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                    <text>T~ STATE

PENN

H——__

SF A

PREVIEW

FORUM

I

(See Page

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO,

NSA Conference Starts Today;
Community Involvement Topic
The National Student Association will sponsor a two day conference on community involvement. It will take place this weekend in Norton Hall.
The National Student Association is an organization of students in over 300 member colleges and universities, including
Buffalo. Its purposes are to provide basic services to student
governments and to provide a
structure wherein the membership can define policies and undertake action. N.S.A, has a national office in Washington, D.C.
and conducts the National Student Congress.
This weekend’s conference will
begin at 8:00 p.m. this evening
on the second floor of Norton
with a key-note address on “Community Action Organization and
the Federal Anti-poverty Program” by Ambrose Lane, Erie
County Community Action Coordinator.

Following

the

address

two

panels will meet. “The Role of
the Student in the Community:
Protest vs. Welfare” will be the
topic discussed by Clinton Deveaux, President of the Student

Association;

Jeanette

Scudder,

Dean of Women and campus
N.S.A. advisor; and Jay Brett of
the Amherst Young Republicans.
The second panel of local business and labor leaders will discuss “Business and Labor Action
in a Community” with a member
of the faculty. The sessions will
continue until 10:30 on Friday.
Saturday morning at 10:15 will
see the panel on the role of the
student resume. Richard Siggelkow, Dean of Students, will replace Dean Scudder.
The other panel on Saturday
morning will consider “Government Action in a Community,"
Programing workshops to provide constructive programs in
civil rights will take place on
Saturday afternoon
from 1:303:30 p.m.
A banquet will be conducted
between 5:00 and 6:30 on Saturday. Dean Scudder will speak on
“What N.S.A. Is." Cost is $2.10.
The conference will conclude
Sunday with a regional plenary
which will begin at 10:30. The
election of a new treasurer is on
the agenda.
All interested students are invited to attend any of the conference events,

'

!

NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1965

NO. 16

Mary C. Wright to Speak
On Chinese Nationalism
“Chinese Nationalism" will be
Dr. Mary Wright’s topic as she
concludes the current China series
at 3:00 p.m. today in the Fillmore
Room. The China Series, cosponsored by the Convocations Committee and the International Club,
has presented two previous speak-

ers, A. Doak Barnett and William
E. Griffith.
In addition

Mrs. Wright

will
appear before the Graduate History club speaking on “Chinese
History as a Touchstone for West-

ern History,” tonight at

8 p.m,,

Room 233, Norton.

in Birmingham, and was graduated from Vassar College in 1938.
She received her Master of Arts
degree in 1939 and her Ph D. in
1951 from Radcliffe College. In
1947 she was named Assistant Professor of History at Stanford University and was promoted to Associate Professor in 1954.

In addition to a major book on
nineteenth century China, “The
Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism,” she has written numerous
articles on China for professional
journals in the United States,
France, and Great Britain.

Dr. Wright is a Professor of
History at Yale University and
one of the nation’s leading scholars on Far Eastern history. The
first woman ever appointed to a
tenure faculty position on the
Yale faculty of Arts and Sciences,
she is also Advisor on Far Eastern Literature in the University
Library and Director of the Undergraduate Major in Chinese
Studies.

Currently, Dr. Wright’s chief research concerns the Chinese Revolution of 1911. In August of this
year, she will conduct a conference on the subject Where 20
scholars from seven countries will
take part. Mrs. Wright is a member of several national committees
concerned with the development
of Chinese Studies in the United

Born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama,
Mrs. Wright attended high school

her husband when the Japanese
attacked at the start of the second world war. She was captured
during the invasion and spent
the duration of the war in a. Japanese prisoner of war camp

Dr. W. Griffith Advocates
Containment of Chinese
By RONNIE BROMBERG

The United States is concerned
with the “awakening of China on
the international scene” and the
challenge it now presents. Dr.
William E- Griffith of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
discussed this problem in his lecture on “China and United States
Foreign Policy,” Monday, December 6 at 3 p.m. in the Millard
Fillmore Room, Norton.
Dr. Griffith, the second speaker
on Communist China, was sponsored by the Convocations Committee of the Student Senate, the
International Club and the Politics Club. He replaced Dr. Brzezinski who was originally scheduled to speak. Dr. Brzezinski, Director of the Research Institute
on Communist Affairs and Professor of Government at Columbia
University, became ill and arranged for Dr. Griffith to come in
his stead.
Dr. Griffith is currently the Director of the program in Studies
on International Communism at
MIT’s Center for International
Studies. He is also a Professor of
Soviet Diplomacy at the Fletcher
Schobl of Law and Diplomacy and
a lecturer in Political Science at
MIT. Dr. Griffith formerly was
political director of Radio Free
Europe at Munich. Among his
works are two books on the SinoSoviet rift and one on European
Communism.
In discussing the U. S. confrontation with Communist China, Dr.
Griffith compared it with past
Western confrontations. He spoke
of China as a country esposing
a revolutionary doctrine, violence
and guerilla warfare, not a traditional imperialism.
The administration must realize, Dr. Griffith stressed, that the
present regime in Peking is “completely and irretrievably hostile
to the U.S.” We must understand
Mao’s view of a “dichotomous
world” where imperialism versus
revolutionaries. Dr. Griffith continued that Mao sees man, not
weapons, as the decisive element

Page

States.

Dr. Wright

was in China with

As a participant in one of this

DR. MARY WRIGHT

summer’s national teach-ins, Mary
Wright opposed the current policy
of the United States and sugeated
that we should put an end to the

war.

The China Series has been coordinated by Nick Marchelos
under the Convocations Committee headed by Jerry Matros* and
Sarah Rubinstein.

YAF. S.D.S. Clash In
Debate on Vietnam Policy
-

Young Americans for Fteedom
sponsored a debate against Students for a Democratic Society
Tuesday, November 7 in Norton
Union, The topic of the debate
was: “Resolved the United States
commitment in South Vietnam is
■necessary and crucial to the well
being of South Vietnam and the
free countries of the world."

faculty
Dr. Griffith discusses Vietnam and China with students and
any
negotiating
under
mese
from
in his long term view of history.
He is convinced that China will terms.
After emphasizing the decline
win in the long run and can strugin Chinese influence since the fall
gle indefinitely. However, he is
Griffith turned
cautious in his tactics and doesn’t of Khruschev, Dr. analysis to
the
from the area of
see a necessity for high risk forpolicy. He feels that
area
of
policy.
eign
is
foreign policy
Dr. Griffith next discussed the “American
enlightened selfby
the
governed
of
Chinese
Commudevelopment
interest of the country.” He emnist foreign policy: China’s parimperative of
ticipation in the Korean War as a phasized that the
foreign policy should be the
major power in world politics for U.S.
of domination of the
the first time and her dispute “prevention
Eurasian land mass by a major
with the Soviet Union. He spoke
hostile to American interof how the Chinese leaders are power
Griffith further spoke of
Dr.
that
est."
the
dream
.
.
.
by
“plagued
revithe needs for maintenance of strago
will
them
after
China
tegic superiority over all poten...

sionist.”

enumerated the
that
dominent characteristicsforeign
have influenced Chinese
policy. They include the determiand
nation to become self-reliant
Dr.

Griffith

,

.

.

a major world power, the primacy
the U.S.
of the struggle against
and concentration on the arms
struggle. China believes, Dr. Grif-

is reluctant
fith said that the U.S.
to have counter-guerilla warfare
or conand won’t escalate further
indefinitely.
tinue the war
Dr. GrifIn discussing Vietnam,
objectives—fith spoke of Chinese

to maintain a prolonged stateraate
Vietnaand to prevent the North

tial enemies and awareness that
with all its power, there is a danger of the U.S. becoming “dizzy
with success.”
“China is fundamentally a very
weak nation” and the "balance
is not turning in China’s favor,”
Dr. Griffith feels. He emphasized
as a foreign policy;
“the dangers of carrying out this
policy are minimal.” Turning to

containment

the Vietnam confrontation, Dr.

Griffith concluded that “Vietnam
calls into question the creditability of the U.S. in its containment
of China and the Soviet Union;
therefore we must fight.”

Peggy Marano, YAF member
and moderator for the debate,
opened the debate and introduced the speakers: SDS members John Marciano and Steve
Crafts, YAF members Steve
Sickler and Ronata Wolynec.
Each of the debaters opened with
five minute speech after which
there was a period of questions
and answers.
Steve
Sdckler began the
speeches with a comment on the
nature of communism as ex-

pounded by Marx, Khrushchev,
and Mao. Marx's view was that

communism should be directed

against the existing social and

economic systems

Mr. Sickler felt that Vietnam
a domino in the communist
plan for world conquest. He
pointed out Ho’s desire for a
unified Vietnam and the nine
regular regiments in the south
for that purpose. Mr. Sickler
ended his remarks by saying that
our policy murt be one of victory
by ending communist aggression
in South Vietnam and Asia.

was

Steve Crafts questioned points
raised by Mr. Sickler. He stated
that Mr. Sickler’s evaluation of
the world as good (the free
nations) and evil (communism)
was too simple and was a poor
reason on which to base war. He
conceded that the communists
are aggressive but felt that all
states are to some degree. He

felt that the Communist Manifesto is not closely followed by
communists today and that Khrushchev meant economic, not
physical burial, in his statement.

Ronata Walynec, stated that
the United States has made mistakes in its history but that we
must be prepared to fight communism. She recalled the statement by the Moscow Presidium
that the capitalists should be
lulled to sleep by appeasement
and then smashed. She emphasized the brutality of communism

She said the Geneva Agreement
stipulated peaceful removal of all
troops, was violated by the Vietminh when they looted and destroyed material, kidnapped government officials, and left cadres
of guerrillas in the south.

John Marciano, the last to
speak, questioned our commitment to Vietnam. He stated that
the Diem regime, the first to
receive American support, was an
illegal
government.
As the
French pulled out, the U.S.
moved into the power vacuum
and supported Diem who assumed
power

after a referendum

in

1955. Hr. Marciano felt that this
election was extremely fraudulent and therefore Diem had no
right to rule. Hence we should
not have supported him nor
should we be supporting the present government of South Vietnam. But, he continued as he

cited from Bernard Fall. France

recognized the Vietminh in January, 1945, as the popular force
and Ho in March, 1946, as the

leader of the nationalist movement which fought the Japanese.
He ended by saying that to prop
up Diem is as bad as supporting
the regime in South Africaner
supporting another Hitler.

�Ad Hoc Faculty Committee
Concerned With Vietnam
By LORETTA ANGELINE

An Open Letter to President
Johnson has been recently drawn
up by the Ad Hoc Committee
on the Vietnam War. The letter
expressed concern at the excala-

tion of hostilities in Vietnam and
a more serious effort
toward reaching a negotiated

urged

settlement.

The statement, prompted by
the recent announcement that the
Administration failed to investigate an offer for negotiations
last fall, was issued by 172 committee members at Buffalo and
Fredonia. “As educators, the signers of these statements are particularly concerned at the erosion
of the national morality which
inevitably accompanies the kind
of brutal warfare against civilians which is steadily intensifying as the war expands,” commented the faculty in a press
release of December 7.

In the open letter the faculty
arc appalled at the
destruction
of villages, the
napaling of civilians, the tons of
misdirected explosives—all said
state "We

Friday, December 10, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

to be unavoidable consequences
of trying to kill the ‘enemy’ . . .
Mr. President, now is the time
to excalate negotiations . . . We
want Americans to be known
as people who heal rather than

hurt, who
maim.

teach

rather

than

The Ad Hoc Committee was
formed on November 15 by faculty members concerned with the
United States policy. A petition
was drawn up based upon an
open letter to the New York
Times of Sunday, October 31, by
faculty members from several
universities and colleges.

Representatives of the Ad Hoc
Committee were present at the
Peace March on November 27.

THE TELEPHONE, by
Menotti and L’Arleccbino
by Busoni is cancelled.
The operas were previously scheduled for Thurs-

day, Friday, Saturday,

and Sunday, December 9-

12.

Fourth Lecture In Technology Series
Given on Psychological Adjustment
On Wednesday, December 8,
Dr, Hunt of the Psychology De-

partment and Mr. Seimering of
the Department of Drama and
Speech gave a lecture on “Psychological Adjustments in a Technological Society” in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge in Norton Union at
3:30 p.m.

The lecture was the fourth in a
series on Technology vs. Humanities. Dr. Hunt began the discussion by summarizing the contributing factors which give today’s world an aura of impersonality. He spoke of the resulting
alienation of the individual who
finds it hard to see the meaning
of existance today, with the increase of the size of units in
which people are involved and today’s emphasis upon institutions
and organizations.

Dr. Hunt optimistically stated

We set out to ruin
some ball bearings and
failed successfully

Mr. William Seimering and Dr. Raymond Hunt conclude informal
lecture series.
Mr. Seimering concentrated his
that he thought that things are
better now in a cultural sense. part of the lecture upon the imWhile people have pictured the plications of mass communication
technologist as a devil who is which includes a large and indifthe root of evil, there will come ferent audience, mechanical reproduction, rapid distribution,
a “Golden Age,”
and low unit cost. He emphasized
that both the nature of the media
and the degree of involvement it
promotes have influence upon the
masses.

He stated that one of the effects of mass communication is
found in the bland, nonspecific
message which must be conveyed.
He also stated that mass media is
“caught up in finances” and the
main concern has become whether
or not it will sell.
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by smearing them with an

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ten years or so, but for a problem.

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The many electric motors in those offices
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thus entailing costly annual maintenance.
To stamp out this problem, many tests
wereconducted at Bell Telephone

Laboratories. Lubricant engineer George H. Kitchen decided
to do a basic experiment that
would provide a motor with the
worst possible conditions. He deliberately set

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�December 10, 1965

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Student Faculty Administration Forum
Discusses Problems of a University

I SUMIMAN
OPEN EVENINGS

By NANCY TODER

of the faculty member. At the
present time policy is set by a

The Student Faculty Adminis-

tration Forum met last Friday.
December 3, to discuss the "purpose of a University.” The Forum,
consisting of twelve students, six
faculty members, and six admin
istrators, is chaired by Dean Siggelkow.

substitute.

Ope of the faculty members in
describing the "purpose of a University" named two categories—education and scholarship. An administrator claimed that the components of purpose were research,
instruction, and public service.
Public service was further di-

vided

into international under-

voca-

standing, citizenship, and
tional preparation.

An objection was raised to the
category of “public service.” If
the community was able to determine the criteria in this field, it
would be encroaching on the aca
demie freedom of the university.
Thus, in order for the category of
“public service" to be acceptable,
it must be defined by the university. Several of the students raised

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an objection to

the term

“in-

struction" claiming that “we have
enough of that now."
The

committee of faculty members in
each department, with the admin,
istration having the final say. A
•majority of the Forum agreed
that there should be a better way
to obtain tenure, however the difficulty was in finding a proper

Forum

then

discussed
the “major proposition" of a university concerning its faculty,
“Publish or Perish.” The consensus of opinion as expressed by
the faculty was that this proposition exists; but “Publish or Perish” has been greatly exaggerated.
In many universities, “Publish
or Perish” determines the tenure

Several of the students on the
Forum, who are also Senators,
suggested that a “course evaluation" might serve as an appropriate substitute. The Student
Senate has composed a course

evaluation questionnaire which
will be administered next semes-

The Forum decided at the end
of the meeting that the next discussion would consider the University of Buffalo as an institution and specifically, its characteristics.
Although the Student Faculty
Forum is not a legislative body,
it does have considerable influ
ence due to its significant membership. , The first few meetings
have been introductory; the purpose being to discover how the
various members feel about gen
eral issues. It was decided that
the Forum could not discuss specific issues until it has discussed
general

principles.

ter.

Election In Bus, Ad, And Education
By ETHEL

The

SOLOMON

presidential vote in the

School of Business Administration election is being contested
as of Tuesday, December 7. In
the School of Education election
for Senator, five votes were cast
for the one candidate. Voting
was held on December 6 from 10
a.m, to 4 p.m. in Norton Lobby.
President-elect of the Business
School is J. Edward Smith, Jr.
However, his election is being
contested by Frank D'Arrigo.
When first posted, the winning
candidate for president was Mr.
D’Arrigo, but additional ballots
were found in the ballot box
which had not been counted. The
additional ballots gave Mr. Smith
the majority vote.
Vice ■ president ■ elect is Brian
Rolth, Treasurer-elect is Frank
Canto, and Secretary-elect is Mi-

chael Sonnenreich All are junMr. D'Arrigo, a

iors, except for
senior.

The School of Education elected Martha Obers as their Senate
representative. She is a junior,
from Brooklyn, New York,
Over 150 ballots were cast in
the School of Business Administration election. Harry Bienstock,
chairman of the Elections Com
mittec of the Senate, noted that
this was a sizeable turnout. How-

ever, only five votes were cast
in the School of Education elec-

tion. Mr. Bienstock believes this
was due to student disinterest,
■the fact that many students were

student-teaching during the day,

and a lack of publicity. Concerning the fact that there was only
one candidate, Mr, Bienstock observed that “people have run un-

opposed before.”

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SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

grump

The

.

The Left: Old and New
A series of meetings were held this week to discuss
“old”
and “new” Left in this country. Although
the
some leaders of each were conspicious by their absence,
the general tone of the meetings was one of honest give
and take and mutual recognition. After the disheartening fiasco of radical bickering witnessed so recently in
Washington, these meetings came as a pleasant and
surprising change.
Disagreements and conflicts in idealogy were openly

discussed and the potential of this nation to produce an

effective, humanitarian movement embracing the hitherto
dissonent elements of liberal and radical reform, seemed
once more like an exciting possibility. Many theoretical
problems involving the relationship of means to ends,
particularty surrounding the tactic of non-violence and
the true nature of the state, were discussed and debated,
but the feeling that all present shared a vision of a better
life and a more moral and humane society was inescapable.
Although the very existence of the “New” Left is
predicated on the failure of the old left to achieve a
society where there truely exists “liberty and justice for
all,” there is a similarity between them that should not
be forgotten in the differences in their rhetoric and
strategies and that is the similarity of devotion to an
ideal of the human community which transcends political
boundaries and barriers of language and culture. Ultimately it is that devotion, and the intelligence and compassion with which it applied, that will make the “New”
Left a force for the redress of wrongs and the healing
of wounds in this country, and not just a passing fad in
-

I look forward to the arrival
of winter with snow, skiing,
frostbite, traffic jams and all the
various other little oddiments
which make life in Buffalo in
the winter months interesting.
One of the really interesting
things which occurs is that the
snowbanks develop next to the
sidewalks here on campus. Actually the snowbanks themselves
aren’t interesting but the result
61 having no place left to go
when a truck comes creeping up
behind you certainly is.
Since I actually do not spend
that much time walking around
the campus during the day I
may be discussing a minority
view. It may be that I am just
Truck-prone the way some people arc accident-prone. It does
seem to be that very frequently
a mail truck, or a service vehicle,
or the vending machines departemnt, or the police, or somebody
wants to drive down the sidewalk upon which I am walking.
I consider this most unfair
since it is very seldom that I
desire to walk down the roads
that run adjacent to every building on campus. In all fairness I
must admit that they may not
want to drive down them for the
same reason I do not want to
walk on them. The concept of
standing in the middle of the
track at Le Mans, Watkins Glen,
or the Indianapolis Speedway at

certain times of the year seems
somewhat unpleasant; it could
be that the truck drivers simply
feel they lack the necessary
horsepower to compete and that
driving is an equally unpleasant
concept.

Be that as, it may it does seem
to me that a truck is not a people and it is better off on a road
as opposed to a sidewalk. In almost all cases the drivers are
vary nice about the whole thing
and just slow down to a slow

crawl behind you. There is something about walking in front of
a vehicle which outweighs me by
several thousand percent which
unnerves me badly however.
It may be I am just a nervous
sort but every time his front
bumper brushes my pants cuff
(I am hopelessly old fashioned,
a number of my slacks still do
have cuffs on them. I am negotiating with the Smithsonian now.)
I wonder if I should slip and fall
would he really be able to stop
and I generally leap to the side
and let him roar by me.

The choice when the snow
banks are rather deep and you
only have a pair of shoes on your
feet it somewhat more difficult.
Do you take a chance on being
run down and perhaps maimed
for life or do you take a leap
into the snowbank and wind up
with strep and virual pneumonia?

by STEESE
The only real answer seems to
be to keep overshoes on at all
times and to continue the current favorite evasion tactic of
using those rustic paths that wind
through the ex-grass at various
places on campus.
I promise I will quit soon but
a sudden thing struck me the
other night during a conversation
on Vietnam. The phrase “dirty
little war” is rather frequently

heard and I have used it in this
column at least a few times. It
occured to me that if it is really
legitimate to modify “war” with
“dirty” and “little” then there
must be such an animal as a
BIG CLEAN WAR. This idea is
worth considering, I think. Instead of a dirty little war in Vietnam perhaps we could interest
someone in a big clean war involving all of Asia. Wheeeeeeee.
And me with three and one half
years of reserve time remaining.
Infuriating Funny Dept. “What
did the Grape Say When the
Elephant Stepped on It?” Ans:
(brace yourself against something
solid and if you have just eaten
come back later): “Nothing, It
just let out a little whine.”
There, now you know how I felt
when I heard it. Enough. Enough.
Next week I might comment on
the officiating, basketball type,
at Memorial Auditorium, but I
doubt it. Even think about it
makes my ulcer hyperactive.

the national press.

The job which faces the “New” Left is monumental.
The world is less inclined to believe in the possibility
of a peace where every man has dignity, and the wreckage of the broken trusts and shattered hopes of old left
litter the way and make it almost impassable. But the
real possibility of these hopes will not obe denied, and the
hope of peace least of all.
The New Left must resist a war this nation seems
committed to. It must find alternatives to ignorance and
deprivation, not just here in this country, but throughout
the world. It must prepare is participants, not just for
a momentary flash of radicalism during the college years,
but for lives of quiet, passionate service to ideals. It
must surmount the hatreds and betrayals of two hundred
years of exploitation and butchery. It must bring the
whole world back past Kronstadt and Barcellona, Bekin
and Madrid, back past Budapest and Rotterdam, Leopoldville and Cape Town. It must bring this country back
.past Montgomery and Haneyville, past A ppomattox and
the Bay of Bigs.
The New Left must write a new geography, a new
grammar. These are not easy things to do, but the tools
to do them are at hand.

Murder

of Gonzago

To evangelist Billy Graham who
said on November 15, that “draft
card burnings border on treason”
goes this week’s “Blessed Are the
Peacemakers Award.”
To George Lincoln Rockwell,
Head of the American Nazi Party,
who blamed the Communists for
the power failure which reliable
authorities attributed to a faulty
relay, goes our “Don’t Confuse
Me With the Pacts, I Have My
Mind Made Up Award,”

To Reverend Duane F. Sweet,

a Baptist minister and a gra&lt;ju-

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except
for

exam periods,

Thanksgiving, Christmas,

and Easier.

Editor-in-chief
Managing Editor
Business Manager
News Editor

RONNIE

Feature Editor

BROMBERG

JOHN STINY

Feature Editor

Acting Sports Editor
layout
Copy

RAYMOND

SUSAN GREENE

Asst.
Asst

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor

Editor

JOANNE LEEGANT
STEVE SCHUELEIN
SHARON HONIG
LAUREN

JACOBS

EDITORIAL POLICY IS

Photography

Editor

Continuity Editor
Ad Co-ordinator

Circulation
Faculty

Manager

Advisor

Financial
Leprechaun

Advisor

EDWARD JOSCELYN
MARCIA ORSZULAK
GARY FISCHER
DIANE

.IRENE
DALLAS

LEWIS

WILLET
GARBER

RUSSELL GOLDBERG

DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
HONOR RATING

FIRST CLASS

(7/

PRESS

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation

10,000.

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madi»on Ave., New York, N. Y.

To the most Reverend Archbishop Philip Hannan of New
Orleans, who opposed a Vatican
document condemning modern
limited war because war “is an
apt and necessary” instrument
for safeguarding the world equi-

By JOHN MEDWID

librium of power and Who was
afraid that this statement would
be considered critical of American policy and a slur on U. S.
motives in Viet Nam, goes our
“Peace on Earth to Men of Good
Will Award,”
And, finally, to Gary Davenport, Russell Flick, and Samuel
Bechdel who drew three to ten
year jail terms in Clinton County &lt;Pa.) Court for a series of
burglaries committed while they
were in jail, including one at the
county courthouse, go this week’s
“Last Laugh Award.”

Cacotopia and Eutopia
The following are Orwellian
tidbits gleamed from the press
over the past tew weeks. The
first item appeard in the Buffalo
Courier-Express on November 30:
Humphrey (Vice President
Hubert) and Clark (Senator
Joseph of Pennsylvania)
spoke at the opening of a
three-day conference called
by President Johnson to explore every conceivable approach to peace.

VOLPE

this week’s Intellectual Freedom
Award.”

.

iilll

By STEPHEN CRAFTS
DOUBLETHINK '65

Editor-in-Chief

ate of Bob Jones University, who,
although he admits he hasn’t
read them, opposes the placing
of books like John Steinbeck’s
Grapes of Wrath and J. D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye on
high school reading lists goes

.

Later in the same day, the
Buffalo Evening News announced
that “a revolution in the conduct of land warfare comparable
to Hitler’s dispatch of German
tank divisions into Poland in
1939 may have taken place this
month in the central highlands
of South Viet Nam.” Although no
official announcement was forthcoming on the success of bellicopters, it was clear to the reporter, James Robinson, ‘that
the Army has crossed the threshold of an entirely new approach
to the conduct of land battles.”

The second item appeared in
the same edition of the Courier
at item one. Billy Graham, speaking before an overflow audience
(including LBJ) in Houston’s new
Astrodome Stadium, said:
Yesterday there was a
demonstration in Washington
protesting the policies of our
government
i n Southeast
Asia. It seems the only way
to gain attention today is to
organize a march and protest
something. Even a little handful can make a great noise
and get national attention
if they are protesting and
demonstrating.

The evangelist also railed
against secularism, poverty, illiteracy, racial injustice, crime,

the forces of tyranny, lust, etc.
and left no doubt as to which
side God supported in the Vietnamese scuffle.
The last item comes from the
New York Times of November
16. Robert McCloskey, State De-

partment press officer, commenting on the Hanoi peace feelers
ignored by the -United States:

All our indications were
that there was no serious intent on the other side. We
saw nothing to indicate that
Hanoi was prepared for peace
talks, and the Secretary of
State said he would recognize it when it came.
His antenna is sensitive.
Fine, But, at his age, can he

raise one?

One last item cannot even be
honored as a doublethink. Who
else but Mayors Kowal would be
capable of the following nothink:
I firmly believe that if every
housewife or shopper con
tacts their federal representatives, we shall one day soon
have this much needed halfcent coin.

The coin, the mayor explained,
would save the housewife mil
lions of dollars a year. Instead of
paying 17c for one half of a 2/33c
deal, she would only pay 1616c.
If nothing is done about this
pressing need, we may expect
the mayor, always on the look
out for the fast buck, to counterfeit the half-cent coin.

�Friday, December 10, 1965

PACK FIVI

SPECTRUM

IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE

...

OR CAN IT?

Prof. Kahn Plans

Four Week Tour

LOOKING FOR AN OUTLET?

Join the SPECTRUM

Professor Arthur Kahn of the

department of classics at UB is
organizing a four-week Classical
Archeology tour of Turkey, the
Greek islands, and the Greek
mainland for next June,
Dr. Kahn, who has publ- hed
articles on archeology in leading
journals, is familiar with the
Aegean area and has organized
the tour so as to include stops
at the most famous centers of
Aegean civilization. The tour will
begin in Istanbul and then move
on .to such sites in Turkey as
Troy, Pergamum, Smyrna (Izmir),
Ephesus (visited by St. Paul),
and Sardis (capital of King Croesus of Lydia). The tour will then
proceed to the islands of Rhodes
and Crete before moving to the
mainland of Greece for visits to
Athens, Delphi, Marathon, Olympia, Mycenae, and other places
famous in history.
The tour is limited to thirty.
Inquiries should be sent directly
to Professor Kahn at the State
University.

Typing Staff
Tuasdays and or Fridays from 3 p.m.

Call 831-2210 or 831-3781 anytime!

Students interested in
joining a Spring Arts Committee may pick up and
application to the
Union Board office, room
210, Norton.

return

oCetterA

to

the Editor

Organization Desires Accuracy in Editorials
TO

THE EDITOR;

On behalf of the Student for
the U. S. in Vietnam, we would
like to protest the factual inaccuracy of the editorial in the
Spectrum of Friday, November
19. It is not our purpose in this
letter to discuss the reasons why
we believe as we do, since these
are already well-known; rather
we wish to express our belief
that it is the solemn responsibility of every newspaper, whether or not their views are in accordance with ours, to refrain
from printing false statements
of if they are inadvertently printed, to retract them when discovered. This in our view includes
not only The Buffalo Evening
—

News but our own beloved “unbiased” Spectrum as well.
Specifically, the Spectrum stated that “While Johnson was making his famous speech offering
‘unconditional’ talks to end the
war in Vietnam, U-Thant, Secretary General of the U. N. was
making arrangements for talks in
Rangoon. These peace talks were
refused by the U. S.” The fact
of the matter is that U-Thant
made his offer in September
1964, when the U. S. was in a
very poor position militarily and
negotiating then would have been
as foolish as if the British had
negotiated with Hitler after Dunkirk. It was not then that President Johnson made his offer as
the Spectrum implied, but ralher
seven months later, in April

1965. And although the Spectrum
did not mention it, the North
Vietnames under Ho Chi Minh
(not -Thant), have never been
willing to negotiate under any
terms except prior U. S. withdrawal from Vietnam, which
would be tantamount to sur-

render.

Although

the

Spectrum

Your editorial of Friday, December 3, in reference to the
Fine Arts Film Committee was
most out of order. This might
be attributed to an ignorance of
the purposes and financial standing of the committee. The purposes of the committee as we
have established them are as
follows:
1—To provide films of a higher quality than are generally
available to the university.
2—To cultivate an interest in
the Cinema among the student
body.

3—To provide entertainment
for the members of the university.
Unfortunately, the percentage

of people at this school who are
genuinely interested in the Cinema is extremely small. Yet, there
is no justification in ignoring
everyone else. We try to select a
program that will satisfy most of
the people while keeping in mind
the above standards.

The Fine Arts Film Committee is for the most part, selfsupporting. The Union Board
provides us with a budget which
is too small to be of any great
use in supporting the 35 mm program in Norton. To put a film on
the screen in the Conference
Theatre costs us in the neighborhood of $370. Consequently, any
film that we exhibit must have
sufficient box office appeal to
keep us from going deeply into

been informed of this inaccuracy
no retraction or apology has yet
been printed. We do not consider
this to be in keeping with respectable journalism or with academic honesty, and we urge the
student body to take a more

openminded and objective view
of the major world issues than

their student newspaper has.
Frank Glinger and
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman

debt. Perhaps if the Spectrum
provided us with a $12,000 budget
we could be free of such commereial considerations,
This week we started another
film series in 16 mm, which is
independent of the 35 mm program in the Conference Theater
This program will try to present
films which are considered classics in the history of the motion
picture. The films will frequently
be supplemented with program
notes, lectures, and discussions.
They will be presented free of
charge, every week in Diefendorf
Hall. 1 hope that this series will
attract a large enough audience
to merit its continuity.
Richard Antonio Haber
Vice President
Fine Arts Film Committee

Student Comments on YAF SDS Debate
TO THE EDITOR
As an interested observer of
the YAF sponsored debate concerning American intervention in
Vietnam, I see it necessary to

point out a glaring inconsistency
on the part of YAF. This organization called for a “formal debate” between SDS and itself.
After two years of formal collegiate debate, I was under the
impression that a moderator (if
there is to be a moderator), would
take an impartial and unprejudiced position in relation to the

audience. The moderator, Peggy
Morano, in her introduction to
the debate, drew a parallel between Japanese invasion of Pearl
Harbor and American involvement in Vietnam, implying that
America in both instances was
the victim of foreign aggression.
This analogy is not only patently
false but emotionally prejudicial
and should have been eliminated.
The affirmative (YAF) speakers
could have introduced it into the
debate and made it an issue, however the biased position of the
moderator, who was also unaware

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of the resolution, gave an observer the same feeling a Spanish
representative must have felt at
the election of Franco.
I feel it also relevant to report
that YAF, in their zealous quest
for objectivity, neglected to reserve the room in which the debate was to be held. I, a member
of SDS, noticed this and reserved
the room ten minutes before the
room was to be given to the Student Senate. Free enterprise
strikes again.
Daniel Katz

CHRISTMAS
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Film Committee Defends Policy
TO THE EDITOR:

Everything Photographic for Profess.onal
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OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an
authorized publication of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsi-

bility. Notices should be sent
in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114

Hall, attention Mrs.
before 2:00 p.m. the
Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization
Hayes

Fischer,

are
publication.
notices

not

accepted

for

GENERAL NOTICES
Graduate School Calendar;

Dee. 10 (Friday
Last date for pre-registration
for students who will continue
in the second semester, 1965-66.
Dec. 17 (Friday)—
—

Last date fo rsubmission of
theses and dissertations for February Graduation.
Jan. 14 (Friday)—
Last date for oral defense of
thesis or dissertation.
Graduate Students—who plan
to take the January 22 Graduate
Language Examination to establish language competency for a

graduate degree must register by
December 13, in the Student Test-

ing Center. 316 Harriman Library.
WEEKLY CALENDAR
Monday—
American Geophysical Union,
Department of Geological Sciences, presents Dr. Benjamin F.
Howell, Professor of Geology and
Geophysics, Pennsylvania State
University. The topic is “The
Interior of the Earth.” Open to
faculty and staff, 1400 Crosby
Hall, 10:00 a.m.
Tuesday—
Air Force ROTC is sponsoring
a Military Airlift Command Presentation. Open to the Public,
148 Diefendorf Hall, 11:00 a.m.

Trivia Tournament, the second
in a series organized by WBFO.
Open to the Public. Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Hall, 7:00
p.m.

Friday—
Department

Class of Multi-Dimensional AgeBranching Processes.” Open to the Public, 306
Diefendorf Hall, 4:00 p.m.
Biology Seminar, features Dr.
Elias Cohen, Associate Cancer
Research Scientist, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute, whose topic
is ‘‘Heteroagglutinins of Limulus Polyphemus." Open to the
Public, 134 Health Sciences Building, 4:00 p.m.
Department

of Mathematical

Statistics, is sponsoring a Colloquim, with Dr. Charles J. Mode,

Professor Mathematics, Montana
State University, The topic is
“Some Limit Theorems for a

PLACEMENT
INTERVIEWS

Please caH the University
Placement Service for additional
information on the following interviews, Appointments should
be made at least one week in
advance of the interviewing date
if possible.
December 13
Y.M.C.A. of Buffalo and Erie
County

Manufacturers &amp; Traders Trust
Hope’s Windows, Inc.
Merck Co., Inc.
Carbon Products Division Union Carbide Corp.
Yale
Towne
December 14
General Telephone Co. of
-

&amp;

Pennsylvania
H. J. Heinz Co.

NSR On Sale December 13-14

The semester’s second issue of
the New Student Review, campus literary and opinion magazine, will go on sale December
13 through 15. Copies will be
available in the lobby of Norton
Union between 10 a.m. and 2
p.m. The price is 50e.
The format of the Review has
been changed to allow experimentation -with a new size and
type. Articles include “On Synicism" (Eric Steese), an examination of the place of the “true
cynic” in our society; “The Prehistory of the Big Beat” (Lewis
Bowman), covering the trends in
the development of rock ’n’ roll;
"Henderson and the Existential
Hero: The Significance of Life”

(Mary Leary), a paper dealing
with the types of searching in

PHILADELPHIA
STEAK HOUSE
1390 FILLMORE AVE.

dian film directors. Also, within
the issue are two short stories
by Matthew C. Corrigan and
Philip A. Pupkas, poem and an
art section.
Elections for a new Editor of
the Review will be held on Thursday, December 16 at 4 p.m. The
term of Editor runs from January to January of each year.
Candidates attend a staff meeting, discuss policy and plan together and they are voted on by
the current staff. Any interested
students should contact Harriet
Heitlinger,Ext. 2765, or leave a
note in the Review office, Room
302 Norton.

Steak Sandwich
Submarine
Italian or Polish
Sausages

iS—

Cheektowaga,

Erie County, N. Y.
December 15
Cornell Aeronautical
Laboratory, Inc.
Owens-Illinois, Inc.
IBM
Service Bureau Corp.
The Bendix Corp., Eclipse
Pioneer Division
December 16
Erie County Dept, of Social
Welfare
U.S. Civil Service Commission
General Dynamics/Electronics
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
December 16, 17
American Meter Co., Inc.
December 17
The Firewel Co., Inc.
-

ONE OF THE YEARS 10 BESTI"
N

(Near East Utica)

)■

Haskins &amp; Sells
Dun &amp; Bradstreet, Inc.
Moore Products Co.
Central School Dist. No. 1,

several literary heroes, and “An
Interview with Leiterman and
Matson" (Mark Wright), excerpts
from an interview with two Cana-

■

You may have noticed that good movies, like women
and the weather, seem to run in cycles. Either there are
so many of them that you can’t possibly see them all, or
there are none available just when you seem to need them
most. The vagaries of distribution can actually be explained by a number of simple economic facts. The most
important one, I would imagine, is that most people (that
is, the people who contribute the majority of the box-office revenue) go to the movies in spurts at certain times
of the year. Thanksgiving and Christmas are two of these
times. And, correspondingly, the three week period between the two holidays is something of a hiatus. Aside
from those of us who can’t get the monkey off our back,
only a few people go to the movies with any regularity.
Shopping, exams and the general hassle of life before
Christmas cuts down most people’s leisure time to the
point where they are likely to postpone any plana they
may have had to catch a flick.
The managers of the theatres know this, of course.
And to avoid having pictures for which they had to put
up a huge guarantee (against a large percentage of the
gross) play to empty houses, they offer re-runs and grade15 (or worse) features during this time. You’ll notice that
lavish productions like The Agony and The Ecstasy and
Thunderball are both going to open just before Christmas
after a highly publicized series of previews and a large
number of advertisements in periodicals and the like. So,
one has to be content with sleepers and good re-runs. If
your instincts are good, you can usually hit about one
for two. For instance, the Sands of the Kalahari has been
playing as the more prominent part of a double feature
with an obscure item called Requiem for a Gunfighter.
Kalahari has some good character roles, but it is clearly
garbage. It doesn’t even remotely make it as a good adventure film. Hut, strangely enough, Gunfighter turns out
to be a pleasant surprise. It has Rod Cameron, Tim Holt
and a number of other old-time Western stars.
Hut to try a movie like Return From the Ashes or
The War-Lord, or the double bill I’ve been discussing is
pretty risky. It’s all too easy to blow an evening entirely
at some mind-rotting garbage which has no redeeming
characteristics for even the most “camp” movie go-er.
The better choice is to watch for re-runs at local houses
and catch up on good films that you may have missed.
Before I suggest a few, however, let me disgress for a moment. I’ve used the word “camp” a number of times (as
has my distinguished colleague Bill Sherman) and 1 sense
that it is a word which is oft used but not clearly underauthority on the substood. I would not presume to be
ject like the high priestess of the cult, Susan Sontag (who
seems to have invented the term to describe and justify
her own life-style), but let me relate an anecdote which
is a functional definition of camp.
At the closed-circuit telecast of the Clay-Patterson
fight. the promoters of the show, fearing another early
knock-out and millions more irate customers (they also
charged one dollar less this time) presented a film of the
Buffalo Bills highlights of the ’64 season, a film by the
Firestone Tire people on the ’65 Indy race and then the
10 round preliminary bout between Amos “Big Train”
-Liacoln and some chap whose name I forget. The fight between these two willing journeymen of the fistic profession went 10 spirited but undistinguished rounds. After
the decision (Big Train won by one point), some guy in
the row in back of me got up and went home. That’s

Friday, December 10, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Y Post

\&amp;uh.
V

camp, gang.

Now. back to business. The Hill and King Rat were
I saw this season. Neither of them
played in Buffalo for very long. They were just too gutsy,
too real and too ugly for the Sound of Music crowd. Both
of them are showing up now for two night stands at various neighborhood movie houses. I raved about The Hill in
a previous issue and my enthusiasm is still very immediate. An usher there who told me it was still great the
17th time epitomizes my feelings. King Rat, which I never
got the chance to discuss, was a bold, provocative, original and flawed production which I found emotionally
draining in a way which the Pawnbroker aimed for but
missed. And, The Cincinnati Kid is still trying to beat
The Man down at the Center. As Bill said, it isn’t FILM,
but it sure as hell is the movies.
The Kensington, which had Mickey One, a very interesting movie by A,rthur Penn (who made the vastly
under-rated The Left-Handed Gun) out of Orson Welles
and Jean-Luc Godard by way of Fellini, is offering that
must-see rare old classic, The Grand Hotel. It has Garbo.
Barrymore, many more. Ah, me. The grand old days.
Nostalgia, angst, panache and so on. See it and find out
what Kramer was trying to do in that miserable failure
Ship of Fools.
Finally, the Circle Art is presenting a Shakespeare
festival (complete program available at box-office) with
some of the best and some of the worst attempts ever
made at filming the great one's work, and the Glen Art
is having a festival of arts films, with Breathless (Goddard) and Marienbad this weekend, and Nothing But a
Man early next week. Both films will be introduced bv
distinguished experts in the realm of the cinema, and remember, if Fred Keller weren’t around, there would be
that much less to see in Buffalo most of the year.

two

of the best films

TAKE-OUT
PHONE

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If

Tom

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Julie Christie

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BILLY' LIAR
WU.ni KiDf -STfUUWI PRESENTATIONS

H

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NORTON CONFERENCE THEATRE
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

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(Opening Under New Management—formerly the Boar's

504 PEARL STREET at Tapper
Thursday thru Sunday

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at the
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Every Fri A Set from 9:30
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Also AFTER HOURS JAZZ —Fri.

A Sat. 3 a.m. to 6

featuring GUEST ARTISTS

�Friday, December 10, 1965

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Luciano Berio, Composer MUSIC ON CAMPUS
Presents Lecture In Baird
of Music.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra has programmed a new
work by Berio for presentation
at its concerts on December 21

Luciano Berio, leading young
Italian composer, will present a
lecture in Baird Recital Hall on
Monday, December 13 at 8:30
p.m.

are being presented by the Department of Music and made possible by a grant from the Fred

Alice Slee

23. Chemins (sur Sequent*
for harp and orchestra.
Chemins had its world premeire
in October 1965 at the Donaueschingen Festival.
II)

ten’s Symphony for Collo and
Orchestra with cellist Mstislav

The Buffalo Philharmonic Concerts on Sunday. December 5 and
Tuesday, December 7 consisted
of the Brandenburg Concerto No.
1 by J. S, Bach, Benjamin Brit-

Rostropovich, and the Shostakovich Symphony No. 5.
The six Brandenburg Concertos
arc works of rare quality and
exemplify Bach at his best. For
much of the work there are
groups of instruments "opposing"
each other, that is, playing com-

l^eii^iouA

The lecture, entitled “Voices,”
will be illustrated with tapes of
musical examples. This is the
second in a series of three Slee
Lectures in Composition which

erick and

and

By DANIEL SCHROEDER

Founda-

tion.

Mr. Berio was born'in Oneglia,
He graduated from the
Milan Conservatory of Giuseppi
Verdi and studied with G. C.
Baribene, G. F. Ghendini and
Luigi Dallipiccola. In 1953, Mr.
Berio worked for the Italian
Radio in Milan where in 1955 he
established the “Studio di Fonologia Musicali” for electronic
music. In 1960 he was Composer in Residence at the Berkshire Festival in Tanglewood,
where his composition “Circles,”
a Fromm Foundation commission,
received its first performance.
Mr. Berio now lives in Cambridge
Massachusetts and teaches composition at the Juilliard School
Italy.

GAMMA DELTA

HILLEL

NEWMAN

Gamma Delta will meet Wednesday, December 15, in Room
344 of Norton, to elect officers.
Anyone planning on attending
the Christmas party, call Nancy
Steiger at NN 2-5070, after 6 p.m.

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak
on: "Two Civilizations in Conflict.” After the Sunday Supper
at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel House,
there will be a showing of The
Trial based on Franz Kafka's
novel.

The Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a Christmas Party on
Friday, December 17 at 8 p.m.
at Newman Hall. Dr. Cox of the
Political Science Department will
speak on the “Problem of U. S.
Foreign Policy” at the meeting
on December 8 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Conference Theatre.

�

�

�

STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

The S.C.A. will have its annual
Christmas dinner Thursday, December 16 at 6 p.m. in the home

of Rev. John Buerk at 49 Heath
Cost is $1 and reservations
may be made by calling TF 65806.
St.

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GREEK NOTES
Marc Edelstein of Beta Sigma
Rho and Sue Baum will hold a
party during intersession. Rich-

ard Miller is actively seeking
student support for Mr. Formal.
Phi Kappa Psi is looking forward to their social with Sigma
Kappa Phi this evening. Tomorrow evening the pledges will
honor the Brotherhood with the
semi annual pledge party. Monday, December 20, there will be
a mixer in the .Millard Fillmore
room from 3 to 5 featuring “The

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Rogues." Alpha Kappa Psi will
hold a joint Christmas Party
Parly with Alpha Phi Delta at
Bossclla's Saturday evening. Beta
Phi Sigma will hold a cocktail
party at A1 Levitt’s apartment tonight at 7:30. All rushees are in
vited to attend this pre-Pharmacy
School Christmas dance party.
Bcrnie Stein of Alpha Epsilon
Pi set a new intramural swimming record in the fifty yard
free style. There will be a bas-

ketball game with the freshmen
to be held in our gym, tomorrow. Sigma Kappa Phi is looking forward to the social with
Phi Kappa Psi this evening.
Kathy McGee has been elected
Scholarship Chairman of Pan
Hellenic Council. Sunday, December 12, Chi Omega is ex
tending their traditional Christmas Kindness to the patients of
Buffalo State Hospital. They will
be carolling and passing out seasonal favors. Phi Epsilon Pi has
purchased an entire block of seats
for the Peter, Paul and Mary
Concert to be held tomorrow at
Klcinhans. Alpha Gamma Delta
is having a social with TEKE this
Friday. The pledges are sponsoring a Christmas cookie and
candy cane sale in Norton Union
from 11 to 2 p.m. on December
13, 15, and 17. Tomorrow night,
the pledges of Gamma Phi will
hold a bowling party for the

brothers at the Franklin Bowla-Drome on Fillmore and Ken-

sington. Alpha Phi Delta will
hold a Christmas Party tomorrow
evening from 8:30 to 1 p.m. at
Bossclla's on Cleveland Drive.

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plementary phrases, taking certain sections alone, and joining
together at some points as the
end: In the first movement it
was horns vs. oboes vs. strings:
in the second, oboes vs. high
strings vs. low strings and bassoons; etc. The horn work was
the most outstanding, especially
in a high solo in the third movement. The rest of the solo groups
were very competant. However,
the faster movements did not deliver that exquisitely delicate
tension of movement that is
Bach’s real greatness. PeHiaps
they were taken at the wrong
tempo, or perhaps those several
painfully weak entrances—which
should have been ironed out in
rehearsal
were at fault. The
fourth movement, the sectional
dance movement, came out the
—

best.

Britten’s Symphony for Collo
and Orchestra was written in
1963, dedicated to and premiered
by Mstislav Rostropovich in 1964.
The style is identified simply as
eclectic, but despite the variety
of compositional techniques used
in this work, there are several

constant principles:

Emphasis is on moving masses
(not individual countrapuntal lines) which build up
through several repetitions, climax, and are replaced by a new
idea or a new variation of the
old one. Meter is non-existant in
some places, regular in others,
depending on the thematic material which ranges from fragmentary motives to quasifplk

of sound

songs.

Tonality is a force fell throughout. Special instrumental effects
are an integral part of the idiom.
Britten's work is really more

than eclectic because his ideas,

although they stem from other
styles form a unique school of
composition into which many
others can find a place. (Prokofieff’s Cello

Concerto,

for in-

stance, can be seen as an earlier
entrant in the school; it has simpler, more sustained ideas but

shares

much with the Britten
The composition seemed
like an old standard to Mr, Rostropvich; his playing was virtuesic in the sense that he semed to
understand and anticipate every
nuance, and it helped immeasurably to sell the piece. After several minutes of applause, he encored with Bach's Sarabando in
work.)

E Minor.

Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony
can probably also be seen as in
the line leading to Britten, but
his work is eclectic in a more
obvious sense. Although his sections arc organized better thematically, they arc stylistically
different. For instance, the first
movement has a fairly dissonant,
st ro n g • rhythmed introduction
which sounds like a modern
Beethoven, followed by a string
melody and accompaniment in
simple harmony which could have
been written by Max Steiner.

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December 10, 1965

Friday,

SPECTRUM

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BASKETBALL
(Cont’d from P. 11)
student body to attend the games.
If the team receives the sparse

support if had last year, this will
the last year of any name
teams on the basketball schedule
until the new campus opens.
If the team does receive the

be

support it deserves, however, a
bright future in the Aud lies
ahead. For the past few years

almost all the Saturday night
doubleheaders at the Aud have
slated Canisius and St. Bonaventure against topflight national
basketball powers. Next year,
however. St. Bonaventure will
have completed its multi-million
dollar fieldhouse and will be
playing only four or five games
at the Aud.
This leaves the door wide open
for the Bulls, but you, the student, hold the key to this door
hinged on the future of UB basketball. If the turnout at the
Penn Slate game doesn’t show
considerable improvement, the
Nittany Lions will be forced to
sever basketball relations with
UB for financial reasons. And this
story will be rewritten with the
other name teams on the UB And
schedule if the attendance con
linues to lag.
Consequently if the Bulls have
no name teams left interested
in playing them. Canisius will
simply look for another way to
fill the gap. The Griffins could
use their freshman in a preliminary or, if forced to. play alone
rather than split profits with a
team that could only add a couple
thousand fans, whereas Canisius
can draw 8,000 by itself anyway.
On the other hand the Bulls
would not only maintain but also
improve upon their schedule if
they could guarantee a respectable turnout. Under these conditions national name teams would
be just as willing to play UB as
Canisius would be to have the
Bulls on their Saturday evening
twinbills.
Canisius coach Bob MacKinnon
summarized the Aud situation by
saying, “I realize there have been
certain problems such as exams
in getting attendance at the Aud
in the past-less than 1,500 tickets
were sold by the UB ticket office

.

tactics brilliantly, the Bulls held
their own the entire way before

.

for each game—but if a school
wants national recognition, it has

to start from the Support of the
student body. Maybe it's the fact
that we are only a one-sport
school why we can got solid student support for our games, hut
UB, an excellently-coached team

with great records the past few
years, deserves much more sup-

port than they’ve been getting.
Since St. Bonaventure will only
be playing four or five doubleheaders at the Aud next year,
there should be a number of
dates—although I don't have the
exact figure-offered lo UB providing they don’t have scheduling
problems on those dates.”

Penn State is probably the out
standing team on the UB schedule
this year. Returning from lust
year’s 204 team, which copped
13 in a row before being bounced
from the NCAA Eastern Regional
by Bill Bradley and Princeton,
60 58, are 6’ 4” pogo stick Carver
Clinton, 6’ 9" Paul Mickey, 6’ 5"
Ray Saunders and 6’ 1” guards
Jim Reed and Jerry Roseboro.
6’ 3” sophomore Jeff Persson is
also making a determined bid at
cracking the starting lineup. In
their only two outings before the
upcoming UB clash, the Nittany
Lions have taken measure of
Maryland, 65-61, and Gettysburg.
81-63. Rated in the AP Top 20
in pro-season polls above such
Eastern powerhouses as Syracuse
and Cornell, John Egli’s quintet
will be the commanding favorite
against

the Bulls.

You say then, Henry, why
should go to watch the massacre?
First you should be informed of
a similar situation that occurred
two years ago when UB. returning from a pasting at the hands
of Syracuse, faced Villanova at
the Aud. At the time the Wild-

bowing, 56-54.

The fans that did turn out ccr
tainly didn’t feel as if they had
wasted an evening, for they had
cheered for their school nearly
upsetting a national headliner,
not running some unknown team
into the floor.

Only by attending will you be
able to see if lightning strikes
twice. And if it doesn’t you’ll be
seeing one of the top teams in
the East in action, while helping
the future of UB basketball.

Bulls. For the thousand or so diehards that did go to watch the
slaughter, the game turned into
the most exciting the Bulls have
played in many years. Employing Coach Serfustini’s hall-control

“Well, I’m glad that at least
you see the light”, beamed Ron,
“but what are you doing with the
balls?”
Henry smiled smugly and replied, “I’m moving them to an
untorn table where we can start
over. I don’t think you’ll scratch
again.”

you’d prefer seeing “King Kong
vs. Godzilla” to “The Sound of
Musig”? Could you imagine what
the team’s chances of winning
were if they pranced around the
lloor all night and tossed haphazard 40-foot hook shots through
the rafters for color effects. A
team averaging 6’6” might get

Students interested in
applying for Editor of the
NEW STUDENT REVIEW, should contact Harriet Heitlinger ext. 2765
or leave their names in
Room 502 Norton. Deadline for the applications
is Wednesday, December
15.

away with it, but not a team as
compact as the Bulls. And fans
do attend in hopes of seeing their

CaUBoard
Graduate Student Association
The Graduate Student Association extends an invitation to all
graduate students
and their
guests to attend the Annual Graduate Student Holiday Buffet, Friday, December 17, at 7:30 p.m.
in Room 240 Norton. They will
also hold holiday coffee hours,
December 20 through 22 in the
G.S.A. Lounge, Room 356 Norton.

�

�

All

by today. If not, it will be for-

feited.

�

i!r’

�

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
The Photography Club will
have a meeting today, in Room
266 Norton at 4 p.m.

Barbara Barrie and Bernie Hamilton

team win.

�

SKI CLUB
lesson money must be paid

in

"One Potator Two Potato"

Henry, it seems as if your antischedule and anti-Scrfustini views
weren't justified. You can take
a 20-minute bus ride, see UB
play a national powerhouse (all
for free) and not only enjoy yourself. but also give the UB basketball future a much-needed shot

NORTON CONFERENCE THEATRE
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As Henry was about to resume
shooting after being inforced of
the true situation, Ron asked, “So,
arc you going to the game?”

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While gathering the balls from
the table and putting them in a
tray, Henry responded, “Sure I'm
going, but if most of the other

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students are as ignorant as I was
about the situation, I don't see
how we’re going to get any drastic attendance improvement.”

Well, Henry, you say your last
complaint is that you don’t like
Coach Serfustini’s slow, deliberate type of game. You also say

cats, featuring Wally
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�Friday, Decamber 10, 1965

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

A Sort of a Preview Or
Pennsylvania Plays Bulls?

z

—

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
A stoic yawn lined Henry’s lips

as he stood in the Norton pool
hall leaning on his cue. Henry’s
friend, Ron, crouched patiently

over the far end of the table,

squinting to see if the seven-ball
really was dead.
While weighting the evidence
presented on the table as to

which shot to take, Ron mumbled
in Henry’s general direction,
“Going to the Penn State game

HOCKEY

.

.

.

10-3-1 squad. Cohen canned two
goals and wingers Jim McKowne
and Mike Walh also tallied for the
Bulls. Another rookie, Lenny DePrima, contributed two assists to
the cause. Veterans Bill Savage
and Hannah were the other UB
goal-getters. Special praise must
also go to the rookie goalie Bill
“Bumper” Fuge who played an
exceptional game under very difficult conditions. Fuge turned
away 25 enemy shots and was
under constant pressure as the
abundance of Buffalo penalties
left his teammates short-handed
through much of the game.
The surprising showing by Canton makes it look like it will be a
tight race down to the wire in
the Finger Lakes this season. As
many as five teams, UB, Canton,
Oswego, Ithaca and R.I.T, have
a shot at the title. This is only

the Northmen’s second year of
competition and they
skated with much hockey savvy
and skill. Outstanding for them
was Ernie Hough who many Buffalo players remember from last
year when he played for the champion Oswego six. He got one goal
and three assists in a losing cause.
Teammate John Wells also showed
much promise as he amassed a
goal and two assists. The Bulls
should have their hands full again
tomorrow when they travel to
Canton to close out the homeand-home series. Tech had 72
shots on goal against Brockport
and the game there could have
been more of a rout if not for the
fact that the Brockport goalie is
also the back-up goalie for the
varsity

at the Auditorium next Tuesday?"
Henry hesitated a moment, as
if taken by complete surprise by
this query, took the last puff
from his cigarette and then remarked with astounding confidence, “I’m not sure. Are they
playing Canisius or the Bonnies?”
Just as Ron was about to stroke
the cue ball, he suddenly lurched

forward, missed the ball and put
a seven-inch gash in the red felt.
Grinning arrogantly at Ron’s
apparent failure, Henry strode to
(Cont’d

from P,

12)

Rochester Americans of the American Hockey League.
The Ice Bulls next home game
will be next Tuesday, the 14th,
against Oswego State, Don’t miss
it, it could be a preview of the
championship game. Last year the
Bulls were the only team to dc
feat State. Game time is 10 p.m,
at the Amherst Arena. Admission
is free for students upon presentation of an ID card.
Bulls
PIERRE PUCK SAYS
travelled to Rochester last Wednesday to do battle with archrival R.I.T. Since the paper goes
to press before the results of that
game are in, you can read about
it in Tuesday’s edition of the
paper . . . Co-captain A1 Moorehouse threw out his bad shoulder
again in the second period after
a particularly hard cheek at the
red line, but it was snapped back
into place and he awarded a very
rare penalty shot at 8:48 of second period when a Canton player
was penalized for throwing his
stick to block a shot on goal.
Speedster Jim Bausch did the honors for the Bulls but his sizzling
shot hit the left post. UB led 5-2
at the time and that goal could
have put the game on ice . . . Buf
falo protested Canton’s second
goal, claiming that a whistle had
been blown before the score, but
to no avail . . . Don’t tell anyone,
but there are some big games in
the works for later in the season.
Possibilities are Eastern hockey
powers Colgate and Penn and a
—

surprise Mid-Western powerhouse
that is also very well respected in
college football circles.

the table, ignoring Ron’s piercing
black eyes.
As Henry was scrutinizing the
angle he would have to negotiate
to bank the 14-ball over the slash
in the cloth, Ron defiantly slammed his cue down to further
abuse the battered table.
“You can’t be serious about
that." Ron said heatedly.
“About what?" Henry replied
innocently as he toyed with the
table-scorer in front of him,
"You really don't know that
UB. the school you go to. plays
Penn State Tuesday?" barked
Ron.
"You know I don't follow a
team with a crummy schedule
like that," Henry rebuked selfassurcdly as he nervously fumbled
for a pack of cigarettes in his

shirt pocket.

“Crummy schedule!” Kon
howled, raising his hands skyward, “whop was the last time
you looked at the schedule?”
"Well, last year . .
“Last year! That’s what I figured," Ron retaliated. “Things
are different this year with
Syracuse, Penn State, Cornell and
a bunch of other classy teams on

the schedule.”
“Really?" asked Henry in sheer
bewilderment.
Really, Henry, it’s true: UB
has
revemped its basketball
schedule to the point where you
can no longer gripe about it.
Along with Syracuse, Penn State
and Cornell, UB has also added
Bucknell, San Francisco State,
Akron, Northern Illinois and
Kent State to its season schedule.
The Bulls have also retained
Colgate, Niagara and Rochester
from last year to give UB as
stiff, but also as attractive, a
schedule as it has ever had.
the dungeon—like con-

Since

fnies

of Clark Gym limit the
and respiratory capecities of the players as well as
the financial support that many
of the “name” teams demand, the
Bulls will be playing six of their
games at roomy Memorial Auditorium where free buses will be
available to lake UB students for
the twenty-minute ride.
Tuesday's game is crucial in
many aspects, the most important
eyesight

of which the student body will

be responsible for attendance. If
the Bulls are to maintain the
name teams on their schedule in
the future at the Aud-for Clark
Gym will not accommodate these
teams—it is indispensable for the
(Cont'd. on P. 10;

Viewpoint

-

/)

Ballad of a
Track Man
By GLENN CUNNINGHAM
When such popular sports as
football and basketball have to
beat the drums loudly to attract
students to their games, it isn’t
hard to figure out the size of the
crowds which flock to such less
glamorous sports as track and
cross country. The only time that
the spectators outnumbered the
competitors in a trackmcet at the
U. of Buffalo, someone had
spread a rumor that the UB team
v/as permitting coeds to compete
and that a former Miss January
was excelling in the broadjump.
Some quite seasoned runners have
told me that at those rare occasions when they competed in a
regional meet and a few thousand
people had gathered in the stands,
they were almost immobilized by
the unexpected and unaccustomed

presence of so many strangers at
what is often considered a private
rite attended only by a small
handful of friends' and members
of the family.
However, trackmen, being indi-

vidualists and stoics who must
learn to live with a whole host of
subtle mental and physical tor

lures,

never complain

about the

relative anonymity that surrounds
their efforts and are often completely satisfied by the
of their own efforts.

success

As Robert Frost once said, the
essence of the whole thing is to
surpass the performance of your
former self, and while cheering
friends and hysterical admirers
certainly provide encouragement,
the victories and defeats of most
runners arc lonely and intensely
personal.

The one thing that does bother
a track man, and those at UB in
particular, is the feeling among
"outsiders" that the fraternity is
exclusive and that it takes an un
usual type of person to belong.
Neither sentiment is true. To the
contrary, most of those men who
have become hopelessly addicted
to running on muddy cinders in
short pants in a driving rain with
the temperature hovering around
freezing, are convinced that they
have found the only answer to
some of the ultimate questions of
life and existence (although they
would not care to express it in the
presumptuous literary style I’m
employing). And, although the

quest and its rewards are indeed
individual and personal, they are
available for more people than
might realize it themselves. In
you
other words, why not try it
might like it.
—

The kind of spirit and total involvement that is typical among
members of the track team is expressed in a letter from Larry
Elsie, the Captain of the team, to
the Sports Editor of the Spectrum.
Elsie is a genial, no-nonsense sort
of guy who is a natural athlete.
He's a pretty good handball player. a tough man with a cue-stick,
and so on, but one of the reasons
he isn't a champion at anything
else is his nearly fanatical dedication to track. His letter, which
follows, is straight forward and
direct in its approach, and speaks
for the attitude of the man:
“Track Coach Emery Fisher is
attempting a rebuilding program
for this year's outdoor campaign.
By initiating an extensive indoor
schedule, he hopes to get the
jump on the outdoor season.
Weather conditions are so bad in
Buffalo for so long into the
spring that it isn't possible to
work hard in April to make up
for a missed winter season. There
will be five collegiate sponsored
indoor meets and two sponsored
by the Canadian AAU to beef up
the ovef-all dual-meet schedule.

Any athletes who can run
(sprints, middle distance, distance)
or participate in any of the field
events (shot, discus, jumps, polevault) arc desperately needed to
build a winning team.
If you arc interested in competing, regardless of any previous
experience, we urge you to attend
a preliminary meeting of candidates on Monday. December 13,
in Room 35, Clark Gymnasium,
at 4 00 p in.
Carry Elsie,
Captain
I know Coach Fisher. He is a
whimsical and witty man
who is worth working with There
is practically no pressure of any
kind from the outside. Everyone
who shows up makes the squad.
Give Emery Fisher some of your
time and you can have all of his.
If you’re looking for a way avoid
getting flabby this winter and
would like to do something hard
that will pay you for your effort,
come to that meeting and see what
Elsie has to say.
warm,

WBFO Broadcasts
Basketball Games
WBFO will continue coverage
of home and away UB basketball

as Sports Director Wally Blatter
and Jack Karaszewski follow the
Bulls in their game against the
Albany Beds. The pre-game show
begins at 8:15 p m. with the live

and exclusive play by play to
start at 8:30 pm.
Remember this Saturday’s basketball game. Albany versus Buffalo over WBFO FM 88.7, AM 780.

su

575 MAIN ST.

Frc« Parking

in Raar

854-2211

Main Street in Snyder
opon «v«ry ovoning

'til

Chmtmjs

�Friday, December 10, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

*laujssa
=4

-&lt;f

§ip®iasi* S
iA

A=

Herd Tramples Northmen 7-6
Come from Behind Victory
In CT.'s Premiere Season

The UB hockey team started its
196566 season off on the rij»ht
foot with a 7-6 come from behind
victory over Canton Tech. Star UB
defenseman Kevin McCullough,
playing in his first game for the
Herd, scored the winning goal
with barely two minutes left in
the last period.
The Northmen were an unknown element as this is their
premiere season in the Finger

State the previous evening had
been no fluke, as they came back
from a 5-2 deficit midway through
the second period to take a 6-5
lead with eleven minutes gone in

—

falo.

the final stanza of play. They
made full use of their power play

also honored as the basketball
athlete of the year by Western
New York Knights of Columbus.
Tune in WBFO for first coverage
of all UB Sports.

Play Auditions
Auditions are being held for
"The Threepenny Opera" Sun
day, Monday and Tuesday in Norton: Sunday at 7:30 in Room 333,
Monday from 4 to 6 p.m. in
Room 333 and 7:30 p.m. in Room
266 and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 333.
“Threepenny Opera" is being
staged by Henry A. Wicke, Jr.
Directing Kurt Weill’s score will
be Buell Niedlinger, a member
of the Creative Associates. The
production will be designed by
Boris Baranovic. A production
and stage crew is also being
formed.
All students who would like
to sing, dance or act are eligible
to try out for the cast of 25. For
further information contact Rosalind Jarrett, Clement Hall.

The film TRIUMPH
FOR THE WILL will he
shown Monday, December
13 in Diefendorf 148. The
film will lie followed by
a lecture given by Professor Nemming, a Third
Reich historian from Buffalo Slate. Admission is
free and refreshments will
be served after the film.
Please check poster in Norton in case of room change.

A sensational individual performance by Dave Bing, Syracuse
University’s All-American, coupled with a great overall team effort, enabled Syracuse to completely demolish the Gagers from
UB, A 43 point output by Bing
drew a comment from Dr, Serfustini that any ballplayer in the
nation would envy. He said that
Bing showed him as fine a demonstration of individual basketball
brilliance that he has ever seen—comparing favorably with Bill
Bradley’s performance in the
NCAA tourney last year.

—

sociation, but they showed that
their 9-2 shellacking of Brockport

Harvey Poe, UB's All-American
guard from West Orange, New
Jersey, will be the feature guest
on Wally Blatter s SPORTS TALK
tonight at 5:50 p.m. The interview can be heard over WBFO
FM at 88.7mc or WBFO AM closed
circuit to UB residence halls at
780kc. Poe, a senior, has led the
Bulls in scoring for the first two
games this year. Last season for
his play in the NCAA Mid-Eastern
Rcgionals, he was voted to the
all tournament team. The Bulls’
highest scorer of a year ago was

MIKE DOLAN

It was a combination of too
resulting in commuch height
plete board dominance by SU, a
full court press for the entire
game
which took its toll in the
second half and too many fouls
that resulted in such a devastating defeat for the Bulls from Buf-

bakes Intercollegiate Hockey As-

Guest on WBFO

By

Victorious leers in Action
attack as the Bulls were hit with
a rash of penalties. The home
team totaled 24 minutes in the
penalty cooler while Canton had

but half that total.
But when Canton started piling
up their penalty minutes it proved
very costly to them. With the

Northmen holding onto their slim
one goal edge midway through
period three, two Tech players
were caught holding within 30

seconds of each other and suddenly the Bulls had the opportunity that they had been looking
for. Coach Hannah sent, in his
speediest forwards and with the
two man advantage, they worked
the power play to perfection. Defensive captain Tom Robertson
brought the puck up along the
left-hand boards and passed to
Day Hannah Jr. just beyond the
blue line. Hannah skated straight
for the right hand corner of the
goal( faked a shot and passed to
Fred Cohen the other wing who
had stationed himself in front of
the net. Cohen slapped in the
puck for his second score of the

night and thus knotted the con
test at 6 6.
Tris set the stage for McCullough. Kevin, who transferred
here after playing for Harvard,
had distinguished himself the entire evening on defense as he personally broke up two Canton scoring opportunities and was instrumental in killing time for the
numerous UB penalties. But his
moment of glory came with only
2:04 showing on the clock and
the score still all-even. He picked
up the puck after a face-off deep
in Canton ice and blasted a low
line drive at the Northmen cage.
Canton goalie Mark Dougherty
was screened from the play by
one of his own teammates and
valiantly lunged in the direction
of the puck. But the black rubber disc went by his outstretched
leg and Buffalo had its first vic-

tory of the year.
First year men carried the load
for the Bulls as they helped Coach
Hannah forget the loss of four
All-League players that June graduation robbed from last year’s
(Cont’d. on P. 11)

"One Potato, Two Potato"
NORTON CONFERENCE THEATRE
SUN.

—

MON.

—

TUES.

There was some sparkling play
by Bill Barth, Harvey Poe, and
Artie Walker along with Goldstein but it just wasn’t consistent
enough to mount any steady offense.

SU gained control of the opening tap and the quick surge by
Bing and pair of foul points by
Dean gave the Orange an 8 to 2
lead. With Walker coming fast
with a pair of foul points and a
field goal the score was narrowed
to an 8 to 4 margin.

At this point, Syracuse applied its full court press that it
was to utilize for the remainder
of the game and the results were
immediate. Bing stole the ball on
two different occasions and both
led to scores. Walker contributed
with another pair of foul points
as did Bill Barth, and the score
stood at 20-13. After a long jump

shot by Bing, making the score
22-13, the All-American from
Washington, D. D., sat out the remainder of the half. For the remainder of the first half SU slowly drew away from UB and by
the end they held a 49-33 halftime
advantage.

Because of the good first half
showing, UB fans voiced an air of
optimism about the coming second half. However, this was quickly vanished when the Orange
Gagers took to the court for the
last half. Quickly they managed
to pour in ten of their first eleven

shots from the field, took advantage of several UB errors and before the Bulls knew what was happening, they found themselves on
the short end of a 65-35 score.
Syracuse continued to mount
the score and apply pressure and
held a 30 point advantage when
coach Serfustini was called for a
technical foul when he disputed
an official’s decision. It seems
that everything bad happened to
the Bulls in the second half. Culberg
who was guarding Bing,
fouled out and from here on in
it was all Bing.
—

Bing had left the game with a
minute to go and 39 points, when
it was discovered that he had a
possibility of breaking the Manley
Field House record of 41 points.
So Fred Lewis, the SU coach, decided to put him back in the
game. No sooner was Bing back
in the game but, with a tap-in
and a drive there was a new rec43. The crowd of 5,700 went
ord
wild with jubilation.
—

Dr. Serfustini was a little disappointed in the team’s performance observing that, “Syracuse
has a fine team and really gave
us a bad beating, but I’m looking
forward to playing them at Buf-

falo in the years to come.”

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                    <text>—

PLAYS

,
,

1

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

B

(See Page 6)

Performance of
Purlie Victorious'
Dec. 8 in Norton
Benefit performances of “Pura p„ v by Ossie
Davis, will be given lor the Free
Southern Theater December 8,
9, and 10 in the Millard Fillmore
Room of Norton Union. The play
is being produced by Mr. Robert Costley, member of the Free
Southern Theater.

lie Victorious,”

Mr. Costley is a native Buffalonian, who is playing the lead
role in “Purlie Victorious,” as
well as producing it. Mr. Fred
Keller, owner of the Circle Art
and the Glen Art Theaters is •directing the play. Actors are citizens of Buffalo, not necessarily
actors by profession, who volunteered to perform in the play.

Tickets are being sold in the
Norton Ticket Office at $1.00 for
students, $1.50 for faculty members, and $2.50 general admission.

The Free Southern Theater
consists of 21 professional actors
who carry the theater into areas
of the South which are culturally
deprived. It is now in its third
season. It was originally created
by Mr. John O’Neill and Mr. Gilbert Moses as a workship at

Tougaloo College near Jackson,
Mississippi. The FST formed its
first company in 1963 and went
on tour with “In White America.” Now, for the 1965 season,
the company is beginning a tour

of six states—Louisiana, Missis
sippi, Arkansas, Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee.

Mr. Costley will return to Buffalo in late January to produce
“Blood Knot,” by Athol Fugard.

Stanford U. Dept
Gives Scholarship
Stanford

AFRICAN

H—Hl|

Pa «e

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965

VOLUME 16

The

\*

L

University

De-

partment of Communication is
now receiving applications for

graduate scholarships for the
1966-67 academic year. The awards
carry stipends from $1,575 to
$4,575.
Approximately 25 scholarships
—more than double the number

last year—are available for students preparing for careers in
editorial journalism, mass communications research and broadcasting and film. These are
&gt;

grants, not assistantships. No serv-

ice is required of recipients.
The increased number of awards
is due to a $975,000 grant to the
department made by the Ford
Foundation. Part of this grant
will provide 12 National Honors
Fellowships carrying stipends of
$4,575. These are reserved for
students who demonstrate a
strong interest in newspaper and
broadcast journalism, and are for
A.M, candidates only.
In addition to its long-established A.M. and Ph D, programs,
the Department of Communication
now offers a Ph.D., in Public Affairs Communication. This degree combines study and research
in mass communications with
study and research in politics,
economics, and history.
Requests for particulars should
be addressed to the Executive
Head, Department of Communication, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305. January
15 is the deadline for applications.
In addition to these awards, the
department also appoints some
research assistants.

Barnett Cites Chinese Inconsistencies
By RONNIE BROMBERG

A. Doak Barnett, Professor of
Government at Columbia University and an expert on China,
discussed “China and her Asian
Neighbors,” Friday, December 3
at 3 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room. Mr. Barnett was the
first of three speakers in a series of lectures sponsored by the
Convocations Committee of the
Student Senate and the International Club.
Mr. Barnett spoke of the apparent inconsistencies in Chinese
policy, which can only be ex-

plained by the Chinese view of

the outside world and the overall
strategy employed.
Twenty years ago, China was
power vacuum, preoccupied
with internal problems; today she
exerts a growing influence on
Asia and the international community as a whole. Her policies
toward Asian nations are varied
and flexible. By her methods,
China hopes to weaken and elima

inate the influence of both
U. S. and the Soviet Union.

the

The leaders of China view the
outside world in a number of
different ways. In the first place,
they are intensely nationalistic
Chinese, desiring to achieve great

A. DOAK BARNETT
power status. They are also dedi-

cated, militant Chinese revolu
tionaries, who see themselves as
the “truest of the true believers.”
At the same time, the leaders
are experienced, pragmatic political leaders.

Mao Tse Tung has stressed
the need to formulate concepts

Frosh Council Sells Blazers,
Collects Clothes For Children
try

The Freshman Class Council
Tuesday, November 30, to
discuss their sale of Rollins Blaz
ers and plans for the Winter Week
clothing drive.
The blazers are navy blue with
the UB insignia hand-embroidered
on the pocket. Orders can be
placed in the clothing department
of the book-store December 3
through 5 or December 7 through
10. “We hope to start a tradition
on this campus with the blazers,”
stated Charles Zeldner. “They not
only are good looking, but will
serve as a momentum of college
long after our graduation.”
In conjunction with Winter
Week a clothing drive is being
sponsored for the children of the
Buffalo State Hospital. Starting
Wednesday, November 8, boxes to
be used as receptacles for clothing and stuffed animals will be set
up in the dormitories and Norton

met

Union.

Morleen Spielman, chairman of
charity for Winter Week, remarked after visiting the hospital last
Monday, “There is a need for
stockings
clothing, shoes, nylon

and any type of childrens
goods. The children of the hospital range in age from 5-15, Com
muters can help by bringing old
clothing of their brothers and sisters to school. Residents who have

sewing a stuffed
time, might
animal or yarn doll, both of which
are easy to make. Old clothing
can be used by the teenagers or
adults of the hospital.
The committee will be visiting
the hopsital to present the articles
and to have a party for the children. Anyone who plays an instrument, sings, etc, and wishes
to help, should contact Morleen

Spielman (877-7568) or Sharon
Roth (831-2258).
“These items are desperately
needed,” commented Miss Spielman. "Dr. Beghennini, psychiatrist for children, was very much
in favor of the drive. We appeal
to the whole student body to co-

operate.”

YAF to Debate
SDS on Dec. 7;
Topic, Viet-Nam

of grand strategy, by analyzing
the potential balance of forces.
There have been different views
of the world situation, from a
view of the world in simple black
The Young Americans for
and white terms to a recognition Freedom announced at their
of the many non-aligned coun December 3 meeting that they
tries which must be neutralized will sponsor a debate with memand disassociated from the West. bers of the Students for DemoHe called for more militant accratic Society on December 7. The
tion in 1958. In 1960, as a result Topic will be: “Resolved: The
non-support
of
of
the Soviet United States Should Remain in
Union and internal weaknesses Vietnam." Steve Sickler, Presiwas
and problems, China
unable dent of YAF, and Renata Wolyto carry out in practice the stranec will take the affirmative positegies she pursued.
tion.
Members of the group disIn the last few years, China has cussed the YAF support of the
been forced to recognize the U. S. commitment in Vietnam.
world as increasingly polyeentric
YAF, a nationwide organization
and herself as relatively weak with a membership of 40,000,
passed a resolution at the nationand isolated from the two superal convention last August, callpowers.
ing for the “commitment of adequate numbers of ground troops
China has adopted a militant
to combat guerrillas now active
line toward the more distant in South Vietnam." saying that
areas, where there is the least “this nation is required by moral
risk involved. However, in areas considerations of the highest
order to come to the aid of the
closer to home, she must conpeople of South Vietnam and
sider the risks of direct involveother countries of southeast Asia
ment. Peking’s leaders will conin their defense against aggrestinue to expand Chinese influsion." It was resolved that YAF
ence, but whatever the broad support the commitment of the
U. S. in Vietnam.
strategy, on the tactical level,
YAF is interested in the decenthey will continue to be highly tralization of power in the govpragmatic and flexible.
ernment. They believe in military preparedness and do not
think that unilateral disarmament
will keep the peace.

NCCJ Honors
Clifford Furnas
For Humanism

Dr. Carbonell
Killed in Accident

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas. PresiDr. Virginia Carbonell, assistdent of UB was honored by the ant professor of Anthropology at
Buffalo and Lockport Chapters the State University of New York
was killed in a three
of the Western New York Region at Buffalo
car collision Wednesday, Novemof the National Conference of
ber 24, on the New York State
Christian and Jews (NCCJ). The Thruway. a short distance cast of
the Village of Herkimer.
awards banquet was held DecemDr. Carbonell was driving alone
ber 1st at the Statler Hilton Hoto New York City to visit some
tel.
friends for the holiday weekend.
There were three people in
with
Furnas,
accordance
in
Dr.
each of the other two cars. One
the criteria for National Awards other man was killed and two perconferred by the NCCJ, was hon
sons were injured.
ored for his...distinguished servDr. Carbonell received the
ice, nationally and locally as Mosby Book Award for General
Excellence in 1953. She was a
well as internationally, to the
member of several organizations
fields of education and science.
including the International Association for Dental Research, the
American Association of Physical
Anthropology, and the Illinois
Medical Research Society.
candidates, and a coffee hour to
Dr. James E. Anderson will
enable the student body to meet teach Dr. Carbonell's classes for
in
people
competing
seven
the
the remainder of the semester.
the Mr. Formal Contest. The
An instructor to teach the classes
prebe
will
of
the
contest
winner
second semester will be anat
the
Siltrophy
with
a
sented
nounced.
ver Ball, Saturday, December 18.

Winter Week Dec. 12-18
Winter Week will take place
from December 12th through December 18th this year. Many activities ha&gt;-. been planned bv
Chairmen Jerry Dade and Ste-

pnanie Sacks.

(used)

On Sunday, December 12 the
Winter Fantasia” will present
a snow sculpture competition, a

motorcade for the Mr. Formal

Flanigan Reads Poetry

In Clement Hall Series

Last Thursday evening, the Clement Hall Cultural Committee
series
sponsored the first of a
of readings and lectures. Mike
Flanigan, a 23 year old poet, read
his work, Song of Sylvio.
Mr. Flanigan came to Buffalo
of Mansfrom the prairie town
field, Illinois to study with the
to
writers and poets of UB. Prior
wrote
his arrival in Buffalo, he poc
and illustrated two books of
try, Autumn Children and Trouof
bador. His latest work, Song

NO. 15

book-length poem,
written in the style of fantasyreality images, using “Mother
Goose” metaphors.
As he stated in his author’s
note, “There is a rhyme in na
ture and if God give me time.
I’ll go back home to nature and
man's ancestral rhyme.”
Sylvie, is a

a
He concluded
portion of an A. Ginsberg poem,
Howl and discussed the problem
of communication between the
poet and the people.

by

reading

Winter Week will also include
a mixer featuring "The Maniacs"
Tuesday, December 14 and a
Carnival and Free Night Thursday, December 16, when free
bowling and pool games will be
available. A tobogganing party
has been planned for December
17 at Chestnut Ridge Park, and
a
Student Faculty
Game will take place in the eve
ning in Clark Gym.
A Charity Drive December 5
through December 18 will also

be part of the activities for Winter Week. Boxes to collect clothes
for the children at Buffalo State
Hospital will be put in Norton
and large residence halls. Another highlight of the activities
will be the movie Nothing But
A Moo which will be shown from
December 12 through December
14 in the Norton Conference Theatre,

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9
Wednesday, December 8,
Politics Club will present Pro,cssor Frank Re&lt;,ves of the How
University School of Law,
speaking on some of the legal
assets of the civil rights movement. In addition to teaching,
Prof. Reeves is a practicing civil
rights lawyer. He will give his
assessment of the relative effects
of litigation vs. mass demonstrations and discuss strategies emOn

.

_

.

ployed in selecting test cases and
fighting them through the courts.
The meeting will take place at 4
p m in Room 231 Norton Union.
Anyone interested

attend.

is invited

to

�7*~r

Editorial (Comment,

Paul Goodman

BROTHERHOOD SPEECH
Furnas
made a speech at the Statler Hilton
Dr.
Wednesday night accepting the National Brotherhood
Citation from the National Conference of Christians and
Jews in which he said a number of things which we were
very glad to hear.
The speech was interesting for a number of reasons,
among those being that it contained comments about
communism which grew out of a concern with the general
issue of human brotherhood, rather than any specific

incident. President Furnas suggested that the creation
of a world-wide middle class, in conjunction with the
expendature of America’s agricultural surplus to feed
the world’s hungry, as the program to defeat communism.
Dr. Furnas’ remarks included strong support for “a world
wide community of nations” founded on “the common
brotherhood of man.”
Although these ideas are far from new, it was significant that the President of our University chose to utter
them before the spot-light after a long public silence.
At moments, Dr. Furnas’ prose sounded like Westbrooke
Pegler at his worst, but the theme of his remarks was
drawn from Adlai Stevenson at his best: “the world is
too dangerous for anything but truth, too small for anything but brotherhood.”

It is gratifying to realize after the months of equivicating about the FSA and silence about other issues, that
this University has in Dr. Furnas a president who is concerned about the larger issues which confront us today
and who seeks creative and humane solutions to the
dilemma which threaten to erode our sense of the just
and leave us only with an appreciation of the expedient.

rsCetter

to

the Editor
were opposed to the

To tho Editor

speakers

over
broadcast
WBFO last Friday, which will be
rehearsed this week, was said to
be a discussion of the reapportionment amendment which failed
the Senate last week, which would
have removed the extreme overrepresentation of the smaller divisions as compared to University
College and Arts and Sciences,
and removed the dual-representation system which gives member
of certain groups, such as fraternities and religious clubs, extra

rector represented groups which

amendment. All but the News Di-

program

A

votes on the Senate.

The participants in this discussion were Senators from Education and Pharmacy, officers of-the
Inter-Fraternity Council and
Council of Religious Organizations, the News Director of
WBFO, and Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, advisor to the Senate. The
moderator who took an active
part in the discussion, is a candidate for Education Senator.
With the exception of Dr. Zimmerman and Miss From (who in
spite of her School of Education
and Union Board affiliations supported the amendment), all the

THE

would lose their extra representation on the Senate, if the
amendment were passed.
Neither the person who proposed the amendment (myself),
the seconder (Miss Brown), or
the other main speakers in favor
of it, such as Mr. Kim Darrow
and Mr. Carl Levine, were invited
to take part in this program. One
Senator who supported it, Mr,
Bruce Goldstein, was said to be
contacted but unable to participate. The moderator explained
that she was “too busy” to “run
around calling everyone.”

This is very irresponsible journalism. It's not very cricket to
use the air for an expression of
one’s own views, except in clearly
labeled editorials. Moreover, when
an innovation is proposed it is
usually not treated by presenting
only the case against it.
WBFO’s news and opinion coverage is usually quite good. I hope
this program is only a temporary
lapse.
Ellen Cardone
(Cont'd on

P.

7)

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Publication

weekly from
exam periods,

Editor-in-Chief

Managing

Business
News Editor

Asst

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor
Manager

RAYMOND VOLPE

SUSAN GREENE

Asst
Feature

Editor

Feature Editor

Acting Sports Editor
Layout Editor
Copy Editor

Tuesday, December 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

RONNIE BROMBERG
JOHN STINY

Continuity Editor

STEVE SCHUELEIN
SHARON

HONIG

LAUREN

JACOBS

EDWARD JOSCELYN
MARCIA ORSZULAK

Ad Co-ordinator

Circulation

JOANNE

EDITORIAL POLICY

Photography Editor

Faculty
Financial

GARY FISCHER

Manager

DIANE

Advisor

IRENE

Advisor

Leprechaun

DALLAS
RUSSELL

LEWIS

WILLET
GARBER

GOLDBERG

IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.

Subscription

10,000.

grACffvSMAt*

$3.00

per

year,

circulation

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave , New York, N. Y.

What is the meaning of the
word “Youth" when they say
“Youth revolt” or “What has
gotten into College Youth?” I
doubt that age 18-25 was ever
before referred to as Youth. In
a rural economy, the young are

indispensably productive by 12
and are grown-up farmers by 18
or 20.
In the old factory system, children were put to work at 9, to
teach them work habits; they
were certainly just “workmen”
by 18. In later factories, after the
child-labor laws, 18-year-olds were
young working people, not youth.
In agrarian or labor demonstra-

tions and strikes these young people would naturally be involved,
and especially relied on for their
courage and daring, like military
soldiers, who were also 17-25.
In countries with a different
academic tradition than ours, e.g,
Latin countries or Japan, it is
assumed that students are even
more mature than others of their
age, so they are expected to be
in the forefront of political conflicts. in 1900, when only six per-

cent of the 17-year-olds graduated
from high school, the rest, who
from 14 on had to choose vocations and look for jobs in a competitive market, were surely pretty seasoned by 18. And in moral
matters, there would surely be
no question of trying to control
the sex life, social life, or vices
of young people 18 to 25,
Arresting Maturation

I think (here are two chief

causes for the odd use of the

word at present. Because of technical developments, there is less
need for the direct productive use
of the young (and no use at all
for the old).
There is a longer and longer
interval in which the young must
be baby-sat and policed. Our preferred means of keeping them on
ice is, of course, to extend the
years of schooling, especially
since for many (though I doubt
for most) extended schooling is
useful training for their future
jobs. But it happens that the

methods and tradition of American schooling have tended precisely to arrest maturation.
Although compulsory schooling

increases to the college years, the
school-ma’am spirit of the elementary grades prevades the entire system, whether we think of
the corridor passes and censorship of hair-dos, the prescribed
courses and credits and grading,
the method of talking-at and assigning lessons, or the restrictions on political and social life.
Studying a cross-section of high
schools, Ed Friedenberg has to
conclude that their chief function
is to break spirit. And most important, the restriction of growing up in one sociological institution, the school, must be defeating to the majority for whom
formal schooling is not the best
way to learn.
i
But from the beginning they
have no choice. If a youngster
tries to follow his bent, whether
a “hobby” or a romance, he is
unhesitatingly interrupted and
put back on the one serious track.
The inevitable revolt against
this servitude is now occurring
among college students, undergraduates, graduates, young instructors, and their dropout
friends. And it seems to me that,
among these too, there is a curious anomaly of language.
The dissenting students do not
really regard
themselves as
“young people,” whether as young
workmen or young citizens or
even as students; they finally regard themselves as the only
people. This is expressed by the
formula “Do not trust anybody
over 30.” That is, they are a separate race of humanity. Interestingly, 48 percent of the population is now below 26.

Chief Exploited Economic Class
The reality, in my opinion, is
that they have been forced into
the position of being an isolated class-of-the-young. They cannot identify with the social role
that their elders have assigned
them; they have different interests and there is a class conflict.

The Right
In its short life, this column has
perhaps already established somewhat of a record, namely that of
never once having mentioned the

word “Vietnam.” I have had noth-

ing to say about it mainly because
I had not completely made up
my mind about it.

It has been
certain all along that the U.S.
should stay there, but beyond that
point I left the tactical decisions

to those who knew all the facts.
Times change. I still don’t
know all the facts. Few people

do, and tew should. I still don’t
want to go out and lead the
First Cavalry Division, or go there
at all. Yet I now presuppose to
make recommendations.
In the first place, we should
declare war on North Vietnam.

We are Wiping out full regiments
of North Vietnamese regulars; we
are bombing targets all over that
country: we are raising draft
quotas and elimination deferments

Murder

a province differing in language,

laws and customs, the difficulties
to be overcome are great, and it
requires good fortune as well as
great industry to retain them; one
of the best and most certain
means of doing so would be for
the new ruler to take up resi(he then sugdence there . ,
gests the establishing of colonies
.”

selves. I have been told it, in
broadly the same outline, from

coast to coast.
First came the Beats. Castro
was our symbolic leader, but perhaps he has messed himself up
with the senile Power Structure.
Kennedy fizzled out, though since
the assassination he has emerged
as a martyr. The execution of
Chessman was a portentous warning to us, for it showed that the
System intends to do us to death.
We tried out* strength in Mississippi and in the battle of the
steps filmed by HUAC. Finally,
occurred the Founding Event,
Sproul Hall and the recognition
by the Faculty Senate that we

Exist.

(

A leader of the Free

Speech Movement at Berkeley
assured me that this was the first
Event in 40,000 years.) Etc., etc.
There are regional variations.
Along with the History, there
has developed the political theory
of para-movements: para-politics
(e.g. of SNCC and the Freedom
Democratic Party), para-sociology
(e.g. of Students for a Democratic
Society), para-education (e.g. the
free Universities).
In principal, this parallel development is not an old-fashioned
revolutionary concept, to get control of and transform existing institutions. Rather, it is a New
Beginning that will grow up
uniquely and slough off the old.
The spirit of the Modern!—“we
moderns”—has breathed a few
times before in European history;

I will try to describe it further
on another occasion.
Copyright Paul Goodman, 1965

By JAMES CALLAN

in a manner suggestive of fullscale war years; daily we step
up shipments of men and arms to
the Vietnamese Peninsula. Let’s
face it
we are at war and it
should be official.
In the second place, we should
fight war. We impose upon our—

For one, there seems to be some
rule against fighting on enemy
soil. We hear all about the trials
of war on the civilian South Vietnamese villager, while his northern counterpart lives on placidly or prepares for battle undisturbed, All we can expect from
this kind of war is a draw, and
the objective of any war should
be victory.
Another taboo—there are numerous areas of North Vietnam
merous sacrosanct areas of North
Vietnam that remain free from
bombing raids merely because
they are population centers. Now

of Gonzago

The fantastic Machiavellianism
of the Borgia court is almost surpassed by the daily machinations
of our own government.
It is unfortunate that Johnson,
Rusk, McNamara and Co. have
neither the political sophistication to study their master well
nor the courage to take his advice. In the Prince he writes, “But
when dominions are acquired in

Indeed, despite their being
pampered, they are at present
the chief exploited economic class
—their time of life being used
for other people’s purposes. (Negroes, displaced farmers, the aged
are out-caste, rather than an economic class.)
Rather than as a class of society, however, the young have
appointed themselves to be a distinct race or nation, and, correspondingly, they have performed
the remarkable act of having a
self-conscious History of them-

on a new dominion.) "For it must
be noted that men either be caressed or else annihilated; they
will revenge themselves for small
injuries but cannot do so for
great ones; the injury therefore
that we do to a man must be such
that we need not fear his vengeance. But by maintaining a
garrison instead of colonists, one
will spend much more, and consume all the revenues of the state
in guarding it, so that acquisition
will result in a loss, besides giving much greater offense, since
it injures everyone in that state
with the quartering of an armyon it; which being an inconvenience felt by all, everyone becomes
an enemy, and these are enemies
which can do mischief, as though

I don’t advocate killing for the
pure joy of it, but I do advocate
killing in the time of war if it
will help win the war. Did we
take a census of Hiroshima or

Hamburg two decades ago before
we bombed them? If our moral
inhibitions are so strong now,
where were they then? Hanoi and
Haiphong each contain targets of
vital war importance, but rather

than take the lives involved in
destroying these targets we postpone the war indefinitely and in
the long run lose many more lives
on both sides.
Look at the facts of the war.
The most industrially and militarily advanced nation in the world,
a country of 190 million people,
is at war with a tiny, backward
Asian country of 15 million people whose principal product is
rice. Any result other than total,
immediate victory for the U.S.
smells of fish.
By JOHN MEDWID

beaten, they remain in their
homes. In every way, therefore,
a garrison is as useless as colonies are useful” (Chapter 3
Of
Mixed Monarchies). Our halfhearted Machiavellianism
goes
on all over the world, notable
mainly for its lack of success in
promoting our own national interests. The recent adventure in
Santo Domingo is a case in point;
we invited ourselves into the
country, supported the military
junta against the followers of
—

Bosch (the first democratically
elected president in 38 years),
landed 21,000 U.S. troops, under
the guise of a “peacekeeping op
eration" considered an attack to
wipe out the rebel forces, and
(Cont’d

on P. 7)

�Tuesday, December 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

Gordon F. Campbell
On Christian Science

stated

that modern

plained the basic principles of

the faith. He told of the belief
of Christian Science that there is
“just one mind—God’s.”

Mr, Campbell is a graduate of
U.C.L.A., and was a First Reader
at the Mother Church.

inventions

standing of true science, for in
some ways they help to decrease
ignorance. He said that man can
use material things, but must
turn first to God.

In speaking of the application
of Christian Science to college
life, Mr. Campbell said that for
“Christian Science to be applied
to college life, one must first be
a Christian Scientist, then a college student.” He went on to say
that an important part of a college education is individual eval*
uation of all experience, which
requires standards higher than a
materialistic view of life.

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applications until Friday, December 10, according to their
programs to be offered

entation.

ART EXHIBIT FREE

/

a paper, “Typing of Metaphor by
Domain,” at a meeting of the
Linguistic Circle of Buffalo,
Thursday, December 9, at 8:15
p,m. in Room 344 Norton.

psycholinguistics). “Just-thoughtof” as well as finished works
are equally acceptable for pres-

COME VIEW OUR AFRICAN

(near Woodlawn)

English read a paper, “The
Metonymic Poem"; at the second, Professor H. L. Smith of
Anthropology and Linguistics and
Mrs. Betsy Hewitt, a graduate student in English presented a suprasegmental analysis of Frost’s
poem “The Most of It”; at the
third Dr. Newton Carver of Philosophy read a paper, “Sentence
Structure in Grammar, Logic,

J

Afro-Asian
Bookstore

Mr. Richard Abrams, a graduate student in English, will read

The Linguistic Circle of Buffalo was formed recently to provide a forum for the presentation and discussion of papers,
notes, and sketches in linguistics
and related fields (e.g., anthropology, applied mathematics, etymology, lexicography, literature,
philology, philosophy of language,

prepare the way for an under-

In discussing the power of prayer,he said that, if one can adopt
a spiritually scientific view of
all causation, things can occur
which are beyond the comprehension of the mortal mind; i.e., the
healing of wounds without medication. He told of a personal experience as a child, when he was
cut on a rock and, after turning
to prayer, the wound was healed.
“True prayer is learning to love
and to include all mankind in
one affection.”
Mr. Campbell told the history
of the Christian Science movement, the revelations of Mary
Baker Eddy, its founder, and ex-

Linguistic Circle of Buffalo European Studies
Hears Reading by Abrams Given Undergrads

s

Mr. Gordon F. Campbell, lecturer for the First Church of
Christ Scientist, spoke on Thursday night at the annual lecture
of the Christian Science organization on campus.
Mr. Campbell stated that the
scientific age has given us many
wonders, but that “we should
empty today’s wonders, and not
let them employ us.” He further

PAGE THREE

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SPECTRUM

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SPECTRUM

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�Three Penny Opera
Is Annual Musical
Presented In Baird
The arihualstudent musical this
year will be the "Threepenny Opera." the longest-running offBroadway musical. It will be presented in Baird Hall February
24 through 27 and March 3
through 6.

Written by Bertoldt Brecht, the
opera, based on “The Beggars'
Opera" by John Gay, was first
performed in Germany in 1928.
Beneath the surface gaiety, its
bitter cynicism reveals the social
discontent of a Germany on the
brink of Nazrism. As a result of
its political overtones, the play
was banned by Hitler.

Tryouts For "Orestes"
Today and Tomorrow

Try-outs on Monday and Wednesday will be hold from 7 to 9
p.m.; Tuesday readings will be
from 3 to 5 and 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Rehearsals will begin late in January and the play will be per-

formed in the Millard Fillmore
Room Norton Union, frdm March
9 through 12 and on tour during
the Easter vacation. The try-outs
arc open to any member of the
university community, faculty included. Early try-outs are being
held so that costumes can be con-

Sadie Hawkins Dance
In Goodyear East

The Social Committee of GoodKurt Weill’s songs and music year East House Council is sponare not the typical production, soring a Sadie Hawkins dance
numbers but are the musical exDecember 11 in the Goodyear
pression of the characters, story,
cafeteria.
and general comment. Most wideThe decoration theme is Dogly known is "The Ballad of Mack patch, U. S. A. There will be
the Knift.”
mock marriages by Marryin’ Sam.
Prizes will be awarded for the
The production will be staged best Dogpatch costumes. The Unby Director of Opera Produccalled Four, a UB group, will
tion and Design Hal A. Wicke,
provide rock and roll music, and
Jr., and will be under the musJim Wheeler, senior, will call
ical direction of Buell Neidlinger, square dances. Refreshments will
a member of the Creative Associbe served.
ates, in residence at the UB DeTickets will go on sale Department of Music. The production
cember 8 at Goodyear desk and
will be designed by Boris Baranin the Cafeterias. Prices of tickets
ovic.
are 25c per couple and 15c per
(

A cast of 25 including beggars,
thieves and women of ill repute, is
being sought. Auditions will be
held in Norton Room 330, Wednesday and Thursday, December 15
from 4 to 6 p.m., and 7:30 to 10
p.m., and Friday, December 17
at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone is eligible to sing,
dance, act and work on produc
tion. For further information contact Production Manager Rosalind Jarrett in Clement Hall,
iwxw:

person.

Attention!!
Attention!!
All Groups
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December 12-18
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structed well in advance of rehearsals.
The director of this production
of Orestes is Dr. William S. E.
Coleman, assistant professor of
Drama and Speech. Scripts for
reading are on reserve in Hardman Library.

Discussion of
Citizen Kane

CLASSIFIED

A discussion of Citizen Kane
took place Friday night, December 3, in the second floor lounge
of Norton Union. Guest speakers
were Mr. Bill Harrell, of the
sociology department, Mr. A1
Pam of the psychology department, and Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, assistant professor of phil-

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This applies to UB students
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I. H. O. P.
Tom Courtenay and Julie Christie

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NORTON CONFERENCE THEATRE
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

—

osophy.

The projected tour of the play
is not yet set, but it is hoped
that it will be performed at least
five times in five different theaters.

The calendar for the second semester is now being

compiled hy the Public Relations Committee of the
Union Board. It is imperative that we he informed
of each event that will be
taking place next semester
hy Wednesday, December
15, in order for it to appear in the Calendar. Details, including date, time,
and nature of the event,
must be placed in the Public Relations Committee’s
box in the Union Board office, Norton 215.

Dr. Zimmerman opened the discussion with a psychological interpretation of the film. He suggested that Rosebud, Citizen
Kane’s dying utterance, stood for
everything in life that he desired
but never could obtain.

Mr. Pam also gave a psychoanalysis. According to
him, Rosebud, which is essentially love, is sought in four ways:
with money, with power, from the
women he loved, and in the grand
palace he built to withdraw from
the world. The building of the
logical

palace represented a relinquishing of the hope of being (loved.

Mr. Harrell discussed the mbvie from a social and moral point
of view. He said that the movie
“boiled down to the relationship
of the individual to society, which
becomes threatening to us when
power is involved.”
After the initial hypotheses,
discussion was opened to the audience. Most of the comments
made referred to the ideas which
the guest speakers had made,

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�Tuesday, December 7, 1965

ejCetterA

SPECTRUM

the Editor

to
\

TO THE EDITOR;

\

Many of the UB students

not understand why Dr.

can-

Furnas

and his illustrious party guests
are given special privileges‘when
it comes to such things as parking in front of Goodyear Hall, and
going down the newly created
one-way street the wrong way.
They also fail to understand why
these laws are in effect.
Parking in front of Goodyear
is prohibited, because, in case of
fire, the trucks would not be able
to get through, and the one-way
street was established to prevent
bumper-to-bumper tie-ups.
Why can Dr. Furnas and his

guests break these laws? It’s simple! Tie-ups on the road and fires
on campus are prohibited during
the course of his parties.

Terri Marnor
TO

THE'

EDITOR;

I find it difficult to follow the
logic in John Boner’s rejoinder
to William C. Williams’ terrifyingly patriotic bit of automatism
(Spectrum, November 19, 1965).
Boner says, ‘1 am against this
present war to the very bottom
of my soul!” This statement is
preceded almost immediately by
. . were I
the "non-seqoitor,"
to be sent (to Vietnam) with my
unit tomorrow, I should hope to
perform my best.”
Why do even unpatriotic Americans find it necessary to violate

their “souls” in the name of

patriotism? It appears to me that

between Boner’s brand of dedication and Williams’ there is a difference only in degree (albeit
hdge) and not in kind; both follow the pernicious paths of nationalism to destruction and immorality. 1 suppose it is not
enough to denounce a cause in a
Student newspaper while furthering it in one’s work.
Now it may be that Boner’s
reply was intended to serve as
jan antidote against the stupid
jaceusation of cowardice levelled
lal the conscientious by the ignorant. Hopefully this is the case,
ind should his unit be sent to
Vienam tomorrow, he would follow his soul and not his country.
L. J. Beckman
TO

THE EDITOR:

I am probably old fashioned
and out of step with current fashions but I do believe in the old
adage “rank hath its privilege”
and I am therefore of the opinion
that faculty and staff should receive a twenty per cent discount
from the student bookstore. I do

not think that students and fac-

ulty in an academic community
are equals nor should they be
made so. I am frankly sick and
tired of students demanding privileges they have no right to have.
You must earn the privileges you
enjoy.
Jane Trager

Crisis in Southern Africa
By J. W. STINY

While the thirty-three new nations since 1955 and the three veteran independent nations
of
Egypt, Liberia, and Ethiopia get
on with the job of nation building, the southern fifth of the
African continent finds itself in
one major crisis after another.
The continually recurring crises
result mainly from relationships.
The minority group—some four
million Caucasians—are trying to
turn back the clocks of time and
progress as they attempt to
strengthen their hold over the
lives of some twenty million nonCaucasians.
Most white people admit that
majority rule will come eventually, but the minority in power
is trying to hold it back as long
as possible. Dr. Salazar of Lisbon
has said that Portugal will never
give up her “overseas provinces”
of Angola and Mozambique which
together measure some twentyfive times the size of metropolitan Portugal. Prime Minister of
Rhodesia, Ian Smith, now in his
forties, has stated that he does

not expect to see a black
ment during his

govern-

lifetime.

Dr.
Verwoerd of the Republic of
South Africa has evidenced no
change of heart in his determined policy of white domination.
The struggle is basically for independence, but it also becomes a
racial struggle because of the
composition of the two main
groups.

The new crisis in southern
Africa is the turning toward vio-

lence on the part of the nonCaucasians as the only way they
see left to them for achieving majority rule. This brings out the
use of more force on the part of
the ruling minority to maintain
"law and order.” The threatening
cloud of violence is growing and
may well take the form of a
devastating hurricane which could
make Viet Nam seem only an
April shower
by comparison.
Something needs to be done immediately to change the climatic
conditions.

Assistance from America and
other western nations is making
it possible for Portugal to maintain large armies in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea. Without
this material aid and moral support from the western nations,
Portugal could not continue to
suppress indefinitely the voice of
the majority group in her “overseas province.” She would be
forced to go to the conference
table. Through continued support for Portugal’s military operations, the American public becomes collaborators with a dictatorial regime which is repressing
the basic needs of fifteen milof the masses and insensitive to
lion Africans.
The economy of the Republic
of South Africa is also currently
very sound. This is largely due
to private and corporation investments from America and England. Talking with an American
churchman, a government official in the Republic of South
Africa confessed, “So long as
the banks and businesses of the
United States back us, we can
go ahead.” But if this financial
backing were to be withdrawn,
a situation of economic catastrophe might bring the white minority group to a conference table
for discussions with other groups
forming the national life. Any
kind of discussions entered into
sincerely and seriously with leaders of all ethnic groups in South
Africa would break the high tension and possibly provide creative avenues for reconciliation
and co-operation. But as long as
the economy of the Republic is
bolstered by American money,
discussons are unlikely to take
place.
The crisis in Africa, although
not created by the United States,
is being prolonged by American

economic aid and investments in
southern Africa. The longer the
crisis in human relationships
continues, the higher the tensions will mount until the day
of an explosion from which
Americans will not escape.

PAGE SEVEN

INTBAMVBALS:

Zygots Beat
Alpha Sigma Phi
By GEORGE JACKREL
Playing in the mud after many
postponements, the Zygotes beat
Alpha Sigma Phi for the Campus
football championship by a score
of 24 to 16. The proceeding week,
Alpha Sig secured its place in
the finals by beating Beta Sigma
Rho 24-8. The Zygotes were led
during the season by quarterback
Bill Barto, end Earl Tompkins,

Weekly Calendar
December 7-13
Wednesday:
Lecture: “Psychological Adjustments in a Technological Society", Technology vs. Humanities
Series, Dr. Hunt and Mr. Simmering, Dorothy Haas Lbunge,

3:30 p.m.

Thursday:
Film: “Billy Liar". Conference
Theatre, through Dec. 11.
Lecture: "Typing of Metaphor
by Domain”, Richard Abrams,
graduate student, Norton, Room
344 8:15 p.m.
Panel Discussion; Sponsored by
UB Student branch of American Pharmaceutical Association,
Capen G-22, 8 p.m.
Play: “Tiny Alice", Studio Arena Theatre.

and halfback Jack Karaszkewski.
They completed all their games
without incurring either a loss
or a tie.
On Monday night, November
29, the Swimming Finals were
held. The top six men in each
event, according to the two previous weeks of time trials, competed. The meet was convincingly
won by Alpha Epsilon Pi, compiling a total of 63 points. Theta
Chi finished in second place with
34 points and Gamma Phi third
with 26 points. Listed below are
the winners of each event.

Friday;
Volleyball Game; IRC Clark
Gym, 7:30 p.m. Mixer to fol-

record time, 26.4

Call Board

75 yd. Medley Relay—AEPI.
50-yd. Freestyle—Stein. AEPi
(new

sec.)

50-yd. Backstroke—
Fregenheimer, Independent
Diving—Weis, AEPi
75-yd. Individual Relay—
Helffenstein, Phi Kappa Psi
100-yd. Freestyle—Stein, AEPi
50-yd. Brest-fly—Sharkey,
Theta Chi (new record time,

30.0

sec.)

100-yd. Freestyle—AEPi
The Basketball leagues com
menced play this past Monday
night with the first games of the
Independent League. The scores

follow:

5th Floor

Tower, 28—
3rd Floor Tower, 20
2nd Floor Tower, 28—
8th Floor Tower, 18
4th Floor Tower, 49—
6th Floor Tower, 42
Blueballers, 33—S. L.’s, 17
11th Floor Tower, 45—

low in Fillmore Room.
Lecture: "Chinese History as a
Touchstone tor Western His-

tory", Mary C. Wright, professor
of history, Yale, Norton 233,
8 p.m.

szo
"Cafe Tel-Aviv" will be the
theme for this week's Student
Zionist Organization meeting. Israeli singing and dancing will be
featured in the program as well
as other entertainment. The meeting will take place Sunday at 8
p.m. in Room 246 Norton Union.
WBFO
On Tuesday evening, December
14, at 6 p.m., J. E. Deane will
have as his guest on meet the faculty, Dr. Karel Hulicka. This is
the second in a two part interview in which Dr. Hulicka speaks
on Soviet education.

Saturday:
Miicar: Sadie Hawkins, Goodyear

East.

Concert;

Peter, Paul and Mary.
Kleinhans.
Sunday:
Open Houm:
p.m.

Cook Hall, 2-5

Concert: Peter, Paul and Mary,
Kleinhans.
Concert: Lukas Foss, conductor,
Grant Johannsen, pianist. Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.
Concert; Christmas program, Albright Knox Art Gallery Sculpture court, 5 p.m.
Monday;

Lecture: Creative Associates
Series, Conference Theatre,
Norton, 8:30 p.m.
Lecture; "Voices”, Lucieno Berio, Sice Series, Baird Hall, 8:30
p.m.

Applications for Financial Aid for the 1966-67
academic year are now
available at the Office of
Financial Aid to Students
located at 23d Hayes Hall.

The deadline dale for filing applicatons is February

15, 1966.

Applications for aid for
the Second Semester of the
current year may also be
obtained from the Office
of Financial Aid to Students. The deadline date
is January 4, 1966.

Murder of Gonzago

...

secretary the day of U Thant's
from P. 2)
Freeloaders, 17
supported the civilian junta of
proposal that the U.S. could write
Donald Reid Cabral with extenits own cease fire terms. Johnson
sive economic aid and political
and Rusk echoed this story on
advice. Cabral planned to cancel
numerous occasions and Robert
the elections in September since McCloskey,
State
Department
Press officer, said that these ofhe didn’t have any popular support. He had, however, a police
were
rejected because "on
fers
the basis of the total evidence
force trained by the C.I.A.
The machiavellianism involved
available to us (Dean Rusk's senin the negotiations with Hanoi sitive antenna, you know), we did
The Graduate Business Assooften takes on the overtones of not believe at any time that North
ciation will hear Mr. Henry H. 1984 Newspcak. “There arc no
Vietnam was prepared for serimanager
of the BufCoords, plant
authorized negotiations underway ous peace talks."
falo Manufacturing Unit of Westwith Mr. Thant or any other govThis columnist is not in favor
ern Electric, December 9, at 2 ernment. I am not going into any
of a Machiavellian government,
p.m. in 231 Norton. As the second
diplomatic chitchat that may be but if we must have one, let us
such speaker this year, Mr. Coords going forth, or way-out feelers at least have an efficient one. As
will speak on "The Manager A ij but authorized meaningful negoti1 sec it, Machiavclli would ad
A Corporate Citizen." Refreshvise one of three courses. We
ations," (ieorge Reedy, then Press
ments will be served, and all stu-1
could win the friendship of the
dents are welcome.
people. This, however, cannot be
done by invading the country
Mr. Coords attended Columbia
University and in 1960 was a mem
and quartering 200,000 troops. It
ber of the Massachusetts Insti
could be done with a realistic
program of economic and technitute of Technology program for
Senior Executives. He began his
cal aid. The United States has
career with Consolidated Edison
spent the last decade making the
of New York City, and joined
Vietnamese people its enemy. Or,
shop
Western Electric in 1942. His preswe could just write the whole
affair off as a loss. Or, we could
ent position of plant manager
was assumed in May, 1964 At the
exterminate (he Vietnamese peopresent time, Mr. Coords is on
ple. Johnson seems to have chosen
the Board of Directors of the
Mam Street in Snyder
this course but halfhearted Machiavellian that he is. he isn’t even
open ever/ evening 'til Chmfmet
Buffalo Chamber of Commerce,
doing this right.
and is Chairman of the Chamber’s
Job Opportunities Council
(Cont’d

Henry H. Goods
To Address
Grad. Bus. Assn.

!/&amp;■

The Union Public Relations Committee is compilin'; the activities schedule
for the coming semester.
If there is any organization wishing to enter dates,
they are to contact Room
215, Norton Union no later
than December 15.

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Bocce Sponsors Bull's Basketball on WBFO

**»

�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

=t

=i

=4-

Tuesday, December 7, 1965

s
.

—

—=&amp;

=

UB Over Brockport 79-63
By MIKE DOLAN

UB opened its varsity Basketball campaign last Wednesday
night on a winning note, by handing Brockport State a 79-63 defeat. Although UB played hot and
cold ball, they showed lots of
promise and good scoring potential against a strong Brockport
team. Dr. Serfustini had nothing
but words of praise, saying, "The
team showed sparks of a good
ball club against a physically
strong opponent.”
Coach Serfustini felt that a
great effort on the part of seniors

Bill Barth. Harvey Poe and Paul
Goldstein, coupled with a tremendous performance in behalf
of sophomore Artie Walker were
the key points that enabled UB
to gain their opening victory.
UB controlled the opening top
with Artie Walker getting the advantage over his taller opponent.
A quick surge- by Goodwin, Goldstein and Barth gave the Bulls
a 10-1 advantage early in the
game. Play slowed down a little,
however UB played steady ball

and by the 19 minute mark held
a 17 point spread advantage and
led by a score of 29-12.

A little while past the midway
of the first half, Brockport started an offensive drive behind the
shooting of Feeleres and Keuhn
and this brought Brockport to
within four points of the Bulls
and the crowd was buzzing with
apprehension. The complexion of
the whole game was changed.

Now it was UB’s turn to show
their finesse. Behind the headsup and consistent ballplaying of
Bill Barth and Harvey Poe, the
Bulls were able to take a 45-34
lead into the locker-room for
the halftime intermission.

2,000 got their first look at UB's

promising sophomore Artie Walker. The Cincinnati muscleman
completely dominated the boards
and also spearheaded the offensive momentum which gave
UB a lead that it was never to
relinquish. By the time that Walker had finished, the Bulls had
built up a commanding 58-34
advantage.
A 24 point lead enabled Dr.
Serfustini to have a look at
some of his fine sophomores, of
whom, Jon Culbert performed
capably.
High grade honors went out
to Bill Barth, the evening’s high
scorer with 20 points, to Harvey

Poe, who in the first half scored
15 and ended up the night with

18. Also high on coach Serfustini’s merit system was Paul Goldstein. Of course, Artie Walker
turned in a great performance
in his varsity debut. Norwood
Goodwin also received words of
praise.

Last Saturday night the UB
version of varsity Basketball
traveled to Manley field house
down in Syracuse. Syracuse University possesses the finest team
ever to represent their school in
basketball. Under the capable
coaching of Fred Lewis and leadership of All-American Dave
Bing, Syracuse’s Floyd Little of
Basketball, the Orange host UB
and are fresh from a 118-68
trouncing of our cross-town rivals, Buffalo State. This team

will present perhaps the most
physically powerful and fastest

teams that UB will face all season. It will require an overall
team effort to produce a victory,

thats collegiate basketbut . .
ball.
This Friday, the Bulls are on
the road again with Ithaca providing the action and Saturday
night, Albany State plays host.
.

BUFFALO
Goodwin

Walker
Barth
Poe

Goldstein

Brotaell

Culberth

Bernard

Williams
Smith

(79)
Fg Ft T
4 2 10
3
1 7
5 10 20
7 4 18
2 15
0 0 0
4 2 10
2 3 7
0 0 0
10 2

Total* 28 23 79

(63)

BHOCKPORT
Fg Ft T

5 11
2 15
4 19
Goodfellow 4 2 10
Ryan
2 2 6
Frederes
4 3 11
3 3 9
Coles
Ramsay
10 2
Kuehn
Reif

3

Thomas

Totala 23 17 63

If there was a turning point in
the game, it was, without a doubt,
the first 10 minutes of the second half. During this period of
time, the Bulls displayed a phenomenal defense, allowing Brockport only two field goals and five
points altogether.

It was during these 10 minutes
the Clark Gym crowd of

that

Viewpoint
The Meaning
—

Of Sports

By

STEVE OBERSTEIN

I have always wondered why
I seem to have been endowed
with a phenomenal interest in

sports. As 1 have continued my
educational advancement, 1 have
come across some basic sources
which serve to partly explain
this question. At the same time
that 1 first realized history to
be made up of men much like
myself, it occurred to me that
many individuals throughout the
course of existence have had to
cope wdth problems similar to
mine. My books gradually began
to come alive as 1 sought to understand the reasons behind a
given individual’s course of action.

Both

the

Jesuits and

Plato

advocated the combination of a healthy body in co-or-

clearly

dination with the healthy mind.
For the average modern day
sports enthusiast, such complicated strategies as check-offs at
■

the line of scrimmage and the
flashing of baseball signals held
little interest compared to the
enjoyment of the game. The expert, however, must take more
than just ability into considera-

tion when confronted with the
problem of classifying an athlete.
Natural ability is a tremendous
asset, but it does not automatically indicate that a man can do
the job. This type of reasoning
was what made last week’s ProFootball Draft such a challenge
to the coaches and scouts.
For every Mickey Mantle or
Jimmy Brown, there are hundreds
of thousands of fair-to-good anonymous talents. Out of this
group come the ones whom I
consider the real heroes. They
can be best characterized by their
desire, plus the intangible dif-

ference that their presence makes
on the field. The Cincinnati Reds
as well as other contenders had
more power, but the Los Angeles
Dodgers emerged as 1965's Cinderella team behind Maury Wills'
"home-runs" —a single, one or
two stolen bases, and a ground
out. Eddie Stanky, Billy and Slater Martin, and football's Pat
Fischer and Tommy McDonald
are just a few examples of men
who use a greater percentage of
their ability than many of their
more talented contemporaries.
Maybe it is because they have to
put out harder just to survive
but these are the men who win
ball games and are always in demand.
These situations can be translated into other cases besides
the competition between two
teams. It is easy to get the girl
if you are good-looking and/or
have a lot of money; it is less
demanding to fall back into a
father’s business than to enter
the struggle which honesty in
your education entails. Sports are
just one of the many aspects
which make up the modern world.
Everything else, however, can be
shown to have a connection with
the human conflict readily apparent in athletics. Whether it
is another team, one particular
opposing player, or the clock,
the pressure is always on. The
pitch, of the competition is as
keen as any you will ever face.
There is a certain amount of
poetry in the co-ordination of an
individual’s mental and physical
powers that I find continually
breath-taking. Perhaps that is
why the recurrence of this phenomena under the heading of
"Sports” is such a big part of my
life.

because now you can
complete Air Force ROTC in
just half the time!
Are you interested in starting a military career
while in college—but afraid it will cut too deeply
into your schedule?
Well, here's good news for you. Air Force
ROTC now offers a 2-year program. You can
start it any time you have 2 years of higher education remaining—whether on the undergraduate or graduate level.
Here’s another good thing about this program: you get a chance to “sample” Air Force
life before you sign up. During a special summer orientation session, you get to make up
your mind about the Air Force, and the Air
Force gets to make up its mind about you. Only

when both are satisfied are you

finally enrolled
in the program.
You’ll learn a lot in Air Force ROTC. The
curriculum has been completely revamped. The
accent is on aerospace research and development. But of course the classes are only the
beginning. The important thing is that you’ll be
taking the first big step toward a profession of
great responsibility, as a leader on America’s
Aerospace Team.
Find out more about the new Air Force
ROTC program. See the Professor of Aerospace Studies today!

United States Air Force

�</text>
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                    <text>—

VIETNAM

-j

—

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

CONFERENCE

)—

WBF0 0N

ll

(See Page 2)

NO. 14

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1965

VOLUME 16

China Series Starts Tod

Senate Defeats
Reapportionment

"Freedom

An intense debate on a reapportionment of
the Student Senate highlighted the meeting of
Tuesday, November 30. An additional amendment
was also voted on by the Senate. A resolution on
“Freedom Christmas” and a report of the Calendar
Committee were also included on the agenda.
The reapportionment contained three main provisions; a more equal distribution of Senators
among the various divisions of the University;
more adequate representation for Freshmen; and
the election of the voters’ own representative for
the following year. Student Association Secretary
Ellen Cardone then proposed an amendment to

the

reapportionment.
Miss Cardone’s proposal stated that the IFC,
IRC, CRO, Union Board, and the Pan Hellenic Council should not have a voting representative on the
Student Senate but, instead, a non-voting one.
Vice-president Rosemary Brown suggested that an
executive board of the Student Association be
organized. It would help coordinate the policies of
these organizations. Each group would possess one
vote on the executive. This and Miss Cardone’s motion were defeated.
Debate concerning the original reapportionment
followed. Senator Curt Montgomery was against

the resolution and its amendment. He felt that
such organizations as the IRC and the CRO should
not be deprived of their vote and that they have
Rosemary Brown attempt* clarification during reimportant contributions to make to the Student
Photo by Carol Goodson
apportionment debate
Senate. Mr. Montgomery also did not agree with
the idea that the Senate should
be reduced in size, or that the
Professional Schools should lose
some of their votes, as provided
for in the resolution. He believed
that the resolution was a “partial
reapportionment” and was “not
correctly thought out.”
Miss Cardone spoke out in favor of the reapportionment. She
By ALICE EDELMAN
se on No ‘
felt that the Senate contained
Flooding the entire area in front of the whit H°“
some “glaring faults” in its strucpolice estimated a throng of 20,000 to 25,000 marchers
27,
vember
ture, and that certain changes boosting placards denouncing the war in Vietnam.
spirit was
must be made “either by the SenA sense of solemnity pervaded the march but the songs but
ate or the student body in referhigh. There was an occasional lull of soft peace march
endum. The reapportionment
silent.
.
the demonstration was, by and large,
on pleading for a
was defeated
The majority of the marchers were intent
an immeurged
Senator Carl Levine presented
negotiated peace treaty but some of the marchers
an amendment which provided
troops.
of
U.S.
diate withdrawal
hal th
r
there
by the fact that
for the election of a NSA CoordThe marchers did not seem disheartened
them
inator during the regular spring have already been three peace marches in Washington. Most of
or not their actions have an
election and the election of delesaid that they had to be there whether
gates, in addition to the Presieffe
dent and the Coordinator, to the
this group was not student dominated.
and sever.)
NSA Congress. These delegates The age span was diverse, including many elderly citizens
independently, there
the
had
come
of
marchers
would be chosen in a special elecWhile
most
children
groups were
tion during the last two weeks were several organizations represented. The largest
Peace. Every state in the
Strike
for
Women’s
The
amendment
was
and
the
of April.
SANE SDS,
its delegation. Some
passed.
Union was represented. Even the clergy sent
Pope Pau °n themof
the
face
signs
a
with
carried
Carl Levine also presented
members of SANE
con
b
a
counter-demonstration.
Across the street
“Freedom Christmas” resolution.
d n p 12
(Cont’d on P. 7)

ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI

C

A. DOAK BARNETT

What is China? This question' has occupied the attention of the world’s highest councils on
both sides of the iron curtain and in the United Nations. In the next week students here will have
the opportunity to hear three noted experts on China illuminate this vital topic.
The convocations committee of the Student Senate and the International Club will co-sponsor lectures by A. Doak Barnett, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and Mary Wright.
Today at 3:00 p.m. in Millard Fillmore Room of Norton, A. Doak Barnett will discuss China
and Her Asian Neighbors. On Monday evening at 7:00 p.m. China and American Foreign Policy will
be the topic of Professor Brezezinski also in the Fillmore Room. The final lecture by Mary Wright
will be held next Friday.
Mr. Barnett holds a B.A. and M.A. in International Relations from Yale University. He is currently a Professor of Government at Columbia University and serves on the faculties of Political
Science and International Affairs.
The first fifteen years of Mr. Barnett’s life was spent in China and since that time he has
served as a correspondent, consul and consultant on the far east. He was a correspondent for the Chicago Daily News Foreign Serive in China and Southeast Asia for periods between 1947 and 1955. During this time he also served as a consultant for the Economic Cooperation Administration in Washington, D.C., 1950 to 1951; Consul Public Affairs Officer, Evaluation Officer. Foreign Service Reserve,
American Consulate General in Hong Kong from 1951 to 1952; and Associate of the American Universities Field Staff in Hong Kong and in other Asian areas from 1953 to 1955. From 1956 to 1957, he
was the head of the Department of Foreign Area Studies, Foreign Service Institute, Department of
State in Washington, D.C. Professor Barnett also served as Field Researcher, for Louis Harris and
Associates and the Maxwell School of Syracuse University in Asia, Middle East, and Eastern Europe
in 1957.
Zbigniew Brzezinski is Professor of Government and Director of the Research Institute on Communist Affairs, Columbia niversity. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York,
a Consultant to the Department of State and to Rand Corporation.
He received his B.A. from McGill in 1949 and his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1953, From 1953-60
Dr. Brzezinski taught and did research at Harvard until he was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship

longer if they so desire.
They may choose the civil rights
organization they wish to work
with and the state in which they
would like to work.

The National Student Association is sponsoring "Freedom
Christmas,” a plan for students in
northern colleges and universities to assist in the registration
of Negroes in the south during
the period December 19-january

work

7.

soon

Responses must

as
planning

possible

be received as
to facilitate

The program is being coordinated in conjunction with the Conference of Confederated Organizations, which includes the Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC), the Congress
of Racial Equality (CORE), the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP), the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, and the
Southern Student Organizing Committee (SSOC).

Film Discussion

Students wishing to participate in the program arc required
to pay for their own food (ap-

William Harrel of the Sociology
Department, Alvin Pam of the
Psychology Department, and Dr.

proximately $15 per week). They
must also provide their own transportation to the orientation center, a place to be designated later,
and then to their assigned work
areas. The Student Association
has consented to pay half the
cost. NSA will provide housing.
Participants must work for a
minimum of one week but may

Anyone interested should con-

tact either Carl Levine, Regional
NSA Chairman, in the Senate Office, or at 837-6311, or Marion
Michael, Campus NSA Coordinator, in the Senate Office or at
831 2571.

Marvin Zimmerman of the Philosophy Department will discuss

the Fine Arts Film, Citizen Kan*,
tonight at 7:30. The discussion
will be held in the Second Floor
Lounge of Norton Union and is
co-sponsored by the Council of
Religious Organizations and the
Fine Arts Film Committee.

Demonstration In Washington
Protesting U.S. War in Viet-Nam
®

..

...

,

.

,

,

,

„

„

°UnUke preWourmarches,

s^"?

(

*

'

Part of 23,000 who pickatod

MOUSO
Mow hr

Don Blonk

�Friday, December 3, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Conference On China and Vietnam
Conducted at Syracuse on Dec. 8
Conference on China and Vietnam will be held at Syracuse
University Wednesday, December
8 from 3 p.m. to midnight, in the
Gifford Auditorium. Members of
the federal government and professors from a few universities
will speak throughout the day.

From 3-5 p.m., Professor Julian
Friedman from Syracuse University will have the floor, with O.

Edmund Club, former member of
the State Department, and a representative of the State Department, yet to be named.

Roger Hillsman, former Assistant Secretary of State for Far
Eastern Affairs,' now at Columbia

University, and Professor Jonathan Mirsky from the University
of Pennsylvania will speak at
7:30 p.m.

A panel discussion will take
place at 9 p.m. Members of the
panel will be the representative
from the State Department and 0.
Edmund Club, with Dean Stephen
Bailey from Syracuse University
acting as moderator.
Hans Morgenthau from the Political Science Department at the
University of Chicago will address
the audience at 10:30 p.m. During
the final half hour the Confer-

ence will be open to comments

from the floor.
For further information call
Sarah Rubenstein at 831-3161.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

The IBM interviewer
will be on campus
December 7-8
Interview him. How else
are you going to find
out about new ways to
use your talents and
skills in an exciting
“go-places” career?

You could visit a nearby IBM branch office. You could write
to the Manager of College Relations, IBM Corporate Headquarters, Armonk, New York 10504. But we would like to see
you on campus. Why not check at your placement office
today? See if you can still make an appointment for an
on-campus visit with IBM. Then interview the IBM interviewer. Whatever your area of study, ask him how you might
use your particular talents at IBM. Ask about your growth
potential in America's fastest-growing major industry.
You’ll never regret it. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

IBM

The most
walked about
slacks on
Campus are
HUBBARD
slacks with
"DACRON"
Great Hubbard styling with
the lasting neatness and
care free comfort of “Dacron”, in these slacks of
55% Dacron* polyester, 45%
worsted wool. Styled in traditional Classic and Gay
Blade plain front models,
in all the favorite colors, at
better stores everywhere.
Also available in blends of

70% Orion*

acrylic,

30%

worsted wool, or “Dacron”
with “Orion”.
*du Pont

Reg. T.M.

�Friday, Pacwnbr 3, 196S

PAM THRU

SPECTRUM

Union Board Announces English Department Burglarized;
Plans for Annual Silver Ball Many Items Are Missing From T.C's

The annual Silver Ball sponsored by the Special Weekends
Committee of Union Board is going to be held on December 18
at the Mary Seaton Room in Kleinhans Music Hail.
The theme of the semi-formal
affair whose general chairman is
Tom Hines, is “Reflections in Silver”. After the Faculty Reception which will be held before
the ball, everyone is invited to
dance to the music of Jay Maran’s Orchestra from 9 p.m. in the
evening till 1 a.m. in the morning.
The Silver Ball will be the culmination of the activities for Winter Week, which is December 12
through December 18. Trophies
for the best snow sculpture and
the best overall participation in
the activities for Winter Week
will be given at the affair.

Other awards to be presented at
the bail are trophies for Mr. Formal and the best Mr. Formal campaign, for which there are seven
entries.

Tickets cost 3 dollars per
couple and there are special
prices for block tickets.

The chairmanship of
the 1966 Freshman Orientation committee is still
open. Applications may
be procured from and
filed with the secretary
in the Senate office, Norton 205, by Wednesday,
December 8. The chairman shall be selected by
the executive committee
of the Senate.

Dear Mr. Advertiser:

English Department offices in
Annex A were robbed between
12 noon Sunday, Nov. 28, and 8:15

a.m. Monday, Nov, 29.

According to office personnel,
the thief entered Annex A, opened
most of the locked doors and
cabinets, and helped himself to
a variety of articles. Apparently
there was a method to the theft:
All the items taken belonged to
the English offices, while the Political Science offices in the annex
remained untouched.

The manner of entry is not definitely known. Footprints found in

the snow led to room 19 of the
annex, where a window had been
opened. The device used to open
locked doors and cabinets was not
discovered.
Among the missing things are
chairs, books, ashtrays, cigarettes,

scotch tape dispensers and candy
bars. The Political Science Department did report disappearance of
one portable typewriter but investigators feel the invader mis-

IUAN FASHION SHOfS

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office.
More valuable items were not
taken. Drawers containing the employees payroll were found open,
but the money was left in its
place.

PAISANO

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�Friday, December 3, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

YAF Soundboard

.

THE MARCH CONSIDERED
The latest March on Washington to End the War in
Viet Nam has called in to question the efficiency and
moral force of mass demonstrations in our nation’s capitol.
The D. C. police estimated the crowd at 25,000 souls, and
the March officials estimated participants at 40,000. The
only noticable effect of the March was an estimated
$100,000 of increased revenue for the restaurants and
hotels of the District of Columbia and the release of two
prisoners of war held for two years by the Vietnamese.
Bus drivers in New York City refused to transport
the demonstrators and the commits of the released
prisoners has revived interest in the moldy creation of
the military mind, “brain washing.” The national news
coverage of the March characterized the marchers as
“misguided,” rather than “communist dupes,” and the
country is well on the way to accepting moral indignation
as a nuisance like the common cold.
The conference held simultaneously in Washington
to create a co-ordinating organization to oppose the War
in Viet Nam was a victim of the same kind of fatigue and
an unreasonable fear of public opinion carried the day.
The time is swiftly approaching when it will be necessary
for men and women in this country to oppose the war, and
not worry about ABC News, or what their parents are
going to say.

If those who adopt a moral posture in the face of the
obscenity of this war are unwilling to take the responsibility of the moral life, then the opposition to the war,
no matter how many people participate in it, become
merely trivial. The March on Washington trivialised the
efforts of malor men, and pointed to he necessity to find
what William James called “the moral equivalent to

war.”
There is a lot of real work to be done before this
nation returns to a course of peace and human 'action.
The burden of that work falls on those who oppose the
war, and if they remain unwilling to shoulder that responsibility, then the national news media are correct
in their evaluaion of the marchers: They are merely “misguided.”

EPILOGUE TO A

TfeACK-IN

When 'the situation’s crucial
And we don’t know what to
do, shall
We negotiate, conciliate, or
fight

?

If they’re stoning our

legations
Should we bribe them?
Should we bomb
them? What is right?
Should guerillas come
attacking,
Is it wise to go backing
Off somewhere, or blow them
All to smithereens?
Should we spring to the
offensive
Or be shy and apprehensive
Send in food or a division
of Marines?
These are quite perplexing
questions;
I’m glad to hear suggestions;
And meanwhile, I do all I
can to stall,
And my only observation
On this touchy situation
Is: the safest policy is none
at all.
By John Morressy
From

National Review

Why has the teach-in gone
stale? The Viet Nam issue remains as prominent as before
but the talkathon is on the wane.
The teach-in has gone stale be-

jhe

SPECTRUM

If there really is a single week
in the year that I am “most” difficult to live with
a number of
people insist it is impossible to so
designate a single week on
grounds of gross insufficiency
it is most probably the week after
Thanksgiving. In a way this is
passing strange since I enjoy both
Thanksgiving and Christmas but
on the other foot it seems to me
one used to have an opportunity
to sort of build up to Christmas
and New Year’s.
—

—

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Publication Office at Norton Hall,
weekly from the first week of
Editor-in-Chief

JEREMY TAYLOR
EDELMAN

DAVID

Managing Editor
Business Manager
News Editor

SUSAN

Foatwra Editor
Sports Editor

....

RAYMONQ VOLPE
GREENE

RONNIE BROMBERG
JOHN STINY
RICHARD DRANDOFF
STEVE SCHUELEIN

Layout
Copy

Editor.

Editor

SHARON

HONIG

LAUREN JACOBS

Photography Editor

__

EDWARD JOSCELYN

lditor___.MARCIA ORSZUIAK

Continuity

Ad Coordinator
Circulation Managor

GARY

Financial

FISCHER

__DIANE LEWIS

Faculty Advisor

IRENE WILLET

Advisor

Loprochaun

.DALLAS GARBER
RUSSELL GOLDBERG

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

FIRST CLASS

HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation
10,000.

Represented

National
Madison

for national

Advertising
Ave.,

New

advertising

Service
York,

fifteen bucks extra of loot when
the big day does finally get here.
On Thanksgiving the turkey will
be bright red with green stuffing
or if you wish to be a nonconformist, you can have a bright
green turkey with bright red
—

Inc.,
N. Y.

by
420

Instead of winning converts to

one side or the other, the primary success of the teach-in is

in reinforcing the thinking of

persons who have already made

the ideological plunge. (Most
students already support the
U. S. aid to South Viet Nam as
evidenced in their almost unanimous support of a pro-U. S. petition last year which garnered
5000 signatures at UB. The teachin helps bring this support into
the open.)
The last UB teach-in presented
speakers pro and con, but most
observers were forced to admit
that in terms of audience support the pro’s had it. Not only

is there massive student support
for the war, but this support is
becoming more intensified. Two
weeks ago there was a sudden
sprouting of Victory in Viet Nam
buttons, but these people were
not new converts to the Victory
movement—they were the manifestations of much latent support. These people are not zealots or show offs; they are rep-

grump

FILMS AT S.U.N.Y.A.B.
The Norton Union Film Committee has once again
shown a lack of imagination and interest in their choice
of films for the coming semester. There is a great and
It depresses me to see the signs
growing interest in the cinema on this campus and sevsaying “Santa Arrives Friday by
Helicopter” and suddenly realize
eral organizations have sprung into being to fill the vacuthat the Friday so indicated is
um created by the unwillingness of the administration to November 26th. The 26th of Noconsider the cinema as a legitimate area of study.
vember is exactly four full weeks
before Christmas Eve. At this rate
The Union Film Committee was created to fill this I can foresee all sorts of great
vacuum and they have failed in their responsibility, not advances: pictures of Santa Claus
only to provide films of merit which would otherwise chopping down a Cherry Tree on
Washington’s Birthday; St. Nick
not be available, but also to provide films of differing shooting off fireworks on the 4th
genres in order to create a situation where the cinema of July, and admonishing people
may be discussed in all its aspects. The Film Society is to drive safely over the long
Day weekend cross my
primarily concerned with the production of student and Labor
mind.
faculty films, but without adequate support from the
We can have red and green
Union Film Committee, this campus will remain a place pumpkins on Halloween and instead of being monsters, good litwhere “movies” are trivial entertainment, and where
tle boy and girl types will win a
the “art of film” is left solely to the people that make free Santa’s Little Helper outfit,
which should be worth at least
them.

THE

cause the formalized debate has
fallen into a stereotyped discussion with the same old speakers
and the same old speeches. The
teach-in is no longer a forum
for ideas but has turned into a
soapbox for propaganda.

...

stuffing and

candystripe drumsticks.
While keeping religion above
the subject I am trying to express,
there is a certain feeling about
the expression,
Christmas Is
Christ’s Birthday,” which seems
to make it something at least sort
of spiritual, albeit obviously not
the great spiritually important
day that the death anniversary of
JFK was. I suspect I am doubly
gloomy this week because of the
way the American Association of
Manufacturers has gobbled up
Christmas and the way the professional mourners have martyrized
“

JFK.

To take the latter first, my attraction to JFK was the life and
vitality of the man. I am not at
all interested in trading the respect and admiration that I had
for what appeared to be an intensely alive human being for
the warmth so many seem to
find in canonizing him. JFK was
a man and despite the reams of
paper which claim the contrary
of late, he was not even a great
one. Perhaps it is the greatest
tragedy of all that he was not permitted a chance to earn by himself, that idolization he is now
being given, for he very possibly
could have been great.
To return to my assault upon
Christmas and the Commercialization Thereof. It creeps painfully
across my consciousness that a
number of little kiddies seem to
feel that unless they have a net
weight of fifty pounds of goodies
excluding stocking stuffers
—

oCetterA

to

TO THE EDITOR
What’s with the underground passage between
Norton and Harriman all of a sudden? I used to
enjoy that spooky “lobyrinthian way” imagining
that I was on a minotaur hunt to the center of
my psyche or something. I chuckled at such college humour as “I love Cliffy Furnas,” etc. Now,
alas, it seems a group of first graders must have
been turned loose in the passageway for a “writeon-the wall-party” such as we used to have for our
kids just before putting new paper on the wall.
Honestly, with all the important problems in the
world toward which the college population should
be directing its energies, do we have to “waste
our substance” in the puerile pasttime of trying
to shock with four letter words? Besides, nothing
is so boring as a four letter word after you’ve
‘heard’&gt;ahd seen-lf a few times. If you dop’t be-&lt;

reseillative of the ordinary student who, summing up his courage, pinned his opinion on his
shirt. The teach-in helped intensify his feelings.
It was first necessary that the
student become interested (one
point for the teach-in) and secondly that he become reinforced
(one point for the teach-in). As
much interested as the teach-ins
have aroused, no more than a
handful have changed their
minds about Viet Nam—rather
they just believe more strongly
what they did before.
And Tuesday I donated blood.
The Inter-Residence Council
through the Red Cross is sponsoring a blood drive for our soldiers in Viet Nam. It was wonderful to see the students there.
I knew they hadn’t come for
the hell of it; they were there
because they cared and were willing to go through a little inconvenience to prove it. 200 gave
Tuesday, and 200 more are signed
up to give Wednesday, Dec. 1,
when the Red Cross will return
to campus.

It started innocently with the
teach-in and last Tuesday the
Victory movement staged its first
demonstration in the basement of
Tower, as 200 students, quiet but
determined, each gave their pint
of blood.

by STEESE

which don’t count
more than
any of the rest of the “get” set
they have been grossly mistreated.
Adults seem little better. Note
the looks on the faces of those
happy bustling Christmas shoppers. Fanatical Concentration. “I
have to find something just right
for Uncle Willy!”; Near Exhaustion, “Perhaps I can make it
through one more store before I
collapse.”; the Thoughtful Conniving, “If I give Melvin the $.98
ash tray that looks like Richard
Nixon, then I can give Myrtle
that hideous lamp that Wanda
gave me last Christmas and that
will leave me only twenty-seven
gifts short.” “Ho, Ho, Ho.” “Get
out of my way you fat red drunk.”
As for a number of the parties
given under the guise of celebrating the holidays
well the
Germans have BierFests during
the summer and I think it is much
more practical. Nobody falls down
the ice and breaks their neck, nobody tries to drive home afterwards and skids into the Black
Rock Canal, and if ice cubes are
scarcer during the summer at
least it is easier to find an empty
bedroom.
—

—

Enough. I shall go off and build
a fire in my fireplace so that
when that damn personalized
greeting card salesman tries to
slide down the chimney again he
will be most surprised. Next
a diatribe on the various
week
types of small trucks using the
sidewalks for highways, subtitled
—

“Run, Student, Run

”

tlie Editor

lieve it, just sit around saying a four letter word
to yourself for a few minutes and you’ll fnid it
as dull and repetitious as any other word so repeated. If you don’t find it so, visit the speech
clinic. That’s what it’s there for.
Meanwhile, let’s address ourselves to something less boring and more important. Now that
line that read “Destroy the machinery of the
state.” . . . that was intriguing, providing such
destruction is not merely for destruction’s sake but
to clear the way for construction of better ways
of running so cumbersome a thing as this university. And also providing such destruction is accomplished through the most precious possession
we have, the legally constituted machinery of the
democratic process.
Sincerely,
(Mrs;) Grace B'.‘Martin

�Friday,

Dacambar 3, 1945

PACK FIV*

SPECTRUM

Free Sonata Recital
In Baird on Monday
By DAN SHROEDER

Charles Joseph, violinist, and
Norma Bertolami, pianist, will
present a sonata recital in Norton Union Conference Theater on
Monday, December 6 at 8:30 p.m.
This will be the fourth in a
series of programs of the Creative Associates being presented
by the UB Department of Music.
The program includes works by
Telemann, Beethoven, Schubert
and Brahms. Admission to the
recital is free.

VietnamDemonstrations
Spark Backlash of Gifts
(CPS) —The protests against American policy in Vietnam have
resulted in a backlash that threatens to drown the Pentagon in a
sea of cookies, fruit cake, and other gifts for the servicemen in
Vietnam.
Spokesmen for the Pentagon said they are welcoming support
but are weary of the problem it creates. Literally tons of cookies,
hundreds of cases of beer, thousands of books, and other items have
been offered, and the Defense Department has little intention of
moving all that to Vietnam.

Mr. Joseph became a member
of the Center of the Creative
and Performing Arts last year
and has appeared in many of
■their “Evenings for New Music."
He received his Masters degree
from the University of Illinois,
and has studied violin with Ivan
Galamain and Josef Szigetti. He
left a teaching position at the
University of Oklahoma in 1958
to accept a Fulbright award, following which he became a staff
member of the North German
Radio and concertmaster of the
Hamburg Bach Orchestra. He has
appeared as solo recitalist in
many European capitals.

Miss Bertolami is well known

A spokesman for the Red Cross said it “certainly appreciates
the spirit behind the college movement” but “in view of the fact
there is no blood shortage there, you can understand that no one is
pressing for any needed blood drives.”
Red Cross President James Collins said that more than 100,000
students on 75 campuses are expected to participate in blood drives.
He said the Red Cross took on the assignment at the encouragement
of the Department of Defense, but he wants people to understand
that very little of the blood donated on campuses will be sent to
Vietnam.

The typical response to the protests however, has been rallies,
,
speeches, and meetings.
At Rutgers, 3,359 students last week signed a petition in favor
of U.S. policy. An additional 700 names were gathered at Douglass
College, the university’s branch for women. The petition was presented to the New Jersey congressional delegation.
The student newspaper and the campus radio station at Syracuse
University joined in rallying campus support for U.S. policy in Vietnam. In joint editorial announcements last week, the paper and the
station said they “strongly support the government and its present
policy in Vietnam.”
At the University of Utah, 475 students have signed a letter to
the commanding general of U.S. forces in Vietnam supporting U.S.
Policy there.
Adding to the verbal reaction against the protests, Dr. Grayson
Kirk, president of Columbia University, said last week that a student
who rates political activity above an education should surrender his
as
Place in the university to someone who regards the
more than a place to mount an ivy-festooned soap box.”

Heinz Rehfuss, internationally
known baritone, will perform
Schubert’s Winterreise song cycle
Wednesday, December 8 at 8:30
p.m. at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery. Mr. Rehfuss will be accompanied by Gilbert Kalish on
piano.
Mr. Rehfuss

is

Chicago.

Mr Sogan read some of the
poetry he has written recently.
Two of his poems were dedicated

chamber music repertory, foe
local singers, accompanists, and
teachers. Solo motets, oratorio

is remembered for his presentation of Die Schone Mullerin a
few seasons ago, as well as his
varied song recitals of last year.
He is a Professor of Music at
UB for the present season.
Heinz Rehfuss is also directing

to Mr. Sogan’s experience when
swimming with some friends in

Besides being a professor in
ancient classical languages, Mr.
Sogan teaches science and has
written several textbooks. Bom
in Iowa, Mr. Sogan is presently
teaching in San Francisco State
magaCollege and is editor of the
zine "Choice.” In addition to writing poetry, Mr. Sogan has written
some fiction, and such magazines
as the New Yorker have published his literary criticisms.

a series of four colloquia on vocal

particularly

in the Now Yorker and relates

John Sogan, author of such
anthologies of poetry as Cycle
for Mother Cerforini, Spring of
the
the Thief, and Ghost* of
Tuesday
recital
last
Heart, gave a
in Diefendorf Hall. The reading
was sponsored by the Abbott
Reading Fund and the Friends of
Lockwood Memorial Library.

School in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Miss Bertolami has
appeared with the Boston Pops
and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and has performed in
New England and New York in
chamber music recitals with her
sister, Vivane Bertolami, violinist.

noted for his interpretation of
■the Schubert song cycles and he

“The Picnic” started out as a
long novelette about childhood
and was finally converted into
several poems after eight years.
“Prison Poem” and the "Owl” are
two poems that Mr. Sogan translated from the journals of the
Hungarian Freedom
Fighters.
“Rescue” will soon be published

International Red Cross officials say the war in Vietnam confronts the organization with a situation they believe is unprecedented
in its more than 100 years of activity. For the first time, an official
said, the Red Cross is being used as an intermediary to forward
relief supplies provided by people of one country for people in a
country with which their government is at war.

Longy

WillPerform
Rehfuss
Winterreise Song Cycle

to his students. They were titled
“Scenes for a Young Man Who
Talked" and "To a Young Poet
Who Fled Before I Could Say He
Was Good.” In the latter poem
the title describes the plot of the
story and perhaps the most effective lines “I’d rather be a
farmer in a hut understood by
swine than be a poet misunderstood by men,”

The blood, however, isn’t needed in Vietnam and the American
Red Cross, which is handling many of the donations said it is not
being sent to Vietnam.

Campus groups are now becoming involved in a 100-car Christmas
train that will cross the country gathering gifts for troops in Vietnam The train is officially being sponsored by the U.S. Jaycees, the
Young Democrats and the Young Republicans. It is the first time
the Young Democrats and the Young Republicans have combined on
any project.

ap-

with the Buffalo Philharmonic in February. She studied
with Heinrich Gebhard and Isabelle Vengerova and at the Berkshire Music Center. She has
taught piano at the New England
Conservatory of Music and the

Mr. John Sogan Read
Poetry Last Tuesday

One form of support for American policy on college campuses
is what has come to be called the “bleed-in.” Students give blood
for American troops in Vietnam as a sign of support.

However, the Red Cross said its job is to move the supplies,
not to catalog the donors or their motives.

to Buffalo audiences and will

pear

Other poems read were “Three
Moves,” “The Zoo,” “Monologue
of Sons of Saul,” “Suzanna," and
"On the Death of Keats.”

HEINZ REHFUSS
ensembles, lieder, art songs, and
contemporary music will be performed and analyzed on Tuesday
evening, December 7 from 7:30
to 9:30 p.m. in Baird Hall.
Mr. Rchfuss was bom in 1917
in Frankfurt-am-Main, He studied
voice with his father, and served
as leading baritone with the Zurich Opera from 1940 to 1952.
Since that time he has toured
extensively, singing in recitals
and with orchestra at all the important European festivals and
appearing as guest artist at the
leading European opera houses.
His recent recording of Telemann's St. Matthew Passion with
the Pro Musica Orchestra in Munich won the Grand Prix du
Disque. He will fly to England
later this month for appearances
on the BBC in Berlioz' L'Enfanca
du Christ and a program of
Rameau cantatas.
Arrangements for individual or
class instruction with Mr. Rehfuss
can be made through the Millard
Fillmore College and regular university registration procedures.

Rhodesian Crisis Topic of
Special WBFO Broadcast

WBFO will broadcast a special
program titled “Rhodesia: Facts
and Figures” Friday, December 5,
at 10 p.m. The program will be
re-broadcasted Sunday at 6 p.m.
This news special was made expressly for the National Educational Radio network by the
British Broadcasting Corporation.
The program deals with the Rhodesian crisis and features the
voices of Prime Ministers Harold
Wilson of Great Britain and Ian
Smith of Rhodesia, plus informed
commentators in London. Por-

tions of the program were picked
up off shortwave, while other portions were received via the transAtlantic cable.
Paul Gustafsson, Consul General of Finland will inaugurate a
special 13 program series commemorating the birth of Jean
Sibelius beginning Monday, December at 8:19 p.m. Mr. GuMafsson recorded a special program
outlining the importance of Sibelius in Finland and other background material about Finland especially for WBFO.

�PACE SIX

SPECTRUM

Friday, Dacambar

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wind repellent.

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Even a neuter
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X 1965

�&lt;*
u

December 3, 1965

GSA Officers
The Graduate Student Association of the State University of
New York at Buffalo, held its annual Fall election during the
month of October. The new officers are: Chairman, Norman R.
Lazarus, Biochemical Pharmacology Dept.; Vice-Chairman, Vincent Ciancio, Education Department; Treasurer, Ronald Stein,
Philosophy Dept.; Secretary, Patricia Fiero, Psychology Dept.
Executive Council members were
also elected.
The next meeting of the Graduate Student Association Executive Council will take place December 3 at 7 p.m. in Room 234,
Norton Hall. All Graduate Students are welcome.

The Peace Corps Placement Test will be given
on December 6, 3 p.m. in
the Federal Office Bldg.,
Room 432, at 121 Ellicott St., Buffalo.

SPECTRUM

TAG Operations Reviewed CLASSIFIED
Cadets Visit Langley Field
FOR SALE

,

for Profau.onal
Uu

Delaware Camera Mart
Movie Rentals Photo Finishing
Cameras Supplies Projectors
-

-

-

2635 DELAWARE AVENUE
177-3317

Qive

Paper:Mate
and your gift
problems
all
are
wrapped upI

1961 HG 1600, black, removable
hardtop, new tires, only 29,000
original miles; $830. Phone 832-

ROTC cadets had a first-hand
look at Tactical Air Command's

2779.

global operational capabilities at
Langley Air Force Base, Virginia,
on a recent base visit.
At a briefing, cadets were told
of TAC’s function, mission, and
organization. Cadets toured the
48th Fighter Interceptor Wing

and viewed the F-106 aircraft
while pilots explained some of the
capabilities and safety equipment
the craft possessed. While on the
flight-line, aircraft such as the
C-130, a globe-spanning cargotroop carrier were inspected.
Just outside of the Langley Air
Force Base the cadets toured the
22nd Air Defense Missile Squadron where they were briefed in
the Command Center as to the
BOMARC potential.
UB cadets were most surprised
to find a Sea Survival School and
a NASA complex on an Air Force

Base. Demonstration of a downed
pilot pick-up in the sea made it
obvious that no expense is spared
Everything Photographic
and Amateur

PACE

The Department of
Music, SUNYAB regrets
the cancellation of the
opera productions “The
Telephone” and “Arlecchino” scheduled for December 9-10-11-12. Tickets may be returned to
the Baird Hall Box Office
and cost will be refunded.

DELMORE TELEVISION

1966 MUSTANG, six weeks old,
450 miles; must sell; six cylinder. Call TT6-0317, 4 p.m. to
6 p.m.
TWO J. B. LANSING speakers
in big folded horn enclosures;
asking $95 each. Phone 634-0752.

1958

PLYMOUTH HARDTOP.
new transmission, tires, battery,
etc.; snow tires, too. Must sell,

best offer accepted. 836-8360 or
831-3646.

gat

«y*

Two UB novice debate units attended the annual debate tournament at Harpur College in Binghamton, New York, November 19
and 20.
The first novice unit, composed
of Ted Beringer and Philip Sanzone on the negative and Caro)
Waschler and Doreen Stiehler on
the affirmative emerged with a

10% STUDENT
DISCOUNTS

835-6444
If no answer—873-7999

Hundredsja^Ittti^

Sales and Service

� Slide Rules
� Drafting Sett
� Drafting Supplies, Etc.
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MICROSCOPES

Hours 9 a.m.
9 p.m.
Monday thru Saturday
—

ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY CO.

10% DISCOUNT
to Student &amp; Faculty

YOUR I.D. CARD IS WORTH 10% AT
/

Shoe

/

Rounding out briefings and
tours was the trip to historic
Williamsburg as students learned,
in a detailed tour of the restored
area, some of the history of the
United States.

Novice Debate Unit Wins
Third Place at Harpur

1243 Eggert Rd. nr. Main

on all makes of color and
black and white TV's, stereo,
phonographs &amp; radios, including car radios.

*

Blczejawski, J. Gratn, A. Dorr
to save individuals on their own
in the water. They were also surprised that the NASA complex at
Langley has a training model for
lunar landing where simulated
moon touch downs are made.

S+oje

3097 BAILEY AVENUE
BUFFALO, NEW YORK
Nationally Advertised Brands
Wt
U.S. KEDS
ESKILOO Shoe Boot
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7-1 win-loss record and tied with
two other schools for first place.
They were awarded third place on
the basis of total speaker points.

At the same time, a unit of varsity debaters attended the University of Rochester Debate Tour-

nament in Rochester, New York,
and emerged with a 6-6 overall
win-loss record.

Senate
(Cont’d

from

.

P, 1)

This provided appropriations of
money to students who volunteer
to go into the south in order to
register Negroes during winter
recess. The resolution was passed.

The Calendar Committee report
was presented by Shelly Cohen.
He stated that the committee has
accepted the innovation of a free
hour. The resolution will now be
presented to the Dean's Council.

1957 BUICK SPECIAL, in good
driving condition; best offer
accepted. Can be seen at 32
Fougeron St., Dietrich Busch.
1959 CHRYSLER WINDSOR four
door hardtop; full power, excellent condition, inspected; new
brakes, muffler and paint. Call
Alan after 6 p.m., 836-5863.
SNOW TIRES, used; 13, 14, and
15 inch. All popular sixes. All
in good condition. Wheels also
available. Call TR 7-2120 after V
p.m. and all day Saturday. Ask
for Lance.

WANTED
LEAD GUITAR and lead singer
for up and coming “go-go”
band. Call 662-7456, ask for Dale.
TYPIST for Spectrum from 3 p.m.
to 5 p.m. on Tuesdays and/or
Fridays.

ARTICLES of opinion on any subject; signed or unsigned, 100
to 400 words, perferably typewritten. Return to Norton Box 64
ur Newman Hall for publication
in Discussion, a monthly, campuswidc journal.
MISCELLANEOUS

IF ANYONE has found a small
white leather notebook (looseleaf) with typewritten poems in
it, please return it. Turn ti in at
the Norton lost and found, or
call me, Robin Herniman, TF 38838.

FREE BABYSITTING, two to
three days per week, in exchange for same. Graduate student’s wife with two pre-school
kids will exchange for same or
more, days and hours flexible.
Phone 877-8992.

Mr. Cohen further stated that the
committee was investigating the
possibilities of a longer intersession and a two day break during
finals.

The names of the members of
the Publication Board were announced. They are David Edelman, Robert Weiner, Dan Rotholtz, Saralee Rubenstein, Paul
Kapycinski and Martin Guggen-

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Partners * Press, *9nc.
Jhfott &amp;■ SLul Printing
138)

heim.

KENMORE AVENUE
(at Dataware)

Phone 876-2284

The next Student Senate meet
ing will be held Tuesday, December 6.

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N. Y. 14226

�PAGE EIGHT

IM®Q3 (Bill
The Cincinnati Kid (now playing at the Center Theatre) had two strikes against it before I even saw it. First,
the producers of the film had fired Sam Peckinpah, the
original director, after only one week of footage had been
shot. Peckinpah, who is in my opinion the finest young
American film maker now working within the superstructure of Hollywood, was replaced by Norman Jewison,
whose major contribution to the art film was that he had
directed a half dozen Doris Day epics. Peckinpah first
came to blows with the establishment over Major Dundee
when several key scenes were re-shot and the entire film
re-edited behind his back. Peckinpah was so angered
that he removed his directorial signature from the finished product. It was right after he did this that he was
fired from The Cincinnati Kid. The excuse the producer
gave was that Peckinpah was working too slowly.
The second reason that I was prejudiced against the
film was summed up most articulately by Barbara Long in
a review which appeared in The Village Voice recently.
Miss Long and other critics had already pointed out that
in adapting Richard Jessup’s novel for the screen, many
of the key issues were either oversimplified or overlooked
entirely. The Cincinnati Kid is one of the more interesting
American novels of recent years. In dealing with the
problems of surrogate spiritual values in a secular society,
Jessup also raised the issue, quite simply and quite beautifully, of the codes of action men live by in their relations
with each other and with women.

Friday, December 3, 1965

SPECTRUM

Bitch-In on Multiversity
Designed to Set Goals
A
BOULDER, Colo. (CPS)
Bitch-In on the Multiversity,” a
vocal referendum on the problems of student life, has been
scheduled early this month at
the University of Colorado.
—

Modeled after the teach-ins on
Vietnam, the bitch-in will be
aimed at attacking what the student thinks is wrong with the
university, why, and what can
be done about it.
Unlike the teach-ins, however,
there will be no formal, planned
speeches. All comments and criticism will come directly from
the students themselves.
As each student enters the auditorium, he will be given a numbered IBM card which he will be
encouraged to bend, fold, staple,

hell U the movies,

the university, and
the university system would also
be welcome to speak.
Participation is open to every
student and “no gripe is too
small to be aired,” the campus
is being told. The session will begin at 8 p.m. and continue as
long as there are speakers.
The

entire

tape.

The plan is based on a suggestion by Professor of Sociology
Howard Higman who will serve

as the moderator for part of the
evening.

CITIZEN

TECHNICOLOR

•m

KANE

An R.K.O.
Radio Film

NORTON

(it*

ct

CO^
„.

Last Week
«;)•

m SpnatHaanr?
*

fM

CKMJ

FINAL WEEKS!

THEATRE

iSnia

(Opening Under New Management—formerly the Boar's

504 PEARL STREET at Tapper
Thursday thro Sunday

JAZZ

—

From 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.

JAZZ

—

SAM NOW'S Quintet
Also AFTER HOURS JAZZ —Fri.

&amp;

Sat.

3 a.m. to 6

featuring GUEST ARTISTS

THE GLEN ART

—Western New York’s Newest and Finest Theatre—

INVITES YOU TO A

"WHAT-IS-AN-AW-FILM

FESTIVAL!

SEVEN AWARD-WINNING FILMS
With a "Uvt" Introduction and Commentary!
Dec. 2, 3 JULES AND JIM wtn onc«rw*m* r
INTRO’O BY JEROME ROTHLEIN, STATE UNIV. COLLEGE
DeC. 3, A, 5' 814
**wnllo Mastroianni
INTRO'O BY DR. THRO. KIM EL, CANISIUS COLLEGE

Dec. 6, 7 THE SILENCE ®y ingmar Bergman
INTRO'O BY
FRED

KELLER, Cl ROLE ART THEATRE

Dec 8, 9 L'AVVENTURM
INTRO'O BY HERMAN QOCRB,

STATE

with Monica Vitti
UNIV. COLLEGE

Dec. 10, 1, 12 LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD
-PLUS

BREATHLESS »Hh j..n s^&gt;.r,

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

Dec

will be

see!”

ORSON
WELLS

7M AND

session

taped, later transcribed, and the
comments studied by the committee. A local radio station has
expressed interest in broadcasting all or part of the bitch-in

ask

Cont.

The Cincinnati Kid is a story of men under pressure.
It’s not only important “how we play the game” but also
if we win or lose. Since in the “social world” there can
be no real clear-cut victories because values are relative,
victories in the world of athletics, bullfighting, poker, or
pool, victories in an area of action where men are still
judged by a pre-established code of ethics and rules, become even more important. Unlike the toreador or the
gunfighter, if The Kid loses, he will not physically die.
But, to him, that which he risks is as great as his life.

«w,*s

praise for

"As classy a spy
film as
you could

Fri. and Sat.

What is at stake, and what does come out in spite
of the efforts of the producer to sugar it over, is a man’s
very existence, the way he chooses to commit his life. Our
knowledge of “reality” can only be, like the card game,
based on an imperfect knowledge, a well-educated guess.
We cannot know all the cards, but we bet nevertheless.
And no one can play the cards for us.

bnVft

The committee planning the
bitch-in said that the meeting
would not be closed to the positive aspect and those who had

a SPECIAL Show

play.

So what if its corny. The New Orleans funeral. The
gongs by Ray Charles. The shoeshine boy. McQueen's patented smile, like Bogey’s lisp. It may not be The Cinema,

Sponsored by the national affairs commission of the Associated Students of the University
of Colorado, the bitch-in is intended not only to allow the individual student “to get it off
his chest,” but to provide a set
of goals and priorities for action
on the problems of students.

Presents

I find it almost painful to report that in spite of all
this, I liked the film. It’s hard not to like a film that Steve
McQueen is in. McQueen, who along with Jean-Paul Belmondo, has taken on the aspect of a Bogart for the sixties, is perfect as The Kid, the three-river gambling man
who is the best stud poker player of the decade. Edward
G. Robinson is also perfect as Lancey, The Man, the best
stud player in the world, the one whom The Kid must

The final hour of the fim is the real redeemer. The
card game. 8 p.m. Hotel Lafayette, New Orleans. The
players are: The Kid, Lancey, The Shooter, Pig, Yeller.
No limit. Check and raise. If you are Tap City, you have
half an hour to raise the roll. Chairs contracted at $10 an
hour. Cards bonded by New Orleans Bridge Club. If any
deck proves juiced, the loser's paid off. Ladyfingers is
substitute dealer. Hoban is there from Memphis, Whistling Sam Megee is dead, but Jelly from Boston is there.
The Las Vegas odds are 8-5 on The Man. The Shooter
shuffles five times, once for each player. There is no cutting—the highest tribute possible. First hand. The Kid
pairs a nine, bets a double sawbusk, buys the pot.

each card holder will have five
minutes to sound off. Only the
ordinary rules of good taste will
apply. Subject matter and position will be wide open.

FINE ARTS FILM COMM.

Instead of confronting these things, Ransohoff, the
producer of the film, seems content merely to film an imitation of The Hustler, substituting stud poker for pool.
And to satisfy any disgruntled intellectuals or hipsters,
he hires Terry Southern (who now it seems has become
Hollwood’s official “black humorist”) to write the
screenplay.

The rest of the casting is also exceptionally good.
Tuesday Weld as Christian, The Kid’s girl, who represents the possibility of a “normal” existence proves once
more, as she did in Soldier in the Rain, that she is a good
actress if given a suitable part. Joan Blondell as Ladyfingers, Cab Calloway as Yeller, Rio Torn as Slade, all
perform well. Karl Malden as The Shooter, a father-figure for The Kid, performs well, and Ann-Margaret as The
Shooter’s Wife, is as bad as ever. Unfortunately the characters of The Shooter and his wife are so changed from
the novel to film that they lose all significance. The love
interest between The Kid and The Shooter’s wife may
make for good box office, as does The Shooter’s sell-out,
but these things have nothing whatsoever to do with what
is at stake in the film.

or mutilate. In numerical order,

INTBO-O BY THOMAS SIMMON, B. U. N. T.

13, 14 NOTHING BUT A MAN
itrmo'D mr win uy

with Ahfcey Lincoln

shcmnam, s. u. n. v.
PM NighMyt (UfmliiMnh
StibacriplKNia—*7.50; Sft.il—ti $6.
MaN Chacki To: GUN ART THCATU

Curtain-Tiaia

ow , H*

•

N&gt;

».

=

�Friday, Decamber 3, 1965

Browsing Library's Annual
Contest Planned For Spring
Norton Hall Browsing Library
is sponsoring its annual book collection contest this year from
February 4 to March'4.
undergraduate

All full time
students under 25 years of age
are eligible to enter. The prizes
are $100 first, $50 second, and
$25 third.
Each entrant must have a collection of 15-25 books on a single
topic or limited field, and must
submit a paper of no more than
1500 words (five pages) explaining when, how, and why these
books were collected.
All application forms are due
in the Browsing Library, room
255, Norton Hall on or before
February 4, and the 1500 word
essay is due by February 18. Included in the paper must be a
list of ten books you hope to
add to your collection, with five

i

At the Low "Go-Go" Price*

Afro-Asian
Bookstore

of them annotated. A bibliography of the collection, including
the cost of each book is also ne-

cessary.

The book collection is due in
the Browsing Library, room 255
Norton on February 25. Judging
will take place there on March
4, with a Coffee Hour to follow.

UB Trivia Tournament
Columbia, Hunter, Syracuse, and
Rochester, all among the top colleges in the nation have jumped
on that
growing bandwagon
known as trivia. New York City,
the place where it all started has
a radio station, WNBC, which docs
nothing on one of its weekday
afternoon shows but answer and
ask trivia questions with its listenaudience. Buffalo up until now
has been relatively dormant in
the area of trivia. WBFO has
taken it upon itself to organize
the first city-wide trivia quiz.
Hereafter known as the UB Trivia Tournament, this program will
bring the exciting realm of the
odds and ends to the University
and the City of Buffalo. This Tuesday at 7 p.ra., the first offering
of trivia will take place in the
Millard Fillmore Room. There
will be two teams competing,
much like the old UB college
quiz, but the audience will also
get to answer any trivia that
neither team can answer. So, if
Tuesday night is free for you and
you don’t have either an FM
(88.7 me) or AM (780 kc to dorms)
radio, drop in on the first UB
trivia tournament, Tuesday, December 7, 7 p.m. in the Millard

Fillmore

Room,

The "Soul Literature"
Center of Buffalo
•

•

Informative Books on
Negro and African Life
and Cloture
Imported African Merchan-

BILLIARDS
INVITATION TO POCKET
BILLIARD PLAYERS
With Time to Spare
DURING HOURS WHEN THE
UNION ROOM IS FILLED—

dise including African Woodcarvings (from $1.90 up),

Come on Over to:

drums, Xmas cards, wall
paintings, masks, plaques,
newspapers, magazines, Islamic literatre.

CUE BEE

3229 Main Street
Adjacent to Campus

COME VIEW OUR AFRICAN

ART EXHIBIT FREE

1412 Jefferson Ave.
(near Woodlawn)

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Use Your ID Card and the
Hourly Rate is the Same
This applies to UB students
ONLY

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Tha Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPE
WRITTEN form to 114 Hayes Hall,
attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00
p.m. the Friday prior to the week
of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for
publication.

GENERAL NOTICES

Law School Applicants—A recruiting team from Howard University Law School, Washington,
D. C., will interview interested
candidates on December 8 from
3:00-4:30 p.m. in Room 330, Norton.

Graduate School Calendar

Dec. 8, 9, 10—
Pre-registration for students

who will continue in the second

semester 1965-66,
Dec. 17 (Friday)—

Last date for submission of
theses and dissertations for February Graduation
Jan. 14 (Friday)—
Last date for oral defense of
thesis or dissertation.

WEEKLY

CALENDAR

December 4:

A Library Concert consisting of
music and readings will be presented in the Auditorium of the
Erie County Public Library at
8:30 pm. It features Professor Leo
Smit of the Department of Music,
whose, topic is “Six Composers;
Self Portrait in Words and
Music.”

December 6:
The School of Education

Hall, telephone 831-3311 for addiCol-

will feature Dr.
Daniel Berlyne, Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto, who will present a paper
entitled “Problems in the Psycology of Thinking” Open to the
faculty and students of the Departments of Education, Psychology and Philosophy. 2:30-5:00
p.m., Room 233, Norton.
loquia

series

December 9:
The Linguistic Circle of Buffalo
presents Richard Abrams. Graduate Student in English, whose
topic is "Typing of Metaphor by
Domain.” 8:15 p.m., Room 344
Norton.
The School of Pharmacy presents a Panel Discussion sponsored by the State University of
New York at Buffalo Student
Branch of the American Pharmaceutical Association. The moderator is Dean Daniel H. Murray.
Open to the Public, 8:00 p.m.,
Room G-22 Capen.
December 10:
The Graduate History Club is
sponsoring a lecture by Mary C.
Wright Professor of History, Yale
University, whose topic will be
“Chinese History as a Touchstone
for Western History” in Room

233, Norton at 8:00 p.m.

A Biology Seminar features Dr,
Herbert C, Dessauer, Professor of
Biochemistry of the Louisiana
State University Medical Center
whose topic is “Protein Diversity
and Animal Speciation." Open to
the Public, 134 Health Sciences,
4:00 p.m.

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Please contact the University
Placement Service Schocllkopf

tional information regarding the
following announcements and in-

terviews.

Law Graduates—Graduating seniors and recent graduates that
are interested in a position with
the Illinois Division of the American Civil Liberties Union should
contact the University Placement
Service for application instructons. Applications for employment with the FBI are also available.
Application for examination No.
20-166
Junior engineers and
architects for New York State,
are available. Positions are open
with the Department of Health,
Conservation, Labor and Public
—

Service.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

December 6:
City of Detroit
Graduate School of Public Affairs—State University of New

York
National Labor Relations Board
—Region 3

Lybrand, Ross Bros.

Mont-

Marlin-Rockwell Co., Division
of TRW Inc.
Union Carbide Corp.—Chemical
Division
December
Internal
Hornell
Hornell.

7;

Revenue System
City School District
N. Y.

7, 8:
International Business Machines

December

Corp,

December 8;
New York Central System
University of Rochester
The B. F. Goodrich Co.
Chenango Forks Central Schools,
Chenango Forks, N. Y.
December 9;

Firestone Plastics Co.
Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
The Great Atlantic &amp; Pacific
Tea Co., Inc.
Retail Credit Co.
Bureau of Federal Credit Unions
December 10:

International Paper Co. —North
ern Division
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.
Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.
IBM—The Service Bureau Corp.
South Huntington Schools, Huntington Station, Long Island
—

Ionite thru Sun.—Wes Montgomery
Playboy Jazz Poll Guitar Winner

&amp;

gomery

2nd SMASH WEEK

—

FREE PARKING nail Is LIMstf
Bank. A half block from I ha thaaira.

—

lorthRaiiel
m M2S Mtm AVtTf Mil
ALL STAR CAST
*•

Royal Arms

19

u

8 85 «“

ST

OPENS MON. DEC. 6

AHMAD JAMAL TRIO

Coming Monday, Dec. 13— 'THE FOUR FRESHMEN"

BIGGER BURGERS
MEAN
BETTER EATING

BARRY'S 19c HAMBURGERS
1435 Millersport Mwy. at Maple Road
1 Mile North of Sheridan Dr.

Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers, Fish—Chicken —French Fries
Thick Shakes—SoH Drinks—Coffee—Milk—Hot Chocolate

WE BUY THE

BEST—WE SELL THE BEST

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REAL OLD FASHION
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SANDWICHES

—Delivery Service—

836-9490
771

NIAGARA FALLS BLVO.
Just Minutes From Campus

PIZZA
TP 3-1344

�PAM TIM

Friday, Dacambar 3, IMS

SPECTRUM

STEAK HOUSE

Get-acquainted
to UB Students

offer

FREE STEAK DIKNERS
COUPOn)
(and THE
a
party of four
Eat Four Sizzling Steak Dinners-GET 1 FREE!

Just bring

BLACKBOARD

from now through December 7, 1965, 11:00 A.M. to
9:00 P.M., you can get four $1.39 steak dinner’s worth $5.56 and pay

It’s a fact
only. $4.17

.

.

—

.

or $1.04% apiece

But that’s only a come-on
are” and
.

II Order

a thick % lb.
sizzling sirloin prepared
exactly to your taste.

j
(

I
I

.

!

...

the idea is to get you to “come-as-you-

.

H
to

j

Watch it char-broil
mouth-watering perfection right before your very.

|

eyes.

|!

|(

The whole princely platter includes: the magnificent sirloin steak, plus
baked Idaho potato, tasty grilled roll, salad
all for a buck thirty-nine
less 25% if you’ve got three honest friends with the ingenuity to split a
penny four ways, (beverage not included).
...

OFFER GOOD THROUGH TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965

BRING THIS
COUPON WITH
YOUR PARTY.

*

V

\

like a prince on a pauper’s
budget-No tipping either!

z

J

sizzii
HOUSE

1
N DR

11:00 thru 9:00 P.M

It’s Sizzle's version of the New
Math.,. because it’s our first.
week in business... see you at
3180 SHERIDAN DRIVE across
from Northtown Plaza —watch
for the flaming gaslights.
1100 TO 9:00 (OPENING WEEK ONLY)

V

Kfl Relax and enjoy. Eat

|

3

Z

IM
&gt;

I

�Friday, December 3, 1965

SPECTRUM

GREEK NOTES
The Pledges of Gamma Phi will
be initiated tonight. Tomorrow
there will be a BYO party. Beta
Phi Sigma is having an open
mixer tonight at Eduardo’s on
Bailey Avenue for all pharmacy
majors. Alpha Phi Delta will hold
a beer rush stag this evening at
the Club Bar on Austin Street
near Grant and Military at 8 p.m.
Sigma Kappa Phi will hold their
annual pledge tea for the pledges
of all other sororities Sunday, December 5. There will be a dinner
for all sisters and pledges at the
apartment before the meeting
Monday night, December 6. The
newly elected officers of the
pledge class of Chi Omega are:
President, Charlotte Nigro; VicePresident, Marsha Wing; Secretary, Julie Maley; and Treasurer,
Jean Hoffman. Monday night, Chi
Omega will hold an alumnae
party at 7:30 p.m. at the University Presbyterian Church. Alpha
Kappa Psi will hold a tour of the
Chevrolet plant this evening. Saturday, there will be a closed beer
stag. Phi Lambda Delta will hold
a “snows up” party at the Lafayette “stud farm,” 8:30 p.m. The
Phi Lambda Delta Literary award
of the month goes to Ron Holland
for hia Aspiring poetry at the
Bowlo-Drom animal party. Theta
Chi sorority is sending magazine

subscriptions, crayons, and small
toys to the children of a Liberian
school, where Marilyn Schanzer,
a graduated sister, is working as a

Peace Corps volunteer, The newly

elected officers of the Alpha
Gamma Delta pledge class are:
President, Louise Leifer; VicePresident, Rena Finkelstein; Secretary, Ellen Mendelsohn; and
Treasurer, Karen Kozlowski. A
fashion consultant will speak to
the sisters and pledges, December
3 from 10 p.m. to 12 p.m. Freshmen are invited to attend the
Theta Chi fraternity dated rush
party tonight at 9 p.m. at the
House, 2 Niagara Falls Boulevard
at Main. Phi Epsilon Pi is holding an annual Skiing and Swimming Winter Fete to be held at
,

Kissing Bridge tomorrow evening.
The slopes, lifts, chalet, and pool
will be available. There will be an
alumni dance Saturday, December 4, at the Seagram Tower for
Tau Kappa Epsilon. The pledges
will sponsor a party for the brothers and their dates, tonight at a
cost of $5. There will be a pi-

nochle tournament December 7,
in the Norton card room from
3 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 11
p.m. costing $1. Two $10 gift certificates will be presented to the
winning team.

Used Auto Parts for

FOREIGN CARS
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There will be a party at Santera’s (Main and Leroy) Friday,
December 3. The Uncalled Four
will provide the entertainment.
Free to members, and $.75 for
non-members. Lessons start Tuesday, December 14.

�

�

�

ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY

The Richard C. Browning Squad,
ron of Arnold Air Society is holding the 15th Annual Military Ball,
February 16 at the Connecticut
Street Armory. This year’s Ball
will again feature music by Jan
Maran and the annual Queen Con-

�

�

There will be a meeting of the
Atheist Philosophical Society discussion group Thursday, December 2 at 8 p.m. in Room 245 Norton Union. The topic will be “The
Dialectics of Nature: Recent Discoveries in Bio-Chemistry and
Their Significance for a Scientific
Understanding of the Phenomena
of Life.”

MUSIC OH CAMPUS
By DAN SCHROEOER

Since the last installment of
this column, several diversified
concerts of the highest quality
have been presented in the area.

The first of these, on November 14, featured the New York
Pro Musica in celebration of -the
700th anniversary of the birth
of Dante, with a program of
"Florentine Medieval and Renaissance Music.” The ensemble of
six vocalists and four instrumentalists (who played a total of
14 instruments,) was directed by
Noah Greenberg. All the music
played was from before 1600,
therefore virtually prehistoric by
many people’s standards. But the
style of music varied widely,
from the ethereal vocal interweaving of the Isaac mass, to a
carnival dance with a lot of percussion and melodic ideas transported from the Middle East, to
the pure melody versus counterpoint in the duets, to a happy
hunting song which was unfortunately reduced from its original setting of six parts, to the
expressive and sharply sectional
madrigals of the late 1500’s which
embodied all previous styles, and
led to . . . well, the rest is history. The pieces varied also by
the use of different instruments,
which seemed appropriate in
most cases. It was an expert performance of music that needs to
be heard occasionally and if the
Pro Musica must have an excuse
to come around next year, there's
alway the 701st anniversary of
the birth of Dante,
On Wednesday, November 17,
a “Recital for Students” was
given by Mischa Schneider, cellist, and Leo Smit, pianist. The
duo performed the Brahms

Sonata

No.

1 and

1995

1960 CHEVY
V-8, auto, trans., radio, power
steering, red with white top.

Beethoven

Sonata No. 5. Mr. Smit played
Bach’s Suite No. 2 and Partita
No. 4. Although the difficult
passages were well performed,
the playing of the artists did not
seem geared to brilliance but to
an attempt to play each note

appropriately to each other and

to the musical context. The communication to the audience,

which was composed of many
more students than usual, partially realizing the goal of the
Music Committee’s sponsorship
of the concert, was very successful.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Concert on Sunday, November 21
held some surprises. The “hypermodern”

Chemins

wire

Belair 4-dr. Hardtop
$

The Erie County Health Department would like to express
its thanks to the student body
for their patience and cooperation throughout the tests.

ATHEIST PHILOSOPHICAL
SOCIETY

1964 CHEVROLET

Convertible, powerglide, radio,
wire wheels. A turquoise beauty with a black top.

Students who did not have
shrimp are being asked to give a
small blood sample for the tests.
The departments would like sixty
but presently only have twenty
such volunteers. Interested students who qualify are asked to
contact the Erie County Health
Dept, at TL 6-2800 or the UB
Health Dept.

�

SPECIAL AT

$

titers of certain antibodies in
those students who ate shrimp in
Goodyear Cafeteria with those
who didn’t. The epidemic-causing
organism has been described as
shigellosis. The study will include
a search for other organisms.

lowing the Christmas break.

6-cyl., stick shift, radio

2695

The Erie County and UB Health
Departments have recently initiated a study to compare blood

test. Tickets will be available fol-

1964 CHEVY
Impala Conv.

1965 IMP ALA

Study Conducted
By Health Dept.

PAGE ELEVEN

I. H. O. P.

by

Luciano

Berio was cancelled because the
composer could not arrive in
time to conduct it as planned, so
Mozart's Sameramid* Overture
replaced it—a left-handed way to
keep in the stated theme of "Four
Centuries of Italian Music.” Considering such short notice, or not
considering it, the work was very
well done; the delicate string
work, the delightful piccolo solo,
the solid horn chorus were as
good as any heard here. Vivaldi's
Concarto for Two Mandolins was
an abundance of lively sequences
in which the abbreviated string
orchestra whispered to allow audibility of the solists. The soloists, with a minimum of slips,
were most effective in the fast
sections and in the sections where
their pure tone quality contrasted with pizzicato strings or harpsichord. The Cimarosa Ovartura
and Scana from "II Matrimonia
Segrito" featured the voices of
the UB Chorus and the Schola
Oantorum. It suffered in comparison with the Mozart for several
reasons:
The melodic interest
was not as great as that of the
Mozart, due to the selection of
the large, charmless finales and
choral sections of the Cimarosa
opera; the orchestration was not
as light and flexible for the same
reason; there was not contrast of
mood but a continual forte climax. A 1954 work by Nono,
Liebeslied, was the sole representative of this century in Italian
music. It featured a small chorus
and percussion instruments, the
latter playing a very small part.
The work, composed in the 12tone principle, has asymetrical
phrases. Accents and fortes or
pianissimos came out of the air;
if only because of its roots in the
Italian school, this brought Gesualdo to memory. But the effect
here was more starkly primative
than expressionistic. The counterpoint was
meager attention
focused on the single vocal melody and the silence surrounding
it. The Verdi Te Drum closed the
program with a bang. It is a short
but massive work for full orchesSacred Pieces, Verdi’s last work.
In the soft and sustained passages
the weaving harmony, even
counterpoint, hinted of Wagner.
But the drillcd-in tutti chords
suggested only Verdi at his most
vulgar. Never since the Verdi
Requiem of last year have such
crass sounds been heard, but the
Requiem is a larger, betterstructured work. The choruses acquitted themselves very well in
the tasks before them, and will
soon be heard from again with
the Philharmonic.

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SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

'lord of the Flies"
Evaluated Sociologically

Washington Protest...
from P. 1)
but more vocal was staged. Some
of the marchers sang “God Bless
America” while others' vehemently denounced communism.
(Cont’d

Mr. Bill Harrell professor of
Sociology, lectured December 1
on “The Sociological Evaluation
of Lord of the Flies" as part of

While some of the signs read:
“Burn Teach-In Professors,”
“Guinea Pigs for Guinea Professors,” and “Communists Bomb Civilians,” One counter-demonstrator wore heavy chains dragging a
red wooden hammer and sickle.
His sign read: “Bomb Hanoi! Send
Vietniks Out of USA to Red ‘Paradise.’
”

The largest delegation to the
counter demonstration was the
Delaware Valley Citizens for Victory Over Communism. The group
is opposed to the anti-war demonstrators besause they believe that
Peace Groups only demonstrate
when action is taken against the
-

communists.

After two hours of demonstra-

tion, the marchers paraded

sev-

eral blocks to the Washington
Monument. On the way some friction developed as the demonstrators and counter demonstrators
clashed. There was much angry
shouting and police tried several
times to keep the groups separate.
•

At the Washington Monument
every inch of ground was occu-

pied. SANE officials estimated
the crowd at 50,000.

The first speaker was Ronnie
Dugger, editor of the Texas Observer. In this opening remarks
he declared that he was not speaking for draftcard burners and

Th» Bread

&amp;

Puppet Theatre tatarhas war

stated that it was the duty of the
American government to investigate Communist activities in the
ll. S. A large group of spectators
openly expressed their disapproval of this statement.
Dr. Benjamin Spock, the next
speaker, l|auded Pope Paul’s
speech at the U. N. He urged full
disclosure of all events concerning attempts and offers of negotiations in Vietnam. He then
expressed his aversion to the use
of FBI agents to intimidate student organizations. This remark
evoked a standing ovation.
'

The third speaker, Norman
Thomas, pleaded for co-existance
in Southeast Asia and proposed
that President Johnson demand an
immediate cease-fire under the
supervision of the U. N. He ad-

Photo by Don

Blank

vocated the
of Red China
into the U, N. Mr. Thomas said
that the Vietnamese should decide their fate themselves. He ended his speech by declaring: “I’d
rather see America save her soul
than her face.” He then urged all
listeners to convey this message
home and to write their congress-

men demanding

a yes or no answer. Peace or not.
Representative George Brown
called for a cease-fire on both
sides until an agreement can be
reached on cease-fire negotiations.
He sugested that the U. S. support
a Southeast Asian organization
formed on the basis of committment to neutrality.
Other speakers were Mrs. Martin Luther King, Carl Oglesby, Dr.
Edwin Dahlburg, and Professor
Joseph M. Duffy, Jr.

Tax Credits Could Help
To Ease Financial Burden
By DR. 0. C. CARMICHAEL JR.
President Citizens National
Committee for Higher

based on the first $1,500 paid for
tuition, fees, books, and supplies
per student at an institution of

Education Inc.
A plan designed to ease the
financial burden of parents of
college students and to create
new sources for the establishment
of scholarships is receiving increasing attention and support
from both educators and legisla-

higher learning.

tors.

The concept of granting tax
credits

for

some

expenses

of

higher education has had bipartisan backing in both houses of
Congress for more than a decade,
but has never oeen enacted into

law.
Educational organizations voicing support for the principle include, the Association of American Colleges and the Citizens for
Educational Freedom.
Tuition tax credit was conceived to relieve financial pressure on t rsons paying for college educations and to reduce the
threat of students being priced
off the campus.
The measure would permit a
credit against the Federal income
tax of persons paying for tuition,
fees, and other essential expenses
of college students.
Advocates of the plan emphasize the difference between a tax
credit and a tax deduction. Each
dollar of credit would reduce a
person’s tax by one dollar. If
a taxpayer owed $1000 at the end
of the tax year and had qualified
for a $400 tax credit, he would
owe the Federal Government only
$600 in income tax. A $400 tax
credit would save exactly $400
for the individual whether he
earned $5,000 a year or $20,000.
A deduction, on the other hand,
would save a $20,000-a-year man,
more tax dollars than a $5,000a-year

man.

Ribicoff-Dominick measure—typical of the many credit
bills put forth by members of
both houses in recent years—is
The

The amount of credit would be
75 per cent of the first $200
spent, 25 per cent of the next
$300, and 10 per cent of the next
$1,000. The maximum credit allowable would be $325.
The tax credit would come to
or benefactor—paying the educa-

tional costs. Broad assistance in
support of the most -needy students could, therefore, be generated by the colleges and universities themselves.
Opposition to tuition tax credit
has come from several quarters.
Much has been based on a lack
of understanding about differences between a tax deduction—which would tend to favor higherincome taxpayers—and a tax
credit
which would save the
—

lower and middle-income taxpayer a higher proportional share of
his income,
Similarly, some opposition has
been based on the fact that the
measure would not help those
with incomes too low to necessitate payment of Federal income
taxes. Advocates point out that
just because a measure helps
many people does not imply that
it hurts others, that other methpie, and that, in fact, millions of
dollars of scholarship money
could be both liberated and generated by the measure to help
students of limited means.
Finally, there has been some
opposition on the grounds that

benefits would be greater for students at higher-priced private
colleges than at the lower-cost
state universities. The percentage
of relief would be higher at the
publicly supported institutions.

Union Board’s Literature series.
He was introduced by Paul Blatt,
chairman of the Literature committee.
Mr. Harrell expressed his interpretation of the book in both
anthropological and sociological
terms. In the higher primates,
there is a definite aggressiveness,
used for both offense and defense.
This is very true in man, and is
expressed not randomly, but as a
response to conditions. The nature of man, at a level of meaning, becomes evident in such circumstances, but cannot be understood without a basic understanding of the three needs of man
other than those for sustaining
life: other people, control of part
of environment, and closure.
Man is basically self-centered
and evil in the Judeo-Christian
sense, because he needs other people, and thus is part of a society
and cannot live solely for himself. Another need, that of control over some aspects of environment, leads man to seek an
identity, and to express himself.
This can be manifested through
sound, writing, and often through
other men. The third need is that
of closure —fitting into society.
There are two basic types of closure: empirical, in which the individual is already integrated into nature and with his fellow
man, and symbolic, where the individual must fit into a fantasy
world, and accept closure for its
own sake. In the book, Ralph and
Piggy represent the traditional,
empirical closure, which has already been established in the
adult world as law, and provides
a certain degree of order and control, needed over the environment. However, this “embodiment
of common sense” breaks down
under the tension created by the
beast, which forms a symbolic
closure, centered on common
fear. Jack is the representative of
this need for symbolic closure,
mainly because of his desire for
control over some aspect of
society. Thus, he reverts to a
tribe, opposed to the empirical
closure of “civilized tradition.”
This switch, or regression from
empirical to symbolic closure can
be found in certain examples in
bothlite nature and history cited
by Mr. Harrell. Albert Camus, in
his short story, “The Renegade,”
deals with a priest, tortured by
savages, who finally converts to
paganism. When Christians were
being persecuted by the Romans,
and abandoning the Church, they
were frightened into remaining
loyal largely by the book of the
Bible called “Revelations.” In
Erich Fromm’s book Escape From
Freedom, the crisis in meaning
Of the Aryan Supremacy concept

led, as did the other examples, to
a solution which reflects the ini
tial terror.
Most readers of Lord Of The
Flies consider Ralph and Piggy
the heroes, representing civiliza
tion as opposed to Jack’s savagery.
Yet Mr. Harrell feels that Piggy,
Ralph, and Jack are three of a
kind, reaching toward a form of
symbolic closure, by trying to win
over the younger children to one
side or the other. The “Utleens”
have a corporate life of their own
in the book, devoting much of
their time to playing together.
Yet, Ralph and Piggy see this be
havior as useless, because it
means less manpower for maintenance of the signal fire, and
make no provision for this recreation in any aspect of their
society. Jack, also, discounts the
play of the “Utleens” as detrimental, mainly because he can’t
control it, and by use of symbolic
closure, forces the children to
join his tribe. Because all three of
the older boys utilized the fear
of the “Utleens” either of failure
to be rescued, or of the beast
Mr. Harrell sees their behavior as
a failure to reconcile the necessary conditions of life (e.g. selfindulgence and expression as
media of controlling some aspects
of the environment) with the
needs of society. This failure to
comprehend society, and the mercenary use of the “Utleens” fears
classify Jack, Ralph, and Piggy
together, and bring out Simon as
the true hero of the book.
By seeking out the beast, and
-

seeing is in man’s nature, Simon
represents the mortality of man
and his capacity for compassion.
With Simon dies the possibility
of a society based on humanism,
and the concept of intrinsic goodness in man. When he looks into
the “mouth of Satan,” Simon is
exploring certain social relationships in a non-repressive way.
This, according to Mr. Harrell,
could be a solution to the problem. If people such as Simon,
could form a counter-society within the bounds of the present society, they could draw people in.
Also, a recognition of the mortality of man might put the emphasis on living rather than perpetuating the sentiment that man
is immortal, and need not recognize the beast in himself This
proposed solution was contested
by a member of the audience.
Adolf Gucinski, who felt that the
beast exists in society’s self-worship, and used Emile Durkheim

source.

as a

The next of the Literature
series will take place in early
February, and will deal with
works by Saul Bellow and Norman Mailer All students are wel

come.

Where

•hop

for particular

men

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>—
—

the OZ

—-

—I

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

VILLANOVA

REVIEW

PAPERS

B

(see page two)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1965

VOLUME 16

NO. 13

Deveaux Announces Discount
FSA Approves 10% Discount
In Univers B k
P
7

At a meeting of the Board of
Directors of the Faculty-Student
Association, held yesterday in the
office of Upiversity President Clifford C, Furnas, members voted to
aeceed to the Student Senate request for a 10% discount on educational materials sold in the University Bookstore in Norton Union. Further, a budget request for
$85,000 with the right to petition
for up to five-thousand dollars
more should the need arise for
greater funds, was considered and
approved. The budget, for the
coming fiscal year is thirty-thousand dollars more than any former
Student Senate request.

Kim Darrow axplal
dential selection.

Student Role in Selection
Discussed at SFA Forum
By BRIAN EGAN

Dean Siggelkow, acting chairman of the Student Faculty Administration Forum, called the
meeting to order Friday, November 19, and directed the discussion of the role of the students
in helping to select the new president of the University. During
the meeting, such related topics
as the nature of a university, the
role of students in running the
university, and the relative roles
of the faculty, students, and administration in university were
discussed.
The fact that this forum was
only a means of discussing and exchanging ideas and not a legislative body was stressed by Dean
Siggelkow. After a time limit
was placed on the meeting, the
discussion was prefaced by a letter to the forum from Professor
Touster, chairman of the Faculty
Advisory Committee to make recommendations for a new president to the Board of Trustees of
the University of the State of
New York.

Dr. Touster stated that the committee felt that the new president
should have either a doctorate or
a professional degree, should
have an understanding of university life and of the roles of
the various elements in the university, and should have concern
for academic freedom.
The topics of discussion ranged
from the extent that students
should be able to influence the
selection of the new president to
whether students might serve on
the Faculty Advisory Committee
or faculty and students should
serve on the University Advisory
Committee to select the president.
Kira Darrow presented a resolution to place at least one
faculty member and one student
on the University Committee. This
resolution was based on the belief that since these two groups
constitute the most essential part
of the university they should have
some influence in selecting the

new president.

The resolution was defeated by
an 8-9-0 vote. The opinion was
expressed, though, that this does

not mean that the Student Faculty Administration Forum is opposed to the principle behind the
resolution but only against the
specific resolution itself.

The discount will go into effect

on January 1, 1966, one month later than asked by the Senate. The

increased time span will, according to assocition members, provide the bookstore officials with
enough time to arrange for the
practical aspects of the discount.

Student Association President Clinton Deveaux (I.) listens to Vice
President Puffer comment on "muddle of FSA finance".

The 10% reduction will cover
all items required for work in any
given course. Used books, in addi
tion to materials necessary for

lar concession.

laboratory work, will bo covered
by the price' reduction, except in
such cases as “fair trade agreements” will jeopardize a particu

To provide (or greater equality
in pricing policies and to offset
the imbalance created by the re-

duotion for the student body, faculty and staff discounts will be
restricted to the same terms as
student reductions. Previously,
the latter two groups received
across the board decreases on all
items sold at the University Bookstore.
The bookstore discount is be-

Pro-Vietnam Policy Group
Cites Purpose as Education
By NANCY TODER

An organization known as the
“Students for U. S. in Viet Nam”
has recently been formed on the
Buffalo campus. It is a “middle”
group that is opposed to both the
left and right positions on the current situation in Viet Nam.

possibility of reform was good if
more pressure was exerted on the
government.

The organization contains approximately twenty members and
at the present time they are waiting for recognition from the Sen-

ate. Dr. Zimmerman, a professor
of philosophy, is acting as the
group’s advisor. Anyone interested in obtaining more information should approach the group’s
table in Norton Union or call
Woody Langdon at 885-0291 or
Ur. Zimmerman at 634-4592.

The principal purpose of “Students for U.S. in Viet Nam” is
the educate the students by handing out literature which presents
both sides of the question. A major difficulty is determining which
sources of information are reliable. At present the New York
Times, the Reporter, and a book
published in Hanoi containing several of Ho Chi Minh’s speeches
are being used as reference material.
Woody Langdon, President of
“Students for U.S. in Viet Nam”
elucidated the group’s philosophy.
He believes that we are justified
in remaining in Viet Nam but
that it is our responsibility to
“make a greater effort in producing economic and political reform.” Acknowledging the dictatorship and illegitimacy of the
South Vietnamese government,
Mr. Langdon feels that the instia
tution of a dictatorship was
“matter of error" and that attempts should be made to trans_
form the present government of
South Viet Nam into a democracy.

“Students for U.S. in Viet Nam
make
believe that we should
a
greater attempts to obtain
peaceful settlement, but that as
fruitless,
long as the talks remain
the war should continue. Questioned on the hopelessness of
endeavoring to reform the government’s policy, Mr. Langdon replied that he did not feel the sitwas hopeless and that the

uation

ing conducted on a trial basis and
will expire on May 31, 1966, unless

deemed both successful and feasible by association members.

Though not presented formally
at this meeting of the board, the
Student Senate demand for a 15%
decrease in prices on all items
sold at the food service concessions operated by the FSA, was
discussed upon presentation by
Dean of Students Richard Sigglekow. In contrast to the report of
the audit conducted by the State

of New

York, board

members

pointed out that according to
their figures, The food service dlvision of the FSA, came out some
$32,000 in the red for last year’s
operation.
Board members further felt that
any decrease in these charges at

this time would be premature.

They recommended that Student
Association President Clinton Deveaux postpone action on the request until the results of an audit
currently in progress are available. This financial investigation (s
being conducted by a private firm
at the request of the association.
Underlying all debate, was what
Dr. Claude E. Puffer, Vice-president for Business Affairs, termed
a complete “muddle of FSA finances.” Dr. Puffer stressed that
pending future decisions of both
the State of New i York and the
State University system, little if
any concrete plans can be formu'Studei its foi

lated.

NORTON HOURS
Operating hours for
Norton Hall during Thanksgiving Weekend will he:
Wednesday, Nov. 24
7 a.m. 11 p.m.
Thursday, Nov 25
—

-

—

CLOSED
Friday, Nov 26
1 a.m.

a.m.

-

Saturday, Nov. 27
a.m. 7 pm.
The building will open
again at 8 p.m. for the
Chancellor’s Ball, Satur-

—

-

day evening.
Food service available
during building hours
only.

The state, in conjunction with
the report of the State Department of Audit and Control released on October 26, is expected
to rule on the disposition of the
surpluses compiled in former
year's of FSA operation. In addition, future State University system contracts with the FSA may
include rental fees from association funds for the use of stateowned property.

�Tuesday, November 23, 1945

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Editorial Comment

.

.

.

Drama &amp; Speech Department
Announces New MA Program

BREAD AND BUTTER
The "bread and butter” issue of stifdent fees and
costs that have raised such excitement here and in Albany are reaching a settlement in the announced “discount” (see story, page one), but the situation which
The Department of Drama and
Public Address and Oral Com
spawned the outrageous profiteering remains essentially Speech
at UB has announced a munication.
the same. The problem is complex; the FSA sees its new Master
of Arts program in
role as one of “business efficiency” rather than service,
Designated to include classical
the faculty view themselves as “hired professionals”
rhetoric, public address, and communication theory as a single
rather than leaders of an academic community, and the
specialty, this program will make
well, the students don’t seem too sure.
students
it possible for students to focus
Albany, and the impossible bureaucratic machine of
on preparation for the doctorate
the State University, hangs like a storm cloud on the
in speech or to meet State Dehorizon. If Albany assumes direct control of the “bread
partment of Education requireand butter” of student fees and costs, then it will take six
ments for graduate study in their
Professor Walter E. Oberer
months of triplicate memos and vouchers to get a box of spoke on the “United Auto Workacademic concentration.
the
FSA, then ers Public Review Board” at the
paperclips. If these matters are left to
Courses will be offered in rhethe same sad state of affairs will almost certainly conSchool of Law, Thursday, Novtoric and public address, comember 18 at 11 a.m. This public
tinue.
muication theory, and speech
There is the serious possibility of a student strike lecture was sponsored jointly by pathology and audiology. There
Stuthe
of
Law
and
the
School
and boycott to secure a more equitable distribution of
are substantial library resources
FSA “surpluses,” but unless the problem is attacked at dent Bar Association.
in speech, including a strong colits roots, the coming generations of students will have to
lection of references related to
Dr, Oberer, Professor of Law
fight the same battle. There is something to strike for, at Cornell University, was Exclassical rhetoric.
of
the
but the high fees and prices are only a symptom
ecutive Director of the UAW
Graduate Assistantships in Dereal trouble. What is needed is a revitalization of faculty Public Review Board for two
Teaching, and Research are
and student participation in the affairs of the University. years. This board, composed of bate,
available for qualified students.
group
a
outside
of
citizens
the
saving”
The discounts will come after a sufficient “face
Stipends begin at $2,500 plus
of both labor and governperiod. If all you want is lower costs, then there is no ranks hears
tuition and fee waivers. Stanley
disputes
and
decides
ment,
reason to strike, but if you are as concerned about your between the UAW and indivi- D. Travis is chairman of the proeducation as you are about your stomach and your purse, dual members of the union.
then the time is coming to show that concern and to deCraft Shop Schedule
Because of its independence,
mand that the faculty and students be given a meaningthe Review Board is thought to
Wed., Nov. 24—1-5 p.m.
ful voice in determining the future and growth of this provide
greater protection of the
University.
Thurs. Sun.—CLOSED
individual rights of the union
MORE ON THE FORUM
Mon.,
Nov. 29—Resume
member. It was established by
The Faculty-Student-Administration Forum held its the UAW in 1957 and has been
normal schedule
second meeting last Friday and once again was conspicucopied by several unions.
ous for the lack of intelligent and informed discussion
that took place there. Dr. Touster of the law school and
the faculty committee on selection of a new president
for this campus extended a welcome offer to the students to consult with the committee, but the forum itself
defeated Kim Darrow’s excellent proposal urging more
meaningful participation in the selection process by both
faculty and students.
From that time Jack went about
By RICHARD STONE
It would be unfair to say that the forum has thus-far
been a failure, for it has proven that there is a great deal Courtesy Wisconsin Daily Cardinal all Deceia, voting in its Capitol,
and sitting upon its councils, and
of work to be done before anything like "community govporkbarreling its bills.
Ted Sorensen, the late Presiernment" can be considered at this university. As yet,
dent
aide and now pohowever, it has not provided a place for that vital work liticalKennedy’s
biographer, wrote in his
When, behold, his fame was
to begin. With important items like "the role and cost final chapter of “Kennedy:”
told throughout the land, that is
of athletics” on the agenda, a fixed meeting schedule to “Even though he was himself alto say: he was a young and exassure greater attendance from those not directly on the most a legendary figure in life, ceeding handsome man. But he
panel would be a boon. There is still hope that the forum Kennedy was a constant critic of was possessed by a great lonelimay achieve its stated goal of increased dialogue and
ness.
the myth, and it would be an
understanding among the three major populations of hte ironic twist of fate if his martyrAnd Jack spake unto himself
University, but if the meetings continue to be plagued by dom should now make a myth of
and saith, Whence cometh this afblind protection of vested interest, intellectual snobbery, the mortal man.”
fliction: and forthwith cast it out
and ad-hominem bickerings, then a great deal more than
But what with the secular resaying, The damsel Jacqueline
the forum will be doomed to failure!
ligion that has grown tenaciousshall appear before me; and he
A WORD OF WARNING
ly around his memory (one makes telephones her and saith, Wouldst
The Thanksgiving recess is upon us and the death the pilgrimage to Arlington, buys thou take in a double-feature?
rate due to traffic accidents will take its customary leap. graven images, and reads books
of the Apocrypha, like “A Day
And it came to pass that JacMotorcyclists will account for the highest per capita rise
because of the Weather, and because of the Targe numit is hard to see how Sorenhim which was called the Tribune,
bers of novice riders on the roads. One or two practical dy,”
sen’s book, or Mrs. Evelyn Linand he took her to wife.
suggestions are in order.
coln’s “My Twelve Years With
If you have driven solo for less than 5,000 miles you John F. Kennedy,” or Arthur
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING
should wear a helmet. You pillion passengers should Schlesinger’s and Pierre SalinTO ST. SORENSEN
always wear helmets, since they are the most vulnerable. ger’s forthcoming works will shoo
Now in the fourteenth year of
Pillion passengers should be instructed to lean with the away the faithful.
his office, and being full with
rider, since the instinctive reaction is to lean the opposite
ambition, Jack went forth into the
No doubt these memoirs will be
way on corners. The front brake should be used sparand there went out a
ingly, and if the temperature at ground level is freezing read in the same devotional spirit wilderness;
fame of him through all the reas the way in which one reads the
or below, the front brake should not be Used at all. Region round about.
member that dips in the road and bridges freeze over Gospels. And for those who prefer the myth to th6 man, I have
before the rest of the road, and that a frozen surface, rendered passages from three of
And he campaigned in their
even if it has no ice on it, affords less traction than northe books to make your spiritual cities, being desirous of all and
mal. At most, a motorcycle has 2\-&gt; square inches of reading easier.
preaching the Row called B, which
contact with the road and that the more weight you
men shall know by the sign of
the donkey.
carry, the harder it is to stop quickly.
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING
A motorcycle is not a toy, and it is not a vehicle to
TO ST. LINCOLN
But the Devil came unto Jack
be driven like a car it is a swift and highly maneuverin the guise of a hairy man, which
Patrick
of Kilkenny begat Patable piece of machinery that takes more skill and coJ. of Boston; and Patrick J. is called Nixon, and tempted him;
ordination to drive than a car, apd driving one well is rick
begat Joseph of Hyannis; and Joand Jack wrestled with the Devil
one of the most satisfying experiences a man can have.
seph begat Jack, who is called
for forty days and forty, nights;
.

.

Oberer Treats
Review Board

.

-

gram; he should be contacted for

further information at the Department of Drama and Speech,
Crosby Hall, Room 112,

WBFO Director Named
To Advisory Board
Henry Tennebaum, WBFO Program Director, has been appointed to the newly formed Music Advisory Committee of National Educational Radio. This four-man
committee will evaluate music
programs submitted for national
distribution over educational networks and act as an advisory body
to the executive director of educational radio in the area of music programming.
There are over 100 educational
stations which are members of the
educational network and Mr. Tennebaum is the only member of
the music committee not employed as a full time program director.

Present program director of
WBFO, he has served as the station’s music director during the
last two years. For the last two
summers he has worked in the
radio department of the National
Music Camp in Interlochen, Michigan.

The Oz Papers
them power to advise and to deliberate.
Now the names of the twelve
apostles are these; The first, Rusk,

who is called Dean, and McNamara of Ford; Stewart and Ribicoff whose given name was Abe;
Luther and C. Douglas; Orville
and J. Edward; Arthur and Adlai
the wise; Lyndon and Bobby the
brother.
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING
TO ST. SCHLESINGER
In those days the multitude being full of confusion, there arose
a wrath against the isle of Cu-

bana; and soldiers walked the
land crying, Woe unto thee, Cubana, for in thine iniquity shalt
thou be torn asunder.

And the warriors came unto
Jack and said, Lo, for we shall
rise up and crush the Devil, as
a dog doeth his fleas, for it is
written.
And Jack saith, No, for I have
wrestled the Devil and he abideth in California; and as for the
dog, him which is called Checkers, he abideth with him.

But the soldiers were sorely
vexed and said unto Jack, Behold, for we have deviseth a plan.
And Jack harkened unto them;
for he was not a soldier.

-

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for

exam periods. Thanksgiving,

Christmas, and Easter.

Editor&gt;in-Chief
Managing Editor

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

10,000.

national

National Advertising
Madison Ave., New

advertising

Service
York,

Inc.,

N. Y.

And Jack, walking by the river
of Deceia, saw two brethren, Ted
called Sorensen, and Evelyn called Lincoln, casting stones into the
And he said unto them, Follow

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription S3,00 per year, circulation

for

the land of Deceia, which is upon
the Potomac, in the borders of
Marylandia and Virginia.

sea.

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Represented

Kennedy and he was the secondborn, And Jack went down into

by
420

and cried unto

him.

Begone, thou Nixon, for it is
said, Thou shall not tempt me.

And when the Devil had ended
all the temptation, Jack returned
in his power into the city of
Deceia; and the multitude fell
at his knees crying, Hail to the
Chief.

me, and I will make you servants

For they had delivered unto
him great and wondrous gifts,

And they starightway left their
stones, and followed him: for

that is to say, early returns from
Ohio and Connecticut.
And when he had called unto
him his twelve disciples, he gave

of mine office.

they were unemployed.

And it came to pass that an
raised, and the army
went forth and was defeated; and
men named it The Bay of Swine.

army was

And the multitude when they
heard these things, they were cut
to the heart and unto Jack they
gnashed their teeth and made a
wrathful cry.
For the soldiers had lent false
council, and they betrayed him.

And Jack lamented for the
hardness of their hearts; and cried
in a loud voice, My God, my God,
why hast thou forsaken me?
And Jacqueline took him down
and wrapped him in her arms;
and he wept.

�Tuesday, November 23, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE THRU

IRC Organizes Blood Drives Deparfmenf of Planning and Development
To Help Soldiers In Vietnam Outlines Expansion Program for Campus
MARK K. ROBISON

By

The Activities Committee of
the Inter-Residence Council has
organized a Blood Drive to help
the soldiers fighting in Viet Nam.
One hundred and thirty-five pints
of blood were donated on November 16; students may also donate
blood on December 1 from 10
to 4 in Tower basement.

hopes that this Blood Drive will

promote better relations between
the university and the city of
Buffalo.
The Blood Drive at UB, the
first one of its kind for the
specific purpose of helping soldiers in Viet Nam, has had a good
deal of publicity which led to the
donor response. In addition to
student donations of blood, several faculty members have pledged to donate.

The I.R.C. is working in conjunction with the Buffalo Chapter of the Red Cross. The I.R.C.

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The Department of Planning
and Development is presently un-

dertaking an expansion program
for the Main Street campus. According to Mr. Doemland, head
of the department, “This is the
last time we can use available
space on this campus. From now
on expansion can only be carried
out through the leasing or buying
of already existing buildings and
land on the perimeter of the
campus. We already own nineteen such tracts of land,”

The entire project entails the
construction of twelve temporary
buildings, at a contract cost of
$1.2 million. When asked if some
of the funds would come out of
student fees, (such as was the
case for the Millersport property)
Mr. Doemland stated, “All of the
money would come directly from
Albany, out of state funds.”
Three of these structures have
already been completed. They are
the two temporary classroom and
office buildings next to trailer
park and the third between Acheson

and Parker.

At the present time there are
still nine structures to be completed; foundations for four of
these are now in the process of
being outlined or poured. The
present construction consists of

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about five years, but admitted
that they could last much longer
if necessary.
Locations for all of the present
buildings are in the heart of the
campus and except for Foster
annex, will not be seen from
the street. When asked why the
huge expanse of land on the
Main Street side of the campus
couldn't be considered for building space, Dr. Doemland explained that the temporary structures
would mar the appearance of
the campus. “We are ashamed
of them," he admitted.

As soon as the concrete foundations for the above mentioned

buildings are completed, work
will begin on the Lockwood Library annex, which will also consist of stact and reading areas
and a chemistry classroom building. This leaves three remaining structures to be erected: the
School of Education’s faculty office, a building for housing the
Medical School’s animal quarters
and one general classroom and
faculty office building.
At one of the interviews, Dr.

Doemland stated that the Uni-

He also stated “Our facilities
arc not sufficient for expansion
out there, it would mean a revision in the heating, lighting
and sewer components. We are
not able to initiate such an undertaking when the hospital is built
here."

Baird Announces Change
In Ticket Purchase Policies
As a result of the large request for tickets for musical

dressed

events at Baird Hall, from both
the general public and the university, the Music Department
has announced a change in policy
regarding sales of tickets,
go on sale

envelope must

closed).

Tickets for performances will

Homade Quality Pizza

Student Discounts Available in Person

versity planned the life expectancy of these buildings to be

three administration buildings
and a science library annex. The
library annex will be used for
stack and reading areas and when
the transition is complete, the
three administration buildings
will reopen 22 thousand square
feet in Hayes Hall, which then
will be converted into faculty
and classroom space.

to university faculty,

staff, and students three weeks
prior to the event; they will be
available to the general public
two weeks in advance. The Box
Office will not accept reservations by telephone but tickets
may be purchased there in per
son or by mail order ( check for
payment and a stamped, self-ad

Standing room will be sold on
the night of the performance at
8 p.m.; no reservations will be
taken. The music department
hopes that “this change will give
the students, staff and faculty
the first opportunity to acquire
scats for our performances.”

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Tuesday, Nov. 23 thru Sunday, Nov. 28
(near Woodlawn)

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Discounts

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57 on N.Y.S. Throway

BATTERIES
ACCESSORIES

2c Discount
per
gal.

Given on GAS Fill-Ups
SPECIAL RATES ON
REPAIRS
PARTS
—

KENDALL KASTLE
KAR KLINIC
IRV

&amp;

ARNIE ROSENTHAL

523 STARIN at Taunton
TP 6-9429
Charge Plans Available
Present Your ID Card
Lets than 5 minutes

from U.B.

1962 BUICK
Conv. Good Condition, Auto.
Trans. —PRICED RIGHT

1962 VALIANT

Sports Cpe., Bucket Seats,
SHARP!
3 spd. trans.
—

be en

"O-JAYS"
SINGING ALL THEIR LATEST RECORDINGS
Matinee Sunday 5-9 P.M.

�Tuesday, November 23, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Bulls Defeat Villanova;
Finish Season with 5-3-2

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the Bulls will have depth at quarterback-something which they
have lacked for a good many
years.

In any event, last Saturday’s
contest was a hard fought one in

which the Bulls’ offense made
one of its better showings, and
the vaunted defense did its
typical tremendous job. UB took
the early lead when, with about
two minutes remaining in the
opening period, quarterback Nick
Capuana capped off an 82 yard,
13 play march by sending fullback Lee Jones into the Wildcat line for the final two yards
and six points. Joe Oscodal converted and UB led 7-0.
Later, in the second period,
Capuana fumbled at midfield and
the Wildcats recovered, giving
them excellent field position. On
the next play from scrimmage,
Villanova halfback Joe Santomauro threw a scare into the UB
defense when he got free behind
the secondary, but alleviated that
threat when he let a perfect pass
from Wildcat quarterback Dave
Connell slip through his fingers.
However, six plays later, Connell
passed to end Paul Sodaski for
five yards, and the Wildcats were
on the scoreboard with six points
—the first scored against UB in
three weeks. Jim Case split the
uprights and the score was
evened, 7-7 at halftime.
Offie must have had something
up his sleeve. The Wildcats, possessors of a 1-7 record entering
the contest, were simply not
being contained in the first half,
but after intermission, the Bulls
all of a sudden became their

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Passes Intercepted By

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Fumbles Lost
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1
6-43

Louis XIV improved upon the
methods of warfare. An example
is the development of a linear
frontier for a successful defense
or attack. Other nations soon followed suit, and coalitions began
to form.

Dr. Wolf closed his lecture by
asking, “If a man learned all
these things to perfect wars and
if these things became the fundamental strategies of later wars,
could this be a “reluctant soldier?”

Meeting on Foreign

Studies to Be Held
A student meeting on Overseas
Study of Foreign Languages will
be held Wednesday, December 1,
7 p.m. in room 231 Norton. The
program will include a general
introduction on foreign study programs in Europe and South America.

The program will be conducted by the following members of
the Department of Modern Language and Literature: Bruno Arcudi, Lecturer in Italian; Peter
Boerner, Associate Professor of
German;

85

BULL SESSSION
The UBVillanova series in now evened at
two victories apiece. Both UB victories have come at the Wildcats’ home stadium . . . UB soph
end Ashley broke the record for
yards gained by a pass receiver.
Saturday he caught two for 58
yards giving him 17 receptions
for 349 yards on the season. The
old mark was held by Nick Bottini in the yard 1958 season (313
Inter-Residence Council passed
yards) when the Bulls won the
a resolution at its meeting TuesLambert Cup, symbolic of Eastday, November 18, recommendern small college supremacy . . .
ing abolition of dress standards
The second half recovery by the
UB defense changed the Wildcats in the dining halls.
rushing statistics drastically. In
The following is the resolution
the first half they gained 115 to be sent to the Housing office
yards on the ground, but after and Dean Siggelkow:
intermission were held to minus
“Be it resolved that the Inter16 . . . Capuana and Webber each Residence
Council recommend to
accounted for 76 yards rushing,
the University Administration
while Lee Jones gained 39 . . ,
present dress regulations
The 1-8 finish for Villanova that the
be abolished and the following
marks the low point in Coach Philosophy
and Code of Dress be
Alex Bell’s six year tenure at the adopted by Monday, December
6,
Pennsylvania school.
1965.
“Philosophy of Dress: In our
culture, manner of dress has beBILLIARDS
come an important criterion by
which we are evaluated and judgINVITATION TO POCKET
ed by our peers and our society.
BILLIARD PLAYERS
In keeping with the principle of
With Time to Spare
maintaining the student’s rights
in the academic (community, the
DURING HOURS WHEN THE
University has committed itself
UNION ROOM IS FILLED—

Peter

Boyd-Bowman,

Professor of Spanish; Miss Wilma
J. Newberry, Assistant Professor
of Spanish; Julio Rodriguez, Assistant Professor of Spanish; Gordon R. Silber, Professor of Romance Languages and Chairman
of the Department of Modern Languages and Literature.

Film Society
Tonight at 8 p.m,
Spectrum Office

100’ Project to start

IRC Passes Resolution

Europe for $100

national Travel Est., 68 Herrengasse.
Vaduz,
Liechtenstein
(Switzerland) enclosing $1 with
your inquiry to cover the cost of
the material, overseas handling
and air mail postage.

...

realization that men less Impetous than soldiers should be in
position of authority.

...

Ed's Suzuki

”WEurope, including transportation. possible for less than $100.
A complete do-it-yourself prospectus including Instructions,
money saving tips and a large
selection of job opportunities
along with discount tours and
application forms may be obtained by writing to Dept. X, Inter-

Dr. John B. Wolf, professor at
the University of Minnesota, expressed his views on Louis XIV
as a soldier, in a lecture, Thursday, November 18. He spoke on
Louis XIV’s attitudes toward war,
and pointed out that his tactics
were the forerunners of conventional warfare.

usual fierce selves. With approximately four and one half minutes
remaining in the third stanza,
Connell dropped back to his goal
line to punt, but never did get
the kick off his foot. UB’s AllEast defensive end, Gerry LaFountain crashed through and
blocked the kick, driving it into
Dr. Wolf began by saying that
the end zone. Craig Helenbrook many people considered Louis
fell on the ball for a touchdown, XIV a “reluctant soldier.” Dr.
and the Bulls led 13-7. Joe The Wolf, however, believes that this
Toe booted his eighth consecutive isn’t so. To illustrate his opinion,
successful placement, and UB exhe gave a brief biography of
tended the lead to 14-7.
Louis Quatorze and his encounters
Five minutes of play later, with war.
early in the fourth quarter, ConLouis grew up during a period
nell once again dropped back to
punt, but got the kick off this of war; therefore, he thought of
time. It did not travel very far, himself as a soldier. This attitude
was reflected in his actions when
however, and Fred Geringer returned the boot eight yards to he became king and felt the need
the Wildcat 32 yard line. On the to fight a war in order to fulfill
ensuing series, Capuana carried the role as ruler.
for 12, ran again for five, handed
During his reign, he gained
off to Jim Webber for six, ran
himself once again for four, and many insights into the essence
gave to Webber for three more. of war. One of his lessons was
that great soldiers can’t always
On the final play of the series,
Capuana carried the pigskin over be trusted and those who brandfrom the one, and the Bulls had ish their swords are often hindrances in battle. This led to the
a commanding 20-7 lead. The conversion attempt failed, breaking Chairman Modern Language Dept,
Joe The Toe’s string, and seven
DR. GORDON SILBER
minutes later, the final gun
sounded on a winning note for
the Bulls.
STATISTICS
Buffalo
7 0 7 6—20
Villanova
0 7 0 0— 7
Bflo Villa.
First Downs
11
17
Rushing Yards
..191
99
Passing Yards
65
110
Passes
3-8
10-20

For details write: Dean Loyd llaberly. I
Dickinson University, Rutherford, New

Jersey

to the idea of individual responsibility. It is with this principle
in mind that each individual student is charged with the responsibility of maintaining a standard
of dress which will be in keeping
with the norms accepted by the
society in which he lives. In order
to aid the individual in his selection of a manner of dress, some
specific guidelines are given in
the following code.

Code of Dress; A high standard
of dress should be maintained
by the individual whether it be
in the classroom, the dining halls
or the community.”

IRC Chairman, Gary Roberts,
feels that the administration will
accept the resolution since it is
a “Responsible student decision,
and refusal would denounce the
responsibility of student government”.

Come on Over to:

CUE BEE

3229 Main Street
Adjacent to Campus

Use Your ID Card and the
Hourly Rate is the Same
This applies to UB students
ONLY

PIZZA by DiRose
90t FOR 8 SLICE 13" PIZZA

4 p.m. to I a.m. Weekdays
"

■

In Dick Offenhamer's one
hundredth appearance ' as the
coach of the UB football team,
the Bulls handily defeated the
Villanova Wildcats by a score of
20-7 last Saturday at Villanova,
Pennsylvania. The win was the
Bulls' third straight and brought
their season record to 5-3-2, giving Offenhamer his seventh winning season in eleven years at the
UB helm.
It seems a shame that the season has now come to a close
just as the Bulls are beginning
to hit their stride. The last three
games, against Delaware, Colgate,
and Villanova have shown exactly
what the Bulls were capable of
achieving even without the services of an experienced quarterback. After the Boston University game, in which regular soph
signal caller Rick Wells broke
his leg, the football fortunes of
UB appeared to be diminishing
rapidly, but the team came back
and played what is generally regarded to be as their best football of the season. But the season is over, and reflection is all
that remains. It was not a great
campaign, but it was a more than
satisfactory one, and UB fans can
look forward to next year when

U. Minn. Professor Speaks
On Beliefs of Louis XIV

4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Fri.
3 BIG SHOPS
—

&amp;

Sat.

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                    <text>NEGRO IN

'.^m£

LITERATURE

VILLANOVA

PREVIEW

—

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1965

VOLUME 16

NO. 12

Committee on Reorganization Students Skip Dinner;
Treats Operational Division $1350 Raised for 'Freedom'
The Ad Hoe Committee to Reorganize the FSA met Monday.
November 15 in Dr. Puffer’s office to discuss the handling of the
operational division of the Faculty-Student

By ETHEL SOLOMON

Over 827 UB students gave up
their evening meal on November
18 to participate in the national
“Thanksgiving Fast for Freedom."
As part of a national project, UB
was one of 130 colleges taking
part in this endeavor to feed impoverished Mississippi residents.
This year approximately $1350'
was raised through the efforts of
National Student Association on

Association.

The committee had previously
divided the FSA activities into
three main areas: Restricted
areas, in which the FSA acts as
a repository of funds, administrative funds and expenses, and operating divisions.
The three sub-boards will be a
student board to cover most of
the student activities, a board of
student, faculty, and administration members to cover educational
development and Norton Union,
and an administration-dominated
board to operate the bookstore,
vending machines, parking, and
other such areas.

The first committee under discussion at the November 15 meeting was the Education-Recreational Development. This department
will be operated by the second
board of the tripartite body,
which covers educational development.
The third sub-board will handle
the operation of the Food Service, the Book Store, the Service
Center, and the Vending of Norton Union. Policy concerning this
operation will be handled by the
student board.

Committees not decided upon
the Athletic and Parking
divisions. Decisions will be postponed until the state issues policies on both areas.

were

Student members of the Ad Hoc
Committee are Ellen Cardone,
David Edelman, Clinton Deveaux,
and Robert Baier. Faculty members include Dr. Theodore Friend
and Mr. Stanley Travis. Administrative members are Miss Dorothy Haas, Dr. Claude Puffer,
Dean Richard Siggelkow, and Mr.
Balkin.

The next meeting of the Ad
will be held Tuesday, November 23, to discuss the
way in which people will be
chosen to participate in each of
the sub-boards.
Hoc Committee

Education Election
Postponed to Dec. 6
The chairman of Elections Committee of the Student Senate has
annonced that the elections scheduled for the School of Education
have been postponed from November 22 to December 6.
The decision was prompted due
to the lack of publicity on the
coming election. The Senate has
received only one petition to
date.

Bienstock, chairman of
Elections Committee, stated that
petitions for the School of Education seat can be secured in
the Student Senate office, 205
Norton Union.
Mr.

campus.
The fast here was sponsored
by a special committee of the
NSA, under the chairmanship of

Evelyn Damashek with Jeff Lyn

OR. CLAUDE E. PUFFER
Viee-Pres. for Business Affairs

The Food Service paid $1,60 for

received the collected money and
sent a check to the National Student Association office in Washington, where the

funds were

alloted for various food stuffs
and distributed. The needy Negro
and White people in Washington, Sunflower and Bolivar Counties, Mississippi, will receive these
supplies.
Mr. Norton donated three gal-

lons of coffee for each of three
days to be sold as "Freedom Coffee." The coffee was sold from
1:30 to 4:00 p.m. in the Rathskeller. at whatever price the students desired to pay. The con-

tributions for the coffee ranged
from 10c to 75c. An average of
was collected each day
$15
through the sale of this coffee.
The aid contributed to these
impoverished people was also
used as part of a self-help program. In this program, recipients
are urged to organize into local
committees and distribute the
goods themselves. In this way, the
poverty program is directed by
the poor themselves, and they
are encouraged in the development of local leadership.
It is hoped that this concentration of welfare in Mississippi
will lead to a spreading of the
program in more of the Southern

states.

Constitutional Amendments Proposed to Senate
Two amendments proposed at
the last Senate meeting seem to
share the same root cause—an
improved student role in selecting their representatives. The
reapportionment amendment of
Secretary Ellen Cardone (see text
below) seeks to provide a more
equal number of students represented by each Senator. Carl Levine, Senator and Regional National Student Association coordinator, has an amendment
which would require the election
of the Campus NSA chairman and
provide for selecting delegates to
the convention by plebiscite.
The “free hour” resolution
passed pn Monday, was taken to
the University Calendar Committee by Kim Darrow and Stewart
Edelstein. The committee viewed
the proposal favorably and has
referred it to the meeting of the
Assistant Dean’s Council next
Tuesday.
Mr. Levine proposed the contribution of fifteen dollars to
CARE for the people of South
Vietnam. A substantial portion of
the Senate opposed the donation
because of its political over-tones.
After an amendment to delete
the Vietnamese requirement was
defeated by a narrow margin, the
resolution passed.

The Student Book Exchange,

to counter the pricing policies of the
FSA operated bookstore, will receive continued Senate support.

Secretary ELLEN

established last semester

Senator

Kim Darrow’s resolution

CARDONE

the Exchange until
the bookstore set more reasonable prices on used books was
to continue

TEXT OF REAPPORTIONMENT AMENDMENT
Proposed amendment to the Student
(Revision of
Senate By-Laws, Article I
entire Section 1.)
Membership.
Article I.
Section 1. Representation
All regularly enrolled fulltime students
shall elect tq and be represented in the
Student Senate on a divisional-organira
tional basis a, follows.
A Divisional and School Representa
'
ves
division,
1. Representatives of each
school or class in this section shall
by and from the full time
day students registered in that division, school or class for the semester following the election. Students
who are freshmen at the time of the
who have not
soring election and
registered lor the fall shall be designated as University College sopho
mores. Sophomores and juniors who
have not registered in an upper division at the time of the election
shall be included in the divisions
which they have designated at previous registration as their program
section
areas. Representative, in this seme,
shall be elected in the spring
ter after March 1, and shall serve
for one year The following number,
shall be
voting representatives
OI
of voiiiig
V
e
College
spohomores,
a
.;

L

ejected

-

Un“ver.ity
'

..

b. College of Arts and
*

Petitions must be returned on
or before 4 o’clock, November
23. Information regarding the
election can be obtained in the
Senate office.

ford, assistant.

each dinner voluntarily conceded
by each UB student. The National
Student Association at UB then

c

Sciences. 5

of Business Administration.
Shil
undergraduates, one
seat,

d. School of Education, undergradee.

LhoolTf Engineering, undergr.d
'of

6

f School
graduates,

Health
one

Sciences, under

seal

This group

shall include juniors and seniors
Th.r
in Nursing. Occupational
h ka ' Therapy, and Med
Technology and undergrad
uates in Pharmacy.
seat,
K School of Law. one
h. Medical and Dental Schools, one

?PX.

E

&gt;’&gt;

seat
2. The freshman class shall hav- fou.
b.
voting representatives who shall
elected by the freshman class during
alter
October
15
semester,
fall
the
The date of the election shall b.
Freshset by the Student Senate
man Senators shall serve until the
end of the academic year At the
beginning of the fall semester he
President and Vice President of the
Freshman Class Council shall serve
as interim voting representatives
time as
the regular
until such
Freshman Senators are elected,
Divisional
3, Non-Voting
lives.
The Graduate Student Assoone nonvoting
nation shall send
School
The Law
representative.
Student Council shall send one nonvoting representative in addition to
the voting representative from the
School of Law.
B Organizational Representatives
1- The fallowing group, shall each have
one votmg representative, who shall
|&gt;e the President or Vice-President of
that organization
The Inter-Fraternity Council
b. The Panhellenic Council,
2, The Inter-Residence
Council shall
have two voting representatives, one
,

rh

„.

b

The

mon"^"!

Council

rations.

of Religious

Organ,

The books in the Exthat have not been reclaimed by students will be given

passed.
change

to the Civil Rights Committee's
annual book drive for southern
schools.

SDS, SANE Sponsor
Buses to Washington
The local chapter of SDS is
staging a march on Washington
(or peace on November 27 in
front of the White Hpusc. The
demonstration will begin at 11:00
a m. and there will be an outdoor
meeting in front of the Washing
ton Monument at 2:00 p.m.
SDS

members insist that the

only way to stop this and future
wars is to organize a domestic
social movement which challenges
the legitimacy of U. S. foreign
policy. The group proclaims that
this movement must also fight to
end racism, to end the paternal
ism of our welfare system, to
guarantee decent incomes (or all
and to supplant the authoritarian
control of our universities with
a communitv of scholars.
AN'E. the organization tha

demonstrated for a "sane nuclear
policy in 1962," is co sponsoring
the march. SANE is participating
to hasten a negotiated settlement
of the war. It affirms that no
party to the conflict in Vietnam,
the U. S. included, has done all
it can to bring about negotiations.
However. SDS believes that a
negotiated agreement cannot
guarantee democracy They maintain that only the Vietnamese
have the right of nationhood to
make their government democrat
ic or not. free or not. neutral or
not.

Buses will leave Norton Union
10 p m Friday. November 6,
and will leave Washington at 10
P m on Saturday, November 27
Tickets will be sold at the SDS

at

table

starting Wednesday

�PAM TWO

Friday, November 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

Bisonhead, Senior Men s Honor Society
Takes Active Part In University Affairs
By AUDREY LOGEL
One of the lesser known organizations on campus is the senior
men's honor society
Bisonhead.
Although it was established 42
years ago, the group has only recently begun to take an active
part in university affairs.
The society’s main purpose is
to unite the various groups and
interests of the school. Its members are chosen from every de
partment. In the second semester
of their junior year, all male
students with an average of at
least 1.7 are sent application
forms to fill out. They must also
obtain letters of recommends
tion from a faculty member and
—

from an advisor of an extra-curricular activity in which they participate. The applications are then
screened by members of Bisonhead and the members chosen.
Although the constitution allows
15 members, this year’s group has
only nine members. They are:
Kenneth Asher, Bennett Epstein,
Dennis Curtin, Thomas Kenjarski, Don Mingle, Alan Penn, Sam
Radick, Art Seigle and Rodney
Tabachinski. Past or honorary
members include: Dr. Furnas, Dr.
Plesur (their faculty advisor this
year), and Dr. Ebert,
This year the Society has sponsored lectures which are open to

the undergraduate body. The
speakers at the forums were Dr.
Willard Libby
Nobel Prize winner from the Medical School
and Dr. Nichols
who spoke to
the freshmen men on the subject
of sex. In addition to the open
—

—

—

lectures the Bisonhead members
hold frequent discussion sessions
with members of the faculty and
administration. At these gatherings members voice opinions and
discuss topics of mutual interest.

Currently, the Society is working on a new project. They plan
to give an award annually to a
member of the faculty who displays excellence in teaching.

Atheist and Jesuit
In Dialogue on God
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, member of the University Philosophy
Department and Father Lehmkul,
theology teacher at Canisius College, took part in discussion on
the existence of God, November
17. Father Lehmkul explained his
belief in God, based on the awareness of “self” and depending upon
the awareness of “other.” Dr.
Zimmerman defended his concept
of atheism rejecting a theistic
God who is all good and powerful.
Father

Lehmkul,

the

first

speaker, said that man’s realization of self depends upon trans-

from “self” to the
“other.” Thus, he ultimately experiences the “other” whom he
calls God. He stated “my experience of God is thus grounded in
the experience of self.”
cending

Dr. Zimmerman reasoned if
theism defines God to be all good
and all powerful then evil cannot
exist in the world. “But since I
know that evil exists, I come to
the conclusion that there can be
no infinitely good and powerful

6od.”

After their main speeches, the
two speakers took part in a dialogue discussing faith and the
existence of evil. Dr. Zimmerman

made the point that their common

Here’s the
shortest line
between
graduation and
a “go-places”
career.

belief in freedom and democracy
is far more important than their
disagreement concerning the existence of God.
The dialogue was followed by
questions from the floor which
ranged from the ambiguity of
the speakers to the evil of snowstorms.

UB Students
In Accident
Piero Hadjikokou and Ann Robbins, UB students, were struck by
a car at Englewood and Main on
Monday night, November 15.
Mr. Hadjikokou, a foreign student from India, is a music major
studying to be a concert pianist.
Interested in dramatics, he has
performed in the “Lady’s Not for
Burning.” Miss Robbins is a sophomore majoring in art; she is a
resident student.
The two UB students are at Sisters Hospital. Mr. Hadjikokou is
in satisfactory condition; he is in
the intensive care unit with no
visitors permitted. Miss Robbins

is in fair condition.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

Your name
Thesis Term Papers
-

Book Reports
30« per sheet

MRS. SOL SOLOWAY
18 North Ellwood Ave
Kenmore, N.Y. 14223

It’s the one you sign on at your
placement office for an interview with IBM
December 7-8
Want growth-with a difference?
Career excitement-with
stability? New frontiers in all
technologies-with the leader
in the nation's fastest-growing
major industry?

put your ideas to work and
earn superior rewards.

IBM can offer you extraordinary
growth opportunities in
Research, Development,
Manufacturing, Programing
and Administration-throughout
its network of labs, plants
and technical centers.

to appoint approximately 6,000
new managers. A wide range
of training and education
programs will help you meet
the challenge of growth.

If you want the (acts about these
careers, you'll want to talk to

the IBM interviewer.

Certainly, he wants to talk to you
about these key jobs.
They’re jobs with technical
responsibility. Where you can

In a growth company like IBM,
responsibility and advancement

come rapidly. In fact, during
the next five years IBM expects

So visit your placement office
now for a line on IBM. Sign
on it for your interview. If for any
reason you can’t arrange an
interview, visit your nearest
IBM branch office. Or write:
Manager of College Relations,
IBM Corporate Headquarters,
Armonk, New York 10504.

TF 6-0319

IBM is going places.
Why not

come along?

Whatever your area of study,
ask us how you might use your
particular talents at IBM.
Job opportunities at IBM lie in
eight major career fields:
(1) Research and Development,
(2) Engineering,
(3) Manufacturing, (4) Finance
and Administration,
(5) Marketing, (6) Field
Engineering, (7) Systems
Engineering, (8) Programing.
IBM is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.

HAVE

FUN

WORKING

IN

EUROPE

WORK IN
EUROPE
Luxembourg All types of
summer jobs, with wages to
$400, are available in Europe.
Each applicant receives a travel grant of $250. For a 36page illustrated booklet containing all jobs and application
-

IBM

forms •send $2 (handling and
airmail) to Dept. N, American
Student Information Service,
22 Avenue de la Liberty,
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

�Friday, November 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

American Negro In Literature Is
Topic of Lecture Given by Clifton
By

NANCY TODER

Mr. Fred Clifton, an instructor in philosophy, opened the
Contemporary Novel Series when
he spoke on “The American
Negro as portrayed in James Baldwin's Another Country and Ralph

Ellison’s The Invisible Man. The
series sponsored by the Union
Board Literature and Drama
Committee, presents qualified
speakers who discuss contemporary novels.

Mr. Clifton began his discussion on Ellison’s The Invisible
Man by stating a

paradox-“Elli-

his projection) becomes
visible only when he declares he
is invisible.” The projection of
Ellison is that of a “disillusioned
colored man” who does not wish

son

(or

to participate in the games played
between the blacks and whites,
Ellison is creating types, showing
the relationships between these
various types and indicating the
many roles that each individual
plays.

the same characteristics present
in all people. He talks intimately
about the relationships of his personalities probably because many
of them are real. Mr. Clifton inserted his view that the Negro is
experiencing a “Second Emanci-

Mr. Clifton then gave a short
but colorful synopsis of the novel
pointing out in several instances
how the major character is maintaining a “magical balance” between whites and blacks, and how
he is “walking the narrow edge
where the two communities are
connected.” The character is trying to understand the apparent
but out of necessity he must fail.

Jeff Lesser
Bob Case
Manager

—

Bob Van Slyke
George Levinton
Jay Nisberg

837-6744

837-3336

How to make a bold statement

You’re making a statement when
you wear this Arrow Cum Laude.
An antique gold and brown boxed
in with burgundy. With authentic
detailing, too. Gently flared
button-down collar. Back collar
button and box pleat. Shoulder

to waist taper. "Sanforized”,
of course. $5.00. Wear it and
make a statement:
ifnraat

fk/\

rtli,

At a meeting of the Freshman
Class Council. November 2, 1965,
many forthcoming programs were
discussed. Foremost among them
were Winter Week; a sale of
blazers, and two mixers comprised the -rest of the agenda.
“The plans for Winter Week
are really in full swing,” says
co-chairman Stephanie Sacks,
“and there are still openings for

the insignia of the school embroidered on the pocket. Anyone
interested should watch the
Spectrum and the bulletin boards
for further information about the
sale.
In conjunction with one of the
House Plans, the Council is presenting a mixer December 5 with
Lee Vogel of WKBW; all proceeds will benefit the United
Fund. Also in December the council will sponsor a "Golden Hits of
the Past” mixer.
The Council meets every Tuesday at 6:00 and everyone is welcome. Mr. Henig declared. “If
you have a viewpoint or opinion,

come to the meetings and help

give the Freshman Class not only
ah identity, but a real position on
the campus.”

Silk Screen Workshops;
Lecture and Participation

The EXCITING SOUNDS of

Available for WEEKEND ENTERTAINMENT

Winter Weekend Scheduled
By Freshman Class Council

many committees." Such activities as dances, movies, afternoon
mixers, a free sports night, snow
sculptures, motorcades and carnival arc being planned. The Mr.
and Miss Formal contests and the
Silver Ball will also be held.
The Council hopes to establish
a tradition at UB by sponsoring_a
sale of Rollins blazers. These blazers are navy blue and will have

In contrast to Ellison, Baldwin
creates personalities who exhibit

The
Uncalled
Four

PAM THRU

The Union Board Publicity
Committee in conjunction with
the Norton Hall Craft Shop, will
present a Silk Screen Process
Workshop on Saturday, November
20 and Saturday, December 4,
from 1 to 3 p.m., Norton Hall
Publicity Room 307.
The workshop will include the
“how to” of the silk-screen process plus a general introduction
to the possibilities for publicity
using this technique. Representatives of all student organizations
are invited to attend this workshop.
The first session will consist
of a lecture-demonstration by
Miss Nancy Belfor from the State
University College at Buifalo, an
expert in the silk-screening process. At the second session, students participating will have an
opportunity to apply the various
methods and techniques to their
own situations. Material used in
■

MR. CLIFTON SPEAKS
who has adopted the roles of
“politician, policeman, father, and
mother.” Baldwin has repudiated
the Minister and has tried to escape from his influence.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

these workshops will be furnished
Board Publicity

by the Union
Committee,

Registration forms must be returned to 225 Norton by Tuesday, November 16.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

rlntri

fp’■eiJ, 3nc.

sAttyoll

mill

Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

YOUR I.O. CARD IS WORTH 10% AT

Shoe Store

/./

3097 BAILEY AVENUE
NEW YORK

BUFFALO,

Nationally Advertiiad Brandi
U.S. KEDS
BATES FLOATERS

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AMERICAN GIRL

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3)24 Bailey

2896 Delaware Ave.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Open
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'

FASHION

SHOPS

�Friday, Novambar 19, 196$

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

(Comment

.

.

THE FSA RESOLUTION
We hope that the Student Senate resolution calling
for reform in the procedures of the FSA will have its
effect, because if it fails, Albany will probably take
over the operations currently administered by the FSA.
Bad as the FSA has been, Albany would be worse.
The plans for more student involvement in the workings of the FSA become more and more important as
more information comes to light about the use of student funds. The Norton Union film, “8 V2”, drew more
people than the football game, yet the football machine
consumes more money than all the workings of Norton
put together.

TO DIE IN VIET NAM
The latest LOOK magazine contains an article
by Eric Severeid exposing the blatantly hypocritical
and immoral policy of the Johnson administration. While
Johnson was making his famous speech offering “unconditional” talks to end the war in Viet Nam. U Thant, Secretary General of the United Nations, was making arrangements for talks in Rangoon. The»e peace talks were
refused by the United States. Secretary General Thant
returned and made arrangements once again, and again
the U. S. refused to go to the conference table!
The fact* are now exposed. The U. S. does not
want to negotiate and end the reign of death in South
East Asia. We are not prepared to negotiate “anywhere,
anytime.” It appears that President Johnson has lied
to this country and to the world. By this refusal, and by
the blatant lies President Johnson has issued, he has reduced the United States to the level of Hitler’s Germany
when they signed the Munich Pact. The United States
is engaged in the kind of murderous international duplicity that has plunged us into two world wars.
There will be no negotiated peace; there will be
no end to the murder of American men; there will be
no stop to the Viet Namese genocide; there will be no
honor or dignity in being an American until the insane
policy of planned duplicity is abrogated. President Johnson said the right thing when he pledged the U. S. to
unconditional talks; he said the right thing when he said
we wanted peace; he said the right thing when he
mourned the deaths in Viet Nam—BUT HE LIED.

THE RIGHT TO KNOW

.

If we are to live in a world with other men, if we
are to solve our differences by any other means than
the bloody bayonette—then information must be made
available not only to the “leaders,” but to the people as
well. The press has Ion? been the guardian of “an
informed electorate,” and an informed electorate is
the foundation of the democratic process.
The recent incident involving the attempted negotiations in Rangoon highlights the need for new legislatio in this area.. This country needs to have the 4 ‘right
to know ’’guaranteed, if only to make the rights of freedom of speech and of the press meaningful.
The Rangoon incident also highlights the need for
legislation in the area of “public trust.” The betrayal
of the “public trust” which took place when this country refused to negotiate after publicly proclaiming our
willingness to do so in another era might have been
grounds for impeachment. They should be grounds for
some sort of prosecution. If we can not assume that
our “leaders” are honorable men of good will, then
we must attempt to guarantee it by legislation.

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Editor-in-Ckiol

JEREMY TAYLOR

Managing Editor
Hmwi Editor

DAVID EDELMAN

ORSZULAK
Aaat.
Business Manager RAYMOND D. VOLPE
RONNIE BROMBERG
Eeetvre Editor
....JOHN STINY Photography Editor EDWARD JOSCELYN
Sport* Editor
RICHARD DRANDOFF
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Adviser..
Aaot.
IRENE WILLET
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
Copy Editor
Ad Coordinator
LAUREN JACOBS
GARY FISCHER
EDITORIAL POLICY II DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
c
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription S3. 00 per year, circulation
jyAw
(Tmvt

SUSAN GREENE

10,000.

Continuity Editor

The

.

MARCIA

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

grump

The headline of Tuesday’s
Spectrum read “Senate Demands
Price Decreases,” a marvelous, heroic, gallant gesture which is completely devoid of meaning and
will be flatly ineffective. It would

seem that it would penetrate

eventually that we have on this
campus an unrepresented majority. The students on this campus
would have due cause for an
armed rebellion if this were a
nation. We have no political rep-

resentation that has any power,
taxation without representation
and several other concepts that
have in the past caused people
to shoot at each other with intent
to kilt.
This is not a nation, which is
just as well. Those who prefer to

stand back and watch the carnage

—such as myself—tend to get

killed in a real, live, shooting
war. Since this is not a nation,
we then become an underpriveleged majority. It should be recognized that this can only happen
because of apathy on the part of
that majority, but we will not

dwell on that. The point is simply
that the Civil Rights struggle in

by STEESE

the South is a very similar situation on many counts and this
similarity provides a whole
damned armory of weapons to be
used in the situation.
Since a primary cause of the
present dissatisfaction is economic, i.e, the feeling that money is
being made in improper quantities by various organizations dealing in student service, let us pull
out an economic weapon. Since
this is a reasonably effective university, I will assume everybody
has heard of a boycott. 1 would
sugest that we rename this form
of action and call it a“Buy-Out.”
This principle is the same, especially for those services dealing
in perishable items. If a significant number of students could be
organized to divert their buying
power outside the on-campus facilities it would very possibly
interact with such things as overhead, salaries, and other expenses
to create a much more favorable
atmosphere for reduction of
prices.

There are completely legal and
non-violent ways of making life
at least a little difficult for those

hard, good merchants on campus
too. Businessmen being businessmen, I am tempted to think that
if he, Joe Bookstore owner, were
offered a markup of a small but
significant nature for doing nothing but ordering books and showing some students which crates to
pick up, he might be sorely
tempted.
I am not stupid enough to think
that a great many students can be
persuaded to sacrifice their convenience for a concept as nebulous as political equality. On the
other hand, it does involve money
out of almost everybody’s pocket
in the immediate present. I am
not a student leader. People behedin me make me very very
nervous. A “Buy-Out” properly organized by those people who do
represent student groups can and
will work. It will also be necessary that there be cooperation between commuters and resident
haliers and that such diverse
groups as the YAF and the SDS
recognize that each is made up
of human beings. It will not be
easy, but it can be done.
(Cont’d on P. 8)

Cacotopia and Eutopia
In his study of magic and religion, Sir James Frazer made the
following comment on the expul-

sion of evil:

whether the evils are conceived of as invisible or as
embodied in a material form,
is a circumstance entirely
subordinate to the main object of the ceremony,
which is s i m p 1 y to affect a
total clearance of all the ills
that have infested a people.
While Frazer’s study was confined mostly to primitive peoples,
the prevalence of acts of expulsion of evil in our own society is
noticeable enough to warrant
some consideration.
.

.

.

Take for example our present
bugaboo, Communism. It is no
coincidence that the metaphor
most often used in describing
Communism i?cancer. Cancer and
Communism, the two things we
fear most, lumped together into
a convenient tumor capable of
sapping our bodily essences. Communism becomes, in this way, an

organic malady (or anti-nature).
Our opposition becomes a form
of public health. We have, in ef-

fect, effected “a total clearance
of all the ills .
.

As we reach different levels of
civilization we become more,
sophisticated in what we will
allow as an embodiment of evil.
Though racial bigotry and antisemitism still exist among the
primitive, the more civilized become increasingly discriminating
about the nature of their buga-

boos. We discard the concept of
the International Communist Conspiracy because it is too all-inclusive for our hard, analytic minds.
Instead we fasten upon a more
palpable evil. Like Red China.
It is remarkable that it has
taken us so long. Red China is
the perfect bugaboo: We know so
little about her and she is so
wonderfully alien. We are thus
enabled to make of the Red
Chinese a Satanic force. The drive
against them becomes a holy crusade. Whether or not Red China

Commentary.
On the fifteenth of this month
I was pleasantly surprised to receive a letter (with the courtesy
of the Editor, to whom it was
sent) from a lieutenant in the
U. S. Navy. This officer, one
William C. Williams first says
that he feels afraid that his name
is a very common one. He further states that his profession,
as a career officer, is very common also. He is a fully-qualified
nuclear delivery bombardier and
I am glad that he is happy and
satisfied with his place in life.

0. K. about that much I am

prepared to be nice. But when
he says that he would have a hard
time training me to become a
useful military man, I must say
something. I am, as I have said
before, not afraid to serve in

the armed forces of my country.

.

.

and although many people tend
to sneer at our Reserve/National Guard forces, they play an
important role in this nation’s
defense.
To Mr. Williams: I am at present serving with the New York
State National Guard Co. E (TAM)
727th Mt. Bn. I am an aircraft
mechanic and most of my superiors consider that I am a
“useful military man.” I am, as
a matter of fact, at this time in
the position of training others in
my unit to become useful mechanics. I want to do a good job,
and believe that I do. My desire to perform well has nothing
to do with my position on the
Vietnamese conflict, were I to
be sent there with my unit tomorrow, I should hope to perform my best. However, I will

is the evil we make of her is not
the issue. One thing, however, is
certain; Red China is necessary
for our peace of mind, a peace
that could ironically get us all
killed.
It may be that Red China is an
evil force, but before we go about
expelling it we should know what
we are doing. For the implicit
danger in believing our own bugaboos and metaphors is the possibility that we may go to war
over them. Unfortunately we
cannot do so on a figurative
level. There may have been a
certain logic to war when the
strongest weapon was the longbow, but where is it now? The
fact is that the Chinese are human
beings: They feel, eat, sleep, excrete, and copulate much in the
same way we do. Another fact:
We have to learn to live with
them. We are much stronger than
they. We can afford to try.

If we need a bugaboo, let’s try
the Cleveland Browns. It’s safer.

By JOHN H. BONER

never volunteer to go there. I
am against this present war to
the very bottom of my soul !!!
You are not a war monger, Mr.
Williams
a war-monger is
one who knowingly, and cunningly sets out with deliberation to
...

undermine the basic foundations
of peace and trust. The “warmongers” who work for this country would be found in an organization like the C. I. A. Mr. Williams, I would say that if you
are “trained, able, and without
qualms willing to kill millions”
in the name of democracy, and
if there are others, in your position who feel the same way,
then God help this country . . .
no! God help the world !!
do you
Think, America
want a man like this at the
...

trigger of nuclear

devastation?

�Friday, Nevambar 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

gucinski.

..

Lecture Given by George Abraham;
'Indian Jews: Forgotten Community?'
“Indian Jews—Forgotten Community?” was the topic discussed
by Mr, George Abraham at a
meeting of the Student Zionist
Organization on November 16.
The Jewish Community in India, commented Mr. Abraham, is
the poorest one in the world.
The community, B’nai Israel, consists of approximately 20,000 Jews
whose
ancestors were shipwrecked sixteen to twenty centuries ago near Bombay on their

In B’nai Israel they prefer to
have love which follows marriage,
rather than marriage which follows love. Most marriages are arranged. Mr. Abraham stated that
there have only been four divorces in the community.
In India, according to Mr. Ab raham, the Jews have complete
freedom to practice their religion
as they wish, Even at the University of Bombay a Jew cannot
be forced to appear for an exami-

since these Jews didn’t know the
local language they started the
cheapest business they could
find
oil pressing. Later they
were able to become farmers,
which most of them are today.
A few of them left their farms
and went to the city where they
obtained education from the British, and became lax in their observance of the traditions. Yet
today, 90-99% of the Indian Jews
are orthodox.
Discussing the dating system,
Mr. Abraham said that the social
life is practically nil in the orthodox synagogue, but that the reformed temples plan dances
where boys can meet girls.

Mr. Leonard Port Reads
Short Stories and Poems

way from Palestine.
Mr. Abraham pointed out that

—

Mr. Leonard Port, member of
the English Department, gave a
reading of selections of modern
literature in the Browsing Library, Room 255 Norton, Tuesday, November 16. This was the
first in a series of readings sponsored by the Browsing Library.
He featured poetry selections
from such modern authors as
Alan Dugan and Philip Darken
and a passage from the novel

nation on a holy day. In fact,
exams are held on holy days.

no

ART LECTURE
Mr. Graham Collier, associate
professor of art at the University
of Connecticut and author of
"Form, Space and Vision", will
present an illustrated lecture on
“The Psychological Life of Art”
al UB Tuesday, November 23, at
4 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf.

“Letting Go” by Philip Roth
Mr. Port, Who received his M.A.
from the University of Wisconsin,
stated that he is a fan of the
Tolstoy and
Russian authors
Dostoyevsky, and others—but he
chose modern literature for this
reading because many people believe it is easier to understand.
—

The reading was followed by a
coffee hour.

HANDBAGS and GIFTS

Complete Selections of Nome Brand Luggage
Courtesy

c

-sCetterA

to

“Commentary” Questioned
TO THE EDITOR;
Today I had the dubious opportunity of reading the editorials and the Commentary of the
October 22 and 29 issues of the Spectrum. I can
barely find a sentence of either to which I do not
wholeheartedly disagree. I do, however, firmly believe that Mr. Boner has every right to his opinions,
no matter how uninformed or warped they may be.

First, may I introduce myself. The name is Williams, a rather common one throughout this nation
of ours. And I am afraid that my occupation is
rather common also; after all a career serviceman
must have the intestinal fortitude to be willing, as
well as able, to fight for what we believe in. I’m
very much afraid that in Mr. Boner’s book, I’m
classified as a warmonger and, perhaps, a killer.
To the latter, I must admit as I’m a fully qualified
nuclear delivery bombardier, trained, able, and
without qualms, willing to kill millions if need be,
in order that our nation, our democracy (under
which Mr. Boner may speak and write) will prevail over dictatorship, whatever its current aliasI assume that I had my first taste of war, at about
the same time that he was a babe in arms; and
having seen the aftermath of war, both in Europe
and Japan, I assure you that I shall never advocate
war except that as it has ever been in our nation’s
history, one fought to overcome tryranny.
Now may I question some of his statements?
The myths of the Red Menace? Is the wall dividing Berlin a myth? Are the thousands of Cuban
refugees pouring into the United States at every
opportunity myths? Are the Chinese I have spoken
to in Hong Kong, who escaped at the cost of leaving
loved ones behind in Red China myths? He asks
why the German people did not stop Hitler on
his way to power. I have another answer, they
believed fools like Mr. Boner who told them Hitler
was not a menace. He refers to the then Prime
Minister Chamberlain on his return from Munich.
Famous, I believe, for “Peace in Our Time.” He
states that President Johnson assures us of no
further intervention in Asiatic affairs. Not so! !
The President has firmly promised opposition to
tyranny, wherever need be in the interests of our
nation. Mr. Boner speaks of the Viet Cong volunteers. I have served there as well and can assure
him that a man volunteers rapidly to save the lives
of his loved ones. In such a case, perhaps even
Mr. Boner might volunteer also! I sincerely hope
not, as I would hate the task of training him to
become a useful military man.
William C. Williams

the (Editor

DISCOUNTS to University Faculty and Students
(Opposite UB)
TF 3-1600

3400 MAIN STREET

Government Unwilling
to Negotiate

TO THE EDITOR:

For over a year the U. S. government unequivocally declared to Americans and the world that
peace talks could not be possible because of the
staunch unwillingness of North Vietnam to sit

down at the peace table for discussions. Time and
again President Johnson declared his “unconditional discussion’” position to talk peace. Now, in
response to an article written by the radio and
television commentator Eric Sevareid, the State
Department confirms that as far back as a year
the U. S. refused to meet with representatives of
North Vietnam in Rangoon, Burma to discuss terms
for ending the Vietnam hostilities. The offer was
presented through no less a person than the Secretary of the United Nations, U Thant.
Through letters to editors of various local
newspapers we have expressed the fact that our
government has been unwilling to negotiate for
peace in Vietnam. Evidence now confirmed by the
State Department of the U. S. in reply to Mr.
Sevareid provides confirmation of what we have
been contending. Why must the government deliberately deceive the people it supposedly serves?
Why do Americans continue to pretend they can
trust the government to inform us of the truth
when we now learn of such untruths as the one
above? We call upon Americans to write directly
to the President and congressmen insisting upon
truthful accounts of what is taking place concerning the war in Vietnam.
Sincerely,
Sidney M. Willhelm

Associate Professor
Bill Harrell
Elwin H. Powell
Lecturer
Associate Professor

CARE Table
TO THE EDITOR:
I think the new table at the union owes the
student body some answers to questions which
have been raised. The CARE table asks us to contribute money for food and relief for the Vietnamese people. What I question is: 1. To what
extent are the U. S. Marines involved in distribution? 2. Is it true that this aid only goes to
South Vietnamese people? 3. Most importantly,
if it is true that our government has allegated
about one billion dollars a year to be spent in Vietnam, if private expenditures take up some of the
burden of the relief as CARE asks us to do, does
be
this then leave more government funds free to
spent in the war? Are we therefore, by aiding
the people, possibly, in reality giving our support
to the war? This is something many of the con
tributors are hot willing to do,

"Inquirer"

CONTACT LENSES

COMPLETE EYE CARE

DR. ALEXANDER KATZ
DR. LOU KRDP
OPTOMETRISTS

Phone.

B35-3311

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226

�Friday, Novambar 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

IFUaMS

EM Sherman

I’ve always been interested in the genre of horror.
When I was a kid I remember crouching down low in
my matinee seat at the movies on Saturday afternoons,
covering my eyes and peeking out every so often to
watch Peter Lorre manipulate The Beast With Five
Finger*. I used to devour Crypt of Terror comic books
and stay up late at night to watch Boris Karloff and
Bela Lugosi on television. I never did outgrow it. I
tend to intellectualize it now and can make out a good
case for Louis Feullade’s Le» Vampires as one of the
cinema’s greatest achievements, of talk about the “black
humor” of Jean Duvivier or Roger German. But what it
all really comes down to is a taste for the macabre.
This taste was satisfied last week when I saw Repulsion at the North Paik and The Nanny at the Kensington. Repulsion is directed by Roman Polanski, a
young Polish director whose previous films were Two
Men With A Wardrobe and Knife In The Water. Polanski has been grealy influenced by Hitchcock, and in
Francoise Trauffaut’s forthcoming book on Hitchcock,
Polanski asserts that Hitchcock is the greatest living
American director.
•*

RepuUion is the story of a young girl going mad.
Simultaneously, Polanski’s camera participates in, and
records objectively, the experience. With a tenderness
yet a sureness that is painful to watch, the film progresses toward its inevitable conclusion, until finally
we are forced to confront the fact that it is we, the society-at-large who are responsible for her actions. By
our callousness, our refusal to care and to communicate,
we force each other to become more and more isolated
until finally we force what innocence is left in the world
to retreat to the only place it can find safety; the inner
recesses of the mind. Driven by fear and shame, the
girl blindly strikes out against the possibility of the
human relationship she so desperately needs.
There is no escape from the cracking foundations
of her existence, the grasping hands, the corpse of fertility buzzed by flies, the Pisan phallic symbol, the
perversions of love and beauty, all rendered exactly
and sensatively by Polanski. All chances of escape is
illusory. The girl may watch the nuns in their life of
contemplation, but when the church bell tolls the audience is reminded that Polanski views a retreat from life
as an implicitly lesbian cop-out. Nor can we explain her
madness by a Freudian analysis. The eyes that stare
out at the beginning and the close of the film, stare out
at us, accuse us.
Catherine Deneuve, as the girl, performs perceptively. Ian Hendry and John Frazer, in minor roles, act
well as they always do. But it is the mind and heart of
Roman Polanski which dominates the film, and the
triumph is his. Although Repulsion is a tribute to
Hitchcock, Polanksi has in both form and content, transcended his master’s panache.
The Nanny, written and produced by Jimmy Sangster and directed by Seth Holt is recommended only for
devotees either of campy horror films or Bette Davis.
The film tries to capitalize on the commercial success
of Whatever Happened To Baby Jane and Hush, Hush
Sweet Charlotte. Unlike those two films, however, in
which the director Robert Aldrich, went beyond camp
to create valid works of art, The Nanny features so much
gratuitous horror, so much over-obvious and heavyhanded thematic deliniation, that the strengths of the
film does have are smothered in the kitsch.
These strengths are interesting manipulation of
point of view for the first hour or so, generally intelligent dialogue, surprizingly witty interplay among the
boy and the teenage girl, and another performance
from Miss Davis in the grand guignol tradition. Unfortunately it is not enough.

Repulsion is a successful work of art in the best
tradition of the horror genre. The Nanny will return
a tidy profit.

Lola's Idle Hour Inn
GRAND ISLAND, N.Y.

T»k* NYS Thruway across Grand liland Bridga
Look for
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maka axtrama right off first axit
—

—

Ballet and The Applied Arts
Topic of Symposium In Baird
A symposium on ballet and the
related arts will mark the university’s participation in the week
long visit of the New York City
Center Ballet. The panel, which
may be heard at 8:30 p.m., Monday, November 22, in Baird Auditorium, will discuss the problems
of dancer, choreographer, lighting designer, and conductor in

sistant conductor of the Buffalo
Philharmonic; and Thomas Watson, Assistant Professor of Theater.

'Fantasticks' Success;
3000 Attend Musical
The musical fantasy, “The Fantasticks,” in its recent run on
campus, proved to be the most
successful theatrical venture in
the history of the campus.
Seven performances

were given,

"MANIACS"

ber, and th’s opens the way to
similar theatrical ventures in the
future,” said Mr. Sol Davidson,
ticket booth manager.

MCHO

WBFO will broadcast a
special documentary titled,
PORTRAIT OF A RIOT,
which explores the causes
of the Watts uprising. It
will he broadcast Friday
at 7:00 and rebroadcast
on Sunday at 6:00.

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JAZZ

SAM NOW'S Quintet
Also AFTER HOURS JAZZ

ADMISSION: $1.10

a screen adventure
provoked so much
excitement!

proves that the student body will
support a production of this cali-

Thursday thro Sunday

the

Not since "The Bridge
[OnThe River Kwai"has

and each was attended by a sellout audience. Altogether, close to
3,000 people saw “The Fantasticks.” Of this figure 80 percent
of the total audience were students. “The success of this show

\

WED. —FRI. —SAT. NITES

The visit of the company from
Lincoln Center will conclude with
a performance in Kleinhan's Music Hall at 8:30 p.m., Friday, November 26. There, under the direction of George Balanchine,
principal choreographer, they will
perform “Agon” to ’ the music of
Igor Stravinsky provided by the
Buffalo Philharmonic, conducted
by Richard Defallo.

creating a ballet performance,
Participants will be: Arthur
Mitchell and Edward Vilella, principal male dancers of the company; Marcia Segel, editor of
Dance Scope; Richard Defallo, as-

—

FH. A Set. la.rn.hi

featuring GUEST ARTISTS

ajn.

�Friday, Novambar 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SEVEN

'You Haven't Suffered Enough,' Reviewed
By

three-scene farce on just about
everything. I waited patiently
for the “plotless plot . . to unfold,” but, I daresay, it never
did. Perhaps I am exceedingly
dull, or perhaps 1 am merely a
pragmatic individual in a prag-

SUZANNE ROVNER
go

on,” and
"The show must
it did, finally, when Chancellor
Furnas et al decided to bring
their unscheduled two hour gab
fest to a close. Opertlng afternoon became opening night, and
the Student Theatre Guild’s production of You Haven't Suffered
Enough played to a half-filled
(sounds better than half-empty)
Conference Theatre. Monday, November 15.
by

tamic world, but I could make
little sense out of the “sensible
nonsense” that is You Haven't
Suffered Enough. Five or six
meaningful lines and an excellent
east made the play interesting
and enjoyable, but hardly enlightening.

You Haven't Suffered Enough,
Ruth Swayze, is a one-act,

Randi Douglas as Cyriasis, the
perfect purple person, stole the
show. She was constantly graceful, often terrifying, and always
wonderfully purple. When she
stated that, “All yellow things
are born ugly,” it was really
quite believable. Miss Douglas,
for her role in You Haven't
Suffered Enough, was runner-up
for the Best Actress award at the

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Susan Kaplan, portraying Arthriosis, was more than adequate.
When she made Bounce cry, I
hated her. When she momentarily
became Queen of the Peanut Butter Festival, I rejoiced with her.
And when she was unable to hold
hands with a tarantula, I ctuld
definitely see her point.

Robert Nigro as Bounce was
an interesting contrast to the
other three, more domineering,
figures. Although he was not
quite as slimy and gooky as he
was cracked up to be, he provided a fine target for the verbal
attacks of the others. The highlight of his performance came
when he displayed his uncanny
ability to talk as if his mouth
were full of peanut butter.
While I did find the play itself

think the cast deserves much
credit for a job very well done.
Each one believed in his part, and
served to make You Haven't
Suffered Enough as enjoyable as
it was.

?

SEATING FOR 40

David Goldfarb, who earned
the title of Best Actor at the Festival, was superb as Cheyenne.
His facial expressions and perfectly controlled motions made
the audience realize that—even
if we knew he wasn’t a real live
tarantula—he sincerely believed
he was. Any actor that can make
me believe that he is a tarantula
has got to be good.

disappointing, (I do not think it
will enter my mind frequently, or
ever again, for that matter,) I

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WARREN COVINGTON
and His Famous Orchestra

Grand Ballroom
Dancing: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
BEVERAGES AVAILABLE
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Advance Tickets: $3.00
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Nov. 22 thru Nov. 28

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overall “cohesive format” of the
dances, were
the biggest structures the Philharmonic could control completely:
but on them, Foss’ vivid almost
arrangement of the

exciting interpretation was quite

Dances, Concerto for Violin and

Cello, and Symphony in G Minor
(originally Piano Quartet No. 1,
orchestrated by Schoenberg in
1937),

The main strength is in the fine
ensemble sound from all sections.
The full-voiced texture of Brahms
(and even fuller-voiced Schoenberg orchestration) gave the audience plenty of opportunity to bask
in the rich wind, string and combined wind-string blends, to which
the musicians did justice. If Lucas
Foss could have channeled this
well-balanced mass of sound, more
precisely the performance would
have been a not certain but much
closer representation of Brahms
structures. Foss’ less than efficient baton technique led as it
has in the past, to unclear entrances his phrasing was too often
shaky, even in the Hungarian

The best performance was of
the pops-concert work-horses, the
five lively and sentimental Hungarien Dances. The two Dances

not orchestrated by Brahms had
more brass doublings and a more
comic-opera melodic simplicity.
The communicating of the unify-

successful.
The Concerto tor Violin and
Brahm's last orchestral
work, has an empty, bombastic
first movement, a pleasant second movement, and a less pretentious "vivace" third movement.
The performance of the first
movement seemed too sectional,
not fluid enough; but if Foss did
not milk its full value, Brahms
did not create much of a cow to
milk. The movement has continuous introductions and sequential
melodies and transitions, in the
and
orchestra and solo parts
that’s all. The second movement,
a typical Brahms lyric, fared well
and the third movement had the
best balance and singing quality.
Cello,

—

The Symphony in G Minor is a
different Brahms: First it is
Brahms not writing for orchestra. and not quite as liable to
hear the footsteps of Beethoven
behind him; thus a Brahms who
need not be solemn or pompous,
who can be experimental or char
who can te experimental or
charming, who can even break
into a marital theme in the middle of an "andante' movement.
(This of course, does not make
for a rational thematic or emotional development). Second, it is
not Brahms at all, but Schoen-

berg, using tuba, piccolo, pizzacato string melodies, muted

brasses

—

none of which Brahms

and accenting
ever dreamed of
by orchestration the irregularities
of Brahms’ freer style by using,
for instance, tambourine and xylophone in the march episode,
Schoenberg’s orchestration contains too much in variety of
—

sounds, and the Brahms work
same malady in harmony, but the performance of the Symphony gave
the most hints of what we can expect from the Buffalo Philharmonic before the season is over.
may suffer from the

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AIRWAYS

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SCHROEDER

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FOR TABLE

CAMP RD.

By DANIEL

Both the weaknesses and
strengths of the Buffalo Philharmonic were apparent at the
Sunday, November 14 concert of
Brahms’ works: Hungarian

Buffalo has the asset of highcaliber soloists, but although Isidor Saslav, violinist, and Howard
Coif, cellist, performed their solos
brilliantly, their phrasing was
not appropriate to that of the orchestra or each other (for instance, in a disagreement between
soloists about a dotted note value
in the first movement of the
Concerto). Mr. Coif especially
made over-use of the “cambiata,"
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�PAGE BIGHT

SPECTRUM

AIESEC Chapter
Planned For UB
For nearly two decades now
many students in economics and
business have had traineeships in
a foreign country sponsored by
the AIESEC organization.
AIESEC stands for Association
Internationale des Etudients en
Sciences Economiques et ComOrganization,
merciales. The
which has gradually grown from a
European to a global one, has approched the School of Business
Administration with the sugestion that a local chapter be established here.

The purpose of such a chapter
would be twofold: (1) It should obtain employment for foreign students in the various industries in
or around Buffalo, and (2) On the
basis of reciprocity Buffalo students would be enabled to spend
a summer as a trainee in a foreign country of their choice (a
department store in Paris, a shipping company in Rotterdam, a
steel mill in Yugoslavia etc.).
The positions offered are deskjobs, and preferably such that
the students learn something
about business, apart from the
local language and customs. Nearly all international companies
(Shell, IBM, Lever Brothers . . .),
as well as many banks and industries offer AIESEC traineeships,
to a total of about 5,000 a year.
In Europe the exchange program is very well established and
popular with the students. For ex-

ample, in Rotterdam and Stockholm more than half of the graduating students have profited
from an AIESEC traineeship during their studies.
The United States AIESEC, established by Columbia University
around 1957, has now about 50
member schools. Buffalo belongs
to the New England region. The
present director of the New England region is Mr. Michael Smith,
a senior from the University of
Rochester,

Mr. Smith has done some
groundwork and feels that it
would be quite feasible to start
the program in Buffalo with at
least five traineeships for the
summer of 1966
provided we
establish a local chapter.
The Dean of the School of Bu—

siness Administration supports
the program. However, AIESEC is

strictly a student organization and

the support is therefore normal
and passive rather than financial
and active.
Mr. Michael Smith will come to
campus to meet with the interested students on Tuesday, November 23. in Crosby Hall, Room 42,
at noon. Miss Gail Myers, a sophomore (Goodyear Hall) and Miss
Jane Sommer, a senior, will be
able to give interested students
more information.

Friday, Novambar 19, 1965

Greek Notes
Pi Lambda Tau's annual Pil-

grim’s Day Party” will be held
tonight at the Stone Jug on Main
St. in Youngstown. The dress will
be Indian or Pilgrim. Members
are asked to be at the party by
7:30 and the pledges by 8.

Tomorrow evening, Phi Kappa
P»i will hold their annual “Roaring Twenties” party, a costume
and liquor punch party.
There will be a touch football
game between the pledges and
the members of Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sunday.

the members of Alpha Phi
Omega.
Alpha Kappa Psi will be going
to Batavia Downs this evening.
The officers of Theta Chi Sorority's fall pledge class are:
Audie Stempel, President; Carol
Keck, Vice President; Judy Raab,
Secretary and Barb Wells, Treasurer. There will be a social tonight with Theta Chi Fraternity.
Sigma Delta Tau are having
their philanthorpic project for
the New York Association for Retarded Children. The girls will
meet in front of Norton Union

Tomorrow, Bev Bolles will be tomorrow at 12.
married in St. John’s Episcopal
The lnter-Frat«rnlty Council
Church at 11:30 a.m. All members of Alpha Gamma Delta are
planning to attend.
The two Theta Chi’s on campus will have a social at the
Friday:
Speaking of the Students for a
Movie: “The Rose Tattoo," Theta Chi Fraternity House toDemocratic Society reminds me:
night
night
at
8.
Tomorrow
all
Studio Arena Theatre, through
There are occasional moments
interested members of Theta Chi
December 4.
when the pompous asininity of the
Fraternity
get
together
will
inConcert; Show Tunes, Duffalo,
local branches of Bureaucracy beformally and patronize one of comes almost pathetically
ludicconductor, Kleinhans Music the local night spots.
rous. The SDS table is no longer
Hall.
Tonight the pledges of Tau
to be found in its accustomed
Film: “Jules and Jim,” discusKappa Epsilon will begin their stand in Norton. The heresy vercussion and evaluation by Jutrips to other chapters. Tomordith Crish, Dacman Little Thesion of this tale I know is that
row there will be a small BYO
8 p.m.
the “Powers That Know Best” deMovie and Lecture: “Egypt, party for the members.
cided the long-haired, anti-AmerPhi Epsilon Pi will hold a Semi ican, hall-clogging SDS had to go
Evolution and Social Revolution” Dr. Mourad, Norton 246, Formal, Mr. Formal Mike Fish, and cleverly managed this by
Party featuring the Arthur Lylimiting the number which would
7:30 p.m.
man Dancers and the Hubert
Beer Blast: Gary, US Bonds
have included SDS. I don’t really
suppose that anybody could know
Schendlebaum Orchestra tomorAEPi, free busses leave Norrow evening at the ROC MAR.
ton 8:15 p.m.
that one of the tables allowed to
Tomorrow, a Roman toga party replace SDS would be equipped
Saturday:
will be held by the pledges for with people standing on tables,
Concert: Creative Associates,
screaming over the sound of the
Haas Lounge or Baird Hall
music (?) they were playing, that
8:30 p.m.
everybody should buy a ticket to
Mixer: Newman Club, Fillmore
a king-sized beer party.
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
Dance: “An Evening in Paris,”
They couldn’t really know but
Hillel, Temple Emanuel 9 p.m.
they might have checked. This
Sunday:
way a few nasty-minded people
Two blood drives to aid vicConcert: Lukas Foss, conductor, Hans Vigland, organist, tims of the Vietnam war were who believe in the right to disheld this week at Stanford Unisent, academic freedom, and free
Jess Levine, violinist, Kleinversity.
speech may misinterpret the herobans* 2:30 p.m.
Concert; UB Wind Ensemble,
One, sponsored by a committee ic efforts of Norton to protect
called Medical Aid, was collectour tender ears from seditious
Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
ing blood to be sent to North propaganda by stuffing it with
Monday:
Vietnamese who are victims of twist sounds. (Sounds, that is a
Lecture: “The American Jewwhat the group called “Amervery nice word, it certainly ain’t
ish Novelist,” Dr. Fradin, Temmusic).
ican militarism.”
ple Beth-El, Niagara Falls,
A second group, led by the
8:30 p.m.
Bulldozer Alley grows ominousLecture, Demonstration; The newly-formed Walter Array Society, an ROTC club, was collecting ly longer. Any day now they are
New York City Ballet, Daemen
Little Theatre, Rosary Hill Colblood for the South Vietnamese. going to make a slight error and
In one afternoon, the Medical
pull down Hayes, Crosby, and
lege, 9:45 p.m.
Convocation with Louis Lomax, Aid group said it received
Lockwood to replace them with
temporaries. Between the Dutch
Rockwell Hall Auditorium pledges of about 60 pints of blood.
12:00 noon, State University The ROTC group said it had 150 Elm Beetle and the Bulldozers
pledges.
College.
we may just get moved to the

Weekly

The grump...

Calendar

Blood Drives
For Vietnam

A
PAT

the UUnion.

(Cont’d

from P.

4)

new campus before the last tree
goes under. If it rains just a little bit more everything will probably sink, then again if it snows
it would at least hide the whole
mess from sight for at least a

little while.
choice.

A

most

difficult

I have to run down
Enough
to the Rathskeller and pay 15c for
—

a Hot Chocolate and a similar
price for a brownie. I am simply

famished.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

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� Drafting Supplies, Etc.
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Whom professors soy, "The mart you
know, tho mor# you want to know I"—
Bright studonts consult
—

BARNES

meeting that was scheduled for
Monday has been concealed. The
next meeting will be held Monday, Nov. 29.
Ken Ritz of Bata Sigma Rho
has been appointed as inner
guard. Roger Rubenstein and
Sandy Kesend have been elected
as Warden and Secretary respectively.
AEPi’s School it out Blast with
Gary “U. S.” Bonds, Nov. 19, at
Washington Hall. Advance tickets are for sale at $1.50 The
price at the door will be $2. For
tickets speak to any member of
AEPi or come to the table in

&amp;

on all makot of color and
black and white TV's, storao,
phonographs A radios. Including car radios.

COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES

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�Friday, November 19, 1965

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

Advertising Fellowship Is

Sponsored For 14th Year
Chirurg and

Cairns, Inc., of
New York, Boston and Hartford
are sponsoring the James Thomas

Chirurg Advertising Fellowship
at the Harvard Graduate School

of Business Administration, for
the 14th successive year.

This international fellowship
grant of $1,500 will be awarded
to an “outstanding student” desirous of entering, in the fall of
1966, the first year of the twoyear Harvard Business School
program, leading to a degree of
Master of Business Administration and planning a career in advertising. The fellowship was established in 1953 by James T.
Chirurg, vice-chairman of Chirurg and Cairns.
Interested persons should submit applications for both admission to the Harvard Business
School and the Chirurg Fellowship prior to February 1, 1966,
and should take the admissions
test for graduate study in business administration, administered

by the Education Testing Service at Princeton, New Jersey
early in Febraury. Final selec-

tion of the 1966-67 Fellowship
will be made with the assistance
of the Advertising Club of Bos-

ton. Additional information may
be obtained by writing to the Ad-

missions Board, Harvard Business School, Soldiers Field Road,
Boston, Mass., 02163, or any
Chirurg and Cairns office.

HILLEL

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
Dr. Justin Hoffman will give the
second sermon lesson in a series
on: “Religious Symbols of Judaism,” There will be a dance on
Saturday evening, November 20
at 9 p.m. in the social hall of
Temple Emanuel.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

CRO

The next CRO meeting will be
held on Tuesday, November 23,
at 3 p.m, in Norton 317. All representatives and religious advisors are asked to attend.

NEWMAN
The

Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a mixer Saturday, November 20. in the Millard Fillmore Room at 8 p.m., featuring
“The Cavaleers." Admission will
be 75 cents per person or $1 per
couple.

)-if
j -6\ i
i Hrrt) (i

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin It an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum asumei no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday prior to
the week of publication. Student
organization notices arc not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
University College Students—the remaining dates for pre-registration for next semester are:
Nov, 22 through Nov. 24—C, Y
Nov. 29 through Dec. 3—S
Dec. 6 through Dec. 10—L, T,

A. E
Dec. 13 through Dec. 17—D, I,
J, O. Q, U, V, X, Z

WEEKLY CALENDAR
November 20:
The Department of Music—presents a Concert by the Creative Associates, Open to the Public, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
November 21:
The Department of Music—

+

6

-

'j

+

i)

presents

Wind Ensemble.

UB

Open to the Public, Baird Hall,

8:30 p.m.
November 28:
Th« Department of Music—presents Slee Composers’ Concert, featuring compositions of
former Slee Composers, Open to
the PPubiic. Baird Hail, 8:30 p.m.
December 1

The School of Law—presents
Professor Oliver Oldman, Director of the International Tax
Program and Professor of Law
at Harvard Law School, who will
be speaking on “The Suitability
of the Real Property Tax in the
Modern Urban Community." Open
to the Public, School of Law, 77
West Eagle St., Room 110 at 3
p.m.

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Please check with the University Placement Service, Schoellkopf Hall, telephone 831-3311 (or
additional information concerning the following announcements
and interviews.
Northeastern University is interviewing students on Monday,
Nov. 22, in the areas of engineering and science that are interested in the Graduate Co-operative Program. This program offers
an integrated program of fulltime academic work and fulltime employment in the student's
field of specialization. It is of
two year's duration and during
that time, the students are paid
salaries sufficient to cover tuitition and living expenses.
The Boston Public Schools announce that they are accepting
registrations during the month
of November for teaching examinations to be given in Boston.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
November 19:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti-

tute

November 22
Reliance Electric 4

Engineer-

ing Company

New York State Dept, of Public Works
Remington Office Machines—
Division of Sperry Rand
November 22, 23
E. I. DuPont de Nemours, Inc.
November 23 :
Corning Glass Works
Harrison Radiator—Division of
General Motors Corp.
General Precision
U. S. General Accounting Of-

ifikj)

fice

November 29
Xerox Corp.

Sylvania Electric Products, Inc.

Yale 4 Towne
November 29, 30. December 1:
Bethlehem Steel Corporation
November 30:
Ford Motor Company

S. D. Leidesdorf 4 Company
December I:
U. S. Marine Corps
The Upjohn Company
Erie Technological Products,

If communications were good enough
you could stay in the sack all day

Inc.

Thomas J. Upton, Inc.
Arthur Young &amp; Company
Vestal Central Schools, Vestal,
N. Y.

Moving your body around

is highly inefficient.

If communications were perfect

you would never have to.
Of course, you would still
have to get exercise.
But that's your problem.

We want to make it easier for you
to contact people, learn,
get information, attend lectures,
and hold meetings.

We developed Picturephone*
service so you can see as well as talk
when you call. And be seen, too.
We introduced Tele-Lecture service
(two-way amplified phone calls)
to let you hear lecturers
in distant locations. And so you
could ask them questions
no matter how far away they were.

Right now, many students can dial
from their dormitories to a
language lab. Soon a student
will be able to dial into a
computer thousands of miles away
to get information for his courses.

,

Depending on the nature
of the information, he might get
his answer back audibly, s
printed on a teletypewriter,
as a video image,
or a facsimile print.

Some of these services

are available now.
Others are being tested
For the next week or so
better get a move on.
� Service mark oI the Ball Syatem

®Bell

System

American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
and Associated Companies

December 2:
U. S. Army
John Deere Welland Works
The Babcock
Wilcox Com&amp;

pany

Union Carbide Corp.
Oscar Mayer

&amp;

Company

Frontier Central Schools, Hamburg, N. Y.
December 3:
Buffalo Forge Company
Sinclair ReRsearch, Inc.
The Carborundum Company
Peat, Marwick. Mitchell A Co
New York Telephone
Some school districts require
a special examination in the candidate's area of preparation in addition to the Common Examination. If you are planning to teach
in any out-of-state cities, please
contact the University Placement
Service to ascertain if additional
examinations will be required of
you.

�Friday, Novambar 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

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.

Summary of fha 1965 Season
1965 was a season of frustration for the UB Harriers. They
started the season with high
hopes, but these hopes started to
fade very rapidly. The first casualty was Captain-Elect Bob Bijak.
who had to drop out of school.
Secondly, the MVP of last season,
an outstanding runner, Dick
Genau, injured his knee two days
before the opening meet and was
sidelined for the entire season. A
junior, Jack Kerns, was elected as
the new captain of the team which
compiled a 4-7 dual meet record.

MARTIN JAFFE
Ed Nusblatt has played an important role in helping the UB
Golf Team compile this year’s
impressive record, Ed won the
qualifying fight for a position
on the golf team in his sophomore year. During that year, the
golf squad went undefeated for
the second consecutive season. Ed
contributed greatly to the team’s
record of 20 wins and no losses
in two years.
As a junior, Ed was unable to
play because of illness. That year
the team went on to win eight
out of nine in its dual matches.
This year, as a senior, Ed returned to the links and contributed to the team’s record of eight
wins and two losses. He captured
the qualifying fight for the number one position on the team.
In October, when the team traveled to Rochester for the annual
Brook-Lea Tournament, Ed was
low medalist in a driving rainBy

storm.

The UB Golf Team placed first
in the tournament for the fourth
consecutive year, no doubt aided
by the fact that Ed Nuablatt was
the low man in the entire starting field. Also during this successful year, the team went to

mors
Jack Mworka, Pat Muffaoletto, and Dennis Czaja; two
juniors
Jack Kerns and Roy
McMuIlon; and seven sophomores
—Paul Rogovich, Bob Stephenson,
Mike Alspaugh, Dave Latham.
Larry Naukum, Joe Graf and Bob
Brodfrehrer.

cuse and qualified for the first
position in the ECAC finals, held
in Bethpage, Long Island, where
the team finished a respectable

The sophomores came through
very well in their first varsity
season. With a year's experience,

OIL
TIRES
BATTERIES
ACCESSORIES

—

—

The one dark note for the future is the lack of freshmen who

came out for Cross Country. Only
four frosh reported this year, and
out of these, only one had had
any previous cross country experience.

Most of them will continue to
run in the many AAU meets that
will be held in the area throughout the next month. This was a
very hard working, dedicated
group, and they knew they had
to run all year round. Cross
Country is not a seasonal sport,
and conditioning must be maintained twelve months a year. The
see them running
•round campus, give them a
cheer instead of trying to run
them down with your car.

next time you

.

ev«

back.

ers in the East.

Playing the number one position, Nusblatt finished the season with a 7-2-1 record and a 74.8
stroke average.
Outside of UB, Ed has com-

piled a very impressive personal

record. He qualified two consecutive years for both the Long
Island Amateur and the Metropolitan Amateur golf tournaments. He also went to the semifinals in the Metropolitan Junior
golf tournament. Ed qualified for
the annual Richardson Memorial
Golf Tournament at Seawane
Country Club in Long Island.
He also reached the semi-finals
in the club championship at Seawane Country Club.
Indeed, Ed Nusblatt has played
a great part in helping the UB
Golf Team establish the impressive reputation as one of the finest squads in the East.

The Intramurals article
in last Friday’s Spectrum
incorrectly gave the date
of the Intramurals SwimFinals

were very lucky to win last week
against the Rams. Fran Tarkenton
will win this one for his team,
and the loss will virtually eliminate Green Bay from the championship in December.

(Cont’d from P. 12)
ing the Bears doubly tough. The
Lions can use a better quarter-

as being

No-

vemher 22. The correct
date should have read November 29, from 7-9 p.m.

Discounts

Washington 21, Pittsburgh 10
It seems that the Redskins'
games never mean anything. Last
week they lost to Philadelphia
and are now tied for 5th place.
Arizonians do have pride. The
Steelers, however, don’t even have
pride. Even if they did it would
take more than that to get them
out of last place. Maybe when
John Henry Johnson is healthy
—but until then, things don’t look
to good.

Baltimore 42, Philadelphia 17
Unitas or Cuozzo—what’s the
difference? As I said last week,
Gary Cuozzo can be the top quarterback on almost any team in
the league. This was proven by
his 5-touchdown pass-performance
last week. With the great team
like the Colts, even Fearless
could lead them to victory.
Berry, Moore, Mackey, Levitt,
are all great names in pro football. With a line like the Colts
have, led by Parker and Levitt,
they’re just too tough.
Minnesota 14, Green Bay 10
Neither of these teams have
been playing good as of late. The
Vikings may be shaken-up over
Van Brocklin’s sharp resignation

and reinstatement last week. The
Packers have shown nothing, and

AFL:

Oakland 21, Denver 17
Both teams played well last
weekend, however, the Raiders
came out on the short side of
that 17-14 squeaker with Buffalo.
As a rule, they don’t lose too
many games towards the end of
a season and they won’t take it
on the chin again.
New York 27, Houston 24
In an upset, I think the home
crowd in New Yerk and almost
a full season’s experience will
spur Joe Namath to his finest
game of the year. George Blanda
had 6 of his passes intercepted
last week against Denver; maybe
he is finally getting old. The Jots
don’t have a whole lot to offer,
but Joe should be enough this
week.

Kansas City 75, Boston 0
Some of you readers might
think that this is an outlandish
score. It is. Only the editor forces
me to keep on the conservative
side. The Chiefs upset San Diego
last week, and are only XVi games
from first place. At the same time
the Patriots are a dead last in the
East and stink. They are easily
the worst team in either league,
and somehow don’t even belong in
the same city as the Celtics.

MORE
FLAVOR
in your life

on

the returning sophs and juniors,
along with Dick Genau, should

most certainly improve next season, barring any unforseen mishaps.

.

Chick's Picks

eighth. With a score of 79, Ed
finished thirteenth out of a field
of 66 of the finest collegiate golf-

ming

this ensooE
ENO ?

IguBBLE

UB Harriers UB Golf Star
Ed Nusblatt
Close Season
The UB Varsity Cross Country
Team dosed its collegiate season
last Saturday with an eleventh
place finish in the New York
State Championships held at Roberts Wesleyan College. Roberts
captured the championship for
the third consecutive year. UB
scorers were Senior Jack Mworka,
Soph Bob Stephenson, Junior Jack
Kerns, Senior Pat Muffoletto and
Soph Dave Latham. The team was
without the services of its top
men, Soph Paul Rogovich and
Soph Mike Alspaugh, who became
ill the morning of the meet.

?

WHERE HAVE SONNY AND
ADMINISTRATION MAN GONE
TO? IS THIS THE WORK.OF
THE CONSPIRACY OF
HUMANITY f
wiu

m/

IS TM£

FLM

(carling)

2c Discount
per gal.
Given on GAS Fill-Ups
SPECIAL RATES ON
PARTS
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KAR KLINIC
IRV

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TF 3-1344

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Less than 5 minutes
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�Friday, Novambar 19, 1965

Fearless Feigin
12)

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

.

.

(Cont’d from P.

the national champion. The contest features two great running
teams with equally tough defensive units. The Fighting. Irish (7-1)
have, in Nick Eddy, Bill Wolski
and Larry Conjor, a backfield trio
second to none in the nation, plus
a defense, led by All-American
Nick Rassas, that has yielded but
61 points in eight contests.
The Spartans (9-0), champions
of the Big Ten and Rose Bowl
bound, have equally impressive
statistics. Halfback Clinton Jones
and fullback Bob Apisa have accounted for over 1,250 yards on
the ground between them and
the Steve Juday-to-Gene Washington aerial combination gives State
a scoring threat from anywhere
on the field. The duo combined
for three TD tosses in last week’s
victory over Indiana.
Duffy’s boys also lead the nation in rushing defense with a
phenomenal 50.4 average. Each
team also boasts an excellent and
dependable place-kicker.
So why did I go with the Irish?

The game will be very close, without a doubt, but Notre Dame is
playing in very friendly South
Bend. Also, a leak has developed
in State’s passing defense, which
should be exploited fully by Irish
QB Zloch.
PRINCETON 20, DARTMOUTH
13—This is the first time since
the inception of the Ivy League
in 1955 that the two top con-

tenders for the Ivy crown went
into the deciding game with unbeaten records. The Tigers (8-0)
are currently riding a 17-gamp
win streak and are the defending
champions.
They feature a powerful offense that is averaging 33 points
a game and is led by brilliant

tailback Ron Landeck, who has
passed for 17 TD’s and run for
seven more. Also complementing
the Tiger attack is soccer-style
kicker Charlie Gogolak, who has
broken all NCAA kicking records
this fall with 27 career field goals
(16 for 22 this year) and has a
string of 45 consecutive PAT’s.
Anchoring Old Nassau's line are
two massive tackles, Stas Maliszewski and Paul Savidge, who
opens gaping holes for the backs
in their single wing attack.
AI1 that Princeton has to face
iturday is the Ivy’s most stingy

defensive

team. The Indians (8-0)

have allowed their opponents only
57 points so far and would like
to make up for last year’s 37-7
drubbing by Princeton that cost
them the Ivy crown. Dartmouth
complements its defensive might
with a punishing ground attack
featuring halfbacks Bob O’Brien
and Paul Klungness, plus fullback
Pete Walton, who is currently
battling Gogolak for the Ivy scoring lead. Mickey Beard at quarterback mixes his plays well and
is an adequate passer.
OHIO STATE 34, MICHIGAN 21
—The Buckeyes (6-2) have gone
back to their fullback-up-themiddle-and-a-cloud-of-dust offense

with much success in recent
weeks, while the Wolverines (4-5)
have been struggling to get back
on the winning track. This game
was expected to be for all the
marbles in the Big Ten but now
is just another battle between two
good teams. State looked mighty
impressive last week against Iowa.
WASHINGTON 21, WASHINGTON STATE 17—The Cougars
(7-2) probably lost their chance
for a trip to the Rose Bowl when
Arizona State scored after the
Arizonians had kicked a fourth
period field goal and then chose
instead to accept a penalty called
against Washington State.
The subsequent touchdown gave
Arizona State a 7-6 upset. If the
Cougars still entertain any hopes
of everything coming up roses
on New Years, the Huskies (4-5)
will remove them. Washington
has played the best ball on the
West Coast for the past four
weeks.
BUFFALO 27, VILLANOVA 13
—The Bulls (4-3-2) finally showed
their true colors, as they played
their best game in a long time
last week in their upset of Colgate
28-0. The defensive line, with
'Poles, LaF&gt;iuntain and Helenbrook is making pro scouts sit
up and take notice, and the revitalized offense featuring the
powerful driving of fullback
Jones and the passing of Capuana
to Ashley gives the Bulls 'he
rounded game that they’ve lacked
ever since Wells was hurt. The
Wildcats (1-8) lost heavily from
last year’s strong team and are
really hurting.

Viewpoint
By CHICK ARNOLD

Professional football, in recent years, has advanced
to the notable position of almost having overtaken baseball in the race for the title of our “national pastime.”
But wait a minute; before all you enthusiasts out there
in never-never land begin rolling up your sleeves and
foaming at the mouth in anticipation of an argument
over this statement, let’s look a little closer. No, this
isn’t an advanced English course, nor one in the History
of Football—it’s just a look at professional football—nothing more.
What is this phrase “national pastime”? We all
know what the word “national” means—(for those of
you who don’t however it means “of or pertainingto
a nation”) —"Pastime” though, is a little more involved.
It may surprise some of you to learn that “pastime,”
as defined by Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary
means “something that amuses and serves to make time
pass agreeably.” Is this the honor that today’s pro football is trying to arrest from the clutches of baseball?
Is this “something that amuses’ what people get into
arguments over each day, sometimes causing bloodshed and aggravation? Hardly.
The contemporary meaning of our national pastime
is something very different from what hearty old Noah
Webster had in mind when he, or whoever did, wrote
his book. Today it is the sport making the most money,
the sport gaining the biggest headlines when its stars
are offered fantastic salaries. If this were the case, football would win hands down because Joe Namath was
offered $400,000 to sign, while $200,000 is the highest
amount anyone has ever received to play for a baseball team. So what’s the story—how come people call
baseball America’s national pastime? Does it amuse?
Does it serve to make time pass agreeably? Yes.
Professional football is more exciting than professional baseball. Professional football draws more people than professional baseball. And certainly, professional football is much rougher than professional baseball. So what?
Professional football, at the moment, exhibits characteristics not at all characteristic of a sport to be called
our national pastime. Foremost among these is the fact
that pro football is not at all united. Because of the two
pro leagues, each existing independently of the other,
football cannot be called our national pastime. The
fights over the signing of college players; the tremendous name-calling existing throughout the season by both
leagues; and the arrogance with which each feel that it
is superior, is terrible. Until this split is rectified, and
pro football acts as pro football should, it must be considered number two in the race.
There are other things, too, that must be corrected
In recent weeks two coaches. ho are rominent in their
respective leagues, outwardly criticized the referees—or lack of them. Both leagues need another referee on
the field. Harlan Svare of the Los Angeles Rams and
Lou Saban of Buffalo are two coaches that have complained; others have, but more quietly. There is too
much action taking place on that football field for the
number of officials that are present; four are desperately needed.
Another small detail is the case of the two-point
conversion rule in the AFL. Supposedly, this rule was
enacted to eliminate ties. Ties prove nothing, so why not
prevent them by allowing a team scoring a touchdown
to go for one point or two. Then, we ask, why has there
been three ties this season so far in the AFL, and none
in the NFL, the league with no two-point conversion
or Denrule. There’s something fishy in Arizona
mark—-or something.
Last week the AFL announced that they would
hold their college player draft on November 20—one
week earlier than the NFL and the day many colleges
end their season’s play—the NCAA has, outwardly condemned the AFL for this action, and Big Ten Conference
Commissioner Bill Reed issued a statement advising Big
Ten football coaches to oppose AFL efforts to contact
players, a direct protest to the AFL move. The league
maintains that the reason for this move was to prevent
the NFL from “baby-sitting"—or hiding draftees. Whatever, their reason for holding an early draft, the move
was a poor one. It brought ill feelings against a young
league, which can use all the help it can get in trying
to maintain an equilibrium with the NFL. Sure. UB ends
its season November 20, but many schools don’t—certainly a big blunder for Joe Foss and the AFL.
_

College men (and women)
prefer the look of
.
..
slacks
neat, wrinkle-free.
Farah
And they wear so much better.

SLACKS,

WALK SHORTS, JEANS
with

FaraPress

—

im
SSii

EHBIg

Football fans do indeed feel that the rival leagues
will get together—eventually. How long will it take
for the two leagues to realize that union would benefit
all—and harm none? Until this time, when the two
leagues unite, baseball will remain the national pastime.

�Friday, November 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

1“

s
iipmessMsnaa
==«==&lt;s==^===^==fe==
*

Bulls To Face Villanova
Wildcats Underdogs to UB
In Final Game Tomorrow
By

MIKE GINSBERG

This

Saturday the UB Bulls
look to close the 1965 campaign
on a happy note against a Vil
lanova team which will be happy
just to close their campaign.
The ’65 season has been a long,

hard one for the Wildcats, who
have won just one game all year*
The Bulls will be up for this
battle hand have the momentum
to roll over the Wildcats. Sur-

hit and it has been there and at
center that the Wildcats have
been hurting all season. Of the
linemen returning this season,
worthy of note are ends Paul
S„d.„ , ™. Rich
John Fry and Harry Walter, and
t;uard Lou Morda. Of the sophs,

...I*;

lotto and Bill Andrejko, two experieneed signal callers. The
pride of the backfield is team
captain Tom Brown. An All-East
prospect at fullback, Brown last
season gained 5,5
for ■
tremendous 6.4 average. Backing
up Brown is Dennis Ditz, a fine

BUFFALO BULLS

—

points than can be taken with
pride in reviewing the season:

The defense, which has been inspirational, the performance of
the offensive unit, handicapped
by the loss of Wells, and the anticipation of Wells’ return and continued improvement next season.
ln citi "g
Geringer
g
Taylor and Gerry

®,u’„ S!

V,’,„
a
“

...

.
are

L

..‘“.S
,■

Weber, Lee Jones, who

1965

little trouble.
The Wildcats

By STEVE FEIGIN

5-0

Number l’s

3-2
2-3

Skanks
House 2
House 5

1-4

0-5

0-5

House 1

Monday League 4:00 p.m.
4-1
Hippies
3-2
Chargers

2-2-1
0-4-1
0-5
0-5

House 6
Number Ones defeated Hippies
38-8 to win the Monday League.
Wednesday League: 3:00 p.m.

5-0
4-1
3-2

Zygotes

Warriors
Vikings

2-3

Rookies
Newman Club
Stochastics

1-4
0-5

Wednesday League: 4:00 p.m.
5-0
Dolans
Moon Platoon
...4-1
C-Men
3-2
2-3
G.D.I.’s
.

tackle Joe Nolan and guard Fred
have been the most

Levinsky

consistent performers.
Bell is rich in talent in his
backficld, where he can boast several outstanding men. Quarterback Dave Connell is the best all
around player on the team.
Among his accomplishments last
season were: Best passer, second
best runner with a 4.0 average,
top punter with a 36.3 average
and high scorer with 34 points.
Backing up Connell are Gerry Bel-

defensive specialist. Two talented
sophs at halfback are Ed Bollinger
and Don Cranley.
Despite the presence of a strong
backfield, the Wildcats do not
present a formidable threat. The
weak line cannot be counted on

Ice Bulls Open Season
As the football season draws
to a close, the Buffalo sports
spotlight falls on basketball and
ice hockey. Tomorrow, the University of Buffalo Hockey Team
inaugurates Us third season when
it travels to Eric, Pennsylvania,
to do battle with the Erie Hockey
Club whom they defeated three
times last season by scores of
9-2, 9-7, and 9-7.
The Ice Bulls retain a solid
core of veterans from last year's
squad which finished second in
the Finger Lakes Hockey League
while compiling a 9-3-1 slate. Notable lasg year was UB’s 6-4 victory over Finger Lakes Champion Oswego State, State’s only
setback in league play. This year
Canton Tech and Utica have been
added to the league and the nine
members are now arranged in
two divisions. The Bulls are in the
“suicide division” along with
such powerhouses as Oswego,
R.LT., Ithaca and Brockport.
Coach Day Hannah, Sr. has lost
all-league forwards Jerry Doherty
and Karl Balland, and Ken Sherry,
the league’s top goalie. Captain
Dan Gorney, along with his assistant A1 Moorehouse and A1
Dever will center the first three
forward lines and should receive
strong support from such wingers
as Day Hannah, Jr., Fred Cohen,
Lenny DePrima, Jim Bausch and

Monday League: 3:00 p.m.

House 8

Villanova, with

expected this
season to be a tough one. But
no one at Villanova anticipated
such a disappointing year. The
Wildcats have lost six of their
seven games including Ihcir last
three. This is in contrast to a
highly successful '64 campaign
when Villanova took six of eight
games. The big difference is in
the line where the Wildcats have
lost ten top linemen through
graduation. Coach Alex Bell’s defense, a trademark for the past
four years, has been unable to
to carry the Wildcats this year.
No opponent scored more than
13 points against Villanova last
year, and three teams were shut
out. This season the defense has
given up scores of 28, 24, 35, 24,
21 and 32 points and here lies
the difference in the two seasons.
Bell has had to use sophomores
in key positions and they have
not developed quickly enough.
Tackle and guard were hardest

1965

House 7
House 9

prising things have happened to
the Bulls this season, so Saturday’s finale will bo no sure victory. It does appear though that
Bulls should take

INTRAMURAL
TOUCH FOOTBALL
FINAL LEAGUE STANDINGS

House 3

‘

,

Intramurals

Jim McKownc. Bill Savage and
Tom Robertson arc veterans of
last year's high scoring and highly penalized defensive corps and
will team with rookies Jim Romanowski and Kevin McCullough
to give UB solidarity in the defensive zone. The goalie position
is still up for grabs with Iasi
year's back-up goalie Steve Zeig
TOM BROWN of Vi llanov«
ler and MUNY star Bill Fuge leadany strong opposition and
to
hold
ing the candidates.
You will notice that the word keeps Villanova from posing a
"team” was used rather than great threat on either offense or
“club" in the opening paragraph. defense.
Due to the success of last year’s
team and the fine turnouts of the
The Bulls are finally moving
student body at home games, the
and Coach Offenhamer must be
wishing for the season to be exathletic department has been
tended several weeks. For the
shown the possibilities of carrying hockey as a varsity sport at
first time this season the Bulls
UB, and is completely financing have had back-to-back victories,
this year's squad. Full varsity staand both have been impressive.
tus for the Ice Hurd is not very The Bulls have given up an average
far away.
of less than eight points a
game this season, while shutting
Home games this year will
out four opponents. Looking at
again be played at the Amherst
Recreation Center on Millersport this record makes me wonder how
Highway, a ten mile drive from
they have managed only a 4-3-2
the UB campus. Admission for record. In answering this, they
students this year will be free can cite a few tough breaks, costly mistakes at inopportune moupon presentation of an identification card. Games will be played ments, a stop and start offense,
on Saturdays and Tuesdays at the
and the loss of Rick Wells midway through the campaign. The
earliest starting time of 10 p.m.
Negotiations are underway to prolast two performances only prove
vide free bus transportation to what the Bulls are capable of, and
leave from campus before each this is what makes the season so
home game.
frustrating. There are many

may turn out to be the greatest
runnee in UB history, and other
soph standouts, Dick Ashley and
Ted Gibbons. Quarterback Ron
Ridolfi and Nick Capuana deserve
special note for their efforts
under great pressure.

In the season finale against
Villanova, the Bulls should close
the campaign on a positive note.
The UB runners will have a field
day against the weak Villanova
line, and the Wildcats will be
frustrated by the UB defense.
The Bulls will end the season
with a victory over Villanova and
the hope for a more successful
season next year.

-

Raccoons
1-4
Untouchables
0-5
Zygotes defeated the Dolans 68-8
to win the Wednesday League.
Tuesday Frat. League
Beta Sigma Rho
.5-0-1
Alpha Epsilon Pi
5-1
Sigma Phi Epsilon
4-2
Tau Kappa Epsilon ....1-2-3
Phi Epsilon Pi
1-4-1
Alpha Kappa Psi
1-4-1
Gamma Phi
1-5
._

Thursday Fret. League
Alpha Sigma Phi
5-1
5-1
Sigma Alpha Mu
Phi Kappa Psi ...1
4-2
Pi Lamba Tau
...4-2
Theta Chi
2-4
Alpha Phi Omega
1-5
Alpha Phi Delta
0-6

GRID FORECASTS

-

Chick’s
Picks

Fearless

By CHICK ARNOLD

By STEVE FEIGIN
The big question facing the
college fan tomorrow is upon
which game to focus his attention. For on tap tomorrow is a
multitude of important games of
national interest.
At stake from coast-to-coast is
the national championship, numerous bowl berths, and most of
the conference titles. The top col
lege elevens in the land will be
battling in such diverse places as
Princeton, South Bend, Fayetteville and Los Angeles.
When Tennessee failed to con
vert after its second touchdown
last week and lost to Ole Miss
14-13, it not only ruined its own
unblemished record but kept me
from posting my first perfect
record. Still, my 10-1 record gives
me 57-19-1, for a .750 percentage
Some of the major games to be

NFL

Cleveland 35, Dallas 14
The Browns are now leading
the Eastern Division by two
games and can smell a chance
to beat a Western opponent in
the championship game. Jimmy
Brown passed the 1000-yard mark
in ground gaining again, and
along with Ernie Green will make
for too great an obstacle for
Dallas to handle, Don Meredith is
too inconsistent to knock over
the tough Cleveland defense.
Chicago 24, Detroit 14

The Bears have become a league
powerhouse all over again. They
handled St. Louis quite easily
last weekend while Detroit was
being dumped by the 49'ers. Gale
Sayers is the top candidate for
Rookie-of-the-Year, and will continue playing top football.
That once-famous Chicago defense is coming along again, mak-

(Cont’d on P, 10)

Feigin

played tomorrow are:
NOTRE DAME 24, MICHIGAN
STATE 17—The winner of this
(Cont’d on P, ID

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1965

VOLUME 16

NO. 11

Senate Demands Pri ce Decrease
Cardone Seeks Reapportionment;
Darrow Proposes "Free Hours

Spectrum To Be Published
On Tuesdays and Fridays
The Spectrum is now being
published twice weekly. For the
first time in the history of the
publication, which dates back to
the early nineteen hundreds under the banner of the Buffalo
students will receive the
paper on Tuesday and Friday
Bee,

mornings.

A semi-weekly publication has
been desired for several years.
The expanded student population crowding the campus and
the parallel growth of student organizations and clubs, plus the
expanding role of the university
as a center of research in the
sciences, has greated an urgent
problem of getting news to the

university community quickly.
In announcing the initiation of
the semi-weekly edition, EditorIn-Chief Jeremy Taylor has fulfilled his promise to the Spectrum staff made when he assumed editorship last March.
Deadline changes resulting
from the change are as follows:
Advertising at 3 p.m. on Fridays
and Tuesdays for Tuesday’s and
Friday’s paper respectfully. Reli-

"

The Student Senate is seeking reorganization
in virtually every aspect of campus life. At last
night's meeting the senators passed resolutions
seeking price reductions from the FSA operated
food service and scheduled free hours from the
university administration. Additionally, they heard
the proposal of an amendment that would change
the electoral base of the Senate.
A reapportionment amendment was proposed
by Association Secretary Ellen Cardone. Its pur
pose was to create a more equitable distribution in
the number of people represented by each Senator
Miss Cardone pointed out that, while some Senators
had more than 800 constituents, there were two
Senators who were elected from a voting base of
less than 200
The major, innovation which this amendment
suggests, aside from voting for the division in which
you will be enrolled rather than the one you are
presently in. is the creation of one seal from the
School of Health Sciences. This would consist of
the undergraduates in the schools of Pharmacy and
Nursing and include the previously unrepresented

pious Tidings and Call Board for
Tuesday’s paper at 5 p.m. on Friday. Greek News and Call Board
for Friday’s paper at 5 p.m. on
Tuesday.
Earlier this year the Spectrum
set another first by publishing
its first summer edition.
Business Manager Raymond D.
Volpe said that the size of the
paper should increase during the
year with anticipated advertising
revenue. By next year the paper
should be up to full size.
Managing Editor David Edelman said that much of the success for the papers twice weekly
publication is creditable to the
zeal and responsibility demonstrated by the general staff. Most
of the staff is composed of freshmen and sophomores. Each year
the Spectrum seeks the underclassmen participation in an effort to maintain its originality
and preserve a carry over staff
for the next year. The expanding
of the publication has created a

need for
members.

several

more staff

students in Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy

and Medical Technology. Additionally, graduating
seniors would not be able to vote for student
senators. A complete text of the amendment will
be printed in this Friday’s Spectrum and discussed
at the next Senate meeting.
The FSA Food Service was rebuked, in a res
olution proposed by Senator Linda. Gunsberg. for
following policies which contravene the principles
upon which the State University of New York
LINDA GUNSBERG
was founded. The Levitt report on FSA finances
Proposes Cut In Food Prices
was used as a substantiation of the feeling of
more than 89% of the student
body who felt they were being
overcharged for food.
Since the report cited excessive
profits and possible “reductions
of 10% to 20%
the Student Senpresence of over 700 impoverishIracts voluntarily abstain from ate requested a 15% reduction
their evening meal, and the by December 1. 1965
ed men, women, and children,
The resolution further empow
who are striking for an increase money is saved for the needy.
In a press release from the ered the President to take any
in their substandard wagei.”
White House, October 2!), Presiaction required to assure the re
A portion of this year’s fast dent Johnson expressed his hope alization of these demands if
"That students across the land they were not met voluntarily
money will also be used to aid
will gove support.to this worthy After a onesided debate the res
self-help corporations which proproject.” He also said:
vide work and products for imolution passed 21-1-0,
Student Senator Kim Harrow
poverished Negroes.
By foregoing one meal on Novproposed that the Senate enLast year $1100 was raised at
ember 18, American students will dorse the Calendar Sub-CommitUB’s “Fast for Freedom” with give witness to their compassion tee’s recommendation that the
.
. and lend much needed asuniversity adopt free hours on
almost unanimous resident stu
dent participation. $1000 was sistance to families threatened Tuesday and Wednesday when
planning next year's schedule
made at Tower and Goodyear by cold and hunger.
Free hours would be periods
dining halls, and $100 was raised
Last year, 80,000 students par during the day when no classes
at Norton cafeterias. This year,
more commuter participation is ticipated in the fast and raised would be scheduled. It was felt
encouraged to meet the success a total of $38,063.43 Directors of that these time periods would
this year hope to raise permit commuters and, also dormof the dorm drive. In the dorms, the -fast
$50,000
students with prepaid meal con
itory students to participate more
fully in co-curriculer activities,
eg
lectures, clubs, at the uni
versity. The resolution passed by
voice vote and will be presented
to Dr. Kaiser and the Calendar
Committee at their meeting to

Fast For Freedom To Be Nov. 18
By ETHEL

SOLOMON

UB students will once again
participate in a “Thanksgiving
Fast for Freedom,” scheduled for
November 18, and sponsored by
the United States National Student Association. Students at
more than 120 colleges and universities will participate in the
fast, and an estimated 100,000
students will go without dinner

in order to feed impoverished
Mississippi Negroes.

This year’s fast

will

concen-

trate on Washington, Sunflower

and Bolivar Counties, Mississippi,
and will provide food for up to
5,000 people. These counties have
only winter food distribution programs and according to Stephen
Arons, director of the fast, “the
need is extreme because of the

.

Separation of Room and Board
Announced by Housing Office
A recent decision to separate
room and board was made jointly
by Dr, Puffer, Vice-president for
Business Affairs, the Housing Office, and the Faculty Student Association, on November 3. The
separation was seen as a means
of easing the problem of overcrowding in the cafeterias.

Goodyear and Tower Cafeterias
were designed to feed 2,000 people. At present, 2,600 students
hold room and board contracts,
forcing the facilities to accomodate a load of 30 percent beyond
capacity.
Any student may be released
from his board contract by submitting a written request for release from his parents, who originally signed the contract.

Next year, with an increase in
enrollment, it will be impossible
to feed all resident students.
Some means will have to be established to decide which students will be able to get board

separately
room by the Housing' Office and board by the
FSA. The FSA is a corporation
which pays rent to the Housing
Office for the use of the kitchens
and dining facilities. The Housing
Office in turn rents its facilities
—

from the State of New York. The
money received from room and
dining hall rental goes into the
dormitory income fund from
which expenses are met. Through

this process, 71/2 percent of the
money received in board fees is
paid to the State of New York.

feeding students under contract,
as well as those on campus who
will not be under contract
commuters and graduate stu—

dents.

Martin Fcinrider, president of
the Ripon Society, explained both
the origin and primary goals of
the organization It originated at
Harvard University in 1956 and

exploring all feasible alternatives.
possibility would be the construction of a new dining hall;

At this time, it is not known
whether the separation of room
and board will effect the total

cation, building a

finding a lokitchen, and
of other necessary

established its national headquarters in Cambridge, Mass.

Mr. Peinrider stated that “It is
dedicated to the voicing of mod
crate, liberal Republican idealo

this would require
installation
facilities.

Bender, supervisor elect of the
18th Ward in the City of Buffalo.
Mr. Bender, former chairman
of the Young Republican Active
ties of the county, stated that
“the Republican Party should
have a basis; and from this, the
interpretations may vary from
conservative, moderate or liberal
ideologies.” He raised the questions:'!) “Do we use the Republican Party as a basis for political
philosophies or as a means of ex
posing a candidate',' 2) Was John
V. Lindsay's victory in New York
City a victory for the Republican
Party'’”

Mr. Schillo, Director of Housing, reported that the administration is fully aware of the lack
of dining facilities. It is presently

contracts.

Room and board are handled

The first* meeting of the newly
organized Ripon Society was held
on November 10 at 7:30 in Norton Union. Highlighting the meeting was the guest speaker. Miles

Seperation of room and board
poses a dual problem. It entails

One

cost.

Bender Speaks at Opening
Of Campus Ripon Society

SCHILLO

(Cont'd

on P.

5)

,

The Student Senate amendment
passed two weeks ago requesting
for the Senate the power to

its constitution without
the approval of the Faculty-Committee on Student Affairs has
been temporarily pigeon holed by
this committee. A letter read at
the meeting cited the importance
of the amendment and the busy
schedule of the committee as the
reasons for the delay.
In the course of committee reamend

ports Association Vice-president
Rosemary Brown outlined plans
for the Academic Affairs Committee to conduct a course-eval
uation program augmented by
the use of electronic data equip
ment contributed by the Campus
Data Processing Center.
Miss Brown also explained the
student welfare reorganization,
which removed control on quesservice,
tions regarding food
bookstore, and parking from the
Welfare Committee and placing
them under direct Presidential
control.

�Tuesday, November 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAM TWO

Theta Chi Sorority Wins Greek Queen;
Sig Ep and Chi Omega Capture Sing
Greek Weekend, fall 1965, was
climaxed by the annual Greek
Ball held at Kleinhans Music
Hall, Mary Seaton Room, Saturday, November 13 from 9 p.m. to
1 a.m.
At this time, the Greek Queen
was presented and the winners of

the Sing were announced. Jay
Moran provided music for the
dance.

Sigma Phi Epsilon Places First in Creak Sing
Photo by

Marc Levine

FRIDAY, NOV. 26th

IN PERSON

WARREN COVINGTON

Janet Shelly of Theta Chi Sorority was crowned Greek Queen
at 12 p.m. by last year’s Queen,
Harriet Somin of Sigma Delta

questions. Greek men voted on
November 11 and 12 in Norton
Union.
Winners of Greek Sing were
also announced. Sigma Phi Epsilon took overall and first place
in the large division; Sigma
Kappa Phi was second. In the
small division, Chi Omega was
first and Sigma Delta Tau was

Greensleave Coffee House Reopens

Susan Dicker, Marilyn McConky

The Greensleave Coffee House
at 719 Elmwood Avenue has reopened under new management,
A series of programs have been
announced for the coming week.

each girl modeled and answered

on Wednesday of this week starring W.C. Fields. It is expected
to be either The Fatal Glass of
Beer, or The Pharmacist.
On

Tau. The five candidates were
Susan Gallauresi, Sunny Lawryk,

and Janet Shelly. They participated in a campaign which included a fashion show, held
November 10 at 3 p.m. in the
Millard Fillmore Room, in which

second. The Inter-Fraternity and
Panhellenic Councils sponsored
the Sing, held Friday, November
12 at 7 p.m. and again ait 10 p.m.
in the Millard Fillmore Room.
Eight sororities and fraternities
participated in this event. Carol
Anderson was the overall chairman of the Greek Sing Committee.

Arnotionoieturewin be shown

Thursday evening, Patsy Reese,
a noted local folk performer will
be singing

Last Sunday marked the beginning of the Greensleave’s
chaplaln Festiva i." Every Sun.
day for the next few weeks there
will be a showing of one of Charlie Chaplain’s films.
..

.

„

and His Famous Orchestra
Dancing: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.

—

Grand Ballroom

BEVERAGES AVAILABLE

Advance Tickets: $3.00

—

at

the Door: $3.50

Call 649-8367-8
FOR TABLE RESERVATIONS

AIRWAYS

LEISURE LAND INN
CAMP RD.
Exit

—

Hamburg, N. Y

57 on N.Y.S. Thruway

if minus
ONLY

FOOLING,
mum: it

The young bucks of America
go clean-white-sock in the Adler stretch
of the century: new ShapeX.

ir ip-rim:

Kick up your status at Adler’s 100th birthday in thefirst cotton crew ever spiralled
around Spandex to absorb all pressure from all ten toes. The first sock to go to
any length to please you. So giving it takes on all sizes 9 to 14. ShapeX: in white
and 9 great colors. Get Clean-White-Sock through and through.
Put all your feet in ShapeX. Stay in shape for just one buck.

CAMPUS CORNER
MARTINS, LTD.
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE

WM. HENGERER CO

After-Shave, $3,50, Cologne $4.00
Available at these campus stores:

_

ADAM, MELDRUM

&amp;

ANDERSON CO., INC

�Tuesday, November 16, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Fine Arts Film Committee Board of Trustees Announce Plans
Shows Series In Diefendorf For New Campus And Health Science

The Fine Arts Film Committee
will sponsor a new 16mm series
of classic films, starting November 22. The movies will be shown
in Diefendorf 148 every Monday
evening at 8:00. Admission is
free.

A new theme will be presented
every 3-5 weeks. These themes include; Russian films; Japanese
films; Orson Welles, American
actor and producer; David Lewelyn Griffith, American producer;
Jean Cocteau, noted French
author; Humphrey Bogart, famed
American actor; and Surrealism.
Films exhibting new and experimental techniques of the motionpicture industry may also be
shown.
Also included in the series are
some silent pictures; “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” (1920), “The
Last Laugh” (1924), “Berlin: Sym-

phony of a Great City” (1927),
“M” (1931), “Triumph of the Will”
(1934-1936), and “Olympia” (1936-

The Board of Trustees of the
State University of New York
meeting on the UB campus last
Thursday announced the $200 million master plan for the development of the new campus as well
as the Health Science Center to
be built on the site of Rotarv
Field.

1938). These will be presented
with subtitles and music. The
music will either be the original
score or thd committee’s innovation.
Richard Haber, a member of the
committee, is in charge of selecting the films. Acting as faculty
advisor is Mr, Thomas, a Drama
and Speech Instructor.
The present film series in Norton Union will also be continued.
Movies which are to be presented
in the near future are “Knife in
the Water,” “Citizen Kane,” and
“Billy Liar.” Admission is 25e.

President Samuel B. Gould
speaking for the Board of Trustees stated that electrical and heat
ing conduits as well as installation of storm and sanitary sewers

will get
of I960.

Academic subjects, 1 or 2
hours, Tuesday or Thursday
p.m. Call TT 4-7250 for details.
Sponsored by First Presbyterian Church.

in the summer

Fall of 1966 was the date anticipated for the construction of
facilities for the general athletic
and recreational program. In
reply to questions concerning the
hopes of many in the Buffalo
community that a large stadium

Browsing Library
Hears Mr, Port

could be built for Buffalo Bills
president said that a
stadium seating 20-25 thousand
was all he anticipated. Dormitories to accomodate 2,400 students will be underway in the
fall of 1966, to be completed in
1968.

use, the

Mr. Leonard Port, member of
the English Department, will give
a reading this afternoon at 2 p.m.
in the Browsing Library, Room

Volunteer Tutors
WANTED
for 9th Graders

underway

255 Norton Union,
Mr. Port is currently teaching
two English courses and is working on his Ph.D.
This will be the first of a series
of readings sponsored by the
Browsing Library Committee. A
coffee hour will follow. Everyone
is invited to attend.

Dr. Gould stated that increased
enrollment demands could be met
through utilization of shuttle-bus
transportation between the new
dormitories and the classrooms on

CONTACT LENSES

COMPLETE EYE

CARE

DR.

LDU

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226

PHONE: 035-3311

Informative Books on
Negro and African Life
and Ctuture
Imported African Merchandise including African Woodcarvings (from $1.50 up),

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The William Sloane
House YMCA has 1491
rooms available to
men, women and
groups, sensibly priced
at $3.15-$4.50 single:

The squad, with an overall record of seven wins and one loss,
had the highest total speaker
point score in the tournament.
Thirty-six schools attended
Queens Tournament.

ho«

Riverhead—Kaller Jwry. St.
Rome—Infusino’s Jewelers
&amp; Silversmiths
Sag Harbor—Fritt Jwry. St.

Sayville—Fred Stadtmuller

Jewelers Inc.

the

Northwestern University won
the Varsity Division while the
University of Missouri captured
the Novice Division title.

Saratoga Spgs.—P. S. Eddy
Schenectady

—

Maurice B. Graubart
Scotia—Mayfair Jwlr., Inc.
Sherburne—
Turner Jewelry Store

Southampton—Corwin's
Main Street Jewelers

Springville—Robert H. Engel
Syracuse—Albert Jwlry. Inc.
Syracuse—
E. W. Edwards &amp; Son
Wellsville—F. A. Drew, Jwlr.
West Hampton Beach
R. F. Vail &amp; Son
White Plains—
Bramley &amp; Co., Inc.

—

NEW YORK CITY
Brooklyn—
Louis Amols Sons, Inc.

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Einsohn Jewelers Inc.
Ithaca —Cramers Jewelers
Johnson City—
Messner’s Jewelry
Little Falls—G. J. Morotti
Massena—Peets Jewelers
Middletown
R. Edgar Clarke, Inc.
Middletown
F. O. Kernochan, Inc.
Monroe—Monroe Jewelers
Newburgh—Cowan’s Jwlr.
Clean—Reed's Jwlr., Inc.
Ossining—Hartnik Bros.
Oswego—Schneider Bros.

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Cortland—H. Alpert Jwlr.
E. Setauket —Davis Jwlr.
Elmira —Elmira Jewelers
Elmira —Ray Jewelers
Freeport—Lloyd’s Jwlr. Inc.
Glens Fall—M. C. Scoville
Herkimer—Winstons Jwlr.

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Canandaigua—
L. M. Campbell Jeweler
Cohoes —Timpane’s, Inc.
Corning—Ray Jewelers of

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Ray Major and Allan Wayne on
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in Queens, New York last week-

Buffalo—E. A. Pfister, Inc.

Woodlawn)

«.

A functional system of parking, entrances and exits will be
an integral part of the new campus because of the need to provide adequately for commuting
students and faculty. Therefore,
planning in this area, and in all
site planning and utilities location was time consuming.

Liarakos on the affirmative, and

The varsity Debate Squad captured first place at the Queen
College Debate Tournament held

Buffalo—Harry Gamier, Inc.

1412 Jefferson Ave.

.COMFORTABLE.

pletion of the master plan

Debate Squad Places First
In Tournament at Queens

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Albany—F. J. Lambert
Auburn—Geo. A. York Jwlr.
Binghamton—
Callan-Major Corp.
Buffalo—A. M. &amp; A.

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DR. ALEXANDER KATZ

The "Soul Literature"
Center of Buffalo

•

President Gould said that more
detailed information with regard
to such matters as architectural
concept, site development, schematics, building locations and a

end.

Afro-Asian
Bookstore
•

Main Street. Several of the smaller dormitories on the Main Street
campus will be rehabilitated for
seminar and classroom use

Brooklyn—Nilsen's Jewelers
Brooklyn—B. Senter Inc.
Brooklyn—
Swiss Jewelry Center Inc,
Bronx—Bick Co. Jewelers
L. Is. City—Chas. Anagnos
Manhattan—Clive Jwlr. Inc.
Manhattan—Dial Jwlr. Inc.
Manhattan
Dyckman Time Shop
Manhattan—
M. L Kester Jwlr., Inc.
Manhattan—Maryo Inc.
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(Tower Jeweler*)

Manhattan —Schwartz Bros.
Manhattan—Scolnlck Inc.
Manhattan—
Silver's Jewelry Store

Manhattan—Morris Weigler
Manhattan—
Wexler. M. &amp; Sons

Ridgewood—Isaacs Jwlr.
Ridgewood—F. Stadtmuller
Staten Island (Great Kills)
Paul’s Jewelers
Staten Is. (Pt. Richmond)
Russell.Reed, Inc.
Queens Vil.—Jaeger Jwlr.

—

—

�Tuesday, November 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

Editorial (Comment
GRATITUDE
Albert S. Cook took over the helm of
our English Department almost three
years ago and during his tenure the Department was “streamlined” and a number of new academic policies were instituted. The academic community owes
him a vote of thanks for this alone, but
his accomplishments have extended beyond the confines of a single department.
His efforts in securing the teaching
services of nationally recognized figures
and his insistance on excellence have done
much to restore the humanities to a position of prominance our school and stem
the tide “scientism” which threatens to
turn this university into a “fact factory”
instead of a center of higher learning.
The students and faculty at this urtiversity, particularly those in the humanities and liberal arts, owe Albert Cook a
debt of gratitude for this vital work. We
hope that whoever is chosen to be his successor will continue to strive for that same
degree of excellence so that this university

.

.

may be known as much for its scholars
and creative artists as for its researchers
and “higher statisticians.”

GROWTH
As you have undoubtedly noticed by
now, the Spectrum is coming out twice a
week. The institution of a semi-weekly
paper is part of the planned growth of
the Spectrum toward more up-to-date and
meaningful service to the campus community. It is an uphill battle, and since
this great and growing university is still
without a school of journalism, the impetus for growth must come primarily
from the students themselves.
We have been fortunate, thus far, in
the supprot and interest we have received
from the students, faculty, and administration (with the notable exception of the
Office of University Affairs) and we
believe that the expanded news services
offered by the Spectrum will play an important role in the total growth of this
university in the years to come.

cjCetterA to the

Editor

Answer To
Miss Katz

Plea For

Cleanliness
TO THE EDITOR:
As early at 1962, the administration and several involved student groups became interested in
the decorum of the center lounge.
Various techniques were installed to clean up the area, but
to no avail. The House Committee of Union Board, made investigations into the mess that was
left after each day. The next
group to take an interest in it
was the Standards Committee of
the IFC since many students
using the area were fraternity
men. The Committee decided on
a resolution which authorized
penalizing fraternities if their
members were seen breaking
rules in the lounge.
Since this solution seems to
claim that the area was exclusive
to fraternities, the problem went
back to the House Committee. In
Dcember of 1964, the House Committee passed a motion stating
that if the decorum in the center lounge had not improved by
January then the lounge would
be closed. Indeed, for the first
week of the second semester,
the lounge was closed. When it
reopened, however, the problems
were the same. By late March,
the House Committee was ready
to give up. They realized that
peer group policing was impossible, and passed an amendment
making themselves advisory rather than legislative. This in effect
turned the problem over to the
administration.
The administration decided to
allow the year to end without a
change, but during the summer
used the area for cultural exhibits. When school resumed, the
exhibits were to remain in the
lounge area. This is the situation to date.
At the first meeting of the
Student Senate this year, a motion was passed which set up a
committee to look into the matter of the center lounge. The
committee met with the administration and together they have
attempted to solve the problem,'
The lounge is to be reopened
but it was felt by the committee that the students should be
fully aware of what has occurred
and fully aware of why the
lounge was closed. The administration has agreed that mere closing is not the proper solution.
However, it is imperative that
the lounge be used properly and
it was felt that if the students
were made aware, that it would
be used properly.
Martin F. Guggenheim,
Chairman Norton Union
Special Facilities Committee,
Student Senate

Commentary

.

TO THE EDITOR:

“Why do students join the
Peace Movement?” In seven paragraphs, Miss Kitty Katz, SDS
spokesman, attempted to answer
this question in last week’s Spec
trum. Her argument, stripped of
rhetorical devices, boils down to
little more than a clumsy asser-

tion of humanism. What is inter-

esting, though, is that without
realizing it, Miss Katz has illustrated the real reason why many
students join radical movements.
Just as Miss Katz ostentatiously
(and arbitrarily) lists the “great
names” which have influenced
her “rational” (but nonetheless
existential) revulsion to an ultimately pragmatic, rather than
idealistic, society, her fellow radicals want nothing more than to
make their high moral position
known publically, to enable them
to claim the smug glory of selfrighteousness which they long to
wallow

in.
Instead of the meaningless generalizations and cliches Miss
Katz's letter pours forth, she
might have offered the unenlightened world of non-SDS members
some of the eternal verities she
has gleaned from Jefferson, Thoreau, Confucius, Ghandi, Einstein,
the Constitution, the Bible, Faust,
and Piers Plowman. For to us, instead of offering formulae to solve
the problems of the universe,
these great men and works have
only posed further and greater
problems

Jeannie Stoll

Campus

Dress

Standards
TO THE EDITOR:
Ever since September when I
first arrived on campus, I have
head various Allenhurst freshmen and other resident students
complain about the dress standards imposed on them. During
the past two weeks, steps have

been taken by The Allenhurt
Council and the IRC Standards
Committee to ease the situation.

Present dress regulations are
not merely inconsistent, but many
times ridiculous. The question
arises why on Saturday night
dress standards are suspended
and then enforced during the
week. If dress standards are not
needed on one night of the week
they are not needed at all. Under
the present regulations it is possible to be thrown out of the
cafeteria if bluejeans are worn

no matter how clean they may
be. On the other hand a mudsplattered pair of white levis are
quite acceptable. The “hosts” go
to great extremes to prove that
dress regulations must be enforced at all times. They even investigate turtleneck and erewneek
sweaters to assure themselves
that no one is sneaking in with
collarless shirt underneath a
sweater. This brings up a point
about the basic difference between a button-down madras shirt
and a madras shirt with a Henley
collar (no collar). The person with
a Henley collar will not be admited to an evening meal. What
is so sacreligious about a Henley
collar?

At a future IRC meeting a resolution will be presented calling
for the complete abolition of dress
standards. The results of the Allenhurst Dress Standards Poll
leave no doubt in my mind that
a majority of Allenhurst students
are against dress regulations. I
can personally attest to the inconvenience caused by returning to
Allenhurst to change at catching
another bus to campus in order to
arrive at Goodyear Cafeteria before it closes. Although the Allenhurst poll is by no means conclusive on all dress standards, it
does prove my point. What right
does one person, be it student or
administrator, have to tell another
person what to wear and when to
wear it? I have always been of
the opinion that I am capable of
selecting my own clothes on a
given day. It is up to each person
to chose what he wants to wear.
If someone else is offended by
his choice of clothing he has the
perogative to move to another
part of the cafeteria.
I would like to quote from last
year’s final report presented by
the IRC to the Student Senate.
"The Dress Standards Committee
reported that Housing approved

of all the decisions of the commit-

tee and the Council including allowing men the privilege of wearing dungaress to dinner ...” Action should be taken for the complete abolition of dress standards.

Robert Weiner

By JOHN H. BONER

It does seem, as Mr, Taylor said
a recent editorial, that the
students, either seriously or not
so seriously interested in the socalled “protest movement”, are
losing steam. I am at a loss to
explain this development as I
personally believe that the Asian
conflict is just as serious this
week as it was a while ago. Have
these students, “the conscience
of America,” been genuinely discouraged by the lack of initiative
on the part of those who, in
thought at least, support them?
Have they been scared by the
aroused ire of the multitude of
Johnsonian Republicans or the
veiled threats of the hokey old
veterans (of Camp Dix?) Or are
in

they just not seriously enough
interested in their country’s future to continue making a concerted effort to awaken the morality of its people?

There is, about the most intelligent of these protesting students,
an air of cynicism that constantly
undermines their own efforts to
reach their contemporaries. The
hard, simple fact of the matter is
that these “intellectual” students
(known as beatniks by the hate
scribblers, et al, of the Buffalo
Evening Opinion) are living in a
dream-world as unreal as that of
their “unenlightened” contemporaries.The members of this “upperechelon” of the protestors passes
its idle hours (what few there are)
evaluating their chances of edu-

How Many More

TO THE EDITOR;
How many more ugly yellow
buildings will be erected on campus? How many more trees will
be cut down?

James Ralemowitz
A. R. Sheppard

.

.

eating the ignorant masses, and
discussing the merits of “civil disobedience” and the dream of an
American Anarchistic Utopia. The
sad thing about this, this feeling
of superiority, is that they may
have a right to feel superior. The
right of the leaders of “The Intellectual” to feel superior is granted them by the students! who do
not know what is going on out-

side their little sheltered environments, and worse, do not care
to find out. The disturbing thing
is that there seems to be a “knownothing attitute developing within
the student (national?) body, a
feeling that: “I don’t know what’s
going on in Vietnam, and I never
want to know!”, as long as our
good president and his puppetmaster “Mac-the-Knife” tell us
that: “All is for the best in this
best of all possible worlds.”
The incidents of four people in
our country immolating themselves whether driven to escape
from or protest against the mangling of their consciences is academic: the fact remains that they
have died as a direct result of
the maintenance of Mr. Johnson's
“war of the national liberation.”
The burning of these good people
is terrifically shocking to those
of us in this country who are still
able to think for ourselves. We
cannot any more pass off these
persons as “cranks”
instead
we must accept the fact that the
immoral acts of the present administration are b e g i n n i n g to
have a serious effect upon the
hearts of many good Americans.
—

����������������������������������������������At

Cjoodman

I

—

I

i
�������������������������������������������A****
College students keep asking Maybe, at present we need fewer
me if they should quit. My usual roads and your task is to preanswer has been: Life is not a
vent them from being built.
bed of roses in or out of college;
If you are going for medicine,
slay if there’s even a singe subthink about health as well as
ject you are really interested in
pathology and the superiority of
and feel you are learning—unless
preventive medicine to curative
of course, the routine is bad for medicine. This will give meaning to biology, and anatomy; and
your health or you have to do
something dishonorable, like fakit will certainly lead you into
ing to get by.
psychosomatics and social hyBut I now think this is the geine. Here again you may find
wrong approach. The right anyourself in troublesome action.
swer is that given to the young
And you may find that you are
by Prince Kropotkin half a cena maverick. For instance you may
tury ago: Ask yourself what you begin to see that attraction of
want to do with these beautithe arduous career of general
ful and useful subjects that are family practice with house visits,
presumably available in the uniduring which you can forestall
versity, and see to it that you
future chronic diseases, instead
get what you need. If you are of the present rage of specializain engineering ask what kind
tion and office visits, plus psychiatry when it is late in the
of community you want to make
housing, roads, or machinery for;
game.
what kind of housing etc, such a
If you study law, remember
community needs; and how best
that it really deals with the makto prepare yourself for the task. ing of a just society and defense
The inquiry will certainly lead
against injustice in any society.
you into sociological questions,
This will soon bring you into
problems of politics, history, and
economies and politics, and perhaps even into political actions
administration. It will make you
to make your future possible.
(Cont’d on P. 6)
*

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for

exam periods. Thanksgiving,

Christmas, and Easter.
JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor-in-Chiof

Managing
News Editor

Editor
SUSAN GREENE

RONNIE

Feature Editor
Sports Editor
A**t.

?

.

Layout

BROMBERG

JOHN

STINY

RICHARD DRANDOFF
STEVE

SCHUELEIN

Continuity

Editor

Business Managor

Editor

Photography
Circulation

MARCIA ORSZULAK

Managor

Faculty Advisor

VOIPE
JOSCELYN

RAYMOND D.

EDWARD

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE

Editor

Copy Editor

WILLET

Financial Advisor
SHARON HONIG
DALLAS GAPBER
LAUREN JACOBS
Ad
GARY FISHER
EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation

10,000.

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

�Tuesday, November 16, 1965

PACB FIVE

SPECTRUM

On Campus MocShuJirun

'V

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",

“Dobie Gillis," etc.)

/

Unique Experience Offered At Lake Forest;
Undergraduate Years Completed Without Classes
The possibility of completing
an entire undergraduate career
—from registration to .bachelor’s
degree—without ever attending
classes is being offered to 75 college freshmen this fall.
The experiment, underwritten
by a $325,000 Ford Foundation
grant, is underway at Lake Forest College. A national selection
committee picked the students,
all of whom had accelerated high
school preparation.
The participants pursue their
degrees through faculty-guided
study, free of the usually required courses, class attendance,
grades, and credits. “Students,

however,” William fiartlet, director of the program, explained,
“must show a proficiency in math
and a foreign language” and must
pass a comprehensive exam in
the humanities, social sciences,
and natural sciences. They must,
in addition, follow a major program the end result of which
will be a research project and a
research paper.

Each student has a faculty
adviser who acts in the role of
“preceptor, critic, and guide.”
Each student also has access to
visiting scholars, lecturers, and
artists.
Bartlet says the program has
three objectives: Without course
requirements the student will be
able to follow the range of his
own abilities and interest; specifically, he will be able to participate in more interdisciplinary
study, avoiding the barriers of
formal courses; student-faculty
relationships should improve, as
the elimination of grading will
correspondingly decrease a professor's “monitoring” function.

Other schools are also experimenting with the standard grading system.

The

California Institute of
Technology faculty voted to drop
grades iq freshman courses last
fall. The Cal Tech faculty said
this was to make the transition
between the high school and
college a smoother one for en
tering students. Freshman level
courses are now evaluated on a
pass-fail basis.

Dean

of freshmen, Foster

Strong said, “What we are doing

dramatizes what we think students are here for. Ordinarily,
students feel the pressure to try
and get a B even though they
are not interested in the course.
This is not the way a scholar
should feel. Adults who are successful don’t work this way. We
want to take off the artificial
pressures and let these talented
kids develop as they would like
to develop."

Courses are being conducted
as before; there are the same
assignments, quizzes, and tests.
Tests are graded numerically. At
the end of the course, numerical
grades are used to determine
whether the student passes or
fails. Letter grades are neither
given to the students nor kept
by the professors.

The standard grading procedures are followed at Cal Tech
in all courses above the freshman level.
According to Dean Strong the
system is undergoing a two-year
evaluation. The faculty will determine whether or not to continue the program at the end

of this year.
At Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, upperclassmen
become able to take courses in
which grades are either pass or
fail as of this fall. No letter
grades are given.
At Goddard College in Vermont, no specific courses are required, class attendance is not
checked, and no grades are given.
Goddard, a private non-denominational school of about 300 students, does require its students
to work eight hours a week in a
college maintenance job. Student jobs range from janitor to
telephone operator. Students also
run their own dorms and participate in community projects.

The student is completely equal
with the professor in the community government of the college, which meets twice a month
to set policy. Students are asked
not to address their teachers as
doctor,” or “professor,” or “mister.” First names are preferred.
The average student takes three
courses a semester. The fivecredit courses meet once a week
for three hours. Thus students
have classes only on three days
‘

Lockwood Library Honors
Poet William Butler Yeats
,

By

CHARLES CUMMINGS

Lockwood Library is currently
holding a centenary in honor of
the man whom many consider to
be the greatest poet of the twen-

The books on view are Tha Collectad Roams of W.B. Yeats, the
copy that Yeats gave to James

rest of their time

School officials say this plan
allows every student to learn at
his own speed without worrying
about keeping up with the rest
of the class at the expense of
comprehension.
San Jose State College in California is experimenting with a

program

in which selected fresh-

men will be allowed to study at

their own speed without courses,

tests, or grades.

The program, now in its second year, is worth 48 lower division credits. Six full-time tutors are in charge of the instruction of the 130 students in the

program.

Education

for these students,

including physical education and
12 to 14 units of pre-major work,
will make use of individual tu-

torial work, group discussion, and
small seminars. Tutors, of the students themselves, occasionally
lecture a small group on a given
subject.
Grades are eventually assigned,
but only at the end of the year.
Each student’s tutor evaluates his
work and when the year is completed assigns a letter grade for
the equivalent courses. School officials say this is necessary so
the students in the project can
be placed back into the normal
grading system at the end of the
year.

Beginning this fall, Princeton
University is offering its students the opportunity for
courses under a pass-fail system
instead of receiving letter grades.
Students can choose any course
outside of their major department in which they wish to be
graded on the pass-fail system.
They can only take one course
under this system during a term
and cannot take more than four
during their undergraduate years.
Study of a possible revision in
the grading system is underway
at Washington University in St.

Louis. Under the program suggested there, students in the
first and second year would be
told only if they pass or fail
courses and would not be given
a letter grade.
Dean Robert R. Palmer of the
College of the Arts and Sciences,
in announcing the study, said,
“Intense concentration on making grades is a dispiriting factor that limits the student's
chances to get an education.”
He said he left grades had to
be continued in upper division
work since they had become a
standard for admission to graduate and professional schools.
Dean Palmer said this was regrettable. “Learning should be
enjoyed, if at least enjoyable,”
he said.

Ripon Society
(Cont'd from P. 1)

tieth century, William Butler
Yeats.

The poetry collection has an
almost complete set of Yeats’ first
editions, some of which are being
displayed along with a number of
the poets original letters, in the
main reading room of Lockwood.
The exhibition, scheduled to
last for six weeks, includes Yeats’
letters to James Joyce; Joseph
Hone, who wrote the poet’s authorized biography; Oliver St. Gogarty, who was the model for
Buck Mulligan in Joyce's Ulysses,
and A.H. Butler who published
Yeats’ works.

a week. The
is their own.

gies, its purpose is to spread the
word . . . Republicans arc forward looking. Just as the aim of
the Republican Party in past years
has been progress, so it is the aim
of the Ripon Society.’’

The theme of the Society's first
project is “Do you really CARE?"
Money will be collected in Norton
Union beginning Friday, November 12 and continuing through
Vietnam
November 24 for Care
Relief; it will be used to purchase

YOU, TOO, CAN BE .INFERIOR
The second gravest problem confronting college students
today is inferiority feelings. (The first gravest problem is,
of course, the recent outbreak of moult among sorority
house canaries.) Let us today look into the causes of inferiority feelings and their possible cures.

Psychologists divide inferiority feelings into three princi-

pal categories;

1. Physical inferiority.
2. Mental inferiority.
3. Financial inferiority.

(A few say there is also a fourth category: ichthyological
inferiority a feeling that other people have prettier fish
but I believe this is common only along the coasts and in
the Great Lakes area.)
—

Let us start with the feeling of physical inferiority, perhaps the easiest to understand. Naturally we
are inclined
to feel inferior to the brawny football captain or the
beautiful homecoming queen. But we
not. Look at all the
should
people, neither brawny nor beautiful, who have made
their
marks in the world. Look at Napoleon. Look at
Socrates.
Look at Caesar. Look at Lassie.
What I mean is you can’t always tell what's inside a
package by looking at the outside. (Sometimes, of course,
you can. Take Personna Stainless Steel Blades, for example. Just one glance at that jolly blue and white package—so bright and pert, so neat but not gaudy—and you know it
bps to contain blades of absolute perfection. And you are

rami

gram

right! Personna gives you so many shaves per blade it takes
a math major to count them. And they are luxury shaves
smoother, comfortabler, kinder to the kisser. Moreover,
Personna comes both in Double Edge and Injector style.
And as if this weren’t enough, Personna is now offering you
a chance to grab a fistful of $100 bills from a $100,000 bowl!
The Personna Stainless Steel Sweepstakes is off and running, and you're all eligible to enter. Visit your friendly
Personna dealer today to get details and an entry blank.)
—

But I digress. Let us turn now to the second category
mental inferiority. A lot of people think they are dumber
than other people. This is not so. It must be remembered
that there are different kinds of intelligence. Take, for instance, the classic case of the Sigafoos brothers, Claude and
Sturbridge, students at a prominent Western university
(Dartmouth). It was always assumed that Claude was the
more intelligent just because he knew more than Sturbridge
about the arts, the sciences, the social sciences, the humanities, and like that. Sturbridge, on the other hand, was ten
times smarter than Claude when it came to tying granny
knots. But no matter; everybody looked down on "Stupid
Sturbridge,” as they called him, and looked up to “Clever
Claude,” as they called him. But who do you think turned
out to be the smart one when their granny almost got loose
and ran away? You guessed it—good old Stupid Sturbridge.

—

We arrive now at the final category, financial inferiority.
One way to deal with thte condition is to increase your income. You can, for example, become a fence. Or you can
pose for a life class, if vour college is well heated.
But a better way to handle financial inferiority is to accept it philosophically. Look on the bright side of poverty.
True, others may have more money than you have, but
look at all the things you have that they don't— debts, for
instance, and hunger cramps.

Always remember, dear friends, that poverty is no dis-

grace. It is an error, but it is no disgrace.

—

WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS
Joyce; Mosanda, A Dramatic
Roam, which is one of the rarest
modem first editions; and CalhYeats
laan Ni Hoolihan, a play by

food and other necessities for the

people of Vietnam.
Structure,

Activity Committees,

and a tentative program of guest

speakers arc currently underway.

•

•

•

r IMS. Mfti Mhulmau

Rich or poor, you can all afford luxury thacing—icilh Pernonna Stainless Steel Bladea and Personnas partner in
sharing comfort, Burma Share*! It soaks ringt around
any other lather and it’s available in regular or menthol.
*

�PACE SIX

Goodman...

(Cont'd from P. 4)
a critic of legislation. You may
even have some important questions to ask in rhetoric and Eng-

lish, when you realize that bureaucracies are trapped in their
routine languages and rituals.
Look into the admirable bail project at NYU, managed by students,
that has saved thousands of poor
people from rotting in jail.
Those in the humanities and
history know in their bones that,
as Arnold put it, literature is
the cricticism of life, the touchstone we hold against the actuality; as Dewey put it, it is by appreciation that we judge the
worth of what we’re after next.
! doubt
that the level of TV, the
lies in the press, or the campaign speeches of politicians can
stand up under the scrutiny of
humanists. Also, the monuments
of humanity in literature and
the causes of history—perhaps
especially the “lost causes” give
us other ways of being men than
the roles and motives that seem
possible in 1965.
In general, all the university
sciences and arts have theoretical
and methodical parts that are remarkable for their beauty and
ingenuity, and something is very
wrong with college teaching if
students do not come to delight
in these things. But besides, especially students of physical science
ought to ask what applications of
theory are desirable and worth
looking at. (I am surprised that
some of the contracted research
in some of our universities is not
being picketed by science students.) We use a high scientific
technology that most of us do
not understand, and these students must become the critics
and interpreters for us of the
political economy of science.
Needless to say, students who
stubbornly insist on getting what
they need from the university
courses, for better ends than
getting a degree, license, and
good salary are likely to clash
with the system they arc in,
with its syllabus, and departmentalization, and its academic isolation from reality. They will certainly clash with authoritarian
control. But then they have specific causes for anger and conflict. Instead of being passive
and unfulfilled, they will be aggressive and frustrated. This is
better than simply quitting in
disgust, and it is certainly better
than empty griping.
Such a changed student attitude would bring the professors
back to life. A professor would
have to prove the relevance of
his subject, and so find new
relevance in it. He would have
students with articulate questions, who arc the easiest to
teach, though often embarrassing
to one’s ignorance. But most important, in my opinion, is that

society could again be irritated
with science and arts. As it is at
present, with all our knowledge.
Explosion and college-going, there

is very little evidence that many

people are taking thought.

Free Flu Shots

Tuesday, November 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

ROIC Detachment Honors Member
At Niagara Falls Air Force Base
The ROTC detachment recently
honored its distinguished members during a special dinner at
the Niagara Falls Air Force Base.
The principal speaker was Colonel
F. B. Heck who spoke on Air
Force personnel problems.

Following Colonel Heck’s address, Lt. Colonel Thomas Huddleston honored twelve cadets as
Distinguished Military
Cadets.
They were: Cadet Col. Robert
Eddy, Cadet Col. George Loncar,
Cadet Maj. John Bellizzi, Cadet
Maj. Frank Bianchi, Cadet Maj.
James Lumley, Cadet Maj. Paul

Kopycinski, Cadet Maj. David
Wozniak, Cadet 1st Lt. Brian
Caldwell, Cadet 1st Lt, Ralph Larson, Cadet 2nd Lt. Marvin Mitzel,
Cadet 2nd Lt. Starr Powell, and
Cadet 2nd Lt. Dennis Smith. Lt.
Colonel Huddleston then recognized outstanding achievements
at Summer Camp noting that
Cadets Harold Hartshorn, George
Loncar, Germain Ludwig, and William Martin were awarded Vice
Commandant’s awards and that

Cadet Paul Kopycinski was the re-

University of Buffalo is one of
colleges and universities
throughout the United States invited to participate in the Queen
City Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament to be held Saturday, No
vember 20th, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
many

cipient of the Air Force Times

Award.

Mr. Joseph Plesur, Director of
Instructional Television at UB;
Dr. Richard Cornell, Assistant
The duplicate bridge tournaProfessor of Political Science, Mr.
Joseph Kast, father of Capt. Hast, ment will be a two-session team
Captain Jack Snider, U. S. Army; of four, boarda-mateh event.
Cadet Lt. Colonel Francis Lazarus,
Any undergraduate or graduate
Army ROTC Brigade Commander
at Canisius College; and Cadet Lt. student is eligible to play in the
No limit has been
Colonel Angelo Severino, Army tournament.
placed on the number of teams
ROTC Brigade Commander at that can be entered from each
Niagara University were guests school but entries must be made
in groups of four.
at the Dining-in.

P 3S

The Company’s first engine, the Wasp, took

jfl

■/ :i

to the air on May 5, 1926. Within a year the
Wasp set its first world record and went on
to smash existing records and set standards
for both land and seaplanes for years to
come, carrying airframes and pilots higher,
farther, and faster than they had ever gone

Jj

before.

Pr

and

uture

Take a look at the above chart: then a good long look
at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft—where technical careers
offer exciting growth, continuing challenge, and lasting
stability—where engineers and scientists are recognized as the major reason for the Company’s continued success.

ship in fields such as gas turbines, liquid hydrogen
technology and fuel cells.

Should you join us, you'll be assigned early responsibility. You'll find the spread of Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft’s
programs requires virtually every technical talent. You’ll
find opportunities for professional growth further enhanced by our Corporation-financed Graduate Education Program. Your degree can be a BS, MS or PhD in:

Engineers and scientists at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft
are today exploring the ever-broadening avenues of
energy conversion for every environment... all opening
up new avenues of exploration in every field of aero-

Influenza vaccine will again be
offered by the Student Health
Service in the basement of Michael Hall on Wednesday, December 1, and Friday,' Decepiber 3.
from 4-5 p.m. The charge is 50c.
Two injections, approximately
4 weeks apart, are suggested for
those who have not been immunized within the past two
years. Anyone with an allergy to
eggs or with symptoms of an acute
respiratory infection should not
be immunized.

space, marine and industrial power application. The
technical staff working on these programs, backed by
Management's determination to provide the best and
most advanced facilities and scientific apparatus, has
already given the Company a firm foothold in the current land, sea, air and space programs so vital to our
country's future. The list of achievements amassed
by our technical staff is a veritable list of firsts in the
development of compact power plants, dating back to
the first Wasp engine which lifted the United States
to a position of world leadership in aviation. These
engineering and scientific achievements have enabled
the Company to obtain its current position of leader-

BOCCE

Pratt

IF 3-1344

Bridge Club Invited
To Queens College

&amp;

MECHANICAL AERONAUTICAL
ELECTRICAL CHEMICAL
ENGINEERING
PHYSICS
CHEMISTRY
METALLURGY
CERAMICS
MATHEMATICS ENGINEERING SCIENCE OR
APPLIED MECHANICS.
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

For further information concerning a career with Pratt
&amp;
Whitney Aircraft, consult your college placement
officer—or write Mr. William L, Stoner, Engineering
Department, Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,
Connecticut 06108.

SPECIALISTS IN POWER... POWER FOR PROPULSION—POWER
FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE
AIRCRAFT, MISSILES. SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

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�Tuesday. November 16, 1965

,

gin UB fans would have been
happy to see unchanged.
Halfway through the third,
quarter, Hurd was responsible
for what Coach Offenhamer
called, “The key play of the
game.” With the spirited Raiders
trailing by only a touchdown,
Hubbard returned a Hansen punt
to the UB 42. Reserve quarterback Mark, a “marked” man for
UB’s mayhem battalion, threw a

pass down the sideline intended
for Port. Just as the Darien,
Conn., native was about to grab
it, Hurd, guarding the Colgate
end tenaciously, plucked the ball
out of mid-air at the 30 and
raced up the sideline. Once across
midfield the 195-lb. E1 m i r a n
proved as uncatchable as a me-

.

.

(Cont’d from P. 8)

chanical rabbit and easily outdistanced his pursuers to the
end zone. Joe the Toe converted
to make the score 14-0.
threats to file
assault and battery charges
against UB’s felonious line, the
Bulls paid no heed to this gesture
and continued to force the New
Rochelle junior to look down the
barrel of the UB cannon. After
being obliterated as he pounced
on his own wild-pitch-out for an
eight yard loss, Mark intentionally grounded the ball on the
Colgate ■ 14 on the ensuing play
while being demolished by Saranac Lake Express No. 84.
The Raiders, however, managed
to escape the situation unscathed,
but gave the Bulls another chance

by later

fumbling at the 23.
Helenbrook fell on the loose ball,
but again the Raider defense, led
by Hap Clark, Ed Schautz, and
John Paske, stopped the Bulls.
When the Raiders fumbled
again with six minutes to go in
the final quarter, the Bulls refused to let them off the hook
again. LaFountain recovered the
hall at the Colgate 25, and four
plays later Capuana lofted a 17yard picture pass to Ashley deep
in the end zone. Joe the Toe
lined another conversion through
the uprights to make the score
21-0.

With victory virtually assured,
the Bulls continued the rout by
scoring again in the final two
minutes,

Ashley again

man-

uevered himself free behind Colgate safety Tom Wilson, hauled

:-jm

in Ron Ridolfi’s perfect 30-yd.
pass at the 5 and tumbled across
the goal line. The Toe kicked
his fourth in a row to account
for the 28th point.
Coach Offenhamer said jubilantly afterward, “I'm really glad
that we were able to impress the
home fans. We usually play our
best on the road. I hope we have
lit a firecracker.”

UB

First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passing

179
84

Passes

4-14

5-15

Passes inter.
Fumbles lost
Punts
Yards penal.

9-36
43

8-30
55

Baby Bulls Bow To
Tangerines 65-6
,

What is rated as the finest
freshman football team that Syracuse University has ever had,
completely demolished the University of Buffalo Frosh down at
Archbold Stadium at Syracuse by
the score of 65-6.

The highlight of the afternoon
came, as the Baby Bulls shocked
the Tangerines with a 67-yard

touchdown strike which enabled
the frosh to grab a 6-0 lead. This
initial score stunned both the
onlooking
S.U. frosh and the
crowd, but not for long. As it
was soon to be proven, the UB
frosh griddcrs were in for a long
afternoon. The 67-yard beauty
from Don Mason to Ollic Svec
was their only score, from there
on out it was Syracuse all the
way.
Del Gaizo, the S.U. quarterback,
hailed as the greatest quarterback ever to enroll in “Piety Hill"
history, threw four touchdown
passes and was the main factor in

4

The Red Raiders must have
thought it was TNT.
STATISTICS

the humiliating defeat of the Baby
Bulls.
Del threw to his twin brother,
John, for 23-yards, to Ed Nowicki for 13 and 24-yards and to
Tony Kyasky for 14; all for touchdowns. The S.U. southpaw quarterback also ran one in for the score.
Ed Legalia and Fid Bulicz supplied the additional tallies.
Overall, it was a dark day for
the freshman football team from
UB. The future certainly looks
good for the varsity "Orange" as
a fine team flexed their gridiron
muscle that produced their victory in such a convincing manner.
This season was a little disappointing for the Baby Bulls as
far as the record-book is conone victory, one tie,
cerned
and four losses. However there
were a few individual standouts
on the team and we will certainly be seeing a lot of them out
there next fall when the Varsity
football season rolls around.
—

INTRAMURALS...

*

1

rv
p

Football Championship

To Be Played Tomorrow

Last Friday, Alpha Sigma Phi
defeated Sigma Alpha Mu in the

Thursday Fraternity League
championship Intramural football game, by a score of 16 0. The
playpff was due to the fart that
SAM won their final league game
while Alpha Sig was losing
theirs. As a result, both teams
finished the regular league competition with identical records of
5-1. Alpha Sig will now play Beta
Sigma Rho, the Tuesday League
champion, this afternoon at 3 on
the Intramural Field to decide the
campus Fraternity Championship.

The lusty life is bac
And it starts at
the Sign of the Pub
Uncork a flask of Pub Cologne. If you hear tankards clash
and songs turn bawdy, if the torches flare and the innkeeper
locks up his daughter
it’s because you’ve bee
and unloosed the lusty

The results of these three
games will be reported in Friday’s Spectrum.

*3nc.
.ydhyoU

Tomorrow

afternoon, barring

unforeseen weather conditions,
the Campus Championship will
be decided when the winners of

PIZZA
IF 3-1344

-Smill Printing

10% STUDENT
DISCOUNTS

championship was played

between the Zygotes and the No.
1's, who defeated the Hippies 388 to gain a spot in the playoff.

&amp;

■•fcS Jr-" 11

Independent

Yesterday, t h e
League

the Alpha Sig-Beta Sig, and Zygotcs-No. 1's games will meet.
This game will also begin at 3
p.m. on the Intramural Field.

:

Colgate Review

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

HunJreJtojltevu!
*
*
*

Slide Rules
Drafting Sets
Drafting Supplies, Etc.
■Ineealar tad Maaecalar

MICROSCOPES
ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY CO.
1211 Hertel Are., Buffalo U
TR S-7472
____

|

Only S Minute*

NEED

From Campus

GLASSES?
*

MAIN

GARY J. BECKER

|
“

OPTICIAN
U.B. Alumnus

"Formerly of N.Y. and Long Island"

PRICES TO PLEASE STUDENTS
1719 HERTEL AVENUE
-

by Revlon
nrav *3 75 to $10 00. Created for men
Pub cologne, after-shave, and cologne spray.
.

,

_

_____

836-6484

-

�Tuesday, November 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

S

BRING

Great Team Effort Enables
UB To Crush Colgate, 28-0
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

Whoops of “Bring on Army”
filled the air in Rotary Field
Saturday after the fired-up Bulls
had pulverized Colgate, 28-0, before 8,268 fans to up their season record to 4-3-2.
Since the final score was a fair
measuring stick of the degree of
UB superiority, cries of “Bring
on Notre Dame” didn't seem too
far fetched for some of UB's more
chauvinistic fans. After all Army,
a charter member of Eastern football’s “Big Five,” dropped a 29-28
decision to the Red Raiders, so
they could hardly be considered
a match for the Bulls.
The Bulls reached the acme of
their up-and-down season by playing almost flawless football to de-

molish the favored Red Raiders
of the Chenango Valley. Ironically, Coach Offenhamer, a Colgate

beating. After knocking starting
quarterback Buff Platt of com-

mision in the first half, the UB
defensive line, spearheaded by
Craig Hclcnbrook, E. G. Poles,
Gerry LaFountain, Jim Duprey,
and Joe Garofola, spent the remainder of the afternoon testing
the resilience of reserve signalcaller Mark, who finished the
game with a total yardage figure
of minus forty.
The game statistics again speak
as a testament to UB’s defensive
prowess. The Bulls held Colgate
to five first downs and yielded
only 65 yards to the Red Raiders.
The defensive line, which held
the visitors to minus yardage in
the second half, gave up a total of
14 yards in 43 carries, an average
of 11V4 inches a try!
The defensive secondary, bolstered by the 6’2” Hurd, performed admirably as it allowed

ARMY!

ON

where the Bulls gained the field
position they had been seeking.
The vaunted Colgate defensive
secondary, which had already recorded twenty pass thefts this
year, was in for a rude awakening
as Capuana completed a sideline
pass to Ashley at the 7. Two plays
later, at the four-minute mark of
the first quarter, Capuana rifled
another strike to Ashley, who
made a classy reception in the
middle of the end zone. Joe the
Toe converted to give the Bulls a
7-0 lead.
Coach Offenhamer commented
about the success of his strategy,
“With a great defense I feel the
percentage in my favor is about
eighty-five to fifteen. The first
quarter could have been a replay
of what happened to us at Holy
Cross.”

After a punt exchange the Raiders took over on their 13. Two
plays later the Bulls capitalized
on a break when Platt harassed
by the UB line, tossed a pass
toward Bill Davis. The ball squirted high out of Davis’ hands, and
Sella, angling in on the sophomore end, outreached him for the
pigskin and returned it twelve
yards to the Colgate 23.
After three plays netted only
three yards, Joe the Toe booted a
long, high field-goal attempt
which was ruled just wide.
Midway through the second
quarter the Red Raiders began
making headway as Ilg’s booming punts pushed the Bulls further and further upfield. After
Colgate returned a Brian Hansen
punt to the UB 45, Platt rolled to
the 37 and then completed a first
down pass to Paul Port at the 24
for a first down.
Platt again found running room
to his right side as he threaded
his way to the 11 for another
first down. Two plays later at the
7, Platt dropped back, lost seven
yards and probably as many years
of his life when he turned around
to see LaFountain roaring in on
him at full blast as the Raider
quarterback slipped to the turf.
Platt then completed a fourth-

SPEAKING OUT
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

Apathy and The Stadium Issue
It was a cold, damp day with a stiff wind out of the
Southwest when the crowd began filing into Rotary Field
only 8268
last Saturday. The filing in didn’t last long
people showed up for what promised to be the most exciting UB football game of the season. The opposition,
Colgate Universiay, had defeated Army 29-28 a few
weeks before, and entered the UB contest with a recrod
of 5-2-1.
The small crowd booed mercilessly when the Red
Raiders jaunted onto the field, and gave the Bulls a
rousing cheer a few moments later. The 17 graduating
UB gridders were announced to the crowd, and four peanuts later, Joe Oscsodal boomed the opening kickoff to
the Colgate 5. Again the crowd cheered. The rout was on.
Colgate, on the morning line a solid two touchdown
choice to defeat the Bulls as they had the year before,
has experienced fewer more frustrating afternoons. The
great UB defense, seventh in the nation entering the
game, held the Raiders to 65 yards total offense for the
game, a figure which will probably prove to move the
Bulls up on the defensive scale. It’s just a shame that
there weren’t more people at Rotary Field to witness
what was probably UB’s best showing of the past few
—

years.

Granted, the weather was bad, but, after all, it was
the last home game of the season and the last chance for
many of the students of this University to see their football team in action. Under these circumstances, there is
no reason why there weren’t twice as many people in
attendance. The sections which were taken by Colgate
students and alumni were, for some strange reason (could
it be school spirit?) about twice as densely populated as
the UB students’ stands. Apparently the students here
just cannot find two free hours on the weekends to go
to see the football team which they themselves are supproting., Apathy is indeed a sad state of affairs when
it strikes a limited group, but when it affects the major
part of the academic community, not much can be said
of this University. It is about time that the studenst here
woke up and realized that there is more to going to
college than just books.
Closely related to the question of attendance at footUB Defense grinds Colgate Back Into the ground
ball games is the plan for the stadium at the new campus.
Photo by Don Blank
President Gould of the State University system has stated
only four completions, with Dan
alumnus, exploited the air lanes,
that the new stadium will have a seating capacity of
interceptions
Sella
two
making
a Colgate strong point and a UB
20,000 to 25,000 which seems to be a trifle undersized
and Hurd one.
Achilles’ Heel in the past, to sabofor a campus which will eventually accommodate 28,500
The game began on an auspitage his Alma Mater.
students. It is a little strange that the needs of the new
The Head Coach said, “It cious note when Coach Offencampus, being so adequately met in other endeavors, will
couldn't have happened to a nicer hamer’s field position philosophy
be so grossly undercut in the realm of athletics. Evidently,
school. And it was a deserving was given a chance to operate as
the Bulls won the toss. With UB
win in what had to be the year’s
big time football is here to stay at UB
why can’t it be
electing to defend the south goal,
best effort."
big time all around?
Three times the Bulls found a Colgate was left with litle choice
Some groups in the Buffalo metropolitan area are in
vulnerable spot in the Colgate except to receive against the
favor of a huge, all-purpose domed stadium to be built
to
secondary
score touchdowns
on the new Amherst campus. I can only concur with this
via the aerial route, twice on
suggestion, which may seem assinine to some of you, and
passes from Nick Capuana to Dick
here are my reasons: If, for some strange reason, ALL
Ashley and once on a toss from
of the UB students decide to go to a game, they will not
Ron Ridolfi to the sure-handed
be able to get in. However, if a stadium with a seating
sophomore end.
capacity of around 50,000 is built, with the State and the
Coach Offenhamer had special
City of Buffalo splitting the cost, the stadium would be
praise for Capuana, “He’s been
working on his passing and he
more than adequate for UB games. In addition, the Bufwas really on target. His ball hanfalo Bills would be only too happy to play their games in
dling was just excellent too.”
an arena where their players will not take the risk of
The other UB tally also came as
catching pneumonia during a game. Also, with a stadium
a result of a pass. This time, howof this magnitude, Buffalo would have a good chance
ever, the Red Raiders were on the
of attracting a major league baseball team.
there are
offensive, as Tom Hurd snared
other
benefits: conventions could be held ift.a domed
a Bob Mark pass at his own 30
stadium, and if the administration so desiresji it could
and sped 70 yards down the sideeliminate the Grindle Hall type structures at the back
line for the score.
As brilliantly as the offense
of Diefendorf, and use the new stadium for mass lectures.
Ha!
functioned, the savage UB defense again gained top billing in
So, President Gould, why not think it over and maybe
the praise department. Recording
you too will come to the conclusion that this school and
Nick Capuana searches for forgot
its fourth whitewashing of the
Photo by Peter Bonneau
city DO need the type of stadium mentioned here. It
season and third in the last four
wing. Karl Baumgartner returned
pass to Davis at the 3 but it would only cost about 25 million dollars, and when that
down
games, the Her&lt;‘ made a non-enthe Joe Oscodal boot to the 15, was not enough for a first down, is split up between the State University
and the City of
tity of an of'ense which had
where he was roughly greeted by
The Raiders rolled to the 28 Buffalo, the actual cost to the University will not much
scored fifty points in its last two
an unstoppable force named E. G.
they
gained
when
the
but
ball,
outings.
exceed what will have to be spent to put up a structure
Poles, On third down Platt rolled
(Cont’d on P. 7)
No less than eight members of
left and lobbed a wild pitch-out Platt was flattened on an end seating 25,000.
the Red Raider squad were forced
In a stadium with a dome, the crowd would defito workhorse Marv Hubbard, sweep and the Raiders never reoff the field with injuries at varnitely exceed the 8,268 that showed up at Rotary Field
which the latter recovered on his covered their offensive thrust,
ious stages of the game as the own 3. Ray llg hurriedly punted
on a cold, damp day with a stiff wind out of the SouthThe bruising first half came to
Bulls applied a merciless physical out of the end zone to the OR 33,
an end with the score 7-0, a marwest long ago when UB defeated Colgate 28-0,
—

.B#

*'

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1UFFAL0~

STATE

LOUNGE

COLGATE

PREVIEW

OPENS
(see

H

page

VOLUME 16

f-irp

page

NO. 10

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1965

Students Seek Policy Role
Student-Faculty-Administration Forum
Discusses Organization at 1st Meeting

Dr. A. W. Rowland (L) and Dr. C. I. Fuffor (r.) IMon to atudont
raquasts for a vole# in University decision making.

Photo by Robert Wynne

By SUSAN GREENE
The Student-Faculty Administration Forum met for the first
time Friday, November 5, to discuss its functions and to try
to come to some decisions regarding organization and policy. In
addition, a resolution was proposed recommending the appointment of a student and a faculty
member to the University Council Committee which will choose
a university president upon the
resignation of Dr, Furnas. Dr.
Richard Siggelkow, Dean of Student, presided over the meeting
as temporary chairman.
A resolution for the creation
of the Forum was adopted by
the University Senate, the governing body of the Faculty Student
Association, on April 21, 1965, on
recommendation of the Senate
Committee on Student Affairs. At
that time, Dr. Claude C. Puffer,

Vice-President in Charge of Business Affairs, proposed the establishment of “a forum where students, faculty and administration
meet on a regular basis to discuss
current problems.”

The Forum was formally created at the beginning of the 196566 school year. Composed of six
members from administration,
six from the faculty, and twelve
from the student body (includ-

ing two temporary members), it
met for the first time last Friday
to discuss organization and plans.
The meeting was primarily
concerned with laying the
groundwork for future meetings
of the Forum. According to Mr.
Clinton Deveaux, student representative and President of the

Student Association, the problem
lies in creating an organization
with the minimal amount of
rigidity. “We want to create an

FSA Rev lew Panel Meets
By EILEEN TEITLER

The Ad Hoc Committee to Reorganize the FSA approved by
President Clifford C. Furnas to
study the Faculty-Student Association and to make recommendations for changes in the FSA
met last week to discuss results
of investigations undertaken so
far.

The committee divided the
F.S.A. activities into three main
areas: restricted areas, in which
the F.S.A. acts merely as a repository of funds; administrative
funds and expenses; and operating divisipns, in which there
is an income.
It was decided that restricted

administrative body, as there is

Cook Leaves
Chairmanship
Dr.

Albert Cook, past chair-

man of the English Dept, has rev,
cently resigned from his position. He was appointed for a
three year period, but has declined an offer to continue his
chairmanship.
Since Dr. Cook engages in stu-

dent criticism, poetry and other
creative work and also has been
offered a Senior Fellowship at
the Center for Advanced Studies
in Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, he feels that he cannot spare
the time for this position.
Before coming to UB, Dr. Cook
turned down an offer for a chairmanship at a large midwestern
university, but accepted the promising offer made by UB’s English
Dept. He emphasized that the department had been very generous
in allowing him to continue his
personal work. Dr. Cook also commented that if the department
were weak, if there were disagreements within the departments, or if the department were
not being encouraged by the administration he would have continued as chairman.

no policy involved. This will also
apply to administrative funds. No
decision has yet been reached as
to the operating division.

There is agreement with the
recommendation, made by Dr.
Puffer, vice president in charge
of Business Affairs and member
of both the ad hoc committee and
the F.S.A., although the committee has not reached a final decision.
Dr. Puffer has recommended
that the F.S.A. be reorganized
into a three-part board, with an
executive board of directors,
similar to the present board. The
three sub-boards will be: a student board which will cover most
of the student activities area and
make policy for the entire asso
riafinn- a board composed of
equal representation of students,
faculty and administration, which
will take care of educational development and Norton Union;
and an administration-dominated
board, which will operate the
,

bookstore, vending machines,

parking, etc.

No financial investigation will
be made, and Mr. Deveaux stated
that the audit will not effect the

reorganization.
As to intercollegiate athletics,
there will be no reorganization

of structure until state officials
make a statement of policy later
this semester. At present, intercollegiate athletics are supported
by student funds.
Mr. Deveaux stated: “I expect
the work of the Committee to be
complete by the beginning of
December. Its plan will most
probable be in effect by next
semester.”
of

the

man,

ert Baier. Faculty members include Dr. Theodore Friend and
Mr. Stanley Travis; administrative members are Miss Dorothy
Haas, Dr. Claude Puffer, Dean
Richard Siggelkow, and Mr.
Batkin.

CLINTON DRVfeAUX

Heads Reorganization

Gould Unveils Latest Plans

State University President Samuel B. Gould explained a change
in State University policy concerning the selection of Presidents for the State campuses and
reported on the progress of planning for expansion of the State
University of New York at Buffalo at a news conference held
yesterday on the UB campus.
The president pointed out that
the Board of Trustees had been

the

Amherst

determine itself.”
Mr. Kim Darrow, student member, proposed a resolution concerning the appointment of a
new president ofThe university.
upon the resignation of Dr. Furnas, August 3, 1966. Mr. Darrow
felt that since the “selection of
a university president is of vital
importance to every member of
the academic community,” and
since the "student body and the
faculty are two of the most important segments of this comat least one student
munity
and one faculty member” should
be elected to the University Council Committee, which examines
candidates for president of the
...

The

Student-Faculty Adminis-

Forum recommended that
the placements should take place

immediately, and that they should
be "chosen by the groups they
are representing, or by official
representative bodies of these
groups.”

that the removal of the rule pro-

to

The decision insures that IHtle
time will elapse between meetings, and that most members will
be available to attend. Dean Siggelkow will continue to act as
chairman until a system is arranged. It seems probable that
there will be a rotating chairmanship, each member serving
for at least one meeting.
There will not be a formal
agenda, but topics for discussion will be sent to each member
before a meeting, and they will
be scheduled according to general consensus. Detailed minutes
will not be kept. Members fear
that the recording of every speaker will have an inhibiting effect
upon some of them, and detract
from the informality.
There was no definite decision
on the actual structure of the
Forum. The members want flexibility; for this reason Dean Sig-

tration

hibiting a member of a given

slightest.”
In relation

Because the members want to
keep the meetings as informal as
possible, these questions posed
definite problems. The solutions
to the problems are not necessarily permanent, but will temporarily serve as the basis for
future meetings.
It was decided that the Forum
would meet at least once a month.

university.

discussing a policy change in relation to all state campuses. Dr.
Gould stated that the Board felt

campus from the field of selection for president of that campus
would give the board "maximum
flexability" in their choice of
Presidents. Asked if this decision
had any relation to the coming
retirement of Dr. Furnas, President Gould replied “not in the

be structured?

gelkow suggested that they “see
how things go. The structure will

committee
were appointed by Dr. Clifford
Furnas. The student members
are Ellen Cardone, David EdelMembers

in which everyone
will feel free to express himself.”
Discussion dealing with the
structure itself dominated the
meeting. Among the questions
raised were the following: How
often should the committee meet?
Who should act as chairman?
Should there be a formal agenda?
Should detailed minutes be kept?
How exactly will the committee
atmosphere

campus the president explained
that it was difficult to be precise about schedules because of
the magnitude of planning and coordination necessary for the overall 200 million dollar project. Dr
Gould did point out that groundbreaking for the new dormitories

will take place in the fall of 1966
and that occupancy could be scheduled for as early as fall of 1968.
President Gould felt that increased enrollment could be met by
shutlebussing between the new
dormitories and the Main Street
campus.

The matter will be further
discussed at the next Forum,
scheduled for Friday, November
19. Among the topics to be discussed at this meeting are the
facutly-evaluation program, the
academic honor system, the role
of the different groups who make
decisions and policy, student fees,
and the new campus.
Although speakers will not be
recognized from the floor, anyone interested in attending the
Forum of November 19 may do

so.

�CONTACT LENBEB

COMPLETE EYE

CARE

DR. ALEXANDER KATZ
DR. LDU KRDP
OPTOMETRISTS

UNIVERSITY

BUFFALO.

PHONE: B35-3311

2896 Dtlawort Avs.
Ktnmora, N.Y.
PINE

PLAZA

N. Y. 14226

3124 BAILEY AVE.
Buffalo, N.Y.
PLAZA

Niagara Falls, N. Y.

‘Survey On Asian Culture’ YAF Program On
Is Presented by Dr. Lin Lin Hungarian Revolt
Professor Lin Lin economist, of
China arived on campus this week
under the auspices of the Visiting
Asian Professors Project. Dr. Lin
Lin will teach a graduate course
entitled “Survey of Asian Culture” and will speak to students
at other State Universities of New
York.

Dr. Lin Lin was born in Canton, China. He came to the United
States in 1930 and returned to
Nanking in 1947, Considering the
possibllty that the Chinese Communists would soon overrun the
mainland, Dr. Lin Lin and his
family migrated to Taiwan. Without being aware that the government was in Taiwan, Dr. Lin Lin
believed that the traditional Chinese would be able to hold Taiwan as a base for recovery of the
mainland.

In 1949 when the Sino-Japanese
War broke out he joined the
Chinese Information Service and
began teaching at the National
Taiwan University in Taipei
where he was a member of the
faculty ever since. During the
war he also taught at the UniFar East
versity of Maryland
Division at the Taipei Center
where classes were conducted in
Taipei for American servicemen.
In 1956 he came to the United
States for two years of post graduate work at Ohio State University, His present status at the
University of Taiwan is Director
of the Evening School.

DR. UN

Visiting Asian Professor

He also stated that higher education is rapidly increasing in Taiwan. There are 35 instiutions of
higher education. Whereas fifteen
years ago, there were 1,000 students at Taiwan U„ today there
are 9,000.

—

Dr. Lin Lin commented that,
like the American universities,
Taiwan U. is being flooded with
applicants, necessitating rigorous
screening process for. admission.

The Visiting Asian Professor
Project began in Sept., 1962. The
major goals of the project have

been to .enable as many American
students as possible to learn
about as many Asian nations as
possible within a year, and to
give Asian scholars an opportunity to learn about America and its
colleges and universities. During
the academic year, two visiting
professors are sponsored each
semester on the participating campuses.

Equipped with a
Turbo-Jet 396 V8,
special suspension

and red stripe tires.
These cars weren’t meant for
the driver who is willing to
settle for frills.
They’re engineered from
the chassis on up as no-compromise road machines.
Standard output of the new
Turbo-Jet 396 V8—which
powers both models—is 325
hp. This remarkably efficient
power plant is also available
in a 360-hp version.
So much for what happens
on straightaways. How about
curves? You ride on a special
SS 396 chassis—with flatcornering suspension and
wide-base wheels.
A fully synchronized 3speed transmission is standard. Or you can order a 4speed or Powerglide—also
Strato-bucket front seats,
center console and full instrumentation.
Sound like a car you could
get serious over? That, as
you’ll see at your dealer’s, is
precisely how Chevrolet engineers planned it. Seriously.

gram was presented consisting of
a film and three speakers. The
keynote speaker, Dr. Ertavi, was

introduced by YAF President
Steve Sickler. Dr. Ertavi stressed
the Hungarian revolution $is evidence that Communism was Ttot
the champion of th$ WSsses,- -aed
that it could not stand lit open
competition with free countries

The next speaker was Dr. Tjeatski, who served as a medic during the revolution. Dr. Leatski
emphasized that Hungarians no
longer desire to exist under Communist rule, that for this reason their birth rate is the lowest
in the world, and the number of
abortions is double the number
of births.

was shown next. The pictures

served as a photographic record
of the events leading up to the
rebellion and the revolt itself.
Dr. Ebert, chairman of the
Geography Department, was the
third speaker. He appealed to today’s young people to use the opportunity to enrich themselves
with facts, and to detect the misleading efforts of many to win
over the ideas. The meeting was
adjourned, and a coffee hour
followed,

DEALS JEWELERS
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next to

Amherst Theatre)

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See the new '66 Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy

By SHARON SHULMAN
The UB chapter of Young
Americans for Freedom (YAF)
sponsored a series of programs
Thursday, November 4, to commemorate the ninth anniversary
of the Hungarian revolt against
Communist rule. A table had
been set up in Norton the previous week to provide books and
information about the cause.
YAF members sent up three
balloons at noon in the colors of
the Hungarian flag: red, green,
and white. Each balloon carried
the name of one country which
has recently been affected by
Communist revolution: Cuba,
Hungary, and Viet Nam. The purpose of this part of the program
was to relate the three situations,
and to emphasize the importance
of preventing the spread of
Communisim into Viet Nam, as
our country failed to do in Cuba
and Hungary.
Later that afternoon, a pro-

A film, “Revolt in Hungary,”

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�Friday, November 12,' 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

UB Civil Rights Committee
Involved In Urban Renewal

UB Music Department Commemorates
Dante’s Birthday on November 14 15

The Student Civil Rights Committee is presently engaged in a
project to organize the Ellicott
Mall and Talbert Mall residents
into a resident council to bring
their grievances to the housing
authorities. These two residential areas are Urban Renewal
projects, both approximately five
years old.

In celebration of the 700th anniversary of the birth of Dante,
the Department of Music is presenting two events: A lecture on
“Stil Novo and Ars Nova” by
Nino Pirrotta, on Sunday, November 14, and a concert of “Floren-

According to A1 Pam, committee member, the people living in

the areas voiced the following
complaints to members of the
Civil Rights Committee who canvassed the area last week:
1—Lack of police protection.
2—Poor housing conditions.

,

“The Ellicott Mall is now a
ghetto with greater than 99% of
the people being Negro," he commented. “They have little control over the conditions in which
they are living. It is the intent
of the Civil Rights Committee to
organize the people in order that
they may express their opinions
to the city in an effective man-

ner.”

interested in this type of work
are encouraged to contact Gene
Cooper (831-3552) or Ira Lands(875-9027).

3—No supervision for the playground areas.
4—Disregard for law governing how often houses must be
painted.

“It must be kept in mind that
these two housing developments
are city projects with the city
acting as landlord,” Mr. Pam

DAN SHROEDER

tine Medieval and Renaissance
Music” by the New York Pro Musica, on Monday, November 15.
Both events are at 8:30 in Baird
Hall.

People who feel they may be

man

By

There will be a general
meeting of the Student
Welfare Committee in
Room 21 Norton on November 11, at 8:45 p.m.
All members are required
to attend.

The Pro Musica, directed by
Noah Greenberg, was formed to
create the opportunity for audiences to hear the glorious musical
masterpieces of the age of Shakespeare, Leonardo da Vinci, and
Dante (1265-1321). The ensemble,
which as recorded much of this
music is composed of young singers and instrumentalists who have
been widely acclaimed for their
artistry and authenticity. Nino
Pirrotta is at present a Professor
of Music at Harvard University.
The Monday concert will feature works by Isaac. Landini,

commented.

GENUINE

2 for 1

SALE

THE

international

HOUSE qf

Monday

PANCAKES

—

Members of Hie New York Pro Muslce sightseeing In Moscow's Red
Square.

Marenzio and many others; two
of the pieces are settings of Dante’s own texts. Some of the Florentine music is from recently discovered manuscripts, from the
productive period of Lorenzo the
Magnificent (1469-1492). The type
of compositions range from

wind,

string and percussion instruments.
The admission to the lecture is
free; the price of the Pro Musica
Concert is $2.50 for non-university people, $1.50 for faculty, and

IF 3-1344

on PANCAKES and

Although no specific instruments were written for in this
period, the Pro Musica has attempted to recreate the music on
accurate copies of the instruments
which existed then, which are the

ancestors of the modern

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�Friday, November 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAG! POUR

Norton Lounge Reopens
By ELLEN BURSTIN
The center lounge in Norton
Union which has been closed to
the students since last year will
reopen on November
15, announced the administration and
student groups.

1

Much concern was shown by
the student body in general when
the lounge was closed and cultural exhibits replaced the furniture. Many were not aware of
the decision made by the administration who closed the
lounge was because of the careless use of the area. “The decorum of the students using the
lounge was poor and resulted in
incidents such as ripped furniture, cigarette burns, and scattered debris.” In an attempt to
correct the situation, the administration and several student

groups tried to institute a “clean
drive, but this
a failure.
As the problem became more

up the lounge"
initial effort was

acute, a thorough investigation
was instituted by the House Committee, a student organization; a

A

mass meeting, organized by

Since 1940, the people of the
Baltic States of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia have been subjugated by Soviet colonialism.
American students of Lithuanian
descent have determined to bring
this matter before the attention
of the United Nations. It is the
youth of today who will have to

A special broadcast of the UN
Day concert given by the New

committee from the Union Board;
and the Standards Committee
from the Interfraternity Council,
whose interests stemmed from the
fact that fraternity men used the

lounge.
The Student Senate, concerned
over the lack of lounge area,
created the Norton Special Facilities Committee to investigate the
problem. This committee, in conjunction with the administration,
has agreed that the closing of the
lounge was not the right answer,
and that the lounge is to be reopened to thd students November 15,

Rally to Protest Loss of
Lithuanian Independence
Lithuanian Americans and consisting of approximately 20,000
people, will be held in Madison
Square Garden, New York City,
at noon on Saturday, November
13, 1965, to protest the 25th anniversary of Lithuania’s loss of independence. The rally will be
followed by a protest march to
the United Nations.

WBFO Presents Special
Broadcast of UN Concert

cope with

the world of tomorrow.

Believing that the future will
be affected by the manner in

which this basic issue of freedom
is resolved, they have decided
that the events of this past year
indicate that the time is now
ripe for a mass demonstration.
This issue will concern not only
Lithuania, but all other countries
now behind the Iron Curtain, and
also those which, if no action is
taken, may eventually be “incorporated” into
Soviet
the
Union,

Anyone wishing further information concerning this demonstration, or any other Lithuanian
functions, may contact Audrey
Masiulionis, 56 Lovering Ave.,
Buffalo, N. Y. 14216, TR 6-8776.

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

performance.

Leonard Bernstein conducts the
Philharmonic in the concert,
which includes Beethoven’s Lenore Overture No. 3, the Symphony No. 9 by Shostakovich, and
the Chorale Finale of Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony. Appearing with
Mr. Bernstein are the S c h o 1 a
Cantorum, Hugh Ross, director;
the Farmingdale Boys’ Choir,
Arpad Darazs, director; and vocal
solists Martina Arroyo, soprano;
Regina Resnik, mezzo-soprano;
Jon Vickers, tenor, and Justin
Diaz, bass.

Issues of New Student Review
To Be on Sale Next Week
The New Student Review, UB's
literary magazine, will be sold in
Norton, Monday, November 15 to
Wednesday, November 17, from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; the price is
500. The winner of a Saturday
Review award, this magazine accepts contributions from any on
or off campus source.
Issued twice a semester, the
first Review of the tall semester
under the editorship of Harriet
Heitlinger, will include three
The Cat's Tail
short stories
by N. Howard, Nights of the Virgin Freshman by Jeff Beuchner
and an untitled story by Mark
Schneider
an excerpt of an
original music composition and
an accompanying article by Gary
Cohen, a philosophical history of
the body by Paul Piccone, an
essay by Bernice Rosen entitled
Dance;
Creation through the
—

—

Body, Bill

Helwig’s pictorial es-

Union Board
Novel Series

r

V

;v

ft

A Contemporay Novel Series,
planned by the Union Board

Literature and Drama Committee,

will provide “intellectually stimulating lectures by well-qualified
speakers on contemporary novels
read by a large portion of the
student body,” Paul Blatt, chairman, has stated.
At the first of four lectures

on

Wednesday, November 17, at 4
p.m. in the Conference Theatre,

Mr. Fred Clifton, instructor in

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philosophy, will discuss “The
American Negro as portrayed in
James Baldwin’s Another Country and Ralph Ellison’s The Invisible Man." Mr. Bill Harrell,
lecturer in sociology, will present the second lecture on “A
Sociological Evaluation of William Golding’s Lord of the Flies."
At the next lecture, Dr. Marcus Klein, associate professor of
English will discuss “The Love
Theme in Saul Bellow’s The Adventures of Augic March and J.
D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the
Rye." The last lecture will feature Dr. Leslie Fiedler, professor
of English and nationally prominent writer, who will speak on

“Norman Mailer’s American
Dream and Saul Bellow’s Her-

zog."

SAFE AS COFFEE
*

I

the United Nations has been
scheduled for Sunday, November
21 at 8:15 p.m. by WBFO, the
FM radio service of UB.
The concert, taped in the UN
General Assembly on October 24,
includes Benjamin Britten’s new
choral work, Voices for Today.
This will be the area premiere of
Britten’s work, which was commissioned for the anniversary

BOCCE
IF 3 1344

say, Segment of Nature, eight
poems and an art section of col-

leges.

The New Student Review was
recognized by the university four
years ago. It was conceived as a
literary and opinion magazine
with a strong emphasis on com-

ment and criticism.
Current faculty advisors are
Dr. Leslie Fieldler, literary critic and the author of several
novels, and Dr. Robert Rossberg,
recently appointed associate dean
of the School of Education. The
editor of the New Student Review is chosen at the end of
each fall semester by the current editorial board, subject to
approval by the Publications
Board. Miss Heitlinger, outgoing
editor, has stressed that any interested students may contact
her at either the magazine’s office, 831-2319, or at 831-2765. Staff
positions are also available.

The deadline for the next issue
will be November 15 and contributions will be accepted in poetry, fiction, non-fiction, art, humor
and photography. Copy must be
submitted to the NSR office, Rm.
302 Norton or mailed to Box 40,
Norton.

Honor Societies
Have Receptions
Alpha Lambda Delta, a freshman women’s honor society, and
Phi Eta Sigma, a freshman men’s
honor society will hold a reception for prospective members Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m. in
the Dorothy Haas Lounge. Invitations have been sent to those
freshmen whose previous records
indicate that they may qualify
for membership. Also invited are

all the present members of both
societies.
In order to qualify for Alpha
Lambda Delta or Phi Eta Sigma,
a student must attain a 2.9 average during the first semester of
his freshman year, or a 2.5 cumulative average during his entire
freshman year.

Petitions are now avail-

able for those who wish to
run for an office in the
School of Business Administratibn. Petitions can
be obtained from the secretary in room 205 Norton
Friday, November 12 thru
Tuesday, November 16,

�Friday, November 12, INS

New Campus Committee Encourages Student
Interest And Participation In Making Plans

The New Campus Committee,
formerly called the Campus Expansion Committee, seeks to inform students about the new
campus and to gather the students’ ideas concerning what the
new campus should be like. Chairman George Bodner and sponsor
Siggelkow are
Dean Richard
working together on this project.
The Committee consists of
members from such interest
groups as the Pan Hellenic
Council and IRC, as well as commuter and resident representatives. These members meet on
Wednesdays at 4 p.m. in various
locations.
Last Wednesday Miss Dorothy
Haas discussed the student union
which will be erected at the new
site. In coming weeks, Dr. Silverman will outline the plans for
the future libraries and Mr. McLean will speak about housing on
the new campus.
Chairman George Bodner hopes
that interested students will aid
his committee in either of two
ways. The first way is by joining
the committee and attending the

PAM PIV1

SPICTKiiM

meetings. Since the meetings take
place in different locations every

week, interested students should
talk to Mr. Bodner to learn where
the meeting 'will be held (8365660).

Secondly, if a student has an
idea to be considered, he should
submit a brief formal report in-

By JO ANNE LEEGANT
eluding name and telephone number to The New Campus CommitInter-Residence Council aptee mailbox in the Senate office proved a semester budget of
(Room 205 in Norton).
$1200 for Activities Council at its
meeting on Thursday, November
or
five
four
weeks
the
comIn
mittee will submit a report to 4, in MacDonald Hall, Plans
the Administration concerning were made for the IRC Blood
necessary and desirable changes Drive, and for the dress standin the plans for the new campus. ards decision.

Ski Club Meeting Announces
Plans For

Coining

The Ski Club held its first meeting of the year
vember 3, in the MillanpFillmore room. Mr. Gene Wmdemer,
Red Cross instructor,
guest
speaker. Several changes were
made for this skiing season.
Much of the skiing will be
done this winter at the Sitz
Marker Lodge, a private ski club
with advanced, intermediate, and
beginner slopes, and a verticle
T-bar. Ski trips will take place
Wednesday nights and all
Sunday, Lessons will

day

be given

Approves
Activity Councils Semester Report

Inter-Residence Council

Season

on Wednesday nights by Red
Cross instructors,
The Ski Club is planning a
party at a local resort for the
first week-end in December. A
ski movie and dance at Kleinhans
was announced and tickets are
being sold for two dollars. Coming in the near future is a ski
show at Leisureland in Hamburg
which will feature new products
in skiing.
Membership cards may be
picked up on Mondays, Wednesday and Fridays from 11-1 o’clock
in 320 Norton.

Activities Committee, headed by
Pat McCann, consists of one member elected by each house coun-

cil. This committee plans and coordinates social, cultural and athletic programs on a larger scale
than would be possible if each
residence hall worked independently.

IRC is sponsoring a Blood
Drive for the American soldiers
fighting in Vietnam. The object
of the drive is to help the soldiers
fighting in Vietnam regardless of

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

political opinion about the

The question of dress standards
will face IRC at its next meeting.
This year, for the first time, IRC
will have the power to decide
whether or not dress standards
are necessary. If dress standards
are to be established, IRC is empowered to set them. Last year,
IRC was only permitted to draw
up a recommendation of dress
standards, and the final decision
was made by the Housing Office.
It had been determined that
standards should exist.

A student questionnaire has
been circulated to get student
opinion on dress standards. The
results of the poll will be compiled by the Standards Committee, which will prepare a recommendation to IRC.
The next meeting of IRC will
will take place on Thursday, November 18, at 7 p.m, in Tower
Hall. IRC meetings arc open to
any interested resident student.

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�PACE SIX

Friday, November 12, IMS

SPECTRUM

Editorial (Comment

.

.

Commentary

.

THE ALL UNIVERSITY FORUM
HOPES AND DISAPPOINTMENTS

.

.

By JOHN H. BONER

.

-

The first meeting of the Faculty-Student-Administration Forum was held on Friday of last week with most
of the representatives of the three branches of the university community in attendance. Although most of the
meeting was concerned with procedural questions, the
meeting marked a significant change in the attitudes of
the establishment toward the nature of the academic
community since it is the first time that students, faculty,
and administrators have faced each other as equals
under the explicit assumption that they all have a role
to play in the determination and administration of total
university policy.

The first substantive issue discussed was a resolution
proposed by Kim Darrow, one of the student members of
the panel, which suggested that the selection of new

president for this campus to replace C. C. Furnas when
he retires is of vital importance to students and faculty
alike. These two groups, because they are vital components of the academic community, should have a meaningful role in selecting a new president.
OPEN DISCUSSION

PLAGUE OR PANACEA?
the
discussion
that
followed the lines of vested
In
interest appeared. The administration suggested that
it was too late to talk about this matter since the selection
process was already under way. The faculty said that
their committee to suggest candidates was a form of
faculty participation, even though the faculty had no
direct voice, and the students expressed dismay that they
had not been consulted in any stage of the deliberations.
The “open discussion” did much to reawaken old
hostilities and the eventual decision to limit debate and
table the resolution was viewed by some as a return to
the “old" ideas concerning university policy. The forum
was supposed to enhance the exchange of opinion and
provide a meeting ground for compromise and debate.
The decision to limit debate and postpone the next meeting for two weeks did much to dissipate the salutory
effects of the forum itself, although its creation is still
the most hopeful sign to date that the academic community is on its way to being reunited.

.

But, you have all been told
time and time again that to disagree with the government is one
of this country’s fundamental
rights. The thing I feel I must say
is that the student dissenters, as
far as I know, do not despise
those men who have been sent
over to Vietnam. My own feeling
is one of admiration for the courage they display, giving their

By STEPHEN CRAFTS

The mind of the bureaucrat
skulked on the page of the newspaper. What was to be its answer
to the charge that it had spent
$325,000 of the students’ money
on land speculation without consulting them? Surely it would not
draw an analogy between its operators and a bank’s, for the latter at least pays dividends. Its
answer was as follows:
“Since the university may
create a new campus only
once in a century or more, or
may never move, this opportunity to purchase a tract of
land is one which may never

occur again.

“To have waited several years
of acting promptly
would undoubtedly have
made the purchase of the
land financially impossible
because of rapidly rising land
prices in the area.”
instead

Some serious charges were made during the forum
meeting, indicating that there are indeed areas of mutual
concern which deserve the attention of a body composed
of people drawn from all three branches of the academic
community. Dr. A. Westley Rowland, head of Public
Relations for this university, charged the Spectrum with
He refused to substantiate his charges

at the meeting and the forum adjourned hastily before
the issue was joined.

Makes sense to the Bureaucratic Mind. Had there been time it
would have asked the students’

We offer Dr. Rowland the pages of this paper to
substantiate his charge and make constructive suggestions for the improvement of our service to the campus
community. If he still is unwilling to do anything more
than make inuendos, we offer him these pages for a public apology.
We also suggest that the unprovoked attack on the
student press was not in the finest tradition of “public
relations.” Dr. Rowland, “your public relations slip is
showing!”

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor-In-Chief

Managing
News Editor

Editor
SUSAN GREENE

RONNIE

Footvro Editor
Sport* Editor

Layout
Copy

JOHN STINY

RICHARD
STEVE

Editor
Editor

BROMBERG

Continuity Editor

.

SHARON

HONIG

Circulation Manager
Faculty Advisor
Financial Adyiaor

LAUREN

JACOBS

laprochaun

DRANDOFF
SCHUELEIN

MARCIA ORSZULAK

Business Manager RAYMOND D. VOLPE
Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
DIANE LEWIS
IRENE WILLET

DALLAS GARBER
RUSSELL GOLDBERG

EDITORIAL POLICY

IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation
10,000.

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

arms, legs and their lives to a
war that is confusing to a great

many of them, and one that most
of them have no interest in. I
read an article in the local evening opinion paper a while ago,
stating that the boys exiled to
Vietnam had become so demoralized by hearing of the protests
that they had actually begun to
THINK and even ask QUESTIONS
about why they were there. I am
sure that all good legionnaires
will realize that the formation
of any type of questioning of orders is the bane of any good unified command. (“Who tol’ you to
THINK??!!”)*

I have said before that, I do not
consider myself a coward, I do
not try to dodge military service,
I welcome it, I feel that I can do
as much as any one else, if need
be, to serve my country. How-

ever, I am sure that,

no matter

whether I am a Private or a
Colonel, I will enter this undeclared war with a sense of shame
rather than pride; with a sense of
duty rather than enthusiasm, and
with a sense of dispiritedness and
absolutely no desire to hurt anyone. I am sure that many of the
guys over there now feel the same
way, essentially. I do not want
these men over in Southeast Asia
fighting my battles for me**. If
I am called I will go with no fuss
or commotion, but, I don’t feel I
should have to
I don’t feel
that any of our troops, other than
those stupid, childish volunteers,
should have to be in Vietnam.
...

from a common adage used by
SFC. R. Irvine, Ft. Dix, N.Y.
I do not feel, personally, that
this is MY battle.
*

**

Cacotopia and

-

SERIOUS CHARGES

irresponsibility.

It has occurred to me that a
great many people in this country are laboring under a misconception about the nature of the
“student protest movement.” The
people who espouse the slogan
“my country right or wrong .
seem to be trying to lead the
American people, like a flock of
sheep, into belieying that anyone
who disagrees with the present
administration is an “enemy of
the people.” This is not so.

permission. One can almost hear
the pitch for a once-in-a-lifetime
chance to buy a golf course and
stadium. But some man in a mustache and zootsuit had it convinced that there was oil to be
had, so they had to act quickly.
Where to get the. money? From

the students, of course. Banks
would charge exorbitant interest

rates.
This land speculation deal is a
blatant example of the bureaucratic mentality, an amoral, endsjustify-the-means attitude of selfperpetuation. The University or

“knowledge factory” must run
smoothly
disagreement has yet
to be programmed. Because the
higher law of the machine prevailed, the students’ money was
appropriated. And the politicalsocial-economic amalgam contin—

ued its petty pace.

What was the justification that
the Bureaucratic Mind gave for
its unethical, if not illegal action? It did not give one.
“The board at the time of

purchase agreed that students
fees should be reduced as
soon as possible. Such steps
are currently underway.
The two major objectives
achieved by the association
are indications of economy
and prudence in the handling
of financial affairs.” (All
quotes from Clifford Furnas,
BEN 10/26/65).

But what about the students’
three hundred and twenty-five
thou?
Will the students receive interest as if the Administration’s
prudence were a loan? Will they
ask that the University sell their
land and that the profit be divided among them in the form of
reduced fees? Will they seek
reparation and damages through
legal action?
Probably not. The Bureaucratic
Mind depends upon student apathy. It slunk back to Hayes Hall
where it signed a Defense Department contract for research
on more effective cigarette lighters.

THE RIGHT
By JAMES CALLAN

Lest anyone think that the
“red” end of the Spectrum has
become completely dominant, this
column will be devoted to the expression of an alternative view
of communism to that recently
proposed by the editor of this
newspaper.
Agreed, Mr. Taylor, the “communist menace” from within is
nothing to get too bothered
about, not because communists
aren’t trying, not because the
consequences wouldn’t be dire if
they ever succeeded, but simply
because pre-revolutionary conditions do not prevail in the United
States. Agreed, Mr. Taylor, communists are blamed for more than
their share of the “happenings”
in this country. Agreed, there
are many reformers who are not
communists, and who would probably agree with you and me that
among the flaws of communism
are its means-ends mixup, its misinterpretation of class conflict,
and its police state tactics.
But

what is communism

stripped of these manifest flaws?

Socialism. Take out the classwarfare beliefs characteristic of
Marxism, and the totalitarianism,
terrorism, and opportunism characteristic of Russia and China,
and you’re left with the hard
core of socialist theory, that
theory which you fail to mention,
let alone criticize, in your critique of communism. And this is
no oversight—your editorials and
columns over the past few years
have demonstrated that you are
in fact, if not in name, a socialist.

Communism, evil that it is, is

not an internal threat to the
United States. But blaming communism for the acts of socialism
and liberalism is a threat in that
the true perpetrator, and the true
danger, remains hidden.

Socialism ,and the ultra-liberalism from which it differs so
slightly, stand remarkably free
from criticism. Most of the attention is directed toward the relatively harmless communist element, while the rest of the left
thrives. But socialism is an evil,
a rotting, corrupting evil that

drains the lifeblood of a country.
Socialism destines a nation to the
terrorism of a Russia or the meekness of a Britain. If you deprive
the men of ability of their just
reward, the fruits of their labor,
you have to make them continue,
at the expense of freedom, or let
them stop, at the expense of importance. Take away the profit
motive, the incentive ambitious
men work under, and you have
to run your nation with a gun;
if you’re going to run it at all.
In the name of humanity, socialism has weakened the spirit of
this country, collapsed the spirit
of the rest of the world, and
threatens to strip all men of their
backbone and turn them into
jellyfish, whose occasional groping efforts can be directed only
toward the “public good."

No, Mr. Taylor, “seeing red”
doesn’t hide the seekers of true
reform, it hides the perpetrators
of destructive
evil. No, you
didn’t name the “fundamental”
flaws of communism, you named
the surface blemishes on the
fundamental diseases, ultra-liberalism, collectivism, and so-

cialism.

�Friday, November 12, 1965

gucinski.

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

.

cJlelterA

.

LET'S MAKE THE WORLD SAFE FOR DEMOCRACY

to

the Editor

NOTE: Since there still appears to be some confusion about the policy governing the “Letters
Editor," here are the three criteria which are applied to this section of the paper. (I) All letters
must be signed; names will be withheld upon request, but they must be affixed to the original copy.
(2) Letters should be limited to one typewritten sheet; we will consider longer letters, but we reserve
the prerogative to edit them to size. (3) We will not print letters which violate the libel and pornography laws.

EDITOR'S
to the

Buffalo Evening News
Denies “Feud”
TO THE EDITOR;

without

The Spectrum is free
criticism from
us, to comment upon this newspaper, news or other
developments as it sees fit.
But when you assert that in publishing the results of the state study of the Faculty-Student
Association we might have been inspired by improper motives, as a part “of their long feud with
the university,” it is essential for the benefit of
out-of-town students, as wel. as faculty members
who are new to Buffalo, to call attention to your

of sensationalism. We consider these actions immoderate, immature, and irresponsible. It is no
longer possible for Republicans to complacently
retreat into their own ideological corners or to
charge into the extremes of selfishly motivated
behavior.
The Republican Club remains the official organ
of Republican opinion at UB. We shall continue
our support of the club and its programs.
As Abe Lincoln might have said "When the
going gets tough, the tough get going, and The
Pansies Get Out."
Steve Sickler, President
Terry M. Seal, Executive
Ivan Makuer, Treasurer
Peggy Marano, Secretary

error.

The Buffalo Evening News and individuals con
cerned with it have been ardent and continuing
supporters of the university. This has been shown
in many ways for a period which is longer than the
age of the vast majority of the present student
body.

The only feud of which we are aware has been
in behalf of the university to gain support and promote its development.
A, H, Kirchhofer,
Editor, Buffalo Evening News

The

grump

On Friday afternoon, last, I was
sitting and nursing a cup of tea
in my dark den when two of the
geniuses in training, resident in
the same basement came by. They
only came by because they had
been studying all afternoon—at
Bittermans—and could not find
their way home but they did stop
by. The talk was interesting. It
amounted to a question about
why I didn’t stop worrying about
mundane uninteresting things
like who was robbing how much
out of which student’s pocket and
worry about something of prime
importance, such as “how to get
rid of Dick Offenhammer, the
world’s worst football coach and
the only reason we do not have
unbeaten seasons all the time.”

There are those who claim I
am being sarcastic I know but
you regular readers —the same
person proofreads this column
every week—are better able to
judge what a foul canard that is.
I do not mind being trapped by
the lunatic fringe once in a while.
After all my carefully guarded
anonymity on campus has proved
a great barrier to the beattle like
crushes which had worried me at
first and I do like to talk to
students—occasionally.
Now, this may be a legitimate
viewpoint, namely that both the
basketball and football coaches
on this campus are hopeless incompetents and unfit to coach at
Beauregard Tech much less UB.
I do not feel I am prepared to
comment on the football coach. I
used to run cross country in high
school. The year they cancelled
that to get more bodies for football I did go out for football. I
lasted two practices before they
handed me a scorebook and put
me on the sidelines where insurance cost less.
Notre Dame gives thirty full
scholarships a year to football
players alone. Mississippi gives
more than that. In the Ivy League
they give prestige if not as much
money. Place yourself in the position of one of the coaches for
this happy institution. Now just
what do you have to induce Sam
Swiftfoot—All Conference Halfback—to come here? “C’mon
Buddy, we have this classy field
where you can play for kicks
every Saturday afternoon and
there aren’t even any noisy students to bother #ou.”
The point is this. Big Name

by STEESE

football costs money. Big Name
basketball costs money. If there
are enough of you willing to contribute time and money why not
talk to the coaches instead of
about them? I would imagine
there must be some way that a
Campus Booster Club could contribute a scholarship or equipment to the cause. Dwell on the
concept of giving thirty $1000
scholarships a year to the sports
program. That means if you have
such a program running it is
going to cost you $120,000 a year,
just for the scholarships. Do not
forget the small tabs necessary
for flying the team to the Rose
Bowl for the USC game etc.
The decision of this administration is that the Sports Progress shall be self supporting. In
other words it can spend what it
has. It ain’t got much. Personally
I can see places where jmoney
could be spent just as well as
on the football and basketball
teams. I remain uncommitted on
the value of the inter collegiate
sports program, I am told that
Dr. Serfustini—resident wizard of
the basketball program—is an extremely articulate spokesman for
the value of such programs. I was
going to call him up but frankly
it scares the hell out of me just to
look at him. This isn’t really a
sports column anyway. Rationalization is one of my favorite pasttimes.
Basketball I think I know something about. I had the pleasure
of watching a great deal of it
from a bench of twelve in high
school. My personal opinion is
that both the basketball teams
that represent this university in
intercollegiate athletics consistently get maximum mileage out
of their personnel. Whether the
same is true of the football team
I do not know. It may be true
that the coaching staff is unable
to adapt the offense to the personnel and in attempting the reverse causes difficulties. I notice
that Pitt could use our defense
however. One way to find out
be
about the coaching staff would
to barsomething
give
them
to
gain with for a while and then
see what happens. This might
eventually resolve the question of
why the freshmen seem to do bet-

ter against more impressive competition than the varsity.

Like I said before, this is not
a
a sports column. There was
(Cont’d on P. 16)

Suggested Name for Spectrum
“Red Hanoi Express”
TO THE EDITOR:

Judging from your “hate America" editorials,
why not change the name of this treason sheet to
“Red Hanoi Express!”

Jack

Casey

Cast Thanks ‘Spectrum’
for Review
TO THE EDITOR:

The cast of Lady's Not for Burning would like
to thank the Spectrum for its review of last week’s
production. Mr. Pardee’s direction, Miss Kling’s
costumes, Dr. Watson’s set, and the entire crew
did provide the UB cast the necessary impetus
to present a laudable production.
Just as the music students appreciate Baird
Hall, those of us who work on and back-stage
appreciate our own theatre. The fact that UB has
such a fine theatre for the many Student dramatic
productions is indeed worthy of notice. The excellent facilities for rehearsal and final production
are quite conducive to the development of quality
collegiate drama. Without them it would be a
struggle.
Also important to the theatre is reviewing: Not
only do the actors benefit from incisive criticism,
the university community does also, for it is given
a necessary focus on the play and the total performance. The audience which is aware of its
critical eye, finds within the production more than
entertainment. The play goer learns to be a critic,
thereby, increasing, over the years, his own perspicacity of any of all art forms.
As the student newspaper, the Spectrum plays
an important role not only in the recognition of
group and individual student accomplishment but
also in the development of personal aesthetics.
Without reviews, the theatre will survive, just
as it would without a stage of its own, but the
needed process of development is impeded.
The cast of Lady's Not for Burning

Republican Club
Reaffirms Policy
TO

Why Students Join

The Peace Movement
TO THE

Why do students join the peace movement?
Why do we sit on picket lines protesting segregatin, HUAC, or slaughter in a country on the other
side of the world? Don’t we have enough academic work to keep us busy? We’re often asked.
Taxpayers tell us they support a university so that
we may learn to become useful members of society. “Run along to your rooms and read your
books," they demand. "Why meddle in affairs not
directly concerned with your studies?”

First of all consider the function of the uni-

versity. Is it maintained merely to make people
useful, to prepare them for a job, and if so, why
is such emphasis placed upon a “liberal education?" Why is it generally held that a doctor or
engineer must take English or that a student in
the humanities must take math and science? The
junction of a university, as defined by administrators and educators, seems to be directed towards
a bigger and more important goal than mere vocational training. It seems to be directed towards
the goal of producing a student who is informed
and able to think in all areas of experience.
Students in the Peace Movement are demonstrating not that we disvalue or ignore the importance of our studies, but that in fact we understand the reason why we study. We realize that
our studies are utterly irrelevant unless they be
applied to real problems out in the big, cold
world. Else we have created an ivory tower, beautiful to behold and utterly useless.
Anaximenes writing to Pythagoras said,
To what purpose should I trouble myself
in searching out the secrets of the stars, having
death and slavery continually before my eyes?

The question is the prototype of the questions
students ask themselves when they risk academic
failure, disapproval of parents, peers, and authority, rebaiting, beatings on the picket lines and
even imprisonment. The answer lies in each student's honest and intelligent reaction to what he
has been taught.
When we are taught the best ideas of the greatest men, when we realize the humanistic, democratic and rational ideas we hold to be -true arc
played false, when we have learned enough to be
able to see the truth about war and hatred, then
it is time for us students to say to the authority which seems so willing to send us off to war
without our consent:
Powers that be, demigods, Johnson et al—
You have let us read Jefferson, Thoroau, Confucius, Ghandi, Einstein, the Constitution, the
Bible, Faust and Piers Plowman. We have got
their ideas in our minds and in our hearts.
Our reason and our ethics (taken from sources
you claim to hold valid above all else) tell us
we will no longer hate for you. We will no
longer kill for youl And, in order to end your
reign of death, we will not longer vote for
youl

Kitty Katz,
SDS

THE EDITOR;

acWe, the members of the Republican Club
knowledge the right of Mr. Lewis and Mr. Levine
to resign as members of the UB Republican Club,
We believe, however, that their reasons for doing
so are unsound and that the various allegations
contained in their letter to the Spectrum last week
are completely unfounded and totally falacious.
We reaffirm our support of the club policy welcoming All Republicans as new members. The
Republican Party and our club must be open to all.
We believe that these resignations will not solve
ideological differences; instead they constitute a
flight from reality and no problem is ever resolved by simply running away.

Differences of opinion arising within the memreconciled among the membership
without resort to the foolish and dangerous tactics

bership can be

EDITOR;

Ahab Gets Gypped
Out of Three Cents
TO THE EDITOR
Once upon a time Ahab the Arab set forth on
his daily trek to the Rathskeller in quest of the
“staff of life.” He clutched his meager daily allowance of seven cents for a roll (not having the two-

cents for the price of butter).

To his great dismay Ahab found that the Kalif
of the Rathskeller had raised the price of his roll
to ten cents—whether Ahab desired the butter or

not.

The moral of this story is that the FSA is

gypping Ahab out of three cents.

Ahab the Arab

�Friday, November 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE KICHT

Education and Cultural

Lecture Given by Dr. Bonner Bruce King Lectures And Demonstrates;
On Major Works of Thoreau Master Class In Modern Dance Given
By PATTI WARTLEY
“Thoreau Today” was the topic
of a November 5 lecture by Dr.
Bonner, reviewer, author and faculty member of the English
Dept. He spoke on Thoreau’s two
major works, W.ld.n and Civil
Disobedient..
Henry David Thoreau, who
lived from 1817 to 1863, is probably the most widely read today.
Dr. Bonner attributed this popularity to the fact that Thoreau
“stands for something he possessed that would be useful to
us." Frequently quoted by anarchists, Thoreau expressed the
idealistic notion of anarchy in
Civil Disobedi.nc. when he said.,
“the best government is no government.’
Dr, Bonner cited three popular

misconceptions about Thoreau. He
by no means proposed to destroy
government; although, like Wordsworth, Thoreau saw no point in
accepting political ideas, organizations, or governments as guarantees of good life. Although he
accepted his world on the whole,
when forces of society tended to
crush the forces of man, Thoreau

would protest, take part in civil
disobedience to resist, and dissolve himself from society in general. He saw man as an individual
in relation to government: “Live
life as long as possible, free and
uncommitted,” Thoreau advised.
Another fallacy, said Dr. Bonner, is the idea that Thoreau
wanted to reject or destroy the
modern economic society of his
time. Thoreau advocated using

culture for what it will

one’s

yield, so long as this does not in-

terfere with the better part of
man's being. He saw nothing
wrong with the world, except the
“too-muchness” of it all, “Do not
try to change the world,” Thoreau
wrote. “Look at the world, see
what it is like, and make a life
for yourself in the world as it
is."
Dr. Bonner stressed the fact
that Thoreau never swooned in
the face of nature, nor did he
ask his readers to do so. His intentions in living in the woods
are
often misunderstood.
To
quote Thoreau’s exact words: “I
came to the woods to live deliberately; to confront only the
essential forms of life, and not
when I came to die, discover that
I had not lived,” Nor did Thoreau
tell men to live like hermits. He
insisted that an individual can
best find his conscience and
power when alone. Dr. Bonner
expressed astonishment at today’s
fear of silence and solitude; man
cannot be alone to find himself,
or to think out the complexities
of life.

Dr. Bonner refered to Thoreau

as a “working idealist with a positive purpose,” who warned man,

“For heaven sake—wake up and
live! . . dream your air castles,
but build foundations under
them.’ Thoreau detested reformers, organized moralists, and do.

gooders. He wanted people to say

what they had to say, not just
what they were expected to say.

Dr. Kistiakowsky Speaks
On Scientific Progress
By ANNE RECORE

Dr, George B, Kistiakowsky,

re-

cipient of the Medal of Merit,
Nicholas Medal, Priestly Award,
and Medal of Freedom, spoke at

4

f

the last of the six Fenton Lectures. In his speech, he stated
that science was once a cultural

eral times, but due to her sci-

entists, she continues to advance.

Although government encourscience, Dr. Kistiakowsky
feels that its interest pertains
to social, not scientific goals.

ages

Those in government realize science is needed to achieve public
health, prestige, and preservation
and improvement of our environment,

Only

highly technically
can provide this Serv-

trained men
ice; thus, the government issues
grants to encourage research and
training.

While the government is striv-

ing for social objectives, Dr, Kistiakowsky continues, the scien
tist views his work as a purely
cultural endeavor. Others feel research is just another way of
spending money, and those with

the academic attitude believe it is
part of the educational process.
However,

Dr

Kistiakowsky

feels professional scientists aren’t
doing all of their job and don't

pants his basic exercises, His
lecture demonstration combined
dancing, exercises and informative material concerning various
aspects of modern dance.
-

Modern dance, Mr, King explained, correlates with all the
other modern arts which are characterized by a break with tradition and by constant exploratory
work. It differs from previous
dance forms such as ballet, in
that it uses and explores the area
near the ground. In this it has
been influenced both by studies
of primitive cultures and by Oriental art. Freud and Expressionism have also influenced the sub-

ject matter of modern dance in
the exploration of negative feelings and the concern with dreams.
The techniques of falling was developed to portray these aspects
and Mr. King did a study, using
the various ways of falling to
make a dance.

There is always a source for a

Music Committee
And Music Dept.
Sponsor Concert
The Union Board Music Committee in cooperation with the
Music Dept, is sponsoring a concert to be held at Baird Hall
on November 17 at 8:30 p.m.
Pianist-composer Leo Smit and
cellist Mischa Schneider will perform. An introductory program
has also been planned.
Beethoven’s Sonata in D, Opus
violin cello

tita No. 4 in D for piano will follow the opening sonata. Following
this, Sonata for violincello by
Bach will be performed. The closing piece will be Sonata in EMinor for cello and piano by

neces-

sity of facts, he stated that French
engineers once made great progress; however, scientific data was
not collected. Now, scientifically
speaking, France is progressing
very slowly. In contrast, German
progress has been hindered sev-

In the master class, Mr. King
taught approximately 30 partlci-

102 for piano and

systematic method was needed,
and that in order for major progress, new scientific facts were
necessary.
As an example of the

Bruce King, modern dancer,
choreographer and teacher, conducted a master class in modern
dance in the Fillmore Room on
Friday, November 5 at 3 p.m. and
a lecture-demonstration later that
evening, at 7 p.m., in which he
demonstrated his techniques of
teaching and dancing.

Brahms.

DR. KISTIAKOWSKY

Final Fenton Lecturer
have the proper attitude. He believes that more of them should

be educating the public, for those
connected with large-scale science and research don’t consider
educational aspects.
He summed up his talk by saying that much science (especially

that connected with the space program) is political. He also stated

that less than .2 of 1% of the
Gross National Product is being
spent on scientific research, and
that there are less than 100,000
scientists in research in this country. His comment: “Pity.”

The Circulation Staff of
the Spectrum needs members. Apply now and avoid
the rush. Leave name and
phone number in Diane
Lewis’ mailbox in the Spectrum Office.

A program presented by the
Music Committee in conjunction
with Baird, has been executed in
order to acquaint the student
body with the two artists and
the concert itself. This program
included the “Disc Discussion"
followed by an informal coffee
hour, held November 11 in the
Dorothy Haas Lounge. Mr. Sinderbrand, a student of Mr. Smit,
lectured on the artists and illustrated his discussion with recordings of these two performers.
Mr. Smit, presently a professor of Music at UB, was previously on the faculty of the University of California and Sarah
Lawrence College. He has received the Fulbright Award for
piano, the Guggenheim Fellowship for composition, the Boston
Symphony Orchestra Award and

the New York Critics Circle
Award. His original compositions
include “The Alchemy of Love,”
a comic opera in three acts, and
Capriccio for String Orchestra,
conducted by Leonard Bernstein
with the New York Philharmonic,

BRUCE KINO, Madam Dancer
dance, whether an inner one, as and the inner feeling of lamentaan emotion, or something out- tion.
wardly observed. The dance “RunThe evening ended with five
ning Figure” started with a feelshort dances; March, Pastoral,
ing
that of being hurried and Anger, Very Quiet and Scherzanrushed, and then grew into the do. The audience was able to
related theme of looking. His watch an artist present a crosslast long dance, “Lament” had section of his work and ability
and a broad picture of modern
the folk melody of “The Streets
of Laredo” as its outer source
dance.
—

Soc. Club Hears Harrell
On Alienation In Art
By ALICE EDELMAN

In a lecture entitled “Art and
Alienation,” Dr. Bill Harrell of
the Sociology Dept, spoke of the
artist and his relationship to society. Dr. Harrell’s lecture, sponsored by the Sociology Club, was
given Thursday, November 4 .
The modern artist, according
to Dr. Harrell, is attempting to

realize himself through the act
of creation, and he is not interested in knowing whether his art
is understood by the viewer. He
is painting solely to give- himself pleasure. Dr. Harrell proposed the analogy of modem art
and masturbation: the self be-

Dr. Harrell, however, thinks
that art, like the sex act, cannot
be successful unless some sort
of reciprocity takes place. He
emphasized that art should call
forth a response from the viewer.
Dr. Harrell spoke of the social
nature of art, as D. H. Lawrence
speaks of the social nature of the
relationship between a man and
a woman; to be complete, the
relationship must be reciprocal.
And complete realization of the
self cannot be achieved without
participation in the realization of

man. Responsibility, Dr. Harrell
explained, requires inquiry into
the self, into the nature of man,
and into the nature of men in relation to one another.

As an example of art as masturbation Dr. Harrell cites pop
art. “This form of modern art
is not concerned with sensitivity
or appreciation of form. The
fundamental principle of pop art
is that any object which exists
in the universe is as worthy of
attention as another; Andy Warhol’s Brillo Box is as good as
anything else.”

(Ottil...

tfejL

another.
While Dr. Harrell grants that
viewers can see modern art and
think it is beautiful, the art fails
because it does not elicit any
emotional response. Consequently
it is unethical. Further, it will
remain unethical until the artist
recognizes his responsibility to

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�Friday, November 12, IMS

PACE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Fellini's Prize-Winning 8Vi Presented
Federico Fellini’s widely-discussed Two-Academy-Award Winning “8Vi", the Joseph E. Levine
presentation whigh has caused
considerable eyebrow raising for
its frank delineation of an aging
movie director’s erotic daydreams,
will be shown in the Conference
Theatre today through Sunday.

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This film has been one of the
most highly honored in motion
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Including the two Oscars it re
cently won, Fellini’s “8Vi” has
so far taken 16 of America’s most

coveted honors. Newsweek magazine, Commonweal, the Paris Edition of the New York Herald
Tribune and the Seattle Post Intelligencer have called it “The
Best Film of the Year.”
The
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among
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York Film critics,
opinion is considered
the most reliable in the
called it “Best Foreign

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Film of the Year.” So did the
National Board of Review, the
Dallas Times Herald, and the
New York Post.
Fellini’s “8V2 was placed
among the “Ten Best of 1963” by
the New York Times, the New
York Herald Tribune, the Npw
York Daily News, the Los Angeles Times and the Saturday Review.
”

The picture won its Oscars in
the “Best Foreign Film" and
“Best Costume Design for a Black
and White Picture” categories.

Fellini, whose career is said to
follow closely that of the erotic
dreamer in his picture, is no
stranger to Academy Awards
Two of his previous offerings,
“La Strada" and “Nights of Cabiria” have been similarly honored.
Director (Marcello Mastroianni) and his wife (Anouk Aimee) in 8V&lt;|

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�Friday, November 12, IMS

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

ca

'no YDURf HOT 1 THERE ARE NO
HOKE STUDENT PARKING IOTS.
THEY HAVE BEEN LIBERATED
FOR THE USE Of MILITARY
TRANSPORT VEHICLES. TDU'RE
FREE NOW, AND HE ©E
■XKAKHIC TERRORISM!
IS HERE TO PROTECT \*MIR
V FREEDOM NOW GET
MOVING BEFORE I
/ XSHOOT you

YOU THINK

/I’M tOINCTOPARX

I

mm

HALT! WHERE 00

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MY SCOOTER IN THE

ra

V STUDENT PAWING

NIlIEN 6Y JceiMY
DRAWN »Y JEREMY AND MM
inrtlhwt. 6Y jan

-

JYNOPHS: LAST WEEK WE SAW MILITARY
MAN HAKHM6 AN EVIL SCHEME THE
SINISTER SIX HAVE PLEDGED
THEIR HILL COOPERATION, AND ON THE
MORNING Of X-DAY WE SEE THE
UNIFORMITY RINGED WITH ROTC CADETS

w

R.VM.C
4UYS, I'UCONr'
fSM.
pr*sruu.Y! *Y

you cant get intoyouR,
CLAST WITHOUT THE PAST WO to !
what's the pass word'/'
’WSSNOHO I
N060DY TOLD Mf

COVUNMiNT MAN HAS SENT IOHWATIM.AT10NS AND IMMiOIATE
ODUMAni ucocmtun to caott
LACJUT, Tout HtM TTMIONAT «WUS
DtCTATOC HDMINISTAATION MAH IS
UMM* Close MUST IS PtOIKT j

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halt!

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word? y

MOM TH» MIIU aho jye /
OAHCKtOUS STUttHT cfAOttS XJ
AM MINA too

HIM

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WHAT |S THE

,wt*D?&gt;

WHAT IS TO BECOME OF
SONNY OAU f WHERE
IS THE CONSPlRACYOF
HUMANITY 7 WHAr
ABOUT miOEWT STUDENT
where will it all

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■

MUSIC OM CAMPUS

WBFO will rebroadcast

an interview with President Furnas this Sunday
•
.1
t
at gr6 p.m. from
the series

MEET THE FACULTY.
By

DANIEL SCHROEDER

The glass-encased auditorium
of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery was the setting for another
concert in the "Evening for New
Music” series. The performers
were members of the Center of
the Creative and Performing Arts
at UB.
Plan (1965) by Vinko Globokar
was advertised as a "theatrical
piece," and as such was quite
effective. The fragmentary musical elements, led by John Bergamo on tables (Indian drums)
and imitated by four wind players, would not have been as successful were it not for the theatrical devices accompanying it.
The increase in the contemporary
musical theatre piece is evidence
that composers realize the need
to work in several dimensions to
get their less-than-explicit messages across.

Also played for the first time
in America were the Zwaniig
Grup'an of Bo Nilsson. Karl
Kraber, flute, Andrew White,
oboe, and Sherman Friedland,
clarinet, were supposed to have
played 20 successive note-patterns, starting with anyone they
chose. This rather random arquite orrangement sounded
dered; the composer must have
carefully considered the possible
juxtapositions of tone colors and
patterns. A thematic element of
a long note growing in intensity
and ending in a falling splatter
of fast staccatos, emerged as the
central idea of the work.
Three of Elliot Carter's Six
Pieces for Kottlodrumi (1950)
formed separate, solid entities
rooted in traditional tonality and
recognizable rhythmic patterns,
which distinguished themselves
by the clarity, variety and constant but not urgent forward
movement of the lines. Jan Williams’ playing of the four timpani kept the diverging lines in
focus at almost all times.
The most shocking works were
Creative Associate Michael von
Biel’s 1 Quartet and Quartet with
Accompaniment, in which the
composer played cello. It had to
be shocking music to immediately
divert the audience’s attention
from Mrs. von Biel, who played
violin and was attired in a wonderful black dress with bat-wing
arms. The pieces used similar

avant-garde techniques: bowing
on the strings or under the
strings with the front or back of
the bow, plucking, scraping, etc.
(Mr. von Biel's specialty
was a
creaking door growl-squeak.) It

became a contest of whose bow
would come completely unstrung,
from the rough usage first. How
ever these techniques did have
more meaning in the second
piece, when they were arranged

in a structure of recognizable,
recurring contrasts between instruments and sections, one of
the latter featuring bass and/or
cello against traditional harmony
in the other three strings, an
effect that has been surprisingly
neglected by modernists.
This column should be devoted
mostly to the last half of the
concert, which featured Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaira (1912),
one of the rare breed of modern
classics. It is one of the first
landmarks in the development of
atonality, and it also represents

the

culmination of

the decad-

ant Romantic-Expressionist ethic.
Richard Dufalo conducted seven
of the Creative Associates including Carol Plantamura, soprano,
who sang and spoke (a revolutionary combination of both on
indefinite pitches) 21 poems about

the moonstruck Pierrot. Miss
Plantomura’s interpretation contained all the necessary subtleties, but seemed at times like
a foreign element imposed on the
atmosphere of Dufallo's unyielding metrical precision. However,
the total performance succeeded
in capturing the blithe mysticism
which Schoenberg intended.
The Creative Association and
Mr, Dufallo departed Buffalo
the
following Monday, to repeat their
concert in New York City, Wed-

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SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

Two Plays Held at Baird Modern
The recent production of Martin Duberman’s drama, In White
America, produced locally by the
Jewish Community Center, will
be given a single performance at
Baird Hall on Saturday evening,
November 13th at 8:30. All proceeds from the performance will
be given to the Free Southern
Theatre.
A “Bail Barrel" will
placed
in the lobby of Baird Hall during
the run of Tha Lady's Not for
Burning and 50% of the final

night’s proceeds will be donated
as well.

Between November 8 and 12,
Bail Barrels will be housed at
Fred Keller’s Circle Art Movie
Theatre and at Joseph Krysiak’s
Greensleave Coffee House. 712
Elmwood Ave. Tickets for the
performance are $1.50. Advance
reservations can be made by calling 831-4633 daily between 10
a.m. and 12:00 noon. The Baird
box office will also be open for
sale on the evening of the performance at 7:00 p.m.

Dance Group Concerned
With Dance Methods Development

Every Tuesday afternoon from
3-4 p.m. the Modern Dance Club
meets in Clark Gymnasium. The
club is primarily concerned with
the development of dance techniques and its application to improvisation.

It is open to all students regardless of their dance experience,
and students may still join. The
club’s only criterion is that a
member cannot miss two consecutive meetings since discipline

is an important part of developing technique.
It is an objective of the club to
stimulate interest in dance on
campus by presenting dance programs. The first program November 5, 'featured Bruce King, a
noted dancer, teacher, and choreographer. The next program will
be December 1, when three dance
films will be shown in the Conference Theatre of Norton.

Here’s the
shortest line
between
graduation and
a “go-places”
career.
Your name:

It’s the one you sign on at your
placement office for an interview with IBM
December 7-8
Want growth-with a difference?
Career excitement-with
stability? New frontiers in all
technologies—with the leader
in the nation's fastest-growing
major industry?

IBM can offer you extraordinary
growth opportunities in
Research, Development,
Manufacturing, Programing
and Administration-throughout

its network of labs, plants
and technical centers.

If you want the facts about these
careers, you'll want to talk to

the IBM interviewer.

Certainly, he wants to talk to you
about these key jobs.
They’re jobs with technical
responsibility. Where you can

put your ideas to work and
earn superior rewards.
In a growth company like IBM,
responsibility and advancement
come rapidly. In fact, during

the next five years IBM expects
to appoint approximately 6,000
new managers. A wide range
of training and education
programs will help you meet
the challenge of growth.

So visit your placement office
now for a line on IBM. Sign
on it for your interview. If for any
reason you can't arrange an
interview, visit your nearest
IBM branch office. Or write:
Manager of College Relations,
IBM Corporate Headquarters,
Armonk, New York 10504.

IBM is going places.
Why not come along?

Whatever your area of study,
ask us how you might use your
particular talents at IBM
Job opportunities at IBM lie in
eight major career fields:
(1) Research and Development,
(2) Engineering,
(3) Manufacturing, (4) Finance
and Administration,
(5) Marketing, (6) Field
Engineering, (7) Systems
Engineering, (8) Programing.
IBM is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.

IBM

�PAGE FOURTEEN

Senate Committee Lists Rooms German
For Study During Examinations
'

Friday,

SPECTRUM

v

The Student Welfare Committee announces that the following
areas will be open to students
for study purposes: Harriman Library 55S, 56S, and 66 S, the
Trailers No. 4, No. 5, No. 8, No.
9, and No. 10. These rooms will
be open Monday through Friday
from 6 p.m, to 11 p.m. In addition, a room in Foster Hall, 220C
will be open Monday, Thursday,
and Friday from 6 p.m, to 11 p.m.
-

It is hoped that the opening

of these room will alleviate the
current shortage of adequate
places to study.
Mr J. Z. Freidman, head of the
Welfare Committee warns that,
“any wanton destruction or misuse of these areas will result in
their immediate and permanent
closing. Any student in violation
of this rule will be apprehended
and turned over to the proper
university authorities for punish-

men.

Theatre Exhibit In Baird

The German Theatre Exhibit
Today, an exhibit of photographs
and posters, will be on display in
the lobby of Baird Hall from November 3 through November 13.
It can be seen in conjunction
with Fry’s The Lady’s Not for
Burning produced by the Department of Drama and Speech November 3, 4, 5, and 6; and the

visting production of In White
America on November 13.

This traveling exhibition, sponsored by the American Educational Theatre Association, is on loan

from H. Geissler of Inter Nationes,
Bonn, West Germany, and Erich

Frohman of Mansfield State College, Mansfield, Penn.
This exhibit represents an average schedule of a theatre in Germany today. Public support and
civic pride maintain over 200
theatres in 100 cities. Many such
theatres, aided by city and state
budgets, have permanent acting
companies which offer as many
as ten different plays during ten
months of the year.
German theatres, regardless of
size, balance their fare with the
classical and the modern, as the
exhibit photographs indicate. Besides Schiller and Shakespeare,
Beguet and Borchert represent
modern playwrights writing in the
German language. Other modern
playwrights popular with German

EDITOR S

NOTE; Gre«k

Notes is a serv-

ice of the Spectrum to fraternal organizations. Its purpose much like Religious Tidings and Call Board, is to announce coming
activities and events. Copy containing other
materal will be cut.

bethEhem

UjLJ

BETA SIGMA RHO

If anyone is interested in patronizing our 17th annual Autumn Nocturne ad book, he or
she may do so by contacting any
member before December.

Our representative
will be on campus

Nov. 29 and 30
December 1

THETA

The German Theatre is a vital
reperatory theatre which is now
beginning to show it has recuperated from the aftermath of World
War II. Playbills no longer reveal
predominantly foreign authors,
as was the case immediately following the war. New German
authors have been recognized and
are presented along with the
classics.

in steel plant operations,
sales, research, mining, accounting, and other activities.

ALPHA EPSILON PI

DEGREES required are

presents

ALPHA PHI DELTA
Alpha Phi Delta would like to

School Is Out
BLAST
starring

If you would like to discuss
your career interest with a
Bethlehem representative,
see your placement officer
to arrange for an interview
appointment.

ar
and "THE UNCALLED FOUR"
at WASHINGTON

8:30

Propress Propmm

BETHLEHEM
STEEL

WGR

HALL—FRIDAY, NOV. 19

-

-

PI LAMBDA TAU
Pi Lambda Tau Fraternity will
hold a cocktail party for tomorrow before the Greek Ball. The
party will begin at 7:30 p.m. at

Dennis Smith’s home.
GAMMA DELTA
Gamma Delta will meet Wednesday, November 17, at 6:30 p.m.
in Room 344 of Norton Union.
The cars to Toronto will be meeting at the east entrance of Norton at 2 p.m. Saturday, November 13. For more information,
call Bill Startt at TF 5-3364.

?

FREE BEER

ADMISSION: $1.50 advanced

announce that Mike Pecorella has
been appointed to the newly established position of Expansion
Chairman, and also that Don Colquhoun has been elected Parliamentarian.

—

-

$2.00 at

door

GAMMA PHI
Tomorrow night, there will be
a cocktail party at Jack Kiebala’s
apartment before the Greek Weekend Ball.

ALPHA PHI OMEGA
Tonight there will be a Poker
Party at Frank and John’s apart-

ment.

FRATERNITY

ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Alpha Sigma Phi will hold a
casual party at the Hotel Worth.

OPPORTUNITIES are
available for men interested

An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for

CHI

Theta Chi Fraternity will hold
a closed Cocktail Party at the
House preceding tomorrow night’s
Greek Ball. An attempt has been
made to have perfect attendance
from our fraternity at the Dance.

to interview undergraduate
and graduate candidates for
Bethlehem’s 1966 Loop
Course training program.

arts.

audiences are Anouilh, Sartre,
Miller, Williams and Wilder.
In addition to the works of the
aforementioned playwrights, German audiences during the 196364 season saw Who's Afraid of
Virginia Wolff, The Voice of the
Turtle, A Raisin in the Sun, and
the Great Sebastians.

GREEK NOTES

CAREERS
IN STEEL

mechanical, metallurgical,
electrical, chemical, industrial, civil, mining, and
other engineering specialties; also chemistry, physics, mathematics, business
administration, and liberal

November 12, 1965

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
Rhetta Habecker won the title
of Miss Pledge of 1965. There
will be a pledge-sister workshop
on Saturday, in Norton at 9:30
a.m.

SIGMA

KAPPA PHI

Sigma Kappa Phi will hold

their second annual “Neewollah”
Open House from 11-1 this Saturday, November 12 at 4 Flower
Street. All Greeks are invited to

attend.
Kedra Dobrindt was elected Assistant Pledge Mistress. There
will be a dinner at the apartment
on Big and Little Sister Nile Monday. The officers of our new
pledge class are: Judy Anello,
President; Bobbie Law, Secretary;
Ruth Perkins, Treasurer; and Elinor Cantwell, Social and Scholarship Chairman.
SIGMA DELTA TAU
president of the pledge class, Bonnie Scherer is treasurer and Bar-

bara Factor is secretary.

CHI OMEGA
Chi Omega will get together at

Maxi’s after the Greek Sing and
then end the evening with a pajama party at the sorority’s apartment. Breakfast will be held at
the Pancake House, the morning
after.

CES

_yamah
wee

HERBS HOW TO WIN; Simply write the word "Jenny" on an official entry blank. Send it to
WGR Radio, 2065 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, N.Y. 14207. Entry blanks available wherever
Genesee is sold, at WGR Radio, or write and we'll send you one. Yamaha winner will
be selected by drawing. Entries must be postmarked no later than November 27, 1965.

WGR

==o

�Friday, November 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

Calihoard

Chronicle

&amp;

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

CHEMICAL SOCIETY

There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club, Friday, November 12, in Norton, Room 262
or 266.

ASTRONOMY CLUB

The Student Affiliates of the
American Chemical Society will
conduct their annual Open House
tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The program will consist of a tour
through Acheson Hall, the Chemistry building, giving the students
an opportunity to see demonstrations performed by industrial representatives and chemistry majors. A meeting will be held this
afternoon at 4 p.m. in Room 5,
Acheson Hall, for the Open House.

The Astronomy Club will meet
next Monday, November 15, at
4 p.m. in 111 Hochstetter.

•

STUDENT ZIONIST
ORGANIZATION
Student Zionist Organization
will present the first in a series
of guest lecturers this Tuesday,
November 16, at 7:45 p.m. in Norton, Room 248. Mr. George Abraham, of Bombay, India will speak
on the Jewish community of India.
Elections will also be held at the
meeting.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
CLUB

The OT Club will present a
guest speaker, Dr. Albert Rekate,
on Wednesday, November 17, at
8 p.m. in the 2nd floor lounge in
Norton. Dr, Rebate’s topic will
be “Rehabilitation and the New
University Health Center." Refreshments will be served.

PIZZA by DiROSE
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PACE FIFTEEN

Ball Held at Hilton Nov.
By Pan Hellenic Council
The Pan Hellenic Council of
UB held its annual Ball in the
Terrace Room of the Statler Hilton on Saturday, November 6. The
Ball, which was given in honor of
the Fall 1965 pledges of the six
sororities on campus, was attend
ed by 450 people.
Elaine Kwitowski, Social Chair-

man of the Pan Hellenic Council,
organized the formal affair, which
was held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in
the morning. After going to the
private cocktail parties which
took place earlier, the couples
then went to the ball, where music
was supplied by Eddy Diem’s

Orchestra.

The new pledges received flowers, and Sheretta Habecker, who
was chosen Miss Pledge 1965, received a bouquet. Mrs. Weiss, a

Friday
Greek Sing: Millard Fillmore
Room, 7 P.M., 10 P.M.
Lecture; "Indian Jews, Forgotten Community?” Mr. George
Abraham of Bombay, India, Norton, 248, 7:45 P.M,
Movie; “8 Vi" Conference Theatre 3 P.M., 6 P.M., 9 P.M.
Saturday
Concert; Geneseo and UB Glee

8:30 P.M.
Movie; “8Vi" Conference Theatre, 3 P.M., 6 P.M., 9 P.M.

Sunday
Concert: Lukas

Foss, conductor,
Saslow and
Howard Coif, Kleinhans, 2:30
featuring Isador

BRIAN
BAUER

P.M.
Lecture: “Stil Nova Ars Nova,”

Prof. Pirotta of Harvard, Baird
Hall, 8:30 P.M.
Coffee Hour: Millard Fillmore
College, Norton 231, 7-9 P.M.
Tee; Alpha Lambda Delta, Dor-

UB —Class of ’65

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OPEN

Haas Lounge, 3-6 P.M.

Movie: Indian Association of
Buffalo, Conference Theatre,
6:30 P.M.
Movie; “8 Vi” Conference Theatre 1 P.M., 4 P.M.
Monday
Dante Celebration; New York
Pro Musica, “Florentine, Me-

TR M100

EVES. 'Til 10 P.M.

The marching band of UB
made its annual trip with the
football team the weekend of
October 29. One hundred and
forty-five members of the band
travelled to Boston for the Holy
Cross-Buffalo game scheduled for
last Saturday. The band also performed for a high school in Seneca Falls on Friday night before
the last major show of the season on Saturday. The theme was
"See America First.”

Meeting; Women's Dental Guild,
Faculty Lounge, 11 P.M.
On Sale: New Student Review,
Norton, through 11/17.
Lecture: ''Health and Religion,"
Your Neighbor's Faith Scries.
Rev. Seward Hiltner, Statler
Hilton, 8 P.M.
Play: “You Haven't Suffered
Enough,” Conference Theatre,
Norton, 4 P.M. through 11/17.
Tuesday

Lukas Foss, conductor,
Isador Saslow and Howard Coif,
Kleinhans, 8:30 P.M.
Movie: 5 Modern British Sculptors, Mr. James Herman, Rosary
Hill College, Duns Scotus Room
312, 4:30 P.M.
Concert; Buffalo Sonata da CaConcert;

mera; works from Baroque pe-

riod, Rosary Hill College, Daemen Little Theatre, 8:30 P.M.
Lecutre: “Russia Today," Dr.

Raymond Ewell, 148 Diefendorf
Hall, 3 P.M.
Wednesday
Opera; "Carmen," the NYC
Opera, Klcinhans, 8:30 P.M.
Play: "Sundays and Cybele,"
Rosary Hill College, Daemen

Little Theatre, 7:30 P.M.

Meeting; Engineering Dept
Norton 264, 11 A M.

AWPEN's Norton 330,

dieval and Renaissance Music"
Baird, 8:30 P.M.

Meeting:

Dance Recital; International
folk dances, Rosary Hill College,
Marian Social Room, 8:30 P.M.
Lecture; “The Courage of Their
Convictions: America's Early
Collectors of Modern Art,"
George Heard Hamilton, Yale
University, Albright Knox Auditorium, 8:30 P.M.

Lecture; "The USSR, A

onnr

Calaxie 4-Ooor. V-8,
automatic transmission

UB Band Makes
Trip to Boston

Weekly Calendar

Clubs, Fillmore Room, Norton,

"SEE ME''

Student Co-ordinator, who is, the
new Pan Hellenic Advisor, was
also presented at the affair.

7:30 P.M.

Critical
Analysis of Soviet Power," Dr.
Charles Ebert, Lounge Area,
1 P.M.

Thursday
Movie: "The Rose Tattoo," Studio Arena Theatre, through
12/4
“Louis

Lecture;

PIZZA
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XIV: Soldier

King," John B. Wolf, prof., U.
of Minnesota, Room 70, Acheson, 8 P.M.

The Students for the U.S. in
Vietnam will hold a meeting
today at 3 P.M. in Norton 344.

Only 5 Minutes

NEED
GLASSES?
GLASSES?

From Campus

�

MAIN

GARY J. BECKER
x

OPTICIAN

*

U.B. Alumnus
"Formerly of N.Y. and Long Island"

PRICES TO PLEASE STUDENTS

1719 HERTEL AVENUE

836-6484

-

�Feigin

(Cont’d from P. 20)

.

ism among the members. Last
year’s vote was delayed a week
until after the USC-Notre Dame
game. It was assumed that if
the Trojans upset the Fighting
they
Irish
which they did
would get the nod over Oregon
State to face Michigan in the
Rose Bowl
which they didn’t.
The discontent from that decision wasn't soothed much when
State received a 34-7 shellacing
subsequently, and it will weigh
heavily on the heads of the directors when they contemplate
their votes. Another boner like
that and the PAC could very
well go the way of the old Pa
cific Coast Conference from whose
—

—

—

:

ashes it arose.

It seems a North-South schism
has arisen in the ranks and could
very well have a direct bearing
on the outcome of the voting.
The four Northern schools, Washington, Washington State, Oregon
and Oregon State arc rumored
to vote as a bloc and need but
one deserter from the California group of USC, UCLA, California and Stanford to swing
the vote their way. The Southern
branch has not always been as
chummy and have been intense

rivals for decades. A careless
word dropped in the conversation, and Washington State may
find itself with a free ticket to

Pasadena.

Most observers believe that the
muddle will not be clarified until the final week, if then. The
November 20 traditional games—
Washington vs. Washington State
and USC vs. UCLA—will be very
significant. My personal choice
would be the Bruins (5-1-1) who
have surprised all the experts
mediocrity for them. It certainly
wouldn’t hurt the image of the
Rose Bowl to have UCLA fade
their only conqueror this year,
Michigan State, in what most
certainly would be a very memorable contest. Washington
State (7-1), another surprise this
fall, is primarily a sophomore
squad and will have two more
cracks at it. The Trojans (5-1-1)
could call the Rose Bowl a second
home and despite last year, should
make way for a more deserving
team.

1 continued

my remarkable sue-

The grump...
column in last week’s Spectrum
that wasn't even sporting now
that 1 stop and think about it

though. Someone wrote a beauty
for the YAF Soundboard and I
have to admire his sense—I certainly wouldn’t have signed it
either The main idea seemed to
be that since there was less “pink
grass” on .campus than there was
(is)
cen grass" that the nasty
old
k grass" which sneakily
seize
wer while the “green
gras
sitting on its lazy a—,
shou! immediately turn over control of the Spectrum to the responsible and representative por-

tions of the student government.
No doubt the YAF would be delighted to function as interim
leadership.

There were some of us who felt
that there was much less “old
grass" than "new grass” at the
Republican Convention in 1964.
The “old grass” certainly got
what it wanted through better organization and effective operation
while the "new grass” was sleeping. Those of us who felt that
way were not silly enough to say
"give it back”. We just made
damned sure we voted. Next time
there is a question of who is
going to

edit the Spectrum is the
lime to raise this issue. You win
a few, you lost one. At least more
people are reading the editorials
this way—IF THEY CAN KIND A
SPECTRUM Smarter? Hochstetter Hall is off limits this year9
I -o.

and

the

millenium

come. Bulldozer Alley

Friday, Nownbtr

SPICTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

is

has

alive

—

cess last week, as my 8-3 record
brought my overall record to a
very respectable 48-18-1, a .723

percentage.

Tennessee 20, Mississippi 0—
Just when things started going
right for the Rebels (4-4), Houston came along and halted their
three game win streak. This will
be another bleak Saturday for
them as they find the Vols' (5-0-2)
stiff defensive wall impossible to
penetrate.
Notre Dame 55, North Carolina
6—First Conjar scores four times
in one game and then Wolski
tops that by one, two weeks
later. Now it’s Nick Eddy’s turn
to run wild as the Fighting Irish
(6-1) get their offense into full
gear (you think that 69 points
is a lot!) for next week’s showdown clash with Michigan State
in a game which should decide
the national champion. The Tar
Heels (4-4) should never have left
friendly Chapel Hill.
Dartmouth 26,

Cornell 20

—

The Indians (7 0), off a 47 0 massacre of Columbia, are keying
for next week’s battle with
Princeton for the Ivy Crown. But
they’d better not brush aside the
Big Red (3-2-2). Ever since the
return of QB Marty Spaunagle,
the Cornell offense has been
devastating. After tomorrow,
Dartmouth may not have enough
left for the Tigers.
Missouri 33, Oklahoma 14—The
Tigers (5-2-1) are the most underrated eleven in the

nation.

They have too much of everything for the Sooners (3-4), who
haven’t been the same since Bud
Wilkinson went to Washington.

U.S.C. 44, Pittsburgh 21—I can
safely say that the Panthers (2-6)
are the best team in the land with
a 2-6 record. After Saturday
they’ll be the best team with a
2-7 record. Only a super team of
“Mighty” Mike Garrett and the
Trojans (5-1-1).
Penn State 22, Navy 19—The
Nittany Lions (3-4) rate the edge
here on the strength of their
strong running game. The Middies' (4-3-1) Cartwright will fill
the air with passes, but to no

avail.

(Cont’d

from P.

Arkansas M, SJM.U. «
It’s
hard to believe, but the Mustangs
(4-2-1) can win the SWC crown
if they can pull off this upset.
They’ve come from nowhere and
are making life tough for the
Razorbacks (8-0). But Arkansas
doesn’t fear S.M.U.—it’s Texas
Tech next week that has them
shivering in their pants.

7)

with men, machines, and the
crackle of falling tax dollars. It
seems to me the need for space,
and no one in their right mind
considers that this space is not
needed I hope, could have been
recognized some years ago. I seem
to recall reading many many articles about how things were going to have to expand. So why

not before now?
I will not be so foolish as to
follow Roger Prices lead and offer
money for anybody elses grumps
but if somebody out there knows
of something typically idiotic

that you feel should be noised
about drop me a line care of the
Spectrum. I will not reprint anything that isn’t signed, but 1 will
sign anything I can verify. As
long as it is not controversial.
Heaven knows I wouldn’t want to
offend anyone or irritate them
into thinking. Next week, if the
Bomb don’t fall, and the devil
don't rise.
Late Bulletin: On the way to
Norton, masochistic me, 1 had to
walk up Bulldozer Alley. A surveyor who had apparently missed
the Security Lectures informs me
we arc to have nine (9) hot dog
stands—er, temporary buildings.
—Gackkk!

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

Syracuse 42, West Virginia 26
—The Orangemen (5-3) missed
on both conversions and as a consequence lost to Oregon State last
week. If they entertain any notions about a bowl bid, they’d
better make a strong showing
here. Floyd Little has an excel-

lent opportunity

to really run

wild. Defense certainly isn't the
Mountaineers (5-3) forte.
Princeton 24, Yale
Tigers (7-0) could be hurt by Bob
Bedell’s kidney injury more than
anyone suspects. He was the
blocking back in their single wing
attack and was responsible for
the blocks that sprung Landeck
for all his big runs. He also called
all the plays and held the ball
for all of Gogolak’s kicks, a much
more important job than it seems.
The Tigers must find a replacement for him in time for Dartmouth on the 20th. But they
can’t afford to experiment too
much tomorrow against the Elis
(3-4) who have looked mighty
impressive of late. They lost to

IX

INS

Dartmouth by only three points.
Auburn 21, Georgia 17—The
Bulldogs (5-3) loss to Florida last
week knocked them out of the
SEC race. The Plainsmen (4-34)
are still in the picture' though,
and that extra incentive will be
enough to insure victory tomorrow.

Alabama 34, South Carolina 7
—Steve Sloan was in top form
last week as the Crimson Tide
(6-1-1) rolled over L.S.U. 31-7.
’Bama seems to have found itself
and is eagerly awaiting its showdown with Auburn on the 27th.
The Gamecocks (4-4) have enough
troubles winning in the weak
ACC without taking on the top
team in the SEC.

�Friday, Novambar 12, IMS

Chick's Picks
(Cont’d from P. 20)
the

pro-forecaster—can’t

PAGE SEVENTEEN

SPECTRUM

wait,

can you?
Notable* last weak: Tim and
Jim Brown personally had it out
in the Browns-Eagles game. Tim
ran for 186 yards and Jim for 131
—not a bad day for anyone.

In Green Bay, the legendary
Packers were limited to 68 yards
total offense, and minus two yards
passing. Detroit’s big four—
Roger Brown, Darris McCord, Sam
Williams and Alex Karras—threw
Bart Starr 11 times for 109 yards
—again proving they are tops in
the league defensively.
Dallas beat San Francisco despite making 9 first downs to 26
for San Francisco. Who says profootball is all offense?
Here are this week’s picks:

.

.

.

A Cleveland victory would certainly enhance their chances for
a second straight Eastern Division Crown!

Dallas 17, Pittsburgh 7—There
aren’t many low scoring games in
pro football anymore. When there
is, however, it is either because
of an inept offense or staunch
defense. This game has both in
the offense of the Stealers, and
the defense, of the Cowboys. Dallas is starting to roll again and
Pittsburgh is still tied for last
place in the East.
Washington 23, Philadelphia 17
—The Redskins have won three
in a row after losing their first
five. The Eagles played a great
game, in a losing cause against
Cleveland. They were up then—this week they’ll be down, and
will sink lower as they lose to
the Redskins.

NFL:
Cleveland 28, New York 21
The Giants were a disappointment
last week, as they fumbled away
a tie for second place. At the
same time, the Browns played
nip-and-tuck with Philadelphia,
and fortunately came out “nip.”
This is a big game for both teams.
—

Chicago 35, St. Louis 24—This
will be a wide open football game
—the Bears are really beginning
to roll, both individually and as
a team. Gale Sayers is the top
rookie in the league, and the
home crowd will want to see a
Bear victory. The Cards need this

game to remain in contention in
the East. They’ll have to be up
in the clouds to take this one.
Green Bey 27, Lot Angeles 10
—Green Bay is lucky to have a
break in their schedule against
the lowly Rams. They have lost
two in a row, and need re-vitalizing. They certainly should find it
against Los Angeles.

teams in the league. There is only
one on which he wouldn’t be,
Minnesota, because they have
Fran Tarkenton. He’s a great
scrambler, and a great ball-player.
This game will mean a lot to
both teams. The Colts, though, are
too tough!

Detroit 27, San Francisco 13—

The Lions are the team with the
Baltimore 21, Minnesota 20— best defense in the league, and
when the defense is rolling, the
Every game is a big one for the
offense cannot help but do well.
Colts and this one will be even Milt Plum isn't as bad as his
bigger if Johnny Unitas is not name implies—and Detroit
will
able to play. Gary Guozzo could win again.
be the starting quarterback on 12 AFL:

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Partners' Press, ~9nc.
ynft

&amp;

Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Buffalo 21, Oakland 14—The
Raiders knocked off Houston last
week, the week after the Oilers
beat Buffalo. But the Bills are
fabulous and they always (almost) seem to win. Their defense
is great, their offense is great,
and as a team, they are the best
in the league. They just have to
win.

once said “and when the defense
is rolling, the offense cannot help
but do well.” (see above.)
Houston 24, Donvor 10—The
Oilort need this victory to stay
in contention in the East. And
you can bet your boots that they
will be “up” for this one. The old
pro George Blanda, threw 61
passes last week and by Sunday
his arm should no longer be stiff.
Denver 'stinks!
Boston 3, Now York 2—I wish
I could pick a tie, because these
two teams are pretty close to
even; both not having too much
to offer. New York has Joe Namath and Boston has, 1 well, they
have more than one man on the
team worth mentioning. The Pats
are at home; so maybe they'll win
—maybe they won’t, though.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

35, Kansas City 14

San Diago

—The second best team in the
league is San Diego—and they
shouldn’t have too much trouble
in trouncing Kansas City. Even
the Chargers' defense is playing
good ball. And some learned man

GUITARS. Martins: D-18, 0-16NY,
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From $20. Also banjos and mandolins. D'Angelico guitar strings
20% off. 894-6003, NX 2-2309.
1958 PLYMOUTH hardtop. 2-door,

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IF 3-1344

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plays including Antony and Cltopatra. For each play Cliff’s Notes
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MAN’S WRIST-WATCH lost near

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�Friday, Novambar 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHTEEN

Red Raiders HereTomorrow
By MIKE GINSBERG

The unpredictable Bulls come
home this Saturday and the game
at Rotary Field could be the
most exciting one of the season.
The Red Raiders of Colgate will
field the strongest defensive
team the Bulls have faced all
season, and the game should be
tight and low scoring. It appears
that the Bulls’ final home game
will turn into a battle of defensive giants,
Colgate, thus far this season,
has compiled a 5-2-1 record, with
mixed results against some tough
opponents. The Red Raiders shut
out Yale 7-0, played Cornell to a
scoreless tie, lost to Princeton
27-0 and edged out Army 29-28.
The Raider strength centers on
a strong defensive line and an
The Colgate offensive is only fair,
as the Raiders rely on the defensive unit to give them the ball
This they have done effectively,
as Colgate opponents have been
held to under ten points in six
of their eight games. Anchoring
the defensive line is Captain
John Paske, an outstanding competitor. at guard. At the ends
the Raiders have two strong performers in Hap Clark and Joe
Clare. Junior Ray Ilg, a potential
All-American, provides the Raiders with a strong linebacker. The
defensive secondary, which has
been the key to the Raider success, is brilliant.

LEE JONES

After looking at the phenomenal record of the defensive
platoons, the offensive squad
seems unimpressive, but it cannot be discounted. The Raiders
have an experienced quarterback in Buff Platt. However, the
loss of his prime receiver Pete
Beaulieu will hurt. The backfield,
weakened by the loss of Tom Carpenter, shows two sophs, Harry
Shoff and Marv Hubbard, starting at halfback. The Raiders are
weak at the tackles, but have
two strong guards in Marty Juredine and Ray Miller.
Despite last week’s big victory over Delaware, it is difficult
to predict the Bulls’ performance

GOLF

(Cont’d

from P.

in Saturday’s game. There are,
however, positive factors that
must be considered. For the first
time since Well’s injury, the
Bulls presented an offensive attack of some magnitude. Capauna,
performing well at quarterback,
had a strengthened line helping
him. The big gamble of putting
Holly and Taylor on the offensive
line paid off, as the move did
not weaken the defensive line
to any degree. Worthy of special note, following his performance last week, is soph fullback
Lee Jones. Jones’ explosive running has kept a scoring threat
alive all season. With two games
remaining, he is well within
reach of the all time UB season
rushing mark. Jones’ running on
Saturday could prove decisive
against the tough Raider defense.
As for the Bulls’ defense, what
more can be said? The defensive
unit’s consistent play can only
be described as inspirational.
In all, Saturday’s game at Rotary Field is worth coming to, if
only to see two of the best defensive units in the East. The Bulls
will not be able to build any
great passing threat against Colgate’s “air-tight” defense. They
will have to rely on the running
of Jones and Webber to move the
team. Colgate’s offensive threat,
too, will be nullified, as the
UB line will have no trouble
stopping the Raiders. The lack
of an effective field goal kicker
on both teams will keep the score
very low, but the Bulls’ running
game gives them a slight advantage.

20)

the season, handed UB its first
loss. The other two victories, both
played away, included an 18-0
drubbing of Niagara and a 9Vz8% squeaker over Buffalo State.

A summary of the golf team’s
highlights might give everyone
an idea of their fine performance.
First of all, in dual competition,
UB golfers finished with an 8-2
won-loss record.

Next, at Rochester, N, Y., for
the fourth year in succession, UB
took first place in the Brook-

Lea Invitational, Incidentally, at
Brook-Lea, UB also produced the
low medalist in Ed Nussblatt,

UB continued its winning ways
in a first place finish in the

E.C.A.C. Eegionals held at Drumlins Country Club in Syracuse.

This regionals victory in Syracuse enabled the golf team to advance to the finals of the E.C.A.C.
held at Farmingdale, L. I. Here
UB’s best found the going rough,
but still finished a respectable
eighth against the keenest competition in the East.
Looking forward to next year,
UB golf prospects are good. This
year’s graduation will only take
two players from this season’s
studded team. Hats off to the golf
team for a good season: An indication of the increase in quality
of the UB inter-collegiate athletic
program.

SPEAKING OUT
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

College Football As It Should Be Played
In a world chocked full of athletic scholarships,
hiring and firing of collegiate coaches, and wall-to-wall
carpeted dormitories for football players, it is most refreshing to see college football as it should be played.
New York University, Georgetown University, Fordham
University and the University of Chicago, all of which
made the decision to drop varsity football a number of
years ago, have all reinstated the sport, but on a much
different basis from the manner in which we know it.
The new system being used at the aforementioned campuses is one of fun, not kill; one of voluntarism, not
scholarships.

“Club football,” as this new sport is known, is played
much like intramural football at UB, but it is highly organized. It is tackle football, not touch, and the players
are fully protected and uniformed. The basic difference
between it and varsity football is that the accent is on
fun—both individual and team—and the alumni does not
clamor about firing the coach if a team happens to lose
the lion’s share of its games. The schedule is reduced to
maybe four or five games, one which is considerably
easier for both the players and coaches, and when compared to the varsity system, it wins hands down.

A few weeks ago, Sports Illustrated ran a picture
article about the “football dormitory’’ at the University
of Alabama. When I first saw that article, my initial
reaction was one of revulsion at the wall-to-wall carpeting, chandeliered lobby (with fireplace) and the description of the players’ meals. It seems that they are served
steak twice a day, and in one particular picture of one
of the dorm’s rooms, there was a notable absence of
books on the sculptured-out-of-the-wall shelves. Maybe
Bear Bryant and his young protegees do run the University of Alabama (something which is not uncommon at
some schools), but he certainly could have been more
discrete in his pick of a publication in which to exhibit
his masterpiece. Better Homes and Gardens might have
been a better choice.
It is exactly this sort of thing which college football,
in its present form, helps to promote. The present system
so emphasizes success on the field that it couldn’t help
but lend itself to athletic scholarships, coaches hanged in
effigy, palatial dormitories for the players, and, in some
extreme cases, even payment of the players.
This is not intended to imply that football at UB
will develop into anything like that which exists at
Alabama, but the system here, as most everywhere else,
is far from being perfect. Over $65,000 a year in athletic
scholarships at this University seems to me to be going
a bit overboard—major college ranking or not. Club
football on this campus would eliminate the need for
scholarships, sharply reduce student fees, and maybe
even increase attendance at UB football games, which,
needless to say, is pitifully low.
There is no reason why UB could not join the ranks
of NYU, Chicago, Fordham and Georgetown in instituting
a program of club football. It would prove to be more
fun for the players, coaches, and maybe even the students.

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Announcing
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a semi-formal dance
December 18, 1965
in the Mary Seaton Room
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IMS

Intramurals

Viewpoint
Bulls 'Just Too Tough'
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
It must have been an agonizingly ‘long walk for
Coach Dave Nelson when he congratulated his UB
counterpart, Dick Offenhamer, after the latter’s Bulls
had shelled Nelson’s Hens, 22-0, Saturday.
Not that the “Admiral” enjoys losing football games
to anyone, but this paricular. defeat must have ■ been
particularly galling. Last year, the Delaware coach, a
prominent national figure who hs already been honored
by a full length story in a weekly national magazine,
came to Buffalo with unblurred visions of victory.
Afer the horrendous UB exhibitions against Holy
Cross and Marshall in preceding games, it wasn’t surprising that the Hens, a small college powerhouse,
entered the game assuming the favorite’s role. The
Admiral, in quest of his 100th victory in his 14th season
at the Delaware helm, sent his Hens strutting onto the
field anticipating results similar to the 34-6 crushing of
the Bulls in 1963.
Four quarters of bone-rattling play later, the Bulls
sent the demoralized Hens home with the worst defeat
Nelson had suffered in his Newark tenure, 37-0. Certainly the Bulls had been at their best and the Hens left
something to be desred in their play, but there was little
question in the minds of the spectators as to which had
been the better team. To everyone that is except the
fuming Admiral. After the game he made some rather
choice comments about the game such as: “No, Buffalo
didn’t play that well, ‘Anyone would have looked great
the way we played.’’
It is expected that a coach as accustomed to winning
as Nelson would be a little hot under the collar after
such a humiliating setback, but a coach, as a representative of his instiution, is also expected to be slightly more
composed and diplomatic regardless of the outcome. He
certainly did pot ingratiate himself into anyone’s heart
with his comments, and it’s almost certain that they were
not forgotten on UB’s return trip last week.
In an article that appeared in The Courier-Express
a few days before this year’s game, the Admiral bestowed
his highest accolades upon the Bulls in general and E. G.
Poles, Joe Holly, Gerry LaFountain and Craig Helenbrook in particular. Upon reading these mellifluous
plaudits, one could not help but wonder if Nelson wasn’t
playing just a bit coy, figuring to “psych out” the bane
of Delaware’s previous season. With lingering memories
of the 1964 Rotary Field fiasco, it seemed highly unlikely that the “Admiral” would be so magnanimous with
his compliments without an underlying purpose.
The day of reckoning finally arrived last week and
when the dust had settled, the Admiral still had to settle
for second place honors. In case any doubt remained in
the “Admiral’s” mind as to which the superior team was,
the Bulls cleared the bench to push across their final
*

tally.

After being outscored 59-0 for eight quarters of

action, it appeared that even the Admiral was beginning
to see the light. Maybe the Bulls were a shade better

than the Hens.
Hat in hand and lump in throat, the Delaware coach
shook hands with Dick Offenhamer after the game and
simply said: “YouYe just too tough.” Somebody must
have let him in on a secret.
Should the Bulls extend their mastery over Delaware
to three in a row next year, Nelson may yet learn the
meaning of humility. Speculation indicates, however,
that the “Admiral” will be going to extremes to preserve
his arrogance.
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FOOTBALL FINALS SOON
By

GEORGE JACKREL

The Intramural Football Sea-

son is coming to a close as the
campus championship game is
scheduled for next Wednesday.
The Zygotes will play the winner of the No. 1’s vs. the Hippies
game, next Monday for the independent championship, and Beta
Sig will play either Alpha Sig
or SAM next Tuesday for the
Fraternity League championships.
The Zygotes won their league on
the basis of their 68-8 victory
over the Dolans who were previously unbeaten. This impressive victory, coupled with the
fact that they are last year’s defending champion, must place
them as the favorites in their
upcoming games. Beta Sig, whose
record is 5-0-1, after beating Sig
Ep 30-12, is the Tuesday league
champion since AEPi (4-1) can
no longer tie them. SAM (4-1)
still has an outside chance of
catching Alpha Sig (S-0) in the
Thursday league competition.

MIKE DOLAN

The University
of Buffalo
freshman started, what was to be
a clean sweep for UB football
last weekend, with a 50-0 trouncing at the expense of Ithaca College. It was a glory shared effort as seven different UB players were to carry the pigskin into
paydirt. The performance was
the finest of the year turned in
by the frosh gridders. UB took
command right from the start
and simply overpowered their
opponents throughout the entire
game.

The small crowd in attendance
at Rotary Field saw at least one
UB tally in every period; Tom
Murphy scored on a 2 yard run,
Steve Svec went for 3, Chuck
Drankoski carried 5, Denny Mason scampered 70 with a pass interception, Dan Luciano plunged
1, Dan Martin raced 5, and Dave
Richner exploded from the one,
all for touchdowns. Bob Embow
four extra points
while Nick Coupas and Martin
carried for the two pointers.
Among UB’s defensive highlights
were a blocked point by Ralph
Yanik and the recovery of Mike
Maser, deep in Ithaca territory.

place-kicked

Generators

—

The only highlight for the Ithaca squad was their nifty quarterback, who spent most of the day
trying to avoid the fierce rush
put on by the UB defensive line.
It was an overall fine team ef
fort that enabled the UB gridders to gain their initial victory

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Midland, ate.

LESS THAN 5 MINUTES FROM UB CAMPUS

of the season.
Today the UB Freshman Football team closes out its season
with a trip to Syracuse. The Tangerines boast their finest team
in the history of the school
and will present the toughest opposition yet faced by the frosh
this year. However, the freshman
have come a long way since the
season started this spirited squad
just may bring about the upset
of the year in freshman football.

UB Athletic Director,
James Feelle announced
that an additional game
has been added to the UB
1965-66 -Basketha 11 Schedule. The Bulls will play

McMaster University of
Hamilton, Ontario, in the
Hamilton Armory on SatFeh. 12, 1966.
This gives UB a 23game schedule for the
coming season. The Bulls
will open on December 1,
against Brockport State at
urday,

(dark Gym.

Also key pass interceptions by
Richner, Drankowski and Luciano helped to set up scores.

—

—

Handball, swimming, and basketball are the next three Intramural events. Handball entries
must be in by Friday, November
12 and play begins Monday, November 15. The singles matches
will be played on Monday and
Tuesday afternoons and the doubles matches will be played on
Thursday afternoons. There is
only one more swimming lime
trial date left—Monday. November 15 at 6 p.m. The finals meet
will be held from 7-9 p.m. on
November 22. The lowest five
times in the trials will swim in
the finals. Basketball entries must
be submitted to the Intramural
office by Monday, November 22.
The leagues will be fitted on a
first come, first serve basis, so
we would recommend that all
those interested should get in
their entries as soon as possible.
The Independent leagues will be
held on Monday and Wednesday
at 8:30 and 9:30 and the Fraternity leagues wil be held on
Thursday at the same times.

Baby Bulk Overpower
Ithaca In 50-0 Rout

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�PAGE TWENTY

Friday, November 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

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15

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s

—

Bulls Defeather Hens 22-0
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
An electrifying 90-ylard interception return by Gerry LaFountain triggered the gridiron Bulls
to a 22-0 pasting of the offenseminded Blue Hens at Delaware’s
home field in Newark Saturday.
The victory boosted UB’s record
to 3-3-2.
With no score early in the sec-

ond

quarter,

the

Hens moved

deep into UB territory. Quarterback Tom VanGrofski then called
for a flat pass to halfback Ed
Mason. LaFountain, who was covering Mason, waited until the

but worry that this game was going to run the same blundering
course as others in the past had.
Delaware, cheered on by a
crowd of 10,401, pushed the Bulls
deep into their own territory, but
the UB defense clamped down
and regained the ball.
Two series of downs later the
high-scoring Hens, led by quarterback Tom VanGrofski, again
threatened the Bull end zone.
The momentum of the game
quickly reversed itself here when
VanGrofski made the fatal mistake of releasing a pass into the
flat at the 10. LaFountain snared
it there and began his 90-yard
jaunt to paydirt. Joe Oscodal converted to give the Bulls a 7-0

to step in front of
the intended receiver at the 10
and steal the pass.
With the stream of traffic flowing in the other direction, Ron
lead.
Pugh chopped down the only Hen
The second quarter was fairly
with an immediate shot at Launeventful except for what was
probably the most horrifying play
Fountain.
of the game for Coach OffenhaThe 225-pounder ripped up the
field untouched as only one other mer. On a punting situation near
Delaware player, VanGrofski, had midfield, center Joe Holly, playa shot at catching No. 84 from
ing his first game of the season
behind. E. G. Poles, however, took on offense, conducted an expericare of that assignment at midment to see if punter Brian Hanfield and the pride of Saranac
sen could jump up twenty feet
Lake was home free.
to haul down his snap.
After the experiment had failed
LaFountain, who completely
changed the complexion of the
along with the collective pulses
game and the season with his
of UB fans, a personal foul pengridiron gem, was not content to alty gave the Hens a first down
merely torpedo Dave “The Adat the 6 as they could be seen
miral" Nelson’s vessel, he had detecting the faint tinkling of
to make certain it sank out of Santa Claus’ sleigh bells. Again
sight. To gain these objectives the ruthless Bull defense rose to
“Frenchy" was responsible for nuthe occasion, however, and slammerous key tackles in the Hen
med the door on the Hens.
backfield, including a crucial 4thThe Bulls scored again in the
and-one attempt on the Delaware
third quarter when versatile Tom
39 in the fourth quarter. To add
Hurd intercepted a VanGrofski
a dab of icing to his already
aerial at midfield and returned it
well-frosted cake, LaFountain
to the 31. After Jones had
made a second interception, again smashed his way to the 1, Jim
deep in UB territory, forcing the
Webber cracked over the goal
crestfallen “Admiral” to accept
his
ship had gone
the fact that
under for the last time.
Somewhat overshadowed by La
Fountain’s glittering display was
the outstanding running of sophomore fullback Lee Jones. The
5’10" 200-lb. Buffalo native bulldozed his way to the eye-opening
total of 157 ylards in 23 attempts
as he enjoyed as great an afternoon rushing as a UB back has
ever had.
Sparked by LaFountain’s defensive heroics and Jones' offensive explosion, the rejuvenated
Bulls played their best game of
the season against the Hens.
Ironically last season followed the
same pattern—the year’s top effort against Delaware came after
a disastrous showing against Holy
last instant

line on fourth down. Joe the Toe

again split the uprights to make
the score 14-0.
Later in the quarter VanGrofski again brought the Hens winging to the UB 11. Refusing to

@$?&amp;!*? guy again?!!!” Even the
ball-carrier’s lawyer cousin, Perry,
couldn’t get him out of this jam,
and down he went for a five-yard
loss at the hands of Mr. LaFountain.

of
later fireworks by marching 51
yards to the Delaware 7 early in
the first quarter behind the slick
ball-handling of Capuana and the
running of Jones. When the Bulls
lqst the ball on a fumble on the
following play, one could not help

GERRY LaFOUNTAIN
All-East End

Harriers To Close Season
Next Week In State Meet
The UB Cross Country team
won one meet and lost two last
week, defeating Frcdonia 23-32
and bowing to Gannon, 21-35. In
the Fredonia meet, the UB leaders were Jack Kerns, Second;
Paul Rogovich, third; Jack Mivorca, fifth; Bob Stephenson,
sixth, and Mike A 1 s p a u g h,

seventh.

Against Gannon,

Paul

Rogo-

vieh finished second for the Bulls.

In the

meet of the week,

the UB harriers lost to Alfred
University, 15-48, on the very
hilly Alfred course.
The last cross country meet of
the season will be the Sixteenth
Annual New York State Championships at Roberts Wesleyan
College next week. Fifteen colleges from throughout the state
will compete. Roberts Wesleyan
is the defending champion and is

favored to repeat its win of last
year.

McNamara, for the

first

count.

STATISTICS

UB
UD
10
6
249 105
31
72
3-9 7-20
3
0
5-31 6-37
1
0
Penalty yards
101
32
BULL SESSION . . . LaFountain, Craig Helenbrook, Hurd,
Poles, Dan Sella and Joe Garofalo
gained the highest defensive
marks, while Jones, Taylor and
Capuana led the offense. . . . The
victory was the first the Bulls had
ever scored at Delaware against
the Hens. . . . Delaware’s rec.
ord is now 4-3.
LaFountain
was named to the All-East team
for the third time—ho hum. . . .
UB’s punt formation shift paid
dividends when they lured the
Hens off sides and gained a first
down. . . . Jones’ longest run of
the game was a 42-yard dazzler.
. . . Massachusetts drubbed Holy
Cross, 27-0 Saturday. UB defeated
UMass by two touchdowns and
lost to HC by the same margin.
That’s football. . . . Coach Ofenhamer said, ‘'If the Bulls don’t
receive student support for the
Colgate game, the students don’t
deserve major college football.”
.
. .
The Bulls will face their
toughest opponent of the season
since Boston College in Colgate
at Rotary Field tomorrow. A hardhitting defensive battle looms as
was the case last year when the
Red Raiders held on for a 7-6
win. The Bulls may be competing
against the best all-round player
they will see this year in 205-lb.
linebacker-fullback Ray Ilg.
First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passing
Passes
Passes intercepted by
Punts
Fumbles lost

..

NICK CAPUANA and RON PUGH

learn by experience, he again
In the final minutes of the
arched a flat pass in the direcgame, Capuana, who showed acres
tion of Mason. LaFountain beat of improvement over his shaky
him to the ball again, but this debut against Holy Cross, exhibittime the Hens upended him beed a great deal of gridiron savvy
fore he generated a full head in moving the offense. With Holly
steam.
of
and Bill Taylor bolstering the ofIn the final period LaFountain, fensive line, the Bulls tore holes
wanting to assure himself of a
in the Hen wall, and Cappy exsecure niche in the “Admiral’s” ploited the situation by sticking
wildest nightmares, wrecked Del■to the ground almost exclusively.
aware's dying hopes of a comeIn the last minute the Utica
back. With fourth-and-one at the junior, a Dean’s List student, conDelaware 39, the Hens chose founded the Hens by tossing firstMason to run for the all-important
down passes to Webber at the 15
first down. Before he ever apand Jim McNamara at the 3.
proached the line of scrimmage,
In the next-to-last play of the
Mason could almost b» he!»-d game Ron Ridolfi entered and hit
loud,
thinking out
“Not this senior end Denny Burden with
the initial six-pointer of his varsity career. On the extra point
attempt Ridolfi connected with
another splinter-ridden senior

LaFountain All-East Again

Cross.
The Bulls gave indications

end,

points of his varsity stint.
After the ensuing kickoff, time
expired with the visiting Bulls
holding the heavy end of a 22-0

Gerry LaFountain, UB defensive end, last week was named
to the weekly All-East football
team for the third time this season.

LaFountain, against Delaware
last week, intercepted two passes,
running one of them back 90
yards for a touchdown, and once
again exhibited his remarkable
mobility and consistency in the
line play.
With but two weeks remaining
in the season, it is beginning to
appear that Gerry will wind up
on the ECAC All-East First Team
—a tremendous achievement indeed.
The Spectrum Sports Staff
hereby extends its congratulations to Gerry LaFountain—as
fine a football player as UB has
ever seen.

Golfers End Season
By

Mike Dolan

UB’s golfers closed the season
in a fine fashion with three
straight victories enabling them
to compile an 8-2 overall record.
The team functioned according
to pre-season predictions—finishing one of the best years in UB’s

golf history.
One of the final three victories
accomplished by the golfers was
a revenge match, with McMaster
of Canada on the latter’s home
greens. The final score was UB

12V4, McMaster 5V4.
It was McMaster, who earlier in

(Cont’d on P. 18)

GRIDFORECASTS

-

Chick’s
Picks
By

Chick Arnold

-

Fearless

Feigin
By Steve Feigin

It’s that time of the year for
There aren’t too many weeks
the annual blooming of the War
left to improve on a mediocre
record. This goes for pro-football of the Roses, West-Coast style,
forecasters as well as pro-football better known as the Pacific Athletic Conference fiasco. For this
teams. The Denver Broncos had
year, as in the past, the PAC
better do some winning, and
race seems certain to end up
Charles (long for Chick) had also
without a clear-cut winner emergbetter do some winning. ,
There were just enough upsets ing.
Three teams, U.S.C., U.C.L.A
in the NFL last week so that the
and Washington State, are carryraces for Conference titles will
be tough ones. The Cleveland ing unblemished conference slates
Browns had opened a small lead into the 9th week of college
action, and it is probable that at
in the East, but St. Louis is a
least two of them will finish the
hot-and-cold ball club; they’re due
season that way. For in this, the
to be hot. In the West, the Baltimore Colts have won six straight, PAC’s second year at full strength,
most conference members still
and have a one-game lead over
the Green Bay Packers, losers of have incomplete schedules and
may play as few as three league
their last two ball games. There
hasn’t been such gloom in Green foes. Such is the case with Washington State, The dilemma is
Bay since
“Fearless Feigin”
which team to choose as the PAC’s
smacked up his rented Fury.
representative in the Rose Bowl
As of 10:00 this morning, my
Game on New Year’s Day,
over all record is 42-31-13 for a
The PAC’s solution is to as.575 percentage. (I aint Howard semble the eight athletic direcCossell, you know.) Chances are,
tors on November 22, some 48
it will probably be the same tohours after the final conference
morrow. This week, however, is games have been completed, and
th* week—the big week—the one vote to pick the team.
But this
where Chick proves his ability as
has brought about much antagon(Cont’d on P. 17)
(Cont’d on P. 18)

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                    <text>1

syNY

is i-* ■■■
■

daze
f«c

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

pa*e

B|K

DELAWARE
prev,ew

|

■

i it/I■

&lt;*&gt;*'

NO. 9

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1965

VOLUME 16

Pres. Gould Sees New Campus Open By '68
NSA Seek Student Volunteers
To Tutor the Underprivileged
The National Student Association has organized a committee to
aid in the tutorial program for
underprivileged children in the
Buffalo area. The program was
initiated by and is held at St.
Augustine’s Episcopal Church located at 770 Humboldt Parkway.

Officially recognized by the
Board of Education, this program
assists students who are having
academic difficulties either due
to a poor environment or to a
limited mental capacity. Incorporated into this is a “special services” program which helps unwed
mothers with their school studies
and enables them to take Regents
at the end of the year.
The program is non-sectarian
and involves students ranging
from the second to the eighth
grades. Its two major functions
are the improvement of reading
and mathematical skills and, the
development of interest in nonacademic areas such as art and
music. Instruction is on a one-to-

are held
Monday through Thursday from
4 p.m. to 6 p.m, and 7 p.m. to
9 p.m., and Saturday mornings.
Tutoring for the unwed mothers
is on Thursdays from 7 p.m. to
9 p.m., and Saturday afternoons
from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
So far 50 UB students have
volunteered to act in the capacity
of tutors. These students are not
necessarily education majors, and
there are no requirements that interested students must meet. In
order that the program be more
effective, various faculty members have organized a committee
to help orient the tutors. For
more information regarding this
program call either 831-3175 or

one basis and “classes”

837-6744.
On December 10, there will be
a New York State Regional Convention on “Student Community
Involvement.” The National Student Associations of all the New
York State schools are invited,
and the convention will be open
to all students.

Comments On Feinbefg Law And FSA
During Student Press Interview
Plans and land acquisition for
Ihe new campus will be complete
"in a matter of months". President Samuel Gould stated Monday
afternoon in an exclusive interview with the Spectrum at the
Statler Hilton. He suggested that
the partially

completed campus

would be “open for business" by
1968 and that “we will be out
there digging holes by next year."
When questioned about the reactions in Albany to the Levitt
report on F.S.A. policy throughout the State system, he said that
of the
the recommendations
Comptrollers Report and the recommendations of the State Uni
versity “are virtually the same."
The only salient point of disagreement which President Gould
mentioned was the question of
contracts between the State University and the F.S.A.’s and each
campus. The comptrollers oilier
would like to see a uniform per
eentage of "profit" or “surplus”
written into each contract, while
President Gould said that he
would prefer to see the percentages determined by the needs of
each individual campus situation.

Greek Weekend Has Varied Program
Greek Weekend, an annual
event sponsored by the sororities and fraternities on campus,
will be held this year, Nov. 12
and 13. The events highlighting
the weekend include election of
a queen, a competitive sing, and
Greek Ball.

V

A fashion show Wednesday,
Nov. 10 at 3 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room will initiate the weekend.
Each of the five queen candidates will model three outfits,
and will answer any questions
from the floor. Judges will be
present to evaluate the girls on
both their modeling and their

responses to questions. Voting by
Greek men will take place Thursday and Friday, Nov. 11 and 12,
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. in front
of the Conference Theater.

W

&lt;!l

Saturday,
November 13, the Greek Queen
and winners of the Sing will be

Greek Ball,

The program will be given in
three parts: selections by the
Carol Choristers, selections by
our Men’s Glee Club, which will
be conducted by Mr, Sachs of the
Music Department, and three
choruses from the Messiah, which
the two groups will perform together.

There will also be a dance following the concert, which begins
at 8:30 in the Fillmore Room of
Norton Union. Tickets will be
available at both the Norton Box
Office and the Baird Box Office
and cost will be 50c for students, faculty, and staff and $1
for all others.

McConky

CANDIDATES FOR
GREEK QUEEN
SIGMA KAPPA PHI’S candi
date for Greek Queen, Susan Gal
lauresi, is an 18-year-old sophomore majoring in Psychology. Last
year she was President of Goodyear South and served on the
Freshman Orientation Committee,
and she is now a Sophomore
Sponsor. Her interests are singing, dancing, piano-playing and
skiing.

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA fraternity presents as its candidate,
Sonny Lawryk. Sunny is a 20-yearold junior majoring in nursing
with a minor in English. She has
been Vice-President of her sophomore nursing class, a representative to the Executive Council,
a member of the Ippon Club,
member of Silver Ball and Spring
Weekend committees. She is active in the House and Cultural
commitees for her dormitory. Her
interests include composing

system.

When questioned about the attitude of the Slate University toward increased student participation in academic decision making, course evaluation, curriculum and calendar changes, and
the like, he said: “There is great
value in that kind of participa
lion. Certainly students should
have the opportunity to sit in on
faculty and administration deci
sion making; they should he able
to make their feelings and judgements known,'’

Dr. Samuel B. Gould, President
of the State University of New
York, spoke on academic freedom
at a luncheon given Monday. November 1, by the Buffalo Area
Chamber of Commerce, in honor
of the presidents of 18 Western
New York colleges and universities.
In his speech. Dr. Gould emphasized the importance of academic freedom in a college community. "No matter what the society or conditions of the times,
the university must be independent and free from outside control of the ideas it explores; academic excellence cannot be dissociated from such independence
and freedom.”
Dr. Gould voiced the fear that
today’s college student will become followers rather than leadIf we place stricture
upon our youth
If they accept
every idea with docility during
their formative years, they will
be sheeplike as adiflts."
He continued; “Show me the
university or, indeed, the community where no unpopular idea
can find opportunity for utterance . . . and I will show you a
place of sterility and inaction, of
self satisfaction bordering on the
...

reactionary."

Dr. Gould recognized the burden placed on the university in
the world today. It is no longer
the "ivory tower" in which a student places himself for four years
or more.

The university "finds itself
plunged into the midst of the
world’s problems from both a
theoretical and practical viewpoint." he commented. Within its
realm falls the “great burden of
scientific and technological discovery," as well as social and po
litical problems.
“We cannot emphasize too
often these days the necessity for
complete and absolute academic
freedom for the scholar and a
similar sense of freedom for the
lay citizen,” Dr. Gould repeated.

Petition Censuring Editor Dropped
A petition circulated on cam
pus last week sought to censure
the editor of the Spectrum for

he an expression of the majority
of the student body, it is necessary for me to withdraw it."

failing to express the “opinions

He did, however, urge those
who have become interested “in
our cause" to make their feelings

music, playing the piano, folk
swimming, and other
dancing,

of the student
body" in the editorial section of
the paper It further called for the
“resignation or removal and replacement of the Editor in Chief,

sports

Mr. Jeremy Taylor."

CHI OMEGA’S candidate, Marilyn R. McConky is a 20-year-old
junior from Loudonville, New
York. Marilyn was active in various campus weekends including
Homecoming, Spring Weekend
and Greek Weekend. She is also a
member of Newman Club and
Sophomore Sponsors, Her hobbies
are waterskiing, sewing and dancing; she also does volunteer work
with children. As a sociology
major, Marilyn is planning a career in Social Welfare in child

The spokesmen of the group
circulating the petition, Mr. Donald Eddy and Miss Susan M.
Duffy, planned to circulate the
petition for three days, Oct. 27 29;
however, it was voluntarily with-

of the majority

Lawyrfc

Shally

announced.

The “Carol Choristers,” the
women’s chorale group of SUNY
College at Geneseo, will visit the
Buffalo campus on Saturday, Nov.
13th. This group, directed by Mr.
John Kucaba, will be giving a
joint concert with the UB Men’s
Glee Club.

Queen

Gallauresi

is invited to attend.

At the

v

sity

Candidates

Sororities and fraternities will
compete in Greek Sing Friday
night, Nov. 12, at 7 p.m. and 10
p.m. Tickets for both performances will go on sale this week.
Everyone

IB

If

Ktjr

SUNY President

President Gould expressed concern over the statements in the
Levitt report which suggested
that students were being over
charged for the necessities of student |;re: books, food, housing,
parking, and campus expansion,
tie said that price reductions or
rebates would be "up to the individual campuses", but (hat re
ductions in students costs were
assured within the year.
lie concluded his remarks by
saying that problems of academic
freedom were much on his mind
and that the abolition of the Lemberg Certificate was one step in
the direction of assuring academic
freedom to both students and faculty throughout the State Univer-

CofC Hears President
On Academic Freedom

correction.

THETA CHI’S candidate for
Greek Weekend is Janet Shelly.
She is a 20-year-old senior majoring in Business Education and is
currently student-teaching at Kenmoe West Senior High School.
(Cont’d

on P. 12)

drawn aflei the first day.

Mr. Eddy explained the withdrawal stating: “The petition was
meant to be an expression of dissatisfaction on the part of the
majority of the student body with
Mr. Taylor’s editorial policies.
The overwhelming majority of
the students responding to the
petition disagreed with the position taken by Mr Taylor in “Editorial Comment"; however, they
also expressed their belief that

the student body cannot impeach
the editor of a student newspaper
for expressing his views in his
editorials. As the petition was to

known in articles and letters to
the Spectrum.
At press time, with some peti
tions still outstanding, 643 signa
tures had been counted.

The New Student Re
view

,

UB literary maga

/ine, goes on sale Novein
her 15 in the lobby of Nor
ton Union, for 50c a copy
Copy for the second
issue must be submitted to
the NSR office. Room 302
Norton ,or mailed to Box
40, Norton, by November
15. Material is being accepted for the following
categories: fiction, nonfiction, poetry, humor, and

photography.

�PAGE TWO

The most
walked about
slacks on
Campus are

HUBBARD
slacks with
“DACRON”
Great Hubbard styling with
the lasting neatness and
carefree comfort of "Da
cron", in these slacks of
55% Dacron* polyester, 45%
worsted wool. Styled in traditional Classic and Gay
Blade plain front models,
in all the favorite colors, at
better stores everywhere.
Also available in blends of
70% Orion* acrylic, 30%
worsted wool, or "Dacron"
with "Orion",

Friday, November

SPECTRUM

5, 1965

Community Relations Board Created
To Encourage Student Involvement
A Community Relations Committee has been formed recently
■as a special committee of Union
Board. The purpose of the committee. as stated by Joyce Edel-

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

man, committee member, is “to
help this University produce ac-

tive citizens
citizens who will
be concerned about the problems
of poverty, education, crime, disease and government; and who
will take the initiative in action. Such involvement in the
community will raise the image
of our university at the same time
as fulfilling our social responsibility for aiding community de—

velopment.”
Although at present plans are
limited to creating a foundation

for future projects, Jocelyn
Lundquist, committee chairman,
reports arrangements in progress
tor bringing a group of orphans
to the next UB football game.
Anyone interested in

joining

this committee in its formative
stage is encouraged to attend
meetings on Tuesday afternoons
at 4 p.m. The assigned meeting
room will be posted on the bulletin board of the Union Board
office, room 15. Later in the year
there will be a call for volunteers
to do community work.

‘du Pont Reg. T M

“We are not the first college
or university to attempt this,”
Miss Edelman remarked. “Other
Union Boards at such schools as
Columbia University and Texas
Christian University have already
achieved encouraging success in
broad community programs. These
programs often in cooperation
with government bureaus include
counseling, recreation, rehabilitation, and urban renewal.

CAREERS
IN STEEL

Our representative
will he on campus

Nov. 29 and 30
December 1
to interview undergraduate
and graduate candidates for
Bethlehem's 1966 Loop
Course training program.

OPPORTUNITIES are
available for men interested

in steel plant operations,
sales, research, mining, accounting, and other activities.

DEGREES required are

mechanical, metallurgical,
electrical, chemical, industrial, civil, mining, and
other engineering specialties; also chemistry, physics, mathematics, business
administration, and liberal
arts.
If you would like to discuss
your career interest with a
Bethlehem representative,
see your placement officer
to arrange for an interview

appointment.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for
Progress Program

BETHLEHEM
STEEL

“We plan to emphasize on person-to-person contact, particularly
with the aged and the young. Organizations on campus will be
encouraged to contribute to this
work. Alpha Phi Omega Fraterhas already voiced an
nity
interest.

“The value of such a program
for both the UB student and the
community will be great; however, its success depends upon
concerted student action. We look
forward to the future development of this committee.”

Debate Team
Places Third
UB debaters attended

the

Group Action Tournament at
Michigan State University, Oc-

tober 27. At the tournament,
the teams prepared a report on
this years’ collegiate topic: "Resolved
That Law Enforcement
Agencies Should Be Given Greater Freedom in the Investigation
and Prosecution of Crime.” The
report was presented to a panel
of experts who questioned the
debaters and judged their report. Eleven schools participated.
—

Last weekend, three novice debate squads attended the D’Youville College Debate Tournament
in Buffalo. In their first eollegiate tournament, the debaters
placed third in a total of eleven
schools. Two Buffalo students,
Glen Payne and Ted Beringer,
won awards for the best negative
speakers. In addition, third place
honors for four-man teams went
to C. Rees and G. Rennels representing the affirmative, and R.
Ascher and K. Gasdiek representing the negative.
This weekend debaters will debate at the University of Chicago’s annual tournament, and
at the Queens College Debate
Tournament in New York City.

Jim Jimenez end Barbara Damatchek continue in 'Fantastiekt.'

Four Extra Performances
Of Fantasticks To Be Given

All systems are go for the renewal of the musical “The Fantasticks,” the show that proved
so successful in its abbreviated
run last week. “The Fantasticks”
will run for four additional performances, beginning with a matinee this Sunday, Nov. 7. Performances also will be given
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
evenings, Nov. 8, 9, and 10 at
8:30 p.m. All performances will
be in the Millard Fillmore Room
of Norton Union. Tickets are
priced at $1 for students, $1,50
for faculty and staff, and $2 for
general admission.
Those people currently having
tickets and reservations for last
Saturday and Sunday are asked
to contact the Norton Union
Ticket Office immediately to exchange their, tickets for these
additional performances. The tickets for last weekend’s performances will be honored for any
one of these four performances.
“The Fantasticks” is a romantic
fantasy, and is performed by an
all-student cast, directed by
Henry A. Wicke Jr. of the Drama
Department of SUNYAB. The

all-student cast includes Winnie
Watson as the mute, Jim Jimenez
as El Gallo, Barbara Damashek as
the girl, Jim Kirsch as the boy,
Lebert Puma as the girl’s father,
Jim Todkill as the boy’s father,
Lewis Rampino as the old actor,
and Jeffrey Lesser as the man
who dies.
Scenic designer is Jack MeGroder; Carol Bielecki is the
choreographer; and Marc Pomerantz is stage manager. Musical
director is by Noel Harrington,
with Karen Reed and Ronnie
Ragen at the piano and Carol
Wilson as the harpist.

Meeting Called
For Frosh Paper
By RICHARD MILLER

To voice news of the Freshman
Class Council, and the Class of
’69 as a whole. The Baby Bull, a
freshman class newspaper, is being formed; an organizational
meeting will be held Wednesday,
November 10, in the Student Senate office at 7:30 p m.
The Baby Bull has been a freshman class tradition in previous
years, and the present administration hopes to expand its previous coverage. Lary Henig, President of the Freshman Class, noted,
“There is a definite need for a
newspaper oriented toward the
underclassmen, as the Spectrum
often fails to devote sufficient
coverage to our activities."
The initial meeting will see the
assignment of stories, and other
journalistic responsibilities for

the first issue. Editorin-Chief,
Richard Miller, requests that all
interested freshmen, with or without experience, should attend. He
added that 'there will be equal
opportunity and work for all.”

In its abbreviated run “The
Fantasticks” drew wide acclaim.
It is advised that tickets be purchased early in order to avoid
disappointment. At the risk o£
being taken as a comedian and
a corny one at that, “The Fantastieks” is a fantastic show, and
is worthy of your attendance.

Volunteers Needed;
Peace Corps Test
Slated For Tuesday
By PATTI WARTLEY

The Peace Corps Placement
Test will be given at a special
session on campus Tuesday, November 9, at 7 p.m. in Room 233,
Norton.

The Corps'Itbeds 10,500 quali
fied volunteers to begin training
next summer. Volunteers with lib-

eral arts backgrounds, agriculture
skills, training in
physical education, health, home
economics, and over 300 other
skill categories are needed to fill
requests from 46 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
and engineering

In addition, the Peace Corps invites college juniors who will
graduate in June, 1967 to begin a
six to ten week training program
this coming summer. This Advanced Training Program will enable interested students to get
first-hand experience and instruction in areas which would aid
them in later work. Thus it would
be possible for a junior considering service in Latin America to
learn the native language while
attending a summer “school” in
one of the Latin American countries. Credits obtained in this
manner can be transferred to UB.

Paticipants in the training program will receive $75 per month,
in addition to room and board and
subsistance money. Government
loans up to $600 are guaranteed
available to students who might
have worked elsewhere for other
wages during the summer. The
advance training can be used as a
trial period in which to decide
about future service in the Peace
Corps.

Married couples are eligible for
the Peace Corps if both can serve
and if there are no dependent
children, A college degree is not
necessary for all projects.
A Peace Corps recruiting program team will visit UB campus

from February 20-26. Returned
volunteers will be available to ad
dress classes and other interested
groups. Additional aspects of the
team’s program will be announced
at a later date.
For further information about
the November 9 Placement Test
and the procedure for applyingplease contact Mr. I, Michael Di
Gerlando in Room 225 Norton,

�Friday, November 5, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Parking Ticket Appeals Now Heard Student Judiciary Thinks Dorm Procedures
By Student Judiciary Traffic Courts Contradict Constitution of Association
cision. The appeal can be granted, denied, or denied with fine
suspended, which means that the
student is guilty but has a permissible reason.

As of October, 1965, thrpe
Traffic Courts, formed by the
Student Judiciary, have been operating to hear appeals from
students who wish to dispute
parking tickets. Each Court is
in session one night a week in
Norton, and hears approximately
ten

A student may file for an appeal

a night.

cases

by

submitting a

petition

from the Bursar, which is reviewed by the Traffic Courts. One
week prior to his hearing, the
student is sent a notice, and his
petition is before the Court when
he appears. He is then questioned
concerning the circumstances of
his objection to the ticket. All
proceedings are confidential. If
the student’s appeal is denied,
he is able to refer it to the Student Judiciary.

The latest problem encountered by the Traffic Courts is the
confusion students have in distinguishinging which parking
meter goes with each parking
space. The Courts have recommended to the Grounds Committee that visible signs be put
up to specify the corresponding
meter. Many students have been
putting money into the wrong
parking meters and consequently have been receiving tickets.

The students for the
U. S. in Viet Nam will
hold its organizational
meeting today at 3 p.m. in
Norton, Room 329. Dr.
Zimmerman will talk on
“Viet Nam and Democracy.” All are welcome.

Each Traffic Court consists of

one Chief Justice and two Jus-

tices who try each case, and one
Secretary-Justice who records
the proceedings. The ticket-holder is questioned by the Justices
and subject to their majority de-

Among current issues being
dealt with by the Student Judiciary, an independent organ of
the Student Association, are
parking, housing, and jurisdiction. The organization wishes to
make known to students its
policies.

This year, student judiciary
wants to establish consistency in
dormitory policy. The board feels
that some dormitory procedures
are contradictory to the constitution of the Student Association
because they do not assure due
process. Students have the right
to defend themselves, a right to
council, and a right to confront
their witnesses against them.
“Student Judiciary would like
students’ suggestions about the
parking problem on campus,"
stated Rick Jaross, head of the
Student Judiciary. The organization has the jurisdiction and
power to hear appeals of parking violations. For this purpose
the judiciary has set up three
parking courts.

students who feel that any provision of the Student Association
Constitution needs amending to
propose the change, to the Student Senate. An amendment may
be proposed by petition of at least
10% of day-time students.

hearing of the cases than the
state would. The board feels that
its procedure is particularly effeclive in a university community,
The approach of the board is rehabilitative rather than punitive,
Student Judiciary urges those

The Judiciary interprets its
role in parking in a very strict
manner, stated Mr. Jaross. He
said that the judiciary feels it
must uphold the existing rules
and regulations of the university.
Changing the rules and regulations is not part of its functions.

The
ENGAGE-ABLES
go for
Kee

By ALICE EDELMAN

Ice’

Another issue with which Student Judiciary is concerned is
jurisdiction. Presently Student
Judiciary feels that only cases
that are relevant to student
status at the university, that is,
thbse involving expulsion and
suspension, should be heard.
However, the present opinion of
the judiciary is that its duty is
to hear all cases involving off
campus violations because it feels
that the student judiciary will
provide a more fair and judicious

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HUAC —THE GRAND ILLUSION
.The silence that has accompanied the current investigation of the Klan seems to be enforced by a kind of
“liberal opportunism” which is little short of nauseating.
Where are all the critics of the Committee who attacked
the Committee as unconstitutional?
The House Committee on Un-American Activities
is still an illegally constituted body, using immoral
methods of smear and sensational exposure. The Ku Klux
Klan is a blight on the nation’s conscience—a native hybrid of fascism which grows from the same diseased soil
as the Committee itself. The fact that these two disgusting institutions of American life are now supposedly at
swords points is no reason to quit the field of principle
and remain silent in hopes that “something good may
come of it.”
Abolish the House Committee; prosecute the Klan
when they break the law; conduct the political life of the
nation on principles of justice and equality, and not on
the headlines and the hope that it won’t matter if we
abandon the principles of legal protection “just this
once”.
FSA —ANOTHER ILLUSION
It was possible to hope that when the results of the
State investigation into FSA policy were blazoned accross the front pages of our local press, and when the
president of the State University came to Buffalo and
promised publicly that student fees and campus prices
would be lowered, that some greater reaction could have
come from Dr. Westley Rowland, Dr. Claude Puffer, and
President C. C. Furnas than: “We’ll consider it.”
This is, however, exactly what happened. The Student Senate and its president, Clinton Deveaux, are in
the painfully slow process of drawing up proposals and
requesting that specific grievances be redressed. They
will produce proposals which will hopefully be put into
effect by next semester, but if the administrative majority on the FSA mistakes the careful slowness of the
Student Senate for incompetence or unconcern, then
there will be a confrontation on this campus that will
rival Berkeley. Concede that students and faculty have
the right to a say in how their own money is used—because the stink raised by the Levitt report will not “blow
over”!
ILLUSIONS

—

RIGHT AND LEFT

The recent spate of intense interest in our nation’s
politics appears to be dying down, and the campus is
returning to its usual mood of hostile unconcern. The
fury of the attacks, sparked in reaction to the International Days of Protest against the War in Viet Nam,
showed that the supposed sophistication of America
today, politics in this country are still governed by fantasies and illusions that are as archaic as they are dangerous.

The left cries for “solidarity” and the right for
“purification”. Specters of “conspiracy’’ are invoked and
then exorcised with almost religious ferver. Men are dying every for illusory “freedom”. Human beings mutilate
and torture each other in the name of “justice” and
“equality”.
The power of these illusions is almost absolute; and
as the power of the illusions grow, real things become
illusory. “Responsibility” becomes a flickering shadow,
and “morality” disappears in a puff of smoke.
Any man who kills or mutilates another man is responsible for his act, whether he is a common criminal,
or an automaton following orders.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the Stale University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
Editor-in-chief
Managing Editor
News Editor

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

SUSAN

GREENE

Continuity Editor
Manager

RONNIE BROMBERG

Feature Editor
Sportt
Layout
Copy

Editor
Editor

Editor

A

Friday, November 5, 196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

JOHN STINY

RICHARD DRANDOFf
STEVE SCHUELEIN
SHARON

HONIG

LAUREN

JACOBS

Circulation Manager
Faculty Advisor

Financial Advisor

Subscription

S3.00

Represented

for national

Madison

per

RATING

year,

circulation

advertising

Advertising Service Inc.,
Ave., New York, N. Y.

D. VOLPE

EDWARD JOSECIYN
DIANE

LEWIS

IRENE

WILLET

DALLAS

GARBER

RUSSELL GOLDBERG

Leprechaun

Socond Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.

National

RAYMOND

Photography Editor

FIRST CLASS HONOR

10,000.

MARCIA ORSZULAK

by
420

majority instead of

THERMOPYLAE

cates of

Here follows the speech of an
unknown student to his unrepresentative student government
which had lent a deaf ear to his
and his fellow students enthusiastic support of a certain ill-fated

accurately reflect

petition.

campus.”

“Fellow Students: I rise to address you tonight on a topic
which I consider vital to intellectual freedom on this campus. The
Student Senate should bring to
its attention at this special meeting a situation which endangers
our most basic privileges as
human beings. I rise to defend
for every person on this campus
the right to PINK GRASS.
Last week a group of students
started a petition to support that
ancient American tradition
GREEN GRASS, I quote from that
petition”
Whereas this great country was
upon green grass; and
Whereas the pioneers of our great
country even built their noble
houses from the sod of green
grass; and Whereas, the vast majority of setudents favor green
grass as opposed to pink grass;

built

and Whereas, the advocates

of

pink grass are so vocal that everyone assumes that they are in the

The

us the advo-

green grass who more

student opinion; Therefore, be it resolved:
That this petition be submitted
to the foreman of the grounds
crew so that he will eliminate all
traces of pink grass from the UB
I sympathize greatly with the
students who initiated this petition and can understand the dismay with which they view a few
“pinkies” as representing the
vast majority of "greenies.” Being
a reasonable man, however, I feel
it only just to point out that the
complete destruction of pink grass
is a highly arbitrary action. I defend to the death the right of pink
grass to exist. On the other hand,
it is my duty to point out to the
advocates of pink grass an obvious situation which they habitually choose to ignore, that is,
that while green grass grows all
pink grass flourover campus
ishes in only two lonely loca-

—

What with people running about
yelling about all the outrageous
profits that certain of our campus
organizations are making it is not
surprising that one should get
curious as to specific prices. At
least that is my only excuse for
the following assortment of figures of various sorts.
This whole farce developed
when I had to spend 15c for a
cup of hot chocolate in the Ratkiller. Having nothing to do last
week except do atrociously on
my first German exam of the
week (DOWN WITH UMLAUTS)
I felt I should delve more deeply
into just what was happening. My
first move was to stealthily creep
into the aforementioned Ratskiller and creep off with two hot
drink cups and two cold drink
cups. Exhaustive research on
these demonstrated that a white
hot-type drink cup holds seven
ounces when quivering on the
brim. A cold drink cup in the
sai. e state of completeness holds
nine ounces. We will give up on
the obvious ramifications of “and
when was the last time you saw
one of those cups FULL?” and
henceforth accept seven and nine.
Now then, milk. I am making
a further assumption that we are
going to make our hot chocolate
with milk, this may be rash indeed. One can buy milk in gallon quantities for 89c; there are
32 fluid ounces in a quart, it says
here, and four quarts in a gallon.
This, oh best beloved, means that
we are buying 128 fluid ounces
of milk for 89c. This comes out
to about .7c a fluid ounce or for
a 9-oz. cup 6.3c. I do not pretend
to know if 3.7c is a reasonable
figure considering overhead, cost
of cups, etc., although I would be
interested in knowing just what
the overhead is for the food service. Does the equipment belong
to the school or to the leaser, and
who pays for power, gas, water
and such misc.?

Note the .7c a fluid ounce for
milk. Now, I can buy four pounds
of a chocolate type stuff for
$1.59. Be a sport and call it $1.60.
It is a hell of a lot easier to figure the math. A one-half pound
box makes two quarts. 1 thereby
prediet i we can make 16 quarts

Great Compromise! In this compromise we shall not dilute 'anyone’s rights, for freedom can not
be compromised. We shall however take into account the fact
that the petition has drawn enormous support and we shall consider the possibility of pink grass,
by occupying the Spectrum office
may be violating the rights of
green grass. Here are the terms
of the compromise. 1. That the
foreman of the grounds crew
allow pink grass to grow whereever it is able to take root. 2. That
pink grass be allowed to remain
on the first floor of Norton in
front of the Master Calendar. 3.
Most importantly, that green grass
replace the pink grass in the
Spectrum office.

tions.

To purge pink grass from the
Spectrum office selectively in
no way endangers the right to
pink grass. I defend the right of
pink grass to exist, and to spread
if it is able. So long as that office is responsible for a publication bearing the inscription “The

These two places are the third
floor of Norton in the Spectrum
office and on the first floor of
Norton in front of the Master
Calendar.
I propose a
In this light

I shall deny the existence of any
“right” of pink grass to unquestioned oligarchy therein. And my
denial is complete until there is
more pink grass than green.”

—

—

grump

a thrillTHIS WEEK ONLY
ing expose of the HOT DRINK
RACKET.

-

.

.

with a four-pound box. That is
512 fluid ounces. Which means
that the cost per fluid ounce of
the chocolate drink gookum is
just about ,31c. Notice please that
we here are dealing with tenths
of a cent, not in pennies. Go
back a ways and take that ,7c a
fluid ounce for milk and add it
to that .31. I get a figure of 1.01c
a fluid ounce. It seems thereby
that I am paying 15c for a cup,
if completely full, of hot chocolate, the contents of which comes
very close to being worth 7c. Hot
drink cups are only 7-oz. remember. That must be a very damned
large overhead in the hot chocolate business.
Brace yourselves coffee drinkers, it is your turn. If you can get
across the intersection of Main

and Kenmore and into the University Plaza without being chased
up a telephone pole by a Cobra,
Mustang, Sting Ray, or Baccaruda
which
—no I mean a Barracuda
will take excellent wind and much
determination, you will find that
you can buy three pounds of coffee for $2.20. According to the
cook book I bought my young
lady, you should place one pound
of coffee in from 5 to 7 quarts
of water when you are making it
in bulk. So we will take a nice
middle figure of six quarts. Three
pounds of coffee makes around
eighteen quarts of coffee, or 526
fluid ounces of coffee. More or
less standard rounding gives up a
cost per cup of coffee of 41c
times 7 or 2.87c or 2.9c. That subtracted from the dime you clunk
down leaves an interesting difference of 7.1c. I have heard of people who went heavy on the cream
and sugar but unless they are
—

using frightfully expensive water

down there in the bowels of Norton Union it seems to me these
figures indicate a little private
enterprise.
Now then. Might we also discus the existence of such things
as bulk discounts on cups, milk,
coffee and chocolate gookum?
And whether or not they use real
milk or dried milk-gookum when
they make the hot chocolate. It
seems to me that with a school of
Business Administration on campus and a chronic shortage of student part time jobs that it would
not be totally beyond the realm
of reason to suggest that there
be a student authority to run the

official student newspaper

.

.

by STEESE
food service with a full time staff
of experienced personnel, say
four or five, to supervise and
direct. And if it should be that
we can not find enough people
willing to take part in such a program on our own campus, why not
offer the food facilities to ECTI?
It would fit very well into some
of their food service programs I
would think and the profits would
be going into the pockets of those
who can use it to pay for an education rather than speculate in
land.
Speaking of land speculations,
I would speculate its a gonna be
another month before anybody
does anything with bulldozeralley. Scenic as hell on the HayesHochstetter read ends. Maybe we
should start the collection for
grass seed now, rather than waiting until next spring.

If anybody besides me has a
large size thing for waves and
spray and water in motion type
things we do have a spot here in
town where things do happen once
in a while. Now brace yourself. I
hate to offer an ethnic reason for
going to Front Park but that is
the position I find myself in. Last
Sunday was tremendous. Recommend it especially on days with
high winds, and when small craft
warnings are announced. It isn’t
the California coast but it is
foamy, and sprayey and generally a nice place if you like wind
and water in combination.
I have been asked to make
another plug. For which I, as
usual, will receive nothing. I have
been asked to plug one of the

plundering university

mercena-

ries. But with cause, 1 think. To
wit, the University Bookstore Record Department. Those records
are priced more than competitively with a number of the shops
and even chain stores around
town. And while there are gaps
in the folk and classical sections
here and there there are also
things which are very hard to
find elsewhere. Enough, I am
going to skulk off and see what
else I can play boy crusading reporter about. Maybe an effort
should be made to find out what
really happens on top of Goodyear Hall
or is this really a
—

dry campus?

�Friday, November 5, 1965

gucinski.

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

.

oCetterA

.

THE STRANGE BIRD OF BOB MILCH

the (Editor

to

EDITOR’S

NOTE Since there still appears to be some confusion about the policy governing the “Letters
to the Editor,” here are the three criteria which are applied to this section of the paper. (1) All letters
must be signed; names will be withheld upon request, but they must be affixed to the original copy.
(2) Letters should be limited to one typewritten sheet; we will consider
longer letters, but we reserve
the prerogative to edit them to sire. (3) We will not print letters which violate the libel and pornography laws.

Freedom of Expression
Entails Certain Responsibilities

being, not historically or logically sound, and not
in the interest of the "general welfare" of all the
people, we hereby resign our position, as President and member at large of the Executive Committee of UB Republican Club and from the club
as a whole.

TO THE EDITOR:

The most important aspects of our democratic
society are our basic freedoms: the freedoms of
speech, press, assembly, etc. As citizens of the
United States we are guaranteed these freedoms
in our Constitution, But the acceptance of such
freedoms also entails an acceptance of the responsibilities inherent within those freedoms. Every
freedom carries with it the responsibility of using
it wisely, prudently, and with discretion. It these
responsibilities are not accepted and carried out,
then the whole basis for granting such freedoms
is threatened.

One of the most important freedoms granted
to students of a university in this country is free-

dom of the press. Student editors are free to utilize
their editorials for the expression of their own
ideas, and their right to do so is protected by both
academic freedom and freedom of the press. The
acceptance of the protection of these freedoms,
however, entails the responsibility of not abusing
them.
This means that while the Editor is entitled to
express his views, whether they be acceptable to
a majority of the student body or not, he does not
have the right to overstep the bounds of pro-

priety by urging his reader to elude his duty to

Cacotopia and Eutopia
By STEVE CRAFTS

Within the next few months
there will recur in the United
Stdtes what has become a ritual
of extirpation. This time the victim Of the purge will be the student movement. The movement
trilljt be destroyed because it is
subversive—not in the political
sense, but morally.
For deep within the American
Unconscious is the fear that the
United States is a fraud. No one
has yet explained away the fact
that this country’s economic
growth was dependent upon slavery in the South and class exploitation in the North; that that
clause in the Declaration of Independence, “all men are created equal,” never applied to
Negroes; or that we are one of
the few countries in history to
attempt the genocide of an indigenous population. No, these
tacts of history cannot be reconciled with the myth that America is what it says it is, the Land
of the Free and the Home of
the Brave.
We are moral cowards, for we
have repressed our original sin
as a nation; we have not faced
the possibility that we are perhaps, after all, no better than
anyone else. But the feelings of
guilt remain. No matter how
hard we try, the guilt will not be
expunged.

That is why we must have another McCarthy era. The student
movement wants, once and for all,
to examine the soul of its country,
to see whether or not beneath the
tinsel of our civilization there
is anything worth saving. The
students are only asking that we
look &gt;at ourselves.
And this is exactly what cannot be permitted, for all the old
feats of fraudulence and hatred
of guilt would have to be faced.
They would be placed before the
American people who would see
what has become of the mythic
American Dream.
The students will be called
Communists but never will the
moral issues they have raised be
considered. Many will have their
lives and careers ruined because
the United States cannot allow
the exposure of its moral and
spiritual depravity.
There is no country in

world

that hates

the
dissent more

than the United States. It made
the mistake of allowing it in
the first place. The United States
cannot now foreclose on dissent,
because it is too deeply imbedded
in the American Myth. But when
things get too close for the American Unconscious, when the students want to talk about our collective and original sin, dissent
can no longer be tolerated. The
purge begins—the ritual of extirpation.

Study in Europe
College students interested in
study in Europe during the winter, spring, and summer terms
are invited to apply now for
Michigan State University programs beginning in 1966.

Offered by the American Language and Education Center
(AMLEC) of MSU’s Continuing
Education Service, informal and
economical programs are scheduled for Paris, France; Lausanne
and Neuchatel, Switzerland; Florence, Italy, Cologne, Germany and
Madrid, Spain.

Barcelona and

Winter programs start January
10, and the spring programs, April
18, with the exception of the
Madrid course which begins April
11.
The programs will feature
classes in conversation, composition, grammar and reading. Participants will also visit points of
historic and geographic interest,
which become the topics of lectures and seminar-type discussions covering cultural, political,
social and economic institutions
of the country in which they are
residing,

'

To promote the use of the foreign language and to provide
them with opportunities to better
understand their European contemporaries, American partici-

pants will attend classes and share
living accommodations with students from many countries, in-

cluding Germany, France, Italy,
Spain, Denmark, Sweden, Switz-

erland and Great Britain.
A descriptive brochure and application forms can be obtained
by contacting AMLEC, 58-A Kellog Center, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich,

his country.

Despite the editorial printed in our newspaper on October 22, the right to dissent does not
carry with it the right to evade the law, or the
right to encourage others to do so. If the Editor

is going to utilize the protection that the freedoms
of our nation offer him, then he must respect and
carry out the responsibilities inherent within them,
and keep his editorials within the bounds of
wisdom, prudence, and discretion
Robert Donald Eddy

“Non-Intellectual” World Hit;
Called “Little,” “Egotistical
TO THE EDITOR

When I read Miss Mandelcorn's letter last week,
I was very upset, not only because I did not agree
with her but also because I know many other people
have the same view as she. I found it impossible
to accept her statements and her “non intellectual”
attitude toward the discussion of current affairs
in the Spectrum.
First of all, she refers to the Spectrum as the
official war grounds for various political groups
in the school. I do not see how anyone could
objectively say such a thing. Certainly the paper
devotes many of its columns to politics, however
no one can deny that it is open to any comment
relevant to the student and school. The fact that
these political columns, all of which happen to
be personal opinion, discuss YAF, SDS and SODA
does not mean that the paper itself is entirely
political.

Secondly, Miss Mandelcorn attacks the Spectrum

because its “small group of intellectuals” express
their opinions on certain issues which she considers “interesting" but not pertinent to herself
as a student. In other words, she objects to those
people who care enough to consider other affairs
worth talking about, besides their own. On the
first page she wants the paper to print a social
calendar —something which definitely does not interest the majority of 20,000 students.
I feel that this position of “non-intellectual” is
absurd and selfish because it allows one only to
think about one’s own little, egotistical world. Stu
dents who choose to live in this small world and
who feel that the fate of the Vietnamese peoples'
lives and the fate of the world as a whole a re not
much more important than football or The Fantasticks, should retire from life.

Prudence Boczarski

Republican Club Splits;

Liberal Officer, Member

Resign

TO THE EDITOR

Whereas many members of the Republican Club
of UB as well as the National Republican Organization, have stated certain positions on current
issues and have created a philosophical base not
conducive, in our opinion, to the country’s well-

When and if the Republican Club and Republican Parly face up to the fact that there are thirty-

five . million Americans in poverty that must be

given the tools to help themselves, that our government of, by, and for the people does have a
stake in the well being of the people, that the
American people are not the "cops of the World"
and that American ethnocentric efforts to force
our way of life on other people of other lands
and of other cultures must change to genuine
efforts to help them through social and economic
reform, as well as military efforts, that freedom
cannot and must not be sacrificed merely to maintain “order," then we will reconsider our resignation now submitted.
Jeffrey Lewis
Carl Levine

Student Reacts to
Captain’s Viet Comments
TO

THE EDITOR

1 was interested in Captain Saranto's reply to
a column entitled The Murder of Gonzego. The
reply, I am afraid, failed to convince me that his
position was correct because, instead of presenting facts of his own in rebuttal he merely affirmed
that he was right and then went on to question
Mr. Mcdwid's intelligence, his patriotism and his
general hygiene.
Captain Taranto writes that we are in Vietnam
to preserve freedom, yet there is no freedom in
South Vietnam to preserve. There has never been
a free and honest election in South Vietnam and
the suppression of civil and human rights has been
a constant feature of the succession of dictatorships
(most of them military) that controlled Saigon and
existed only as long as they had the support of
the United States. In the last few years, the
Vietnamese people have been the victims of massive American terror (bombings, napalm, gas, defoliation as well as the conventional weapons used
by our forces.)
Captain Taranto simplifies

the complex situ-

ation there by suggesting that only two alternatives are possible: to continue our present course
there or to withdraw immediately. The possibility
of a negotiated settlement with the Viet Cong, it
would seem, escapes him.

“Burning draft cards is the easy way out and
requires little backbone." This is blatantly false

since conviction offers the certainty of up to five
years in jail and $10,000 in fines while the possibility of any draftee going to Vietnam is considerably smaller. It would seem to me that the
burning of one's draft card as a protest against an
immoral war and the decision to go to jail rather
than to participate in that war is an act of moral
courage rather than of cowardice.

“A few students living a comfortable life in the
U. S. are doing all the complaining." It is generally the students who take the responsibility
of being citizens and human beings seriously; it
is those students who go down South and who
are beaten and shot while trying to register Negroes
or those students who work in Northern slums
and who know the meaning of poverty by
the
horrible effects that it has on their fellow human
beings who oppose the war.

The charge that Mr Medwid cannot talk
about
Vietnam becau.se he was never there
reminds me
of the argument that one cannot talk about
insanity without being a lunatic.
"Let us see American
students stand up and
speak proudly of the United States and be
we
live
in a nation strong enough thank
ful that

nations like Vietnam.” We
be proud of our country

to heln

students would like to

and its revolutionary
We would like to support
Jefferson
when he said Governments are
instituted among
men deriving the,r just powers from
the consent
of the governed." As a
student I fail to see how
the destruction of the freedom of the
people to control the economic
resources
area ' 0
Vietnam as a laboratory for new
methods of warfare and to
use Vietnam as an
cusc for a possible "preventive”
heritage

China by our
81 " 6

proud.

own military-industrial

war

e*

against

complfx

in

antlC°mmunism ought to make
us

John Von Langen

�Friday, November 5,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

1965

Education and Cultural Affairs
Final Fenton Lecturers Speak; Husband, Wife Team Exhibit Art Budapest Quartet
range from
her
Government of Science Topic
blossoms and Lotus flowers Presents Concert
abstracts of her present works.
Toulmin Justifies

Kistiakowski

Expense

Last Speaker

Professor Stephen Toulmin, lecturer, author and Professor of
Philosophy, spoke Thursday, October 28, on “The Govcrment of
Science.” Professor Toulmin was
the fourth speaker in the James
Fenton Lecture Series being held
on UB campus for the public.

The fifth and final lecture
of UB’s annual Fenton Lecture
Series was presented November
4 by Dr. George B, Kistiakowsky,
Abbott and James Lawrence professor of chemistry at Harvard

Professor Toulmin was concerned with how scientists can
justify their requests for government support. Scientists have
taken two views: either that “as
a scientist, people must support
my work as culture;” or that
“scientific research must be regarded as an overhead on technological

advancement."

—

Science is a tertiary activity by
which prosperity and employment can be maintained, Dr. Toulmin pointed out. Among intelligent youth there is a strain of
austerity which is connected with
economic growth and political
views. Therefore, the true justification must be technological such
as medical research.

Nehru Is Topic
Of Essay Contest
The Education Department of
the Indian Embassy is sponsoring
an essay contest to stimulate the
interest of Americans in modern
India. The topic is "NEHRU AS
A WORLD CITIZEN
Competition is open to American students
between the ages of 18-24. Typewritten essays, which should be
between 2,000 and 2,500 words
(the actual count of words to be
indicated on the top right hand
corner of the first page of the
essay), must be accompanied by a
letter giving the student's name,
nationality, date of birth, school,
and major course of study. The
contest closes on Wednesday, December 15, 1965. Entries should
be sent to the Education Department, Embassy of India, 2107
Massachusetts, N. W., Washington 8, D. C. The winner of the
contest will be awarded a free
one-week trip to India.
”

Hans Brun, her

President for science and technology and a member of the
President’s Science Advisory
Committee. He is the recipient
of the Medal of Merit, the Nicholas Medal, the British Medal for
Service in the Cause of Freedom,
the Priestly Award, the Willard
Gibbs Medal, the Medal of
Freedom, the Ledlie Prize of
Harvard University and the Parsons Award of the American
Chemical Society.

Fertility

Conference

The largest conference on fertility control ever to be held at
any university in the United
States will take place November
12 and 13 under the sponsorship
of the School of Medicine and
Department of Graduate Medical
Education.

The program, which is the first
in an annual scries, has been
planned to present all advanced
medical concepts and practices
along with corollary sociological
views and recent world developments.

Lectures to be held the first
day of the program will concern
such topics as the need for information on fertility control, the
physiology of reproduction, intrauterine contraception, population growth and family planning.
November 13, the program will
include lectures on various aspects of abortion, such as a cause
of maternal mortality, Danish
legal aspects, and alternatives to
abortion.
Following discussions of sterilization for fertility control, and
the rhythm method, the Reverend
Carl F. Burke of the Council of
Churches will moderate a panel
discussion by three clergymen of
various denominations concerning “Religion and Birth Control.”

The panel discussion will be
followed by a lecture entitled “Future Possibilities in Fertility Control,” and a summarization of the
conference.

Applications are available for Activities Drive
today and all next week in
the Union Board Office
and tlie candy counter.

Chinese

Swiss-born hus-

band, is the nephew of the artist
Balz Camenzind from Sempach,
Switzerland. Mr. Brun is well
known for his abstract art and
use of color. Most of his- work is
in oil, but there also are some
watercolors in the present collection.

University.
Dr. Kistiakowsky discussed the
series' them, “The Government
of Science: Scientific Choice and
Science Policy in a Free World,”
in the Norton Union Conference
Theater at 8:30 p.m.
Dr. Kistiakowsky was formerly the special assistant to the

The Fenton Lecture Series,
which is open to the public without charge, is held annually by
the University in conjunction
with the Fenton Foundation,
which was founded in 1922 to
commemorate the “name and
public service" of James Fenton,
Buffalo businessman.
The second, more poltical view
can't be based on the cultural doctrine. “One must view the role
of pure science on the national
or political level as a technological roulette where the speculator wins big prizes
if you
don’t speculate, you don’t accumulate,” commented Professor
Toulmin, meaning that in pure
science, the economic return of
research cannot be foreseen. If
the economic payoff from scientific research is to be the basis
for justification of government
support, then the decision of how
it is to be divided up becomes a
political economic issue.

paintings
apple
to

The exhibition and sale is sponsored by the Student Union Board
Exhibits Committee of Norton
Hall.

JOHANN BRUN
An exhibit of oils and water
colors by Johann Brun and Lifang,
a husband-wife team, is currently
being held in the Center Lounge
of Norton Union. The show, which
will continue until November 12,
is open to the public from 9 a.m.t

Major.

Tickets to these concerts are
being sold at the Baird Hall Reservations Office.

11 p.m. weekdays and Saturday,
and from 1-11 p.m. Sunday.

Modern
Music

Lifang, (Li is the maiden and
professional name of Mrs. Brun),
is a native of Formosa. She met
her husband while studying at
the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris
under a French government scholarship. A calligrapher and artist,

AND LIFANG

Adler Speaks on Herbert Hoover
By SHARON

SHULMAN

Dr, Selig Adler of the History
department, spoke Monday night
on the “Depression and the Or-

deal of Herbert Hoover.” The lecture consisted of the material in
the corresponding chapter of his

book, which deals with the United
States in the years between the
two world wars.

Dr. Adler felt that Hoover’s

main dilemma was his failure to
recognize the impact that our domestic affairs had on global economy and peace. However, the economic thrust that created the sit-

uation. including such measures
as export promotion and tariff increases, seemed to build a form
of American economic nationalism, which put a limit on U.S.
foresight and bypassed the potential of international diplomacy.
U.S. isolationism was a leading
factor in the events of the 1930’s
and ’40's. Where Secretary of
State Henry Stimson advocated
U.S. intervention in foreign affairs, Hoover wanted restraint.
After World War I, Hoover and
others backed the latter policy
and the following situations arose:
(1) Prolonged distress was brought
on by an economic dip due partly
to unbridled American economic
loans abroad. When money tightened, the whole world suffered.
(2) The literature of Hemingway
and others, and the ideas of Senators such as George Norris,
blamed the foreigners for the situation, and exaggerated nationalism and isolationism. (3) Trade
barriers arose, due to such measures as the Hawley-Smoot Tariff,
despite warnings of European retaliation. Designed to reduce foreign competition, the bill nearly
eliminated foreign trade. (4) To
meet the crisis, European nations
withdrew their gold supplies from
the United States. (5) The Allies
repudiated a total of $12 billion
in war debts.

The international situation was

aggravated by the rising and con-

The resident Budapest String
guest artist Walter
Trampler, viola, will present concerts on November 8, 10, and 12
at 8:30 in Baird Hall. The Quartet is composed of Joseph Roisman and Alexander Schneider,
violins, Mischa Schneider, cello,
and Boris Kroyt, viola.
Their November 8 concert will
include Mozart’s Viola Quintat in
B-flat Major, Beethoven’s Viola
Quintet in C-Major and Mozart’s
Viola Quintet in G-Minor. The
November 10 program will feature the Viola Quintet in C-Major
and Viola Quintet in D-Major of
Mozart, and the Viola Quintat in
E-flat Major of Dvorak. The final
concert of this series, on Friday,
November 12, will offer Mozart’s
Viola Quintet in C-Major, Brahms’
Viola Quintet in G-Major, and
Mozart’s Viola Quintet in E-flat

Quartet with

flicting factions

of Communism
and Fascism. Militarism became a
threat to world peace. Where, during the Depression years, democratic nations wanted international self-sufficiency, many countries
turned to Fascism, a system with
goals incomprehensible to the
democratic mind. If this Fascist
threat had been recognized and
opposed in time, the principle of
collective security could have
been upheld. In other words, Dr.
Adler feels that Hitler and Mussolini need not have been inevitable. The American reaction was
a simple impulse to isolationism.
Yet Dr. Adler points out that
it was easy to be an isolationist in
the early 1930’s when no real
threat was evident in Europe.
Even Franklin Roosevelt seemed
to lean that way in 1932, but later
realized the need for U.S. intervention. In short, Hoover’s dilemma was his lack of foresight,
in not using international diplomacy as a means of warding off
a tragic world-wide situation.
Mr. Barone, of the History Club,
and Dr. Horton, Chairman of the

History Department, spoke briefly and directed questions from
the floor to Dr. Adler. The meeting of the History Club then adjourned until the November 18
meeting.

The next discussion in
“Technology vs. Humanities,”. sponsored by the
Public Relations Committee of Union Board, will
take place Thursday, Nov.
10

3:30 p.m. in the
Dorothy Haas Lounge. Dr.
Scholedes and Dr. Nichols
will speak on “Ethics in
Science.” Everyone is invited to attend.
at

Members of the Society for the
Creative and Performing Arts
will present a concert in their
“Evenings for New Music’ series
at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
auditorium, on Sunday, Nov. 7
at 8:30 p.m. Admission is free.
Vinko Globokar’s Plan (1965—
American premiere) for flute,
oboe, clarinet, trombone and percussion; three of Elliot Carter’s
Six Pieces for Kettledrums (1950),
featuring Jan Williams; the
American premier of Bo Nilsson’s
Zwanzig Gruppen; and Michael
von Biel’s First Quartet (1963)
and Quartet with Accompaniment
(1965), are the modern works featured. Richard Dufallo, assistant
conductor of the Buffalo Philharmonic, will conduct the Creative Associates in Schoenberg’s
atonal, now historical work, Pierrot Lunaire (1912).

The Creative Associates, supported in their studies and performances of new music by a
private Rockefeller Foundation
grant, have been stationed at this

university for the two years since
their inception. After this concert, they will depart Buffalo for
a concert of modern music, on
November 9, in New York City.

Special Programs In
Norton Music Room
The Music Room, 259 Norton,
has set aside Tuesday evenings
for programmed music. On each
Tuesday during the month of November, from 7-10 p.m,, music
of one particular category will be

played.

On Tuesday, November 2, the
subject was classical music. This
coming Tuesday, November 9, the
topic is folk music. The following
records are scheduled to be
played: Bob Dylan, The Times
They Are A-Changin'; Phil Ochs,
All the News That's Fit to Sing;
Buffy Sainte-Marie, It's My Way;
Dave Van Ronk, Just Dave Van
Ronk; Peter, Paul and Mary, Sec
What Tomorrow Brings.

On Tuesday, November 16,
readings from Shakespeare and
Milton will be played. Jazz and
popular music comprise the categories for the two remaining
Tuesdays in November,

�Friday, November 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

College Fellowships

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State

University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes Hall,

attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00
p.m. the Friday prior to the week
,

of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for
publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Attention! All 1966 Degree Candidates: All graduate and undergraduate students planning to
graduate in February 1966, who
have not previously done so, must
notify the Office of Admissions
and Records, 201 Hayes Hall, no

later than MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1965.
All those planning to graduate in May 1966 must so notify
the Office of Admissions and Records no later than Monday, February 14, 1966, Failure to comply
with this regulation will result in
postponement of graduation until
the next regular commencement.
Pre-Registration for Juniors and
Seniors: All Juniors and Seniors
in the College of Arts and Sciences, including those on probation, may pick up the necessary
Pre-registration materials for the
Spring of 1966 in front of the Bursars Office in Hayes Hall between
9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., Thursday,
November 11, Friday, November
12 and Monday, November 15.
Students who do not wish to
pre-register or do not obtain their
registration materials on the
above designated days will have
to register January 19, the regular registration day.
University College Students

—

the remaining dates for pre-registration for next semester are:
Nov. 8 through Nov. 12—K, G
Nov. 15 through Nov. 19—R, P,
Nov. 22 through Nov. 24—C, Y
Nov. 29 through Dec. 3—S
Dec. 6 through Dec. 10—L, T,
A, E
Dec. 13 through Dec. 17—D, I,
J, O, Q, U, V, X Z

WEEKLY CALENDAR

November 5
Biology Seminar—featuring Dr.
F. Burnham of the Department of Chemistry, Cornell University, whose topic will be “Metal
Ions in Tetrapyrroles of Biological Interest.” Open to the Public,
134 Health Sciences Building,
Bruce

4:00 p.m.
November 10
David P. Hackett Memorial Lecture—co-sponsored by the Society
of Sigma Xi, features Dr. Kenneth V. Thimann, Professor of
Biology and Provost, University
of California at Santa Cruz. The
topic is “Nucleic Acid and Protein
Synthesis in Relation to Growth
of Plant Tissues: Developments
from Hackett’s Researches.” Open
to the Public, Capen Hall, Room
G-22, 8:00 p.m.

November 12

Seminar in Engineering Sciences—sponsored by the Division
of Interdisciplinary Studies and
Research, features Dr. Eric F.
Lype, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Stevens Institute of
Technology. The topic is "The Macroscopic Foundations of NonThermodynamics.”
Equilibrium
Open to the Public, 104 Parker
Engineering at 4:00 p.m, A Social
Hour precedes in 128 Parker Engineering at 3:00 p.m.

PLACEMENT

ANNOUNCEMENTS
, Please contact
the University
Schoellkopf

Placement

Service,

Hall, telephone 831-3311, for additional information on the following announcements and interviews:

'

The Connecticut Department of
Welfare has announced November 10, 1965 as the final application date for the Child Welfare

or Public
Assistance
Examinations,

Provide Student Aid
Service

Education Majors registration
for the National Teacher Examinations to be given on December
11, 1965 closes November 12. Ap
plications are available at the
University Placement Service.
The Buffalo Board of Education
has extended the period for filing
an application for the Buffalo
Teaching Examinations until November 15, 1965. The completed
application forms should be on
file in the Office of the Division
of Personnel, 720 City Hall, Buffalo, New York 14202, or postmarked not later than midnight,
November 15. The Common Form
of the National Teacher Examinations is also used by the Buffalo schools.
References required for admission to various graduate schools
may be sent to the Educational
Placement Division which will
distribute them to the appropriate graduate schools. The original
references are retained in the
candidate’s permanent credential
file for utilization upon completion of the advanced degree.
—

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
November 8

Imperial

Chemical Industries,

Ltd.
U. S. Navy Audit Office
November 8, 9, 10
New York Telephone Western
Electric Company, Inc.
American Telephone and Tele-

graph Company
New York Telephone and Bell
of Pennsylvania
November 9
New York Department of Audit

and Control
November 10
Unilever Research Laboratory
November

PAGE SEVEN

11

Atlantic Refining Company, Inc.
General Electric Company
Sachem Public Schools, Holtsville, Long Island
November 12
Allied Chemical Corporation
Acme Electric Corporation
Company
Arthur Andersen
American Institute for Foreign
Trade
&amp;

By CHARLES CUMMINGS
Students who wish to apply
for a New York Regents Fellow
ship must do so before December

Those students seeking an
award from the National Science
Foundation have to submit applications by the second week in

I. H. o. P.
YOUR I.D. CARD IS WORTH 10% AT

Shoe Store

summer.

3097 BAILEY AVENUE
BUFFALO, NEW YORK

New York State, always a rich

source of fellowship awards, is

offering 640 such endowments for
1966-67. They include:
1. 90 Herbert H. Lehman Fellowships in the Social Sciences,
Public and International Affairs
—for masters or doctoral study.
2. 250 Regents College Teaching Fellowships for beginning
Graduate Study
for students
completing the bachelor’s degree.
3. 100 Regents College Teaching Fellowships for Advanced
Graduate Study
for students
who have completed at least one
year of graduate study.
4. 100 Regents Fellowships for
Doctoral Study in Arts, Science,
or Engineering
for beginning
or advanced doctoral students.
5.) 100 Regents Fellowships for
Part-time Doctoral Study in Science and Engineering
for be—

—

—

—

ginning or

advanced

doctoral students.

part-time

The Regents Fellowships range
in amount from $500 minimum to
$2,500 maximum for f u 11 -1 i m e
study, and from $250 to $1,250

for part-time, according to financial ability. The average annual
award for full-time study is approximately $1,800.
The Lehman Fellowships contain provision for a flat annual

award

of $4,000 for first

year

graduate and master’s degree students, and $5,000 for subsequent
years of doctoral study.
The, beginning college teaching
fellowships are g o o d for two
years; all other fellowships are
good for one year, although students may reapply for up to a
total of four years fellowship as-

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sistance.
All applications must be submitted before December 1 to the
Regents Examination and Scholarship Center, The State Education
Department, Albany, New York
12224.
(Cont’d

on P.

12)

UB’s Student Musical Group
Plans Television Appearance
geuers also appeared in the Rosary Hill variety show.
Bill Drellow, a junior majoring

in psychology, plays the 6-string
guitar. Also on 6-strong guitar
are: Karen Mangold, a freshman
French major, Sandy Simon, a

The Voyageuers, a new music
group of UB students, will appear
on the Stan Roberts Show on
Channel 7, WKBW, Saturday, November 6, at 2:30. They will play

“Rider”, “Sinner Man”, and “I’m
Going Home".
The group was formed 6 weeks
ago. Its first performance was at
the Homecoming Weekend mixer
in the Rathskellar. The Voya-

Casting Hall, State University College at Buffalo,
1350 Elmwood Ave.. presents “The Queen of the
Rebels” hy Ugo Betti, November 11, 12, 13, 14.
Curtain time is at 8:15
p.m., Upton Hall Auditorium, admission free. For
ticket reservations phone
TT6-2320 Ext. 401.

junior majoring in engineering,
and Carole Forman, a freshman
artmajor . Gladi Bowman, a freshman English major plays the tambourine, and George Kayatta, a
graduate assistant in languages,
plays the 12-strong guitar and the
5-string banjo.
The Voyageuers will appear on
campus again on November 16, at
the Clement Hall Installation Banquet in the Millard Fillmore room.

On

Wednesday

eve

nings, WBFO News prc
sents Senate Report with

Robin Mitchell. Mr. Mitchell reports and analyzes
the proceedings of the Student Senate of the University at Buffalo. On Friday
evenings Martha Ohers
discusses the Senate with
its members on Interview
From the Senate. Tune in
to WBFO, 88.7 me. FM or
780 kc. AM closed-Circuit
(to the dormitories) to
hear these programs. B

Do you know this man?

He's in the 1966 Bufffalonian
Are You?
Order your copy in the Norton Lobby
(opposite the

Millard Fillmore

Room)

�IFlCLSflS

Friday, November 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

M Gherman

Weekly
Calendar

MUSIC OH CAMPUS

Nov. 5-11

Otto Preminger’s The Cardinal was the worst serious
film of 1963. In Harm’s Way, also directed by Preminger, was the worst film of 1964. But Bunny Lake Is
Missing, now playing at the Granada theatre, is, in spite
of Preminger, worth seeing. Preminger is a man who,
throughout his career has pandered to the public taste.
He has, unfortunately, become the darling of certain
critics, Andrew Sarris in particular, because Preminger
has often dealt with topics which were considered “taboo”
for the cinema. The Man With The Golden Arm, for example, was the first film dealing with drug addiction.
Although the film was intellectually dishonest, Preminger
emerged as a hero fighting against censorship. But as
Nelson Algren, on whose book the film was based, said:
“Preminger is not interested in drug addiction. It was
just personal publicity. While I’m glad to see that censorship broken, I’m sorry that my book was used to break
it for a man whose social interest has nothing whatsoever
to do with the problem.”
Whereas Stanley Kramer, whose Ship of Foolishness
has thankfully sunken into oblivion, reduces and oversimplifies moral issues to the point of absurdity, Preminger just avoids the issues entirely. During In Harm’s Way,
a soldier rapes a nurse who subsequently commits suicide. So, conveniently, the soldier flies off into battle
torn by guilt, does courageous things for good old Uncle
Sam and gets himself killed in the process. But dishonest
intentions do not necessarily mean that the outcome will
be a bad film.

In Bunny Lake Is Missing, the emphasis is on textbook Freud, incest, and sado-maochism. Perhaps a critic
should aim for aesthetic detachment, but I’m afraid I
can’t help remembering watching the filming of a key
scene in the film. There was Otto, ordering his lackeys
about, lecherously eyeing Carol Lynley, and rubbing his
chubby hands together in gleeful anticipation.
But in spite of it all, it’s not a bad film. The central
action centers around the supposed kidnapping of a child.
The pace of the film, for the first hour, is slow and relaxed, and the contrast between tone and subject matter maintains the suspense and tension so necessary to
a film of this kind. Sir Laurence Olivier’s portrayal of
the police inspector is flawless, and the rest of the cast
acquit themselves admirably.
The underlying theme of the film raises the question which the eighteenth century philosopher George
Berkeley dealt with by proclaiming that: “To be is to be
perceived.” To develop the theme, Preminger uses a tape
recording of children telling about their dreams, and
television shows, the first of which the characters listen
to, the second of which they watch, as structural metaphors. In terms of image, shadow and light are constantly
juxtaposed as physical correlatives to mental states of
mind. Unfortunately, there is more shadow than substance given to this part of the film. This is undoubtedly
because Preminger felt he would lose the mass audience
interested only in a good mystery yarn if he were to
develop the problem fully. So instead of grappling with
the issue, he ties it all up in the end with an obvious and
artificial conclusion, ties a ribbon around the package,
and waits for the dollars to roll in.
If you decide to see Bunny Lake Is Missing, I strongly
advise you bypass the other part of the double feature
program. Harvey Middleman Fireman. Although the film
is meant to be satire, what it really is turns out to be the
wish-fulfilment dream of a hopeless clot. If you like
Reader’s Digest, you’ll enjoy it immensely. Ernest Pintoff,
who directed it, has previousy done several good shorts,
notably The Critic. But this time hes on the wrong side
of the ironv.
Two words, used most notably by Dwight MacDonald, have, in the past few years, crept into the intellectual argot, Panache and Kitsch. To define the difference between these words, one need only see Those
Magnificent Men In Their Flyinfc Machines to understand panache; and The Great Race to understand Kitsch.
The former is a fast-pacea and entertaining comedy
which is (despite one or two process shots) technically
admirable. It is directed by Ken Annakin with verve and
flair, and it manages to capture what must have been
the mood and flavor of the times when aviation was in
its infancy. There are many good performances most
notably by Gert Probe, Jean Pierre Cassell and Ugo Tognazzi. Ronald Searle’s credit drawings are themselves
worth the price of admission.
The Great Race is so bad that even the talents of
Jack Lemmon and Peter Falk can’t save it. It purports
to be a tribute parody of the old-time melodramas when
the audience could cheer the hero and hiss the villain, and
Blake Edwards, the director, dedicates the film to Laurel
and Hardy. But in attempting to combine melodrama and
comedy, the film falls flat after the first fifteen minutes.
(Cont’d on P. 10)

Friday

Bowling Party: International
Club, Norton Basement, 7:30 p.m.
Freshman Football: UB vs,
Ithaca, Rotary Field, 2 p.m.
Movie: “Rocco and his Brothers”, Conference Theatre, 12 noon
to 11 p.m.
Play; “Death of a Salesman,”
Niagara University Student Center, 8:30 to 11 p.m.
Play: “The Lady’s not for Burning,” Baird Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Mixer; D’Youville, American

Legion Hall, 9 p.m.
Saturday

Movie: “Rocco and his Brothers," 12 noon-11 p.m., Conference
Theatre.
Play: “The Lady’s not for Burn
ing,” Baird Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Pan Hellenic Ball: Hotel Stat
ler Hilton, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Sunday

Lecture: Hayes series, “Gold of
the Amazon,” Franklin K, Paddock, Buffalo Museum of Science,

3 p.m.
Concert: “Evenings for New
Music,” Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30 p.m.
Concert;
“An Evening with
Steve Lawrence and Eydie

Gorme,” Kleinhans Music Hall,
8:30 p.m.
Concert: Orchard Park Symphony Orchestra with Dr. Joseph
Wincenc conducting, Depew High
School Auditorium, 8 p.m.
Israeli Folk Dance Club, 8 p.m.,

Como, remaining at the top. The
growth of popular vocal art, except in Cole’s case, is bound up
with the growth of jazz and dance
bands starting with WhitemanCrosby. This situation became inverted in the later 40’s as undistinguished studio orchestras supported the reigning singers, and
finally broke up in the late 50’s
when small groups and simple
music became the mode (and still

Since it has been a relatively
quiet week musically (not including the Creative Associates’ “Pro-

gram of Lieder, Non-Lieder and
Electronic Music” which ranged
from beautiful to interesting and

amusing

—

and was never quiet),

I will turn to describing the popular male vocal situation.
I don’t know if anyone has

categorized it, but for me the
contemporary popular vocal era
starts with Bing Crosby in the
early 30’s, blossoms at the end of
the 30’s and through the 40’s with
the big band sponsorship, and
thins out into the 50’s, with only a
handful, Sinatra, Nat Cole, Perry

is).

The period from the advent of
Klvis to the Beatles cannot be ignored, but it does not belong to
the era of ‘popular vocal art”
(Cont’d on P. 10)

AN ABSOLUTE KNOCKOUT OF A MOVIE!
...one of the best films of the year!
Times
Crowther,
—

Bosley

N.Y.

ROMAN POLANSKI'S

R£PU

starring

CATHERINE
DENEUVE
NOW*
■1VII

■

A ROYAL FILMS

INTERNATIONAL
PRESENTATION

North PariS
l42»HtetELAVE.*TF6-7«ll

Room 344, Norton Union.

Monday
Concert: Budapest String Quartet, Walter Trampler (viola), Baird

Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday

Peace Corps Placement Test;
Norton Union, 233, 7 p.m.
Lecture; Mr. Lawrence Speiser
speaking on “The ACLU’s Role
in National Legislation,” 8 p.m.

at the Unitarian Universalist
Church, 395 Elmwood Ave.

Wednesday
Concert: Budapest String Quartet, Walter Trampler (viola), Baird
Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Coffee Hour: Technology vs.
Humanity series, “Ethics in Science,” Dr. Aristotle Scoledes, Dr.
Peter Nichols, Dorothy Haas

Lounge, 3:30 p.m.
Thursday

“‘THE IPCRESS FILE’ IS A THINKING
MAN’S ‘GOLDFINGER,’ FUNNIER BY
FAR THAN ANY OF THE JAMES
BOND FILMS!" -NEWSWEEK

‘THE VER

Lecture: “Your Neighbor's
series, “Race and Religion,” Sister Claire Marie, Statler Hilton Hotel, 8 p.m.
Panel: sponsored by Bisonhead
and the Dean of Men. The topic
is “Admissions Policy in the Professional Schools,” at 3:30 p.m.,
Millard Fillmore Room in Norton
Union.

Faith"

Petitions are available

for those students who
wish to seek the office of
Senator from the School of
Education. The petitions
will he available in Room
205. the Student Senate
office, from Friday, Nov.
5 to Wednesday, Nov. 10.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

7:30-9:30

JSk

�3

«

MICHAEL CAINE
NIGELGREEN

GUY DOLELi AN ■ SUE LLOYD

STUDENT DISCOUNTS AT BOTH THEATRES
Upon Presentation of Proper I.D. Cards

Cinema:
LateShow

imsmmiT w

•

TECHNICOLOR
techriscopE

Every Friday
6k Saturday

Cinema

M5NAINST.TLS-9606

Amherst:
Matinees
Saturday &amp;
Sunday

�Friday, November 5, 1965

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

Studio Theatre’s ‘Oh What A Lovely War’
Is Not Such A Lovely Play To Reviewer
By MARTHA TACK

Oh What A Lovely War
such a lovely play. A most overdrawn compilation of songs and
lampoons which could have been
more appropriately entitled,
Were the Years That
• Those
Were,” it left me wondering why
Studio Arena Theatre could have
made such a disastrous choice.

is not

Typical army shenanigans and

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

the driest of English humor bombard the audience from its opening. There is talk of war. “Oh,
We Don’t Want to Lose You,” sing
a group of scantily clad girls. But
the archduke has been assassinated, so it’s “Good-byee."

“Long, Long Trail.” “Joe Soap’s
Army” is on screen, and the
French and the English are on
stage, Mon general, je ne comprends pas, mais continuous, s’il
vous-plait. And here comes “Sister Susie." “Hitchy Koo."

“I Don’t Want to Be a Soldier,” cries “Johnnie Jones,” as
the girls “Hitchy Koo” the down-

.
. . World War
I . . . killed
10,000 people . . . flickers overhead, while at the Battle of Messinjs Ridge “They Were Only
Playing Leap Frog.”
“Ooh, it
makes you shiver, doesn't it?”

hearted boys, into thinking that
they’ll make men out of them.
But when faced with the “Drill
Sergeant” no amount of hitchy
kooing can make a man out of
a boy, or a show out of a cliche.

The production itself is executed well. The original, London
costumes out do the show, Mr.
Zierk’s lighting merits praise, and
an arpeggio from Mr. Cox, is always welcome. There is one moving scene, that of the meeting of
the two opposing forces on the
battlefield, on Christmas eve. But
above all. you can “Pack Up Your
Troubles,” Director Parone, for
the one thing that evoked a
“Smile, Smile, Smile,” was the
enthusiasm of the east members,
and their well-rehearsed musical

“Dear kaiser , . . Carry on!”
look out, “Here comes a
Whizbang,” and then it’s the
"One of the great
Screen Characterizations"
-

Express

pSoe

THt

7:20 AND 9:30

numbers.

PM

But that is about all that can
be done with Joan Littlewood’s
creation. What it amounts to is
a bunch of cliches thrown together into a confusing package of
skits and thirty-one songs, twenty
of which arc in the second act.
“Ooh, it makes you shiver, doesn't
it?”

GKILGI
3165 BAILEY AVE

,At the Low

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PHILADELPHIA

1390 FILLMORE AVE.
(Near East Utica)

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IN

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THE

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RENAISSANCE

4. Hamburgers
5. French Fries
6. Coffee

(Opening Under New Management—formerly the Boar's Head)
w,

504 PEARL STREET at Tupper
Every Fri. and Sat Night

TAKE-OUT
PHONE

896-8900

JAZZ

—

—

TAU KAPPA EPSILON
The brothers of TKE arc having a social tonight with the sisters of Pi Omega from Buffalo

State. The pledges have challenged the brothers to a beer
football game at 1 p.m., Sunday.
Afterwards, there will be a clam
bake at Ellicott Creek Park. The
brothers and pledges of TKE will
be available for the Pan Hellenic
Ball tomorrow night. Arrangements may be made by calling
836-1215.
GAMMA PHI
Avenging an early season loss
in league play, the brothers of
Gamma Phi defeated Tau Kappa
Epsilon five touchdowns to none
in a rainstorm last Sunday. By
previous agreement, a half-keg
of beer was consumed with the
losers serving the winners. We
thank the fraters of Tau Kappa
Epsilon for a very enjoyable
afternoon.

PHI EPSILON PI

JAZZ

—

3 a.m. to 6 a.m.

featuring GUEST ARTISTS

Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity will
hold an Elliot Zolin Schlock Party
tomorrow evening at Emile's
Hall. Continuous music by I-civic
K, and Susie C will add an extra
garnish to this party.
Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity is
happy to announce the invitation

of Mike Fish.

The Brothers wish to congratu-

From 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.

SAM NOW'S Quintet
Also AFTER HOURS JAZZ

Another Buffalo Jazz Festival
Folk Presentation

late Coach Trnold Minkoff (Mink)
and the Phi Ep cross country
team for its outstanding per-

formance in last Friday's meet.
Special recognition is extended
to Mark Gltashow for finishing in
the top four. The Bowling Team
has also had great success. It is
now tied for second place with a
14-2 record. Keep up the good
work!

ALPHI PHI DELTA
Alphi Phi Delta held a Hal
loween Party last Saturday night
at the Brighton Acres. The broth
ers and also some of their friends
from TKE and AKPsi had a very
enjoyable evening. Brother Tom

Bob Dylan

Thalner and his fiancee, Miss
Judy Kataskas, won the best costume awards for their original
baby

costumes.

BETA PHI SIGMA
Bela Phi Sigma wishes to thank
everyone who attended its presentation of the film from Merck,
Charp and Dome.

SATURDAY
Nov. 20th—8:30 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall

There will be a party tomorrow at Tony Bonacci’s apartment,
1942 South Park Ave. at 8. We
hope to see everyone there.

All Scots Reserved

$5, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50

Our study clinic will be held in
Room 330 Norton Hall at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday. This clinic is
open to all undergraduate phar
macy majors. We hope to see
everyone who attended the clinic
last week there this week.

MAIL ORDERS FOR BEST
CHOICE OF SEATS—S END

SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED
ENVELOPE WITH CHECK OR
MONEY ORDER NOW TO
BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL,
c/o DENTON’S, 32 COURT ST.,
BUFFALO 2, N. Y.

1 A

1

Chi Omega hopes to see all the
tomorrow
night at the cocktail party held
before the Fan Hellenic Ball. This
year the party is to be given at
Joanne Armenia’s home.
Chi Omega has chosen Marilyn
McConkey to run for Greek Queen
this year.

sisters and their dates

ALPHA PHI OMEGA

i .V

chaSdSw.

The
deepest

a

SHERIDANai PARKER.
JUST THE WAV YOU LIKE EM

express

their

sympathy to brother
McDowell on the loss of

ALPHA PHI OMEGA
brothers and
Tonight the
pledges will hold a Halloween
"Recovery Stag at Randy, Denny,
and "Glory’s" apartment.

The brothers extend their con-

gratulations to Mike Roach on
his recipience of an AFROTC
scholarship for Outstanding academic achievement.
SIGMA KAPPA PHI
Congratulations to Sister Kathy
McGee, our new alternate delegate to Pan Hellenic Council. The
sisters are having a cocktail
party in the Georgia Room of

the Statlcr Hilton before the
Pan Hellenic Ball tomorrow.

BETA SIGMA RHO
Beta Sigma Rho would like to
announce that its fourth closed
party will be held tomorrow night
at its hall. Because of the lim
iled facilities, this party will be
open to only

invited freshmen.

SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sigma Phi Epsilon wishes to
express its appreciation to Broth-

er Pat Sherman for the fine Halloween “Housewarming” Party
held last Saturday night. Thanks
also to the Varysburg Volunteer
Fire Department for its valiant,
but futile efforts to prevent the
total destruction of the barn.
The brothers are looking forward to tomorrow night's “Pajama Party” at the Hotel Worth
ALPHA EPSILON PI
The AEP Beer Barrel Award
for UB’s best lineman and back
of last week's Holy Cross game
goes to Joe Holly and Leland
Jones.

Congratulations to Steve Walsh
and his fiancee, Ronnie (the chap
ter sweetheart), for their great
costumes as Count and Countess
Dracula at the Halloween Party
last Saturday night. The exFlower Street Pansies really
racked up on the awards with
the winner and two runner-ups
of five).

SIGMA DELTA TAU
Sigma Relta Tau is looking forward to its cocktail party to be
held at the Hallmark Manor
Motel tomorrow night at 7:30,

and the Pan Hellenic Ball which
will begin at 9 p m at the Statler
Hotel. At this time we will honor
our newly initiated pledges.

ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Last weekend the Sigs traveled
to Cornell for the “Rolling
Stones" concert A party followed
at the Alpha Sig House on the
Cornell campus.
The brothers are looking for

ward to the Joint Party with Phi
Psi which will be held tonight.

THETA CHI SORORITY
Sister Janet Shelly is looking
forward to meeting all the fraternity men during the next two
weeks, held tomorrow at 6:30 at
Kathy Pietrazak’s house, proceeding

sil

brothers

David
his father.

(out

PHI KAPPA PSI
Tonight we will have a “joint
party" with the brothers of Alpha
Sigma Phi. We are sure that this
year’s party will be even better
than last year’s.

19

CHI OMEGA

ALPHA MU

A hearty invitation is extended to all freshmen to an unforgettable “Open Party” to be held
this evening. For further information, just ask any brother.
We’d like to get to meet you!

__

THE

1. Steak Sandwich
2. Submarine
3. Italian or Polish
Sausages

SIGMA

Sigma Alpha Mu would like to
thank everyone for making this
year's “Ernie Davis Leukemia
Drive” the most successful yet.

—

But

—Courier

GREEK NOTES

the Pan Hellenic Ball.

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
Alpha Gamma Delta would like
to congratulate its new pledges
for this Fall.

Before the Pan Hellenic Ball,
we are having a Cocktail Party
at the Hotel Lenox in the Ivory
Room, from 7 to 9 p.m.

�Cali Board
ACCOUNTING CLUB

On Monday, November 8, the
Accounting Club will present a
panel discussion with the topic,
Career Opportunities in the Field
of Accounting, On the panel will
be representatives from Price
Waterhouse, General Motors, the
Internal Revenue Service, and the
UB faculty. Each panel member
will give a brief talk on his par-

ticular field. Following this, individual questions will be answered by the panel members.
This is an excellent opportunity
for interested students to find out
more about what a career in Accounting has to offer. The panel
will take place at 3:30 p.m. in
Room 246 Norton. Refreshments
will be served.
MODERN DANCE CLUB

A meeting will be held on Tuesday, November 9, from 3 p.m. to
4 p.m. in the small gym of Clark
Gymnasium. The Composition and
Performing group will meet on
Thursday, November 11, from 7
p.m. to 8 p.m., also in the small
gym.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club today in Room
262, Norton Union, at 4 p.m.
Members arc asked to bring all
problem prints and negatives for
discussion.
ATTENTION!!! All unidentified
lockers in 353 will be opened in
the near future and contents and
locks disposed of by members.
Please label your locker. Old
members are asked to vacate old
lockers.
MATHEMATICS CLUB

There will be a "Problem Solving Contest” at the next regular
meeting of the Mathematics Club
on Wednesday, November 10 at
7:30 p.m. in 344 Norton. It will
be presented by our advisor, Dr.
Chilton, and feature both individual competition and team competition between residents and

Friday, November 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TEN

MUSIC
Col. Heck Speaks at Dining-In under
discussion here.
,

,

(Cont’d from P. 8)

,

Besides
“The problem of national secur- remnants of the past, the only
Colonel Frederick B. Heck,
ity must be shared by all, miliChief of Personnel Plans and Polisinger to attain great success in
cies of the Pentagon, addressed tary and civilian alike,” said the the last decade, within the frame150 UB Air Force ROTC Cadets Colonel. He continued that “Miliwork and tradition of past singand invited faculty members last tary leaders must be the best for ers, is Andy Williams. On WilFriday evening. Colonel Heck
the greatest part of the national liams’ last Monday evening TV
budget goes for this security and show there were present reprewas the honored guest speaker at
the Advanced Course semi-annual requires men of foresight to make sentatives of the popular singer
Dining-in held at Niagara Falls
judicious expenditures.
today: Williams, the unqualified
success; Vic Damone, a fine singAir Force Base Officer’s Club.
Colonel Heck spoke on the perColonel Heck stated, that “the er, who made a splash in 1949,
military profession is more colorsonal side of the personnel busigot lost for a decade and is now
ness in the Air Force. He noted ful and more challenging than making a “come-back," and Eddie
that ROTC is the greatest source any other endeavor. It may take Fisher, who also was rejected
of officers that the Air Force has you to the moon and beyond. You after success in the 50’s and is
may be at the international conand observed that such distinnow returning on the night club
guished leaders as General I,e
ference table one day and flying circuit (with less of his former
supersonic aircraft the next. The innocent, pure tone quality, for
May, General Schreiver, and Genmilitary is exciting and challengsome reason).
eral Friedman were ROTC grading.”
uates.
The success of these returning
artists and most who have discovered or retained popularity,
(Cont’d from P. 8)
like Sinatra and Steve Lawrence,
has definitely been limited beIt capitalizes on the American taste for nostalgia and cause of the lack of demand. Probfor
just
heavy-handed,
on,
and
plods
adolescent love,
ably their type of music simply
three hours.
does not fit the psychological de-

FILM

.

.

.

Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines
has both tempo and style, and at the end of the film you
feel that in some way those men were “magnificent.” The
nostalgia uplift is earned. Instead of tempo and style,
The Great Race offers Tony Curtis and Natalie Wood.
One concluding note: By the time this article appears, The Ipcress File will have opened in Buffalo.
Don’t miss it.

mands of today’s adolescents, who
form the backbone of the record
buying public. Thus the singers
are confined to making bad movies, as Williams and Goulet have
done; performing on TV shows of
their own or as guests on others
(like Tony Bennett, who has been
glad to sing “I Left My Heart”
etc. for any occasion); or diversifying into drama and other interests, like Crosby and Sinatra.
It is impossible for me to conclude this discussion without paying homage to the giants of this
area of music: Bing Crosby, a fine
jazz singer whose voice and personality have never been equalled
(and whose style has not changed
for 40 years), and the greatest of
them all, Frank Sinatra. I could
document this man’s movement
from interesting mediocrity in the
40’s to untouchable artistry in the
50’s (with Nelson Riddle), and
back again; but that is another
story.

I. H. O. P.

Ford Motor

Company is:

commuters.
The problems will not require
much background and new members arc welcome.
ASTRONOMY CLUB

The Astronomy Club will meet
next Monday, November 8, at 4
p.m. in 111 Hochstetter. Anyone
interested in becoming a member is welcome to join us at this
time.

WOMEN'S RECREATION
ASSOCIATION

All those women students inin playing competitive
basketball should report to Clark
Gym starting Friday, November
5 at 2 p.m. Practices will be held
at this time for several weeks,
eventually leading to a selection
of an intercollegiate team later
in November. A schedule of
games is being set up with neighboring colleges and universities.
terested

The apparatus room in Clark
Gym is available to women students on Tuesday nights from
6;30 p.m. to 8 p.m., starting this
coming week. The trampoline, balance beam, parallel bars as well
as other apparatus will be available to work on.
If you’re not interested in apparatus, come out for volleyball,
also on Tuesday nignts at the
same time, 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

BOCCE

challenge

At many companies the opportunity to work on
challenging projects comes after many years of
apprenticeship and a few grey hairs. Not so at
Ford Motor Company where your twenties can
be a stimulating period. There are opportunities
to prove your worth early in your career. Dale
Anderson’s experience is a case in point.
After receiving his B.A. in Physics in June, 1962,
Dale joined our College Graduate Program and
was assigned to our Research Laboratories.
Recently he was given the responsibility for corDale A nilerson
B.A., Willenberg University
recting cab vibration occurring on a particular
type of truck. His studies showed that tire eccentricity was the cause of the trouble. Since little change could be effected
in tire compliance, his solution lay in redesigning the suspension system.
Tests of this experimental system show the problem to be reduced to an
insignificant level.
That’s typical of the kind of meaningful assignments given to employes
while still in the College Graduate Program —regardless of their career
interest. No “make work” superficial jobs. And, besides offering the opportunity to work on important problems demanding fresh solutions, we offer
good salaries, a highly professional atmosphere and the proximity to
leading universities.
Discover the rewarding opportunity Ford Motor Company may have for
you. How? Simply schedule an interview with our representative when he
visits your campus. Let your twenties be a challenging and rewarding time.

The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan

IF 3-1344
An equal opportunity employer

�Friday, November 5, 1965

PACE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

The first meeting of the
Student Faculty Administration Forum will he
held in Room 233 Norton,
from 3:30-5:30 p.m. on
-

-

STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
Thursday we will discuss “The
Secular City,” by Harvey Cox,
This book was written as a study
guide for ecumenical student conferences to be held this year and
discusses the secularization of
our culture with its meaning for
Christians. The meeting will be
held at the chaplain’s home, 49
Heath St., at 7;30 p.m. Supper
is served at 6 p.m. for fifty cents.
Reservations may be made by
calling TF 6-5806 or TF 4-4250.
A seminar on the subject “The
Meaning of Religious Language”
is being conducted by Chaplain
John Buerk, Sunday morning at
the University Presbyterian
Church, from 9:30 to 10:30. A
light breakfast of coffee, orange
juice, and doughnuts is served.
Anyone interested is welcome to
join the group at any time.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
The campus Christian Science
Organization’s regular
weekly
meeting will be held Thursday
evening at 7:15 in Room 264. The
topic of the meeting will center
around consideration of a divine
source of supply.
NEWMAN CLUB
Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a Pizza Party and Social tonight at 8 p.m. at Newman
Hall. Admission is fifty cents.
Wednesday a controversial play
“Endgame” will be presented
with a discussion of the play following. Admission is free and it
will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Norton Conference Theater. Everyone is invited to attend.

The

If anyone would like to submit
articles for the newspaper Discussion, please place your articles
in Box 64, Norton Hall or bring
them to Newman Hall. All articles
are welcome.
Mass is offered daily at 11
a.m. at Newman Center. Sunday
Suppers are served each week at
5:30 p.m. at Newman Hall. Also,
discussion classes are continuing
every Tuesday and Thursday at
9 a.m. and 1 p.m. in Room 344,
Norton Hall.

a correspondent for the Israeli
newspaper Davar, will be the
guest of the Graduate Club that

Friday.

Nov. 5

.

evening.

Visitors are welcome,
hut are requested to remain in the background
during the first part of
the meeting when procedural matters will he discussed. The second part of
the meeting will he devoted to selecting a few topics
for detailed consideration
in future meetings.

A1 B. Meyers, President of Hillei at State has called a meeting
of the group for Wednesday, November 10 at 7:00 p.m. in the
College Union. Plans for a supper
program will be discussed and
reports by various committees
will be made.
HILLEL

The B'nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: “The Schema
on Jews.” An Oneg Shabbat will
follow.
The annual One-Day Institute
will be held on Sunday, November 7 in the Hillen House, Registration will take place at 11:00
a.m. to be followed by a brunch
at noon. The Institute lecture will
be given by Rabbi Richard Rubenstein, Director of the B’nai B’rith
Hillel Foundation at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Rubenstein’s subject will be, “Reconstruction
A Contemporary Critique,” A discussion hour will follow. Upon the conclusion of the
morning session the delegates
will visit the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery. Supper will be served
at 5:00 p.m. in the Hillel House
to be followed by a social.
An invitation is extended to all
faculty members of Buffalo area
colleges and their wives to attend a meeting of the Hillel Fel-

Applications

—

lowship Group

on Sunday,

are

now

available for Spring Weekend Committees at the
Union Board Office, Room
215. or the Candy Counter.
Positions available are;
Secretary, Business and
Tickets, Publicity, Special
Reporter, Dance, Faculty
Reception, Brochure and
Program, Queens, and
Special &lt;Evenls.

j
|

DEALS JEWELERS

I

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

I

No-

j

vember 7 at 8:00 p.m. in the Hillel House. The speaker of the
evening will be Dr. Richard Ru
benstein of Pittsburgh, a prominent lecturer and writer. Dr. Rubenstein will speak on: “Freud
and Judaism.” A discussion period and social hour will follow.

j
)

I

EARRINGS —RINGS
DIAMONDS —WATCHES
WATCH REPAIRING
JEWELRY REPAIRING

I

I

PRICES TO PLEASE STUDENTS

|

1719 HERTEL AVENUE

|
-

j

NEW YORK
Albany—F. J. Lambert
Auburn—Geo. A. York Jwlr.
Binghamton—
Callan-Major Corp.
Buffalo—A. M. &amp; A.
Buffalo—Harry Gamier, Inc.
Buffalo—E. A. Pfister, Inc.
L. M. Campbell Jeweler
Cohoes—Timpane’s, Inc.
Corning—Ray Jewelers of

Corning, Inc.
Cortland—H. Alpert Jwlr.
E. Setauket —Dawis Jwlr,

requested to do so.
The second of two lectures on

Surprise!
your ArICarved Diamond Ring comes
to you on its own precious throne.

Elmira—Elmira Jewelers
Elmira—Ray Jewelers
Freeport—Lloyd's Jwlr. Inc.
Glens Fall —M. C. Scoville
Herkimer—Winstons Jwlr.
Huntington—

Einsohn Jewelers Inc.
Ithaca—Cramers Jewelers
Jamestown
Vincent's Jewelers Inc.
Johnson City—
Messner's Jewelry
Little Falls —G. J. Morotti
Massena—Peets Jewelers
Middletown—
R. Edgar Clarke, Inc.
Middletown
F. D. Kernochan, Inc.
Monroe—Monroe Jewelers
Newburgh—Cowan's Jwlr.
Clean—Raed's Jwlr., Inc.
Ossining—Hartnik Bros.
Oswego—Schneider Bros.
—

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*

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-

See Dream Diamond Rings only at these Authorized ArtCarved Jewelers

IVCF

PIZZA

HERTL

OPTICIAN
U.B. Alumnus

I

The IVCF fellowship meeting
today will concern “The Way and
How of Witnessing,” This is one
of the most important meetings
to be held this year,. All members who can possibly attend are

The Hillel Graduate Club will
meet on Tuesday, November 9 at
8:30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Graduate students, single faculty
members and seniors are invited
to attend. Mr. Shlomo Genossar,

1

MAIN

GARY J. BECKER

!

(next to Amherst Theatre)

ORGANIZATIONS
The CRO will meet next Tuesday at 3 p.m. in Norton 217. All
representatives and religious advisors are asked to attend.

Regular prayer meetings are
held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday and 10
a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesdays in
Norton 217. Regular Bible study
meetings are held Monday at 3
p.m., Wednesday at 2 p.m., and
Thursday at 10 a.m., also in Norton 217.
For further information please
contact Miss Billie Lee Knapp at

�
)

COUNCIL OF RELIGIOUS

“The Presence and Power of the
Holy Spirit in the Work of Regeneration,” will be given by the
Reverend Peter Pascoe, Kenmore
United Presbyterian Church, Wednesday, at 3 p.m. in Norton 264.

Only 5 Minutes
From Campus

Plattsburg—
Stoughton's Jewelers
Potsdam —Carey Jwlry. St.
BLOSSOM

LOTUS

on a Mile

throne

charmingly gilt bo«ed
All styles shown with then hllle thrones,
written ArICarved
Irom St50 to S1200 backed by the
guarantee and Permanent Value Plan

Qwved

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It

For free folder write J R

wood A Sons Inc

256 E 45th

Poughkeepsie—
David's Jewelry Store
Riverhead—Kaller Jwry. St.
Rome—Infusino’s Jewelers
&amp; Silversmiths
Sag Harbor—Fritt Jwry. St.
Sayville—Fred Stadtmuller
Jewelers Inc.

Saratoga Spgs.—P, S. Eddy
Schenectady—

Maurice B. Graubart
Scotia—Mayfair Jwlr., Inc.
Sherburne—
Turner Jewelry Store
Southampton—Corwin’s

Main Street Jewelers

Springwille—Robert H. Engel
Syracuse —.

Syracuse—

E. W. Edwards &amp; Son
Wellswille—F. A. Drew, Jwlr,
West Hampton Beach
R. F. Vail &amp; Son
White Plains—
Bramley &amp; Co., Inc.
—

NEW YORK CITY
Brooklyn—

Louis Amols Sons, Inc.

Brooklyn—Nilsen’s Jewelers
Brooklyn—B. Senter Inc.

Brooklyn—
Swiss Jewelry Center Inc.
Bronx—Bick Co. Jewelers
L. Is. City—Chas. Anagnos
Manhattan—Clive Jwlr. Inc.
Manhattan—Dial Jwlr. Inc.
Manhattan—
Dyckman Time Shop
Manhattan—
M. t. Kester Jwlr., Inc.
Manhattan—Maryo Inc.
(lower Jewelers)
Manhattan—Schwartz Bros.
Manhattan—Scolnick Inc.

Manhattan—

Silver’s Jewelry Store
Manhattan—Morris Welgler
Manhattan—
Wexler, M. &amp; Sons

Ridgewood—Isaacs Jwlr.
Ridgewood—F. Stadtmuller
Staten Island (Great Kills)—
Paul’s Jewelers
Staten Is. (Pt. Richmond)
Russell-Reed. Inc.
—

Queens Vil.—Jaeger Jwlr.

New Yorh 1001
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ijitiv.

*•&gt;

vW.'

�M!W
aaas

THIS WEEK:

SYNOPSIS LAST
EPISODE THOSE
TWO SUPER-

STUDENT -STUDENT -JOINS ROTO
PDQ/SNATU SS
%

AtENT OO-SOUL
CONFRONTED
EACH OTHER

1

)

3

6ALK HIS

HONEY.
CANDY MOSLEM

&amp;

IDEAlP^^/v’

I

1

HELLO? HELLO, GET ME
THE PRIORITY LINE TO
GOVERNMENT MM
...

totfsiQj

iXrx

CLASSIFIED
material
found in unidentified lockers
within Room 353, Norton Union.
Contact Box J, Norton Union.
VIOLIN. Full-sized. Fine instru
ment. Phone NL 2-3045.
1962 CHEVY IMPALA 2-door
Coupe, White, 25,000, not a
scratch, NF 3-6374.
1961

PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
Convt., full power, R&amp;H, low
mileage, good condition, must
sell. Phone NX 2 3804.
RCA CARTRIDGE TAPE RE
CORDER, 2 speed; 4 track:
$100.00 includes personal tape
all
tape adapter
collection
plug attachments. No fumbling
—

witth tapes with this cartridge
recorder. Call immediately—8354351,

1958 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP 2-dr,
V-8. New transmission, tires,
battery, etc. Best offer accepted.
1961 FORD STATION WAGON
with radio, heater and 38,000
miles, must sell. Call 694-4928.

TRIUMPH HEREUD Convertible. Priced reasonably and
in good condition. Call TF 6-5777.
1962

FOR RENT
APARTMENT, ideal for 1; Kleinhans Music Hall area, $60
month, includes stove, ref., water,
heat, 1 bedroom, living room,
kitchen and bathroom. Call TT
4-4389. Want a mature neat person.

LOST

HABER has lost his

wallet If found please call 8732136. A reward will be given to
the finder.

WANTED
USED SET of stereo speakers capable of 50 watts. KLH or Bozak preferred. Phone TF 6-3865,

X*.

from P,

1)

students and their parents to the
school as a tour guide. In her
freshman year she was chosen
Homecoming Queen. Her interests
include horseback riding, tennis

and swimming.

SIGMA DELTA TAU’S candidate is Susan Licker, a senior
from Syracuse, New York, majoring in sociology. As a member of
Sigma Delta Tau, Sue has held

the position of Activities Chairman and is presently Second
Vice-President, Outside of sorority, she has participated in the
House Council of Goodyear,
Michael, and Cooke Hall, and is
now Secretary of the Judiciary
Board of MacDonald Hall. Sue
has also worked on the Spectrum
Business Staff.

Chick's Picks
(Cont’d

from

P,

13)

San Diego 27, Denver 10—The
up on the wrong side of the bed

last week in losing to Boston.
According to Abdullah, they are
much too good to lose this one.

Fellowships

•

•

•

from P. 7)
Students who meet U.S. citizenship requirements and who are
residents of New York , State are
eligible to apply for the Regents
Fellowships. Residents of other
states are allowed to apply for
Lehman Fellowships. Winners are
selected in the spring by committees of faculty members from the
graduate schools of New York
State. Selection is based on the
applicant’s academic record, faculty recommendations, and scores
on the Graduate Record Examination.
In the most recent competition, 3,257 applications were submitted for a total of 468 awards.
Almost 100 Regents Fellows also
won Woodrow Wilson, National
Science Foundation Fellowships
or honorable mention. Since Regents Fellowships may not be held
concurrently with other similar
awards, a number are declined
each year and thus become available to others who rank high on
the alternate list.
Those who apply for the Regents College Teaching Fellowships must plan to teach in a
(Cont’d

State upon completion of their
studies. They may attend graduate school at any college or university in the United States offer-

ing approved doctoral programs
and having special provisions for
the training of college teachers.
Winners of the Arts, Science, or
Engineering Fellowships and Lehman Fellowships are required to
attend graduate school in New

—

IF 3-1344

SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT

2( Discount on Gas Fill Ups
10% Discount on Tires, Batteries, Accessories
On All Parts and Labor
Mufflers Pipes Brakes Shocks Springs
Generators
Carbs U-Joints Fuel Pumps
—

—

—

—

—

Voltage Reg.
Lube

—

—

—

Oil Change

—

Water Pumps
—

Trans. Oil

—

—

Starters

Anti Freeie

Cooling System Repair

Kendall Kastle Kar Klinic
STARIN AVE. at Taunton

TF 6-9429
Midland, etc.
Charge Plans
LESS THAN 5 MINUTES FROM UB CAMPUS
—

p»—r~&gt;—f—*

Order Your Personalized

Christmas Cards
NOW!
25 % Discount thru Nov. 30

On

Friday night, November 19, at
8:30 p.m. Goodyear South presents: Goodyear A Go Go (Sunday dress preferred). Go Go Girls.
Special treat with lucky number.

FRENCH TUTORING by French
man; Litterature; Conversation
837-8185, evenings.

BOCCE

York State,

CATALOGUES AVAILABLE

ous
DISCOTHEQUE ANYONE?

(Cont’d

four years at UB,
Janet has introduced prospective

ALL PHOTOGRAPHIC

—

Greek Queens.
During her

FOR SALE

ask for

. •. AND 50 , INTO THE NIGHT,
THAT ARCH-FIEND, MILITARY- MAN,

LAVS HIS SINISTER PLANS...

/

\

EUGENE

u

THIS GIVE'S Mfc

Bu *

?

,

HERO, SONNY
OR IE, WON

AN

f

HE DOING HERE

YB,siR!rrte^r-&gt;H

THROUOH NO
FAULT OF
HIS OWN

r

GOOD GROUND-WAR! IT'S
STRANGEJOB'S SECRET WEAPON,
STUDENT-STUDENT- WHAT'S

A FINE BODY OF MEN. I CAN HARDLY TELL
THEM APART- THE RETROGRADE
©UG ARCH 1C TPERRORISM GOMMAND
BUILDS-THE KIND OF MEN THISCOUNlty
NEEDS; RIGHT, CADETCOLONEL LACKEY •

AND OUR

( CAN*.

-ilQ

derto, Y INCIDENCE^

OF ATTENDENCE

COOL AND

JeREWY AADJAVJ
UtnERINt BY OAN

HMMMM

-

=

HEROES, -SUPER

WRIITEN BY JtRLMV
DRAWN BY

...

Friday, November 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

"ON CAMPUS"

�Fearless Feigin
(Cont’d from’ P. 16)
cal choice to win over ’Bama tomorrow. But the Crimson Tide
has bested Ole Miss and last week
L. S. U. was creamed by the Rebels, so you can throw your logic
right out the window. This has
been the story all season long.
Teams have been going up and
down the standings like they are
in a yo-yo league. But yet, “Fearless” Feigin has seen a light in
all the darkness. After careful
evaluation of the entire situation and a few rubs of my magic
lantern, I’ve decided that Bear
Bryant will retain the SEC crown
that he captured last year with
an unknown quarterback named
Namath. They should knock off
L. S. U. and Auburn, their two
remaining conference opponents,
and thereby finish with a 6-1-1
conference slate to edge out Auburn at 4-1-1. The dark horse candidate is Tennessee, who so far
has avoided being upset by tying
everyone. They have no games
left with the other leaders but
will have to polish off the likes
of Ole Miss, Kentucky and Vanderbilt to earn the top spot with
a 4-0-2 record. The smart money
will be riding on the Crimson
Tide.
After last week’s attack by my
next door neighbor, the “professional” forecaster, my fans probably expect me to retaliate. But
I don’t go in for such tactics.
Chick and I are (were?) good
friends, so I wouldn’t want to
hurt his feelings. After all, is
it necessary to say anything after
the so-called pro came through
with a remarkable 2-9 record on
his predictions gained through
his supposedly superior wisdom
in the forecasting field? I leave
it for you to decide.
By the way, my own record
last week was a second 8-4 in a
row fdr a 39-15-1 overall, a .722
percentage.
Alabama 24, L. S. U. 7—The
Crimson Tide (5-1-1) rolls on
toward the Sugar Bowl. The Tigers (5-2) were expected to put
up a stiff fight here, but they
don’t have a chance after losing
both their quarterbacks.
Army 26, Air Force 21—The
Cadets (3-4) are high on potential
but low on luck this year. They’ll
have to get maximum mileage
from their fleet running backs
and staunch defense to overcome
the passing wizardy of the Falcons' (1-5-1) Stein.
Georgia Tech 13, Tennessee 7
—The spotlight in the South falls
al rivals. The Engineers (5-1-1) are
eyeing a post-season bowl bid

and will be going all out to hand
the grief-stricken Vols (3-0-2)
their first setback, It breaks
down to a question of whether
soph sensation Kim King can
overcome Tennessee’s stingy defense.
Notre Dame 41, Pittsburgh 17
—The Fighting Irish (5-1) have
been devastating ever since Purdue. They’ve clobbered four teams
in a row and will add the Panthers (2-5) to that list. Pitt, with
a potent aerial combinaion in Lucas to Crabtree is still shellshocked after last week’s mauling by Syracuse at the big Shea.
Princeton 33, Harvard 16
There’s a slight chance for an
upset here if the Crimson (4-1-2)
can straighten themselves out.
The Tigers (6-0) have been going
full-blast ever since the opening
gun and are due for a letdown.
-

CHICK'S PICKS

...

But I doubt

if it will happen.
Another big day for Landeck and
Gogolak.
U. C. L. A, 24, Washington 16

—The Bruins (4-1-1) are the surprise of the season, along with
their only conqueror Michigan
State. They’ve been improving
with every game and now have
set their sights on the Rose Bowl.
The Huskies (3-4) are having a
poor year by their standards but
looked mighty impressive in rolling over 'strong Stanford last
Saturday 41-8.
Syracuse 34, Oregon State 15—
This will be an offensive slugfest featuring the running of
Floyd Little (14 TD’s) vs. the passing of Paul Brothers. The Orangemen (5-2) have bowl aspirations
and have looked mighty tough
as of late. The Beavers (3-4) still
seem unsure of themselves.

16, Georgia 13—The
Bulldogs &lt;5-2) want this one bad
to stay alive in the SEC race.
But they’ve been hit heavily by
injuries to key operators and
will succumb to the passing of
the Gators' (4-2) talented Steve
Florida

Spurrier.
Washington State 14, Oregon 9
—The Cougars &lt;6-l) were ticketed
for the depths of the AAWU this
fall after graduating 16 lettermen. And then, to further complicate Coach Bert Clark’s problems, he lost his six top players
before the season was even underway. He’s turned a bunch of
nobodies into a West Coast power. The Wabfoots (4-2) will make
this game close, but State is
used to tight ball games. They’ve
won five of their games by a
total of 21 points.
Michigan State 42, Iowa 13—
One more after this and Duffy’s
boys are on their way to Pasadena. They’re the top team in

the

nation

after

last

week's
and
look unbeatable—at least, until
they tackle Notre Dame at South
Bend on the 20th. State (7-0)
should have no trouble with the
Hawkeyes (1-5) who have been
unable to find the running backs
to take the pressure off Gary
Snook.
slaughter of Northwestern

(Cont’d from P. 16)
quarterback, Fran Tarkenton,
having his second big week in
a row, passed for 234 yards and
two touchdowns before 83,000
hostile fans in Cleveland. At the
same time, the Vikings surprised
all by showing a tough defense,
holding Jim Brown and the Cleveland Browns to 17 points.
The latest Arezonians to make
it big are Chicago rookies Jimmy
Jones and Andy Livingston, Jones
caught the go-ahead touchdown
pass from Rudy Bukich in the
Bears’ victory over Green Bay
and caught two more passes important in Chicago’s big second
quarter. Also impressive were
Charlie Taylor of Washington,
scoring twice, and his backfield
mate at Arizona State, Tony Lo-

rick, who scored for Baltimore.
When Baltimore beat San Francisco last week, it was the seventh
straight time that games beween
these two teams came out with
the same winner. That kind of
outcome can hurt. Also hurting
for the 49’ers is John Brodie,
who will be out two or three
weeks with a partial shoulder
separation.

Well—Better luck this week:
NFL: New York 24, Washington 17: What can be said about
the Giants? This rookie-laden, inexperienced team has somehow
managed a 4-3 record, despite

having given up 55 more points

than they) have scored. Tucker
Frederickson is making a strong
bid for Rookie-of-the-Year, and
Earl Morral has found a new life
in the Giants’ uniform, Washington is hot, but the Giants are
hotter.

Baltimore 28, Chicago 24—This
clash, between two of the hottest
teams in pro fooball, should
really be a thriller. The Bears
having won four in a row are
sparked by rookie Gale Sayers.
The Colts, behind Johnny Unitas,
have climbed into a tie for first
place in the Western Conference.
Baltimore has an edge in experience, however, which could
spell the difference this Sunday.
Green Bay 17, Detroit 10—The
Lions and the Packers are two
top defensive ball clubs and give

Navy 28, Maryland 14—The
Middies' (3-3-1) talented sophomores have lost their cockiness
after being man handled by
Georgia Tech and Notre Dame on
successive Saturdays. This is relatively a breather for them because they close out the season
with Pehn State and Army. The
Terrapins (3-3) haven’t been particularly imperssive this year.
-

..

through

Mr. Larry R. Drake
University Placement Service

Schoellkopf Hall
Residence Row West

f r i3 p jzza
”

»

1

t

il

c
20
ar 2
TR 3-1330

c

°

»

—

Houston 21, Oakland 17—Every
week, people say George Blanda
is too old for a pro-quarterback;
and every week, he proves he
isn't. Four field goals and two
touchdown passes last week
against Buffalo should quiet all
those Don Trull "backers.” Oakland was disappointing last week
against Kansas City and certainly
will show less against Houston.

a tough game

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

Chicago last week, while Detroit
met the same fate against the
Bears two weeks ago. However,
the Lions loss wasn’t an upset.
Minnesota 35, Los Angeles 14—
A team as “hot and cold” as Minnesota usually does hot put Together three consecutive weeks
of good football. But Fran Tar-

PIZZA by DiROSE
cS3
..

sas City played

The
Buffalo 28, Boston 14
Bills lost last week by accident,
just the same way Boston won.
Gino Cappelletti caught two
touchdown passes and kicked two
field goals; not a bad day for an
MVP. However, Buffalo will surely bounce back and show again
why they are the top team in
the league.

up points reluctantly. Green Bay
took a beating at the hands of

InSenior scientists from Imperial Chemical
the
visiting
be
will
England,
dustries Limited,
to
Campus on Monday, November 8. They wish
from
discipline
meet graduates in any scientific
would
Britian or the British Commonwealth who
United
I.C.I.
the
in
with
like to discuss careers
who
Kindgom. Recent arrivals, as well as those
to
returning
of
are considering the possibility
them
with
touch
in
to
get
Britian, are invited

—

...

kenton has had two great weeks
in a row and shouldn’t have too
much difficulty doing it again.
The Roms have lost 5 in a row,
and from this corner, it looks
like number six will emerge this
week.
Cleveland 38, Philadelphia 77
—The Eagles have nothing to
offer in the way of resistance
against the Browns. Cleveland
ran up against a tough Minnesota
team last week and suffered their
second loss of the season. They
will be ready to bounce back this
week and should do so handily
at the expense of Norm Snead,
Tim Brown and Company.
St. Louis 21, Pittsburgh 17—
The Stealers surprised all last
week by tripping Dallas for their
second win in a row, At the same
time, the Cardinals fell to the
Giants. St. Louis needs this one
if it is to remain in contention
for the Eastern Division championship; Pittsburgh needs it if
it is to stay out of the cellar.
San Francisco 24, Dallas 21—
The 49'ers have lost two real
tough games in the last two
weeks. They almost pulled one
out last week against Baltimore,
John Brodie is out, but his replacement, George Mira, is a top
quarterback himself. They arc
too good a team to be this far
down this early in the season.
Willard and Crow will beat Dallas on the ground this week.
AFL: Kansas City 17, New York
13—The Jets played a great defensive game last week in their
trouncing of Denver. This week
however, New York won’t be as
lucky, and will not get all the
breaks, as they did last week.
Their offense showed little, despite their total of 45 points. Kan

against Oakland, and won 14-7,
utilizing a very tough ground
game. The Jets are not known
(or their rushing defense. This
game could be a rout.

BRITISH SCIENTISTS

-

90'

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, Novamber 5, 1965

C«t«t

Frftckiiit Pizza

ALWAYS DELIVERED FREE and HOT TO U.B.
■■■* 3 Big Shops ■■

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'

I

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AVAILABLE AT

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Ellicott Sq. Bldg.
Main St

�PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday, Novambar

SPECTRUM

WBFO Will Broadcast
Speaking Out
Tri-4 Bowling
Basketball Again This Year Tourney Results weather, sauerbrauten and beer
(Cont’d

It was announced today by
WBFO's Sports Director, Wally
Blatter, that the campus radio
station is set for exclusive broadcast of 13 of the 18 UB basketball
games. (Van Miller and WBBN
will do the other 5). WBFO first
covered basketball two years ago
when they did six home games.
Last year, all but one game of

ice is now connected to all men’s
and women’s dormitories. We at
WBFO are sincerely pleased to be
able to again broadcast the Bulls’
season.”

Working along with Blatter this
year will be Jack Karazewski, a
graduate of last year’s ball club
and one of the UB’s all-time

greats. “Jack knows his basketball and as a colorman, should
be an invaluable asset to our
overall broadcast.”
UB’s first game will be December 1, a home contest with
Brockport State. After airing the
opener, WBFO will follow the
Bulls to the University of Syracuse for the big game against
the Orangemen.

The station will also cover the
second half of 7 home freshman
basketball games. WBFO’s Sports
Casters Mark Schweiger, Barry
Scharcot, Howie Novich, Bill
Martin and Rich Baumgarten will
alternate.

WALLY BLATTER

Photo by Marc Levina

cast exclusively under the student operated station. Mr. Blat"Judging from letter said
ters and calls, coverage of last
year’s LeMoyne Christmas Holiday Tournament provided the
largest listening audience in the
station’s hisory.

This year our FM power has
been increased to cover a radius
of over 50 miles. The AM serv-

WBFO’s schedule of varsity
games to be broadcast follows:
Brockport—Dec. 1 (home).
Syracuse—Dec. 4 (away).
Albany—Dec. 11 (away).
18 (home).
Bucknell—Dec
Western Ont.—Jan. 20 (away).
Toronto—Jan. 25 (home).
Plattsburgh State
Jan. 28
(home).
Windsor—Feb. 4 (away).
Wayne St.—Feb. 5 (away).
McMaster—Feb. 12 (away).
Alfred—‘Feb. 16 (away).
Albany St.—Feb. 19 (home).
Rochester—Mar. 1 (away).
—

INTRAMURALS
(Cont'd

from P.

16)

and Phi Ep. The first runners to
finish (of a starting field of 156

harriers) were:

1—Jim Beam, G.D.I,
2— Ed Ingerman, AEPi.
3— Joe Cassata—Sig Ep.
4— Leon Lewis, Shanks A.C,

the handball tournament will be-

5—Ted Altholz, AEPi.
The

tennis

tournament

soon. The time trials for the
swimming meet will be held on
Monday, November 8 and Monday, November 15, from 7-9 at
night. The final meet will be
held on November 22. All entries must be handed to Mr. Muto or Mr. Sanford. In addition,

was

gin on November 13. All entries
must be submitted by November

12.

Sig Ep in losing effort
completed this week with the exception of the Doubles Final between Valdos and Pepperman of
Sig Ep, and Levitan and Schweiger of SAM, We’ll have the result

of that match next week. In the
final standings for the tennis
tournament, SAM took first, with
AEPi second and Phi Ep third.
Mort of the football action
was rained out last week, but
that means that there will be dou-

ble action this week. The first
league championship game will
be played this week between the
Zygotes, the defending school
champions, and the Dolans.
The golf tournament was won
by Brummer of AK Psi with a
fine score of 77. Alpha Sig won

the tourney with AEPi second

and Sig Ep third.

Two big events are coming up

Photo by Ivan Makuch

Anyone interested in becoming a member of the

University of Buffalo
Squash Team must first
play on a squash ladder
that will be posted on the
board near the Squash
Courts. Top five players
will play the intra-city
team match each week—please contact: Alan Reynard, Ext. 2808, 875-2164
or Mort Rothstein, Ext.
2643. 839-2898.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

The winners of the bowl-off
in the Tri-4 Tournament which
was held Saturday, October 30
at Norton Lanes were:

Females —1st, Miss Julie Olsen;
2nd, Miss Mary Davison; 3rd, Miss
Barbara Nemeyer.

Male—1st, Mr, Les Brenner,
2nd, Mr. Dan Evans; 3d, Mr.
George Maringer.

The Qualifiers, many of whom

expressed their enjoyment of the
tournament and the desire to engage in another one, were:

Female
Linda Zeitz, Mary
Davison, Pam Krauter, Julie Olsen, Joan Moritz, Roeanne Faulkner, Jane Stabbe, Havela Klapper,
Barbara Nemeyer, Mary Lou
—

Kraetz,

Male—Dan Evans, David KrimBonarigo, Bob Drewitt, Jack Braderick, George
Maringer, David Clark, Tony
Verdi, Robert Braun, Les Brenper, Chuck

ner,

Plans are being made to conduct the Association of College
Unions’ qualifying tournaments
very soon. These tournaments,
open to all full-time students,
both undergraduates and graduate, who meet other eligibility
qualifications, are to select the
persons who will represent the
university in the Regional Association of College Union Tournaments to be held here tentatively, February 18 and 19, 1966.
Further information about these
tournaments will be posted in
the Recreation Area as soon as
the details have been arranged.

from P.

.

.

£

1965

.

16)

guzzling
not in the
Pepsi-Cola capital of the U.S., not by any means. Now,
in all likelihood, they’ll come up with something like the
Atlanta Cougars or the Atlanta Tiger Cats, or something
like that. Maybe they’ll try to appeal to regional chauvinism and call the team the Atlanta Rebels. Probably
not . . . too catchy and a bit too controversial for the
timid stuffed-shirt, image-conscious magnates who run
the show. They had a team there once called the Atlanta
Crackers, but that has minor league connotations and
sounds just a bit too insulting for people who would like
to forget that they were once all red-clay farmers, cottonpickers and moon-shiners. No, it will probably be something innocuous and gutless like the Atlanta Falcons or
the Atlanta Hummingbirds.
But think how amusing it would be if teams were
named afer some immediately discernable aspect of their
performance or some characteristic that one immediately
associates with them. Then, following Veeck’s suggestion,
why not the Atlanta Carpet-baggers? Or, the Atlanta
Red Necks, or the Atlanta Money Chasers?
For that matter, why stop with Atlanta? Consider
Charley Finley, his mules and his rotten team in Kansas
City. Instead of the Athletics, why not the K. C. Asses?
(which could still be abbreviated as “The ’A’s.”) Since
most of them are on television in the off-season, how
about the Los Angeles Actors? Or the San Francisco
Head-Beaters? Or the Philadelphia Failures? Or the
Houston Incompetents? And for those well-known chattels of C. B. S., the New York Antennas or maybe the
New York Transistors or perhaps the Johhny Kean Show
with Mickey Mantle and his Friends which could be
abbreviated N.Y.T.V., I won’t even begin to suggest what
one could call the Mets.
Somehow, the entire concept of naming things was
epitomized for me by a story which I heard about the
efforts of the people out in Oakland to name their new
stadium. There were a number of humorous suggestions,
of course, such as Land Grab Field and Taxpayer’s Park,
but the best entry of all was the one which suggested that
they call the new stadium Weevus Frobbish Field. No
one was able to recall anyone of that name who had done
anything for the city or for the team and the whole thing
seemed rather mysterious until someone looked at the
bottom of the letter. It was signed by Weevus Frobbish.
-

�Friday,

November 5, 1965

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Crusaders Trip UB 20-7
Bulls Offense Halted Again
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
It isn’t very often that a football. team can hold a pre-game
coin-toss largely responsible for
defeat, but such was the case at
Fitton Field in Worcester, Mass.,
Saturday as the Holy Cross Crusaders jousted UB’s skidding
Bulls, 20-7.
Coach Offenhamer’s pre-game
strategy, as in past weeks, was
to push the Crusaders’ back to
the ball after the opening kickoff, and then capitalize on field
position. Since most teams that
win the flip elect to receive, the
Bulls anticipated no Holy Cross
deviation from this pattern.
Therefore, win or lose the toss,
the Bulls expected to be kicking off with the wind behind
them.
The Crusaders, however, upset
the Bull applecart before the
game ever began. Holy Cross
Coach Mel Massucco, another
graduate of the field position
school, decided to employ the
same tactics as UB had planned.
When the coin spun to the ground
and toppled to the Holy Cross
side, it marked the beginning of
a long afternoon for the Bulls.
With the Bulls still wincing
from quarterback problems, the
wind-aided Crusaders worked
their plans to perfection. Utiliz-

Baby Bulls
Bow, 25-14

ing a strong defense to throttle
any plans that Nick Capuana, in
his debut as starting quarterback,
could concoct, the hosts pushed
the Bulls back to the UB 5. Brian
Hansen, kicking into the teeth
of a brisk wind, punted to the
30, where the Crusaders gained
the field position they had been
seeking.
Two plays later signal-caller

Coach Offenhamer said afterward, “With the wind a definite
factor, we wanted to do exactly
the same thing they did. The
score might have been turned

Jack Lawson outwitted the Bull
defense, which was looking for
a pass, by rolling around end 28
yards for a touchdown. Mike Kaminski converted to give the
hosts a 7-0 lead.
The Crusader defense contained
the Bulls deep in UB territory
after the ensuing kickoff and
again found themselves in favorable field position after the
lethargic Herd offense relinquish the ball. The Crusaders
drove to the 2, but the Bull line
stiffened, forcing the hosts to
settle for Kaminski’s 24-yard field

goal.
Desperately

trying

to

inject

some adrenalin into the Buffalo

offense, Coach Otfenhamcr sent
Fred Geringer in at quarterback
after UB received the following
kickoff. This venture, however,
also failed as HC defensive back
Pete Schmerge intercepted a
Geringer aerial at the UB 31.
Five plays later Kaminski booted another three pointer, a 25yard effort, through the uprights.
Holy Cross led 13-0 at the end of
the first quarter and things
couldn’t have looked blacker for
the Bulls.

pass

interception by teammate

Jack Marsh.
Mike Maser of UB recovered
an enemy fumble on the Manlius
47 and three plays later, quarterback Murtha threw a 14-yard
touchdown pass to halfback Steve
Svec to give UB a 1412 edge.
However, UB’s lead was soon
erased as Manlius came right
back with a 55-yard drive, capped
by Charles Duke's five-yard scamper that put the visitors in front
to stay.

Manlius added an insurance
touchdown in the final period on

an 18-yard screen pass from VVer-

stle to Pete Schafer. Lally kicked
the conversion, adding the 25th
point.

This afternoon, the UB frosh
entertain the gridders from Ithaca College. The Baby Bulls are
winless to date, but this could
be victory number one. Next week
the frosh travel to Syracuse to
take on the little “Orangemen
who feature an interesting quarterback-effd brother combination,.

string quarterback Tyler directed the Crusaders on a 74-yard
scoring march to apply the back-

breaker.
The scoring play was achieved

when Tyler, who performed laudably in a relief role against
around if he had won the toss Syracuse the previous week,
and gotten early field position.” tossed a 48-yard strike to the fleet
Neither team threatened seriBrian Flatley behind the beously during the remainder of fuddled Bull defensive secondary.
Bulls
halt,
fialthough the
the
For practical purposes the game
nally mustered some semblance
could have ended at this point.
of an offense in the closing minThe deflated Bulls finished the
utes as Lee Jones carried the game as they had started it—brunt of the attack. At interin a mire of futility. The spark
mission the Crusaders mainof hope which had grown into
tained their commanding 13-0 a flame in the third quarter had
lead.
had been completely doused.
When the second half resumed,
It is only hoped that a burnthe Bulls came to life, giving a
ing ember can be uncovered
short-lived reprieve to the dis- among the ashes by kickoff time
illusioned UB followers. Tom against Delaware tomorrow.
Hurd triggered the Comeback by
UB
HC
First downs
8
14
returning a Crusader punt 27
yards to the HC 38. Three plays
Rushing yards
88
155
later Capuana arched a pass in118
41
Passing yards
Passes
tended for Jim Barksdale at the
4-12 6-13
Passes int. by
0
10, which Lawson intercepted,
2
9-35
625
but an official defected a defendPunts
Fumbles lost
1
er interfering with Barksdale.
0
Suddenly the touchdownYards penalized
35
42
starved Bulls had received a break
BULL SESSION—Joe Garofalo
to maintain their momentum. and Capuana, who
doubled as deAfter Jim Webber had slashed fensive safety for a while, reto the 8, Capuana fired a lookceived the highest defensive
in pass in the general direction grades, while Jones and Barksof Dick Ashley in the end zone. dale paced the offense . . . Jones
The ball was batted into the air, was the
game’s leading groundbut the stickyfingered Massena gainer, picking up 54 yards in
sophomore hauled it in for the nine carries . . . Coach OftenJoe Oscsodal then instepped
the extra point and UB was thrust
back into the thick of the game,
13-7.
Mqments later the rejuvenated
Bulls received
another break

hamcr was amazed at the previously-winless Crusaders' lack of
success this season. The Head
Coach said, “With the wealth of
talent, offensive speed and defensive size they have, it’s hard
to figure how they’ve lost so
many games this year. They lost
their first two quarterbacks
(Lentz and Cunnion) and still had
three excellent ones in reserve
that they played against us. I'd
be happy to have any one of
them" . . . Although the quarterback situation is anything but
rosy, Coach Offenhamer said he
was satisfied with Capuana's performance, and added, “He's our
quarterback now and we’re going to stay with him." . . . UB
thrashed Delaware, 37-0, last year
in the Herd's top effort of the
season. The lopsided defeat left
Delaware Coach Dave “The Ad
miral" Nelson seething, so the
bulls can anticipate a superlative effort to prevent another
“Hen plucking" at Newark, Del.,
tomorrow.

A rtnerS Press, JL.
jllyoll &amp; Smttl Prin liny
:■
JXn,i*w■

•

M

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

scope.

By Mike Dolan

Undefeated Manlius Prep from
Syracuse overpowered the winless
UB frosh team, 25-14, at Rotary
Field last Saturdey to register
its sixth straight football victory
of the season. However, it required a strong rally by Manlius
in the final period before they
could go ahead for good and deal
the winless Baby Bulls their
third loss.
UB took a first-quarter lead
when -quarterback Mike Murtha
fired a 45-yard touchdown pass
to end Bob Embrow, and Dennis
Mason skirted right end for the
two-point conversion, giving the
Calves an 8-0 advantage.
A bad break came in the second period when Manlius blocked
a UB punt and Jim Buthus fell on
the ball in the end zone, giving
the Syracuse prep school a touchdown.
A five-yard keeper by quarterback Greg Werstle gave Manlius
a 12-8 halftime lead following a

when Gerry LaFountain scooped

up a Crusader fumble at the UB
37, but again the visitors' offense
began to stutter. After Hansen
punted to the HC 26, second-

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Friday, November 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

\

/

£

-

Bulls Invade Delaware
By MIKE GINSBERG
The Bulls arc now probably
at their lowest point of the season and *will have to overcome
many obstacles in their attempt
to even their record this Saturday, at Delaware Stadium. Not
the least of their worries is a
strong Delaware team which has
never lost to UB at home. The
Bulls won last year’s meeting at
Rotary Field, 37-0, but the odds
are great. The Hens present a
formidable threat in this game,
which may very well- decide
whether or not the Bulls close
the season with a winning record.
Two years ago Delaware won
the National Small College

Championship with an undefeated
season. Last year the Hens
dropped to 4-5, and at the beginning of this season the outlook wasn’t very good. But Coach
Dave Nelson has a habit of winning~f4TO-44-6 record-m 18 years
of coaching) and has molded this
squad into a strong unit. As a
result, the Hens currently have
4-2 record and are in contention
for the Middle Atlantic Conference title in what was supposed
to be an off year. Offensively,
Delaware is very strong, running
up 40, 24, 42 and 22 points in
their last four outings. Nelson
is starting three sophomores in

the backfield, but

they have de-

veloped quickly. All three, half-

backs

Ed

Mason and Brian
Wright and fullback John Spangler, are fast and represent a

good ground game to supplement the Hen’s fine passing game.
Calling signals will be-Tom Van
Grofski, a senior who set several Delaware passing records
last year. Van Grofski’s prime target will be star receiver Mike
Purzycki, a junior who is already one of the top performers in the Middle Atlantic Conference, Paul Mueller, who was
in the starting backfield last
year, will be at the other end
position. The offensive line is
strong with standouts Jay Gibbons and Art Christensen at the
tackles, Tom Lapinski and Ed
Anderson at guards and Denny
Toddings at center. Defensively,
the Hens have a strong inside
line, are shaky at the tackles
and have a weak secondary.
Standouts are ends Bill Drueding
and Ed Sand, and guards Herb
Slattery and Denny LaFazia.

left considerably weakened, but
at this point of the season, something must be done. It is old
hat already to talk about the lack
of a passing attack, and is too
hard to forsee any miracle cure
for the problem. And—without a
passing game, the ground attack,
centering around the fine running of Lee Jones and Jim Web-

ber, is put under greater pressure. The big question is: With
the juggling of the lineup will
the strengthened offensive line
help the passing game and will
the defensive line be able to

absorb

the

lo?s

of two stand

\
outs?
A matchup of the

two teams

gives Delaware the advantage in
almost every case. Offensively,
the Bulls’ ground game will be
able to move, but not to excess.
and the passing game is too weak
to take advantage of an unstable
Delaware secondary. On the

other hand, the Bull’s weakened
defensive squad will be hard

pressed by a dangerous Delaware offensive team. As it stands,
the Bulls are definitely underdogs and will have to catch fire
fast to pull this one out.

On the whole, the Hens have
a strong offensive team, capable
of exploding for big scores. Defensively, the line is sufficiently
strong, but the secondary is vulnerable to a good passing attack. In all, Delaware is a strong
team, and a threat to roll up a
lot of points at any time.

■

11

Delaware QB VAN GROFSKI

-

End MIKE PURZYCKI

GRID FORECASTS
Fearless

Chick’s

eigm

ic
By

Chick Arnold

It's a funny thing how things
can happen in pro football. It is
often said that “on a given day,
any team can beat any other
team in their league." Well, last
Sunday was that day. To say
there were a few upsets in the
pro ranks is the understatement
of the year. It seems as if all the

top teams (barring Washington
and Baltimore of the NFL) came
out on the short side of the
score. As a result of this weekend of forecasters nightmares,
my record for the week came out
to a disheartening 2-9; an overall record of 36-26-3, or a .580
percentage. That kind of percentage certainly won’t win a
pennant.
Actually, last week-end was
just one bad break that was
bound to happen sooner or later.
Our pro teams arc noted for their
consistency. How many of you
who are laughing at me now
could have predicted the Boston
Patriots, who had not won pre-

viously, to up-end the San Diego
Chargers, who had not lost? Also,
who ever though those fighting
New York Giants would win
again? Green Bay lost their first
game of the season to a hot Chicago team infested with rookies.
All in one week-end!

Notables this weak: Minnesota

(Cont’d on P. 13)

-

By

Steve Feigin

As college football heads into
its 8th week of action, most conference races have been decided.
But there arc still some that are
far from over and will go down
to the wire before they are resolved. One such is the Southeastern Conference hassle.

Not two, not three, but four
teams have a good shot at the
SEC crown and not one of them
is a clear-cut favorite to cop the
honors. As we go to the press,
the top teams still in contention
are:
1—Auburn
2— Georgia
3— Alabama
4— Tennessee

As for the Bulls, there isn’t
much to be said that hasn’t been
said already. In an attempt to
spark the team, Coach Offenhamcr has made some big changes
in the lineup, but they don’t
solve all the problems the Bulls
arc faced with, Offenhamer has
moved Captain Joe Holly and
Bill Taylor from defensive to offensive line, with Holly at center
and Taylor at right tackle. He
also moved halfback Tom Hurd
to safety, with Nick Capuana
starting at quarterback. The
move is a tremendous gamble in

Intramural
X-Country Results
By

GEORGE JACKREL

Three sports have been completed so far, and the first standings in the race for the Pahlowitz

Trophy have been posted. The
trophy is awarded annually to the
fraternity that compiles the most
points in all of the intramural
events combined. The standings
after the completion of the tennis, golf and cross-country tournaments follow;
AEPi

3-1-0

Phi Ep

And if that isn’t an impressive
enough list for you, just look at
the teams that they had to
eliminate to get there; powerhouses such as Florida, L. S. U.,

Kentucky and Mississippi. They
could very easily nickname the
SEC the “Suicide League." It’s
getting so it’s impossible to forecast with any accuracy the outcomes of each Saturday's interconference battles. For example,
by all rights since Alabama lost
to Georgia, Georgia lost to Kentucky, and Kentucky was beaten
by L. S. U„ the Tigers are a logi(Cont’d on P. 13)

SAM

Theta Chi
Alpha Sig

105 points
98 points
97 points
95 points
91 points

The cross country meet was
last Friday at the Grover
Cleveland course, Jim Bean, the

run

defending champion, won easily
over a course that was comparilively slow due to the heavy
rains that had fallen during the

week and the strong winds which
buffeted the runners. His time
for the 2.2 mile course was 12:47,
considerably slower than the
course record which he set last
year. Theta Chi won the meet
with a low score of 70 points,
followed by Alpha Epsilon Pi
(Cont’d on P. 14)

QB NICK CAPUANA

SPEAKING OUT
By LEON LEWIS

The Name Game
No sports fan in this country can be unaware of the
fact that Baseball is no longer the sole claimant to the
lille.

2-0-1
3-1-1
1-0-2

UB Safety TOM HURD

Our

National

Pastime.”

Although

professional

football has been riding the crest of a surging wave of
popularity, Baseball would probably still reign unchallenged were it not for the seemingly succession of
blunders that have been committed by the idiots who
are in charge of administering the game. The almost
legendary Bill Veeck, a stormy figure in the history
of baseball since its halcyon days, offers some fine inside
criticism of the ways the baseball establishment has
been running the show in his entertaining memoir, A
Hustler’s Handbook (which he prepared in collaboration with Ed Linn). He has some hilarious chapters,
especially the ones describing the Yogi Berra-Johnny
Keane fiasco, and a number of angry muck-raking ones,
particularly the one in which he excoriates the syndicate
which bought the Milwaukee franchise in the National
League. Veeck describes in explicit detail the machines
of. Bill Barthlmy, the president of the syndicate, as
Barthelmy manuevered a financially successful team out
of a proven big-league city into a huge, open
television
market in the South. He calls Barthelmy and his crew
carpet baggers,’ and this epithet gave me a number of
ideas for a more realistic system for naming teams than
the rather stupid animal-oriented one which exists at
the moment.
The people running the new Atlanta team will want
any memory that people might have of any
previous existence in another city. They’ll want to trade
on the proven box-office value of names like Henry
Aaron and Ed Mathews, of course, but they certainly
won’t want to dredge up memories of rotten Wisconsin

to wipe out

(Cont’d on P. 14)

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                    <text>F|LM

J

.

STATE

LEON
page

,

UNlivER^ITY^^NEWRT
TMj

,

HOLY CROSS
PREV,EW

n
n

page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965

VOLUME 16

NO.

•

State Comptroller
Issues FSA Audit

Questions Policies
W to 20 Per Cent Reduction
In Food Cost Cited

Dean el Students Siggelkow enters FSA Debate

Senator Raymond Velpe proposes Budget Policy

By RONNIE BROMBERG
The State Department of Audit
and Control, Office of Comptroller
Arthur Levitt, issued an audit
October 26, on the financial position of the Faculty Student Association of UB. Samuel B. Gould,
President of the State University
of New York, has promised to follow through on the recommendations of the audit.
The auditors stated that the
FSA has “made profits and accumulated surpluses far beyond
that contemplated at the time of
. (its) formation.” As a result
of these profits, the Comptroller’s
Office has suggested that the associations on State Universities
campuses have "grown to the
point where their operations must
be reappraised and brought under
the supervision of the state university, their pricing policies reevaluated and their earnings controlled.”
The audit was issued as routine
business. It is the function of the
State Comptroller to audit all
state agencies; as the FSA is part
of the State University structure,
it is considered a state organization. (Three branches of the state
university were selected at random for review.) With this report, the State Department of
Audit and Control has completed
its function; it has no punitive
powers and is empowered only
to inform and advise the Governor (a letter with the significant
findings has been submitted to
.

Changes in FSA Policy
Requested By Senate
Finance Committee Should Be Evaluated
By RUSSELL BUCHMAN
Highlighting the Student Senate meeting of Tuesday, October
26 was a resolution concerning
discounts for students at the University Bookstore. Also passed
was a resolution requesting a
change in the policies of the Student Senate Finance Committee.
Other items on the agenda included the ratification of Parking
Court judges, a vote on two pro-

posed amendments and the recognition of two organizations.
A resolution which would give

Student
Association President
Clinton Deveaux the power to
take “. . . any and all necessary
action . . .” to innovate an “immediate” 107c discount in the
University Bookstore was proposed by Carl Levine. The Senate
discussed the fact that the Faculty Student Association, which
is supposedly a non-profit organization, has been receiving a 127o
profit. The majority of the Senators agreed that the FSA was
receiving too large a profit. The
resolution was passed.
University College Senator, Ray
Volpe, proposed a resolution stating that the Student Senate Finance Committee should re-evaluate its policies for reviewing
budgets of student organizations,
basing its decisions on the value
of the organizations' program to
the student body. The resolution
further states that the Senate
should re-evaluate budgets already passed this year and that
any new policies of the Finance
Committee should be submitted to
the Senate for approval.
The Student Judiciary recommended nine students to act as
judges in three courts. The courts
are set up as follows; Sue Landerson, chief justice, Martin Kamens,
and Leon Kelner; Les Lupert,
chief justice, Steve Michaels, and
Joel Shtier; and Julian Bernstein,
chief justice, Robert Eddy, and
Dennis Gray. The Senate ratified
all nine recommended persons.

The amendments to the Senate
Constitution presented at the last
meeting state that neither of the
two Iner-Residence Council representatives has to be the president of the IRC, and that amendments to the Senate Constitution
do not have to have the approval
of the “proper University authorities.” Both amendments were
passed unanimously.
George Bodner, University College Senator, moved that the Senate create a Committee dealing
with the presentation to the proper authorities of student ideas
concerning the new campus. Mr,
Bodner also moved that the Senate recognize the Geological Society of SUNYAB. The Senate

formed the New Campus Expansion Committee and made the
Geological Society official on
campus.
Dr. Claude C. Puffer, Vice President in Charge of Business Affairs at SUNYAB, was contacted
for any comment he might care
to make upon the recent release
of the synopses of the report of
the Department of Audit and Control concerning the Faculty Student Association. Dr. Puffer stated
that he had not been aware that
the report would be released at
this time, although he had known
that there would be some information forthcoming on the recent
audit. He further stated that he
(Cont’d on P. 13)

FSA was not designed as a money
making venture; it is non-profit.
Only a small revolving fund
should be kept once the organization is running smooth; it is
run on a cost basis with no profit.
The FSA is an educational organization, not a business organization.
However, substantial surpluses
have resulted from overcharges
to the students on books and
the auditors cited that
food
“food charges can be reduced
by 10% to 20%, thus saving stu—

.

Governor Rockefeller).

Corresponding with the rate of
growth of the State University,
there has been a growth in the

various branches,
in both financial resources and
the nature of the activities. The

FSA’s of the

SAMUEL B. GOULD
State President
dents and their parents from $250
to $500 over the four-year college course . . . and that every
substantial profits” have been
and
made from the bookstore
(Cont’d on P. 13)
—

Furnas Releases Statement on FSA
By SUSAN GREENE

Clifford C. Furnas, in a
released October 25,
defined the role of the Faculty
Student Association, explained
how the funds were being used,
and reported on the progress of
the Association since its inception
August 28, 1962. Dr. Wesley Rowland, Assistant to the President,
further elucidated some of the
points made in the release.
In his release, Dr. Furnas stated
that “(The FSA), quite early in
its existence had two major objectives. First, it decided that
adequate operating capital and
reserves must be accumulated so
that the Association would be
completely sound financially. In
case of an error in judgment or
in case of some unexpected and
unforseen disaster resulting in a
large and sudden financial drain,
the Association would have no resources to command except its
Dr.

statement.

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS
President

own.

Faculty Student Association an
“Second, the Board decided that ad hoc committee was appointed
if and when a new campus site by President Furnas, to study the
was purchased for State Univerdevelopment and operating orsity at Buffalo, it would be pru(Cont’d on P. 13)
dent and proper for the Faculty
ALL STUDENTS NOTE
Student Association to purchase a
tract of land in the immediate
over
sevTuesday is the last day
vicinity to be developed
eral years as a recreational and
for students who are schededucational facility of great useuled for three final exams
fulness to students and faculty.
in one day to report this
To have waited several years
instead of acting promptly would
to the Information Desk in
undoubtedly have made the purthe Office of Admissions
chase of the land financially imand Records (201 Hayes).
possible because of rapidly rising
land prices in the area. The Board
The Student Welfare Comat the time of purchase agreed
mittee is attempting to esthat student fees should be retablish a rule whereby no
as
soon
Such
duced
as possible.
student
will be permitted
steps are underway.”
Dr. Roland explained the steps
to take three final examithat are under way are specifinations in any one day. In
cally directed to increase the
order to succeed all stuawareness of student desires:
“Before the audit appeared, a
dents in this category must
...

great many things were changed.
.
.

.

At the last meeting of the

register.

�Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

National Student Association History Given; YAF Sponsors Program
Maintains Academic Freedom and Standards Hungarian Revolt Recalled
;

On November 4, 1956, 6000 Viet Nam against Communist imRussian tanks and 12 divisions of perialism. It symbolizes the U. S.
Russian infantry crushed the
refusal to aid Hungary, which
Hungarian Revolution.
On Noresulted in continued slavery for
vember 4, 1965, a commemorathat nation, and our agreement
tion of the ninth anniversary of to aid the Vietnamese, which
the Hungarian revolt will be held
will result in freedom for that
at UB. The program will be
nation.”
sponsored by the UB chapter of
At 3 p.m. in Norton Union ConYoung Americans for Freedom.
ference theater, commemoration
The day’s events will begin
exercises will resume with a proat noon at the fountain behind
gram including a film on the revNorton when a huge helium-filled olution produced by the Associatballoon will be released as a part ed Press and a series of speakers.
of a ceremony remembering Giving the keynote address will
those who died fighting for freebe Dr. Ertavi, faculty member
dom in 1956. This balloon will and freedom fighter. Following
carry a banner reading: 1956 will be the film and speeches by
Hungary—1965 Viet Nam. As exDr. Lozlo B. Szimonisz, a freedom
plained by YAF Vice Chairman
fighter and Buffalo physician,
Peggy Marano, “The banner unand by Dr. Charles Elbert, Chairderscores the continuing battle man Ufi Department of Geofor human dignity which erupted graphy.
in Hungary in 1956 and is still
All speakers will be available
being waged by the people of
for questions and informal discussions at a coffee-hour being
held immediately following the
program in the Millard Fillmore
Room.
Tentatively, books and periodicals will be on display at the
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
main entrance of Lockwood li(next to Amherst Theatre)
brary for those interested students. In addition a table will
be set up in Norton to distribute
EARRINGS —RINGS
a FACT SHEET on the RevoluDIAMONDS
WATCHES
tion and books dealing with the
WATCH REPAIRING
revolt.
JEWELRY REPAIRING
'

By BARBARA FITZSIMMONS

"We the members of the national union of students of the
United States desiring to maintain academic freedom, academic responsibility and student rights: to stimulate and
improve
democratic student
government; to develop better
educational standards, facilities and teaching methods; to
improve student cultural, social, and physical welfare; to
promote international understanding and fellowship; . . .
we hereby establish this Constitution of the United States National Student Association.”
The foregoing is a quote from
the Preamble to the Constitution
of the United States National Student Association (NSA) which
gives in capsule form the overall
ideals and goals for which this
organizat 1 an was founded.
The NSA is the official voice of
the student body of the United
States, both nationally and internationally. Almost 20 years ago
the need for an organization of

this type was recognized, and a
conference of students from various colleges and student organizations was held in Chicago in
1946 to consider its formation. A
committee was appointed to draw
up a constitution, and at a subsequent meeting at the University of Wisconsin in 1947 students
from over 350 colleges across the
country ratified the constitution
and planned an overall program
for the NSA.
NSA policy is determined by
the National Student Congress at
an annual meeting. This congress consists of delegates from
all member colleges, the votes of
each school being determined by
its size. (UB has 6 votes in the
Congress.)
An important part of NSA activity is the maintenance of a
National
Student Information
Service. This office collects and

distribues to member schools
information and literature on
many subjects of interest to students—from the availability of
student discounts to new student-

YOUR I.D. CARD IS WORTH 10% AT

ifi&amp;

W4
W0T

Shoe Store

///

3097 BAILEY AVENUE
BUFFALO, NEW YORK

Nationally Advertitad Brands
U.S. KEDS
ESKILOO Shoo Boot
BATES FLOATERS
AMERICAN GIRL
FLORSHEIM
And Many Other Brandt

How much
will Paris

directed programs being set up

on various

campuses.

One of the goals of the NSA is
the improvement and strengthening of student government. To
this end the Annual Conference
acts as a training session for new
student government and NSA
leaders.
A third area in whch the NSA
is active is in the representation
of American students at international student conferences and in
various agencies and organizations affecting students. Among
these are: the World Student
Service Fund, the Young Adult
Council of the National Committee for UNESCO, and the Supervision Committee for the Cordinating Secretariat of the National Union of Students. It is also
the only student member of the
National Education Association
and the American Council on
Education.

Creation of a spirit of community involvement on the part
of students is another important
facet of the NSA program. In
line with this, a New York State
Regional Conference of NSA will

be held here at UB the week of
November 13. The topic to be
discussed by delegates is “Student Community Involvement”
and all schools in New York
State are invited to participate.

The NSA organ on this campus
is the NSA Committee, headed by
Coordinator Marion Michaels.
This Committee distributes to
other students committees and
information made available by
the National Office and acts to
institute new programs on campus. Among the activities being
undertaken this year are the institution of a program of course
evaluation, a tutorial project, and
the organization of a Student
Service Office.

PARIS KELTS
AVAILABLE AT THESE CAMPUS STORES

CAMPUS CORNER
MARTINS LTD.
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE

on

OIL
TIRES

BATTERIES
ACCESSORIES

2c Discount
Given on GAS Fill-Ups

KENDALL KASTLE
KAR KLINIC
523 STARIN at Taunton
TP 6-9429
Charge Plans Available
Present Your ID Card

,

&gt;

rv
*

■
:

”

Discounts

—

UU

Almost indestructible. Gets better-looking every
day. Saddle-stitched. Wide. With a solid brass
buckle. In four masculine shades. A lot of belt
for $3.50. Even by Paris standards.
Send the belt
t
...m.
v
tag with just Er t''
$2 to Paris for ft.
a regulation-size(22"x3'/2 "xVi ")hard
(ouch!) maple fraternity paddle with a leather
thong. Beautifully grained and finished.
Decorate it, hang itup or keep classmates in line
with it! Shipped postpaid. Write: Paris Belts,
RO. Box 3836, Chicago, Illinois 60654.
Please indicate your college or university.

—

SPECIAL RATES ON
REPAIRS
PARTS

deliver
for 3.50?

Beaucoup! This Paris belt is real steerhide.

DEALS JEWELERS

Ur

IT''

When you can't
afford to be dull.
sharpen your wits
with NoDoz
TM

NODOZ Keep Alert Tablets fight off
the hazy, lazy feelings of mental
sluggishness. NODOZ helps restore
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SAFE AS COFFEE

4t»«&lt;

r&gt;iM4

i

Lass than 5 minutes
from U.B.

Influenza vaccine will
again be offered by the
Student Health Service.
First injections will be
given on each of two days:
November 3 and November
5, from 4-5 p.m. in the
basement of Michael Hall.
The cost will be 50c per injection. The time for second injections will be announced later. Those who
have been immunized within the past two years will
require one injection only.
Anyone allergic to eggs or

showing symptoms of an
respiratory infection
should not be immunized.

acute

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

�Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

UB Civil Rights Committee Starts Work
On Opposition To Roswell Park Project
By

SUSAN GREENE

The Civil Rights Committee,
headed by Mr. Charles Brewer,
is beginning its work this year
with a program to oppose the
Roswell Park Urban Renewal
Project, now under consideration
by the City of Buffalo. The Committee is cooperating with Buffalo CORE, under the leadership
of Mr. Luther Burnette. According to the two groups, the City’s
plans conflict with the terms stated in the Federal Urban Renewal Law.
The City recently applied to the
federal government for a $450,000 grant under the Federal Urban Renewal Law to conduct a
survey of the Roswell Park area.
When the survey is completed a
blueprint will be drawn up for
the demolition and reconstruction of the area; the land will be
cleared and turned over to the
Roswell Park Hospital for development.
According to the plans published by the hospital, the land
will be used for the expansion
of hospital facilities, and highrise buildings will go up. Approximately 85% of the units
will be occupied by Roswell Park
employes who presently live
throughout the city.

The survey will cover all the
streets between High and Tupper
on the north and south, and Michigan and Main, on the east and
west, and will eventually extned
northward to Best St. This area
will be demolished in approximately two years. Within these
boundaries is a small area adjacent to the hospital, bounded by
Carlton and Virginia on the north
and south, and North Oak and
Elm on the east and west. This
area, an early acquisition area,

is slated to be torn down this
spring, under another law.
The area is predominantly Negro (2/3 of the population) and
the median income is $3,000 per
year. One-third of the residents
are over the age of 65 and are

on pensions.

The UB Civil Rights Committee
and CORE are in opposition to the
plan for many reasons. The Federal Urban Renewal Law requires
that a committee be organized,
composed of residents of the
area concerned, to participate in
the survey and the planning that
occurs. "There is a committee
in Buffalo,” reported Mr. A1 Pam,
member of the Civil Rights Committee, “but no residents are
members. The committee is a
blue-ribbon committee,”

A second objection is that the
needs of the residents are not
being taken into consideration.
The Civil Rights Committee and
CORE believe that a relocation
plan should be devoted to minimizing inconvenience. The City
has offered municipal housing for
people who want to move, but
most of the residents wish to remain where they are. CORE fears
a repetition of the Ellicott relocation plan, where the only housing
the city offered to uprooted residents was within the Negro ghetto. It is trying to avoid fostering segregation in relocation situations.
Thirdly, the two groups oppose
the project on the grounds that
the Federal Urban Renewal Law
requires that first priority in new
housing go to residents of the
area. In this case the housing
will first go to Roswell Park employees. Further, because of considerations in the size, pricerange, and type of building, the
residents must have a voice in
what will be built; in this case
they do not.

CORE also opposes total demolition as opposed to spot demolition. Many homes are in good
condition, and the homeowners
do not want them destroyed.

“In short,” Mr. Pam commented, "CORE does not oppose the
urban renewal project per se, but
it wants a lawful urban renewal,
in which residents plan with the
City, rather than having the City
plan for them.”
CORE has now been active in
canvassing people in the neighborhood to form a resident council to fulfill the “letter and the
spirit of the law.” Members of
the UB Civil Rights Committee

have been instrumental in the
canvassing over the past two
weeks.
Saturday night saw a culmination of their efforts when a public meeting took place at St. Phillip’s Church, attended by 20 residents. The Oak-Michigan Residence Council was organized, and
Mrs. Bertha Ford elected chairman. The group moved to send
a letter to Mr. Kavanaugh, head
of the City Urban Renewal Commission, requiring a negotiating
session with him on the future
of the area. It further moved to
send a letter to the Federal (Jovernment, requiring denial of any
funds for an urban renewal proj-

ect in Buffalo until a meeting is
held. Roswell Park representatives were present at the meeting, and agreed to cooperate with
the council on problems of mutual concern.

Amendment Made
For I.R.C. Paper
The Inter Residence Council
passed a constitutional amendment providing for the establishment of an Inter-Residence Publications Committee at its meeting October 21; it accepted he
offer of the Housing Office to
finance the PRISM until the com-

mittee is established. The amendment gives IRC the power to publish a residence newspaper or any
other publication it deems necessary or beneficial to the resident student.
The committee will consist of
two members of IRC, two members from each residence publication, and two resident students
not involved in IRC or any resident publication. The chairman
will act at a non-voting chairman
of the committee. After % of
the House councils have passed
this amendment with a 2/3 vote,
it will go into effect.
At present, the only resident
publication involved is the Prism,
which is now trying to increase
its reporters and advertising.
This publication has made an
appeal to IRC to grant it a budget which would be of help in
the effort to improve the newspaper. IRC could not come to an
agreement on a Prism budget,
and members expressed disapproval of the type of news the
publication is printing.

PAGE THREE

Col, Frederick Heck

Speaks
At AFROTC Dining-In Today

Colonel Frederick B. Heck,
Chief of Personnel Procurement,
Separation and Officer Promotion
Branch, Headquarters USAF, the
Pentagon, will speak at the October 29 AFROTC Dining-In.

Promoted “Through-the-Ranks",
Colonel Heck has held a variety
of jobs during his 23 year Air
Force career. Some of his positions have included: assistant to
the Air Force Special Weapons
Program (Joint) Commander; Director of Personnel to 6,000 military and civilians at the 38th Tactical Missile Wing, Germany; and,
Chief, Career Development Planning Section, USAF.
In his present job he formulates policy for officer and airman procurement, Regular officer
appointment, separation, retire-

ment and officer and warrant officer promotion and demotion; recall of the Air Reserves forces
and military personnel retention.
He also prepares and submits reports, data and testimony to Congress in support of Air Force and
DOD legislative actions in each
of the above and related areas.
Holder of the “Missile" badge,
he is a qualified missile man,
earning this distinction while in
the 38th TM Wg.
He is a graduate of Maryland
University (B.S.) and University
of Pittsburgh (M.B.A.), married
and has three children.
As speaker at the Dining-In, a
Formal Stag dinner, he will address about 150 Professional Officer Course cadets and invited
U.B. faculty members.

Ticket Office To Expand Services
The Norton Union ticket office
has expanded its services during
the 1965-1966 school year; it will
sell tickets for both campus functions and off-campus presentations. The ticket office will also
provide student discounts for the
chartered vacation transportation.
At the present time, tickets are
being sold for the new Studio
ARENA Theatre with attractive
student discounts available. The
upcoming presentation will be the
musical satire “Oh, What a Lovely War,” to open Thursday, October 28, and run until Saturday,
November 13.
The Norton ticket office also
sells for many other off-campus

attractions

during

the

school

year, including the November 20
Bob Dylan concert and the Peter,
Paul and Mary Concerts on December 11 and 12. Next semester
will see Roger Williams, Ferrante

and Teicher, Carlos Montoya, and
many other artists appearing in
the Buffalo area. .

During vacations, Greyhound
Bus charters will leave campus
for New York City and any other
destination, depending on the demand. Student discounts for
these trips will be available
through Norton ticket office. Reservations for Thanksgiving Vacation will be taken beginning in
November.

KLEINHANS
OMHMtm ■Mffal*

The Housing Office agreed to
finance the Priam for 5 weeks or
until the committee is established
to plan the budget. This plan
will allow the newspaper to continue without interruption until
the disagreements are settled.

Tlrnwr Plan

■aulavard Mall

&amp;port $hop Xnft (doUeip £hop
72nd Anniversary

SALE

w

PIZZA

Starts Monday, Nov. 1

IF 3-1344

,oa

s 2775

p

All woll sport coats In natural
shoulder style by Donald Richard.
Now at a special low price for
Kleinhant Anniversary Sale. Fall's
newest shades in campus correct
patterns. Sport Shop. All 3 stores.

SLACKS

*12”

All wool reverse twist slacks in
trim tapered style. Slacks that take
a neat press and keep it. Charcoal
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brown, and olive. Buy now at this
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•

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Donald Richard Suits, Sal* Priced
Donald Richard Suits in Imported Fabrics

$53.75
$57.75

�Editorial Comment

.

.

Commentary

.

THE FSA —THREE STRIKES AND YOU’RE OUT

I am back, having just returned
from a short stint of nation defending, and am once again content to leave that proposition to
the professionals for another
three weeks. I started the weekend off right by falling off the
bed of a two-ton truck, and ended
it perfectly by standing ankle
deep for about four hours in

Last Tuesday the Buffalo Evening News did the
students on this campus a great favor by plastering the
results of the State investigation of the “Faculty-Student
Association” all over their front page. We suspect thaf.
their motives were not the purest, and that it was part
of their long feud with the University, but we must thank
them for finally printing what we have been saying for
almost a year.

freezing, muddy, water listening
to the bullets tearing through
the targets overhead, and hearing
the whine as they ricocheted
from the earth works ten feet

The “non-profit” FSA collected over a million dolprofit from the students of this university over a
period of nineteen months. The State investigation concluded that prices in the cafeterias and book store could
be lowered by 10% to 20% without endangering the
services rendered by these organizations. The investigation noted the fact that the money from student fees
was used by the FSA to buy land and the studens were
purposely kept in the dark about the transaction. It
pointed out that the FSA collected thousands of dollars
from student parking while the State payed the salaries
of the men wh collected that money.

lars

away, while I watched the first
snow of the year. That is as close
to combat as I ever want to get,

and I imagine that is as close to
combat as any of our men now in
Vietnam ever wanted, or expected to get. I admire their courage for sticking at a dirty job
that they were ordered to do and
which they may not all enjoy the
principles of.
It must be remembered, however, that as far as is known, the
Vietcong are a voluntary group,
and are enthusiastic and therefore the more likely to fight to
the bitter end (which will probably be the case). Our troops
however, are now largely made
up of men who were ordered to

Clifford Furnas stated graciously that he would
“study” the possibilities of lowering prices and student
fees. “Studying the possibility” is not enough. Armed
with the undisputable results of the State investigation
up every request and allegation made by
which
the Spectrum and the Student Senate it is time for the
students on this campus to go to Dr. Furnas, Dr. Puffer,
Dr. Rowland and the rest and demand that their grievance
be redressed.

(1) Significant price reductions in the cafeterias and
the book store

JAMES CALLAN

Democracy is not the best form
of government. Offhand, I can
think of at least one better, a
representative, limited, constitutional republic. Democracy is subject to unfair representation, determination of policy by incompetents, and unjust infringement
of minority groups. Let’s look at
the U. S. and see how each shortcoming is removed, and how each
removal has been removed, in
our own system. We know of
course that we live in a republic.
No one who knows the meaning
Of the word can deny that our

(2) More student and genuine faculty representation on

the FSA and less administration control
(3) Reduction of parking costs and increased parking
facilities
(4) Separation of room and board contracts

(5) Student veto power over FSA “long range planning
and acquisition”

The first strike against the FSA came this year when
Westley Rowland (who should know about public relations) told a student delegation that we would never
know how our money was being spent by the FSA parti-

government is not, and cannot be,

a democracy. We elect a few to
speak for many, which brings us
to the first point.
In the first place, this republic is representative. Each citizen
is represented, and each is represented according to his take in
the government. For why should
you be represented the same if
you had more to gain from the
proper functioning of government

cularly in the area of athletics. The second strike came
with the release to the press of the results of the State
Investigation, we don’t know what rules the administrators on the FSA are playing by, but in the student ball
park—“three strikes and you’re out!”

THE

SPECTRUM

News
Asst. News

Burstin.

TAYLOR

By JOHN G. MEOWID

JEREMY
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor—SUE GREENE
Editor-RONNIE BROMBERG

Carole Forman,

Alice Edelman, Loretta Angelina, Ethel Solomon,
Pam Lent, Sharon Shulman, Art Conduzio, Robin Herniman, Helen Peters, Ann Recore,
Judy Weisberg, Brian Egan, Russell Buchman, Harriet Goldberg, Eileen Teitler, Ann
Sellman, Joanne Leegant, Marleen Spielman, Nancy Toder, Don Schroeder, Jaye Katz,
Tom Block, Karen Green, Gail Lehrman, David Robinson, Charles Cummings, Leslie
Goner, Patti Wartley, Micki Lessner
Sports Editor-RICHARD DRANDOFF
Asst. Sports Editor-STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff-Chick Arnold, Mike Castro, Mike Dolan, Steve Feigin, Mike Ginsberg, George
Jackrel, Marty Jaffa, Arnie Nafhanson, Steve Oberstein, James Sharcot
Feature Editor-JOHN STINY
Fitzsimmons, Stephanie Parker, Adolf Gucinski, Barnie Bartow, Judith
Beyer, Erroll Sull, R. P. Schwab, Magda Ziegler, Richard Geller, Martha Tack, S. Rovner,
C. Cummings, Jo Ann Thompsons, Wendy Masch
Columnists-Leon Lewis, Larry Coleman, Paul Suidzinski, Robert Milch, J. Callan,
Staff—Barbara

Rick Salter, Dave Gardner, Eric Steese, John Medwid, T. Blair Bachwitz, Daniel
Schroeder
Layout Edltor-SHARON MONIG
Stall—Carole Gutmann, Christine Woodcock, Lorraine Gerla, Steve Silverman, Stan
Bouchier
Freedman, Joann
Copy Editor-LAUREN JACOBS
Stall-Mary Louise Noon, Ethel Soloman, Judi Kron, Joan Fprretfi, Claire Shotlenfeld,
Roberta Rothstein, Carol Beck, Gail Ratish, Robin Weiner, Linda Mead, Susan
Zuckerberg, Carol Becker, Mary-Jo Cesarr
Business Manager-RAY D. VOLPE
Staff—Barbara Auricle, Audrey Cash, Georganne Gilels, Rochelle Greenberg, Ann
Philip
Paranti, Pat Rosenfeld,
G. Krupoff
Office Manager -KATHY KUNIGISKY
Staff-Barbara Levine, Brenda Brigham, Susan Zuckerberg

Staff—Don Blank,

Peter Bonneau, David Collins, Carol Good son, Alan Goodson, Alan
Gruber, Richard Katz, Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Jim Malicki, Anthony Walluk, Susan
Wortman, Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager-DIANE LEWIS
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation

9500.
Represented f6r national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

go, and are probably somewhat
bewildered as to just why. It is
a' known fact that when men are

just arbitrarily ordered to go into
a combat situation where they
feel they have no stake, they do
not fight well or enthusiastically.
When in battle they aim at the
sky, as in any war they do not
want to kill. Naturally, these
pawns are upset at the student
anti-war demonstrations. They
probably don’t want to be there
any more than we want them to
be there. I hope that at some
time those troops, and a great

many

of the misled American

people will realize that we do not
feel animosity towards them. On
the contrary, we admire the men
who are giving themselves to
Johnson’s war, (and Eisenhowers,
and Kennedys).
I hope that not everyone believe, everything that appears in
the News is gospel, because it

sure ain’t. I have friends in Viet-

nam this minute who have written me, and in spite of all the
letters from “GI’s” that appear in
the city’s late newspaper, some
of which are quite obviously the
products of good PR men, the
tone of the letters I have received expresses nothing but dis-

illusionment and lonliness.
We can probably win the war
in Vietnam, there is no use in
denying that . . . but will we
ever win the people? Something
more is at stake in that small
country than the two equally
decadent ideologies presently in
conflict. Our alliance with that
country has been a mockery at
best. With a country as large and
as rich as ours in alliance with
them, the people of Vietnam
should long ago have attained a
much higher standard of living
than they now have.
We cannot blame the present
low standards altogether on the
war, or on the V. C. we must,
rather take a large share of it
upon ourselves. When we enter
into an “underdeveloped” country we offer the government two
things: 1—our ideology, 2—military aid to preserve it.
The communists enter a small
country promising the people one
thing, food. Whether either government delivers the promised
thing is immaterial, the important
thing is primarily the promise.
What this country must remember is that no amount of military
force can ever win the minds of
people.

and were financing a greater
share than I?
Secondly,

voter qualifications

limit the determiners of policy to
the responsible portion of the
electorate. Of course we don’t
allow children, idiots, or felons to
vote.

Would you jump if your little
sister told you to? Presumably,
we disallow from the vote anyone
who would be unable to form reliable opinions or who would be
suspect of forming malicious
opinions.
Thirdly, the possible decisions
the government can make are restricted according to lines of
order and natural rights enumerated in the Constitution. We
would not want a slim, errant
majority to be empowered to ef-

fect any law it wanted to, however unjust it might be. Of course,
impossibility never bothered the
gods of Washington much.
And so, are we now perfect?
Well, no, but we were as close to
perfection as we could have rea-

sonably been expected to be not
too long ago. But things have
changed. The elected and appointed representatives of the people
have worked intentionally or
otherwise, to destroy the safeguards of democracy: the first,
with the recent “one man
one
vote” ruling of the Supreme Court
and the defeat of the Dirksen reapportionment amendment; the
second, with the recent Voting
Rights Bill; and the third, practically every time Congress and
the Court opens its collective
—

mouth.
Last year legislatures in several states were apportioned along
a wealth-population basis, taking
into account differences in population and wealth in the distribution of seats. But theSupreme
Court decided on “equality” and
Willie Jones from the slums of
New York gets the same voice as
Henry Luce. Senator Dirksen and
the majority of Congress felt that
the Court had become a little too
(Cont’d

on P.

11)

Murder of Gonzago

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
Editor
Managing Editor

By JOHN H. BONER

THE RIGHT

We would suggest the following as a list of initial
demands:

Staff-Ellen

Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

1

The column entitled “The Sad
Devolution of the College Rebel”
cryptically signed Thermopylae is
a rather obvious monument to
the Sad Muddle of the College
Conservative. I am not, at this
point, going to beat the drum for
Liberalism since I find myself
in accordance with the eminent
lexicographer whose definition
runs: “Conservative—a statesman
who is enamoured of present
evils as opposed to a Liberal who
wishes to replace them with new
ones.” The unfortunate condition of the American right is
that it is philosophically committed to supporting both liberty and order. The conservative
has an important criticism to
make of the development of paternalistic big government—that
in order to be free, men must be
able to control a significant part
of their destiny. They must be
able to make choices and they
must be responsible for them.
The conservative dives head first
into the muddle, however, when
he confuses certain social, political and economic arrangements
existing in Western Europe and
America during the Eighteenth
and Nineteenth Centuries with
freedom. Laissez-faire capitalism

was hardly

a free society for the
children working like animals in
the mines or for their parents
chained by poverty to their machines knowing that the only alternative to slavery was starvation.

Columnist Thermopylae builds
his case against the student rebel, particularly the bearded student rebel, in the name of order
rather than freedom. He objects
to his relativist philosophical position as well as his hedonistic
mores and pragmatic political
views.
His abhorence at the
idea that some people take dope
or practice homosexuality or other forms of license shows quite
clearly that the conservative is
not an advocate of freedom when
freedom contradicts his particular idea of order. “Failing to understand ordered liberty, they
stormed the San Francisco city
Hall to scream their defiance at
H.U.A.C.” It is precisely because
they understand the meaning of
that
liberty
these
students
“stormed” the San Francisco City
Hall to “scream” their defiance
at the tyrannies of Congress. It
would be difficult to find, since
the Salem witch burnings, so
gross a violation of the principles and rights of which we as

Americans are justly proud. It is
because the student
rebels know the meaning of liberty that students are dying in
the South to implement the idea
that “all men are created equal.”
And it is precisely because rebels
know the meaning of liberty that
they are taking a stand against
Johnson’s war in Vietnam and
Johnson’s invasion of the Dominican Republic because “governments are instituted among men
deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed;
that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of
these ends it is the right of the
people to alter or abolish it, and
to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers
in such forms as to them shall
seem most likely to affect their
safety and happiness.”
There is, of course, the usual
hue and cry about the student
left being opposed to both liberty and order, usually ending in
the wail that they want too much
liberty. In spite of the fact that
Thermopylae is setting up a straw
man—the rebel cannot be both
this coraloof and involved
respondent wonders why the student rightists have been notice(Cont’d on P. 9)
precisely

—

�■'

Gucinski

.

!UWJT 3CA9

MU«T35=fa

ladol
.vsbi
Friday, October 29, 1965
•

SPECTRUM

.

oCetterA

.

WE ARE NOW OVER THE HILL

PAGE FIVE

.

to

the (Editor

.

TO

Spectrum Called To Task

diligently. I also refer you to the recent
emigration from Cuba.

For Urban Renewal Story

I- certainly don't speak in defense of war. My
II-S hasn’t come yet, and I’m just as reluctant to
be drafted as anyone else. I do not speak as a
Conservative, for I support the liberal domestic
policies. However, I cannot see how, in the name
of the Vietnamese people, the United States can
be condemned as the aggressor. I do not see how
the Viet Cong has more of a right to be in South
Viet-Nam than the United States forces.

THE EDITOR;

The student body of this university, has stood
idly by while its newspaper has been completely
transformed into the “official organ” of every protest group in sight. However, the quality of even
the protest reporting has sunk so low as to be an
object of shame to everyone connected with it.

Steve Koral
444A Allenhurst

I refer specifically to last week’s article entitled
“Civil Rights Committee Treats Urban Renewal.”
This article makes the following statements:

Moratorium on Protests
Might Break V.C. Morale

1. “The City of Buffalo wants to use the Oak

Street area for an urban renewal project without
the consent of the residents, and without sensitive
relocation plans.”

2.

the people will be removed from their
homes without receiving either permanent or tempo. .

rary housing.”

I do not wish to argue the truth of ■ these
views but rather I vehemently protest the fact
that they were presented neither as quotes from
an authority nor as editorial opinion of the authorhut as statements of accepted fact. I would ask
“Who states these views” and “What are this person’s qualifications to make such statements?"
These are the two most basic questions which any
journalist must answer in an article of this sort—both were unanswered in this case. This is journalsim at its very worst.
Freedom of Press holds that the press itself is
After Paul W*b#r, 1943

The

grump

0 ye of good taste,—ye being
those, who read this column (all
right so let me retain a few fantasies)—you may remember that
on Friday last a number of comments were directed at The Buffalo Evening News for biased reporting. It was, and is, my feeling that The Buffalo Evening
News takes great care to report
such news as it sees fit to. Such
news usually being that which
supports the editorial view therein.
On major local issues and national ones too, however, there
are usually some straight news

stories. I do not recall ever seeing a front page story in The
Buffalo Evening Newt being as
pointed and completely biased as
the story by Mr. Fox on the front
page of last week’s Spectrum.
The blame cannot be placed there
alone. A reporter who believes
strongly may easily be tempted
to overstate a case. Editors were
created to be sure that there was
someone who could control overeager reporters. If they wish to
share space on the editorial page,
fine, but previously made decisions have no place on a front

page.

It is in general, obviously
stupid to say that the student
left wing is overrun with commu-

nists. If there were communists
involved I do not think that the
student left would be making as
many strategic and propaganda
errors as it is. Until the current
business of burning draft cards
began, the student left could only
be attacked by the use of obviously strained conceptions of
various laws on trespassing, parading without a permit, and similar trivia. No, there is a very
real law, closely connected with
a very real emotion, and it is
going to do the left irreplaceable
harm if said left does not tread
lightly. World War II and Korea
are not buried that deeply in
the minds of the bulk of this
country’s population. Death of
many families was caused because they were drafted. Men
were drafted and a fair percentage of those men died. It is not
a pleasant memory.
One man arrested for burning
his draft card or failing to register when he turns eighteen can
be a martyr. Fifty people arrest-

.

by STEESE

ed for the same offense is stupidity. Three years in prison and a
heavy fine—and as a practical
consideration judges are not
noted for their kindness towards
those of the student left that are
actually brought to trial for any
reason—it is not going to do a
damned thing to get the troops
out of Vietnam. This is a step
beyond civil disobedience in a
hostile southern community. This
is a deliberate violation of a Federal Law. And it is not an unfair
law. As the draft system stands
now, the system may be unfair
but the law which says that all
must stand an equal chance of
being in that system is not unfair.
As mentioned last week ,the
Johnson Administration could
score a major political victory
over the left by allowing them

health and service organizations
in such zones as Kashmir, Vietnam, and Indonesia. They, being
people who are of draftable age
and do not agree with the present
situation in Vietnam, have what
we called in the army, a legitimate gripe. The wise thing to
do would be to give them an
alternative, a choice which would
allow them to expend their humanitarian feelings.
In a basically law-abiding country—most of us stretch it but
how many really deliberately
break it?—deliberately breaking
a law and at the same time leaving a wide open possibility of
charges of cowardice is just plain
idiocy. Nobody trained in revolution would be as stupid as to
make it.
It strikes me that all this
weighty stuff will be forgotten
ten minutes after it is read if I
didn’t try to say something constructive my conscience and puritan psyche would bother me.
There are several glorious
mounds of sloppy gooey mud out
in back of Hochstetter and Hayes
if you are looking for scenic

beauty. They are right

near

sev-

eral beautiful bulldozer slashes.
Believe me, it would be difficult
to miss them. I have heard rumors that thgre may be five instead of three biuldings back
there. Just think we could have
the whole spectrum, or at least
the five primary colors out there.
(Cont’d on P. 9)

legally responsible for the truth of its printing—
I trust that the Spectrum is not prepared to support this article as it was printed. Whether the
blame falls to poor reporting or to “creeping
editorial-ism,” this conduct cannot be tolerated in a
publication of this size and scope. The title of
“journalist” is a time honored one—if the Spectrum does not have people worthy of this name,
it is failing in its stated purpose and should be
either reformed or dissolved.

David W. Crane

Student Questions SDS,
Says U.S. Not Aggressor
TO THE EDITOR:

The SDS peace declaration, as published in the
October 22 Spectrum, stated as follows: “Thoreau
said of another war, ‘How does it become a man
to behave toward this American government today? I answer, that he cannot without disgrace
be associated with it.’
The SDS then proceeded
to apply this to the Southeast-Asian war. In case
the SDS did not realize it, Thoreau was referring
to the Mexican War of 1846, when the situation was
just the reverse of what it is today. That war was
one of United States expansionism, in which the
United States was the undisputed aggressor.
”

I cannot see how the United States can be
termed “aggressor” in the war in Viet-Nam, After
all, it was Mao Tse-Tung himself who declared
“Wars of National Liberation” the means for expanding communism. I defy anyone to demonstrate
that the National Liberation Front is anything but
a Communist movement, and that they are not
being aided very materially by North Viet-Nam
and China. Does not the fact that North Viet-Nam
and China are aiding an insurrectionist movement
in a foreign country make them aggressors? The
United States is helping the established national
identity in South Viet-Nam support itself, I realize that “establishment” is a very bad word in
this newspaper, but the identity of a Saigon-led
nation is just as legal as a Hanoi-led nation, according to the 1954 Geneva Accord. That is,
neither was established according to that agreement, so all the legality and “if they did have
elections” questions are irrelevant. Obviously,
neither North nor South Viet r am has any right to
infringe upon the other’s sovereignty, as North
Viet-Nam is undisputably doing.
I do not understand how the United States can
be called “aggressor against the people of VietNam." I realize that napalm and saturtion bombing is no friendly gesture toward innocent people
in the immediate vicinity. But who kidnaps all
the young men of villages and publicly executes
village leaders on night terror raids, and who,
may I ask, guards the people's rice paddies in
harvest from the pillaging forages of whom?

I doubt that the Viet Cong represent a genuine
popular movement. For the subject of the popularity of Communism, and the relative righteousness of Communism and whatever philosophy the
United States represents, I refer you to the letter
in the October 22 Spoctrum by Jose G. Campos,
the Cuban Political Exile, who obviously has had
more experience with practical Communism then
anyone here

who has studied

Marx and

Mao

wave of

TO

THE EDITOR;

In last week’s issue of the Spectrum, the SDS
chapter on this campus tried feebly to show that
their participation in the International Days of Protest was not Communist inspired. To any student
who may have been duped into believing their
contention, I offer the following facts for consider-

ation:

1. The Hanoi regime is openly in contact with
the protesters (even SDS cannot deny this.)
2. On the national level, an acknowledged communist sits in on the steering committee.
3. The SDS table in Norton Union has been
distributing the Viet Nam Courier (official organ
of the Communist regime of North Viet Nam) while,
believe it or not, this country does not provide
commercial mail service to that country! Why do
we allow Communist garbage of this form to reach
this country?
4. As Nat Finney, nationally-recognized news
analyst, has reported in The Buffalo Evening News,
the protest coincided with an increase in Viet
Cong defections to whole units where previously
it had been restricted mostly to individual defectors. Also, while the Reds were losing on the
ground and defections were mounting steadily,
V. C. morale was at its lowest level in the war.
Yet, lo and behold the lunactic fringe (or should
I say the missing link) of the SDS stages a protest,
the Commies play this big in their propaganda and
machinery and V. C. morale is given a fresh boost.
Quite a coincidence, eh Mr. Taylor- Furthermore,
as Mr. Finney points out, whenever Viet Cong
morale is low, the SDS coincidentally picks a handy
date to stage a protest, and Mr. Taylor wants us
to believe that there is no connection between the
protest movement and the Reds!
Suggestion to all SDS members; If you are truly
pacifists and disagree with U. S, policies in Viet
Nam, call a moratorium to your protests for only
four weeks; break all ties with Hanoi; and openly
support our President. I guarantee that when the
Communists suddenly find themselves against the
armed might of the U. S. and a determined people,
they will crawl to the conference table. If your
moratorium fails to end the war, then you may
resume your protests. Could anything be fairer?
Philip Fanone

Stalemate, Not Reform,
Held Communist Aim
TO THE EDITOR
You stated in a Spectrum editorial of October
22, that, “The communist menace is nothing to
worry about in this country, worry might better
be expended on what is going to happen to this
country if the reforms sought by serious and moral
men are not enacted!” I believe, as you do, that in
1965 within the context of the enormous success
that America has enjoyed—Communism is a bankrupt doctrine. Communism is bankrupt in 1965 because the “reforms sought by serious and moral
men" have and arc being enacted. The American
people find no appeal in Communism and from
experience reject Communist lies.

Communists are enemies of progress and reform! So long as Americans lawfully and peacefully revise their system to include justice for all
her citizens, the Communists will remain failures.
Only if the Communists can somehow stifle our
progressive tradition and thereby increase strife
to the point of revolution, can they ever come to
power, American movements of reform, to be successful, must gain popular acceptance; groups like
SDS by radical positions and irresponsible conduct have only gained popular rejection. Who can
regard them as serious or moral?
If such radicals can force the American people
into a stubborn mood of reaction, the Communists
would be on their way to power. This is why
Communists are attracted to movements of protest,
not for the sake of reform, but to create a stalemate, where only Communism can stand to win.

Philip Stephan Sickler
(Confd on P. 12)

�PAGE SIX

Friday, Oetobar 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

Education and Cultural Affairs
Somerville Talk Concludes
Convocation Lecture Series
By NANCY TODER

Professor
spoke

John

Millard Fillmore College, in conjunction with the Schools of Business Administration and Engineering, and the College of Arts

Somerville

on “Dialectical Material-

ism’s Theory of Value,” Friday,
October 23 His lecture concluded
the Philosophy Series sponsored
by the Convocations Committee.
Professor Somerville began his
address by pointing out that
philosophical problems arise from
the fact that variations exist, and
that men must determine what
distinctions are to be made between good and evil, beauty and
ugliness. Man must express his
valued judgments as is indicated
by the existence of moral and
legal codes in all societies. There
are two questions that must be
asked: First, “What do moral and
esthetic standards depend on and
how are they arrived at?” Second,
“From these various standards
how can we determine which are
right?”

There are three different approaches used in answering the
first set of questions. The first
is through subjective and arbitrary feeling; that is “each to his
own taste.” Organized religion has
adopted a second approach which
states that a supernatural being
has commanded man to obey certain eternal standards. The third
approach asserts that man’s values are neither subjective nor
supernatural but that they can be
determined by causes which can
be understood. Consequently, through reason and objectivity
one can find the “right” values.
Marxism rejects the first two approaches.

Aristotle and Plato agreed that
in order to have a “just” society,
there should exist no separation
between political and social factors. The limitation of Greek
thought however, was due to
their aristocratic concept of man.
They did not believe that everyone was capable of running their
own lives and of participating in
politics, as is shown by the fact
that ancient Greece was a slave
state:

With the advent of Christianity,
there was a revolt against the
aristocratic principles in the
sense that “all people were children of God and were born with
an inherent dignity.” However, it
is significant to note that such
institutions as slavery, serfdom
and divine right were sanctioned
by the Church. An additional limitation of Christianity was that
reward and happiness were not
projected for this world but for
the hereafter.
Political democracy then
evolved, which initiated changes
in political institutions. Nevertheless, there were still no significant economic reforms and only
a small minority were “rich, educated and fulfilled.”

and Sciences, will host the first
Ford Seminar Program to be held
on campus November 8.
The Ford College Seminar Program, now in its tenth year, consists of a series of informal meetings between representatives of
colleges and universities and Ford
Motor Company executives. The
purpose of the seminars is to
bring educators first-hand information about the automobile industry and to give them an opportunity to appraise and evaluate automotive business practices.
The evening Faculty Seminar
will consist of a series of discussions involving engineering, finance, economics, international
Marxism rejects the aristocratic
concept of man, believing that
“all organically normal people
possess potentials of higher development although not in the
same fields.” In other words, all
people can lead responsible and
fulfilled lives. However, in order
for this state of full development
to exist there is a prequisite of
economic abundance.
Marxists hold the following
moral values as goals for all people: full physical, mental, and
emotional health, full educational
and creative development, and enrichment and growth of the individual personality. For the society the goals are: the elimination
of poverty, economic exploitation,
destructive competition, and international warfare.
Professor Somerville concluded
by explaining the Marxist approach to art and esthetics. The

role of art must be understood in

terms of its causes which are
shaped by such factors as socio-

economic evolution and conflicts
between religion and morals. The
only exception to this is art for
amusement’s sake. However, it is
difficult even for this form of art
to remain neutral since it is the
effect of art on the lives of people and not the artist’s subjectivity which is significant. The
kind of art Marxists object to is
the “reproduction of mechanical
and surface things without showing of underlying factors.”
Art concerns itself with the
world man lives in and life in general. It should neither raise false
hopes nor promote false values.
As for the exercise of control
over art, Profesor Somerville said
that the former is separate from
the theory of art and that it
varies in different countries and
at different times. He concluded
by saying that Marxists “reject
art for art’s sake in favor of art
for man’s sake.”

Okada's 54 Oil Paintings

Displayed at Art Gallery
An exhibition of S4 oil paintings by the leading Japanese
American artist Kenzo Okada
will continue on display at
the Albright Knox Art Gallery
through November 28.
-

Okada, who has won a number of international awards, attended the opening of the exhibition last week, along with
other leading critics and museum

official*.

ibmr

t«c*

*

04

r.M\v

MFC Presents Dr. Selig Adler
Ford Seminar On the Ordeal

The show, organized by the Albright-Knox, includes works from

1931 to the present,

with the

emphasis on more recent works.
The paintings have been loaned
to the Buffalo museum from pubprivate
lic
and
collections
throughout the U. S.
Okada, 63, has been living in
the U. S. since 1950 and is a

naturalized citizen. This is his
first major retrospective ezhibition, ;kp ad
\i\W-, vn
«

competition, personnel planning
and administration, marketing,

Dr. Adler has taught at Cornell University and at the Universities of Illinois and Rochester, and is a member of many
important American historical socities. He has lectured in many
parts of the United States discussing current events, foreign
affairs- and world, American, and
Jewish history. He speaks regularly on radio and television
and is a participant in the University of Buffalo Television
Round Table series.

Events Begun
By Craft Shop

peared in many journals. His
most recent article, “The Operation on President McKinley,” was
published in 1963 in the Scientific
American. This work was dramatized on radio and was the recipient of first prize from the’ American Association of State and
Local History. His sketch of the
background of American-Israeli
diplomatic and cultural relations
was published as part of a volume entitled Israel; Its Role in
Civilization.

This fall, the UB Craft Shop,
Room 7, Norton Hall is starting
a new year -of exciting craft activities. Like last year, daily sessions (1-5, Monday through Thursday, 11-4 on Friday and, new this
fall. 1-4 on Saturday for experienced students) have been scheduled. They are open for registration to any student upon presentation of his ID card and to
faculty and staff for a three
dollar fee. During these sessions,
any one of the numerous crafts
being offered this year, ceramics,
metal, enameling, leather, printing and lapidary, may be pursued by the student. Craft supplies and instruction are available through the shop.

Students Needed
To Start Tutoring

munit||jft

of Hoover

Dr. Selig Adler, Samuel Paul
Capen professor of history at the
university will speak on the “Ordeal of Herbert Hoover,” 8 p.m.,
Monday,Conference Theater, Norton. The first lecturerer in a
series sponsored by the History
Club, Dr. Adler will give a preview of a chapter from his forthcoming book, The Uncertain Giant
1921-1941; American Foreign Policy Between the War*, to be published about the first cf the year
by the Mac Millan Co.

labor relations, arid manufacturing management. Management
personnel from Ford will act as
discussion leaders in these areas.
That morning, Ford will conduct a Student Seminar Program
for juniors, seniors, and graduate
students interested in the same
areas of discussion to be covered
at the evening Faculty Seminar.
Registration will begin at 9 a.m.
in the Conference Theater, and
the discussions will conclude with
a luncheon meeting to be held in
Norton Hall.
200 representatives from 16
area colleges and universities
In the areas where a special
have been invited to attend the interest has been shown, specific
Faculty Seminar. Registration will workshops have been
organized.
begin at 5:15 p.m. in the Faculty This fall a
block printing and a
Club, and group discussions will picture framing workshop have
be preceded by a dinner to be
been formed. The block printing
held in the Millard Fillmore has already been started and
will
Room.
continue meeting every ThursSince 1965, 593 colleges and day evening from 7 to 9
in the
universities and more than 7,000
Craft Shop. For a three dollar
faculty and administrators have
registration fee, instruction and
participated in these Ford sponall materials are provided. Balsored College Seminars.
ances will be refunded. The picture-framing workshop will start
November 1 and will meet from
7 to 10 on Monday nights until
November 22. Materials and instruction are also covered by a
Undergraduate and graduate
students at the university have
been asked to participate in a
tutorial program for collegebound students at South Park
High School in Buffalo.
The program, sponsored by
the Temporary Action Committee of the Commander Perry Public Housing Project, is being offered classroom space at St.
Brigid School. Officials at South
Park High have agreed to provide
a suggested list of students, and
to supply textbooks.
Tutors are needed in all subjects, but especially in mathematics, science, and English.
The Economic Research and
Action Project of the SDS is the
campus sponsor. Sign-ups for students who are willing to help
will be held from Monday to
Friday (November 1-5) from 103 p.m.. Other recruitment will
take place through education
classes at the university.
The Perry Project Temporary
Action Committee is the housing
project’s community action organization. They are working with
UB, Millard Fillmore College,
and the State University College
in an attempt to get enough
tutors to start the program. Other
plans include tutorials for noncollege curriculum students in
the project.
UB students have participated*
in similar programs for elementary sUjdents in the Buffalo com-

to Speak

will be organized later in the
year in areas where enough students are interested.
Also being planned by the Arts
and Crafts Committee is a large
craft show, sale, and competition,
to be held in Norton Union prior
to winter recess. Exhibitors will
be university students, many of
whom will have their products
for sale. Prizes will be awarded
to outstanding exhibits in various
fields.

Reading Given By
Poet Anne Sexton
Anne Sexton, prominent American poet, will read from her own
works Friday, October 29, at 4
p.m., Room 70, Acheson Hall.
She is the author of “To Bed-

lam and Part Way

Back,” “All

My Pretty Ones,” and a volume

of selected poems.

She held the Robert Frost Fellowship at Breadloaf Writer’s
Conference, and a grant from the

Ford Foundation in 1964-1965
for residence with the Charles
Playhouse in Boston. In 1965,
she was awarded the first literary magazine travel grant under
the auspices of The Congress
for Cultural Freedom, and was
elected a Fellow of The Royal
gl LiteratutUa. London.

Dr. Adler’s articles have ap-

Among Dr. Adler’s several
books are included the well
known treaties in isolationism,
The Isolationist Impulse, and
From Ararat to Suburbia, a history of the Jewish community in
Buffalo, written in collaboration
with Thomas E. Connolly. His
forthcoming book, The Uncertain
Giant 1921-1941: American Foreign Policy Between the Wars,
will Be published in January,
1966 by the MacMillan Co.

All are invited to attend Dr,
Adler’s lecture.

Weekly
Calendar
Friday.

ctober 29

(

Movie: “Oh What
.War” Studio Theatre.
Musical:

a Lovely

“Fantasticks”

more Room, Norton, 8:30

Fill
p.m.

mental Films” Conference Theatre, Norton, 3-11 p.m.
Seminar in Engineering Sciences; Mr. S. P. Altman “Hodograph Techniques in Orbital Mechanics” Parker Engineering 104,
3.00 p.m.
Lecture: Aerospace Presentations Team, U. S. Space Program,
Buffalo Museum of Science 4-6

p.m.

Lecture: Dr. Arnold J. Holmes

“Delinquency and Pseudodelinquency,” Butler Auditorium, Ca-

pen

Hall, 8:30 p.m.

Saturday October 30

Football: Freshmen,
Manlius, home.

UB

vs.

Opera: “Cinderella” Metropolitan Opera National Company,

Eastman Theatre, Rochester.
Musical:
“Fantasticks” Fillmore Room, Norton, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 31
Musical;
Fantasticks”
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, November 2
Lecture; Slee Series, Capen
Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, November 3
Play: “The Lady’s Not for Burning" Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 4
Lecture: Fenton Series Dr. Kistiakowski and Dr. Lawrence Conference Theatre, 8:30 p.m.
Play: “The Lady’s Not for Burning” Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Film: Yojimbo, Conference

Theatre?

'

�Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin it an
thorizad publication of the State'
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEform to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Stu-

WRITTEN

dent organization notices are not

accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
University College Students

—

Registration for next semester
for ALL University College students, excluding nurses, began
Monday, October 18. 1965. Stu-

dents whose last names begin
with the letters designated below
will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for courses
on the following days:
Nov. 1 through Nov. 5 —M, F.
Nov. 8 through Nov. 12—K, G.
Nov. 15 through Nov. 19—R,
P, N.
Nov. 22 through Nov. 24—C, Y.
Nov. 29 through Dec. 3—S.
Dec. 6 through Dec. 10—L, T,
A, E.
Dec. 13 through Dec. 17—D, I,
J, O, Q, U, V, X, Z.
Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
No. 114 one week in advance of
the above scheduled times.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day in January.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

WEEKLY CALENDAR
October 29
Seminar in Engineering Sciences—features Samuel P. Altman, consulting engineer, Navigation and Guidance Technology,
General Electric Corp., Missile
and Space Division. The topic is
“Hodograph Techniques in Orbital Mechanics,” 104 Parker Engineering, 4 p.m. Open to the
Public, a social hour precedes in
128 Parker Engineering at 3 p.m.
November 4
James Fenton Lecture—the final lecture of this series features
George B. Kistiakowsky, Abbott
and James Lawrence Professor of
Chemistry at Harvard University,
in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall. Open to the Public,

8:30 p.m.

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Operation Home Town Talent—the Buffalo area Chamber of
Commerce and the Unversity
Placement Service is encouraging graduating seniors and advanced degree candidates who
will graduate in 1966, and who
reside in the Western New York
area to participate. Companies,
associations and organizations in
the Buffalo eight-county trade
area who normally hire college
graduates will be participating.
Interviews will be held December
28 and 29 at the Statler-Hilton
Hotel.
Contact the University
Placement Service for additional
information.
Education majors anticipating
on-campus interviews are reminded to complete and return their
registration forms early. All
forms leading to the completion

UNIVERSITY CAMERA
AND

PORTRAIT STUDIO

3114 MAIN STREET
2 blocks from School

Everything in used photographic equipment. We
buy, sell and trade.
Open Daily
Mon.

Thurs. till

TF 5-9230

PETE TUCKER

(Bus. Admin.) of the ’62
Bethlehem "Loop”
Course enjoys selling steel
products in our Cleveland
District. He’s typical of

young men on the move
at Bethlehem Steel.

Seniors and graduate
students in engineering and
non-technical curricula will
soon be interviewed for
the 1966 Bethlehem Loop
Course. We offer splendid
career opportunities in steel

plant operations, research,
sales, mining, accounting,

and other activities.
For detailed information
pick up a copy of our
booklet, "Careers with
Bethlehem Steel and the

Loop Course,” at

Placement

your

Office.

An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for
Progress Program

pany.

Burroughs Corporation.
New York State Banking De-

On Campus Am

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flay, Boys!’’,
“Dobie Gillie," etc.)

TWELVE IS A MAN Y-SPLENDORED THING
Today I begin my twelfth year of writing this column in
your campus newspaper.

These dozen years have passed like a dozen minutes. In
fact, I would not believe so much time has gone by except
that I have my wife nearby as a handy reference. When I
started this column, she was a mere slip of a girl—supple as
a willow bough and fair as the morn. Today she is gnarled,
lumpy, and given to biting the postman. Still, I count myself lucky. Most of my friends who were married at the same
time have wives who chase cars all day. I myself have never
had this trouble, and I attribute my good fortune to the
fact that I have never struck my wife with my hand. I have
always used a folded newspaper, even during the prolonged
newspaper strike of 1961 in New York. During this journalless period I had the airmail edition of the Manchester Guardian flown in daily from England. I must admit, however,
that it was not entirely satisfactory. The airmail edition of
the Guardian is printed on paper so light and flimsy that it
makes very little impression when one smacks one’s wife.
Mine, in fact, thought it was some kind of game and tore
several pairs of my trousers.
But I digress. For twelve years, I say, I have been writing this column. That is a fact, and here is another: I shave
every morning with Personna Stainless Steel Blades. I bring
up Personna Stainless Steel Blades because this column is

sponsored by the makers of Personna and they are inclined
to brood if I omit to mention their products.

partment.
November 4:
Massachusetts Mutual Life In-

surance Company.

Social Security Administration.
New York State Civil Service.

November 5:
Touche, Ross, Bailey

&amp;
Smart.
Cornell Graduate School of Business &amp; Public Administration.
Ernst &amp; Ernst.
Humble Oil.
Interviews for graduates in the
areas of Engineering and Science

are:

Jim Tuttle’s

&amp;

of the credential folder must be
returned before any interviews
with school administrators will
be scheduled.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
A reminder —that appointments
for interviews should be made at
least one week in advance of the
interviewing date. All seniors
and advanced degree candidates
should register immediately.
Literature describing the current opportunities with recruiting organizations is available at
the University Placement Office,
Schoellkopf Hall, telephone 8313311. Candidates are advised to
review the literature before interviewing the organization.
Interviews for graduates in the
areas of Business Administration,
Law and Liberal Arts are as follows:
November 1:
Buffalo Branch of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York.
November 2:
Phillips Wertman Company.
YWCA
November 2, 3:
Central Intelligence Agency.
November 3;
The Travelers Insurance Com-

PAGE SEVEN

9

November 1:
Great Lakes Carbon Corpora
tion.
General Aniline &amp; Film Company.
November 1, 2:
Monsanto Company.
November 2:
AVM Corporation.
November 2, 3:
Central Intelligence Agency
November 3:
Speer Carbon.
November 3, 4:
Union Carbide CorporationLinde Division.
November 4:
Social Security Administration.
Texas-U. S. Chemical Company.

Not, let me hasten to state, that it is any chore for me to
sing the praises of Personna—as you will agree once you try
this sharpest, smoothest-shaving, longest-lasting blade ever

devised by the makers of Personna Blades—now available
both in Double Edge and Injector style. Personna, always
the most rewarding of blades, today offers even an extra reward—a chance to grab yourself a fistful of $100 bills from
a $100,000 bowl! The Personna Stainless Steel Sweepstakes
is off and running, and you’re all eligible to enter. Visit your
friendly Personna dealer soon to pick up an entry blank
(void where prohibited by law).

And, by the way, while you’re at your friendly Personna
dealers, why don’t you ask for a can of Burma Shave? It
comes in Regular or Menthol; it soaks rings around any
But I digress. For twelve years, I say, this column has
been discussing, forthrightly and fearlessly, such burning
campus questions as “Should students be allowed to attend
first-hour classes in pajamas?” and “Should deans be retired at age 25?” and “Should foreign exchange students be
held for ransom?”.
Today,continuing the tradition, we take up the thorniest
academic problem of all: the high cost of tuition. Let me
tell you how one student, Lintel Sigafoos by name, solved
this problem.

Lintel, while still a boy in Straitened Circumstances,
Idaho, had his heart set on college, but, alas, he couldn’t
afford the tuition. He applied for a Regents Scholarship
but, alas, his reading speed was not very rapid—only two
words an hour—and before he finished even the first page
of his exam, the Regents had closed their briefcases crossly
and gone home. Lintel then applied for an athletic scholarship, but he had, alas, only a single athletic skill—balancing
an ice cream cone on his chin—and this, alas, aroused only
fleeting enthusiasm among the coaches.

And then he found the answer: he would get a student
loan! Of course, he would have to pay it back after graduation, but clever Lintel solved that, too: he kept changing
his major, never accumulating enough credits to graduate
until he was 65 years old. Then he repaid the loan out of his
Social Security.
Where there’s a will, there's a way.

BETHLEHEM
STEEL

SETHI EHCM
ST II

*

•

•

e

1WU. Mu Sbultuan

The maker* of Pereonna Stainleee Steel Blade* and Burma
Share* are happy to bring you another teaeon of Max Shutman'* unceneored, uninhibited, and unpredictable column.
We think you'll be happy, too. when you try our product».
•

�Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

WdM&amp;l IL!1®SS anwag

‘The Fantasticks’ Started As One Act Play,
Now World’s ‘Fifth Longest Running Show’
By MARTHA B. TACK

Two By Lumet
In the summer of 1959, a group
I feel that too many directors tend to forget amidst of one-act plays was performed
their enthusiasm for the almost limitless possibilities of at Barnard College in New York
the cinema as a creative medium, that a poor acting City. An experienced off-Broadperformance will negate the most imaginative, dynamic way actor and producer, was pardirection. Consequently, no matter what faults he may ticularly attracted to one of the
auhave cbmmitted, I
always been interested in Sidney plays, and commissioned its full
Lumet’s films. He seems to have a knack for evoking thors to expand it into a May
show. Nine months later, on
exemplary performances from every actor or actress who 3, 1960, The Fantasticks was prehas ever worked with him. Sometimes, his concern for sented in the tiny Sullivan Street
the finest points of the actor’s craft interferes with his Playhouse in New York’s Greentotal sense of the film he is making. For instance, his wich Village, drawing critical apadaptation of O’Neill’s Long Days Journey Into Night proval.
turned out to be a fascinating stage set-piece witth almost “Through its
first act it is sweet
profound performances by Jason Robards and Katherine
and fresh in a civilized manner,
Hepburn. However, it never sustained the rhythm that luminous and gay. In the form
would have made it a good movie.
of jldainty masque, it is a variaon a Pierrot and Columbine
Two of Lumet’s latest films are in Buffalo now. The tion
theme. The boy and girl, who
Pawnbroker, playing at the Glen Art and Circle Art theaare neighbors, are in love as long
tres, suffers from the same defect as the O’Neill adaptaas a wall separates them and they
tion but to a much lesser extent. The Hill, a film which believe that their fathers disaphas been comparatively unpublicized in Buffalo except prove. Actually their fathers want
for the hullabalo about its star, Sean Connery, is the them to marry. To create an irfirst film in which Lumet has wedded his competence resistible romantic mood, the fawith actors to a structural vision of the film as Film, thers arrange a flamboyant adduction scene in the moonlight.
and it is undoubtedly his finest picture to date.
Although
story
slight,
the

'-«v*

Ossie Davis A Sean Connery face staff Williams (Stan Hendry)

is

the

style is entrancing. The characters are figures in a legend, acted
with an artlessness that is winning.

“After the intermission, the author substitutes sunshine for
moonlight. Disillusion destroys
the rapture of their first scene.
Peirrot and Columbine have
combed the stardust out of their
hair. Perhaps “The Fantasticks”
is by nature the sort of thing
that loses magic the longer it endures. But for the space of one
act it is delightful. The music
has grace and humor.”
N.Y. Times, Brooks Atkinson
And so began the history of
what has become the fifth longest
running show, and the third longest running musical in America’s
musical history, surpassed only
by My Fair Lady and The Threepenny Opera. Little did its authors
realize what effect their show
would have the world over. Here
at home, the music met with such
high acclaim that a recording,
usually reserved for Broadway
productions, was made by MGM.
Restrains of “Try to Remember”,
“Soon It’s Gonna Rain”, and
“Much More” are continually
heard on radio, TV, and on the
recordings of such popular vocalists as Barbra Streisand. In the

shown itself at U.B. by the number of publicity posters stolen.
It is

suggested, that tickets be

purchased immediately, for if
they go as quickly as the posters,

students will be unable to witness
the first production ever to be
sponsored by Nortin Union board,
and which also has the distinction
of being the first production in
the country using video-taping for
rehearsals.
Many times during rehearsals,
actors become too wrapped up in
their work and lose their perspective. Video-taping the production
helps solve this problem, by enabling actors to have a first hand
view of their performance. According to Mr. Wicke’s report in
the October 21 edition of the
Courier-Express, this process will
enable everyone to see his own
individual performance as seen
by the audience. Video-taping the
rehearsals is of great value to the
already, competent cast since
many of its members intend to
make the theatre their career.

According to Mr. Wicke, students usually do not attend student performances. For the six
years that he has been at UB,
he has observed that the major
patrons of UB cultural events
have been residents of Buffalo.
A musical endeavor by The
Fantasticks, can not be supported
by Baird Hall, thus The Fantasticks marks a big step in the
history of UB’s cultural events
because it has been brought to
the heart of all student activities,
Norton Hall. The student support
that The Fantasticks receives will
determine the future of UB’s cultural events.

Tickets are on sale in the Norton ticket office at $1 for students, $1.50 for faculty and staff
members, and $2 for the general

public. Ticket reservations may
be made by calling 831-3704. The
last performance being Sunday,
October 31, you have three more
chances to see UB’s production

of The Fantasticks.

The Easy Life' Now Showing
In the Conference Theater
Anyone who has hoped to take
a carefree European vacation by

the sports-car and bikini route
should especially enjoy viewing
Joseph E. Levine’s comedy-drama
“The Easy Life,” opening today
and Saturday in the Conference
Theatre. The Embassy Pictures
release, starring Vitorrio Gassman, Catherine Spaak and Jean
Louis Trintignant, has the entire
seaside playground of the Italian
Riviera as its backdrop. The story
of two young men on a spree of
easy living for two days takes
them—and the moviegoer—on a
whirlwind tour of Italy, tearing
over famous, and dangerous,
mountain roads, along the shore
and through towns and villages.
-

-

-

As on any really enjoyable .trip,

there are stops along the way—The Pawnbroker has a strike or two against it from
for fun at the beach, boating,
the start. It deals with a theme we all consider crucial
yacht parties, water-skiing, and
to man’s fate, it is frankly emotional and it is totally
dancing. Director Dino Risi, while
realistic in its conception. That it is successful most of
shooting “The Easy Life,” often
the time is, I feel, a very strong recommendation. It is
found it necessary to “take over”
difficult to avoid a high degree of personal involvement
an entire community or vacation
spot in order to create the needed
in the life of Sol Nazerman, the pawnbroker who has
atmosphere for a scene. In one
retreated away from any type of commitment towards
another human being, and the progress and outcome of
farmers were to dance the twist,
his spiritual journey is totally compelling. 1 think we adapted for a television spectacular which starred Bert Lahr,
tend to forget nowadays—those of us in the critical “fraHolloway, and Ricardo
ternity”, that is—that The Cinema, for most people, is Stanley
Montalban. Productions of The
primarily an emotional experience, and only second an Fantasticks have been presented
intellectual one. You don’t have to be a Jew to love Rod in schools, colleges, community
Steiger’s conception of Sol Nazerman. The impact of the centers, stock companies, and in
concentration camp on Nazerman is presented in univertheatres throughout the world,
sally applicable terms. The man has been hurt beyond ranging from Tel Aviv to South
pain and has retreated into a shell which cannot be Africa.
HIGH SMOKE SBNOBET
breached by tenderness or love, which cannot be removed
JOSE FERRER- LEEHARVIH
Now it is U.B.’s turn. Director
OSKAR WERNER ELIZABETH ASHLEY
to offer mercy or compassion. Nazerman, the pawnbroker, Henry A. Wicke, Jr., chose to do
has chosen to forget the horror of his experiences bv sealThe Fantasticks because it entails
ing himself ff from humanity. He has surrounded himself a small cast, each member having
with things; people and money have both become objects. a part, and is “deceptively easy
Sun. lo Thun, at I
Mon. to Frl.
I
1:25.4:20,
Lumet and Rod Steiger have gotten together to create to stage.” An indication of the
7:00,8:3S
I 7:00 and 8:38
popularity
has
already
show’s
Sol Nazerman as an astonishingly real conception. Steiger
is on the screen for nearly two hours and is superb. His
acting is intense and perfectly controlled so that it is
SPEND YOUR SATURDAY NIGHTS AT THE
difficult to watch, even more difficult to write about. The
image of Steiger, the sweat and blood comingled on his
face and clothes, mouthing a silent scream like Lear, is a
startling cinematic re-creation of Edward Munch’s The
Cry. It is a moment that is seared into the mind and one
Dancing
which will re-occur for a person as a part of correlative
moments through a lifetime. And, Lumet has surrounded
3 SHOWS
Steiger with actors whose performances in a different
key are equally striking. Brook Peters, Jaimie Ortis, WarNO COVER
NO ENTERTAINMENT CHARGE
ren Finnerty are all frighteningly real.
The movie is less satisfactory on the intellectual level.
In spite of his extensive experience, Lumet is still too
with Audience Participation
indulgent. Too much of the film is heavy-handed. There
are long shots of people walking or staring that break
down the mood instead of supporting, it. The scene in
Large
the social worker’s, apartment is dreadful. The religious
FUN FOR ALL
symbolism is hardly necessary and intrudes too often.
The whole relationship between Nazerman and his assistCOMMUNITY SINGING
(Cont’d on P. 10)

HVIVIEH ■

he soon found the town’s residents eager and ready to join in.
The result was one of the most
effective and authentic scenes in
the film.

In addition to all of the natural
scenic beauty in “The Easy Life,’’
Risi was careful to include beauty
of the female form: scores of bikini-clad girls decorated the
film’s beach sets and delighted
the Riviera’s Beach Set! In fact,
so that lovely Catherine Spaak
might be dressed differently than
the others, she wears a one piece
striped bathing suit reaching to
her knees!
Sennett than
sexy, Catherine is still the cutest
—or the kookiest—girl in the
scene. And in another scene she
wears a more conventional twopiece suit—by now almost obsolete on the fun-filled beaches
used as “locations” for the cast
and crew of “The Easy Life.”

Another Buffalo Jazz Festival
Folk Presentation

Bob Dylan

•

,t

GLEN CASINO
—

Continuous Entertainment

—

RAY VOHWINKLE

Pitcher of Beer —$1.25
—

—

SATURDAY

No«. 20th—8:30 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall
All Seats Reserved

$5, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50
MAIL ORDERS FOR BEST
CHOICE OF SEATS—SEND
SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED
ENVELOPE WITH CHECK OR
MONEY ORDER NOW TO
BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL,
c/o DENTON’S, 32 COURT ST.,
BUFFALO 2, N. Y,

�Friday, Oetobar 29, 1945

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

MUSIC ON CAMPUS Drama Groups Present First Play of Season
By DANIEL SCHROEDER
Sunday, October 24, three-of

the most musical musicians in
the area gave a joint recital at
Allen SiBaird Hall. ClarinetistRosenberggel, soprano Dorothy
er and pianist Carlo Pinto, all
from the UB music faculty,
played works from the 19th and
20th centuries.
The Mihalovic Sonata for Clarinet and Piano which started the
program, is an interesting work
in the modern chromatic-pandiatonic idiom which is no longer
anything new, and has the jagged
rhythmic interplays which have
also been done better by other
composers. Still, it is a successful piece, and proves that this
idiom has many years of life
left. The next work performed
was Satie’s Death of Socrate*.
Satie was an innovator before
1900, but by the time of this
work (1919), it was plain that
he was not progressing further.
Thus the idea of recurring patterns, changing only in relation
to each other but never changing
themselves, like the colors of a
prism, had already been incorporated into the wider range
of expression of Debussy. Brahms’
Sonata for Clarinet and Piano is
as introspective as is usual for
the master, but only in the first
“allegro appassionato” movement
does he descend to self-indulgence (which isn’t as bad as all
that). Seiber’s Three tongs by
Morgenstern feature texts of
something just inside of surreal-

ism, and music, for voice and
clarinet, which matches them
perfectly. Spohr’s Seven German
Songs ended the evening in fine
style; something by Schubert or

his antecedents should end all
concerts, for their undeceptively
simple content and joyous outlook
(“the beautiful songs of the
birds
the trees begin to blossom . . . Life is pulsating everywhere”!).
At some time during the recital, each performer displayed
the one best aspect of his talents.
For instance, the many faceted
Mr. Pinto returned to his most
experienced and accomplished
role of accompanist; as he was at
his best in the very unobtrusive

1 now'
7:30-9:30

conceived orchesflrally.) The difference in timbre between clarinet and voice was less noticeable;
in Sieber’s ‘Three Songs” there

are many passages challenging
the performers to match their
tone qualities, which the duo accomplished remarkably. Mr. Sigel seemed a wee bit uncertain
about landing in his high register,
especially in the disjunct opening piece. But he constantly improved, and his floating but fullbodied arpeggios in “Longing,”
a song from the closing Spohr
cycle, left no doubts about his
mastery. Mrs. Rosenberger likewise turned in an impeccable performance, notably on the jumpy
Seiber cycle, in which she was
accompanied only by clarinet.
(How did she find those pitches?)
Her voice was also quite suffi-

cient to the

sustained, almost
monotonous drama of Satie’s
Death, though it seemed to miss
something of the warmth and
rubatos of Spohr’s Seven Songs.
To coin a phrase, it was a professional performance by professionals; and it also had that
extra quality which only a great
dea lof experience and a bit of
inspiration, can create.

performances.

The final performance on Saturday, November 6, will be a
benefit for the Free Southern
Theatre. This unique group has
toured the South for two seasons
and was tentatively scheduled to
perform on the UB campus in
November, Unfortunately, a number of other colleges and universities did not choose to book this
group and the tour was cancelled.
It had been hoped that the northern college tour would raise
enough funds to meet the expense
of offering free theatre throughout the South. One expense not
counted on was $4000 in harassing
fines levied by municipal governments antagonistic to the Civil
Rights Movement. Half the box
office receipts for this benefit
performance will be donated to
the Free Southern Theatre, and
patrons will have the opportunity
of contributing, if they so desire.

Murder of Gonzago
(Cont’d from P. 4)
able by their absence from the
civil rights movement where
both the spirit of the Constitution (liberty) and the letter of
the Constitution (order) have
been violated. It would seem that

the sad muddle of the campus

rightists is that they are so
caught up in their own rhetoric
and their own cliches about freedom that they forget that freedom means Negroes voting in
Mississippi without being shot
and slum dwellers not being
FRII PARKINS behind Liberty Rank
entrance from Hertel and earner of
Norwalk.

I I I

...

backdrop to the Spohr work. As
other times, especially in the
first movement of the Brahms,
the piano seemed too rich in texture in comparison with the clarinet’s naturally thin high range.
(In this particular case, however,
Mr. Pinto could hardly have given as true an interpretation if
he used a lighter touch or pedal,
because his part was obviously

The Lady's Not for Burning.
which plays in Baird Recital Hall
from November 3 to 6, opens the
dramatic season of the Department of Drama and Speech. Produced in association with the StuGuild, Christodent Theatre
pher Fry’s verse comedy, according to the noted director-critic
Harold Clurman, is characterized
by “wit, grace and a touch of tenderness.” Tickets for the limited
run go on sale Monday, October
25, at the box office in 1 N Harriman Library. Reservations can
be made after that date by calling 831-4633. General admission
is $1.00; student admission will
be $.50. This lower price scale is
new this year. Tickets will also
be available at the Baird Hall
box office on the evenings of the

WorthParis

.

.

.

robbed of the privilege of living
in hovels. Freedom exists only
when it is exercised, not when it
is talked about,
the murder of gonzago awards
To the Catholics who are now
openly invited to join the Ku
Klux Klan in Maryland in what
is assumed to be a new era of
tolerance for that organization
goes our Dubious Honour Award.
To Lyndon Baines Johnson,
who, has told a gathering of government information officers that
he expects them to spend more
time producing favourable news
about his administration and
less time co-operating with reporters in search of stories which
displease him goes this week’s
Now Wo Know tho REAL Roason
Removed Award,

PIZZA

HOPELESS-

IF 3-1344

BOTNOTHONS”
«

John Brotnan and Pamela Dadcg in "Tha Lady's Not for Burning"
Mr. Robert Costley, a local actor
who toured with the Free Southern Theatre, will be available for
questions at a post-show coffee
hour in the Baird Rehearsal

Room.

Thfe Lady's Not for Burning,
directed by Mrs. Julia Pardee, is
the first of four full-length productions to be presented on campus during the year. The Student
Theatre Guild will produce Kopit’s Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's
Hung You in tha Closet and I'm
Peelin' So Sad from December 17
to 19, the Department of Drama
and Speech and the Guild will
present Euripide's Orestes from

March 9 to 12 and Harold Pinter’s
The Birthday Party from April
27 to 30.
This season explores the range
of dramatic experience. Fry’s
verse play is a springlike romantic comedy tinged by bitterness,
yet still a lyric hymn to the glory
of being alive. Kopit’s play is a
parody on the excesses of the

Absurdists while it makes a dev-

astating comment on the modern
cult of “Mom;” the rarely produced Orasta* is a strange fusion
of tragedy with the satyr play

and combines black humor with
flamboyant melodrama; and Pinter’s early play has been termed
a “comedy of menace.”

Die grump...
(Cont’d from P. 5)

HUAC continues to Investigate
the Klan. The great guardian of
American Freedom and Liberty
against one of the most underhanded and sneaky disrupters of
the great American Dream. Of
course it is somewhat difficult
to see the HUAC side looking like
pose?

I must be a bad guy. I have not
given United yet. I have this cute
little IBM card with my name
and several dozen options for
weekly or semi-annually or permanent collections. I think if I
hang onto it long enough that one
of these

days

the computer is

going to clank down the stairs
and take it back. AFL-CIO Brotherhood of Computers will probably protest these remarks. How
would you arrest a computer for
income tax exasion anyway? It
wouldn’t fit in most cells and
you know it is going to be smart-

er than a fair amount of the arresting officers.
The Bookstore is slipping. Not
only have the Pinks disappeared
but one of the turnstiles is
broken and you can actually slip
out without going past the cashier. I happen to think I am a

pretty broadminded guy and the
record collection in the bookstore
is pretty fair but if somebody
doesn't take Barry McQuagmire
or whatever the name of the
gentleman who authored “Eve of
Destruction” is, out of the Folk
Music there is going to be a
picket or two. Put him with Bob
Dylan—and take them both out
of Folk and put them on a separate rack. That should please

everybody.
Enough, I am going to go
watch a bulldozer cavort on the

ex-softball diamond. If it goes
farther than it has now I just
may lie down in front of it. Later.
Watch out for the FBI—and
people with red beards.

PMAMOUHT PICTURE

E YEAR’S TEN BEST!”
Ntwtwk
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COMEDY!
“BRILLIANT! A
‘TOM JONES’
WITH JETAWAY!”

I. H. O. P.

Support

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—Tim# Mag.

""HstteEflSlIifc
starring

(titled in italy -il sorpasso-)

VITTORIO GASSMAN CATHERINE SPAAK

LOUIsTRINTIGNANT oInORISI MARIO CECCHIGORI
AN EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE
JEAN

CONFERENCE THEATRE, NORTON
CONTINUOUS FRIDAY A SATURDAY

1:29 AND

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THI

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�PAGE TEN

SPECTRUM

FILM

Greek Notes
ALPHA

SIGMA

SIGMA PHI EPSILON

PHI

The Alpha Sigs were out in
force last Saturday night for their
annual Pajama-a-go-go at the Hotel
Worth. “Scubi-juice" was served.
Thes weekend a contingent will
travel to Cornell and congregate
at the Alpha Sig House there.
Saturday night they will attend
the Rolling Stones Concert.
We are proud to announce the
induction of our 12 new pledges.
Alpha Sigma Phi is looking forward to its joint party with PhiPsi, November 6.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI
Sigma Kappa Phi wishes to congratulate Sister Cathy Hawley on
being elected President of her
Nursing Class. We also thank Dr.
Plesur for speaking at our last
meeting.

BETA SIGMA RHO
As expected, last
Saturday
night’s joint party with Phi Kappa
Psi was judged as a fine example
of true college intrafraternal
spirit. We wish to extend our congratulations to Phi Kappa Psi for
edging out Beta Sigma Rho in the
“dance” contest.
We are proud to announce the
recent induction of our newest
fellow honorary member. All-Pro
Tom ("Tippy") Day of the champion Buffalo Bills football team.
We hope the extra-large fraternity sweatshirt we bought him

will fit.

We proved ourselves undefeated in football by beating Alpha
Epsilon Pi last week. We wish
continued success to uor golf and
tennis teams also.
Today is our Vice-Warden’s,
Steve Litvak’s, birthday. Happy
birthday. “Litz.”
Thanks to Gerry Cantor in his
effort with other fraternity representatives to get the center
lounge back.
Thanks to Stu Miller for his
vigorous imagination and effort
in making our new hall wonderfully attractive. Our achievements
were possible not only because of
a united effort, but because of the
highly skilled leadership of Chanc e 11 o r Marc Edelstein. “Ko,”
Roger, Litz, Druss, Juice, Kenny,
Henry, and Sam.

THETA CHI SORORITY

Theta Chi wish to thank the
brothers of Pi Lambda Tau for a
very enjoyable social.
Also “thanks” to all those who
have helped to make our pumpkin sale such a success. Today is
the last chance to purchase your
pumpkin.

The sisters are looking forward
to welcoming their new pledges in

244 Norton from 3-5 p.m. this
afternoon.
PI LAMBDA TAU
Pi Lambda Tau would like to

announce that its fall pledging is

now fully underway. The pledge
class has challenged the brothers
to a football game this Thursday
or Friday at 4 p.m. The social
with Theta Chi,Sorority last Friday was very successful.

Phi Epits annual HalloParty at Brother
barn. Music will
the Cavemen.

Tomorow night Sigma

silon will hold
ween Costume
Pat Sherman’s
be provided by

ALPHA PHI DELTA

TAU KAPPA EPSILON
Douglas Young is the new IFC
Junior Representative. Last weekend the Praters held a dance honoring their parents. Events for
this weekend include a Clambake, Sunday, October 31 at EIlicott Creek Park. There will be a
football game with Gamma Phi
and a Beer Stag, after the game,
at the TEKE Apartment. The
game will take place Saturday,
October 30 at I p.m.

Congratulations are extended to
brother Tom Peca on his election
to Sergeant at Arms.

The brothers would like to welcome their new pledge class and

BOCCE
TP 3-1344

CHI OMEGA

wish them the best of luck.
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA

The sisters are looking forward
to a social with Theta Chi Fraternity tonight. Sunday, the sisters
are giving a bridal shower for
Sister Bev Holies in Norton. The
Pledge Initiation ceremony will
be held at an Alumnae’s home
Monday.
PHI KAPPI PSI

Phi Kappa Psi would like to
appreciation to Beta
Sigma Rho for their active participation during last Saturday’s
express

“joint party.”

Tis weekend the brothers will
hold a costume Halloween Party.
ALPHA EPSILON PI

The brother’s hope “the best
man wins” in the first annual
UB
Buffalo State pancake eating contest at the International
House of Pancakes tomorrow.
Bemie Stein, Gene (I am the
greatest) Haber, Gary Goldberg,
Gus Reichbach. and Alan Gerson
will be representing UB. A $25
first prize will be given by I.H.P.
—

Chi Omega would like to thank
the new sisters for the very delightful costume party given last
Sunday. We would also like to
express our appreciation for their
gift.

Thanks goes to all the commit-

tees who so successfully organized our Outer-Space Theme Rush
Party. We were glad to see so

many rushees present.

PHI LAMBDA DELTA
Phi Lambda Delta will hold its
annual Halloween Party Saturday
night at 8:30 at 970 Lafayette,
the Stud Farm. The first 10 gallons of apple smash will be supplied by the brothers.
The brothers would like to congratulate brother Ron Holland on
his fine work at making the last
blast a great success.

ALPHA KAPPA PSI

The AEPi beer barrel for the
best players of the past week’s
game will be given this week to
Gerry LaFountain and Dan Sella.

Alpha Kappa Psi, enjoyed a
pledge orientation banquet, at
which Dr. Ertell spoke, at the
Niagara Manor Plantation Room
last evening. The brothers are
looking forward to a Halloween
Party Saturday evening and a
football game with Theta Chi
Sorority Sunday afternoon.

ALPHA PHI OMEGA

THETA CHI FRATERNITY

This Saturday evening, the
brothers will have a Halloween
costume party at the Sheridan
Lanes.

This past week, the brothers of
Theta Chi Fraternity spent their
time painting and modernizing
the Chapter House at 2 Niagara
Balls Blvd. The brothers hope
this renovation will compliment
the expected enjoyable social
with Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority
tonight and a Twin-Halloween
party tomorrow evening.

The brothers wish to announce
the members of the Fall Pledge
Class: James Jones, President
John McGrady, Stephen Millman,
and David Nemcek.
GAMMA PHI

The brothers of Gamma Phi
have many festivities planned for
this Halloween Weekend. Tonight,
there will be a stag party in
honor of alumni brother Ray Poltorak who will be married next
month. Tomorrow night, at 8
p.m., a dated costume party will
be held at the Club Bar. Finally,
Sunday afternoon will feature a
rematch of a touch-football game

3151 BAILEY AVE.
at E. Amhant
Buffalo, Now York 14215
Dial 832-1200
FREE PARKING
COME TO MOREY'S

A short distance from
Campus and get your

10% DISCOUNT
by showing ID Card

.

.

(Cont’d from P. 8)

ants, (called Jesus Ortis), is theologically bloated and
hardly justifiable. The final scene with the spike is just
too much! Neither the head nor the heart is served.
Lumet moralizes too much even in his best scenes and
even the flashbacks (too derivative from Munk’s Passanger) could have been integrated more skillfully so that
they provide insight as well as information.
I’ve talked about The Pawnbroker at some length,
but The Hill is a much more effective film. The manager
of the Center told me that it was scheduled to close last
night, and I hope that he has held it over or that it is
scheduled for a second-run house at some date in the near
future. It is a movie that I was so completely absorbed by
that I haven’t got the necessary distance to write an
effective analysis.
The story is about a British Army Detention Camp
in North Africa. The camp is run by a career soldier who
takes immense pride in turning the dregs of the British
Army (deserters, thieves, trouble-askers, rebels, etc.)
into men who will be proud of themselves and proud of
their country. Unfortunately, his laudable intentions have
become corrupted by his strict adherence to the K. R.—
the manual of arms—dating from the days of Queen
Victoria. Five prisoners arrive at the camp and one of
them, played to perfection by Sean Connery, is a sergeant-major himself, a career man who slugged his commanding officer when he was ordered to sacrifice his
men in a militarily hopeless position. The dramatic conflict between Top Sergeant Harry Andrews and Connery
is absolutely incendiary. Andrews, a basically decent
man, is slowly losing control of the camp to a C. O.
named Williams (Ian Hendry) a sadistic, brutal man who
was a prison screw in civilian life. While Andrews wants
to make toy soldiers out of his men, Williams vents his
own neurosis and weaknesses on every man he can break.
Connery has devoted his life to the army too and believes
in the book to a point, but now that he has been punished
for his courage and good sense, he has become an enemy
of the establishment. For King and Country, he must be
sent to the orders and the “hill” itself is the tool which
the system will use to break him. Connery and Ossie
Davis (a West Indian) resist every attempt to break
them and from the battleground of men’s wills, a sr.ouldering study of the principles which men live and die by
develops in intensity and power.
The cast is perfect. I can’t imagine anyone better in
any of the roles. Connery makes one forget that he plays
James Bond most of the time in about five minutes. After
that, he is Joe Roberts, Scots accent, bawdy humor, violent sense of self-preservation, sense of loyalty and duty,
the lot. The camera work is great, the sound actually
too realistic at times (speeches get lost) and the tone and
pacing perfectly gauged to burst into a furious final
crescendo after an unbelieveably comic tour-de-force by
Ossie Davis. It is a hell of a movie.
.

.

.

On Thursday, Nov. 4,
1965, at 8:15 p.m. at the
Auditorium of the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Library, Lafayette Square,
The American Jewish Committee and The Buffalo
Meeting of The Society of
Friends will sponsor a pub-

Go all out for

lie lecture by Charles E.
Silberman, Editor of Fortune Magazine and author
of Chrisis in Black and
White. The Topic is “The
Deepening Crisis in Race
Relations.” There is no
charge for the open lecture.

warmi

sagebrr
cushion of crepe. Rand Shoes $12.95 to $20.95.

100% Pure Beef
Clothing Fathion Center hr Men

.

tiger tan waxhide

MCDONALD'S

SIGMA DELTA TAU
As the Fall 1965 sorority rush
has ended, Sigma Delta Tau would
like to congratulate al of the new
sorority women. The sisters would
like to thank Cindy Perl, President of Pan Hellenic Council for
a job well done.

with Tau Kappa Epsilon. Afterwards will be a beer party where
the losers will serve the winners.
The brothers wish the best to
“Monk” Hines and Linda McIntyre on their engagement last
week.

Alpha Phi Delta will hold a
Halloween Liquor Party tomorrow evening at the Brighton
Acres. It will be a costume party
with prizes awarded for the most
original costumes. The party will
last from 9 until 1 and will feature music of a well known area

band.

Friday, Octoba. 29, 1965

MENU

Hamburgers
Templing Cheeseburgers
Old-fashioned Shakes
Crisp Golden French Fries
Thirst-Quenching Coke
Delightful Root Beer
Coffee As You Like It
Full-Flavored Orange Drink
Refreshing Cold Milk

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SPECTRUM

29, 1965

PAGB ILBVIN

THE RIGHT
—

IVCF

The previously scheduled hayride has been cancelled. Instead,
a Halloween party will be held
8 p.m. October 30, at Randall

Memorial Baptist Church. (Come
dressed as you want!) If you need

meet in
front of Tower Hall at 7:15 pjn.
There is a donation of 25c to help
defray the costs of the evening.
transportation, please

The next two lectures on the
“Principles of Faith” of IVCF
will be given by Rev. Peter Pascoe, Kenmore United Presby-

terian Church, on November 3
and 10, at 3 p.m. in Norton 264.
The topic will be “The Presence
and Power of the Holy Spirit in
the Work of Regeneration.”

IVCF holds regular prayer
meetings at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday
and 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesdays in Norton 217. Regular Bible
studies are held Mondays at 3
p.m., Wednesdays at 2 p.m. and
Thursdays at 10 a.m., also in

all other times, Mass is offered at
11 a.m. each day.

If anyone would like to submit
articles for the newspaper Discussion, please place your articles
in Box 64 in Norton Hall or
bring them to Newman Hall. All
articles are welcome.
Next Friday, November 5, a
social will be held at Newman
Hall starting at 8 p.m. Posters
will supply further information.
On November 10, Newman will
present a controversial play
Endgame with a discussion of
the play following. Admission is
free and it will be held at 7:30
p.m. in Norton Conference Theater. Everyone is invited to come.
Sunday Suppers are served
each week at 5:30 p.m. at Newman Hall. Also, discussion classes
are continuing every Tuesday and
Thursday at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. in
Room 344, Norton Hall.
HILLEL

Norton 217.
For further details please contact Miss Billi Lee Knapp at 8313251.

NEWMAN
Father Thomas

O’Leary will
speak on “Preparing for Marriage” at the meeting on Wednesday, November 3, at 7:30 p.m.
in Norton Conference Theater.
Everyone is welcome to attend.
November 1 is All Saints’ Day,
a holy day of obligation. Masses
will be said at the Cantalician
Center at 10 a.m. and 11 a.m.
On November 2, All Souls’ Day,

Masses will be offered at Newman
Hall at 11 a.m., noon, and 5
p.m. On First Friday, November
5, Masses will be offered at Newman Hall at 11 a.m. and noon. At

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Arthur Burke,
a student at the University, will
speak on: “Life in a Kibbutz.”
An Oneg Shabbat will follow.
Hillel will serve a Delicatessen
Supper on Sunday, October 31 at
5:30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Rabbi Alan Ponn, Temple Beth
El Niagara Falls, will speak on:
“Tradition and Change—The Reform View.” Reservations for the
supper should be made at the
Hillel House.
The annual One-Day Hillel Institute will be held on Sunday,
November 7 in the Hillel House.
The guest speaker will be Rabbi
Richard Rubenstein, Director of
the B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation

at the University of Pittsburgh.
A limited number of reservations

for the Institute are available.
An invitation is extended to
members of the faculty and their
wives to attend a meeting of the
Hillel Fellowship on Sunday, November 7 at 8 pjn. in the Hillel
House, 40 Capen Blvd. Rabbi
Richard Rubenstein, director of
the B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation at the University of Pittsburgh and Charles E. Merrill,
Lecturer in Humanities, will Speak
on: “Freud and Judaism.”
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

ORGANIZATION
The regular weekly meeting of
the campus Christian Science Organization will be held next
Thursday evening at 7 in Room
264. All interested students are
welcome to attend.
A business meeting primarily
for the formation''o?'&gt;plans regarding the forthcoming lecture
will follow the November 4
meeting and will be'field in Room

277.

GAMMA

.

from P. 4)

A torn and tattered Constitution lies somewhere in Washington, just where I’m not sure. I

w

M'

DELTA

will meet Wednes3, at
6:30 p.m. in room 344 of Norton
Union. Pastor Cattau will play
tape recordings of discussions of
the Reformation. Commuters are
invited to meet in the Rathskeller at 5:30 p.m. for dinner before
the meeting.
Gamma Delta

day

.

evening, November

All those planning on going
to the University of Toronto Saturday, November 13 are asked
to be at the next meeting to
discuss details of the trip.

&lt;1°
No! because I have giventhem Buffalo's
moat exciting shoppe. Not because I
have offered them the finest names
in traditional casual clothing. Not
because of the unusual antiques and
little fun things at the shoppe. Not
of my sensible price policy
But just because I'm adorable.

iDcesimfinBi
net

mam traar eurrvo
.

picnic at

The price of the
Letchworth State Park has been
raised to 55c.

salesmen s sample sale
Men's

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Long

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UNIVERSITY

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.

doubt that it’s in the White
House, or the houses of Congress
high-handed, but the proposed —why should they want it there?
amendment didn’t get -through the The Supreme Court has a copy,
twisted, stretched, and distorted
very liberal Senate. What’s this?
Willie wants all the rich to supout of recognition. Interstate
port all the poor? What do you commerce is now defined as all
say, Mr. Luce? Well, that makes action or lack of action. General
it even.
welfare means anything anybody
wants. The elastic clause
The Voting Rights Bill outlaws
stretches the length of fifty
literacy tests in every state where
states. But who cares? Nobody
less than SO percent of the eligiuses the Constitution as a guide
ble voters have voted. The preany more. It’s Just a bulwark now,
sumption; When the majority is and really not much of a bulilliterate, the majority should wark.
rule! How in the world is a man
What happened? W i 1U e just
going to know anything about a
had another kid? Well, fork it
candidate if he can’t even read
Luce.
what’s written about him? True—- over, Mr.
be
no
taxes.
poll
there should
True—every effort should be
made to prevent voter discrimination because of race or color.
But this approach, designed to
protect democracy, merely makes
it a farce.
(Cont’d

—

Men's
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HRS' 1

*-

�oCeiterA

the Editor

to

Viet-Nam: Patriotism

or

Profits

TO

THE EDITOR:
I was recently pleased to receive a copy of
an editorial (I presume) entitled “The Murder of
Gonzago” by John G. Medwid in your October 8
issue.
Now I don't know Mr. Medwid, however, I am
sure that he has never been to Vietnam, nor has
he spoken with the Vietnamese people in an attempt to understand the validity of our aid to this
nation. No one will deny that the economics of
this rich but undeveloped country are of concern
to the United States and for that matter the entire
free world.
Mr. Medwid's use of quotations from U. S. News
and World Report, etc. in no way disprove our
prime reason for being in Vietnam, to stop the
expansion of communism and defend our belief in
freedom.

I find a complete lack of patriotism (which for
some is “old fashioned”) both in Mr. Medwid’s philosophy and in teach-ins, pickets, and draft card
burnings by the most part a bunch of rowdy,
bearded, shabbily dressed students who are supposed to be demonstrating acts of “moral courage.” Let us see American students stand up and
speak proudly of the United States and be thankful that we live in a nation strong enough to help
nations such as Vietnam.
Contrary to Mr. Medwid’s beliefs, no political
solution is possible in Vietnam at this point. The
only solution (aside from our present course of
action) is complete withdrawal which is totally
unsatisfactory.
I believe that the average “Protesting” student
does not know enough about Vietnam to be in a
position to maintain that the Vietnam solution
requires a political rather than a military solution, That, like burning a draft card is the easy
way out and requires little backbone.
However, we will always have the Monday
morning quarterbacks who are more than willing
to tell you how to solve the problem, but have
little understanding of the details of the game.
And may I say to Mr. Medwid who believes we
are killing in Vietnam to gain “fat profits;” I
know why we are in Vietnam and I am proud of it
as are 99% of the Americans here. I am sorry that
he doesn’t know why. Doesn’t it seem strange that
over 125,000 Americans in Vietnam are doing a
tough dirty, difficult job with little or no complaints, while a few students living a comfortable
life in the U. S. are doing all the complaining?
Americans will be in Vietnam until there is an
honorable peace regardless of the ignominious
whimperings of a few misguided youths.
I hope you see fit to publish this letter as rebuttal to Mr. Medwid’s comments.
Monroe J. Taranto
Captain, U. S., Army

Student Scores Editorials
TO THE

Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

EDITOR:

It seems to me that the wording in your masthead has been neglected to the point that you are
seriously cheating the UB students and faculty
members of school news.
“The Official newspaper of the State University
of New York at Buffalo. . .” is how it reads, not:
“Official war grounds for YAF, SDS, SODA,

Uirtue

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

Below i* the final exam schedule for January, 1966.
The Student Welfare Committee in cooperation with Dr.
Arthur L. Kaiser, director of Records and Admissions, is
and other such intellectual reform groups.”
attempting to establish a university rule whereby no stuYes, we students are interested in Viet Nam
dent is permitted to take more than two exams on any
and other world affairs—we get the CourierExpress. We personally sat in on a good deal of one day. (All students who are scheduled for more than
the Teach-In and found it interesting and, in part, two exams on any day, must report to the information
enlightening from both points of view. In order to desk
in the Office of Records and Admissions, room 201
avoid another battle, I will not tell you who I
Hayes
Hall, during the week of October 25-29.
(or
But
or
disagree) with.
agree
that isn’t all I,
(Continued

from P.

5)

other students, want to hear about—and that isn’t
20,000 students.
In 1960, (when I worked on the Spectrum) we
were interested in the student. You only seem
to be interested in your small group of “intellectuals” (if we can call them that.)
Let’s get with it—just because UB wins a football game doesn't mean that it has to be in the
Sports section—it could be on the first page—and
so could that article on The Fantasticks.
Personally, I’d like to see this letter on the
front page with no cuts rather than stuck on Page 5
—that is if you’ve got the guts to put something
there that a lot more students would like to see
than your group would.
Good luck—on your private war—let’s have the
Spectrum back that used to belong to us “nonintellectuals.”
Eoz Mandelcorn

U.S. Must Face
The Agressor Now
TO THE EDITOR;

I’ll lay it on the line as I see it. Do we want
our nation to be dominated by someone other
than ourselves? Since the colonial days, the answer
has been no! 1 feel that the answer is still no.
Today, we the majority, rule ourselves. Our own
personal actions are not curtailed except if we violate one of our own laws. I also feel that it is
everyone’s duty to help preserve our freedom.
Anyone who does not is just a free-loader, living
off someone else’s labor.
The last two World Wars tought many of us
that if we give an inch to an aggressor, he will take
a mile. Only after we were seriously threatened
did we act in the past World Wars. We learned
our lesson when it came to Korea. We realized
that in order to keep ourselves from immediate
danger, we had to act immediately when an aggressor began to move. We did that in Korea and even
then we almost lost.
We are again faced with an aggressor who
wants to increase his domain. The elected rulers,
primarily the president, have realized that an
aggressor is again on the move. To prevent him
from gaining world-wide domination, they have
decided to stop the aggressor at the start of his
growing period. To be sure, like Hitler, this new
aggressor will grow and continue to grow until he
has complete domination everywhere, including
here, unless he is stopped. In World War II, we
decided to act only after it became obvious that
we were next on an aggressor’s list of countries
he wanted to dominate. Isn’t it easier to stop an
avalanche by stopping the first stone, than to
fight the full force of its accumulated wrath. I
say, realize the big picture, and do what we can
now to keep this nation of ours free for all time.
Robert J. Pomichter

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January
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DATE

Wednesday,

Jan.

Jan.

Thursday,

Friday,

5-14. 1966

S

1)
2)

6

1)

10

101

1)
2)

Economics 181
Economics 182R

1) Mathamatics 117
2) Mathamatics 141
3) Mathamatics 241

101

1) Chomistry 101
2) Businass 5201

2

Psychology

Wadnosday, Jan. 12

History

1) Political Scionco 151
2) Nursing 111

Q

2)

Jan. 11

Thursday,

103

H
V

1) Sociology
$
2)

Saturday, Jan. 8

Tuosday,

4:00-7:00

1) Drama A Spaach 126R
2)
E

Jan. 7

Monday, Jan.

12:00-3:00
1) Modern Language
2)
R
3) Business 0201

101

D

2)

N
I

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P

English 101

Jan. 13

2)

Friday, Jan. 14

Modarn Languagas

101

Y

Philosophy 203

Thursday, Nov. 4, 3 p.m.
in room 329 Norton. Dr.
Bonner will discuss the
application of Thoreau’s
ideas and philosophy of
life to today’s world. All
are welcome to attend,

Union Board Literature
and Drama Committee presents Professor Bonner of
the English Dept, who will
speak on the subject of
“Thoreau Today,” on

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�SPECTRUM

Friday, Oetobar 29, 1965

PAGE THIRTEEN

Campus Sororities Face Extinction, Furnas' Statement
wilKsit
Says Professor Scott of California
(Cont’d from P. 1)

The sorority representative to
DAVIS, Calif. (CPS)
A Uni-_
versity of California sociologist' the campus student government
said, however, she felt the drop
says that sororities- long influential in manipulating the campus reflected a “steady trend
social order, now face extinc“The drop has been about the
tion.
same every year since I’ve been
John F. Scott, professor of sohere,” she said. “It has someciology at the University of Calithing to do with the way the unifornia, Davis, feels that the factors that caused the growth of versity is changing.”
these social institutions during
—

”

the first half of the century have
changed and that rigidly structured sororities are finding it
more and more difficult to mesh
with today’s highly competitive
campus society.
Dr. Scott, who has studied sororities in detail, says he finds
them an outgrowth of society’s
efforts to control marriage and
the selection of the “right man.”
“University administrations are
not as hospitable to Greeks as
they once were,” he says, citing
regulation changes that tend to
minimize the influence of Greek
activities on campus. Extensive
dormitory complexes are effectively competing with sorority
housing and off-campus activities
are proving as popular and as
varied as sorority activities.
“But the worst blow of all to
the sorority system comes from
the effect of increased academic
pressure on the dating habits of
college men,” Scott says. “Academic competition on most campuses is keen and college men
no longer have time for the form
of courtship that once made sororities so exciting.”
Scott concludes that the sority system, “not likely to yield to
change,” will no longer be able
to sustain itself. “When parents
find that sorority membership
does their daughter little good,
the system as we know it will go

into history.”

On the University of California’s
27,500-student Berkeley
campus, the predictions made by
Dr. Scott are already beginning

to come true.

Sorority rush participation was
was down this fall to 340 coeds
as compared with 437 just a year
ago. The dean of women’s office

could not explain the drop.

Student Senate...

from P. li
had not received a copy of the
actual report upon which the releases had been based.
(Cont’d

When asked whether he felt
that the information released was
factual Dr, Puffer stated that he
would presume so but again pointed out that he had not seen the
actual report. Since the entire
situation is very complex the matters involved should not be subject to a hasty action.

Concerning the possible effect
of the report on the re-organization of the FSA Dr. Puffer stated
his hope that any plans for reorganization of the FSA be along
the lines to be suggested by the
committee headed by Student
Senate President
Clinton De
Veaux. This committee was founded as a result of the recommendation.

Another trouble within the
Greek system not mentioned in
Dr. Scott’s study is either implied or actual racial and religious discrimination. Last spring,
the national Sigma Chi fraternity
organization dropped the Stanford University chapter from its
rolls after it had pledged a Negro. The national body said this
was not the reason the chapter
was dropped, however.
Because of the Stanford incident, whch prompted Commissioner of Education Francis Keppel to warn that any institution
of higher education allowing
fraternities or sororities to discriminate would not qualify for
federal funds, Sigma Chi is now
under scrutiny at campuses
across the nation.

This fall, the chapter of Sigma
Sigma Sigma sorority at the Catholic University of America in
Washington, D. C. terminated its
affiliation with the national
group. The local chapter had
just joined in May. Pam Hull,
chapter president, said the decision was made after some chapter members attended the soroity’s national convention in New
York City.

“During the convention,” 'She
said, “I discovered policies of the
organization which had not been
made known to our group when
we joined.” Informed sources
within the chapter have made it
known on campus that the “unacceptable principles and traditions” involve discrimination.
Four national

fraternities and

two sororities took their fight to
remain at the State University
of New York at Buffalo all the
way to the New York Supreme
Court. The school had adopted
a policy that national Greek organizations would have to leave
campus or drop their national

ties after this school year.

FSA Audit...
(Cont’d from P. 1)

from the $13 per student fee,
which should be “discontinued or
reduced.”
The

auditors

have estimated

that “about $325,000 was charged

to the students and used mostly

for land acquisition.” This investment was contrary to the original
premise of the organization. In
addition, “student approval was
not sought for this . . . students
have been especially precluded
from serving on the Board of Di-

for such services as food, bookstore, and vending,” the "limitation of the amount of revnues
which can be realized from such
services and expended for student
and college benefit,” the “expansion of student representation in
association affairs.” and four, the
“adoption of guidelines which
will assist in determining appropriate activities.”

The report stated that there is

“We must be mindful, (however),” Dr. Gould said, “of the
continued needs of our students
for many services and activities
which the state, through tax resources, has been either unwilling or unable to provide.”

Mr. Gould, President of State
University, expressed his concern
with the comptroller’s report.

Other steps are being taken to
investigate possible reorganization of the PSA. The PSA Ad-Hoc
Committee for Reorganization was
appointed by Dr. Claude Puffer,
Vice President in Charge of Business Affairs, October 25, as part
of his study on the PSA. The Committee, under the chairmanship
of Mr. Clinton Deveaux, President
of the Student Association, was
established both to evaluate the
prices of books and food and to
consider reorganization of the
PSA structure. This reorganization will provide for student and
faculty setting of policy, rather
than solely the administrators;
Mr. Deveaux expects to present

rectors.”

a “proper and desirable place for
a faculty-student association in
the college community;” however, it is necessary to provide
for both “all possible savings in
the cost of service to students . . .
(and) “prudent auditing and
budgetary controls.” Prices should
approximate cost and provide no
more than a reasonable profit. As
an example, textbooks in City
College are sold to students at
10% to 20% off list price; in the
three universities reviewed by the
auditors, books are sold at list
or close to list price.

Prior to the report, he had already “initiated a series of steps

designed to strengthen FacultyStudent corporations, to clarify
their relationships to the university, and to assist them in continuing to meet the responsibilities which they have discharged
so creditably for a number of
years,”
“Many of its comments are in
sugline with the comptroller’s
gestions” and include; the “institution of formal contracts

made.

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ed continuation of studies to determine whether reduction of
fees, bookstore prices or profits,
food service prices, parking
charges or other modifications of
income or increases in the service or both, would be possible.
The studies are continuing. Student leaders are being consulted
and students will have a very important input in the determination of these matters.”

Further, students will now have

dents will be consulted in the
future because students now sit
on the FSA Board. At the last
meeting, Robert Baier, President
of the Graduate Student Association, was appointed student representative. Clinton Deveaux was

SDS Resolution

To summarize his release, Dr.
Furnas stated: "The Faculty Stu-

dent Association will continue to
review and to modify its operations. It is currently awaiting the
suggestion of a committee appointed by President Gould to
study the operation of Faculty
Student Associations in all units
of State University. It is anticipated that additional modifications will be established, the possibility of formal contracts in
some areas of services and other
guidance for the Association will
be very welcome.”
Dr. Roland expressed confidence
in the ad hoc committee and
the future of the NSA: “1 think
the committee can do a great deal.
I have confidence that everything
will work out well."

PIZZA
IF 3-1344

administrative re-

strictions.

l.t.lL

Why

“Dacron?&amp; cotton?

.

The Student Senate passed a
resolution Monday, October 26,
requesting a 10% discount in the

Because The Young Man in the Know knows
he’s got a good thing going for himself in
Eagle shirtsof 65%“Dacron”' polyester, 35%
cotton. Take the Eagle “Tromblee”. Thai’s
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further
to the

“The Board at a meeting on
September 17, 1965, recommend

the committee’s final recommendations before next semester.

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, President of UB, has promised that
the report "will be studied carefully,” as we continue our studies
to see whether reductions can be

.

press:

a say in matters such as buying
new land with FSA funds. “Stu-

despite possible

Furnas stated
his release

Dr;

changes in

the committee.

The proposal states that whereas the suppression of those
groups opposing the war in Vietnam is likely to reach local levels and as the SUNY at Buffalo
chapter of SDS is unequivocally
opposed to the war in Vietnam,
SDS resolves to continue to use
all possible and practical means
to bring to the attention of the
American people the insanity of
this war and bring it to an end,

.

Liaison Officer,
in on the Board
meetings,” Mr, Deveaux will not
have a vote because under New
York State Law no one under 21
years of age may be a voting
member of the Board.

ganization of the FSA and to recommend to the membership desirable changes.” The committee
will be responsible for determining what students want most in
regard to lowering prices in the
Bookstore or lowering student
fees; or perhaps a different solution altogether. Clinton Deveaux,
President of the Student Association, was appointed chairman of

At a weekly meeting on October 20, 1965 SDS members agreed
to issue a resolution which edifies the organization's position
concerning the war in Vietnam.
The resolution was drawn up as
a response to what one member
refers to as “red-baiting’ and as
a reaffirmation of support of the
national SDS office. It strongly
condemns the “malicious criticism” being leveled at the national office and urges them to
refrain from any conciliation with
“neo-McCarthyites” or those using
more subtle means of suppression.

.

elected
"and

�-

F ANTASTICKS' RE VIE WED

Fantasticks alive and believable.
The score is enchanting; it projects every emotion. Never was
the “lesson" of this musical easier
to swallow, yet never was it more
meaningful.

Barbara Damashek, portraying
The Girl, did more than anyone
or anything else to bring the
spirit of Tha Fantasticks to the
UB stage. Although her voice
was a bit shaky around the high
notes during the first act, her
facial expressions and wholesome
looks more than compensated for
it, James Kirsch, as The Boy, was
excellent opposite Miss Damashek.
Not only did he sound male; he
even looked it (a rarity among
amateur leading men). Their duets
were especially appealing.

Boy, Jim Kirsch, and Girl, Barbara Damasehak,togather

Jim Jimenz was well type-east
as The Narrator. Unfortunately,
his voice often lacked the strength
required for El Gallo. He was far
better in the few tender moments
when his verse told the story of
young love maturing.
Lewis Rampino and Jeffrey
Lesser as The Old Actor and
Mortimer, The, Man Who Dies,
were superb. These character
parts brought most of the humor
to the show, and each was played
thoroughly and effectively. Mr.
Lesser was particularly good when
he was not the center of attention. He chewed his gum (tobacco?), scratched his side, and
somehow managed to keep a
straight face throughout.

Fathers, Lebert J.
James Todkill, could
have been more emphatic in both
speaking their lines and singing.
The high point of their performances was the duet “Plant a Radish.” Here they “picked up speed”
•&gt;nd lost their inhibitions.
lastly, Winnie Watson, as the
Mute, was excellent. Her make-up
reminiscent of ‘Stop the
was extremely
World .
effective. Her motions were graceful, and spoke clearly.
two

Puma and

Her father, Lebert Puma, and his father, Jim Todkill

—

—

.

The most memorable facet of
the production is the concept of
“September.” “Spring is born out
of winter’s laboring pain,” and
September is that much sweeter
after a cold and bitter December.
In the end, The Girl is no longer
a “princess”, but, indeed, “a button-maker’s daughter.” The Boy
is not the idealistic young poet
he had been. Both had dreamed.
Both had been hurt. Both had
learned. Because they had
learned, they had, once again,
found September.

By JEFFREY SIMON
Some time ago, Newsweek, The
Saturday Evening Post, and a
few other quick thinking magazines carried “definitive” articles
on the “resurgence of the American left on campus.” Now aside
from the fact that the phrase
“resurgence of the American left
on campus” smacks of smug,
journalistic socialogy. the articles,
for whatever else they were
worth, presented the American
public with a rough outline of
student socio-political activism.
It would have been nice if the
articles had stirred up a wave
of anti-university panic and
caused parents to think twice
about sending their children to
academic propaganda mills. With
a smaller enrollment, it would
have been a hell of a lot easier
to find a parking space.
But, as could have been expected, the articles didn’t scare
anybody and UB is even more
crowded than it was before. SDS
has solve-ins, and a seemingly
permanent table in Norton. Lord
Russell is still alive, Martin
Luther King is joining everyone
else in making foreign policy
suggestions and the capitalist
system is bolstered-by SDS members every time they buy a motorcycle. (I could be wrong about
that. One of these days, I’ll take
a poll and find out if there actually is a large occurrence of
motorcycles among SDS members
or if. it’s just my imagination.)
Anyway, what the articles
didn’t say is that ardent student
political activity of any kind is
pointless no matter how you look
at it. First of all, it almost never
does any good. Nobody is ever
going to convince me that students had anything to do with the
rescinding of the Feinberg oath.
There will be a meeting of .the
Arts &amp; Crafts Committee 9:30
Thursday, October 21, in the
Craft Shop.
The Feinberg oath was a practical
joke, just like the Berkley riots

.

were. All practical jokes have to

end somewhere.
Secondly, student activism
needs Belief with a capital B to
keep itself going. Belief with a
capital B must have some sort
of end in view and political ends
in view are impossible. They must
be or else professional politicians

would have them.

Thirdly, Belief, etc. is obviously
symptomatic of inner emotional
conflict. If only group therapy
would take the place of solve-ins,
then the activists might really be
into something. Actually, though,
now that I think about it, the

solve-in went one step further
than group therapy. It was pure

psychodrama.

Fourthly, as confusing a thing
worse when
the things to be believed are
completely ridiculous. Nobody
short of Robert Shelton is going
to argue with racial equality, but
when people say things like, “If
only Fidel Castro were American,” or “The people’s Republic
of China is more of a democracy

as Belief is, it gets

than the U. S.,” it’s difficult not

to argue. I can’t help thinking of
the poor woman at the solve-in
who told how the Vietcong were
shooting down American jets (the
ones that go over 700 mph.) with
rifles by simply standing in front
of them and firing. They didn’t
even do that in G.I. Joe comic
books.

Finally, leftist student political
activity is pointless because there
is no organization. It probably
wouldn’t do much good anyway
but somebody should try to unite
groups named after Spartacus,
(no kidding, they really exist),

W. E. DuBois, John Reed and
Burt Tilstrom into one big John
Brown fan club. Then and only
then can they all get together
and dance the radicalism tango.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE
SKIS and bindings. 833-8354.

6.70x15

TIRE. By Goodyear,
bought for $16 six months ago.
Can’t use anymore because sold
car. Will sell for $9. Call NF 44676.

GOYA GUITAR—-Nylon strings,
permanent guarantee. Call
Monday before 1 p.m. 835-4351.

The production should be seen

by anyone who has not yet experienced it. It is almost as enjoyable to those of us who are
viewing it for the second or third
time. The Fantasticks, in a word,
it is
.
is lovely. Better still
September,

-

On Motorcycles, SDS,
Psychodrama and Belief

By SUZANNE ROVNER
An almost naked stage, a few
bright costumes, and a touch of
magic make the world of The

The

Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Magic Glasses are offered by Actor

Jim Jimenei

1960 FORD FAIRLANE —4-Door,
6-cylinder, stick shift. Will accept best offer. Call TF 4-8525.
SNOW TIRES—7.60x15, excellent
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Olympia SM7
TYPEWRITER
portable. Two years old, cost
$119 new, asking $75 or best offer. Elite type, “diplomat” style;
vertical and horizontal half-space;
automatic tab; carrying case. Cal'!
—

The Grass Harp, a play
with humor and fantasy
by Truman Capote, will
be the first major work
presented by the Daemen
Little Theatre players of
Rosary Hill College, from
October 27 throough to
31. Performances begin
at 8:30 p.m. Admission
is $1.25 for adults, $.75
for children.
The play is under the
direction of Sister Mary
Francis, assistant professor in dramatic art at the
College. Stage managers
are Diane M. La Borie
and Elizabeth Ann Zeder.

spoke

ol.

science as part of current Fenton Series.

There will be a meeting
of the Ski Club next Wednesday, Nov. 3 in the Fillmore room. A new area to

ski has been secured where
there are no lift lines,
cheap prices (pay as you
go), week nites and Sundays.

Many roles

bland to make the 'Fantasticks'

Stop in, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
Fillmore room and check
on our kick off the season
party

Ralph Sibley, 885-6096;

MISCELLANEOUS
MALE OR FEMALE STUDENT—
Free room and board for 3hour per day (3-6 p.m.) baby-sitting. Children 6 and 8 yrs. old.
Call TF 9-0365.
UB CLASS RING—1966, fratern

ity emblem. Found under the
bleachers at the UB-Richmond
game. Call 837-4796
THE DRUIDS—Play rock ’n roll
music better for any occasion.

Call David Hamilton, 634-3603.

�Friday, Octohar 29, 1965

PACE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

CJIBvaJ
OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPY CLUB
All potential O. T.’s (Occupational Thoroughpests) are cordially invited to the next meeting of
the O-T. Club covening on Thursday, November 4 at 4 p.m. in room
333. At that time our two roving
ambassadors will give a talk on
their trip to the American Occupational Therapy (Student) As-

sociation conference which will
be held in Florida. This will be
an excellent opportunity to learn
more about your future careers,
so please come!
MODERN DANCE
WORKSHOP
Composition and performing
group will meet Thursday, October 28, 7 to 8 p.m. in the small
gym (Clark Gymnasium).
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a meeting of the
Photo Club at 4 p.m. today in

room 266. Don Glena, photog-

rapher for University Relations,
our new advisor, will speak on
various aspects of photography.

ASTRONOMY CLUB

Weather permitting, the Astronomy Club of UB will have
an OPEN HOUSE tomorrow evening, Saturday, October 30, from
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The Club wishes
to show the public the exceptional performance of the University’s recently overhauled teninch Cassegrainian telescope.

The moon and Saturn will be
the principle objects of observation.
. The
group will meet in 111
Hochstetter before ascending to
the observatory on th6 sixth
floor of the building. All are wel-

available at the candy counter in
Norton Union and on the bulletin
boards in Tower Hall.

CADET LADIES CLUB
The well rounded student
needs more than academics, he
needs a social life, a life consistcome.
ing of learning and exhibiting
MODERN DANCE CLUB
social graces, exchanging fellowDance
Club
will ship and discussing current events
The Modern
meet Tuesday, 3 to 4 p.m. in the in a relaxed atmosphere.
small gym (Clark Gym).
Sixty UB students took advantage of such an evening last SatSPRING ARTS FESTIVAL
Applications for all positions urday at the Niagara Falls Offor the Spring Arts Festival are ficers’ Club when AFROTC cadets
™d their dates were guests of
.ne UB Cadet Ladies Club.
Relaxed in the air of friendship, the group was able to find
out for themselves how the Air
Force officer lives after office
hours. There was an opportunity
to question officers on all facets
of air force life and, surprisingly,
there is little difference between
military and civilian job pursuits.
Families with hopes and dreams
for a better future prevail while
the man-of-the-f a m 11 y is the
bread winner and “mom” is the
hub of home activity.
How better to learn of your
future job than to see it first
hand. And, that is in essence
the motto of the Cadet Ladies
Club at UB—Behind every successful officer is a well informed
wife.

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DAY
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�PAGE SIXTEEN

This weekend, the novice
debaters are participating
in D’Youville Novice Tourrp

,

.

j

twelve students
are entered in four rounds
of competition debate with
namenl.

Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

other schools from New
York State. Previous to
this, novice members have

•

attended discussion seminars at Utica College and
Michigan State University
Next weekend, the best af..
f

lirmative and negative
team as determined by
,

D’Youville results, will
represent UB at the University of Chicago Novice

Tournament.

There will be a UNICEF
Mixer on Friday, October
29, 8:30-12:30 p.m. in the
Goodyear Cafeteria. Admission is 25c single and
35c a couple. Refreshments
are free and all profits will
go to UNICEF. Music by
Rocky Lucci and his band.

VIEWPOINT
nents so far this
mal 2-3.

.

.

•

(Cont’d from P. 19}

year, yet their record

remains a dis-

When you stop to think that not a single
Buffalo
team has scored upon UB more than twice in any one
game. You realize that it is rather outstanding for a team
with a 2-2-2 record. Three ingredients for a winning team,
—

in this order are: defense, a kicking team, and an offense.
in
decreasing order. Bear Bryant of Alabama says that a tie
is like kissing your sister
not much thrill in it.
THE BIG TEN:
This was THE team in pre-season picks.
Michigan
It looks like the forecasters lose again, seeing how the
Wolverines just couldn’t jell. Last year’s Rose Bowl victors are this year’s doormat.
Here is a bandwagon. Before the
Michigan State
season started the Spartans were not regarded too highly.
Somewhere along the line a championship team developed. State is not without originality either
two Hawaiians, a barefooted punter, and a possible All-American
quarterback in Steve Juday.
Purdue
the state of Indiana has never had a BigTen representative in the Rose Bowl. The Boilermakers
have come closer than Indiana, but that only counts in
horse shoes. Last weekend's loss to Michigan State was
a heartbreaker and all but destroys their hopes for the
Pasadena Trip.
Ohio State stated strong, but again it was M.S.U. that
upended their bowl hopes. Iowa has the quarterback in
Snook and Minnesota the end in Aaron Brown, but neither
have the team.
SOUTH EASTERN and WESTERN CONFERENCE
The SEC can usually be divided between Alabama
and L.S.U. ever since the rebels of “Ole Miss” ran into
some recruiting trouble.
S.E.C.:
Alabama
What happened here, everyone asks.
Two losses and a tie have left the Crimson Tide with
much to be desired. A far cry from last year’s Joe Namath
Inc.
The Bulldogs got off to a fantastic start.
Georgia
First they upset Alabama on a controversial play, then
dumped Michigan, but ran into a little trouble with
Florida State. Last weekend Kentucky beat them
so
Georgia is on their way out as a dark horse.
L.S.U.
With an ample load of talent returning, the
Tigers have produced another winning team. It looks like
L.S.U. and the Chinese Bandits are headed for another
bowl bid.
S.W.C.
This can also be called the Texas-Arkansas
conference.
Arkansas
The Razorbacks settled the issue two
weeks ago in Fayetteville. Arkansas. In one of the finest
collegiate games ever witnessed and in classic rivalry,
Arkansas put on a last minute surge to defeat the Longhorns and take another long stride towards their second
National title. It was heartbreaking indeed, but the sign
of a couple of football’s best
Texas
Ston and think! How long has it been since
the mighty “Longhorns” have lost two games in any one
season? The Razorbacks delivered the first blow and
then, last weekend, the Owls of Rice turned a last minute
interception into a field goal and Texas went down to
defeat. That’s college football!

Well, U.B. has a fine defense, and the other two

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U.S.C.
Here’s another team that figured high in
the pre-season polls. They started slow with a tie to
Minnesota, but then streaked to four straight victories
behind the sensational running of Mike Garrett. Then
came “the” game down at South Bend, Indiana. There
was lots of prestige involved here. Notre Dame lost a
game and a National Championship last year because
of U.S.C. This year the tables were reversed. It was U.S.C.
that was driving for the National title and the Fighting
Irish dealt the losing blow.
U.C.L.A.
After U.S.C.’s loss and a fine comeback,
the Bruins remain in contention for the Far West Conference and a Rose Bowl ticket.
INDEPENDENTS:
Notre Dame
The Fighting Irish are going to look
back to game in Fayette, Indiana, when the Boilermakers’
quarterback, Bob Griese, completed 19 of 20 passes for
the win. Since then, the boys from South Bend have
improved steadily and last week they smashed U.S.C.
and Mike Garrett. Try again next year!
BIG EIGHT:
Nebraska
This team, in many phases; is the finest
squad in the country. They have rolled over every team
they faced and are on the road to a possible National
title and a sure bowl bid. Two fine quarterbacks and
Freeman White, an end, have produced one of the finest
football machines in the nation. Hats off to the Cornhuskers!
So goes college football! Mighty Texas has fallen,
Alabama crumbled, and U.S.C. has been crushed. To the
heights of glory have risen Arkansas, Michigan State, and
Nebraska. Notre Dame continues to perform according to
their legendary role. With three to four games remaining for most teams, the complexion can change as rapidly
as it has formed. But again, game attendance up, rivalries have endured, and new heroes have been born
all
going to indicate the excellent nature of college football
at its best.
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�Friday, October 29, 1965

SPECTRU

PACf

HOLY CROSS PREVIEW

Punchless Bulls Face
Hard Luck Crusader 11
By MIKE GINSBERG

The UB Bulls’ problems seem to
multiply each week, and this Saturday’s trip to Worcester will provide little relief. The big problem for the Bulls remains the
need to find a replacement for
Rick Wells. The solution is not
any closer than it was a week
ago. And while Holy Cross’ record is unimpressive, the Crusaders will be no easy match. Saturday’s game looms as a tough one
for UB.

Dayton

.

.

.

(Cont’d from P. 16)
strength against strength. Again
there was an enormous pileup at
the UB goal line as Mell smashed

into the middle of the line. But
when the mass of bodies unpiled,
Mell was found to be two feet
short of the final lime parallel.
The UB defensive line had passed
its most rigorous test with flying colors.
After a 15-yard penalty had
moved the Bulls out of end zone
danger, Dayton dropped into a
prevent defense whch allowed
the Bulls to move to he UB 46.
On the last play of the game it
was only fitting that the defense
had possession of the ball as Pete

Richardson

pilfered

a desperation Ridolfi bomb at the Dayton

20.

STATISTICS
Dayton UB
Q
Q
First downs
Yards rushing
35 109
Yards passing
Ill 34
Passes
11-19 2-12
0
Passes int. by
4
Punts
....5-32 3-36
3
2
Fumbles lost
Yards penalized
65
67
....

....

BULL SESSION

. . .

LaFountain

and Holly gained the highest de-

fensive grades, while Jim Barksdale, Hurd and Ashley paced the
offense .
LaFountain was
named to the weekly All-East
team, the second time the rugged
Saranac Lake native has been
thus honored this season
Attendance was a sparse 6,096 . .
The game marked the first time
the Bulls had failed to score in
16 games .
Hurd aggravated a
shoulder injury in the first half
and his availability for Holy Cross
remains a question mark . . . Holy
Cross has yet to win a game this
year, but UB has never beaten
the Crusaders, who annually face
an imposing schedule, in previous
meetings . .
UB is only 2-2-2
now with the hardest portion of
the schedule ahead. The starting
quarterback is shelved for the
season and only one remaining
game is booked on friendly soil.
And you think you’ve got prob.

.

The Crusaders have compiled a
record of no victories, four losses
and one tie. A look at the list of
teams that Holy Cross has faced
provides a reason tor this disappointing record. The Crusaders
have met Harvard, Dartmouth,
Colgate, Boston University, and
last week lost to Floyd Little and
Syracuse, 32-6. New head coach
Mel Massucco has had no break
in the schedule and as a result,
his inexperienced Sophs have
been learning the hard way. Ironically, the Crusaders are strongest in the position where the Bulls
now need the most help. Massucco has two fine quarterbacks in
Brian Flatley and Jack Lentz.
Flatley, a senior, has the experience, but Lentz is the more explosive ballplayer. Last season, as
a soph, Lentz set several Holy
Cross records with his great running. Although he has yet to
prove his passing ability, Lentz
remains a big threat. Elsewhere,
there are many question marks
due to inexperience and a lack of
depth. The backfield is improved
over last year. If Junior Tom
Haley has not recovered from a
post season cartilage operation,
the Crusaders will be very weak
at the ends. There are no other
experienced ends on the squad.
Captain Joe Lilly and Mike Addesa represent a strong pair of
tackles. The guards are weak and
the shifting to guard of last year’s
fine center, Bill Morris, has left
a big gap at center. In all, Massucco, lacks the manpower to effectively platoon his line. He has
made the difficult decision to go
with his youngsters rather than
use his experienced lineman both
ways, and this is one reason for
the Crusaders’ disappointing record.
The Bulls, following last week’s
scoreless tie with winless Dayton,
have problems. Last week the offensive threat was non-existent.
Five times UB got the ball inside
the Dayton twenty-five and failed
to score. The usually strong running game was well under par,
and there was no passing game.
Much of the blame for the lack
of offense can be placed on the
failure to find a quarterback to
take Wells’ place, Ron Ridolfi
was fine two weeks ago when he
took over the controls of a firedup UB team, but last week failed
to move the squad. It could be
that Ridolfi hadn’t had enough
preparation for the game, but
otherwise, Coach Offenhamer
must look elsewhere for a quarterback. Leading candidates for the
job are Nick Capuana and Fred
Geringer. Capuana and Geringer
are both only 5’9” as is Ridolfi,
and this lack of height is a serious shortcoming. Another glaring weakness which proved decisive in the game was the lack of
an effective field-goal kicker. Joe

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Hcrt.l Av«., Buffalo Id
TB s-tat?

Gerry LaFountaln
UB defensive end who made Allfor the second time last
week.
Oscsodol missed three field goal
attempts and any one of them
being successful would have
given UB a victory. The defensive

East

squad was outstanding again and
gave

the offense numerous op-

portunities to score. This superiority of the defensive has been
true week after week. It is a
tribute to the defensive platoon
that the UB record is as good as it
is, taking everything into consideration.

In all, the game will be decided
by whicft is worse; The UB offense or the Crusaders’ defense
line. The Bulls’ defense will keep
Holy Cross from mounting any
great scoring threats and the
weaknesses in the Crusader line
provide a good opportunity for
the strong UB running game.
But whether the running can
carry the offense without a passing gamC'Ts'doubtful. In all, the
Bulls maintain a slight advantage,
but anything can happen.

COUNTRY
Last week the UB Cross Coun
try Team had two meets, defeating Niagara 17-46 and bowing to
Cortland State 39-18. This week,
the Harriers faced Fredonia on
Wednesday and on Saturday, tomorrow, they will un in the Canisius Invitational at 2 p.m. in Delaware Park. These two meets will
be reported in next week’s Spectrum.

BILLIARDS
INVITATION TO POCKET
BILLIARD PLAYERS
With Time to Spare
DURING HOURS WHEN THE
UNION ROOM IS FILLED—

Come on Over to:

BEE
CUE
3229

Main Street

Adiactnt

to Campus

Use Your ID Card and the

Hourly Rate is the Same
This applies to UB students
ONLY

SPEAKING OUT
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

The Deal

l,ast week, in a surprise move (at least to me), the
New York MeU traded two rather good young ballplayers for an ex-Most Valuable Player who is 34 years old
and seriously considering retirement if next season is not
a good one for him. The player in question, Ken Boyer,
could conceivably serve as an inspiration (and do they
need it!) for the young members of the Mets, but if he
should flop before these impressionable neophytes he
could laeve a lasting scar upon the team.
In return for Boyer, the Mets sent pticher Al Jack*
son, a consistent 20-game loser with the New Yorkers,
and infielder-outfielder Charley Smith, who now goes on
to his fifth major-league team, to the St. Louis Cardinals.
Jackson will probably reverse his recent trend when he
pitches for the Cards, and could possibly wind up as a
consistent 20-game winner. Charley Smith can always
be counted on to hit anywhere from .250 to .270, drive
in 70 runs and hit 15 to 25 homers. When compared to
Ken Boyer’s 1965 performance, it makes one wonder who
got the best of the deal.
On the positive side, the Mets will now have a vetr
eran left side of the infield to go along with Ed Kranepool at first and Ron Hunt at second. For the first time
in their history they will have a man who is capable of
hitting a home run each time he comes up to the plate,
although the Mets have a few youngsters who could eventually become such a threat. Boyer, the former captain
of the Cardinals, will provide a definite inspiration for
the Mets if he can play up to his past form, and he could
become the first real leader the tenth-placers ever had.
As for the Cardinals’ end of the deal, Jackson, with
a little more luck and more support than he ever received in New York, could become one of the better lefthanders in the National League. He has shown flashes
of brilliance in the past, but his team never quite followed suit either at bat or in the field. On the other
hand, Smith can always be counted on to give his best,
and is an accomplished glove man to go along with his
strong hitting.

On the negative side of the trade, if Boyer flops and
retires at the end of next season, the Mets will have gotten absolutely nothing, and will have lost two good young
ballplayers to boot. As it appears now, the deal seems
to be one last grandstand play on the part of George
Weiss, the Mets’ general manager, who is retiring at the
end of next year. Weiss has been disappointing and has
been disappointed in the Mets and his trade for Boyer
just might be a last-ditch attempt on his part to elevate
the Mets to a ninth or even eighth place finish as his partan excellent one for St. Louis
excellent for New York. But
and the net result will be an
men of potential to the team
than any other.

Partners ’ Press,

~9nc,

Jk 9 olt &amp;■ Smitl Printing

and one which might be
then again it might not,
unnecessary loss of two
which needs them more

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

�PACE EIGHTEEN

Friday, October 29, 1965

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Mustang College Sweepstakes.

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Home Phone Number.

2. Coupon must be received by no later than November 15,1965, to be eligible
to win the use of a Mustang.
3. Each winner will be required to produce evidence that he or she is a college
senior or graduate student before any prize is awarded. Decision of judges

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for two weeks only. Winners are responsible for returning the loan-out Mustang
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Friday, October 29, IMS

Viewpoint

PAGE NINETEEN

Chick's Picks

.

your pro-forecaster is undoubtedly the more gifted of the two
(There is a reason why I am the
—

COLLEGE FOOTBALL—
A NOBLE SPORT

"professional" forecaster).

by MIKE DOLAN

Who says that baseball is America’s favorite past-

time? Word has it, that baseball is on the way out. Football, with its increase in rivalries and plenty of action is
here to say. This year is no exception. Here we are six
weeks into the gridiron campaign and only three major

teams remain unbeaten and untied. Pigskin dynasties of

the past are rapidly crumbling and doormats of yesteryear are flexing their gridiron muscle. This is a result
of several factors, but the increase in academic standards, coupled with an increase in athletic scholarships
have made it possible for just about any major college
or university to bring a National Championship to their
campus. Without further delay, let’s take a look throughout the country and see how the collegiate football has
bounced so far this season.

THE

EAST;

Syracuse
No doubt the Orange have one of the
country’s most exciting runners in the person of Floyd
Little. Bearing the same number (44) as two former
Orange greats
Jim Brown and the late Ernie Davis,
—

—

Little is well on his way to another three touchdown performance which last weekend, against a hopeless Holy
Cross team, has put him in the national scoring lead (10
touchdowns). However, the Orangemen started slow and
will have to back into a bowl bid.
Penn State
This is an example of a tough luck
team. The Nittany Lions have outplayed all their oppo(Cont’d on P. 16)
—

Fearless Feigin

...

(the Tigers were also unbeaten
last year and look where their
record got them) and Utah State,
because it is not a “name” school,
that leaves three school? in the
running. Each has gotten through
the rough part of its schedule
unscathed and should, baring unforseen upsets, experience continued success. So what does one
do if they all finish at 10-0 at
season’s end?
It really doesn’t seem fair

pick

to

one over the other. The

Cornhuskers, currently leading
the nation in offense and also
ranking high in the defensive department, seem to be the best of
the trio but they play a comparatively trouble-free schedule. But
then do you choose the Razorbacks on the strength of their 2724 victory over dethroned leader
Texas, or the Spartans, because
they have the most representative

(Cont’d from P. 20)
polls with a grain of salt. There
may not be much of a difference
(it any at all) in quality between
the top college elevens. With the

increased overall caliber of the
sport as a whole, any team in the
top ten could defeat any of the
other nine (be they higher or
lower in the rankings) on any
given Saturday.
Last week’s record was a respectable 8-4, and I didn’t have
to import any “outside” experts.
My overall record is now 31-11-1

for a percentage of .736.

The only solution seems to be
the organizing of a national tournament such as the NCAA runs
for its collegiate basketball program. The numerous conference
champions and selected independent schools could battle it out in
a toumey, with the survivor being
crowned as national champion.
Certainly, this is an idea to consider seriously. But first there
are a million obstacles to overcome and this will take time.
Meanwhile, try to understand the

point I am trying to bring across.

You have to take the AP and UPI

Georgia Tech 33, Duke 14
This is one of the fiercest rivalries in the South. Ordinarily the
score would be a lot closer, but
the Engineer* (4-1-1), with Kim
King tossing TD bombs, should
have an easy time with the Blue
Devils (4-2), who are having problems of late.

—

Minnesota's E r a n Tarkenton
threw for 407 yards while the
Vikings nipped San Francisco 4241. It seems every one of Minnesota's games have ended the same:
high scoring and real close. They
have scored 202 points, highest
in the league; and given up 201,
also a league high.
The Washington Redskins
scored their first victory of the

season

an impressive one over
St. Louis, with the help of the
men from Arizona, Charlie Taylor and Jerry Smith, both former
Arizona State Sun Devils, each
caught a Sonny Jorgensen touchdown pass. Maybe the team is
finally starting to play some good
football and getting some good
breaks, all in the same game.
Here are this week’s picks;
—

Baltimore 35, San Francisco 24—
The Colts are going to have to
keep winning and hope for an
upset if first place is to be theirs.
Johnny Unitas pulled one out
for them last week against Los
Angeles. At the same time San
Francisco fell prey to another top
quarterback, Fran Tarkenton, of
Minnesota. If the 49ers' weakness
is quarterbacks, Unitas will have
a field day.
St. Louis 21, New York 17
This is a must game for both

(Cont’d from P. 20)

.

teams. The Giants have' turned a
lot of heads their way in recent

weeks with some real good team
playing. Allie Sherman must be
doing a great job in getting all
he can out of a young and virtually inexperienced team. However,
St. Louis is a tough ball club, and
last week's loss may have been
enough to arouse them. Without
Charlie Johnson, it may be close.
With him, a rout for St. Louis.
Dallas 28, Pittsburgh 7—Usually, the home team has a decided
advantage because of the home
crowd—not so in Pittsburgh. Here
is a city bitter towards its football
team, an attitude that cannot help
but reflect in the playing of the
team. The Staelars won in Philadelphia last week while Dallas
lost a tough one to undefeated
Green Bay. The Cowboys shouldn't
have too much trouble this
week.
Los Angeles 27, Detroit 10
The Rams led Baltimore for three
quarters last week. Unfortunately,
for L.A., anyway, NFL games are
four quarters long, and Johnny
Unitas beat them. The Lions,
meanwhile, caught their lunch at
Chicago where the Bears mauled
them 38-10. The Young Angelenos
will have to start playing some
good ball soon
time is running
out!
—

—

Green Bay 24, Chicago 21—The
Packers are the only undefeated
team in the league. Bart Storr
could not get going last week
against the tough Dallas defense.
He had better not have the same
problem this time out, for the revitalized Bears have been quick
to take advantage of mistakes this
season. This will be a tight one,
but I think the more experienced
Packers will take their seventh
in a row.
Cleveland 38, Minnesota 28

—

A real big inter-conference game

but
for both teams this week
a bit too
If Warfield
is back this week, the Browns
will win easily; if he isn't they
will win, also. Minnesota's de—

Minnesota has been
“frisky” this season.

fense seems to get worse each
week
and Jim Brown will have
little trouble running it ragged.
—

Washington 17, Philadelphia 10
—Here's an important game that
means very little in the standings;
perhaps a battle for fifth place.
Washington has won one in a row,
and their momentum and home
crowd advantage should enable
the Redskins to sweep past the
floundering Eagles. Losing to the
Giants and Pittsburgh is low, but
to Washington also—look out!
AFL

Buffalo 28, Houston 20
The
Bills have not only a great ball
team, but also a great front office; as was obvious by the acquiring of Bo Rgberson. Bo is just
fast enough to give them that
long threat. Along with Kemp,
and the great line, they are real
tough. Houston's George Blanda,
throwing five touchdown passes,
showed his “Old Stuff” last week.
He’s too old to do that well two
weeks in a row.
—

Denver 21, New York 13—Denver seems to be a “hot-and-cold”
ball team. While the Jett seem to
be only cold. The Jett are winless this season, and will certainly remain that way until their
receivers learn to catch. This
problem has plagued them all
year, and now is getting to the
ridiculous point. Hey, Weeb
you’d better shell out a little for
an end
quarterbacks have to
—

—

have someone at the other end!
Oakland 24, Kantat City 21
Ex-Jet Dick Wood threw two
touchdown passes to Art Powell
and he’s the secondlast week
string quarterback. The Chiaft
blew their game with Houston,
and certainly have been disappointing this season. They don't
deserve to win this game, and
they won’t.
San Dlago 35, Boston 7—Despite
the fact that the Patriots have a
poor defense, they also have a
terrible offense. Here, the Chargors will be out to revenge the tie
they suffered a few week ago
and should do so handily.
—

—

—

—

recuse 27, Pittsburgh 13
The Orangemen (4-2) will wrap
up the Lambert Trophy after this
one. Floyd Little is unstoppable
and could make this the fourth
game this season that he’s scored
three touchdowns. The Panthers'
(2-4) only chance is if quarterback Lucas gets a hot hand and
can exploit Syracuse's defensive

shortcomings.

Notre Dame 35, Navy 16—The
Fighting Irish (5-1) may have a
letdown after their spectacular
grudge victory over USC, but still
have too much for the Sophladen
Middie (3-2-1) squad. The Irish
offense, featuring Eddy and Conjar, is devastating, and their defense, led by All-American candi-

date Nick Rassis, is impenetrable.

I. H. O. P.

A
PAT
I)

Notables: Jim Brown beat the
Giants with the help of Ryan Collins, and young Walter Roberts,
Big Jim rushed for 177 yards,
caught 3 passes—and even threw
one for a T.D. to Gary Collins
What a ball player!

—

—

in their cap with a victory over
powerful Notre Dame in their season’s finale? I really can’t give
you an answer.

Last week’s three “losses” were
toughies. Houston kicked a field
goal in the last 17 seconds to nip
Kansas City 38-36; the Staolors
scored their first victory with the
help of an 82-yard pass interception; and Sonny Jorgensen (remember him) led the Washington
Redskins over the injury-riddled
Cardinals.

.

)

It
Dartmouth 20, Yale 0
seems that no one has told the
Big Green (5-0) about Princeton
yet. They’re talking like the Ivy
crown is really theirs. They should
have no trouble with the Elis
(2-3) here as they practice up for
their showdown meeting with the
Tigers on November 20. Both
—

that game, the last for both, with

perfect 8-0 slates. It should be
some battle.
Army 13, Colgate 0—The Red
Raiders (3-2-1) have fallen victim
to that old gridiron saying, “You
can’t win if you don’t score
points.” They’ve managed just

two touchdowns in their last five
games, and if it weren’t for their
tenacious defense, they might
now be 1-5. The Cadets (3-3) are
having a so-so year, but this
game is catered to their style of
play. They should squeeze out a
victory in the low scoring contest, as the running of Hamilton
and Barofsky pay off late in the
game.
Michigan State 27, Northwest-

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

ern 7
The Spartans (6-0) had a
scare against Purdue last Saturday, but a great football team can
always come back, as they did. It’s
a breeze now to the Rose Bowl
with the only tough spot on the
schedule being with non-league
rival Notre Dame. The Wildacts
(3-3) found a new star in quarterhack Dennis Boothe last week
but will need ten more like im
to knock off State.
Kentucky 29, West Virginia 14
The Wildcats (4-2) have surprised all the experts (including
myself) by not folding so far.
Their upset of Georgia last week
has thrown the SEC race into a
turmoil with no less than seven
teams having a shot at first
place. Norton and Co., with two
conference losses already, are out
of it, but with a strong finish
can still earn a bowl bid. They’ll
have an easy time with the Mountaineers (4-2), who still haven't
learned that this game isn’t all
—

—

offense.
Nebraska 33, Missouri 7 —This
is the big game in the Big Eight.

If anyone is going to beat the
Cornhuskers (6-0), it will be the
Tigers (4-1-1). Mizzov’s main forte
is defense, but it won't be able
to stand up to the pressure of
the nation’s top offensive unit.
Even if the Tigers manage to
contain Duda, Solich and Co., its

I*' chaSoSal hots#
-it m
Zki.

SHERI DAN ai PARKER

JUST THE WAV YOU LIKE 'EM

hasn’t materialized
yet. This will be another step for
Nebraska on its way to a rematch
with Arkansas in the Cotton
own offense

Bowl.

Florid* 17, Auburn 0

—

The

Gator* (4-1) want this one bad, if
they’re to have a crack at the
SEC title. A win here, plus a victory over Georgia next week,
would probably pul theni over the
top. The Spurrier-to-Casey aerial
express is on the verge of break-

ing every Florida passing record
in the books. The Plainsmen (2-31) lack the defensive might that
has brought them success in the

past five years.
Ohio State 23, Minnesota 17—
Don’t tell anyone, especially
Michigan State, that the Gophers
(3-2-1) are unbeaten in Big Ten
play and still have an outside
shot at a tie for the championship. All they have to do is beat
the Buckeyes (3-2), Northwestern,
Purdue and Wisconsin. They won’t
have to worry about the other
three after this weekend!
Penn State 24, California 21
The Bruins (3-3) have played surprisingly well thus far, consider—

ing that when Craig Morton grad-

uated last June, they lost 90 percent of their offense. They should
have faced the Nittany Lions (2-3)
earlier in the season. Cal might
have won then, but not now.
L.S.U. 28, Mississippi 13—Ask
your grandfather if he remembers
the last time that OI« Miss (3-3)
lost three games in one season.

This definitely isn’t their year.
This used to be THE game in the
South, but now it’s just another
one for the Tlpar* (5-1) to win. if
they want to stay alive in the
SEC. The Bengals had better save
a little of their offensive might
for Bama next week,

�PACK TWENTY

Friday, Octobar

SPECTRUM

89&gt;B(B TINS fid

iA=

-4

&lt;f

(

t=

»,

INS

S

UB TIES FLYERS, 0-0

Defensive Line Saves Tie
As Bull Offense Sputters
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

If you're looking for a guaranteed way of losing a few teeth,
try asking Coach Offenhamer if
he misses Rick Wells in his offensive lineup. The latter's absence
was only too obvious at Rotary
Field Saturday as the punchless
Bulls struggled to a 0-0 tie with
winless Dayton.
Despite the efforts of fill-in
Ron Ridolfi to generate an offense, the Bulls could never get
rolling although several golden
opportunities presented themselves. On each occasion, however, lackluster efforts were
thwarted by the fired-up Flyers.
One positive aspect of the game
was that the vaunted UB defense
was seen in true perspective in
its finest hour. After 5’6” Roosevelt Mell had stunned the Bulls
by bouncing off three would-be

Jim W»b*r

—

goat

Even a halftime conversation
with James Bond provided Coach
Offenhamer with no solutions to
his offensive nightmare.
The Head Coach offered these
post-game comments, “There are
two sides to every football game,
offensive and defensive, and both
teams played great defensive
games. The game was Dayton’s
best of the year—we always seem
to bring out the best in our opponents. Naturally I’m disappointed we couldn't score at least once,
but we couldn’t move the ball.”
The Colgate alumnus added in
anguish, “Did I miss Wells?” I
would have given my right arm to
have seen him healthy again!
(Nick) Capuana, who wasn’t ready
to quarterback last week, should
be ready to start against Holy
Cross so we can work our rollout
options better.
He and (Tom)

around and for gain

tacklers on his way to a 56-yard
gain on the first play from scrimmage, the Ohioans were held ot
—22 yards on the ground for the
remainder of the game. And the
Herd needed every ounce of the
effort to blank the visitors and
salvage a tie.
To say the Bull offense performed inadequately might be the
understatement of the week. Five
times the reluctant hosts had possession of the ball inside the Dayton 25—three times on gifts by
the visitors—but not once could
they crack the scoring column.

Hurd will probably go most of the
way on offense and alternate at
defensive safety, providing of
course that the latter’s shoulder
is all right.”
Dayton found itself in scoring
position the first time it had its
hands on the ball. After the dynamic Mell had ripped up the middle from the Dayton 23 to the
UB 21 where Gerry LaFountain
dragged him down from behind,
the drive stalled and Tom Ledinsky’s field goal attempt just
missed.
After UB had botched two

INTRAMURALS
By

GEORGE JACKREL

Harold Posner, an independent,
won the singles tennis tournament
for the second year in a row. Posner defeated Nulen 6-1, 6-1, in
the final match. The doubles tournament is in the semi-final round
and it will be over this week.
The football leagues are entering the final stages of play, as
many big games were played this
week. Last year’s champion Zygotes rolled over the Rookies 460, and Beta Sigma Rho squeaked
by last year’s fraternity champion
Alpha Epsilon Pi by a score of
14-12. As expected, this was a
game between AEPI’s defense and
Beta Sig's offense, and an extra
point proved to be, the difference.
In the Wednesday 4 p.m. league,
a big game is scheduled between
the Dolans and the Moon Platoon,
both undefeated. Also, there are

two undefeated teams in the

Thursday Fraternity league;
Alpha Sigma Phi and Sigma Alpha

Mu. In other action, AKPsi defeated Gamma Phi and Sig Ep
defeated Phi Ep. The leaders in
each league are as follows:
Monday 3 p.m. No. 1’s.
4-0
Monday 4 p.m. Hippies
3-1
Chargers
3-1
44)
Wednesday 3 p.m. Zygotes
Moon Platoon
4-0
Dolans
4-0
Tuesday; Sig Ep
3-0
. 34)
Beta Sig
Thursday: Alpha Sig
4-0
Sammy

.34)

The Cross-Country meet will be
held this Friday at Grover Cleveland Park and the Golf Tournament is completed, but all of the
score cards haven’t as yet been
turned in. We will have these results next week.

drives via an interception and a
fumble, the Bulls received their
first break when a fourth-down
hike from Frank Chew sailed over
punter Tom Prinz’s head on the
Dayton 21, where Craig Helenbrok and Joe Holly spilled Prinz
to the ground. After the UB offensive machine had gone in reverse for three plays, Joe Oscsodal opened the second quarter by
flubbing a 32-yard field-goal at-

tempt.
Minutes later the visitors, doing their best to keep their perfect slate immaculate, went
through the same act again as
Chew snapped another errant
hike to Prinz. Holly collared him
on the Dayton 18 this time.
If one can look at the game’s
offensive efforts in a light-hearted vein (it was difficult to take
them seriously), the following
play was a sterling example of
the futility of either team’s gaining possession of the ball. On the
play, Ridolfi faded back and fired
a perfect strike to Theron Sumpter of the Flyers at the Dayton 5.
Sumpter returned the ball to the
24 where, while being tackled,
he was relieved of his ball-lugging duties by the larcenous motives of Jim Dunn. The play,
which looked more like an old
ended
Keystone Cops re-run,
with UB gaining a first down on
the Dayton 24.
Late in the half, Dayton ballhawk Gary Hussion from Dunkirk, the only Flyer squad member from New York State, grabbed a deflected Ridolfi pass and
returned it 23 yards to the UB
43. The Flyers advanced to the
26 before being stopped cold.
Seconds later the half ended the
same way as it had started.
The second half proved to be
little more than a continuation of
first-half antics. Early in the
third period Dayton penetrated

WBFO

Sports

UB Football Captain Joe Holly,
along with All-East selections
E. G. Poles and Jerry LaFountain,
will be the special guest on
WBFO’s Sports Talk this evening
at 5:50 p.m.
As stated by one grid official,

“UB’s defensive line is just about
as good as any you’ll see in college football. Holly is a real leader with great respect from his

mates; Poles in extremely fast

for his size; LaFountain is a hellova ballplayer. All three are excellent pro prospects.”

NCAA statistics seem to verify
this man’s remarks. The Bulls in
six games have allowed the opposition an unbelievably small
62.8 yards per game. That puts
them among the top five major
colleges in the nation.

Three of the leaders of that defensive unit can be heard at 5:50
p.m. over WBFO (FM 88.7 me.) or
WBFO (AM 780 to aU UB dorms).
Wally Blatter will host the show.

Built halfback crashes through Dayton defensive line
to the Bull 16 after blocking a

Brian Hansen punt, but another
Ledinsky field goal try went
awry.

On a second-and-goal situation
Preisser hit Spear on a slant-in
pattern at the 1. Suddenly only
three feet separated the Bulls
from their third loss of the season. But the hard-nosed Bull
line was not ready to concede

The Bulls proceeded to make
their only sustained march qf the
day as they parlayed the running
of Jim Webber and Denny Przyanything.
kuta, a 23-yard RidoIfi-to-Dick
Preisser barked his signals,
Ashley completion and a 15-yard took the snap from center and
personal foul penalty to move
handed to Taylor, who crashed
from their own 20 to the Dayton into the middle of the line and
17, but a fourth-down pass incame bouncing back like a rubcompletion squelched the drive.
ber ball off a brick wall. No gain.
The game now boiled down to
Three plays later, Bill Taylor
one play with 1:32 to play. The
pounced on a fumble at the Dayfans in the seats sat tensed as the
ton 23, but the Bulls moved nowhere fast as Ridolfi’s passing Dayton huddle broke up. Coach
Offenhamer stood rooted to the
arm went completely out of kilter. On fourth down Oscsqdal, sideline in his customary cap and
whose kicking foot made a good windbreaker. Wells, clad in a
match for Ridolfi’s throwing arm, gray hooded sweatshirt, sat still
Jn the bench, his right leg and
allowed Ledinsky to breathe a
ankle encased in plaster. Maybe
sigh o frelief by missing another
they wouldn’t have been watchthree-point attempt.
ing quite as intensely if fate
After -the defenses had dominated most of the fourth-quarter hadn’t been as cruel a week earlier, but now the outcome of the
play in UB territory, the detergame was solely in the hands of
mined visitors made their most
the defense.
serious scoring threat. Reserve
quarterback Gary Preisser spearPreisser again stood over cenheaded the drive which began at ter yelling signals. The UB forthe Bull 43. Blending the runward wall dug in like a row of
ning of Mell and Mel Taylor with guard rails, unyielding and imcrucial completions to Bill Spear, pregnable. Preisser took the snap
Dennis Buchet and Ken Conliffe, from center and wheeled to hand
to Mell, who had already gained
the Orlando, Fla., signalcaller engineered the visitors to a first 90 yards rushing, choosing to test
(Cont’d on P. 17)
down at the UB 8.

-

GRID FORECASTS

-

Chick’s
Picks

Fearless
Feigin

By CHICK ARNOLD
Eight won, three lost, certainly
isn’t a bad record for a “righthand man”
now if the left
hand can get together with the
right, and put together a truly
fantastic week-end of pro-football
prognosticating (that’s a mouthful), we can have a chance of
overtaking the college picker
next door. Of course, we won’t
go into the fact that “he” picks

By STEVE FEIGIN
The number one team in the
press polls is supposedly the best
team in the land. But is that al
ways the case? Usually the dis
tinction goes to the team that
gets through the season with the
least scars on its record. But
how do you choose the mythical
national champion if more than
one major eleven finishes with
an unblemished record?
As college football heads into
its seventh week of action, six

—

games of his choice, rather than

getting a definite slate of games
each week. So those of you who
take heed in unimportant, pointless, and fool-hearty statistics,
look deeper into these columns
of forecasting
and thou shalt
surely be content to find that
(Cont’d on P. 19)
—

major college teams. Nebraska
Arkansas, Michigan State, Princeton, Dartmouth, and Utah State
have perfect records. Discounting
the Ivies, because people would
be ashamed to pick one of them
(Cont’d on P- 191

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                    <text>STATE

SOMERVILLE

DAYTON

LECTURE TODAY

V

page

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965

NO. 7

Students Arouse Communities
Americans And
Canadians Join
In Viet Protest

Students And Mayor
Conduct Rival Rallies
By R. DENNIS FOX

Publicized by two weeks of radio and television coverage, students across this nation and in
twenty foreign countries marched
in support of the International
Days of Protest initiated by Berkley’s Viet Nam Day Committee.
In Buffalo, Students for a Democratic Society protestors picketed
the Federal Court Building on
Friday, October 15, while Mayor
Chester A, Kowal addressed a
gathering on the steps of City
Hall.

By MARK K. ROBISON

The International Days of Pro-

test culminated in The Assembly
of Unrepresented People in Exile
which convened at 2:30 p.m.- on
Saturday October 16, in front of
the American Consulate in Toronto.

There were 400 American students who were joined by 900
Canadians.
Declarations
were
read by peace groups such as the
Student Union for Peace Action
(S.U.P.A. Can.) and groups from
the Universities of Cornell, Rochester, Syracuse, and the UB chapter of S.D.S. peace declaration
is as follows:
-

“The United States is waging
an immoral war against the people of Viet Nam. We are asked

to condone

indiscriminate
slaughter of men, women and
children in the name of peace
and freedom. There are many
Americans who have deluded
themselves into believing that
napalm, saturation bombing and
trained killers are mechanisms
of peace; and that news manipulations, violations of International
Law, and support of ruthless dictators such as Diem, Khan and
Ky are in the interests of freedom. Such beliefs are the product of a morally and spiritually
bereft society.
“Thoreau was to say of another war: ‘How does it become a
man to behave toward this American Government today? I answer, that he cannot without disgrace be associated with it’ We
have come today, refusing to
associate with the disgraceful
brutality in Southeast Asia.
“But we cannot dissociate ourselves from the struggles of millions to attain true peace through
freedom from social and economic oppression.
“We mourn the deaths of Vietnamese and American people,
and on their behalf and for all
DECLARE
mankind,
WE
PEACE.”
Most of the Peace Declarations
followed in the same vein, expressing the need, for peace in
our world today, 7
(Cont’d on P. 11)

Minions of

from atop
Toronto

the

Law

U.S.

observe crowd
Embassy in

rhoto by

Don Bl.nk

across from American Embassy in Toronto

gathered
Phoio by Don Blank

Pro-US Students,

After an hour of picketing under the eye of Buffalo Police and
meml&gt;ers of the local FBI office,
the anti-government demonstrators crossed over to Lafayette

Professors

Hold Washington Conclave
By SHARON SHULMAN

The meeting began at 10 a.m,
with brief introductory remarks
by Frank Keating, President of
the Student Body of Georgetown
University. Congratulatory telegrams for the students of the University of Alaska and John Carrol University were read. Then
John Taylor, the National Director of the Junior Chamber of Commerce spoke, endorsing US policy
and informing the President of
his action. He was followed by
the National Vice-President of the
Jaycees who mentioned the concurrent “International Days of
Protest” sponsored by a number
of organizations, by explaining
how these protest leaders had
been trained to organize the event
at a Communist school in Connecticut. He felt that the “responsible young American’s” story
must be spread. To aid in this
cause, the Junior Chamber of
Commerce has initiated a “National Day of Appreciation” in
December to recognize the courage and dedication of the American soldier in Viet Nam.

A recent illness which has kept
Senator Thomas J. Dodd from attending several sessions of Congress, also prevented the Connecticut Democrat from appearing at the Symposium: Instead,

At 3 o’clock Mayor Kowal, after a sudden public announcement
earlier in the day, addressed a
mixed crowd of city hall officials,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, and
grade-school children bused in
from St. Anthony’s. The city hall
workers who were given an hour
off at 3:00 p.m. to hear the mayor, were notably absent.
The SDS pickets arrived at 3
p.m. at the Court Building. They
then joined in a moving line of

pickets, which grew by 3:30 to
about 75 demonstrators. Blocking the door to the building
were members of the Police
Dept, and the FBI. Workers from
City Hall, passing on their way
to catch buses for home, commented “nothing else to do,”
smirked and passed on.
•

Across the street on the cor-

ner, two policemen stood in a
doow shack protecting them-

selves from the rain and watched
as a car of youngsters drove by
shouting “cowards, yellow bellies” at the demonstrators. Shoppers across the street pausedshook their heads, and passed on.

A group of thirty-eight UB students filled the bus headed for
the “Pro-US Symposium” in Washington, D.C., on Friday, October
15. The convention, attended by
over 1000 college students, was
intended Axs demonstrate that a
majority of young people support
the United States commitment in
Viet Nam and stand which our
government is taking against Communism in South East Asia.
The bus was chartered through
the efforts of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) and the
Republicans Club. The group, including two members of the
American Conservative Union, left
Norton at 7 p.m. and arrived in
Washington at 6 a.m. the following day. It established headquarters at the International Inn,
where the symposium lectures and
discussions were held.

Square and gathered under the
McKinley Shaft to hear SDS
cspeakers denounce the U, S.’s
policies in Viet Nam.

In front of City Mall Sanitation
Dept, trucks lined the curb,

with vehicles from Buffalo’s three T.V. stations, and a
station wagon from the Fire

mixed

Dept. Across the street from City
Mall multi-colored flags stood
aside Ohl Glory and Canada's
new Maple Leaf banner. The
steps were blanketed by T.V. and
radio technicians adjusting cameras and recorders. To the left
of the podium the children from
St. Anthony’s received flags from
a nun and waved them at the
passing traffic shouting “revolu-

Vie* Ambassador An from Vietnam Hears Yaf Delegates in Weshingfon
Photo by Ivan Makuch
his son, Thomas J. Dodd Jr., a using the example of Stalin’s rehistory professor at George Washgime, the horrors of which were

ington University, spoke briefly
for his father, and introduced Mr.
David Martin to read the Senator’s
speech.
Dodd’s speech dealt with the
questions that people confused
about US policy in Viet Nam
might ask. The first would be
“Why are we in Viet Nam?” And
his answer is that Communist aggression threatens the security of
the U.S. and the entire free
world. We are also in Viet Nam
to protect our national interests,
a policy which has been followed
by every administration since the
Truman Doctrine. What is at
stake here is the independence of
240 million in Southeast Asia, we
are in the conflict for them, and
more specifically for the defense
of the South Vietnamese, by
whose request we have become

involved.
“How do we know the Vietnamese people don’t want Communism?” This will to resist Communism has been displayed time
and again in battles. Most South
Vietnamese soldiers arc volunteers and the South Vietnamese
defection rate is less than a quarter of the enemy’s.
“What is the nature of the
North Vietnamese government?”
This question is best answered by

hidden until revealed by Khrushchev. Although Ho Chi is portrayed to be a kindly benefactor,
the tactics of his war will later
testify to his good will.

tion, revolution,” and children
NFT buses hurled
back “assassinate the mayor,
lynch the mayor.”
passing in

To the right of the podium
Veterans of Foreign Wars 3254
stood at attention in a line protecting the speaker from the
(Cont’d on P. 11)

“Didn’t South Viet Nam violate
the terms of the 1954 Geneva
Convention?” Under the provisions of this treaty, there was
to be a three-nation international
control commission to supervise
free elections in Viet Nam, This
also depended on the regrouping
of the French and the United
Nations forces. But the North
Vietnamese would not consent to
a final declaration, and no free
elections could be held. Saigon would not hold to a treaty
already broken.
“What about the cost in human life?” The consequences of
an American defeat would be
much worse. The loss of Viet
Nam will mean a recurrence of
the same situation.
These were the main ideas from
Senator Dodd’s speech. This was
followed by the appearance of
former Ambassador to the U.S.
from Viet Nam, Tran Van Chuong,
whose brother is the present
foreign minister. This speech
Mayor Kowil
dealt with the sentiments of the on City Hall
(Cont’d on P. 9)

ijJrmn
itopa
Photo

hr

crowd

Do» BW

�MH

Friday, October 22,

SPICTRUM

TWO

IMS

Calendar Committee To Aid Dean’s Council Residence Council Enacts
With Plans And Revisions To Schedule
UB Epidemic Resolution
.calls
action. We feel that this will promote better understanding between the administration of this
growing university and its stu-

Two representatives from the
Student Welfare Committee, Mr.
J. Z. Friedman, chairman of the
Welfare Committee of the Student Association, and Mr. Sheldon Cohen, Assistant Chairmanhave been chosen to represent
the student body at the Deans’
Council's sub-committee for calendar revisions and planning.

dent body.”

The major planning to be done
relates to last year’s referendum,
in which the majority of the students expressed a desire to extend intercession: days would be
made up by an extension of
classes at the end of May. By
ending classes on Friday instead
of Tuesday, an extra day of
study would be made available.
Finals would end on May 25th,
and it is hoped that this would
not interfere with graduation.

The subcommittee will consider proposals for calendar revisions that have been forwarded
to it by the Calendar Committee.
Mr. Friedman stated that “the
Student Welfare Committee is
highly pleased with Dr. Furnas’

Another project undertaken by
the Calendar Committee, which
will go through the Deans’ Coun-

DING'S
CHALET ROY ALE
For Meat Ball Sandwiches
Corner Colvin Blvd. I Sheridan Dr.

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Mortal A»e., Buffalo
TR 5-7472

Charter Flight Is
Planned to NYC

The Transportation subcommittee of the Student Welfare Committee is now investigating the
possibility of chartering a commercial airplane for student use
for vacation travel.
The committee is attempting to
arrange a charter flight for the
Thanksgiving vacation to and
from New York City. Before this
can be done, however, it must
have some evaluation of student
support. Anyone interested in
making arrangements with the
committee for this possible flight,
please contact either Jack Doren
at TF 2-0090 or Ed Baron at 8313375 between 6:30 and 11 p.m. by
Tuesday. The flight cannot be arranged unless enough students
respond.

MICROSCOPES
ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY CO.

for a rule disallowing
cil
three finals on one day. This is
presently being worked on by
the Committee, which will meet
with Dr. Kaiser, head of Admissions and Records, to devise a
plan for make-ups for those students with three finals.
The proposition to end classes
for Thanksgiving vacation on
Tuesday instead of Wednesday,
with the extra day to be made up
at Christmas, is not being carried any further. This is due to
the fact that a large majority
was opposed to the plan.
The date for the first meeting
of the Calendar Sub-Committee
of the Deans’ Council has not
yet been set.

The resolution was on the re-

cent epidemic and reads as follows:

“The Inter-Residence Council
of the State University of New
York at Buffalo is the governing
body of the resident students at
State University of New York at
Buffalo and is the spokesman for
these students.

A large number of the resident students at State University
of New York at Buffalo were
stricken by the recent epidemic
which necessitated much time
and effort on the part of many
persons and groups to control the
spread and treat the ill.
The Student’s Health Service
and Medical School of the University of New York at Buffalo
both provided professional administration and co-ordination.
The Erie County Health Department investigated and gave professional help. The Maintenance
Staff of the residence halls established temporary infirmaries
and provided other labors. The
Housing Office and the Food
Service of the University acted
quickly to confine and control
the epidemic. Many student
nurses, medical students and volunteer students provided much
of the aid necessary to treat the

111.

BOCCE

Be it resolved that the InterResidence Council, on behalf of
all resident students, thank the
Student Health Service, School
of Medicine, Erie County Health

PIZZA

16

Inter-Residence Council, at its
first meeting Thursday, October
14, passed a resolution pertaining to the recent epidemic and
appointed its committee chairman for the coming year.

IF 3-1344

_____

Department, School of Nursing,
Maintenance Staff, Housing Of-

fice and Food Service, for their
and efficient actions
which confined the spread of the
epidemic and for their treatment
and care of the ill. Be it further
resolved that the Inter-Residence
Council extends thanks to the
many sutdents who gave their
time and energy to aid their fellow students.”

concern

The following people have
been appointed to various positions in IRC: Steve Allen and
Joel Gershowitz will head the
Election and Orientation Committee. Food Committee will be
headed by Jo Anne Leegant. Suzanne Beeman is chairman of
the New Campus Committee.
Judith Hart will head the Standards Committee, with co-chairman Gail Lehrman, who will
specifically be responsible for
the Awards Subcommittee. Publicity Committee chairman is
Georganne Gilels, with Debbie
Wallace heading the Facilities
Committee.
Pat McCann was unanimously
elected to head the Activities
Council, a body designed to establish social, cultural, and athletic programs for the benefit of
the resident student. Its membership is drawn from the House
Councils of each dorm, each of
which elects one representative.
Two IRC representatives were
elected to sit on the Student
Senate. They are Steve Reish and
Kathy McDonald.

IRC now has an office in Tower
Hall. The office will serve as
general headquarters for IRC, its
committee meetings, and office of
the “Prism,” the resident student
newspaper.

CUP AND POST

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Clip and Save for a TERRIFIC BONUS in the Future!

—

WITH
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DINNER
OR
SNACK

�Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

All-Student Production of ‘The Fantasticks’
To Be Presented Wednesday Through Sunday
By CHARLES

CUMMINGS

"The Fantasticks" is coming to
UB and will make its first appearance this Wednesday in the
Millard Fillmore Room of Norton
Union. An all-student cast will
present the show at 8:30 for five
nights, the last performance being held Sunday, October 31.
The production’s director, Henry A. Wicke Jr, described “The
Fantasticks” as a romantic fantasy which is able to create “a
willing suspension of disbelief.”
“In fact,” he added, “The Fantasticks brings the theater back
to where it should be—in the
imagination of the audience . . .
where the most fantastic scenes
can be conjured up.”
According to Director Wicke,
“The Fantasticks” is an atypical
musical in which “the emphasis
is on talent and not on the money spent for production. Scenery is sparse because nothing
pretends to be photographically
real. And there are no stars in
the show; all actors are on an
equal footing.”

The student-actors in the UB

production are: Winnie Walston
who plays the mute; Jim Jiminez
as El Gallo the bandit; Barbara
Damashek as the girl; Jim

The City of Buffalo wants to
use the Oak Street area for an
urban renewal project without
the consent of the residents, and

Kirsch as the boy; Lebert Puma
as the girl’s father; Jim Todkill
as the boy’s father; Lewis Rampino as the old actor; Jeffrey
Lesser as the man who dies; and
Bob Nigro as the handyman.
Jack McGroder is the scenic
designer of the production; Carol
Bielecki is in charge of choreography; and Marc Pomerantz is
the stage manager. Musical di-

reetion is being handled by Noel
Harrington, assisted by Karen
Reed and Ronnie Ragen.
Tickets for “The Fantasticks”
are now on sale in the Norton
ticket office. The prices are $1
for student, $1.50 for faculty and
staff members, and $2 for the
general public.
Ticket reservations may be made by calling
831-3704.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next

to Amherst

Theatre)

EARRINGS —RINGS
DIAMONDS
WATCHES
WATCH REPAIRING
JEWELRY REPAIRING
—

Professor Somerville took part
in the following international research projects of UNESCO:
Philosophic Foundations of Human Rights, Interrelation of Cultures, and Inquiry into Freedom.
He has been chairman of three
recent discussion between American and Soviet philosophers.
Professor Somerville has presented papers at six international

KALAMAZOO, Mich, (CPS)
Some students at Kalamazoo College are getting verbal grades.
What they hear, simply, is the
recorded voice of their professor
evaluating and grading their
term papers or lab reports. By
replacing the red 'pencil with a
dictation machine, several professors have found that they can
give students more than twice
as many comments without increasing the time it takes to
grade a set of papers.
The school has not had the opportunity to evaluate the system
scientifically, but some observations, based on the 200 students
involved in the initial test, have
been released.
Thus far, the system has been
tried by professors in the English history, philosophy, and
—

without sensitive relocation plans.
Under the federal law, such projects are illegal; the law explicitly
states that residents must be consulted and must actively participate in the planning of new housing. Further, the law states that
residents must have first priority
in moving back into their former
neighborhood, whereas the city
wants to house the employees of
Roswell Park Institute in the new

KAREN GREEN
The Spring Arts Festival, an
annual event sponsored by the
Arts Festival Committee of Union
Board in conjunction with the
Student Senate, will be presented
in April, 1966. Students interested in participating can pick up
interview applications in Norton
Hall before November 2, 1965.
The Spring Arts Festival was conceived by the Fine Arts Committee in 1963. The festival ran
from April 15 to 20. Noted performers at this festival were
Isacc Stern, the Budapest String
Quartet, a troupe of Spanish dancers, and poetry reading by John
By

buildings.

removed from their homes without receiving either permanent
or temporary housing.

Fuller.

In 1964, Lambert, Hendircks and
Bavan, a famous jazz vocal group,
appeared in addition to sixteen

The committee has divided into groups in order to canvass
residents of the area, and inform them about a meeting that

noted Canadian artists and various student performances.

tomorrow night
will
from 7-9 p.m. at St. Phillips
Church, to elect officers for a
be

Professor John Somerville will Congress of Philosophy and leeon “Dialectical Materialtured at five European univerism’s Theory of Value" today-sgl sities in the course of cultural
3 o'clock in room 17 DiefendorP'-exchanges. He has also presentHall. He is the third and last ed special lectures at a number
of American universities,
lecturer in the Philosophy Scries
Among his books are The Philsponsored by the Convocations
osophy of Peace, The Communist
Committee.
Trials and the American TradiProfessor Somerville is a nation, Social and Political Philtive New Yorker and he received
osophy. He is editor-in-chief of
his A.B., M.A., and Ph.D. from
the translation journal, Soviet
Columbia University. He learned
the Russian language and spent
two years in the U.S.S.R. prior
to World War II in independent
post-doctoral research on Soviet
Marxism on a Cutting grant from
Columbia. He was the first American philosopher to make an extensive first-hand investigation
of this field, and as a result wrote
speak

PROF. JOHN SOMERVILLE

Festival of Arts Profs Give Verbal Grades
Slated For April

If the City proceeds with its
current plans, the people will be

DEALS JEWELERS

Address By Professor Somerville
To Be Last In Philosophy Series

Soviet Philosophy; A study of
Theory and Practice.
He was awarded a year’s Rockefeller grant from Stanford University to do further research.

Civil Rights Committee
Treats Urban Renewal
The Civil Right Committee met
Sunday night to discuss the Oak
Street • Urban Renewal Project.
The committee is planning to organize people from the Oak Street
area in Buffalo to serve on a
committee for urban renewal
dealings with City Hall.

PAGE THREE

held

According to the Committee,
the festival was in its peak of
success in April, 1965, when it
presented the Norman Walker
Dance Company, the play "In
White America," and the folksinger, Phil Ochs,

resident council to deal with the
urban renewal plans.

For further information about
the festival, contact the Union
Board or call 831-2511.

PIZZA
BOCCE

IF 3-1344

The UB Bulls football game
with Dayton University tomorrow
has been designated as Parents’
Day at UB. The game will be
played at 1:30 p.m. on Rotary
Field and will be the first meeting of the Bulls and the Flyers,
a powerful mid west independent
eleven.
Students whose parents buy
tickets for the game will receive
a free ticket along with those
purchased by their parents. In
other words, three tickets for
the price of two. Although this
privilege extends to ail ticket
categories, a special group of
seats has been set aside between

DINO'S

CHALET ROY ALE

UNIVERSITY CAMERA

For Prompt Take-Out
Service Call 873-8101

PORTRAIT STUDIO
!

3114 MAIN STREET

\

2 blocks from School

Everything in used photographic equipment. We
buy, sell and trade
Open Daily

:

Mon.

&amp;

Thurs. till 9

!

TF 5-9230

form of grading plan to keep using it. Dr. John B. Moore, who
introduced the system at Kalamazoo, says that student-teacher
contact is greatly increased. Dr.
Moore originally tried the idea
in an attempt to save grading
time. Instead, he found he was
spending about the same amount
of time grading papers but was
making far more detailed comments than he did with a pen.

There have been no student
complaints and much praise from
those who felt they were receiving more personal attention.
“We get a lot more understanding just by hearing the tone of
the professor’s voice,” one stu-

dent said.

Second Annual Parents Day

Jim Tuttle's

AND

All the
teachers who have tried the new

chemistry departments.

Corner

Colvin Blvd. I Stioridon Dr.

I
|

the 40 and SO yard lines in the
section.

$3.50

It is hoped that organizations
will take advantage of this opportunity to have their entire
membership and their parents
together for a fine football game.

Some organizations have already
reserved blocks of seats and plan
parties with their parents after
the 'game. In this connection,
the “Tunk” in the Faculty Club
will offer Dixieland music of Eli
Konikoff, and beer for $1.00 per
couple.

This campus has few traditions
and is striving to start one with
the Parents’ Day at Rotary Field.

Organizations are encouraged to
participate. Ticket reservations
singly, or by group, can be made
by calling 831-2926. All such
reservations must be picked up
and paid for by 9 p.m, tonight.

�Friday, Octobar 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

.

“SEEING RED”
A lot of people seem to have been “seeing red” lately.
U.S. Senators have been saying that the recent out-cry
against our military involvement' in Viet Nam is “red
inspired” and “red manipulaetd.” Sen. Dodd says they
must be part of a Communist plot because international
demonstrations all took place on the same day. and who
else has a network capable of co-ordinating such an enterprise? A.T. &amp; T. for one, Sen. Dodd, and the mail service
for another
are they a “red plot” too? Perhaps any
kindof communication between people, and sharing of
ideals like peace and human dignity is part of the “red
menace?" Perhaps love, and respect for the worth of
others, and an unwillingness to kill people when ordered
to by moral cripples is “subversive defeatism?”
No, Senator Russell. No, Senator Lasche. No, Senator
Dirksen, they are not a “red plot”—they are simply the
kinds of things free men learn to cherish.
You may try to scare these people back into the
silence created by Joe McCarthy; you may try to discredit TionestTmen by saying that they are “red influenced” you may try to stiffle the minority in this country
with red-baiting and “investigations” which condemn
without a trial. You may even succeed in making some
people “see red”
the red of justified anger that burns
before stupidity, immorality, and lies.
SOME SIMPLE TRUTHS —IF ANYONE CARES
There are some fairly simple truths about communism that very few people seem to think about. There
are some communists in this country, and they pay heavily for their beliefs. Certainly they are attracted to movements of social protest and reform—communism is a
critique of capitalist existence which points the way
toward many reforms. There are also a vast and serious
majority of reformers who are not communists, and who
peofurthermore are not stupid, deaf, dumb and blind
ple who are not about to be led around by the hand by
communists, or the national press, or “public opinion,”
or by anyone or anything else they don’t agree with.
Communism has some very fundamental flaws: a
basic mis-understanding of the relationship between the
means and ends of social reform and change, a simplistic
interpretation of cultural conflict and its eventual solution, and a history of immoral opportunism which rivals
even our own. However, any man who wants to stand up
with me for what I happen to believe in, is welcome to
do so, be he communist or Republican. If he influences
a group to take actions of which I disapprove, I will
resist him. If I fail, I will leave the group.
The vast majority of people involved in reform
movements in this country feel as 1 do. They are not communist "dupes” any more than they are employees of
the Rand Corporation. The “communist menace” is nothing to worry about in this country, worry might better
be expended on what is going to happen to this country
if the reforms sought by serious and moral men are not
enacted!
In fact, although my concerns about communism
are minimal, the best way to “fight communism’’ in this
country is to offer genuine alternatives for the reformer
and the moral man concerned about our foreign policy,
to create American movements which affect the life of the
nation, and not to drive the reformer to associate himself with communism because communists are the only
ones who are doing what he feels must be done. In short.
the most effective and meaningful way to “fight communism’’ in this country is to support organizations like
SDS and SNCC, the organizations which make doctrinaire
communism irrelevant.
THE DRAFT AND YOU
I have made my feelings about the draft abundantly
clear ob numerous occasions in the past in this paper
and elsewhere. The draft is a form of “involuntary servitude” which I believe is unconstitutional. It is an obscene
blot on the life of the nation and an immoral mechanism
to perpetuate immoral wars. It is humanly degrading, personally insulting, and nationally debilitating. For the
above reasons and many more it should be abolished,
and resisted in every way which does not do violence
to the principles of human community.
I am a registered conscientious objector. In fact.
I have not yet been issued a 11-S since my hearing, even
though I am a full time student in good standings I hereby °ff*r to aid any young man in seriously seeking and
obtaining a conscientious objector rating in the Selective
Service. I further offer to assist any young man who
wishes to avoid the draft because he doles not want to
fight in immoral wars, for ideas which are betrayed with
every breath we take. This is nothing new and I have
been doing it for a long time. It may even seem a little
redundant to print it, but this last week the U.S. Attorney
General began investigating people “who may be counseling others to evade the draft."
I wifi not be scared into keeping silent about the
things in which I believe. I will not cease to sav that people should resist the draft, and I will not stop helping
them. All this witch-hunting, and “investigating” and
red-baiting, and patrioteernig” all make me think about
the basic things which motivate human existance. the will
to survive, and the will to make that survival
meaningful,
and not just a biological exercise, I will champion those
drives, against the draft, against the men who say: “dissent is un-patriotic,” against the "investigators,” and, if
need .be, against immoral and unjust laws.
“If this be treason—then make the most of it!”
—

;

—

Commentary
It is sad to think that it is no
longer possible to disagree with
my own government without
immediately being branded as
a traitor. I once held it as one of
this country’s greatest freedoms,
freedom to express my opinion of
my country and to have a voice

in my government.
Nowadays I guess this is impossible and I shall just have
to stand by and silently watch
while little by little my country
departs from the great ideals
upon which it was founded. The
causes of this departure are not
very hard to see; you may even
be a party to this slide from democracy to oligarchy.
A great many American peo-

ple have been educated well in
the myths of the RED MENACE,
and have allowed themselves to
become steeped in the supersti-

tion

that makes

that Eastern

sphere a slave world and our
Although
own a "free world.”
you can have a reputable teacher lecture to these people citing

the words of some of the great
historians on the subject of Communism, to these believers in the
"Communist conspiracy” the

.

.

•

By JOHN

teacher is only a pawn of the
“enemy.” Therein lies the utter
insanity of the situation.
We now have a spirit in a majority of the people of moral superiority. In instances, people
who have never gone beyond
high school, write to newspapers
and say openly that these people who protest against government policy (college students
and professors) are just stupid
or uninformed. It is almost the
old story of The Emperor's New
Clothes all over again.
It is quite easy nowadays to
draw a parallel between the situation in this country now, and
the situation in Germany when
Hitler began to rise to power.
After the last world war, everyone was asking why the German
people didn’t see what Hitier was
and stop him. We have the answer before our very eyes in our
own country. The people did not
stop Hitler because he and his
henchmen including the quite intelligent Hr. Goebbels had for
a numbers of years beforehand
“primed the pump” by convincing the people that they were
patriotic heroes. They said (as

H.

BONER

we do) that they wished to free
the downtrodden masses (in other countries) from the oppres-

sion of their governments.

I cannot help recalling the
little speech made by British
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain on his return from Munich.
I would like to adapt Mr. Chamberlain’s speech to the present
situation. Mr. Johnson has assured us that after he has freed
the Vietnamese, it will be the
end of American intervention in
Asiatic affairs. Hitler’s pretext
for his invasion of other countries (and some purges within
Germany) was that he was afraid
the Communists would gain control . . . sound familiar?

I really don't know just why
I wrote this . . . the people I
would like to reach probably
won't even read it. But if you
read it, and understand it, and
.
agree with what I am saying
even a small part of it . . . please
talk to people about it! Join
some of the protests
in any
capacity you can!
Don’t just
stand around with your fingers
.

.

...

up your

!!

YAF Soundboard

—

By MARATHON
There seems to be much contusion on campus and in the nation
in general concerning the beliefs
and ideologies of the right. In
the following paragraphs, I shall
attempt to clarify some of the
mistakes made most frequently.
A very frequent misconception
is the attempt to lump all “rightists” together. This is indeed a
grievious error, for there are
many divergent definitions of
“conservatism” among conservatives. These differences are demonstrated by regularly occuring
fights, arguments, and crippling
splits within and among conservative groups.
It is, for example, very wrong
to call a “Yaf-er a ‘Bireher’ The
differences between these two
groups have become even more
apparent since William F, Buckley’s campaign for Mayor in New
York City, Buckley, one of the
founders, and the spiritual father
of YAF, (Young Americans for
Freedom), recently criticized the
society as irresponsible and harm-

ment in campaign speeches and
articles (National Revue 10/19/
65). This stand has brought forth
hundreds of letters from irate
“Birehers" stating that the communist conspiracy has finally
reached Buckley. In addition, a
comment was made to one of our
YAF members by a local “Bircher” that he considered YAF to
be communist infiltrated and

—

policy.

Another common mistake made

by observers of conservatives
overlooking the differences be-

tween libertarian and traditional-

istic conservatism. These differences are easy to observe and
difficult to define. However, I
shall attempt to point out main
distinctions. Basically, a traditionalistic conservative dislikes
change, especially for the sake of
“progress” or “to get the nation
moving again." A traditionalistic
conservative wants to know where
the nation is moving and if it is
beneficial to get there quickly.
He wants to be sure that change
is needed and, above all, if the
change is for the 'better. In addition, a traditionalistic conservative would agree with Edmund
Burke, perhaps the world's first
great traditionalistic conservative,
in his ideas about the value of
nationalism. Burke stressed the
worth of a national consciousness
evolving out of historical tradition. This would allow for the
growth of liberty within the nation.
A libertarian, on the other
hand, is almost an anarchist. He
believes in laissez-faire economics
and in no government controls on
anything that would limit the
total freedom of the individual.
He has an atomistic view of society in which a state is made up
only of the individuals compris-

ing it but is not greater than the
sum of its parts.
This is a very different view
from the traditionalist who sees
society as an organic evolution
of history, customs, and institu-

tions. In the state, the individual is at once meant to be free,
yet also, part of the organic
whole, consisting of the past and
present. Traditional values,
mores, customs, and ideals, unite
the individual with the society.
The individual becomes part of
the nation and receives his identity and freedom from this nation, especially if it is a free and
“liberal” state such as the United
States of America.
In addition to these two basic
types of conservatives, there are
many people in between. These
people combine and modify traditionalistic and libertarian views,
depending upon the particular
issue.
In conclusion, I shall state that
the reason that I have attempted
to point out these basic differences is to assure the readers
that when a member of YAF
speaks, he does so only for a
fragment of the conservative
movement with which he agrees.
He is not necessarily speaking
for YAF as a whole, nor for any
other individual in YAF. He
speaks only for himself, because,
above all, a “Yaf-er” is an individual with his own interpretation of the “conservative” political ideology.

Cacotopia Eutopia an

By William Mayrl
The University as a Corporation

When asked to comment upon
what might be the motive force
behind the new student movement, Mario Savio of Berkely replied:

The most important concept
for understanding the student
movement is Marx’s concept of
alienation. Its basic meaning is
that the worker is alienated
from his product, but the concept can be applied to the student too . . . The students are
frustrated; they can find no
place in society where alienation does not exist, where they
can do meaningful work, despair sets in, a volatile political
agent. The students revolt
against the apparatus of the
University. This is the motive
power of the student movement.

Students in

dominated. This type of extremism has found no place in YAF

a large university

—

are subject to many of the same
forces which confront working
people in the outside world. The
modern American University has
become a corporation not unlike

General
General

Motors, Bell Aircraft,
Dynamics and many

others.
It is not only the external structural similarities with the above
mentioned
institutions
which
make the university a real corporation. Such things as large size
and massive bureaucracy are
bad enough, but unfortunately
the similarities are deeper, American Universities are actually
productive corporations which
are expected to turn out commodities for the Military-Industrial Complex.

The first of these commodities
is research for specific Federal
projects. These projects range
from medical research to research
for the War Department on such

things as the fashioning of
clear weapons, the design

nu-

of
bombers and missies, and chemical germ warfare. One fourth of
all Federal funds going to university science, 400 million dollars in the last fiscal year, came
from the War Department. In this
regard, Gerald Piel, publisher of
the Scientific American, has
commented:

The fact that profe'ssors become increasingly for hire on
studies done to contract specifications reduces the integrity
of higher education, downgrades the teaching function
and weakens the university’s
role as an agent of free inquiry
and as a center for the independent criticism and surveilance of Federal policies.
This leads to our discussion
of the next commodity that the
(Cont’d on P. 10)

�Friday, October 22, 1965

DEAR STUDENTS:
While I would prefer a greater
measure of personal communication with State University’s student body, 1 feel sure you will
be sympathetic to the fact that
such is simply not possible under
present circumstances.
However. I do want to take this

oCetterS
Cuban Exile
Questions Editor

,

TO THE

opportunity, so graciously provided by the editors of your
newspapers, to wish all of you
every success in the coming year
and to offer a sincere welcome to

the freshmen: Be assured that
your growth as individuals is of
primary concern to all of us.
Becoming a member of the University is more than learning
some rules and customs. It is,
rather, making yourself an active
part of a vital educational adventure, catching and holding onto the spirit of restlessness and
urgency we all sense as we view
the possibilities for the University and for your own future, determining that you will do your utmost to contribute to the fulfillment of both these possibilities. You are all members of a great
band of comrades who share an enthusiastic desire to acquire knowledge and wisdom.
My hopes and yours are truly the same, for your progress and
growth will enhance similar progress and growth for the whole
University. You are our reason for being; I assure you I shall do
all in my power to make available to you a University experience
worthy of your talents.
Every good wish to you for a successful year.
Sincerely yours,
Samuel B. Gould

President

ClK Circus
mankind since time immemorial.
Lately, however, I’ve taken to
dreaming about being able to
walk through the lobby of Norton Hall without being solicited
for one thing and another more
often than a sailor in Soho.
Last Friday, for example, I
had barely reached the top of
the outside steps when someone
caught my attention with a
karate chop to the hooks. “Wanna
contribute, friend?” he asked as
he removed the circulation from
my earlobe.
“Uh, to what?” I replied, neatly
putting him in his place with a
witty retort.

imos Cultural Home,” he answered deftly

by Bob Milch

“O.K.,” and I literally coughed

up a buck.
No sooner had I been released
from that vice-like grasp and
made my way past the first door
than this lovely looking wench
oozed her way toward me.
“Voted for the Ugly Man, yet,

big boy?”
A quick check revealed that
no one around was more than
five-three, so I rapidly deduced
I was being addressed.
.

.

.”

“Why don’t you vote for Myron
Kromsnitch? No, wait! I think

it’s Krimsnatch. Yeah, that’s it.
Myron Krimsnatch. He’s really

ugly.”
A glance at his picture and I
was convinced that with his closeset ears and wide-spread nostrils,
Myron was a shoo-in. “Sure, I’ll
vote for him. What are you doing
Saturday?”
(Cont’d on

grump

by STEESE

agree

letters from military personnel
in Vietnam telling me why they
are there I am geting sick and
tired of it. But this insults me
and nobody else with any kind of
rational approach to the problem
at all. There is a real and obvious
problem. There is a disagreement
and we are not going to legislate
it out of existence.

The present Editorial View of
The News is that there is no division of opinion in the Vietnamese
War. It is all a pipedream, people. You will be so kind as to
vanish and stop being vague
shadows in the air. I have read
accounts of civil rights demonstrations that disagreed largely with
those given me by my radical
friends who were there and arrested, etc. 1 have read so many

REDS CAPITALIZE ON STUDENT PROTESTS. That on Tuesday, Guess what news (opinion?)
paper I found that in. Funny
thing though. The article turned
out to be a warning by J. Edgar
Hoover that the communists are
trying to exploit these protests.
It was slightly over a half a column long. To witness such acts
by something that is supposed to
be a news medium is to wonder
what all the shouts about government management of news was
about. Not really, but how many
except for the Times would really
miss anything these days?
You are either for or against it
seems. It being anything. Do yourself, and me, a favor. Spend eight
cents a couple of times a week
and keep the Courier-Express in
business, I mean it would be nice
(Cont’d on P. 12)

TOP SCHOLARS LAUD U. S.

VIET POLICY. That, in case you
were lucky enough to miss it, you
may remember as being the headline of The Buffalo Evening News.
And would you like to make a
guess as to how many “Top Scholars” were involved? TWENTY!

And the story calls those who diswith those TWENTY a
small but vociferous group.” I
have suffered through pomposity
and asaninity from Buffalos’ version of the Chicago Tribune before but this is damned well in-'
suiting. Mr. Righter, that is the
honest to God name of the publisher of The News, and Mr.
Kirchhofer, the Editor, and
doesn’t he at least sound like he
ought to know better?, have decided that there is no problem.

by tons to political prisons.
Have you ever stopped to think,
Mr. Editor, why communist coun

tries have walls to contain peo-

ple', while the 'll. S. needs quotas
to keep them out?
Let me tell you, Mr. Protector
of the Democracies, that 99 out
of 100 Cubans will love to see
the U. S. Army in Cuba, so they
again.

“Yup.”

“Well

EDITOR

How nice it is to write from
a good chair, well fed, with air
conditioning and above all with
liberty to write what one thinks.
Your writings confused me, because the description you created
about the troops that stop election, take over universities and
set up "provisional” (read eternal)
governments, are exactly the communist troops that are in Cuba,
North-Vietnam and that tried to
take over the Dominican Republic, Let me further tell you that
they also speak a foreign language, dress green, and take
over every food supply the country can have. Let me add that
they send people by the thousands
to the firing squad, and humans

the Editor

to

UB Driver Upset
By “Exit
Aislesr” Parkers

It is a known fact that parking at UB is quite critical. Even
with the addition of two lots on
Main St., I still feel there is a
need for a parking ramp such as
that at Michigan State University.
(2) I also feel there should be
more responsible driving in the
parking lots. There seems to be
little or no observation in turning corners or in regarding pedestrians, (3) This ties along with
my argument of irresponsible
driving: if a person assumes the
task of driving, he should also
be responsible for any damage incurred. (4) Finally, I appeal to
you, the student body, who own
cars or motorcycles, to think of
(1)

TO

Let me tell you, and your
S.D.S. mind inside of you, that
it is very nice to speak from
here, but that is is awful to
have to leave your fatherland
when the communist take over.
But do not fear for having
written that article, because
sometimes God has Mercy on the
fools . . . Wait for His Mercy . . .
Jose G. Campos

Cuban Political Exile

which offers the least chance of
some blacktop boob backing into
your grill (and of course, not reporting it) and which offers the
least chance of being boxed in by
the tarmac tyrants who (or which)
inevitably, as day follows night,
park in exit aisles.
These latter are a source of
endless ire to me, especially in
view of the fact that they enjoy
impunity from parking tickets.
3 p.m. daily will find upwards of
one half dozen (unticketed) cars
parked in aisles and entranceways of the west end of Baird
Free lx)t No, I (West), to cite

your fellow students. You have
all been taxed by tuition and
books and you know the students’
financial woes. Heavy automobile
damage only congests those finan
cial burdens.

I would like to thank the “considerate person" out there somewhere who saw fit to damage my
property with mv compensation.
If such situations prevail, we
must ask ourselves the question.
“To Park or not to Park,” for
this is indeed the question.

only one area.

Perhaps the administration feels
this is the price motorists
must pay for the privilege of
evading slipping the one-armed
bandit a dime. But may I point
out that if that campus patrolman were diverted from his post
by Hayes Hall (where he waits in
(hat

Ticked-off Townee

TO THE EDITOR:

Now that the UB herd of S.D.S.
has made the front pages of such
great newspapers as The Buffalo
Evening News, possibly they will
not be credited with so many
articles in the international news
service of the Spectrum. If such
is not the case. I seriously be
Spectrum's at

ambush with his bull horn for
some freshman coed not to cross
between the white lines), the
Bursar should net from the above
described area alone $50 daily.
That logic should appeal to any
uniformity administrator.

Object to
Administrative
Hypocrisy

Sic Semper Tyrannis

TO THE EDITOR

Indeed, ’tis a joyous occasion
when Chancellor Furnas and his
friends get together for a rollicking time, in the penthouse atop

Gym Grade Should

Not Affect
Academic Average

Hall. We graciously
welcome their presence.

Advises SDS “To
Do Something
Constructive”

be buying our
S.D.S. Table.

Goodyear Residents

Goodyear

“The Majority”

the

TO THE EDITOR;

However, hospitality can be
pushed too far, when not only
one, but two elevators are made
unavailable to the residents. To
add insult to injury, students are
requested (ordered) to use the
stairways and service entrances
in the far rear of the building
when not dressed in their Sunday attire (whatever that may
be!). Goodyear Hall is our home,
a place for relaxation and study.
Why put up the facade that on a
day of rest we walk around in
heels and dresses?

At 8 this morning I was
cheerfully greeted by my Phys.
Ed. teacher who announced to
us that we were going to have a
test. A test? In gym. Our "hourly”
consisted of running pass patterns, and throwing passes.
lake most students. I’m strug
gling along trying to maintain
a good average. My Quality Point
Average is supposed to be academic. If I get a C in all my
courses, but a D in gym should
1 be academically penalized be:

go or cannot display the proper
football stance?

scent to a certain point. To dis-

possess

Now that the S.D.S has gloated
their pictures in the “big” papers
they can quit the lip-service,
which is ridiculous, and do something constructive like taking a
bath and joining the Armed
Forces. I’m sure that the government is looking for corpsmen
to wear those big helmets with
the Red Cross on them. They
make such nice targets for those

THE EDITOR:

As any veteran UB driver
knows, parking here is not simply a matter of finding any open
parking space, but finding one

could have food, clothes, liberties, universities and schools

working his way to my wallet
via my tonsils.
“Y.E.C.H.?”

I’ve always been a dreamer. At
one time, when very young. I
dreamed of being a spaceman,
zooming around like Buck Rogers.
Then I dreamed of being a cowboy, and wearing a black outfit
with two guns, like Hoppy’s.
Later, I wanted to be a doctor,
and find the cure for some
deadly disease that had afflicted

The

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

and inconvenience fivehundred of us is indeed taking
advantage, and we refuse to be
part of the hypocrisy propounded by the administration.

Many superior students have
had a very good average lowered
because of an inability at sports.
I am not downgrading athletics.
They are an integral part of one’s
well being. But they should not
figure in a student’s academic

Sincerely,
Jayne Sacks

Helene Kimmel
Benna Kolinsky

standing.

D. K. M.

innocent, peace-loving members
of the National Liberation Front?
The Majority

Appeal To

Student Drivers
TO THE EDITOR:

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus. Buffalo, N Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May. except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
Editor*in-Chiel

On a gloomy Buffalo Saturday
morning, I departed from an 8

o’clock Chcm lab only to find
myself in an even gloomier situation. Walking to my car, I noticed a major disfiguration in my
fender. It seems as if some one
had “inadvertently mangled” my
fender to the tune of almost 300
dollars damage. And of course,
the culprit had left the scene.

I am quite sure my experience
is not unique at this university.
However, I would like to state
our parking facilities and some
four objective points concerning
people who use these facilities.

JEREMY TAYLOR
EDELMAN

Managing Editor
Nawt Editor
Feature Editor

BROMBERG

Manager

Business

JOHN STINY

Advertising

RICHARD DRANDOFF

Manager
Faculty Advisor

SHARON HONIG

Financial

LAUREN

Photography Editor

JACOBS

Advisor

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Socond Clots,
Subscription
10,000.

Represented

Postage

Paid

S3.00 per

for

MARCIA ORSZULAK
RAYMOND D.

Manager

Circulation

STEVE SCHUELEIN

Layout Editor
Copy Editor

Editor

Continuity

SUSAN GREENE
RONNIE

Sports Editor

DAVID

at

Buffalo, N.Y.

year,

circulation

national advert.ting

National Advertising Service
Madison Ave., New York,

Inc.,

N.

Y.

by
420

VOLPE

BERNARD OIKMAN
DIANE

LEWIS

IRENE WILLET
DALLAS

GARBER

EDWARD JOSECLYN

�Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGI SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs
Shils Speaks on Scientific Policy
Professor Edward Shils, the
second of five lecturers in UB’s
annual Fenton Series, addressed
students and faculty Thursday
evening, October 14, in the Conference Theater at Norton Union.
Prof. Shils, a Fellow of Kings
College,
discussed
"Scientific
Policy in Underdeveloped Countries.”
Prof. Shils asked whether it
would be advisable for Asian and
African nations which are constitutionally independent ad who
want to be modern, to develop
science. They must, because
there is a close correlation between scientific activity
and
technology and economic growth
in rich and poor countries. The
concern by leaders of new states
for scientific research is utilitarian; research is necessary for
industrial development.
In answer to the question
“What kind of science should
they (new nations) develop?,”
Prof. Shils stresses applied science. Although the results of scientific research of the advanced
countries is available to developing nations, they must apply this
information locally. Health problems and natural resources differ and require adaptation to the

new circumstances.
In addition, each country must
be surveyed to know what it has

and what can be done with it.
The developing nations need
their own body of scientists,
since foreign scientists are too
expensive if imported in large

J

search cannot be planned; most
of the important lines of development have come about acci-

dentally.

There must be a far-reaching
decentralization of decision-making for applied research; budget
control should be scattered over
various ministries to bring research into close contact with
the user, industry. There are laboratories in each field independent of the government and universities but these have little relationship to economic development, There must be allocations
of tasks to the different kinds of
institutions, industry, the universities and government must cooperate.

numbers and are available only
for short term employment. New
nations need an indigenously
generated science, with scientists
trained at home who will work
on local problems.
Prof. Shils then presented the
reasons for having a scientific
policy. As a result of the high
cost of science today and the
lack of private industrial enterprises and foundations in the dedveloping nations, the government must allocate funds if there
is to be any science. These funds
must be allocated to the differ-

ent problems according to a rationale. However, scientific re-

Cjoodman

—

—

Centralized planning is difficult in new nations because there
are not enough scientific experts
to act as advisors with breadth
and judgment. Therefore, a scientific community or atmosphere
must be created where there exists an appreciation of science;
a scientific tradition should be
developed.

Prof. Shils’ final point was that
there is a need to retain scientific talent in new nations. If
their men stay, they can train
and enliven young people and
stimulate their curiosity. But in
some countries if scientists stay,
they forfeti a chance for further
education and personal betterment. There is also a need for
secondary education and technicians, as an underpinning for
scientific research.

I Yale Law Dean
To Speak on
Faculty Gov't
*

*

************************************************

Many students tell me they are
in school this year, or in school
altogether, to avoid going to the
rice paddies. They say it angrily,
not slyly. Their moral problem
is an unusual one. It is not that
they are shirking the army for
their personal comfort or their
careers—a dodge that occurs at
all times and in all countries;
rather, they feel they ought to
be resisting the present war more
honestly, burning draft cards,
going to jail, etc. According to
the opinion polls, the President
has a solid popular majority for
his policy, but I doubt that he
has anything like a majority in
the colleges, especially among
the younger instructors and the
students. Thus, I expect the teachins and anti-war demonstrations
to be stronger and to involve
civil disobedience, if only because of these students’ self-disgust for their privileged exempt
-

status.

On the other hand, for the students who are not protesters,
the draft-policy does not have
much patriotic significance. I
doubt that there are many students who feel enthusiastic that
their college training is an indispensible function of the Great
Society and its war effort, so
that their student-deferment is
valued as a positive good, rather
than a lucky break.

Best Students Are Dissenters
Even more serious, however,
the most intellectually earnest
students are the strongest dissenters, on Civil Rights, University reform, pacifism, opposition
to the Vietnam war. This was
evident at Berkeley, where the
Free Speech Movment leaders
had grades far superior to the
average; and the same has just
been demonstrated across the
country in a report for the Car-

Corporation: dissent is
strongest in schools with the
highest academic standing and,
in those schools, among the best
students. Think of the unfortunate, and dangerous, polarization
among young people that this implies. The armed forces tend to
be filled with the poor and unschooled. They are drafted, and
they also tend to enlist since
negie

they are likely to be drafted
anyway and they might as well
have it over with; besides, in

peace-time conditions, the armed
services provide education for

the ambitious that is better than

most high schools and some colleges. In war-time conditions, the
selected group at the front understandably resents the protesters at home who are a different
breed. A reporter from Danang
(Warren Rogers in the N. Y.
Journal-American) says, “The 18and 19-year-olds, fashionably referred to as high school dropouts,

have steel in their backbones
and maybe too much of what
prize-fighters call killer instinct.”
But the protesters are most often
better informed, more reasonable, and even more earnest. Naturally the men at the front think
of them as slackers, careerists,
beatniks, or

nuts.

On the streets, the ever louder
crowds that curse the young
pacifist demonstrators are in fact
likely to be cursing the young
people of whom they would ordinarily be most proud and whom
they would like their own children to emulate. If the American
casualty lists mount, we are
bound to see a Know Nothing
spirit worse than McCarthyism,
for the dissent is more widespread, stubborn, and intellectually critical than it was in McCarthy’s time. This is certainly
(Cont’d on P. 10)

An address on faculty government by Ralph S. Brown. Jr.,
Simeon E. Baldwin, professor of
law and associate dean of the
Yale Law School, is scheduled
for the October 28 meeting of
the University Chapter of the
sity

Professors. The address
will be presented in Diefendorf
148 at 3:30 p.m.
Professor Brown is a member
of the National Council of the
AAUP and is on the Board of
Directors of the American Civil
Liberties Union. He has been the
director of the Walter E. Meyer
Research Institute of Law which
supports research toward “securing to humanity a greater degree
of justice.”

At Yale Law School Professor
Brown’s activities as associate
dean are concerned with the
educational program of the
school, teaching and research in
government regulation and corporate law. He has been the editor
of the Yale Law Journal, and
assistant editor of the Yale edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence. He also authored Loyalty and Security, published in
1958. The Gerard C. Henderson
Memorial Prize for 1956-60 was
awarded to Professor Brown by
the Harvard Law School for authoring a “critical and constructive work, of outstanding excellence, dealing with administrative law or other legal problems
affecting government.”

AAUP members and faculty
are invited. Coffee will be served
following Professor Brown’s address.

Michael Polanyi
The Sweeney of Modern Science
-

By NEWTON CARVER
One might reasonably characterize Michael 'Polanyi as the

James Johnson Sweeney of modern science. Mr. Sweeney came
to town some two years ago, at
the re-opening of the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, and told us
that no layman can hope to judge
a painting accurately or to appreciate the whys and wherefores
of its worth. A painting defies
analysis, and any judgement of
it must depend on just seeing
it in the right way. Such perception, or intuition, can be learned through conservance with the
technique, medium, and even
style which the artist uses. So
not only is the layman cut off
from sound aesthetic judgement,
but it is even impossible for, say,
a traditional representational artist to evaluate modern abstracts.
The only way to size up an
artist is to accept the judgement

his close associates make of him.
Mr. Sweeney’s anti-rationalism
struck me from the first as dangerous, and I could see the analogs of his thesis cropping up
in other realms of thought. Only
the military could judge when
certain weapons should be used,
because such judgements require
a special military insight. Academics should not criticize what
the U.S. is doing abroad, because
foreign policy decisions require
a special diplomatic insight. Administrative judgements require
a special bureaucratic insight, precluding students and faculty from
having any substantial say about
the affairs of the Faculty-Student
Association. No civilian review
boards, because judging police
work because ativeaministrhttoig
work requires professional insight. And so forth—until each
little coterie of “specialists” has
built its wall against rational analysis and critical evaluation.
But at least, I thought, science
was proof against such intuitionism, because of its insistence on
argument and demonstration.

surdities aside, but also to rank

acceptable ideas. This ranking
affects nearly the whole science,
for resources are always limited
and naturally go to follow up the
most promising proposals. Which
proposals are most promising?
According to Mr. Polanyi the issue can be determined only by
the unchallengeable intuition of
experts, and of course the established experts see most promise in proposals that follow
their own line of thinking. Hence
science should be organized into
self-evaluating coteries, like those
which Mr. Sweeney’s philosophy

would encourage in art and other
fields. Conclusion: The management of modern science, like that
of modern art, requires critical
evaluation to bow before intuition.

If this be modern, let us fall
back on something tried and true.
Like the early 19th century outlook of Elias Hicks, a Long Island farmer and preacher, who
said: “Reason is the recipient of
revelation. Take away reason and
there is nothing left for revelation to act upon.” Or, if you must
have something up-to-date, the
posture of Logical Positivism or
any variety of philosophical analysis. Let us, by all means, cherish insight and revelation. Not
even Bertrand Russell, one of
our century’s greatest advocates
for scientific and analytic thinking, was prepared to dismiss these
inspired cources of ideas. (See
the title essay of Mysticism and
Logic.) The point is rather that
no mystical insight shall be deemed authoratative in public discussion until certified by evidence
and sound reasoning. Or, as William James put it, an idea must
be judged by its fruit rather
than its root.

—

What Mr. Polanyi did in his
Fenton Lecture
and it must
be admitted as a genuine hypo—

considered for and against, it
must be judged to be plausible.
Judgements of plausibility and
absurdity are, according to Mr.
Polanyi, patently undemonstrable.
These judgements are, indeed,
not inferential judgements at all,
but a variety of perception. So
when a scientist “sees” that an
idea is absurd, he is under no
more obligation to demonstrate
its absurdity than he would be
to demonstrate that he sees his
hand when he holds it in front
of his face. Hence books can
•be dismissed unread and ideas
discarded untested.
These "insights" into plausibility serve not only to cast ab-

Mr. Polanyi said that scientists
are guided in their assessments
of plausibility by their conception of reality. Maybe so. But in

the certification of belief and

pudgement, it is better to be guided by a conception of sound reasoning than by a conception of
reality
by logic rather than
metaphysics. It is true that we
cannot justify everything at once:
Pierce and Wittgenstein have
—

shown that. From this Mr. Polanyi falsely infers that some judgements cannot be justified at
all. Fortunately this gloomy con-

clusion does not follow; and it
would open the gate to such a
flood of irrationalism and authoritarianism that we had better reject it. What we need is to return, a bit wiser, to the old maxim that every judgement is subject to rational scrutiny.

Heinz Rehfuss Appointed
New Professor of Music
UB has appointed international

concert artist Heinz Rehfuss as
Professor of Music beginning this
academic year. Mr. Rehfuss is re-

membered for his three gracious
concerts of old and new music at
Baird Hall and the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery last spring. He plans
to arrive in the United States
shortly to undertake the development of advanced vocal instruction here at UB.
Because of some technical difficulties in his arrival, the Music
Department was obliged to cancel

the announced concerts of October 15 to 17 for it had been expected that Mr. Rehfuss would
be in Buffalo by the first of October. This series, the ‘“Weekend
for Singers,” is tentatively rescheduled for February 4 and 5,
1966.
Arrangements for individual instruction with Mr. Rehfuss for
the coming semester can be made
through Millard Fillmore College
and the regular university registration procedures.

�fAM

SPKCTRUM

Friday, Oetahar M, 1H5

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

SCVCN

young men with the programs
available leading to a commission
in the U. S. Navy, after completion of their education and upon
receipt of a degree.
October 26
Johnson A Johnson
B.S.,
MBA, Accounting, Finance, General Business for an Accounting
—

The Official Bullatin is an authorized publication of tho Stata
Univarsiy of Now York at Buffalo, for which tho Spoctrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Applications for the School of
Education
Students in their
sopohomore year wishing to be
admitted into the School of Education in September 1966 for Ed.
B. and/or teaching certification
—

in New York State, should make

application NOW.
Pick up application forms from
your University College adviser
or the School of Education, Foster Hall 201.
University College Students—
Registration for next semester
for ALL University College students, excluding nurses, began
Monday, October 18, 1965. Students whose last names begin
with the letters designated below
will see their advisers plan their

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(Something old, something new.)
This Arrow shirt gives you best of
both worlds. (1) A long-pointed
collar role in the most authentic
tradition. (2) A husky-looking
basket weave that updates
ordinary oxford. For other
interesting features, check the
tapered body; back pleat and

"■

L

Si i

W/h
g

I

I

I
/

;

/

&amp;

W

MM

s

|

M

'

—

S.

't

”

M.S., Ph.D., Accounting, Finance,
General Business, Industrial Relations, Labor Relations, Marketing
and Statitstics, B.S.- M.S., Industrial Engineering and Mechanical Engineering. Candidates will
locate in Western New York.

seventeen

weeks

active

for three years.

of

intensive

,
1

■*

duty

Lord Manufacturing Co.—B.S.,
M.S., PhD., Chemistry, Chemical
Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Mechanical Engineering and
Physics. Openings in research
and development, design, product
development and materials research. Candidates will be expected to relocate.
October 25, 26, 27

Management Training Program,
B.S., M.S., Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering and
Electrical Engineering for an
Engineering Management Training Program, B.S., M.S., Industrial Engineering, Mathematics
and Engineering Science for the
Management Services Management Training Program.
Connecticut Mutual Life—B.S.,
B.A., Accounting, Finance. Gen-

eral Business, Industrial Relations
and Labor Relations. Marketing,

Statistics, Economics, Geography,

History and Government, Politi-

cal Science, Law, Modern Languages, Psychology, and Sociology. There are many opportuni-

ties for sales and management

positions. Candidates will locate
in Niagara and Erie Counties.
U. S. Dopt. of tho Treasury (Internal Revenue) —B.S., candidates
with Accounting, Business Administration and Liberal Arts majors
are needed. Candidates should
be willing to relocate if requested.
Leeds A Northrop— B.S., Ph.D„
Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering and Physics. Positions in
Sales Engineering. New Product
Engineering, Systems Engineering, Research and Development
arc available. Candidates will be
expected to relocate.
October 27
American Cyanamid Company
—B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Chemistry and
Chemical Engineering. Technical
candidates are needed to work
primarily in Research and Development, Sales and Manufacturing.
Symington Wayno Corporation
—B.S.- Industrial Engineering,
Mechanical Engineering. Opportunities for engineers in design,
Research and Development and

Production.
October 28
Buffalo State Hospital B.S.,
MBA, Business Administration,
candidates who are interested in
the State’s Administrative Internships will be able to discuss
these openings with a representative of the Buffalo State Hospital. There is a specific opening
for a Business Management Assistant.
Socony Mobil Oil Co Ph.D.,
Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, opportunities in Re—

troleum and chemical fields. Candidates should be willing to re-

locate.

Buffalo Public Schools—representatives of the Personnel Dept,
will conduct interviews for the
purpose of providing information
regarding the Buffalo Schools
and their forthcoming teacher
examinations.
October 28, 29
Ingortoll-Rond Co.—MBA, Accounting, Finance, General Business, Industrial Relations and
Labor Relations, Marketing and
Statistics, with a previous B.S.
in Engineering, B.S., M.S., in all
engineering areas. Opportunities
include project engineering, industrial engineering and design
engineering as well as administration and production.
October 29
Now York Totophono—All female candidates at all degree lev-

els of Liberal Arts and Business
Administration to fill manage-

ment training or telephone representative positions.

Addrassograph-Multigraph Corp.

B.S., M.S., Mechanical Engineering. M.S.. Ph D., Engineering Science, Physics and Mathematics.
Candidates must be willing to relocate to Cleveland, Ohio.

•••:&gt;:

.

#

Elementary Art,

training. Upon completion of
their training, successful candidates are required to serve on

.

m

—

U. S. Coot Guard—B.A., B.S.
—opportunity for graduates in all
programs to fulfill their military
obligation as commissioned officers. Selected candidates receive

i #M Ml

\

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The University of Michigan—will have numerous positions
available in both chemical and
research laboratories for graduates in Chemistry, Biology, Biochemistry, Bacteriology and Medical Technology. Contact the UPS
for additional information.
Buffalo City Schools—require
both the Buffalo Board of Education Examination and the National Teacher Examination, students planning to apply for teaching positions in the Buffalo City
Schools should make application
for these examinations- both of
which will be given December
11, 1965. The deadline for applying is October 29, 1965, please
contact the UPS for applications.
Philadelphia School District—has announced the closing dates
for applications for examinations
in the following fields:

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
October 25
Fishtr-Prico Toys, Inc.—B.S.,

/

$

Sheridan Dr.

—

School Nurse.
Continuous Filing—All elementary grades, Kindergarten and
Special Classes.

-ARROWwa

&amp;

WEEKLY CALENDAR
October 28
Jamas Fanton Lecture The
fourth of this annual series of
lectures features Stephen E. Toulmin, Director of the Nuffield
Foundation Unit for the History
of Ideas, London, England, in the
Conference Theater, Norton Hall.
Open to the Public, 8:30 p.m.
Psychiatric Guest Lectures
Series—Featuring Dr. Donald J.
Holmes, Associate Professor Psychiatry, University of Michiganwhose topic will be “Delinquency
and Pseudo-Delinquency,” Butler
Auditorium, Capen Hall, 8:30

October 20

unusual stripes to choose from.
$5.00. You expected to pay more?
Bold New Breed from

"

Niles a Week

Corner Colvin Blvd.

programs and register for courses
on the following days;
Oct. 25 through Oct. 29—W, H
Nov. 1 through Nov. 5—M, F
Nov. 8 through Nov. 12—K, G
Nov. 15 through Nov. 19—R,
P, N
Nov. 22 through Nov. 24—C, Y
Nov. 29 through Dec. 3—S
Dec. 6 through Dec. 10—L, T.
A, E
Dec. 13 through Dec. 17—D, I,
J, O, Q, U, V. X, Z
Students will make appoint-,
ments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
No. 114 one week in advance of
the above scheduled times.
Students who do not make
their appointment at the scheduled time, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required to register in Clark Gym
on Registration Day in January.

l\\l I II 11
till 1 111 11

U. S. Naval Air Statioiv—The
Naval Aviation Information Team
from the Navel Air Station, Willow Grove- Pa., will visit the
campus to acquaint qualified

For further information on
the above interviews please contact the University Placement
Service, Schoellkoph Hall, tele-

pohne 831-3311.

�Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAG! BIGHT

J3if( S)lierman

‘Return Journey’ Presented
By Student Theatre Guild
Suzanne Rovner

The Knack, Richard Lester’s fourth and most ambitious film, now playing at the Kensington Theatre, is
a “must” for anyone interested either in Film As Art
or for those who just want to relax at a good movie.
Lester’s first venture into cinema was The Running
Jumping Standing Still Film, a successful attempt to return comedy to its roots, to capture the essential energy
of the old Mack Sennet slapsticks. The film was shot on
the dueling grounds of Hampstead Heath in London and
featured performances by Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan,
Harry Seacombe, Bernard Crbibins, Millicent Martin, and
others from the old BBC “goon” shows. In as much as the
film had a story-line, it concerned the attempt of an artist to paint a pastoral landscape, to escape through art
from the chaos of the external world. But reality, in the
form of dogs urinating, children flying kites, couples
making love, and boxing gloves on springs coming out
of nowhere, kept intruding.
It was the two Beatle films however, which catapulted Lester into the public eye. A Hard Days’ Night was
the most refreshing British comedy in a decade; not since
Ealing Studios produced satires like Two Way Stretch
and I’m All Right Jack, or since Alec Guiness turhed in
a string of brilliant comic performances culminating in
Alexander MacKendrick’s The Man in the White Suit,
had a comedy seemed so original, so full of vitality. Many
critics compared the almost surrealistic bantering of the
Beatles to the comedy of the Marx Brothers. But A Hard
Days’ Night, not hampered by an artificial script or
by any taint of commercial slickness was even better than
Duck Soup.
Help! was an experiment in film as pop-art. Lester
seemed like a juggler frantically trying to keep all the
balls up in the air at once. Primarily because of the banality of the script, the film fell flat and was worthwhile
only because of the witty interplay among John, Paul,
George, and Ringo. But because of Lester’s association
with the Beatles, he was able to convince Woodfall Films
to give him complete artistic control over The Knack.
The Knack, like all of Lester’s film, juxtaposes the
best elements of “pure comedy” with a strain of Dadism;
from the tension created by this combination, the final
product is one which can only be described as a kind of
anarchic film poetry. The conflict which is at the heart
of the film is conflict between the established forces of
society and individual human values like freedom, love,
and spontaneity. Lester’s film world is a dynamic one.
Society and the people in it are subject to pressures they
only half understand and cannot control. As a result of
this dynamism, the world has a richness of texture; the
central conflict effects everyone. His films, The Knack
in particular, are filled with the victors and victims of
the conflict, the sick and the sexually perverted, the
saints and sinners, the innocent and the corrupt.
The Knack is also an example of a “cinema of the
absurd.” There is a discrepency between tone and subject matter. The musical score by John Barry for example is one moment classical and romantic, the next,
jazzy and harsh. The cutting and cross-cutting is exceptionally quick, and the viewer is totally caught up in
the shifting viewpoint of the evolving photo-montage.
One gets the feeling that the film is a “comedy” because
Lester knows that confronted with the absurdity of the
human condition if you are unable to laugh, you will go
mad, Charles Wood’s script based on Ann Jellico’s play,
is paced frenetically. Dialogue is clipped off at such an
astonishing rate of speed that after a while one gets the
feeling that the lines are emblamatic, are manifestations
of half-realized archetypal patterns. (“Rape!” the girl
cries. “Not today, &lt;ffear,” the woman answers and slams
the door in her face.) A Greek chorus of voices from
the society-at-large comment on the action of the film.
One moment you are involved in the action. Then
the next you are partially alienated from it, then totally
alienated, then involved again. Lester keeps reminding
you that what you are seeing on the screen is only a film,
only an illusion. The cinematic vocabulary is that of
Jean Luc Godard, without question the most important
and influential of contemporary film makers, but Lester
assimilates it to his own individual vision. Even Lester’s
viewpoint concerning his influences is ironic. There is
one scene, in the film where Colin, the boy without the
knack (of seducing girls), attempts to board up the front
door of his flat. As he does so, subtitles "explaining”
what he is doing appear on the screen. It is, simultaneously, a tribute to and a parody of Godard.
I said before that Lester’s art is a kind of film
poetry. What I meant is that if you see the film a second
time, what impresses you is not the pace of the action or
the quick visual cutting or even the theme, but the fact
that the film takes on the quality of an abstract expressionist painting. Blacks, whites, people, beds, motorbikes, gloves, hands, heads, streets, are all juxtaposed.
Images weave back and forth not in a logical sequence,
but contiguously. The only “form” is the form imposed
by the artist. And since the essence of cinema is illusory
motion, even that form is unreal.
But perhaps I’ve been too serious about the film. I
Simply then,
don’t want to scare anyone away from it.(Cont’d
on P. 10)

to life for

Dylan Thomas came
a few short moments last week

when the Student Theatre Guild
presented Return Journey in Norton’s Conference Theatre, October 11, 12, and 13. This one-act
play is the poignant reconstruction of the poet’s visit to the town
of his youth, Swansea, Wales. For
half an hour we watched a man
struggle hopelessly to recapture
the identity of “Young Thomas,”
the boy who had left Swansea
many years earlier. Through
bombed-out ruins and along the
peaceful shore, the poet searches
for the lad he once knew so well
—the boy who was “up to no good

ence. Was that line rehearsed, or
ad libbed? No one knew, and
hopefully, no one cared.

The jumbled tirade was an excellent commentary on contemtar more enporary America
lightening than any politician’s
speech could be With nothing
being accomplished and little
being said, despite the noise and
number of persons involved. The
cast did a splendid job of being
Americans, and unfortunately,
Wednesday’s audience did the
same. There is little else to say.
—

Another Buffalo Jazz Festival
Folk Presentation

Bob Dylan

but the beat of his blood.”

“Return Journey” was, for
much of the audience, the first
experience with Dylan Thomas
the playwright. The musical quality of the words make the drama
as exciting as Thomas’ poetry. The
was
cast
weak in spots
saved by the beauty of the script.
—

—

Director David Goldfarb did a
job of staging, utilizing a
stop-and-go effect for the lighting. It was virtually impossible to
keep the characters from upstaging one another occasionally, considering the limited size of the
stage. With the lights focused on
only one portion of the stage at
a time, the audience was not distracted by the background actors.

fine

AMERICA'S FOLK
SINGING POET

SATURDAY
Nov. 20th—8:30 p.m.

Kleinhans Music Hall
All Seats Reserved
$4.50. $3.50, $2.50

Especially noteworthy were the
performances of Sandra Klein as

the barmaid, Barbara Thirtle as
the schoolmistress, and Ted Jaffe
as the promenade man. Kudos to
the entire cast for their sense of
timing, and for their “feel” of the
story. Their involvement with the
drama made each member of the
audience truly join the playwright
in his search for “Young Thomas,” for Youth and for Yesterday,
Ferlinghetti’s “Servants of the
People,” directed by Jeanette Veling, was the second production of
the afternoon. Although the requested audience participation
got a bit out of hand in spots, the
experiment was wholly success-

ful.
The characters, constantly moving, interrupting, shouting, and
cursing, were extremely effective
in creating a portrait of the
“Great Society.” In the end, the
dignified chairman, the monotonus Southern bigot, and the raging white liberal all sounded
alike. The desired effect was realized; it was impossible to distinguish the cast from the audi-

RITA TUSHINGHAM

•tcoMMCNMO

I

ro«
A WOOOFALL

FILM

The
Pierced
Ear
3624 MAIN ST.
(opp. Clement)

Pierced Earring*
Charm*
Necklace* Ring*
Pin*
—

—

—

832-7579
1-6 p.m.

MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED
SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED

SEND
ENVEMONEY
CHECK
OR
LOPE WITH
ORDER TO SUFFALO JAZZ FESTIC/O DENTON'S, 32 COURT
VAL. BUFFALO,
2, N.Y.
ST.,
-

Poet, David Goldfarb,
after Young Thomas

inquires

Photo by Ruaaell Goldberg

F

L.jf/t

•rtO

BILLIARDS
INVITATION TO POCKET
BILLIARD PLAYERS
With Time to Spare
DURING HOURS WHEN THE
UNION ROOM IS FILLED—

Not because I havegivan themBuffalo's
most exciting shoppe. Not because I
have offered them the finest names
in traditional casual clothing. Not
because of the unusual antiques and
little fun things at the shoppe. Not
because of my sensible price policy
But just because I'm adorable.

Come on Over to:

TEEcomrrarcoBxsi

Use Your ID Card and the
Hourly Rate is the Same

...

CUE BEE

3229 Main Street
Adjacent to Campus

This applies to UB students
ONLY

�PAM MINI

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 22, 1965

Washington
Demonstrations

MUSIC OH CAMPUS

Hit work on display In Lockwood

Rare Literature To Be
Displayed In Lockwood
By PATTI WARTLEY
unique collection of rare
works will be displayed in Lockwood Library from October 27
through 30, coinciding with a
A

convention of the New York Library Association in Buffalo.
Important early editions in the
field of science will be displayed
at the entrance of the library.

Discounts
on

OIL
TIRES
BATTERIES
ACCESSORIES

Among these works will be “De
Re Metallica” by Georgius Agricola, published in 1556, and a

translation of this work done in
1912 by Herbert Hoover.
Within the main reading room
will be an exhibit of Shakespeare’s original four folios; the
first of these, published in 1623,
is generally regarded as the most
important book in the whole
range of English literature. The
collection was displayed in Lockwood in April last year to commemorate the fourth centennial of
Shakespeare’s birth. It was largely set in type directly from
Shakespeare’s manuscripts, and is
therefore our closest approach to
the originals, all of which have
perished.

2c Discount
Given on GAS Fill-Ups
SPECIAL RATES ON
REPAIRS
PARTS
—

The balcony of Lockwood will
feature collections of Twentieth
Century poets, including manuscripts and first editions of such
poets as Dylan Thomas, William
Carlos Williams, Stephen Spender,
Marianne Moore, and W. H.
Auden.

KENDALL KASTLE
KAR KLINIC
523 STARIN at Taunton
TF 6-9429
Charge Plans Available
Present Your ID Card

5 minutes
from U.B.

Less than

Selections form the University’s
internationally known Joyce Collection will again be shown, as
part of an exhibit centering
around the publishing history of
Ulysses. Letters dealing with the
publication will be on display, including correspondence with Syl-

via Beach, the American bookstore proprietor in Paris, who
first printed and distributed Ulysses,

—

sociates and Ali Akbar Khan’s
group only to each other. In this
comparison, I felt the Creative
Associates lost, in terms of
Subtuty and interplay between instruments, despite the fact that
they carried out their usual fascinating work within their idiom,
a point I deemed unnecessary to
repeat to informed readers. However, it was impossible for me to
tell-to what degree this was due
to the inherent differences in
the musical idioms and the expressive capabilities of the instruments. I was fooled by the seeming lack of structure in the jazz
piece; it was organized melodically (by mode changes) and rhythmically to a greater extent than
most people (and I) heard. But
did I misjudge the audience’s perception of form, particularly in
that of the Indian piece? Or was
it enough for most listeners to be
caught up in the virtuosity and
dynamism of the latter instead
of receiving the “message”?
Above is all I intended to state
and question about Thursday’s
concert. My only concrete criticism of Ali Akbar’s final Satur-

CIRCUS...
(Cont'd

from P.

5)

“Gedoudahere. You’re

uglier

than he is.”

Picking up my ego, I got three
steps into the foyer when I was
accosted by an earnest young

fellow who looked like he had
just taken a tranquilizer and
should have taken another. He
was covered with buttons, some
of the more memorable being
“Remember
the Inquisition,”
“Grant was Good,” and “Don’t
Plant Lindens, Plant Birches.”
“Do you realize,” he began before I could feign a convulsion,
“that Dr. Spock is a Communist
dupe?”
“Ummmm. uh

.

.

“Why sure. Not only that, but
we’re being poised here. Not just

SPEND YOUR SATURDAY NIGHTS AT THE

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Dancing

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3 SHOWS

NO COVER

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ray vohwinkle
with Audience Participation

Large Pitcher of Beer —-$1.25
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fun for all

—

COMMUNITY SINGING

the food. The textbooks are loaded with exerpts of the Communist
conspiracy. Have you ever noticed that the line from Pogo’s
ear to his tail forms a sickle? Or
that Albert’s head is like a ham
mer. Have you ever delved into
the deper meaning of ‘Red Riding Hood’?”
Trying to figure out just what
textbooks this kid was reading,
I led him to the water fountain
so he could take his 12:05 feeding.
I had almost made it to the
alcafeteria door, dear reader,
most, when from behind came,
buddy. Wanna join a
movement?”
“Huh?" I said, making the
fatal mistake of recognition.
“Wanna join the ‘Students for
a Sane and Democratic Society
“Psst,

Who Are Unrepresented and in
Exile Because Nobody Listens to
Us Nohow?”
At this point the only movement I wanted was the movement
towards the lunch line. But this
boy was persistent, and so was

as

Brahms, The

communicative,

(Cont'd from P. 1)
Vietnamese people in their appreciation of the American actions in his country. He said the
war in Viet Nam was not a people’s war. i.e. not the population
against the government, but in-

stead.

a communist-prepared war

from outside aimed for all of
Southeast Asia. He mentioned that
Maxwell Taylor had said that the
possible consequences of American withdraw! would mean the
Communists would have a new
tactic of infiltration which even
the United States could not fight.
The next speaker was Mr. Joseph Luman, a member of the
Department of State for two years

and former press attache and aid
to Ambassador Taylor in Viet
Nam. He gave the history of the
present Southeast Asian crisis and
showed how the U.S. interests
coincided with that of the South
Vietnamese. He also stated that
although some South Vietnamese
political factions weren’t in agreement with the government,
none have gone to the side of the
liberation front. Mr, Luman entertained questions from the floor
and the meeting adjourned tem-

pedagogic stance of Khan and
Ghosh in particular, and the
whole of the festival, might have
been suitable for all audiences;
but given the wise aims of the
festival for this time and place, it
was perfect. In fact, I wish the
Creative Associates would occasionally use this type of approach.
The Indian Festival as a whole
was also a success. The inevitable
porarily.
“adverse circumstances” of carrying it out can readily be exgrew
The group reconvened with a
plained by the fact that it
from an idea of one concert into panel discussion moderated by
events
week-long series of diverse
the nationally syndicated columnenlisting the support of many orist, Rowland Evans. Participants
ganizations and individuals on ■were Dr. Frank Trager of NYU,
and off campus. While the politi- br. David Rowe of Yale, Dr. Olico-intellectuals seek to make some ver Martin of Rhode Island Unisense out of the “Uniformity of versity, and Dr. Franz Michael
Buffalo.” the festival stands as of George Washington University.
the first non-administrative proDr. Rowe slated the three reagram of great intra-university cosons why we have to win this
operation). Although student participation could have been much war are: 1. Military—if we lose
better, the total attendance of we admit our war methods and
approximately 2500 included will are insufficient to meet the
many persons from all areas of Communist challenge. 2. Econointerest on campus, as well as mic—We can’t allow Southeast
the usual audience from outside Asia to fall to China, who wants
the university community. There to integrate it into Chinese economy. We denied the same to Japan
are no plans to repeat the festival but it will certainly serve as and Korea. 3. Political—If we lose
a model and starting point for we’ll have convinced ourselves
and the world that America can
many more projects of this kind.
no longer exist as a spirit of
freedom. We still do have the
will, but we need to express and
demonstrate it. The U.S. must
his friend The Ape Man, who saw take the risks and pay high costs
that a sucker was about to be to show its stability of purpose,
landed and came to join the to maintain our values and ideals.

■

-

day concert was in the matter of
Sheela Mookerjee’s voice, which
had a “breathy" quality that I
don't think is any more highly
regarded in Eastern than in Western Art Music. As for all the nonsense about television sets at
Baird, I still feel that such a ridiculous situation strikes at the
roots of concert-going and had to
be commented on. (One thing I
forgot to mention: Do you or do
you not applaud a TV set?) Of
course, despite the sometimes adcerse circumstances, this concert,
like all of the others, was a success (a point I may have neglected to mention) mostly because
of the music, which can be at the
same time as surprising as Stravinsky and as beautifully lyrical

■

Robert Grave*

By DANIEL SCHROEDER
There is a point where good
critical audacity no longer functions to help the critic see
through the feeling of great respect which he has for superior
performers; beyond this point the
audacity becomes an aim in itself, and itself obscures good criticism. I regret to say that last
week’s “Music on Campus” transgressed this boundary between
boldness and obstinacy too many
times. I would like to interpret
and repeat
because, surprisingly enough, I refuse to withdraw—my previous criticisms of the
India Festival Concerts on October 8 and 10, in an atmosphere
less permeated with unnecessary
and clouding sarcasm.
Since my connections with Indian music and the last two decades of Jazz are equally tenuous,
I have compared the respective
performances of the Creative As-

seminar.
“We’re fighting the obsolusccnt
capitalist regime that has devoided our country of all the

trcndencics toward decency and
humanitism. The war mongers
and the others in Washington behind their bureaus and other
furniture will not dictate to all
of us for their profit. Now, just
over here we’re selling some
things you might be interested

We have bumper
that say, 'Make Love,
Not War,’ that are just 35 cents
a peice. Then, for another 10
cents, you can get one that goes
under the first saying. ‘But Do
It Discriminately.’ those are for
our more moderate members. And
we're planning a big march on
Cheektowaga next week to protest a subject to be decided at a
later date; that oughta be a
smasher. Well, how about it?”
Seeing no immediate way to
extricate myself, I hollered, "Hey.
Look at that FBI. man with a
tape recorder,” with which my
antagonist gave a nice demon-

in

persuing.

stickers

stration of
ure and
issues of
Militant (a

congestive heart failwilted over several

the

December

steal/at

1963

25c).

Anyway, I still dream of being

able to"enter Norton quietly, unassailed. Better, I think, I should
find the cure for that disease;

It’s probably easier to do.

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
For Pina
Corner Colvin

Blvd. A SKovidon Dr.

After short statements by the
other members, the panel answered questions from the floor. The
next speakers were students who
had spent some time in Viet Nam
working with the people. They
agreed that people overlook the
tragedy of war, i.e. the arising
barriers of distrust and hatred
in man’s mind. Yet the students
were convinced that the U.S. has
been able to begin to win over
the villagers. The students (endorsed the new Village Adoption
Plan, through which a school or
organization may adopt a South
Vietnamese village for a small

cost.

The highlight of the symposium
was a march from the International Inn to the South Vietnamese
Embassy. Three hundred students
took part, and were accompanied
by a police escort. Upon arrival,
they were welcomed inside the
embassy by Assistant Consuls
Hwh and Long, who spoke for

Ambassador Kiem. There the
Vietnamese flag was presented to
the students and the diplomats
received an American flag in return. The Vietnamese diplomats
also accepted a petition supporting U.S, policy, which had been
signed by two thousand students
at the University of Michigan.
With this event the symposium
dispersed. It had been lauded by
leading columnists and officials
all over the country. The sym-

posium was sponsored jointly by
the Young Americans for Free-

dom, Young Democrats, and the
Young Republicans.

�r.

CaiiEoard

Cacatopia

DER DEUTSCH VEREIN

life. The government uses "schol-

arships” as window dressing for

various programs. Headlines
in The Buffalo Evening News recently informed us that “Top
Scholars Laud U, S. Viet Policy.”
These men are doing their job.
However in some ways the university assembly lines are breaking down. There are segments of
the students and faculty population which are not conforming.
This fact worries the leadership
of this country. This is why Rusk,
MaeNamara, Bundy. Unger, and
even Johnson are being sent to
what they consider “restive”
campuses. They realize that the
university wields a great deal of
power in their system. They are
fearful of any stoppage in the
valuable production.
What the Power Elite fails to
realize is that its attempts to
repress the student movement
may backfire. Increased repression may only heighten the awareness, on the part of the students,
of the important power that they
possess. The use of Federal agents
and investigating committees, and
the equation of pacifism with
treason and opposition with Communism, may further estrange
the student. In addition to being
alienated from his product, the
intellectual will be alienated from
the government. The
student
movement is becoming aware of
itself. As this awareness increases what was at first a rebellion may well be transformed
into a revolution.
its

eingeladen!

MIXER COMMITTEE
Mixer Committee of Union
Board and IRC are planning a
mixer/dance for UNICEF. It will
be held Friday, October 29 from
8-12 p.m. in the Goodyear cafeteria. Music will be by Rocky Lucci
and his band. (In their first appearance on campus in over a
year). Donation will be 50c a person, 75c a couple with all profits
going to UNICEF.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

There will be an emergency
meeting of the Photography Club
today at 4:30 in Room 266, Norton Union. All members are
urged to attend. All others interested will be welcome.
MATH CLUB

On Wednesday, October 27, the
Math Club will present Dr. Frank
Olson of the Department of Mathematics speaking on “Problems
and Solutions.” The meeting will
be held in Norton 344, and will
start at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Olson has
always been one of our most interesting speakers, and we are
looking forward to a very enjoyable meeting. All interested students are welcome. Refreshments
will be served.

.

.

.

Utopia

&amp;

(Cont’d from P. 4)
university corporation is expected to produce—conformity to
Federal policy. It is the job of
the university to turn out ideologists for the American way of

Es wird cine Versammlung des
deutschen Vereins am Mittwoch
urn 7:30 in Norton 334 gebcn. Herr
Berner wird eine Vorlcsung uber
Deutschland halten, Allc sind

FILM
it’s

(Cont’d from P, 8)

an incredibly groovy flic. It masterfully dissects the
sexual neurosis at the center of our mass society.
You’ll
(“We’re all of us, more or less, sexual failures
like Thelonious, he’s deep, he’s satisfying . . Any organ
not in constant use atrophies.”) And it’s always a pleasure to watch Rita Tushingham who is slowly developing
into one of the finest actresses around. There are things
(like the quick demise of Tolen, the boy with the knack)
in the film which aren’t totally convincing, and it would
be easy I guess to pick holes in it. But why quibble. One
can only hope that Lester continues his creative growth
and doesn’t cop out on his next film, A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum.
.

.

.

.

GOODMAN

(Cont’d

from P.

22, IMS

SPICTRUM

PAM TIN

6)

a grim relationship between the
community of scholars and society.

Policy Academically Outrageous
Consider another bad aspect of
this relationship. Precisely to diminish shirking and to guarantee social utility (according to its
lights), as well as to increase re-

cruitment, the government will
now exempt only students who
get good grades, carry a full
course-load, and even are in the
sciences rather than the humanities. But this kind of extramural pressuring is academically
outrageous. The curriculum and
level of performance that warrant a student’s being in college
must be entirely the affair of
the student and his professors,
otherwise educational process is
impossible. For a particular student at a particular time, a right
load, off-campus work, a moratorium might be just the right
thing. A student's mediocre
grades might be quite irrevelant
to the quesion of how much he
is profiting. The right curriculum depends on where and how
a student is.
I am unwilling in this column

to discuss the merits of the Viet-

nam war as policy—in my opinion, it is both unjust and impolitic—but as an academic I
must say this: the pressuring
and interference of the draft
policy in academic matters are
intolerable and poison the atmosphere of the community of
scholars. It is the duty of faculty

•

•

•

to protest against
them and refuse them, and it is
the duty of students to urge the
faculty to do so.
In abstract logic, the "just
concertedly

policy" on the student deferment
is clear: Either the war is just
and then nobody should be deferred (except for absolute social or personal necessity); all
must be in it together. Or the
war is unjust and we should get
the hell out of it. And abstractly
I agree with this forthright reasoning, but—
Since the President does not
seem to be about to give up the
war, the logic means abolishing

the deferment. The students
would of course be wildly against
it, for various good and bad reasons. Also, University administrators would be against it, since
it would diminish their population and grandeur, even if many
are students only to avoid the
draft. But finally, I think the
government itself must shy away
from such a step, for it cannot
be eager to cope with the unknown, but certainly very large,
number of students who oppose
war and would strenuously object
to being drafted, but who now
settle quietly for deferment. At
present the government is obviously disposed to get most of
its troops from the National
Guard and the Reserves, rather
than asking for an Emergency
and risking debate. Yet this drift
toward a big professional army is
hazardous to democracy, and we
may rue it.
—Copyright Paul Goodman, 1965

LASSIFIED

—

FOR SALE

IVCF
The annual fall IVCF Bible and
1961 MG A Roadster—Excellent Life Courses will be given at Sycondition. Radio, wire wheels, racuse University, Nov. 5 through
snow tires, new top. $1100. Phone
7. Selected passages from the Gos833-4947.
pel According to John will be
Underwood,
in
TYPEWRITER
studied in relation to methods of
good condition, standard keypersonal and group Bible study
and leadership. Applications must
board; $10. Phone TR 5-1951.
be in no later than Friday, OctoUSED ENGLISH RACER—26”, 3
ber 29, The cost of the entire
speed. Call Jon, 837-7936, eves.
five dollars.
Couch, weekend is about
LIVING ROOM SET
At this time a limited amount of
lounge chair, two lamps and
transportation to Syracuse is
two tables. Price $100 for every- available. Full details will be sent
thing. Phone TR 5-1951.
when you register.
STEEL STRING GUITAR—Hand
IVCF, UB Chapter, in co-operamade in Holland; great for betion with the IVCF Chapters of
ginner; will sacrifice; $15.00. Call Buffalo State and Erie County
831-2788, Loni.
Tech., is planning a hayride on
1959 TRIUMPH TR-3
Wire Saturday, October 30. Further inwheels, Perelli rites, Tonnau formation will be available durcover, excellent condition; $525. ing the next week.
The second of two lectures on
Call TT 6-2960.
“The necessity and efficacy of the
VOLKS—Excellent
condition;
’64
substitutionary death of Jesus
$1200; must sell. 885-2870.
Christ for the redemption of the
1961 PONTIAC Bonneville conworld,” will be given by the Rev.
vertible; excellent condition, Peter Pascoe, October 27 at 3 p.m.
full power, good top; $995. Phone in Norton 264.
NX 2-3804.
MUSLIM STUDENTS' ASSN.
The Muslim Students’ AssociaLOST
tion of U.S.A. and Canada will
present “Philosophy of Islam” by
GOLD CHARM of a ship. $10 re- Dr. K. Diab, on Saturday, Octoward. Contact Miss Benedicta ber 23, at 6:30 p.m. in Room 233
Norton Hall. It will be open to all.
Billy, 633-8229.
CANTERBURY
THETA CHI Sorority pin, cresThe sixth in the current discuscent shaped, gold with small
pearls. If found, call 831-3059 sions of the “ACTS OF THE
APOSTLES” will be held on Tuesor 831-3159. Reward.
day and Wednesday of next week,
2 to 3 p.m., in Norton 266, The
specific topic will be “Barnabas
MISCELLANEOUS
and Paul turn to the Gentiles
FREE —Young calico cat needs (Acts 13:1-14:28). All students and
home and loving care. Call faculty members are invited to
Mrs. Squire, 892-5994.
attend either of the duplicate
sessions.
FRENCH TUTORING by FrenchThursday, October 28 at 7:30 in
man. Translations, literature,
conversation. 837-8185, evenings, Norton 234, the sixth in the series of seminars on “Christian
Jean Pierre Volaire.
Wholeness” (Coproprate Healing
HELP the war on poverty. Hire and Learning) will be offered.
The Druids. Better rock ’n This series is conducted by the
roll music for any occasion. Call Chaplain, The
Rev. R. Sherman
Dave Hamilton, 634-3603.
Beattie and is open to all mem(MONO &amp; STEREO) repaired. For
bers of the university community.
prompt service call 833-3458
Other events of note for this
after 5 p.m.
semester include: Sundays, 7:30
p.m., student conducted seminars
at the Chaplain’s home
1179
Elmwood Avenue opposite the
State College; Tuesdays, seminar
on “Acts of the Apostles”; Wednesdays, seminar on “Acts of the
BOCCE
Apostles” followed at 6 p.m. at
the Chaplain’s home by Holy
Communion; 6:45 p.m. Pot Luck
Supper; 8:00 p.m. Open House.
Thursdays, seminar on Christian
—

—

—

—

PIZZA

IF 3-1344

Wholeness,

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
The regular weekly meeting of
the campus Christian Science Organization will be held Thurs-

Moe Balsam at the Piano
Comar Colvin Bivd.

A

Shoridan

Dr.

Quads

a

start

CAREER IN BANKING
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PERSONNEL OFFICE, 100 CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y„ 10007
PLEASE PRINT ■
--==j
■■■■■--

Address

HILLEL NEWS
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Susan Moss, a
student in the School of Nursing
will speak on: “Impressions of Israel.”

Hillel’s Annual Hay Ride will
be held this Saturday -evening at
Camp Centerland. Buses will leave
from Norton Union at 7 p.m.
Tickets for the Hay Ride may be
purchased by members of Hillel
on a first-come-first-served basis
at the Hillel House.
There will be a Lox and Bagel
Brunch this Sunday, October 24
at 11 a.m. in the Hillel House.
Rabbi Daniel Kerman of Temple
Beth Am will speak on; “Tradithe Recontion and Change
structionist View.”
STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSN.
Thursday, October 28, Sharon
Clarke will talk about her experiences in India, and give us
her impressions of that complex
country. This past summer, Sharon took part in the “Experiment
in International Living” program
and lived in the Indian cities of
Jabalpur and Benaras. Colored
slides will accompany her presentation. Everyone is invited to attend the meeting which will be
held at the chaplain’s home, 49
Heath Street, at 8:00 p.m. Supper
is served at 6:00 p.m. for 50c;
reservations may be made by calling TF 4-4250 or TF 6-5806,
A seminar on the subject “The
Meaning of Religious Language”
is being conducted by Chaplain
John Buerk, Sunday mornings at
the University Presbyterian
Church from 9:30 to 10:30. A
light breakfast of coffee, orange
juice, and doughnuts is served,
Anyone interested is welcome to
join the group at any time.
NEWMAN
The Newman Apostolate is sponsoring a mixer at Newman Hall
tonight at 8:30 p.m. Admission is
free for members and 50c for
non-members. Refreshments will
be available.
Rabbi Hoffman will speak at
the meeting this Wednesday, October 27, in Norton Conference
Theater at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is
invited to attend.
Next weekend, October 29, 30,
and 31, the Newman Educational
Weekend will be held in Rochester. Events will include a mixer,
discussion groups, a dinner-dance,
and a communion breakfast. Anyone interested can obtain further
information by contacting Newman Hall or by attending the
—

Wednesday night meeting.
Devotions are continuing each
day after 11 o’clock Mass for the
remainder of October.
Sunday Suppers are served
each week at 5;30 p.m. at Newman Hall. Everyone is invited to

attend.

Clothing Fashion Center for Men

MAIL TO

Name

tend.

�

12. 1965

to start your career July 1, 1966
FOR FURTHER

ber 25, at 7 p.m. in Room 220
Norton. All are invited to at-

5,800

•

� NO

day evening at 7:15. All interested
students are welcome to attend.
LIBERAL RELIGIOUS
FELLOWSHIP
Mr. David Posner will speak on
“Modern Poetry,” Monday, Octo-

3151 BAILEY AVE.

■t E. Amherst
Buffalo, Now York 14215
Dial 832-1200
FREE PARKING

—

COME TO MOREY'S

—

—

A short distance from
Campus and get your

10% DISCOUNT
Or contact Banking Dept, offices

in Albany. Buffalo, Rochester or Syracuse.

by showing ID Card

�Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

Toronto...

Buffalo Demo...

(Cont’d from P. 1)

While the demonstrators filed
around in an oval in front of the
Consulate, the C.I.A. had three
men atop the building taking

pictures

PAGE ELEVEN

(see picture).

(Cont’d from P. 1)
After a prayer and comments
from Ft. Erie’s mayor's representative and a pledge to the
flag by a city commissioner, Mayor Kowal addressed the gather-

The picketing went on for 'ing
and read the Proclamation
about an hour and a half, then
of Viet Nam Day in recognition
all the demonstrators went across
of the “patriotic, selfless and
the street to the mall in front of
dedicated efforts” of servicemen
Peace
hear
the
Consulate
to
the
fighting “daily in this great and
above.
mentioned
Declarations
noble cause of combating ComAfter this took place the entire munism.”
Park,
to
Assemly marched
Queens
In a later interview with the
about one half mile from the
Mayor he told this reporter that
Consulate. There most groups rethe proclamation was the result
organized and an announcement
of a letter the mayor received
was made that American Stufrom Corp. R. S. Gabryszak, a
dents from the State University Buffalo serviceman, who wrote
of New York at Buffalo were
“but to get to the point, what I
about to burn their draft cards in would really like to see is the
of
the
War
Viet
Nam.
in
protest
entire City of Buffalo get toAn appeal was made to all other gether in a clothing drive of chilseriously
American males who
dren’s clothes for the children of
abhored the war to join in on South Viet Nam." The mayor did
this particular symbolic act of not mention the program but
protest. The crowd looked on as rather addressed himself to the
four students from UB burned last line of the letter stating “But
their draft cards.

GREEK NOTES

I believe the cause I am fighting
for and I just want everyone to
help the people of this country.”
The Mayor said a copy of the
proclamation would be sent to
the commander of Allied Forces
in Viet Nam.
The exercise ended with a
prayer recited by an eighth grader from St. Anthony’s, Tommy
Lopez. Immediately after the exexercise one well-wisher congratulated the mayor commenting his

Alpha Sigma Phi and to ail fraCHI OMEGA
Chi Omega is looking forward ternities and others who made
to the Halloween costume party this year’s contest the success
Sunday, given by the new sisters
that it was.
Tomorrow the brothers will
for the other sisters. It will be
have a date party at the Orchard
held at the home of Janet Leslie
and begins at 4 p.m.
Park Motel at 8:30. (B.Y.O.D.)
Rushees are welcome to visit
The brothers extend their
the table in the Millard Fillmore wishes for success to the Fall
Pledge Class.
speech was “divinely inspired.” Room.
An attendant was then given permission to unlock the back door.
PHI LAMBDA DELTA
PHI EPSILON PI
The SDS picket in front of the
Phi Lambda Delta is holding its
Phi Epsilon Pi would like to
Court Building moved to Lafawelcome the members of the fall annual Last Blast tonight at Washyette Square at 4 o’clock. About pledge class. The new pledges arc ington Hall featuring the “Cavaone hundred persons crowded
Jerry Barnett, Bob Beck, Jesse
lecrs" and the spectacular Bobby
together to hear the speakers Bernstein, Dave Freundlich, Billy
Comstock and His Counts. Bobby
denounce U. S. policy, offer comJack Huttner, has just finished a tour with the
Hirschkowitz,
parisons of moral issues now and Lenny Kielson, Richie Kurtzman,
Dave Clark Five, Herman’s Herand those raised at the NurcmJay Nisburg, Pete Shulman, Jay mits, The Rolling Stones and the
burg Trials after WW II. The Steinburg, and Morris Torres, A Righteous Brothers. Bobby has
SDS speakers were infrequently Bob Fink Party will be held toalso done background music for
interrupted by hecklers and vermorrow evening at the Hotel Lloyd Price and Chubby Checker.
bal exchanges between SDS Richford.
This will be one of the few times
you will be able to see him and
members and passing workers.
All in all the demonstrations
his Counts in Buffalo. Also feaALPHA GAMMA DELTA
were peaceful, orderly and quiet.
tured will be 75 kegs of BallanAlpha Gamma Delta is preparSome commented that the rain ing for the informal, off-campus tine Beer. The Blast will start at
8:30 p.m. and the donation will
rush party, to be held at St. Anbe $2.00 at the door. Advance
drew's Episcopal Church, Tuessales tickets will be available
day from 7 to 10 p.m.
today at the Last Blast table in
Norton for $1.50. Free buses will
PHI KAPPA PSI
be running to and from WashingPhi Kappa Psi is looking forton Hall and will be at Norton
ward to its “joint orgy” with the
Union and at Allenhurst at 8:30
brothers of Beta Sigma Kho to-

BOCCE
PIZZA

IF 3-1344

morrow evening. It will be a
liquor punch party with “The
Rogues,” and is being held in an
attempt to promote some interfraternity spirit.
Later next week, we will have
a Stag for Brother Rick Wirth,
who is leaving to serve his country.

SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sigma Phi Epsilon wishes to
thank Sigma Delta Tau for the
stag, held at the Hotel Worth
last Friday night.
With nothing on schedule for

this

weekend, the brothers are

making plans for the big Halloween Party, to be held October 30
at Brother Pat Sherman’s barn,
near Varysburg.
ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Alpha Sigma Phi will hold a
pajama party at the Hallmark
Manor tonight at 9 p.m. There
will be a pre-game beer party at
Paul Bennet’s apartment at 10:30
a m. Bill Yawak's name was omit
ted from last week's list of newly
inducted brothers.

PI LAMBDA TAU

Pi Lambda Tau would like to
announce its social with Theta
Chi Sorority tonight. The social
is being held at the Hotel Worth
at 8:30 p.m. The dress will be
jackets and ties. The fraternity
would like to congratulate their
new brothers who were inducted
last Tuesday night.

ALPHA KAPPA PSI
Alpha Kappa Psi will hold a
pledge orientation banquet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. The brothers
would like to congratulate John
Brummcr for capturing medalist
honors at the fraternity golf tournament at Audubon Golf Course
last week.

ALPHA PHI DELTA
week, Alpha Phi Delta had
its annual community project. It
rased over $200 for the Kensington Lions Club in the annual
Last

ww

"•

BEETHOVEN
HANO CONCERTOS
LEON FlflSHER
GEORGE SZELL
THE CLEVELAND
ORCHESTRA

sc 6051 /BSC
‘Stereo

'*■

Jtk(tartrts

»

Ml

&lt;g&gt;
151* (A 4-Record Set)

I

&lt;^B&gt;

White Cane drive for the blind.
The brothers held a date party
last Saturday at the Brighton
Acres, and they are planning a
Halloween Party for October 30.
Sunday, the brothers will occupy a block at the Buffalo Bills
football game, and they will be
at Rotary Field tomorrow to
cheer on the Bulls.

ALPHA PHI OMEGA
Alpha Phi Omega extends its
congratulations to Tau Kappa Epsilon's candidate. Jay Katz, Mr.
Ugly Man on Campus 1965 and
runner-up Marty Swenson of

p.m.

BETA PHI SIGMA
Beta Phi Sigma will hold a

study clinic Wednesday at 7:30

in Room 262 Norton Hall.
There will be tutors available for
p.m.

all undergraduate pre-pharmacy
courses.
We are having a film and a
speaker from Smith, Kline, and
French Laboratories immediately
following our meeting this Mon-

day.
GAMMA PHI

Gamma Phi will hold a return
engagement at the Brighton Acre
engagement at the Brighton
Acres Supper Club tomorrow.
Steve Wilson and Bruce Vereecken have been selected as the
Alumni Advisors.
THETA CHI SORORITY

Theta Chi is looking forward to
a social tonight with the brothers
of Phi Lambda Tau.
Remember, the Great Pumpkin
is coming!
THETA CHI FRATERNITY

Theta Chi wishes to congratulate Tom "Monk” Hines who was
elected vice-president of the Industrial Relations Club last week.
Saturday, a special initiation
ceremony was held for Tom Stratton, who was hospitalized during
his pledge class’ initiation. Twelve
new pledges were inducted Wed-

nesday evening.
Congratulations to Brothers
Sharkey and Swanson for their
elections to the offices of Librarian and First Guard respectively.

SIGMA

KAPPA PHI

Sigma Kappa Phi congratulates
Sister Betsy Mitchell on being
elected Vice-President of Clement
Hall. Dr. Plesur will speak to the
sisters next Monday at 8:30 p.m.
in the Conference Theatre. We
cordially extend an invitation to
all sorority women to attend this
meeting also.
BETA SIGMA RHO
Beta Sigma Rho wishes to con-

gratulate the ten pledges that
were inducted Monday night. We
are all looking forward to our
joint party with Phi Kappa Psi
tomorrow night.
The brothers also wish to congratulate Steve ( the “Worm")
Litvak on his election as vicepresident for the ensuing year.
Good luck to our “great” football team led by “H” Bender with

the aid of Dave Leibman, Paul
Goldstein. Lewis Druss, Ken Ritz,
Miles Kavelier, and all of the
other fine members of the squad.

�[

*

BY
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Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

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NEEDS A
SYNOPSIS?
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WHAT'S
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PIZZA
BOCCE

TF 3-1344
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DINO'S
CHALET ROYALS

HOU'.|MI, IS

A MUST

,

'

School of Health Related Professions

The establishment of a School
of Health Related Professions in
the University Health Center on
campus was approved by the State
University of New York Board of
Trustees.

According to Dr. Peter F.
Regan, vice-president for health
affairs at UB, the new school will
have three major functions:
1. It will provide academic integrity as well as administrative
and fiscal security to those health

related educational programs for

which the University Health Center already has primary responsibility. The school will provide a
suitable locus for the initiation
of such other health related programs as may be found desirable
and necessary in the future.
2. With respect to professional

programs related to health which
are conducted in other sectors of
the University, the new school
will provide a means of the clinical facilities available at the
University Hospital.
3. Concerning professional programs related to health which
are conducted in other units of
the campus, the school will provide a clinical complement to the
acadamie operations conducted in
such units thereby allowing for
a rounded total educational pro-

who are needed to carry out a
single open-heart surgical procedure.

“The health needs of the nation

must be met by making every
health professional more effective,” Dr. Regan said.
An important way of accompilshing this is'by educating assistant in every field, so that
every highly trained professional
can work through a number of
others.

‘A

striking

example may be

found in dentistry. If all of the
nation’s 100,000 dentists knew
how to use chair-side assistants,
and if there were 300,000 such assistants, the nation’s dental needs
could be met. As it is, there is
virtually no hope of producing
the 300,000 full trained dentists
that are needed under present
conditions,” Dr. Regan said.
He felt that similar examples
could be found in occupational
therapy, physical therapy, or any
of the other professions.

gram.

According to Dr. Regan, highly
professionals (doctors,
nurses, dentists) comprise but Vo
of the 2'/i million people employed in the health fields. As an
example, he cited more than 100
people trained at different levels

trained

THE GRUMP . . .
from P. 5)
to keep one local paper you could
trust in business.
Before I am accused of all sorts
of dire things I will explain why
I am sick and tired of reading
earnest letters from Military Personnel. I do not think that the
letter writers to newspapers over
(Cont’d

there are anymore an accurate
gauge than the protestors here.
The U. S. personnel in Vietnam
are the ones who were caught. I
was separated from the army last
March. I have no wish to go back
in and go to Vietnam and get shot
at. And I will state as strongly as
I can that I think eighty percent
or more of the U. S. trooops wish
they were out before the pot
boiled over too. It is no question
of cowardness. Those people are
doing a miserable messy job. I
can not, and will not, believe that
on the whole they enjoy doing it,
nor can I believe that having seen
what is going on, having been

shot at, they would be greatly
saddened if the war ended tomor-

row.
In a rather broad denouncement of the U. S. in Vietnam last
week in the Spectrum Dr. Powell
made heavy use of quotes from

OUR "SPECIAL PURCHASE” GIVES YOU
FANTASTIC SAVINGS

ON CLASSICAL RECORDS!

the New York Times. One of her
sources was James Reston. I wonder if she noted his “The Stupidity of Intelligence” in last Sunday’s Times
October IT, He
tells a very simple and horrifying
tale, I think. It seems that Hanoi
is not interested in negotiating
because the feeling there is that
of the war in Vietnam because of
the U. S. is going to be forced out
of the war in Vietnam because
of internal political pressure. The
■inflated claims found in this
country, “50% of the American
people are against the Viet War”
etc., must be largely blamed I
think. If the left, trying to convince itself of its political
strength, weak at best, has succeeded in convincing Hanoi, then
at least part of the damage and
slaughter must lie with the left.
I walked around Norton trying
to find one those cute little signs
that Young Americans for Freedom had up. As I recall it it read
something like “For Freedom?—
Join YAF!” Which sort of nettled
me a little, I wonder if it occured
to someone in the YAF that one
could still be for “Freedom”
—

nebulousity anyone?
and not
be too interested in joining forces
—

with their group.
I did not say a word when they
put temporary class rooms up by
the Dorms. I mean, do I live in a
dorm? And I mumbled in my
beard when they put .the yellow
giant 15 cent Hamburger stand
up between Acheson and Engineering
they had the decency
to keep it partially out of sight—but spake nate. Now it seems that
they are not constructing mtid
pies on a mass scale over behind
Hayes entirely without purpose.
It seems my friends that the grass
is being removed to make way for
the addition of three temporary
buildings. I do not have the heart
to make inquiries as to the current definition of temporary. I
also dread the prospect of there
being a variety of colors involved.
Oh well, maybe it isn’t Frank
Lloyd but it is ours, all ours. At
the current rate of architectural
disintegration an aerial view of
this campus may well become a
classic example of how not to de—

sign a University complex.
If somebody really wants to
name that skunk, how about
Stinker-Belle? Pretty odorous
huh? You know me, lots of
smelly jokes. And if you think the
forgoing were bad, grace yourself.
Russell Goldberg feels that be
should be known as Lepra-Cohen.
Which will no doubt result in my
being called a fascist when I am
only a poor goyem.
Enough, as I am sure you will
agree. But one minute more. I
beg your pardon. I was approached Sunday morning by the
—

Director of the Fantastiks, the
same to open next Wednesday
And ' it seems that things are a
little rough, I mean they just had
the third baby (congratulations

Mrs. Wicke, Mam), and he needs
his job and all so if all you people would troop in great multitudes to see the Fantastiks it
would be nice. Seriously, those :
you lucky, enough to have seen
it or know it all can tell others
that it is an excellent piece of
work, and this production will
probably be well worth seemsNext week, if The News doesn t
get me drafted. ‘‘But I left my
draft card and my wallet in m&gt;
other pants. Help Help Help help
. help
help
h»l... he . .”

�Friday,

Oetobar 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE

VIEWPOINT

Ice Bulls Begin Training
The 1965-66 version of the UB

ishing in the Finger Lakes Intercollegiate Hockey League.

Hockey Bulls opened their train-

The UB attack, which aver

program last week in Fort
Canada under new head
coach Day Hannah Sr. The hockey
team, now in its fourth year of
existence, is financed entirely by
the athletic department in its
drive toward official University
sanction as an integral part of
the UB sports scene.
ing

aged seven goals per game, will
again feature the likes of A1
Dever, Dan Gorney, Dan Han-

Erie,

nah Jr., Jim Bouch, Brian Fraser,
Paul Kubiak. Pete Marrus, and
Jeff Weaver. Several new-comers, Jim McKowne, Len Deprima
and Fred Cohen from the Buffalo Muny League are, also coptending for starting positions.

Coach Hannah, who has mastermined many victorious teams
throughout Canada and the Buffalo area, will inherit ten members from last year’s squad which
compiled a 10-3-1 record in fin-

The defense is causing Coach
Hannah the most concern as two

leading defensemen and the starting goaler have graduated. Tom
Robertson, a Toronto native, and
Bill Savage, a transfer from St.
Lawrence, will continue to provide experience at this position.
Kevin McCullough, a transfer

from Harvard, and Jim Romanowski also figure highly in the UB
defenses.

\

The big question mark of the

team concerns the goalkeeping,
easily the most important position. Here Steve Ziegler, last season’s alternate goaler; has responded to the challenge. Reporting in top condition after a summer of hockey on Long Island,

Ziegler has shown vast improvement with each practice. He will
be supported this year by fresh
men goalies Charlie Huber and

Don Kareff.
This year home games will
again be played at the Amherst
Recreation Center on Tuesdays
and Saturday nights, with starting time an hour earlier than last
year, at 10 p.m. The Ice Herd's
schedule is as follows:
Dee. 4 at Buffalo—Canton Agricultural and Technical College.
Dee. 8 at Rochester—Rochester
Institute of Technology.
Dec. 11 at Canton—Canton Agric.
and Tech. College
Dec. 14 at Buffalo—Oswego
State.
Dec. 17 at Brockport— Brockport
State.
Dec. 18 at Syracuse—Syracuse
University.

Jan. 29 at Hobart—Hobart Col
lege,

Feb. 5 at Buffalo—Ithaca College,
Feb. 11 at Ithaca—Ithaca.
Feb. 12 at Utica—Utica College.
Feb. 16 at Oswego
Oswego
—

State.

Feb. 19 at Buffalo
Rochester
Institute of Technology.
at
Buffalo—Broekport
Feb. 21
—

State.

Chick's Picks
(Cont’d

from P.

16)

Michigan State 27, Purdue 14—
How can a team win when it
doesn’t even wear shoes, but it
will. Can you smell the roses
yet, Duffy?
Georgia Tech 13, Navy 6—The
Middies (3-1-1) have enjoyed unexpected success this year with
a sophomore-laden squad but their
offense it too weak to pierce
the Yellow Jackets' (3-1-1) armor.

Nebraska 33, Colorado 15—The
Buffaloes (4-0-1) never expected
to do as well as they have. But
they should be brought down to
earth this week by the Cornhuskers (5-0). Coach Devaney has
a full house this year plus two
star quarterbacks in Churchich
and Duda while most coaches are
still searching for one. And don’t
forget little FB Frank Solich,
who weighs in at 157 but plays
like he is about 100 pounds
heavier.
Duke 26, Illinois 21—The Blue
Devils (4-1) may have blown the
ACC crown last week to Clemson, but should rebound tomorrow. Scotty Glacken should throw
often enough to neutralize the
running of the mini's (2-3) Grabowski, who last week surpassed
the rushing record held by the illustrious Red Grange. Illinois is
a big disappointment this year to
its supporters.
Penn State 34, West Virginia
16—The Nittany Lions (1-3) have
really had a tough year so far.

WALT BANTZ (E.E.)

of the ’63 Bethlehem
"Loop” Course is an
engineer at our new,

$50-million research
laboratories. He’s typical
of young men on the move

at

Bethlehem Steel.
Seniors and graduate
students in engineering and
non-technical curricula will
soon be interviewed for

the 1966 Bethlehem Loop
Course. We offer splendid
career opportunities in steel

plant operations, research,
sales, mining, accounting,

and other activities.
For detailed information,
pick up a copy of our
booklet, "Careers with
Bethlehem Steel and the
Loop Course,” at your
Placement Office.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for
Progress Program

BETHLEHEM
*. ’ TEEL bethi ehem
ST EL

I

They’ve outplayed their opponents in every game, yet have
only one victory to show for
their efforts. They should have

little trouble with the defenseless Mountaineers (4-1).
Syracuse 44, Holy Cross 0

—

What can you say here. When
you’re up against Floyd Little
there isn’t much you can do, except pray. The Orangemen, (3-2)
will romp over the hapless Crusaders (0-3-1).

DINO'S
CHALET ROYALE
For Barbecued Chicken
i

Corner Colvin Blvd.

&amp;

Sheridan Dr

PIZZA
BOCCE

IF 3-1344

|
|

(Cont’d

•

•

•

Georgia 14, Kentucky 12—The
Bulldogs (4-1) must be mighty
surprised to find themselves alone
atop the SEC, They stumbled
last week against independent
Florida State, but will be on the
rebound Saturday. The Wildcats
(3-2) started out like a ball of
fire, but form has held true and
they have been folding in the
middle of the season as they
usually do.
Stanford IS, Army 6—The Indians (3-1-1) almost pulled off a
big one last week when they held
USC at bay for the first three
periods. In this battle of the
defenses, the visiting Cadets (3-2)
will come up short. They need a
passing attack to complement
their potent running game.

Alabama 21, Florida State 13
Coach Bryant has been handicapped this year by a small
squad, but they are heavy on potential. The tie with Tennessee
should have awakened them, but
they had better be on their toes.
The Seminoles (2-2) are a lot better than their record indicates.
—

Princeton 33, Penn 6—The Tigers may still be using the archaic single wing attack, but do
you hear anyone complaining?
They’ve won their last 13 in a
row and there’s no reason for
them not to add at least five
more to that this season, no with
Gogolak kicking, Landeck running, and Maliszewski tackling.
Poor, poor Penn (3-1).
Michigan

20, Minnesota

16—

The little Brown Jug is up for
grabs again tomorrow. It should
go
are

to the Wolverines

(2-3) who

long overdue. The Gophers
(2-2-1) are tough, but not good
enough.

U. S. C. 23, Notre Dame 18

—

Believe me, I do not really hale
the Fighting Irish (3-1). And I
really do think that Parseghian
is an excellent coach. It’s just
that his team always seems to be
in the wrong place at the right
time. They’ve been keying for
this game ever since those last
two minutes of the game last
November and have had nothing
to do the past two weeks but
think nasty things about the
Trojans (4-0-1). They’ll be a little
tight on the gridiron tomorrow,
and a nervous team, no matter
how good it is, makes mistakes.
Southern Cal and Mike Garrett
lecond suet
give me my
ful UPSET OF THE WEEK

from P,

.

.

THIRTEEN

.

14)

on occasion, a pitcher who has had a fabulous year has
won it. Bobby Shantz won it while with the Philadelphia A’s in the American League in 1952, Koufax did
it in 1963. This season he led N.L. pitchers in every
category but shutouts, in addition to setting a Major
League record for strikeouts in a season with 382. Mays
led the league in homers 52, total bases 363, slugging
.650, and was high up in other offensive
percentage
-

-

-

categories.

A.L.—Versalles with a very outside chance to Grant.
Versalles’ record is this: tied for fifth in games with 160,
first in at Bats with 666, first in runs scored with 126,
first in total bases with 308, and tied for first in doubles
and ti iples with 45 and 12, respectively. He was also tied
for third in stolen bases with 26, and drove in 77 runs,
a phenomenal figure for a lead-off batter. Mudcat led
the American League in victories, in won-lost percentage,
and in shutouts. However, His earned run average was
3.27, usually not good enough to qualify a pitcher for
the MVP award.
Cy Young Award

This award goes to the top pitcher in the majors for
the year; meaning Koufax. Not only did he lead the
National League in everything but shutouts, but also the
American League as well. Sam McDowell of the Cleveland Indians did just barely beat him in strikeouts per
inning, but that is a minor point. Koufax, is, without
a doubt, the most overpowering and dominating pitcher
of the past decade and a half.
Rookies of the Year Award
N.L.— This year’s winner in either league won’t have
led anywhere near the credentials that the 1964 winners,
or even the runner-ups had. Frank Linzy of the San
Francisco Giants had the best year of any rookie hurler
in the Senior Circuit, while Joe Morgan of the Houston
Astros was the best of the batters. However, Jim Lefebvre of the Dodgers will probably receive a good share
of the votes because of his clutch hitting and his having
been on a pennant-winning team. Linzy was truly a
great pitcher for the Giants in 1965. He was called
in during the roughest spots and invariably pitched the
Giants out of trouble. Joe Morgan, though only 20 or
21 years old, stepped right into the second base position
and did a bang-up job. He scored 100 runs in 1965, and
for the Astros, that is quite an accomplishment.

A.L.—The award, in all probability, will go to either
pitcher Marcelino Lopez of the Angels, or outfielders
Curt Blefary of the Orioles, and Jose Cardenal of the
Angels. Lopez, pitching in tough luck, had only a 14-13
record, but had a highly creditable 2.8!) ERA. Rlefary
slugged 22 homers, drove in 70 runs, and hit .260. Cardenal, a fleet, competent fielder, hit .250 and was second
in the league with 37 stolen bases.
Comeback of the Year
I am not positive exactly what criteria is used for selecting the winner in this category, blit for me it is the
man who, once a good player, has experienced a poor
season or two, and has come back to perform in the old,
accomplished manner. Using this reasoning as a basis
for the award, I shall select Don Cardwell of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Mr. Cardwell was, at one time, a pitcher
with almost unlimited potential with the Cubs, Phillies,
and Pirates. He was what could be called pretty good
for the average pitcher from about I960 to 1963. Late
in 1963 he came up with arm trouble. This trouble continued into 1964 and prevented him from doing any
pitching until about June, and then only in the minors
at Columbus. He strengthened his arm during the remainder of the year and the Pirates brought him up at
the tail-end of the season, compiling a 1-2 record for the
Corsairs. The Pirates headed in 1965 hoping they could
count on Don to be a mainstay of the staff. Cardwell
came through with flying colors, and even pitched a onehitter and a two-hitter during the course of the season.
He wound up 1965 with a 13-10 record and a 3.19 ERA
while pitching 240 innings. For this, 1 designate Cardwell as my nomination for the Comeback of the Year
Award. Other players who enjoyed comeback years in
1965 were Verron Law of the Pirates Steve Bar
the Orioles, Tom Tresh of the 1
e rear
the Angels, and “Junior”
(

me if I’m wron

&gt;r this t

�PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

DAYTON PREVIEW
Injury Riddled Bulls Face
Low Flyers From Dayton
By

ARTURO GOSHINSKY

The University of Buffalo will
take the field against Dayton tomorrow without their sophomore
signal caller, Rick Wells, who is
out for the remainder of the season with a broken leg. The keeper
play in the third quarter of the
Richmond game may have dealt
a fatal blow to UB's hopes in the
1965 season. It is a basic axiom
of football that without an experienced quarterback you have
to play defensive football and
and that is
pray for the best
exactly what the Bulls will have
—

Viewpoint

rated a doubtful participant until
completely recovered.
Offenhamer said this week that
he expects Ron Ridolfi, a 5’9”,
171 pound senior, who had understudied Wells this season, to be
the starter tomorrow. Ridolfi took
over in the second half after
Wells left the Richmond game
and directed the Bulls on a 72
yard scoring march which was
climaxed by his 21 yard pass to
Dick Ashley for a score. Ridolfi
is rated as the best passer on the
squad and a capable ball handler
and field general, but his lack of
size diminishes the UB running
attack, particularly on the sprintout pass-run option series.
Tom Hurd, a sophomore, will
start practicing at Capuana’s safety spot in the Bull’s defensive
backfield. Hurd, who has been
first-string tailback and wingback
since the start of the season, has
the size (6’2”, 192 pounds) and
speed that Offenhamer would love
to have in his defensive sec-

Despite the Bulls’ quarterback
difficulties, this week they are
facing a Dayton eleven which has
scored a fantastic total of six
points in five games. They have
managed to lose to Cincinnati 280, to Kent State 14-6, to Bowling
Green 9-0, to Louisville 34-0, and
to the Quantico Marines 10-0 last
week. In their five games to date,
they have scored six points (as
was already mentioned) and have
given up 95, so the Bulls could
be in for a big week.

The loss of Wells, however, is
impossible to minimize. In the
games that he played, Wells, with
635 yards, has accounted for more
than half of his team’s total offense. He had completed 23 of
63 passes for 349 yards and four
touchdowns and had gained 286
yards rushing on 97 carries. He
had a clear shot at UB’s all-time

great pitching, and clutch hitting, when it was
needed.
Grant—For approximately the same reasons as Koufax,
and also for showing his past season’s record wasn’t
.
a fluke.
Oliva
and Battey—For their inability to demonstrate how
OR GERINGER?
they have come to be regarded as agressive hitters.
Their only touchdown this year
Versalles—For his demonstrating what a real ballplayer
was scored by Bill Mays, a halfback who leads the team in rushlooks like. If he had any better luck, he could have
ing with 147 yards for a 2.9 averwound up with 12 hits for the Series.
age, in punt returns with two for
Killebrew—For
his leadership qualities and coolness
15 yards, and is second in pass
receiving with four catches for
under fire.

Dodgers —For their displaying coolness under pressure,

to do for the remainder of the

garded as having good potential
for the job.

Another defensive halfback.
Fred Geringer, a 5'9”, 163 pound
senior will also start practicing
at quarterback. Although more
experienced than Capuana at the
post, a compound fracture of the
middle finger of his left hand has
hampered him and, he must be

55 yards. Roosevelt Nell, a much

heralded halfback, is second in

rushing with 93 yards gained first
in kickoff returns with six for
157 yards and fourth in receiving
with two receptions for 17 yards.

OR CAPUANA
rushing and total offense records
for a single season. Up to the
moment of his injury, UB had
scored eight touchdowns for the

season

and Wells

had either

passed or run for all of them. In
addition to playing quarterback,

Wells had returned one punt for
29 yards and two kickoffs for 50
yards. He was the team’s leading
scorer with 28 points.

Koufax— For his guts, pitching savvy, and ability to
throttle the Twins even without his best stuff.
Wills —For his panic-creating ability due to his great
base-running talents. He also showed surprising
fielding skill.

Johnson—For showing that if once (actually 12 times
for his 12 years) you don’t succeed, try again.
Fairly —For his ability to show how he hits annually in the
first half of the season.

season.

UB Coach Offenhamer announced Monday that Nick Capuana, who has been playing firststring defensive safety, worked
out this week at quarterback in
an effort to fill the void created
by Wells’ injury.
The 5'9", 170 pound Capuana
was the first string tailback last
year and averaged 4.8 yards per
carry. He was shifted to safety
this season because of a lack of
experienced defensive backs. His
play at safety has been excellent
and includes two pass interceptions, along with five punt returns for 58 yards. Although Capuana has not played quarterback
since his high school days, he
worked at the position throughout spring practice and is re-

This is the same reporter who predicted the Twins to
beat the Dodgers (if they were the team from the National League) in seven games. I correctly forecasted the
number of games, but incorrectly picked the winning
team. No alibis will be offered; only objective, hopefully
so anyway, impressions on certain players and the reasons they impressed me.

Parker —For his ability to only hit lefthanded
Gilliam—For his proving how valuable an old pro can be
in the World Series. He came up with perhaps the
biggest play of the Series.

ondary.

WILL IT BE RIDOLFI

IMPRESSIONS OF THE SERIES AND PROBABLE
AWARD WINNERS OF 1965 SEASON
By J. B. SHARCOT

Not much else can be said of
the Dayton team. They have been
outclassed by their opponents in
every conceivable category. Their
opponents have completed 50%
of their passes while the Flyers
have completed less than 22%
of their tosses, and the total offense figures (through the first
four games) show the futility of
the Dayton eleven. They have
managed to accumulate 569 yards
while “holding” their opposition
to 1202 yards. And to add insult
to injury, their opponents have
even tallied more first downs by
penalty than they have.

All in all, Dayton gives one the
appearance of being a very, very
poor team, and by 4 PM tomorrow, UB’s record will be a much
improved 3-2-1.

Allison—For making one of the greatest catches I have
ever witnessed.

Twin Hitters —Except for Versalles, for their lack of
showing any hitting ability.
Mele and Alston—For their ability to show that to be
a big-league manager involves more than only baseball knowledge. They refused to be ruffled when
the breaks were going the other way. I felt the
only possible mistakes they committed occurred in
the first game when Alston allowed Drysdale to
remain in so long, and in the third game when Mele
brought in A1 Worthington (a right-hander) to face
lefty Ron Fairly.
The Series in general —The starting pitchers received all
the decisions, and until the seventh game, the home
team always won. It was a close series, though not
in the outcome of any one particular game. However, the Dodgers had Mr. Sanford Koufax, the
ULTIMATE weapon.
Most Valuable Player Award
N.L.—Either Koufax or Willie Mays of the San
Francisco Giants. Usually a hitter wins this award, but
r‘"

Golf
(Cont’d

Ed Nusblatt

Tony Santelli
Doug Bernard

.

from P.

16)

Mike Lawler

A Syracuse player was high

individual medalist, however, and
a 76 score by Tony Santelli was
good for third place.
Down at Farmingdale's Bethpage Country Club the complex-

ion was a little different
as
golf’s class of the East gathered
for the E.C.A.C. finals. A couple
of high scores ruined UB’s bid
for victory, but the team did
finish 8th in a field of 12. The
U. S. Naval Academy came
through with a fine team effort
—

team honors and fin
2 total score
(dividual

results in the fi

74
87

83
87

Total 336
The remaining schedule for
dual competition is a follows:
Tuesday—McMaster at Ancas-

ter golf course.
Thursday
Buffalo State at
Sheridan golf course.
Monday—Niagara at Hyde Park
—

golf

course.

The record for UB golfers to
date is 6 wins against two losses,
certainly a credit to the University and the players.

Chick's Picks
(Cont’d

.

16)

K. C. played miserably against the
Bill* last week, but Dawson will
have a big day this time around.
The Chiefs will get out to a quick
lead and then look for Houston,
led by Don Trull, to come on with
a rush and make it a close game.
Oakland 24, Boston 13—Boston
played over their heads last
week against San Diego, and
Oakland did not look impressive
tying the Jets. However, Powell
and Daniels will lead the Raiders
to a victory.

PIZZA

DING'S
CHALET ROYALE

BOCCE

IF 3-1344

from P.

Every Night Is Good
|

Corner

Colvin Blvd.

&amp;

Sheridan

Dr.

j

■

(Cont’d on P. 13)

i

�*

Friday. Oetabar

Vt. INS

REVIEW

SPECTRUM

-

BULLS CRUSH SPIDERS, 24-0

WELLS' LEG BROKEN
LOST FOR
By

STEVE SCHUELEIN

The old “All’s well that ends
well” cliche was only a partial
consolation to UB after the Bulls
had squashed a somewhat outclassed Richmond Spider outfit
24-0, at Rotary Field Saturday.
In fact “All’s not well that ends
Wells” might be a much more
accurate description of Bull sentiments after the crippling loss
of promising quarterback Rick
Wells with leg and ankle injuries.
On a third-and-five situation at
the UB 20 early in the second
half, Wells swept left on his pet
roll-out option. He managed to
advance to the 22 before being
chopped down by a swarm of
Spiders. After the pileup untangled, Wells remained sprawled
on the turf in intense pain.

Ridolfi. The slightly-built Rhode
Islander turned in an adequate
job against Richmond, mixing his
plays astutely and passing accurately, but it was obvious he
was no Wells on the roll-out option, the mainstay of the Bull
offense.

The inopportune injury was a
most unfortunate blow for the
Bulls since the Ithaca sophomore
had just begun functioning brilliantly at quarterback to put
some life into the slothlike existence of the offense. Now suddenly, at the height of the season- the offense was stripped of
its spark.
The burden of responsibility
shifted suddenly into (fee unexpecting arms of understudy Ron

PIZZA
BOCCE

IF 3-1344

by Peter

UB recorded its first score at
the 3:40 mark of the opening
stanza when, after Tom Hurd
walked a 38-yard tightrope down
the right sideline with a Richmond punt to the Spider 20, Joe
Oscsodal rocketed a fourth-down
35-yard field goal attempt easily
over the crossbar.
After completely dominating
play, the Bulls pushed their lead
to 11-0 with 5:15 to go in the
half. The 10-play, 50-yard drive,
in which the running of Wells,
Jim Webber and Lee Jones was
mixed with passes from Wells to
Jim Dunn and Dick Ashley, was
culminated by a seven-yard toss
from Wells to a wide-open Dunn
in the end zone. The 6-ft.. 190-lb.
Wells then swept right end on
a faked extra point kick attempt
to tack two more points to the
score.
Only moments later at the
Spider 12, Brisky crashed through

the Richmond

line

to deflect

Mike Bragg’s punt attempt, which

squirted out to the 22. Three
Wells sweeps later the Bulls had
upped their margin to 17-0.
Wells’ scoring play, a three-yard
smash, came with 2:15 to play
before intermission.
Only a few plays after action
resumed in the second half, disaster struck as Wells’ right leg
gave way after being tackled on
a roll-out. The gritty signalcaller
courageously hobbled off the
field as his curtailed season
came to an abrupt halt.

Late in the third period Ron
Ridolfi, Wells’ replacement, started the Bulls on the touchdown
trail again. Displaying a great
deal of poise and heads-up signalcalling, Ridolfi used the run-

PIZZA by DiROSE
90' for 13” pizza

C

°

‘cola

,

S

We Now Have 2 Bakers for the Fastest, Freshest Pizza
ALWAYS DELIVERED FREE and HOT TO U.B.

ed back and threaded the needle

perfectly to Ashley at the 3, from
where the latter’s momentum car-

a group of laudable deHolly’s first
fensive marks

topped

.

.

.

.

ried him into the end zone. Joe
the Toe's placement ballooned
the score to 24-0.
Interceptions .snuffed out mild
fourth period threats by both
teams. Holly twice foiled Spider
drives with thefts at the UB 7

.

diving interception came on a
fourth-down play and cost the
Bulls 21 yards, but did little to
detract from his glittering performance . . Garofalo and Dan
Sella also cashed in on intercepBrisky was named to
tions .
.

the All-East team for his sparkling play. The 190-Ib. Detroiter
succeeds LaFountain and Poles,
who had gained the honor in
,
previous weeks
Ashley’s
touchdown catch was his third
Richmond
in as many games
.

.

.

.

.

With Holly playing the role of
General Grant, the UB Blueshirts
laid seige to Richmond with the
same reckless abandon that their
Union counterparts had done a
century earlier. With the likes
of Gerry LaFountain, E. G. Poles,
Craig Helenbrook, Dennis Brisky,
Bill Taylor, Russ MacKellar, Joe
Garofalo and Holly taking turns
at causing mayhem in the Spider
backfield by bruising and abusing Linn and Shotwell with metronomic regularity, it was only
a matter of time before the Bulls
made a shambles of the game.

Bonneau

py at safety and (Jim) Barksdale
to take over for Hurd at offensive wingback.”
One thing is for certain. This
tentative wholesale lineup juggling indicates that the pain of
Wells’ injury is being felt in
more places than the aforementioned’s right leg and ankle..
The hapless Richmond offense
never had a chance against the
headhunters on the heralded UB
defense. Only the seven pass receptions by end Dennis Phelps
brought the Spiders out on the
plus side of the yardage-gained
ledger. The Richmond rushing
yardage of —45 speaks for itself
as a testament to the host’s Rock
of Gibraltar.
It was not surprising that Richmond Coach Ed Merrick brought
his offense into town equipped
with two quarterbacks, Larry
Shotwell and Jan Linn, for it
was necessary to keep one in the
offensive lineup while the other
was being given oxygen on the
sidelines while being brainwashed

ning of Webber and Jones and
fired a key completion to fellow
Rhode Islander Dunn to move
UB to the Richmond 21. On third
down with 1:10 to go in the period, the S’-9” 170-pounder drift-

—

into returning to the game by a
staff of eminent psychologists.
And it was no small wonder
that they were able to return at
all! After the ferocious UB line,
spearheaded by ringleader Joe
Holly,, had pursued the quarterback like a school of sharks zeroing in on a piece of meat, it took
quite an effort just to stay alive
on the signalcaller’s part.

Coach Offenhamer has a great
problem, but as the Head Coach
says, 'Tm not panicking yet. The
loss of Wells at this point of the
season comes as a great blow.
That leaves the quarterback position open for Ridolfi, (Nick)
Capuana and (Fred) Geringer to
fight out for. In all probability
we’ll start with Ridolfi against
Dayton, but if their defense keys
on the passing game, we might
make a series of changes which
would send Capqana to quarterback, (Tom) Hurd to replace Cap-

Photo

After being taken by ambulance to the hospital, Wells underwent two hours of ligament
surgery on his right ankle while
a cast was being prefared for
the broken fibula in his right leg.

nmm

paoi

2 f° 20**
IB 3-1330
f

°

r

and 16 respectively, while Larry
Zunich of the Virginians stole a
Ridolfi pass in the end zone on
the last play of the game.

end Phelps appears to be a capable replacement for graduated
John Hilton. Phelps grabbed seven passes for 110 yards Satur.
day
Workhorse Webber,
showing flashes of his blinding
speed, gained 85 yards in 16 carries . . Wells picked up over
600 total yards during his abbreviated season . . . The attendance problem—only 7,705 to see
the game—continues to be an
upsetting puzzle . . Despite its
0-5 record Dayton, tomorrow's
opponent, is no slouch. Coach
Offenhamer expects another yeoman deffensive effort from the
Bulls, while he is keeping his
fingers crossed on offense.
.

STATISTICS
Richmond

6
-45
133
10-23

First downs
Yard rushing
Yards passing
Passes

7-32

Punts

1

Fumbles recov.
Passes int. by
Yards penalized

1
20

UB
IS
166
134
8-18
7-32

1

4

85

Highest ofBULL SESSION
fensive grades went to Webber
and Wells, while Holly’s 74%
.

.

.

.

.

.

VJRA Revamps Program
This year the Women’s Recreation Association has undertaken
the job of revamping its entire
recreation program. The reason
for this, according to President
Marilyn Alfes, is that it will enable the organization to offer the
many recreational
facilities of
Clark Gymnasium and Norton
Union to more of the women students attending the University.
For the past several weeks,
many of the various clubs sponsored by the organization have
been getting together to formalize individual plans. There is still
time for any interested campus
women to join one or more of
the activities offered. The following are some of the planned

activities:

Competitive Field Hockey is
offered on Tuesdays from 3:305:00. This activity offers a chance
to play field hockey on on intercollegiate level. Practice games
are played Tuesdays and Fridays
with area schools, while McMaster, Keuka, and Brockport
provide the actual competition.
For those who feel they don’t
have the ability to play competitive hockey there is a chance

to play Recreational Field Hockey, which is offered Thursdays
from 3:30-5:00.
On Thursdays from 6:30-8:00
there is Recreational Swimming
for those who desire an opportunity either to perfect strokes
or merely to take a dip for relaxation. A Synchronized Swim
Club has been formed for those
who like fancy swimming. Anyone interested in this may come
to the pool in Clark Gym on
Tuesdays from 6:00-7:00. Competitive Swimming is offered for
those who like speed swimming
on an intercollegiate level. Swimming meets are scheduled for
later in the semester; at the
present time the team is practicing Thursdays from 5:30-6:30.
Other activities
semester are:
Bowling

—

offered

this

Wednesday, 6:30-

8:00, Norton Union.

Modern Dane*—Tuesday, 3:00-

4:00, Clark.

Tonnit
Thursday. 3:30-5:00,
Tennis Courts.
—

DING'S
CHALET ROYALE
Famous Fish Fry
Cmrnt Colvin ihrd

A SImcMm Dr

�=n

Friday, October 22, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

4=^^=^

SPEAKING OUT
6y RICHARD DRANDOFF

A Bad Break
Last Saturday at Rotary Field the ultimate injury
hit Coach Dick Offenhamer’s UB football team when
quarterback Rick Wells’ leg was broken. The Bulls have
been hit hard by the injury jinx this season, but this
last one was so much more severe than the others that
it has induced a tremendous shifting around of the squad.
The results of this shifting will be on display against a
mediocre Dayton team tomorrow, the ideal opponent for
the Bulls who must experiment and attempt to regroup
after last week’s shattering blow.
It is yet unknown who will get the call at quarterback
for the Bulls tomorrow, but in all likelihood it will be
Ron Ridolfi, the back-up signal caller for the past two
seasons. Nick Capuana and Fred Geringer worked out
at the position, and if they are needed, Coach Offenhamer will not hesitate to* call upon either of them. In
any event, UB should not have too much trouble disposing of a horribly outclassed Dayton which has scored
all of six points in its first five games.
Each of the three possible Bulls’ quarterbacks is
only 5’9” tall and may have some trouble seeing their
receivers over the outstretched hands of onrushing enemy
linemen, but, as has already been noted, they should
be able to throw enough completions to deal Dayton its
sixth loss of the season.
After tomorrow’s game, the Bulls will play three of
their remaining four contests on the road, and this fact
might keep the squad from compiling a winning record.
They must still fact Holy Cross, who beat UB last year,
Delaware, who UB beat, Colgate, who also beat the
Bulls last season, and Vilanova, who the Bulls were to
face in last season’s final contest, but the game was
snowed out. The crucial factor in all these games will
be the ability, or lack of same, of the starting quarterback (whoever he may be) to augment his passing with
an effective running attack.
The defensive secondary will be bolstered by the
addition of 6‘2” sophomore Tom Hurd who will most
likely take over Capuana’s spot at safety. The UB pass
defense has always been plagued by lack of size and
Hurd’s addition should be a valuable asset to Assistant
Coaph Deming’s ball hawks. If the Bulls’ offensive efforts are less as the result of Wells’ injury, the defense
must take up the slack and the secondary is perhaps
the crucial factor for the remainder of the season.

FROSH

-

FOOTBALL
Sunk By Navy
By MIKE DOLAN
The Yearlings of the U. S. Naval Academy struck early with a
pair of first period touchdowns
and late with a pair of fourth
quarter scores, in a 27-6 victory
over the U. B. frosh. The Navy
victory gave them a 2-1 record
while the Baby Bulls are still
looking for their initial victory
after a pair of setbacks and a tie.
The Baby Bulls found the going rough right from the start as
Navy’s Andy Van Sant, a 200pound fullback, capped a 60 yard
drive with a two-yard plunge for
the first tally. Later in the first
period, the Naval Academy’s
plebe' quarterback sneaked for
the second touchdown.
Shortly after this was UB’s
highlight for the day. Dennis
Mason, a new frosh quarterback,

completed a 40-yard pass play to
halfback Steve Svec for the
score. The try for the conver-

sion failed and UB was on the
short end of a 14-6 score. Incidentally, this was the first time
that UB frosh squad was able
to score against the Middie yearlings over a period of three years.
Again, in the fourth quarter,
Navy moved offensively. Lettierri, the plebe quarterback, hit his
halfback Joel Delewski with a
10-yard scoring pass. Lettierri
closed out the scoring himself as
he cashed in for the second time
with a 5 yard end sweep. Dave
Vitler came in to kick his third
extra point conversion and the
final score stood Navy 27-UB 6.
Despite the score, it was the
frosh’s best performance against
a Navy team in a series that started in 1963 with a 30-0 clubbing
in addition to last year’s 42-0
humiliation.
The frosh are -open this week,
but
next Saturday, November 30, is the Baby Bulls’ home
debut. Gametime is 3:30 p.m.
Manlius will provide the opposition as they boast a fine team
which possesses a pair of victories
over the powerful Syracuse frosh
squad. Remember, the Baby Bulls
are looking for their first win,
so this game should provide plenty of action and excitement for
UB students.
...

Tournament

Doug Bernard

Mike Lawler

This week the amazing Abdulwill honor Spectrum fans
with his pro-football selections.
He will no longer be in the background as my right hand man.

lah

Golfers Finish
Eighth In ECAC

Let’s hope the Bulls can do the same.

GRID FORECASTS
Chick's
Picks

Baby Bulls

The team may be down, but we are sure that they
are not out. Adversity has a strange effect upon athletics
witness the performance of the Los Angeles
Dodgers this season. In spring training it was learned that
their star pitcher, Sandy Koufax, had a traumatic arthritic condition in his pitching elboiw, but that did not
stop him from leading the major leagues with 26 wins,
382 strikeouts, and a 2.04 earned average to go along with
a perfect game. In addition, the Dodgers’ only legitimate
hitter, Tommy Davis, broke his ankle sliding into a base
on May 1 and everybody counted the Dodgers out of
By MIKE DOLAN
the pennant race. But, as everyone knows, the team started scoring by the bunt, error, walk, and every other posTwo weeks ago, UB’s fine golf
sible manner known to baseball. Later in the season, with team turned in a splendid effort down at Drumlin’s Golf
only two weeks remaining, the Dodgers fell four and
Course in Syracuse, N. Y. Their
one-half games behind the San Francisco Giants and excellent performance enabled
everyone said that they would finish as far down as fifth them to gain a three-way tie with
host Syracuse University and
place. But to cap it all off, the Dodgers reeled off thir- Rochester
Institute
of Techteen straight wins to clinch the pennant on the next-to- nology, and an invitation to the
last day of the season. Again, after losing the first two Eastern Collegiate Athletic ConWorld Series games to the Minnesota Twins, all the ference finals held at Bethpage
Country Club in Long Island.
doubters returned and claimed that the Dodgers were noIndividual results of UB’s first
thing and didn’t even belong in the Series. They came place finish in the qualification
on strong ot win in seven games however, and finally round held at Drumlin’s Country
Club were as follows:
proved that a team certainly can win under advrese conEd Nusblatt
81
ditions.
Tony Santelli
76
—

S

81

84

Abdullah comes to us straight
from New York City, where he
has been picking baseball and
football games for a local paper.
Thusly, I feel reasonably well assured that he can take over my
duties as football prognosticator
this week.
My record last week was 6-3-2
giving me a season’s percentage
of .650.
Now to

R. J. Abdullah

—

NFL: Chicago 31, Detroit 17
Detroit goes hot and cold and so
does their quarterback Milt Plum.
Look for the Bears, led by rookies
Sayers and Butkus to have another big day.
—

Cleveland 35, New York 21—
The Giants are certainly rounding into form as Earl Morrall is
getting to know his receivers.
However, watch for Ryan and
Collins to team up and exploit
New York’s rookie pass defense.
Green Bay 24, Dallas 7-rBart
Starr is a wonderful field general and will lead the Packers
to the league championship this
year. The Cowboys and their
three quarterbacks are still a
year away.
Baltimore 21, Los Angeles 17
—Johnny Unitas will have to be
on target because Los Angeles is
going to be up for this clash.
The Rams will have their civic
pride at stake after the Dodgers’
series victory.

Minnesota 35, San Francisco
17
The Vikings are just too
talented this year. John Brodie,
San Francisco quarterback, says
coach Y. A. Tittle has been giving him valuable pointers. But
Tittle would have to play, if the
49'ers were to win this one.
Philadelphia 24, Pittsburgh 21
—The Steelers will put forth a
strong effort in their attempt to
win a ball game. Tim Brown of
the Eagles has blossomed into
one of the league’s most feared
offensive players and will run
wild before the home town fans.
St. Louis 28, Washington 14—
The Cardinals are going to make
a big run for the Eastern Division
crown this year. Randle, Conrad,
—

and Johnson were somewhat
slowed down last week against
Pittsburgh, but that will not happen again. Washington still is
without a win and will not get
one here.
AFL: Buffalo 24, Denver 10—
Cookie Gilchrist is coming home
this week with the Broncos. Buffalo, however, will have its fantastic defense in high gear, ready
to meet Gilchrist. Watch Sestack
and Straiten really do a job! The
Bills certainly helped themselves
with the acquisition of Bo Robertson this week.
San Diego 30, New York 17—
Shea Stadium should again be
filled as the Jets try to ge untracked. San Diego, led by John
Hadl, right now is the class of
AFL. Joe Namath will come back
this week and show the real
class that he possesses.
Kansas City 27, Houston 24—
This one will be a real squeaker.
(Cont’d on P. 14)

-

Fearless
Feigin
Another conference title is on
the line this week as college football enters its 6th week of action. This time the spotlight is
on the Big Ten, where a few
surprises have developed in the
weeks past.
The experts, brushing aside
the graduation of Bob Timberlake and Mel Anthony, conceded
the Big Ten crown to defending champion Michigan. But the
Wolverines have not come up
with the scoring punch they
graduated last June and are now
just another good team. The limelight this year is destined for
Michigan’s cross-state rivals, the
Spartans of Michigan State, who
are the real sleeper this fall. They
go into tomorrow’s battle with an
unblemished record and their
five victims are still talking to
themselves. On the last two Saturday afternoons, the powerful
Spartan defense has held Michigan and Ohio State, two strong
teams who earn their victories
on the ground, to minus rushing
yardage. And to complement
this, Coach Daugherty has a passing combination of Juday-toWashington to keep him on the
scoreboard. But if the aerial attack falters, he also has the Big
Ten’s most exciting running back
in Clinton Jones and an imported place-kicker from Hawaii who
can get him three points from
anywhere inside the 40 with his
bare foot (Oh, my aching toes).
Their opponent tomorrow is

none other than giant-killer Pur-

due, who is currently tied with
State for the conference lead.
They have QB Griese back at
full strength, but seem to have
slipped a little since Notre Dame
and needed last minute field
goals by Griese in the last two
games to insure victory. This
game is a must win for them if
they want that trip to Pasadena
on the First. State has finished
the rough part of its schedule
and only conference 1 o w 1 i e s
Iowa, Northwestern and Indiana
remain. A victory tomorrow for
Michigan State would seem to sew
it up.
Last week’s Texas Arkansas
thriller could go down as one
of the all-time greats. It was
really heart-breaking to see either team win because each played
well enough to deserve the victory. Texas, led by “Marvelous
Marv” Kristynik, played magnificently in overcoming a 20-0
deficit, but in the end, it was the
combination of Brittenum to
Crockett that brought victory to
the Razorbacks in a tension filled
92 seconds of play. I was particularly distressed at the outcome
because it ruined a perfect record for me. After picking 8 out
of 9, my overall slate is 23-7-1
for a .767 percentage.
-

Note: This week there’s another good one on TV when Notre
Dame and Southern Cal clash in
the grudge match of the year,
year. Don’t miss it.
(Cont’d on P. 13)

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              <elementTextContainer>
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                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="41">
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;</text>
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                    <text>H. FEIGL

—

-J

STATE

RICHMOND

—

TO SPEAK

n

page

VOLUME 16

page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1965

NO. 6

Panel Produces

Senate Hears
F.S.A. Report

Many Definitions
Of a University
By ART CONDUZIO

By RUSSELL BUCHMAN

On Tuesday, October 12, at 3
p.m. the panel discussion, “Who

Should Establish

A report on the annual meeting
of the Faculty-Student Association initiated the Student Senate
meeting Tuesday, October 12.
Other business included a report
of the Financial Committee by
Treasurer Sandy Seide, a proposal to the Senate Constitution.

University Poli-

Students, Faculty, or Admincy
istrators?” was held in the Millard Fillmore Room.
—

The panel consisted of: Jeremy
Taylor and Clinton DeVeaux representing the students; Raphail
Sealey, professor of classics, and
Dr. Charles H. V. Ebert, professor and chairman of geography,
representing the faculty; Dr. Peter
F.
Regan, Vice-president for
Health Affairs, and Dr. Myles Slatin, acting dean of the College

Student Association President
Clinton DeVeaux presented Dr.
Puffer’s proposed reconstitution
of the Faculty-Student Association. The proposal states that the
FSA shall be reorganized into
three divisions: a student division, which will coordinate student activities and student government; a faculty-student administration division, which will coordinate recreational facilities;
and a division “dominated" by the
administration, which will be in
charge of the bookstore, vending
machines, and similar operations.

of Arts and Sciences, representing the administration.
After Moderator Russell Goldberg introduced the panel, each
member was given a chance to
state his views.
First to speak, Dean Slatin
questioned “Who does make university policy?”

In answer to this question, the

Dean stated that policy may start
as high as the Board of Regents
—but it is effected by many

The Financial Committee’s recommended budgets for various

things (e.g. deans, President Furnas, faculty, senate, etc.) including students.
Dean Slatin stressed the faculty’s role in making policy, especially in fields of curriculum and
degree requirements. He stated,
“Faculty is the heart of the university.”
Dr. Ebert, who spoke next, reaffirmed Dean Slatin’s statement
that policy ‘fis not made from

above, but from below.”
He noted that the purpose of
a university is to educate people.
There are two facets of this education: 1) the presentation of
facts and the development of
skills and 2) the stimulation of
the human mind. He believes that
this general purpose determines
policy because the institution
needs a definite structure to
carry out this purpose. Clearly,
this university has a definite and
a very complex structure.
Dr. Ebert believes that each
group, faculty, students, and administration has its own special
function in this structure. He emphatically stated,, “the function of
the students is learning.”
He concluded his opening statement by questioning, “Can a student, in his short time here, con-

ceive of the tremendous aspects
of running a university?”
The Student Senate President,
Clinton Deveaux, stated that he
views the university more in
terms of a community than as a
structure and therefore, in his
opinion, policy must be determined by a community form of
government.

According to Deveaux, university policy is divided into two

areas:

1) academic—which is, for
the most part, determined by faculty, and 2) non-academic (defined as anything not purely in
or related to the classroom)
which is determined by administration. He then proceeded to
attack each of these by first
questioning whethehr student’s
comments have the value he believes they should have in the
formation of academic policy.
Then he stated that faculty and
students do not play a significant role in the formation of nonacademic policy. According to
Deveaux they should play a leading role.
To quote Dr, Regan, the next
speaker, “It is impossible and
should be impossible and wrong
to see a totality of university
policy unless it emerges as rep(Cont’d on P. 15)
—

—

university organizations were presented by Treasurer Sandy Seide.
Budgets that were passed by the
Senate include: $1,643.88 for the

EVENTS DURING HOMECOMING WEEKEND

...

See Page 15

S.D.S. Slogan "Make Love Not War' Launches
October 15 and 16 International Days of Protest

By ALICE EDELMAN
Displaying their slogan “make
love not war,” the local chapter
of SDS will launch the International Days of Protest this weekend. The schedule of events is as

follows:
The highpoint of the protest
will be the Convention of the Assembly of Unrepresented People
in Exile at the U.S. Consulate
in Toronto, Canada. The assembly
will be convened by SDS members with an opening speech defining what is meant by an Assembly of Unrepresented People
and the reasons for going to a
foreign country to register their
protest.
The group hopes to emphasize
through the symbolic act of exile
that those people in the world
who stand for human decency are,
at this time, unrepresented, SDS
members believe that the American government is carrying out
unilateral action in foreign policy and is not considering and is,
in fact, ignoring the concerned
protests of many of its citizens.
“The U.S. Government,” says
an SDS member, “is legally, politically and morally wrong in its
policy in Vietnam.” The demonstrators proclaim that “legally,
the U.S. has violated the UN,
Charter, the Geneva Agreements,
and International Law.” Members
also raise the objection that in
waging a war there is a constitutional question: Congress has
not been asked for a declaration
of war.
Politically, SDS believes that
the U.S. is approaching the Vietnam problem incorrectly. “If the
objective of the U.S. policy in
Vietnam is preventing the spread
of communism, our present policy of military intervention could
not be worse, since the only way

can be beaten is
through political, social, and economic change,”
While SDS emphatically criticizes U.S. legal and political policy, the organization rasies strongest objections to the alleged immorality of U.S. policy in Vietnam, SDS member, Steve Crafts
communism

summed up the moral issue: ‘Can
we suppose that the interests of
freedom are served by napalm,

indiscriminate bombing, and supporting

dictators?

Obviously, the

freedom we are talking about in
this sense is our own. The moral
crisis of the Vietnamese was is
the assumption that our freedom
is more important than the right
of people throughout the world
to self-determination. We are
asked to condone the killing of
Vietnamese peasants and Ameri(Cont’d on P. 14)

Residence Hall Elections
Completed October 7th
Residence Hall elections were
completed October 7, in Goodyear
and Clement Halls. Due to the
recent epidemic, elections in
these halls were postponed, while
in the other halls, elections were
held on September 30, as scheduled.
In Allenhurst, the following
people were elected: President,
Elliot Smith, Vice-president, David Spinelli, IRC Reps, Steve Alan, Alan Fried, Joel Gershowitz,
and Steve Gratton.

Tower Hall’s new officers are:
President, Stan Brodsky, Vicepresident, C. J. Miller, Secretary,
Bob Case, Treasurer, Bob Guely,
and IRC Reps, Steve Reich, Dan
Becker, and Joel Reinman.
Schoellkopf Hall elected the
following students:
President,
Sara Silverstein, Vice-president,
Margaret Loomis, Secretary, Eileen Teitler, Treasurer, Diane
Silverstein, and IRC Rep, Judith
Hart,
In Cooke Hall, the
officers were elected:

Bonnie

Burke,

following

President,

Vice-president,

Eleanor Cantwell, Secretary, Sher-

etta Habecker, Treasurer, Julie
Hastings, and IRC Rep, Suzanne

Beeman.
MacDonald Hall elected: President, Susan Weinstein, Vicepresident, Judy Wallace, Secretary, Barbara Weinstein, Treasurer, Lynne Burek, and IRC Rep,

Kathy McDonald,
Clement Hall’s new officers
are: President, Sandra Froah,
Vice-president, Betsey Mitchell,
Secretary, Barbara Boff, Treasurer, Jori Sherman, and IRC
Reps, Pat McCann, Sharon Gott-

lieb, and Debbie Wallace.
Goodyear Hall South elected
the following students: President, Frances Nesi, Vice-president, Ann Volpe, Secretary,
Laura Bloom, Treasurer, Nina

American Institute of Aeronautics
and Astronautics; $600 for the
Occupational Club; $1,797 for the
Pharmacy School Student Council; $640 for the Politics Club,
formerly the Political Science
Club; and $653 for the Student
Educational Association of New
York. A budget of $1,765 for the
Sociology Club was tabled until
a club member addresses the Senate on the merits of the club's
publication, the Catalyst.
A proposal for the recognition
of Young Americans for Freedom
was presented by Mr. Jeff Lewis.
He called the YAF a group of
“young conservatives,” while referring to Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) as a group
of “young radicals.” A motion to
table the proposal, on the grounds
that no representative of the organization was present, was defeated. The motion to recognize
YAF was passed.

A report of the Student Welfare Committee regarding block
seating for fraternities at football

was presented by Mr.
Charles Liarakos. Fraternities
have not yet responded to letters
concerning this proposal. Mr. Liarakos, therefore, recommended
that no further action be taken
by the Senate.
games

Article V of the Senate Constitution presently states that amendments to the constitution must
have the “approval of the proper University authorities,” The
proposed deletion of this phrase,
presented by Student Association
Secretary Ellen Carddne, will be
voted upon at the next meeting.

Gary Roberts, President of the
Inter-Residence Council, proposed
the elimination of the requirement that one of the two IRC representatives to the Senate be the
president. This will also be voted
on at the next meeting of the

Senate.

Perlmutter, and IRC Rep South
The names of the four student
and at Large, Jo Anne Leegant, body representatives to the Facand Gail Lehrman, respectively. ulty
Student Administration ForGoodyear Hall East elected: um
announced. They are:
were
President, Suzanne Rovner, ViceJeffery Lynford. freshman; David
president, Sheryl Elgort, Secresophomore;
Harriet
tary, Julie Olsen, Treasurer, Edelman,
Marcia Alperson, and IRC Rep, Heitlinger, senior; and Jeremy
Georgeanne Gillels.
Taylor, senior.

�Graduate Business Assn.

Money
Presents Lecture onMitchell
served

The Graduate Business Association is presenting its first speaker of the year, this afternoon at
2:30, in Norton Union, room 231.
George W. Mitchell, member of
the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System will
speak on, "International and Domestic Objectives in the Formulation of Monetary Policy". All

interested students and faculty
are invited.
Presidcnt Kennedy appointed
Mr Mitchell to the Board of Governors in 1961. He is also a member of the Federal Open Market
Committee. Prior to his appoint

Attention SENIOR
NEEOINO

Friday, Oetobar 15, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

&amp;

as

Mr.

Vice-President of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago. He took
a leave of absence to serve as
Director of Finance for the State
of Illinois from 1949-1951,

Mr. Mitchell served as a member of the Illinois Tax Commission from 1939-1940, and was Tax
Consultant for the CAB in 1944
and 1945. He is a member of the
Advisory group whose function
is to investigate the Bureau of In-

Dr. Seymour Geisser, professor
of mathematical statistics, becomes the first chairman of the
department which formerly was
apart of the Department of Math-

ternal Revenue, He is also a mem-

ber of the American Economic
Association, National Tax Association, Internationale
de Finances Publiques, and the Econometric Society.
A discussion period will follow
the lecture and refreshments
will be served.

Dr. John C, Wahlke, chairman
of the Department of Political
Science, succeeds Dr. Roy Macridis, who resigned his post to accept a position as professor of
political science at Brandeis University. Dr. Wahlke has served
as professor of political science
at the University since 1963.

TO

Sludents-U.S. Citizens

COMPLETE

THEIR

EDUCATION

THIS

AND THEN COMMENCE WORK
COSIGNERS REQUIRED.
ACADEMIC TEAR
SEND TRANSCRIPT AND TULL DETAILS OP YOUR PLANS AND REQUIREMENTS TO
—

—

STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC.
AIO-AI3 ENDICOTT REDO., ST. PAUL

Two department chairmen have
appointed in the Departments of Mathematical Statistics
and Political Science at UB.
been

ematics. Prior to his appointment
at the University this fall, Dr.
Geisser was associated with
George Washington University.

GRADUATE MEN

FINANCULJJELP

NOMINAL

ment

Two Departments
Appoint: Chairmen

1, MINN.

A NON-PROFIT CORP.

UNDERGRADS, CUP AND SAVE

Dr. Wahlke is a graduate of
Harvard, where he also received
his doctorate in 1952. He is the
author of two books on American
government, “The Causes of the
American Revolution,” and “Loy-

alty in a Democratic State.”

YAF Republican Club
Sponsor Washington Trip
f

By JOANNE LEEGANT
UB chapter of Young Americans for Freedom and the UB Republican Club will co-sponsor a

chartered

bus to “The Symposium for Freedom in Vietnam”,
in Washington, D. C., next Saturday, October 16.
“The Symposium for Freedom
in Vietnam”, a meeting of national scope and importance, will
be sponsored by a bi-partisan
committee of student leaders. The
Symposium will serve as the
starting point of a coalition of
Liberal and Conservative, Republican and Democratic anti-communists.
This meeting will be an effort
to counteract the thousands of
students opposed to the U.S. policy in Vietnam, who will be picketing and protesting on that day.
YAF chairman, Steve Sickler, and
Republican Club President, Jeff
Lewis, issued a joint statement
saying, “In order that the entire
American population not come
under the false impression that
the American student in general
is opposed to our anti-communist
stand in Vietnam
we feel that
we must participate on October
—

16.”

The program of the symposium
includes a major address by Senator Thomas Dodd (D-Conn.) and
a Republican Senator yet to be
announced. Joseph Lumen, a
State Department official and former attache to South Vietnam,
will also address the meeting. In
addition, Rowland Evans, a wellknown columnist, will speak. Professors David Rowe of Yale,

Frank Trager of NYU, Oliver
Martin of the University of
Rhode Island, and Frank Michel
of George Washington University will participate in a panel
discussion of our involvement in
Vietnam, Afterwards, a panel of
students who have been in Vietnam will discuss their experiences.

There is no charge for the Symposium. Busses will leave Friday
from Norton at 7 p.m., and re-

turn to Norton at 8 a.m. Sunday.
Round trip fare will be $11.60.
Anyone wishing further information may contact Steve Sickler at
831-3584.
YAF is a nationally affiliated
organization of moderate conservatives. Prior to the formation of the YAF, virtually all
campus political groups leaned
toward the left. The founders
of YAF felt that the image of

students

who signed petitions
supported strong foreign policy
in Vietnam. The founders of

YAF on campus felt that there
was a need for a student group
which would represent the opinion of the majority of students.
Last year, the national organization of YAF passed two resolutions, supporting foreign policy in Vietnam, and Section 14
of the Taft-Hartley Act, the
“Right to Work Law”.
At present, the UB chapter has
20 members and is growing. Application for membership is made
through the national chapter in
Washington, D. C., and the member is then affiliated with the
local chapter.

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�Friday,

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Octobar IS, 1965

Civil Rights Committee Holds

Control
Will Interfere With Administration
Congressman Fears Federal
By SHERRY HAUG

,

The
WASHINGTON (CPS)
chairman of the House Special
Subcommittee on Education says
there is still not federal control
in education but that there are
—

some danger signs.
Rep. Edith Green (D., Ore.)
and the ranking Republican on
her committee. Rep. Albert H.
Quie (R. Minn.), held a special
press briefing on the problems
of education early this week
(Oct. 5) during the Education
Writers Association meeting here.

Mrs. Green said she is concerned about “the ability of an
administrator to run his institution as he thinks best with federal aid.” As an example, she
cited what federal matching funds
have done for education.”

A school might feel it needs a
humanities building, she
said, but find matching funds
available for a science building.
new

So the school takes what money
M has, gets the matching funds,
and builds the science building.
Rep. Green said there is always a phrase in every education
bill that says no federal agency
will have control over the curriculum of any institution getting federal funds. “It is a nice
phrase,” she said, “and schools
need to see that it is enforced.”

Mrs. Green disagreed with
“some colleagues in the House
who want to investigate local
school situations.” She said she
would not feel that she should
even go to the school board in
her home community and demand
as a member of the House to investigate local problems.
Along the same lines, she said
said she felt the statement this
summer by Commissioner of Education Francis Keppel that discrimination in sororities and
fraternities could be grounds for
schools losing federal monies
“went beyond the federal inte-

Anyone can

GOOF.

With Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper, you
can erase that goof without a trace.

Discussion on Main Issues

rest.” Mrs. Green said she felt
the language of the Higher Education bill, now in a SenateHouse conference committee, “reflects the feeling on this,"
One of the points of contention on the bill in committee is
just how far discrimination in
Greek letter organizations will
affect a school’s federal aid
funds.

The progress of the bill itself
is in doubt. Rep. Green said. “It
depends almost solely on what
happens with the legislation to
repeal section 14b of the TaftHartley Act that’s now on the
floor of the Senate and whether
there is a filibuster.”

j

i'*SA»i
M/
r

•TT™*..

*&gt;

'

At a civil rights committee
meeting Sunday, October 10, the
three main issues discussed concerned, setting up a table in Norton Union to collect funds for an
appeal case, pending, as a result
of last year’s sit-in over alleged
discrimination at P.S. 6, the
School 15 condemnation issue,
and the relationship between the
Student Civil Rights Committee
and the Buffalo chapter of the
Congress of Racial Equality. The
meeting was conducted by Mr.
A1 Pam, President.

The purpose of the table set
up near the Conference Theatre
for the past week is primarily to
collect money to defray the cost
of a $3100 appeal which 12 UB
students and parents of children
Rep. Quie noted that the gov6 face as a result of their
ernment is now providing a in P.S.
conviction last March. As it is exbroader scale of aid to junior
plained in a letter being distribcolleges and Rep. Green cauat the table, the appeal is
tioned that junior colleges might uted
being made since neither the
become the "pork barrel of the
mothers nor the students need to
future because it’s much easier have
a conviction on their recfor a congressman to know the
ord, and also to set a precedent
needs of a junior college in his for
Civil Rights in Buffalo. Aphometown than those of a fourplications for membership in
year school 500 miles away.
CORE are also available.
Another topic of discussion was
related to the condemnation of
School 15 and its continued use.
DINO'S
This school, part of Buffalo's pubCHALET ROY ALE
lic school system, has been condemned as totally unfit for use.
Sing Along 7 Nites a Week
Furthermore, the city housing ofCorner Colvin Blvd. I Sheridan Dr.
ficials and the fire department
have stated that it is too dilapidated to be renovated. It was
built in the late eighteen hundreds and has never been fixed
up. Although it should have only

Not a telltale smudge remains. A special surface permits quick and easy erasing with an ordinary pencil
eraser. For perfect papers every time, get Corrasable.
In light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In
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By BRIAN EGAN

Notwithstanding the fact that
the school was supposed to be
abandoned by this fall, the city
has done nothing about moving
the children from School 15 to
other schools. The city is now considering a bid by Niagara Frontier Transit for the purpose of
providing bus transportation for
the children to other neighboring
schools. If this bid is not accepted. School 15 will continue to be
in use throughout this school
year.

The second item of discussion
concerned the relationship between the student Civil Rights
Committee and CORE, Last year,
the students worked closely with
CORE and most of them belonged
to this organization. This year,
stated A1 Pam, a closer rapport
should be established between
the two bodies than is now existing. He feels that less students
in the committee are attending
CORE meetings than was formerly
the situation. Attendance at these
meetings is important for adequate understanding of the problems at hand and of the work
that must be done to meet these
problems. The discussion ended
with various members commenting on the change in the civil
rights movement.

UNIVAC Dance
Slated for Nov.
A UNIVAC Dance, sponsored
by the Council on Inter-Collegiate Affairs, will be held Friday,

November

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Tickets are now on sale in Norton at the price of $2.50 per
person. One dollar will be refunded at the door to each member
of the couple, provided he presents the proper UNIVAC card.

When you purchase your ticket

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many more children there.

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fill out a questionnaire

which will provide the UNIVAC
with enough information about
your dating habits, your likes and
dislikes, and your specific interests, to select an “ideal” date
for you. This questionnaire will
be processed and two matched
UNIVAC cards will be turned out
by the machine; the set will be
mailed to the boy whose name
appears on the top card. It will
then be his responsibility to contact the girl whose name is on
the second card.
Music will be provided by two
bands, each playing a different
type of music. Beer will be served
and a game room will be open.
A Folksinging contest with a $20
first prize will be going on simultaneously in the Union, Six
local colleges are participating
There are only a limited number
of tickets available. Proceeds
from this event will go to the

United Fund.

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Friday, October 15, IMS

SPECTRUM

FOUR

Editorial Comment

•

.

THE RIGHT

.

THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND THE
“COMMUNIST MENACE”
The U.S. Department of State appears to be in the
business of creating and strengthening communist movements throughout the world. That may appear a little
outrageous at first glance, but let us examine the situation. In the Dominican Republic, in Viet Nam, in Brazil,
in Cuba, in Cambodia, in Loas, in Paraguay, in Rhodesia,
in South Africa, in all most every "underdeveloped” nation in the world, the Department of State, through the
"counter-insurgency program” and organizations like
A.I.D., is in the business of bolstering undemocratic,
brutal, corrupt, and grasping governments why? in the
name of “anti-communism,” of course.
Imagine for a moment the Buffalo is occupied by
troops who speak only Sanskrit and whose skins are a
delecate shade of green. These troops have stepped in
to stop the up coming election for mayor and have set
up Ben Kurtz as provisional mayor until the situation is
“stabilised.” The University is being used to house the
troops, the hospitals have been closed for lack of supplies
and transportation has been taken over completely by
the green invaders. Fantastic?
I think not, the weird
situation discribed above is very like the situation in most
countries where the State Department is taking an active
role in fighting “communism.”
Would you as student at this university and resident
of Buffalo be upset about occupation by green, Sanskrit
speaking troops? Would you like to see the mayoral
election proceed? If you would, then you are very close
to being a "communist!” In fact, if you did anything
(even picket, or sign a petition) you would be called a
“rebel” or a member of the infamous “Buffalo Cong.”
If a man came to you and said, “We have to get these
green bandits out of Buffalo, there will be a meeting of
citizens to discuss ways and means of getting the green
troops to withdraw and go back to the moon,” I doubt
whether the first question that entered your mind would
be: “Is the man who says this to me communist?”
The man who decided to send the green troops to
Buffalo would be directly responsible for making you a
“communist.” Put yourself in the place of the citizen of
Cuba in the early fifties, a citizen of Viet Nam today, a
citizen of Haiti, a citizen of the Dominican Republic,
in fact try to imagine that you are a citizen of any country
where the State Department is manipulating, or trying
to manipulate the local government. Then think about
the “communist menace.” Who is making the issues that
the communists are organizing around? Is it possible to
suppose that our State Department is making more “communists” than Marx could convert in a month of Sunday
debates? The answer is obviously yes.
If people are left alone to work out their own political destinies, which is supposedly what we stand for,
they will not choose to be ruled by a police state, communist or capitalist. The “communist menace” is in direct proportion to the stupidity, immorality, and shortsightedness of the State Department’s foreign policy.
-

THE F.S.A. REVISITED
We had the dubious privilege of observing the latest
meeting of the FSA. Clinton Deveaux made once again
several proposals for the reform of that body’s operation.
One of them passed, one was tabled by general consent,
and one was in effect defeated by a vote to table indeffinately. The meeting went smoothly and even Clifford
Furnas agreed that the student “input” was valuable.
There is now the possibility of genuine faculty and student involvement in the disposition of funds for “nonacademic” purposes, and for the decisions about how
much each of us must pay in fees. The Executive of the
Student Association is working very hard toward this
end, but sooner or later their work must either stand or
fall on the concern of the student body, and the willingness of the faculty to recognize their importance to the
academic community outside the classroom. We cannot
stress too strongly the necessity for intense and informed
debate on the issue of the future of the FSA. The “eyeball to eye-ball” forum, organized by Westley Rowland
must deal directly with this issue. When it does, it will
be very important to have as many faculty and students in
attendance as possible. It is your money that is disappearing into the FSA. It’s your food that makes you sick
and your books you have to go in debt to buy. The first
battle has been won; the issue is now out in the open and
the possibliity of participating in the decisions which
effect you has been presented. From here on in, to a
very degree, it’s up to you.

THE TORONTO PROTEST
Last week-end the Spectrum attended the International Teach-In at the University of Toronto. The quality
of the debate was extremely high and the arguments presented by the many foreign dignitaries and experts in
international relations tended to overwhelm the arguments for U-S- involvements in Viet-Nam, and for even
(Cont’d on P. 5)

By JAMES CALLAN
(Note; The views expressed in
this column do not necessarily
represent those of any conservative individuals or groups on
campus or elsewhere.)

From Economics, by Samuelused in Economics 181;
“The modern economy is blessed
with important ‘built-in stabiliz. tax receipts change autoers’
matically when income changes
.'. The same stabilizing effect
is realized by unemployment
compensation and other welfare
transfers
and by farm aid
programs.” What Mr. Samuelson
considers blessings, I think of
as burdens. But I would make
it quite clear that my opinion is
based only on my judgment of
the facts, and is not itself a fact.
son,

..

.

This campus is coated with
liberalism. Like a thin film, it
covers the tables of the Rathskeller, the meetings of the Student Senate, the pages of this
newspaper, and, of course, the
classrooms. To attempt to identify or quote individual teachers
would require a column and a
memory far more massive than
mine, and besides, it would probably violate “academic freedom.”
the textbooks
But the books
you have to buy, supposedly to
teach facts to the inquisitive mind
—are my main gripe. I mean,
the
you’re reading along
derivative of X2 is 2X . . . the
Hopi Indians practice the rain
dance
the graduated income
you know,
tax is a good thing
like the goodness of the graduated tax was under a stone
—

...

...

...

someplace.

.

false opinions, and opinions disguised as facts. A few examples
will make my point. All quotations are from textbooks now
being used or recently used in
the courses cited.

The

.

Tha Politics of American DeIrish and Prothro,
used in Introductory Liberal Indoctrination (Political Science
151), sort of shoots a hole in the
beliefs of any individualist: “Several nineteenth-century assump.
. furnished a support
tions
for the belief that economics
could be separated from politics
(e.g., belief in) private property
. . . private enterprise . . . indithe profit
vidual initiative
motive
free competition . . .
a natural economic order in
which the price mechanism guaranteed a just distribution of
economic rewards.” Needless to
say, the authors go on to show
that these old myths have' become outmoded by new realities.
Some would disagree.
mocracy by

.

...

.

We are being taught opinions,
poor opinions, wrong opinions,

.

.

.

grump

Lo, and I have survived my
trek into the wilds of Massachusetts
without even a hangover.
I wish the same could be said of
the rest of the group which excursioned. It wasn’t quite as wildernessy as I had expected actually, you had to cross the lawns
(lawns, mind you) of two other
cottages to get to the lake. Me
and mine walked along the lake
early in the evening by the light
of a full moon and that was nice.
Climbing over docks every twenty
feet and sneaking across people's
back lawns (more lawns, mind
you) does nothing great for romantic inclinations though.
—

We took with us a television
anrf a radio was already in
residence. These links with the
Ouuuie world were taken primarily to see if the Dodgers could
which
ward off total disaster
they did quite nicely. As it turned
out, having them with us enabled
us to follow very closely the most
important news story of the year.
I won't say that I thought the
President’s Gall Bladder operation was overcovered but I did
breathe a sigh of relief when the
world series finally did start.
(Now if it had been the gall bladder of somebody important . .
say Maury Wills . .)

set

—

.

.

I stand confused only as to who
exactly to blame the most for the
“Great Gall-Bladder Crisis”. While
I can not in all honesty blame
the President for getting sick and
needing the operation there remain a number of obviously idiotic incidents surrounding last

weekend.
With the current shortage of
hospital bed space I rather fail
to understand why the entire
Johnson family had to descend on
Bethesda Naval Hospital. I mean
this seriously. I do not know the
exact total of rooms but if you
assume one for Lady Byrd, one
each for the daughters, one for
Him, one for Her (Yes I know
one of them died of ear cancer
but that foolish collie is still
there someplace isn’t he?) You
have several already, and all
those poor secret service agents
have to sleep someplace now don’t
they? And how would you like
a dog to scratch Us fleas in your
nice clean operating room?

.

I think that the real big booby
prize goes to the Newsmen. I
found myself utterly amazed that
people of a reasonably high caliber
such as John Chanchellor
(or however you spell it) could
sit there with looks on their faces
reminiscent of the Cuban Missile
Crisis and discuss what time the
president woke up, what he had
for breakfast, whether or not
there was blood in his urine, and
what color his pajamas were.
What color his pajamas are? I
should care?, you should care?
What color the president’s pajamas are is important? I think
me, personal, that he used to
sleep in a nightgown but succumbed to the blandishments of
a pajama lobby.
—

I had kind thoughts for the
NBC station we were watching in
Mass. They dropped the network

coverage of the Doctors Press
Conference on Saturday and ran
a kiddies TV show. At least they
upgraded their programming a
little.
My apologies to the Phantom
of the Spectrum. His official title;
on the masthead of last week’s
Spectrum at least, is now Leprechaun. (Oy, Vay! Bussell Goldberg,

a Leprechaun?)

The title of this column (?)
is cribbed from the title of a
very difficult to describe magazine-newspaper called The Grump.
This little gem is edited monthly
by Roger Price and it is “For
People Who Are Against All The
Dumb Things That Are Going
On.” I have a subscription, you
can get yours by writing to'
Grump, Inc., 230 Park Avenue,
New York, New York 10017. For
two dollars you get seven issues
and a free grump button. For
three dollars you get twelve issues. They don’t say if you get
a free grump button for three
dollars. I do not own any part
of this magazine, I just think it
is a marvelous idea.
A number of people who have
been sneering at Bob Byaln for
using electric instruments have
a grievous shock coming. On the
latest Joan Baez Album “Farewell, Angelica” she has Bruce
Langhorne backing her with an
electric guitar on a couple of
songs. Folk Music Note: If Messrs.
Bergen and Rubin really feel that

Yet the same “nineteenth-cen-

turylsm" from The Now Europe,
by Lichtheim, in Political Science 152: “It is . becoming
evident that the state can no
longer be thought of as a policeman ‘holding the ring’ while competing private interests slug if
out in the market place
Such
notions —more or less adequate
.

.

.

.

.

in the nineteenth century .
simply will not do in present
day circumstances.” Becoming
evident, is it? Well, one of the
major party presidential candidates last year didn’t think it
was so evident. We get the
“everybody knows” approach just
the same.
I’m almost afraid to delve deeply into the sociology books, but
here’s a short one from Sociology,
by Broom and Selznick, used in
Soc. 101 (that’s Socialism 101): “In
the twentieth century a large
measure of government responsibility for industrialization is
taken almost for granted.” Next
edition the “almost” will be gone,
watch and see. What are they
trying to say? A large measure
of socialism is taken almost for
granted? Do you think that’s a
.

.

—

fact?
These are just a few of the
more blatant examples of what’s
going on. You can probably find
some of your own. Just put this
paper down, open one of your
books, and start reading.

by STEESE
jhe Folk Festival was managed
in a “bush-league” manner by its

coordinator, Richard

Lawrence”

why the hell didn’t they organize
it in the first place, and barring
that, offer some suggestions,
rather than the not too well hidden suggestion that they could
have done it much better. Somebody tried something, somebody
expended some effort, and damn

but it would be nice to see somebody stick his neck out on this
campus without a large clumpy
bunch of people saying, “Well,
why didn’t you ask me?, I could
have done it much better.” They
did ask you, but most of you
didn’t have time, now did you?

Black is black and white is
white dept. The Murder of Gonzago last week informed me that
the entire student protest movement draws its inspiration from
a morality higher than the will
of the government and thus all
acts of student protest are acts
of moral courage. That there is a
morality higher than the will of
government is unquestionable,
yet should there not be at least
some hesitation before someone
claims that his way is more moral
than anyone elses. I am quite sure
that the hard line segregationists
also are of the definite opinion
that there is a morality higher
than the will of government . .
but of course they are wrong, and
the protesters are right, or perhaps I should say, correct.
.

And in case you have forgotten, all the people who are leaving Cuba are dissatisfied profes-

sionals who have all sorts of
money and want to get out before Castro takes it all. At least
that is what I was told last time.
That happens when the total of
the refugees surpass that of the
professional population should be
interesting. Also interesting
should be the reaction of the
Cuban government if, as some
like myself may think, there has
been a very large underestimate
made of those wanting to leave.

.If they don’t sink my cabin
cruiser off Key West
no you
fool, don’t look, out for the
Cubans, it is the Coast Guard I
am worried about
I may see
you Friday next.
—

—

�Friday,

Oetofcar 15, 1965

PAM FIV*

SPECTRUM

PRSFCSSlon:

oCetterS

"

STDOEBT

THE EDITOR:
The proceedings of the recent
meeting of the officers of the
Student Association with Dean
Scudder, Dr. Puffer Miss Haas
and Mr. Balkin were discussed in
detail with the Spectrum because
it is our belief that there is no
need for secrecy in these matters. Basic changes in the F.S.A.
are being discussed, and progress
reports should be available to
everyone.

Last week’s Spectrum editorial,
reporting our discussion of this
meeting, contained some fundamental misunderstandings which
must be corrected. The editorial
implied that the proposals made
by Dr. Puffer were a “take it or
leave it” offer, providing for
token changes but leaving unchecked the administration’s control of the F.S.A. This is simply
untrue. In the first place, Dr.
Puffer’s outline was presented

um m~VM? WV."

Editorial Comment..

(Cont’d from P.

This paper has long been publically opposed to the

war, and to U.S. military diplomacy in the name of
“freedom.” We support the international protest against
the war to be held this week-end in Toronto. We urge

all concerned faculty, students and staff to go to this
Toronto protest and take a little time to demonstrate
their concern over the war, not just in Buffalo, but before the press of the whole world. This is an important
protest. It takes place on foreign soil and is directed
toward enforcing the pressure of world opinion opposed
to the war. It is always important for each man'to actualize his personal beliefs, but in this case the personal
benefits of moral action are augmented by the possibility
that, owing to the international nature of this protest and
the other protests taking place on Saturday all over the
world, this protest may indeed have a salutory and tangible effect on the course of the war.
Go to Toronto. It’s important, not just to you, but
to the possibiliy of world peace.

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Editor

Managing

...JEREMY TAYLOR

Editor

.DAVID EDELMAN

News Editor—SUE GREENE

Staff-Ellen Burstin, Carole Forman, Alice Edelman, Loretta Angeline, Ethel Solomon,
Pam Lent, Sharon Shulman, Art Conduzio, Robin Herniman, Helen Peters, Ann Recore,
Judy Weisberg, Brian Egan, Russell Buchman, Harriet Goldberg, Eileen Teitler, Ann
Sellman, Joanne Leegant, Marleen Spielman, Nancy Toder, Don Schroeder, Jaye Katz,
Tom Block, Karen Green, Gail Lehrman, David Robinson, Charles Cummings, Leslie
Goner, Patti Wartley, Micki Lessner
Sports Editor-RICHARD DRANDOFF
Asst. Sports Editor—STEVE SCHUELEIN
Arnold, Mike Castro, Mike Dolan, Steve Feigin, Mike Ginsberg, George
il
Jackrel, Marty Jaffe, Stan Lichwata, Arnie Lichwala, Arnie Nathanson, Steve Oberstein,
_

fhick

James Sharcut
Feature Editor- JOHN STINY
Statt-Barbara Fitzsimmons. Stephanie Parker, Adolf Gucinski, Barnie Bartow, Judith
Beyer, Erroll Soil, R. P. Schwab, Magda Ziegler, Richard Geller, Martha Tack, S. Rovner,
C. Cummings, Jo Ann Thompsons, Wendy Masch
Leon Lewis, Larry Coleman, Paul Suidzinski, Robert Milch, J. Callan,
Rick Salter, Dave Gardner, Eric Steese, John Medwid, T. Blair Bachwitz, Daniel
Schroeder
Layout Editor—R. DENNIS FOX
Staff— Sharon Honig, Carole Gutmann, Christine Woodcock, Lorraine
Gerla, Steve
Silverman, Stan Freedman, Joann Bouchier
. •
Copy Editor-LAUREN JACOBS
Staff—Mary Louise Noon, Ethel Soloman, Judi Kron, Joan Ferretti, Claire Shottenfeld,
Roberta Rothstein, Carol Beck, Gail Ratish, Robin Weiner, Linda Mead, Susan
Zuckerberg, Carol Becker, Mary-Jo Cesari
Business Manager-RAY D. VOL PE
Staff—Rochelle Greenberg, Ann Parent!
.

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Audrey Cash, Georganne Gilels,

Pat Rosenfeld,

Barbara Avrick,

Office Ma«Mar-KATHY KUNIGISKY
Staff—Barbara Levine, Brenda Brigham, Susan Zuckerberg
Photography Editor— EDWARD J. JOSECLYN
««t-Don Bland, Peter Bonneau, David Collins, Carol Goodson, Alan Good son, Alan
Gruber, Richard Katz, Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Jim Malicki, Anthony Walluk, Susan
Wortman, Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager- DIANE LEWIS
FIRST

CLASS

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Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.

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420

simply as a possible basis for
future discussion. In this light,
it is an honorable and intelligent
attempt to arrive at a mutually
acceptable solution. We may disagree on specific points, and certainly the final structure will dif-

fer from the outline, but this is
believe) Dr. Puffer’s intention as well as our own.

(we

Secondly, the question of final
administrative control was simply left open at the meeting. It
appears that a board of directors
(comprised of people over twentyone) will be a legally necessary
part of the Association. The
question of whether this board
will have any power to reverse
the decisions of the “operating
divisions” was not specifically
discussed. It should be noted,
without going into excessive detail, that these operating divisions would include student representatives, with voting major-

ities in at least some areas of
major policy. To label these proposals as “another insult and denial of the maturity and responsibility of the student" is inappropriate. Even if this were true,
and it is not, there is no final
set of proposals open to such an
evaluation.
Substantial discussions about
the future of the F.S.A. have
been opened. We will not be satisfied with a set of token changes
which continue to exclude students from a final say in the
allocation of their own money.
We will .however, continue to
examine all proposals for change
in an atmosphere of fairness and
mutual respect. We hope the
Spectrum will continue to do the
same.

Sincerely,
Clinton Deveaux
Sanford Seide
Rosemary Brown
Ellen Cardone

Folk Festival Chairman Relates Untouched Events
TO THE EDITOR:

.

the most conservative advocate of State Department
policy, forced to reexamination of the U.S. position.

THE

the Editor

Association Officers Score Spectrum Editorial
ro

VOOfe MV

to

My object in writing this letter
is not to assume a defensive posture in relation to Mr. Bergen
and Mr. Rubin’s review of the
Buffalo Folk Restival, but rather
to relate events that were not
covered in their review.

In my experience, folk festivals
are much more than just the attendance at the formal concerts.
It is a sad commentary on “bush
league” reporting that the reviewers’ interest went only far
enough to cover the concerts.

The workshops conducted on Saturday afternoon were attended
by approximately five hundred
people whose interest in folk
music went beyond the glamour
of attending concerts.
The attendance at the concerts

as reported by the Spectrum was
quite accurate, but the reviewers

failed to note that the numbers
exceeded the 1964 Syracuse University Folk Festival which was
in its third year, and was discontinued due to financial dif-

Although we were prepared to

seat 2100 people at each concert, the attendance has war-

ranted our beginning the planning of a second festival next
fall, and both the Greenbriar
Boys and Buffy Sainte-Marie have
expressed a desire to return.
It is my sincere hope that next
year’s Buffalo Folk Festival will
be a success and receive the
complete coverage that this year’s
so rightly deserved.
Richard Lawrence,
Co-Chairman Buffalo
Folk Festival

ficulty.

Editorials Should Assume More Constructive Role
TO THE EDITOR:

I have read some of your editorials and your statements in the
Summer issue of Buffalo Alumnus. with interest. Your regretful
tones about students who are
merely degree seekers conjured
up an image; in the middle of
the campus sits Rodin's Tho
Thinker. He not only contemplates passively, but he also sits
and cries. Does he ever rise, walk
around or ever react positively
to what he sees? No, he sits, in
an editorial bureau (the scene
has changed), contemplates and
writes about what disturbs him,
hopes (or the future, returns to
the middle of the campus, and
sits. Once in a while he takes his
hand from under his chin, and
points a sharp finger at those
who are also an evil, i.e. the faculty and that Gorgonian Administration. Then, having consumated that, his hand returns to his
chin, and a burdened head returns to its contemplative position. The end of the image! A
bit rash, revengeful and rigid.
Do you ever consider the varicultural and scientific activities offered by, and in this
university? Has your paper ever
undertaken a survey among students (i.e. those many who will
reply to a questionnaire) on how
they feel about their faculty?
Have students ever been asked
about their many encounters
(intimate or not) with their professors in offices, cafeterias, bookstore, barbershop, etc.? Has there
ever been a survey (which would
be almost impossible to undertake) on the many interested and
engaged members of the faculty,
who see high values in their stuous

dents? Have they been encouraged by your paper and by students? Do you ever look objectively at the difficult (incredibly
difficult) and creative efforts of
President Furnas and his imaginative and constructively working
Administration?

But now, when you wail, consider also the following; at a
large institution of higher learning there are as many individuals
as there are statistics for them.
Many of them come here to receive something, each in his own
way. That is their right, under
our democratic system of education, which has produced the
most creative country in the
world. We have pledged our
lives, each one in our own way,
students, alumni, faculty and
administration, to educate the
youth of this great country. In
essence, in case you have forgoten; “Let Each Become All He
is Capable of Being.” If you disagree with those who merly come
to us to be degree seekers, (and
they will always be the “majority,” for better or worse,) then
criticize them. If you feel strongly
about their lethargy, it is your
right as an editor to fight them.
But, do not forget those who are
willing and “Capable of Being.”
They form a sizeable group, and
you, as editor, must help them
to find seriousness, education
and pleasure, by reassuring them
that they can improve their
“Being." They need your assistance in channeling them in activities and thoughts that run
above and beyond classroom,
dormitory and commuting life.
Set these people and their groups
up as examples for others to
see. Certainly some will follow

them. Enhance their image, they
have a good one, a positive one.
Tell your readers, for example,
that one of your reporters has
found a particular club, activity,
or professor especially stimulating. Also tell your readers why.
You, as editor, tell them. A good
editor is an incredible stimulus.
A student newspaper is the
means for student self-help. If
everything that the editor writes
sets university life into bleakness, how can the readers receive
help, except a dive into obscurity?
If you only use the paper as a
platform for platitudes and invective, you are doing us all,
yourself, students, faculty and

administration, a disservice. Rise,
grow in stature .reach for the
latest ideals among true intellectuals, i.e. intelligent optimpositivism.

To become an important and
significant contribution to our
country, this university needs the
efficient

and effective aid of
who is capable of
being, and I envision that a student newspaper ranks among the
top aids of this development.
Inveigh against short-comingsI
Above all, highlight our qualities!
Won’t you help us to achieve?
Stefan F. L. Grunwald
everyone

Editor’s Note: This letter was
three pages (single spaced) and
was edited. We hope that we
have not done violence to the
arguments. Please keep letters to a reasonable length if
you wish to see them printed

uncut.

(Cont’d on P. 18)

�Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX
.&lt;

,

Oetobar 15, 1965

’

.

Education and Cultural
........

Dr. Polanyi Opens Series of Lectures
Covering the Nature of Science
“Scientific truth is that which
scientists think to be true," stated Professor Michael Polanyi in
the Conference Theater on October 7. As the first lecturer in
this year’s James Fenton Lecture
series, the Senior Research Fellow
from Merton College, Oxford,
The Covarnopened the theme
mant of Sclanca with an exposition on the nature of science and
the methods by which its practitioners advance it.
Prof. Polyanyi sought to define
the scientific ideal not as a precise mathematical model, but
rather as a perception of the real
world. As a perception science is
interesting and meaningful.
“Strict" science is strictly meaningless.” By way of illustration he
used the examples physics and
biology: the former having high
precision but dealing with relatively dull objects, and the later
having very interesting subjects
to study but possessed of less
mathematical precision.
Every scientist must be free to
follow his own interest unimpaired by social, economic or political pressure for optimum scientific progress. With this freedom
the scientist must exercise the
self-discipline to follow investigations of high return and the scientific community to reject the
work of a dilatory nature.
Worlds In Collision by Immanual Velikovski was held up as an
example of a work rejected out
of hand by the scientific community. This was as it should be, sugguested Prof. Polanyi, since the
author had no background in the
topic of astrophysics and his analysis no roots in scientific tradition. If works of this type were
—

James Mellon, a teacher at
Drew and co-director of the Free
University of New York, spoke
at an all-night teach-in on civil
liberties and academic freedom
at Rutgers University Wednesday, September 29. “As a professed Marxist and Socialist, I
do not hesitate to state my position,” he said. “I stand side by
side with Professor Genovese—
I don’t fear a Vietcong victory
in Vietnam; I welcome it.”
Eugene Genovese is the Rutgers professor who last spring
came under attack in the state
legislature for supporting the
Vietcong at a teach-in on Vietnam. The Rutgers administration refused to fire Genovese.

The president of Drew, Robert
immediately charged
Oxnam,
that Mellon’s speech was “irresponsible,” and said on Thursday, September 30, he would call
for a faculty committee to reconsider Mellon’s contract with the
University.

The Rutgers teach-in was sponsored by the Committee for Free
Speech, organized during the
summer as a result of the Genovese indictment last semester.
Its marathon teach-in, which went
from 10 p.m. to 0 the next morning, was to have dealt with academic freedom in the United
States, but many of the lectures

Performs at

The world famous Budapest
String Quartet will present their
first concerts of the season on
the evenings of October 18, 20
and 22 at 8:30 in Baird Hall, with
guest artists Buell Neidlinger on
double bass and Leo Smit on piano. Works by Mozart, Shubert,
Schumann and Brahms will be
featured in this “Piano Chamber
Music Series.” Low priced student and faculty tickets are available at the Baird Hall Box Office.
-

The Budapest Quartet, composed of Joseph Roisman, Alexander Schneider. Boris Kroyt and
Mischa Schneider has been in
residence at UB since 1963. They
are the most widely recorded
string quartet in the world; thejr

most famous record series is their

Michael Polanyi open* 1965
Fenton Lecture Series
-Photo

by RusmII M. Goldberg

not summarily rejected, he continued, science would bog down
in the attempt to test and thus affirm or deny any crackpot theory.

Even theories advanced by reputable investigators can be ignored without harm to scientific
progress. Prof. Polanyi used the
example of his own researches in
gas absorption which were ignored when they first appeared. This
too was as it should be for at the
time there appeared to be anomalies unexplained by the theory.
These has since proved trivial and
the theory largely correct, but at
the time the proper course was

investigation.
If the results expected to not justify the expenditure of time required to investigate a problem,
it is the proper course for a scirejection

without

entist to abandon it in favor of

more profitable paths.

Support of the Viet Cong
Causes Uproar at Drew
NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ. (CPS)
—A political science instructor
at Drew University who declared
his support for the Vietcong if
the U.S. continues its current
policy in Vietnam, now faces
possible dismissal.

Lecture on Delusions of Pacifism
Baird Presented By Prof. Zimmerman

Budapest Quartet

also hit at U. S. policy in Vietnam.

Prof. Staughton Lynd of Yale,
one of the leaders of the teachin movement against the war in

Vietnam, said that he too shared
Prof. Genovese’s views. Commenting that he was about to
speak “seditiously,” Lynd said
“if the U. S. neither grants the
elections (in South Vietnam) or
leaves, the National Liberation
Front should prevail.”

performance of all the Beethoven
quartets, which they also perform annually on campus. In addition to performing with the
Quartet, Alexander Schneider has
been the organizer of the Pablo
Casals Music Festivals all over

the world.
Leo Smit, who has studied under Fulbright and Guggenheim
Fellowships, has also recorded
many compositions for piano, esworks,
pecially
contemporary
such as Copland’s Piano Blues,
dedicated to him. He is now a
member of the UB Music faculty.
Buell Neidlinger has worked with
Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor and others, as well as
playing in the Houston Symphony
Orchestra. He is presently a Creative Associate in the Center for
the Creative and Performing Arts
here.

schools in different corners of
the world and some have had
previous teaching experience.

Dr. Federico Gata received his
Ph.D. at the University of Madrid and taught most recently at
Sao Paolo, Brazil. He has also
taught in Montreal, Caracas and
other parts of Venezuela. Dr. Kuo
Tsai Chen obtained bis FhJ&gt;.
from Columbia and most recently taught at the University of
Brazil, and previous to that at
Rutgers in New Jersey. Dr. Rafael Artzy obtained his Ph.D.
from the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem and also taught most
recently at Rutgers. Dr. Anthony
Ralston completed his Ph.D. at
MIT and is Director of the Computing Center here at the University. He was formerly Direc-

A talk on Delusions of Pacifism
was given Monday, October 11,
by Dr. Marvin Zimmerman. The
speech was one of several sponsored throughout the year by the
Liberal Religious Fellowship.
Dr. Zimmerman in the content
of his speech said that there exists no true pacifist since no man
has ever experienced a totally
non-violent life. Those people
who would lay down arms in
Vietnam on in any country where
the U.S. has primary control, in
the hope of non-violence promoting non-violence, are under a
delusion. Dr. Zimmerman posed
the question, “Wouldn’t a disarmament by us invite attack?”

Dr. Zimmerman speaks on
"Delusions of Pacificism"

Dr. Zimmerman distinguished
between nuclear pacifists and conventional pacifists. The nuclear
pacifists would not tolerate using
nuclear bombs but might consider conventional weapons, whereas
the conventional pacifists would
consider neither. Therefore, are
nuclear pacifists really pacifists
at all? If we consider the case
where a man would defend himself (or his country) by conventional means only, wouldn’t he
be inviting nuclear attack? Or if
a man would not consider using
conventional weapons, wouldn’t
be invite attack by conventional

These questions Dr. Zimmerman
left open for disaussion in a question and answer period following
his talk. Questions were asked
concerning his ideas on the international policies the U.S. should
take. He answered that a new
policy must be developed for each
new circumstance. Also, there was
interest shown in Dr. Zimmerman’s theories on a world government controlling nuclear power.
The Liberal Religious Fellowship will be presenting speakers
on various topics. Everyone is invited and urged to attend meetings which will be held on Mon-

—Photo by Robert Wynne

weapons?

The personnel commitof Union Board is seeking a general chairman, a
secretary, and chairmen or
members for the following
committees: Art, Drama,
Literature, Music, Dance,
Publicity, and Business.
Applications may be
picked up from any building on campus or the Norton candy counter and
must be returned to room
215 Norton on or before

Interested and eligible students
pare talented Negro students and
other minorities such as Spanish-

tee

speaking Americans for foreign

service careers in one of the
three major foreign affairs agencies of the government: the Department of State, the Agency of
International Development (AID),
and the United States Information Agency (USIA). The program is administered by Howard

Feigl Lecture
Given Today

November 2.

By JUDY WEISBERG

Dr. Herbert Feigl, Professor of
Philosophy, will present a lecture
on Friday, October 15, at 3:00

p.m., in the Millard Fillmore
Boom. He is to be the second
in a series of three lecturers
sponsored by the Convocations
tor of Computing at Stevens Institute of Technology. Dr. Yuzo Committee and will speak on “ToUtumi received his Doctorate of ward a Philosophy for Our Age
Science.”
Science at Japan University. Dr. of Presently
the Director of the
Eric Wallace obtained his Ph.D.
Minnesoita Center for Philosophy
at the University of Liverpool
and was lectured at Leeds. Dr. of Science, Dr. Feigl has been a
Ubiraian D’Ambrosio completed Professor of Philosophy since 1940
his Ph.D. at Sao Paolo and was at the University of Minnesota.
formerly a Research Associate at He was President of the American
Philosophical Association, WestBrown University in R. I.
ern division during 1962-1963, and
Dr. Michael Geminani received a Machette Foundation lecturer at
his Ph.D. from Notre Dame. Purdue University in 1951 and at
Brooklyn College in 1956, and a
Fasile Gorciu is an applied mathMead-Swing lecturer at Oberlin
ematician working with the FedCollege in 1951. The recipient of
eral Defense Organization.
a Rockefeller Research Fellowship
and a Guggenheim Fellowship,
Dr. Feigl was also a Carnegie visiting professor of the University
of Hawaii in 1958.
Dr. Feigl is one of the editors
of Currant Issues In the Philosophy of Science and of Readings
In Philosophical Analysis and
Readings in the Philosophy of
,

day nights.

Foreign Servite Careen Planned
Sponsored By US/A And AID
at UB are informed of a new program designed to select and pre-

Math Department Acquires
Varied New Membership
The Math Department has acquired several new members this
year who hold varying degrees
and positions here at the University. They have studied at

By LORETTA ANGELINE

Science.

University in cooperation with
the above mentioned agencies.

Students are selected into the
program while in their junior
year of college. In the past some
seniors have been accepted but
it is now anticipated that for the
future, seniors will be chosen
only in those cases where there
is an indication of outstanding
qualifications for a foreign affairs career.
Forty juniors will be selected
into the program during the 196566 academic year. They will be
offered paid internships in State,
AID, or USIA during the summer
of 1966 and may receive supplementary educational assistance of
various kinds during their senior
year in colleges in which they
are enrolled. Twenty-five of these
forty students will be chosen
during their senior year to receive fellowship awards, ranging
up to $4,000, for a year of graduate study in foreign affairs fields
in institutions selected in consultation with the program staff.
Students in the program, particularly those awarded fellowships, must take both the Foreign Service Officer examination
and the Federal Service Entrance
examination during the senior
year, as well as during the year
of graduate study if necessary.
Passing the Foreign Service Officer Examination is considered
for appointment as a Foreign
Service Officer. The Federal
Service Entrance Examination
must be passed before appointment can be made in many other
types of government employment.
Applications

should be received at Howard University, Foreign Affairs Scholars Program,
Washington, D. C. 20001 by December IS, 1965. Selection of students will be announced by
March IS, 1966. UB students interested may get further information by making an appointment with Mrs. Sonia Robinson,

Diefendorf 109.

;

�Friday,

October IS, 1965

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorised publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICE
University College Students
Registration for next semester
for ALL University College students, excluding nurses, will begin Monday, October 18, 1965.
Students whose last names begin
with the letters designated below
will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for
courses on the following days:
Oct. 18 through Oct. 22—B
Oct. 25 through Oct. 29—W, H
Nov. 1 through Nov. 5—M, F
Nov. 8 through Nov. 12—K, G
Nov. 15 through Nov. 19—R,
—

P, N
Nov. 22 through Nov. 24—C,

Y
Nov. 29 through Dec. 3—S
Dec. 6 through Dec. 10—L, T,
A, E
Dec. 13 through Dec. 17—D, I,
J, 0, Q, U, V, X, Z
Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
114 one week in advance of the
above scheduled times. At this
time, the Receptionist will give
the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow
in the subsequent registration
procedures. O.T. students will
make their appointment with the
receptionist. (P.T, students make
appointments with Miss Heap di-

rectly). Nursing students are advised and registered through the
School of Nursing.
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled time, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required to register in Clark Gym
on Registration Day in January.

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
October 19, 20
New York Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company
B.S.
Accounting, Finance, General Business, Industrial Relations and
Labor Relations. B.A.—Economies, English, Geography, History,
Government, Law, Modern Languages, Psychology and Sociology. Career opportunities for a
sales type of position with management potential. It is possible
to locate in the Buffalo area.
The Standard Oil Company of
Ohio (SOHIO) —B.S., MBA —Accounting, General Business, Marketing and Economics. B.S., M.S.
Chemical Engineering, and
Chemistry. Career opportunities
in management, research and development, design, and plant
process work. Candidates must
be willing to relocate in Ohio.
Further information may be
obtained at the University Placement Service, Schoellkopf Hall,
or by calling 831-3311.
—

—

—

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Published by

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PACK SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Rhetoric and Reality:
Are The Vietnamese
Better Dead Than Red?
By DR. ELWIN H. POWELL
The massacre in Vietnam continues. Since January, 1965 the
United States Air Force alone
has killed at least 15,000 people
in the south, (Charles Mohr,
New York Times, August 16).
500,000 to 600,000 refugees have
fled the countryside, mainly to
escape American bombing,
(James Reston, NYT, August 16).
From an experimental counterinsurgency operation the U. S.
effort has grown into a war of

annihilation of the enemy forces
and their socio-political base the
National Liberation Front. The
NLF is the de-facto government
of some 80 percent of South
Vietnam.
The United States has decided
to crush the NLF. To do so will
require the virtual liquidation
of the population. Is it worth it?
What national interest is at stake
on this Asian peninsula, 7000
miles from our own borders?
Jack Langguth, (NYT, July 7)
quotes a young American pilot:
“I don’t like to hit a village.
You know you’re hitting women
and children. But you’ve got to

decide that your cause is noble
and the work has to be done.”
What then is this high purpose
which justifies the murder of
thousands and thus the betrayal
of our own moral principles?

Lofty sentiments about helping
a “free and brave people to resist aggression” which President
Johnson gave as our official reason for past and present involvment, (NYT March 21) are now
laughed off even by the proponents of American policy. Prior to
the February 1865 bombing of

North Vietnam, it seemed the
United States was mainly interested in stabilizing the area, perhaps along Laotian lines. But
with the air strikes on the North
a new doctrine came into play—that of deterrence (derived from
the Latin root for terror).

Theoretically the threat to
destroy North Vietnam was designed to bring Hanoi to the conference, hopefully on her knees.
Yet as early as the Bay of Tonkin
bombing (August 4, 1964) the
North Vietnamese secretly proposed “peace talks, without conditions” as revealed a year later
by the New York Herald Tribune
(August 8, 1965). Again in April
according to Max Frankel of the
Times, proposed peace talks which
among other things asked for
“eventual withdrawal of American forces but not as a condition
for parley" (NYT, April 14). Initially we refused to negotiate
because we thought we were losing the war; now we refuse because we think we are winning
the war. As the Wall Street Journal (September 21) said: “U. S.
officials are questioning the wisdom of peace talks now; favor
waiting till reds feel impact of
new troops.”
What, then, do we hope to
‘win’? What are the political objectives of the war? Far from
stabilizing the area, the American escalation has aggravated
the pre-existing Asian chaos. U.S.
military
action has shattered
SEATO and badly shaken NATO
—the system of cold war alliances
designed to protect the ‘free
world’ after the early hopes of a
functional UN had been scrapped
in the late ’40s. (The UN, unfortunately, can play almost no
role in a Vietnam settlement
since neither North Vietnam nor
China are members.) If our aim
is the containment of communism, the Asian upheaval which
we have precipitated will in the
long run further the ‘evil’ we
seek to avoid. Both containment
and stabilization are meaningful
diplomatic goals for which wars
are often threatened and frequently fought. But American
military means in Vietnam now
serves neither end.
Having lost sight of our objective, as Santayana once re-

marked, we redouble our effort
to attain' it. We don’t really know
what we want in Vietnam but we
are willing to kill for it. As
rational diplomatic-political goals
are obscured, we resort to the
rhetoric of anti-communism to
justify the continuation of military violence. And tho rhetoric
bears virtually no relation to
reality. Senator Dodd said on
NBC’s Meet the Press (February
14, 1965) “if we don’t stop the
communists in Saigon we will
have to stop them in Seattle.”
Those who take such threats

seriously are bordering on psychosis. It is of course possible
the communists will take Seattle
next July 16. Just as it is possible the world will end on February 9. But to act on either

forecast is insane.

In politics, as in war and daily
life, we have to act on probabilities not possibilities. What
are the probable consequences
of American action in Vietnam?
There is a growing consensus
the United States can hold on
militarily for the forseeable futhough nothing is certain,
ture
"war is the province of chance,”
says Clauwitz. Still it seems likely we can convert South Vietnam into another South Korea,
another Formosa, another Spain,
another “freedom-loving dictatorship” surviving as an armed
camp. But at what probable cost
and gain?
—

(1) Diplomatically, another
string of military bases will not
win the minds of men, though it

may make it easier to kill some
bodies. Our Vietnamese fortress
will serve only as another symbol
of American military imperialism. For the Vietnamese, the war
has already been redefined; it
(Cont’d on P. 14)

L.BJ. 'Carnival
Of Buncombe'
By JEFFREY SIMON

Politics, Mencken's “Carnival
of Buncombe,” never had a finer
side-show attraction than Lyndon
Baines Johnson. His wife and
oldest daughter are Birds. His
youngest daughter is America's
most obnoxious teenager and
probably will be until well after
middle age. His face looks like
a combination of Lincoln and
W. C. Fields, and his public voice
has an oozing petulant quality
which would make him seem
overburdened even if he were
President of the Ford Foundation. He owns a ranch and a T.V.
station and takes great pleasure
in driving 70 mph in his Lincoln Continental. If he were not
President, he would be a rococo
caricature of the Great American Eccentric. But since he is
President, his idiosyncracies are
made to seem human and even
endearing. But beneath all this,
(here is something terrifying.
Frankly, LBJ scares the hell out
of me. Too many of his qualities
pass from humorous to dangerous when magnified by the Presidency.

He is reputedly oversenitive.
that, there is the
Senator Church story, the one
with the punch line, “Next time
you want a dam built, ask Walter Lippmann,” and the wrangle
with House Republican leader
Gerald Ford. When reporters
criticized him for not sending
Hubert Humphrey to Churchill’s
funeral, Johnson seemed a little
too quick to react and just a
little too waspish when he did.
He has an enormous hole where
his diplomacy should be. There
was a frightening story in a national magazine about Johnson
hanging up on the leader of one
of our closest allies! It nulst
have been true, because if it
wasn't, it was blatant sedition.
Also, why did he cancel Shastri’s
visit to the U. S.? If he hadn’t,
if he had met Shastri when he
was supposed to, would that have
had any effect in delaying the
war with Pakistan?
For proof of

He has pretensions to grandeur.
He has said many times that he
would like to be known in history as the greatest President
our country ever had. Such pretension goes beyond ambition
into possible delusion. I would
prefer that he do the best he
can to be a good President. It
would certainly make him a lot

more trustworthy.

He has an enormous love of
power: Practically every article
written on LBJ describes the rel-

ish with which he employs his
masterful persuasive technique.
It is good to have a President
who is adept at power politics,
but it is good to have a President so adept and such a large
party majority all too eager to
do his bidding? He can literally
do almost anything he wants.
He has an obsession with “consensus." LBJ is portrayed as
needing the constant assurance
that the “American Public" is
on his side. In the light of his
other qualities, this is a lie,
either to the public or. if true,
to himself. If it is true, then
it is a game he plays to enable
him to do what he was going
to do anyway.

I am no analyst, nor am 1 a
political scientist but I have
gnawing doubts about Lyndon
Johnson and these doubts frighten me.
In themselves, these qualities
are merely disquieting. But after
two years of the Presidency,
they have been magnified, showing all the signs of being progressive. The President would have
us take his paternal hand and
walk with him into the valley
of the shadow of the Great Society.

�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, October 15, IMS

SPECTRUM

FaceFor
Student Theatre Guild

IMS 1LKDS9 ILHWHi New

The Ship Sinks
There are two types of films which really disappoint
me. When a fairly talented director like William Wyler
almost succeeds in capturing the elusive essence of a
book like The Collector, my enjoyment of the film is
always mixed with a sense of regret for that little bit he
missed. As my distinguished colleague Bill Sherman
pointed out last week, the promise of something excellent detracts from the performance of something very
good. However, this kind of mild regret is not nearly
as galling as the frustration I feel when a heavy-handed
journeyman like Stanley Kramer takes marvelous cinematic material like Katherine Porter’s Ship of Fools and
scuttles the vessel before it has left the harbor.
When Miss Porter finally published her huge
novel after twenty years of
hard work and six months
of frantic publicity, most of
the critics who dealt with
it were carried away by the
sheer size of the book and
the author’s reputation and
they praised it lavishly. The
eminent scholastic Mark
Shorer, famous for his
weighty analysis of Sinclair
Lewis’ work, called it “the
major novel of the century." Now that the smoke
has begun to settle, Miss
Porter’s epic venture and
Shorer’s credentials as a
critic have both shrunk
somewhat. The book has a
numbing effect due to the
oppressive tone of violence
which pervades the action.
There is no relaxation of
"Every time I hear that old German music, I remember I'm a tension, no sense of relief
dawrf"
—Michael Dunn and very little ironic detachment during the course
of the narrative. Miss Porter’s attempt to chart the bounds
of theh human condition often degenerates into an outraged polemic at man’s venial nature. While she gets an
accurate unflinching picture of the pig sty, Miss Porter
misses that part of man which is “the glory, jest and riddle” of the world.
Stanley Kramer, the film’s director and producer,

felt that he could take Miss Porter’s story out of the bilge

and fly it from the top gallants in the golden sunshine
of enlightenment and reason. Unfortunately, his massive contempt for his audience interfered with his intentions. Kramer has always been famous for the “message”
picture, but his messages are often banal and obvious
and Kramer sees his model in the sixth-grade civics lesson. For instance, Black and White choosing prison together in The Defiant One*, the “little man’’ growing
smaller in Death of a Salesman, MAN liquidating himself through his folly in On the Beach, and decent folks
suffering through ignorance and fear in Inherit the Wind.
But, while the message was obvious, the points Kramer
reached for were valid if overblown, and Kramer always
couched his soft-headed social commentary amidst a genuinely dramatic situation in which interesting people
seemed to have something important at stake. Then,
he met Abby Mann.
Mann reinforced all of Kramer’s worst impulses.
A collaborator ought to reduce his partner’s mistakes
get Kramer to forget for a moment that his pictures
matter, in this case. But Abby Mann suffers from the rather
dangerous delusion that everything he says is extremely
important for the improvement nay, survival
of the
species. Judgment at Nuremberg, the first Mann-Kramer
collaboration, presented an interesting and complicated
theme with all of the subtlety and sensitivity of a right
cross. In Ship of Fool*, Kramer and Mann have reduced
the characters to clearly labeled stick figures, clouded
the theme so that there is no coherent development towards any discernible point of view and structured the
entire set-up with an unending number of trite directorial
tricks that have been worn-out and wrung clean through
overuse, misuse and plain stupidity.

The group is the same, but the
name has changed. Tho Student
Dramatic Society has now christened itself The Student Theatre
Guild.
The S.T.G. aims at presenting
at least one play a month. During
the month of September, the
Guild presented the Zoo Story
by Edward Albee and Rouge
Atomique by N. Richard Nash.
Return Journey by Dylan Thomas
and Servants of the People by
Lawrence Ferlinghetti are the
October productions. On Novem-

...»

People"'

-Photo by David

Collli

ber 15, 16, and 17, the Student
Theatre Guild will present You
Haven't Suffered Enough by a
local playwright, Ruth Swayze.
It will be directed by John Lund,
a student at U.B., and will be
presented in the Conference Theatre free of charge to all students and faculty members.
The Student Theatre Guild welcomes all suggestions in Room
312 Norton Union, and in Box 65.

Motion picture patrons who are
ardently devoted to thrills, chills
and spine-tingling suspense in
their screen fare can count on
more than their share of skipped
heartbeats and edge-of-the-seat
tension when they go to see Henri-Georges Clouzot’s “Diabolique,”
the prize-winning French mystery
drama opening on Thursday,
October 21 at the Conference
Theater. Co-starring Simone Signoret, Vera Clouzot and Paul Meurisse, the setting of “Diabolique”
is a boys’ school on the outskirts
of Paris where Michel Delasalle,
portrayed by Paul Meurisse, not
only conducts matters with a firm
hand but has turned his wife
Christina, Vera Clouzot, and his
mistress Nicole, Simone Signoret,
into a pair of conspirators.
The two beautiful ladies, embittered by Michel’s dictatorial
and high-handed methods, join
forces in a somewhat diabolical
plot to do away with him for
good. The plot is carried out effectively in a country house
owned by Nicole. A telephone call
from Christina lures Michel to
the murder scene where he is
served poisoned whiskey and
drowned in the bathtub. The female murderers then bring the
body back to the school, drop it
into the swimming pool and return to their hideout, convinced
that they will have a perfect
alibi when the body is discovered.
But the plot reaches a fever
pitch of excitement when the
swimming pool is emptied for

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Vanel, the two women are enmeshed in a net of terror. The
picture reaches a climax that can
be described as one of the most
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cleaning—and the body is gone.
As the mystery deepens and
marches on until it arouses the
suspicion of Police Inspector
Fichet, impersonated by Charles

_

And, damn it, all of the material is there to make a
As a matter of fact, in spite of
everything, about one hour of the screen time is pretty
good, mostly because of the interaction of a number of
very fine actors. (Kramer is smart enough to cover his
bete with fine casts or unusual casting
Tony Curtis
and^Sidney- p otier? Good grief! But not bad). The
old grand hotel” idea interesting people from different
backgrounds thrown together
is still viable and the
premise of having a
bunch of Germans and a few Americans (old world cynicism vs. new world innocence
(Cont’d on P. 11)

Photo by Dmvid Collin*

Diabolique' Showing October 21
In Norton Conference Theatre

-

really fascinating picture.

"Rotum Joumay" In Conference
Theatre. L to R, David Goldfarb;
Sand! Klein; Gary Michalski.

TR 3-1330

�Friday, Octobar 15, 1965

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New Jer-

New Perspective* on Poverty
offers a revealing look at poverty
in the United States. The book is

an attempt in nineteen

essays

to

define, discuss and remedy America’s most serious national problem. “Our goal,” the editors point
out in their preface, “in this
anthology is to capture as much
merit from work in the area as

Jim Tuttle's

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permits, and to contribute
thereby toward a fuller understanding of the problems and
more effective programs of re-

By DAN SCHROEDER
I attended two of the concerts

form.
The book is divided into four
sections. The first, “A General
View of Poverty in America” surveys historically, not only the
plight but the strengths of the
poor. The second section’ “Reforms for Specific Problems,” offers some challenging new approaches. Arthur Shostak presents a strong case for birth
control. “Contrary to popular stereotypes, recent studies suggest
that lower class Americans want
as few, or even fewer children
than do those of higher status.
Lower class couples incur a high
number of pregnancies because
they do not use contraceptives
as regularly as do upper-class
couples. The author attributes
this to ignorance of proper contraceptive methods and the high
cost of contraceptives. Only seven
states (all southern) now permit
such discussion (or birth control). In the other forty-three,
manifold prohibitions are local in
nature and reflect the pressures
exerted by ethnic and specialinterest groups. A current liher(Cont’d on P. 13)

DEALS JEWELERS

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next to

Amherst

Theatre)

EARRINGS —RINGS
DIAMONDS
WATCHES
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Op

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Not because I have given thornBuffalo's
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have offered them the finest names
in traditional casual clothing. Not
because of the unusual antiques and
little fun things at the shoppe. Not
because of my sensible price policy
But just because I’m adorable.

dure!

of the India Festival: The ‘Dialogue” between the Creative Associates and Ali Akbar Khan's
group on Thursday in the Haas
Lounge, and Ali Akbar Khan’s
final performance on Saturday at
Baird Hall. The first concert left
me with the usual questioning of
my own standards and abilities
of perception; the second concert brought reassurance and
with it a hardening of opinions.
Mr. Herbert Kellman, the
prime motivating force of the
Festival, introduced the acts on
Thursday (and perhaps also on
Saturday, when I arrived late).
The Western group composed of
percussionist John Bergamo, bassist Buell Neidlinger, and alto
saxophonist Andrew White,
played continuous, very loosely
organized improvized jazz for the
first half .Then sarodist Ali Akbar Khan, tabla-ist Shankar Gosh
and tamboura-ist Sheela Mookerjee improvised on two ragas.
Hardly a dialogue. Mr. Kellman

said that the differences between
the two kinds of music are great,
but that they share the element
of improvisation.
The Creative Associates performed with gusto (except perhaps on Mr. Bergamo’s part) in
the decadent but certainly transitional language which is the
present stage of American jazz.
Mr. White, a tall, round-shouldered Negro, rocked back , and
forth in his solo, which was at
times very inventive. (But I insist, against the advice of experienced and informed jazzmen, that
the philosophy of this kind of
playing has not yet advanced
quite a whole step beyond Charlie
Parker.) Mr. Neidlinger was also
quite active; he actually seemed
to be trying to complement

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White’s solo, instead of soloing
himself (a practice which lesser
musicians have resorted to with
Fantastic but incomprehensible
results), The percussionist was
less successful. His performance
only announced the inadequacy
of traditional jazz percussion instruments to sound a wide range
of dynamics and attacks necessary to a meaningful interplay between instruments. What a world
of difference between the snare
drum and the tabla! (However,
dubious effect of Mr. Bergamo
was in part due to his own heavyhandedness.) At certain intervals
the boys would break into a
stereotyped jazz pattern of regular cymbal beats and a scalar
bass accompaniment to the soloist. This was (he only hint of order, at most other times there
was doubt as to who the soloist
Although attempts were
was.
made, I was amazed at the lack
of perceptive interplay between
these usually fine musicians.
There were some very different musical ideas from the Indian group. The most important
single one was the constant droning of the tonic, not only by the
tamboura but also by the sarod
during its melodic inventions.
Things got very boring after 20

minutes of the same note. But
the practice guarantees that the
audience does not take its minds
away from the original melodic
idea, which frequently hovers
around and returns to home. The
Western players lost literally
everything of form, while the Indians were never far away from
their base even when the rhythm
was free. (At most times, Indian rhythms stayed within regular meters for reference purposes.) The interplay showed the
most striking difference between
the Indians’ several hundred
years of development and the
jazzmen’s 50. Shankar Ghosh
watched for his opportunities to
fill in a line, and Ali Akbar was
obviously telling him his every
mood with his eyes. A climactic
feature (and a good piece of
theatricality) was an episode in
which the drum repeated the
rhythms and, to a primitive degree, pitches of the sarod. There
was much more subtle work in
between, especially in melodic
variation by the remarkable
sarod.
The program said: “And while
most Indian pieces are indisputably long, they mm even longer
to a Westerner.” This is true.
There is no telling how much my
natural state of depression had
to do with it, but my mind was
definitely trying to retreat from

the world of Indian music beneath closed eyelids. Thus I could
not believe
enthusiastic
the
standing ovation accorded to the
Indian group by every conceivable campus “type”
we were
all there. Those who clustered
around the feet of the master,
Khan, during the performance
were obviously most swept up by
his final burst of virtuosity, perhaps even by the cumulative effect of the piece. This is why
they applauded him so well. I
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cannot believe that a majority of
the

audience followed what he

was doing, or understood it.

At Thursday's performance, it
also occurred to me that what I
was hearing in the back of the
Haas lounge was not people playing instruments at all. It was
sounds coming through a microphone. As soon as a large audience comes to listen and a microphone must be used, some of
the humanity is inevitably taken
out of any music; it could very
well be a phonograph at the
other end of the mike. To reassure myself, I looked up often
to see the bald-headed Khan and
his group, seated placidly on a
colorful Indian carpet. I was thus
unprepared for Saturday’s debacle.

I arrived late and was ushered
into a large, crowded room where
I stood watching a snowy television picture—could it be Flipper? No, too late for that. On
each of five sets, the closest of
them only 100 feet away, and listening to . . . yes it was! Ali
Akbar Khan, The audience must
have been interested, they had
their eyes glued to the sets. Of
course they could have been
waiting for gummoke. But why
not stay home for that? Yes, why
not?, Why not get a nice Ali Akbar record and listen to it at
home instead of going out On a
cold fall night to listen to it
over a loud speaker in a mobbed
room? I could say much more
about this, but I see that Fm
getting progressively less subtle.
The second half of the concert
I dragged my wilted date up to
the balcony so she could get a
glimpse of the master, maybe
even hear him. The scene was
dense here also: People laying
on the stage, in the aisles, one
gentleman sitting on the edge of
the balcony with his feet hanging over the side. One of the people who shoved in back of me in
the balcony was the Festival organizer, Mr. Ketlman. We were
in mutual discomfort. But I had
here my most profitable, enjoyable moments of the Festival.
Since we had to stand I could not
become drowsy as I did on Thursday. I had to listen (I counted all
the way through one piece in a
tala of 1U4 and I could almost
feel the fun the musicians were
having with that asymmetrical
structure), and the subtle formulas of improvisation. Sheela
Mookerjee sang several songs;
her voice is far from great, but
the very expressive and beautiful
melodies helped the effect of her
competent performance. Again,
as on Thursday, the drum playfully imitated the sarod, building up into an overlapping
("stretto” in Western music) interplay, to break up the (relative) montony and lead to a successful conclusion and sustained,
tumultuous applause from—need
I say—a crowd.

The University Chapter
of the Civil Service Employees Assoc, will present a Dinner Dance at
the Cordon Bleu Restaurant, Saturday, November
6, 1965. Scheduled are:
Cocktails at 6:00, Dinner
at 7:00, and Dancing at,
9:00. Tickets are $4.75
per person. Those persons
who wish to participate
only in the Dance may obtain free tickets upon presentation of their membership cards. Anyone interested contact Bob Smith,

831-2701.

�PAGE TEN

Dr. Laughery Heads
Human Factors Lab
By BOB MARTIN
One can be easily mystified
if he passes a room in the engineering building that says “Human Factors Lab” and has a
note on the door saying that no
one is to be admitted unless he
is one of the small list of given
persons and has identification.
Quickly the imagination seizes
the mind and he sees things
such as multiple machines reproducing all of the human movements or amputated parts of the
human body performing the work

of certain machines.
This reporter hesitantly
knocked at the door and inquired
of one of the students as to what
they were doing in the lab. The
answer was "screwing offfollowed by a volley of engineer
laughter—and then an explanation.

The Graduate School of Industrial Engineering offers a degree
in Human Factors Engineering
which is mainly concerned with
research in the capabilities of different individuals in relation to
various types of machinery. According to the assistant of the
department, Craig Smith, the
current research experiments deal
with short term memory recall,
the experiments being performed
mainly by Dick Cimbola and Al
Pinkus. These experiments will
be useful in determining a person’s capacity as a radio or radar

operator. The central measuring
machine used in conducting these
experiments is a predetermined
programmed presentation device
which is a complex electrical network capable of simultaneously
testing ten subjects with a variety of visual and auditory material, consisting of letters, numbers, and figures.
The department head, Dr. Kenneth Laughery, also a member of
the Psychology Department, and
the six students in the Human
Factors program are expecting to
aquire valuable new equipment.
This equipment will consist of
an auditory and visual tester capable of accurately detecting all
known types of visual and auditory defects, and a program computer. The latter device will not
have predetermined programming, but rather will adjust its
programming according to the
individual responses of the subjects. It will, therefore, be capable of both measuring a persons recall, and length of time
necessary to “teach” him the material he was unable to recall.
The department has also acquired two new and lightproof
rooms which eliminate even the
most minute stimuli which may
hamper the subject’s memory recall. These rooms, costing $12,000
will prove valuable to the researcher’s in the department of
psychology and work measure-

ment.

Lady's Not
For Burning'
Nov. 3-6

According to Dr. Paul F. Hoffman, who in 1962 became the
first Physician-Director of the
Service, its purpose is a twofold
one of first assuming responsibility for the physical and emo-

tional health of those students

residing on campus (in loco parentis) and secondly, providing

proper health education for the
entire student body.
Located in the basement and

on the first floor of Michael Hall,

the Student Health Service provides both inpatient and outpatient care. The Inpatient Department, which is open 24 hours a
day during fall and spring semesters, has 15 regular dormitory
rooms to care for students who
require medical and nursing supervision. Each patient is seen
daily by a staff physician. The
average number of patients per
week has been approximately 20
since the beginning of this semester, while the average stay is
three days.
The Outpatient Department
first becomes familiar to new students during summer planning
conferences when a pre-entrance
health appraisal is made, based
upon a physical examination by
the student's personal physician.
This Department has hours weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 8.00 p.m.,
and Saturdays and Sundays from
10:00 a.m. to 500 p.m. It provides
emergency first aid, as well as
limited treatment and diagnostic
procedures and consultant-referral to qualified specialists.
There is no charge to students
for physician and nursing services provided by either Department.

The present Health Service
staff, both Inpatient and OutpaDepartments,
tient
numbers
about 40. ’liiis includes the equivalent of three full-time physicians, a part-time psychiatrist on

call, nursing staff,
clerical staff.

aides, and

In addition to inpatient and
outpatient care, the Student
Health Service is currently conducting a variety of related programs. These include: 1. Institution this year of a voluntary

health education program, featuring the use of movies. 2. Beginning of a program of practical
training in conjunction with the
medical education programs. Last
year for the first time student
nurses came to the Health Service as part of their formal training. 3. Assisting with establishment of standards for treating
snake-bites in cooperation with
the Biology Department. 4. Compilation of a detailed volume of
Health Service policies and procedures—the first time this has
been done since the Service was
organized.

The Student Health Serivce is,
by comparison, a relatively young
university department. This is because from its foundation in 1846
until just 12 years ago, UB was
entirely a commuter school and
as such had no need for a service
of this type. In 1953, however,

with the construction of the first
dormitories, the need for a
Health Service for resident students was recognized. The first
offices of the health service were
located on the top floor of Clark
Gym. In 1956 it moved to the
basement of Michael Hall, and
in subsequent years has taken
over upstairs wings to house the

Inpatient Department.
With the current increase in

student enrollment and attendant
shortage of space, the Health
Service is experiencing stifling
growing pains. According to Dr.
Hoffman, the lack of space,
coupled with a shortage of personnel (e.g., the average physician-student ratio is 1 per 1,000,
while UB currently has the equivalent of only three full-time physicians) has limited the scope of
Health Service activities to about
one tenth of its potential. This affects not only immediate everyday health care, but also new programs of research and health education. Dr. Hoffman outlined a

'All These Women Today

Lady's Not For Burning, a comedy in verse by Christopher Fry

in Baird Hall. Under the direction
of Mrs. Julia Pardee, the cast
and crew of the play are already
in rehearsal.
In the cast are: Jeanette Veling,
Gary Battaglia, Honda Lyon, William Cortes, Pamela Dadey, Peter
Hadijakou, Clifford Group, John
Brosnian, John Lund, Hayward
Allen, and Barry Tannenbaum.
The play, fancifully set in a fifteenth-century

English

cottage,

will have these actors romping
about stage in period costumes
designed by Esther Kling. The
stylized representation of the village mayor’s house is being created by Dr. Thomas Watson.
A production crew headed by
stage manager, Francine Zumpano, is now occupied in an extensive search for accurate period
props.

Tickets for the play will soon
be made available. Expect more
information in future issues of
the Spectrum.

wide range of new programs
which he hopes to see instituted
in the future, when additional
space and an increase in staff
personnel permit. Among these

By KAREN GREEN
All Thai* Woman, an Ingmar
Bergman film, is being shown today and tomorrow in the Conference Theater. This film is one
of many presented every weekend
by the Film Committee of Union

Board.
The excellent motion picture,
Diabolique, which has had limited showings in Buffalo already,
has been booked as a special
service by the Fine Arts Film
Committee. This film, starring
Simone Signoret, is considered
one of the best horror movies
ever to be made. Because of the
expected large sale of the tickets
for the show, tickets will go on
sale the Monday preceding the
showing.
The film committee will appreciate any suggestions from students and faculty for future films.
These must be submitted to the
theater box-office in writing.
The Film Committee began as
of interest from the
student body to have good, renowned films shown on campus
for a nominal fee. In addition, it
was decided that these films
would be shown on weekends in
order that more students might
benefit from them. The first
film this year, Mondo Cane, was
a complete success, proving that
a result

—

ployees.

Staff and Faculty Benefit Program—At the present time only
first aid is provided for these
groups.
Environmental Health and Safety
—The Health Service has a seat
on the Safety Committee, but
does not take an active part.
Athletic Medicine—Institution of
a program covering football and
basketball teams, as well as intramural sports.
Active Campaign Against Smoking—Some universities have begun such campaigns by removing
all cigarette machines from their

campuses.
It is hoped that with the impending move in 1968 to the new

Amherst campus, the Student
Health Service will acquire facilities which will permit inauguration of these ambitious programs and the essential development of the Health Service in
proportion to the tremendous
overall growth of this university.

Buffalo Philharmonic
Opens Season Nov. 24;
Lukas Foss Conducting
The Buffalo Philharmonic sea-

son opens November 14 and stu-

dent tickets are available.

When Lukas Foss opens his
third season as Conductor-Music
Director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, it will signal
the opening of a raoust outstandyear of music. He will conduct
twelve of the fourteen pairs of
concerts in the Sunday afternoon and Tuesday night series.
Such guest stars as Andres
Segovia, Artur Rubinstein, Elizabeth Schwarazkopf, Leonard Pennario, Mstislav Rostropovich, Felicia Montealegre will be featured soloists, as well as thirteen

others.

Student tickets are $12 for the

14 concerts. For a complete program of the 1965-66 Season, and
reservations, call TT 5-5000 or
write the Philharmonic at Kleinhans Music Hall.

Opens New Playhouse

—

—

there is a great demand for movies of this calibre. Because of
the success so far this year, the
films will most likely continue
throughout the semester.

Studio Arena Theatre

October 7, 1965, marked a turning point in Buffalo’s cultural
history; it was the opening of
the new Studio Arena Theatre.
contemplated
long-range
proJust about fifty days ago, with
grams are the following:
the purchase of the Town Casino,
Buffalo succeeded in obtaining
Formal Health Education
Beginning with the employment of a theatre having professional
status, and its own professional
a qualified full-time health educator to carry out the program, resident acting company. Unlike
rather than the staff physicians. the typical proscenium stage,
Creation of a Mental Health Dewhich may evoke a feeling of

partment
Under the full-time
direction of a qualified psychiatrist.
Occupational Medicine
Regulation and control over the health
of professors and staff members.
At the present time this university does not even require a physical examination of new em-

,

Saturday In Conf, Theatre

November 3 through 6 at 8:30
the Department of Drama
and Speech with the cooperation
of the newly renamed Student
Theatre Guild, will present The
p.m.

Student Health Service Described;
Dr. Hoffman Outlines Two-Fold Purpose
In view of the recent campus
epidemic, this would seem an appropriate time to give some space
to that "underground” organization known as the Student Health
Service.

Friday, Octobar IS, 1965

SPECTRUM

pleasing picture from every angle in the audience.
But certainly a director’s work
is of no value without a competent cast. Again, Mr. Quintero
had no problems. Colleen Pewhurst, as Josie Hogan, does a
fine portrayal of a bitter, buxom

Irish lass. Miss Dewhurst’s thick,
yet articulate Irish brogue, and
her facial expressions ranging
from the most bitter to the most
separateness between the actor tender, bring depth to her role.
and the audience, the three-quarJohn O’Shaughnessy, Josie’s fater arena stage, having no seat
ther, is a good target for his
more than 52 feet from it, brings
daughter’s harsh repartees, althe performers and the actors though his stuttering over some
closer together, creating a more of the lines proves distracting.
fulfilling experience for the draJames Daly’s performance as
ma enthusiast.
James Tyrone, Jr., is weakened
Mr. Jose Quintero, the director by his excessive involvement
of Eugene O’Neill’s A Moon for with his lines.
tho Misbegotten, Studio Arena
Technically speaking, the
Theatre’s premiere production, creaks of the stage floor are anuse
made
of the entire theatre noying and detract from Robert
as his stage, enhancing the realMotley’s simple, yet appropriate,
ity of the production by bringing sets. Many a tender moment is
the actor into the audience. A heightened by David Zierk’s
director of an arena theatre, unlighting.
like that of a proscenium theaEugene O’Neill’s story deals
tre, has the problem of two addiwitth two misbegottens in search
tional angles from which the
of comfort and understanding
audience may view the play. But
which they find, for a brief pethis was no problem for Mr. piod, in each other. Drama enthuQuintero. Just as he extended siasts in Buffalo have also been
the boundaries of the stage, he in
search for a good professional
extended his skill in directing theatre. With the addition of the
into achieving a symmetry in the new Studio Arena Theatre,
anothblocking of the cast, creating a er search has ended.
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�PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, October IS, 1965

Success of The Fantasticks Reviewed

By CHARLES CUMMINGS
A stage almost devoid of scenery, a cast the size of a baseball
team, and a shoestring budget—these are the improbable ingredients of the remarkable success-

ful musical Tha Fantasticks. The
musical’s New York run of more
than 2,000 performances has
grossed over one million dollars
which has handsomely repaid the
original investment of $16,500. In
addition, Tha Fantasticks has
been performed in dozens of foreign countries by hundreds of
professional and amateur acting
groups.
Bearing these credentials of
success The Fantasticks now
comes to the UB campus. An allstudent cast will present the
musical in the Norton Union, Fillmore Room at 8:30 every evening, October 27-31.
Henry A. Wicke Jr., who will
direct the production, described
The Fantasticks as a “romantic
fantasy" that strongly appeals to
college students because they can
identify with the girl and boy who
are the show’s main characters.
Director Wicke went on to say
that the highlights of the show
would include the well-known ballad, “Try to Remember”, and the
witty, mildly risque osng, “It
Depends on What You Pay”.
These and all musical numbers
will be performed in the 3/4
round style which Director Wicke
feels “enables more people to be
closer to the stage.”
The unusual scenery that characterizes The Farrtastict is the
concern of Jack MoGroder, a

FILM...

get it?) traveling to Germany in 1933 (Misa Porter’s
book has it in 1931 before the Nazi take-over) provides
a situation that is just dripping with possibilities. But
audience.”
nothing comes of it. There is even a chorus to provide
What really stimulates the imacommentary before and after the voyage a
gination, though, is how to find an ironic
with welUmertz, for chrissake! ! in case
dwarf
afflicted
another musical, like The Fananyone has slept through the picture (a distinct possi-

sophomore and Fine Arts major,
who is the first student at UB
to hold the position of Scenic
Designer. According to Mr. McGroder the scenery of Tha Fantasticks consists of non-descript

impression of spontaneity and to
stimulate the imagination of the

items

tastick, that will return 60 dollars
for every one dollar invested.

like scarves, boxes

planks in order to “convey

and
an

-

-

'Enormous Crowd' Watches
Indian Dance Group Perform

Indian Dance Group of the Asia
Society of New York presented a
recital of Bharata Natyam, the

classical dance of India, performed by Bali Ram and Maya
Kulkarni, on Friday, October 8,
at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall. This
recital, part of the India Festival
which took place October 3-October 9, drew an enormous crowd.
Closed circuit television provided
additional room for those arriving
too late to find even standing
room.

Classical Indian dance is based
a legend which maintains that
Brahma, a Hindu god, invented
dance and drama for. the amusement of the gods. Brahma transmitted all his knowledge to
Bharata, a wise man who then
created the sastra, the dance
system which was put into writing in the fourth century A.D.,
after a long oral tradition had
kept it alive. Movements, facial
expressions, costume, and makeup are all dealt with in this
system.

on

Indian dance themes are also
based on legend concerning Siva,
the legendary, original great
dancer and one of the trinity of
gods revered by the Hindus. The
Ramayana and the Mahabharata,
two epic poems dealing with men,
gods, heroes, and cowards as
does classical Greek and Roman
epic poetry, also provide themes
for Indian dance.
Bharata Natyam, the oldest
classical dance, has recently
come to be executed by men and

(Cont'd from P. 8}

women, who heretofore had been
responsible solely for the preservation of the technique. Facial expressions, body, hand, and
finger movements are all employed to express the emotions

basic to Indian dance:
love, fury, heroism, fear, humor,
pathos, wonder, disgust and tran(rasa)

quility.

There are two catergories of
Indian dance, both of which involve this intricate expression of
emotions. The nritta, or pure
dance, is performed for its aesthetic appeal to the senses. The
nritya, on the other hand, tells
a story or conveys a mood
through pantomime or through

the characteristic gestures.

To

fully understand every movement and gesture requires of the
observer experience with Indian
dance and a previous knowledge
of what tale is being told by the
dance. Yet, Indian dance can be
enjoyed and appreciated purely
in its artistic capacity.

The Bharata Natyam, which has
been called “visualized music,”
offers the illusion that the music
springs from the dancer himself.
Every movement, every gesture,
every beat of the foot, which is
emphasized by a ring of small
bells on the dancer’s leg, is in
perfect accordance
with the
music. Bali Ram and Maya Kulkarni, the performing artists,
proved through their remarkable
presentation, that Indian dance
is not only a manifestation of religious devotion, but also an excellent source of entertainment.

bility.)

This is what happens. Heinz Ruehmann, a Jew who
swears he is a “good German” walks around like a mobile book of Yiddish folk wisdom dispensing sweetness
and charity to those who hate him. Jose Ferrer plays the
standard anti-semitic professional man and comes complete with consort a blond, busty specimen of “German
Womanhood” as Goebbel’s pictured her. Jose Greco is a
Spanish Flamenco Dancer and Facist Pimp who hires out
his entire troop to the ship’s company. Lee Marvin is
excellent and irrelevant as a washed-up ball-player.
Oskar Werner is even better as the sophisticated, cynical,
charming ship’s doctor who becomes involved with somea part played poignantly by
one called La Conteaaa
Simone Signoret who has no sense of aristocracy about
her
too much warmth, too much heart. George Segal
(handsome and expressionless) and Elizabeth Ashley
(pretty and mis-directed) are cast as an American bohemian couple who are traveling together to see if they
have anything going for them except, as Miss Ashley so
fetchingly puts it in the vernacular of the ’30’s, SEX.
(To digress for a moment, Segal is unbelieveable when
he talks with “feeling” about his art. He sounds like an
‘'first
elevator operator in a large department store
floor, peasants suffering, second floor, life-like passion
and anguish, etc.”) Michael Dunn is hammy but very good
anyway as the dwarf, another symbol of an oppressed
minority and Vivien Leigh plays a fading southern rose
with all of the expertise of someone who has been doing
the same thing for two decades. And so it goes.
This brief summary undoubtedly sounds confusing.
It is a fair picture of the ways things are as the movie
opens, which is fine, but it is also a picture of the way
things are as the ship sails into the sunset. Nothing has
changed, no one is wiser, some may be sadder but only
for a moment, and a few are no longer alive. We’ve had
a touch of young love (a short one, mercifully) and a
touch of “mature love” that is about the only really
gripping part of the picture since Oskar Werner and
Simone Signoret work so well together. But, mostly,
we’ve had a series of morality lessons. Prejudice is bad,
there is some good in everyone, love is bitter and sweet,
art is long and life is short. Ho hum. In an age which
is characterized by “black humor," camp, a sense of the
macabre and the absurd, and a feeling that one had
better laugh to avoid insanity, the whole thing comes on
as a huge, top-heavy freighter that is always in danger
of disappearing into the swirl of its own wake.
-

.

.

.

.

Canisius College will
present a New York Cafe
A Go-Go Dance in the

AND

BENTLEMANL7

A.

JIM ANTHONY

(I.E.) of the ’60 Bethlehem
"Loop” Course is
engaged in operations

V

f

research in the Industrial
Engineering Department
of the nation’s largest
steel plant. He’s typical

When you can't
afford to be dull.
sharpen your wits
with IMoDoz tm

Seniors and graduate
students in engineering and
non technical curricula will
soon be interviewed for
the 1966 Bethlehem Loop
Course. We offer splendid
career opportunities in steel
plant operations, research,

sales, mining, accounting,
and other activities.
For detailed information,
pick up a copy of our

booklet,

"Careers with

Bethlehem Steel and the
Loop Course,” at your

Placement

Office.

An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for

The warmth of theabove long

sleeved knitted shirt is

STEEL ietmJehek
ST It
•

as

friendly as the handclasp of
companion. On the

a favorite

shelves and racks of the pro-

prietor’s store, gentlemen
will find this genial fashion
knitted in yarns of many colors and fibre content.

$12.95

Progress Program

BETHLEHEM

sound system from 9 p.m.
Tickets are $1
per person, and will be
sold at the door. Refreshments will be served and
proof of age is required.
to 1 a.m.

DING'S
CHALET ROY ALE

of young men on the move

at Bethlehem Steel.

Campus

NoDoz Keep Alert Tablets fight off
the hazy, lazy feelings of mental
sluggishness. NoDoz helps restore
your natural mental vitality.,.helps
quicken physical reactions. You be-

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NODOZ is as safe as coffee. Anytime
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Plenty of Free Parking
Corner Colvin Blvd. I Sheridan Dr.

I. H. O. P.
Pierced Earrings

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Pins

Necklaces

Rings

The Pierced Ear
3624 MAIN ST. (opp. Clement)

Corner
3262 Main St»««t
opfsU* V.B.

.

Dr. and Mrs. Clifford
C. Furnas honored the
first five selections to
UB’s “Athletic Hall of
Fame” at a pre-foothall
game luncheon to l&gt;e held
at 11:30 in the Goodyear
Hall Tenth Floor Dining
Room Saturday, October 9.
The selections, a 11
alumni of the University,
include: Dr. James J. Ailinger, class of 1925,
(D.D.S.); Edmund E. Malanowicz, ’32; Daniel P.
Dalfonso, ’38; Dr. Phillip
B. Weis, ’41 (M.D.); and
Louis D. Corriere, ’49.

Student Center Auditorium, Friday, October 15.
Continuous music will be

6EMIAL

.

832-7579
Charms

—

1:00-6:00

Bracelets

�PAGE TWELVE

GREEK NOTES
BETA PHI SIGMA
Pharmacy is not an easy field
in which to major at this university. ..Realizing this fact, Beta
Phi Sigma has decided to establish a study clinic for all freshmen and sophomores in pharmacy. Freshmen or sophomores
wishing to attend this clinic may
contact any brother or call A1
Levitt, 895-8843.
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
Alpha Gamma Delta extends a
warm welcome to all rushees and
wishes to remind the sisters of
the rush workshop in Norton 333,
Tuesday.
CHI OMEGA
Chi Omega is proud to announce that it won the first prize
in the Homecoming Publicity
contest and a Chi Omega became
first-runner up in the contest for
Homecoming Queen. Sisters
Brenda O’Hern and Carol Dekramer have been elected president and vice-president, respectively, of their nursing class.
Cheryl Seifert was elected second vice-president of the Student
Nursing Association of New York
State.

All rushees are cordially welcome to have lunch with Chi
Omega in the Millard Fillmore

Room.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI
Sigma Kappa Phi congratulates
Sister Lynn Corse in her new
office as Activities Chairman. Wel-

come to the rushes! The sisters announce

a coming rummage sale in November. If anyone has any contributions, he
can get in contact with the sis-

ters at the sorority lunch table!

DELTA CHI OMEGA
Delta Chi Omega Fraternity is

holding a contest to name our
mascot, a skunk. Twenty-five dol-

lars cash will be awarded to the

person who submits the winning

name. Tickets

for submitting
are available from any
brother, pledge, or at the DCO
names

table in Norton.
We would like to wish the best
of luck to our pledge class for
Fall '65: Larry Culp, Tom Foster, Mike George, John Hill, and
Paul Wietig.

THETA CHI
The brothers would like to congratulate Garry McGovern on his
pinning last weekend to Jackie
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sigma Phi Epsilon had a great
Homecoming weekend, starting
off with a beer party at Muscarella’s Bakery. Saturday night,
the brothers enjoyed a dated
liquor party at the Hotel Richford.
Last weekend was an appropriate time ot welcome home brother Bob Swanick, who has recently
completed the Peace Corps training and is on his way to Nepal.
The brothers are looking forward to this Friday night’s social
with the Sigma Delta Tau Sorority.
SIGMA

DELTA TAU
Sigma Delta Tau is looking
forward to seeing the Hushees
at their table in Norton this
week.
We are anticipating a good
time Friday night at a social with
the brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon. Transportation will be provided.
Saturday afternoon the SDT’s
will travel to Toronto to see the
stage production of Porgy and
Bess. The bus will leave Norton
Union at 10:45 a m.
The sisters would like to extend a welcome to our Regional
Advisor, Mrs. Marilyn Goldberg,
who is visiting with us this weekend.
TAU KAPPA EPSILON
Tau Kappa Epsilon is justifiably proud to congratulate Jay

Katz for his victory in the cam-

Friday,

SPECTRUM

pus Ugly Man Contest. In return,
Jay Katz thanks bothbrothers and
non-Greeks for their support.

This week, the fraters will be
attending a purple passion party
at the Flying E on Saturday
night. The party will feature the
playing of the Rocking Para
mounts. Nextweekend, the fraters
will be holding their Annual Parents Weekend.

Annual Band Day Features Opler Named As
Tribute to John P. Sousa Career Advisor
the
The UB’s
Band
bands will

will
Marching
sponsor the annual "Band Day”
for 1000 high school musicians
representing 13 Western New

York high school bands on Saturday, October 16.
The theme of Band Day is a
musical salute to John Philip

Sousa, famed march composer.
During half-time ceremonies at
University
the UB Richmond
football game, the combined
-

BETA SIGMA RHO

The party on Saturday night in
our new hall was judged an overwhelming success by both fellows and alumni. The fellows
wish to congratulate Jack Sternberg and Gerry Cantor for their
fine showing in the Watermelon
Contest and Kenny Ritz for being acclaimed one of the ugliest
men on campus. We also wish
continued success to our undefeated football team.
THETA CHI SORORITY

Theta Chi extends their welcome to the new rushes and hope
that they find rushing a pleasant
and rewarding experience. Students -be on the lookout—the
Great Pumpkin is coming.

ALPHA PHI DELTA
Alpha Phi Delta will hold a
get together tonight with their
dates at Brother Jim Muffoletto’s
home in Snyder honoring their
newly initiated brothers.
The brothers would also like to
Homecoming
congratulate the
Weekend Committee for their excellent work in the organization
of last weekend’s homecoming

October 15, 1965

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Partn ■P
erA

r U
,

.

J

nt

.

mi'// Printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

play

following

marches by Sousa: Fairest of the
Fair, Hands Across the Sea, and
El Capitan.
The bands, under the direction
of Richard W. Rodean, assistant
director of bands at the University, and Richard Fagan, marching band assistant, will complete
their show witht the performtheir show with the performance
of the UB Alma Mater.

The UB Golf team
qualified for the ECAC
finals last week by tieing
Syracuse and Rochester
Tech in Syracuse. Tony
Santelli fired a 76 for 3rd
place in the match.

Mrs. Charlotte F. Opler, vocational information specialist in
the Student Counseling Center
at UB, has been named a career
consultant in Western New York
for returning Peace Corps volunteers.

In this capacity, she will assist
those volunteers who wish to enroll at UB and other local colleges after their return from
their assignments. In addition,
Mrs. Opler will advise returning
volunteers who either wish to
work in Western New York or
who are from this area, but need
advice for schooling or employment elsewhere.

DINO'S
CHALET ROYALE
For Barbecued Chicken
Colvin Blvd. I Sheridan Dr.

Corner

NowINewChevelle

events.
They are now in the stage of
planning an excursion to Cornell
to hold a get together with their
brothers from Mu Chapter at Cornell University. The brothers do
this from time to time in order
to keep in touch with their
friends and brothers at other universities and to promote Greek
friendship between the university and others.

Alumnus Ken Bernstein has
written and says that he is attending medical school this year
in Spain. Norm Mingle, another
graduated brother, left last week
for active duty as a second lieutenant is the Air Force in Abilene, Texas.
Today, the brothers will undertake a community project. They
Club in their
Cane Drice.”

annual

"White

GAMMA PHI
Gamma Phi would like to welcome the Fall Pledge Class of
1965. The first pledge meeting
will be held Monday in 330 Norton.
This Saturday, the brothers will
go on a Hayride to be followed
by a “Warming Up” party at
Johnny’s Nite Owl.
Congratulations to Larry Elsie
who has been selected as the
new Social Chairman and second
I.R.C. Representative.
ALPHA SIGMA PHHI
The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi are proud to announce the
initiation of the following brothers: Alan Laurita, Gary Falk,
Tony Miceli, Joe Toscano, Tom
Miranda, Michael Lisiecki, and
Phil Tennant.

PI LAMBDA TAU
Pi Lambda Tau fraternity
would like to announce a"pajama party” this Saturday night.
The party is being held at Bosnia's Restaurant on Cleveland Hill

Attention etudiants de
Francais! V o u 1 e z-vous
vous amuser dans une
ambiance francaise? Venez Tous mardi, le 19
octobre, a la salle 329
Norton a 20 heures.

New Chevelle SS S96 Sport Coupe—with clean-sculpted all-new Body by Fisher.

by Chevrolet
Two new Super Sport beauties
for ’66—a hardtop and convertible
-propelled by nothing less than the
new Turbo-Jet 396 V8.
This remarkably efficient power plant,
with aircraft-type valves, deep-breathing ports and other design advances,
develops 325 hp in the standard
version. And you’re welcome to order
more—in a 360-hp version—if you’re
so inclined.

Both Chevelle SS 396 models ride on
a special flat-cornering chassis. A fully
synchronized 3-speed transmission with
floor-mounted stick shift is standard. Or
you can order a 4-speed or Powerglide
—also Strato-bucket front seats, center
console and full SS instrumentation.
Your Chevrolet dealer’s is the place to
see how all this feels from behind the
wheel. He’s a great believer
in letting the customers
handle the merchandise. “■jUHr"*'

See the new '66 Chevrolet, Chevelle,
n, Corvair and Corvette at your dealer’s

Chevy

�Friday. October 15, 1*65

SPECTRUM

Draft Deferment Forms Confused
(AGP)—After years of putting
students through the machine,
the University of California comthe
mitted the final ignominy
distinctions between the male
and female students have finally
been erased, says the Daily Californian.
—

At least that seems to be the

case since the University began

putting draft deferment

I

forms,

I

DINO'S
CHALET ROYALE

|

Moe Balsam at the Piano

I

Cornor

Colvin

bureaucratically known as “SSS
Form 109 for undergraduates” in
registration packets sent to women students.
Happily, most of the women
•students weren’t too distressed
by the complete disregard of
their sex. One smiling frosh coed
said, “I thought it was a sign of

(Cont’d from P. 9)

alization of American /attitudes,
especially among Catholics, activity by the Planmed Parenthood Federation of America, and
new breakthroughs in the development of contraceptive devices may lead to dramatic
changes in our present birth control practices.
their non-discrimination.”
A second proposal, by Ian ScanA spokesman in the registrar's
office explained that the cards dlers, urges consideration of
were automatically put into all Canada's highly successful baby
of the registration packets sent bonus program which gives all
out. “However, the instructions mothers a monthly government
allowance for each child. The
were clear." she said.
plan,

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'

once violently opposed by

many Canadians, now provides
better food, clothing, medical and
dental care and education for
most of Canada’s previously deprived children. The remaining
essays in this section deal with
other specific problems, includ-

ing job opportunities, job retraining, education, medical care,

and housing.
The third section gives an overview of governmental poverty
fighting programs, offering criticisms and alternate suggestions,
among them a government guaranteed annual income of $3,000.
The Epilogue is most challenging intelectually. Adam Walinsky, in an essay originally
published in the New Republic
contends that “the middle class
majority does not want to improve significantly the lot of
the poor; rather, it actively desires to keep the poor as they
are.” Mr. Walinsky’s explanation
of this phenomenon exposes the
basic status insecurities so many
of us confront, and exposes the
“poverty of satisfaction, purpose
and dignity that afflicts us all."
Dr. Rodman concludes, in
“Lower Class and the Negroes,”
than since the poor have no
spokesmen of their own, it is
the duty of the intellectuals to
champion their cause.
The articles are generally well

PAGE

•

•

Calendar
Friday:

Lecture: Herbert FeigI, ‘Toward a Philosophy in an Age
of Science, 3:00 p.m., Millard
Fillmore Room.
Movla: “AH These Women”
continuous showing from 3-11,
Conference Theatre.
Samlnar: in Engineering Sciences: J. Morris, speaker, Parker Engineering, 3 p.m.
Lactura: “Metropolitan Government in Toronto”, J. B. Milner,
School of Law, Room 108, 3 p.m.

Do you have suggestions or complaints about

the Food Service presently
in operation on the University Campus?
If your answer is yes,
register your opinion
along with your name or
the name of your organization by placing it in the

Student Welfare Committee’s mail box located in
the Student Senate Office,

Cali Board

The Moslem Student Organization presents Philosophy of Islam
by Dr. K. Diab, Saturday, October 23, 1965 in Norton Union,
room 233, 6:30 p.m. (All are invited.)
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club today at 4:30
p.m. in room 266, Norton Hall.
All new members will be most
welcome.

Saturday:
Varsity Football: UB

vs Richmond U., 1:30 p.m., Rotary
Field.
Film: “All These Women”
continuous showing from 3-11,
Conference Theatre,
Racital: Heinz Rehfuss, Capen
Hall, 8:30 p.m.

Sunday:
Master Class for Singers: Heinz
Rehfuss, Capen Hall, 2 p.m.
Film: South on the Wind,”
Travel, 2:15 p.m., Buffalo Museum of Science.

Monday:

Freshman Forum for Women:
2 p.m., Conference Theatre.
Concert: Piano and Chamber
Music Series, Baird Hall, 8:30

p.m.

Tuesday:

Freshman Forum for Women:
11 a.m., Conference Theatre.

Wednesday:
Concert: Budapest String Quartet, Piano and Chamber Music

ton.
Office hours are Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday: 11 to 4,
and Tuesday and Thursday: 8 to

10 p.m.

A1
PAT
1965-1966

‘

Series, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.

Thursday;

The Schustmeister Ski Club
will be accepting new members
all next week in room 320 Nor-

D

V.B.

Weekly

•

documented and the editors provide a useful bibliography. New
Perspective* on Poverty is a book
well worth reading, both for its
insights and its proposals. While
this reviewer cannot agree with
all of the specific solutions offered, the book provides a useful and meaningful basis for a
dialogue, and stimulates serious
thought about the problems of
the poor in America.

Freshman Forum for Women:
11 a.m., Conference Theatre.
Lecture: Fenton Series, “Science, Choice,
and
Human
Values," Alvin M. Weinberg,
8:30 p.m.
Film: Diabolique, 11 p.m., Conference Theatre.

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THIRTEEN

presented by the

UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
“ON CAMPUS”

�Powell
(Cont’d

.

from P.

.

.

7)

is no longer a civil war of north

against south but of both, against
the foreign invader, the United
States. To retain its South Vietnamese military base the United
States is resorting to indiscriminate devastation of the people
and countryside. And the prob-

able result is fear
and hatred.
If I were a Vietnamese and my
two-year-old son was permanently disfigured by napalm, I would
be tempted to hate Americans.
(Charles Mohr. NYT, August 16)
describes a woman “who has both
arms burned off by napalm and
—

her eyelids so badly burned that

she cannot close them. When it
is time for her to sleep her
family puts a blanket over her
head." The war is not winning

the hearts of the

Friday, October 15, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Vietnamese.

Reportedly other Asian peoples
are appalled by our action
but
that is only a probable inference
not a documented fact. Outrage
has no measure.
—

(2) Domestically, the war will
greatly strengthen the militaryindustrial complex and has already substantially set back the

time-table for disarmament. There
is now talk of a 10 to 12 billion
dollar increase in the ‘defense’
budget, and intimations that welfare and social service spending
may be curtailed. Can’t afford
both ‘‘guns and butter’’
as
those people with plenty of but—

tersay.

(3) Morally, if the war becomes
a prolonged Korea
a real probability
there will be a further
—

—

brutalization of the American
character. (McCarthyism, it should
be recalled, was largely a consequence of Korea). We will have
to learn to hate, which is better
to justify bur killing! The pious
have been alarmed by apathetic
subway riders who fail to intervene when a fellow traveler is
beaten by thugs. And last year
38 people watched from apartment house windows as a Miss
Genovese was beaten to death.
Of course it was none of their
business; after all they did not
really know what was happening. Perhaps they did not care;
perhaps they vicariously enjoyed
it, like TV come to life. But
were those who failed to stop
the killing accomplices to the
murder?
Are we collectively
all
Americans
guilty of the same
kind of murder by default in
—

Freshman Class
Holds Meeting

The Freshman Class Council
met Monday, October 11, 1965, to
discuss forthcoming programs.

The announced date of Winter
Week will be December 5 through
December 11. An entire week of
activities are being planned. Gerald Dade and Stephanie Sacks arc
Co-chairmen for Winter Week.
Any freshmen desiring to work
on a committee, or head one, is
urged to speak to a council repApplications for
resentative.
chairmanships and/or committee
memberships will also be available in Norton Union and in the
respective dormitories.
The Council is doing its best to
promote school spirit with direct
reference to our Freshman Football Team. Many ideas for having
an inter-school dance, and renting
a bus and going with our team
to away games was discussed. It
was also suggested that we invite

representatives of our opponent’s
schools to UB for a pep rally or
a mixer or both.
The Baby Bull, the publication

SDS...
from P. 1)

Dr. Nancollas Appointed
New Chemistry Professor
A faculty member from the
University of Glascow, Scotland,
has been appointed a professor
of physical chemistry in the Department of Chemistry at the
State University at Buffalo.
Dr. George H. Nancollas, who
was associated with the University of Glascow since 1953, is a

former consultant for the United
Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority.

He received his bachelor’s and

(Cont’d

doctorate degrees from the University of Wales, England, and
a doctorate of science from the
University of Glascow. In 1963
he was appointed a visiting scientist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. He
has served as the representative

for the Western part of Scotland
to the London Chemical Society.
He has been the recipient of
various research grants and has
published more than 50 articles
in professional journals since
1961.

can soldiers in the name of peace.
Our means of promoting freedom
and peace are antithetical to the
ends. The crux of the moral issue lies here.’
,

SDS members feel that the demonstration will be effective in
jolting the consciousness of people who have not done a great
deal of thinking about what the
U.S. Government is doing in Vietnam. SDS hopes that by going to
the Consulate in Canada the organization can, in an indirect
way, let the U.S. Government
note the feeling of some of its
people. The American Consulate
General has been asked by SDS
to be present so that SDS can
present them to the government
in Washington.

You can date for less in Lee Leens.
(With the authority of the Leen-look,
you can convince her that going out... is out.)

which tells what the Freshman
Class Council is doing, will have
its first edition out by the end of
October. I’eggy Kicrnan is October’s editor, and she welcomes any
suggestions or ideas anyone may

have.
As previously stated, all meetings of the Council are open and
any interested freshman may attend.

CLASSIFIED
RADIOS and PHONOGRAPHS
STEREO) repaired. Student rates. Call 833-3458 after
5 p.m. for prompt service.

(MONO

&amp;

FOR SALE

BLUE MGA 1960—Wire wheels,
radio, snow tires, plus 5 tires.
Must sell. $750. Call TT 6-2425
evenings, Pat Larby Ecklund.
1959 TRIUMPH

TR-3
Wire
wheels, Perelli tires, Tonnau
cover, excellent condition. $525.
Call TT 6-2960.

FIAT 500
833-3458.

—

—

40 mpg gas. Call

\

SKIS, 6’3”
with bindings, $25.
Mel, 833-8354.
—

MOTORCYCLE—500cc, $175. Mel,
833-8354.

\

m

—

G-10 GOYA Guitar—10 years aged

our name, has decided it would
Better than new, with case
$150.00. Phone 835-4351.
rather have the Vietnamese dead
than red. But we have no moral
'60 FORD station wagon
allright to make that choice for
around excellent condition. $500
others. The individaul can alor best offer. Call TF 6-1642.
ways kill himself if he finds himself being converted to commuLOST
nism against his will. But he has
no right to kill others to keep BRIEFCASE lost on September
29 in Diefendorf Hall. Initials
from adopting a different poliA. S. were on brown leather brieftical philosophy.
case, just below lock. If found,
None of us have done enough please
notify Dr. Scoledes at 831to halt the savagery perpetrated
or 837 6562.
in our name in Vietnam, But 4203
those who have left any moral
SITUATION WANTED
sensibility must realize that, in
the words of Staughten Lynd, it JOB WITH established band by
experienced sax player. Contact
is not enough to denounce the
Terry Weaver at NT 4-4703. If
war
we must stop it.
unable to reach leave name and
“When if not now? Who if not
phone number.
—

!

—

Novice Debaters
The novice debate club for all

beginning debaters has begun to
meet regularly Tuesdays at 7 p.m.
in 357 Norton. The officers for
the fall semester are: Ted Be-

ringer.

President; Charles Small-

wood, vice president; Katherine
Gasdick, secretary and Carol Rees,
treasurer. They will be participating in debates or discussions
at Utica College, Michigan State
University. D’Youville College,
and University of Chicago. Anyone interested in joining is invited to attend the meetings or
to contact Mr. T. McPhail in 113
Crosby Hall,

THE DRUIDS play Rock ’n’ Roll
music better for any occasion.
Call David Hamilton, 634-3603.
ANNOUNCEMENT
FACULTY AND STUDENTS in
teresfed in the Museum of Mod
ern Art Student Group Member
ship Plan see Art History Bulle
tin Board outside 244 Crosby
Book discounts and other sub
stantial savings.

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�PAOK PIFTIIN

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 15, 1*65

U.S. Aggression in Viet Nam
Topic of SDS Panel Sunday

The following amendments to the Student Association Constitution have
been proposed:
1. Senate, By-Laws, LB.
Present text: “The Inter-Residence Hall Council shall have two representatives, one man and
one woman, one of whom
shall be the President of
the Inter-Residence Hall
Council.”
The amendment would
delete: “one of whom shall
be the President of the
I.R.C. Council.”
2. Senate, Constitution, 5.
Present text: “This Constitution may be amended
by either the Student Senate or the student body
with the approval of the
proper university authori-

but “we”, because we are
a democratic society. If we fail
to protest, we are even more guilty because we are condoning these

ment)

By LORETTA ANGELINE
A question and answer discussion of U.S. Aggression in Viet
Nam, sponsored by the Students
for a Democratic Society, was
held in Tower last Sunday evening. As an introduction, the purpose of SDS was explained as
concern with the moral issue of
war and peace. The panel discussion was to bring together people
who have contributed time and effort on research of the Viet-Nam
war.

The structure of the discussion
a question-answer volley, the
jist of which was as follows;

was

Question: What is the rationale
“Days of Protest’?
Answer; Congress has refused

behind

to debate issues concerned with

the Viet-Nam war. Protests have
constrained the escalation of the
war to a degree. Basically, we
are concerned with the moral issues of death.
Question; Isn’t there any other
way to protest? What about the
direct political approach?
Answer: Everyone is groping
for this, but the channels of communication are clogged. Write letters to Congress! Protestations
were started off by this quote
from the Spanish Revolution: “To
be silent is to lie.” The guilt of
15,000 confirmed dead does not
rest on “they” (the U.S. govern-

actions.
Question; If the U.S. pulls out
now, what will happen?
Answer; It

will be necessary to

negotiate with the National Lib-

eration Front, the North and
South Vietnamese governments,
and the Chinese. In the Geneva
Agreement of 1954, there was
overall agreement not to intervene. We cannot “win” except by
complete destruction.
Question: What is an example
of what you (SDS) termed “lies
and distortions” by the U.S. government?

Answer: The White Paper written by the U.S. government asserted aggression by North VietNam
on South Viet-Nam. There is no
proof of this! The U.S. government says we are there to protect the South Vietnamese. Yet
the Viet Cong are South Vietnamese controlled by Hanoi. We
are there to “protect” the South
Vietnamese, but they favor the
Viet Cong!
Qusstion; What is the
purpose in Viet Nam?

ties.”

The amendment would
delete: “with the approval
of the proper University
authorities.”
These amendments will
be voted upon at the next
meeting of the Student
Senate, October 26.

U.S.’s

Answer: They feel that it is
economically a good place to hold.
Dwight Eisenhower has said that
industrial investment makes sense
there.

WHICH WAY IS YOUR PERSONALITY WARPED?
Don't jump to any quick conclusions! Capitol Records has thoughtfully
provided you a foolproof method for answering this question and two equally
burning issues:
Is Our Society GoingTo Pot? and Are You Ready To Hear

ART BUCHWALD?

ART BUCI

SEX AND THE
COLLEGE BOY

Pictured here is the first and only record
made by nationally-syndicated columnist Art
Buchwald. You may or may not know of this
fellow. No matter. Buchwald is either:
a)

"The most comic American since Mark
Twain"

b) "Nothing more than a

'65 Homecoming Highlighted
By Competitions Pep Rally
,

By PATTI WARTLEY

The 1965 Homecoming Weekend, October 8-9, was highlighted
by numerous competitions and
Friday’s Pep Rally. Despite the
inclement weather, Clark Gym
was packed for this event.
/

The stars of the missive rally
were the new Homecoining Queen
and the Ugly Man oh Campus. /
This year’s Q u e e nl Camille
Severyn, is a senior majoring in
Spanish; the runners-up in this
contest Jean McEnvoy and Carol
Stewart. Tau Kappa Epsilon’s Jay
Katz was voted Ugly Man on
Campus in a competition sponsored by Alpha Phi Delta service
fraternity. The money raised from
penny votes was donated xtp the,
Working Boys’ Home.

FALSE

1) The Russians scramble every third word of Mr. Buchwald's column
to confuse the C.I.A.
2) The Louvre can be run in under six minutes.
3) Arthritis is unavailable in Palm Beach, Florida.
4) The best reason tor contributing to charity is getting your picture
5) There is a drastic shortage of Communists in the U.S.
6) Every American city should have a resident Communist.
7) J. Edgar Hoover is a fictional character appearing in the Reader's
Digest.
8) The majority of college men believe in chastity.
9) College girls don't respect boys who "give in.”
10) A Harvard boy wouldn't think of “going all the way” with a girl;
besides, he wouldn't even know what it meant.

o liaunoX baiS

byARTBUCHWALD

.

the relation of faculty to students (the academic community).
The role of the administration is
to facilitate matters between faculty and students. Therefore, because policy decisions affect the
quality of the education they
should be made by faculty and
students.

resentative of all three groups.”
Dr. Regan then cited definite
areas in which each group should
have sole jurisdiction and definite areas in which cooperation
between groups is necessary. He
stressed the necessity of this cooperation for success.

At this time the panelists were

'Professor Sealy, representing
the faculty, noted three areas of
division 1 on campus and stated
his opinion as to who should
form policy in these areas.
1)

Advanced study, teaching
and research (e.g. course offerings, admissions, etc.)
Policy should be formed by

2)

Matters that clearly don’t
occur in area 1 (student
chibs, newspapers, etc.)
Policy should be formed by

given a chance to reply to the
different views expressed.

Both Dr. Slatin and Dr. Ebert
agreed that there is a necessity
for students to make sound suggestions and complaints.
Mr. Deveaux augmented this
statement by saying that everyone’s reactions, even a first semember are important and should
be given some consideration.
In reply to Mr. Taylor, Dr.
Regan pointed out that Mr. Taylor himself was somewhat of an
administrator in running the
Spectrum. Dr. Regan then proceeded to show the necessity of
administration to determine policy whether they be employed by
the university or whether they

the students.
3) Any area

which may effect
studies (e.g. housing, eating
facilities, etc.)
Policy should be formed by
faculty and administration.

be students in some type of administrative position.

“The role of the university administrator is to make sure that
the voices of the new students
and young faculty members are
heard—in other words to create
a climate of interaction, and to
express these opinions when necessary (e.g. to a higher governing body such as the Board of
Regents ,” stated Dr. Regan.

Jeremy Taylor, last to make his
opening remarks, stated that he
agreed with much of the above,
but he believed that policy should
be made by faculty and students

bjods

land! Xjbab joj aiuiod

NOHV13ddd3i.NI

s iiatmoX

ba(Q

ONIdOOS

for those who qualify only

SEX AND THE COLLEGE BOY

.

(Cont’d from P. 1)

He concluded by stating that
he firmly believed that there
should also be some way of bringing the taxpayer's say into the
formation of university policy.

Xuy
*»»«3|pu! uBBMiaq U|
|u|tSB »»•» »m
■Xbmb iqSu pjvMipng py j»q japaq p.noX i(3|* o» 'ipi* BJ.noX *»l«3|pu! oot 1° »J03« y
piiMMPng py uo
ajoos y
Bull) jnoX 0)seM i.uoq suoijsanb pidnis Xq paiooj aq i.ueo noX sajeoiput o 1°
■asiaj XjaAa jo*

faculty-student reception proceed-

Students may have some say
in areas 1 and 3 by making suggestions and complaints to faculty and administration.

taken.

•&gt;(»»

.

$2.85
THE UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

Professor Sealy warned against
Ur. Taylor’s idea of the forum
because, in his opinion, a few
interested people will wind up
doing all the work—i.e. serving
on committees.

in open forum. Then this formulated policy would then be carried out by administrators.
Mr. Taylor stated that Administration has very little part in

In his reply, Mr. Taylor again
reaffirmed his statement that administration should not be in a
position to effect academic policy.

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
For Meat Ball Sandwiches
Uw UM. IM

a

HmtUm Or.

Ll

following

ed the dinner. The Queen and
Ugly Han led off the first dance
to the music of the Ralph Westfield Band. Camille Severyn was
presented with a plaque from the
Student Association.
Part of the success of Homecoming Weekend was due to the
publicity
it received, largely
through the Publicity Contest.
The winner, Chi Omega sororiety,
and the runner-up, Alpha Gamma Delta, both received trophies
from the Alumni Association.
Honorable mention went to the
fifth floor of Clement.

This year, a new tradition was
initiated in the form of Homecoming competition, most of the
contests tying in with the Indian
theme. These activities were intended to get more student participation into the weekend. The
winner of the Indian-making contest, sponsored by the dorms,
was Cooke Hall. Alpha Phi Delta’s
human totem pole was judged as
the tallest. The most authentic

DEBATE

—

the memorable game on Rotary
Field—there was a gala dinnerdance at the Cordon Bleu. A

spirit.

writer of

TRUE

Following the Rally students
congregated in the Rathskeller
for a mixer. The turnout was
overwhelming; couples who found
room to dance did so to music
provided by the Nelson Pleasant’s
Band. An added attraction was
the singing debut of UB’s newest
folk-singing group, the “Voyagers.”
Saturday evening

The Pep Rally was also highlighted by the presentation of
original Ugly Man skits by various
fraternities. Coach Offenheimer
and Capt. Holly spoke to assembled fans, helping to arouse team

unadulterated rot”

Now with that in mind, you can see why we're afraid this album could fall into the wrong
hands. To prevent that possibility, we've designed the little quiz you are about to take,
DO NOT DIVULGE YOUR SCORE!

Indian costume was sported by
Melodye Darnell. The fifth floor
of Clement took the Apache Relay, while the brothers of Beta
Sigma Rho ate more watermelon
than the other groups entered,
Homecoming Committee
The
called the competition “a great
success” and expressed hope that
the tradition will be continued
] for future weekends,

f

At 4:15 p.m. the replies finished and, after a short intermission, the audience was given a
chance to ask questions.

�PAGE SIXTEEN

to

the Editor

Student Questions Effeciency
of Scholarship Office
TO THE EDITOR:

alone—in my personal acquaintance I am just one of many students who is experiencing financial anxiety which the loans
were, I presume, created to relieve. This may sound abstract,
but when one is forced to consider whether one will be eating
the next day, or where one will
be living when the rent comes
due, one feels the reality of the
situation. Perhaps some of the
students who are awaiting these
funds have alternatives, but
many do not. The borrowing of
money from a friend is all right
detailed statement. The student if one knows when one will be
must then return a form stating able to return it, but to put somehis acceptance or rejection of the one else in a poor position also
offer if it has been extended to is not agreeable to the lender
him. If the student accepts a nor the borrower. If one does not
like to collect creditors rather
National Defense Loan, he has
than friends, the situation restill to submit an oath of almains. Perhaps the student is
Ilegiance to the United States
before he can receive the money. eating and has paid the rent but
cannot afford to take advantage
The process of qualifying for the
of even the free concerts on camloan is therefore a tedious one.
pus, because he does not have
When I finally completed the the bus fare. The possibilities
•hove mentioned procedure, I mentioned are not extreme cases
was told the money would be nor a few among the many; they
available in September. It is now are facts in the lives of the students who obviously need the aid
mid-October, and the money has
failed to appear. I am not waiting or could not have qualified for it.
I fee) that I must express my
disappointment with the university as it regards financial aid to
the students. By the first of
March each year, a student seeking aid in the form of either a
loan or a scholarship must have
submitted an application to the
Financial Aid Office in Hayes
Hall. During the latter part of
August the student is informed
whether or not he has qualified
for aid, the qualifications being
scholastic standing and financial
need established by a rather long,

The Townees Don’t Move
Fast Enough
TO THE EDITOR:

1 was deeply distressed to hear
that the “in crowd,” or as you
so aptly put it, “animals,” no
longer have a place to rest their

weary bones. That is indeed unfortunate. But what shocked me
is that there is a 15 minute wait
for seats in the ‘townee” lounge.
Do you mean to say that not one
townee jumped up to offer you
of the “in crowd” a seat? What

insubordination! Something must
be done. A resting place must be
found for these lost souls who
carry on their shoulders the burdens of the world. I humbly beg
to offer a suggestion. How about
The Buffalo Zoo? If they cannot
accommodate you, Tm sure you
will find many who will agree
that “Forest Lawn” would make
a fine resting palce for you and
your "in crowd.”
A Townee

To Aves Disparge

Friendship Won’t
Come On Silver Platter

To the Aves Disparge of Norton Hall and Allenhurst:
Here I am, meeting you half
your golden offer of
friendship.
Your outstretched
hand may get frost bitten from
the coldness of your letter. A
discerning reader can usually
judge between the cheeky and
the tongue-in-cheek. My letter
had the effect which I desired—namely effect. Those of us who
aren’t so apathetic to such accusations are willing to stand up for
what we believe. Your letter,
though beautifully stated, contradicts itself. You claim that we
should not make a distinction
between resident and commuter
—then proceed to tear into commuter faults. Trwcel Enough garbage has been said about who is
doing what wrong. What about
who is doing what right? Wake
up and see this campus for what
it is. My so-called “wild imagination,” admittedly melodramatic,
served its purpose. You opened
your eyes. The semi-vegetables
around here jumped out of the
salad long enough to shout about
the grievous judgment I bad
passed over them.
way to

To those of you who still maintain that I am a little man—at
least get the sea right Being
aware of problem isn’t enough.

Sitting on your Mary Bickford’s
and cooing about this gripe and
that gripe won’t change anything.
My “beady eyes" and firm ex-

Commutor Cites Benefits of Home Life

(Cont d from p 5&gt;

TO THE EDITOR:

Spectrum Athletic

As a commuting student, I
would like to present to this institution a different view of commuter life than the one that was
given in the paper of October.
Although driving back and forth
to classes and campus functions
is bothersome, there are some
definite advantages to being a

Comments Are
In Error
TO THE EDITOR;
Perhaps I am wrong but it
always has been my belief that
an editor should be knowledgeable on a topic before he bothers
to write about it. I can not conceive of Mr. Taylor knowing anything but second or third hand
information on a topic he began
in this paper three weeks ago.
It regarded the location of the
student section at Rotary Field.
A' survey was made this past
week, asking the opinion of people that do know a good deal
about the situation—students that
frequent Rotary Field. It was
worded like this: I have attended
UB football games in the past
two years. I do have trouble seeing the play—I do not have
trouble seeking the play. The
participants were asked to fill
in their name under the heading
they felt was true.
Of the 209 students that signed,
187 said they have no trouble
seeing, while 22 said they did.
Personally, I tend to believe
the 89.5% who, themsolvas, seem
to have little difficulty watching
the game than you. Hr. Taylor,
whom I doubt have ever attended an athletic event on this
campus.
Twenty or thirty yard line
seats are not the best possible
but there are many on this campus that are happy to be thoro,
watching major college football.
As one participant in the survey mentioned, “Maybe we could
talk the state into building a revolving football field. Then all
seats wbuld be equal and there
would be no more complaints.”
I bet there would be.
E. R. (Wally) Blatter

‘Sick’ SDS’ers Are
Doing The
Threatening
TO THE EDITOR:
Isn’t it a curious coincidence
that members of Buffalo S.D.S.
are having their lives threatened
at a time when the U. S. is fighting a war for "freedom” in Viet
Nam? Isn’t it curious that it is
some of the same people who so
strongly support this “just war”

commuter.

These are:

1. I am always sure that my
homecooked meals are pure and
wholesome.
2. I can have clean linen when
I choose.

3. 1 can find some privacy and
quiet in my own room.

4. I have no rigidly enforced
curfew.

UB is the school I have chosen
for my higher education; I simply cannot alter the fact that I
happen to live in this vicinity.
Although I am not proud of my
hometown in every respect, Buffalo is not a dirty word; neither
is the majority of its citizens.
We commuters do welcome all
residents. We want to meet you
and learn more about you and
your hometown, be it “the City”
or Hicksville. And if you pardon
our flat A’s and forget the word
"townie,” you will find that Western New Yorkers are just the
same as the rest of you.
Hannah Horwitz

’

TO THE EDITOR:
May I ask for a few column
inches to decry the highly impolite practice of a few students
and instructors who enter classrooms and lecture halls before
the members of the previous
class have left the room? The
intruders have sometimes gone
so far as to press their noses
against the window of the door
until the instructor in the room
signals his students that class is
over, at which time the intruders
burst noisily into the room.

The shock of an invading band

Cartoon Strip Is
In Bad Taste
TO THE EDITOR:

The inclusion of the cartoon

has often caused me to forget all
that my instructor tried to cram
into the last few minutes before
“ten-to.” Brief after-class discussions at the teacher’s desk are
all but impossible with the next
class milling around. Above all,
however, is the logistics problem:
Two-way
traffic, especially
through a doorway, it lets officiant than traffic one way at a
time. The proof is’ manifest.
The polite procedure, I believe,
would be to wait until the room
is emptied; to wait quietly, along
the corridor walls, out of sight
from the class occupying the
room, in order not to distract
them.
(Please note that I do not mean
to endorse instructors’ keeping
their classes overtime. I think
this to be ineffectual, as' well as
in itself impolite.)

Sony Daze in the Spectrum is an
horrendous example of journal-

Courtesy Canon No. 1

ism, a source of sinister, unconstructive criticism and mockery,
and an insult to the students of
this campus.
If you are sincere in your efforts to have student representation in all facets of campus activity, you will remove this pointless creation and confine your
criticisms to your editorial column in an intelligent manner.

enough to gasp at your lack of
concern. Yes, I am capable of

Jobs in Europe
Switzerland
A
rope Is now possible at approximately one filth the usual cost by
taking a summer Job in Europe.
Jobs are available from the easy
going French Riviera to the high
paying German factories with no
-

Granted that these people are
“sick” and still represent a small
emotion.
minority and a still smaller
threat to anyone’s life, they are
Granted many of us are still
symptomatic of the growing war
confused as to what path to take.
temperament. One finds liberals
But those who desire friends
(who support Johnson) growing
should not have to burn offerdefensive (where do they go
ings to acquire them. No, my
critical writers, friendship is from here?) and rightists openly
offered to no one of us on a silver expressing their hopes for Viet
platter. But once it is attained, Namese genocide (excuse me, acit should be set on one. This cording to like only 80% of the
isn’t a decree for anyone to grasp Viet Namese people support the
the nearest sweaty palm and kiss National Liberation Front). The
the ground. But it wouldn't hurt U. S. textile industry (to name
one of the less despicable Amerto grasp the idea of what we
ican oligopolies) is openly jubiwant out of friendships, and emlant at the new “military orders
brace these goals.
There is a non-existent phrase providing major spur.” New York
Times, August 15, 1965.
“just a student." All of us have
Adding to all this there i s
thoughts worth sharing and
a persistant, unending whisper
ideas to air. Being nasty and cutting others down most certainly which blows in the wind all
across the land: War is Peace,
won’t achieve anything. The
War is Peace, War is Peace.
blinders have now been comThe question might be asked;
pletely removed. Masses of people flocking together in a happy Where do we go from here? A
throng are screaming for friends study of Nazi Germany, replete
its official apologists (e.g.
—someone to talk and laugh with. with
Heidegger) and "social humaniCan you or I be so selfish as to
refuse anyone this? Enough of tarian” legislation (compare, for
this fiasco. Sit in a narrow world example; the Great Society),
of narrow minds bemoaning what might provide a fruitful basis for
prediction. And nausea.
a sad fate is yours, or get the
Robert McCubbin
hell up and do something. My
cynicism, regrettably has not been
abetted. However, I now remain
DING'S
Most sincerely yours,
CHALET HOYALE

Morleen Spielman,

Recording Secretary,
Freshman Class Council
(alias “Cynical Freshman”)

I would like to contradict
“Freshman.” I feel that most
resident
students are truly
friendly; in all cases they have
been friendly to me.

Leifs Curb The *Invading
Bands of Students

—

For Pizza

Bob Ryder,
Vice-President

Newman Club

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prospectus and application forms
write to Dept. Z. International
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and air mail postage.

-

*

oCetterA

Friday, October 15, IMS

SPECTRUM

M

»

St

*

836-6484

-

�S P I

Friday, October IS, INS

Below is the final exam schedule for January, 1966.
The Student Welfare Committee in cooperation with Dr.
Arthur L. Kaiser, director of Records and Admissions, is
attempting to establish a university rule whereby no student is permitted to take more than two exams on any
one day. (All students who are scheduled for more than
two exams on any day, must report to the information
desk in the Office of Records and Admissions, room 201
Hayes Hall, during the week of October 25-29.

EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
January 5-14, 1966
Wednesday,

Jan. S

Jan.

Monday,

Jan. 10

Tua.day,

Jan. 11

Wodnasday,

Thursday,

v

1) Sociology
2)
t

•

Jan.

1)
2)

12At

Science 151
111

1) Economics 181
2) Economic. 182R

1) Chomi.try 101
2) Busina*. 5201

Q

Z

English

101

1) MaHiamatic. 117
2) MaHiamatic. 141
3) MaHiamatic. 241

101

Psychology 101

12

History
1) Political
a) Hurting

H

1) Drama 8. Spaach

Jan. 7

Saturday,

1) Modern language 103
*
a)
3) Butina** 0201
1)
a)

Thursday, Jan. 4

Friday,

4:00-7:00

12:00-3:00

DATE

1)
2)

N

Football Coach at
UB will be a guest this
evening on Sports Talk
with Wally Blatter.
The Baby Bulls tackle
Navy today at Annapolis.
Last year Navy spoiled a
perfect record for the UB
first year men, and this
year they are strong again.
Coach Wolf will talk on
his squad’s chances for an
upset on WBFO (88.7mc
FM toWestern New York)
and WBFO (AM 780 to
all UB dorms) at 5:30
p.m. Listen daily t o
WBFO for the first news
in college sports.

All students interested
in working on a New Campus Committee to work on
plans for the new campus
are asked to leave their
names and phone numbers

T

101

in the Secretary’s mailbox
in the Student Senate Of-

Jan. 13

Friday, Jan. 14

Jim Wolfe, the Fresh-

man

Modarn

Languagas 101

Philosophy

203

fice, room 205.

—
—

GAMMA DELTA
Gamma Delta, the international
association of Lutheran students,
will be attending as a group the
UB football game this Saturday.
October 16, at Rotary Field. We
will meet at the east entrance
to Norton Union at 1 p.m. Afterwards, we will have supper together at a nearby pizzeria.
The next Gamma Delta meeting
will be Wednesday, October 20,
at 6:30 in Room 344 of Norton
Union. Commuters will be meeting at 5:30 in the Rathskeller for
dinner. Any dorm students who
are able to are also asked to join
in Christian fellowship over the
evening dinner. The committees
on the Niagara Lutheran Home
and the winter retreat are asked
to have their reports ready for
this meeting.
The cost of the picnic which
was held at Letchworth State
Park on September 25 has been
set at thirty cents per person.
All those who have not yet paid
are asked to do so at the next
meeting.

at the 'Hilltop Stables. Cars will
leave Newman Hall at 1:30 p.m.
The charge will be |1.50 per
hour.
Shameem Rarvi will speak on
the Islam religion at the next
meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Norton Conference Theater. Everyone
is invited to attend.
On October 29, 30, and 31, the
Newman Educational Weekend
will be held in Rochester. On
Friday, October 20. registration
will begin at 6 p.m. followed by
a mixer. Saturday morning and
afternoon will be devoted to
speakers and discussion groups.
Saturday evening, a banquet and
ball will be held. A communion
breakfast will close the weekend
on Sunday morning. Further information about this weekend
may be obtained at Newman Hall
or at the weekly meetings.
October devotions to the
Blessed Virgin are held after 11
a.m. Mass each morning. Sunday
Suppers are served every week
at 5:30 p.m.

HILLEL. NEWS
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m., at
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on, "Rejoicing
Over the Torah.” Ah Oneg Shabbat will follow.
The annual Hillel Hay Ride
has been scheduled for October
23. Buses will leave from in front
of Norton. Tickets are now available at the Hillel House for members of Hillel. They will be distributed on a first come first
served basis.
Hillel classes are meeting at
their regular time this week. Elementary Hebrew, Sunday, at 2
p.m.; Basic Judaism, Sunday at
3 p.m.; Talmud, Thursday at 4
p.m.; Advanced Hebrew will meet
on Tuesday, October 26, at 4 p.m.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
The regular weekly meeting of
the campus Christian Science
Organization will he held next
ThursdaV at 7:15 p.m. in room
264.

NEWMAN

The

Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a horseback riding
party this Sunday, October 17,

RONCO

IVFC

The Reverend Peter Pascoe of
Kenmore United Presbyterian
Church will speak on ‘"Hie necessity and efficacy of the substitutionary death of Jesus Christ
for the redemption of the world,”
October 20 and 27 at 3 p.m. in
room 264 Norton. These are the
fifth and sixth lectures in the series on the Principles of Faith
of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship. The Principles of Faith
cards have arrived.
invites any interested
to attend the weekly
Bible study and prayer meetings. If- you are interested in
learning more about the Bible,
both Old and New Testaments,
or are just interested in finding
out more about IVCF, you are
welcome.
IVCF

persons

A Bible study of Old Testament
characters is held on Wednesday
at 2 p.m. in Norton 217; the
regular weekly Bible studies of
the New Testament are held
Monday at 3 p.m. and Thursday
at 10 a.m. in Norton 217. The
prayer meetings are held 1:30
p.m. Tuesday and 9:30 a.m. and
1 p.m. Wednesday also in Nor-

SALES

3241 Bailey Avenue
EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AND COLLEGE APT.
(Appliences, Furniture, Etc.)

TF 5-6010

FARAH MANUFACTURING CO

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�Friday, October 15, 1*45

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

RICHMOND PREVIEW
Bulls To Face Winless Richmond
Tomorrow at Rotary Field
For a

couple of fellows who

were strictly defensive perform-

last season halfback Larry
Zunich and end Ed Kullaf are
doling fine for Coach Ed Merrick’s University of Richmond
eleven which faces the University of Buffalo in Buffalo, N. Y.,
Saturday afternoon at 1:30 p.m.
Zunich, 200-pound junior from
Portage, Pa„ plays both offense
and defense this season. In a losing game against East Carolina
last week Larry caught a pass
from Quarterback Larry Shotwell
good for 38 yards and a touchdown. He also intercepted a pass
and ran it back 11 yards. Zunich
is averaging 3.5 yards a carry
with 49 yards in 14 attempts, his
ers

longest being a 20-yard run
against Virginia Tech. He has
caught four passes for 60 yards
and is averaging 20.6 yards on five
kickoff returns.

Kullaf. 6-1, 200-pound senior
from Garfield, N. J„ had to turn
from defense to offense by necessity. The Spiders lost all of their
offensive ends, and Ed quickly
accepted the responsibilities of a
pass catching end. He has gath-

ered in eight passes for 136 yards
and two touchdowns. One was a
30-yard toss from Quarterback •
Jan Linn against Virginia Tech.
Kullaf caught five passes last
week including a 28-yard TD
pitch from Linn.
Merrick thinks his inexperienced quarterbacks, Jan Linn and
Larry Shotwell, continue to show
improvement. Each threw a TD
pass last week, Shotwell hitting
on four of eight for 78 yards and
Linn on eight of 18 for 100 yards.
Two of Linn’s three intercepted
passes were of the deflected variety. Sophomore Mike Bragg also
did his best punting job last
week, averaging 40 yards on seven
kicks. Except for the interceptions, an early fumble and a bad
pass from center, the game would
have been more evenly contested
than the 34-13 East Carolina victory would indicate.
Fullback Ron Gordon and defensive Tackle Bob Andrews suffered injuries in the game with
the Pirates and are listed as
doubtful for the contest with the
Bulls as well as Defensive End
Bob Prince, hurt in the Southern
Miss. tilt.

Viewpoint
“FLOYD PATTERSON
AND DOXING”
By MIKE GINSBERG

This column is appearing in the SPECTRUM for the first time this
week. Its purpose is to express the opinions of the Various Members
of the Sports Staff. We welcome your comments.

Buffalo holds an 18-6 decision

over Massachusetts, tied Tampa,

13-13, and lost to Boston College,
18-6, and to Boston University last
week, 14-7. The Richmond Scout
was impressed with the running
and passing of Buffalo quarterback Rick Wells and the size of
the Bulls’ team. He noted that
Buffalo gained over 300 yards,
much more than Boston University, but just could not score on
several drives deep in BU territory.
Records to date
BUFFALO (1-2-1)
6
Boston College
Tampa
13
Massachusetts
18
Boston U.
7
—

RICHMOND (04-0)
0
7

7
13

West Virginia
Virginia Tech
So. Mississippi
East Carolina

18
13
6
14
56
25
28

34

FROSH TIE FACE
HA VY THIS WEEK
By MIKE DOLAN

The Colgate freshmen, boasting their finest frosh squad in
history, rallied with a final period score and a tie with UB last
Friday at Hamilton.
Colgate took the opening kickoff and proceeded to march for
a 69 yard drive and paydirt. Art
Koupe, a big, speedy halfback,
swept around the right end for
the final five yards and the score.
The place kick by Ted Beekman
Colgate 7-UB 0.
made it
Again sparkling play by the
Baby Bull quarterback, Mike
Murtha, spearheaded the offense.
—

Fearless Feign

As for the fight itself, Patterson remains unsure of
Although he maintains otherwise, he is building himself up
and giving the fight great importance, as he did the first
Liston fight. My hope is that the results aren’t the same.
The hope for boxing is that we see a good fight in Las
Vegas, regardless of the victor. As for Floyd Patterson,
he has been a credit to boxing and to himself in the past.
I hope he doesn’t let boxing or himself down in the future.

—

the game in the UB Faculty Club.
Refreshments will be served; music by Eli Konikoff and his Dixieland Jazz Band. Sportswritars and
sportscasters invited.
Probable Starting Line-Ups
(Offense)
RICHMOND
Ed Kullaf, Sr., 192
Bemie Ortwein, Sr., 231
Ray Tate, Sr., 235
Terry Smith, Sr., 219
Larry Pew, Jr., 205
Dick Hodsdon, Sr., 225
Dennis Phelps, Jr., 180
Jan Linn, Jr., 192
Ronnie Grubbs, Jr., 180
Larry Zunich, Jr., 200
Ron Gordon, Sr., 216
BUFFALO
Dick Ashley, So., 200
Bill Abbey, Jr., 215
Ted Gibbons, So., 230
Bruce MacKellar, Jr., 225
Mike Rissell, So., 215
Mike Wuest, Sr., 230
Jim Dunn, Jr., 200
Rick Wells, So., 190
Jim Webber, Sr., 170
Tom Hurd, So., 192
Lee Jones, So., 200

LE
LT

LG
C

RG

RT
RE

QB

LHB
RHB
FB
LE

RG

RT
RE

QB

LHB
RHB

Intramurals
By GEORGE JACKREL

-

On reading the October 11 issue of Sports Illustrated,
Late in the first period Murtha
I came upon an article by Floyd Patterson entitled “Cason a 45 yard rollout. The
sius Clay Must Be Beaten.” The article left me deeply scored
extra point failed and
disappointed in Patterson. I have always held a great try for thetook
a 7-6 halftime adthe
hosts
more
respect
importfighter,
of
for
as
a
and
him
amount
vantage.
the
Liston
ant, as a person. As a champion and following
Now it was time for UB’s frosh
fights, Floyd Patterson was a credit to boxing. But the defense to shine. An intercepFloyd Patterson who wrote this article is a confused, tion by Chuck Drankowski midunsure person, grasping for the self confidence he lost in way through the third period gave
the ring against Sonny Liston.
the Baby Bulls the ball on Colregard
is
in
basis
of
Patterson’s
attack
on
Clay
The
to his membership in the Black Muslims. I most emphatically agree with Floyd’s regard for the Black Muslims.
Syracuse 27, Penn State 22—
I also agree that Clay’s membership in the organization
is bad for boxing. But I do not agree that the fate of The Lambert Trophy is up for
boxing rests on the removal of Clay as heavyweight grabs in this one, but both the
champion. It is not Clay’s membership in the Muslims Orangemen (2-2) and Nittany
playing as
that is killing boxing; it is the poor quality of fighting. Lions (1-2) have beenFloyd
didn’t
care.
Little
they
if
With another fighter involved in the Lewiston fiasco, the
should give the victory to Syrarseults would have been the same. And with the anticicuse over State’s talented, but
pation of a good fight, no appreciable amount of fans will still green sophomores.
Patterson
is
stay away simply because of Clay.
confusing
Clay’s reputation as a fighter with his personal beliefs.
U.S.C. 27, Stanford 12—This
Futhermore, if an ardent boxing fan dislikes Clay, he will looks like a week for big games.
come out to see him beat. Many fans will be coming to You can almost smell the roses
here. The Indians (3-0-1) are back
Las Vegas to see Patterson beat either Clay the loudto their old winning ways after
mouth or Clay the Black Muslim. Patterson is either una long stretch of lean seasons,
aware or afraid of this.
but they won’t be able to conMore disappointing to me is Patterson’s use of cheap, tain the Trojan's (3-0-1) explosive
ugly rumors to make his point. He is lowering himself runner, Mike Garrett. In fact,
by even mentioning such items as threats on Liston if he nobody will catch him this year
didn’t take it easy on Clay, possible dangers to Clay were as he earns the Rose Bowl trip
he to disassociate with the organization or lose the fight, for Southern Cal that they were
cheated out of the last time.
and Patterson’s fears for his own safety. He was overhis
bounds
with
reaching
by discussing these items
no
Michigan Stata 26, Ohio State
facts to back it up.
24—Woody Hayes has given up

himself, despite an outward show of confidence.

Last year's result
Buffalo 28, Richmond 13
Series to date—
Buffalo leads, 1-0.
Coaches—
Dick Offenhamer, Buffalo
(54-36-4 in 11th season)
Ed Merrick, Richmond
(53-80-7 in 15th season)
Special Events—4th Annual Band
Day. More than 900 bandsmen,
representing 13 crack high school
bands from throughout Western
New York, will participate in the
half-time show with the 150-piece
University of Buffalo Marching
Band under the direction of
Frank J. Cipolla.
The following bands will be
present: Eastridge High School
from Rochester, North Collins
Central School, Niagara Falls
High School, Southwestern Central School from Jamestown, Bemus Point High School, Akron
Central School. Sherman Central
School, Sweet Home High School,
Savona Central School, Lancaster
Senior High School, West Seneca
Central School, LeRoy Central
School.
The UB Alumni Association will
hold a “Tunk” immediately after

on passing again this year and
gone back to bis fullback-up-themiddle offense. It paid off handsomely last week against Illi-

nois and should go well tomorrow. But this season Woody
hasn't got the defense to complement FB Barrington. The
Spartans (40), surprise team of
the Big Ten, have the guns to

gate’s 20 yard line. It did not
take long for Murtha to capitalize upon the miscue. Five plays
later he fired a strike to end
John Doherty for a .touchdown.
UB went for two points and suc-

ceeded as halfback Dennis Mason
rushed for the conversion. The
score stood 14-7, with the Bulls
leading.

However, a 10-yard pass in
the last period from Ron Burton
to end Bill Newman was good
for the score. It now was time
for Beckman’s second placement
and the score was all knotted up,
14-14, which was also the final
score. It was Colgate’s opener
while UB has a loss and a tie to
their credit.
The UB defense played another
fine game and the offense
showed much improvement. UB
actually outplayed Colgate even
though they were considerably
outweighed on the line, and Colgate exhibited line speed and

power in their backfield.

.

.

shape.

Monday, 3 p.m. League

No. 1’s
Skanks
House 3

4

p.m. League

Chargers
Hippies
House

7

3-0
2-1
2-1
3-0
2-1
2-1

Tuesday

AEPi
Beta Sig

1-0
2-0
1-0

Sig Ep
Wednesday, 3 p.m. League

Warriors
Zygotes

4

2-0
2-0

p.m. League

Moon Platoon
Dolans

2-0

2-0

Thursday

SAM
Pi Lara
Alpha Sig

1-0
1-0

(Cont’d from P. 19)

.

pull it out

Due to extremely poor weather
conditions, the Intramural play
in both tennis and football has
been hampered all week. Many
tennis matches had to be cancalled and the Thursday Fraternity Football league games had to
be cancelled. Still we have a lot
of action to report to you, as the
league standings start to take

over the Buckeyes

in what should be a close
game all the way. But they better not get caught looking ahead
to Purdue next week or they
may never get to Pasadena.

((2-1)

Princeton 9, Colgate 6—Here’s
the football classic; powerful offense vs. impregnable defense.
The Rad Raidart (3-0-1) have allowed but one meager field goal
so far and should be able to
tame the Tigar's (3-0) forward
wall. But you can’t win unless
you score points. Final score:
Gogolak 0, Colgate 6.
L.S.U. 20, Kentucky 16
The
Tigart (3-1) have the strongest
team on paper in the SEC with
practically everyone back from
last year’s 8-2-1 squad that upset
Syracuse in the Sugar Bowl. They
got off to a shaky start but are
now just starting to jell. The
Wildcats (3-1) are tough and will
put up a good fight but Pat
Screen should prove a little too
much for them to handle.
Army 24, Rutgars 0
The
Cadats (2-2) get a welcome
breather here after the Fighting
Irish. Rutgers (1-2) is way over
its head here as it faces one of
the stingiest defenses in (he nation.
—

—

Navy 27, Pittsburgh 17—Cartwright may be the Middies' (2-11) answer to a replacement for
Jolly Roger. He and his fellow
sophs are making this a success-

ful debut for coach Elias. The
Panthers (1-3) are a lot better
than their record indicates. They
have a volatile offense built
around Lucas and Crabtree, but
a porous defense and killer
schedule will be their downfall
this year.

Wyoming 34, Texas Western
26
For the past few weeks,
the eyes of the nation have been
glued on an unknown sophomore,
Billy Stevens at Texas Western.
All this boy has done is to pass
over 1300 yards so far this season in only 4 games. He is seri—

ously threatening every collegiate
passing record in the books. In
addition, he’s only a sophomore!
Saturday he faces his first big
test of the year against the
Cowboy* (40), tops in the WAC.
He’s expected to continue his
amazing aerial display, but he
alone won’t be enough. Wyoming
has its own passer by the name

of Tom Wilkinson and he should
throw often enough to keep the
Cowboys undefeated. This will
definitely be a high scoring game.

�Friday,

Harriers Split
Week's Meets

SPEAKING OUT
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

The Varsity Cross Country team
split in last week’s activities, on
Tuesday they traveled to Roch-

'The Choice'

ester and beat R.I.T. 21-36, with
Rogovich second, Jack
Kerns third, Mike Alspangh
Paul

fourth, Jack Mworka fifth, and
Dave Latham seventh.

October 12, 1965
Sports Editor
Student Spectrum

Last Saturday, the varsity was
beaten at home by Brockport 1840. The Bulls scores were Jack
Kerns fourth, Paul Rozovieh
sixth, Jack Mworka ninth, Pat
Muffoletto tenth, and Bob
Phenson eleventh.

CAMPUS

Mr. Drandoff:
I have been following your recent run-arounds with
our athletic department, and would like to share one of
mine with you.
The Engineering Student Council has an annual
Sports Program for the School of Engineering, open to
the entire school and this year with better than 60 students taking part. Trophies are awarded and other
expenditures are made by the Council in order to keep
the program running
This year we contacted the athletic department, first
via official means and then personal contact in order to
obtain one football for use during the fall and to insure a
field would be reserved for our games. We were willing
to insure, in a financial way, the return of the football.
The athletic department's intramural director refused
to cooperate. First, the balls are not for students use.
Well who's paying for them and who’s going to use them?
Then he couldn't tell us which fields would be open
and when. He is sure that there is one open but not sure
which one. Well, what is he getting paid for as Intramural
Director, if he can’t even tell us where we can play our
official games, who could tell us?
What is this athletic department anyway? They take
our money and refuse to do anything for us. It reminds
us of "taxation without representation.” That’s tyranny,
you know!
JOHN BOLTON
President E.S.C,
Dear

Our home course at Grover
Cleveland Park, was almost entirely under one to two feet of
water.

This week’s schedule has the
barriers at home Wednesday
against Niagara, and Saturday
at 4:30 p.m. against Cortland,
which has the finest runner in
the State, and the present course
record holder, Bob Lolley, the
defending State Champ.

BU INTERCEPTS

Secondly, the letter concerns a petition which presumably has been circulated in Norton (although neither
I nor any other member of the SPECTRUM staff ever saw
it before it was sent along with the letter).
The petition makes the statement, “I have attended
UB football games in the past two years. I do have
trouble seeing the play— I do not have trouble seeing the
play.” As far as we are concerned, the wording is not
only atrocious, but unfair. If the statement had read “I
would like to sit at or near mid-field—I would not like to
sit near mid-field,” perhaps the results would have been
different. (On the petition, 187 said they had no trouble
seeing while 22 said they had).
Thirdly, I may be wrong, but it is my opinion that
209 people do not constitute a very fair sample of the
UB community. This is addressed to whom ever was
responsible for the original petition: Run a second one
asking the question which was proposed above, let every
UB student have the opportunity to see and sign it, and
see what the results will be. Or, are you satisfied in
knowing that a whopping 187 people agree with you?
Better yet, you do not even have to do any work—we
will do all of it.
Below is a box with the choices mentioned above.
Now all the students will have the opportunity to make
the actual choice.
Please fill out and return to the SPECTRUM OFFICE
or NORTON CANDY COUNTER

UB games.

a

Signature
j

J

Student Number

'

I would like to sit at
or near Mid-Field for
UB Games.

.

.

UB 30 which Boston defensive
back Don Lewis plucked out of
mid-air and returned to the 2 as
the hearts of UB fans could be
heard plummeting to their stomachs.

A few moments ago a letter to the editor was delivered to the SPECTRUM concerning a question which
was brought up three weeks ago and further discussed
last week in this column—the problem of seating arrangements at Rotary Field. The letter writer seems to be
under the opinion that the Editor-in-Chief, Jeremy Taylor,
has written on the question of seating. First of all, if he
had taken time to read the SPECTRUM, which he finds
so easy to criticize, he would have discovered that Mr.
Taylor has not mentioned anything concerning student
seating at Rotary Field. That criticism appeared in this
column, so Mr. Blatter, please know who you are critizing
before you criticize.

Please Check One of the following:

.

(Cont’d from P. 20)
After Pavlow punted to the UB
21 with a minute to go, Ridolfi,
reputed to be a fine passer, began to fling desperation bombs,
the first two of which narrowly
missed an open Webber. On third
down Ridolfi lofted a pass to the

EDITOR'S NOTE—“ENOUGH SAID"

I would not like to sit
at or near Mid-Field for

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

Oetobar 15, 1965

j

|

With 34 seconds left in the

fray, Thornton weaved his way
around right end for the decisive
tally.

STATISTICS

First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passing
Passes

BULL SESSION

143
35
4-9

211
96
7-19

8-37

3-38
2

3

Punts

Fumbles lost
Yards penalized.

UB
20

...

Passes int. by

1
35

..

. .

.

0

70

Ends Ger-

ry LaFountain and Craig Helen-

brook and the ubiquitous E. G.
Poles received the highest defensive grades, while Jones led
. Attendance was
the offense
. Weba disappointing 7,314
ber made an auspicious ’65 debut after being hobbled with a
leg injury during the first three
games . . . Five former UB greats,
Dr. James Ailinger (’25’), Ed
Malanowicz (’32), Dan Dalfonso
(’38), Dr. Philip Weis (’41) and
Lou Coriere (’49) were inducted
into UB’s newly-established Hall
Bill
of Fame at halftime . .
Taylor, idled with a bum knee
Saturday, is expected to be ready
Lafor Richmond tomorrow
Fountain played yo-yo with mercury-heeled A1 Schweickert on a
second-period play when the BU
halfback bolted through the line
only to discover he was running
on a treadmill before being
strung in from behind by the UB
defensive standout . . . Wells accounted for 198 total yards . . .
The officiating didn’t exactly
please Coach Offenhamer. Particularly disturbing was the unnecessary roughness penalty after
a third quarter BU kickoff, which
cost the Bulls 37 yards, especially
in view of the triple-teaming job
the Terriers were doing on Poles
. .
The Terriers victory ended
a four-year losing streak to the
Bulls . . . Graduation took its
toll on Richmond in standout end
John Hilton and a batch of other
lettermen. The Spiders have yet
to taste victory after games with
West Virginia, VPI, Southern
Mississippi and East Carolina...
The Bulls prevailed over Ed
Merrick’s forces last year, 28-13.
.

.

.

.

By CHICK ARNOLD

Now that the season is about
a month old, things are beginning
to shape up as expected by the
experts in pre-season polls. In
the NFL, the Packers and the
Colts are winning in the west,
the Browns and Cards in the
east, Johnny Unitas, so far, has
proved himself the league’s top
quarterbacks—again. Player of the
gained 168
Year
Jim Brown
yards last week; Rookie of the
—

—

year—Charlie Taylor—is having
a great season for the Redskins,
and there are a couple of top
rookie fullbacks who certainly
deserve mentioning: Ken Willard

of the 49’ers, and Tucker Frederickson of the Giants.

In the AFL, things also are going along as expected. Buffalo
and San Diego are the class of
the league. Long-term injuries
have plagued the Bills, making
the season already beginning, to
look like a long one. The way the
Chargers are playing ball now,
they could go undefeated this
year. With a backfield of men

like Hadl, Alworth, Lincoln, and
I.owe, with rookie Gene Foster
as a stand-by, they are too tough.
Last week’s picks, finished 7-3.
(Naturally, the three that lost
were those of Abdellah). My overall record is 20-11-1, for a .645
percentage. Getting better!!
Here are this week’s picks

NFL: Baltimore 35, Washington
17—Johnny Unitas was fantastic

last week. He threw 3 touchdown passes in the first, half to
get the Colts off on the good
side, and he can do that every
week as he has proven. Washington initiated quarterback Dick
Shiner last week in losing to the
Cardinals on their own miscues.
Look for more of the same this
weekend.

Minnesota 32, Chicago 24
Both these teams won big last
week, and this week’s game
should be a wild one. The Vikings
have scored 123 points in four
games—and have given up 115.
The difference here could very
well be Minnesota quarterback
Fran Tarkinton.
—

Cleveland 24, Dallas 13—Jim
Brown gained 168 yards last
week, and Gary Collins caught a
touchdown pass—and that’s the
story of the Cleveland Browns.
Dallas fell before Philadelphia—and should fall again before the
world champion Browns and
Jim!
—

Green Bay 27, Detroit 20—The
Packers found a new weapon last
week in Don Chandler, not that
they really needed one. At the
same time, Detroit got walked

...

all over by Baltimore. The Packers should knock off the Liens,
but not before Milt Plum will
throw a scare into the boys from
Wisconsin.

San Francisco 17, Los Angelos
The 49’ers almost upset
Green Bay last week; the Rams
were beaten handily by Chicago.
But this tough West Coast rivalry
brings good ball games every
year—and this year should be no
exception. It will be a tight ball
game all the way—and the 49*ers
will just take it.

14

—

Philadelphia 24, New York 7—
Quarterback King Hill led his
teammates to a surprise victory
over Dallas last weekend while

the Giants victory earlier this
will

year was a fluke—a fact that
be proven this time out.

St. Louis 23, Pittsburgh 10
The Stoolors almost pulled one
out last time against Cleveland.
But the Cardinals have two of
the greatest ends in football in
Sonny Randle and Bobby Joe Conrad. Charlie Johnson knows how
to get the most out of his men.
The Cardinals shouldn’t have too
much trouble this week in disposing of the still-winless Stealers.
—

AFL; Buffalo 17, Kanaas City
14—Last week the Bills found
out they were in a tough position without their ends. During
the week, though, there was
enough time to make adjustments
—they will use Billy Joa
Wray
Carlton a lot more and Jack
Kemp will bounce right back to
lead Buffalo to a squeaker over
the Chiefs.
*

Oakland 28, Now York 20
The Jots had a week off last
week—and Oakland played a
good ball game. Joe Namath is
improving with every start. Perhaps in another month the Now
Yorkers will be ready to chalk
—

up a victory.

The
San Ditgo 42, Boston 7
Chargers are the best team in the
league at the moment. The Patriots are the worst team in the
league. Lance Alworth will run
—

wild. John Had) will have another great week—and the Chargors
will remain undefeated.

Houston 24, Denver 14—There
is dissention on the team in
Houston between
the George
Blanda followers and the Don
Trull followers. The team, however, is a tough one and Coach
Mac Speedie won’t let them suffer because of this. Cookie has
not been consistent this season—and before the Broncos will start
winning, there will have to be
some good ball players playing
some good ball.

FEARLESS FEIGIN

.

.

|

Boston
8

CHICK'S PICKS

By STEVE FEIGIN

It’s that time of the year for
the annual Southwest Conference title clash, better known as
the Texae-Arkansas game. These
two teams have either won or
tied for the SWC crown for the
past eight years and it looks like
the same story all over again
this fall. Baylor had an outside
crack at the title, but without
Southall they have no chance.
So the stage is set in Fayetteville tomorrow for this battle of
giants of the gridiron. Both are
undefeated and have won each
of their games impressively.
Texas is currently ranked as the
top college eleven in the nation,
while Arkansas is bolding down
the number 6 slot. However records end ratings mean little in
this intense rivalry. Just one
glance at the scores of their last
five meetings (24-23, 14-13, 13-12,
7-3 and 17-12) will show you
defending national champions,
why coaches get old before their
time. Last October, the Longhorns came into this game as

riding a 16 game winning streak
and ranked at the top again, only
to lose everything when a two
point conversion attempt fell

inches short. This year it’s the
Razorbacks who are the defending champs and have the winning streak to preserve. You can
bet that Darrell Royal and his
boys will be remembering that
game

tomorrow.

The game is on NBC-TV tomorrow at 4 p.m,, so tune in
after you watch the Bulls clobber Richmond. Keep one eye on
Texas' fine linebacker Tommy
Nobis. He could very possibly
become the first lineman ever to
win the coveted Heismann Trophy.

After a mediocre 5-3 record
last week, I am now 15-6-1, a .714
percentage.
Texas 17, Arkansas 12—The
Razorbacks (44)) have the home
crowd advantage but the Longhorns (4-0) want this one bad,
to atone for last year.
(Cont’d on P: 18)

�Friday, Octobar 15, 1955

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

—

¥

'

-'l~

s

ilPKgf SB10M

*

=-

(

-/

BOSTON U. TOPS BULLS, 14-7
2 Platoon System

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
Monday-morning quarterbacks
enjoyed a field day at Rotary
Field Saturday as Boston University spoiled Homecoming for
the Bulls with a last-minute TD
to tag the Bulls with a bitter
14-7 setback.
Second-guessers reasoned that
that result might have been
avoided if the Bulls had, on
either of two occasions, settled
for fourth-quarter field goals
from point-blank range.
The Bulls figured, however,
that with ample time remaining,
even if they failed to score they
could keep the Terriers bottled
deep in BU territory and eventually dent the scoreboard anyway.
Logic, however, was not on the
side of the Bulls on this gray

afternoon.
Offcnhamer exA s Coach
plained afterward. “Certainly I
thought about a field goal, but
we were sure we could score a
touchdown. Films showed after-

ward that the fourth-and-two play
was perfectly executed, but unfortunately Wells slipped as he
cut for the end zone.
In respect to Ron Ridolfi’s
desperation heave which was intercepted in the final minute to
set up BU’s winning score, the
Head Coach snapped, “Certainly
we could have fooled around a
minute and killed the clock for
a tie, but we play to win.”
Quarterback Rick Wells, the

rapidly-developing
sophomore,
was magnificent in a losing cause
to say the least. He ably engi-

neered the UB offense, which
showed a great deal more than
the score might indicate. Fullback Lee Jones acted as a human battering ram in grinding
out valuable yardage along with
tailbacks Jim Webber and Tom
Hurd.
Ends Dick Ashley and Jim
Dunn combined with Wells on
several key passes to turn the
UB aerial attack, an Achilles
Heel all season, into a potent
weapon for the first time. Only
once, on the first Terrier touchdown, did the feared UB defense
yield any sort of sustained yardage. Statistics clearly gave the
Bulls a one-sided advantage over
the visitors.
In truth the Bulls have seldom looked better in their allround play. Yet when the final
gun cracked, the scoreboard,
which thrives on indifference to
statistics, flashed the painful
BU 14,
truth in blazing red
UB 7.
—

By

The National Collegiate Athletic
Association re-adopted the twoplatoon policy at the start of the
1965 season and already there
have been yelps and cries of
anguish from football coaches
around the nation. Such household names as “Bear” Bryant of
Alabama and Dick Offenhamer
of Buffalo have publically contemplated resorting to a major

unit system before the year is
out. While my heart bleeds for
Bryant and his gold mine in
the South, Offenhamer has a
valid point when he questions
the strategy behind maintaining
twenty-two regulars throughout
the course of a bruising season.
Webber gets through for first down
—Photo by Ivan Makuch
The Bulls launched their only py Bostonians rolled.to the UB 8,

scoring drive in the final

sec-

onds of the first quarter. The
sustained 87-yard drive, in which
Wells, Webber and Jones took
turns at making life miserable
for the Terriers, was capped by
a 12-yard TD aerial from Wells
to Ashley at the 6:20 mark of
the second period. It was the second scoring reception in as many
games for the 2l5-lb. sophomore.
Joe Oscsodal proceeded to boot
the conversion to give the hosts
a 7-0 lead.
Later in the half the Bulls penetrated to the Terrier 28 after a
21-yard Wells-to-Ashley

comple-

tion, but the drive fizzled and Joe
the Toe’s 40-yard field goal attempt fell short of the uprights.
Six plays later the half ended
with the score unchanged as the
Bulls had completely dominated
play. Every part of the Bull machine had been impressive; the
sophomore-studded
offense
steam-rolled to
twelve
first
downs and one score, the defensive line was playing its typical
miserly game and the oft-maligned defensive secondary allowed only two short completions. Not once had the Terriers
driven beyond the UB 40.
Boston Unversity marched 70
yards to a score the first time
they gained possession of the ball
in the second half. With sophomore signal-caller Tom Thornton
directing the drive, which was
aided by two costly 15-yard penalties against the Bulls, the scrap-

where
halfback
Neil
Smith
bounced off the center of the UB
defensive wall and scampered
around left end for the score.
Jim Fischer’s wind-blown extra
point attempt, which appeared
wide to everybody except the officials, knotted the game at 7-7
halfway through the period.
After an unnecessary roughness penalty had nullified Wells’
kickoff return to the BU 47, the
Bulls again began to move from
their 16 before Wells fumbled
on the UB 38. UB, however,
stopped fullback Pete Hayes on
a crucial fourth-and-one situation at the Bull 29 and again
took over.
As the game moved into the
fourth quarter, the Bulls progressed to the Terrier 40, from
where a Brian Hansen punt
rolled dead on the 2. But Warren
Schmakel’s spirited crew moved
out of difficulty via Leo Pavlow’s
booming 50-yard punt and a 15yard penalty against the Bulls,
moving the pigskin upfield to
the UB 33.
Wells mixed his roll-out options
with Jones’ line charges to keep
the Terrier defenses bewildered.
A key first down pass to Ashley
and two to Dunn carried the Bulls
to the visitor 16 before the drive
ran out of gas.
UB received another golden opportunity a play later when Joe
Holly pounced on Thornton’s
legal procedure penalty Wells
connected with Dunn at the 12
and then sent Jones slashing to
the 7 for a first down.

by

lv«n Mtkuch

It is also unfair to make a
team that is unable to field two
separate units go into a game
against an opposing eleven whose
ranks are swelled both offensively and defensively. Under these

circumstances, games will not
be decided on ability, but by the
length of time it takes the loaded school to wear down the
key players of the opposition.
Also, the element of a team’s
pride is greater when even a
third-stringer can feel that his
performance is essential to his
team’s well-being. That was what
made the fabled Chinese Bandits of Louisiana State University a nation-wide phenomena a
few years ago. At the same time
it brought Paul Dietzal his first
national recognition as a head
coach.

Wells’ replacement, Ron Ridolfi, moved the Bulls to the 34,
but tossed a wild pitchout to
Hurd, which a whole kennel of
Terriers recovered on the 34.
(Cont’d on P. 18)

Rules could also be in effect
when there is a meeting between
members of the different groups.
A compromise could be agreed
upon so that the use of a certain number of specialists would

through

an

incipient

hole, but the slick sod caused him
to slip at the five. Three plays
later Pavlow again punted out of
trouble to the Terrier 46.

The stamp of progress plus
good old fashioned hoodwinkery
have highlighted the collegiate
season so far. The isolated camera, which can almost instantly
repeat a specific play through
the magic of video tape, has
begun to be used by coaches
during halftime to spot and correct weaknesses. Two weeks ago,
Texas Tech coach, • J. T. King,

credited the closed-circuit instant video tape replay with the
lion’s share of his team’s victory over Texas A it M. Trailing
10-0 at the half, Mr. King and
his assistants made major offensive and defensive realignments
after viewing the movies. The
psychological edge that goes with
this innovation is crushing. No
longer must teams need to listen
to pre-game spiritual excitations,
such as Knute Rockne’s immortal
“Win it for the Gipper” or Hayden Fry’s tearful harangue that
was largely responsible for Southern Methodist University’s 1414 tie with Purdue, previously a
conqueror over Notre Dame and
favorite for the Big Ten title,
only a week after Fry’s squad was
left for dead by a mediocre University of Illinois eleven, 42-0.

of

Wells, whose superlative performance was brought to an
abrupt halt, was forced to the
bench when the coaching staff
discovered the Ithaca signalcaller
couldn’t remember anything and
had been walking in a daze for
the two previous sets of downs.

sharply

—Photo

of lack

I proposed a combination of
the two systems; limited and unlimited substitution; based upon
the number of scholarships a
school gives, the budget a school
allots to football, plus the number of seats that an individual
school has in its stadium. In
this manner, the big-time schools
could play two-platoon football
against each other, and the rest
could abide by their own rules.
I have discounted endowments
and enrollments at a specific institution, since the number of
students at a school is not always correlated to its football
scholarships as is shown by Notre
Dame (total undergraduate enrollment 7,000) for example.

After three rushes had advanced UB to the 2 with six minutes to go, the Bulls elected to
gamble for six points. Wells
rolled to his right and then cut

Jana* Black* far Wall*

By the fourth game of the year,
injuries have robbed even the
most talented squads of some of
their hoped-for depth. Football
is a contact sport, and a certain
number of ailments must be
taken for granted. It is difficult
to perceive, however, how the
quality of the game will be improved if, as Coach Offenhamer
stated in the Courier Express:
“the situation becomes very tense
when you have only one player
(available) at each of eight positions.” The rhythm and co-ordination that make football a team
game are lost when a player
must learn a new position in

mid-season because
numbers.

automatically mean wholesale substitution and certain defeat for the underdog. Thus, ail
games would be decided on the
field, not in the wallet.

not

STEVE OBERSTEIN

Coaches no longer will be necessary. Sunrise Semester could
add a course in football, and assistants could be hired at reduced pay in order to assure

that the plug is not accidentally
pulled out. In fact, transistorized
televisions could even substitute
for the players if the landscaping were changed from grass to
a metallic surface. The most
likely result of all this would
be that the nation’s unemployment would probably again rise
over the three million mark as
many who are not fit for other
occupations would find screens
closed to them and other roads
blocked by gigantic aerials.
Chivalry isn’t dead yet, and
some coaches haven’t completely

lost their minds over the Industrial Revolution. Why, only this
past weekend, Tom Harp of Cornell attempted to come up with
a twelve-foot bullplayer by placing halfbacks on the shoulders
of his tackles, in a vain attempt
to block Princeton’s Charley Gogolak’s low trajectory soccerstyled place-kicks. For the next
week, rumor has it that Harp's
-

safety men are being equipped
with an invisible shield that guarantees its results, or you get a
free tube of Bourbon or Scotch
from the Colgate company.

By the way, Coach Offenhamer,
what ever happened to “Joe the
Toe.”

SUPPORT THE
ERNIE DAVIS

LEUKEMIA FUND

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                    <text>p——————i

—T~STATE UnTvERSITYOF

PAUL

VOLUME 16

■

?c&gt;
n &gt;»1
C»'.&lt;
&lt;r

.

?

NEW YORK

AT~BUFFALO K

•

,

BOSTON

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1965

NO. 5

Debate On
UB Policy

Government
Of Science'
Fenton Topic

A panel discussion of the topic,

and social studies at Victoria University, Manchester,
England,
opened the 1965 Fenton Lecture
Series.

should establish

uni-

Room.

The program will be co-sponsored by the Student Senate Convocations Commitee and the Studcnt-F acuity Association for
Academic Freedom. Its format
will be a six-member panel consisting of two students, two faculty members, and two admin-

the
Mr. Polanyi discussed
series’ theme “The Government
of Science: Scientific Choice and
Science Policy In A Free World,”
The talk was given in the Norton Union Conference Theatre.

The four speakers to follow
Mr. Polanyi, and the dates of
their lectures are: Edward A.
Shils, professor of social thought
and of Sociology, University of
Chicago, October 14; Alvin M,
Weinberg, Director of the Oak
Ridge National Laboratory, October 21; Stephen E. Toulmin, Director of the Nuffield Foundation Unit for the History of
Ideas, London, England, October
28; and George B. Kistiakowsky,
Abbott and James Lawrence
Professor of chemistry, Harvard
University, November 4.

"Who

versity policy—students, faculty,
or administrators?” will be presented Tuesday, October 12. at
3:00 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore

Last night Mr. Michael Polanyi,
a professor of physical chemistry

The series, co-sponsored by the
university and the Fenton Foundation to commemorate "the name
and public service" of James Fenton, a Buffalo businessman, will
continue during the next four
weeks with lectures on Thursday
evenings at 8:30 p.m. in the Conference Theatre. The lectures are
open to the public without charge.

u.

istrators.

■es

see pages 1

&amp;

IS)

Health Department and Medical School
Announce Control of Food Epidemic
By LORETTA ANGELINE

The epidemic which began Saturday morning, September 25, is
now considered under control by
the Erie County Department of
Health and the Ufi Medical
School. There have been no new
cases as of October 1. As previously reported, all cases have
occurred among persons who ate
the shrimp salad served in Goodyear Cafeteria.
Shigella and streptococcus are
the two organisms which have
been tentatively identified as

being the cause for the diarrhea
and sore throats with fever. They
have not been definitely identified because a “strep” epidemic
is not usually contracted by food,
and shigella has been isolated in
the students but has not yet been
found in the shrimp.
Dr. Hoffman, the Director of
the Student Health Service, said
that the majority of students
with the intestinal disease would
go over the illness without any
specific treatment. The original
medication was aimed at the
throat infection but had no effect
on the intestinal disease. There
was recently a change in the
medication administered to students who were still sick. The
second treatment was intended to
combat both diseases.

Goodyear Cafeteria employs approximately 115 persons who arc
now undergoing tests to determine whether they are contaminated by the bacteria. The employees will not be allowed back

to work until

proven uncontami-

nated by the county Health Department and the prevention medicine section of the School of
Medicine, Meanwhile, the cafeteria is running under a new
staff. To make it easier to serve
the students all the women are
eating in Goodyear Cafeteria and
the men in Tower because of the
smaller number of
resident
women. This will continue until
Goodyear’s regular staff is employed again. The cafeteria itself
was closed over the weekend to
be decontaminated; paper plates
and cups arc now being used to
prevent further illness being incurred from the bacterial spores.

Altogether there were about
two hundred students admitted to
the in-patient department of the
infirmary. Many more were treat-

ed in the dormitories, not beof a lack of beds, but be-

cause

cause of a nursing shortage. The
students brought to the hospital
were those who were in need of
treatment the infirmary was unable to administer.

Representing the students will
be Clinton Deveaux, President of
the Student Association, Jeremy
Taylor, Editor of the Spectrum.
The two faculty panelists will be
Raphail Sealcy, Professor of Classics, and Dr, Charles H. V. Ebert,
Professor and Chairman, Department of Geography. Administrative participants will be Dr. Peter
F. Regan, Vice-president for
Health Affairs, and Dr. Myles
Slalin, Acting Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Russell Goldberg will serve as moderator.

The program was organized in
response to increasing speculation and concern by the academic community about the role of
students and teachers in policymaking. It has become even more
timely in the light of present
attempts by both student and faculty groups to evaluate and
make more effective their voice
in university decision making.
Clinton Dexcaux, who is one
of the two student members of
the Faculty-Student Association,
recently introduced amendments
which would significantly increase
student power in that organization. The Faculty Senate is in the
process of revising its by-laws
to broaden the role of faculty
participation. This convocation
will, according to a spokesman
for the sponsors, “serve to more'®
clearly define the issue of student

and

faculty involvement,

and bring together for interaction,
some of the views being expressed by the major parties involved.”

SDS Promotes Activities For
International Days of Protest
By ALICE EDELMAN

USTAD ALI AKBAR KHAN

Ali Akbar Khan Presents
Classical Indian Music

Ustad Ali Akbar Khan, from
Calcutta, India, has been the
artist in residence this past week
giving lectures, demonstrations,
and recitals on the sarode. Aliakbar learned to play this ancient
instrument from his father, Acharya Alauddin Khan who perfected the modern sarode from
the ancient sarode developed in
Afghanistan in the years 1296 to
1315 AD. It had been strung with
gut strings and played with a

bow, but in the 19th Century a
style was developed wherein the
instrument was equipped with
metal strings and playecf with a
plectrum.
Ali Akbar

has popularized
classical music of the sarode and
is sharing his own studies in the
established Ali Akbar College of
Music in Calcutta. Since 1956 he
has instilled his students with
love, devotion, and faith in the
diginity of classic sarode music.

SDS members wrapped up plans
for the International Days of Pro
test at a meeting Wednesday, September 29. Several decisions have
been made concerning the agen-

das for the panel discussion to be
held on October 10 and the teachin, demonstrations, and workshops
to be held on October 15 and 16.
Both faculty and SDS members
will participate in the panel dis-

cussion “Why the U.S. should get
out of Vietnam/’ October 10, 7:30
p.m., Tower Private Dining Room.
Dr. Wilhelm will present a brief

speech after which questions from
the audience will be answered by
the panel, “a group of -experts
on various aspects of Vietnam.”
The teach-in, Friday, October
15, 10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a m. in the

Millard Fillmore Room of Norton
Union, will feature speakers both

in favor and against O S. participation in the war in Vietnam.
They will give 15-minute speeches, following which will be ques-

tion-answer periods. Questions
from the floor will be welcome.
Scheduled speakers are: Professor Nichols, Dr. Zimmerman, Mr.
Garber, Mr. Clifton, Dr. Theodore
Friend, Mr. Harrell, Dr. Harold
Hickerson, members of UB’s fac-

ulty.

“A sincere attempt," says SDS
member Barbara Brody, “was
made to feature an equal number
of pro and con speakers.” Demonstrators, donning black arm bands,
will march for one hour around
the Federal Court Building during which time a declaration of
peace with Vietnam will be read.
The demonstration in Toronto on
the following day will include
clarifying the reasons why SDS

HOMECOMING QUEEN

is in Toronto

“in exile". SDS committee members arc drafting a
letter to the U.S. consulate in Toronto informing him that SDS
is going to Toronto and asking
him to be present at the demon-

stration.
The workshops, which will be
held Friday, October 15, will be
primarily concerned with discus-

sing procedures for making SDS
a regional organization so that
well-known speakers will be made
available to the group. Regional
organization would involve working with political groups and coordinating local SDS activities

with other schools.
There will be an International
Teach-in on October 8, 9, and 10
in Toronto. It is possible that
several cars from Buffalo will be
going. If anyone is interested,
information may be obtained from
the SDS desk.

—See Page 10

�j

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BARBARA LOEB

The Office of Planning and
Development was created August
1, 1962 to help handle the problems of moving the State University of Buffalo to an entirely
new campus, the Amherst site.
The office functions primarily
as the intermediate link between
the business and academic oper-

ations of the university and the
architects. The director is Mr.
William F. Doemland, with a
staff of eleven.
1*

The Planning and Development
Office is concerned with the existing and the new facilities. In regard to the present campus, Mr.
Doemland and his staff are working on utilization and rehabilitation, of existing buildings and
also class scheduling.

.

r

|

Plenty ol Free Parking
Corner Colvin Blvd. I Sheridan Dr

For the new facilities, primarily the Amherst campus, the of-

Motueit umtiT,
turrtio. «. T.
A D&lt;»itiO« of
IMornAttonAI
Brtwtfitt. Inc

fice is concerned with the build-

ing programs, academic facilities,
student housing, athletic facil-

ities, and support facilities. The
office must coordinate UB activities with the State University
guide lines and assist the Office
of Land Acquisition in Albany
in whatever they consider appropriate regarding the Amherst
site. It also must coordinate the
activity of, the State University
Construction Fund and the ultimate users of the university.

Only 5 Minutes
From Campus

� MAIN

A minor function of Planning
and Development is keeping the
records of all existing buildings
on the campus.

HERTL

GARY J. BECKER
OPTICIAN

The office is working toward a
new campus to facilitate at least
17,500 students and a Health and

�

U.B. Alumnus

Sciences Center for 2500 students
on the present campus. The present campus will include a teaching hospital and an extension of
the Erie County Hospital.

PRICES TO PLEASE STUDENTS

1719 HERTEL AVENUE

836-6484

-

October

*,

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Office Drafts Freshman Class Council Officers
Campus Move Elected at September Meeting

DINO'S
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Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

-

RONCO SALES
3241 Bailey Avenue
EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AND COLLEGE APT
(Appliances, Furniture, Etc.)

At this time, the master plan
for the new campus is in the
schematic phase and hopefully
will be available for publication
in two or three' months.
Skidmore, Owings and Morrill

are the architects for the Am-

herst site. A. Bartos and Associates, together with Milton Milstein of Buffalo, are working
on plans for the present campus
with Lester—Gorsltne —as—coif
sultant.

TF 5-6010

Freshman Class Council

rep-

met on Thursday,
September 30, to elect officers.
New Freshman Council leaders
are: President, Larry Henig; Vicepresident, Charles Zeldner; Secretary, Morleen Speilman; treasurer, Arlene Smith; and Executive members, John Houghtaling
and Sharon Shulman.

resentatives

Mr. Henig, the new president,

invites all freshmen to attend any
council meeting. It is hoped that
all minutes of the meetings will
dittoed off and passed out to
freshmen and that a questionnaire Will be made available to
anyone desiring to criticize, make
a

suggestion or

comment.

the freshman class on the Union
Board.
See the Spectrum every week
for current news, happenings of
the council, and announcements
of meeting d?tes.

A 3 a.m. curfew for all
resident women will be in
effect tomorrow, October
9, for Homecoming, as
announced by Dean Jeannette Scudder.

He

maintains that all the council representatives are more than willing to answer any questions the
freshman class may have, and
will do all possible to put their

Neither rain
norsnow
nor heat
nor Liz

ideas into action.

Vice-president Charles Zeldner
will be the freshman representative to the Student Senate. He
will have one vote and all speaking privileges. Both John Houghtaling and Sharon Schulman, executive members, will represent

WBFO Starts
Weekly Series
WBFO, the UB campus radio
station, has announced a series
of programs produced by the
News and Special Events Department. Twice weekly, Mondays
and Tuesdays at 6 p.m., Meet the
Faculty introduces UB professors
to the community. Guests will be
interviewed by John Edward
Deane, Carol Magavero and
Thomas Folino. Wednesday evening at 6 p.m., Senate Report will
be heard. This program will present discussion and commentary
on the proceedings of the Student Senate. Commentators for
Interview from the Senate and
Senate Report are Martha Obers
and Steve Voigt.

1

I

i-- J1

On Thursday evening at 6 p.m.,
WBFO News presents Campus
Calendar, a program designed to
announce upcoming events that
are of special interest to students and Buffalonians. Host for
Campus Calendar is Jesse Strash.
Rounding out the week at 6:05
p.m. on Friday, is Interview from
the Senate, a program which aims
to explore the workings, aims

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(Slightly higher in the West.)

�PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 8, 1965

University of Michigan Experimental Program
To Send Graduate Students to Viet Nam For Study
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (CPS)
The University of Michigan is
—

embarking on

an

experimental

program with the U. S. State Department to send graduate students to study in war-torn Vietnam.

The students are to bridge a
20-year gap in eduactional cooperation between the United
States and South Vietnam as an
“intellectual peace corps."

Do
You
Need
Money

One University of Michigan
student and four from other
American universities have been
selected to receive the academic
fellowships for a year’s study at
the University of Saigon, Saigon,
South Vietnam.

—Work On Your Own;
Your Own Hours

Dr. L. A. Peter Gosling, director of the University’s Center

-

Any Amount

for South and Southeast Asian

ment's Bureau of Cultural and
Educational Affairs to place
American students overseas.
“Government officials have felt
for a long time that the Bureau
should involve the universities
and make use of their experience,
teaching, and selection of students for overseas study,” Dr.
Gosling said.
Df. Gosling was amazed at the
number of excellent students who
applied for the new fellowships
evidencing a keen desire to study
in Vietnam.
“In setting up the program, I
suddenly realized that it has been
impossible for students to get to
Vietnam for the last 20 years."
he pointed out.
“There simply was no way for

Commission Selling
Ads For The Spectrum

DINO'S
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Not At The End Of

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Blvd.

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—Need Money?

Pierced Earrings

Necklaces

Pins

Rings

The Pierced Ear

origThe University of
inally requested the State Department to set up a program
enabling American students to

study

there.

The students selected for the
are interested in researching topics ranging from the
social sciences to the humanities.
They will spend 10 months at the
University of Saigon, possibly extended periods if they wish. The
graduate students wilt be housed
at the University. The $3,000 academic fellowships will provide
for their tuition, study, and living
program

Gosling foresees the stu-

Dr.

dents playing important roles in
1 relations
between the people of

i
|
|

Vietnam and the United Slates.
"We have virtually no social scientists who are well trained in
Vietnamese studies per se, who
have known firsthand the Vietnam language and culture.” he
said. “Except for the experience
of the military, we have not had
proficient persons in Vietnam
who were cultural specialists.”

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interested students to do it. The
foundations were keeping away
because of the changing political
developments, and no program
encouraged scholarly pursuits between the American student and
the Vietnamese people."

expenses.

—Earn A
f

—Call The Spectrum
■

Studies, said the program is a
new attempt by the State Depart-

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�PAGE FOUR

SPECTRUM

)

grump

/

(Comment

The
.

.

.

FSA REORGANIZATION:
A MODERN MYTH OF TANTALUS
At the last meeting of the FSA, held on September
27, Student Association President Clinton Deyeaux made
it quite clear to members of the Association that the students are more than dissatisfied with current policies, especially those relating to the Association’s secretive mode
of operation and its deplorable refusal to meaningfully

represent students in the decision-making “processes.”
Members of the Association had apparently thought that
their meager, concession, in the form of the amendments
by the Board of Directors, would serve as a “symbol” of
the Association’s revitalization and of its willingness to
treat the student as an “almost-equal”. In what seemed
to us an arrogant declaration of a continuing policy of discrimination against the student, we were urged to accept
the amendments coupled with the “good faith” of the Association members as the best we could hope for at this
time. But the students want more.
And as a way of “giving us more”, or possibly as a
vision into some indefinite and hazy future, Dr. Claude E.
Puffer, Vice-President for Business Affairs, announced
his proposals for greater student involvement. In a closed
meeting held on Monday, October 4, with Dr. Puffer, Acting Dean of Students Jeanette Scudder, Norton Activities
Co-ordinator Dorothy Haas, and the officers of the Student Association, Dr. Puffer described his master plan to
restructure the FSA.
The Board of Directors will be maintained as it is
presently constituted, but will serve merely as a rubber
stamp for three committees which will assume the policy
work of the Association: a student affairs committee consisting solely of students to levy and distribute all fees for
student activities: a long range planning group with onethird administrators, faculty, and students to create policy
and make financial arrangements for broader areas of
university life such as the recent land acquisition; and a
“day-to-day” operation committee which will determine
prices for the bookstore, food service, etc. and which will
be composed of a majority of administrators in accordance with the yet unreleased task force report.
At first glance, one is dazzled by the unexpected
“generosity” of the proposal and baffled with the suddenness of a long-awaited victory. Closer scrutiny reveals
that, in effect, the restructuring creates no substantial
change, either financially ordn recognition of student autonomy. Ideally, that is without the prostitution of current
FSA policy, students now have the right and responsibility to determine the financial demands of their activities
program and request fees accordingly. The food service,
bookstore, and other non-profit ventures of the FSA would
retain the same administrative majority under the new
system as they do under the currently misused and incompatible structure.

Indeed, Dr. Puffer’s proposals are the most adequate
yet forwarded by a member of the administration if only
in that they recognize a need to, in some manner and degree, pacify student unrest. We are even tempted to call
an FSA structured along these lines legitimate progress.
But progress, to be called by that name, must be geared
toward some meaningful goal, not to a mere removal of
pressure.

If adopted, the new structure is wholly capable of
“long-awaited victory" or it could be an ingeniously de-

vised scheme to maintain and encourage current practices while emanating a “lily-white” glow of liberality.
The sum of the proposal and its possibilities gives us yet
another administrative plea for “good faith” in their intentions. The effect of the new structure would be nothing more or less than what the administration makes it,
and this alone is enough to label the proposals as another
insult and denial of the maturity and responsibility of the
student.
David Edelman

Friday, October 8, 1965

...

taken aback. Not only was this
The question may have occurred to a few of you—a very an assinine question, (my writing
few truly discriminating souls
has only one superb caliber,) but
—on Friday last, “Howdehell the fact is that I was being questioned by the Phantom of the
come ain’t no grump intodays
Spectrum. This poor soul has a
paper? Huh? Huh? Huh?” If it
did not occur to you—and it tragic history. Last Semester he
should have—it most certainly crossed the trail of the Adminisdid to me. It moved me greatly trations greatest weapon, THE
that I was not in print last AVERAGER, and he lost after a
week—it moved me greatly and very listless quarrel. He is now
doomed to wander far from the
directly to the Spectrum Office.
eyes of men with only a camera
It does not really bother me that
I am not printed you understand, about his neck for company. He
after all a work of art has beauty must be a Phantom. Nobody else
in and of itself and need not in the Spectrum office has ever
seen him.
be pandered to the messes. (That
is my primary rationalization, I
The Phantom went on to tell
me how humorous my column
have several dozen more.)
was last week and how sorry
Anyway, I stormed into Editor
Taylor’s office—strictly out of everyone was they couldn’t find
curiousity—and almost lost my
anyplace for it but the wasteleft eye on the corner of a probasket. Then he gave me a long
fatherly talk about how persevertest sign. I whirled about to defend myself, having earnestly ence made America great, patted
read the Black Belt Guy, and
me on the head, gave me a
promptly suffered a severe bruise
lollypop, and told me to try again.
on my left hand. The piece of
“Yes, Yes,” I cried. “I shall persewood must of been at least an vere,” and left the office with
inch thick. I could have taken my head held high. My euphoria
care of it with my right I am
did not last long though for an
sure but I was always taught evil looking man sidled up to me
not to lead with your writing and whispered in a low menacing
hand. By now thoroughly abashed
tone “John Birch is still alive!”
I sank down, whimpering, onto a
I whirled and fled.
As far as Clark Gym, which
conveniently placed bale of Antion last Friday and Saturday night
Vietnam war material.
“Why,” growled the voice “was
housed the First Annual Folk
your silly column well written Festival—and Firefly Convention.
this week?” I was somewhat
At least I am assuming there was

The Murder
By JOHN G. MEDWID

It is painfully apparent

from
the various “Letters to the Editor” columns and from the interviews with soldiers actually in
Viet Nam, that the position of
the American student-left is being
grossly misunderstood. The popular view of this protest is not
only that it is irresponsible, but
that it is motivated by fear,
cowardice, laziness, or, even as
some suggest, treason. Recently
this letter appeared in The Buffalo Evening Newt; “Too bad
these draft dodgers couldn’t
send their parents overseas to
fight for them, their parents do
'everything else
for
them.”
(signed) G. I. Joe; and this in
the Courier-Exprett: “The United
States is not in Viet Nam in a
‘quest for wealth’ and anyone
who seriously believes so has
little faith in the words of our
country’s military and political
be conscripted
Mr. Baum
into the U. S. Army himself and
first hand view our ‘quest for
(signed)
wealth' in Viet Nam . .
Monroe J. Taranto, Captain, U. S.
...

Army.

of

by STEESE
a firefly convention since there
was no smoking and something
was most definitely glowing all
over the place. And every once
in a while one of the poor little
tykes would try too hard to glow
and break into flame, right?
There are some nice things to be

said for narcotics after all I
guess. Nobody ever exhaled his
used fix into my face.
Straight Suggestion: That the
Student Senate assist the organizations that do organize and present functions like this to police
them. And if “police" and “moniter” are nasty words and the
idea of having to have somebody
standing over you saying “no”
sounds childish, I agree. If, however, the will-power to abstain
for a few hours, and the courtesy
to other attendees and especially
to the artists who had to sing
in a somewhat soupy atmosphere,
are not present then maybe
existing rules should be enforced.
Now look friend, I have nothing
at all against your having a cigarette if you want one, but those
other two hundred smokers have
got to go. If I want to get lung
cancer I have a right to select
my own brand, not use yours
twice, thank you kindly.
The folk festival was an excellent bargain at four dollars
for two concerts and the workshops. The Greenbrier Boys and
(Cont’d on P. 12)

Gonzago

concern. Tin, rubber, rice—key
strategic raw materials—are what
the war is really about. The U. S.
sees it as a place to hold at any

cost.”
President Eisenhower, address-

ing a Governor’s Conference
(Aug. 4, 1958) said, “Now let us
assume we lost Indo-China. The

has seen fit to repudiate Assistant
Defense Secretary Arthur Sylvester’s statement during the
Cuban crisis affirming the government’s right to manage the
news.

Captain Taranto’s solution to
tungsten that we so the student critics is simple—issue them uniforms and guns and
greatly value from that area
would cease coming. So when the send them to Viet Nam with the
125,000 already there. I personalUnited States votes $400,000,000
ly fail to see how this will change
to help that war we are not votany of the Vietnamese facts of
ing a giveaway program.”
life.
Or, more recently, in the June
12 issue of Business Week, “There
are a number of reasons why inThe students do not want to
die in Viet Nam nor do they
dustrial investment in South Vietnam makes sense . . . Second, the
want anyone else to die there in
their places. They maintain that
Agency for International Developthe Vietnamese problem requires
ment (AID) offers a broad range
of guarantees to prospective in- a political rather than a military
vestors. Last, but not least, profits solution. At the Nuremburg trials,
are fat.”
the United States argued that the
As for the words of our poli- Germans could be held respontical and military leaders, listen—sible for their acts on the groundr
to Dean Rusk (Some Fundamen- that there is a morality higher
tals of American Policy, Dept, than the will of the government,
of State Bulletin Vol. IH No. Thus ’ the student protest move1343 Publ, 1845, Mar. 22, 1965), ment, teach-ins, sit downs, pickets,
P eti ‘ ions . . it is the ambassador’s job
. stoppings, and
“.
draft card burnings, become an
and the job of everyone with
Mt of mora c
e instead of
him to accept the notion that ex- one of mere dissent. To fight and
pansion of American trading inclie for freedom is one thing; to
terests is a central function of kill in support of the prospect of
diplomacy.” No one, incidentally,
“fat profits” another.

tin

and

.

U. S. News and World Report

(April 16, 1954) wrote: “One of
the world’s richest areas is open
to the winner in Indo-China.
That’s behind the growing U. S,

,

—

YOUR OWN BACKYARD
By JEFFREY LEWIS

THE

and
MARTIN FEINRIDER
The office of Mayor of the City
of Buffalo is considered by many

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Managing Editor
SUSAN

GREENE

RONNIE BROMBERG

Feature

Editor

Sports Editor

STINY
DRANDOFF

JOHN
RICHARD

STEVE SCHUELEIN

Layout
Copy

Editor
Editor

M

year, Roland Benzow of the Re-

publicans, Frank Sedita of the

Democrats

Editor-in-chief
News Editor

to be the most important elective offices in Erie County. This

SHARON

HONIG

LAUREN

JACOBS

Continuity
Business

Editor
Manager

Advertising

Circulation

Manager

Advisor

Leprechaun

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.
Subscription $3,00 per year, circulation
10,000.

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

ORSZULAK

RAYMOND D. VOLPE

Manager

Faculty Advisor
Financial

MARCIA

BERNARD
DIANE
IRENE
DALLAS
RUSSELL

AKMAN
LEWIS

WILLET
GARBER

GOLDBERG

and Bernard

Kurtz

(of “Super-Kurtz" fame) of the
Conservatives are running for
mayor. It will not be our intention to endorse any of these candidates, but simply to point out
some of their qualifications and
shortcomings.

I. Fifty-two year old Roland
Benzow, the GOP hopeful, is an
attorney, and has been minority
leader of the Buffalo Common
Council for 5 of his 6 years
with that body. His committee
membership on the City Council
is varied and impressive, including the' taxation code of ethics,
and redevelopment committees,

among

others. One interesting
point, about Mr. Benzow is that
he is a Unitarian, and it is very
rare in this city for a member
of this faith to run for such an
important public office. His running might very well be an important step forward for the City
of Buffalo in its war against religious factionalism.
On a hot tip, special to your
Spectrum reporters, it appears
that Benzow will propose that
urban redevelopment be taken
out of the hands of local government and be placed on the
federal level. Among Benzow's
other proposals are completion
of the long-delayed Ellicott Dis-

trict Housing Project, implementation of the waterfront redevelopment project, “good, clean,
honest government, and a Greater Metropolitan Buffalo.” This
last idea is of great importance
to this city, for if it does not
come to fruition within the next

.

.

.

20 years, Buffalo will surely die.
This plan includes a merging of
Buffalo and its suburbs’ educational systems, police departments, and fire departments,
eventually leading to a general
merger. Although Benzow is considered to be an underdog, he is
known for his honesty, and this
is' a rare quality among mayoral

candidates in this city. However,
Benzow has never been known
for any outstanding accomplishments, and has been charged
with playing a nonconstructive
role as councilman.
*

*

•

II. The fifty-eight year old
Frank Sedita of the Democrats
is a Catholic, and as such has a
distinct advantage in the race for
mayor. He was mayor of Buffalo
from 1958 to 1962, but was defeated in his bid for re-election
by the present Republican mayor
Chester Kowal. In order to judge
(Cont’d on P. 11)

�Friday,

October 8, 1965

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

pR2Fe§sion-

STuDEHT

vr

oCelterS

4^

TO THE EDITOR:
TO; All Department Chairmen
and faculty concerned.
Several hundred students, mostly Freshmen and Sophomores
were unavoidably absent from
classes during the past two weeks
due to a food poisoning epidemic
in one of our dining halls.
It is the position of this college that these students should

not be penalized, and indeed, your
co-operation is requested to see
that full value is received in each
course in terms of make up labs,
classes, quizzes, etc.

A list of students known to
have been stricken will be sent to
all departments. Please advise
all instructors of the presence
of this list and enlist their aid
and co-operation

Cynical Frosh
/

TO THE EDITOR;

/

To the Cynical Frosh:
Pity on THEE little man.
With gripes so big
With beefs that ran
CHEEKY
and hoW!
'
And little mdeed is the word.
Don t hide behind crumbling accusations of what we (residents)
appear to you but look with your
“minds eye" to what we are.
Friendship is in the lifting of
your own hand. Don’t feel so
darn sorry for yourself! Lift the
blinders off your eyes—I mean
really—and draw a few correct
conclusions instead of letting
your verbose flourish and equally
wild imagination sweep you into
,

//

VOW AMP 1, ERIC, ARE WE IMRW'i
GREATEST UWN&lt;5 SMEUS.'

'

pioneering, or mere idiosyncrasy.
The representatives of the “New
Student Left” who confront us
on campus today are the spirit-

ual descendents of these rebels.
There is, of

course, a

classic

pattern in the behavior of the
rebel. As M. Staton Evans pointed out in his Revolt on the
Campus, the rebel’s rebellion was
reaction against the other-directed values of Liberalism. The
pressure of conformity, the lack
of respect for the enduring
norms of excellence, and the
steady diminution of freedom,
left many of the young adrift
“in a world they never made.”
As a result, they drifted away
from their fellows, rejected all
convention as “square,” all society as hopeless. Salvation was
to be found only in complete
abandonment of one’s .self to

hedonism.

Man, to the Conservative, is a
being capable of reaching great
material and spiritual heights,
or sinking to the depths of degradation. If he is to exist at all,
it must be within a social framework., where he can cooperate
with his fellows. Such a framework requires, on one hand, liberty of the individual to seek
his own values, to act to achieve
them- and on the other hand,
order, to guarantee that the liberty of all shall be safe from the
anti-social actions of the few
who would resort to violence and
to fraud to achieve their ends.
The Conservative position then,
seeks the balance between liberty and order. How much order is
needed to maintain society?
Further, the Conservative asks
to what extent the State, the arm
of society which maintains
order, shall be entrusted with

.

thinking you (the commuter) are
an expert at telling people what’s
wrong with them!

THE RIGHT
The Sad Devolution
of the College Rebel
A small part of the social scene
from the late Fifties to the early
Sixties was that phenomenon
called the Beat Generation. The
“Beatnik,” the “hipster,” with
his scraggly attire, his cryptic
language, his contemptuous denial of all custom and convention, his rejection of all the values around him have made him
an object of scorn to the other
members of society. The fate
of any unconventional individual
has always been thus, whether
his unconventionality was actual

the Editor

Faculty Asked To Help Students “Make-Up”
Work Missed During Epidemic

//

By THERMOPYLAE

to

such power. And finally, since
the Conservative realizes that
society can exist only if there
are common values, and that
these values are the means of
preserving such a society, he
asks what these are, and what is
their source.
To the rebel, such an approach
is as “unacceptable as the nonprinciled; relativist approach of
Liberalism.” The enemy, to the
rebel is custom and convention,
any kind of order, whether it
be work or the order represented by the policemen. The only
solution lies in being “aloof and
detached, abandoning the idea
of values for the delicious feeling of doing what one pleases.”
Thus, there is the prevalence of
although people grow
beards
beards for other reasons
the
use of marijuana and narcotics,
the cavalier attitudes towards
homosexuality and other forms of
licence. One does this to show
contempt for the “outwork" customs. What the rebel fails to
realize, of course, is, that in gaining this seeming individualism,
he is abandoning the real individualism of the mind.
This loss of independence has
already had its tragic results.
The bearded “individualists” who
had scornfully rejected the values of Liberalism slowly drifted
back toward the collectist fold.
The young man who had scorned
all idealism now joined unthinkand this is
ingly in the mobs
the most descriptive work—that
—

—

—

sat, enraptured, listening to the
shopworn ideas of discredited
ideologues. Failing to understand
ordered liberty, they stormed the
San Francisco city hall to scream
their defiance at HUAC, Failing
to understand that the price of
vigilance,
peace is continued
they marched for peace and de-

manded unilateral disarmament.
And failing to understand that
liberty exists not in spite of custom and convention but because
of it, they surrendered their own
liberty and now, parrotlike, offer
proposals to reduce the liberty of
others.
In a sense, the rebel is not a
ludicrous figure, he is a tragic
one. His original purpose, rejection of the values of the modern
Liberal, was a good one; in rejecting all values, however, he
betrayed his end and returned
from an illusionary freedom to
the expounding of collectivism.

Who, but the resident student
whose home, family and friends
are miles out of reach would be
especially in need of making a
new life and new friendships, in
strange dwelling he almost learns
to call a home. Life for the resident is hard in the first few

Some

names

may

have been

omitted from the list. A stu-

dent who claims to have been ill
and is not listed should secure
verification from the Student
Health Office.
Thank you for youMtrttKin this

matter.

\

Bradley Chapin,
Dean, University College

Don’t Wait For Friendship

—

weeks of establishing himself as
a Part of the student body, participant in dorm society, and as
fulltime socializes Can he help
il if ou stubbornly wait for us
to take the first step, say the
first word. go running around
imbecilically with a smile pasted
upon our mouths at eight in the
a . m rm sure there arc more
meanin( fu | things in Hfe
&gt;'

._

,

I hope all commuters aren't
like you. FRESHMAN (and I’m
sure they aren’t) for the sight
of you would be enough to warn
off any visitor: lips set rigid in
stern determination, defined with

a pussy pout-eagles eyes, beady,
peering analytically at
each
passerby
and the
furrowed
brow as the tention grows (“Is he
or isn’t he , . . If he dosen't
do anything . . . neither will I!
—

...

Bah Humbug!’’).
Then you go running for sympathy-—what do you want? Life
isn't handed to you on a golden
platter. Ingenuity is the key to
what it seems you are seeking.
(If the jist of what you said is
true—I don’t know-.

You talk of cliques. Cliques?
cliques I have seen are

The

suspicious

bunches

fo

giggling

commuters hanging around—masculine hords stalking in wolf
packs holding hourly den meetings

...

Cliques—us? If a dorm is a
representation of a family, a

home away from home, either it
is concluded all families arc
cliques or all cliques are familicst?)

Let us not draw a line between
and the resident
because this kind of class-type
distinction won't help but hurt
the entire spirit of our school—the commuter

oor university. I am always ready
to extend my hand to a new
acquaintance.
Strike a golden mean—a happy
medium- meet me half way. And
if you can sec that hand outstretched, though not seemingly
visible, don’t ponder too long
upon the rightness of it, it may
disappear.
Aves disparge,

Norton Hall
and
Allcnhurst

.)

.

Center Lounge “Who Should
Make The Decision”
TO THE EDITOR

Several Tuesdays ago, at the
first meeting of the Student Senate, perhaps one of the most important issues in student government was brought to the floor.
The motion made by Carl Levine,
Arts and Science Senator, concerned the reopening of the cen
ter lounge in Norton Union to
the students.
The issue however, is not this
one at all. My issue is who should
make the decisions?

I

think it

best to limit the choice of de
cision to three different groups:
the administration, the senate,
and the student body as a whole

The center lounge was closed
by recommendation of the house

committee (a student committee)
of Union Board but was closed,
in practice by the Administration of Norton Union. If we allow
the administration to decide, then
let us do away with student elections entirely. The Senate debated for one hour whether it
should pass a resolution in favor
of reopening the lounge. Its decision was affirmative. But it
means nothing. So, the Senate
a measure, which will
a referendum before the
student body and they will voice
their opinion. But again, I fear
passed

bring

this means nothing. Miss Haas
(who, if any readers do not
know, is quite an important person in Norton Union decisions)
told the Senate, in essence, that
she does not care whether or not
the students want the lounge
back. In fact, she knows they do.
If Miss Haas, and the other
administrative members
make
their decisions regardless of popular opinion, then the title of
President Dcveaux, the official
title of Senator Levine seem quite
farcical to me.
Martin

F.

Guggenheim

Greeks Put Away “Petty Conflicts”;
Work For Common Goal
TO THE EDITOR

Greeks and friends: May this
year be the one in which we
prove that the Greek system is
worth having on our campus. I
believe that it is about time that
we prove to the State Board of
Trustees that we arc essential
to university life. Let me bor
. . united
row an old saying,
we stand, divided we fall.” Put
away all of our petty conflicts
and let all members of frater

nitics and sororities work for a
common goal—to prove our salt
Today is the last day that you
can help in one small way. In
the lobby of Norton Union you
will find the jars put out for
Alpha Phi Omega's Ugly Man Contest. I have my preference and
I'm sure you have yours. Regard
less of this choice, help rebuild
that working boys’ home. Drop
your pennies, nickels, whatever
you can afford into one of the
jars. Help us in setting a good

example at what college students
can do for their fellow man—those who "ain't got it so good.”

One final reminder, this week
is Homecoming, Support it; go to
its functions, have a good time.
You have earned it by going to
class for the past ifour weeks,
and it will make the path a little
easier for the rest of the semester.
Let's go—Greeks. Raise your
voices and be heard; but do it
right.

John Puchalski

Allenhurst Election—Should
Administration Conduct Student Affairs
TO THE EDITOR

Lack of foresight on the part
of the administrative staff was
all too obvious in the recent
Allenhurst elections.
Candidates were given no written set of rules, and as a result,
many of the rules were broken.
Candidates were penalized for
which
disobeying regulations
previously had not been clarified.
There was not time to appeal
such administrative decisions in
the short time allotted for the
campaign. When a candidate is
given an ultimatum of the “comply or be disqualified” type, there

is little choice, speaking from a
pragmatic political point of view
The time has now come to look
at this incident as an example of
the continuing desire on the part
of the school administration to
prevent the student body from
autonomously conducting its own
affairs, I wish to question the
right of the administration to
control a student election. Clearly
such Control is the case yet the
great majority of students accept
this without questioning the right
of the administration to assume
this

power.

Power

has

been

usurped, yet the apathetic are
willing to accept it.

It is my opinion that elections
could be competently run by an

elections board composed of students, which would have complete jurisdiction in the handling
of such matters, 1 realize that
an elections board exists at the
present time, but 1 maintain that
under the present structure it is
too limited in scope, since, in this
case and point, the election was
completely controlled by administrators. Student affairs should be
run by students, and regulated
if necessary, by the administra
tion

Daniel Rotholz
(('ont’i!

on P

13)

�Friday, October 8, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs
�*�■*■*��*���****�**�*�**��*�������*�***���*��**��

Cjoodman

*

�

�

�

—

*

�
�

—

*

At a conference at Time-Life,
where they are preparing a
series on “Youth,” I was sur-

prised that they hadn’t heard of
the Free University movement
though small dissenting colleges
have sprung up in probably several dozen places this year. (I
myself have been invited to a
dozen.) That is, the Time-Life
part of the Establishment is no
more in touch with what is going
on than, say, the Central Intelligence Agency is in touch with
Latin America, or the Federal
Arts Council is in touch with
living theater. Yet how would
they know, given the company
they keep? So let me spell out
this news for a column.
During the Cold War, American education has been increasingly tightly harnessed to (not
very ideal) National Goals; it is
hot unfair to speak of the Factory-University, powered by government, foundation, and corporation money, and processing
students. Inevitably, therefore,
there are attempts to set up
small independent enterprises of
higher education, generally in or
next to big established institutions, Our

situation has historical

analogies. In 18th century England there sprang up tiny dissenting academics to escape the
Test Acts, a kind of loyaltyoaths. During the Renaissance,
the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge withdrew from the Uni-

versities, which had rigified. The
very beginning of our present
higher education, during the rise
of the towns in the 12th and
13th centuries, was the founding
of tiny universities of free
scholars and clerics in the face
-

of the

feudal Church.

OVERLAPPING
PARA-MOVEMENTS
And there is an important
analogy in our own times. The

polities of the Freedom Democratic Party in Mississippi to bypass a system of injustice, the
para-sociology of militant community-development to combat
the patronizing social work of
the Welfare State, or even the

of life the Beats to
escape the rat race. And these
para-movements tend to overlap.
People who object to credits
and grading are likely to object
to gray flannel suits and to police brutality.

.

HARRIET GOLDBERG
Additions to the faculty, improvements and changes of curriculum, and seminars for the
student body, have been planned
by the Department of Mathematics at UB. The highlights of
the fall term are an enlarged
staff, a revised program for nonmajors, two new courses for majors, and a new program entitled
“Seminar in Creative Mathematics,” which is already in progress.

The
“Seminar in Creative
Mathematics” offers opportunities for further work for those
who have a genuine interest in
Math. Meetings are held in four
separate groups on Monday be-

tween two and four, Wednesday

between one and three and three
and five, and Friday between
one and three. These four separate groups are divided according to the level of work each
undergraduate student has attained. Professor Frank Olson,
who is directing the program
with Dr. Michael Gemignani,
stated, ‘The program has as its

By NEWTON

para-way

Philosophy

has

CARVER
traditionally

been hailed as the guide of life,
but with the enormous success of
science over the past century
many people have plunked- for
science rather than philosophy. It
is hard to deny that philosophy
All the para-colleges have comlacks the predictive power, the
mon themes. They object to the
experimentally verified theory,
impersonality of faculty-student and the accumulation of learning
relations, cash-accounting credits that characterizes science. Thus
and grading, high tuition-fees, set upon by the bitch-goddesses
administrative paternalism, extra- success and progress, philosophers
mural interference with freedom must find a way to defend their
of speech and inquiry and role.
morals, irrelevant bigness in the
rather simple function of teachRoughly speaking there are two
ing and learning. Positively, the modes of counterattack open to
dissenters want community, cur- philosophers: to be with science
riculum directly related to social or to be against it. (A third alterand personal reality, a say in native is to suppose that science
making decisions, intrinsic mois with you; but this interesting
tivations to study, and tailoring variety of factionalism has been
needs
the schedule to individual
characteristic only of Marxist
philosophers.) Mystics and exisand stages of development.
tentialists are generally against
TYPES OF
science and scientific thinking.
"FREE UNIVERSITIES"
Although they may grudgingly admit that science succeeds in arNaturally, however, each sponriving at true descriptions of the
taneous group has its own emworld, they regard more truths as
phases and style. Graduate stuunimportant and urge us to aim
dents at Columbia feel that authentic scholarship is impossible at what is urgent arid significant
in the routine in which they are Other philosophers reject this disgetting their degrees, so in their paragement of science, which they
“free university” they set up take to be the best fruit of human reason and imagination, and
night courses to which they invite scholars they respect to understand by philosophy a comteach them real subjects for mitment to clarity and truth, John
real. The graduate students at Austin puts the point this way:
Berkeley, on the other hand, are “Importance is not important,
suspicious of “anybody over 30;” truth is.” Hence science is welthey feel they can direct their comed and taken as the model for
all serious discursive thought.
own studies, and they are espe(Cont’d on P. 13)
cially interested in political subjects avoided in the regular curriculum, including direct action
projects like organization migrant farm-labor. An enterpriArtist
WASHINGTON (CPS)
sing group at Ohio University
in-residence programs through
(Athens) is after foundation-support to hire its own .professors: out the country will receive boost
er shots from the new National
and I have been offered a princeFoundation for the Arts and Ipa
/
at San Francisco State (I don’t i'nanilies.
President
Johnson
has
listed
money
know where the
comes
from). In these cases, it seems grants to schools and univafsities
to support great artists/nn the
that what is studied will be an
agreement of what the teachers campus as one of the nyljor tasks
of the foundation. TheAdhers. anwant to teach and the students
nounced at the September 29
(Cont’d on P. 16)
ceremony signing t*ie foundation
bill into law, include the creation of a national repertory theater and an American film institute, the sjJpport of a national
opera, a national ballet, and sympurpose to develop creativity
and facility of thought in the phony orchestras, and the commathematical field.” Problems missioning of new works of muwill be discussed and original sic.
Thj/Foundation consists of two
research will be encouraged.
$5 rtiillion national endowments
—one for the humanities and one
In order to single out students
of above average ability, the (fir the arts—and a Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities to
three most outstanding members
co-ordinate their activities. In adwill be entered as a team in the
dition, the new law provides
William Lowell Putnam
funds to match private contribumatical Competition, a national
to (the endowments, to give
contest. Other hohors that will tions
special arts grants to the states,
given
be
to the best students are and to
remodel and purchase elegift memberships in the Mathementary and secondary school
matical Association of America
arts and humanities equipment.
and selections of mathematical
It also authorizes $500,000 for
reference books. Dr. Olson also training
institutes to strengthen
stated that further opportunities the teaching of the arts and hufor individual recognition will be manities in elementary and
secin the publication of a student
ondary schools. Many college and
mathematical journal which will universities can be expected to
include mathematical problems, host these arts and humanities insolutions, and articles of interest. stitutes, just as they have sponStudents will also have close consored language, science, mathetact with members of the Math matics, and history institutes in
comDepartment. Attendance is
the past.
pletely voluntary and all those
According to the new law, the
interested should contact Profesessential difference between the
sor Olson or Professor Gemignani arts and the humanities is that
in the Math Department in
the arts involve creation, perMichael Hall.
formance, and exhibition, where-

Math Dept Plans Change
By

Philosopher Feigl to Speak
On Our Age of Science
Kaufmann

Attacks
Existential Irrationalism
By

RONNIE BROMBERG

Dr. Walter Kaufmann, philosophical author and lecturer,
addressed UB students and faculty on “A Critique of Existentialism,” October 4, at 3 p.m. in
the Millard Fillmore Room. He is
the first of three speakers in a
Philosophy Series, sponsored by
the Convocations Committee.

After beginning with a brief
sketch of the common elements

—

and answer period.

Dr. Kaufmann opened with the
problem of defining existentialism. He feels that although there
are more differences than similarities among the four major
existentialists, Kirkegaard, Jaspers, Heideger and Sartre, we must
study them together in order to
understand the differences.

There are a number of common
features of existentialism, although there is no common doctrine. Rather, these philosophers
are dissatisfied with the emphasis
placed on doctrines; they are
suspicious of traditional philosophers and academic philosophy,
for they are concerned with theorizing instead of life itself. The
existentialists are individualists,
above all, for they place a high
premium on feelings, emotions
and life.
Rather then being preoccupied
with the ordinary, existentialists
are concerned with the extraordinary
the most intense emotional experiences. They feel that
the starting point for philosophical experiences are our most extreme experiences, the ultimate
situations, such as confrontation
with one’s own death, despair,
fear, dread and profound guilt.
—

DR. WALTER KAUFMANN

New Grants for Artists
—

of existentialism, Dr. Kaufmann
then went into the main point of
his lecture
a criticism of the
existentialists’ conceptions of the
limitations of reason, using Kirkegaard as an example. The lecture was followed by a question

a# the humanities center around
-Study. Included among the arts
'are music, dance, drama, creative writing, architecture, painting, sculpture, photography, cos-

trial design, film, television, radio and recording. Included in
the humanities are modern and
classical languages, linguistics,
literature, history, jurisprudence,
philosophy, archaeology, criticism,
theory of the arts, and humanistic
aspects of the social sciences.
The creation of the arts and
humanities foundation culminates
a concerted 2V2 year campaign,
led largely by members of the
academic community, to get federal support for non science
fields. The main thrust of the
campaign came in the spring of
1963, when three national scholarly and education organizations
united to sponsor a National Commission on the Humanities.
The Commission’s report was
presented in June, 1964, and concluded that the arts, humanities,
and relevant academic disciplines
needed additional massive support, coming largely from the federal government. It recommended that an independent National
Humanities Foundation, similar
to the National Science Foundation, be created. Congressman
William S. Moorhead introduced
a bill embodying the Commission’s recommendations.
After hearings in February and
March of this year, the administration’s “consensus” proposal—essentially the one passed—was
formulated. In addition to many
university and commission representatives, the bill’s hearings
included testimony by noted performers such as Theodore Bikel
and Charlton Heston,
-

Dr. Kaufman, in criticizing
Kirkegaard, is well aware of the
philosopher’s stature and place in

respect for him. Realizing that
humor and seriousness are not
mutually exclusive, this philosopher wrote about serious matters
in a humorous manner, Dr. Kaufmann respects Kirkegaard for his
deep devotion to his ideals.
Praised highly by a newspaper he
loathed, he felt compromised and
rebuked this praise. This indifference to popularity is highly
admirable. Kirkegaard wanted to
become a true Christian which required breaking with the established state church, with all its
traditions. While dying, he wanted sacraments, yet refused them
from an ordained minister, rather
than compromise himself.
He
showed the greatest integrity and
wanted the very fitting epitaph,
“That Individual.” These aspects
of Kirkegaard, Dr. Kaufmann
feels, are above criticism.

However, there are elements of
Kirkegaard’s philosophy that are
open to criticism
namely his
conception of the limitations of
reason. This criticism is applicable to the other existentialists as
—

well. Dr. Kaufmann agrees that

reason is limited

in very important ways, but he disagrees with
the nature of Kirkegaard’s conception of reason. The latter fails
to see what reason can and should

do
it discards the ideals that
don’t stand up to examination and
aren’t worth living and dying for.
Kirkegaard feels that reason must
give us ideals to live and die for
and if “reason and philosophy
(Cont’d on P, 17)
—

�Friday,

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Oetobar 8, 1965

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Official Bulletin is an
publication of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes, no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent
in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.

The

authorized

GENERAL NOTICES
Graduate School Calendar
the last day for resigning from a
a course without penalty is today,
OCTOBER 8, 1965.
University College Students
Registration for next semester
for ALL University College students, excluding nurses, will begin Monday, October 18, 1965.
Students whose last names begin
with the letters designated below
will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for courses
on the following days:
Oct. 18 through Oct. 22 —B
Oct. 25 through Oct. 29 —W,
—

—

H

Nov. 1 through Nov. 5

—

Nov. 8 through Nov. 12

—

M,
K,

R
U
S
H

ment Division, Avco Corp. The

topic is “Experimental Studies
of High-Temperature Gas Transport Properties.!’ Open to the
Public, 104 Parker Engineering
Building, 4 p.m.

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare
offers
opportunities to work in Public
Health Services, Social Security
Administration, Food and Drug
Administration, Office of Education or Welfare Administration.
Contact the University Placement
Service for further information.
New York State Professional
Careers Exam
the University
Placement Service has just received a supply of Professional
Career Applications. Successful
completion of this examination
determines the candidates eligibility for the many civil service
opportunities available in New
York State.
Case Worker
preliminary
applications for the New York
State Case Worker Exam are
available. The first examination
will be given October 23, 1965.
Contact the University Placement Service for additional information.
—

—

—

sure!

.

if

Registration

U.S. Marine Corps Recruiting
all candidates at all degree
levels to enter the Armed Services as Commissioned Officers.
Oct. 11
Hewlett-Packard Company
Electrical Engineers, Chemists,
Material Scientists and Solid
State Physicists, Ph.D. or equivalent required. For further information contact the University
Placement Services.
Oct. 12
U.S. Marine Corps Recruiting
(Women)
all majors and degrees for a military career with
the U.S. Marine Corps. The Corps
conducts a nine-week summer
program. Upon completion and
graduation, a commission as a
second lieutenant is offered.

Today

quired to register in Clark Gym
on Registration Day in January.

Oct. 13

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at REGULAR Airline FARES too!

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Dec. 6 through Dec. 10
A, E
Dec. 13 through Dec. 17
D,
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Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
114 one week in advance of the
above scheduled times. At this
time, the Receptionist will give
the student registration cards
and a list of instructions to follow in the subsequent registration procedures. O.T. students
will make their appointment
with the receptionist. (P.T. students make appointments with
Miss Heap directly). Nursing students are advised and registered
through the school of Nursing.
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled time, or who do not keep
—

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Cooperative College Registry
Witherspoon Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Mr. Paul Sherry of
the Cooperative College Registry

X* *1.

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on the
campus
{/ \

—

WEEKLY CALENDAR
Oct. 11
Department of Music
presents the first Slee Lecture to be
held in Butler Auditorium, Capen
Hall, Open to the Public, 8:30
p.m.
Oct. 12
Sigma Xi Lecture
presented
by Dr. Willard F. Libby, Nobel
Prize winner in the field of
Chemistry and Distinguished
Visiting Professor in Nuclear
Science. Dr. Libby will speak on
“Space Science” in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall. Open
to the Public, 8 p.m.
Oct. 14
James Fenton Lecture
the
second of an annual series of
lectures to be held this Fall features Edward A: Shils, Professor
of Sociology and of Social
Thought, Chairman of the Committee for the Comparative Study
of New Nations, University of
Chicago, in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall. Open to the
—

—

—

Public, 8:30 p.m.
Oct. 15
Seminar in Engineering Sciences
features James Morris,
group leader, Plasma Properties,
Research and Advanced Develop—

will

interview

candidates

m

be-

tween 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
The purpose of the Cooperative
College Registry is to register

and assist candidates interested
in joining the faculty of a church
-related college.
Oct. 14
E.l, DuPont de Nemours

&amp;

Co.

B.S., Civil Engineering. Immediate career opportunities in
the DuPont Construction Division for Civil Engineers graduating in February 1966. Future
opportunities will be available
for May graduates.
—

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A Oiviiion Of

Dr. Samuel Sanes will
on “Before Medical

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�Friday, October 8, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

(J3iii Gherman
For those who might be interested in the problems
involved in the rendering of a good novel into an intelligent film, The Collector, directed by William Wyler,
based on the book by John Fowles, and now playing at
the Granada theatre, provides a fine case study. Both the
novel and the film are concerned with the relative nature
of evil and madness, with the implications of the fact
that death is the only certainty in a world of chaos. But
whereas the novel emphasizes point of view, focus, and
ultimately the relatively nature of truth itself, the film,
by avoiding this problem and placing the stress instead
on psychological problems arising out of a class structure,
comes dangerously close to melodrama.
To successfully deal cinematically with a problem
like “the relative nature of truth” the director must be
gifted enough to conceive how the camera may be used
as a participant in the unfolding reality, a kind of psychiatric tool; Kurosawa in Roshomon or Godard in Une
Femme Mariee for example do just that. Wyler is a good
director, but he lacks that touch of cinematic genius
which separates the good from the great. By avoiding one
of the key instances of the novel, he loses much subtle
complexity and substitutes nothing of lasting value in
its place.
Wyler's technique is derivative from Hitchcock. It is
slickly ironic and most entertaining. It is also at timefe
heavy-handed and rings false. The most obvious heavy-

handedness occurs when Wyler is pushing the aforementioned class differences as the psychological superstructure, “I was right to bring you here. We could never
have been friends on the outside
You never really
Stop patronizing me.” Wyler hammers
talk to me .
it in making sure that everyone gets the point. And just
in case anyone did miss it, Terrance Stamp, in these moments of “confrontation” forces his accent into a Cockney
clip while Samantha Eggar’s voice takes on a more cultured tone. Less obvious, but perhaps more important
in terms of artistic integrity, is the on-location shooting.
Wyler, in the name of “realism” makes sure that the
key London scenes occur in easily recognizable and stereotyped settings. The girl goes to an art school near
Kingsway; she breaks up with her lover in a pub on
Havistock; she is abducted in Hampstead. It’s like Blake
Edwards making sure he gets in a shot of Washington
Square in every one of his films shot in New York. It
becomes rather ridiculous when Stamp drives Miss Eggar
from Hampstead to his house in Kent via Trafalgar
Square (shots of pigeons and fountains). Ridiculous because to drive from Hampstead to Kent in the country
is like driving from Manhattan to Queens via Jersey City.
Nit-picking? Maybe, but it seems to me to be indicative
of the major flaw of the film: Substituting commercial
slickness to avoid the issue.
.

.

.

.

.

In spite of this, the film is worthwhile. This is because Wyler’s strength as director stems from his ability
to handle actors. Miss Eggar has said that Wyler virtually frightened her performance out of her by domineering her, cajoling her, scolding her, forcing her by
the sheer power of his will to respond to the situation
with the exact response. As a result, she turns in an exceptional performance as the kidnapped girl.
Stamp, whose acting gets a bit better each year as
he matures, is masterful as the “collector.” His facial
tension, his physical motions, are perfectly controlled;
his small-boy manner covering over the fact that he destroys in the name of love. “What’s a few specimens to
. There'd be a blooming lot more
a whole species?
of this if people had the time and money.
.

.

There are many good things in the film besides the
acting. Certain individual scenes are quite striking:
Stamp’s running in the rain, elated after the successful
kidnap: Miss Eggars agreeing to remain with him for
four weeks; the seduction scene; all are superb—-successfully intertwining comedy and a terrible pathos. Maurice
Jarre’s musical score is excellent. There are other things
film. The physical details of the imprisonment are not convincing and,the pace and tempo often
wrong with the

drag.

What it all boils down to however, is the problem
which by now is old hat: how to create a “work of art”
which will be palatable enough to a mass audience so
that it will return a profit for the producers. The answer
seems always to be
compromise. In the pressbook
publicity campaign for the film there is the following
—

suggestion:

“In this new film Terrance Stamp is a butterfly collector until he turns to collecting girls! Are there butterfly collectors and collections in your town? In almost
every community, the police have
a record of girls who
have disappeared without a trace as Samantha Eggar
does. With police cooperation you have the basis for a
number of useful promotions.”

The Collector is a good film. It should have been
better.

SUNDAY’S
FUN DAY,
CHARLIE
BROWN
Fantasticks—New Musical Comedy
“The Fantasticks,” a musical
comedy that features both sentiment and a mockery of sentiment, will be presented by an
all-student cast at 8:30 every
evening from Wednesday, October 27 through Sunday, October
31. Performances will be held on
a three-quarter round stage in
Norton Union’s Fillmore Room.
Musical accompaniment will be
provided by piano, harp, percussion, and bass.
Henry A. Wicke, Jr., a member
of the music faculty, will direct
what he describes as “the best
student cast ever assembled for
a musical at UB.” Jim Kirsch, as
The Boy, and Barb Damashek, as
The Girl, have the leading roles,
playing the sweethearts whose
romance is forbidden by seemingly hostile parents. Lee Puma
and Jim Todkill as the parents
are actually close friends who
hope to promote the match by
pretending to forbid it.
Winnie Watson will portray
The Mute. Hers is probably the
strangest part in “The Fantasticks.’’ As a mute she will have
no lines, yet she will be on stage
longer than any of the other actors. She is to be the arranger
of props and scenery—hanging
out a cardboard moon or sun to
indicate changes from night to
day, scattering confetti to underline moments of gaiety and even
becoming a wall by stretching

THE NEW

along with Musical Director Noel
Harrington, Musical Assistants
Karen Reed and Ronnie Regen,
Scenic Designer Jack McGroder,
and Stage Manager Mare Pomer.
antz.

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DIN

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her arms.

Jim Jiminez, as The Narrator,
will not only comment between
-the-scenesJiuL will also enter
into the action of the story.
Lew Rampino, Bob Nigro, and
Jeff Lesser will also be featured
in the production. Support and
direction for the entire cast will
be provided by Director Wicke,

ifu

Nobel Winner
Dr. William Libby
To Speak Tuesday

If*

Dr. Willard Libby, Nobel prize
winner in chemistry, will speak
to undergraduates on “Radiocarbon Dating” on Tuesday, October
12 at 11 a.m. in Acheson 140.
Radiocarbon dating is used to
calculate the age of artifacts on
plant and animal products.

&amp;

ShlPOF
M

CHARACTER BY CHARACTER... SCENE BY
SCENE...EXCITEMENT BY EXCITEMENT...

The Bisonhead Society is sponsoring Dr. Libby as a visiting
professor from UCLA.
Following
the
lecture the
Bisonhead Society will sponsor a
closed luncheon at 12:30 in the
Tiffin Room in honor of Dr.
Libby. Honored guests will be Dr.
Clifford Furnas, Dr. Ebert, Dr.
J. T. Horton, Dr. Bruoan, Dr.
Baumer, and Dr, Plesur,

COLUMBIA

PICTURES

VIVIEN

PRESENTS A STANLEY KRAMER PRODUCTION

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ELIZABETH

LEIGH SIGNORET FERRER MARVIN WERNER ASHLEY
SEGAL GRECO DUNN KORVINandRUEHMANN LILIA SKALA
KATHERINE ANNE PORTER’S "SHIP OF FOOLS''
GEORGE

JOSl

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CHARLES

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�Friday, October 8, 1965

Do
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GREEK NOTES

?
•

ALPHA PHI OMEGA
Alpha Phi Omega is looking
forward to Homecoming Weekend and urges all students to

actively support the event.
Tomorrow evening, prior to the
Homecoming Dance, a cocktail
party will be held at Jerry

DINO'S
For Bavarian Black Beer
Blvd.
Sheridan Dr.

Corner Colvin

&amp;

Tau Kappa Epsilon will be attending a closed cocktail party
before the Homecoming Dance.
This is Homecoming Weekend,
so, let’s all go out and support

the Bulls tomorrow.

I. F. C,
All preferential lists must be
submited to Mr. Garber’s office
Room 316 Norton by 8 p.m. Mon-

PHI KAPPA PSI

Audience Participation
featuring

NO COVER
NO Entertainment

Charge
Every Saturday Nite
Continuous

ENTERTAINMENT

•

Tuesday.

*��******���****��***�*

J

it
!

RAY

VOHWINKLE

Dancing and

UMOC.
The brothers will hold a brief
victory party immediately after
the game, and will conclude Saturday’s festivities with a cocktail party before attending the
Homecoming Dance.
A reminder to all rushees: preferential bidding is Monday and

i

*

IN PERSON
Friday, Oct. 15th

COUNT BASIE

and His World Famous
ORCHESTRA

Dancing 9 p.m. to

)

a.m.

Big Pitcher
of Beer

$3.00
Advance Tickets
$3.50
At Door

Community Singing

for Table Reservations

•

Comedy!

•

Games!

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from Main Street

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Sunday. Congratulations to Sue
Schillo for winning the best
pledge award; to Sisters Hawley,
Hunt, Strong and Gallaurese for
their pledge scrapbooks, and to
Sister Knapp for receiving the
Scholarship Award. The new sisters completed their pledge project at St. Rita’s Home for Children.

ALPHA PHI DELTA
Alpha Phi Delta held a dated
Rush Party last Saturday night at
the Club Bar.

Tonight at 6:30 p.m., the brothers will hold their rush dinner at

BETA PHI SIGMA

Phi Kappa Psi, in conjunction
with HOmeeoming Weekend, is
sponsoring R. C. Shields for

THANX

Theta Chi Sorority held a dinner dance last Saturday at the
Peter Stuyvesant Hotel in honor
of the newly initiated pledges.
Karen Hanson received the award
for the outstanding pledge. The
outstanding sister award went to

THETA CHI FRATERNITY

members. At the ceremonies conducted September 26, the following wer,e inducted: Robert Allen,

Jeffrey Kenyon, Larry

GAMMA PHI

for the Tremendous Turnout on Sat. Nite for Your

THETA CHI SORORITY

Robert Marko, Frank Pinzcl, John
Puchalski, Edward Sharkey, Paul

Gamma Phi would like to announce the election of their new
pledge master and rush chairman, AI Luck. Tomorrow night
before the Homecoming Dance,
the brothers will hold a cocktail party at the Claredon in Williamsville.

Williamsville, N.Y. 632-0065

ual.

Theta Chi Fraternity wishes to
congratulate its newly initiated

day.
Bidding will take place in the
I.F.C. office, Room 347 Norton
Monday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and
Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

GLEN PARK
CASINO

Dress for the party will be cas-

Carol Kujawa,

The American Pharmaceutical
Association has proclaimed this
week National Pharmacy Week.
Beta Phi Sigma Pharmacy fraternity hopes that our support
of the APHA has helped pharmacy increase its horizons this
week and every week of the year.
The brothers are holding a
Hayride today. Any brother needing directions or desiring a map
call Irwin Wechsler.
There will be a closed cocktail party tomorrow before the
Homecoming Dance at A1 Levitt’s
apartment. The party starts at
7:30 p.m.

SERVICE

Pi Lamda Tau wishes to announce a party tomorrow at 8:30
p.m. at Brother Petz's home.

PHI LAMDA DELTA
Phi Lamda Delta fraternity
will hold a rush party tomorrow
at 8:30 p.m. at Bosellas. By invitation only! Phi Lamda Delta
would also like to announce the
appointment of Jim Sigourney as

Activities Chairman.

DELIVERY

PI LAMDA TAU

Trent’s home.

TAU KAPPA EPSILON

CHALET ROY ALE

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Mackey,

Schwiegerling, and Tyler Swansoh.

Tomorrow', there will be a postgame party at the house, 2 Niagara Falls Boulevard, for the
Brothers and the Alumni. Refreshments will be served. Preceding the dance, a cocktail party
will be held at the house at 8 p m.
SIGMA KAPPA PHI

Sigma Kappa Phi is looking
forward to meeting the new
rushees this Sunday at the sorority convocation. Welcome to our
new sisters initiated just last

the Lakeview Hotel on the American Lake Shore, The famous
Lakeview Smorgasbord will be
served. Dr. Milton Plesur, the
Assistant Dean of University College. will speak.
Congratulations arc extended
to Brother Don Colquhoun and
Miss Wendy Baum of Chi Omega
on their pinning last week.
The brothers will be out in
force' this weekend to cheer on
the Bulls against Boston U. Also,
for the third week in a row, they
will occupy a block of seats at the
Buffalo Bills game Sunday.
PHI EPSILON PI
Phi Epsilon Pi will hold a
Homecoming Party at the Roc
Mar, tomorrow.
The Rush Stag held last Friday night proved to be very enjoyable for both brothers and
rushees.

New System For
A&amp;S Division
By SHARON SHULMAN

Since the August retirement
of Dr. Anderson as Vice-President for Educational Affairs,
there has been a realignment of
all the degree-granting divisions
of the University, with the exception of the Health-Science division. A general committee
structure has replaced Dr. Anderson as head of these divisions. President Furnas has appointed Charles Fogel as his specail assistant directing this committee.
In the Colleges of Arts and
Sciences, Dean Slatin directs a
committee of the heads of each
of the three branches. Dr. Handy
is in charge of the philosophy
and social sciences departments;
Dr, Harris directs the natural
sciences; and Dr. Sap, the music
and humanities.
Dr.

Slatin and other adminis-

trators arc optimistic that the
system will work, although it has
in effect for only one

month. This is a purely experimental arrangement and its survival depends on its effectiveness.

�PAGE TEN

SPECTRUM

Homecomi

Friday, October

Candidates

MARILYN McCONKY

ir

VICKI

S
CINDY NASH

HOWE

JUUI SCHULZE-BECKENHAUSER

AVA SHAPERO

•,

CINDY WALCOTT

CORNILLE SEVERYN

1965

�Friday, October I, 1965

PACE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM
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•

-

The CRO will hold its next
meeting Tuesday, October 12 at
3 p.m. in Room 217, Norton. All
CRO representatives, presidents
of all religious organizations, and
their advisors should be present

at this meeting.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

ORGANIZATION

The regular monthly meeting
of the campus Christian Science
Organization will be held next
Thursday at 7 p.m. in Room 264,
All are welcome.

HILLEL
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hoffman will speak on: “Sukkoth
Symbols.” An Oneg Sabbath will
follow.
Dr. and Mrs. Justin Hoffman
have extended an invitation to
all members of the Hillel Student
Council for an Oneg Sukkoth to
be held Sunday, October 10 at
8:30 p.m., in their home, 12 Colton Drive.
The class in Elementary Hebrew will meet this Sunday at
2 p.m. and the group in Basic
Judaism will meet at 3 p.m. in
the Hillel House. A meeting of
the Talmud Study Group will be
held on Thursday at 4 p.m. in
the Hillel House. The class in
Advanced Hebrew will hold its
first meeting Tuesday, October
26, at 4 p.m. in the Hillel House.
The annual Hillel Hay Ride will
take place Saturday evening,
October 23. Buses will leave from
Norton Hall and return to Norton at the conclusion of the affair. Tickets may now be purchased by members of Hillel at
the Hillel House.
1VCF

There will be an important
meeting of all members of IVCF
today at 7 p.m. in Norton 344. At

this time the revised constitution will be presented and a vote
taken for ratification of the proposed changes. All members who
can possibly attend are requested to do so.
Again, a reminder to those
members of IVCF who are interested in the Fall Weekend
Conference of Western New York
Chapters, IVCF. The conference
will be held October 15 through
17, at Le Lourneau Christian
Camp. Application blanks should
be in as soon as possible.
This week’s lecture in the series on the six principles of faith
of IVCF is the second of two
parts on The Consummation of
the Kingdom in the “glorious appearing of the great God and our
Saviour Jesus Christ.” The Rev.
Walter Watson of Lancaster will
present the lecture from 3 to 4
p.m. Tuesday in Norton 262.
IVCF holds regular prayer
meetings at 1:30 p.m. Tuesdays
and 9:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesdays in Norton 217. Regular
Bible studies are held Mondays
at 3 p.m., Wednesdays at 2 p.m,
and Thursdays at 10 a.m., also in
Norton 217.
Anyone desiring further information should contact Miss
Billi Lee Knapp at 831-3251.

NEWMAN
Rabbi

Hoffman

will be the
at the meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Norguest speaker

ton Conference Theater. Everyone is invited to attend.
October devotions are held
every day at Newman Center
after 11 a.m. Mass. Sunday Suppers are served every Sunday at

5:30 p.m.

October 29, 30, and 31, the
Empire State Educational Weekend will be held in Rochester.
Registration will begin Friday,

'

October 29, at 6 p.m. followed by
a mixer. Saturday morning and
afternoon will be devoted to
speakers and discussion groups,
Saturday evening, there will be
a banquet and semi-formal dance.
The weekend will end with a
Communion breakfast Sunday
morning.
Further information on this
weekend can be obtained at Newman Hall or at the Wednesday
night meetings.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

Next Thursday, October 14, our
topic will be “Authority in the

Church.” We shall discuss: “What
was the source of authority in
the early Christian Church and
“What is the Roman Catholic
concept of authority as far as
the Pope is concerned? All meetings will be held at the chaplain’s home, 49 Heath Street, at
7:30 p.m. Supper is served at 6
p.m. for 50c; reservations may be
made by calling TF 6-5806 or

TF 4-4250,

The Student Christian

Move-

ment Fall Conference, entitled
“Poverty,” will be held the weekend of October 15 through 17, at

the Lisle Conference Center. The
main topic to be discussed is
“Shall the people of God join the
State in its war on poverty?”
Further information may be obtained by calling Chaplain Buerk,
A seminar on the subject "The
Meaning of Religious Language”
is being conducted by Chaplain
Buerk Sunday mornings at the
University Presbyterian Church
from 9:30 to 10:30. A light breakfast of coffee, orange juice, and
doughnuts is served. Anyone interested is welcome to join the
group at any time.
There will be a meeting of the
Liberal Religious Fellowship this

Your Own Backyard
Frank Sedita we must look at his
record as a past mayor.
Sedita’s administration may be
condemned on at least five counts.
First, it was noted for its weak
attitude towards crime. Buffalo,
during the Sedita administration,
was reported by the State Crime
Commission for “the existence
of widespread, open and notorious violations of the laws concerning gambling, vice and liquor
control.” Second, Sedita sank
$250,000 of city funds into
the still unusable Delaware Park
Casino. Third, the Sedita Administration was rocked by a parking meter scandal. Fourth, there
was gross mismanagement of the
Ellicott District Housing Project.
And finally, Sedita ignored Benzow’s 1961 legislation for the
creation of a City Division of
Pollution. But, there were of
course redeeming features of Sedita’s term in office, several of
which point towards a more progressive attitude in the City of
Buffalo. He established a “HalfWay House” for alcoholics; and
this was an important start for
the new concept of social legislation. He also aided in the solving
of two major urban problems—traffic control and parking, and
he managed to reduce city expenditures.
Among Sedita’s campaign promises are: more money for education; furthering urban renewal;
strict law enforcement, improved
water and air pollution control;
and city financial aid to the
Studio Arena Theater. This last
idea appears to us as a refreshing one in a city that is sadly
lacking in live theater. The other
Sedita proposals appear to us as
promises to do now what Sedita

Monday, October 11, 1965 at 7
p.m. in Norton. Check the bul-

Corner

Colvin Bhrd. A

Shoridan Dr

letin board for the exact room
number. Dr. Marvin Zimmerman
will speak on "The Delusions of

Pacifism,"

Math Department
Widens Program
Next semester, non-majors will
be able to take a new program'
designed to give a wider view of
mathematics. Instead of the choices between a four semester calculus sequence or a Math 117118 sequence, the new curriculum
will offer a two or three semester sequence. Dr, Parker, the Executive Officer of the Math Department, stated that this new
group of courses should be more
practical and less technical to aid
those students who are not majoring in math but who need a
broader view of the entire field.
Two new courses have been
added to the curriculum for majors. Dr. Magill will be giving an
introductory course in Topology
which is offered at only a few
other New York State schools,
and Dr. Barback will be instructing students in Mathematical Logie, his specialty.

The
ENGAGE-ABLES
go for

The new faculty members include five professors, Drs. Rafael Artzy, Kuo Tsai Chen, Federico Gaeta, Yuzo Utumi, and Anthony Ralston, who is also the
Director of the Computer Center.
Dr. Eric Wallace is a new visiting
associate professor from Liverpool and Drs. Joseph Barback,
Ubiratan D’Ambrosio, Michael
Gemignani, and King Lee, are new
assistant professors. Dr. V, G.
Gorciu is a new lecturer and Alex
Bocopoulos, William
Jackson,
John McCabe and Dick Wood are
new instructors here.

TC

&amp;

ep

&amp;

gtlc

ipmm

(Cont’d from P. 4)
f»Mr« (mm |I00 lo $2M0
In Mmiw Hi Mint ill iHlil. JC

did not do in his first term as

I

Ring* ( nljigril
rjitr Milk Kr|

mayor.

Each Keepsake setting is
a masterpiece of design, reflecting the full brilliance
and beauty of the center diamond
a perfect gem of
flawless clarity, fine color and
meticulous modern cut. The
name, Keepsake, in the ring
and on the tag is your assurance of fine quality.
Your very personal Keepsake
is now at your Keepsake
Jeweler’s store. Find him in
the yeltow pages under
“Je

Bernard Kurtz apparently got
a swelled head when he saw the
success of his Super-Kurtz insurance commercials. For some rea-

son, Kurtz believes that although
he has no government experience,
he thinks he can take over this
city’s government with all the
problems contained therein. He
originally started as an independent businessman’s candidate,
but jumped at the Conservative
endorsement when it was offered
to him. It seems to us that if
Kurtz was going to offer the people of this city a third choice
for mayor, he should have remained an independent, for an
independent just might be what
this city needs.
In conclusion, this years choice
is between Benzow who has relatively few accomplishments to
speak of, Sedita who has already
proved his incompetence in office, and Kurtz who is known
solely for his lack of qualifications. Though the bookies say
its odds-on for Sedita because he
is Catholic and because his name
is the best known of the three,
and although it looks as if Benzow will pull a large vote because his name sounds Polish,
we can only hope that the voters
will choose the next Mayor of
Buffalo on “rational, not emotional” basis.
As of this printing, it appears
that both Sedita and Benzow will
speak before the student body,
and be open for questions on
Thursday, October 21. We hope
you will all attend.

Nomination forms for the Annual Graduate Student
Association Executive Council may still be picked
up in Room 311 of Norton Union.

CAMUOT

...

[~H0\
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COUNCIL OF RELIGIOUS
ORGANIZATIONS

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one 1

Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-pagc Bride's Book

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Discounts

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on

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OIL
TIRES
BATTERIES

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Jim Tuttle’s

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SPECIAL RATES ON
REPAIRS
PARTS

UNIVERSITY CAMERA
AND

PORTRAIT STUDIO

S

—

3114 tyAIN STREET
2 blocks from School

KENDALL KA5TLE
KAR KLINIC
TF 6-9429

Everything in used photographic equipment. We
buy, sell and trade.

Charge Plans Available
Present Your ID Card

Mon. A Thun, till 9

523 STARIN at Taunton

Open Daily

5 minutes
from U.B.

Less than

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TF 5-9230

•

•

I

i
I
j
|

from P.

4)

I have one secret vice, one last
tenuous link with normalacy. I

aiA

now and ever have been a
Angeles Dodger fan.
When things looked black way
back
I felt that nobody
wins fifteep in the National
League without losing some too
—which San Francisco was kind
enough to do. Having suffered
through unnumeral one run victories and defeats this year I
consider my ulcers well worth it
and would like to make a Series
Prediction befitting my loyalty.
Friends, Minnesota is going to be
lucky to do any better than the
Yankees did, and we all remember that series now don’t we?

rabid~bos

whei\.

interest if you compare the two
performances. He came on strong
last Saturday night and if all
there did not agree with everything that he said, at least he
said it in an entertaining light.
Maybe if SDS pays him another
bonus he will come back again
next year—if we can keep HUAC
away long enough to have one

next

DOHT

(Cont’d
•

Buffy St. Marie on the first night
were followed by Eric Anderson,
Rev. Gary Davis and Phil Ochs
on Saturday evening. Beside the
haze I have one minor grump.
Rev. Gary Davis plays a fine
guitar but we were sitting in
the seventh row, me and mine,
and somewhat baffled by his
vocal portions. A translation
would be appreciated.
Phil Ochs was my personal surprise. He played here in the Dorothy Haas Lounge last Semester
(Spring 65) and he must have
spent the earlier part of last Saturday night at someplace of great

Alterations &amp; Clothing
837 Niagara Falls Blvd.
837-4828
10% STUDENT DISjCOUNT

ACCESSORIES

grump

The

Suburban Tailor A
Men's Shop

Enough, if I do not freeze to
death in the wilds of Massachusetts over the weekend and you
stay out from under all the chestnut trees up into which small
monsters insist on heaving all
manner of objects, maybe we will
meet again next week.

year

—

Famous Fish Fry

Corner Colvin Blvd.

&amp;

—

Sheridan Dr.

Indian Advances
To Be Discussed
By JO ANNE LEEGANT

The second coffee hour in the
series “Technology Versus Humanities” will be presented by
the Union Board Public Relations Committee, Wednesday, October 13, at 3:30 in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge. Dr. Burvil Glenn
of the School of Education, and
Dr. Leslie Barnette of the School
of Psychology, will open the discussion.
Wednesday’s coffee hour will
begin with a presentation of facts
by Dr. Glenn and Dr. Barnette.

Both have studied the culture and

history of India, and will begin
discussion by showing how the
recent technological advances
made in that country have resulted in a change in the culture
and political outlook. They will
show that as technology became
more advanced, the importance
of the arts decreased. The situation in India will then be cor-

related with the situation in the
United States. The floor will be
opened for free discussion between faculty and students, in
which ideas will be exchanged
on an equal basis.

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
-

j
j

fight it.

Get Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper.
Mistakes don’t show. A mis-key completely disappears
from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets
you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper?
Eaton’s Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy
weights and Onion Skin. In 100-sheetpackets and 500sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments.

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John Lauritzen wanted further knowledge

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CITY CLUB
STITCHERS

Sew w hat's new: the handsewn

He’s finding it at Western Electric

Budget not up to City Club, youngman? Ask for Wesboro Shoes $8.95 to $ 10,95.
Wouldn't you like to be in our shoes? Most ot America is. International Shoe Co.. St. Louis, Mo.

Asailable at these tine stores;

SATTLER'S DEPT. STORE, Blvd. Mall &amp; 988 Broadway
WEXLER'S Southgate Shoe Store, Southgate Plaza
West Seneca, New York
PARK SHOE STORE, DIF Plaza, Dunkirk, N.Y.

When the University of Nevada awarded John
Launtzen his B.S.E.E. in 1961, it was only the first
big step in the learning program he envisions for
himself. This led him to Western Electric. For WE
agrees that ever-increasing knowledge is essential
to the development of its engineers—and is helping John in furthering his education.
John attended one of Western Electric’s three
Graduate Engineering Training Centers and graduated with honors. Now, through the Company-paid
Tuition Refund Plan, John is working toward his
Master's in Industrial Management at Brooklyn
Polytechnic Institute. He is currently a planning

System’s revolutionary electronic telephone switching system.
If you set the highest standards for yourself, both
educationally and professionally, we should talk.
Western Electric's vast communications job as
manufacturing unit of the Bell System provides
many opportunities for fast-moving careers for
electrical, mechanical and industrial engineers,
as well as for physical science, liberal arts and
business majors. Get your copy of the Western
Electric Career Opportunities booklet from your
Placement Officer. And be sure to arrange for an
interview when the Bell System recruiting team

engineer developing test equipment for the Bell

visits your campus.

Western Electric

MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM

AN EQUAL OPPORTU
Principal manufa
ig
Engineering Research C

location;

:

I

Friday, October 8, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

ties Oc
N.J.ZTo'

■ng. ,vn

any of
III., L

es

plus

36 others th

[he

U.S.

larters, New York City

�Friday, October 8, 1965

&lt;

jCetterA to the

Distraught Student
Seeks Reopening
Of Frat Lounge

.

TO THE EDITOR;
Considering this column has
turned into the gripe section of
the Spectrum, I would like to
add my nickel’s worth.
It seems that in my past three
years at UB, Norton Union is the
place to go to 1 be in with the
“in crowd.” Well, that’s good and
fine—but this year the “in crowd”
or what is customarily known as
the “animal lounge” is out. Apparently, the administration has
felt that this place be considered
a distaster area, but offers no
help to those of us who need a
place to sit.
Right now, I am in the “townee”
lounge where I had to wait
fifteen minutes tfor a seat. Obviously, the administration does
not realize the seriousness of this
problem. (Where can I relax and
read my Spectrum on a Friday
afternoon?)

Tired of Standing,
Barry I. Adler

Student Protests

Charge on Checks

TO THE EDITOR:
As one of the many students
who has to spend money like
mad on this campus, I wish to

complain. Students have enough
problems cashing checks around
this place without having to pay
a 10 cent “cover charge.” If the
book store is going to give this
service, I think they ought to
give it. I think this is one service
that ought to be provided tor the
students free of charge. Checks
are the only access some students
have to money. I don’t see why

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

1963 CORVAIR MONZA, black
with red interior, bucket seats,
4-speed with 145 h.p., heavy duty
suspension, 4 new Dunlop Road
Speed tires; $1050. Call TR 31426 after 5 p.m.
MOTORCYCLE,

candy

apple

green, 500cc verticle twin Ind-

ian “Scout” $175. Mel—833-8354.

'57 PLYMOUTH in running con
dition, passed inspection. Snow
tires, good battery, reasonable
price. J. Harris, 831-3649, Capen
Hall Room G6
NORTHLAND (wood) SKIS, with

bindings 6’3”, $25. Mel 833-8354.

WANTED
SECOND HAND baby seat for
bicycle with foot rest. Call 632-

8726.

BASS GUITAR PLAYER for es
tablished Rock 'n Roll band.

634-3603.

SERVICES AND REPAIRS
THE DRUIDS will play Rock n
Roll Music better for any occasion. Call David Hamilton at

634-3603.

RADIOS

PHONOGRAPHS
(mono and stereo) repaired. Student rates. Call 833-3458 after
five for prompt service.
AND

LOST

AND FOUND

REWARD for return of
painting (original condition, 2 x
3 ft, semi abstract still life, done
in earth colors—umbers, siennas,
white, black, etc., taken from
rack in Art Room 322 week beginning September 15, 1965. No
$25.00

questions

PACE

SPECTRUM

asked. Phone NX 4-1811

or BU 5-9186.

MISCELLANEOUS
FACULTY AND STUDENT inter
ested in the Modern Art Student Group Membership Plan see
Art History Bulletin Board outside 244 Crosby. Book discounts
and other substantial savings.

Editor

(Contd from P.

we should be expected to pay a
charge just so we can give the
money we get from the check to
another part of the college.

Anne Recore

Allenhurst Rep

Objects to Outdoor
Gym Activity

Exhibit: Center
Union, Miniatures and Manuscripts from the 13th to the
19th centuries. To be shown
until October 9.
Reception and Fashion Show:
8:30 p.m., Millard Fillmore
(women only)

Mixer: (after the pep rally)
Union Board, 10 to 1 am.,
Rathskeller
Dance Recital: Indian Dance
group of the Asian Associates
of New York, 8:30 p.m., Baird
Hall
Cybelle”
Movie: “Sundays
continuous performance 3-12
in the Conference Theatre
Panel Discussion on "Indian
Philosophy” given by Dr. Riepe
and Dr. Scoledes in the Dorothy Haas Lounge at 3:00 p.m.
■

Saturday
Varsity Football Game: UB vs.
Boston University, 1:30 p.m.,

Field
Final performance
Ustad Alii Akbar Khan, Shankar Ghosh, Sheela Mookerjee,
8:30 p.m., Baird Hall
Rotary

Concert:

&amp;

Cybelle”

■

Drama Series Planned;
Society Elects Officers
GREEN

On October 11, 12, and 13 at
4:00 p.m. the Society will present
two one act plays entitled Return

First, Slee

Lecture,

Lecture:
8:30 p.m., Capen Hall
Lecture: Freshman Forem for
women, 2:00 p.m., Conference
Theatre
Tuesday
Lecture;

ple. The first is being directed by
Dave Goldfarb, and the second by
Jeannette Veling; both students
at UB.
In November, the Society will
present an original two-act play
by Ruth Swayzw entitled You
Haven't Suffered Enough. John
Lund, director of this play, is
holding tryouts this week. All
those interested are welcome. For
further information, contact the
Drama Society office, 312 Norton.
Dad, Poor
Hung You In
Oh

Dad,

Mama's
Anri I'm

Feeling So Sad is the comedy
which will be performed in December. This play, by Arthur Kopit, will be directed by Corinne

The Drama Society was created
in 1962 by a student, Dick Roth.
His purpose was to acquaint dra
ma students and those interested
in drama with actual dramatic
experience. In the autumn of

I

.

his book Erfahrung und Theorie
in der Physik. He moved to the
United States in the early 30's,
and ever since has been one of the

principal American proponents of
philosophical analysis. The task
of a philosopher is to analyze and
clarify
not just science, but
the nature of all sorts of human
Enterprise. It is a role more humble than grandiose, but greatly
significant nonetheless. A man of
great wit, l*'cigl once summed up
the analytic position by warning
that the greatest challenge to a
philosopher was to avoid selling
his birthright for a pot of mes—

sage."

University of Buffalo

produced.

The Drama Society is financed
by the Student Senate and by
membership dues. Until recently,
ticket money from performances
also contributed to help finance
the organization. But now all productions are free to the students.

The officers of

.y.

—

ff

Masiulionis; and

vj^

ERNIE
DAVIS

the Drama So-

ciety are: President, Francine
Zumpano; Vice President, Gary
Battaglia; Treasurer, Dick. Kawccki; Business Manager, Bill Cortes;
Corresponding Secretary, Audrey

LEUKEMIA
FUND

Recording Sec-

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Fig tit Slurlw At Home
KICKOFF WEEKEND OCTOBER
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ABGOTT

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Your I.D. Card
is Worth 10% at

Clothing Fashion Center for Men

Buffalo, New York 1«15

Theatre

brand of friendliness

BOULEVARD MALL

Dial 832-1200

Wednesday

Sports; Varsity and frosh crosscountry, UB ys. Niagara, 4:00
p.m., Rotary Field
Coffee Hour: Dr. B Glenn and
Dr. L. Barnette, 3:30 p.m.,
Dorothy Haas Lounge
Lecture: Dr. W. F. Libby, The
Carbon 14 Dating Process”
8:30 p.m., Capen Hall
Concert;
Creative Associates,

8:30 p.m., Baird Hall
Thursday

Women’s
Forum series, 11:00 a m., ConFreshmen

ference Theatre

Fenton series, 8:30
p.m., Conference Theatre
Lecture;

1963, the Society presented its
first production which consisted
of three plays: This Property
Condemned by
Williams, Impromptu by Mosel, The Stronger
by Strinberg, In addition, the east
also re-enacted scenes from West
Side Story. Each play was entirely student acted, directed, and

Jaffe.

women, 11:00 a.m., Conference

Lecture:

Herbert Feigl is among the philwho align themselves
with science, and throughout his
career he has tried to understand
the intricacies of scientific method and the criterion of meaningfulness. As a young man he lived
in Vienna and participated in the
Vienna Circle, a group of empiricists with the same orientation. It was there that he wrote
osophers

Journey and Servants of the Peo-

continuous performances 3-12
in the Conference Theatre
Monday

fication.

—

Pat Occhiuzzo

—

—

Been V*

This semester, the Drama So-

Lounge, Norton

Movie: “Sundays

for example, a creed or
a disclaimer certificate
it may
be unimportant whether you understand what you arc saying or
have any way of knowing it to be
true. But if the froth of a statement also matters, then you must
clearly understand what it means.
Unless a statement has just one
clear meaning, no one can know
exactly what proposition is supposed to be true if the statement
is accepted. Clarity, indeed, is
not enough; but it is an indispensable prerequisite to truth, and is
greatly to be preferred to mysti-

ment

—

ciety has planned a series of
plays to be held in the Conference
Theater in Norton Hall.

7-13

&amp;

.

Halstead

By KAREN

Calendar

room

.

covered. They are easy targets discursive.)
for infectious and contagious
Why not guess at the truth? If
diseases, yet they too are participating in gym activities.
it is important to believe propAlthough this may be a way ositions which arc true, then you
of reducing over crowded physical can improve your chances tenfold by accepting ten times as
education classes, 1 cannot understand why the spacious Clark many propositions. Surely they
But this is
Gymnasium cannot be used on can't all be false!
not the way of science. A sciensuch days.
If this practice is an established tist must distinguish between inone, I Cannot understand why it venting hypotheses and accepting
has not been questioned and them: invention should be bold,
imaginative, and prolific: but acdealt with earlier.
ceptance must be cautious, forced
Steven L. Gratton
by the evidence, and abstemious.
“Dr.
So guessing won’t do: there must
some test which a proposition
be
Where Have
passes before it is accepted. For
You
a scientifically oriented philosopher, his appetite for truth is
TO THE EDITOR
ascetic rather than gluttonous:
1 must express my deep thanks he wants to believe only what is
true.
to Dr. Halstead for sharing his
-•fourfold path of commitment
If truth is important, so is clarity. It is of course possible to
until now I was just a poor, confused college student waiting for accept a statement that is vague
indeed vaguethe coming of a new Buddha. or ambiguous
How heartening to be no longer ness and ambiguity contribute to
in that bind with the road to the popular acceptance of statesalvation so expertly paved for ments, as a study of proverbs and
me. Dr. Halstead—Where have political slogans readily shows. Tf
what counts is just whether or
you been all my life?
not you accept a certain state-

Weekly
Friday

.

(Cont’d from P. 6)
(Literature, if it is sound and estimable. is expressive rather than

—

TO THE EDITOR:
I have recently been elected to
Inter-Residence Council as a representative from Allenhurst.
A matter has been brought
to my attention which I feel
needs questioning and explaining.
On the morning of October 4,
the temperature dipped to a low
of 35 degrees Fahrenheit, a strong
gusty wind was blowing, and we
experienced our first snowfall.
Most of us had changed into our
winter coats but, alas, there was
a group of disheartened physical
education students clad only in
their gym shorts and T-shirts
doing exercises.
In my opinion these are extremely adverse conditions for
outside physical activity. With
the weather changing, everyone
is on the verge of catching anything from the common cold to
strep throat and pneumonia.
Also, after the recent epidemic,
many students who were placed
in the infirmary but are now released are not completely re-

OCT.

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�Friday, October 8, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

■

BUFFALO
FOLK FESTIVAL

u

1V*

vc

T
v
.il

t
&amp;

"

i

X:

:4.

�Friday, October 8, IMS

-

SPECTRUM

PACE FIFTEEN

Phil Ochs Highlights Weekend Festival

By David Bergen and

Peter Rubin
The first “annual” UB Folk
Festival took place at Clark Gym
last Friday and Saturday nights.
The Friday night program was
interestingly varied with the
Greenbriar Boys, a spirited bluegrass ensemble opening the show,
and the stunning Buffy St. Marie,
a full-blooded Cree Indian songwriter and singer, performing
after the intermission. Saturday
night’s concert featured Phil
Ochs, the Reverend Gary Davis
and Eric Anderson. The opening
night of the festival drew only
900 people to hear the lesser
known Greenbriar Boys and Miss
St. Marie, but on Saturday night,
1340 people turned out primarily
to hear the eastern favorite, Phil
Ochs. The attendance for the
two evenings was not indicative
of the quality of the performers
at each concert. Phil Ochs, currently riding the crest of a wave
of popularity at UB where he is
looked on as “the folksinger in
residence,” probably accounted
for the larger turn-out Saturday
evening. For those who waited
until Saturday night to worship
at the altar of their new idol, we
felt that Friday night’s concert
was considerably more rewarding.

.of all

bluegrass music, Bill MonHis playing definitely did
not degrade the high standards
of his master. Herald, one of the
originators of the quartet, was
featured on “Levee Breaking
Blues,” and that song alone, with
its combination of musicianship
and virtuosity by all of the members of the group, was enough
to show why the Greenbriar
Boys are considered one of the
best groups in the business and
why they were so popular with
the audience Friday night.
Buffy St. Marie balanced the
evening’s program perfectly. Expertly changing the tone and
pace of her repertoire, she was
consistently impressive. Her rendering of "Codine” was the highlight of her performance. The
song itself can be compared with
Dave Van Bonk’s “Cocaine Blues”
since both deal with the twilight
world of the junkie. It seemed
as if she aged before our eyes
as she did the song. A total commitment and an appealing sincerity were quite evident in
songs that dealt with her people, the Americain Indian, and
their harsh exploitation by the
U. S. government. In addition to
the numbers she played on an
ancient, weatherbeaten guitar,
she also employed her unique
roe.

version of the Jew’s Harp effectively. Throughout the performance; her exotic beauty had a
powerful effect on the audience.
Eric Anderson, the proverbial
home town boy who made good
(?), led off the second night of
the Festival. Although his lyrics
are pedestrian, his melodies repetitive and derivative and his guitar playing amateurish at best,
the obvious quality of his sincerity and the strong aura of his
sexual attractiveness compensated for his musical deficiencies

for most of the audience. The

reason for Anderson’s popularity
seemed to be those that catapultFabian to fame some years
back. It is unfortunate that the
American public is always willing to compromise talent for
good looks. Anderson is a nice
guy and attractive at that, but
those qualities alone do not constitute greatness in a folk singer.
The mood of the concert was
drastically changed by the appearance of the most famous of
the living “Holy Blues Singers,”
the 69 year old Reverend Gary
Davis. His songs are a combination of secular and sacred music
with an individuality of his own
that makes them unique. “Samson and Delilah” is a famous
Bible song-sermon which was

The UB Folk Festival was certainly not Newport
nor was
it Philadelphia. It was, sadly,
UB. Although it didn’t' have to
cope with the myriad problems
that the larger festivals invariably encounter, the UB Festival
was beset by its own difficulties.
Clark Gym was set up to hold
2100 people each night. The total
attendance for the two evenings
was 2240. Could it be that the
entire Festival was handled in
a bush-league manner by its coordinator, Richard Lawrence?
Friday night’s program opened
with the Greenbriar Boys. With
the addition of Richard Greene
playing fiddle and Frank Wakefield, who replaced Ralph Rinzler (on the mandolin), the Greenbriar Boys have undeniably become one of the finest groups of
.

.

first recorded by Blind Willie
Johnson. “You Got to Move,"
which featured some elaborate
guitar playing, is a synthesis of a
secular melody with a sermon
text. If one can keep track of
what Gary Davis is talking about
between numbers, his singing and
carrying on can be quite an enjoyable experience. His guitar
playing is still powerful and personal, although the Reverend has
obviously begun to lose some of
his vocal finesse.
The highlight of the evening’s
concert was the appearance of
the topical folk-singer Phil
Ochs. It is unfortunate, perhaps,
that Ochs seems to know only
one tune (and a few variations),
for as interesting as his songs
are, the re-occurence of the same
melody in song after song becomes tiresome. His guitar playing has improved considerably
since we saw him last at the Gaslight Cafe in NY before the summer. And, while his voice is not
outstanding by any means, he
does get the point across. Phil
Ochs has become for the young
person of the sixties, what H. L.
Mencken was for his generation
during the Depression. He is a
real social critic in that nothing
escapes his barbs. All points on
the political horizon seem fair

targets for Ochs’ trenchant wit.
He has a great sense of stage
presence, which proved helpful
in coping with the heckling of
several onerous individuals.
The songs ranged from the
Berkeley riots to the U. S, intervention at Santo Domingo. It

seemed that the people who
cheered the loudest for Ochs’ attack on the doctrinaire liberal in
"Love Me, I’m a Liberal," were the
same ones who roared the loudest for “Here’s to the State of
Mississippi.” Some of the audience may not be getting the
point of all that Ochs is saying.
What may have been the most
enjoyable aspect of his performance was his sense of humor
and his ironic outlook. His quips
about God, Dylan and St. Joan
were right on the mark. For a
change of pace, he finished his
performance with the poignant,
"When I’m Gone,” which told it
like it is.

I

j

j

SPANISH TUTORED
Contact Phil
886-3604

.

their kind in the country. Their
first number was somewhat
marred by the injection of Richard Lawrence’s personality into
the performance. As Robert Yellin was about to begin the banjo
introduction to “Down the Road,”
Lawrence

muffled the strings

of

the banjo so that he might continue his opening routine. Yellin
remarked later that he had never
seen anyone do that to a performer, and had the group not
been in tune for “Down the
Road,” they would have started
another song.
Blending
and

rag-time,

bluegrass

ballads, the Greenbriar Boys
were superb. “A Minor Breakdown,” which was composed by

Robert Yellin, featured Richard

i

Greene on the fiddle and Yellin
on banjo, while Herald provided
a typically tasteful series of base
runs on the guitar. The piece developed from an intricate interweaving of two basic melodies,
and exhibited a complexity that
actually had overtones of a Bartok composition. Greene’s solo
on that number was so breathtakingly good that he momentarily transcended the limitations
of the “folk fiddler” to employ

his instrument in a classical
mode, a feat he managed in the
“Orange Blossom Special” as
well. Greene, while an extremely
competent fiddler, is still not
in the class of legendary Tex
Logan. Perhaps as Greene’s familiarity with the folk tradition
grows, his obvious natural gifts
will enable him to reach that
level of excellence which only
Logan occupies currently. The
other new addition, Frank Wakefield, the only rural hill-country
singer in the group, played a
number of pieces that were
strongly influenced by the father

-

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The lively action group on campus goes for these

Brushie leather shown here.

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j

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�PACE SIXTEEN

Paul Goodman
(Cont'd

from P.

Friday, October S, 1965

SPECTRUM

.

6)

want to learn; but in other

cases

the curriculum is determined entirely by the students. For example, in the Guild of Independent Students started by a dropout of Swarthmore, each one
studies on his own and presents
his work to the others, but admired “veterans" are invited to
visit, criticize, and inspire. At
Monteith, undergraduates, remaining
within the school,
choose from their own number
teachers who they think have a
particular competence and whom
they can of course depose. At
the new Free University at Rice,
professors are welcome but “the
problem is to explain to them
that we don't want to be taught
anything, we want the chance to
learn.” The free university conference of Students for a Democratic Society, centered in Ann
Arbor, has heavily stressed the
beneficent effect of interpersonal confrontation, an emphasis
coming, no doubt, from the remarkable SDS experiences in
community development in poor
neighborhoods.

*—

—■—&gt;

—

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Corner

Colvin

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MAN VERSUS

WEATHER

RELATIONS WITH
"REAL" COLLEGES
A problem arises in the odd
relation of the para-colleges and
the regular institutions they arc
in or next to. President Alden
of Ohio has seemed eager for
the students, to try on their own,
so long as it doesn't cost the
State anything. When Mcyerson
was acting-Chancellor at Berkeley, he told me he would give
academic credit for the paracourses if they could prove themselves. At Rice, however, there

before or after the ball game
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seems to be

ill-feeling and rivalry. Swarthmore cannot (Sept
21)

make up its mind if

the

independent Guild can use the
library. At Rice and Columbia
it is. interestingly, religious organizations, on the campus that

Delightful Root Beer

dissenters and pro
vide shelter or money.

Meantime, the para-colleges
enthusiastically branch out into
all kinds of extra-curricular community projects, from political
and social direct actions (these
are sometimes curricular, under
the heading "pragmatic sociology") to coffee-houses, little theaters. literary and political jour-

nals, co-op bookstores, student
housing. What a beautiful Do-ItYourself populism! What a pity
they are so young and inexpert
cnced. If not they, who?
Copright by Paul Goodman

While the proprietor is aware
of meteorological announcements of atmospheric conditions. he still advises his
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�Friday. Octobar 8, 1965

DING'S
CHALET ROY ALE
For Spaghetti
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Blvd.

&amp;

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America’s outstanding
collegiate jazz musicians
will compete in the First
Annual Mobile Jazz Festival on April 2 and 3 in
Mobile, Alabama. The Festival will be hosted by
Spring Hill College and
the finals will be broadcast nationwide and overseas via ABC Radio.
The Festival has established a National Advisory Board to obtain professional guidance. This
Board consists of A1 Hirt.
Pete Fountain, Pete Nero.
Henry Mancini, Ward
Swingle, Cal Tjader, Dave
Brubeck, Skitch Henderson and Jerry Gray.

RON WALSH

(C.E.)
of the ’60 Bethlehem
"Loop” Course is field
engineer for important
j construction projects. He’s
typical of young men on the
j move at Bethlehem Steel.

Applications are now
being accepted by the Festival from students who
wish to compete. If you
are interested in entering
contact the Mobile Jazz
Festival, P.O. Box 1098,
Mobile, Alabama.

Seniors and graduate
students in engineering and

non-technical curricula will
soon be interviewed for
the 1966 Bethlehem Loop
Course. We offer splendid
career opportunities in steel
plant operations, research,
sales, mining, accounting,
and other activities.
For detailed information,
pick up a copy of our

booklet, "Careers with

Bethlehem Steel and the

Loop Course,” at your
Placement Office.

An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for
Progress Program

BETHLEHEM
STEEL

PAGE

SPECTRUM

HILL WINS GRAND PRIX
Pictures and Story

By BUZZ VICTOR
Fighting the elements and Dan
Gurney, Graham Hill went on to
win the Grand Prix of the United
States for the third straight year.
Jim Clark, already 1965 world
champion, took the early lead, but
was forced out of the race by
spark plug trouble in the 12th
lap. This makes the third time
in as many years that Clark has
been stopped by mechanical
ble in the United States Grand

your

trip to Europe pay

for Itself.

PAYING JOBS
IN EUROPE
Luxembourg- 25000 jobs (office, resort, farm, factory, etc.)
are available in Europe with

wages to $400. Travel grants
are given to each applicant.
Send $2 (handling and airmail)
to Dept. T, American Student
Information Service, 22 Avc.
de la Liberte, Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg for a 36-page illustrated booklet giving all
jobs and application forms.

,

trou-f’f

Prix,

At only one point, after Clark's
leaving the race, was Hill not

the leader. Jack Brabham, who
finished third, led for part of the
39th lap. Hill went back into the
lead when Brabham went off the
road on the rain-slicked 90 degree turn. From that time on it
was Hill’s race. Brabham's partner, Dan Guerney, was his only
competition in the race’s second
half. At one point Guerney pulled to within 3 seconds of the leader, but Hill’s masterful driving
held the number one spot. He extended the lead to 12,5 seconds
by the end of the race. Jackie
Stewart, who was just one point
behind Hill in International standings ran into trouble with his
car’s suspension system and was
out of the race early.
In his BRM, Hill contended with
strong cross winds and intermittent rain. His winning time was
two hours, 20 minutes, and 38.1
seconds. The average speed was
107.98 miles per hour. Although
this is a relatively slow time, the
weather and oil on the track had
to be reckoned with.
Also finishing in the points

Kaufman
Make

SEVENTEEN*

To The Victor Goes The Spoils
Dan Guerney's
Jack Brabham, taking

were

teammate.
third, the

Ferrari Team of Lorenzo Bandini
of Italy, and Pedro Rodriguez of
Mexico, finishing fourth and fifth.
Jochen Rindt of Austria finished
sixth. Hill is now solidly in second place in the standings with
42

points to champion Clark's

maximum 54. In international racing, nine points are awarded the
winner, six for second, four for
third, three for fourth, two for
fifth, and one for sixth. Only the
best six of the 10 international
races arc counted for each driver.
Honda Motors of Japan entered
two Honda Mark Two machines in
the race and each finished. Both
were more than two laps behind,
but it is interesting to note that

Hill The Weery Winner
these cars (previously untested in
compeitioh) held up this well. It
points to another name to stand
with BRM, Lotus, Ferrari, and
Brabham in Grand Prix Racing.
•

Hooks and/or money
left with the Student Hook
Exchange may he picked
up al the Student Senate

Office in Room 205 in
Norton Union between the
hours 12-1 and 3-4:30
p.m. daily except Saturdays until October 20.

he dialectic for proof, loose as.

don’t give you anything, then
they can’t take anything away."
Philosophic training develops our
critical powers and teaches us to
ask searching questions.
Kirkegaard opposed critical
thinking. He thought that it was
necessary to have obedience to an
authority; one must be willing
to die for it. “What our age needs
is not reflection but passion,” a
willingness to die for one’s faith.
However, today we can see this
plea for passion in a different
perspective, Dr. Kaufmann feels.
There has been an overabundance
of people willing to kill for faith
and authority, such as the Nazis.

Furthermore, in his “Concluding Unscientific Postscript,” Kirk
egaard declares that “subjectivity
is truth,” having completely disregarded reason. Dr. Kaufmann
pointed out that he has made a

number of confusions. First, he
has made the confusion of sincerity and truth. He feels that sincerity encompasses all the truth
available in the ethical-religious
realm and if someone is sincere,
then he is subjectively in the
truth. However, one can be sincere but wrong; the two must be
separated.

Second, Kirkegaard made the
confusion of certainty with truth.
If one is certain then one is sub
jectively in the truth. However,
one can be certain and wrong.
Third, he said that what makes a
man eternally happy is true. He
failed to understand that often
illusions can make us happy.
Fourth, he stated that the conclusions of passion are the only reliable ones. This is not so, for in
philosophy we reason, “what does

•

•

(Corit’d

from P.

6)

it mean?” Disregarding reason,
Kirkegaard only asks, “are you
willing to die for it?"
Kirkegaard has failed to understand the difference between responsible and irresponsible
choices and decisions. He has assumed that reason can never be
used effectively for responsible
decisions. He feels that

where

reason cannot be the end-all,

you

must throw it out and trust something else. However, in life’s important decisions, although rea-

son alone can’t decide, it excludes
certain possibilities. Education
teaches us to use reason as far
as we can.
Dr. Kaufmann feels that some
explanation must be made for
Kirkegaard’s seemingly contradictory stress on subjectivity on the
one hand and authoritarianism on
the other hand. As a result of
completely discarding reason,
Kirkegaard has decided that all
decisions must be made completely subjectively, according to one s
own whim, or one can choose
some infallible authority, that
makes all the decisions. (Of
course, there is the problem of
assuming that you know this one
cnoice of an authority is infallible.) His stress on subjectivity
and authoritarianism arc both opposed to reason.

Heidegger has also spoken out
against logic and critical thinking. However, if logic is out,
where is the discipline? Heidegger, like Kirkegaard, has been
driven to find some authority; he
has turned to the pre-Socraties.
He made the flight from subjectivity to authority, without considering that the authority could
have been wrong. He merely used

sociatic thinking, which will justify any conclusion. He, too. has
disregarded reason.

Sartre, a gifted and interesting
writer, has also misunderstood
reason, Dr. Kaufmann feels. He
doesn’t understand the difference
between responsible and irrespon-

sible decision. Since he can’t turn
to reason, he flees from subjectivity to authority, Sartre has
turned to Marxism; he is too much
of an individualist to accept the
party line, but he needs the authority of an historical movement.
Sartre, unlike Kirkegaard and
lleideger, is not openly against
reason; he just doesn’t fully understand what is a rational decision.

Dr. Kaufmann sympathizes with
the existentialist emphasis on real

experience, but he doesn't think
it necessary to make a break between experience and theory, or
reasoning. The history of philosophy provides examples of the
possible connection. In the “Apol-

ogy of Socrates,” the existentialist feeling
these arc the ideals
for which I have lived and will
die
is expressed, but the ideals
have been arrived at through
ruthlessly critical thinking, in the
tradition of philosophy.
—

—

t

miE
(wot Ecm

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Buffalo, N.Y. 14214
Phone: 333-0060

�PACE EIGHTEEN

Friday, October 8, 1965

SPECTRUM

BOSTON U. PREVIEW
BULLS FAVOHED TO WIN
ANNUAL HOMECOMING GAME
By MIKE GINSBERG
The UB Bulls, fresh off last
week's victory over Massachusetts,
face an improved Boston University team tomorrow. The BU Ter-

riers compiled an unimpressive
2-7 record under freshman coach
Warren Schmakel last year, a

disappointing season to say the
least. The return and anticipated
improvement of many of last
year’s sophomore starters and a
crop of talented newcomers indicate that BU will field a much
better team. The Terriers gave
an indication of that last week
when they beat Temple, 14-7.
The presence of many sophomores trying to fill key roles
makes the Boston picture, on the
whole, spotty. Offensively, the
team will be vastly improved.

mainly due to probable starting
quarterback Bob Kobus, a junior.

Kobus

has

shown

considerable

ability, but in case he falters,
talented soph Tom Thornton is
ready. Either quarterback will
have two capable receivers in

ends Jim Fischer and Bob Nichols, and the backfield is rounded
out by three outstanding performers. Halfback Dave LaRoche,
quarterback, has
a converted
great running ability, and two
outstanding fullbacks are Peter
Hayes and Billy Murphy, last season’s top ground gainer for BU.
At tackle, captain Larry Dyer
highlights a strong group of talented men. Only returning linebacker Mike Chamberlain stands
out among a group of inexperienced guards. The loss of center

Saturday’s performance against
a strong Massachusetts team. The
offense continued to show improvement, but more than ever
the UB defensive squad looked
very impressive. Worthy of special note is the defensive secondary, which performed outstandingly against a highly touted Massachusetts passing game. Nick
Capuana, Dan Sella and Tom Ri-

dolfi covered Milt Morin and
Co. extremely well. Capuana’s interception was a key play of the

*

'

E. GREENARD POLES
All-East UB Tackle

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20)

of title hopes for the loser. The
difference on the scoreboard will
be very small and the team which
makes the least errors will come
out on top.
Notre Dame 29, Army 13—The
subway alumni will pack the Big
Shea tomorrow to watch these
two traditional rivals do battle.
The Fighting Irish (2-1) proved
beyond a shadow of a doubt that
they are the best eleven in the
land when they came back from
a 7-6 deficit at halftime to murder Northwestern, 38-7. The Black
Knights (2-1) do not compare with
some of the great Army teams
of the past and though they always play their best are definitely
outmanned here. Notre Dame’s
QB problem will keep the score
down.
Duke 35, Pittsburgh 21 The
Panthers (1-2) found a quarterback last week in the person of
Kenny Lucas. But even he wasn’t
enough as the Steel City boys
were mauled by West Virginia,
63-48 (this is football?). They will
experience some of the same to—

halted a late Massachusetts rally. The defensive
line kept constant pressure on
quarterback Landry with a strong
rush, but on offense the Bulls
remain a big question mark. The
passing game again showed
flashes of excellence. Wells exhibited good judgement in his
passing early in the game, but
when things got rough, his inexperience showed. We can, however, expect to see a steady improvement in his play.
As

it

appears,

this week’s

Homecoming game against the
Terriers will give the Bulls their
first home victory. The UB defense will have no trouble with

Boston U. and the offensive team
will look good against an inexperienced squad. The pick here
is for the Bulls to look very good
in winning this contest.
•

•

•

morrow from the offense-minded
Blue Devils (3-0). Duke is once
again the scourage of the Atlan-

tic Coast Conference and should
find itself in a bowl come New

Year’s Day.

Arkansas 33, Baylor 7
This
game promised to be another
classic Southwest Conference
Brawl, but the Bears (2-1) lost
their star passer Terry Southall
with a busted leg and thus their
entire offense is gone. The Razorbacks (3-0) will sharpen their
teeth on Baylor as a warm-up for
showdown with Texas on the
16th.
—

Boston College 21, Penn State
Brendon McCarthy had an
off-week against Army and should
play more like the Sophomore-of
-the-Year that he is, come tomorrow. This game is a must if
the Eagles (2-1) want the Lambert
Trophy. The Nittany Lions (0-2),
pre-season choices for Eastern
supremacy, have been a big disappointment. It seems their inexperienced linemen will need
time to come around.

17

—

Boh Deming and “Buddy” Ryan will share the
mike tonight on WBFO’s
weekly interview program,

UB’s defense one of the
most feared in the country.
Tune in SPORTS TALK,

SPORTS TALK. The

WBFO-FM (88.7 me. to
Western New York) or
WBFO-AM (closed circuit to all UB dorms).
And remember, it’s sports
daily, at 5:50 over the
University of Buffalo radio station.

(Cont’d

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(Cont’d

the show.
Ryan and Deming make
up the two man team who
under Head Coach Dick
Offenhamer, have made

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Fearless Feigin

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Shakes
Fish
French Fries
flit Dogs

Rick Stawitsky through illness
leaves an opening in the middle
of the line, Stawitsky had been
considered a potential All-American so his loss is particularly
painful. In all, the Terriers appear to be much improved, but
not enough to pose a formidable
threat.
The picture for the Bulls appears brighter now following last

!

from P.

20)

LATE DEVELOPMENT
The Sports Editor
The Spectrum
Sir:
As a married student I was greatly interested in
your column concerning the difficulty of married students bringing their wives to UB athletic events
especially football.
I went to see the Athletic Director, Mr. Peelle, and
found him most cooperative and willing to help. After
explaining to me that he had never been approached
before by someone desirous of solving the difficulty, we
both discussed the problem and have worked out an
equitable solution.
If any married student is interested in acquiring
tickets for himself and his wife, he should call Mr. PeelK
or the ticket office at Clark Gymnasium.
Sincerely,
William J. Love, Jr
We would like to take this opportunity to congratulate both Mr. Peelle and Mr. Love for their concern and
achievement concerning this matter. If the other problems, listed above, can now be alleveiated, maybe the remainder of the UB community (aside from just mar
ried students) will be equally satisfied.
—

�Friday, Oetobar 8, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINETEEN

Bulls Beat UMass, 18-6
Poles and Capuana Lead
UB Over Talented Redmen
been victimized in the past. Wells
threw a short look-in pass to
sophomore end Dick Ashley, and
the Massena native eluded two
defenders and outlegged his other
pursuers across the goal line.
Joe Oscsodal’s conversion made
the score 15-0.
The Redmen put their lone tally
on the scoreboard in the final
play of the half. Seemingly out
of scoring range with 70 yards
and as many seconds to go before intermission,' the Redmen
moved to their 43 in two plays.

By STEVE SCHUELEIN

The gridiron Bulls evened their
record at 1-1-1 by combining an
explosive first-half offense with
a clutch second-half defense to
hand host Massachusetts an 18-6
drubbing at Amherst, Mass., Saturday.

For a while

it appeared the
game might turn into a replay of
the previous week’s Tampa nightmare, but the UB defense forced
the Redmen into crucial secondhalf miscues to hold them at bay.
“It was our best game,” was
Coach Offenhamer’s post-game
comment. “Our defensive line was
as tough as ever, our offense continued to show signs of improvement and our defensive secondary was outstanding against the
huge Massachusetts ends.”
Tom hurd put the Bulls in
scoring position midway in the
opening stanza when he returned
a wobbly UMass punt to the Redmen 17. Four plays later Rick
Wells, aided by a path-clearing
Lee Jones block, threaded his
way into the end zone from five
yards out. The score mounted to
8-0 as Wells cracked across the
goal line on the extra point attempt.
Minutes later the Bulls electrified a crowd of 10,200 by scoring on a 64-yard pass play in the
blitzkreig style by which they’ve

Intramurals
Have Begun
By

Chick's Picks

GEORGE JACKREL

Last week witnessed the opening games in both the Football
and Bowling Leagues. The Tennis
Tournament also began, and this
week the singles and doubles
tournaments will enter the sec-

ond round.

their first loss.

The football scores are listed
below:

St. Louis 28, Washington 14:
The Redskins will again have to
wait a while longer for victory.

Tuesday Fraternity League
Sig Ep 16
Beta Sig 42

strength, their backfield will not
be the same. St. Louis looked
real good against Dallas last

Gamma Phi 8
AK Psi 6

Thursday Fraternity League
SAM 16
Phi Psi 14
Phi Lam 12
APO 0
Alpha Sig 12
Theta Chi 0

week, and
this week.

Wednesday Independent League
Warriors 24 Newman Club 6
Rookies 22
Stockkastics 6
Zygotes 32
Vikings 8
Moon Platoon 14
GDI 0
Dolans 6
C-Men 0
Racoons 32 Untouchables 26

In the bowling league AEP,
SAM, Phi Ep, APO, and Gamma
Phi all won four points, so there
is a five way tie for first place.
The three highest averages were
achieved by Kobrin
Phi Ep,
Alterman
SAM and Hetzel
AE Phi.
-

-

-

The Golf Tournament has been
set for the Audobon-Amherst
Golf Course. All entries must be
by October 12. Each player
must pay a greens fee of two
dollars. Rentals will not be available at the course.

First downs
Yards rushing

BULL SESSION

83

29

91

171

3-9

13-27

Punts

9-36

10-37

Fumbles lost
Yards penalized
NICK CAPUANA
UB Safety

by the size difference, rammed

his helmet into Morin’s midsection so fiercely that the impact
caused the Redmen’s King Kong
to fumble. Dan Sella recovered

.

2

2

56

46

In the fourth quarter the Bulls
moved to the U-Mass, from where
Oscsodal flubbed a field goal attempt.

Moments later the hard-hitting
Bull line forced Landry who spent
a good deal of the afternoon

Dr. Kinsey’s successor
University’s Institute for Sex Research

.

at Indiana

Raiders' rugged brand

of football almost beat Buffalo last
week, and should have little
trouble in Boston. The Pats cannot face up to the fact that Babe
Parilli is an old quarterback, and
until they do something about
this, will remain winless.

has announced that a study
is planned on “Sex in Col-

....

....

arm in the punting department
where sophomore kicker Brian
Hansen, in his Varsity debut,
turned in an outstanding job . ,
.
.
Jim Webber and Fred Geringer are still question marks for
tomorrow's game . . . Ashley’s
touchdown was scored on the first
pass he had ever caught in a varsity game . . . Boston University,
a 14-7 winner over Temple last
week, has been steadily improving under Coach Warren Schmakel, who replaced Steve Sinko
last year. “They’re a well disciplined team that can run and
pass.” was the coaching staff’s
nutshell summary of the Terriers.
. . . : The Bulls won last year's
meeting, 35-0.

Pi*
RPg*J

We can suit you best
...

naturally!

YOU
CAN STAY
ON TOP
OF YOUR
CLASS WORK
ir

&lt;0^*v-.i 0*'

mad crowd, this week.

28, Boston

10: The

Every Night Is Good

l.A Tabulated Bibliography of Standard
Textbooks indicates pages in the Outline
that summarize appropriate chapters in
each text.

Over
ANTHROPOLOGY

Corner Colvin Blvd.

&amp;

Sheridan Dr.

DRAMA

j
|

NOBLE COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES

by 2 unique cross-reference charts

ART

|

&amp;

...the original paperbacks Keyed to Your Texts

BUSINESS

DING'S
CHALET ROYALE

mmsm

with BARNES

by Gerry

nation forms for the Annual Graduate Student
Association Executive Council may still be picked
up in Room 311 of Norton Union.

him to regain his eye, and throw
for some touchdowns.

mm

The entire

LaFountain, E, G. Poles, Bill Taylor, Russ MacKellar and Craig
Helenbrook, was superb, limiting
U-Mass to a microscopic 29 yards
rushing
Highest defensive
grades went to Captain Joe Holly,
Taylor, Poles, Capuana and Sella,
while Bennie Washington, Jim
Dunn, Dick Ashley and Brian MacKcllar topped the offense
The Bulls received a shot in the

lege.”
Reported the New York
Times recently: “It hopes
to lighten its staff’s load
hy straining students to do
much of the field work on
that one.”

Kansas City 17, Denver 13:
Cookie will find himself up
against a good football team this
week. The Broncos just got by
New York last week, and will not
be so fortunate Sunday. Lenny
Dawson is a top rate quarterback,
and plays better as the season

...

defensive line, anchored

will look even better

Chargers have the league’s leading rusher in Paul Lowe, and
Johnny HadI is starting to look
real good. They knocked off
Houston handily last week, and
their only problem will be the

|

U-Mass
16

Passes intercepted

AFL
San Diego 24, Buffalo 17: The
Bills are hurting now without
Bass and Dubenion; and they have
a tough bre.ak in the schedule
in playing San Diego their first
week without the two. The

•:

UB
6

Yards passing
Passes

them.

|

tion.
The Redmen regained possession at the UB 26 on a Hurd
fumble, but the impregnable defense again foiled the host’s efforts as Tom Ridolfi nabbed a
rushed Landry pass.
Four plays later Joe the Toe
clicked on his first field goal
success, a 28-yarder and gave the
Bulls an 18-6 lead. The final gun
cracked less than three minutes
later with the score unchanged.

Dallas 21, Philadelphia 17: This
could be another “almost” victory
for the Eagles. They were not
too impressive against Cleveland
last week, but should be tougher
with Norm Snead back at the
controls. The Cowboys' tough defense will not be able to carry
the team all year, a fact that will
be brought out this week as
Philadelphia will nearly overtake

Oakland

Only minutes later UB was
again wading in dangerous waters
as U-Mass penetrated to the 7.
The defense, however, again rose
to the occasion as Capuana extinguished the sparks of the comeback with an end zone intercep-

Statistics

.

(Cont’d from P. 20)
San Francisco 27, Green Bay
24: In the Upset of the Week, the
Packers will find the surprising
49er's too much this week. Bart
Starr threw for 263 yards last
week, and the Packers nipped
Chicago. San Francisco has scored
103 points in three games, so far
and they should have just enough
momentum to carry them past
Green Bay, giving the Packers

scrambling for his life in the
backfield as the UB front wall
chased him incessantly as if he
had stolen the locker room keys,
to fumble. As Russ MacKellar
recovered on the 16, the Bay
State signalcaller groggily ambled
back to the U-Mass bench looking
as if he had been hit by everything in Blue and White except
Buster the Bull and the head
cheerleader.

the second half.

ably by the hard-charging front
wall, showed its aplomb as Landry completed an aerial to 6’4"
240-lb. Milt Morin on the UB 6.
180-lb. Nick Capuana, undaunted

Quarterback Greg Landry, an-

other promising sophomore
scrambler, then lofted a 53-yard
strike to Tom Swanson on the UB
4, which the taller UMass end
caught by outleaping his diminutive defenders. Two plays later
Landry fired a completion to Dick
Benoit in the end zone as the
first half ended. The extra point
attempt, which could have
brought the hosts within striking
distance of the Bulls, went awry,
however, and UB took a 15-6 lead
into the locker room.
The six-pointer gave the Redmen a huge psychological boost
as could be seen by their firedup play in the second half.
Midway through the third period the hosts appeared on their
way to another score as they
marched to the UB 16, but the
Bull secondary, helped consider-

on the 6 as the Bull defense repelled the first U-Mass rally of

2. A Quick-Reference Table indicates pages
in various standard textbooks that correspond to topics covered in chapters
of the Outline

100 titles on the following subjects:

ECONOMICS
EDUCATION
ENGINEERING
ENGLISH v

GOVERNMENT
HISTORY
LANGUAGES
LITERATURE

MATHEMATICS
MUSIC
PHILOSOPHY

PSYCHOLOGY

SCIENCE
SOCIOLOGY
SPEECH
STUDY AIDS

�j|L,

139 r °*

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Friday, October S, 1965

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IlfiQihu
w

s

*"'«nr

—

SPEAKING OUT

i

#

UB Golfers Win
Brook Lea Again

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

By MIKE DOLAN

A Reply

20, the 1965 version of the UB varsity golf team
opened on a winning note. Since
then, the golfers have gone on
to win three more
a total of
four wins without a loss in dual
competition. Since their opening
win over St. Bonaventure 5-3, UB
has produced the following re-

Last week a letter to the editor appeared in the
Spectrum from a young lady who is a part-time employee
of the Athletic Department. In this column two weeks
ago we asked for a reply (from the same department)
to several unanswered Questions. Are we to assume that
the aforementioned letter was the official reply or was
it merely the opinion of an individual? The Athletic Department did not answer our questions, so all we can
do is assume that this young lady is, in fact, the official
jpokesman for the department.
Many charges were levelled at the Spectrum in last
at both the editorial and sports pages.
week's letter
We can only answer the charges against us, so here are

GRID FORECASTS
CHICK'S

1. The statement made that “only $12.50 (of the
$47 activities fee) is used by this department.” If the
writer of the letter had bothered to read what was said,
she would have discovered that we do not believe that
all of the money is used by the Athletic Department (perish the thought). The day before the column was written,
the President of the Student Senate furnished us wtih
the $25 per year figure, so we did “consult someone in
authority before printing these ‘lies.’
”

2. “If students are not satisfied with their seats

they can get better ones, by paying for them. The paying
public (alumni and UB friends) cannot be expected to
spend money for season tickets and then sit on the ends
while the students get the better seats for almost noththing.’’ In reply to this statement, and as a source of information to UB students, here are the prices of those
seats which are up for sale at all UB home games: Season tickets are priced at $17.50 and 12.50. Single game
reserved seats are $3.50, $2.50 and $2.00, and the general admission price is $1.50 per game. For the $1.50,
the general admission ticketholder is entitled to sit between the 35 yard lines on the Bailey Avenue (and students’) side of the field—the very same seats in which
the students are not allowed to sit (without paying, that
is).

The “almost nothing" to which the letter refers is
$12.50 per term. This does not seem like almost nothing
to me, and I know many people who could make much
better use of this money. Here is an offer
Athletic
Department. Return the $12.50 portion of the fall semester activities fee to the students of this University
and let them purchase your general admission seats for
$1.60 a game. There is absolutely no reason why the
"alumni and UB friends" should be treated any better
than the students which keep this institution alive.
—

3. “The seats in the stadium here, however, are all
placed in such a way that it is invalid to say that it is
not possible to see the game (unless the viewer is wearing hair in his eyes, or sunglasses covered with mud).”
Invalid you say? Did you ever try sitting at the goal line
and watching play at the other end of the field? As for
the statement in parenthesis
we can’t all be perfect,
—

honey.

sults:
UB 15—Canisuis 3

UB 17'A—Niagara

%

UB 14M&gt;—Buffalo State 3'/i

Those representing UB in dual
competition, and their respective
records are as follows:
Wins

Losses

Ed Nusblatt

4

0

Tony Santelli

4

0

Mike Lawler

3

1

Doug Benrad

3

1

Bill Ahrendsten

4

0

Harold Menchel

3

0

A1 Sillato

I

0

Bounding out the squad are:

Robert

Stone,

Steve Michaels.

Peter

Fischer,

For those of you who are unfamiliar with collegiate golf
scoring let us clarify the problem. First of all, in dual competition the two schools involved
each field six players. Each one
of these golfers has a capability
of scoring three points
one
for the front nine, one for the
back nine and one for the overall low score. In tourney play,
each school is represented by
four members and the total low
score is tabulated for the winning team. So, as you can see,
in UB’s first four meets the squad
has performed superbly.
—

UB continued their winning
ways way down at Rochester last

week for the fourth consecutive
year. Buffalo’s best have won
the Brook-Lea College Invitational tournament held at the
Brook-Lea Country Club, More
than ten colleges and universities were represented at the
meet. Again, it Was a well balanced team effort that provided
the winning margin. In the driving rain, the following members
of the golf team scored for a 326
total:

1. Ed Nusblatt
2. Tony Santelli

79

3. Mike Lawler

4. “In the history of this department there has been
only one graduate student who has approached Mr. Peelle
in regard to his wife’s attendance at games. This sole
case of this type occurred two years ago and the wife
in question was admitted to the game free, as a guest
of the Athletic Department.” Apparently the writer spoke
to Mr. Peelle (head of the Department) concerning this
matter whiotT gives us further reason to believe that it
constitutes fh official reply. All we can say about this
matter is that a student should not have to approach the
chairman of a department with his problems. There

should be a permanent policy which would take care of

matters of this sort, or does Mr. Peelle have enough
free time to speak to every married student on campus?

At the present time there are petitions circulating in
Norton and the Law School to attempt to alleviate this
ridiculous problem.

(Cont'd on P. 18)

FEARLESS
FEIGIN

PICKS

By CHICK ARNOLD

By STEVE FEIGIN

There is really nothing like a
good, hearty pat on the back to
boost someone’s ego; and when
that “someone” is a sports forecaster, the pat is doubly appreciated. At this time of writing,
no one has pat me on the back—not even my roommates, who I
thought were my friends. Last
week’s picks came out quite
eight right, three wrong,
well
for an overall record of thirteen
right, eight wrong and one tie,
a ,619 percentage. And not even
a handshake. My percentage really is not too bad considering such
things as the weather, atomic

I know how anxious my loyal
fans were when my column did
not appear in the last issue of
the Spectrum, but there was no
need to worry. No, I was not decapitated by one of my tormentors from last year. I merely decided to rest a week on my
laurels, figuring that I could not
possibly top my performance in
my initial column, where I astutely prognosticated the downfall of Notre Dame at the hands
of the Boilermakers of Purdue.

—

—

answers:

—

—

On September

your

r**:
J

S P E CT R U

PAGE TWENTY

at Bulk

4. Doug Bernard

86

The first day of Varsity
Basketball practice will he
Friday, October 15, 1965
at 3:30 p.m. in Clark
Gym. All candidates are
invited.
The re will he a meeting of all candidates for

the Freshman Basketball
Team on Monday, October
11, 1965 at 4 p.m. in
Room 322 Clark Gym.

—

number,

etc.

In these troubled times, everyone (who is anyone) has someone he can look to for advice,
someone who can offer help when
needed, and who can take the

blame when necessary. Now, I,
too, your esteemed pro-forecaster,
have taken on someone to operate in this capacity. For the present, he shall be referred to only
as Abdullah. This man of mysstery has been referred to by
many as a football “genius”;
someone who can really “call
those plays.” This week, Abdullah will have a small voice in
the picking. The games he picked
will be announced next week,
after the results are in (of
course). In the meantime, however, I shall make an attempt to
continue on my way as the nation’s number one forecaster of
Professional football games in
Buffalo, New York for the Spectrum. Anxiously, here are this
week’s picks:

age.

NFL
Los Angeles 28, Chicago 20:
Bill Munson and his young teammates almost upset the Colts last
week, while the Bears were being
beaten by the tough Packers.
The Bears have the poorest defense in the league, and as yet
their offense is not tough enough.
They will have to wait a while
longer to chalk up victory number one.

Baltimore 23, Detroit 13; The
Lions are noted for their tough
brand of defense, but it is going
to take more than Joe Schmidt
to stop the rolling Colts. Johnny
Unitas and Lenny Moore are two
of the best and will not be
stopped this week.
Cleveland 33, Pittsburgh 7:
The Steelers do not have a chance
this week. Last week was their
chance against the Giants; and
they blew it. Jim Brown is going
to be tough today, and will walk
all over the boys from the Steel
City.

Minnesota 35, New York 14:
The high-scoring Vikings will finally have a breather in their
schedule this week when they
meet the Giants. The New Yorkers have put together two in a
row
and now this week, they
must play a football team. Fran
Tavkenton threw two touchdown
passes last week, and against the
Giants, could conceivably throwhalf a dozen.
—

(Cont’d on

I am back this week, and will
be for the remainder of the collegiate season. This Saturday’s
major forays are discussed below. It is getting decidedly tougher to predict successfully the outcomes of these games. With the
advent of the two-point conversion and the liberalizing of the
substitution rules, it has gotten
to the point where practically
any college eleven has a good
chance of winning any given
week. This is only the fourth
week-of the season and already
the list of major collegiate unbeatens has thinned considerably.
Some of the elite who were upset
last were were: Michigan, Boston College, Penn State, L.S.U.,
Purdue (tied by lowly S.M.U.),
Baylor, Iowa, Kentucky, and of
course, Massachusetts. When a
team can amass 48 points in one
afternoon (Pitt) and still be 16
points short of victory (vs. West
Virginia) it shows you that any
thing can happen on the college
gridiron. This is why football
has replaced baseball as the Na
tional pastime.
By the way, my record so far
far is 10-3-1 for a .769 percent

P.

19)

Michigan 22, Michigan State
20—The Spartans (3-0) have sur
prised a number of people witli
the success they have enjoyed
so far this season and may even
go into this contest slightly fa
vored. The Wolverines (2-1) have
been shaky so far but will live

up to a pre-season expectations

before the home crowd tomorrow. The Ann Arbor fans will
cheer their team on to victory
as the “War for the Roses” gets
underway with a bang in the
Big Ten.
Purdue 27, Iowa 20—Here is
another important Big Ten clash
The Boilermakers (2 0-1) suffered
an expected letdown last week
after Notre Dame and should get
back on stride here with a healthy
Griese at the helm. The Hawkeyes (1-2) have the potential to
win big with their Snook to Neonan aerial circus, but just cannot seem to find, the winning
way.

Syracuse 26, UCLA 17—It took
Floyd Little 3 weeks to hit stride,
but he is going at full blast right
now. The Bruins (1-1) got lucky
last week against Penn State, but
will not repeat against the stronger Orangemen (2-1).
Florida 17, Mississippi 14—The
SEC race this year is about as
predictable as Cassius Clay. Tne
Gators (2-1) get the nod here
over the stronger than expected
Rebels (1-2) in a game wh eh
could very well mean the end
(Cont’d on P 18

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                    <text>FSA Smashes Student Proposal
The membership of the Faculty-'
Student Association met on Monday, September 27, to consider
two amendments proposed by the
Board of Directors to increase
student participation in the Association. The special session,
held in the office of university
President, Clifford C. Furnas,
terminated in the passage of the
proposed by-law changes, and the
defeat of a substitute motion
moved and supported by the student members, President Clinton
Deveaux and Vice-president Rosemary Brown.
The two amendments forwarded by the board included the
admission of the President of the
Graduate Student Association to
the membership of the Association and the removal of constitutional procedures restricting
board membership to non-students.
The first scheduled amendment
DR. CLAUDE E. PUFFER
moved after which Charles
was
for
Business Affairs and
V.P.
Vice-president
FSA Treasurer, desires students Balkin, Assistant
for Business Affairs, explained
to have "good faith" in the willingness of Board of Directors to the logic behind the proposed
change. At the formation of the
hear their opinions.

FSA, students were represented
by only one body, the Student
Association; since that time the
arisen to represent a substantial
number of students. It was the
feeling of the Board of Directors that the by-laws needed a
clarification and that such an
increase in student membership
would make student “input” more
meaningful.

President Clinton Deveaux
moved a substitute motion which
would alter the entire membership structure of the Association.
His amendment proposed the
reduction of administrative members by eliminating the three
Assistant Vice-presidents for Business Affairs who are currently
sitting on the FSA, and the addition of two students and two
faculty members to the Association. This would bring representation to a balance with four
administrators, four students, and
four faculty members.
Dr. Claude Puffer, Vice-president for Business Affairs, ex-

NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER I, 1965

cal! Education. Miss Barcham’s
favorite sports are swimming and
horseback riding she is also interested in oil painting. Miss Barcham is recording secretary of
the Association of Women in
Physical Education, and is vice
tee in Cooke Drmitory.

Vicki Ann Howe, also a nine-

teen-year-old junior, is majoring
in Sociology. Miss Howe lives in
Niagara Falls, Canada. She is a
member of Chi Omega Sorority,
and has served on the Spring
Weekend Committee, and on
Freshman Houseplan.
Cindy Nash, from Clarence,
New York, is an eighteen-yearold sophomore in Sociology. She
is currently a member of Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, and of the

executive committee for Fresh-

man Orientation. Swimming, skiing, and music and dancing are
Miss Nash’s favorite extracur-

ricular interests.

Marilyn McConky from Londonville, New York, is a nineteen-

year-old junior majoring in Sociology. Campus activities include
Spring Weekend Committee,
Sophomore Sponsor, and Freshman Houseplan. She is also a
member of Chi Omega Sorority.

Her hobbies

include horseback
riding, sewing, and water-skiing.
Jean McEvoy from Glen Cove,
New York, is a twenty-year-old
junior majoring in Early Childhood Education. An avid moviegoer and patron of art museums,
Miss McEvoy is historian of Chi
Omega Sorority. She student
teaches a third-grade class, and
has been on Dean’s List since the
first semester of her freshman
year.

Julie Schulze Beckinghausen
is a freshman from Buffalo majoring in Biology. She is eighteen
years of age and hopes to become
a doctor. Miss Schulze Beckinghausen from Cheektowaga, New
York, is a member of the University Women’s Choral and the
Newman Club. She has been
chosen “Miss Jr. Achievement of
the Niagara Frontier 1965”, first
runner up in the U. S. Besides
her other interests she is a member of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences, and the Young Republicans. Her hobbies include
dramatics and the piano.
-

-

New York, who is majoring in
Nursing. She is a member of the
Sigma Kappa Phi Sorority, the
Freshman Orientation Committee, and she is also a Sophomore
Sponsor. Her interests include
skiing, music, and swimming.
UGLY MAN

The “Ugliest” man on campus
will be chosen in a contest sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, to
be held during Homecoming
Week, October 4 to 9. The results
will be announced and the awards
presented at the Homecoming

years old and a senior majoring
in Spanish. She is a member of
the International Club, Angel
Flight, the Spanish Club and the
Newman Club. She is employed
as a music teacher for the guitar,
accordian, and piano. Her major
outside interest is travel. She has
already studied for two months
at the National University of
Mexico.

(Cont’d

on P.

Ava Shapero is a freshman
from Syracuse, New York who is
majoring in Speech and Drama.
Miss Shapero is eighteen years
of age and hopes to become a
Speech Therapist. She is a candidate for Vice-President of
Goodyear South. Her hobbies include skiiing and dramatics.
Carol Stewart is a twenty year
old Junior majoring in Business
Administration. Miss Stewart is
from Franklin Square, Long
Island, New York, who transferred to UB in September ’65
from Nassau Community College.
Her campus activities include International Club, and Student
Senate Representative. At N.C.C.
Miss Stewart maintained a Dean’s
List average for four semesters
and was captain of the Cheerleaders. Her interests include
sewing, music, and art. She plans
to major in Public Health Relations, Personnel Management.
Cynthia Wolcott is a nineteenyear-old sophomore from Perry,

...

ignore extremely important argu(Cont’d on P. II)

Goodyear Food Creates
Massive Student Illness
ning in Goodyear Cafeteria. Over
100 students were admitted to
the infirmary alone, while at least
half again that many received
treatment in Goodyear, Clement,
and Allenhurst. Six students were
hospitalized.

1965 Homecoming Queen
To Be Presented Next Friday
Homecoming Queen, chosen
September 28 from the ten finalists selected September 20, will
be presented at the Pep Rally
Friday, October 8. The Queen
finalists were judged on beauty,
poise, intelligence and personality.
Jackie Barcham, a nineteenyear-old junior from Jamaica,
New York, is majoring in Physi-

maintained within any group
whose functions paralleled those
of the FSA on our campus. Dr.
Puffer, chairman of this task
force, further reported that the
group’s yet unreleased report
would recommend that at least
one student member sit on the
Board of Directors.
Mr. Deveaux stated that “subjecting the FSA to the extensive
limit of Dr. Puffer’s suggestions
restricts the autonomy of the
university and its students in
favor of an arbitrary unity.” He
continued, "I am appalled that

such a body retains administrative majority. H we take a look
at the goals of the Association,
we should realize that faculty
and students are the medium by
which a university functions.
The purposes of the Association
should be carried out with the
judgment of those whom it is
intended to help
“I cannot accept the limitations of such a task force. We
have two other more reasonable
alternatives: we could make fees
voluntary so that the FSA would
retain' at least a semblance of
democracy or we could structure
the Association so that the faculty and students can control it.
“For us to sit by and adhere
to wha,t a task force says, is to

As of Wednesday, September
28, over 200 students had been
stricken with food poisoning as
a result of eating shrimp salad
served the previous Friday eve-

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

BUFFALO,

plained that the task force appointed by SUNY President Samuel Gould to study the operation
of similar associations throughout the state system, felt that an
administrative majority over both
faculty and students should be

11)

\

Students complaining of fever,
a sore throat, and diarrhea began
reporting to the infirmary early
Saturday morning. That evening,

the number of ill students
reached epidemic proportions,
and by Sunday the number was
so high that students who were
too ill to remain in the dorms
were admitted to a make-shift
infirmary set up in the basement
of Tower, as well as in the study
rooms on Tower’s first floor.
Personnel from the Erie County
Department of Health began investigations of the situation on
Saturday, and continued throughout the week. By Tuesday it had
been definitely ascertained that
the cause of the epidemic was

Senate Hears
FSA Report
;

Barrel Change
Student Association President
Clinton Deveaux conducted the
second Student Senate meeting
of the 1965-66 academic year,
September 28, in the Fillmore
Room of Norton Union. A report on a special meeting of
the Faculty Student Association
(F.S.A.) was of primary concern.
Other business included a resolution supporting the contribution of monies raised by the
"Campus Barrel” to the World
University Service, the Student
Senate elections of four representatives to the newly organized
Student Faculty Administration
Forum, and a report of the International Student Affairs Committee.

DEAN JEANETTE SCUDDER
Dean of Women and Associate

Dean of Students, is acting as
Dean of Students during Dean

Siggelkow's

trip

to

Paraguay.

Kaufmann Lectures

Existentialism
(See Page 6)

The passing of an important
resolution and the defeat of an
other highlighted the F.S.A. meet
ing.

The

accepted

resolution

states that the President of the
Graduate Student Association will
now hold a seat in the F.S.A.
The defeated resolution, presented by President Deveaux, stated
that the F.S.A. should be reorganized as to include one-third
administration, one-third faculty,
and one-third students. It was
felt the vote of 6-2 against the
(Cont’d on P. 10)

Apathy

Shattered by

Epidemic

a food-borne virus, and that the
diseased food was the shrimp
salad. Although it had originally
been believed that the culprit
was solely streptococcal bacteria,

further reports revealed that this

was only part of the cause. Investigations are still in operation

to determine the exact nature of
the illness.

Or. Hoffman, Director of the
Student Health Service, reported
that the infection was probably
not contagious. As a precaution-

eaten the shrimp salad ip Goodyear were given penicillin, the
same drug used to treat the af-

flicted students. Dr. Hoffman further reported that although there
was a question of closing the University, by Tuesday night the
percentage of students contracting the disease had dropped drastically, and the University could
safely remain open.
Dr. Hoffman worked closely
with Dr. Mosher, head of the Erie
County Health Committee. While
Dr. Mosher conducted the inves-

tigation, Dr. Hoffman took charge

of

treating the

"Tremendous

sick.
cooperation

on

the part of University and community personnel made the task
of caring for the sick as efficient
as possible,” Dr. Hoffman gratefully announced. “The School of
Medicine, School of Nursing,
housing staff, maintenance staff,
volunteer students and the Erie
County Health Department all
share the responsibility for the
smooth and well-organized administration.
Investigations are
conducted

still

being

to determine exactly

when the food became poisonous,
and whether or not the fault lies
with the Food Service on campus.
Dr. Mosher reported that any
further discoveries and results
will be announced.

�PAGE TWO

Friday, Octobar 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

Peace Corps Week Planned; Freshman Class Elects
Council Representatives
DiGerlando Named Liaison
DiGerlando. Under the direction
of this man, a great deal of activilies hate been planned for
the future to bring forth the
ideals of the Peace Corps. He
also hopes to glean constructive
criticism and ways to make the
Corps a better, aid to more people
of the world. Among these activities are two on-campus recruiting tests, a number of panel
discussions, a visit to the campus
by returning envoys, and speakers
from Washington.
Along with the two examinations to be held in the Federal
Office Building on Ellicott St.
on October 9 and November 13,
(both at 9:00 a.m.) there are two
exams scheduled on November
9 and April 25 in Norton Union,
room 233, Both these exams will
be held at 7:00 p.m. to accommodate those students who would
not be able tq attend the morning

tests.

The planned Peace Corps Week
will be February 20 through 26,
During this week returning volunteers from all areas of the
world will be visiting UB, accompanied by Washington officials; these people will be participating in panels, open forums,
and class discussions in order to
enlighten those people who may
want to raise questions or learn
more about the Peace Corp’s
work. Clubs may also want to
have these people participate in
their meetings. Accompanying
these activities will be various
films and seminars.
Mr. DiGerlando particularly
emphasized the fact that the object of this week was to inform

and encourage constructive ideas
with the importance placed on
improvement of this ever growing
organization.
An

important facet of the
Peace Corps is the Advanced
Training Program. This is made
up of a group of students who
have just finished their junior
year, who then go on to study
specialized courses and foreign
languages in order to better prepare them for the Peace Corps
situations. This simultaneously
gives them training and college

credit. Within this program is
incorporated an opportunity for
a Government loan to finance the
supplies the

advantage of lesexpenses to those who
otherwise be unable to
participate in Peace Corps pro-

sened
would

grams. It turns the program
into a combination of continuous
education and experience, much
of which is alignment with the
Vista and Job Corps.
This and other aspects of the
Peace Corps will be discussed
in the coming Peace Corps Week,
and until then, any questions
should be directed to Mr. DiGerlando in Norton 225.

Rush Registration
Will Begin Monday
Panhellenic rush registration
for this semester will begin next
week, Monday, October 4 through
-Friday,—October 8,—from 1-3:00
p.m. in the Norton lobby and
3-5:00 p.m. in the Panhellenic
office. All upperclass women are
eligible and the registration fee
is one dollar.
Athena, the Greek Goddess of
wisdom, is the symbol of the
1965 Fall Panhellenic Rush, “for
she represents the epitome of
womanliness, the goal for which
sorority women strive.”
Following registration, the formal rush period will begin with
a Convocation Tea on Sunday,
October 10, followed by a series
of parties, including coke parties
in Norton and informal parties
both on and off campus. This
period will give rushees a chance
to meet the sisters of the various
sororities and learn about the
many facets of sorority life.
The rush period will end on
October 29, with final bidding.
"For many, the culmination of
rushing is membership into the
fraternal organization of their
choice. For all, rush is a unique,
enjoyable and worthwhile ex-

The new members stated that
they are all interested in a true
representation of their class. They
feel

The President of the Student
Senate, Clinton Deveaux, welcomed the council and discussed
student responsibility at their
first meeting, Wednesday, Sep-

that unless freshmen

are

willing to discuss their views with
their respective representatives

and/or the council, it will be
literally impossible to truly in-

terpret their desires and anticipate their problems.

tember 22, Mr, Deveaux expressed

Students may still obtain applications in Room
205 Norton for the Student Faculty Administration Forum, created for
communication

among
students, faculty and administration members.

Meetings are open to all freshmen, and they are urged to attend, to observe, to complain, to
suggest or, simply familiarize

themselves with the functions of
the council.

The results of elections of officers, held Thursday, September
30, will be printed in next Friday’s edition of the Spectrum.

Do ?
You
Need
Money

A hootenany for local talent,
p.m. today in the

to be held at 3

Millard Fillmore Room, will open
the 1965 Buffalo Folk Festival.
Appearing in concerts tonight and
tomorrow night, will be Phil
Ochs, Buffy St. Marie, Eric Anderson, The Greenbriar Boys and
Reverand Gary Davis. They will
also participate in workshops tomorrow afternoon.
Buffy St. Marie will appear for
the first concert this evening at
8:30, followed by the Greenbriar
Boys. Phil Ochs, Eric Anderson,
and Reverand Gary Davis will
perform at

concert.

tomorrow evening’s

Workshops will be held tomorrow afternoon. At 1, there will
be a Bluegrass Workshop; at 2, a
Contemporary Songwriters Workshop, with all performers participating; and at 4, a Seminar lor
Topical Songwriters, led by Phil

Ochs and Eric Anderson.
Tickets will be on sale at the
door tonight for those who have
not bought them in advance.
Each concert costs $2.50; however, tickets for the entire weekend, including both concerts and
workshops, will be $4.

r-

~r4

•

CHALET ROYALE
Corner COLVIN BLVO.
end Sheridan Drive
For Piiia

Just call him “Smooth Sam”

—

HE’S WEARING “DACRON”®-“ORLON”®
Ultramatic Prest Haggar dress slacks. Even
when the humidity hangs hot and heavy,
or he's soaked in a sudden shower, 70%
"DACRON” polyester-30% "ORLON” acrylic
keeps these fine dress slacks smooth and sharply
creased. They even take repeated washings
without a wrinkle. And Haggar styling gives
him the trim fit he wants in fine dress slacks. No
wonder the gals go for "Smooth Sam". 10.95

■

1k j M.

By RENA FISCH

The Inter-Collegiate Council is
a
representative
organization
comprised of six local colleges
and universities. S.U.N.Y.A.B. became a member early last year.
Rosary Hill, D'Youville, Canisius,
Saint Bonaventurc and Buffalo
State are the other five partici-

®Du

pants.

One of the Council’s goals is
to facilitate communication
among the campuses involved, In
accordance with this aim, a master calendar of events will be
published monthly and distrib-

uted to each school. This will
list activities taking place on
each campus which are open to
the public.
In a slightly different vein, the
Inter-Collegiate Council has made
plans for a rather unique dance
in early November. Proceeds from
this affair will be donated to the
United Fund, yet only a limited
number of tickets will be available. Dates, selected by machine,
(Cont’d on P. 7)

his desire to see the Freshman
Class stand up for their rights and
work as a unified body. Attending the meeting were: Mr. Dallas
Garber, assistant co-otdinator of
Norton Union; Harold Bob, Martin Gugenheim, Evelyn Weinrub,
and Helene Friedman, members
of last year’s Freshman Class
Council.

perience.”

—

Inter-Collegiate
Council Fosters
Communication

The Freshmen Class elected
sixteen men and women to the
the Freshman Class Council in
their conference hours of Monday and Tuesday, September 20
and 21. The representatives are:
Gerald Dade, Beth Greenberg,
Larry Henig, John Houghtaling,
John A. Kajewa, Peggy Kieran,
William Moore, Larry Pivnick,
Carol Roberts, Stephine Sacks,
Sally Schoenfeldt, Sharon Shulman, Arlene Smith, Martin Stern,
Morleen Spielman, Charles Zeld-

■

A few weeks ago, UB appointed
a new diector for the Peace
Corps on campus, Mr. Michael

Hootenanny
Starts Festival

.

WIN A FORD MUSTANG or one of 50 other big
prizes. See your Haggar dealer for details.

1

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HAGGAR SLACKS AT:
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FRED RONEKER'S, Williamsville

�Friday, October 1, 1965

Student Judiciary Serves
To Interpret Constitution
The Student Judiciary exists
on this campus as the supreme
judicial body, lit is composed of
five Student Judges. Its functions are to interpret the constitution, provide a fair hearing
and decision in the regulation
of student conduct, and recently
to hear appeals on parking violations.
To implement these functions
the judiciary is empowered to
fine up to $100, subject students
to social probation, to remove a
student from participation in activities and to recommend the
expulsion or suspension of a student. The Judiciary in order to
carry out its many duties and
services, requires the assistance
of a number of students.
Among Che services needed
and no doubt the most important
is the secretary of the judiciary.
The function of the secretary is
to attend all meetings of the Judiciary and to record the decisions. Due to the highly confidential nature of the Judiciary
and the necessity to maintain this

Do ?
You
Need
*

Money

this confidence, the Judiciary is
highly selective in its choice. Application blanks for this post can
be obtained from the secretary
in the Senate Office, Room 205
Norton.

Realizing the terrific parking
and traffic problems, the Judiciary has decided to establish
four parking courts this year.
The courts consist of three members and a secretary. All appeals of traffic violations by students can be brought to these

courts.

The criteria for these posts are
are a 1.0 average and indications
of student involvement as well as
a desire to participate in student
activities. The secretary of the

parking court may act as a justice in case of the absence of a
member of the court in a particular meeting. The Judiciary
will act as an overseer of the
parking courts activities through
its power to hear appeals. Appli-

cation for these posts will also
be found in Room 205 Norton. A
meeting to select these judges
will be held Wednesday, September 29 at 7 p.m.
The Judiciary would like to
encourage all interested students
to apply for these posts.

Anyone interested in
the “front of the house”
operation

—

design, poster,

organiza-

tional theater parties, etc.,
call Ann Hicks—2511
or leave name at desk.

� MAIN

GARY J. BECKER
OPTICIAN
U.B. Alumnus

PRICES TO PLEASE STUDENTS
1719 HERTEL AVENUE
-

publicity.

ushers, business, program

Only 5 Minutes
From Campus

NEED

GLASSES?

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

836-6484

-

—

Board Committee SDS

Plans to Participate
In International Protest

Sponsors Drives

Allots Budgets

By ALICE EDELMAN

The Union Board’s first Open
House of the year will end today
at 5:30. This semester’s theme
is—join a Union Board committee and ‘'Fit the Key to Your Interests.” Members will be on
hand in the Board office, Room
215 Norton, to answer questions
interested students might have
about committees and to receive
applications for committee membership.

The Union Board is comprised
of six officers elected by the outgoing Board, and eleven standing
committee chairmen, as well as
special committee chairmen. At
the Board’s bi-monthly meeting
each committee is given an opportunity to report its current
activities and projects, and to discuss any policy changes. The
Board apportions committee
budgets and sponsors an Open
House, activities drives, and
weekends such as Homecoming,
Spring Weekend, and Silver Ball.
It is represented on the Student
Senate by its president, currently
Joanne Osypiewski.
The eleven Union Board committees are: art, arts and crafts,
film, house, literature and drama,
mixer, music, personnel, publicity, public relations, and recreation. These committees sponsor
events and programs related to
their area of interest.
An orientation program and
coffee hour will be held on Sunday, October 3, from one to four
in the Dorothy M. Haas Lounge,
All present Board members, new
applicants, and students interested in learning more about
the Board are invited to attend.

The local chapter of Students
for a Democratic Society is cooperating with its national organization and the Vietnam Day Committee of Berkeley, California in
the October 15 and 16 International Days of Protest against the
war in Vietnam. SDS believes
that American policy in Vietnam
and the Dominican Republic frustrates the democratic ambitions
of the people of these countries.
SDS will convene an Assembly
of Unrepresented People in Buffalo on October 15. Following the
format of a similar Assembly
held on August 9 by national
SDS, the local chapter invites individuals and organizations to
make declarations of peace in
Buffalo. The Assembly will reconvene in exile October 16 in front
of the U. S. Consulate in Toronto,
Canada. SDS is going to Toronto
for two reasons: 1) declarations
of peace by similar assemblies
have gone unconsidered by the
U. S. government, thereby forcing SDS into exile so that they
may be heard; and 2) the international implications of the U. S.
government’s war against the
Vietnamese affects Canadians.
SDS hopes for their support and
has invited them to participate in
the Assembly.

"The Assembly of Unrepresented People is being formed in Buffalo because SDS feels that it
and others who oppose the war
in Vietnam are not being represented in the formulation of
U. S. policy,” Michael Ferbcr, an
SDS member from Swarthmore
College, stated. He continued:
“The group is no longer repre-

Burnette Addresses Committee
On Opportunities For Students
Mr. Luther Burnette, of Buffalo CORE, spoke at a meeting
of the UB Civil Rights Committee, held Sunday night, and conducted by Michael Gardner, vicepresident, and Charles Brewer,
former president.
Mr. Burnette spoke on the opportunities open to the students
to do meaningful work for the
integration movement and human rights and discussed Out
quality of the Buffalo school system and the Roswell Park urban
renewal project, two local problems.

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
Night Is

fight for equal rights if they are
to achieve anything. This work
must be done primariliy by Negroes, although students can do
some needed work,”
According to Mr. Burnette, the
most serious problem now is the
improvement of the Buffalo

school system, which, he feels, is
one of the worst in the state.
He stated that Buffalo spends
(Cont’d from P. 11)

Corner COLVIN BLVD.
and Sheridan Drive
Every

Mr. Burnette stated that many
people are needed not only for
dramatic work such as sit-ins, but
also
for organizational work.
“Whereas most of the past work
in the north has been done to
make people aware that a problem existed, the tedious day by
day work begins now,” said Mr.
Burnetts. "Because people don’t
give up an advantageous position

Good

7 t's just tike having my
own private tutor when / study
with Barnes &amp; Noble
College Outlines,,,
\

keyed to my texts,

TEXTS KEYED
TO OUTUNE

OUTLINE KEYED

A Tabulated Bibliography

A Hoick-Peteroaco Table

•I Standard Taatbaaks

indicates pages in the

Outline that summarize
chapters in
each text.

appropriate

Subjects

TO TEXTS

indicates pages in various
standard textbooks that
correspond to topics covered in chapters of the
Outline.

range from Accounting to Zoology

*-

sented by the U. S. government
because President Johnson has
violated the Constitution and has
used the mass media of communication to promote the support
of the war in Vietnam. Too many
crucial decisions are being made
by military leaders who are not
qualified to do so.”
.

The schedule of events for the
two days is as follows:
Friday, October 15
10 A.M.-2 P.M.—Teach-in in Con-

ference Theatre, Norton Union.

.Faculty members on both sides

of the issue have consented to

speak.
3:00 P.M.—demonstration culminating in an Assembly of Unrepresented People in Niagara
Square.
7:30-11 P M. —workshops in Rooms
240-248, Norton Union, in the
cuss regional organization of
political action groups and fu-

ture strategy.

Saturday, October 16
2:00 P.M,—reconvention of Assembly of Unrepresented People in Exile in front of U. S.
Consulate in Toronto, Canada.
The purpose of SDS, as stated
by Michael Ferber, is dedication
to the promotion of participatory
democracy in every phase of
American life. Mr. Ferber summed it up stating, “In general,
SDS supports student participa-

tion in the decisions that effect
them. The organization believes
that students have responsibilities oil campus as well as on, that
they must act to make known
their ideas and hopes, and that
they must build in America and
the world a pure democratic community.”

Since its national formation in
the fall of 1962, SDS has worked
to carry out its plans. One attempt is the Economic Research
and Action Project (ERAP) which
has been in existence since the
summer of 1964. This project is
organized in approximately
twelve northern cities and involves about two hundred students working full time in the
community. These students encourage organization to support
Negro rights, and to protest high
rent and health code violations,
inadequate schools, political corruption, and maldistribution of
welfare. SDS also supports the
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the
Last

April SDS

organized

a

march of 25,000 on Washington
to protest the war in Vietnam.
SDS welcomes interested students and members of the community to its weekly meetings
which are held every Wednesday
at 7:30 P.M. in Norton Union. A
basic statement of the ideals of
SDS and Port Huron Statement,
is available at the SDS table in
Norton Union.

�Friday, Oetobar 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Cditoriaf Comment

.

.

.

—

Cacotopia and Eutopia
their rural dwellings and forced
to flee to the cities to escape
terror from the skies (not terror from ground maneuvers of
the geurrillas). As thousands of

By RICHARD SALTER
FOOD POISONING?
and DAVID GARDINER
but
help
FSA
Food
Service
can
not
operated
The
take great responsibility for the current “epidemic” of
Our article of last week covfood poisoning on campus. The official releases from ered the background information
knocked out, the refuthe office of the tfSA and from Dr. Westley Rowland asconcerning the development of huts are
cribe the' illness to “food borne bacilli” or “virus.” This the war in Vietnam from 1941. gees forsake their homes and
livelihoods for the squalor and
is an obscure way of saying that the students who ate We showed how America’s deepuncertainties of the city, creating
the shrimp contracted at least one disease that was ening commitment led to furmany critical social and economic
occathe
war.
It
is
two).
expansion
We
realize
that
ther
of
in the food (and possibly
problems that did not exist bethis
historical
commitment
that
sionally these things “just happen” and that perhaps no
fore. This deliberate policy of
one is to blame, but it raises the interesting question: drives the government to escalate terror that compels the abandonwar.
The
ment of villages has resulted in
why do we pay such a huge administrative mark-up to rather than end the
reality of the situation in Vietthe PSA to handle the food service, if even they cannot nam has been distorted out of untold deaths among the peasants. The U. S. Air Force proudprotect the students from “food-borne’’ diseases?
its proper perspectivev. Noting
We attempted to get accurate information from the this tendency, George Kennon, ly proclaims 15,000 “confirmed”
FSA, the Board of Health, the doctors and hospitals who former U. S. ambassador to the deaths since the first of the year
as its contribution to the war
handled the deluge of sick students about the exact U. S. S. R., observes:
effort. The U. S. government,
nature of the disease and whether or not the preparation
"There is, let me assure you, however, cannot expect to have
nature
responsible.
The
obscure
of the food was partly
nothing more egocentrical than
many hearts and minds to win
of the disease made exact answers to these questions an embattled democracy. It soon if it is intent upon such massive
impossible, but we were told that sloppy practices in becomes the victim of its own destruction as this. It is an outfood preparation, as well as using food whid% should war propaganda. It then tends come of trying to resolve nonhave been disposed of could well have been decisive to attach to its own cause an military problems through milifactors. Was the FSA Food Service trying to save money absolute value which distorts its tary solutions. Even before diown vision on everything else.
rect intervention by U. S. forces,
by jeopardizing student health?
Its enemy becomes the embodi80 per cent of the South VietFSA
CONFRONTATION
THE
A
ment of all evil. Its own side, on
namese population, according to
In the name of the faculty and students of this the other hand, it the center of former President Eisenhower, fauniversity we have had parking problems, exhorbitant all virtue."
vored Ho Chi Minh. Consequently, it would be a military necesThe government awkwardly
prices, bad food, clumsy administration, and a secretive
tries to rationalize its actions in sity to elimnate 80 per cent of
land deal, all financed by student parking fees and studemocracy”
dent activities charges. All of these things have been Vietnam, hut its policies are all people to “bring
and have frightening to Vietnam U. S. style!
done by the administrators who run the “Faculty-Stu- bankrupt
implications for Vietnam and the
dent” Association.
Action such as the policies iniworld. For example, U. S. air
tiated in Vietnam generate doubt
The President of the Student Senate at the last raids upon South Vietnam crein the minds of many Asians as
FSA meeting tried to get a proposal passed which would ate a refugee problem of enorgive faculty and students a real place in the decisions mous proportions. The sorties to the true intent of the U. S.
the great loss of
of the FSA. His proposal was defeated by the same have increased from 2,000 to 11,- Recognizing we
can expect the
life,
administrators who created these pressing problems.
000 per month and, with the human
spread of outspoken anti-AmerThe administrators on the FSA, Claude Puffer, passing of the monsoon season, ican, not anti-communist, feelCharles Balken, Paul Bacon, and the rest, have no right are expected to accelerate. Yet, ings throughout all of Asia.
to the money collected specifically for student activities. according to Charles Mohr of Prince Sihanouk of Cambodia inThis is money collected from students, for students, yet the New York Times, already sists that
close to 1,000,000 South Vietmore than a quarter of a million dollars ($250,000) goes
namese have been uprooted from
In perpetuating the war in
into the FSA for “internal” expenses!
President Deveaux proposed at the last meeting that
activities fees should be administered by the students
or by a body which meaningfully represents faculty and
students. This proposal will be voted on at the next
meeting of the FSA on October 11.
By JEFFREY LEWIS and
Ryan had to, because of his offi“Administrative mark-up” is one thing; a quarter
MARTIN FEINRIDER
cial position as Party Chairman,
of a million dollars is something else entirely. The sturemain aloof from this primary
quick survey of the
As
for
a
played
campus
with,
fleeced,
will not be
dents on this
past decade of local politics, one battle, this contest was still conor ignored much longer.
sidered a test of Ryan and the
can’t help but notice that cornew Erie County GOP. Alruption, mismanagement, and inACADEMIC FREEDOM THREATENED
it was a tight race, and
Professor Boyd-Bowman this week granted a student efficiency are the norm. Out of though
the odds were in favor of Finn,
least
into his experimental class in Chinese on the basis of his the past three mayors, at by
(the endorsed incumbent), Benda
two have been indicted
high performance on the Modern Language Department’s
er, much to the pleasure of GOP
Grand Jury for conduct unbetest.
In casual conversation, after this student
aptitude
Headquarters, won. If one might
coming a public official. Houshad been given a class card and made arrangements to ing projects that should have have considered Finn a Grimm’s
make up the work he had missed, the subject of foreign taken no more than two years left-hand man, which in fact he
-

I

South Viatnam, In supporting in
Saigon leaders who ara universally unpopular, known as har
"cresfuras," tha Unitad States
has forced the majority of tha
common people and the majority
of the elite of South Viatnam
into the arms of the Communists.
This is not the way to combat
Communism in this region or in
many others. This "anti-Communist" war, by reason of the imperialist character that it forcibly
assumes in tha eyes of the
masses, on the contrary, favors
Communism.

President Sukarno of Indonesia
instructs American diplomats to
“go to hell with your aid”; Singapore secedes from Malaysia to
avoid domination by America;
Japan expresses grave alarms
at the use of her territory for
the launching of air raids by
B-52s; China, witnessing the rapid
buildup of American military
might on Asian soil, feels threatened and now prepares to defend herself from the possibility
of a direct invasion. Thus do we
mind many former allies alienated by America’s military solution to the myth of a spreading
Communistic subversion in Asia.
As America feels endangered
by a hostile Asia manufactured
by its own misconceptions, there
is every reason to suppose that
influential spokesmen in Congress, diplomats, generals, and
segments of the public will exert
demands for full utilization of
military weapons. The logic of
military solutions to the world’s
problems, therefore, ultimately
leads to the definite possibility
of a nuclear holocaust. Such are
the implications of “finishing” the
“job” in Vietnam.

YOUR OWN BACKYARD

visiting Cuba on journalist’s visas.

Dr. Boyd-Bowman
then retrieved the class card and stated that he “had no
use for leftists.”
The blatant infringement of student academic freedom triggered a chain of events which involved the
Chairman of the Modern Language Department and
several administrators. At this writing Dr. Boyd-Bowman has tentatively agreed to enroll the student and
has pleaded "ignorance” of the University policies on
academics freedom.
This skirmish proves once again that academic freedom is not secure on this campus and that the kind of
mentality which created the Feinberg disclaimer and
fired George Starbuck and Harry Keyishian is still welcomed, not only by the administration of this University,
but the people who make education grants in Washington
as well.
We are tempted to thank the teachers and administrators whose work has quieted the storm Dr, BoydBowman’s arbitrary and unethical action has created,
but we suspect that is rather like thanking architects
whose building don’t fall down and kill people.
We are very sensitive to encroachments of academic
freedom at this University and incidents like this do
-

not help to quiet us.

THE FACULTY DIRECTORY
COMIC RELIEF
Last year this university produced a Faculty Directory that looked like an ad for a second rate antique
shop. This year, in honor of “culture” or “erudition,”
they turned out a directory which looks like the bad
memories of a high school drop-out. It really is grotesque, all the way from the dividers (symbolising "precision,” no doubt) to the great BIG FOOTBALL that dominates the center of the embarassing cover. We would
like to thank the six or seven administrators whose tireless effort produced this great work for the improvement
of the campus. At least most of the names are spelled
right, and even if no one answers at the other end, the
phones ring when you dial the numbers,
-

after 10 years. Air and water
pollution have become so bad
that the nation’s attention has
been focused on this city as a

glaring obscenity.
Some have heralded these 1965
elections as a Reformation—all
admit that if something is not
done quickly, Buffalo can forget
for all time the possibility of becoming a leading center of the
nation. It is our duty as students
and citizens to make sure this
reformation takes place—now!!

I. We all know that the National Republican Party came
close to death during the 1964
Presidential campaign. In Buffalo, it was worse. The problems were compounded by a
split in the party between State
Senator Walter J. Mahoney and
Erie County GOP Leader Robert
W. Grimm. After a long and
bloody fight, the Mahoney forces
finally came out on top by having Thomas Ryan, an extremely
honest, capable man, elected
County Chairman in April. The
upcoming elections will be a
test of Mahoney’s power, Ryan’s
ability, and the Republican Party’s capabilities.
In general, the endorsed
Republican candidates, mostly
Ryan men, won.
One notable exception was a
fight in the 18th Ward of Erie
County for the nomination for
Supervisor between
the
endorsed incumbent, Lawrence Finn
(an old-guard Grimm man) and
Miles D. Bender one of the Mahoney-Ryan forces).
Although

was. 18th Ward GOP Chairman
William Disher, who engineered
Finn’s endorsement and who
placed his neck on the chopping
block in this primary battle
must be considered to be one of
Grimms’ right hand men. This
is why Bender’s victory (GrimmDisher-Finn’s defeat) must have
been particularly gratifying to
Ryan and Headquarters’ staff.
Ryan probably took Bender’s victory in this contest as a good
omen indicating that perhaps
now Erie County Republican factionalism is dead, and that hopefully the party will unite behind
him for victory in the upcoming
elections.
We told you that we would
warn you when we were about
to editorialize
here it comes.
It is our opinion that Bender's
victory is not only a good omen
for the Republican Party, but
also a good indication that the
Reformation we referred to earlier is coming. Bender is what
may be hopefully considered to
be the “new breed” of politician.
He is young, aggressive, and sincere. We consider Bender and
those like him to be the hope
not only for the GOP, but of good
government. We’d like to take
this opportunity to announce to
those of you who are interested
in becoming political activists
and who have a sincere interest
in good local government, and
in good government in general,
the formation of The Ad Hoc
University Committee to Support
Miles D. Bender for Supervisor.
We feel that his election to this
—

post will be a sound political
base for him. In our opinion, because he is so honest, ambitious,
and able, Bender cannot help
but go up; and, we would like to
give him a boost. Those of you
interested in joining our little
political Crusade can reach either
of us at 873-2995, or can contact Bender Headquarters
H. Those of you who enjoy
studying political bossism would
have a field day studying the
career of former Erie County
Democratic Chairman Peter Crotty, who can only be compared
to the DeSapio-Buckiey (Charles,
not William F.)
Steingut
bosses of New York City. In June,
Crotty appointed the comparatively young Joe Crangle to be
his successor in the post of Party
Chairman. The upcoming elections will be a test for Crangle
to see if he can hold as tight a
reign over the Democratic Party
as did Crotty. It appears that
the November elections were, in
essence, placed on a silver platter for Crangle in that Chester
Kowal, a Republican, present
Mayor of Buffalo has had an administration which is more than
typical of the decadent government this city has seen in the
past ten years. If a public opinion poll were to be taken in this
city, it would be obvious that
almost anyone would be preferred as Mayor to Kowal.
In conclusion, we can easily see
that the upcoming elections will
be a test of the ability and
strength of two new party Chairmen. Ryan of the Republicans
will have to unite his strife-torn
party in order to overcome the
Kowal stigma and to start the
GOP back on the road to success. It should prove to be interesting to see which of the
two party Chairmen and which
of the candidates comes out on
top, and whether or not the victors are best for Buffalo and best
for good government. Will the
November elections be the start
of the hoped-for Reformation??
—

�Friday,

October 1, 1965

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Z'Vi

oCetterA

to

the (Editor

Epidemic Victims Commend

Student Volunteers
TO

THE EDITOR

As unfortunate victims of the

recent epidemic, we had the opportunity to observe the selfless

efforts of staff and students. The
staff, our own, and those recruited from other hospitals, aided us twenty-four hours a day
and were always kind, considerate, and cheerful. By far the most
inspiring, however,
was the
amount and extent of the volunteer service rendered by our fel-

low students. After hearing constant cries of “apathy” on the
UB campus, one only had to witness the undaunted help which
we know we could never repay,
to see that sometimes, at least,
they are unfounded.
We wish to extend our thanks

to all those who helped make our
enforced stay in (he infirmary

as pleasant as possible by giving
unselfishly of their time and

energy.

Gratefully

The Sickles of the
Infirmary Lounge

Bed Number:
1) Ann Meager
2) Elaine Hill
3) Marilyn Schwab
4) Ellen Zeiller
5) Lauren Kirschner
6) Judi Reisz
7) Elaine Belsky
8) Carlotta Rudgers
9) Gwen Whitley

Athletic Department Employee

Defends Current Practices
TO THE

EDITOR;

I am writing in response to
an open letter to the Athletic
Department and a brief editorial,
both of which appeared in the
Spectrum of Friday, Sept. 24,
1965. I am a full-time student
who works part-time in the Athletic Department so I am familiar
with both student complaints and
actual departmental procedures.

THE RIGHT
By JAMES CALLAN
Government welfarism under
the Johnson administration has increased at the fastest rate since
F.D.R. Welfarism and its underlying redistributionist principles
(let them be flattered by the
label) have reached the point
where justification seems to them
unnecessary. Ironically they reach
the point simultaneously where it
seems to me impossible.
Welfarism is currently tax-financed, and favored by the representatives of the taxpayers. How
then can a proponent of democracy oppose welfarism?
Well, to answer, let me propose
an alternative to the current welfare system: a government sponsored program, financed voluntarily by individuals, to serve the
same ends. My contention is that
if the “everybody wants it” justification is valid, then this system would serve nearly as well
as the present one without foreing anyone to contribute against
his will. Now if the majority of
the people vote for candidates
who they know will tax them for
welfare purposes, it seems obvious that these people want them
to do it. But if compulsory taxation in this area were to be re-

THE

placed by a voluntary system,
these same citizens would then be
freed of the extra tax burden and
would presumably contribute this
excess back to the charitable institution, for what change would
the new law effect in their charitable outlook? Naturally some
who didn’t like the original system would keep their money, but
since they were in a minority

anyway the system wouldn’t suffer sizably.
Obviously, however, our legislators don’t think this system is
feasible or they would have begun it already. Nor do I think it’s
feasible, and the reasons show
the groundlessness of liberal welfarism. Those citizens who favor
the present system and who would
not contribute to the alternate
one must either be profiting
from it now, or be ignorant of
the fact that they are being taxed.
If the latter be the case, then
democracy is at fault, for democpresupposes an

racy

intelligent

am! informed electorate. If the
former, the contributors unfavor
able to welfarism constitute a
majority, but are overruled by
the benefactors. In other words
our electorate contains a majority
of fools or cheaters.

SPECTRUM

The

official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving,

Christmas,

and Easter.

Editor
Managing

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor

News Editor-SUE GREENE
Sports Editor-RICHARD DRANDOFF
Asst. Sports Editor-STEVE

SCHUELEIN

Feature Editor-JOHN STINY
Layout
Copy

Editor-R. DENNIS FOX
Editor-LAUREN JACOBS

Business Manager—RAY D. VOLPE
Advertising Manager-BUDDY DIKMAN
Office Manager-KATHY

KUNIGISKY

Photography Editor-EDWARD

J. JOSECLYN

Continuity Editor— MARSHA ORSZULAK
Circulation Manager-DIANE

LEWIS

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

aTpLAft

Second Class,
Subscription

Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y,
per year, circulation

$3.00

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

First of all. I would like to
suggest that the Spectrum editor
and staff make sure of their
facts before they print. There
are many errors and misconceptions in both articles and 1 think
it would have been a much better practice for the writers to
consult either this department or
someone in authority before they
printed these lies.
No. I. The FSA does not support the intramural program, so
whether this program is run to
meet the editor’s approval, or
not, this should not reflect on the
Athletic Department. The intramural program is completely,
100%, supported by the state
through the Physical Education
for Men department which is not
an FSA department.

No. 2, The $47 activities fee
noes not go to the Athletic Department—only $12.50 is used
by this department. This money
is not "grossly misused in the
name of sports” but is used to
provide athletic contests to which
every student is admitted free

because of this fee. This includes
every sport that takes place at
this university.
No. 3. If students arc

not satisfied with their seats they can
get belter ones, by paying for
them. The paying public (alumni
and UB friends) cannot be expected to spend money for season tickets and then sit on the
ends while the students get the
better scats for almost nothing.
The seats in the stadium hero,
however, are all placed in such
a way that it is invalid to say
that it is not possible to see the
game (unless Of course the viewer is wearing hair in his eyes,
or sunglasses covered with mud).
If students wish to have the Athletic Department give them the
best seats, then they must act
as the sole support of the athletic contests either by paying
a steep fee or by paying for
each game as it is attended.

No. 4. In the history of this
department there has been only
one graduate student who has
approached Mr. Peelle in regard
to his wife's attendance at games.
This sole case of this type occurred two years ago and the
wife in question was admitted to
the game free, as a guest of the
Athletic Department.
In general, I think both articles
were unfair and out and out lies

in the fact that the information
was not verified and was completely incorrect. In the future,
I would suggest that you check
your sources more carefully and
take more time to justify your
accusations. While there are
some practices of the Athletic
Department which are not ideal,
and the department is well aware
of its own shortcomings, they
arc doing the best they can with
the limited facilities and support
that they have at this university,
and if the Spectrum would support and help them, rather than
try and dig up dirt (or make up
lies) it would be more profitable
for both the teams and the student body that they represent.
Patricia Gale Tananbaum

Commuting Freshman Comments
On Friendships at the University
TO THE EDITOR

This is an open letter to all
open freshmen. You can’t answer
me in words—only actions, and
sincerely, I’d like a lot of answers.

I am one of the despised, uneducated, unwelcome, persons on
this campus—I am a freshman.
But worse than that, I dwell deeper in the den of iniquity, I am
(excuse the profanity) a commuter. There appears to be some
with
heinous crime connected
being a non resident around here.
The people from the dorms form
unique cliques which are simply
easy to catergorize.

1. Room mates and suitemates.
Two strangers are plunked together in a foreign environment
and are told, “Play nice, Kiddies."

Okay, it takes adults to exist with
each other. When the girl clicks

her pen till it drives you hairy,
or enjoys destroying your sound
theorems on drinking, study, religion, and/or sex with the flick
of her tongue, then congratulations must go to the patient ones.
Sure there are the roommates
who have personalities which
blend and can accept each other
at face value—but why must you

ostracize us? We don’t contaminate dorms, honestly. You’re
sick of
homesick? So am I
home. Forgive me, but the old
routine “strange town, unhospitible, ex officio hosts" should get
off the pot. You are all at least

exposed to a potential group
(clique) of people to make friends
with. Many of us come alone
everyday from great distances.
The clubs and mixers are difficult to attend, the Buffalo bus

service being what is is. Allenthink you’ve got it
bad? Couldn’t you possibly endure another friend? Since when
was there a quota system involving immigration into hearts?
Corny—not really, when ydiT consider how desperately alone some
of us are. We want you to see our
home life—our world—but we’re
only allowed to observe the glass
enclosed world of yours. Ihaven’t
an answer to the dilemma only
a desire to seek one. Now that
I’ve completely meandered from
topic, I'll continue. Suitemates—you either love or hate someone
you share a John with. I never
heard of anyone feeling lukewarm in this respect.
from the same area.
easy and natural to
enjoy the company of people
who come from your hometown.
You share much in common and
have old memories and private
jokes. But you are limiting your
scope. If you sought friendships
strictly from Hornsville, then you

2. Girls
It's truly

should have stayed in Hornsville.
This may come as a shock, but
there are others on this campus
whom you might enjoy and vice
versa. It isn’t unheard of for
you to be the first to welcome
a stranger. But then again, you’d
better not
that would be acting as an individual.

3. Snobs. These people (?)
cling together as a last resort.
They are so pre-occupied with
self and earth-shattering decisions
as: “whom shall I belittle today?”
or “Does my hair really look
alright in the back, Bob?”—
“Yes, Irv” that they barely no-

tice who their associates are
other than that they are IN and
have passed all requirements including a strenuous 3-hour clothing label inspection examination.
This crowd possesses a one-way
ticket to sharp dates, rotten
grades, bankrupt parents, phony
values and no goals. They are
not capable of true friendship
and neither you nor I need them.

4. True friends. There is noth-

ing plebian or "uncool" about
being and having an honest
friend. People exist who respect
and sincerely like and enjoy each

other’s company. Don't be offended. You should treasure your
true friends. But have the ability
to discern between fact and fiction. Don’t let your friendship be
a Venus fly trap—beautiful on
the outside—but capable of devouring. Open yourself to new
people.

I've taken the blinders off my

eyes. The faults of commuters
are profuse and provoking. We
are infamiliar surroundings; there
is less for us to adjust to. You

have twice the responsibility, financially, socially, morally, and
personally. I could go on. But
instead of each of us giving ourselves a hearty pat on the back
—why not do it to someone else.
We can never truly be welcome
at UB unless we first can welcome each other. Let me
first. Hi, my name is
1 desire your company; 1 desire
your friendship. Sorry to contradict, but you are more than welcome here.
My hand is extended—have you
the guts to grasp it?
Most cynically yours/
FRESHMAN

�PAGE SIX

Friday! October 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

«

Education and Cultural Affairs
Lecturer to Criti ue Existentialism
Philosophy Series To

Be Presented By
Convocations Board
By LAWRENCE BEDNARSKI
Dr. Walter Kaufmann will address students and faculty on “A
Critique of Existentialism” Monday, October 4th at 3:00 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room. Dr. Kaufmann is the first of three speakers in a Philosophy Series sponsored by the Convocations Committee .

Born in Germany, Dr. Kaufwas graduated Phi Beta
Kappa from Williams College in
1941, and received his M.A. from
Harvard University in 1942. In
1947 he received his Ph, D. from
Harvard and joined the faculty
at Princeton University, where
he is now a professor of philosophy. He has taught undergraduate seminars in “Philosophy of
Religion,” “Hegel, Nietzsche and
Existentialism,” as well as a variety of senior Seminars in the
Special Programs in the Humanities, and in the Woodrow Wilson
School.
Dr. Kaufmann has delivered
many lectures
at universities
both home and abroad, including
two Loeb Lectures at the University of Frankfurt, and two Matchette Lectures at Brooklyn College. The Undergraduate Council at Princeton invited him to
be the Witherspoon Lecturer of
the Spring term of 1962, the
highest form of recognition that

mann

the undergraduates can officially

bestow on the faculty. He also
has held visiting appointments
at Columbia, Cornell, the New
School for Social Research, the
University of Michigan, and the
University of Washington.
Dr. Kaufmann is the author of
the following books: Nietische,
(1956); Critique of Religion and
Philosophy (1958); From Shakeipeare to Existentialism (1959);
The Faith of a Heretic (1961);
and Cain and Other Poems (1962).
He has translated, with intromajor works together with a se-

lection from Nietzsche’s other
books, and has edited Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre
(1956). He is co-author of Ethics
and Business: Three Lectures
(1962).

The

second lecture in the
three-part series will be delivered by Dr. Herbert Feigl Friday,
October 15 at 3:00 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room. Dr. Feigl’s topic
is “A Philosophy for Our Age of
Science.” Professor Feigl was an
active and critical participant in
the development of the "Vienna
Circle" of Logical Positivism. He
is currently Director of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of
Science. He is also one of the
two editors of the philosophical

journal, “Philosophical Studies,"
Dr. John Somerville will deliver the final lecture on “Dialectical Materialism’s Theory of
Value,” Friday, October 22 in
room 147 Diefendorf, He is the
President of the Society for the
Study of Dialectical Materialism,
author of the book “Soviet Philosophy,” and editor of the philosophical journal, "Soviet Studies
in Philosophy.”
As an introduction to each lecture, a member of the Philosophy
Department will write a short ar
tide which will provide the student with a general background
and introduction to the topics

discussed. These articles will appear in the SPECTRUM before
each lecture.

Dr. John Halstead on Students;
God Should Be First Commitment
By

JOHN P. HALSTEAD

In responding to the request
to comment on the student’s responsibility in the university, I
have taken the liberty to construe my commission rather
broadly. Not only is the student
here to learn and think, but to

prepare himself, or herself, upon
graduation, to become a contributive member of society. He
need not aspire to be a Renaissance man, but should try to become a full man, at least, a multifaceted man, for the perplexities
of a Robert Oppenhcimer dramatize the pitfalls facing the specialist citizen. To so enlarge himself, the student must be committed to ends outside himself,
because the person uncommitted
to such ends is subject to every
random impulse and is not so
much enlarged as dispersed.
On or off campus, before, during, or after college, the first
commitment of the student, as
of any person, is to God. He who
denies or questions this, denies
or questions that man is anything more than a superbly clever animal. But he who believes
in God, augments his being with
a dimension which overleaps this
world and is fit to accept his
earthly successes with humility
and his earthly defeats with wise
tranquility. This dimension has,
beyond a doubt, inspired more
humanity to acts of superhuman-

ity than any other vision known
to mankind within recorded history.

The person preoccupied with
the affairs of the world endows
them with undue importance.
Our lives are overshadowed by
the obliteration potential of the
atom bomb. We fear. But the
world has known the fear of
obliteration before. The approach
of the Millenium had the pants
scared off a good many devout
Christians. The Plague which
wiped out more than half the
population of parts of Europe
must have seemed the eleventh
hour to our ancestors. We must
learn to live with the standing
threat to our civilization. But we
must learn once again, how and
when it is appropriate to die
someplace else but in bed or on
the golf course. The very least
of the lessons of the Cross, and
I use the allegory in universal,
not in Christian terms alone, is
that there are occasions when
man must die for the right cause.
“What doth it profit a man if
he gain the whole world and
suffer the loss of his soul?” It
makes very little difference to
me whether I die by a crossbow
quarrel or by atomization
as
long as it’s worth the candle.
—

The man preoccupied with iniquities of the world—and they
are legion—is indeed uncomfortable and rebellious, for he lacks
the serenity to attack iniquity
with effective objectivity and
wastes his powers and talents
on protest. Winston Churchill
said that:

of Coimbra, Portugal. The singers,

making their second visit to the
United States to perform in the
International University Choral
Festival at Lincoln Center in
New York City, will present a
concert in the Fillmore Room,
Norton Union. The public is invited to attend free of charge.

The group’s floor length monk’s
robes give them an aura of romance and mystery. They are
not, however, shadows out of the
Middle Ages, but students from
the third oldest university in the
world. Coimbra University was
founded by King Dinis in 1290,
a little less than a century and
a half after the founding of the
Portuguese Kingdom by King
Alfonso Henriques. Originally

called "Estudo Geral,” which
translates as General School, the
university soon became so closely
identified with its location that
the name was officially changed
to the University of Coimbra.
The Chorus, whose native title
is the Orfeon Academico de
Coimbra, is the oldest students’
organization and the first choral
group in Portugal. It was founded in 1880 by a young student
of law, Joao Arroio. Keeping

On Existentialism
By DR. PETER H. HARE

With his enormously successful paperbacks, Walter Kaufmann has done more than any
other American to disseminate
existentialist ideas in this country. This is fortunate because he
is the most clear-headed of existentialists. No existentialist is
The person who has never better read in analytic philososensed the drama is condemned phy; none has more respect for
to a life of cynicism and frustratight argument. Scattered through
tion. But for the man who trusts his books are brilliant polemics
in God, that “measureless and against the vast amount of plain
perpetual uncertainty,” furnishes sophistry in existentialist literthe fountainhead of eternal inature. Nothing revolts him more
spiration, hope and possibilty. than the pseudoprecision and
And the student who knows this, verbal acrobatics of Kierkegaard
has released his talents and enand Sartre, but he reserves a
ergies to the full scope of their special contempt for the bombaspotential.
tic verbiage of Heidegger.
For a student in the university, the search for truth should

be his second commitment, and
I mean truth in its broadest possible construction, for that is
the function of the university
itself. Know thyself, know thy
subject, and never violate the
integrity of either.
For he who gives himself up

to it, there are few joys so unalloyed as the rediscovery for
oneself of the enduring insights
of poetry, science, history, and
philosophy. Herein lies the excitement of the search for knowledge. The bored student never
learns this because he is bored.
It is revealed to the questing student because he must know. The
student who lives up to this commitment will earn a treasure far
(Cont’d on P. 10)

alive the choral heritage of Portugal and Spain, Jnese singing students have traveled throughout
Europe, performing before the
people of Spain, South Africa,
Casablance, Tangiers, France, the
Portuguese Islands, and also have
sung in the United States on a
1962 tour. Their plans for next
year include tours to Angola
and Mozambique, France, Scandinavia and Brazil.

when, while still a student, he
became assistant to the former
conductor, Rev. Dr. Elias de
Aguiar. He was appointed acting director in 1930. Many of
the most beautiful and stirring
songs in the repertoire of the
Coimbra Chorus are Dr. Marques’
own arrangements of original

A curious fact about the students of the Orfeon is that they
do not confine their vocalizing
to the concert stage. During the
academic year at Coimbra, small
groups of them can be heard
singing in the streets of the old
university town on any night of
the week. The black cape is the
traditional garb of the Coimbra
student and frequently the capes
worn at the campus are tattered.
Several explanations have been
offered for this: one is that they
tear off a piece of the cape to
give to someone as a sign of
esteem; the second, and perhaps
more logical version, is that a
young lady who grants a kiss to
the student is rewarded with a
piece of his cape.

from the Renaissance masters to
modern popular songs at the
Sunday afternoon concert, and
then will be joined by the University
of Buffalo Women’s
to
perform
Chorale
several
works from the International University Choral Festival Repetoire,
among them a traditional Russian
nonsense
song,” “Nagorushke,
na gore,” edited by R, S. Beckwith, and Randall Thompson’s

Dr. Manuel Raposo Marques
has been conductor of the Orfeon
de Coimbra since 1936. His career
with the Orfeon began in 1926

Presents Views

“We are not at home in the
academic world; in fact we
would never be at home in any
patterned world . . . Without a
measureless and perpetual uncertainty the drama of life would
be destroyed.”

Portu uese Chorus Presents
oncerts o
ora
or
On Sunday afternoon, October
3, at 2 p.m., UB will play host to
the Male Chorus of the University

Walter Kaufmann

compositions.

The chorus will present a concert of selected choral works

“Alleluia.”

A. R. Ammons, former
poetry editor of “The Nation” and currently teaching at Cornell University,
will give a reading of his
own works October 8, at
4 p.m., Room 70, Acheson
Hall.

As critical as he is of the
work of other existentialists, Professor Kaufmann is as preoccupied with moral committment
and the avoidance of self-deception as any existentialist. He
takes analytical philosophy to
have been as hopelessly academic
and unconcerned with the important questions of every day
life as existentialist philosophy
has been hopelessly murky and
intellectually irresponsible. What
is needed, he argues, is genuine
honesty, both moral and intellectual. Philosophy should “hurt.”
He suggests that to excuse an
existentialist’s murkiness by saying that he is a poet is “rather
like saying that Senator McCarthy was a poet.” Heidegger’s
grotesque prose appears to be
even worse poetry than it is
philosophy.

Like Santayana, Professor Kaufmann is a professional philosopher who has published volumes
of poetry, but in his view “philosophy is poetry, become selfcritical . . . with an intellectual
sioned thought and emotion can
grow together.”
Convinced that genuine religion and genuine philosophy are
closely related, Professor Kaufmann has consistently attacked
organized religion in a Nietzschean manner, having published
an important book on Nietzsche
while still in his twenties. He
goes so far as to subtitle a chapter “How to Go to Hell,” and to
cite a study showing that the
tendency to lie and cheat is higher in children with a greater
knowledge of the Bible and seriptual precepts. Theology and apologetics he takes to be models
of complacent self-deception, but
no one could admire more the
insights into the human condition to be found in much religious literature.
Apart from his close argument,
Professor Kaufmann’s plea for
committment to the quest for
moral and intellectual honesty
is made appealing by his rare
sense of humor and his muscular prose. It is apparent that he
has learned much from Nietzsche.
Although less aphorismic, his
style has much of the pungency
of Nietzsche’s. In fact, in every
respect, both philosophical and
literary, nowhere is existentialist
philosophy to be found in a more
attractive form.

�Friday, October I, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

India Festival to Open CJ( Board
Oct. 3 at Albright-Knox

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
The regular weekly meeling
of the Photography Club will be
held today in Room 266 at 4:30
p.m. Officers for this year will
be elected. New members are
welcome.

Baird Hall. They will explain
The UB India Festival, spontheir art and perform with taped
sored by numerous cultural and
university groups, will continue 'musical accompaniment.
next week with concerts, lec“The Creative Aspects of the
Art of India” will be discussed
tures, exhibits and a film, all
pertaining to Indian culture. All by Dr. Sherman Lee, director of
events are open to the public the Cleveland Museum of Art, at
IPPON CLUB
the first of the week’s lectures,
without charge.
There will be an Ippon Club
Preliminary lectures on “The
October 4, 8:30 p.m., in the Normixer at 8 p.m. today in the
ton Conference Theater. An exFillmore Room, featuring a. Judo
Structure of Indian Music” were
hibition of Indian work in brass exhibition.
presented last week by Dr. Harold Powers, Associate Professor bronze, copper, silk and ivory,
including a photographic display,
STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION
of music, University of PennsylThe School of Law and the
vania, to facilitate understanding “Forms and Rhythms of Rural
India”, by Charles Green, and Student Bar Association are
of the forthcoming concerts. Usmany miniatures on loan from pleased to announce a public
tad Ali Akbar Kahn, a virtuoso
of the sarod, an ancient stringed the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, lecture on Requirements for Good
will remain on display October Housing and a Practical Enforceinstrument, will perform on Sunday, October 3, 4:30 p.m. at the 3 to 9, in Norton Union Center ment Policy by Saul W. Lipshutz,
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and
Lounge.
Chief, Enforcement Section, DeDr. Raymond Ewell, Vice Presat the final concert Saturday, Octpartment of Licenses and Inspecober 9, 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall. ident for research at UB, will tion, City of Philadelphia today
Accompanying Mr. Khan will be
use slides of India he personally at 3:00 p.m., School of Law,
gathered on “India Today” on Room 110.
Shankar Ghosh on tabla, or InOctober 7, at 8:30 p.m. in the
dian drums, and Sheela MookerConference
Theater,
jee, on tempora, the “drone"
Norton.
ISRAEL FOLK DANCE CLUB
lute.
There will also be a panel disYou don’t have to be Jewish
cussion on “Indian Thought” on to enjoy the Isreali Folk Dance
Mr. Kahn’s group will also perOctober 8, in the Dorothy Haas Club every Sunday at 8 p.m. in
form at two lecture demonstrations scheduled for Monday and Lounge, at 3 p.m. Dr. A. ScoRoom 344. (We do Greek dances
Tuesday, October 4 and 5, at
ledes (chairman), L. Barnette, also!)
3:30 p.m. in the Norton ConKrish
Burrell,
Ewell,
A.
R.
V.
ference Theater, at which stunan and D. Riepe will participate.
DER DEUTSCHEN VEREIN
p.m,, in
to
October
at
8:30
dents will be encouraged
ask
On
5,
There will be a meeting of the
the
Conference
questions and state their reacTheater, Norton,
DDV Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
tions. In conjunction with memthe film, “Devi” will be shown.
Room 334 Norton. Slides of GerDirected by Satyajit Ray, and
bers of the Center for the Creamany will be shown, and a distive and Performing Arts, this with the music of Ali Akbar,
cussion period will follow. (Regroup will present a dance-reKhan, it will represent modern
member to brjng your microcital on Friday, October 8, at Indian film art at the Festival.
scopes.)

Slatin Names Three

Dr,

To Asst, Deans Posts
Dr. Miles Slatin, acting Dean
of the College of Arts and Sciences, announced today that
three faculty members have been
named Assistant Deans of the
College.

The three men, whose appointments became effective September 1, are Dr. Lynd W. Forguson,

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
Corner COLVIN BLVD.
and Sheridan Drive
Sing Along 7 Nites a Week

Assistant Professor of Philosophy,
Dr. Ernest C. Thomson, Jr., Assistant Professor of Drama and
Speech, and Dr. Robert F. Wesser, Assistant Professor of Eng-

lish.
Dean Slatin said the appointments were made in order to expand the services that the College can give to students and
faculty members. In addition, he
said, the appointments were
made to respond to the expanded
enrollment in the College.

HILLEL YOM KIPPUR SERVICES

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is Worth 10% at

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Graduate School Calendar
CORRECTION, the last day for resigning from a course without
penalty is FRIDAY, OCTOBER
8, 1965, NOT October 22, as previously stated.
—

90

C

f°r 13 pizza

11
COLA 2
TR 3-1330

We Now Have 2 Bakers for the Fastest, Freshest Pizza
ALWAYS DELIVERED FREE and HOT TO U.B.

for

WEEKLY CALENDAR

All University College Students
are reminded that their advisers are available for conferences on any matters, whether
academic or personal, that might
be troubling them. Students are
encouraged to take the initiative
in arranging such conferences by
making appointments with the
University College receptionist in

Oct. 1
The School of Law
a lecture by Mr.

presents
Saul Lipschutz, Chief of the Enforcement Section, Department of
Licenses and Inspections of the
City of Philadelphia. The topic
is “Housing Code Enforccmenf’.Opeh to the Public in
the School of Law, 77 West
Eagle Street, 3 p.m.

Diefendorf No. 114.
for next semesRegistration
ter for ALL University College
students, excluding nurses, will
begin Monday, October 18, 1965.
Students whose last names begin
with the letters designated below
will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for courses
on the following days;
—

—

—

Oct. 7
James Fenton Lecture
the
first of an annual series of lecto
Fall
tures
be held this
features Michael Pplanyi, re—

nowned

Physical Chemist,
speaking on "The Growth of
Science in Society.” Open to
the Public, in Norton Hall, Conference Theater, 8:30 p.m.

B,

W

II.

Nov. 1 through Nov. 5

Nov. 8

through

Nov. 12

—

—

Nov. 15 through Nov. 19

M, !■

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

K, G

Education majors

—

1’, N,

(3 days) Nov. 22 through

24

—

C,

Dec. 6 through Dec. 10

—

—

A, E,

NoV

will interview candidates in all
fields for September, 1966 place-

ment. January graduates please
note that January 1966 vacancies
include positions ■ in grade one
and grade six.

S,

L, T

Intercollegiate Council

Students may still ol&gt;taiu applications in Room
205 Norton for the Student Faculty Administration Forum, created for
communication a m o n g
students, faculty and adm i n ist ra t ion mem I kts.

(Cont'd

from P.

2)

will be required for admittance
to this dance. This UNIVAC
Dance received its name from The
method by which couples will be
chosen for the event. Each student purchasing a ticket will provide a required amount of information about himself. This mate-

The SPECTRUM

rial will be fed into the machine
and will be matched with information offered by an applicant
of the opposite sex. As a result

Published by

f-^reAA,

each

student involved

will be

“fixed up” with a partner that
the UNIVAC deems suitable

£7* mi'/i Printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

tract

unique set up should atcurious and unat-

many

tached students from the six parso watch
for farther details about the Inter-Colle'giate UN1VAC Dance.
Tickets will go on sale during
the second week in October.

Phone 876-2284

Pierced Earrings

interested

Chenango Forks Central
Schools, Chenango Forks, Broome
County, New York. Mr. fjorman
Sweeney, Supervising Principal,

Y

Nov. 29 through Dec. 3

—

in

R

ticipating campuses

*

PIZZA by DiROSE

on Registration Day in January.

—

Oct. 25 through Oct. 29

D,

the above schedule times. At this
time, the Receptionist.will give
the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow in
the subsequent registration procedures. O.T, students will make
their appointment with the receptionist. (P.T. students make appointments with Miss Heap directly). Nursing students are advised ?nd registered through the
School of Nursing,
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled time, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required to register in Clark Gym

and graduate
the last day for resigning from courses without an
“F” penalty is FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1965.

—

—

Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist .in Diefendorf
No. 114 one week in advance of

—

Oct. 18 through Oct. 22

13 through Dec. 17

I. J, 0, Q, U. V. X,' Z

Undergraduate

students

and many other brands

I

Dec.

accepted for publication.

U.S. Ked

j graphic equipment. We j
!

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not

773-5126 after 5

2 blocks from School

|

FOR SALE
|

3114 MAIN STREET

.

Gcidmaus

TF 6-4540
Jim Tuttle's

Carolyn Rakalik, Peace
Corps worker in Phillipines is in desperate need
of ehildrn’s hooks for her
students. Any contributions from University
Community can he taken
in Room 9 Aeheson Hall
from now till Oct. 25. Can
you help?
Your I .D

576 Taunton Place

Tuesday, October 5
6:30 P.M. 8:30 P.M.
Wednesday, October 6
10:00 To Sundown . . .
“Break the Fast” Supper at Conclusion of Service
—

SCHU .S MEISTERS
The Schuismeisters Ski Club
will have its first meeting Monday, October 11, at 7:30 in the
Millard Fillmore Room. All new
members welcome.

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Pins

Necklaces

—

Rings

The Pierced Ear
3624 MAIN ST. (opp. Clement)

Plui D*po»if

832-7579

Charms

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1:00-6:00

Bracelets

�Weekly
Calendar

Siliwai

SUILSM2

The well-known folklorist Jean Shepherd, in a semi

scholarly memoir in the latest issue of Playboy, describes

th mystique which surrounded movie-going in his home
town, Hammond, Indiana during the Depression. Shep’s
neighbors were a typically desperate, debt-driven crew
and they flocked to the Orpheum in unruly mobs to
escape the sad routine of their lives. The impression
they had of Hollywood, according to Shepherd, was that
of an inscrutable monolith offering them scraps of pleaWhat
sure and totally controlling their emotions.
People seemed hung up on
worked was repeated.
Busby Berkely “musicals,’’ Jack Oakie comedies, Tim
Holt westerns and similar delights, and by god, that was
what Jack Warner and his friends were going to give
them. Why experiment and take unnecessary risks
when they had a formula that obviously worked (economically, anyway)

Friday, October 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

?

Sounds drolve, doesn’t it? Those poor hooples out
in Hammond (which Shep describes as “the second most
nothing town in the U.S.”) had no sophistication, no taste,
Well, that Id Hollywood molith has crumbled, but many
of the rocks in the structure have been resurrected and
are still astonishingly durable. We have, for instance,
the James Bond industry (item 4 due this fall), the,
Vittorio Gassman industry momentarily engaged in marketing minutia; and more to the immediate point, the
Marcello Mastroianni-Joseph Levine cartel and the Nouvelle Vague Mystere, a collection of French directors
who have dedicated themselves to the frequent reproduction of films based on fifth-rate American gangster
novels.
Casanova ’70, currently at the Amherst Theater, is
Levine’s latest. Italian movies about sexual mores are
popular; pretty girls are always popular and Marcello
Mastroianni is very popular. So, add color, an unusual
situation ( a modern Casanova who cannot “perform”
unless he is in a dangerous or threatening situation),
flashy music and slick direction and presto-instant capital
and satisfying reveue. The movie is rather incoherent
and it has no consistent philosophy of conceptual comedy,
but it is an entertaining trifle, mostly because Mastroianni
is so good.
-

I remember when La Dolce Vita was released in this
country.
Dwight MacDonald, the gadfly iconoclast,
wrote in Esquire that Mastroianni was satisfactory in
the part of the wandering newsman, but that he had
been obviously type-cast and didn’t seem to have much
range or any interesting expectation. The usually arrogant Mr. MacDonald has obligingly eaten crow in his
column a number of times since then and with god reason.
Mastroianni has demonstrated a range and versatility
that is astonishing. He’s excellent whe he is serious
(The Organizer or La Note) and equally fine in a light
comedy like this one. The picture hasn’t really got much
going for it aside from Mastroianni and lots of pretty
girls, but that’s a potent combination and enough to make
it good entertainment. Sme of the vignettes involving
Mastroianni’s attempts to involve himself with an attractive lady in a potentially disasterous situation (affairs
with his commanding officer’s wife and the wife of a
monsterously homicidal Count, for instance) are extraordinarily funny. Mastroianni is given the run of the
lot and certainly takes full advantage of his mobility to
improvise creatively and to wring every possible laugh
out of each incident.
The film called Backfire at the Kensington is another derivative effort. They’ve re-united that loveable
team from Breathless. Jean Paul Belmondo and Jean
Seberg, and this time they’re trying to smuggle gold from
one country to another. The gold is disguised as a TR 4
and the villain is Gert Frobe. Sounds like Goldfiger, but
actually, the movie was made before the most recent
Bond flic. Unfortunately, nearly every feature of this
film is lifted from some better picture, like Vivre Sa Vie
(Godard), Shoot the Piino Player (Truffaut), Le Doulos
(Jean-Pierre Melville) or the aforementioned Breathless.
Predictably, it hasn’t got the style of any of them, and is
a patch-job with lots of gimmicks, some which work and
most which fall flat. There is no steady increase in
suspense and no gradual development of the tension surrounding the leadig players. As usual, Belmondo is a
dashing and spirited rogue, but he has been robbed of his
charm and elan by what is just about the all-time worst
dubbing job in film history. Belmondo, Seberg and
Forbe all speak English. Only Miss Seberg dubbed her
own voice and she doesn’t seem to speak English as well
as French, (not that her French isn’t laughable too).
The hopeless inadaquancy that marks the speaking voices
of the characters undercuts few good effects that the
picture has, and the ending is a total cop-out a far cry
from the cynical and brutal conclusion of all three of the
pictures I mentioned before that are part of the same
tradition. If you really like Belmondo, it’s almost worth
watching anyway. If not, then forget it.

Concert: Buffy St. Marie and
the Greenbriar Boys, Clark
Gym at 8;30.
Concert; Leo Smit Concert at
5:30 and at 8:30 P.M., Baird
Music Hall.
Saturday
Folk Concert: Phil Ochs, Rev.
Gary Davis, Eric Anderson,
7:30 P.M. in Clark Gym.
Workshops: The American
Blues Tradition, Songwriter’s
Workshop and The American
Bluegrass Tradition at 1:00

P.M. in Norton Union.
Sunday
Chorus Recital: University of
Coimbra and UB Women’s Chorale, 2:00 P.M. in the Millard

Fillmore Room, Norton Union.
Concert: Ustad
Ali Akbar
Khan, Shankar Ghosh, Sheela
Mookerjee, Albright Knox Gallery, 4:30 P.M.

Monday

—Lecture: “A Critique of Existentialism”, by Walter Kaufman, at 4:00 P.M. in the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton
Union.
Demonstration and Lecture on
Indian Instruments, 3:30 P.M.
in the Conference Theater.
Tuesday
Film: Devi at 6:30 and 8:30 in
the Conference Theater.
Freshman Forum Lecture Se-

ries for Women, 11:00 A.M.,
Conference Theater.

Wednesday

Sushil Mukherjee,
singer 'and flutist, demonstrating folk and traditional music;
8:30 P.M. in Baird Hall.
Coffee Hour and discussion
group with Dr. B. Glenn and

Recital;

Dr. L. Barnette.

Creative Associates,
8:30 P.M. at Baird Hall.
Concert;

Thursday

Lecture: “India Today” by Dr.
Raymond Ewell, 1:15 P.M., Conference Theater. •
Fenton Lecture Series, 8:30
P.M., Conference Theater,

PIZZA

Starting on Mondays at 10;30
Wally Blatter will return
to his jazz show of last year,
“Just Jazz.” Following him at
11:30 (on AM only) will be “Two
Sleepy People” featuring Gary
Falk and Sue Kaplan, who will
entertain with popular music.
Tuesday nights, Gary Battaglia,

WBFO, UB’s radio station, has
announced its late night programing for the fall. The station, operating on the AM band (780kc)
exclusively to (he residence halls,
and on PM 88.7mc) presents
varied shows of musical entertainment.

p.m.,

Exhibit At

also in his second year, will present “Sounds of Broadway and
Hollywood,” followed by Will
Draper and the “In Crowd,” at
11:30 (AM only).

Art Gallery
By

BONNIE BURTON

Rich Lawrence once again
hosts a program of folk music
when he returns on Wednesday
night at 10:30, with “Down the
Road.” Following at 11:30 (on
AM only) is WBFO’s first rock
and roll show. Tedd E. Beare,
“Agent Double 0 Zero,” is the
deejay. Thursday is jazz night
when at 10:30 Waverly Jones presents the “Jazz Gallery.” Gordy
Vansuch follows him (on AM only) with the “Night Mood.”

The Albright-Knox Gallery is
exhibiting a comprehensive collection of woodcuts, etchings and
lithographs. Scheduled to last
through October 10. The exhibit
through
spans
the fifteenth
twentieth centuries, and features,
in particular, the works of Albrecht Durer, Harmensz Van
Ryn Rembrandt, William Blake
and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec.
The fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries are represented by a
number of flat-patterned German
and Italian woodcuts, noted primarily for their expressionist
line, and by three of Duerer’s
etchings, reknowned for their detailed intensity. The seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries are represented by examples of Stefano
della Bella’s fantastical engravings, Giambattist Piranesi’s architectural fantasies, Claude Lorraine’s pastoral etching and by
Rembrandt’s chromatic rendering
of “Jesus Christ Preaching.” William Blake’s illustrations for the
“Book of Job,” also representative
of the eighteenth century, are
on display in an adjoining room.
The nineteenth and twentieth
century display combines the
lithographic art of Toulouse Lautrec, Kumi Sugai, Giorgio di
Chirico and Odilon Redon; with
the etchings of James Abbot McNeill Whistler, Georges Braque,
Millet, Manet and Pissaro.

DINO'S
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To finish off the week, Danny
Katz presents his repetoire of
folk music on his show, “Blue
Friday.” Ending the evening,
D. J. G., WBFO’s disc jockey, returns with the D. J. Grainer Show
at 11:30 (AM only), with an entire hour of rock and roll.
Programming begins
today,
October 1, and monthly guides
may be obtained by writing to
WBFO, Baird Hall, specifying an
AM or FM guide.

LAST WEEK!

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�Friday, October 1, 1965

By

DANIEL SCHROEDER

Last Thursday and Friday evenings Dr. Harold Powers, Associate Professor of Music in South
Asia Regional Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, gave
good-sized audiences a foretaste
of the UB India Festival.

The

Festival-proper begins with a
concert by North Indian “Master
Musician” Ali Akbar Khan on
Sunday, October 3.

After an introduction by the
organizer of the festival, Professor Herbert Kellman, Dr. Powers
made some preliminary remarks

about the music which will prevail in Buffalo this week: It is not
folk, but art music. Ali Akbar
Khan is “popular, but only in the
sense Maria Callas is popular, not
Bing Crosby.” Although north
and south Indian music differs in
style, the basic heritage and language of music is common to
both. A soloist is accompanied by
drums (tabla), an instrument
droning on the tonic and fifth
(the tamboura, a long-stemmed
lute with three metallic strings),
and sometimes another melodic
instrument. The sarod and sitar
are melodic instruments slightly
larger than the guitar, with metal
strings played using a plectrum.

DING'S
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_

Dr. Powers explained the structure of the music, calling it a
theme and variation principle.
The main theme or “raga” is

made up of several motives
which permeate every phrase.
The tala, a complex arrangement
of units of time (Powers called
them “syllabic units” to relate
them to the words of a song)
forms the rhythmic organization
in regular patterns. Once the
raga and tala are established the
soloist and accompanists improvise on them, returning at moments to the set rhythmic and
melodic phrases, and at the end
repeating the main theme. This
is, of course, very similar to jazz
improvisation; the actual sound
is also strikingly similar to contemporary jazz.

Unlike the situation in western music, the audiences in India
are encouraged to show their reactions to the music in physical
terms as clapping and shouting.
Dr. Powers typified this tendency; his enthusiasm and knowl-

edge was spontaneous, if not always geared to instructing the

audience. It is this kind of spontaneity which it is hoped the audience in the coming week will
perceive.

Now Playing!

“Symphony
For A

Massacre”

A Frenchy Thriller

About The Paris
Under World
"Taut, Tense,
Fascinating!"

GREEK NOTES

CHESS

MUSIC ON CAMPUS
By

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

PAUL SIUDZINSKI

Famous

And Beaten

8:30 P.M., the brothers of Alpha
Phi Omega will hold an invitaChess dates back to ancient tional formal rush dinner at the
India during the period of Huri Milky Way, on Main St., in Wildomination from A.D. 455 to 543. liamsville. All prospective
Huri is somebody, not something, rushees are cordially invited to
attend.
and it is to him we owe the game.
On Friday, October
1, the
His intention was to make a game brothers will hold a card party
which symbolized a battle be- at John Edward's apartment. It
tween two Indian armies and Huri starts at 8:30 P.M. B.Y.O.B.A.M.
called the game chaturanga, or Hope to see everyone there.
The brotherhood is looking for“the army game.” Personally, I
ward to the kickoff of our intraprefer to look at it as an act of mural football season with high
hopes for a successful season.
seduction. This attitude has gotten me into serious difficulties. I We are also preparing for bowling.
often catch myself at the point of
Greek Sing practices will start
attempting to checkmate my opthis week with brother Dave Mcponent’s queen. It is normally Dowell as musical director.
impossible for me to use this bit
PI LAMBDA TAU
of eroticism to my advantage for
Pi Lambda Tau Fraternity
my opponents, invariably, are wishes to announce a trip to the
Watkins Glen Grand Prix. A bus
male.
will leave Saturday, October 2
To fully appreciate the intrica- at 8 A.M. and arrive home SunThe
cies of the garde, however, you day, October 3 at 6 P.M.
charge is $6.00 per person with
to
have
know how to play. This
refreshments provided. For any
extends beyond a knowledge of additional information, call Rush
how to move your pieces. Chess Allen at 836-6072 immediately.
ability comes when you are able The Fraternity also wishes to anTittemore has
to move your opponent’s pieces. nounce that Gary
been chosen to enter the “Ugly
This level of chess becomes more Man Contest”.
a matter of forcing your opponent
PHI EPSILON PI
to do what you want him to than
Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity would
of doing what you want to. All like to announce a rush stag to
you have to worry about ts trybe held this evening. Admittance
ing to prevent your opponent is by invitation.
For rush
information call
from forcing you to do what he
Ginsberg 836-7763.
wants you to do. Obviously, this Howie
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
becomes a vicious circle. It comes
The brothers of Alpha Phi
to the point where a chess player
Omega will hold a mixer Friday,
is identified by his style of play. September 24 at Bosellas
on
An interesting example comes
Cleveland Drive. All prospective
from Dr. Emanuel Lasker, ex- rushees arc cordially invited and
Chess Champion of the World. He rides if necessary will be furonce kept his identity secret from nished by the brothers. “Activihis opponent, who, conveniently, ties" will commence at 8:30 and
his opponent who, conveniently, last until
nev said, “a stronger player than
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
many a man who has eyes but
sees not.” It was after Lasker had
On Saturday, September 25, the
unleashed a few tremendously sisters met with National officers,
Jean C. Hoyt (3rd Grand Vice
powerful moves, that the blind
man lifted his head, smiled and President) and Beatrice Bosworlh
said, “Ah, Dr. Lasker, I presume.” Evans (Secretary - Treasurer) at
the Airways Motel. We would
like to welcome Sister, Debbie
Hughes from Thiel College, in
(?).

—New York Times
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TAU KAPPA EPSILON
The fraters of Tau Kappa Epsilon would like to congratulate
John Maloney for his election to
the odiec of Grammaleus. We
would also like to urge support
of the Homecoming weekend and
its many events, which will take
place in two weeks. There will
be a Rush party Saturday night,
October 2, at the Flying E Ranch.
The party will be a sweatshirt

WBFO (88.7 me FM
and 780 ke AM
closed
circuit to the dorms) will
present an hour-long program of required music
for the courses Introduction to Music 113 and 114,
September 30 and every
Thursday at 3 p.m.
-

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ALPHA PHI OMEGA
On Wednesday, October 6, at

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and bermuda party and will fea-

ture the playing of the Rocking

Paramounts. We would also like
to remind all prospective rushees
of the late date for rush registration, Friday, October 1.
ALPHA PHI DELTA
The Brothers of Alpha Phi
Delta will hold a closed Rush
Date Party

tomorrow evening at

the Club Bar on Austin St. near
Military and Grant. The party
will start at 9 p.m. and will last
until 2 a.m.
The Beer Blast, which the
Brothers held last Saturday night
was a great success and similar
events will be held in the future.
The .Brothers would also like
to announce the election of officers for this term: President
Tom Thalner, Vice-President
Don Colquaoun, Treasurer
Bill
Mike
Zanghi, and Secretary
PecOrella. They would also like
to congratulate their newly initiated Brothers.
—

—

—

—

PHI KAPPA PSI

The Brotherhood of Phi Kappa
Psi would like to* thank those students who attended "Kick-Off*
Weekend" last Friday, This weekend, the Brotherhood will hold
two rush functions. Friday there
will be a Rush Social, to which
we have invited the Sisters of
Theta Chi Sorority at Randolph
Hall beginning at 9 P.M. Saturday, there will be a date rush
party at a place to be announced,
also starting at 9 P.M.
Again this Sunday, the Brotherhood and their dates will occupy a block of seats at the Bills’
game.

Last

Wednesday evening the

Brothers threw a Stag party for

Social Brother Dave Stewart, who
left today to serve his country.
SIGMA

KAPPA PHI

The sisters of Sigma Kappa
Phi Sorority held a dinner for
the pledges at their apartment
on September 27th. We are also
loking forward to initiation of
the following pledges on October 3, 1965: Jacqueline Alessi,
Joan Strong, Patricia Gilfoule,
Catherine Hawley, Diane Hunt,
Judy Kerr,- Barbara Knapp. Nancy
Lcitcrt, Kathy McGee, Patricia
Miller, Peggy Miller, Julie Preston, Suzanne Shillo, Barbara Sieger, Cynthia Wolcott, Cynthia
Nash, Suesan Gallaurcsi and Jean
Holmes. As a volunteer project
the sisters will be ushering at the
Studio Theatre performances.
CHI OMEGA SORORITY
Chi Omega would like to extend their appreciation to sister
Genie Knapp who did such a
splendid job organizing our Parent’s weekend. The beer and
pretzel party after the game, as
well as the Sunday Brunch,
proved to be very memorable.
Also we sisters of Chi Omega
Sorority would like to announce
that three of our sisters were
chosen for Homecoming finalists
and are participating in the various events. These girls are: Vicki
Howe,

Marilyn

Jeanic McEvoy.

McConkey

and

�HALSTEAD

•

richer than the $425,000 which
the statisticians tell us the aveif

age college graduate can expect
to earn in the course of a life-

time. ■
Truth is not only substantive,
but ethical. There may be no
absolutes here, but there are establishable standards and values,
rights and wrongs. The hankypanky that goes on in Samoa is
irrevelevant here, because you
are not living in Samoa. Lying
and cheating are wrong, and honesty right, even when unprofitable, because material gain and
college transcripts are inconsequential when measured against
human dignity. Ask any African
nationalist. Adultery is wrong
and chastity is still a virtue, not
only for moral but for perfectly sound social reasons which
your priest, minister, rabbi, or
any member of the Sociology
Department can regale you with.
Any person who denies this is
guilty of a hedonism which all
societies and most individuals
have ultimately found in sufficient as a guide to thought and
conduct. To the person who cries:
“But I must express myself:” I
can think of no more pointed reply than the words of Father
Hesburgh, President of Notre
Dame. “We hear more praise of
talent today than of values. Talent, however, is useless, even
dangerous, without values. A man
of great talent and no values is
like a powerful sports car with
no steering wheel—there is no
direction for the power and no
meaning to its journey.”
Let the student who wants to
be free remember, that it is not
the society around him which determines his freedom, but what
he is himself, for “the truth shall
make you free.”
I should think that academic
excellence would be a third commitment which should draw on
the student. Perhaps this is a
corollary to the search for truth,
in all- its forms, for the person
who is fully committed to that
search, can hardly avoid sound
achievement. For the minority of
students who are called to the
academic professions' excellence
in scholarship is patently an end
in itself, but for most of you who
will end in suburbia rather than
academia, the pursuit of excellance in college will carry over,
will continue to drive you and
urge you to read more and learn
more and perform better in your
job, your home and your community, and what may be more
important,

to

communicate

telligently with all men.

in-

Finally, the student should be
learning in college that he has
a commitment to his fellow men,
i.e., to all men. And "aU" men
means just that—not only those

he likes, but those he hates—not
just the underdog, but the upperdog as well—not only the distant,
but those who brush against him
daily. It is easier perhaps to have
compassion for the suffering people of distant Hanoi that for the
President, near at hand, who anguished decision caused that suffering
because “familiarity
breeds contempt.” This is why
—

I

Sure!

•

•

(Cont’d front P. 6)

we are cautioned to “love thy
neighbor,” for he is sometimes
hard to take.
Loving one’s neighbor is pretty
hard to achieve unless we trouble
ourselves to find out what motivates him, what concerns him,
what bugs him, what makes him
tick. Many students are con-

vinced that their parents, their
teachers, their deans, their political leaders—the “older geneither tyeration," that
rants or ineffectual fuddy-duddies who blindly pursue their selfish aim of auto-glorification by
means of thought control, financial power, electoral corruption, and militarism. Why is this
held to be true? Largely because the student hasn’t yet discovered that the “thorn is on
the rose, the horsefly is in the
ointment, the overalls are in the
chowder, and there is no balm
in Gilead." His somewhat wiser
ciders are all too sensitive to
this, but continues to entertain
ideals and try to improve upon
imperfection, however, inadequate their fumblings may sum
in the eyes of the young Turks.
Dr. Charles Malik, former Pres-

to be “a part of the maine,” if

you would avoid total isolation
from the real world. For better
or worse, you are stuck with
your fellow man, and you might
as well make your relationship
as harmonious as possible.

To summarize—for the benefit of the student who had a big
luncheon but has now awakened,
sensing the termination of the
lecture—I would say: “Trust in
God, seek the truth, work hard
and love thy fellow, and your
life will, indeed, be a contribution to society.”

WANTED; Windshield for Capriolo 125cc.
FOR SALE —Yamaha 55cc Motorcycle. Perfect economy mod-

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WANTED: Political
interested in joining “The Ad
Hoc University Committee to Support Miles D. Bender for Supervisor?” Call Marty or Jeff at
873 2995, or call Bender Headquarters at 836-8664.

ONE-year-old 12-string guitar for
sale. Case included. Cost $100
new, will sacrifice for $50. Call
Lewis Bowman, 836-1355.
KITTEN free to -good home. Call

TX 5-5538.

FOR SALE—1961 Deluxe Volkswagen bus. Radio, sun roof,
wrap around windows. $900. R.
Barrett, 831-4336.
FOR RENT
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for gentlemen. Gall TX 3-7922
or TF 6-3092.
LOST
Brown wallet, Friday
September 14, in Diefendorf
—

Basement. Contains valuable
cards and papers. Bring to Lost
and Found. Reward. D. B.
FOR SALE —Corvair 1963 Monza,

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THE DRUIDS will play Rock n
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Would whoever stole my cheap
imitation tan poplin “Barracuda"
from Tower lobby last Tuesday
show some ethics and return the
glasses that were in the pocket?
Gary Falk, 831-3568.
WANTED —Faculty to speak at
Viet Nam Teach-In Friday,
October 14, 10 a m.-2 p.m. Call
831-3972.

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—

ident of the U N. General Assembly, said: “Be merciful and
Understanding in your judgement of the reigning generation,
because who knows that one
day you will not require mercy
and understanding yourselves.”
I would add: “Criticize, protest,
demonstrate to your heart’s content, but always with a friend
ly purpose to your fellow man.”

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BOCCE

October 1, 1965

Student Senate...

from P. 1)
resolution demonstrated a strong
desire of the administrators to
hold on to their majority.
(Cont’d

Rosemary Brown, Vice President of the Student Senate, proposed that the revenue collected
this year by the “Campus Barrel”
be presented to the World University Service. The W.U.S. is
a charitable organization which
has as its purpose the improvement of educational facilities in
underdeveloped countries. The
resolution was passed.

Four Student Senate members

were elected as representatives
to the Student Faculty Administration Forum. This is a newly
constructed organization which
hopes to improve the communication between students, faculty,
and administration. It is composed of twenty-four members: six
administrators, six faculty, four

Student Senate members, two
graduate students, two profes-

Applications for Senate
Committees may be obtained at the Norton candy
counter or at the dorm
desks, and should be returned to the Student Senate office, Room 205, Norton.

sional students, and four students
who are not involved in any other
campus government. The newly
elected members froth the Student Senate are President Deveaux, Vice President Rosemary
Brown, Arts and Science Senator Carl Levin, and University
College Senator Kim Darrow.

A report on the International
Student Affairs Committee was
presented by Rick Jaross. Mr.
Jaross explained that the seminars that will be conducted by
the committee will attempt to
give both American and foreign
students an insight to culture.
He expressed the desire of involving the entire UB student
body in cultural enrichment. Mr.
Jaross also reported that the committee is, at present, working in
cooperation with other factions
on a Peace Corps program.

The Student Senate Meeting
adjourned at 9:10 p.m. The Senate will meet every other Tuesday evening at approximately

7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore Room
of Norton Union.

DINO'S

CHALET ROY ALE
Corner COLVIN BLVD.
and Sheridan Drive

Plenty of Free Parking

�PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Octobar 1, 1965

Friday,

Homecoming
(Cont’d from P. 1)
Voting will end at 12:30, Friday at the Pigskin Party in the
Rathskellar. Skits, based on the

“Indian Trod”—will be presented
at the Pep Rally. October 8, at
9 p.m. Winners will be chosen on
a basis of 100 points—90 for
votes and 10 for participation
and skits.
The Ugly Man Contest is sponsored annually by Alpha Phi

All students are invited
participate in any of
the Homecoming competition, scheduled for the
Pep Rally on October 8.
to

The competition will he
follows:
I) Human Totem Pole
contest—open to groups
with prizes to be awarded
for the tallest and most
original poles.
as

2) Stand-up Indian
wrestling contest.

3) Apache Relay—open
of five girls.

to teams

4) Indian Costume contest—prize to be awarded
for the most authentic
costume.

5) Watermelon—eating
contest.

Applications for these
events are available in
Norton, on the bulletin
board opposite the candy
counter. They should be
turned in at the candy
counter by October 5.
There will be an important meeting of all contestants on October 6 at 7
p.m. in Room 231 of Norton.

DINO'S
CHALET ROYALE
Corner COLVIN BLVD
and Sheridan Drive
For Meat Ball Sandwiches

c
...

Omega Fraternity, to raise money
for charity. Voting is measured
by pennies contributed in each
candidates name and the proceeds this year will go to the
Working Boys’ Home in Buffalo.
The Ugly Man Key will be awarded- to the winning candidate,

while the runner-up will receive
a trophy. Last year’s winner was
Arnold Air Society, with Theta
Chi Fraternity runner-up.

FSA
(Cont’d

.

from P.

.

.

1)

ments of student autonomy and
the nature of the university. If
this university had any integrity

at all, it would realize that stu-

dents make decisions

as a result
of due consideration, not emotion, and that they should be
given the opportunity to try them
out.”

The substitute motion was defeated by a vote of 2-6-0 with
only student members voting in
the affirmative. There was general concensus in the body that
“philosophical
questions”
the
raised by President Deveaux
merited further consideration.
The original motion was then
passed by a vote of 6-0-2, after
which the amendment to remove
the restrictions concerning student membership on the Board
of Directors was passed unanimously.

Mr. Deveaux proposed a motion to officially allow Spectrum
attendance at membership meetings of the Faculty-Student Association. After limited debate
concerning the role of the Spectrum in the university community, the body unanimously approved the proposal.
Other motions proposed at the
meeting were the opening of general meetings to the entire academic community and the allotment of all fees imposed upon
the student body to the Student
Association for appropriate dis-

to Amherst

Theatre)

Diamonds
Rings
Earrings
Watch Repairing
Watches
Jewelry Repairing
•

•

•

committee.

There will be a special lecture
series on the six principles of
faith of IVCF. The next two lectures on The Consumation of the
Kingdom in the “glorious appearing of the great God and our
Saviour Jesus Christ,” given by
the Rev. Walter Watson of Laneanster, will be presented October 5 and 12 at 3 p.m. in Norton

—

The Hillel Graduate Club will
hold its first social function of
the semester Sunday at 8:30 p.m.
in the Hillel House. This affair
will take form of an “Expresso
Coffee Hour.” Refreshments will
be served. Graduate students,
single faculty members and seniors girls are invited to attend
and to join this group.

262.

8 p.m, in the Hillel House for
group discussion. Another activity of the Graduate Club, to
which all interested under-graduates are invited, is a folk dancing group, which will meet on
Thursday, October 7, at 7:30 p.m,
in the Hillel House.

Regular prayer meetings arc
1:30 p.m, Tuesday and 9:30
a.m. Wednesday in Norton 217
and Bible studies are Monday at
3 p.m. and Thursday at 10 a.m.
also in Norton 217.
at

Hillel is again sponsoring High
Holiday Services for out-of-town
students in the Jewish War Veterans Post. These services arc
limited to boys and girls attending colleges in Buffalo and are
not able to return to their respective home communities for the
Holidays. As in the past, a
“Break-the-Fast” supper will be
served by Mrs. Jennie Farber at
the conclusion of the Yom Kippur Service.
The first meeting of the class
in Elementary Hebrew will be
held on Sunday, October 3, at
2 p.m. The Basic Judaism Class
will hold its first meeting at
3 p.m. The first session of the
Talmud Class will be held on
Thursday, October 7, at 4 p.m.
in the Hillel House.
The Hillel Classes are open to
all students attending the uniIVCF

Anyone desiring further information on the above topics should
contact Billi Lee Knapp at 8313251.

CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION

The third in the
cussions of “The
Apostles” will be
day and Wednesday

College Students

Welcome
A GREAT TREAT
Something New &amp; Different

TF 6 4041

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SMORGASBORD

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9 p.m.

ALL YOU CAM EAT-99c

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

Wed and Frl

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—

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—

Dry cleaning machines
-

held Tuesof next week

Chaplain Beattie conducts a
series of lecture-discussion groups
on “Christian Wholeness" Thursday evenings at 7:30 in Room 234
Norton. All interested members
of the university community are
invited to attend.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

-

FREE PARKING

Left on N. Cayuga Rd

$2.00

from Main St

BARBER SHOP
371 KENMORE at Englewood

University of Buffalo Beat Massachusetts

HILLEL STUDY GROUPS
SUNDAY at 2 PM.
ELEMENTARY HEBREW
SUNDAY at 3 P.M.
SURVEY OF JEWISH HISTORY
TUESDAY at 4 P.M.
ADVANCED HEBREW
THURSDAY at 4 P.M.
TALMUD
—

—

SEE US FOR YOUR NEXT HAIRCUT

—

—

It won't be monkeyed up
WE CUT IT AS YOU LIKE IT

Register Now at the Hillel House, 40 Cape/i

—

We feature the "University" cut—razor

finished

dis-

of the

In addition, there will be an
open house Wednesday at 8 p.m.
—1179 Elmwood A /enue opposite the State Collej

Plaza Shoe

836-4700

current

Acts

in Room 264 Norton at 2 p.m.
ALL interested students and faculty members are invited to attend either of the duplicate sessions.

Repair

LIBERAL RELIGIOUS

FELLOWSHIP

The Liberal Religious Fellowship will have its first meeting
on Monday, October 4, at 7 p.m.
Reverend Paul N. Carnes, minister of the Buffalo UnitarianUniversalist Church, will speak
on ‘‘Religion as a Human Experience." The meeting will be held
in Room 366 Norton. Plan to at-

tend.

NEWMAN
Apostolatc is
sponsoring a mixer tonight in the
Millard Fillmore Room in Norton
at 8 p.m. Admission is 50 cents

The Newman

and live music will be provided.
The meeting on Wednesday
will be held at 7:30 in the Norton Conference Theater. Dr.
Smith will speak on “Evolution,”
at this meeting.
Beginning October 1, there will
be devotions to the Blessed Virgin immediately following II a m.
Mass daily.

In addition to the previously
scheduled Bible studies and prayer meetings listed below, there
will be a new weekly prayer
meeting Wednesday at 1 p.m.
and a new weekly Bible study
concerning Old Testament characters Wednesday at 2 p.m., both
in Norton 217.

The Graduate Club is also meeting ewery Thursday evening at

IVOF is sponsoring a pizza party today at 8:30 p.m. If anyone
is interested in attending, he is in

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next

Hillel will hold another of its
Sunday Evening Suppers Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel
House. Reservations are necessary. Rabbi Aaron Weinberg,
Temple Beth David-Ner Israel,
will give the second lecture in
the current series on “Tradition
the Conservative
and Change
View.”

bursement.
Both amendments
were forwarded by Clinton Deveaux and subsequently postversity.
poned to the annual membership
meeting scheduled for October 11.

DEALS JEWELERS

vited to meet in front of Tower
Hall at 7:45 p.m. where transportation to the home where the
party is to be held will be provided. There is a nominal charge
of 75 cents per person to help
defray the costs of the evening.
At this time also, the executive committee would like to remind members of IVCF of the
upcoming Fall Weekend Conference of Western New York Chapters, IVCF. Application blanks
should be available next week
from members of the executive

HILLEL

The B’nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on "Penitence
and Atonement.” An Oneg Shabbat will follow.

TF 6-4540

Sunday Suppers arc served at
Newman Hall every week. Everyone is invited. Also, remember
the Theology classes on Tuesdays
and Thursdays at 8, and at 1, in
Room 335 Norton.
MUSLIM STUDENTS

ASSOCIATION
The Muslim Students Association of U. S. A. and Canada, announces the General Body Meeting for elections and other im-

portant items, to be held at 5
p.m., Saturday, October 9, 330
Norton Hall. All Muslims and interested non-Muslims are welcome, free refreshments.

Civil Rights
(Cont’d

from P.

3)

less than almost any other area
in New York State on each pupil,
and that the facilities and equipment in the schools, are very
poor.

Charles Brewer suggested that
students begin work almost immediately on the Roswell Park
area urban renewal project. He
explained that some city officials
have proposed demolishing the
existing structures before the
residents have time to find new
homes. Students are needed to
urge the people of the area to attend a scheduled city council
meeting, and speak out against
the proposal. The work will begin
this week and will last several

days.

The meeting closed with discussions on how to raise money
and how to improve the organization. The fund raising committee will discuss several suggestions and will report back at the

next meeting.

�Friday, Octobar 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

World Series Preview
JIMMY SHARCOT

By

The 1965 World Series will
open in Metropolitan Bloomington Stadium. Minnesota, the liome
of the Minnesota Twins, the

American League pennant winner.
Whom they will play from the
National League, is at yet, undetermined. The Series will begin on Wednesday, October 6, unless the National League race
ends up in a tie, either two- or
three-way. The National League
teams involved are the San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Cincinnati Reds. In the
the case of a tie, the'Series will
open at a later date.
The Twins have sewed up their
win already; however, they actually have been coasting since
September 11th when they had
a nine-game lead. Therefore, the
usual World Scries will be taking place, with an American
League team that had its win
nearly clinched three weeks before the season ended, and a
National League team which has
had to fight tooth-and-nail to the
very last game. Since the National League has won the Series
six of the past ten years maybe
their way of wihning the pennant is the best way. This year's
results should give further proof
to one of these arguments.
Scouting Reports
TWINS
Killebrew
Great power hit
ter subject to striking out, ade
quatc fielder, no runner.
Kindall
Great fielder, can go
get ’em, poor hitter but has penchant for delivering in the clutch.

policy of playing for a homeror-nothing. If their pitching holds
up as it has all year, the Twins
could prove to be a most formid-

able opponent.

National

League

Scouting Reports
DODGERS
A solid infield, but
not sensational in any respect exInfield

—

GIANTS

REDS

Infield
Solid defensively up
the middle and solid hitting-wise
at the corners. McCovey and Hart
are lethal wallopers,,while Lanier and Schofield are a great double play pair and can also sting
the ball on occasion.
Any outfield with
Outfield
Mays is good, but with the Alou’s
and Gabrielson, it is very formidable. All can hit, run and field.
Catching
Haller and Bertell
are great catchers, but Haller hits
with much more authority and
therefore plays five out of every
six games.
Marichal, Shaw,
Pitching
Linzy, Bolin, and Murakami have
had great years and with G.
Perry, Herbel, and Spahn, it is
a formidable staff. Marichal and

Infield
A fabulous hitting
infield, but Cardenas is the only
real accomplished glove man.
Rose has had a truly outstanding
year,
Johnson, Coleman, and
Perez are savage hitters.

—

—

cept Wills’ base-stealing. Lefebvre somehow always drives in
the big run, but otherwise not
real good hitters. Parker and Gilliam are very capable fielders,
Lefebvre is fair and Wills is inconsistent.
Outfield
All three are capable at bat but only Fairly is
good in the field. Davis has great
speed, but often misjudges fly
balls. Johnson is an exciting ballplayer and that is usually when Linzy are outstanding pitchers
and have played a big role in the
a fight breaks out.
In very capable Giants’ success this year.
Catching
Overall Outlook on Giants
hands with Roseboro and TorGiants have been a controversial
borg. Both can also hit an occateam and also a good one. Must
sional long-ball.
Real strength of have Mays, McCovey, and Hart
Pitching
team lies here as it did in the hitting long ones to have a real
1963 Series win in four straight chance in the Series.
over the Yankees. The staff is
not only solid up and down, but
sensational in the Golden Arm—
Koufax, Big D. Drysdale, Osteen,
Perranoski, Brewer, and Bobby
Miller. These men must be outstanding if they are to beat the
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Outfield
Robinson, Pinson,
and Harpen'can do it all, but
oftentimes do net. They are great
runners, excellent hitters, and
good fielders. Somehow, they
don’t win too many games.
—,

Catching
Johnny Edwards is
one of the top five catchers in the
game and Pavletich is a very accomplished hitter. Very solid department for the Reds,
—

Pitching—The reason the Reds
have not completely run away
and hid from the rest of the
league lies here. Maloney and
Nuxhall (when sound) have been
their only consistent hurlers.
Even Ellis, who has won over 20
games, has been in-and-out since
July, O’Toole has completely fallen apart; Jay has a bad arm;
Craig is a loser; Arrigo is a wild-

man; Davidson is a rookie: McCool too often becomes far too
careless.

Overall Outlook on Rods—Reds
have the most talent in the league
but so far have not been putting
it together. If they do, look out
for them. However, they have
not been able to so in 155 games.

Prediction
Twins, because
of greater depth and a hunch, to
win in seven games, if they play
the Dodgers and six games if
they play the Reds or the Giants.
—

I am going to issue a warning
right now: Do not blame me if
the Twins lose. If I am wrong,
it certainly will not be for the
first time. May the best, not better, team win!

DiNO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
Corner COLVIN BLVD.

and Sheridan Drive

For Prompt Take-Out Service
Call 873-8101

talented Twins.

—

—

Spectacular playVersa! les
er who does everything with a
flourish. Great fielder and runner.
Rollins
Has had a sub-par
year, but competent in all re—

—

spects.

Allison
Inconsistent hitter,
who, like Versailles, does everything with a flourish; can carry
the team if hot.
Hall
Good hitter and can go
get ’em; also a very good clutch
hitter.
Oliva
One of the best 5 hitters and all-around players in
baseball. A real star.
Battey—Great hitter and clutch
ball player when healthy. One of
their real cogs.
Minchar, Valdespino and Kosco
excellent pinch-hitters who
could play an important part in
the series.
and Quilici
outstanding utility fielders who can play
—

—

—

—

—

many positions capably.
Grant
Has had best year of
his career; should pitch opening
game.
Kaat
One of the top left—

—

handers of the American League
a very reliable consistent per
former.
If fully recovered
Pascual
from injury, he should give Twins
enough pitching to win Series.
J. Perry and Merritt
Good
men who could start if Pascual
is not ready.
Relievers
Have been the
major difference between this
and last year's team Worthington and Klippstein have really
done yeomen work.
—

—

—

Overall Outlook on Twins
Though they essentially have the
same team as a year ago, when
they finished in a tie for sixth
place, they are playing a different brand of baseball and have
had much better fielding. They
are running the bases with abandon and are using their heads instead of just brawn. This has
proven to be much more successful practice than last year's
—

BOCCE
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�Friday, October 1, 1965

The Black Belt Guy

.

way:

kid.”

1) “Boy. did you make a fool of me, a weak little

2) “Boy did I want to kill you.”
He had this annoying habit of accenting the word
“kill’’ by raising his hand over his head and bringing it
down with blinding speed through whatever happened
to be in its way. His strength was superhuman. I was
outraged when he went right through the roof of a
parked automobile, and was about to say something
when he accented another “kill” with a piston like
thrust of his leg sending the fire hydrant bounding out
into the gutter, its spray of water hitting me flush in
the face.
Becoming a little unnerved with the way the conversation had turned, for, after all, Harry had made
his point that his feelings toward me had been, if not
still were, decidedly homicidal, I resolved to change
the subject.
“So Pig, (gulp), er Harry, what have you been
doing recently? I hear you’ve been sick,” I lied, hoping
to have him describe his ailment. “Migraine headaches,
wasn’t it, poor chap? Strange cure, though, head-banging and all that.”
Harry gave me that look again. “What are you
crazy or somethin’?” He seemed obsessed with my
degree of sanity, and I thought to myself, “He’s really
missing the point.”
“I’m healthy as a horse,” he boasted. “I’m strong
as an A-bomb. I’m dynamite, daddy. You see these
feet
Watch these Katas.”
Katas, I surmised was his strange gymnastics I had
observed before, for he now lapsed back into them,
grunting and leaping in a most uncivilized manner. De-

Supervisor Alfred

G. Frisch of Manila and Frank

A. Amrozowicz of the First Ward
in Lackawanna, whose candidacies are supported by the Republican, Democratic and Liberal
Parties, goes our Political Sure
Thing Award.
“For, astounding as it may be.
Senator Goldwater seems to believe that the escalation of international conflicts will bring
peace. And in so believing, he
has talked the language of nuclear irresponsibility.”
H. Humphrey,
Minneapolis Star, 10/7/4
“Humphrey Defends Policy in

Vietnam”
Headline, N. Y. Times 5/14/65
“Humphrey Says War Can’t
Be Won in Air”
Same source 6/5/65

.

To Vice President Hubert Horatio Humphrey goes this week’s
Condemned From His Own Mouth
Award.

.

.

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE

?

You
Need

Corner COLVIN BLVD.
and Sheridan Drive
Moe Balsom at the Piano

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naturally!

—

f*

JIM XAVIER
|
(

(Ch E

of the ’62 Bethlehem
"Loop” Course is an

engineer at our Sparrows
Point, Md. plant—biggest
| in the world. He's typical
| of young men on the move
I at Bethlehem Steel.
Seniors and graduate
students in engineering and
non-technical curricula will
soon be interviewed for
the 1966 Bethlehem Loop
Course. We offer splendid
career opportunities in steel
plant operations, research,
sales, mining, accounting,
and other activities.
For detailed information,
pick up a copy of our
booklet, "Careers with
Bethlehem Steel and the
Loop Course,” at your
Placement Office.
|

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spite my protestations, he commenced to destroy everything on the block
cars, lamposts, chunks of sidewalk,
(with the hammer on his head). Suddenly he turned
to me and shrieked, “You see this gi I wear,’’ pointing
to his bathrobe. “This sash is black, isn’t it? Isn’t it?,”
he demanded fiercely.
At that point, sensing Harry was definitely perturbed over something, I would have agreed the sash was
black had it been scarlet red, but in fact it wa» black,
and so 1 answered in the affirmative with no pangs of
—

conscience;

“You’re damn right it’s a black belt,” he said
sharply, “and what do you think of it?”
“It’s a beauty,” I replied, not at all sure L goi. his
point, “I bet it sure keeps that robe of yours, that gi
(remembering his word) shut tight.”
Again that look. “What are you, crazy or somethin’?”
“This means that I, Harry the Pig, am a master of
karate, (slashing motion of hand, fingers extended, sawing a lampost in half), a lethal weapon, (piston kick of
foot sending a parked car rolling'across the street), a
black bell guy!
“My, my, my, my,” I said hollowly, the full import
of his words finally hitting me with the force of the hammer growing out of Harry's skull. “What does one do as
a “black belt guy?”
“I teach karate at the dojo,” (karate school), he
replied.
“My students learn to be lethal weapons, and
when they become proficient enough to reach the black
belt stage, they in turn teach others. We get more and
more proficient and are doubling and tripling our numbers every year.”
This thought of an unending progression of “lethal
weapons” reminded me of a gun factory, and depressed

me.

Harry, as he later explained to me, was so far
advanced that he had bypassed conventional items of
destruction in his field. He was developing his hands,
feet and hammer for projects such as telephone booths
rather than books, log cabins rather than wooden planks,
and office buildings rather than single bricks.
“And eventually my pupils will be just as good as
me,” he boasted.
Actually, Harry wasn’t a bad fellow until he went
into one of his katas fits, but I guess that’s like saying
Hitler wasn’t a bad fellow until he decided to rule the
world.
Anyway, I took my leave of Harry as quickly as 1
could and have been reflecting on that strange meeting
ever since. Before that event I had been one of those
who worried and philosophised over the fate of our
world with the mushroom cloud of nuclear war hanging
perpetually over it. 1 had always adhered to the optimists position of “Where there’s life, there’s hope.” Perhaps something could be worked out.
No I know I was mistaken. There is no hope for
man. It’s just a matter of which comes first the bomb,
or the black belt guys.
-

JBBi

...

•.

“Pig!” I shrieked, losing all self-control, almost
beside myself with woe.
He stopped, and gave me that querulous look again.
“Thank goodness you’ve ceased,” I said. It is I,
Alpljonse, your playmate of days gone by.”
“Alphonse,” he repeated slowly, studying me carefully. “So it is! Hey, remember that time . .”
Here he commenced recounting a tiresome series
of recollections of our youth, concluding each the same

To the Massachusetts State
Public Health Council which is
holding hearings to determine
whether boiled beans can be
legally sold as “baked beans”
goes our Earthshaking Political
Activity of the Week Award.

Do

•

(Cont’d from P. 16)

To Larry Lodges of Las Cruces,
New Mexico, who ate seven and
one-half watermelons to win a
watermelon eating contest and
whose prize was two watermelons,
goes this week’s Perseverance
Award.

To G.O.P.

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for
Progress Program

BETHLEHEM
STEEL

5T El

�PACK FOURTEEN

Friday, October 1, IMS

SPECTRUM

Massachusetts Preview
All-American End Morin
Leads Redmen Against UB
By MIKE GINSBERG

Vic

weeks.
.

(Cont'd from P. 16)
I
Detroit 24, Washington 13
would like to say that any team
with five players from Arizona
cannot lose three in a row, but
the Redskins certainly did not
—

show much last week. Detroit
surprised Minnesota, and are riding the hot arm of Milt Plum,
who should not have much trouble picking apart the Washington secondary.
Minnesota

30, Los Angeles 27
Another tough game for the
Vikings, who have run into some
tough luck so far this year. Fran
Tarkenton is due to break loose,
and with Tommy Mason and Bill
Brown back there with him, Minnesota should pull one out for
victory number one. Bill Munson
looked great last week, but now
will be up against a contender.
—

The Orange put the first five
across the finish line followed by eight Bulls before another Orange shirt crossed.

DINO'S

MILT MORIN
—

whole, however, the defense looks

ready to take on Massachusetts.
The offensive squad showed
great promise but again was
erratic. Soph quarterback Rick
Wells displayed a lot of ability,
but also his inexperience. Wells
ran exceptionally well and has
shown excellent ability as a
scrambler. He picked up 93 yards
on the ground and scored a
touchdown on a one-yard plunge.
Well’s passing was better than
the record indicates, as several
Baltimore 31, San Francisco 21

The 49’ers are undefeated so
far this year, but haven’t as yet

—

played

a

tough

team.

Johnny

Unitas and company lost a real
heart-breaker last week in Green
Bay on fumbles, and will be on
their toes Sunday.
New York 17, Pittsburgh 13
The Giants stumbled onto a victory last week, and may just stumble upon another one this week.
They don’t have too much to
offer, but the Steelers have less.
They have gone through the season's first two weeks without
showing a thing. There is a sour
feeling in the steel city over
Buddy Parker’s last minute resignation, and the crowd will take
out its hostilities on the hapless
—

Steelers.

THE DRUIDS
Ploy Better Roc 'n Roll

Fully Equipped, 4 Now Tiros

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—

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Sat., October 9
TICKETS LIMITED
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fine passes were dropped by receivers. However the four interceptions charged against him

were very costly.
Taking everything into consideration, this Saturday’s game will
be a real tough one for the Bulls.
The explosive Massachusetts passing game will have to be stopped
for UB to win. The hope here
is that experience will cut down
costly mistakes and the team
will shape together as a unit to
pick up its initial ’65 victory.
NOTES . . . Guard Bill Taylor,
who suffered a pulled Achilles
tendon last week, was practicing
Monday and will play tomorrow
,
,
.
Despite an injured right
knee, end Jim Dunn is expected
to start against the Redmen . .
Safety Nick Capuana suffered another broken nose in the Tampa
game . . place kicker Oscodal
now 0 for 3 in the field goal
department . . . Tampa Coach
Sam Daily said of Wells; “He’s
a good football player’”
Attendance last Saturday missed
the projected figure of 10,000
by almost 20% . . . UB foes did
.

.

...

not fare too well last week with

Boston College defeating Villanova 28-0, Maine over Boston U.
by a score of 18-7, Virginia Tech
over Richmond 25-0, Kent State
beat Dayton 14-6, Harvard over
Holy Cross 17-7, Colgate held
Cornell to a scoreless tie, and
Delaware lost to Hofstra 17-6 . ...
If the Bulls are hit by any additional injuires, Offenhamer may
be forced to return to using players both ways.

TOWER SERVICE CENTER

DRY CLEANING

Kick-Off Sale
3 &lt;or *1.34

Music Better

For Proof

Tuesday’s results:
Canisius 50
UB 15
UB 42
Bflo. State 17
UB won 1
—

Corner COLVIN BLVD.
and Sheridan Drive

allowed two touchdown passes in
the final twenty minutes. On the

Frosh Runners Are Still Needed to fill out the frosh team. Any
freshman interested, please report to Coach Fisher in the CrossCountry locker room in the basement of Clark Gym,

Tuesday UB hosted a triangu
lar meet between our city rivals
Canisius and Buffalo State.

CHALET ROY ALE
RICK WELLS

Tomorrow, Saturday, October
2, the team travels to Syracuse
for the Sixteenth Annual Le
Moyne College Invitational Run.
This meet brings together about
fifteen teams from throughout
New York State,

men

'

'

r

FOR SALE
NF 2-7917

■

'

1958 Olds 88
$250.00

;

outwill

Now for a look at the Bulls,
following Saturday’s shocker. The
team as a whole appeared much
improved over the squad that
lost to Boston College in the season opener. Perhaps that is why
the tie was so disappointing. The
defense put in another fine performance, but the secondary

Cross-Country

out the services of their number

Fusia is

have two outstanding receivers
in ends Milt Morin and Bob
Mecrs, returning for another season. UB’s defensive secondary
was inconsistent in last Saturday’s
13-13 tie against Tampa, so if
Landry is on target, the Bulls
can look forward to a long, hard
afternoon.

Varsity

one runner, Dick Genau, who
has an injured left leg which
he received in a touch football
game. He will be lost to the team
for approximately two or three

expected to start sophomore quarterback Greg Landry. Landry’s
ability to take over for Jerry
Weickel, lost through graduation,
may very well determine the
come of the game. Landry

The

team opened their season last
Saturday on a losing note, drop-

ping a decision to a strong Syracuse team, 15-40. UB was with-

This Saturday the Bulls take
the field against the University
of Massachusetts team deep in
talent and hot, following a 41-0
victory over American International. Massachusetts has led the
Yankee Conference for the past
two years and is favored to do
so again again this year. Despite
heavy losses through graduation,
the Redmen have the depth to
platoon successfully if they desire. The Redmen loom as a
tough opponent for the Bulls,
who are still looking for their
first victory.
Redman coach

CROSS COUNTRY TEAM
BOWS TO SYRACUSE

Discounts
on

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BATTERIES
ACCESSORIES

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�Friday,

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

October 1, 1965

TAMPA TIES UB, 13-13
SPARTAN COMEBACK NETS TIE;
WELLS; BARKSDALE SCORE TDs

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
Red flags were scattered across
the field as the officials whistled
the UB extra point attempt to
a halt. Tampa had been ruled
guilty of illegal procedure, giving
the hosts their extra point attempt from a yard out.
When Rick Wells’ plunge for
the two points was stopped inches short of the goal line, it
seemed to make little difference,
for the Bulls’ margin of victory
was going to be measured in
touchdowns not in extra points.
Or so it seemed for one half
Saturday as the Bulls zipped to
a 13-0 lead before collapsing and
settling for a 13-13 standoff. In

their home opener on a crisp,
sunny day before a disappointing
crowd of 8,016, the Bulls plalyed

solid football for thirty minutes,
free from the wholesale blunders
which have plagued them in the
past, and thereby dominated the
first half.
While the UB defense limited
the Floridians to 89 yards, the
offense, relying heavily on the
running of sophomores Wells,
Tom Hurd and Lee Jones, churned out 182 yards and only lost
the ball once, that on a first period interception.
UB maintained its 13-0 cushion
until well into the third quarter,
when suddenly the roof caved in.

if the Bulls
had saved themselves in the first
halt for the final 16-minute fiasco.
Three intercepted passes, several
missed tackles and a few thousand disillusioned fans later, the
final gun signaled an end to the
contest at 13-13, The Mets would
have been forced into extra innings to find an even zanier end
to their game, but for the Bulls
(maybe thankfully) there was no
fifth quarter.
The scoring began promisingly
enough when, after a scoreless
first stanza, UB drew first blood
early in the second quarter. The
Bulls capitalized on a wild fourth
down snap which sailed fromt he
It seemed almost as

TOM HURD CUTS THROUGH

Tampa 44 to the 10. from where
Keven Hurt's desperation punt
attempt dribbled out to the 26.
UB received another break two
plays later when Lee Jones' fumble on the 24 was scooped up by
Jim Barksdale, who advanced it
to the 11 for a first down. After
Wells weaved his way through
four taeklers to another first
down at the 1, the lanky UB
quarterback dove into the end
zone for a 6 0 lead. After a Tampa
penalty Wells was stopped short
extra
on the aforementioned
point attempt.
With less than two minutes remaining in the first half, a Hurt
punt was downed on the UB 43.
After a five-yard gain to the 48,
Wells faded back and rilled a 29yard strike to Denny Burden at
the Tampa 23.
On the next play Wells returned to the air route and fired
an aerial into the corner of the
end zone which Barksdale made
a spectacular juggling c a.t c h
despite air-light guarding by his
defender. Joe Oscsodal converted
to give the Bulls a 13-0 lead.
In the remaining 1:15 the Spartans made their most determined
bid, highlighted by reserve quar-

terback Ed

yard dash

Nizwantowski’s 31a 24-yard pass

and

from Nizwantowski to

Gary Rapp,

but time ran out on the visitors
on the UB 11.
Midway through the third quarter the Bulls appeared to be on
the move again, but the complexion of the game quickly
changed

before or after the ball game
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Make your first stop at McDonald’s.
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are made of 100% pure beef, government
inspected and ground fresh daily. They’re
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CORPORATION 1B6A

3424 SHERIDAN DR. AT SWEET HOME RD
North on Bailey Ave. to Sheridan, Turn Right
5 Minutes From Campus
AND

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD
Just Past Boulevard Mall (Maple Road)
5 Minutes From Campus

when

linebacker

Dan

Sikes pilfered an errant Wells
pass at the Tampa 30 and lugged
the pigskin all the way to the
UB 18.
On a fourthodown pass from
the 15, Tampa was miffed at the
officials’ decision that a Nizwantowski to Dan Cogan pass was
caught out of the end zone, but
it made no difference since a
penalty marker indicated that the
Spartan signal caller was across
the line of scrimmage when he
released the ball anyway.
After the Bulls failed to move
the ball, John Smigelski punted
to the Tampa 28 with a minute to
go in the quarter Suddenly the
Spartans found themselves back
in the game as Nizwantowski lofted a sideline pass to danker John
Perry, which the slippery 180lb. Miami native caught, then
broke free from the grasp of two
would-be tacklers and galloped 72
yards to paydirt. Hurt split the
uprights with 37 seconds left in
the canto to make the score 13-7.
The visitors regained possession moments later on a UB punt
to the Tampa 38 and were again
knocking on the touchdown door
when Ron Pugh found a loose
ball in his possession on the UB
12 to squelch the drive.
Tampa then parlayed a fired up

DINO'S
CHALET ROY ALE
Corner COLVIN BLVD.
and Sheridan Drive
For Barbecued Chicken

TAMPA LINE

defense, a delay of game penalty,
a poor fourth-down UB hike and
an even worse punt into another
crack at the end zone from the
Herd 12.

Two plays after a nine-yard
completion to Cogan with 6;45
to go. Nizwantowski rolled to his
left and again aimed for Cogan,
who was closely guarded by Nick
Capuana in the end zone. When
both men came down with the
ball Tampa, the offensive team,
was ruled in possession of it and
UB was ruled out of possession of
the lead.

The all-important extra point
attempt went snafu, however, and
the game remained in a 13-13

deadlock.

Following the Tampa kickoff

the UB offense began to move

behind the running of
Wells, whose inexperience and
inconsistency fought his poise
and determination to a stalemate
during the course of the,game, as
the Bulls penetrated to the
Tampa 39.
After an exchange of interceptions, the Bulls' offense fizzled
at the Tampa 26, from where Oscsodal’s field goal attempt was
muffed.
again

Tampa was stymied on its own

20. forcing Hurt to punt to the
UB 40, but the bumbling Herd
gave the hosts another chance as
Wells, who completed as many
passes to the opposition as he did
to his teammates, threw a pass
into Sikes' arms which was returned to the Bull 42.
After two successful Tampa
passes

and

a

15-yard personal

foul penalty against UB with time
running out, Hurt stubbed a 25yard field goal attempt short of
the uprights, which Capuana returned to the UB 27 as the final
gun sounded.

STATISTICS
UB Tampa
First downs
15
9
Yards rushing
81
217
Yards passing
158
72
Passes
4-16 13-28
Passes intercepted by 2
Punts
6-29
9-34
Fumbles lost
0
1
10
27
Yards penalized

BULL SESSION . . . The game
was similar in many ways to the
9-9 tie with Cornell last year.
. . . Perry was a thorn in the side
to the Bulls all afternoon not only
did the flashy flanker haul in five
passes for 103 yards, but he also
returned two kickoffs for 58 yards
and one punt for 12 yards
But if the Bulls’ secondary had
problems with Perry, one shudders at the prospects of what the
outcome at Massachusetts tomorrow will be. The Redmen possess
a potential All-America in Ron
Kramer-like end Milt Morin, who.
at 6'4” and 240 lbs., made sham
bles of the UB secondary in last
year's 24-22 UMass win . . . Defensive end Gerry LaFountain
was honored as an All-East selection for his play last week. The
other All-East end? Morin, of
course. . . . Barksdale was shaken
up in the fourth quarter, but returned to action,
-

�Friday, October 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

¥

S

■

=i-

The Black
Belt Guy
By MICHAEL CASTRO
One day as I chanced to be walking aimlessly down
a lonely street in a dirty residential section of Manhattan’s West Side, I came upon a sight that startled me
out of the blank reverie into which I was slipping.
There, about twenty feet before me, a figure appeared
to be
in knocking his head against
the brick wall/of an apartment building with the machine-like regularity of a Well-oiled woodpecker.
“A suicide,” I thought, “or perhaps a lunatic who
perceives himself a pneumatic drill.” In any case this
being something one did not regularly encounter, even in
the West Side of Manhattan, I decided to advance and
see if I could dissuade this poor soul from his folly, perhaps give him the friendly, compassionate company his
misery obviously wanted..
“0 miserable yet noble man!’’ I cried
No response.
“O proud Aries the Ram, butt not your majestic
horns to dullness!” His ears seemed to perk up at this
sally, but only momentarily, and he returned dutifully
to his painful task.
“6 alienated man, existential anti-hero of our troubled times,” I cried with a flourish. This line, which I
had recently come across in a New York Times Book
Review seemed to catch his attention. He suddenly
whirled around, looked at me querulously, and said:
“What are you, crazy or somethin’, bud?”
This remark took me aback momentarily, but I
recovered niftily to give him one of my best condescending chuckles. “No, no my friend,” I said paternally, “it
is you who is obviously disturbed, not I. It’s not everyone
one comes upon butting hjmself to death against a cold
building wall. O tell me, what tragedy, what woe,
what direful happenstance of this cruel and unjust
world has driven you to such despair?”
He gave me no answer. In fact, after my first few
words, he stopped listening to me entirely, and went into
a series of frightening gyrations of which I had never
before seen the like. He combined a series of jumps,
turns, starts, and blocks with sharp chopping and flicking motions of his hands and feet, and accompanied this
bizarre demonstration with distinct short gutteral grunts
even more terrifying than his insane dance.
This performance forced me to alter my original
diagnosis. “More physical than mental,” I thought to
myself. “Cerebral damage to the motor area of the brain,
causing a form of St. Vita’s Dance, along with distinct
speech impediment.”

$&lt;=t=.
Intramurals Begin With
Tennis and Football Leagues

CHICK'S
PICKS

By

By CHICK ARNOLD

Well, the first week of my professional forecasting has ended,
and I guess I can always blame
it on a few last minute scores,
or just plain rotten luck. But
the fact remains that I finished
the week wltht a record of 5-5-1.
I will no go into discussing those
5 “losses”. Those of my readers
who are true football fans will
know that three of those games
were lost in the last minute of
play
and there is no point in
crying over crumpled cookies
(how does that expression go,
—

anyway?).

There were a few minor upsets last week: who expected St.
Louis to score 49 points against
those World Champion Cleveland
Browns? and 5 Arizonians letting down the Washington Redskins? and those powerful New
York Giants, with the league's
newest kicker, Andy Stynchula,
booting 3 field goals, coming from
behind to nip Philadelphia 16-If?
What can one do?
Here are this week's picks

GEORGE JACKREL

This week the Intramural Sea-

son got off to a big start as the
Football Leagues and Tennis
Tournaments were begun. There
are four Football Leagues and
each one plays on a separate day.
When the league season ends, the
champions of the two Fraternity
leagues will play the champion

of the House Plan and the Inde-

pendent League for the campus
championship. As the season goes
on, we will be providing you with
the scores.

The Tennis Tournament, which

was started this week, also includes fraternity men and inde-

pendents, all going for the overall championship.
There has been a change in the
Golf Tournament. We will be
able to state the time and place

of the Tournament in next week’s
issue.
The Cross Country meet has
now been slated for October 29
at Grover Cleveland Park. Last
year more than 73 men participated in the meet and we are
expecting another good turnout.
Anyone interested in competing
should start practicing now, since
the competition is expected to be
rough. All entries must be submitted by October 26 to the Intramural office in Clark Gymnasium.

AFL

Buffalo 30, Oakland 17 Those
Bills are too tough. Without Duby,
they will be hurt, but will seek
blood against Oakland. The Raiders will have their dreams of
sweeping through the East shattered when they come up against
the league’s most powerful team.
Houston 28, San Diego 24
Mr. Blanda, the old pro, lost a
tough one last week to Oakland;
and San Diego had to settle for
HEYI WAIT A MINUTE!
a tie with Kansas City. This will
be a rough ballgame, but the
depth of the Oilers will prove to
be the difference.
Kansas City 24, Boston 17
These two teams do not have too
much to offer, and they will battle it out between themselves.
Len &gt;
By MIKE DOLAN
Dawson is too good a
ballplayer to be held down much
Mick Murtha, the UB frosh
longer. He will prove it this week!
New York 17, Denver 14
In quarterback from Endicott, lived
a tight game, Joe Namath could up
to his pre-game reputation
prove to AFL fans all over the
with
a couple of long runs and
that
he
as
country
is as good
Papa Ewebank thinks (and hopes) some heads-up ballplaying despite
he is. He showed a little of his the Calves’ 16-0 opening day loss
touch in completing 19 passes to the Plebes of West Point last
against the Bills last week, and
Friday. Army spoiled the Baby
with a little more experience, he
Bulls’ debut with a stubborn dewill be great.
fense and two quick scores in the
first period.
NFL
—

—

—

Frosh Bow to
Plebes 16-0

—

He continued on in this way for some time, completely impervious to my presence, allowing me a chance
to study him more closely, He wore loose fitting white
pants of some canvas-like material, rolled up above the
ankle. His feet were bare and appeared swollen to
twice normal size. Covering his chest was what appeared to be a white silk bathrobe tied by a silk sash.
His hands, or what should have been hands, were, I
swear it, feet. Only the fingers were recognizable, and
they appeared straight and sturdy, as five protruding
Green Bay 33, Chicago 10
slabs of wood. The arm itself was swollen and muscular
making it appear that it was indeed a four-legged beast The Bear* almost pulled one out
I had encountered. It was in his head, though, that I last week, but not quite. Not a
against the Packers. Debelieved his countenance achieved its pinnacle of glory, chance
spite some key injuries, Green
for, where he had been banging it against the wall, from Bay
should take their third in a
the top of the skull down to the eyebrows, a protruding row without too much trouble.
growth of skin-covered bone or cartilage had appeared,
Cleveland 27, Philadelphia 10
rather square and symmetrical in shape, making him
Everyone is trying to figure
resemble, quite remarkably, a smiling snub-nosed out what happened to Cleveland
last week against the Cardinals.
hammer.
The Eagles beat the Cards the
It was here, peering into the face of this gesticulatof the season. But that
ing, grunting, hammerheaded sufferer, that I was taken first week
type of reasoning cannot work
aback. I seemd to perceive something vaguely familiar in
pro football. Ryan should
in his countenance. It couldn’t be, yet it was! The nose, bounce back this week, and lead
the eyes, the unmistakable hoggish mouth
I was the Browns to victory, along with
an acquaintance of my youth, a boy we had called Harry a big, strong fullback.
Dallas 27, St. Louis 24
the Pig.
This
My compassion doubled on the spot. It seems a is the big game of the Eastern
universal truism that whenever one comes across an Conference and should be a real
acquaintance of one’s youth, he is inclined to feel a thriller. The Cowboy defense has
allowed an
total of nine
closer bond to him now then he even did then. Perhaps points in theamazing
first two games this
we are embracing the idea of youth he represents in our season. And the Cardinals are
minds eye more than anything else. In any case, though rolling offensively with the
I had detested Harry in my youth, I now felt for him throwing of Charley Johnson to
as if he had been my best friend. “Poor Harry,” I Randle and Conrad. It is a tough
rthought, “poor fat little pig who we all mocked and one to pick, but I have to go
with the tough defense to stop
teased in childish folly. What hast thou come to?”
St. Louis.
—

—

...

Army’s first score came on
their first series of plays. They
received the opening kickoff and
proceeded to drive 65 yards for
the game’s initial score. Later in
the first period, Steve Lindell,
the Plebe kicking specialist, added a 25-yard field goal to pad
Army’s margin to 10-0. Finding
themselves ten points down, the
frosh defense began to click and
the Plebes were unable to move
against them. The game’s final
score came in the fourth period
when a costly UB fumble on the
Calves’ five yard line resulted in
a touchdown pass to 6’5” Army
end, Gary Steel.

THIS IS ONLY PRACTICE

WBFO Presents
Comprehensive
Sports Coverage
Chief Assistant and Defense
Coordinator, Janies “Buddy” Ryan
will be the special guest on
SPORTS TALK, tonight with
WBFO Sports Director, Wally
Blatter.

The former All-Conference and
All-American
from
Scholastic
Oklahoma State has built the
Bulls’ defensive lines into some
of the best in the country. UB’s
lines have consistently ranked
nationally among the top 20 in
all categories.
Mr, Ryan, a native of Texas,
will talk of the Bulls’ season to
date and will give a “scouting
report” of Massachusetts, UB’s
next opponent.
Starting Monday, October 3,
COLLEGIATE SPORTS SCENE
will be aired over WBFO, Mondays through Thursdays at 5:50
Mark Schweiger will review
the Bulls play on Monday; Bill
Herskowitz will be heard on
Tuesdays. On Wednesdays it will
be Dick Baumgarten. Barry Shared will run the show each Thursday and on Sundays, Howard
Novick will wrap up the weekend action.

—

(Cont’d on P. 13)

(Cont’d on P. 14)

Even though the Calves were
on the short end of the score,
their performance was praiseworthy. The inability to put together a sustained offensive drive
along with a stubborn Army defense were the two factors of defeat. Yet Coach Wolfe felt that
the team as a whole played well,
and with improvement in the
offering, they will win quite a
few games before the season
comes to a close.

Fridays at 5:50 p.m. are set

aside for interviews with some
of the top personalities in college sports. Next Friday Wally
Blatter will talk with Bob Deming, Defensive Backfield Coach
at UBN,
SPORTS TALK and COLLEGE
SPORTS SCENE can be heard
over WBFO-FM (88.7 me. throughout Western New York) and
WBFO-AM (780 closed circuit to

the

dorms).

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Educational and
Cultural Affair!
page

VOLUME 16

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1965

NO. 3

FSA Special Meeting
Friday
Folk
Festival
Buffalo
For Increased Student Role
Concerts, Workshops, Hootenanny, Scheduled

By BRIAN EGAN

and ANNE SELMAN
The 1965 Buffalo Folk Festival, the biggest event of its kind
ever to be held in Western New
York, will take place the weekend of Friday, Oct. 1. Weekend
plans include two folk concerts,
a series of workshops, and a
hootenanny. Appearing will be
Phil Ochs, Buffy St. Marie,
Eric Anderson, The Greenbriar
Boys, and Reverend Gary Davis*
all top folk singers of the day.

To Consider Amendments

81

Proposals Ask For
Expanded Membership;

Student Seats on
Board of Directors
An increase in the role of students in the Faculty Student Association will be considered at a
special meeting of the members
scheduled for September 27. Advanced texts of two proposed
amendments to the FSA by-laws
released to the Spectrum by Clifford C. Furnas, President and

Kick-off for the Festival weekend will he a free hootenanny
Friday afternoon, Oct. 1, in the
Millard Fillmore Room from 3:00
to 5:00. It will feature campus
anyone and everyone
talent
is welcome to bring guitars, sing,
or just come and watch. The
weekend is planned as a real
festival, not just a series of concerts, and it is hoped that the
hootenanny will initiate a festival
—

Student Senate
Starts New Year

spirit.

Phil Ochs
Two evening concerts in Clark
Gym and three daytime work“The performers were chosen
shops will comprise the festival.
because they represent the best
Buffy St. Marie will appear at
in the different areas' of folk
8:30 Friday night, followed by music,” explained Richard Lawthe Greenbriar Boys. Phil Ochs, rence,
co-chairman of the FesEric Anderson, and Reverend
tival. Phil Ochs, a major topical
Gary Davis will wind up the
songwriter, was a student at the
weekend Saturday night at 8:30.
1963 and 1964 Newport Folk FesWorkshops will be held Saturtivals. This year marks his secday afternoon, beginning at 1:00 ond appearance on the UB camwith the Bluegrass Workshop.
pus; he appeared last April at
All performers will be present
the Spring Arts Festival. His
at the Contemporary Songwriters songs range is subject from Viet
Workshop at 2:00. Phil Ochs and
Nam and Birmingham to labor
Eric Anderson will lead the disunions and capital punishment.
cussion in the Seminar for TopSome of these songs have been
ical Songwriters which will be
recorded for Elektra Records.
held at 4:00. Workshops will be
informal, consisting mainly of
Buffy St. Marie is a graduate
discussions with the performers
of the University of Massachuand perhaps some demonstrations
setts and is a member of the
of their techniques.
Cree Indian Tribe, Since her first
Tickets are currently on sale folksinging appearance she has
at the Norton Ticket Booth, or
done some songwriting and has
by reservation at 831-3704. Rerecorded several albums for Vanserved tickets will be held until
guard. She has performed
noon of Friday, Oct. 1. Any leftthroughout the United States and
over tickets will be sold at the
has appeared in such major folk
door, but people are urged to clubs as the Village Gate and the
purchase their tickets in advance
Gaslight Cafe. Although she recently took ill while on an interto assure themselves of seats.

Buffy

Sainte-Marie

national tour of Spain, and as a
result was forced to miss the
Philadelphia Folk Festival, she
is due back in the United States
shortly, and will appear at the
Buffalo Folk Festival.
The Greenbriar Boys represent
an interesting phenomenon in
folk music. Although all but one
of them come from cities, they
have successfully reproduced the
true bluegrass sound, with Robert Yellin playing the banjo, and
Frank Wakefield and John Herald on the guitar. They record
for Vanguard and have accompanied Joan Baez on one of her
albums. Recently Dick Greene,
who plays one of the finest bluegrass fiddles in the country, has
joined' the Greenbriar Boys. The
Buffalo Folk Festival will be the
scene of the first American performance of the new group.
Reverend Gary Davis is one of
the outsanding Negro spiritual
and blues singers in America
today. Reverend Davis first recorded during the 1930’s for the
new defunct Perfect Label, For

Resolution Is Passed
For Reconsideration of
Center Lounge Closing
Vote ol Confidence
Given to National Fraternities
Calendar Changes Asked
By RUSSELL BUCHMAN
The first Student Senate meeting of the 1965-66 academic year
was conducted by President Clinton Deveaux, September 21 in
the Fillmore Room of Norton
Union. Mr. Deveaux then pre
sented a speech dealing with the
summer activities of the Student
Senate, Successful ventures undertaken include: a student evalu a t i o n of all 100 courses a
teach-in discussing the pros and
eons of the American policy in
Vietnam; and a solve-in at which
possible solutions of the Vietnam
situation were formulated. Committee reports followed President

Deveaux's presentation.

The Public Relations Commit-

tee report was given by Rena

Fish. Miss Fish talked about the
activities of the Intercollegiate
Council which has as its purpose
the coordination of campus activities for six neighboring colleges and universities. During the
summer the Intercollegiate Coun
cil discussed improvements in
communication between the camBengal in 1922 and was tutored
puses and the publishing of a
joint calendar of social, educafrom the age of five by his father.
tional, and recreational events.
He earned for himself the title
Marion Michaels then presentof “Ustad,” a Persian word meaned the report of the National
ing “master musician,” while still
in his early thirties. Ten years Student Association. Three new
projects have been proposed by
ago he received international rethe .(.S.A, They include a stucognition through his first longdent national study program, a
playing record made in the United
course evaluation program, and
States, Ali Akbar’s mastery of the
a tutorial program run in codelicate and demanding instrument, the Sarod, places him in operation with the civil rights
the front rank of Indian musiccommittee.
ians and he is known as the
A report on the Academic Af“State Musician of Jodhpur.”
fairs Committee by Sara Lee Ru
binstein followed. Miss RumbinAli Akbar Khan has traveled exstein, representing the entire
tensively in Asia, Africa, Europe,
and the United States and in 1964
Academic Affairs Commitec,
he was sponsored by UNESCO.
voiced the desire to abolish com
prehensive examinations. In adThe following is a list of spondition, both the Student Attitudes
sors of India Week:
Committee and a Research Committee, which will seek remedies
Department of Music
Department of Art
for disadvantages at SUNYAB
and determine who is responsible
Department of Drama and
for certain decisions, have been
Speech
The Union Board
organized. A series of lectures for
International Club
the fall semester have been arranged and tentative events have
India Association
New York State Council on the
been set for the spring semester.
Arts
The report of the Welfare Com
American Society for Eastern
mittee was given by John Fried(Cont’d on P.

14)

India Weeks Opens Cultural Festival;
Lectures, Concert, Art Exhibit Offered
By ART CONDUZIO
Thursday, Sept. 23, marked
the beginning of India Week a
festive occasion, unique to both
the University and to the city of
Bufalo. This is the first time that
so many aspects of a foreign culture are presented in such a concentration. Not only i§.a generous sampling of the 'Various the
Indian arts available, but there
are also various lectures to make
these arts comprehensible to our
Western eyes and ears.
The project began when the
Music Department wanted Ustad
Ali Akbar Khan for a single lecture. The Music Club soon expressed its interest, as did the
Art Department. With the expression of interest of various
other organizations, India Week
came into existence.
The Festival begins with two
preliminary lectures by Dr. Har-

old Powers, Associate Professor
of Music from the University of
Pennsylvania. The lectures, titled
“On the Structure of Indian Music," merit the attendance of anyone interested in music.
The formal program commences

Sunday, October 3, with a concert
by Ustad Ali Akbar Khan in the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Monday and Tuesday there will be
lectures by Ustad Ali Akbar

Khan, after which the audience

will be permitted to interview
him. On Monday evening there
will also be a lecture by Dr, Sherman Lee, Director of the Cleveland Museum of Art, on “Creative Aspects of the Art of India.”
The art exhibition during the
Festival promises to be something
utterly unheard of in the history
of Buffalo, Many objects are
being loaned from the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery but many
others, are being loaned from
private collection. On Tuesday,
there will be a film on Indian
Culture, called “Devi,” shown
twice during the day. On Wednesday, there will be a recital of
Indian folk and traditional music.
Thursday night there is a panel
discussion on “Indian Thought,"
after which refreshments will be
served. The final concert, featuring Ustad Ali Akbar Khan, will
be on Sunday, October 9, at
8:30 p.m.
Ali Akbar Khan was born in

Arts

(Cont’d on P.

14)

Chairman of the Board of Directors of the FSA, reveal certain
concessions to student demands
for greater involvement in university policy decisions.
The first of these changes will
expand the membership of the
FSA to include the president of
the Graduate Student Association.
Heretofore the only student mem-

bers of the eleven-man association
have been the President and
Vice-President of the Student Association. Other members include
the President of the University,
the Vice-President for Educational Affairs, the Vice-President
for Business Affairs, three Assistant Vice-Presidents for Business Affairs, the Dean of Students,
and two faculty members appointed by the previously named
members.

The seven administrators, two
faculty, and two students meet
annually to hear reports and democratically elect a Board of Di-

rectors which conducts the busi-

ness of the FSA throughout the
year. Previously membership on

the board has been limited to

members of the administration
or faculty of the University, but

the second proposed modification
would permit student members
of the FSA to be elected as
directors.

According to

changes

President Furnas,

now being studied for

the Association are the natural
outgrowth of its coming of age
as a University service agency.
“At the time of the merger,” he

said, “the role and functions
which it would assume were not
clear. Today, however, with three
years experience behind us, we
are able' to chart the Association’s directions more clearly and
to study changes for more effective operations and services just
as we do in all phases of the
University’s on-going programs."

Students Must File
With Admissions Office
Or Face Draft Call
With the recent increase in the

draft quotas called for by President Johnson, if you have not
filed a 109 form with the Office
of Admissions and Records, 201
Hayes Hall, you may be drafted.
All male students who either do
not have a 2S Selective Service
classification or who have not
filed a 109 form should go to

201 Hayes Hall between the
hours of 8:30 a m. to 4:30 p.m. as
soon as possible to complete this
form.

It is imperative that students
notify their local draft board of
any change in their status such
as a change in address, marital
status, number of hours carried
in school or if you are reentering school after an absence. If
this is not done and the draft
board has difficulty in locating
(Cont’d on P. II)

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The most
walked about
slacks on
Campus are

HUBBARD
slacks with
"DACRON”
Great Hubbard styling with
the lasting neatness and
care free comfort of "Dacron”, in these slacks of
55% Dacron* polyester, 45%
worsted wool. Styled in traditional Classic and Gay
Blade plain front models,
in all the favorite colors, at
better stores everywhere.
Also available in blends of

70% Orion* acrylic, 30%
worsted wool, or "Dacron”
with "Orion”.
*du Pont Reg. T.M.

Book Exchange
Here To Stay
By LESLIE GONER

Book

Exchange
ended its first semester operation on September 20, 1965 with
a feeling of remarkable‘achievement. The directors of the Exchange were very optimistic concerning its future. The Student
Settle hopes to run the Book
Exchange in the spring semester
and then again next fall.
The Student

The Student Book Exchange
was a non-profit organization
whereby students were able to
save from about $1.50 to $2.00
on the purchase of books.
Approximately one thousand
books were exchanged in a two
week period. This statistic alone
is evidence of the tremendous
success of the venture. Coupled
with this was the reaction of the
students. They strongly snupported the exchange and patronized
it whenever possible. When a
similar Student Bok Exchange was
established before, it failed. This
failure is accredited to&lt; the apathy of the students. This year’s
success was an indication that
the Student Senate can accomplish things.
Students will be able to pick
up their money and/or books at
the Student Senate Office, Room
205, until October 20, between
the hours of 12:00 and 1:00, or
3:00 and 4:00. The Senate expresses its gratitude to all those
who helped the Student Book Exchange

succeed.

Swingline

PafflfMllfB

Friday, September

Commuter Relations Board
To Begin First Semester
By EILEEN TEITLER

The Commuter Relations Board,
designed to handle the problems
of the commuter community at
UB, held its first meeting in the
Student Senate office Thursday,
September 16. “The Board will
function as the commuter liaison
to the Senate and try to act on
any problems which affect the
Commuting' students,” explained
Stewart Edelstein, chairman of
the Board.

Originally formed as an investigating committee, the Commuter Relations Board is' now a
special committee of the Student
Senate. It has attempted to discover the interests of the commuting student by analysis of
the results of a questionnaire

circulated last year. Six hundred
of the 2,500 questionnaires were
returned, and these showed great
interest in a Commuter Relations
Board.
The Commuter Relations Board
is attempting to channel its work
into three areas: Commuter-Resident relations, a Commuter Welfare Committee to work on situations such as food prices in Norton, and attempts to plan for
locker space for all commuting
students. The Board is working
closely in this with the Welfare
Committee.
Other plans include attempts
to meet with officials of the
Niagara Transit System to obtain
lower prices for commuting students, as well as considering
plans for partial meal plans in
Norton.
One of the

most ambitious projects of the Commuter Relations

Board is the plan to set aside
per week during which
no classes will be held. This hour
would be used for convocations
and club activities, which the
commuter might not be able to
attend at night.

one hour

A

significant accomplishment

of the Commuter Relations Board
is the car pool bulletin-board in
the basement of Norton. It is also
responsible for the program in
which many former graduates of
local high schools have returned
to familiarize the incoming commuting freshmen with the situations they will be facing.
The membership of the Com-

muter Relations Board is com-

posed of this and last year’s
Freshman Class Councils, as well
as interested commuters. Membership is open, and anyone interested in joining is invited to
leave his name in the Student
Senate Office.

If any commuters have specific
problems on which they feel the
Student Senate should and could
take action, they are invited to
leave air suggestions in the Com-

muter Relations Board box
205 Norton,

Room

in

Debating Society
Off To Another
Successful Year
The UB Debate Society began
its current season last Wednesday evening with a discussion
and coffee hour in Norton Union.
An explanation of debate at
SUNYAB was offered. The season’s topic; Resolved: That Law
Enforcement Agencies in the
United States Be Given Greater
Freedom in the Investigation and
Prosecution of Crime, was discussed by interested students at
r
all levels.
Robert Dregone, an active debater and society treasurer, winner of the New York State Peace
Oratorical Contest held at Utica
College last semester, recently received Honorable Mention in the
national finals of the Peace Oratorical Speaking Contest.

12 | You have a TO'

Any person who could not
make the meeting, but who is
still interested in debate, is invited to inquire at Room 357,

Stapler that
staples eight
10-page reports
or tacks 31 memos
to a

Norton Union,

DON McCANN

(M.E.) of the ’60 Bethlehem
"Loop” Course is a key
man in the engineering
department in our giant
plant near Buffalo, N.Y.

bulletin board.
How old is the
owner of
this TOT Stapler?
This is the

Swingline
Tot Stapler

(including 1000 staples)
Larger size CUB Desk
Stapler only

$1.49

No bigger than a pack of gum-but packs
the punch of a big deal! Refills available
everywhere. Unconditionally guaranteed.
Made in U.S.A. Get it at any stationery,
variety, book store!

He’s typical of young
men on the move at
Bethlehem Steel.

Seniors and graduate
students in engineering and
non-technical curricula will
soon be interviewed for
the 1966 Bethlehem Loop
Course. We offer splendid
career opportunities in steel
plant operations, research,

sales, mining, accounting,
and other activities.
For detailed information,
pick up a copy of our
booklet, "Careers with
Bethlehem Steel and the
Loop Course,” at your
Placement Office.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer in the Plans for
Progress Program

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INC
Long Island City, N Y.

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Union Board Seeks
New Members
By

PAM LENT

The Union Board is inviting
you to “fit the key to your interests” at their first informal
Open House of the year. It will
be held in the Union Board office, Room 215 Norton Union, on
Thursday, September 30 through
Friday, October 1, from 9 to 5:30.
Everyone is welcomed and is
urged to join. All of the committees are open to new and old
members Joanne Osypiewski,
president of the Union Board,
reported that “the reason that
the Union Board has been successful in the past is that it is
keyed to student interests. A committee is begun when a group of
individuals see the need for action in a specific area.”

The Open House is limited to
Union Board activities because
of the time element involved, but
the co-chairmen, Pat Jones and

Ladd Sivenpiper, have hopes to
extend the next drive in the

spring to campus organizations.

An orientation program for old
and new members will be held
Sunday, October 3.

SUNY President
Makes Two New
Appointments
Two administrative appointments in the expanding Graduate
School at State University at Buffalo were announced by President
Clifford C. Furnas.
Dr. Robert L. Ketter, professor
and chairman of the Department
of Civil Engineering, was named
acting dean of the school, and
Dr. Laurence A. Michel, professor
of English, was appointed to a
new post as associate dean.

Dr. Ketter will serve as the
School’s administrative head during the leave of absence of Dean
Henry M, Woodburn who is ill.
In addition, he is maintaining his
position as professor and head
of the Department of Civil Engineering. During the period in
which Dr. Ketter acts as graduate dean, the civil engineering
department will be operated by
an administrative committee to
be chaired by Dr. Ralph R. Rumer, associate professor of civil
engineering. Members of the committee and their areas of responsibility are: Dr. Kenneth J. Tharp,
undergraduate upper division
education; Dr. George C. Lee,
graduate education; and
Dr.
Charles W. Thurston, pre-engineering education and continuing
education. Dr. Ketter will com
tinue to supervise areas relating
to the building program and the
coordination of research proposals for civil engineering.
“Dr. Michel’s appointment,”
President Furnas said, “is the
result of increased administrative
responsibilities brought about by
spiraling enrollments in the
School which is responsible for
all Master’s and Doctoral programs at the University, except
those in business, education and
social welfare. The School’s enrollment has increased by 80 per
cent since 1960 and is expected
this year to show a sharp increase
over last year’s total of 1,800. In
the new post, Dr. Michel will be
in charge of admissions procedures and interdivisional programs.

Mr. Andrew W, Holt will continue to serve as assistant dean
in charge of grants and fellowships.

Acting Dean Ketter came to the
university to head the newlyformed civil engineering department in 1958, having previously
served as research associate professor at Lehigh University,
1956-58. He received the B.A.
degree from the University of
Missouri and the M.S. and Ph.D.
degrees from Lehigh.
The author of more than 50
technical papers published in five

countries, Dr. Ketter is responsible for writing portions of the
design specifications for the
American Institute of Steel Construction. He is one of three men
in the country on the accrediting
committee of the Engineering
Council for Professional Development, and is chairman of the
Structural Committee of the Welding Research Council of the Engineering Foundation.
Before joining the University
in July, 1960, as an associate professor of English, Dr. Michel
served with the same rank at
Canisius College for five years.
He also served as an assistant
professor for five years and an
instructor for four years at Yale

University.

Dr. Michel received his bachelor’s degree in 1937 from the College of Charleston, South Carolina, and his master’s and doctorate from Fordham University in
1939 and 1941 respectively.
He has served on the Curricu
lum Committee of the University’s
College of Arts and Sciences, as
vice chairman of the Department
of English, and on the executive

committee of the Graduate School.

�Friday, September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

Asian, Professor MaGnaye
Instructs 40 Graduates
By MICKI LESSNER

year. Under this program, Asian

professors lecture for a period of
time to students of American

universities.

Originally a Political Science
Professor, Miss MaGnaye attended
the University of the Philippines
and did her graduate work at
Yale and Syracuse Universities.
She has been participating in this
project since last semester and
has visited many schools throughout the United States. During the
past summer Miss MaGnaye was
on a lecture tour of the State
University of New York school
system, including a one week stay
in Buffalo.
Besides teaching eight Political Science classes at the University of the Philippines, she is
program coordinator of the Program Implementation Agency, a
branch in the office of the President of the Philippines. Her job
there is to help put programs
of the government into effect.
When asked to comment on the
system of education in the Philippines she answered, “The educational system there is patterned
after the educational system in
this country. A minor difference
is that the student-faculty relationship here is less formal than
in my country.” She went on to
comment on the informality of
our dress standard.
Professor MaGnaye lectures on

Birthdates will be addto ID cards during the
week of September 27-31
in the basement of Foster
Hall, from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. Students must present his birth certificate,
a copy of his birth certificate or his driver’s license.
No other identification
will be accepted.
ed

Temporary Classrooms
Ease Space Problems
By SHARON SHULMAN

The State University of New
York at Buffalo is working to
alleviate its space problem by
building on two temporary sites
before its final move to the new
campus in 1968. Two plans have
already been suggested to' the
University to make use of these
sites.

Forty students are currently
studying Asian culture in a graduate course taught by Asian professor Dolores MaGnaye. Miss Ma
Gnaye Is the first visiting Asian
professor Of the 1965-66 academic

The first plan was announced
to the Faculty Club, on September 13, by Dr. Claude E. Puffer,
vice-president in charge of University business affairs. It involves a 1966-67 budget request

Prof. Dolores MaGneye teaches
new course in Asian Culture as
the first visiting Asian professor
topics varying from “The Philippine Educational System” to “The
Communist Movement in the
Philippines.” On October 12 she
will give an open lecture entitled
“The Role of the Philippines in
Modern Asia,” in the Conference

Theatre of Norton Union.
The visiting Asian Professor
Program was conceived of in September 1962 at the University of
Buffalo and developed under the
direction of Dr. Burnet H. Glenn.
It is designed to enable American students to learn about Asian
nations and to give Asian scholars
an opportunity to learn about
America, its colleges, and its universities. Within this framework
efforts have been made to benefit
both America and the nations of
Asia.

PAGE THREE

for the rental of 100,000 square
feet of additional off-campus
space. The proposal, already approved in principle by the Uni
versity’s central staff, must now
meet approval in Albany. It is
hoped that this temporary site
will be as close to the present

Jrom the

Presidents
Student Body President Clinton
Deveaux addressed the first meeting of the 1965-1966 Student
Senate on Tuesday, September 21.
The text of his speech is as

follows:
On Thursday, September 9, as
a participant in the Academic
Convocation of the Freshman Ori-

and sophomore commuting students were surveyed and asked to
comment on the relevance of the
existing student activities programming and how it could be
improved. Numerous changes
have been suggested and the Commuter Board, hopefully will become a permanent representative
group.

There has been set up by the
Faculty Senate, a Student-Faculty
traditional Student Body PresiAdministration Forum. Its memdent Welcome Address to our inbership will include six adminiscoming students.
trators, six faculty and twelve
At that time, I spoke of prinstudents, graduate and undergradciples and basic areas of student
uate, The first meeting of this
government concern. An outline
campus as possible.
forum, to be held in early Octowas presented to the Freshman
ber, will be important in deterclass of my view of the role and
The second plan calls for the responsibility of today's
mining the role which it will play
univerconstruction of temporary buildsity student. The three basic areas in university reform.
ings on the 100,000 square feet into which my discussion was secAt one of the first meetings of
of space behind Hayes Hall. This tioned were Educational Reform,
this senate we became members
area, which should be occupied Community Involvement
of the Inter-Collegiate Council of
and Inby the beginning of the second
ternational Affairs. To speak only Buffalo. This group representing
semester, will include a library of principles, however, is not even the colleges in the Buffalo area
annex, administrative offices, laba beginning. The responsibility
can be an important agent in
oratories, and classrooms. At this before us is to develop meaninginter-university cooperation in sotime, bids have been taken and ful programs in all of these areas. cial areas as well as community
the signing of contracts should Along
with the Union Board, the
involvement.
follow Soon.
Student Judiciary, the Student
The New York State region of
Publications Board, other student the National Student Association
No major problems have arisen government organizations and stuis planning a conference on comin the execution of these two dent activities, we must
devise munity involvement to be held
plans, or in the work on the new and establish extensive relevant
this semester. As you kow, Carl
campus. Architects and state programs for greater student inLevine has been elected to the
agencies are presently working volvement.
presidency of our region.
on plans for the latter,
Where do we from here?
At the beginning of this seA lot of nice words, you say?
mester, the International Student
If these words draw a blank in Affairs Committee, Mr. Richard
your minds, senators, then you are
Jaross, Chairman, in conjunction
unaware even of the accomplish
with the Office of Foreign Student
ments made by the Student SenAffairs, under Mr. Laurence N.
ate and Student Association since
Smith, held our university’s first
March 23 when you took office. Foreign Student Orientation ProThere is much yet to be done. gram. With student, faculty, and
There are many programs with community cooperation, newly adhead resident of each hall Tuesmitted foreign students weje
day. They will be circulated from which we must experiment. These
provided with housing and were
September 24 through September beginnings, however, have already reached and involved more given extensive orientation to the
29. During this time, the candistudents than student governuniversity and the community.
dates will conduct their camment administrations in the past
Plans for the continuation and
paigns.
i
had been able to involve in an
extension of this program and
Each residence hall has its own entire year's programming.
more programming in the area of
During the summer, plans were
House Council composed of four
student international awareness
officers and a representative from finalized for a Student Book Exare well on their way.
each corridor. The Housi Council change. Its successful operation
If you are somewhat startled
of each hall is responsible for is evidenced by the over 1,000 by these programs then you have
officially
used
books
which
were
planning of activities within that
been negligent in your duty
you as senators should have been
hall. Activities include mixers, traded during its two week existThe
International
Club
must
picnics, trips, open houses, ence.
more involved in this programbe
thanked
for
us
allowing
the
ming. If you are satisfied, feel
UNICEF drives, and lectures. The
use
of
their
this
lounge for
activities are organized through
enthat much has been done, indeed
more than has been accomplished
separate committee: Sports, terprise.
The
New
Student
Review in coin the past, and are ready to sit
Social, Special Events, Cultural,
operation with our Academic Af
Scholarship, House, and Publicity.
back and be content with only
Student
fairs and National
AssoCommittees are organized by
these beginnings then we have
ciation committees began last seno place for you as a "Student
House Council officers and are
mester, an evaluation of the large Representative". We must be
composed corridor representa100 level courses. The results of
tives. Any resident student may
willing not only to continue with
this student evaluation have been
apply for a position as a commitwhat exists, but to also chalexcellent and it will be greatly lenge the future with exciting new
tee or member.
expended in the future.
programs and creative alternaDuring last semester and the
tives if we are to leave our mark
summer, one of the newest stuas a meaningful student governdent organizations on the campus, ment administration. Only if each
Your I .D Card
the Students for a Democratic of us is willing to accept this
Society held a teach in and a grave responsibility should we
Is Worth 10% at
solve-in on the issue of our govcontinue to exercise the privileges
ernment policies in Viet-Nam.
of chosen representatives. If we
These events have helped to creare not ready to meet the chalate a healthy atmosphere of dislenge then we must let others,
cussion and debate on important more capable, take our place.
world issues.
These words are harsh but our
At the end of last semester, as responsibilities more than
demand
an executive committee, the Comthat they be said and said again.
BOULEVARD MALL
muter Relations Board, under
The fate of student government
Stewart Edelstein, was estabrests with us. Let us meet the
lished.
of
the
then
task.
All
freshmen
NAME BRANDS
entation Program, I delivered the

House Council Elections
To Be Held September 30
By JO ANNE LEEGANT

House Council will hold election of officers Thursday, September 30. Any resident student
with a minimum cumulative average of 1.0 is eligible to run for
office.
Petitions for House Council officers will be available from the

—

.

(Zeldmans

'•

FOR MEN AND WOMEN
U.S. K.d

Pappagallo

Viner* Loafer*
Bato* Floaters
Flortheim
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and many other brands

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HILLEL STUDY GROUPS
Elementary Hebrew
Advanced Hebrew
Survey of Jewish History
Talmud
—

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OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS
Register Now at the Hillel House, 40 Capen
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IF 6-4540

�(Comment
FSA

Friday, Saptember 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

•

.

.

A Change in Attitude ?

The Faculty-Student Association in a recent meeting at Kissing Bridge discussed the feasibility of actually
allowing faculty and students to sit on its Board of Directors. They neglected to invite the two student members of the Association, the President and Vice-President
of our Student Senate (see letters to the Editor). This
seems to exemplify the kind of bureaucratic high handedness and sloppy thinking with which the FSA has approached almost every direct encounter with students.
The indirect encounters with the FSA are too mechanical,
too heavy-handed, or sloppy; you pump money into a
parking gate, you hand it to a cashier, you push it
across the counter in the book store, you drop it into
vending machines . .
.

JAMES CALLAN
For the benefit of freshmen
and those upperclassmen who
never realized the existence of
conservatism at UB, this column
will be devoted to the expression of right-wing viewpoints.
They will usually be unpopular
viewpoints, and nearly always opposition viewpoints. Its purpose
isn’t to return America to laissezfaire, or to create in Buffalo a
bastion of conservatisnt', or to
wipe socialism off the face of the
earth (not necessarily because
these are undesirable goals, but
because they are quite unattainable in the contemporary campuscountry setting). Its purpose is
simply to present the rational
viewpoint of political and social
questions, and maybe change a
mind or two.

We understand that the FSA may come in for some
criticism in the State investigation for amassing too
large a “contingency fund” i.e. “profits” from their nonprofit operation. It has also come to our attention that
the FSA is planning to spend the student’s money without consulting them, as yet, on a ski slope and a small
Perhaps a brief history (beboat harbor contiguous to the legendary “new campus.”
We suggest that decisions of this order, made about stu- cause it is brief) of conservatism
here would be a good start. A
dent funds might indeed be brought to students for apfew years ago there was a chapproval.

FSA Athletics

A Great Experience or
a Bag of Worms?
-

The FSA finances, with student funds, the entire
intramural sports program (which amounts to practically
nothing) and the entire intercollegiate athletic program
(which amounts to a professional sport industry). We
attempted to get some facts and figures about the ahtletic
program and the proportion of student fees which went
for athletic scholarships, and were informed by Wesley
Roland, a Vice-President of the University, that information was not available, and probably would never be
available. So, its a little difficult to form an informed
opinion of the FSA Athletic program, but we have strong
suspicions that the students’ funds are being grossly misused in the name of sports. What are the facts that the
FSA is keeping so quiet? What does our mammoth football team cost the students at the University? What do
we get back from the undisclosed amount of money which
is spent in our name? We wish we knew .
.

.

ter of Young Americans for Freedom on campus, which I understand was promptly disbanded by
the national office for expounding
liberal views (liberal compared to
national that is, probably reactionary compared to this place).
That chapter has never been reestablished, contrary to Mr. Taylor’s assertion that it is fairly ac-

tive.
Following this there was no
rightist inclined political group
here, and consequently little expression of right wing views, until last fall. But then Students
for Goldwater astonished itself
by growing to a membership in
three figures. While not overactive, it at least provided a framework where we could discover
our compadres, and formed a
rough basis for the Young Republicans Club, created last spring.
The YR’s blend a political mix-

ture, but is at present the safest
a conserv-

place around to voice
ative opinion.

Hopes for the future now rest,
once again, with YAF. A small

Editor-in-Chief

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
first week of September to the last week in May, except for
periods,
Thanksgiving,
exam
Christmas, and Easter.

Publication Office
weekly from the

Editor
Managing Editor

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

News Editor—SUE GREENE
Staff—Ellen Burstin, Carole Forman, Alice Edelman, Loretta Angeline, Ethel Solomon,
Pam Lent, Sharon Shulman, Art Conduzio, Robin Herniman, Helen Peters, Ann Recore,
Jody Weisberg, Brian Egan, Russell Buchman, Harriet Goldberg, Eileen Teifler, Ann
Sellman, Joanne Leeganf, Marleen Spielman, Nancy Toder, Don Schroeder, Jaye Katz,
Tom Block, Karen Green, Gail Lehrman, David Robinson, Charles Cummings, Leslie
Goner, Patti Warfley, Micki Lessner
Sports Editor-RICHARD DRANDOFF
Asst. Sports Editor-STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Chick Arnold, Mike Castro, Mike Dolan, Steve Feigin, Mike Ginsberg, George
Jackrel, Marty Jaffa, Stan Lichwala, Arnie Lichwala, Arnie Nathanson, Steve Oberstein,
James Sharcut
Feature Editor- JOHN STINY
Barbara Fitzsimmons, Stephanie Parker, Adolf Gucinski, Barnie Bartow, Judith
Beyer, Erroll Sull, R. P. Schwab, Magda Ziegler, Richard Gelfer, Martha Tack, S. Rovner,
C. Cummingi, Jo Ann Thompsons, Wendy Masch
Columnists— Leon Lewis, Larry Coleman, Paul Suidzinski, Robert Milch, J. Callan,
Rick Salter, Dave Gardner, Eric Steese, John Medwid, T. Blair Bachwifz, Daniel

Schroeder

Sharon

Honig,

Layout Editor- R.

DENNIS FOX

Gutmann, Christine Woodcock, Lorraine Gerla, Steve
Silverman, Stan Freedman, Joann Bouchier
Copy Editor-LAUREN JACOBS
Mary Louise Noon, Ethel Soloman, Judi Kron, Joan Ferreffi, Claire Shottcnfeld,
Rothstem, Carol Beck, Gail Ratish, Robin Weiner, Linda Mead, Susan
Zuckerberg, Carol Becker, Mary-Jo Cesan
Business Manager RAY D. VOLPE
Staff- Roche He Greenberg, Ann Parenfi
Advertising Manager-BUDDY DIKMAN
Krupoff, Pat Rosenfeld, Audrey Cash, Georganne Gilels, Barbara Avrick,
(i.P
Rochelle Greenberg
OfRce Manager-KATHY KUNIGISKY
ihR— Barbara Levine, Brenda Brigham, Susan Zuckerberg
Photography Editor- EDWARD J. JOSECLYN
? iTb Bland, Peter Bonneau, David Collins, Carol Goodson, Alan Goodson, Alan
Gruber, Richard Katz, Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch,
Jim Malicki, Anthony Walluk, Susan
y
Wortman, Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager-DI ANE LEWIS
Carole

Roberta

„

but diligent group, cemented during last year’s campaign, is now
laying the foundations. More on
this group will follow in succeeding weeks, but at present all I
can do is wish it my best.

By R. S.

&amp;

The latest issue of Newsweek
carries a story with the headline:
“We Have to Finish the Job;”
the “job” it tells us to finish is
the war in Viet-Nam. This glib
Newsweek headline reflects' the
current mood of those who support President Johnson’s policies,
and it serves to preempt all efforts to communicate just how
the “job” was started, why the
U.S. pursues this job, and what
exactly finishing the “job” will
entail. Today, and in the following two publications, we intend to come to grips with these
issues.

A Sovereign Nation Seeks
Our Help
The U.$. Government has reiterated time and again, through

nation-wide television broadcasts,
special Presidential press conferences, traveling State-Department
“truth teams," etc., that the U.S.
became involved in Viet-Nam at
the request of a sovereign nation
namely, the Republic of South
in order to help the
Viet-Nam
latter stem the tide of Com—

—

munist

Charlie Mister has departed
from our midst after, oh, so short
a stay. And now that he is gone,
it just remains for his story to
be told.
Few of you knew Charlie, for
he was a quiet boy; he never entered a crowded orientation session and shouted, “Who else went
to Erasmus?” Few of you knew
Charlie, for he was a different
boy he said “Yes sir” and “No
ma’m” and never spindled or
mutilated his IBM cards. Few of
you knew Charlie, for he was
only

on

campus one day.

His father, Mr. Mister, had
driven Charlie here on Registration Day. Unable to find a place
to park, he deposited his son
near the gym, gave him the usual
father to freshman advice (“If
you overdraw your cheeking account I’ll take your arms off at
the ankles.’), and headed back
for the rolling plains of Nassau
County. So Charlie, alone and unknown, took his place in the registratin line; fortunately, the line
reached the Colonial House, so
he had time for a quick breakfast.
Two hours passed, and Charlie
neared the doors of Clark; in
his left hand were cards A-l
through A-9, in his right hand
were cards B-2 through B-7, in
his breast pocket his insurance
cards, and in his mouth Master
Cards 1 and 2.
“All right, now. Everybody
give me Master Card 1 in that
order,” said the phys-ed major
guarding the gym door. “You
■

there!”

■

(pointing

at

Charlie),

“Where’s your card?”
“Garp?” Charlie replied as best
he could.
“Here, gimme that,” the man
in the gray flannel sweatsuit said
as he none-too-neatly separated
Charlie’s incisors from the card.
The line moved on into the basement, through the boys’ locker
rom, past the pool, through the
girls’ locker room, past the pool,
through the broom closet, and
came to a halt at the pool. Here
another executive trainee came
and collected the remaining Master Card from Charlie’s now soggy hold on it.
“Whatsa matter stupid? Ya let
yer card fall inna water?”
The line moved again, now into
the gym proper. Everywhere people were rushing to, and fro,
hither and yon, here and there.
There were lines everywhere,

and Charlie got at the end of
one that seemed to be very popular, figuring it was for Fresh-

man English.

When he came out of the men’s
room, he thought he’d better ask
for help. Timidly he approached
the table marked “Guidance”
where a Medusa-like woman of
100 was dispensing wisdom.
“Yeah?” she demanded, deftly
tucking an errant serpent back

under her visor.
“Where do I

go?” Charlie
asked plaintively.
“Over there,” the. counsellor
chortled, pointing to the History
table.
Charlie waited in line at the
History table.
“101 is filled. Get your advisor’s signature and come back.”
“But I don’t know my advisor.”
“Oh, you really should get
know him. He’s the best friend
you have. I’m sure you two will
get along famously.”
“Well, where is he?”
“How do I know? Try Diefendorf.”
Charlie trudged over to Diefendorf and got into the line marked
“Advice.”
“101 was filled, huh, kid?” said
the counsellor, who bore something of a resemblance to Mad
King Ludwig of Bavaria. “Geez,
that’s tough. I don’t know what
to do for you. Maybe you’d like
to only carry nine hours this
semester? No, huh? Ah, I’ve got
it!” he exclaimed, exulting in
the pearl he had just passed.
Six times that day Charlie
made his way from Diefendorf
to the gym, trading one subject
for another. Finally, he had a
complete schedule, and while it
was true he would be taking
Physics 592, Old English 212,
Economics in Post-War Babylon
313, and Movie Appreciation 101,
at least now he knew he was enrolled.
The sun was setting as Charlie
entered the gym that last, fateful
time. He was hungry, tired, and
dazed. He didn’t realize it when
he made a wrong turn, and, instead of going to the registration room, entered the ROTC
War Room.

“Where do you think you’re
the lieutenant
barked.
That did it. It was the first
time all day Charlie had heard
going, Mister?”

(Cont’d on P. 11)

Cacotopia and Eutopia

D. G

infiltration

from

the

“Nqrth.”

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

American Involvement Begins

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.
Subscription S3.00 per year, circulation

In view of the facts of U.S.
involvement in Viet-Nam, the
Government’s position above is
embarrassingly easy to refute. In
the first place, American ambitions toward that country began

9500.
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising
Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

OK Circus by Bob Milch

THE RICHT

.

as early as July 29, 1941 when
Roosevelt, in considering the
prizes of war, stated: “If Japan
was the winner, the Japanese
would take over French Indochina, and if the allies won, we
would.” And this was a good
thirteen years before a “sovereign nation” of South Viet-Nam
even existed.
During the ensuing war, the
Vietnamese, ruled by the Vichy
French were overrun and finally
occupied by Japanese forces. The
war years brought about the brutalization of the Vietnamese and
violent suppression of the “Doc
Lap” forces who were the Viet
Minh nationalists seeknig independence. Harold Isaacs estimates
that over two million Indochinese
died of starvation over this
period.

With the end of the war, the
nationalists under the leadership
of Ho Chi Minh looked forward
to that elusive Vietnamese dream
independence (“Doc Lap”).
The Allies, however, through a
series of manipulations, overt and
covert, reestablished French
Colonialism. It is at this point—still a decade before a “sovereign
nation” of South Viet-Nam existed—that the real beginning of
U.S. involvement can be seen.
The brutal French Colonial rule
during this period, was overwhelmingly supported by U.S.
—

finances and material. Any attemtps at rapprochement
between the French and the Vietnamese failed, culminating in allout war in 1947. Continuing U.S.
aid to the French during the war
is noted by Robert Scheer:
Between 1950 and 1954, the
U.S. sent $2.6 billion worth of
military and economic aid to
the French in Viet-Nam (80%
of the cost of the war)
$800
million during 1950-52 but $1.8
billion in 1953 and 1954 in response to the imminent French
collapse. Senator Mansfield's
Subcommittee on State De—

partment
and
Organization
Public Affairs reported in 1954
outnumbered those of the Viet
Minh by a factor of 5 to 3 and
as a result of American assistance
the non-Communist
forces possess great superiority
estimated as high as 10
to 1 in armaments and the flow
of American aid was constant
.

.

.

—

and increasingly heavy.
The actual arrival of American
military personnel can be traced
back to 1950 when, on Truman’s
order’s, a U.S. Military Assistance Adivsory Group (MAAG) ar-

rived in Viet-Nam. The U.S. continued to support the French
colonial war throughout period;
in 1954, for example, 200 U.S.
technicians were sent to service

(Cont’d on P. 11)

|

j

�Friday, September 74, 1965

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

oCetterA

to

Communication Breakdown
Questioned By President
September 22, 1965

TO THE EDITOR

Yesterday I obtained, purely by
copy of a university news release. It discussed
the agenda for the Faculty Student Association’s
first meeting, which, as the release informed me
is to be held on September 27.
It seems that proposals for changes in the
FSA structure grew out of the University’s FacultyAdministrative Fall Conference on September 16.
I should think that students should have been informed of this conference if not invited to send
representatives. The issues discussed at that
time are more than relevant to the student com-

munity.
Concerning the September 27th meeting, as
one of the two elected student representatives to
the FSA, I am entitled to be informed of such
meetings before the press is informed or even at
the same time that news media are told of such
events. It seems also that the proposed adgenda
might have at least been mentioned to the student representatives.
I raise these questions only to point out the
obvious lack of communication and I hope that
this only represents a temporary break down in

'FlRT 1 (SET MV MATTER, AWP THEN I
get mv mme% amp ma i get
tHt P».P.?*
The

grump

Well, well, well you made it

through another week. So did I.
I wasn’t fired, lightning didn’t
strike, and the rent didn’t even
come due. Which can only mean
that if this appears I shall probably be in dire straits in someway. They don’t really plan to
call up reserve clerk-typists for
use in Vietnam, do they? Shudder

I have discovered once again,
can’t say rediscovered once
again, and in addition to that I
do completely forget it so it is
a true discovery—again. I realize this raises hell with the continuity but I know that same
purist who sneered at me for
using prostrate gland instead of
prostate gland will be back again
if I do not defend myself in advance.) As- I was saying back
there in front of all that garbage, I found myself enjoying
the fact that my personal philosophy seems to lack cohesiveness. There is a wonderful thing
about being in the middle. No
matter in which direction you
fire you have to hit something.
(I

I have an highly developed
suspicious nature and one of the
areas it functions best in involves
people who stand up in public
and cry loudly “I have the

WAY

!

! !

!”

Thus I sort of like

being in the middle spectrum of
things because I am free to criticize the left and the right and
all the rest of the silly people in
the middle with me. If you are on
one extreme or the other it

makes it somewhat difficult to

aim at somebody standing next
to you.

To grump a bit more specifically. I do not like the phalanx
qualities of extremism. There
seems to be a tendency to rally
around 1 a standard and tolerate
no criticism at all. I am by nature
a criticizer, a noisy, opinionated
individual with an abiding fondness for stirring up aunt, or is it
ant, hills.?
Admittedly the right, Mr.
Welch and birds of a similar
shade, seems to be more guilty
of this than the somewhat fragmented left with its large confusion of political, philosophic,
and pure civil rights groups. But
still I have this suspicion of any
group whose members are so
sure and so positive and so unified in their beliefs.
I have a great deal of trouble

by STEESE

in seeing the world in black and
white. Everything comes on my
receptors as sort of fuzzy and in
various shades of grey. For good
example number one take the
present incumbent of the White
House. Opinion on the left and
right seems pretty well unified.
LBJ is a rat. The left don’t like
him cause he is fighting and the
right don’t like him cause he
ain’t fighting hard enough, in addition to which he is giving, or
has given, the country’s money
away to a bunch of “damn furiners.” Welch
fine old American name, that.
Dr. Linus Pauling, of whom I
would say more later, spoke of a
“Rule of Law” last week. The
mean nasty President of this
country who is a basically bad
guy for fighting a useless and
senseless war in Vietnam, was
insisting last week that the necessary power to settle the Kashmir
dispute lay in the United Nations
and this was the agency he would
function through. This at a time
when he had been asked to personally intervene by one of the

those communications.

Sincerely
Clinton E. Deveaux,
President, Student Association

FSA Scored For
Ignoring Students
TO THE EDITOR:

The failure of the F.S.A. to notify its two student members of its last meeting, is a typical example of the attitude which is manifested towards
students on this campus. As usual, important
issues were discussed and decided upon without
student respresentation. Excuse me for my “belligerent” attitude, but as one of the student members 1 don’t like being ignored. The decision of
the F.S.A. to allow student members to sit on the
board if elected (as of now 7 administrators, two
faculty, and two students are members of the
F.S.A.—I assume you can count) is another one
of their empty gestures, The fact that students
weren’t even invited to the meeting, where this
and other important issues were discussed, seems
to belie their intentions.
Rosemary Brown,
Vice-President Student Senate

the (Editor
Classroom Conditions Examined
Students Urged to ‘Cope
’

TO THE EDITOR:
As an undergraduate student here at the “Uniformity,” I have encountered many of the conditions which you have mentioned in your editorials.
I have sat in classrooms brimfilled with gibbering
freshmen, bored old ladies taking courses for
something to do, and glassy eyed professors turning lectures into memorized recitations.
However, I would like to talk about those
people whom you don’t see in class; the ones you
see playing pool in the Union, handing out pamphlets, and playing Pinochle in the lounge. They
have lots of time to do these things because they
don’t go to class.
Why?
"The instructor presents uninteresting, dull,
boring, and unimaginative lectures. He presents
only facts—like a book. Who needs a talking book?
Besides, I’m too far behind now to catch up now.”
"He’s a work!” “He’s a nurd!" “He wears white
Adlers.”
“The lecture hall is very overcrowded, creating an extremely adverse learning situation. I feel
that by not attending the class I am in some small
way helping alleviate the situation and giving someone else a better chance to learn. Something like
Christ,”

“He didn’t sign the Feinberg Oath! He’s a
pinko! Down with the faculty. They are subverting
■fr America � through educationally disguised propaganda! Down with the Reds! Kill the umpire!”
"Actually the faculty is in league with Jeremy
Taylor in a magnificent plot to discourage real
students from attending classes so that more room
can be made for rich freshmen with rich alumni
parents. That new campus has to be paid for

somehow you know,”
I would like to suggest that the professors are
not the only people at fault. It seems that too
many people have forgotten the word scholarship,
or at the least how to define it. Is the dropping
of a course an indication of the instructor’s attitude or the students? I think the latter.
A professor is an incidental to the course—a marionette manipulated by the course which
he presents in his own way. The caliber of the
course may resemble a Be-Be gun, but the coliber of the course is dependent upon the student.
Let us hope that we are students enough to cope
with conditions here rather than turn away from
them.
Bill Reid

Community Action By
Fraternities Urged

—

belligerents.
Perhaps I am not as truly cynical as I wish I were, because
every once in a while I wonder
if humanity as a whole might
not stumble through somehow. I
do know that the sight of both
Russia and the U. S. in complete accord over an issue as
serious as this one makes me
wonder, and maybe even put
ten dollars in the savings bank

instead of another bottle of
booze, just in case I’d live to
retire.
Snide remark to all those who
have been so condescending to
me when I voice my distrust of
Communist China and then tell
me that the domino theory in
Southeast Asia is ridiculous.
Peace, it’s wonderful. In its time
and place. I wonder what explanation can be offered for
China’s friendly little conclaves
on the Indian Border except she
is a have-not, and a hungry dragon always is the worst kind. Sir
Lancelot told me that once—just
before that last one bit off his
head. Tsk,
My copy of the SPECTRUM, I
couldn’t find anyplace else so I
just walked into the lounge and
picked up three or four slightly
used copies from the rest of the
junk on the floor—why don’t we
(Cont’d on P. 12j

Standards for Politicians Cited
TO THE EDITOR:
One of the more frequent (informal) criticisms
of S.D.S. activities on this campus is that they take
the form of protest, i.e. a negative approach: Often
the statement is made “Why don’t you propose
something better?”.
It should be made clear, in answer to this type
of criticism, that social protest (whether it is
against foreign policy, economic privation, racial
discrimination, or a local issue like the appointment of George Sipprell to the post of County
Welfare Commissioner) is a challenge to the politicians, who ostensibly represent us, to prove
themselves qualified in their roles as "representatives of the people” rather than rulers of the people or stooges of the vested interests.
The poiht is: they are the ones who purport
to be able to manage society. All responsible
citizens must insist that they either be competent and moral in their task or get out!
Robert McCubbin

‘To Bed or Not to Bed Or
Winning a Night’s Sleep
’

TO THE EDITOR

As a sophomore tripleu in Tower, the Uniformity collects $843.00 for providing me with the
necessities of life for one year. As part of these
necessities, I was gleefully provided with a Spartan
3/4-inch plang on wheels, topped by two-and-a-half
inches of foam rubber. By decree: A Bed.
During the past two weeks I naively went from
Resident Advisor to Head Resident to Housing
Office in search of a good night’s sleep. In a
fantastic show of red tape, everyone was busy
“checking into the matter.”
Deciding that the only good kick is a swift
kick, I proceeded to the Housing Office and informed the Assistant Director that I would soon
be moving my “bed” to his office and sleeping
Miere. Whereupon I received a new bed in short
order.

At least as far as dealings with the Uniformity
are concerned, “Nice guys finish last.”
Edward M. Baron

(Cont’d on P. 13)

TO THE EDITOR
At its last meeting, that of Sept. 21, the Student Senate passed a resolution supporting the
continued presence of national fraternities and
sororities on campus. It deleted from the original
motion, however, a provision stating that “Greek
organizations should play a greater role in campus and off-campus activities.” As author of the
whole resolution, I strongly oppose the deletion.
One of the primary reasons that the Greek
organizations on campus are losing their court
case to remain national, according to several
informed people, is because they do little, if anything, to better the campus and the community.
Yes, they (or rather we, for I am a member
of a national) sponsor a Greek Week-End dance,

Greek Sing, Stunt Night, and the Float Parade.
They collect money in the form of certain charity drives for various local organizations. Good,
the potential is there.
But why can’t fraternities as organizations, not
individuals (for many individual members are ac
live), work, for example, on civil rights. The
main argument opposing the state ban on nationals
is that “it is an unconstitutional infringement on
the free right of association for individuals.” We
talk about freedom to join extra-curricular activities—there are people in this country, and indeed
in this county, who cannot read or write, because
they were never afforded the opportunity we
were, there arc people who feel they have been
exploited by others because of their skin color or
religion, there are people who feel they have
nothing to lose by robbing a store or beating another man because they have been downgraded

all their lives.

Why can't these organizations work with young
Negroes and Whites to get them to live together
and respect each other as people, not as antagonists? Why can’t they, for example, sponsor basketball teams composed of poor whites and
Negroes so that they might play together instead
of fight , together? Why can't they work to bring
these children to our campus to show them the
life ousidc the ghetto that they might also have,
of academic achievement, of school and community
spirit, of a better life to live for.
The choice is there for the sororities and
fraternities of UB The choice and responsibility
is there for the Senate of UB. The choice and
opportunity is there for the students of UB.
Carl S. Levine,
Member, Student Senate

�PACE SIX

Friday, September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

Education and Cultural Affairs

Experimental Courses In
Metaphysical 'Pathos
And Theories of Education Chinese, Japanese Set
.

and

Theories of Bureau-

cracy

"That gifted historian of ideas,
Arthur O. Lovejoy, astutely observed that every theory is associated with, or generates, a
set of sentiments which those
subscribing to the theory could
only dimly sense. Lovejoy called
this the ‘metaphysical pathos’ of
ideas, a pathos which is ‘exemplified in an description of the
naturer of things, any characterization of the world to which one
belongs, in terms which, like
the words of a poem, evoke
through their associations and
through a sort of empathy which
they engender, a congenial mood
or tone of feelings.’
“As a result, a commitment to
a theory often occurs by a process
other than the one which its
proponents believe and it is usually more consequential than they
realize. A commitmemnt to a
theory may be made because the
theory is congruent with the
mood or deep-lying sentiments of
its adherents, rather than merely
because it has been cerebrally
inspected and found valid. This is
as true for the religious prose of
social science as it is for the
more lucid metaphor of creative
literature, for each has its own
silent appeal and its own metaphysical pathos.”

Gouldner goes on to discuss and
criticize the metaphysical pathos
which pervades the various contemporary theories of bureaucracy. This being, generally, the
tendency to succumb to a kind of
pessimistic funk or fatalisn when
considering the possibility of
democratic controls and personal
identity within a bureaucratic
organization. Certainly, this has
been true from the very beginning apd is very explicitly stated
in the ground breaking work on
bureaucracy by Max Weber and
Robert Michels. In the concluding chapter of Political Parties,
after having convincingly documented his notion of the “iron
law of oligarchy,” Michels writes
in a mood of despair, seeing little
hope for the realization of a democratic society. Since the 1920’s
this mood has sometimes alternated between despair and a
light-hearted resolution to the
fate of industrial man, but in almost all cases it has remained
pessimistic. This mood has now
permeated the general society
and has become especially characteristic of the faculty and students of the cor t emporary University. Obviously these feelings

are not entirely illusory, they reflect a rather overwhelming sense
of helplessness and anonymity
that is engendered by huge bureaucratic organizations.. However, when these feelings degenerate into pessimism and even
cynicism we are in great trouble
because we are not motivated to
freshly examine the problem of
democratic control in a bureaucratic society. This in turn leads
us to falsely attribute certain
problems entirely to a system
when, in fact, the conditions we
deplore may reflect in large part
substantive attitudes, values and
acts of individuals and groups or
even the lack of sufficient bu
reaucratic organization.
Let me take the last point

.

with their welfare and education
the students are shocked and
angered when they find they are
often thought of as necessary
evils, “warts” and audacious bearers of problems and characteristics which defy easy computer
programming or the handy pigeon
holes of bureaucratic functionaries. These conditions are exacerbated by bureaucratic organization but they can be changed
by the students and faculty

Permit me to begin with a long
quotation from Alvin W. Gouldner’s essay, “Methaphysical Pathos

.

through

imaginative, forthright

and militant confrontation of not
the bureaucracy, qua bureaucracy, but the policy makers and
funcionaries who are not only
its “brains” but on occasion even
its victims.

WILLIAM HARRELL
—Photo by A. Gruber

Obviously,, the most important
problem is defining the goals of
the University, which will involve
defining the goals of education
and scholarship. There is no rea-

son to think that there will be

one goal or one related set of
goals. There will not only be different goal orientations but goal
orientations that are in violent
conflict. Futhermore, there is no
reason to believe that the goals
can be defined now in other than
extremely general terms or that
the goals once explicitly defined,
will forever remain the same.
Clearly, all interested parties
should participate and have the
right to participate in the continual effort to define and solve
the important problems of the
academic community.

first: There is a great deal of
justified belly-aching on the part
of students (and to some extent
faculty) about such things as
the seemingly interminable series
of lines they must stand in sometimes for hours at a time; the
great confusion over who teaches
what courses and when; what
form is necessary in this situation, who approves it, if anyone,
and where do you get it and
after you get it,, and fill it out,
where do you take it. Understandably, students feel under
these circumstances harassed and
However, I am convinced that
mistreated. More importantly, we will
not even initiate the
much of this busy—work seems
necessary effort to solve these
pointless and makes the student
problems as long as we succumb
feel as if he is being pushed
to the metaphysical pathos which,
about arbitrarily by a capricious arise in a community or nonand invisible God
sometimes
community involving large numbitterly referred to as the bubers of people and many complex
reaucracy.”
functions. For example, we usually assume that large classes make
However, as C. W. Mills has it impossible for
there to be any
pointed out in White Collar, this
effective
communication
and extype of wasted effort and confuchange of ideas between student
sion is as often as not the conand teacher and student and stusequence of too little bureaucradent. But this is an assumption
cy rather than too much. In this
and no one has really examined
context the University needs to
be more bureaucratic, that is, the alternate possibility that large
classes could be just as rich and
more rational, rather than less
or even more exciting
bureaucratic. I'm sure that the exciting
than small ones. It may well be
student couldn’t care less if he
that when a large class is dull
were assigned a number and
and pointless we blame it on class
asked to fill out a series of IBM
size when in fact it may have the
cards if this effort subtracted
same cause as dull and pointless
from the confusion and the
small classes, that is, a bored and
amount of time waiting in lines
distracted instructor and ill-moand racing back and forth across
tivated students in the glassythe campus in search for the
eyed stupor that can best be deproper functionary. To achieve
as grade-terror.
these better conditions requires scribed
not only the rationalization of
We must confront this problem
the bureaucratic means but it alof large numbers because there
so requires that the goals of the
is not likely to be any real alterbureaucracy be defined principalnative. The usual response is,
ly by the students and faculty “less bureaucracy” which transrather than by the administrators lates into small numbers. This
tors and/or clerks. If and when
assumes that through the more
this is done the more mundane
intelligent use of teachers and an
annoynances of bureaucratic life,
immense increase in their numif they are minimized by rational
bers we can solve the problem
organization and the humane use
by decreasing the size of classes.
of technology, will fall into proHowever, that may solve only
per perspective.
one problem, the immediate relationship between teacher and
The student is infuriated, as
student. It doesn’t solve the probhe should be, when the adminlem of communication, exchange
istration and faculty treat him as and action arising between stua number, that is as a cipher.
dents outside of class, between
He rightfully objects to being students in general and the facultreated as a simple category that
ty in general, between faculty and
can be conveniently coded for
faculty, student and administraIBM consumption or a memory tion. In fact, large numbers of
machine which can be evaluated
small classes may well promote
by a memory machine tester. Led
the already marked trend toward
to believe before entering the
insularity among the various
University that the institution
academic disciplines.
was fundamentally concerned
(Cont’d on P. 13)
—

The modern language departmerit has expanded this year to
include courses in Mandarin Chinese and Japanese. The courses
are essentially an experimental

kind of teaching. Students study
individually and in groups of
two or three. Basically the teaching is done by a newly-developed
“tape” course. Further help is
given to the students by a native
informant who is not a language
teacher, but rather, a native
speaker of the given language.

Those upperclassmen and graduate students who are seriously
interested in, more information
should go to 240 Crosby Hall,
Saturday morning at 10:00 a.m.
The Chinese course is closed but
there is room for three more
people in the Japanese course.
Special arrangements will have
to be made because drop and
add day has come and gone. The
Modern Language Aptitude test
will also be administered Saturday morning. This will be the
basis for gaining entrance to the
Japanese course.
Both courses are under the direction of Dr. Boyd-Bowman, a

Dr. Boyd-Bowman, Director of
new courses in Chinese and
Japanese

-Photo

by Peter Bonneau

linguist with U. B., who previously directed a similar, successful program under a government grant at Kalamazoo College
in Michigan.

Acute Classroom Shortage Noted;
Problem's Main Causes Cited
7 Buildings Planned
By

LAWRENCE BEDNARSKI
and

BARBARA ANN FITZSIMMONS
As a large number of students
are aware, there is presently an
acute classroom shortage on this
campus. According to Mr. John
R. Warner of the University
Planning Division, this shortage
has three main causes: an increase
in enrollments of 1,000 students
per year, the need of additional
offices and labs for the faculty,
and the introduction this year of
several new courses, including;
Chinese, Japanese, and Vietnamese.

This problem of lack of space
is currently being met by holding
classes in Norton Union and using
temporary buildings and trailers
on the Bailey Avenue side of the
Campus. Seven rooms on the third
floor of Norton are being used
for classes in Business Administration, English, Languages, and
Social Welfare. Their use adds
35 classes per day and 200 per
week to the classroom capacity
of the University. When asked if
he felt that the use of these
rooms caused an overflow of students in the Union, Mr. Warner
replied in the affirmative.
The two temporary buildings
along Bailey Avenue, Annexes A
&amp;
B, currently house the offices
of the English, Political Science
and Social Welfare Departments,
as well as classrooms. They accommodate 90 classes per day
from 8:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. for

a total of 450 to 480 classes per

week. The ten trailers in this
area contain the Graduate Division and approximately 200 classes per

week.

These facilities are not sufficient for the immediate expan
sion necessary, however, and several alternative methods of gaining more space have been con-

sidered. Mr. Warner stated, “We
tried expanding the present facilities, but we are overcrowded
in Foster, Crosby, Hochstetter and
Diefendorf. Additionally, attempts have been made to expand off-campus to Main Street,
and the Anthropology Lab and
classes have been located in three
stores.” Mr. Warner also mentioned, “We could meet at Twin
Fair on Niagara Falls Boulevard,
but it would cause a commuting
problem.”

Through a consensus of decisions of the University President,
Vice-President, and the Planning
Division, it has been decided that
additional temporary buildings
will be erected and classes will
continue to be held in Norton
Union for the time being. However, Mr. Warner said that these
classes in Norton would be moved
as soon as temporary space is
available, and in the meantime
attempts would be made to find
space so that classes need only
be held there in the morning.

Construction currently planned
includes seven temporary buildings
one
behind Diefendorf
Hall, one adjacent to Foster Hall,
one in front of Acheson Hall and
three behind Hayes Hall, An addition to Lockwood Library is also
planned, which will contain both
offices and classrooms. When completed, these temporary buildings
will add 130,000 square feet of
classroom area. Mr. Warner remarked that no more permanent
buildings will be erected “unless
it is an absolute necessity.” In
1970 when the move is made to
the new Amherst Campus, and
this Campus becomes a HealthScience Complex, these temporary
buildings will also be re-located
to serve as labs, shops, and
—

warehouses.

�Friday, September 24, 1965

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Physics Seminar NSR and Senate Committee
Studies Research Plan Evaluation Booklet

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

QUANTUM
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPE-

WRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attnetion Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Stu-

organization notices are
not accepted for publication.
dent

The New York Telephone Company will be on campus September 28, 1965 seeking female

applicants.
to obtain qualified personnel to
fill management training or telephone representative positions.
Contact the University Placement Service for an interview

time.
Applications are on tile for the
Federal Service Entrance Examapproximately 200 exination
cellent career opportunities are
available through this source.
These examinations are given at
—

NOTICES
(A Reminder)
APPPLICATIONS FOR MAKE-UP EXAMINATIONS for the removal of Incomplete Grades will be accepted no later than OCTOBER 11,
1965. Make-Up Examinations will
be given the week of November
15th.
Graduate School Calendar—
Sept. 24 (Friday)—Last day for
first semester registration.
Oct, 22 (Friday)—Last day for
resigning from a course without penalty.
GENERAL

—

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Attention; Seniors and Advanced Degree Candidates—In an
effort to assist graduating seniors
and advanced degree candidates
find meaningful employment, the
University Placement Services
provides interviewing opportunities with representatives from

business, industrial, educational,
and governmental agencies. Candidates must be registered with
the University Placement Service in order to take advantage
of these opportunities.
Millard Fillmore College and
part-time students—who anticipate completing their degree requirements by August, 1966, are

encouraged to register and recruit through the University
Placement Services.

Education majors—are not automatically registered with the
University Placement Services.
Seniors and graduatg students
not previously registered should
initiate the establishment of
their permanent credential file
by procuring their credential
forms from the Educational
Placement, Division in Schoellkopf Hall. Early registration will
afford candidates the maximum
advantages of the placement service.

Informatioin regarding forthcoming teacher examinations
that are required in certain
school districts, their application deadlines, and dates of test
administration, will be provided
when the examination information is available. Candidates
should determine the requirements of those districts in which
they are

specific times only, and applications must be submitted approximately one month before the date
of the examination. Do not wait
to apply until you receive a degree; you are eligible if you meet
degree requirements within the
next nine months.

PLACEMENT
INTERVIEWS
Appointments should be made
at least one week in advance of
the interviewing date.
Sept. 27.
The U. S. Air Force Logistics
Command—BS, MBA, Accounting, Finance, Statistics, BS, MS,
Industrial Engineering, Mathematics. Career opportunities for
trainees in Digital Computer Programing. Training begins on February 10, 1966. Applicants must
take the Federal Service Entrance Examination.
An application must be submitted no later than October 20,
to take the November 20 examination. Candidates must be willing to relocate to Ohio.
Sept. 28, 29
U. S. Navy Recruiting
All
candidates at all degree levels
to enter the Armed Services as
Commissioned Officers.
—

are:

Common Branch, Early Child
hood, and High School Science,
October 8, 1965.
Junior High Spanish, Music, Mathematics, General Science,
French and Russian, October

22, 1965.

High School Russian and Industrial Arts, October 29, 1965.
High School Guidance, Decem-

ber 2, 1965.'

The Student Senate Academic
Affairs Committee and the New
Student Review, in conjunction
with the National Student Association, is planning to present a
comprehensive course evalution
booklet. The guide will consist of
a description of each course
offered on the undergraduate
level, including discussion of
course material, text, and in-

The first five lectures in a series
of 13 seminars concerning the engineering sciences sponsored by
the School of Engineering was
held this week in the Karr Parker
Engineering Building.

These special lecture series
programs first began two years
ago when the Physics Department decided it would be extremely informative to bring in
eminent speakers to lecture on
their particular field of Physics.

structor.

Toward the latter part of October, questionnaires will be distributed to students' in each
course. Random samplings of the
responses will be evaluated by
statistical methods as recommended by administrative personel. These results, along with
additional information from the
instructor, will comprise the evaluation of the course.

The 13 seminars, which will be
held at various dates throughout
the academic year, will consist
primarily of presentations of pre
vious and current research and
activities in the areas of solid
and fluid mechanics, plasma
physics, applied mathametics, and
experimental methods. Each seminar will be preceded by a social
hour in Room 128 of the Engineering Building.

The course evaluation booklet
will be completed and available
to the student body by January

This lecture series is sponsored and supported by a number of research laboratories on
the Niagara Frontier; Bell Aerosystems Company, Cornell, Aeronautical Laboratory, Linde Research Laboratories, State University of New York at Buffalo,
Sylvania Electronics, Union Carbide Metals Co,

of 1966, This will give students
an opportunity to know all that
is essential about the courses
they wish to take at the time
they pre-register for the Fall
’66 semester.

Recommendations and suggestions will be made concerning a
number of the courses, based on
information from the student
questionnaires. It is hoped that
faculty will use this constructive
criticism to make improvements
and revisions in their programs.
Further, with full faculty and
student co-operation, the evaluation program can be an effective
and lasting means for students to
comment on the kind of education they arc receiving and the
kind of education they desire.
Those

1
Campbell Sales Company (Division of Campbell Soups)—BS,
with interest in General Business
and Marketing. Candidates will
enter a management training

program which includes both formal and on-the-job training. Initial training will be in the Buffalo area. Candidates must be
willing to relocate after train-

ing.

The James Joyce and
Robert Graves exhibits in
Lockwood Library have
been extended through
October 8.

in working

KLEIN HANS
Downtown Buffalo

&lt;

Announcement

impart $hap

I

First National Student
Assoc. Committee Meeting

Thruway Plaia

Boulevard Mall

(EaUey* £liop

this semester, Thursday,
September 30, at 4 p.m.,
Student Senate Office, 2nd
Floor Norton.

AIL WOOL
SLACKS

Appointments for Seni-

$I5 95

or Pictures in the 19651966 Yearbook must he

made hy September 30th.

Trim and tapered slacks in rich
all wool reverse twist. Plain
front styling in popular shades
of Cambridge gray, charcoal
gray, charcoal brown, charcoal
blue and olive.

The last day that pictures
will he taken is October 1.
Make your appointments
as soon as possible at the
Norton Candy Counter
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.rn. and
at the ticket booth from
5 p.m. to 7 p.rn.

Sport Shop.

From Campus

All 3 Stores.

SPORT
COATS

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Only 5 Minutes

NEED
GLASSES?

interested

with the Course Evaluation Committee are requested to contact
Lcs Lupert of the New Student
Review.

Oct.

$335°
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man about - campus look you
like. Natural shoulder styling
in rich all wool fabrics that
have the luxurious feel of fine
homespuns. Crisp plaids and
handsome heather effects in
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interested.

The examination application
deadlines for the following fields
in the New York City Schools

ELECTRONICS
LECTURE SERIES

GARY J. BECKER
OPTICIAN

Sport Shop.

U.B. Alumnus

All 3 Stores.

PRICES TO PLEASE STUDENTS

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-

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Donald Richard Worsted Suits with Vest

$65 A
$69.50

\

�IFUILSiOS j3iH S)Lerman
Of what value is a documenfilm, Orson Welles once
asked, unless “the camera is an
eye in the head of a poet.” But
Felix Greene, whose travelogue
film Chinal opened this week at
the Circle Art Theater seems to
have regarded the camera as
merely a cumbersome appendage.
Greene has done- his best/ to turn
intrinsically interesting material
into fifth rate watery pap. A
documentary film may be judged
on two grounds: aesthetic and
moral. Chinal is a failure on
both levels, and it is indicative
of the curiously absurd state
of American affairs that the film
has come in for such high praise
from serious critics.
tary

Remember those Hollywood travelogues we used to see featuring
journeys to far-off lands complete with romantic sunsets and
dancing girls (and a shot of the
commercial airline which has
sponsored the film and whose
planes will fly you there)? China!
hasn’t progressed beyond this
level. In other words what is presented on the screen are shots
of parade, schools, sports, entertainments, farms, market places,
and what we don’t get is a sense
of anything beneath the surface;
we don’t get the ‘'feel" of the
land, the people. One knows
more of Paris in two minutes
from the camera of Raoul Goulard, more of New York from
the wide sweeps and panning of
Shirley Clarke or Lionel Rogosin,
than from the entire footage of
Felix Greene’s opus. All those
millions of people, but never a
sense of humanity. All those
thousands of miles of land and
never the sense of space and
majesty that John Ford in even
his most insipid Western always
gives you.
Part of the problem lies

in the
fact that neither Greene nor the
Chinese cameraman he worked
with have the slightest idea how
to handle a camera. Greene
talks about the intimacy of family dinners for example, and presents the viewer not with the inside of the living quarters, not
with shots of the wife preparing
food, not with a picture of the
family preparing for dinner (in
other words even the most obvir
ous and mundane things which
might interest us or give us a
bit of insight), but with a series
of close-ups of the children
smiling and stuffing their mouths
with scampi. That he could have
done in a Chinese restaurant in
the Westl Or, when Greene shows
you a ping-pong tournament, the
players

participating

are

the

world’s finest, but what we are
shown on the screen are not the
strokes of the players, the ball
in action, but the applause of
the spectators and the faces of
the performers instead of the
hands. Just two isolated exam
pies, but typical ones.
Greene says that the govern

ment was, by and large, helpful
and gave him a large measure of
artistic freedom. Greene speaks
Chinese and his Chinese assistant
presumably does also. Then why
not interview any of the people?
Greene talks of the

schools, the

science and foreign language
classes. Why not let the teachers and students speak? He shoots
a town meeting, and says there is
an important discussion going
on. W'hat is it’ He says the
crops have been destroyed by
rain. Where is the rain? Where
indeed is the crop? He talks of
the slums. Where are they? Almost every shot
stilted, artificial

Friday, Saptamber 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

seems

posed,

But worse (if that is possible)
than the aesthetic quality of the
film is the lack of political con
tent. Greene says that the film

is not political, that he refuses

to pose easy answers.
Fair
enough. But surely a documen-

tary on China must at least
raise problems. The political
question is there whether Greene
deals with it or not. To bypass
it as Greene does is the same as
a documentary film on Mississippi which bypasses racial issues. In the best documentaries,
the artist, if he doesn’t take a
stand, at least deals with the
issue at hand. Whether the viewpoint if pro-left as in Chris Marker’s Cuba Sil or implicitly fascist as in Riefenstahl’s Triumph
of the Will or anarchic as in
Franju’s Les Sang Des Bates, the
issue is exposed. Even in the
supposedly objective cinema
verite experiments of Leacock
and others, there is always a
point of view, we learn something. It seems incredible to say
that after a feature length film
on China, we know nothing significantly different than before
the film, but it is, unfortunately,
true.

Greene says that we will see
China as he saw it. One can only
conclude that he saw it as a
British tourist and he might as

well have photographed the whole
thing with a Brownie Hawkeye
and be done with it.
To make matters worse, before
the film there is an abominable
performance by the Peking Symphony Orchestra. It reminded me
of Dr. Johnson’s remark about
seeing a dog walk on its hind
legs: It’s never done well, but
at least amusing to watch. Part
of the problem lies with the inadequate sound reproduction, but
the inadequacy of the orchestra
and soloist are certainly not
blameless. One wonders why, if
the Chinese government felt the
need to present a concert for export, they didn’t at least enlist
Fou Ts’ong as soloist. Ts’ong, the
best of the Chinese pianists, was
|nowhere to be seen. Instead

some hopeless nonentity banged
out a Liszt complete with the
appropriate facial contortions.
One felt like yelling out Tirez
Sur Le Pianiste! when it was
over.

To make the program a total
disaster, there was a French short
about an old woman and a string
bean plant. All very Meaningful
and Significant of course, but
so heavy-handed that it seemed
like a bad parody of Chabrol.

Dr. Powers Presenting Lectures
On Structure of Indian Music

Weekly
Calendar
SEPT.

By BRIAN EGAN

24 TO 30

Today

Albright-Knox Gallery; Exhibit
Sixty works by members of the
Paterson society; until Oct. 10.
Exhibit, Collection of prints
representing Art Movements
from the 15th to the 19th
century; until Oct. 10.
Conference Theater: Norton

Union Movie Hondo Cane, 3;00,
6:00 and 9:00 and 10:00 p.m.
O’Keefe Center: Toronto, The
Canadian Opera, through October 9.
Baird Hall: A lecture by Harold Powers, “The Structure of
Indian Music.”
Circle Art Theater: Film,
"China," runs through September 30.
LECTURE: Dr. Bruce Jacobson speakftig on ‘Soluble RNA
134,
and the Code,” Room
Health Sciences Building.
Saturday, September 25
Football Game UB versus Tampa—1:30 Rotary Field.
Conference Theater: Film
"Monde Cane" for time see

above.
Monday, September 27

Baird Hall: Lecture, Mr. Sol
Balitz speaking on “Techniques
as the Key to Differences between Bach and Mozart.
New Student Review Coffee
Hour, 7:30 to 10 PM for students interested in joining the
staff.

Tuesday, September 28

Freshman Forum lecture series
for women, 11 a.m. Conference Theater.
Thursday, September 29

Union Board Activities Drive
opens, Students wishing information about Union Board and
Board activities should inquire
at the Union Board offices in
Norton Hall.
The Department of Music
presents a lecture by Sol Babitz,
an authority on string playing
—

and performance practices of
18th century music. The topic is
‘Technique as a Key to the Differences between the Bach and
Mozart Styles. Open to the Public, Baird Hall, 8:30 p m.

In short, a horrendously boring
and pretentious program. At least
Julie Christie in Darling is still
in town for those of you that
haven’t seen it yet. Even Fred
Keller can’t bat 1000 all the
time. At least he tries. His new
cinema (the old Glen) in Williamsville will open soon. It
should be a welcome complement
to the Circle Art.

Each student is entitled

to use his ID card for his

own free admission to
home football game. A
special section in the
stands is reserved for students. Any card used hy
someone other than the

person to whom it -was issued, will he confiscated
and turned over to the
Dean of Students’ Office.

of

—

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|

Dr. Harold Powers is presenting
a lecture, “The Structure of Indian Music,” September 23 and
24 in Baird Hall. Dr. Powers’ two
part lecture will serve as an introduction to Indian music for
the coming concerts of Ali Akbar
Khan.

The lecture will attempt to
present the structure and unique
parts of Indian music. Dr. Powers
will incorporate into his lecture
the use of slides and will demonstrate with instruments. He will
also perform several pieces of
Indian music.
Professor Powers, born in 1928,

attended Stanford University and
received his B.A. in music from
Syracuse in 1950. From Princeton

he received his M.S.A. in composition and musicology in 1952,
and his Ph.D. in 1959. From 19521954 he studied in India with a
Fulbright Scholarship. He continued his studies in India in 1960

with a grant from the Rockefeller
Foundation. In 1964 he attended
the International Congress of
Orientalists. Professor Powers
was a member of the faculty of
Princeton from 1955 to 1958 at
which time he went to Harvard
where he stayed until 1960. Since
1960 he has been an associate professor of music in South Asia
Regional Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Powers
has frequently written articles on
Indian music and on seventeenth
and eighteenth century opera.

YAF Opposes East-West Trade
WASHINGTON, DC (CPS)
The conservative youth organization whose picket lines and
boycott threats helped force a
halt to U. S. negotiations with
Rumania over sale of a rubber
plant has announced new plans
for a full-scale drive against
trade with Communist nations,
—

Young Americans for Freedom
;YAF) announced at its fifth annual convention that it would

form a national advisory committee to consider “possible further action against American
business firms which might be
engaged in negotiating trade
deals with Communist nations.”
Outgoing YAF national chairman, Robert E. Bauman, said the
organization had already singled
out four firms which were considering Eastern Bloc trade. All
four have been notified of YAF’s
opposition to such plans, he said.

RONCO SALES
3247 Bailey Avenue
EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AND COLLEGE APT.
(Appliances, Furniture, Etc.)

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JOSEPHS LEVINE

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�PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 24, 1965

MUSIC ON CAMPUS Mondo Cane In Conference Theater
By

DANIEL SCHROEDER

WBFO will be the only area
station to participate in a special international Radio Network
broadcast of election returns, of
the German Federal Republic
(West Germany) next month.
Coverage of today’s elections
(3:00-6:00 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time) will be a joint project of
the German Information Center,.
Radio Deutsche Welle, Cologne,
Germany, and Radio New York
World Wide in New York City,
in cooperation with the National
Educational Radio Network. This
is the first time that NER member stations will participate in a
live network.
Reports of the elections will
originate in English from the studios of Radio Deutsche Welle in
Bonn and Cologne, with relay to
the United States where more
than 50 educational radio stations
will carry the three hour program.
Programming plans for the
election include special reports,
commentaries and interviews,
along with spot reports from contacts in Bonn. Official returns
and informed commentary and
analysis will be transmitted by
Trans-Atlantic cable from Germany to New York. Washington
and New York-based German experts will act as program commentators.

The international radio network will include transmissions
of the more than 50 National
Educational Radio network stations, the five high-powered shortwave transmitters of Radio New
York Worldwide (WRUL) aimed
toward Latin America and the
Caribbean, and the regular over-

fOR ANYONE WHO DOES NOT
IYANT TO WEAR BLINDERS.-^
“A FILM EVERY AMERICAN
SHOULD SEE” ,/£Sbs
-c.i.s. rv

'OUTSTANDING."-'"'

We

Felix Greene's

IMP
Contains material from tha
Official China Film Corp. of Pakinp'

7:30 9:30
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Students' Rales

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MsmfMUTmeM

GLEN PARK

CASINO
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seas service of Radio Deutsche
Welle.
Transatlantic costs will be
underwritten by Radio Deutsche
Welle in Cologne. All interconnection costs will be underwritten through the cooperation of
the German Information Center
in New York.
At stake in the elections are
518 seats in- the Bundestag and
the contest between the Christian Democratic Union led by
Chancellor Erhard and the Social
Democratic tarty of Berlin’s
Mayor Willi Brandt.

�

�

�

The rehearsals of the Marching
Band began five days ago before
the start of the semester, at the
annual Band Camp. Over 100 ihstrumentalists turned out to practice the music and the marching procedures of “The Pride of
the Bast,” under Director Frank
Cipolla, Assistant Director Richard Rodean, and Assistant Marching Band Director Richard
Fagen.
Since then, the Marching Band
has been rehearsing three times
a week and will take its traditional place at the Bulls’ first

game tomorrow, with its pregame entrance, half-time shown,
and final rendition of the “Alma
Mater.” The theme of this halftime show is
A Tribute to
Chancellor Furnas,” including
highlights from his whole career
up to his ascendency to the University President.
The band numbers 135, not including its flag corps and drum
majorettes. This will enable it
to perform shows
of at least
as great a scope and quality as
in the past. Its field trip this
year will be to the Holy Cross
game, October 29.
At the end of the football season the Marching Band will reorganize as usual into the Concert Band, composed of Music
Majors and other musicians of
the highest caliber, and the UniThe Department of Drama and
versity Band, composed mainly
Speech and the Student Dramatic
music
with
whom
of students
Society announce that rehearsals
is an avocation.
begin this week for their co-production of Christopher Fry’s play,
The Lady's Not For Burning. The
English comedy being directed
Jim Tuttle's
by Mrs. Julia Pardee of the Department of Drama and Speech
UNIVERSITY CAMERA | will have four evening performAND
ances in Baird Hall, November 3
PORTRAIT STUDIO j through November 6.
“

I

~

i

I

Designing and supervising the
construction of the stage sets is
Dr. Thomas Watson, Director of

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Next to University Plaza

cers, are the decisive factor in

the choice of the movies and gen-

erally operate with a great deal

of freedom. Last year, under the
direction
of Stew
Gurtman,
movies were presented once a
week however because of the programs great success each movie
will be presented on thrpe sepa-

rate days.
If the student body reacts favorably as it has done in the past,

the program may be extended to
include a Film Festival which
would present films of an experimental and
classical nature.
These movies would either be
held in Diefendorf Hall or shown
with the weekly movie in the
Conference Theater. These plans,
however, are tentative and flexible depending on how the student body responds to this year’s
movie program.

Portuguese Male Choir
To Sing October 3rd
The Male Chorus from the University of Coimbra, Portugal, will
present a choral concert assisted
by the UB Women’s Chorale October 3, at 2:00 P.M. The performance, which is free to the student
body and the general public, will
take place in the Millard Fillmore
Room of Norton Union.
The chorus, romantically eostutned in floor-length monk’s
robes, is making its second visit
to America to participate in the
International University Choral

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Founded in 1880, the Orfeon
Acad cm ice de Coimbra, the
group’s native title, has performed in Spain, South Africa,
Casablanca, Tangiers, France, and
Madeira. Dr. Manuel Raposo Marques, director of the chorus since
1936, has also either composed
or arranged many of the pieces
in the group’s repertoire.
The Coimbra Chorus will present an individual program and
then join with the University of
Buffalo Women's Chorale to perform several works from the International University Choral
Repertoire,
including Randall
Thompson's “Alleluia" and a tra-

ditional Russian nonsense song,
“Na gorushke, na gore," edited

by R. S.

Beckwith.

Women’s Chorale.

director of the

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572 Amherst

Greatly Reduced!

The Lady's Not For Burning requires a cast of eight men and
three women. Auditions for the
production were held this past
week. No cast list was available
at press time

Right in your neighborhood
at REGULAR Airline FARES too!

Thurs. till 9

"The Perfect Place

tumes, while Drs. Ward Williamson and William Coleman, both
new members of the Department
of Drama and Speech, are responsible for the lighting and the
sound effects of the production.

AIRLINE TICKETS

—

(Formerly of Vohwinkle’s
Restaurant)

Theatre. Miss Esther Kling is creating the fifteenth century cos-

You can pick up your

RAY
Participation Fame’

The Film Committee consists
of a small but competent staff
with Richard Haber as President
and Marty Sado and Jeffrey Lesser as operating Vice-Presidents.
Although the movies must be approved by the faculty, the committee, and especially the offi-

{

featuring

VOHWINKLE

a large screen.

'The Lady’s Not For Burning’
Begins Rehearsal This Week

NEW POLICY

“Of Audience

tion pictures. Along with the
movie there will be a short, a
newsreel, and perhaps a cartoon.
If these additions do not meet
with general approval from the
student body, they will be eliminated. Each film will be shown
three days, Thursday, Friday, and
Saturday, in continuous performances. The seating for each performance is approximately 300
and, due to the fact that new projection equipment was bought this
year, the films will be shown on

By NANCY TODER
The Film Committee, established by the Union Board several
years ago, will be presenting its
first movie of the season this
weekend. This week’s picture,
Mondo Cane, and the other films
to follow will be shown in the
Conference Theater in Norton
Union.
Mondo Cane will be shown at
3:00 P.M., 5:05 P.M., 7:10 P.M.,
and 9:15 P.M. on September 23,
24, and 25. The price of admission is twenty-five cents and tickets may be purchased at the ticket booth in Norton Union or at
the door.
The program that has been
scheduled includes Freud, Sundays and Cybele, All These Women, Knife in the Water, Billy Liar
and other world acclaimed mo-

ALWAYS DELIVERED FREE and HOT TO U.B.

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y

�Jazz Is Compared
To Modern Poetry
By LARRY G. COLEMAN

Cannonball Adderley once said,
"Hipness is not a state of mind,
but a fact of life.” So I don’t even
know why I’m doing this unless
it’s with the intention of showing those who want to be shown,
a side door into a new wave of
understanding what is really happening about them. The disturbing factor is that the essence of
Free Jan has existed for so long,
in suspension. Only, now has it
begun to reveal itself.

The Avant Garde, La Nouvelle

Vague, and Impressionistic Jazz
are all terms we might use to
refer to what Charles Mingus or
Ornette Coleman would simply
call, The Words, These are not
the words of anyone else; they
are the musician’s, to do with as
to turn out through
he pleases
across the bandhis horn
stand to people who pretend to
understand him. These people
prove that they can understand
only on the surface, by the evident tapping of their feet, and
...

...

the “Yeah Man” of which the fre-

quency of utterance is in accordance with the degree of apparent
hipness of the entire pack.
Often, the jazz musician of the
wave "finds himself playing
at an audience that neither knows
nor cares about what he is saying
or the way in which he says it.
I say, playing at the audience, be
cause in order to establish a certain rapport with them, the artist
must somehow charge the air,
filling it with the intensity and
the power to minimize any conscious distance between himself
and the audience. If he is capable
of this then he is no longer playing at his audience. If Ornette
Coleman could communicate in
this way through his horn, then
he would be playing to the people
for the people . . . and
they would be bearin' him.

new

...

Instead, it seems that people
up with themselves,

are too hung

and with the idea that the music

is nonsense and nothing more, or
they say “the people around me
seem to know what’s happening,
so I’d better hide the fact that
I don’t."

This is the reason why, for
most of this year, Ornette Coleman gave up on audiences, organized workshops in Greenwich
Village, and played the violin.
He has however managed to remain

lumam

retiring to his musical hermitage.
He still digs people and realizes
that they’re still very far from
digging him. Integration (between
a tenor sax solo and rhythm
movement) is what he firmly believes in and incorporates with
great success into a composition
called “Cross Breeding.” ORNETTE ON TENOR (Atlantic
1394). This piece, because of the
interwoven harsh tones of Ornettes’ and Donald Cherry’s condensed solos, conveys more than
many of his recent compositions.
It is symbolic of what Ornette
Coleman, the men, wants.
Perhaps the only way for him
to reach people is through an
integration of ideas, a fusion between his and their stream of
consciousness, and a cross-breeding of emotion. Neither Ornette
nor can any artist clearly transmit this emotion to individuals
concerned with merely the superficial, the hipness as a state of
mind and nothing more.

The Film Society will
hold its second meeting
of the Semester at 7 ;30
p.m. in the Spectrum office, Tuesday, September
28th. All faculty and students interested in viewing, discussing and making films are encouraged

to attend.

Friday, September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Homecoming Weekend to Be Held Bowling Leagues Albright Presents
Tournaments Exhibit of Prints
With Highlights on Indian Theme And
to
currently on
contestants will Are Planned
WARTLEY
By

PATTI

one of
t Homecoming Weekend,
the highlights of the year at
U.B., is scheduled to begin unofficially on Thursdaly and Friday afternoons, October 7 and 8,
with films of past football games.
student Steering Committee
■£he
has scheduled a variety of activities, including mixers, competition, and the long-awaited Homecoming game against Boston University. This year the weekend
will be held on an Indian theme,
Friday evening, visiting alumni
women will be welcomed with a
fashion show presented by the
finalists in the Homecoming
Queen Contest. Alumni men will

have an opportunity to recount
past experiences at a special Stag

Party given in their honor.
On the same evening, students
will participate in an outdoor
mixer and pep rally on the side

terrace

of Norton. Band and
cheerleaders will begin at Clement Hall and lead a procession
of resident students to the mixer,
where the Homecoming Queen
will be crowned.
The selection of the ten finalists for this year’s Queen contest
was made on Monday, September
20, in the Dorothy Hass lounge.
The girls, scored on beautly, personality, poise, and intelligence,
were: Jackie Barcham, Vicki Ann
Marilyn McConky, Jean
McEvey, Cindy Nash, Julie
Schulze Beckinghausen, Camille
Severyn, Ava Shapero, Carol
Stewart, and Cynthia Welcott. The
final judging will take place on
September 28, at 6:00 P.M. in the
Charles Room. The names of the
Howe,

■

Queen, and the first and second
runners-up will be announced at
the Pep Rally Friday evening.
The Rally will also be the time
for the traditional Ugly Man contest, sponsored by Alpha Phi
Omega fraternity. The contest is
open to all campus fraternities.

Pictures of the
appear in next week's paper, and
students will be able to vote for
the ugly man of their choice.
Votes will be a penny each, and
the total amount of money collected by each fraternity will
count towards 90% of their
points. Money will be collected
from 9:00 to 5:00 during the day,
and until 12:30 Friday night in
the Ratskeiler. The other 10% of
the vote will come from the winning skit presented by a fraternity. A plaque and key will be
presented to the winning group.
All students are invited to participate in any of the homecoming
competition, also scheduled for
Friday night. Such participation
is hoped to lend to the spirit of
our weekend. The competition
will be as follows: human totem
open to groups
pole contest
with prizes to be awarded for
the tallest and most original
poles; Standup Indian wrestling
—

contest; Apache Relay

—

open

to

team of five girls; Indian Costume contest
prize to be awarded on the most authentic costume;
and a Watermelon-eating contest.
Applications for these events will
be available in Norton, on the
bulletin board opposite the candy
counter. They should be turned in
at the candy counter by October 5.
Following the Pep Rally there
will be a massive mixer in the
Ratskeller. Saturday afternoon,
at 1:30, U.B.’s football team will
meet Boston University on Rotary
Field. The Homecoming Queen
will be presented to the alumni
at this game. Those who still have
—

energy left

will dance to the music of
the Ralph Westfield Band at the
Cordon Bleu. Tickets are four
dollars per couple; only 250 are
dents

available.

11,12, and 13 productions of the

MARTHA TACK

The Student Dramatic Society
is expanding its facilities by
building a library in Room 312
of Norton Union, the society’s
headquarters. The library will
contain books, scripts, and any
information concerning dramatic

of Recreation for Norton Hall,
wishes to inform all students tendering a I. D. card to recreation
area personnel to be sure to pick
up their I. D. card when they
return their equipment, as the
cost of replacement I. D. cards
has risen sharply. To help implement the return of your I. D.
card, the policy of requesting an
advance deposit from billiard and
table-tennis players has been discontinued.
All of the equipment in the
area has been renovated (bowling lanes resurfaced, billiard
tables recovered, tennis tables
repaired) and is in excellent
playing condition. The bowling
classes, indicative of their growing popularity, have been extended through 1:00 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Thursday. They are
on Friday.

over at

noon

Student groups desirous of
forming bowling leagues should

contact Mr. Paffie, Room 20, Norton, at ortce, as only a' few

league spots are still available.
A league may be started with as
few as twelve bowlers (and up to
sixty). A bowling tournament
with prizes to both men and women is now in progress. First prize

in each division (male and female) is a new bowling ball. Four
games may be bowled in this
tournament for $1.15. The tournament is open to all members
of the campus community. Further details may be obtained at
the recreation counter.

Prints from the 15th
the
20th century are
exhibition at the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery. The exhibit .will
continue until October. Mostly
lithographs, the subjects ranged
from 15th century saints to 20th
century portraits.

The highlight of the show is
the illustrations for the book of
Job by William Blake, which are
excellent. The rest of the show
is rather lacking. The older
prints, with a few exceptions,
are small and unimpressive. The
20th century part doesn’t really
show what modern graphic artists are doing.

WBFO to Feature
Campus Calendar
Campus Calendar is a weekly
presentation of WBFO Radio for
the purpose of informing UB students of events on and off cam-

pus which would be of interest
to them. It is heard each Thursday at 5:45 p.m. If your club or
organization is sponsoring an
event which you feel would be

of interest to the student body,
please feel free to let us know
about it. Club meetings, mixers,
trips, etc. will also be announced.
Send all information to:
WBFO CAMPUS CALENDAR

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14214
Or phone; 831-3687

will dine and dance

Saturday night. The alumni dinner will take place at the Statler
Hilton. From 9:00 to 1:00 stu-

Drama Society Plans Plays
The word is expansion. Expansion of the Student Dramatic Sofacilities, membership,
ciety’s
and productions has gone into
effect. The goal of the society is
to present first-rate productions
without charging an admittance
fee.

Mr. Joseph C, Paffie, Director

very popular Oh Dad, Poor Dad,
Mama's Hung You in the Closet
and I'm Feeling So Sad by Arthur Kopit, and Servants of the

Mastermind
world
affairs

Read The New York Times

People by Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Early in November, the Student Dramatic Society will be
ucin

with the drama and

speech department, Christopher
Fry’s The Lady's Not for Burning.

/

«

#

t

events.

Plans to present at least one
student-produced play a month
began with the presentations of
the Zoo Story by Edward Albee
and Rouge Atomique by Richard
Nash during the week of Freshman orientation. Rehearsals have
already begun for the October

Plaza Shoe
Repair

Have The Times delivered every morning
at low college rates.
For service, get in touch with:

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Y«r On* Stop Service Center

STEPHEN SOROKA
Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines

-Blbs. S2.00

—

TOWER

EXT. 3552

�Friday, September 24, 1965

CIRCUS...

Cacotopiaand

—

(Cont’d from P. 4)

his name —his real name—used.
It didn’t matter that it was his
last name (after all, he’d never
met the officer before), or that
the tone was somewhat harsh. It
was his name, and Charlie *as
overcome with a sense of gratitude.
“Oh, thank you. Thank you.”
he cried, joyfully hugging the
cadet.
“Huh” said the officer, trying to maintain his dignity.
“Thank you for calling me by
my name, not ‘Hey you’ or ‘You
there.’ Oh, thank you.”
“Huh?” said the lieutenant,
nobly rising to the occasion.
“I can’t tell you how grateful
I am,” Charlie sobbed as he sank
to the ground and kissed the
polished shoes.

“Oh, I got it. I know all about
you guys. You pinkos. You leftist
subversives. We got lectures
about you preverts and your
tricks. Oh no. You won’t get me

in a compromising position so
you can later blackmail me and
jeopardize our security,” And
with this, Charlie was escorted
from the gym with a somewhat
amateurish judo hold applied to
his left ear.
That night the lieutenant, the
advisor, the counselor, all congratulated themselves on a job
well done. But the next morning,
there was one person absent
from Physics 592.

Kick Off Beer Blast Set
The Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity
proudly “kicks off” the 1965 University of Buffalo home football
season by presenting the seventh
annual Kick Off Weekend Beer

will be held this
evening at Washington Hall start-

(Cont’d from P. 4)
French combat planes. Truly, as
one American diplomat observed,
“We are the last French Colonial-

ists in Indochina.”
With the collapse of the French
at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, the
Viet Minh were able to achieve
an agreement (the Geneva Accords) with the French in which,
as Scheer describes it, “the latter (Viet Minh) exchanged a
favorable military situation for
one in which it could pursue its
goal through election
the
culmination of ten years of
—

bloody fighting.”
The Geneva Accords included
basically six provisions: (1) an
end to the war; (2) “temporary"
division of Viet-Nam into two
zones (North and South): (3) the
withdrawal of rival armies to regrouping zones; (4) the prohibi-

tion of any “reinforcements in
the form of all types of arms,
munitions, and other war material,” and the prohibition of the
establishment of new military
bases; (5) political immunity (for
dissenters) and free elections in
1956 with a subsequent reunification of the country; (6) freedom to migrate.
The U.S. did not sign the
Geneva Accords. However, it issued a separate document which
in effect supported the Accords.
The U.S. was not therefore legally
obligated to abide by the provision for free elections. It did not.
Eisenhower tells us why the U.S.
did not believe in this democratic
process for Viet-Nam. In his
memoirs he explains that every
expert he consulted agreed that
if an election was held, possibly
80% of the people of both North
and South would vote for the
coalition of parties under Ho Chi
Minh.

Blast. This affair

ing at 9 P.M.

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Featured will be “The Maniacs”
and “The Vibratos” along with
forty halves of beer. Free buses
will leave from Norton Union and
Allenhurst Apartments at approximately 8:45 P.M.

American's Alternatives:
Ngo Dinh Diem
But fortunately, as Life Magazine pointed out (May 13, 1957),
“Diem saved his people from this
agonizing prospect.” American’s
anti-Conmunist hopes were

placed in Ngo Dinh Diem. Diem,
an aristocratic Catholic, and a

supporter

of the Vietnamese
Monarchy, found his way (with
the help of Michigan State University funds into the U.S. where
a massive campaign to put him
into power as Viet-Nam’s “anticommunist, nationalist alternative” was begun. The force behind this campaign were as numerous

as they were diverse;
Cardinal Spellman, Norman
Thomas, John F. Kennedy, Arthur
Schlesinger, Tom Dooley, Joseph
Buttinger (Socialist ex-editor of
Dissent), Edward Lansdale (CIA
Agent), The New York Times, The
Saturday Evening Post, Life Magazine. New York Herald Tribune. The Reporter, The New
Republic
all of these prestigeful '“people and publications,- and
more, were enlisted in the cause.
Victory was realized in 1955
when Diem was installed as the
Premier of Viet-Nam. “From the
Spring of 1955 on," writes Scheer,
"the U.S, commitment to Diem
was complete. This meant that
the U.S. would ignore any French
protestations and the Geneva Accords, including the provisions
calling for reunification through
free elections . . .”
—

Viet-Nam Under Diem
Immediately, Diem began to re

ceive financial aid from the US.
Government. He cancelled all
trade with the North and began
persecution of former Viet Minh.
U.S. assistance also provided for
the establishment of a military
academy under the slogan “We
will march to the North,” Two
public relations firms and a fiftyman team of professors from
State University were
enlisted to promote an image of
a “miracle” in Viet-Nam. The
miracle included the illusory ac

Michigan

complishments of economic prosperity, political stability, and the
transformation of popular opin-

ion in Diem’s favor. Behind this
facade, a campaign of ruthlessness took its toll: People were
placed in “strategic hamlets”

—

a modern name for coricentration campus
for purposes of
"re-education” and "protection;"
religious persecution ran rampant; the MSU professors changed
the police force into a para-military force, and in corijunction
with the CIA created a neo-fascist
Police State; during the period
from 1954 to 1962, the U.S; poured
in $2 billion worth of military
and economic aid (from the Wall
Street Journal, which properly
—

took note of the violation of the
Geneva Accords.) Of this $2 billion, only 20% was assigned to
social and economic projects,
most of which found its way into

military hands.

Diem methodically attempted to
wipe out all forms of peaceful
rnd democratic dissent, Tens of
thousands were arrested, tortured
and imprisoned without trial. Hu
go Devillers, a Catholic anti-Communist himself, had this to write
about the regime: "A certain sequence of events became almost
classical: denunciation, encirclcmertt of villages, raids, arrests,

plundering,
interrogations enlivened by torture, deportation,
and regrouping of the populace."
This inhuman endeavor to achieve
"political stability" led to the
development of an opposition
force calling itself the National
Liberation Front. (On this point,

Devillers writes that "the insurrection existed before the Communists decided to take part, and
they were simply forced to join
in. And even among the Communists the initiative did not originate in Hanoi, but from the
grassroots, where the people were
literally driven to take up arms
in self defense
”)

Finally an

enemy! Now

the

U.S., after violation of practically
every basic provision of the
Geneva Accords
finds itself
justified in answering the call
of a "sovereign nation” to resist
“aggression from the North.”
Since this position was so utterly
incredible, a State Department
“White Paper” documenting the
“aggression from the North” was
made necessary. The aggression
amounted to two and one-half
percent of the arms used by the
NLF, and with much difficulty
“after five years of fighting the
U.S. White Paper was able to
document a total of 6 Northern
infiltrees.” (I. F. Stone, March 8.
—

1965;

The more recent history of
Viet-Nam is well-known. Diem
was overthrown in 1963 and has

tors.

With each new dictator
American commitment seems to

increase.

We have outlined how the U.S.
became involved in the Vietnamese “job Newsweek tells us
to finish. In next week's column
we will examine the implications
of “finishing" the “job,”
"

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SMORGASBORD
ALL YOU CAN EAT-99c
Wed and Fri

FOR SALE: A Tower three-speed
tape recorder with stereo playfa a c k. Contact Jeremy Taylor
SPECTRUM office. Will bargain.
FOR SALE—500 cc. Twin 1950
Indian Cycle, needs transmission work, $175.00. Mel, 833 8354.
FOR SALE; Vespa Motor Scooter.
90cc double sealer, $339. Bike
Shop, 715 Elmwood Avenue, 8826323. Students—10% discount on
all English racers.
FOR SALE: 1961 Corvette; $270:
4 speed; extras; 835-8623 after
5:00 p.m.
FOR

SALE: Having Campus
Parking Problems? Can fit anywhere; 1962 Fiat 500
good condition, -Sun—roof, 40 mpg gas;
$275; call 833-3458 immediately.
—

OLD GUITARS, Banjos and Man
dolins. Bought and sold, traded

repaired. Also sell D'Angelico
strings, 984-6003 or NX 2-2309.

&amp;

Wanted: Political Volunteers:
Interested in joining “The
Ad Hoe University Committee to
Support Miles 0. Bender for Supervisor?” Call Marty or Jeff at
873-2995, or call Bender Headquarters at 836-8664

WANTED:

to form
n roll group

Musicians

professional rock

—need combination of lead, bass,
and rhythm guitars,, organ, or
sax. If interested leave name, ad
dress, telephone number, and in-

strument

in SPECTRUM office

c/o Russell Jay Dikman.
WANTED;

Experienced voluntary secretarial help needed to
join the SPECTRUM STAFF.

BMW 250 cc motor
cycle with faring and touring

WANTED; A

tank. Write SPECTRUM, box No,
HELP

WANTED: Male and Female. Waitresses and Bartender
trainees. Over 19 years of age.
Apply in person at Glen Park

1

Casino.

FOR RENT

Large, 2-bedroom
unfurnished apartment. Couples
preferred. Close to school. 270
Jewett Avc. Reasonable. Call TF
3-1727.

Draft...
(Cont’d

from

P, 1)

linquent and you will be placed
at the top of the eligible list. The

local draft board does all classifying and a 2S classification is
only a temporary deferment subject to renewal.
The draft board calls inductees

according to classification. Delinquents are first, then volunteers, and finally those in the 19
to 26 age bracket with a 1A classification, beginning with the oldest. Even if you are 1A there is
still hope for those at the younger end of the scale but avoid that
delinquent category and keep
your draft board happy by keeping

them informed about what

you are doing. They are always

glad to hear from

you.

*450

Call Sat. or Sun.

Campus revolution!
Slacks that never
need ironing—never!
Galey and Lord

CLASSIFIED

—

—

4-10 p.m.

632-0065
FREE PARKING
Left on N, Cayuga Rd
from Main St.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Part,,

eri

P^Snc.
Ml/i Printing

|

J

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

!

�grump...

The
GAMMA

DELTA

Gamma Delta, the international
association for Lutheran students held its first meeting of
the semester, Wednesday, Sept.

15, in Norton Union. Plans discussed included sponsoring a Pops
Concert at Kleinhans Music Hall,
serving at the Niagara Lutheran
Home, and holding a retreat
later in the year.
The Gamma Delta picnic will
be held Sunday at Letchworth
State Park. We will meet at the
front entrance to Norton Union
at 11:30. Arrangements will try
to be made for those unable to
go until later in the afternoon.
Anyone having a difficulty of this
sort is asked to notify Rick Volk
at 831-3475. The cost of the picnic supper and gas for the drivers will be shared by all those

attendirfg^.

The next Gamma Delta meeting will be Wednesday evening,
Oct. 6, at 6:30 in Room 344 of
Norton Union, All Lutherans are
asked to come.

HILLEL
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Jewish Hillel House. Dr.
Justin Hoffman will speak on
“Rosh-Hashonoh in Jewish Tradition.” An Oneg Sabbath will follow.

Hillel will again hold HighHoliday Services this year in the
Jewish War Vets Post, 576 Taun-

ton Place. Only out-of-town students will be admitted by showing their ID card. Limited space

makes the strict enforcement of
this rule necessary. Time of the
services is announced elsewhere
in this issue of the Spectrum.
Because of a conflict, the Hillel
Hayride scheduled for Oct. 2, had
to be postponed. The new date
will be announced in the near
future.

The class in Elementary Hebrew will meet Sunday, Oct. 3
at 2:00 p.m. in the (Hillel House.
The class in Basic Judaism will
meet at 3:00 p.m. the same day.
Advanced Hebrew will meet
Tuesday, Oct. 26 at 4:00. The Talmud class will meet Thursday,
Oct. 7, at 4:00 p.m. Each class
will meet for one hour a week.
GRADUATE CLUB

The Hillel Graduate Club extends an invitation to an “Expresso Coffee Hour” to be held
Sunday, Oct. 3, at 9:30 in the Hillel House. Graduate students,
single faculty, and senior girls
are eligible to join this group.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship would like to announce a
lecture series on the six principles of faith of the organization. The series, starting Sept.

2i,

will consist of twelve lec-

tures, each an hour long, given
by three speakers.
The lecturers are as follows:

The .Rev. Walter Watson of Lancaster on The Unique Divine Inspiration, Integrity, and Authority
28, and
of the Bible, Sept. 21
The Consummation of the Kingdom in the “glorious appearing
of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ.”, Oot. 5 &amp; 12
(All 4 lectures given in Norton
262); the Rev. Peter Paseoe of
Kenmore
United Presbyterian
Church on The Necessity and Efficay
of the Substitutionary
Death of Jesus Christ for the redemption of the world, Oct. 20
27, and The Presence and Power of the Holy Spirit in the Work
of Regeneration, Nov. 3 &amp; 10 (All
4 lectures given in Norton 264);
and the Rev. Dale Fisher of Calvary Baptist Church Independent
on The Deity of our Lord Jesus
Christ, Nov. 16 &amp; 23, and The
historic fact of His resurrection,
Nov. 30 &amp; Dec.. 7, (All 4 lectures
given in Norton 262). All lectures
are given at 3:00 p.m.
In the addition to the lecture
series, ICVF holds regular Bible
study meetings, prayer meetings,
and fellowship meetings. The
prayer meetings are at 1:30 p.m.
Tues. and 9:30 a.m. Wed. in Norton 217; the Bible studies are
Mon. at 3:00 p.m. and Thurs. at
10:00 a.m., also in Norton 217;
and the fellowship meetings are
held every other Fri., except for
vacation, at 7:00 p.m. in Norton
Hall, starting Sept. 24.
&amp;

&amp;

NEWMAN

Dr. Glenn H. Leak will speak
at a meeting of the Newman Club
on September 29 at 7:30 P.M. in

the Norton Conference Theater.
He will discuss his travels in
Russia.
Tuesday, September 28, Theology Classes” will begin. They will
be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 9 o’clock and at 1 o’clock
in 335 Norton. The courses are
‘‘Basic Ideas of Theology” and
"Modern Church Problems.” Students may register for classes at
the Newman meetings or at Newman Hall.
Remember! Sunday Suppers are
served at Newman Center every
Sunday at 5:30 P.M. Also, 11
o’clock Mass is celebrated every
day at Newman Center.

Union’s nuclear armament could
destroy this country. Dr. Pauling
is far above my caliber of intelligence but I would like a definition of terms—just what does

he mean by destroy?
I used to think that there was
an honest chance of discussion
on the subjects of Peace and
Vietnam. I was incorrect. If I
quote a figure I am told it is
wrong, if I question a figure
there is usually one stock answer
The New York Times.
—

GREEK NOTES

Clinton St.). The dress is either
African or casual. The brothers
also wish to announce a trip to
Watkins Glen October 2 and 3,
open to all engineering friends
of the fraternity. Group transAlpha Sigma Phi is holding a portation and refreshments will
pre-game party tomorrow at 11:00"'’be provided. For information concerning the social as well as resa.m. at Paul Bennet’s apartment,
to celebrate our first home toot- ervations for the excursion, conball game.
tact Rush Allen at 836-6072.

Alpha Kappa P*i will hold a
dated open rush party at Johnny’s Night Owl on Bailey Ave.
tomorrow evening. For dates or
rides call 883-0034 or 877-3758.

Beta Phi Sigma Fraternity is
a dated rush party at
Dubells on Smith St. at 9:30 p.m.
This rush party is free to all
holding

undergraduate Pharmacy majors

and to the members of the third
and fourth year classes who are
rushing Beta Phi Sigma. For
further information contact either
Irwin Wechler 895-4883 or Alan
Levitt 895-8843.

what happens while
that worthy is on strike? ?).
And if you ask where in the New
Phi
Epsilon D i Fraternity
York Times—ain’t nobody with
information here today. Which wishes to announce the inducupsets me. I failed two semesters tion of sixteen newly initiated
of Calculus because I kept trybrothers. They are Jack Brading to figure out why such and rick, Myron Brand, Mark Cohen,
such was so instead of just Sandy Eisen, Mark Feldman,
memorizing enough to get me Sandy Finkel, Steve Ginsberg,
through the course and get rid Alec Glasser, Gary Holob, Rich
of my “F’s”. (Have to make aver- Leventhal, Steve Linker, Pat
age you know!)
Marotta, Steve Michaelson, Butch
It is like religion now. If you Perchick, Neil Ringler, and Stan
don’t like my views you are Weiner. The initiatory ceremony
prejudiced—this is outrageous! was held Sept. 19, in Norton
Everybody who is sure, is sure Union.
and you had best know it. If you
All prospective rushees are inare still fumbling around for an
vited to come to the fraternity
answer like me, write me a letter. I am getting very weary of table in Norton Union or see a
being told what I should believe; brother for fraternity or rushI don’t want to discuss it, I want ing information.
to argue it.
Phi Lambda Delta Fraternity
I mentioned the United Appeal
would like to announce the elecearlier. That means that little
tion of some of their new offeller with the computer is figficers: Treasurer, Ken Brodie;
uring out just what I should give
Jr. J.F.C. Rep., Brian Frager;
so that I will be giving a proper
Sergeant-at-Arms, Mike Marino.
donation. And those IBM cards
Lambda Delta will hold a
that you are supposed to fill Phi
stag Sunday afternoon
rush
out telling how much you gave, at thebeer
Bowlodrome from 3:00-5:00
etc. (if it ain’t here yet, it’ll p.m. Rides
will be given. Please
come) BAH! I am very sure that
Gasparrine, 894-1649.
I would personally find much call Dan
more spare money for charity
Pi Lambda Tau wishes to inif I were not as eonsistantly vite all engineering rushees to
badgered. Like those motion picattend their “Swahili Social”
ture theaters where they run the with the sisters of Pi Omega Nu
short with the plea to help the tonight. The Social is at Island
hospital and then stick a can Park Inn, 1987 Union Rd., (near
under your nose.
Would somebody explain why
there is a large chunk of wood
and a rather nice note telling
you not to use this door, permamently on that one end door
on the Lockwood side of Norton?
And be careful, I do not know
what it is they are putting on the
hand rails in Crosby but I would
be careful until someone does
find out. Trifle slimey. Bye-Bye.
(Hmmmm,

?

Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity
will hold a Pre-Game, dated, rush
picnic tomorrow beginning at
10:00 a.m. at the Ellicot Creek
Park. Wednesday there will be
a Coffee Hour in Room 233 Norton Hall from 3:00-5:00 p.m. All
rushees are cordially invited to
attend both functions.

Theta Chi Sorority would like

to extend their welcome to the

inducted sisters: Geri
Waltman, Pat Connors, Ronee
Lovas, Mary Ann Merker, and
Barb Tycha. They wish to announce new officers for the fall
semester: President, Sue Bouck;
first vice president, Debbie Brodnick; second vice president, Lynn
Miskell; pledge mistress, Claudia
Elliot; queens chairman, Darla
recording secretary,
Bradley;
Joann Baumgart; corresponding
secretary, Gloria Pardo; treasurer, Marilou Leonard; assistant
treasurer, Barb Ellis; historian,
Janet Savanyu; chaplain, Arlene
Ardanowski; sergeant at arms,
Cathy Gerlach; custodian, Debbie
Brodnick; glad girl, Joanne
newly

-

-

Chimera.

Theta Chi Fraternity will hold
a T.G.I.F. rush stag today at 3:00
p.m. at the House, 2 Niagara

Falls Bvd. at Main. Free refreshments will be served.

Tomorrow a victory date party
will be held at the Sheridan Bowling Lanes, commencing at 9:00
p.m. Casual dress is in order. All
rushees are urged to call 836-9895
or 836-6825 for rides or additional
information.
Sigma Alpha Mu will hold a
‘cornin’ home” party tomorrow
night.

4

MAIN AT EGGERT

ORGANIZATION
regular meeting of

(Cont’d from P. 5)
just give some worthy organization the right to collect all the
scrap newspapers dumped on the
lounge floor, the United Appeal
will never have to worry about
them again—anyway the SPECTRUM quoted D. Linus Pauling
as saying that Vsth of the Soviet

Jacobi Bros

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

The

Friday, September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

'■■1
-i

i'*&amp;

m

Headquarters For

the

campus Christian Science Organi-

zation will be held next Thursday evening at 7:00 p.m. in Room
264. Vistors and new members
are always welcome.

h.i.s

WESLEY FOUNDATION

POST GRAD PRESS-FREE slacks

The student Methodist Fellowship on campus, Wesley Foundation, welcomes all old members
and any interested newcomers to
the Wesley Sunday night dinner
and program. Supper begins at
5:00 p.m. and will be followed
by a discussion on “Man
Who
or What Is He??” The coming
fall weekend, held by the group
at Silver Lake Oct. 1, 2, and 3,
will also be discussed this weekend and those interested in going
should plan on attending the

in your favorite colors:
Navy, grey, loden, tan
and blue olive

only $6.98

—

Jacobi Bros;

meeting.
Transportation, Sunday night,
will be provided from Goodyear

Hall, Allenhurst, and the Union
to the Foundation Center on
Bailey and Minnesota Avenues
at 4:45 p.m.

Bn
Yiir
Clurft
Acciut

mUrnmm
•

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opposit* V.B.

�PACE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 24, 1965

cjCetterA to the
Alumnus Scores Editorial
For “Few Specific References”
TO THE EDITOR:

As a recent graduate of the University, I
help but be amused by what I read
in your editorials which appeared in the first
complaints, while
issue of the Spectrum. Your
often valid, read like a politicians speech when
he is running against an incumbant; full of sound
and fury, but with only a few specific references.
As for the rest, they were shotgun indictments.
As an intelligent man whose command of the
written word is indisputable, why did you reduce
yourself to the expedient of an expression of meaningless generality like, “freshman instructors .
.
do not prepare their lectures . . .” To whom did
you refer? All such men? Most of them? Some of
them? Maybe only a few?

could not

.

To anyone who might be interested in some of
the good aspects of UB, I address the second part
of this letter. I am currently attending a MidWestern University in search of my Masters degree
in history. There are some things which I would
liked to have said as an undergraduate, in praise
fear that these
of some of my professors, but
sentiments might have been misinterpreted prevented this. In the department of history are two
men of such outstanding ability, that I feel the
time has come to praise them.
Dr. John Horton is a man of eloquence, charm,
wisdom and humor. It was he who first gave me
the love of history that I now have. Each semester
that I attended his classes, my respect and admiration grew ten fold. He is a bottomless well of

information whose presence on the UB campus
honors all of us—students, alumni, and staff.

The second man I wish to commend to you
does not engage in the theatrics of Dr. Horton,
nor does he make the attempt at amazing his
students which the seemingly all knowing Dr.
Horton pulls off with such great facility. The man
of whom I speak is Dr. Orville Murphy. Dr. Murphy is an excellent lecturer who never ceases to
make heavy demands on his students in readings
and papers. I do not know of one student who
has taken European Diplomacy and has not developed the opinion the Dr. Murphy is a truly good
man. No problem is too small to go to Dr. Murphy
with. He is a very understanding and compasionate
man who is never too busy for his students. Dr.
Murphy tried to help me with a problem that I
have in putting my thoughts into words. That I
failed him is a source of constant irritation to me,
not because my grade in his course was poor, but

Editor

&lt;

Cont d from p

because I wanted to show this man that I could do
the work he demanded. Dr. Murphy is a man with
whom I would have liked to make my friend.
Realizing the impossibility of such a situation, 1
did not try to achieve it, now that it is too late,
I am sorry, Very sorry.
Yes, there is some good at UB, There are Drs.
Horton and Murphy; two truly outstanding men.

An Alumnus

Protest of Vietnam
Better Off-Campus

MATH CLUB

POLITICS CLUB

The Math Club will hold its
first meeting of the year Wednesday at 7;30 p.m. in Townsend
304. Dr. Stephen Cavior, Asst.
Professor of Mathematics, will
speak on “Power Sums in Number Theory.” All interested undergraduate or graduate students
are invited to attend. Refreshments will be served.

Wednesday, the Polities Club
will present Dr. Everett F. Cataldo of the Political Science Department, discussing “Congress
and Presidential Pressure” at
3:30 p.m. in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge. Before coming to
SUNYAB Dr. Cataldo taught at
Ohio State University and spent
a year as a Congressional Fellow
of the American Political Science
Association, where he had an opportunity to study in depth the

IEEE

TO THE EDITOR

It is time for the student protest of the U.S,
war in Viet Nam to move into a new stage. Those
students who have participated in the Washington
demonstrations, both in the spring and in the
summer, have certainly come to the realization
that the bulk of the anti war activity must be
carried on “off-campus” in their own communities.
There are, at present, all too many students
willing to confine their anti-war activities to the
campus or to distant locations. This attitude is
wrong and must be corrected.
Although there is much work to be done in
the way of initiating protest movements on other
campuses in the local community, it is most urgent
at the present time to go out to the people in
the Buffalo and Niagara Falls areas with our literature and, if possible, sound trucks. Recent polls
indicate that there exists a large anti-war sentiment among the workers in these areas.

Students not connected with existing campus
orangizations that are now involved in anti-war
activity can bring forth independent, constructive
suggestions with regard to anti-war slogans, leaf-

lets, demonstration ideas, etc. and should attempt
to move their own organizations, their friends,
and their classmates to a position opposed to
U.S. agression in Viet Nam.
Those students still not clear on the issues
should attend discussion meetings on Viet Nam,
request information at the tables in Norton Lobby,
or conduct their independent research.
In any case, all students should take time out
from their classes, their homework, their fun, and
their activities to think seriously and act decisively
on the Viet Nam issue.

HILLEL
576 Taunton Place

7:00 P.M.
Sunday, September 26
10:00A.M. 7:00 P.M.
Monday, September 27
Tuesday, September 28 —10:00 A.M.
—

-

—

YOM KIPPUR SERVICES
576 Taunton Place
Tuesday, October 5
6:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.
10:00 To Sundown .
Wednesday, October 6
“Break the Fast” Supper at Conclusion of Service

The Student Branch of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers will hold its
first meeting Thursday at 7:30
p.m. in Room 104 of Parker En-

Congress. All
those interested are invited to
attend.

operations of the

gineering:

Mr. Luis Salazar, of the Western Electric Company, will speak
What
on "Lasers and Masers
Arc They?”
All Senior, Junior, and Sophomore EE students interested in
joining the IEEE should attend
—

this

meeting.

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

The first meeting of the Photography Club will be held today
in Room 266 at 4:30 p.m. Officers
for this coming year will be
elected, and a budget will be
organized. New members are
welcome.

AIAA MEETING

There will be an open meeting of the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics at
4:00 Monday in Room 104 Parker
Engineering Building for all
those interested
or aerospace.

in aeronautics

Applications
Homecoming

for

the

Publicity

Contest will he available
at the Candy Counter. Entries can include oil
cloths, posters, and the
like. The contest is open
to all individuals and
groups. Areas will be chosen at time of application.
Applications should be
turned in to room 225,
with a $2 entrance fee, no
later than October 1. Entries must be up by October 4, and down by the 11.
Judging will take place on
October 5. Trophies will
be awarded at the dance
for first and second
places. Creativity is the
key not in this contest!
There will be no restrictions on size, money, or

material.

Gerald Gross

Metaphysical Pathos..

ROSH HASHONAH SERVICES

$oard

Spectrum

5)

(Cont’d from P. 6)

Another common response to
the problem of large numbers is
to cut back student enrollment
by “raising standards". This has
the obvious danger in our society
of creating an academic elite but
it also completely ignores the cs-

humane life, then 1 cannot see
how it is possible to rationalize
the exclusion of any person from
higher education. My personal
view is that there should be no
standards (which, by the way,
would include the abolishing of
financial standards) for admission
to the University but all who
want to attend and can stumble
onto campus should be welcomed

should be more than a place
where ideas and facts are transmitted, discovered, and explored
within the traditional framework
of the various academic disciplines. The University should also be an experimental community,
a microcosm of the larger society where the link between facts,
ideas, values, skills, action and

enter

organization are explored and experimented with. Not an artificial

mean even larger
well, so be it.

with the total University as a potential community, involving the

and

encouraged to

even

—

—

TF 6-4540

tion. If it is reasonable to define
the goals of liberal education as
the expansion of human consciousness and sensitivity in the
service of a more fulfilling and

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This issue is much larger than
the problem of meaningful and
quality education. The stakes arc
no less than the possibility of
creating the conditions for a
meaningful life for all men, a
really democratic society, unalienated human existence. If the
problems of number and complexity cannot be resolved within
the University setting how is it
possible to solve it in the larger
society. If a teacher and 500 students cannot fruitfully join the
crucial ideas and issues of our
time how can we ever expect the
larger society to join the issues of
the day in a democratic fashion
and proceed toward thoughtful
and humane action? No matter
how bleak the prospects or how

entire University population as
equals, where the stakes are high
and the decisions crucial. What
could be learned in this environment and about this environment
may well be the greatest contribution the University can make to

10% STUDENT
DISCOUNTS

deeply imbedded our metaphysical pathos we simply must face
and resolve these problems.

Under

seems to

the circumstances, it
me that the University

Hjindreds^cJ^tems^
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�is a definite lack of space in Norton Hall and he believes the administration has tried to retaliate against a few reckiless students. Alan Burden, Chairman of
the Union Board House Committee, reminded the Senate that the
student body was originally given
until January 1965 to improve the
condition of the lounge. This date
was later extended to June 1965.
Nevertheless, according to Mr.
Burden, the lounge was misused.
The resolution that the Senate
passed stated that the decision
of how the area be used should
be determined by the students,
the area should be re-converted
to a lounge, a committee to study
the situation will be set up, and
the responsibility for the present
situation is shifted from the administration to both students and
administration.

Student Senate
from P. 1)
man. He stated that radio WBFO
will this year present a series of
lectures on the Student Senate
and its activities. The proposed
calendar changes will be presented to the proper persons in the
beginning of October. A committee also took a survey of the parents of UB students concerning
alcoholic beverages on campus.
The results, however, are confidential. Further, efforts have been
made to lower the prices of the
food service and the bodkstore.
These have met with partial suc(Cont'd

cess.

Stewart Edclstein presented the
Commuter Relations Board report. The car pool commuter
board which was organized last
year, has been very successful.
Tentative plans forwarded by the
board include a Resident-Commuter Committee to coordinate the
activities of the residents and
commuters; a Research Committee, to investigate commuter
problems; a meal plan for commuters; and a “free hour,” during which classes will not be
scheduled for one or two hours
weekly so that commuters can
participate in extracurricular ac-

tivities.

President Deveaux then stated
that each Student Senator should

Friday, September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Carl Lavina, Senator from Arts
and Sciences, debates proposal
on center lounge in Norton
—Photo by M. Levine

in at least one committee, and went on to new business.
Carl Levine, Arts and Science

become active

Senator, stated that the administration, upon closing the center
lounge in Norton, violated student rights, in that the student
body should decide whether the
area should by used as a lounge
or as a “culture center.” There

FOLK FESTIVAL
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

the past sixteen years he has
lived in New York during which
time he has recorded several
albums and has appeared in numerous concerts. His music is as
much jazz as it is religious material. (He rarely sings secular
songs). He combines the intensity of religious spirituals with
the drive of jazz and the mood of

passed.

Linda Gunsberg forwarded a
resolution stating that intersession be lengthened by three days
be added to the calendar at another time. The motion was
passed.
The Student Senate meeting adjourned at 9:55 P.M. A coffee

hour followed.

rence and Miss Weisbrot are

music will also be the
of discussion Wednesday,
pt. 29, on the television proam “Dialing for Dollars.” Richd Lawrence, accompanied by
one of the campus talents appearFriday afternoon hootenanny, will appear at this time,
to discuss
and the’
whole vast spectrum of folk
music in general.
pic

ical songwriter Tom Paxton who
brought him to New York and
.
.
.
got him started m folk music.
He has recorded one album and
has appeared regularly at the
Gaslight Cafe in New York. His
style of singing personal love
songs has made him a rapidly
rising folk singer.
...

Richard
Weisbrot
charge of
for this

,

„

„

Lawrence and Frima
are co-chairmen in
the Folk Festival. Plans

unprecedented event
were begun early last semester;

the^estival(

The UB Hockey Team

will hold an organizational meeting Wednesday.
All those interested in
playing will please meet
promptly at 4 p.m. in the

Tower Lounge.

THIS
WILL

NOT
INTEREST
YOU

IF

you believe in ultra conservative

IF

you are a strict
conformist

IF

you are closed minded and bigoted

IF

you would definitely like to
improve your grades

IF
IF

you have a real desire to be a

IF

it is imperative that you
do well in college

methods of learning

(where learning is concerned)

better than average student
you are intelligent enough to
realize that you can improve

Just call him “Dapper Dan”
HE’S WEARING “ORLON”®-worsted wool
flannel Haggar Slacks. He wears them to
class, to the game and out on dates ...
and still he looks dapper. They’re styled with
the trim fit he wants in fine dress slacks.
Tailored in 70% "ORLON" acrylic-30%
worsted wool. "Orion” in the blend makes
these slacks hold their knife-edge crease and
shrug off wrinkles practically forever. No
wonder the gals go for "Dapper Dan”.
(5&gt;Du Font's Reg.

THEN READ ON
For one reason or another only 1 out of 10 students will
be able to qualify for this revolutionary, but proven,
method of self help. If you are selected the cost will be
minimal and within easy reach of anyone, new freshman
or grad student.
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Are you presently a subject for any other
research program?

op-

timistic about the success of the
event. Mr. Lawrence expressed
the general attitude: “The overall sentiment of the artists in
the show is to make the Festival
an annual event which will make
a name for the University as a
folk music and cultural center.”

NFolk

the blues,

.

A resolution presented by Carl
Levine stating that national fraternities and sororities should be
able to return to the campus was

approval by Union Board was
given in March. Both Mr. Law-

T.M.

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�Friday, September

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

24, 1965

AH HA I JUST LET SUDEWr-STMUEMT
THE ATMOSPHERE AT THE UNIFORMITY WITH
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CONSPIRACY OF HUMANITY WILL 6E
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GET 6000 6RADE5 AND, AFTER
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IT GIVES US GIRLS SUCH A FEElI'
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Remember rates are low aM weekend.
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�SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

Friday, September 24, 1965

GIANTS 81V FOR PENNANT
By

STEVEN OBERSTEIN

In a year in which two arms,
eight bats, empty seats, and a
team with no stars dominated the
National League, the San Francisco Giant?, just a year away
from being torn by dissention
and a key racial problem, look
like the class of the only truly
competitive major league.
The arms, which at this point
look a little worn, frayed, and
frostbitten, of course belong to
Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale
of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The
bats are the Cincinnati Reds, a
team which consistently started
a team whose worst hitters averaged between .270 and .280, which
was significantly higher than any
regular on the Mets or Yankees,
for example. The Milwaukee
Braves, who are forsaking good
German beer for Atlanta’s southern hospitality at the end of the
1965 season, had the misfortune
to play before little better than
Minor League crowds in their
lame duck year. It would have
made a better story than Gussie
Busch’s firing of Bing Devine,
last year’s Major League Executive of the Year, who put together
the 1964 World Champion St.
Louis Cardinals, if the Pittsburgh

CO.

■

*mD SA*Oi«S

Pirates could have won the pennant for two seasons.
First of all the powers that
govern the post season trip of
Major League baseball clubs to
Japan decided to forego the tour
this year because they felt that
the Pirates, who had been chosen
for the honor, weren’t representative of American baseball since
they do not possess any actual
superstars. That plus the fact that
Pittsburgh lost 24 of its first 33
games this year would have made
a lot of so-called experts hide
quietly in the corner until at
least Spring training next year.

All that is water over the
bridge now, though, because the
Giants have an almost insur-

of tenth place. Herman Franks
was chosen to manage the Giants
by owner Horace Stoneham because Franks knew the organization, having coached for both Leo

Durocher and Alvin Dark when
they were the Giants braintrusts,
and because he was on a friendly
basis with the Giants’ many Latin
and Negro players. After the
Dark fiasco in N. Y. when Alvin,
an educated, well-informed South
ern gentleman from Louisiana,
was publicly put on the spot for
his alleged mistreatment of some
of his players, Stoneham wanted
to be sure that there would be
no such incidents in 1965. Franks
had managed in the South American winter leagues and knew
enough Spanish to transmit his
thoughts to his Latin ballplayers
without an interpreter. He was
also the man who, after Leo
Durocher, was closest to Willie
Mays. Before he lifted one pitch-

mountable lead and should have er to pinch-hit, or platooned anyclinched the pennant by the time one, his position for the 1965 seawe go to press. How did they son was already ensured, although events haven’t proved
get there Should all the credit
him to be completely infallible.
go to the legendary Willie Mays
Orlando Cepeda, slugging first
and the much-abused Juan Marifachal, or was it basically a team baseman and the Bay Area’s
vorite ballplayer, had a knee opeffort? Also, what effect did Hereration over the winter. One
man Franks, a neophyte to the method that the Giants use to
stream of managing a Major get into shape was to walk from
their hotel to their practice
League team have?
fields at their spring training
Let’s go back to Spring trainhome in Phoenix, Arizona.
ing, when even Charles Finley Franks, of course, could be seen
and his mule thought they saw walking with is Latin ballplayers
a silver-lining to the bleak reality every day. Finally, Cepeda felt so
good that he dared the fifty year
Id Franks to race him. Since Herman was a lead-footed catcher
0»'CifAi &gt;fC'»f
J
during his playing days, this
didn’t seem like too much competition for the huge Puerto
Rican and his weak knee. Franks
consented, Cepeda re-injured his
knee, and has been at bat less
than thirty times all season.

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Even before spring training,
Franks had agreed to a trade
which sent rookie outfielder Jose
Cardenal to the newly-named California Angels in exchange for
rokie catcher Jack Hiatt. Not only
did the Giants lose a promising,
exciting Latin ballplayer, but
they practically admited their
mistake when less than a month
after the season began, they
traded veterans Harvey Kuenn,
EM Bailey, and Bob Hendley to
the Chicago Cubs for catcher
Dick Bertell and outfielder Len
Gabrielson, who at the time
seemed litle more of a throw-in.
Lefthander Bill Hands was
brought up from the Minor
Leagues at the same time to replace Hendley in the starting rotation. His failure enabled the
Giants to sign the gutty legendary
Warren Spahn when the Mets cut
him loose. Spahnie has pitched
creditably—for a forty-four year
old—as merely a stop-gap measure. In another trade the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Giants exchanged weak-hitting shortstops
with the Bucs obtaining another
Puerto Rican Jose Pagan for the
anemic-hiting Dick Schofield. Also, lefthander Bill Henry was
snapped by the Cincinnati Reds
to San EYancisco in a straight
player deal for fellow reliever

Jim Buffalo.

Budget not up to City Club, young man? Ask forWesboro Shoes $8.95 to $10.95.
Wouldn't you like to be In our shoes? Most of America is. International Shoe Co., St. Louis, Mo.

Admittedly, the Giants got rid
of Kuenn’s and Bailey’s big salaries before they had completely
lost their market value, and the
trade for Henry was a necessity
because Japanese pitcher Masanori Murakami was an unknown
quantity early in the season as
a late inning reliever since he
was both a rookie and a southpaw, as well as being the only
member of his race in the Majors at this time. Gabrielson also
surprised by winning the regular
left field job when Matty Alou
couldn’t hit enough to hold it.
However, Schofield (aside from
being a great fielder) and Bertell
have done little more than take
up spots on the roster. Also, why

didn’t the Giants trade away more
of their young Latin players before they hired a man who was
especially well-versed in handling
players of that extraction?
There are other oddities which
could not have been taken into
account before the season started.
Bob Shaw, a fair short reliever,
was given another shot at a starting assignment when bespectacled rookie Frank Linzy began
piling up saves as well as a fantastic earned run average. Shaw
has already won sixteen games
to become the team’s number two
starter, and Linzy has done more
than the Giants ever expected,
winning seven games and saving
at least fifteen at this writing.
This is extremely noteworthy because pennants are notoriously
lost—not won—ny rookie relief
pitchers who are unable to bear
up under the pressure of a tight
late season race. Cepeda’s incapacitation allowed Willie McCovey to move back to his natural
position first base, and Stretch
has more than bounced back after
an off-year last season. He has
already hit thirty-seven home
runs this year to rank second behind the redoutable Willie Mays.

top utility infielder in the game,
as well as a clutch pinch-hitter.
Second-line pitchers Gaylord
Perry, Ron Herbel, and Bob Bolin

will all win between ten and
twelve games before the end of
the season as spot starters and
long relievers. It is impossible
for a club to win a pennant without the pitching depth that the
aforementioned have provided.

Of course, we’ve saved the best
for last
Willie Mays, Juan
Marichal, and most important of
all, the Giants’ fantastic late season winning streak. Willie-theWonder has been just that, hitting close to fifty home runs,
knocking in over one hundred
runs, and battig well over .300.
Not many player ca lay claim
to these figures in one season,
but a living inspiration to his
teammates, Mays, has done it
time and again, as well as playing
just about the best center field in
baseball. Marichal has to be
ranked among the top two or
three right-handed pitchers, regardless of what you think of his
bat hurling talents. A twenty
game winner for the third
straight time, Marichal should be
a big winner for many years to
—

come.

As for the other Giant regulars,
young Jesus Alou has been a wonder in right field, hitting over
.300 all year. Jim Ray Hart, who
had a poor first half, has come on
strongly both at bat and at third
base since the All-Star game, as
he did last season in his rookie
year. It should be noted that
Hart’s bat really began to smoke
after he was suspended for a day
by Manager Franks for breaking
the curfew law. Maybe Herman
really does have a knack for this
game after all. Second baseman
Hal Lanier and catcher Tom Haller have both had off-years at
the plate, but Franks has stuck
with them all season, and they
have been valuable as all-around
hustling ballplayers. It would be
unfair to speak of the regulars
without giving special mention to
Jim Davenport, who relinquished
his regular third baseman’s job
a year ago to the heavier hitting
Hart, but who now ranks as the

Golfers

Now the piece de resistance:
the winning streak. After the
Marichal-Roseboro incident, the
Giants and Dodgers both stumbled
until conditions quieted down.
Then, however, the Giants caught
fire. The way that the National
League pennant race shaped up
with only thirty games left, any
one of the five teams previously
mentioned could have emerged
victorious if they had a similar
run such as the Giant’s fourteen
game winning streak. To the
victor goes the spoils, however,
and in all probability it will be
the Giants against the injuryplagued Minnesota Twins who finished sixth last season with
basically the same team. Which
all goes to prove that they must
be doing something right, although the Giants, behind Marichal’s strong right arm, will upset the applecart in the World
Series.

Take Opener

By MIKE GINSBERG

The

Golf Team successfully
opened its 1965 season Monday,
defeating St. Bonaventure 15-3.
In winning this match, the golfers avenged last season’s loss to
the Bonnies. That defeat had
been particularly bitter as it halted a thirty match victory streak
extending over three years. It
had also proved to be the only
loss of the season. The nucleus
of the team which compiled an
8-1 record last season was lost
through graduation. This raised
fears over the ability of a team
composed chiefly of untried
players to approach last season’s
performance. This year’s squad
includes eighteen new men.
Monday’s impressive victory over

St. Bonaventure quelched these
fears.
The match was characterized
by a well balanced team effort.
Six UB golfers scored. Tony Santelli captured individual medalist honors as he fired a two over
par 73. Santelli
and Harold
Menchell led all scorers with
three points apiece, Mike Lawler
tallied two and one-half points,
as did Bill Ahrendtsen. EM Nusblatt and Doug Bernard each
added two points to round out
the scoring.

A match was played at home,
against Canisius College on Wed
nesday, as the young UB golf
team sought to build a winning
streak of its won. See next week’s
Spectrum

for results.

INTRAMUBALS
(Cont’d from P. 20)

Matches will be played as follows: Singles—Monday and Wednesday at 3 and 4 p.m. and Doubles Matches on Friday at 3 and

4

SUPPORT |

p.m.
Golf

The Intramural Golf Tournament Will be held at the Town
of Amherst Golf Course on Friday, Oct. 1, 1965. Entries must
be submitted to the Intramurals
office by Tuesday, Sept. 28. Pairings and starting times will be
posted at the Intramural Office
on Thursday, Sept. 30, 1965.
Starting time for the tournament
will be 1:00 p.m.

THE

BULLS

L|

�'

Friday,

September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVENTEEN

Frosh Open Season Today
Tiny Bulls Take a Trip on

The Hudson
By MIKE DOLAN
This weekend is the home opener for the Bulls of UB, but what
about the freshman team? This
is a small group of young men
who, day in and day out, go out
there and knock heads with the
varsity ballplayers, trying desperately to get them up for each
Saturday. In many cases, they
are battling for a future position
on “the” team (the varsity). As
is frequently seen, they are the
ones who are pitting their speed
and youthful zeal against varsity brawn and experience. Yet
—why is so little known about

-

HARRIEBS FACE SYRACUSE
—

Face Plebes

them? On the practice field they
are on a par with the varsity,
however, in the papers, they receive little or no recognition.
As the majority of us know,
last year’s frosh squad was the
finest in UB’s history, compiling
a fine 5-1 record. This is also
demonstrated by their representation on the varsity team. In addition, there were a large number
ineligible to return because of
academic reasons—a problem not
encountered at some football

schools.
Well, this year should be no exception for the Baby Bulls. As

"Help"
Frosh Cross-Country
runners needed. Any freshman
who would like to run Cross-Country please report to Coach Emery
Fisher today at 4 p.m. in the basement of the locker room of Clark
Gym.
The varsity Cross-Country team
opens their season against Syracuse University tomorrow at 11
a.m. on the UB home course

part of UB’s buildup program we
have what looks to be a fine
freshman team. Coach Wolfe says
“they look pretty good”—this
being a conservative outlook.
They have a couple of crackerjack quarterbacks, some fine receivers, and, as a whole, the
team is shaping up in fine fashion. A repeat of last year’s record is not at all out of the picture. As a matter of fact, they
just may go all the way.
Some of the outstanding players—those who have looked real
good up to date, as mentioned by
Coach Wolfe, are the following:
Cleveland
C—Weslowski, Jack
Hill, N. Y.
G
Kowaleswki, Tom Detroit,
Mich.
E—Embow, Bob—Hamburg, N. Y.
E —Doherty, John—New Bedford,

which is the Grover Cleveland
Golf Course. The second meet
of the season, also a home meet,
will be held Tuesday at 4 p.m.

PRO
(Cont’d

.

from P.

.

against our two home town rivals, Canisius and Buffalo State.

Present indications in practice
show that lettermen Dick Genau
and Jack Kerns (this year’s recently elected captain) will be
among the top prospects of this
year’s’ varsity. The outcome of
the season will have a great
bearing on our sophomores and
how quick they become adjusted
to the greater distance of the
varsity, course (4Vi miles) from
the shorter 2*6 miles of the
freshman course.

COLLEGE

.

20)

World Champs this week, with
Mr. Fullback leading the way,
and Ryan throwing often enough
to keep the St. Louis secondary
alert.

Los Angeles 33, Chicago 7—
The young Rams will break out
this week and trounce the hopeless Bears. A team with as much
talent as Los Angeles will come
alive at home against the Bears.
Green Bay 23, Baltimore 21—
Mass,
G—Sabo, Don—Johnstown, Pa. In this squeaker, the difference
T—Kuzmitski, Ken
Metheun, will be the enthusiasm of the
partisan Green Bay crowd. Last
Mass.
T—Thomas, Jeff—Syracuse, N. Y. year’s games both went to BaltiQB—Murtha, Mick
Endicott, more on missed field goals, and
the Packers will be extra-careful
N. Y.
QB—Manson, Dennis
Buffalo, here, Johnny Unitas was too hot
last week. Here, he’ll run out
N. Y.
HB—Richner, Dave—Greenhurst, of gas—and luck, against the
tough Packers.
N. Y.
Minnisota 14, Detroit 7—Two
HB—Sves, Steve—Endicott, N. Y.
HB—Walker, Art—Medina, N. Y. tough defenses will meet, with
FB—Murphy, Tom
Johnstown, Minnisota's Frank Tarkenton
showing why he is one of the top
N, Y.
signal-callers in the league. Joe
Those completing the freshman Schmidt and his gang won’t be
roster are as follows:
able to stop "the scrambler” as
Ends
Guards
Baltimore did last week, and the
Hayden, Tom
Vikings will come out with a
Mason, Hale
Mosher, Jim
Tuzynski, Joel
toughly fought victory.
Washington 21, Dallas 17—In
Wilbur, Curtis Zameroski, T.
John
Lupeinski,
Miller Jeff
an upset, the Redskins will squeak
Walters, Greg
by the rookie-laden Cowboys. TayPrzybyeein, J.
pros.
Kommer, M.
lor and Mitchel are
Tackles
Any team with 5 players from
Arizona Can’t lose two in a row!
O’Hara, C.
See you next week!
Measer, Mike
a e
art
Kowalski, Mike
’
Kovack ’ YJohn
Riccelli, Joe
Vanik, Ralph
Quarterbacks
Coupas, Nick
Halfbacks
Bazinet, Ken
Schwartz, Tom
Fullbacks
Ebling, Jim
Drankowski, C
Danescu, Ray
Luciano, Dan
Mariehone, R.

...

(Cont’d from P. 20)
The always dangerous Spartan*
will be tough for anyone this
year and may catch Rip Engle
and his boys looking ahead to
Syracuse and the Lambert Trophy.

—

—

—

W

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A close contest down to the
wire with the home-advantage
giving Penh State the edge.
Purdue 29, Notre Dame 27—
After last week’s 48-6 drubbing
of Cal, the Fighting Irish have
everyone saying that
they've
taken up where they left off last
year. And they probably have.
Zloch looks like another seniorsensation like John Huarte was
a year ago, and Eddy and Wolski
complement a powerhouse of
fense. But this could very well
be the Boilermakers' year to
howl. The smell of roses has
never been so strong in Lafayette, as the Irish will find out
when they play there tomorrow.
Shades of U.S.C., as Ara’s boys
become victims of my first (and
probably my last) upset of the
week.
Other games of interest:
Boston Col. . 28 Villanova
L.S.U.
17 Rice
Syracuse
35 Miami, Fla
Stanford
18 Navy
Pittsburgh
14 Oklahoma
Texas
21 Texas Tech.
—

6

0
13
14

7
6

.

The frosh play essentially the
same schedule as the previous
year with their opener being this
Friday against the plebes of
Army down at West Point. Two
trouble teams could be Navy—last year’s only loss ,and Syracuse, a usual pride of the East
and power of the nation. The
schedule is rounded out by Colgate, Manlius and Ithaca. The
first home game is Saturday, Oct.
30 against Manlius and the following Friday the frosh are
home again—November 5 against
Ithaca.

—Photo by I. M*kuch

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�Friday, September 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

PREVIEW
TAMPA
DEFENSIVE BACKFIELD FACING

TAMPA (OFFENSE)

LE “Gary Rapp, So., 208

LT “John Yates, Sr„ 235
LG Doug Erwin, So., 215
C Doug Erwin, So., 215
RG *Gary Hallauer, So., 210
RT Mike Farley, So,, 235
RE "Dan Cogan, Sr., 208
Val Johnson, Sr., 175
QB
LHB Wayne Blount, Jr., 197
RHB *Jim Underhill, Jr., 220
im Perry, Sr., 180
FB

ANOTHER TEST FROM SPARTANS
fensive backfield from the pre-

By ARNIE NATHANSON

The University of Tampa Spartans are hoping to have their best
year since 1947 when they were
undefeated, untied, and unscored
upon, winning their only game
48-0. After their 16-12 victory
over McNeese State last week
this seems highly improbable.
Led by returning quarterback
Val Johnson, last year’s team
broke seven school records on
(heir way to compiling a 4-6 wonlost record. However, it should
not be forgotten that last year's
Spartan team faced such stab
warts as the University of Mississippi, both Northeastern and
Louisiana, land
Southwestern
Wofford' Over the last two years
they are currently riding a three
game winning streak with victories over Wofford, Western
Carolina, and McNeese State.
The Spartans are anxious to devour our Bulls as their fourth
straight victim.

NOTES

Guard TED CIMONS

up

Tampa Back PERRY
1142 yards through the
the

team

air,

and
speedy flankerback from Miami,
is a top notch runner, pass receiver, and an exceptional defensive player who may start
both ways. Underhill led the
team in scoring and rushing last
fall. His only weakness was his
blocking which he improved this
spring and the pro scouts rate
him as a fine prospect. Blount,
a 61”, 197 pound junior from
Columbia, Alabama, broke into
the starting backfield last year
and developed into one of Tampa's best running backs. He was
second leading
the Spartans’
ground gainer last fall with 326
yards gained for a 4.1 yards per
Perry,

captain

Spartan eleven lies in their line.
They lost both starting ends and
tackles from last year’s squad,
and they are searching desperately for able replacements.
The UB Bulls, coming out of
the BC game with only minor
injuries, will be able to test their
questionable offense against the
inexperienced Spartan line. The
UB defense, which was particularly impressive in the second
half against Boston College,
should be able to hold the Tampa
running game in check, but can
expect a stern test of their de-

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This is the first

AVERAGE WEIGHTS

game between Tampa and Buf-

The aparent weakness of the

The assets of the Tampa eleven
lie mainly in their starting backficld which has returned completely intact. Their probable
should instarting backfield
clude star quarterback Val Johnson, halfback Wayne Blount and
Jim Underhill, and flankerback
John Perry, Johnson, a 5'10,” 175
pound senior from Lakeland, Fla.,
set the school record last year
for passes completed with 9, and
for total passing yardage, rolling

,!

fense. If the Buffs’ offense is
going to “explode” this year,
Tampa appears to be the ideal
opponent.

carry average.

SUNY

*

dominantly passing Tampa of-

FIUMOU

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this ad and you get personalized free gift)

falo. The teams will meet again,
at Tampa, on Nov. 12, 1966,
, . . The expected attendance for
this game, UB’s home opener,
should be in the neighborhood
of 10,000. . . . Tomorrow has
been designated as “Dr. Furnas
Day,” to honor UB prexy Dr.
Clifford C. Furnas for his support and contributions to UB
athletics during his tenure as
president. Dr. Furnas became
chancellor of UB on Sept. 1,
1954, and is retiring on Sept. 1,
1966.

Buffalo

Tampa Back BLOUNT

BUFFALO (DEFENSE)

LE ’Gerry LaFountain, Sr., 220
LT ’Jim Duprey, Sr., 220
LG ’Bill Taylor. Jr., 230
RG ’Russ MacKellar, Jr., 210
RT *E. Greenard Poles, Sr., 220
RE ’Craig Helenbrook, Sr., 210
LLB *oe Garofalo, Sr., 205
RLB ’Joe Holly (Capt.), Sr., 210
LHB ’Dan Sella, Jr., 175
RHB ’Fred Geringer, Sr., 165
S ’Nick Sapuana, Jr., 180

Tampa

Line
Backs

215 Line
173 Backs

Team

204

216
-193

Team

Oct. 2 —At Massachusetts
Oct. 9 —Boston University
Oct. 16—Richmond
Oct. 23—Dayton
Oct; 30—At Holy Cross
Nov. 6 —At Delaware'
Nov. 13—Colgate
Nov. 20—At Villanova

All Home Game
Field—1:30 p.m.

at Rotary

�Friday, September

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

24, 1965

BC BESTS BULLS, 18-6
EAGLE AERIAL ATTACK
KEY TO BULL DOWNFALL
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
Although Boston College may
be breathing somewhat easier
after subduing UB, 18-6, in the
opener for both schools at Chestnut Hill Saturday, all is not
gloom on the Bulls’ campus
either.

After reviewing films of the

game Coach Offenhamer said op-

timistically,

“Considering

the

greenness of
we
our offense,
were very
pleased and see a great deal of

opposition and the

Our defense should
hold up while our offense should
get better. I don’t think we’ll
play anybody better than Boston College, and we did outscore
them in the second half.”
potential.

This analysis summarized the
tilt quite accurately as a Golden
Eagle contingent much deeper
in size, speed and experience
than the determined Bulls scored
a decisive but not overly impressive triumph.
Despite the BC beef advantage
on the line, the touted Bull defensive wall did an effective job
in limiting the Eagles to a mere
126 yards on the ground. When
it came to the air lanes, however,
things weren’t quite as rosy for
the Bulls, The polished Eagle
aerial game inflicted the deepest claw marks on the Bulls, who
left something to be desired in
their secondary as quarterback
Ed Foley connected with his

elusive receivers time and time
again.
On the game’s first play from
scrimmage on the UB 20, lightning-heeled sophomore Paul Della-Villa managed to maneuver
himself free behind the Bull secondary, which is about as desirable a situation as hitting your
drive out of bounds in a sudden
death playoff with Arnold Palmer, and only his circus catch
of a Foley pass which caused him
to lose stride prevented a BC
six-pointer.

Foley,
the
architect
who
mapped the blueprints for Bull
destruction with his adroit signal-calling, completed two more
throws as BC marched to the 10.
Four plays later fullback Bill

Donovan

culminated the drive
by hurdling over the goal line
from a foot out. Marty Dimezza
then split the uprights to give
the Eagles a lead they never relinquished, 7-0.
After a rash of fumbles prevented either club from making
any marked progress until well
into the second quarter .the win-

BC was not to be denied on the
following play, however, a perfectly executed deep reverse, as
rabbit-quick Dick DeLeonardis,
aided by a bone-rattling John

Leone block, skirted left end for
the tally. The score rose to 15-0
as Foley swept right end and
just managed to tuck himself into
the corner of the end zone.
The second half matched two
adamant defenses which were
largely responsible for
their
team’s fourth-period scoring.

The .Bulls mustered theirWnost
serious scoring threat
in
the final stanza by moving from
the BC 31 to the 12 after gaining possession on a wild fourthdown hike.
The drive soured there, how

The 38 yard gain to the UB
42 gave the hosts field position
early, an advantage they con-

ever, but the Bulls regained possession on the 10 only moments
later when Captain Joe Holly
blocked Joe DeVito’s punt at-

trolled for the remainder of the
half.

tempt:

Rick Wells, the poised sophomore quarterback in his first
Varsity assignment, then bootlegged around right end and
knifed his way into the end zone
to make the score 15-.

Halfback TOM HURD
ners capitalized on a costly Bull
bobble as the ball was pried loose
from fullback Denny Przykuta's
graps on the UB 23 and BC lineman Jib Chevillot emerged from
the ensuing pileup with the pigskin.
After the versatile Foley found
running room to the 14 and
hearlded sophomore Brendan McCarthy muscled his way to a first
down on the 8, the deceptive BC
quarterback drifted back and
arched a strike into the end zone
which slithered through end
Gordie Kutz’s fingers.

The extra point attempt, which
could have brought the Bulls
within striking distance of the
Bay Staters, never materialized
as a mix-up at the snap resulted
in a fumble at the line of scrimmage.

The hosts closed the scoring
late in the game when Leone
snared a stray Wells pass deep
in UB territory to set up a 33yard field goal by Dimezza.

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End JIM DUNN
STATISTICS
First downs
Yards rushing

Yards passing
Passes int. by
Passes
Punts

Fumbles lost
Yards penalized

UB

BC

8
86
25
2
4-13
533
8
20

16
131
135
4
10-23
336
2
41

BULL SESSION . . . According
to the coaching staffs demanding
“grade" system, Denny Burden

and Bruce MacKellar received the
highest offensive

grades

while

Tom Ridolfi and E. G. Poles
topped the defense . , , Foley
was shaken up when Gerry LaFountain and “Bingo" Duprey
smashed him into Ihe ghound late
in the game . . . Wells and Tom
Hurd, ex-high school rivals at
Ithaca and Elmira Southside respectively, showed a great deal of

,
potential for sophomores .
Boston College backfield
field might be one of the school’s
greatest in two years since Della
Villa, DeLeonardis and McCarthy
are all sophomores , . . Tailback
Jim Webber remains on
the

The

doubtful list for tomorrow’s home
with, Tampa . . . The
coaching staff considers Tampa
similar in style to the Marshall
squad which upset the Bulls the
last two seasons.
opener

�Friday, Saptember 24, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWENTY

a®®®

�

X

1
®®*

==4t===6===^===£====h^
INTRAMURALS:
Teams Set Foi
Grid Leagues

SPORTS CIRCLE
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

AN OPEN LETTER TO
THE ATHLETIC DEPT.

The

UB

intramural

Comment’: Only if they wish a lot. The attendance
game has been disappointing to say the least, and
it has recently come to our attention that the student
body is not the only cause. The athletic department and
their ridiculous practices must shoulder some of the
blame.

at UB

A few days after last week’s edition of the Spectrum
press, a graduate student approached me and
told me a story which was difficult to believe. He informed me that, as a married student, when he decided
to take his wife to a game at Rotary Field, he had to
purchase a reserved seat for her, enter through separate
gates, and then scramble once inside in an effort to find
each other so that they could sit together in the student
section. THIS IS WRONG. At most other schools with
an expanding football program, married students are
taken into consideration, and their spouses are admitted
to the games free of charge. UB is rapidly building up
a reputation for first class football why can’t they
manage a stadium in the same manner?

went to

The fraternity leagues
formed as follows:

were

Tuesday League

Alpha Epsilon Pi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Alpha Kappa Psi
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Beta Sigma Rho
Gamma Phi
Phi Epsilon Pi

Thursday League

1. Sigma Alpha Mu
2. Alpha Phi Delta
3. Alpha Sigma Phi
4. Theat Chi

victory.

Hi there, sports fans! I’m sorry
that last year’s professional prognosticator won’t be
picking the games this year. The
staff felt it was necessary to rid
him of this influential position,
and made him sports editor. So
from now on, the danger will be
confined to the other end of this
to report

page.

In the future, I will be trying
my luck in forecasting the pro
games. There were a few minor

and
some surprising
scores in last week’s action.

upsets

In the NFL, Baltimore surprised a lot of people by trouncing Minnesota, behind Johnny
Unitas, 35-16. Detroit showed a
real stiff defense against the
Rams, in blanking tlie Angeleno’s
20-0; and no one expected the
San Francisco 49’ers to score 52
points against the supposedly revitalized Bears. Of course, the
big upset of the week was in
Philadelphia, where the Eagles,
led by Tim Brown, upset the
tough St. Louis Cardinals 34-27.

Here are the picks:
I

mJ

AFL: Buffalo 28, New York 20.
The Bills are just too tough at
home, and may end the home season undefeated. The Jets, how-

ever, will give the Buffalonians
the expression) a scare,

(excuse

with Joe Namath, Bake Turner,
and company waking up.

The stadium is not beautiful, but it does not have

All that remains is an urging to all loyal UB supporting to go to the game tomorrow and cheer for the
Bulls, regardless of the restrictions imposed by the
Athletic Department. Maybe we can beat that press
release which predicted an attendance of 10,000. And
maybe a few extra cheers will lead to a resounding

By STEVE

CHICK ARNOLD

'

to be as long as it is functional, but it is not that either.
We are not trying to say that a new one should be built;
that would be a frightful, flagrant waste of money now

Now that we have gotten that out of our system,
Saturday’s game with Boston
a comment is due
College. The Eagles struck fast and hard, virtually stunning the Bulls sturdy defensive unit. The UB secondary,
severely undermanned, never did recover from the initial
shock, and BC quarterback Ed Foley was able to complete his passes almost at will throughout the first half.
This is not meant as a slap at the plyaing or coaching,
but merely as a statement which is attempting to reveal
the fact that a 5’9” defender is going to find tough going
against a 6’4” end, whether the opposition is Boston
College, Tampa or even Slippery Rock State Teacher’s
College. An extra effort is needed by these UB defenders
in order to keep these huge receivers from turning a
UB win into a rout for the other side. We hope that the
Bulls’ defenders will take this as a word of encouragement, and not as a knock, which it definitely is not.

By

This week, all teams in both
leagues will have lost their opening game jitters, and the two pro
leagues will begin to show some
form of consistency among the
leaders. I’ll do my best, and keep,
my fingers crossed all weekend.

5. Pi Lambda Tau
6. Phi Kappa Psi
7. Alpha Phi Omega

-

that the new campus is in the works. But we have heard
a rumor (or is it a rumor?) that the supposedly condemned Rotary Field stands will be moved to the new
campus. Being that this is in the form of an open letter
to the Athletic Department, we sincerely hope that they
will see fit to reply to what has been said and dispell
student fears that when they return to UB for Homecoming in the future, they will not be forced to sit on
the same stands which rise grotesquely above the turf
of Rotary Field.

PICKS

football

leagues have been formed and
it looks like it is going to be another exciting season in the
world of intramural football. Alpha Epsilon Pi, the champion of
last year’s fraternity leagues has
the capacity to make this their
sixth straight championship. Even
though they lost three seniors,
Bob Kohansky, Billy Mainwald,
and George Cole, ABPi still has
a strong team and has the potential to win another championship.

FEARLESS
FEIGIN

CHICK'S

By MARTIN JAFFE

News item; “The expected attendance for this
Saturday’s University of Buffalo home opener against
Tampa University is 10,000.”

This brings us to another question. Why are students not allowed to sit between the 35 yard lines on the
students side of the field? The better seats in the
student section are sold to alumni a situation which must
be remedied if more students are going to attend the
games. , The Athletic Department should certainly be
the first ones to realize that you simply do not see
if your seat is on the ten yard line. We realize that the
sale of these seats is an important source of revenue for
the school and Athletic Department, but then why is
there a $47.00 per term Student Activities Fee? This
must be rectified if more students are to come out to the
football games at dear old Rotary Field, which leads us
to the question of Rotary Field itself.

GRID FORECASTS

■ i-*~—
'

.

...

—

w,
-

-

v. H v- •
•ySv-S's-.'
T
f

_

- -

-

.u—»-

*

'

■

-

TEKE VS. AEPi

The Independent Leagues were
formed as follows:
Wednesday 3:00 p.m
1. Warriors

2. Rookies
3. Vikings
4. Zygotes

5. Newsman Club
6. Stochastics

Wednesday 4:00 p.m
1. The Moon Platoon

2. M, Dolans
3. Raccoons

4. Untouchables
5. C-Men

6. G.D.l.’s

Tennis

The Intramural Tennis Tournament will begin on Monday, Sept.
27, 1965. A team may enter a
maximum of eight singles players
and four doubles teams. A player
may compete in both singles and
doubles tournaments. The tournament will consist of a single elimination competition in both singles
and doubles.
(Cont'd on P.

16)

Denver 24, Boston 13—Cookie
will show he’s a better ball player than he showed last week
against Buffalo. ParUli is getting
old, and the Pats are in need of
a spunky quarterback. It looks
like their first victory will remain in the future.
Houston 32, Oakland 18—One
great quarterback is plenty. The
Oilers have George Glanda. With
Don Trul standing by, the boys
from Houston will be too tough
for the disappointing Raiders.
San Diego 21, Kansas City 10
The Chargers came up with rookie
Gene Foster last week, and with
Hadl. Alworth, and the boys all
healthy now, the Chiefs will be
completely outclassed.
NFL: San Francisco 27, Pittsburgh 14—The Stealers showed
nothing last week against Green
Bay and will show little more
against the 49ers. With John
David Crow healthy. San Francisco this year will shake its
“doormat of the league” image.
Philadelphia 20, New York 10
The Giants will finally score a
few, but not enough to overcome
the boiling Eagles. Last week’s
impressive upset of St. Louis will
be all that’s necessary to get
them past the Giants. Snead will
pick apart the N. Y. secondary
easily without Erich Barnes,
—

Cleveland 27, St. Louis 20—
The Cards suffered an upset last
week, and the Browns didn’t look
too impressive in beating Washington. But Jim Brown cannot
be held down for two weeks in
a row. The Browns will look like
(Cont’d on P. 17)

FEIGIN

Well fans, another college football season is upon us and “Fearless Feigin” returns for another
year, by popular demand. Each
week, in this space, I will give
you my expart insight into the
major collegiate battles across
the nation every Saturday. My
colleague next door, Chick Arnold, will handle the professional
ranks, replacing Richard Drandoff who was demoted to the
job of Sports Editor. One thing
you will notice that is different
from last year is that I will not
be predicting the outcome of the
Bulls’ games. Various threats on
my life have forced me to exclude them.
Oregon State 28, Iowa 22—The
Beavers got a taste of Big Ten

blood (Illinois) last week and
will be out for more of the same
tomorrow. This game will be a
duel between two passing QB’s
with State’s Paul Brothers getting the nod over talented but
inconsistent Gary Snook of the
Hawkeyes in a wild aerial contest.

Nebraska 54, Air Force, 6—
Strictly no contest here. The
Cornhuskers are solid at every
position and should walk away
with the number one ranking.
The cheating scandal has left
the Falcons in worse shape than

the New York Giants, and that’s
pretty bad. They’ll be lucky to
win a game this year.
Kentucky 27, Mississippi 13—
This game brings together the
two dark horses of the powerful
SEC. The edge belongs to the
Wildcats, who are always at their
best early in the season. The Ole
Miss dynasty is crumbling, and
if they don’t plug that hole ' at
QB they may not even match
last year’s 6-4 record with their
killer schedule.
Army 27, VMI 12—The Black
Knights are in for a very long
season if their game with Ten-

nessee is

any indication. This
game with their punchless cousins
from the South will give them a
chance to regroup their forces
Coach Dietzel will have to have
a healthy Barofsky to go along
with his staunch defense if he

wants a winning season.

Alabama 42, Tulane 0 The
Crimson Tide may have blown
the SEC crown when Georgia
passed for that two-point conversion, but they still have the
best team in the South. Sloan and
Co. should have a picnic with
—

helpless Tulane.
Slippery Rock 4, Maryland
State 1—A high scoring game featuring two strong teams with
pro-style attacks. Pay special attention to the time-outs where
consensus
All-American water
boy Gungadin Cohen meets head
with
on
All-Conference trainer
“Cuts” Kowski. Last year, at
half-time, “Cuts” successfully re
moved 2 out of 3 appendixes
equipped with only a butcher
knife and Singer sewing machine
Penn State 20, Michigan State
19—The Nittany Lions picked a
tough opponent to open their ’65
season, and their inexperienced
linemen may suffer because of it
(Cont’d on P. IT

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STATE

PAY CUT

BOSTON

M
ga—g——i
SB

page

IB

pane

!l

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY,

VOLUME 16

PREVIEW

SEPTEMBER

,

,

,

NO. 2

17, 1965

Health Committee
Reverses Decision On
Compulsory Insurance
“Hues and Cries” of
Students Affect Move
By LORRETTA ANGELINE
The Student Health Plan, made
compulsory for all full-time undergraduate students, is once
again being administered on a
voluntary basis. The decision to
revert to the former policy was
made by the Health Committee
after various “hues and cries”
arose from full-time students who
did not desire extra coverage.
Dr. Paul Hoffman, Director of
the Health Service, reported that
the initial decision to make all
insurance policies uniform was
issued to insure that all students
would have health insurance. In
the past there have been students
who have carried no protection

at all.

necessary. It is supplemented by
the utilization of community services such as diagnostic laboratory services and medical consultation. The SUNYAB plan also
has no minimum income requirement, as is found in Blue Cross
plans.
Dr. Claude Puffer, the vicepresident of Business Affairs de-

cided with whom the student
coverage would be carried after
careful consideration by the Student Health Committee of different policies offered by various
companies and their respective
prices. This Committee is made
of representatives of the Deans
of the Schools of Medicine.

Dr. Hofman felt there were
other advantages to this policy,
such as the minimizing the bookkeeping and providing of the
coverage of medicine and doctor
bills for local students as well
as for out of town students which
Blue Shield doesn’t provide for.
“This policy is not like any other
because it was writen specifically
for students at the University of
Buffalo by supplementing our
services,” Dr. Hoffman stated.

Faculty-Senate Comm.
Suggests Plan For
Student-Faculty
Administration Forum

The Health Committee, which
acts in an advisory capacity makes
recommendations to the VicePresident of Health Affairs, the
Dean of the School of Medicine,
and the Director of the Health
Service on various questions, also
felt that a uniform policy would
be advantageous to the school
and the students. However, so
many students did not desire
coverage of the student health
plan, that the decision to make
it compulsory was changed on
September 9.

lems and concerns common to
students, faculty and administration members. At the present
there is no consistent means of
communication among these
groups, which often arrive at
conflicting solutions to problems
concerning them all.

Under the Student Health Plan,
the student is covered at home,
at school or while traveling, 24
hours a day throughout the school
year. The benefits are effective
September 3, 1966. The Health
Service offers ambulatory medical
care and infirmary care when

Student Book Exchange permits students to set their own selling

knowned chemists and steadfast

humanitarians, address a gathering Monday evening in the Millard Fillmore Room in Norton
Hall. Dr. Pauling, who has won
the Nobel Prize twice, once in
1956 for chemistry and again in
1962 for peace, chose to speak
on world affairs, which he felt to
be a more crucial topic at this
time than any chemistry lecture
he

could

give.

After defining “Science” as a
he urged
research for truth,
affairs
at
world
look
that people
scientifically. This would involve
searching
four necessary steps;
of the
for facts; consideration
resaid facts, without prejudice;

by

B.

Wynn*

The Faculty-Senate Committee
on Student Affairs has recently
suggested a plan for the creation of a Student-Faculty-Administration Forum to discuss prob-

‘'Communication between students, faculty and administration is recognized as an important concern within the modern
University,” a report by Studentever, when one views the avail-

able vehicles for such interaction
on this campus it becomes clear
that there is no forum for discussion by all three groups of
common problems and concerns.
There is little doubt that the
same issues are considered in
(Cont’d on P. 10)

Birthdates
Student Book Exchange
On I.D. Cards Trades Over 700 Books
Accepted Proof
EILEEN TEITLER

Birthdates will be added to
ID cards during the week of
September 27-31 in the basement
of Foster Hall. In order to have
his birthdate typed on the 196566 card, a student must present
his birth certificate, a copy of
his birth certificate, or his driver’s license. No other identification will be accepted.
The Audio-Visual Department
decided not to include birthdates
this year after receiving a number of complaints by people in
Buffalo who reported that students were deliberately misrepresenting their ages.
Since
birthdates are not needed for admittance to any activities on
campus, the department planned
As a result of the efforts of
representatives from the Student
Senate, dates of birth will be
added to ID cards. Provisions
will be set up in the basement
of Foster Hall only during the
week of September 27-31, from
9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Nobel Peace Prize Winner Pauling
Urges 'Concern for Humanity'
By GENE COOPER
The Graduate Student Association was extremely fortunate in
having Dr. Linus C. Pauling,
one of the world’s most re-

-Photo

*

jection of dogma (specifically
that of patriotism) and replacing
it with a concern for humanity;
and honesty as, for example,
publicizing the facts of the dangers of nuclear warfare, rather
than deceitful minimizing of the
effects. These scientific criteria
for judging world affairs cannot
help but be moral in their
character.
He began by speaking about
the campaign waged a few years
ago to arrive at a satisfactory
test ban treaty. He emphasized
with staggering statistics, the
number of children who will
die at birth or be otherwise
harmfully affected, and spoke
of the millions who could have
been saved had a treaty been
arrived at in 1959 when negotiations started, rather than in 1962,
when agreement was finally

reached. Dr. Pauling also made
a plea for a similar treaty outlawing chemical and biological
warfare.
Dr, Pauling emphasized the
fact that fallout shelters serve
no practical purpose in providing
protection from radioactive fallout. He pointed out that shelters
would tend to increase militarism and the possibility of a nuclear war by giving the people
of America a false sense of

The Student Book Exchange,
which opened Sept. 10, is a nonprofit program enabling students'
to sell their books directly to
other students, thus keeping all
profits. “The Student Book Exchange represents an experiment

Buffalo Folk Festival
In Clark Gym Oct /,2
By

BRIAN EGAN

The 1965 Buffalo Folk Festival,
the largest ever held in Western
New York, will be held at 8:30
P.M., October 1st in Clark Gym.
The festival scans the entire field
of folk music by presenting Phil
Ochs, Buffy St. Marie, Eric Anderson, The Greenbriar Boys, and
Reverend Gary Davis.
The festival will consist of two
three workshops.
Opening the festival will be Buffy St. Marie, followed by the
Greenbriar Boys. One o’clock
Saturday, October 2, the Bluegrass Workshop will take place.
At 2:00 p.m. a Contemporary
Songwriters Workshop will include all the performers. Phil
Ochs and Buffalo’s own Eric Anderson will lead the discussion in
the Seminar for Topical Songwriters which will be held that
Saturday at 4:00 p.m. These workshops will consist mainly of discussions in which the performers
will answer questions and posdemonstrate techniques.
sibly
That night, Phil Ochs will appear
along with Reverend Gary Davis
and Eric Anderson.

concerts and

The price for the entire festival (including both concerts and
all three workshops) is $4.00.
Tickets for either concert is $2.50
which does not include admittance to any of the workshops.

The success of this festival
could very well determine the
future of other concerts. An overfestival
whelmingly successful
security.
of
this year could lead to bigger and
He also raised the question
immorality in government. He better festivals in the future. Not
only might the folk festival grow
believes that people are esseninto a big folk event which would
tially moral but that governattract many excellent and popuments by their nature are imphillar folksingers but big name permoral. Quotes from Greek
formers in other fields could be
osophers as well as citing acbrought to campus after the
oftions of our own government
ability to draw large audiences
ficals helped to prove his point.
(Cont’d on P. 10) has been proven.

in student automony. Its

success

thus far demonstrates that students are willing to accept
responsibility and are able to
exercise that responsibility

through meaningful programs.”
Thus says Clinton Deveaux, president of the Student Association
which has fostered the Exchange.

The attitude of the administration was stated by Dean Richard
A. Siggelkow, Dean of Students,
who said: “Our position is that if
students wish to carry on this
type of book exchange and it represents a real service to the student body, then the project is an
appropriate venture for the Student Senate.”
The Student Book Exchange
was conceived during the campaign last year by the majority
party and has been carried out by
Peter Cohen, chairman of the
Book Exchange Sub-committee of
the Welfare Committee Its purpose is twofold; first, it is performing a service to the students, and, second, it is a form
of protest against the high prices
of the University Book Store. Its
success indicates that students
are interested in such a program,
and it will definitely continue
next semester.
Over

700 books

have

been

placed for sale so far, as well as
an unknown number which have
been sold in the room. The biggest problem o( the Exchange, it
appears, is an insufficient supply

of books. The reaction has been

generally favorable; the employees are all volunteers.
The Student Book Exchange
will remain open until Monday.
Books are still available.

Peace Corps Director
To Speak Here Sept 21
RUSS£LL
co-operation

BUGHMAN
with the Peace
Corps Servivce Council of Buffalo, an affiliate of the Buffalo
Council on World Affairs, Mr.
Harris L. Wofford Jr., Assistant
Director for Planning, Evaluation
and Research for the Peace
Corps, will be at SUNYAB on
Tuesday, September 21. Members of the Buffalo Council on
World Affairs, Peace Corps returnees, inductees and parents
may attend Mr. Wofford’s presentation at 8:00 p.m. in the auditorium of the Albright-Knox Art
(Cont'd on P. 10)
By

In

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 17,

WELCOME “ON CAMPUS

UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
EPARTMENTS

OOKS

TEXTBOOKSTRADE BOOKS

IFTSI RECORDS
LOTHINC I SUPPLIES
ERVICES
ENTAL I REPAIR
HECK CASHING
ERICAS EXPRESS
PECIAL ORDER
OPY SERVICE

E-PURCHASE OF
SED BOOKS

"

%

/.
*

■

lr
ft

r'
-5'.

Xx

/

I

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f
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*•

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londay—Friday 8:30—8:30 Saturdays 10:00—2:00

NIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
“ON CAMPUS” PB&gt;-

1965

”

�Friday, September

Dean Scudder Advises Intellectual\
Spiritual and Physical Sharpness
The first of a series of lectures of the Tenth Annual Woment’s Forum was held this week
in the Conference Theater in Norton Hall. Dean Scudder conducted the fifty minute discussion,, of
the "Responsibilities and Opportunities at the State, University

Dean Scudder elaborated on the
motto of the University, “Let
each student become all that he
is capable of being,’” by explaining
that there are three ways in
which a student should seek to
fulfill this goal: intellectually
studies),
spiritually
(through
(philosophically, culturally, religiously, socially), and physically.
She observed: “Too many freshmen let their health fall down
by not getting enough sleep. It
seems life gets more interesting
after ten o’clock.”

admission are half A’s and half
B’s in all courses, and at least
15 hours of credit. “Enrollment
has almost doubled in the past
three or four years,” she noted.

Perhaps most important of all,
Dean Scudder assured the women
that there are many people on
the University campus to whom
they can turn for help. “Begin
with asking your sophomore advisor, if you are a resident. Then
go to your Resident Advisor or

Head Resident.” For

academic

problems, academic advisors, or
professors would be willing to
offer aid. Finally, there are the

staff advisors and the Dean of
Women.

Mrs. Shiela Rhodes, philosophy
instructor and staff member to

Freshmen Elections
For Class Council
September 20-21
The forthcoming elections for
the Freshman Class Council will
be held Monday and Tuesday
in the second freshman conference hour.

t

of New York at Buffalo." For
the next fiye weeks, freshman
women will attend these conferences designed to clear up misconceptions about college life and
answer problems which would be
prevalent in the group.

Dean Scudder informed freshmen women about the freshman
honor society. Requirements for

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

17, 1965

Dean Scudder addresses
man Women's Forum
—

Fresh

Photo by A. Walluk

the Dean of Women, will be sponsoring a program describing the
majors offered in the University,
Miss Linda Weiss has an office in
342 Norton Hall for student consultation. Mrs. Mildred Hoffitz,
secretary to the Dean of Women,
is also available for assistance.
Dean

Scudder included

com-

ments about dress standards in
her discussion: “Dress standards
which are proper for a university such as this are skirts for
classes and skirts or dresses for
the dinner meals.”

Several Friday afternoons in
October will be set aside* for open
houses at the residence of Dean
Scudder. 3 Allenhurst Road. Each
girl will receive an individual invitation.

Parking Regs.
October 8, 9; To Be Enforced
Homecoming

Dance at
Cordon Bleu

Homecoming this year will fall
The purpose of the council is
on October 8 and 9. some of
manifold. It attempts to act as
highlights being the tradia governing body for the entire the
tional dance and football game
freshman class, act as a sounding against Boston University. Homeboard for any grievances which coming
Queen will be presented
occur, provide experience for
at the game arid once again that
those students interested in stu- ■evening
at the dance which will
government,
dent
coordinate be
held at Ihc Cordon Bleu.
over all freshman activities, and
promote interest and participaThe football game will take
tion in student activities.
place at Rotary Field on SaturPetitions will be distributed day afternoon and for two days
after the first conference hour proceeding the game (October 7
of
to anyone desiring to run for and 8) movies will be shown the
membership on the council. Al- games from previous years in
Conference Theater in Norton.
though the elected representatives make up the council, the Homecoming weekend will begin
meetings are open to all members a week earlier than usual because the date must coincide with
of the freshman class.
the football schedule.
The past officers; Martin Gugenheinl president, George BodThe dance, which will be proner vice-president, Ronna Yosim ceeded by the Faculty Student
secrctray, Martin Jaffe treasurer, Reception, will be held on Satcan be proud of the accomplishurday, October 9 at 9:00 pin.
ments of the council. They spon- and will feature the Ralph Westsored a successful Winter Week field band. The limited number
and co sponsored the Silver Ball. of tickets—250—will go on sale
A tutoring system was establish- within the next two weeks.
ed. as well as a committee to aid
in commuter transportation problems.
All freshman men and women
arc urged la take an interest in
their participation and selection
during the Conference Hours.
The first meeting of the Freshman Class Council will be at 4:00
p.m. Wednesday.

Appointments for Senior Pictures for* the liullaIonian may he made at
the Norton Candy Counter,
9 a.m. 5 p.m. and at the
Notion Tiekel Counter,
5-7 p.m.
-

Friday afternoon, September 17
in room 233 Norton Union all of
the applicants for queen will be
briefed. On the 28 of September
the final judging will take place
and the ten finalists will be presented at the fashion show for
alumni on Friday, October 8.

All upperclassmen interested in pledging a fralernily this semester must rush

register in the Inter Fra-

lernal Council offiee, .'$40
Morion Hall Monday and
Tuesday. Registration lee
will he $1.25.

From The Office of the
Dean of Students
We are very aware that the
student parking situation on
campus is difficult. Additional
spots are being added as rapidly
as space and finances permit.
We feel strongly that the fairest
way to handle things is to have
reasonable regulations and enforce them strictly. Students can
help to ease the situation somewhat by arranging to share

driving.
All cars parked on campus
must carry official stickers. Students should obtain a free sticker from the Bursar’s office, 230
Hayes, for each vehicle they expect to bring to campus. All tickets are processed, yellow as well
as pink, so that any student who
trys to "beat the system” is only
making added work for the already overburdened campus police and building up extra $10
fines for himself. Last spring a

number of students found themselves faced with over $100 in
accumulated fines which they
were expected to pay before they
could register for further course
work. Any change of ownership
or change of license plate number should be reported to the
Bursar’s office.
Please place the sticker in the
proper location—'the left front
side window—unless this is absolutely impossible because of
the structure of the car.
Students who for medical reasons must park close to classrooms, should apply to the office
of the Vice-President for Business Affairs, 139 Hayes, for a
special permit. Medical excuses
cannot be accepted after-thefact.

Students who, because of special research projects or other
work on campus, must park
illegally for brief periods of
time in order to make deliveries
(Cont’d on P. 10)

From Buffalo, Phone Rates Are Lowest After 6 P. M. to

Rochester, Olean, Cleveland, Ohio,
Detroit, Mich., Pittsburgh, Pa.,
and many other points
No need to wait until late at night to make that
long distance phone call. Now rates from Buffalo
to Rochester, Olean, and to many other points
from Buffalo (within 70 miles intrastate and 220
miles interstate) are lowest starting after six P.M.
After six, you can phone Rochester and Olean
for 40C; Cleveland, Ohio for 55C; and Detroit, Mich,
for as little as 60C. (For a three-minute station-to

station call, Federal tax not included.)
Why wait until late at night to call these and
many other cities? Call after six, at reduced rates.

® New York Telephone
Pwl of th« Nitionwid*

Syttam

�Friday, Saptember 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

Unity s Guilt

.

Congratulations to the Book Exchange

By DANNY RUSSELL

The Student Book Exchange has more than proved
its worth to the student body, not only because of the
substantial savings which have acrued to those students
who purchased their books through the Exchange, but
also because it has conclusively shown that the students
at this campus are more than capable- of running their
own affairs without benevolent paternalism from the
Faculty-Student Association, and that they want to be
free of the self-satisfied and grasping bureaucracy which
characterises the F.S.A.„_ One can only hope that the
Book Exchange will herald more autonomous student
associations which will serve the students themselves.
The Book Exchange will handle texts for all courses
next semester. Bring your books to the Exchange, buy
your books at the Exchange; you’ll not only save money,
but you’ll help the entire campus by proving that students are capable of “administering” their own affairs.

“The Negroes whipped themselves into a frenzy against their
Rememimaginary enemies.”
bered from the silent movie,
“Tarzan of the Apes.”

The Food Service Students Are People Too
-

For those of you who didn’t realize it when you
[.
read the news story (page 10), the Food Service is yet
Associaanother" arm of the ubiquitous Faculty
tion. When we were informed of the attempt to cut
student wages tb 75 cents an hour (a figure that would
make Simon Legree blush!) we went immediately to
Mr. Perry and suggested that blanket exploitation of
students through a less than “living” wage and a phoney
“bonus” was discrimination of the most obvious order.
At that meeting on Wednesday afternoon we were
told that policy decisions of this sort were not reviewable
until the end of the semester.- We sensed a certain
schizophrenic split between the desire to hire cheap
student labor, and a strong conviction that all students
were “irresponsible” and “immature.”
On Thursday morning we received a call from the
Dean’s Office informing us that our suggestion to treat
all employees of the Food Service the same way, with a
beginning salary of at very least one dollar had been
adopted by the Food Service.
We applaud this decision, but we are also forced
to wonder if the attitude toward students, all students,
which prompted the initial discriminatory practice has
been shaken. We can only hope that it has students
are people too!
-

The FacultyxStudent Association

-

An Introduction
It is the understanding of this paper that the grossly
misnamed Faculty-Student Association is at the root of
a great many of the pressing problems on this campus.
At the moment, the State Legislature is investigating the
F.S.A. and debating the use and effectiveness of such
associations throughout the State University system.
As it stands now, every student on this campus pay
an activities fee which is supposed to go for the maintenance and improvement of co-curricular activities.
This money, in excess of $900,000, goes into the mysterious bureaucracy of the FSA. Eventually, the students on
this campus determine the use of considerably less than
8 '/'&lt;■ of the money that they themselves have payed for
their own programs.
“Something is rotten in the State of Denmark .
“Needs no ghost, come from the grave, to tell us
this, Horatio.”
.

Editor-ih-Chief

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N Y. 14214, Published
Weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor
News Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAn
SUSAN GREENE
RICHARD DRANOOFF
MARCIA ANN ORSZULAK

Business Manager

RAYMOND VOLPE
BERNARD DIKMAN
VACANT
EDWARD JOSELYN
KATHRYN KUNIGISKY
IRENE WILLETT
DALLAS GARBER

Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager

Photo Editor
Office Manager
Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor
Da^

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y,

Subscription

9500

$3 00

per

year,

circulation

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

—

Any society capable of saying
that it is going to produce Negroes who are whipped into a
frenzy against their not-so-imaginary enemies.

ClK Circus by Bob Milch
One frigid morning several
years ago, a most unusual egg
was found at the door of the Department of Ecology, It was a
mealy thing, with a lily-white,
badly mishappen shell that
looked like something like the
head of a toadstool. One end of
the shell had a small crack from
which emanated a foul, putrefying odor most unlike anything
smelled before in the Department of Ecology.

pendage three or four times the
size of the other.
Over the months the bird grew
until it was too big and too smelly
to be confined in any lab or office; so while they were reluctant
to loose this thing on society, the

had its right to freedom
and the department memhad their right to twentyhour protection. The bird
was given the run of the campus.
The Los Angeles rioters are
divested of all personal responWhat a sight it was, this ugly
sibility for the riot in light of
thing with an unmanageable left
While their finer sensibilities
wing and yellow stripe down its
the fact that their society reback flying in circles over the
fuses (present tense) to look upon revolted against it, their gentler
precampus and wilting foliage with
them as individuals; a Negro is natures and inquisitiveness
vailed, and the members of the
an entity partaking only of mass
its breath. It wasn’t long before
department decided to incubate
identity. How can a society conthe news and the odor of the bird
this bastard freak to see what got around, and many people took
demn people as individuals when
would develop. With gentleness notice of our left winged oddity:
it denies them their individuality
and care they warmed and
very well known lecturers came
in the first place?
watched the egg; they even grew and saw it; moderately wellPe6ple do not wreck their fuused to the sight, if not the smell, known literary scholars came and
tures when they have one. Beatof the thing.
similied about a phonix; totally
ing an egg invariably produces
A year or so passed when, on unknown sociologists came and
scrambled eggs.
took polls.
another bitter night, strange rumAH the while the bird flew in
These individual rioters are blings began to come from the
circles, its voice of protest clearegg. It tumbled about in its innot, even now, for me, individuly audible through the clouds of
als. They are predictable and I
cubator, rolling around and spewsight-obscuring dust raised by its
ing its nauseating odor in a mencan no more think of them in inlarge left wing. It flew all over
acing, hissing sound. Then, there
dividual terms that I can concampus, once landing in the ofceive of a KKK member having was a horrible scream of protest
fices of the student newspaper,
any significance but as a member
from within and, as if it could no
(where it breathed on the editoriof a group. Destructive activity longer contain its onerous bural page), once landing in the cafe(to self and society) is a phenomden, the shell gave way and preteria kitchen (where it breathed
enon having no more to do with
sented . . .
on the food, though no one took
guilt than an exploding atom.
Well no one was sure exactly notice). It was having a high old
time, just spinning and spewing.
Inalienable rights grudgingly what it was. It looked like a bird,
And then one day the bird was
metered out so as to prevent the but it had a funny, furry growth
gone. Where it went, why it went,
further alienation of emerging on its lower beak most unlike
any bird’s; and it had the feet of
no one knew. Some of us were
Africa is not love.
a bird, but they were encased in
genuinely saddened to see the
thinking
on
of
peoInsistence
leather-like straps with holes for thing depart, for it had given us
“political
terms
of
realiple in
something to smile about; some
the claws; its feathers were sterties” divests people, by definition,
ile white except for yellow tips,
of us were glad to see it go, for
of individuality. Since I am real
and swept up on each side to the annoyance of its breast-beatto
a
I do not owe my existence
ing, left winged flight and its
form a ridge down its back; its
parliamentary majority. One vote,
an
voice was most un-birdlike
odor had at times been difficult
one man.
aggravated, protesting rasp like
to bear.
that of a prepubescent Tarzan.
But despite the fact that the
King says he will go forgivingAnd soon it was learned that the bird is gone, you can still see the
ly to the jails, despite the guilt
horrible smell that had come
efects of its stay. The next time
of each rioter, and see if he can through
the crack of the shell you pass through Norton, notice
discover some way the rioters can
not from decaying-matter at the people handing out papers
rebuild the desolation they have was
was the bird’s breath;
at the door: the fur on the lower
but
all,
you
ever
see
a
wrought. Did
odor, permeated everything,
the
face, the leather straps on the
to
scrambled egg apologize
the
on an
feet. Take the piece of paper
egg beater? When a man acts in and once the bird breathed
object, the noxious scent stayed they give you, and read what is
terms of "political realities" he for weeks. But oddest of all was on it, and if you read well j'Ou
ceases to be a realist.
the fact that the bird had.an overwill see the large left wing and
an ungainly apthe yellow stripe; then, smell it.
The rioters mean what they sized left wing,
are. There are people in America
(Its full name is God Bless
America), who have nothing. God
(I call it by its first name even
though it prefers to be called
America, since I am on familiar
By R. S.
D. G.
victims and are now seeking to
terms with my uncle, my big
be the agents of their social
brother, and my father) allows
Capitalism, a system of despair
transformation. The Liberation
his subjects to exist with nothing;
to exist for self destruction. The today, lingers fifty years beyond Movement spearheaded by SNCC
(Student Nonviolent Co-ordinatits time, living by sucking the
entity we call America, as a preing Committee) in the Southern
soul out of its own people and
dictable political power structhe blood out of the rest of the
states is the same type of moveture, is amoral. It is capable of
world. Militarism, its off-spring
ment that seeks to bring freedom
infinte good or infinte evil.
out of control, gets its ‘injoys’ to the Vietnamese. Our adminisPeople really hear other peoout of keeping us at the brink tration responds in similar ways
ple only when there is love to
of the abyss. America has the to both these movements—by ashelp the tones of a man’s voice
serting that each is infiltrated
facilities this very day of, on
resonate. Love is hardly a polithe one hand, feeding, clothing with Communists and hence evil.
tical entity. There is God the
America has achieved the ultiand sheltering the world and on
King and God the Man. Since
mate philosophical
the other, destroying civvilizacomfort—the formalization of religion men
tion. The obsolete economic sysclosure—all activities directed
to
study God.
against the status quo are dehave undertaken
tem prevents the former, while
But some Bibles are just books,
the obsolete military system profined “Communistic.” This antiand some books are just Bibles,
motes the latter. It isn’t even a
communism has reached alarmPolitics, the government of men, toss-up as to which one shall win,
ing proportions similar to the
should not be an art, but a relihysteria developed in Germany
for they work together: Like
gion.
with regard to the Jewish people.
piped-in music, the “poverty”
program pacifies the natives at
Even a consititutional movement
1 doubt seriously whether
home, liberating the warhaw'ks to replace the only democratimany rioters had constructive
for unchecked devastation of cally elected President in the
productive political ends in mind.
somebody else’s natives.
history of the Dominican RepubMen are peculiar animals, they
lic, was defined by our anti-comalways must have a way to say,
Our Liberal paternalism has
munists as a Castroite plot and
"I am,” to other men. Deprived
proven itself an enemy of the
warranted the dispatching of
of “legitimate outlets,” the riotpeople in Los Angeles, Harlem,
thousands of Marines. This action
ers were really doing no mofe
was a clear violation of the OAS
than saying, “I am.” In light of Berkley and Vietnam. The old
ways are a failin’; no longer do
Charter, but our recent activithe fact of a nearly all-white pothe underprivileged want to be
ties do not show much regard
lice force and considerable brustruggle toward for treaties. Internationally, our
tality
95% of the dead and helped in the
wounded are Negro
“I am” middle-class sterility, they, like anti-Communism has led to the
perpetration
was something that needed saythe new socially-conscious genof war crimes
eration, want to participate in (bombing of a sovereign nation
ing. The rioters were heard politically; the noise came out as,
the decisions which affect their and the use of harmful gasses);
nationally, HUAC has trampled
“we are.” Political America does liwes, having had their fill of disover any civil liberties the connot believe that when people get honest politicians and unscruputogether to say “we are,” it
lous businessmen.
stitution guarantees. As an ironic
means that every man in the
note it should be mentioned that
These people are tired of being
group is saying, “I am.”
(Cont’d on P. 6)
bird
then,
bers
four

—

Cacotopia and Eutopia
&amp;

—

—

�Friday, September

PR2Fe§sion

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

17, 1965

:

in

m

oCetterA

vim*/

the Editor

to

Dr. Plesur Slight Noted

Editorial Cited Asserting
*Belligerent Attitude

STDDEnT

TO THE EDITOR:

*

TO

THE’

It seems to me that when planning Freshman
Orientation, someone should give thought to who
should be invited to speak before the incoming
class. When this was done this year, a grievous
error was committed. Dr. Plesur, Assistant Dean of
University College, was not invited to participate
in the Orientation program. No one even had the
courtesy to send him an Orientation program guide.

EDITOR:

The editorial entitled “Students Seek Voice in
Administration” which appeared in the August 6th
issue of Spectrum contains some doubtful assertions and a belligerent attitude which are quite
out of place in an institution of higher learning.

Dr. Plesur should have been last on the list
of people to ignore. He could very well be the
most important person on campus for the Freshman

What seems more likely than the “declining
standards of packaged education being turned out
by the UB production line" is the rising aspirations
of a vocal minority of the student body, a minority
to which the writer of the editorial apparently belongs and which is more committed to and expectant
of genuine enlightenment than ever before, and
rightly so. But to conclude that declining standards
prevail at this University is to be ignorant of its development and growth over the years, an ignorance
which might be rectified by inquiry.

to meet.

Dr. Pauling Lauded;
SDS Members Sought

What is more distressing is the pugnacious
charge that the University Bookstore has deliberately “robbed”, “exploited” and “fleeced" the students
and that Norton’s cafeteria is charging “outrageous
prices”. One wonders what position the writer of
these words assumed on the question of Goldwater’s
“extremism”. A student who is presumably a junior or senior should be embarrassed to allow himself so loose a construction of the English language.

THIS... m

"

grump
If this sparodic and generally
pessimistic collection of growls
and complaints about the things
in the world in general ever appears before the reading public, it
will be through the auspices of
the editorial staff of the Spectrum
and will indicate once
and for all the degenerate level
—

of that group.

That contained herein is strictly the opinion of the author and
may or may not be that of anyone else in the entire world. Paranoia, anyone????

I went to a wedding last Saturday. Charming wedding
there
was much to drink and it was all
free. The church was a very attractive and highly modernistic
Unitarian church in Schenectady.
The minister may not have voted
for Goldwater but he gave that
aura. While pleasant, the entire
affair served to arouse my ire
against the tlassic system of marriage and forms an excellent basis for attacking the old guard
“Wait till it’s legal” basis of
—

morality.

Any tribe that builds sex up to
be the answer to everything and
yet calls for restraint until legally released puts a tremendous emphasis on the “First Night”. So
of course we then put enough
strain on both Bride and Groom
to make sleep difficult, when we
allow either of them to »o to
bed at all, for at least a week, and
then when they are botn urea,
cranky, slightly rung-over and
nervous as hell, society graciously
permits them to fulfill their natural desires
if they can escape
those carloads of “friends” who
would think it great sport to discover where they are hiding from
the rest of humanity.
—

Draft Card Burning seems to be
gaining strength in some areas.
Being one of those who has been
brainwashed by two glorious years
as a draftee I would like to make
a suggestion. Since the distinct
impression I get from the antiVietnam side is that everybody
who wears a uniform is somewhat
simple iriinded and in great need
of help to see the error of their
ways, I would suggest that the an-

swer is missionaries. Don’t burn

your draft cards gentlemen, volunteer for the draft and demonstrate from inside where you are

?

"

by STEESE
liable to the same punishments
and stupidity as the majority of
individuals now wearing the uniform. I refer only to the army
which I served with, not the one
now engaged in Vietnam. I would
hope there is a difference, a great
difference.

In case you have missed it, the
Mennen Co. has some new sort
of anti-acne goop out. I have no
idea if the goop is as poisonous
as the advertising but I assume it
cannot be so. The advertisement
on the local nonsense radio sta-

tion, WKBW, maintains that all
virile young men who happen to
have acne should stop using sissy girl solutions to their problems and use this new wonder
product. Marvey, the stuff sounds
as though it were distilled from
the prostrate gland of the Bull
Musk Ox.
On the trip to Schenectady mentioned earlier, it was my somewhat dubious pleasure to travel
part of the way on the New York
State Thruway. Having spent the
previous Labor Day Weekend
driving around the Province of
Ontario I could not help noting
the fact that one gets around in
Canada with a much greater ease
in general than one does in New
York State. One of the overlooked
advantages of having a toll free
superhighway is that you do not
have to limit your exits and entrances because of the cost of
putting in one of the same.

Martin Feinrider

TO THE EDITOR:
Anyone attending the GSA Convocation Monday evening could not but be impressed with the
moral vision and sanity of Linus Pauling.
It is hoped that a number of those who afforded
Dr. Pauling a standing ovation will join with Students for a Democratic Society in our quixotic attempt to influence American policy in Vietnam
by supporting our local version of International
Days of Protest, October 15 and 16.

The complaint that the faculty is guilty of “ineptness” and “shabby teaching” may well be true.
I am seldom satisfied with my class preparation,
and I’m quite sure that nocturnal student carousing
is not the sole cause for the glassy stares and head
nodding which occasionally confront me. However,
to proclaim that the student organization will "construct considerable pressure both on and off campus” to rectify the problem is not only premature
but displays a deplorable naivete in judging the
professorial mind-, I think I am correct in stating
that most professors at UB would welcome constructive student criticism and responsible evaluation of
their performance when conducted by the proper
student representatives and given in a spirit of good
will and mutual respect. But most faculties worth
their salt would react adversely to the fundamental
disrespect and bellicosity displayed in the editorial
and to the inappropriate sort of pressure the writer
implies is about to be exerted.

It is further hoped that commitment to the
men like Linus Pauling will not end October 16, and that those whose consciences have been
disturbed by the Convocation speaker will involve
themselves in meaningful political activity the year
’round.

ideals of

i

SDS dlans to provide such activity. We meet
every Wednesday evening in Norton Union. Members can also be contacted during the week at the
SDS table in the Union.
Stephen Crafts

'

John P. Halstead
Assistant Professor of History

Parking Problem Voiced;

Advice Given to Displaced
TO THE EDITOR:

‘Lopsided’ Editorial Opinion
Challenged by Freshmen
TO THE EDITOR:

I feel your comments in the editorial “Degree
Seekers Not Welcome” are neither valid nor very
tactful. To be truthful is one thing, but to be
truthful just for the sake of showing how honest
and straightforward our paper is, is another point
entirely.

To be able to judge a whole freshman class,
as you did, by possibly comparing it to yours, cannot be considered a truism. I suggest, therefore,
that before undertaking the task of writing such
an editorial you, the “upperclass”, should at least
try and get to know us, the “lowerclass”, and then
formulate your lopsided opinions.
Philip Smith

Rebellion, Reform Sought
By Unwelcome Student

Not only are there much greater numbers of access points but TO THE EDITOR;
the psychology seems to be that
the driver is capable enough to
As one of the unwelcome, I would like to say
get his car on and off the bloody to you, Mr, Taylor, that I am not glad to be here.
road without being led by the The manner and atmosphere at UB is one,unexhand. They manage it. Of course pected and undesired.
I do wonder if the license system
The administration and faculty place more eraup there is not somewhat differenduring
ently handled. I have yet to find emphasis on wearing a skirt to meals,
grading from
myself stuck behind a little old long and often unfruitful lines, and
lady driving a Corvair at twenty a few tests, and draining the student’s pocket than
creating intellectual stimulation.
miles an hour through a no passing area of a fifty mile per hour
The wondrous upperclassmen may be categorhighway with the general air of ized between complacent and smug to childish and
a
driving
who
is
nitrosomeone
superficial. This is certainly not the ideal Univerglycerine truck.
sity. However, many high school graduates choose
Congratulations to those who UB because of limited means of finance. Since we
are responsible for conceiving are stuck with it, and you with us, freshmen and
upperclassmen should protest and rebel enough to
and executing the idea of a Student Book Exchange. I was going reform the policies and attitudes that suppress the
to patronize—so of course the poential of UB to be a University.
two, books I did need were brand
Paula Ford
(Cont’d on P. 6)

*

This past Monday, I had occasion to witness
first-hand the way this University’s Central Maintenance has ruined the already congested Bailey
Avenue parking lot. In past years this lot was so
bad that Congress voted funds for it under the
Appalachia Bill for underdeveloped areas! Now, 1
am afraid, the lot is as useless as a Confederate
dollar.
Actually, I had a notion the present situation
would occur. During the summer, maintenance
crews were busy day and night in resurfacing and
repainting this lot. Right away I knew something
big was afoot. I simply couldn’t believe that Central Maintenance would have the poor commuter in
mind. Fortunately, just when I was beginning to
believe that they were having a change of heart,
they showed their true colors. They proceeded to
partition the lot into a faculty and a student lot.
The first six rows adjacent to the gym were made
faculty parking space. While this move piay have
been justified, here is a startling situation; Monday the new faculty lot contained less than a dozen
cars while students were forced to park opposite
the University Plaza, some distance away from
the nearest civilization.
Fearing that this present situation would take
place, I wisely decided to leave home at sunup for
an 11:00 o’clock class. As expected, the Bailey lot
was full as were all the others. I was directed to
the area behind the women’s dorms and here is the
frightening development. Trying to wade through
the thick underbrush to my classes, I was ambushed
by a lost Viet Cong patrol, I barely escaped with
my life but I will not take any more chances. I will
enroll in the Air Science Department’s Chunter Insurgency course and I’ll have to buy equipment to
ensure my safe traveling from this lot to Diefendorf. Isn't this a helluva price to pay while the
new faculty lot is empty and could be restored to
its old beauty by giving it back to the students?
Allow me to give all of you displaced Bailey
lot users a careful bit of advice. I plan to use the
lot for Central Maintenance so that some of their
workers will be forced to hunt for hours for a parking space. Then and only then, I fear, will the
people in this department realize what a hardship
they imposed on the student body by partitioning
the Bailey lot. Give them a taste of their own medicine, I always say.

Philip Fanone
Displaced Bailey Lot User

�CAPITALISM
(Cont’d from P. 4)

many persons (Juan Bosch of the
Domonican and Prince Sihanouk
of Cambodia among them) have
demonstrated that our anti-Communism has created many more
Communists than the Communists themselves could
have.
Such are the results of a ridiculous position.
Following Nobel Peace Prize

winner Linus

Paulings'

.

.

Bob Dylan A
Changed Man
-

.

Priest: Anybody who walks
like a duck, talks likkc a duck,
and quacks like a duck is a duck..
(More laughter while they depart for their cars.)
Us: That’s a' strange way for
a man of the cloth to behave.
Why arc you laughing? Come
back and talk to us.
Priest: I’m not (laughing that
is).

By DON BLANK
the songs on this
specific record are not so
much songs but rather exercises in tonal breath control
"...

. . . the. subject matter—the
something to do with the
meaningful as
it - is—has

The least you could do
stop laughing and treat us
beautiful strangers, vivaldis
green jacket and the holy
witnessed the proportions to
like human beings.
(A
good deal more shrill
which this paranoia has grown.
slow train.” From' notes by
A group of priests were aplaughter followed as they disBob Dylan.
proached and asked what, they
appeared .into the darkness.)
Bob Dylan’s songs become
thought of Dr. Pauling’s address.
By their mockery and accusaThe answer was “Not very much.”
tions, these direct descendents more obscure with each succeeding album, while his new “sound"
of The Prince of Peace place
Out p u i z z i c a I response was
“Why??” Answer: “Awww. same
themselves in grotesque contrast (exemplified by electric guitars)
seems to have gained him h largold Commie line.” Stunned by to Pauling, a man -of unshaker audience (witnpss,_Tnc sucthis reply, we had to probe able decency about whom AlStone").
further.
bert Schewitzer has Written: cess of “Like a Rolling
This ironic phenomenon has
Us; What do you mean by
“By his efforts to prevent nuhas prompted charges of “comthat?
clear war and to bring the powerPriest: It would take too long
ful forces of. nuclear energy mercialization” by many of his
confused old fans. Some simply
to explain
under international control, Prodon’t like his new “sound."
After a short interruption the
fessor Linus Pauling is renderconversation was pressed . . . ing a great service to humanNevertheless, Dylan’s newest
Us; On what basis could you
ity.”
album, Highway 6) Revisited, is
Pauling
Fehrelcnghetti
that
the
Lawrence
once
say
espoused
just as worthy as any of his
Communist line?
remarked that he was waiting previous ones.
round
a
wonder.”
Priest. (After a good
of for
“rebirth of
Now
laughter). Well, you know how
the time for waiting is over and
Dylan has not sold out. He is
he talked about people being only a few insulated Beatnieks still angry. His anger has simply
moral and governments immoral
would deny that a rennaisance taken new forms and new obHe then only talked about the
of wonder has occured on the
jects.
campuses of the world. This new
immorality of the United States
In his first three albums, Dyspirit protests against social inGovernment.
lan’s contention is that man’s
justices wherever they may apUs: Therefore that makes him
enemy is the system. He rarely,
a Communist?
pear. This column will attempt
if ever, sings any of these songs
Priest: He’s been spouting the to reflect the mood of the move(never
protest
his so-called
Commie line for 15 years.
ment by performing critical anUs: Have you read the Senate
alyses of domestic and world songs) in concert now.
In his last three albums (beJudiciary Committee’s investigaevents. Forthcoming articles will
ginning, perhaps ironically, with
tion of Pauling?
discuss a diverse range of topAnother Side of Bob Dylan) arc
'Priest; No.
ics from the role of the univerUs: Its about 700 pages long sity in the military establishment more concerned with the individand they weren't able to prove
to the relevance of Dylan and ual. He sings of alienation with
anything.
Camus.
the guilt on the alienated (“Like
a Rolling Stone” and Ballad of
a Thin Man"). He sings of sick
people in a sick society (“Desolation Row” and “Highway 6d—visited”), and offers no simple
(Cont'd from P, 5)
least a million bureaucrats who answer
as he did in his earlier
semester.
new this
It is a worthy will crawl out of the rubble and protest songs.
effort. It might be of interest to start an investigation to prove
As for the rest of the album
some that the Sudent Council, or that it was not their fault.
. . . there are two blues, with
whatever they call it at the UniThe John Birch Society will bethe traditional mood but modversity of Munich, got very irked
gin its investigation of the House ern
hang-ups. This is a tender,
over the caliber of the food and
UnAmerican Activities Commitperhaps love, song: It “Takes
proceeded to demonstrate that
tee, Which makes just as much
a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train
better meals were possible than
sense as either of those two worto Cry,” And there is one lighter
that being served in the Mensa, thy organizations do. Yes, Virsong: “From a Bqick 6."
the student cafeteria. They did
ginia, I do know that it is supGranted Dylan’s “sound” is
this by buying in bulk and paying posed to be the other way around,
same hourly wages for everyone I am attempting to be humorous. different. The use of accompanists, however, adds a musicianwho helped back into the general Ha.
ship, which, whether you like it
fund as the normal personnel
or not, surpasses anything Dylan
Why don't they be honest and
were paid. They served it more
call it the John McCarthy Sociecould or can do on solo guitar.
cheaply and better.
The notes, a fine poem by
ty?
The next day they were demon
Dylan, are a pleasant change
And how come the fountain beslrating prior to arrival of the
from the typical self-congradutwixt Norton and Lockwood and latory type on most albums.
city fathers to partake of the
Harriman and Foster was off all
food, Alas it seems the Mensa
Dylan has changed (note even
summer and turned on the first the difference in his mood on his
staff had been informed of these
week of classes?
developments and served chickalbum covers, say between The
en. Chicken over there, by the
Last Note: Won't it be keen if Times They Are A'Changing
by, is usually served at ChristU.S. troops serve as part of a and his latest). And as hard as
mas, if then. The city fathers
U.N. force in Kashmir and can be it might be to some, the change
came and of course found everyshot at from both sides with U.S. is, at the least, worth examining.
thing just fine.
(Monday, Sept.

13)

Us:

speech

this column

is

.

,

Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

GRUMP

.

If the bombs do fall and no
one else survives there will be at

.

weapons—just as on Cyprus?
Bah! Sec you, maybe, next

week.

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financially) of using one value
system—the Playboy Image— to

support

another—the

ialist.

T.G.l.F. PARTY
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welcome all students to a
T.G.l.F. party today in the
Millard Fillmore Room
from 3:00 until 5:30 p.m.
SALES

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prepared and the Playboy key
lets them not only into the Playboy Glub but into the world

their status desires are
satisfied as well.
where

Hefner the editorialist defends
love, including sex, as the total
commitment of one human being
to another. The rest of the magazine (many of the advertisements included) imply what is
essentially an anti-feminist position—that Woman ought to be
pursued by Man, and once
caught, should be his plaything.
Putting waitresses into Bunny
costumes is both anti-feminist
and dehumanising since it destroys the possibility of a total
relationship between human
beings by reducing one to the
role of a Bunny and suggesting
the role of a hunter for the
other. When a girl thinks of herself as a Bunny she cannot be a
woman and enjoy the love so
vigorously defended in the editorial columns.
It appears that there is a basic
philosophical contradiction between the humanist and the salesman in Hugh Hefner that bears
considering. On the one hand he

But what about Hugh Hefner
offers the values of freedom
the magazine salesman? The enand lovve and human dignity
tire mystique of the magazine while on the other he sells the
is oriented around the proposiveneer of success-status symbols
tion that the purchaser of —to people who, for
one reason
Brands A, B and C will beor another will never undercome a "Playboy.” One can also
stand the meaning of the phifind without too much difficulty, losophy
that they superficially
advertisments for Playboy accesespouse.
sories, a wide variety of things
including clothing and jewelry,
The Murder of Gonzago is
playing cards, dishes, books and
pleased to announce this week’s
golf clubs, each with a distincawards:
tive Playboy insignia designed
to make their purchasers feel
Jo the government supporters
like ‘'Playboys." It seems rather
of the current military dictatorunlikekly that any of those who
ship in South Vietnam who were
are traditionally considered playnot alarmed when Prime Minisboys of today likke Tommy Manter Nguyen Cao Ky said: “People
ville, Raphael Trujillo, and the ask me who my heroes are. I
late King Faroukk, almost all have only one—Hitler” goes
this
with an unlimited source of week’s Polities Makes Strange
wealth would even consider buyBedfellows Award.
ing a manufactured image that
costs, including a year’s magaTo whoever scheduled a class
zine subscription, less than two
in a non-existent room goes the
hundred dollars. Unlimited
Administrative Bungle of the
wealth hardly requires the outward signs of affluence. The PlayWeek Award.
boy audience is looking for
some kind of assurance that they
There will he a meeting
are now the urbane, sophisticatof the U.B. Civil Rights
ed group that they would like to
be. Hugh Hefner has the image

ATTENTION N.Y.C. RESIDENTS

Contact

editorial

viewpoint. The danger in holding two value systems at the
same time is that it leaves Hefner open to the charges of hypocrisy and opportunism. Personally, 1 think that the editorial
comment is sincere and I generally agree with him. I also
think that his willingness to discuss important issues which Victorian or totalitarian minded elements in our society would
rather keep under the rug is
commendable. So much for Hugh
Hefner the philosopher-editor-

of Gonzago
1

PAGE SIX

836-6484

-

Committee this Sunday,
September 19 in Norton
Hall. New members are
invited to attend.

�v

F SA

—

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, Saptambar 17, 1965

Background and Functions
stated purpose of these associations is to conduct campus activities which are outside the financial and operational jurisdiction
of the State of New York. At
SUNYAB this broad directive includes collection and disbursement of the general university
fee paid by each student, including the bookstore, food services,
vending machines, parking facilities, and intercollegiate athletic
programs. In addition to these
functions, the Association here
plans long-range land acquisition
and development programs. An
example of this is the purchase
by the Association in May, 1965,
of a 505 acre tract in Amherst,
New York, north of the site of
the proposed Amherst campus.
This land is presently being developed into an intercollegiate

BARBARA ANN FITZSIMMONS
The September 10th issue of
Spectrum contained a letter to
the Editor from Dr. Claude Puffer, Vice-President for Business
Affairs, concerning the Faculty
Student Association and its po. . very important
tential for
contributions to the continued
development . .
of this university. The following is an elaboration on this subject with the purpose of more fully acquainting
the student body with (one of the
more important, but less wellknown) organizations on campus.
The Association was incorporated August 28, 1962, as part of
the merger of the University of
Buffalo with the State niversity
System. It is a private membership corporation which has no
stockholders and no dividends
since it is a non-profit corporation. Its officers are unsalaried.

golf course.

How are funds handled by the
Association disbursed? What income does the Association itself
have? First, with regard to the
general fee paid by all students,
it is allocated by the Association
approximately as follows: State
University of New York in Albany
27%; Campus athletic activities
27%; Student-run ac-

Each of the 58 units in the
State system has a similar association. These organizations are
not, however, subject to direct
financial control by the State
University of New York, nor do
they receive funds from it. The

—

—

HILLEL
ROSH HASHONAH SERVICES
576 Taunton Place
Sunday, September 26
7:00 P.M.
Monday, September 27
1:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M.
Tuesday, September 28
1:00 A.M.
—

—

—

YOM KIPPUR SERVICES
576 Taunton Place
Tuesday, October 5
6:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.
Wednesday, October 6
10:00 To Sundown
“Break the Fast” Supper at Conclusion of Service
—

—

.

.

.

TF 6-4540

Zero in
on the world
with the trusty New York Times

tivities (Spectrum, Senate, etc.)—
16%; Faculty Student Association
—30%. This 30% of student fees,
plus profits from sales of books,
food services, vending machines,
and the other services it operates comprise the Association’s
income.
Who are members of the Faculty-Student
At the
present time the membership is
comprised of five members of
the University Administration,
two Faculty Representatives, and
two Student Representatives.
This group meets once a year in
October to elect a Board of Directors which operates the corporation for the coming year. The
current Board consists of five

Association?

Administration members.
In May of 1965, as part of the
first routine general audit of this
University since its merger with
the state system, the New York
State Department of Audit and
Control began an examination of
the financial operation of the
Faculty Student Association.
Shortly thereafter it was disclosed that the State University
of New York was conducting an
investigation into the operations
of all Faculty Student Associations throughout the State. One
factor which prompted the in-

vestigation was concern expressed
by State Senator John H. Hughes
of Syracuse over the range of
activities undertaken by various
F.S.A.'s across the State, especially with regard to land acquisition, and in some cases, large
profit accumulations. Later in
the same month it was announced that the State Legislature, through the Senate Finance
Committee and the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee,
would conduct its own investigation of these same land acquisitions and profits accrued by these
non-profit Associations.

Weekly
Calendar
SEPT.

17-23

Today
Albright-Knox: Exhibit of a
survey of prints covering major
art movements from the 15th
to 19th Century. Runs through
Oct. 10.
Royal
(Toronto):
Alexandra
comedy Luv currently playing,
starring Dorothy Luden.
Daily at Circle Art Theater,
Felix Greene’s China. An outstanding movie. 3165 Bailey.
O’K eefe Center (Toronto).
Opera Turando by Puccini, in
Italian. Also on Thursday, the
23rd.

Saturday

O’Keefe Center: Opera The
Barber of Seville by Rossini.
Also Wednesday.
Sunday

Conference Theater, Norton;
Indian Movie, Hum Done (We

Have The Times delivered every morning
at low college rates.

For service, get in touch with:

STEPHEN SOROKA
TOWER

EXT. 3552

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin if an
authorized publication of the
State University of New York
at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
114 Hayes Hall, attention Mrs.
Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
ApMake-Up Examinations
plications for make-up examinations for the removval on, INCOMPLETE GRADES must be
filed in the Office of Admissions
and Records, 201 Hayes Hall no
later than OCTOBER 11, 1965,
Make-41) Examinations will be
given the week of November
—

15th
Graduate School Calender
Friday—Last date for filing pro-

—

grams for February

1966

Friday, Sept. 24—Last day for
first semester registration
Friday, Oct. 22—Last day for resigning from a course without penalty.
•

«

and midnight performances. Runs thru Sept. 25

Evening
Tuesday

Channel 17: 9 p.m. Dynamics
of the Family
Weekly program.
Thursday

O’Keefe Center: Opera La Boheme by Puccini (in Italian)
Buffalo Museum of Science
Observatory; Public Viewing
Night, 9 p.m. the “Omega" nebula in Constellation Serpens.

Winter and Spring Graduates
—(Bachelor and Advanced Degrees) Register now for the following:
Career planning and guidance
On-campus interviews with employing officials
Establishing a permanent placement file
Complimentary copy of
College Placement Annual

the

For further information contact, University Placement Serv-

ices, Schoellkkopf Hall.
Sept. 20-24—

Quantum Electronics
A lecture series sponsored and supported by the Department of
PPhysics, Bell Aerosystems, Cor—

nell Aeronautics Laboratories
Inc. of Cornell University, Sylvania Electronics Systems and
Union Carbide Metals Company,
the'featured speaker is Dr. Nicholas Bloembergen, Gordon McKay PProfcssor, Harvard University. The series will be held in
114 Horchsterrer Hall, 4 p.m.
Sept. 23-24—

IRC Elections
On Thursday
By

Elections of representatives to
the Inter Residence Council will
be held Thursday, Sept. 30. At
least one representative will be
elected from each resident hall
by all the members of the dorms.
Any student with a minimum
cumulative average of 1.0 can
qualify.

Petitions to run for IRC representatives may be obtained
through the head resident
Monday. The campaign will
last from September 24 through
September 29. At this time the
candidates will circulate their petitions and speak to their fellow
resident hall students.
IRC is made up or. representatives from each hall and four IRC
officers elected the previous
spring by the resident student
body. Officers of the present IRC
are:

The Department of Music—
Presents two Lectures on Indian
Music by Professor Harold Powers, University of Pennsylvania,
at Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.

JO ANNE LEEGANT

Gary

Roberts,

Chairman;

Mike Kayes, Vice Chairman; Paulette Bohnen, Secretary; and Andrea Roth, Treasurer. One IRC
representative is elected for each
150 students in the larger halls,
and a minimum of one representative in the smaller halls.
The council acts as the spokesman for the residence hall students to the university and the
community, and is empowered to
act in any situation where general
student welfare is concerned, such

as the food service, the academic

calendar, class priorities, or orientation programs. The council
Two). 7:30 p.m.
does its work through committees, each commitee having a
Monday
chairman from the IRC, while its
O’Keefe Center: Opera Rigo- L mernbcrs are drawn from any and
all students interested in these
letfo by Verdi.
Melody Fair; Comedy This Was particular problems. IRC holds
Burlesque.

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS

two seats on Student Senate.

Among the many IRC committees are: the Food Committee
which meets regularly with dining administrators to discuss food
problems and to help plan thp
menu for the following weeks;
the Awards Committee which recognizes the outstanding workers
in each hall, and the New Campus and Standards Committees. A
special functionary group within

the Inter Residence Council, the
Activities Council, handles the
coordination of social; cultural
and athletic events.

CJt&amp;vJ
CHEMICAL SOCIETY

The Student Affiliates of the
American Chemical Society will
hold a new member mixer Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Rooms
124-125 Acheson Hall. All chemistry majors wishing to join or
to find out more about the stu-

dent affiliate
attend.

program

should

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION

The regular weekly meeting of
the Christian Science Organization on campus will resume this
Thursday evening at 7 p.m. in
Room 264, All interested students are welcome to attend.
CORE
CORE

will be having a RENT
PARTY today at 9 p.m. The
party will be held at the CORE
office, at 1536 Jefferson Ave.,
at Brunswick. Cost is $1, and includes refreshments.
Members
and their guests are invited.
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
CLUB

The first meeting of the fall
semester will be held Tuesday
at 11 a.m. in Room 344 Norton
Union. Membership is open to
the entire Student Body.
STUDENT WELFARE
COMMITTEE

The Student Welfare Committee of the Student Senate will
hold a chairmen's meeting Monday at 8:45 p.m. in Room 211,
the Senate office. This meeting
is compulsory for all chairmen.

If unable to attend contact J. Z.
Friedman, at 831-3269.
Ski Club

All members interested in being on committees please leave
your name and phone number
in the Ski Club office. Room 320,
Norton.

�Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Drama Society Sets
iLnwsig
Plans For Semester

wrote a book about the “Old
In 1953L'
West” —thai is, he Treated a number of characters with
no resemblance to anybody who ever lived in the Historical West ,and pkrced them in a setting that is a pure
product of the myth-maker’s imagination. He called
the book The Ballad of Cat Ballou and it must have been
this catchy title that induced someone in Hollywood to
purchase the movie rights. Fortunately, the title is the
only thing that remains of Chanslor’s childish vision,
since the producers of the movie were smart enough to
realize that there has been a surfeit of “heroic” westerns
in the last decade or so. Instead, they have produced a
burlesque of the traditional western movie, and although
they haven’t quite brought it off as some of the unusually
rhapsodic reviews in the national periodicals seem to
suggest, Cat Ballou has some great moments and one really fascinating acting performance. This isn’t going to be
the film that makes the American viewing public (TV
and movies) aware of how they have been hoaxed by the
Western Mystique, but it is one of the few films about
the west which offers a comic outlook beyond the conventional humor of the saloon brawl, the funny-looking
side-kick and the inept cowpuncher (not that it doesn’t
have these stand-bys too).
For the last ten years or so, Lee Marvin’s acting
reputation has been growing steadily. His performance
in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (in which he
played Valance in* John Ford’s vastly under-rated film)
was the culmination of a career in which he has practically become the living symbol of a sadistic, insane, nearly
inhuman but recognizable killer. Marvin’s impressively
exaggerated features and his intense, haunted eyes give
him a physical advantage which he cleverly exploited
and combined with a surprisingly professional devotion
to his craft as an actor. Now, with his image at its strongest, he has been cast in a comic role for the first time
that I can think of and, incredibly, he is superb. Actually,
the producers have played their trump card twice by
casting him as the proto-typical badman as well, but even
this role is undercut by his silver nose (to replace the
one bit off in a fight), his preposterously menacing gutteral rasp and the strange music which accompanies every
one of his brief appearances.
Marvin plays a rather broken-down gun-fighter
named Kid Shelleen. Jane Fonda (Catherine Ballou)
hires him to protect her father who has antagonized the
entire town in which he lives by refusing to sell the water
rights the town needs to industrialize. However, Shelleen
turns out to be a drunkard filled with nostalgia about the
courage of his contempories instead of a cold killer. He
has become a victim of social transition of all things, and
his alcoholism is actually a defense reaction to the fact
that he has become a living relic, a useless accessory
from a bygone era. He offers some strangely poignant
comments about the human discards of the frontier and
even in his most humorous moments, he is always a man
of flesh and substance, not a stick-figure dressed in funny
rags. You want to laugh at him and with him at the same
time, and this, 1 think, is the triumph of his performance.
When he is on the screen (he isn’t for the first 30 minutes)
the picture is delightful and if the Cinema Establishstead of his sentimental value or the cost of the picture
he was in, I see no reason why Lee Marvin shouldn’t win
an academy award for his role as Kid Shelleen. A really
good comic performance is a rare and difficult thing and
just as perceptive a comment on man’s fate as a deadly
serious one.
The rest of the movie alternates between good and
bad moments. They are about evenly balanced, I would
say. Jane Fonda is getting to the point where she can
be quite charmnig at times, and a little wistful too, but the
director doesn’t seem to know what to do with her much
of the time. Michael Callan as her boyfriend is jejune,
Dwayne Hickman as her boyfriend's uncle (!) has some
good bits and a number of actors I didn’t recognize are
top-notch as Frankie Ballou, and as an Indian named
Jackson Two-Foot (who Frank Ballou insists on addressing in Hebrew, considering him a member of the “10
Lost Tribes of Israel”
something he heard from a former congressman on a circuit lecture). Perhaps because
the title of the picture is taken from a book with the
word “ballad” in its 'title. Stubby Kaye and the late Nat
King Cole Appear between scenes to recapitulate (invariably inaccurately) the action past and forecast the
scenes to come with a catchy banjo tune.
They are unfortunately inane much of the time and
seem quite superfluous. In addition, I was instinctively
saddened every time Nat Cole appeared on the screen.
The illness which led to his untimely death is not in evidnece and his appearance is an ironic commentary on
the state of his health. Somehow, it all seemed sadder
than anything else in the film.
The pace is good, the color excellent, the special effects very nicely done and the writing often quite witty.
Even if the whole thing doesn’t always stick together,
Lee Marvin makes up for it anytime he is on the screen.
The advertisements call it “the funniest western ever
made.” This may be so, but it is a dubious distinction.
The western movie (consider Gary Cooper, for instance)
has not been known for its humor,
—

The Student Dramatic Society
held a meeting Monday, September 13, to outline the plans for
the coming year. Officers of the
club, elected last semester for
the «1965-66 academic year, addressed old members of the club,
as well as prospective new ones.
To lead off the semester, the
Student Dramatic Society will produce “The Lady’s Not for Burning” on November 3, 4, 5, and
6. Tryouts for the production will
be held Tuesday, September 21,
from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m., and Wednesday, September 22, from 3:00
to 5:00 p.m. The location for the
tryouts will be posted on bulletin
boards in Crosby Hall, the basement of Hariman Library, and
the Student Dramatic Society office in room 312 of Norton Union.

Performances are entirely student-produced, acted, and directed. The Student Dramatic Society meets every Tuesday at
7:00, and there is a theater workshop after every meeting. Officers are: Francine Zampano, president; Gary Battaglia, vice-presi-

dent; William Cortes, business
manager; Dick Kawecki, treasurer; AiMrey Masuilonis, corresponing secretary; Sandra Kline, recording secretary.

held in Norton 262 today
from 7:30 p.m. to 11:00
p.m

Student Directory Changes or additions should he

made in 225 Norton Hall,
hy Wednesday.

the Student Dramatic Society
exists for the education of every
student and all are welcome. No
student need feel restricted from
joining the club because of a
lack of experience. Writers are
invited to submit original scripts
for production.

Applications for HomeQueen are available at the candy counter.
coming

A.C.5.
ART

Six more plays will be produced by the society during the
course of the semester, “The Servants of the People” and “Oh
Dad, Poor Dad, Mama’s Hung
You in the Closet and I’m Feeling
So Sad” will be presented the
afternoons of October 11, 12, and
13. The other four plays have
not yet been chosen.

&amp;

CRAFT

SUPPLIES

615 Englewood Ave.
Kenmore

837-4556
"Hard to Get Art Supplies"
Art Exhibits, Art Lessons
and
Picture Framing
Open Daily Mon.-Sat. 9-5

Novel Film Opens
At Local Theatre
By

LAUREN JACOBS

Felix Greene’s controversial
movie “China” arrived at the
Circle Art Theater on Bailey
Ave. yesterday and will be shown
to Sunday. Mr. Greene produced
and wrote this film after traveling through Communist China.
While he was there, was granted
a filmed interview with Chou EnLai.

This color presentation, the
only one of its kind in the West,
features life in remote areas in
China, as well as that in cities,
Chinese folk music, and classical
music performed by the Peking
Symphony Orchestra and artists
from the Shanghai Conservvatory
of Music.
Playing on the same program
with “China” is a black and
white short also produced by
Greene, featuring the Peking
Symphony Orchestra. The performance includes two pieces by
Chinese Composers and the Liszt

After showing these films at
several Universities, cards were
distributed and viewers were
asked to rate them. The results
were approximately: 77% positive, 17% positive but with reservations, 3%% negative with
some positivve aspects, and 3%
with totally negativve reactions.
The San Francisco Chronicle has
hailed the film as, “thoroughly
professional . . . colorful . . .
fascinating

.

.

.

engrossing

.

entertaining.

JAY BEE LOUNGE
572 Amherst
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Doors Open at

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Last time for tryouts for
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—

Free Parking Nitely at Bartlett Buick

—

�Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

MUSIC ON CAMPUS

HELP!

By DANIEL SCHROEDER

music in Capen Hall. Pianist
Michael Sahl and percussionists
John Bergamo and Jan Williams
were the performers.
The concert opened with the
“Military Music for Two pairs
of Timpani,” by Andre and
Jacque Philidor. This piece was
written around 1780 and so I
suppose it should not really be
considered avant-garde but then
again compositions for two pairs
of tympani are not exactly overabundant in music literature.
The most that can be said for
it is that it is original and was
admirably performed, with Mr.
Bergamo and Mr. Williams providing ample contrast in dynamics to relieve the monotony.
Frederic Rzewsi’s “Study II
(Dreams)” followed, with Mr.
Sahl playing the soleo piano part.

avant-garde composer. He was
represented on this program with
his “Atlas Ecliptiealis with Winter Music,” a title which I have
a feeling has little or nothing to
do with the content of the piece.
It is scored for piano and a variety of percussion instruments,
including what appeared to be
pots and pans suspended from a

clothes rack. Just about every
sound that can possibly be obtained from a percussion section
was achieved in this piece, and
for that alone it would be praiseworthy. But there is also a feeling of tension prevalent, whether
intended or not, and this feeling
lasts throughout the whole piece,
with no release anywhere along
the line.
The second half of the program consisted
of Mauricio
KageTs “From Sonant
1960/
Earle Brown’s “Four Systems (1954),” and Mr. Sahl’s
“Vibraphone, Piano, and Percussion Piece (I960)” of which the
latter seemed to be the most
interesting, due to the composer’s exotic writing for the vibra-

Union Board has announced that positions are
now available on the Personnel Committee for second semester freshmen,
sophomores, and juniors.
Applications are available
through September 24 in
Room 215, and on the second floor of the Union.

*

phone.

Year’s Music Schedule
Shows Great Promise

My Ring
Is Missing
By T. BLAIR

—

BACHWITZ

“The sacred sacrificial ring is
PLOT.
“The famous Beatles” John,
Paul, George and Ringo (who by
some strange twist of fate wears
the sacred sacrificial ring) race
through a series of sight gags,
pratfalls, bulesques and general
absurdities in this their second
film offering. Perhaps the effort might have been more successful if the producers had
stayed with their original intention to avoid relating the scenes
as much as possible. As it was.
the “plot” tended to distract
more than enhance an otherwise
delightfully absurd motion picseem to be talcing shape as a
nineteen-sixties technicolor stereophonic version of “the famous
Marx brothers.” Idiocy and flippant jargon in the face of peril.
Comfort in chaos. A seeming inability to communicate with any
but each other.
missing!”

-

THE CAST—The Beatles: John
Lennon, Paul McCartney, George
Harrison and Ringo StSrr (an
alias) PLUS an extremely competent (of course) British supporting cast
NOTE: Lack of
co-operation on the part of the
-

•

—

management
of the
Buffalo
Theatre prevents me from revealing the names of these fine
supporting players

,

.

,

CINEMATOGRAPHY
Both
this film and its predecessor
(HARD DAYS NIGHT) should be
seen for their imaginative use of
camera and processing technique.
These plus the application of a
great deal of masterful Editing
make both films visually exciting pieces of work at almost
every moment. The addition of
color in this second film was a
decided asset.
—

All the performers merit much
praise for deciphering this extremely difficult music and for
performing it so conscientiously
and astutely. A word or two of
praise is also deserved by the
audience, first of all for having
the courage to come, secondly for
staying through the whole concert, thirdly for being so wellhaved, and lastly for somehow or
other sensing when each piece
was finished. (These pieces don’t
end like Beethoven symphonies.)
The concert was one in a series
of presentations held Thursday
night for the benefit of Freshmen, as part of the orientation
program.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

To return to the earlier comparsion with the Marx brothers,
like an updated Groucho, the
British foursome seem to have
furthered an image of iconolastic
anti-establishmentism. Caught in
the film’s far ranging satirical
net were (among others) The
Queen (GOOD LORD), The C of
E (MY WORD), Government

grant scientists

(“M.I.T.

wanted

me to rule the world for them.”),
Scotland Yard and James Bond
(THE FIENDS).
(Cont’d on

FOIIPEMl
HAH H

P.

m

I

GLEN PARK

CASINO
Williamsville, N.Y. 632-0065

NEW POLICY

The fall concerts In the area
especially at UB promise to
make this the “most exciting and
ambitious season yet”
for those
who get excited over this sort of
thing. The quote is from Herbert
Kellman, head of the ConcertPlanning Committee of the Music
Department, who has at least
succeeded in inspiring the first
large scale integration of efforts,
spanning several departments in
one unified message of culture:
The UB Festival (Oct. 3-9).
Not. that the campus concerts
have lacked for attendance, but
there seems to be a marked division among the audiences. The
Budapest Quartet Concerts are inevitably packed by elders who
wish Krips was back in Buffalo,
the creative Associate Concerts
are attended by dutiful scholars
or curious know-nothings (welcomed by Foss and Co.), and special music events like Slee Lectures play to a smaller, curious
but constant composite of professionals and oddball students
(not a criticism). The last and best
hope for mass popularity of musical traditions in Buffalo lies
with Lucas Foss
who is more
the enthusia'stic promoter and less
the complacent, accomplished
conductor Krips was
and the
Philharmonic subscription' concerts, which have not lost all
their old supporters and have
added many new, young ones.
There is no doubt but that the
future of music lies with college
students. But it is obvious that
most UB students have never attended any of the previously mentioned musical activities. No one
has a duty to culture but each
man has a duty to himself, and
student organizers like the Norton
Music Committee have at last become aware that their duty is to
many people. (The Committee is
for the first time working with
the Music Department on the
India Festival, and the upcOm-

I and

,

If this piece isn’t exactly memorably melodious, it at least succeeds in conveying a wild spontaneity that is so often prevalent
in our dreams and nightmares.
There were long periods of
silence, followed by fortissimo
playing which gave the composition the absurdity and lack of
continuity one finds in dreams.
John Cage has probably experimented with more types of
compositions than any other

Thursday, Sept. 9, three members of Creative Associates presented a concert of avant-garde

PACK NINE

16)

—

—

_

CONCERT

. ,

Friday

Saturday

8:30 P.M.
„

-

„

..

-

'Of Audience Participation Fame'

8:30 P.M.

(Formerly of Vohwinkle’s

CLARK GYM

Restaurant)

Waring

featuring

phi |

Buffy St. Marie

Qchi

Greatly Reduced!

with
REV. GARY

an^

Greenbriar Boys

DAVIS

Prices

ERIC ANDERSEN
Rich Lawrence, M.C.

Saturday

•

-

8:30

WORKSHOPS:
1:00 P.M. NORTON UNION

Songwriters Workshop
The American Bluegrass Tradition*

•

TICKETS.

For Further Information

-

??

of Beer—$1.25
•

$2.50

—

Big Pitcher

-

Presenting

The American Blues Tradition

DANCING

•

Community Singing
Laughs!
Comedy!

By REID

Some ten years ago, when
music was still Sinatra and Crosby or Johnny Cash and Jimmy
Dean, a new snowball began to
roll down hill. The new sound (?),
ologieal aid of Presley’s hips, and
sounding like a mutated freak of
Getz’s early fifties ‘third stream
cool’, began its roll down hill roll
(definitely down) and continues
to, under equally non-harmonic
influences, which brings us to
point
last week’s Bo Diddly
Abomination at the Pine Grill
At first we were disappointed
not to obtain a front table in the
—

$4 00

both

concert*

I

workshops

ci
me
Available
of .1.
Ticket Office
.

Norton

_

Norton
Norton Union,
831-3704

ffi
SUNYAB

°

"

Attention Seniors
Appointments for Seniors Pictures in the 196566 Yearbook can he made:
Daily: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
at the
Norton Candy Counter
5 p.m. to 7 p.m
at the
Norton Ticket Booth

You must have an appointment. Make one as
soon as possible.

•

Games!

per concert

FREE PARKING
NO COVER
Left on Cayuga Rd.
from Main Street

taining a more important place
than ever in Western thought.

Thus this Festival is of the utmost importance. It will be preceded by two preparatory lectures, the evenings of Sept. z3
and 24 at 8:30 in Baird Hall.
Other coming music events are:
The annual Budapest Quartet
Series, five Creative Associate
Concerts, three Slee Lectures,
lecture by Sol Babitz on string
and keyboard technique in Bach
and Mozart (Sept. 29), Book Two
of Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier
performed by Leo Smit (Oct. 1),
a lieder recital by faculty
member Heinz Rehfuss, lecture-recital by New York Pro
Musica and Nino Pirrotta in celebration of Dante’s 700th birthday
(Nov. 14-15), Donzietti’s Don Pasquale performed on campus by
the Turnau Opera Co. (Nov. 22),
recital by professor David Fuller
on harpsichord (Dec. 1), two modern one-act operas performed by
area artists.
This article cannot go into the
other numerous faculty and student concerts, many of them as
yet unscheduled, or into the usual
high-caliber schedule of the Buffalo Philharmonic and other local
music .societies; but these do
exist, and may be mentioned or
reviewed as they occur, in this
column.

.

j

CONCERT

RAY
VOHWINKLE

2, 1965

&amp;

—

An Evening With
Bo Diddly

featuring

OCTOBER 1

mg, Committee-sponsored Folk
Festival workshops seem to be
aiming as much at undertaking
despite
as the entertainment
the Greenbriar Boys).
The India Festival, the symbol
of what can be the new order,
and the answer to the University's
lack of humanism (decried from
cover-to-cover in last week’s
Spectrum), is devoted to music,
art and aesthetic thought of the
East. Eastern thought has long
intrigued and often overwhelmed
Westerners (as E. M. Forrester in
Passage to India), and is now at-

.

.

crush of music lovers, our distant table proved to be a greater
asset than expected, as, we apart
from a persistant ringing, our
hearing is otherwise unimpaired.
Notwithstanding the noise we did
ing it up in stage center, and
B. D.'s electric silk suit light up
like an “Eat at Bo’s” sign.
Meanwhile, “Bo” was "messing
with” a couple Up on the stage
and going into hysterics as they
faithfully echoed his ‘shame and
scandal’ lyrics. The bass droned
on and on, the drums repeated
4-4 beats with early Swahili overBo even played once in
tones
a while.
Although opinion seemed fav—

orable, the second set found The
Bo in an “arty” mood. I was informed that what followed was,
in fact, three separate and autonomous “songs.” Next emanated
two tear jerking ballads—“Aztec”
and “Scuttlebug" during which
The Bo found enough time to
losen his tie, move his ring from
left to right hand, clean out his
pockets, pull up his pants, reset
the amplifier, wipe off the microphone, and play almost a full
chart ending to ““Scuttlebug,”
which we found so inspiring we
scuttled hurriedly for the front
door under a hail of 4-4 swipes
at the snare and E chord variations.
If you dislike rock

’n’ roll, I

strongly recommend that you see
you'd be
Bo Diddly next time
surprised how much you can appreciate the Rolling Stones,
This week we are looking
forward to seeing the Lonnie
Woods Trio at the Cold Spring's
Bon Tonand regretting the opening of Agent 007 at the Pine.
—

BOCCE
PIZZA

IF 3-1344

�Student Pay Cuts
C ANCE1LED
By NANCY TODER
Commuting students who began
working for the food service this
Fall were surprised to find that
instead of earning the wage of

one dollar

per hour and bonus,
the wage of last year’s employees,
they would only receive seventy
five cents per hour and bonus.
After hearing complaints about
this situation, the Spectrum spoke
to Mr. Perry, head of foor service personnel who confirmed the
reduction.
Mr, Perry explained the difference in wages for commuter and
board contract students by pointing out that since the student
on board contract has already
paid for his meals, they cannot
serve as compensation. His hourly
rate of pay must therefore, in
fairness, be higher than the nonresident student who takes his
meal as part of his compensation.
Therefore, the rate of pay for
a student employee is greater or
less depending on whether he is
on board contract. Rates are seventy five cents per hour plus
meals and an attendance bonus
for non-resident students and one
dollar per hour plus meals and
attendance bonus for resident students.

The attendance bonus amounts
to twenty five cents per hour

and is paid at the end of each
semeester to all students who do

not “desert” the food service dur-

ing weekends or before finals.
Mr. Perry said that in previous

years many students had failed
to show up for work before final

examinations, and that this had

proved to be disastrous since at
this time resident dining halls
are operating at full capacity.

When asked whether there
would be a reduction of prices in
the Norton Cafeterias since there
had been a reduction in wages,
Mr. Perry replied that several
items have been reduced, but
a general reduction is doubtful.
He did, however, say that prices
would be maintained despite a
rise in the cost of materials.
At a meeting last Wednesday
the various directors and coordinators of the food service established a new series of job categories for student employees. This

!!

graded system provides salaries
of up to $1.00 per hour plus

bonus for commutors and $1.25
and bonus for resident students.
These higher wages will be paid
to students in more demanding
positions and do not effect gen'
eral cafeteria workers.

EXTRA

.

.

.

The Spectrum received a call
from the Office of the Dean of
Students on Thursday morning.
Apparently, food service officials
agreed with Spectrum
have
claims that the bonus system for
is discriminatory and
have abolished it until further
notice. Hereafter, pay for all student employees will begin at
$1.00 per hour.' A system of semester pay raises will be investigated as a possible means of increasing student employment and
motivation.

—Greek News

—

ALPHA PHI OMEGA will hold
their first social, a date party, at
Bosella’s Friday at 8:00 p.m. All
prospective rushees are cordially
invited.

ALPHA SIGMA PHI cordially
invite all eligible rushees to an
open, dated, rush party, to be
held at the “Flying ‘E’ ranch at
9:00 p.m. tomorrow. Rides will be
available to those who need them,
in lobby of Tower dorm at 8:45
p.m. For further information call:
831-3494 or 831-3561.
BETA PHI SIGMA fraternity
will hold a house warming B.Y.O.
party at Steve and Wex’s apartment tomorrow at 9:00 p.m.
PHI KAPPA PS I cordially invites all rushees to a Rush Stag
this evening at the Hallmark
Manor on Main St. near Amherst,
starting at 8:00 p.m. For rides
and/or information, please call
Roger Fredricks at TF 2-4567.

establish a forum where students,

faculty and administration meet
on a regular basis to discuss current problems is offered.”
The group will be composed of

24 members: 6 from administra-

tion (selected by the Dean’s
Council and to include at least
one representative of the Dean
of Students’ office), 6 from the
Faculty (selected by Faculty Senate to represent a range of
rank and experience in the University), 12 students (4 chosen
by the Student Senate and 4
chosen as representative members of the student body who
are involved in Student Government, 2 graduate students and
2 professional students).
The method of choosing the
four representatives from the
the student body (other than the
four senate members) are now
being planned by the Student
Senate. Students who are not
involved in student government
and are interested in representing members of the student body
may file an application with the
secretary in the Student Senate
office (Norton 205) before Friday, September 24. The four will
be chosen by the senate.

Movie Review
(Cont’d

from P.

.

.

.

9)

PAULING

.

.

.

The film was a romp. Adverv
ture, Romance, Satire, Broad Burlesques, Exotic Eastern Maidens
(“How do we know you’re not
just as filthy with yOur filthy
eastern ways?”) and of course
The Beatles. The six new original
songs written for the picture by
John Lennon and Paul McCartney
(HELP, THE NIGHT BEFORE,
YOU’VE GOT TO HIDE YOUR
LOVE AWAY, I NEED YOU,
YOU’RE GONNA LOSE THAT
GIRL TICKET TO RIDE) are
pleasant but unfortunately not
as striking as those in their
G-rsf picture The film also lacked
some of the depth and tasteful
handling contained in the first

opus. This may be accredited in
some part to the restrictions of
a

more rigid plot

structure.

Where Hard Day's Night had
something of a documentary
style to it, the second film is
more

traditionally

a

“plotted”

film.
On the whole the film is entertaining at all times if a bit
superficial and
contrived at
some. It is presently to be seen

at

several drive
around the city.

theatres

in

Dr. Linus Pauling speaks on the problems of peace
—Photo

”

PHI LAMBDA DELTA fraternity will have a party at the Teke-

wood Room, in the Bowlodrome
starting at 8:00 p.m. and dated.
The fraternity will supply the
first four kegs for brothers and
guests only.
PI LAMBDA TAU fraternity
wishes to announce that coffee
hours will be held Friday, Mon-

(Cont’d from P. 1)
all three areas, with very little
awareness of the commonality
of the concerns and frequently
with little awareness that solutions arising from one group may
not only be different but also in
direct opposition to solution arising from another group. With
this in mind . . . the proposal to

Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

day and Tuesday in Engineering

Building for

all rushees. The
times on these three days will be
from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
There will also be a date party
open to all rushees at Bosellas
Restaurant in Williamsville beginning at 8:30 p.m. Saturday.
Call Rush Allen at 836-6072 for
any additional information.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON fraternity will open their Fall Rush
program with a beer stag today
from 8:30 p.m.-l:00 a.m. at the
Hotel Worth. All rushees are
cordially invited to attend.

THETA CHI SORORITY is
looking forward to the installation of new sisters and also of

the officers for the fall semester.
The ceremony will be held Sunday at the Three Coins Restaurant, after which a luncheon will
be served.

THETA CHI Fraternity extends
a warm welcome to all of the returning students and to the new

freshman class.
All undergraduate men interested in a fulfilling college
career are urged to watch this
column for upcoming rushing
and fraternity orientation activities. Freshmen arc reminded that
although we are unable to pledge
you this semester, nonetheless,
we look forward to seeing you at
our rush functions.
SIGMA DELTA TAU is holding
a “Back to School” picnic this
Sunday at Ellicott Creek Park.
Transportation will be provided
in front of Norton at 1:00 p.m.
for those sisters needing rides.

Peace Corps
(Cont’d from

.

.

.

(Cont’d

from P.

1)

An important segment of the
speech by Dr. Pauling dealt with

P. 1)

the incredible power of atomic
Gallery. All students and mem
weapons
a power so awesome
bers of the faculty are welcome.
Mr. Wofford was born in 1926 that few' can conceive of the
in New York City. He served in amount of energy involved by
employing everyday terms. He
the United States Air Force during World War II and received a repeated the importance of being
Bachelor of Arts Degree from aware of these facts throughout
the University of Chicago in his speech, in order to emphasize
1948. jn 1954 two LL.B’s, from that efforts toward peace are
Yale Law School and Howard absolutely necessary to prevent
Law School, were presented to annihilation of the human race.
him. During and after law school He stressed that the nuclear
he served as assistant to Chester powers have the potential to
Bowles, the Ambassador to India. kill the population of the world
an
He also accompanied Mr. Bowles many times over, giving as
on a trip to the U.S.S.R., India, example that the Soviet Union
Poland, and Yugoslavia in 1957, could destroy the entire United
States with one eighth of its
present megaton power.
From 1954 to 1958 Mr. WofDr. Pauling embarked on a
ford practiced law as an associate in the firm of Covington long narration of injustices perand Burling in Washington. In petrated by United States for—

visor to the Rev. Theodore Hes-

burgh, a member of the United
States’
Commission on Civil
Rights and the president of
Notre Dame University. He was
in charge of the Commission’s
studies and hearings on discrimination in housing and edited the
first report to the President. Mr.

Wofford became Associate Professor of Law at Notre Dame
Law School in 1959. He currently
has a five-year leave of absence
from the University.
In 1960, he served as campaign
assistant to the then Senator
John F. Kennedy, after which
he became Special Assistant to
the late President in matters
dealing with civil rights and the
Peace Corps. He worked with
Sargent Shriver, and in 1961 accompanied him to Africa and
Asia to set the foundation of the
Peace Corps. Mr. Wofford then
returned to Africa alone to set
up a Peace Corps program in
Nyasaland, Togo, and Ethiopia.
He is currently working in
Washington as assistant to Shriver advising on African Peace
Corps affairs.
Mr. Wofford married

the for-

mer Clare Lindgren of St. Paul,
Minnesota, He and his wife spent

most of 1949 in India studying
village economics and the Gandhian movement. From their experiences the Woffords wrote
India Afire, published in 1951.

globe. He called for a foreign
policy more concerned with the

ideals that America should and
can stand for, the most important of which is democratic selfdetermination by the people of a
country. He further stated that
the United States government
will support military dictatorships, as it did in Cuba and
Viet Nam and have constitutional
governments overthrown, as it
did in Iran and Guatamala, in
its efforts to prevent these governments from instituting any
kind of systematic economic reforms through which American
industries might lose profits. Dr.
Pauling reminded the audience
that during the Mexican rebellion, U. S. businesses accepted
compensations and systemtically
left that country over a twenty
year period, but when the United
States was faced with a similar
prospect in Cuba and Iran, it
withdrew its support from the
new governments and even ar-

Parking Problems
should obtain permission ahead
of time from Mr. Eugene Murray, Chief of Institutional Safety,
Service Building, Winspear Ave.
The Campus Police will have a
list of those cars given such
special permission and will not
ticket them unless the privilege
is clearly being abused.
There will be cases when
tickets are issued unfairly. Such
tickets should be appealed as

ranged that

by R. Goldberg

the Constitutional
of Iran be over-

government
thrown.

Dr. Pauling read a letter he
had written to President* Johnson asking the president directly
whether we would negotiate with
all parties concerned in Viet
Nam specifically the National
Liberation Front and it not, why.
He has received no reply after
three weeks. He urged that the
U.S. end the war any way it can,
no matter with whom negotiations must be conducted. He
also stated that the exclusion
of the NLF from unconditional
negotiations was proof again of
the immorality and unscrupulousness of government. He left
the address Box 4068, Santa
Barbara, California for all persons interested in obtaining a
responsible booklet entitled “How
We got into Viet Nam.”

Dr. Pauling made an important
point when he stated that it
was necessary to apply the principle of “symmetry” in our understanding of other people’s
problems. This policy is summed
up by the quote “Do onto others

twenty percent better than you
would have others do onto you
to make up for subjective bias,”
Finally, Dr. Pauling stressed
the fact that the ultimate purposes of any form of government
are the same and that sooner
or later their differences in
means would be reconciled with
the uniformity of their aims. He
said basically as the processes of
government become more refined, they approach each other
and that wars and attitudes of
mistrust inhibit this approach.
If the world we live in is to be
preserved these inhibiting factors must be eliminated under
world law in order that existing
systems

may

approach

each

other's ends more rapidly.

(Cont

d from p,

3)

soon as possible by filling out an
appeal form in the Bursar’s office. The appeal will be heard
by a Parking Subeourt of the
Student Judiciary and the stu-

dent will be notified as to the
date and place of .the hearing.
There are now three student
parking lots on Main St. near
Bailey Ave. in which parking is
free.

�PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 17, 1965

—
—

‘I

HILLEL

NEWMAN

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service at 7:45 p.m. this evening
in the Hillel House. The delegates
to the National Leadership Institute will present a panel discussion on their impressions of
the Institute. An Oneg Shabbat
will follow.

The Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring its first social of the
year tonight at 8:00 p.m. in Newman Center. Admission is free

There will be an Open House
this Saturday evening, beginning
at 9 p.m. in the Hillel House. Admission is free. Refreshments
will be provided by Aurora Chapter of B’nai B'rith. This will! be
followed by a Selichoth Service in
the Hillel Chapel.
The first delicatessen supper
of the year will be held on Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel
supHouse. Reservations for the
per are necessary and will be accepted as long as seats are available. Tickets are now on sale at
the Hillel House. The speaker of
the evening will be Rabbi Leonard Buchen, Ahavas Achim Lubavitz Synogogue. He will speak
on “Tradition and Change—Orthodox View.”
This

*

'„*

■■

CO,

-

AND S«NDI«1

Newman bowling league—\yill
begin its season at the Norton
lanes at 7:30 p.m, Friday, September 24, a hayride is planned.

and beer and other refreshments
will be available.
Sunday at 10:30 a.m., the Red
Mass of the Holy Spirit will be
offered at the Cantalician Center. Fr, Beasley will deliver the
sermon. After Mass, free refreshments will be served.
The weekly Sunday Supper will
be held in Newman Hall at 5:30
p.m. beginning this Sunday,
Wednesday, Dr. Allen Kuntz

TAKE HOME

835-4404

Watch posters for further information.

Dinner for One

KICKOFF WEEKEND
IS
NEXT WEEKEND

September 24th

jumbo Box

Elementary Hebrew
Advanced Hebrew
Survey of Jewish History
Talmud
—

—

The Thrift Box

OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS
Register Now at the Hillel House, 40 Copen
—

-

-

-

The Family Bucket $3.75
to 7 grateful people. 15 pieces
of delicious Kentucky Fried Chicken.
6 Rolls and 3 Honey.Country Gravy ....1

Serves 5

(

Jacobi Bros.

Howj On l/m CJuxJm!

MAIN AT EGGERT

The Party Barrel $4.95
Serves 7 to 10 happy people. 21 pieces
of Col. Sander's Kentucky Fried Chicken.
The Perfect meal for parties. 10 Rolls

Snack Sack 75&lt;
2 pieces Chicken
French Fries

DELIVERIES

H

FOR

Published by

Partners PreAA, *3nc.
9

5-6 p.m. Daily
p.m.

8:30-9:30 p.m. Daily
For

Orders

Before

8:30

835-4404

SLACKS

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

SHRIMP DINNER

$C98

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Cole Slaw
French Fries
Cocktail Sauce
2 Rolls

1946 MG-TC

Dse

RECONDITIONED
Best offer over $1,500.

Your

Charge
Account

•

505 Main St,

•

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Thruway Plaza

Now Delivered

•

$
25
.50
Box for Two
1.00
Box for Six..
Country Gravy
pt
30
.45
Creamy Cole Slow pt.
Potato Salad
Villa Beoiia
Mashed Potatoes ...pt.
Ralli
6 far .25
Roll.
12 far .45

Single Order

FISH DINNER

$1.35

pcs. Fish
Cole Slaw
French Fries
Tartar Sauce
2 Rolls

JUMBO SHRIMP
Per lb. $1.95

95&lt;

FISH

Lb. 95&lt;

Amherst

(Main

Contact:

French Fries

2

5 Jumbo Shrimp

Press-Free

838-2759

Carry-Out Foods

..

By the
SUNY DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery Charge 25c

Post Grad

Printing

STUDENTS

For Orders Before 5

s 22 95

V

T

RESIDENT

Noon-10 p.m. Sun,

Corduroy

COAT

The SPECTRUM

Nancy Long
NF 4-4298 after 5

$2.25

9 pieces (one whole chicken) of delecJuicy
table Kentucky Fried Chicken
Tender
Just the way you like it.
4 Rolls and Honey.

—

IF 6-4540

Students interested in joining
one of the Hillel Study groups
should now register for them at
the Hillel House. The following
classes are being offered this
semester: Elementary Hebrew on
Sunday at 2 p.m.; Survey of Jewish History on Sunday at 3 p.m.;
Advanced Hebrew on Tuesday at
4 p.m.; and Talmud on Thursday
at 4 p.m. Each group meets for
one hour a week beginning with
Sunday, Oct. 3. These groups are
open to all students attending
the State University of Buffalo
without charge.

U.B,

$1.75

5 generous pieces of mouth-watering
Kentucky Fried Chicken. Washed Potatoes,
Gravy and 2 Rolls.

HILLEL STUDY GROUPS

ices this year for Rosh-Hashonoh
and Yom Kippur. These services
will be held in the Jewish War
Vets Post, 57 Taunton Place. The
first service will be held on Sunday evening, Sept. 26, at 7 p.m.

RIDE NEEDED

$1.25

3 generous pieces of mouth-watering
Kentucky Fried Chicken. Creamy Cole
Slaw, Mashed Potatoes, Gravy and Rolls.

town students that Hillel will
again sponsor High-Holiday Serv-

From Williamsville fo

»f- *f

will speak at the Newman meeting in Norton Conference Theater at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, the

advise all out-of-

is to

p* GWk,

&amp;

Eggert)

ONION RINGS

So. Shore Plaza

Nightly

&amp;

35&lt;

All
6-12Day Sunday

�PAGE

Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

TWELVE

YOUR PLAN to take over. EDUCATION
AND USE IT TOK VOUR OWN PURPOSES
IS VERY LAUDABLE, BUT THE DRAFT

7SI

—

Syhops\s-

WE saw
THE MEETlMfc OF THE
SINISTER SIX INTWE
halls of the: -.

ustweex

SILENCE
...atfcE

ESTABLISHMENTJust as MILlTARy-

,

WOULD YOU Be

«[\TH0UT MY

IS ONLY A SKIRMISHING WEAPON,
You MUST CHANGE THE STUDENTS THEM
SELVES, MAKE THEM ACCEPT YOUR
VALUES, VOUR IDEAS, VOUR DELICIOUS

!!

»RAIMCWU&gt;«

THE BOM 6

?

MEDIOCRE

HAN INtROJ)UC£D
HIS ULTIMATE

WEAPON, THEp&amp;RAF
WRITTEN AND DRAWN BY

JEREMY TAYLOR
q

LETTERING BY JAN

j

AH EERIE GLOW
FELL OVE R THE
ROOM

N TM

JS IT GOING
TO BE

THERE WILL BE
MO PROBLEMS
WITH THIS KID
he's our K-ey
to power and

1

.

.

i

THE
EXAM ? /

ON

WE CAN GO

fortune

!

ON CHARGING
OUTRAGEOUS

PRICES

!

/

WE WON’T HAV
ANV TROUBLE
WITH PuBUC
RE UUTONSV

HAS C&gt;0O0

LEADERSHIP
POTENTIAL"

S.

P,

s

LOUSV TECHNOCRATS THIKIlC.
THEY CAN PUSH US AROUND
SEE ABOUT THAT !!

THESE

•

•

•

NEXT WEEK'!'

he's A &amp;ooo
eolloweR.

THAT ARCH-FIEND,

y
BUSINESS
,
MAN

MILITARY-MAN

MAH

Goes to

the uniformity

CAMPUS, TURNS ON THE

im
Rig *6"

�the
STANDS FOR

\

GWTlMUE

SAT., SEPT. 18th
9 P.M.
89 MARION

Your I .D. Card
is Worth 10% at

Site*
BOULEVARD MALL

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

l).S. Ked

Poppa gal lo
Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florskeim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots
and many other brands

AFROTC Awards Scholarships
An important milestone was
added to the scholarship program
at UB when AFROTC granted
five financial assistance grants
(FAP's) to
cadets this year.
Eventually UB should have 40
to 50 FAP’s as the Air Force
phases in the 5,500 scholarships
in the next four years. The five
FAP's cover full tuition, fees, and
books for each cadet for two
years. They also receive about
$1,000 in non-taxable subsistence
money in the two years at $50 a
month.
About 150 sophomores competed for the awards which went
to: Eric M. Dail, 12 Pamela Dr.,
Depew, N. Y.; James E. Ellis, 31

Larch Rd.; William F. Grof,
2523 Monroe Ave„ St. Albans,
W. Va.; Michael G. Roach, 37
Cherry Lane; and Jonathan D.
Swift, 529 Madison St. Ernest
P. Salmon, 31 Enterprise Ave.,
Tonawanda, N. Y., was nominated
as an alternate.
The FAP’s were granted to UB
students in the four-year program. From all available information, future scholarships will be
awarded only to four-year
AFROTC students. A two-year
program in effect at UB permits

TME DRAFT BLOWS 1

\i3^

I

•A\ VESA

OPEN PARTY

FAN AND

J

a student to earn an Air Force
commission by enrolling in the

Junior-Senior Professional Officers Course and completing a
six-week field training program.
Students who have two-years of
school remaining including graduate study, may enroll in either
the two-or-the four-year program depending on their undergraduate work according to an
AFROTC spokesman.

10% STUDENT

The SPECTRUM

DISCOUNTS

Published by

partners

~3nc.

’

*

*
*

Printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Hundreds of Items!
Slide Rules
Drafting Sets
Drafting Supplies, Etc.
Binoealar and Monocular

MICROSCOPES
ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY CO.
A»e., Buffalo 10
TR 5-7472

1211 Mortal

_____

_____

ROMA PIZZA
IF YOU ARE FROM NEW YORK CITY, OR ANY OTHER PART OF
THE COUNTRY, YOU KNOW WHAT BUFFALO HASN'T GOT.
WE HAVE THE PIZZA YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR!
(Next to 300 Club)

For Delivery fo Campus or Vicinity

CalK832-9044

�Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

Club Honors New Foreign Students
International Club will present
a Formal Reception for new foreign students and faculty members Thursday. The event, sponsored in conjunction with the
Foreign Student Committee of the
Women’s Club, will be held in the
Haas Lounge at 7:00 p.m. Through
such an effort International Club
under the chairmanship of Kathleen Boll, vice president, hopes
to pneet the new foreign students
and acquaint them with those
members of the university community, student and faculty, who
are concerned with international

affairs. Club members, including
foreign and American students at
the undergraduate and graduate
levels, will act as hosts, welcoming their guests to an evening
tuned to friendly exchange. Refreshments will be served and
music of their homelands will
greet the foreign students. Highlights of the evening will include
an African dance and drum
group, the award of a certificate
of honor ta Dr. B. H. Glenn; professor of Education, by the Pakistani Student Association of America and presentation of International Club’s officers and program
for the year.

The Bailey student lot
has been reduced by 224
cars which is now available to faculty and staff.
Overall we now have 126

CLASSIFIED

Reading Speed Course

ty

—

A GREAT TREAT

Different

&amp;

HOMECOOKED

SMORGASBORD
ALL YOU CAN EAT-99c
Wed and Fri

4-10 p.m.

—

632-0065

more parking spaces available for student parking
than was available last

year,

Parking on the roadways
is prohibited by (lie University because of city fire
regulation. The City of
Buffalo provides the University fire protection.
Therefore, the University
enforces this regulation.
Cars parked in violation
of any University regulation will be towed away.

•

Handwrought Earrings
For
Pierced Ears

WANTED:. Liberal-Radical students to join Students for Democratic Society, an association de
voted to the improvement of the
American political and social
scene. Contact Rick Salter, Socio-

•

SILVER
GOLD
COPPER
$1.95 and up

FOR SALE: A Tower three speed

tape recorder with stereo play-

!

back. Contact Jeremy Taylor
SPECTRUM office. Will bargain.

Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

1

WANTED: A BMW 250 cc motor
cycle with faring and touring
tank. Write SPECTRUM, Box

]

No. 1

!

TF 6-4041
-

Gifts For All Occasions
DOMESTIC
IMPORTS

logy Department,

Plaza Shoe
Open 9 a.m.

—

3184 BAILEY AVE.

all others, 50c a line.

—

NEW LOCATION

—

WANTED; Experienced voluntary
secretarial help needed to join
the SPECTRUM STAFF.

College Students
Welcome
Something New

of C^rafti

Classified ads are a weekly
service of the SPECTRUM offered free to students and facul-

Bill's Speed, Comprehension,
end Concentrating Power
Classes forming NOW for
6 sessions of Basic Skills
Training
TR 3-i450

FREE PARKING
Left on N. Cayuga Rd.
from Main St.

PARKING
The parking lot fronting
Main Street near Bailey
Avenue is complete. It will
hold approximately 350
cars. This lot together with
the permanent lots on Main
Street will now accommodate 740 cars. These are
free parking lots.

PACE THIRTEEN

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center*

FOR SALE; Keath-Kit AR-2 A M
$15.
short wave receiver
—

SPECTRUM Box No. 2,
Laundry and Dry Cleaning

—

Dry cleaning machines
-

8 lbs. $2.00

FOR SALE: 1952 Excelsior “Ac

cordiana" accordion
simulated pearl finish

120-Bass,
-

$125.00

excellent condition

PIZZA by DiROSE
90

C

for 13 P izza
"

COLA

We Now Have 2 Bakers for the Fastest, Freshest Pizza
ALWAYS DELIVERED FREE and HOT TO U.B.

2 for 15
TR 3-1330
c

FOR SALE: 1957 Royal Standard

795

Office Typewriter, grey, with
cover

and accessories, in good
shape $45.00.
Contact Patrick Morgan at
-

833-8542. Will bargain.

"FOREVER PREST"
"MUSTANG"* MODEL

WANTED: Girl for general office

part time. 886-6048—Jackson
Publisher Co., 494 Masten Street,
Buffalo.

You can always tell If they're
genuine Haggar
dress
slacks. They're extra lean and slim.
Snug fitting. Have their own

Madras belt and

Assembly of Unrepresentative People called I»y
Students for a Democratic
Society.
Friday, October IS, al
noon

belt buckle. You can always tell
if they're "Forever Prest," too.

They take repeated washings with no
ironing ever needed. In your size
and favorite colors.

®Haggar'$ Reg. T.M.

(l®|Rl|E|(Y|(?|

.Saturday aiinnuoii,

A_

ober 16 al SUNYAH.

3151 Bailey Ave. at Amherst

Poise n ivy
WOMEN'S CASUALS

WELCOME
8AD)I

TO SCHOOL

WHEN YOU GET THE ITCH
FOR SOMETHING NEW
SEE OUR FALL COLLECTION OF
WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR
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Campus revolution!
Slacks that never
need ironing—never!
Galey and Lord
permanent press fabrics
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•

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PHONE:
806-0011

�PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

Boston College Preview
•**

Bulls Face Tough Test
In Beantown Opener
By STEVE FEIGIN
That time of the year is upon
us again when we fill our hip
flasks (with hot coffee, of course),
bundle up warm, and journey to
friendly Rotary Field for an after
noon of excitement and sometimes heartbreak. It's football

line of the New York Jets of the
American Football League. He
will

Syracuse and Colgate. But the
varsity is a different story. He
looked very impressive in practice, but the only true lest is in a

be very capably supported

by, such consistent performers as

game.
The rest of the backfield situation is also very shaky. Danny

Ron Pugh, Bill Taylor, and Captain-linebacker Joe Holly. The

Secondary, a perennial problem,
seems finally to be in capable
hands, Danny Sella, who was
picketf as ECAC Sophomore-ofthe-Week last year for his play
against Delaware, and Senior
Fred Geringer will man the halfback posts, while Nick Capuana,
a Dean’s List student, will be the
safety. Nick, the Bulls most versatile back, was the starting tailback last season and seems to

Przykuta is back

for his third

in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
to do battle with the Eagles of
Boston College.
This looks like it’s going to be
the sort of year that turns
coaches’ hair permanently grey.
Not only do the Bulls face possibly their toughest schedule ever,
but graduation and the liberalizing of the substitution rules haVe
brought up some important prob-

lems.

As usual, the UB defense is
solid, even more so now that plalooning will allow the defensive
specialists to concentrate entirely upon their jobs. Lcttermcn return at all positions, and the line
is big (220-lb. average) and mobile. The bulwark of the defensive wall is big number 63, E.
Greenard Poles, E, G. has been

son All-American squads and
brings back memories of another
great UB tackle, Gerry Philbin,
currently anchoring the defensive

WG

Mike Rissell

Franklin Sq, L. I
Batavia, N. Y.
Coatesville, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Newport, R. I.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.'
Ithaca, N. Y.
Manlius, N. Y.
Syracuse, N Y.
Depew, N. Y.

Souh

C Bruce MacKellar
SG
Ted Gibbons

Jr.
Soph.

Jim Ratel*
Jim Dunn 5
QB Rick Wells
TB
Jim Webber
WB Jim Barksdale
ST
SE

FB

Dennis

Soph,

Przykuta

DEFENSE

RG

Saranac Lake,N.Y,
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y

Gerry LaFountain
Ron Pugh
Bill Taylor
Russ MacKellar’5

Kenmore, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y.

E. Greenard Poles
RE Craig Helenbrook*
LLB Joe Garofalo*
RT

Cheektowaga, N.Y,

Gloversville, N. Y.
Lyons, N. Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa,

RLB Joe Holly (Capt.)»
LHB Dan Sella*

Danville, Pa.
Utica, N. Y,

RHB Fred Geringer’
S Nick Capuana*
Lellerman

conceivably have been 9-0. Punting, also an eye sore last year, is
another question mark. Right
now, halfback Brian Hansen will
handle the kicking chores.

So it seems that Buffalo’s opponents will be hard pressed to
find the end zone, but the Bull’s
offense may have an even harder
time of it. The offensive platoon,
which is loaded with sophomores
and inexperienced personnel is

time again, and the University of
Buffalo eleven kicks off its 1965
campaign tomorrow when the
Bulls travel to Alumni Stadium

WE Dennis Burden
WT Tony Miccli

LG

practice.

an unproved quality. One big
headache is at the vital quarterback spot which is vacant due to
the graduation of Don Gilbert,
who rewrote the record books
last year. It looks right now that

PROBABLE STARTING LINE-UPS
OFFENSE

LE
LT

have made the transition to defense in fine style. He also
worked out at quarterback in

COACH OFFENHAMER

-J-

QB RICK WELLS
year at fullback. He’s a proven
runner, but two recent knee operations throw doubt on that posi-

tion. His two understudies, Lee
Jones and Tom Brennan are both
unproven sophomores. Jim Barksdale, a converted fullback who
saw limited action last year will
operate from the wingback post
and soph Tom Hurd will start at
tailback in place of letterman
Jim Webber who is out with an
injury. The line is brawny but
green. Stickouts appear to be
Dennis Burden and Jim Dunn at
the ends and sophomore guard
Ted Gibbons.
Joe ‘The Toe” Oseodal, the soc-

Overall, the Bulls will send out
a big, rugged team with fairly
good speed each Saturday, The
defensive unit will be formidable,
but lack of experience and depth
will stall the UB offense. If the
injury bug doesn’t strike, this
will be another winning season

for Coach Offenharaer. Otherwise,
look out.
To add to all this, the Bulls
could not have picked a tougher

some will be tackle Jim Chevillot,
center Bob Hyland, a 245-Ib. behemoth; and captain and end
Charlie Smith, a glue-fingered
receiver and defensive standout.
The Sophomore-laden backfield
is inexperienced but is exceptionally fast. Watch for Dick DeLeonardis operating from the right
halfback slot. In the only previous meeting between the two

teams, All-American QB Jack
Loncannon led the Eagles to a
15-0 victory over the Bulls on a
rainy day in 1963.

Game time is 1:30 p.m. and
it will be broadcast over WGRAM (550 on the dial) and will
be telecast over WGR-TV (Channel 2) with Don Gillis doing the

play-by-play.

cer-style

kicking specialist, returns, but will have to improve

TACKLE E. G. POLES
sophomore Hick Wells is the loading candidate, lie led (he frosh
last year to a 5-1 record with victories over the yearlings of Army,

SPORTS CIRCLE

(Cont’d

from P.

ED FOLEY

opponent to launch their ’65 season. Boston College has finally
joined the elite football powers
of the East and is the dark horse
this year to capture the Lambert

20)

The new sport in the news is, of course, football, and
we feel that the pros are worth somewhat of a mention.
The American Football League has already begun play
and the pattern hits already become apparent. The Rills
beat Boston, Houston beat the New York Jets, the Chargers beat Denver and Oakland, not too surprisingly, smashed Kansas City. The four winners of last week should
to be the consistent winners of the season and last
week’s losers can only wait for next year. The National
Football League begins in two days and what will happen
there is anybody’s guess. The Eastern Division will (it
says here) develop into a two team race between Cleveland and St. L|Ouis with the Cardinals coming out on top.
Both teams lack an efficient back-up quarterback, but
St. Louis’ first-stringer, Charley Johnson, will have his
first tremendous year to lead his team to the title. I hate
to disappoint all you Giant fans, but your team is destined
to a sixth or seventh place finish.

In the Western Division look for a surprising three
way battle between Green Bay, Los Angeles, and last
year’s champion Colts. The Rams are young, fast and
alert and this combination will be hard to beat, but Unitas and Moore will again lead Baltimore to a division
championship. Again this will not be the year of the
Packers, but they cannot be held down too much longer.
In any event, both leagues will again show some exciting football and probably will break attendance
records for the umpteenth straight year. Let’s hope the same
can be said for the UB Bulls.

CAPTAIN JOE HOLLY
on last year's results (1 FG, 12
PAT) if the Bulls are to keep
themselves in the game. A few
more well placed points last year
and the Bull’s 4-4-1 record could
‘

Jim Tuttle's

j
|

UNIVERSITY CAMERA

|

AND

j

PORTRAIT STUDIO

3114 MAIN STREET
'

2 blocks from School

j Everything in used photoj graphic equipment. We
j buy, sell and trade

I

Open Daily

|

Mon.

J

&amp;

Thurs. till 9

TF 5-9230

Trophy, symbolic of Eastern supremacy. Last year they counted
Syracuse, Holy Cross and the Air
Force Academy among their victims. Ed Foley is a very capable
quarterback both running and
passing operates behind a power-

ful forward wall which averages
225 pounds of meanness from
end to end. Particularly trouble-

r

BOB HYLAND
Remaining

Schedule

Sept. 25
Tampa
Oct. 2
Massachusetts
Oct. 9
Boston U.
Oct. 16
Richmond
Dayton
Oct. 23
Oct. 30
Holy Cross

Home

—

Away

—

Home

—

Home

—

Home

—

Delaware

Away
Away

Colgate

Home

Villanova

Away

—

Nov. 6
Nov. 13
Nov. 20

—

—

—

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's
KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!
'

Walt
Licensed agent
broker
Class of 1941

&amp;

WE CAN INSURE YOU, PERIOD!
We can insure you regardless of value of
car or age or driving record!

TWO LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

2608 MAIN STREET at Fillmore
(across from Don Allen's)

TF 2-8092
493 MICHIGAN

(across from

Little Harlem

TL 2-0820

Hotel)

(mention this ad and you get personalized free gift)

�Friday, September

17, 1965

PAGE

SPECTRUM

FIFTEEN

’64 UB FOOTBALL REVIEW
11 Points Separate Bulls
From Undefeated Season
By

STEVE

SCHUELEIN

While the 1965 edition of UB
anxiously awaits its
opener with a favored Boston
College, eleven tomorrow, one
can almost see the flame of optimisim glowing in the eyes of
Bull followers. For only a year
ago,
the UB football squad
launched its campaign with a
similar venture to the Hub to

football

play Boston College’s cross-town
rivals, the Boston University

Terriers.
Considered close to

a

attempt was stopped inches short
of the final lime parallel.
When the finale with Villanova was snowed out the following week, the Bulls, who had
outseored their opponents by a
170-97 margin, finished the season with a somewhat misleading
4-4-1 slate.

Graduation tolls again were
heavy with quarterback Gilbert,
who set all-time UB total yardage
and passing records, the prime
casualty.

As was the case a year ago, it
seems that the Bulls need to uncover some sufficient key replacements in a hurry.
Although
College
Boston
looms as a formidable obstacle
for the Bulls’ plans this year,
UB did not perform according
to script lasb year, particularly
in their Beantown opener.

Coach Offenhamer and his
forces may have a few surprises
in'store this year also.

Gilbert scores Winning TD in Homecoming Game at War Memorial
Stadium

toss-up

the oddsmakers, the game
matched the question riddled
Bulls with the Terriers, who
were playing their first game
under a new head coach. Supposedly long on determination
and short on experience, the
Bulls faced the momentous task
of rebuilding a line without AllEast tackle Gerry Philbin and a
backfield stripped of regular
signal caller John Stofa.
As the Boston University encounter began, the question
mark about the Bull’s 1 gridiron
potential soon turned into an exclamation point as a well-oiled
offense and a rock-ribbed defense combined to thrash the
by

-

Terriers,

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
Stores, Inc.

3610 MAIN ST.

(near

Bailey)

across from Univ. of Buffalo

Free Parking Next Door University Manor Hotel

35-0.

As the Bulls shot to a 9-0 lead
early in the first quarter at Cornell’s Schoellkopf Field against
the Big Red the following week,
a Rose Bowl berth did not seem
out of reach for some of the
team’s more chauvinistic fans.
Suddenly the magic bubble
burst; the offensivve juggernaut
began to stall while the defense
began to yield sizable chunks of
yardage. Bull efforts bogged
down in a mire of futility for
the remainder of the game.
Although the contest ended in
a 9-9 knot, the deadlock did
little to boost the team’s morale.
Try. as they may, costly blunders and a touch of tough luck
collaborated to deal the Bulls
three agonizing setbacks in their
next four outings.
After dropping a 24-22 decision
in the home opener against Massachusetts the following week,
when UB twice lost fumbles inside the Redmen’s 20 in the waning moments of the game, the
Bulls traveled to Huntington, W.
Va., where host Marshall administered a 14-12 upset with the
assistance of a few rather debatable calls on the part of the
officials.
A week after a reversal of
form in which the Bulls rallied
to subdue VMI, 14-10, in Homecoming at War Memorial Stadium, the locals managed to drop
another heartbreaker as Holy
Cross copped a 20-14 uphill battle at Rotary Field.
Against Delaware the Bulls finally regained the form that had
deserted them for several weeks.
Entering the tilt as the marked
underdog, UB bucked the oddsmakers ahd opened some eyes
even among its own fans in a
37-0 shocker. Quarterback Don
Gilbert, who had come into his
own as Stofa’s protegee and
heir apparent, scored three touchdowns and passed for two others.
After a lackluster start the
Bulls finished in convincing
fashion to overwhelm Richmond, 27-13, the following week.
Then came Colgate, which had
developed into one of the East’s
stingiest defensive clubs. Trailing 7-0 in the game’s final seconds, the Bulls managed to penetrate the end zone, but the allor-nothing two point extra point

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�Friday, September 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

sipcdirvS'*' M

�

—f

=/

SPORTS CIRCLE
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

We're Back

4t—tA—'/£=
Golfers Rebuilding After
3 Championship Seasons
■

By STAN LICHWALA

The UB Golf Team will open
its 1965 season Monday when
it entertains St. Bonaventure at
Audobon Golf Course. Following
on Wednesday at Audobon, Canisius, the little Three Champions, will meet Buffalo. These
tests will quickly determine the
strength of the young UB Golf

A good many years ago, in the Polo Grounds in
New York City, a young reporter made the mistake of
asking Leo Durocher, then the manager of the late New
York Giants, what he thought of the Brooklyn Dodgers’ Team.
chances of winning the National League Pennant. “The
The nucleus of a team that
Dodgers?” inquired Durocher, “Are they still in the
scored 30 consecutive victories
league?” We thought that some of you might have wonover a three year span was lost
nered the same thing about Spectrum Sports, so let this through' graduation last May.
be taken as a statement of intent. These hallowed pages The rebuilding phase must progress
if this year’s team
will appear in every forthcoming issue of the Spectrum, so hopes quickly
to match the eight vicfear not, sports buffs.
tories and one defeat scored by
To begin with, we would like to extend a hearty last year’s squad. Three men
welcome to all the new freshmen, and attempt to explain
how the sports pages will be run this year. Each week
during the football season you can expect to find a complete review of the past week’s UB game in addition to
NFL
a factual review of the upcoming contest. Both the Varsity and Freshman teams will be given this in-depth covEAST
WEST
erage in order that their closest followers, the UB student St. Louis
Green Bay
body, can be well informed as to their week-by-week Cleveland
Baltimore
progress. Also on these pages you will find intramural Washington
Minnesota
Los Angeles
coverage (reports on the Hockey Club’s activities), and, Dallas
Philadelphia
San Francisco
in most issues, a run-down of the top college football elevChicago
ens in the land. In addition, our fearless prognosticators Giants
Detroit
have returned (much against the best advice of their Pittsburgh
famliies and friends) to suffer through another season
AFL
of criticism and bad picks. And, like the Rock of Gibraltar, Sports Circle will be ever present to back them all up.
EAST
WEST
All we can do now is hope that you will read what we have

-Pro Picks-

to

say.

•

*

*

*

*

*

As you undoubtedly know by now, the University of
Buffalo opens its 1965 football season tomorrow afternoon in Boston against Boston College. All we can do
about this game is watch it on television and hope that
the Bulls come out on top. The point of our discussion
here is next Saturday’s game against Tampa University
here at Rotary Field. Most of you remember last season
and how small the crowds were. In fact, the only time
that Rotary Field saw anything even resembling a decent
sized crowd, it was filled with the ROTC Corps on “Operation Turnout.” Maybe this season will be different, but
it will not become so simply by hoping that it will be. The
only way in which the attendance can be increased is by
getting out to the games. Simple, you say? There is just
no other solution, so we are urging all upperclassmen as
well as freshmen to go to the games and cheer for the
Bulls. The strange sight of a full stadium could conceivably stir up the team and push them to even greater
hegihts, and, who knows, you might even enjoy the
games.
***.**

At this time of year, when two major sports aie in
the news, the one which is just beginning usually garners
the lion's share of the news. In deference to fair play
we would like to throw in a mention of baseball's waning
days. The American League race is, for all intents and
purposes, over, and the Minnesota Twins are simply going through the motions in anticipation of the World
Series which will begin in the Twin Cities on or about
October fifth. The National League race is a different
story and most likely will not be resolved until the
son’s final day. As of this writing the San Francisco Giants possess a two and a half game lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers, and if Willie Mays continues his torrid
pace, the Giants will be difficult to overcome. The Dodgers’ ace in the hole, Sandy (Perfect) Koufax and Don
($500,000) Drysdale will have to win all of their remaining games if the Bums are to have a chance of taking it
all. Maybe a prediction is not in order at this late time,
but the guess here is that the Dodger pitchers, tops under
pressure, will be able to prove their worth in the season’s
final two weeks. The Giants suffer from a lack of consistent pitching and this glaring weakness will become
all too apparent when all the pressure of the pennant
race falls upon the shoulders of these inexperienced hurlers. So, our guess is the Dodgers first, Reds second, Giants
third and Braves fourth. Remember the guess, but don’t
(Cont'd on P. 19)
bet on it.

Buffalo
New York
Boston
Houston

Oakland
San Diego
Kansas City
Denver

U.B. HOCKEY

U.B. Hockey Clul) will
hold its first meeting on
Monday, September 20.
All those interested in
playing will please meet
promptly at 4:00 p.m. in
Tower Lounge.

with varsity experience will be
returning to the team this year.
Steve Michaels, Ralph Goodrich,
and Ed Nusblatt, who saw action
in the 1963 season but missed

last year because of illness, will
form the new nucleus. Their past
performances have proven the
ability of these men. Coach Serfustini has eighteen new men
who will play 54 holes of medal
play golf this weexend to determine who will round out the
remainder of the squad,
&lt;

Included in this year’s schedule is the Fourth Annua! BrookLea Invitational Golf Tournament to be held September 24
at Rochester, N. Y. In the past
three invitationals, Buffalo has
-

placed first each time and will
again defend their championship
against some of the finest golfers
in the East. The complete schedule is as follows:

VARSITY GOLF—1965
September 20—Sit. Bonavemture
September 22—Canisius
September 24—At Brook-Lea Invitational (Rochester, N. Y.)
September 28—Niagara
September 30—Buffalo Stite
October 1—McMaster
October 5—At Canisius
October 7—At St. Bonaventure
October 12—At Niagara
October 14—At Buffalo State
October 19—At McMaster (Toronto, Ont.)

AEPi Victorious
In Intramurals
By GEORGE JACKREL

Last year, for the fourth consecutive year, the Alpha Epsilon
Pi Fraternity won the Lawrence
Pahlowitz Memorial Trophy. This
trophy annually is awarded to
the Fraternity that compiles the
highest total score in all the
various Intramurel sports conducted by the Physical Education
Department. A maximum total of
40 points can be earned in each
of the 14 sports, and at the end
of the year the results are tabulated and the winner is declared.
All major sports are included
in the Intramural program: softball, basketball, football, etc. In
addition to the Fraternity league,
there is an Independent league
consisting of any group of students who wish to get together
and participate. Coming up soon
this year is football, tennis, golf,
and cross country.
Another very exciting year is
anticipated, especially siiice the

Pahlowitz Trophy would be retired this year by AEPI if they
are once again victorious. So,
how about everyone getting out
and watching or participating in
the Intramural program this

year!
Here are the final results in
the Fraternity league from last
year:

AEPi
Phi Ep

...

SAM
AEO
EOE

..

_

...

TKE

...

394

350
345

344
264

Tennis and football entries must be in by this

Friday. Competition begins
next week.
A meeting for Fraternity sport managers this Friday at 3:30 p.m.

CROSS COUNTRY TEAM STARTS
PRACTICING FOR FALL SEASON
The cross-country team will
begin practice today, with the return of only 3 lettermen from the
64 team these being Dick Genar,

M.V.P. in '64, Jack Kerns and

Larry Elsie. Two lettermen who
were being counted on by Coach
Emery Fisher, were Captain-elect
Bob Bijak, who had to drop out
of school and Bill Suedmeyer who

must sit out a year on doctor’s
order.

There should be some help
coming from last year’s freshman team especially Paul Rogovich and Bob Stephenson, who
were 1-2 on last season’s frosh
squad, there are also an additional 3 or 4 of last year’s frosh,
who could be of great help at the
increased varsity distance
Cross Country Schedule
Sept. 25 Syracuse
Sept. 25 Syracuse
Sept. 28 Canisius &amp; State

-

1965
Home
Home

Away

Oct. 2

Invitational-LeMoyne
Oct. 5 RIT
Oct. 9 Brockport
Oct, 13 Niagara
Oct. 16 Cortland
Oct. 23
At LeMoyne-Colgate
Oct. 27 Fredonia State
Oct. 30
Initational-Canisius
Nov. 2 Gannon

Home
Home
Home

Away
Away

Away
Away

Away
Nov. 6 Alfred
Nov. 13 NYSCYT*
Away
Roberts Wesylean
*No Freshman
Home Meets
Grover Cleveland
Golf Course,
—

Freshman Back Meets Varisty Tackier

Away
Away

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE

7

NO MORE
CHARLIE

NEW

H i

"V

mass.

__

■

■■■jjjjinMBHB

PREVIEW

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1964

VOLUME IS

NO. 3

K
Keating
Speak on Campus
-

The Convocations Committee of the Student Sen-

ate will present Senator Kenneth B. Keating and
Mr. Robert Kennedy, both candidates for the Senate
seat from New York State. The speakers, appearing
today and tomorrow, will speak from the outdoor
terrace of
Union. The public is invited.
Senator Keating, arriving in a 12 car motorcade,
will be on campus at 10:20 and will speak to the
students at 10:30. After his half hour address he
will tour Norton Union meeting students in the

leaving the campus he
will stop and visit President Furnas in Hayes Hall.
After serving in the House of Representatives for
12 years he was elected to the Senate in 1958. Born
in Lime, New York in 1900. Senator Keating is a
graduate of the University of Rochester and the
Harvard Law School. From 1923 until 1949 he was
a practicing attorney in Rochester, New York. He is
married and has a daughter and two grandsons.
Senator Keating, the Republican incumbant, is
basing his campaign on experience and his record.

cafeteria and halls. Before

Mr. Kennedy, arriving with six cars and a bus,
will make his address :t 11:00 tomorrow. After his
15 minute speech he will leave the terrace and
possibly address the Students for Johnson, Humphrey and Kennedy, their meeting to be held in the
Multi-Purpose Room.
Born in 1925, Mr. Kennedy grew up in New York
City. Previous to his seeking the Senate seat from
New York State he was Attorney General of the
United States, He is married and has eight children.
Mr. Kennedy, the Democratic candidate, is baising
his campaign on his record as Attorney General,
hoping to show how he can transfer his accomplishments from the national scene to New York State.
Both are the first convocations for this year. Commenting on the program President Robert P. Finkelstein said, “The Student Senate, through the Convocations Committee, always endeavors to present
issues of educational interest to the student body.
Our latest speaker series features the two major
candidates for the New York State Senate seat.
This is in keeping with the present interest in the
election campaign, and the Senate wishes to present
to the student body both sides of the Senatorial

SENATOR KENNETH B. KEATING

MR. ROBERT KENNEDY

campaign.”

Homecoming Dote Set
Theobald
Starts Friday, October 16

Explains
Cybernetics Theory

This year the main activities
of Homecoming Weekend will
commence Friday, October 16,
Once again the steering committee is sponsoring an oilcloth contest to publicize the theme of the
weekend, “Some are silver, and
the others gold.” This year, however, the contest is open to individuals as well as groups, and

applications may be picked up
at the candy counter in Norton

coffee hour this afternoon in the
Haas Lounge. At this time the
ten finalists will be chosen. These
finalists will be presented to the
student body at 1:00 p.m. in the
Conference Theater, Wednesday.
The queen will receive her crown

at the Pep Rally, Friday night
from last year’s queen, Carolyn
Cooper.
The weekend will officially
open Friday, October 16. with

CAROLYN COOPER

Homecoming Queen 1963
the Pep Rally in Rotary Field,

scheduled for 9:30 p.m. At this
time the cheerleaders will spirit
the crowd for Saturday’s game
against VMI, and the ten finalists will be introduced. Following the rally, there will be a
mixer in Norton Union,
Saturday will see the arrival
of the UB alumni, especially the
Class of ’39 which is celebrating
its 25th Reunion. To accommodate an even larger crowd this
year, the game against Virginia
Military Institute will be played
-

Union.
A queen for the weekend will
be selected. Any university woman was eligible to be a candidate.
The queen candidates were
briefed at a meeting Monday,
and they will be judged at a

. .

L

(Cont’d.

on

Pg. IX)

Robert Theobald, economist,
author and lecturer, , explained
his theory on the “Effects of Cybernetics” last Friday in the Conference Theater.
Mr. Theobald regretfully stated
that one of the scarcest resources
of our country is trained people.
He claimed that if you’re “sensible" and don’t get educated, you
can work for 20 hours a week and
still earn a good income, whereas
if you become educated, you usually work approximately 80
hours per week. Consequently,
those with the most capacity for
leisure time have the least time
to enjoy it. Cybernation, Mr.
Theobald went on to explain,
would guarantee everyone a fixed
income which would enable them
to have more time for what they
wanted to do. He admitted that
it will be difficult to make people believe in the effects of Cybernation unless his proposals
are fitted into the needs of the
present society:
Student Salary: people who are
also students are working as
much as people in a factory, apd
should thus be paid a salary for

;

'

:

By JANET ZIDOW

The location for the two
convocations has been
changed from Clark Gym
to the outdoor terrace of
Norton Union.

r

Physically and mentally ill: All
people in this category should be
given a reasonable living stan-

dard.
Widows and widowars; An adequate income should be given
to those widows and widowers
with children.
Ammand tha amploymant act:
It should be the intention of the
American government either to

provide enough jobs or to provide an adequate one for all those
who are unemployed
If it
proves impossible to reduce unemployment to a reasonable lev—

ROBERT THEOBOLD

attending school. Mr. Theobald is
“fed up” with the claim that
there are always enough grants
or scholarships, because it is usually “the students who need

them that never get them.”
Aid to paopla ovar 65: Mr. Theobald believes that the present
Social Security laws are inadequate for providing a reasonable
standard of living for Senior Citiaen*.

j

el.
“This does not have to be a
deterministic world where we are
all swept along.” Mr. Theobald
concluded. He challenged his
audience to change the value
structure techniques required of
this age.
“Students do change things.
The individual actions of each
of us have noticeable effects on
events and we are all involved
in the problems of social change.”

�Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Cap and Gown Heads Panel Niagara Frontier Publishes Magazine
Frontier
its occasion
strikes
Series
s
For Women Forum
more in certain available
The Niagara
me as having

Review

money

Cap and Gown, the senior
women's honorary society, this
year again participated in the
Freshman Women's Forum. The
topic of discussion was
man Experiences From A Senior
Viewpoint” and three separate
programs were given—September
21, 22 and 24. Such questions as
“How do campus activities affect
your life? Do they force you to
live in two different worlds?"
were answered by the panelists. A
ten minute question period followed each discussion, during
which freshmen were invited to
ask their own questions.

“Free-

Election to Cap and Gown is
character and service. The‘main
ideal of the organization is to give
recognition to those women in

Impressions Program
Next Thursday, October 8, 1964,
the International Club will present a program on “First Impressions of America" as received by people from other
countries who see the United
States for the first time. The
program will begin at 7:30 p.m.
in Norton. This is a topic of
interest to American as well as
foreign students and everyone
is welcomed to attend.
The International Club of
SUNY at Buffalo provides an op
portunity for forming friend
ships among foreign and Amer
ican students and faculty by
planning social and cultural ac
tivities of international interest.
Any interested foreign or Amer
ican student can become a member of this club or attend the
meetings and contribute to the

based on scholarship, leadership,
the University who have been
most influential in promoting the
highest ideals of college life. Unlike other groups, Cap and Gown
has no specific tasks. It is free
to plan its own programs and

realizes its goals in whatever
ways the women choose.
This year’s members of Cap
and Gown arc Marilyn Schanzer,
president; Marlene Vowinkel, secretary; Doris Hyncik, treasurer;
Dawn Henry, Sherry Werner,
N a n c y Johnson, Lee Bradley,

Susan Cherry, Betty Wardrop,
Cheryl Uang, Carolyn Dussing,

and Judy

Auerbacher.

Election to be Held
Chairman, vice-chairman, secretary, and treasurer of I.R.C. will
be chosen in a general residence
hall election October 12. Any
resident student fulfilling the
qualifications and desiring to run
for an office must obtain a petition from the Housing Office to-

day, The petition must contain
100 signatures with no duplication for the same office. The petitions must be handed in Wednesday at a mandatory meeting
of all candidates in Tower 4:00
p in. Voting booths will be placed
in Goodyear, Clement, and Tower
October 12 for the purpose of
selecting the officers. Any additional information can be obtained from your R.A. or the Housing
Office.

editorial
concern. That is: the men who
have made this magazine did not
need to do so to see the work
they publish appear in print, (And
lest this appear too carping, let
me say now that the magazine
is worth anyone’s dollar.
than

in

any

urgent

Niagara Frontier is as fine a
definition of a magazine’s concern as you might wish to find
incorporated in its title. Yet to
be local does not demand that
one be representative. Locality
is operated upon by forces from
without. In turn, a local magazine
is a focus for the forces that
emanate from, and operate upon,
place (here, in Buffalo) and its
stance is outward. The poems
shown here (in Buffalo’s Niagara
Frontier Review) by LeRoi Jones
and Robert Greeley are part of
any writer’s frame of reference,
now (if he is tuned into that
present.) The presence of the poet
Charles Olson, and the poetry

collection in the Lockwood Library are two examples in Buffalo
for those outside.

Those forces, in and out, are
the definition of the Niagara
Frontier in this first issue of its
Review. Everything else is waste,
and a reduction of energy. (As is
more evident elsewhere than
here.) To be local demands that
one not be representative.
(I

have made no description of

Niagara Frontier Review Summer 1964 $1.00

the magazine you’ll buy with
your dollar. These remarks about
the first issue of a Review will

not become meaningful until
you’ve spent your money and
read through what might have
been otherwise, what? four bus
rides or a lousy meal.)

Moebius and Doria and other
men whose writing places them
within that play of forces implied
in the Niagara Frontier focus will

be much of the future burden of
the mag.
—Andrew Crozier

B0CCE

programs.

lll/llLu
Mi
ICilO li
1V1111

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEFCASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage

3400

Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students
TF 3-1600
MAIN STREET (Opposite UB)
Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till 9 P.M.

Now available...a special opportunity

TO REPRESENT AVON COSMETICS
ON CAMPUS
By special arrangement with the college, an opportunity is offered to two resident students to represent Avon, world's largest cosmetic company. These girls
will enjoy a unique earning opportunity: an exclusive franchise to offer fellow
students Avon’s famous cosmetics on campus. Because Avon has an international reputation, the high quality cosmetics, not available in stores, are in
great demand. They are the newest, the best, beautifully packaged, and fully
guaranteed. Student Representatives in other colleges are pleased with the
acceptance of Avon, and with their substantial earnings.

For

more

information, please contact

Mr. Lipsicuis
Placement Office

�Friday, October 2, 1964

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Freshman Women
Forum Series Set

Doctor Bonner Opens
Fall Lecture Series

UB Band Will Honor Frosh

A Freshman woman can sometimes feel like a blind man on
a tightrope. The Freshman
Women’s Forum, co-ordinated by
Mrs. Dorothy K. Simon, gives the
freshman an opportunity to take
a deeper look at herself; to think
through why she is here. In a
series of six talks, given three
times a week—Mondays at 2:00
p.m, and Tuesdays and Thursdays
at ll:O0 a.m. in the Theater Conference Room in Norton Union—the freshmen are given the privilege of discussing their problems
with some of the most distinguished faculty members at the

Dr. Willard H. Bonner, speaking on “Henry David Thoreau
Today”, presented the first in a
series of four faculty lectures
programmed for the fall semester
on topics of literary interest yes-

marching band, will make its first
home appearance tomorrow at
Rotary Field when the half-time

University.
A two part lecture titled “A
Mature Meaning of Sex Relationships" will begin Monday, at
2:00 p.m. in the Conference TheA
ater. ‘“Your College Years
—

Time For Personal Enrichment”
will be given the following week.
The Forum will close with a social
hour October 26 and 27 at 4:00
p.m.

Miss Jeanette Scudder, Dean of
Women, returned from New York
to open the Forum with a stimulating talk on “Opportunities and
Responsibilities in the University.” Miss Scudder discussed
what success can mean to the
student, and listed three prerequisites for academic success:
ability, desire, and perseverance.
One of the most unusual, helpful presentations in the Freshman Forum Series has been the
panel given by members of Cap
and Gown, Senior Women's Honor
Society. They informally and informatively discussed “Freshman
Experiences from the Senior
Viewpoint.” The Seniors examined the problems that both the
resident and commuting students
encounter in their first year on
campus. They invited the freshmen to participate in the discussion, or to see them after the
meeting with any personal questions.
One of the most important topics for all students, “Achieving
Academic Success,” has been presented on Monday by Mr. William
M. Frltton, Senior Academic Advisor in University College, on
Tuesday by Dr. Richard B. Bugelski, Professor of Psychology,
and on Thursday by Dr. Olive P.
Lester, Professor and Chairman
of Department of Psychology. The
question was raised by the lecturer, “What is Academic Success?”
He went on to point out that
success is for the individual what
will make him happy. Mr. Fritton gave as a definition for happiness, “Knowing you can do something well.”
Those freshmen women who
have missed the first few lectures
should take advantage of the program, designed to help them
make the most of their years at
the University.

Ji

fm

show will honor the freshman
class. The marching band will introduce the freshman class to the
football songs which will become
familiar pieces as the 1964-65
season progresses. The “Victory
March” and “Go For a Touchdown" will be featured numbers
in the half time show of precision drill maneuvers and complicated formations. The half time
show will be climaxed by a stirring arrangement of the UB Alma Mater.

terday.

Dr. Bonner has been a member
of the university faculty since

1922 and is presently Director of
Graduate Study. He wrote the
Book Review column in the Buffalo Evening News for several
years and has had three books
published, including Pirate Laureate, The Life and Legend of
Captain Kidd.

Last week, the band made its
debut in Sehoellkopf Stadium at
Cornell. Their glittering performance took second place to none
of the 69 high school and college
bands that were present, includ-

Mr. David Posner will present
the program “Modern Poetry
With Readings” October 22. Mr.
Posner, poet-in-residence at Lockwood Library, has just completed
a verse-play for music which will
be produced next fall by the University’s Music Department. In
addition, a book of Mr. Posner’s
poems based around “Algerian
Summer” will be published next
year.

“Freud in the House of Fiction” will be the topic of Mr.
Robert Rogers’ talk November
19. Mr. Rogers was a recipient of
a SUNY Summer Research Fellowship in 1963 and has had articles in literary publications.
The series will close December
with Dr. J. Benjamin Townsend
speaking on a topic to be announced later. Dr. Townsend is
presently Director of Humanities
and Assistant Professor of English at SUNY. Besides various
articles, he has had published two
books, including 100: The Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy 1862-1962.

Rushing to Begin

ing the Big Red. The UB marching band paid tribute to the visiting high school bands in a
sparkling pre-game show and
then played a leading role in the
mass band performance at halftime. By every indication the
“Pride of the East’ is in for one
of the best seasons that they have
ever had.

Sororities will again begin their
campaign seeking new members.
It will open with Registration in
342 Norton Union October 5 and
6. All Upper Class and Transfer
women carrying a minimum of
12 hours with a 1.0 cumulative
or previous semester average are
welcome to register. This is necessary for RUSH!

Listen to

WBFO

Photo Club News
If you have the desire to further your skills in the field of
photography or if you know nothing at all about it but would
like to learn, then attend the
Photography Club meeting. It
will be held Fridty at 4:00 p.m.
in Norton, Room 264. For further information contact Steve
Cooper at 877-6157
+

Formal rush is scheduled to
open with a Convocation program Sunday, October 11, in the
Conference Theater. Representatives from all the sororities
Alpha Gamma Delta, Chi Omega,
Phi Zeta Chi, Sigma Delta Tau,
Sigma Kappa Phi, and Theta Chi
will be attending along with
All programs are at 3:00 p.m.
the rushees.
in Norton Union, Room 219
the second floor lounge.

—

The SPECTRUM
now

printed by

j\irim&gt;rS
sQhgotl

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mill Printing

&amp;

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

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Phone 876-2284
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The series is sponsored by the
Union Board Literature and Drama Committee to both provide
interested students the opportunity for learning in a more informal atmosphere than the classroom and to better student-faculty relations by alerting students
to the extra benefits the faculty
has to offer.

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�THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo
14, N. Y. Published
first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Publication Office
weekly from the

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Managing Editor
New* Editor

Feature

Editorial

Financial

Editor
Advisor
Advisors

-

MARTIN D. KRIEGEL

Harvey

\

David Edelman
Ann Orszulak
Alan Scholom
Howard Auerbach

Lay-out Editor
Copy Editor
Sports Editor
Advertising Mgr.
Business Mgr.
Editorial Assistant
Photo Editor

Zimmerman
Paul Nussbaum
Barbara Strauss
Gary Falk
William Siemering,
Dallas Garber
Thomas Haenle

Marcia

Bernard Dikman
Henry Cagan
Joscelyn

Edward

General Staff: Steve Feigin, Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Peter Rubin, Jeremy Taylor,
Margo Rakita, Sue Greene. Eileen Murphy, Gary Lyman, Gary Chilcoft, Nancy Migdol,
Jeanne Stoll, Don Eismann, Merle Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou

Kozlowski, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Skip Venneri,
Linda Leventhal, Sharon Richter, Diane Holtzman, Richard DrandofF, Lenny Gaby,
Chick Arnold, Stan Lichwala, Diane Hayes, Manon Michael

Photography Staff:

Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

George Jackrel, Skip Blumberg, Eric Snyder, Roger

Simon, Bruce

Goldstein

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class,
Subscription

Postage

Paid at Buffalo, New York

$3.00 per year, circulation 9000_

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

Editorial

The quarterly journal publishes
research articles relevant to education in large cities particularly
in depressed areas of large metropolitan centers.

‘Urban Education’ is interest
ed in the urban pupil and in
learning: in the urban teacher
and in teaching; in the urban
administrator and in administra :
tion;” an editorial in the first
issue states.
“

"Urban Education is not a soap
box," according to Dr. Button.
“What the urban schools should
do is no less but no more important than the possible ways
in which it might be done, and
there are other publications primarily concerned with what
should be done."

Dr. Button said there will be
action to alleviate the shortcom
ings of the urban schools but
y that it is not the purpose of
“Urban Education” to promote
action.

"It is the purpose of our publication to provide a basis for
making such action effective.
"Our intent is to advocate only
one line of action, that of gaining
more knowledge."

In discussing, suggested solu
lions concerning today's many
urban education problems, Dr.
Button feels that "much of what
is said is more common than
sense."

The first issue contains articles
written by professors from the
University of Chicago, the University of Illinois, and State University professors.

Dr. Richard C. Wade, professor
of history at the University of

Chicago, writes of “The Inner
City in a Mobile Society." "How
Reversible are the Cognitive and
Motivational Effects of Cultural
Deprivation? Implications for
Teaching the Culturally Deprived
Child,” is the title of an article
written by Mr. David P. Ausubel,
professor of educational research
at the University of Illinois.

Professors Jacob D. Hyman and
Wade J. Newhouse, Jr. of the
University’s School of Law discuss "Desegregation of the
Schools: the Present Legal Sit
nation,

”

-

Subscriptions to the journal are

$5.00 per year

or

$150 per

Michael Lebowitz, Paul Esch and
Stew Curtman.
The greatest contributions were
made by the dorms through
breakage fee donations. Goodyear Hall headed the list of con
tributors with over $1,000.
Art Burke, Chairman of Campus Barrel, is conifdent that the
estimated goal will easily be
reached by the deadline. The
University’s combined goal this
year for United Fund is $26,000.
It is to be obtained through donations by students, faculty members and employee donations.

By SUE DUFFY

Dr. Button Edits Educational Journal

Dr. H. Warren Button, assistant

The Campus Barrel campaign
to raise $3,000 is, from all indications, going to go over the top!
To date, $2,200 has been collected
by the sale of Raffle tickets and
the Hootenanny which was held
last Friday. The Hootenanny
drew such unexpected numbers
that over $100 was made at clear
profit. (At 37c a head, that accounts for a good showing.) The
winners of the Raffle who were
drawn at the Hootenanny are;

The Amherst Expansion of the
UB campus was the topic of a
student-faculty coffee hour in the

The purpose of the University is to offer its students
a means to a mature intellect. To all extents this University does more to hamper this growth than to abet it.
The purpose of the universities is not to manufacture
better citizens to conform to the standards of the society,
but rather to offer a firm basis for individualism in
thought and action. Conformity to a set of accepted truths
and opinions cannot be considered part of the ideals.
The University should be free from the external social
pressures for conformity. But offering just-a-little-abovesubsistance salaries to the instructors does little to enhance this freedom. Rote memorization of other men’s
facts and opinions does little to enhance the growth of
a discerning intellect. The artificial social restrictions set
for on campus domitory living do little to enhance the
maturing of the emotional life of thp student. For the
intellectuality Concerned student the restrictions merely
serve to cause rebellion against the structuce.
The key lies here: the University must assume that the
students are living with serious intent. The free exercise
of the intellect is the greatest challenge to living for man.
And only through its free use will the individual be able
to achieve the greatest heights.

professor of education, is the editor Of ""Urban Education," recently published by the University of Buffalo Foundation.

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Coffee Hour

On The Necessity
for Change at UB

The first issue of a national
education journal designed to
promote and disseminate research
concerning urban education has
been edited by a State University
of Buffalo professor.

Campus Barrel Goal
To Surpass $3,000

issue.

Dorothy Haas Lounge Wednesday,
September 16. Dean Bradley
Chapin and Mr. John Warren,
Head of Planning and Development, answered student queries
concerning the new campus.
Dean Chapin called the choice
of the Millersport location three

miles north of the present campus
a “calculated decision.” All facts
of the University with the exception of those connected with the
health sciences will be moved to
the Amherst campus. The present
dormitories will be modified to
encompass married student housing. It is expected that the new
facilities will be prepared for
the move by 1968.
When asked about any proposed methods of transportation
between the two campuses Mr,
Warren cited the possibility of
a shuttle bus service operated at
intervals of approximately ten
minutes.
He also discussed the development of “areas” for the new campus, that is recreation areas, academic area, and residence area,
the latter arranged in informal
groupings. Each classroom building would have what Mr. Warren
called a “student commons”
where students who arrive early
for class or have a short break
may congregate for discussion or

relaxation.

Dean Chapin stated that all
athletics will be handled oh the
new campus. He called the projected plans for physical education facilities “liberal,” A new
stadium meeting the basic requirements of a physical education department will be built.
Much time was devoted to discussion of how the Amherst
campus will cope with the parking problem. As regards underground parking, Mr. Warren cited
two difficulties which might be
encountered, the rock problem
and the moisture problem. He asserted that surface or ramp park
ing would be more practical
alternatives.
Dean Chapin referred to the
future library facilities as "absolutely unbelievable," Many books
have already been purchased for
the library which will be eight
times the size of Lockwood

Library on

the present campus.

When asked if he felt that UB
would tend more and more toward specialization in the Health
Sciences field, the Dean answered
that the new campus would bring
a better balance rather than increased specialization.

Both men stressed the fact that
the state has no' basis for com
paring UB with any other state
school, thus the fresh thinking
that has characterized the plan
ning of the new campqs.

cjCetterA to the
Dear Editor;

Re Miss Strauss: The BUFFALONIAN receives no budget
from the Student Senate, nor does
it receive any money from the
Student Activities Fee as does the
SPECTRUM. The BUFFALONIAN
is not subsidized by any organization or extra funds. It is a nonprofit organization to which the
students contribute their own
time to produce the book.
Each book costs $12.08 to be
published. This does not include
shipping charges from the binding factory in Rochester to Buffalo. We contract with a photographer on a bulk basis in order
to reduce the standard cost of a
sitting fee for pictures. We have
a special advertising staff that
solicits orders to provide funds
with which we can reduce the
price of the yearbook for the
students.
There would be nothing more
desirable for the BUFFALONIAN
staff than to be able to give all
students, not just seniors, a free
yearbook. Many schools practice

Dear Editor;

The elections of 1964 have
seemed to make the public more
politics-conscious than ever before. Few people have no opinion” about any of the issues and
candidates this year. The voter
has expressed a true interest in
the races in which he may cast
his vote. Now, not only the
comics, sports, and picture pages
are being read, but the editorial,
front, and inside pages are finally being examined for their
content.

It is interesting to note what
the candidates have said, or are
reported to have said. The most
notable of those whose statements consistently need explanation is the Republican presidenBarry M. Goldtial
water. Mr. Goldwater has be
hind him a long history of statements which have
had to
be subsequently “clarified” or
denied. In his eagerness to idem
tify with conservatism. Mr. Goldwater has made several blunders.
One glaring example of this was
a speech entitled "Is Conservatism Dynamic?", which Mr. Gold
water had submitted to be printed in the Congressional Record is
a speech he had made in Mon
clair, New Jersey. It was dis-

Editor

this, of which Alleghany College
is an example, but the book is
paid through the Activities Fee
and it is non-voluntary. If
SUNYAB was organized this way,
it would eliminate many hours
of worry over the amount of
yearbooks to be ordered. It would
eliminate second guessing and we
would not run out of books as
we did the 1964 BUFFALONIAN,
because we must order all the

books by January 1, and submit
a partial remittance at that time.
We must absorb the cost of any
books that are left over.
There is no annual profit because the money is all put into
extra added features such as colored pictures, full page dividers,
etc. If Miss Strauss would like
her yearbook to be in paperback
form with no color pictures, we
could probably reduce the price
for her. We would sincerely and
deeply appreciate it if Miss
Strauss would take her complaint
to the powers that allocate the
Student Activities Fund.
Sincerely,

M. J, Donohue, Editor

covered that the speech, which
was actually delivered by a
Princeton professor, was an attack on Goldwaterism. It was later termed a “clerical error” by
Mr. Goldwater’s office. Some er
ror! Obviously, Mr, Gold water
is not aware of all the statements that he has made, or at
least purported to have made.
Indeed, he seems bent on political suicide. Recently, he attacked Federal programs for the
elderly in the state of Florida,
chose Tennessee as the state
where he reiterated his proposal
to sell TVA to private interests,
and in the Appalachian area, he
attacked the President’s antipoverty program. Either he was
ill-advised, or he was possibly
trying to alienate as many people as possible before election
time.
The strategy that would seemingly be employed by Mr: Johnson would be to let Goldwater
do all the talking and blunder
himself out of his chances for
reaching the White House. Or,
as long as the polls show that
Mr.
Goldwater’s chances are
slight to win the election, possibly he is providing us with a
diversion in this election year.
David Goldfarb

�Friday,

SPECTRUM

October 2, 1964

.

We are now, according to many

the midst of an election which
will determine the future of. our
country for generations to come.
Now, surely, is the time for all
men of good will to come to the
aid of their party,... to support
the candidate who speaks for
them, who stands for the things
they believe in. Unfortunately,
there seems to be an astonishing
paucity of men whom one can
whole-heartedly support. Not one
man has escaped the villification
and vituperation of his opponent.
Where can one turn? The answer,
of course, is not to other men
who will be similarly irresponsible and subject to the same
temptations, but to daring new
proposals which will enable the
electorate to express its wishes
more satisfactorily. As the great
James Madison said in The
Federalist Papers, “This is a
country of laws, not of men.”
I know that the advocacy of
anything new is bound to be
unpopular, but this is hardly the
time to. succumb to one’s fears.
Therefore, let me express and
outline two suggestions which, I

feel, cannot fail to shore up the
our once great
democratic traditions. What was
good enough in the simple society
of 1776 is no longer quite adequate in the complex disorganized social millieu of the
1960’s.
sagging walls of

First, I suggest that this country adopt immediately what I call
the Incumbent Incarceration Act.
This simple piece of legislation

is designed to drastically cut the
staggering amount of corruption
which, seems to have become an
integral part of government on
all levels. It would state, simply,
that a candidate running for reelection would serve a term in
prison equal to one-half of his
term of office should he be defeated. I think that the merits
of this plan are obvious. The public will have the opportunity to
vote for two new men when the
incumbent has been guilty of
some miscarriage of justice. No
politician will dare face the wrath
of an aroused electorate when he
sees the doors of a prison waiting

.

GAETANO FIASCO

-

-

...

■

...

Numerous Music Events
To Be Held This Year

Civil Rights Committee Aids
In Voter Registration Drive
The Civil Rights Committee of
the Student Senate, in conjunction with the Citizens’ Council on
Voter Registration, began a voter
registration drive last Wednesday, in an effort to increase the
number of Negro votes in the
Buffalo area and give the UB
students an active part in civil
rights.

Interested students met in the
Fillmore Room in Norton, where
Mike Lappin, head of the voter
ro
registration drive, spoke to
about the drive and gave instructions for canvassing. The students were divided into 15 groups.
Each group of about ten students
was headed by a captain and assigned a district to cover. The
canvassing is part of a citywide
survey on

voter registration.

Mike Lappin feels that the student canvassing effort has had
two effects. It was primarily an
attempt to increase the political
strength of the Negro population
in Buffalo. By having a larger
vote, the Negroes will have more
of a say in the political structure.
Registration is necessary in order
to enable them to vote.

However, the canvassing has
had an effect not only on the

No More Mr. Charlie

By LARRY SIEGEL
TKe ideal of practically every
clean-cut, all-American schoolboy
has traditionally been to grow up
in self-defense. The testimony of
be just like Robin Hood or
Our system of government has
for him. Similarly, what man to
principle
my friends was completely igbasis
the
pragmatic
part
the
more
as
of
its
Jesse
James;
as
to
risk
would be so foolhardy
nored, The verdict—my friends
justice for all. But in
glamorequal
less
frequently
consider
of
when
wrongdoing
he knows that
were fined $25 and $50 for disSouth and in Helena, Arhis punishment awaits him as ous, yet equally lucrative ventures the
turbing the peace.
this
principle
one
kansas,
was,
I
Recently,
crime.
such
where
in
soon as he be uncovered by the
the
just
exnot
fact,
in
In
racket
has
been
was
use.
notorious
elements of a crusading press?
Two of my co-workers and I
campus, opposite was the true guiding
Yes, some men who are probably posed right here on our
also personally witnessed Helfor the courts and the
glory
stealing
principle
all
of
entailing
the
not really guilty of any serious
ena’s justice. A policeman broke
poor to sustain the police department. There are two
cupidity will suffer, but then, from the
into our home and told us to
of
systems
of
which
and
distinct
wealthy,
advantage
separate
the
what system devised by men has
come with him. We asked why,
is that it is perfectly legitimate. justice—one for the white man
ever been perfect?
but he wouldn’t tell us. He said,
justice
the
black
or
in
one’s
self
this
and
one
for
To establish
asking you any quesMy second proposal, less bold particular variety of theft, all and injustice. This has been the "I'm not
so don’t ask me any questions
certainly
just
long
Negroes
way
the
first
is
an
allotment
for
so
that
the
required is
than
but
that
in Helena are very discouraged tions." We were taken to the
as revolutionary, is the Voter's of floor-space in Norton Union
were fingerDissatisfaction Amendment. It (the smaller the room and the about changing this form of law. County Jail where we
printed and photographed. It
would provide for a place on less convenient, the better), an In Helena, the judge, the chief
wasn’t until after this procedure
every ballot
in which the in- army of blue-smocked checkout of police, and the prosecuting
were told we were under
formed and disgusted voter might ladies, and a list of all textbooks attorney ate all kin folk. So you that we
arrest and the charges. The
which would which students are required to can see the reason for real displace his mark
charge was vagrancy. We were
couragement in the Negro comread, “I am not willing to support read, and you’re in business.
in jail for five days before we
munity.
any of the candidates whose
were bailed out. The bail was
Proceed to order the deluxe,
names appear on the ballot.” I
$500 apiece and it was raised in
gold-bound copies of each book,
Two Negro friends of mine
would hazard a guess that anythat your order must
went to a filling station to get New York City. At the trial we
where from 10% to 25% of the specifying
presented photostats of cancelled
people who are eligible to vote in not arrive earlier than the third a couple of bucks worth of gas.
Arrange tempay checks, letters with our adThey were hungry so they went
any election would prefer not to week of classes.
of the most into the grocery store connected
dress on them, and leading Negro
shelving
porary
to
at
all
rather
than
decide
vote
gave testimony as to the
and confusing variety with the filling station to get
crammed
citizens
between,
the order of precedence
ema
we
were doing. After all
and
instruct
all
ordered
work
possible,
bologna.
They
some
it
as Dr. Johnson so apply put
thoroughly in the art pound but changed their minds
this evidence was presented, the
in the 18th century, “a louse and ployees
judge found us guilty. We were
a flea,” In accordance with my of being elsewhere whenever after two slices were cut off,
because they saw it was going to fined $250 plu* three months in
proposal, the aroused electorate they’re needed.
set at $1500
be too much. They told the owner jail. Our bond was
will be able to tell the party
Sweatshirts are an especially
apiece. It is hard to believe that
wanted a half
bosses that they are not going to profitable sideline, incidentally. that they only
ya
this is the sentence and bail for
give their tacit support to a One can easily and cheaply pound. He said, “What, are
a misdemeanor. It would apply
tryin’ to get wise? Get outa
machine ticket.
smuggle in discarded MauMau here." My friends started to leave
more to a felony. We, of course,
loincloths, stitch them together
have appealed the case and right
Some timid souls will say, “But
the
owner came from bewhen
stamp SUNYnow we are waiting for it to
why must we do this? What’s with spider webs,
the counter with a club
hind
wrong with our fine democratic AB on them with easily accessible and hit one of the Negroes over come up. It can come up at any
process?” Frankly, I would have chalk-dust, and make a clear prothe head, cracking his skull. The time and it is very possible that
fit of $2.79 on each shirt.
tended to agree until very rethe three of us will have to leave
other fella got hit in the foreopen. One dragour respective schools to go back
cently. I have never put much
it
push
ripping
the
arm,
beyond
all,
Above and
down to Arkansas for the appeal
stock in what are, admittedly, idea of school identity by stampged the other to the safety of the
trial.
rather radical proposals. HowFour
white
men
were
noteand
left.
stationery,
on
car
ing SUNYAB
ever, an incident which occurred books fountain
jockey in the store when this happened,
pens,
A great deal of good came out
recently changed my mind. A shorts, and anything else you can but did nothing.
of this trial though. Three local
person I’ve known and respected think of, and immediately hike
for some time told me, in a someThese two friends pressed Negroes put up $3000 in property
the price 25%. Freshmen, who
the
what bemused fashion, that he
for our bond. This was a very
as yet learned that In- charges against the owner of
haven’t
courageous thing for these people
the
through
intended to retire. "I can’t keep
store.
town
The
went
never
definition,
Groupers, by
to do, because now they are
up with it all,” he said. “I want wear anything clean enough to formality of a trial. The four
to stop. To have some time for
witnesses were called one at a marked. But they do not care, for
the insignia, and upperclassread
they feel that a positive step has
to be able to look men, who are searching for a
myself
time to testify. Each witness was
at people
to feel things again. philosophical symbol of identito be taken if this system is to
allowed to hear the previous witin
the
I am going to stop soon
be abolished. This move by these
fication in an apparently chaotic nesses’ testimony so that all
three men also did a great deal
a year or two perhaps . . . then universe, are ready-made “cusstories were the same. The story
there will be peace again. In the tomers,” or suckers, if you prefer. was that one of the Negro fellas in getting the black community
to come together and fight this
valley.”
pulled a knife on the owner and
system as an organized group.
It doesn’t sound to much like a
As for the used book trade, the owner hit them with the club
very startling sentiment, but, insist that you are doing the
sadly enough, my friend is 22 student a favor by acting as midyears old. Something will have dle-man. Of course, anyone who
to be done.
is anxious to resell his books does
so because he desires to kindle
the spark of knowledge in some
other student, and had better not
be concerned about the money
angle. On the other hand, if
someone is willing to buy a used
book, if the price is not exorbitant, he may take it for granted.
master of the Buffalo Philhar"An Evening of Rare Instrumonic, will give an all Bach and
mental Music” Part I will be
Unfortunately, a monopoly conat 8:30 p.m. in
Vivaldi program Tuesday in Uptonight
given
bookstore
the
SUNYAB
trols
ton Hall at Buffalo State. Seenie
Negroes, but on the students right now. It is possible to form Baird Hall, admission free. FeaRothier and a dance ensemble
themselves as well. It gave them your own hate group, but a more tured will be Marjorie Hartzell,
Philharmonic,
will assist in the Bach Suite no.
with
the
harpist
your
contact
to
disexpress
an opportunity to come in
subtle way
University’s
on
the
2.
performing
community
which
lack
of
suffigust, reproach and
with the Negro
new instrument.
The Buffalo Chamber Music
many had never had before. In cient funds is by wearing old
deciding whether or not it was high-school sweatshirts and purSociety series of concerts will
Saturday night will be Part II
begin October 13 with the Budaworthwhile to canvass, each stu- chasing your used books directly of "An Evening of Rare Instrudent had to solidify some of his from another student.
mental Music” also at Baird, at pest Quartet. All programs are
Genee
in the Mary Seaton Room of
convictions on civil rights. He
at 8:30 p.m., admission free. PerKleinhans Music Hall and begin
forming will be Rodney Smith
had to think about the effort and
at 8:30 p.m. Student tickets are
possible risk involved in the canand Colin Smith, oboists; Flor$1 per concert or $4 for the
ence Myers, English hornist; Carvassing and its value. Finally,
Baird Hall announces
each student was able to receive
lo Pinto, harpsichordist; Nelson series (6 concerts); general admission is $3 per concert or $12
Dayton, bassoonist; and Dorothy
first hand knowledge of civil
that all seats for the Budafor the series. Tickets may be
rights by participating in one of
Rosenberger, soprano. The proobtained from Denton, Cottier
gram will feature the Handel
pest Siring Quartet perits programs.
and Daniels, 32 Court Street;
no. 6 in D; “Es warKammertrio
5,
7,
9,
Oct.
formances,
The actual time for canvassing
tet alles auf dich” from Cantata also from Mrs. Una Deeming,
was decided by each group. The
23 are sold
telephone TT 3-6004; or at the
and
21,
no. 187 of Bach; the Beethoven
19,
students, traveling in groups of
door. Also featured on the series
in C op. 87; works of GorTrio
seats
out. However, stage
two, usually covered one block
will be Leonard Rose, cellist:
don Jacobs and Eugene Bozza.
around and finished in about
The New York Woodwind Quinare still available, and
Monday, Wednesday and Fritwo hours. They were provided
tet; The Paris chamber orchestra;
there will be an overflow day, will be the first three con- the Carnegie String Quartet; and
with “Registration Canvass 1964”,
certs of the annual Beethoven
on which the name, address and
the Kroll String Quartet.
room where audio visual
Cycle, given by the Budapest
registration status of each perLeo Smit will be appearing at
conCycle
recorded.
be
The
be
will
Quartet.
was
sound
will
voting
age
of
and
T.V.
son
Baird October 10 and 17. The
19,
handed
October
and
23.
21,
students
cluded
the
addition,
In
piped in. Tickets are free, The Budapest will be giving first recital will be the performout information to the voters
ance of the entire Book H of
but
no student will he adregisanother chamber series Novemand
when
to
about where
Bach’s Wall-Tempered Clavier
2,
4,
performances
under
overflow
withber
and
6.
All
circumstances
to
the
ter and the
mitted
and will begin at 5:30 p.m. with
Hall
and
begiven
are
Baird
A
in
re-register.
which they must
intermission for dinner. The secout a ticket. Tickets for the
p.m.
at
8:30
gin
was
formed
telephone committee
ond concert will be "An Evening
and
6
perform2,
4,
Nov.
of Modern Music from 1904-57”.
The Brandenburg Chamber Orto contact those who were not
ances are still available.
chestra of Buffalo, directed by Tickets are available at the Baird
home at the time of the canHarry Taub, associate concertBox Office.
vasses
By

astute political commentators, in

.

To: Muckraker
Department

PAGE FIVE

—

�Greek Notes
Panhellenic was the guest of
past
Syracuse University this
weekend, when two delegates of
our council. Barb Witzel and

attended

a regional
Panhellenic Conference. The two
girls found the discussions very
informative and they returned
with new ideas for Panhellenic

Cindy Perl,

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Council.
The sisters of Chi Omega wish
to thank Alpha Phi Delta for a
successful social last Friday evening.
Sister Barb Witzel, President
of Panhellenic, was the guest of
Upsilon Alpha Chapter of Chi
Omega at the five-state Panhel
lenic Convention at Syracuse last
weekend.
Chi Omega will celebrate its
Fall Elusinian Monday.
The sisters of Phi Zeta Chi
wish to welcome their newly initiated sisters Monday night. An
informal party was held after
their initiation.
Sigma Kappa Phi will hold
their initiation ceremonies Sunday. The new sisters will then
be honored at a dinner at the
Mauna Kai Restaurant.
The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi wish to congratulate the new
brothers recently initiated into
the fraternity. These new broth
ers, along with the entire fraternity, also congratulated broth
er Joseph Garofalo of the UB
Bulls in the outstanding game he
played at Cornell.
A date party is being held Saturday at the Tree Haven Restaurant (formerly the Old Barge Inn)
on Niagara Falls Boulevard and
Tonawanda Creek Road. This par
ty is open to rushees by invitation only. Rides will be made
available by contacting any brother.

On October 30, the Alpha Del
ta Chapter of Gamma Delta will
sponsor the Pop Concert and
Dance at Kleinhans Music Hall.
The program will be comprised
of songs and music by Richard
Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstcin.
Exchange tickets arc on sale for

ees who attended the rush stag
at the Club Bar Friday night and
at Bosela’s Wednesday.
There will be an invitation rush
dinner Tuesday. We would like
to wish the Alumni best of luck
on their annual KICKOFF WEEK
END open blast at Washington
Hall tonight at 8:00 p.m. There
Big Mack
will be two bands

ed.

it staples

term papers and class notes, photographs, news items, themes, reports.

at Norton Ticket
This is the first of the
Pop Concert series. Let's all
support good music.
Tomorrow we arc all looking
forward to a hayride and barn

it tacks

Forest

&amp;

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POLICY

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notes to bulle tin board, pennants
to wall, shelf p &gt;aper, drawer linings.

OF CLOTHING
SUITABLE FOR
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WOMEN'S CASUALS

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The brothers of Tau Kappa Ep-

$1.75 per person

Poise 'n Ivy

YOU
HEAHDf

and the Vibrotoes. The Vibrotoes will be in the Fillmore Room
this afternoon from 3:00 p.m.
The sisters of Sigma Delta Tau
would like to congratulate the
new sisters who were initiated
last Monday. We would like to
congratulate Evelyn Damashek
for being the best pledge. We
are all anticipating a successful
rush period starting with convocation October 11.
The brothers of Phi Lambda
Delta are holding a beer rush
stag for rushees by invitation at
the Club 161 tonight at 8:30 p.m.
Also, the brothers would like
to extend their appreciation to
Phi Delta Theta fraternity of
Cornell for the great time shown

Booth,

The Brothers of Phi Kappa Psi
would like to thank all the rush

mm

—

silon would like to thank all the
rushees who attended their stag
party last Thursday night and in
vite all rushees to a date party
this Saturday at Rockmor Lanes.
All those interested should phone
836 0248 for details. The brothers
would also like to announce their
rush dinner, to be held Thursday
at Hallmark Manor. Those rushees planning to attend should
contact one of the members.
Theta Chi Sorority will hold its
fall Dinner Dance this Saturday
night at the Prime Rib Restaurant in Williamsville. A cocktail party will precede the din
ner, and awards will be present-

October 2, 1964

No bigger than a pack of gum. Refills
available everywhere. Made in U S.A.
At any stationery, variety, book store!

other brands
INC.
lono island

am. new yonk

V

5 Minutes From U of B Campus

call

TF 6-9764

For Additional information

|fl

VH|5k
-

�Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

ROTC Program Opens Door
For Future Military Careers

Spectrum CdaH (t^oard

Mixer Committee
The Mixer Committee is sponThe United States Air Force cation, and many, many others
is in need of about 10,000 officers from accountant to veterinarian. soring a combination T.G.I.F.to be held tonight
a year. To some people this may
It is virtually impossible to have Kick off mixer
in the Fillmore room of Norton
appear as a shocking amount, but
10,000 men enlist in the Air Force
to the Air Force this number of
that are immediately ready to Union from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00
p.m.
men is a great deal more! It is
assume positions as officers. For
�he lifeline of the United States
everyone’s
govAdmission is free
reason
the
United
States,
this
so come!
Air Force.
ernment established a Reserve invited
These men are all not needed Officer Training Program (ROTC)
Occupational Therapy Club
to pilot the sleek aircraft that
which would give the military serThe Occupational Therapy Club
we see flying over our homes and
vices, during time of war, a ready
industries each day. The Air supplement for the Regular will have its first business meetForce needs ntore than “jet jock Officer Corps. This system was ing of the year today at 2:00
ies" and offers more. For the begun in 1862, but today, while p.m, in Room 330 Norton Union.
man with scientific or technical
It is important that all memstill basically a Reserve Officer
leanings, excellent opportunities Training Program, the Air Force bers and prospective members atexist in the areas of guided mis
ROTC, such as exists at the State tend as they will discuss the possiles, research and development, University of Buffalo, is the most
weapons systems, cartography,
important single source of pro
and meteorology. Also needed arc curement for Air Force officers.
officers with a r liberal arts or Approximately 5,500 officers per
year are commissioned into the
business administration education, capable of training in such United States Air Force through
the ROTC program.
fields as intelligence, psychologic(Cont’d on P. 11)
al warfare, public relations, edu
—

and count
yourself among
the best-informed
people on
campus.
Enjoy convenient campus delivery every morning.
Get in touch with your
campus representative today.
STEPHEN SOKOHA
Tower Dorm

sibility of two meetings per week.
Also, on Friday, we expect to

form

various

committees

and

plan the semester’s activities.

Political Science Club
There will be an organizational
meeting of the Political Science
Club Tuesday at 1:00 p.m. in
Room 335 Norton. All interested
students ahe invited to attend.
Communications Committee
The Communications Committee will hold an open meeting
next,Thursday in the Senate Office, Room 205 Norton Union, at
7:00 p.m. All interested students
are invited to attend.

SUPPORT

THE
BULLS

BOCCE

He’s carrying her away in his dashing
ADLERS but he's clean-white-sock
just the same
They're headed for the primrose path but they’ll wind up picking flowers. That’s
knowing what to do and when to do it. That’s being clean-white-sock. An attitude
that colors every thing you do no matter what color your socks. And you get it only
from Adler. Here all feet wear the Adler SC shrink controlled wool sock. Clean
white or in eighteen colors. SI
ANY. CINCINNATI
U,

�Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE NINE

“BUSTER” is exactly Ube the real Buster, the Butt's Mascot. He stands 8-1/2“ high, is black with white Ivory
horns and has a blue and white saddle blanket. Now available at the University Bookstore “On Campus.”

NOW AT THE

UNIVERSITY
‘BOOKSTORE

“ON CAMPUS”

�S/., n

)

0/

/

”

/

.fe-

jLJv

-

;

If
Thc Bull* haa Serre/t w m

op

i

a tough time with long-time
Washington patsy, Idaho.
In the Oregon-Penn contest the

(Cont’d from P. 16)

B'U,

/

,a,

Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE TEN

n«on uur uncus

DM*-

miy

spa

AowT wuwt t»

«sy r«
-uuttrrs

RtbHtN I

in its defensive line. Buffalo is
lucky that this contest will be
played at Rotary Field, or the
margin of victory might be even
greater.
NOTRE DAME 22 PURDUE 7
Ara Parseghian may have the
sleeper of the year out at South
Bend. The Irish, having finally
tasted victory after 5 years of
famine, will be mighty tough to
stop. The Boilermakers are always strong, and their specialty
is upsets, but they will be unable to budge the massive Notre

beef of the Penn State defense
ought to neutralize Oregon’s fine
passer, Bob Berry, and capitalize
on the inexperience of the Oregon offensive line and backfield,

—

PENN 21 12.
In the Ivy League, Princeton
ought to continue its winning
ways, regardless of Columbia’s
big victory last week, Cosmo Lacavazzi will be very hard to con-

tain. Roberts could be all-American, but it won’t be enough to
PRINCETON
cage the TIGERS

Dame line.

—

WASSHINGTON 34 IOWA 21
The Huskies finally lived up to
their pre-season ratings in the
rout of Baylor, Junior Coffey and
his teammates will make short
work of the Hawkeyes, who had

23-19.
In Dixie, Florida will have its

—

There will he a meeting of all Varsity Hasket-

hands full with L.S.U., which
may be more than it can hold,
Larry Dupree is a sure all conference back, but Florida’s tough

schedule along with L.S.U.'t explosive baekfield, the best since
the ’58 national champs will skin
the GATORS 28 19.
The Big Ten, used to “grind

it out” football for years will
have that tested Saturday when
Tommy Myers, the League’s best
passer, comes up against the
stone hard ILL IN I. With lineman
like 237 pound Butkus and 250
pound Sutton opening holes for
Jim Grabowski, a crunching tailback THE ILLINI should bury
Northwestern
30-6.
In the Far West, surprises and
scrambles are always present.
The Stanford-U.C.L.A. game is a
fine example. Both teams are regarded as about even on paper,
but the UCLANS with Larry Zeno could slip a fast one by the
Indians
U.C.L.A. 17-10.
—

—

*vP

V&gt;

hall candidates, Monday
at 4:00 in Clark Gym.
There will he a meeting
for all freshman basketball

candidates, Wednesday, at

'

9 4 8

4:00 at Clark Gym.

M.F.C. DAY AT ROTARY FIELD

Millard Fillmore College students have pledged their support
to the 1964 University of Buffalo
Football team. Tommorrow has
been rightfully designated “Millard Fillmore College Day at
Rotary Field The Evening Division Student Congress has purchased a block of tickets for
tomorrow game against Massachusetts, and will be out in number to "back the Bulls”,

fwfm
A study of twins is
being conducted at
UB. Interested twins
please call Dr. Rennet at 831-2845 during the day.

YOU CANT FAKE IT!

3 hours in the rain

-

and these slacks still stay pressed!
Tailored in 50"/o Dacron polyester-50"/i Orion acrylic.

Either the excitement's there, or it's not. And it was decidedly there when THE
HIGHWAYMEN came home to their alma mater The audience was with it—and they
sparked a performance that tairly sizrled with excitement. Whether they're swinging
their way through an old (avonte like Careless Love or playing around with a witty
new lyric like Possum Meat, The Highwaymen hit a new high at their HOMECOMING
—recorded live at Wesleyan University.

THE HIGHWAYMEN: HOMECOMING
AVAILABLE IN STEREO, OR MONAURAL. AT RECORD STORES EVERYWHERE

THEY RE NEW DACR0N , l *'-‘‘0RL0N" J®! New, Ultramatic slacks
by Haggar! Even in the rain, they never lose that knife-edge
crease .. . always stay in great shape! They won’t bag at the
knees . . . wrinkle behind the knees, at the waist or other
points of stress. Wash or dry clean them . . . they’re beautiful’hither way. And wear? We wonder if it’s possible to wear
them out. And Haggar Slacks just fit better . . . naturally. 10.95
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U Itramatic

�Friday, October 2, 1964

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

WlWiid

81PABIIE)

By LEON LEWIS

BEHOLD A PALE HORSE
Perhaps you are discussing the
contemporary cinema with a
youngman from France or Italy.
He tells you that Hollywood, is
all right for fancy, colorful, frivilous movies, but, he says, you
must turn to the European film
for anything serious. Well, you
reply, this may be true in general,
but look at some of our most
talented directors. Their attitude
is certainly mature and appropriately serious. Take Stanley Kuprick, for instance, or Fred Zinneman, who made ‘“From Here to
A lucky accident,
Eternity’
he says. Look at Zinneman’s latest effort! You shrug and tell
him that this is just a momentary
slip, but of course, you know that
he’s got you. Zinneman is totally
to blame for the unfortunate
mess that was made of Emeric
”

Pressburger’s taut, compelling
short story, To Kill a Mouse on
Sunday.

Consider what Zinneman had
work with. A fine story about
a Spanish loyalist, a folk hero
now, living in exile in France
just across the border from Spain.
He has been making raids into
Spain ever since the end of the
Spanish Civil War, He has been
tormenting his arch enemy, Capt.
Vinolos, the chief of the local
Civil Guardia, who has finally set
a trap which he is sure will work.
In addition, there is a priest,
tormented by his oaths to the
cloth and his duty to his fellow
man, who may be able to save
the bandit.

to

Throw in some marvelous scenin the small towns in Spain
and France and in the mountains
on the border, some appealing
subsidiary characters, a bit of
mood-making guitar music and a
cause that one can easily sympathize with. Add such interesting
and accomplished professionals as
Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn
and Omar Sharif and how could
any one fail? Nevertheless, Zinneman does. I’m still not sure
how it happened.
ery

Unfortunately, what Zinneman—certainly not a man of any real
genius—has done, is to try to
combine the two possibilities.
Needless to say, Ris combination

lacks both of the virtues he is
striving for. As Byron said at
one time in Don Juan, “For god’s
sake, give us houk and soda
water.” Soda water is nice and
so is champagne, but a combination of the ' two is likely to be
revolting.
Gregory Peck is lots of fun to
watch as Manuel Artiquez, the
bandit-hero. He looks right and
delivers lots of rotten, silly lines
with what seems to be real conviction. Somehow, one begins to
care what happens to him, but
then, the story is told so slowly
and with so many stock cliches
of the heroic peasantry that it
becomes intolerable to watch and
Peck’s fate diminishes in importance,

Similarly, Anthony Quinn

manages to strut and pose impressively as a hypocritical fascist leader, but his behavior is
just as often foolish as menacing, Omar Sharif appears to be
properly anguished by his problems as a priest and at times he
enlivens his role with a kind
of grimacing (if obsequious) hu-

manity, but he seems to be so far
removed from any aspect of life
that one hardly cares.

The story is uneven, the dialogue is very heavily weighted
down with a terse delivery that
passes for a kind of naturalistic
profundity in many modern films
about rural folk, and the story
itself seems to move in chaotic
fashion towards a fine climax
that is over all too soon. The
pace drags interminably throughout most of the movie and then
speeds up at the conclusion so.
that we are robbed of most of the
pleasure of a scene that we have

been waiting for.
There's lots more wrong. The
lighting is overly dramatic and
lacks subtlety, the scenes are cut
to underline obvious and banal
generalities, the fine music is
actually not used enough (for a
change) and the social significance which Zinneman seems to
be half-heartedly hinting at (the
movie was banned in Spain, the
ads proudly tell us) is lost amidst
the morass of detail and pseudodocumentary footage that is presented.

It’s boring to try to describe
the faults of an unimpressive
failure. If you like Gregory Peck
(as I do), you may find the movie
interesting anyway. If you want
more, try The Gunfighter (1950)
when it is on television. There’s
Peek at his best as a rebel in a
good movie.

YOUR INVITATION TO

TONIGHT’
1:00am
9:30pm
CONTINENTAL INN HOTEL
&gt;

3456 DELAWARE AVENUE (near Sheridan)
Western New York’s largest social group over
300 people attend each of our functions
—

Ties

The purpose of the AFRGTC
is to provide the Air Force with
officers capable of accepting
command and leadership positions and responsibilities. These
are to be the men in whose hands
will rest the command functions
of tomorrow’s Aero-Space force.
Tuesday and Thursday afternoons at the State University of

Buffalo see the male freshmen
and sophomores partaking in the
compulsory two-year program
that the University maintains.
This group of men numbers well
over 1500 for the first two years
at the school. Continuance after
the first two years is strictly
voluntary. The student makes his
own decision to continue and if
he is mentally and physically
qualified, he is a few steps closer
to the Second Lieutenant commission and a possible career in
the United States Air Force
through the Advanced Corps

Eg

from P.

1)

at War Memorial Stadium in Buf-

falo. Buses will leave campus for
the game. The half-time actiyities will be highlighted by
arrival of the queen and her
escorts. At this time the queen
will be presented to President
Furnas.
The alumni dinner-dance will
be at the Statler Hilton, and the
student Homecoming Dance will
be in the Mary Seaton Room of
Kleinhans Music Hall. A faculty
reception will precede the dance.
Students will dance to the music
of Gus Farrell’s ten piece band
from 9 to 1 a.m., Tickets for the
dance go on sale Monday at the
ticket booth in Norton. A special
price offer is also being made
this year, and groups may purchase tickets in a block at a discount rate. A block of 30 tickets
sells for $2.75 apiece, a block of
20 for $3.00 apiece, and a block
of 10 for $3.25 apiece. Individual
tickets are being sold for $3.50.

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1964

SOON

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�PAGE TWELVE

Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

Off 5Ur J C„ff
a

By SKIP VENNERI

Comparisons one would never

realize existed became apparent
when reading current Best Sell
ers. I have thought for a long
time that Leon Uris held a rather unique position in contemporary literature. It had been my
opinion that all an author had to
do was use identical characters,
put them in continuously unbelievable situations, add an un
thinkably trite love scene, and
they would produce Best Selling
Novels, Mr. Uris validates my
theory by having four of his novels reach the lofty heights of
the List. Until I read The Group,
I thought his position secure, now
I am not so sure. Mr. Uris meet

Mary McCarthy.
Miss McCarthy's book, The
Group, has been on the Best
Seller list for over 20 weeks.
If you are like me, you read
the excerpted blurbs by critics
on the cover of books. The critics
in this instance go absolutely
lyric. "Biting satire", “an indictment of a generation”,
her best book to date”.
This novel is truly an indictment of a generation, and biting
satire. It is an indictment of
what our literary tastes have
come to and a satire on what
we consider, even in its simplest
form, a novel.
The Group is exactly that. It is
composed of eight Vassar girls
(class of ’33) and their respective
lives (or slices from their lives)
for a period of five years after
they graduate from Vassar.
Miss McCarthy may have been
experimenting with a new literary form when she wrote this
novel. If her aim was not to
create a single real person in
The Group, she has succeeded
beyond her wildest expectations.
She might have tried this new
form because of a new generation
of reader, one who is not looking
for characterization or plot but
for varied sexual suggestions and

we understand what social class
you’ve come from); a scene for
each of her characters to lose
their virginity; an attempt at
satire when talking of child-rear
ing habits of the twenties; a
misunderstanding of mental illness; and, I almost forgot, one of
the girls is a Lesbian.
Miss McCarthy is also a literary
critic but one would never know
it from her novel. With The
Group she has firmly established
herself as a Best Selling Commercial Writer. If by some far
stretch of the imagination she
believes she is writing satire, we
have come a long way, in the
wrong direction, from Sinclair

Lewis, who has written about the

same subjects with more artistic
style and infinitely more social
awareness.
Next week I will begin part one
of a two part review on Henry
Miller's The Rosy Crucifixion, one
of the few books that are still
banned in this country.

“

situations. If she is writing for
this type reader, then her novel
has many fine selling points, for
it includes: an attempted rape
(“
his eyes staring at her
like two blue pinpoints and his
lips drawn back across his teeth
like a wild animal about to
c h a r g e"); adultery; impotence
(“she had a very clear idea of the
male member, and she could not
help forming a picture of Put’s
as pale and lifeless, in the coffin
of his trousers.”); a biased view
of the upper class (you can pull
in your claws, Miss McCarthy,

|

A new form answer sheet
will lie used for all machine scored course examinations. The electro-

graphic pencils required
with the previous answer
sheets can no longer he
used. Answer sheets marked with electrographic pencils or pens cannot be

scored, and the student
will receive no credit for
his examination. A number
two (No. 2) pencil is re-

commended.
A hox containing ten
items numbered from 0 to
9 will he found in the upper right hand corner of
the answer sheet. Each student is required to fill in
his student number in the
first six items. If your student number is less than
six digits, place a zero in
the first item or items.
The last 4 items must
he left blank. Answer

sheets without an accurate
student number will not be
scored.

HILLEL

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Dn Justin
Hofmann will give the first in
a series of three sermon lessons
on: “Sabbath Symbols.” His subject will be, "The Kindling of the
Lights.” An Oneg Shabbat will
follow.

The first Sunday evening program of the current year will
be held Sunday in the Hillel
House. A Delicatessen Supper
will be served at 5:30 p.m., to be
followed by a talk on: “The Psychological Aspects of Intermarriage.” This presentation, which
will be the first in a series of
live on Intermarriage, will be
made by Mr. Norman Fertig, Supervisor of the Vocational Guidance Department of the Jewish
Family Service of Erie County.
Reservations for the supper are
necessary,

Students who have expressed
interest in participating in one
of the Hillel Study Groups should
take note of the following schedule: Elementary Hebrew, Sunday at 2:00 p.m.: Advanced Hebrew, Sunday at 3:00 p.m.; Talmud, Thursday at 7:00 p.m.; Issues in Jewish Life, Thursday at
8:00 p.m. All groups meet for

.

.

The weekend of October 16-18,
the Inter Varsity groups from
the colleges and universities in
Western New York Will meet for
a retreat at LeTourneu Christian
Camp on Canandaigua Lake. Everyone is cordially invited to
come to all of these activities.

Student Zionist Organization

“Israel Fights Back!” is the
theme of this Sunday’s Student
Zionist Organization’s meeting.
Several members will relate the
exciting story behind the 1956
Sinai Campaign, including some
recently released
information
never before publicly aired.
Those students both interested
in military strategy and the more
human aspects of the Campaign
will be especially enthused. Fol-

NEWMAN APOSTOLATE
There

will be a mixer and taffy
pull tonight at Newman Hall at
8:30 p.m. Admission is free to
members; non-members, 50c.

BOCCE

"Issues of the Election” will be
the topic at Wednesday night’s

mutual belief in Jesus Christ
as a personal Savior and in His
substitutionary death for our
sins. The group provides warm
Christian fellowship, regularly
scheduled Bible studies and prayer meetings, and frequent special
events.

This semester our Bible studies
are being held Monday at 3:00
p.m. and Thursday at 11:00 a.m.
Prayer meetings are being held
every Tuesday at 3:00 p.m, and
Friday at noon. These meetings

(Main &amp;Winspear)

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SUBMARINES

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Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m.
there will be a discussion at Newman Hall.
The Theology classes are continuing in Norton 330 on Tuesday and Thursday at 9:00 a.m,,
10:00 a.m., 2:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m.

INTER VARSITY

Sandwich Minimum)

Friday

in the Con-

Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship is an interdenominational
group of students who share a

FREE
DELIVERY
(2
CHARCOAL BROILED

with the many mission boards
represented there.

ference Theater.

A Coffee and Discussion Hour
will begin on Thursday at 3:00
p.m. in the Hillel House.

RESTAURANT

.

Tonight the group will show a
film of Inter Varsity’s triennial
Urbana Missionary Conference at
7:30 p.m. in the Conference Theater of Norton. This December
about 6,000 students are expected
at the University of Illinois to
take this opportunity to learn
more about missions through lectures and personal conversations

meeting, 7:30 p.m.

one hour per week in the Hillel
House. In addition, there are
three groups meeting on Wednesday afternoons in the activity
rooms of the College Union at
Buffalo State: Elementary Hebrew at 2:00 p.m.; Basic Judaism at 3:00 p.m. and Advanced
Hebrew at 4:00 p.m.

1HE
UPPER LEVEL
3199 MAIN STREET

will all be held in the CRO office in Norton Union, Room 217.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N. Y. U226

837-5090

TBANSITOWN PLAZA
WILLIAMSVILLE,

N. Y. 14221

634-5533

�Friday,

UB Sports Highlights

Feature

It’s sports time again on WBFO
as “UB Sports Highlights” begins
its second year tonight at 5:45
p.m.

SPORTS ON T V

By

on a fake naked reverse
with his punt returning partner,
quarterback Fred Dula quickly
led Nebraska to two touchdowns
—one on a 45 yard pass and the
other on a 13 yard toss that was
originally deflected by a Minnesota defender —to give the Cornbuskers an exciting 26-21 comeback victory.
A quick change back to the
baseball game showed the umpires in muddled contusion. The
situation was finally explained
by 01’ Diz, whose Southern eloquence was at its best. The umpires changed their decision and
ruled that Rojas had actually
caught the ball, and the Phillies
made it a doubleplay by appealing to the umpires that Carty
had left third base before the
return

STEVE OBERSTEIN

After the past weekend, this
viewer, at least, can’t possibly
conceive of spending any amount
of his sojourn from the scholastic world at any place other than
in front of the television set.
Arrayed for the enjoyment of
America’s spectator public were
such exemplary examples of athlethic endeavor as baseball, football, and tennis.
Starting with the Milwaukee
Brave-Philadelphia Phillie baseball game, Saturday afternoon
produced as many heart palpatations as any calculus final ever
did. Noteworthy in the picture
that beamed at us from Connie
Mack Stadium was the fact that
this game was one of determining
factors in the suddenly tightened
National League pennant race.
CBS-TV and the National League
schedule makers must be congratulated for their amazingly

when Milwaukee’s Rico

Carty unloaded a bases loaded
triple in the top of the ninth to
give the Braves a 6 to 4 lead.
With wily veteran Warren Spahn,
still good in the clutch for an
inning or two despite his
troubles this year, warming up
in the Brave’s bullpen, things
looked black for the once un-

touchable Phillies. Then Mike De
La Hoz belted a line drive to left
field which was seemingly caught
by Cookie Rojas, left fielder for
the city of Brotherly Love. However, the umpire felt differently
toward the play, ruling that he
had trapped the ball, allowing
Carty to score from third, and
permitting De La Hoz to take
second on the play. Rojas charged
Shag Crawford, the umpire who

had made the call, with venom
in his eye s, but luckily, was
caught by Ruben Amaro, Phillie
shortstop, before he could do
something he might have eventually regrettedf?). At this point
my curiosity became too much
and a switch was made to the
Nebraska-M i n n e s o t a football
game, which looked like an American Football League game of a
couple of years ago due to the
frequent long-distance scoring in
the waning moments. Seconds
after Minnesota’s Bill Crockett
had put the Gophers ahead 21-12
with a thrilling 80 yard punt

top two players in the world
today—Roy Emerson and Chuck
McKinley—watched the match
from the sidelines- and could only
root their respective stalwart representatives on service to win
the five set match. Both players
deserve the highest commendation for their outstanding performances.
The one constructive observation that I have after this fantastic sports weekend is that

three sets are needed to fully
appreciate the wonderful artistry
that can be seen on TV on these
autumn weekends.

“Sports Highlights” is designed to keep you up to date on all
the UB sports teams. Football,
Cross Country, Golf, Swimming,
Basketball and Hockey are all in
season, and they’ll all be covered
in the 15 minute program hosted
by WBFO’s Sports Director Wally
Blatter.

Also, this coming Monday, Dick
Fleischer will open up his new
weekly show, a summary of the
weekend sports happenings, at
5:45 p.m.
Don’t forget, for top news on
UB sports, keep tuned to WBFO,
your campus radio station, 88.7
on your FM band.

Sunday

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with Cleveland’s appropriately
named Browns defeating the
Ollie M a t s o n-led Philadelphia
Eagles behind the invincible Jim
The National Football
Brown.
League’s ingenious video tape
that enables a player to be
singled out and followed on any
particular play highlighted this
athletic encounter. The tape is
then shown seconds later as the
offensive team huddles and gives
the viewer added insight into
the strategic war known as pro
football.
The Davis Cup again came to
the fore in the late afternoon as
Dennis Ralston and Fred Stolle
spectacularly fought each other
in what announcer Jack Kramer
(one of the world’s premier tennis players for many years) referred to as the greatest Davis
Cup match he had ever seen.
This was all the more astounding when it was noted that the

FILET

minutes from

Helenbrook should also be off
the walking wounded list by Saturday
Edward executed a
fake punt to perfection in the
first quarter which proved instrumental to the UB touchdown
Jim McNally, Russ MacKellar, Ron Pugh, Jim Duprey,
and Fred Geringer were stalwarts
on defense along with Poles and
Garafola
The Gilbert to
Pawloski look-in pass came as
such a shock to the Cornellians
that it is hoped that the Bulls
can devise some more innovations during the course of the
season
Coach Offenhamer
considers Massachusetts as a hardnosed, well-balanced unit probably superior to that of Cornell. He
added that “I’ll be burning long
candles this week.”

tried to control their tempers
as well as their game against
the robot-like pair from downunder—Roy Emerson and Fred
Stolle. The good guys prevailed
in a stirring five set match.

MCDONALD'S NEW

(4

14)

cameramen were perhaps too
good as Messeurs Ralston and
McKinley, valiant knights fighting for America’s court prestige,

SOMETHING SPECIAL

©

from P.

Holly, Dom Piestrak, and Craig

the

Coin Operated Tracks

#

Bulls Tied
(Cont’d

catch, and therefore was out. One
then changed channels wondering whether Carty, a former
prize fighter, would take revenge
on his oppressors—the umpires.
But now fighting was quite out
of place because the doubles
match of the Davis Cup between
America and Australia was on
the screen. Everyone knows that
tennis is a gentleman’s game, but

sagacious powers in deciding to
televise this exciting game. You
could almost see Philadelphia’s
pennant dreams going up in

smoke

THIRTEEN

PAGE

SPECTRUM

October 2, 1964

�Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

BULLS TIED BY CORNELL
zone via a 15-yd, ramble by second team fullback Dick Condino.
The Niagara Falls senior seemed
stopped three or four times on
his journey to paydirt, but
through a determined second effort he managed to bull his way
into the end zone. Oscsodal’s PAT
attempt was pushed to the right
and UB led, 9-0.
A false sense of security buoyed Bull hopes in the second quarter as memories of the Boston
shellacking of the week before
probably reappeared in their

By STEVE SCHEULEIN

The UB Bulls encountered
their first meeting with frustration this fall as they were held
to a 9-9 stalemate with Cornell
at Schoellkopf Field in Ithaca
Saturday. The deadlock gives the
Herd a respectable 1-0-1 record,
but undoubtedly it does little to
mollify the afterthought visualizing the 2-0 record which could
have been attained with a performance similar to that of the
opener in Boston a week earlier
After soaring to a 9-0 lead minds. Here the Herd attack
began to deteriorate as it comearly in the initial stanza, the
mitted about as many foibles in
previously well-oiled Bull machine began to sputter and spent the final three quarters as the
Philadelphia Phillies did in the
most of the remainder of the
entirety of last week. Much of
tussle trying to regain its com
the reason for the Buffalo colposure. A combination of UB
blunders accentuated by an acute lapse and the Cornell rejuvenation in the second period must
case of fumblitis and a 6’2”, 200lb. Cornell quarterback named
be attributed to the brilliant Big
Marty Sponaugle made the Bulls Red signalcalling of lanky junior
fit to be tied. And tied they were. Sponaugle, a triple-threat thorn
The SUNYABs drew first blood in the side of the Bull defense
when their defense bottled the all afternoon.
Early in the quarter the Big
Big Red deep in Cornell terriRed pentrated inside the UB 5
tory following the opening kickdespite the efforts of the Bull
off. With the aid of a poor Cornell punt, the Bulls gained posdefensive line spearheaded by E.
G. Poles, who spent almost as
session on the Cornell 30. Almuch time in the Cornell backthough the UB offensive drive
ficld as Sponaugle and Co. Just
was stymied by the Big Red, the
as it appeared that the Ithacans
Bulls were nevertheless within
field goal range for the accurate would register on the scoreboard,
right fool of Joe Oscsodal. His Sponaugle lost the handle on the
line drive bool from the 32 just
ball and linebacker Joe Garafola,
apparently inspired by the “Go
cleared the crossbar and marked
the first time that the Bulls had Garf" sign that one of his fervent
(The
rooters was parading around the
Cornell,
ever scored against
Ithacans captured both previous UB bench, alertly pounced on it
to temporarily halt the Cornelmeetings of the two schools—27-0 in 1898 and 72-0 in 1932).
bans. Three plays later, the locals
Later in the quarter the Bulls completely botched a quick-kick
attempt and returned the ball to
climaxed a sustained 50-yd.
the Big Red within breathing disground march to the Big Red end

tanee of the goal line. The Bull
line jelled for this one goal line
stand, however, and forced the

Big Red to settle for Sponaugle’s
12-yd. field goal. Two series of
downs later, Sponaugle, whose
performance quelled rumors that
Cornell gridiron teams would
completely fold with the graduation of Gary Wood, sailed a
towering spiral punt deep into
Bull territory. At least three
strands of Coach Offenhamer’s
hair could be seen turning gray
as the UB punt returner attempted an aerobatic over the shoulder
catch of the kick. The ensuing
fumble was recovered by Cornell
sophomore center George Me
Weeny inside the Bull 20, and six
plays later, on a fourth down
and goal to go from the 2, Sponaugle pitched out to halfback

Pete Larson who, with the aid
of a block by tackle Doug Zirkle,
tumbled into the Buffalo end
zone to knot the score at 9. The
first half terminated shortly after
Sponaugle pulled his extra point
attempt to the left of the uprights.

The Bulls received the second
half kickoff and churned upfield
like a hot knife through melted
butter, with workhorse Denny
Przykuta and a fired-up Bob Edward carrying the brunt of the
attack. The drive was highlighted
by a fourth-down look-in pass
from quarterback Don Gilbert to
end Gerry Pawloski. It was the

second time in the game that this

previously, untested play to Captain Pawloski, who has proven to

be the most valuable contribution
from Detroit to Buffalo since the
automobile, clicked for crucial
yardage. Once inside the Cornell
10, however, the drive soured and
a fourth down pass attempt into
the end zone was batted down
by the Big Red secondary.
The Bulls spent the final quarter on the defensive as they
thwarted two well- engineered
Cornell drives. One was choked
out early in the period when the
elusive pigskin squirted away
from Cornell on the UB 1 where
Garafola hugged his second key
recovery. Minutes later, Cornell
was again knocking on the door,
but a fourth down field goal try
by Sponaugle was muffed. All
the spectators gasped in astonishment as the Bulls, plagued by
another mental lapse, tried to
run the ball out of the end zone
when it appeared they had about
as good a chance of returning it
past their 20 as A1 Capone had
of escaping from Alcatraz. The
runner was dumped on the 4, and
with first down 96 yards from
the enemy goal line, Bull optimism was as a minimum. Fortunately, however, Gilbert completed
a 45-yd. aerial bomb to Edward
which electrified the spectators
and brought the Bulls out of a
deep hole. Neither team threatened seriously after this, and a

few minutes later time expired.
The scoreboard high above Cayuga’s waters flashed the final
score as a 9-9 tie, but the jubilation in the Cornell locker room
and the gloom in that of Buffalo
reflected the true feelings of the

teams.

STATISTICS

Buffalo

Cornell

First downs

200
53

Rushing yards
Passing yards

3-13

Passes
Passes intercepted by
6-35
Punts
4-22
Fumbles lost
48
Yards penalized
10
BULL SESSION
Poles,
Gerry La Fountain, and Leo Ratamess were all injured during the
game, but they are expected to
be ready for next week’s home
opener against Massachusetts. Joe
(Cont’d on P. 13)

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By special arrangement with the college, there is an opportunity for a resident
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earning opportunity: an exclusive franchise to offer Avon’s famous products to fellow
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14

150
117
6-13

�Friday,

October 2, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

MASSACHUSSETTS PREVIEW
Strength
ing for the Redmen, in addition
to his regular assignment as right

By CHICK ARNOLD

at

1:30,

Tomorrow afternoon
the University of Buffalo will
open its home season at Rotary
Field against a powerful Massachusetts team; a team that last
week suffered its first loss since
1962. The Redmen lost to Harvard, 20-14, and in doing so, gave
up their first touchdown in the
last ten games.
Last season, the stingy Massachusetts defense gave up a total
of 12 points—seven of them in
their opening game with Maine.
And from that team, there are
22 returning lettermen. In addition to acquiring this sparkling
defensive record, the Redmen
also captured the “beanpot”,
which goes to the winner of the
tough Yankee Conference. They
were 5-0 in conference play, 8-0-1
overall, and are heavy favorites
to retain the title this year.

Massachusetts placed five men

on the All-Conference team last

year, and three of them are back
again this year. Quarterback
Jerry Whelchel headed the team
last year, and is “Mr. Football”
at Massachusetts. Whelchel is 6’,
190 pounds, and has been referred to as the total football
player. Last season he led the
squad in scoring, rushing, and
passing (he completed 55% of his
attempts), in addition to being a
standout on defense. He is definitely the key to the Massachusetts
team, and the game this week
will certainly depend greatly on
what kind of day he has. In the
past, most of his days have been
good ones!

Bob Meers and Milt Morin are
the remaining A11 Conference
Redmen, and together, they are
probably the best set of ends in
the East. Both were members of
the All-Conference team last year
as sophomores, and both are likely to retain that honor this year.
Meers is a 6’3”, 205 pounder,
who led the team in receiving
last year. In addition to his passcatching ability, Meers is also a
fine blocker.
-

At the opposite end of the line
is Morin, 6’4”, 240 pounds, and
the team’s second leading receiver. Morin is the bulwark of the
team, doing the kicking and punt-

end.

At

tackle, Massachusetts

The Redmen were hurt by
graduation and back luck at
guard. They have co-captain Pete
Pietz, 220, as the only returning
letterman at that position. Ron
Brooks, a great prospect who lettered last year as a sophomore,

underwent back surgery and will
be lost to the team for most, if
not all, of the season. And Tom
Brophy, a two year letterman,
has decided to forego football
in his senior year. This leaves
the Redmen with Larry Spidle,
who at 205 is one of the smallest
men on the line, Spidle is the
only member of the probable
starting team who is not a letterman.
At center the Redmen are quite
strong. Last year, Bernie Dallas,
as a sophomore, worked his way

into the starting lineup and although he was sidelined by injuries the last two games, he
has been called the best center
seen at Massachusetts since
World War II. This year as a
junior, he is even better, and
should win acclaim as an AllConference selection. Also at center are seniors Joe Doyle and
Charlie Scialdone.

ings with Ivy League opponents,
so look for tomorrow’s game to
be a hard-fought, uphill battle

for the

Bulls,

Probable Starting Line-ups:
BUFFALO
Craig Helenbrook, 200
Leo Ratamess, 255
Jim McNally, 206
■Joe Holly, 210

At fullback, Mike Ross, 210, is
the only returning letterman, but
junior Dave Kelley and sophomore Dick Benoit should give
the Redmen some added depth
at this position.
Backing up Whelchel at quarterback for the third straight
year will be Jack Schroeder. How-

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MASSACHUSETTS
Bob Meers, 205
■Bob Burke, 230
’’Pete Pietz, 220
’Bernie Dallas, 215
Larry Spidle, 205
’’Dick Kehoe, 225
’Milt Morin, 240
Jerry Whelchel, 192
Bob Ellis, 185
Palm, 190

Ken

making two changes in his starting b a c k f i e 1 d for tomorrow’s
game against Massachusetts. Willie Shine and Bob Edward will
replace Tom Oatmeyer and Nick
Capuana at the wingback and
tailback positions respectively.

The

Bulls will need all the
weight they can find. The Massachusetts line outweighs the Buffalo line by 11 pounds per man.

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Willie Shine, 205
Dennis Przykuta, 202

Another strong position of the

Massachusetts squad is halfback,
where there are five returning
lettermen. Bob Ellis and Ken
Palm will probably start, with
Phil DeRose, Terry Swanson, and
Dick Lewis on the sidelines ready
for action. Two fine sophomore
prospects, Dave Giurla and Don
Durkin, round out the halfback
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has

two big and strong returning lettermen in Bob Burke and Dick
Kehoe. Burke is 230 pounds, and
Kehoe is 225, indicating the size
of the Massachusetts line, aver
aging 220 pounds.

Craig Helenbrook, the Bulls’
first string left end, and Dom
Piestrak, regular right tackle,
the Bulls.
who won letters the past two seasons, are both expected to be
The Head Coach at Massachusetts is Vic Fusia, beginning his ready for the Massachusetts game.
Both of these men missed the
fourth year at this position. Fusia games against
Boston University
has done a great job building his
of leg inteam from an average one to and Cornell because
juries. Joe Holly, UB's regular
New England's number 1 Major
All-East
College team. His overall record center and candidate for
is also expected to see
at Massachusetts is 19-7-1 for a honors,
.731 percentage. He’ is the 20th action after being kept out of
the Cornell gamp because of a
and best of the Massachusetts pinched
nerve in his left shoulcoaches, which can be demonder. If all three of these men get
strated by his fine record with
into action, it will be the first
a team that in the past was altime this season that the Bulls
ways a medioerb One. Coadi Fusia
have taken the field at full
has said, “Success is often achiev will
strength. And with these three
ed as a result of dedication, delinemen fighting for the Bulls,
termination, and a high level of
their line will have more of a
he
has
certainconsistency”: and
chance
for success against the
at
Massaly accomplished that
bigger Redmen.
chusetts. His tough defense is
This is the first meeting bejust about as consistent as it
tween the two schools, and could
can get. It very seldom makes a
conceivably be the beginning of
mistake, and never makes the
a top Eastern rivalry.
same mistake twice. Last week,
The Bulls will have to play a
however, Harvard was just too lot better than they did against
strong, as they scored 20 points,
to beat the Redmen.
more than had been scored Cornell
and UB are both
against Massachusetts in the last Massachusetts
coming off disappointing show
eleven games combined. The
Harvard team is a tough one, Kymc&gt;m&lt;mKymcmrm(mK&gt;
though, and is likely to be a top
Eastern power this year.

ever, it is doubtful that he will
see much action this week against

'

—

’

Bulls at Full
Ready to Scalp Redmen

—

�PAGE SIXTEEN

Friday, October 2, 1964

SPECTRUM

SPS&amp;fflBUBa
SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

§!F®S11Pi

Grid Picks

Golf Streak
Continues Professional
By STAN

LICHWALA

The UB Golf Team added an-

THE GOOD SIDE

other victory to their long string

AND THE BAD SIDE
In spite of last week’s “loss” to Cornell, there was
one promising development over the weekend with regard
to the UB football picture. The freshman team, affectionately called the Baby 'Bulls (not a very good name)
handily defeated the Plebes of Army, by a 16-6 score.
So we have two sides with which to examine this past
weekend’s football activity.
First we, will attend to the good side
the “little”
Bulls (sounds bad, doesn’t it?). Coach Dewey Wade had
much to be happy about after last Friday’s overwhelming victory. The overall play of the “small” Bulls (that’s
even worse) was of high caliber. Not only did they defeat the Plebes, but they did it in a highly impressive
manner. There offense was effectively diversified between rushing and passing while their defense was a
formidable one, in continually thwarting the West Pointer’s potential scoring drives.
Assistant freshman coach-Jim Ryan, while informally reviewing the game at the onset of a Monday morning
bowling class pointed out that “we should have had a
few more touchdowns than we scored.” The coach asserted that numerous mistakes, which are to be expected
the first time any team plays together, cost the “young”
Bulls (still not very good) two touchdowns and a third
potential TD was stopped by an Army goal line stand.
However, taking everything into consideration, the Baby
Bulls (1 give up) got off to an excellent start against a
powerful Army team. At this time, the future freshman
prospects look very bright.
—

of victories by defeating St. Bonaventure, 11-7, in a very close
match played September 24 at

Audubon Golf Course. This victory was the twenty-fourth consecutive dual match captured by
the fine UB golfers.

College

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

In last week’s edition of the
Spectrum, 1 announced, for all
the world to hear, that I would
stick around for the remainder
of the season regardless of my
results. I’m happy to say that I
won’t have to go back on my
word because last week’s picks,
for some strange and unknown
reason, were astonishingly successful, (my record for the week
was 8-3
hard to believe, but
true.) This encouraging news has
given me, as they say in the
television commercials, “a new
lease on life," or, to put it in
other words—my editor has reconsidered and is not, after all,
going to tie me to the TV aerial
on top of Tower on the night of
January 29. Therefore, I am inspired to continue and go on to
even greater heights, hopefully,
and here are this week’s picks:
National Football League:
DETROIT 28, NEW YORK 17—

By

procured the services of an advisor to aid me in my prognostications. His name is Teddy
Altholz and, much like myself,
fancies himself as an expert. He
qualifies as a successful “Monday Quarterback”, having accomplished a 14-1 record on last
week’s major encounters, after
having thoroughly scrutinized
‘he sports section of the Sunday
New York Ttimes. (There must
have been a misprint in the fiHis five
nal football results).
picks appear at the end of this
column. I leave it up to America to decide my fate.
I have given Teddy two West
Coast games to pick because they
have been giving me trouble as
of late. Of my nine “miscalculations”, four have come at the
hands of West Coast elevens.
My record to date is 18-9-2.
The
MICHIGAN 24 NAVY 21
Wolverines have their eyes set
on the Big Ten title this year
and have the talent to go all the
way. “Jolly Roger” and his Middies, though a strong team themselves, will face rough sailing

The golfers from St, Bonavenwere unable to shut out any
of the UB golfers. The points
won by each man follow their
names, which appear in the order
of the position number that they
play: Steve Watts, 1; Ralph
Goodrich, l'/i; Gary Weiss, Vk\
Jim Bruce, 3; Kearons Whalen,
Vz; and Steve Michaels, 2 'k The
medalist for the match was UB’s
number one man, Steve Watts,
who shot a fine 76—only six
strokes over par. This victory is
a good indication that the success
UB golfers have experienced in
the past wilMmminue) this year.
This week has—been a very
Without Tittle, there’s net much
busy week for Dr. Serfustini’s
punch in the Giants' attack. Wood
men. Tuesday, UB entertained
was good enough to beat the
Niagara at Audubon. They travlowly Redskins, but the question
eled to Sheridan Golf Course yeshere is: Is he good enough to
terday to be the guests of Buftake the Lions by the tail?
falo State,
CLEVELAND 31, DALLAS 13
The greatest test of this year’s
team will come today, when our —The Cowboy defense was finSaturday.
golfers will participate in the ally shown for what it is and the
U.S.C. 28 MICHIGAN STATE 17
Browns are rolling along. It
Third Annual Brook-Lea Invita—The Trojans romp over the
should be a very enjoyable Suntional Golf Tournament at RochSooners really shook the college
ester, New York. In the two day for Jimmy Brown and comranks. QB Fertig may prove to
previous Brook-Lea Invitationals, pany.
be more talented than his illusthe UB golfers have returned
PITTSBURGH 28, PHILADELtrious successor, Pete Beathard.
After victories over The Spartan squad is game, and
with the first place trophies. PHIA 24
Again, the UB team will be the New York and Dallas, the Steelwill be up for this encounter, but
defending champion as 12 other ers have regained their ’63 form. Southern Cal has all the big guns.
schools attempt to challenge our
The Eagles had their wings clipNEBRASKA 34 IOWA STATE 14
ped by Cleveland and will probgolfers for the first place. Each
The Cornhuskers scored twice
tumble
the
cellar
to
after in the last five minutes to overschool will be represented by ably
this
their four best men who will
encounter with their Keycome a surprisingly strong Mineach play eighteen holes. Scoring stone State rivals.
nesota team. This game will defST. LOUIS 30, WASHINGTON
will be according to medal play
initely be as close. State, even
The Cardinals are hard
arid Ihc team with the lowest 14
with smashing fullback Tommy
enough for the top teams to beat,
Vaughn, is only a second divitotal medal score will be declared the champion. This year’s let alone the feeble Redskins.
sion team this year. Nebraska
UB Golf Team will exert every
Come Sunday night, the Redbirds
will use this game as a stepping
effort to retain supremacy in the will be flying high atop DC.
stone to the Big Eight Crown.
Stadium looking more and more
Brook-Lea Invitational Golf TourARMY 21 TEXAS 20—The Black
like champs.
nament and bring home still anKnights leave friendly Michie
BALTIMORE 35, LOS ANGELother trophy to add to their imStadium this week and venture
ES 21—There can be no doubt
pressive collection.
out to meet the Longhorns on
that the Rams are already the their home grounds. Texas, does
surpise team of 1964, but Unitas’ not seem to miss Carlisle, AppleColts look like they can’t be stopton, et at, as much as expected.
ped after topping Green Bay and
The Cadets though, do not frightChicago (52-0) in succession.
en easily, as they demonstrated
GREEN BAY 27, MINNESOTA
last week against Boston College.
13—The Vikings have disappointThe big question mark is Stiched since their opening-game vicweh’s ankle, injured in the heat
tory over the Bears and will be
of battle against B.C. If Rollie
The Cross-Country squad opena source of further disappointhas not sufficiently recovered by
ed its season last week on a sour ment to their fans when they fall game-time, it will be
an uphill
note, dropping two meets away before the powerful Packers on
fight for Army. If he is O.K.
from home, to Brockport 23-36 Sunday.
look for the rough Army, grindand to Syracuse 16-45. Dick Genau
CHICAGO 17, SAN FRANCISit-out, offense to neutralize the
led the varsity in both meets, CO 10—What can be
said in favor versatile Texas attack and make
placing 4th at Brockport and 5th
of the Bears after last week’s the Longhorns victims of this
at Syracuse. Other UB scorers humiliating 52-0
defeat at the
week’s UPSET OF THE WEEK.
were Jack Kerns, 5th and 10th, hands of the Colts? Merely this
GEORGIA TECH 27 CLEMSON 0
Captain Ed. Lontrato, 7th and —they’re still better than the
—The Engineers have not reach7th, Bill Sucdmeyer, 12th and
49'ers.
ed the rough part of their schedlllh, and Bob Hoffman, 11th and
American Football League
ule and will continue on their
12th.
BUFFALO 33, OAKLAND 13— winning ways. Clemson is not
This week the team faces one The Bills look almost unbeatable
the fearsome team that it used
of the most rugged schedules
after last week’s big win over to be.
ever run by a UB squad: TuesSan Diego and the hapless RaidSYRACUSE 4? HOLY CROSS 7
day, Buffalo State and Canisius ers are not very difficult to beat.
The Orangemen may have the
at Buffalo State; Thursday at
SAN DIEGO 21, NEW YORK
best backfield combination in the
4:00, Rochester Tech at home;
17—Neither of these teams has country in Nance and Little (5
Saturday, the Le Moyne Invitaimpressed anyone as yet. The TD's vs. Kansas). The Crusaders
tional at Syracuse, where 20 game is a toss-up, but the Chargshowed that they had a vulneraschools will compete.
ers have a talented quarterback, ble defense last week and will be
The Frosh squad ended last
Jets
something the
obviously unable to plug the gaps in time.
week with a record of 1-1, beatlack.
Coach Anderson of Holy Cross
ing Brockport 23-36, and losing
BOSTON 38, DENVER 10
wants to retire from the gridiron
to the Orange of Syracuse 18-41. The Broncos
have yet to win a
this year with at latst 200 vicBob Stephenson led the Baby game and the Patriots have yet tories under his
belt. After this
Bulls with a 2nd at Brockport to
game he'll still lack 4.
lose one. There’s no reason
and a 3rd at Syracuse. Other
why the trend shouldn’t continue
MASSACHUSETTS 24 BUFFALO
Frosh scorers were Paul RogoHOUSTON 35, KANSAS CITY
The Redmen were
17
by
vich. 3rd and 8th, Dave Latham. 28—Offense is the name of the Harvard last week and upset
will be
5th and 9th, Mike Alspaugh, 6th game in the AFL and the
Oilers out for revenge. The Bulls played
and 14th. The Frosh team to have the best in the league. The sloppily against
Cornell and still
date has shown good balance and Chiefs will come out second best
have not patched up the holes
a lot of spirit.
in K-C. on Sunday.
(Cont’d on P. 10)
ture

—

,

—

—

Now to the dark side of last week’s football picture.
This partial observer had the pleasure, if you can call
it that, of seeing the game and thus can relate to you,
pur beloved sports fan, the facts first hand (in a biased
manner, of course). From this corner there was only one
fact responsible for the Bulls (this sounds good so we’ll
leave it alone) “loss”; this being overconfidence. How a
team can trounce an average Boston University squad one
week, and then come back to tie a Cornell team no stronger than the B.U. eleven, needs some explaining. Certainly there was no difference in the amount of preparation
for the two games. The team was well drilled for both
contests and in fact, Coach Offenhamer had previously
commented on last week’s first two practices, calling
into
them “the best we ever had”. Thus the team
both games equally well prepared. As far as injuries are
concerned the only player out for this game and not for
the B.U. encounter was star center, Joe Holly, who
could have made a big difference, but not 35 points
W'orth. It is also true that individual performances vary
from week to week, but there is rarely a total team lapse
as would have had to be the case to wipe out a 35 point
spread. Other points of similarity between the two games
are that both were played away, and both were home
openers for the opposition, so in these respects there was
no difference.
The only other variable not taken into consideration
which could have affected the game, is the psychological factor. The Bulls were indeed a confident team after
their trouncing of B.U. in the season opener, and perhaps too much of this confidence was carried over to
the Cornell game, especially after they had opened up
a quick 9-0 lead in the first quarter. For after that, it
was all downhill for UB as Cornell continued to pick up
momentum while the Bulls seemed to be in a rut.
However, at the beginning of the second half the
Bulls did manage to sustain a drive but were thwarted
at the goal line, where their attack just seemed to fizzle
out. Their only other scoring threat came on a long pass
play from Gilbert to Edward, who was tripped up in a
desperate diving tackle by the last defender near him.
Beyond this it was all Cornell.
As far as the use of the word loss in place of tie
is concerned, we feel the game was indeed a loss with
regard to the optimistic expectations of the UB supporters
for the game as opposed to the pessimistic expectations
the Cornell backers had.
This week will be a different story. The Bulls are
no longer the picture of confidence they were after the
B.U. victory. They are a team determined to make up
for last week's “loss”. Massachusetts will be a tough
nut to crack, having being undefeated last year, with 23
lettermen returning. But from this corner we look for
a Buffalo victory to successfully open the home season.

STEVE FEIGIN

At the insistance of several of
my faithful followers, I have

—

—

Harriers Lose
First Two Meets

—

—

—

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                    <text>i

NORTON
OPEN HOUSE

*•

HARVEY ZIMMERMAN

On October 17, at 8:00 p.m. in
the Millard Fillmore Room of
Norton Union, the State University of New York at Buffalo will
have the honor of hearing Associate Justice of the United
States Supreme Court William 0.
Douglas address the Graduate
Student Association.

Justice Douglas, who will be
accompanied by his wife, the
former Joan C. Martin of Am-

herst, will discuss “The Rule of

Law and Survival,” He will speak
to more than 800 students at the

annual Graduate Student Convocation being sponsored by the
Graduate Student Association.
Unfortunately, due to lack of
space, his discussion will be open
only to graduate students by invitation.
Justice Douglas, who was appointed an Associate Justice to
the Supreme Court in 1939, was
nominated by President Franklin
D. Roosevelt. Prior to bis appointment, be was director of the
Protective Committee Study, and
Securities and Exchange Commission for two years.

Receiving his law degree from
Columbia University, Justice
Douglas went on to serve as a
member of the Columbia Law
School faculty. He then served
as a member of the Yale Law
School faculty from 1928 to 1936.

He holds honorary degrees
from 11 universities, and is the
author of more than a dozen
books.
Known as a strong conservationist, Justice Douglas is probably the most widely traveled

m

I

Theobald Here

H

fl||K’«

CORNELL
PREVIEW
(see

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1964

Douglas to Speak
During Convention
By

—————

VT"

1

/see page

VOLUME 15

X

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

page

NO.

Aptheker's Right to Speak
Upheld By Supreme Court

Robert Theobald, noted economist and author, will appear on
campus today at 3:00 pm, in the
Conference Theater
Students and members of the
faculty are invited to the lecture
Dr. Herbert
Aptheker will
of the Board of Trustees. The
which is being presented by the speak here this semester, comCourt established the right of
Convocations Committee of the pleting the Convocations series
Dr. Aptheker to speak at the
Student Senate. An informal disUniversity.
on political ideologies, started in
cussion and coffee hour, in Northe Fall of 1962.
Mr. Egan, through his right
ton 331, will follow the presento appeal, took the matter to
tation in the Conference Theater.
The highest tribunal in New
the State Court of Appeals for
Mr. Theobald teaches at the York State upheld the right of a reeonsideraion. Arguments were
Foreign Service Institute of the
Communist to speak on a State
heard this past May. Judgement
State' Department and at New University Campus. In a recent was ultimately decided in favor
York University. He attended
decision, the State Court of Apof the Board of Trustees. The
Cambridge University in Engpeals ruled that Dr. Herbert ApCourt of Appeals upheld the
land, where he received his mastheker, an avowed Communist, lower court’s decision to allow
degree
ter’s
in economics.
had the right to address stuDr. Aptheker to address our stuHe is the author Of the best dents
at our university.
dent body.
selling book The Rich and the
This decision is one of great
Dr. Aptheker was scheduled
Poor. Other of his publications to address the student body on significance.
It was the first timeinclude The Challenge of AbunOctober
1962 as the final the highest state court ruled
dance and Free Men and Free speaker 31,
in a series that presented on the question of Communists
Markets. His works deal priseveral political ideologies. On addressing students on State Unimarily with the effects of scienthe day of the scheduled speech, versiy campuses.
tific and technological change on
Justice Russell G. Hunt of the
The Student Senate invited Dr.
society and the economy. In adState Supreme Court issued an
Aptheker to speak at the Unimember of the Supreme Court. dition, he concerns himself with
injunction in response to the
versity in conjunction with a
He 'has traveled throughout the the relationships
and problems
action of Mr. Egan of Ballston
convocation series entitled Poliworld studying customs and at- between the developing and the
tical Spectrum of the Contemtitudes of foreign people and ob- developed nations of the world. Spa, N.Y. This order temporarily
restrained the President of the porary World. The purpose of
serving foreign governments.
Mr. Theobald is a member of University and the Board of Trusthe series was to present the
Born in Maine, Minnesota, in the Columbia University Seminar tees from proceeding with the
major political ideologies of our
Technology
on
and
Social
Change
he
is
son
the
of a Home
time to the student body. The
1898,
program.
Missionary of the Presbyterian and is a member of the Editorial
The Appelate Division of the five ideologies included in the
Board
of
ComHill
McGraw
Book
Church. Attending grade and
Supreme Court heard the conseries were: fascism, conservapany’s International Series.
high schools in Yakima, Washtivism, liberalism, socialism and
troversy in October, 1962. Mr.
ington, he received his A.B. deEgan contended that the address
communism. The speakers engaggree from Whitman College in
by Dr. Aptheker was in violation
ed to appear were Sir Oswald
Applications for the
1920.
Mosley, Dr, Russell Kirk, Hon.
of the Feinberg Law, which bars
position of editor-in-chief
he employment of a known ComEugene J. McCarthy, Mr. NorHe served in the army during
munist as a faculty member on
man Thomas and Dr. Aptheker,
of the Spectrum are now
World War I as a private. Among
a State campus. He argued that
respectively. Dr. Aptheker was
Justice Douglas’ varied affiliathe
Pubby
being accepted
as a logical complement of the
the only speaker that did not
tions, he is a member of Phi
of the Stuprovision
concerning
faculty appear.
lications
Board
Alpha, Delta Sigma Rho, Phi Beta
members, a known Communist
Robert Finkelstein, President
dent Association. Forms
Kappa and belongs to several
should also be barred from apof the Student Senate, reaffirmclubs including the Explorers,
may be picked up in the
pearing on a State University
ed the Senate’s belief in the
and Himilayan and Overseas
campus.
Student Senate office, toimportance and significance of
Press Club.
The Board of Trustees argued the series. Mr. Finkelstein was
day, Room 205 Norton.
that the Feinberg Law was con“heartened to hear of the deThis is indeed a great honor
The
must he
applications
cerned solely with the employcision of the Court of Appeals
which has been bestowed upon
submitted by Monday
ment of faculty members. They
that affirmed the Student Senate
the University and it is hoped
contended that the appearance belief that speakers of all ideothat Justice Douglas will receive
noon. An official statement
of a known Communist, as a logies aid in the education proa warm greeting.
of cumlative grade point
guest speaker, did not come uncess.” When questioned about
average and grade point
der the jurisdiction of the Feinthe reappearance of Dr. Aptheberg Law. They further cited
ker he commented that, "the ofaverage for the previous
precedent of the United States
ficers of the Student Senate are
semester, both 1.0 or highSupreme Court that distinguished
in agreement that the invitation
er must accompany the apbetween membership in the Comshould be rescheduled.” The ofmunist party and the active adficers are presently endeavoring
plication.
vocacy of the doctrines of Comto arrange for Dr. Aptheker’s
Selections will be made on
Mr. Kriegel, the present
munism.
appearance at the University as
the basis of acedemic and/or proeditor
has
for
the
The Appelate Division handed
the final speaker in the series,
resigned
fessional record, the feasibility of
down its decision in December
The Political Spectrum of the
remainder of the term.
the applicant’s proposed study
1962. The court decided in favor Contemporary World.
plan, and personal qualifications.
Preference is given to candidates
who have not previously lived
or studied abroad and who are
under the age of 35.
Three types of grants are available under the Fulbright-Hays
Act: U. S.
Government Full
Grants, Joint U.S.-Other GovernBy MARION MICHAEL
ment Grants, and U.S. GovernI
ment Travel-Only Grants.
Each Full Grant provides roundIn the first meeting of this
trip transportation, tuition, mainsemester, the Student Senate,
tenance, and health and acci- Tuesday night both concluded
dent insurance for one academic business carried over from the
spring and initiated plans for
year of study or research. Participating countries in the Full
future actions.
Grant program include: ArgenRenewed backing of the natina, Australia, Austria, Belgium- tional fraternities in their strugLuxembourg, Brazil, Ceylon, gle for the retention of national
affiliations was among the famiChile, China (Republic of), Columbia, Denmark, Finland, liar issues taken up. Mr. Peter
Ostrow moved that “Whereas the
France, Germany (Federal Republic of), Greece, Iceland, In1963-64 Student Senate voted undia, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, animously to support the right
of national fraternities on this
Korea, Malaysia, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, campus to retain national affiliaPakistan, Peru, Philippines, Portions, . . . and whereas the ruling
tugal, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, by the trustees of the State University discriminates unreasonTurkey, United Arab Republic,
ably against national fraternities,
United Kingdom and Uruguay.
Special opportunities under the
and infringes upon the right to
freedom of association, be it reFull Grant program include:
A motion was also made consolved that: We reaffirm the posiwith the Senate's action; however,
teaching assistantships in India,
Iran and Italy for students intion taken by the 1963-64 Senate cerning the Student Senate action
this was defeated in a 1 25 vote.
terested in teaching English as a “and" urge the trustees of the of alloting Senate funds for the
The first item in new business
anti-HUAC demonstrations last dealing with new plans was a moState University to reevaluate
foreign language; and fellowships in Italy for teaching Amertheir stand, and to unilaterally spring. This motion called for a tion to send a letter from the sturetrace their 1953 edict." After general referendum to be held
ican language and literature, hisdent body to Dr. Kaiser about reshort discussion ,the Senate voted
in order to ascertain whether or scheduling the spring recess. Miss
tory, philosophy or law.
(Cont'd on P. 4&gt;
not the students themselves agree
(Cont’d on P. 3)
and passed the motion.

Fulbright Awards Available
For Graduate Study Abroad

Only a few weeks remain in
which to apply for Fulbright-Hays
fellowships for the 1965-66 academic year. More than 900 graduate grants to 53 countries are
available through the U.S. Department of State’s educational
exchange program, which is authorized by the Fulbright-Hays Act.
The Institute of International Education (HE) administers the competition for this program.
Application forms and information for students currently enrolled in the State University
of Buffalo may be obtained from
the campus Fulbright Adviser,
Miss Emma E. Deters, 107 Acheson Hall. Individual department
heads also have lists of countries offering opportunities in
particular fields. The deadline
for filing applications through
the Fulbright Adviser on this
campus is Thursday.
Students who wish to apply for
an award for study or research,
or for teaching assistantships,
must have : U.S. citizenship, at
least a bachelor’s degree by the
beginning of the grant, language
proficiency commensurate with
the proposed project, and good
health. Social workers must also
have at least two years of professional experience after the
Master of Social Work degree.
Applicants in the field of medicine must have an M.D. at the
time of application. Creative and
performing artists do not require a bachelor’s degree, but
must have four years of profes-

sional study

perience.

or equivalent ex-

2

Senate Supports Nationals;
Forms Plans for UB Expansion

�SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

ETS Announces
Teaching Exams
College seniors preparing to
teach school may take the National Teacher Examinations on
four different test dates each
year instead of one, Educational
Testing Service announced.

New dates set for the testing
of prospective teachers are: December 12, 1964; and March 20,
July 17, and October 2, 1965.
The tests will be given at more
than 550 locations in the 50
states.

Scores on the National Teacher
Examinations are used by many
large school districts for employment of new teachers and
by several states for certification or licensing of teachers.
Some colleges require all seniors preparing to teach to take
the examinations.

Lists of school systems which

use the examination results

are

distributed to colleges by ETS,
a nonprofit educational organization which prepares and administers the examinations.
On each full day of testing,
prospective teachers may take the
Common

Examinations,

wiiich

measure the professional and

gen

eral preparation of teachers, and
one of 13 Teaching Area Exam
inations (formerly called Option
al Examinations) which measure

mastery of the subject they expect to teach.

Prospective teachers should
contact the school systems in
which they seek employment, or
their colleges, for specific advice
on which examinations to take
and on which dates they should

be taken.
Bulletin of Information containing registration forms, lists
of lest centers, and information
about the examinations may be
obtained from college placement
officers, school personnel de
partments, or directly from National Teacher Examinations, Educational Testing Service, Prince
ton. New

Jersey.

Students Meet For Fulbright-Hayes
(Cont’d from P. 3)
President Johnson
As an enthusiastic product of

student interest in the current
activity,
dents for
Johnson and H; .phrey” met
last Monday, in the Millard
Fillmore Room of Norton Union
to perpetuate the Kennedy ideals
by forming a plan of action to
keep his administration alive. According to Mike Lappin, campus
chairman, Kennedy had great
faith in his belief that the future
of our country depends upon its
youth. At this meeting, over 100
students proved that they are
aware and intelligent enough to
meet their responsibility.
What role can students, es
pecially those under twenty-one,
play in this, year’s campaign?
Plans in many fields were offered which will require active
supporters who are willing to
work to see their candidates
elected in a Democratic sweep in
the impending election. There
will be an area voter registration
drive which, it is hoped, will
extend to the City of Buffalo, as
well as to every eligible voter
and night-school student on campus. There is paper work, leaflets
to be distributed, signs to be
made, a concentrated letter-tothe-editor campaign in the Buffalo papers. Senator Humphrey
political

“

is expected to speak at a rally
in Buffalo within the month, and
Students for Johnson and Humphrey will be there to bear and
support him. A welcoming com
mittee to “show the youthful

voice of the Buffalo area" will be
formed.
This formative meeting for aL
filiated students, the skeleton of
which was organized four years
ago during Kennedy’s campaign,
went extremely well, thanks to
the efforts of Tony LeRusso, Jim
Fox, and Mike Lappin, and the
enthusiastic showing and re
sponsc of the student body. This
election should be everyone’s
concern—if it is yours, you are
welcome to attend the next meeting of Students for Johnson and
Humphrey Monday.

Support

Our Advertisers

Joint U.S.-Other Government
grants are offered cooperatively
by the U.S. Government (which
provides travel) and a foreign
government (which provides tuition and maintenance). Joint
awards are available for study
or research in Bolivia, Brazil,
Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Gua-

temala, Haiti, Hondoras, Mexico,
Panama, Paraguay,
Peru, Poland, Rumania and Venezuela.
Nicaragua,

For Travel-Only Grants, the
United States provides a supplementary travel stipend for a
maintenance and tuition scholarship awarded by a university, private donor or foreign government. These awards are for ten
countries: Afghanistan, Austria,
Denmark, France, Germany, Iceland, Israel, Italy, Netherlands
and Sweden.

Under a special program, additional grants for 1965-66 will be
available for study in Latin America. It is expected that as many
as 80 grants will be offered to
graduating seniors and recent
graduates for study in countries
where the number of U.S. students has traditionally been
small, such as Bolivia, Brazil,
Costa Rica, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Nicaragua, Uruguay
and Venezuela, Recommended
fields of study are social sciences,
political science, history, law and
humanities.
The applications of the students, processed by the Institute,
are reviewed by National Screening Committees of specialists in
various fields and area studies.
Panels of candidates recommend-

Friday, September 25, 1964

Debate Club Holds Meeting
A meeting of the Varsity team
of the Debate Club was held last
Friday, to acquaint the members
with this year’s topic, resolved
that the Federal Government
should establish a program of
Public Work for the unemployed.”

A novice class of 40 is e'xpected
in the Society this year, but there
is still plenty of room and anyone interested may stop in at
the Debate Society office located
in Norton Union Room 357, or in
The Drama and Speech office in
Crosby Hall.
Mr. Terry Ostermeier is the
coach for varsity teams, and Mr.
Dick Sihell is The Novice Assistant. The University Society
sponsors a debate tournament
here on campus in February.

A list of schools to be visited
included Queens College, Vermont University, §t. John Fisher,
Rochester and Michigan State

Universtiy.

ed by the Committees are forwarded to the supervising agencies abroad for further review.
If an award from another government is involved, applications
are also presented to that government for consideration. The
final selection is made by the
Board of Foreign Scholarships,
comprised of 12 leaders in the
educational field, appointed by
the President of the United
States.
The aim of all Fulbright-Hays
awards is to increase mutual understanding between people of
the U.S. and other countries

MiIiIaIIa'a
I tIIII iBllU
&amp;

through the exchange of persons,
knowledge and skills. Since the

academic year 1948-49, when the
program was initiated, more than
12,000 American graduate students have studied abroad on
Fulbright grants. The Institute
of International Education helps
to administer this and other exchange programs between the
U.S. and more than 100 foreign
countries, which annually involve
approximately 6,000
students,
scholars, leaders and artists. It
is also a clearinghouse for information on all aspects of international education.

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

ATTACHE CASES BRIEF CASES
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
,

Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
3400

Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students
MAIN STREET (Opposite UB)
TF 3-1600
Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till 9 P.M.

�Friday, September

25, 1964

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

W.R.A. Schedule Dr. Milner to

A U.S. co-ed urns lea craam in

Europe

PAYING JOBS
IN EUROPE
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg,
Sept. 9—Students are urged to
apply early for summer jobs in
Europe. Thousands of jobs (office, resort, factory, farm, etc.)
are available. Wages range to
$400 monthly and the American
Student Information Service
awards travel grants to regis-

tered students. Those interested
should send $2 to Dept. T, ASIS,
22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and request the ASIS
36-page booklet listing and describing every available job, and a
travel grant and job application.

The women’s physical education department is sponsoring the
W.R.A., which is the Women’s
Recreational Association. Any
woman currently enrolled in UB
is eligible to participate in any
of the activities of the association. The department urges all
girls who are interested to contact Miss Diebold at the gym,
ext. 2941. If enough interest is
shown in the present activities,
special events, such as field trips,
water ballet, and swimming
shows, will be planned.
The activities planned for the
fall semester are on the following schedule:
Archery, Monday, 4:00-5:00

p.m., Clark Gym.
Bowling, Wednesday, 6:00-8:00

p.m., Norton Union.

Hockey, Thursday, 4:00-5:00
Clark Field.

pjn.,

Modem Dance, Tuesday, 3:004:00 p.m., Clark Gym.
Swimming, Thursday, 7:15-8:30

p.m., Clark Pool.

All activities begin September
21 with the exception of bowling

Which begins Wednesday.

THE NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION

EXISTS TO IMPROVE AND DEEPEN

Teach Here
A professor from the University of Dijon, France, has been
appointed the first visiting professor of French at the State
University of Buffalo this semester.

Dr. Max Milner, professor of
French literature, is the 29th
visiting French professor sponsored by the Jones Visiting Professorship established at
the
University by Mrs. Joseph T.
Jones in 1929.

Last Monday was the Union
Board’s first attempt to create
The professor will teach an more student interest in various
undergraduate course entitled, organizations and clubs on campus through an ‘Open House.’
“Les Romans De Georges Bernanos.” He will also teach a Each participant in the event
representatives of
graduate seminar in “Rimbaud maintained
organizations
Avant Les Illuminations.” Two their respective
irom 3 to ’&gt;5 p.m. Monday afterpublic lectures which Dr. Milner will deliver in English will be noon. Their united endeavour
was to orient the new students
announced at a later date.
with the various organizations
Dr. Milner has been a member and clubs on campus, and to draw
of the Faculty of Letters since new members,
1953 and was named a profesThough many information
sor of French literature in 1962. sheets were passed out Monday
He taught at the Lycee d’Amiens afternoon at the Union Board
and the Lycee de Sevresand and booth in Norton lobby, the rewas an attache of research at the sponse was slow. Many of the
National Center of Scientific Resecond and third floor offices of
participating organizations, such
search before serving at Dijon.
as the Buffalonian, WBFO, the
He received his doctorate in
Student Dramatic Society, and the
1960 and has written several Newman Club, to name but a few,
books. His books on Georges remained vacant,
save for an ocBernanos will be published in casional passerby.
the near future.
The New Student Review, how-

along with the campus’
latest magazine, Th« Bull, seemed
to draw more interest. Also
among the more successful was
the Student Arts and Crafts
Shop, which reported to have
taken on several new members
that afternoon as a response to
the ‘Open House’ event. The
Browsing Library and the Music
Room were also found to be ex&gt;
ever,

periencing some activity.
Early last summer Ladd Sievenpiper had sent out letters to
each campus organization, inviting them to give their aid and
participation in Monday’s event.
By the beginning of this fall’s
semester he had received no
response to his invitations. As a
result much of the preparation
had to be crowded into a few
days.
Also detracting from the activities drive was the fact that many
organizations had already held
their membership drive meetings.

THE QUALITY OF EDUCATION
IN THE UNITED STATES AND TO
PROMOTE INVOLVEMENT STUDENT WITH
THE WORLD AND THE

ISSUES WHICH FACE US TODAY.

The S. U. N. Y. A. B. National Student
Association committee needs INTELLIGENT and
VIGOROUS students to initiate and administer
a meaningful and coherent program of

Academic,

Scholastic, Political, and Social signifigance,

to

includeCivil Rights, Academic Freedom, Student
participation in Academic Affairs, Campus wide
speaker programs, publications, personal involve-

ment, and (hopefully) learning.
There will be an introductory meeting in the

Senate Office (2nd Floor Norton) Monday, (the
28th) from 12 Noon to 4 or leave applications
(name address and why you are interested) in the
Office at any time.

Now available...a special opportunity

TO REPRESENT AVON COSMETICS
ON CAMPUS
By special arrangement with the college, an opportunity is offered to twg resident students to represent Avon, world's largest cosmetic company. These girls
will enjoy a unique earning opportunity: an exclusive franchise to offer fellow
students Avon’s famous cosmetics on campus. Because Avon has an international reputation, the high quality cosmetics, not available in stores, are in
great demand. They are the newest, the best, beautifully packaged, and fully
guaranteed. Student Representatives in other colleges are pleased with the
acceptance of Avon, and with their substantial earnings.
For more information, please contact

Mr. Lipsicuis
Placement Office

�JjI

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Editorial Advisor
Financial Advisors

-

Harvey Zimmerman
Paul Nussbaum
Barbara Strauss
Gary Falk
William Siemering
Dallas Garber
Thomas Haenle

MARTIN D KRIEGEL
Lay-out , Editor
Copy Editor
Sports Editor
Advertising Mgr.
Business Mgr.
Editorial Assistant
Photo Editor

David

Edelman
Ann Orszulak
Alan Scholbm
Howard Auerbach
Bernard Dikman
Henry Cagan
Edward Joscelyn

Marcia

Chick Arnold, Stan

Bugels|ti, Trudy Stern, Peter Rubin, Jeremy Taylor,
Murphy, Gary Lyman, Gary Chilcoff, Nancy Migdol,
Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou
Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Skip Venneri,
Diane Holfzman, Richard DrandofF, Lenny Gaby,
Lichwala, Diane Hayes, Hanon Michael

Photography

George Jackrel, Skip Blumberg,

General Staff; Steve Feigin,

Vick.
Margo Rakita, Sue Greene, Eileen
Jeanne Stoll, Don Eismann, Merle
Kozlowski, Rita Solomon, Phyllis
Linda Leventhal, Sharon Richter,

Goldstein

Staff

Eric Snyder, Roger

Simon, Bruce

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class,
'

Friday, September 25, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Subscription

Postage Paid at Buffalo, New York

$3.00

per year,

circulation 9000

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

Editorial
Voter Registration

No More
Mr. Charlie
By LARRY SIEGEL
The first of a series of articles
written by a student depicting
his experiences in the deep
South.
You drive through the ‘tdelta
area” of Mississippi toward that
“old man river” until you come
to a bridge that spans the river.
Before you cross it, you arc
stopped at a quarantine station
to have your 'car checked. I’m

still not sure what they check
for. But anyway, if your car passes the inspection you drive over
the bridge and you are Helena,
Arkansas. Well, what’s so special
about Helena, Arkansas? Only a
handful of civil rights workers
and the towns people know. This
town is as closed a society as
the state of Missisippi. In fact,
the bridge that I mentioned before, almost never was, because
the towns people did not want
any outside traffic coining
through this town. They wanted
to preserve what they had,
through isolation. And what docs
this town 'have? For 60% of its
people, who have black skin. Hel-

ena has meanness, bigotry and
lawlessness. For 60% of its people this means humiliation, deOver 150 UK students, under the auspices of the Civil gradation, beatings, killings and
loss of human dignity. People
Rights Committee of the Student Senate, will be canvasmany
sing most of the 12th and 13th wards in a fine effort have heard these words for
years, but only by being in places
to increase voter registration in these areas.
like Helena, can anyone really
know what they mean. For myThe ideal of the free ballot is a cherished one. The self and my three co-workers who
election is the only time when the voice of every citizen lived and worked in Helena for
may be heard equally. The drive for registration is inSNCC, and for the Negro in Heltended to counter the apathy of eligible voters. It is ena these words have special
meaning.
centered in predominantly Negro areas where registraTheir meaning Is real and their
tion is poor.
meaning is lived daily. Children
Michael Lappin, the chairman of the Civil Rights Comwear nothing but a pair of dirty
mittee, is to be commended for his organization of the drawers for most of the year,
drive,
volunteers, too, are to be commended for because the family doesn’t have
enough money. Large families
their work and the devotion to the ideal.
live in one room shotgun houses
The turnout has been excellent. But to cover larger that have flies swarming all
areas, more students are needed. We cannot urge too around. The roads in "colored
strongly that all students with time be willing to devote town” are so bad when it rains
that you walk almost knee deep
but a few hours to this effort.
in mud. Women and children
pick cotton 12 hours a day for
Registration days are Monday, Tuesday and Wednesslave wages. Sixty-five year old
day. We have only until Wednesday evening to accommen are called “boys” by teenplish the goals. Interested students should contact the agers
and have to reply, “ya,
Senate Office or Mr. Lappin as soon as possible.
sir.” Negroes get beat up almost
And a note of reminder to the academic community it- everyday and then arc fined for
self :
disturbing the peace. Peoples’
All eligible voters must be registered in order to vote. homes are shot into at night, beIf you have not voted since 1961, or if you have moved cause someone went to try and
since you voted last, you must re-register on either Mon- eat in a white restaurant. People
lost their jobs, because they were
day, Tuesday or Wednesday to be able to vote on Novseen talking to one of us. We
ember 3rd.
were arrested for vagrancy in the
house we were living in. Fire
bombs were thrown at our house.
Men entered our home with shotguns and gunny sacks to haul
(Cont'd from P. 1)
meet the needs of the student us off in. Bodies of Negro people
body academically, socially, and are fished out of the Mississippi
Gunsberg proposed that this letathletically: and to work with any River almost every day and
ter, to be circulated for signanothing ‘is ever done about it.
faculty committee or administratures among the students, request tive committee considering simi- People’s phones were either shut
that our vacation be moved from lar problems and to contact the off or tapped. Folks who had
the present time (March 13-22) up
architect to implement student water and electricity had it shut
to the last week in March, a time suggestions." Miss Linda Levenoff.
that would better coincide with thal and Mr. Gary Presant reAll these things happened this
the vacations of other universe spectively moved that the comsummer and have been happenties and colleges. Miss Linda Le
mittee consists of a junior, sopho- ing for many, many years. This
venthal urged that a committee more, and Senate representative has produced an almost paralyzof students and faculty members of the freshman class and that
ing state of fear within the Negro
settle a definite new date for the all the committee members must people of Helena. It was really
vacation so that results are not be Senators except for the reprebad this summer, because of our
hindered by disorganization sentative from freshman council. presence. The white people felt
among the various student group The discussion proceeding a vote that our being there was a real
requests. A following motion to contained both requests for con
threat to their way of life. And
refer this matter to the Student
sideration, time and further study they are right. Cutting through
Welfare Committee was voted on before action on this committee all this violence and harrassment
and passed. Miss Gunsberg’s mowhich would involve immence imis progress; Visible progress is
tion was then placed on old busi
portance and work effecting stu- being made in Helena. The black
ness for a following meeting.
dents in the far future and also man is waking up. He is fed up
Among the most far reaching
requests for immediate action. and will not eat anymore of the
plans initiated at this meeting
Among the closing statements of crap that he has been eating for
was the motion proposing that the discussion was Miss Leven- so long. Many young people in
the Student Senate establish a fowl's statement "Our main con Helena will die for their freedom
special committee, the Student cern here is to tstart doing some rather than live the way their
Senate Committee on Campus Ex
thing." The Senate vote on the parents have lived. More people
pansion. This committee’s stated mai motion clearly carried.
have registered to vote than ever
objectives were to be to: “Study
The last motion passed by the before. Negroes arc organizing
all plans and actions for the proSenate at this meeting proposed themselves into groups that will
posed new campus and to com
the Student Senate's formal en- act to change the system. I think
municate the results of their dorsement of the VMI football the white man knows this. I think
studies to the Senate and Spec
game. The homecoming UM1 he knows that he is fighting a
trum weekly; to define how the game will be held on October 17 losing battle. He knows that the
physical facilities of the new in the War Memorial Stadium, status quo is going to be changed
campus could best accomplish
and the Senate encoucage all stu no matter how hard he fights it:
goals of university education and
dents to attend.
no matter how violent he gets.

the

Spring Vacation Discussed

,

_

-

.

voj

take tfo&amp;rm in

cjCetterA

to

Dear Editor

I have just paid $3.00 for the

privilege of having my picture
appear in the 1965 Buffalonian,
and I have one simple question
to ask: “WHY?" Why are seniors forced to pay not only $3.00
for their yearbook pictures but
also full price for their yearbooks (unless they buy them

ahead of time in which case the
is reduced to a mere

price

$6.50!
It is

my humble impression
that when a student has attended a university for four
years, and has paid into that
university a goodly amount of
student fees (which are non-deductible from Regents Scholarships by the way) that student
is entitled to a free yearbook
upon his departure from that

if

-

-

fo^yemaom"

the (Editor
Aside from the fact that it
would be a rather nice gesture
to give the senior his yearbook,
this practice would make the
bookkeeping procedure for the
Buffalonian staff a much simpler one, baceuse they would
know at the beginning of the
year the exact number of seniors to receive books.
But let us be honest; I am
not suggesting this altruistic giving of free yearbooks to make
the yearbook staff happier. I
think all of us, when we fondly
gaze through our yearbooks 25
years from now would rather
remember them as a going away
gift from UB than as just another thing we had to pay for!
Barbara Strauss
Class of ’65

university.

Dear Editor:
In the flurry of a presidential
campaign year, political observers
frequently pay little or no attention to what they consider minor
candidates. For instance, when
the names of John R. Pillion or
Max’ MacCarthy are dropped,
they are likely to be greeted by
an apathetic “who?” and forgotten just as quickly. For the sake
of clarity, these two anonymous
gentlemen will soon be contending for a seat in the House of
Representatives for Buffalo’s 39th
Congressional district, Pillion
being the incumbant congressman.
Before deciding upon a candidate by purely party lines (which
can be especially misleading this

it is advisible that one research each man thoroughly and
then make his choice. Pillion
tends toward conservative legislation; he supports the Republican Party’s presidential nominee,
and has bestowed his name upon
the local chapter of Young Americans for Freedom; MacCarthy,
relatively unknown in active political channels, stands behind the
present administration and its
liberal tenets staunchly,
Both men are in the process of
launching their campaigns, the
outcome pf which will have farreaching effects. The Students for
Johnson and Humphrey Committee has begun to organize activities supporting McCarthy, the
Erie-Niagara Youth Committee
for Goldwater-Miller is expected
to begin its drive to back Pillion
quite soon; both organizations
year),

depend to a large extent upon
support from college students.

JEANNE STOLL

Dear “Editor,'
Although now you
than a hypothetical

are

no

more

construct of

we still long to know
you. There is an urgent need for
talent to uncover the dust of disjoint degeneracy. The need preimagination,

vails now. NOW is the antecendent of the future; a future which
you must help to mold. A sculptor does not exclude the torso,
unless he is making a bust. I do
not want to see the Spectrum go
to 'bust.’ Give the Spectrum the
legs it needs to stand on.
I do not care if you’re in your
office with a white shirt and tie;
personnally, that is not my
groove, nor your stick. Man, high
riding boots, dungarees, and a
dirty shirt are fine with me. I’m
hip to appearance and reality.
You have started the sculpture.
NOW is of importance. This is
real, I could picture you and your
newspaper looking real clean-cut,
ivy-league,
cordovan shoes,
... . boistfous
brassy-b u c k 1 e d
belts. But, that means naught.
...

We don’t have room for powerhungry egocentrics in a newspaper, or anywhere. These people
dedicate themselves to self-glory.

Let them have their power, but,
the expense of anyones
quest for awareness.

not at

Editor, you have got to be a
muckraker, because there is a
hell of alot of muck to be shoveled out of the path of lucidity.
What is a newspaper? For that

matter, what is the Spectrum?

I'll let you answer these questions.

name withheld by request

�Friday, September

25, 1964

SPECTRUM

President Sets
Senate Goals

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR
,1 heard an administrator for
whom I have the utmost respect
(yes, there are some administrators who are intelligent and are

working to improve the quality
of education on this campus,)
lamenting the lack of student interest and involvement at this
school. It has been my experience
that this “apathy” is much more
widespread than even the pro-

fessional student activities per
sonnel would have us believe. I
don’t believe that the problem
has ever been stated correctly—“apathy’ is a sell out, a scapegoat
for students and administrators
alike.

“A p a t h y” is something for
which I have no respect, but I
do have respect for many of the
students and teachers who are
casually labeled as "apathetic”;
this leads me to believe that
"apathy” does not describe the
situation adequately. When the
editor of the Spectrum, Martin
Kriegel, a student characterized
by intelligence, wit, energy, and
conviction, resigns because the
editorship “isn’t worth the grief”,
and when my closest friends and
acquaintances leave school, or
cut classes merely because they
are scheduled across the campus,
then no matter what the surface
appearances may be, the cause
is not apathy. I believe that the
causes of this sad state of affairs
are larger and more deeply rooted in the fabric of American
Society (including beer bellies
and TV dinners, as well as the
American Dream) than many
people are willing to admit.

Inaccessability is a primary
cause of the retreat of students
from organized life. The All New
’64 Bigger Improved American
Organization has grown out of
human proportion and the ability
of individuals to participate in
the direction and genuine administration of such organizations
has diminished to the point
where the total energies of one
man are no longer sufficient to
alter the course of the behemoth
one iota.

Hypocrisy is also a crucial factor in the retreat. The gross disthe words

in
the brochure and the lines at
registration: between “the land
of the free and the home of the
brave” and the undeniable discrimination that takes place, even
in the urban North; between our
moral posture in international affairs and US. troops supporting
a corrupt military dictatorship
in Viet Nam have all contributed
to a distrust and disengagement
on the part of all those students
in the United States who still
find it difficult to accept hypocrisy as a way of life.
Relativism, both personal and
philosophical, has undercut the
stance of the moral man, and
everyone is open to the criticism
of, “well, that’s just your opinion.” It has become almost impossible to take anything but
ones own personal life seriously.
The pressures of all these situations have culminated in a
massive disillusionment which
manifests itself in behavior which
appears apathetic but which is
actually a coefficient of frustration and genuine malaise. Marty
quits as editor; Dick drops out
of school; Robbie cuts classes
and administrators mutter about
the calibre of student at this
crepancy between

Uniformity.

I have answers—lots of unpopular answers. Engagement, risk,
compromise,

all

of

these

can

ward off the spiritual death that
stalks the Unimpressed Generation. Even more unpopular answers like love and socialism, getting an education that’s humanly
relevant are even more effective.
But screaming about apathy is
bootless and f o o 1 i s h—expend
your energies on things that you
Can believe are important (and
fun certainly is ope of them).
The final answer must be only
to take life seriously, because
unless we do, the administrators
will be right and the possibility
of any kind of education, or
human betterment will diminish
and eventually vanish from each
of our lives.

O'Hara, Poet Reads Today
Mr. Frank O’Hara, director of
exhibits for the Museum of Modern Art in New York, will read
selections of his poetry at the
State University of Buffalo today,
at 4 p.m. in Room 146, Diefendorf

sue of “Audit,” a literary magazine edited in Buffalo.
Mr. O’Hara received his M.A.
from the University of Michigan and was one of the founders
of the Poets Theatre in Nev

Hall.

York City.

Mr. O’Hara, a winner of the
Hopwood Award for poetry in
1951, is the author of Meditations • in an Emergency, Secend Avenue, and several other
works including verse plays. His
works comprise the current is-

Mr. O’Hara is one of several
poets whose readings will be
sponsored during the fall semester by the Friends of the Lockwood Library, the Charles Ab
bott Poetry Reading Fund and
the University.

Nursing School Expanding
With Several New Programs
Physical therapy is the treatment of physically disabled persons by means of exercise, mas-

sage, water, and other rehabilitational procedures in order to
acquire as near a normal condition as possible for the patient.
In U.B., the department mainly
stresses the cases of every day
accidents. Of these, the automobile disabilities are most prevalent.
Miss Heap, the hdad of the
physical therapy department, is
very happy to be part of the
Health Center which will eventually take over this entire campus.
The department is also a division
of the School of Medicine. The
office is now located near Rotary
Field, but will be moving into
larger office when the transition
takes place.
Most of the instructors have
degrees in physical therapy,

PAGE FIVE

which makes our department
more equipped than most schools.
The 115 students enrolled in this
course have a few classes taught
by some of the staff of the medical school. The department feels
that this is a great honor, Some
lectures are given at various hospitals on medical and surgical
processes. Patients are often used
as references. Clinical work is
necessary in such a course so one
can put the theory, learned in
class, to work.
The opportunities are innume r a b I e. The U.B. department
stresses the Air Force program,
which enables a therapist to become an officer in the Air Force
and work all pver the world. Our
horizons are growing and new
aspects of therapy are constanttly
being dicovered. Physical therapy
will always be, of utmost importance in the medical field.

SKETCH

When asked the goals of the
Student Senate, 1964, President
Robert Finklestein replied:
Yesterday, Sketch received a
,
obligation is to educate students 1
from a group of dorm stua
areas,
but we 'dents who feel that the role
in wide range of
must also realize that our re- played by the students living
sources are limited.
We must on ci Jm Pus could and should be
greatly increased. As one time
prior,ze our activities, our mandorm tuden,ts ourselveSi we fee
power, and our time. In doing that this situation can be chang
this, we have an obligation to ed and should be changed. The
serve the student body in the students living in the dorms rea large Portion of the
areas which we stated were most P r se
school s population and their
important when we campaigned
ideas and desires should be
for office. We have no right to brought forth.
assume office and then to turn
This is the letter which we
our backs on the student body. received. Read it and if you
agree with these people join them
There are many issues on our in their attempt to improve the
college campus which need imconditions existing in the dorms.
mediate attention and we must To the Dorm Students of UB;
concentrate our efforts in those
As dormitory students, we
areas where influence will be
feel that the dormitory should
heard We have an educational be a place where we can relate
and leadership responsibility, but positively to the college campus
first and foremost, we must reand the surrounding community.
spond to the needs of the stuUnfortunately, this is not the
dents. We can’t forget about the case. For the most part, the
immediate problems of our own dorm has been utilized as.book
campus, to spend all our time as cases, coatracks and beds
a
an off campus pressure group,” place too often regarded with
The problems Robert Finklestein indifference, if not hostility. Is
was referring to are the “New there any plausible reason why
Campus Deal”, the New Campus, these conditions must continue?
Course Evaluation, Speaking InRecall the countless times you
vitation, and Vacation periods.
have sat around and merely comThe “New Campus Deals" plan plained about the inadequacies
and inefficiencies of the dormiis to suggest to committee chairmen possible ideas to consider in tory government and activities.
their committees. Those chairmen should carefully consider
their goals, and the senators
should carefully consider its phil-

Ji—~

BY PETER RUBIN

—■——

“Our/

,

'

,

®

"‘

,

—

osophy.

There are plans to move the
undergraduate campus of UB to
a site three miles away, thereby
this campus becoming the setting
of the graduate school. Students
are the backbone of any university, and we, the students of
UB should not tell our viewpoints about this new campus in
vain. Our ideas must and will
be heard.

Course Evaluation, academically, is the “most lacking facet
of our educational progress”, as
far as Mr. Einklestein feels. We
must put an all out effort to
remedy this.
The students should

bo able

to invite ANY person to speak
here. In order for our educational process to be complete, this
list should not be censored by

anyone.

Spring recess begins on March
13th. The Senate has an obligation to prove, that with the support of the students, an alteration of this date is possible.
In conclusion, Robert Finktestein feels that our student government is not powerful enough.
We must strive to increase this
power: With the help and backing of the students of UB. Mr.

Einklestein feels that all these
goals can be achieved.

Homecoming

Dan

c

e

Tickets may lie purchased
at reduced rates:
Itlock of 30 tickets
2.75.
Block of 30 tickets
(”

®

$2.75

Block of 20 tickets
@

$3.00

Block of 10 tickets
r

"

$3.25

Individual tickets are
All dance tickets
will go,on sale at the ticket booth in Norton Union
October 5.
$3.50.

while its potentialities were so
evident that all that was necessary was interest and enthusiasm.
How many of us realize the potential and resources of the
House Council and the I.R.C.?
How many of us have taken advantage of the worthwhile activities that have been offered
by the dorms in the past? Are
we willing to see committees
which could carry out and accomplish cultural, civic, and
social functions dwindle, defeating the very purposes for which
they exist?
The new dorm, should inspire
new fervor. It should act as a
unifying, directive body for its
residents. We know it can, with
responsible leadership. We, as
residents of Clement Hall, urge
intelligent and reponsible voting
in the coming election. Meet all
the candidates, learn what they
seek to do for you. We hope
that upon reading the platforms,
you will realize that there can
be effective plans to fulfill the
vague promises that have so
often been made to you in previous years. We look forward
to your response.

Sincerely,
Susan Orlofsky
Lauren Jacobs
Linda Ross
Barbara Newman

Norton Browsing Library Open
Now For Enjoyment of Students

Are you overwhelmed, every so
often, by the pressing need to
escape from the stream of students rushing to class, gulping a
lunch, clogging the halls? Why
not let the Browsing Library (255
Norton) be your sanctuary?
Spend a pleasant in-between hour,

or a mollifying morning, an
agreeable afternoon or a relax
ing evening, browsing through a

intimate collection of well-chosen, beautifully-bound books. Sc
lect a book to meet any mood—.
humorous if you feel like laugh
ing, philosophy if you'd rather
concentrate, or fiction, poetry,
drama, biography or sports, if
any of these strike your fancy.
Rifle through the pages of the
current issues of magazines, or
catch up on the ones that you

missed.

And, if you’re tired of seeing
the same old paperback books
on your bookshelf, bring a few

along and exchange them for
others at the “Paperback Ex

Perhaps you just don’t feel like
reading; all you want to do is
let your thoughts wander. Then
why not drift into the Music
Room (right next door to the
Browsing Library), settle in a
comfy chair, close your eyes, and
float along with the music? Or
take a record into a private booth
and be absolutely alone with
nothing but music of your own
choice surrounding you. The
music room offers records from
every category—jazz, folk, classical, opera, symphony, popular,

show.

Both the Browsing Library and
the Music Room are open from
9:00 a m. until 10:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday, from noon until
6:00 p.m. on Saturdays, from
noon until 10:00 p.m. on Sundays. Both will welcome you with
warmth and peacefulness and
open doors. And, let’s face it,
you have to hide somewhere.
Why not give them a try?

change”.

School of Nursing

Therapy Courses Open
To best fulfill the community's
as well as society’s needs, and
to adapt itself to the changing

to meet individual interests and
which provide an insight into
human behavior as well as society as a whole; Actual experience
in the practice of nursing is provided by the numerous community health agencies with which
the School of Nursing is affili-

educational concepts, The School
of Nursing has been developing
and expanding with great strides.
At present, the School offers a
fouryear Pre-Service Baccalaur
eate Program, which leads to a
ated.
Bachelor of Science degree, a
Some of the upcoming events
Baccalaureate Program in Genmelude a tea October 4 for stueral Nursing for graduates of
dents in the under graduate and
diploma-schools of nursing and
graduate programs, a reception
a Graduate Program. “The goal
October 25 given by Mrs, Senof these programs,” according to busch. Dean of The School of
Miss Simpson. Assistant Dean of Nursing, to honor the new facThe School of Nursing, “is to ulty, and a tea on November 5
provide the necessary academic
for hospital freshman students.
and nursing courses and laboraWith eager and dedicated stutories to develop a good prac
dents, a competent and hardtitioner of nursing.” Along with
working staff of educators, and
the courses directly related to the finest equipment, this school
the major field, the curriculum promises to achieve only excel'
also includes academic electives lence,
■

�SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Friday, September 25, 1964

Lafferty to Speak Saturday
William F. Lafferty. Jr., Di :
rector for Student Affairs at St.
Joseph’s College, Philadelphia,
Pa., will speak, at the first, local
conference on Evening College
Education

and

student

ment to be held
Canisius College.

govern-

Saturday at

Mr. Lafferty is a counselor, ad
ministrator and faculty member
at St Joseph's where he has been
cited for "outstanding loyalty,
leadership and service." He is
currently active in the Associa
tion of University Evening Col
leges, Student Personal Associa
tion, the Amercian Society of
Personal Administrators and the
Society for the Advancement of
Management. He wi well known
for Community efforts in the Ki
wanis International, Knights of.
Columbus and the Jaycees.
His topic, “Student Govern
ment: An Evaluative Rationalizalion", will be part of the daylong sessions which will bring
together educators, administrators and student representatives
irom many Western New York
colleges. The conference is be

ing sponsored by the Western
and Central New York Region of
the

International

Association

of Evening

Student

Councils

(IAESC).

newly-formed region is
of Millard Fillmore
College of the State University
of Buffalo, and the Evening DivThe

comprised

ision of Canisius College.
Ewald R. Blatter, regional President and a student at Millard

Fillmore College, said that lectures and workshops have been
planned to consider the effects
of student government on the
role of the individual evening student in his scholastic and community endeavors.
A special report on the IAESC
will be given by Reuben R. McDaniel, ,ir.. also of Philadelphia,
President of the international
group which includes American
and Canadian colleges and universities, Mr. McDaniel, a June
1964 graduate of Drexel Insti-

tute of Technology 'Philadelphia),
has travelled thousands of miles
to member schools during his
term of office.

“The Role of Evening Student
Council Officers: Explicit and
Implicit,Duties” will be the subject of a speech by A, J. DeSimone, President, Millard Fillmore College Students Association.

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�Friday, September

25, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Greeks to Remain Student Leaders Attend
On National Basis
The new semester arrived at
U.B. with many changes; how-

saved by a £ourt injunction,
fraternities and sororities will

ever,
the

continue as before, on a national
basis. At the September 14th
meeting of the I.F.C., the dispute
between the U.B. national fraternities and sororities was the spot-,
lighted issue. Chairman Harold
Helpurn expressed confidence in
the I.F.C.’s fight and said that if
the fraternities and sororities did
not have such a good case, they
would not have won the injucttion. He strongly urged the fraternities and sororities not to
dis-affiliate themselves from national lines on their own because
this would hurt the position of
the others. He went on to say that
“the university and its friends
have been enjoined from directly
or indirectly interfering with
rushing,

pledging, or initiating

members of their national organizations while the matter is pending in court. Accordingly, all the
fraternities and sororities were
encouraged to continue their
rushing, pledging, and initiating
as they have always been in the
past.” He stressed this point in
spite of Dean Siggelkow’s suggestions to defer these activities.
Chairman Halpern’s confident
parallel by
I.F.C. President Steve Soland,
who said that “The I.F.C. is confident that our attorneys will be
most successful in maintaining
our national affiliation.”

outlook has been

The I.F.C.’s cause has also been
backed by the Student Association. President Robert Finkelstein stated, “The 1963-1964 Student Senate passed a policy statement endorsing the continuance
of national fraternities and sororities on campus. Over the past
few months, I have done everything in my power to aid this
cause and will continue to do so.
I welcome this temporary injunction and hope that ultimate victory is in sight.”
Judge Kramer said that this is
an extremely complex problem
which requires a great amount of

research. The fact that New York
State is involved should not discourage UB students. Should the
courts decide against U.B., the
I.F.C. will get another ipjuction
from the Supreme Court.

YOU

and your funny
friends...
will get a warm welcome if

your family knows what to
expect. So warn the folks
when you invite friends
home for the weekend
with a telephone call.
—

New York Telephone
You get action when

you telephone

Annual NSA Convention
by SHARON HEEND

The annual convention of the
‘National Student Association,
held this August in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, was attended by Robert Finkelstein, President of the
Student Association; Robert Feldman, Vice President; Linda Leventhal, William Berger, Jeremy
Taylor, and Paul Nussbaum, all
of whom represented the University.
At its

annual Congress, dele-

gates meet with other student
government leaders. Leading edu-

cators and national figures are
invited to address the Congress.

Seminars and discussions are
held on such topics as academic
freedom, student government, in
ternational student affairs, and
the role of the American student
in today’s society.
Legislation which can be in
any area or consist of a policy
or program mandate begins with
the appropriate subcommittee.
After leaving the sub committee,
legislation is sent to a regular
committee and from there to legislative plenary.
Highlights of this year’s convention included discussions
about the aims of higher educa
tion, student freedoms and student relationships with the administration and faculty. This
summer informal seminars dealing with the problems of national
and international affairs were

also held.

When asked for his reaction

to the convention, Paul

Nuss-

baum noted that “many problems
face the NSA if it is to remain
the most important student representative voice in the nation.
It has been losing members at

the rate of ten percent annually.
A great number of schools have
been dropping out because NSA
has been taking stands on political affairs which do not pertain to students in their role
as students.”
“Article II, Section A, of the
NSA Constitution clearly states
that the NSA shall not take part
in activity which does not affect
students in their role as students.
It is also my feeling that the delegates were not objective in the
observance, or possibly, the
breach of this article in the constitution at the 17th Annual Convention. It is my personal belief
that student government should
not be the prime vehicle for
student participation in partisan
political affairs.”
He also added that the NSA
has had at its command many

resources, numerous enough in
strength to make it a very powerful student organization. “If NSA
would devote more of its efforts
and resources to the problems
facing the member schools, the
drop out rate would decrease and
the prestige of the organization

would be enhanced.”

Wanted: Full-time Faculty
or Staff member to act as
advisor for a student or-

ganization. (Photo Club)
For information, write to

BOX J, NORTON UNION
or contact Steve Cooper,
116 Delsan Court, Buffalo
14216 (877-6157).

Taylor

Your I .D Card

Applications for queen
candidates of Homecoming
Weekend are available at
the candy counter in Nor-

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Greek Notes
Sorority Rush Registration is
October 5 and 6, from 3:00 p m.
to 5:00 p.m. in the Pan-Hellenic
Office, Room 342. Norton.
Alpha Epsilon Pi answered the
call of the Red Cross and the'
community by giving part of its
time to donate blood to the local
chapter of the American Red
Cross. The Fraternity has thus
far donated 30 pints of blood.

The brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity cordially extend,
to all .prospective Rushees, an
open invitation to a Coffee Hour
in Norton, Room 233, today from
3:00-5:00 p.m. and a dated rush
party this evening from 9:00 p.m.
until 1:00 a.m. at the Transit
Lanes. All rushees are cordially
invited. A rush buffet dinner will
be held on Sunday. The dinner
II be by invitation.

Graduate
Fellowships
Available
Inquiries about the Danforth
Graduate Fellowships, to be
awarded in March, 1965, will be
answered by Emma E. Deters,
107 Acheson.

Friday, September 25, 1964

Daniel Rose, Director of the old Faculty Club. He
will then personally conradio and T.V. programmtact
the stations, or make
ing Ijasori for UB asks that
arrangements with the orif campus organization
ganization to do so. Howwish to utilize the facilities
ever, it is important that
of radio and T.V. stations organizations check with
in the Buffalo area to pubhim first, rather than conlicize their activities, that tacting the stations themthey first go to his office in selves.

�Friday, September 25,

1964

SPECTRUM

Smit Presents Jazz Concert
For Pete Johnson in Capen
By VICKI BUGELSKI

Leo Smit, pianist-composer and
professor of music here, is giving
several recitals this season, beginning tonight with a benefit
concert for jazz pianist Pete

cital are for the Music Scholarship Fund. Admission for the
concert is $5.00; for dinner and
concert i« $8.50.

Students may obtain tickets
free of charge (except for the
dinner) by presenting the proper
ID card at the Baird Hall box
Johnson.
Tonight’s cone e!f t -will take
office before the day of the conplace in Capen Hall. Admission cert. Full admission will be
charged to those who do not
for students is $1.50; general admission $2.50, The first portion follow these regulations.
of the program will be the per
The second concert, on Oct, 17,
formance of two jazz concert! of at 8;30, will be “An Evening of
American composer Aaron CopModern Music from 1904-57”,
featuring the works of Ives, Deland, who was once a Slee Professor here, Mr. Smit will perform
bussy, Copland, Hindemith,
the Piano Concerto, assisted by Schoenberg, Bartok, and StravinEmmanuel Sinderbrand at second sky. General admission for this
piano. Mr. Sinderbrand has studconcert is $3.50. Tickets for both
ied with Mr. Smit and has given concerts may be purchased for
several successful recitals here. $10. For additional information
Allen Sigel of the music faculty and reservations, call 831-3408.
Mr. Smit, of course, needs no
will perform the Clarinet Concerto, with Mr. Smit at the piano. introduction. A Curtis scholarThose who have heard Mr. Sigel ship pupil at nine, he was a “veteran” performer at 15, He has
before need only to be informed
that he is playing, to know it will coneertized throughout the nabe a fine event.
tion and Europe, and has been
The second half of the'program the recipient of many honors
will be recorded performances of and awards (Fulbright and GugPete Johnson. The program will genheim). He was Slee Professor
begin at 8:30 p.ra.
of composition here in 1962, and
Mr. Smit will give two recitals
joined the staff here in 1963,
of keyboard masterworks Oct. 10 He has been extremely busy since
and 17, both programs in Baird then, giving many concerts and
Hall. The first is a highly unrecitals, in addition to teaching
usual program, and a “Buffalo and composing. Those who heard
first”. Mr, Smit will perform the him last year will remember his
entire Book II of Bach’s Well- marvelous performances of MusTempered Clavier, consisting of sorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibitwenty-four preludes and fugues tion, and of Beethoven, Haydn,
and Stravinsky. He appeared with
in all the major and minor keys.
The program will begin at 5:30 the Philharmonic, performing
p.m., with a dinner intermission.
Tchaikowsky and Stravinsky, conDinner will be served at, the
ducted and performed in a prosecond
Faculty Club, and the
half gram at the Art Gallery, and
of the recital will begin at 8;30 gave a four-hand music program
p.m. The proceeds from this rewith his students.

MUSIC by COLLEGIANS
F eaturing

FREDDIE REEB
phone 836-8 1 96

Applications for makeup examinations for the
removal of INCOMPLETE
GRADES must he filed in
the Office of Admissions &amp;
Records, 201 Hayes Hall
no later than OCTOBER.
1964. Make-up Examinations begin November 16,
1964.

PACE NINE

J/^eilc^iouS
Gamma Delta

The next regularly scheduled,
business meeting will be held
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m, in Room

344, Norton Union. It will be

preceded by dinner at 5:30 p.m.
in the cafeteria. All are welcome
to attend.
Student Christian Association

This year he will conduct the
Philharmonic in one of his own
works the Symphony #27 No. 2.
He will also be giving more recitals, in addition to the ones
already scheduled. Those who are
familiar with Mr. Smit’s performances will certainly not miss
these fine musical evenings.
Those who are not, will soon find
out that a Smit concert is something not to be missed while
one is in Buffalo. Mr. Smit and
the music department have taken
much time to arrange matters
so that students may be admitted
free, to promote more music on
the campus.

The Student Christian Association is sponsoring again this
year a program at the State Hospital on Elmwood Avenue. Participation by students is voluntary. Work will be in the area of
tutoring, recreation and companionship with patients. The work
will entail approximately two
hours per week (more if you can
afford it). Transportation can be
arranged. It is imperative that
students participating be mature
and willing to stay with the program throughout the semester.

A second project will be carried out in conjunction with the
Westminster House in downtown
Buffalo. This will be a Saturday
morning program of tutoring. No
special training is needed. Each

tutor will be responsible for two
students in the fifth or sixth
grades. Transportation can also
be arrranged for this project.
Both programs are open to all
students. If you are interested,
please call the Protestant Chaplain, John Buerk, office phone
TF 44250, home phone TF 6-5806.

LIBERAL RELIGIOUS
FELLOWSHIP

There will be an introductory
meeting of the Liberal Religious
Fellowship in Norton Union on
Sunday the 27 at 7:00 p.m. We
invite all

atheists, hu-

agnostics,

manists. and all others with reli-

gious comittments to attend. The
Liberal Religious Fellowship
exists to serve the needs of those
faculty and students who have hu
man committments which are not
satisfied by orthodoxy. The Liberal Religious Fellowship was af
filiated last year with Student
Religious Liberals
a continent
wide organization with assoeia
lions with the Unitarian-Universa
list Assn., the American Humanist
Assn, and the American Ethical
■

Union.

FEMALE STUDENT TO LIVE IN
Board, Lodging and spending money in exchange for baby sitting. Ni ce
home, own room with desk and TV
Wi II iamsvi lie. Automobile transportation to U.B. available.
NF4-4298

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By LEON LEWIS

There's a tough flick at the
'ircle Art called The Cool World.
is,try'his cat
Duke Custis
ng to cop a piece, so he can go
own on some bad faces with his
cople But he’s tight on bread
nd Priest, his man, won’t lay it
n him. So he starts pushing pot
or Priest, hustling "coolies" and
ifting bags on the street. The
■vhole scene is bad. "Summer is
i fake," he says. Things are tense
the fuzz are lookm his turf
.ng to bust him and they waste
a
me of his friends. His chick
splits for the coast.
ca-head
Priest goes high with a shylock
md blows his cool. Blood, the
op cat -in the Pythons, is de—

—

—

—

—

troyed by junk.

In the rumble Duke cuts An4el, the war lord of the Wolves
n revenge for Little Mans death,
and at the fade out, he is busted
by the head-breakers and took
o the closet in,their short. Angel
-ays “Thanks," as he wigs out,
and that's where it's at, Jim.
You dig

—

he means

"take me

df this gig . . . anyways!”
Shirley Clarke, the same good
ady who made the film version
if Jack Gelbers play The Con
aection, is the driving force be
i.ind this dynamic, unique film.
The movie takes place in Harthe seething caldron of
em
bate, fear, love, lust and dying
hopes which is driving its inhablants to violent desperation. It
was shot on location during one
hot. edgy summer. All of the
main actors are non-professionals
xcept Carl Lee, Canada Lee’s
son, who plays Priest, (he was
owboy in The Connection) and
helped Miss Clarke In adapt and
arrange the script from Warren
—

Miller’s perceptive book; and Jerome Raphael (Solly in The Connection)
who has an ironically
amusing bit part in the beginning
of the picture as a woeful but
sympathetic high school teacher
taking Duke and his classmates
to Wall Street to show them that
they too "can own a share of
America." They already have a
share, but most of them would be
only too glad to cash it in for
some new chips.
After the fakery, hokum and
tinsel which Hollywood passes
off for reality in most of its
pictures, it is a stunning thing
to see a movie that looks so
real that the camera appears to
be eavesdropping. The use of
such techniques of very contem
porary film making as the quickcut, the hand-held camera, Kaledoscopic lighting and the changing perspective of the evolving
photo montage give the movie a
sense tif vitality and intimacy
even when the techniques are
not completely under control.
The jagged rhythms of the scenes
capture the rapid intensification
and relaxation of emotion in the
lives of the characters.
The film is an unusually fine
integration of sight, sound and
sense. Miss Clarke has used an
exciting new score by Mai Waldron to excellent advantage. Dizzy Gillespie and Yusef Latecf
provide horn solos that tend to
underscore and extend the tone
and mood of a scene, while the
subtle, probing work of a very
competent rhythm section fades
in and out of the sounds of life in
the streets of the city. The eye
often reels with the shifting viewpoint, but Miss Clarke’s experi

it staples
term papers and class notes, photo-

graphs, news items, themes, reports.

Km

9 p.m.

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school projects, posters, stage sets.

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JSUfinq&amp;te.
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INC.

Tonight, Capen Hall, 8:30 p.m.:
Leo Smit in a benefit jazz eon
cert for Pete Johnson.
Sunday, 8 p.m.: First Presbyterian Church, Symphony Circle,
Squire Haskin, organ, and Ronald Richards, oboe, in a program
of works of Buxtehude, Bach,
pieces from the first Organ Book
of Guillaume-G a b r i e 1 Nivers
(1665), and contemporary works.
Admission free.
Friday, October 2, Baird Hall,
8:30 p.m. A special concert featuring the university’s new harp,
Marjorie Hartzell, harpist with
the Philharmonic, and faculty
member here, will perform works

of Kirchhoff, Dussek,
Salzedo, and the Hindemith Sonata (1939). Mrs. Hartzell will be
assisted by Elizabeth Phillips, viola, and Jacob Berg, flute, in a
special performance of Debussy’s
sonata for flute, viola, and harp.
Admission free.
The annual Beethoven Cycle,
which consists of the performance of the complete (17) string
quartets of the great master by
the Budapest Quartet, quarter-inresidence here, will be October
5, 7, 9, and 19, 21, 23. The performances this year will be in

WASH

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•

Events this week

Baird Hall, and therefore will
accommodate only a small audience. Concert-goers are advised
to make their reservations early.
Students will be admitted free of
charge, according to the usual
procedure, if they obtain their
tickets prior to the day of the
performance. The Beethoven
Cycle has been given by the
Budapest every year since the
beginning of the series, in 1955.
|fow that the Quartet is in residence, the members will give recitals and many extra concerts of
chamber music, some with guest
artists. The members are Joseph
Roisman, first violin; Alexander
Schneider, second violin; Boris
Kroyt, viola; and Mischa Schneider, cello. They are all Professors
of music and t£ach and coach
students in chamber music.

LaFontaine Hair Fashions

Dry cleaning machines

it fastens

This is no propaganda effort.
Miss Clarke is not asking us to,
see Duke as the product of some
unfortunate society failure. She is
showing us a human being and
saying ■ “Here is a man. This is
the way he lives.” When she succeeds in conveying the sense of
his life, as she often does, the
movie is, in the words of the
camera-man in The Connection,
“the way it really is.”

By VICKI BUGELSKI

Repair
Open 9 a.m.

wall, shelf ps &gt;aper, drawer linings.

And this is the crux of Miss
Clarke’s endeavor.
She is not
afraid to take chances. Her subject matter is drawn from experience rather than someone’s
suggestion of what “experience”
is like. She is not trying to convince anyone of anything, Rather,
she is telling us the story of a
young man bewildered by his en
vironment, misguided in his intentions but enormously appeal
ing. “There goes Duke Custis . .
he’s got heart. He’s a cold killer,”
Duke hears people say this in his
mind’s sound chamber, but we
see a sensitive, friendly and loyal
person forced to act as he does
to survive. Duke has nothing but
his self-respect and the only way
he can maintain this is by leading his friends in a rumble
against the only tangible manifestation of the “enemy” which
he can strike out at.

.

25, 1964

Upcoming Musical Activities

TF 4-1675

TF 6-4041

totes to bullet tin board, pennants

merits in visual cognition are
starting in their success. Even
the occasional lapses in cinematographic conception do very
little to detract from the movie.
The viewer may be distracted or
even unsettled particularly if he
is not familiar with certain recent
trends in movie production, but
the over all effect is worth the
infrequent moments of vertigo.
Miss Cldrke has gained more than
she may have lost by not using
conventional lighting, set-ups and
camera positions. The movie is
artistic without being arty.

Plaza Shoe
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

it tacks

■0

Friday, September

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

�Friday, September

25, 1964

SPECTRUM

Off 3rar J Cuff

WBFO is hack on the
air Mon. 4:00-10:30 p.m.

a

88.7 mgs. FM

By SKIP VENNERI

In this column I will try to
review as varied a selection of
contemporary novels as is possible. Realizing the difficulty of
appealing to as wide a spectrum
of literary tastes as are manifest on campus, I will welcome
any suggestions you may have
regarding subjects or particular
writers you feet should be re

viewed. The novels reviewed in
this column are available at the
University Bookstore.

In his novel The Last Temptation of Christ, Nikos Kazantzakis

has brilliantly and sensitively
portrayed a very personal and
human Jesus Christ. This is not
an orthodox presentation of the
life of Christ. It is an interpretation of Jesus as a man plagued
with a divinity he feared, his
struggle to deny this divinity,

and his final acceptance of it,
not in a mythical connotation of
a dual man-god figure, but in
humanistic splendor of men as
sons of God.
There is an immediate empathy
with this conception of Jesus.
When he tries to displease God

crosses
for the Roman soldiers to use

by deliberately making

when they crucify Jewish Zealots
the magnitude of his fear is overwhelming. This is a Jesus that
loves a woman, Mary Magdalene,
desires her and wants to marry
her. His attempt to flee from the
fate that pursues him and his
final capitulation after the last
temptation are committed as a

man, not as a God.
Kazantzakis sees in Jesus a
very simple and gentle man, yet
not above angry bursts of temper. By attributing to Jesus an
epileptic condition, Kazantzakis
explains the revelations he was
supposed to have undergone. He
is at times a humanist and at
others an ascetic. The dichotomy
of his personality is the desire
for the simple life of a family
man, yet he is driven to fore
the prophecy because of the
knowledge that man through love
can transcend all the frailties and
injustices that he both suffers
and dispenses.
The last temptation occurs on
the cross. It becomes both temp
tation and self revelation, for on
the cross occurs the fusion of in-

peasant totally lacking in imagination and sensitivity. The one
person, who I feel, has the author’s full sympathy and who is
acutely aware of the drama he
is involved in, is Judas Iscariot.
It is from Judas that Jesus draws
his strength, and their closeness
becomes a focal point in the
novel. Judas is seen as always
having half his face in light and
half in darkness.
Kazantzakis is a master of the
use of recurring symbols and
metaphor. His prose is as rich
and vibrant as poetry. His conception of Christ may bring crys
of 'heretic” from Christians, but
his Jesus has infinitely more
meaning and depth for the humanistic mind, than the incredulous biblical figure wrapped in
myth and paradoxes.
Kazantzakis is one of the great
writers of the twentieth century.
The Last Temptation of Christ is
his most powerfully moving

tellect and emotions. As Jesus
dies his final words, ‘It is accomplished”, becomes a moment
of self realization which is also
universal knowledge of the totality of man and an affirmation
of agape. Kazantzakis ends his
novel with “And it was as though
he had said: Everything has

PAGE ELEVEN

Ruse Afoot at UB
Newest, gayest group on campus is the Returnees to University Student Education. Nobody
knows yet exactly how many
there are, but everyone who has
come back to school after several years absence is eligible to
join: The functions are to ease
the re-entry stress and strain;,relieve the lost lady (man) on campus feeling and work for the welfare of this particular group;
Recognizing the obvious fact of
life that there is strength in numbers, RUSE invites all interested
returnees to attend the meeting
scheduled Wednesday in Room
330 Nortf

Hall at 11:45

ART BLAKEY

_

(Cont’d from P. 8)

Phi Lambda Delta would like to
invite all rushees to a smoker and
coffee hour Tuesday afternoon in
Norton Union, (time and room
will be posted.
The Brothers will be attending
the IIB-Cornell fame. A party
with the Cornell Phi Delta Theta
fraternity will be held after the
game.

The officers for this year are as
follows: President, Jay, Matulewski.; Vice-President/Doug Lyons;
Secretary, George Ehresman;
Treasurer, Mike Marino.
For further information, call
Mrs. Sheldon J. Cornblum TF 53283 or Mrs. Victor Kaunitz TR 7-

novel.

begun.”
The people who

were involved
in the life of Jesus are vividly
drawn. Peter becomes an extremely earthy, almost stupid
%

l(Xh

Big Week!

■

are words that
mean big trouble

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

•Spectrum
Tuesday the Bridge Club will
hold its first Duplicate Game,
as well as its first Bridge lesson.
All students, faculty and staff are
invited to attend. The meeting
will be held in Norton, Room 327,
at 7:30 p.m.

NEW STUDENT REVIEW
The NEW STUDENT REVIEW

(the literary and opinion
zine on campus) deadline

magafor all
copy for the fall semester issue
is October 2. Drawings and/or
literary contributions can be left
in Room 302, Norton, or placed
in box &gt;40 in the Reservations
Office of Norton.

CAMPUS BARREL DRIVE

Campus Barrel is sponsoring a
hootenanny tonight in the i'illmore Room at 8:00 p.m. In addition to an all star cast of campus
talent, there will be a drawing

for the raffle tickets that have
been on .sale this week for Concerts by Louis Armstrong. The
New’ Christy Minstrels and II.M S
Pinafore. Art Burke, Chairman of
Campus Barrel, will .preside over
the drawing

Admission will be a nominal
37 cents. All proceeds go to Cam
pus Barrel who will divide funds
between United Fund, CARE and
the J.F.K, Scholarship on campus.

STUDENT JUDICIARY

All students interested in being
the secretary of the Student Ju
dietary 1964-63, will please make
application for this position
through the Student Association
Office, 205 Norton Union. Applicants must be of at least junior
standing and should have at least
a 1.0 cumulative average. The
ability to type is strongly recommended. Deadline for applica
tions is,Friday, October 2, 1964.

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

Would you like FAME, PRESTIGE, RECOGNITION (and cheaper photo rates?)

If so, come, Join the PHOTOGRAPHY CLUBI An organizational
meeting will be held today at
4:00 p.m. in Room 264, Norton.

SPEECH

&amp;

Research to Study
School Drop-Outs
An independent research organization, Tutor Research, has
been established by a group of
qualified Juniors and Seniors at
the local universities. The purpose of this group is to study
the causation of school drop-outs
in key “conflict-crisis” grades
children to be tutored will include those students of area
would
parochial schools who

benefit from additional work. All
academic studies will be covered.
Tutors in their junior and senior
years of college are needed to
work for the group. Tutors may
handle as many students as their
personal schedule allows. Responsible students who are interested
in tutoring and good wages arc
requested to apply to Spectrum
Office.

The Student Speech and Hearwill hold its first

meeting on Wednesday at 8:30
p m. in Norton 335. The meeting
is open to anyone interested in
the field of speech. Refreshments

Last year several students, realfact'that our UB campus
lacked humor in the way of a
magazine, it was decided by research of humorous periodicals
across the country the possibility
of a successful humor magazine
on campus. This opinion was also
held by the members of the Student Publications Board when
they ratified the "BULL'S" constitution.
The Board members of this new
and welcomed magazine include
Alan Penn and Peter Ostrow as
co-editors-in-chief along with
Sandy Friedman as Business Manager. There are still positions
open for artists, writers, memizing the

J

I

Support
Our

HEARING SOCIETY

ing Society

Bring Honor to SUNYAB

*

j

Advertisers

■

bers for the editorial, circulation, publicity, and ad staffs.
Since there is no office as yet
for the "BULL," those interested
in working and having fun doing
so should get in touch with one
of the above names.
Our new humor magazine will
print anything that is funny and
preferrably pertinent to student

affairs. The

material must,

Journal."

The "BULL" is sure to be big,
popular and expensive. (Well,
what can you expect if it’s big!)

this coupon worth
(only

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per purchase

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For more information, please
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CONVOCATIONS COMMITTEE
Anyone interested in applying
for the position of chairman of
the Convocations Committee of
the Student Senate should secure
an application in Norton 205.
Deadline for applications is October 2.

This is the average man.
The men studying him aren'l.
Putting together thousands of measurements, Air Force
scientists designed this "typical" head. Its purpose? To
help provide better protective equipment for Air Force
flying personnel.

But the young men working on this project are far from
average. As Air Force officers, they are working in a field
that requires a high degree of technological insight
most Air Force jobs today call for advanced
'oung

alized know-how
officers the op

ihey g

"

dertake vital missions of great responsibility.
For instance, an Air Force scientist may be,exploring
the complex field of aerodynamics. Another may be
engaged in bioenvitonrhental engineering. A third may
be studying the technology of nuclear weapons.
How many other professions'give a young man sue
important work to do right from the start?
You can get started on an Air Force officer c eer b

U.S. Air Force

of

course, be in good taste. It’s quite
obvious that they will be competing with the "Ladies Home

p

BRIDGE CLUB

(Soarcl

Friday, September 25, 1964

L

I

I

�Friday, September 25, 1964

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

BULLS ROUT BU!
By

BRUCE GOLDSTEIN

The UB Bulls bullied their way
into the 1964 football season last

Saturday by virtually overpowering Boston University. The Bulls
showed bon e-crunching power,
good speed, depth, and ability to
capitalize on opportunities.

To say that UB dominated the
game is an understatement. The
hard charging UB line rushed BU
passers and punters all day.
Vicious tackling separated ball
carrier from football more than
once. The statistics are not indicative of the game because
Boston did much of its gaining
in the fourth quarter when Offenhamer used the third unit.
The ball was in UB territory only
three times in the first half and
then it was in Buffalo possession.
Dick Offenhamer’s wrecking
crew converted two pass inter
ceptions and a blocked punt into
scores besides giving ulcers to
the Boston coaches.
The first score of the game was
set up in the first period when
junior Gerry La Fountain intercepted a BU pass at Boston’s 28.
Seven plays later Przykuta broke
into the end zone behind good
blocking. On the try for the point
after, Boston was off-side. Offenhamer chose to try for two points
from a yard and a half out. Bob
Edward went in with little trouble.
The Bulls started moving in the
second quarter with a 54 yard
drive from their own 37. The

drive was stopped when quarterback Don Gilbert, trapped on the
option, threw a desperation un
derhand pass which was intercepted by Terrier Ed Meizler at
the B.U. one yard line.
In the middle of the period,
Boston, unable to move, punted
to Willie Shine who returned the
ball 12 yards to the B.U, 34. Gilbert lofted a high, soft pass on
the second down which was gathered in by Dave Nichols at the
eight. He eluded two tacklers as
he carried it into the end zone.
Joe Oscsodal kicked the point
after.
UB made it 22-0 with 20 seconds remaining in the half. La
Fountain made a leaping block
of Duarte's punt and the ball was
recovered by the Bulls at the BU
34. Gilbert threw a bullet at
Pawloski and pass interference
was called at the 9. Gilbert tried
the same play again and connected with Pawloski for the TD.
The Terriers started the second
half with renewed spirit and they
moved the ball from their own
30 to the UB 17. Then defensive
specialist Fred Geringer snared
a pass in the end zone. He put
on a burst of speed and returned
the ball 64 yards to the Boston

Harriers Oppose Syracuse
In Second Meet Saturday

of the game.
in the final period Przykuta
carried three times from the 12.
He scored the last TD with a
two-yard plunge. Oscsodal then
proceeded to do what he rarely
does—he missed the point after.
Despite this, Pm sure he will be
one of the important men on the

Group running is most important

team.

The Varsity and Freshman
Cross-Country teams will open
their season Wednesday, September 23rd; at Brockport and will
travel to Syracuse on Saturday,
September 26th, to meet the Orange, one of the strongest harrier
squads in the East.

The Bulls showed over all excellence in their victory over BU.
Without injuries this could be
one of the most successful years
in UB football history, despite
the awesome schedule.

The teams have been coming
along at a faster pace this year
than in many years and, also,
they are running in a much closer group than they did last year.

meyer, Dick Genau, Bob Hoffman,

in cross country as it doesn't give
the opponents as many opportunities to put their men between
yours.

At this early stage the Varsity
squad shapes up like this: 1st,
Stu Katz, and then a group of
Captain Ed. Lontrato, Bill Sued-

John Kerns, Jack Mrowka and
Bob Martin. Late-reporting Ray
Mueller and Bob Bijak will probably join the group after another
week of practice.

36.
Sophomore quarterback

Jim
Robie directed the second unit in
the final stages of the third
period. He had a 29 yard roll out
to the Boston 12, which was the
longest individual offensive gain

Baby Bulls to Take On
Army Plebes Today
By CHICK ARNOLD
On September 25, the UB fresh
man football team will take the
field at West Point to kick off
their season by clashing with the
plebes of Army. This year, such
prominent football schools as
Navy and Syracuse are also on
the slate, as the Baby Bulls try
to improve last year’s record of

2-4.

This year's edition of the Baby
Bulls has been referred to as the
best in the school’s history. With
such high school stars as Stan
Baranowski, Ted Gibbons, Rod
Rishel, Richard Wells, Bennie
Washington, and Thomas Hurd
doing a fine job for the Baby
Bulls, chances of having a successful season are good. Baranowski, from University High in
Detroit, Michigan, is a 6’2” 203
pound tackle who received honorable mention, All-City for two
years. Coach Dewey Wade says:
“Baranowski has been playing
fine football for us, and looks
like he’s going to be another
Philbin,”

Another football player like
Gerry Philbin would certainly be
greatly appreciated by the varsity. However, this year there
are a number of outstanding Baby
Bulls from last year playing on
the varsity. Quarterback Jim
Robie, End Jim Dunn, Dick Dunbar, last year’s most valuable
Freshman lineman, and halfback
Nick Capuana head the list.
The Freshman football team
works doubly hard. In addition
to playing A regular slate of
games against other schools, the
young Bulls serve as grist for
the varsity mill during practice
sessions, so Coach Wade and his
assistants—Jim Wolfe, Jim Ryan,
Bill Selent, and Jim Wick—will
need all the material they can

against the Baby Bulls.
The complete UB freshman
football schedule is as follows:
Sept. 25—ARMY at West Point.
Oct. 3—ITHACA COLLEGE at

Ithaca.
Oct. 10—COLGATE at Rotary
Field.
Oct. 24—NAVY

at Annapolis.
Oct. 31—MANLIUS PREP at
Manlius.
Nov. 13—SYRACUSE at Rotary

GO TO

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NOW 2 LOCATIONS

get.

UB is one of two colleges whose
frosh squad plays the plebes of
both service academies (Syracuse
is the other). Last year Coach
Wade’s charges broke even; beating Army, but losing to Navy.
However, this year Syracuse is
expected to be the roughest

..

NIAGARA FALLS BLVD. AT MAPLE RD.
(5 minutes from campus,
(OPENING

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just past the Boulevard Mall)

SHERIDAN DR. AT SWEET HOME RD.

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�*

Friday, September 25, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

THE PAHLOWITZ TROPHY *

Trophy Awarded Annually
For Intramural Activities
By LENNY GABY

One of the most popular and

important activities at the University of Buffalo campus is participation in sports. All students,
however, are not gifted enough to
engage at the intercollegiate level.
For these students, which comprise the vast majority, the In
tramural Sports Program provides an excellent competitive outlet. The major objectives of the
program are recreation, social
contact, group spirit, and phys-

ical fitness.
Male undergraduates compete
on either a Fraternity Team, a
Dormitory Team, a Semi Perman
ent Organization Team, or an
Independent Team. The Fraternity Teams dominate the activity
where a total of 2,823 men par
ticipated last year. The most
popular sports, as could be expected, were football and basketball. In football, 40 teams were
entered and 620 men participat
ed. In the basketball circle, 42
teams entered and 501 men participated in some high quality
basketball.
The champions in each sport

were:
Tennis—Sigma Alpha Mu.
Cross Country—Phi Epsilon Pi.
Football
Zygotes (Campus
Champion); Alpha Sigma Phi
(Fraternity Champion)
Golf—Sigma Phi Epsilon,
Basketball—Alpha Epsilon Pi
(Campus Champion; Zygotes (Independent Champion).
Volleyball—Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Swimming—Beta Sigma Rho.
Handball—Alpha Epsilon Pi,
Squash—Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Wrestling—Sigma Phi Epsilon,
Fencing—Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Track—Alpha Sigma Phi.
Softball—Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Bowling—Alpha Epsilon Pi.

Wolverine team

in years. The
a shocked
Washington team last week, 3-2,
but Michigan, with its starting
backfield '63 intact, will come out
victorious.
Navy 42 William and Mary 3
Even though Staubach floundered last week, the Middies sailed
on. This game is merely a brea-

COLLEGE PICKS

Falcons

(Cont’d from P. 16)

The Redmen have been verywith points as of late.
Last year they gave up 12 and
this year they’ve already added
a shutout to that. Harvard has
a big line, as lines go in the
Ivy’s, plus a few fast backs, but
they lack a leader. The Crimson
will have a tough time finding
the end zone.
stingy

tramural sports during that year.
Any fraternity that wishes to
retire the trophy must win it
for a period of three consecutive

years. The only exception being
Alpha Epsilon Pi, which must

win it five consecutive times.
The first year that the Law
rence Pahlowitz Trophy was in
existence Sigma Phi Epsilon was
the proud recipient. Last year the
award was presented by Alpha
Epsilon Pi Fraternity for the
third consecutive year. The closest competitor was Sigma Alpha
Mu, 32 points behind. The margin of victory was the largest in
the history of the award.

Pittsburgh 21

•

Oregon 7

-

ther in Navy’s tough schedule
and will offer Roger a chance
to regain his ’64 form.
Georgia Tech 28 Miami, Fla. 0
The Engineers were not particularly impressive last week but
they will have little to worry
about. The Hurricanes will do no
damage here.
LAST WEEK'S RESULTS 9-4-1
-

KLEINHANS

—

The Panthers were tripped up
by a tricky UCLA squad in the
NCAA opener but they still have
too much for the Webfoots. Both
teams suffered heavy graduation
losses but Pitt still has Mazurek
and a solid line.
Nebraska 24 Minnesota 14
Murray Warmath seems to run
out of All-American linemen and
that’s just what he needs to
slow up the husky Cornhuskers.
For those of you who missed
Nebraska will win handily but
the invisible print at the bottom not by
last week’s 56 0 score.
week’s
Intramural
Sumof last
Illinois 20
California 13
mary, the top ten teams of last
The Fighting lllini will be denied
were
as
follows:
year
a repeat trip to the Rose Bowl
466
Alpha Epsilon Pi
this year but they can still take
434
Sigma Alpha Mu
any West Coast eleven. The
426 on
Sigma Phi Epsilon
366 Golden Bears were really imBeta Sigma Rho
pressive in upsetting Missouri but
363 they
Phi Epsilon Pi
will need more than Mor362 ton’s passes
Alpha Sigma Phi
and goal-line stands
317 against
Gamma Phi
the defending Big Ten
279
Tau Kappa Epsilon
184 Champ.
Phi Kappa Psi
Michigan
126 Bump Elliott24mayAir Force 6
Alpha Phi Omega
have his best
-

soared over

Downtown Buffalo

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Boulevard Mall

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The ultimate

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Back to Campus
Special
THIS
•

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of every

fraternity competing in this intramural league is to win the
highly coveted Lawrence Pahlowitz Memorial Trophy. The trophy is presented each year by the
Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity in

u

the memory of Lawrence Pahlo-

witz, a brother who died as a
result of spinal meningitis. He
was an exceptional athlete and

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�Friday, September 25, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

COWELL PREVIEW
UB Faces Cornell Big Red
In Test of Line Strength
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

There are but seconds remaining in the game and the \JB Bulls
have been stymied all day by
the tough Cornell defense. But
nevertheless, the Bulls are determined to go in for the final
score of the game in a last ditch
attempt
to salvage whatever
prestige they may have left. Howthe gun
ever, it’s too late
—

sounds and the Bulls shuffle off
the field in defeat : a humiliating and bitter one. The final
score is Cornell 72, Buffalo 0.
Tomorrow? No
1932, the
last time that UB played Cornell. Perhaps this is a fitting
introduction to illustrate how the
quality of football has risen at
UB. This season, in their first
game, the Bulls justified their
ranking as a major college football power by defeating Boston
—

—

y
HEAD COACH OFFENHAMER
University 35-0 with a display
of balance and depth rarely seen
at this University, Against BU,
three quarterbacks threw a total
Of six pases and completed four
of them for 54 yards and two
touchdowns; nine men carried
the ball 54 times for 228 yards,
an average of 4.4 yards per carry;
and four men caught one pass
apiece for an average of almost
14 yards per reception. It was
a true team effort
one the
team and the University can be
proud of
totally unlike the
1932 season, when, in seven
games, the UB team scored 19
points and gave up 208.
All the stars of last week’s
game will be back tomorrow to
oppose Cornell at Schoellkopf
—

—

Field in Ithaca, with the notable
addition of 260 pound Leo Ratamess at tackle, Leo was injured
last week and was unable to play
the second half in Boston, but
his presence will definitely be
felt by the Big Red.
Tom Harp is beginning his
fourth year as the Cornell head
coach and for the first time, he’ll
have to do without the services
of Gary Wood and Mike Gogolak,
Last year, Wood led the Cornell team in passing, kicking,
pass interceptions and total offense. He placed second in rush
ing and was just about as important to the Big Red attack as
Y. A. Tittle is to the New York
Giants’. As a matter of fact,
Wood is Y. A.’s understudy and
the Giants’ second-string quarterback this year. Gogolak, as every
Buffalo area football fan knows,
is the invaluable place kicker of
the Bills. His absence will hurt
Cornell because good college
kickers are notoriously hard to
come by. UB has a big edge over
Cornell in this department due
to Joe Oscsodal, a newcomer to
football wars, whose style is
reminiscent of Gogolak, They

both kick with the side of their
foot, soccer style.
Coach Harp does, however,
have the services of two returning lettermen in his backfield.
Marty Sponaugle, Wood’s understudy at quarterback last year,
is considered 'to be the star of
the team and he’s only a junior.
If Cornell is to have any success
in the Ivy League in '64, Sponaugle and Bob Baker, a senior
halfback from Buffalo and last
year’s team rushing leader, will
have to lead the way for the
Big Red. The two remaining backfield starters are Pete Larson,
a 180 pound sophomore halfback, and Bill Wilson, and as
yet untested 200 pound junior
fullback.

The line has to be the strong
point of the team, boasting six
remaining
lettermen including
Joe Ryan, a bruising 210 pounder.
Last season virtually the same
line was one of the best in the
Ivy League and should prove
to be a worthy match for UB’s
highly touted forward wall.
Cornell, like UB, will be employing a basic winged-T offense,
something that is completely new
to the team. Up until this year,
Harp has employed the Lonely
End offense, a carryover from
his assistant coaching days at
Army.
To date the series stands 2-0
in favor of Cornell, with the only
games taking place in 1898 (a
27-0 victory for Cornell) and in
1932 (the 72-0 game). Even a
superficial examination of these
scores reveals that UB has never
scored a point gainst the Big
Red. But in recent years, the
Bulls have had a fair measure
of success against Ivy League
teams, defeating Harvard 6-3 and
Columbia 34-14, in 1958.
In summation, it must he said
that UB enjoys an advantage in
experience and depth. When this

Hockey
Meeting
The UB Hockey Bulls
will have an organizational
-meeting on Tuesday, September 29, at 6:30 p.m.
The meeting will he held in
room 334 Norton Hall. All
those interested in playing,
managing, or publicizing
the team are welcome.
Freshmen are encouraged
to attend this meeting.
Last year the Hockey
Bulls placed second in the
Finger Lakes Collegiate
Hockey League, losing
only to R.l.T. This was the
Bulls’ first year in the
League.
Other teams in the

PRO PICKS
(Cont’d

from P.

16)

championship. The JETS have
youth and enthusiasm on their
side, but the PATRIOTS possess
experience and an upset win over
San Diego. It must be rated a
toss-up, with the toss here going
to the New Yorkers,
HOUSTON 35, DENVER 18—
The BRONCOS threw a king size
scare into Buffalo in the first

half of last week’s game, but
couldn’t sustain it and were
eventually drubbed. The OILERS

should again show the boys from
the Mile-High-City how the other
half lives when they send exteammate Jack Lee and the remainder of the BRONCOS down
to their third loss of the young
season.

KANSAS CITY 24, OAKLAND
14—It’s hard to keep a good team
down, and the CHIEFS will prove
that to the RAIDERS on Sunday.
The big Kansas City backfield
and hapless Oakland, defensive
line will team up to bury the
RAIDERS deeper in the AFL cellar.

league include: R.l.T.,
Brockport Slate, Ithaca,
Syracuse, University of
Rochester, Oswego State,
and Hohart.

is added to the fact that Cornell is experimenting with a new
offense, the choice here must
be for the Bulls to take their
second in a row.
BULL NOTES: It’s doubtful
that UB center Joe Holly will be
able to play against Cornell due
to a pinched nerve in his left
shoulder
Kicker Joe Oscsodal surpassed last year’s extra
point (by kicking) total for the
....

New Blue Blazer Line for Young Men

Now available...a special opportunity

TO SELL FAMOUS AVON GROOMING PRODUCTS
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entire season by booting three
successful PAT’s against BU . . ..
The cast is off end Craig Helenbrook’s foot and he’s expected
to see limited action against the
Last year’s All
Big Red
American UB lineman, Gerry
Philbin, visited the UB dressing
room after the game in Boston.
Since the Jets (his new team)
didn’t play last week, Gerry had
the day-off to visit his old team
....

mates.

By special arrangement with the college, there is an opportunity for a
student to represent Avon, world's largest manufacturer and distributor of g
products for men and women. The Collegiate Representative will enjoy a
earning opportunity: an exclusive franchise to offer Avon's famous products
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t

For more information, please contact

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�Friday, September 25, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

ir

SS&gt;S(Bft!B®SQ SS&gt;(G)!BV8
SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

The New Look...
It was a nice dav last Saturday afternoon. The UB Bulls
were in Boston to face the BU Terriers, as if someone did
not already know that by now. When the final gun
sounded the Bulls were on top, 35-0, again nothing new
to even the most uninformed follower of UB sports.
The attack was just about the same as last year’s,
which overpowered no one, with the exception of the
a very, very small college' team.
Gettysburg Bullets
Again nothing very new.
The defense, too, was indeed of the same stubborn
variety that marked last year’s platoon, when yardage
was given up as .grudgingly as a place in line of change
of program day. Once again, nothing new.
—

Improved Defensive Secondary

GOLF
PREVIEW
STAN LICHWALA
“Last year’s U.B. Golf Team
established itself as one of
the finest teams in the East.”
This was a comment by Dr. Leonard Serfustini, U.B, golf coach,
in a recent interview. The record
of last year’s team certainly substantiates Dr. Serfustini’s remark.
In dual competition, the team
won 10 and lost 0, stretching their
winning streak to 23 straight victories in dual matches. The U.B.
linksters placed first last year at
the B r o 6 k-Lea Invitational in
Rochester, New York. Another
first place was won in the
E.C.A.C. qualifying round at Corin the
University and
nell
E.C.A.C. finals, played at Farmingdale, Long Island, the team
placed fourth to round out a
most successful year.
There are 16 candidates out for
the team this year. Steve Watts,
Kearons Whalen, and Gary Weiss,
all seniors, are returning veter
ans from the 1963-64 team who
have proved themselves excellent
golfers. Missing from last year’s
undefeated team will be Curt
Siegel and Brownie Kopra, who
will both be concentrating on
studies; Ed Nusblatt, out because
of illness; and Fred Berman, who
graduated. These are the fine
golfers Coach Serfustini must replace, Among the new hopefuls
who show promise are sophomores Mike Anderson, Steve
Michaels, and Steve Schuelein;
juniors Michael Lawler and Ralph
Goodrich; and senior James
By

On the contrary, there were some things very new.
Take for example, the defensive secondary, which was a
sore spot all throughout last year’s campaign. Perhaps
it is deceiving to judge this solely on the basis of tbe
team’s performance against a BU squad hardly noted for
its strong passing game. But the facts remain—three
completions in thirteen attempts, totaling a meager 27
yards, plus .three key interception. When compared
against the 201 rushing yards the Terriers ground out,
even the layman can. see that there is something to this
wild notion of an improved secondary. The onesided
score can be attributed to the three interceptions, which
in addition to crushing potential BU scoring drives, were
directly responsible for two Buffalo touchdowns. Thus,
we can see just how important a role the revamped secBruce.
ondary played in last week’s overwhelming success and
Dr. Serfustini had this to say
(we hope) will continue to play in the upcoming games. about the outlook for the 1964-65

A Placekicker At Last
Those of you who recall the unfortunate situation
which arose last season after each UB touchdown will
remember an acute deficiency of successful point after
touchdown conversions, by way of “foot.” This year Hungarian place kicker Joe Oscsodal, who uses a soccer type
kick, has already surpassed last year’s total of two extra
points by kicking, with his three conversions against BU.
A potential fourth extra point was blocked, but Mr.
Oscsodal had already proven his worth as both a place
kicker, and a kick-off specialist. No doubt, he will be of
even more value in the future when the final outcome
of a game may be decided by an extra point or a field
goal. The game is called FOOTball, and literally speaking, the Bulls have indeed an excellent FOOTball player
in Joe Oscsodal.
Star of the Future
arren Schmakel, the BU head coach, whose team
had just been humbled by the Bulls, conducted the usual
post-game conference during which time
he, of course,
praised the Bulls in general as is the custom for the losing
coach. But his actual praise was not really aimed at the
Hulls as a team, but at an untested sophomore
quarterback ''ho had played only one previous collegiate game
as a frosh. Jim Robie had indeed been an impressive
figure in his varsity debut. He had fumbled
the first time
he handled the ball, but regained his poise
and composure
\\

at a, time when most inexperi-

enced-quarterbacks might have
flustered, or to use a
popular expression—"choke." He
came back to complete two passes in as many attempts, and to
make the longest single run of
the day for either team in leading
the Bulls to a score. From this
corner, it looks as though UB
has a quarterback with great potential. one who could develop
into a real star in the. very near

become

future
Yes, indeed, there is most definitely a new look about the Bulls
this year.

JIM ROBIE

U.B. Golf Team; “We know the
talen of the returning veterans,
they have proven themselves as

outstanding golfers. To duplicate
last year’s impressive record, we
will have to replace some very
fine golfers. The success of this
year's team will depend on the
new talents’ showing and the
continued fine performance of
the returnees. I’m sure this year’s
squad will do their very best to
continue the fine reputation established in the post.”
VARSITY GOLF SCHEDULE
1964-65 SEASON
Thursday, Sept. 24: St. Bonaventure, at Audubon, 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 29: Niagara, at

Audubon, 1:30 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 1: Buffalo State,
at Sheridan, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 2: Brook-Lea Invitational at Rochester.
Monday, Oct. 5: Canisius, at
Audubon, 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 7: St. Bonaventure, at St. Bona., 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, Oct,
10: E.C.A.C.
Qualifying Round, at Colgate.
Monday, Oct. 12: Buffalo State,
at Audubon, 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 14: Niagara,
at Hyde Park, 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 17: E.C.A.C. Finals Bethpage, at Farmingdale,
L.I.
Monday, Oct. 19: Canisius,
Audubon, 2:00 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 23: McMaster!
Audubon, 1:30 p.m.
t
—

-+

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

Partneri PreiS, 3nc
’

-Altjutl pT Smi h Pr!n lilt
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284
&gt;—&gt;•

Grid Picks
College

Professional
By

By STEVE FEIGIN

RICHARD DRANDOFF

Some of you may be wondering
how I ever got the guts to come
back after last week’s disastrous
picks, but fear not, UB students,
your fearless prognosticator intends to stick around for the remainder of the season. Upon examination, last week really wasn’t
that bad after all. A close investigation of the Column will reveal, among my correct picks,
one exact score (Pittsburgh 27,
New York 24), and two pretty accurate ones. The choice here was
Buffalo over Denver by a 34-14
score, and in reality, the Bills
whipped the Broncos, 30-13. In
another AFL encounter, 1 picked
the Houston Oilers to defeat Oakland 42-35, and the final score
bore me out when the Oilers
came through 42-28, So, despite
a not-too-successful record and a
slightly deflated ego, it wasn’t
that bad after all.
This week’s picks:
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
WASHINGNEW YORK 20,
TON 14—Tittle won’t be there as
the result of an injury suffered
in the Pittsburgh game, but rookie Gary Wood was impressive
under fire, competing 7 of 18
passes for 107 yards. The GIANTS
should come out on top in this
battle of the Eastern Division
cellar-dwellers.
BALTIMORE 30, CHICAGO 27
—Both of these teams enjoyed
victories last week, Baltimore’s
a big upset over Green Bay, and
Chicago’s an important one over
Minnesota. This one will be close,
but the h o m e-field advantage
should aid the COLTS as they go
against the defending champion
BEARS.
CLEVELAND 29, PHILADELPHIA 16—The BROWNS will be
in there all the way this year,
and the revamped EAGLES, upset
last week by the 49’ers, will not
stand in their path. Look for
Jimmy Brown to run wild in this
one.

PITTSBURGH 34, DALLAS 31
—After last week’s upset of the
Giants, the STEELERS could be
in for a letdown. But the COWBOYS, coming off two successive
defensive gems, are probably in
for a bigger one.
MINNESOTA 24, LOS ANGELES 14—After six straight wins,
the VIKINGS were unfortunate
enough to run into the Bears
and came away the worst for it.
Now the pressure is off and Van
Brocklin’s boys should upset the
surprising RAMS.
ST. LOUIS 24, SAN FRANCISCO 14—After last week’s bruising encounter with the Browns,
many people are convinced that
title will be spelled CARDINALS
in ’64. The offense-minded Redbirds should prove too much for
the 49’ERS to handle.
GREEN BAY 21, DETROIT 10
—In this unusual Monday night
game, the PACKERS should rebound after the shock inflicted
by the Colts, and take the LIONS
by the tail. It’s been a long time
since Lombardi's gang has suffered two consecutive defeats.
AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE
SAN DIEGO 20, BUFFALO 17
—The all-winning BILLS face a
rough one Saturday night at War
Memorial against the defending
champion CHARGERS. It could
go either way, but the pick here
is for the CHARGERS to upset
the BUFFALO applecart—at least
for this week.
NEW YORK 28, BOSTON 24—
This is the one that could eventually decide the Eastern Division
—(Cont’d on P. 15)

This column-was originally to
be named Feigin’s Fearless Forecasts, but after last week we
may have to change that to “Fearful”. I have received much rebuke upon the comments that
I made regarding a certain East
Coast game. To all my “loyal”
fans, may I extend my deepest
sympathies. I call them as I see
them, but I will gladly listen to
anyone who has something to
say. But please, please, say it
before Saturday. This country already has too many Monday quarterbacks. I really didn’t do that
poorly
as compared to another
—

columnist of the staff. Two of
my picks lost by a single point
and I was wrong on -the “infamous game” by the margin of
a 55. yard desperation pass in
the last 12 seconds. Remember,
as Bobby Baker said, “Not everyone can be perfect.”
Columbia 29 Colgate 12
Sensational Archie Roberts will
make the Lions a -tough team to
beat this year. The Red Raiders
have a sound defense but will
be unable to get on the scoreboard often enough because of
a sputtering offense. Buff Donelli’s boys are the Ivy dark horse
this year. This game is just a
warning.
Penn State 20-U.C.L.A. 6
The Bruins have already knocked
off one Eastern power already,
but that is as far is they will go.
No matter how many tricks Bill
Barnes pulls from his sleeve, the
Nittany Lions will triumph. They
played better against Navy than
the score (21-8) indicates.
Army 24 Boston College 14
The Eagles pulled the surprise
of last week by squeezing by
Syracuse. But the Cadets looked
mighty impressive in routing the
Citadel Boston’s poros forward
wall will be unable to contain
Stichweh and the speedy Black
Knights.
Auburn 33 Tennessee 7
The
Vols seem unable to cope with
the transformation from the
single wing to the T. The War
Eagles, were overpowering in
their opener and Sidle is running
wild again. Look for Auburn to
win the big and come out as
number one in the country.
Buffalo 24 Cornell 13
Cornell has not played the Bulls in
over 30 years and they will wish
that they hadn’t for another 30.
The Big Red lost record breaking,
All-Ivy QB Gary Wood to the
Giants and have been unable to
find a replacement. If Buffalo
contains Cornell’s rushing game
it will be a cold night in Ithaca
on the 26th.
Mississippi 28
Kentucky 7
Coach Bradshaw coined the slogan “10 or more in ’64” to describe his wildcat squad. After
Ole Miss tames them, people will
think that the good old coach
meant losses, not wins! Listen
for the Rebel Yell come Saturday,
Ohio State 34
S.M.U. 17
The Buckeyes will corral the hapless Mustangs as they sharpen
their claws for the Big Ten.
Oklahoma 17
U.S.C 14
Last year the Trojans were
knocked from the no. 1 spot by
a spirited Sooner squad. This
year, the tables are turned and
judging by last week’s results,
the Sooners are due to be toppled. But the Oklahoma's problems should be ironed out by
now. A team with this much
potential cannot be brushed aside
lightly, just because it has a bad
week. A real close, exciting contest.
Massachusetts 12 Harvard 0
■

—

—

•

—

-

—

-

—

-

—

-

—

-

—

-

—

(Cont’d

—

on P. 141

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                    <text>�Queen

brothers of Alpha
Epsilon Pi will once again
activate their annual “Beer
Barrel Award” at the
Th(‘

Homecoming Game tomorrow afternoon. The
award is presented each

week to the outstanding
lineman and the outstanding back of the previous
week. Some of the recipients include: last year’s
co-captain Larry Gergly,

quarterback
and

Candidates’ Profile

Homecoming Queen Candidates
posess a wide range of talents
and varying intere
The final
selection of the j ges will be
announced at the Pep Rally tonight. Three girls will reign as
Queen and her Court.

Council for Goodyear, and is in
terested in skiing.

Cherie Gals is a 20 year old
Junior from Buffalo, New York.
She is a sociology major and her
interests are reading and jazz.

pequa, New Jersey.

Helene Kimmel is an 18 year
old
Freshman
from Valley
Stream, Long Island, majoring in
languages. She is a member of
the International Club and Students for Johnson and Humphrey.
She is also on the Spectrum Staff.

John

All-America
Slofa,
tackle Gerry Philbin, (pre-

sently the starting defen-

sive and for the New York
Jets). This marks the sixth
year that the award has
been presented.

Donna Daugherty, a math major, is an 18 year old Freshman
from Athens, Pennsylvania, Donna is a member of the House

Linda Misiak is the Secretary
of Goodyear South. She is a 17
year old Freshman majoring in
Business Administration, Linda
makes her home in North Massa-

Gail Edwards, another skiing
enthusiast, is an 18 year old
Freshman from Syracuse, New
York. Gail is a History major.

Terry Neal, a 19 year old Psychology major is a Sophomore
from Corning, New York. She is
a member of Sigma Kappa Phi
sorority and is a Sophomore
Sponsor. Terry is also a member
of Newman Club and is on the
Special Events Committee tor
Homecoming.

Connie Zettle is a 17 year old
Freshman majoring in Secretarial
studies. She likes to ski and is
also r a fan of sumrher sports.
Connie lives in Buffalo.
Evelyn Natal, a native of Rochester, New York, is an 18 year
old Freshman whose major is
History. Her interests are government and skiing and she is a

member of Hillel.
Mady Yanuck is a 17 year old
Freshman from Hollis, New York
who is undecided as to her major.
She likes to ski.
Lynn Corse is a 19 year old
Sophomore majoring in Sociology.
Sne is a member of Sigma Kappa
Phi sorority and is interested in
sports and music. Lynn lives in
Snyder, New York.

College Placement Annuals are
now available to all senior students who register with the University Placement Services, This
book is a compilation of recruiting information listing companies
which come to college campuses
to recruit candidates for career
opportunities with their companies.
Applications for the Federal
Service Entrance Examination
(FSEE) and the New York State
Professional Examination are on
file in the Placement Office.
Successful performance in these
examinations will place candidates on the Federal and State
Civil Service lists and qualify
them for excellent careers. Register now at the University Placement Service. Interviews will be
held by company representatives
who begin their recruiting season
October 27, 1964.

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Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

�•

1

HAAS
DISCUSSION

STATE

UnTvERsWy"oF

AT~BUFFAL0

yM|

PREVIEW

page

&gt;

VOLUME 15

H

(see

NO. 5

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1964

Clement Hall
Dedication Held
By

NEW YORK

LONNIE KLIPSTEIN

The dedication of the Carolyn
Tripp Clement Hall took place
October 9 in the Green Lounge
of the new nine-story women’s
dormitory .Miss Helen B. Schleman, Dean of Women at Purdue
University, was the key-note
speaker for the occasion.

Miss Schleman addressed a
group of distinguished public servants including Mr. Seymour H.
Knox, chairman of the Council Of
the University; Mr. Harold T.
Clement, philanthropist and eldest living son of Mrs. Carolyn
Clement; Dr, Clifford C. Furnas,
president of the University; Senator Walter J. Mahoney, majority

In her remarks, Miss Schleman
stated that the low expectations
of women’s achievements are responsible in part for the low output of women's successes in
college and in public life. In support of this theory, she noted
the statistic that less women
finish college than do men, although many more women than
men finish high school. As a pos
sible solution, she stressed the
need for more motivation for
women to encourage full use of
their educational abilities.
After Miss Schleman’s address.
Mr. Seymour Knox directed the
dedication ceremonies, which included the cementing of a copper
box filled with historical articles
into the cornerstone. Tours of

Homecoming Weekend; Pep Rally Tonight
Some are Silver, Others Gold/ Theme of Dance
The Homecoming and Special

Events Committees have planned
many events in keeping with the
theme “Some are Silver, Others
are Gold,” of this year's Home-

will open the weekend which
will conclude with the Homecoming Dance tomorrow night.

The Pep Rally will signal the
opening of the festivities. Students will gather in front of
Clement Hall at 8:00 p.m., where
the march will begin. The route

will extend from Clement, past
the other dorms, over to Clark
Gym to pick up the football players, and on to Rotary Field.
At Rotary Field, students will
gather around the bonfire. The
football players will make the
first contribution to the woodpile by throwing in an effigy.
Everyone will then have a chance
to throw wood, or effigies into
the blaze. (Admission to Rotary
Field is one piece of wood.)

When everyone is seated in the
bleachers, the football players,
who will have been introduced before the bonfire, will be interviewed by a Spectrum reporter.
An informal period will follow,
at which time students will be
free to question the football play
ers, thus gettin gbetter acquaint-

ed with them.

CLEMENT HALL
leader of the Senate of New
York; Mr. Homer H. Woods, sec
retary of the Dormitory Authority
of the State of New York; Miss
Jeannette S c u d d e r, Dean of
Women; and Miss Carolyn Tripp
Clement, the great granddaughter and namesake of Mrs. Carolyn
Tripp Clement.

Clement Hall were conducted
after the program and were continued after a luncheon for the
guests of honor.
The officers of the Student Association and Miss Susan J. Orlofsky, president of the new
dorm, represented the student
body at the dedication.

Mrs. M. Childers Appointed
New Student Coordinator
Mrs. Marie Childers, newly appointed Assistant Co-

ordinator of Student Activities, began working August

17 in Norton Union as one of six assistant co-ordinators.
Mrs. Childers received her Bachelors degree in English and her Masters in student personnel at Southern
Illinois University. At Southern Illinois she advised the

Panhellenic Council and worked with several other

student organizations.
Born in Olney, Illinois, Mrs.
Childers has traveled through the
west, midwest and mideastern
United States. She is particularly
interested in reading and music.
Commenting on UB, she stated:
“Overall, my impressions have
been favorable, but there are
many capable students here who
are not using all their ability. I
like the great variety of Students
and great diversity of student
interest.”
Mrs. Childers advises music
committee, personnel committee
and public relations committee of
the Union Board and the elections committee of Student Senate. Also, she assists students
interested in travel abroad and
is in liaison with the World University Service, an organization
in which Amercan students and
faculty learn about and assist
students of all countries with
their problems.
“One of the objectives of coordination of student activities is
to help students participate to the
best of their ability,” Mrs. Chil
ders explains. "Students are here

i

Skits for the fire-dargon contest will be presented by the representatives of the participating
groups. Entries will be judged
both on the dragon itself and on
the skit. Judges for this contest
ahe Dr. Plesur, Dr. Stout, and
Mr. Wachtell. The fire dragons

will march to Rotary Field with
the rest of the rallyers. Participating groups are Schoelkcpf
HalK Theta Chi Sorority and Sig
Ep. Last year Sig Ep was the
only entry.
Next

organizations

sponsoring

“Ugly Men’’ will present their

skits. The results of the voting
which took place in Norton this
week will be made public. The
contest itself is being sponsored
by Alpha Chi Omega Fraternity,
who will give the money to the
United Fund. The winner of the
fire dragon and ugly man con

The second program in
the Dean of Men’s orienta-

tion series for all freshman
men will he held Monday,
at 7:00 p.m. in the Conference Theater in Norton
Union. Dr. Daniel A. Nichols will speak on The
Conduct of Sex. This will
he a frank discussion for
college men concerning the

psychological and physiological aspects of sex in a
hetrosexual environment.
Dr. Nichols is Assistant
Professor of Obstetrics &amp;
Gynecology at the School

i

MRS. CHILDERS

primarily to get an education, but

a classroom can only gives us
facts and knowledge. It’s up to
the individual student to integrate this knowledge into his life.
Students must have a broader
perspective other than their own
particular specialty.”

1

coming Weekend. The annual
Pep Rally scheduled for tonight,

of Medicine here.
The last program in the
series will be presented
Monday, October 26, At
that time, Dean of Students, Richard A. Siggelkow, will discuss “Our
University in Transition
and Your Future in it.”

HOMECOMING COMMITTEE, Left
Biawiti, Rhea From, Eileen Palley.

Lundquist, Jane Goldin.

tests will be announced
dance tomorrow night.

at the

Following the skits, the win
ners of the Poster Contest will
be revealed. Contenders for the
trophy for this competition which
is being donated by the alumni—are Chi Omega, Theta Chi, Sigma Kappa Phi, Angel Flight, and
Arnold Air Society. Posters have
been displayed on campus since
Wednesday. The theme for the
posters was; "One is Silver and
the Other Gold", the homecoming theme, and "Old 39” the
alumni theme, so-called in honor
of the class of 1939, wheih is cele
beating its 25th anniversary this
year. Mr. McClaine and Dr. Newberry are judges.

Escorted by members of ROTC,
the candidates, for Homecoming
Queen will then make an appearance. The winner and first two
runners-up will be announced,
as results of the judging which
was completed Monday afternoon.
Carolyn Cooper, queen of 1963,
will crown the new queen.

Winner of the free ticket to
the dance will also be announced.
A mixer in the Rathskeller is
scheduled from 10:30 p.m. until

1:30 a.m. after the rally, at which

to

Right,

Front

Row;

Joyce

Back Row: Cindy Bock, Josh
Rocky Lucci and his band will
play.

The

UB-VMI

game

will

be

played at War Memorial Stadium
Saturday. Buses will leave the
campus at noon. Round-trip tickets at 35 cents can still be purchased at the Norton ticket booth.

At half-time

the

Queen and

two runners-up will be driven onto the field in a locomotive, “Old
39” again in honor of the class
of 39. The football players and
the heads of homecoming committees will be introduced at

this time.

The Homecoming Dance will
take place at 9:00 p.m. in the
Mary Seaton Room of Kleinhan's
Music Hall. Gus Farril will provide the music. Tickets are still
available, in singles and in blocks
of ten, twenty, or thirty (for
which there will be a discount).
Chairman of the dance committee, Cindy Bock, will introduce

From, who will present the
fire dragon award and the poster
awards (first and second place).
She will then introduce the president of APO who will present
a trophy for the best ugly man
skit and a trophy to the winner.
The queen will be presented by
Jane Golden.
Rhea

Professors from Paraguay Visit
Buffalo's School of Medicine
Three professors from the National University of Asuncion’s
School of Medicine in Paraguay
have begun a three month visit

at the University.
Dr. Lois Alberto Garcete, Dr.
Jorge Hamuy, and Dr. Julio
Manuel Morales are visiting the
University as part of the project agreement between
the
United States AID Mission and
the National University.
Dr. Garcete is a professor of

obstetrics and head of the institute of obstetrics at the National University. Dr. Garcete,
who does not speak English, will
be working primarily with Dr.
Clyde L. Randall, professor and
chairman of the department of
obstetrics and gynecology and
Dr. Francis A. Smith, assistant
clinical professor of obstetrics
and gynecology, both of the University’s School of Medicine. Dr.
Garcete's association with Dr.
Randall will include directly
working with the obstetrics departments of the Univenity-af-

filiated hospitals in Buffalo.
Dr. Jorge Hamuy is a professor
of pediatrics and head of the
institute of pediatrics in Asuncion. He will work with Dr. David
T. Karzon, associate professor of
pediatrics and. acting head of
the department of pediatrics at
the University, studying the
operation of a pediatrics department and the teaching of pediatrics in the Medical School.
Dr. Morales is a professor of
gynecology and head of the institute of gynecology at the National University. Having served
as dean of the School of Medicine and rector at the National
University, Dr. Morales will work
with Dr. Randall, Dr. John B.
Graham, clinical associate professor of gynecology, and other
members of the gynechology
faculty in the School of Medi

cine.

Each professor has been recommended to appointments as visiting professors in their respective
fields.

�Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Students To Support Goldwuler Dr. Wyld Elected
Society President
By

SHARON HEENO

Students for Goldwater and
Miller, a new group on campus,
was recently formed to promote
the candidacy of Barry Goldwater. The club, under the chairmanship of Kearuns Whalen, is
seeking to demonstrate to the
citizens of the community that
“more than one political opinion
exists on campus". The organization intends to expose the people to the “true beliefs of the
Senator' by distributing pro-Goldwater literature among the student body and inviting guest
speakers to the campus.
According to Peter Ostrow, a
spokesman for the group, which
has well over one hundred members, the students are supporting
Goldwater because they believe

“the present administration has
made a shambles of foreign affairs while the Republican candidate offers constructive alternatives to the liberal philosophy
of welfarism which now exists”.
He noted that “the alternatives
are based on an unchained free
enterprise system that would ultimately lead to greater prosperity". It is also the group’s posi-

tion that national aims in the
cold war should not be “to see
how long we can keep from losing but to work actively for the
right of people to determine their
own form of government.’’

Copies of President Johnson’s
Civil Rights record from 19491960 which the club says shows
him to be “a hypocrite in the
field of Civil Rights" as well as
copies of Goldwater’s speech
•the Four Principles of Our
Greatness" will be distributed by
the club in the near future to
give students a further insight
into the issues of the forthcoming
election. Dr. Henry Paolucci, the
Conservative party candidate for
New York State Senator, is also
slated to give a speech in support of Mr. Goldwater in the
Norton Conference Theater Monday at 4:00 p.m.

Members are now busily collecting money for an LBJ retirement fund whose proceeds will be
used to commission the writing
of an operetta based on the popular Western song “Home on
the Range". It will be released
shortly after the election. The
group will meet today at 1:00
p.m.

in Room 242.

Dr. Lionel D. Wyld, professor
of English at the State University
College at Buffalo, was named
president of the New York Folklore Society at the annual fall

TOWER
SERVICE CENTER’S

Kick-Off
Dry Cleaning Special

meeting at Cooperstown.

“CLEAN CLOTHES THIS FALL
WILL KEEP YOU ON THE BALL”

A graduate of Hamilton College
and the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Wyld has taught at
the University of Notre Dame,
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
and the State University of Buffalo. While at UB Dr, Wyld was
advisor to the Folk Music Club.

(Light-weight)

(Plain)

ANY 3 FOR ONLY *1.18
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He was twice the recipient of
a Rensselaer Research Fund grant
for folklore studies of New York
State, and he is the author of
Low Bridge! Folklore and the
Erie Canal. He is currently completing a book on the contemporary writer Walter D. Edmonds,
which will be published next
year. He has contributed to various folklore and literary periodicals and is on the staff of Abstracts of English Studies and is
editor of the New York American
Studies Newsletter.

p ANTS SWEATERS

SKIRTS

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Binghamton, Henry's
Jewelers
Brewster, Addessi
Jewelry Store, Inc.
Buffalo, A ,M &amp; A's
Downtown, University
Buffalo, Sheridan, Thruway &amp; Southgate
Plazas
Catski11, Hollenbeck's
Jewlers, Inc.
Cheektowaga, A.M, &amp;A.
Cohoes, Timpane's
Jewelers
Corning, Bong's Jewelers
Cortland, Harry Alpert
Jeweler
Elmira, Deister &amp; Butler
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Inc.

Endicott, Henry's
Jewelers
Hudson, Alger's Jewelry

Ithaca, Schooley's
Jamestown, Baldwin
Jewelry
Kingston,

Schneider's

Jewelers, Inc.

This is big news for Pizza lovers. Santora’s Pizza Patrol will
deliver an extra delicious, freshly baked and piping hot pizza
right to your door at no extra charge. Call Santora's
Pizza
Patrol any day from 2 P. M. to Midnight, and presto, your
favorite pizza will be on its way to your home. You may
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occasions.

FOR FRESH BAKED
PIPING HOT PIZZA
CALL

837-5700

Lockport, Scirto's
Jewelry Store
Niagara Falls, Jaffee
Jewelers
Oneonta, Jerry Halbert
Oneonta, R. E. Brigham,
Inc.
Oswego, Raymond's
Jewelers
Oswego Conti Jewelers
Plattsburgh, Henry's
Jewelers
Rochester, Hershberg's
Jewelers
Rochester, Wm. S
Thorne
Schenectady, Maurice B.
Graubart &amp; Sons
Schenectady, Wallace's
Syracuse, Henry's
Jewelers
Town of Tonawanda,
A. M. &amp; A's
Watertown, Henry's
Jewlers
West Seneca, A. M.&amp; A's,
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SYMMETRY

AT

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FROM

S125

THESE FI NEST 0 RES

�Friday,

Octobar 16, 1964

Rostow Gives
Fenton Lecture

Enrollment, 19,157
Seven Percent Increase

Final enrollment figure released Tuesday revealed a seven per
cent increase over last year.
By DONALD A. EISMANN
Tota lenrollment is, 19,157 comto 17,888 students who
Professor Eugene V. Rostow, pared
registered last year, with the
Dean of the Yale Law School,
greatest growth shown in graduspoke on "The Legal Health of
Cities” in delivering the first ate enrollment which increased
This fall, 3,381
Fenton Lecture October 8. Dean by 20.6 percent.
Rostow’s lecture was the first in students registered for graduate
2,804 last year.
a series on “Megalopolis: Urban work compared to
Enrollment in the professional
Life and Urban Conditions.”
schools increased 9.6 percent with
Professor Rostow began his talk 1,075 students currently-enrolled
with an examination of the menin the Schools of Medicine, Den
tal health of cities in our time. tistry. Law and Social Welfare.
It became rapidly apparent, from
Undergraduate student enrollhis opening remarks, that Mr. ment was up by
4.2 percent with
Rostow was going to present more
14,701 students enrolled in unproblems in a questioning mandergraduate work compared to
ner than he was going to answer. 14,103 last year.
attempt
point
an
to
out
the
In
University officials pointed out
difficulties of the problems (involved in ascertaining just where that this year is the fifth straight
academic year that enrollment
the Urban problem lies, Mr. Rostow cited the existence of what has increased by more than 1,000
he called “Statistical Myopia.” students.
Over the past decade, enroll
This involves the existence today
of a plethora of statistics proving ment at the University has inthe existence of a marked in- creased approximately 90 percent.
crease of all the ills that plague
cities today. But is this really
the case or is this increase attributable to an increase in the
number of statistics that are
available to Social Scientists today?
Dean Rostow also cited the
existence of a Rural Myth in the
span of American History. This
concerns itself with the belief
(existing from the time of Jefferson) that 'somehow the cities
of America are inherently evil.
The existence of this myth, even
today, leads to the general condemnation that our cities are
breeding grounds for all that is
bad.

Dean Rostow then proceeded to
elaborate on the different categories of social action that are
being undertaken today in an
effort to grapple with the problems that do exist in the cities.
The well-known methods of
Urban Renewal and allied techquies such as educative methods
of direct action geared to young
and old who are not equipped to
cope with modem society, were
all examined in some detail. In
the examination of these new
methods, Rostow pointed out, we
have been forced into taking new
paths of action which are geared
to the new class of internal immigrant which exists today. This,
in effect, represents a cycle in
the methods of remedial techniques employed in the last 50
years.

Dean

Rostow dismissed

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

the

question of the Legal Health of
the cities in a few words. “The
law as an adjunct to carrying
out social remedies has been
adequate, if somewhat clumsy.
This is evident in the recent reapportionment decision.” Along

with this, Mr. Rostow noted that
none of the solutions which have
been postulated and carried out
in relation to the Urban problem have produced the Utopia
which the public has been led
to expect.

In conclusion, Rostow looked

to the large universities as the
hope for the eventual solutions
to these problems. Only the university, with its extensive facili-

ties for research, is able to ade-

quately co-ordinate the findings
of the various disciplines in re-

lation to the overall Urban
Where else, he concluded, can you find 30,000 peo-

problem.

ple living

under one administrative government with so little
°f the ills that plague cities of
such size?

ATTEND

THE VMIGAME

Enameling Arts
Workshop Starts

The Arts and Crafts Committee of the Union Board has chosen an old, yet new craft, that of
enameling on metals as its first
workshop this year. This simple craft consists of fusing various colors of glass to a metal
surface. Possible projects include making of jewelry, bowls,
boxtops, mosiacs, table tops, and

Judges Sought
The Student Parking Court, estableshed in Oct., 1963 by the
Student Judiciary to judge appeals of parking violations has
publicized the qualifications for
judges in the Parking Court. They
are as follows:
1. “All judges shall be full time
students of, at least junior standing during their term of office,
as, determined by the Deans of
their divisions."
2. “All judges shall have
achieved a 1.0 average and a 1.0
average in the semester previous
to appointment, or the equivalent, according to the respective
Deans of the division in which
they are enrolled.".

3. "No student member of the
Student Senate shall sit on the
court."

The term of the Parking Court
ends with that of the Student
Judiciary.

Students who meet these requirements and are interested in
serving on the new court may
obtain application forms from
Mrs, M. Paiisano in the Student

Association Office,
Norton Union,

Room

205

Tribute to Alumni
Band, Halftime Show

Storr to Give
Marine Lecture
“Marine ‘Queeriosities’ was the
topic by Dr. John F. Storr at a
meeting of the Sheridan Niagara
Kiwanis Club which was held in
the Red Lobster House Tuesday.
Dr. Storr, associate professor
of biology, illusrtated his talk
with color films taken during his
20 years of underwater explora"

tions.
Two years Of study in the Gulf
of Mexico resulted in a monograph which he recently had
published by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Department of
the Interior.
Dr. Storr, originally from Ottawa, Canada, received his B.A.
degree from Queen’s University,
Kingston, Canada, in 1942. He
received his M.A. and Ph.D. from
Cornell University. Before coming to Buffalo in 1958, Dr. Storr
was a research assistant professor
in the Marine Laboratories of the
University of Miami.

SUPPORT
THE
BULLS

In accordance with the
Constitution, Article Five,
Section One, Part B the
following amendment has
l)een offered:
Whereas: The Student
Publications Board has
been an ineffective institution in aiding student publications, and
Whereas: The Student
Publication Board has attempted to stifle academic
freedom, freedom of the
press, and freedom of
speech by setting inconsistent and arbitary standards.
Therefore be it resolved
that the Student Publications Board be abolished
and its powers be delegated as follows;
Be delegated to the judiciary.
2. The recognition of publications lie given to the
Student Senate Activities
Committee.
3. The editors shall

choose their own successors with the approval of
the Faculty-Student Associaton Executive Committee.

Tomorrow “The Pride of the
East” will make its first appearance at War Memorial Stadium
in five years. Under the direction
of Frank J. CipoIIa and with the

assistance of Richard Rodean and
Richard Fagan, the marching
Band will welcome alumni with
sculpture.
a sparkling half-time show. SpeThe first session of five weekcial recognition will be given to
ly workshops will be held Tuesday, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. It the Class of 1939 on their 251h
will take place in the Craft Shop reunion. Precision drill maneuvers will lead the Band to a forma(Room 7) in Norton Hall. All
students interested are welcome tion of a star in which President
to attend. There is no charge for Furnas will present the Home
the workshop, but participants coming Queen and other special
are asked to cover the small cost events. To conclude the half-time
show, the Band will form a giant
of materials used.
UB and play the “Victory March."
This is an opportunity for all

/
1
\
\
\

IKEEP BP
WITH
THE TIMES!

(ebeNfto Ijork Cimffl)

\

\
\
\

/
/

~T
(cut on

dotted linel

Wear this "campaign button" and
you'll meet the nicest, bestinformed people on campus.
Although an election year is a time
of buttons and ballyhoo, you can
rely on The New York Times to get
behind the ballyhoo to bring you the

complete story of politics '64...the
candidates, the campaigns and
the issues.
And when it comes to national and
international news...and news of
sports, the arts and entertainment
... business and finance... there is
no coverage like New York Times
coverage,
Why not arrange to have convenient campus delivery of The New
York Times every morning? Get in

touch with your campus representative today.

STEPHEN SOKOItA
Toner Dorm

�Friday, Oetobar 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

the Editor

...

APATHY AND AWARENESS
With the degeneration of social, political, and intelthe exlectual activities there is a growing awareness of
lack
of
The
campus.
this
that
exists
on
tensive apathy
student
entire
part
the
of
the
on
participation
and
interest
body is amazing.

No More
Mr. Charlie
By

LARRY SIEGEL

Nothing that ever hapens is all
one way. Things are never all
good or all bad. There is always
a mixture. And Helena, Arkansas, is no exception. It has its
own peculiar mixture. For the

last three weeks I have been
writing about the injustices and
Never before in the recent history of this University evils that have been perpetrated
leadership and
on the Negro community by the
has there ever been a greater need for
white community. But what about
true
that
is
students.
it
If
of
the
involvement on the part
the difficulties in the Negro comthen munity itself? There are many
the youth of today are the leaders of tomorrow,
Negro comtomorrw will be a grey day. It is the responsibility of the difficulties within the
munity that inhibit progress, proFor
if
to
lead.
educated and ‘enlightened’ individual
duce tension, and make life in
there is no value commitment and leadership on the part general unpleasant. This side of
the story must be known in order
of the educated ‘elite’, then where will it come from?
that people may have a clear
understanding of the civil rights
core
On this campus there is no reason why a small
movement in the South. If progof students have to carry the lead for all the rest. There ress is to be made in Helena,
have to realize their
is no reason why so few have to spend long and hard the people
own shortcomings and not put
the
share,
while
than
their
fair
far
more
hours, doing
all the blame on the white man.
Negroes in Helena have their
rest sit back and do nothing.
own power struggle. Sometimes
meetings Would turn into bitter
Thfe usual excuse given why someone can’t particifights and only resentment was
activipate in student government, publications, political
the outcome. Some of the leaders
ties and social functions is that they just don t have the in the black community would act
like children when they did not
time.”
get their own way. They would
either storm out of the meeting
There is no reason why everyone can’t participate. or sit and sulk and then nothing
was accomplished. Men found it
Positions are open in almost every phase of student activito compromise, because they
ties. The key to participation and keeping an average is hard
felt that criticism was meant as
proporis
properly
the
time
the budgeting of time. If
a personal attack, when it wasn’t
that at all. They forget that they
tioned there is no reason why studies should suffer beare all at a meeting for the same
cause of activities.
purpose, that is, their freedom,
and not for their own personal
For
essential
education.
is
to
Student participation
not used
living.” glorification. They are
as Plate said, “The unexamined life isn’t worth
to meeting in large groups and
communicating with each other.
The process of education is more than books, examinaSomething is a fact when one
tions and lectures. It is an internal growth, which is deperson tells another person what
development
is
Education
the
pendant upon participation.
they heard someone telling someone else. To us this is rumor,
of the individual.
but not in Helena. People rely
on this and look at is as valid
‘ To those students who leave this campus as fast as
information. According to this
possible after their last class I say what have you gained “valid information”, I was sleeping with the woman who let us
from the college ‘experience’?
stay at her house. According to
this “valid information” a Negro
have
borne
the
In the past the commuter students
was run out of town, because anbrunt of the attack on the apathetic student. Certainly other group of Negroes said he
the dorm students are no better considering the results was a “snitcher.” According to
this “valid information”, a young
of this weeks I.R.C. elections. (Out of a possible 2,600 man was ostracized by his peers,
right
the
lobbies
in
only 290 voted, and the booths were
because they thought he was giving information to the cops. Ruof Goodyear, Tower and Clement Halls.)
mors about everything were flying around Helena all summer
hours
long
planning
who
spend
To those students
and, I am sure, for years and
and participating in many of the student activities I say vears before this summer. I got
sick and tired of hearing them
too bad there aren’t more of you.
to the point of blowing up at
some of the people who were
The problems of a democracy and a free society are giving me the “facts.” Some of
directly related to the leadership and participation within the rumors were so absurd that
it was hard to believe that these
it. If there is no leadership in American youth, then there people
trusted the information. I
is no leadership inithe future of America. No external got to the point with some people
enemy will have to conquer us for we will die and decay
that I wouldn’t listen to anything
they said unless they actually saw
from within.
it. So much of the ignorance
and backwardness is continued,
because the people count so heavily on this kind of information.
Because the Negro man receives
brunt of discrimination, he
the
at
newspaper
University
The official student
Buffalo.
of the State
of New York
brings it back to his family and
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
takes it out on them. So many
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
men either beat their wives,
JOHN P KOWAL
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
leave them or are constantly
Lay-out Editor
News Editors
Paul Nussbaum
David Edelman
drunk. This is not true with all
Copy Editor
Barbara Strxuss
Marcia Ann Orzulak
the men, but it is with enough
Gary Falk
Sports Editor
Allan Scholom
Feature Editor
Editorial Advisor
William Siemering
Business Mgr.
Bernard Dikman
cases so that it cannot be ignorFinancial Advisors
Howard Auerbach
Advertising Mgr,
Dallas Garber
ed. Fathers teach their sons such
Thomas Haenle
Photo Editor
Edward Joscelyn
Circulation Mgr
Managing Editor
Alice Ostrander
Peter Rubin
hate that no wonder a child
Bugelski
Trudy
Jiremy
Taylor,
Marge
General Staff Vicki
Stern, Peter Rubin,
Rakita,
grows up hating and feeling that
Sue Greene. Eileen Murphy, Gary Lyman, Gary ChiIcptf. Nancy Migdol, Jeanne Stoll,
Don Eismann, Meryl Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou Kozlowski,
his life is futile. I can see the
Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro. Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Skip Venneri, Linda Leventhal,
reasons for hate and cannot
Sharon Richter. Diane Holtzman Diane Hayes, Manon Michael, Erol Soil, Ellen Lorig.
judge harshly, a man who lives
Linda Wachner, Susan Arnow, Judy Schachter, Jo Anne Leegant, Doug Hughes,
Bernice Cohen, Margo Rakita
by hate. But at the same time;
Photography Staff David. Collins. Peter Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wertman. Don
I see children growing up to hate
Blank
and continuing with it where
Sports Staff Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff. Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala.. Steve
Schuelem, Skip Blumberg Mike Castro, Lenny Gaby, Bruce Goldstein, George Jackrel,
their fathers left off. Freedom
Steve Oberslem, Eric Snyder. Harvey Starr, Marty Jafte
will never be obtained with this
Circulation Stfff: Diane Lewis. Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce- Fenmore, Mary Lou
Palmer
attitude. I feel that it is this
attitude that gives the Negro so
A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
much trouble in getting freedom,
because hate produces such unSecond Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, New York
constructive activity that many
Subscription 13.00 per year, circulation 9000
times more harm than good is
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising
done. Justice and equality is what
Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
we are fighting for, not revenge.
-

-

THE

SPECTRUM
-

.

oCetterA

to

the Editor

Board Defended
TO

THE EDITOR:

The October 9th editorial condemning the Publications Board
supported Henry Simon’s proposed amendment to abolish same.
At the outset, one must note
that Mr. Kowal, the new editor
of the Spectrum, was himself the

co-editor of both the publications
whose “demise” he attributes to
a personality clash between himself and the Board. Thus the attack on the Board resembles a
vendetta.
It is charged that the Board
is ineffective in suppressing “flyby-night publications.” Any such
ineffectiveness reflects only upon
the particular composition of the
Board, not upon the Board itself.
Just because a given group of
persons fails in a particular case
is no justification for a wholesale
condemnation of the Board as an
institution.
Mr. Kowal objects to the qualifications 'for Board membership
being appointive and exclusive
of editors of other publications,
charging that those with direct
knowledge of publications are
“filtered out.” Does he wish to
imply that among 15,000 students,
the limited number of editor-

ships available on student publications totally exhausts the supply of experienced and knowleogable journalistic talent? Does
he wish to, imply that the President of the University is neither
justified nor qualified in appointing students to a supervisory
board?
The effect of Henry Simon’s

amendment would be to create

a self-perpetuating oligarchy on
personal favoritism among student publications and Student
Senate and to give these persons
carte blanche to pursue whatever pet causes they desired.

If

the Publications Board is

“potentially dangerous” it is so
only in stifling the free exercise
of collusion and governmental
journalistic monopoly. If the powers of the Publication Board, representing administrative checks
and balances, are to be delegated
to the Student Senate and the
respective editors, representing
student self-government, then
student publications have no right
to a share of the student activities fee which is assessed on our
invoices through the administrative arm, and which we students
have no choice but to pay.
David L. Schriber

Non-Partisanship
TO THE EDITOR:

In the October 2 issue of Spectrum, it was stated on the first

“in keeping
with the present interest in the
election campaign . . , wishes to
present to the student body both
sides of the Senatorial campaign,”
When both candidates were introduced, the Senate’s non-partisan view of the election was
stressed. It seems to me that the
Spectrum, in its coverage of both
candidates’ speeches, greatly violated the non-partisan view the
Senate professed to be taking.
This can be demonstrated by the
fact that nearly an entire page
page that the Senate

?

was devoted to presenting the
text of Senator Keating’s speech,
whereas the same was not done

for his opponent. In addition, in

presenting “the complete text”
of Keating’s address, his last appeal, which illustrated his opinion
of students’ intelligence, in which
he stated, “I love you and I love
colleges” was craftfully omitted.
Mr. Kennedy hit upon many important issues during his question-answer period but one would
never know it by reading the
article entitled “Kennedy Attacks
Goldwater”.
Is this UB non-partisanship?
—Evelyn Damashek

Reply To Taylor
TO

THE EDITOR:

Jeremy Taylor's
Spectrum,
and I must say I was greatly
inspired. It is astonishing how
similar my experiences have been
to his.
When he spoke of “otherness"
I knew exactly what he meant
—I have had this divine experience many times. In fact,
my “otherness” reached a peak
when He, God, spoke to me during meditation. I did not think
this unusual, but he brought with
him my grandfather, who has
been dead over seven years.

I read

Mr.

“Reflections” in the

When I saw my grandfather sitting there, “otherness” prevailed my soul.
It is nice to know that there
are others like Mr. Taylor who
share these higher experiences.
I only goes to show that our
Creator makes us all from the
same mold.
Also I would like to say that
I agree with Mr. Taylor that
philosophy is a useless subject
and .“completely arid.” Those
philosophers of today have even
gone so far as to question Theology and the sacred institutions
which spread the word of faith.
Bob Kushin

Confrontation
TO

THE EDITOR

Since Mr. Taylor is so anxious
to engage in “meaningful confrontation,” I have no doubt that
he will be glad to receive this

short criticism of his views, which
I sincerely put forward in order
that all vague statements may
be clarified and any hidden mean-

ings revealed, thus satisfying the
spirit of healthy inquiry. Only
by critical analysis of all our
“philosophies” undertaken without the outcome preconcieved,
can any truth be found.
One can’t help noticing something queer about Mr. Taylor’s
reflections, as if along with the
printed words something else was
present, something underhanded,
surreptitiously lurking between
the lines. What can this furtive
element be? Perhaps the clue lies
in the statements Mr. Taylor

often makes about his “search
for a personal faith.” Isn’t it
strange that an athiest would be
conducting such a search? Why
would he want to use that sort

„

of language? We don’t have to go
far for the answer, the smell
is familiar . . . “Christianity” has
been parading up and down the
page only in a very tricky cama-

flouge.

It is really amazing how people,
especially rather talented and intelligent people, are continually
doing this. It’s very understand"Christianity”
able,
however,
being such a tricky creature.
Mr. Taylor was not brought
as “loosely” an Episcopalian as
he thinks; the views still run
through his viens, thrives and is
at work in his body. Mr. Taylor
has, perhaps unkowingly, been
inhibited at the knee with those
presuppositions of Western religion. Verbalism often disquires

the fact that we all have a
social “filter or censor” that presents the awareness of certain
realities and enables us to decieve
ourselves when believing we are
going against our older beliefs,
we merely substitute them anew
in a different guise
(Cont'd on P. 7)

�Friday,

Octobar 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Haas Presents
Socialist View
Eric Haas, Presidential nominee
of the Socialist Labor Party,
spoke on "What American Society Should Be” in the Conference, Monday,
In his discussion, Mr. Haas
touched upon many topics, presenting the Socialist critique of
t o d a y’s society and proposed
methods for ■ reform. Mr. Haas
treated the necessity for social
revolution from a historical context, using the United States as
a base for discussion. He noted
that in the early development of
of our society the worker owned
his own tools. Due to automation,
this is not the case today. The
Socialist Labor Party aims to re-

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

Editor’s Nate: Mr. Taylor is quoted in the October 10 issue
of the Saturday Review in an article by Sherman B. Chickerin#
entitled "Beyond Make Believe." Mr. Checkering refers to Mr.
Taylor’s work as “characteristic of much of the best of student
writing."
Once again it’s time to answer
my mail, crank and otherwise.

To the freshman girl who wrote
me the reaction to the “Freshman
Go Home” column, I am sincerely
sorry that letter was not printed
in the "Letters to the Editor”
column, but such are the vagaries
of a badly managed student newspaper. To Mary Jones Smith, I
can say only that you should take

fundamentals of reading if you’re

serious about our "experience of
otherness" being similar, and if
you’re not serious, it seems to me
that you might expend satirical
energies more profitably, else
where.

Mr. Gerald Gross’ letter (see
"letters to the Editor,” this issue)
deserves a more extensive reply.
1 am glad to receive your criticism, although I feel you have
misunderstood my argument. It’s
been along time since I have
been accused of being a creeping
Christian. 1 am an intellectual

agnostic and an emotional atheist,
(i.c, I have come to the conclusion. as docs Kant, that the question of God’s reality can not be
empirically determined, although
I may say that 1 believe the vast
weight of "evidence” seems to

Smith,
Webb, C.B., An Introduction to English for Business Majors.
Duck, L.F.,
A.J., A Programed Guide to the Science of Psychology.
Western
Joes,
The Significance of Arithmetic in College.
N.O.,
Thought—An Introduction to Philosophy for Reserve Officers Candidates.
Wuber, J.C., Out of the Ingroup, In on the Outgroup—The
College Student and His School—A Guided Survey Course in Sociology.
Doe, F.C., Writing in the English Language—A Program for
the Science Major.
Stinker, A.B.. One—Two—Three—Chemistry—
Durkheim, E.,
A Study of Chemistry for the Education Major.
Suicidal Tendencies in the College Student.
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

oCetterA
(Cont’d

from P.

to

6)

A good example of this phenomina is seen in the life of Kant,
the founder of critical philosophy,
who after writing a brilliant criti-

que on speculative metaphysics,
turned around and proclaimed his
faith in the Almighty - an act
that was necessitated by his

bourgeoisie Christian background.
Quite often even the most in
telligent intellectuals are unable
to break through the social

taboos.
Jeremy Taylor has a paragraph
about “human love” being the
highest endeavor of man. He

states that “any person in the

world can love any other person.”
Isn’t the tone quite apparent by
now! Here
we have another
broader who thinks he has found

a higher and finer meaning to
life, based on an engagement in
“the human community,” and, in

addition; he feels that this realization can be ground for an
"existential commitment” and a
"personal faith.”

To speak of “dialogue” and “encounter” and “risk” with all the
vague generality of the Sartrean
(and Buberist) existential theolegeans certainly makes it clear
that although Christianity may
change its clothse, the same old
dirty body is snecking around
presenting itself as
“liberal
thought" and as “original discovery—perhaps even as atheism!

If one prefers the affusifications
of the existentialists ever that of
the scientific empiricist, one
should at least read Nietzsche; in
the Anti-Christ he writes the following:

■ it seems that among Chrisof truth that is called ‘proof of
tians there is a kind of. criteria
strength.’ Faith makes blessed:
hence it is true.”
J

T. has abandoned academic
philosophy for the wider world
of literature and the arts. Something was dead in philosophy,

the Editor
fresh air and life was demanded.
In my opinion this is a mistake.
Academic philosophy is of great
signicance, and although many
who teach it are real “panzies
anyone who would consider it
“arid" and “totally unrelated" has
has definitely gone wrong. The
romanticist will ineviably make
this error because he is alienated
by clarity and technical precision.
Modern philosophy has abandoned the synthetic a priori and
all the accompanying vagueness
and nonsense. Truth calls for
logical analysis and not vague

generalities or picturesque inscriptions. Modern
philosophy,
especially where linguistic analysis is emphasized, is definately,

technical. The Romanticist dislikes to be clear, to be technical;
he prefers poetry to truth tables
When one turns his back on
academic philosophy to become
"engaged” with "pressing questions” the theologian’s trap snaps
with a clang and soon what one
is engaged in is a “dialogue” With
infinate otherness” (and up pops
the deity!)

Mr. Tayolr writes:
‘I believe that there is no God,
although I believe further that
the question itself is of little
importance.”

The

question

is

important.

Logically one can be an atheitst
and programtically one must take
an atheistic stand. Modern philosophy reaffirms the powers of
abstract thought and empiric investigation. To avoid going astray
one must have an understanding
of logical relationships. To avoid

the technical effort necessary to
such an end, and to come out for
"atheistic truth” and an employment of primitive picture language as Mr. Taylor does when he
affirms the relevance of "the
multi-logue of images” to make
a decisio not for truth, but for
fuzziness in one’s employment of
language. But then the Christian
is basically this sort of creature.
Gross
■

-

ERIC HAAS

addresses students
place the present system of "eco-

nomic despotism” with a new
economic freedom. Haas stated
“Employed persons lack economic
freedom . . , We should restore
to the people who do the work,
their own ‘socially owned' tools,”
noting the fact that the industries are socially operated, but
not socially owned.
Mr. Haas noted that the Socialist Labor Party has “no concern
for patching up society—we have
a revolutionary program” to be
brought about in a peaceful manner. Concerning the problem of
automation and the unemploy
ment resulting from the displace
ment of workers, Mr. Haas quoted
references from what he termed
“impeccable capitalist sources,”
and noted that at present “there
is no solution,” He quickly destroyed the “myth” that education
is the answer, stating, “If all the
present youth had college degrees, they would all be wiser
. . . but still out of jobs.’’
-

Mr. Haas contended that Socialism is the answer, completely
renovating the structures of society, from the gold and silver
standard to the geographical rep-

resentation in the government.
He noted that the revolution must
be brought about through the
peaceful means of the ballot,
and that the Soviet form merely
replaced “the capitalist with the
bureaucrat.” Mr. Haas stated that
the present form of government,
with its geographical representation was fine for an agricultural
society, but that for the present
day, “we must vote not from
where we live, but from where
we work,” proposing “labor councils” with the administrators serving the workers.
The reforms wanted by the Socialists cannot be brought about
under the present system, Mr.
Haas stated. “We must learn to
utilize technology and material
things to make life rich for every
human being,” he concluded, and
then quoted the “golden rule” as
the means to a truly perfect so-

ciety.

'

support the contention that there
is no God, but to live as an agnostic, with the concurrent ambivolence and uncertainly, seems to be
a waste of precious potential. I
can not live as though there
might be a God - God has no
emotional or spiritual reality for
me whatsoever that is, I believe
there is no God.)
On the other hand, I do not

believe that the images developed
by the Christian religions to deal

with their religious problems arc
totally irrelivent. I do not believe that merely because one is
not a Christian, one must reject
Ihc total body of Christian images
and teaching; the "golden rule”
for example speaks directly to
(he human condition, as docs the
Sermon on the Mount and the
body of the social gospel. I do
not set these “Christian” paradigmes above my own search for
meaning and value but I have
recognized in them a tension
toward genuine improvement of

the human condition.
You argue that I am cither selfdeluded or underhanded. 1 would
rather say that you have grossly
misconstrued my premise, as well
as my development My argument
with academic philosophy (obviously something about which you
feel very strongly) is based on its

necessarily fragmentary nature.

It is how we live, rather than
what we think that is crucial, and
when there is little or no correlation between the two, the value
of what is thought is pretty illusory. How many philosophy instructors who think academic
freedom is important signed the
loyalty oath? (I think we are
more fortunate than we know to
have acceptions to this rule, like
Newton Carver!)
Semantics and linguistic analysis are valuable only in so far as
they improve the quality of our
lives, and that quality must be
measured in terms of the whole
man not merely in terms of the
analysable portion of his public
thoughts. You assert that we must
have “an understanding of logical
relationships” in order to avoid
going “astray.” I would submit
that love is not merely a “logical
relationship" and
standing involves

that undermore than
would also argue that

words. I
academic philosophy since it is
the science of logical analysis
must need rule out of its domian
those which can not be adequ-

ately dealt with in logical terms.
Logic itself is not, I believe, a
body of truth, but on* method of
approaching the truth among
many others.
As for your attack on the image
as "primative picture language,”
and your allegation that I have

placed “fuzziness” over “truth,”
these are shrill and overbearing
and unworthy of a letter which
is other wise quite respectable.
The "fuzziness’' which you sense
in the statement is probably due
in part to a use of language with
which you have no sympathy.
Words arc not merely logical
symbols in the set of logical
thought. They carry connotations
and shadings which make possible
all literature. I attempt to m*an
what 1 say and not merely define
it. You pay me a higher compliment than you realize when you
say that there was “something
else” beside words in my column,
“lurking between the lines.” The
"fuzziness" is also due in part to
a basic misunderstanding of the
premise of the article, i.c. that
truth is something that must be
sought, not discovered. I believe
that human life has no inherent
meaning or value, and that what
meaning we seek and discover
in our lives is created through
dialogue with that which is other
than oneself, (is that precise enough for you?) I believe that we
create meaning, and that love
may be defined as that which
most closely approaches a totally
meaningful endeavor. Thus there
must be an openended, “fuzzy”
quality to a search which is defined from moment to moment
by the energy and risk it entails.
To conclude. I may say that I

have doubts about the historical
Christ, let alone the spiritual
"Savior." I believe that original
sin is one of the sickest, most
obscene constructions of a diseased scoiety and that an afterlife, even if there should transpire to be one, is totally unimportant to me. Now just how you
get creeping Christianity out of
those statements, or indeed, out
of my previous article, is beyond
trie.

I am glad however that you
took the trouble to write your
reply as I feel that this kind of
interchange is useful and exciting,
both to me and to others. I urge
anyone who is of a mind to write
to the editor, although in future
I probably will not have the
opportunity of answering every
query and criticism. Please keep
the crank mail coming too, since
we all need a little deversion in

the office.

All graduate and undergraduate students planning
to graduate in February,
1965, who have not previously done so, must
notify the Office of Admissions and Records, 201
Hayes, immediately and in
no event later than Friday,
October 30, 1964.
All those planning to
graduate in May, 1965
must so notify the Office

of Admissions and Records not later than Monday, February 16, 1965.

Failure to comply with this
regulation will result in
postponement of graduation until the next regular

commencement.

*

�Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Fulbright-Hayes Act Offers

Study and Research Grants

Students who wish to apply for
an award for study or research,
or for teaching assistantships,
must have: U.S. citizenship, at
least a bachelor’s degree by the
beginning date of the grant, language proficiency commensurate
with the proposed project, and
good health. Social workers must
also hvea at least two years of
professional experience after the
Master of Social Work degree.
Applicants in the field of medicine must have an M.D. at the
time of application. Creative and
performing artists do not require
a bachelor’s degree, but must
have four years of professional
study or equivalent experience.

Selections will be made on the
basis of academic and/or professional record, the feasibility of
the applicant’s proposed study
plan, and personal qualifications,
Preference is given to candidates
who have not previously lived or
studied abroad and who are
under the age of 35.
Three types of grants are available under the Fulbright-Hays
Act: U.S. Government Full
Grants, and U.S. Government
Travel-Only Grants.
Each
Full Grant provides
round-trip transportation, tuition,
maintenance, and health and accident insurance for one academic year of study or research.

Participating countries in the Full
Grant program include: Argentina, Australia, Austria, BelgiumLuxembourg, Brazil, Ceylon,
Chile, China (Republic of), Colom-

bia, Denmark, Finland, France,

Germany (Federal Republic of),

Greece, Iceland, India, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Peru,
Philippines, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, United
Arab Republic, United Kingdom
and Uruguay.
Joint U.S.-Other Government
Grants are offered cooperatively
by the U.S. Government (which
provides travel) and a foreign
government (which provides tuition and maintenance). Joint
awards are available for study or
research in Bolivia, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala,
Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragus, Panama, Paraguay, Peru,
Poland, Rumania and Venezuela.
For Travel-Only Grants, the
United States provides a supplementary travel stipend for a
maintenance and tuition scholarship awarded by a university,
private donor or foreign govern-

ment. These awards are for ten
countries: Afghanistan, Austria,
Denmark, France, Germany, Iceland, Israel, Italy, Netherlands

and Sweden.
Under a special program, additional grants for 1965-66 will be
available for study in Latin America. It is expected that as
many as 80 grants will be offered
to graduating seniors and recent
graduates for study in countries
where the number of U.S. students has traditionally been
small, such as Bolivia, Brazil,
Costa Rica, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Nicaragua, Uruguay
and Venezuela. Recommended
fields of study are social sciences,
political science, history, law and

humanities.

The applications of the students, processed by the Institute,
are reviewed by National Screening Committees of specialists in
various fields and area studies
Panels of candidates recommended by the Committee are
forwarded to the supervising
agencies abroad for further review. If an award from another
government is involved, applications are also presented to that
government for consideration.
The final selection is made by
the Board of Foreign Scholarships, comprised of 12 leaders in
the educational field, appointed
by the President of the United
States.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Appointments should be made at least one week in advance of the
interviewing dale. Students must complete registration in order to be
eligible for campus interviews. If you nave not done so, register now.

October 21-22 U. S. AIR FORCE
All maj ors at all degree levels for positions in the following areas;
Pilot, Navigator, Aircraft Control, Weapons Director, Missile Operations, Weather. Scientific Development Engineering. R&amp; D.Communication Electronics, Missile Maintenance, Avionics-Munitions, Aircraft
Maintenance, Cartography. Air Police. Special Investigation 6c Intelligence, etc. Women may apply for positions listed above. Candidate
may be expected to relocate. All candidates must be U. S. Citizens.
October 22 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
All majors at all Bachelor’s levels to pursue graduate study in busi-

-

ness at the University of Chicago. Citizenship

is not

required.

,
October 26 XEROX CORP.
ACCOUNTING-Cost Control, Profit Planning 6c Improvement and
Financial Statement Preparation, Candidates are not expected to relocate and do hot have to be draft exempt. Interested in women candidates. All candidates must be in top half of their class.
NEW YORK TELEPHONE
October28 29
Outstanding men of all majors at the Bachelor and Master's Degree
level for our management and engineering development urograms.
-

-

Minimum objective for hires is our district level which is known as
the start of our middle management. Permanent hires are placed in
our field depts. around N.Y.S. Initial assignment is based upon candidates interests and qualifications. Active leadership capacities in well,
selected activities at college is important. Our one-year training
program involved immediate management titles and assignments. At
the end of the first year or sooner, an evaluation is made of the individual with respect to his potential with the company. Candidates
should expect relocation but not always required. Candidate does not
have to be draft exempt. Not interested in women candidates.,
October 28-29-30
LONG LINES (Div. of New York Telephone)
BS. MS—Gen. Bus., Acct’g.. Mktg.
Men to go into Initial Management 1 raining Program. These men
-

will be placed directly into a management position upon coming
with thecompany.They will be given many opportunities to demonstrate their managerial abilities. At the end of this period an evaluation
is held and we mutually decide whether the man should continue to
pursue a career with our company or whether he might better seek
employment with other industry. This program is our tool to provide
our company with its future middle and upper management people.
Candidate will be expected to relocate, but docs not have to be draft
exempt. Not interested.in women candidates.

October 29

-

30

WESTERN ELECTRIV CO. (Div. of New York

-

Telephone)
Acct’g.. Geh. Bus., I.R. 6c L.R.. Mktg.
MS-Acct’g., Gen. Bus., Mktg., I. K. L. R .
Male candidate in top 'A of class for "high risk-reward management training program. Prefer Business Administration, Eeo,, Mtkg.
majors who are not restrictive. Comparable type of program available
to Accountants Jn top Vi of class who are interested in Comptroller

BS

-

&amp;

area.

ENGINEERING

&amp;

SCIENCE

INTERVIEWS

-

October 12-13 U S NAVAL AIR STATION
All candidates at all degree levels to enter the armed service as commissioned officers. Candidates will be expected to-relocate. Not interested in women candidates.
October 13-14 U.S. MARINE CORPS (Women Officer Selection l
Ain and all majors and degrees for a military career with the U. S.
Marine Corps. The Corps, condicts a nine-week summer program.
Upon completion and graduation, a commission as a second lieutenant is offered. Candidate will be expected to relocate and must be a
-

U.S. Citizen.

October 14 GENERAL ANILINE FILM CO.
BS-Ch.E. Ph.D.
Chem.
CHEM- Research Chemist in Organic. Physical and Analytical fields.
Problems run the whole range worn basic problems to product and
process orientation. Interests in the Photographic and Reproductive
process are important for the Binghamton. N.Y. location.
Engineers required in process development and process
CH.E
analysis and design, some pilot plant operation. Candidate must
be in upper half of class. Candidate may be expected to relocate.
Some locations require women candidates. All candidates need citizen&amp;

-

-

ship.

October

14-15

-

U. S. COASTGUARD

College graduates in all programs for opportunity to fulfill their
military obligation as commissioned officers. Selected candidates receive 17 weeks of intensive training. Upon completion of this training,
successful candidates are then required to serve on active duty for
three years. Candidates may then be placed on sea duty, shore assignments. or flight training. Candidates therefore, will be expected to
relocate. Not interested in women candidates.

October 21-22
U. S. AIR FORCE
All majors at all degree levels for positions in the following areas:
Pilot, Navigator. Aircraft Control. Weapons Director. Missile OperatioueationElectronics. Missile Maintenance,Avionics-Munitions.Aircraft
Maintenance, Cartography, Air Police. Special Investigation 6c Intelligence. etc. Women may apply for positions listed above. Candidate
may be expected to relocate. All candidates must be U.S. Citizens.
October 22 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
All majors at the Bachelor's Degree level to pursue graduate study
in business at the University of Chicago. Citizenship is required.
-

-

October 26 - XEROX CORP.
Chem.. Ch.E , EE, ME. IE. ES. Math Physics
BS. MS. Ph.D
ENGINEERING. CHEM . PHYSICS-Machinr &amp; Chemical process
-

Control, Process
mfg. in quality control. Production 1 Supervision
Engineering.
PHYSICS. CHEM
Fundamental fle Applied Research.
MATH. STATISTICS
Cost Control. Profit Planning 6t Improvement
and Financial Statement Preparation
&amp;

-

-

Candidates are not expected to relocate and do not have to be
exempt. Interested in women candidates. All candidates must

draft
be in
top half of their class.
October 28-29-30
NEW YORK TELEPHONE
Outstanding men of-all majors at the, Bachelor and Master's degree
level for our management and eftgineering development programs.
Minimum objective for hires is our district level which is known
as the start of our middle management. Permanent hires are placed
in our field dept, around N.Y.S. Initial assignment is based upon
candidates interests and qualifications. Active leadership capacities
in well-selected activities at college is important. Our one-year
training program involved immediate management titles and assignments. At the end of the first year of sooner, an evaluation is made of
the individual with respect to his potential. Candidates does not have
to be draft exempt. Not interested in women candidates.
-

October 28-29-30
LONG LINES (Div. of New York
BS. MS-CE. EE. ME. ES. Math. Physics.
-

Telephone'

Men to go into Initial Management Training Program These men will
be placed directly into a management position upon coming with
the company. They will be given many opportunities to demonstrate
their managerial anilities. At the end of mis period an evaluation is
held and we mutually decide whether the man should continue to
pursue a career with our company or whether he might better seek
employment w ith other industry. This program is our tool to provide
our company with its future middle and upper management people.
Candidate will be expected to relocate, but does not have to be draft
exempt. Not interested in women candidates.
October 29-30
-

Arrow Decton . . . bold new breed of shirt for a bold new breed of guy. Jam it. Squash it.
Give it a pushing around—all day in class, all night at a party. This Arrow Decton oxford
fights back. Defies wrinkles. Keeps its smooth composure through a 25-hour day. It’s all in
the blend of 65% Dacron* polyester. 35% cotton. Best for no
ADD /) ¥J/L
ironing and wrinkle-free wearing. White, solids, stripes. $6.95.

For ARROW Fashions it's

MEN’S SHOP
RIVERSIDE
713 TONAWANDA STREET (Comer Ont.rio)
Shoo

Phono; TR 5 8400
9 AM tor* PM. Doily

-

WESTERN ELECTRIC CO. (Div.

Telephone

BS
EE. IE- Math
MS-EE. Math
ENGINEERING fit SCIENCE

of New York

Male candidates for EE. ME. IE
of class Assignments available in all
areas of engineering ranging from Research to Management Engineering
on products ranging from Missile Systems. Solid State devices. Microwave to Cable. Wire and Standard Apparatus, Also seeking Math majors in top Vs of class interested in Engineering Programming area
Candidate does not have to be draft exempt
-

assignments. Must be in top

Career opportunities with the N.Y. State police are available for young
men. Student must be 21 years old. Base salary $5700.00, all service
clothing and equipment is furnished. Retirement after years of service,
certain medical, surgical and disability benefits provided. Additional
literature available in the University Placement Services in Schoelkopf

Hall.

Applications for the Federal Service Entrance Examinations (FSEEt
ana the New York Stale Professional Careers Test are available in
the University Placement Services. Many excellent career opportunities
are available' far stiylents.

�Friday, October 16, 1964

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Spectrum

Paolucci to Speak Student Artist Bartlett Speaker
Mon. in Norton
At Debate Forum
Dr. Henry Paolucci, the Conservative Party candidate for
Senator in this state, will speak
in the Conference Theater of
Norton Union Monday, Oct. 19,
at 4:00. He is a Professor of Political Science at Iona College in
New Rochelle, New York.
In his own words, Dr. Paolucci
is determined not to let Nov. 3
become “vote for the liberal of
your choice day.” Opposing the
candidacies of both the Republican incumbent, Senator Kenneth Keating, and the Democratic
candidate, Robert Kennedy, Paolucci will outline his platform
and speak in favor of the presidential candidacy of Barry Goldwater.
favors equality
Dr. Paolucci
among the legislative, executive,
and judicial branches of the government. He supports Civil
Rights, but reminds the public
that we cannot legislate friendships. Favoring a balanced bud-

Steven Carver, 20 year old
junior in the Department of Art,
has been commissioned to do
a second painting for the owner
of the Philapelphia Eagles’, Jerry

Wolman.
Last year, Mr. Carver portrayed, on a 3 by 4 foot canvas, the
9 yard end run which caused
the lf-13 win for the Eagles
over Green Bay, and led to the
NFL title in December, 1960. The
painting was presented to Mr.
Wolman in his Washington, D.C.
office, in which it remained until
late this past summer. However,
before the NFL season opened,

Iff

***'

get, he attacks the fiscal irres-

ponsibility of the present admin-

istration.

As a conservative candidate,
Dr. Paolucci believes in a more
strict interpretation of the Federal System of government, and
therefore holds in high regard
the integrity of the individual
states. He feels that foreign aid
should be used to strengthen our
allies, not to bribe our enemies.
The program is being sponsored by the Students For Goldwater and Miller Committee on
campus, whose goal it is to “work
for the election of the Republican ticket by correcting distorted
interpretations of the conservative philosophy.”

IRC Officers
Are Selected
As a result of the Inter-residence Council elections held last
Monday the following students
be selected as officers for the
coming year: Julian Burstein,
chairman; Stan Brodsky, vicechairman; Joyce Black, secretary;
and Gary Roberts, treasurer. The
election slate had only these
four people on the ballot. Lois
Menter, chairman of the elections committee of the Student
Senate, suggested that the elections be cancelled and the four
candidates be seated by the residence hall representatives without an election contest.
Out of a possible 2600 votes,
290 were cast. The division being: Julian Burstein with 223
votes, Stan Brodsky and Joyce
Black with 217 each, Gary Roberts with 226, and the rest divided between some 200 other persons including such write-in candates as Jeremy Taylor and Him
Beagle Johnson. Julian Burstein,
the new chairman, said he was
appalled by the turnout and that
his primary objective this year
will be to get more people behind the organization.

STEVE CARVER
the Eagles had their annual “good
luck” party at Wolman’s office,
saw the painting and liked it so
much that they took it back to
their club house; they now refuse
ot return the canvas to Mr, Wolman, who in turn has requested
Steve recreate another significant Eagles play.

Mr. Carver is as yet undecided

on the subject for his second
gift. However, he plans to entitle it “Eagles in Action.” This
year, Steve began specializing in

commercial illustration with the

hope of becoming a free lance

artist. His artistic talent has been
admired in the New Student Review, Tower Publications and
AEPi material. Steve is a native
of Brooklyn and a graduate of
the High School of Music and Art
in New York City.

(REGULAR

USED
TEXTS

NSA COMMITTEE

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

The N.S.A. Committee will hold
its second meeting in the offices
of the Student Senate on the
second floor of Norton at 4:00
p.m. today. All members are required to come and all interested
are invited to attend.

Are YOU a frustrated SHUTTER BUG? Do YOU have difficulty finding an outlet for your
suppressed photo desires? SUFFER NO LONGER!
Join the
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB ! WE
WILL HELP YOU! Come to Room
264 at 4:00 p.m. today.

�

&amp;

Hedda Beckman and Carl Levine will take the negative position on the national topic in an
audience debate against Queens
College of New York City. This
years proposition is, Resolved:
that the Federal Government
should establish a national program of public works for the
unemployed. Also representing
the University are Gloria Alfieri,
Mary Schefter, Nick Sargent, and
Ray Duscher, In addition to the
committee panel discussions and
audience debate, there will also
be a demonstration panel of Experts discussing the national proposition. Professor Bartlett, of the
UB School of Industrial Relations,
will participate on this panel.
Professor Bartlett led the discussion at a Society meeting last
Monday night on the question of
unemployment and its solutions.
He indicated that mass Federal
spending was perhaps the best
answer to the problem, but questioned whether a program of public works was the best solution.
He went on to limit this issue to
the question of selective public
work for various localities. Professor Bartlett stressed that the
reason the Federal Government
so often intervenes in the states
is because many of our states abdicate their responsibilities. His
truly witty examples of private
affluence versus public squalor,
as well as many others, kept the
atmosphere informal and inform-

OCCUPATIONAL

�

�

THERAPY

CLUB

SPEECH

There will be a business meeting of the Occupational Therapy
Club today at 2:00 p.m. in Room
337. For those unable to attend
there will be a short meeting
Tuesday at 3:00 p.m, in Room
333.

&amp;

HEARING SOCIETY

The next meeting of the Student Speech and Hearing Society
will take place Wednesday. It will
be held in Room 246-248 Norton
at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Sanders, our
guest speaker, will speak on opportunities in the field of speech
and hearing. For further information call TT 5-1879.

�

ENAMELING WORKSHOP

Enameling on Metals Workshop
begins Tuesday from 7:30 p.m.
to 9:30 p.m. in the Craft Shop

7) of Norton Hall. All
students are welcome to attend.

(Room

�

SKI CLUB

First general meeting of
Schussmeisters Ski Club set for
Thursday, in Fillmore Room.

Beverly o( LA BELLE FEMME
is proud to introduce Miss Gail and Miss Anne

Effective Immediately
SHAMPOO

&amp;

$250

WAVE

Regular $20.00 Lanolin Soft Wave

$900

Perms including style cut

LaBelle Femme
1101 Niagara Falls Blvd.
(across from Gleasons)

ative.

BOCCE

Thunderbirds

TF 3-1344

A display of jet acrobatics by
the Air Force Thunderbirds will
highlight the 175th anniversary
observance of the U.S. Customs
Service on October 20 at Niagara
Falls Municipal Airport. The public is cordially invited.
Before the half-hour Thunderbird display, scheduled for 4:30,
skydivers will
perform
and
marching demonstrations will be
given by the Marching Band and
ROTC Drill Team.
Skydivers will perform again
after the Thunderbird display.
Static displays of aircraft and
missiles will be available throughout the afternoon.
Representatives of the U.S. and
Canadian Customs will be guests.

UB SWEA SHIRTS
&amp;

Members of the UB Varsity
Debate Society are participating
in panel discussions and demonstration debates at Syracuse University this weekend. The tourna
ment is sponsored by the New
York State Debate Coaches Association, of which Mrs. Janet
Speech
C. Potter (of UB Drama
Department) is President.

C'a(( SoarJ

-

PENNANTS

-

JACKETS

-

DECALS

-

STUFFED ANIMALS
(SCHOOL COLORS)

CHILD SC

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
3il0 MAIN ST.

MEDICAL
DENTAL
NURSING

I-—'

Next to University Manor Motel

SCIENCE
ENGINEERING

TF 3-7131

REFERENCE
BOOKS

WALL TO WALL PAPERBACKS

�19th Century Art at
Albright-Knox Gallery
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery
has negotiated an unusual international art agreement, which
will bring an important 19th century English work to Buffalo for
an extended exhibit.
Director Gordon M. Smith announced that the Tate Gallery
of London has loaned the Albright-Knox “Seascape with
Buoy”, an oil by the great English
artist, Joseph Mallard William,
Turner.
Mr. Smith worked out details
of the loan while in Europe this
summer. The painting went on
display last Thursday. It will remain at the Buffalo gallery for

two years.

The Tate Gallery rarely lends
from its collections. The Yale
University Art Gallery is the only
other U.S. museum currently having a similar loan.
Paintings by Turner are infrequently seen in museums, even
in Europe, because the artist bequeathed the bulk of his works
to his country. The bequest included 300 major oils and some
19,000 drawings and watercolors
which were divided between the
Tate and the National Gallery of

London.
“The price for a painting of
the size and period of ‘Seascape
with Buoy’ is prohibitive and
such paintings are rarely available," Mr. Smith said. He has
long sought a Turner work to add
to the gallery collection.
The work is dated 1835-1840.
It shows the Turner style which
influenced the French impressionists and has echoes in the
20th century abstract expressionism.

Any changes in your
1963-1964 local address
should he inserted on the
directory card in the Director’s Office, 225 Norton
by Wednesday. Your Cooperation is appreciated.

Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE TEN

UB Faculty to
Attend Convention

Milk Prices
Forced Down

Three SUNYAB faculty members will participate in the annual convention of Social Studies
Teachers in the Buffalo Zone of
the New York, State Teachers

The results of several weeks
work achieved partial success last
week with the decrease in the
price of milk products in Nor-

Association October 26.
At 9:30 a.m., the teachers will
hear an address by Dr. Charles
V. Ebert on “The Influence of
Geography on History.” Dr. Ebert
will bring the newer insights of
modern geography to bear on this
classic topic. He is chairman of
t h e Geography Department at
SUNYAB.
RHO PI PHI PHARMACY EXHIBIT
Later in the morning, Dr. Milton Plesur of the History Department will participate in a
panel discussion of recent interBy JEFFREY LEWIS
pretations of American history.
The exhibit, near the second
In connection with National
Pharmacy Week (October 4-10),
floor lounge in Norton, was a
Dr. Jack Nelson, Assistant Professor of Education, will explore Rho Pi Phi, the professional phardisplay of drugs used in the
“The Changing Role of the Teachpast, showing the tools of pharmacy fraternity, had set up an
macy 75 years ago. In contrast,
er in the School Hierarchy” in informative exhibit concerned
drugs currently being used were
another part of the program.
with the various aspects of pharAny interested students and macy, on the second floor of also displayed, showing the rapid
progress that has been made.
student-teachers from the campus Norton Union.
are invited to any and all parts
The theme of this year’s PharPredictions of drugs of the future
—largely radioactive—were demmacy Week was “Know Your
of the convention.
Pharmacist and the Services he onstrations of what the future
holds for pharmacy. The second
Offers,” Following on this theme,
There will be a meetthe purpose was to make people half of the exhibit consisted of
photomicrographs taken by Romore aware of what the pharmaing of Students for Keatman Vishniac, a Russian-born phocist does, and to show the avering today ai 3:30 p.m. in age
consumer
that he is more toghapher and biologist, whose
329
Room
Norton. All inthan just the friendly face behind original techniques in taking
terested students are inthe drugstore counter. The lesser these pictures will inspire due
respect for the scientist. The
known aspects of pharmacy, such
vited to attend.
Pharmacy Week exhibit continas manufacturing and drug research, were also emphasized last ued through this week.
week. An additional purpose is
the introduction of students to
the many opportunities in the
field of pharmacy, at the same
time making them aware of the

Exhibit for Pharmacy Week
-

Texts Needed
From French
Summer Course

If you took French 101-102 this
summer and still have the textbook, the Department of Modern
Languages and Literature urgently requests you to sell back your
copy of the text to the Bookstore as soon as possible. The
book. Speaking French, by Mayer
et al., Revised Edition 1964, was
printed in only a limited number,
and due to heavier registration
than expected, a number of students still have not been able
to purchase the book. The Bookstore will pay half price for your
used copy.

ton Union,

A committee, organized jointly
by the Spectrum and Presidential
Assistant Arthur Burke, has been
compiling facts and figures re
lated to food costs, both wholesale and retail, at UB and other

state institutions.
After confrontation with these
figures, the new food service conceded that the milk produce
prices were undoubtedly out of

line and would be corrected. The
new food service is under the
auspices of The Student Faculty
Association and has been operating since the summer sessions,
hood was formerly prepared by
Cease Food Corporation. Cease’s
contract was cancelled last year
in hopes of eliminating the “middle-man” and perhaps providing
better food at lower costs. Mr.
Bennett, newly appointed Director of University Food Service,
last year stated that he would
make every effort to work with
the students.
The student committee is now
in the process of cheeking prices
on juices, pastries and salads.

THE MALL RESTAURANT

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it staples

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�PAGE

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 16, 1964

Randy’s

BOCCE

Amoco Station
300 Kenmore Ave.,
Buffalo, N.Y.

—

TF 3-1344

Phone: 836 -8961

$eiifylouA
STUDENT ZIONIST
ORGANIZATION

fEPIC

}

RECORDS

AN EXCITING DIMENSION
IN NOVELTY
ENTERTAINMENT

26110*
Rolf Harris, the King of Novelty, performs such happy songs as "Click Go
the Shears,” "The Farmer Went Out for
Some Beer," "The Wild Rover” and
others.

Student Zionist Organization
presents another of its informative meetings this Sunday at
7:45 p.m. in Norton, Room 234.
This week’s subject will be “Genocide?”, a report of the alarming growth of German ‘technicians,’ who are working exclusively for Egypt’s government towards the destruction of Israel.
SZO hopes to take action to prevent the disintegration of an already shaky Middle East. Following the program Israeli dancing and singing will be taught
to interested students. SZO is
a non-religious organization, recognized by the Senate and open
to all interested students, regardless of religious affiliation.

HILLEL
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m, in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will continue his discussion of “Sabbath Symbols" with
a sermon lesson on: ‘The Havdalah Ceremony.” An Oneg Shabbat will follow.
The third meeting in the current series on Tntermarraige”
will take place Sunday at 11:00
'"a.m. in the Hillel House. Rabbi
Leonard Buchon, Congregation
Ahavas Achim-Lubavitz, will discuss the problem from the Rabbi’s point of view. A Brunch
will be served for which reservations are necessary.
A “Live and Learn" Coffee
Hour will be held Thursday at
3:00 p.m. Suggestions for discussion topics may be made.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
The Student Christian Association at Buffalo is participating in
this year’s fall conference at

Lisle, New York this weekend.
Under the sponsorship of tne
Student Christian Movement in
New York State, the topic of
“SEX AND THE HUMAN PREDICAMENT” will be discussed by
Doctor Herbert Stroup, Dean of

Enjoy the Ragtime Era with specialist
Max Morath. He romps through such
colorful tunes as "Cakewalkin' Shoes,”
"Dorianna,” "Hello, Ma Baby” and
others.

Brooklyn College.
Thursday the S.C.A. will pre
sent an evening of discussion relaled to the Lisle weekend. The
theme will be “HOW TO BE
SEX-CESSFUL WITHOUT REAL
LY TRYING.” The meeting will

be held at the home of Reverend
John A. Buerk, Chaplain of the
Student Christian Association, 49
Heath St. (off Main below Campus
Corner) at 7:30 p.m, All students
interested in the topic to be discussed are cordially invited to
attend. Supper will be served at
6:00 p.m. The cost will be $.50.
Reservations for supper can be
made through the office, TR 4
4250, or the Chaplain’s home, TF
65806.

WESLEY FOUNDATION
The weekly supper meeting of
the Wesley Foundation will be

With wickedly pungent satire and wit,
Cambridge dramatizes vital issues and
comments with disarming innocence on
the fads and foibles of our times.
Cambridge is hilarious!
Q'-EPIC", Marc* R«g. T.M. MINTED IN U.SJL

—

held Sunday, at the Foundation
Center, University Methodist
Church, Bailey and Minnesota
Aves. Supper will be served at
5:00 p.m., and a discussion of
“The Feminine Mystique” will
follow.

NEWMAN APOSTOLATE

Arthur Burke, a representative
fro mthe Student Senate, will
speak at the Newman Apostolate
meeting in the Fillmore Room of
Norton Union Wednesday, at 7:30
p.m. He will discuss the “Structure and Functions of the Student Government”. The annual
initiation of new members will
follow this meeting. A pizza
party will also be held at Newman Hall immediately after the
initiation.

The Sunday night discussions
are continuing at Newman Hall
each Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The
weekly discussion groups meet
each Tuesday and Thursday in
Norton 330 at 9:00 a.m., 10:00
a.m., 2:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m.
Mass is said daily at noon at
Newman Hall. During October,
devotions follow Mass.
Buffalo State Teachers College
is the host this year to the Empire State Province Educational
Weekend Oct. 30, 31 and Nov. 1
All activities will be at the Hotel
Buffalo in downtown Buffalo.
Registration begins Friday, Oct.
30 at 600 p.m. A mixer and introduction speech are scheduled
for Friday night. Saturday morning and afternoon are devoted to

lectures. The dinner dance will

be held Saturday night; a Com-

munion

breakfast

Sunday morning.

will

follow

INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP
Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship

invites all those interested

to come to our Bible studies and

meetings. The Prayer
meetings arc held Tuesday at
3:00 p.m. and Friday at noon; the
Bible studies, Monday at 3:00
p.m. and Thursday 11:00 a.m.
Th ?se- meetings will be held in
•lie CRO office in Norton Union,
Room 217.
prayer

This weekend, the Inter Varsity
from the colleges and
universities in Western New
York will meet for a retreat at
Lelourneu Christian Camp on
groups

Canandaigua

Lake.

Transporta 1

lion will be provided.

Everyone

is welcomed

ELEVEN'

Two Doctors
To SpeakHere
Dr. Salkoff and Dr. Newbold
will address the Society on International Medicine when the
Society presents its Second lecture series of the year Monday,
October 19, at 8:00 in 147 Capen
Hall. Dr. Salkoff will speak on
the American Psyche in the Foreign Lands, and Dr. Newbold on
his Fifteen Years in the Congo.
A graduate of Brooklyn College, Dr. Salkoff now teaches
psychology in the psychiatry department of the Medical School
here at the University. His work,
primarily concerned with clinical
and experimental psy c h o 1 o g y,
brought him in contact with the
Peace Corps. He studied the reactions and adjustments of the
Peace Corps volunteers to their
periods of training and service.
In his talk, Dr. Salkoff will delve
into the attitudes of Americans
contemplating foreign service. He
will discuss the necessity of selfanalysis and personal introspection before undertaking this responsibility.
Dr, Newbold, an American citizen, has spent the past fifteen
years in Bukavu, Africa, as a
physician and surgeon. After his
internship in the United States,
he served his tour of duty in the
United States Army, and then
went on to Bukavu, as a new and

relatively inexperienced doctor.
Dr. Newbold found himself to be
completely on his own and the
only physician for the entire population of (he area which surrounds Bukavu, Without previous
experience, especially of this nature, Dr. Newbold had only the
Seventh Day Adventists to lean
on for support and aid. Dr, New-

bold will describe the difficulties
and challenges that faced him and
how he coped with and overcame
them.
To arouse and intensify interest
in the medical problems of the
world, the Society on International Medicine has opened its
door to all undergraduates as
well as all graduate students. To
solve these burdensome problems
it is necessary to involve the
cooperation of all people, not only
those whose prime concern is
medicine- However, medical students who are interested in foreign service do have the oppor-

tunity to study and practice in
underdeveloped 1 a n d s through

this program.
*

Dr. F urnas Honored
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas was honored Monday night when he was
made a fellow of the American
Society of Mechanical Engineers
(ASME),

This honor,’the highest which
can be given by ASME was given
Dr. Furnas at a dinner held at
Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, where he had served as
director before becoming Chancellor of UB in 1954. The presentation to Dr, Furnas was made
by John J, Neitz, Chairman of
the Buffalo section of ASME.

the

I

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

I Partners

Press, Jnc
till Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

�Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Events
Sachs Named Baird
Alexffhder

sswwim® sv&amp;ssid New Director
By LEON LEWIS

By VICKI

point of view. The other, the
much-ballyhooed Dirk BogardeJames Fox study of personal
power called The Servant starts
off with a much more promising
situation and allows it to deterioriate towards a relatively aimless conclusion.

To consider the better effort
first, Nothing But the Best traces
the social climb of a totally un-

scrupulous but sympathetic young
chap who is convinced that "this
is a dirty, stinking world, but
there are some smashing things

in it.” He resolves to go his way
to get those “things,” and in
realization of the fact that the

upper-class have a nearly insurmountable lead to begin with, he
engages a total scoundrel of the
establishment to teach him the
ropes. "I want you to make me
you,” he tells his bemused mentor. The opening scenes of the

film which detail this curious education are very imaginative and

milieu-tend to

make up for it.

After all, not everything that
goes on in the world is very well
motivated either. The movie reflects this reliance on whom and
chance quite well.
The Servant, on the other hand,
is much slower paced and lower
keyed, but it reaches some moments of frightening intensity as
Dirk Bogarde, in what must be
his best role, slowly manages to
work a reversal upon James Fox,
who has hired him to be a manservant. The script was written
by Harold Pinter and it conveys
a strong sense of the ominous as

we see Bogarde slowly reverse
the normal channels through
which power is communicated.
The direction by Joseph Lbsey, an
American living in Britian who is
highly admired by the cinema
esthetes of Europe, is unfortunately obfuscating. Once Mr. Bogarde has the reins in his hands,
the movie begins to look like a
mid-30’s Hollywood pastiche of

the troubles and torments of the
wicked. The action following the
early denouement is neither convincing nor pertinent. The sexual
deprivation of Fox and Sarah
Miles grows tiresome and the
movie just seems to end. The lack
of any dramatic resolution turns
a fascinating study into a routine
exercise in sin.

Smit To Perform All-Modern
Music Program In Baird Hall
By VICKI

Leo Smit,

BUCELSKI

pianist and composer

here, brilliantly performed the
entire Book II of Bach's WellTempered Clavier at Baird last
Saturday.

is considered quite
aremarkable feat to learn the Book
II, which consists of 24 preludes
and fugues, one in each major
and minor key. It is even more
of an accomplishment to perform
Book II, because of the length
and many technical dificulties.
Mr. Smit did this, and much
more. His performances of Bach
are those of a master. The lines
are flowing, always smooth and
clear, themes always heard. His
performances are relaxed. Even
towards the end, Mr. Smit did
not show signs of being tired.
A hush fell over the audience
It

for the entire program, probably the most over those who have
struggled with some of the difficulties of fugue playing themselves.

A most remarkable feature of
Mr. Smit’s musical talent is his
versatility. He will be performing an all-modem piano music
program tomorrow night at Baird.
Very recently, he gave a benefit
concert for jazz pianist Pete
Johnson, performing jazz concert!
of Aaron Copland. In addition,
Mr. Smit is equally famous as a
composer. He will be conducting
his own Symphony #2 on the
Philharmonic Series this February.
We should be extremely
proud and consider ourselves
very fortunate to count Mr. Smit
among the faculty at this university.

Support The Ernie Davis

Leukemia Fund

semester.

The Men's Glee Club will give
concert tomorrow for the alumnae homecoming program. A special joint concert will be given
with the Colgate Glee Club on
the "Colgate Weekend". A dance,
open to all students, will follow
the concert. The ticket for the
concert will include admission
to the dance.
a

The UB choruses will be featured with the Buffalo Philharmonic November 22 and 24, in

a concert performance of Mozart's opera, Idomeneo. This performance will be repeated at
Philharmonic Hall of Lincoln
Center in New York City late in

December.

The annual Christmas Concert
will take place in the Fillmore
Room. The program will be an
all-French Christmas. The Charpentier Midnight Mass, which is
based on French Noels, will be
performed. The music on which
the work is based will also be
performed. This Mass is an example of the baroque style in
France. Choruses from the Berlioz L'Enfance do Christ, a nineteenth-century work, will complete the program.
Many concerts with other colleges have been scheduled, to
take place on campus, and also
out of town, The groups will
make their annual Spring Tour
next semester. The W o m e n’s
Chorale meets Mondays and Wednesdays from 4:00-5:00 p.m. and
Thursdays from 6:30-8:00 p.m.
The Men’s Glee Club meets Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. There is still opportunity to join the Men’s Glee
Club. Anyone interested should
contact Mr. Sacks at his office
in Baird Hall. All rehearsals take
place in the auditorium of Har-

riman Hall.

performed.

Tryouts for the ’64-’65
Frosh Cheerleading Squad
will begin today in the
Goodyear Recreation Hall,
and will be conducted from
3:30-5:00 p.m. by the Varsity Cheerleading Squad.

All interested Freshmen

are invited to participate.
The schedule for the entire session is as,follows:

Leo Smit will present an “Evening of Modern Piano Music”
1904-1957 tomorrow night at 8:30
at Baird. He will perform works
of Ives, Debussy, Copland, Hindemith, Schoenberg, Bartok, and
Stravinsky. Tickets are available

Friday, Goodyear Recreation Center, from 3:30-

at the Baird Hall box office.

Monday,

The Budapest Quartet will conclude the annual Beethoven
Cycle with concerts Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday. All performances are at Baird Hall and
begin at 8:30 p.m. The Second
chamber series will be presented
by the quartet November 2, 4,
and 6.
Student series tickets for the
Buffalo Philharmonic concerts
are available from the Philharmonic ticket office, Kleinhans
Music Hall, TT 5-5000, The orchestra, under conductor Lukas
Foss, will open its season Saturday, October 24, at 8:30 with
the performance of Beethoven’s
Ninth Symphony. Other highlights of the season include “The
Last Ten Years of Music”; the
Verdi Requiem Mass; an allFrench program; the Stravinsky
Symphony of Psalms; the Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 of Bach,
with Mr. Foss at the keyboard;
Leo S m i t conducting his own
Symphony #2.

5:30 p.m.
creation

Tuesday,
creation

Wednesday, Norton Hall,
Room 240, 242, and
Auditions. and
244
judging beginning at
-

4:30 p.m.
All participants must attend two of the three scheduled practices.

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ATTEND
THE VMI GAME
,

and refreshing approach on display in Buffalo now. One, the
Clive Donner film Nothing But
the Best, purports to tell a
straight story but ends up by
telling it from a rather strange

danmed better than what he had
before, and his mood of ironic
detachment enables him to take
the whole thing in stride. Some
people may feel that seduction,
forgery, impersonation and even
murder need a bit more character
motivation than Conner provides
for young Mr. Bates, but the
stunning authenticity of the

|

Not surprisingly, this has all
begun to change recently. Several
young British directors have begun to make movies which rival
the plays of Tennessee Williams
in their studies of the venialities
of mankind and the theatre of
the absurd in their attitudes
towards its presentation. There
are two examples of this curious

very much. Life with the rich is

not all its cracked up to be, he
discorvers, but it is obviously

1

literature.

Bates* gets what he wants,
eventually, but not before he has
compromised himself in a number of serious ways. Much to the
credit of Mr. Conner, none of his
"sell-outs” actually affect him

Robert Sacks, the new choral
director, has joined the music
department faculty this fall. Mr.
Sacks is replacing Robert Beckwith, who is currently on leave,
working on his doctorate at Cornell University.
Mr. Beckwith
plans to return next year, and
will work with Mr. Sacks to
expand the Choral program.
Mr. Sacks is a graduate of Amherst College, and holds a master’s degree in choral conducting
from the Juilliard School of
Music. He is completing work for
his Ph.D. in musicology at New
York University. He spent last
year in Paris on a Fulbright
grant, doing research for his dissertation. Mr. Sacks is transcribing motets of the littleknown
French baroque composer Henri
Desmarets into modern notation.
The work of Desmarets, a contemporary of Lully and Charpentier, is the subject of the dissertation.
During the summers, Mr. Sacks
is a water safety instructor at a
teenage camp. Now he is busily
engaged in preparations for many
choral concerts to be given this

|

■

totally hilarious. Denholdm Elliot,
certainly the best actor in the
movie, plays the tutor to pompous
perfection. Alan Bates is quite
believeable as the bounder who
wants to marry the bosses daugh
ter.

Live Music
Stag
■
TELL YOUR FRIENDS
Meets 1st 3rd FRIDAYS OF EVERY MONTH

Heels

&amp;

T ies

'

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"■

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&amp;

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Most of the films of the “new”
British cinema have been straight
out of the slum and gutter school
of movie making. The downtrodden poor of London and the Mid
lands
the 1960’s vers, on of
Dicken’s “cluttered masses” have had their plight dissected
and scrutinized from a wide
variety of anglsc. Such esoteric
concerns as the malaise of the
upper-classes have remained the
exclusive preserve of the Italian
directors, while an abstract, timeless view of life has been the
province of the French ones. The
British have stuck pretty to a
clinical realism, touched with a
nice tinge of that traditional
idealism which has always informed the best British art and

BUGELSKI

Schneider, violinist
with the Budapest Quartet, will
conduct a string orchestra in a
special concert tonight at 8:30
p.m. in Baird Hall. Admission is
free and all students and faculty
are cordially invited- to attend.
The program is the one performed for the dedication of the new
Buffalo and Erie County Public
Library. Works of Vivaldi, Mozart, Debussy and Barber will be

”

,

j

�Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

Parents Day at Rotary
—

By SCOTT KURMAN

Obviously, you say, the hand
will be trivial as there are only
six cards per; ads since it is so
intuitively easy, I trust that
everyone who submits solutions
will be* honest. Good Luck.

Did any of you think South’s
bidding rather radical? Or perhaps were you confused when he
stripped the hands of hearts?
Oho. Perchance you were really
observant enough to detect a surplus of 4H’s and a marked deficiency of AH’s. Correct; advance
GO and collect $200.

By the way, the bridge club
still exists, and is really rolling
merrily along on the road to the
land where all squeezes work and

The major point of interest of
the article is the new game,
“Libel.” Who’s going to get more
upset by the typos and who’s
going to turn on me with fancy
document on legal paper because
of them, Jose or Dotty? Maybe
I should start a pool, wherein
everyone interested sends two
bits to me along with exact day,
hour, minute, and second of delivery of subpeona; they, if I win,
I might even pay off the suit
and recoup some unfortunate 2nd
and 3rd game world series speculations.

nobody psyches.
Speaking of physic bids, or
psychics, or psyches, is speaking
of the most controversial bridge
innovation since point-count. Personally, I believe that they can
be a valuable ally, (as potentially
as nuclear fission.) But right now,
many players find them rather
as constructive as hydrogen bomb,
and as safe as same in the hands
of a Goldwater.

The keynote in proper use of
phsycics is discretion. If, in any
evening of play, you psyche more
than once, your partner will be
in to mistrust all your bidding,
and then you’re in trouble. Some
compare the psyche to the bluff
in poker. A successful bluff is one
that is not expected; if you have
a reputation for playing a straight
-forward game, your deceptive
bids will work much more often
than if you carry a brand.

By now, you are all wondering:
where is the bridge? And it is
right of you to do so, for a
Frankensteinian monster has been
created when I was consigned this
job. (Sure, I’ll kibitz.) (Yes, I’ll
mention random data about the
bridge club, its members, and
xascinating type hands that appear before me. But, it I have
random comments to make about
anything worth kibitzing, they
will appear.

Next Saturday will be Parents
Day at Rotary Field. The Crusaders of Holy Cross, a club UB
has never beaten, will furnish
the opposition. If a student buys
two reserved seat tickets for his
parents, he will receive a third,
ticket with the other two at no
charge. We’d like to make this an
annual affair, but student response has been negligible. Many
students asked us to start this
program, now it is up to them to

support it. Remember, next Saturday is Parents Day. The Clark
Gym ticket office is open 9 to 5
every day and 9 to 9 the Friday

1428

University College reminds all freshmen and
sophomores whose last
names begin with the letters C and F that they will
see their advisers, plan:
their programs, and register for courses October 19October 23.

before the game.

|orthPariiif
llw

W“k FINE FLIPPANT
FILM! The love scene
in a canopied bed in
a deserted castle is
the funniest since
Albert Finney and
Joyce Redman
munched and leered
their way through
dinner in 'Tom Jones'!"

TWO TOP

FEATURES

HERTEl AVE.» TF6-74IJ

JOSEPH[ LEVINE

SOPHIA

LOREN

MARCELLO

OMNI
VITTORIO De SICAs
CAR 0 P0NT11in COLOR

-LIFE MAGAZINE

---

“A cheeky, stylish,
variation on ‘Room At The
Top’! Superlative!"

AV WAND

—TIME MAGAZINE
«

r SHATTERING

“Fully aware of 'Room At
The Top’, they have
fashioned a carefree,
cocky comedy! Sparkles
with wit and a
gratifying irreverence
for sex!"

“THE SEASON’S MOST ARGUED ABOUT FILM!’’
LIFE

A

Till next week (may I live so
long), may all your “vices* be
little ones.

Bridge problem time: this is
double-dummy (i.e., you can look
at all four hands), hearts are
trumps, and you need to take the
rest, sitting south, with the lead

Due to a mistake in laythe byline for the
Crudest Sport was omitted. We express or apologies to the writer Leon
Lewis.
out

A

The Kibitzer

—

PAGE THIRTEEN

TECHNICOLOR
Times Film Release

Student Discount with 1.0. Card
Monday thru Thursday

l

-N.Y. TIMES

|\l(FHilM0

BUT the

in your hand. Remember that
since you can see all the hands,
so will be defenders, so forget
any noise about making West
guess what to pitch.

Send your answers to Scott
Kurman, c/o The Spectrum, and
some sort of suitable point-scaling will be worked out. Some
sort of reasonable prize will be
offered to the winner; person
with the greatest number of
“points.”

South: S:
C; J 4
West: S:
7 5

—

,

A 9, H

North: S: Q J, H

—

,

—

,

K 8

East: S:

Q 6

K 8, H

NOW SHOWING!

H: A K, D: A 2,

—

,

Another Buffalo Jazz Festival Folk Presentation!

|

D: 7, C; 9
D; Q, C:

America s Folk Singing Poet

BOB DYLAN

A

D: K J, C:

All

Door* Open Daily at 12:30 p.m.
Late Show every Friday &amp; Saturday
Student Rates with I.D. Cards

SUNDAY NOV. 1st 8:00 PM
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
Sects Reserved

-

$4.00, $3.25, $2.50, $1.75

For best choice of seats mail orders NOW with selfaddressed stamped envelope. Send check or money
order to BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL, c/o Denton's,
32 Court St., Buffalo 2. N Y.

r

MEET YOU AT THE

|

!

Special Saturday Afternoon Concert
After the Game 4:30

-

Ours

FREE ADMISSION

I

*

|

Oct. 19

Coming Oct. 26
Coming Nov. 2

-

-

—

Junior Mario Trio
Joe 8. Eddie "There’s a meeting
Moynord Ferguson and his band

I Royal Arms

—

Stewart Granger in "COMMANDO"

NOW!

7:30

Donald Byrd Quintet
I Coming

PLUS

19 W. UTICA
885 6262
-

Open 11:15 A.M.!

PflB.*..’3UNT
in 3-52501

�The Furnas’

Host Faculty
The annual faculty reception
by Dr. and Mrs. Clifford
C. Furnas in honor of all new
faculty members of the University was held Sunday (October
11) from 3-6 p.m. in the Tenth
Floor Goodyear Hall Dining
Room.

held

The receiving line included all
the new full professors at the
University. They included Dr.
and Mrs, Kurt Aterman, Dr. Guillermo Diaz-Plaja, Dr. and Mrs.
Leslie A. Fiedler, Dr. and Mrs.
Reed A. Flickinger, Dean and
Mrs. William D. Hawkland, Dr.
and Mrs, Akira Isihara, Dr, and
Mrs. Frederic Koenig, Dr. and
Mrs. V. S. Krishman, Dr, and Mrs.
Frank A, Loewus, Dr. and Mrs.
Edward H. Madden, Dr. Maximilien Milner, Dr. and Mrs. Harold F. Peterson, Dr. and Mrs.
Grant T. Phipps, Dr. and Mrs,
Peter F. Regan IU, Dr. and Mrs.
George 0. Schanzer, Dr. and Mrs,
Harold Segal, Dr. and Mrs. Clarence Stuckwisch. Mr. Seymour
H. Knox, chairman of the Council of the University, and his
wife also stood in the receiving
line.
Hostesses at the reception included Mrs. Claude E. Puffer,
Mrs. Raymond Ewell, and Mrs.
A. Westley Rowland. Assisting
were Mrs. Clarence P. Bender,
Mrs. George H. East, Miss Rosaland Greig, Mrs. Nora L. Hunkins, Mrs. Harold F. Lang, and
Mrs. Elmer W. Navel.
Pourers were Mrs. Anne Sengbusch, Mrs. Ralph F. Lumb, Mrs.
Henry M. Woodburn, Mrs, Thom:
as J. Schillo, Mrs. Clarence Balkin, Miss Dorothy M. Haas, Mrs.
Robert Fleming, Mrs. Robert S.
Fisk, Mrs. Daniel H. Murray,
Mrs. Bradley Chapin, Mrs, James
A. English, Mrs. S. Howard Payne,
Mrs. Richard A. Siggelkow, Mrs.
J. William Everett, Mrs. Milton
G. Albrecht, Mrs. Robert F. Berner, Mrs. Roger W. Gratwick,
Miss Dorothy K Simon, Mrs. E.
Arthur Trabant, Mrs, James S.
Schindler, Mrs. William J. O’Connor, Mrs. Paul A. Bacon, Mrs.
Benjamin H. Lyndon, and Miss
Emily H. Webster.

The Annual Graduate
Student Convocation will
fake place Saturday, at
8:00 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room, Norton Hall. The
guest speaker of the evening will he Justice William 0. Douglas of the
United Stales Supreme

Court. His topic will he

Etchings Here
Etchings by Mare Chagall will
be shown in an exhibition titled
The Bible: Chagall’s Interpretations, on view at Norton Hall
from Oct. 12 through Oct. 30.
One hundred and five plates,
commissioned by Ambroise Vollard, were created by Chagall between 1931-1939 and 1952-1956.
They were published by Teriade
in 1956, and Chagall later handcolored a limited number of sets.
The rare complete colored edition
now being shown is from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Aldrich. The exhibition is touring
museums, galleries and universities throughout the country under the auspices of The American Federation of Arts.

His etchings for the Old Testament show the brilliance of a
major work. Una Johnson, Curator of Prints, The Brooklyn
Museum, states: "From his early
background of Hebraic history
and ritual, Chagall brought to
this art a profound, almost medieval fervor . The devout yet afflicted world of the Mosiac Law
and the Prophets is projected into a kind of fluid chaos, deeply
poetic and religious. It has wistfulness and simplicity and is
steeped
in religious conviction.”

Greek Notes
The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta are looking forward to their
informal party Wednesday. Initiation will be held Sunday at
3 p.m. at the home of alumna
Dorothy Dehn.
Chi Omega Sorority is looking

forward to again meeting rushees
at their ‘Masquerade Party’, to be
held Monday evening.
Sigma Kappa Phi presented
awards to sisters: Joan Paxton—
Scholarship; Karen Hartwick

—

Scrapbook; Penny Hemming
Best Pledge.
Best of luck to sisters Lynn
Corse and Terry Neal who are
finalists for the 1964 Homecoming Queen.

—

The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi will have a beer party to
welcome the pledges tonight at
the Hotel Markeen. Saturday,
there will be a cocktail hour for
brothers and alumni preceding
the Homecoming Dance.
Saturday night at 9:00 p.m. the
brothers of Phi Epsilon Pi are
holding their first annual Homecoming affair at the Hotel Rich-

The brothers of Phi Kappa Pii
would like to congratulate brother Don Gilbert on his being
ranked 19th among the nation’s
quarterbacks in total offense.
For Homecoming, the brothers
will charter a bus to and from
the game. After the game there
will be a closed pig-skin party at
the Stuart Arms Hotel, West Utica St. Big Mack will provide the
music from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. Following the beer party
there will be a cocktail party at
the home of Brother Ron Ansell,
Stoneleigh Drive, Kenmore, starting at 9:30 p.m.

The Sisters of Sigma Delta Tau
would like to thank the brothers
of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity
for helping to make last Friday
night’s social a complete success.

Clerks are needed for
the Student Senate election
October 26. Any interested
student with free time between 9:00 a.m. and 6:00
p.m. on that day should
come to the Senate Office.
Room 205 Norton, for further information.

For the sorority’s annual philanthropic project the sisters col

lected for the Asthma Founda
tion of America.
The Brothers of Gamma Phi
will hold a cocktail party at
8:00 p.m. Saturday before attending the Homecoming Dance.

ford, 210 Delaware Avenue. It
will be a semi-formal affair with
Forty etchings illustrate the band and entertainment.
first five books of the Old Testament and sixty-five prints depict
The brothers of Sig Phi Epsilon
scenes from the lives of the kings are ail looking forward to a gala
and prophets. “The Creation of Homecoming Weekend. Friday
Man,” “The Meeting of Rachael night the brothers will attend a
and Jacob,” “Crossing the Red dated sweatshirt beer party. SatSea”, “David and Goliath,” and urday, Sig Ep will have a pre
“Moses Breaking the Tablets” are game wine party at Randy Mill’s
some of the great Biblical events apartment from where they will
Chagall has pictured. Among the form a car caravan and go to the
patriarchal figures portrayed are UB-VMI game at W.M.S. SaturNoah, Abraham, Isaac and Joseph day night the brothers will sponas well as the prophets Elizah, sor a semi-formal closed cockIsaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. Cha- tail party at Larry Moon’s apartgall has also chosen to interpret ment and then dance to the music
several rarely illustrated episodes of Colby Taylor at the Hotel
such as “A Prophet Killed by a Worth. This event is closed to
Lion” and “Promise to Jerusa- brothers and their dates only.
lem.”
In these etchings carefully bit-

ten lines, delicate cross hatchings

and shadings have been used to
achieve dark areas and contrasts;
the drawing has been executed in
Chagall’s characteristic style. The
entire work has been completed
with craftsmanship and patience.
Trial proofs for the edition exist
in no less than four and sometimes as many as fourteen states.
Chagall, born in Russia in 1889,
now lives and works in Paris.

Hear THE COLLEGIAN Si
and FREDDIE REEB
at the CYAC
Convention Ball 836 -81961

Ambroise Vollard (1867-1939),

~K~

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establishing t h e reputation of
such painters as Cezanne and Roualt, among others. In later years
he achieved his personal reputation as a publisher of fine

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The Brothers of Thata Chi
would like to thank Dr. Segalkow
for speaking at the Theta Chi
rush dinner that was held at the
Theta Chi house.
We would also like to thank
Dr. Plesur and Mr. Ronald Banks
for speaking at the weekly coffee hour for professors at the
Theta Chi house. This afternoon
at 2:30 p.m. Dr. Chatwiek will
speak at the House.
We will hold a cocktail party
at Peter Ankorate’s house, an
alumnus of the fraternity.
We welcome our new pledge
class with enthusiasm and will
do all to help them promote the
ideals of our fraternity.

...

“The Rule of Law and
Survival. Graduate students may attend by invitation, and must present
invitations at the door.

the

Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

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�Friday, October 16, 1964

�

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIFTEEN

OLYMPIC BASKETBALL

In the history of basketball as
an Olympic sport, the United
States has never lost a game.
This is, to be sure, an enviable
record, but it does pose a prob-

lem, for it has created the illusion among both American fans
and players that the United
States cannot, and in fact, never
will lose a basketball game in
Olympic competition. This is a
dangerous attitude, particularly
this year, for all indications are
that foreign entries are stronger
than ever before, while the United States’ team is not as strong
as the two previous ones. The
1956 team was led by K.C. Jones
and the incomparable Bill hussell, who are currently starring
for the professional champion
Boston Celtics. The 1960 club
with Oscar Robertson, Jerry West,
Jerry Lucas, Terry Dischinger,
Walt Bellamy and Adrian Smith
has to be rated as the greatest
array of amateur basketball talent ever assembled. These clubs
had little trouble in rolling up
easy victories en route to gold
medals.
International competition ever
the last four years has improved
tremendously. The work of American goodwill ambassadors such
as Nat Holman, Abe Saperstein,
Lou Rossini, Red Auerbach, and
many others, who have brought
what they know of the game to

(evidenced by the selection of the back-court, with Jeff Mullins,
Darrell Imhoff in 1960 and Walt Bill Bradley, Walt Hazzard, (of
Hazzard this year); to select a No. 1 rated UCLA), and Larry
player from the Armed Services, Brown, (outstanding AAU player
(Adrian Smith in 1960); and to in the trials.) The two berths that
many people thought Kramer and
select -players from the A.A.U.
all-stars, (Dan Swartz in 1960, Jones deserved were awarded to
Larry Brown, Pete McCaffery and big men Mel Counts and Lucious
Jerry Shipp this year.) Naturally Jackson, whose play at the trials
these players have the necessary was less than brilliant, but who
talent, but the fact that they sat- are vital to the team because of
their height.
isfy any of these rather extraneA look at the team itself reous requirements would give them
veals, firstly, regional balance,
an advantage in being selected
over players of approximately something which does not win
equal talent, who did not satisfy too many ball games, but does
keep peace in the officialdom
any of these categories.
amateur athletic circles. RepThe time the trials occur can of
also be of consequence. Gary resenting the East are Larry
Bradds, a unanimous All-America Brown of Long Beach and Bill
Bradley, the South sends Jeff
selection at Ohio State, was un“Bad
able to attend the trials due to Mullins, the Southwest Jim
a conflict with his studies. Cazzic News” Barnes and Lucious JackRussell, Michigan’s sensational son, the Pacific Coast Joe Caldsophomore, was unable to play well and Hazzard, the Northwest
more than a few minutes due to Mel Counts, and the Midwest
a leg injury. Both players were George Wilson and Jerry Shipp.
The strength of the team lies
eliminated immediately from conin the backcourt where playmaksideration.
ers Brown and Hazzard have
When Cotton Nash, three times
an All American at Kentucky, re- speed and ball handling ability,
fused to commit himself as to while Mullins and Bradley, who
whether or not he would sign can both also play up front, are
a major league baseball contract prolific scorers. Forwards Barnes
upon his graduation, he found and Caldwell, neither an excepthat he had failed to make the tional shooter, are both strong
Olympic basketball team. (Nash defenders, exceptionally fast, and
subsequently signed with the Los spectacular rebounders. The weak
Angeles Angels.) These are all spot appears to be at center.
Walt
Thr
Bill Rr ill
'

Bellamy this year to handle the
opposition's big man. Mel Counts
is big (7 ft.) and a dangerous

shooter from far out, yet he has
a tendency to shy away from
contact under the boards. Jackson, a small-college All American
at Pan American, is a powerful
6’9”, but has a tendency to foul,
and has not really been tested
against top competition. George
Wilson of Cincinnati, who caused
a lot of raised eyebrows by making the team, could surprise a
few more people by his contribution to it. While small for a
center at 6’8", Wilson is outstanding on defense and a great
rebounder, and is the type of
unselfish player who can inspire
others with his hustling type of
play.

The key to the success of this
year’s team should be Bill Bradley of Princeton, the greatest
player ever to compete in the
Ivy League. Bradley is an unselfish player in the Oscar Robertson mold, who, on a normal
night, leads his team in scoring,
rebounding and assists. Bradley is
surprisingly inconspicuous on the
court. He does not appear exceptionally fast, yet always seems
just quick enough to beat his
man. He does not possess the
leaping ability of a Caldwell, yet
makes up for it with a knack for
being in the right place at the
not a spectacu: ght time

�

lar dribbler and playmaker like
Hazzard, yet he is a dependable
ballhandler who has little trouble
against a full-court press, and
manages to get the ball to the
free man. Bradley combines all
this with a truly phenomenal
shooting touch. In short, he is a,
complete basketball player.
Bradley should lead the United
States to another Gold Medal in
basketball. Although not as good
as the dream team of 1960, there
is too much talent on this team
for our foreign competitors. It
must be kept in mind, however,
that the rest of the world is
catching up to us in basketball.
The Russian All-Stars fared very
well against American teams in
their tour of this country in 1963.
The United States entry in the
Pan American games two summers ago finished a sorry third.
The jersey with USA printed
boldly across the chest is no
longer enough to scare foreign

basketball players back to the
soccer fields. The United States’
victory in hockey in the last
Olympics should point out the
fact that as the world grows
smaller, the “national” sport is
becoming as extinct as the dodo.
In spite of this, look for a
starting team of Bradley, Brown,
Mullins, Caldwell and Counts to
bring home a Gold Medal from
Tokyo after tough encounters
with Brazil id Russia.

�Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

October 16, 1964

Feature

BEHIND THE BILLS SUCCESS
By STEVE OBERSTEIN
season popular sentiment concerning the Buffalo
Bills has been drawn to the quarterback controversy involving the
much traveled Jack Kemp and the
rapidly improving sophomore
Daryl Lamonica. While both of
these stalwarts have been enjoying unusually good seasons thus
far, the key to the Bills’ success
this year has been the here-to-fore
unheralded players that coach
Lou Saban discovered during the
exhibition season.
So far

this

Saban had to almost completely rebuild his defensive line for
the 1964 season after he traded
Sid Youngelman to the Jets, and
Mack Yoho retired. Journeyman
Ron McDole, who had seen service in both professional leagues,
finally found a home at one of
the defensive ends. Saban teamed
him with Tom Day, who had been
a regular offensive guard for the
Bills until midway in the 1963
campaign when he was injured.
Dave Behrman, a grave disappointment as a rookie last year,
had come to training camp determined to win a starting guard
position, and this enabled Day
to switch to defense, Tom Keating, a rookie from Michigan, also
came on so strongly during the
summer that he started the season as one of the defensive tackles, teamed with the only returning starter, all-pro Tom Sestak.
The play of this foursome has
been one of the principal reasons for the Bills’ strong start
this season because of their tremendous pass rush and ability
to work as a unit after playing
together for such a short time.
Coach Saban also went out on
a limb by getting rid of veterans
so that ten rookies could make
the team. As noted before, Sid
Youngelman, veteran of ten pro
seasons, was sent to New York
for an undisclosed draft choice,
where he was quickly dropped by
the Jets. Bill Miller, last year’s
leading pass receiver, was traded
to Oakland, also for a draft
choice, where he is now hampered by a bad knee. Split-end Charley Ferguson was cut from the
squad so that room could be
made for Glen Bass, who has
been having his greatest season.
Billy Atkins and Marv Matusak
were traded to Denver where they
are now playing second string
on a last place team. Willie West
was also sent to the Broncos, but
because he was booed out of
Buffalo by the fans. Ken Rice was
traded to the Raiders for the
rights to Leroy Jackson, who was
quickly cut by the Bills to make
room for a rookie. The 1963 deal
with San Diego also helped the
Bills, but for an unexpected reason. Although Dick Hudson has
done a fine job at defensive
tackle, Hatch Rosedahl was recently released, so that the players that the Bills received for the
rights to Tobin Rote really
haven't equalized the deal. The
plus has been the improved play
of Lamonica, who never would
have had a chance to develop so
quickly with both Rote and Kemp
on the roster in front of him, and
might even have been cut because of the roster limitations in
the American Football League.
Thus, none of Saban's trades have
yet to hurt him, and the probability that they eventually will, is
not nearly as great as the potential shown by the rookies that he
has added to the roster this season.
Most of the positions on the
Bills are dominated by draft
choices—not rejects picked up

from the rival National Football

League. All-stars Stew Barber,
Billy Shaw, and Tom Sestak are
examples of this procedure, showing ihat Bill*’, owner JSalpb Wil

son isn’t afraid to spend money
to battle the NFL to bring a
winner to Buffalo. The defen-

sive backfield is filled with all
exyoung homegrown players
All America George S a i m e s,
Booker Edgerson, Ray Abbruzze,
and rookie Butch Byrd, who has
—

come through quite impressively

in his first campaign. Other rookies such as Hagood Clarke, a
great punt return man, Pete Gogolak—a soccer kicker who gives
the Bills the field goal threat

they were sadly lacking, Joe O’Donnell and Oliver Dobbins—of-

fensive line and defensive backfield reserves, respectively, Joe
Auer and Bob Smith—offensive
halfbacks, who are still learning
their trade, and Willie Ross—just
off the injuredAeserve list, whose

performance against
Houston stamps him as a coming
star, have given the Bills a new

Auer and Bobby Smith plugged
the gap caused by the injury to

-

impressive

lookthat hasn’t gone unnoticed
either by the fans or the standings, Ironically, Rosedahl, unquestionably the most sought after
and highest priced rookie,
couldn’t cut the mustard sufficiently and had to be let go.

Thus, their tremendous depth
is actually responsible for the
year the Bills are having. They’ve
had injuries, as any pro team
must, but they’ve been lucky
enough to have the right man
ready at the right time to replace
their wounded warriors. Even if
one of their quarterbacks got
hurt, they still have another
quality one waiting in the wings.
This puts them far and above
most pro teams who generally
carry one veteran regular and
one rookie in whom they have
very little confidence. The game
in Houston was a case in point;
rookie Don Trull couldn’t move
the Oilers after George Blanda
was removed, so that the Bills
were able to take advantage of
the lapse in the Houston offense
to construct an insurmountable
lead. The Bills were also fortunate that Jim Dunaway was able
to return to active duty when

rookie sensation Keating was injured, with no loss in efficiency.
Hagood Clarke was also experienced enough to do a good job
in the secondary when Ray Abbruzze sprained his knee. Joe

Hockey Meeting

old pro Wray Carlton. Walt Cudzik, one of the two off season
acquisitions to make the Bills’
roster, has done a yoeman-like
job at offensive center since
Dave Behrman got hurt. This
move enabled A1 Bemiller to
switch to guard and keep the
offensive line strong. Paul McGuire, the Bills’ other new veteran player, is a top notch linebacker who could step in if any
one of the three starters got
hurt, as well as the best punier
the Bills have ever had.

NOW

The UB Hockey Bulls
will hold their first practice of the season on Sunday, October 18, at Fort
Erie Rink. All those needing rides are requested to
be in Tower Lounge at 7
p.m. sharp, with equipment.

OPEN

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1
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ATTEND
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Roomate Wanted
House on Bailey Avenue
8 Room
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�Friday,

INTRAAAURALS

Alpha Sig Wins Golf
By ERIC

PAGE SEVENTEEN

SPECTRUM

October 16, 1964

SNYDER

a 0-0 tie, SAM whipped Lambda
Tau 22-6, and Alpha Phi Delta
overcame TEKE 18 8. On Thursday, AEPi passed Phi Psi in the
standings, winning by a 28-12
score. Sig. Ep. beat Alpha Kappa

Frosh Win Again

By MARTY JAFFE
The UB freshman football team
extended its undefeated season
by trimming the Red Raiders of
Colgate 12-6 Saturday, at Rotary
Psi li-S, and Theta Chi and Field. This win, the third straight
Gamma Phi were dealocked at for the Baby Bulls, ties a record
6-6. The standings in the fraterfor victories in a season. The
nity leagues are as follows:
team has three more games to
W-L-T play this season, Navy, Manlius
Tuesday League
300 and Syracuse, It was also the
SAM
Phi Ep.
2 0 1 first time a UB freshman team
1 0 1 has defeated the frosh of ColBeta Sig.
W-L-T gate University.
Thursday League
2 0 0
The game was won in the
AEPi
2 0 0 fourth quarter when the freshAlpha Sig.
noon.
2 10 men drove downfield 53 yards
In golf, Alpha Sigma Phi won Phi Psi
for a touchdown, which broke
the tie score and put the team
&gt;V- !*T
ahead. The standout player for
the frosh was back A1 Schnurr,
from Centerport, N.Y., who was
’fill
responsible for the last six points
which won the game.
The Baby Bulls, finding them
selves on the Colgate 30 yard
line after a Rick Wells 23 yard
pass to Dennis Briskey, were determined to get those 30 yards
and break the deadlock. The task
was given to Schnurr and in four
straight plays the freshmen were
in the lead 12-6. Schnurr’s first
carry brought the ball 14 yards
to the Raiders’ 11. Then, he let
loose for carries of two, four
and finally a five-yard smash for
the touchdown.
The Baby Bulls’ first score
INTRAMURALS, APO VS. EP.
came in the first quarter when
independ
The standings in the
the tournament with a four man
they opened with a 82-yard touchteam total of 335. Sigma Epsilon ent leagues are as follows:
down march. The tally was reW-L-T
Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, and Phi Monday League
corded on the score-board as
3 0 1
Lambda Tau ended up with team C-Men
fullback Tom Brenner scored an
3 0 1
Zygotes
totals of 337, 347, and 353 reoff-tackle slant from the two.
310
spectively. The individual medalRavens
The only score by the Colgate
3 10 frosh was tallied in the third
ists' final scores were B. WeinLosers
Penagallo
W-L-T
League
of
J.
76;
Wednesday
stein
SAM,
quarter. Their drive was started
3 0 0
of Alpha Sig., 77; D. Moore of
Williams House
by Fran Pordern who intercepted
0
0
2
Roger
Simon
of
80;
Sig. Ep.,
and
James House #1
a pass on the Baby Bull 39. The
1
82.
1
1 Red Raiders made use of the
James House #2
AEPi,
W-L-T interception. In seven plays culFriday League
In football last week, there was
2 0 0 minating with a Don Mooradian
Bunnies
a lot of exciting action in the
2 0 0
fraternity leagues. Last Tuesday, Winners
to Ken Schultz 4-yard pass play,
2 0 0 the Colgate freshmen tied the
Beta Sig. and Phi. Ep. fought to Fantastics

While the World Series and
the Olympics got under way this
past week, the intramurals program here at University of Buffalo began its third big week
of outstanding events.
In tennis, Peter Lederman defeated Dave Solomon in a hard
fought match of 6-2 and 6-3, to
take this year’s singles champion
ship. Last Friday’s doubles championship match, which had to
be rescheduled because of rain,
will be held this Friday after-

«■

College Grid Picks
from P. 20)
this game, but they had better
beware. The Vols (3-1) are stronger than most people anticipated
and seem to be able to handle
the T. Namath will have to probe
through the rock-like defense,
looking for holes.
NOTRE DAME 27, U.C.L.A. 7—
The Bruins (3-1) were rudely
received by Syracuse last week
and may take a while to get
back onthe track. The Irish (3-0),
ranked #5, are now the top
defensive team in the nation.
Now that the boys from South
Bend have reached the heights
of the top ten, they want to stay
there. And they will.
ILLINOIS 26, MINNESOTA 16
—The Fighting lllini (2-1) arc
now forced to lay back and wait
for a few timely upsets. They
better not get complacent,
though, because the Gophers (1-2)
(Cont’d

are not a push-over this year.
They had a bad break, though,
losing their star QB when he

broke his

leg.

BUFFALO 24, V.M.I. 21—The
Bulls (1-2-1) will be fighting mad
on Saturday after 3 very disappointing games. But so will be
Keydets (0-4), who have lost three
games by a total of 9 points. This
is Buffalo’s Homecoming, though,
and they will be trying extra hard
to impress the home-town fans.
But to win, the Herd must work
on their defense.
OREGON 23, ARIZONA 16—
The Wabfoots (4-0), led by that
passing fiend, Bob Berry, have
attracted very little attention this
year, while taking care of 4 op-

ponents. Despite heavy graduation
losses, Coach Casanova can field
a first rate squad. Arizona (2-1),
as usual has a multitude of speedy

backs, but is not in the same
league with Oregon.
OUKE 17, N.C. STATE 14—
The A.C.C. race is very much in

o

doubt, so every game played is
a big one. The Blue Devils (1-0-1)
manhandled Virginia a week ago
and are out for bigger game. The
Wolfpack, softened up by Alabama, are vulnerable. Duke will
be out to avenge last year’s 21-7
drubbing.
U.S.U. 21,

KENTUCKY 3
Well, the bubble has burst. The
Wildcats (3-1) were toppled from
the heights last week and HOW!
They

t

10055 WOOL BLAZERS

�

—

—

were inauled by Florida

State, 48-6, and may never recover. Certainly not against
L.S.U. The Tigers (4-0) have the
most consistent team in the upset-riddled SEC this year and
are eyeing the title. A victory
here will put them on their
way.
CALIFORNIA 14, NAVY 12—
Without Staubach, Navy is just
a second rate ball club. His ankle
is still a question mark, so the
Golden Bears (2-2) have the edge
here. Morton has the makings of
a great passer, and will spend a
peaceful Saturday afternoon picking apart the Middle (2-2) secondary.

Brookfield
as advertised in
PLAYBOY

score 6-6.
Coach Dewey Wade feels he
has an extremely strong team
this year. When asked his opinion of the game Coach Wade replied, “Well, we won, didn’t we?”
Statistically, the Baby Bulls
gained 181 on the ground and 27

!

*

FROSH BEAT COLGATE 12-6
The Baby Bulls next face the
in the air as compared to Colgate's 110 rushing and 17 passplebes of Navy at Annapolis Oct.
ing. The individual top rusher
24. Coach Wade feels that his
team is going to do well against
was Schnurr who piled up 60
yards in 16 carries. Brenner, the
the Middies. He said that his
other outstanding rusher, gained team, “is going to go out there
mother 40 yards on the ground.
and try to beat their pants off!”

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

I Partners
j jHxjoll

’

Press, 9nc
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f^rinliny

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(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

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•

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�Friday, October 16, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

RAMS SHOCK BULLS
M. I.
Passes Are Decisive Factor V.
SEATING
As Bulls Suffer 14-12 Loss

Cross
Country

Student seating for the VMI
in War Memorial Stadium
will be handled as follows. ALL
students must use GATE 3, which
is on Dodge St. near the tunnel.
To get into the stadium all that
is required is your ID card, you
DO NOT need any other ticket!
Student seating will be on a first
come first served basis in the
TEMPORARY bleachers in front
of the regular stands on BOTH
sides of the field. There is one
exception to this.
game

only 35 seconds left in the half,

The UB Bulls locked horns with
the Marshall Rams for the second
time in as many years last Saturday. On each occasion the result
has been similar: a better Buffalo
team has outplayed the Big
Green only to be victimized by
one or two long passes resulting
in demoralizing t w o-point set-

backs.

Last year at Rotary Field, it
was Marshall halfback Jack Mahone who scored on a long aerial
to ignite a 10-8 upset of the Bulls.
This year’s antagonist was 6’

190 lb. end Bob Pruett, who twice
outmaneuvcred the UB secondary
and tallied both Ram touchdowns
on 85 and 56 yd. pass runs in
leading the hosts to a 14-12 defeatof the Herd at Fairfield Stadium, Huntington, W.Va.

The Blue and White finally
recovered from the fumbilitis epidemic to which it had succumbed
in its last two outings, but an old
nemesis, the back-breaking penalty, proved

finally granted an opportunity to
shine and responded auspiciously.
Late in the third stanza, Miller
dropped back on a passing situation and spotted Pruett, who
gained nearly 200 yds. with 6
receptions, near midfield; the
agile end squirmed away from a

would-be tackier and raced down
the sideline unmolested to give
the Big Green a 13-6 lead. The

advantage was upped to 14-6 as
Winter, who was also credited
with 18 tackles and assists, kicked his second conversion.
The invaders had an opportunity to knot the score with three
minutes left in the game as Gil-

just as pernicious

in hampering its offensive drives.
Some of the penalties were called
in crucial situations, and to say
that some of the officials’ rulings
were questionable would be a
gross understatement. Post-game
films reve-.led a few critical and
debatable calls that were certainly decisive in the outcome of the
game. Coach

however, with third down and
lengthy yardage on his own 15,
Miller faded back and fired a
strike to Pruett, who raced untouched for the equalizer. Cocaptain Bill Winter put the West
Virginians ahead to stay with
his ensuing PAT.
After play resumed in the second half, the Bulls were repeatedly handcuffed by costly penalties which nullified sizable gains
by Gilbert and Shine, who was

bert efficiently guided the club
the length of the field. The
steady running gains of Bob Edward, Przykuta, and Gilbert, combined with two clutch passes to
Captain Gerry Pawloski and
Gerry LaFountain, and a final
12-yd. scoring bulls-eye to Dick
Condino brought the count to

Offenhamer

was
thoroughly disgusted after having
witnessed these decisions for a
second time on the screen.

Although a certain amount of
the blame for the defeat must be
attributed to the penalties, the
Bulls should nevertheless not be
vindicated for yielding the two
long touchdowns. But again, it
was a mechanical mistake, not a
lack of desire, which the Mountaineer Staters exploited in order
to register on the scoreboard.
The first Pruett touchdown reception can be accounted to a lack
of respect for his speed by the
secondary man who covered him.
Quarterback Howie Miller connected perfectly with him in full
stride, and the senior speed merchant simply outlegged his defenders to the goal line. On his
second six-point jaunt, Pruett
again utilized a Bull blunder to
his own advantage as he ripped
loose from a tackle and sprinted
down the sidelines for the clincher, In truth, the Herd's caliber
of play was excellent for the
second consecutive week, but a
pair of numbing long passes and
an unjustifiable superfluity of infractions against the visitors tilted the entire complexion of the

GERRY PAWLOSKI

the coaching staff . . . Touted
Marshall end Jim Cure was restricted almost exclusively to decoy purposes with Pruett being
the target of most aerial attempts
. . . The Bulls have seen all they
want of sensational ends this season. After Bob Meers and Milt
Morinof Mass, two weeks ago,
and Cure and Pruett last week
for an encore, who can blame
them? Incidentally, most scouts
consider a Delaware end named
Ron Bianco to be at least the
equal of any of the aforementioned quartet . , . Heralded sophomore Jim Robie’s chances of seeing very much action seem to
be growing dimmer each game
in the light of Gilbert’s recent
resurgence . . . Coach
Offenhamer plans no drastic changes
for tomorrow’s Homecoming clash
with VMI. The Coach stated, “I
can't find fault with the way the
boys have conducted themselves
in the past two games. This includes our pass defense which
was guilty only of mechanical
mistakes last week, which an excess of practice won’t eliminate.
A perfect pass play will succeed
against any defense. Take the
pros, for example: despite giving
up most of the other team’s scoring through passes, a defensive
back’s job is as secure as that of
any teammate.”

tnbilP

14-12. The SUNYABs muffed
their chances to tie, however
Marshall back Larry Coyer,
who last year recovered the fumble in the end zone which could
have given UB a victory, grabbed
an errant Gilbert aerial in the
end zone and sent UB’S deadlock
aspirations skyward in a puff of
as

�

eral ID cards were picked up at

the Massachusetts contest because

they were being used by someone
else; These cards won’t be returned until after the season, so
it’s a high price to pay, DON’T
lend yours to anyone!

Guy

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Marshall

First downs
Yards rushing
71
Yards passing
284
Passas
11-20
1
Passas intarcaplad by
1
6-35
Punts
448
1
Fumblas lost
62
Yards panalizad
60

IN THE BASKET

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Miller Step-in Bindings, and Safety-straps (Installation included)

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Hot Fish Sandwich
Crisp French Fries
Fried Shrimp Basket
K

UB

against Niagara at home. Saturday the Bulls will run a meet
with Canisius and Lemoyne at
Delaware Park at 1:00 p.m. Running for Lemoyne is Bill Ripple
of Niagara Falls, one of the finest collegiate cross-country runners in the East.
With Genau returning, and Bijack and Jack Mrowka improving every meet, the team hopes
for some better luck this week.
The Frosh with Bob Stephenson leading the way, run the
same teams this week.

HENRY’S MENU
FOR HUNGRY STUDENTS
.

STATISTICS

BULL SESSION
Gilbert
Capuana, Condino, Pawloski, La
tamed aside imminent disaster in Fountain, Jim McNally, and
Leo
tae second quarter with an in- Ratamess received the highest
aptrnl pool Bat *and, their de- “marks" for the game
according
•ufcue aamnit incorrigible •WW •ta’ \M - Hgw cciidridrf iVetf.'pji.-..

Dick Genau.
This Wednesday,

Everyone
Says

Tasty Cheesburgers
Tongy Bar B Que Burgers

to a 14-12 triumph.

pronounced nosedive recently,
proceeded to miss the conversion,
which later proved to be a strategic casualty. After UB had

individual winner. In win-

#

100% Beef Hamburgers

The Bulls were given one final
chance of regaining possession of
the pigskin in the final seventy
seconds, but a most controversial
unsportsmanlike conduct call
against the visitors, which incensed Coach Offenhamer to no
end, allowed the Rams to run out
the clock and to cling tenaciously

The locals scored the initial
touchdown of the fray midway in
the first period on a drive that
consumed 64 yards in 7 plays.
The entire starting backfield,
composed of Don Gilbert, Willie
Shine, Nick Capuana, and Denny
Pnykula, devoured huge chunks
of yardage at will, a task simplifleld by the gaping apertures
opened in the Marshall defense
hythe hard-hitting Bull line. Tail
back Capuana, a swift Utica
sophomore, culminated the march
with a nine-yard dash into the
end zone Joe the Toe, whose
placekicking feats have taken a

the

ning, Stu set a Colgate course
record. Other place winners for
UB were Capt. Ed Lontraro, Bob
Bijack, Jack Keins, and Bob Hoffman. The team was weakened by
the illness of Bill Suedmeyer and

!«*«*

smoke.

contest.

The seats in front of Section
for parents and friends of the UB players and NO students will be permitted to sit in these seats. There
are 3500 seats available along
the sidelines and if these are
filled latecomers will have to sit
in the General Admission section at the clock end of the field
or in the field boxes at the opposite end. NO STUDENTS will
be allowed, to stand along the
sidelines, they must have seats.
With a crowd of over 20,000 expected, there will be a tremendous traffic problem and we urge
students to get to the stadium
early. The student gates will
open at 12:30 p.m, REMEMBER
BRING YOUR ID CARD. Sev4 have been reserved

1

By STEVE SCHUELEIN

Last Saturday, the Bulls were
beaten by a very powerful Colgate squad. Stu Katz of UB was

Sheridan
*

**«&gt;

M

»

&lt;

-

*

1V

•

comer Niagara

Falls Blvd.
j *&gt;m

&lt;

�October 16, 1964

Friday,

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

v.M.i. pneview
UNDERRATED KEYDETS TRY FOR

FIRST VICTORY AGAINST U.B.
By CHICK ARNOLD

With all the ups and downs of
the World Series out of the way,

and the launching of the Olympics out in the past, Buffalo
sports fans can turn once again to
UB and the Bulls. If you happen
to be in the neighborhood of
War Memorial Stadium tomorrow
at about 2:00 p.m., why don’t you
stop in and watch a real good
college football game?
This week, the Bulls take on
the Keydets from the Virginia
Military Institute in the 39th Annual UB Alumni Homecoming
game. To date, VMI has an 0-4
record. However, this is quite
misleading, as they are a much
better ball cub than their record
indicates. Three of the games
have been lost by a total of a
mere nine points. A break of any
kind in any one of these games
could have changed the tide, and
their record could just as easily
be 3-1. Last week, they outplayed
Virginia most of the way, but a
couple of bad breaks cost them
a 20-19 defeat. UB too, has lost
a couple of “squeakers”, so this
contest will be a good game between two schools who have suffered similar fates thus far in
in the year.
VMI was rated as a Southern
Conference leader prior to the
start of the season, but has been
held back by injuries. They are
at top form physically tor this
game, though, and are now start-

and should prove a hard nut for
the Bulls to crack.
The University of Buffalo has
a few problems this week besides
the Keydets of VMI, In last week's
game against Marshall, two
tackles, Ron Pugh and Dorn Piestrak, were hurt—Pugh suffering
a hip injury, and Piestrak a recurrence of a right ankle sprain.

This, added with the fact that
Brian Kent is already sidelined,
leaves Buffalo hurting for tackles.
Last week’s loss to Marshall

was a rough one psychologically
for the Bulls. This year’s edition
of the Bulls is probably better
than any in recent years—yet
they have won but one of four
games. It’s definitely not lack of
effort; they fight hard all the
way in every game. Their own
mistakes beat them. Buffalo played a good ground-out game of
football against Marshall, only to

ing to jell as a team.

Quarterbacking the Keydets is
senior Charlie Snead, 6-1, 192
pounds. Snead is the brother of
Norm Snead who is the quarter
back for the Philadelphia Eagles.
He is a fine' drop-back passer,
and last week completed three of
four against Virginia. His reserve, Hill Ellett, is also a fine
passer who will undoubtedly see
a lot of action this week Ellett
is only a sophomore, but already
has shown great promise. Against
Virginia, he attempted 13 passes,
completing six.

The halfbacks, Donnie White
and Mike Patterson, are real scatbacks. White is 5-8, 158 pounds,
and Patterson is 5-9, 162 pounds,
but they know how to use their
size, or lack of size, as assets
in getting away from defenders.
White, as co-c a p t a i n, can do
everything, and is presently averaging over five yards gained
per carry. And last week, Patterson ran 81 yards for a touchdown against Virginia
The team, as a whole, is rather
small. However, they are very
fast, emphasizing team speed,
and are also very well disciplined. The Keydets are known for
their 100% effort in every game,

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offense for one season, 1,092
yards, set by Don Holland in
1951, Gilbert also has a shot at
the season records for most touch
down passes in a season and
most yardage gained passing in
a season. The respective records
are 9 by Gordon Bukaty in 1958,
and 807 by John Stofa in 1961.
A crowd of 20,000 is expected
at tomorrow's Homecoming game.
The Bulls will need all the support they can get from the sidelines, In a game as tight as this
one is expected to be, fan participation very often plays a large
part in determining the outcome.
Campus parking lots will be
open from noon until 6:00 p.m.
tomorrow. NFT shuttle-buses will
leave the campus every 10-12 minutes between 12:30 p.m. and 2:00
p.m: from Bailey Avenue next to
Rotary Field. Regular city fares
will prevail. And the buses will
also be available to return fans
to the campus.
As it stands now, this game
is a “must” for both schools
VMI needs it to start th'*"

Down -But Not Out

L. Bull
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seconds of each of the two halves. Seven men are dropped
back on past defense with the intent to concede the short
pass in an effort to prevent the long one; hence, the
term “prevent” defense.
It is not our policy to second guess the coaching
staff, but in this case we must make an exception, and
again emphasize the fact that these were indeed ideal
circumstances for the use of such a defense and even
more especially so, since the play of UB secondary had
been inept throughout the game, as previously stated.

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VOLUME 15

[extra
BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1964

NO.

9

APTHEKER TO SPEAK
State Court Upholds Completes I.D. Cards Needed
Academic Freedom Political For Friday Lecture

After two years of legal
proceedings Dr. Herbert
Aptheker’s right to speak
on a State University campus has been upheld.
The history of the court
battle for academic freedom started in October of
1962 with an injunction
barring the appearance of
Dr. Aptheker at the State
University at Buffalo. Just
before Dr. Aptheker’s apJustice Russell
pearance
Hunt of the State Supreme
Court in Albany granted a
temporary restraining order to William Egan of Ballston Lake, New York,

Mr. Egan, then Democratic candidate for the
Congress in the 30th District, sought the restraining
order claiming that an
avowed communist should
not be allowed the use of
tax-supported

facilities.

At that time Dr. Clifford
C. Furnas stated, “Naturally, we abide by the ruling
of the court, so the scheduled lecture has been postponed. As I understand it,
further court action on this
matter is scheduled for
November 9th. I feel confident, because of the firm
and statesmanlike stand
which the State University
of New York Board of
Trustees has taken, through
the Chairman, Mr. Frank
Moore, that common sense
and objectivity will prevail
and that’ the basic principles of academic freedom
-and university rights will be
re-established at that hearing.”
The Aptheker Case
reached the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court

Series

in Albany in December of
1963. At that time the court
unanimously ruled that Dr.
Herbert Aptheker had the
right to address the student
body at the State University campus.

By JOHN P. KOWAL

Editor-In-Chief

Dr. Herbert Aptheker1 is
the last of five speakers
in the series “The Political
Spectrum of a Contemporary World”. The series,
The Appellate Division’s scheduled for the fall of
historic reversal, written by 1962, featured Sir Oswald
Associate Justice Walter J. Mosley on September 26,
Reynolds, stated that “we who spoke on Fascism; Dr.
cannot sustain the decision. Russell Kirk on October 3,
There is no legislation who spoke on Conservadirectly covering the in- tism ; Senator Eugene J. Mcstant situation.” Justice Carthy on October 17, who
Reynolds
then defended spoke on Liberalism; Mr.
the higher value of acaNorman Thomas on Octodemic freedom above ber 24, who spoke on
Egan’s contentions; He then Socialism and Dr. Herbert
cited precedent which holds Aptheker who was schedthat membership in the uled on October 31, to
Communist Party does not speak on Communism'
automatically entail illegal
In a published statement
advocation to overthrow
1962 the Senate stated,
in
the government.
‘•The purpose of this proEssentially, the issue was
gram is to offer students
one of academic freedom, the opportunity to examine
right to inquiry without inand compare various polititerference, and not so much cal idealogies. The Student
whether or not students Senate believes that the
should or should not listen maintenance of a strong
to any particular lecturers. and vigorous democracy is
The court stated: “Teachcontingent upon a working
ers and students must al- knowledge
political
of
to
ways remain free
philosophies by its citizens.
study and evaluate, to gain The atomsphere provided
maturity and new underby a searching and intelstanding; otherwise our lectual University, is most
civilization will stagnate conducive to the dispasand die.”
sionate study of political
idealogies.
The Student
hailed
President Furnas
the ruling of the Appellate Senate strongly believes
Division declaring himself that it has a responsibility
to complement the work of
“very pleased.” The Unithe classroom and provide
defended
the
Senversity
ate’s program from its in- students with an opportuniception, and Dr. Furnas ty to listen and question the
political
said, after the December proponent of a
directly.”
philosophy
that,
announcement
28th
“It’s certainly all right with
‘“The Political Spectrum
me if the Student Senate
of
a Contemporary World’
reinvites Dr. Aptheker to is a series of coordinated
speak.”
lectures presenting a continuum of political thought
Conservafrom Fascism
tism Liberalism Socialism
Communism. Each speaker was carefully selected
w i t h
The award sighted the after consultation
faculty.
of
the
Senate, “For upholding the members
They were chosen not only
of Academic
principals
because they are identified
Freedom and futhering the with a particular philoconcept of a free univer- sophy, but also because
sity through its series, The they are well qualified to
Political Spectrum of a intelligently articluate that
philosophy.”
Contemporary World”
...

-

-

Series Receives ACLU Award
Twp years ago, Novem
1962, the Niagara

her 6,

Frontier
American

Branch of the
Civil Liberties
n ion presented to Senate
President Richard Erb it’s,
Sfcl cond annual civil liberties
award

-

-

Dr. Herbert Aptheker, the
last of a series of political
speakers, will speak this Friday on “Marxism: Its Relevance to the U.S. Today”. The
lecture, sponsored by the Student Senate, will be given in
the Fillmore Room at 3:00
p.m. The content of the lecture will be a defense of
DR. HERBERT APTHEKER
Marxism, in the context of an
overall philosophical view. The lecture will be the same
one that was originally planned for October 31, 1962.
Today and tomorrow the original Aptheker Convocation tickets may be exchanged for new ones. Thursday and Friday new tickets will be issued. In order to
exchange or get a new ticket any member of the Staff,
faculty or student body must go to the ticket booth in
Norton Hall with proper identification. There will be
600 tickets issued for the Fillmore Room and 500 tickets
for the Norton Listening Rooms. Friday, no one- will be
allowed into either room without a ticket and an identification card.
Aptheker Background

Dr. Herbert Aptheker was born in Brooklyn in 1915.
His early education was in the New York City public
schools. He received his Bachelor’s, Master’s, and Doctorate at Columbia University, his disertation was on,
‘‘Amercan Negro Slave Revolts.”
A veteran of World War II, Dr. Aptheker entered
the Army as a private and after serving four years in
the field artillery ended his military career with the rank
of Major. In 1946-47 Dr. Aptheker was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.

He is presently the assistant editor of the quarterly
Mainstream and editor of Political Affairs. Dr. Aptheker’s latest books include, “The American Revolution”
and “The World of C. Wright Mills”. Dr. Aptheker is
also a professor of History at the Jefferson School of
Social Sciences.

President Finkelstein
Releases Statement
The following statement has been released by Senate President
Robert P. Finkelstein.

‘The Student Senate of
the State University of New
York at Buffalo announces
that Dr. Herbert Aptheker
will speak in the Fillmore
Room on Friday, November
13, 1964 at 3:00 p.m. The
address will be open to stu
dents and faculty only, up
on presentation of validated identification cards and
tickets of admission. Dr.

Aptheker will be the final
speaker of the series en-

titled, ‘The Political Spectrum of a Contemporary
World,’ which has includ-

ed

speakers

on

fascism

conservatism, liberalism &amp;
socialism. Dr. Aptheker

will speak on Communism.
His speech is entitled,
‘Marxism; Its Relevance to
the U S. Today

�</text>
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,

EXCHANGE
program

f=
.

V
VOLUME 15

pane

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, MARCH 5, 1965

19

NO.

Senate Elections Next Week
Civil Rights Demonstration
On Hiring Planned Monday
SUE GREENE
A demonstration to protest the
hiring practices oi ihe maintenance department at SUNYAB has
been planned by the Civil Rights
&lt; ummittee
for Monday at 3:00
m. in front of Hayes Hall,
l or the past several weeks the
■ituation has been under investigation by members of the Civil
By

Welk claims that he
practices no discrimination and
lias always been happy to entertain Negro applicants.
Members of the Civil Rights
Committee attempted to contact
Dr. Furnas and were told to get
in touch with Dr. Duffer, who
then referred them to Mr. Doppey,
who, in his turn suggested con(ion.

Mr

Ole iVIiss Exchange
Program Discussed
The administration of SUNYAB is entertaining a suggestion
from the Civil Rights Committee
to attempt an exchange program
with the University'of MississippiUnder the program, students
from UB will spend their junior
year at "Ole Miss". The administration here has already assured
the committee that students will
get full college credit for the
year spent away from the University of Buffalo.
(Cont’d on P. 8)

ELECTIONS INDEX
Editorial

Reflections
Platforms
Officers Candidates
Univ. Col. Candidates
Arts &amp; Sci. Candidates
Eng. &amp; Ed. Candidates
Sample Ballot Sheet

Ix&gt;is Mentor, chairman of the
election Committee has outlined
ihe voting practices and procedures which will govern Tuesday's
and Wednesday s Student Senate
elections.
All students in University College and Arts and Sciences must
have a validated ID card in order
to vole. Students enrolled in UC
and A&amp;S will use voting machines

to east thcr ballots.

Taper bal

lots will be available in Norton
for those registered in Engineer-

ing, Nursing. Pharmacy, and Busoess Administration.
Voting booths will be in operation next Tuesday and Wednesday in the balloting places and
time:

p. 4
p 5
p.

Validated ID Necessary to Vote

8-9

p. 10-11
p. 12
p. 13
p. 14
p. IS

University College

Tower Hall
Tues., 11-2 &amp;

—

4-6: Wed., 11-2

Clement Hall
Tues.. 11-2 4-6: Wed. 11-2
Goodyear Hall
Tues., 11-2 4-6: Wed , 11 2
Norton Union

&amp;

3-5

—

&amp;

&amp;

3-5

&amp;

3-5

—

&amp;

—

Tues 9-5

Wed

.

Arts A Sciences
lower Hall

—

Tues., 11-2 4-6: Wed., 11-2 3-5
Clement Hall
Tues.. 11-2
4-6 Wed.. 112 &amp; 3-5
Norton Union
Tues,, 9-5: Wed.. 9-5
&amp;

&amp;

—

&amp;

—

I.aw School students can vote in
Koom 205 Norton Tuesday and

Wednesday from 10-2. They will

be required to show ID cards

other valid proof.

or

Juniors and Seniors enrolled in
March

Nursing may vole Monday.

8 from 7-10 in the maintenance
office. Med-Dent students will also vote in the maintenance from
102 Tuesday and Wednesday

All students are reminded that
order for their vote to register they must pull the lever above
the candidate’s name down so that
an "x appears in the space. To
reopen the curtain the large levin

er must lie pulled over complefe-

9-5

Corps Volunteers Reflect on Experiences
Must Overlook Shortcomings

By MARGO WALLACH

ARNOLD GRAF AND PETER RUBIN PLAN STRATEGY

Labor Committee. The
committee has discovered that
out of 350 people on the maintenance staff there are only two NeRights

groes.

The committee feels that the
situation cannot change in future
given the present hiring practices. Mr. Welk, in charge of university buildings and grounds, explained that he hires personnel
upon the recommendation of the
current staff. Since 99.5 per cent
are presently of the Caucasian
race, Mr. Welk was obliged to
agree that it was possible that
the situation will never change.
Applicants are hired on the
basis of work experience and
moral character, there being no
restrictions with respect to education or civil service examina-

tact with Mr, Welk. Mr. Welk. in
his turn, feels that he cannot sign
an agreement without Mr. MeCay’s approval, who is in the hospital with a heart attack. Consequently. Mr. Michael Lappin,
chairman of the Civil Rights Committee, has not yet been successful in his negotiations with Mr.
Welk for a firm commitment to
alter the situation. Mr. Welk asserts that he is quite willing to
make such a commitment but is
not sufficiently placed in the
University hierarchy to do so.
Mr. Lappin continues in his efforts to find the focus of power
within the University but should
he fail to do so before next Mon-

Monday marks the celebration
of the fourth anniversary of the
establishment of the Peace Corps,
and the arrival of a team of
Peace Corps representatives and
returned volunteers on campus.

Mr. Rodgers contends that one
of the most important qualities

necessary for an enjoyable experience in the Peace Corps is the
ability to overlook shortcomings
and to get along well with people.
Thus, the peer rating forms which

Dr. Simon, Associate Professor
of Public Relations at Utica College and advisor to Utica’s “Tangerine”, was invited by the Student Publications Board to conduct a program on student journalism this week. A total of ten
people responded to this opportunity. including the advisor, edi&gt;ors and a reporter of the Spectrum. Minor staffs of all student
publications on this canipus were
conspicuously absent.
Dr. Simon discussed guide rules

Miss Brown and Mr Rodgers

agreed that the common Philip-

pine philosophy of life is very
relaxed and can be expressed
in two words: “bahala na." The
English equivalent might be. "If
I do not do it today, perhaps I’ll
get around to doing it some other
time,"

Enid Coel was delighted when
the Nigerian children greeted
her, “Welcome, Madame," whether she was coming or going. She
found them to be especially

students and faculty are invited to join the picket line
around Dr. Furnas’ office.
day,

friendly, being constantly glued

to

■or good

PEACE CORPS DISPLAY EXCITES INTEREST IN NORTON

Hk.

newswriting. He men-

tioned proximity,
magnitude,
Prominence, meaning to the reader and human interest as the important elements of a newsworthy
story, in writing news, he said, a
ston- must begin with the end
"suits of the issue
discussed.
Use your eyes," Dr. Simon
stressIf nothing seems to happen,
'
say so,”
The bulk of the lime that Dr.
simon was here was
spent discussing the conflict between the
student Senate, the Student Pub-

"“'"v

Students pausing at the Peace
Corps information center in Norton this week heard a number
of
of fascinating reflections
dreamlike experiences in different nations of the world.
Dana Rodgers laughingly remembered his encounter with a
nervous, unhousebroken python
at a Science fair in the Philippines, one of Mr. Rodger’s most
irritating frustrations was during
the Patron Saint Day fiesta in his
community when there was an
overwhelming supply of food to
.
.
more than he could
eat
manage
did attempt

DR. SIMON

structure of the Publications
Board must be vastly changed
Dr. Simon said that a Board

should include the top editorial
staffs of all student publications.
He said that editors of student
publications should ideally be
elected by the editorial staffs of
the publications.

her

heels,

and

chivalrous

enough to carry her books for her
on their heads. The family ties
in Nigeria, she feels, are much

lications Board and the Spectrum.
Dr. Simon agreed with Editor
John Kowal who felt that the
M

thousand pesos per person arc

placed on one single combat.
Customarily, the losing roster
provides dinner while the winning roster rises in value and
fights again..

Journalism Seminar Informative

A seminar on journalism turned
out to be a dialogue between the
Spectrum editors, the Publications Board Chairman and Dr.
Raymond Simon.

Each rooster, she explained. is equipped with metal
blades on its heels, and thus all
the fighting is done with the
heels. Men of all social strata
spend fortunes of money to raise
rosters, and bets as high as two
P.rown,

although

he

to compensate for
his inadequate appetite by visiting other communities at various

times when he heard of fiestas

being celebrated in their vicinities, According to Mr. Rodgers,
he and his colleagues required
one month to adjust to Philippine
food, and upon their return to

the United Stales, another month

was necessary

to readjust

their native foods.

to

volunteers complete during their

training period are invaluable
for predicting the probable success of their fellow volunteers in
future, possibly more complex social relationships.
Brenda Brown suddenly recalled the popularity of “tuba."
a local Philippine drink. To make
"tuba," the natives extract the
sap of coconut trees, pour it into
old, dirty kerosene cans, and
allow it to ferment. When the
merchants begin to sell the fresh
sap in front of the stores in the
morning, the drink is comparable
to an American fruit juice. By
afternoon, the drink begins to
taste like vinegar, and by evening ,it is quite intoxicating. Mr.
Rodgers and Miss Brown both
agreed that one taste of “tuba"
was enough to satiate their appe-

tites for the remainder of their
years residence in the Philip-

two

pines.
Cock-Fighting Appealing

The traditional Philippine sport
of cock-fighting appealed to Mias

stronger than those in the United
States, and, consequently, she
feels that the people feel a greater responsibility toward their
fellow citizens than we do in
this country. Miss Coel perhaps
felt a tinge of regret at leaving
Nigeria where she had the feeling of being someone rather
special and different from the
people around her to return to
the frustration of being merely
one fo a common mass of Americans in the United States.

Precision of Language Sfrossod
Bob Haupt was impressed with
the rich culture of the inhabitants of Bogota, Colombia. The
people of this land seem to place
great emphasis on the precision
of their language, on the arts,
and on the recitation of poetry,
and on the whole are very intellectual and philosophically oriented Mr Haupt claimed he has
never seen a city with so many
bookstores as has Bogota furthermore, he was at first somewhat astonished to discover that
customarily the festivities of the
(Coat’d on P. 8)

�PAGE TWO

Editors Elected
The editorial staffs of two
major UB publications have elected their choice of editors-in-chief
for next year Jeremy Taylor was
unanimously chosen for the head
spot on the Spectrum. Michael
Henry won the vote for editor-

Friday, March 5,

SPECTRUM

ture Editor and writer of “Reflcc
(ions

Mr: Taylor has extensive ex
perience in journalism including
executive postiions at a professional press and national publication. Mr. Taylor is a founder

1965

Senators Evaluate 1964-65

The last session of the 1964-65
Student Senate calendar was not
called to order because a quorum
was not reached A few of the
Senators who did come for the
meeting discussed the record of
this year’s Student Senate with
the Spectrum.
Most agreed that the accomplishments of the Senate were
overshadowed by student apathy
and unfavorable publicity concerning their mistakes. Linda
Gunsberg, Senator from Arts and
Sciences said, “The Senate’s lack
of dedication to the new constitution came to a fine note tonight
when the quorum was not
achieved.” Miss Gunsberg had attemped to have 2 hour meetings
called for each night until the
new Senate takes over, for the
porpose of completing discussion
on the constitution.

fieant and worthwhile. I hope the

covered by this year's body in

Student

Association will
carry on many of the things that
we have not finished.'

next

eluding the establishment of a
Student Discount Service, an ex
cellent convocations program, im-

It wit the best of timet; it wat the wortt of timet. It wat an age of
witdom; it wat an age of foolithnett . . We had everything before
ut; we had nothing before ut . .
.

Senate Leavet Unfinithed Work

JEREMY TAYLOR
ship of the Buffalonian by 9-1-1.
Both elections were conducted
Tuesday. The editorial staff of
the Spectrum interviewed Rewrite editor Paul Nussbaum and
Mr. Taqlor, who is presently Fea-

MICHAEL HENRY

of the New Student Review and

has served the Spectrum for the
last two years.

Mr. Henry has been a Buffalonian editor for the last two years.

Miss Gunsberg continued, “Maybe this request on my part was a
bit unreasonable, but the point
to be made is that this constitution was introduced by this Senate and final action on it should
come from this Senate. What kind
of Senate leaves its unfinished
work to the next Senate for no
other reason than a lack of interest?"

.

Mr. Finkelstein felt that the
Senate was split on philosophical
grounds rather than along party
lines as it had been in the past.
Reflecting on the Presidency he
said, “At times it has been a hell
of a headache but I will leave
with mixed emotion s.” He
pointed to outstanding business

provement in next year’s calendar regarding Spring Vacation

and lengthening of library hours
during final exams.

Miss Gunsberg also commented
on the accomplishments of the
Senate, “Anything achieved by
this year’s Senate,” she said, “was
not through a united effort; in-

•

French Student Money
PARIS (CPS)—French college
students have begun a drive to
gain adoption of a national system of salaries for all persons

pursuing regular university stu

dies

The drive is expected to cul
minate in a debate this spring
when a Socialist-supported bill

will be brought before the Na
tional Assembly,
The National Union of Stu
dents. Fiance's largest student

organization, is calling for a
monthly salary of 450 francs
(about $90.i to be paid to every
student taking courses toward
a degree
The National Union thinks -students should be paid to continue

their education because their
studies constitute "an apprenticeship of the country's social and
economic life Student work represents an investment by the
nation, they continue
The salary system, they argue,
would help to democratize French
higher education, where sons of
industrial workers and farmers
seldom continue their studies.
An extensive system of scholarships exists, but the students
claim that it is cumbersome and
discriminatory. Presently about
one-fifth of France’s 350,000 college students are getting some
official help.
There is also a limited system
of in-training salaries for certain
students in teachers' colleges who
sign contracts to join the teachers’ corps after graduation.
”

Opinions on the work done by
this years Senate covered a broad
spectrum. President Robert FinkThe cost of the proposed sys- elstein said, “Upon leaving office
tem is estimated at $340 million 1 feel there are many things we
a year, but the students contend have done that have been signithat half this sum could be made

up by eliminating scholarships,
lax exemptions and family allowances for parents of college
students, and subsidies for student restaurants and dormitories.
Official reaction to the propo
sal has been cool. Education of
ficials said they recognize the
need to widen educational oppdr
(unities, but as a result of long
conflict with French students
over one demand or another, of-

ficials tend to think the latest
idea is demagogic.
At the present time officials

are thinking in terms of improving the scholarship system, and
the Parlimentary debate this
spring is expected to result in
a clash between supporters of
scholarships and advocates of
salaries

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Special
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Special arrangements for Greyhound bus transportatioi
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favorable rates during Spring Recess are beim

available to students through the ticket Booth
Norton
Hall. The arrangements will include special
in
rates to New York City with departures direct from
made

he campus. Those students interested in securing bus
ickets for special service to New York City should
Indicate and register their reservations at the ticket
sooth. Buses will leave Norton at 4:00 pirn. on
:

riday,

March 12.

�Friday,

March S, 1965

‘Speech in Politics; 1964’
Panel Discussion Topic
Student Senate Convocaand the Departtions Committee
Spech will
ment of Drama and
host a panel discussion WednesThe

students and faculty en"Speech in Politics: 1964.”
in
It will be held at 4:00 p.m.
the Conference Theatre. Sister
M Julianus McKee, S.S.N.D.,
ph d„ Professor of Speech and
Chairman of the Department at
College in St. Louis
Notre Dame
will discuss “Foreign Policy in
day for

titled

Julianus received her
■r's degree from St. Louis
I'Diversity in 1953 and completed her requirements for the Ph.D.
degree from the Department of
Spech and Theatre at the University of Illinois in 1962.

Film, Speaker Explain Asian Picture

rector and Station Manager and
a radio and television announcer
for Westinghouse Broadcasting
Co. in Boston. Later in New York
City, Mr. Cobb served as a pro-

ducer-announcer for WRVR-FM
and a radio-TV producer for the
Broadcasting and Film Commission. Two of his programs have
been seen on CBS-TV and NBC-

the National Platforms.” Profesir Richard Cobb, Co ordinator of
Communications at Onadaga Community College in Syracuse, will
speak on "Domestic Issues in the
( ampaign.” Dr. Michael H. Prosr. Assistant Professor of Drama
■,ad Speech at the University of
buffalo, will chair the Panel and
will discuss "Campaign Personos." The three panelists will
-out a similar discussion at
New York State Speech As- ciation
Convention March 13

&lt;•

,/»

~

A

In 1959, she was named Associate Professor of Speech at
Notre Dame College. In her doctoral thesis, Sister dealt with
Booth Luce’s Rhetoric
Communism while she

Claire

was a Congresswoman.

Wednesday evening Sister
will address faculty and
students at St. Joseph Teachers
College in Buffalo. Her appearance on the State University Convocations Program will mark the
first time a nun has been hosted
Julianus

by the Committee.

J

-/k

Professor Richard A. Cobb
TV. Stanley College in Boston
presented him with an honorary
Master of Oratory degree and
he holds an M.S. from Syracuse
University where he taught at
the Television and Radio Center.
Professor Prosser received his
Ph.D. in September from the University of Illinois in Urbana. For
three years he was a teacher of
Latin and spech at the Urbana
Junior High School and he taught
Public Speaking and English for
the Foreign Born at the Champaign Senior High School Adult
Education Program. He joined
the Department of Drama and
Speech at the State University
of New York at Buffalo in 1963.

His doctoral thesis concentrated
on the speeches of Adlai E. Stevenson in the United Nations and
was based partly from research
and study which he made at the
United Nations, the United States
Mission, and the State Depart
ment in the summer of 1962. In
January, Dr. Prosser assumed the
office of Executive Secretary of
the New York State Speech Association for four years.

Debate Society
Elects Officers

Blood Donors Needed
For Arnold Air Society
Drive on March 25

New debate officers for 1965-66
re elected by Society members
a general meeting in Norton

last Monday evening. They
arc Diane Hayes, president; Charles Liarakos, vice-president: Ellen
Abelson, secretary; and Robert
Dragone, treasurer.

I! debaters placed third out of
enty-two schools at the recent
■nt State Annual Tournament,
chard Fleisher and Robert Dra"Me (affirmative) scored a three
in—one loss record while Allan
ayne and Charles Liarakos (neg-

■

&gt;

lue) scored with two wins and

losses. The UB unit met
ams from the University of

'o

1’ittsburg, Dayton, Bowling Green,
and Ohio State. Mr, E. Richard

assistant coach, accompan-

led the group.
'

arsity debaters Diane

Hayes

'■d Hedda Beckman and Novice

haters Allan Wayne and Charles
arakos will participate in a sixbund tournament at Boston Uniersity this weekend. Each 'twonan team will debate switch-side,
alternately taking both the affirmative and negative positions. The
unit will be coached by Mr. Terry
!i
Society advisor.

claims of outside aid in arms was
ridiculous in light of the massive
supply of captured U. S. guns,
(pictured) and domestic arms.
Miss Kissilng agreed with Mr.
McCarter's claim that the Viet
Congo were indeed receiving arms
from the Communists.

Alpha Lambda Delta

Freshman Honorary
Holds Tea for 38
Thirty-eight Freshman women,
having achieved a scholastic average of 2.5 or better in their first
semester of college, have become
eligible for membership in Alpha
Lambda Delta. At a tea. given
in their honor Tuesday. Feb. 23.

the

structure

and purposes of the

organization were explained to
them.

Alpha Lambda Delta is a National Honor Society, devoted pri-

marily to the acknowledgement
of scholastic distinction and to the
enhancement of learning. It is an
organization which is designed to
bring women of exceptional intellectual ability together, not only
that they might benefit through

•

Moral Crimes Committed
Miss Fran -KUsling, a National
irdinator of 'The May Second
Movemer
pointed to the fact
that the
enova Accords had
S, interven
been broken b\
name
affair

mutual association, but also that
they might learn to apply their
knowledge in the most prolific
manner.
Freshmen, to whom
in Alpha Lambda
Delta has'been extended are: Susan Bender. Susan Bernstein, Jan
ct Bochmann, Marion Brcitharl.
Marsha Brenner, Patricia Christy,
Marcia Cohen, Sheryl Elgort, Jill
Engclberg, Ellen Finkelstein. Ju-

those

Professor Cobb is an Assistant
Professor of Speech and co-ordinates Television Activities and
Audio-Visual Aids at Onadaga
Community College. Under his
direction the college's closed circuit television has been used for
lectures in English, Health, and
Dental Chemistry. He began his
professional career in New England as a radio actor and announcer. He became Program Di-

For 1965-66

A film produced by the National Liberation Front of South
Viet Nam, illustrating American
atrocities in Viet Nam, spawned
a heated debate here this week.
The film, made for showing to
Vietnamese audiences, was
brought to the United States by
the “May Second Movement,” a
radical student peace group.
Charles McCarter, a twentyfive year old freshman and Air
Force Veteran,
defended the
United States' position in South
Viet Nam. He said, 'We have as
much or more right to be there
than the Communists” and added
"that from the beginning there
has been subversion and aggression from the north.."

'

tor

against

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

Over 340 donors arc needed
for the March 25 Blood Drive
sponsored by the Arnold Air Society. The first phase of the annual blood drive starts this week.
Members of the Arnold Air Society and the Angel Flight are
taking pledges from those over 21,
and making parental consent
forms available to those under
21.

Arnold Air Society has secured
two mobile blood units from the
American

Red

Cross,

Buffalo

against the people of Viet Nam.
Miss Kissling sighted examples
of American atrocities reported
in Life Magazine last summer.
The movie, narrated by Miss
Kissling, pictured “looting and
burning" of South Vietnamese
villages, "peasants converted into

set

up of
veritable con-

forced laborers” and the

“strategic hamlets;
centration camps” by the U. S.
and Diem troops. At one point.
Mr. McCarter pointed out, the
narrator disCribed the use of
bloodhounds while the film
showed German Shepherds.
American Claims Ridiculous
The film showed Vietnamese
peasants fighting with the Viet
Cong guerrillas and making pit
traps and “simple weapons.” The

narration

said

that

American

FRANCIS KISSILING
Discussion, which became quite
healed at times, centered on the
recently published State Department White Paper on Viet Nam.
One of the points argued Was the

questionable origin and supply of
Viet Cong. Miss Kissling main-

tained for the most part hat the
guerrilla forces are South Vietnamese peasants fighting to free
their country from U. S. imperialism and dictatorship. Mr. McCarter sighted the White Paper’s
reference to the origins of supply and control of these forces
as being Hanoi and the North
Vietnamese Comunist Party. He
substantiated this point by
pointing to Czechoslovakian produced Mauser rifles recovered
from guerrillas.

the basement cafeteria of
Men’s Dormitory. Every fifteen
minutes. 16 people will be scheduled to give blood between the
hours of 9;00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
Mr. John Hollands of Arnold Air
Society was told by Mr. Potter,
American Red Cross representative, that much of the donated
blood would be used in open
heart surgery within a few days
of the drive.

All persons over the age of 18
may donate. This includes students, faculty members, and employees at the University of Buf
falo.
Reservations can be made now
for the annual Blood Drive which
win be held Thursday, March 25

dith Gagola, Katherine Gasdick,
Marcia Gerber, Barbara Green.
Rochelle Greenberg, Jean Hoffmann, Dianna Ives, Roberta Katcher, Marilyn Katz, Judith Kerr.
Alice Lokiec; Terri Marmor. Gail
Myers, Gloria Opiela, Joanne Pieczynski, Margo Rakita. Julie Ruszczyk, Anne Selman, Dawn Shinal, Judith Silverman, Paula Silverman, Tracy Suor, Sandra Thomas, Naomi Tobias, Susan Untracht, Rochelle Wechter, Nancy
West, and Christine Wilgos.

Four Freshman women, who also qualified for membership on
the basis of their cumulative average for their Freshman year,
are: Marie Brand, Ronnie Bromberg. Barbara Dorczak, and Susan
Yeomans.

Formal initiation will be held

Tuesday, March 30.

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�Friday, March 5,

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

THE DIVINE CONFLICT

(Cont’d

from P.

2)

dividuals worked by themselves
or within small groups. There
was, in my estimation, no attempt by the President to establish working rapport among the
Senators. This must be altered."

Every spring the campus is turned into the battle
ground for the “diving conflict.” The different political
factions are busy filing violations,' putting up and tearing
down signs, and planning their usual nonsense.
There are some who believe (despite this year’s
Senate) that student government can be an effective 'Stifling and Sterile' Atmosphere
means of helping students gain a voice in their destiny.
To those people goes the sAd and difficult job of transHenry Simon, Senior Senator,
expressed his feelings toward the
forming the Senate into an effective group.
Hoping to find people that could reform the Senate Senate of the past year. “Rather
than dealing in specific critithe Spectrum conducted interviews open to all candimerely suggest
dates. We can only regret the failure of the United cisms, I would
prevailing atmosphere
that
the
Students candidates to participate in this procedure. was intellectually stifling and
After exhaustive hours of meeting with the party chairsterile. Only in rare instances,
man, Peter Ostrow, the party still refused to come. They such as consideration of the Feintranscribed
and
insisted upon having the interviews
berg-complex, was there any real
printed in the paper. When confronted with the treexchange of ideas. Yet even in
mendous cost of this procedure they refused to pay for this case the real issues were obany of it, yet they still insisted it be done in that way. scured by needless semantic
When it was suggested that the interviews be open to quibbling and parliamentary inefficiencies.
the public, they still refused.
Is it possible they only wished to make unreason‘’The Student Senate, “Mr. Siable demands that the paper would have to refuse in mon continued, “seems to have
order that they might discredit informative reporting
imitated, in style and approach,
with the stigma of bias. We think this may be the case the nature of the administration.
and urge you to watch the campaign for such activity. Although the Sehate’s formal
with the
The paranoid attitude and actions of the United stands may be at odds
administration, it is largely guilty
Students Party are unfortunate and are surely a hin‘me-tooism.’

Why can’t the
of
drance to their own activities.
Senate be a forum for discussion
Left with only one party to interview the Spectrum of crucial and relevant issues,
has choosen those candidates that, through the interand not the sophistic debate
view and by other means, have shown some promise of ground which is all it often is?”
being effective student leaders.
Mr. Simon said, “The Senate
has assumed an administrative
CLINTON DEVEAUX FOR PRESIDENT
Clinton Deveaux has proven his ability to lead. As burden which, to be shouldered,
a University College Senator his voting record speaks demands too muchof of interested
maintaining
persons. Instead
for itself. He has further shown his abilities as Chair(and enlarging) a bureaucratic esman of the Union Board House Committee, the Senate tablishment I wish we could get
Executive Committee, Vice-President of the Freshman back to ideas.”
Class Council and a member of the House plan and the
Dan Silber, University College
Senate Convocations Committee. Mr. Deveaux has
shown that he can handle responsibility, is aware of the Senator expressed the opinion
that the Senate this year did not
situation that he faces, and has definite plans as to edulive up to the potential it showed.
cating Senators and solving the communication problem He
said, “The schism in the Senas well as transforming the Seante into a body of effec- ate could not exactly be called
tive action. Vote for Clinton Deveaux.
liberal vs. conservative.”
ROSEMARY BROWN FOR VICE PRESIDENT
Rosemary Brown offers experience that she gained Campus Affairs vs. Off-Campus
while working on the National Student Association Committee, International Student Affairs Committee, CampHe felt that the Senate should
us Barrel Committe and as an aid at the Summer Planning devote more time to campus afa
to
willingness
Conferences. She has expressed
do the fairs and student activities. “I
many tasks and dirty work that would be required of think the university should alan effective Vice-President. Vote for Rosemary Brown. ways come first," Mr. Silber said,
referring to the “time wasted by
SANDY SE1DE FOR TREASURER
the dead weight on the Senate.”
Sandy Seido is eminently qualified for the position He said, “There has been a defiof Treasurer. His experience as Treasurer at Monroe nite lack of respect shown for the
Community College, and his participation on this years Office of the President this year,
Finance Committee as well as his certification from the 1 don’t know if it is the fault of
the Senate or the President.” Mr,
American Institute of Banking speak for themselves.
that the tangible prosIn addition he is endorsed by the present treasurer, Silberofsaid
a new constitution was
pect
William Berger, who said,
the most
“There is one position in student government in which experience and proven ability are the criteria in choosing a
candidate. The position is that of Treasurer
The Campus
Alliance Party has chosen a candidate for Treasurer with
experience proven ability, that person being Sandy Seide,
who not only has served on this Finance Committee of this
year's Student Senate, but also served as Treasurer of the
Student Association of Monroe Community College.
Unfortunately the United Students Party has selected a candi
date only to fill in the ballot on the election machine. Their
candidate for Treasurer, as sincere as he may be about doing
a good job. does not possess the necessary background and
insights into both the Senate and the Finance Commitee
which would enable him to do a good job.”

Vote for Sandy Seide.

ELLEN CARDONE FOR SECRETARY
Ellen Cardone visualizes the office of Secretary as
a creative post which could effectively be used to better
the Senate through improved communication. Her outlined plans for increasing the scope and activity of the
Secretary as w'ell as her ideas relating to the prominence
of academic activities in financial allocations make her
the obvious choice for Secretary. This coupled with her
experience as co-chairman of the Senate Convocations
Committee and her other activities point her up as what
she is. a serious student, interested in the improvement of
the total educational experience on this campus.
Vote or Ellen Cardone.

Arts and Science

oCetteri

Senate...
...

LINDA GUNZBERG FOR A &amp; S SENATOR
As incumbent Senator from the Gpllege of Arts
and Science, Linda Gunzberg offers a fine voting record,
a wealth of experience from her many activities including Union Board, Residence Halls, and the Senate. She
has demonstrated leadership capabilities while on the
Executive and International Affairs Committees, of the
Student Senate, and the Faculty-Student Committee for
Academic Freedom. Vote for Linda Gunzberg.

important undertaking

of the Senate and noted the need
for a drastic reorganization of
student government. “What is

needed is closer lines of comunication between the Student Senate and the Administration and
more student support.”
Clinton Deveaux said, “The
failings of the Senate have been
more evident than its accomplishments, Complete detachment

from the committee structure of
the Senate was a major problem
on the Senate floor. That should
never happen.

the clditor

to

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

Candidate Misconduct
platform, was hoping to accomplish in winning the elections. He
rudely dismissed me, with the
following words: “Sorry, honey,
but you do not have a vote
and
I do not have time to waste on
you,”
I think it is a bad situation that
so many of us students are ignorant as to the kind of people
we have chosen to act as our representatives. And, it would be an
even sadder situation, if these
people succeed because it is oh
vious that they are not interested
in our concerns, but rather, their
own self-glory.

To The Editor:

In regard to the upcoming Stud e n t Senate elections, I would
like to inform the students of one
certain candidate for president on
the United Students’ ticket. I
would like to relate an event,
which proves my previous statement. Perhaps I should inform
you first that I am a night school
student, enrolled in the Millard
Fillmore College, and that most
under discusof the matters
concerning the day stusion
dents, also affect the night school
students. Upon approaching Mr.
Sargent, on the same date, I questioned him as to what he, and his

—

—

—

Mary-Martha Zoll

APS-CRO Conflict
in the CRO; they had been sent
by the Senate and had to get by
the CRO before returning to the

TO THE EDITOR:

I wish to thank Gerald Gross
of the Atheistic Philosophical Society for bringing our publica-

Senate for reconsideration.

Mr. Gross states that true liberals are working to eliminate
discrimination, ignorance and
loud-mouthed intolerance, I agree.
Let me mention a few aspects of
the Newman program which is
open to anyone. Newman has an
“adopted" Negro family. In addition, Newman members have
assisted St. Nicholas parish in
their recreation program for children from low income families.
Last summer five Newman members did religious census work in
Utah; they received no pay. For
the second year, we have a Comparative Religious class which
meets every Tuesday in Norton
330; guest speakers from Eastern
and Western religions discuss the
precepts of their belief. March 7,
Newman has invited other members of the CRO to attend a Com
munion Supper and observe our
new liturgy. In short, the New
man Apostolate can be proud of
its contributions to our University and community.

tion Ditcosiion to the attention
of the student body. However,
several points in his letter demand clarification.
First of all, the Newman Apostolate is not opposed to the establishment of an Atheist Club. We
are opposed to the admission of
the APS into the Council of Religious Organizations and to Senate financing of the APS.
The crux of the APS-CRO issue
has nothing to do with defining
religion. In fact, we agree that
religion may be defined to include atheism. The decision of
the CRO to exclude the APS is
clear when the following is considered:

1. The CRO constitution states:
“The purpose of this council shall
be the promotion of religious
welfare, and to be a single body
representing all religious organizations in Nniversity affairs.”
The APS said they could not support this purpose.

Before Mr. Gross speaks of discrimination, ignorance and loud
mouthed intolerance, he should
remove his club posters which depict broken crosses and cracked
Stars of David. He should revise
the Theist Manifesto, an emotional hodgepodge of verbiage,
and replace it with one worthy
of an intelligent mind. If we’re
going to have an Atheist Club
this campus, let’s have a good
one
or none at all.

2. The Atheist Manifesto states;
“It will be the purpose of the
Atheist Club to act as a counterforce at this University to the
already well-established and active religious organizations which
strike us as resembling those
typical promulgators of garbage
etc.” The APS upheld this
purpose.

It is obvious that the scope of
the CRO, apart from any definition of religion, does not include
the APS as it presently exists.
It should also be noted that the
APS did not desire membership

THE

...

Bob Ryder, President,
Newman Apostolate

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the Slate University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except fo
f
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JOHN P. KOWAl
Managing Editor
Refer Rubin
Bernard D'kman
Business Manager
New* Editor
Barbara Strauss
Advertising Manager
Howard Auerbach
Ass'f News Editor
Trudy Stern
Circulation Manager
Alice Ostrander
- Jeremy Taylor
Feature Editor
Re-Write Editor Paul Nussbaum
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Allan Scholom
Photo Editor
Edward Joscplv
Copy Editor
Marcia Ann Orszulak
Faculty Advisor
.William Siemermq
Layout Editor
- David
Edelman
Financial Advisor
Dallas Garber
-

“The Senate has failed to take
action when it should have and

sometimes it has acted too little
and too late. It is the duty of
student government to express
views. The Senators failed to take
positions on many significant issues."

Trudy Stern, Senator from University College, felt that all sig-

nificant contributions of student
government this year were the
results of the efforts of a very
few individuals working around
the Senate rather than with it.
“Leadership on the Senate has
been invisible. It is sad that interested people avoid the Senate
for expediency’s sake, rather than
go through the bureaucratic
wringer. The Student Senate does
not deserve laurels for the efforts
of so few.”

__

r

the Editor

1965

...

—

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Marge Rakita, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann, Meryl Frank,
Sharon Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Marion Michael, Debbie Rubie, Scott
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Greene, Sue
Teifler,

Eileen

Sue

,uffy, Bill Cortes, Sue Fuller, Nina Kostraba, Loni Klipstein, Joey Elm, Jim Bloge't
Skip Blumberg, Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis, Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters, W i| l“,,T '
Saloman, Joan Fox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Giglia, Harold Bob, Chuck Cummings.
Raymond Votpe, Jerome Taylor, Ann Gruber, Benoit Bourgois, Sue Melvin, Linda Cor v
Susan Thomas, Marsha Alt, Nancy Simonoff, Rebecca Citron, Rebecca Weinberg Jav
Nisberg, Margo Wallach, Elaine Barron, Alan Goldstein
Staff: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff,, Steve Feigin, Stan lichwala, Steve
Schuelein, Steve Oberstein, Martin Jade, Mike Caifro, Harvey Starr
Photography Staff; David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Sutan Wdrtman, 0.
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Subscription S3.00 per year,' circulation
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Represented for national advertising by
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I

�Friday,

March 5, 1965

f*

SPECTRUM

•

•

•

The Academic Efforts; A Progress Report

Personality
off the Week
GARY EVANS
Gary Evans, Regional President
of the Student Zionist Organiza-

tion, first became interested in
Israel five years age when he

went there on a student tour
sponsored by the Hebrew Cub
ture Council. While in Israel, he
had the opportunity to work on a
kibbutz where he developed a
deep interest in the fledgling na-

tion.
When he entered UB in 1962!
Gary helped form the UB chapter
of SZO. Through SZO, students
may learn about Israel, its past,
its present, and its future. Membership is not limited to students
of the Jewish faith. SZO believes
in unity and brotherhood among
Jews all over the world, and the
centrality of Israel for the Jewish
people. The interests of SZO include Jewish people all over the
world, not only in Israel.
“We have a place in the world.
We don’t feel beaten,” said Gary
of the SZO members. “SZO docs
not see the world in a hopeless
situation. The goal of SZO is not
to send everybody to Israel, but
to work for a better world. SZO’s
main purpose is an educational
one.”

ddditoriai

(Cont

’ d from

p 4)

University College
KIM DARROW FOR U.C. SENATOR
Kim Darrow possesses qualities of a magnitude rarely found in a Freshman. As one of the founders of the
Faculty-Student Committee for Academic Freedom he
has demonstrated his ability to initiate meaningful student activities. A Vice-President of the Liberal Religious
Fellowship he has shown himself capable to work in
positions of leadersip and responsibility.
Vote for Kim
Darrow.
RAYMOND VOLPE FOR U.C. SENATOR
Ray Volpe exhibits a rare combination of maturity
and idealism. As a Navy veteran returning to school
interested in, his own education he realized that there
were certain things wrong at this University. In order
to correct the situation he decided that he would have
to commit himself beyond the academic sphere. He has.
Vote for Ray Volpe.

jCetterA

to

the Editor

Due to a

lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter
be withheld upon request.
All letters must be typewritten, double
and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday .before publication.

Complete

Names will

Gross Attacked
TO THE EDITOR

The article of February 19 by
Gerald Gross has provoked concern among some science students
at SUNY at Buffalo. For one
thing, we object to the wild exaggeration that “the whole student
h idy is shocked to disbelief” over
a recent controversy. But more
offending was the unfounded
tatement “science students are
gradually realizing that theism is
ncompatable with scientific outook and turning awav from thesm”.

We,

science

students among

•.dentists dealing daily with the
arying elements of phenomenon
feel differently. This is
''

KSHSCTIOMS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

With the events of last week
and the pressure of the next, it
is time to speak briefly of the
American pastime, politics. In
the campus elections there arc
only four people I know well
enough to endorse wholeheartedly, and those are Clint Devaux,
Ray Volpe, Linda Gunsberg and
Kim Darrow.' 1 have known all
four of these candidates for some
time and have grown to respect
their wit. imagination, intelligence, and conviction. 1 know, al-

though not as well, the people
against whom they are running,
and it is my opinion that Clint,
Ray, Linda and Kim will do the
better jobs if elected. There are
other candidates whom I do not
know as well like Oslieb, Gugino,
Brown and Cardone. I would, and
probably will, vote for these candidates on election day.
We are now face to face With
the perennial political party
issue, 1 have watched this phenomenon for a number of years
and without fail the parties talk
big at elections, fall apart in the
months before summer vacation
(win or lose) are reformed by
Christmas of the following year,
under new leadership and with
completely new and usually different principles and programs.

It then becomes necessary for

everybody to change allegiance
again before the next election,
and the whole thing starts all
over again.
This year I have no particular
reason to believe that things will
be any diferent. I like the Campus Alliance platform better than
the United Students, and I have
more respect for Dave Bdelman
than Peter Ostrow, so I wooM
support Alliance over U.S., but
how effective either party

will be

depends on their ability to folfull
campaign promises, not just make
more a 11 r a c t i v e ones every

March.

I was planning to devote the
lest of this column to a discus-

sion of larger issues in our
worlds politics today, but it occurs to me that I’ve said most of
what I have to say before, that
nobody knows or cares about the
Spanish Civil War, that people do
not even like to read the word
“anarchism,” that the left in
America is dead from the neck
up and the waist down (all it has
left is guts), and that the difference between action and belief
is so great that anything I would
say would make me unhappy and
bore most everybody else. So just
forget it—

SZO has updated the meaning
of Zionism. Originally the goal
was to create Israel is a realstate. Now that Israel is a reality, the interests of Zionism can
be expanded.
The demonstrations in Ottawa*
is an example of interest in worldJOHN BONER
wide Jewry. The SZO demonstrated in front of the Russian Embassy to protest the unfair treatLast week, 1 tried to give a
could bring out small differences
ment of Soviet Jews by the Russhort History of the situation(s) between these two situations that
sian government. As Regional
would probably sway your thinkin which we are embroiled in ViPresident, Gary was permitted to
ing (for instance, 1 believe most
enter the embassy with a letter of etnam, We arc engaged in a polprotest. The Ambassador refused icy of intrusion that parallels that of us have forgotten that when
of the Russians in Cuba. In CuCastro won the Cuban revolution
to see, him, and the Council Genba, the Russians wanting to peragainst our dictator Batista, we
eral refused to accept the letter.
petuate the government of Eidel
were one of the first nations to
He called the demonstration "hostile”. The demonstration was a Castro, sent “technicians" to that whom he appealed for aid. Perisland. They also sent, along
haps if we had given it to him.
success, however, in that it was
good deal
we would have had a friendly Sogiven good news coverage. Many with their assistants, a
of arms and artillery. In Vietnam, cialist state at our doorstep, rathCanadians were made aware of
er than an unfriendly communist
we Sent “advisors" to help the
the situation in the Soviet Union
unpopular government stand in nation (better a Mexico than an
through the publicity.
control and arms and artillery to
. well, I digress).
an Albania .
No other demonstrations are help stem the flow of communism. Rather than try to sway your
planned in the near future. SZO
thinking, I will content myself
The pot calls the kettle black!
prefers to remain a peaceful, edwith trying to show the situation
Why is it belter for us to do
ucational group, only demonstratas I see it. We arc right now, very
ing in a crisis. An Israeli Indeprecisely what we have been
unpopular with the Vietnamese
blaming the communists for dopendence Day celebration is planpeople, to sum it up. here is a
ing? The situation now resembles
ned for April 17-19.
simplified explanation; the North
very
western
early
one
of
the
SZO is sponsoring trips to IsVietnamese hate us because they
tnoives where there were "good
rael. The newest work program
arc under direct influence from
and
"bad
guys”.
Obviously,
guys”
the communist Republic of China,
is a full year of work in Israel.
(the U:S.) arc the “good guys”
we
the the South Vietnamese people
The cost is only $540. It is open
and as "good guys”
Vietnam
in
dislike us intensely because we
to students. Ability to speak Hebe rash,
nothing
we
do
can
ever
insist on perpetuating an old. albrew is not necessary, since an
or dangerous; it must always be
most senile, you might say, govintensive Hebrew training course
heroic
and
well-advised.
ernment, which has practiced inis given in the first few months.
However, a thought has struck
tolerance for years. In addition to
While in Israel, the students are
which, the Country of Vietnam is
able to work on a kibbutz doing me and those of you who are
more religious than I. have probtoo basically primitive for the
work related to their major field
capitalistic system to appeal to
The goal of SZO is to send 1000 ably seen this, and no doubt will
anyone other than those already
students a year. The name of the be quick to call me out on it, and
that iS: the "golden rule". We say
wealthy. So many people arc saytrip is “Schcrut La'am" . . . “Serving: we (the U.S.) should, and
ice for the People". There is also "the Russians sent advisors to
Cuba, so why should not We send
must, leave Vietnam to whatever
a summer trip to Israel for $960
advisors to Vietnam?” Well, there
its fate may be. and we should
To apply, or to get information,
seems to be a conflict here, we
leave on the first boat! And this
write to the Student Zionist Or
also have an adage that says “two statement also goes to the Peoganization, 515 Park Avenue, New
ples Republic of China!
wrongs do not make right". I
York, New York.

COMMENTARY

JEFFREY OSLEEB FOR A &amp; S SENATOR
Jeffrey Osleeb has shown a deep concern for progressive and humanitarian activities. His membership
in S.A.N.E..C-O.R.E., the Faculty-Student Committee for
Academic Freedom and the Senate Civil Rights Committee emphasize his desire to serve his fellow man.
Vote for Jeffrey Osleeb.

spaced

PACE FIVE

not the place, in a school news
media to expound, although it is
common practice, upon religious
or anti-religious theory. We ask
Gerald to come to the Health Sci
ence Building and the hospitals
in which we work. Perhaps then
he can relate the true facts about
science students. He will at the
same time find that the truly scientific method is perhaps the
most "Liberal” approach to the
greater mysteries of life.
Elly Maul, Nancy Phclon,
Joanne Strenk, Marvanne
Mather, D. J. Moore, Dikne
Wisher, Marion Cary,
Medical Technology ’66

St. Aubyn to Lecture on Jean Genet Today
Professor Frederic St. Aubyn.
Chairman of the Division of Language and Literature at Elmira
College, ' will deliver a lecture
on the controversial French playwright Jean Genet, at 5:00 p.m.,
today in the Baird Recital flail.
The title of Professor St. Aubynls
talk is, "Jean Genet: A Vision
of Reality and The Rcaltiy of

Vision."

The talk is being offered free
to the community and the University staff in conjunction with
the Department’s production of
Genet’s play, The Balcony.
Friday, Mar 12, Leon Restingkcaeh will participate in a Symer, Irving Janis, and Milton Roposium on Attitude and Be-

havior Change from 9.00 am4:00 p.m. in Norton Hall. Please
obtain tickets at 312 Hayes Hall
Thursday from 2:304:00 p.m
each of the above-mentioned sci-

entists will be available for informal discussion of their own work
m Norton Union. Three separate
simultaneous sessions will be

held in Rooms 333, 334, and 335,
during which each scientist will
answer questions and comment
on work in his fiel.d. Sociology
faculty and graduate students are

most cordially invited to attend
A series of avant garde films
produced in the U.S. will be
screened at the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery during the Buffalo
Festival of The Arts today.

Sunday, the films will open at
2:30 p.m. in the Gallery Auditorium and continue nightly at
8:30 p.m, through March 13 With

matinees March 10 and 13.
The series will include "Eat",

produced

by

pop-artist

Andy

AVarhol; "Guns of the Trees”, by
Mekas; "Dog Star Man", by Brak
hage, as well as other films to be
announced.
The Festival, d e a 1 i ng with

avant carde movements in all the
arts, is sponsored by the Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy, with ihe
cooperation of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the State
University of Buffalo, the State
University College and the New
York Council on the "Arts.

�Friday, March 5,

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

1965

Education and Cultural Affairs

Education: Two Views
Dean Robert Fisk Responds
To Education Courses Scored
The summary of Dr. Davies’ address, which I appreciate the oportunity to see and to respond to, is a
highly colored over-statement; but it does express some
of the very real hazards to the success of education
courses and sequences.
1 would agree that irrelevance must be guarded
against. One source of irrelevancy is the explosion of
knowledge, which has occurred
in education as well as in other
fields. Trivialities, new or old,

should not be allowed to accumulate. Priorities must be assigned,

and the study of matters of less
immediate importance to the new

teacher should be deferred. Another source of irrelevancy is the
unwillful presentation of the
ideal as real, of the intent as
the deed. The problem of minimizing irrelevance is one of
which the faculty of the School
of Education is fully aware. It
has been an important basis for
continuing modifications of our
undergraduate education sequences, and continues to be.
Guard Against Impersonality
We
have been on guard,
whether successfully or not,
against ‘impersonality.’ This is
not an inevitable result of bigness, but is a danger. We are in
the process of experimenting

ROBERT FISK

with tutorials, as one way to
avert this danger. Our faculty,
including student teacher observers, has been quadrupled in
(Cont’d on P. 14)

DALE RIEPE
Professor of Philosophy
Never have so many been taught by so few with so
little preparation. This is true in Cuba, Ghana, and Indo-

nesia as well as in the United States. For the twentieth
century is the century of education as much as the century of science. In the nineteenth century only Germany
was atempting mass education and before that no one.
Today both students and teachers need patience.
For the brief time that I was
in administration I taught and attended committee meetings in
the morning, answered memos
and attended committee meetings
in the afternoon as well as succeeded the indigent. In the eve-

The more requirements and
credits, the more cheating and
the less learning occurs

The more committees to examine affairs, the less work gets

accomplished.

the

administration

The more coihmittees the students and faculty attend, the
more suspicious they become of
the administration.

Hence, a big university should
be ruled as if one is cooking a
small fish: low fire, and little
oil.

Each

teacher learns different

things from teaching just as each
teacher imports a different phil
osophy. My own viewpoint at
this period, having passed from
tutor to assistant, from assistant
to fellow, from fellow to assistant,
associate and full professor, and

progress.”

Davies saw education students

as part of the generation of college students who acutely feel
the “bigness and impersonality"
of the university, a feeling that
leads to alienation and lack of

identification with the institution
and its purposes. “The ‘angry
young man’ in the 400 student
lecture class on ‘Introduction to
Education’ or ‘Principles of
Techmg’ may well stay dissatisfied and angry when he begins
to teach,” he declared.
Davies indicated that the uni-,

der of Taoism:

less

sends

a beautiful new color television
set to his son in the Peace Corps
stationed in a remote Ethiopean
village where there is no electricity and no television station.
Such a situation can’t be helped
by improving the television set,
wishing for a more grateful son,
criticizing the motives of the
father, or berating the Ethiopians for their lack of technical

versity bears the responsibility
for improving this situation. Too
many colleges and universities
have not yet accepted teacher
education as “a legitimate and
front-rank responsibility of higher education." An increasing emphasis on research and specialization results in an “orphan status” for education courses.

ning I wrote memos, expressed
hostility to my family, and took
aspirin. Out of this 25 well as
earlier irresponsible experience
a certain amount of wisdom was
distilled. Put in the form set
down for us by Laotzu the foun-

The

Don Davies, Executive Secretary of the National Commission
on Teacher Education and Professional Standards of the National Education Association, charged that as a result of this irrelevance the young teacher
sharply rejects "educational theory” and feels a “lasting and
damaging hostility toward the
education courses in which material was covered.”

the rich American who

By

trusts the faculty and students,
the more committees it appoints.

A leading specialist in teacher
education claimed that education courses are “not relevant to
the problems faced by the teacher in the classroom” at a meeting of the American Association
of School Administrators.

In adition to being unrelated
to the real classroom situation,
education courses are characterized by a "kind of pseudo-scholarship,” Davies remarked. “We
find ourselves in the position of

Brief Thoughts on Teaching

The less students and faculty
are consulted, the more organizations they form.

Davies Deprecates
Education Courses

DALE RIEPE
from professor to associate dean,
and returning to piofessor, is as
follows: (1) A teacher must hava
a dialogue with his students as\
well as with other faculty members and administrators, and if it
helps to put chairs in a circle,
well and good; (2) Again a note
from Laotzu: "To know that you
do not know is the best. To
pretend to know when you do
not know is a disease. Only when
one recognizes the disease can
one be free from the disease.”
This is the accumulated wisdom
of teaching in industry for two
years and in colleges and uni-

versities for twenty. What will

the next twenty years bring? Perhaps what Laotzu recommends:
“Blunt the sharpness”
"Untie the tangles"
“Soften the light?"

m m, m fp.

m 'e me',
EHAU TAKE I

%.

On Sale Monday

If...

"

Zjodau:
Draws Crowds and Raises Questions
A large metallic sculpture
which runs around the floor
under its own steam and which
speeds up in the presence of blue
and petulently stops when it sees
red, a painting which leaves spots
before your eyes, a keyboard instrument which plays light as
well as music . . . these are some
of the components of the “optic
and kinetic” arc show currently
on display at the Albright-Knox
Gallery as part of the Festival
of the Arts Today. The show has
drawn several thousand observers and has raised in the minds
of many seriously disturbing
questions as to the nature and
boundaries of art.

It is interesting to realize that
the most fundamental attack
upon the traditional concepts of
art and the artist is not part of
the optic and kinetic show at the
Davies urged that every college which prepares teachers and Gallery, but is embodied in the
is “willing to make a full and exhibition of “found objects” at
Upton Hall across the street at
adequate institutional committhe State Teachers College. In the
ment to the job of teacher edukinetic and “op” are show, alcation" should completely abanthough the works themselves are
don its program.
bazarre and novel, the fundamenThe education program of any tal relationship
between artist,
campus should be the responsiwork, and audience remains unbility of the entire faculty, not changed.
The artist, by himself,
just education professors. The
produces the work of art to apfaculty must cooperatively reexpeal to, or at least to be shown
amine its teacher education proand sold to the “public” who emgram, “finding ways to prune out
ploy the artist to produce the art
the deadwood, eliminate overlapengage in that
pings and duplication, and reduce and who do not
activity themselves. The show of
education course requirements if
found objects, however, destroys
these are excessive.” Davies suggested that "excessive” courses even that distinction, since it is
a collection of things people have
are anything over 25 per cent of
found, old doors, machine parts,
the total undergraduate program. baby carriages,
driftwood, bones,
He urged also that alt teachers, bed springs, which are thought
both elementary and secondary. to have particular beauty either
because of the shape, texture,
color, or unusual setting. Thus
here there is no artist, only, dirt;
rust, and decay, no “work of art,”
no specialized audience, only the
experience of awakening the
senses and the aesthetic faculties
by observing in a setting de-

Manuscripts

m tomo'cniK'

thk fm, iu w. n, m

signed to intensify observation.

Even those audiences which
were willing to accept the comic
vaguaries and abrupt intrusions
of the kinetic and optic art, were
unwilling to accept old junk as
new art, and went away from
Upton Hall as though they had
been insulted, or worse as though
they have been told that what
they had believed as gospel all
their lives was open to radieally
new interpretation.
of the kinetic and
works shattered conventions also. There seemed to be
an almost philisophic determinaan almost philosophic determinaartists to make the audience interact with the works. There was,
for instance, a junk sculpture
which remained static until activated by a member of the audiSeveral

optic

ence by stepping on an obviously
placed foot treadle.

The machine then contorted

and waved it extremities, to the

accompaniment of metallic clankings and crashings. The relationship between the observer and
the work was thus made uniquely
vital. The work did not move unless he himself took an active

part in its creation from

moment

to moment.

The Spectrum critic returned
to the show three times and hails
the Albright-Knox Gallery, the
State University of New York,

and all the patrons who

conceived

and executed the shows and the
festival We would suggest that
some of the purely optic pieces
in the show be moved to posi
tions where they might be seen
in a better light; we would als°
suggest that every one go to the
shows, before they close next
week, if they do not want to miss
one of the most exciting, stimulating, and, at moments, truly
beautiful shows it has been our
privelege to observe.

�Friday,

March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SEVEN

Plaza Shoe

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

The

Official

Bulletin

authorized publication
of New

is

an

of the
York at

State University
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
typewritten (orm to the Old
Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix,
before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General Notices

Probation and Dismissal University College: There has long
been misunderstanding and confusion on the part of students regarding probation and dismissal.
University College has recently
mailed academic letters to each
of its students, ranging from
those who earn Dean’s and Honor's list distinction (2.0) to those
who were dismissed. The College
also recognizes the achievements
of those students who earn an
average of between 1.0 and 1.99.
Many Universities unfortunately
ignore this “average” group usually its largest classification.
Goood standing is defined as a
minimum of a 1.0 or “C” average. Each student’s case is evaluated individually by his adviser. Thus, students can expect
that it will be a few weeks after
the close of the last examinations
before the College has had the
opportunity to examine close to
5,000 student records. This time
lag is necessary to insure the fact
that each student will be treated
as an individual.

Probation and Warning
Students whose quality point
averages are below 1.0 receive a
warning classification of some
sort. Those with less than a .7 in
their first semester are placed
on academic probation. Academic
probation is defined in detail in

the University College Catalog,
but in brief, during the time of a
student's probation he may not
represent the University at any
public function, may not participate in organized student activities, and is required to attend
each meeting of each class for
which he is registered. If there
is not a reduction in the quality
point deficiency, the College
will
dismiss such students at the close
of the present semester.
Freshmen
Generally speaking, freshmen
who are on Probation or who are
warned must decrease their overall quality point deficiency to at
least five in order to be allowed
to continue. If a freshman is dismissed in June, he may be al-

lowed

to return to the University
°n a strict probation basis after
one academic year has elapsed.
Attendance at another Univers[ty s not generally advised but
students so affected should check
with their adviser. Summer Session attendance is possible but
an academic year’s
"furlough”
will still be required.
Success at
any institution of higher
education depends largely on
objec*

tives and motivation and it is
our hope that in the year away
from school, evidence can be presented by the students of consistent application and effort and
acceptance of responsibility in
any worthwhile activity. Very
often a year away from formal
education will result in the necessary motivation.
In addition, it may be possible
for a student who is improving
but who has not made the necessary overall improvement to
be given a thrid semester in the
College, but in a new program.

Students should discuss these
possibilities with their adviser.
Sophomores
Sophomores in University College cannot be given the option
of a year’s “furlough” since they
must have the requisite average
(normally 1.0) by the end of their
sophomore year in order to be
promoted to a senior division. In
some cases, these students can
also qualify for an Associate degree and in selected cases will be
given the option of a fifth semester in which to earn that degree.
Usually, sophomores whose averages are deficient will be dismissed. Fifth semesters are offered only to those earning the
Associate Degee or those steadily improving in a new program.

Please remember that students
on Strict Probation as a result of
first semester grades who received a special notice cannot
advance register until second
semester grades are evaluated.
However, all students should
plan a program with their adviser.

students vyill make appointments
with Miss' Greenman and Miss
Heap directly. Nursing students
are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
times, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym, on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance ‘register during the
scheduled publicized times. If
the Quality Point Average of
such students improves to such
a degree that they become eligible to continue in school, they

will be informed in June, after
semester grades are in. concerning later registration dates. Students in this category, however,
who wish to see their advisers
arc encouraged to do so. It would
be helpful if these students could

make an appointment during the
alphabetically scheduled times,
but, if the problem is pressing,
they can make an appointment
at any time.

Weekly Calendar

March 11—
Lecture Series in Hydrology:
Dr. Peter E. Eaglcson, Associate

Professor in Civil Engineering,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in Aeheson Hall. Room
362.

Seminar: “Dynamic Similarity
in the Surface Runoff Process”
.

.

.

11:00 a.m.

Lecture and Discussion: “Analysis and Synthesis of Hydrologic
Systems
I” . . . 4:00 p.m.
Fine Art* Film
Citizen
Kane”. March 12—
Lecture Series in Hydrology
Dr. Peter S, Eagleson, AssociateProfessor in Civil Engineering,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in Acheson Hall, Room
362.
—

University College would like
students who have questions to
bring them to their advisers
when they come in for their advance registration or program
planning.
Registration
University College Students; (except Nurjing
Students) All University College
Students, except those on Strict
Academic Probation, will register for next semester according
to following alphabetical sched—

ule:

—

Seminar: “Some Specifications
of Hydrologic Measurements" ...
1:00 p.m.

Lecture and Discussion: “Analysis of Synthesis of Hydrologic
Systems

—

II"

. .

4:00 p.m.

March 22-

AsDr. Peter W. Frevcrt
sistant Professor of Economics,
will present a paper, “Economic
Behavior Under Uncertainty: An
Experiment,” in Room 333, Norton Hall.
—

March 8 through March 26. A,
E, I, N, 0, Q, T, U, V.
Mach 22 through March 26. S.
March 29 through April 2. H,
Y, L.
April 5 through April 9. M, J,
X.

April 12 through April 16. K

F.

April 19 through April 24. B
April 26 through April 30. W

Placement
Announcements

The following places have announced openings for employment are available:
Greenville Steel Car Co. of

Greenville, Pa.
May 3 through May 7. P, C.
Genesee Settlement House of
appointRochester.
ments with the University ColQuaker State Oil Refining
lege Receptionist in Diefendorf
No. 114 one week in advance of Corp. of Bradford, Pa.

Students will make

The Worcester Foundation for

the above scheduled times. At
Worcesthis time, the Receptionist will Experimental Biology in
give the student registration ter, Mass,
U.S. Department of Agricul
cards and a list of instructions to
follow in the subsequent regis- ture.
Women’s Army Corps.
tration precedures. O.T. and P.T.

Foreign

IF 6-4041

Service of the

U.S.:
The next foreign service examination will be given May I. Contact the placement office for examination applications and in-

terview appointments.
Graduate Record Examination;
Pick up information and application form from the Student
Testing Center, 316 Harriman
Library. Examinations will be
given March 6, April 24, and Julv
10.
Miller Analogies Test: May be
taken at any time by contacting
the Student Testing Center, 316

Harriman Library.
New York City: Social Studies
deadline for applying is March
19,

References, required for admission to various graduate
schools, may be sent to the Educational Placement Division
which will collect, reproduce,
and distribute the references to
the appropriate graduate schools.
The original references are retained in the candidate’s permanent personal credential file
for utilization upon completion
of the advanced degree.

Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Servi-ce Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

—

Dry cleaning machines
-

■

8 lbs. 52.00

Vavvvvwwjvvvww

1
—

a

Are you still
wearing
those creasy
kid slacks?

\

Teacher Placement
Interviews

\

Cates Chili Central School District: Rochester, N.Y. is con,

ducting interviews at their school
any school day between 8:30 a.m.
and 4:30 p m. Although they prefer the candidate to see the

school in action, appointments
can be arranged during the
spring vacation or any other time
if necessary. Apply to; Mr. Wil-

liam Hagenlocher, Director of InGates Chili Central
School District, 910 Wegman
Road, Rochester, New York.
Call Mrs. Doris Rabe, of Educational Placement (831-3311) to
make an appointment to see the
interviewer for the following

struction,

schools.
March 9—
Rush-Henrietta

Schools, Rush-

Henrietta, N.Y.
March 11—

Elmont C. S. for K—6 levels

only.
March 12—
Central Square Central Schools,
Central Square, N.Y.

Placement
Interviews
March 5—
U.S. Coast Guard
American Oil
. Berkshire
Life Insurance Co;

March 8—

McCurdy

&amp;

Co.

March 9—

U.S. Army
Hope’s Windows
Travelers Insurance Co.

March

3E

'l-f

-

10—

Cornell Aeronautical Labs, Inc.
The Bendix Corporation—
Eclipse—Pioneer Division
Acme Markets

March 11—

U.S. Department of Agriculture
Factory Mutual Engineering
Division

March 12—
U.S. Dept, of State
For interview appointments or
information, please call 831-3311,
University Placement Services,
Schoellkopf Hall.

Get into some wised-up

Post-Grads that know where

a crease should always be and
where it should never be, and
how to keep things that way
The reason is the Koratron*
fabric of 65% Dacron*/35%
cotton. No matter how many
times you washand wearthese
trimly tapered Post-Grad'
slacks, they’ll stay completely
neat and make the iron obsolete. In tan, clay, black, navy
or loden, $6.98 in poplin or
gabardine, $7 98 in oxford.
At swinging stores.

Press-Free"
Post-Grad
slacks by

his

•0W*O«T'» lit. TM *o«

*!•(*

�Friday, March S, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

UNITED STUDENTS PUATFORM

existence. We will demand space
be allotted on the new campus
for fraternity houses. We feel
that farternities, through their
IFC-required public service projects. their blood drive, and their
general support of schol functions, serve a worthwhile purpose
at the university, and project a
positive image of our student
body to the local community. We
reaffirm our unequivocal opposition to the 1953 edict of the

Slate University denying national

affiliatioi\g. This is discriminatory, and violates the first amendment to the constitution of the
United States.
4. We advocate the complete
separation of room and board
contracts. Everyone who lives in
the dorms has to pay for all the

meals served there, whether he
eats them or not. This is unfair; it leads to waste and is a
financial burden to those who
do not make use of it. We will
try to institute a meal-ticket plan
like the one in effect at Columbia University, whereby a student pays only for the meals he
eats in the school cafeteria.

onstrations.
6. Bookstore prices are ridiculous! We have made much progt

ress, and will continue to work
to bring a Student-Run Co-Operative Bookstore to Campus. This
is being done in light of the fact

that, the local merchants have all
refused to co-operate in lowering prices to anything less than
a twenty per cent markup. Therefore we have taken the initiative
and are confident of success. This
is a case in which student action
has been forced by the policies
of an unco-operative administration. We have obtained permission to buy books on time, and
are presently working on the
problem of space for the store.
7. We pledge to enlarge the
academic course evaluation program now in effect. Faculty members and administration should
be willing to accept constructive
criticism of courses by those who
have taken them. We will also
expand the program to include
evaluation of textbooks used.
8. We will demand that names
of instructors be posted on the
lists of courses offered during
registration. The Instructor for
each course is known in advance,
and' this knowledge would influence some students in their
choice of subjects. It will also
allow students to enroll in
courses with teachers of their
chosing, instead of taking pot
luck. We also will try to have
final exam schedules posted on
the registration lists, since this
information is also known in advance.
9. We will ask that the new
edition of the University Bulletin
contain more complete course disruptions, especially in the upper
division courses. It should also
state when certain courses will
be available if they are not
offered every semester.
10. We announce our emphatic
support of the committee presently being formed by the honor

societies and deans of divisions
to advance the cause of academic
honesty. This committee is in
bestigating ways to foster an atmosphere on campus which will
discredit cheating. We applaud
the experiment being carried out
in Dr, Friend’s History 122 class
to see if an honor system can
work at UB We look forward to
the day when this system Will be
in effect on the whole campus.
11. We recognize the needs of
the land for finances, and we
will work to assure their maintenance through the Faculty Student Association, the music department, or the establishment of
their own general fund.
12. We believe the Hockey Club
should receive more allotments of
funds, and its games should be
broadcast over WBFO. Also, we
feel that when the Hockey team
believes itself to be ready for
varsity status, this status should
be granted by the athletic department.
13. We recognize the Ski Club
as an important organization of

students on campus, and deplore
the efforts of those who sought
to keep them from receiving
funds from the Student Senate
this year.
14. In another example of the
effectiveness of working through
the proper channels, the University Council will decide this May,
on the basis of evidence for both
sides, whether we will be allowed
to serve beer on campus. However, even if they decide against
it, United Students Party pledges
to continue the fight. The Student Body voted eight to one
last year in favor of beer on
campus ,and it is the responsibility of a representative government to carry out their wishes.
We will use any means necessary.
15. We support the establishment of a Senior Week at UB.
We believe that any activities
which will establish worthy traditions here should receive the
support of the student body as a
whole and the financial backing
of the Student Senate.
16. The perking problem: We
will ask the Buffalo Police Department to extend the limits on
parking spaces on the streets
around campus. We will also
work to establish either: a free
parking system on campus, or a
system whereby students pay a
fixed sum at the beginning of the
year. In any

case, the ten-cent

22. We support the present student government administration’s
strides in many vitally significant
areas. A few of these are the
academic course evaluation, alcoholic beverages on campus, the
Student Senate Discount Service
and the Student Co-Operative
Bookstore. The achievements of
this administration.should not be
confused with the somewhat lackluster records of some senators.
The Student Senate has many
“deadweight” senators who prevent all areas of our Student Association from proving their full
worth. We believe that this will
no longer be the situation if you
vote for the candidates of the
United Students Party, “for representation after the election.”

welcome.

Exchange Program
(Cont’d from P. 1)
The plan was suggested to Mr.
Pam, head of the Labor Committee of the Civil Rights Committee, during the past summer.
Living in Mississippi as a volunteer, he found that the faculty
of “Ole Miss" would be glad to
have northern students attending
the school. Although there are
northern students at Mississippi
now, they are, according to the
faculty, chiefly “fascists.”

gates must be removed.
Mr. Pam was further influ18. The Faculty Student Assoenced by Mississippi: the Closed
ciation: This is the group which Society, a book written by
determines the allotment of funds Charles Silver. In it Silver conto the Student Senate and almost
tends that the state of Mississipevery other group on campus.
pi is impervious to outside inAt present, although there are
fluences.
two students on the Association,
Once the program is estabthey are not permitted to sit on
lished in Buffalo, the adminstrathe board of directors, which
makes all the important decisions.
There is now an amendment to
its constitution being considered
which would let a student (president of the Senate) belong to the
board of directors. We believe (Cont’d from P. 1)
this amendment must pass, if we parties suddenly cease in the
are to be assured a fair deal.
middle of the evening to give
way to the recitation of poetry.
19. We apologize to the stuBaseball is a popular sport of
dent body for those individuals
who ran with United Students last the cost of Colombia, and Mr.
Haupt enjoyed listening with the
year and fraudulently declared
their support of our platform. Colombians to the World Series
Spanish from
These people, the ones who, after broadcasted in
Miami for their benefit.
being elected, deserted their obIn contrast to the modern charligations to the Student Body,
were responsible for much of the acteristics of Bogota, Mr. Haupt
well-publicized “inaction” of the discovered that the famed Colomsenate this past year. We pledge bian port of Cartegena is surrounded by a high wall and
this year to represent our constituents after the election; to appears very colonial. The coastal
set up monthly meetings where life is easy going in comparison
to that of the center of the
students can talk to all the senators and discuss campus issues.
We will not let student governHAIR CUTTING
ment abandon its main function
VILARDO’S
BARBER SHOP
stu—action for the good of the
530 Nlogoro Falls Blvd.
dent body. United Students does
not operate for the sake of its
next to Tops Market
own existence. We try to improve
TF 6-9343
of
the
nomithe quality
Senate by
JOSEPH G. VILARDO, Prop.
nating people who we believe are
best qualified. We ask you to
judge them objectively.
20. We believe that Junior
women should be allowed to live
off campus without having to
plead disability or financial need.

tion in Misssissippi will be contacted. No action can take place
until a definite number of students have agreed to enroll down

South. Although the academic
standards do not equal those of
the 'University of Buffalo, the
personal experience will more
than compensate for the academic lack.
At least five students must
agree to go to Mississippi before action can begin. Any sophomore who is interested is urged
to contact Mr. Peter Rubin at
the Spectrum office or Mr. A1
Pam at the Student Senate office, in Norton Union.
Interested freshmen are also
encouraged to contact Mr. Rubin
or Mr. Pam. Plans for the 196667 school year will then get
underway.

Peace Corps...

LISTEN

21. We believe that Senior
women should be allowed unlimited curfews, subject to an
honor system set up by them-

selves.

TO

WBFO

country where all the important/
industry, technology, and educational institutions are located.
"Get More Than You Give"
Dana Rodgers best expressed
the feelings of his fellow returned volunteers in declaring
that in the Peace Corps program,
“You get a lot more than you
give.” The entire group visiting
at UB agreed that they had
learned from this experience far
more than they had taught during
their two years of work. Further
more, they all cherished the beautiful friendship they have developed with the natives of their
assigned countries.

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

Partn

*

erA

JpreAAy Jnc*

-Ahgotl &amp;* Smith printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at

I

2. The Spectrum must be improved to its former level of respectability. It is atrocious misconduct for a paper which has a
monopoly on campus to manage
news and play politics in the
name of "freedom of the press."
We approached the Spectrum and
requested they make public the
candidates’ interviews, so that the
readers, instead of accepting their
endorsements without question,
could have a basis on which to
form their own opinions. This
request was denied, and there 1
fore we have unanimously rejected any support from the newspaper. We do not believe that the
Spectrum is interested in objective reporting, and this should
be changed. Our university needs
an objective, efficient student
newspaper, and we pledge to
work for one.
3. We believe that, whether a
student belongs to a fraternal
organization or not, he should
recognize their legitimate right to

5. We believe that the quality
of dorm food is too low, and the
price of Norton food is to high.
We pledge to rectify these situations, and will take all necessary
steps to fulfill this pledge including meaningful student dem-

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

1

1. The United Students party
believes that the Senate’s primary
concern should be with on-campus
affairs. Issues dealing with the
general welfare of the student
body are more important than
any other considerations that
come before us. They are the
ones on which we have the most
power to act, and we feel obligated to use this power to its fullest extent. This is not to say
that the senate should take no
action outside the confines of our
campus. The United Students
party believes that student government definitely has a responsibility—mainly an educational
one—in off-campus affairs. We
supported the issuing of fact
sheets on the House Committee
on UnAmcriean Activities, the
Sporn issue, and the Publications
Board, and the movies and debate
on HUAC. These projects were
undertaken in an effort to help
students form their opinions on
rational grounds, and we feel they
were worthwhile. We pledge to
issue fact sheets on all issues of
this sort, and then, it the situation warrants, to take action in
the name of the student body,

STUDENTS NEEDED
Education majors will
be able to fulfill their Junior year requirements by
working at either the Buffalo Urban League or for
St. Augustine Church. If
you are interested in the
Urban League please call
885-4787, between 6:008:00 p.m. Wednesday. If
you wish to work for St,
Augustine please call 8313861. Non-education major volunteers will also be

�Friday,

March 5, 196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINE

CAMPUS ALLIANCE PLATFORM

To *he Student Body:
We. the candidates running tor
,er,at&lt;- i••■nations on the Campus
..nice ticket I eel we must exview
•i student iiie
■dent government
concern .s the nature ol
■ation

ai

large

quality ol ! ;ie on
us. It is a ;,/e infected with
;i of administrative faculty,

the

student indifference.
The
Indent's curriculum, and the
Methods of teaching, mane his

courses seem irrelevant to his
immediate life; they appear as

m personal as the cinderblock
ualls that surround him, Consethe student becomes
quently
alienated and apathetic- be does
not icei a part of things; their
is little here mat he can call his
own.- His formal education seems
■ I -connected from student activities and organizations, ami, ultimately. from his entire personal

nsident Gould’s Lincoln day
mencement address indicated
concern with this situation,
.s hot indifferent to it. And
inust not be indifferent either
believe that strong student
ership is essential in solving
inadequacies in our eduealion and in the quality ol campus .ife. If nothing else, the {acidly and administration must be
rlinuously reminded that, in
the words of one educator ' the
students are capable of knowing

from
lie.! they ought to get
■.dir education. But this would
a minimum effort we can do
mere. Although no one has all
t;u' answers: we must do more.
We are a new and revitalized
party; we will do more.
&gt;&lt;

&lt;•

‘

PART II
The Scope of Student Government
Contention: Student Involvement
Students cannot and must not

isolate themselves from iar reaching contemporary issues. We must

actively express our opinions on
important political ami social
problems. Furthermore, we must
interest ourselves and act on
tiie problems lacing universities
throughout the country. As elect-

ed

representatives,

the

student

senators must assume leadership
in mobilizing student opinion.
Proposed Action I
Our university’s support was
sought to defeat the newly proposed tuition at the City University of New York. Though other
university Senates participated,
ours refused to be involved. The

Proposed Action I
We affirm the right of

students

to referendum, recali and initiative upon petition at any time for
any issue. We will enact legislation to establish these rights.
Contention; University Image
The university and its students
arc too often regarded with contempt by the Buffalo press and
community. In order for us to
fulfill adequately our function as
a public center of learning, we
must remove anv prevailing negative

images.

We will combine the Public
delations and Communications
Committees to provide for greater
efficiency and productivity. Ibis
unified committee shall be link
ed permanently to the University
Relations Office, The new structure will better communicate all
aspects of studeni life in their
proper perspectives to the Buffalo community.
arthermore we would pstab
icquaim
civic
ish programs
!

loaders and loca
dents with the

ugh school'slit
'irkm- s Of~fnii

and

inform

community of student

and

activities

within

problems

the

uni-

versity.

this would be more in

-ersitv of Buffalo student
the highest general uniter
si(&gt; fee in (he enliie New York
Slate Vniversity system. The FSA
receives according to official enrollment figures; over nine hun-

tion

uith the

spring

conjunc

recess

of

other universities.

Proposed Action

II
To give sharper focus to these
problems for the student bodv
end administration alike it will
be proposed that the Convocations Committee organize
gram of six or seven

a

pro-

distin-

guished speakers, representing
such 1 ifIds as education and

architecture.
discuss issues
ek-vant to the current quality
of campus life.

Proposed Action ill
We will establish a new Campus Expansion Committee whose
ob.iecl will be to investigate and
examine all available plans for
the new undergraduate campus to
be built in Amherst. Representatives of major interest organizations arid several at-large mem
bevs will be included in this
body Its general function will be
to inform the student body and
.acuity of the proposed plans tor

this

(he

ruling body of

corporation.

y

dred thousand dollars from these
fees. In return our student government receives the lowest total
return m the State system Our
student government and all organizations responsible lo it. receives less than I0f
of (he total
feeMhis year We believe that a
full and fair disclosure of the
allocation of the other 90'1 of
the university fee be given the
student body.
We feel the only permanent
solution to this problem is to
effect a total reorganization of
Die KS*&gt;. We favor the system
used in the other State Universities in New York where the

Manuscripts

ii.e Amherst campus. The cbm
mittee will firstly, inform the
student body the senate and the
faculty, on all proposed plans for
:iic Amherst campus. Secondly,

On Sale Monday

voting members ol the PSA
the faculty and the students.

Education
The

structure

of classes

of curricula, the

and

Ihe

sub-

sequent impersonal manner in
which many courses are presented contribute to ihe student's

detachment from his studies.
The student, in many cases, has

I'm room—and little encourageto move in liis own direction on his own time, With his
chosen subject matter: “Ultimately. he loses the incentive to
study that comes with a sense ol
ment

own.

discovering

and

learning

im-

portant ideas. The quest for high
&lt;r grades becomes his only motivation

Proposed Action 1

The range oi the Academic
Affairs Committee will be greatly
expanded. The current course
evaluation program offers a beginning, but it scarcely measures

up to the scope of the problem:
the necessary improvement of
the quality of our education. The
committee will build, through its
research branch, an extensive
body of information on current

more directlv repthe needs and interests of

our academic community by giving laculty and students the right
t ■ determining the ailocation of
their own funds.
Wc do not. pretend

Contention: University Bookstore

The I’niversity

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

Fraternities and Sororities
The Campus Alliance Party,
those of its members who sal in
the senate in the past, and those
who run as its candidates now,
supports the continued and active presence of national fraternities and sororities on this
campus. Xhr party recognizes'
the essential functions that the
Greeks pertorm for many students and the university fn an all
too often impersonal institution,
fraternities and sororities are an
invaluable source of personal contact among students as individ-

uals. This fact, and the party's
firm belief in the principle of
free association, leads us to emphasize our endorsement of their
remain

on campus, with

M3

MS

—

**

•

Bookstore

is

controlled by the FSA. which
should be a non profit organization. Yet, prices of new books
(Cont ii on K 15'

Part Ml

right to

however,

that reorganization of the FSA
will occur overnight But we will
begin a maximum effort towards
this accomplishment.
Because of the unique structure of I his university s FSA. we
propose that the following action
be initiated immediately, directed
toward the lime when the FSA
better represents the university's
students and faculty.

tne administration
on those plans it considers inadequate and inappropriate for
any aspect of future student life
In addition the committee will
provide suggestions and new proposals of its own. Faculty support and counsel will be sought
and welcomed.

national affiliations.
methods and innovations in colA strong student government
lege education. Coupled with a
clear evaluation, such information and a strong Inter-Fraternity
can lead the committee to offer Council and Pan Hellenic Couninterest and action taken towards many valuable suggestions to the cil can and must work together.
bettering the lives of college stuadministration. The following will There is no conflict in their
goals; there need only be direcdents on other composes is a
serve as illustrations:
step towards improving our own
tion and purpose in their manner.
1) Various plans and programs
predicament. We would particiProposed Action I
for independent study for credit
pate in these involvements.
Because fraternities and sororwill be investigated.
Proposed Action II
2) To bring
about greater ities have a crucial interest in the
We shall offer to the student student-teacher contact, various nature of housing, eating, and
extensive speaker and informarecreation facilities on the new
seminar programs could be estabtion programs developed along lished. Needs of freshman and campus, at least one seal each
will be reserved for the IFC and
the lines of the recently comsophomores, as well as upperpleted “Political Spectrum of a classmen, will be considered.
Pan Hellenic councils on the
proposed New Campus Expansion
3) A program for "free hours"
Contemporary World.” In addition, wa shall support responsible such as that used at Queens ColCommittee.
Proposed Action II
student stands on issues.
lege, will be proposed. During
be
As members of the Student
Contention; Intar-Univarsity
these hours no “classes would
Co-operation
scheduled. All students would Senate, we will endorse a letterAll students in the State Unithen share a time period when writing campaign to state legisversity system are subject to a
lators and universities policythey could attend speaker prosingle policy as adopted by the
makers to gain support for the regrams, club functions, and acBoard of Regents. Unfortunately, tivity meetings. Hours such as tention of national fraternities
these students have no formal from 1 to 2 o’clock on Tuesdays and s9rorities.
lines of comunication. Under such and Thursdays would constitute Part IV
a “uniform” system, we should
the free hours. Final decision on
Faculty Student Association
unite on common issues.
the program and the hours would
Faculty Student AssociaThe
Proposed Action I
of course involve student and
tion (FSA) is an incorporated exWe propose the establishment faculty concensus.
ecutive body controlled by five
of a "Congress of State Colleges
4) Student internship programs
members of the university adminand Universities." Representathat
established
beas
—such
who control all nontives shall meet several times tween Stanford University and istration,
and funds.
could academic activities
during the year to consider all California Congressmen
All Food Service, University
common issues (e.g, the proposed he established. Under this pro- Bookstore,
parking lot, and vendraise in housing costs).
gram, students work for a coning machine profits, and all stucongressman
and
Contention: Referendum,
gressman. The
dent university fees are controllThe present Student Senate the, university pay his salary.
ed by the FSA.
proevaluation
5)
Constitution allows for referenA teacher
dum once a year Because there gram will be instituted. MoreAt the other State Universities
no Provision for intiative and over, various teacher incentive in New York, the FSA is a body
of voting students and faculty
recall, students have been denied plans will be investigated.
rights which are essential to dem6) The extension of library with administrative advisors.
Here, every year the five execu,
ocratic government—the rights of hours during exam periods.
popular review and legislative
7) A competent staff would live officers arc all administrainitiative.
work with the administration to tors. Students and faculty have

arc

This

e, - Icm wou.d

resent

n will advise

Part I

size

no voice on

’&gt;•

Pioposed Action I

niversitv.

correlate our Spring vacation period with the Easter holiday, as

�PACE

Friday, March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

TEN

UNITED
STUDENTS

OFFICER CANDIDATESNew Campus Expansion Commit
tee: Student Senate Welfare Com
mittee; Student Senator for Uni
versity College: Dean’s List.

Presidential
Candidate
NICK SARGENT

candidate for
President Student Association; ae
counting major with 1.7 overall
average; Presidential-Aide; chairman of the Senate Public Rela
lions Committee; chairman of the
Special Co-operative Bookstore
(United Students);

Daniel Silber. United Students.
Vice-President. I disavow the support of the Spectrum Before
going into my personal reasons

Sargent

United

problems. Measures have been
taken to solve these problems
and they currently appear in the
United Students platform. 1 have
met with Bill Berger and another
member of the Finance Committee and 1 am fully enlightened

these individuals rise and address the floor for a half hour
at a time. And then, the same
persons readdress and again readdress the floor on the same
point well after the other Senators, myself included, have made
up their minds how they intend
to Vote on the issue. I am not
exaggerating when I say that up
to three hours are sometimes
spent on picayune issues. As
President
of the Panhelleme
Council. I have had direct experience with an organization that
can efficiently accomplish its objectives plus provide innovations
for the welfare of the people it
represents. Needless to say, the
knowledge that the most import-

Committee; member of the Senate
Senior Week Committee; member
of the Debate Society; member of
the Pre-Law Society.
Nick

majority of the members are, I
often times found myself in the
position of interested observer.
And what did I observe? I observed a potentially powerful and
efficient organization, the voice
of you, the student body, rendered useless and comical by
supposedly interested and intellectual individuals. I have seen

Students

Candidate for President of -Student Association I disavow the
support of the Spectrum My
candidacy for President of the
Student Association is based oh
the belief that student govern
ment can do more for the slu
dent body by acting through the
administration rather than act

FRENCH TUTORING
by Frenchman
•

•

•

conversation
literature
grammar

CALL 836-4990 Eves

Are you still
wearing
those creasy
kid slacks?
MICHAEL MERLIS

as to the duties and tremendous
obligations that the office in
volves I am in favor of a balanced budget and will try to get
additional funds from the Faculty
Student Association An attempt
will be made this year to dis-burse funds in an equitable manner among all clubs and organizations. I feel I am well qualified
for the office of Treasurer and
the proceeding statement should
indicate this I feel my opponent
is also well qualified for the posl
tion and no matter which of us is
elected the job will be done well

and 1 fool well
qualified to pul this philosophy
to work The four years that 1
spent in the business world be
fore returning to school in 19611
pave me valuable experience in
petting things done through
"channels," and this has already
paid off in my role as presidential assistant. There arc times,
though, when university administrators are unwilling to compromise. I believe it is at this

time that responsible students
could and should seek an alternate solution; a solution that

doesn't necessarily start with a
demonstration or a march on
Hayes Hall. I believe we as mature students acting as an effec
five student association can impress upon the administration
that we are able to assume the
burden of initiative and responsibility. It was just this type of approach that led to the idea, and

will lead to the implementation,
of a non-profit student co-opera-

will be achieved. My personal
reasons for participating in student government are many. I
feel it is one of the finest activities a student can indulge in
and 1 consider it a genuine challenge. I also feel that the best
way to make sure something’s
getting done is to do it yourself,
and I would like to see some
things done I've been working
with student government here
since my first week at school
and feel I know enough about
the machinery of our student
government. I would like you
to give me the opportunity to
help lead the Senate in those
directions which will benefit us
all as students here.

tive bookstore. Though student
government has succeeded in
many areas, there are many
things yet to be done. It is only
with a mature, flexible policy
that they can be achieved. It is
with this type of philosophy that
I will carry out the office I seek.

Secretarial
Candidate

Vice-Presidential
Candidate

Activities: voting member of the
’64-65 Senate as representative
from Panhellenic; Panhcllenic
Council President; 1963 Senate

DANIEL SILBER

FTeshman year: representative to
Allenhurst Council; chairman of
Allenhurst Council Cultural Committee; member of Allenhurst
Council Athletic Committee; president of Freshman Class Council;
intramural

tennis, basketball,

track, fencing; member of UB
Men’s Glee Club; Sigma Alpha
Mu fraternity; Pledge Class Special Events Committee Sopho
more year: Union Board Public
Relations Committee; chairman

BARBARA WITZEL

Freshman Orientation Committee;
Union Board Committees: Personnel, Recreation, Silver Ball;
Sophomore Sponsor; Chi Omega
member of executive
sorority
board, various chairmanships,
Panhellenic delegate: present
1965 float committee co-chairman;
—

junior; English major in Arts
Sciences.

&amp;

Barbara Wltxal, Secretary. 1 disavow the support of the Spectrum.
For the past year I have sat on
the Student Senate, and because I
was not an elected senator, as the

BARBARA WITZEL

ant organization on this campus,
the Student Senate, could not be
so effective appalled me Determined not to be one of these
individuals who is constantly
complaining but not acting I have
decided to run for Secretary of
the Student Association with the
hope of doing something about
the present situation. I am confident that with more genuinely
interested individuals in its membership the Student Senate can
be an effective and truly representative voice of the entire student body.

Treasurer

Candidate
MICHAEL MERLIS

(Treasurer, United Students); junior; President of the School of
Business Administration; accounting major; member of the Accounting Club; chairman of the
Annual Student-Faculty Banquet
of the School of Business Administration.
Michael Merlit. Treasurer, I disavow the support of the Spectrum.
I am a twenty year old junior,
majoring in accounting, and my
accounting courses have dealt
rectly with budgeting and firtancial management. I completed
courses in finance and cost accounting which dealt with both
establishing and formulating budgets. My practical experience in
this field was attained when I
was trasurer of my High School’s
Senior Class, This summer I am
working for an accounting firm
where I will get valuable experience which will help in next

di-

Your I .D

Card

is Worth 10% at

GcUimatts
SAae*
BOULEVARD MALL

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
U.S. Ked

Pappagallo
Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters

Florsheim
Eskiloo and

semester's

financial endeavors.
of the School of
Business Administration, I have
met many people and discussed
their complaints—academic, administrative and social. I would
like to try to solve some of these

.

J If •
•

y

1

Get into some wised-up
Post-Grads that know where
a crease should always be and
where it should never be, and
how to keep things that way
The reason is the Koratron
fabric of 65% Dacron*/35%
cotton. No matter how many
times you wash andwearthese
trimly tapered Post-Grad;
slacks, they'll stay completely
neat and make the iron obso
lete. In tan, clay, black, navy
or loden, $6.98 in poplin or
gabardine, $7.98 in oxford
At swinging stores.

|

mg against it

/

i

i

NICK SARGENT

M \M SCHHTS
Manuscripts, a publicaIion ol SI \'l All. will go
on sain Monday. It is oitcii
the case, in reading a piece
of poetry or a prose selection. that one finds a clear
expression of things which
lie himself lias thought.
Perhaps Nathan Cooper’s
poems will appeal to your
definition of God. or you
may find Verna Taylor’s
observations on life and
people, experiences which
you have known personally. And Peggy Madden’s
selection on Lawrence is a
perceptive study of youth
today. In short, there is
something for every one
in Manuscripts.

AV*

|

ill/

look at above immediate solution

of specific student gripes This I
believe is a basic understanding
and mutual respect between the
student body and the administrasomethin ; which unf irtion
tunately has been sadlv lacking
at this university, A working relationship is necessary which is
both pliable and ever-ready for
use, 1 emphatically believe that
with better communication all
reasonable student goals, and this
includes beer on campus and
lowering of food prices, can and

"

j

(T&gt;

:

DANIEL SILBER
for seeking the vice-Presidency,
I'd like to briefly relate and explain certain convictions 1 have
about student, government- 1
Sincerely believe that it is by
nature one of the most valuable
and rewarding types of Student
activity. It is a standing opportunity for students to assemble, discuss university matters
intelligently and maturely, and
make the student voice heard on
all levels. I believe that there
is a broader perspective we must

As President

Campus Boots

and

many

other brands

Press-Free'
Post-Grad
slacks by

his

•ovfoer

*oeFotfssrwnw-

�Friday,

March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

OFFICER CANDIDATES-CAMPUS ALLIANCE
Candidate
CLINTON DEVEAUX
University College Senator; Chairman, Union Board House Com
mittee; Executive Committee, Debate Society. Convocations Com
mittee; Freshman Class Council
Vice President; and House Plan

Student Government is
tremely important part
life It has given me an
amity to develop my own
ship ability and to give of

an ex-

of my
oppor

leader
myself

Rosemary Brown

—

A vice-presi-

dent is the key to a strong and
effective student government. He
assists the President, assumes the
President’s office during his absence, and coordinates senate
committees, I feel that the latter
is the most important function of
a vice-president, as coordination
is necessary for effective student
action.
1 am running for Vice-President
because I want to see our student

assume its rightful
place of leadership and influence
this
at
university. This is possible
only if student leaders are able
to act together to initiate and implement programs I am running
because I believe that 1 am capable of fulfilling the function of
co-ordination which is necessary
for such action
I also believe that this coord;
nation should be extended beyond that necessary for commitgovernment

tees;

East Scholarship Committee: Psy
chology major with a 2.6 overall.
Ellen Cardone
The office of
Secretary of the Student Associaseems
to
tion
me to hold its greatest potential as a communications
function. The Secretary is directed by the Constitution to record
the proceedings of the Student
Senate, to notify members of
meetings, to carry out corres
pondence and to participate on
—

the executive committee
It is my belief that this respon
sibility is not fulfilled by typing
up the minutes and placing them
in the Senate Office. The officers
you elect are officers of the Stu

Id the student body through conscientious and dedicated work. I
have worked in student government here at UB in elected positions for two years I have wit
nessed growth, enthusiasm and direction but I have also seen disinterest and lack of leadership.
I wish to be a part of all that has
made student government meaningful on this campus but 1 am
also willing to accept my share
of the responsibility for its failures

I offer to the student body exin student affairs and
knowledge of and acceptance of
the responsibilities of a student
leader. I wish to build a student
government which is
dedicated to
presenting to the University, the
community, and the world a true
picture of the University of Buffalo student body and its opinions. With a strong and direct
program and dedicated student
senators, I feel that we can accomplish this goal.
Campus Alliance is a new and
revitalized party and has compiled a platform
which not only
presents our
views on both on
and off-campus problems but
demonstrates how we plan to produce changes in the present system. For this reason our platform
15 extremely long. I hope that
every student will read and evaluate this statement of purpose.
After reading it students will find
d difficult not join with us and
work with us to make UB the
great
state university that it
should be.

will
work together to make sure that

perience

We, as students of this University can and must do more, I,
as candidate for president on the
iampus Alliance ticket, pledge
that I win d 0 more

Vice-Presidential
Candidate
ROSEMARY BROWN
Committee; International
■’indent Affairs Committee; CamPus Barrel Committee; Student
e at Summer Planning Con'

,

crences;

Freshman Orientation
Executive Committee; Internalonai Club; Political Science
Iub ; History tutor at St. Augustine's,

Graduate of Monroe Cqhimunity
College; served as Student Senate
Business
Treasurer,
yearbook
Manager, student newspaper Cir
dilation Manager, Representative
to College and Institute Student
Government Association. At I B.
served as member of the Finance

budget designated Student

Activities is approached, a gross
exception is apparent. The stu
dents appear to be operating in
a reverse manner. No budget has
been handed in and no program
has been planned There is only
an amount of money allocated for
them which, as the case was this
year, was only about haif of what
the students planned program
Naturally, their program
was
had to be drastically reduced
U seems both unethical and
extraordinary that we should have
to ad lust our activities to a givci
activity fee Why aren't we con
suited with for allocations in the

■

The office of
Sanford Seide
Treasurer of I lie Student Association requires an individual with
more than interest and sincerity
it demands an individual with
definite plans and a broad background of experience from which
to draw 1 feel that I can offer
both of those qualities Most Important ito you are in\ feelings
toward our Universilv Fee and

the committee chairman to plan
a general program for the year in
reference to party platforms, This
way the committees will have definite goals to follow and we can
make sure that there will be no
overlapping of function as exists
now. I will use my knowledge of
current, past, and future action
of each committee at executive
meetings in planning Senate
agendas Since committee reports
are often inaccurate, the chairman will periodically address the

vice-president and secretary

SANDY SEIDE

Company

it should be between com

Senate.
Communication is the main
method whereby I can achieve a
degree of co-ordination between
Senate and student body. The

Treasurer
Candidate

the

Committee, of the Union Board
Personnel Committee, ami publi
city manager of the IFC Concert
Attended the American Institute
of Banking and was employed
by the Lincoln Rochester Trust

mittees. and the Student Senate
and the student body I will make
it my responsibility to act with

CLINTON E. DEVEAUX

opinion and communications become, the more effective and responsible your leaders can be.

ELLEN CARDONE
dent Association as well as of the
Senate 1 would consider it in;,
first responsibility to prepare
summaries as well as minutes of
meetings, and to make both avail
able in convenient, publicized
places Permanent posters should
be set up to inform students of
the date time and place, and the
agenda of each Senate meeting
These are simple things but they
have not been done All student
are entitled to speak at Senate
meetings.
They should know
when issues of interest to them
will be decided
for there are
many such issues we expect to
bring many more to discussion
and action. We will need the interest, committment and debate
of all who are willing to improve
the University and their place
within it.
The Secretary is one of four
members of the Senate elected
by the entire student body. The

our actual Activity Fee
The managing of a university's
total financial affair
and complex form of business eu
terpnse Our present form of or-

which is dominated
and actually is controlled by the
Administration is called the l-'.i
culi ■ Student Association 11 is
permitted to tax each student a
fee in order to meet the budgets
ganisation

which apparently are presented
and approved so that a full' min-

SANFORD SEIDE
other non
uur Uni
ver.utv must be tri.only if we
are able to plan a program, we
should be able to submit a bud
Ret askuu! for a portion of the
S91 00 which we p
However
we have no voice : our Activity

same manner as ti

■

Presidential

academic activities i

fees

v ould

yea
is the $01,110
railed ihe I niversily 1
is the corre
of planning, an organization s &gt;
livities ■ but when the portion o

allocation
like

a

resent

I

pas

"I Ins, method

Faculty

■eques

Student

Associatm;

and receive

ample funds for the 'i dents pro
This is an Activity Fee
grant

-

responsibility to inform and to
discover the needs and opinions

ROSEMARY BROWN

all important information is submitted to the Spectrum or published in a newsletter.
I also feel that each Freshman
class should be formally oriented
not only to the structure of student government, but to the role
it actually plays in this university.
Such an orientation program
could be incorporated into the
summer planning conferences.
Many of these promises were
made in the past, and never
fulfilled. I feel that it is possible
to evaluate my promises by my
past performance. By this I mean,
not what positions I have held or
what committees I have served
on, but rather what I have accomplished. If you vote for me and
the Campus Alliance slate, you
will, have taken the first step
toward fulfilling these long-forgotten promises.

Secretarial
Candidate
ELLEN CARDONE
Co-Chairman of the Senate Convocations Committee; Sophomore
sponsor; Member of Goodyear

of each division and group should
be inseparable from the office,
and I will do my best to achieve
this.

As a member, and now as cochairman, of the Student Senate
Convocations Committee, I have
been working on a program designed to increase the scope and
immediacy of our education. This
semester’s presentations will draw
on fields such as Student Government, Politics, the Press, and the
Cinema. Next year’s topics include proposed series on The New
University, the Phenomenon of
Man. and China. Participation in
the Women’s Honor Society,
Sophomore Sponsors, and dormitory scholarship committee have
added. I feel, to my ability to
recognize and deal with issues
concerning the quality of our education. My high school activities
centered around writing, publications, student council and International groups. All of these became permanent interests and
added to my experience in working with people and ideas.
Our University (like our lives
as students) is in a state of transition. Every part of our platform
is concerned with ways of increasing the scope and the measure of personal choice in the
decisions that will be made in
1965-66. Every pledge in our plat
form can be fulfilled. The stronger and more confident student

the
ed.
;hor,

POINT
OF THE

LANCE
by Sargent

Shriver
16

pages

Sargent

Shriver's ringing
words could be read by millions as I hope it will be
it would advance the cause
—

of peace and tell Americans
more about their true selves
than any book I have seen
in many a year. It is a dis-

tinguished and thoughtful
book by a shining personality."

David E. Liuentual
"An extremely valuable resource and contribution in
the War on Poverty around
the world and in our own
backyard.”
Professor
-

of illustrations

At all bookstores

one of the ablest new figures
in public life of our generation. It is a book to give
courage and hope to the
anxious and fearful, and to
confirm the faith of those
who see what a great future
lies before mankind. If

—

—

Cloth. $4 95 Paper. $1.45

Patricia Sexton, New York

University

New York. N. Y. 10016

I

Student
■e hand

per

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Friday, March S, 1965

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE CANDIDATES
UNITED ST I DENTS

BOB POTTER

—

member of the tennis and track
teams.

me

this
i Oe

repetition wi
reason for tn

ot

with
the Civil

’en
the l abor Committee of
Right
Committee

due to

uselessness of stude
eminent but rather
the qualify oi the people leeted.
My views cannot possibly be exone hundred words,
However
i.v. goal in o ne sen:l be- eiimin, ate the
a' tins school and obtain
herein

i

Bookstore Committee: member of
Alpha Phi Omega fraternity a
contributor to the Kiiil magazine
High School
active in many
idiases of school and class government: an editor of school paper: officer in the Kev Club; a

ifraid

:

vernment
m student
worked on several campus- problems. notably with the Co-op

up non

c Spectrum

h

this

group 1 have worked on various
rn co
projects and presently !
chairman of the bankin protect
I support my parly platform and
I agree that the Student Senate
should be campus oriented: that
its primary objective should be
to serve the students. Since 1 am
can

only

I

hope I will have the
to meet you and disideas for a successtui and
ty

HAROLD BOB
(United Students): Freshman,

Pre
mod
Freshman Class Council.
Chairman Publicity committee;

ni&gt;

BOB POTTER
Bob Potter, UC Senate
I disavow the support of the Spectrum.
have
the
.
recently had
opportunity lo work on various problems of university life and feel
atisfied in running with a party
that attends to the realities of
the campus in. a mature and reponsiblc manner t he proposed
Constitution, the co-op bookstore,
the Publications Board, and the
allocation of funds are but a
few of the items with which the
Senate will deal next year. I
believe the focus of the Senate’s
consideration should be directed
towards university affairs. I feel
the Senate will find its most
effective tool in co-operating with
the administration as long as progress may be secured. It is in
this capacity that I wish to serve.

MARTIN F. GUGGENHEIM
School: Vice-president Student Association; president Freshman Class; School parliamentarian: athletic representative to the
Executive Committee; chairman.
Budget Committee: member of
Board of Governors; Glee Club:
two years varsity basketball and
two years varsity bowling.
At UB: President, Freshman Class
Council; member Convocations
Committee of the Publications
Board: member Student Senate

&lt;iitor

ibv

But

Harold B. Bob for Senate from
UC I niter! Students 1 disavow
the support of the Spectrum The
arbitrary shortness of this paragraph prevents me from fully
staling my views, 1 hope to speak
to as many students as possible
during the campaign and can be
reached at TK 4-3803 The first
duty of any senator is lo act
for the welfare of the student
body If elected 1 wit! work to;
bring the co-op bookstore to camNorton

LENE FRIEDMAN
High School
Ad\ertising c
mittee ot Yearbook: Senior Cc
—

cii member; Senior Band M
ber; Drama Society; Tennis Cl
and National Honor

Society

Most freshman and sophomores
agree that the education, campus
life, and • administrative altitude
existing on this campus falls far

short of the quality of experience
expected from a University.
The too often large classes

and
the

boring lecture instructors,
sterile regulation-bound

dorms and dorm iife, the "Alien-

hurst

of our treshmen
the slate administrations
harassment of nationally affiliated' fiaiermtie
and the marked profit making o
the bookstore and food service
all, constitute manifestation*
our legitimate grievance
Each of these issues .-mould he.
and can be, dealt with by. (he
Student Senate. The eagerness
of our sopnomores and especially
our freshmen class, is a positive
Captivity'

LENNI FRIEDMAN
l : B—President of Goodyear
Hall East. Freshman Class Council and Faculty-Student Commii
tee on Academic Freedom
At

KIM DARROW
High

School—Student Court:
sistant Editor of School pape
member of National Honor 'S

ill

establish worthy iradilions such as Senior Week: act

prices,

ciety.

College—Vice President of Elbe
ai Religious Fellowship; Urcai
ized the Faculty-Student Comnu
tee for Academic Freedom
Kim Darrow—The overall eriuc
tional structure of this universe
is inefficient, and teemin? wit
flaws which can be broadly ca
gorized as either educational

EVY WEINRUB

Evy Weinrub, University College,

United Students, I disavow the
-■upport of the Spectrum. You say
that the Student Senate :s the
Mickey Mouse Club of this cama point there. Hut

economic.

The quality of teaching, the excessive size of many classes, the

pus. You have

you also insist that it is incapable of raising its status. You
are badly mistaken. This year, ac-

complishment was
completely
prohibited by a number of senators who ran with United Stu-

HAROLD BOB

High

Welfare Committee.

I

RAYMOND VOLPE
Veteran: Service Schoo
Student Counselor Member
Niagara Fails Civil Defense: Assistant Layout Editor and Feature Writer ol Spectrum; mem
ber of Spring Arts Festival: Con
locations Committee: English major with a 2,4 overall

boys,

Chairman Humanitarian Projects
Committee

Campus Alliance

to resolve the commuter-resident

problem, The college experience
means more than just classes.
These opportunities land responsibilities) are ours.
RICHARD SEGAN
Students); half year at
Queens College: UB activities—
Voter Registration Project; Students for Johnson and Humphrey;
Civil Right Committee: Labor subcommittee: Ski Club
United
States Eastern Amateur Ski Association Committee.

(United

RAYMOND VOLPE
declaration of their potential and
dents for the sole purpose of willingness to support Senate
victory: after they won their leaders who will voice and act
scats and their soon-abused votes, on student dissatifactions.
It is this new spirit in Unithey rejected their platform issues in order to tie up the Senate versity College coupled with the
for hours and months discussing praticle, specified propositions
issues which were of no concern outlined in the Campus Alliance
to you or to the problems you Party platform, that has encourface on this campus. United Stu- aged me to seek a Senate seat.
dents wants to and can improve Any freshman or sophomore
the unfavorable conditions in our wishing to discuss these issues
may contact me by dropping a
school. And 1 am a United Student.
note in my box in the Spectrum
office or phoning BU 3-4389,

INDEPENDENT

GEORGE BOONER
High School—Yearbook and news-

paper staffs: Treasurer of Debate
Club: President of Chess Club.

College

Senate representative
from the Freshman Class Council: Student Senate Activities
Committee; Activities Committee
of the Freshman Class Council:
Winter Weekend Committee; and
Activities Drive Committee.

—

—

lack of effective communication

among students, faculty and ad
ministration, and thus a general
disinterest in university life are
among the educational deffici
encies. Exorbinant prices charged
by the Faculty Student Associa

tion in the Bookstore and Food

Service, inavailability of FSA rec
ords, high room and board costs,
and a generally excessive finan
cial drain on students, coupled
with a low return in the form of

allocation to student organizations
constitute some of the economic
flaws.

STEVE SICKLER

The Student Senate is the mam
organ which the students have
for affecting any remedy to the
situation I have described
I think that the Senate, with a

High School—two years as Student Council Representative; com-

mitteeman three years in school
government, chairman of his party in senior year.
At UB—ran for Freshman Council; joined the Allenhurst Publicity Committee; active campaigner with local party organi-

MARTIN GUGGENHEIM
Marlin

Guggenheim. University
College Senatorial Candidate. United Students. I disavow the support of the Spectrum There is

RICHARD SEGAN

Richard Sagan. Senator, University
the sup-

zation and UB student organization; participated in a debate before the Wesley Society on election issues: active member and
co-founder of the Young Republican Club of UB.

GEORGE SOONER

strong leadership and capable and
concerned membership can affect
such remedies. I believe that with
'my desire to improve the university and my previous qualifications, I can make a valuable
contribution toward forming the
Student Senate into a powerful
and effective organ oh this cam
pus. Thus, I am seeking the office
of Student Senator.

�Friday,

March 5, 1965

«•-

SPECTRUM

ARTS

PACE

SCIENCES

&amp;

UNITED STUDENTS

RONALD SILVER
(United Students); Sophomore;
president of Fraternity Pledge
Class; Senior Week Committee;
Public Relations Committee;
chairman of Fraternity Rush Committee; Communications Committee; Schussmeisters Ski Club; Student Dramatic Society; appeared
in the school production of “The
American Dream”, playing in part
of “Daddy”; Sigma Alpha Mu;
majoring in Spanish.

ts

BOBBI GROSSMAN
(Arts &amp; Sciences Senator, United
Students); Sigma Delta Tau sorority; Senior Week Committee;
Dormitory Committees; Resident
Advisor Candidate; Dean’s List;
Glee Club; Greek Weekend Committee; Baird Productions—“Do
Re Mi”

Roberta Grossman, Senator, Arts
and Sciences. 1 disavow the support of the Spectrum. Student
Government can and must meet
the needs of all individuals on
this campus. For the past two
years the Senate has been
manicled by those individuals
who put personal objectives before the welfare of the student
body.

I pledge to correct

Compus Alliance

BARBARA CONIGLIO
(Arts &amp; Sciences Senator); Freshman year—participation in the
Fine Arts Festival of D'Youville

LINDA S. GUNSBERG

Arts and Sciences Senator; Mixer Committee; Member of Alpha

Lambda Delta; House Council
Parlementarian; Stunt Night Committee; Silver Ball Publicity Com-

College; Sophomore year—participation in Newman Club;
Junior
year—Treasurer of Pledge' Class
of Alpha Gamma Delta; worked
on the. Publicity Committee for
Winter Weekend; newly elected
editor of Alpha Gamma Delta
fraternity.

mittee; Concert Committee Secretary; Union Board Personnel
Committee; Union Board House
Committee; Michael Hall House
Council; Resident Advisor; Student Senate Executive Committee; International Affairs Committee of the Student Senate;
and Faculty-Student Committee
on Academic Freedom.

this

CARL LEVINE

situation. Whether Commuter
or Resident, Greek or Indepeijdant, this year’s Senate is in the
unique position

interests. The

to serve

proposed

In 1961, the University of Buffalo became a New York State
institution of higher learning.
Suddenly, a small, private college
was transformed into a sprawling
university with increased fungi
available for faculty and building
improvement and construction.

your

Consti-

tution, with its dual house and
strong executive can greatly improve the efficiency of Student

Yet, the Student Senate has not
adjusted to the turnover.
Instead of endeavoring to
the student body, we find the Senate sitting back and appointing
committees to study the problem!.
They infallibly wind up with the
same position they were in before. This is true not only in cam-

RONALD SILVER
Ron Silner. I disavow the support
of the Spectrum. I do not seek
the backing of the single newspaper on the campus which purports to represent the entire
student body. I am seeking the
office of Senator from Arts and
Sciences for the simple, yet intense belief in the potential of
student government. While significant world events do warrant
our attention, our primary goal
should be the satisfaction of the
needs and wants of the men and
women of this university. Let me
represent you and work for
cheaper books, lower food prices
and a better school. To this endeavor I wish to devote myself
and with your support I shall.

MARTIN GUGINO
Junior; Arts and Sciences; majoring in mathematics; served on
the National Student Association
Steering Committee; chosen with
three other students to represent
UB at the Association’s regional
meeting in Ithaca; announcer on
WBFO; worked with the film committee of Union Board; joined the
Faculty-Student Committee on Academic Freedom and helped write
its constitution; serving on its
publicity committee; member of
Men’s Glee Club, elected to serve
on its executive board.

BARBARA CONIGLIO

BOBBI CROSSMAN

Government. I ask for your support in order to achieve the pasage of the Constitution thereby
serving our common interests.
PHYLLIS LIES
&amp;
Sciences; Spanish
major—Secondary Ed.; Goodyear
East—Music Committee; Scholarship Committee; Union Board
Mixer Committee; Sophomore
Sponsor; Spanish Club; Glee Club;
Dean’s List.

Junior; Arts

martin

cugino

Martin Gugino

I disavow the supthe Spectrum. Secondly,
m the question of undergraduate
'■duration, the students are the
interested party, yet they are
not treated that way.
Students
a rc not asked to comment
on the
quality of the texts they are us■og, nor are their Unsolicited
j***ons formally considered;
students are not told the teachers
assigned to specific
sections until
e first day of class. These overpo .‘ nt to the problem. I
oink it is time we
took undereducation seriously; I
s time we put *aith in
e cliche “The hope
of the world
port of

"

fh- i?

*

ties

in

its

youth.”

Barbara Coniglio, Senator, Arts
and Sciences. I disavow the support of the Spectrum. The responsibility for Student government rests with the entire Student Body. A nice cliche, with
emphasis on the word, RESTS.
I feel that the responsibility of
Student Government does rest
in a student’s hand but in an
active sense. He must devote his
talents and time to this responsibility, which may be the cause
of worthwhile accomplishments
for the campus and for his own
scope of learning. 1 purport to
have such an interest. While not
offering a panacea for the ills
of the University, I do feel that
a Student Senator can act intelligently and constructively on
matters which will benefit the
student body as a whole. By
persistant investigation and inquiry, through the legitimate
channels of faculty and administration, I think that feasible solutions to many campus problems
can be effected.

Paper Controversy
BOSTON (CPS)—A struggle for
the control of the newspaper at
Boston University moved toward
a climax this week as the School's
Student Congress prepared to demand that control of the News
be turned over to the Congress
by the Board of Trustees.
University President Harold C.
Case opened the controversy when

PHYLLIS LIES
Phyllis Lieb, Senator, Arts and
Sciences. I disavow the support of
the Spectrum. In essence, the Student Senate should serve the purpose of attending to those matters which Directly involve and
affect the student body. As an
observer for the past two years,
I have heard the bickering and
have seen the emotional outbursts of the senators in matters
which are relatively unimportant
and minor. And I have seen the
underlying differences • develop
among those on the floor. I find
this to be the main reason for
the constant delay of so many
of the important issues. 1 have
a strong interest in dealing with
these major issues, and in making
worthwhile accomplishments with
the entire student body in mind.
The office of senator affords me
the opportunity to assure an effective Student Senate which will
deal first and foramost with our
campus

—ia—

THIRTEEN

he invoked a long-dormant section of the newspaper’s charter
that permits the administration

to exercise censorship

over the

paper and to compel it to print
any article the administration

wished to have printed.
Case’s demands apparently came
in response to an editorial in last
week’s issue of the News attacking a plan by the administration
to take over control of the campus FM radio station which is

now student controlled.
The paper had also been outspoken in criticism of the campus
bookstore which it said reaped
“excessive profits."
Last week, after Case announced that he would use the
section of the charter to print a
front page editorial and news
story, the Student Congress voted
to give the News money to print
a "bootleg” edition of the issue
that would not contain the Case
material. It also asked Case to
expunge the section of the char
ter governing the operation of
the News.
-—

LINDA CUNSBERC
"I am in favor of taking stands
on significant issues concerning
the local community, the nation,
and the world. But attention to
these matters of profound im
portance should not divert concern for the Senate’s prime responsibility; the realm of university life. There are many campus problems which) cannot be
pushed into the background—-and
the Senate, representing the welfare of all the students, should
assume the responsibility of investigating and alleviating the
grievances of the student laxly.
An example of such an issue is
the financial support of the hock-

pus affairs, but also with inter-

university and national relatione
(which this year's Senate has hai

little, if any, influence in.
The Senate must take action on
all issues affecting student life.
As a senator, I would hope to iriL
tiate action to solve these problems along the lines of the alter-

natives presented in the Campua
Alliance party platform.

ey team.

Take for example the financial
situation of the Hockey Team.
The question is whether the burden of financial support of the
team should fall upon the Senate
or the Athletic Department. The
Senate should continue to encour
age strongly that the Athletic Department. provide this support,
since the Senate should not be
made responsible for providing
funds to inter-collegiate athletic

competitions. An organization as
deserving as the Hockey Team
should not have to "prove itself”
further before it gets adequate
funds from the proper source
“There is the crucial question
“Finally, the Senate ought to
a new constitution. Before a final
decision is made as to whether
there should be four autonomous
organs of student government or

DAVID FRANKO

Phi Kappa Psi Historian and Financial Committee Member; Senior Representative to the IFC,
chairman of the annual dinner,
the activities comittee and Greek

Ball; Served as Representative te
a regional IFC conference at C4-

umbia College.

three organs beneath the power
of the Senate, effective communications among the Senate and
such groups as IRC, IFC, Panhcllenic Council, Union Board, Stu
dent Judiciary, amt the Publications Board should be initiated.
Finally, the Senate ought to
support the efforts of the Fac
ulty Student Committee on Academic Freedom The opportunity
for academic freedom is here and

it most be met,’’
Diope that my efforts will aid
and encourage the Senate in creating the intellectual and aca
demic climate appropriate to a
“

great university.”

CARL LEVINE
Publicity and Accommodations
Committee of the Debate Society;

Leukemia Drive Committee: Fea
lure writer for, "For Two Cents
Plain”; member of young Re
publicans Club.

JEFFREY OSLEEB
Winter Weekend Committee;
1-abor Committee o( Senate Civi
Rights Committee, Student Committee (or Academic Freedom;
Member o( CO R E and SANE;
Publications Committee. Political
Science Club; and Alpha Epsiloa

PJ Fraternity.

�ENGINEERING

CURTIS MONTGOMERY

Majoring in Engineering Science;

President of both his Freshman
Sophomore Classes in the
School of Engineering; member
of Engineering Student Council
for two years; Pi Lambda Tau fraternity; Senior Representative to
the Interfraternity Council; running as an independent candidate
for Student Senate from the
School of Engineering.
and

Friday, March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

MICHAEL PETZ

Majoring in Chemical Engineering; presently serving at president of the Junior Engineering
Class; vice-president of the Engineering Student Council; two
years in Pi Lamda Tau fraternity.

EDUCATION
HELEN CAPELL
Education Senator; (United Students); commuter;

junior; early

childhood education.

PARKING COURT
Two
secretaries are
needed for the Student

RHEA FROM
School of Education: Communication Committee; Sophomore Sponsor; Norton House Committee;
Browsing Library
Committee;
Silver Ball Committee; Student
Senate Elections Clerk; Alpha
Lambda Delta; Spring Weekend
Committee, Freshman Orientation.

Judiciary Parking Court.

The position entails sending notices to those appealing to the court, and recording minutes at the
meetings. For further de-

tails, contact Barb Strauss,

TR 6-0924.

jlfir

OPEN HOUSE
Schoellkopf Hall will he
having its second Open
House Sunday from 2:00
p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend and
see how living in a coeducational dorm is man-

aged.

PIZZA

HELEN CAPELL
W

f

Robert Fisk
MICHAEL

CURTIS MONTGOMERY

BUSINESS
ROSS RADLEY

(United Students); Business
School; accounting major; junior;
1.5 overall average; letterman for
freshman football; Newman Club
three year; active in intramural
sports; Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity as treasurer for second year;
during sophomore year worked
ten to fifteen hours in the kitchen at Goodyear; presently desk
receptionist at Goodyear and
Tower.

PETZ

Pharmacy
DENNIS F. GIA QUINTO
Junior; (United Students); pres-

ently the Senator from the School
of Pharmacy; member of the Student Activities Committee; mem-

ber of the Council of the Pharmacy School Student Association;
member of Alpha Sigma Phi Fra-

ternity (corresponding secretary
for two years); in freshman year
was the vice-president of Michael

Hall.

...

from P. 6)
the last four years. It would be
naive to say that we completely
avert impersonality, but we do
make serious efforts to minimize
it.
Certainly it is unrealistic for
the prospective teacher to see
teaching only under circumstances, in classes of bright and
attentive middle class pupils in a
model or blue ribbon school. We
guard against this shortcoming
by sending SUNYAB’s student
teachers, for part of their student
teaching at least, to schools with
pupils from lower social classes,
classes for less-than-brilliant pupils, and even to teach classes
in detention homes.
There is much danger that we
might make an ‘orphan’ of undergraduate education courses. The
faculty of the School of Education would agree with Davies
that teacher education should not
be a sideline for any institution;
it should be done right or not at
(Cont’d

RHEA FROM

Graduating
engineers &amp;

scientists:
Join IBM's
new computer
systems science
training program

all.
Most of our prospective teachers on this campus are students
in the College of Arts and Sciences, and their programs have

in fact always been arrived at
by the faculty of the College
rather than by only the faculty
of the School of Education. Most
students devote only 15% of their
undergraduate course work to
coursework in Education, as con-

DENNIS

ROSS RODLEY

"I disavow the support of the
Spectrum. I feel that the Senate
should be mainly concerned with
campus affairs. Similarly, the individual senators should be mainly concerned with affairs pertaining to the division they represent.
As a senator from the Business
School I intend to promote student-faculty relations in the Business School. Although primarily
concerned with its own division,
each senator should he aware of
the other issues to vote intelligently. Lastly, the senate or any
other organization should not let
personality conflicts or 'politics'
blind their judgment.”

Dr. John Anton, Profes-

sor of Philosophy, will discuss career opportunities

for Philosophy Majors in
college teaching and in
other professions in Room
-233-Norlon Union at 3:00
p.m. Tuesday.

F. CIA QUINTO

WBFO Covers
Election Scene
Government has its day Wednesday night on WBFO, as Election Central takes you behind the
scenes to witness the drama and
excitement of Student Government.

Anchormen J. Z. Friedman and
Joe Willet will bring analysis and
commentary on the fast moving
results in party headquarters and
polling areas. Roving reporters
Bob Sherman and Roger Tompkins will be all over with their
on-the-spot interviews of candidates and party officials.
Following the election results,
a panel of distinguished campus
personalities will discuss Student
Government and its role on the
campus and in the community.

Manuscripts
On Sale Monday

trasted with the 25% which
Davies suggests as the maximum.
On this count we are not guilty.
SUNYAB programs mandate that
our prospective elementary teachers should “study in depth in the
subject matter,’’ in addition to
coursework in education.
Four Year Program
A four year teacher education
sequence which puts prospective
teachers in contact with pupils
from its beginning undoubtedly
has merit. As a matter of fact,
such a program is now available
to some SUNYAB students, as
part of the Inter-University
Teacher Education Project. But
it would be a disservice to
SUNYAB students to make this
the pattern, because it would
make it impossible for them to
select education as a career at
any later time.
As

to

internship

programs,

Davies may have fallen into a
trap he has pointed out. Of
course internships would be valuable. But of course they do not
exist, except for a few students.
We will try to make them available, and in time will. In the
meantime, advocating them is
very much like advocating, to use
Davies’ phrase, “television in
Ethiopia."
In sum, it is interesting to see
once again that some of our most

severe critics come from within
teacher education, rather than
from submarines!

IF 3-1344

Become a problem-solver and advisor to
users of IBM computer systems in areas
such as:
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

real-time control of industrial processes
communications-based information
systems
time-shared computer systems
graphic data processing
computer-controlled manufacturing
systems
management operating systems
engineering design automation

All engineering and scientific disciplines are
needed. IBM will give you comprehensive
training, both in the classroom and op the
job. Openings are available in all principal
cities of the U.S.
For more information see your placement
director, or call the nearest IBM branch
office. If you prefer, write to R. W. Bower,
IBM Corporation, Room 301, 731 James
Street. Syracuse, New York 13203.

IBM
DATA

PROCESSING DIVISION

�Friday,

March 5, 1965

STUDENT SENATE
GENERAL ELECTION BALLOT
Morch 9 &amp; 10, 1965

Row A

UNITED
STUDENTS

Vlea Pras.

Sacratary

Traosurar

Hlek

Denial

Silbar

Michaal L.

Sargant

Barbara
Witsal

Q

Q

Q

Rob amary
Brown

Elian
Cardona

Sanford
Saida

□

□

□

Clinton E.
Dovoaux

CAMPUS
ALLIANCE

STUDENT SENATE

□

.

STUDENT SENATE
MED-DENT-NURSINC BALLOT

LAW SCHOOL BALLOT
March 9 &amp; 10, 1965

Prasidant

g

Row B

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Vie* Pr**.

Hick

UNITED
STUDENTS

Sargent

Daniel
Sllbar

□

□

Row B
CAMPUS
ALLIANCE

Clinton E.
Deveoux

Rosemary

□

□

**»«

Marl I.

President
*

Brawn

Secretary

Treasurer

Barbara
Wild

Michael L.
M.rllr

□

□

Ellen
Cardona

Sanford
Soldo

□

Row A
UNITED
STUDENTS

Vie* Fro*.

Nick

Doniol
Silk*r

(Qioosa two)

FI
I I

Cordon*

Sonford
Sold*

□

□

□

CORRECT DIVISION
|

[

NURSING
(CKoos* on*)

Wlllord Mayors (C.

Q KoHiy

A.)
|

Allan Paglio (Ind.)

f~| J«hi

BUSINESS ADMIN.

(Choosa ona)

Ellon

Brown

(Qtooo* on*)

n Curtlaa Montgomery
(Ind.)
n Nlchoal Pat* (Ind.)

[nursing

|

Roioowy

SENATE REPRESENTATIVE

(Chaoaa two)

□ Halan Copall (U.S.)
□ Rh.o From (C.A.)

□

□
MARK

| EDUCATION

|

L.

□

□

Clinton E.
Dovoomr

Timmw
MtcKooi

Borbor*

Morfi*

□

MARK CORRECT DIVISION

Socrotory

Wit«*l

Sorjont

Row B
CAMPUS
ALLIANCE

□

PniUwt

|

DENT SCHOOL

PlotrooEok

(Ind)

(Choosa two)

O Kothy Pl*tros*ok (U.S.,

Q Bruce Goldstein (U.S.)
I I Ross Radley (U.S.)

C.A.)

”] PHARMACY
(Choose one)

FI Dennis Cia Quinto (U.S.)

President

Vice Pres.

Choose one Choose one

UNITED
STUDENTS

CAMPUS
ALLIANCE

Secretary

Treasurer

Choose one

Cheoseene

Daniel
Silber

Barbara
Witsel

Michael
MeHls

Evelyn
Weinrub

Nereid
Bob

Marty
Guggenheim

Clinton E.

Rosemary
Brawn

Ellen
Cardona

Sanford
Saida

George M.
Bodnar

Raymond
Velpe

Kim L.
Da new

Stephan

INDEPENDENT

Cheese one

Cheese Six (4)

Nick
Sargent

Deveaux

President

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE SENATOR

Sickler

Bob
Patter

Helene
Preldman

UNITED
STUDENTS

CAMPUS
ALLIANCE

Nick
Sargent

Cllnten E.

Deveaux

Vice Pres.

Secretary

Cheeseene Cheeseene

Denial
Silber

Resume ry
Brawn

Berbers
Witsel

Ellen
Cardens

Treasurer

ARTS AND SCIENCES SENATOR
Cheese Five (5)

Cheeseana

Michael
Merits

Phyllis
Lleb

Sanferd
Selde

Jeffry

Carl S.

Osleab

Levine

Martin

Ranald

Reberte

Sliver

Grossman

Guglne

Linda
Cunsberg

David
Pranks

Barbara
Cenlglle

INDEPENDENT

CAMPUS ALLIANCE PLATFORM
(Cont’d from P. 9)
equal or exceed those of any

commercial bookstore. Used books
are sold at a marked profit.
Proposed Action I
Pat Simson, Campus Alliance
senator, initiated a student bookexchange in late 1963. Students
wishing to sell ar purchase used
books communicated with one
another through the use of a card
catalogue system operated by the
Student Senate. A purchaser paid
less to another student than bookstore rates, and anyone wishing
to sell received more from another student than the bookstore
would pay. This eliminated the
large middleman profits of the
University Bookstore. Why was
this system abandoned? It worked
here; it works at other universities; we will re-activate this
system.

Proposed Action II
prices must be recan achieve this by
compelling the University Bookstore to compete with local bookstores. We have secured pledges
from several departments to
place book orders with other
stores providing a student dis-

Bookstore
duced. We

count. We would

encourage

stu-

dents to avoid the University
Bookstore in favor of those offering a discount. With profits reduced, our legitimate complaints

will receive greater emphasis.
(Graduate students already receive a 20% discount by ordering
books directly from the publisher.)
An alternate program, a book
store co-operative has been proposed by the present
student administration. This plan is un-

feasible because:

1) It requires an outlay
of at
least thirty-five thousand dollars
~a sum incompatable with Sen-

ate budgets.

2) It is unlikely
that the FSA
would provide or loan funds for
a competing bookstore.
Contention: Food Service
The prices of ail foods in Nor-

ton cafeterias are exorbitent. A

the staff of the engineering
with the
school, compiled a study in 1963
dealing with the parking probaid of Dr. Silverman of the Psychology Department. It revealed
lem. He conclusively showed that
that 89.9% of the student body parking spaces for an additional
is dissatisfied with the cafeteria two to three hundred vehicles
situation. The cafeterias are also could be provided by relining a
operated by the FSA, alledgedly portion of each lot for small cars.
on a non-profit basis. When the This plan is now being successcafeterias were taken over by the fully employed in many univerFSA, Dr. Puffer said that the sities such as the University of
aim was to bring lower prices to Rochester and Queens College.
students. The only price change At that time the administration
which has occurred is the one on was approached and flatly refused
dairy products affected by this to evaluate it. We will resubmit
the plan. We will not abandon
party’s past chairman.
Proposed Action I
this issue until a definite and
We can affect a change in the reasonable answer is given.
Food Service. First, all alternaPart V
tives available through the offiFood and Housing
cial channels of the administraContention; Room and Board
tion will be considered. If these
The average room and board
alternatives prove unsuccessful, a
University syscomparative price listing of our costs in the State
according to the Now York
Food Service and local schols and tem,
Times, is $650. Our cost, under
restaurants will be published to
the existing contract, is between
inform the Buffalo community $880
and $930. Additionally, a
and parents of the food problem. raise
of $65 has been announced,
Last, if these measures fail to
to be applied during the next
produce a change, we, as memthree years to all state colleges
bers of the Student Senate, would
and universities.
to
avoid
Norstudents
encourage
Proposed Action I
ton cafeterias at specified and
publicised time intervals. Lack of
Our university Senate will lead
customers for prepared food and
in organizing an inter-university
protest against uniform housing
money paid to hired help will
reduce profits. The Food Service increase. We would advocate at
should then be ready to negothe above proposed Congress of
tiate a reduction in prices.
State Colleges and Universities
measures such as appeals to the
Contention: Parking Faeililia*
State Legislature and to the
Proposed Action I
citizens of New York.
it
the
state
univeronly
Ours
uses
the
Proposed Action II
sity in New York that
Students are unable to contract
toll-gate parking system. We
favor the system used in most room without board at this uniother universities in New York versity. Mr. Okoniewski, Director
of Food and Housing, has indiwhereby students purchase a
cated to this party’s past chairparking sticker for a nominal fee.
man his approval of separate
Then, they have parking privileges for the rest of the semesroom and board contracts. No folWe
low-up action has been taken by
ter without additional cost.
will submit such a plan to the either the Student Senate or the
Housing Office. We feel that a
administration.
plan of such obvious merit deProposed Action II
serves greater consideration. We
Peter Scholl, former chairman
Grounds
endeavor to affect this
will
Senate
of the Student
change in the immediate future.
Committee, in co-operation with
survey was conducted

Proposed Action III
A survey in Goodyear dorm and
the Allenhurst apartments has
shown an overwhelming desire
for more co-educational dormitory activities. We will work with
the Inter-residence Council to encourage the establishment of
weekly visiting hours in the
dormitories.
Contention: Boor on Campus
This party fully supports tho
program for having boor sorvod
on campus. We do however, recognize that all possible student
action has been taken and therefore, we will not make unworkable pledges for the immediate
solution of this problem.

Part VI
Conclusion

Wo, tho candidates of the Cam- r
pus Alliance Party, feel that the
contentions and proposed action
stated above best describe the
predicament of our education, the
quality of our life, and the needs
of our student government.

President Gould's commencement address expressed his concern for our problems as students. He emphasised that "bold
and imaginative changes are essential." We agree. We must de
more for the university; we can
do more; we as members of the
Campus Alliance Party will de
moral
■

GET OUT OF THE POOL!
YOU CAN
|p you are a student with a "B" average
or better, and have a good driving record,
No increase in Rates for accidents or
violations.
,
.

.

.

CA L TX 5 123g
.

�Friday, March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SEVENTEEN

ICE BULLS TIED BY ITHACA

NINE PLA YERS PENALIZED
IN THIRD PERIOD BRAWL
Bulls increased their lead to two
goals, but each time the Bombers came back to close the gap,
Doherty slapped in a 25-foot backhander at 7:02 for his 12th goal
of the season and Gorney completed his hat-trick six minutes
later, but Diagostino’s two goals
offset the Buffalo scores. The
for their first Finger Lakes championship, But the visiting BombBulls missed numerous opportuers' late rally took a back seat
nities to increase their lead, and
to the wild brawl that took place
the score stood at 5-4 as the buzzer sounded. Typical of Buffalo’s
near the end of the third period
bad luck oceured when the refand saw nine players penalized.
On the short end of a 6-5 score, eree disallowed a goal in the first
and with less than two minutes
11 seconds of play, claiming that
left in the game, Ithaca pulled the puck had been kicked in.
goalie Bill Simpson from the nets
The SUNYAB’s came out on the
in a desperation bid to notch the
ice for the third period with the
score. The strategy seemed to
idea of wrapping up the game
backfire when UB speedster Day early. With the first line on the
picked
up
an
errant
Hannah
ice, Gorney took a pass from DohIthaca pass and shot from mid-ice
erty and broke in alone against
net.
his
at the empty
But
blast Simpson. His moves pulled the
was a foot wide of the mark, and goalie from his net, but a hardgave the Bombers another life. skating Ithaca defenseman manThey brought the puck down the aged to poke his stick in and deice and with but 1:20 showing on flect the puck. The Herd came
the clock, Tony Diagostino knotright back and, at 4:00, Hannah
ted the game on a pass from found the net on a 3-2 breakSteve Forman. That is how the
away to give them a seemingly
game ended, though Tony almost safe two goal edge.
got the would-be winning goal (it
At the ten minute mark, Ithaca
would have been his fifth of the made its move. At 12:22 Diagosgame) with but 2 seconds left. It
tino's third score put them only
one down, and then, with but five
took a spectacular save by UB
goalie Ken Sherry to preserve the
minutes left, Walford pilfered a
tie.
pass and skated in on Sherry
The ice Bulls dominated the alone. It looked like Ithaca’s high
game for the first 55 minutes of scorer had a sure score, but Ken
play, in their best effort to date
made a picture save on a very
since the upset of league-leading difficult stop. Ithaca seemed to
have lost its last opportunity, but
Oswego State. The Herd had almost complete control of the puck
then lightning struck.
and kept the action deep in IthA few seconds after Walfords
aca ice. But at 15:47 of the final
miss, UB defenseman Tom Robperiod, the Bulls owned only a ertson rocked the Bombers Reilly
slim one goal lead. A combinawith a bone-crunching check betion of bad bounces and defenhind the Buffalo net. The action
sive lapses had allowed the Bombmoved to the Ithaca zone, but the
ers to remain within reach at 6-5.
two players decided to forget the
In typical UB fashion, the visigame for the time being and
tors scored the games first goal started throwing punches. Soon
during a pile-up in front of the all the players on the ice, includ-

lost

three

relatively

inexperi-

enced skaters. The Bombers then

took advantage of UB’s loss of
important personnel and went on
to tie the contest.
Earlier in the week, the Herd
had defeated a Brockport State

registered three hat-tricks
this year (Gorney, Balland and
Doherty) Jerry also collected four
against Syracuse . . . UB’s last
hope for first place trophy is if
R.I.T. trips up Oswego later this
month. As things stand now. a
Buffalo victory over State on the
13th would give each identical
11-2-1 records and Oswego would
be crowned champ on basis of
more total goals. The standings
have

to date are:

W

L
1

9

2
3
3
6
8
11
14
Scoring

10

1. Oswego

2. Ithaca

9

3. R.I.T.
4. Buffalo
5. Brockport
6. Syracuse

8

5

4
2
0

7. Rochester
8. Hobart

Individual
Goals

Player
Gorney
Doherty

11
12
5
4

I

A daring maneuver by George

Moore, Ithaca hockey coach, may
have cost the , UB hockey team
more than just a victory at the
Amherst Arena last, Saturday
night. The 6-6 tie that resulted
between the two schools may
have extinguished Buffalo’s hopes

PIERRE PUCK SAYS —Ithaca
played the last three minutes of
game with an empty bench. They
dressed only eleven men and after
a ruckus in third period found
themselves a little shorthanded.
Two subsequent penalties cost
them the last of their reserves
. . . The Bulls have been heavily
penalized all year, but before the
fight, there had been only four
penalities in over 55 minutes,
none in the last 33. Maybe they
were a little overdue? . . . They

Balland
Dever

T
I
3
0
1

1

0
0
0

Assists
IS
10
8
7

Moorhouse

Bausch

2
3
2
4
3
I
0

Fraser
Robertson
Hannah
Weaver

Lenegan

Kubiak
Whelan

2

Algeier
Marrus

I
1
1

Mitchell

0

Ravage

DAN GORNEY BEATS ITHACA GOALIE AGAIN

six, 7-4, coming back strong after
again giving up the opening goal.
Balland led all scorers with three
goals and an assist, as the icers
held off a third period rally by
the visitors.
The UB hockey team takes to
the road tonight against Syracuse,
but will return home to Amherst
Arena tomorrow night for a game
with Broekport. Game time is
10:30 p.m. and admission is free.
Free busses will leave from Norton Union. The winners of the
fund-raising raffle will be announced at the game.

wound up being assessed 59 minutes in penalty time. A game is
60 minutes long . . . Sherry has

Proctor
Evans

0

Dewitt

0

0

very creditable 2.9 goals per game
average 2.36 official ave. includ-

ing two 1-0 forfeits by Hobart . . .
Defenseman Bill Mitchell missed

LISTEN

the game but wound up tied anyway - tied in bonds of matrimony,
that is! Mitch has joined the

TO

Armed Forces and leaves soon
for Korea. Good luck to him and
his new Mrs. . . . Diagostino and
Gorney led
scorers with five

WBFO

points, followed by Balland and
Reilly with four each . . . Bulls

5th ANNUAL
INTERCOLLEGIATE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

NEW YORK CITY EXCURSION
MARCH

17

‘Deluxe round

-

18

-

19-20-21

trip transportation on an air

conditioned, bar equip-

ped, lavoratory equipped scenicruiser.
'Hotel accomodations for 5 days and 4 nights at the world famous
AMERICANA HOTEL
trip refreshments featuring UTICA CLUB on tap to
from New York City
*St. Patrick's Day Parade on Fifth Avenue (Wednesday)

‘Round

$60.00

BUFFALO ITHACA ACTION

Buffalo

net at 8:10 of the first
period. But
the Bulls came right

back and put so much pressure
on Simpson that exactly one minute later they had moved from
one down to one up. Most of the
1050 onlookers thought that the
Ithaca net-tender was fortunate
to escape with the score only 2-1
against him, as the first line of
Dan Gorney, captain Jerry Doherty and player-coach Karl Balland kept the pressure on. Gorney registered both of the goals
"nth Balland getting credit for
assists on each. Doherty got UB
goal number
three at 16:30, but
the Bulls left the ice with only
a 3-2 lead as Jerry Walford had
out-skated his defender and faked
out Sherry for Ithaca's second

success.
Twice in the second period the

ing the two goalies, were involved
in a slugfest behind the net. A
few spectators even took it upon
thejnselves to join the battle.
When the smoke had cleared 15
minutes later, both of the original combatants were seated in the
penalty box with five minute
fighting penalties and 7 others
(4 for Buffalo and 3 for Ithaca,
including goalie Simpson) had
been slapped with 10 minute mis-

conducts.

Considering

that the

game had only 4:13 to go, this
meant that they were through for
the riight. The ice Bulls were hurt
the most by this, as the entire
first line (which had scored five
of the six goals and had been on
the ice for a lion’s share of the
time and Robertson's defensive
partner. Mike Whelan, were sent

to the locker room, while Ithaca

and

'National Invitational Tournament (basketball) in Madison Square
Garden (Thursday and Saturday)
‘Tour of an Ocean Liner (Thursday), Cruise of Now York Harbor
(Friday), and tickets to various “live” television shows.
‘Baggage handling, tips, and New York City hotel tax.

Buses leave Tuesday night and return Sunday night. Accomodations at the Americana
Hotel at triple occupancy. Double occupancy is $2.50 per person extra per night. Single
private accomodations are $5.00per person extra per night. All rooms are fully air conditioned, with radio, television, and ice-maker refrigerator bar. Croup rates are available.

Send check

or money

order

to

Deposit; $20 (n on-refundable)
Late fee; $5.00 (after Mar. 8)
Limit: 360 person* (10 buses)
A I

•

John P.

Morrissey,

President

Intercollegiate Alumni

Assn,

c/e 318 Voorfiees Avenue
Buffalo, New York 14216

(New York City residents) Deluxe round trip transportation on a
b ar equipped, lavoratory equipped scenicruiser witft refreshments
included to and from New York City. $20.00 round trip or $10.00
one-way (to or from)

Additional information: TF 6-3527 (or) TR 7 2220
-

Serving
UTICA CLUB BEER exclusively
****WEST END BREWING COMPANY

-

BUFFALO, NEW YORK****

Pts

26
22

�/ —V

Friday, March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

A BID FOR THE BULLS!!!
VICTORY OVER ROCHESTER CLINCHES BID;
TEAM ROLLS OVER LEMOYNE AND STATE
STAN LICHWALA

By

The University of Buffalo Basketball Team had its hopes of a
tournament bid on the line when
UB played host to Rochester Uni-

versity at ( iark Gym on February twenty-fifth, The Bulls were
nine game winning
riding on
tournament bid in
streak
he floo:
sight wh
y took
packed
ipacity
of Clark
for one
.&gt;

With their bid secured, the UB
hoopsters moved to the Memorial
Auditorium Stadium to meet LeMoyne. another tournamentbound team, in the opening minutes of play, the scoring was- very
even as neither team was able to
ain any ftreat advantage. I.eMoyne. with superior height,
dominated the hoards completely
in this half as 'the I B players

State Orangemen at their gym on
Elmwood Avenue. Once-beaten
by' the Bulls this season, the
Orangemen were up for their final
game of the season and had high

Wednesday, UB entertained Alfred in Clark Gym and tonight
they open the College Division
Tournament of the National Collegiate Athletic Association in Akron, Ohio, against Randolph-Maeon, Mason Dixon Conference
■

Champion, and tomorrow evening
the Bulls will meet one of the
other two teams entered in the
tournament.

1. MICHIGAN

2. UCLA
3. BUFFALO
4. ST. JOSEPH’S

DAVIDSON
MINNESOTA
DUKE
HANDOLFMACON
10. WICHITA
11. SAN FRANCISCO
12. VANDERBU1LT
6.
7.
8.
9.

fju(■ &lt; /f■ {1 off one shot at a time.

13. INDIANA
14. TENNESSEE

15. VILLANOVA

called a
half and

take ad\.
cral thn

aver

I'll, lla
half. But

led

27 11, Finally

Rochester was able to find the
range and draw a little closer,
but they had fallen loo far behind and appeared to be worrying about their earlier mistakes
instead of concentrating on scor
ing. As a result, the Bulls led
at halftime 43-31.
Rochester was able to stay with
Buffalo in the second half until
they hit another cold spell. In a
four minute span midway
through the half, the Bulls outscored Rochester 10-3 and put
the game oitl of reach. After this
burst, Buffalo led 67-47 and continued to pile it on. The final
score was Buffalo 88, Rochester
65,

Jack

Top Twenty

5. PROVIDENCE

LB w

scoring

Spectrum

led the Bull’s
with the finest point out

Karaszewskj

put this season as he tossed in
21 points Bill Barth had a good
night as he ended up,with 19,

followed

by

Norb

Baschnagel

with 15 and Harvey 1’oe with It).
The following day the dream of
a tournament bid became a reality as UB accepted a hid to the
Mid-East Kegionals in Akron.
Ohio.

16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

the

lead early in the second half, but
could not pull very far ahead. As
time was running out, UB had a
one point advantage and LeMoyne was pressing, The Dolphins fouled Dan Bazzani and he
calmly sank his two shots. LeMoyne regained the two points,
but fouled Jim Bevilacqua who
proceeded to sink two foul shots
with 19 seconds to give to UB a
62-59 vjetory.

GO
BULLS
GO

Although the Bulls gained the
victory, they suffered from a
terrible night of shooting
in
the first half, both teams shot
thirty per cent from the field,
—

but in the second half UB
climbed near its average when
the Bulls hit for 50 per cent of
their goal attempts to 43.3 per
cent for LcMoync, Norb Baschnagel led the Herd with 17 points,
followed by Harvey Poe with 12,
Dan Bazzani with 10. and Bill

Barth, Jim Bevilacqua, and Paul
Goldstein each with six points.
Thus. UB extended its victory
streak to 11 slraighl and brought
the season record to 16 victories
against

UB STUDENTS

See Germany
this Summer!

two defeats.

Monday night. UB traveled
acrqss town to meet the Buffalo

EVANSVILLE
ARIZONA
ILLINOIS
NEW MEXICO
STEUBENVILLE

BARTH SINKS 15 FOOTER

hopes of upsetting the tourna
ment-bound Herd,

The Bulls moved out to a 12-4
advantage halfway through the
first half as the Buffalo State
team experienced a cold night
from the, field. At this point UB
employed a 1-3-1 zone defense
which proved to be very effective By the end of the first
half, UB

led 3525,

The Bulls hit 22 of 51 attempts
from the field for 43 per cent
and led with rebounds, 50-43. Bill
Barth hit for 14 points and Harvey Poe tossed in 13 while Jack
Karaszewski and Dan Bazzani each
had 12.

Prearranged summer jobs

Round trip from Buffalo
Lufthause Scheduled Jet
Low Group Rates
Call Art Lazarowitz

835-6705
(We apologize for

last week’s

misprint of phone number)

The Bulls stayed with their new
defense the rest of the evening
and piled it on the Orangemen

as they opened up a 21-point lead
at one point in the second half.

Buffalo State closed the gap somewhat, but UB still won their
twelfth straight game, 62-47.

Would you liks to work in a
European resort this summer?

PAYING JOBS
IN EUROPE

1

Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
Thousands of jobs in Europe, including resort hotel, office, factory
sales, farm, child care and ship
board work are available through
the American Student
tion Service. Wages can read
$400 a month, and ASIS is giving
travel grants up to $390 to the firs.
5000 applicants. Job and travel
grant applications and full detar
are available in a 36-page illustrated booklet which students ni«.'
obtain by sending $2 (for the book
let and airmail postage) to UeP 1
M, ASIS, 22 Ave. de la Liberte
Luxembourg City, Grand Ducn&gt;
of Luxembourg.

ACTION

’AGAINST LI MOYNE

�Friday,

March S, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE

NINETEEN

TOURNEY PREVIEW
TO FACE

BULLS

AKRON, STEU

RANDOLPH-MACON

6-9 Bi

inspiro us." He also mentioned
that tonight's game will feature
four of the best small colleges in
the country, and all UB backing
will be greatly appreciated. ‘‘‘The
game will also be carried on radio
by WBEN ,

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
This week the curtains were
lowered on the regular season of
one of the most successful basketball years ever for the UB
Bulls, but roundball interest has
risen to an even more fervent
pitch now with the opening of
the NCAA College Division Tour-

Basketball

a sphere through a hoop as any
to have come out of this uni
versity , . . And as Coach Ser

The hopsters will be in Akron
tonight to participate in one of
eight regional tournaments which
will determine the eight finalists
who will tangle for the crown
next week in Evansville.
In its 7:00 p.m. first-round contest UB has drawn RandolphMacon of Ashland, Virginia, a
reputable quintet with a 19-3 record and the champion of the
Mason-Dixon Conference. After
the smoke has cleared from this
meeting, Steubenville will tackle
the Ohio Valley Conference winner, Akron, in the second half
of the twin bill. The two victors
will then clash Saturday to decide
who will go on to Evansville.
What are the UB chances in
the tournament? “Any of the 32
teams that made it this far is
capable of pulling this thing out,”
replied Coach Serfustini. And
with all the sweat, pain, and
pressures of a winter reminding
the teams of the sacrifices they
have given to be invited to the
tourney, one can be sure there
will be no letting down now for
there are no second chances for
the losers.
The Randolph-Macon club the
Bulls will lace tonight possesses
all the credentials Of the one
that went all the way to the title

fustini has said,

who has

to

go

The Bulls, however, will con
tinue to take them one at a lime
Luck is smiling

Let’s hope Lady
with them.

ZYGOTES
IN BASKETBALL
Last Thursday night the
Zygotes (Independent
Champions) defeated Alpha Epsilon Pi (Fraternit)
Champions) for the campus basketball championship by a score of 60-56.

UB BAS

SPORTS CIRCLE

from P. 20 1
Joe Moran, 9 and 2, is the defending champion. To
look at him, it is hard to believe, for he is short, not much
over five feet tall, nearly bald, and wears the kind of
expression you’d expect on a Pierrot character—perpetually sorrowful. Obviously, he has had a hard life, but

he has not been beaten by it. He’s the “house man”
(something like the “club pro’’ at a golf course), and in
unprepossessing appear-

ance, once he has a cue stick in his hand, he looks (and
Plays) like a champion. No one knows the game better;
no one is more effective with as little show of effort.
His opponent. Joe Scozza, is nearly his antithesis. If
• were a movie director, I would sign him up to a lifetime
.contract and then figure out a part for him. He is a big
man with a heroic swatch of thick white hair, wears rustlc plaid shirts and smokes huge, vaporous cigars. His
natural style of doing things that might be described as an
affable swagger although he is nearly ambidextrous at
the pool table, he shoots lefty when it matters.
Before the match wdth Moran, his record was 9 and 0.
About one hundred people had gathered to watch
the match, Gerrans reserved two tables for the tournament, and the one one which Scozza and Moran were to
Play was surrounded by 7:30 p.m., a full half hour before the scheduled starting time. Most of the spectators
as if they knew what they were watching
as
fhey had an aficion for this sort of thing. The match
itself was almost anti-climatic. The game was 14 to 1
rack, and they played until one man had 125. Until they
reached 80, both men played well and carefully. At one
Point the score stood at 78-73, Scozza’s favor. Then,
curiously, the pressure seemed to get to them. Moran
scratched on an easy shot. He sat down, looking even
glummer than usual and shook his head slowly from side
to side. Then
Scozza used too much draw on a hanger
ar| d
hurried the cue ball in the pack.
fhe crowd sighed sympathetically. Scozza looked at

looked

"Anyone

gone this far has potential
five games further.”

(Coat'd

of his sad countenance and

most

in which
butterflies evolve into seagulls in
the stomachs of the survivors,
while bitter disappointment chas
tires the losers. This year’s Bull
outfit is as deserving and well
oriented in the skills of putting

nament.

spite

tourneys are

unpredictable events

ETBALL READY FOR TOURN. iMENT

Spectrum
All-America
1. BILL BRADLEY
2. WAYNE ESTES
3. CAZZIE RUSSEL
4. RICK BARRY
5

GAIL GOODRICH

6. BILL BUNTIN'

TRACK MEETING
All candidate* for the
Varsilv
and Freshmen
Track Teams report to
Coach Fisher Monday.
March 22. at t:(K) pan. in
Hoorn G5H. (.lark (.vin.
It von intend to try out
lor

the

track

must report

team

von

on this di.lt

It was a heated battle all
the way, hut in the end the
Zygotes' tremendous overwhelming height and
weight advantage- proved
too much lor the hard
lighting Vpes to handle.
Plaving for the Zygotes
were' Boh Edwards, Craig
Heleniirook. Boh Taylor
Joe Holly, Earl Tompkins
and Dennis Burden. On the
AEPi team were Jeff
Man. Ron Salamonson,
Barry Cohen. Steve Walsh.
Boh Kohansky. Mike Castro. Barry Brpiman, arid
Gary Harrison.

7 DAVE STALLWORTH
8 DAVE BING
9. BILL CUNNINGHAM
10. (TIE) FRED HETZEL
DICK HETZEL

Support

Our
Advertisers

—

“

.,

toe

ceiling for several seconds. “Only I could do that in
tfle whole world,”
he mumbled, berating himself. “He
sold out,’_la. gambler-type
next to me whispered. For a
ew shots, it looked like Moran might run out, but he was
n °t able to control
the cue ball as completely as he usually does, and he scratched off the pack. A1 Epstein,
runner-up in the recent ACLU 3-Cussion billiards tournashrugged “He sold the farm,” Epstein commented.
,ut Scozza didn’t really have a good shot. He elected to
a v sa^e
and for an agonizing series of shots, he and
-coran traded safes. Finally, Moran tried a very diffiuit cut and
missed. Scozza, obviously relieved, ran the
remaining balls to win the match.

ment
-

\.

,

Amidst the back-slapping that followed, I asked Scozza if there had been any turning point in the match, any
time when he knew that he had his man. He glanced
over at Moran who was putting a cigarette into a, very
long black holder and said, “You never can be sure
against Moran.” This week he meets Beatty 'where he
figures he has a "fifty-fifty chance” to win. “It should
be a good match,’’ he told me in a kind of cautious understatement. It felt that he was not anxious to think
about playing Beatty any more than was necessary.
I wanted to ask Moran about the match too, but it
didn’t seem like a good idea. When I left, he was still
looking at the table as if it had betrayed him. When
something is your whole life, it is not easy to lose. But
the next time I was there, he seemed to have recovered.
He was beating some fool who thought he might catch
the champ unaware at his own specialty, one-pocket.
But Moran was too good. Never smiling, his gigantic cigarette holder dropping ashes on the felt, he was winning
game after game. I could tell the other guy was going
to quit. Moran was ready to shoot all night. He looked
more like a champion than,

We Are Proud
to Announce

the Opening

NEW
TIEINC.
LAND
S7t MAIN ST.
e SMOOTH W TUES
•

MAANUM HCKt
10% Mnwtf
With I.O. Card

�Friday, March 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

-

—/=-%=

A
&amp;

Mermen Set Six Records
Bonnies
Victory
Over
In
GAME
THE ONL Y
SPORTS CIRCLE
By LEON LEWIS

By

IN TOWN...
Pool (or pocket Milliards) was once considered a
gentleman's name. In England, in the l‘Jth Century, some
of the most exclusive clubs in London were actually just
places where men might play pool in very posh surroundings. The .slum dwellers and f utter runners played
100, of course, but that didn’t matter. A gentleman could
Announce to his family or his business associates that
ie planned to spend a night at billiards and suffer no
ocial censure. Somehow, in the transition to the new
image of the game changed In the
world. the
early days, billiards champions in this country were acorded the same respect that boxing champions and
ainters received. They were admired and lionized for

heir skill hut no one would think of inviting them to
dinner. Then, things got much worse. In the ’,‘iOs and 40s
he public image of the pool-room was somewhat lower
han a dock-side saloon and Just a little bit higher than
ow class brothel. Things have been improving for the
;ame since then, but even the strenuous public relations
ampaign which the Brunswick company has been run■ing has not (pule upgraded the image to equal that ot.
ay. bowling—another “lower class” sport which has
&gt;een recently rehabilitated. It’s a pity. too. because pool
s not only one of the most satisfying sports to play,
but also one of the most exciting to watch.
There are two kinds of “billiard academies” these
days. One is the spawn of our plastic age, the other is
he product of a long and interesting tradition. In the
newer emporiums, the tables—covered in a variety of
garnish pastel shades—are surrounded by potted palms,
ndirect lighting and a host of accessories which have
nothing to do with pool. The only thing lacking in most
&gt;f these places is competent pool players. The older esablishments have an entirely different set-up. There is
io juke box, nobody doing the frug in the lobby, no fullength mirrors, no Women “playing” (and very lew
watching) and no examples of the interior decorator's
.irt. On the other hand, there are far fewer louts screamafter every miss, nobody sticking his cue in your guts
because the tables are too close, far better tables in much
better shape and usually about 5 or 6 really good pool
shooters. Curiously, for all of these obvious benefits, you
pay about half the price for the same amount of shooting.
Vot all of the old places are like this but, in Buffalo,
here is one place which is. It's called Gerran’* Billiard
Academy and its on Washington Avenue back of the
Palace Burlesque, house.
At the moment, Gerran’* is the scene of the Niagara
frontier Pocket Billiards Championship. Sixteen men are
-ntered, playing each other once in a mammoth round■obin affair. The tournament offers cash prizes for the
irst three places, plus an additional bonus for high run.
There are two kinds of good players. One is the
■oving hustler, the other is the stand-out local champion,
fhe movie “The Hustler” told you everything you need
to know about the big time hustler. Most of the good
&gt;nes know each other and get their kicks in head-to-head
matches, officially sanctioned like the one going on now
n California or unofficially arranged by their friends,
.uther Lassiter might be the best of them at the moment,
nut the pack is right at his heels. If you walk into any
good pool room and start asking around, you will hear
the same names, the same stories. Word gets around
ind you can find out how the “shooters" are doing anyvhere on the circuit.
The other kind of player is the local man. He stays in
his home town and is involved in a constant struggle with
■he other “local men” to be "King of the Hill.” The
tournament at Gerraiu may settle the argument in Buffalo for a while
at least until the next tournament.
—

Although there are sixteen men entered, only about
One is John Beatty,

tour or five have any chance to win.
a construction worker who takes the

winter off and shoots

pool. Last year, he appeared on a “Beat the Champ” TV
show and beat everyone he faced for 10 successive weeks.
His record at the moment is 10 and 1. Long Jim Roach is
also 10 and 1. He is very tall, very thin, and the youngest
of the contenders; the only one under thirty. The only
other two men with a chance to win met last week in what

was the most crucial match of the tournament thus far.
(Cont'd on P. 19)

STEVE RONIS

Last Saturday afternoon, Feb.
27 the UB mermen pul on a dazzling display of their aquatic ability , on the way to a 55-40 drubbing of the St. Bonaventurc swimmers. No less than six school records and three pool records were
shattered. At meet time the spectator gallery started to fill up
with UB supporters. Along with
the crowd came signs and banners that were strung from wallto-wall arrtund the pool. The
crowd, the banners and the ability of the water Bulls, proved to
he too much for the powerful
Bonaventurc squad. After pulling
out a close decision over the Toronto mermen, the UB natators
were really “up for this contest Winning it they clinched a
wining season and a V-5-0 record.

I B's 400 yd, medley relay opened up Saturday afternoons conto.l. Three records fell before the
water Buds, as they churned their

way to victory, and an early UB
load 7-0 The first new record
came when UB's backstroking ace,

Charles Zetterberg, streaked the
first leg of the relay in 59.7, a
new school record. To complete
the foursome were Howard Braun.
Wayne Worthing, and Carl Millerschocn. All four swimmers established a new school and pool
record, when they recorded the
time of 4:00.2.

Hoy Troppman, the water Bulls’
fine distance swimmer, provided
a back-to-back victory for UB.

In the 200 yd. freestyle event. Roy
practically flew over the water.

When his head bobbed up after
the race, another two records
had fallen. Roy established a new
school and pool record. When he

recorded the time of 1:54.3.

Charles Zetterburg went record
hunting again in the 200 yd. back-

stroke. He shattered the old
school record, when he splashed
the distance in 2:14.3 Roy Troppman, not to be outdone, broke

another two records in the 500
yd. freestyle. He chalked up new
school and pool records. His time

was a very respectable 5.34.2.
Howard Braun, swimming in the
200 yd. breaststroke, completed
UB's record breaking onslaught.
Howie posted a new school record, and the time of 2:29.1.
UB swimmers also posted victories in three other events, although no records were broken.
In the 200 yd. individual medley.
Bill Fleischman posted a first;
Jerry Chapman, putting on a fine
diving display, won the fancy
IB’s
dive: Carl iMillerschoen
Captain, sprinted his way to a
first place in the 100 yd. freestyle
Bounding out the water Bull’s
fine squad were Walt Eisenbeis,
Barry Butler Mark Crashow Irv
Puls, Marv Mitzel, Steve Bonis,
Mike Perkis John Edelman John
Danahy, Milton Marks, Mike Nawrocki, and Russ Hughes,

This weekend, Friday and Saturday. the UB mermen 'will lie
Y. S.
competing in the Upper
Championships, at Syracuse University. Coach Sanford is confident that his squad will make a
good showing at the state meet
UB 55
-

St. Bonaventure 40
-

400 med. relay—(UB) Zetterberg. Braun, Worthing. Millerschoen; (B) Daley, Hilbert, Horton, Kelly, 4:00.2* **. 200 yd. free
—lUB&gt; Troppman. (B) Mennes.
(UB) Eisenbeis, (B) Faillace, 1:54.3* **: 50 yd, freer—&lt;B) Brace, (B)
Quaid, (UB) Butler, (UB) Grashaw.
(UB)
24.4; 200 yd. ind. med.
Fleishman, (B) Hulihan. (B) Antosh, (UB) Puls, 2:19.0. Fancy
dive—(UB) Chapman, (UB) Mitzel, (B) Duran, (B) Baker. 200 yd.
butterfly—(B) Kelly, (B) Horton,
(UB) Worthing, (UB) Roms, 2:21.4
—

100 yd. freestyle—(UB) Millerschoen, (B&gt; Quaid. (UB) Perkis,
(B) Faillace, 51.7; 200 yd. back—-

(UB) Zetterberg, (UB) Grashaw,
(B) Daley, 2:14.3*: 500 yd. free—(UB) Troppman, (B) Mennes, (B)

(UB) Edelman, 5:34.2
200 yd. breast—(UB) Braun, (UB)
Danahy, (B) Hilbert, (B) Antbsh,
2:29.1*: 400 yd. relay—(B) Brace.
Quaid, Mennes, Kelly, (UB) Marks,
Narocki. Hughes, Perkis, 3:36.8.

Hulihan.

School Record

*

Pool Record

Wolfe Named

Frosh Coach

As of Wednesday afternoon a
tentative agreement has been
reached between the Student Senate Committee and the University
Personnel Department.

Dick Offenhamer announced
“election of James R, “Jim
Wolfe, one-time star lineman for
the University of Buffalo, as the
new coach of freshman football
at his alma mater. In revealing
the. choice of Wolfe, Offenhamer
commented that Wolfe had done
(lie

a fine job for the past two seasons as a graduate assistant to
former frosh mentor Dewey Wade
and that Wolfe would make a
\aluable addition to the UB staff.
Wade recently was named offensive line coach at Buffalo to succeed Charley Reeves who resigned.
For his part. Wolfe stated that
he was particularly thankful to
Wade for help given during the
past two years. He also said that
he appreciated the confidence
that Coach Offenharaer placed in
him and that he was looking for
ward with keen anticipation to the
1965 campaign.
The new Buffalo coach is a
native of Endicott, New York,
where he played for Union-Endi
cott High School. He won three
letters at guard for Buffalo and
was co-captain of the team in his
senior year, 1962. He received

his B.S. in 1963.
Wolfe will assume his new duties at once and will be on the
field during spring practice which
begins April 5.

�</text>
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1

LAST
SUMMER

y

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Cj

LbJP

EDITION

1

NEXT SPECTRUM
M

|

J

BH
|%#|
HA

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1965

VOLUME 15

Psychotherapist OK s
Picking Up A Date

By

Dr. Albert Ellis, New York psy-

_

—

His thesis is that it’s perfectly
right and proper for the woman
to take some initiative in the
mater of boy-meets-girl. There is
nothing really new about this

approach. Ladies of former gene-

DR. K. H. KURTZ

rations, with unimpaired proprie-

Today, if one follows the waittobe-asked policy, the usual
sources for meeting men produce
relatively few likely young male
acquaintenances. Many of Dr.
Ellis’s patients have high standards for the man they hope to
whereas the

men

they
meet usually fall into the categories of “creeps,” “bores,” “pro-

fessional Romeos,” and “married
playboys.” These girls are all
young, attractive, well-educated
—and all share the same sense
of hopelessness.

The legitimate pickup, he maintains, is a splendid means of
finding the right man. “Whereever you happen to be, if you
see a man you think you’d like
to know, you should either devise some way to approach him
or make it clear that you are
approachable and that he won’t
be rejected.”
The advantage of the legiti-

mate pickup is that it offers a
girl the chance to be more selective in the choosing of a friend,
date, or husband. By taking the

initiative, she increases the range
of her own selectivity.

The author discusses some of
e traditional ways f of meeting

man. First, there’s the blind

&gt;te, or the occasion when a
an is introduced to a girl. She
not being selective, since the
eld of choice is strictly limited.
ie has .one man out of one to
loose from, and

THOMAS J. SCHILLO

DR. SOL W. WELLER

3 Given New Faculty Positions
Dr. B. Richard Bugelski
Is Director Psych. Labs.
An associate professor of psychology has been appointed director of the University’s psychological laboratories, it was announced today by Dr. B. Richard
Bugelski, Chairman of the Psychology Department,

Dr. Kenneth H. Kurtz will assume the position of co-ordinator
of the development and utilization of research facilities in the
department. His responsibilities
will include budget planning, the
purchase of equipment, supervision of technical personnel, and
the development of balanced upto-date facilities.

Dr. Kurtz, who served formerly
as a research psychologist at the
Veterans Administration Hospital
and the Stanley Aviation Corporation, received
gree from the
falo, and his
torate degrees

his bachelor’s deUniversity at Bufmaster’s and docfrom Yale Univer-

sity.

He holds membership in several honorary and professional societies, including: Phi Beta Kappa, The American Psychological
Association, the American Association, the American Association
of University Professors, and the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Thomas J. Schillo
Is Assistant Dean of
School Business Adm.
Mr. Thomas J. Schillo, assistant

dean of the School of Business
Administration at U.B., has been
appointed Director of Residence
Halls at the University, it was
announced today by Dr. Richard
A, Siggelkow, dean of students.
Mr. Schillo replaces Mr. John
Z. Okoniewski, who has accepted
a similar position at Clarkson
College, Potsdam, N.Y.
Mr. Schillo will be responsible
for co-ordinating all campus housing facilities for the University’s
2600 resident students.
Mr. Schillo received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in
business administration from the
State University at Buffalo. In
1954, he was appointed to the
post of assistant dean in the
School of Business Administration and became an assistant professor of business organiation in
1962.

He was granted a Ford Fellowship in 1957 and pursued advanced graduate degree work at
Harvard University through 1959.
Mr, Schillo was a 1st Lt. in
the U.S. Army from 1941 through
1945. He worked in industry from
1945-53 in public and industrial
accounting and office manage-

ment.

Dr. Sol W. Weller
New Prof. Chem. Eng
Dr, Sol W. Weller, a world-recognized authority on catalysis,
has been appointed professor of
chemical engineering at U.B. effective September 1.

Dr. Weller, who has been associated with the Aeronutronic
Division of the Ford Motor Company at Newport Beach, California, since 1958, has published
more than 60 scientific papers
in the fields of catalysis, chemical kinetics, the separation of
gases by membranes and other
media, and photosynthesis.
The newly appointed professor
has degrees from Wayne University, and also the University
at Chicago, where he researched
his doctorate under the direction
of Professor James Franck, a Nobel Prize winner,

Before joining the Ford Motor
Company, he was associated with
the U.S. Bureau of Mines Synthetic Liquid Fuels Program and
the Houdry Process Corporation.
Dr. Weller is a member of the
American Chemical Society, the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, Sigma Xi,
and the American Institute of
Astronautics and Aeronautics.

if he’s not her

pei that’s too bad. At “singles”
■nces and resorts, she risks runrig into an assortment of gigos, most of whom will assume
if is just man hungry and in
hurry to “pair off.”

-

bachelor house
rties can be even more discrous. There is less room to
nee and no room for sports, so
t if no good prospect appears,
re is nothing for her to do
e Pt fend off a prematurely
orous male. In organized
mps, such as clubs, a girl is
sting her time unless she
11(15 across
the man in the
rse of her first few meetings,
ec memberships rarely go up
leaps and bounds, the club’s
!e population tends to be stathis also holds true for

-

on

P. 2)

gether into a modern university
complex resulting in one of the
finest universities

in the country.

By the early 1970’s, a literal “city
of education," capable of accommodating more than 20,000 full-

time students will be well on its

way

to real’ty.

While the

plans for the future
are being drawn by the architects and engineers, the activities on the present campus continue at an unprecedented pace.
Enrollment at the University continues its upward trend, straining the present facilties to the
absolute limit. Enrollment this
fall will edge toward 20,000 full
and part-time students. Current
projections call for 9,000 fulltime undergraduates, 4,600 graduate and professional students
and more than 6,000 students enrolled in our evening division,
Millard Fillmore College, The
ever-increasing desire for a quality education has made necessary
the erection of several temporary
buildings including the use of
“trailer 1’ type classrooms.
Expenditures for sponsored research again climbed to record
totals, reaching a mark of more
than $7,500,000 during the 1964
65 academic year. Showing an in
crease of nearly $1,400,000 over
the previous year's total, research
expenditures placed the Univer
sity among the top 50 universities in the country.
As the stature of the University increases, we continue to attract internationally known scholars. A recent grant from the New
York State Science and Technology foundation has provided
funds for the visit of two distinguished scientists, Dr. Willard
E. Libby, 1960 Nobel Prize winner
for research in chemistry, and Dr.
Edward Teller, famous for his
role in developing the atomic and
hydrogen bombs, will serve at ( the

visit-

hold

(Cont’d

Poised and waiting with eager
anticipation, the State University
of New York at Buffalo today
stands anxiously seeking the commencement of the most exciting
era in its 120 year history.
Within the turn of this decade,
the University will undergo both
a major metamorphosis and a
complete rebirth. The Main and
Bailey campus, housing the State
University at Buffalo since 1922,
will become a health sciences
complex complete with its own
hospital. The University's Schools
of Medicine, Dentistry, Nursing
and Pharmacy will occupy the
present facilities and develop into
one of the finest health centers
in the country.
In the town of Amherst, the
undergraduate and graduate
schools will occupy a completely
new, $130 million campus to be
constructed on more than 900
acres off Millersport Highway. In
a very short time, the many fine
traditions of the former University of Buffalo will be woven to-

University as distinguished
ing professors of nuclear science.

'srooms.

solution, which may not
good for the rest of
country but which is fast
ground in New York, is
friendly neighborhood bar.”
collegiate counterpart might
•he student union, or the
"ite campus hangout. (Eman*on has not yet gone
so far
a young woman can
go to
r by herself
without being
what conspicuous; however,

DR. CLIFFORD C. FURNAS
President

chotherapist and manage counselor, has given authorative, verbal sanction to something that coand young ladies in geneeds
ral
have been doing for some
time: “picking up” a likely looking man as a potential date, companion, or even husband.

ty, used to resort to all sorts
of tactics such as dropping gloves
and handkerchiefs to attract the
attention of an attractive man,
hopefully to break the ice.

NO. 40

President Outlines
University's Growth

By Young Ladies

marry,

WILL BE
SEPTEMBER 10

is about to end. UB students now turn to the task of finals before a
The end of a long long summer semester
brief vacation and then the fall

As the University forges ahead
in the critical race of meeting the
needs of our society, 1 am
reminded of the advice the first
president of this University. Millard Fillmore, once gave to his
son: "Industry, integrity and perseverence will accomplish everything, Never doubt of success,
and you are almost certain to
accomplish all you desire." This
philosophy is applicable to the
State University at Buffalo.
Through "industry, integrity and
perseverence," we will accomplish all we desire.

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Friday, August 20, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The bar has
clublike atmosphere where pitchers of beer, a jukebox or group
informal
clothes
folksinging,
and informal manners are the
rule. In these surroundings, any
girl with an ounce of initiative
should be able to engineer a
decorous pickup with no trouble
at all.
For the girl initiating her program, Dr. Ellis suggests a few
ground rules. No matter how
charming or trustworthy he
seems, she should not immediately go to his apartment or take
him to hers. This is carrying
instant friendship too far. She
should stick to somewhere public and safe, like a restaurant,
where she can sit and talk at
leisure as the two of them find
out various things about each
other. If she still feels she’d
like to see him again, she can
give him her telephone number
and address, so he can take the
initiative from then on. Don’t, he
admonishes, chase him. If she
doesn’t want to see him again,
she can plead a previous engagement when he suggests a
date. Arid if she has made an
obvious mistake, she can give
him a false telephone number
and address. “All’s fair in finding true love, and you have your
own protection to consider."
There are

numerous approaches

the girl can use: mistaken identity, asking him for directions
when she’s “lost her way,” commenting on a picture in an art
gallery, or asking the name of
a tune at a dance.
There are some pitfalls in pursuing this technique of man-hunting vthat might end in misfires.
Perhaps the gentleman, once met,
incorrectly assumes that she is
looking for a sex playmate. It
won’t take him long to find out
he was wrong. She has lost nothing in making the acquaintance and might have learned
something in the process.
Or perhaps the man sensed
that she was a young woman on
the make, too frantically in
search of a mate. To be in desparate, obvious need is the worst
possible way for a girl to win
the man of her choice for she
will inevitably do all the wrong
things out of sheer nervousness.
That desperate need to be married is part and parcel of feeling
worthless. She is, in effect, saying
that, alone, she is nothing. A
mature man wants stability in
his woman, just as she wants

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U.B. President Clifford C. Furthe “First Annual Alumni Leadership Workshop” to be held at the William
Baird estate, Ridgeway, Canada,
Friday, September 10, it was announced by Mr. Richard C.
Shepard, president of the General
Alumni Board executive commit-

—

nas will keynote

—

tee.

The theme of the first annual
be, “Developing
the Ideal Alumni Association.”
At the workshop, the General
Alumni Board will unveil the proposed master schedule for the
1965-66 academic year and honor
the Outstanding Area Alumni
Club of the year. The award will
be presented by President Furworkshop will

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Alumni leaders including club
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of Buffalo Foundation, Inc. board
of trustees as well as the deans
of the various schools will attend
the workshop.
Prominent alumni leaders will

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200 Main St. TL2-0111

participate as panelists and as

discussion group leaders.
Also at the conference, Dr. Wil-

liam J. O’Connor, director of the

University of Buffalo Foundation,
Inc., will discuss the “Octagonal
Concept of the University of Buf-

falo Foundation, Inc. He will discuss the eight-sided program of

service that the Foundation offers to the alumni. These services include: institutional advancement, creative projects, service, communication, scholarship,
cultural programs, continuing
education and the alumni program.

The state ot California’s pro1965-66 Budget exceeds
the total amount of money spent
by all 48 states in 1938.
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it in him.

The main stumbling block. Dr.
Ellis found, is the girl’s estimation of herself based on a lifetime of indoctrination. When she
says she's afraid of “other people’s" opinion of her, this usually means that she herself
thinks the method is “wrong”
and “immoral”, which Ellis interprets to mean that she has
a poor opinion of herself. If she
she’s doing nothing wrong and
has a good opinion of herself,
the opinions of others aren’t going to disturb her.

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A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure
3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

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490 PEARL STREET

Phone

parking in rear

853-9806

�Friday, August 20, 1965

SPECTRUM

c Jitoriai (Comment

.

.

.

During the past summer the State University has
traveled over historic paths. Part of the journey was
skillfully directed and brought the University well along
the road of establishing itself as a model for other state,

Treat Students
Like Adults'-Says
Harvard Administrator

FEINBERG DISCLAIMER
ABOLISHED
The unanimous decision of the State University’s

Board of Trustees to abolish the Feinberg disclaimer
this summer (see Spectrum Extra June 15) was “joyously received.” With one blow, the State Administration,

under the leadership of President Gould, not only rid
the academic community of political harassment but also
established a precedent of communicating and resolving
internal problems with its students and faculty. In doing
so. the University acted to remove the legitimate grievances that sparked rioting in Berkeley.

FSA PROBED
The structure of the Faculty-Student Association,
ironically excluding both students and faculty members
from positions of decision making, has long been a point
of contention on this campps. Early this summer when
the FSA’s activities came to the public eye through investigations from the State Department of Audit and
Control, the State University, and supposedly by the
State Legislature, many thought that the long awaited
house cleaning was at last being initiated. But this has
not been the case. The Department of Audit and Control has yet to release the findings of its inquiry. Locally,
the most significant step taken by the State University
was the appointment of Dr. Puffer, treasurer of the FSA
at this university, to the committee that was conducting
the investigation. And the State Legislature? After all
the noise coming from that direction subsided, no one
remained to initiate anything. And so perhaps, what is
needed is a reminder to those parties that students and
faculty members are still outraged by the FSA fleecing.
And this outrage will only be ebbed by the restructure of the FSA along the lines before proposed:
an equal voice of Administration, Faculty and Students
bn the board of directors. Such a decision giving the administration a voice would infact be generous. At the
State College here in Buffalo, the students and faculty
members are the only voices on the FSA Board of Directors.

GREEKS DEPRIVED NATIONAL TIES
After | a two year battle in the State Courts, in
July national fraternities lost their fight to remain on
campus. The reason for their ouster being that the State
University wanted to curb discriminatory practices (initiated in 1953) and felt that local organizations would
be easier to deal with. Divide and Conquer.
The Spectrum’s support of national fraternities has
er been based on the merit of the Greek system. Aside
&gt;'um representing one of the few active groups on campls amidst a population of seemingly apathetic citizenry,
lie merits of fraternal systems are few. But if the fraternities are to die, they should do so on their own. The
State University’s intrusion is clearly a violation of the
ri - ht of free association as defined by the Constitution.
How can students be asked to mature into responcitizens respecting and implementing the Constion (and the asseriton of individual rights embodied
ein) when proceeding generations abuse those rights
assorted pretexts. The University’s ruling is another
tuple of an over protective society removing from its
vidual citizens the responsibility of government.

e

THE
15

SPECTRUM

summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State UniverNew York at Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall, University
Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the twelve weeks of summei
from June 11th to August 27,

Edito'rs-in-Chief

DAVID EDELMAN

RAYMOND

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

Faculty Advisors
DALLAS GARBER
IRENE WILLETT
full responsibility for the content of the
Editorial opinion is an expression of their view$ and does not
reflect that of the Spectrum staff of the students at this university.

Editors-in-Chief

•

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class,. Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.

(j/ii V*

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assume

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Subscription $1.50 for twelve editions,
circulation 8,000.
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, lnc. 420
Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y
(&lt;

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JNaOQLS

(CPS)
University administrators and
faculty members must treat students like adujts at all times if
student rebellion is to become
a constructive rather than a destructive force on today’s campuses, Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth of

Harvard told the Association for
Higher Education, meeting in
New York this summer at the
annual NEA Convention.
Farnsworth, who is director of
Harvard’s University Health Service, said that impatience with
social injustice was an atribute
which faculty and administration
should try to develop and to encourage in their students. But he
cautioned that students should
not be destructive of “individuals
and ideals.”

�

¥

“a large proportion” of today’s student activists are "disturbed youngsters”
who are projecting their own personal frustrations onto the causes they are leading. Their protests lose effectiveness because
they are carried too far.

In his address Farnsworth criticized the nation’s news media for
distorting the image of today’s
students. While the press implies
that all students have a negative,
destructive approach to society,
Farnsworth believes that the vast
majority of students criticize because they are concerned with
building a better society.
He deplored student tendency
to discard all old values because

their elders have not practiced
these values. “Too late they learn
that the destruction of all values
does not mean that more satisfying ones will appear to replace
them.”
earlier address to the
session, 1964-65, AHE president
E. K. Fretwell, Jr. of the City
University of New York urged
universities to improve freshman
courses, often assigning full professors to these students and suggested that students be given a
role in helping run the university. A committee assignment for
students can be “a sobering and
experience,” while
maturiing
their “consumer-eye view” can be
In an

an asset to faculty and administration

Farnsworth’s address opened a
panel session “Student Rootlessness and Restlessness: Is There
an Answer?”. Other panelists included Mrs. Esther Raushenbush,
newly appointed president of
Sarah Lawrence College, Miss Ellen Sickles, a 1965 Sarah Lawrence graduate and Jeffrey Kleinberg, a 1965 graduate of Brooklyn College.

S'

ms,
some,

"leg mi Connected to the Km
m some mmw to the thigh

THIGH 60WE ComCftD..."

While they should be communicating with the faculty and
administrative personnel with
whom they disagree, all too often
power struggles develop which
are not constructive.
Farnsworth told CPS in an interview after his address that
he felt the students at Berkeley
had been protesting for the right
goals but had not been utiliziing
the right methods. He added that
both students and administration
were to blame for the breakdown
in communication.

*

§L7»

He explained that

He emphasized that an academic institution should seek
ideas first, then find people to
execute these ideas and attempt
only as a third step to gain financial support.

VOLPE

:U0|Ss9doJld n

THREE

By PAUL LUEBKE

schools. Some of the journey was detoured down back J
wood roads.

PAGE

WEEKLY CALENDAR
AUG. 20 AUG. 27
-

All Week
How to Look At A
Painting; Norton, 2nd floor.
Exhibit;

CAMPUS FACILITIES

Robert Graves, Manu
and First Editions:
Lockwood.
Play; "Inherit the Wind"; Kiss
ing Bridge Playhouse, Glen
Exhibit;

Swimming Pool:
3 to 5 Monday Friday
7 to 9 Tuesday &amp; Thursday

scripts

■

families and children when accompanied by

(includes

wood.
Art Exhibit: Albert Gleizes, cu-

adults)

Craft Shop:
10 to 4 Tuesday, Wednesday

bist paintings Albright Knox
Art Gallery,
Entertainment: Gizel Macken

and Thursday
Libraries:
Lockwood—7:30 a m. to 11:00

zie, vocalist; Melody Fair.
Erie County Fair: August 21-28.

p.m. Monday through Friday
8 to 5 Saturdays
1 to 11 Sunday
Harriman—7:30 a m. to 11:00
p.m Monday through Friday
9 to 5 Saturday
1 to 11 Sunday
Browsing Library
10 to 10 Monday through

Today

8:30 pin. Play; “Falstaff";
Stratford Festival Theater, Ont.
Can.

8:30 p.m. Play: “Marriage of
Figaro”; Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont., Can.

Saturday

Friday

11:00 a.m. Chamber Music;
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont

10 to 4 Saturday

(closed Sunday)
Music Room;

Can.
2:00 p.m. Play: “Julius Caesar”
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont.

Can.

.

10 to 10 Monday through
Friday
10‘ to 4 Saturday

■.

2:00 p.m. Play; “Mahagonny";

(closed Sunday)

Stratford Avon Theater, Ont.,
Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Cherry Orchard”; Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Marriage of

Figaro" Stratford

tre, Ont., Can.

Avon Thea-

Post Office:
Hayes—8 to 12 Monday
through Friday
&amp;
Sunday)

(closed Saturday

Norton Union:
7:00 a m to 11:00 p.m.

Monday through Friday
7 to 7 Saturday
(closed Sundays)
Cafeteria—11 to 1 Monday
through Friday
7:30 to 2:00 pm Saturday
(closed Sundays)
Rathskeller—7:00 to 10:00
p m Monday through Thurs-

Sunday

2:00

Jan Concert: Dave
pin
Brubeck Quartet; Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Buffalo Community Orchestra; Delaware

Park.

day

Tuesday

p.m. Movie: Old
Movies; College Union.
9:00

7:00 to 4:30 pm

(closed Sunday)

Time
(State

College)

Wednesday

8:30 p.m. Concert: Buffalo Community Orchestra; Hennepin
Park.

Thursday

Did King Arthur actually exist?

If

so, did he truly preside over
the legendary knights of the round
table? Evidence suggests that there

7:30 p.m. Movie: "Under the
Yum Yum Tree"; Upton Hall,

was

9:00 p.m. Public Night at the
Observatory: A Globular Cluster in the Constellation Hercules.

Saxons in fifth

(State College)

a real King Arthur, a powerful
Celtic chieftain who led his countrymen

aganist

the

invading

century.

But ex

8:30 p.m, Entertainment; Stan

cavations carried on in the 1930’s
failed to turn up evidence that
Arthur had any real connection

Kenton; Kleinhans Music Hall.

with Tintagel. hts legandary home.

Friday (27tfif&gt;

�Friday, August 20, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Browsing Library Features
*

fA

Varied Periodical Selection

SPECTRUM SPORTS
Rookies will make mistakes and
mistakes they made as was evidenced by the missed blocking
assignments, tackles etc. However, this is exactly what training camp and preseason games
are for. It’s better to have the
mistakes made now than during

SPORTS
CIRCLE
By DAVE FRANKO

The Buffalo Bills are two preseason games into the
1965
American Football League Season, In their two showings so
far. Buffalo has looked like night
and day. In their first showing
against Boston they handled the
Pats easily. In fact they handled
them so easily that a “mid-season form” description was placed
upon them. However, in their
last game against Houston the
Bills really looked bad. Their
total offense for the entire game
was 107 yards and brought stirring memories of M.C. Reynolds
and Co, back to Buffalo fans.

Jim Simon Is New
UB Head Trainer
Jim Simon, head coach of basketball and baseball and assistant
football coach at Riverside High

School in Buffalo, will be the
new head trainer of the University of Buffalo athletic teams, ac
cording to an announcement
made recently by UB Athletic

Director Jim Peelle.

Simon succeeds John Sciera,
who left to adcept a teaching
position at Cortland State. The
new trainer, who will assume his
duties immediately, is a graduate of UB and letercd in varsity football there while playing
frm 1946-1950. He received a degree in physical education from
UB and also a degree in physical
therapy from Louisiana State University.

His experience includes being

physical therapist at the John
Hundley Orthopedic Clinic in Little Rock, Arkansas, and at the
Veterans Administration Hospital
in Canandaigua. He came to
Riverside in 1960 and was instrumental in producing some
outstanding teams in all sports.
Simon, married and the father
of two boys, lives at 219 Hartford Avenue in the Town of
Tonawanda

the regular season.

fensive unit for the entire game
and used “blitzing” techniques
not usually seen during the preseason period. Couple these tactics with Buffalo’s play everybody philosophy and it is not
hard to see a lopsided game.
Buffalo fans relax! The Bills
will be ready on Saturday night,
September 11 for their first regular season game against the Boston Patriots. If they are not
ready, then and only then, will
panic be in order.

And so the questions continued
and probably will continue until
the next game Saturday against
the New York Jets. The concern

|

Coach Lou Saban decided upon
a new philosophy last year. His
philosophy was essentially one of
bringing a team along in training
camp and reaching a peak early
in the regular season rather than
half way through the training
period. It is exactly this procedure that won Coach Saban 13
ballgames and the AFL championship last year. The coach is following the same procedure this

Cinema
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SPECTRUM
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*i»-conoit:oneb

James Garem

DARLING

If one takes a closer look at
the Houston game the picture
doesn’t look so bleak. Coach Saban used, his first units for only
the 1st and 3rd quarters; he also
experimented with a few rookies
to see if he could find one who
can play more than one position.

Genghis Kahn

Jean-Paul Belmondo

Laurence Harvey
Dirk Bogarde
Julie Christe
in

Studont Discounts

2 Hits in Color

Now Playing

STARTS

[WOOMOIWST.TH^WS

Now Showing

to Norton 255 to stimulate any
imaginative interests under the
sun, at the Browsing Library
periodicals section.

I428HERTEL AVE.«TF6-74II

August
—

News, the New York Times, the
National Observer, the Manchester Guardian, even the Buffalo
Jewish Review and of course the
U.B. Spectrum. So come on up

|orthPai#§

-

,
.

Do
You
Want
To
Write
For

fully

Claudia Cardinale

r-~—Ml*fiXKSirA'X:CMOmaVKHt

really isn’t necessary.

the section. In the Browsing Library one can find the Courier
Express, the Buffalo Evening

—

Meanwhile, Houston was playing quite a different type of ballgame, They were playing as if
this game was for the championship. Houston used its first de-

The immediate reaction of the
fans, of course, panic. Questions
of this sort plagued the Buffalo
sports public: Are the Bills as
good as once believed and what
happened to the best offensive
line in pro football? etc.

By IRENE REEP
One of the many fine features
of the Browsing Library is a
large and varied selection of periodicals, inicluding magazines and
daily and weekly newspapers.
Fram Time to Punch, from American Heritage to the U.B. Student
Review, with art and music,
movie, theater and dance, literature and literary criticism, fashion, home and travel, business
and curent events, science and
architecture, politics and foreign
affairs
there is a periodical
to satisfy everyone’s tastes and
interests.
The local and national daily
and weekly newspapers complete

(mention

this ad and you get personalized fre" gift).

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                    <text>UNDERGRADUATE
UNIMPORTANT'

i

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
r

■■■■■ ■■■■ft ■

VOLUME 15

I1

SPORTS

■ BB

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1965

NO. 39

Afro-American
Arts Festival

UB Med. Student
Working in Japan

The Afro-American Arts Festiwill be held this Sunday, Aug.
15 at Rockwell Hall. State
Teachers College at 8:00 p.m. The
program “African Holiday” will
feature dancers, singers and
drummers from the African Cultural Center. Inc, here in Buffalo.
Internationally known Pearl
Primus and company will perform
as well as dancers from the African Pavillion of the World's Fair.
Donations for the event are
$1,50 for students, $2.00 adults.
Guests artist will be. Makcda
Joyner and her company of African dancers, singers and dancers
from Nassau, Bahamas and Hati;
Oliver Jones, cheorographer, and
Marylin Marvella and Miriam

GIL PRESTON
Special to the Spectrum

val

By

The following are excerpts from
a letter by Gil Preston who is
working in Japan with UNICEF.
“Here in KyKyoto, Japan
oto, which is really a comfortable,
pretty city of 1,300,000 inhabitants in an area half the size of
Buffalo, we live in an International Student House. This experience has surely added, and will
continue to add to the value of
our stay in Japan and to our general education.
—

We have the opportunity to
■ak with students from every

part of the world, and particularly Southeast Asia. The roster
of countries includes Chile, Switzerland, Austria, India, Ceylon,
Burma, Viet Nam, Indonesia, Cambodia, Egypt and Israel, Some of
these students have been sent by
their governments to study in
Japan and some of these governments are not very much in favor
of the U.S.A. in general and the
Viet Nam policy in particular. I
don't think I would miss the opportunity to speak on frank terms
with these people for anything,”
In the following excerpt Gil
attempts to relate “What I’m

doing'’ in Japan.
"There exists in the Retina of
the eye a measurable electrical
phenomenon known as the elec-

troretinogram (E.R.G.). It
first observed in the late

was

19th

century and since that time many
investigators have attempted to
explain the significance of each
of the components of the E.R.G.
Everyone agrees that the E.R.G.,
taken as a whole, is intimately
concerned with the transmission
of visual information to the brain,
but it is very crucial to the ultimate understanding of the visual
senses to be able to identify the
site of the origin of each of the
subcomponents of this very complex wave form. It is at this point,
the site of the origin and the
measuring thereof, of one of these
subcomponents that my work is
concerned.
(It

might be said in passing

Dr. Noell of UB is one of the
ief protagonists in this internanal controversy, since his theof the origin of the E.R.G.
nponents represents one pole
the controversy, behind which
ny workers have aligned themves and at which many others
e aimed scientific lances since
■4 when the original work of
Noell was first published.)
One of the subcomponents of
E.R.G., as it is called, are the
called oscillatory potentials
Using voltages3- In brief, these
cntials are believed to be the
ult of some kind of interacn between the rods and cones
the retina and as such are
'Ught to be infinitely concerned
h the sensation of color vision,
investigate these potentials
ther, we are stimulating hui retinas with different waveof colored light and reding the changes, if any, in the

’

it

rs

illatory

potentials.

‘

The work has not progressed
enough to give any results.
E R.g, is so complex that it
difficult to be sure that any
nges observed
are due purely
he perimeters under
m an &lt;3 not to some unthoughtf event taking place
simuleouslv.

shall continue the work,
September a preliminary
‘’ill probably be prepared
read at the International
ress on E.R.G., to be held

Graves.
Persons wishing to attend may

call TT 6-9185 for further information.

Berkeley Revolt

—

State Is ‘Provincial’
On Wednesday, August 4, Dr.
Leonard D, Cain, Visiting Professor of Sociology from the University of California at Sacremento, addressed some 100 students in the Conference Theatre
on the topic of “The Student Revolt at Berkeley and Its Impli-

4000 Participate in
Washington March
Six UB Sit-Ins
Jailed
By JOE MELNICH

Special

cations.”

Spectrum

On August 6, the twentieth anniversary of the bombing of
Hiroshima, pacifist groups
launched a four-day protest which
included picketing, vyorkshops,
and a march to the steps of the
House of Representatives.

In reference to the situations
prevailing at the time of the unrest, Dr, Cain said, “Clearly the
State has taken pride in the accomplishments of the university,
there has been recruited and internationally based and reknowned faculty, but all the while, I
would submit, the state has remained surprisingly provincial.”
Dr, Cain feels that the “abominable’’ coverage given by the press,
the “brutality” inflicted upon the
students, and the general conditions and detachment of faculty
and administration within the
educational community prior to
the outbreak, are too often disregarded in an assessment of the
Berkeley situation.
His general impressions and
evaluation of the Berekeley crisis
can be summed up by his words
in reference to another manifestation of the “new generation's
“attitude,” I cast my lot unswervingly with the young people.”
“It’s high time that the chicanery, the duplicity, and the false
modesty that the adults have for
iso Tong been deluding themselves
with be swept away. And maybe
then a new burst of freedom, a
new opportunity to maybe look
at one another as person rather
than object will be possible . . .
It seems to me that first, with
the situation that our adult society is now and secondly, with
the evidenced mood of the student generation, we’re in for this
type of immediate future, and I,
for one, look forward to it with
much glee along with just a bit
of trepidation.”

to the

LEONARD D. CRAIN
Visiting Professor
from U. C. of Sacramento

The demonstration was named
the Assembly of Unrepresented
People and was attended by 4,000
persons from all over the country.
The conference was originally to t
be concerned with two main
topics—the War in Vietnam and
the attempt of the Mississippi
Negroes to unseat the five U.S.
Representatives from that state.
The main emphasis turned out
to be on the war and on what
many demonstrators felt to be the
neglect of Congress in allowing
the President to fight an "unde-

"Dusk Dance" Wednesday
Features Local Jazz Combo
- A--“Dusk--Dance" will be held
from 8:00 to 11:00 p m. Wednesday on Norton's Terrace. Entertainment' wall be provided by Benny Small and a five piece combo.

In case of rain, the dance will
be held in the Rathskeller. Re-

freshmorns will be served with

out

charge

The event, beinng sponsored by
the Norton Union Summer Planning Committee, will feature
dance music and jazz. No rockand-roll will be played. Everyone
is invited.

son’s policies.

There was picketing throughout

the weekend and on Sunday, forty
sit-in demonstrators were arrested in front of the White
House. Throughout the weekend,
the demonstrators were subject to
police harassment which varied
from blowing C02 from the exhausts of motorcycles into the
faces of the sit-ins for a five
minute period, to the roughing up
of demonstrators. Throughout
this, the police would not allow
picture taking.
The heart of the action occurred on Monday, August 9, with
a march scheduled from the
Washington Monument to the
steps of the Capitol.at which lime
the Assembly would convene and
issue a Declaration of Peace. The
police warned that the demonstrators might be charged with contempt of Congress, and one replied that it would at least be a
filing charge to be jailed under.
As

the

demonstrators

ap-

proached he steps of Congress,
two teenage members of the
American Nazi Party jumped

from the crowd and threw red

paint on the leaders of the march,
including Dr. Staughton Lynd of
Yale University, Robert Paris
Moses, field secretary of SNCC,

and David Dellinger, Editor of

Liberation Magazine
This seemed to solidify the
spirit of the group and nearly
600 people crossed First Avenue,

thereby

committing civil disobediance. At this point they sat
down at the entrance to the House
of Representatives and started to
read their Declaration of Peace
with the Vietnamese.
Eventually, over 350 protestors
were arrested including four from
Buffalo and two members of students for a Democratici Society.
They were charged with disorderly conduct and fined onehundred forty dollars. SDS Will
set up a table in Norton Union
today to raise money for the bail
of the Buffalo students.

Japan on September 10, 1965
Gil summed up his stay in
Japan with this closing para-

in

graph:

“As for my free time in Japan,
we have done so much and seen
so much, in the short time we
have been here that I could not
begin to retell it all. Suffice to
say that Japan is the Wealthiest
country and the most progressed
in Asia, and therefore I for one
have a burning curiosity to see
the rest, so as to be able to better understand, for myself, what
is meant by the poverty of Asia
which is so often spoken about."

dared” war. An important development which grew out of the
demonstration was the establishment of a coordinating committee to serve as a link between the
many groups in the country which
have evolved in protest of John-

from Buffalo,
of SDS. drove
down in groups of three and four
to participate in the Washington
Thirty

people

mostly members

Anita Shear, noted
in Haas Lounge.

folk singer, performed last Thursday evening

March

�Friday, August 13, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

'

For COMPLETE Banking Ser
vice Visit, call or write

Manufacturers &amp;
Traders Trust Co.
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OFFICE
(opposite campus)
MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

\w
ir
|W

DEALS JEWELERS
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

*

(next to

Watches
j

j
I
(

Amherst Theater)
—

Diamonds

Swedish Film to Be Shown
In Conference Theater, Thurs.

EXPERT WATCH AND
JEWELRY REPAIRING

ENGRAVING AND
DIAMOND SETTING

*r

Work Done on Premises

K&gt;

SEE THE LIVE
MERMAID
•t the

Cross Roads

#r

3875 Harlem

GENTLEMEN S FURNISHINGS
SHOULDER CLOTHING

at Kensington

NATURAL

J
Ake Gronberg and Harriett Andersson in a scene from "Sawdust
and Tinsel"

This Thursday at 1:00 and 8:00
the Swedish film Sawdust
and Tinsel will be shown in the
Conference Theatre in Norton

p.m.,

Plaza Shoe
Repair

Union,

\l0'

ty*

;

2900 DELAWARE AVENUE
. „\
*''
KENMORE, N. Y. 14217
cW
Phone 873-3228
a v a

1

y . 0V c
('

4.&lt;

c

The story is of a middle-aged
circus owner who has forsaken
his family for a passionate equestrienne who allows herself to be
seduced by a young actor. The
circus owner takes to the bottle,
is beaten in a fight with the actor, and attempts suicide. Eventually the man and his mistress
move on, to their uncertain fate
in the “naked night” which engulfs the caravan.
The film illustrates an impor-

tant phase in

Bergman’s

career.

As John Gillett wrote in the program for the London National
Film Theatre’s Swedish Film retrospective, it “is a study in humiliation and sadism. In this
film, Bergman takes a long sustained look at the darkest side
of the human personality. The
plot development includes scenes
of hysteria, eroticism, nudity, and
is often reminiscent of the masochistic German school of the
1920's.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

IF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

-8 /fas. $2.00

stop for it.

GOHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.
80 Metcalfe St

,

Buffalo, N. Y

,

Ph. 853-2121

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES

6161 GENNESEE STREET, LANCASTER
5 Miles from Transit Road

English Pleasure Riding and Lessons Given
Boarding and Training of Show Horses

Come In For Your $1.73

Lessons:

a

hurgandy Shetland sweater late
Thursday and rushed out. without
her change for ten dollars, please

—

Dry cleaning machines

”

Will I In* Jad\ who purchased

9 p.m.

-

—

Vi hr.

Hacking: $3.00 hr.

$3.50

—

10 OR MORE
NT 4-4400 Mgr. John Shaffner

SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF

NT 3-9755—NT 3-6617

Poise nlyy

-

Stable

JAZZ JAZZ
-

1086 Elmwood Ave.

—

JAZZ

-

HOTEL

PRINCE EDWARD
presents

Copies
I

SAM NOTO QUINTET

Starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,

JOE ROMANO

INC

Quick

Thursday, Friday

&amp;

Saturday

BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure
3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

XEROX COPIES

490 PEARL STREET

Quick

Phone

JMlAUjRAKAI

PRINTING

St at Transit *d. WllllamsvUle, N. T.
NF 4-4404 of NF 4-4421
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Featuring a Complete Chinese Family
Dinner At Your Request
'A Complete Luncheons From $1.25
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Complete Full Course Dinners—$1.75
A Excellent Facilities for Wed4loj*, Banquets,
and Partin up te 300
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Quick
TYPING
Term Papers, Thesis

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BONO

PHONE TL 3-6460

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HIS MUSIC

AND IAT,

EVENING

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l/KST THE WAV YOOL/KE EM

�Friday, August 13, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited
to 250 words Complete identification, including phone numbers,
must accompany each letter Names will bo withheld upon
All letters must be typewritten, double spaced and submitted
before 1100 AM. on the Tuesday before publication

The President’s Domestic Side
It would be safe to wager that/ if Lyndon Johnson's political fame were split
in two, like an old oak tree struck by
lightning, his foreign policy side would
drop thunderously to the right and his
domestic policies would flutter lightly to
the left.
But it is this domestic side of President Johnson that now deserves attention.
It is here that he has proved to be the
political wizard, driving through Congress
revolutionary bills for new imigration
laws, Medicare, tax reductions, housing
subsidies, and civil rights.
And in the area of civil rights he must
be given the loudest applause. The recent
Civil Rights Bill passed giving fair voting
rights to Negroes can never subtract from
him the stature he assumed in its signing.
And with the polls open to the Negro
population, especially in the South, many
anxiously await the next election. For if
all that has been said about the absence
of the Negro’s influence in local and national policies is as crucial as anticipated,
new elections should ,see governmental
changes in the local community level that
will far out weigh the suffering and tolerance of the demonstrations that brought
it to be.
Looking beyond the President’s desk
to the Justice Department one will, if
only taking a casual glance* notice a holdover from the Kennedy Administration,
Attorney General Nicholas de B. Katzenbach. Though not always in the headlines,
personally, his work in civil rights, criminal prosecution and as a contributing architect to the imigration laws and other
bills initiated by President Kennedy are
well noted. It is this type of administrator
in Washington that lifts our spirits when
lesser men blunder.

The Student Book Exchange

Modern Language Dept.
Undergraduates ‘Unimportant
—

’

TO THE EDITOR

Throughout the United States, Modern Language Departments must provide at least one year
of instruction of a modern language to each student
on campus. This is:indeed a wise decision and one
which presents a tremendous challenge to the departments to interest American students in another

cultural background, another pattern of speaking,
as well as another pattern of thinking.
Paradoxically, it seems that the majority of
Language Departments regard this first
year as being quite unimportant, and not one professor spends a great deal of time in the organization of the first and second years of the language, Large universities feel that they are already
"in the, new wave” of advanced teaching, as they
pride themselves bn the few native-speakers in

Modern

...

(Mt

tollt

iih

fof Ci)^ J ifbue \IM&gt;,
k (tow* lift Wy WpiM""

WEEKLY CALENDAR
AUG. 13 AUG. 19
Exhibit: Robert Graves, Manuscripts and First Editions; Lockwood.
Play: “Inherit The Wind ': Kissing Bridge Playhouse. Glenwood. 8:30 p.m.
Art Exhibit: Albert Gleizes, cubist paintings Albright-Knox Art
Gallery

■

EditJrs-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO
Faculty Advisors

WILLIAM SIEMER1NG

DALLAS GARBER

The Editors -m-Chief assume full responsibilty
n en
ot
°*

,

*

l? Sl ° n
|'
o’ ’he

for the

’he Spectrum.
Editorial opinion is an extheir views and does not necessarily reflect
Spectrum staff or the students at this university.
Second Class, Postage Paid

at

Buffalo, N Y , Subscrip$
1 50 for twelve ed&gt;
8,000;
‘circulation
Represented
for t national
advertising
National
by
Advertising Service, Inc.,
420 Madison Avenue, New
tion

’ions,

"Mahagonny";

8:30 p.m. Entertainment: Johnny Mathis,; Kleinhans Music
Hall.
8:30 p.m. Concert; Student Institute Chamber Ensemble;
Baird.
Saturday
Art

Exhibit:

“American

Im-

pressionism”; Room 231, Norton.

11:00 p.m. Chamber Music;
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont.,
Can.

2:00 p.m. Play: ‘Cherry Orchard”: Stratford Festival The-

8:00 p.m. Band Performance:

Pageant of Drums Rotary Field.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Henry IV”:
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont.
Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: ."Mahagonny":
Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont..
Can.
Sunday

3:00 p.m. Concert: Music Institute Concert; Baird
8:30 p.m. Concert: Greater Buf
falo Orchestra; Delaware Park
2:00 p.m. Entertainment Lois
Marshall, Vocal Concert, Bach;
Stratford Festival Theatre. Ont

Can,

7:30 pm. Concert: Clarence
Festival Orchestra Concert:
Clarence Town Park
8:00 p.m. Entertainment: “African Holiday;" Rockwell Hall

(State College).
Monday

9:00 p.m.

(State

College).
Wednesday
8:00 - 11:00 p.m. Dusk Dance
on the Terrace: Benny Small
and 5-Pieee Band (No Rock n
Roll); Norton Terrace.
7:30 p.m. Movie: "Bridge Over
The River Kwai;” Upton Hall
(State College).
8:30 p.m. Concert: Buffalo Com.munity Orchestra: Humboldt
Park.

Thursday
1:00 p.m Movie; “Sawdust and
Tinsel” (Sweden-19531: Norton's
Conference Theatre.
8:00 p.m. Movie: (same as 1:00
p.m. showing)
9:00 p.m. Public Night At the
Observatory: Planet V e n u s;
Buffalo Museum Science.

CAMPUS FACILITIES
Swimming Pool:
3 to 5 Monday Friday
7 to 9 Tuesday &amp; Thursday
■

.

THE SPECTRUM

DAVID EDELMAN

tre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play:

Movie:

(includes families and children when accompanied by
adults)

Craft Shop:
10 to 4 Tuesday, Wednesday

and Thursday
Libraries:
Lockwood—7:30 a m to 11:00
p m. Monday through Friday
8 to 5 Saturdays
1 to 11 Sunday
Harriman—7:30 a m to 11:00

p.m Monday through Friday
9 to 5 Saturday
I to 11 Sunday
Browsing Library
10 to 10 Monday through
Friday
10 to 4 Saturday
(closed Sunday)
Music Room:
10 to 10 Monday through
Friday
10 to 4 Saturday
(closed Sunday)
Post Office:
Hayes—8 to 12 Monday
through Friday
(closed Saturday

Old

Time

m:

Monday through Friday

Another point which deserves some questioning
is why instructors and students in a inultiple section course cannot make their own departments
interested enough in them to prepare a well-balanced final exam which would serve as an adequate
control over the distribution of final grades as
given by individual instructors. It seems that this
would be a tremendous protection for the majority
of students in smaller sections against such dis-

advantages as "the pet student”. There are testing
services in most campuses, but many of the foreign
teachers have never seen a well done and technically balanced test; and yet they arc expected to prepare the final exam in all of the multiple section
courses.
I am a foreigner myself and 1 believe that I
have been learning a great deal from my American
colleagues in the Modern Language Department
about the organization of courses as well as test
preparations.

Academic procedures, however, have a granitic
resistance to change, and if something is not done
very shortly there will soon be not one worthwhile
professor who will accept any classes on the under
graduate level. Relief from teaching is considered
the chief reward for accomplishment, and the teaching of undergraduate classes are considered as an
underlevcl assignment. As long as only research
pays off in cash and fame, the scamp of teaching
is irresistablc.
Why shouldn't universities set up a machinery
for systematic student appraisal of the faculty?
Results might be evaluated by a tripartite group
of representatives of the faculty, administration and
student body in each department. The results of
such an appraisal could guide department heads
n their decision to reward faculty members with
permanent tenure, salary increases, and promotions.
The faculty-would then realize that they have to

Some profc
cation ought to be

conducted

withou any inter
But as for me, the
dudent has the right to demand a better
breed of
caching and teachers than he is getting at the

7 to 7 Saturday

Collegees

anu,

universities in America are
dt
in need of money. Most of
have
come from akin
from parents, and from leei

iperatc

be

(closed Sundays)

day

Saturday

ma.j

nor will the

Cafeteria —II to I Monday
through Friday
7:30 to 2 00 p m Saturday
(closed Sundays)
Rathskeller—7:00 to 10 00
pm Monday through Thurs
(closed Sunday)

methods

Sunday)

&amp;

Norton Union:
7:00 a m to II 00 p

7 00 t6 4 30 p m

of some of the sections.

We know that there arc advantages to learning
with a foreign speaker but let’s not exagerate them.
The for'eigner as. well as the new B.A. graduate
cannot be trusted to teach in any campus without
previous training in the essential facts of education:

teaching

Movies; College Union

All Week

atre, Ont., Can.
2:00 p.m. Play; ‘Marriage of
Figaro” Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont., Can.

The summer edition of the official student newspaper
’he State University of New York at Buffalo. Publicaon Office at Norton Hall,
University Campus, Buffalo, New
ork U214. Published for the twelve weeks of summer
sessions from June 11th to August 27fh.

charge

Today, high schools and colleges provide far better
training in the first years of a language than universities do, as they refuse to accept anyone with
less than an M.A, and experience or credits in

-

more than a few years, the prices
Exhibit: How To Look At a
Painting; Norton, second floor.
at the Faculty-Student Association operatPhotography Exhibit: “Electroned University Bookstore have been a
ic Color Abstractions"; Buffalo
source of concern to both students and
Museum Science.
their representative body, the Student AsEntertainment;
August 9 - 15.
sociation. The abysmal inadequacy of the
Jerry Vale; August 16 - 29, GiStudent Government in handling the probsel Mackenzie: Melody Fair,
lem was of almost as great concern as
8:30 p.m.
the problem itself.
Today
Art Exhibit: “American ImThe newly elected Student Senate and
pressionism”; Room 231, NorSenate Officers have almost completed
ton.
arrangements for a long-range program
2:00 Play; “Falstaff"; Stratford
to make books and book prices better
Festival Theatre, Ont., Can.
suited to student needs. The first step in
8:30 p.m. Play: “Julius Caethese plans will consist of a Student Book
sar”; Stratford Festival Thea-

Exchange.
Students will be asked to leave their
used books with the Senate for resale to
others at a price somewhere within the
vast range between the prices asked by
the University Bookstore and the prices
offered for a student’s books.
The Spectrum lauds this program as
the first rational attempt at solution to
one of the student’s more pressing areas
of concern. We further encourage students
to utilize the exchange in the fall semester
und thus both directly aid themselves and
strengthen the position of the Student Association as a mediator for student prob-

Editor

jCetterS to the

...

ire

th

tat control their fa

ike. Harvard

and

a few
fierkele

&gt;pi n

are
d ea
;

(editorial Comment

be I on

duration.

MRS

Why

i

ihmrld be. They
a hat they believe
ar

MARGARET ALFA.NZO
XkitinK Facility Member

�MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
DANIEL SCHROEDER
“An Evening of New Jazz” last
Sunday evening at Baird was
a shocking, sometimes disillusioning, but never boring, display
of virtuosity. The compositions
cannot be praised or condemned
in one gulp, since they varied
from each other in so many ways.
However, composer W i 11 i a m
Penn’s melodics, which ranged
from atonal Mulligan-like counterpoint in “Trick or Treat” to
Stravinskian rhythms in “Ruthlessness” actually (and unfortunately) played only a small part in
the compositions. Three out of
the four pieces relied to a great
By

SCOREBOARD
The final tennis tournament
under the auspices of the Summer Sessions Recreation Program
featured outstanding players and
competition. Art White and Nick
Chong each made their way to
the final round where Chong defeated White 6 4, 6-1 for the
championship. White, a former
UB star, drew a bye in the first
round and then downed Richard
Bernstein 6 4, 6-0 and Larry Bernstein 6 1. 6-2 to advance to the
finals. Chong displayed excellent
position play and moved to the
championship match by defeating
Jim Hansen 6-0. 2-6, 6 4; Jerry
Goldman 6-1, 6-2 and Jim Marcia
6-3, 6-0.

SPORTS
CIRCLE
By DAVE FRANKO

The Buffalo Bills, American
Football League Champions, arrived at training camp at the
Camelot Inn in Blascdell, N. Y.
on July 22. The objective of the
camp being to find those players

most impressive so far arc: Paul
Costa—has to be the most pleasant surprize of camp so far. A
never
“jack-of-all-trades", Paul
quite found a “home" in any position at Notre Dame. Coach Lou
Saban and Co. have found one
for him at defensive end and he
has responded with an excellent

performance.

Al Atkinson—all UB students
must remember Al for he haunted us for three seasons while
playing for Villanova. He is being played at the “mike" or middle-linebacker position and is in
the thicH of competition. Pete
Liske—a second year quarterback
from Penn State who was obtained from the New York Jets
in a trade, completed four of six
passes in last week’s game against
Boston. Bill Laskey—a' linebacker from Michigan's Rose Bowl
Champs of last year is another
surprize as he was signed as a
“free agent”.
All of the rookies as well as
the veterans will be on display
'tomorrow night at the annual
“Meet the Bills” night at War
Memorial Stadium. The opposition will be furnished by the
Houston Oilers. Kick-off time is
8.00 p.m.

who will best help the Bills defend their A.F.L. title. Approximately twenty-five rookies faced
the (ask of competing against seasoned veterans for positions on
the team. Many found the com-

are

Private
Parties

I ESIA ROOM

gone

HOTEL WORTH
1
200 Main St. TL2-0111

Today, the Bills have thirteen
rookies left in camp Among the

KLEINHANS

extent on the performers’ ability
to improvise, and thus were suband their
ject to their whims
—

deficiencies.
In "Trick or Treat” the quartet
had almost complete freedom to
do whatever they pleased. At their
worst, the musicians became
wound up in virtuosity without
meaning; for instance, bassist Joel
Di Bartolo picked at everything
in sight except his nose. Saxophonist James Miller played nonstop 128th-note runs but the effect in this case was almost of
organization, with a “home tone”
recurring frequently, perhaps involuntarily. The featured per-

former, trumpeter Nelson Starr,
gave a more subdued and personal performance, but he had a stiffness that stayed with him all eve-

ning. Percussionist Michael Rynne
freely improvised on his own,
adding to the general cacophony.
There were a few interesting moments in this, the most exciting
and progressive number of the
evening, but it seems that complete freedom of improvisation
instead of leading on to new horizons has, in. its present form, already reached its limits.
"Polysaturated” had an arranged interplay in at least four different keys between five musia vulcians. The desired result
gar but witty burlesque of the
was better attained than
blues
any other of Mr. Penn’s musical
goals for the evening. It was
—

P«HMOT BwffaU

Tkrwway PUu

Baulavard Mall

&amp;port $hop Knfc (EullPiJf
Semi

-

often hilarious. However, when
the composer tried to accomplish
a serious goal, in “Ruthlessness”,
he fell flat on his face. This attempt to show visually as well as
musically “the evolution of an
artist” seems amusing in retrospect, but a miss is as good as a
mile: As theatre it was unsuccessful, as music worthless.
The best received piece, obviously because it was the most
planned and therefore tradition-

Annual

SALE
Sport Coats

all

wool

with

the

omespun.
should)

Na

popular

des

Bi

ness in the collaboration between
Mr. Penn and the performers, it
was this: for improvisation works
to come off, there must be in the
atmosphere a hard core of insight, understanding and organization, and the attitude surrounding this performance was, instead
anarchistic. Despite this, it was
a worthwhile effort and display
of talent.

SLACKS

s

statistical data.
There is, however, one joyous
fringe benefit brightening up the

existence of the fated student
body. Norton Hall has managed
to avoid the suppression of student welfare via its second floor
Music Room. Here lies one place
untainted by the stigma of impersonalization and indifference.
Music is provided for our pleasure and enjoyment, and a multitude of categories is designated
for almost every individual taste.
Private listening booths increase
the freedom of each student to
select his or her choice of music
and new records are continually
purchased for variety and quality. Although an adequate number of classical, folk, jazz, humor,
pop, spoken word and show tunes
have been supplied, our suggestions for new records are always
appreciated. The world of music
is opened to us without any cost
or profit other than our cooperation
and I.D. card of course.

—

LOLA
PLUS

BREATHLESS

With Jean Paul

Belmondo

August 16-17—

Seance On A Wet

Afternoon
PLUS

The Pumpkin Eater
August 18-19—

Nothing But A Man
PLUS

One Potato,
Two Potato

CR9M8®
MSBNW*MW

Tti&amp;m

2 Hits in Coioi

Nbw Playing

A Very Special Favor
Rock Hudson, Leslie Caron

Sergeants 3
Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin

Starts

Wed. In Color

GENGHIS KAHN

Omar Sharif, Steven Boyd

—

Under The Yum Yum Tree
Jack Lemon, Carol Lynley

W*r SellMs W*r
Bomjj SehneWw £ £
CtpKfM P*rf»Pr«ttiM T
Woody Ms# Oweta Andrew

M£

,

X§L
NIAG. FALLS 297-1470

TELE.

Moved Over and Held Over

Sons of Katy Elder
John Wayne, Dean Martin

TECHNICOLOR*

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Leslie Gore

Starts Wed.

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Student Discounts Both Theatres

Lorna Maitland, Paul Hoppei

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Tommy Holden, Marilyn Mann

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Moved Over and

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What's New Pussycat?
Peter O'Toole, Peter Seller
Romy Schneider, Ursula Andi

Psycho

Janet Leigh, Anthony Perk
Starts. Wed.

TECHNICOLOR*

|

URSULA ANDRESS

I

plus “36 HOURS”

MORITORI
Marlon Brando, Yul Brenne
John Goldfarb,
Please Come Home

Shirley McLaine, Paul Crei

with Jamat Garnar

for trumpet, featuring Nelson
Starr with the composer conducting. It contained big band-Kenton
sounds as well as passages of free improvisation and
carried the whole off with success and even beauty. As jazz,
however, the performance lacked
the tension which is in the score.
It deserves another performance,
when Mr. Starr is at his best.
If there was ah inherent weak-

Richard

fabrics

Now Playing
JACQUES DEMY

—

IRENE YESNER
Music lovers unite! We of the
student rank and file are continuously harrassed by the machinations of university management.
Numbers and IBM computers
have minimized our rights as individuals. Our sole means df idem
tificati'on is itemized on a small
rectangular card with pertinent
By

al, was “Melange,” a jazz concerto

s24 75
by Donald

CIRCLE ART
FILM FESTIVAL

Joyous Fringe Benefit

—

CLEARANCE

Styled

Norton's Music Room-

|

SPECTRUM SPORTS

petition loo tough, and
now.

Friday, August 13, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

12

95

Your U. of B. Drug Store

FIRST DRIVE-IN SHOWING
Walt Disney's

MARY POPPINS
Plus

Featurette

IN COLOR

Flash, the Teen-Age Otter
for this engagement only

children admission 50c

r'i

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's

i

KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

J.
WALT

Licensed agent

broker
Class of 1941

&amp;

WE CAN INSURE YOU, PERIOD!
We can insure you regardless of value of
car or age or driving record!

Lisbon Bailey
Drug Co., Inc.

TWO LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

3378 Bailey Ave.

(across

-

Prescription Specialists

Phone TF 3-1830

2608 MAIN STREET at Fillmore
from Don Allen's)

TF 2-8092
Boulevard Gardens
Court Motel

493 MICHIGAN
(across from

2424 Niagara Falls Blvd
•

DONALD RICHARD NATURAL SHOULDER SUITS

$52.75

•

DONALD RICHARD SUITS IN IMPORTED FABRICS

$57.75

&amp;

Family Units

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Single

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and you get personalized free gift)

�</text>
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McCarthy Viet Nam
Policy Questioned

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
~.

—•—

I

LADY

'
__

I
VOLUME IS

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1965

acle Worker," will be performed
by the Depew High School Footlighters on August 7 beginning
at 8:30 p.m, in Baird Music Hall
at U.B.
The musical score for “Dinny”
was written by Mr. Gibson. The
play, which was produced offBroadway during the 1959-60 season, concerns the dream of Dinny who wants everything in the
world and expects to get it very
easily, Dinny’s dream soon turns
into a nightmare.
The Depew High School Footlighters, under the direction of
Gerald Hoke, have appeared individually in several Western
New York community theater
productions such as Neal du
Brock’s production of “Becket,”
the Studio Theater’s production
of “Androcles and the Lion,”
and Hal Wicke’s Gaslight Theatre production of “The Drunkard.”
Cast members for Dinny and
the Witches include: Shannon

Historical Society
Announces Purchase
Of Fillmore Letters
The Buffalo and Erie County
Historical Society has announced that it has recently purchased five Millard Fillmore letters
to add to its extensive manuscripts collection.

Williams, Patricia Sehmidbauer,

UB Sponsors
Music Institute
For High Schools
For the first time, the SUNYAB Music Department is carrying on a two week "Music Institute” for high school students,
from August 1 to 15. The selected
students in the program have opportunities to perform in band
under Richard Rodean and Paul
Bryan (of Duke University), in
orchestra under Dr. Robert Mols
and Mischa Schneider (member
of the Budapest Strig Quartet),
in chorus under Robert Wadsworth, and in related solo and
small ensembles. They also study
a music theory and humanitiesintegration course with Carlo
Pinto and Mr. Rodean, respectively, All of the instructors except guest conductor Bryan are
members of the SUNYAB faculty.
The acting director of the proAssistant Director of
Bands Richard Rodean, says it
is designed as “an introduction
to campus living and study” to
promote “a liaison between higher music education and secondary school music instruction”
which is lacking today. A total
of 100 students, 75 residents and
25 commuters, are registered in
the program.
gram,

A twelve-page letter written
April 12-14, 1853, by Fillmore
to his sister, Julia, who was residing in Buffalo will be of
special research importance to
scholars and historians, both at
the local and national level. A
definitive work has been published on Fillmore, but additional
primary source material related
to Fillmore, the man, is badly
needed. With this new acquisition, another perspective can be
acquired on Fillmore (as a per-

ning

son).

children’s

In it he writes in detail of
his wife’s sickness, death and
the return to Buffalo. “My home
is deserted. It’s great attraction
is gone; and every object of her
care while living but reminds
ic that she has gone never to
my nights are solicturn
ary and my home is desolate.”
....

Interesting, also, is one of the

tters written while Fillmore
4s in the House of Representives, January 27, 1835, to Sec-

tary of War Lewis Cass, conrning the petition of Daniel
cClure regarding damages inured during the burning of

iffalo in the War of 1812. The
maining three letters are of
more routine nature, one was
itten by Rep. Fillmore, Dec.
1839, to Secretary of War
R. Poinsett. The other two
ters were written to his family:
c to his sister-in-law, Julia,
St. Paul, Minnesota, and the
icr to his brother, Cyrus, Nov.
1854. These five letters tother with 30 additional letters
d 20 artifacts from the So'ty's collection are now on
dibit in the Society's museum.
he

Buffalo and Erie

County
torical Society is the reposifor the Fillmore manu

vipts. It possesses

all the letters
received as Vice-President and
sident, and many letters and
lles of letters sent by him.

are many recreational
activities, lectures and faculty
There

demonstrations for the students
to attend, as well as performances by the students themselves.
Saturday, August 10 the students
will perform at the Buffalo Eve-

Netvssponsored crippled
camp, Cradle Beach,
in Angola. The afternoon of Sunday, August 8, they will give a
public concert at Baird Hall. Student soloists and chamber en-

sembles from the Institute will
give recitals at Baird on Friday,
August 6 and Friday, August 13
at 8:30. All of the ensembles will
travel to Niagara Falls, Canada,

on Saturday, August 13, to perform at 3:00 in Queen Victoria
Park. They will return Saturday
evening for a final banquet at
the University, The final concert of the Music Institute will
feature Robert Wadsworth conducting the chorus, Dr. Robert
Mols with the orchestra, and
Richard Rodean with fhe band,
3:00 at Baird, Sunday, August
.15.
The Music

Institute, like its

predecessors the String Institute
and the Band Institute, is giving
advanced high school students a
chance to perform in first-rate
ensembles under the guidance of
fine musicians and teachers. It
is questionable whether SUNYAB's own ensembles are of the
quality ' of these high school
groups; perhaps in the coming
years the raising of musicianship
in these students by the university will prove mutually profitable.

Sculpture Are Featured

By DAVID BERGEN
and PETER RUBIN

Nancy Adams, Joseph Ferrante,

Dennis Pawlowicz, Frank Thomas, Martin Weidner, John Pietrusjka, Martin Stack, Helen Chrjanowski, Robert Lewandowski,
Andrea Patrizio, Gail Lewis, and
Patricia Chamberlin.

NO. 38

Toronto Folk Student Art Display
Festival to Be In Norton This Week
Drawings, Oil Paintings and
This Weekend

High School Production
in Baird on Saturday

the Witches by
Dinny and
William Gibson, author of “Two
for the Seesaw" and “The Mir-

page

The Mariposa Folk Festival
will be held August 6-8 at a new
site this year, located forty miles
outside of Toronto. The Festival
will include four concerts and
workshops. There will be recreational facilities available for
swimming, boating, camping and
picnicking. There will also be a
dance following the concerts on
Friday and Saturday nights.
The

Friday evening concert
will begin at 9 p.m. and will
feature one of the best city blues
singers, John Hammond. Other
performers will include the Alien-Ward Trio, Gordon Lightfoot,
the York City Boys, Elyse Weinberg, the Dirty Shames and Wade

Hensworth.
Saturday evening’s concert will
be headlined by Phil Ochs, who
appeared at UB last spring and
who has performed at the Newport and Philadelphia Folk Festivals. Also appearing wil be
Son House, the legendary delta
blues singer, Ian and Sylvia.
Joanie Anderson, the Country
Gentlemen and Bill Price.
Sunday
afternoon’s concert
will be held at 2 p.m. and will
feature Gordon Lightfoot, Lotus
and Bram, the Common Folk, Owen McBride and Sharon Trotsin.
The SNCC chapter of the University of Toronto will sponsor
a special concert Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. which will feature Phil Ochs.
Saturday afternoon will be devoted to workshops which will
consist of the performers at the
regular evening concerts. The
workshops are a blues, a banjo
and a ballad.
Ticket prices are $3.00 for the
Friday night concert, $3.50 for
Saturday night, $1.50 for the
workshops on Saturday or $8.00

for the entire weekend. The $1.50
ticket for Saturday afternoon
will entitle the bearer to the use
of all recreational facilities. Tickets may be obtained at the box
office, or in Toronto at Sam the
Record Man, 347 Yonge St., or
the New Gate Cleve Coffeehouse,
Avenue Road in Yorkville,
The Mariposa Folk Festival
can be reached from Buffalo by
taking the Queen E to Highway
27, north on 27 to Airport Road
which leads to Caledon East (22
miles north of Airport Road).
Signs leading to the Festival will
be posted along the route.

FREE
GAME
NIGHT
From 8 to 11 p.m. this Wednesday, the recreation facilities in the
basement of Norton Union will
be opened free to interested students.
On a first come first served

basis, with time limits if crowding occurs, the bowling alleys,
pool tables and table tennis room
will be available to students presenting their I D. cards. Arrangements for the free game night
were made by Mr DiGerlando of
the Norton Union Summer PlanCommittee.
The recreation area is normal-

ning

ly opened Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 11.p.m. and
on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 7
p.m

Everything is free and everyone
is welcome.

By JAN THOMPSON
Beginning Monday, students
participating in the Art Department’s summer workshop will
show examples of their work in
Norton Union. Represented will
be works from the three courses
—drawing, oil painting and sculpture.

The students in the drawing
class, instructed by Mr. Joseph

Fall Festival

Previewed
Much excitement is being generated on campus regarding the
first U.B. Folk Festival. The festival, including two evening concerts and afternooon workshops
and lectures, will take place the
weekend of October 1, 2, and 3.
Headlining the festival will be
Phil Ochs.
Ochs appeared last spring on
the campus and caused quite a
sensation. He was received so
well that the festival producers
naturally felt that he should have
a return engagement.
Singing journalist or musical

commentator might best describe
the work of Phil Ochs, a leader
in the current topical song re-

vival. Using the folk idiom as
his base, Phil discusses the various issues and events of the
day, including such varied and
controversial subjects as Viet
Nam, Cuba, Labor Unions, and
Capital Punshment.

Appearing wtih Phil Ochs will
be Buffy St. Marie, the Greenbriar Boys, The Rev. Gary Davis,
and Buffalo’s own Erie Anderson.
Tickets go on sale early in September.

Buffalo JC s to
Host Foreign Student
The Buffalo Chapter of the
United States Junior Chamber
of Commerce will sponsor the
visit of an Italian student to
Buffalo during August and September,

Pietro Giordano of Torino,
Italy, will arrive in Buffalo August 4 for a seven week stay in
Buffalo. A Jaycee official explained the reason for the student’s visit.
Mr,

'The Buffalo Junior Chamber
of Commerce is very pleased to
bring this student to the Niagara Frontier since we feel that
through this type of program
'■J-C’s" everywhere can do their
own significant part in improving international relations,” Mr
Donald Bixby, program chairman
said.

Selected through the Experiment in
International Living
Program. Mr. Giordano was selected by the Buffalo “J-C’s" because of his desire to achieve
a better understanding of current American thought and stan
dards of living. He is studying
nuclear engineering in Italy and
speaks English fluently. Current
plans call for an extensive visit
by Mr. Giordano at State Uni
versity at Buffalo.

Reardon, have contributed samples of the progress that they
have made during the last six
weeks. These include pen and
ink sketches, tempra paintings,
conte drawings and collages, rang-

ing from detailed, sometimes delicate realism to "far out" nonobjective pieces. As a foundation
course, the emphasis was on the
basic rudiments of drawing and
the development of a more mature style. The most colorful and
varied examples from this class
are the collages.
In oil painting class, Mr. Sheldon Berlyn has encouraged the
students to express themselves
within a regulated set of problems. A variety of approaches
were introduced, from the Renaissance method of underpainting
and glazing to the expressionistic

current technique, through a
study of historical references.

The paintings range from recognizable imagery to the more
non-objective approaches through
the interpretations of the figure
and of the still life. Color is controlled and used effectively.
One particular problem given
to the class was to re-interpret
a painting done by an earlier
master, such as Vermeer or Rembrandt. The solutions were translations into a more expressive,
contemporary stlye.

The majority of the students
in the summer program are candidates for a Bachelor of Fine

Arts degree and are taking courses for credit. Although many of
them are regularly enrolled in
the university art department,
there is a wide representation
from other colleges.

Gordon Lambert, a student at
the Rhode Island School of Design and currently in both the
summer drawing and painting
classes, commented on the course
while working one his latest
painting. It is likely that his
observations are shared by many

of the students. Gordon remarked that this class was more than
just a summer course, but a formal introduction to oil painting
for him. He feels that the teachers are excellent and that the
presentation of the material is
well done, especially considering
the short duration of the course.

Mr. Rich’s sculpture class has
worked in clay, and plaster. The
students are contributing ceramic pieces to the exhibit.
The students’ showing will be
presented during the week of
August 9 to 13.

Folksinger Will

Perform Tuesday
In Haas Lounge
Anita Shear, noted folksinger
and accomplished Flamenco guitarist. will appear Tuesday even-

ing in the Dorothy Haas Lounge
at 8:00 p m to 10:00 p.m. Miss
Shear will sing a varied selection
of American and European songs
as well as play Flamenco music.
She has been on nation-wide television and has appeared at several New York night clubs including “The Bitter End." There
is no charge for this event.

�i

For COMPLETE Banking Service

Visit, call or write

An Addition to Charlies
Shop A Lady Barber

DEALS JEWELERS
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

j Watches

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

I

OFFICE

|

(opposite campus)

I

I

MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

—

Diamonds

Shaggy

soon

EXPERT WATCH AND
JEWELRY REPAIRING
ENGRAVING AND
DIAMOND SETTING
Work Done on Premises

v

|

(WMWWWWVWMMi

Plaza Shoe
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6 -4041
-

9 p.m.

8 lbs.

$2.00

GOHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.
80 Metcalfe St., Buffalo, N. Y.,

Ph. 853-2121

SALE

20 50% OFF
ALL
-

ON

Summer Merchandise
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

IESTA ROOM

students may
1

a pretty new addition to the
campus barbershop. Miss Judith
A. Kwandrans, 17, petite graduate of Akron Central High School
and the Chippewa Barber School,
has been clipping the locks of
lucky collegians in the University’s barber shop for the last
two weeks.

her choice.

—

Dry cleaning machines
-

haired

out of style thanks to

grandfather suggested I become
a barber,” she explained. Judy
heeded her grandfather’s advice,
and now is enthusiastic about

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

go

200

®rest

TRANSITOWN PLAZA

Charles Candino, owner of the
campus barbershop estimated
that his “barberette” is one of
three or four professional lady
barbers in the city of Buffalo,
“The men want to look at someone pretty for a change. She
will probably gain business for
the barbershop,’’ he said.
Judy, whose past experience
was mainly confined to giving
trims and short haircpts, now
says she finds that her barbering skill is being tested with the
longer haircuts in vogue with
college men. Her next undertakings at the shop will be manicuring and beard trimming. Apparently the University’s first
lady barber has little difficulty
with
wisecracking students.
“They like to joke around,” Candino said, “but most of them are
nice boys.” The “nice boys” seem
to be enjoying the whole thing
immensely. One of Judy’s customers kidded, “Lady barbers!
I though they didn't exist.”
Two male passers-by did the
usual double take, and one said
with a grin of anticipation, “I
think it’s time to get my hair cut
again." Another shorn student
explained his first experience
with a lady barber, “It kind of
took me by surprise. I thought
they must be kidding." “She did
a wonderful job though,” he added quickly.
Although the unusual situation
at Charlie’s is a deviation from
the idea of a barber shop as an
inner sanctum for men only, it
hasn't put a damper on conversation in the barber’s chair. One
customer, admittedly shy, said,
“I usually go into a barbershop,
sit down, and that's that, but
we got into a discussion of lady
barbers and I opened right up.”
“I don’t suppose it matters which
sex cuts your hair as long as it
gets cut,” he concluded thoughtfully.

HOTEL WORTH
TL2-0111

Main St.

The Pierced Ear
3624 Main Street
(opp. U.B. at Bailey)

Featuring
PIERCED EARINGS and
NON-PIERCED
PINS
BRACELETS
NECKLACES

The young “barberette", who
lives in Akron, N.Y., has become
the star attraction in the University’s Norton Union. Working
in the chair nearest the shop’s
door, Judy draws hundreds of
double-takes each day from passing students. While some might
consider the occupation of lady
barber out of the ordinary, Judy
seems to regard her choice of
a career as nothing unusual. “My

Repair
Open 9 a.m.

Private
Parties

—

,(next to Amherst Theater)-

Manufacturers
Traders Trust Co.
&amp;

1965

Friday, August 6,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

—

—

RINGS

Judy Kwandrans is a new attraction at Norton's Barber Shop
Judy joined a staff of six male
barbers at Charlie’s Barber Shop,
which opened with the new Norton Union in 1962 as a supplement to another store owned by
Candino near the University Plaza.

It is very possible, however,
that in the future the female
population of the shop will increase. Said Candino, “I may send
my wife to barber school.”

I BIG

OR TALL
WE FIT THEM ALL

j

)

—

GENTLEMEN S FURNISHINGS
NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING

GRENELL MEN'S SHOP
3249 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, N. Y.

|

)

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES
6161 GENNESEE STREET, LANCASTER
Road

5 Miles from Transit

English Pleasure Riding and Lessons Given
Boarding and Training of Show Horses
Lessons; Va hr.
Hacking: $3.00 hr.
$3.50
—

—

SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE

NT 3-9755—NT 3-6617

-

Stable

—

NT 4-4400 Mgr. John Shaffner

SEE THE LIVE
MERMAID

W:

at the

Cross Roads
3875 Harlem
at Kensington

pjs^-

Visit MILITELLO’S Complete Luggage Center

Sifts- for

•
•

•
•

’ccaiioni

Gifts of Distinction
Nome Brand Luggage

•
•

Ladies Leather Handbags
Bar Accessories

JAZZ

•

•

-

JAZZ

Portable Bars
Attache Cases
Mens &amp; Womens

Billfold

Expert Repair Dept.

-

PRINCE EDWARD
presents

JAZZ
HOTEL

SAM NOTO QUINTET

Starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,

JOE ROMANO
Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday
BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure
The Dept. Music's Concert Series
has provided UB students and
faculty many enjoyable evenings
this summer.

3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

490 PEARL STREET

Phone
parking in rear

853-9806

�Friday, August 6, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

STUDENTS SEEK VOICE

PRSFession-

IN ADMINISTRATION

BV

STODEnT

Students returning this fall, will find
student leaders have far from forit
th
ilten
those internal problems that have
g
for too long been characteristic of this

oCeiteri to the Editor

OM M ArUflup

A6P

ba limitad
lack of apac. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must
Du.
phone numbers,
to 250 words. Complete identification, including
must accompany each letter. Names will be withheld upon request.
All letters must be typewritten, double spaced and submitted
before 11:00' A M. on the Tuesday before publication.
to

Johnson Motto Is Incomplete
TO THE EDITOR:

What could be more prophetic?
Let me offer a more complete quotation of
President Johnson's frequent Biblical appeal to

campus.

,

The Student Senate, under the leadership of the Campus Alliance candidates
who .swept last year’s elections, has
pledged itself to sounding out the sources
of the problems and seeking the means
necessary to solve them.

reason:

Come now, and let us reason together . . .
If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat
the good of the land:
But if ye refuse and rebel, ye shall be
devoured with the sword . . .
Holy Bible, Book of the Prophet Isaiah,
Ch. 1, verses 18, 19, and 20.

PROPHET

Two major sources exist, both resulting from the absence of student represervatives in the university structure,

Rebuttal to McCarthy’s
Viet Nam Stand
DEAR REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTHY:
Your letter to the Spectrum explaining your
stand on Viet Nam contains several errors which
must be clarified.
1) The logic reported by Secretary McNamara
that you cite not only points to extensive use of

Academically, too many instructors
for too long a time have failed to uphold

their responsibilities as teachers. Students
are not getting the education they demand.
Instructors that fail to come to class prepared, that use outdated, irrelevant, and
poorly edited texts and class programs
to cover for their own eneptness will find
that the student evaluation programs being initiated by the New Student Review
and the Student Senate will not only expose their shabby teaching but construct
considerable pressure both on and off
campus for their rectification.
the Faculty-Student Association (when and if the State University, State Legislautre, and State Department of Audit and Control finish with
them) will be faced with more and more
demands for student involvement and decisions in the dealings of that money making organization.
Financially,

The major area of concern with the
FSA is in its fleecing of students in the
operation of the University Bookstore and
Norton’s cafeterias.
The bookstore has not only exploited
its monopoly of students in the sale of
new books, but has particularly robbed
them on the resale of used books. Possibly
the operation of a book exchange by the
Student Senate will cause the FSA to police itself before it is too late. The cafeterias, in turn, have not only charged outrageous prices, but failed to serve adequate meals.
But these problems will not be solved
hv the actions of a few students however
committed they be. What is needed and
what will be asked is the large scale participation of all UB students and faculty
embers in protest against unfair prices
and the declining standards of packaged
f ocation being
turned out by the UB
production line.
'

THE SPECTRUM
newspaper

The summer edition of the official student
-T the State University of New York at Buffalo. Publica''on Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, New
York 14214
Published foe the twelve weeks of summer
sessions from Juni 11th to August 27th.

Editors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOIRE
DAVID EDELMAN
Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO
Faculty Advisors

WILLIAM SIEMERING
The

DALLAS GARBER

Editors-in-Chief assume

full responsibilty for the
the Spectrum.
Editorial opinion is an e*• 'ession
of their views and does not necessarily reflect
' at of the Spectrum staff or the students at
this university.
•ontent

j

0f

Second Class, Postage Paid

Buffalo, N Y ; Subscrip$1.50 for twelve edicirculation
8,000;
Represented
for national
advertising
by
National
Adverting Service, Inc.,
420 Madison Avenue, New
at

tion

tions,

York, N. Y.

'SAV, MIKE/ DIPNY VOU GET A LMN TO
PAV VOURTUmoN LAST TE£M ?

American forces in Viet Nam, but also World War

*

WEEKLY CALENDAR
AUG. 6-AUG. 12
Monday

All Week

Exhibit: Robert Graves, Manuscripts and First Editions; in
Lockwood.
Play; “Inherit the Wind"; Kissing

Bridge

Glen-

Playhouse

wood,
Art Exhibit:

Albert

Gleizes,

Albrightpaintings;
Knox Art Gallery.
Aug. 6 &amp; 7: Play; "Mary Mary,"
Melody Fair.
Aug. 9-15: Jerry Vale; Melody

cubist

Fair.

Play:

Millionairess;"
“The
Shaw Festival, Court House

Niagara-on-the-Lake,
Theatre,
Ont., Can:
Exhibit: How to look At A
Painting; 2nd floor corridors,
Norton.

“American Impressionism”; Room 231, Norton.

Exhibit;
Exhibit;

Paintings,

drawings

and prints by U.B. summer students of Dept, of Art; Room
233, .Norton.
Photography Exhibit: “Electronic Color Abstractions"; Buf
falo Museum of Science.
Today

8:30 p.m.

Reader’s

‘‘Edward II”,
Theatre; Conference
Play;

Theatre, Norton.
8:30 p.m.. Play; “Cherry

Stratford

chard”;

Or-

Festival

Theatre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Marriage of
Figaro"; Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont., Can.

Saturday
11:00 am. Chamber Music:
Theatre,
Stratford
Festival
Ont., Can.
2:00 p.m. Play:

Stratford
Ont,, Can.

“Henry IV";

Festival

Theatre,

2:00 p.m. Play: "Mahagonny";
Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont.,

Can.
8:30

p.m.

Play:

Festival

Stratford

“Falstaff";

Theatre,

Ont., Can.

8:30 p.m:

Play:

"Marriage

of

Figaro"; Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Dinny and the

Witches"; Baird Hall. No admission charge.
Sunday

2 00

French,

sky;
tre,

Concert: National
Orchestra, Rampal
flute virtuoso, Shum
Festival Thea

pm.

Festival

■

Stratford

Ont.. Can.

3:00 p.m. Concert: Music In
stitute ConcertJBaird Hall
3:00 p.m. Movies: “Treasures
in the Snow," "Wildlife World”
and "Israel" (color); Buffalo
Museum of Science.
8:30 p m Concert: Greater Buf
falo Orchestra; Delaware Park

8:30 p.m. Film Lecture; “Cultural Exchange Program In
Europe”; Baird Hall.
Tuesday

8:00 p.m. Folk Concert: Anita
Shear; Haas Lounge.
Wednesday

8:00-11:00 p.m.

Game

Even-

ing: Free use of Norton’s re-

creational
Union.

facilities;

Norton

8:30 p.m. Concert; Greater Buffalo Orchestra; Riverside Park.
Thursday

tre, Norton.
2:30 p.m.

Haas

Lounge.

8:00 p.m. Movie; “Tomorrow
Is My Turn”; Conference Theatre, Norton,
9:00 p.m. Public Night at the
Observatory; The Planet Ven
us; Buffalo Museum of Science.

CAMPUS FACILITIES
Swimming Pool:
3 to 5 Monday - Friday
7 to 9 Tuesday 4 Thursday
(includes families and children when accompanied by
adults)

Craft Shop:
10 to 4 Tuesday, Wednesday

and Thursday
Libraries:
Lockwood —7:30 a m.

ballot.

6) Your letter gives no indication of your
seeking consultations and evidence from other
than government sources. Yet we know from the
forthright and accurate writings by correspondents
in Viet Nam of the New York Times, David Halberstrom
The Makings of a Quagmire
and
The
the Associated Press, Malcolm W. Browne
New Face of War
that our government and
—

—

—

—

to 11:00

p.m Monday through Friday

8 to 5 Saturdays
1 to 11 Sunday
Harriman—7:30 a m. to 11:00
p.m Monday through Friday
9 to 5 Saturday
1 to 11 Sunday
Browsing Library
10 to 10 Monday through
Friday
10 to 4 Saturday
(closed Sunday)
Music Room;
10 to 10 Monday through
Friday
10' to 4 Saturday
(closed Sunday)
Post Office:
Hayes—8 to 12 Monday
through Friday
(closed Saturday 4 Sunday)
Norton Union:
7:00 a m. to 11:00 p m.
Monday through Friday
7 to 7 Saturday
(closed Sundays)

Cafeteria—II to 1 Monday
through Friday
7:30 to 2:00 p.m Saturday
(closed Sundays)
Rathskeller —7:00 to 10:00
p m Monday through Thurs
day

7:00 to 4:30 p m

tional Liberation Front.
5) You write that “the United States has in
tervened to uphold the right of this people (i.e.,
the people of South Viet Nam) to control its own
future”. The fact of the matter is that it is the
United States military might that prevents, today
and in the past, the free choice of which you
speak. The 1954 Geneva Accords called for elections in July, 1956 throughout Viet Nam under
international jurisdiction. The
United States,
through active support of the late Ngo Dinh Diem,
undermined this opportunity of choice by the
Viet Namese people through an election which
President Eisenhower has acknowledged in his
book, Mandate for Change, would have been won
by Ho Chi Minh with no less than 80% of the vote
cast by a|l Viet Namese voters through a secret
:

1:00 p.m. Movie: “Tomorrow
Is My Turn"; Conference Thea

(closed Sunday)

III. You should inform your constituents of this
fact.
2) The United States, in confronting actual
threats from adversaries, need not be restricted,
as you claim, only to the alternatives of “fighting”
or “yielding”. From the very beginning our President could have taken the issue to the United
Nations but refused to do so. Such a decision
would not have been either “fighting” or “yielding”. It is indeed regrettable that your alternatives
are so confining that you cannot advocate peaceful solutions to world problems through an international agency such as the United Nations.
3) You neglect to inform your constituents that
President Johnson has not been willing to negotiate; President Johnson continues to call for
“unconditional discussions", not negotiations as
you state in your letter.
4) You avoid informing your constituents of the
unwillingness by President Johnson to “transfer
this conflict from the battlefield to the conference
table” through direct negotiations with the Na-

Saturday

officials have been misinformed of the facts about
Viet Nam on many occasions.
7) Your letter fails to note that the United
States government frequently and deliberately misinforms the people of the United States when embarking upon military involvements in the internal
affairs of soverign nations. For example, Adlai
Stevenson misinformed the American people and
the entire world by denying, in a speech before
the United Nations, United States involvement in
the attack upon Cuba at the Bay of Pigs. The
landing of military forces in the Dominican Republic is another classic illustration by our government, this time through President Johnson, to mislead the American people and the entire world:
an attempt was made to deny a genuine effort
for the establishment of a democratic government
by the Constitutionalists while all the while our
President officially informed us of another socalled "communist take-over." (See an accurate,
factual account by Theodore Draper, “The Roots
of the Dominican Crisis." See also Tad Szulc's
confirming article, “When the Marines Stormed
Ashore in Santo Domingo," Saturday Evening Post,
July, 1965) Surely such deliberate distortions of
reality as these undermine the faith and confidence
of the American people in their government.
We therefore beseech you to inform yourself
and your constituents of the truth and of
the basic
facts concerning, in particular, military intervention by the United States government such as
in
V letnam and the Dominican Hepublic.
SIDNEY M WILLHELM
Assistant Professor
LEONARD D. CAIN, JR.

Visiting Professor

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marked the
play last Thursday on the Clark
Gym softball diamonds. The Deparlment of Biology behind the
pitching and hitting of Doug Morrow edged by the Maintenance
Department 7-6 Morrow's homerun proved to be the difference.
Ken Raster of Maintenance pitched well enough to win but a
Biology run in the bottom of
the 7th ended his bid for vietorv. Joe Potts had a round tripper for the losers
The second game saw the
T,„h.

h,tt

C.N.D.E.A. Counselor and Guidance Institute club end the School
of Education s win steak at 3
with a 7 5 win. It was strictly
a "pupil over teacher afternoon
as Marvin Adams pitched the
victory. The Professors were led
by shortstop Harry Hartley’s
sterling defensive play. There is
a rumor abounding that the homework given to members of the
Institute will increase.
TENNIS

The final tennis tournament
under the auspices of the Summer Sessions Recreation program
featured outstanding players and

compe,,tlon:
.

I*

Uutstanoino
.

t/r

.

//

OJ m 00

A

JJ.'i,'._,

flOOIllOflS

will be boosted by
■
i
the 'fit;
players
severaLnew
for tv,,,
6566 season. The backfield wd be
strengthened b\ DickEhyar , a
capable quarter back and punting
OkU.
specialist from
The Bulls

....

homa, who

15

kctball team and also played
baseball.
UB assistant coach Ron La-

L

C

an7wi
d lTg cMipeUtoVwhrsfouW make
b

fjne

g

°

.

change,

lineman ...

i

.
in

in the fall is
W esolowski 6-0, 205-pound
wbo was caD tain of the
en t er ng

,

,

high

‘

“nc|:

“

?

„

‘™nsfcrnng to Bu

falo from Northtastern C
homa A. &amp; M. Junior College.

.

The 5-11 180 pound Enyart won
8 letters in basketball and football at Wyandotte High and was
all state quarterback in the latter
sport. He has been termed “a

. .

this trade inParticipation
t w0 prerequisites, good
duality and good condition. Individuals are urged to bring in
Paperbacks in exchange for an
equivalent number of circulating
paperbacks. A constant influx of
books is encouraged for the benet

.

,

voBes

school footwesolowsk
the
jne
in
g : schoolboy grid prospects
P
N(ny York w as sought
w
,’„
.
|
made
lt es n e
f
b
&amp;
Buffalo Evening News
am) Courier Express All-ECIC
teams for two straight years and
the Courier Express All-Western
psjcvv York team last year.
Wesolowski also played basketbal| ahd baseball at Cleveland
cievelBnd Hill1

‘

.

Thf

fit of all interested readers. New

III

I428HERUL AVE

L'k'k'k'k i
Daily Nt

„

Beside the Music Institute activities for the coming week and
the Anita Shear concert, there
15 another important music event
on campus this wrek, Sunday,
August 8, at 8.30 there will be
sists of compositions by William
A Penn, a graduate music studcnt at suNYAB, featuring trumpeter Nelson Starr.

■

•

The

from

....

saturated.”
Mr. Penn, a jazz pianist in this
area for everal years, is aware
of and has employed the newest
directions of improvisational music (his “Ruthlessness" was inspired by “Sur Scene” performed

.

in Iast fall’s Festival of the Arts),
xhe concert represents a compendium of some of Buffalo’s
a cornfinest jazz musicians
bination of talents which, under
the right leadership could and
should take place more often.

.

„

MAIN St JLi-eeA |

Student

MAIN

ST.TE4
Theatres

Discounts Both

2 Hits in Coloi

Now Playing

FIRST AREA
DRIVE-IN SHOWING

What's New Pussycat?
Masquerade
Cliff Robertson, Jack Hawk

TELE. NIAG.
Now Showing

2 Hits in Color

Having a Wild Weekend

Now Playing

Sex and the Single Girl

—

Dave Clark

—

Tony Curtfs,

THE TRAIL
"Wonderfully

work."

FALLS 297-1470

CIRCLE ART
FILM FESTIVAL

Natalie Wood

LORNA

Kafka's great

faithful to

Five

Starts Wed

Orson Welles, Anthony Perkins

Me-

.

lange, ’ which has an almost traditional big band arrangement,
to the more pretentiously metaphysical “Ruthlessness' for eight
musicians and two actors, to the
avant-garde forms (or formlessness, as you may choose) of
“Trick or Treat” and “Polyun-

year with the San Francisco
49’ers. Ryan said that at this
stage of his career Danescu has
better hands and more moves
than Parks, with about the same
speed. The onlythingthatParks
has an advantage in is height.
Mark
Murtha
All-Southern
Conference quarterback who led
Union. Endjcott High school to
championship
should
P
djstan
t(J ,£e Bullf
passjng arm Murt ha is the son
o{ Mark Murtha Sr whose nick
name is Mick also played yar.
sity baseball at Endicolt. U.B.
chief assistant coach Ryan who
scouted Murtha, rates him as a
"fine college prospect with a good
passing arm."
„

range

pieces

CinmatAnhm
645
5500
7^6j

S^eOUSWE

com

mention AU-

’^WYHQR.

r-r-j— -baiH/iwmraKraHo/naneb—Z.'

}///cu /jtik

R

By DANIEL SCHROEDER

PwhPrstiHM’T^

Csffwtos

Peter O'Toole, Peter Sellers, .Ron
Schneider, Ursula Andress

RGX
6HIRLEU AML
BERGMAN -HARRISON • MacLAINBY

„j|]

Ryan Danescu an end from
Hi b cphnol in Detroit.
wbo ' js descri b ed as “the best
receiver that I have ever seen”
b y Assistant Coach Ryan will also
|
line-up.
af d strength to the Bulls'
Although only 5-11. 160-pounds,
Danescu won 3 letters at Salesian
High andm

To further advance this exchange continuum, the Browsing
Library supplements the collection of paperbacks with some
books of its own choosing. The
efforts of the Browsing Library
are directed towards adding to
whatever results are produced
by the students themselves. The
development of a fine paperback
library is possible only if this
venture is supported with the
cooperation of the student body.

INGRID

I"*
AIM PI IQ
t-fllVirUO

0\l
Cl

afcolsCIL

Pttot Soffits Pstsr

contributions will broaden the
spectrum of selections, and enable this free service to remain
worthwhile and diversified.

|orthParkf«i
*TF6-74IJjg-|

■mif'ir*

MUSIC

high and low hurdles and the
440 relay.
In evaluating Danescu, Ryan
compared him to Texas Tech AllAmerican Dave Parks who was
one of the NFL’s top rookies last

n II n
UB
\JU Bulls
uuu* Boast
iin

By IRENE YESNER

A kaleidoscope of classics, cartoons, poems, and who-done-it
thrillers are among the sundry
offerings comprisinfi the Br W
Paperback Exsing Library

1965

■fr-b RorngSchneMw

i

SPECTRUM SPORTS

�

r\

Exchange
Libi
Browsing Library
Need Participation
Program Needs

™!

|

I"*

Friday, August 6,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Lorna Maitland, Paul Hopper

—Newsweek

9-10
Last Year at
August

TICKLED PINK

Tommy Holden, Marilyn Mannini

Marienbad
PIUS

The Cousins
August 11-12
Now Showing

Jules Et Jim

Sons of Koty Elder

PIUS

Les Mistons

John

CISMS®
WSBAlltYxJMW

Wayne,

Dean

Martin

PLUS

Girl on the Beach
Beach

Boys,

Leslie Gore

tfu**

—

good passer and an outstanding

FIRST BUFFALO SHOWING
2 Big Hits In Color

THAT FUNNY FEELING

_——————————

i'

CT

Sandra Dee,

■

Bobby Darin

IMITATION OF LIFE
Lana Turner, Darren Gavin

Starts Wed.

MARY POPPINS

an impressive classroom re
cord: he was valedictorian of his
graduating class, received a trophy as the outstanding scholar
athlete in Oklahoma and was on
the Dean’s Honor Roll in junior
piled

a top-notch junior college player
from Eastern Oklahoma A &amp; M
College. Swiderski. 6-0, 190-lbs .
was an All-Conference halfback
last season at E Oklahoma
"Buddy Ryan said that Swi
derski will probably play defen
sivc end or line backer for the
Bulls. Swiderski’s home town is
Ctica. N V where he played at
Whiteboro Central High School
and w as captain in his senior year
and where he was selected to the
Central Oneida All-Stars for two
vrars
John Patrick Doherty, one of
the outstanding ends in New Eng;
land high school football circles
last fall, will be enrolled here
this fall The 6 1 205-pound Do
herty played for Bishop Stang
•

to

hi-.

1

In addOnm

was selected all
■onfercnce, all city, all state Class
C" and Catholic iligh School All

ihip,

Doherty

Amcricar

A Versatile athlete, Doherty wa
captain of his high school's has

...naturally!
’■

U

I

•

• •

Re.

o
A :^L

e

Discotheque after 10 p.m.
2443 Niag. Falls Bivd. 694-tm

'

)m MAUHAKAI

4170 Main Sf. at Transit Rd.» WHIUmseille, N, Y.
NF 4-4404 of NF 4-44J1

|v7L/J
XaFK

USaSIl
uHf

*

-AKhCL
figgaA
HWII
Moj
IT)

i

The Bulls' reserve strength will
be bolstered by Walt Swiderski,

|y|f HHI

We can suit you best

Featuring

•

Complete

Compete

Licensed agent

broker
Class of 1941

FullI Cow* Dinner*-*! .7*

Excellent FeciliHee For Wed4l»*«, (enquet|.
end Potties up to 300
10% Student Discount
* Credit Cards
Honored
A Tropical Drinks
now you can danci to

*

BONO

( «,
1 |[||j(HHj)/

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sat.

and

OPEN

KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!
&amp;

WE CAN INSURE YOU, PERIOD!
We can insure you regardless of value of
car or age or driving record!

TWO LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

|
#

HIS MUSIC

&amp;

ivmr rsi.

thing but the best at Willoughby's

WALT

Chinese Family

Dinner At Your Request
*
Complete Luncheons From $1.2S
*

I'd rather fight than let you get any-

2608 MAIN STREET at Fillmore

I
I

evening

(across from Don Allen's)

TILL^=30e^V^-Wh&gt;J

TF 2-8092

—‘

Boulevard Gardens
Court Motel
.

-

Druq Co., Inc
D

NX 2-3842
1W

(across

Lisbon Bailey

2 424 Niagara Falls Blvd.
.

493 MICHIGAN

Your U. of B. Drug Store

_

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10 Minutes from U.B,

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c

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into

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from Little Harlem

Hotel)

TL 2-0820

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>1

Rep. McCarthy

STATE

UNIVERSITY~OF

|h||P

NEW YORlTAT BUFFALO

E9

m

School of Ed.

—-

■ A

jflfl

Softball Win Stroak
page four)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1965

VOLUME 15

NO. 37

Solve-ln
Solved Little

Steele Speaks On Viet Nam Today

The Solve-ln, sponsored by the
a Democratic Society
(SDS), filled the Fillmore Room

BLUES FOR MR. CHARLIE’
ON STAGE IN BAIRD HALL

For Students

Students for

of Norton Union last Thursday
evening from 6:30 p.m. to 1:00

a.m.

A spokesman for the SDS tried
to establish a theme for the Solveln saying, “We had a Teach-In
late in the spring and the TeachIn was open for anyone to speak.
We heard from the right and from
the left . . . since the Teach-In
the war has escalated . . . many
Americans have died . . . many

Vietnamese have been killed . . .
The reason we are having the
Solve-In tonight is that we are no
longer considering the solutions
from the right, such as the bombWe are considering of China
ing alternatives from the left.”
...

V'isiting proponents of solutions
included Joseph Popper of the
DuBois Clubs, James Robertson
from the Spartacist, Deidre Griswold representing Youth Against
War and Racism, and Ralph Levitt
for the Young Socialists. James
Aronson, editor of the National
Guardian, spoke on the special
role and problems of the American press in the Cold War and
most particularly Vietnam. Jeremy Taylor, editor of the Spectrum for the Fall, spoke on the
personal problems and alternatives pursuent to the Viet Nam
conflict.
“It is of primary importance,"
said Mr. Popper, “to esablish within this country a broadly based
Socialist movement aimed not
only at the ending of the war in
Viet Nam but also at a socialist
We
reorganization of society
recognize, however, that most of
those who are moving in opposition to the war are not willing to
move toward socialism . . . Our
movement must (thus) be for
America.”
a
Mr. Robertson continued
somewhat similar theme by suggesting, "this is a Solve-In to
propose a policy to our government, It is not our government
A new government carrying
out a new policy is required for
a solution to the Solve-In.”
Mr, Aronson charged that “the
combined forces of the United
States government, the intelligence, and the army; and the
government of South Vietnam, if
you can call it that; and the home
offices of most American newspapers and wire services are combining to keep from the American public the truth about what
one reporter called the ‘dirty,
stinking war in Vietnam’.”
In his speech late in the pro...

...

gram Jeremy Taylor pointed out
that “this is not merely a presentation of views on the war in
Vietnam. It is a presentation of
ahtudes on the state of American Society.” He then went on to

provide

the first set of specific
steps that could be taken: “I suggest to you as the first personal
alternative to be considered,
young men of draft age, should
consider the alternative of conscientious objection . . . second
choose not to work in defense
industries, choose not to pay the
tense part of your taxes
d finally
a very heroic alterdive which was offered by the
...

...

ilosopher William James . . .
'luntary poverty as the only
oral equivalent to war.” He also

■ paraged the lack of elementary
urtesy at the Solve-In and sugsted that people could learn
om each other if they could
eat their political positions not
castles to be sallied forth from
m them return to atfer a battle,
R rather as transitory things
are subject
editions change.

at

to change as

“Blues for Mr. Charlie,” a drarace relations in the
contemporary south written by
James Baldwin, is being presented tonight and tomorow by the
Ira Aldridge Players in Baird
Music Hall at U.B.

Bernice Steele, a member of
the Women’s Strike for Peace
and a Professor of Social Work
in Washington, D.C., will speak
on the Challenge in Southeast
Asia from the point of view of
Viet Nam, today at 8:00 p.m. in
Room 240, Norton Hall. The convocation is being sponsored by
the local chapter of Students for
a Democratic Society.

ma about

The play deals with the reactions of white and negro communities to a lynching.
The Ira Aldridge Players were
formed in 1960 by James Taylor.
The Players first play was "Raisin in the Sun” followed by
“Moon on a Rainbow Shawl,”
“Dark of the Moon” and “The
Wooden Dish.”

Mrs. Steele is currently chairman of WSP’s United Nations
Committee which has a recognized observer at the UN. She has
recently returned from a series
of conferences in Jakarta, Indonesia where she spoke, along
with ten other representatives of
the group, to six women from
North Viet Nam and four women representing the National

When Taylor left Buffalo the
direction of the Players was passed on to Lakin Hill. The first
production under Hill was, "Come
Back Little Sheba.”

Liberation Front.

The Ira Aldridge Players have
performed at the State University College at Buffalo, the Studio Theater, the Off-Broadway
Theater at the Hotel Richford
and at the State University of
Buffalo.
Tickets for “Blues for Mr. Charlie,” the third play in the State
University at Buffalo summer
series, can be obtained by calling
the Norton Hall ticket booth at
831-3704. Admission for faculty
and students is $1.00 and $2.00
for the general public.

Concert Monday
The concert Monday afternoon
at 1:00 p.m. in Norton’s Conference Theatre will feature Carlo Pinto on piano, Isidor Seslan
violinist, and Dorothy Rosenberger soprano.

The concert will include pieces
from the work of Mozart, Nedrorem, Emmanuel Chabrier, James
Woodard, and J. S. Bach.

The Ira Ridge Players opened James Baldwins' Play
Mr. Charlie' last night in Baird Hall

'Blues For

Prince Fairyfoot' On Stage
At Rosary Hill College Now
Prince Fairyfoot is being performed by Rosary Hill College.
The production, which will play
at 3:00 p.m. from July 29 through
the 31 and at 8:30 p.m. on July
31 and August 1 at Daemon Little Theatre lists the following
cast of characters: Anthony Be-

Workshop On Smoking
Course For Educators
The development of a plan to
control smoking among adolescents is the project of a workshop course on “Smoking and Its
Relationship to Health and Disease” being held at U.B. July 1930.

The course, presented by the
University’s School of Education,
is designed for teachers, supervisors, and other personnel concerned with the health problems
of smoking and their application

as the King; Mary K.
as the Queen; Robert J.
Fleecefoot; Gary L. KorRobin Goodfellow; and
Gregory Thomas as Stiffstep.

vitiere
Wilkes
fox as
cus as

It is the story of Prince Fairyfoot, who lives in the land of
big-footed people. However, the
Prince has tiny feet. He is about
to many Princess Maybloom, the
large-footed princess from the
land of little feet, when if is
discovered that he has tiny feet.
He is immediately chased out of
Stumpinghame and the Princess
is pressed to marry the new ruler.
Lord Stiffstep. Prince Fairyfoot
and Princess Maybloom are aided
by a little elf named Robin Goodfellow and events come to a happy conclusion for both.
The play is directed by Sister
Mary Francis, O.S.F., the director
of the Fioretti players and administrative head of the Summer
Program in Theater Arts at the

College. Although a new venture
lor the College, Children’s Theatre is not new to Sister Mary
Francis. Several years ago, Sister directed a very successful
group of Fioretti players at Stella Niagara, New York. Her work
there gave rise to at least one

for health teaching.

Participants in the workshop
include: Dr. Robert Baumler,
clinical professor of medicine,
U.b!; Dr, Jerome J. Maurizi, assistant professor of medicine, U.B.;
Dr. William E. Mosher, commissioner of the Erie County Health
Department; Dr. Theodore H.
Npehren, associate professor of
medicine, U.B.; Dr. Charles A.
Ross, assistant research professor Of surgery at Roswell Park
Memorial Institute; and Dr. V. J.
Sallak, executive secretary of the
Buffalo and Erie County TB and
Health Association. Dr. Sellak is
the chairman of the workshop.

WSP Member
Returns From
Viet Nam Visit

actress, Patricia Freeman
of Niagara Falls. Miss Freeman
is now attending the Summer
Theatre Arts Program and is doing the scene design for Prince
young

The New York State Air Force
Association presented its "Aerospace Education Award" to the
president of U.B. at its 18th An-

nual Convention Saturday at 8:30

p.m. (July 24) in the Parkway
Inn, Niagara Falls. Or. Clifford
C. Furnas received the award for
his "many contributions through
the positions he has held in industry, government and education."

Fairyfoot.

Others in the cast are Ellen M.
Anllo, Roxanne M. Anllo, Richard
J. Bcller, Mary Eder, Stephen J.
Eder, Kathy Kmiecik, Jennifer L.
Rogers, Mark Smith, Katherine J.
Wasilelwski, and Susan E. Wasielewski.

The Women's Strike for Peace
is a “grassroots
movement"
founded in 1961 when fifty thousand people demonstrated against the nuclear testing which was
being conducted by the United
States and Russia, The WSP
stands for “general and complete disarmament under strict
control" by all the nations of
the world. They feel that their
aims can be achieved only with
cooperation by the East and
West, and that it is their responsibility as citizens of this
country to demonstrate and to
function as lobbyists to further
the cause of peace throughout
the world.
Sister organizations of the
WSP have been established in
a number of countries including
Japan and Canada; and in 1962
the organization extended to
Russia.
Among the supporters for the
Women’s Strike for Peace are
Bertrand Russell, Reverend and
Mrs. Martin Luther King, and
Dr. Benjamin Spock.
A spokesman for Students for
a Democratic Society commented
that, "Mrs. Steele is in a position to give Us some of the relevant facts which may have been
unavailable to us. Her discussions with the Viet Cong give
her a perspective that few
American can claim,”
Following Mrs. Steele’s remarks will be a question and
answer period. The convocation
will be open to the public.

Friends of the Bulls
Hold Year-End Party
The Friends of the Bulls, a
group of alumni and friends of
UB, will hold a year-end party
at Kissing Bridge July 24 it was
announced today by the group’s
president Kenneth Hanour
After cocktails and dinner, the
Friends and their wives, will attend the Kissing Bridge production of Lawrence and Lee's, "Inherit the Wind.” The social event
will climax the organization's
first year of business activities.
Begun in the fall of 1964. the
Friends of the Bulls is a group
interested in furthering the University’s athletic program and
community standing. Their goal
is to improve and upgrade the
overall athletic schedule, attendance and recruiting program.

�Friday, July 30,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

DEALS JEWELERS

For COMPLETE Banking Ser
vice Visit, call or write

(next to Amherst Theater)

Manufacturers &amp;
Traders Trust Co.

Watches

—

Published by

Diamonds

-

Partners ’ Press, -3nc.

EXPERT WATCH AND
JEWELRY REPAIRING

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OFFICE

MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

Work Done on Premises

j

Photography Display: “Electronic Color Abstractions”; Buffalo Museum of Science.

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

DIAMOND SETTING

II afer
v&gt;f
-

”

Cross Roads

)

/

|

|

3875 Harlem

|

I

|

Kensington

Exhibit:

Exhibit;

How to Look at a
Painting; 2nd floor corridors,
Norton.
Exhibit: American Impression
ism; R 231, Norton.

CLASSIFIED

Play: “The Millionairess”; Shaw
Festival, Court House Theatre,
Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont„ Can.
Play: “Inherit The Wind”; Kissing Bridge Theatre, Glenwood.
Art Exhibit; Albert Gleizes,
cubist paintings Albright-Knox
Art Gallery.

FOR SALE

1959 Hardtop, new tires,
Radio, wire wheels, excellent conMCA

ard”; Stratford Festival Thea
tre, Ont., Can.

Sunday

2:00 p.m. Concert: Rampal
French, flute virtuoso, Shum
sky, National Festival Orchestra; Stratford Festival Theatre,
—

Today
Exhibit:

James Joyce, Manuscripts and First Editions; Lockwood Library.
2:00 p.m. “Henry IV”; Strat-

Poise nlyy Summer Sale

ford Festival

FINAL REDUCTIONS
DRESSES
SKIRTS &amp; SLACKS
BLOUSES
ALSO KNIT TOPS,

Daily
Thun

til 5 30
til 9 00

Orig.

Sale

4.95-12.95
3.45- 5.95
All 2.15

5.95- 10.95
3.95- 5.95
BERMUDAS AND SLEEPWEAR

-

30%

Poisenlyy

OFF

MSSJSUKRL

Phone

Rd.» William,villa, N. V,
NF 4-4404 of NF 4-4421
� Featuring a Complete Chines* Family
Dinner At Your Raqueit
A Complete Luncheon* From $1.25
� Complete Full Count Dlnnen—$1.75
� Excellent Facilities hr Weddlnga, Banquetl
and Partin up to 300
10% Student Discount
� Tropical Drinks
� Credit Card* Honored
NOW YOU CAN DANCI TO
tl70

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES
6161 GENNESEE STREET, LANCASTER
5 Miles from Transit

Road

English Pleasure Riding and Lessons Given
Boarding and Training of Show Horses
Hacking: $3.00 Hr.
Lessons: Vi hr.
$3.50
SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE

Mala

St. at Tranalt

BONO

&amp;

HIS MUSIC

IVERY ERI. AND SAT. EVENING

.KITCHEN OPEN TILL_2:3(

—

—

JAZZ JAZZ

—

-

NT 3-9755—NT 3-6617

-

Stable

NT 4-4400

Mgr.

falo Orchestra; Delaware Park

Monday

1:00 p.m. Concert: Carlo Pinto,
with instrumental en
semble; Conference Theatre,

Theatre, Ont.,

Charlie”; Baird Hall.
8:30 p.m. Entertainment: The
King Family; Melody Fair.
8:30 p.m. “Falstaff” Stratford

886-0011

1086 Elmwood Ave.

Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Concert; Greater Buf-

Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Blues For Mr.

9.95-24.95

John Shaffner

-

Norton.

8:30 p.m. Play: “Mary, Mary
Melody Fair.
Tuesday
8:30 p.m.

Concert: Faculty
Woodwind Ensemble Concert
and Demonstration; Conference
Theatre, Norton.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Greater Buf
falo Orchestra; Cazenovia Park.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Mary, Mary";
Melody Fair.

Wednesday

8:30 p.m. Play: “Edward II”;
Reader's Theatre; Conference
Theatre, Norton,
8:30 p.m; Play: “Mary, Mary";
Melody Fair.
Thursday
1:00 p.m. Movie: “David and

ton.

JAZZ

2:30 p.m. Disc-Discussion; Haas

presents

SAM NOTO QUINTET

Starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,

JOE ROMANO
&amp;

piano

Lisa”; Conference Theatre, Nor

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

Thursday, Friday

Saturday

Lounge, Norton.
8:00 p.m. Movie; “David and
Lisa”; Conference Theatre, Nor-

ton.
8:30

p.m. Play: “Mary, Mary
Melody Fair.
9:00 p.m. Public Night At The
Observatory; The Moon; Buf-

falo Museum of Science,

BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure

Your U. of B. Drug Store

Lisbon Bailey
Drug Co., Inc.
-

3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

490 PEARL STREET

Phone

parking in rear

James Joyce, Manu

scripts and First Editions; Lock
wood Library.
2.00 p.m. Play: “Julius Caesar
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont
Can.
2:00 p.m. Play: “Marriage of
Figaro"; Stratford Avon Thea
tre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Cherry Orch

Lockwood Library.

Phone 876-2284

S88888^^K%S8a!i888888888888888888888g888888a
see the live

I

Saturday

Exhibit: Robert Graves, Manuscripts and First Editions;

(at Delaware)

j

Festival Theatre, Ont., Can
8:30 p.m. “Mahagonny”, Strat
ford Avon Theatre, Ont., Can

All Week

_AhyoH &amp; Smith Printing

ENGRAVING AND

(opposite campus)

WEEKLY CALENDAR
July 30 August 5

The SPECTRUM

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

1965

Prescription Specialists
3378 Bailey Ave.
Phone TF 3-1830

853-9806

Boulevard Gardens
Court Motel

SALE

2424 Niagara Falls Blvd

NX 2-3842

20-50% OFF
ALL

Single &amp; Family Units
10 Minutes from U.B.

Private
Parties

ON

Summer Merchandise
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

(Srest

1

IESTA ROOM

HOTEL WORTH
200 Main St. TL2-CH 1_^

Plaza Shoe
Repair

TRANSITOWN PLAZA

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m

T

9 p.m

Your One Stop Service Cente

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines

-8 lbs. S2.00

�Friday, July

30, 1965

SPECTRUM

editorial Comment

.

.

PAGE THREE

rsCetterA

.

AMERICAN COMMITMENT

to I lie

Evening News Criticised
For Biased Journalism

AND THE PRESIDENT

EDITOR, BUFFALO EVENING NEWS

The escalation of American commitment in Viet
Nam makes the time late to distinguish between moral
commitment and political commitment in the actions of
country’s foreign policy

a

Clearly it is wrong

to kill. This is a foundation of

the laws of civilized people. This is a moral law. It is
applicable to Man’s conscience and to the way he should
conduct his life either as a leader or follower. But political commitments such as the necessity of men to protect
whether it be their loved ones or the
what is theirs
their
labor
is also a deciding factor in the
fruit of
way in which men live.
—

—

At this point in the development of the war in Viet
Nam, any further analysis of our position in these terms
would merely be redundant. The President’s TV message
of July 28 does raise some serious questions within the
context of his position.
Two very basic issues were consistently skirted by
President
in the press conference which immediately
the
followed his Viet Nam policy statement.

As a former student in Texas and as a professor in California for the past thirteen years,
I have been an inveterate reader of newspapers.
Although both these states have the reputation
of supporting less than liberal causes and newspapers, the supposed news article of July 21 on
the forthcoming “Solve-In” on the State University campus is as vicious and slanted as any article
I have read.
As a summer visitor to “The City of Good
Neighbors,” I have received a Chamber of Commerce pamphlet which boasts that “Buffalo stands
among the first cities in the world in the proportion of church membership to population.” I suggest that these “good neighbors” read, say, Pope
John’s encyclical, “Pacem in Terris,” and compare
his hopes and pleas with those of the “revolutionary
youth groups” sponsoring the “Solve-In.” Or, to
be ecumenical, let them read the Presbyterians’
proposed “Confession of 1967,” which states in part:
‘Conflict among nations defies the justice and
peace which governments exist to serve. Nuclear,
chemical, and biological armaments divert human
and material resources from constructive use and
threaten to annihilate mankind. The church is
called to practice the forgiveness of enemies in
its own life and to commend to the nation as
practical politics the search for cooperation and
peace. This requires the establishment of fresh
relations across every line of conflict and the
risk of national security to reduce areas of strife
and broader international understanding. When
the church allows some one national sovereignty
or some “way of life” to be identified with the
cause of God it denies Christ the Lord and betrays its calling.’
If Pope John and the supporters of the “Confession" be revolutionaries, then so be it. Maybe,
Mr, Editor, you should assign Reporter Turner the
task of reviling the priests and ministers along

Firstly, Johnson made it a point to adamantly stress
his position that the United States government is willing and eager, at any time, to move from the battlefield
to the conference table, and that we will negotiate with
any government in an attempt to find a peaceful solution to the war. The policy is quite admirable; yet, Johnson twice refused to extend his comments to the National with the students.
The "Solve-In” story is so honeycombed with
Liberation Front, which just might be the only way to
irrelevancies and distrotions that only a few can
end the war.
be commented on here. Why is a reporter priviSecondly, and perhaps more important to the establishment ideology of the United States, the question
as to the limits of the President’s power in conducting
the war without congressional approval was raised and
for all extents and purposes ignored. The Spectrum
maintains that the extent of the President’s emergency
powers and those accorded to him as Commander-inChief of the armed forces have been greatly distorted
and that any further misuse of these powers should be

curtailed. It should be noted, that in
our involvement has been steadily and
ing, there has not yet been one formal
bers of Congress
the representatives
to emerge this nation in a conflict of
—

this war, where
rapidly increasdebate by memwith sole power
such magnitude.

As an observation of particular concern, though
one not directly relating to the governmental position
on the Viet Namese War, was the President’s method
of addressing the public. Though we cannot, in all fairness, preclude the possibility of Johnson’s sincerity, his
methods and logic have the earmarks of a tailored image
"hich grossly underestimates the intelligence of the
American people.

SPECTRUM

THE

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State Univer■y of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University
»mpus, Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the twleve weeks of summer
ssions from June 11th to August 27.

Edilors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE

DAVID EDELMAN

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

DALLAS

,

GARBER

The Editors-in-Chief Assume full responsibility for the content of the
Editorial opinion is an expression of their views and does not
cessarily reflect that of the Spectrum staff or the students at this university.
tectrum.

A C P FIRST CLASS HONOR
Second Class, Postage

PhtS6

RATING

at Buffalo, N Y
twelve editions,

Paid

SI. 50 for
circulation 8,000.
Represented for national advertising
National Advertising Service, Inc ,
Madison Avenue, New York, NY.
Subscription

critics.
I want to believe that the news coverage of
the “Solve-In" will be more accurate and less
spiteful than the preliminary coverage.

Ed.

—

It wasn't

LEONARD D. CAIN, JR,
Visiting Professor of Sociology

Rep. McCarthy Explains
Stand on Viet Nam
TO THE EDITOR

In the months that I have been your representative I have had the happy duty of announcing
quite a bit of good news.
But now the time has come for me to painfully present to you some terribly unpleasant
news.

The fact that the policies we have pursued
to an honorable
that we take a
course that has some chance of being more effec-

thus far in Viet Nam have not led
termination of the war requires
tive.

Faculty Advisors

WILLIAM SIEMERING

leged to interject that a speaker “will dispense
the latest propaganda line”? If a person who
“defied police” and was "arrested and acquitted,”
may not the police been in error? And what does
“encounter with the police” mean? My, my, a
speaker was “steeped in revolutionary fervor from
her teenage days.” In Texas schools I studied
American history, including our own revolution,
before I was a teenager.
What does “ideological hookup" have to do
with a “position taken” on an issue? A reporter
ought, it seems to me, report the positions taken
and let the public judge their relevance.
It is indeed a sad commentary on contempor
ray America that hate and fear labels are attached to those among us who would seek to
overcome the violence and brutality of war. Ironically, many Americans who such a short time ago
were so vitriolic in their condemnations of the
Demoncratic administration, now, as that same
administration supports mass killings of defenseless villagers, turn their vitriol upon the new

bv
420

The logic of the recent deterioration reported
by Secretary McNamara points to more extensive
use of American forces in the ground war.
It is my duty as your representative to can
didly let you know how I see the situation from
my vantage point here in Congress.
And let me say that I have arrived at my position after many hours of the most painful and
careful review of the facts in top-secret briefings
at the White House and in Congress and in thought*
ful study in the quiet of our living room. As a
veteran of two wars, I am profundly a
man of
peace. I have three strong, young sons and believe
me I know that many of you do too And I keep

Editor

this in mind every time I am called upon to cast
my vote as your representative on the crucial issues of war and peace.
With this as background, let me now present
my position on the dangerous situation we now
face.
First of all, we must realize that our policies
affect not only Viet Nam and its hopes for freedom, but American security in its broadest aspects
and the long-range preservation of basic human
values.

The grim reality is that the right of a peaceful people to exist outside the Communist orbit
is being brutally challenged.
The United States has intervened to uphold
the right of this people to to control its own future.

With the military odds running heavily against
South Viet Nam, the United States could not possibly withdraw from the war without a catastrophic

let down of the forces resisting communism all
over the globe.
As long as the Communists seek to extend their
system by terroristic methods and military aggresled by the United States
sion, the free world
has the alternative of fighting or of yielding
its most cherished standard of values.
The Administration has demonstrated at every
opportunity
time and time again
its eagerness to transfer this conflict from the battlefield
to the conference table. Neutral nations and nations allied with the United States have tried to
do the same. But every single overature that has
been made has been rebuffed.
But we can not abandon our allies in Viet
Nam because their foes prefer the ambush to
the conference table.
So. we must brace ourselves for stern measures that will assure us an honorable seat at
whatever conference table the future may take
—

—

—

—

us to.
As a people, we must face the hardship and
sacrifices that history has always demanded of
those who would make the cause of human liberty
a vital force.
REPRESENTATIVE RICHARD D. MCCARTHY

Senator Byrd Scores Adm.
On Right-to-Work Appeal
TO THE EDITOR
From experience, we have learned that the
more government is centralized, the more easily
it is influenced
by leaders
if not controlled
of organized pressure groups.
Certainly, the political target areas and the
ruling officials of the government are more concentrated.
We have heard that the more government is
centralized in Federal bureaucracy at Washington,
the more it is susceptible to the influence of labor
—

—

leaders.

It is now proposed that the Federal Govern
ment outlaw State right-to-work, statutes.
In this connection, think of this fact:
In the past 35 years strikes in this country
have prevented more than 800 million man-days
of work; that is a loss of more than 800 million
man-days of pay, and more than 800 million mandays of production.
I have always conceded to good citizens in
the rank and file of labor unions the privilege

of

organizing.

I have conceded to legitimate labor unions the
privilege of collective bargaining when they represent their members.
But I also concede

to men and women the
right to work if they choose. This is certainly a
basic right.
Labor leaders want the Federal Government
to force membership in a union as a condition
of employment. In excess of 50 million, or
more
than 70 percent of those employed in the United
States are not now members of the big national
and international unions.

Generally speaking, State right to-work laws
provide that the right of individuals to work shall
not be denied on account of either membership
or non-membership in labor organizations.
The Taft-Hartley Act recognizes States rights
in
this field. 'Labor leaders want this provision repealed.

Without it, we could not expect, the pfesent
Supreme Court to strike down every State right-

to-work law in the country.
Nineteen States have these right-to-work laws,
a number of them enacted with
constitutional
amendments adopted by referendums If they arc
not desired, the people in the States who approved
their enactment could bring about their repeal.
But the labor leader pressure is at the Federallevel They want Federal action for
wholesale
nullification of the States rights these laws
represent, and the individual liberty they protect
I regard the right to work as'I do the right
to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
States have the right, the responsibility,
and
the duty to protect this fundamental
freedom
This is my position and I shall fight for
it
SENATOR HARRY F BYRD, Virginia

�NOTES AND BOOKS
THE MOTORCYCLE
Andre Pieyre de Mandiar/lues
Translated by Richard Howard
Grove Press (GP 329)
$3.95

By JEREMY

TAYLOR
The Motorcycle is not a novel
that speaks to any American condition, although one of the central
figures of the work is American •
a Harley Davidson “74.” Several
reviewers have claimed that de
Mandiargues has done for the
motorcycle, “what D. H. Lawrence
once did for the horse,” but it
may be argued that in both cases,
the images of the horse and the
motorcycle both bore that vital
and sexual symbolism before
their introduction into literature.
The Motorcycle is not really comparable to any works of Lawrence, since it lacks any really
masculine characters; the three
major male characters in the
novel, an antiquated rare book
dealer, a characterless and passive teacher of history, and a
sadistic and decadent librarian,
all fall short of any genuinely
masculine identity. In fact, the
only character who begins to exhibit any masculine vitality is an
unidentified West Indian customs
agent who appears briefly in a
page and a half and who is too
sketchily portrayed to lend any
masculine imperative to the work
as a whole.

also many inadequacies in Richard Howard’s
translation, or rather, there are
many inadequacies in the work
which appear to stem from awkward translation. The “technical”
passages, in which the work
abounds, arc the most notable
in this respect. We are faced
with descriptions involving "acceleration grips” (rather than
“throttles”) and an odd piece of
equipment called a "standard”
which appears to be the “jiffy
stand' or possible the “center
stand" of the Harley..
There are

This machine, for which the
novel is named, and with which

it deals in great detail throughout the course of the narrative
strained the credibility of this
reviewer within the first twenty
pages. The protagonist, a mere
slip of a girl, nineteen years old,
is able to start it with one kick
on a chilly fair morning after it
has been sitting in a cold garage
for over a day. It is certainly
possible that Mr. de Mandiargues
has ridden a Harley, but he has

Dinny and The Witches
Performance Aug. 7
By Depew Footlighters

SPECTRUM
SPORTS

Dinny and the Witches by William Gibson, author of Two for
the Seesaw and The Miracle
Worker, will be performed by the
Depew High School Footlighters
on August 7th. This performance,
the fourth in the U.B. drama
series, will be held at 8:30 p.m.
in Baird Music Hall. No admission will be charged.

by

The Depew High School Foot
lighters, under the direction of
Gerald Hoke, have appeared in
dividually in several Western New
York Community theatre productions such as Neal du Brock’s
production of Becket, the Studio
Theatre’s production of Androc-

North
Park'
1428

Cliff

Robertson, Jack Hawkins

CinemuAmhmt
Student

Discounts Both Theatres

FALLS 297-1470

TELE. NIAG.

CIRCLE ART

9 BEST SELLERS-TOGETHER!

Now Playing

—

Tommy Kirk, Anette

YEARI^
'I’MAUBIGHT

Funicello

Mr. Moses

—

Robert Mitchum, Carroll

Miracle In Milan

IHf BRIGHHSI, LIVELIES!
COMEDY Of THE

in Coloi

Monkey's Uncle

FILM FESTIVAL

__

2 Hits

Now Showing

Baker

Starts Wed.

HAVING A WILD WEEKEND
Dave Clark Five
SEX AND THE SINGLE GIRL
Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood

DE SICA AS DIRECTOR!
“More laughs than I’ve had
at the movies in an age!”

—New Yorker

mm
AROVF
•

■

run,T1J

Sutff

•

*

August 1

Two Women

Vo/

August 2-3

SELLERS
lANCARMtCHAEl URHMHQMAS

Now Showing

Woman in the Dunes

SoUai*

Plus

That Funny Feeling

Knife in the Water

Strange Bedfellows

Sandra

Dee, Bobby Darin

Gina

Rock Hudson,

6£U*e
mm

Lolabridgida

Starts Wed.

SONS OF

KATY ELDER

John Wayne, Dean Martin

GIRL ON THE BEACH

namftjtm

Beach

Boys, Leslie

Gore

HELD OVER
2 Big Hits In Color

Discotheque after 10 P.M.
2443 Niag. Falls Blvd. 694-1144

Walt Disney's

PHONE TF 2 6982
SKYWAY

THE MONKEY'S UNCLE
Tommy Kirk, Annette Funicello

NIAGARA

THE WORLD OF
HENRY ORIENT

FALLS BLVD.

N.

SHERIDAN

(or translated).

Peter Sellers, Paula Prentiss

The body of the novel is concerned with a trip on the Harley
from a French town aceross the
border of Germany to Heidelburg,
and with the delicate scries of
fantasies and reminisccnes evoked by this passage. The style is
deceptively flat and lucid The
character and psyche of the pro-

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's

*!£,'

X

/

tagonist is explored in a manner
reminiscent of Thomas Mann or

KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

WALT
. . ,

Henry James at his most descriptive. The insights generated
by the narrative are clear and
ramify far beyond the confines
of the single character, and in-

NATURAL

.

.

Licensed agent
broker
Class of 1941

FURNISHINGS
SHOULDER CLOTHING

GENTLEMEN'S

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.

WE CAN INSURE YOU, PERIOD!
'■ .
We can insure you regardless of value or
car or age or driving record!

GOHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.
30 Maltalto

deed, beyond the whole novel.

The theme of the novel is almost identical to the theme of
Mr de Mandiargues earlier work,
The Girl Beneath the Lion, and
the character of the protagonist is
illuminated with a delicacy and
a seeming objectivity which is
neither clinical nor moralistic.
The darker sides of ferhinity revealed by her mental and physical wanderings are disturbingly

Masquerade

|S45MAIWSITU-6eo5| 5500 MAIN STTUTtM

certainly never tried to start one
on a cold day! If one can forgive this monumental inaccuracy
then the rest of the '‘technical"
descriptions of motorcycling are
quite adequate, if awkwardly
written

What's New Pussycat?

OR*

Nt§

HERTEL AVE.'TF6-7411

”

DRIVE-IN SHOWING

Peter O'Toole, Peter Sellers, Romy
.
Schneider, Ursula Andress

calculate, and know that Viet
Nam is not a Chinese restaurant,
a disease, or a new record .”—
Melvin Barlow of UCLA, quoted
by Mrs. Joan Bowers in a consultant’s paper for the 1965 White
House Conference on Education.

funny

2 Hits in Color

FIRST AREA

PaotaPrarttot^eff

Capaetoa

(CPS) —A sound basic education is the “ability to read, write,

ft

Softball
The School of Education softball team continued their winning ways by edging the Phase
I Grad Students 4-3 on the Clark
Gym Diamond last Thursday. The
Professors jumped to a 3-0 first
inning lead and were never headed. Joe Igoe’s 2 run homerun in
the 3rd closed the gap but the
Foster Hall boys led Ed Herr's
standout defensive play in center
field were not to be denied.

Now Playing

of

production

cheeked out by contacting Jack
Wintermute, 312 Clark Gym between the hours of .1:00 and 3:30
every week day.

Pet* SaDats Mar fflboMram
M £ Romy SchrieMar *

les and the Lion, and Hal Wicke’s

Gaslite Theatre
The Drunkard.

The more advanced tennis playcampus stepped aside last
week for the running of the novice men’s tennis tournament.
The finals saw Peter Zimmermann
and Colin Dalton battle it out
for the championship with Zimmermann winning by the score
of 2-6, 6-4, 6-2. Zimmermann defeated Mike Violante 6-1, 6-2 to
gain the final round, while Dalton, a visitor from England, turned back Alan Lewis 6-1, 6-1 for
his semi final victory.
The final tournament of the
of the summer is currently in
progress. The results will be
printed in the Spectrum next
week. For those not interested
in competition, courts are available and equipment may be

ers on

The music for Dinny and the
Witches was written by Mr. Gibson and the play was produced
off-Broadway in the 1959-60 season. The play is a fantasy which
begins with the dream of Dinny,
the hero, who wants everythinig
in the world and expects it the
easiest way. Unfortunately, everything unreal that Dinny takes
unto himself boomerangs and his
dream becomes a nightmare.

real and expose a kind of vitality
which gives breadth and depth to
the work which is unfortunately
not sustained by the great majority of other characters or by
the
sensative descriptions of
moods and landscapes against
which the action moves and with
which they fuse at the close of
the novel.
This conclusion, which is exciting, and true to the internal
logic and posture of the narrative,
does not seem however to bring
the work to anything but a literary conclusion, and one has the
sense that it is generated to justify the final unifying image of
the novel which the author suggests is “perhaps the true face
of the universe,” If this is indeed, “the true face of the universe,” then the expression on
that face is ambiguous, for one
has the distinct impression that
despite the feminine appearance
of the central character, the dark
world she inhabits, and the bizarre urges she is subject to, she
is really a disguised homosexual,
and that her entire experience,
and the experience of the reader,
is one of homosexual, rather than
heterosexual love.
The Motorcycle may not be the
kind of novel one chooses to
read twice, but it is eminently
worth reading once.

1965

Friday, July 30,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

f
?

S

Buffalo. N V

Ph, 853

Small—$1.00

Med. —$1.25

TWO LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

2121

2608 MAIN STREET at Fillmore

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"Made Like a Piiia, Cooked Like a Pina, Tastes Like a Pina"

IN CASE WE CAN'T SATISFY YOU,
WE WILL DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK.

from Don Allen's)

Harlem

Hotel)

TL 2-0820
»
«

(mention

this ad and you get personalized free gift

�</text>
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                    <text>JAMES BALDWIN

,

...

J

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

PLAY

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BASEBALL,

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 23,

VOLUME 15

jflH

tennis

scores

page

NO. 36

1965

Syracuse Touring Company to Perform
A Thurber Carnival' in Baird Hall
By

JOHN W. STINY

On July 23 and 24 at 8:30 the
Syracuse University Summer
Touring Company will bring the

stories and cartoons of the late
James Thurber to life on the
stage of SUNYAB’S Baird Hall.
Tickets are available at the Norton Hall Ticket Office, and at the
door on the nights of the performance. Prices are $1.00 for
faculty and students and $2.00
for the general public.

The Thurber Carnival promises
to be highly entertaining

.

.

.

The second presentation of the
State University at Buffalo’s drama series will be performed by
one of the few undergraduate
touring companies in the country,

Med Student in Math Lecturer to
Paris Tells of Visit for Summer
UNICEF Work Teachers Institute
By CARY A. PRESANT
Special to the Spectrum
PARIS, France
Travelling on
a four lane highway through the
heart of the largest and most
beautiful park in Paris, the Bois
de Boulogne, one passes a sculp—

tured waterfall and then turns

onto a narrow winding gravel
road. It leads him past a tranquil
lake, over a trickling brook;
through the arches of trees and

the customary metal gate, up to
the Chateau de Longchamp. Built
in the middle ages, rebuilt by
Haussman and again by Coty, the
Chateau provides an idyllic setting of flowered gardens, ivy covered towers, and the impressive
chateau itself against a stark contrast of modern white laboratories and lecture halls.
This, then, is the headquarters
of the International Children’s
Center, founded 15 years ago and
supported since
then by the
French Government and UNICEF.
K is dedicated to the improvement of the welfare of children
and bases its activities on two
main principles. First, although
the concept of child welfare is
divided by most people into fields
°f medicine, education, social
service, law, etc., it is in reality
a u it indivisible. It is detrimental to the child, as an example,
for he doctor to be ignorant of
•he educational environment, and
similarly for the teacher to be
unaware of nomative child development. Second, the education of
adept and knowledgeable special■sts in new aspects of their own
speciality as well as topics in
other areas best serves the ultigoal of improved child, wel-

Dr. Anthonie Van Heemert, a
lecturer in mathematics at the
State University at Groningen,
Netherlands, will spend July 26
and 27 at a summer institute of
science teachers being held here.
Dr. Van Heemert is one of
fifteen European scientists and
science teachers participating in
a six week information exchange
with American science teachers.
The scientists, from Belgium,
Denmark, Netherlands, Norway,
Sweden and the United Kingdom,
will visit 121 of the National Science Foundation sponsored institutes.

Dr. Van Heemert has taught
mathematics and physics in the
Amsterdam high schools and at
the University in Utrecht. He received his doctorate degree from
the State University in Groningen
in 1943.
The scientist has done research
in the fields of topology, geometry, and the philosophy of mathematics and science, and has published many works in his field.

!

,,

c

&gt;s far easier to understand

Thurber had been convinced that
he ought to compile his fables
cartoons and essays and cartoons
into a revue. Among the items
included, are “The Unicorn in the
Garden”, “If Grant Had Been
Drunk at Appomattox” and “The
Secret Life of Walter Mitty”. The
revue opened to unanimous critical approval in February of 1960
and played for 224 performances.

ce nter

organizes extensive
and courses in Africa,
and South and Central
'jca as well as
in Paris and
J nt r
European cities, on various
. P c
°f child welfare for docf
teachers, psychologists, soworkers, judges,
Usually,
ese individuals haveetc.a number
sessions together and
,general
R specialized
sessions in their
“"’n
S1;

Thurber was once described by
‘•Life" as “the greatest working
humorist of his day”. A good
number of critics and analysts
have tried to define the nature
of Thurber’.s humor enabling him
even to make light of his blindness. The consensus is that it
lies in his ability to be witty
without malice and gentle without being inane. He had a highly sophisticated view of the foibles of the 20th century “Homo
Sapiens Americanus” and conveyed his vision of the ridiculous
through his slightly mad but never unrealistic world of amorphous
confused people and “human”
dogs and rabbits.

Christopher Fry’s poetic comedy, The Lady's Not For Burning,
will be the second production presented in the 1965 series of the
Rosary Hill College Summer Pro-

year.

J, Matalone who plays Jennet and
Robert B. Shea who plays Thomas. In the supporting cast Leonard
P. KadluboWski is Richard; Pa-

tricia A. Freeman is Alizon; Don-

in Theatre Arts. This vivid
comedy by Fry is one of many
outstanding works written by this
noted English playwright, A few
of his most noted works are Venus Observed, A Phoenix Too Frequent, and A Sleep of Prisoners.

na M. Benincasa is Margaret;
Timothy J. Denesha is the Mayor; Thomas J, McKay is Nicholas;
Robert A. Witnauer is Tappercoom; Clifford P. Group is the
Chaplain; and Richard C. Herrmann.

The Lady's Not For Burning is

Reverend Alvin Rossey, S.D.S.
is the scene designer and technical director. Costumes are being
executed by Sister Mary Francis,
O.S.F., the administrative director of the Summer Theatre Arts

gram

set in medieval England, A satirical view of life is attained in

the roles of Thomas and Jennet,
The plot presents a young girl
accused of witchcraft who doesn’t
want to die and a young man who
sees all the iniquity in the world
and so desires death.
The play, which is running
nightly at 8:30 p.m. from July 22
through July 26, is under the direction of the Reverend John J.
Leddy, O.M.I., a member of the
faculty of the College’s Summer
Theatre Program.
The leads are held by Susanne

Program.

The production is being staged
at the Daemen Little Theatre.
Tickets may be obtained in advance by calling the Box Office
at 839-3144 between 10 a.m. and
5 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Adult admission is $1.25,

Concert Series
In Baird Set
For This Monday
On Monday, July 26, the Department of Music will present a
continuation of their concert series. The program will take place
in Baird Hall at 1:00 p.m. The
following day, Tuesday, July 27,
a repeat performance will be given in the Norton Conference The-

atre at 8:30

p.m.

Featured in the concert will be
Oswald Rantucci and William
Courtial playing the guitar, Ronald Richard, oboe; and Richard
Rodean, bassoon. The program
will consist of Sonata in E major,
op. 14, No. 1 by Beethoven; Diabelli’s Sonatina in A major for
Guitar and Piano, op. 68; J. M.
Komter’s Suite in A major for
Two Guitars; Two Romances for
Oboe and Piano, op. 94, No.s X
and 3 by Schumann; and Poulenc’s Trio for Piano, Oboe and

Bassoon.

The Deutospotmies, some early
poems including The Featherbed,
The Next War, and Read Me,
Please for which a series of man-

,

fields.

a

ROBERT GRAVES
manuscript

working on a

well as delightful

Three Professors
Named Fulbright
Fellows for 65-66

else.

tha

*s

2nd Summer Production
At Rosary Hill College

Robert Graves has been acclaimed as a poet, scholar, cultural and religious historian, es:
sayist, critic and classicist. He
has been writing poetry since
1914 and considers himself, in
spite of his many important works
of non fiction, a poet above all

of these principles by

.vs, many different nations
presented. It is expected
il representatives cbntrib'formation from their inal experience in their own
(Coht’d on P. 3)

“The Thurber Carnival” was
originally produced by
Haila
Stoddard in 1960, after James

An exhibit of Robert Graves’
manuscripts and first editions
will be on view in the Poetry
Room, Lockwood Library On July
24 until August 31 to mark the
poet’s 79th birthday on July 24.
This most complete gathering of
Graves’ manuscripts is one of the
many unique collections of twentieth century poets housed in the
Poetry Room.

Drieiiy examining the activities
M the center. First, in education,
"

summer performing throughout
New York, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.

Robert Graves Exhibition
Marks Poet's 79th Birthday

mate

!ht' ‘ssets

which will spend four weeks this

uscripts is available with corrections and revisions. Several first
edition books are on display also
—Poems (1926-1930), Poems and
Satires 1951, Collected Poems
1955, and Collected Poems 1959,

Tryouts for Edward II by
Christopher Marlowe to be performed August 4th and 6th
will be held Monday, July 26th
at 8:00 p.m. in the Band Room
of Baird.

Rehearsals will be
3rd. The production will be conducted by
Dr. Thomas Watson.
August 2nd and

Three professors at UB have
been awarded Fulbright Fellowships for the 1965-66 academic
Dr. George Hochfield, associate
professor of English, will lecture
in American Literature at the
University of Ljubljana, Yugoslavia. Dr. Sidney Shulman, associate professor of immunology
and biophysics, will study and
work in the Laboratory of Immunochemistry of the Saint Louis
Hospital in Paris; and Dr. Piyare
L. Jain, associate professor of
physics, will teach and assist in
the graduate program at Rajirstan University in Jaipur, India.
Dr, Hochfield, who will participate in the first teaching program to be sponsored by the Fulbright Act in Yugoslavia, served
as an instructor in English at

Pennsylvania

State

University

from 1955-57 and as an instructor
and assistant professor at Ohio
State University from 1957-63.
Dr. Shulman. who also holds an
appointment as a member of the
Department of Biophysics in the
School of Medicine, will be financially assisted by a fellowship
from the Commonwealth Fund
while on his sabbatical leave in
France.

In Paris, Dr. Shulman will be
carrying on research investigations on the physical and chemical
properties of certain serum proteins, in particular, those molecules that have antibody activity
or that closely resemble antibody
molecules. This includes work on
the gamma globulins in human
and rabbit serum.
At the State University at Buffalo, Dr. Shulman served as an
instructor in chemistry in Millard

Fillmore College from 1952-53.
He also served in the Department
of Bacteriology and Immunology
from 1954 58.
Before coming to the State University at Buffalo, Dr. Shulman
served as a project associate in
the Department of Chemistry at
the University of Wisconsin. He
received his B.S. at George Wash
ington University and his Ph D.
at the University of Wisconsin.
Dr.

who has published
works in scholarly
journals in his field, received
his B A. in 1945 and his M.A. in
1948 both at Punjab University.
He received his Ph D from Michi
gan State University in 1954.
Jain,

numerous

�i

i

I

|

J

CANOES

Friday, July 23,

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO
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BOATS

!

FOR RENT

WOLF'S BOAT HOUSE J

327 S. El licet* Creek Rd.
J
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For COMPLETE Banking Service Visit, call or write

Manufacturers &amp;
Traders Trust Co.

1965

Richard III to Be Shown in Norton

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OFFICE

(opposite campus)
MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
GENTLEMEN S FURNISHINGS
NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING

—

NX 2-3842

8 lbs. S2,00

Single &amp; Family Units
10 Minutes from U.B.

Visit MILITELLO’S Complete Luggage Center

Qifh for

•
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Gifts of Distinction
Nome Brand Luggage
Ladies Leather Handbags
Bar Accessories

f Coming Soon!

Occasion*
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Stable

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next to Amherst Theater)
—

Diamonds

j
)

JEWELRY REPAIRING
ENGRAVING AND
DIAMOND SETTING

—

-

dIals

Produced and directed by Laurence Olivier, in association with
Alexander Korda, Richard III is
based on the play by William
Shakespeare. The film will star
Laurence Olivier, John Gielgud,
and Claire Bloom.
Richard III is the story of the
dark history of a wicked king
With all the pageantry and social
portraiture, and all the political
elements that made possible a
hunchbacked king’s career of bru-

By IRENE YESNER

At the end of every rainbow
lies a pot of gold-and a similar
treasure can be found Monday
thru Friday 1010, and Saturdays
10-4 at the end of the second

floor corridor in Norton Union.
Music fans will find a precious
record collection ranging from
Davis to Dylan, Guthrie to Goulet,
Shakespeare to Streisand, and the
Beatles to Bach in the Norton
Hall Music Room.

—

NT 4-4400 Mgr. John Shaffner

tality and crime in medieval

E

land.
The film is the winner of three
awards for direction, acting and
Production. The British Film Academy, the Berlin Film Festival,
the Edinburgh Film Festival, and
the National Board of Review
have acclaimed Olivier’s work.
Time Magazine said of the production, ‘The cast that Olivier
has assembled is a Who's Who of
the British Theatre . . . Olivier
himself interprets the title role
with a mastery so complete that
Richard III in his generation can
surely never be himself again."

Browsing Library And
Music Room a Treasure

Prescription Specialists
3378 Bailey Ave.
Phone TF 3-1830

EXPERT WATCH AND

English Pleasure Riding and Lessons Given
Boarding and Training of Show Horses
$3.50
Hacking: $3.00 hr.
Lessons: Vs hr.

y

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5 Miles from Transit Road

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SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE

(bel. Forest 8, Bird)
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Drug Co., Inc.

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Attache Cases
Mens &amp; Womens Billfolds

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day, July 22.

2424 Niagara Falls Blvd,

Dry cleaning machines
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The movie Richard III will be
shown at 1:00 and 8:00 p.m. in
the Conference Theatre on Thurs-

Boulevard Gardens
Court Motel

Work Done on Premises

Adjacent to this melodious
atmosphere reading bugs will delight in the wealth of reading
material supplied by the Norton
Hall Browsing Library. A potpourri of magazines such as Time,
Atlantic Monthly, Post, Mademoiselle, Ski, Ebony, and Holiday
contribute to the literary surroundings created by Sartre,

Lowell, Joyce, Stendhal, Alt
and Kafka among other no
authors, poets, and playwrig
The prize possessions in

Music Room/Browsing Libi
combination, however, are of
finite value the students, st
and faculty at UB are the n
treasured entities, and their d
fort and enjoyment is foren
in the area. The literature
music is available for appro
tion and relaxation the bo&lt;
and chairs are waiting to
filled.
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�Friday, July

23, 1965

SPECTRUM

Freshmen Women
Will Hear Series
On Opportunities

A series of six lectures designed
to assist the freshman women
at l.B in taking advantage of the
opportunities offered at the University will be held September 13
through October 21.
The lectures, to be presented
three times during each week,
will be delivered by members of
the faculty.

Topics,

participating

faculty

members, and the week of each
lecture are “Opportunities and

Responsibilties in the University,”

Miss Jeannette Scudder, Dean of
Women, September 13; “Freshman Experiences from the Senior
Viewpoint,” a panel discussion
composed of members of the University’s Cap and Gown Honor
Society, September 20; “Achieving Academic Success,” Dr. Joseph L. Hindman, assistant professor in biology, Dr. Dorothy

B. Adema, supervising psychologist at the Student Counseling
Center, and Dr. Milton Plesur,
assistant dean of the University
College, September 27.

“A Mature Meaning of Sex
Relationships,” to be given in two
parts, Mrs. Beatrice Roth, social
worker at the Student Counseling
Center, Dr. Jimmie C. B. Holland,
clinical associate in the Department of Psychiatry, Mrs. Sheila
Rhodes, teaching fellow in philosophy, Dr. Barbara J. Howell,
assistant professor in physiology,
Dr. Theodore Schulman, clinical

assistant in obstetrics and gynecology, and Mrs. Mary B. Parke,
parent , and family life educator,
October 4 and October 11; “Your
College Years
A Time for Personaly Enrichment,” Dr. Katherine F. Thorn, professor in drama
and speech, Mr. Allen D. Sapp,
professor and chairman of the Department of Music, and Mrs. Bernice M. Rosen, instructor in the
dance, women’s physical educa—

tion.

,

Freshman women who attend
atend the Forum will be entertained Friday afternoons at the
Doan of Women’s residence.

1

i

.3nc,
-'h’yotl &amp; .Snath Printing
KENMORE AVENUE
(«t Delaware)

1)

Blues For Mr. Charlie' Thursday
Baldwin Play In
Baird Music Hall

profit returned from the invest-

ment of extensive time, effort,
in these educational

and finances

By JAN THOMPSON

projects is thus multiplied sev-

On July 29th, 30th and 31st
James Baldwin’s play, “Blues for
Mr. Charlie,” will be presented

eral-fold.

The center, in addition, maintains what this author has found
to be the best medical reference
library in Paris, and makes bibliographies and abstracts of over
1000 periodicals available to research workers. It simultaneously maintains an Africo-Asian reference library for socio-econom
ic fields. In the 15 years of its
existence, the center has written
over 40 books and is now publishing three journals.
The center performs and organizes social and medico-social research in such fields as growth
and development, contagious di
seases, chidren’s needs, and
tuberculosis vaccination (BCG),
With its international scope, the
center is ideally situated to perform such immense cross cultural studies.
To this author, several impor-

tant

philosophic questions arc

raised after examining the International Children’s Center. First,
the concept of the medical missionary, travelling to a foreign
frontier to treat the greatest number of people in the little time
he has, can be challenged. Given
a limited amount of time, the
missionary could do more good
for more people if he educated
others in the practice of modern
medicine rather than just practice it himself. Such a philosophy is demonstrated not only by
the International Children’s Center. but also by Project Hope.
Secondly, the concept of unity

of welfare

programs and social
services is reiterated. In the frontiers and the developing countries, the educated man cannot
be an island unto the practice
of his own specialty. With the

premium

placed

on

in Baird Music Hall. The play
will be produced by the Ira Aldridge Players and directed by
Lakin Hill. The Players, part of
the exceptional Negro Drama
Company, are a group of professional and amateur actors from
the surrounding area.

These Ukranian Easter Eggs are typical of the talented work performed at the Craft Shop

Craft Shop Open House;
Fisher Is New Director
The Craft Shop in the basement
of Norton Hall will be holding an
Open House this Wednesday to
familiarize those interested with
the opportunities and personal
available to teach skills in the
Craft Shop. Two demonstration
sessions for techniques of crafts
will be held. In the morning,
10:00-12:00 will be ceramics
(hand building), jewelry and block
printing. Sylvia Rosen will, in
ceramics, do hand building with
animals forms and bowls. The
jewelry, silver casting, will be
shown by Bill Helwig, Dick Pascucci demonstrating block printng will make color and black and
white prints.

2:30-4:30
will consists of ceramics (wheel
throwing), enameling and leather
The afternoon session,

work. Ulli Chamberlin, ceramics
instructor, will “throw” some
pitchers and vases on the ceramic

wheel. Eameling shown by Rollie
Hanson will include the making
of copper bowls; pins, tie clasps,
and cuff links, and also the ingraving of designs in hot copper.
Finally, leather craft demonstrated by Huldy Gutekonst will be
sandle making. A sandle workshop
will be started shortly.
Mr. Joseph Fischer is the new
director of the Craft Shop. His
previous work was as assistant
recreation director at the Nellis
Air Force Base, Las Vegas,
Nevada. He is skilled in ceramics,
jewelry making, lapidary, leather
crafts, silk screening, wood working and photography.

education,

14

“Blues for Mr. Charlie” and
Arthur Miller’s “After the Fall"
shared the Foreign Press Association’s 1963-64 dramatic award.
It opened on Broadway at the
ANTA theater, staged by Burgess
Meredith.
David Boroff of the National
Observer (April 27, 1964) has observed this play with both enthusiasm and reservation: “Mr. Baldwin has mustered all his pamphleteering skill and has written a
raw stinging denunciation of racial oppression. The play is as
much a civil rights pageant as a
drama
militantly propagandists in intent, often crudely oversimplified. but unfailingly vivid,
—

moving and powerful."

(he

School.

Before joining Purdue in 1963,
Dr. Calvert served as an industrial
representative in the marketing
department of Humble Oil Re
fining Company for six years. He
also served as a consultant on
coal production for the Midwest
Coal Producers Association.
A lieutenant commander in the
Civil Engineers, Corps, Dr. Cal-

The

International Children's
in fifteen years, has dem
onstrated the value of an organ
ized, logical approach to the welfare of children throughout the

vert received his bachelor's in

engineering

world Us achievements can serve

A

Till.

Dr. Calvert, a registered profes
sional engineer, will also hold the
faculty rank of assistant professor at the University.

Center,

i)

the killing of Emmett

dean of

gleetcd.

uation, and perhaps a degree of
criticism of other humanitarian
efforts of our time

Events arc touched off by a
■‘mysterious" lynching of a negro
boy in a small southern town, and
Mr. Baldwin remarks that the
incidents are based remotely on

Dr. Donald E. Calvert, former
instructor of industrial administration at Purdue University, has
been appointed assistant dean of
the School of Business Administration at UB it was announced
today by Dr. James S. Schindler,

,

as a source of discussion, rc-eval-

“Blues for Mr. Charlie," Mr.
Baldwin’s second play, deals with
racial discrimination as a disease
of the white society. It is dedicated to the memory of martyrs
to the civil rights cause, specifically Medgar Evers and the children who died in a Birmingham
church.

Calvert Named
School of Business
Assistant Dean

the doctor, again only as an example, must be well versed in
education, social work, psychiatry,
sociology, and public health.

lems of developing areas satisfies one’s humanitarian instincts
to a greater degree, the less
lamorous introspection of domestic problems should not be ne

Phone 876-2284
■ggl

from P.

nations may be commented upon.
It is the philosophy of the International Children's Center that
all children can benefit from
their programs. Hence, to concentrate on the children of Kenya and forget the children of the
United States, who in many in :
stances may be equally in need of
improved conditions, is without
logic. It may be suggested, then,
that while investigating prob-

now printed by

i381

(Cont’d

country as well as profit from
the lectures and
of
other representatives. It is further assumed that these representatives will educate their countrymen upon their return. The

Thirdly, the concept of welfare
improvement in the developing

i The SPECTRUM
i

Children s Center

PACE THREE

Aquarium of Niagara Falls' President, William E. Kelley, examines
an exhibit containing representative life from an Atlantic coral
reef. The coral reef is one of several exhibits designed to duplicate
as accurately as possible the natural habitat of various groups of
aquatic life. A staff marine artist is employed by the Aquarium to
prepare these exhibits.

feiSBSS&amp;S&amp;Sl
SHERIDAN at PARKER

JUST THE WAV YOU LIKE 'EM

his master's

in

in

dustrial , management and his
doctorate in industrial administration at Purdue University.

History repeated dsetl with uncanny accuracy when a dam bust
near Longarone. Italy in 1964.
wiping out that small town and
several nearby hamlets. History's
only
comparable disaster, the
tragic Johnstown, Pa. Hood ol
1889, 2200 lives were lost. The
Longarone catastrophe took a
known toll ol 1917 lives, but
authorities believe that from 200
to 300 additional lives were lost,
making the total almost identical
to that ol the Johnstown flood.
~

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                    <text>J

POETRY

STATE

UNIVERSITYOF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

READING

l

——

«v

c

BBi

VOLUME 15

■

i

FOLK

—

M
H

M

n

FESTIVAL
(see

iirI

_

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1965

NO.

35

SDS Escalates Teach-In
State Trustees
Move Dismissal
Of Frat Injunction
In the motion by the trustees
of the State University of New
York for a summary judgment
dismissing the action brought by
the six contesting fraternities at
UB, Justice Mathew Jasen reserved decision.
Dr. Clifford Furnas, President
of the University, entered the
fight over the status of nationallyaffiliated fraternities and sororities in the Supreme Court Hearing. James 0. Moore, Jr., entered
a sworn statement by Dr. Furnas
indicating that “no problem of

discrimination exists” at UB.

Dr. Furnas said in his statement that “national organizations

were more constructive and as
rule were better than the local.”
He further stated that Greek
organizations on Campus “contribute to the general term of
school, of unity and school spirit.
Their social events . . . are more
socially acceptable than the informal, uncontrolled social
events.”

The court battle stems from a
1953 ruling by the State University trustees which banned nationally-affiliated
societies on
State college campuses. Prior to
UB's affiliated with the State University system in 1962, The University of Buffalo Fraternity and
Sorority Alumni Council formed
to seek a waiver of this ban in
UB’s case. Unsuccessful in this
attempt, they obtained a court
order restraining enforcement of
this ban pending court disposition
of the matter.
The Fraternity and Sorority
Alumni Council maintains that
the State cannot make rules applicable to certain groups and
not to other groups that carry
on the same activities. Local and
national Greek letter groups at
UB participate on an equal basis
in athletic, social, and school
activities. There is no racial or
religious discrimination practiced
by either of the groups. The council maintains, therefore, that this
ban on nationally-affiliated society is an unreasonable and arbitrary classification by the State
University trustees.
t. Furnas
stated that “the
ter is now up to the courts
decide.”

F ee Game Time
This Wednesday
Irom

3:00 to 6:00 p.m, Wednesthe recreational facilities in
he basement of Norton Union
*'!&gt;! be
open free to interested
‘indents.
'n a first-come-first-served bawith time limits if crowding
'urs, the bowling alleys, pool
•es and ping-pong tables will
available to students presenttheir ID. cards. Arrange•its were made through the
rton Union Summer Planning
smittee.
e recreational area is normal
aened Monday through Fri
rom 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m
an Saturdays from 10:00 a.m
00. p.m.
last free game time was
June 23 in the evening. The
ng was considered a huge
ss and since then students
asked that it be repeated.

a

;

!&lt;*'

McGovern Emphasizes Differences
With Government Viet Nam Policy
After a slight delay, Senator
George McGovern of South Dako-

taken place almost unannounced.
Examining the correspondence
pertaining to Viet Nam we find
that in shifting its position to a

ta spoke on Monday to an overflow audience in the Norton Conference Theater, on the topic of

“World Peace”.
Speaking in conjunction with
the three week seminar “Teaching About Peace,” he discussed
his differences with the Administration’s policy in Viet Nam. Proceeding with what he felt was a
hard line, that is, realistic policy,
Sen. McGovern pointed to what he
felt to be an erroneous use of
the term. “Hard line is usually
applied to those persons holding
the view that the U.S. should
hold an inflexible position, pressing for a military victory, while
the term ‘soft line is used to describe those persons who take
cognizance of the political realities of the situation. The Senator
is both
stated that his position
hard in the sense that it is intellectually painful, and realistic in
the sense that we must look at
the political conditions.”

more aggressive stance we are
replaying the French role, and repeating the French mistakes, with
the only difference being that we
are not involved in a process of
trying to hold a colony. This difference however is difficult to
explain to peasants whose crops
have been burned by napalm.
Our policy of tactical bombing
is ineffective since, for example,
dispatches indicate that after a
recent bombing raid, 3 out of 4
persons seeking medical treatment for injuries were women,
children and other non combatants. Extension of our commit-

...

The expanding U.S. involvement
is a hazardous course and may
produce a great debacle. The
course of action suggested by the
President’s advisors which was expected to weaken the Viet Cong,
has obviously not worked, and yet
having recommended an unworkable course, they are now pressing
to apply more of the same unsuccessful medicine.
This policy, similar to the policy of “Containment”, is not workable under the different political
conditions in Viet Nam. Its former
successes have been in areas with
both stable and democratic governments.

There seems to be a general
confusion of goals as to whether
our purpose is to prevent Ho Chi

senator McGovern
Speaking on Peace

Minh from gaining political support, or whether we are trying
to prevent Chinese Military aggression.

Sen. McGovern pointed put that
in the past few weeks there has
been a radical shift in our policy
in South Viet Nam compared to
the terms of our original commitment. He cited past statements
from Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson and Secretary
McNamara to show that our policy has changed from providing
economic, and political support
and military advice on the condition that the South Vietnamese
Government develop a stable
framework and popular support,
to one of increasing and active
participation. A change from an
advisory to an offensive role has

at

Johns

Hopkins

University,

which included an offer of negotiations without preconditions.

The Senator pointed out, however, that there is a certain limitation inherent in the offer since
the Viet Cong would not be included in any negotiations. The
main text of McGovern's speech
ended with a quotation from the
late President
Kennedy's Innaugural Address:
negotiate out of
"Let us
fear but let us never fear to ne-

gotiate,”

Carnival' Next Friday, Saturday

general public.

A Thurber Carnival, the second event in the UB drama series, will be performed by the
Syracuse University Summer
Touring Company. The group,
which launched its first tour last
summer, is composed of undergraduates, and is one of the few

undergraduate touring companies
in the country. After a two-week
stay on the Syracuse University
campus, the touring companyspends four weeks “on the road”
performing throughout New York
State, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania.

James Thurber once described
by Life Magazine as “The greatest working humorist of his day.”
His flavorsome family stories
have become classics of American

humor. His wit is also revealed
in a large number of cartoons of
dogs, rabbits, and people. At age
six, Thurber lost the sight of one
eye when a brother accidentally
shot him with an arrow. In his

The Millard Fillmore Room of
will be the scene
of the country’s first Solve-In on
Thursday, July 22, at 6:00 p.m.
The Solve-In will be sponsored by
the Buffalo Chapter of Students
for a Democratic Society.
According to SDS, because of
the national signifiance of the
Solve-In, students from all Buffalo campuses and nearby universities such as Syracuse, Cornell
and the University of Rochester
will be in attendance. The meeting will also be open to the
Norton Union

general public.

The format of the Solve-In will
consist of the presentations of
analyses of the causes and purposes of the United States foreign
policy by national student groups
that are opposed to the War in
Viet Nam. Each group will prement will not weaken the Viet sent its own alternatives to the
Cong and will destroy American war; and, together with the audiinfluence and moral leadership. ence, will attempt to arrive at
This erosion of confidence is a a workable solution.
tragic by-product of our policy,
SPECTRUM OF THE
best demonstrated by the fact
STUDENT LEFT
that we stand virtually alone in
Delegates to the Solve-In will
this situation, without the support
as the
of most of our traditional allies. be sent by such groups
the
We should concentrate a greater Student Peace Union (SPU),
of America, the
amount of talent and strength in Du Bois Clubs
May 2nd Movement, the Spartaa search for a diplomatic and pocists, Students for a Democratic
litical settlement.
Against
Sen. McGovern applauded the Society (SDS), the Youth
War and Fascism (YAWF), and
sugthat
President
Johnson
steps
Alliance
gested in his speech on April 2, the Young Socialist

Syracuse Players in
A Thurber Carnival, the New
York revue hit in which the wit
and fun of the late James Thurber’s famous cartoons and stories
are brought to life on stage, will
be performed at Baird Music Hal!
on July 23rd and 24th at 8:30
p.m. Tickets are available in the
Norton Hall Ticket Office, (8313704) and will be available at the
door. Tickets are $1.00 for faculty and students and $2.00 for the

To Seek Alternatives
To Viet Nam War

mid-forties he lost the sight of
his other eye, but managed to
continue writing due to a prodigious memory. A humorist, he
could even make jokes about his
own sightlessness.

(YSA).

The Student Peace Union describes itself as “independent of
both East and West, applying the
same standard of criticism to
both.” They feel that the answer
to the problem is not a military
one and that “the logic of containing Communism through international policing fails to deal
with the economic, social, and
political problems of these
nations.”
The Du Bois Clubs are “independent of any parent organization or political party” and feel
that the problems of poverty unemployment, segregation, and
war can be solved only by “radical changes in our society.”
The May 2nd Movement is a
radical student peace organization
that stands opposed to “all armed
intervention by the U.S. government anywhere, anytime in the
world.”
feel
that,
Sparticists
The
“America’s intervention in Vietnam was part and parcel of the
strategy of waging ceaseless wars
against struggles for economic
and political indepedence by the
Asian peoples.”
Students for a Democratic
Society is an association of young
people on the left who “maintain
a vision of a democratic society,
where at all levels people have
control of the decisions which
affect them and the resources
upon which they arc dependent.”
The Youth Against War and
Fascism, whose delegate, Deirdre
Griswold, has just returned from
a trip abroad here she met with
leaders of the National Liberation
Front, are “partisan to the oppressed of the world.” They declare, “we place no confidence in
the institutions of this society.
If the Marines were to leave
Saigon and police Selma instead,
wouldn't they carry oj their
bayonets the same kind of democracy they are inflicting in

Vietnam?”
Members

of the Young Socialist
feel that “it is the
tendency of the colonial revolu ;
(Cont'd on P. 4)
Alliance

�Friday, July 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Valeriani Talk
To Probe Crisis
In Dom. Republic

For COMPLETE Banking Service

Visit, call or writ*

Manufacturers &amp;
Traders Trust Co.

Rqg$l
We

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OFFICE

...

(opposite campus)
MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

j

CANOES

&amp;

BOATS

■

GOHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.
80 Metcalf* St

.

Buffalo, N Y

,

Ph

853-2121

|
•

WOLF'S BOAT HOUSE

327 S. Ellicott Creek Rd.
Vi Mile E. of Niag. Falls Blvd.
$1.25 hr.
NX 3-1450

suit you best
naturally

NBC News correspondent

!

Your U. of B. Drug Store

!

FOR RENT

;

can

!

Lisbon-Bailey
Drug Co., Inc.

Prescription Specialists
3378 Bailey Ave.
Phone TF 3-1830

•

\
|

DEALS JEWELERS
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next to Amherst Theater)

Poise n lyy

Watches

MID-SUMMER SALE
ALL SUMMER SPORTWEAR
—

STARTING THURSDAY, JULY 15th

—

Diamonds

EXPERT WATCH AND
JEWELRY REPAIRING
ENGRAVING AND
DIAMOND SETTING

Work Done on Premises

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REDUCTIONS TO 50%

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6 -4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

—

Dry cleaning machines
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8 lbs.

$2.00

Richard Valeriani will address the
student body of UB, Friday, July
16 at 1:30 p.m. in the Conference
Theater, Norton Union.
Valeriani, who reported the Bay
of Pigs invasion, the Cuban missile crisis and the anti-American
rioting in Panama, will discuss,
“The Dominican Republic: Shattered Showcase.” His talk will be
sponsored by the University’s Department of History in conjunction with its Latin American Studies Program.
Valeriani began his journalism
career with the “Trentonian” in
Trenton, N. J. in June, 1956. Later
that year he joined the Associated
Press working on the bureau desk
and world desk in New York.
Two years later he was assigned
to the AP bureau in Havana.
Born in Camden, N. J., Valeriani
received his bachelor’s degree
from Yale University in 1953. At
Yale he received his first broadcast experience with play by-pla/
accounts of sports events. He
spent a year in Italy and Spain
studying on a fellowship before
joining the U.S. Army. Valeriani
is married and resides in Washington, D. C.

Simpson Named
Acting Dean of
Nursing School
Miss Ruth E. Simpson, assistant
dean of UB’s School of Nursing,
was named acting dean of the
School today (July 9) by University President Clifford C. Furnas.

Miss Simpson, who is also an
associate professor of nursing,
will replace Dean Anne W. Sengbusch whose retirement became
effective June 30. Dean Sengbuseh, who served as dean for the
past 20 years, was the first dean
of the School.

In announcing the appointment,
Dr. Furnas said: “Miss Simpson’s
administrative, teaching and nursing experience will insure the
continuation of the effective leadership needed in the School.”

GENTLEMEN S FURNISHINGS
NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING

Before joining the University in
1956 as an associate professor
and the first assistant dean of the
School of Nursing, Miss Simpson
was a professor and director of
the nursing department at the
College of Mount Saint Vincent,
New York City. She graduated
from St. Vincent's Hospital School
of Nursing and received her bachelor’s degree in nursing education
from State University at Buffalo.
She received her master's degree
in administration at New York
University where she also served
as part-time instructor in the
graduate nursing program.

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES

Prynne and Will
To Read Poetry In
Baird on Wednesday
Poetry readings will be give i
Wednesday at 1:00 p.m. by two
poets in residence at the SUNYAB
summer session, J. H, Prynne ai d

Frederick Will.
Mr. Prynne, who took his degrees at the University of Cam-

bridge, England, is currently Director of Studies in English at
Gonville and Caius Colleges, Cambridge, and editor of Prospe-t
magazine. His book, Force of Circumstance, and Other Poems, was
published in London in 1962, Dr,
Will, professor of English at the
University of Iowa, is the author
of two volumes of poetry, Mosaic
and A Wedge of Words.

Mr. Prynne is currently teacha course in 18th-Century
Literature and a seminar in
modern poetry, based on the man
uscript holdings of the Poetry
Room of Lockwood Memorial
Library. Dr. Will’s courses during
the second session are Literary
Criticism and Poetry of the Late
18th and Early 19th Centuries.
ing

Another of the literary events
of the summer session will be the
opening, Saturday, of an exhibit
of manuscripts and publications
Graves,
honoring
of Robert
Graves’ 70th birthday. Special
Joyce exhibits, assembled from
the renowned Joyce collection at
Lockwood, will be on display until
the end of next week.

Reading of Sartre s
Nekrassay This
Wed. and Thurs.
On Wednesday and Thursday
evenings, July 21st and 22nd, the
Department of Drama and Speech
will present a Reader’s Theater
production of Nekrassov by Jean
Paul Sartre, The performances
will begin at 8:30 p.m, in Baird
Music Hall and no admission will
be charged.
Nekrassov, a farce in eight
scenes reveals Monsieur Sartre
as a first-rate humorist. In the
play, written in the middle fifties, Sartre, the existentialist philosopher, examines the cold war,
French politics, and the art of the
Master swindle.

UB students and several local

actors will be performing in the
play under the direction of Dr
Thomas Watson,, Assistant Professor of Drama and Speech.

Any member of the University
Community is invited to join the

Reader’s Theatre. The first tryouts for Nekrassov will be held
tonight, July 16th, at 7:30 p ro.
in the Baird Hall bandroom.

Madame

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Students $1.50

Faculty $2.00
Others $2.50
TICKETS IN
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�Friday, July

16, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

(Editorial (Comment

.

.

.

THE WAR IN VIET NAM
Part I
In regard to the merits of the teach-in, Jack A.

Smith of the National Guardian has said, “This vehicle
—when confined to the give and take of academic debate
without commitment—is a limited device.”
Though we strongly adhere to our former policy
emphasizing the need for academic dialogue, to a large
extent Mr. Smith’s remark is accurate. The only consensus achieved at the teach-in in early March was a

Rev. Davis to Perform
At Buffalo Folk Festival
Blind Reverend Gary Davis has
been signed to appear at UB as
part of the first 1965 Buffalo
Folk Festival to take place on
October 1 and 2.
Recognition has come late to
the 69-year-old blind Baptist minister. However, in recent years
his songs (“If I Had My Way,”
“Candy Man”) have been reaching
an ever increasing audience and
his instrumental skills on guitar,
banjo and mouth harp are now
being heard by yet another generation of appreciative fans.

.

plea for more adequate information on the actual effects
of U.S. policy. It seems clear to us now, as it should
have then, that we probably have all the information that
will be willfully given to us
As the university and the nation emerge from their
efforts with the teach-in, the only fairly consistent sentiment that we can discern is the notion that war is wrong,
The Reverend has appeared at
but not necessarily that this war is wrong. Though the the Newport, Philadelphia, Indian
to
adequate
killing
rationalization
for
Spectrum sees no
Neck and Brandeis Folk Festivals;
bi 1 lance a nation’s ineptitude at foreign policy, to some,
a fear of the Communist challenge is enough reason to the Boston Arts Festival; Columwallow in the products of that nation’s error. Their bia University; the Second Fret
point, which clearly fails to deal on a right-wrong basis in Phili; the Bohemian Embassy
and is therefore unrestricted by a higher moral code, in Toronto and many other clubs
is. however, well taken.
and schools too numerous to menIn conforming to its history of coherent, educational tion.
programs to end poverty and war, the local chapter of
Other performers being con
Students for a Democratic Society has come up with a templated
include: Buffy St
groups
Solve-In.
Student
which
have
tactic—the
new
Marie, Phil Ochs, Eric Anderson
the
War
Vietin
expressed their commitment against
and The Greebriar Boys.
nam will present their solutions to the conflict, in addition to their proposals for student action to alter U.S.
policy (see news story, page 1).
Hopefully, some of the delegates to the Solve-In
will deal specifically with the nature of our commitment
and with alternatives which account for our need to meet
Crocodile Tears of Peace
the Communist challenge. Regardless of what their
solutions are, the SDS program will expose many students
to points of view which are largely unavailable to them TP THE EDITOR
called for open debate on Viet Nam.
4) There are plans for various demonstrations
and will thus serve an educational purpose.
I have the uncomfortable feeling that the

oCetterA

Part II

President Johnson’s TV message that we are faced
with a situation in Viet Nam that will force “new and
serious decisions” is a statement that is probably new only
to him. The President seems to be prepared only to
tell American’s what they already know, that we are
at war in Viet Nam, that soon we will be the major force
carrying on the war, that the war is going to last a long
time and will cost some of us our lives.
The next time someone mutters about the “lessons
of history” that we must study for answers to today’s
problems, many might break out in hysterics at the
thought. The lesson of history seems to be that people
will always get involved in situations that they know
little about, that they will make reckless commitments
to these involvements with even less knowledge as to the
extent of their commitments, that Man still would rather
cling to his ego and refuse to admit to error than save
his life and those of his fellow countrymen, especially
when it doesn’t appear he will have to offer his.
Viet Nam is a mess. The United States is involved
there as the result of not having a foreign policy of
intelligent material. It tried to back up what seemed
a simple commitment with military force in the belief
that it was so powerful it could not lose. But the battle
is larger than was imagined, and rather than correct
a mistake in diplomacy and military strategy with diplomatic understanding, we have continued to patch our
errors with increases in military force —the bigger stick
PO'icy. The point is that these tactics may work so well
that the Red Chinese and the Russians will have to rise
to meet our challenge, and the complexion of our diplomatic maneuvers will have plunged us all into the kind
of idiocy that is so easy to overlook when it is 9,000 miles
from our shore.

to

teach-ins, local and national, have served not as
checks on the widening of the war in Viet Nam,
but as rituals that have run interference for the
present make-it-get-worse-so-it-might-get-better policy. However, efforts to bring peace need not wait
for the conversion of Viet Nam into a total graveyard. A stepped-up effort toward peace may in
fact emerge out of the work of various students,
professors, and other volunteers loosely co-ordinated by the Inter-University Committee for a Public
Hearing on Viet Nam. If there is going to be any
expression of the desire for peace, it will have to
come from such sources, because it is plain that
the governments presently tearing Viet Nam apart
care little about the matter. We can hardly take
at face value the official crocodile tears calling for
peace, which are invariably accompanied by new
shipments of troops and explosives.
Those interested in trying to bring an end to
the Viet Nam war may not yet know of some recent developments reported in BI-WEEKLY INFORMATION AND ACTION REPORT. 1) The BI-WEEKLY itself is a step toward better communication
among peace-seeking people in the U.S. Two numbers have come out so far; I shall draw from the
contents of these first two numbers in the items
below. The editor is Bruce L. Bevelheimer of the
University of Michigan. Subscriptions are only
$2 (two dollars). Address is: P.O. Box 7228, Detroit 2, Michigan.
2) There are plans to hold a Community Rererendum on Viet Nam in Ann Arbor.
3) The Wisconsin Democratic Party, meeting
recently in Green Bay, refused to pass a motion
pledging support for President Johnson on Viet
Nam and the Dominican Republic, Instead, they
condemned the use of torture by both sides, and

SPECTRUM

THE
**

Editors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE
DAVID EDELMAN
Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

Faculty Advisors

DALLAS GARBER

WILLIAM SIEMERING
Sp*
n

°'

The Editors-in-Chief assume full responsibility for the content of the
rum. Editorial opinion is an expression of their views and does not
warily reflect that of the Spectrum staff or the students at this university.
Pa o
Second Class.
Subscription

Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.
$1.50 for twelve editions,

circulation 8,000.
PHtSB

.

Represented for national advertising
National Advertising Service, Inc.,
Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y.

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in Washington on August 6-9, the anniversary of
Hiroshima. Individuals will approach the House
of Representatives and will declare peace, dramatizing their contention that present policy does not
fairly represent them. For further information,
write to Eric Weinberger or Bob Parris, 107 Rhode
Island Avenue, N.W., Washing'on, D.C.
5) There will be an international teach-in at
Toronto in October.
6) Twelve women from Women Strike for
Peace have flown to Djakarta to meet with six women delegates from North Viet Nam and six from
South Viet Nam, In a meeting of five days, now
going on, the attempt to at least communicate is
being made.
7) This month, the first number of VIET REPORT, a monthly news bulletin devoted to comprehensive reporting of the crisis in Viet Nam
will come out. The first number will contain the
complete text of the 1954 Geneva accords; an article by Bernard Fall which shows that the Viet
Nam war is already as costly for South Vietnamese
as the Korean war was for Koreans; ahd many other
features. Advisory board for VIET REPORT arc
Robert Browne, Otto Feinstein, Staughton Lynd,
and Stanley Millet.
The overall effect of all these items is no
doubt small when compared to the vast machinery
for engineering popular consent which is at the
disposal of the supporters of present policy. But
things are certainly grim enough to call for all
the counter-efforts that anyone can mus'er.
Sincerely,

ARTHUR EFRON
Assistant Professor
Department of English

Unenlightened Journalism
TO THE EDITOR;

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State Univertity of New Yorlr at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University
Campus, Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the twelve weeks of summer
s - °ns from June 11th to August 27.

the Editor

Last week’s editorial dealing with the actions
taken by CORE at their national convention was
the most unenlightened piece of journalism I ever
read in the Spectrum. It compared favorably with
what one would expect to read on the editorial
pages of the Buffalo Evening News.
I would like to raise one question and that is—what good are civil rights if there isn’t a world to
enjoy them on?

It would appear to me that your narrow and
provincial way of looking at the civil rights movement shows a complete lack of awareness as to
what is really going on. Did it ever occur to you
that the burning of Charlie Sheppard in Mississippi
and the incineration of South Vietnamese villagers
with napalm is comparable to the degree that in
both instances, people are being persecuted for
trying to change the existing socioeconomic order
under which they live?
If it is at all possible, I would like to know
how a statement concerning American involvement
in areas of the world where we don’t belong can
weaken the civil rights movement and destroy
CORE’S political image when that very image is

Ed.—We would like to point out that the majority
of the delegates do not feel as strongly as you on
their

relationship to an all-encompassing

social

rapidly changing with the emergence of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and the Brooklyn Freedom Democratic Movement and by the
recent statements made by Dr. Martin Luther King
and the stand of the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) concerning the war in
Viet Nam and our aggression in the Dominican
Republic.
It may be difficult fur you to realize that the
revolution (and there is one going on whether
you realize it or not) that is taking place in this
country, while being spearheaded by the civil
rights movement, is more than just a fight for
ones' civil rights; it is a struggle to change the
entire social and political structure of this nation.
In conclusion, I would request that in the
future, before you start writing editorials which
you have a serious misunderstanding of, you try
to familiarize yourself with what is really going
on and then you can come out with your valuable
chosen comments to your readers.
PETER J. RUBIN
Student Coordinator,
Buffalo CORE

Further, we wonder whether other
members of CORE shore your views on the nature
of "the revolution".
movement.

�MUSIC ON CAMPUS
SCHROEDER

By DAN

The six dancers of the Maria
Alba and Ramon de los Reyes
Spanish Dance Company, plus a
singer and a guitarist, performed
last Saturday evening at the State
University
College’s Rockwell
Hall to a large audience.
The dances ranged from traditional folk forms to modern stylizations, from pleasant, colorful
numbers to moments of bleak and
inescapable intensity. But they
were always Spain: Thus the joyous group dances like the opening triology (set to sonatas
played on the piano, which alter—

nated with the guitar
of the
18th century Spanish-Ilalian Scarlatti) had an underlying air of
formality and the dynamic solos
like the premiered “El Gitano”
had the dark mysticism of Spain.
"El Gitano” was an intricate

Weekly Calendar
All Week

Exhibit: James Joyce Manuscripts and First Editions; Lockwood.
Art Exhibit: How To Look At
A Painting; 2nd floor corridors
NortonArt Exhibit; Children’s Art Program Exhibit, 19th-26th; 2nd
floor corridors Norton.
Art Exhibit: Albert Gleizes,
cubist paintings; Albright-Knox
Art Gallery.

Play: “Inherit The Wind;” Kissing Bridge Playhouse, Glenwood. 8:30 p.m,
Play: “Shadow Of A Gunman;”
Shaw Festival, Court House
Theatre, Niagara-On-The-Lake,
Ont., Canada. 8:30 p.m.
Play: “Guys And Dolls” with
Hugh O'Brian and Anita Bryant;
Melody Fair. 8:30 p.m.
Today
8:30 p.m. Play: “Joseph In Col-

orado;” Baird Hall.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Henry IV;”
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont.,
Canada.

8:30 p.m. Play: "Mahagoony;”
Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont.,
Canada.
Saturday
2:00 p.m. Play: “F a 1 s t a f f;”
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont.,
Canada.
6:45 p.m. Excursion: “Madame
Butterfly,” Eastman School of
Music, Rochester; tickets in
Norton.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Julius Caesar;”
Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont.,
Canada.
8:30 p.m.

Friday, July 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Play;

"Mahogany;”

Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont.,
Canada.
Sunday
2:00 p.m. Concert: M o s a r t,
Piano Cone, No. 25, Violin Cone.
No. 4; Stratford Festival Theatre, Ont., Canada,
7:30 p.m. Recital: Metropolitan
Music Club of National Ass. of
Negro Musicians Inc.; Kleinhans
Music Hall.
8:30 p.m. Play: “Joseph In Colorado;" Baird Hall.
8:30 p.m. Concert; Buffalo Civic
Orchestra; Delaware Park,
Monday
1:00 p.m. Concert: Music Faculty Woodin Quintet, Eastman
School of Music Faculty Chamber Ensemble; Baird Hall.
Wednesday
1:00 p.m. Poetry Reading; J. H.
Prynne and Will Frederich;
Baird Hall.

3-6:00 p.m Game Afternoon;
'Free use of Basement Recreational Utilities; Norton.
8:30 p.m Concert: Buffalo Civic
Orchestra; Humbolt Park.

flamenco virtuoso work by Ramon de los Reyes, arid as such it
was a show stopper. But its quality was all direct, visceral and immediate; it hardly showed the
“abstract quality of purity” it was

supposed to embody. The other
premiered work "El Tacon y la
Bata”,was more poised; Maria Alba’s work in it was sensuous (in
a strikingly pink dress) but never
quite voluptuous.
The most intense and meaningful dance, perhaps by virtue of it
being the first appearance of the
stars, was the dark and dramatic
duet, with guitar and singer, "De
Camela y Clavo.” It was repre-

sentative of the whole program
at its best, especially in the varying interplays of rhythms: Between feet, clapping, guitar melody (unhappily but unavoidably
magnified by a microphone), castinets, the singer’s chanting, arm
and leg movements, slapping guitar and the magnificent use of
the head and torso to magnify and

coalesce all of these elements.
There are two opposites in the
Spanish spirit, and they have been
described before: The carefree,
naive joy of southern Europe and
the mysterious element (most vividly portrayed by the chanting
on often dubious tones, on the
singer), which is not pathos but
wants to be, from the Moors. At
its best moments
and this, frequently :
the Alba-Reyes Company had both.
The absence of any colorful
background was sometimes incongruous. Otherwise the setting
was sufficient, and sufficient as
a reminder that SUNYAB which
sponsored the program had no
suitable.place to present it. This
will be remedied in several years;
wait and see.
—

—

Solve-ln
from P.

(Cont’d

SwU'k SOtlobt

..

Worth Parfc'^i

1)

lions to move toward

that worries the American ruling
class and threatens to tear more
and more countries out of the
capitalist economy.”
In addition to these groups,
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the
Student Union for Peace Action
(SUPA) have been invited and

AVE.-TF6-MII
BUFHUOSHOHim

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TOP SUSPENSE TMRIU SHOW
OF THE YEAR!
GregoryPECK 8. Cary GRANT

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future. Also, James Aronson of
the National Guardian has expressed his willingness to attend,
and SDS expects to hear from him
at a later 'date.
AN ESCLATED TEACH-IN
Walter Horton, co-ordinator of
the Solve-ln for SDS said, “the
Solve-ln is a response to the
continued escalation of the War
in Vietnam and is, in essence an
escalation of the Teach-In. Moving
beyond academic debate without
commitment, the Solve-ln will
present a broad spectrum of the
views of the national student
groups that are unequivocably op-

posed to "the government’s war
policy. The question will not be
should you support the war, but
rather how can you stop it.”
“The Solve-ln moves away from
the idea that students at a university are there only to explace problems, to consider “both
sides” of questions, and to maintain an “open mind;” and the idea
put forth by the government that
the world is beset by very complex problems that admit of no
easy solutions. The Solve-ln proclaims that there are solutions
and that students must take a

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score objective examinations.
Pursuant to this new system,
students are responsible for
the following:
1. ONLY No. 2 PENCILS
CAN BE USED. Answer sheets
marked with any other marking device will be scored inaccurately, resulting in a LOWER score.
2. STUDENTS MUST PROVIDE THEIR OWN PENCILS.
3. Scores are recorded by
students number, NOT by
name.
STUDENT NUMBER
MUST BE RECORDED IN THE
FIRST SIX CELLS IN A BOX
LABELED "IDENTIFICATION
NUMBER"
OR
"STUDENT
NUMBER".
4. Record the following information on the answer sheet:
name, date, course, nime of

Niagara Falls

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AUDREY
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BAKER

Effective immediately, a new
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2424

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are expected to reply in the near

Thursday
Movie: “Diary Of A
Priest;" Conference
Theatre, Norton.
2:30 p.m Disc-Discussion; Haas
Lounge, Norton.
8:00 p.m. Movie: “Diary Of A
Country Priest;" Conference
Theatre, Norton.
8:30 p.m Reading: “Nekrassov”
by Jean Paul Sartre; Reader’s
Theatre, Baird Hall.

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�</text>
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                    <text>BROMBERG

[

STATE

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

8 BILLION FOR

Spectrum

VOLUME 15

~

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1965

NO. 34

Senator McGovern to Speak on Peace
PAUL KOPYCINSKI

By

Senator George McGovern, Democratic senator-from South Da-

kota, will discuss “World Peace”
in Norton Conference Theatre on

12, at 11 a.m.

Monday, July

Senator McGovern, who is op-

posed to present governmental
policy in Viet Nam, is talking in
conjunction with a 3-week university seminar “Teaching About
Peace.” In an afternoon session
following his speech the Senator will discuss his remarks with
high school social studies teachers who are participating in the

seminar.
A native of Avon, South Dakota,

McGovern

received

his

Bachelor of Arts degree from
Dakota Wesleyan University and
his M.A. and Ph.D. in history
and government from Northwestern University.

Elected to the United States
House of Representatives in 1956
and 1958, the Senator served as
a member of the Committee on
Education and Labor and the
Committee on Agriculture. McGovern was Food for Peace Director and Special Assistant to
President Kennedy in 1960.
McGovern was elected to the
U.S. Senate in 1962, becoming

the first Democratic Senator
from South Dakota since 1936.
Presently he is a member of
the Senate Committee on Agri-

culture and Forestry and the
Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs.
Members of the seminar are
primarily high school social studies teachers from local districts.
A grant from the Institute for
International Order provides scholarships covering their tuition.

The seminar program seeks to
provide the students with a base
of knowledge about the problems

and prospects of peace, to provoke the students to further inquiry in the area, to have the
students develop and analyze
teaching materials for use in
teaching about peace in secondary classrooms, and f|b assist
the student in understanding and

Alba-Reyes Spanish Dancers to
Give Performance Tomorrow Night
Buff. State Hall
Will Be Used
of two
“El Tacony La Bata”
Gitano”
will high-

The world premiere

dances
and “El

—

—

light the appearence of the AlbaReyes Spanish Dance Company in
Rockwell Auditorium at the State
University College at Buffalo tomorrow evening at 8:30 p.m. The
presentation is being sponsored
UB.

by

The program, part of the SumSessions
will
program
provide a variety of Spanish
dances and melodies. In addition
to flamenco, the program will
include the dances of the mountain people of Aragon, melodies and dances of Galicia and
aand classic 18th century forms
of "Andalucia.”

mer

The Company made its debut
at the Theresa R. Kaufmann Concert Hall in New York City last
year. They were immediately
signed for a second appearance
at the Concert Hall following
their debut.

Later this summer they will
he appearing at Jacob’s Pillow
.and at the Long . Island Festival
m Glenvale, New York.
of the

members of the
worked togeth--r as
members of the “Ximei;
Vargas Company.” Members of the company in addition
to Miss Maria Alba and Mr. Raany

mon

formerly

eyes

are:

dancers, Roberto
Car
Pastora DeRonda.

na, Manolo Rivera,

n s uarez,
'a,i Morales;

?!®

u

pianist Nino Gar
and gui-

: singer, Paco Artiz;
farist.
David Serva.
la

raVn ?e
or,:

Company has received
eviews as
.
,
fresh,
us and beguiling. It was
dense and, passionate at
especially when Miss Alba
Reyes were around. She!
is one of the wonders
Spanish dance world, a
of consumation, skill and
anc* an actress of great
and

power.”

Times.)

J.he Ne

(The

New

York Herald Tribune
Miss Alba and Mr.
n abundance that
eleVt’
an
passionate vitality
wh J* * d
raa 5es the best Spanish
dan 'mg
seem like improvisation. "

Rev

«

f 3Ve1
0 **

"

'

-

may be obtained at the
Hall ticket office at UB
acuity and students: $2 00
eral public).
ts

contemporary affairs.
The seminar format calls for

interpreting

a morning presentation by an
authority in a field germaine
to the topic of peace, followed
by afternoon faculty-student discussion of the topic. Procedural
approaches for the seminar suggest short available readings on
topics prior to discussion, with
recommended followup bibliographies with the emphasis being
placed on application to high
school teaching.
Senator McGovern’s speech is
a seminar highlight which is
open to all students. It is being
jointly sponsored by the Summer
Student Convpcations Committee
and the Seminar in Social Studies: Teaching About Peace.

Poetry Reading
To Pay Tribute
To James Joyce

SENATOR GEORGE McCOVERN
(D-South Dakota)

News Correspondent
Valerian! Will Speak

On Dominican Crisis

NBC News Correspondent
Richard Valeriani will speak in
the Conference Theatre on Friday, July 16, at 1:30 p.m. The
subject of his talk will be, "The
Dominican Republic: a Shattered
Showcase."
Valeriani was graduated from
Yale University in 1953 with a
three writers and critics who B.A, degree. At Yale he got his
have been in residence for the
first broadcast experience doing!
second summer session.
play-by-play accounts of sports
Lionel Abel, a playwright and events. He spent a year in Italy
critic living in New York, is the and Spain studying on a fellowauthor of Metatheatre: A New ship before going into the army.
Valeriani began his journalism
View of Dramatic Form. He has
written several plays, including career wi*h the Trontonion in
the award winning Absalom, as New Jersey in 1956. Later that
year he joined Associated Press,
well as verse, criticism, and fiction appearing in various literary and worked on the bureau desk
and world desk in New York bemagazines. Mr. Abel is presently teaching courses in “Tragedy” fore being assigned to the A.P.
and “Form in Modern Dramatic bureau in Havana, Cuba.
Mr.
joined NBC
Valeriani
Literature.”
News in April 1961, as a correspondent in Havana. He returnJ. S, Atherton, a leading English authority on Joyce, is a leced to the U.S, in May of 1961
following the Bay of Pigs inva
turer at Wigan
District Mining and Technical College, and
sion. “In spite of all the hazards
has been a British Council Lecinvolved in covering Castro’s
turer. He is the author of The Cuba,” said Valeriani on his reBooks at the Wake; A Study on turn, “the American newsmen
made their decision to leave with
Maria Alba and Ramon de los Reyes will be featured at tomorrow the Literary Allusions in Finnegans Wake, and editor of a 1964
reluctance. But then you can't
night's performance in Rockwell Hall.
edition of A Portrait of the Arsend stories from behind bars."
tist as a Young Man. Mr. Ather
Valeriani had been arrested five
ton is teaching courses in G. M
times in a 20-month period,
Hopkins and Joyce.
Having evacuated Cuba, he was
transferred to Chicago as a rovHugh Kenner, a fellow of the
ing correspondent. He returned
Dr. Shlomo Tadmor, Executive
Royal Society of Literature, is
to Florida later that year during
Secretary of the Council of Highcurrently Professor of English
the Cuban missile crisis. The rest
er Education, Ministry of Educaat the University of California
of 1962 and 1963 were spent
at Santa Barbara. In addition to traveling through the South
tion and Culture for the State
to his Joyce studies, Mr. Kenner
covering racial developments at
of Israel, will lecture on “The
is noted for his criticism of Ezthe University of Mississippi and
Idea of International Cultural
ra Pound, T. S. Eliot and sevenin Birmingham.
Exchange,” July 14 at 1 p.m. in
teenth century poets. He is preWhen anti-American rioting
sently leading seminars in Pound
the Norton Conference Theater.
broke out in Panama in January,
and Samuel Beckett.
1964, Varlcriani was sent there
In addition to his secretariat
to report from the scent. Later
The discussion will be held
with the Ministry of Education
that year he covered the RepubliWednesday at 2:30 p.m, in the
and Culture, Dr. Tadmor is curcan and Democratic conventions
Norton Conference Theater.
on NBC Radio, and traveled with
rently head of Foreign Relations
Joyce’s unique mastery of lanHubert Humphrey during the
for the State of Israel. He did
guage will be demonstrated in
campaign. After the elections he
undergraduate work at The Hereturned to the South to report
readings from Ulysses and Finneand
received
gans Wake, given by Mac Hambrew University,
on the continuing civil rights,
(Cont'd on P. 2)
story.
his master’s and doctorate from
the Teacher’s College of Columbia University.

The University's series of
events honoring James Joyce will
be highlighted this week by a
panel discussion and readings
from Joyce’s works. The discusPoet, Playsion, James Joyce
wright, Novelist, will feature
—

1

&amp;

Tadmor Lecture on Culture Exchange

Dr. Tadmor is a guest lecturer
at the University this summer
conducting a seminar entitled,
"Education in a New Society."
This seminar deals with the history, problems, and structure of
education in Israel
modern
against a background of independence, pioneering, and mass
immigration. Dr. Tadmor s course
a
aims at seeing education as

Lemon Tree In Rathskeller

DR. SHLOMO TAOMOR

of and solution to
problems of a society in transi-

reflection

Folksingers and Poets will entertain in the Rathskeller Wednesday evening from 8 to II
when the Summer Planning Committee sponsors the Lemon Tree,
a coffee house program.

tion.
1
Dr. Tadmor will lecture at a
number of universities throughout the United States this sum.

mer,

...

,

.

The Rathskeller will be dark

checkered tablecloths
spread over table tops, the Iraditional lemon tree wilt be erected and university students will
Pn ed,

entertain with folk singers and
poetry readings. Unlike the last
Lemon Tree, prices in the Rath-

skeller will not be reduced.

At the last Lemon Tree, Daniel
John Zimmerman read his poetry
.

d d Natale Gold and Steve Mann
played guitars. Students are welcome to bring their instruments
to add to the entertainment
......

"

„

.

.

�Friday, July 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

DEALS JEWELERS

For COMPLETE Banking Ser-

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

vic# Visit, call or write

Manufacturers

(next to Amherst Theater)

&amp;

Watches

Traders Trust Co.

—

Diamonds

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

EXPERT WATCH AND
JEWELRY REPAIRING

(opposite campus)

ENGRAVING AND
DIAMOND SETTING

OFFICE

MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

Opening Performance of ‘Joseph in
Colorado’ Scheduled for Thursday
r

Joseph in Colorado/ the new
play written and directed by Conrad Bromberg, is to be performed on July 15, 16, 17, and 18 at
8:30 p.m. and July 17th at 2;30

in Baird Music Hall. Admission is $1.00 for faculty and
students, and $2,00 for the general public and tickets may be
obtained at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
p.m.

Work Done on Premises

The Pierced Ear

Private
Parties

3624 Main Street

Joseph in Colorado is a comic
fantasy which concerns itself
with the questions of hope and
despair. It takes place in a mountainous region of the American
West in the summer of 1892,
Mark Wright, ah English major
from Thunder Bay, Ontario, is
the narrator of the play. He has
performed in The Balcony, American Dream, and Servants of the

(opp. U.B. at Bailey)

IESTA ROOM

Featuring

PIERCED EARINGS and

PINS
NON PIERCED
NECKLACES
BRACELETS
—

HOTEL WORTH
1
200 Main St. TL2-0111

—

RINGS

Visit MILITELLO’S Complete Luggage Center

Sifij
•
•
•
•

caiioni
for M QPortable
Bars

Gifts of Distinction
Nome Brand Luggage

People.

•
•

Ladies Leather Handbags

•

Bar Accessories

•

Attache Cases
Mens &amp; Womens Billfolds

Expert Repair Dept.

7ri££iJU4to'*

Action

-

Fraa Parting

—

Uirtue

83J-1600

OPEN: MON., THURS., FBI. EVES

ip*

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES
6161 GENNESEE STREET, LANCASTER
5 Mile* from Transit Road

yjt%y RQOj^J
We can suit you best

English Pleasure Riding and Lessons Given
Boarding and Training of Show Horses
Lessons;

Vi hr.

—

$3.50

to Leon's (Wilin "Joseph in

leading

liam Cortes) death
Colorado"

COMPLETE LUGGAGE CENTER

3400 Main Strait spp. UB

.

Hacking: $3.00 hr.

,..

naturally!

SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE
NT 4-4400 Mgr. John Shaffner
NT 3-9755—NT 3-6617 Stable
—

—

-

[

Coming Soon! T. H. L.

i

1086 Elmwood Ave

%

I Poise niyy I
\

(bet.

Forest

Your U. of B.

&amp;

,

Bird)

Drug

Store

Lisbon-Bailey
Drug Co., Inc.

Prescription Specialists
3378 Bailey Ave.
Phone

TP 3-1830

Lawrence Siegel, who plays
Henry Fradkin, was born in New
York City and has danced with
the Judson Dance Group in addition to designing sets for the

Judson Poet’s Theatre.
Roiida Lyon, playing Anna Siegel in the play, is from Elmira,
New York and is majoring in
Drama and Speech. Her previous
acting experience at UB includes:
Enemy of the People, Teacher
and His Victim, The Balcony, and
Private Ear and Public Eye in
addition to appearing in The
American Dream at St. Bonaventure Drama Festival.
William Cortes has lived most
of his life in New York City.
He plays Leon Siegel in Joseph
of Colorado and has appeared in
The Balcony, and Private Ear
and Public Eye.
Joan Bromberg, of Elmira, New
York, is appearing as Toady in
her first stage production,
Francine Zumpano, a drama
major from Buffalo, is appearing
as Marthe. In 1963, she earned
the National Catholic Theatre
Conference Award as Marya in
Riders to The Sea. In the St.
Bonaventure Drama Festival she
was 1964 runner-up for best actress for her performance in The
Bald Soprano. She was presented with the UB 1965 Student
Drattiatic Society Best Actress in
a Comedy Role for her performance as Grandma in The American Dream.

of the

Other members

cast

are: Lawrence Ewashen as John;
John Zeeb as Peter; John Lund
as Mark; Sandra Klein as Mary;
Robert Little as he First Miner;
Lori Rayburn as the First Miner’s
wife; Mark Wright as the Townas the
man; Carol Bielecki
Townswoman; Gary Battaglia as

Raven Poole.

-

A
PAT
I

L

•

Dry cleaning machines
8 lbs. 52.00

»3sa&amp;"”&lt;v
at
SHERIDAN

A*
PARKER

1)

theatre at Cambridge, and the
author of a forthcoming volume
of poems, The Horse Opera and
Other Poems, to be published by
the Ohio State University Press.
Mr. Hughes, an instructor in the

Eglish Department at SUNYAB,
has recorded sections from Ulysses for Folkway Records.

The readings will take place
Thursday at 1:00 p.m. in Baird
Music Hall, Admission is free to
both events,

Boulevard Gardens
Court Motel

r inc.

9 p.m.

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

sj

from P.

Copies

Your One Stop Service Center

I)

(Cont’d

mond and Dr. Richard A. Hughes,
Dr. Hammond, an assistant professor of English at SUNYAB, is
a former member of the poet's

&amp;
Family Units
10 Minutes from U.B.

TF 6 -4041

tr.
s.-'

Poetry Reading

NX 2-3842

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

-

p.m.

Single

Repair

GENTLEMEN’S FURNISHINGS
NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING

Tryouts for Nekrossov
by Jean Paul Sartre will
be at 7:30 p.m. Friday,
July 16 in the Band Room
of Baird Hall. Rehearsal
Line: Saturday, July 17th
2:00 p.m.; Sunday, July
18th 8:00 p.m.; Monday.
July 19th 7:30 p.m.;
Tuesday, July 20th 7:30

2424 Niagara Falls Blvd

Plaza Shoe
Open 9 a.m.

Ronda Lynn appears as Anna in
Condar Bromberg's "Joseph in
Colorado," opening July IS in
Baird Hall.

m■*»!

JUST THE WAV YOU i/HE 'EM

Quick
XEROX COPIES

—

Quick
PRINTING

Quick
TYPING
Term Papers, Thesis
PHONE TL 3-6460

�Friday, July

9, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

fdditoriat (Comment

.

.

.

PROPOSAL QUESTIONED

Education Bills
Mount to 8 Billion
In Appropriations

PRSFession:
STDDEnT

6V Cfcvt MAM04
AcP

In an address to the American College Press RelaOregon Daily Emerald (CPS)
tions Association, Ur. A. Westley Rowland, Assistant to
Education has come to be big
President Furnas, said,
business in Washington. If the
“What has happened to students all over the nation
is to a large extent due to the failure of effective
communications . . . the failure is a lack of eyeball
to eyeball confrontation on a regular basis.”
He proposed that a responsible remedy to this problem would be a student faculty administrative forum
which would not be a decision making body, but rather
would meet regularly to share common concerns and
-

-

administration’s

new programs
make it through this session of
Congress unscathed, as they seem

likely to, the total of Federal
aid to education will jump to
$8.6 billion for the coming fiscal
year. This is nearly a 37 per
cent increase over last year’s appropriations.
Many persons are not entirely
happy with this. They see if
as meaning mounting Federal

control of education. But the
fact is that state and local governments are no longer able to
Dr. Rowland’s remarks show both a deep concern pick up the whole bill of school
csts.
are
rising
with the problems faced by all members of the uni- sharplyEnrollments
at all levels
in the
community
insight
and
into
an
effective
means
an
versity
colleges and universities as well
to aleviate those problems. But communication requires as in elementary and secondary
schools; This is particularly true
more than just an artificial forum; for communication in the institutions
of higher
accompanied
by
any
purpose
of
useful
it
must
be
to be
learning, where Federal aid is
necessary to support needed exan attitude of cooperation.
pansion, both on the physical
level and in the growing field
For years, student suggestions and needs have been of research.
channeled through formally determined administrative
But the danger of a giant
monolith assuming conroutes with little or no positive action being taken. The Federal
of our educational system is
only truly effective means of establishing this attitude trol a
yet
remote fear. Jonathan Spiof cooperation would be to extend Dr. Rowland’s forum vak, writing on “Education’s Mudto a decision making body
a move which his remarks dled Bureaucracy” in a recent
issue of The Reporter, points out
clearly exclude.
a more current problem. The
people on Capitol Hill are not
If Dr, Rowland feels that an adequate representa- so worried about having too
tion of the university’s needs requires administrative, much power, he says, but are
concerned with knowing exactly
faculty and student discussion and consensus, then the who has the power. As too often

J
in

develop understanding.

//

—

—

rational means of university management is to extend
that balance of opinion to the decision-making processes.
This he has failed to propose.

WISE DECISION
Last Monday delegates at the Congress of Racial
Equality Convention in Durham, N.C., voted to call for
withdraw! of U.S. troops from Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. The decision was later reversed after a
fight led by CORE’S national chairman, James Farmer.
Had the first decision remained, it would have succeeded in both weakening CORE’S role within the Civil
Rights Movement and destroying CORE’S apolitical usefulness as a structure for motivating civil justice and
social reform.

Every individual and every group expressidly has
the right to both formulate and communicate any opinions on all issues. Yet, it is difficult to see how political
and social commitment beyond CORE’s expressed and
needed purposes can do anything but mask and inhibit

their goals.

happens in any governmental
structure, administration of legislated programs ends up scattered among a dozen different agen-

cies. Thus, instead of co-ordinating together toward a single goal,
authority is divided, and duplication and waste sometimes result.
This kind of bickering within
the separate bodies will only
get worse if the government does
not delineate authority more
specifically. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn) has recommended
that a Department of Education
be created. But chances are that
opposition from the affected
groups will block this effort.
The most reasonable solution
is already being implemented.
Last year Francis Keppel, com
mission of the Office of Education, created an Interagency Committee on Education. This seems
the most optimistic plan toward
developing more coordination of
Federal education efforts. Keppel
has done much to clear out the
deadwood that bogged down the
efforts of his predecessors. It is
only hoped that his new committee will not also suffer from
the same internal squabbling that
made its creation necessary

1

THE

SPECTRUM

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State Univer/ of New
York at Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall, University
Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the twelve weeks of summer
33ions from June 11th to August 27.

Editors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE
DAVID EDELMAN
Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

Faculty Advisors

WILLIAM SIEMERING

DALLAS GARBER

The Editors-in-Chief assume fuli responsibility for the content of the
Editorial opinion is an expression of their, views and does not
cessarily reflect that of the Spfectrum staff or the students at this university.

ectrum.

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.

t&gt;RtS6

Subscription $1.50 for twelve editions,
circulation 8,000.
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising
Service, Inc., 420
Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y.

m

"now thk mx ioni i? ovee roup
VMPPEP YEAR OLD, AMP It MAPE U$ OUEP
FIFTVIHODSAW POUAft IH FlSffll HA?."
Entrance Requirements Eased for 50
Freshmen in Experimental Project
The chance to qualify for the
freshman class at UB next fall
will be given to as many as 50
students who otherwise might
never have had the opportunity.
The project is part of $278,162
grant recently approved for the
University by the U.S. Office of
Education under a section of
the Economic Opportunity Act.
The funds for the current summe session and the 1965-66 academic year. The grant was received by University College, the
administrative division of the
University which supervises the
first two years of instruction for
all students at the University.
The fifty students being chosen
for the project do not meet the

entrance requirecompetitive
ments to attend the University
and they are all members of
families which earn less than

$1800 per year after taxes. However, they have shown outstanding indications other than their
present scholastic records that
they

are potential

college ma-

terial.

They were recruited from a
group of more than 100 candidates who were nominated by
guidance counselors and social
agencies in this area. Approxi-

matcly 75 per cent are from
Western New York
The group will participate in
a special summer program designed to enable them to successfully enter the September
(1965) freshmen class on a level
comparable with other entering
students,

Several specialists have been
hired for the six-week session to
carry out the instructional portion of the program. Two language arts teachers will work with
groups of not more than 12 students on oral and writen verbal
skills and two reading specialists
will work with students to improve comprehension and speed,
mathematics teacher will give
special assistance to those showing a deficiency in that field.
diagnostic
Exhaustive
tests
will assist in isolating specific
problems and counselors will
work with the students on an
individual basis. Group counseling sessions and specified periods when teachers will be available for students to voluntarily
seek help, will round out the
program. Both governmental and
private funds will be sought for
the fall to financially assist those
who successfully complete the
summer program.

1

WEEKLY CALENDAR
All Week
Art Exhibit; “Moods of Light”;

2nd floor Norton.
Art Exhibit: How to Look at
a Painting; 2nd floor corridors
Norton,
Art Exhibit:

cubist

Albert

Gleizes.

Albright
paintings
Knox Art Gallery
Play: 8:30 p.m. “Pygmalion’
Friday and Saturday; “The Sha
dow of a Gunman” Tuesday
Thursday; Court House Thea
tre, Niagara-On-the Lake, Ont.

JULY 9

8:30 p.m. Play; “Mahagonny
Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont
Can.
Saturday

2:00 p.m.

Play; "Julius Cae
sar"; Stratford Festival Thea

tre, Ont., Can.

2:00 p.m. Play; “Marriage of
Figaro"; Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play;

Stratford 1

"Henry IV”;

-

JULY 15

brand, piano; Norton Conference 'Theatre.
Tuesday
8:30 p.m.

Concert

(same

a:

Monday)

Wednesday

2:30 p.m. Panel Discussion:
"James Joyce
Poet, Play
weight, Novelist"; Norton Conference Theater.
8:00 p.m. Entertainment) The
Lemon Tree; Rathskeller.
Concert; Buffalo
8:30 p.m
Civic
Orchestra;
Cazenovia
Park.
—

Festival
Theatre,
Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Enterta inment: AlvaReyes Dance Co., Ballet EsCan.
Play: 8:30 p.m. "Music Man”
panol; Rockwell Hall, State
Univ. College, Elmwod Ave.
Friday and Saturday, “Guys
Thursday
and Dolls”, Monday-Thursday; Sunday
1:00 p.rti.
Poetry
Reading:
p.m.
Melody Fair.
2:00
Concert: Arrau Rose
Readings from Ulysses and
Exhibit: Joyce Manuscripts and
Shumsky, All Beethoven ArchFinnegans Wake; Baird Hall.
duke Trio Piano Son, Op. 54,
First Editions: Lockwood.
2:30 p.m, Disc-Discussion; Haas
Play: 8:30 p.m. “Inherit the
111; Stratford Festival TheaLounge, Norton.
tre: Ont„ Can,
8 00 p.m. Movie: "Room SerV/ind”; Kissing Bridge Playhouse, Glenwood.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Buffalo
vice"; R 140, Capen Hall.
Civic Orchestra; Delaware
8:30 p.m. Play: "Joseph\ln
Park.
Today
Colorado" by Conrad Brom8:30 p.m Play: “Falstaff" Strat- Monday
berg; Baird Hall.
1 p.m. Concert: Allen Sigel,
ford Festival Theatre, Ont.,
(performances Friday, Saturclarinet,
day, Sunday)
Can.
Emmanuel Sinder

�Friday, July 9, 196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

REVIEW

Movie to Be Shown in
Capen Hall Thursday

A Delight Inherit the Wind
At the Kissing Bridge Theatre
-

romp

Brothers

Marx

The

through a farce based on their
own Broadway comedy success
in Room Service which will be
shown at 140 Capen Hall on
Thursday at 3:00 and 8;00 p.m.
The film stars the Marx Brothers,
Lucille Ball, Ann Miller, and

By JEREMY TAYLOR
It should be stated unequivocally at the outset that the Kissing Bridge version of Lawrence
and Lee's Inherit the Wind is a

Frank Albertson.

The movie, directed by William A. Seiter with screen play
by Morrie Ruskind, is based on
the play by John Murray and
Allen Boretz. The story is of an
unscrupulous show manager tryto keep

ing

cast

his

Big John s

"Hercules Archer" by Emile Antoine Bourdelle is currently on
display at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.

Submarines
771 Niagara Falls Blvd.
South of Sheridan at Harrison

29’

Harlow

Carroll Baker, Peter

80 MaKalla SI

,

Buffalo, N Y.,

Lawford

origins.”

Operation Snafu

and up

Sean Connery, Stanley Hollaway
Start* Wed.
2 Hit* in Color

McHale's Navy Joins
The Air Force

Have you Tried One?
?

Joe Flynn, Tom Connally

Fluffy

Phone 836-9490

GOHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.

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Joe Morrison, Barbara

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Lorna
Lorna Maitland,

SAT. EVENING

Paul

Hopper

Tickled Pink

I42BHERTEL AVE.-TF 6-7411

Now Playing

presents

Color

Disney's Masterpiece

None But The Brave

Starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,

THIRD SMASH WEEK

bOTI

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1 ™ SEASON!«

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Sunday

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John

BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure

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3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

Phone

FIRST BUFFALO SHOWING

853-9806

TWO

parking in rear

HITS

IN

COLOR

HARLOW

Carroll Baker,

Cricket Ticket Service

Lawford

Peter

4 FOUR TEXAS

Frank Sinatra,

at University Plaza

Dean Martin, Ursala Andress

COMING

Walt Disney's
THE MONKEY'S UNCUE

(Evan's Gift Shop)

TICKETS FOR:

Melody Fair, Shaw Festival, Toronto, New York
TELEPHONE 835-2828

—

Jl *SL

starring

Licensed agent

"The anatomy of corruption
studied in brilliant detail!”
—N.Y. Herald Tribune
—

EASTMAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC

|

Students

J1.50, Faculty
Others $2.50

TICKETS IN NORTON UNION

—

Plus

broker

Class of 1941

more

returning

to

the

court

house for the final scenes.

If the mood of the opening
scenes is a bit too hilarious, in
terms of the overall message of
the play, this is largely due to
the fact that neither of the principals has yet appeared and that
the audieilce has to be wooed
a bit, since the open air seems
to encourage more chattiness and
shifting of places than is usual
during a production. Once Fred
Keller (as Henry Drummond) and
Bill Peters (as Mathew Harrison
Brady) have appeared, their sure
and professional touch keeps the
play in line from then on and
subdues the sometimes exaggerated playing of the rest of the
cast. They are both so good, in
fact, that one hardly notices that
Bruce Hammond is a far too
tentative Bert Cates and that
Roberta
Rochelle’s
furrowed
brow and shrill voice are more
suitable to an adolescent worried
about her homework than a girl
in the throes of a clash between
basic loves and loyalties. Jay
Borland manages to be through
ly irritating as E. K. Hornbeck,
the smart-aleck reporter, but one
imagines that his lines rather
force him into this unsympathetic role.

The supporing cast, in a word,
is adequate, and the evening’s
honors go to Fred Keller and
Bill Peters for superb performances in their demanding roles.
The play itself seems a trifle

“dated”, since wer are currently
confronted with far more serious
and perplexing problems than
the schism between religion and
somewhat of an arti
science
ficial dilemma, at least to those
of us north of the Bible belt
but, as previously noted, it is
naturally so well suited to this
theatre that one cannot quarrel
with their choice. By all means
make the effort to get down
there; if huge crowds are willing
to drive that far in the winter
to ski down a hill, surely this
enterprising venture in the strawhat circuit is worth an equa
amount of trouble!
—

&amp;

WE CAN INSURE YOU, PERIOD!
We can insure you regardless of value of
car or age or driving record)

TWO LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

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(across from Little Harlem Hotel)

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—

KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

WALT

Jean Genet's
$2.00

to return to the middle ages!)
Ine audience is quite content to
sit on benches in the twilight
and watch what is going on in
the town square, and then move
and
“inside the courthouse”
later to adjourn to the side oi
a convenient hill for Reverend
Brown’s revival meeting, once

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's

THE SERVANT

NOW PLAYING

Sarah Miles and Dick Bogarde

produced by

BUSES LEAVE
TOMORROW at 6:45 p.m.

r

CIRCLE ART
FILM FESTIVAL

MADAME
BUTTEBFLY
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wmm

Frank Sinatra, Clint Walker

JOE ROMANO
&amp;

in

Cinderella

SAM NOTO QUINTET

490 PEARL STREET

unforgettable

McCarthy’s

short story “The Unspoiled Reaction” for a case in point.) However, this particular play, produced in this particular manner
in this particular place is a delight, and we ■ need not quibble
with the program notes, (though
we may suspect that the production was the result of an
appraisal of the available facilities rather than a serious effort

IldrthParKcjfB)

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•

&amp;

“Participation” by the audience may be a form of psychotherapy, an incitement to riot,
a new kind of round game, or
a controlled experiment, but in
the ordinary way most students,
critics and creators of drama

would agree that it is NOT something which will encourage the
writing or production of great
plays. (One has only to recall

Ph 853 2131

BOKO

well
worth the drive down there. This
reviewer is not completely in
agreement with the thesis outi.e. “This
lined on the program
experimental production of Inherit the Wind hearkens back to
Medieval times when audiences
frequently moved from setting
to setting to view the Morality
and Miracle plays presented for
their enjoyment and edification.
We hope the unusual manner of
our presentation will help you
feel a living part of our play
and we encourage your natural
responses to what will happen
before and around you during
the evening. The greater the extent of your participation, the
more all of us will again experience the sense of community
in which Drama had its ancient
—

together

OPEN 11 a.m. until

experience, and

delightful

in a hotel without paying any
bills.

Mr

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—

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                    <text>P0LISH

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

EE?
■■■

VOLUME 15

H

*E*

To Play Tuesday
In Haas Lounge

FEINBERG
.

H

page

Eli Kassner came to Canada
in 1951 where he started his
guitar career as teacher and performer. He was then asked to
join the staff of the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto,
He then joined the Andres Segovia guitar course where Segovia himself w'as teaching.

for several seasons and has appeared with his company in a
New York television production
of excerpts from the Shakespearian repertoire entitled “The
Sickness of Love.”

Mr. Kassner is the founder and
president of the Toronto Classical Guitar Society, which is dedicated to the furtherance of the
classical guitar in Canada,

Downing to Speak
On Madison Project
On July land 2, at 1:15 p m.,
Jane W. Downing will be guest

lecturer to the

participants in
the National Science Foundation
Institute for Elementary School
sponsored by Rosary

Holl College. On Thursday, July
1, Mrs. Downing will speak on
the experimental program known
as the Madison Project, and on
Friday, July 2, she will teach
geometry to Grade 4 students.
was in

her classroom in
lison School in Syracuse, that
Robert Davis of Syracuse Uniand Webster College behis experiments in teaching
Icrn mathematics to elemenschool children. Mrs. Downnow serves as supervisor and
ic teacher in mathematics for
wuse Public School System,
be same time she is eonon: in mathematics for the
Y ork State Department of
otion, and is well-known by
rs and children who listen
" r weekly in the FM radio
o' m
"Keys to Mathematics”
Empire State School of the
tie is much in demand as
ker at meetings of elementcachers, serving regularly
nis
capacity for the National
"Cil of Teachers of Mathemaas well as for
the Associaof Mathematics
Teachers as
as for the Association of
nematics Teachers of New

n

*

1 1

n

will he a Calyphrntp on the Norton
on Tuesday, July
pso music and free
ments will he pro-

33

The New Student Review, unthe editorship of Harriet Heitlinger has been selected by the
National Student Association and
The Saturday Review in their
annual contest as the second best
college literary magazine in the
nation. The winner of the Best
Magazine award was Bennington's
Silo, The New Student Review
recivcd the Honorable Mention
award. Over 200 colleges and
universities were entered in the
contest including such
well
known schools
as
Harvard,
Princeton, Stanford, Michigan,
and Wisconsin. Miss Heitlinger
was asked to attend the National Student Association Congress in August as a guest of
the sponsoring organizations in
order to receive the award at
the first meeting and banquet
of the Congress.

his

Mr. Kassner has performed extensively on radio and TV and
has given numerous solo rectitals in Canada and the United
States. He has played with the
Stratford Shakesperian Festival

NO.

NSR Wins National Acclaim

Mr. Kassner was born in Vienna where he started to study
the guitar at the age of eleven.
At the beginning of World War
II he was forced to emigrate to

'

IIL

I

I

H

Classical Guitarist Eli Kassner
will perform in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge on Tuesday, July 6. Mr.
Kassner will demonstrate special
techniques of guitar with special
emphasis on classical and flamenco music.

Personnel

~.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965

Classical Guitarist

Israel where he continued
musical studies.

K

Marla Alba and Ramon de los Reyes and their company of dancers,
singers, and musicians will bring the best in Flamenco to Buffalo on
Friday and Saturday the 9th and 10th of July. Full story will appear

next week.

Stratford Festival Excursion
To Leave From Norton Today
A bus excursion to the Stratford Festival in Canada will
leave from Norton Hall today
at 2 p.m. After a dinner stop
in Kitchener, Ontario, the buses
will arrive in time for the 8:30
p.m. performance of Julius Caesar.

The

excursion will last for
two days with tickets to Saturday
performances of Henry IV, Falstaff, and Mahoganny available.
The price of the excursion is
$20.50 which includes transportation, sleeping accommodations
and tickets to three of the four

The excursion is the second in
a series of three which is sponsored by the Summer Planning
Committee. Reservations for the
Festival and
accommodations
are available at the Norton Hall

Ticket Office. The buses will
leave the Stratford Festival for
Buffalo immediately following
the Saturday evening perform
ance.

iperformances.

IV, and Falstaff
are designed by Desmond Heeley
with music by John Cook. Douglas Campbell, one of the original
Festival company members and
now Associate Artistic Director
of the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre
in Minneapolis will direct the
performance of Julius Caesar,
with decor by Leslie Hurry. The
Rise and Fall of the City of
Mahogonny is an opera by Kurt
Weil and Bertolt Brecht and is
appearing in its first showing in
North America. Musical direction
is by Louis Applebaum, with sets
and costumes by Brian Jackson.
Both

Henry

Also appearing at Stratford is
exhibit of costumes and props
used from previous years' productions, books, music and crafts.
The display is located in the
is
Festival Exhibition Hall which
located in the Festival Exhibition Hall which is a few minutes
walk from the Festival Theatre.

used before. The theatre’s unique
platform stage is a permanent
structure which is a modern
adaptation of the Elizabethan
stage with balcony, trapdoors,
nine
seven acting levels andaddition
major entrances. Th&lt;?
balcony brings
of an 858-seat
to
the capacity of the theatre
more
spectator
no
with
2,259
than 65 feet from the stage.

The first issue of the magazine was published in the Fall
of 1962. It was assembled on a
very limited budget and resembled anything but a polished magazine. It was mimeographed, collated and stapled by hand. Tom
Berdine assumed the editorship
in 1962 and under his guidance
the magazine went from a mimeograph process to the use of a

professional

printer.

Judith Auerbacher, after hold-

ing the post of Non-fiction Editor, was elected Editor in January 1964 and continued through
January 1965, Miss Auerbacher
continued the development of the
magazine by initiating electric
typewriters for use by the staff
Secondly with the help of Tom
Ellis, who as Business Manager
procured the necessary funds, the
NSR went to a more and more
professional and polished process of type setting.

Miss Heitlinger who has been
with the magazine since its conception has held the positions
of Production Manager and Non
fiction Editor before taking over
as Editor this past January. Miss
Heitlinger has used her experi
ence to mold (he New Student
Reveiew into a nationally prominent college literary magazine. She instituted the idea of
examining a theme from many
prospcctives. which, in the case
of the award winning issue, was
alienation.

Miss Hcitlinger who is an Oc
cupational Therapy major was
extremely pleased upon nearing
the outcome of the contest and

an

All performances will appear
in the Festival Theatre which
was constructed in 1957 to re
place the ‘'big-top” which was

This has been a meteroric rise
for the New Student Review
which has been publishing only
a short three years. The NSR
was founded with much dissonance on the part of many student and administrative committees. The NSR was the direct
descendent of The Circle, an
underground magazine, edited by
Gordon McCormick, who became
the first editor of the NSR.

"Joseph In Colorado", a play by
Conrad Bromberg it in rehearsal
for its July 15 opening in Baird
Hall.

interested, especially Freshmen, in joining the UB Civil Rights
Committee or UB CORK,
please leave your name
and expected address in
the Spectrum Office, in
care of Peter Rubin.
Anyone

stressed the effort of her staff
as a team affair. She was how
ever a bit disgruntled over the
fact that the students and fa
cutty on our campus do not appreciate the quality and diversity
offered in every issue of the
magazine as evidenced in the
relatively small percentage of
people on campus that purchase
the New Student Review. She
went on to thank those that have

contributed articles, time, effort
and rhoral support all of whom
in one way or another, contribut
ed to the success of the magazine
She offered an invitation to all
to submit articles to make it
an even greater
future

magazine

in the

HARRIET HEITUNGER
Editor of Now Student Review

Miss Heitlinger particularly
made mention of the fact that
the faculty advisors Dr. Robert
Rossberg and Mr. Martin Blaze
have been a tremendous help by
not only offering encouragement
when needed but by giving intelligent erudite criticism of
staff ideas. She pointed out that
they truly advised in the best
sense of the word, leaving a

wide latitude of freedom in
which the staff could operate

The particular issue entered
the contest was centered
around the theme of Alienation.
It is significant that the issue
sampled and drew from the broad
spectrum of talent found on this
campus. It included works from
Freshman and Seniors, from
Graduate Students to Professors
in

and Administrators.

Paul Piccone, a Graduate Student in philosophy, traced the
development of the concept of
alienation by way of ideological and historical viewpoints.
Dr. Powell of the Sociology
department included an article
entitled "Beyond Utopia: The
Beat Generation as a Challenge
for Sociology of Knowledge.” He
related the way of life by those
of that ilk to the implications
on contemporary society.
Matthew Corrigan of the Eng
Department had an ancillary chapter to a novel Madeleine which he is presently writ
ing. He exhibits in this work a

lish

definite style
found today.

not

commonly

Dr. Raymond Ewell who is presently vice-president for Research
and Professor of Chemistry and
Engineering on our campus in
eluded an article entitled “Fa
mine and Fertilizer" This piece
of

work has received interna
tional recognition in the Chemical and Engineering News from
which it was reprinted. He dis
cussed the population explosion
problem and its relation to the
probability of famine He stressed
the importance of fertilizer in
the coming years to improve the
lot of mankind

This was the first recognition
the New
existence as

of

Student Review's
an accomplished

literary magazine Miss Heitlinger feels that if the present extent of cooperation is continued
and expanded, the review will
ontinue

winning

such

honors

�SSIce*«l«i

Go Anywhor#
With Everything

Manufacturers

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(opposite campus)

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1086

Two visiting faculty members
will give a poetry reading Thursday at 1:00 p.m. in Baird Hall.
The visitors are Galway Kinnell
and Robert Mezey. The poetry
reading is the beginning of a
series that next month will feature a Joyce panel discussion,
readings from Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake, and a poetry reading by visitor J. H. Pynne.

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Galway Kinnell was educated
at Princeton and the University
of Rochester. He has taught at
Alfred Univ., the Univ. of Chic-

JAZZ

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

ago, Univ. of Grenoble, New York

preoonti

Univ., and the Univ. of Teheran.
He headed the Liberal Arts Program of the Univ. of Chicago
Downtown Center; spent two

SAM NOTO QUINTET

Starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,

JOE ROMANO
Friday, Saturday &amp; Sunday

years as a Fulbright professor
at the Univ. of Teheran.

He has published a book of
poems: What A Kingdom It Was.
His poems have appeared in va-

BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure
3 AM to 6 AM Friday and

Saturday

All Guest Stars Invited

490 PEARL STREET

parking in rear

853-9806

Lisbon-Bailey
Drug Co., Inc.

son Review, New World Writing,
the New Yorker, and Poetry, and
have been reprinted in the Pocket Book of Modern Verse and
other anthologies.

Robert Mezey received his B.A.
and M.A. from the State Univ.
of Iowa, and has served as instructor at the Univ. of Iowa,
Fresno State College, and Western Reserve University. Among
the awards he has received are
the Robert Frost Poetry Prize,
the George Ogden Prose , Prize,
and the choice of his volume,
The Love Maker, as the 1960
Lamont Poetry Slecetion of the
Academy of American Poets.
His writings have appeared
since 1953 in numerous literary
journals and magazines such as
Poetry, Kenyon, Review, Partisan Review, Saturday Evening
Post, and the New Yorker.

2424 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Prescription Specialists
3378 Bailey Ave.
Phone TF 3-1830

Are you harder to catch
in a Moss Shirt?

rious journals such as The Hud-

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Your U. of B. Drug Store
Phone

1965

Poetry Reading Thursday

For COMPLETE Banking Service Visit, call or write

SHELLS

1

Friday, July 2,

SPECTRUM

PACK TWO

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Single

&amp;

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Private
Parties

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Watches

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA

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Open 9 a.m.

Have you heard about the latest girl grabs boy tactics now in
vogue in our very best colleges? It's Called “Loop de locker loop”.
When a girl spots a guy she likes, she grabs him by his locker loop.
Tug. And a new trophy is added to her bulletin board collection.*
Girls complain that men who wear Moss Shirts are very hard to
catch. The locker loop is so wide, flat and secure just like the loop
on a coat-she can't pull it off. In fact, the whole shirt is made that
way. Quite a buy, we might add, since the Moss traditional shirt
costs about $5.
We've figured out a way whereby you can hold on to your locker
loop and still give it away. Join our Locker Loop Club and we’ll keep
you supplied with enough locker loops to keep a harem happy. Mail
in this attached coupon and we’ll send you a batch. As many as you
need, but please no bragging.

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Laundry and Dry Cleaning

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I would like to become a member
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girls
Please send Locker Loops lor
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�Friday, July

2, 1965

SPECTRUM

Editorial (Comment

Assessment of
.

.

Reaction to the

—

By PAUL KOPYCINSKI

earnnigs, protect their families, and express their ideas.
Just as we have been unable to practice pure Democracy,
so too have the Communist countries been unable to
create the ideal manifestations of their beliefs.
The degree to which, both systems vary from their
theoretical models is irrelevant. What is relevant is
that the opposing systems are the basic premises of the
most powerful countries in an inescapable world.' What
is important is that the two orders learn to co-exist so
the hideous spectacle
as to avoid total annihilation
of man’s stupidity.
Our foreign policy is that communication which
must explain to the countries of the world just how we
intend to live peacefully with our neighbors. It is of
paramount importance that it be a coherent policy which
reiterates our attempt at a rational compassion in dealing with the peoples of the world.
Our foreign policy to date has not in practice recognized the right of another ideology to exist. It has
persisted in an attempt to remodel the world in the
image of America with our type of government, our
material values, and our business-oriented power basis.
We have failed to understand and acknowledge the internal politics of foreign countries which demand either
a compromise coalition or anti-democratic government.
Flag-clutchers like House Republican Leader Ford
(Mich.) who seek a total war and total victory in Viet
Nam are diverting any attempt at meaningful co-existence. They are helping to expand the “American dream”
without convincing anyone of its value. Equally guilty of
this naive concept of worldly oneness is Senator Dodd
(D-Conn.) who has charged the U.N. delegation to the
Dominican Republic as biased on the grounds that it is
trying to establish a coalition government with Col. Francisco Caamano Deno’s rebel forces. It is this kind of
irrational fear and political ignorance that saw Juan
Bosch, a duly elected official, forced from office by
military coup because he placed a Communist in his
labor administration.
The U.S. should and must take a solid stand when
confronted with Communist expansion by military means.
This should be our committment to the peoples of the
world
to defend them when confronted with unwanted, external military threats. But when foreign policy
deteriorates to the point that we refuse to hold an election because representatives advocating our system would
probably be voted down, as in Viet Nam, no longer can
we claim that we represent the best interests of the people and we lose our right to halt Communist advancement
in that counrty.
Our policies of foreign aid and involvement should
be economic and social. This is not to say that we should
fill the pockets of self-styled politicians so that they Will
agree to be pro-American. But rather we should extend
aid in the form of Peace Corps activities
technical advice and development of natural resources for the betterment of the country, not for exploitation by profit-hungry

Out of the ashes of the Feinberg Certificate arise a number
of questions; “What will the
actual procedure be in accord
with the general procedure laid
down by President Gould?” and
“What will happen to those who
refused to sign the certificate
previously?”

Prior' to the abolition of the

—

Feinberg Certificate, two nonsigners, Paul Sporn and Harry
Keyishian, were dismissed. Various other faculty members who
refused to sign the oath have

either suffered

Buffalo,”

The Edilors-ih-Chief assume full responsibility for the content of the
*t!rum. Editorial opinion is an expression of their views and does not
retsarily^refleet that of the Spectrum staff or the students at this university.

Second Clan, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y
Subscription $1.50 for twelve editions,
circulation 8,000.
Represented for national advertising by
National 'Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madisbn Avenue, New York, N. Y.

the

"NOT SAGWLAIWfENCE
CHANCE?

oLetler to

Another reaction to the abolition of the Certificate has been a
sudden outburst by the American
Legion, The American Legion
maintains that academic freedom
is a pursuit of truth yet they
are concerned about the removal
of the Feinberg Certificate, no
doubt from the fear that the stu
dent won’t be able to find the
truth without the certificate. Dr.
George Hochfield feels that this
concern for academic freedom on
the part of the American Legion
is a pretense to certain values
that the Legion doesn’t actually
cherish and is therefor? meaningless to them.
President Gould, in clarifying
the abolition of the ' Feinberg
Oath stated that the general procedure to be followed in place
of the Feinberg would entail
and not
asknig professional
political questions of applicants
at the time of their interview.
It would then be up to the
judgement of the interviewer to
determine if there was reason
to question the applicant regard
ing his political affiliations UB
officials are looking to Albany
for clarification before setting
down a definite procedure to be

ledge of economic autonomy so they will be able to establish and perpetuate the governmental system of their
determination as we have perpetuated our own. This
and only this can endear our country to the peoples of
less advanced nations.

Faculty Advisors
DALLAS GARBER
WILLIAM SIEMER1NG

under

"

Because we are not a totalitarian nation we cannot
enslave people for the betterment of their country. We
can only share with them in the techniques and know-

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

written

BY ANY

maintain that the withdraw! of
the certificate was not an admission of these damages but
a reaction ot opposition. Therefore these men will continue their
case testing the constitutionality
of the Feinberg Law. The es- Due to a lack of tpaca LETTERS TO THE EDITOR mult bo limited
sence of the case with reference
to 250 words. Complete identification, including phone numbers, must
to the certificate is now in terms accompany each latter. Names will be withheld upon request. All
of past damages caused by the letters must be typewritten, double spaced and submitted before
11:00 A.M. on the Tuesday before publication.
certificate.

businessmen.

Editors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE
DAVID EDELMAN

withheld

psuedonym, Frank Nugent, gives
a summary view of this situation
prior to the oath’s abolition. He
probes the injustices and damages wrought upon those who
didn't sign. Dr, Maud and affected fellow faculty members

—

SPECTRUM

from

promotions or pay increases. Dr.
Ralph Maud, in his pamphlet,
“The Feinberg Certificate at

—

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State Univer'V of New York at Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall, University
i!, rus,
Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the twelve weeks of summer
'rsions from June llfh to August 27.

STDDEnT

Feinberg Abolition

—

•

PRSFeSSIon:

.

RALLY 'ROUND THE FLAG
BOYS
The cold war is the basic confrontation of two diftwo systems that are
ferent systems of government
not restricted to political ideologies, but rather consist
of the ways in which men interact to distribute their

THE

PAGE THRU

followed here.

I

All
8:30 p.m. Play: “Inherit The
Wind”; Kissing Bridge Play-

|

house, Glenwood.
8:30 pm. Play: “Music Man"
with Darrin McGavin; Melody

1

Fair.
Art Exhibit: Moods of Light
R 231 232, Norton.
Art Exhibit: How to Look at
a Painting; 2nd Floor Corri-

Norton.
Art Exhibit: Anatomy of Art:
Patrick Lavery’s ACS Gallery
dors,

615 Englewood.
Art Exhibit; Typewriter Compositions by Mrs. Winifred T
Caldwell; YWCA, 190 Franklin
Street.
Art Exhibit: Albert Gleizes,
cubist paintings; Albright-Knox
Art Gallery.

Exhibit: Joyce Manuscripts and
First Editions; Lockwood Li
brary

the (Editor

Freshmen Forewarned
TO THE EDITOR
I wish to take this opportunity
to take the administration to
task and to issue a warning to
any perspective Freshman who

might read the Spectrum. Although Summer Planning Conferences are a fine method for
orienting incoming Freshmen to
college life, they are not only
useless, but arc indeed a misservice if they do not orient the
students to the REAL college life.
FRESHMfiN BEWARE! Don't
get your hopes up; don’t get op-

timistic over the information you
arc fed during your Summer
Planning Conference. UB is a big
school! When you go to school
here, you will get a big school
education and all the evils that
are inherant therein. Here, all
you are to the administration is
a student number (welcome student No. 0000000) To the faculty
you arc even less. Professors

don’t

know their

students

they don’t teach to you, they
teach at yon.
Don't let me discourage you
completely. You Freshmen are
coming to a good school (as far
as big schools go), and you’re getting a cheap “education." My
point is simply to let you know
something about "bigschoolitis";
I want to let you know something that they won't tell you
in your Summer Planning Conference. 1 want to soften the
shock you will receive in Scptem
her.
FRESHMEN: there is one salvation. You can avoid becoming
just a student number, and you
can avoid the frustrations of a

big school. There

is hope for
salvation. There is a way, but
only on# way. BECOME ACTIVE
IN STUDENT AFFAIRS AND IN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT.
MARTIN FEINR1DER

Where Is the Water?
THE
What's this with no water in
in the fountain? What good's a
fountain without water? And
EDITOR;

TO

what are all those freshmen going
to think when they see a water
less fountain?

JAN

JULY 2-JULY 8

WEEKLY CAL INDAR
Week

,

Today

|

Monday

2:00 p.m. Excursion: Bus ex
cursion to Stratford Festival,
(see story pg. 1)
7:30 p.m, Play: “Mahagonny”
Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont,
Canada.

8:30 p.m

Stratford
Ont., Can
8:30

"Julius Caesar"
Festival
Theatre,

Play;

Concert:

p.m.

Buffalo

Saturday

2:00 p.m

Stratford

Play;

j

1:00 p.m. Contort; Norma and
Allen Sapp, duo piano program; Conference
Theatre,
Norton.

j

J

Tuesday

8:00 p.m. Contort; Eli Kassner,
Classical Guitarist; Haas Loun
ge, Norton
8:30 p.m. Contort Norma and
Allen Sapp, duo piano pro
gram;
Conference
Theatre,
Norton.

j
!

j

J

“Henry IV"; Wednesday;
Festival
Theatre
8 00 p.m Entertainment; Cal

j

Ont., Can
ypso Calicnte; Norton Terrace
2:00 p.m; Play: “Mahagonny";
8 30 p m
Concert: Buffalo !
Stratford Avon Theatre, Ont.,
Civic Orchestra; Humboldt
Can.
Park.
8:30 p.m.
Play: “Falstaff"; Thursday
Stratford
Festival
Theatre,
1:00 p m Movie; "Eve Wants !
Ont.,
to Sleep"; Conference Thea [
8:30 pm -Play: "Mahagonny";
tre; Norton.
Stratford Avon&gt; Theatre, Ont.,
2:30 p m Disc-Discussion; Haas
Can

1

Caic^

Sunday

8:30 p.m. Concert:
Buffalo
Civic Orchestra: Delaware Park.

Lounge.
8:00 p.m. Movie; "Eve Wants
to Sleep"; Conference Thea
tre, Norton

J

!

j

�Friday, July 1, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

MUSIC ON CAMPUS
By

DANIEL SCHROEDER

The first of the summer series
of concerts, held last Monday

w 1
'

ER

CIRCLE ART
FILM FESTIVAL
—

NOW PLAYING

—

DR. STRANGELOVE

Gallows humor with Sellers,
Scott, Hayden, Wynn, et al
Plus

PURLIE VICTORIOUS

("Gone are the Days")
Hilarious Spoof on Segregation
down South!

MON. TUBS.
Satyajit Ray's

—

■

—

RATHER PATCHALI
Plus

VICTIM

afternoon and repeated Tuesday
evening, featured faculty members Robert Mols on flute, Alta
Mayer on cello and George
Crumb on piano and harpsichord.
The Vivaldi and Telemann Sonatas for Flute and Continue
were held together by\ repeti
tion of phrases, strong tonality
and pure vitality (in which
Crumb’s driving rythem forged
on despite
some understandably breathless moments from
Dr. Mols). The Beethoven Sonata
for Cello and Piano had the
lyracism and sound rhetoric of
the master, the latter a little
overbalanced in the performance.
Dr. Mol’s own Sonata for Flute
and Piano used built-up chords
and conflicting tonalities as well
as primative “open” sounds and
Medieval modes to obtain a kind
of complex emptiness as in Hindemith, motivated considerably by
a vital rythem, particularly in
the last movement. Bcstor’s piece

for unaccompanied flute was a
well-articulated, little confection.
David Burge’s “Sources for Flute
and Piano” (1964), probably of
Pierre Boulez’s “new impressionist” school, has carried all things
to their limit: Range of instru
ments, special effects (as plucking piano, strings), absence of
rhythm, fragmentation of melody,
dynamic extremes and general
disorder. It did, however, have
style and, in one or two instances, substance.
The ensemble work was generally good and of a unified
spirit. Intonation offered few
problems, even between cello
and piano. The magic of good
weather or good advertising or
good music brought out large
audiences.

The next faculty concert is
Monday, July 5 at 1:00 p.m. and
Tuesday, July 6 at 8:30 p.m,
at the Norton Conference Theatre. Norma and Allen Sapp
(Music
Department Chairmen)
will perform a dua-piano program.

mm

natmaJtm

2 Hits in Color

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Art of Love

James Garner, Elke Sommers,

Dick Van Dyke, Angie Dickenson

Nightmere in the Sun
Ursula Andress, John Derek
Starts Wed. in Color

Harlow

Carroll Baker, Peter Lawford

Operation Snafu

Sean Connery, Stanley Hollaway

and least but not last

Woody Allen
and guest star

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Doris Day, James Garner
Starts Wed.

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Elvis

Presley, Jocelyn Lane

Racing Fever
Joe Morrison, Barbara Biggart

~

:
0
9

r

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's
KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

'

I

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fA

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Donovan's Reef
John

Am

Jrwswo'

Wayne, Lee Marvin

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�</text>
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                    <text>RUSSIAN
-

.

-

..

FILM

(—STATE UNIVERSITY

i

X

V.-C_

-

VOLUME 15

■■

Shaw Festival at
Niagara-on-the-Lake

FRESHMEN

NO. 32

By WILLIAM CORTES
pre-

in the world devoted prin-

cipally to the plays of the great
Irish playwright. The festival will
begin June 29 with Pygmalion,
Shaw’s most popular comedy
about a professor of phonetics
turning a Cockney flower girl into
a lady. The play will run through

11.

O’Casey’s The Shadow of
July 13 -July 25, will
mark the first salute to Shaw’s
great friend and compatriot, and
will initiate the Festival’s policy

S?an

a Gunman,

of presenting the works of other

outstanding playwrights. The play
is the first of O’Casey’s trilogy,
with “Juno and the Paycock” and
"The Plough and the Stars,’’ based

on Dublin tenement life and the

works,
combine tragedy and
humor, are noted for their superb
use of language.
Easter Rebellion. O’Casey’s

which

The concluding play of the
series will be Shaw’s The Millionaires, July 27 August 8, in which
Shaw returns to his “Major Barbara” theme of the inequality of
wealth in modern society and the
genius of some “bom bosses” for
■

making money.

All three productions will be
presented in the former Courtroom of the Town Hall of NiagaraOn-The Lake. Performances are
held Tuesday through Sunday at
8:30 p.m.; there is also a Saturday
matinee at 2:30 p.m.
If enough students are interested, the Norton Hall administrative staff will plan an excursion
to Niagara-On-The Lake for a part
of the festival.

Thc Shaw Festival '65 will also
feature a seminar on Shaw, July

■10-13.

Mr. Bromberg is a member of
the Writers Unit of Actors Studio
in New York. He is the 1964
recipient of
the Rockefeller
Foundation Writing Grant. His
plays include The Defense of
Taipei which was first produced
at the Actor’s Workshop in San
Francisco. He also has several
one act plays to his credit, including The Teacher and His
Victim first produced at the
“Festival of Two World” in Conrad Bromberg, author of the
Spoleto, Italy, and which has been play, "Joseph in Colorado".
produced on campus by the stucipal roles are Ronda Lyon, Garry
dent dramatic society.
Battaglia, Francine
Zumpano,
Mr. Bromberg will be directing William Cortes, Larry Seigel, Joan
his own work. Last December he Bromberg, Larry Ewashen, and
was seen on campus in the De- Mark Wright.

partment’s fall production of his
earlier play, The Defense of Taipei. While here he began work on
a new script. The result has been
this original production of Joseph
in Colorado.

The play, described by its
author as a fantasy, takes place
in a mythical mining town in
Copper Mountain, Colorado,
where in 1892 come three young
socialist to organize the miners.
The story of what happens to
them provides the play’s action.
Unlike the Defense of Taipei,
Mr. Bromberg's new play calls
for a ilaijge cast. Acting in prin-

tie first in a series of sumconcerts will be presentee.
Monday
June 28, at 1:00 p.m.
in Baird Hall. The concert will
ir

feature Robert Mols, flute; Alta

Mayer, violoncello; and George H
Crumb, piano aand harpsichord.
Robert Mols is presently University Orchestra Director and
Professor of Musical Theory at

Under

Bromberg's

these actors

direction,
and others are fol-

lowing an intensive production

schedule which inculdes six hours
of rehearsal daily.
As the script requires much
dance movement, Bernice Rosen
has taken the assignment of
choreographing the play. Cos-

tumes for
being created by Esther Kling.
Multi-unit set has been specified
by the author and it is being designed and constructed under the
supervision of Dr. Thomas WatJoseph in Colorado are

son.

Assistant Professor of Drama

and Speech.

Harbor Cruise Slated for Wednesday
Wednesday evening, buses will
provided to take interested
students and faculty members to

be

First of Summer
Concerts at Baird
Set for Monday

New Program Devised
To Orient Frosh to Activities

A new play by Conrad Bromberg, Joseph in Colorado, is being
produced by the Department of
Drama and Speech as part of its
summer program. The production
is now in rehearsal at Baird Hall
and will be performed on the
evenings of July 15, 16, 17, and
18, and a matinee on Saturday.
July' 17,

the foot of Main Street where

they will depart for a boat excur-

sion of the Buffalo Harbor and
the Niagara River. The excursion
will include a tour of the industrial complexes in the harbor,
yacthing clubs, Fort Erie, the Seaway Piers, the world’s largest
grain elevators and other educational and tourist attractions.
is free;
Bus • transportation
tickets for the boat excursion arc
$1.00 for students, $1.50 for faculty, $2.00 for others. The buses
will depart from campus at 6:30
JUB.
A narration of all points of interest in addition to facts and
;

-

data about the harbor will be
given over the public address
system aboard. In case of rain,
the boat is equipped with a full

cabin to protect passengers. The
excursion party will return to
campus by

11:00 p.m.

Other points of interest on the
harbor tour will be the U.S. Coast
Guard Station, Flour Mills, Buffalo’s new Heliport, the Port
Authority Marine Terminal and
Small Boat Harbor, the Bethlehem Steel Plant, Lake Freighter
docks, the Peace Bridge and International Bridges.

Tickets for the excursion may
be obtained at the Norton Union
Ticket booth.
.

'65 at Niagara-

sent the fourth season of the only

July

P

Bromberg Play In Rehearsal Freshman Conferences
Will Begin on Monday
Student Production in Early July

ELLEN CARDONE

On-The Lake, Ontario, will
festival

WELCOME

-„

--S,
h

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1965

Pygmalion' to Open

Shaw Festival

'

}

~—

bhm|

By

I

......

OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Starting Monday, June 28, more
than three thousand incoming
freshmen will attend the summer planning conferences. Two
shifts will arrive each week on
Mondays and Wednesdays for the
three day period which consists
of advanced registration and general orientation. Each shift will
be composed of one-hundred and
fifty students.

The summer conferences are a

recent innovation designed to aid
the student in becoming ac-

customed to a large scale university and its methods. The conferences arc compulsory for all
incoming freshmen men and
women regardless of whether they
will reside in university housing
or in private residence during
their first year. This system is
designed to create a greater bond
between resident and commutor
students; as normally, commuters
would be unaware of the problems and attitudes of dormitory
life, while residents often remain
disconnected from commuters.
On the first day of the planconference the student will

ning

Renowned Chemists
At Summer Symposium
internationally ■ famed
Four
scientists will be the principal

speakers at a chemistry summer
symposium on “Relaxation Techniques in Chemical Kinetics in
Solution” to be held June 28-30.
More than 150 scientists are expected to attend the symposium.
The four speakers arc Dr. Leo
DeMacyer,
a Belgian physical

chemist and electronics expert
associated with the
Max Planck Institute for Physical Chemistry, Gottingen, Germany; Dr. John Baxendale, a
reader in chemistry at the University of Manchester, England,
and an international authority
on radiation chemistry and pulse
radiolysis; Dr. Edward F. Caldin,
at present a member of the Department of Chemistry at Leeds
University, England, and soon to
be a reader in Chemistry at a
new university in Canterbury,
England; and Dr. Aaron Loewenstein, of the Israel Institute of
Technology at Haifa, internationally known for his work on nuclear magnetic resonance phenopresently

mena.

The symposium is being cosponsored by the United States
Air Force Office of Scientific
Research and the Chemistry De-

Featured

in Monday’s concert
"'ill be Vivaldi’s Sonata in C
winor for Flute and Continue;
Sonata for Flute and Piano (1949)
Robert Mols; Beethoven’s Soala in C Major, Op. 102, no. 1,
•or Violoncello and Piano: A
»md in the Willows, Suite for
Flute by Charles Bestor;
™urces for Flute and Piano by
Uavid Burge; and Telemann’s SoPata in G Major for Flute and

partment at UB.

register and will hear

a general

orientation lecture, after which
he will be free to socialize. A
battery of tests designed to establish placement in remedial or
advanced courses will be administered to freshmen on the second day of the conference. The
third and final day marks the
freshman’s first experience at
registration an a tour of Lockwood and Harriman libraries. Interspersed among these required
events, several social and cultural
functions are scheduled for the
student’s enjoyment and stimulation.
Freshman women and men will
be housed in Goodyear Hall and
Tower Hall respectively. As in
the case during the academic
year, each floor will have a resident advisor who will be available to the freshman to answer
any questions they may have or

problems they encounter concerning either residence or general university life. Further, student aides will be available at
specific times to aid the incoming
students in their registration and
orientation periods.

This year, a new method to
encourage participation in extra
curricular activities has been devised by student groups. During
their first day at the university,
Ihe freshmen will be required to
complete cards which record the
activities in which they have
participated during their high
school careers. These activities
will then be classified into
groups, and the college activity
which most closely coincides with
the student's interest will draft
a letter requesting his participation. In addition, exhibits outlining the functions and importance of student government and
student activities will be on display in Norton’s center lounge
during the periods in which conferences will be held
Last year's series of planning
conferences were judged a successful means of dealing with
the nearly three thousand incoming freshman of the class of
'68 This year, with the largest
class In the university’s history,
the method will be put to an
immense test. For this reason,
freshmen are encouraged to follow their schedules scrupulously
and thus avoid a decrease in the

program’s efficiency.

-

The primary aim of the con
ference is the study of rapid
chemical reactions, many of
which take place 100 times taster
than the "blinking” of an eyelid. Also included will be seve ;
ral talks of newly developed
special techniques for the mca
surement of these rapid reac ;

J

r

concerts of the series will
Id on July 5, 12, 19, and
August 2 and 9. Repeat
mances of all concerts will
Id the evening following
erformance. The repeat for

tions.

1

In addition to the four foreign
chemists, 15 American scientists
presently engaged in research
have been invited to present

t

n

papers.

concert will be held at
on Tuesday, June 29

'onference

mcert series is by the
and Creative Associates
sored by the Department
at UB.

President Clifford
will welcome the' visiting chemists at the opening session Monday {June 28) at 8:45
University

Theater.

C. Furnas

szsxsx

£■ a*

a.m.

Registration for the Sec
ond Session of -summer
courses will be held on
Monday, June 28. Registrants are requested to go
to Clark Gym where standard registration procedures
will he employed. Clark
will he open from 8:00 to
11:00 a.m. and more than
1,500 students are expected

�Friday, June 25,

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Private
Parties

For COMPLETE Banking Service Visit, call or write

Manufacturers

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HOTEL WORTH
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(opposite campus)
MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
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Court Motel

Featuring
PIERCED EARINGS and

NON-PIERCED
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NECKLACES

A bit of the Russian countryside in "Chapayev"

'Chapayev' to Be Shown
In Norton Thursday

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Visit MILITELLO’S Complete Luggage Center

QifU for

•
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Name Brand Luggage
Ladies Leather Handbags
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1965

Occasions
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Expert Repair Dept.

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80

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Ph. 853-2121

Chapayev, the Russian film
hailed the Best Foreign Film of
the year by the National Board
of Review in 1935, will be shown
in the Conference Theatei’ in
Norton on Thursday, July 1, at
1:00 and 8:00 p.m.
The film tells of Chapayev, a
peasant guerilla leader who
fought in the 1919 battles against
the Germans and the White Russians. Chapayev, one of the most
popular of all Russian sound
films, particularly portrays the
human qualities of the central
character and of Russian peasants
in general.
Starring Boris Babotchkin and
Boris Blinov, Chapayev will be
shown in Russian dialogue with
English subtitles. Roger Manvell

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES
5

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from Transit

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Hacking: $3.00 hr.

SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF

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Road

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Lessons: Va hr.

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of Film Magazine said, “It threw
aside the aestheticism of the
silent days and solved the problem of how to make a good story
about a great Soviet hero in a
realistic but not pedestrian manner.”
Chapayev is the third in a film
series sponsored by the Summer
Planning Committee.

—

NT 4-4400 Mgr. John Shaffner

—

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�Friday,

June 25, 1965

(Editorial (Comment

.

.

.

RIGHT TO WORK
In his May 18th labor message to Congress, President Johnson urged repeal of Section 14B of the TaftHartley Act authorizing state “right-to-work” laws. Today the measure is in committee.
Repeal of Section 14B would recognize the right
employer and the union to enter into agreements
the
of
that would require all workers to be union members. The
law would, in effect, deny the civil rights of the worker
by coercing him to join a labor union. If he refuses, he
will lose his job and be denied employment in the future
in a plant or factory where a union shop has been established by a union contract with the employer. Immediately, workers in nineteen states where compulsory
unionization has so far been defeated, would be forced
to make this decision.
It is apalling that such an important legislative deto abolish civil rights
has been presented by
cision
the President without more explanations than the brief
comment to “reduce conflicts in our national labor policy
that have for several years divided Americans in various
—

—

states.”
The power of the unions cannot be underestimated.
Their financial aid in supporting candidates is paid back
in support of bills like the President's request for repeal
of 14B. Compulsory unionization would force workers
to support, through their dues money, candidates they
might not want to vote for in an election.
The need for a strong union bargaining force is
essential for a reasonable balance of power in which the
worker receives his fair share of the nation’s wealth.
Yet, union leaders could better achieve this power by demonstrating to the non-union member their usefulness as
organizers in pursuit of social equality and justice, rather
than by seeking legislation which abridges the rights
of the worker.
There are many citizens of this country who strongly believe that they should not be compelled to join any
organization of a private nature. Just as we support
man’s right to be judged on his own merit rather than
on racial, religious, or ethnic criteria, we must also condemn dsicrimination on the basis of affiliation. Freedom
to associate or not to associate is a fundamental right
of American citizens.

ON DEMONSTRATIONS
There are three major differences between student
demonstrations and the annual assemblages of honorable groups such as the Junior Chamber members now
visiting Buffalo.
1) Student demonstrations rarely rate police

es-

corts at their outset.

2) No additional revenue is incurred by Buffalo
merchants and officials when students riot. (Buffalo is
not boosted.)
3) Occasionally, student demonstrations have a ra-

tional purpose.

SPECTRUM

THE

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the Slate UniverPublication Office at Norton Hall, University
Cam puli Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the Iwleve weeks of summer
sessions from June llfh to August 27.
sity of New York at Buffalo.

DAVID EDELMAN

Editors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

Faculty Advisors
DALLAS GARBER
WILLIAM SIEMERING
The Editors-in-Chief assume full responsibility for the content of.
Spectrum. Editorial opinion is an expression of their views and does not
necessarily reflect that of the Spectrum staff or the students at this university.
N Y,
Postage Paid at Buffalo,
Subscription $1.50 for twelve editions,
circulation 8,000.
by
Represented for national advertising
National Advertising Service, Inc., 4/u
Madison Avenue, New York, N Y.

Second Class,

entSB

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

The Graduate Student In
The Contemporary University

Graduate Faculty Relationships
When senior professors of a
university department deem it
necessary to meet with their
graduate students to discuss ways
of increasing the contact between
the two groups, it becomes fairly
obvious that all is not well with
student-faculty relationships. Further when a faculty wife, who was
on a first name basis with staff
prior to entering graduate school,
feels that it is expefcted of her
to address these members by
their professional titles even
when off-campus, it becomes still
more evident that there are subtler ways of perpetuating class
barriers than by blatant discrimination alone. Finally, when a
graduate student remarks to me,
in all seriousness, that he feels
faculty-student meetings could be
of no possible use because he is
unable to visualize a situation in
which he could contribute something useful, then the subtle indoctrination of inferiority-is complete.
Why these gulfs exist are not
all that clear, but I am acutely
aware that they do exist. Personality deficiencies among some
staff members may be a small
contributory factor, as evidenced
by the person who stated, that,
as I had now become a graduate
student, he could no longer address me by my professional title:
The motivating factor being, presumably, the better to impress
upon me the lowliness of my
present status. The problem how rever transcends these petty factors. Some of you may feel that
the problem is overstated and
that the present situation is working very effectively. Allow me to
dispell some of these illusions.
While in attendance at a meeting
discussing this very problem, a
graduate student was heard to remark that he was very careful
not to do anything which may
bring him into direct opposition
with his advisor as this could
jeopardize his chances of a favourable testimonial when he left—a statement which says nothing
for the graduate student, but even
less for his professor. If this
were a lone example, the situation
would be bad enough, but when
a great majority of students carry
on in this fashion, then relationships have reached a new low.
The implications of such behavior are far reaching and permeate into every facet of student activity. Not only is it impossible to be professionally proficient under these circumstances,
but even more sad is the fact that
intellectual honesty is wilfully
suppressed. The outcome is that
graduate students seldom openly
discuss their difficulties with
faculty, but reserve their complaints for student groups, where
of course, their problems are
talked about ad nauseam without
any real solution being found.
Even when placed in a situation
in which freedom of expression is
invited, and the promise of no
reprisal extended, graduate students never quite succeed in discarding their cloak of suspicion.
In student government this same
fear of reprisal results in a continual watering down of graduate
student demands when presented
to the powers that be. While this
attitude no doubt keeps the authorities happy and stops them
from cutting off the candy supply,
the real problems never get a
proper airing.
It is very easy to conclude that
it is the graduate student who is
at fault, but I for one, can’t help
feeling that he has learned to
keep his mouth shut as a result
of past experiences with the administrators . and faculty. Most
graduate students exercise sufficient initiative to enable them to
care for a family and bring up
their children in a responsible
manner, yet within the confines
of a university, which supposedly
of this
exists for the cultivation
initiative, it rapidly evaporates.
Why?

One of the reasons may be that
the educational system makes no

real distinction between graduates
and undergraduates. The attain:
ment of the first degree seems
to signify nothing more than a
necessity for attending further
classes in which the same teaching
methods and the same criteria
for judgment of intellectual capabilities prevail. Perhaps the secret lies in the word teaching! In
an age when universities scramble
to obtain scientists with the greatest reputations so as to burnish
the college image, it is inevitable
that universities should change
from being centers of higher
learning to centers of higher
research. The longer one remains
at the university the more obvious
it becomes that the greatest experts do not always make the
best teachers. The terms scientist
and educated, staff member and
educator are not synonomous. The
appointment of faculty members
whose prime interest is research
produces a barrier between staff
and student. Educating is regarded as a chore that interferes
with research. To try to provide
more time for research, courses
are crammed together and tutoring becomes more and more intensive. Yet learning is a process
that consists only partly of teaching. Indeed, it is quite possible
for a student to learn without
having formal teaching, as evidenced by the fact that in some
countries no courses whatsoever
are taught beyond the first degree, What is also quite clear
is that

Weekly
Calendar
All Week
Art Exhibit: "Moods of Light”

2nd Floor Norton.
Art Exhibit: Typewriter Compositions by Mrs. Winifred T.
Caldwell; Lobby YMCA, 190
Franklin Street.
Art Exhibit: Anatomy of Art;
Patrick Lavery’s ACS Gallery.

615 Englewood.
Joyce Exhibit; Manuscripts and
First Editions: Lockwood Library.
Art Exhibit: Center Lounge,

Norton.
Today

Play: “Inherit the Wind" Kissing Bridge Playhouse, Glenn-

wood

Art Exhibit: How to Look at
a Painting," 2nd Floor Norton
9 12:30 Meeting: School Social

Welfare: Norton.

8:30 p.m Play: "A Funny Thing
Happened On The Way To The
Forum" Melody Fair.
8:30 p.m. Play: "Henry IV";
Stratford Theatre, Ontario. Can
Saturday

p.m.
Play: “Falstaff”;
Stratford Theatre, Ont. Can.
5-7 p.m. Meeting; Muslim Students; R 330, Norton
6:45 p.m. Play: “Hansel and
Gretcl”; Eastman School of
Music (Tickets for bus excursion at Norton), Rochester.
8:30 p.m. Play; “A Funny Thing
Happened On The Way To The
Forum"; Melody Fair
8:30 p.m. Play; "Julius Caesar”;
Stratford Theatre, Ont., Can.
9 p.m. Sports: 5th Annual AllAmerican Football Game: Civic

2:00

this system produces an

individual that is no less effective
than his American counterpart.
Undoubtedly, radical alterations
in the educational system are difficult to bring about, but what
is becoming increasingly obvious
is that changes in the faculty
student attitude are urgent. Faculty members must once again be
able to assume their primary role
of educators. Unfortunately, they
themselves arc caught up in a
system that requires scientific
results-thc publish or perish doctrine that produces an indiscriminate outpouring of scientific
material, very little of which is
significant. Things will probably
get worse before they get better,
but diversification of teaching institutes and research centers
seems to be one of the few ways
out.
One looks forward to the time
when they wish to be an educator
will be ambition enough and also

sufficient endorsement for appointment to faculty staff. There
is no doubt in anybody's mind
that the research worked is of
prime importance in our society,
but what is extremely dubious is
whether, under the present conditions, researcher and teacher can
co-exist harmoniously in the same
individual.
■N.R.l

Stadium.

Monday
1 p.m. Concert; George Crumb,
piano with instrumental ensem-

ble; Baird.
8:30 p.m. Play; “Music Man"
with Darrin McGavin: Melody
Fair.

Tuesday

Play: “Pygmalian", Shaw Fes

tival; Court House Theatre, Nia-

gara-On-The-Lake. Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: "Music Man”
Melody Fair.
8:30 p.m. Concert: (Repeat)

Baird

Wednesday

p.m

Excursion: Boat Tour

of Buffalo Harbor and Niagara
River; tickets in Norton.
Play: “Pygmalion", (see Tuesday)
8:30 p.m. Play: "Music Man”;

Melody

Fair.

Thursday

1 p.m. Movie: "Chapayev"; Con
Theatre, Norton.
8:30 p.m. Play; "Pygmalion”:
(see Tuesday)
8:30 p.m. Play: “Music Man";
Melody Fair.

Terence

pRSFession

STDDEHT
-

1

//

s

«

i

it:

"UJHftT PO

r

Voi)

MWW ,'CUPPlNfi'?

"

�-

Gleize Exhibit

By M. N. NOWAK
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery
is presenting an exhibit of cubist paintings which will be held
until August 29. Cubism, like
most other late 19th and early
20th century, movements has no
single exponent of theory. In
general it can be said to deal
with a new conception of reality (ie. opposed to those arising
during the Renaissance) foreshadowed by Cezanne. Cubisms
prime expression is through
form broken and fragmented into various facets of the object.
Reality is no longer one moment
or one point in time. In depicting all concepts of an object simultaneously reality is alienated
&gt;

from the world of natural representation. An object is seen in
all its dimensions at once with
time assuming the character of
a fourth dimension. But it must
be remembered that reality remains relevant in cubism.
The

though

by

no

means sole exponents of cubism were Braque and Picasso.
Albert Gleizes was a member of
the circle which later developed
around them in Paris, The paintings exhibited at the gallery are
representative, and a reflection
of his development as a painter.
In it a line of development can
be traced from the world of
natural objects to a world of
abstraction. An early work “The
Church at Creteiul” illustrates
his first attempts at rendering
form using color rather than
light. The peasants are presented
in almost acidic tones. Though
unified by color, a disjunction
of forms does prevail.
goes on to achieve
a unity of composition in a small
painting “Paris (La Quai)". Here
a
the color it the structure
factor which intermittently controls his paintings and later ascends to a dominant position in
his work. The structuring of
tones is prevalent, even to the
point of subordinating a rich
palette. The
subdued monochrome becomes dull, nevertheless the structural flow carries
this painting.
Later he

—

Early

Gleizes utilizes aspects

of the stylistic characteristics of
Braque and Picasso. We witness
a breakup of the planes, a fragmentation of the surface, and
the attempt to emphasize a geometrical structure, negating all
else. His palette is, a little too
grey and the structure of form
over-delineated and unjustified,
resulting in a composition lacking entirely in the discipline of
Classical Cubism.

Albright-Knox

at

Gleizes’ landscapes are a sort
“filtered Braque” and his
figures are reminiscent of Picasso. It is only in an early formative work, “Woman with Phlox”,
that Gleizes asserts his artistic
integrity. In this beautiful portrait of humanity, form, is delicately modeled, and the graduations of depth and tone are
subdued, yet living. Here he is
not a classical bubist of still life
and figure studies, but has a
social and environmental consciousness. The themes of city
life predominate his early years
and continue into his later periods.

of

the “Triptych”, but it lacks the
power to carry its meaning with
the proper impact. It is too stifled in a light palette of pastels
to obtain any depth.
Gleizes of this period is embued with a sense of simplicity,
a concern for experimentation
in color and a quest for reality.
When he gives his colors a living content, the reality of the
autonomous is achieved. Gleizes’
expression in forms of Cubism in
the style of Picasso and Braque
is his testing ground for the
reality to come
set forth by
principles of autonomous structure and color.
—

As a Cubist, Gieizes arrives at

CLASSIFIED
ADS

self expression with his
“Man on a Hammock,” which is
an assimilation of the style on
his own terms, characterized by
a balanced flow of structure in
grey, and enriched by a jewellike splash of color. An awareness of theme and color is demonstrated which is carried even
further in his “Brooklyn Bridge”
and “Here in Port.” In these two
works he goes beyond the limitations of Cubism itself. The structure becomes completely two-dimensional and the graduation of
tones is at a minimum to achieve

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CIRCLE ART
FILM FESTIVAL

PERSONAL: See Rick and Bob
at your friendly Norton Recrea
tion Desk.

FRI., SAT., SUN.
are

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Fellini's
LA 5TRADA

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PERSONAL: Roommate

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especially in “Brooklyn Bridge”.
On the other hand, the unity and
force of design of “Here in Port”
reveals a turn toward a world of
non-representationa! objects.

The Marx Bros.
IN

A DAY AT THE RACES
PLUS

2 Hitt in Color

Now Showing

Henceforth we see the autono-

Ski Party

structure proposed by
Gleizes and his friend Metzinger,
which is in opposition the structure derived from nature as advocated by Picasso and Braque
Being autonomous it is responsible for its own structure. This
form is best seen in the two
beautiful panels “Triptych”
(1930). Here color is the creator
of form in terms of a moving
fluid self contained, structure
and the colors are flat, but their
juxtaposition engenders colors
that seem to merge; form seems
to grow yet have a self contained depth and meaning. It is unfortunate that the Gallery was
unable to obtain the center panel.
mous

A NIGHT AT THE OPERA

Deborah' Walley

Frankie Avalon,

Bikini Beach

Starts Wod.

—

Funicello

Frankie Avalon, Annette

Von Ryan's Express
Frank Sinatra,

Howard

Trevor

2 Hitt

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in Color

Von Ryan's Express
Frank Sinatra, Trevor Howard

Starts

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KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

James Garner

Wed. in Color

The Family Jewels

Gleizes’ “Crucifiction” of the
time period conveys the
sense of the spiritual as

with Jerry Lewis

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same

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Doris Day,

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FATE IS THE HUNTER
Suzanne Pleshette, Glenn Ford,
Hope, Tuesday Weld,

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Hansel
and
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North Parira;
li

SPANISH tutoring offered by UB
Junior. Native Speaker. Call 834-

PERSONAL;

true

1945

|

On Review

leading,

Friday, June 25,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

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presents

SAM NOTO QUINTET

starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,
BUSES LEAVE
TOMORROW at 6:45 p.m.

Student. *1.50, Faculty $2.00
Other* $2.50

Ticket* in Norton Union

JOE ROMANO

Friday, Saturday

&amp;

BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure
3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

490 PEARL STREET

parking in

Phone 853-9806
rear

I
APPLY NOW
»

Sunday

I

SPECIAL

-

-

VACANCIES
i

I

WALK-IN EXAM

NO PRIOR APPLICATION NECESSARY
WHERE: East High School
820 Northhampton Street
Buffalo, New York
WHEN: Sat, Morn., June 26, 1965 at 9:30 A.M
Fri. Eve., June 25, 1965 at 7:00

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STATE UNIVERSITY 0F NEW Y0RK

i spectrum

VOLUME 15

AT BUFFALO

—

The first of many Joyce events
this summer is the Bloomsday
exhibit, June 16 through July
31 in the Joyce room on the second floor of Lockwood library.

Elections to House Council Offices for Schoelkopf Hall were
held on Thursday, June 10. Sandy
Simon, formerly Vice-President of
Tower House Council, was elected to the chairmanship of Schoelkopf. Representatives are Pete
Avery, Richard Pariser, Richard
Urbont. and Ray Stoner. David
Wierzchowski was elected Repre-

great novel Ulysses
one day, June 16, 1904,
in the life of a middle-aged Dubliner, Leopold Bloom, Joyceans
throughout the world commemorate June 16 every year as Bloomsday The exhibit features unpubJoyce’s

deals with

lished material centered around
the publishing history of Ulysses.
A large selection of letters dealing with the publication will be
on display, including much correspondence with Sylvia Beach,
the bookstore proprietor who first
published and distributed Ulysses.

sentative-at-Large.
The basic goals of the House
Council are to encourage broad
participation in sports, cultural,
and social events. Chairman Sandy Simon stated. "We are planning on about three-hundred dol-

An additional exhibit, on the
Lockwood balcony from June 22
through July 31, will display a
number of early and rare publications of Joyce, including the
broadsides “Gas from a Burner”
and “The Holy Office”; an early
essay, “The Day of the Babblement”; and correspondence with
various literary figures of Joyce’s
day, with examples of the editions
and magazines to which they pertain.

expended predominantly to enrich the social and cultural activities of the dormitory students
at summer sessions."
Cooke Hall, which serves as
summer for co-eds, is expected to
hold House Council elections late

selections, from the

large, unique and world-renowned Joyce collection at the University, will be of special interest
to the distinguished Joyce scholars who will be in residence this
summer. In addition, the faculty
and undergraduates will be afforded an opportunity to examine
items which are only infrequently

exhibited.
Further Joyce events (or the
summer include a panel discussion, July 9, by Dr. Thomas Connolly o( the English Department,
with visiting scholars Lionel Abel,
James Atherton, and Hugh Kenner: and a program, July 15, of

Anagnoson Named
For New Position
William

T,

Anagnoson, guid-

ance director and vice principal

of Dclevan
Machias Central
School, has been appointed to
tin' newly created post of admissions counselor in charge of secondary school admissions.
-

lars per session from the Housing Office. The money will be

of James Joyce by
Patrick Tuohy on display in
Lockwood Library.
Painting

readings from Ulysses and Finnegans Wake, by Dr. Richard A.
Hughes and Dr. Mac Hammond.

Miss Dorothy M. Haas, coordinator of student activities, was
presented with the Samuel P.
Capen Alumni Award last evening (Saturday, June 12) at the
26th
annual General
Alumni
Awards and Installation banquet.
The coveted award, the highest
award presented to alumni, is
given annually to an alumnus who
has
demonstrated
meritorious
contributions to the University
and its alumni.

1

new admissions counselor
ed a BA. degree from
eastern University. He has

work for certifica-

n guidance and administraHarvard University, Cor-

niversity,

and the Univer-

Rochester, and is presently

master’s degree program
State University at Bufhis two years at the
Machias School, Mr. Anhas instituted a guidance
*'ng program, begun spedent programs, and pub-

1

'g

a

~

periodical

guidance

to his position at Deledachias, Mr Anagnoson
or five years as a teacher
ac h at Livonia Central

NO. 31

Asian Professors
To Lecture Here
Five professors from Asian universities have been selected by
the School of Education at State
University at Buffalo to participate in. the Summer Session of
the Visiting Asian Professors
Project to be held June 28
through August 6.

Art Exhibition
Opens Monday
An exhibtion of twenty reproductions entitled "How to Look

received her bachelor’s degree
from the University of the Philip-

The paintings in the exhibition
are representative of the range
of art that the museum-goer is
confronted with and, with the assistance of small textual explanations, illustrate the important
features that should be looked
for in a work of art.
How to Look At a Painting is
comprised of a series of instructive steps, each illustrated by a

Mr. Yu, a lecturer in the Department of English at Taiwan's

Mr. Richard C. Shepard, who
was installed as the new president
of the General Alumni Board,
said that Miss Haas has displayed
qualities of excellence in the
educational profession since first
joining the University in 1934.

Other officers installed at the
banquet were: president-elect, Dr.
Stuart L. Vaughan; vice-president
for activities! and athletics, Mr.
Michael Guercio; vice-president
for development, Mr. Alexander
P. Aversano vice-president for
associations and clubs, Mr. Luke
C. Owens; treasurer, Dr. Thurbcr

signed to introduce the most important elements in observing a
painting. The pictures of an iden
tical scene by two different artists demonstrate the quality and
span of interpretation, the type
of alteration of the subject matter, and the diversified reactions
that a painting can induce.

FREE
GAME
NIGHT
From 8 to 11 p.m, Wednesday
the recreation facilities in the
basement of Norton Union will
be opened free to interested stu
dents.
On a first-comc first served ba
sis, with time limits if crowding

occurs, the bowling alleys, pool
tables and table tennis room will
be available to students presenting their 1.D. cards. Arrangements
for the free game night were
made by Mike DiGerlando of the

1

Norton Union Summer Planning
Committee.

The recreation area is normally
opened Monday through Friday
from 10 a m. to 11 p,m. and on
Saturdays from
10 am. to 7
is free and everyone is Welcome, so bring a frier
on Game Night
Everything

This kind of accentuation is deDOROTHY M. HAAS
Norton Co-ordinator for
Student Activities
LeWin;. presidential advisors: Mr
J. William Everett, Mr. Donald
B. Hofmar and Dr. Harold G.

Rosamilia.

‘Ugetsu to Be Shown
In Norton Thursday
’

Ugetsu, the grand prize winner
of the Venice Film Festival, will
be shown on Thursday at 1:00
and 8:00 p.m, in the Conference
theater in Norton, The film,
starring Machiko Kyo, will be
shown with English subtitles.

Cue Magazine said of the.

film.

pine’s and also attended Yale
and Syracuse Universities. From
1961-63, she served as a social
scientist for the National Science
Development Board of the Philippines. She is also a member of
the American Political Science
Association.

Provincial Normal University, is
a specialist in the field of Chinese
literature. He received his bachelor’s degree from National Taiwan
University and his master’s degree at Iowa State University and
served on the faculties of Tunghai, Soochow and National Cheghi
Universities of Nationalist China.
Mr. Yu will lecture July 5-9.
Mr.

Maruyama, assistant proat the International Christian University, Tokyo, will lecture July 12-16. He
has been an instructor at Cornell
University and Ithaca College and
is a specialist in modern applied
linguistics. Mr. Maruyama has
published several articles and
monographs on modern language

fessor of French

teaching

methods.

Dr. Aung, who will lecture July
19-23, has received a total of eleven degrees from the Universities of Rangoon, London. Cambridge and Dublin. The first
Burmese to receive a doctorate
degree from a British university
(in English literature), Dr. Aung
also holds degrees in history, economics, anthropology and law.
He has also served as vice-president of the Burma UNESCO National Commission, director of the
Rangoon Johns Hopkins Centre
for International Studies and
president of the Inter-University
Board of India. The author of
numerous books on Burmese culture. Dr, Aung is presently a visiting scholar in the School of
International Affairs at Columbia

University.
The closing session of the lecture series will be held July 26JO with Mr. Rajasekharaiah. a
reader of English at Karnatak
University, Dharwai, India. Mr.
Rajasekharaiah was a Visiting Asian Professor last semester A specialist in English and Indian literature, he received his bache
lor’s degree in English and philosophy from Mysore University
and his master's degree in Eng
lish literature from Nagpur Uni
versify in India.

Originally billed as a success
sor to Rasho-Mon, Ugetsu's action
takes place in sixteenth century
Japan The film concerns to peas,
ant neighbors who see the opportunity to fulfill their own desires
in the confusion of fighting and
pillaging by feudal armies. Each
travels to the city; the potter
hoping to become rich, and the
farmer craving military glory.
Both meet their downfalls and.
shocked into reality, return home
to resume their former lives.
Wrought id artistic form, in
which sight and sound are brilliantly merged in powerful theHas profound
atrical images
contemporary significance. The
9rl js u liversal. the poetry age
Distinguished by a pho
loveliness rare in mo

The five scholars, who are specialists in the humanities and socal sciences and speak fluent
Knglish, will lecture on the history, geography, religion, and political, social and economic structures of their respective countries. They include: Miss Dolores
Magnaye, Philippines Mr. Kwangchung Yu. Nationalist China; Mr.
Kleizaburo Maruyama, Japan: Dr.
Htin Aung, Burma and Mr. Turnkur R. Rajasekharaiah, India.
Miss Magnaye, who will lecture
from June 28-July 2, is research
program coordinator of the Program Implementation Agency for
the Philippine government. She

At a Painting" organized by Mr.
Bartlett H. Hayes, Jr. of the Addison Gallery of American Art
will be shown to the public from
June 21 to August 22 on the sec
ond floor of Norton Hall. The
exhibition is sponsored by the
New York State Council on the
Arts and is circulated by The
American Federation of Arts.

specific painting exemplifying
the challenge of understanding
and communicating with a picture
The inquiring gallery observer
is transported from Etruscan Art
of the fifth century B.C. through
the Italian Rococo, Impression
ism, and the Cubism ot Pablo Pi
easso not by an emphasis on
chronology, but by an emphasis
on the different aspects of each
painting.

“&gt;

tli the coordination of the adion of students from secon- schools and the maintenance
relations between the seconT school guidance personnel
the University’s Admissions
He will also supervise a
h school visitation program
oughout the state.

this week.

Haas Receives Capen Award

Mr Anagnoson’s new duties in-

graduate

WEDNESDAY IS

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1965

Lockwood Library Sponsors Schoelkopf Hall
Bloomsday Exhibit Announces House
Joyce
Council Officers

These

1

The Visiting Asian
Project, founded by

Machiko Kyo and Masayuki Mori
star in "Ugetso" to be shown
Thursday at 1 and 8 p.m. in
Norton Union.

lion pictures
The film is co sponsored by the
Summer Session Planning Committee and the Norton Activities
"

too:

inators

Professors
Dr. Burvil
H. Glenn, professor of education
at State University at Buffalo, is
now in its third year and is being
sponsored by the Department of
State and the Fulbright program
The summer project is restricted
to the £tate University units at
Buffalo} Oswego, Potsdam, Cort
land and Brockport where the
visiting scholars will rotate* on a
weekly

basis.

�Friday, June 18, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO
For COMPLETE Banking Service Visit, call or write

Manufacturers

&amp;

Traders

Trust Company
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OFFICE

(opposite campus)
MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

Okoniewski Resigns Position
Ed.M, from the University, He
is a member of the Association

Mr. John Z. Okoniewski, director of housing, has resigned his
position to accept a newly-created post as director of residence
life at Clarkson College (Pots-

of College and University Housing Officers, the New York State
Association of Deans and Guidance Personnel, the New York
State Counselors Association and
the American Personnel and
Guidance Association.

dam. NY.).,

Mr. Okoniewski’s resignation
becomes effective July 31. A replacement for the position has not
been named.

Named to his present post in
1960, Mr. Okoniewski joined the
staff of the University in 1957
as an assistant director of Norton
Hall. In 1958, he was named assistant coordinator of student ac-

Private
Parties

The Students for a Democratic Society will meet
tonight at 8:00 p.m. in
room 233 in Norton.

tivities.

IESTA ROOM

He received both his B.A. and

BIG OR TALL
WE FIT THEM ALL

HOTEL WORTH
200 Main St. TL2-0111

1

—

GRENELL MEN'S SHOP

i

i

)
;

3249 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, N. Y.

FOXHALL VILLAGE
STABLES

j
Dr. Thomas E. Connolly, Professor of English, was recently
elected president of the Catholic
Council on Civil Liberties of
Western New York.
The CCOL is a national organization whose non-professional
membership function to support
and preserve civil liberties by
means of open discussions, letter
writing, and other means of persuasion.
A graduate of Fordham University and the University of
Chicago, Dr. Connolly was formerly a member at Loyola University, Chicago, and Creighton
University, Omaha, Nebraska.

6161 GENNESEE STREET, LANCASTER
5 Miles from Transit Road

English Pleasure Riding and Lessons Given
Boarding and Training of Show Horses
Lessons: Vs
—

hr.

—

Hacking: $3.00 hr.

$3.50

SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE

NT 3-9755—NT 3-6617

•

Stable

Connolly Elected
CCCL President

—

NT 4-4400 Mgr. John Shaffner

EARN WHILE YOU LEARN

AVON
offers earning opportunity for resident
students during summer session.

GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHINGS
NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING
GOHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.
80 Metcalfe St

Call TL 3-4417 or TL 3-9569
Between 9 and 5 for

Appointment

,

Buffalo, N Y

,

Ph. 853-2121

JHAUH&amp;KSI

N. Y.
NF 4-4404 of NF 4-4421
� Featuring ■ Complete Chinese Family
Dinner At Your Request
� Complete Luncheons From $1.25
if Complete Full Course Dinners—$1.75
A Excellent Facilities for Weddings, Banquet!,
and Parties up to 300
10% Student Discount
� Tropical Drinks
�Credit Cards Honored
HOW YOU CAN DANCI TO
4170 Main St. at Transit Rd. r Willlamsvilla,

——

BONO
EVERY

&amp;

FRI.

HIS MUSIC

AND

SAT.

EVENING

Dr. Wall Appointed
To UB Foundation
Dr. Walter Scott Walls has been
appointed board-member of the
University of Buffalo Foundation
by the State University trustees.
Dr. Walls’ appointment follows
the resignation of Alfred H.

Kirchhofer, Editor of the Buffalo
Evening News.

The UB Foundation is a non
profit group that was initiated
when the University joined the
State System in 1962. The foundation handles all alumni affairs
and encourages and accepts gifts
and bequests for the University.

OPEN

Yoyr U. of B. Drug Store
Lisbon Bailey
-

Drug Co., Inc.
Prescription Specialists
3378 Bailey Ave.
Phone TP 3-1830

DEALS JEWELERS
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next to Amherst Theater)

j Watches
|

j
j

APPLY NOW
SPECIAL

-

-

VACANCIES
I

I

WALK-IN EXAM

NO PRIOR APPLICATION NECESSARY
WHERE: East High School
820 Northhampton Street
Buffalo, New York
WHEN: Sat. Morn., June 26, 1965 at 9:30 A.M
Fri. Eve., June 25, 1965 at 7:00 P.M.

EXPERT

—

Diamonds

WATCH

AND

JEWELRY REPAIRING
ENGRAVING AND

|
(

j
|

j

j

DIAMOND SETTING

I

Work Done on Premises

j

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TP 6 -4041
9 p.m.
Open 9 a.m.
-

Your One Stop Service Cen'

Laundry and Dry Cl earn ng
Dry cleaning machines
-8 lbs. S2.00

�Friday,

June 18, 1965

SPECTRUM

Editorial (Comment

.

.

3 Out of 4

.

Late last week the Disarmament Commission of the
Nations, by a vote of 89-0, approved a World Disarmament Conference which will include Communist
China. The United States was among the 16 nations abstaining on the vote.

United

1) a

fear

than $8'4 million.

In a report announced today.
Dr. Arthur 'L. Kaiser, director of
admissions and records and acting chairman of the University's
Scholarship Committee, said that
13,044 students including full*and
part-time undergraduate, graduate, and professional students, received either scholarship or loan
assistance equalling $8,290,001.
The total enrollment at the University was 19,157. The figures

more effective in the 17-nation Geneva Conference. Both
reasons are absurd rationalizations.

It is more than just naive to believe that the Geneva
Conference can achieve meaningful results when one of

the world’s upcoming nuclear powers is excluded from
the bargaining tables. As far as the U.S. fear of a propaganda forum is concerned, the government’s failure to
enthusiastically co-operate with and assume a leadership
role in any movement having the remotest possibility to
achieve peace is all the propaganda that a hostile foreign power could aspire to.

include $37,797 from the University of Buffalo Foundation,
which provided financial aid to
110 students.

The U.S. abstention was hardly indicative of the
conservative reaction to the feasibility of world government and peace movements; our commitment to the
United Nations is sufficient to dispel, that hypothesis.
The vote more aptly represents the stubborn, prideful
adherence to the idea that Red China does not exist
a
reasoning which clearly fails to justify the abstention.

According to Dr. William J.
O'Connor, Foundation Director,
these scholarships were made
possible through contributions
from alumni and private citizens.

"The University of Buffalo
Foundation's contributions to stu-

—

dents is only a small portion of
the tota.1 financial aid picture at
this time,” he said. “However, we
are gratified that the principle

U.S. arguments for peaceful co-existence can hardly
be taken seriously if we reject even the slimmest chance
at progress toward multi-lateral disarmament.

of combined public and private
support for a great University
is gaining increasing acceptance
in the Buffalo area. Scholarships
are an excellent example since;
in most cases, these 110 individ
uals could not have come to the
University without Foundation
support.

FSA NEEDS REVISION

In early May the Student Senate Executive and
the FSA Investigating Committee met with Dr. Claude
E. Puffer, UB Vice-President for Business Affairs and
Treasurer of the Faculty Student Association.

Dr, Kaiser pointed out that because of joint public-private sup-

port, the problem of financing a
college education has become a
thing of the past.

The report of the meeting, released early this week,
detailed Dr. Puffers’ request that an outline of student
opinion on the organization of the FSA be available
to President Gould’s task force which is currently investigating the association (Spectrum, June 11).

“The old saw that a college ed
ucation is impossible because of
expenses is no longer true." he
said.

It is far from clear how one can expect students
to have formed constructive criticisms on what has to
them become an issue clouded by an acute lack of thorough, first-hand information. We know little more than
that we should know more andiJhat FSA policies, especially price policies, far from reflect the interests of the
students.

THE

Of the more than 15,000 students receiving aid, Dr. Kaiser
said that approximately 50 per
cent of them obtained aid from
more than one source.
Loans totaling $58,750 were giv
cn to 110 students studying in the
area of the health professions, A

total of 14 students received $7,
from several endowed loan
funds.

475

The Editors-in-Chief assume full responsibility for the content of the
not
,ec
"um. Editorial opinion is an expression of their views and does
fy
cessarily reflect that of the Spectrum staff or the students at this univers

Subscription $1.50 for twelve editions,
circulation 8,000.
Represented fpr national advertising by
420
National Advertising Service, Inc ,
Madison Avenue, New York, N, Y.

By PAUL KOPYCINSKI

The Catalyst, a new, biennial

publication at UB, made its debut on campus this week. The
journal, which is oriented toward
the study of human society is “a
stimulus to the free interchange

of ideas.”

In this vein, Mark Kennedy's
“Some New Teeth for Old Saws:
A Plea for Problem Orientation
in the Social Sciences” is a high-

light of this first issue. Kennedy
parallels Durkhcim’s division of
labor philosophy with the plight

of

the modern

student,

which

originates through increasingly
complex categorization. He chides
Durkheim's enclosing the object
of observation so that he couldn’t
see the outside variable, Kennedy rhetorically queries the dcsir
ability of further categorizing and
advocates just such a free interchange of ideas embracing all
types of people who have similar
thoughts. While the Durkhcim

section of the article maintains
a scholarly distance, the conclusion solidly brings the point to
within grasp
In "A New Imperialism', Richard Salter traces early theories
of Imperialism through to contemporary imperialistic theory.
Salter maintains that, 'the goal of
the militarist is to maintain the
power of America and of themselves," He also states that “The

8:30 p.m Play: "Inherit The
Wind": Kissing Bridge Playhouse, Clenwood.

Photographs: Buffalo Museum
Science.
Sunday
Exhibit: Collection of Joyce
Photography Exhibit: Prize
Manuscripts and First Editions;
Winning Photographs Made By
Lockwood Library.
Americans, Mexicans. Slid Can

I

Today

12:30 p.m. Meeting:
9:30 a m
School of Social Welfare; R

.

-

1

234 Norton
10 a m. 2 p.m. Meeting: Western New York School Study
Council; R 233, Norton.

I
I

8
For
233,
8:30

(

-

I

I

I

market mentality has been super-

ceded by the warmaking mentality.” He concludes that the military is obsolete. While this article is authoritatively written and
tcstimonially supported, one won
ders if such expression would be
possible if the military were abolished unless, of course, the Com-

munists abandon their world domination plans.
A further interesting approach
to human society is expounded in
Thomas Vanderbeck's "A Trampled World,” Vanderbcck evolves
the plight of the native African
through the poetry and literature
that has sprung from oppression
by the white man. His excitingly
comprehensible use of primary
material, studies this still cur-

rent problem.

The Catalyst's creators express
the desire to not merely attempt
to reflect an intellectual revolution, but also to bring it forth
This movement is in the true university spirit and is a much needed step away from today's ten
dency toward “radical nothing-

ness crusades.”
All contributors to The Catalyst's birth are currently UB students and faculty. Subscriptions
at a cost of one dollar per year
are available at Box G, Norton
Union. Campus sale will begin

in Norton this week. The editors encourage contributions for
their forthcoming issues.

|

,

10 p.m. Meeting: Students
a Democratic Society; R

Norton.
pm.

Play:

"Henry

IV";

Stratford Theatre, Ont., Can.
8:30 p.m. Play: "Dead Hand";
Off

Broadway

Theatre

I

I
|

■

Photography Exhibit: 1964
Snapshot Award
Newspaper

,
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y

Fair.

Forum”;

Editors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE
DAVID EDELMAN

DALLAS GARBER

The Catalyst'-A Stimulus
To Free Exchange of Ideas

8:30 p.m. Play: "Inherit The
Art Exhibit: (see Monday).
Wind"; Kissing Bridge PlayArt Exhibit: Albert Gleizes, cub
Wednesday
house, Glenwood.
ist paintings: Albright Knox
8 11 p.m. GAME NIGHT, free
Saturday
Art Gallery
use of recreational facilities in
2 p in. Play: “Kalstaff"; Strat
8 a m. • 5:30 p m. Meeting: Cre
basement Norton Union.
fold Theatre, Ont , Can
ative Problem Solving Institute
Photography Exhibit: (see Sun8:30 p.m Play: "Julius Caesar"
Norton.
day).
Ont., Can
Stratford
Theatre,
8:30 p.m Play: “A Funny Thing
Art Exhibit: (see Monday).
8:30 p.m Play: "Let's Not And
Happened On the Way to the
Off Broadway
Say
We
Did":
Thursday
Melody

,

WILLIAM SIEMERING

"

All Week

,

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State UniverV of New York at Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall, University
mpus, Buffalo, New York 14214. Published for the twleve weeks of summer
ssions from June 11th to August 27.

Faculty Advisors

'm mv Tomow.ocmHs’, awpmai
ME THE HAPPIEST HAJJ ALIVE.

WEEKLY CALENDAR... June 18-25

;

SPECTRUM

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

STDDEnT

More than three out of every
four students attending SUNYAB
during the 1964-65 academic year
received some form of financial
assistance which totaled more

t'hat the conference would be nothing more than a propaganda forum and 2) a belief that negotiations would be

As a first step in any planned reorganization of the
FSA, the Spectrum suggests a shift in the present structure of five administrators, two faculty and two students
to a more compatible structure of three administrators,
three faculty-members and three students. This would
ensure both students and faculty , of an opportunity to
sit on the Board of Directors and thus acquire an effective voice in the association.

PR2Fe§Slon:

Students Get
Financial Aid

WHAT’S THE POLICY?

Reportedly, U.S. opposition was based on

PACE THREE

adians; Buffalo Museum Sci
'
ence.
8:30 p.m. Play; "Dead Hand";
Off Broadway Theatre.

Monday

Photography Exhibit: (see Sun
day).
Art Exhibit: “How to Look At
a Painting”; 2nd floor corridors, Norton

day).

°°

m
.P,
VVcl are:

®. oc ' al

‘

(see

Sun

•

R 234

‘i

Nor,on Mal1
12 30 p.m Luncheon: Bacteriol- I
ogy and Immunology: Charles
Room, Norton.
I

12:30 p m Luncheon: Clergy
Foundation, R 240 48. Norton
1 p m Film: “Ugetsu”; Capen
Hall. R 139
8 p m Film: "Ugetsu", Capen
Hall. R 139
9 p m Public Night at the Observatory: Vega. Brightest Star,
In the Summer Sky, Buffalo
Museum Science (last night un-

til

August 5th)

Photography Exhibit;

Tuesday

Photography Exhibit

a. "1

®

?, ch

'

.

I
i
I

I
.

(see

day I.

Art Exhibit:

.

(see Monday

Sun

�PACE FOUR

SPECTRUM

Boulevard Gardens
Court Motel
Blvd.

NX 2-3842
Single &amp; Family Units
10 Minutes from U.B.

Coming Soon! T. H. L.

n ivy j
Poise
1086 Elmwood Ave I

|
\

S

‘-i-

’i

.

fv-j

(be». Forest &amp;
xfe ;»o£fe3cM&gt; '0'S 4%

Bird)

1945

Opera Under the Stars
A bus excursion to Rochester
to see the opera Hansel and
Crete! will leave campus next

The opera is free.
Tickets for the bus transporta
tion are on sale in Norton.
Saturday.

The opera will be held

out-

doors and so students planning
to go should take warm clothing
FIRST BUFFALO SHOWING

UPFROM
THEBEACH
CLIFF ROBERTSON RED BUTTONS
Also

GOODBYE, CHARLEY
in Color
Debbie Reynolds, Tony Curtis
Pat Boone

NIAGARA Drive-In Theater
1701 Niagara Falls Blvd.
Tonawanda

and blankets

Buses will depart from Norton
(Tower Side)
at 6:45
promptly. Student tickets are
$1.50, faculty and staff $2.00,
others $2.50,
Union

The excursion to the opera
was arranged by Miss Ann Hicks,
Assistant Co-ordinator of Student Activities of Norton Union.

The excursion is part of the
summer program planned by the
Summer Planning Committee.
In July, excursions are planned
to take students to the Stratford
Festival in Ontario, Canada and
later to Rochester again to see
Madame Butterfly.

HERTEL

AVE.-TF6-74M

Bette

Charlton Heston Richard Harris

Color

•

Plus DR. STRANGELOVE
STARTS WED

2 Hits in

Kwan

Nancy

Now Playing
Ingmar Bergman's
—

THE SILENCE

�

Davis, Olivia Dehaviland

"HUSH, HUSH
SWEET CHARLOTTE"

t

ALL

Doris Day, James Garner

THESE’WOMEN

X•K

Bergman’s last movie and his

{

—Starting Monday—
FELLINI FESTIVAL
The White Sheik

only

*

+

"MOVE OVER
DARLING"

?The

color film!

and

Young and

2 Hits

mm i

Color

in

Ski Party

Frankie Avalon, Deborah

Walley

ALBERT R. BROCCOLI I nri l| PflUlMCDV
-HARRy SALTZMAN S OWN

Frankie Avalon,

Annette

.

LUNNcRMni007^

Bikini Beach
Funicello

fuming

..»

“GOLDFIN6ER"

x.i... u
TECHNICOLOR'
UNITED ARTISTS
Student Discounts Both Theatres!
Starts Jun. 30
,.™

Jantzen's trim trunk with the
Of

surfing lookl

NOW SHOWING

NOW

LOVE HAS MANY FACES

PLAYING!

Lana

lastex duck,

Turner, Cliff Robertson

-

Steve McQueen, Lee Remick

Starts Wed

—

7 Great Pictures in Color

JAZZ

Von Ryan's Express

from the contrast Color waistband,

at the leg,

Move Over Darling

and styled with coin pocket and drawcord

Doris

Day,

James Garner

SAM NOTO QUINTET

BUFFALO'S ONLY AFTER HOUR JAZZ SESSION
A complete breakfast menu for your pleasure
3 AM to 6 AM Friday and Saturday
All Guest Stars Invited

490 PEARL STREET

r

The SPECTRUM needs people
that can sell Advertisements.
Work with our
here

Staff

or

at

home

in

your

Phone
parking in rear

853-9806

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's
KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

WALT
Licensed agent
broker
Class of 1941

2900 Dalowor* Av*., K*fimor*, N. Y

JAZZ
HOTEL

Starring, direct from the Woody Herman Band,

Can
You
Sell

jantzen

IN YOUR WARDROBE Com* To

-

JOE ROMANO
Friday, Saturday &amp; Sunday

SPORTSWEAR FOR SPORTSMEN

Daslt

JAZZ
presents

$7.95

Qdoentuie

-

PRINCE EDWARD

Frank Sinatra, Trevor Howard

trimmed In the same seagoing color

a

Pussycat?"

BABY THE RAIN MUST FALL

the trunk is laced

28-38,

"What's New

*w**a\»vuM»w mmisooMAiMsmnmms

Color

WE CAN INSURE YOU, PERIOD!
We can insure you regardless of value of
car or age or driving record!

TWO LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

2608 MAIN STREET at Fillmore
(across from Don Allen's)

free

TF 2-8092

time.

493 MICHIGAN

INTERESTED?

(across from Little Harlem Hotel)

TL 2-0820

CALL US
(mention

*

WHM8*;
*

SOFT SKIN ON BLACK SILK
STARTS WED.

I
J

thfe’Passionate*

SWEET ECSTACY
Elke Sommers, Pierre Brice
also

»

»

JAMES BOND IS BACK IN ACTION!

SHOWING

I
»

MMMM

NOW

t

—

J

The World of Suzi Wong

*

�“The most shocking movie I’ve
{ever seen” —N.Y. Daily News

Color

Robert Mitchum, Carroll Baker

�*��****

CIRCLE ART
FILM FESTIVAL

{

Mister Moses
William Holden,

*

�

Academy Awards
MAJOR DUNDEE

•_jjr

~

Winner of 3

SHOWING

Albright-Kno* Art Gallery.

VorthPark^i �J
1428

NOW

"L'Etoite Grand Edition," by C.C,
is now on display at the

Find

'

2424

Niagara Falls

[

Friday, June 18,

this ad and you get personalized free gift)

�</text>
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_

GOOD

|f£^5

VOLUME 15

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1965

NO. 30

FEINBEHG
OATH
ABOLISHED
Samuel B. Gould, President of
the State University of New York,
announced yesterday that the controversial Feinberg Certificate,
adopted in 1956 by the State
Board of Trustees, has been abolished. Its elimination will become effective on July 1, at which
time a new procedure for adherence to the Feinberg Law will be
put into effect.

The Feinberg Disclaimer has
been a required component of all
faculty files, for final authorization to a teaching post at the uni-

versity. The applicant to any instruction position certifies, upon
signing the certificate, that he is
not a present a member of the
Communist Party or, if he has

been, he has communicated the
fact to the president of the university and that he recognizes the
Regent Rules on Subversive Activities as “terms of his employment.” The disclaimer was the
state ordinances on subversives.

Under the new system, a candidate for a university post is
shown a copy of the Feinberg

Law. It is then the responsibility
of the appointing officer to determine whether or not the individual can seek such employment in
accordance with the ordinance.
The appointing officer is then authorized to conduct any inquiry
deemed necessary to further resolve the candidate’s eligibility
under the regent’s rules for subversive activities.

Refusal

of a

candidate to answer any question
relevant to this inquiry may be
considered sufficient grounds to
refuse the. appointment

CERTIFICATE

Anyone who is a member of the Communist

Party or of any

organize'

ttoo that advocates the violent overthrow of the Government oLeha

Ifcltcd States or of the State
thereof cannot
Anyone

who

waa previously a

meat of the Itaited States
subdivision

signing

thereof

member of

Activities"

directed to

the Govern

political

thsKPluttVead the publication

of the IMlversity

ys.

York,
*-

raqetter

PTSt,, entitled "Regcma Rules on Subversive

wMh the Instructions set

rules ahttf-eguiations as

part

itbyit*is of

well

as

forth

above and understand

the laws cited therein

my employment. 1 further certify

mehroer of the Cm.imunlst Party

President

Pkm/6r

President before

is

that

VVwmbrr of

(fcieKhrow of

the

,J«e
of the S*r

a

the Communist

or of the State of New

this certificate.

is to certify

V

employed by the State Ubiversity.

be

organization that advocates the violent

of any

This

New York or any political

of

the Communist

Pajty

I

and that If

I

have

have communicatedthat

of the State University of

are

th*t 1 am not
ever been a
fact to

the

New York.

Signature

THE FEINBERG OATH

—

President Gould left the door
to employment open to all those
dismissed for refusal to sign the
certificate while they, at the same
time, are not members of subversive organizations. Among those
fired for their failure to sign at
UB are George Starbuck, Harry

A RELIC OF THE PAST
Keyishian and Gregory Corso
President Gould remarked that,
"The
procedures will
new

strengthen the university’s intent that academic freedom shall
not be infringed upon and constitutional rights not impaired."

GOULD ANNOUNCES
UNANIMOUS DECISION
In an exclusive interview with
the Spectrum after last night's
press conference, SUNY President Samuel B. Gould elaborated
on the events leading to his announcement that the State Univer
sity's Board of Trustees had unanimously voted to abolish the con
troversial Feinberg disclaimer,
and the effects this new policy

would have on future university

hiring practices

Asked about the circumstances
leading up to. the Board’s deci :
sion, President Gould said. “It was
a unanimous decision. I intro

duced it at the May meeting and
we reached a tentative agreement. Then I drew up, or rather
a statement
I had drawn up
and it was passed at the June
When
meeting without comment
further questioned about the
timeliness of his, announcement
he said
t occurred at Ih
”

STATE UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT
SAMUEL B. GOULD

time merely because it took this
long to

work it out."

President Gould added that it
. impossible for me to
was ",

tell" what would be the effect of
the Board's decision on the Fed
eral hearing starting in Buffalo
tomorrow to hear arg"ments as
to the constitutionality of the

Feinberg Law.

The President was asked if support for the abolition of the Feinberg certificate on this campus,
especially that from the Academic Freedom Committee, had influenced the Board's decision.
He replied that, "Of course my
own feelings have always been
that the certificate is not essential to the Feinberg Law." And
that, "Yes, the feelings of the
academic community had an effect on the Board."

President Gould further related
that reimbursement of those fired
because of their refusal to sign

the

disclaimer,

Keyishian.

such

as

Harry
ex

would have to be

amined by our legal counsel, he
is the only one who can answer
the question.”
In an effort to clarify the announcement. President Gould was
asked by the Spectrum if applicants interviewed would be presented with any specific question
concerning political affiliations.
"Not necessarily It will be up to
the interviewer to come to a
judgment as to whether or not
there is reason to ask such a
question We arc relying on the
judgment of the interviewer, a
department head, of dean, or
some other presidential appoirv
lee."

When asked if the questions
would then be professional, rather

than political, he answered, "that
is right, not political
"

President

Gould's

comment

when told that the Buffalo aca
demic community greeted his an
nouncemenl with great jubilation

�Tuesday, June 15, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

History of Feinberg
And The University
The State University of New
York at Buffalo was known until
recently as the University of Buffalo. It was a private university
with a long tradition of academic
freedom instituted under its renowned Dean, Samuel Capen. In
September of 1962 the University
became part of the State University of New York, joining with
other campuses under the State
Board of Regents.
This Board of Regents had
adopted the Regents Rules on
Subversive Activities (The Feinberg Law) prior to the inclusion
of the University of Buffalo, as
part of its regulatory code governing the State University. When
the University of Buffalo became
part of the State University system, these rules were applied to
its faculty and staffj'Jalthough
promises had been given that all
faculty and staff would be retained under the State University,
and that no “loyalty oaths” would
be applied on this campus. The
procedure selected to implement
the Law was the Feinberg Certificate
it was in effect a
loyalty oath.
—

The appearance of the Certifi-

cates in' faculty mail boxes at the

end of Christmas vacation caused
much consternation and the local
chapter of the American Association of University Professors was
able to gain a stay of execution
until the faculty had had a chance
to discuss and debate the professional and moral implications of
the requirement to sign a loyalty
oath.
The A.A.U.P. held meetings and
the Liberal Religious Fellowship
held public meetings after the
Student Senate failed to take action on the matter. A debate
ensued which included the entire academic community, and at
the height of the debate, the
Spectrum solicited signatures on
a petition asking for the abolition
of the Feinberg Certificate which
was delivered by a contingent of
students to the State University
offices in Albany. The students
were unable to deliver the petitions to Governor Rockefeller’s
office and picketed in front of
the Legislative and Judicial build•

ings

The Student Senate and the
A.A.U.P. then held public debates
on the Certificate and the Law.
which attracted hundreds of students and faculty. The Student
Senate and the A.A.U.P passed
resolutions condemning the Certificate and asking for the repeal
of the Law. Several teachers re-

THE

fused to sign and two of them,
Starbuck and Harry Keyishian were fired as a result.
One teacher, Paul Sporn, signed
the certificate and was fired for
alleged infringements of the Feinberg Law despite his signature.
George

The House Committee on UnAmerican Activities held hearings in Buffalo and subpoenaed
some of the academicians involved in the Feinberg controversy.
The Student Senate sponsored
a demonstration against the Committee and accused it of violating
academic freedom, as well as
violating the Constitution.

Early in the ’64-’65 academic

year the Faculty-Student

Commit-

tee for Academic Freedom was
forced to oppose the firings and

harassments of teachers occasioned by the Feinberg Law and Cer-

tificate. The Committee met with
the new president of the State
University, Dr. Samuel B. Gould,
to present their grievences and
to ask his help in abolishing the
Certificate and repealing the Law.
They picketed on the afternoon
of mid-winter commencement and
instituted a program of demonstrations and concrete proposals
for the abolition of the Certificate and the bolstering of Academic Freedom at Buffalo and
throughout the State University
system.

In the spring semester of ’65,
noted poet Gregory Corso
came to Buffalo to teach. He was
well into the semester, teaching
a course in Shelley, when he too
was fired for failure to sign the
Feinberg Certificate. This created great consternation on the
campus and when Gray McArthur
was threatened with dismissal
for the same reason, Dr. Gould
stepped in and halted dismissal
proceedings.

the

In the meantime, those professors who had refused to sign
from the time the Certificate
was
imposed brought action
against the University on constitutional grounds. These actions
were at first successful stays of
execution until the close of school
for the summer, but were later
reversed by a higher court. It
is these cases which were decided
to involve “substantial constitutional questions”
the questions
which will be decided by the
three-judge federal panel here
in Buffalo in proceedings to be—

gin

tomorrow.

in the time that has elapsed
between the original impostion

SPECTRUM

The summer edition of the official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Publication Office at Norton hall, University
Campus, Buffalo, New York 14214 Published for the twleve weeks of summer
sessions

from June

11th to August

27.

Edilors-in-Chief
RAYMOND VOLPE

1

DAVID EDELMAN

Business Manager
RUTH SHAPIRO

Faculty Advisors
WILLIAM SIEMERING
DALLAS GARBER
The Editors-in-Chief assume full responsibility for the content of the
opinion is an expression of their views and does not
necessarily reflect that of the Spectrum staff or the students at this university.

Spectrum, Editorial

Second Class,

&amp;
«CLb

Postage Paid at Buffalo, NY
Subscription $ 1.50 for twelve editions,
circulation 8,000
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madison Avenue, New York, N, Y.

of the Certificate and its abolition
by President Gould yesterday,
the University has lost the services of several excellent teachers
who were either fired as a result
of their unwillingness to sign,
or who refused to come to an
institution which employed loyalty oaths.
During their first meeting with
President Gould at winter commencement, the Academic Freedom committee presented an alternative method of implementation of the Law. They expressed
a pressing desire to see the Law
repealed, but suggested that there
were ways of implementing the
Law which were not odious to
them as the requirement of a
loyalty oath. It is interesting to
note that the procedures outlined
by President Gould in his recent
announcement are exactly the
same as those procedures suggested to him by the Academic
Freedom Committee at their
meeting of February 12.

Association Members
Comment on Decision
The Student-Faculty Association for Academic Freedom was
established early last year under
the leadership of Kim Darrow,
Henry Simon, and Jeremy Taylor.
Kim Darrow, the association’s
president, remarked upon receiving the news of Gould’s announcement, “On behalf of the Student
Faculty Association for Academic
Freedom, I would like to express
our delight upon the abolition of
the Feinberg Certificate.”
"When the executive committee
of our organization met with
President Gould in February,”
Darrow continued, “he indicated
his concern over the state of
affairs caused by the Feinberg
Law and Feinberg Certificate. At
that time he stated it would be
a matter of months and comprehensive effort; favorable results
have indeed occurred in a few
short months.
“These developments, of course,
provide a greatly improved educational atmosphere within the
State University system. However, at present the Feinberg Law
itself still exists. We fervently
hope for a favorable decision
from the court cases of the nonsigners.

“In any event, this organization will continue to work for
the elimination of the Feinberg
Law and all other obstacles to
academic freedom.”
Henry Simon, one of the founders of the association and senator
emeritus of the Student Association, had this to say of the
abolition: “I am delighted to
hear of the decision by President
Gould. Those of us who have
labored these recent years for
academic freedom are very much
gratified by this action. President
Gould and the Board of Trustees
are to be warmly commended.”
“As I look back upon the development of interest in the Feinberg situation, I recall various
meetings, rallies, and efforts
(such as our trip to Albany) which
once seemed hopeless, sly, idealistic, and futile. But now, in
retrospect, their effectiveness is
clear. Students and faculty, working together in common concern,
were of great influence in the
abolition of this certificate.
“As my friend Jeremy Taylor
remarked upon hearing of the
decision. 'We accomplished a
Berkeley without a riot.’ May I
offer my congratulations to Jeremy, Kim Darrow, and to all the
interested persons who participated in the efforts to bring
about such an encouraging and
significant decision.”

Editorial (Comment

.

.

.

Important Decision
The unanimous decision of the State University’s
Board of Trustees to abolish the Feinberg disclaimer is
a great stride toward ridding the academic community
of political harassment and returning it to academic excellence and unfettered scholarship. This decision has
been long sought and therefore is all the more joyously
received.

Praise For President Gould
Much credit for this accomplishment belongs to
President Samuel B. Gould. He has demonstrated ,unwaivering energy and courage in his fight for a strong
and free academic community, one that can be assured
that its interests are being considered by the State
Administration. At a time when the bridge between administrations and faculty-student bodies is suffering great
strain through lack of communication and respect, President Gould’s action is especially welcomed. It is when
this kind of communication is ignored that conditions
deteriorate to the point that sparks rioting and rebellion
as occurred at Berkeley.

Not Enough
The abolition of the Feinberg disclaimer is an inv
portant step toward academic freedom. But politica
tests persist, although not in a written form, when interviewers use the Feinberg Law as a means to judge the
eligibilty of applicants. Political discrimination has not
ended, but rather has been reduced to a form more in
harmony with the goals of a university.

What Must Be Done

?

In education worthy of its name, teacher and student must be free to follow their thoughts wherever the:
may lead. The university society must be free from th
endless corruption and suppression of the world: yet.
it must include the ideas of the suppressor and the
suppressed. Just as all men must be free to express
their views to a committed public; all men must be free
to present their views to the uncommitted mind. Onb
the individual can choose his beliefs; they cannot be
chosen for him
...

The Feinberg Law Must Be Abolished

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WELCOME

TO
TO

,./ci

(

|

VOLUME 15

-—i

;rrrrr
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
—

GOV. BROWN

,

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1965

fjCLUSIVE

Local Playwright Charges
The Buffalo Evening News
With Suppression of Play

NO.

Council Bans Beer on Campus
Survey of Parents to
Remain Confidential
Hi a unanimous decision by a
quorum of the University Council, permission to serve beer and
light wines in the Rathskellar and
on special occasions was denied.
The issue was resolved by the

Junior Chamber of Commerce
Sponsors Play—-Not Author
‘News’ Editor Denies Charges

(See

Review P.

the fact that the News has not
reviewed his play,
A spokesman for the Jr. Chamber said “we sponsored a playwriting contest and Mr. Fried
happened to be the winner. Our
only motive was to encourage
live theater in the Buffalo area.
We sponsor the play, not Mr.
Fried
his ideas and beliefs."
Concerning the play itself, the
Jr. Chamber spokesman said,
“we’re satisfied to the extent that
we support the feelings of the
experts who judged it.”
...

Bill Urged

thor's life as a candidate of the
American Labor Party in Buffalo and as a witness subpoenaed
before the House Committee on
Un-American Activities.
In April and early may, the
Jr, Chamber conducted a play
contest “to bring the public their
role in fostering live and vital
theatre in this community.” Mr.
Fried and twenty-five others submitted scripts for the contest
which was to be judged by Duke

The financial activities of the
State University Faculty-Student
Associations are being investigated by several high state authorities, Controversy over the FSA's
role in relation to the State University has promoted investigations by the State Legislature,
the State University, and the
State Department of Audit and

University Drama Department
‘so there would be no question

Control.

Attenion to the fiscal affairs
of the associations was aroused
by State Senator John 11 Hughes

as to impartiality,” The Dead
Hand was selected, and the Jr.
Chamber promotional campaign

aen it was pointed out to
that they were still pub-!

reviews

of other local

etions. the editorial office
hat was because they had
previous

commitments

to

And then
when they
asked if this new policy
—

as preventing publicity
e Dead Hand might be
d once the Dead Hand was
a spokesman for the edioffice said he would not
s or no.”
Neville, Managing Editor
News, stated to the Specthat Mr, Fried's charges
se and that the News has
ned the production of his

ie said that Mr. Fried’s
are the results of the
‘Sht s dissatisfaction with

CLINTON E. DEVEAUX
Student Association President

Assistant to President Furnas

liine-member state-appointed body
on Friday. May 21, after a session behind closed doors.
The decision was the culmination of several years of controversy involving the Student Senate, the University Administration, and the State University of
New York. Though council members felt that the proposal was
undesirable at the present time,
they reserved the right to reopen the question at a later date.
The council considered all information at its disposal including
Student Senate polls and legisla(Cont’d on P. 7)

FSA Finances Probed by Authorities

7)

which included exclusive releases
to the News was begun.
In a letter of complaint to the
Dramatist Guild, Mr. Fried said
‘the evening newspaper, the Buffalo Evening News, had not carried any mention of the play
or the production. Efforts to find
out why brought evasion. First
we were told no publicity had
been given to them. Then, when
"e confronted them with the
fact that they had been given
ten articles and two pictures and
had promised to use them, we
were told a policy had been established by the newspaper to
the effect that there would be
no reviewing of any plays except
those done by the most respectable community theatre in the
area, the Studio Theatre, or of
hh'ys that come in from out of

DR. A. WESTLEY ROWLAND

Dr. Claude E. Puffer, FSA Treasurer, has been appointed a member of the SUNY "Task Force"
studying the FSA.

(R-Syraeuse). He has urged that
a bill be considered by the Sen
ate to define the relationship
between the private membership
associations and the State University system. Senator Hughes
told legislators that complaints
have Come’ to him that persons
have been unable to obtain com
petitive contracts for work at
Syracuse University. The legisla
ture was told that several associations have been buying large
tracts of land in the state, and
many are showing a net profit

Feinberg Ruling This Week
June 16 has been set as the
the constitutionality of the rein
berg Law and the Feinberg Certificate. The three-judge court
will consist of Federal Judge
Judge
John 0. Hendetson, Circuit
Leonard P. Moore of New York.
City, and District Judge Harold
P. Burke of Rochester.
The suit was brought by
George Hochfield,

Newton Car-

ver, Ralph N. Maud. Harry Keyishian and George E. Starbuck
who, as UB faculty members, reCerfused to sign {he Feinberg
itself,
tificate. This by the law
states that the signer is familiar
with the Regents Rules on subactivities, is not a mem-

versive
Party and
ber of the Communist
has reif he ever has been hepresident
ported the fact to the
of the State University.
Judge Henderson had former

suit, but on
Court of Appeals decided that a constitutional issue
was involved and ordered the

ly dismissed the
Mav

3.

the

forthcoming

trial.

The Feinbcrg Daw and Certificate have caused much controversy on this campus in the
last two years. Another reper
cussion of it was the firing of
Paul Sporn. Although he signed
the certificate, he was accused
of misrepresenting himself.
Last semester Gregory Corso, an
internationally noted poet, was
dismissed from a teaching assignment in Millard Fillmore College due to his refusal to sign
the certificate. One of the major
manifestations of concern for the
problem was the formulation last
semester of the Student-Faculty
Association for Academic Free
dom.

to

Define FSA Role

despite their charter specification that they be a nonprofit

association.

Student leaders here have com.
plained that the "marked profit-making' of the FSA in operation of the University Bookstore,
cafeteria, and vending machines
is a heavy burden on students
financially. They have asked for
a reduction in prices on all facilities on several occasions.
Last year the U.B FSA reported
an income of over a quartermillion dollars witn a net income of over $400,000 The association has also announced that
it purchased a 505-acre tract of
land for $775,500 in the Town
of Amherst. Association Treasurer Dr. Claude E. Puffer, has said
that the land will be used for
recreational purposes for the new
campus, j
State Senator Samuel L. Greenberg (D-Brooklyn),

Chairman of

the Senate Finance Committee,
said that the legislative investigation of the association will be
conducted by the Senate Finance
Committee and the Assembly
Ways and Means Commitee. Senate Majority Leader Joseph Zar
etski (D-Manhattan) added that
the Joint Legislative Committee
on Higher Educaion might also
take up the problem when it
it the end of the
legislative

session

The State Department of Audit and Control is presently conducting an audit of the financial
records of the FSA in conjunc
lion with a routine check of

tfie university's record. The state's

audit of the FSA is somewhat
unusual in that the FSA is a

private membership Corporation
and not an official state agency.

The audit of the FSA will be
released to the public once it is
completed.

President Gould of SONY has
announced that a special Task
force” of ten persons representing the entire state system will
also conduct an investigation of
the FSA. UB Vice-President for
Business Affairs and Treasurer
of the UB Faculty-Student Association. Dr. Claude E, Puffer, has

.

Buffalo playwright Emanuel
Fried has charged that the Buffalo Evening News has attempted to suppress his production of
a Buffalo Junior Chamber of
Commerce sponsored play, the
Dead Hand. Further, the ad hoc
Committee For A Vital Theatre
in Buffalo charged that the
Buffalo Evening News high command refused to carry releases
concerning the play, and with
others of that ilk pressured Jr.
Chamber to kill the play.” Mr.
Fried remarked, “one radio station bluntly said it would not
mention the play because of its
author and its content.”
The play, dealing with the McCarthy era and its effects, closely
parallels the events of the au-

29

been appointed to the committee.
SUNY has also engaged a private

organization, the Nelson Associates, to study and report on the
association.
On this campus, the FSA cam*
under heavy fire during the last
Student Senate election when
Campus Alliance candidates asked for a "total re-organiiation of
the FSA" to give students and
faculty members "the right to
determine the allocation of their
funds."
At present, the FSA is a private membership corporation having a corporate body of nine
members. Five are university administrators, two arc faculty
members, and two are students.
President Clinton E. Dcveaux
Rosemary
and Vice-President
Brown of the Student Association
are the student members of the

corporation.

These nine members meet once
a year to elect a board of directors who then retain full control of FSA business for the
remainder of the year. The present structure gives the administration a five to four voting
margin over a possible coalition
of faculty and student members.
Since its inception when the unit
versity merged with the state
system, the board of directors
has consisted solely of university administrators.
In particular, the FSA has been
criticized for its profit-making
on student services. The FSA
operates the University Bookstore
and cafeterias in Norton Hall,
vending

machines and athletics

on campus. The association receives money directly from students through their required payment of a general university fee,
a sum that last year amounted
to over $650,000. Student leaders
have asked that a reduction in
prices, especially in the bookstore and cafeterias be made.
They have said that consideration has been given to calling
for a boycott of lha University
Bookstore and cafeterias if price
reductions are not arranged. They
are now awaiting action of the
state authorities.

�For COMPLETE Banking Service Visit, call or write

Manufacturers &amp; Traders
Trust Company
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OFFICE

(opposite campus)
MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
(Main at Winspear)

DEALS JEWELERS
University Plaza
(next to Amherst Theater)

Expert Watch and jewelry
repairing, engraving
and diamond setting

GENTLEMFN'S FURNISHINGS
NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING

Work done on premises
Visit MILITELLO’S Complete Luggage Center

Ql/1* for Jiff Occasions

•
•

•

•

Friday, June 11,

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Gifts of Distinction
Name Brand Luggage
ladies Leather Handbags
Bar Accessories

•

•

•

•

Portable Bars
Attache Cases
Mens &amp; Womens Billfolds

Expert Repair Dept.

Fulbright Fellowship
Granted to Hamberg;

Will Research Economy
And Investment Growth
Dr. Daniel Hamberg, professor
of economics, has been awarded
a Fulbright Fellowship to lecture
and conduct research at the Bologna Center of Johns Hopkins
school of Advanced International
Studies, Italy, during the 1965-66
academic year.
Dr. Hamberg, an economic advisor to the U.S, Secretary of
Labor, is also the recipient of a

Faculty

Research

TO SAVE CASH

An author of three texts in the
field of economics, Dr. Hamberg
has also writen numerous articles

appearing in scholarly journals.
His most recent article is entitled, “Size of Firm, Monopoly,
and Economic Growth,” wnich has
been published in a book entitled,
“Economic Issues and Policies."

OF

USED
TEXTS

Dr. Joseph M. Benforado, associate professor of
pharmacology, has been named associate dean of the
University’s School of Medicine effective July 1.
According to Dr. Douglas M Surgenor, dean of the
School of Medicine, “Dr. BenfoV&amp;do’s duties will fall in
the important areas of academic planning and curriculum
?

development
Dr. Surgenor said the
”

necessary

ucational atmosphere

to learning."

"Dr. Benforado, through his
background and interest will be
of much help to us in this most
important area Of responsibility,”
Dean Surgenor said.
Dr. Benforado received his B.S.
degree from the City College of
New York in 1941, and his M.A.
degree in 1942 from Columbia
University Teachers College. He
was awarded the degree of Doctor of Medicine from the New
York State College of Medicine
at Syracuse in 1951.
Dr. Benforado was associated
with the Harvard Medical School’s

“The Government of Science:
Scientific Choice and Science Policy in a Free World,” is the theme
of the 1965 Fenton Lecture Series.

Dr. Hamberg, who received his
bachelor's, master’s and doctorate degrees from the University
of Pennsylvania, served on the

Five world famed scientists are
scheduled to lecture for five consecutive Thursday evenings, October 7 November 4. The lectures
will be delivered in the University’s Norton Union Conference

and the universities of Delaware
and Maryland before joining State
University at Buffalo in 1960. In

1952, Dr. Hamberg was elected a
lifetime member of the Royal
Economic Society.

-

Theater at 8:30 p.m.

The distinguished speakers will
include: George B. Kistiakowsky,

Abbott and James Lawrence Professor of chemistry at Harvard

no cover charge or minimum

JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
SAM

DR. JOSEPH M. BENFORADO

NOTO

PLAYBOY’S TOP JAZZ TRUMPET
nominee and stpr performer with:
COUNT BASIE

■

University and former member

of the President’s science adviscommittee; Michael Polanyi,
formerly Senior Research Fellow
of Merton College, Oxford and
Professor of physical chemistry
and social studies at Victoria University, Manchester; Alvin M.
Weinberg, director of the Oak
Ridge National Laboratory and
recipient of the Atoms for Peace
Award; Stephen E. Toulmin, director of the Nuffield Foundation
Unit for the History of Ideas;
and Edward A. Shils, professor
of sociology and social thought
and chairman of the Comparative
Study of New Nations at the University of Chicago.
The lecture series is given each
year by the University through
the Fenton Foundation, established in 1922 to commemorate
‘the name and public service" of
James Fenton, Buffalo businessory

man.

•

•

Have a COOL summer
with a FAIRFIELD Nylon
Sleeveless Shell MockTurtle and Jewel Neck

STAN KENTON

WOODY HERMAN

Wilt Perform Fri., Sat., Sun., Nite at the

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

490 Pearl Street

Parking in Rear

JAM SESSION ' SUN 9pm to
Buffalo’s Top Jazz SHow!

5 Year Guarantee
9 Exciting Colors

?

1086 Elmwood Ave.

(bet. Bird

"WALL TO WALL”

PARK FREE NEXT DOOR
Univ. Manor Motel Lot

&amp;

Forest)

PAISANO

PIZZA

PAPERBACKS

Phone TF 3-7131

qj-

Poise n lv.y

ALSO,

3610 Main across from U .B
Goodyear Hall

Jostelyn

of Pharmacology
from 1952 1958, and with Oxford
University as a Life Insurance
Medical Research Fund Fellow
from 1957 1958,

•

TOO

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

Edward

Photo by

Department

Fenton Lecture Series Previewed

,ular Demand...

WE'LL BUY 'EM BACK,

expan-

sion of medicinal knowledge due
to research has presented the
medical schools with a "greater
and greater challenge in bringing
that knowledge to the student
and in providing the kinds of ed-

grants.

faculties of Princeton University

WE HAVE PLENTY

Benforado Named to Med School
Post For Planning and Curriculum

Fellowship

awarded by the Research Foundation of the State University of
New York. He will conduct research with this grant during the
summer on the relationship between investment and the rate
of economic growth.

In the past, Dr. Hamberg has
lectured at the Netherlands
School of Economics, the universities of Genoa, Bologna,
Frankfurt, Buenos Aires and
Wascda University in Tokyo under Fulbright, Ford Foundation
and Socjal Science
Research

SEE US FIRST

1945

3242 Main St
(across from Campus)
FATHER’S DAY IS JUNE 20TH—and about time you threw something
great Father's way. Shower him with gifts in the best of taste, chosen
from tempting selections of:

Summer Sport Jackets....from $30.00
Light Weight Suits
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Washable Slacks
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Summer Dress Shirts
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Sport Shirts
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Knit Shirts
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Sport Belts
Colorful Neckwear
Summer Hosiery

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Pizza, Subs, Heroes,
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837-6120
We're Just Across the
Street So Come and
Join Us
for a Snack or a Meal
"Here to Serve 'U
at U.B."

�Friday, June 11, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Dr. Slatin Appointed Acting Summer Sessions Teller Named Nuclear Science
Arts and Sciences Boast Increase Professor at UB for 1965-66
Dean ofSlatin,
associate dean of the College of
Dr. Myles
dean of In Enrollments
Arts and Sciences, has been
appointed acting
the College, it was announced today by University Presi-

dent Clifford C. Furnas.

—-

*

*•

Dr. Slatin replaces Dean Milton
C, Albrecht who will retire in
June in order to devote himself

to teaching and research in the
University’s Department of Sociology. Dean Albrecht announced
January

in

his intention to retire at

leadership

Y.)

and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Yale
University (New Haven, Conn.).
He is a member of the Board of
Directors of the United Negro
College Fund and a member of
the Board of Managers of the
Erie County Historical Society.
The College of Arts and Sci-

The anniversary program will
consist of six speakers discussing
various aspects of nursing beginning Friday and will end with a
banquet at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in
the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Union.
The first speaker will be Dr.
Eleanor C. Lambertsen, professor
and chairman of the Department
of Nursing Education at the
Teachers College of Columbia
University. She will discuss

DR. MYLES SLATIN

Acting Dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences
Photo by Edward Joscelyn

ences is the largest unit in the
University’s 14 divisions. During
the past academic year there
were approximately 5,000 students
enrolled in the College. The College is divided into three subdivisions: Philosophy and Social
Sciences; Mathematics and the
Physical and Biological Sciences;
and Language, Literature and the
Arts. Dean Albrecht headed the
College’s 50th anniversary held
last year in April.

“Nursing Education” at 8 p.m,
today in Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall. The remaining speakers will speak tomorrow in the
Conference Theater, Norton Un-

ion.

Miss Dorothy M. Smith, dean
of the College of Nursing at the
University of Florida, will discuss
“Facts About Nursing Service
and Nursing Practice” at 9:30 a.m.
At 11 a.m., Captain Beverly Glor
of the Department of Nursing at
Walter Reed Institute of Research, Washington, D.C., will discuss “The Need for Nursing Research."

BIG JOHN'S

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771 Niagara Falls Blvd.
South of Sheridan
at Harrison

29‘

HAVE YOU TRIED ONE?
Open 11 a.m.
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until?

Phone 836-9490

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English pleasure riding and lessons
300 acres of trails and indoor arena
Special rates for groups
NT 4-4040
NT 3-9755
Ask for John Shaffner, Manager or Instructor

A
PAT
I)

this

when about five hundred freshmen will register for the second

Nursing Anniversary Program
The School of Nursing will celebrate its 25th anniversary Friday and Saturday, June 11 and
12 on campus.

sessions

The largest single registration
day for this summer's sessions
will take place in three weeks

guidance,”

Queens College (Flushing, N.

Summer school

year are among the largest and
fastest growing in the country.
In. the last four years, there has
been a 290% increase in enrollment. In 1960, there was a total
enrollment of 1949 students; by
1964, the figure had grown to
is expected

and

Dr. Slatin, who holds the rank
of associate professor, has been a
member of the University’s English Department since 1952. Dr,
Slatin's major field of study is
American Poetry. He was appointed Associate Dean of the
College in 1963. He received his
Bachelor of Arts degree from

,

5618, and this year’s enrollment
to exceed 7000. This
includes approximately 1000 students from other colleges in the
nation.

the close of the spring semester.
Dr. Slatin’s appointment will take
effect July 1.
In announcing the appointment,
Dr, Furnas said, “Although we regret the resignation of Dean Albrecht, we are confident that Dr.
Slatin will continue the same type

of outstanding

Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller
has announced that Dr, Edward

[.

I

session beginning June 28. Many
of these students are following
accelerated programs which enable them to graduate in three
years. The acceleration program
is constantly growing, and we
now have a more complete program than most other schools.

In addition to the seven
hundred course sections which
are being offered, many new programs and workshops have been
created, such as the guidance
and counseling institute and the
National Science Foundation Institute.
Also, there will be about forty
faculty members representing universities throughout the country
and the world. Some -of these
include the Universities of Iowa
and New Mexico, Cambridge University, the Illinois Institute of
Technology, Duke and Obcrlin
Universities, Berkeley and Rutgers, as well as many European

universities.

WBFO Series
Is Acclaimed

The National Association for
Educational Broadcasters has informed WBFO that a series prepared for broadcast by the university station has been accepted
for national distribution. The programs are from the symposium
held this spring titled, DISCRIMINATING ABOUT DISCRIMINATION. They were edited and pre
pared for broadcast by David
Schriber, News and Special
Events Director of WBFO.

Teller, internationally reknowned
physicist, famous for his key
role in the development of the
atomic and hydrogen bombs, will

be a Distinguished Visiting Professor of Nuclear Science during
the academic year 1965-66.

Made possible by a grant from
the New York State Science and
Technology Foundation, Dr. Tel-

ler's Buffalo residency will be devoted to the encouragement and
stimulation of programs in the
peaceful uses of atomic energy
now under way at Buffalo and
other campuses of State University. According to President
Clifford C. Furnas, Dr. Teller
will also give public lectures,
conduct seminars and meet with
graduate students and faculty in

nuclear science and allied fields.
Dr. Furnas said that the acceptance of the appointment by Dr.
Teller is indicative of the leader-

ship in research, particularly nuclear research, enjoyed by State
University at Buffalo. "We are
truly honored that this outstanding physicist will be on our campus during the next year.”

“His teaching,
criticism will be
not only for our
the programs in

comment and

most valuable
institution and

chemistry, engineering, biophysics, physiology,
physics and nuclear research, but
also for the entire scientific and
industrial community of Western
New York and the State,” Dr,
Furnas said.
Dr. Furnas said that the State
University at Buffalo and in
other establishments in the region
the Western New York Nuclear Research Center, Inc., located on the campus, the Ros
—

well Park Memorial Institute and
the fuel reprocessing plant of Nu
clear Fuel Services, Inc., in Cat-

taraugus County
there is a
great reservoir of talent and of
facilities for teaching and research in the peaceful uses of
nuclear energy which are truly
unique and outstanding in the
nation. He emphasized that these
facilities afford an excellent base
—

for the development of further
programs.
Dr. Teller, who is currently Director of the Livermore Radiation Laboratory and Professor of

Physics-at-Large at the University
of California, was vitally involved
in the planning and development
of the atomic and hydrogen

THE PIERCED EAR
3624 Main Street

bombs. From 1941-52, he served
at the Manhattan District project
o( Columbia University, the Argonne National Laboratory, the
University of Chicago and Los
Almos, New Mexico. He is now
vitally interested in the developments of peaceful uses of nuclear
energy for the benefit of all mankind.

Born in Budapest, Dr. Teller
received his Doctor of Science degree from the University of Leipzig. He is also the recipient of
honorary degrees from a number of American universities.
He has taught and conducted
research at a score of major universities throughout the United
States and Europe, He is a member of the Science Advisory Board
of the United States Air Force, a
fellow of both the American Nuclear Society and the American
Physical Society, and a member

of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences, the American Ordinance Association, and the National Academy of Sciences.
Recipient of the Albert Einstein
award in 1958, he is author of
“The Structure of Matter," ‘Our
Nuclear Future," and “The Legacy of Hiroshima.”

WBFO Presents
Summer Listening
WBFO, the University’s noncommercial FM station, is on the
air this summer for the first time
in its history, offering classical
music, talks, news, drama and
other features from the British
Broadcasting Corporation and the
National Educational Radio Network to listeners on the Niagara
Frontier.

The station is on the air from
3:00 p.m.-10:15 p.m. Monday
through Friday and can be heard
at 88.7 me. on the FM band; students in residence halls can receive the station at 780 on their
AM radios.

Programs of particular interest
include talks from the PACEM
IN TERRIS convocation held in
New York this spring, (Mondays
and Wednesdays at 6:30), a series
of talks on the implications of

automation (Tuesday, 6:30) by the
distinguished British authority,
Sir Leon Bagrit, the talks DISCRIMINATING ABOUT DISCRIM
INATION (Thursday, 7:00) which
was held this spring on campus,
and CONCERT HALL heard at
8:15 daily.
Free program guides listing all
the programs may be picked up
at the candy counter in Norton
Hall or in the residence halls.

(opp. U.B. at Bailay)
Featuring

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NON-PIEftCED
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Yoor I .D Card

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Campus Boot*
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�Friday, June

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

(Comment

.

.

.

ON THE INVESTIGATIONS
The sheer size of the State University and the legal
complexities involved with centralized administrations
has made necessary the creation of independent nonprofit financial corporations'to handle the daily business
of the State University’s many branches. Such should
be the role of the Faculty Student Association.
But power tends to perpetuate itself. The present
FSA structure giving a 5-4 voting margin to University
Administrators, completely denies an effective voice to
student and faculty members.
Though the faculty and students are not represented
by the directors of the FSA, they are continually taxed
by the FSA by means of the required general university
fee and the profit making of the University Bookstore,
food services, and vending machines, all of which are
operated by the FSA.
The practice of associations to award contracts without competitive bidding and the current policy of land
aquisitions has completely removed the FSA from its original role of serving the university and its students, rather
than paralleling the responsibilities of the central state
administration.
We await the day when control of the FSA is given
to the students and faculty as its name implies. The
current investigations of the Faculty-Student Association
are long overdue and much welcomed.

The Role of Contemporary Student;
Governor Brown Analyzes Clash
©
1965, NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE INC.
EDITOR’S NOTE: The following article is reprinted with permission
from the Sunday, May 23 edition of the NEW YORK HERALD TRI-

BUNE.
Few student demonstrations have received the publicity and attention of the disturbances at the University of California at Berkeley
during the past year. The turmoil began when the university abruptly
banned on-campus recruitment for off-campus political activity.
Less than three weeks ago a special committee headed by Jerome
Byrne, a California lawyer, made a report to the state board of regents
sharply criticizing university president Clark Kerr and other administrators lor their handling of the student protests, and recommending
basic changes in the structure of the university. President Kerr recently made some recommendations of his own.
We chose to reprint Governor Brown’s first statement on the demonstrations, since they do justice to student and administrative interests
alike. His remarks hint at an ideal philosophical structure which, if
adhered to, could adequately meet the needs of all members of a uni-

versity community.
The Hon. EDMUND G. BROWN
Governor of California

By EDMUND G. BROWN

The University of California
right now is facing the most critical period in its history.
We live in an era of change.
The rate of technological change
keeps accelerating each year. And
the university is the mother of
technology and the home of this
change.

It is ironic, therefore, that the

university itself has not been able
to keep up with the very change

THOU SHALT NOT DRINK ON CAMPUS
Beer on campus is far from crucial to the well-being
of a university society; it is an extravagant convenience.
Yet, the issue has been of prime concern even to students
whose non-existent level of activity deems them apathetic.
The University Council decision does raise some
rather serious objections. The fact that council sessions
were held behind closed doors and that the results of
the postcard survey of parents will remain confidential
infer a blatant disregard for the influence and opinions
of the students. The decision itself reflects the denial
of student maturity which so often is the cause for
strained student-administrative relations.

A STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

The moral and practical arguments against capital
punishment leave no doubt that death penalty statutes
are both archaic and inhumane. Unnecessary killing can
neither discourage capital crime nor approach consistency
with the human element we often write into democratic

procedure.

Governor Rockefeller’s hestiancy to sign the legislature’s bill, in addition to his eventual approval, were both
equally understandable and laudable. The exceptions
specified in the bill all but dispel the validity of the agruments against the death penalty as a purpose for the
legislation.

The Legislators’ stand was thus not a moral one—they have failed to assert that the death penalty is wrong.
They have merely revised the criminal laws for a revised society. But this was a first step—a large one toward a worthy goal.

11, 1965

which it has created. It is strange,
indeed, that the university has
been among
the institutions
slowest to change. This is particularly strange, not only because

of the technological revolution,
but because of the education revolution as well.
We must all realize that the
student of today thinks differently than the students of the
'50s: And his hew and clearly
defined attitudes and approaches
to public issues are not confined
to Berkeley or to California. They
may be found nationwide.
Just 10 years ago, college students were called—and rightly
so—the Silent Generation. During
the McCarthy era and
throughout the ’50s, many people
were afraid to say what they felt
in their hearts was right. And
college students merely reflected
the society around them.
That era is gone. The student
of today is vitally interested in
society around him. He should be.
He is no longer content with
society’s apathy—or its wrongs.
He is idealistic enough to think
that society should be perfect, or
more nearly approach perfection.
And he has committed himself to
the effort to make it as perfect
as he can during his lifetime.
Because of this, society should
stand up and applaud. But it
docs not.
Have we made our society safe
for students with ideas? We have
not. Yes. students have changed.

But the structure of the university and its attitude towards its
students have not kept pace with
that change.

DOWN WITH DUE PROCESS

Because the university's change
has not kept pace with the change
in student attitude, some students felt they had the right to
go outside the law to force
change. In doing so, they displayed the height of idealistic hypocrisy, For in their haste to bring
about change, they cast aside one
set of principles in order to gain
recognition of others. On the one
hand, they held up the Federal
Constitution, demanding their
rights of political advocacy and
free expression, which it guarantees. But at the same time, they
threw away the principle of due
process—set forth in the same
Constitution—in favor of direct
action.
And in doing so. they were as
wrong as the university. In doing
50, they were inconsistent with
their own ideals.
Because of their tactics they
brought a swarm of criticism

down upon themselves. Unfortu-

nately, in some cases this criticism has been as extreme as the
tactics of the demonstrators. Some
people—even some people in high
places—have charged that the
Free Speech Movement was a
Communist plot. This a nice easy
explanation for a very complicated situation. But it just isn’t
true.
The student demonstrations at
Berkeley grew because there were
real grievances on the part of

the students which needed recti-

fying by the university. Before
the trouble was over, the goals
of the Free Speech Movement had
the support of a majority of the
students on the campus even
though its tactics did not.

The Federal Bureau of Investi-

gation turned over to me their
confidential file on the Berkeley
situation with respect to subversive activities. Unquestionably,
there were some Communists involved, but the FBI’s file shows
the Free Speech Movement was

not instigated by the Communist
party or any of its front organiza-

tions.
There are undoubtedly a few
Communists involved in almost
every political and social movement of any size and stature
today. But we must be careful
not to condemn an entire movement because Communists involve themselves in it or we
would be condemning even the
civil rights movement.
One of the most successful
tactics the Communist party has
is to attach itself to a social or
political movement which—in itself—has a great deal of merit.
The Communists make themselves well known in it so that
concerned Americans will brand
the entire movement as evil,
thereby causing the confusions,
suspicion, and controversy the
party thrives on.
The

independent investigator

hired by the regents confirmed
the findings of this investigation.
And J. Edgar Hoover told a Congressional subcommittee on March
4 that although “subversives”
were involved, they neither “originated nor controlled” the Free
Speech Movement.

RULE OF LAW
Meanwhile, we must remember
that student interest and concern
in the problems of the community, the state, and the world
is a healthy—not unhealthysign.

But we must also encourage
our students to remember that
the citizen’s right—and even duty
—to dissent must be expressed
within the rule of law.
This nation has grown and prospered, in part, because of farsighted individuals who were willing to fight for change. And we
have prospered because this is
a nation of law—of people who
respect the rule of law—people
who fight by legal means for
needed change within the law.
Violations of law cannot and
will not be condoned. If we allow
a few to violate the rights of
many we would also have to allow the many to violate the rights
of those few.

We need not allow either. We

will not allow either as long as

I am governor.

But neither will we staunchly
defend the status quo. A rapidly
growing society must be a rapidly

changing society.
Knowing this, we must also
realize that our students’ social
and public and political interests
must be encourged and even exploited.
There are those who say, “I am
a taxpayer and I don’t want any
political activity on a campus
which I support.” Let us refer
them to the Constitution of the
United States, for the Constituion
of the United States guarantees
to every student the right to actively participate in political activity on or off his campus.
There are those who say “yes,
I broke the law. But it was for a
good cause and that makes it all
right.” Let us refer them also to
the Constitution of the United
States. It shows how change may
be brought about, using due process within the law.
There are those who say “a
university is a place where you
go to learn, not get a lot of
ideas.” To them I say that a university is ideas, all kinds of ideas.
It is a place where students can
and must be exposed to an infinite variety of ideas. It is by
weighing these conflicting ideas
and choosing the correct ones that
they learn.
Today, the university is faced
with preserving both academic
freedom—the freedom to explore

all ideas—and the rule of law,
There are military schools
where students have one —the
rule of law—without the other.
There are Latin-American universities where students have oneacademic freedom —without the
other. But neither will ever become truly great.
The University of California
has built its greatness by offering a delicate balance of both.
It will continue to be the greatest
public university in the world
because it will continue to offer
that balance.
In order to maintain that bal
ance, there will have to be con
fident and genuine trust on the
part of every member of the uni
versify team, the students, the
faculty, the administration, the
regents, the Legislature and the
taxpayer.
Rebuilding this confidence and
trust at this particular time in
the university’s history will nm
be easy. Right now, each member
his
of the university, team has
own fears and doubts about what
motivates the other.
But this must not stop—or even
delay—the inevitable reconcile
always
tion. Man’s progress is
more a triumph over his owno
fears than over the hazards
the world. And a university s pro
gress is little different.
tin
I am positive that but of
crisis will come an even greate
University of California a uni
versity ready for the 21st centur&gt;
A university ready in structur
—

ready in freedom, ready

&gt;

n

spect for law, and more wort
than ever of the prestige whir
is the University of California

�Friday, June

11, 1965

Canadian Physicist
To Direct the W.N.Y.
Nuclear Researchers
Dr, Henry G. Thode, a leading
Canadian nuclear physicist, and
president of McMaster Univer
sity, Ontario, Canada, has been
appointed to the board of di
rectors of the Western New York
Nuclear Research Center.

President Clifford C. Furnas
viewed Dr. Thode’s appointment
as “a bridge which will be an
important factor jn bringing
about better relations between
the United States and Canada.”
McMaster University, located in
Hamilton, Ontario, is the only
Canadian University housing a
nuclear reactor, and for numerous years has cooperated in
various areas with the Nuclear
Research Center here.
“Dr. Thode's appointment will
be the beginning of still stronger
bonds in various fields of our
two universities,” said Dr. Furnas.

Dr Thode holds honorary degrees from six Canadian universities and is a recipient of the
Chemical Institute of Canada Me-

%m.\ too \m it Ail swnp

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.
An internal reorganization of
the administrative structure at
the State University of New York
at Buffalo was announced by
President Clifford C. Furnas.
Dr. Furnas said the changes
are being made to “achieve greater efficiency and to prepare for
the future as the University grows
toward its role as a major grad-

uate center.”

The reorganization, which will
be for the 1965-66 academic year,
includes:
1. The appointment of administrative heads for the three present divisions of the College Of
Arts and Sciences, and the appointment of a Committee for the
College, which will report to the

President.

2, The grouping of the professional schools (excluding health
sciences) under a chairman, with
a Committee for the Professions
reporting to the President.
3. The appointment of a Special

Assistant to the President.
Three to Work Under Dr. Slatin
Under Dr. Myles Slatin, whose
appointment as Acting Dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences
will become effective July 1, the
three divisions of the College of
Arts and Sciences and their new
heads are: the Division of Philosophy and the Social Sciences,
Dr Rollo Handy, Chairman of the
Philosophy Department; the Division of Mathematics, the Physical
and Biological Sciences, Dr. Gordon M. Harris, Chairman of the
Chemistry Department; and the
Division of Language, Literature
and the Arts, Professor Allen
SaPP. Chairman of the Music Department. The
three Division
Heads will also retain their departmental chairmanships.

The three Division Heads and
Acting Dean Slatin
will form the
oore of a Committee for the College of Arts and Sciences. The
other Committee members include
Dr Henry M, Woodburn, Dean of
e Graduate School, Dr. Bradley
g hapin.
Dean of University Col
e?e, Dr. Oscar
A. Silverman, Dirf,ct°r of Libraries, and Dr. Robf, r } F- Berner, Dean of Millard
1 more College. These Commit;,

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

tee members will also continue

in their present administrative
duties. The Committee will begin
its duties September 1.
Dr. Fisk Heads Professors
The professional schools will
be under the chairmanship of Dr.

Robert Fisk, Dean of the School
of Education.
This group will include the
Schools of Law, Engineering, Business Administration, Education,
Social Welfare, and Millard Fillmore College. The Deans of these
Schools will constitute a Committee for the Professions with duties effective September 1. Also
siting on this Committee will be
Dr. Woodburn and Dr. Silverman.

Other Changes May Evolve
The Health Science Professions;
Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy,
and Nursing will continue in the
present pattern, under the Vice
Presidency of Dr. Peter F. Regan.
In other changes, Dr, Furnas announced that Dr, Chapin will be

Special Assistant to the President
during the 1965-66 academic year.
He will carry out special assignments as designated by the President, Dr. Chapin will also continue his duties as Dean of University College.
Comparing the new arrangement to the base of a "honeycomb,” Dr, Furnas said, “ideally
the new structure will provide
wholesome interrelationships
within a framework of functional independence and will provide
the background from which still
further organizational changes
may evolve, as needed.
.“As a university grows it must
constantly strive to keep in a

state of balance the academic and

decision-making independence of

its components. At the same time

it must provide the administrative
avenues which will insure cross-

fertilization of programs which
are in the best interests of the
students and most efficient for
the acquisition of new knowledge.
“Organizational streamlining is

particularly appropriate at this
time,” Dr. Furnas said, “because

of the steady progress being made
in planning the new Amherst
campus, together with the conversion of the Main Street campus
to a health sciences complex.
“These facilities will serve as
the physical foundation for a
great increase in the number of
students, faculty and programs.
realignment is an
integral part of the over all program of qualitative and quanti-

Administrative

tative growth.”

dal for distinguished achievements in scientific research. He is
also a Fellow of the Royal Society of London. He joined MeMaster University in 1939 as an
assistant professor of chemistry
and became its president in 1961.
During his first years at MeMaster, he built the first mass
spectrometer in Canada and conducted research in the determination of isotopic abundances
using mass spectrometic techniques.

Dr. Thode was instrumental in
the formation of the Department
of Medical Research at McMaster
University while he was Chairman of the Department of Chemistry and conducting research in
the use of radioisotopes in the
diagnosis and treatment of disease.

He is the author of numerous
papers concerned with kinetic
and equilibrium isotope effects in
chemical reactions which were
published

in

various

journals.

His research on the geochemistry
of the sulphur isotopes is known
throughout the world.

The First of Thi

The Graduate Student In
The Contemporary University
(1) financial Support of the
Graduate Student
To a foreign student, who according to the foreign student advisor, is a drain on the financial
system of the United States of
America, it would seem that the
only reason, local graduate students are not embarrassing the
economy, is because, they arc
forced to exist on a pittance.
In the Great Society which exists in America today, the pressures at all levels, whether it be
in the family sphere or in the industrial world, are directed towards the attainment of higher degrees, Of necessity therefore,
both the time spent at the university and the age of the graduate
population increases year by year.
Graduate students are drawn from
two sources. The first coming into
being as a natural progression of
education from undergraduate to
graduate, the second from those
people, who having left the university sphere after their first
degree, find it mandatory to re-

turn to graduate studies, to com-

pete more effectively in an evfl-

increasing technological society.

In a recent survey done by the
Graduate Student Association in
relation to housing, it was found
that only 48 per cent of graduate
students registered at this University were under 25 years of
age, while over 50 per cent are
married and have two or more
children. While these facts may
come as a surprise to some, to
me, at least, they seem perfectly
logical when one considers the
reservoirs from which students
are drawn. What is, however, surprising, is that these facts have
not been generally recognized
by university authorities. The
reasons for this lack of foresight
are difficult to understand and
seem to beVompounded by a number of obscure factors. Not the
least amongst these is the rather
tenuous general attitude which
prevails among the authorities
that the perpetuation of a system

Reismann Receives U.S. Army
Research Grant for 'Titan' Work
A UB professor of engineering
who had a key role in developing
the Titan missile, has received a
two-year $33,948 grant from the
U.S. Army Research Office, Durham, North Carolina to conduct
research on the structure of the
ICBM anti-missile.
Dr. Herbert Reismann, a former
chief of solid mechanics research
at the Martin Company, Denver,
Colorado where he directed the
integration of the auto pilot into
the airframe structure of Titan I,
will be the principal investigator
of the anti-missile structure research.
The auto pilot of Titan stabilizes
and regulates the missile during
its flight. Dr. Reisman has also
served as a consultant for the
auto pilots and structures of succeeding Titan missiles.
The anti missile structure research entitled, "Dynamic Response of Cylindrical Shells to
Moving Pressure Loads,” will have
many other applications including
anti-submarine warfare, according
to Dr, Reismann.
He said the research will deal
with the problems of aerospace,
ground, and underwater structures when exposed to blast loadings emanating from explosions
such as nuclear blasts.
Dr. Reismann, who is with the
Department of Interdisciplinary
Studies and Research, will be assisted in the research project by
graduate students Peter S. Pawlik and Paul M. Culkowski, who
are studying for their master’s
degrees in engineering science

at the University. Both students
received their bachelor's degrees
in aerospace engineering from
the School of Engineering last

month
Mr. Pawlik is the son of Mr.
and Mrs, Peter P. Pawlik, 118
Center Ave., N. Tonawanda. Mr.
Culkowwski is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Briino Culkowski, 38 Marne

is justifiable simply by reason of
.
its existence.
Another reason of greater significance depends on whether the
moral responsibility for supporting the graduate student rests
on the State or the individual.
While the younger members of
the graduate community may not
mind seeking financial support
from his parents or family, most
of the married students to whom

I have spoken find the whole idea
distasteful. It is not very edifying
for a married man, with children,
to run home every time he is
threatened by bills. It would
seem to me, that, as the present
makeup of American Society demands the individual be educated
in order to assume a meaningful
role in that society, the responsibility lies with the state. Admittedly the more conservative
clement among you, would feel
that if graduate students were to
be paid a living wage by the government, the moral fibre of the
country would decline at an
alarming rate. It has always been
a mystery, to me at any rate, just
how a full stomach is able to
undermine the individual.
The results of providing better
financial support can be far
reaching. One of the more immediate and obvious advantages
would be an increase in the number of students. Unfortunately
one of the dangers is a corresponding fall in the competence
of the students. This need not
happen. One presumes that by
the time a student wishes to
enter graduate school he will
have proved himself, academically in the case of the undergraduate, or professionally jn the
case of the person re-enteriltg
university.
Higher salaries would

mean,

therefore,

greater numbers of
graduate students of at least the
present standard, allowing more
rapid advancement into the technological age which, for better or
worse, appears to be the goal of
the present Society.
N. R. L.

Sengbusch Lecture

Series Established to
Honor Retiring Dean
Dr. Peter F, Regan, vice-presi-

dent for health affairs, announced
Wednesday, Jude 2, that the
“Anne W. Sengbusch Lectureship
Series" had been established at
the University in honor of the
retiring dean of the School of
Nursing.

Rd., Cheektowaga.

Dr. Reismann, who recently became a consultant to Bell Aerosystems Corporation received his
bachelor's degree in aeronautical
engineering from the Illinois Institute of Technology where he
served as research engineer and
instructor of applied mechanics
while studying for his master's
degree in mechanics and mathematics. He received his doctorate
in mechanics and mathematics
from the University of Colorado
in 1962.
Before joining the Martin Company in 1957 where he served until 1964, he was principal systems
engineer of the missile division
at Republic Aviation Corporation,
Long Island during 1954-56. He
also served as project structures
engineer at General Dynamics
Corporation, Fort Worth, Texas
during 1951-53.
The author of numerous articles
appearing in various science and
engineering journals. Dr, Reismann is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, an associate fel-

low of the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics and
a member of Sigma Xi.

At a tea held yesterday, in Norton Union (Wednesday, June 2)
in honor of Dean Sengbusch, Dr.
Regan said the lecture series was
established; "to provide the opportunity for students and faculty to obtain stimulation and first

hand information from leaders in

nursing and related fields regarding topics and issues pertaining to
the health care of people and the
eoucation of nurses,"

The series, which is being financed by the faculty and staff
of the School through the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc.,
will begin in the fall. Speakers
will be selected by a committee

from the School of Nursing.

Dean Sengbusch is retiring from
her post in order to return to
full-time teaching as professor of
nursing education. Dean Sengbusch joined the University in
1935 as an educational advisor
for nursing education in the University's Medical School. In 1940.
she was named the first director
of the Division of Nursing under
Chancellor Samuel P. Capen. In
1945. she was appointed Dean of
the School of Nursing.

�Friday, June

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Weekly Calendar

CINEMA '65
By JEREMY TAYLOR

All Week

Art Exhibit; Albert Gleizes,

bist

paintings,

cu-

Albright-Knox

Art Gallery.

Today
Art Exhibit; “Structure and Mo-

Tumultuous images of late childhood and adoles-

cence have become of great and growing interest to
American artists in the sixties. We have witnessed the

nation-wide revival of critical and public interest in the
works of J. D. Salinger, and have watched the meteoric
rise of chroniclers of youth like Goldman (Temple of
Gold), Knowles (A Separate Peace), and Price (A Long
and Happy Life). This increased interest in the darker
side of youth has also been expressed in two films currently being revived at the Circle Art Theater: David and
Lisa, and Lord of the Flies.
This intelligent double-billing allows those unfortunates who missed either or both of these interesting and
well-wrought films to fill the gaps in their viewing, as
well as affording the serious film-goer the unique opportunity of comparing two films of similar interest and
reawakening his sense of pleasure and enjoyment.
Roth of these films are technically excellent, but to
praise a film-maker for technical excellence is rather
like praising a cook because his food isn’t poisonous.
Technical proficiency is the minimum one must expect
from a professional.
These films go some way beyond technique, however. The “arguments” of the films are interesting, one
might even say important, and reverberate disturbingly
into the world of “reality.”
There are inadequacies in the directing of both
films: Lord of the Flies makes excessive use of the closeup in an attempt to give emotional depth to the lesser
characters, and relies too heavily on lighting to create
mood; while David and Lisa suffers from a morbid and
rather cliched characterization of the parents as “misguided” and “frustrated.” Roth films are more than
saved, however, by the skill and natural grace of their
youthful actors, and apart from one or two embarrassing
moments when the flaws are most obvious, the films flow
with an ease and a believability which make possible a
very moving and enjoyable evening.
It is interesting, if not surprising, to note that David
and Lisa achieved its success as a film on a budget of
about one quarter the budget of Lord of the Flies and
did much to spark the current movement of semi-professional film-making in this country (which, one hopes,
like pizza, is here to stay). The young actors in both
flims at the time of their production were “new comers”
to the acting profession and have since become entrenched
in the industry as a result of their sensitive performances
in these two films.
Beyond this point, however, similarities between the
films begin to disappear. David and Lisa is built on the
time honored premise that love and seriousness are capable of conquering most evils, while Lord of the Flies
adopts the even more time honored attitude that man’s
natural life is “nasty, brutish, and short.” Both films
employ children as the primary characters and, although
the setting of Lord of the Flies is exotic and lush, the
credulity of the viewer is not strained by the action of
either film.
In a discussion of Lord of the Flies one must make
some mention of the fact that it is “based on’’ the novel
of the same name by William Golding, another modern
writer involved with the mysteries of maturation. The
action of the film follows that of the book very closely,
more closely, in fact, than most “book-films,” but it must
stand or fall on its use of the cinema as means of generating exerience, and not on its ability to re-create the sense
of the novel. Lord of the Flies is good cinema. Many
people have said that it is better cinema than the book
is literature, but Byzantine comparisons of that nature
can only cloud the issue when viewing the film. It is
impossible to forgel'That one has “read the book” when
watching the picture, but, as was the case with Young
Cassidy and Zorba the Greek, the unique quality of film
as an artistic medium make comparisons between forms
irrelevant.
The double-bill currently playing at the Circle Art
makes very good viewing. Be sure to take your I.D.
cards; student discounts are given.

tion,” an exhibit of sculpture
and light machines, Keller-Nash

Gallery.

8:40 p.m. Play: “Lets Not and
Say We Did,” by Gerald Marchette,- Off-Broadway Theatre.

Saturday

Art Exhibit: “Structure and Mo-

(see Today)
11:00 a.m. Presentation; Town

tion”

of Holland and Buffalo Erie
County Historical Society will
unveil a marker commemorating Fort Humphrery, on Route
16 opposite Ft. Humphery Cem-

etery.
3:00 p.m. Opening: The Aquarium of Niagara Falls, New

York, the only inland salt water
aquarium in the world.
8:40 p.m. Play: “The Dead
Hand” by Emanuel Fried, OffBroadway Theatre.

Sunday

Art Exhibit; “Structure and Mo-

tion”

An exhibition of more than 50
years of paintings by one of the

first cubists, Albert Gleizes, will
be on view throughout the summer at the Albright-Knox Art
exhibit includes
Gallery. The
works from 1901 to the time of
Gleizes’ death in 1953.
Gleizes was known as an avant
garde artist throughout his life.
In 1911 the French Chamber of
Deputies officially condemned his
work as an “affront” to art.
condemnation,
Despite that
Gleizes was represented in the
Armory Show in New York in
1913. He lived in New York from
1915 to 1919. His New York works,
shown in the current exhibition,
include paintings of citv people
and places and caused a sensation
at the time because of their style.
The retrospective exhibition
was organized by the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, New York,
and is being exhibited in a number of other museums in the
United States and in Europe.

(see Today)

Photography Exhibit: 1964
Newspaper Snapshot Award
Photographs, Buffalo Museum
of Science.
8:40 p.m. Play: “Lets Not And
Say

Gleizes Cubist Art
On View at AlbrightKnox Through Summer

We Did”

(see Today)

Monday
Photography Exhibit;
(see Sunday)
8:30 p.m. Play: “A Funny Thing
Happened On The Way To The
Forum” with Godfrey Cambridge, Melody Fair.
8:40 p.m. Play: “The Dead
Hand” (see Saturday)

Tuesday
Photography Exhibit;
(see Sunday)
8:30 p.m. Play: “A Funny Thing
Happened On The Way To The
Forum” (see Monday)
8:40 p.m. Play: “Lets Not And
Say We Did” (see Today)
Wednesday

Photography Exhibit;
(see Sunday)
8:30 p.m. Play: “A Funny Thing
Happened On The Way To The
Forum” (see Monday)
8:40 p.m. Play: “The Dead
Hand" (see Saturday)
Thursday
Photography Exhibit:
(sec Sunday)
8:30 p.m. Play: “A Funny Thing
Happened On The Way To The
Forum” (see Monday)
8:40 p.m. Play: “Lets Not And
Say We Did” (see Today)
9:00 p.m.Public Night At The
Observatory; The Quadruple
Star of the Constellation Lyra,
Buffalo Museum of Science.

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Call Miles Neistat, 834-3714,
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Monday through Friday mornings
for an 8:00 class. Call Linda Ho
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or woman, summer employment with part-time during school
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part-time yearly employment. Experience preferred. Approximate
earnings $175 weekly. Contact
Mr. Jadd in person, Jenss Tonawanda.

First Showing in the
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in color
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Tony Randal

-

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also- SECRET OF BLOO
ISLAND with Barbara
Shelley
Jack Helley
Niagara Drive-In Theater

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JOY IN THE MORNING
Richard Chamberlain, Yvete

11, 1965

Tona wanda

Mimieux

DONT BOTHER TO KNOCK
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STARTS

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LOVE HAS MANY FACES
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FIGHT THEIR WAY BACK!

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Charlton

Elke Sommers, Pierre Brice
also

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Williamsville, New York
Home of Great
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and Dancing Nightly

Show time
8:30 and 11:30
Saturdays 8, 11, 1:15
No Minimum Charge
Except Saturday

Enjoy our famous
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�11, 1965

Friday, June

Allentown Art Show
To Begin Tomorrow

Beginning at noon Saturday,
to SunJune 12, and, continuing
jay. June 13, over 400 artists and
craftsmen will display their works
throughout the Allen-Delaware-

Franklin area of Buffalo. Since

8 years ago, the Annual' Outdoor Art Festival, sponsored by the Allentown Village
Society, the number of participants and spectators has steadily
increased; an attendance of 15,000
is expected for this year.

its inception

For the second year the show
will be judged and cash awards
will be made for the best works
in the various media. The judges
arc Fred Meyer, Professor of the
School of Art and Design at
Rochester Institute of Technology,
and Jan E. von Adlman, curatorial
assistant at the Albright-Knox
Gallery.

Live entertainment will be provided both Saturday and Sunday
from a bandstand located at Delaware and Allen. Station WYSL
will do a remote broadcast from
the festival with street interviews and other features.
The festival can be reached
from the SUNYAB campus by following Main Street toward downtown or by taking a number 8
Bus to the Allen Street Stop.

Private
Parties

IESTA ROOM
1

HOTEL WORTH
TL2-0111

200 Main St.

PLAY REVIEW
Council Decides Against...
Dead Hand' Radical Soap Opera
from P. 1)
tion, a Faculty-Senate resolution,
and a postcard survey of parents
the exact results of which, according to Dr. A Westley Rowland, assistant to President Fur(Cont’d

—

By ELLEN

CARDONE
Fried’s The Dead
Hand, a current production at the
Off-Broadway Theater, is an interesting combination of melodrama, ritual drama, audio-visual
effects and character study, loosely held together by a theme of
radicalism and McCarthyism.
The play traces a group of four
characters through three decades
of political causes. Their first appearance is in 1938 at a unionhall rally for the support of antifascist forces in the Spanish Civil
War. Mike Milovitch, leading the
meeting, is seen as a confident,
jovial organizer, while his wife
Ellen is more concerned with the
dance following the meeting.
Rose, Ellen’s sister and a dedicated vocal cause-fighter,' encounters Bert, a reserved newspaperman who is new to the
cause and somewhat uncertain
about it. After a sort of picketline romance and a grim encounter with Rose's bourgeois father,
Rose and Bert are married.
Ten years later, Rose is still

Emanuel

passing out pamphlets on street
corners—for peace and Henry
Wallace, while Bert has yielded
to society and his editor’s wishes
and has given up leftist thought
and activity. Meanwhile, Mike is
subpoenaed by the “Un-American
Committee” and the nation's furi
witch-hunting atmosphere
ous

and weakens the
penetrates
family; Bert is terrified of being
seen or connected with Mike. In
another ten years Rose and Bert
are separated. Rose has become
a borderline psychotic pursuing
a fruitless artistic dilletantism,
and the play ends on a futile note
in the political limbo of 1958.
The concern of Mr. Fried’s play
is not so much with radicalism
itself, or the reasons for political
activism, as it is with the effect
of a cause on the people in-

nas, will remain confidential. It
is reported that a majority of the
parents were opposed to the proposal.
THE ALCOHOL CAMPAIGN

The fight for “beer on campus”
has been extensively waged by
the past three Student Senate
administrations. Each year, a Senate resolution was drafted and unanimously

Bitterman’s Restaurant
Buffalo. R I];

3204 Ttlain St

*

IDine

*

Beer

Lunches IJou ll Like

requesting

adopted

that students be allowed to drink
socially in the more acceptable
environment of the campus.
The 1964-b5 Senate passed a re-

solution which "cited and invali
dated" what it considered to he
the two major arguments against
Barbara Wilton stars as Rosa in
"The Dead Hand"

volved in it. We sec four very
different and recognizable character types: the durable, hardheaded and idealistic organizer,
the girl who assumes political
dogma for “self-expression" when
she becomes bored with modern
dance, the intellectual position
of the proletarian newspaperman
who forms no emotional ties to
his cause, and the confused,
slightly resentful attitude of the
organizer's wife. The results of
a few decades of political change,
added to those of aging, are
equally revealing: the organizer is
forced to “go underground” and
get an ordinary job while retaining his beliefs and integrity; the

writer becomes old, conservative,
dull and bitter; and, the “dabbler”
loses all contact with reality and
sinks into a sick artsy-eraftsy
existence.
The dialogue and the progression of episodes are like nothing
so much as radical soap opera,
a form which is rarely exploited.
There was the same combination
of personal turmoil and dramatic

two of the
characters become (typically) broken and disintegrated and two
are left more or less ready for
the next episode.
Many of the scenes were opened
with newsreels and taped
speeches; scenes of wars, strikes
and witch-hunting that formed the
background of the action. In ad:
dition, a charus-like technique
was employed; with Rose reciting
scenes from the play she is writing which uses cats as assorted
political symbols. This was an
interesting attempt, but one that
needs work. In this case it added
little and weakened the conlifelessncss,

Liquor

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

while

CAMPUS FACILITIES

Swimming Pool:

3 to 5 Monday Friday
7 to 9 Tuesday &amp; Thursday
■

(includes families and children when accompanied by
adults)

Craft Shop:
10 to 4 Tuesday, Wednesday

and Thursday

Libraries:

Lockwood —7:30 a m. to 11:00

p.m, Monday through Friday
8 to 5 Saturdays
1 to 11 Sunday
Harriman—7:30 a m. to 11:00
p.m. Monday through Friday
9 to 5 Saturday
1 to 11 Sunday

Browsing Library
10 to 10 Monday through
Friday
10 to 4 Saturday
(closed Sunday)

Music Room:
10 to 10 Monday through

Friday
10 to 4 Saturday
(closed Sunday)
Post Office:

Hayes—8 to 12 Monday
through Friday
(closed Saturday &amp; Sunday)
Norton Union:
7:00 a m. to 11:00 p.m.

Monday through Friday
7 to 7 Saturday
(closed Sundays)
Cafeteria—1,1 to I Monday
through Friday
7:30 to 2:00 p.m. Saturday
(closed Sundays)
Rathskeller —7:00 to 10:00
p.m. Monday through Thursday

7:00 to 4:30 p.m. Saturday
(closed Sunday)

The first edition of The
Catalyst, a biennial publication of the Sociology
Club, will be on sale next
week in Norton Hall.

J54AUK&amp; KM

5t. at Transit *d., WUIIamsvilla, H. Y.
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NOW YOU CAN DANCI TO
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BOINO

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IN NEED OF
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paperback)

RECORDS/SCHOOL SUPPLIES/GIFTS
OLLEGE CLOTHING/DORM ROOM EQUIPMENT
ENGINEERING/ BIOLOGICAL EQUIPMENT

&amp;

income.

In a Student Senate referendum
to gauge student opinion, it

found that more than 75% of the
2,750 votes cast were in favor
of serving alcohol in the Rathskellar and on special occasions.
The Welfare Committee compiled
a list of schools serving alcohol,
in addition to an enumeration of
procedures for sales and distribution used at these universities.
In light of this survey and of
student sentiment, the Faculty
Senate approved a resolution on
April 21, which would have allowed the serving of beer in the
Rathskellar. The matter was then
placed in the hands of the University

folk tingor

guitar

bonjo

OPENS

&amp;

AT 8:30
r—

guitar

PJA.

—rrm

Council.

OUTLOOK FOR THE FUTURE

Dr. Rowland explained that in
the council's decision to adhere to
previous university statutes, all
aspects of the proposal were considered. These include the public
relations, student personnel, and
legal problems involved. According to Dr. Rowland, one of the
basic reasons for the decision
was that “most universities don't
do it, especially public institutions.”

When asked if the proposal will

be reconsidered by the council at
some future date, Dr. Rowland

replied, “They always have the
right to reconsider, as is true
with anything; but I don't think
it will be.”

Student' Association President
Clinton E. Devcaux said of the
decision, “It is disappointing to
sec the University Council reject
a well-planned and well-organized
proposal which has the overwhelming support of both the
students and faculty at this university.”

“The
strated

students

have demontheir willingness and
ability to accept the responsibili
tics that such a program entails.
The faculty at this university,
with whom the students have the
closest contact, agreed and supported the proposal.
“Six appointed individuals have
seen fit to reject the plan. Had
their meetings been open to the
public I could question the reasoning behind the decision, but
because of the closed-door policy,
I can question only the decision

itself

tinuity.

The Dead Hand as drama leaves
much to be desired, but as a reminder that political causes arc
not newspaper abstractions, but
rather complex patterns held together by suffering human beings,
it was memorable.

allowing alcoholic beverages on
campus: the problems of accessibility to minors and of the dignity
of the university. The resolution
went on to explain that a wet
campus could easily be beneficial
to the institution in that it would
yield both a more mature attitude
toward drinking among the students and an additional source of

”

�Friday, June 11, 196S

SPECTRUM

Pi •A( .Gl &gt;E EIGHT

Soon! T. L.H. Scientific Advances Instrument Oceanarium
Poise niv,y
Instant Ocean Creates

Unilarion-Universalisl
Church of Buffalo

Coming

Elmwood and West Ferry
Assistant Minister

Rev. Robert E. Wolf
Services every Sunday at

1086 Elmwood Ave.
&amp; Bird)

Synthetic Sea Water

(bet. Forest

10:30

—
'&gt;***?

1

Ijlv,

V

Jwc'

rJ

tw
/

open
The Aquarium of Niagara Falls, New York, scheduled to
June '2, is located on a 3.3 acre site on the northern side of the
city, just below the Falls and the Rainbow Bridge. The building
the week durwill be open from 9 A.M. to midnight every day of
ing the summer.

First Inland Aquarium to Open
The world’s first inland "ocean
arium” has been built in Niagara
Falls, New York, and is the first
inland aquarium in which marine
animals will be extensively, exhibited. The oceanarium will be

open to the public starting tomorrow, June 12.
The two-story building occupies
a full city block on the north side
of the city, just below the Rainbow Bridge. The cost of the land,

building, equipment and marine
animals exceeds $1,000,000.
In the center of the circular
30,000 square-foot building will
be a 70,000 gallon dolphin pool.
Dolphins will be trained to accept blindfolds, then search out

food with their natural "sonar”
tracking systems. Sounds of the
dolphins as they track down their
food will be broadcast through

loudspeakers,
A unique feature of the dolphin
pool is the “split level” viewing
arrangement. Visitors can look
above and below the surface of

the water simultaneously through
each of the eighteen 4x6 foot
windows surrounding the huge
lank.

Jantzen's trim trunk with the surfing lookl
Of lastex duck,

the trunk is laced
from the contrast color waistband
trimmed in the same seagoing color at the leg,

Smaller displays of exotic marine life, including types of
octopuses which have never before been shown in an inland
marine aquarium, will run nearly
the full circle of the interior of
(he building. Plans call for a
total of some 50 separate displays.

Sharks, electric eels, piranhas
and other notorious marine life
will bo seen along with gentler
and more beautiful fish from all
of the waters of the world.
According to Mr. Kelley, developer of Instant Ocean, emphasis
will be placed upon the eduea-

tion value of the aquarium. “Our
show the natural
abilities of marine animals. It is
not necessary to put on a circus.
By themselves and behaving naturally, marine animals are the
most intriguing in existence.”
One series of displays will show
North American game fish. Additional plans call for cutaway exhibits showing how the falls and
Great Lakes came into existence.
Supporting facilities including
classroom and meeting space
which can accommodate 200 perdisplays will

sons, and
complete laboratory
facilities for conducting research
are located on the basement level.

The special marine life displays

are made possible by the

Kelley says.
“We can display, for example,
the giant king crab of Alaska,

and the basket starfish, which
has five arms that open out to
form a net that catches other

fish. These and other marine animals which we will have regularly on display are so delicate
that they have rarely been shown
even in oceanside aquariums. We
expect to have the healthiest marine life in any aquarium,” Mr.
Kelley predicts.

jantzen

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director of the Cleveland Aquarium, and Richard Segedi, an
associate, published an article entitled A New Formula for Artificial Sea Water. The formula was
given the name “Instant Ocean
Synthetic Sea Salts.” The name
“Instant Ocean” has been adopted
as a trade name applying to a
family of products developed
from William Kelley’s discoveries.
The formula consists of 12 separate chemical compounds in the
form of a powder and a liquid
chemical mixture. When these are
added to regular tap water, an
ideal culture medium is produced.
This culture medium is not an
attempt to duplicate natural sea
water. Study has shown that many
of the chemical substances found
in natural sea water do not appear to be required in the life
processes of marine organisms.
Instant Ocean Synthetic Sea Salts,
therefore, contain those substances which marine animals
need in their environment to
maintain life.
Marine biologists using the
product have reported that they
are able to raise such extremely
delicate marine life as jellyfish
and polyps, in a chemically defined environment. Many areas
of study of the physiology of
marine animals are thus made
possible, such as the measurement of excretory products and
proper nitrogen balance. The effects of trace elements can also
be accurately determined.
The cost of making synthetic
sea water with Instant Ocean
salts can be as little as seven
cents a gallon in volume applications.

KIDS! THE SAFE DRIVERS AS WELL
AS THE HOTRODDERS!

Z

I

fresh sea water.
In 1964, William E. Kelley, then

I'd rather fight than let you get anything but the best at Willoughby's

\

and styled with coin pocket and drawcord

28-38, $17.95

new

type of synthetic sea water which
sustains ocean creatures in peak
health. -Development work on the
sea water substitute is sufficiently
advanced so that it would be
used even if an aquarium is built
at an oceanside site. “Every constituent of the water is known,
which allows precise control of
the marine environment,” Mr.

Two-thirds of the world’s surface is covered by oceans: however, relatively little is known
about the ocean and its inhabitants. In some cases, man's knowledge of outer space exceeds his
knowledge of conditions in the
seas of his own planet. Better
maps are available of the moon
than are of the floors of oceans.
One of the major problems
faced in studying marine life is
that scientists must either study
it in the ocean itself, or in sea
water aquariums, which, until recently had to be continuously supplied with great quantities of

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>——

SPRING

1— STATE

■sf

SEMESTER

NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

W

WATCH FOR

(MV MM* ■

VOLUME 15

■

■

THE

SUMMER

-

■

SPECTRUM

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1965

NO. 28

Student Senate Recognizes
Athiest Society and S.D.S.;
N.S.A. Elections Planned
Passes Final Amendment
Cutting All Athletic Funds;
$1,200 Allocated to Spectrum
For Weekly Summer Paper
By TRUDY STERN
At, its

last session, held this
week, the Student Senate wrapped up parlcmentary business for
the year. An amedmcnt to the
constitution was passed, stipulat
ins; that no monies may be al-

Sanford

Seide

Marion Michaels Questions Legality
of NSA Representation

spooks against athletic allocations
Photo

by Dan

Waterman

Pholo

bv Dan

Waterman

4100 Students Support President Johnson;
S.D.S. Plans Anti-Administration March
To Protest Policy
Of U.S. In Asia

Pro-Johnson Petition
Attacks SDS Stand

The Students for a Democratic
Society (SDS) will demonstrate
I heir protest of the war in Viet
Nam tomorrow by marching down
Main Street from the UB campus
to Niagara Square for a rally.
This will highlight a week of
pickets, seminars, and soapbox
speeches on campus.

A week ago Thursday, seven
students joined together to chal-

The march, which reportedly
has received clearance with the
buffalo Police Department, will
begin at the fountain in front of
-Norton Union at 1:00 on Saturday.
It will then proceed down Main
Street to Court Street where it
"ill turn right for the remaining
two blocks to Niagara Square.
There, in front of City Hall, a
rally will be conducted to publicize the SDS protest of the war.
In addition to the literature
being distributed at the SDS table
in Norton Union, a petition is also
available for students and faculty
members wishing to record their
support of the stand taken by
Senator Wayne Morse in Congress,
•he Senator has demanded that
• he war be stopped. A second petition asking for volunteers to

in Viet Nam is also availuble. The response was reported
•o be limited.
tight

Demonstrations by

SDS today

will include a picket in front of
Norton Union and a soap-box
speech at the fountain. SDS this
past week picketed
in front of
Norton Union on Wednesday and
hursday. A soap-box speech and
eminar were conducted on Wed-

1

nesday.

The SDS chapter on campus is
filiated with the National Stu,n's f° r a Democratic Society
nich in turn is the student
anch of the League for Industal Democracy. UB
SDS officers
• Hick Salter, President; David
srdmer, Vice-President; Barbara
nody, Secretary;
John Coe, Treair, U
Bill Mayrl, Chairman of
1

steering Committee.

Finances

has been recorded.

(Cont'd on P. 14)

Ad Hoe Committee to Support th*. President's Policy
in Viet Nam garners Student Support

N.S.A. Delegate Election Today

.

Sickler, John Busch,
Ross Pndaloff, Randy Schuder,
and Keaions Whalen, Others have
since offered help to circulate the

Summer Spectrum Established

.

todaf

.

.

.

SEE PAGE 3

Senior Week Planned

.

SEE PAGE 10

T. R. McConnell Award

.

SEE PAGE 3

President s Summer Message

.

.

.

SEE PAGE 3

petitiojK
The petition affirms the support of the signers to President
Johnson . . . “in the belief that
bargaining with the Communist
can only be fruitful when undertaken from a position of
strength." The petition reportedly
will still be available, for addiin Norton.
tional signatures

.

SEE PAGE 12

McCarthy, Smith and Pulski.

tive), Steve

Athletics

Organizations recognized by the
Senate this week were; the Medical Technologists Club, The Film
Society, Students for a Democratic
Society, and the Athiest Philosophical Society. S.D.S, is an organization dedicated to sustaining a community of “educational
and political concerns bringing
together liberals and radicals, activists and scholars, students and

who support President Johnson’s

The students first began soliciting signatures by approaching students and faculty members on an
individual basis. However on Monup a table in the
day,
lobby of Norton Union and the
petition offe/ed there. The seven
students initiating the petition
are: Robert A. Gismondi, Peter
Ostrow tSenatc CRO representa-

and

$1,200 was allocated for the
Summer Spectrum which will appear weekly during the summer
editors spoke for the motion,
pointing out that 6,500 students
attend summer school and that
“an effective summer newspaper
can function well on this campus." David Edlcman will serve
with Mr. Volpe as editor. The allocation passed by an 18-4-1 vote.

policies on Viet Nam, As of Tuesday, over thirty-two hundred

The seven students organized
and initiated the petition in order
to demonstrate tot he Buffalo
Community and other outsiders
that the SDS stand, which has
received publicity both on and
off campus, is not the only opin
ion being expressed by UB students. Success of their efforts is
evident in that Buffalo radio
stations have given generous coverage of their actions on news
broadcasts. More publicity is expected when the original petition
is sent to President Johnson and
copies arc sent to Senators Kennedy and Javits, and Congressmen

The

Amendment was proposed by
Treasurer Sandy Seide. He
pointed out that students pay
money to the Athletic Depart-

located to athletic teams from
Student Senate funds used for
student activities. It was hoped ment in their annual activities fee
that additional money for the supand that “It is up to us to decide
port of athletic teams such as the what we want in the way of athHockey Club will be given to the
letic programs. If the Athletic DeSenate by the Faculty-Student partment would like the Senate
Association either directly or
to handle the allocations to aththrough the Athletic Department. letic organizations which the
Other business considered by the Senate has previously financed
Senate this week included rewe will do so." He made it clear
cognition of organizations inthat this money should come from
cluding the “Athiest Philosophithat department however. Presical Society." and "Students for a dent Clinton Deveaux said, “These
Democratic Society" and the alteams must remember that we
location of funds for summer are supporting them but not finpublication of the Spectrum. To- ancing them.”

lenge the nationally affiliated
Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS) chapter on this campus. The
challenge is in the form of a
petition carrying the names of
students and faculty members

signatures

day elections will be held for
National Student Association delegates to the national conference this summer.

Senate Committee's Report

.

.

.

SEE PAGE 5

Triangular Track Victory
SEE PAGE 16

�S &amp; E WHOLESALE CORP.
COLLEGE

RINGS

Friday, May 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

PINS

—

—

J E W E L E R Y
GOLD

&amp;

SILVER CHARMS

SPECIAL

PEWTER MUGS

Those who would like
their money hack from the
Spring Weekend Raffle
for the 1965 Mustang,
self-adplease send
dressed, s t a m p e d envelope to
»

-

$7.75

—

Engraving Free

25% DISCOUNT
WATCH AND JEWEL REPAIRING AT WHOLESALE PRICES
RADIO AND TV'S REPAIRED

quested will he donated
J. F. K. Memorial

S&amp;E Wholesale Corp.
442 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Mustang
llox 12—Norton Union
State University of
New York at Buffalo
Please intlude your
ticket. All money not reto the

TF 2-1595

l.ihrarv.

PIZZA by DiROSE
90

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tor 13” pizza

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TR 3-1330

Anderson, Educational Scholar to
Return to Teaching and Research

tributed to the volume Education

Dr. Lester Anderson, Vice President for Educational Affairs at
the State University of New York
at Buffalo, announced that he will
leave administration to devote
full time to teaching and research,
effective October 1, 1965.

For the Professions. It is

along

the lines of this book that Dr
Anderson desires to continue research. Through this research.
Dr. Anderson hopes to be able
to aid administrations in produc
ing “better”, and more "elective" educational institutions.

Dr. Anderson was a member of
the faculty of the University of
Minnesota for eleven years. In
1947, he was a consultant in teacher education to the Office of Military Government in Germany, Before coming to Buffalo, he was
Dean of Teacher Education of the
now City University of New York.
At Buffalo, Dr. Anderson holds
the rank of Professor of Higher
Education in the University’s

In 1932, Dr. Anderson began his
career as a teacher in Nebraska
He has served as a teacher for
15 years and he is “enthusiastic’
over the prospect of teaching for
another 15 years.

Rarely does a person return to
teaching. For Dr. Anderson, his
first love is the life of a pro
fessor; teaching and research.
With his practical experience in
the organization and administra
tion of higher education to enrich
his knowledge he will be teaching
a seminar in “Administration in
Higher Education” and possibly
a seminar in. “Education for the

School of Education.

Dr. Anderson is active in several national educational associations and is on the Board of Directors of the Council on Social

Work Education. He has served

on evaluation teams for the Middle States Association of Colleges;

Professions”.

Universities and National Commission Accreditation for Teacher Education; Advisory Committee on Training Grants for Vocational Rehabilitation Counseling of the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare, and he
was recently named to membership on the Mental Health Training Committee of the National Institute of Mental Health.

Key Figure in University Govt.
Dr. Anderson has been a key
figure in the University’s government and was regarded by Pres
ident Furnas as a valuable asset
to the University, specifically in
the merger negotiations with the
State University. Dr. Anderson

considers the tension of University Administration as challenging
and is optimistic towards the
growth of universities and their
function.
He also believes
that “the
search for new knowledge and
the disemination of old knowledge
is basic to Western Civilization".
In this function the University
serve as a “custodian of the wisdoms of the past and creator of
new wisdoms.” This is a great
force for progress. This is the
idea that governed his thinking
during his administrative years
and now continues in his teaching
position, his goal being the continuing, expanding and changing
of the University,

Educational Scholar
A nationally-known educational
scholar, Dr. Anderson has received many national awards including a doctor of Humane Letters
degree from Bradley University
and a Distinguished Alumnus citation from the University of
Minnesota.

Dr. Anderson is the author of

more than 40 articles and chap-

ters of books, ranging in subject
matter from descriptions of new
educational techniques to a con-

sideration and definition of the
role of the American scholar.
In 1962, he produced and con

PAID FOR

BRING THEM TO:

BUFFALO
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Why go through the Bother and Expense of
dragging your winter clothes home and back
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You can have all your clothes cleaned and
stored for the price of cleaning alone.
Big 4 will pick up your clothes at your dorm,
clean and store them in our vault and deliver them when you want in the fall.

BIG 4 CLEANERS

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Phone: TF 3-7131

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�Friday, May 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

T. R. McConnell
Award Not Given

PRESIDENT’S
message
First, allow me to express my
thanks for being invited by The
Spectrum staff to make a statement for the final issue in the
spring of 1965.
This has been an exciting year
and I anticipate that next year
will be equally so.

In some ways it has also been
a distressing year. All of us in
the University community, which
includes not only Buffalo but the
whole State University system,
are truly heartened with the rising interest of the student body
in the important affairs of the
world. You, the students, are the
ones who will be living and trying to guide the course of the
world events for the next generation. It is most appropriate that
you should look at all facets of
our world-wide, complicated life
seriously and objectively. Hence,
I am not disturbed that you as a
student body may become agitat-

ed with affairs on the other side
of the world. I think this is
proper. I am disturbed, however,
when through the generation of
nuclei of emotion you sometimes
base quick judgments, seek easy
solutions and generate headlines
without having really obtained
all the facts and thought the matter through.
Rightly you are concerned with
many affairs in our nation and
also very close home. This is as
it should be. I think I can assure
you that neither I nor anyone in
the administration or in the faculty wishes to raise any objection to your sincere concern
about trying to develop the best
pattern -for the world in which
you are living.
My only plea, if I really have
one, is that you use your University experience for its real inten-

tion
to take advantage of the
learning and the guidance of
many nations over many years.
In other words
to learn a little
bit from the knowledge of the
world today and the message of
history of how people effectively
solved their problems. I am sure
—

—

that the record will show you that
no major problems are solved by
flash judgments and purely emotional reactions. All great social
adjustments come slowly. Sincere
and wise voices are heard, even
though you may not see as much
progress as you would like from
day to day.

At the risk of appearing archaic, may I quote the thought of
that great Quaker poet, John
Greenleaf Whittier, when he said
“. . . and step by step since time
began. I see the steady gain of
man.”

Thank you for your concern,
your sincerity and your energetic
pursuit of those things which
seem important to you. Keep up

with important things in the
world and come back with a
gleam of the future in your eye.
Have a good summer.

President Furnas Will
Deliver Address May 30

to

tradition this years ceremonies
will be held in Rotary Field, on
campus, or in the event of bad
weather in Memorial Auditorium,
at the foot of Main Street. Because of the large seating capacity of both locations tickets will
not be required for admission
at this year’s graduation.

FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP
•
•

Road Lessons
Refresher Courses

PHONE IF 7-5550
Insured

Senate.

Funds For Friendship
House Teaching Grant
From School of Welfare
The School of Social Welfare
at UB has been alloted funds
through a Teaching Grant, to establish a new Field Instruction
Unit for six to eight graduate

students, under the direction of
a full-time faculty member, at
Friendship House
in Lacka
wanna, N. Y. Funds were secured through . the Children's

ment.

3173 Main Street at Windspear

•

The members of the award committee were Dr. Stanley Segal
Miss Dorothy Hass, Mr. Devcaux
Miss Ellen Cardone, Miss Rose
mary Brown, and Mr. Sandy Seidc
Last year’s T. R. McConnell re
cipient was Michael Cohen, Presi
dent of the 1963-1964 Student

graduating class at 3 p.m. on Sunday, May 30. In a break with

drive safely, and quickly”

Classroom Lectures
Pre-Permit Classes

'The award, should not be given
this year," Mr. Devcaux said,
“because there was not one person of all the nominees who made
in outstanding conrtibution to
the entire university community
in all four areas . . . Each of the
nominees was outstanding in his
area of endeavor, but the committee felt that no one was in
all areas"

Bureau Training Project of the

Amherst Driving School

•

award.

President Clifford C. Furnas
will deliver his traditional commencement address to the June

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS
"Learn

The T. R. McConnell Award
for the graduating student leader who has shown outstanding
qualities of leadership, character,
service and scholarship was not
awarded this year. Clinton Dcveaux, President of the Student
Senate announced the unanamous
decision of the award committee
consisting of the four officers of
the Student Senate, the Dean of
Students, and the Director of the'
Union at a coffee hour last week.
The coffee hour had been scheduled for the presentation of the

-College Trained Instructors

-

Dual Co

Health, Education and Welfare
Department of the U. S. Govern
Friendship House, a Unit Fund
Agency, was founded in 1911.
Since its inception as a Settlement House, it has offered so
cial services, tailored to fit the
needs of the citizens of the area
it serves. It currently conducts
a Pre-School Nursery for sixty
children: a Language Enrichment
Program

for students referred

to the agency by the Lackawanna
School System; Group Work Programs, which provide interest

classes and social group expert
cnees for four hundred youth and

adults; Community Organizations

to deal

with

community prob-

Youth employment Scrv
ice which focuses on the prob
lems of school dropouts and
other unemployed youth; and
Family Counseling and Referal
Services for families in trouble.
Each of the Graduate Students
involved will spend two days in
the classroom and three days at
Friendship House. All students
are working toward a Master of
Social Work Degree,
lems;

PAGE THREE

Summer Spectrum Established;
Edelman and Volpe Are Editors
For the first time in the history
of,its publication, the Spectrum
will be printed during the twelve
weeks of summer sessions. The
paper will continue to be a weekly with the first edition appearing on June 11th The present
Editor, Mr. Jeremy Taylor, will be
unavailable and has appointed Mr.
David Edelman and Mr: Raymond
Volpe acting Editors-in-Chief.
This arrangement has been approved by the Publications Board.

served on the Spectrum staff as
Layout Editor and has recently
been appointed News Editor for
the 1965-66 edition. Mr. Volpe has
functioned as layout assistant and

1

sr

In light of yearly increases in
the summer school enrollment

and the subsequent desirability
of a means to inform students of
campus ai d cultural news, the
Summer Planning Committee approved the plans for the summer publication. The Student
Senate and Publications Board
have also contributed to the planning of this precedent-setting
activity.

The summer Spectrum will include relevant news from the
other Buffalo campuses and from
the city, in addition to standard
items such as campus news, feature, and editorial comment. Mr.
Edelman and Mr. Volpe feel that
the scope of an informed student
must transcend concern with his
immediate problems, and that the
paper's primary function is to aid
the student in becoming informed.
This

Edelman

year

has

R.

Volpe

and

D. Edelmen will

publish Spectrum this

summer.

feature writer and will assume the
position of Layout Editor in the
fall.

Those students who will not
attend the summer session and
wish to receive the Spectrum at
their homes can purchase subscriptions today or Monday at the
Ticket Office in Norton Hall. The
twelve issues are available at a
cost of $1 50.

IRC Honors Outstanding
Dormitory Students
The Awards Committee of IRC

has initiated a new program this
year Our aim was to recognize
those people who. by their presence and attitude, made our stay
in university housing a more
pleasant one. Kach house coun
oil chose an outstanding student
from their dorm. The names of
these students will bg, inscribed
on a plaque given to each resident hall by IRC.

The recipients of these awards

are:

Allenhursf
Gerald Gleasman
—as chairman of his dorm’s so
cial committee he organized their
first open house which was very
—

:

successful.
Clement —Paulette Bohnen—a
hard working IRC representative
who was elected secretary for
IRC next year.

Cooke—Karen

Morijis—a

jun-

ior in nursing who heads her
dorm's cultural committee, Karen
will be honored by her dorm this
Sunday.
Goodyear East —Meryl Markowitz—an active corridor rep and
JB member who has a remarkable talent for bringing the girls
together

and

getting things

done.

Goodyear South—Eleanor Cant
well—a very capable corridor
rep and secretary of Judicial
Board whose membership on several committees show her dorm-

mindedness.

Ernie Curtis—Schoellkopf
always available, Ernie expand
—

ed the Prism, a dorm newspaper,
into an inlerrcsidcntial one and
is now its present editor.
Tower
Ray Stoner
present
chairman of the IRC Activities
Council and very helpful in or
ganiring Tower’s social events.
—

—

Donna Weinstein,
831 2961

Macdonald Hall voted Sue Gutheir
Mass Macdonald
award.
gino

The Commuter Night
Committee of the Commuter Board is seeking interested commuting U B students from the general
BuHalo area, who would
lie willing to work on a
special evening planned
for the incpming freshmen this June. Anyone interested please call TX 66536 lietween 6:30 and
7:30 or leave your name
and address in the Commuter Board’s Box in the
Student Senate Office
(Norton 205). Students
will work with their former high school in arranging this program. Freshmen or Sophomore students at U B would be

preferred

�Editorial (Comment

.

.

cjCetteri to the

.

At the recent regional conference of the National
Student Association a representative of the State Comptroller’s Office addressed the assembled delegates concerning the mode of financing the current building boom
within the State University.
He distributed a complexing diagram of the financing system which he termed "a Rube Goldberg” device contrived for two purposes, (1) To circumvent the
State Legislature and the people of New York, by financing the building program without having a bill
passed by the legislature, and (2) Without submitting
the building program to referendum within the State.
He stated that the primary result of devious channels
Permanent

Temporary

Financing
Housing Fin.

Financing

Agency

Friday, May 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

New York
State

Construction

User

State Univ.
Const. Fund

State

Student

University

Pays bills Directs const
2. Issues bonds &amp; notes
~:&gt;- Receives proceeds
State
Liquidates debts-&lt;—

Receives tuition-&lt;

—

&gt;

—

Pays tuition

occupancy

payments

payments

Receives rentals
7, Liquidates debt
8, Relinquishes title
6,

Pays

Is Challenged

had nothing to do with transferring its functions

TO THE EDITOR;
Your

—

recent editorial about me is

inaccurate.

I have not reneged on any campaign promises
regarding the Unamerican Activities Committee.
My position last Fall and now is that the Committee’s legigimate functions can best be handled by
the Judicairy Committee. It could vindicate itself
with a conscientious investigation of the Ku Klux
Klan, for which I voted.

to Judiciary,

I also noted your “S.D.S. on Campus" editorial
As a veteran of two wars, I am deeply disturbed
over the antics of radical and pacifist members of
this group. Because if it in any way expressed the
thinking of our young men today then we would
be lost. For we would have nobody to fight for the
country.

But I don’t believe that most level-headed
young Americans share the views of S.D.S.
Richard D. McCarthy, M.C.

The votes we east here in Congress on HUAC

1.

Receives

McCarthy Replies

Editor

Editor's Note: The above was received from Congressman McCarthy in reply to our editorial of
April 30. We appreciate his prompt reply but we
would also point’ out that we never mentioned his
position on Il.U.A.C. in that editorial, although we
have mentioned in passing in the editorial of April
23. We would also point out to Congressman McCarthy that oUr coments in the April 30 editorial

were directed toward

Mr. McCarthy’s unprovoked

and totally unsubstantiated attack on the teach-ins.
We extend once more to Mr. McCarthy the request that he indicate whether or not he has ever
attended a teach-in, and if not, as we suspect,
where he gets the information upon which to make
his derogatory statements on television concerning the) teachdns. Again we await his reply.

rentals

Viet Cong Have Won Politically

Receives title

for financing was that the net interest on the loans as
they passed through the channels from the State Housing and iFnance Administration to the Stale University
increased over that paid to private, normal funding
by something on the order of several million dollars.
He pointed out, however that students should not be
concerned, since they are (among others, to be sure)
the ones who benefit. 1 suggest that the benefit is short
lived. 1 also suggest that since one of the major “Rube
Goldberg" gimmicks is the imposition of tuition no the
State University student (after all—the money has to
come from somewhere and that the benefit is not as
great as might first be suspected in getting our State
University building program through wtihout opposition from the democratic process. Hut as he suggested,
“after all, they might not pass it, and then where would
you students be?"
With that for openers, the delegates heard from
the Assistant Attorney General tdif the State of New
York, Mr. Hogan, who stated that students have no
legal rights as students, save for those they have as
citizens, which might indeed be revoked by the college
at any time under the principle of "in loco parentis”
and the “privelege" theory of higher education. He went
on to say that the primary reason for the introduction
of the scholar incentive program was to circumvent
that part of the State Constitution which forbids State
subsidies to private higher education. He pointed out
that the incentive award was not paid to a student but
to the school he attends (to prevent minor slip-ups in
the transaction) and that with the introduction of the
incentive award, the private colleges and universities
of New York were then free to raise their tuitions the
exact amount of the award. He admitted that the imposition of tuition in the State system also allowed the
whole complex of financial juggling to proceed more
smoothly, a propos of the building program, as well as
providing State aid, indirectly, to the private schools
who were also in need of large sums of money to compete with the physical expansion of the State University,
as well as with the State’s mammoth research and publishing machine.
That is essentially what transpired at the information meeting, apart from a few glowing and lengthy
words of praise for the “education for excellence" soon
to be provided by the State University. Yes, soon, because as we all know the situation is much too fluid and
amorphous to think about “excellence" just now.
Later!

Son of Feinberg Strikes Again
There has been, since we went to press last week,
yet another example of the truly poisonous effect of the
Feinberg Certificate. Two educators and scholars of
National reputation who were invited to teach in our
summer session have refused to sign the Feinberg Certificate. These men, Galway Kinnell and Fredrik Will,
had agreed to teach here this summer until they were
confronted with that .stupid scrap of bureaucratic ineptitude, the Feinberg Certificate. We have every confidence that these highly qualified men will not be at
a loss for work this summer, as are some of the other,
less fortunate, faculty victims of the certificate, but we
are also sadly aware of the loss to the students who
have already signed up for the courses these men agreed
to teach, and the many other students and faculty who
will now be deprived of their intellectual company and
scholarly stimulation. The summer program is substantially weakened by their absence,, and the broader implications of this incredibly stupid and inept policy for
our University, and the State system as a whole are
truly horrifying.

In this particular case arising out of the infringement of academic freedom inherent in the Feinberg
C.ertifciate, it is the students who suffer the most. It
(Cont'd

on P.

5)

TO THE EDITOR

I am indebted to my colleague Mr. Carrithers
for replying to my letter on the Vietnam situation,
which must have seemed archaic in asking for a
"fair fight,” Yet I was only saying what an American colonel in South Vietnam put rather more
straight forwardly: ‘‘This is a political war and it
call for discrimination in killing. The best weapon
tor killing would be a knife : . . The worst is an
airplane" (quoted by David Halberstam in The Making of a Quagmire); or what another American
officer said to AP correspondent Malcolm W.
Browne (quoted in his The New Face of War):
“This is a rifleman’s war and I’d be happy if they
took every plane and every cannon out of the
country. They do more harm than good.”
However, I now realize that it is silly to ask
for a fair fight in those terms because clearly the
United States has lost such a fight before it begins.
The Viet Cong, from all one can gather, had long

ago won the political war, “Both Halberstam and
Browne,” say John Baton Davies, Jr. in last week's
New York Herald Tribune, reviewing the two new
books mentioned above, “view Saigon’s and our
battle for men's minds in South Vietnam as a
dismal failure,” The Viet Cong seems to embody

the kind of patriotism that defeated the French
over ten years ago. In the face of such patriotism,
the United States can leave (as De Gaulle now
emphatically advises from his own experience) or
can continue to pit bombs and bullets against human flesh and spirit in a most dishonorable and
hopeless way.

As for the use of such a "fine weapon” as
napalm to save American lives, I suggest to Mr
Carrithers that a better way to save American lives
is to bring our boys home, and find some empty
South Sea island where the obviously illegitimate
South Vietnamese Government can palm out its
pitiful lifetime in exile.
Ralph Maud

Students Applaud Carrithers’ Stand
TO THE EDITOR

Sincerely,

Though noon auctoritee
rilhers, wc salute you.

...

Ruth Shapiro

to spoke, Dr. Car-

Ray Volpe
Randolph D. Schuder
Ross Pudaloff

Diane Oleski

Faculty Apathy Causes Dishonesty
TO THE EDITOR

A couple of weeks ago a letter appeared in the
Spectrum which stated that one important reason
for the extensive amount of cheating on this campus
was due to faculty apathy. 1 would like to emphasize this point by citing an experience which has

just happened to

me.

I was studying for an exam when a friend revealed that he had acquired a copy of a similar
exam given last semester. The test had not been
stolen
the teacher had allowed each student to
retain his copy. Believing that the same questions
might appear on this exam, it was with a relatively
clear conscience that I memorized the questions
and answers. Not only was my “hunch" correct,
but consequently I received an A on the exam, one
of the main reasons being that I was familiar with
many of the questions in advance.
—

1 was not particularly proud of the sterling
manner fit which I had achieved this grade. As a
result. 1 informed the professor that the exam was
not completely fair in that several people had a
significant advantage over the others I also sug-

gested that in the fututre it would perhaps be wise
to construct new questions for each test.
The teacher’s reply could not have been more
disheartening. She was not only aware that the
tests were similar, but she attempted to justify this
practice. Among her answers were that it is diffi
cult to construct objective questions, that much
effort is required on the teacher’s part in continual
ly changing questions, that by asking the same questions she qan stress the saipe points made last sc,
mcster, and that if a student takes the initiative in
finding old exams, he deserves a good grade.
More than just being incorrect, I believe the
reasoning voiced by this professor is indicative of
the type of faculty apathy which is ruining college
education. Firstly, an almost unlimited number of
short-answer questions can be devised for a course
which has large subject matter (ask anyone who
has ever attempted to predict test questions). Similarly. more than one question can be made which
will emphasize a point. But I do, agree with her
when she states that it requires a lot of work to
continually creat JUST exams. As a student I have
every right to expect this, and yes, even demand it
Jeffrey Berman

Port’s Stand Supported
TO THE EDITOR
Last week a professor in one of my 500 student
classes, exhibited “Faculty Apathy." This confirmed
my full support of Mr. Port's past articles. I
realize that this may not be the stereotype UB
professor, but I can only speak from my past
college experience. I have been on this campus for
four semesters now, and I can honestly say that
only three our of the twenty-one instructors, that
I have had, truly cared about his students as
individuals.

Many times students arc opposed, or cannot
comprehend an idea that a teacher lectured on and
by all right he should speak this out with that
lecturer I cannot understand why an educator will

refuse to review, expound upon of clarify any poi
that a student may not fully understand. If tcachc
are truly devoted educators their aim would be
broaden the eager minds that there are on tt
campus, and not to decrease the questions and
terests that every student possesses.
The professor that I started talking abou
tually forbad any questions at his lecture
promised a penalty to any student who trie
see him, during his office 'hours. What kinc
respect does

this

professor expect 0

I would appreciate an

answer

from any

fai

member as to why this attitude is present an
why this is not changed by the University,.
Theodore Asp.es
(Cont’d on P.

12

�Friday, May

7, 1965

SPECTRUM

gucinski

.

.

.

PACE

Editorial

Student Senate
Committee

The Annual Awards Day Program for the Cadets

(Cont’d from P. 4)

may be argued (as indeed I would) that the University
itself, the whole academic community, will suffer more
than the individual students who are deprived of instruction from these extremely competent men, but no
one would argue that the students will not be hurt first
and most obviously.
The issue is clear. The University would rather
subject students to this indignity and depravation than
find an administrative procedure which would not drive
excellent teachers from our doors.
We ask once again, what is the use of an onerous
and unprofessional device that fails to discourage real
subversives from teaching, but only makes it impossible for students to learn from men who take their job
as teachers seriously? We have waited for almost three
years for an answer to this question and we are growing
more.anc' more impatient.
Granted that the Feinberg law is an abomination;
granted that the imposition of political tests on teachers
is vile contrevening of academic freedom; but why must
the State University go beyond the law to harrass teachers whose politics are completely democratic, or even
inocuous, under the guise of saving the students from
Communist propaganda? I hope that we can afford to
wait for an answer!
Students hire a university to teach them, not to
regulate their lives as citizens. When they feel that
that University is not fulfilling the function for which
they employed it, they have two choices. They may leave
and seek admission elsewhere (like a man quitting his
job to find a better one somewhere else), or they can
band together to petition the University to fulfill the
obligation to educate them (like a man joining a labor
union to improve Working conditions, rather than quiting his job.)
A university which does not offer education in an
atmosphere of free inquiry and diverse debate is cheating its students. A university which recognizes no responsibility to respond to student and faculty concerns
is cheating every one, even itself. How long can a man
close his eyes to being cheated?

Reports

Calendar—the Calendar Committee composed of R. Rieboff, J.
Kriegman, L. Kaufman, and S.
Cohen and chaired by Marty
Obers, met with Dr. Kaiser yesterday to discuss the changes
proposed in the referendum to
be held today. Nothing was
accomplished at this meeting.
It was clear that the Calendar
Committee of the administra
tion Dean's Council was "reluctant" to change the calendar as they arc formulated
two years in advance. It was
also noted that lack of communcation between the students and the administration
was the cause of much misunderstanding not only in reference to the calendar but many
other issues on this campus.
Dr. Kaiser claimed* that every
year when the calendar was
discussed, students chosen by
Dean SiggelkoW sat in on the
committee. However, the student government was not made
aware of who these students
were. It was decided that the
present calendar
committee
would serve as student repre
sentatives at the meetings.
Block-Seating—letters were sent
to all fraternities asking them
to submit reasons for blockseating and any other suggestions. As of yet, no one has replied. This matter will be
dropped by the Welfare Committee unless there is a response by the end of next
week.
Library—In order to take advantage of the fact that the library will be open late during
Parting Thoughts on Politics
final exam time, the Welfare
Since
this
is our last editorial of the year, we feel
to
Committee is trying
obtain
justified in extending our final remarks besomewhat
for
extended curfews
female
yond the immediate headlines and discussing the role
residents.
of politics in the life of the student generation. Since
Definite efforts have been
made to decrease the noise in the unfortunate riots at Berkeley, and most recently
the library. The staff has been since the S.D.S. March on Washington to End the War in
made fully aware of the issue
Viet Nam, we have seen a great deal of time and energy
and have taken direct action expended in the national and local mass media discusswith
to deal
the problem in ing the “explosive revival of
the far left,” and the
certain instances.
"radicalism" of American college students. We have
Beer—the Beer Committee chair
been told htat the communist conspiracy is behind it
ed by Bob Potter has been
working out solutions for I) all,, that the communists have planted their seeds in
how beer will be dispensed American college youth and are reaping a rich harvest
of dupes and devils.
and 2) how to deal with disci
plinary problems. Results of
It is,certainly true that the Communists would like
the postcards sent to parents vei’y much to capture the imaginations and hearts of
requesting their opinion on students; it is
also true that a great deal of effort is
beer on campus were: a majorbeing put forth by communists of all sizes, shapes, and
ity in favor of beer at special
descriptions toward that end. But it is also true that
occasions and a large major
they are achieving very little success. We are perhaps
ity against having beer and
in a unique position to say this with no small amount
light wines served regularly
of authority, since we deal every day in one form or
in the Rathskeller.
However, in last year's student another with a large segment of student political thought
poll a majority of students
and action.and have a chance to watch this “re-birth of
were in favor of having beer radicalism” at close range.
served' in the Rathskellar and
True, there is a growing imperative within the
at the last Faculty Senate meetcollege generation toward morality in politics, toward
ing April 21, a resolution was
social reform, toward a definition of the goals of this
passed in favor of having beer
served on special occasions country in terms of humaritarian, .rather than strictly
and in, the Rathskellar. The economic ideals-—-but this is far from communism! It
University Council will be
is, in fact, closer to the ideals of life, liberty, and the
meeitng this month to make
pursuit of happiness, than the dreary, inhumane, amoral,
the final decision.
and squalid embellishment of simple greed which has
Other subcommittees estaboften passed for "Americanism” in previous generations.
lished arc:
As many of you are well aware, the present editor
Grounds: I,eon Kellner
of this paper is a “leftist” (an anarchist, in fact), but
Facilities: Chuck Learokos
Referendum: Steve Sicklcr
he is also an anthrocrat, a constitutionalist, and a great
Transp.: Jack Doren
many nther things which have nothing to do with the
Comm.: Eileen Kolyninck
common definition of "politics.” Politics, for the “new
Registration: A1 Bull
r adical” are not an end
in themselves ,an inflexable
Food: Howard Spilke
tactic for achieving defined goals. Politics are the natBookstore: Marty Feinrider
ural outgrowth of increased wealth, leisure, education,
_
'

eral orientation. Many students
do not attend these classes, and
many teachers do not hold classes. Travel is expensive for only
four days, and students need more
time than this short period allows to travel home.
2. A change involving Thanksthat
classes would end the Tuesday before Thanksgiving rather than
Wednesday. The lost academic
day would be regained by having
classes end Tuesday, December
23 as it has always been rather
than Wednesday, December, 22.
Reason
It is difficult to get home Wednesday. AH means of travel are
excessively busy. Since labs are
cancelled that week, no change
in the planned schedule is needed. It is the custom at most oth
er universities with a large resident population to end classes
the Tuesday before Thanksgiving.
3. Would you be in favor of
having the University Administration establish a definite rule stating that no student be required
to take more than two examinations in any one day during the
final examination period.
Reason
The present system allows a
(Cont'd on P. 12)
giving vacation would mean

als.
1. According to the proposal
of the Student Welfare Committee, the intercession would be extended by three academic days,

allowing classes to begin Monday
morning rather than the previous
Thursday morning. The lost academic days would be regained in
May, classes ending Friday, May
13 rather than Tuesday, May 10.
Also these changes would permit students to have a two day
study break before final examinations would begin Monday
morning.

Reason
The first two days of classes,
Thursday and Friday, are for gen-

THE

SPECTRUM

official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo
ublication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
,

weekly

Peter Rubin
Barbara Strauss
.Trudy Stern
Open to Applicants
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ann Orszulak
David Edelman

News

Editor
News Editor
Editor
feature
Sports Editor ,
Copy
Editor
layout Editor
General

-

JEREMY TAYLOR
Business Manager
Business Mgr. Elect
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager

Photo Editor

Faculty” Advisor
Financial Advisor

Bernard

Dikman
Mark Blumberg
Auerbach
Alice Osfrandef
Edward Joscelyn
William Siemering

S,

'

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor

Howard

Dallas Garber

Bugelski, Meryl' frank, Sharon Heend, Marion Michael, Debbie
'e, Scott Kurman,
Jo Anne Leeganf, Eileen Teifler, Sue' Greene, Bill Cortes, Joey
Chuck
TerrY Davis, Helen
Peters. Joan Fox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Gigha,
r
Cummings,
Raymond Volpe, Jerome Taylor, Marsha Alt, Margo Wallach, Alan Golde,n Sue Zuckerberg,
Sue Thomas, Mickey Drexler
’
Staff

Vicki

■

Wts Staff: Chick
Arnold, Richard D'randoff,
uelem, Steve Cbersfem, Martin Jaffe, Mike

Photograph,

Gruf^

Stall

,an ey

David

Steve

Feign,

lichwala,

Steve

Don
Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Worfman. Pox,
Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder, Dave
Mai

2vmanows *

1

''

Staff:
aimer, lee CoreyDiane Lewis,

Jane Herbrand,

Elbe

Gold,

Joyce Fenmore, Mary Loo
'

Second Class; Postage Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.
Suosc/ipf'on ‘ S3.00 per year, circulation
950C

Represented for national advertising- by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York. N. Y.
•

Ffftss

Stan

Harvey Starr

Castro,

m

(

,

Vote for Calendar Change

Student Welfare Committee urge
each and every student to vote,
expressing his opinion of the proposed changes. The results will
be influential in the move to have
next year’s calendar changed,
changes in calendar
Today, student opinion is being polled on the proposed changes in the University Calendar.
Polling places have been set up
in Norton Union from 11:00 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., and in Tower, Clement. and Goodyear Halls from
II 00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
The Student Senate needs your
opinion on the following propos-

FIVE

Finance Committee

Sanford Seide has established
several subcommittees to investigate food and bookstore
prices, parking lot fees, etc.
This Friday the Investigating
Committees and the Executive
Officers shall , meet with Dr.
Puffer, Treasurer of the University.

Activities Committee
Chaired by Jeff Lewis it has
established a complaint board
to which “all students may
register their grievances concerning student organization.''
The committee is also working
(Cont’d on P.

10)

and the concommittant of these, a genuine' concern for
the human community.
It is that growing concern which is the real force
behind “the campus revolt.” not anything as dull or
stupid as the communist party or any of its doctrinaire
off-shoots. Politics play a real part in the life of the
whole man. Politics are the substantial and theoretical
products, of a life which includes self examination and
critical appraisal of the situation in which we all live,
as individuals and as human beings more united by our
similarities than divided by our differences.

W(»V.

�PAGE SIX

Friday, May 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

Education and Cultural Affairs
Academic Dishonesty Interferes
With Transmission of Knowledge'
Academic dishonesty is absolutely inconsistent with the purpose of the College. The College
has a single purpose, to transmit
sound knowledge to students. In
course of time it certifies student achievement by awarding a
degree or by recommending promotion to a senior division. If
the college certifies a record of

University College is responsifor all 100 and 200 level
courses, and a statement of its
policy in regard to Academic Dishonesty is called to the attention
of all students who are enrolled
in these courses.
ble

Milton Plesur,
Acting Dean

achievement that has been obtained by fraud or dishonsty its
integrity is called in question.
It is therefore the responsibility
of the faculty and students of
University

GERALD MAURI

College

fraudulent and
demic behavior.

to

Symposium, Discussion
Conducted at Unitarian

prevent
aca-

Universalist Church

dishonest

“The Triple
BUFFALO, N.Y.
Challenge: Peace, Freedom and
Jobs,” a symposium, will be held
from 1 to 5 p.m., Saturday, May
8, in the Unitarian Universalist
—

Browsing Library
Contest Winners
Are Announced
Mr. Gerald Mauri, Mr. Lewis
Bowman, and John Medwin are
first-, second-, and third-place
winners, respectively, of the 1965
Browsing Library Contest, sponsored by Professor
David B.
Stout.
Prizes were awarded at a re-

ception for all the applicants in
the Browsing Library Thursday,
April 29. Professor Stout awarded the first prize of $100 to Mr.
Mauri. The Fine Arts Committee
of Norton Union, headed by Mr.

Paul Blatt, awarded second and

third prizes of $50 and $25 to
Mr. Bowman and Mr. Medwin.
Mr. Mauri's entry consisted of
a collection of books dealing with
the “Wines and Foods of France."
Bouquet de France by Samuel
Chamberlain, Wines and Spirits
by L. W. Morrison, Larousse Gas-

tronomique by Prosper Montague
are examples from the collection.
Mr, Bowman's entry was entitled "Modern Poetry” and included books by various modern
poets, such as Robert Graves, Robert Frost, Ezra Pound. Mr. Mcdwin s took first place with his
books of the "Elizabethan Age,”
featuring books by Elizabethan
writers themselves, as well as
books written about the ntera
lure, music, and art of the Eliz
abethan era
Mr. Medwin took
second place in the contest of

last year.
This year marks the third year
that the Browsing Library Con
test has been offered. When it
was originally begun in 1963, Dr.
Stout offered first and only prize
of $100 to the winner. For the
first time, the Fine Arts Committee provided second and third

prizes.
The idea for the contest actual
ly belongs to Mrs. Stout, who won
a similar contest at Berkely, in
California. Both Dr. and Mrs,
Stout hold books in high esteem;
between them they own over 8.000 books. They hope to see the

Browsing Library Contest become
a tradition at the University.
Past winners of the Browsing
Library contest are Ellen Marie
Cass on Nursing in 1963 and
Nancy Schaut on Egyptian Art in
1964

The major categories of academic dishonesty are established
readily. They

are:

cheating in

examinations and quizzes; unauthorized procurement of examinations and quizzes; plagiarism; forgery; the writing of a
paper, assignment, or examination for another. Among the penalties for such behavior are:
failure of an examintaion or
paper; failure of a course; suspension from the University; expulsion from the University. Cir
cumstances alter cases and rea-

—

Weekend. Concert —DICK
GREGORY &amp; MANDR ELL SINGERS Senior
Rail
STATLER MIL—

TON HOTEL. Tickets
available now at the Ticket

Booth

—

Norton Union.

Four panelists will speak on
aspects of “The Triple Challenge,”
to be followed by roundtable discussions.
The program opens with a
statement by Robert L. Tenney,
peace intern for the American
Friends Service Committee in
Syracuse, and former field worker for SNCC (Student Nonviolent

son must guide in determining
what disciplinary action is appropriate in a particular case.

Coordinating Committee).
The Rev. Porter W. Phillips,
Jr., Humboldt Parkway Baptist
Church, will speak on “The Challenge of the Human Rights Revolution.” Rev. Phillips was a participant in the March on Montgomery, and is currently vicechairman of the Community Action Organization.
The challenges of full employ-

Uniform and equitable procedures are essential. It is recommended that: students be informed by the faculty members
of the rules in force; relevant
evidence be gathered at the time
of the offense or as soon thereafter as is practicable; in the
first instance disciplinary action
should be recommended by the
instructor and department chairmen; all such recommendations
should be reported to the dean;
involvnig possible suspen

cases

sion or expulsion should be referred to the dean; all appeals
of departmental action lie to the
dean, who, at his discretion, may
consult with the appropriate College

Committee.

Novelists Eligible For
Award Books Contest
Award Books (a paperback division of Universal Publishing and
Distributing Corporation)
announces a contest for new works

of fiction in the English

lan-

guege. Any writer who has not
had a novel published is eligible.

The judges will be Herbert

Gold, best-selling author and a
former judge of the National
Book Awards; Rochelle Girson,
Book Review Edittor of the Sat

ment and automation will be han-

dled by Wesley J. Hilts of the
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union and senior councilman in Niagara Falls;
and, Marvin Bloom, UB School
of Social Welfare.
Kogcr R. Woock, State University School of Education and former Director of Seminars for the
Institute for International Ordfcr,
NYC, will focus on “The Challenge of Peace,”

Some questions to be dealt with
are, What steps are essential to
guarantee each citizen's full
share in America's economic and
social life? What solutions are

being proposed to deal with the
extent of present day unemployment? How can our resources be
harnessed to insure human dignity and provide material wellbeing for all? How can we achieve
and maintain a warless world?
The public is invited to attend
admission $1.00.
Organization sponsors include
Marian Anderson. Leonard Bernstein, Pearl S. Buck, Rev. and
Mrs. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Albert Schweitzer and Dr. Benja-

urday Review; and Philip H. Bailey, of thte English Department of

Brown

University.

First prize in the Award Books
New Fiction Contest will be
$2500, of which $1000 will be an
outright cash award, and $1500
in advance against standard royalties. In addition to the winner
selected by the judges. Award
Books may offer contracts to other

manuscripts deemed

worthy of

publication

SENIORS and EVERYONE
Don’t forget to
pick up tickets for Senior

Church, Elmwood Avc. and West

Ferry St.

The contest is open April 1,
1965, and will close December
31, 1965. There is no restriction
as to subject matter or style.
Manuscripts should be conventionally prepared (typed doublespace on one side of SVxll”
white paper) and mailed tp M. B.
Kartcr, Award Books. 800 Second
Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10017.
There should be a covering letter,
mailed separately, stating name
and address of author, title of
manuscript, and date when the
manuscript was sent.

min Spock.

TBi'SAV Wit Go As HIGH AS %OOo
A WlF WdU AGFff 15 F/MK ON THE
OWE? EXECUTIVE TPAlWEETS."

College An Unsatisfying Experience
Faculty and Administration Make
By ROBERT FELDMAN
Trying to collect one’s thoughts about the four
years spent at this University is like trying to figure
out, when one eats sweet and pungent spare ribs at a
Chinese restaurant, exactly what is sweet and what isn’t.
I know, however, that I came to this University restless
and groping for something. I leave more restless and
less sure of the world around me than when I came
this is good
I know I came to this University with an ideal in mind of
what the academic cum educational process should be in an institution of higher learning. This
ideal has changed, evolved, if
you will, with the experience of
having lived in such a setting as
this one which is so diametrically opposed to what I thought a
University should be.
I The Faculty
The vision of an academic community of scholars interacting
with one another in a meaningful way I still hold, and will continue to hold, despite the lack
of same on this campus. The
faculty, it seems to me, with the
exception of a few, hold themselves above, aloof, from the
undergraduate. It is a rare occasion when one walks through
the Rathskellar and sees a few
faculty members sitting at a table
talking to a student or group of

Maybe

WEEKLY CALENDAR

(friday—I
.

I

SATURDAY—9:00 a.m. Art Exhibition; Rich
1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Symposium:*
ard Huntington, Graduate Stu
"The Triple Challenge: Peace,)
Freedom, and Jobs.” Unitarian-.
dent. 231 Norton Union.
12:00 Noon Music and Poetry:
Universalist Church, Elniwood
Chamber Setting of the Sand
burg poem “Gone” by Com- SUNDAY—
poser-pianist Dorrit Licht; nar8:00 p.m. Music: "Spring Varia1
rated by Susan La Mothe. Baird
tions" performed by the Sister's
3:00 p.m. Convocation: Stephen Choral Ensemble of Villa Maria*
Spender, poet. Conference Thea8:30 p.m. Music: Symphonetfei
of Buffalo, under F. A. Ressel.
ter, Norton Union.
1
8:Q0 p;m. Art: Japanese Pottery
Kleinhans Music Hall.
and Crafts. Albright-Knox
8:30 p.m. Music: "Evenings fori
8:15 p.m. Chamber Music: DiNew Music” with the Creative.
rected by Joseph Wincenc. UpAssociates of UB. Albrightton Hall, Buffalo State.
Knox Art Gallery Auditorium.!
,

I
.

1

students. All is formal, with com-

plete delineation as to the roles
and bounds one may or may not

assume.

Even the mode of address in this system, Dr. So-andSo, automatically sets up a shield,
a barrier, to meaningful discourse. I realize the pressures
teaching, reon the faculty
seSfch, graduate student tutelage, etc. I appreciate the rationale used; there are only so many
hours in a day, and I accept this
as a fact. However, the “job” of
being a professor, a deseminator
(sp?) of truth, is an extraordinary
one, not bound by the automaton
9 to 5 clock-punching mores that
hold for the rest of society. The
“job” is a sacred one of arousing interest, instilling a way of
thought, which leads to the highest process man is capable of, synthesizing an idea. What is more
beautiful than to see a Freshman
have “insight” into a problem and
develop a series of ideas around
it? You and I know that it might
not be original: it might even bo
trite, but for him ft is new. vibrant, electric, dynamic. We often
lose sight of the fact that the
whole gigantic system justifies
itself by such an act of creation
The student spends four years
at an institution engrossed in
the system of formal classes,
grades, papers, and all the vare
ous trivia expected in order
that he do moderately will. The
student spends his time in a ritualistic way of life imposed on him
by the system. If I were a pro
fessor sitting with some col
—

leagues,, discussing these probbelieve these men would

lems, I

secretly agree with me that the
system, as it is now constituted,
discriminates against the forma

tion of hew ideas.

(Cont’d oh P. 14)

�Friday, May

7, 1965

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Alinsky Doctrine: You Can't Have
Change Without Controversy'
1(&gt;P

The Official Bulletin is an au-

thorized publication

of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix, beprior to
fore 2:00 p.m. the Friday
the week of publication. Student
organization notices are not accepted for publication.

Placement

Announcements

The Herff Jones Company has

announced

opportunities

sales

with their western New York
State, western Pennsylvania, west-

ern Ohio and Indianapolis offices.
Prefer men in late twenties and
early thirties who have completed
their military obligation and are
free to move. Call University
Placement Services for further
information.
Company is
Voisin, Cannon
recruiting for qualified personnel
to enter their Registered Representatives “Account Executives”
training program. For more information contact the University
Placement Services.
Sales opportunity for engineering major. The S. U. Shafer Company, Inc. are Manufacturers Representatives, selling fabricated
metal and plastic components to
industry. Candidates must have a
basic knowledge of mechanical
equipment and
manufacturing
methods of the items and processes this company utilizes. Additional information is available
in the University Placement Serv&amp;

The State of Illinois

Depart-

ment of Personnel in Springfield
is conducting an intensive recruitment campaign for college trained men and women. More information regarding the types of
positions available in the Illinois
state government is available at
the placement office.
The Kordite Corporation of
.Macedon, New York, has a current opening for a Traffic Manager. The candidate will be expected to plan and analyze costs

and maintain effective distribution and supply and directly supervise four employees. Additional information is available in the
University Placement Services.
Due to an expansion in the
Mortgage Department, the Manufacturers
Traders Trust Company has a vacancy for someone
with knowledge and/or experience in real estate appraising.
Qualified candidates should contact Mr. George Binner or Miss
Mildred Blake at the University
Placement Services.
Industrial Relations: Opportunity for young man who wants to
work in the Industrial Relations
field. This position is with the
t tica, New York, subsidiary of a
large corporation. The company
11 sires a
young man who w.i 11
handle all phases of industrial
relations and can work on hh
l! wn. Further
information at University Placement Services.
&amp;

The U. S. Coast Guard has an'imced
in the pay

most of its officer candidates
Bite they are undergoing trainat the service's Officer Candate School in Yorktown. Virua. Under the new program,
dlege graduates attending the
hool will, receive the pay of an

■;5

Interested/ persons

ive additional
e

1

can re-

or by writing to: Procureent Officer, Ninth Coast Guard
'strict. Main Post Office Buildg. Cleveland, Ohio.

Educationa!
’a

TEACHER PLACEMENT

INTERVIEWS

13
Corcoran Unified School District, Corcoran, California (locatMay

ed south of

Fresno)

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
May 12. 13
U.S. Naval Air Station: The
Naval Aviation Information Team
from the Naval Air Station, Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, will be
visiting the campus for the purpose of acquainting qualified
young men with the programs
available leading to a commission
in the U.S. Navy. The goal will
be to encourage young men to
complete their education and upon receipt of a degree enter the
—

Navy’s Flight Training Program
in an Officer Candidate status.
PART-TIME AND SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT
New York Central Railroad has
several full-time employment opportunities for Sophomore or Junior Industrial Engineering students. Applications are on file
at the University Placement Serv-

ices.

New Head Appointed
For UB Biochemistry
Dr. Richard J. Winzler, professor and head of the Department
of Biological Chemistry at the
University of Illinois College of
Medicine in Chicago, has been appointed chairman of the Department of Biochemistry in the
Schools of Medicine and Dentis-

try at UB.
Dr. Winzler will begin his
new duties Aug, 1. He succeeds
Dr. Wilson D. Langley who has
been acting chairman since Dr.

Douglas M. Surgenor resigned
the chairmanship to devote full
time to his duties as Dean of the
School, of Medicine.

Before joining the

University

of Illinois in 1952, Dr. Winzler
served on the faculty of the University of Southern California for
nine years. He was a research
fellow in biochemistry at the National Cancer Institute from 1941
through 1943. He has also served
as a medical education consultant
at the University of Chiengmai,
Thailand. In 1958. Dr. Winzler
was a Commonwealth Scholar at

the University of Freiburg, Germany for one year.
Dr. Winzler received his bachelor’s degree, in 1936 and his
doctorate in 1938 from Stanford

Placement Division:

registrants who have acceptPositions ,are reminded to re-

|fn

,° rm

the Position Acceptance
soon as possible. This in-

as

Station is necessary for deae
mating your placement file and

kind

of

All members of the Student Faculty Association
for Academic Freedom
who plan to he in or near
Buffalo during the summer are requested to leave
their names, addresses and
-

phone

Dimmers

for Kim

Darrmy in the University
College mailbox in the

Student

Student

Room 205 Norton.

Office,

He said that I.A.F. offers its

t

which will

organization

allow the poor, the undcrprivile
ed. the unorganized socio-cconotr
ie classes to take their places as
citizens of the United States."
Saul Alinsky told a large UB aud
ience this week. Mr. Alinsky.
Whose ■ speech was sponsored by
the Student Senate Convocations
Committee, the Civil Rights Committee and the Politics Club, is
the executive-director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, an or
ganization which has been invited
to Buffalo
mittec

by

the East Side ComThe East

Organization.

Side Organization is attempting to
raise the $150,000 necessary to
bring the I.A.K. here for three
years.

Mr. Alinsky said. "You can not
have a change without controversy.” The controversial areas in
which I.A.K. operates is the ini

Spanish Cluh

experience to the local leadership.
He spoke with confidence‘ about
the "high quality" of leadership
offered from the community itself. "These people Team from ex
periencc. They understand the relationships between the issues
and the community, and how to
make sense out of it. They are

all urban renewal experts because
they have to be." He added that
many of these people had only
one or two years of high school
training and pointed out the su-

perfluousness of any relationship
between an education and a diploma

1’sveliology Club
Graduate Nurses Conn

fulernational

Ml budgets must he in
today

Friday or the or-

,

ganization may not be eli-

gible for a budget allocation.
Finance Committee

At a conference before his
speech Mr. Alinsky lambasted the
adihinistration’s anti-poverty pro
grain as a "prize piece of political pornography." He said that
it afforded a cooperation between
public and private authority, a
"big business" with “the poor nowhere in sight.” When asked what

I.A.V.

('.lull

could do that the poverty

prbgram could not do, he said
"I.A.K couldn't do worse."

tiation of programs geared to
help the people help themselves
gain political power and have a
meaningful voice, "The basic issue,” Mr. Alinsky said, “is the
question of whether or not we believe in the people. Ostensibly
that question was answered by
the founding fathers, in that is
the

essence of the democratic

process. Questions are still being
asked, however, such as; Are they
responsible? Who are their leaders? Do they know what's good
for themselves? These ideas are
undemocratic and fearful,”

i.A.F." he said, "does believe
in democracy. Wc operate to help
the poor lake a plate in the
democratic society and they must
have that place. As long as they
are barred, democracy is crip
pled

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information ori
OCS program from the nearCoast Guard. Recruiting Sta-

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developing statistics regarding
placement for the benefit of future graduates, ,

The following organizations do not have their
budgets in to the Finance
Committee;

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All these are cars covered by our special 100% guarantee

IBBOTSON RITCHIE FORD
-

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(near Eggert-just around corner from Boulevard Mall)

IF 7-32 32
5 Minutes from Campus

PAT SAYS: GOOD LUCK ON FINALS

A
PAT
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JUST THE WAV YOU UK£ 'EM

�Friday, May 7,

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Mm JLiwai

iML&amp;as

“Do The Stars Still Shine Tonight?”
According to the local press, Young Cassidy —the
story of Sean O’Casey’s life as a young man—will open at
the Center, May 14. The movie doesn’t sound very interesting. It's hard to make a writer’s working life very

appealing on the stage or screen. After we’ve, watched
the dedicated scribbler agonize over his desk through

the dark hours of the morn for awhile, the writer’s
craft becomes infinitely wearying to watch. O’Casey
knew this of course, and his plays are about gunmen,
drinkers, dreamers and lovers. The movie, 1 understand,
makes much of the fact that O’Casey lived in Dublin
during the “Troubles,” and we get lots of shots of the
1. R. A. clashing in bloody conflict with the murderous Black and Tans. There is one insufferably windy
scene where Young Cassidy listens reverently at the
knee of Lady Gregory and William Yeats, but they are
cast as insufferable prigs (Edith Evans and Michael
Redgrave)—nothing like the volcanic, rebelious, cantankerous souls they actually were.
But in spite of the movie’s ordinary appearance and
its uniformily lukewarm reviews, 1 will make every
effort to see it. The reason is simple. Julie Christie
has a bit part in it as an accommodating whore who
idles away the leisure hours with O’Casey.
Do you remember Julie Christie? If you’ve seen
her once and if you are a man, I don’t know how you
can forget her. She was the girl who bounced through
the streets of London in Billy Liar—‘the one who understood Billy and wanted him to go off to the city with
her. One of the reasons why the movie eventually failed
for me was Billy’s refusal to follow her to a life of love
and adventure. No man could have resisted her the way
she looked and moved and smiled in Billy Liar. And I’ve
found that my reaction is hardly unique. She turned on
all of my friends and everyone I’ve spoken to since
about the movie.
Young Cassidy is her second film to be released
in this country and it looks as if she is about to rocket
off on a very successful career. There are properly
respectful articles about her appearing in the Sunday
Supplements and in some fan magazines and she has
been cast as Lara in the British production of Doctor
Zhivago. The ads for Young Cassidy in New York (and
probably in Buffalo soon) feature her picture although
she has a minimal role in the film. But stardom is a
ficticious thing. It is the product of the myth-makers,
publicity men, copy-writers and hucksters of the Hollywood collosus and the “star” is not necessarily coincident with the competent actor. We all know about the
"star,” but it is the actor who obscures space on the
screen and actually seems to create a “Life” of his own
who matters. I think that Julie Christie Is made of this
rare stuff
I hope so. It’s hard to be certain after
one picture (luck, chance, etc.,), and even if one is
certain, who knows what “they" may do with her or
to her. The movie industry is no kid’s game. Marilyn
Monroe became a “star” and something more, and then
she lost it all. It’s happened before, will happen again
-

...

unfortunately.

To be more specific, Anthony Quinn is more than
a “star." Doris Day,in spite of her successes (spelled
“Money”) is indeed a “star" but nothing else. Everybody went to see Clrak Gable and Gary Cooper and
pretty much ignored Humphrey Bogart in the ’30’s and
'40’s, but where are they now? Cooper and Gable look
like period pieces; Bogart seems timbTess. Again, it is
the difference between the “star” and the actor who is,
who has, something more. These days, the Hollywood
hand-out mill is obviously trying to conjure up some
kind of vision of Carol Baker as a sex symbol (the most
appealing female “star”). As Robert Mitchum, her most
recent male co-star put it, “She’s a nice lady, but are

Best Offering:'
The Public Eye
The Private Ear

Western New York Artists' Showing
Suffers Middle-Age Respectability'
By PENNY SPILLER

,

By AUDREY MASIULIONIS

The Western New York Show,
now being exhibited at the AT
bright-Knox Gallery, is a reason-

The experience of seeing the

twin bill of comedies by Peter
Shaffer, presented at Baird Hall,

local talent. If this show suffers
from middle-aged respectability,

for

themselves.

Hence,

should have.
The Public Eye, a rollicking
comedy about a hungry detective’s attempts to reconcile a
married couple, was very relieving in that here was finally a play
in which at least two of the characters could communicate with
With his marvelous Greek accent and superb character portrayal, Thomas Brennan was at
his best in the title role of Critaforou. Jeanette Velihg caught
the Sincerity and sense of humor
of the delightfully perky young
wife with so much life to live.
Gary Battaglia, as the middleaged, stuffy British-businessman
husband, had a Cary Grant quality, only serious, strict in his

criticism of his wife.
The sets were both attractive
and appropriate, considering the
difficulties of working on such

A neurotic
female is unlike
any other
I!
'

All in all, the two plays, front
almost every point of view provided a worthwhile evening for
all who went to see them, and
may very well be the best dramatic offering of the year

no cover charge or minimum

such a woman...her
hidden thirsts and
hungers...told hy the

JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
SAM

NOTO

PLAYBOY’S

TCP JAZZ TRUMPET
nominee and star performer with:
COUNT BASIE
STAN KENTON
WOODY HERMAN
Will Perform Fri., Sat., Sun., Nite at the

world-famed
director

•

•

MICHELANGELO.

•

ANTONIONI

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

490 Pearl Street

in his itpi|
first i lgL|
color ig jgj E
ii ,m iiiy

Parking in Rear

JAM SESSION ' SUN 9pm
Buffalo’s Top Jazz Show!

By Popular Demand...

tO

?

jySLjP MF

-N Y

Time*

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is

v Marriage
'

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Style

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North
1428
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p

s

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De Sica’s

YOU WAIT

—

an inadequate stage and inability
to build flats because of fire regulations. Costume design was both
exciting and fitting, as created
by Esther Kling. Actors used the
stage to its full extent, with the
very competent direction of Julia

Titlirio

MADE. WHILE

ings inside meanings,
subtleties of sight and
relationships that
should entrance. One
of Antonioni’s most
significant efforts!”

It is distressing to find student
work in which the artistic problems are set, defined, and formulated. The current Two Man

Loren Mastroianni

EYES EXAMINED, GLASSES

"k NEW
FILM BEAUTY! Mean

Student art, on the other hand,
should be part of a different environment, Since there are fewer
demands for “respectability” the
younger artist is free to experiment with new problems and solutions. He should not try to
recreate established problems but
rather should attempt to discover
personal answers. If some of the
young artist’s technical competence is hidden by his struggle
with a new problem there are
no grounds for criticism. Competence can come later.

each other.

Sophia

34 CHURCH ST.

these

problems may be solved without
much struggle or “innovrtion.”
Perhaps, in this case, competence
and respectability are desirable
virtues since they provide a good
comparison to the Art Today
Show which depends upon a new
set of values. After having been
exposed to “new art” the Western New York Show may seem
dull and unoriginal, either in
spite of or because of its competence and respectability.

Joseph E Levine

A WIDE VARIETY Of COLORS

inf

Dr. Benjamin Townsend pointed out in the Buffalo Evening
News, the artists themselves cannot be criticized. In general, the
artists whose works were accepted are well-established and indisputably competent. Such artists are expected to be familiar
with the problems which they set

present*

-

STARTS MAY 12

as

“ONE OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST!”

ROUND, SQUARE, HtX

Show in Norton Union is technically omnpetent and visually
pleasing. Paul Jessel and Stephen
Carver are to be congratulated on
their achievement.

ably comprehensive display of

April 21-24, 1965, evoked mixed
feelings of laughter and sadness.
The Private Ear, a tragi-comedy about a young man who has
little self-confidence in his rewomen, was
lationships with
poignant and realistic. Thomas
Brennan portrayed Ted with such
realism that one was inclined to
forget that this was only a stage
play and not the real thing. Ronda
Lyon’s facial expressions and giggles, as Doreen, were particularly
enjoyable. William Cortes, in the
title role of Tchaik, easily obtained the sympathy of the audience and maintained, for the most
part, the character of the shy,
introspective young man, although he didn’t seem to genuinely appreciate the music as Tchaik

you kidding?”

From what I’ve seen, Julie Christie is going to be
more than a “star,” no matter what the establishment
does to gimmick up her performances or says about her
to publicize her pictures. Her presence as a woman lit
up the screen in Billy Liar. Perhaps in Young Cassidy,
we will see what she is and will become.

1965

•

Tf 6-7411

*,

iil

MONICA VITTI RICHARD HARRIS CARLO DE
RITA RENOIR ■ XENIAVALOERI AIM GROT
MICHELANGELO ANTONIONI IONIO GULR 11
RtKistb bT R1Z201I MmO-lliibutou mt TICHNICOLOT
Best

Winner-Golden Lion Award
Picture 1964 Venice Film fest

STARTS WEDNESDAY
STUDENT RATES

oust**
rum
vtsmfmum

�Friday, May

7, 1965

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

NOTICE
The results of a poll
taken in the dormitories
regarding the broadcast ol
•’study” music over

W’BFO-AM during

final
exam period indicated an

affirmative opinion by the

majority of the resident
students. As a result,
WBFO-AM will broadcast
music during the final
exam period.

Dick Rosmini

Dr. Richard A. Howard, Professor in the Columbia University School of Social Work, will
be the principal speaker at the
Eight Annual Social Work Day
to be held May 12.
Dr. Howard, who recently appeared on an N.B.C. White Paper
entitled, "Terror in the Street,"
will discuss, “Voluntary Agencies
and War on Poverty," at 3:30
p.m. in the Norton Union Conference Theater.
At the evening dinner meeting, the Fifth Annaual Award
will be presented to a person who
has made an outstanding contribution to the community.
The program, which is entitled
“The Adjustment of Social Welfare to Social Change,” is being
co-sponsored by the University's
School of Social Welfare and the
Alumni Association.
Dr. Howard received his doctorate from Columbia University.
He also received his master’s degree from Columbia and his
bachelor’s degree from the University of Rochester.
He has served as a consultant
to the President's Committee on
Juvenile Delinquency, the American Bar Association and the Ford
Foundation.
He has authored and eo-edited
various articles and books including “Delinquency and Op-

I Modern Music

•I*

:—-—

By DAN

SCHROEDER

The other side ol the musical
coin, jazz,’ is not getting the kind
of representation on campus or
in this city that it deserves. The
places featuring out of town
groups can be counted on less
than a hand; the Royal Arms
(Herbie Mann, John Hendricks
were there recently), the Castle
Supper Club (featuring the old
but vibrant big-band sound of
such as Woody Herman) are the
leaders. Well-known but locally-

-

based talents as Sam Nolo and
Don Ellis (creative associate) can

be heard wailing early Sunday
mornings at the Boar’s Head and
the Prince Edward. The Bon-Tori
(“Buffalo's ‘Soul Music’ Center")
and the Pine Grill import “rhythm and blues" jazz, but some of
their artists have been recording

for Folkways and Vanguard, so
cross them off the list. Credit is
due to the Norton Music Committee for the long-overdue action of bringing jazz on campus:
The well-known but presentlySUNYAB-studcnl Jerry Nicwood
was featured with three other
students the afternoon of April
28, in Norton, playing Thelonious
Mon-type arrangements. This was
not the first jazz-concert of this
type, nor, we hope, the last May
we call the attention of the Music Committee to the existence of
the Jazz Composers' Guild based
in New York under Bill Dickson,
with names as Cecil Taylor and
Paul Bley, which is attempting
to become established as a non
profit organization and is looking
especially for college jobs. Final
ly, may we recommend to all fraternity-sorority rejects the really
nice live music of “The Young
Set” in case they are more interested in "Being a Social Lion"
than listening.
The much-publicized Dahl-Sha
pey-Shapero concert last Salur
day, May 1, came off quite well,
if not quite as revolutionary as
forecast here. The most American
and the most effective of the
three was the Shapero Partita in
C, often making musical puns on
the Baroque and Beethoven styles
which were its inspirations. The
Dahl leaned more to Romantic
ism, while the Shapey was the
iconoclast of the evening. Shap
ey’s conducting had the vehement
complexity of his piece (during
the course of the piece, he lost
his collar and a percussionist ru
ined a mallet) and his compelling
gestures showed him to be the
and
type of person who would
say "This is the only way
did
to write music." Comments about
it were, of course, mixed.
An original setting of a Sand
burg poem is featured at a re
cital of Doris Licht’s piano stu
dents today at noon in Baird (the
teacher is the composer). The last

t

'Guitarist Extraordinaire'
tonite thru Sunday
INNER CIRCLE
3191 Bailey nr. Circle Ar

—f

Clowjard to Speak
Here Wednesday

portunity: A Theory of
quent Gangs.”

Delin-

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FELLOWSHIP

Subscriptions for the
.slimmer Spectrum will he
available today and Mon-

Tonight at 6:15 p.m. Inter-Varsi:
ty Christian Fellowship is sponsoring a final fellowship supper
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Adock. Transportation will be
provided from campus. Those
should
needing transportation
meet at the parking lot in front
of Tower Hall at 5:45 p.m.

in Norton. Bring your
name and address printed
or typed and $1,30 in cash.

GREEK NOTES

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA will

hold the Pledge Initiation tomorrow at 11:00 a m., at the Town
Club
ALPHA PHI DELTA held their
annual dinner dance April 24 and
wishes to announce that David
Vastola was this year’s recipient
of the outstanding undergraduate

award.

They arc now in the process of
planning their closing affair of
this year, a summer picnic at Allegheny State

Park.

Tonight, ALPHA PHI OMEGA
will hold their initiation dinner
dance. Dinner will he served at
8:00 p.m.
BETA PHI SIGMA would like
announce the induction of
Ihcir Sprint; pledge class. This
Saturday they are having a closed
party at Beaver Island.

to

CHI OMEGA would like to an
nounCe that Cindy Harrison, pres
ident, and Barbara Witzel, were
tapped by Cap and Gown, the
senior women's honor society.
This year, Chi Omega presented
its social science prize at the
Honor's Dessert to Nancy Johnston in Sigma Kappa Phi.
Chi Omega would like to an
nouncc that it was Jeanic McEvoy who won the first place
trophy in the women’s division
for the best time. Diane Poppendeck also came in first in her
lap.

Janet Leslie, a pledge, was electreasurer for Alpha Lambda
Delta.
ted

Tomorrow evening, the pledges'
of PHI KAPPA PSI Will honor
the Brotherhood by holding the
annual “Back to the Womb”
Pledge

Party.

pledges.

PI LAMBDA TAU wishes to
announce the officers for next

Toronto
Tuesday, August 17, 4 p.m,
-

S5.50

Tim Herlehy; treasurer: Mike
Pelz; recording secretary: Dennis
Terhaar; alumni secretary: Tim
Trautman; historian: Elliott Cole;
chaplain: Jack Bolton and senior
1EC representative: Curt
gomery.

-

Mont-

SIGMA DELTA TAU will hold
a social this evening with the
brothers of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
TAU KAPPA EPSILON announces the newly elected officers
for next year. They are: Prytanis
—Dick Carmen; Fpiphytanis—A1
Classman; Hegemon—Pete Reese;
Keith Hoffman;
Crysopholos
(Jrammateus—Earl Wright; Histo
Hypophetes Jeff
Jay Katz;
Dahlbcrg; and Pylortes
Pete
Balcaen. We are also pleased to
announce the selection of Miss
Nancy Schultz as our chapter
—

—

—

Sweetheart.

The Brothers arc holding,a barn
party at the Flying E Ranch this
Saturday. The party will start
at 9:00 p.m, It will be a band
party, and the liquid refreshment
will be Purple Passion. It will be
the last organized party before
finals!
Today between 9:50 a.m. and
1:30 p.m., the Pledge Class of
THETA CHI Sorority will hold a
PIE TOSS. For 25 cents throw
a cream pie at your “favorite"
fraternity pledges. Everyone welcome.

Open House Set
For Saturday
An “Open House” at the School
of Engineering will be held Sat-

urday (May 8) from
4 p m.
Sponsored by

the

11 a m. to
University’s

the “Open
House" will include displays and
demonstrations by each department in the School: These include: Mechanical Engineering,
a ground effects machine; Civil
Engineering, a display of future
Buffalo transportation system. Industrial Engineering. IBM computer demonstration, Aerospace
Engineering, demonstration of a
plasma-jet wind tunnel; and
Chemical Engineering, behavior
of fluids demonstration
Engineering Council,

Guided tours will be conducted
the students. The program is
being held in conjunction with
he 'Welcome Day" ceremonies,
also May 8, held annually at the
University for high school ju
by

TICKET SERVICE
First Come

semester are: president: Dennis
Licherelli; first vice president:
Rush Allen; second vice president:

*

CRICKET
835-2828

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
Prayer meetings arc being held
Tuesday at 3:30 p-m. and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. There are also
Bible studies Friday at 9:00 a m.
and Monday at 3:00 p.m. These
are all held in the CRO Office,
Room 217, of Norton Union.

BEATLES
ON

ZJidinfyA

lowing day the illustrious C A’s
leave for Washington, D.C.,- where
they will perfom in the InterAmerican Festival and, if they
have some free time, try , to divert some foreign aid to this
area.

PHI LAMBDA DELTA is look
ing forward to their closing par
ty this year to be put on by the

LH 2-2980
Hay Rides
Rides

10 for $3.75

4

of the Creative Associates' "Evenings for New Music" at the A1
bright-Knox Gallery will be Sunday, at 8:30 p.m. Works of Milhaud, Shapcro, Carter. Foss and
Riegger are planned. The fol-

Last Friday afternoon. Brother
Don Warren captured two trophies at the "Trike Grand Prix”
in connection with Spring Week
end. One was for the overall
championship and the other was
for setting the fastest time on
the track.

ANDY’S
RIDING
STABLE
-

g

\

First Serve

and their" parents

�Women's Recognition
Awards Presented at
Dessert in Norton
Wednesday, April 21, at
7:00 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore
On

Room of Norton Union the First
Annual Women’s Recognition
Dcsseft took place. Notable university students, student organizations, and faculty were honored. Traditional campus awards
were given. Dean Scudder discussed the changing- role of women in our society and in the
need for women to take a productive and creative position in
that society and then introduced
the guest speaker, Dr. Dorita
Norton, Assistant to the Director,
Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
Dr. Norton spoke on the meaning
of science and its relationship* to
women students.
The retiring Dean of the School
of Nursing, Mrs. Ann Sengbusch,
was honored for the position she
long maintained at the university and for her contributions to
the nursing profession. Also,
Dean Scudder was honored for
her twenty-fifth year as the Dean
of Women.
Various awards were also presented. The new members of the
Alpha Lambda Delta honor society were

named.

The Alpha

Lambda Delta Book Award was
given Susan Kardaman in the
first place and Judith Haber in
the second. The Chi Omega Social Science Award went to Nancy Johnston'. Katharine Pietra
szek received th eSchool of Nursing A w a r d. The Sophomore
Award Went to Hhea From and
Rosemary Brown. Cynthia Harrison was the recipient of the Ann
W Sengbusch Award in the
School of Nursing .

CLASSIFIED
-ADSOne bicycle—cheap,
WANTED
Ruth Shapiro, 831-4186
—

SINCEREST thanks, Dr Wilson
for your time, advice and cool.
With many and varied good wish
es for the coming year—Convoea
tions Committee.

FURNISHINGS for an apartment
—tables, chairs, beds, a bicycle
etc. Cheap but nice. Call: Ruth
831-4186.

DON’T BLOW YOUR COOI
Get this:
For summer months: June, July,
and/or August; 3 bedrooms, kitch-

en, living room, dining room, etc.;
compeltely furnished; all utilities
included; 1 block from campus.
For further information contact:
Howie

837-6138

Bruce

834-4712
837-5210

Don

Furnished apartment to rent for

summer. 2 bedrooms. 5 minute
to campus. Inexpensive. Call
836-6551 evenings.
walk,

apartment

Furnished

to

share

during summer. One male stu-

dent. Princeton apartments. Call
837-6568 between

11-12 p.m.

MASSACHUSETTS SEA COAST:
Furnished 3 bedroom house on
ocean front, fully equipped, private beach, gas heat 45 minutes
to Boston. Available for season,
monthly

or weekly. Ph. NF 4-3082.

57 Desoto, cheap; Bed, Couch
show case call 832-4326.
•

6 months old; excellent
condition $45. Call 832-4326.

Desk

-

Franko Wins Dunning Award
The Brotherhood of the New
York Eta Chapter of Phi Kappa
Psi Fraternity have announced
that David Franko has been
awarded the Richard A. Dunning
Award as the Chapter's outstanding fraternity man.

Mr. Franko is presently a student senator from Arts and Science and is Vice-President of the
Inter-Fraternity Council. He has
served as Historian, Corresponding Secretary and Vice-President
of the chapter. East semester he
made Dean’s List with a 2.1 aver-

The Richard A. Dunning award
is given to fraternity men that
best exemplify the ideas of the
fraternity as displayed by the late
DAVID FRANKO

Freshman

ing the summer
International Student Affairs
Chaired by Hick Jaross it
foreign

Bank’s loan decisions.
Dr, Benishay, whose article,
“Managerial Control of Accounts
Receivable,” will be published
in the Spring issue of the “Journal of Accounting Research," received his bachelor’s degree from
the School of Law and Economics, Tel-Aviv and ’ his master's
and doctorate degrees from the
University of, Chicago,

Sister M. S. Cecilia
Awarded Scholarship
Sister M. Saint Cecilia, a doctoral candidate in French literature at UB, has been awarded
a Fulbright scholarship for the
1965-66 academic year to research
and write her doctoral dissertation at the Faculty of Letters,
University of Paris, France.
Sister M. Saint Cecilia, who will
complete her second year of graduate studies under a National Education Defense Act Fellowship
here this year, has tentatively en-

titled her thesis, “The Influence
of Existentialism on the Christian

Novel.”

uden

i

Academic Affairs Committee
The committee is concer
it five
rosen
Tom Carroll, Cha
nan. is directly, involved wi
ting departmer
formerly

called

compr

nsivc

end of
senior year. I
necessary to pass these in or
der to graduate. Marilyn Kat:
n charge of academic stan
nesty, the mark
dards (i.t
ing system, the quality of our
your

education).

The status of the

undergraduate in reference to

education is being

dealt with

by Phyllis Shapiro and Marty
Gugino is in charge of prob-

Voting today from 9-5 for Se(Jifeen in front of
Conference Theatre. No ID. card

per person

needed.

supply, so reserve seats as
as possible.

The senior class of 1965 is at:
tempting to begin a new tradition
in the form of a Senior Weekend,
planned for the graduating class.
The weekend is May 28th-May

and students from every
class plus parents and friends are
invited to attend.
, The weekend will begin with a
concert, Friday evening. May 28th
featuring the* young comic Dick
Gregory and the excellent folk
singer Anita Shear. Dick Gregory's marvelous and unusual personality reflects itself everywhere
by the enormous crowds which always receive him. Anita sings
with vigor and electrifying repertoire of popular, folk, spiritual
and jazz music. The graduating
class invites everyone to, join
with them in receiving this double-bill of excellent entertainment, The concert will begin at
8:30 p.m. in the Clark Gymna30th,

next

distributed

fall

to

dis

dates upon

esult

National Student Association
Steering Committee
The NS,A. Committee is
rnational

arc

many

picked

of

ages.

The

university

the cards as age I
;pr any campus ac
iidents

taking

advan

students who hav
up their cards ye

lliva
Katl
Annfern
L'stablishir
and Ron Silver with tabulatin

In- conjunction with

the Aca-

demic Affairs Committee. Les
l.upert is tabulating the course
pring

and is

writing

The weekend continues Satur-

day afternoon. May 29th with a
picnic at Ellicott Creek Park, Site
No. 5, from 11;00 a.m. to 4:00
p m FREE BEER, FOOD, and A
ROCK and ROLL BAND SUP

PLIED! Buses will leave Norton
Union at 11:00.

Saturday evening the Senior
in the Golden
Ballroom of the Statler Hilton
Hotel. At this time the Senior
King and Queen will be announced. Music will be supplied
by Morrie Youngman. Tickets
are available at the Norton Union
Ticket Booth at $3.00 per couple.
Those wishing to enjoy a dawn
breakfast may purchase an additional ticket at $4.50 per couple.

Ball.will be held

The weekend will be climaxed

Sunday by

Commencement

les

verified.

wi

he cards if age has been
The Student Sena
hank M
Millhoiland

The culmination of Senior
Weekend festivities will take
place at the Senior Ball, held at
the Statler Hilton in the General
Ballroom on Saturday night, May

degree

in

pharmacy.

Ellen

has been active in Ski Club, the

Democratic Club, and WRA. She
is a member of Rho Chi pharmacy
,s

Mickey Campbell—Mickey, spon
sored by MacDonald Hall Dormi
tory will obtain a B.A. degree a
an English major. She is a mem
ber of Sigma Kappa Phi sorority
in which she was vice president
Mickey was also a resident advis
or in MacDonald Hall during hei
junior and senior years. Mickey
has been active on the mixer
committee and was an instructor
in the Children’s Swimming Program at Clark Gym.
Linda Thuman—Linda, sponsored
by the marching band expects to
obtain a B.S. degree in business

administration. Linda has been
active in Ski Club, WRA, physical education club and was also a
finalist in the Miss Great Lakes
Contest. She has been a varsity
majorette and a corridor representativc, and Engineering Queen
Contest, Recreation Committee,
and Weekend Committee, She is
a member of the Buffalo Turners
and ran AAU track.
Nanette Balk—Nan, sponsored b
Theta Chi Sorority, is a comnu
ter student. She expects a B.
degree in biology. Nan, has bee
active in Union Board activitie
Theta Chi in which she was trea
urer of her pledge class and
vice president. I.F.C. sing
Stunt Nile. Nan is also a bi
lab instructor
Jane Ellickson—Jane, spo

al,

of APhA
Linda Wescott—Linda, sponsored

Phi

sorority

degree

in busine

by Sigma Kappa

education upon graduation. Linda’s activities include member
ship in Sigma Kappa Phi sorority
and I.F.C. sing.

is

been active in Theta Chi
ty in which she was rec
secretary,

Dorm publicity

up a san

All students wanting their birthdate placed upon nest year's I.D.
card must present a birth certificate (dr a certified copy) or a
draft card to audio-visual September 20 through October t, Mon

day through Friday from 9-3.
This procedure has become necessary as students have been fal-

obtain a B.A,

TOWER SERVICE
W omen's residences will
close at the regular hours
during the final examination period. However, arrangements will he made
to grant extended hours to
1:15 a.in. to individual
residents for the purpose of
utilizing the study halls
which w ill he open in Lockwood Library and Diefendorf Hall.

Exer-

cises. It is hoped that everyone
will share with the senior class
in their Senior Weekend.

ih the efforts of the StuStu

soon

Royalty Will Be
Crowned at Ball

B.S.

their

sium. Tickets are on sale at S2.0C
at the, Norton Unior
Ticket Booth There is a limited

nior King and

29th.
Or. Gordon R. Silber, chairman
The highpoint of the evening
of the Department of Modern will be the crowning of the King
Languages, said that Sister M. and
Queen. Trophies will be aSaint Cecilia is the first student
warded to the winners at this
to win the Fulbright award since time.
the department began its graduVoting will take place for the
ate program.
seniors only, in the Norton Union
“Her award certainly reflects Lobby, Friday, May 7th from 9
great credit on her intellectual a.m. to 5 p.m. All seniors are
capabilities,” he said.
urged to vote and thus help to
make Senior Ball a memorable
A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., and affair. Candidates for king and
a member of the Sisters of St. queen include:
Joseph order, Sister M, Saint
Cecilia received her bachelor’s SENIOR WEEK KING
degree from St. John's University, Steve Aronson —Steve sponsorN.Y., in 1963 where he majored ed by Sigma Alpha Mu, will obin French. She is a permanent tain a B.S. degree in business adresident of St. Joseph’s Convent ministration, Steve has been acin Brentwood, N.Y., and is terntive in Intramural sports, Pledge
poraryily assigned to the order's iiiastcr of Sigma Alpha Mu, and
convent at 3275 Main St., BufStunt Nile.
falo, until she receives her doe "Aike Alois—Mike is a member
torate from State University at
of Alpha Sigma fraternity. Mike
Buffalo.
has been a member of the senate
Sister M. Saint Cecilia, who public
relations committee and
studied at the Sorbonne in Paris has been active in fraternity aflast summer, will leave for fairs, After graduation he plans
France from New York City on to join a larger fraternal organSeptember 23. She will teach ization the U.S. Marine Corps.
first-year French this summer at
Ellen Barr—Ellen, sponsored by
Rosary Hill College.’
MacDonald Hall, will obtain a

t

am

for

D. C.

As a consultant, Dr. Benishay
will review the validity of data
which serve as a basis for the

S

nt form
ndir
ach organization

fr

(World Bank), Washington;

lifying

i

res

the

Dr. Haskel Benishay, associate
professor of finance and management science at UB, has been
appointed as a consultant to the
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development

7, 1965

Senior Week Planned

■

Mr. Dunning

Reports...

Dr. Haskel Benishay
Appointed Consultant

•

age.

A'ith

Friday, May

SPECfRUM

PAGE TEN

Dry Cleaning
Sale
3 for

—.

S1.34

Pants, Skirts (plain), Sweaters
Good Until Saturday, May 22

ALSO THRIFTY BOX STORAGE

�Friday, May 7, 1965

-

SPECTRUM

PAGE

SENIOR WEEN ROYALTY

ELLEN BARR

JANE ELLICKSON

MIKE ALOIS

NANETTE BALK

MICKEY CAMPBELL

LINDA THUMAN

LINDA WESCOTT

STEVE ARONSON

ELEVEN

--

�Senate Reports
from P.

(Cont’d

5)

student to take three final exam
inations fn one day without con

the situation in any way
to constitute a conflict. Most
sidering

teachers agree that having more
than two finals in one day could
substantially lower grades.
—

..

Press, Jrnc.
Iin y

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

I

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

The Student Welfare referendum today will include a separate ballot for the selection of
delegates to the National Student
Association Congress, which will
take place August 22 to September 2 at the University of Wisconsin.

The Senate will send five voting delegates and two alternate
delegates to the Congress. In
the Spectrum will attend.

now printed by

_y4i&gt;$otl &amp; Ssmitl

Separate Ballot For
N.S.A.C. Delegates

addition, Union Board will send
one delegate, and the editor of

The SPECTRUM
’

14

I.

4

The voting delegates will represent the student body in voting on policy issues. The entire
delegation will attend sessions
devoted to the exchange of ideas
on student government and the
other phases of student life.
N.S.A. requires that voting delegates be chosen in a campuswide election. This is a recent
requirement, and the Student Association Constitution
was not
amended in time to provide for
such election at the last Senate
elections in March.
It was decided at the May 4
meeting that the most practical
way of electing these delegates
was to include them on this referendum.
In past years the Student Sen-

GOING
FORMAL!
We

Friday, May

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

rent and sell

a

complete

tine of formal wear.

to

(Srest
's SAc/Li
Buffalo
Phone 837 5090
Transifown Plaza, Williamsville
Phone 634-5533
University Plaio,

ate has sent the N.S.A. chairman
and the four officers of the Student Association as voting delegates, It was suggested, however,
that their votes might be chal
lenged at the convention unless
a special election was held.
The Senate nominated five persons as voting delegates: Marion
Michael, N.S.A. Chairman, and
the four officers: Clinton Deveaux, Rosemary Brown, Ellen
Cardone, and Sanford Seide.
There is provision on the ballot
to vote for the entire slate, or to

vptc for five individuals either
from this list or as write-in votes.
In addlion the Senate nominated seven people as alternates.
There is provision for write-in
votes. The tvyo candidates who
receive the highest number of
votes will serve as alternates.
The Senate nominees are: Evylyn
Weinrub, UC Senator; Carl Levine, A&amp;S Senator; George Bodner, UC Senator; Helen Capell,
Education School Senator; Martin Gugino, Publicity Committee
chairman; Annfcrn Kosloff and
Les Lupert. N.S.A. Committee
members. Each ballot provides
for two votes for alternates.

CJtBoard
PHOTO CLUB
The Photography Club will hold
its final mec
day from 4-5:00. All financial
matters will be taken care of.
and everyone’s attendance is requested

oCetterA

to

7, 1965

the Editor

Name Calling Is Not Debate
TO THE EDITOR;

I have been appalled this week at the sheer
stupidity that both groups those both pro and
con) on the war in Viet Nam have displayed in
Norton Union. It is a sad commentary on our academic community when a serious issue such as
this degenerates into an inane name calling contest. Those who support the President’s policy
have regressed intellectually to branding those who
have a moral objection to the war as supporters
of Ho Chi Minh. This is a subtle form of redbaiting which would do the supporters of the late

Sen. McCarthy proud.
On the othel- hand, those who are opposed to
the war have flourished a petition to bereat those
who support the country’s position to show their
commitment by signing up to volunteer for the
fighting.
Are the two positions of these groups indielive of the true idea of intellectual differences of
opinion? 1 think not! Academic debate and dif
ferences of opinion belong on this campus, the intellectual sham perpetrated by both groups on the
body do not.
Gustin Reichbach

In Verse

Dorm Critique

To serve an ice cream cone
Read Kant.

TO THE EDITOR

The dormatory home of campus lovelies is
Structure of their education, maturation?
Edifice of their suffocation, sterilization!
Education huh —try it
Amusement to the point of riot
Riot, oh, there it is
Hard to study here, i’tis
While reading Wordsworth: “sun’s slant beem
I hear voluminously from mystic dream
Will a maintenance man please report to
CLEMENT DESK
Will a maintenance man please report to
CLEMENT DESK

SHOCKED from my mood in discontinuity I sit
Trying to evaluate what had just hit.
Earthquake, blasting, can this be
No, microphone communication
Just to further my education.
Oh well you lear, girls do mature here
You’re right, and at 2 a.m. they lock the door here
Once in a while the rooms ar checked—
A friendly lovely to inspect.
What an hour extra to unwind
Ask in person—they may not mind.
Is it out overnight you request
Go through enough channels—a grueling test.
Off to dinner with hunger caring
But first—let a gentleman check—
See what you're wearing
Sit in a lounge with friend or beau
Such privacy we’d never know
In a home of our own
Where we might want

Garbage disposal—a dusty chore
There’s no incinerator on the floor.
Bathroom cabinets to keep things neat
Would have been just too delightful a treat.
Try to study in your room
Earplug needed to buffer the boom
Shrieks a lovely—“get the phone”
Try to recover—don’t just moan.
From your room you’d see the
No srch luck

town

Keep those blinds down!
In tls lounge for the cool air hurtin
&gt;

Nothin doin

Close that curtain!

Dainty ladies stiffled

are

But all around here do agree
Their after-life will be no jar
In four years time we’ll blossoms be.

Try to rush the progress?
Want to live off-campus?

Relatives or old or broke
Only trails out of the poke
Ask for freedom Other than this
Get a smile but no dismiss
Education, maturation—yes indeed
it works here, soo
Overcome these obstacles—spin the dice—advance to GO
Ruth Shapiro

Students Make History Before Living It
TO THE EDITOR
There appears to be a growing similarity between the peaceful student marches in our country
and the Latin American political stigma of the
control of parties by student cliques who wish to
run the government, make laws, and rulb people
before they have even received the recognition

of completion of their studies of good citizenship.
They want to perform the operation of leading the
citizenry before interning in responsible citizenship; they want to make history before living it.
The 150 UB students who were among the ten
to fifteen thousand who showed up in Washington,
D. C. a . couple of Saturdays ago to protest our Viet
Nam policy have a perfect right to their opinions.
It is well that they took the time, expense and
effort rather than commit themselves to such
juvenilities as setting marathon shower records or
carrying off the panty supply of the girls dorms.
But what logic is employed when the assume
they can sway public opinion before they have had
parisons of the western and eastern economies,
or have appraised the relative forms of wrongdoings in various hotspots around the globe, be it
Berlin, Africa, Viet Nam or China?
Yet it is good to have a student generation
that is at least aware-or even ‘committed’ to use a
favorite campus exprcssion-which implies that you
first know what you are talking about as well as
what the fellow taking the opposing view is talking

rights certainly have a claim to this knowledge,
as racial discrimination as practiced in this country
may be witnessed first-hand in many places in the
U.S.

But how many of the thousands who marched
in Washington for the ‘get out of Viet Nam’ cause
were truly committed? How many have in fact

experienced Communist agression or thoroughly
studied the history of the specific problem in Viet
Nam-that they consider their opinion as much in
the public interest as that of the Congress, the
State Department, the President and the military’’
How many have put themselves deep in thought
over the political murder that motivated mass

exodus from East Berlin before the wall; of the

nearly one million Vietnamese who fled from North
to South Viet Nam when Ho Chi Minh infused
communist control over the upper half of what
had been French Indo-China?
In his column These Days John Chamberlain
compares our marching students to the schoolmates of Fidel Castro 20 years ago who “succuir
to the excessive degeneration of democracy
is ‘sansculottism’ (unthinking radicalism).” Anc

the pioneer sociologist William Gra
Sumner who said “As a political form this is
rule of a street mob,” in speaking of the crest
the Spanish-American War excitment.
This country needs more than a good five-c
cigar, it needs some students who “study” bef
quotes

they

“commit.”

Richard 0. Boucher

about. Some of those students who march for civil

brewed for braves...

/

/.

�Friday, May

7, 196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE

THIRTEEN

SPRING WEEKEND IN REVIEW

�Senior Feldman Reflects
think and

(Cont'd from P. 6)
II The A«&lt;/nini$fration
The

Administration

is

large,

complex, and fettered by the ex-

istence of channels. How often
do the President, Vice-Presidents
or even the Deans sit down and
talk to a student’’ I don’t mean
talk about the weather or meet
briefly at various honorific functibns to chat, but seriously have
a session with a student to see
how indeed he docs function at
this institution. There are channels; this is the rationale used
by the officials on high to justify their lack of contact. The
Dean's office adds the student’s
input for him to the dialogue;
that is the Dean's job, and rightly so. But I am skeptical of
whether a true representation of
the student's point of view is ever
given. The job of the University
Administrator should not be only
that of an advisor to some student group (although this may
not be a had thing) or one who
determines academic policy.
The major part of the justification of the existence of a University is that it administers to
the student’s needs of scholarship and dynamic growth of the
mind. The way this is carried
out here is through an imposed
order on the student. Hardly
ever is he asked for a suggestion
or even a/i opinion. I do not say
that the student should run the
University

—

Friday, May 7,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

1 do not say that

the student has the experience
or knowledge to make policy decisions, But I maintain he is engrossed in the system if not more
than, at least as much as, the ad
ministrator or the faculty, and
sees things that others, due to
their role or status, or whatever, tails to see. The student
must have a direct voice up at
the decision level so that things
that may be overlooked arc not.
The view is held by the decision-makers that, like the Army
or , any large institution, traditional gripes are held by the

lumpen masses. The parking is
inadequate; the book store prices
arc too high; we want liquor on
campus; the food is terrible, etc.
These are the traditional complaints voiced on every campus,
coast to coast, and they are dismissed at that. Maybe this is correct and maybe there is nothing
that can be done; 1 would be
prone to agree and dismiss these
traditional gripes as just what
they probably arc
an outlet
—

dissatisfaction. But these
things taken at fact value are
trash and not worth the time ?i
energy exerted by so many for
so little. It is what they represent that is the important thing
to zero in on.
The meaningful reasons behind
these complaints are some of the
following: tremendous classes,
being a number instead of a
name, no contact with faculty,
etc., etc. These things seem equally trite and arc dismissed also
as unsolvable problems. But they
for

*

ere not, they are important, gosh
darn it! They are problems to be
discussed and pondered over on
all levels. They are the root of a
disease that spreads across the
land. These conditions turn out a
college graduate that doesn’t

...

probably
think, can’t
never will be able to think, but
who holds a degree from a fairly
reputable University. If this is
not immoral, I don’t know what
III The Student
The student at this University,
as he is at most I would imagine,
is a programmed individual going
through the University in order
that he may eat well because of
this experience. The University
should be a place where the individual is stopped, held in a
state of non-material commitment long enough for him to collect his thoughts. The University
should be a place to “desocialize” the individual to the extent
that he realizes what forces are
acting on him so that he docs
certain things and not others. It
should be a place where the individual learns to question the
pap he has fed since childhood
and arrive at a reasonable orien-

tation to the world around him;

separating out those ideals that
to him are most relevent. I maintain that these functions are not
being fulfilled at this University
at this time. The logical question is to ask why.
The answer is because there is
a lack of warmth, a feeling of belonging, an identity with the in-

Athiest Society Recognized By Senate
(Cont’d from P. 1)
faculty,” as stated in their constitution. It visualizes a democratic society “where at all levels
the people have control of the

.

.

College Junior or Senior
(male)
Age 21-27, 18 hours per week.
Salary $125 per month. Career
opportunity for right man
after graduation.
Prefer business or physical
education major. Write full
details to Personal Data.

"p,

The discussion for recognition for the Athiest Philisophical
Society (APS) was heated and
ended with a tied vote of 5-5-5,
which President Deveaux broke
by voting for recognition. Greatest objection was raised by Council of Religious Organization’s
Senator Peter Ostrow who insisted that the group fell within
the jurisdiction of the constitution of the C.R.O. and therefore
should seek recognition from the
C.R.O. The constitution of the
APS states, “Theistic presupposition based on “faith” are inadequate for the state of affairs
characterizing the twentieth century.”

WANTED

.

the

decisions which effect
members of society

G. T MILLER

360 Delaware Ave.
Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

Plaza Shoe
Repair
Raymond Volpo points out advantages of summer Spectrum
Photo

by

Dan

The names of nominees for
delegates to the convention of
the National Student Association
to be held in Wisconsin this August will be entered in the general referndum today. The dele-

delegates.

Uirtue

gates elected will represent UB
with five votes in the general plinary session. Names of alternates

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6 -4041

Waterman

will also be placed on the ballots.
President Deveaux and N.S.A. Coordinator Marion Michaels will be
sent with three other voting

Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines
-

stitution and the process. The
student is ushered through a series of courses, an endless flow
of exams and a pile of requirements to fulfill; time is not left
to think, to question, to challenge. The structure is rigid and
defined. There is no real effort
made to make the student a part
of the system he is engrossed in.

8 lbs. $2.00

GRADUATES!

He is an outsider in his own cn
vironment ushered around like a
private in the Army, taking
orders constantly, but never par-

ticipating in the decision-making.
Most educators would cringe at
the analogy between the Army
and the University, but the two
are not as anti thetical as we

would expect.
Lastly, is the lack of tradition, of identification, of feeling
for a place one spends so much
time at. There is no effort made
to extend an engratiating hand
to the incoming Freshman or to
the Upperclassman for that matter. There should be an aura of
scholarly warmth permeating the
halls of an institution dedicated
to truth and ideas. It should be
a place of respect for the naiete
of the Freshman, the “know-itall” attitude of the Sophomore,
the sophisticated boredom of the
Juior and the doubt of the Senior. It should be a place for
growth of the mind through which
eventually some inner fulfillment
can be attained.

OUR
7^le President

PEN
‘^

le

State University
at
ajui

of jyew y

°unce the

““"———a.
f^ni
Sunda y, the

COUNTER

Buffalo
Umo,e nc e

°

Versity

ment

NOW

thirtieth ofJVfay

HAS

a* ton*

o'clock
U iversi
&gt;yCampUs
°

We can suit you best
..,

naturally!

Na*UMIIIIMIMIITHJ^

AVAILABLE
GRADUATION

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Also NAME CARDS
SUNGLASSES IN YOUR PRESCRIPTION

COUNCIL OPTICIANS
34 CHURCH ST

1965

On Campus

-

-

�Friday, May

7, 1965

SPECTRUM

AIRFREIGHT

Your Trunks and Personal Items Home

Mr. Arthur Domeland, archi- 1
tect for the new campus, will
appear in the multi-purpose
room Mon. at 4:00 p.m. All
students are encouraged by
Mr. Domeland to come with
their ideas and suggestions for
the planning of the new campus at Amherst.

by calling AMERICAN

AIRLINES AIRFREIGHT
NF 2-6007
Only $6.00* per 100 lb. BUFFALO TO NEW YORK
Airfreight Air Waybills and Shipping Tags are
Available in Residence Hall offices.
‘Airport to Airport rate

PAGE FIFTEEN

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
1965 FOOTBALL REPORT
close of spring practice)

(At

Mead coach—Richard W. Offenhamcr, Colgate '36
in 10

School colors—Royal

Blue

White

&amp;

(53W —341.,—3T

years)

Nickname—“Bulls'

I96S Schedule

at Boston, Mass.
Rotary Field, Bflo.
Amherst, Mass.
Rotary Field, Bflo.
Rotary Field, Bflo.
Rotary Field, Bflo.
af Worcester, Mass.

Sept. 18—Boston College
Sept. 25—Tampa
Oct.
2—Massachusetts
Oct,

at
at
at
at
at

9—Boston U.’
16—Richmond

!

Oct.
Oct.

23—Dayton
Oct. 30—Holy Cross
Nov. 6—Delaware
Nov. 13—Colgate
Nov. 20—Villanovil

at Newark, Del.
at Rotary Field, Bflo.
at Philadelphia. Pa.

1,30 p.m
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p in.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p m.
1:30 p.m.

—Homecoming

1964 Varsity Results (W4-5-4-T1)
34 Boston U.
0
■9 Cornell
9
22 Massachusetts
24
12 Marshall
14
10
14 V.M.l
20
14 Holy Cross
37 Delaware
0
28 Richmond
13
li Colgate
7

1964 Freshman Results (WS-L1)
16 Army Plebes
6
0
36 Ithaca. College Fr.
6
12 Colgate Fr.
48
0 Navy Plebes
21 Manlius School
14
.
13 Syracuse Fr.
0
98 TOTALS
74

Villanova

177

97

TOTALS

—cancelled; storm

Lettermen lost from 1964—19

Lettermen returning—16

Outstanding Veterans
E. Greenard Poles

DT Sr, 5 10 225 Rochester, N. Y.
6 2 230 Youngstown, N. Y.
Jr.
6-1 210 Lyons, N.
LB Sr.

Bill'"Taylor

DG

Gerry

DE

Joe Holly
LaKountain

Sr,

5 11

220

OT

62 230
5 10 230
6.-2 192

Saranac Lake, N. Y

Oustanding Sophomores

Stan Baranowski

Ted Gibbons
Tom Hurd

OG
OHB

Detroit. Mich.
Newport, R. I

Klmira, N. Y.

Buffalo is switching to two platoons in 1965, using separate offensive

and defensive units.
Buffalo will use the Winged-T on offense and the basic 6-2 2-1 on
defense.

OFFENSE
Probable starting line-up (asterii isk indicates

busy undergraduate schedule.

Here are the facts about the new two-year AFROTC Program.

institution*

What’s the curriculum like? It’s been

thoroughly
revamped. You won’t find pat answers and traditional ritualized solutions to problems. New
instructional methods leach the student to arrive
at his own
conclusions, and to test them against

those of his classmates and instructors. Symbolic
of the change is the new title Department of
Aerospace Studies.

which will amount to approximately $120. Dur
ing the school year, you will be paid $40 a month
and you will also get free uniforms.

Will I have a chance to fly while I am in
AFROTC? Senior graduates arc eligible for the
Flying Instruction Program. This involves 36W
hours of flight training and 35 hours of ground
school. Successful completion earns you a civilian
private pilot's license.

United States Air Force
Headquarters, Air Force ROTC

Attn: Ol
Maxwell

Air Force Base, Alabama

Please send more information about the new
Air Force ROTC program.
Name—College

now

attending

Addrcs!
Expect to transfer

TB
WB
FB

Jim Webber
Tom Hurd

Stan Baranowski
Dick Dunbar
Bruce MacKellar

Gibbons
Katel
Dunn
Capuana

Dennis Przykuta

t

Sr

Soph
Jr
Soph.

Soph.
Sr.

6-1
21
19 6 2
19 5 11
19
60
19 5 10
63
22
20
64
19
59
5-9
22
19
6-2
20 5 10

190 Franklin Square, L.I.
230 Detroit, Mich.
205 Dearborn, Mich.
225 Kenmore, N. Y.
230 Newport, R.I.
220 Buffalo, N. Y.
200 Cranston, R. I.
180 Utica, N. Y.
170 Manlius, N. Y.
192 Elmira, N. Y.
210 Depew, N. Y,

6 lettermen, 3 sophomores. Unit is short on game experience. Sophomores Baranowski and Gibbons are rated fine prospects. Burden,
Dunn and Hurd are good pass receivers but who will be throwing
to them is the big question. Capuana, a fine athlete, was fir$t string
tailback last season and has been converted to quarterback. He could
be hard pressed for the starting assignment by sophomore Rick
Wells. Przykuta missed spring practice to recuperate from a knee
operation, his second such operation in a period of 18 months.
Behind him there are no experienced fullbacks.

Joe “The Toe" Oscsodal should give the team adequate placekicking
but there does not appear to be an outstanding punter on the squad.
DEFENSE

Probable starting line-up (asterisk indicates
PE "Gerry LaFountain
LT "Ron Pugh
LG "Bill Taylor
RG "Russ MacKellar

—

How will students for the new program be
chosen? First, you must pass the Air Force Officer Qualifying Test and have a medical examination. Then you meet with the interview board of
senior Air Force officers, who will decide whether
you are to be selected to attend the Field Training
Course. This will be held during the summer
before your junior year. Its purpose is two-fold;
to let the Air Force judge you and to let you judge
the Air Force. Only after you are both satisfied
"'ll you be enrolled in the program- So you see,
&gt;ou have everything to gain and nothing to lose
a Pplying now. But you must act fast—applications w ill be closing for
next year's juniors. Forms
re available from, the
|!
.Professor of Aerospace
todies, or from Headquarters Air Force ROTC,
Maxwell AFB, Alabama.
As an AFROTC cadet, will I
receiv.e pay? Yes,
l°u will be paid for the Field Training Course

Dennis Burden

Ted
ST Jim
SE ‘‘Jim
QB Nick

Air Force ROIC
has now been updated to fit into today’s

Who is eligible for fwo-year AFROTC? Any
male undergraduate who still has two years remaining in college.-It’s an especially good break
for junior college students who plan to complete
their baccalaureate requirements at a four-year

WE
WT
WG
C
SG

letterman)

Sr.
Jr.

Jr.
Sr.

21
20
21
21
22
21
22
20
19

letterman)

5 11 220 Saranac Lake, N. Y
6 1 225 McKeesport, Pa.
6-2 230 Youngstown. N. Y.
5 10 210 Keniriore, N Y.
5-10 225 Rochester, N. Y.
6 1 210 Cheektowaga, N. Y,
5-11 205 Gloversvillc, N. Y.
61 210 Lyons, N. Y.

Sr.
RT "E. Greenard Poles
RE "Craig Helenbrook
Sr.
LLB "Joe Garafola
Sr.
RLB "Joe Holly (CaptJ
Sr.
"Dan
Sella
LHB
Jr.
5-10 175 McKees Rocks, Pa.
RHB "Fred Geringer
Sr. 20
5-9 165 Johnstown, Pa.
S Jim Robie
19
6-3 205 Williamsville, N. Y.
Jr.
10 letlermen, no sophomores. No problems here Unit has sire,
speed and experience. Poles could well be All America, and Holly,
Taylor and LaFountain should attract the attention of pro scouts.
Buffalo will be hard to score against.

FORECAST AND OVERALL EVALUATION

-

Expect
Home Addres:

degree in;—

(Year)

High scoring games will be the exception rather than the rule.
Buffalo will rely on its strong defense and a running attack. Depth
is problematical, based mostly on what is thought to be a better
than average crop of sophomores. The Bulls will be a rugged team
and could have a very successful season, although any optimism
must be tempered by the fact that there is a total lack of experience
at quarterback.

�Friday, May 7, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

*
(

SS&gt;®1B1P§* $
A=A=
AEPi Wins Pahlowitz Trophy
For Fourth Straight Year
■

—

SPORTS CIRCLE
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

Signing Off
Well, the time has come for u.s to say goodbye for
the summer, but in this parting column we will not bore
you with a review of the year in sports for UB. There
have already been numerous “review” type articles
which either managed to praise or damn the players,
coaches, athletic department, arid in some cases, even
the seemingly hapless administration. But all in all,
it, has been a year which has been remarkably devoid
of controversy. That is the way in which we will let it
fade out.

But we cannot end the column here without having
said anything. The best thing to do at. this time is to
analyze the needs and desires of various and sundry
people in the sports world, and hope, for their sake,
that these are fulfilled.
To the UB Athletic Department
A fond hope
that qualified men come along who are able to fill the
shoes of the many who have seen fit to further their
careers elsewhere.
To the Loss Angeles Dodgers
A left fielder to
to take the place of the injured Tommy Davis and another right handed starting pitcher.
.

.

.

...

To the New York Mets
A couple more reliable
starting pitchers, ;{ few more reliable relief pitchers,
a third basman, a catcher who can catch, a first baseman who can field, and, last but certainly not least, a
manager who knows how to handle men.
To the New York Football Giants
A new man
in the defensive backfield, a couple of running backs
who can hold on to the ball, an experienced quarterback, and a few lucky breaks.
To the Milwauhee-Atlanta Braves
About 20,000
more people to attend each game.
To the Fans of the Braves
A major league
team which will appreciate the support that the Milwaukee fans habitually provide their teams with.
To the City of Buffalo
A major league team
for a city which has demonstrated that it can and will
go out and see any team deserving of its support.
To the New York Yankees
A new stadium
within the reach of everyone in the Metropolitan area
so that they can effectively compete with the Mets, and
a couple of losing seasons to show the fans that they
are no longer invincible.
To the World of Boxing
Someone who can
control the gangster element associated with the “sport,”
an honest fight for a change, and maybe even a nottoo-distant demise.
To the UB Students
A safe place to sit while
viewing football games at Rotary Field, and a change
in the plans to move some fo the Rotary Field stands
t othe football stadium at the new campus.
To the UB Hockey Club
Some recognition,
some money, a place to play at decent hours, and Var...

...

...

...

...

.

.

.

...

.

.

.

sity standing.

Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity has
once again successfully defended the Lawrence Pahlowitz Memorial Trophy by winning this
year’s overall intramural sports
competition for the fourth consecutive year. In doing this, AEPi
won fraternity championships in
football, basketball, volleyball,
handball and fencing. The Apes
also had second place finishes in
tennis, squash, bowling and track.
Thus, AEPi came in first or sec-

—

—

-

The team standings and Pahlc

2 Alpha Sig

sports chairman Ivan Edelson
who, in addition to coaching many
of these teams, handled the complex administrative chores involved with all the individual teams.

68
43

3 AEPi
4 TKE
5 Phi Ep

38 %
35

7 Sam
8 Skenks (ind)

22

24
I8V2

The official bowling tourn
ment point results have not y

been tallied. However, the fin
standings were:
1 Sam
2 AEPi
3 Alpha Sig
4 Phi Ep

The Lawrence Pahlowitz Tro-

phy was donated by Alpha Epsilon Pi in memory of a late brother who throughout his life exemplified the ideals of athletic competition, The trophy is symbolic

SPORTS CHAIRMAN
IVAN EDELSON

the title, being victorious in six
of nine events. The individual

winners were:

75 yd. dash—Howie Minkoff—
PhiEp
100 yd. dash—Artie Walker
Rejects
120 yd. hurdles
Jerry Barnett
—Rejects
—

—

mile run—Edie Ingerman—AEPi
300 yd. shuttle relay—Alpha Sig
440 yd. relay—Rejects

The only other event which has
not been tallied is softball. The
tournament will not be counted
toward the overall standings, be
cause rain has forced the cancel
lation of one of the two leagues,
Thus, the final Pahlowitz Trophy
team standings are:
Team

points

1 AEPi

394

2 PiEp

370’/j

3 Sam

3S0
Alpha Sig
345%
SigEp
344
264
TKE
Beta Sig
233
(This does not include the bowling points, but when added, they
will not change the standings.)
4
5
6
7

Netmen Win REIBER LEADS UB TO VICTORY
3 Out of 4 IN TRIANGULAR TRACK MEET
By LEN SCHNEIDER

With only one man absent from
last year's 10-3 squad, the UB
Netmen, coached by Bill Sanford,
are looking forward to another
fine year. With impressive victories over Erie Tech (9-0), Gannon College (8-1), and Canisius
(8-1), the team has only been toppled once in a close match against
Syracuse (5-4). Leading the returning lettermen is Denny Brzezinski. a junior from Buffalo.
Holding down the number two
position is Bob Barrett, the only senior on the team. Playing
third singles is Len Schneider, a
junior from Great Neck, N. Y.
Matt Yuschik, Walt Mann, and
Don Mingle, all from the Buffalo
area, hold the number four, five,
and six spots. Rounding out this
year's squad is Rocky Seigel, a
junior from Jamestown, N. Y. and

...

May 11 against Niagara (home)

After losses to Ithaca and
Brockport, the UB varsity track
team defeated both Oswego and
Buffalo State in a triangular meet
at State’s new all-weather track
last Saturday. The final score was
UB 80ti, Oswego 51 Vi and Buffalo State 21, Captain Ron Reiber,
who scored IVh points while
winning the 100, 220 and 440 yard
dashes, javelin throw and running
the anchor leg on both winning
relays, led the Bulls to victory.
In three meets so far this season,
Reiber has scored 47V4 points.

On Monday, May 3, the UB relay teams finished second in the
Fourth Annual LcMoyne College
Relays, won by LeMoyne. Reiber
once again turned in an outstanding final quarter in the mile relay (48.7 seconds) after having
run in two previous races that
day.

.ne Freshman team at present
holds a 2-1 won-loss record. The

outstanding frosh thus far have
been Mel Spelman, who broke the
school frosh discus record; Paul
Rozovich in the mile run; Larry
Nauhaum in the hurdles; and
Dick trampenan in the middle
distances.

Tomorrow, May 8, at 1:00 p.m.,
the Thirteenth Annual University

of Buffalo Invitational Track Meet
will be held at Rotary Field
Among the competitors will be
Alfred, Rochester, Brockport, Buf
falo State, Canislus, Niagara, Erie
Tech, and UB.

UB 8OV2, Oswego Sl'/j, Bflo. St. 21
440 yd. relay—UB (Keller, Stern.
Elsie, Reiber); :46,6
one mile run—Hauck (S); SoCder
(O); Rose (S); 4:27.6
440 yd. run—Reiber (B); Elsie (B);

Walter (0); :52.7
100 yd. dash—Reiber (B); Igram
(O); Isaac (0); 10.5
120 yd, H. H.—Haug (B); Hassler

(O); McKiroy (B); 17.4
880 yd. run—Hauck (S); VanEssendolph (O); Soeder (6); 2:02 3
220 yd. dash—Reiber (B); Igram
(O); Elsie (B); :23.4
330 yd. H.—Walters (O); Suedmey
er (B); Tompkins (0); 43.0
2 mile run—Hauck (B); Goodwin

(0); Soeder (0); 10:01.4
Mile Relay—UB (Suedmeyer, Rei
ber, Muffoletto, Elsie); 3:387
Shot Put—Hug (B); Ryan (B
Schieffer (O); 46TV4”
Pole Vault —iSteiger (B); Hug (B
9'6”

(B); Schieffer (0
Opdyke (O); 120’2”
High Jump—Haug (B); Hassells
(O); McKiroy (B); 5'10”
Javelin—Reiber (B): Gould (.0

Discus—Ernst

Burison

(S);

169'

BASEBALL RESULTS
UB H
Syracuse 11
UB 1; 16

Rochester 5
Buffalo State 6
UB 18

Cannon
UB
BCTI 0;
UB

4

1
7
3
UB 5
Niagara 0

UB 14
Gcneseo 10
UB Record to Date
5-3
REMAINING SCHEDULE
Koch. Tech

Canisius
Niagara

May 8 (Home)
May 10
May 11 (Home)

3:
3
31

33

6 PiTau

in which the fraternities competed. Much of the credit for these
outstanding successes goes to

of intramural sports supremacy
among the fraternities on campus.
AEPi, having won it for the past
four years, can retire the trophy
next season with another overall
victory. (Because AEPi originally
donated the trophy they must win
it five years in a row in order to
permanently retire it, whereas
any other fraternity only has to
win it three straight years to do
this.) Thus the intramural competition, next year ought to be
keenly fought throughout the entire season, since AEPi will be
seeking to retire the Pahlowitz

broadjump—Artie Walker
Rt
jects
Bob Thomas
high jump
jects
shotput—Ted Gibbons
Reject
witz points were:
1 Rejects

ond in nine of the thirteen sports

To Sandy Koufax
An injury-free season so that
he can exhibit his full potential.
sophomore player-manager Larry
Glazer. With a victory over NiagTo the Spectrum Sports Staff
About ten more ara
U. the tennis team will have
writers—a possible solution* to the many complaints we
of 5-1, with three doubhave had concerning the lack of Coverage which many a record one
singles undefeated.
les and
sports activities have been subjected to.
The remainder of the schedule
We have run out of easy solutions for difficult is:
problems, so we will now conclude with a wish for a
May 7 against Geneseo (home)
good luck on finals, a healthy summer, and a wish that
May 8 against Bflo, State (home)
some of you will stop up in Room 355 Norton when you
May 10 at Alfred
return next fall. Please. . We need help.
...

Trophy, the most coveted frater
pity award on campus.
the final event on this year'-s,
intramural schedule was the track
meet held last Monday. The Rejects, an independent team, won

SUPPORT SENIOR WEEKEND

�</text>
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                    <text>STUDENT

—1

___

n

STATE

BASEBALL
bulls

m

referendum

VOLUME 15

NO. 71

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1965

Senate Condemns Courier Editorial;
9
OK s First Student Referendum
By SUSAN GREENE

Two important motions passed
at the Student Senate meeting
Tuesday, April 27 are a motion
to communicate with the CourierExpress regarding an article in
the edition of April 26 pertaining to academic freedom, and the
motion to hold a referendum to
determine whether students are
in favor of changing the school
year calendar. Other business included a report on the Student
Senate Committees and the appointment of two committee chair-

AFROTC
Awards
Cadets

Signifying the end of another
academic year, Cadet George Loncar accepted command today of
the 575th AFROTC Division from
Cadet Colonel Peter M. Terlecky
during the 15th Annual Awards
Day Program. Thirty-five awards
were made to outstanding cadets
for their contributions to UB and
AFROTC.

The Chancellor's Award for superior academic and military
achievement is awarded to Cadet
Col. Peter M. Terlecky, Elmira,
New York. During his four years
at the University, Cadet Terlecky
has consistently displayed exemplary scholarship and inspiring
military leadership. In recognition of Cadet Terlecky's abilities,
he has been designated a Distinguished Air Force ROTC Cadet.
The Chancellor’s Award was presented by President Clifford C.
Furnas.
The Lawrence D. Bell Award
for the most outstanding Air
Force ROTC graduate qualified
for flight training is awarded to

Cadet Lt. Col. Truman C. Whiting,

West Seneca, New York. Cadet
Whiting started his pilot training
in November 1964 in the Cessna
150. In January 1965 he flew his
first solo. Cadet Whiting is a
member of the
Arnold Air
Society, This award was presented
by Mr. Peter Wacks, Vice President, Bell Aero-Systems.

The Society of American MiliEngineers ROTC Award is
awarded to Cadet Major Milton D.
Marks, Jr., East Aurora, New
York. This is the second time
which Cadet Marks has earned
this award. Cadet Marks has completed seven semesters of a fouryear program toward a Bachelor
of Science degree in Chemical Engineering. With an overall quality
point average of 2.8 (A —). While
maintaining this extremely enviable academic record in a difficult field of study, he has found
time to participate on the Varsity
Swimming Team and is active in
the Chemical Enginearing Club,
Tau Kappa Chi Honorary Engineering Fraternity, Pi Lambda
Tau Engineering Fraternity and
the Student Affiliate of the
American Chemical Society. This
award will be presented by Col.
R W. Neff, District Engineer,
U S, Army Corps of Engineers.
tary

Awards also presented were
The Veterans of Foreign Wars
Medal—Cadet Col. George W.
Olsen, Jr,

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO'S

AWARD
College of Arts and Sciences—
Cadet Col. James W. Wozniak
School of

Business Administration—Cadet Col. Gerald J. Klee-

man

School
Major

of

Engineering—Cadet

Milton D. Marks, Jr.
Air Force ROTC Award—Cadet
Airman Donald W. Havas, Cadet T Sgt John T. Roach, and
Cadet A 2C William Brumfield
(Cont’d on P. 9)

election of representatives to the National Student Association convention, and the recognition of three new clubs on
men, the

campus.

Appearing in the Courier Express of Monday, April 26, and
See Editorial on P. 5

prompting immediate replies from
both the Spectrum and the Student Senate, is the following:
.

Invited Speaker, Mrs. Janet C. Potter pointed
out the P's and Q's of Parlimentary Procedure at
Tuesday's Senate Meeting....

Student Welfare Chairman J. Z. Friedman,
troduced the Referendum Resolution.

Dr. Saul Alinsky to Speak
Here on Urban Revolution

This Monday, in the Millard Fillmore Room at
2:30 p.m., UB students and faculty will have the opportunity to hear Dr. Saul Alinsky, a leading personality
in the urban revolution that is spreading throughout our
nation..
Mr. Alinsky is executive-director of the Industrial
Areas Foundation, an organization dedicated to the
doctrine that “given the opportunity, people in a community
can work out their own problems.” Since its founding 24
years ago the I.A.F. has helped
in organizing two million Americans in 50 communities—among
them impoverished migrants in
Kansas City, Kansas; unemploy-

ELECTIONS

SAUL D. ALINSKY
Alinsky’s appearance is
being sponsored by the Political
Science Club, the Convocations
Committee, and the Civil Rights
Committee,

**Mike Kayes

Secretary:

247

Treasurer

votes

Chairman:
**Gary Roberts
Vice-Chairman:
Stewart Edelstein

Sandra Olin
**

244
115
132

Corps
Loans
College juniors who wish to use
the summer before their senior
year to prepare for post-gradua
tion Peace Corps service now
may borrow up to $600 to help
pay their senior year school expenses. Loan repayment may be
deferred until after Peace Corps
completed.

The loans are expected to en-

**Paulette Bohnen

RESULTS OF

The following communication
to be sent from the Student Senate to the Courier Express was
approved in a unanimous decision
of the senators:

Privately funded, the loans are
guaranteed by USA Fund, a nonprofit corporation providing loan
guarantees to students on 700
campuses, with the participation
of more than 6,000 banks through
out the United States.

Mr,

Andrea Roth

113
158

A total of 295 votes were
cast. This has been the largest number of votes in an
IRC election.

able more third-year college students to enroll in the Peace
Corps Advanced Training Pro-

gram, a two-phase plan that provides intensive Peace Corps train
ing during .the summer months
between the junior and' senior
year, and just after graduation.
Many students who have had to
work during summer months now
may participate in the Peace

Corps Advanced Program.
Allen D. Marshall, president of
the USA Fund, called the loan
program "A unique relationship
between two private organizations
(USA Fund and the Peace Corps
Volunteer Fund) jointly benefiting a unique agency of our Federal Government."

Trainees in the Advanced Train(Cont'd

perhaps we have many

grooming."

The loan program, announced
today by Peace Corps Director
Sargent Shrivcr. is the product
of an agreement between United
Student Aid Fund, Inc. (USA
Fund) and the Peace Corps Volunteers Fund, a non profit foundation established by the Peace
Corps National Advisory Council.

ed copper miners in Butte, Mon-

IRC

Peace

service has been

tana; Negro slum dwellers in
Chicago and Mexican-Americans
in California
The I.A.F.’s most notable success has been in Woodlawn, Chicago, a Negro ghetto of 9,000
people. An apathetic and fragmented community was transformed into a powerful organization that “has defied city hall,

urban renewal, the schools, slum
The l.A.F. has
landlords . .
had such great success that they
have been recently invited to
Rochester, and at the present
time the East Side Community
Organization is attempting to
for
raise the necessary $150,000
a three year program in Buffalo.

in-

,

young people invading institutions
of higher learning who have no
business being there. It could
be that through closer scrutiny
and weeding out of some of the
alleged students room could be
found for those whose main purpose is to get at. education and
not to picket the White House,
get carried to a paddy wagon, or
disdain soap, combs and personal

on P.

9)

WHEREAS: The principle of Academic requires an academic community which is free from pressures from outside that community, to facilitate the pursuit of
knowledge and information in a
free environment, and
WHEREAS: The Courier Express
in an editorial on page 16 of its
Monday, April 26 edition proposed
the expulsion of students involved
in demonstrations to make room
for more incoming students
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED:
that, the Student Senate communicate to the editors of the Courier Express its profound disturb(Cont'd

on P. 11)

The Commuter Night
Committee of the Commuter Hoard is seeking interested commuting U B students from the general
Buffalo area, who would
he willing to work on a
special evening planned
for the incoming freshmen this June. Anyone interested please call TX 66536 Itetween 6:30 and
7:30 or leave your name
and address in the Commuter Board’s Box in the

Student Refill e Office
(Norton 205). Students
will work with their former high school in arranging this program. Freshmen or Sophomore students, at U B

preferred.

would be

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, April 30, 1965

Debate Society Wins
Best Overall Record

Last Friday, UB was represented at the New York State Peace
Oratorical Contest at Utica College by four Debate Society
members and emerged with the
best overall record for the four
categories of competition: Robert . Dragone placed first in
men’s oratory and became New
York State representative in national competition in his division;
Carl Levine and Gloria Alfieri
both placed second in their divisions of men’s extemp speaking and women’s oratory respectively and Mary Schefter placed
third in women’s extemp. Colgate and Cornell were among the
schools who also entered speakers in the competition.
This weekend, Mr. Dragone

WANTED
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(male)
Age

21-27, 18 hours per week.

Salary $125 per month. Career
opportunity for right man
after graduation.
Prefer business or physical
education major. Write full
details to Personal Data.

Free Storage
For Your
Winter Clothing

G. T MILLER
360 Delaware Ave.
Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

Why go through the Bother and Expense of
dragging your winter clothes home and back
again?
You can have all your clothes cleaned and
stored for the price of cleaning alone.
Big 4 will pick up your clothes at your dorm,
clean and store them in our vault and deliver them when you want in the fall,

plans to give the same speech,
which deals with peace through
knowledge, in competition at the
Eastern Forensic Championships
at Queen’s College in New York
City.

Utica, the UB debate
team went on to win the Third
Annual Elmira College Debate
Tournament at Elmira, New York.
The affirmative team, composed
of Robert Dragone and Nick Sargent, emerged with a 3-0 win record and then won the championship round against Utica College
by a unanimous decision of the
judges. Competing schools included Pace College, Colgate, and
others from New York State.
Mr. Terry H. Ostermeier, Society advisor, accompanied Diane
Hayes and Richard Fleisher to
the annual New York University Debate and Oratory Tournament last weekend. Miss Hayes
and Mr. Fleisher entered persuasive and after-dinner speakFrom

BIG 4 CLEANERS
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TALK OF THE TOWN

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ing competition respectively, while also debating four

HARLEY-nAVIDBOIM

rounds

of

switch side
-

debate

on the national topic against
teams from the University of
Chicago, University of Massachu-

Harley-Davidson
a famous American name
now introduces America’s newest fun wheels, the nifty,
thrifty M-50. A stylish blend of
American and Continental workmanship guaranteed to please the eye
and the pocketbookAn all steel,
welded frame forms a sturdy backbone for the M-50’s dependable 50
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gasoline along with miles of adventure. One ride and you’ll agree
the M-50 by Harley-Davidson is the
greatest new go on wheels. Take a
look and a ride on this fabulous
featherweight at:
—

—

Complaint
Board...
The Student Activities Committee feels that although the caliber
of groups on this campus is generally high, students may have
complaints of a serious nature
concerning one or more groups,
but at the present time the students do not know where they
can register their complaints. It
is for this reason that the Student
Activities Committee is establishing a “complaint board,’’ consisting of members of the committee,
for all students to register their
grievances concerning student
organizations.
Of course, the first thing that
the student should do is bring the
complant before the group itself.
If this fails, the procedure is as
follows:
1)

setts, and others.

Next weekend, the debate team
will enter comptition at the
Queen’s College Debate Tournament in New York City.

—

Submit the complaint in
writing to the Student Activities Committee mailbox in
the Senate office with your
name, address and phone

number.
2)

The student registering the
complaint and a representative of the group will be
asked to come to a specified
meeting of the Activities
Committee, at which time
both sides will be heard and
a decision made.

BUFFALO
HARLEY-DAVIDSON
984 JEFFERSON AVE.
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14204

The Student- Activities Committee requests the students’ cooperation and discretion in bringing only complaints, which they
consider serious enough to warrant our attention.

M-50 FOR AMERICA
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�Friday, April

30, 1965
CORE picketed the Genesee Street location
Mohawk Company. CORE protested against alleged

Last Friday, Buffalo

of the

hiring

Niagara

PACE

SPECTRUM

discrimination.

Furlough System for Students
By BARB STRAUSS
Returning to classes this fall,
along with
several thousand
freshmen and many more thou-

sand “seasoned" upper classmen,
will be a large number of students participating in an experimental readmission program.

Inaugurated by Dr. Milton
Plesur. acting Dean of University College, the "Furlough System" allows students whose averages have dropped drastically
demic year has passed. Accordduring their 1 first year of college to return after one full aca
ing to this system, students desiring to be reinstated in college
are required
to inform Dr.
Plesur of their intentions, statcing in addition, their activities
during the year of furlough, to
what they attribute their failure
in college, and why they believe
these failures will not be re
peated upon reinstatement. Such
students’ cases will then be considered on the basis of sincerely,
assumed responsibility and use
of furlough time.

—Photo by Don Blank

In elaborating on the "Fur
lough System,” Dr. Pleasure explained that because the system
was pul into effect only last
year, the results cannot be fully
evaluated until the work of the
September returnees is observed.
However, he feels that the new 1
system is superior to the admin
istrativc policy which existed
previously. If a student failed to

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make a saitsfactory average it
was, at one time possible for him
to enter Millard Fillmore College. after one year’s absence,
and attempt to re-enter day
school by accumulating satisfactory grades. Dr.. Plesur believes that the present Furlough
System" formalizes the procedures through which a student
may re-enter the University and
thus make the process more
efficient.
The

"Furlough

System"

has

been successfully employed at
various universities including the
University of Rochester, where

the assumption is made that
freshmen receiving a D average
or below "got off on the wrong
foot,” and should thus be given
a second chance. Reaction to the
Rochester experiment has been
extremely favorable on the part
of both parents and students,
and the fcaulty.

Dr. Plcsur has received num-

erous letters from students expresses a desire to return. Ex-

cerpts from these letters demonstrate sincere regret at the fail
ure the students, and evidence
of new motivation.
One student remarked
that
"because it was easy to receive
C's in high school for doing only
minimal work. I decided to sec
if I could slide through in college
as it happened, I got
F's . .
Another boy remarked that
...

“fraternities seemed to offer
what I wanted After a fabulous
period of rushing and cutting
classes I couldn’t make up cuts
and classwork. The twenty four
hours per day were not enough
to make up lost time . . . even
though the pay at the factory
where I work is good, the work
is dull and monotonous. All 1
want is to return to school. I
think I could handle the aca
demic load now ...”
Still another student admits

2 f° 15**
TR 3-1330
r

that ho originally desired to at
tend college only "for the sake

DEAN MILTON PLESUR
of saying I was a college student;" he had no motivation to
do well. Now that he is working,
he comes into daily, contact with
people unable to read and write,
people who possess no hope of
personal betterment. “I became
bored and restless with my useless life, and now realize it is
important to go to school."

Several letter writers express
at the time lost due to
failure. However, most added
that they needed the "Furlough 1
year to find themselves, declaring that they were previously not
ready for college.

regret

’

Although those who have written Hr. Plesur in hopes that they
will be reinstated place the
blame for their failures on everything from excessive dating to
overly noisy and inconsiderate
roommates, they acknowledge
that the majority of the fault
lies within ihcir own lack of responsibility, displacement of values .and absence of real and sincere educational objectives. Their
application for readmission to
the University, under the "fur
lough system" appears to dispel
most of the abpve obstacles to
a successful college career.

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�SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Lomment

..

Friday, April 30, 1965

cjCetterS

.

to

Editor's Not*; We received a fairly coherent letter
this week from a party who signed himself “Disgruntled G.D.X.” We have no objection to the
letter and thank whoever it was that submitted it,
but we must remind “Disgruntled” and anyone

McCarthy Makes News?

the Editor
else that we will not print unsigned letters.
We
will withhold signatures upon request, but we can
not print letters from people who wish to
hide
behind pseudonyms,

“Max” McCarthy took it upon himself to go on
television last Sunday night and denounce the teach-ins
currently being held around the country to discuss and
debate American Involvement in Viet Nam. He said
that the teach-ins were not in the American tradition
Reply to Maud
of free exchange of opinion and inhibited “a pacifism
To do less is to betray his trust, and his best may
which this nation was not founded oh.” We would like TO THE EDITOR:
be fearful. In Mr. Maud’s terms, the Pusan perim
to ask Congressman McCarthy whether he has ever ata
reply
space
claim
to
to
friend
and
May I
tended a teach-in, and if not, as we suspect, then where colleague? The act may appear ungracious, but eter may have been somehow “unfair”: the orders
does he get his information from? We suspect that he Mr. Maud’s readers probably are many, and he is were to stand or die, and the desperate action
obviated terrific South Korean and Amcr
has never attended a teach-in since we have, and we stout of heart. Moreover, his large, innocent, and certainly
ican losses and may have saved South Korea for
have found no evidence of rigged debate and, indeed, therefore doubly astonishing misrepresentation of its present place, imperfect but hopeful,
in the
a range of informed opinion that does this country credit. military reality has kinship with other misreprefree world. The Inchon landing certainly would
up in the realm of discourse
cropping
sentations
We challenge Mr. McCarthy to substantiate his allegahave to be called “unfair," but it saved a great
and elsewhere. Let us exclude from conmany American lives, and Chinese lives too,
tions and offer him the pages of this paper for a reply. locally
in
sideration the agitator-propagandist, appallingly
terestingly enough. That is, the “no contest” cast
We certainly do not deny Mr. McCarthy the right using all the resources for ordering and comof things seems to have precipitated unusual
num
and the privilege to support President Johnson’s policy municating truth solely for a political end, howinto our hands, where (come to
right down the line,” but we take strong exception to ever irrelevant or subversive that might be to bers of Chinese were
treated so much better than
it)
they
think
of
Mr. McCarthy’s innuendo that any and all people who truth. No, we’re concerning ourselves with the Chinese treated Americans that something over
fail to do so are undermining the national effort, and professional man and his auditors, persons nonninety (90) percent refused to return home to their
compulsive enough to be members of stable sosomehow disloyal. They are not.
workers paradise and elected to go to Formosa incieties. Mr. Maud ably represents that quarter,
stead.

Courier-Express Strikes Back
The Courier-Express of Monday, April 26, carried
an editorial on page sixteen under the heading: “Qualified Students in Search of Room,” in which the follow-

would never review a book without having read
it carefully, once even declined to comment publicly on the qualifications of a man he had worked
with many months lest his opinion exercise disproportionate influence.
Item; you don’t “organize shelters;” you dig
them or build them or both. You may organize a
defense. In the case of impending napalm attack
this would involve having the foreknowledge to
command “Crouch there not here” or “Dive" (and
stay under water a while) or “On the double into
these thoughtfully provided sealed shelters with
their independent air supply.” Anybody having
even six months military training, even a bare
minimum of military reading, ought to know
these things, and know too that that is why napalm is such a fine weapon. If you Can put if on
your adversary you can take him out of the action
before he takes you out with old fashioned jagged
mortar fragments or an even older fashioned
bayonet, either of which can leave you no less
wounded, or less dead.
The more general item about gas must come
logically after the most general defect in Mr.
Maud’s letter, the unspoken (and unconscious?),
totally erroneous assumption that battle is a “contest” like a cricket match or perhaps a medieval
trial-by-combat with conditions evened up and
stabilized nicely and may God defend the right.
May He indeed! and thefe was that storm in 1588,
but it would be theologically presumptuous for a
commander to assume he had a pipeline to the
throne, wouldn't it? Indeed humility, and duty
to his men, to his mission, to his nation demands
that he make it “no contest” as quickly as he can.

Publicized reports a few days ago spoke of an
unfair Viet Cong bulid-up seemingly aimed at
cutting the country in two, taking the Da Nang
airbase, etc. 1 do not jest of scars: friends fought
and suffered in Korea; two college classmates
died there; two friends are in Viet Nam. Certainly
all of them would prefer nausea to death, wounds,
or capture. It is difficult to restrain impatience
with those who whine we cannot win militarily in
South Viet Nam. We cannot afford to lose and
as a recent president said in response to similar
cries about Berlin “Brave men will make it defensible as brave men made Stalingrad defensible
and Leningrad defensible.” And might make Hanoi
defensible, except we are not attacking Hanoi, nor
any other North Viet Namese town with any view
to occupation. It is difficult to repress a savage
contempt for those Americans, reported to exist,
who solicit medical aid for the Viet Cong, It does
not matter how many V. C. corporals imagine
they are fighting for social justice until Ho Chi
Minh and the command echelon can be persuasively equated with Norman Thomas and shrimp are
whistling “Dixie.” Certainly as Mr. Maud probably
agrees the ultimate solution in South Viet Nam
cannot be simply military (and see the April 23
and 24 New Yorker and Time for convincing reports from the ground as to military situations
and non-military prospects). But let no one doubt
whom those strategic hamlets are fencing out, and
who must win militarily, and how. A recent pres
ident observed that the free world nations do not
have to build walls to keep their people in.

ing sentence appeared:
It could be that through closer scrutiny and
weeding out of the alleged students (,) room
could be found for those whose main purpose
is to get an education and not to picket the
White House, get carried to a paddy wagon,
or disdain soap, combs, and personal grooming.
We are as concerned as the Courier with the fate
of the 10,000 or so qualified high school graduates who
will find no place in our colleges and universities. We
would suggest, however, that the proper way to express
that concern is to address the State Legislature in opposition to the proposed cut in the budget of the State
University, as we did in our extra of April 5, and not to
propose unfair and totalitarian sanctions against students who have found through their education an imperative toward social reform and genuine participation
in the fabric of our democratic society.
We have found many occasions to offer our respect
and congratulations the the Courier-Express, (on the occasion of their HUAC editorial, for instance) but we
must voice our profound disturbance over this latest
Sincerely,
“suggestion,” and point out to the Courier that a stuG. H. Carrithers
dent's right to stay in school should be based solely on
his academic ability and achievement and NOT on his
personality, political beliefs, or mode of dress.
Motives Questioned
We are appalled that the Courier, a paper noted in
This is unfortunate. Instead of leaving military
the community for its sense of fair play and integrity, TO THE EDITOR
decisions to professionals, 80 of our students think
(Stuchapter
The
news
that
a
local
of
SDS
should have made such a proposal on its editorial pages,
they are better qualified to say how and where
Society) was being formed
dents
for
a
Democratic
a proposal which contravenes academic freedom, and at this university came as
we should stop Red aggression. Under the guise
a welcome relief after
which by innuendo casts serious aspersions on a number 80 of our students took part in that idiotic march of “Democratic," "Freedom-loving” and “Humane"
societies, groups have successfully duped a fair
on Washington protesting our stand in Viet Nam.
of students and teachers who are didicated to the prinamount of American students into thinking that
However, I wonder how many of our students
ciples of democracy, social justice, and equality.
Red aggression and terrorism is all right but use
realize that a new organization is being formed
of American troops to stop this is against the name
to supplement and assist the SDS. This is called
of fair-play and honesty. Why should we be bound
FOOLS (Freedom
Outright

Tr

i

or

dents) and

its

platform

Liberation of Stuconsists of:

1. Recall of American troops from Viet Nam,
South Korea, Berlin, Alaska, Ohio, and Walla

Walla, Wash.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of »he State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass’l News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

Peter Rubm
Barbara S,r *u&amp;*
Trudy Stern
Open to Applicants
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ann' Orsrulak
David Edelman

JEREMY TAYLOR

-

Business Mariaqer
Business Mgr Elect
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
Photo Editor
Faculty Advisor

Financial Advisor

Bernard Dikman
Mark Blumberg
Howard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander
. Edward
Joscelyn
William Siemering
Dallas Garber
S

2. Repeal of Prohibition.
3. Withdrawal of Red Cross troops from the
flooded areas of the Mississippi.
4. Last but not least, they are in favor of making Ho Chi Minh and his Red friends honorary American citizens.

Although this might seem ridiculous and nonsensical to some, I will bet there are twenty students on this campus who are ready, willing and
able to march or protest in favor of this platform.

Greek Apathy to Stunt Night

General Staff:

Vicki Bugelski, Meryl Frank, Sharon Heend, Marion Michael, Debbie
Rubie, Scott Kurman, Jo Anne Leegant, Eileen Teifler, Sue Greene, Bill Cortes, Joey
Elm, Terry Davis, Helen Peters. Joan Fox. Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Giglia, Chuck
Cummings, Raymond Volpe, Jerome TayJor, Marsha Alt, Margo Wallach, Alan Gold
stem. Sue Zuckerberg, Sue Thomas. Mickey Drexler
Sports

Staff
Chick Arnold
Richard Drandoff. Steve
Schuelem, Steve Oberttem, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro,

Photography Staff: Dav.d Collins, Pete Bonneau,
Blank, Stanley Srymanow&gt;k , Marc Lev.ne, Dan
Al Gruber
Circulation Staff
Palmer, Lee

a

Corey

Diane lewis,

Second

Jane Herbrand,

Fergm,
Harvey

Stan Lichwala
Starr .

Steve

MakJch, Susan Wortman. Don
Waterman, Toby Leder, Dave Fox,
Ivan

Elbe

Gold.

Joyce

Class, Poitage Paid at Buffalo. N Y
Subscription S3 00 per year, circulation
9500
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Mad son Ave . New York, N Y

F.enmore.

Mary Lou

by fair means when the opposition does not? Why
should we condone the forceful overthrow of a
legally instituted government in South Viet Nam?
Why do we condone terror tactics by the Commu
nists but deplore the use of non-lethal tear gas
by Americans? I fear that Communist groups are
hard at work in our campuses and their success
is evidenced by the 15,000 babies who picketed
the White House last week. Students of this uni
versity listen well: before joining any organization that advocates dubious causes, look into it
with both eyes open. The cause you may be
advocating may be conspiring to overthrow our
Democratic government. Stop, look and listen but
above all, think of your reasons for joining any
organizations. Remember, FOOLS are coming!
Philip Fanone

TO THE EDITOR

Stunt Night is cancelled this year, Unfortuntaely a Greek tradition on this campus may be
broken forever. Words like “apathy" and “disinterest" are not strong eonugh to express my feelings towards many of my “fellow” Greeks. Phi
Epsilon Pi has been working hard, for two and a
half months, rehearsing and promoting interest in
Stunt Night to contribute to the Greek competition
on this campus. This past Monday, four out of the
eight groups, who had previously committed themselves, backed out. Now Phi Ep, along with three
other Fraternities, have no Stunt Night. There will
be a sad and empty hole in this year's Spring
Weekend.

I would like to, extend my thanks to Flo
Gerber (Stunt Night Chairman); her entire committee; and all those Greeks who worked hard on
being “rewarded" with only aggra
Stunt Night
vation, in place of the recognition they deserved
To those who showed their disinterest, by backing
out
for making
I would like to extend my pity
the Greek fight to stay on this campus harder for
all of us At a time when Fraternities are expected
to prove themselves in the eyes of others, such
“publicity" as this can prove quite damaging.
—

—

—

Fred M. Apple
Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity

�Friday, April 3B, 19*5

pam

SPECTRUM

•

•

•

On The Advances of Science: More Effective

ROIC Uniforms

All Aerospace Studies (AS 1)
Students who are certain that
they will return to the University in September 1965 and enroll in AS 2 may retain their
complete uniforni through the
summer, if they wish to do so.
However, they must see Sergeant
O’Brien in the AFROTC Supply,
basement of Clark Gym, and arrange to keep it prior to the end
of the semester. Otherwise, the
late charge will apply after June
15. 1965. All others, AS 1 and
AS 2 students, will turn in their
uniforms between May 7 and
May 21. 1965.
,

SUMMER STORAGE
Arrangements

are

Ihmii"

made by The Inter-Residence Council with the Niagara Storage Warehouse
Co. for summer storage.
The tentative date of pickup is May 19. at Tower.
Goodyear, and Allenhursl.
The complete details will
he forthcoming in a letter
next week which will he
given to all Resident Advisors and which will appear in the Spectrum and
the Prism.

cjCetterA to the

Editor

There is no doubt by anyone who has analyzed
the goals and results of educational exchange
programs that they are forging strong links in
the chain of international cooperation. Recent research indicates that educational exchange programs, even in the cold light of realistic appraisal,
are positive and constructive attempts. However,
where problems do exist, programs cannot be
strengthened in any meaningful or lasting way unless they are seen in the context of the Univer-

sity’s total activities, especially at a time of expanding enrollment and pressures on utilization
of resources for our domestic requirements. In
terms of the investment of eductaional and human
resources as well as funds, international educational programs may be a strain on limited resources. However, the question that confronts us
is not whether we should continue educational
exchange but rather how to effectively plan and
administer programs for receiving and educating
foreign students. Since this does not happen
automatically, adequate resources must be committed to development of effective programs if they
are to be in the tradition of the individual rather
than the mass approach to problems and provide
the opportunity for individuals to develop their
abilities to the fullest.
L. N. Smith
Advisor on Foreign
Student Affairs

Political Science Absence Explained
TO THE EDITOR

RE: “Correction” of Dr. Paul Diesing’s questioning
of the “teach-in,"
Dr. Paul Diesing’s justification of his not participating in the “teach-in” on Viet Nam, is a
"onderful illustration of how academicians remove
themselves from social reality. Dr, Diesing indifectly admits that he is more “concerned with the
Pplication of political theory to current issues"
than with current issues themselves. Theories are
developed to add insight and explanatory power

a

to actual events; not as a substitute intellectual
preoccupation.
It is quite condescending of Dr. Diesing to
suggest that students could only “seriously" discuss international crises if they have a grasp of
stylish, nebulous political theories such as game
theory, conflict theory, etc. No multiple abstrac
tions. or game theory, is needed to adequately discuss •simple" issues such as life and death, peace
and war. These latter issues are justifiably the
“student preoccupations" of a generation that is
sensitive to real events.
Joseph E. Nechasek

On the Washington March
T 0 THE
EDITOR:
Sunny morning arrival

And cafeteria visit. It’s quiet . .
No bombs falling here.
Then to the Lincoln monument.
Why was the reflecting pool full of garbage?
At 10’ the White House picket line
Where ten thousand march in loops
With signs and banners that read:
“End the War in Vietnam”
“Stop the Killing”
American Nazis appear across the street
And Butchers go by in a noise truck.
Marching, on into the afternoon,
We are now twenty thousand joined in protest.
r the Washington monument we move
°

...

A long snake we make as we march,
Moving in and out under the sun.
the speeches seem like so much rhetoric
And the Freedom songs say much more,
Until Potter appears before the student-youth
And calls out fcr a Revolution .
To the. Capitol our pickets move.
The late afternoon wind begins to kick up.
The march is enveloped by the night and we
hear that our petition is refused.
As buses leave for home, we ask:
WHAT NOW?
only answer

COMMENTARY
By RAY VOLPE
Despite colorful spring pickets,
Washington bound Easter-vacation-student-protestors, and a
skeptical but always responsible
press, some Americans and Europeans actually seem glad about
those Air Force “dropings” over
Nort Viet Nam. Needless to say,
out-ragged non apathetic students
on our greater American campuses are beside themselves trying to find new ways to “inform" their fellow capitalists
the "real” situation
trouble plagued Viet Nam.

about

in

The biggest gripe heard from
the nonapathetics (and apathetics, too) is about the lack of
information coming out of Viet
Nam. "Where there's lack of
info, there's gotta be something
sneaky going on." The plight of
the press is real. For example,
no one seems ot know for sure
what percentage of the weapons
used are made in Red China,
the U. S., or arc the products
of busy do-it-yourselfers up

north. The

Army

isn’t telling.

And some are still worried
about our use of questionable
weapons like gas. Napalm, they
point out, is used against “combatants” (trained bad guys), and
if they get burned and disfigured
by its effects—well, that is tough
luck because they should know
better! But nausia gas, ugh!
Users of nausia gas are less discreet and sometimes mix up the
good guys and the bad guys.

Eeveryone gets ill! This of course
makes it a poor "contest" and

should be ruled out as unfair.

Arguments about Viet Nam
between the “let’s-get-out” er's
and the “let’s-stay-and-give’mhell” er’s has become the second most popular national past
time—the most lively is the battle over Civil Rights being
waged between the "let’s-send
'em-back- where they come from”
er’s and the “let's-make-them-free
-like-in-the-North” e r’s! This
backyard quarreling is driving
-

-

-

the TV program pollsters crazy.

North Viet Nam propaganda
movies on Huntley Brinkley are
getting better ratings than Rep.
Adam Clayton Powell’s blasts at
the War on Poverty.
The Administrtaion’s growing
problem of explaining its Viet
Nam policy (we have one now!)
is clearly reflected by the sharp
drop off of barbecues at the LBJ
ranch all the regular guests are
scampering around the country
making speaches to eagerto-listen picketers. President Charles
de Gaulle, still bent on being
"a great man of French history,"
recently refused to allow French
military ships to paritcipate in
war games on the Mediterranean
with the U. S. England, experiencing emigrant problems of
skilled workers and using U. S.
credit to back its currency, has
decided to remain faithful to the
U. S. and its policy in Viet Nam.
Spain's General Franko is still
an anticommunist. And Cuba?
-

Referendum Scheduled Next
Week on Campus Calendar

Position on Educational Exchange Clarified
TO THE EDITOR:
Recently I received a letter from the Executive Council of the Graduate Student Association
requesting me to clarify some statements attributed to me as reported in the March 12 issue of
Th« Spectrum. The Executive Council indicated
my remarks as misquoted in the article appeared
to be generally negative. I wish to take this opportunity to correct that impression.

mva

And the
To work at it together.
Jerry Gross
—

The Student Welfare Committee wishes to announce
that it will hold a referendum on the University Calendar
at the end of next week.
Polling areas will be established at Norton Union,
Tower, Clement, and Goodyear.
The referendum will be concerned with the following

1. A change involving a longer Thanksgiving
vacation would mean that classes would end
on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving rather
than on Wednesday. The lost academic day
would be regained by having classes end on
Tuesday the 23 as it has always been rather
than December 22.
2. Also intercession would be extended by three
days allowing classes to begin on Monday
morning rather than the previous Thursday
morning. The lost academic days would be regained in May by having classes end on Friday,
May 13 rather than on Tuesday. These changes
would permit students to have a two day study
break before final exams would begin on Monday morning.

3. No student would be required to take more
than two exams in any one day during the final
examination period. A definite rule stating
the above would be established by the Univer-

Administration.
The Student Welfare Committee urges all students
to participate in this important referendum. The results will be influential in the move to have next year’s
Calendar changed.
sity

attention
All those people holding advance subscriptions
to the 1965 Buffalonian,
may pick up their hooks
in Km. 243 of Norton lieginning May 3-7, 10 a.ni/
to 4:30 p.m. and May 8,
12 noon to 2 p.m. After
May 8 all extra Itooks will
go on open sale.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Part., 'P~*, Jnc.
#rJ

-4i r .n &amp; Smid Printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Dataware)

Phone 876-2284
11

�Friday, April 30, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Educat ion and Cultural Affairs
Modern Music

New NSR
For Sale
On Monday

On Our Campus
By DANIEL SCHROEDER

The year’s final issue of the
Student Review, campus
literary and opinion magazine,
will go on sale in the lobby of
Norton starting Monday, May 3,
from 9 to 3 o’clock.
Featured in this copy is an
interview with Mauricio Kagel,
Slee Professor of Music this se-

New

mester. Mr. Kagel examines con-

temporary music and selections

from two of his recent compositions which are reprinted, illustrating graphic music and the
“instrumental theatre.”
Joy Granite's article on Jean
Genet's “The Balcony" and Sartre’s existentialism presents an

interesting comparison between
the philosophical views of the
two men. Also included is “The
Myth of Alchemy” by Steven
Bigwood, dealing with the facts
surrounding the precursor of modern-day chemistry. An article
almost as long as its title, “Notes
on the Explication of the Occult,
the Mystic and the Intangible," is
written in terms of Miss Rheingold. The author of this whimsical meditation, Leonard Quimby,
describes himself as an "infrequently published poet” on the
SUNYAB faculty.

Three short stories appear in
this issue, written in quite different styles and dealing with
diverse topics. "A Cluster of
Horsetail Rush,” by Anthony
Krayna, “It Doesn't Matter," by
Joanne Smith, and “Th Preceding Chaptrs Hv Bn Censored,”
by Dan Zimmerman, comprise the
present selection of student writ-

ing in fiction.
Particularly noteworthy among
the poetry is “An Evocation to
Tommy Dorsey," by John Wieners, who visited this campus recently as a participant in the
Fine Arts Festival. Mr. Wieners
wrote this poem while in Buffalo.
Also featured are poems by Zora
Devrnja, Joan Gilbert, Bob Hogg,
Kitayun E. Deboo and Lewis Bowman.

An art section, including two
studies done in cigarette lighter
fluid, and a column devoted to
staff and contributor intrductions
complete the format of the current issue.

The 1965 Buffalonian

will be distributed in Rm.
343 Norton, beginning on
May 3 May 7 from 10
-

a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on
May 8 from 12 noon to
2 p.m.

STEPHEN SPENDER

Spender to
Read Poetry
Poet Stephen Spender, co-editor
of “Encounter,” will read selections of his poetry at 3 p.m.
Friday, May 7, in the Millard
Fillmore Room.
Mr, Spender’s recital will be
co-sponsored by the Student Convocations Committee and the
Lockwood Library of the Uni-

versity.

He is the author of four books
of poetry entitled, “The Still
Centre,” “Poems of Dedication,”
“Ruins and Visions” and "The
Edge of Being," which have been
combined in "Collected Poems
1928-1953.”

He is also the author of a
novel, two books of short stories,
several essays and criticisms and
has translated numerous German
literary works into the English
language. His autobiography is
entitled, "World Within World."
Born in London, England in
1909 and educated at Oxford University, Mr. Spender has been a
co-editor of “Encounter" since
its 1953 inception. He was also
an editor of “Horizon” and a coeditor of the “Concise Encyclopedia of English and American
Poets and Poetry.”

A panel discussion on
the fine arts film “Viridiana,” directed hy Luis
Runnel at 7:30 p.m. on
May 6, 1965, in the Dorothy Haas Lounge.
Co-sponsored h y the
Council of Religious Organizations and the Union
Board Film Committee.

Right now, this minute, there
is a revolution afoot on campus.
Former ideas, mores and conventions arc becoming as obsolete as passe religions, and metamorphasizing just as quickly,
before our eyes, from commanding mysticism to inanity and irrelevance; only to be replaced
as soon as they are created.
Promenant personages on cam
pus and in this city who claim
to be looking ahead (and dare
not look back) with morals and
designs, don’t fool us, the skeptics. We know there is nothing
permanent to cling to; nothing;
nbw that they have destroyed
our only foothold, the past, we
are in a rushing flood and don’t
even have the shore in sight.

Like the situation in Viet Nam,
the support of the populace in

this crisis is limited to mild interest, disapproval, and, in the
greatest measure, simple ignorance. But the uprising is world
wide and one of the insurgents'
stronghold in this city and this
campus.
The preceding mass of metaphors should not make it seem
like a fairy tale. It is as real and
exciting as the time we live in.
Yet how many students know?
Except for a raised eyebrow as
they pass Baird Hall and hear

the ridiculous sounds emanating
from the open windows, do they
realize that Buffalo is a national
center for avant-garde music?
Do they know that part of the
huge Rockefeller Foundation is
being used to pay a battery of
specialists in the idiom, to experiment, study and give performances of the provocative
stuff here on campus? Do they
have any conception of the consequences for the future of what
is going on in music now under
their noses? And, in fact, do
they care to have any idea of
what is going on in music at
all?

Essentially, the conflict is this:
Modern art music almost from
the beginning of this century has
been breaking out of the moulds
of constant rhythm and tonality
(centering a piece around a
“home” tone) which have held
control and order since 1550.
This has resulted, along with
much noise, in new theories to
replace the old, none of which
is good enough to control music
for the next 400 years. To make

matters

worse, much serious
music and all pop music has
acted almost as if the greatest
change
the abandonment of
tonality did not take place. For
-

*m*f vet!*
instance, the Beatles’ harmony
can be analyzed easily under the
same system as that of Bach
(1685-1750). Serious composers
are and should not be content
to stand still in this manner. They
must progress; but now they have
progressed themselves out of any

one, universal set of rules. Avant-

garde music, the kind promoted
in this town, seeks a clear break

with all conservative musical
ideas. A great majority of composers and the public (concertgoing and non) are still fighting
to varying degrees the break
which has been made. Who
knows? Perhaps they are right
to cling to some traditional
values.
Each

new avant-garde compo-

sition is really new. It can do
exactly anything with (or to) the
audience. Still, men like Foss
and Cage are attempting to find
the magical key to the music of
the future, using a variety of
means to produce sounds which
can not even be described here,
trying always new ideas and concepts. These concepts and techniques, by the way, are often
translated in sound as literal assaults on the listeners’ ears, as
those who attended concerts of
the Creative Associates or during
the Buffalo Festival of the Arts
can confirm.
The Rockefeller Creative Associates on campus, now over 20

strong, are talented artists paid
to study and perform modern
music. They are working closely
with the Foss-Philharmonic organization,
two groups
cleus of a
avant-garde

and

together these

have formed the nunational center for
music at Buffalo (the
Festival of the Arts got important coverage in at least three
major national magazines and
was mentioned by all, making it
second only to the Buffalo Bills
in publicizing Buffalo to the
nation
for whatever that’s
worth).

So it is this ear-shattering
quest for a new music over the
protests of the majority that is
the revolution. It is an exciting
point of history in music to be
living, and we on campus are in
the center of it or can be.
-

Most of the students’ listening
activities are confined to the pop
radio stations and to folk artists.
In other words, they hear music
oriented to the adolescent minds
out of which they are supposedly
maturing and to the world of
often sophisticated (and more
often, not) social ideas. Neither
of these is music in any serious
sense of the word.
It was most comical to hear
one staunch member of last Fri
day’s protest at a downtown pow
(Cont’d on P 9)
—

WEEKLY CALENDAR
1 FRIDAY—
12:30 p.m. Recital: Donald Ingram, organist Vivaldi-Bach
Concerto in A minor and works
of Bach. St. Paul’s Cathedral.
7:45 p.m. Music: Michael Ried,
saxophonist; George Kelver,
pianist. St.. John Vianney Sem
inary.

8:00'txm. Music:

Moussorgsky’s

“Joshua," Temple Beth El.

8:00 p.m. Play: 'Our Town by
Thornton Wilder. Bishop Turncr High School.
8; 15 p

m.

Glee Clubs
and Madrigal Singers of Buffalo State. Upton Hall.
Concert;

8:30 p.m Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic under Lukas Foss;
Jacob Berg, flutist, playing

APRIL 30 MAY 5
-

.

.

.

Mozart's

Concerto in D, and
other works for orchestra.
Villa Maria College.

8:00 p.m. Play: “Our Town,”
by Thornton Wilder. Bishop
Turner High School.

8:30 p.m. Play: “The Physicists," a comedy; Studio The
ater. Call IT 6-6850 for tickets:
continuing through May 1.

8:30 p.m.
Buffalo
Philharmonic, “American Music in the University.” Works
of Dahl, Shapero, and Shapey
conducted by the composer.
Tickets free.

Western New York Art Exhibi
tion, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Continuing through May.
Burchfield Drawing Exhibition
Upton Hall, Buffalo State.
c»
»—
SA T11BnAV

1:30-5:00 p.m. Symposium: Literature and Social Science; Robert Bierstedt, Leslie Fiedler,
Leo
Lowenthal.
Conference
Theatre,

-I

Norton Union.

8:00 p.m. Play: "Our Town,”
by Thornton Wilder. Bishop
Turner High School.

Concert;

SUNDAY—

2:30 p.m. Play: “Our Town,”
Thornton Wilder. Bishop

by

Turner High School.

3:00 p.m.

Concert;

UB Band

Concert on Baird Hall lawm.

3:00 p.m. Concert; Buffalo
school orchestra, band, and
chorus groups. Kleinhans Music
Hall.
4:30 p.m. Music: Heinz Wun-

derlich, organist; works of
Bach, Reger, etc. Westminster
Presbyterian

Church.

8:00 p.m. Concert: Zither Club
of Buffalo. Kleinhans Music
Hall.

8:30 p.m. Concert; Haydn’s
“Creation,” performed by the
Buffalo Schola Cantorium. Villa Maria College.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Mischa
Schneider, cellist; Norma Bertolami, pianist. Baird Hall.
MONDAY—

3:00

Convocation: Soul Alinsky, Community Organizer.
Millard Fillmore Room, Norton
Union.

8:30 p.m, Lecture:
Diaz-Plaja,

la Espana de su Tiempo (illustrated, in Spanish) 125 Crosby.

“Goya,

Guillermo
Espejo de

TUESDAY—

8:30 p.m.

Concert:

Club and Women’s
ton Union.

UB Glee

Choral. Nor

8:30 p.m. Recital: Raymond
Herbert; pianist; works of
Bach, Scarlatti, Beethoven, etc.
Rosary Hill College.

WEDNESDAY—

Exhibit of African Sculpt
College Union, Buffalo St

8:30‘ p.m. Illustrated Lecture
Near Eastern Composition ver
sus Serialism in Eastern ani
Western Music; Dr. Peter Gr.
denwitz. Baird Hall.

�Friday, April

30, 1965

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

DEFY GOLDFINGER!

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Official Bulletin is an
of the
authorized publication York
at
State University of New
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
the Old
TYPEWRITTEN form toMrs.
Fix,
Faculty Club, attention
before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

-

route)

MAY 28—All theses must be in
the Graduate Office by noon.
M.A. copies bound - PhD.
copies unbound.
'

MAY 30—Commencement

WEEKLY CALENDAR
APRIL 29Fine Arts Film—“End of Innocence” in Norton Union
MAY 3—
Modern Languages lecture series:
Guillermo Diaz-Plaja, Barcelona,
Visiting Prof, of Spanish, entitled “Goya, Espejo de la Espana de su Tiempo” (illustrated
in Spanish), Crosby Hall, Room
125 at 8:30 p.m.
MAY 6—
Fine Arts Film—“Viridiana" in

Then, a student ship to
Europe will be a fascinating

BETA PHI SIGMA

of Beta Phi Sigma will hold their
annual dinner dance at the Cordon Bleu. The evening’s activities will begin with a cocktail
party followed by dinner and
dancing. Flowers will be presented to those couples pinned during the past year.
Tomorrow night the brothers
will have a closed party at Fasco’s
immediately after the Kingston
Trio Concert.
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta will observe Founder’s Day
on Wednesday, May 5, at noon.
This Monday night there will be
a get-together with the pledge
class.
Joan Salwisz and Alice Wittenberg were elected to Cap and
Gown. Bev Bolles was chosen
Gamma Phi Sweetheart,
ALPHA SIGMA PHI
The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi were the victors at the Gamma Phi Track Meet for the second consecutive year.
The pledge class will hold their
annual pledge party on Thursday,
at the Flying “E” Ranch in Lockport, featuring the “Maniacs.”
Friday night the brothers will
attend the Kingston Trio Concert
at Kleinhans followed by an informal party.
The highlight of the year is
the traditional formal Closing
Affair held at the Executive Motor Inn on Saturday at 8:00.
Sunday will bring the fraternity social activities to an end
with a beach party at Beaver Island Park when the pledges challenge the brotherhood at football.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI
Ellen Fleysher, Jane Goldin
and Monica Bauer were tapped
for Cap and Gown Women’s
Honorary Society. Nancy Johnston won Chi Omega’s Social
Science award.
GAMMA

PHI

The Brothers announce their
newly elected officers: President,
Bryan Caldwell; vice president,
James Killian; treasurer, Ev Reynolds; recording secretary, Ter-

rance Riggs; corresponding

sec-

retary. Paul Jenkins; pledgemaster, Jack Kiebala.
Last Sunday, Gamma Phi held
a very successful Greek Olym-

experience.

ROUND, SQUARE, HEX-A WIDE VARIETY OF COLORS

osk
Book your passage with us
for special foldor and s tudont fobs
in Holland.
Write: Dept. 007.
—

COUNCIL OPTICIANS
34 CHURCH ST.

U.S. NATIONAL
STUDENT ASSOCIATION
265 Madison Avenue
New York, N. Y. 10016

Ibrewed for braves...,

Norton Union

Lrauk

r^nSTWk

GREEK NOTES
Tomorrow night the brothers

piad. The results are: Winner in
Alpha GamWomen’s Division
ma Delta; Winner of the Men’s
Alpha Sigma Phi;
Division
Alpha Sigma
Winner Overall

DOUBLE-HOPPED
for Extra Full-Strength

—

—

House.

Sunday the Brothers will have
a picnic at Chestnut Ridge from
10:00 a.m. till ?.
Miss Beverly Bolles was se-

4 CLASSICAL

secretary, Pete Longo; historian,
Dick Betz; messenger, Roger
Fredericks; chaplain, Mike Blotnik, and Sargeant-at-Arms, Bob
Shields,

with Spring
Weekend, the Brothers will hold
a cocktail party before the ball.
Pete Longo is the campus representative for Maryland Paper
Co. and Frito-Lay Inc. Any sorority, fraternity, or other or-

In

conjunction

j

1

4

J

SPRING
SHOWERS
OF VALUE AT
•/#

president, Marty Groet; pledgemaster, Tom Videan; Treasurer,
Jim Fell; recording secretary,
Lee Schweichler; corresponding

big

name

TO

Vi OFF LIST

labels
RCA VICTROLA
MERCURY WING
PERIOD
MGM and OTHERS

wishing to purchase
paper cups, potato chips, or pretzels, slightly above cost, please
contact Pete at the fraternity
ganization

lunch table.
PI LAMBDA TAU
Pi Lambda Tau is supporting
‘Spring Weekend" by entering
a float ,in Friday's parade In ad
dition, we will hold a cocktail
party proceeding the dance, Sat
urday night, at brother Roy Puciato’s apartment.

AIRFREIGHT

i/3 TO Vz OFF GREAT NAMES...
Monfeux, Fritz Reiner, Paul Paray, Anatol
the Boston, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis,
with
Dorati, William Steinberg,
Chicago, London, and Detroit Symphonies. Artists included are David

Charles Munch, Eric Leinsdorf,

Oistralh, Gilels, Graffman, Brailowsky, etc.

Trunks

Your
and Personal Items Home
by calling AMFRICAN AIBI INES AIRFREIGHT
NF 2-6007
Only S6.00* per 100 lb. BUFFALO TO NEW YORK
Airfreight Air Waybills and Shipping Tags are
Available in Residence Hall offices.
Airport to Airport rote

JHP

Taste

—

Phi.
Tomorrow evening at 8:00 the
Brothers will hold their Initiation of this Spring’s Pledge Class
at 99 Englewood Ave. Following
the Initiation, the Brothers will
hold a dance at the Hackney

lected “Sweetheart” at Gamma
Phi’s annual Sweetheart Dance.
THETA CHI FRATERNITY
The brothers of Theta Chi will
hold a closed cocktail party this
Saturday at Brother D’arcangelo’s home prior to the Spring
Weekend Dance.
Brothers Stirner and Swartz
will represent our chapter at
Theta Chi’s annual Regional Conference this weekend at Clarkson College, Potsdam, N.Y. We
wish them luck on their trip.
PHI KAPPA PSI
The Brotherhood of Phi Kappa
Psi announces the officers for
the 1965 Fall semester. They arc:
President, Dave Franko; vice-

-

INTERNATIONAL
STUDENT ID CARD!

students following the project

The

Graduate School Schedule:
MAY 14—All oral examinations
must be over on or before this
date. The Graduate School must
be notified by departments that
prospective graduates have successfully passed the examination.
(This date also applies to those

Got your passport
Got your health certificate
Get your

"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, April 30,

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

l Avv h o- VJL' iLTmy A JI KjWi
1
jpjPPPPPPPPPPPPPipjPPPPPPippppppppp|PPiMPP&lt;
The more complex and fragmented our society becomes, the more we seem to long for the fierce simplicity
of fabled primitive cultures. Rousseau’s concept of the
“noble savage” seems, somehow, all the more attractive
to us living as we are in the midst of a social scheme
marked by blurred edges, compromises, sell-outs, copouts, hang-ups and disturbingly unsatisfactory quasi-resolutions to most of our problems. Suburban couples who
are rendered distraught by the merest suggestion of an
original or unusual gesture thrill to Alec Guiness’s stage
dramatics as the already legendary Dylan Thomas. As
the bizarre, the strange, the daring and the slightly mad
become less and less palatable possibilities for us in our
daily lives, we begin to long for them in our art and
literature. This is the basic appeal, I think, of the
Michael Cacoyannis production of Nikos Kazantzakis’s
sprawling novel, Zorba The Greek.
According to a recent item in the local press, the
Greek ambassador to France has made public his strong,
personal objections to the movie. He feels that it makes
the Greek people look small-minded and backward and
that it it gives the impression that Crete the site of the
-

UB Karni-Bull Three Evenings of Music
Scheduled For Planned to Honor Albrecht
This Weekend
Ferris wheels, cotton candy,
prizes and hot dogs
you name
it and you’ll find it at the “UB
Karni-Bull” on Saturday and Sunday. The carnival, which will be
set up in the Baird parking lot,
is the highlight of the Spring
Weekend festivities. The games
will be open on Saturday from
10-5, and on Sunday from 1-12
midnight.

will be a variety of
of skill at which many
valuable prizes can be won, some
of which are on display in the
glass case next to the Conference
Theatre. Games will be played
with special “Spring Weekend
dollars" which can be purchased
for 10c each at a special booth
set up for that purpose on the
carnival grounds. Whoever wins
at a game, will receive more
“UB Dollars’’ which they can then
exchange for prizes.
There

games

the dance.

—

The Spirit of Greece

like Buffalo
movie is rainy, gloomy and depressing
in winter. His problem, I believe, is that he has felt
too deeply the misery inherent in the under-developed
economy that plagues Greece. The average American
audience will have no such problem. In addition, what
is most striking about the picture seems to have escaped
the ambassador completely. This is the tremendous vitality of Zorba himself a man who is too sensible and
too perceptive to deny the sadness, but too spirited, too
lusty, too exuberantly passionate
in short, too much (a
MAN to deny the Life of the land.
staid,
The story, simply, is this. An Englishman
serious, young and bookish comes to Crete to try to get
a lignite mine going. Zorba
an older man, a Greek
who dances to the music of life takes him in hand, and
from this highly dramatic confrontation, combustion results. The people of Crete, living in semi-poverty, adhereing strictly to the morals and mores of a thousand
year old folk culture, provide the catalyst which makes
the film incandesent. At the film's conclusion, Alan
Bates, the Englishman, asks Zorba to teach him to dance,
but this symbolic request isn't really indicative of any
change in the life of any one of the participants. That
isn’t the point of the movie. Cacoyannis, the director
who made the fine film version of Electra with Irene
Papas several years ago, is most Concerned with portraying the type of life that is lived on the raw edge of
starvation and despair, and in showing how a finer form
of steel can be forged in this hot cauldron than in a
more sophisticated but less intense land like England.
The “steel” in this-case is Alexis Zorba. It is his
story and Anthony Quinn, in the best performance of
his long career, actually creates Zorba as an amalgum
of the man that Kazantzakis, Cacoyannis and he himself
envisioned. There are some other good performances—
Lila Kredova's academy award performance as a repulsive, hysterical, self-deluded hotel keeper; Irene Papas
as a stunning, silent, darkly handsome young widow;
Alan Bates as the affable, soggy Englishman and as the
credits point out, “the people of Crete” in their infinite
variety.
However, it is Quinn’s picture. He pulls it
together, he is the vitalizing force and he, not Bates, is
the constant focus of our attention and our concern, and
he is magnificent.
He is a man with the rough animal vitality of Zampano, the acrobat in La Strada, but he is much kinder,
more humane, more worldly and vastly more intelligent
and introspective. He is a man who is able to see quite
clearly the disparity between the illusions of men’s
dreams and the harsh reality of their lives, and out of
this rather harsh and disturbing vision, he has created
an ironic pose which is both a shield against sorrow and
an invitation to participate in the fullness of life. He
is a unique creation in an uncreative and ordinary world
and, as Cacoyannis suggests, his wisdom and passion is
communicable and timeless. He is rare and vastly worthy in his appreciation for the apple tree, the singing
and the gbld and he is symbolic of the best in Greece,
in man, in life and the world. He is Zorba! Go see
the picture and see him in his glory.
-

.

.

.

When not at the Karni-Bull,
students can visit the Student
Art Show and sale which will
be set up in front of Baird, or,
they can watch the Judo and Karate exhibition on Sunday at 2:00
or listen to a concert by the UB
Band at 3:00. Alb in all, the carnival promises to provide fun
for all, so don’t be surprised if
you see ferris wheels and merrygo-rounds being set up Thursday
or Friday where you usually park
your car.

-

-

-

-

-

-

Three evenings of music will
be held in honor of Dr. Milton
C. Albrecht, retiring dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences, Saturday and Sunday, May 1 and 2
and Tuesday, May 4.

—

Over 10 big rides are being
brought to campus by Zabel’s
Top-of-the-World shows and will
operate Saturday and Sunday til
midnight to accommodate those
students who are not going to

ALEXIS ZORBA

IMS

There will he poetry
reading and folk singing
in the Rathskellar, alias
“The Lemon Tree" tonight. All food and drinks
will he sold at half price
from 10:30 p.m. to 1:00
a.m. This event is being
sponsored for S p r i n g
Weekend by the Mixer
and Literature Committees

of the Union Board.

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6 -4041
9
Open 9 a.m.
-

p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines
-

8 lbs. S2.00

—

The three-day program will
celebrate Dean Albrecht’s return
to teaching and research in the
University’s Department of Sociology, He announced his resignation from the deanship in January. His resignation will take
effect in June.

The University’s Music Department will dedicate to Dean Albrecht its participation in a concert by the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra to be held at Kleinhan’s
Music Hall Saturday, at
8:30 p.m. The concert will climax
a
ten-day program entitled,
“American Music in the University with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.”

Cellist Mischa Schneider of the
Budapest String Quartet and
pianist Norma Bertolami will give
a recital at 8:30 p.m. Sunday,
in Baird Music Hall.
On Tuesday, May 4, the University Chorus, directed by Mr.

Robert D. Sacks, instructor of
music at the University, will
perform in the Millard Fillmore
Room of Norton Union at 8:30
p.m. Featured guest artists will
include the University’s creative
associates Sylvia Brigham-Dimizi-

DR. MILTON C. ALBRECHT
ani, soprano and Laurence Bogue,
baritone; Donald Doig of Houghftm College’s music department,

tenor, and Cheryl Hussey, a student at Houghton College who
will sing alto.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

�Friday, April 30, 1945

SPECTRUM

Peace Corps Loan

Changing Role of Pharmacist'
Discussed at Spring Clinic

(Cont’d from P. 1)

ing Program begin their Peace
Corps training in June. They re-

ceive travel allowances to cover
transportation to and from the
training center,

and a living al-

lowance while training. Selection

for the Advanced Training Program is the same as that used for
all Peace Corps applicants, based
on an evaluation of the candidate’s background as revealed in
the Peace Corps Questionnaire,
Placement Test results, and character references.

A panel discussion entitled,
“The Changing Role of the Pharmacist,” will highlight UB's 25th
Annual Spring Clinic meeting to
be held in conjunction with the
Annual Pharmacy Alumni Day
today at the Charter House, 6643
Transit Road.

The discussion will begin at
10:00 a.m. and will be moderated
by Dr. Melvin W. Green, director
of educational relations of the
American Council on Pharmaceutical Education, Chicago, Illinois.

Evaluation continues during the
summer training program, and
final selection is not made until
the end of the second stage, fol-

college graduation.
Following the eight-week summer program, Advanced Training
participants return to their regular college, where they may continue language study on an individual basis. No specific course
requirements are made.
After graduation, participants
return to a training center for
eight weeks more of intensive
instruction. Those who successfully complete the final training
program then will begin their
work abroad as regular Peace
lowing

Volunteers.
members of the Peace
Corps National Advisory Council
who were instrumental in originating the Peace Corps Volunteers Fund are Ralph Lazurus,
president, Federated Department
Stores, Inc.; Donald Petrie, Chairman, Executive Committee of
Avis, Inc.; the Rev. John J. Considine, director, Latin American
Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Conference; and former Secretary of Health, Education and
Welfare, Arthur Flemming, now
president, University of Oregon.
Corps

The

IONITE!
THRU SUNDAY

Panelists

will

include;

nalist and editorial director of
Topics Publishing Co.; Mr. James
S, Hill, Niagara Falls retail pharmacist; Mr. Herbert R. Rieman,
pharmacy director of Buffalo’s
Sisters of Charity Hospital and
Mr. Carlyle W. Evans, president
of Gray Drug Stores, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
A summation and analysis of
the discussion will follow a 12:30
p.m. luncheon where guests will
be greeted by Dr. Peter F. Regan,
III, the University’s vice-president
for health affairs. The remainder
of the afternoon will be devoted
to annual business meetings of
the University’s Pharmacy Alumni Association and the Participating Fund for Pharmaceutical
Education.

Retired U.S. Air Force Colonel
Silas R. Molyneaux, director of
public information at State University College at Buffalo, will
discuss, “The Pentagon Looks at
Viet Nam,” following the 75th
Annual Pharmacy Alumni Dinner
The former colonel served as
Chief of the Research and Analysis Division, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force in the

"THE WHITE TORNADO!"
Direct From The
PLAYBOY CLUB
in Chicago

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

now at the

INNER CIRCLE
Coffee House, 3191 Bailey Ave.

Joseph E Levine

presents

Marcello

Loren Mastroianni

Marriage

Vittino

De Sica’i

Pentagon.

He also
served as
chairman of the Far Eastern History Division of West Point’s
History Department and Chairman of the Department of History at the United States Air
Force Academy.

Arnold Air Society
Attends Conclave
The
Richard C. Browning
Squadron of Arnold Air Society
attended the 17th Annual Conclave of Arnold Air Society
cadets with their auxiliary group
Angel Flight. The conclave was
held at Washington, D.C., hosted
by Howard University. Business
meetings were conducted each
day in hopes of solving, adding
and changing legislative and ad-

ministrative rules which strive
to advance universities, Arnold
Air Societies, and AFROTC goals.

At the opening ceremonies
Monday morning, General Bernard A. Schriever, Commander of
the Air Force Systems Command,
was guest speaker. Brigadier
General William C. Bindley,
Commandant of Air Force ROTC,
spoke to the AFROTC officers,
explaining the importance of leadership technique and ability. At
the luncheon, cadets were entertained by the famed USAF Singing Sergeants, after which, Major
General Jess Larson, USAFR
(retired), and President of the
Air Force Association, was the
guest speaker. The traditional
Military Ball was held Tuesday
night. Susan Dreyfus of Tulanc
University was chosen the Little
General, or Queen, of the ball.
At the Awards Banquet, the cadets were entertained by the
USAF Strolling Strings. The Secretary of the Air Force, Eugene
M. Zuckert was guest speaker.
Awards were as follows:
The Maryland Cup for the best
Arnold Air Society Squadron in
the nation, was awarded to Louisiana State University; The Purdue Cup for the best Angel Flight
was awarded to the University of
Maryland; National Headquarter
for the year of 1965-66 was
awarded to Southern Methodist
University, Dallas, Texas.

GOING
FORMAL

‘ONE OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST!”
Sophia

Dr.

Joseph B. Sprowls, Dean of Temple University’s School of Pharmacy; Dr. Jerome I. Tokars, Buffalo physician; Mr. Louis Kazin,
New York pharmaceutical jour-

at 7 p.m.

TOM PASLE

!

We rent and sell a complete
line of formal wear.

Italian

Embassy Pictures

'Style

Release

Gamma Delta

will hold its final

meeting of the semester on May
5. 1965, at 6:30 p.m. in room

334 of Norton Union, The date
for the picnic to be held in Akron Falls Park may be changed
from Saturday, May 8, to Sunday, May 9t because of conflicting plans. All those wishing to

Music
(Cont’d

from P.

.

INTER-VARSITY

.

.

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

6)

er company make a pathetic try
at singing a little stereotyped
counter-melody at the end of
"We Shall Overcome.” Folk
songs, whether by Peter, Paul,
and Mary or Phil Ochs or Lisa
Kindred may very well have a
lot to say, but what they say js
in the words and not the music.

The result of this lack of exposure is that even college graduates have no taste at all for
music - and really don't give a
damn about it. They don't realize that whether they are interested in Mathematics, English,

History, Drama, Religion, Beauty,
or just People there is music for
them. (Those who arc interested
in protest to conservatism and
stagnation, have on this campus
the most in common with the
musical scene.) The events for
the coming week will attest to
the variety of serious music on
campus by student ensembles
and the finest pros in the world:
Wednesday, May 5, 0:1)0 at Baird.
Dr. Peter Gradcnwitz with give
a lecture on "Near-Eastern
Composition versus Serialism
in Eastern &amp; Western Music"
—this one is not for the
squeemish or uninitiated.
A more important event than
free any of these is a free
Philharmonic concert which fea
furcs works by contemporaries
Dahl, Shapey and Shapero at
Kleinhans on May 1, 8:30 incidentally, the composers will be
in Buffalo for an open discussion with Foss and SUNYAB
Music Department chairman A1
len Sapp on Tuesday afternoon
at the State University College
at Buffalo (we can afford to
share our talent). This concert
is most representative of the
revolution
mentioned earlier;
and hardly a week passes that
some such major concert in modern music fails to occur, often
on campus.
So here we are, in the center
of the flood. Although many say
that new music is sinking fast
(citing public indifference as a
symptom), it won’t ai least not
as long as the ultra-progressives
(and in this town, who isn’t) con
tinue to make a big splash, finding a thcory-a-day to explain the

is interesting.

WINNER OF THREE ACADEMY
AWARDS, Including

You arc invited
and, if you
plan to be any sort of intellectto witness our
ual, commanded
-

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

halocaust.

SECOND WEEK

you taste it.

When Zorha talksyou listen.

When Zorha loves—you feel it.
ANTHONY QUINN LILA KEDROVA
'ZORBATHE GREEK"
-

Remember

that the

problems in music arc universal
problems You arc welcome to
try to apply the situation in
music to that of the other arts
dr sciences; or to laugh, or tsktsk or be fashionably bored Or,
if you simply don’t want to be
disturbed,, don't come • ignor-

When Zorha drinks-

®re$t
£AoA4
Buffalo
837 5090
Transitown Plaza, Williamsville
Phone 634-5533
University Plozo,
Phone

Prayer meetings are being held
Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. There are also
Bible studies Friday at 9:00 a.m.
and Monday at 3:00 p.m. These
are all held in the CRO Office,

Room 217, of Norton Union.
The last of a series of lectures
conducted by Mr. San Marco on
the Old Testament will be held
on Tuesday, May 4, at 4:30 p.m.
in room 266 of Norton Union.
On May 7, at 6:00 p.m. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship is
sponsoring a final fellowship supper at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Adock. Transportation will be
provided from campus. Will those
who are interested in going
please contact either Billie Knapp
at 831-4168 or Pat McCarthy at
831 2982 by May 4.

AFROTC...
(Cont'd

from P.

1)

914th Reserve Officer Association
Silver Medal—Cadet Kric M
Dail

National Sojourner's Medal—Ca
det Col. Robert K. Krauth
Buffalo Evening News Plaque-

Squadron 31
Buffalo Evening News MedalCadet Lt. Wesley J. Streater

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF THE
AMERICAN LEGION'S AWARDS

-

varying musical values are questionable, but the struggle itself

__

attend the picnic are requested
to notify any Gamma Delta officer of the more convenient date
as soon as possible. The date will
definitely decided upon at the
May 5 meeting. Either day decided, cars will be leaving in
the evening after an outdoor supper. A large turnout at this picnic will show that there is a
vital group of Lutheran students
on campus.

rules, goals, psychological values
and unfortunate audial incomprehensibility of their music. The

ParkM
ilorth
1420
HERUL AVE -TF6 7411

GAMMA DELTA

-

Color

ilw

PACE NINE

ance, after all,

is bliss.

Support Spring

Weekend

.

.

.

Gold Medal of Merit—Cadet Col
Larry G. Goble
Gold Medal Cadet Major William
M. Martin, Jr.
Silver Medal— Cadet Lt. David W
—

Wozniak
Bronze Medal—Cadet C/Sgt David
L. Schribcr
Award tor Citizenship—Cadet Lt
Gordon C. Storr
Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation Medal— Cadet Major Stan

ley J. Kantanie
ERIE COUNTY COMMITTEE OF
THE AMERICAN LEGION
Gold Medal—Cadet Major Patrick
M. Quinn
Silver Medals— Cadet 1/Lt. John
J Bcllizzi, Cadet Captain James
R. Lumley
Bronze Medals— C a d e t M/Sri
James M. Sunseri, Cadet M/Sri
Leonard F. Kwiatowski
Sons of the American Revolution
Medal for Merit—Cadet Captain
John J. Mackenzie
Captain

Philip Healy

Plaque—

Cadet Col. Norman A. Mingle
Gold Medal of the Buffalo Chapter of the Reserve Officers Association—Cadet Lt. David P
Voss
General Dynamics
Force
Air
ROTC Award—Cadet Jonathan
D. Swift
Chicago Tribune Gold Medals—
Cadet Co! Clark W. Squires.
Cadet Col Stephen S. Mitchell
Commandant of Cadets
Cold
Modal—Cadet Col. Arthur D
Wood head
Chicago Tribune Silver Medals—
Cadet Lts. Dennis L. Smith and
Bryan M. Caldwell
Chennault Drill Society Award—
Cadet Capt. Howard D, Gillette
Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation Trophy— Cadet Major Stanley J. Kantanie
Air Force Times Award—Cadet
Captain Morton B. Zelman
Arnold Air Society Medal— Cadet
Col. John M. Hollands. Ill

Angel Flight Trophy—Cadet A/2C
James L. Kollig

i

�Friday, April 30, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

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ENTER THE BUFFALO GILLETTE-HONDA SWEEPSTAKES, TODAY! RVE
HONDAS WILL BE AWARDED IN BUFFALO.TWO DRAWINGS (MAY 28th
AND JUNE 11th. 1965.) ENTER BOTH! ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE!
RULES

For a handsome head of hair-new Heads Up hair grooming
for men—new from Gillette in two different forms. Heads Up
Liquid, Heads Up Tube. Not greasy. Not drying. A clean
modern formula that rinses right off your hands and
combs right in so you can’t tell it’s there.

1. FILL IN COUPON AT RIGHT, or print your name and address on
a sheet of plain paper. Attach an identifying end flap from any HEADS
UP tube package or the label from the neck of a HEADS UP bottle—or hand print the words HEADS UP on a sheet of plain paper and mail
to the HEADS UP Sweepstakes, P.0. Box 9G, Mount Vernon, N. Y.
10559.
2. A total of five Hondas will be awarded in Buffalo. There will be two
prize drawings. Enter as many times as you wish. Each entry must
be mailed, with HEADS UP identification, in a separate envelope. All
entries received through May 28, 1965 will be considered in the first
drawing. All additional entries postmarked not later than midnight,
June 3, and received through June 11, 1965, Will be considered in
the second drawing.
3. This Gillette HEADS UP Sweepstakes is being conducted in the
Buffalo area and anyone living within 100 miles of Buffalo is eligible,
except employees of The Gillette Company and its advertising
agencies and the families of such employees.
4. Winners will be selected by blindfold drawing under the supervision of The Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation, whose decision will
be final. Only one prize awarded in a family. Winners will be notified
by mail. For complete list of winners in both drawings send selfaddressed stamped envelope to: HEADS UP WINNERS. P.O. BOX
9G, MOUNT VERNON, NEW YORK 10559.
5. Sweepstakes.subject to all federal, state and local laws. Liability
for federal, state or other taxes imposed on a prize winner will be
his sole responsibility.

HEADS
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taiirucp

MAIL THIS ENTRY FORM BEFORE MIDNIGHT, JUNE 3rd!

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�Friday, April

30, 1965

CLASSIFIED

New Swiss Chalet
NOW OPEN

1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

(Next to Twin Fair)
Both Locations Serving from 11 A.M. to 4 A.M.

I
|

Specializing in Charcoal Broiled Chicken
Reasonably Priced
PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE

|

,

,

BOULEVARD

FOR SALE
GIBSON Electric Guitar, Model
ES225T. Sunburst finish, two
pickups, syncro-sonic bridge and
hard shell ease. $200.00 firm.
Amplifier available. John George,

837-5365 7-11 p.m.

—CONVENIENT TAKE-OUT AND DELIVERY SERVICE-

IF 7-4300

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

TL 2-0008
DOWNTOWN
*

1962 FIAT "500", sports model,
sunroof. 40 miles to gallon,
good condition. Must sell immediately. $395.00 or best offer by
May 1st. Phone BU 3-9303 eves.
ROOM FOR RENT

PAISANO PIZZA
3242 Main St. (across from Campus)

FREE DELIVERY
Pizza, Subs, Heroes, Soft Drinks

TO LET: Male student for com
fortably furnished room in new
home, quiet residential street: off
Englewood, on direct busline to
UB; approximately $10 a week
Call Mrs. Loretta Litman, 171
Cable St., TR 3-2012.
HELP WANTED
SUMMER JOB: Family with three
children desires 2 girls; Mothers helper-baby sitters
July at
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—

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337-6120
We're Just Across The Street So Come and Join
Us For a Snack or a Meal
"Here to Serve 'U' at U .8."

Senate Chooses NSA Delegates
(Cont'd

from P.

1)

concerning the afore-mentioned editorial and suggest to
the editors that in future their
concern for higher education
might be better expressed in supance

porting higher budget appropriations for the State University and
facilimproving the
ities available to faculty and stu-

educational

dents.

The Student Welfare sub committee on Calendar Revisions,
headed by Mr. M. Obers, presented the referendum printed on
page 5 through Mr. J. Z. Friedman, chairman of the Student
Welfare Committee.
The referendum was approved
as presented and is scheduled for
voting next week.
A report of the activities of the
Student Senate committees was
made by Miss Rosemary Brown,
vice-president. Specifically mentioned as committees that arc
making progress were the Freshman Summer Planning Conference Committee, the Academic

Affairs Committee, the National
Student Association (NSA) committee, the Welfare Committee,
and the International Student Affairs committee.
Miss Rena Fisch and Mr. Richard Jaris were appointed chair
men of the Public Relations Committee and the International Student Affairs committee, respec-

tively.
Approval of the nominations of
representatives to the NSA convention in late August was given
by the Senate. The representatives are: Mr. Clinton Deveaux,
president of the Student Senate,

Miss Rosemary Brown, vice president, Miss Ellen Cardone, secretary, Mr. Sanford Seide, treas-

urer, Miss Marion Michaels, head
of the NSA committee, Mr. Les
Lupert, head of course education,

Miss Annfcrn Kasloff, and Miss
Weinrab, senator. £n
amendment to the motion was
passed stating that any number
of people may be added to this
list at a later date, if the Senate
Evelyn

so chooses.

The Cherry County Playhouse,
Traverse City, Mich, announces

the availability of apprentice positions to work in an Equity company with' local resident company
and stars. Vivian Vance will open
their season in July in a particularly effective vehicle for her
talents, OVER TWENTY-ONE.
For further details, please contaee Mr. Henry A. Wicke, Room
203, Baird Hall.

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ON

�Friday, April 30,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

■

—-t=
giposa^ps)

—f
� giPiKgssaujM

/

,,

■ —tA

=4

Last Thursday the Baseball
Bulls managed to take the field
in an actual game after being
subjected to six consecutive rainouts. They travelled to Erie.,
Pa., to face Gannon College, and
when they returned home, they
were the proud possessors of a

SPEND
A SPORTY
SPRING
WEEKEND
Sports Editor

A

£=

Diamondmen Bomb Gannon 14-4;
Bow to Syracuse 11-1,In Home Opener

SPORTS CIRCLE

ALLAN SCHOLOM

1965

effort to see what his team is
capable of doing this year, used
seven sophs out of a total of 13
players in the game. One of

them, Ron Leiser, knocked in
four runs on three hits and
scored twice. Junior Bob Barto,
younger brother of basketball

RICHARD DRANDOFF
Asst. Sports Ed.

of Clark Field to take on Syracuse University on Friday, the
story was not quite as encouraging. The Orangemen, capitalizing on several UB tniscues, rose
to the occasion and inflicted an

11-1 loss on the Bulls. Bill Barto,

one of the batting stars of the
victory over Gannon, drew the
starting assignment and appeared to be completely in command after retiring the first II
Syracuse batters in order. In
the fifth inning, Syracuse managed to put five runs across the
plate without the benefit of a
base hit, and the romp was on.
In the ninth inning the Orangemen once again came up with
five tallys, but for all intents
and purposes, the game was already over. Barto, however, gave
up only three hits in the eight
innings he worked, and drove in
the only run that the Bulls were
able to produce off Orange hurl-

er Phil Schoff.
On Monday, the Bulls played
host to Canisius at Clark Field,
Co-Captain STEVE WASULA

Alumni Game Tomorrow
Ends Spring Practice
The University of Buffalo football team will conclude its spring
practice this Saturday when it
plays a game against a team of
alumni and soon-to-be alumni at
Rotary Field, at 2:00 p.m.
The game is the 6th annual
such event and the varsity leads
the old grads in the series by a
3-2 count. Last year, after a close

14-4

mentor of the Old Timers.
Most of the interest on the
varsity will be centered around
quarterback Nick Capuana and
Rick Wells. Coach Dick Oftenhamer is seeking a signal-caller
to fill the shoes of the departed
Don Bilgert. Capuana, last year’s
first-string tailback, is a junior

from Utica, N. Y., and will be
s

••

»•
.

’

-

a a s»&lt;

1

*

victory.

Sophomore

Don

Potwora, in his first start for
UB, got off to a rather shaky
start by giving up two runs in
the first inning, but soon settled

down and proceeded to retire the
next 16 batters to face him. Dick
Hetzel, also a member of the
basketball squad, came on in the
eighth to finish up the win for
the Bulls.
Head Coach Jim Peelle, in an

ZYGOTES WIN

II VOLLEYBALL;
AEPi LEADS
||

IN STANDINGS
The intramural season its heading into the home stretch with
Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity holding a big lead in the overall
Pahlowitz standings. With only
baseball and track remaining the
present standings are:

first half, (he varsity came on
to rout the alumni 42-14.
The alumni starting offensive
unit will probably have Carley
Keats and Gerry Pawloski at
ends, Whitey Miller and Leo
Ratamess at tackles, Paul Gagliardi and Jim McNally at guards,
Mike Lucidi at center, Gordie
Bukaty at
quarterback,
Jim
Ryan at tailback, Jim Burd at
and
Tom
Oatmeyer at
fullback
wingback.

The alumni defensive unit will
feature such former UB starts as
Bruce Hart, Kevin Brinkworth,
Dan Nole and Bob Edward.
The game will mark UB freshman coach Jim Wolfe's debut as

getting his first public test in
Saturday's game. Wells, a sophomore from Elmira, N. Y., was
the sparkplug of a freshman
team that won 5 out of its 6
games in 1964. He’s regarded as
a highly promising prospect.

Other varsity backs who will
be closely watched are sophomore Tom Hurd, a wingback who
wears the “can't miss” label:
Jim Robie, who's been switched
from quarterback to tailback, and
Willie Shine, who has been most
impressive at fullback.

Admission to Saturday's game
is $1.00 for the general public
(UB students admitted free with
I.D. cards), with proceeds going
to the UB Scholarship Fund.

longest ever seen at the
Gannon Field.
It was truly a day for the
sophomore and juniors as only
one ball was hit to the outfield
off Potwora.
However, when the Bulls returned to the friendly confines
the

All 10 intercollegiate teams of
the University of Buffalo suffered a big loss today when John
Sciera, head trainer of the Bulls
since 1958, announced his resignation to accept the position of

pts.
344 pts.
341 Vj pts.
323 pts.
313'/j pt».
234 pts.
233 ptt.

1— Zygotes

JOHN SCIERA

The final fraternity volleyball
standings

were:

1— A E Pi
2— Alpha Sig
3—Sig Ep
4— A P D
5—S A M —.—

6—Phi Psi
7— Gamma Phi
The

.

7-0 38 pts.
6-1 36 pts.
5-2 34 pts.
5-2 34 pts.
4-3 33 pts.
4-3 32 pts.
4-3 32 pts.

softball

tournament is
finally underway. Up-to-date

standings will

appear

week’s Spectrum.

in next

Buffalo and also received a certificate of proficiency in physical
therapy.

His experience includes being
physical therapist at the NeuroPhychiatric Hospital in Canandaigua, N. Y.; head of the Physical Therapy Department at Providence Hospital, Sandusky, 0.:
and trainer for St. Mary’s High
School of Sandusky and Jackson,
Mich., High School. He has also
served as trainer for 4 All-America Football Games of the American Football Coaches Associa-

tion.

The volleyball tournament ended last week with the Zygotes
winning the campus championship, in a round-robin playoff
with AE Pi and Alpha Sig. AE Pi
won the fraternity championship. The playoff results were:

2— A E Pi
3— Alpha Sig

Spectrum.

Sciera to Leave UB
For Cortland Post

363

1—A E Pi
2— Sig Ep
3— Phi Ep
4— S A M
5— Alpha Sig
6— T K E
7— Bata Sig

COACH LAROCOUE DEMONSTRATES 44-RIGHT

star Bill Barto, had four RBIs
on a single and a 345 foot home
run. Bob Riter, another junior,
blasted a 425 foot homer, one of

on Tuesday they journeyed to
Rochester to take on Rochester
Tech, and yesterday they encountered Erie Tech in a doubleheader at Clark Field, Tomorrow, the Bulls will take on
Rochester in another home game
and on Saturday, in a 9 a.m, contest, Buffalo State will be here
for a game. These contests will
be reported in next week’s

Assistant Professor of Physical
Education at Cortland State.
Sciera will leave UB early in
August, as his appointment at
Cortland becomes effective September 1st. At Cortland he will
also be head trainer of the college’s athletic teams.
For Sciera it will mark a return to where he spent his undergraduate years. While there
he earned 4 letters in football
and 2 in swimming and received
his B.S. in 1952. He since acquired a Master’s Degree in Education from the University of

In revealing his leaving UB,
Sciera said that his association
with UB was “extremely happy,
especially because of all the fine
people I worked with and the
many friends I made. However,
the offer from Cortland offered
professional
me
advancement
which, in fairness to my wife
and five children, I could not
afford to turn down."
UB Athletic Director Jim Peelle
expressed regret over Sciera s
resignation and said that all the
people in the UB Athletic Department wish John well in his
new endeavor. Peelle said that
m
he has nobody in particular
mind as Seiera’s successor ana
that he would accept applications
for screening immediately.

Support Spring

Weekend

..

•

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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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LEON

VOLUME 15

Unger Stresses Importance

Of U.S. Presence In Viet Nam
Deputy Assistance Secretary of
spoke to a
State Leonard Unger
laree and attentive audience in
Fillmore Room last Monday.
He dealt with U.S. policy in Southeast Asia with special emphasis on
the current crisis in Vietnam. Mr.
Huger was called in as a replacement for the scheduled speaker,

group of some sixty students
and faculty sponsored by the Students for a Democratic Society
picketed in front of Norton prior

emphasised

At'the meeting of April 13 the
senate voted on the amendment
concerning the allocation of senate funds to athletic clubs, which
read:

LEONARD UNGER
PHOTO

BY R. GOLDBERG

that the current state of affairs
in Asia is the most critical area
of concern for our foreign policy
planners. It is here that we will
(Confd on P. 5)

By MARGO WALLACH

Last Tuesday evening a small but eager audience
heard Mr. Richard “Max” McCarthy speak on “The

Problems of Representation.” In the way of introduction, Mr. McCarthy explained that he receives from one
to two hundred letters per day from different sources,
some not being too pleasant. For example, one reads,

I will work for your defeat
in 1966." He realizes that many
people were vigorously opposed
to his affirmative vote for appropriating $370,000 to HUAC
for this year. Also, many disapproved of his appointment of
a fellow “of liberal persuasion”
to his staff. But, he complains,
he cannot please everyone.
How does a congressman decide to cast his vote? What
yuideposts direct his actions?
Mr. McCarthy enumerated three
f's to guide a congressman in
voting; constituents, conscience,
and country.
Constituents include letters and telegrams re-

—

that UB

meeting.

McCarthy Evaluates Problems
Of Representation In Congress

ceived, questionnaires answered,
and newspapers read. Our country is represented by the dome
of the Capitol
“the most majestic building of the United
States.” According to McCarthy,
We have a great country.” In
order to preserve it, we must
think somewhat of the future
but especially of the past, remembering the traditions left to
us. Conscience steps into the
decision-making after the con"ressman has studied his constituents, while he attempts to
decide which would be best for
his country. McCarthy allowed
his conscience to guide him in
the Medicare issue. His consittuents opposed Medicare, but he
voted in favor of it because he
felt in his conscience that it
would be good for the country.
The evaluation of a congress-

Heated debate on the allocation of senate funds to athletic
clubs occupied a good portion

join the Intercollegiate Council
and that a council of chairmen
of major interest groups on
campus be established, and a
number of student appointments
account for the remainder of the
2‘a hours the senate spent in

once

Unger

By SUSAN GREENE

calendar, the motions

Secretary of State Wilam Bundy, who was forced to
ispend his speaking tour and
turn to Washington for a eon-

Vietnam and their immediate
withdrawal from that country.
The line disbanded during the
speech, but reformed with about
twenty-five marchers afterward.

Athletic Clubs' Allocations Debated
April 20. The Amendment for
Referendum and Initiative, the
motion that the senate take steps
to change the present school-year

Assistant

to Mr. Ungers speech. They were
protesting the present administration's policy, which Mr. Unger represents, and demand a cease fire
on the part of U.S. troops in

26

of the senate meeting Tuesday,

the"

Secretary

NO.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1965

1. No monies shall be allocated to any group within which any
member received academic credit for participating.
2. No monies may be allocated
to athletic teams.
Senators thought the amendhad been passed, but upon retallying the vote, Miss Ellen Cardone, secretary, discovered that
one vote was lacking for a twothirds majority of the entire senate. The senators voted again;
the first portion of the bill passed, the second failed

Mr. Sanford Seidc, treasurer,
absent at the time of the vole,
proposed a modified amendment
on

the same subject:

No monies be allocated to ath
letic teams from the non athletic portion of the student activities funds. Monies may be allocated jby the senate from the
athletic part of student fees, if
given to the senate by the Fa
culty-Student Association or the

athletic

department.

The amendment will be voted

upon at the next

senate meeting.

The Amendment for Refcrcn
dum and Initiative, proposed by
Mr. Raymond Volpe (printed in
last week's Spectrum) was passed
by the senators in a unanimous
vote. Referendum refers to the
right of the students to propose
an amendment to the student
body, if the senate has previous-

ly refused to consider it. Initiative refers to the right of the
students to go to a senate meeting, request what they want, or
richard McCarthy
propose a motion, and let the
term
of
his
man at the end
senate take action upon it.
should involve, said McCarthy,
Change in the calendar for the
his
crea
his response to mail,
year was the next item
school
his
abilities,
live and effective
discussion. Mr. J. Z. Friedunder
various
ability to contend with
man, chairman of the Student
coalitions, and his ability to Welfare
Committee, proposed
House.
drive a bill through the
affecting
t he
modifications
Promoting a bill in the House
Thanksgiving vacation
length
of
in
is much more difficult than
and intersession recess, and the
the Senate, he claimed. In the amount of time between the last
House, there are frequent deday of
House day of classes and first

bates, and members of the
are always present. Furthermore,
powerful speakers such as John
Blotnick and Frank Thompson
sometimes actually succeed in
changing the vote. On the other

finals in May. He felt that:
Glasses should end on Tuesday
rather than Wednesday before
Thanksgiving, that classes after
intersession should begin on Mon

Secretary Ellen Cardone

addresses the Senate

day rather than the previous
Thursday, that there should beat least four days between the
last day of classes and the first
day of final exams in May. Mr.

Friedman also mentioned the
fact that there has not yet been
a rule passed outlawing the sche
duling of three final exams for
one student in one day. This,
Mr. Friedman feels, is indirectly
related to the calendar question.
Mr. Friedman proposed that a
referendum be held to determine
student opinion on this matter.

The motion that the Univer-

sity of Buffalo join the Buffalo
Council of Intercollegiate Affairs
was passed by a 22-1-0 vote The
Council is actually a coordinating committee of colleges in the
Buffalo area. Each school will be
represented by two students.
Through the committee, the various schools will cooperate in
sponsoring lecturers and cultural entertainment groups. Partici-

pating schools will include Buf
falo State, D’Youville, Rosary

Hill, Canisius, and Sister's Hos-

pital.

A motion to form a council
of chairmen of the various in-

terest groups on campus was
made by Miss Linda Gunsberg.

during

Finance Debate

Such a committee would enable
the different groups to keep in
formed of the activities of the
other groups, as well as enable
the groups to cooperate in suggesting legislation which would
be in the interest of all of them.
The groups to be included are:
Union Board, Student Judiciary,
Publications Board, Inter-Fraternity
Inter-Residence
Council,
Panhellcnic
Council,
Council,
Council of Religious Organizations, and the Student Senate.
The committee would be a
council to the President of the
Senate and would meet at least
once before each senate meeting. The motion carried 22-0-1.
Other

business

included

ap-

pointments of students for certain committees. Mr Joseph Epstein and Mr Richard Jaris were
appointed to the Executive Committee of the senate to serve on
the Student Judiciary Board. The
appointments were ratified by
the senators.
Mr. Charles Brewer was recommended by Mr. Clinton Devqaux for head of the Civil
Rights committee. Mr. Brewer
has been acting head of the committee since the resignation of
Mr. Michael Lappin The senators
approved his appointment.

Spring Weekend Story;
Queen and Faculty Pictures zt

�Friday, April 23,

SPECTRUM

New Swiss Chalet
NOW OPEN

1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

(Next to Twin Fair)
Both Locations Serving from 11 AM. to 4 A.M.

Specializing in Charcoal Broiled Chicken
Reasonably Priced
—CONVENIENT TAKE-OUT AND DELIVERY SERVICE
PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE

TF 7-4300

TL 2-0008

BOULEVARD

DOWNTOWN

On Campus
y/

MftQhuJmaji

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag , Boys!",
“Dobie Gillis," etc.)

VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE BARREL
As everyone knows, thirteen-twelfths of the earth’s surface is

water. Thus we can see how important it is to know and understand our oceans. Toward this end American colleges last year
embarked on a program to increase, enrollment in oceanography.
I am pleased to report that results were nothing short of spectacular: In one single semester the number of students majoring in
oceanography rose by 100%—from one student to two!
But more oceanographers are still needed, and so today this
column, normally a vehicle for slapdash jocularity, will instead
devote itself to a brief course in oceanography. In view of the
solemnity of the subject matter, my spmisors, the Persolina
Stainless Steel Razor Blade Co., makers of Personna Stainless
Steel Razor Blades which give you more luxury shaves than
Beep-Beep or any other brand you can name—if, by chance, you

1965

UB Cavalcade of Faculty and
Students March on Washington
Friday night, two busses and
several cars left the campus for
Washington, D.C. carrying over
one hundred and fifty faculty and
student members to a demonstration of concern for the crisis in
Viet Nam. The UB cavalcade arrived in Washington in the early
morning and the demonstrators
dispersed until 9:00 a.m. to window shop, eat, clean up, and view
the sights of the nation’s capitol.
At 9:00 a.m. some two hundred
pickets began to march in front
of the White House carrying placards decrying the American military action in North and South
Viet Nam. By 10:00 a.m. the number of demonstrators had risen to
well over ten thousand with busses arriving from colleges and
universities throughout the continental United States.
There were three counter-demonstrations with a combined participation of no more than fifty
people. The counter-pickets were
drawn from the American Nazi
Party, the Young Americans for
Freedom, and the Polish Freedom
Fighters. There was only one in-

cident which required police action when one of the Nazis kicked
a record player set up by the
anti-war demonstrators ana was
immediately arrested by one of
the six hundred Washington police who were on hand to preserve
order. The uniformed Nazis and
the Polish contingent were then
asked to move across the street,
which they did. At 1:30 p.m. the
demonstrators, who by that time

numbered over twenty thousand,
retired to the Sylvan. Theater by
the Washington Monument to
hear speeches by I. F. Stone; Paul
Potter, President of Students for
Democratic Society; and Senator
Gruning from Alaska. All the
speakers condemned the militaryposture of the United States in
South East Asia. The assembled
demonstrators were then treated
to songs and short statements byJoan Baez, Phil Ochs, Judy Collins, and the Freedom Voices,
Bob Moses, Director of the Mis
sissippi Project, then gave a
speech on the relation between
the war in Viet Nam, the national
mass media, and the struggle for
equal rights in this country.
After the rally the demonstrators marched to the Congress
building to deliver a petition calling for an end to the War in
Viet Nam. After the delivery of
the petition, which was tacked
to the closed doors of Congress,
the demonstrators returned to
their home campuses to face the
prospect of final exams and the
summer vacation.

don’t agree, the makers of Personna StainlessSteel Razor Blades
will buy you a pack of whatever brand you think is better my
sponsors, I say, the Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blade Co.
will today, because of the solemnity of this column, forego their
usual commercial message.
We Iwgin our study of oceans with that evcr-popular favorite,
the Pacific. I.argest of all oceans, the Pacific was discovered by
Balboa, a Spanish explorer of great vision. To gi ve you an idea of
Balboa’s vision, he first saw the Pacific while standing on a peak
in Darien, which is in Connecticut.
The Pacific is not only the largest ocean, hut the deepest. The

ic

iron

iliurnnral

a, a S/mnisli

of {front I'htion

Mindanao Trench, off the Philippine Islands, measures more
than 5,000 fathoms in depth. (It should l)e (minted out here that
ocean depths are measured in fathoms—lengths of six feet
after Sir Walter Fathom, a British nobleman of Elizabethan
times who, upon his eighteenth birthday, was given a string six
feet long. Many young men would have sunk in a funk if all they
got for their birthday was a string six feel long, but not Sir,
Walter! String in hand, he scampered around the entire roast of
England measuring seawater until he was arrested for loitering.
Incidentally, a passion for measuring seems to have run in the
family: Fathom's grandnephew, Sir John Furlong, spent all his
waking hours measuring racetracks until Charles II had him beheaded in honor of the opening of the London School of Economics.)

But I digress, let us, as the poet Masefield says, go down to
the sea again. (The sen, incidentally, has ever been a favorite
subject for poets and composers. Who does not know and love
the many robust sea chanties that have enriched our folk music
—songs like “Sailing Through Kansas” and “I’ll Swab Your
lieck If You’ll Swab Mine” and “The Artificial Respiration
Polka.”)

My own favorite sea chanty goes like this; (I’m sure you all
know it. Why don't you sing along as you read?)
me to the deep blue sea,
can live tcilh honor,
.1 nd every place I'll sham my face

0, carry
Where I

With Stainless Steel Personor.
Sing hi, sing ho, sing mal-de-mer,
Sing hey ami nonny-nonny,
Sing Jimmy crack com and I don't car
Sing Stainless Steel Per sonny.
I'll harpoon whales and jib my sail.
A ml read oUl Joseph Conrad,
And take my shaves upon the warns,
WM&gt; Stainless Steel Personrad.
Sing la, sing lo, sing o-lee-a-lay.
Sing night and noon and morning,
Sing salt amt spray and curds and whe
Sing Stainless Steel Persorning.
The landlocked makers of Personna* and Personna Injector
Blades wish you smooth sailing and smooth sharing—with
Personna and Personna's perfect partner; Burma Shave*,
regular or menthol. It soaks rings around any other lather!

By solving problems in astronautics, Air Force
scientists expand man's knowledge of the universe. Lt. Howard McKinley, M.A.,
tells about research careers on the Aerospace Team.

(Lt. McKinley holds degrees in electronics and electrical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Tech-

nology and the Armed Forces Institute of Technology.
He received the 1963 Air Force Research &amp; Development Award for his work with inertial guidance
components. Here he answers some frequently-asked
questions about the place of college-trained men and
women in the U.S. Air Force.)
Is Air Force research really advanced, compared to
what others are doing? It certainly is. As a matter of
fact, much of the work being done right now in universities and industry had its beginnings in Air Force
research and development projects. After all, when
you're involved in the development of guidance systems for space vehicles-a current Air Force project
in America’s space program—you're working on the

frontiers of knowledge.

What areas do Air Force scientists get involved in?
Practically any you can name. Of course the principal
aim of Air Force research is to expand our aerospace
capability. But in carrying out this general purpose,
individual projects explore an extremely wide range
of topics. “Side effects” of Air Force research are
often as important, scientifically, as the main thrust.
How important is the work a recent graduate can
expect to do? It’s just as important and exciting as his
own knowledge and skill can make it. From my own
experience. I can say that right from the start I was
doing vital, absorbing research. That’s one of the
things that’s so good about an Air Force career-it
gives young people the chance to do meaningful work
in the areas that really interest them.
What non-scientific jobs does the Air Force offer?
Of course the Air Force has a continuing need for
rated offkers-pilotS and navigators. There arc also

many varied and challenging administrative-manaj
rial positions. Remember, the Air Force is a vast ai
complex organization. It takes a great many diffcrc
kinds of people to keep it running. But there are t\
uniform criteria; you’ve got to be intelligent, ai
you’ve got to be willing to work hard.
What sort of future do I have in the Air Force? 1
as big as you want to make it. In the Air Force, tab
has a way of coming to the top. It has to be that
if we’re going to have the best people in the ri|
places, keeping America strong and free.
"

What’s the best way to start an Air Force career,
excellent way—the way I started—is through Air rc
Officer Training School. OTS is a three-month con
given at Lackland Air Force Base, near San Antoi
Texas, that’s open to both men and women. Vou
apply when you’re within 210 days of graduation
after you've received your degree.
How long will I be committed to serve? Four V
from the time you graduate from OTS and red
your commission. If you go on to pilot or navig
training, the four years starts when you’re awar
your wings.
Are there other ways to become an Air Force °^c&lt;
There’s Air Force ROTC. active at many collet
v
and universities, and the Air Force Academy.
admission is by examination and Congressiona •
any
pointment. If you’d like more information.on es&gt;&gt;
Force program, you can get it from the Pro
camp
Aerospace Studies (if there’s one On your
from an Air Force recruiter.

United States Air Force

Jr

l

-

PAGE TWO

�Friday, April

23, 1965

Alpha Lambda Delta Holds Initiation
March

Tuesday,

30,

Alpha

Lambda Delta, women’s National

Honor Society, held its spring
initiation.' In candlelight ceremony, Harriet Royer, president,
introduced thirty-eight Freshman
and four Sophomore women into
the organization. Dean Scudder,
Dean of Women, and Mrs. Simon,
advisor to Alpha Lambda Delta,
also participated in the induction
proceedings.

The following week, Tuesday.
April 6, the newly initiated members met to elect officers for

the coming year. Chosen were:
Dianna Ives, president; Barbara
Green, vice-president; Dawn Shinal, secretary; Janet Leslie, treasurer; and Janet Bochman, his-

torian.
All of the initiates were honored Wednesday, April 21 at a
formal dessert in the Millard
Fillmore Room of Norton Union.
This was a means of conferring
distinction upon those who had

attained high scholastic honors
and had shown outstanding service to their school in the past
year.

Malucci h Summerfield Scholar
Robert David Malucci has been
selected by his brothers in Phi
Kappa Psi at the University of
Buffalo as the Summerfield Scholar of the Year. This is an award
that is available annually in each
of the 63 chapters of this Fraternity for presentation to a member
who, in the opinion of his fellows,
has achieved an excellent record
of good scholarship in combination with demonstrated leadership
qualities and worthwhile contrib-

brewed for

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

utions to the University and to

his Fraternity.
Along with this certificate goes
a cash award of $100.00.
Robert’s activities at the University consisted of participation
in Intramural Sports. In his Fraternity he was pledge master,
historian, and chaplain.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gabriel Malucci of 159 Stoneleigh, Kenmore, New York.

Phi Beta Kappa
Nominees to Be
Initiated at Meeting
The Omicron Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa, national honor society, has announced the election
of thirteen juniors and eight seniors to the UB chapter.
Juniors elected are: Susan Adler, Kenneth R. Asher, Sandra B.
Atlas, Carol Ann Day, Lorraine
D, Eaton, Arline L. Engel, Roberta Sue Engel, Alan B. Holman,
Marjorie Lou Linhardt, Clifford
R. Miller, Ruth R. Munk, Dona R.
Thurston, and Meredith Lynn

The B’nai B'rith Hillel Foundation is offering students and
faculty the opportunity of hearing a report on, “Jewish Life Behind the Iron Curtain,” by an
outstanding journalist, Mr. B. Z.
Goldberg. Mr. Goldberg will address students Sunday in the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. His
talk will be preceded by a delicatessen supper at 5:30 p.m.

At 8:00 p.m. the same evening,
Mr. Goldberg will address members of the faculty, their wives
and guests, in the Hillel House.
Dr. Justin Hofmann, Director
of Hillel, in making this announcement emphasized that these lectures are open to all students
Weissman.
and faculty regardless or religious affiliation and that there
Seniors include: Nancy Best,
is no charge for admission. There
is a nominal fee for the supper
Marcie Larson, Joseph W. Liebernecessary
gall, Martin M. Malawer, Robert and reservations are
for it.
J, McCubbin, Charles R. McKirMr. Goldberg was born in Rusdy, Barbara J. Strauss, and Gary sia, educated at Harvard and Columbia and has been a popular
S. Weintraub.
journalist of the Jewish press and
These twenty-one distinguished a central figure in Yiddish culstudents will be initiated into Phi tural life. He has contributed
columns to The Dey-Jewish JourBeta Kappa at the chapter’s annal, the Brooklyn Eagle, the Tonual meeting, May 3 at the Faculronto Star, and the St. Louis Pott
ty Club. The program will include
a lecture by Dr. Dov Tamari,
Chairman of the Mathematics Department on “The Importance of
Mathematics in Human Culture.
A Reception will follow the speaker, and will be co-ordinated by
the officers of the chapter: President, Dr. Robert Wesser, Vice
President Dr: Evelyn Smithson,
and Secretary-Treasurer Dr. W.
Edgar Winackc.

braves.,.^^^^
DOUBLE-HOPPED

Hillel Association to Sponsor Goldberg
Talk on Jewish Life Behind the Iron Curtain

for Extra Full-Strength
Taste

B. Z. GOLDBERG
the author of The
Jewish Problem in the Soviet UnAnalysis end Solution.
ion
Mr. Goldberg has traveled in
various parts of the world, making three visits to the Soviet Union and two to all the countries
behind the Iron Curtain.
Mr. Goldberg is the son-in-law
of the famous Yiddish writer Sholom Aleichem.
Dispatch. He is
—

[

Gary Battaglia and Tom Brennan in the "Public Eye" to
tonight and tomorrow night in Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m.
PHOTO

be

presented

BY MARK

fli
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LEVINE

�Editorial (Comment

.

.

ejCetterA

.

S.D.S. ON CAMPUS
Students for Democratic Society (S.D.S.) is now in
the process of organizing on this campus. S.D.S. is the
student chapter of the League for Industrial Democracy
and has outstripped its parent organization in membership, enthusiasm, and creative programming. S.D.S. is
a radical organization committed to social reform in
many areas, to academic reform within the existing university structure, to the creation of new free universities,
to the creation of, coherent programs to obliterate poverty in this country, and to find new and lasting alternatives to war. S.D.S. was the prime sponsor of the recent
March on Washington to Call for an End to the War in
Viet Nam which brought twenty-two thousand students
from all over the continental United States to Washington
to protest United States foreign policy and to suggest
alternatives to armed conflict in the Viet Nam crisis.
S.D.S. is an American Student movement which speaks
for American concerns and ideals. The allegations that
S.D.S. is a front organization for any group are totally
unfounded and the rumors that S.D.S. is supporting
creeping socialism are also completely false; S.D.S. does

not

creep.
to the

new

wholehearted support
urge all students and faculty who are concerned with participating in discussions
and projects aimed at producing a society “with liberty
and justice for all” to go to the initial meeting of S.D.S.
and to affiliate if the programs of S.D.S. capture your
imaginations and appeal to your ideals as they have ours.
We offer

campus

our

chapter of S.D.S. We

APATHY AGAIN
At the meeting at which the congressman from our
district spoke there were only about twenty people present. This is truly tragic. “Max” McCarthy defeated
John Pillion in the last election. The ease with which
Congressman McCarthy has reneged on his campaign
promises, particularly his commitments to oppose the
House Committee on Un-American Activities is also
tragic. It occurs to us that the disillusionment which
Congressman McCarthy has generated in his supporters
by his equivocations is one of the factors influencing the
poor turnout at the meeting. We also feel that disillusionment and apathy go hand in hand elsewhere on this
campus, and the community as well. Where hopes and
promises are broken, the will to action suffers. Academically, when the promise of first rate education in the
glossy brochures is betrayed by huge lectures and I.B.M.
exams, then the will to excell in studies falls accordingly.
When clubs promise entertainment and dynamic activities and produce only boring business meetings and
cliquey social life, then we see campus activities falling
into lethargy and inaction. Perhaps the best way to deal
with that perennial bug-bear “apathy” is to see to it that
the promises of college education and political action
are fulfilled.

On

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Eastern
EDITOR IN CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass'f News Editor
Feature 'Editor
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Editor

-

JEREMY TAYLOR

Business

Manager
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Dallas

Staff: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan
Schuelein, Steve Oberstem, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr

Sports

Lichwala,

Steve

Photography Staff: David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Worfman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Mart Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder, Dave Fox,
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Represented for national advertising by
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Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

HPv

to

the Editor

Why We MUST Stay In Viet Nam
TO

THE EDITOR;

There are bushels of erroneous notions being
proposed as to why we should “pull out of Viet
Nam." Their basis is by and large fear and not
too much reason. They show a complete lack of
understanding of the Communist motives, mind
and method. Their arguments arc more emotional
than rational. Take the World War III scare, for
instance. They would have you believe that involvement in Viet Nam must and will irrevocably
lead to a destroying or a devastating thermo-nuclear holocaust. The fact of the matter is, if China
wanted to start a war, regardless of what we did
in Viet Nam they would start one, Conversly, if
she didn’t feel that a war was to her benefit,
nothing short of a direct attack on her land could
draw her into a war. Red China will make war
when she’s darn good and ready, when the opportunity is right for her, and not just because the
United States is in South Viet Nam. Now, if the
Communists can dupe us into thinking that our
actions would cause a 'war and thus’ force us out,
then they will have added to the accomplishments
of that doctrine which most threatens our way of
life.
For several years now, Red China has been
agitating to get the Communist Block to destroy
the “Western Imperialists" in an all-out-war. Up
to now, she has been militarily too weak and has
been restrained by Russia. Now, however, she
has The “Bomb” and awaits only an effective
delivery system. She will no longer be subservient
to the U.S.S.R. Red China needs a war. Her population cannot support itself, therefore cannot be
a world power. Only a war can “cure” her problems, In light of such reasoning, many “Thinking"
type people have postulated that war is inevitable
with China. And if this is so, isn’t it logical to
postulate that to wait and allow them to get
stronger, could only spell our demise? Our survival is at stake! If war comes, Viet Nam will be
the excuse, not the cause.
Another irrational argument given, is that
we do not have the right to force our will on the
South Viet Namese. Well, what in hell’s bells are
the Viet Cong doing? Since there is this overwhelming force of Red Aggression that is trying
to forcefully impose its will on these people,
doesn’t it logically follow that there must be some
counter-force to prevent this? How can these
people make a choice of what way of life they

want with a Communist-held gun at their heads?
South Viet Nam alone, cannot stop them. If we
pull but now, it will most certainly fall to the
Reds. In no time at all, the Reds will next attack
all the rest of the South East Asian countries.
Will we sacrifice them, too, to the Red hordes
because we are gripped by the fear and lack of
foresight of Neville Chamberlain? And who is
naive enough to think that the Reds would stop
there! Did Hitler stop when the Allies back away
from him? Our own surivival doesn’t just depend
on the defense of our own home land. We can not
be blind isolationists to4tfe worst threat that ever
imperiled world freedom.jf South East Asia goes
to the Communist Block, this could tip the scales
of power in favor of the Red Aggressors. In studying history, we know that when the balance of
power is upset, a war inevitably was the consequence. When the balance was maintained, war
was averted. Therefore, we must keep as many
countries out of the Communist Block as possible.
Another argument the “pull out" people use
is the naive notion of international rights. Tis
said that we have no international right to be
there. Ridiculous? Rights only exist when all parties concerned respect and uphold the rules that
form these rights. When had the Communist
Block ever done this? Did they respect the rights
of the people of Hungary or Tibet or the nunv
erous other countries that they hold with an iron
fist? There is but one thing that influences the
Reds, and holds their utmost respect—Armed

Might.

Treaties, negotiations, conferences mean nothing to the Communist. By the directs of their
god, Lenin, these are made to be broken. Only
our armed might holds them at bay in Korea.
Speaking of treaties, how could our allies have
any confidence in us if they knew we would quit
and sell them out to the Communist powers whenever we felt the hint of peril?
The only way to stop Communist Aggression
is to fight it, meet it head on. Passisvism accomplishes little in a world ruled by the law of the
jungle, and assUrredly the law of the jungle does
rule the world today, as always, whether or not
wq admit this! A nation of passivists never remains unconquered for long. We cannot and must
not be passive and indifferent to the Red Aggression in South East Asia, or anywhere else.
David M. Soda

Fair Fight Urged
TO THE EDITOR;
Last night Leonard Ungar of the State Department read from a North Vietnamese publication a list of mea culpas, actions that the North
Vietnamese considered themselves at fault in allowing. By showing them confessing to torture and
execution of the innocent, Mr. Ungar apparently

hoped to convice the North Vietnamese out of
their own mouths. Out of his mouth, however,
came no expression of shame at the tortures and
executions of the innocent perpetrated under American auspices.

I believe that peace is preferable to war, but
I am not so dogmatically pacifist that I consider
all forms of violence equally reprehensible. Your
editorial a few weeks ago contained a challenge
to those of us who consider gas is worse than
napalm. You said you were appalled by the “reasoning" that argued that "it is somehow worse
to immobilize a man with anusia than To burn him
alive with napalm.’* Given the choice of the two,
an individual would have no hesitation. But judging their use as tactical weapons is a different
matter. A napalm bomb presumably has a specific
target, and the enemy, aware of its capabilities,
can organize defensive shelters. The threat is
against combatants and survival goes to the alert
and skillful. Gas, on the other hand, has a wide
area as its “target,” and since there is no defense, affects non-combatants equally with others.

It obliterates any notion of battle as a contest
between warriors of demonstrable prowess. Tactically induced forest fires, where nothing survives,
are a similarly dishonorable weapon. One doesn’t
shoot prisoners nor burn them alive; but saturation bombing, where there is no means of defense,
or the gutting of a whole terrain by fire, these
are equivalent to annihilating the defenseless. It
was the unfairness of it, in terms of our instinctive
notions of what is honorable in war, that made
Hiroshima and Nagasaki so horrible—or, to cite
a lesser case (since we have always to try to even
things up), the use of Russian tanks against Hun

garian insurgents.
In short: if there is a genuine contest in South
Vietnam between a legitimate government aided
(and indeed legitimized) by the U. S. and a rebel
force claiming legitimacy on the basis of popular
support (support from the population of North
as well as South Vietnam), then the weapons used
must be more or less equal, or we will never know
the genuine outcome of such a contest. If our cowboy President proclaims “Fair fight!” and then
pulls from his arsenal weapons that can annihilate
his effectively defenseless contestant, then he is
breaking the unwritten code that operates for all
of us whether we are watching TV Westerns or
world events. His plea then is not “Fair fight'
but “Our country, right or wrong!”

Ralph

Maud

Open Mind Necessary

Garber

Bugelski, Meryl Frank, Sharon Heend, Marion Michael, Debbie
Jo Anne Leegant, Eileen Teifler, Sue Greene, Bill Cories, Joey
Elm. Terry Davis, Helen Peters, Joan Fox. Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Gigha, Chuck
Cummings, Raymond Volpc, Jerome Taylor, Marsha Alt, Margo Wallach, Alan Goldstem, Sue Zuckerberg, Sue Thomas, Mickey Drexler

General Staff: Vicki
Rubie, Scott Kurman,

Circulation Staff

Friday, April 23, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

TO THE EDITOR:

I think one of the greatest assets of man is
his capability to think and to reason. With an
open mind to every expression of an idea, he is
able to broaden his experiences, and by factoring
out those which he feels are not in accordance
with a good life, he approaches a set of values
which he can use to establish himself as an individual. But he must also realize that his values
must be allowed the freedom of change. I think a
major purpose of education is to help us maintain
this open-mindedness.

1 have noticed on this campus an attitude of
dogmatism which I would like to bring to light.

I have in mind certain discussions concerning the
Viet Nam situation in which I observed people,
given the opportunity to express their ideas, doing
so in an uncalm and boorish manner. Also, after
addressing a question to a speaker, these people
then close their ears to the answer offered. It ma&gt;
be a good idea for all of us to allow for the possi
bility that we may sometimes be wrong. I know it
may be hard for us to always keep an open mind
If mine is shut, I would welcome the matter being
brought to my attention, and I therefore bring
this to your attention for what it is worth.
Stuart Sharack

�Friday.

April 23, 1965

gucinski

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

•

•

jCetterA to the

•

Various Protections For The Human Head

Editor

Health Center Committee Organized
TO THE EDITOR:

Vice President Peter F. Regan has called together the Presidents of classes in the schools of
Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy and Nursing, plus
Medical Technology, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy and Graduate Students, to sit as a
Health Center Student Board.
Broadly, the Student Board will be an advisory
group

with the prime objective being, to provide “student input” to the planning of the Health Center
Campus.

The group is meeting monthly with Dr. Regan
and his staff.
If you are interested in more information I
will be happy to discuss it.

Dr. L. A. Capiello
Assistant to the Vice President

to the Vice President for Health Affairs,

Demonstrators Must Know Facts
TO THE EDITOR:

Those misguided students who have taken
part in the School #6 affair have motivated me to
publish the following: I have conducted an investigation and have found that many students involved
in Civil Rights struggle are honest and sincere
workers.

Those students who are honest and sincere
high standards and principles because of
have been hoodtheir overwhelming kindness
winked by a vociferous group of zealots found in
such groups as CORE and NAACP. CORE has a
reported Negro membership of less than 25 members in the City of Buffalo.

with

—

I strongly urge that students, prior to taking
part in any demonstrations involving the Negro
community, should make certain that the majority
of the Negroes in question want their help. It is
essential, also, that they obtain all facts from
both sides and understand the problem in all its
aspects
Donald L. Jackson
Editor Wira Magaiina
Editor's Note: One sentence from this letter was
cut because it contained allegations which were in
exceedingly poor taste and which were unsubstan-

tiated.

Common Courtesy Violated
TO THE EDITOR;

to

Proposed Change in Senate Structure
2. The Law School.

The following amendment has

3. The Graduate School

been proposed to the Student
Senate By-Laws and will be con-

sidered at the next meeting.
The Student Senate shall consist of
K. 1 representative for each 350
students or fraction thereof
in

L The Freshman, Sophomore,
Junior, and Senior classes respectively and separately, excluding Pharmacy
Juniors,
Seniors, and fifth year students; Engineering
Junior,
Senior, and fifth year students; Nursing Juniors and
-

-

Work.

Social

Monday night, our campus was honored
have Mr. Leonard Unger, Deputy Secretary of Stale
for Far Eastern Affairs as a guest. As a high official of our government and guest of our campus
this man should have been afforded the utmost in
respect whether we agree with his statements or
not. Unfortunately, many of those at the convo
cation failed to display even the minimum of respect which should be accorded to a man in his
position.
I do not contend that we should not be able

4. Pharmacy Juniors, Seniors,

Stuart Davis

Communication Is Hope For Intellectual Rejuvenation

-

and fifth year students.
5. Engineering Juniors, Seniors, and fifth year students.
6. Nursing Juniors and Seniors and general nursing program students.
7. The Medical School.
8. The Dental School.
B. and 1 seat each from
9. Inter-Residence Council.
10. Inter-Fraternity Council.
11. Pan Hellenic Council.
12. Council of Religious Or-

to differ with Mr. Unger but we should do it in
a manner that is becoming to both our university
and ourselves. Certainly those who got up to ask
questions, faculty and students alike, should have
had the common decency to listen to the answers
which Mr. Unger gave and should not have used
the question period to harass our invited guest.
The academic community of the University
of Buffalo has been discredited by these actions
and in the future I hope that we will pay the respect due to a visitor of our campus.

■

-

ganizations.

Seniors.

THE EDITOR:
I am writing this letter to express my support
of Mr, Arthur Efron in his belief that there are
some intellectually alive students on this campus.
Many of us refuse to be disillusioned and propagandized into believing that UB has become a
place where both faculty and students most b«
numbed into sterility and mediocrity. We are not
hungry for “father figures" whom we can emulate
and from whom we can seek approval, but we are
hungry for educators who arc human beings, capa
ble of being both guides and friends. The existence
of such people Is neither a fantasy nor a paranoic
dream, for many of us have found some who do
believe that intellectual discourse must involve
imagination and commitment, not robot-like pigeonholing and complacency
As a member of Sociology club, I have been
made aware of the many capable people around
TO

me because the club has been trying to bring
together students of all disciplines on both the
undergraduate and the graduate levels. I have
been present at regular discussions which gave
reality and meaning to the terms intellectually
alive and community of scholars.
For those, who seek some sort of dialogue of
ideas, a place to demonstrate that there is hope
for the many rare students on this campus, as
President, I extent) an invitation to come to the
Sociology Club. We cannot let “there must be
something wrong with the students” become a
self-fulfilling prophesy. It is only through communication that we can hope for intellectual rejuvenation and a genuine feeling of accomplishment.
Ellen Polansky

Pres,, Sociology Club

Fear Should Not Restrict Integrity
TO THE EDITOR

Appropriately titled, “A Word to the Wise” is
sufficient. But it seems that Mr. Alan S. Foscnbaum has the wrong idea of what is wise. He
warns us tp fear what others might think of material status symbols instead of what we believe in;
in fact, he says we should be concerned with the
same things.
The due investigation to be done when committing oneself to a cause is whether the cause is
valid enough for you to spend your time to show
what you believe in. If you know what you believe,
there is no excuse for saying someone else with as
high ideals as your own is less worthy than you because of his “background.’’

If Mr. Rosenbaum's highest pride in himself
is his good background, he is at least consistent
in saying that only those with good backgrounds
are equal to him. But if those are his terms for
examining life, he should perhaps think more about
how much it matters. I pride myself when I demonstrate against this kind of injustice, against senseless little standards which can be really restricting
people who might care enough to try to improve
the world for other people instead of improving
only their own status. A word to the wise should
tell us that if we allow fear to restrict our own
integrity, we won’t really have much sense of
pride in ourselves or in our world as a manifestation
of our lives.
Anne L, Pennisten

Teach-In Questioned
TO

THE EDITOR

Mr. Feldman’s letter of April 16 complaining
about lack of faculty participation in the "teach
in” on Viet Nam seems to require a reply from
me, since I teach political philosophy and am concerned with the application of political theory to
current issues, I can offer three reasons for not
turning up that evening. 1.) the program sounded

to me like a flashy publicity stunt, advertising
the March on Washington, rather than an attempt
to learn or discuss something. ’Teach-in’’ and
“March on . . .” sound vaguely like civil rights
without actually meaning anything definite, and
an all night vigil is certainly not a learning situation. 2.) One caw', not discuss a situation without
knowing something about it. I know very little
ai,.

lose in the

e'

Cong

about the Viet Nam situation and doubt whether
others know much more. It is a very complicated

situation and reliable

(acts

are hard to get.

3.)

Even with inadequate information, one can disedss
Viet Nam, after a fashion, if one has an adequate
grasp of some current theories of international
politics
game theory, conflict theory, systems
analysis, and peace research. I find little interest
in this body of theory among politically active students, and found no reference to it in the preliminary announcements of the sit-in. Had an interest
—

been- shown, I would have been glad to join the
discussion. In addition, the political science department offers good courses in this area (or those
interested seriously in international crises.
Now perhaps this reply shows how ignorant I
am about current student preoccupations. In that
case I apologize and hope to be corrected.

Dr. Paul Diesing
Dept, of Philosophy

���Friday, April 23, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs
-OPEN FORUMWe Need Good Teaching Far More Than Scholarship
phrases

like

Professor

human beings.

consciously discourages

the young people in their classes
with limp effort, calculated indifference and immature condescension; but we agree that
this is a matter which must not
be allowed to remain undiscussed.

Our three main disagreements
concern
1) how students should be treated

teachers
how much damage the policy
of coerced publication has caused

LEONARD PORT

in the teaching profession
3) what is the function
of a uni

Den Hcrghe’s “the teacher is not
a therapist or father figure" do
not diminish that need.

Professor Van Den
certainly understood
ly when he says that
dents to be given a
vidual attention. But

Students Need Gu.dance
Let’s face it! The kids who go
to school here are simply being
ignored! We can’t get out of this
mess by sophislieatcdly declaimiug “My outlook is to treat students as adults responsible for
tion' own intellectual growth or
failure." First of all, most of
our students arc not adults. They
need guidance and encouragemerit from their teachers. And I

versify.

Berghc has
me correctI want stu-

lot of indi-

1 have not
comprehended his notion that
my suggestions for improvements would be leading students
by the hand, spoon feeding them
and academically babying them.
Are requests
that a student
should: be allowed to ask a question in class; be allowed to display his understanding and not
merely his memory on exams;
be allowed to get the courses he
wants; be allowed (o have a decent place to study and a human
place to live; be allowed to talk
to his teacher
are these requests recommendations to baby
a student? I see these proposals
as claims for the barest necessities for a student lo have a
chance lo learn something. What
a pitiful pass we have come lo
here at Buffalo when we hear a
professor saying that increased
contact 'between teachers anct
students would he "degrading for
both students and staff. 1’ Are we
now so fearful of opening our—

.

. .

_

to only
cneourtalk to
not be
speaking to only a restricted in
tellectual portion of him. For it
is not only a portion of him which
is doing the academic work. Perhaps the essence of our job as
educators is to make it possible
and enjoyable for more than a
portion of a student to be engaged in his studies,
Secondly, let me say that if
Professor Van Den Berghe dotachedly maintains that students
are "responsible for their, own
intellectual growth or failure."
then he may as well decide to
gel rid of teachers altogether. In-

will not safely limit this
academic guidance and
agement. When teachers
a student, they should

"Mediocre” Teachers for
"Indifferent” Students?
Does it partake of the nature
of a revelation to say that teachers should also consider themselves greatly responsible for the
intellectual growth or failure of
their students? Need it be repeated that teachers are quite
aware that the harder they work
on a course the harder their students will work on that course?
A teacher is very much involved
in the success or failure of his
students. In some eases he is
the whole difference.' So let’s
stop emphasizing the burden of
responsibility which the student
must carry. No one has lost sight
of that. Let’s start stressing the
share of obligation that the teacher has toward his students. This
has bcen ost sigbt o{
Professor Van Den Berghe
clearly docs not spend much time
considering the obligations of
teachers toward students. He reeognizes, and swiftly dismisses, the
problem of inadequate instruction by declaring “By and large,
students get the mediocre teachjng they deserve by being
indifferent scholars.” The logic of
this statement suggests that the
quality of teaching need only be
attuned to the supposed quality of
the students. We can see Profes,

sor Van Den Berghe pointing his
finger thrcatingly at students and
delivering this proposition: “We
teachers will do our jobs poorly
just as long as you will do yours
poorly.” Not only is this kind of

attitude smug, but it is also fruitless. For by the terms of this
proposition the “indifferent scholars" will never get better and
the “mediocre" teachers will join
them in not improving. Can’t it
be seen that it is essential that
teachers should strive to be as
Hood as they possibly can with
ail types of students. In fact, a
(Confd on P. 15)

WEEKLY CALENDAR

TODAY—4:30 p in. Lecture:

Jean Jacques
Mayoux, “Samuel Becket:” in

French;

148 Diefendorf Hall.

7:30 p.m. Concert: music of the
romantic and modern eras, performed by "Crescendo." the
Buffalo chapter of the National
Association of Negro Musicians;
Unitarian-Universalist Church.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Canisius Col
lege Glee Club, songs of all eras
from baroque to folk and jazz;
Kleinhans Music flail
8:30 p.m. Concert: UB Creative

Associates, modern chamber
music; Butler Aud.. Capen Hall.

8 30 p.m. Plays: "The Private
Ear" and “The Public Eye." by
Peter Shaffer:
Baird Hall.
Tickets available at Baird Hall
and Norton Ticket Booth; con
finding through Saturday

8:30 p.m. Play: ‘The Physicists."
a comedy; Studio Theater. Call
TT 6-6850 for tickets; continuing through May 1.

8:30 pin. Music; MacMahoncy
folksinger: The Greensleave
Klmwood Ave.

.

8:30 p

.

in.

.

April

Concert: “Evenings for

New Music." guided by Lukas
Foss. Albright-Knox Art Gallery And.

TOMORROW—2:30 p.m. Recital: Lynette Was
sink. II; works of Bach, Mozart,
Chopin. Villa Maria College
B:30 p.m. Concert; Frcdonia State
C h a m b e r Music Ensemble:
works of Shapero. Shapey, Dahl.
Butler Aud , Capen Hall,

8:30 p.m. Music: Walter Zvaleko
folksinger; The Grcensleave,
Elmwood Aye.
SUNDAY—
3:00 p.m Concert: Janieec Epke,
soprano; Rivka
Mandelkern,
violinist; and Walter Peek,
pianist, St. James United
Church of Christ. Hamburg.

3:00 p.m. Music: Joe and Penny
Aronson, folksingers; Jewish

Center. Tickets $1,50.
5:30 p.m. Lecture; B, Z. Gold
berg, “Jewish Life Behind the
Iron Curtain;" Hillel House, 40
Capen Blvd

MONDAY—9:00 am. Lecture: “Respiratory
Diseases." A. Arthur Grabau.
Upton Hall, Bufflo State.

1:00 to 3:30 p.m. Music: 'American Music m the University
with the Buffalo Philharmonic,"

rehearsal. Rockwell Hall, Buffalo State.

8:00 p.m. Concert; “Chromatic
Club," Upton Hall, Buffalo
Western New York Art Exhibi
tion. Albright-Knox Art Gallery
Continuing through May.

TUESDAY—9:15 to 11:45 a m Music: "American Music in thg University

with the Buffalo Philharmonic."
rehearsal. Rockwell Hall, Buf-

falo State.
2:15 p.m. Discussion: “Meet the
Composer." Music Room, Col
lege .Union, Buffalo Slate.

"MAILEP flUESTWJ? MU. gf AN5WFEEP
IN A PERSONA 11#P, INTIMATE HANWEP
w/rruiw Two

weep?.

Mac Mahoney
Featured at
Coffee House
The Greensleave Coffee House
on Elmwood north of Ferry is
reopening today, featuring
MacMahoney, a balladeer who
has performed at Kleinhans and
appeared here on several occasions before appreciative audiences. The Greensleave has been
noted for the high quality of
entertainment and cultural activity it has presented to the Buffalo community since its opening, including poetry readings by
Gregory COrso, Charles Olson,
George Starbuck, Leslie Fiedler,

Le'Roi Jones, MacHammond and
many others. They have also presented plays, chamber music, jazz,
and folk music.

Saturday the Greensleave is
presenting Walter Zvaleko, a
folk singer of extreme competance and interesting repetoir.

3-30
5:00 p.m. Concert: UB Little Symphony, directed by Robert Mols,
Baird Hall.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Kroll

"

Colonel Brennan
Addresses ROTC,
Angel Flight
Chaplain (Colonel) George J.
Brennan, Air University Command Chaplain spoke before the
AFROTC Corps, the Angle Flight
and Cadet Ladies Club during a
two-day visit at UB. His visit included discussions with university officials and religious leaders. In all his meetings, qualities
of officer development was of
primary

concern.

His discussions centered around
The Marks of a Mature Individual. Maturity, as stated by Colonel Brennan includes self-mastery; sympathy and concern for
others; acceptance of personal
responsibilities;

a

capacity

Quartet

chamber music. Kleinhans Mu
sic Hall.

The Air Force wants you
return to civilian life, at the
of your obligated tour or on
tirement, as good as or a bet
man, mentally, morally, a
spiritually as the day you en
service.

AFROTC Scholarships
Headquarters AFROTC ann
that scholarships will
awarded to five AFROTC so
mores who will enter the
vanced course this fall. Crite
for the college money are:
dents must have completed
ROTC: be 18 years of age or
older than 23; be a U. S. citi
and be physically qualified
ced

Art Exhibition: “Collegiate Scene
Design Today,” Baird Hall.
WEDNESDAY—8:30 p.m. Concert: UB Band En
sembles. Baird Hall.
THURSDAY—12:00. 3:00. 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 p.m
Film: “End of Innocence," Con
fercnce Theater.

8:30 p.m. Concert; Percussionists
John Bergamo and Jan Williams, UB Creative Associate,
Baird Hall.

commissioning.

Each
two

will
to cover tuitic

scholarship

years

and fees. Retainer pay of
month will also be giver
scholarship holder. Non

ship cadets get S40 retair

Art Exhibition; Burchfield Draw

ings, Upton Gallery. Continu

ing

May'

dergradu

Those interested in entering
the Amy Loveman National Un-

dergraduate Library Contest
($1,000 in awards) contact Gerald
Matross in the Spectrum Office.

to

make reasonable decisions; responsibility to himself, to h
neighbors, and to his Creator

c

rotten job

of instructing their students. We
differ about the reasons why our

by
2)

allows

pletely. Television, magnetic tape
and cardboard learning boxes
wifi fill his requirements for a
teacher more efficiently than live

whelming important assumption.

faculty

competence”

specialized

for the elimination of the presence of human instructors com-

Van

That assumption is that an on
conscionably large number of
teachers at this university arc
doing an inexcusably

deed, his definition of a teacher
as a “man paid to impart his

I

I am glad that Professor Van
Den Berghc has taken time to
reply to my letter. In spite of our
differences, we share one over-

selves to other people that we
can call ah entreaty for personal
attention ‘'degrading?” We all
need each other very much. Load

■

By LEONARD PORT

Instructor of English

'

he

Departn

t

�Friday, April

23, 1965

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official

authorized

Bulletin

publication

an
the

is

of

New York at
State University of
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
no editorial responsiassumesNotices
should be sent in
bility
form to the Old
TYPEWRITTEN
Club, attention Mrs. Fix,

Faculty

Friday to
before 2:00 p.m. the
week of
the Friday prior to the
publication. Student organization
for
notices are not accepted
publication.

General Notices
University College Students (except Nursing Students): All University College Students, except
Probathose on Strict Academic
tion will register for next seaccording to the following

mester
alphabetical schedule:

May

.

3 through May 7

-

P, C

Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
114 one week in advance of the

above scheduled times. At this
time, the Receptionist will give
the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow
in the subsequent registration
procedures. O.T. and P.T. students will make appointments
with Miss Greeninan and Miss
Heap directly. Nursing Students
are advised through the School of
Nursing.

Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times, or who do not keep

made, will be required to register in Clark Gym,
on Registration Day In Septemthem when
ber.

Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance register during the
scheduled publicized times. If
the Quality Point Average of
such students improves to such
a degree that they become eligible to continue in school, they
will be informed in June, after
semester grades are in, concerning later registration dates. Students in this category, however,
who. wish to see their advisers
are encouraged to do so. I would
be helpful if these students could
make an appointment during the
alphabetically scheduled times,
but, if the problem is pressing,
they can make an appointment at
any time.

Advance Registration Schedule
for Day Students Taking MFC

Summer

Evening Classes: Students currently registered in any
day school division may preregister for Millard Fillmore College
1965 summer
evening
courses during the week of April

26-30

only. Registration materials
nstructions will be issued in
Hayes Hall on
the third floor
nalivvay Materials will be issued
mornings only, between 9:00 a.m.
and
noon, and collected after-

noons of the same day only,
between 1:00 and 4:30 p.m. on
a strictly alphabetical
basis as

"Hows, according to the initial
"!tcr of the student’s last name.
A thru C
Monday, (April 26
D thru J
Tuesday, April 27
K thru M
Wednesday, April 28
N thru R
Thursday, April 29
S thru Z
Friday. April 30

n &gt;eh

summer

will

gymnasium

,rom

be

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6 4041

’

-

The Dept, of Modern Languages presents Jean-Jacqucs Mayoux, Professor of Comparative
Literature, The Sorbonne, cur-

Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

-

rently Visiting Professor, Harvard
University speaking in French on
“Samuel Beckett” at Diefendorf
Hall, Room 148, 4:30 p.m.

Fenton Lecture: “World of the
Future” by Gerald Wendt, Butler
Auditorium, Capen Hall at 8:30

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

—

Dry cleaning machines
-

8 lbs. S2.00

p.m.

APRIL 25—
The Department of Music pre-

Ensemble Concert by
Brass, Woodwind, Saxaphone Ensemble, and Clarinet Choir. Open
to the public at Baird Hall, 3:30
sents

-

in

APRIL 28Seminar: ProfesHarold C. Hoelscher, The
Johns Hopkins University, speaking on “Simultaneous Axial Dispersion and Solid-Fluid Mass Exchange in a Packed Bed Absorber,” Room 104, Parker EngineerEngineering

sor

ing, 4:00 p.m.

The Department of Music pre-

sents UB Little Symphony, open
to the public at Baird Hall, 5:00
-

p.m.

APRIL 29Fine Arts Film

-

“End of In

nocence” at Norton Hall
Engineering Seminar: Dr.
C. Lee, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, on the
topic “Stability of Thin Walled
Members of Open Cross-Section”
Room 104, Parker Engineering,

George

4-5 p.m.

Placement
Announcements
General Electric Company:
Open positions have been announced by the General Electric
Company, for Mathematics majors
or Science majors with a Mathematics minor. Candidates will
work with scientists and engineers in analyzing, interpreting
mathematical
and presenting
data. Application blanks and
further information are available
at the University Placement
Services.

Social Service Worker: A Genesee County organization has an
opening for a Social Service
Worker. Candidates must have a
Master’s Degree in Social Work.
The position would, in a short
period of time, enable a qualified
person to become Director of the
Social Service Department. For

further information, contact the
University Placement Services.

Nursing:
The Erie
Health Department is seeking a
male registered nurse. If interested, contact Mr, George Dinner
of the Universfly Placement ServCounty

ices.

Position Acceptance Form; All
registrants who have accepted
positions arc reminded to return
the position acceptance form as
soon as possible. This information

is necessary for deactivating your
placement file and developing sta-.
tistics regarding placement for
the benefit of future graduates.

additional candidates in Electrical /Electronic and Aerospace en-

gineering disciplines to fill projected quotas. Applications from

evening courses

held

Repair

APRIL 23—

The Aerospace Systems Division of Wright Patterson Air
Force Base, Ohio; urgently needs

udents who wish to take
evening classes, but who
egister in advance, must
he regular registration
"

Weekly Calendar

Plaza Shoe

p.m.

\pril 26 through April 30
W, G

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Clark

Thursday, June 3,
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

all interested degree candidates
in these disciplines arc invited.
For further information, contact
the University Placement ServPLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

APRIL 30—
Roche Laboratories

AT

THESE

STORES

FINE

NEW YORK
Albany,

Frank

Adams

Albany, Fuhrman's Inc
Albany. Stuyvesant Jeweler Inc
Stuyvesant Plaza
Amherst.

Adam Meldrum

&amp;

Anderson So

Binghamton. Henry's Jewelers
Brewster. Addessi Jewelry Store, Inc

Buffalo. A M &amp; A s—Downtown University
Buffalo, Sheridan, Thruway &amp; Southgate Plaias
Catskill, Hallenbock's

Jewelers, Inc

Cheektowaga, Adam, Meldrum

&amp;

Anderson Co.

Cohoes, Timpane's Jewelers
Cortland, Harry Alpcrt Jeweler
Elmira, Deisfer

&amp;

Butler

Inc

Endicoft, Henry's Jewelers

Hudson, Alger's Jewelry

Ithaca.

Schooley's

Jamestown, Baldwin Jewelry
Kingston, Scheneider's Jewelers, Inc.
Lockport, Scnto's Jewelry Store
Middletown—Serpentini Jlrs.
Medina, Ltmina's Jlry. Store
Newburgh, Wm. Griffin Jewelers
Oneonta, Jerry Halbert
Oswego, Conti Jewelers
Painted Post, Malhson Jlrs.
Plattsburgh, Henry's Jewelers
Rochester, Hershberg's Jewelers
Rochester, Wm. S. Thorne
Schenectady, Maurice B Graubart
Sons
Schenectady, Wallace's
&amp;

Syracuse, Henry's Jewelers
Syracuse, H. J Howe Inc
Town of Tonaw#nda, Adam.

Meldrum

Utica, Evans &amp; Son
Watertown, Henry's Jewelers
West Seneca, Adam, Meldrum

&amp;

&amp;

Anderson Co

Anderson Co

�Friday, April 23, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

/a?

mm

VALUE
Men's short sleeve dress shirts.
$5.00
Ass’t sizes
Men’s regular dress shirts.
5.95
Ass’t sizes
Men’s short sleeve sport shirts,
3.95
Ass’t sizes
Poplin jackets. Oyster, Navy
5.95-6.95
Ass’t sizes
Men’s cotton slacks.
5.98
Various colors and sizes
Men’s Bermuda shorts
Men’s plastic raincoats
U B sweatshirts

Ill
Odd-lot typewriter ribbons
Avery Christmas “Stickadoos”
Wood carving tool sets
Mobilite M-66 hi-inten. light
Mobilite M-11 hi-inten. light
Albums (with U B seal)
Albums (with U B seal)
Large ass’t of photo and
scrap book refills
Autograph albums
Photo albums
Today memo pad holders
My trip albums
Address books
Book bags
Punches

3.95
3.95
3.00

VALUE
$ .79
.49
.89
13.95
9.95
3.00
2.50

SALE
PRICE
$2.85

2.95
2.49
3.95
3.75 ea.
(2 for 6.75)
2.19
2.39
1.79

SALE
PRICE
$ .40
.19
.29
7.95
5.95
1.75
1.60

15-.50
.99
1.00

10-.25
.49
49

1.00

.49

.50
5.30
.49

.25
2.49
.29

VALUE
Men’s tan trench coats,
1 ea. size 38, 40, 42, 46
Men’s ties
Men’s ties
Men’s summer wear sport coats
Corduroy jackets. Blue and
Brown. Various sizes
Suedine jacket. 1 only. Size 46
Gold poplin jacket. 1 only.
Size 40

17.95
2.50
1.50
16.95

SALE
PRICE

7.95
.79
.59
9.95

14.95
15.95

7.95
9.95

13.95

6.95

Men’s sneakers. White. All sizes 4.69-6.25 2.79-3.89
Women’s sneakers. White.
2.95-4.95 1.85-2.95
All reg. sizes

Juvenile stationery
Pencils
Graphite leads
Today pads (four sections)
Lock-a-matic book rest
Amer. portfolio attache cases
Page boy book racks
Handy caddy
Hootenanny stationery

Address and all-occasion book
(red)
Ass’t styles, colors,
boxed stationery
Memo paper holders w/U B seal
Letter holders w/opener
Stand up memo sheet holder

VALUE
1.00

1 .98\
1.50
1.85
1.20

.98
1.59

SALE
PRICE
.49
.01
.01
.99
\ .89
.85
.75
.49
.65

1.00

.29

.59
1.00
1.00
.50

.35
.49
.49
.25

ww m

MANY RIGHT OUT OF OUR REGULAR STOCK/DISCOUNTS UP TO 80%

�IK!

�A

Friday, April 23, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE HI

m

i

l

Ass’t Jewelry. Necklaces,
earrings, pins
U B double decks of cards

VALUE
$1.00-1.50

3.95

SALE
PRICE
$

.49
.98

Wall plaques. Ceramic and
Brass. w/Hayes Hall
Plates w/campus scenes

VALUE
2.50

SALE
PRICE

1.29
.98

sX
VALUE
$2.50
3.00
5.99
9.00

RCA Victrola, monaural
RCA Victrola, stereo
RCA Victrola, operas, monaural
RCA Victrola, operas, stereo

SALE
PRICE
$1.67
1.99
3.34
5.97

Monitor
Somerset (5 records)
MGM Classics

VALUE
4.98
5.98
4.99

SALE
PRICE
2.49
2.99
1.80

ms.

Deutsche Grammophon Gesellschaft and Archives/ 1/2 Price
PLUS OUR REGULAR COLLECTION OF OVER 3000-RECORDS AT OUR USUAL DISCOUNT
PRICES
LABELS INCLUDE RCA, CAMDEN, COLUMBIA, DECCA, LONDON, MERCURY, ANGEL AND OTHERS

folk music

Bob Dylan/Bringing it All Back Home
F*eter, Paul &amp; Mary/A Song Will Rise
Phil Ochs/I Ain’t Marching Anymore
All the News that’s Fit to Sing

MOOD
Music to Read James Bond By
The James Bond Thrillers
Complete Jackie Gleason

COWBOY AND WESTERN

SHOW AND MOVIE
My Fair Lady
Sound of Music

Mary Poppins

COMEDY
Jackie Mason
Dick Gregory
Bill Cosby
JAZZ

CLASSICAL

Budapest String Quartet/Complete Selection

OPERAS
Maria Callas/Carmen

and Tosca

VOCAL
Beachboys
Reparata and the Delrows
The Supremes
Billy Vaughn
Lawrence Welk

El Pussycat/Mongo Santa Maria
Dave Brubeck
FOREIGN
All Countries
Cannonball Adderley
CHILDREN'S RECORDS/RELIGIOUS/SPOKEN WORD/LANGUAGE RECORDS

Connie Francis and Hank Williams
Johnny Horton

msm m mm"

�Friday, April 23, 196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Spring Weekend 1965 is rapidly
approaching. A fun-filled weekend has been planned with something for everyone. This year,

will be several events durweek pribr to Spring
Weekend which will provide a
warm-up for the traditional festivities. The Spring Weekend committee, under chairman Ronn
Kenderian, felt that these preactivities would serve to create
an interest in the Weekend as
well as to provide entertainment
and enjoyment for the student
there

ing the

SPRING WEEKEND
U8 QUEEN

body.

On Tuesday. April 27, "The
Ugly American," starring Marlon
Brando, will be shown in the Con

fercncc Theatre. Tickets may be

purchased at the ticket table for
any of the showings for 25*.
There will be showings at 10, 12,
3, 5:30, 7:30, and 9:30. This movie
is the elaborate and long-awaited
screen version of the best-selling
novel by William Lederer and
Eugene Burdick. In one of the
most timely adventures of our
day, the powder keg that is Asia
explodes as the U S: Ambassador
to the Kingdom of Sarkhan is
faced with the task of squelching
Red-inspired riots and restoring
order to this war-torn and divided
country.

On

21i, the

Wedesday, April

hilarious movie, Carry On, Nurse,
will be shown at 10, 12, 3, ti and 1!
Theatre
the
Conference
in
Tickets may 1 &gt;e purch;ased also
at the ticket t able for

movie is abou ill
boxer, a physic

a

(Or.

Till

re]

&lt;

irmy
colo
nel and a half •dozen oil hers from
various walks of life who ai
thrown tOKeth ier in a
anil find themselves su
the annoyances and
provided by life amoiif
thermometers, and prel Iv nurses,
Wot I lit ■stlay, Hit
At 2:00 p.m
Jerry
Nit* woo:&gt;d Quartet will

ARLENE ARDANOWSKI
Thefa Chi Sorority
"That touch of honey is Arlene"
Theta Chi’s candidate, Miss Arlene Ardanowski, is a twenty year old
Knglish major from Scarsdale. New
York. Her theme, “A Touch of Honey”, was chosen because it appears to
describe best her appearance as well
as her personality. While maintaining a 1 A overall average, Arlene has
also been an active participant in extra-curricular campus life, including
W.R.A. and S.J3.A.N.Y.’s. She was a
Sophomore Sponsor, and is a member
of the UI&gt; girls swimming team, the
Scheussmeister’s Ski Club, and the
Residence Halls Sports Committee.
She has represented UR for the past
two years as a majorette, and is currently assistant editor of the Greek
newspaper. “The Oracle”,

swinp (ml" in the center tounpe
with three solid hours of solid
jazz. Jerry Niewood, who is a
student at UB, has played with
the Jazz Brothers.

A coffeehouse atmosphere will
be provided in the Uathskellar
Thursday night from 10:30 to
1:00 a.m. In the Kathshkellar.
affectionately dubbed “the l.emon
Tree" for the evening, free lemonade will he served. During the

course of the evening,

Danny

Zimmerman will read his poetry
and folk-singing will be provided
informally by a duet consisting of

Natalie Gold and Helen Sklarew
and

also

Sydney

Sonarman

napkins will be provided, compliments of live Literature Committee of the Union

Candles and

JOAN SALWISZ
Alpha Gamma Delta
"Daisies do tell... it's Joan"
Joan Salwisz, a 20-year-old Junior
majoring in Spanish, is Alpha Gamma
Delta’s candidate with the theme,
“Daisys do tell
it’s Joan!” She
has a 2.2 average and will spend the
summer studying at Santander in
Spain. Her interests include painting,
swimming, and sewing. Among her
activities are Chairman of Sophomore
Sponsors, Corridor Representative, and
Panhellenic Representative from her
sorority. On the council, she is Treasurer and Rules Chairman for Greek
Sing. Joan is the newly elected 1st
Vice-President of her sorority.

the Dorothy Haas Lounge. there
will be voting for Mr. Faculty
and the queen from
to 4 Students will receive a “Support
Spring Weekend" button after
they vote and those who are
seen wearing one of these but
tons will not be continually asked

.

Dr. Bugelski of the Psychology
Department is being sponsored
by the Psychology Club. He has
been teaching at UB since 1946
and is presently teaching Learning Theory and conducting a
senior Seminar. During his years
at UB, Dr. Bugelski has devoted
himself mainly to academic pur-

!)

to vote.
The Friday festivities will begin
with the Heralding Cavalcade. II
will start on campus at 1:00 p in.
and make two trips down Niagara
Falls Boulevard to the Allenhurst Apartments and back to
the Library Circle. Included in
the cavalcade will be a caliope
and other unusual musical instru-

that the vehicle have three
wheels, so that anyone with a
3-wheelcd vehicle may enter.

.

MR. FACULTY

Board.
A fine arts film, "the Knd of
Innocence," will be shown on
Thursday in the Conference at
10. 12. 3, 6. ,8. and 10, '
On Wednesday and Thursday in

ments. Cars containing campus
personalities, sports stars, clowns,
and the Spring Weekend Steering
Committee will also be in the
parade. For the students living
in the Allenhurst Apartments,
a special bus will be included to
bring them to campus in time for
the Tricycle Grand Prix.
The Tricycle Grand Prix, spon
sored by Theta Chi Fraternity,
will start at 2:00 pm. at the
Library Speedway, formerly
known as the Library Circle.
There will be three classes: men,
women and modified In the last
class,
only requirement is

.

suits and has made many contributions to the field of Psychology

Buryil H. Glenn of the
Department is being
sponsored by SEANYS at Buffalo.
He has been teaching at UB for
17 years and is presently teaching
Education 321. A591. A528 Dr
Glenn is the advisor for SEANYS
and participated in the I'nited
Dr.

Education

Fund Drive.

Dr. Joseph Hindman of the
Biology Department is being
sponsored by a group of loyal
biology students. He has been at
the University for two years and
is presently teaching Biology 101.
308. 454R and lectures for Biology
160. Dr, Hindman belongs to
Sigma Xi. AAUP, AAAS. the
Botanical Society of America,
and took part in the FacultyStudent Basketball game.

�ms- APRIL 30

Friday,

April 23, 1965

CANDIDA TES

ROSALYNN BROTHMAN
Sigma Delta Tau
"Lollipops and Rosie"

Sigma Delta Tau’s candidate for
Spring Weekend Q ueen is Rosa Lynn
Brothman. Rosie, a nineteen year old
sophomore, is majoring in Elementary
Education. She has played an active
role in both campus and sorority affairs. Last year, Rosie was Executive
Secretary of the Freshman Class Council, represented that organization on
the Student Senate, and was also a
member of the Spectrum advertising
staff. She was Vice President of her
pledge class, participated in Greek
Sing, and is presently sorority Rush
Chairman. In addition to her extracurricular activities, Rosie has managed to maintain a Dean’s List average.

PENNY HEMMING
Sigma Kappa Phi
"Penny, a whirl thru the Highlands"
Meet Penny Hemming, Sigma Kappa Phi’s candidate for Spring Weekend Queen. Penny, a 20 year old junior from Ithaca, New York, is majoring in physical education. Before becoming a member of Sigma Kappa
Phi, she was president of ■her pledge
class. Her other extra-curricular activities include serving as co-captain
of UB’s varsity cheerleaders and being secretary-treasurer of the WRA.
Besides working on several dorm committees, Penny participated in 1964
Freshman Orientation and plans to
do the same in ’65. Outside of school
she enjoys skiing, (water and snow),
semi-classical music, knitting, and
dancing.

Penny hopes eventually to

be a successful teacher and homemaker.

CANDIDATES
Dr. Lyle Glazier of the English
Department is being sponsored
by

the Bull. He has been

leaching

at UB for 18 yearst and was a
Faculty Fellow of the American
Council of Learned Societies for
one year. He was a Fulbright Professor of American Literature at
the University of Istanbul f

t

inf! courses on Melville i, Confer
porary American Fictioi in, Sum
of American Literatur •e, Grc
English Poets, and was the initi
tor of UB's American Stuudics I’r
granin. He was the directtor of tli
proggram until 1963. Drr. Glazu
is lbhe advisor to the Bunil and
the author of several hbooks, ii
clud
me of pi looms.

Mr. William Siemering of the
Department of Drama and Speech
is being sponsored by WBFO. He
has been an instructor at UB for
four years. Mr. Siemering is presently teaching Introduction to
Speech

126 and other courses in
the department; He is the faculty

advisor to the Spectrum and also
to WBFO. in addition to being an
Assistant Coordinator of Activi-

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Throe trophies will be awarded
in each class, and one over all
trophy. The entry fee is two
dollars, and applications may be
obtained at the Norton Candy
Counter. As an added attraction,
water balloons will be available
to hinder any and all opponents.
At the Grand Prix, the emphasis
will be on fun.
The float parade will start at
Main and Exchange at 1:45 and
will reach campus between 3 and
3:30. Included in the parade will
be the floats and a earaval of
cars, one of which will contain
Chansellor Furnas.
Friday night at 8:30, the Kingston

Trio

will perform at Klein-

hans Music Hall, Tickets for the
concert arc still available at the
ticket booth at special UB Student rates.
The first of May will be the
first day of the “UB-Karni-Bull,”
A Giant Ferris Wheel, the
Scrambler, the Flying Chair,
the Merry ■ Go ■ Round and
six kiddie Tides are being
brought to campus by Zabcl’s
Top-of-the-W o r I d Amusements
and will be open from ten in
the morning to twelve midnight
The carnival will be set up in
the parking lot next to Baird
Music Hall. The midway will offer
a variety of game and refreshment booths. The games will be
played with
special "Spring
Weekend dollars” which will be
purchased at special booths set
up for that purpose. One UB
dollar costs 10c. Refreshments
such as hot dogs and cotton candy
will be available. Prizes will include everything from jump ropes
to tin whistles, from lamps to
clocks and from stuffed animals
to anything you could imagine.
Everyone will win a prize. Chairman of Special Events, Bruce

Rosen, said that "this is the first
attempt at a carnival of such

magnitude on this campus. The
Spring Weekend Committee and
the many area businessmen who
have supported the Karni-Bull
through their generous donations
strongly feel that no one from
UB or the city should miss this
great event. For in addition to

the fun and

excitement of the

amusements, games and cotton
candy, everyone should have the
satisfaction of knowing that a
most worthy cause, the John F.
Kennedy Memorial Library, will
benefit from their support.”
At this time, there will be a
Student Art Show in front of
Baird at which students may
purchase paintings or have their
portraits sketched.
Saturday evening at 9 o’clock,
the dance at the Town Casino
will begin, and it will last until
1:30 a m. The Town Casino is
located at 681 Main Street aftd
there is ample parking space in
I hi' area. Dance Music will be
provided by Dave Cheskin and

his orchestra. Entertainment will
he provided by a br ght new

comedy trio called “the Uncalled
For Three.” They are a trio
similar to the TW3 group. They
have appeared at several night
spots, including the Hitter Knd
in New York City. During the
course of the evening, awards
and trophies will be presented to
the winners of the float, Mr.
Faculty and the Tricycle Grand
I’rix contests. The highlight will
ho the crowning of the Spring
■Weekend Queen, One of the
prizes which Mr. Faculty will receive is a free, all-expenses paid
weekend for two at The Laurels
Monicello, -New York The
in
tickets for the dance are S3 50
per couple and may be obtained
at the Ticket Table in Norton
Lobby. Anyone who buys his concert and dance tickets together
will receive two free tickets to
The Ugly Arneru
The "UB Karn Bull" will be
open Sunday fro: i 1 p m. to midnight

At 2:00.

here

wjll

be a

Judo and Karate exhibition at
the carnival Th icre will be a
lawn concert pro lented by the
UB Band at 3:00 It is hoped that

the dorm students s, and the cornmuters especially, will invite their

friends from the
will be plenty of
everyone

as there
verythiiig for

city

�Friday, April

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

IFB&amp;BQ3 ILS®M3&gt;SWag
Movies dealing with World War II—“The War”
for our generation—have followed an interesting cycle
during the two decades which have elapsed since the
war ended. During and immediately after the hostilities,
the films produced were primarily propagandistic efforts
designed to depict the American Soldier (and his comrades-in-arms) as loyal, courageous and frightfully efficient. The enemy was represented by faceless extras in
German or Japanese uniforms who fell the thousands before the armed might of the allied forces, or by strutting,
profane, saddistic killers in high black boots, long leather
coats and eccentric hair styles. The “War Movie” formed
genre just as crucial to Hollywood’s success in the ’40’s
and '50’s as the Western Film and the formula Love
Story. Then, as our problems became more sophisticated
and complex, the War began to recede into some kind
of perspective and the nature of the films which chronicled its important events began to change.
The dominant mode became the “anti-war” movie.
Screen presentations were inclined to emphasize the
destruction of all of the civilized virtues in the chaos of
total war and the movies offered a table that depicted
the awful waste in natural and human resources which
resulted from the ravages of modern warfare in a mechanized society. Neither side had a lock on the heroes or
the villains. We began to see sympathetic and troubled
generals in the Afrika Korps, and brutal, blood-thirsty,
crazed killers in U. S. army green. Movies like The
Bridge on the River Kwai, War Hunt, The Desert Fox
and The Young Lions epitomized this attitude.
Then, The Guns of Navarone “exploded” across the
screen in larger-than-life color and the entire genre underwent another shift in emphasis. The “enemy,” consistent with our psychoanalytic posture these days, was
composed of good and bad men, but it was still The
Enemy. Consequently, the focus of the film was on the
successful accomplishment of whatever mission happened to be under scrutiny. There was an implication that
the Germans and Japanese probably had their heroic
moments too and that they were good soldiers (which
made the allies’ task all the more formidable and significant), but the. movie was usually Anglo-American or
French-American and the successful completion of the
film’s usually daring feat was measured in enemy dead
and enemy property destroyed. The Great Escape, the
forthcoming Operation Cross-Bow and The Train represent this recent trend in the cinema’s treatment of War.
The Train, currently playing at the Amherst and
Cinema downtown, is an especially pertinent example of
this kind of movie. It deals with the German Army’s
attempt to remove the best works of the French Impressionist painters from France via the railroad system to
Germany. The canvases are worth more than gold and
just as negotiable, but the German general (Paul Scofield—the fine British actor who played King Lear in
New York last summer) is an “aristocrat” who loves an
appreciates them as great art too. The French Resistance
. . . the famed “Maquis,” is determined to stop the theft
of France’s national heritage, but the resistance leader
(nicely played by the always interesting Burt Lancaster)
knows nothing about art. He cares about “people” first
and sees this as another important assignment . . nothing more. There is a bit of metaphysical speculation about
how many human lives can justifiably be sacrificed to
prevent the Nazi’s desecration of France’s “gloire,” but
the name of this film is action and the star of the thing
is director John Frankenheimer: his most interesting
performer the French National Railroad.
Lancaster is intense and convincing, looks appropriately disheveled and brings the magnetism of his immense physical presence and personality to his role. He
is a skilled professional and is ideal for the part. Paul
Scofield looks ruthless as the Nazi general willing to sacrifice peasants by the hundred to protect some abstract
sense of aesthetic value (the paintings symbolize this for
him) and Jeanne Moreau is a fascinating curiosity in a
bit part designed to take advantage of her burgeoning
popularity on the screen. But it is a definite weakness of
the movie that these characters are never developed into
human beings. However, it hardly matters.
Director Frankenheimer (known for hi$ bizarre,
macabre Manchurian Candidate, has done wonderful
things with locomotives. He seems to have sensed the
basic appeal that the steam locomotive has for most people and has exploited it superbly. The shots of trains
rolling, blowing up and just lurking about menacingly
are really intriguing. Then, he has ipanaged to give the
entire film (in black and white) a kind of hard glint that
is very reminiscent of a newsreel. The tints are so severe
that the thing looks more like documentary footage than
a feature film. The effect is always engrossing and seems
to grow in intensity throughout the movie. And, Frankenheimer is familiar enough with such basics as cameraangle, pace and the modern-techniques of cutting to keep
the 21/2 hour movie moving along briskly most of the
time.
Without being especially revealing about the human
condition (the attempt to make a philosophical point of
some sort at the end is not well done), the movie is very
interesting and lots of fun to watch.
.

I4J8HIPTU AVt.-TF6-7411

23, 1965

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�Friday. April

23, 1965

SEANYS Conference Held Last Week

NewNinthState Officers Were Elected
tour
Annual Delegate Assembly of SEANYS, the Student
Association of New
Education
in Buffalo,
York State, convened
April 8-10, at the Sheraton Motor
The

Inn.

■Tomorrow’s Teacher Today”
was the theme of the conference.
Students from colleges throughstate
out the state attended.

New

officers were elected: President,
George Palange; Vice President,

Marilyn Gladysiewiez; Secretary,
Gail Sappenfeld; Treasurer, Martha Salisbury; and Historian, Eta
Adenoff. The new director of the
Western Region, which includes
SEANYS chapters from SUNYAB,
SUC Buffalo, Rosary Hill, D’Youville and SUC Fredonia, is Elaine
Frank from SUC Buffalo.

A tour of the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery commenced the conference April 8. It was followed
by a reception for the attending
delegates. In the evening, Dr. Edward Sage, Chairman of the Department of Education at SUC
Buffalo and member of the Commission on Teacher Education and
Professional Standards, addressed

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the group at a banquet, A
of
Niagara Falls concluded the evening.

New officers were elected at
th closing general session. Members who attended the conference
from UB included: Marcia Berzon,
President of SEANYS; Sheryl
Taub and Nancy Migdol, VicePresidents; Kenneth Shaken. Dr.
Burvil Glenn, advisor to the
group, also was present

International Club
Fiesta Tomorrow
In Fillmore Room
BEWARE all ye who enter the
Fillmore Room tomorrow evening.
Why? Well, so you won’t be
bumped into by a Spanish sombrero, so you don't step on a
sandled foot, or the edge of an
Indian’s sari, and especially so
you won’t be hit by a low flying
pinata or tripped by a Bulgarian
dance group. Now you are probwondering why all of these
things might happen! Tomorrow
in the Fillmore Room, at 7:30
p.m., the International Club of
the State University of New York,
is holding its annual international
“FIESTA”.

r-tfbl/

The “FIESTA”, under the direction of Art Woodhcad, will
have a night club atmosphere,
with the same table and dancefloor arrangement and Lance
Lessler as M.C. In addition to a
band there will be various performances lasting one hour. Included in these will be a rendition of a Japanese candlelight
dance
dance by international
groups in their native costumes.

I believe that a highly significant proportion of the faculty
at this University is guilty of a
a deprofessional delinquency
linquency which perpetuates and
manifests itself in “looking the
other way’ a delinquency which
fosters and maintains a feeling
of apathy in regard to academic
dishonesty. I hope that the time
has come when the faculty can
be persuaded to make a concerted
effort to practice the rules and
regulations they themselves have
set forth to inhibit cheating on
examinations and papers.

In the "Faculty rules and Procedures in Respect to Cheating
. . .
it is stated that “all offenses involving the penalty of
failure of a paper or failure in a
course, instances and actions
must be reported to the Dean
and the Registrar.” However, records in the office of the Dean
of Students show that in the last
four years only two students have
been brought before the Dean of
Students on the above change.
I find it hard to believe that
these statistics reflect the truth,
and that, indeed, in four years
there have occurred only two instances where the instructor has
apprehended the student while

than final
a)

T ° THE EDITOR:
l! seems evident to us, after Mr. Unger's visit
to campus that
a minority of students on this
campus have an utter disregard and disrespect for

nose who have a view which is in conflict with
heir own. Their belligerant queries were an in-

■cation of this and a cause for shame. What is
more disagreeable to us, as students, is the
that certain faculty members took the initia
■'e in these tirades, many of which were aimed at
Unger personally.

pen

’

In addition, we feel that the least this group
conscientious objectors” could have done was
IVe Mr. Unger the respect and courtesy due
man of his position by facing him and listen,0
without interruption and harrassment.

incident which points out this rude bewas Dr. Wilhelm's question shouted from

b)

c)

the rules is non-existant.
The State University of New
York at Buffalo is a dynamically
evolving institution, that must
consistently expand in order to
meet the demands placed upon it
by the academic and civil communities. The expansion must t)J
of a dual nature
the outward
tangible progression, manifesting
itself in enlarged, more intricate
complexities of the scientific
world; and the inward, less tangible but more highly significant
goals of the moral strengthening,
and inculcation of integrity, of
its citizenry.
At present the minimum disciplinary actions for plagarism or
-

offense, failure

For second

third offense, suspension from college by the
Dean of Students

For

I believe that by using the
above rules as a foundation, more

sincere, comprehensive policies
will eventually evolve. Hoping to
add a catalyst I would like to
suggest, in promoting academic
honesty,

that:

re-evaluate their
roles in the administration

a) The faculty

of examinations;

b)

The faculty consider the possibility of more stringent
proctering of examinations;
the all
too familiar practice of giving the same examination
more than once;

e) The faculty abrogate,

d)

The Dean of Students office
keep a central filing system
of all such infractions of slu
dents, and that after a student accumulated two such
infractions, he, or she, be

before the Student
Judiciary for the possibility
of suspension from the university;

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN

FELLOWSHIP
Prayer meetings are being held
Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. There are a]so
Bible studies Friday at 9:00 a.m.
and Monday at 3:00 p.m. These
are all held in the CRO Office,
Room 217, of Norton Union.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is also sponsoring a series
of lectures on the Old Testament.
These are conducted by Mr. San
Marco, Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in

Room 266 of Norton Union. The
last two studies will be held
Tuesday and May 4. Everyone
is invited. Even if you have not
attended the first sessions, I am
sure you will benefit from having attended the last ones.

NEWMAN

The annual Spring Picnic will
be held Sunday at Chestnut Ridge
Park. Cars will leave Newman
Hall at 1:30 p.m. Admission is
$1.00 and includes hot dogs, beer,
pop, potatoes chips and so on.
The Closing Banquet will be
Wednesday, at 6:30 p.m. in the
Hallmark Manor. The 1965-1966
officers will be announced at this
time.

brought

this

matter. The only strength
that rules possess is by the fact
that they arc a condition of
society brought about by their
observance. If the observance is
non-existant then the essence of

For first offense, failure of

in course

“Rulesjhnd Procedures" concerning

are:

exams)

the exam or paper

cheating on an examination, and
carried oqt the predetermined

e)

The Student Judiciary be the
organ,

official

proper,

for

the administration of such

punitive measures as suspension, for I sincerely believe
that much is to be gained by
having students judged by

thcii* own peers.

CANTERBURY

Tuesday and Wednesday of
next week, 2:00-3:00 p.m., the
thirteenth in the current series
of discussions of “The Gospel
According to Saint John” will

be offered. Both sessions will be
held in Room 266 Norton. The
specific topic will be “Resurrection Appearances by the Lake;
with Peter and the Beloved Disciple, (21:1-25). All students and
faculty members are invited to
attend either of their duplicate
sessions.
In addition, there is a celebration of the Holy Communion
every Tuesday in the Veteran's
Chapel, noon.

LISTEN TO
WBFO

Greensleave

co,,ee

hoU8e

The Ukraine, Lithuania, South America, Malaysia, The
Philippines, Japan, Pakistan, India, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon.
Germany,

the Editor

Apologies Due Mr, Unger

On®

cheating on examinations (other

-

Admission charge, which includes food, dancing, and all entertainment is $1.50 (or members
and non-members. The “FIESTA”
is open to the general public and
especially welcomes all foreignNative foods and delicacies will
ers whether they belong to the
of
be one of the many highlights
club or not.
the evening’s festivities. They will
be served in booths styled after
Remember! Pinatas, exotic
their native country by people in foods, dancing, entertainment, all
is
being
foreign dress. The food
at the international “FIESTA” toprepared by a committee of 45 morrow at 7:30 p.m.
in the Fillpeople from foreign lands. The more Room.
participating countries are Italy,

to

l&amp;eiifyious

Chief Justice Lighter Claims Faculty
Responsible for Fostering Academic Dishonesty
-

On the following day, panel
guests of the New York State
Teachers’ Association forum, including Dr. Alice Foley. President of NYSTX, Lloyd J. Klute,
Board of Directors, NYSTA,
George Keeler, TEPS Commission, NYSTA, and Dean Streiff,
Director of Professional Services,
NYSTA, spoke on topics of interest to future teachers and answered questions members had
about the association. “New
Trends” workshops were also on
the agenda. Dr. Samuel Moore
of the UB School of Education
led a workshop entitled, "The
Teacher and the Law: Negligence
and Liability.”

cjCetterd

lor

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

speakthe rear of the room, while Mr. Unger was
your
ing, demanding “From where do you get
sources? Quote some sources!!!” To which Mr.
Unger replied aptly, “The United States govern

ment!”
We as students, would like to extend our
apologies to Mr. Unger for this disgraceful display
of discourtesy (throughout which the Ambassador
maintained his poise) reflects upon us as attendants of this University.

And we recommend that the student body as
a whole send their regrets for this uncalled for
exhibition of emotionalism to Mr. Unger, person
ally, to show him that the general mode of behavat the time of
ior at UB was not well represented
his visit.

Virginia Gilbert, Pat Gunn,
Sharon Bowers, Dave DiFlorio

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�GREEK NOTES

McCarthy Explains
H.U.A.C. Position
(Cont’d from P. 1)

hand, Senate members arc seldom ever present at meetings.
In short, the final estimate of the
worth of a representative must
be determined by his whole record.
When asked what he himself
has accomplished to date in the
House, McCarty replied that first
of all he introduced the Water
Pollution Bill into the House.
This, he said, was no difficult
task, for it is the easiest thing
in the world to introduce a bill
into Congress.” One can even
merely scratch someone else’s
name off a bill and introduce it
himself. However, McCarthy did
accomplish one feat of which he
is proud: he succeeded in driving an amendment on the Water
Pollution Bill—that larger cities
or larger states should pay
greater amounts towards the
clearing up
of the problem)
through the House.
“

were starving
with curiosity to learn why McCarthy had voted in favor of appropriating funds for HUAC. Mr.
McCarthy actually believes that
the powers of HUAC should lie
in the judiciary. At the time of
voting, two votes were polled.
The first involved sending the
bill back to the committee for
hearings to justify the appropriation, McCarthy could not see any
purpose to the hearings. During
the second vote, half of the
voters finally favored the funds.
They realized that the standing
Many

students

committee needs funds. McCar
thy felt that the entire issue
was confused. Instead of attempting to deny the committee funds,
in the first place, opponents of
HUAC should have solicited the
creation of a new committee. At
any rate, now HUAC cannot disappear until January. So, as
Charlie Weldner would say, “If
you can't beat, ’em, join ’em
Infiltrate." The future of HUAC
may depend heavily upon the
results of its investigation of the
Ku Klux Klan. If the investigation is successful, the drive to
destroy HUAC will probably
come to an end. However, should
the investigation be a failure,
the movement to annihilate HUAC will most likely become powerful. McCarthy cannot at this
time predict how he will vote
on the committee in January.
—

McCarthy fully supported the

President when asked to state his
position on the United States'
policy in Vietnam, fie is not a
pacifist although he mentioned
that when polls were taken, the
majority of the people did ad
vocate withdraw! from Vietnam.
He said that he was the first
House member to rise up to
speak in favor of the President,
and he agrees 100% with the
at
speech Johnson delivered
Johns Hopkins University. Finally, McCarthy lauded Johnson
richly
especially for his close
relationship with the legislators
—the warmth of which Kennedy
never achieved during his ad
ministration.
—

Fine

Friday, April

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Alpha Gamma Delta is looking
forward to a dated flower-making
party tonight.
Alpha Phi Delta held their annual Palm Sunday Communion
breakfast last April 11. Services
were held at St. Joseph’s Old
Cathedral and breakfast was at
Perkin’s Pancake House. The
guest speakers were Dr. Richard
LoTempio and Brother Samuel
La Rosa.

Tomorrow night the brothers
will hold their annual dinner
dance at the Park Lane. The
guest speaker will be Dr. Samuel
Bumbulo and the guest of honor
will be Mr. Ferdin and F. DiBartolo, one of the founders of
the Fraternity. Cocktails will be
at 7:00 p.m., with dinner at 8:00
p.m., and dancing to the music
of Shorty Geracc will start at
9:30 p.m.
Alpha Phi Omega, Xi Zeta
Chapter at R.I.T. have accepted
the challenge of the brothers at
the University of Buffalo in
tjicir annual baseball game.
Alpha Phi Omega would like
to

announce the officers for fall

’65 semester. They are: President,
Paul Yovicnc; First Vice Presi-

dent, Bob Garreeht; Second Vice
President, Hob Adamski; Third
Vice President, Sid Weiss; Treasurer, Howard Gondrcc; Secretary, John Edwards; Correspond-

ing Secretary, George Amman;

and Historian, Frank

Allen.

have a

Alpha Sigma Phi will
“Bum” party at the Flying “E”
Dude Ranch in Loekport tomorrow at 9:00.

Peter Doukas was elected InterFraternity Council Representative
for 1965-66.
The annual pledge party
Thursday,
featuring
be
"Maniacs.”

will
the

Rodean, Assistant Director and
faculty advisor for Delta CJai
Omega.

Gamma Phi will hold their
Sixth Annual Greek Olympiad at
1:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon on
Rotary Field.

The Spring Pledge Class will
hold a casual party for the
Brotherhood tomorrow evening at
8:30 p.m. at Roach’s Restaurant.
The Spring ’65 Pledge Class of
Phi Epsilon Pi announces the
holding of their Hawaiian Lei
pledge party tomorrow at
Aliota’s Hall.
wishes to announce that Dave Franko has
been awarded the Richard A.
Dunning Award as the chapter’s
Phi Kappa Psi

outstanding

fraternity

man.

Tomorrow evening the Brothers
will hold their annual “Roman
Toga” Party,

Pi Lambda

Tau is holding a

closed “picket party,” tomorrow,
at Boscla's Restaurant. Each
couple bring a sign.
The officers of our spring semester pledge class are; President, Sandy Simon; Vice President, Bill Winship; Secretary,
Frank Coppa; and Treasurer, Bill
Gould.
Sigma Delta Tau is anticipating
an enjoyable time this evening
at a social with Sigma Phi Epsilon.
They are also looking forward
to a picnic given by the pledges
Sunday at 12:30 p.m, at Ellicott
Creek.

Sigma Phi Epsilon is looking
forward, with alacrity, to tonight’s social with the sisters of
Sigma Delta Tau and Sigma Kappa Phi Sororities.

Tomorrow night, Sig Ep’s will
enjoy themselves at a beer blast,
sponsored by the Spring ’65
pledge class.
Sunday, at 11:30 a.m. the
brothers will sponsor a religious
breakfast in Norton Union.
Sigma Kappa Phi

is

looking

forward to a social with the
brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon,
tonight.

Spring Weekend regretfully announces that, due
to a n e w 1 y-established
policy, recently enforced
by the administration and
the Buffalo Police Department, the drawing for the
1965 Mustang has been
cancelled. All money will
be returned to those who
have contributed donations
which would have gone to
the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library.

The brothers and pledges of
Theta Chi are looking forward
to their last stag function of the
year to be held tonight at the
Sheridan Bowling Lanes.
The brothers of Tau Kappa Epsilon are holding a closed social
this weekend with the Nursing
Students of Meyer Memorial Hospital. The party is to be held at
8:30 p.m. Saturday night at the
Hotel Markeen.

\ljVerB R
We can suit you best
.,.

naturally!

BIG JOHN’S SUBMARINES
771 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
(South

29°

ND

u

of Sheridan

)

836-9490

FREE paddle ball with purchase of each BIG JOHN

Chi Omega will hold a flowermaking party with a fraternity
from Buffalo State tonight at the
apartment. Anyone wishing to
come is welcome.
Monday night, some of Chi
Omega's Alumnae will be helping the sisters make some flowers
and some more flowers! !

This

Delta

past

Monday

evening,

Chi Omega installed

its
elected officers. Larry
Drill was also appointed as
plcdgcmastcr for next year.
newly

Friday, April 30, they will participate in the Float Parade with
the University marching band.
Also Sunday,, May 2, they will
take part in a lawn concert given
by the University bands in front

of Baird Hall,
Saturday, May

1, will

climax

the year’s fraternal activities for
Delta Chi Omega with the formal
closing affair, the "White Rose
Formal," at the Tenderloin Restaurant in Niagara Falls, N Y.
The evening’s activities will begin
by a cocktail party followed by
dinner and dancing. The music
will be provided by the Joe Mann
Quartet, Among presentations of
the evening will be our outstanding brother trophy, the President's Key Award, and the crown-

film commit
Kiul of
Innocence" in Conference

for information write

Theater, Thursday, Apvil
29. at 12. 3, 6, 8, 10 p.m.

Academic Aids, Box 968
Berkley, Calif., 94701

arts

lee presents

ing of the Sweetheart of Delta
Chi Omega. Fred Hamann will
act as master of ceremonies. Attending as guests of the fraternity will be Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cipolla, Director of University
Bands, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard

INSTANT SILENCE

Pat Says: Start MUD Early with a Charcoal Hot

A
PAT
•)

I

j

h

•

23, 1965

V
it

n

SHERI DAN at PARKER

JUST THE mu YOU Li HE EM

�</text>
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                    <text>Kingston Trio to Perform Here During Spring Weekend
Concert at Kleinhans

The Kingston Trio (L. to R.) John Stewart, Nick Reynolds,

&amp;

MJI

Tickets for the Spring Weekend concert and dance are now
available at the Norton Union
ticket booth. The tickets for the
concert, featuring the Kingston
Trio, are being sold at special
student rates. The concert will
be held at Kleinhans Music Hall
Friday, April 30, and will start
at 8:30 p.m. The tickets for the
dance, which will be held this
year at the Town Casino Saturday, May 1, are $3.50 per couple.
Music at the dance will be provided by Dave Cheskin and his
orchestra. The dance will feature
a new comedy group called “The
Uncalled For Three’' as entertainment. During the evening,
awards will be presented to the
winner of the Mr. Faculty contest. The highlight of the dance

Bob Shane

(Cont’d on P, 7)

Uncalled For Thraa

UB

PRIVATE EAR,
PUBLIC EYE

BASEBALL
(see page

(see page six)

VOLUME IS

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY,

twelve)

NO.

APRIL 16, 1965

25

Senate Resolution Condemns Feinberg Law, Disclaimer; Slashes
Funds For Credited Organizations And Athletic Teams
Pub Board's
Rules Change
Seats Editors

Problems of finance and freedom were the primary concerns
of our Student Senate at last

Tuesday's meeting. Additionally

committee chairman were selected and the committee structure

reorganized.

The first major item of business following the opening roll
- call was a reconsideration
of the
Student Faculty Association for
Academic Freedom's (formerly
the Faculty Student Committee

The Student Publications Board
revised its structure this week
by passing a constitutional
amendment making all editors of

for Academic Freedom) request
for recognition which was finally
approved 18-0-4.
Amendments to the committee
structure in the by laws of the
Student Senate as outlined in last
week’s paper were passed quick-

fully recognized publications on
the campus voting members of

the Board. The amendment, proby Gerald Matross, also
provides for seven non-editorial
student members to sit on the
Board in voting capacity and two
non-voting advisors. The amended constitution will go into effect
if President Furnas approves the
changes made.
posed

ly, although an uncertainty as
to the required vote received
necessitated a revote later in

the session.
Mr. Siede's proposed

The amendment of the Board
a short, quiet debate.
These changes were acceptable

followed
to

all

members present.

The

Board has come under fire in the
past
because publications on
campus, including the Spectrum,
felt that the members of the
Board did not have the background
in publications to responsibly wield the power of the
Board.

The Senate will- consider an Admendment on

Referendum

and Initiative

at its next meeting, Tues-

day, April 20, 7:00 p.m.
it' Norton Union’s Fillmore Room.

The Student-Faculty Association for Academic

Freedom

will

meet

Tues-

day at 4:00 p.m. in Room

234.

amend-

ments to the financial rules pro-

Bill Berger attacks Athletic Dept, for ignori

ig si

Asia
William Bundy to Speak on S.E.
The title of his address

is
"Southeast Asia," however his
office advises us that “he is
likely to be responsive to whatever the students want" and
they are “sure he will entertain
questions.” All interested parties
are therefore urged to attend
what promises to be an informa
live session featuring a prominent government official speaking on Southeast Asian policy.

Vietnam may again provide a
topic for discussion in Norton.
Mr. William Bundy will address
an open convocation at 8:00
p.m. on Monday in the Fillmore
Room. The university, working
in conjunction with the Buffalo
Council on World Affairs, has
prevailed upon Mr. Bundy to , include us in his current speaking
tour.
Mr, Bundy holds degrees from
Yale and Harvard Universities
and has served the federal government with the Central Intelligence Agency from 1947 to
1951 and as an Assistant Secretary of Defense on International
Security Affairs from 1961 until
recently when he was appointed
Undersecretary of State for Far
Eastern Affairs.

'th

ji^\

UNOfRSICRITARY MJNOY

Applications for Senate
Committee Chairmanships,
the Student Judiciary, and
the Publications Board
may be picked up in Norton

205.

voked extensive discussion. The
basis of this discussion was the
interrelation of the Senate, the
athletic department, and the student activities fee.
“No money may be allocated
to athletic teams," was an amnedment proposed to the suggestions
of the treasurer by Linda Gunsberg, A4S Senator. In the course
of debate, Mr. William Berger,
former treasurer, summarized his
view of the situation pointing
out the
athletic department
was unwilling to support “teams
that don't make money” despite
the fact it receives a 500 per
cent greater cut of the activities fee for the support of athletics than the Senate receives
for all student organizations. The
modified amendments were then
ratified by two-thirds of the total
Senate membership.
The appointment of committee
chairman were, for the most part,
generally affirmations of the executive committee nominees. Selected in this manner were: Barry
Beanstock, Elections Committee;
Jerry Matross and Sara Lee Ru

benstein, Convocations Commit
tee; and John Z. Friedman, Welfare Committee. The only exception was the election for Activities Committee. The Executive
(Coat’d on P. 9)

�Queen Campaigns to Begin Monday

HIGHLIGHTS FROM
MAY PAGEANT

”***

****1-.

The campaigns for the queen
of Spring Weekend 1965 will
begin Monday. Posters will go
up in buildings and oilcloths will
go up around campus. Each
queen candidate has a theme
which will be carried out
through her whole campaign.
Wednesday, the queen candidates will appear on "Dialing
for Dollars” wearing matching
outfits from Bellvue Dress Shop
on Kenmore Ave. During the
course of the program, they will
be interviewed by Nancy Ann
Fleming, a former Miss America.
The program will be on WKBW

:

11111111!^^^

First Report on
NEW DENTAL MIRACLE THAT WILL
END CAVITIES FOREVER

•

WHY AMERICAN MEN FEAR WOMEN

•

THE TRUTH ABOUT INTERRACIAL

MARRIAGE
•

OUR WILD, "LIVE IT UP’
TEENAGERS

PAGEANT reflects the world about us.
Each month it brings, you informative
articles, adult features, newsworthy
reports, sparkling humor The May
cor tains mote than 30 stimulatng features .some provocative
some controversial all timely and
rewarding. Gel your May issue of
PAGEANT today 1
issue

PAGEANT
AMERICA'S LIVELIEST
THOUGHT-PROVOKING
MAGAZINE

Steve Mann to Perform
With Christy Minstrels
Steve Gottesman, known professionally as Steve Mann, has
just sinned a contract, to perform with the New Christy Minstrel's who were familiar with

Steve from his song-writing and

p r e v i o u s performances.. Last
Wednesday, he was flown to
New York for a final audition

Thursday morning. That afternoon, Steve was signed to a two
year contract. Steve expects to
begin rehearsal late this summer, and will join the louring
group late this year. His event
ual ambition is to manage and
produce in show business, and
he feels that this opportunity is
a big step in the right direction.
In his first performance since
becoming a Minstrel, Steve will
appear Friday and Saturday night
at the Inner Circle on Bailey

TV from 9:00 to 10:30 a.m. and
for those students who are unable to go to the studio to watch,
TV sets will be set up in the
lounges to watch the program.
After their interview, the girls
will act as hostesses to the audience.

Each sorority sponsoring a
candidate will be required to
perform two skits, each 15 minutes long. The first group of
skits will be held Wednesday,
from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
and will serve as the first for-

will re-broadplay “In White
America,” Sunday at 6:00
p.m. (08.7 on FM, 780
closed circuit to dormi-

WHFO

cast the

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mal introduction of the candi
dates to the student body. The
second group of skits will be
held April 26 at the same
times
Both groups of skits will take
place in the Conference Thea
ter. Friday, April 23, the candidates will present a fashion
show. Each girl will model five
outfits—an outfit for school, for
dates, for evening wear, a sports
outfit and a bathing suit. The
girls will then be asked three
questions and their answers will
be judged. Pat Silfer, queen of
Spring Weekend 1964, will moderate the fashion show.
Voting for queen will take
place Wednesday and Thursday.
April 28 and 29 in the Dorothy
Haas lounge from 9 a.m. to 4:00
p.m.

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There are some new cars around

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But they are not Volkswagens.
They are called fastbacks
and some of them are
after fish.
.
:—j
Tou can tell them from volkswagens because
won't go over 72 mph. (Even though the speedometer
a wildly optimistic top speed of 90.)
So you Can easily break almost, any speed law
country in a VW.

named

a

VW
shows
the

Name

Address

fis

GRANVILLE MOTORS, INC

Blvd

Please send me your free

or boil over.
It won't have anything to do with water,
So we saw no reason to name it after a

up

in

GRANVILLE MOTORS, INC

1500 Niagara Falls

And you can cruise right past gas stations, repair shops
and tire stores.
The VW engine may not be the fastest, butit it's among
the most advanced. It's made of magnesium alkloy (one step
better than aluminum). And it's so well machimled you may
never add oil between changes
The VW engine is cooled by atr so it can never free;

i

•

Friday, April 16, 1945

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

illustrated brochure

and

price

list

VOLKSWAGEN
1500 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Just North of BouUvard Mall,

opp.

Phone 836-4600

Twin Fai

AUTHORIZE
DtALCI

�Friday, April

16, 1965

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

McCarthy to Speak Tuesday Senators Ask
On Representation Problems
Congressman Richard D. McCarthy of New York’s 39th District, will speak on “The Problems of Representation" at a convocation Tuesday at 7:30-p.m. at
the University of Buffalo in Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall. The
public is invited.

because of its unfairness, inefficiency and cost.

A congressman may receive
mail from people saying they

President Johnson set up a 30man civilian-military team which
is working on a one-year review
of the selective service system.
According to the President the
study will include:

will work for his defeat: letters
from the far right Young Americans for Freedom or from a liberal group. How does the representative decide how to cast his
vote. Can he please everybody?

—"A thorough evaluation of
the fairness of current and alternative draft selection procedures.

Congressman McCarthy gradu-

ated from the Jesuit Father’s
Canisius High School in Buffalo,
He served in the Navy during
World War II and later earned
a degree at Canisius College be-

Congrettman Richard McCarthy

of New York's 39th District
fore entering the Army for two
years of Korean service.
The congressman was a reporter for a Buffalo newspaper and
then did graduate work at Harvard, Cornell and the University
of Buffalo. The McCarthy family includes his wife Gail and five

children. Their residence
Buffalo.

is in

Welcome Day Is May 8
Approximately 900 Erie and
Niagara County high school juniors and their parents are expected to attend the “35th Annual Welcome Day” to be held
May 8 beginning at 8:15 a.m. in

Norton Union.

At 9:15 a.m., Dr. Robert H.
Hossberg, professor of education,
will discuss, “The College Student and a College Environment.” Following the speech,

students will

form into

small

groups for discussions concern
ing specific programs offered at
the University. At 11:00 a.m.,
the parents will hear Mr. An-

drew H. Holt, assistant dean of
the Graduate School, discuss,
“The Parents’ Role in the college Education.”
Beginning at noon, the University’s Tower Dormitory and sev-

eraI divisions will
house.

hold

......

open

—A series of studies aimed
at tracing the influence of the
draft on employment, on training, on marriage rates, on edm
cation and so forth.

—Surveys and analyses of tHe.
plans and attitudes of young men
of military service age to assist
us in designing ways to increase
,

is the
first Democrat to be elected from
Erie County’s 39th District in 14
years. His campaign was conducted in an area which is 65 per
cent Republican by affiliation, defeating a 12-year incumbent who
may have been the dean of the
Western New York congressional
delegation. This was the congressman’s first bid for public office.
Congressman McCarthy

the number of volunteers.

—A review of the potential
for extending the use of civilians
in the place of military person
nel in support type activities.”

Creates Hardships
Senator Nelson pointed out in
his argument against the draft
that since 42 per cent of the
eligible age group do not serve
the concept of universal mili
tary service is destroyed; countless personal hardships are created because most drafters arc
not called up until they are 23
years old; it is militarily inefficient; it wastes both money and
manpower and it can be respon

Change

sibly eliminated by 1967, the
year that the Draft Law expires.
According to Senator Nelson, the
post war baby boom will create a
surplus of men available for

draft. 1,4 million youths reach
the age of 18 each year while
no more than 670,000 of these
men are needed for military service. By 1967 we will have a pool
of 12.4 million men yet our military needs requires only 2.7 million men under arms. Since the
draft provides more men than
we need we have corrupted the
system to favor:
Those who can afford to (stay
in college until they any 26
years old; those who marry
early; men with criminal records and moral shortcomings;
those who are mentally or physically below standard—and the
standards are increasingly arbitrary; those who employers will
claim that they are essential.

1967

Draft Not Necessary By

Because of the increase in population. by 1967 the draft will
not be necessary to attract the
590,000 men needed each year
for active and reserve duty in all
services. Manpower needs might
be satisfied in many ways:
1) An increase in pay for the
Iwoest ranks. A private entering service earns $78 a month
while in Canada a private starts
at $112 a month and if he has
special skills, he can earn as
much as $202 a month.
2) Eliminate unnecessary military jobs which might be per
formed by civilians. Representa
live Thomas B. Curtis told the
Scabee veterans convention a
few years ago:

"When we examine .
work performed by men

.

bookeeping, housing,
What they
feeding, overhead
(military leaders) have not yet
learned is that the civilian enterprise is better equipped to
train men in those skills than
the military, and incidently at
one-tenth the cost, because we
don’t have to provide room,
board, and wages for our civilian
trainees . . . Following such a
formula we need neither UMT,
military socialism nor destructive high taxes.”

overhaul,

3)
Encourage re-enlistments.
A soldier who enlists for three
years and then re-inlists for another three costs the government $4800. During his six years
service he would replace three
inductees who would have cost a
total of $11,838. At present 97
out of 100 leave the service as
quickly as they can at the end
of their tours while the enlisted
man is available for a longer
term of service and has a higher
rate of re-inlistment.
4) Expand the present service
academies to satisfy both the
need for officers and the desires
of many highly qualified young
men. Among the service academy
graduates, about 85 per cent remain beyond their obligated service commitment while among
ROTC graduates the rate is only

33 per cent.
5)

Use of available manpower

elminiating arbitrary standards.
If standards were relaxed, more

volunteers

would be

qualified because of arbitrary
and changing standards, really
want to serve.
6)

.

Decrease manpower, re
ments

in
form for the Military Establ

by

automation.

Improvement in
?dures.

ment, we find that at least
per cent (and some even
mate higher) is not fighting

natii.-

will it ever be fighting. It has
to do with supplies, transportation, warehousing, maintenance,

for information write

Academic Aids, Box 968
Berkley, Calif., 94701

Nelson, who has been

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thus eliminating the need for a
draft. Many men. presently un-

i

Senator Nelson and McGovern, members of the Committee
on Interior and Insular Affairs,
have submitted a proposal to re
place the present Universal Military Draft with an alternate
voluntary plan. The Universal
Military Draft has come under
the close scrutiny of the leaders
of both political parties during
the recent presidential campaign

Draft

a

�Friday, April 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

c

.

jCetterA

to

the Editor

PRAISE FOR PRESIDENT GOULD
We wish to congratulate President Samuel Gould
Teach-In Assessment
for his sensible and gentlemanly handling of the majorTO THE EDITOR:
increasing readiness to act even when information
ity of cases involving teachers who refuse to sign the
is overtly supressed provided the circumstances are
have
hesitated
to
write
this
letter
for
fear
I
Feinberg Certificate. His decision to suspend action until
sufficiently urgent.
conmight
controversy
that
initiate
a
which
could
I
the constitutionality of both the law and the Certificate
newspaper
My position on the Viet Nam situation is this.
sume
a
considerable
amount
of
time
and
have been decided by the courts has done much to prespace. I write this letter now because I heard just
Viet Nam represents for us and the rest of the
vent dissention and fear in the academic community and
world an unspeakeably grave danger
this hour that I had been quoted in one of the New
the danger
has saved the jobs of Ralph Maud, George Hochfield, York papers as having called the Teach-in sponof nuclear annihilation. We are forcefully reminded
and Newton Garver. We can only wish that this prinsored on this campus a useless farce; and from the
that the situation there could easily escalate into
ciple had been applied last year in the cases of Harry rumors broadcast on this campus, it is clear that a global nuclear war; a war which, presumably, no
Keyesian and George Starbuck, both of whom were a large number of people here have the impression one wants. That being the case, the strategic quesdismissed, and Mr. Corso similarly dismissed, for fail- that I said as much. I did not, and I am appalled tion for us, along with every other breathing citizen
ure to sign the Feinberg certificate. We also hope and that what I did say was interpreted in that way, of the world, is “how can the situation already
here or in New York. I am equally appalled that I
present in Viet Nam be handled so that we might
urge that the decision to await judgment on the constituam called upon day after day to explain what I did
minimize for the possibility of blowing ourselves
tionality of the law and certificate will apply to the cursay at the Teach-in, and I want to take this opporoff this earth?”
rent case of Gary MacArthur, who, although he has tunity to make what I said there as clear and as
never refused to sign, has been unwilling to do so, and univocal as I can.
Now clearly before we can answer this question we need to know specifically what is going on
has been threatened with dismissal. We believe that
spoke
about
a.m.
If I recall accurately, I
in Viet Nam, and nearly everyone confesses that
academic freedom is crucial to the functioning of any Except for an hour’s recess between 1 and 4:30
2:30 a.m.,
the absence of the required ininstitution of higher learning worthy of its name and, I was present from beginning to end. Hence, I have we do not know.weIn can
reasonably hope to
formation all
by
the
judging
coverage that the Corso case and others no good reason to believe that anything of singular sketch a general policy to be applied to thisdosortis
have received in the New York Times, Newsweek and importance to my own position on the Viet Nam of crisis. That is to say, the very best we can hope
many other papers and magazines both here and abroad,
question or my assessment of the Teach-in escaped
to accomplish in the absence of specific data conme.
the concern for academic freedom seems to be manicerning specific situations is a sketch of a general
festing itself in the greater community as well.
My assessment of the Teach-in was, and is, as
plan of action.
follows. I said, and I repeat, that as a dialogue the
Such a sketch would involve first an assessCONGRATULATIONS TO THE PUB BOARD
Teach-in was doomed to failure. It was a failure beof goals, that is, of ends to be attained by
At its most recent meeting the Student Publications cause no sensible dialogue can be carried on in the ment
America as a community among communities. SecBoard amended its constitution to include the editors absence of reliable relevant information concernondly, it will necessarily involve an open acknowling the facts of the matter; and by the admission
of all fully recognized campus publications as full votedgement of a plurality of goals, together with the
happy) of nearly every speaker,
or
(regrettable
ing members. This is the latest phase in the battle beall too obvious fact that there is a plurality of
there
was a deplorable and critical paucity of
tween the Board and the campus publications and we relevant information. It was a failure, too, because communities. Thirdly, our sketch would involve the
would like to take this opportunity to congratulate the on several occasions it turned into a cockfight. It clear and constant awareness that conflict about
Board for its willingness to recognize its shortcomings failed because many of those present could not see ends, whether these be personal, regional, national,
and to reform itself from within. We still feel that the possibility of doing something important even or international, are in some acceptable sense
there are desirable reforms still to be made concerning in the absence of facts. In short, it failed as a fundamentally moral conflicts; and they should be
treated as moral problems. They should not be rethe Board’s powers and procedures, but we recognize dialogue because it was not clearly conceived and garded
as mere logistic or fiscal matters. Finally,
judiciously
performed.
this latest action of the board as a great step in the right
our general plan of action requires that we commit
direction, the direction of a free and responsible stuAs a demonstration of anxiety and concern the
ourselves to what I consider the first principle of
dent press which is concerned with improvement, as well Teach-in was an unprecedented success on this any morality worthy of human beings: wherever
campus, and those who made it possible are to be
possible preserve your neighbor so that the progresas expert in the areas of publication and production.
given the highest commendation. It was an
sive elmination of conflict may be worked put in
STUDENT SENATE: ACTION WITH A PURPOSE
unabridged expression of adult responsibility cona salutary fashion.
cerning
problems.
plain
world
The
Teach-in
made
it
Tuesday night’s meeting of the Student Senate that
My personal recommendation on the Viet Nam
a
concern
over
events
growing
there
is
that
was mostly free from the Tomfoolery which charquestion can be stated quite simply: Short of
affect not only the lives of American citizens, but
acterized its first meeting. The Senate passed a numothers alike. It revealed an increasing willingness wholesale murder, we should do what ever we can
ber of important resolutions and amendments in an to criticize the makers of American foreign policy. to resolve the present conflict there. We must reatmosphere of free debate and intelligent questioning. It also showed that American citizens are willing to member, however, that the specific form of the
solution (provided we can be wise enough to seek
We applaud the Senate Resolution on Academic Freebring pressure to bear upon our government even
dom and its structural amendments and we hope the when we are aware that we are not being supplied it) will depend in no small measure upon what is—in fact—going on there now.
with the information nee ed to be judicious in our
quality of meetings will remain as coherent and intelan
In
decisions.
the
x'each-in
demonstrated
Fred J. Clifton
brief,
ligent in the coming year. The amendments to the constitution of the Senate are of primary concern to the
entire student body and ultimately to the whole acaFaculty Absence Deploreddemic community. The decision of the Senate to refuse
funds to any athletic organization was long in coming TO THE EDITOR
questions, every member of that department, inbut one which hopefully will do something to restore
cluding the Chairman, reneged.
It has always been my impression that the basic
the balance between athletics and other co-curricular
But the political scientists are not the only
university
gather
function
of
a
is
to
and
disseminate
activities. For all too long the athletic department has
ones guilty of disinterest on this campus, they arc
knowledge,
and
that
the
chief
function
of
the
faculneglected the intramural program and refused to serve
merely a glearing example of this disgusting disthe needs of the student body for diversified athletic ty of said institution is to help the student in his play of nothingness on the part of those, who we as
programs. This must cease! The Senate has supported pursuit of truth. If my impressions are correct, students, are supposed to “look up to” and respect.
SUNYAB has very little in the way of faculty. For
activities, like the Hockey Club, out of its activities I feel this persuit
In the past it has always been the student who has
is not confined to the classroom.
budget, to the great detriment of other, non-athletic The academic community should be a place of free been accused of being apathetic, but it appears that
activities, yet the Athletic Department receives almost interchange and mutual respect for ideas, and a new generation of student is being bred and the
three times more money from the activities fee than all opinion. There is no law stating that “in order faculty are not reseponding.
the non-athletic activities combined! This, indeed, must to contribute to an ongoing dialogue you must be
March 24, a similar “teach-in” was held, in
cease! The Athletic Department had better begin to ipso fact right, or shut up,” This is the low level which over 250 faculty members participated. Short
serve the needs of the campus rather than the needs of thinking exhibited by the faculty of this univerly after the U of M “teach-in” the University of
of a few “professional” teams. There had also better sity at this time.
Wisconsin conducted one with over 300 faculty
Minnebe a complete investigation with, perhaps, a campus
Last week there was an all night “teach-in” members in attendance, Berkeley, Columbia,
sota, Stanford, Princton, etc, etc., had faculty in
referendum on the amount of money used proportionon the vital and explosive issue of Viet Nam, conthe hundreds attending. If there were 25 faculty
ducted in a free and open manner. It seems to me
ally on athletics as opposed to non-athletic activities.
members from our distinguished university I would
that this was exemplary of what a university is all
be surprised. What makes this detestable to me is
about, scholars joining together to discuss a prob—

J

THE

lem with the hope that through intercourse ideas
might be crystalizcd. There was one thing missing

SPECTRUM

The official student
of fhe Slate University of New York at Buffalo.,
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
newspaper

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass't News Editor
Feature Editor
Spprts Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

Peter Rubm
Barbara Strauss
Trudy

Stern

Open to Applicants
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ann Orszulak
David Edelman

-

JEREMY TAYLOR
Business Manager
Business Mgr Elect
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
Photo Editor ’
Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor

Bernard Dikman
Mark Blumberg
Howard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander
Edward Josce'yn
William Siemering

S.

Staff
Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve
Schuelem, Steve Oberstein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro,

ffWtegrapliy Staff: David Collins, Pete Bonneau,
Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan
Al Gruber

Blank,

Circelatte*

Staff; Diane

Palmer, Lee Corey

jgAPQ
J

Lewis,

Jane Herbrand,

Feigin,

Subscription

S3-00

per

Stan

lichwala,

Steve

Harvey Starr

Ivan Makuch, Susan Worfman, Don
Waterman, Toby leder, Dave Fox,

E Hie Gold, Joyce Fenmore,

AXJ.‘ FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N. Y,
year,

circulation

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc , 420
Madison Avc , New York, N Y.

Corso Coverage Complimented

Dallas Garber

General Staff; Vicki Bugelski. Meryl Frank, Sharon Heend, Marion Michael, Debbie
Rubia, Scott Kurman, Jo Anne Leegant, Eileen Teifler, Sue Greene, Bill Cortes, Joey
Elm, Terry Davis, Helen Peters, Joan Fox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Giglia, Chuck
Cummings. Raymond Volpe, Jerome Taylor, Marsha Alt Margo Wallach, Alan GoldStem, Sue Zuckerberg, Sue Thomas, Mickey Drexler

Sports

the polihowever, the faculty. Where the hell
tical science department! To my knowledge there
was not one member of that department who spoke.
This is not the first time this department en masse
has stayed away from a discussion vital to the political interests of the students. When Apethekcr
came to speak I personally contacted every member of the department to sit on a pane! asking him

Mary Lot

.

/&lt;rQii£A\

that every faculty member knows better. There
should be an aura of guilt and self recrimination
shrouding those, who, for no good reason refuse to
take part in an exercise aiming at truth. This university or any other can not take its place with the
other greats as long as such an orientation is held
by “the guiding lights.” For a university is in the
final analysis only as good as its faculty, and this
is not merely confined to the classroom.
Robert C. Feldman

TO THE EDITOR
It is the purpose of this letter to compliment the
Spectrum as regards its coverage of last week’s

picket in protest to the firing-of Gregory Corso
As spokesman for the group which picketed in be-

half of Mr. Corso yet marched unaffiliated with the
larger Faculty-Student Committee for Academic
Freedom, I wish to express our appreciation of the
Spectrum's verbatim reprinting of the statement
of our principles, thereby avoiding any embarrassing confusion of motives and/or loyalties. In the
Same vein, however, I would make one further distinction: the fact that our group offered to picket
"not by any means to champion the right of a
Communist to teach at UB but by virtue of the inherent and universal apoliticality of the poet” does

not infer that it was the motive of the Faculty-Student Committee to actively champion that right
Rather, it was our intention in this statement
merely to inform the public that our picket was
based solely on what we considered Mr. Corso s
apoliticality and that, acting alone, the implies
tions of our picket did not extend any further than

such apolitical cases.

It is the reporting of contrary or. as in this
case, simply divergent opinions from those of the
Spectrum's editorial philosophy that insures the
fact that it is indeed possible to have both a philosophy committed editor and an objective and
truly representative press.
Vincent DiMarco

�Friday, April

16, 1965

gucinski

.

.

.

How To Prevent Cheating On Examinations: A Proposal

Cancellation
Bugelski Speaks Administration Denies
Of Classes For Religious Holidays
At Distinguished
representatives.
Lecturer Series
Dr. B. Richard Bugelski, professor of psychology has been
selected to speak at a Distin
guished Lecturer Series sponsored by the educational psychology department at New York
University.
Dr. Bugelski, who is also director of psychological laboratories at the University, discussed “Imagery in Learning."
Thursday, at NYU. His talk in
eluded recent experimental work
in learning at one trip!.

Dr. Bugelski is a graduate of
Yale University and has taught
at Antioch College and the University of Toledo. He is the
author of The Psychology of
Learning” and “The Psychology
of Learning Applied to Teach
mg.”

Next Senate meeting
will be Tuesday, April
20th in Norton Union. An
amendment on referendum and inititative will be

considered.

rjCetterA

to

the Editor

One must not be too hasty, when committing
oneself to a cause and acting out one’s commitment

via the picket-line without due investigation.

Make certain the company you keep in the line
isn't composed of persons whose backgrounds would,
if made known to you, suggest rather strongly that
you and your placard take up a position across the
street or at some distance so as to make obvious

(for you) examine the credentials of the organiza(s) or the group of persons under which you
plan to march and publicly associate yourself.

As a fellow student I submit to you this admon ition. For your own calculated welfare, take heed!!!
The unexamined life," you may come to find, “is
not wor th living.”
..

Alan S. Roseubaum

Center Lounge Closing Questioned
TO THE EDITOR:
As most of us have probably realized by now,
there seems to be something missing when we

walk through Norton Union. The usual gathering
of students discussing the day’s events (among
other things) is conspicuously absent. What then,
is the reason for this?
The reason is simply that the Center Lounge,
which had been the scene of last week’s art exhibition, is still closed (as of Wednesday). And
why is it still closed?
There is no tangible reason; for the aesthetic
display of yesterweek is gone, with few requests
for a curtain call. Only some of its remnants
remain, which could have been removed if an
effort was made, and the center lounge could
have been opened. Why hasn’t this effort been
made?
It seems as though the administration, which

has frowned upon the fraternities’ use of the
lounge in the past, is unnecessarily depriving them
of one of the few places on campus where they
are able to meet together informally and doubtlessly the most popular.
When placed

in a broader context, this ac

tion or rather inaction
general attitude of the
of UB as well as the
towards fraternities (the

does indeed reflect the
administrative hierarchy
State University system,
issue is currently being

disputed in the courts).

Until such time as the courts decide on the
of fraternities at UB, we implore the administration not to try to discourage or hinder
the fraternity system in any way, no matter how
trivial it may seem, for fraternities are indeed
an integral part of college life for the many stu
dents who are a part of them.

status

Allan Scholom

Is Liberty Really Liberty?
THE EDITOR

During the debate on the Feinberg ResoluDon at the Tuesday evening Student Senate meeting, a
number of senators strongly opposed both
the Feinberg Law and the certificate which members of the faculty of state institutions are required to sign.
They asserted that such a requirement abridged “freedom.” I contend that
these well-meaning individuals have some how
eut off “freedom” from the real w’orld.
A

As Mr. Goldberg stated, the government has
right and duty .to protect itself and its citizens

from forces which would overthrow the freedom
was founded upon. Indeed, the preamble of
the federal constitution dedicates “the People of
’be United States . . . to , . . provide for the
common defence, promote the general welfare,
a od secure the blessings
of liberty to ourselves
d

and

our posterity

. .

.

Men generally avoid the logical undertakself-defeating actions. It seems foolish to

lng of

"Dear Dr. Kaiser:

The Executive Committee of the
Student Senate requests that
classes be cancelled Friday, April 16, 1965, which is the date of
Good Friday as well as the First
Seder. We believe this emergency action is necessary for the
welfare of out-of-town students
who will be traveling home for
these religious holidays, as well
as for all students Who cannot attend classes' for religious reasons.
Since many instructors will cancel their own classes on- this day,
a uniform policy would be more
equitable for all concerned.
In addition to this Executive
Committee request for immediate
action, this matter will be brought
before the Student Senate at the
next meeting, April 6, 1965,
Thank you for your attention.
Sincerely,

Ellen Cardone,
19650966

Secretary,

Student Association

SUNYAB"
Although The World Almanac
for 1965 states that the First Seder for the Jewish year 5725 is
tomorrow, the Seder begins at
sundown today. With the cancel
ling of today’s classes, it is doubt

The UB Council of . Religious
Organizations was of the general
opinion that classes should meet
at usual today, and questioned

tion

uphold any principle to the extent that it has
potentially the power to subvert itself; to sanction
educators associated with the Coriimunist movement to teach in state institutions is indeed such
a subversion, since it would permit the propa
gation of ideas Contrary to the aims of government through the very medium of that government.
Some might logically argue that to abridge in
way the freedom which our government is
dedicated to is, in effect, already a destruction of
that freedom, since any principle must needs be

any

a unified absolute, and that to restrict academic
freedom in the manner of the Feinberg Law, is
in essence a denial that academic freedom exists.
This view, however, is wholly devoid of the prac
tical. It is useless to declare the enforcement of a
principle to be beneath the principle itself.
Edward J. Joscelvn

mittee after consultation with student
I appreciate your interest in
this matter.

Sincerely yours,

A, L. Kaiser,
Director”

Committee:

either.

your intention of dissociation. At least, sufficiently

TO THE EDITOR:

Since SUNYAB does not recess
for religious holy days, the Student Senate made the following request in a letter to Dr. Kaiser, Chairman of the Calendar

ful that “out-of-town students"
will attend tomorrow’s classes

A Word to the Wise

TO

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

the need for “emergency action”.
It was also agreed that students
should be able to cut classes in
order to attend religious observances without being penalized.
Dr. Kaiser replied:
‘Dear Miss Cardone

This is in reply to your letter
of March 30.

I have informally sought the
advice of the University academic
deans and there is no disposition
on our part to make any change
in the University Calendar for
1964-65.
The calendar is established and
was set up by the Calendar Com-

The phrase, ", . . there in no
."
imdisposition on our part
plies that if there was ‘disposition" on the part of the Calendar

Committee, “emergency action”
could have been taken to cancel
classes.
Further action by the Senate
was tabled indefinitely at the

April 6 meeting.

All New York State colleges
and universities are required by
Article I, paragraph 4, subsections
El, E2 and J4 of Regulations of
the Commissioner of Education of
the State of New York, to schedule at least 88 days for classes
and examinations per semester.
These regulations deal with the
number of weeks of instruction
needed to receive a certain number of hours of college credit. On
the basis of a student’s taking 16
hours of courses for 8 semesters
to get a degree, a minimum of 88
days of classes and examinations
are required for each semester.
There are 88 Vi days of school
scheduled this semester (Saturdays are counted as half-days),
and any day cancelled would
have to be made up at another
time during the semester. Since
Commencement is Sunday, May
30, 1965, further delay would push
it into June.
The Calendar Committee wishes
the students to note that three
full months of summer vacation
are made available under the
present calendar for summer jobs
or twelve weeks of Summer Session.

The Calendar Committee is of
the opinion that the student
whose observance of a significant
religious holy day results in his
absence from class should inform
his instructor in advance of the
holy day. An instructor receiving
several such notices is not likely
to give an exam that day. The
Committee also advocates that an
instructor who wishes to observe
such a religious holy day is obligated to get a substitute instructor to teach in his absence.
This issue leads us back to the
same old question, “How much
power should the students have
in the administration of the university?”

Proposed Amendment For
Referendum And Initiative
Whereas the purpose o{ student government is to fairly and effec
lively implement the student will; and
Whereas any government elected for a fixed term, particularly one in
which the majority of members do not stand for re-election, is less
than fully responsive to the will of the electorate after election.
Be it resolved that the Constitution and By laws of the Student Association be amended in the following manner to provide a more
equitable expression of student will in the action of the association.
Delete Part 1, Article V, Section 2, "at least thirty days in
advance of the annual election"
Delete Part 1, Aritcle V, Section 2," at the time of the next
annual election” and insert “within three weeks of the date of

presentation of the petition"
Insert Part 1, Article V, Section 2, after in said general election, “provided the total number of students voting shall exceed 10% of the day time student body."
Add new section 3. Concurrent procedure
,
If an amendment proposed as prescribed in above section 1
is- not passed, a majority vote of the senate may submit it to
the student body in general referendum within 3 weeks of
the date of such a vote. The amendment may be adopted in
the same
prescribed in above Section 2.
Insert in the By laws Part 1, a new Article VI. Student Initiative
Any type of regular legislation, with the exception of financial
allocations, may be proposed by petition of at least 100 students to the Student Senate Such proposals shall be considered
at the first regular meeting following receipt of the petition.
Insert in the By laws Part 1. a new Article VII. Student Referendum

The right of referendum shall be extended to cover any type
of regular legislation, with the exception of financial
allocation, in the same manner as provided for amendments in the
constitution, Part 1, Article V, Section 2.
Add to By laws Part 2. Article VI, after "Article V, Section 1

�Friday, April 16, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs
MFC Summer
Registration Set
For Next Week

THE OPEN FORUM

This year marks the first time
that day students will be able to
pre-register for summer evening
classes. Dean Robert F. Berner announced that during the week of
April 26-30 students currently enrolled in any day school division
may complete all registration arrangements through Millard Fillmore College. He pointed out that
any course, regardless of course
number or level, will be open

Intellectually Al ive Student:
Not So Rare a Breed
Behind

Professor

Den

Van

that
Berghe’s fervent
there must be “something wrong
with the students,” I seem to detect a rather too convenient form
of type casting. The campus seems
to consist only of the rare student
interested in “truly” engaging in
"intellectual discourse" with his

professor (just 4 or 5 of these
albinos have shown up in 8 years
of Professor Van Den Berghe’s
teaching), all other students (who
are interested only in what Professor Van Den Bcrghe chooses to
call “frivolities") and all “popu
lar” teachers, who are occupied
not with intellect, but with emotions, morals, therapy and fatherfiguring, By contrast, the “literally hungry” student in India,
Egypt, or Bolivia, is pronounced
“more alive intellectually.”
This sort of categorizing suggests something much different

from what its proponent intendthat his brand of certified
“intellectual” discourse is not reed:

warding to the student who can

afford to slide through college,
or drop out, and still have a good
chance of making more than a
subsistence salary. When students
have that much real choice, they
seem by and large to regard “in

telleclual discourse”
defined
in the purely traditional manner
preferred by Professor Van Den
Bcrghe
to be pretty sterile. Hut
—

the students arc probably just
bringing out a weakness lhal was

there all along. "Intellectual”
needs some radical redefining,
such as that proposed by John

Dewey. Once the narrow view of
teaching as the imparting of a
"specialized competence" for pay
is dropped, the equally narrow
classification of student life as
"frivolities" will also clear up
nicely. And “intellectual discourse" will become ever so much
more "alive.”
For my part, I can only report
that in a good deal less than eight
years, I've found a good many
more than four or five serious
students. (Unfortunately. I must
also report that Faculty members, whose interests seem to be
mainly in such areas as promotions, small talk, prestige, gracious thinking, power, and publication, arc often not willing to engage seriously in matters of intel-

lectual. human, relevance.)
Another convenience in Profes-

sor Van Den Berghc’s position
a convenience at least to the ad
ministrator or junior executive
who needs to believe that by ship

to day students, subject only to

the usual limitations on class size
in certain courses. Over seventyfive courses are available in Arts
and Sciences, Business Administration, and Engineering subjects.
A total enrollment of 2,800 students is predicted in MFC, which
will easily make ours one of the
ARTHUR EFRON

ping non-publishers off to places
where they can neither do research nor teach properly he is
doing a service to the world
is
that publishing and teaching may
occur together, “harmoniously.”
That could be true in a place
where one wasn't encouraged to
grind out every scrap that some
editor might accept, but the only
harmony I ever hear about these
days is the kind where the course
is fashioned in such a way as
to parcel out the professor’s research project to the students,
whose labors will duly appear in
print, somewhere, often without
their knowing about this fresh
development on the “frontiers of
knowledge" (Van Den Berghe’s

issue.

wording).

Perhaps the most convenient
hit of type-casting of all is that
in which "society as a whole"
appears in the role of a noble entity making sacrifices for the dis-

semination and increase of “knowledge" just means more function
aries who dispense further professional skills and still more
“specialized competence," 1 can-

not understand what society this
statement refers to. The one I’ve
been immersed in seems to oper
ate on the premise that the less
critical intellect in its members,
the better. In fact, it is this very
"collectivity at large,” (which
Professor Van Den Berghe wishes
all of us to serve) that insures
that decisions about University
faculty will be made on a basis
which would have pleased Sinclair lewis' Babbitt.

Dr. M a r v i n Zimmerman will speak Monday
at 3:00 p.m. in the Conference Theater. The suhjeet will he: “Is Pacifism
and Non-Violence, an illusion. a delusion or just
naivete." All are welcome.

GRADUATES

—

Hungry? Poor? Deprived?

COME TO G.S.A. PICNIC
FOR

—

Vi B B 0 Chicken, Tossed Salad,

Cole Slaw, Roll &amp; Butter,
Cake, Coffee-Tea-Milk

SUNDAY, APRIL 25
1:00 PM.

TOWNIES.'

Private Ear and the Public Eye

AKRON FALLS PARK
(That's right out Main St.)

Drama Dept. Plays

,

The Department of Drama and
Speech and Student Dramatic Society's production of Peter Shaffer’s The Private Ear and The
Public Eye will give four performances this coming week in
Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, April
24. Tickets are no on sale for
all performances at both the
Norton Union ticket booth and

the Baird box office.
The double bill of British satires culminates a most successful year of university theater
which included the presentation
of Conrad Bromberg’s The Defense of Taipei and Jean Genet’s
The Balcony. Directing Shaffer’s
popular plays is Mrs, Julia Pardee who earlier this season supervised the Studio Theater's
rendreing of Chekov’s Three Sisters. Thomas Brennan of New
York's Actor’s Studio, who directed The Balcony which was
seen last month in Baird Hall,
plays principal roles in both
The Private Ear and The Public

Eye. Joining Mr. Brennan in the
casts of the plays are Ronda

Thomas Brennan and Ronda Lyon add spice to ‘Private Ear and
Public Eye'
Photo by Ivan Makuch
Lyon, Jeanette Veling, Gary Batis $1.50. General admission costs
taglia, and William Cortes.
$2.50. All tickets may be reserved
Student tickets for The Private
through the Baird box office by
Ear and The Public Eye are 75 telephone. The Baird box office
cents, the faculty and staff rate number is 831-3408.

WEEKLY CALENDAR

;

.

.

.

APRIL 16-23

TODAY—
pianist, Butler Aud, of Capen
5:15 p.m. Music: Haydn's
Hall.
I “Seven Last Words,” directed TUESDAY—
2:00 p.m. Concert: Buffalo
I by Hans Vigeland,, Westmin.

I
.

I
I

I

—

ster Presbyterian Church.
Philharmonic, music for young8:00 p.m. Music: “Faure Resters 4 to 11, works of Beethovquiem,” directed by Carol
en, Ives-Schuman, Haydn, etc.
Kleinhans Music Hall,
Hoffman, Presbyterian Church,
Lafayette Ave.
WEDNESDAY—
8:00 p.m. Music: Ernest Bloch's
8:30 p.m. Plays: “The Private
“Sacred Service," directed by
Ear” and' “The Public Eye,”
Barbara
Wagner,
by Peter Shaffer, Baird Hall.
Unitarian
Tickets available at Baird or
Universalist Church, 695 Elm-

wood.
I TOMORROW—
|

—

"LOOK, NEXT EASTER VACATION,
DRIVE, AND
HANDLE THE

—

—

F re slim a n orientation
group leaders needed now.
Applications are now being
accepted. Pick up applications at the Candy Counter.

ten best-lighted (and populated)
campuses in the country during
evening hours this summer. Details of the advance registration
arrangements can be found in the
“Official Bulletin” section of this

1
I
(

I

.

1

10:30 am. Film: “F. D. R.—
Term to Pearl Harbor,”
Historical Society Building.

Third

Norton Ticket Booth, contin-

uing through April 24,
8:30 p.m. Play: 'The Physicists,” a comedy directed by
Donald Wildly, Studio Theater, call TT 6-6850 for tickets,
continuing through May 1,

SUNDAY—
8:30 p.m. Entertainment: Singers and entertainers Chayele THURSDAY'—
Luxemburg and Mordcha Rot3:00 p.m. Convocation: Gregory Markopoulous, film distein, and violinist Rivka Man-

delkern., Jewish Center.

rector.

MONDAY—
CONTINUING EXHIBITS—8.00 p.m. Concert: Goris Kroyt,
Norton Union: The works of
•
violist of the Budapest Quar
Rose Marie Law, graduate stuand Norma Bertolami,
dent, Norton 231.
I tet,

|

Carlton House; 60 Carlton, oil
paintings by Carl Illig, ends
April 18.

Sisti Galleries: 469 Franklin.
Landscapes in oils and group

of mixed media and

drawings

by Fred Weininger, ends April

18.
Jewish Center: Recent printand drawings by Frank Eck
main, ends April 20.
ASC Gallery: 615 Englewood
“Trees and Barns," 70 water
colors by Ethel M. C. Davis.
Filmart: 637 Main, Photog
raphy by John El. Storr, ma
rine biologist on U. B. faculty
ends April 2.

Historical Society Bldg.: “N*
Power,” collection of 23(
drawings, sketches, and watei
colors by Lewis Diera, end;

agara

April 30.
Bach

Festival

Art

Exhibit:

People interested in entering
exhibit contact Gerald Matrosin Spectrum office.

�Friday, April

16, 1965

—l/^eiiaiouA
INTER-VARSITY

CHRISTIAN

FELLOWSHIP
meetings are

Praver

being

p.m. and
held Tuesday at 3:30
Thursday at 4:30 p.m. There are
at 9:00
also Bible studies Friday
3:00 p.m.
am. and Monday at
the CRO
These are Ml held in
Office, Room 217, of Norton

Union.
The

,

.

.

Seminar conducted by
WitBruce Haan on “Personal
nessing," will meet for its last
p.m.
session Wednesday at 4:00
In Room 344 of Norton Union.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is also sponsoring a series
of lectures on the Old Testament.
These are conducted by Mr. San
Marco, Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in
Room 266 of Norton Union. The
last two studies will be held
April 27 and May 4,
,

GAMMA

DELtA

Gamma Delta will meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m, in Room 344
of Norton Union. Topics to be
discussed include next autumn’s
Pops Concert at Kleinhans Music
Hall and money to be raised for
the Gamma Delta International
Mission Project in India.
A social hour in the Rathskeller will follow the meeting. Commuters will be eating together
in the Rathskeller at 5:30 p.m.
Gamma Delta will close the
school year with a picnic, Saturday, May 8, in Akron Falls Park.
Cars will be leaving from Norton Union at 1:00 p.m. Reservations must be in to Bill Startt
by the May 5 meeting. Any officer may be contacted concerning
details about the picnic.

NEWMAN
Lauriston Scaife, the Bishop of
the Episcopal Diocese of Buffalo
and the head of St. Paul’s Cathedral, will speak at the meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Norton 335. Bishop Scaife will discuss the “Similarities and Dif-

—

ferences between
ean and Catholic
special invitation
Canterbury Club

the Episcopal-

from P.

1)

will be the crowning of the queen
of Spring Weekend 1965.

Tickets for these two events

are available in a “package deal”
which will include free passes
to the
movies. The movies which
will be shown are “The Ugly
American starring Marlon Bran-

The annual spring picinc is
scheduled for Sunday, April 25.
at Chestnut Ridge Park. Cars
will leave Newman Hall at 1:30
p.m. Sign up at Newman Hall

by Wednesday if you want to at-

tend. The $1.00 admission includes hot dogs, beer, pop, potatoe chips anti the like.
The Closing Banquet will be
held at the Hallmark Manor on
Main near Amherst Wednesday,
April 28, at 6:30 p.m. Tickets
may be purchased from Mrs,
O’Connor at Newman Hall by
Monday. The cost is $2.50. The
1965-1966 officers will be announced at this banquet.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
SCA and Wesley are sponsoring two Good Friday services today at 12:10 p.m. and 3:10 p.m,
at the University Presbyterian
Church (Main St. and Niagara
Falls Blvd., across from campus).
Services will last no more than
half an hour.

weekend Rev. John A.
Buerk and seven SCA members
attended the Spring Assembly of
the Student Christian Movement
in NYS at the Thornfield Conference Center in Cazenovia. Mr.
Curtis Crawford, a lecturer on
U. S. foreign policy, Unitarian
minister, and instructor in philosophy at NYU, spoke on hte
various aspects of war and peace
in the contemporary world situa
tion. Students from various colleges in NYS participated in discussions, worship, and recreation.
The last SCA meeting this year
will be a eookout Thursday,
April 23 at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Rev. Buerk, 49 Heath
St. There will be no charge for
supper, but please make reservations at TF 6-5806.
Last

do, to be shown Tuesday, and
“Carry on, Nurse” to be shown
Wednesday, Both films will have
showings in the Conference Theater at 10, 12, 3, 5:30, 7:30 and
9:30. Tickets are available in
the ticket booth for the “Ugly
American” for 25 cents and for
“Carry

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Religions." A

is extended to
members.

Spring Weekend Activities
(Cont'd

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

On, Nurse” for 10 cents.

no cover charge or minimum

JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
SAM NOTO
PLAYBOY’S TOP JAZZ TRUMPET
nominee and star performer with:
COUNT BASIE
STAN KENTON
WOODY HERMAN

The Official Bulletin is an authorised publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General Notices
University College Students (except Nursing Students): All University College Students, except
those on strict academic probation, will register for next semester according to the following
alphabetical schedule:
April 19 - April 24—B, F
April 26 - April 30 —W, G
May 3 - May 7—P, C
Students will make appointments with the University College
Receptionist in Diefendorf 114
one week in advance of the above

scheduled times. At this time, the

Receptionist will give the student
registration cards and a list of

instructions to follow in the subsequent registration procedures.
O.T. and P.T. students will make
appointments with Miss Green
man and Miss Heap directly. Nurs
ing Students are advised through
the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
times, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym, on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance register during the
scheduled publicized times. If the
Quality Point Average of such
students improves to such a degree that they become eligible to
continue in school, they will be
informed in June, after semester
grades are in, concerning later
registration dates. Students in

this category, however, who wish
to see their advisers are encouraged to do so. It would be helpful if these students could make
an appointment during the alphabetically scheduled times, but, if
the problem is pressing, they can
make an appointment at any time.
Advance Registration Schedule
for Day Students Taking MFC
Summer Evening Classes: Students currently registered in any
day school division may pre-register for Millard Fillmore College
1965 summer evening courses
during the week of April 26-30
only. Registration materials and
instructions will be issued in
Hayes Hall on the Third Floor
hallway. Materials will be issued
mornings only, between 9:00 a m.

•

Your I .D Card
is Worth 10% at

•

.

•

Will Perform FriSat., Sun., Nite at the

(Zeldmans

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

Parking in Rear

490 Pearl Street

SUN 9pm
Buffalo’s Top Jazz Show!

By Papular Demand...

JAM SESSION

to

?

Sfacd
BOULEVARD MALL

and noon, and collected afternoons of the same day only, between 1:00 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. on
a strictly alphabetical basis as
follows, according to the initial
letter of the student’s last name.
A thru C—Monday, April 26
D thru J—Tuesday, April 27
K thru M—Wednesday, April 28

N thru R—Thursday, April 29
S thru Z—Friday, April 30
Day students who wish to take
summer evening classes, but who
do not register in advance, must
attend the regular registration for
all summer evening courses which
will be held in Clark Gymnasium
on Thursday, June 3, from 6:30
p.m, to 8:30 p.m.
Summer Session:

Registration

forms for the 1965 Summer Session (day courses) may be obtained in the Office of Admissions
and Records, Room 201, Hayes
Hall, beginning Monday, April 19.

registering through

the

Students
Graduate School must secure
their registration cards and in-

structions in Acheson 103. Students in other Graduate divisions
(Education, Business Administration, Social Welfare) may secure
forms in Hayes 201.
Advance registration for the
Summer Session may be completed between April 19 and May 21
in the Office of Admissions and
Records.

Weekly

Calendar

April 16
Foster Lecture Series on Chemistry: featuring Professor Aharon

Kalchalsky, Polymer Department,

Weizmann Institute of Science,
Rehovot, Israel, speaking on “Polyelectrolyte Theory and Membrane Biophysics.’’ Last in the
series of lectures will he held in
Acheson Hall, Room 70, at 4:30

p.m. on the subject “Biophysical
Application of Membrane Thermodynamics.”
Psychiatric Research Seminar:
with Dr. Hans-Lukas Tcuber, Professor and Health Department of
Psychology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Massachusetts, on the subject “The

Frontal Lobes and Their Function,’ at Meyer Memorial Hospital, 12:30 p.m.
April 19
Concert—-presented by the Department of Music featuring Boris Kroyt (viola) and Norma Bcrtolami (piano) in Capen Hall at
8:30 p.m.
April 21 24
—

—

The Private Affair and The
Public Eye —r presented by the
Department of Drama and Speech,
two one-act comedies. General admission: $2.50, faculty and staff:
$1.50, University and area students: $.75, to be held in Baird
Hall at 8:30 p.m. For reservations

telephone 831-3408.
April 21 May 7
by the DepartArt Exhibit
ment of Art featuring painting
by Rose Marie Law, Graduate
Student, in Norton Hall, room
231.
April 23-30
-

—

—

—

Archaelogical Exhibit
in the
second floor display cases, Norton Hall.
April 23
Modern Languages Lecture Ser—

—

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS
and quickly’
“Learn

to

drive safely,

Amherst Driving School
FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP
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Pre-Permit Classes

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Refresher Courses

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•

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

-

Dual Controls

Viners Loafers
Betas Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots

and many other brands

ies;

Jcan-Jacques Mayoux, Profes-

sor of Comparative Literature,
The Sorbonne, currently Visiting

Professor Harvard University, will
speak in French on “Samuel Beckett," in Diefendorf Hall, room
148, at 4:30 p.m.

Placement
Announcements
General Electric Company;
Open positions have been an
nounced by the General Electric
Company, for Mathematics majors
or Science majors with a Mathe-

matics minor. Candidates will
work with scientists and engineers
in analyzing, Interpreting and presenting mathematical data. Application blanks and further information are available at the University Placement Services.
Social Service Worker; A Gen-

esee County organization has an
opening for a Social Service
Worker, Candidates must have a
Master’s Degree in Social Work.
The position would, in a short
period of time, enable a qualified
person to become Director of the
Social Service Department. For
further information, contact the
University Placement Services.
County
Nursing:
The Erie
Health Deparement is seeking a
male registered nurse. If interested, contact Mr. George Binner
of the University Placement Services.
Position Acceptance Form; All
registrants who have accepted
positions are reminded to return
the position acceptance form as
soon as possible. This information
is necessary for deactivating your
placement file and developing statistics regarding placement for
the benefit of future graduates.
The Aerospace Systems Division of WiflCht Patterson Air
Force Base, Omo. urgently needs
additional candidiases in Electrical/Electronic and Aerospace cn
gineering disciplines toiill projected quotas. Applications from

all interested
in these disciplines

We

invited.

For further information, contact
the University Placement Services,

Vacancies: Notification of position vacancies are now being
received in the placement office
in increasing numbers. If you are
an on-campus active candidate,
please obtain such information
from the Educational Placement
Division in Schoellkopf Hall; offcampus active candidates will automatically be sent notifications
of appropriate vacancies.

PLACEMENT
INTERVIEWS

April 16
Eric County Savings Bank
April 19
—

—

New York Life Insurance Co.

The Superior Design Co.,
April 20

Inc.

—

Price Waterhouse, Inc.
Blaw-Knox Corporation, CopesVulcan Division

April 22

—

The Bendix Corp.

—

Scintilla

Division, Sidney, New York
April 30
Roche Laboratories, Inc.
—

For interview appointment or
information, please call (31-3311,
University Placement Services,

Schoellkopf Hall.

�After a typical three month run, the Amherst seems
to have come to the conclusion that How to Murder Your
Wife is no longer a potential money-maker and consequently, the heralded adventure movie The Train started
Wednesday. I’ve had the feeling that this city desperately neeeded a good blood-and-guts adventure story for
quite some time and I’ve been looking forward to seeing
The Train and reviewing it, but unfortunately, the copy
deadline is Tuesday night. So much for that this week
anyway. However, an event of equal importance has occurred. For the first time in my lengthy and spotted career as a movie critic, something that I’ve written has
upset someone enough to elicit a letter. To be sure, it
isn’t a very elaborate complaint, but I am delighted to
have engaged anyone’s interest. 1 also consider this a
great improvement over the type of “criticism” I usually
receive. For instance, Jerry Taylor introduced me to a casual acquaintance of his the other day in the Ratheskeller

and the fellow said: “Your name sounds familiar . . you
write the movie column, don’t you? I think your stuff is
terrible and you don’t know anything about movies.’’
Perhaps I’ve left myself open to this type of churlish
behavior by never stating concretely my criteria for a
successful movie. I feel that an academic exercise of that
sort would invariably be rather boring and pretty irrelevant for most people. I’ve also felt that a general philosophy towards the possibilities of film as art might begin
to emerge from my comments on the various films which
I have discussed. I would like to think that my attitude
is eccentric but not idiosyncratic, iconoclastic but not
totally inconsistent, and that I have been generally responsible to a developing concept of taste. However, I
will certainly concede that a person reading any column
at random might find some of my comments or judgments
flippant, far-fetched, fatuous or even fat-headed. Perhaps
I will be able to clarify myself by discussing the complaints which my correspondent has raised.
The letter—completely reproduced^—reads as follows:
Dear Sir,
What exactly does Mr. Lewis mean by My Fair Lady
being not “much more than a dramatized stage play?”
.

yours faithfully,

Alicia M. Kovzeuiowjke
First of all, I believe that I dealt with the matter at
some length when 1 reviewed the movie in the February
19 edition of this paper. To re-state myself for Miss Kovzeuiowjke’s edification, I imght point out, first, that
George Cukor, who “directed” the screen version, built
the largest indoor stage in history to house his production. Then, he proceeded to re-create the play on this
stage. The result of his efforts is a photographed stage
play
just that. The outdoor scenes don’t look like
“the outdoors.” The entire set-up of the movie lacks the
essential touch of disorder and spontaneity that marks
the world we live in. Everything is too well planned. The
choreography resembles a series of precise troop maneuvers. The essence of this kind of art is that it should
be so well planned that it doesn’t look planned. The effect
should be one of the utter artlessness, almost as if the
camera were eavesdropping. In My Fair Lady, the entire
scheme is one of obvious preparation. Everything is in
place and everyone moves precisely on cue. That’s often
Unavoidable on stage, but the movies can and should do
more.
Now I don't want to suggest that My Fair Lady isn’t
effective, good entertainment. It certainly is. However,
it didn’t begin to take advantage of the resources of the
medium and I found it rather disappointing for this reason. As for Cukor winning the academy award, I was appalled. The introduction of status into anything is not
praise-worthy and the way Cukor played it safe by copying a sure thing is one of the reasons why Hollywood is
slowly suffocating in its own fetid juices. In any event,
Miss Kovzeuiowjke, I was delighted to hear from you and
I would like to encourage anyone else remotely interested
in what I’ve been saying to send along any comments or
complaints. 1 am sensitive to criticism, no matter what
the tone of this column may suggest.
—

University Delicatessen
and Restaurant
Open for the Holidays
SERVING COMPLETE PASSOVER MEALS

IF 2-1456

Spectrum Cdaii (J3oard
ART EXHIBIT
Law

Rosemarie
Cornelissen
will have an exhibition of landscapes in oil, water color, and
tempera from Thursday through
April 29 (10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.

weekdays; 1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday) at Norton
Hall. Room 231. The exhibit is
a studio thesis, in partial fulfillment for her M.A. in Humanities.
She received a B.S. in art education from the Albright Art
School and UB in 1938.
Mrs. Law, resides in Cattaraugus, a small; village 50 miles
south of Buffalo in the Allegcny foothills. Her husband, a
physician, graduated from UB
medical school in 1938. They have

24, at 7:30 p.m. at Eduardo’s
on Bailey Ave. Free pizza and
beer, “Big Mac” will be in concert.

IPPON CLUB

The first official meeting of
the Ippon Club will take place

BOCCE

on Monday, April 19, in Room
244 Norton at 4:00 p.m. All students interested in learning Judo, the art of self-defense, are in-

TF 3-1344

vited to attend.

four children. Mrs. Law is the

daughter of the late Arnold Cor-

nelissen, well-known Buffalo
composer and former conductor
of the Buffalo Symphony Orchestra.
ASME CONFERENCE
The ASME student chapter at

UB will travel to Union College
in Schenectady, April 23-24 to
attend an annual event where
mechanical engineering student
members present technical papers. The prizes which are won
are donated to the winner’s
school to aid mechanical engineering students.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB

The International Club would
again like to invite all students
and faculty to the International
“Fiesta” which will be held in

the Fillmore Room in Norton
Hall, Saturday, April 24, at 7:30
p.m. Preparations are on their
way under the direction of Art
Woodhead.
Admission charge, which includes all food and entertainment, for members and non
members is $1.50.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
CLUB
There will be no meeting of
the Occupational Therapy Club
this week. Elecitons of officers
will take place from Sunday to
Friday, April 23. The ballots
may be left at MacDonald Dormitory, Room 310.

'BURT LANCASTER

PERSONNEL COMMITTEE

Applications for Personnel
Committee are available at any
time in the Union Board Office.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club today, in Room
262 Norton at 4:00 p.m.
RUSE

Returnees to University Education will hold a meeting in
Room 224 Monday at 11:45. Dean
Scudder, Dean of Women, will
speak to the group.
SKI CLUB

The Ski Club will hold a party
for its members Saturday, April

brewed for brave 8

1945

UNION BOARD
MIXER COMMITTEE
presents a Dance, Friday.
April 23, in the MultiPurpose Room from 8
p.m.-12 a.m. Music is In
the “Interludes.” Refreshments will he served.

‘

IMiMS 3aS®Sf ILHWUU

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Friday, April 16,

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

NOW

PLAYING I

..phwvk

�Friday, April 16, 1965

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Music Scheduled Senate Selects Committee Chairmen
to

Chamber

hear the viola at its best, is at
Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall,

week the music departSUNYAB presents a reat
me t
Boris Kroyt. violinist
bv
t
"

Monday.

01

Budaember of the resident
with assist'
Quartet),
String
P est t jsts Norma Bertolami (wife
Department Chairman
f Music
piano and SherII p Sapp) on
Associan Friedland (Creative
"r,
The program conaU on clarinet.
Schumann’s Marchenersists of

from P. 1)
chairman Jeffrey Lewis. Rena
iFsh, a past senator, was nominated for the floor. In the course
of debate, Peter Ostrow, CRO

(Cont'd

Next weekend (April 23-24)
chamber music enthusiasts will
find concerts of chamber music, at representative, supported Miss
Butler Auditorium also. Friday, Fish since he felt
the chairman
Apr. 23, the Creative Associates of
the Activities Committee
are featured in contemporary should not allow his personal in
works by Dahl, Shapero (notably terest to interfere with the recSongs on Poems of E. E. Cumognition of clubs. He gave parmings and Trio for Violin, Viola ticular reference to the recogniand Cello), and Shapey. A cham tion of the Republican Club of
ber ensemble from Fredonia will SUNYAB as opposed to the treatbe guest artists the following Satment of the Young Republican
urday.
Club. A pointed exchange followed in which Mr. Lewis denied any favortism or inefficiency during his tenure. After
further exchange a vote was
held by secret ballot. Since the
(USA KINDRED THAT IS)
11-11-3 result was inconclusive,
Vanguard Recording Artist
a second ballot was held and Mr.
and
Lewis was elected 12 112.
FOLKSINGER

°

h lu„en 0 p. 132; Hindemith’s
Sapp’s First
Sonata op 11, no. 4;
viola Sonata (1948); and Mozart’s
This fine
Trio No 7 in E Minor.
opportunity for those who want

t-

LISA'S
BACK

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

partner i peii, ~3nc.

EXTRAORDINAIDE!

’

(isl

Opening Wed., April 21

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Delaware)

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Mm

ASTRUD GILBERTO
Who with Stan Geti sold over
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Nominated for Best Artist
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Best Female Vocal
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M

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Thank You for

Opening Monday, April 26:

JOHN HENDRICKS

g(P5l

APRIL
23
ANNUAL

Tonight CHI OMEGA will hold
a flower-stuffing party at the
apartment. AH wishing to help
are urged and welcome to come.
The pledge class is raffling a
dinner for two at the Executive.
Tickets are available from any
pledge.
GAMMA PHI regrets that bad
weather forced the postponement of the Greek Olympiad. It
will be held Sunday, April 25.
TAU
is
KAPPA EPSILON
holding a closed semi-formal dinner party tomorrow evening at
the Seagram Tower. This Easter
dinner will be served at 8:00
p.m.

THETA CHI FRATERNITY
celebrated the one hundred and
ninth anniversary of the fraternity's founding last Friday in
the Fillmore Room.

Starting with this issue the
Spectrum will attempt to run a

UNIVERSITY

BOOKSTORE
“On Campus”

classified section. Its success will
depend upon the cooperation received from the students.—Ed.

APARTMENTS
June 1 to Sept.
APT. TO LET
1. Entirely furnished. 2 bedrooms, basement, Eree swimming
club on premises. Call 837-6889
—

evenings.

FOR SALE

CRST-4S*

■

While Roadster
FIAT 1500
Sports Car with Oscar Engine,
Steering
Tachometer, Wood
Wheel, Stick Shift, 4-speeds forward, 1 reverse, transistor radio,
heater. Appraised $1100, make
offer. TH 50272.

3K5fiMflr*A*ir MM

Holiday Greetings
to

party

at Kissing Bridge. Swimming and
dancing will be the order of the
evening.

7:30-9:30

I

OME-

SPRING CLASSIFIED
-ADSSALE

GOLDWHISKERSI

watching

on the Danny Kaye Show
April 7.
—Astrud

me

I428HERTEL AVE.«TF6-74II M
EXCLUSIVE HORTU SIDE SHOWING!

'

BREATH-TAKING!

EASTER SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

Horth ParK^

Tomorrow ALPHA PHI
GA will hold a closed

__

"TRIM

™

88

SPECIAL

LAST 3 NITES

C rid, Herald Tribum

p.nt. (88.7 on FM, 780
closed circuit to dormitories AM).

GtOLDFINGER
r
mvm&amp;&lt;oo7
TECHNICOLOR

TOWERING! YOU CANNOT
AFFORD TO HISSTTl”

3191 BAILEY AVENUE

WBFO will re-broadthe play ‘‘In White
America,” Sunday at 6:00
cast

JAMES BOND IS BACK'.

"ONE OF
THE GREAT
AMERICAN
MOVIES!

GREEK
NOTES

The final legislative action of
the senate was the passage of a
unequivocally
resolution
condemning and urging the aboli
tion of the Feinberg Law and
The Pledge class and sisters
the Certificate which implements of ALPHA GAMMA DELTA, took
it. The preponderence of debate part in the Annual Bunny Hop,
supported the resolution which Saturday, April 10, in downtown
passed easily, 17-1-4.
Buffalo, to benefit the Easter
Seal Drive for Crippled Children
and Adults.

FURNITURE
ing room

2 bedrooms, livcomplete, dinette.

—

Very reasonable.

all our friends at UB

Call

832-4326

evenings.

WE WILL BE OPEN EASTER SUNDAY

HELP WANTED

FROM 4 to 7:30 p.m

THE BUFFALO Chapter of the
Congress of Racial Equality is
opening a new office at 1536 Jefferson Avenue on May 1, 1965,

to

Serve You Our Delicious

Pizza and Subs

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(across

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from

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WARM WEATHER IS BACK

AI
PAT
•)

members are currently
gathering chairs, tables, desks,
heaters, office supplies and necessary supplies for the office
from voluntary contributors in
the Buffalo area. Interested citizens may obtain further information by calling 839-4526.
Officers of the Chapter are
Mr. Luther Burnette, Chairman,
CORE

.

•&gt;

-

SO IS PAT'S

.

and Mr. Elmore Alexander. ViceChairman.

WANTED
1 PIANO PLAYER

Early Evening May

1

Cocktail Hour

837-5686

LOST

&amp;

FOUND

FOUND—1964 Tonawanda High
School class ring with the initials S. E. Call Jim Allison, ext.
3334 or NX 5^2995

MOVING
MOVING -v Must

Sell, Studio
Couch and Kitchen Set. $35
for both, 837-4385.

�WBFO, the student run radio
service at the University of Buf
falo will once again broadcast
the UB Bulls’ spring baseball
games.

It was announced today by the
station Sports Director, Wally
Blatter that all home games will
be carried on both FM (88.7 me.)
and AM (780 to the dorms).

In regard to the athletic coverage this year, the Sports Director stated, “it has been a banner year for us at WBFO.

Through the co-operation of
WEBR we Were allowed to broad-

cast the football games for the
first time in the stations history.

We also covered the entire basketball regular 1 season exclusively both home and away. This
was another first. And now we’re
set to broadcast baseball again:

Complete coverage to the extent
we have had this year not only
gives the UB followers a chance
to keep up with their favorite
teams but also gives invaluable
experience to those working in
the actual broadcast.”

As has been the case in past
years, the entire sports staff will
again work as a team in doing
the play-by-play and color. Mark
Fleisher, Les
Swciger, Dick

and Bur Vogal will
duties along with

alternate
Blatter.
To get the baseball

fever up

COLLEGE

again, co-captains of this year’s
team, Earl Tomkins, Steve Wasula, and outfielder Don Gilbert
have been heard on Blattre’s
Sports Talk program in recent

weeks.

Len

Kosabuki,

better

known as Kos by most everyone
on campus, will be interviewed
this evening at the usual time,
6:00 p.m. Next week the Barto

Brothers, All American Bill and
bill “the Pitch” will be special
guests on the fifteen minute
show.

The opening baseball broadcast
will be this Saturday at 2:00 p.m.
when the Bulls face their old
rival Colgate. This is an ideal
game to start another season.
Colgate with the National Batting Champion on their squad
will be out to trip the WNY
Conference Champion Bulls.

TO EUROPE
ON A STUDENT SHIP!

APRIL
23
ANNUAL

SPRING
SALE
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
“On Campus”

The anticipation of getting
there on a lively student ship

-

ings in hotels, restaurants,
transportation, theatres, museums, stores. Also good for
discounts in the U.S.A.

PINS

—

J E W E L E R Y
GOLD &amp; SILVER CHARMS

SPECIAL

PEWTER MUGS

-

$7.75

Engraving Free

25% DISCOUNT
WATCH AND JEWEL REPAIRING AT WHOLESALE PRICES
RADIO AND TV'S REPAIRED

S&amp;E Wholesale Corp.
442 Niagara Falls Blvd.

TF 2-1595

®X®)
SUNGLASSES IN YOUR PRESCRIPTION

is half the fun of going to
Europe.

And when you get there your
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT 10
CARD is a “must” for discounts in 28 countries. Sav-

RINGS

—

UNIVERSITY

BOORSIORE^^^^fl

COUNCIL OPTICIANS
34 CHURCH ST.

Book your passage with us
ask
for special folder and student jobs
in Holland.
Write: Dept. CT
—

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

U.S. NATIONAL
STUDENT ASSOCIATION

265

Madison Ave., N.

V..

N. V. 10016

New Swiss Chalet
NOW OPEN
1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD

(Next to Twin Fair)
Both Locations Serving from 11 A.M. to 4 A.M.

Specializing in Charcoal Broiled Chicken

Reasonably Priced'
—CONVENIENT TAKE OUT AND DELIVERY SERVICE—PRIVATE

BANQUET FACILITIES

AVAILABLE

TF 7-4300

TL 2-0008

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DOWNTOWN

.

|

1945

S &amp; E WHOLESALE CORP.

WBFO to Broadcast
UB's Baseball Games

Glotsback

Friday, April 14,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

When the surf is up—shoot the curl in trunks cut to do precisely that. By Robert B^irnilg
Bruce. In a bold and brawny stretch plaid of cotton and Lycra spandex from Galey
and Lord, 1407 Broadway, New York 18, N.Y. A Division of Burlington Industries.

Galey*Lor&lt;/
le

�Friday, April

16, 1965

UB Teams Recruiting Top Athletes

APRIL

FOOTBALL
Edward Gallin, the outstanding fullback from Riverside High
School, has decided to play his
college football at the University
of Buffalo.
Announcement of Gallin’s acceptance by UB was made by UB
coach Dick Offenhamer.
The 5-11 225-pound Gallin was
first team All-High in 'Buffalo
for two years and also was selected to the Courier-Express AllWestern New York team. He received honorable mention for AllAmerica in "Scholastic Coach”

23

ANNUAL

SPRING
SALE
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
“On Campus”

ELEVEN

PAGE

SPECTRU

Plaza Shoe

magazine.

Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines
-

8 lbs.

$2.00

-

Gallin also starred on the Riverside track team, recording a
47’6" heave of the shot put.
In addition to his athletic activities, Gallin was president of
the Riverside Key Club (composed of the 12 top seniors),
treasurer of the Senior Class,
Boys’ Marshal of the Junior Class,
and sports editor of the school
newspaper.
Hale Mason, who won all-star
recognition at two different positions in Western New York Catholic high school football circles
last season, will enter the University of Buffalo this coming

September to continue his academic and football careers.

important Announcement
from the Better Grooming

institute ny Miss Anne Alloo

Mason, who played for St.
Joe’s Collegiate Institute, was
chosen first team All-Catholic
guard on the squad picked by the
Buffalo Evening News. Midway
through the season he was shifted to end and led the league in
pass receiving while playing ' in
only four games at that position,
snaring 10 tosses for 245 yards
and scoring 25 points. For this
he was jjicked All-Catholic first
team end by the Buffalo CourierExpress and received honorable
mention for Catholic high school
All-America.
The 5-11 190-pound Mason also
has played 3 years of varsity baseball at St. Joe's. Last year he
batted .364, hit 2 home runs,

played errorless ball and led the
league in RBI’s with 24
Mason served on the Student
Council and in the Shamrock
Club at St. Joe’s.
Steve Svec, a 6-0 196-pound

halfback from Maine Endwell Senior High School in Endwell, New
York, who was a 440-yard track
champion in the Southern Tier,
will play his college football for
the University of Buffalo.
UB coach Dick Offcnhamer an
today that Svec has been
admitted to the college and that

nounced

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

classics
in
collector’s
item
colorings

m

the young man hopes to event
ually major in engineering
An all-around athlete, Svec
played varsity football for three
years and was also on the wrestling team. In track he was zone
champion in the 440 and was
undefeated in dual meets for

three years.

UB assistant coach "Buddy"
Ryan describes Svec as a “tine
looking boy who could develop
into an outstanding running back
in college football.”
In addition to his athletic
prowess, Svec has received honors from the Rotary Club, being
a member of the Key Club and

chosen as “Typical
the-Year."

feenager-of-

BASKETBALL

John Jekielek, one of the top
high school basketball players in
the Western New York area last
season, has been accepted for
September admission to the University of Buffalo, according to

an announcement made today by
UB basketball coach Lcn Serfustini.
The 6-4. 195-pound Jckielck,
who played for Canisius High
School, was selected to the Buffalo Evening News All-Catholic
first team and the Courier-Express second team All-Catholic,
He also made the All-Tournament
team at the Jesuit Invitational
Tournament in New York City.

Jckielck also participated in
baseball and track at Canisius.
A member of the National
Honor Society while in high
school, he will matriculate in
UB’s University College with a
view toward eventually studying
medicine.

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�Friday, April U, i 945

SPECTRUM

TWELVE

--t=

I=—/

¥

�

�

jh=rr-rA
DIAMONDMEN OPEN '65 SEASON
TOMORROW AGAINST COLGATE

-=i

SPORTS CIRCLE
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

THE DOME...
Those people down in Houston have done it again.
Once they got wind of the plans for Shea Stadium in
New York they knew that they simply had to go a bit
further, so what did they do? They built a fantastic airconditioned, wind-proof, heat-proof stadium which also
happens to be “day-baseball proof.” Last Friday the
Astrodome (the new home of the Houston Astros) was
given it first official daylight tryout and Nellie Fox, a
former baseball great and now a Houston coach, was
almost hit on the head by a fly ball he was attempting
to catch. It seems that the panels in the rbof reflected
too much light, making daytime play in the Astrodome

;

-

By Steve Schuelein

At 2 p.m. here tomorrow afternoon the UB baseball nine will
open its diamond campaign

in quest of
another WNY conference crown
and another NCAA tournament
against Colgate

bid.
It’s difficult to predict exactly
how much success the Bull hardbailers will enjoy this season
in an effort to transcend last
year’s impressive 13-5 mark, but
Coach Jim Peelle hopes everything will fall into place.
A nutshell pre-season analysis

of the team indicates that the

virtually impossible.

Day baseball has been dead for a while now, but
the people in charge of scheduling just will not accept
that. On weekends, there is something which can be said
in favor of it, but what that is slips my mirid right now.
During the week there is absolutely no reason why a
baseball game should be played in the daylight hours,
but the team owners seem to be the only people who realize this obvious point. On a Wednesday towards the end
of last season, a game between the Pittsburgh Pirates
and the Philadelphia' Phillies, in the Steel City, drew a
crowd somewhat under 1000 for the afternoon contest.
In Washington attendance figures of this sort are commonplaace for daytime games, and in New York even the
Amazing Mets play before rather sparse gatherings when
their schedule orders them to engage in midafternoort
play. And just about every other major league team has
had to deal with these sort of experiences.

But that is not the crux of the matter. So what if the
club owners lose a couple of bucks? Baseball is too big a
business already, but we are not concerned with the business side of it. What we are concerned with is the average baseball fan such as you and I. The schedule makers
do not seem to be concerned with the fan who can not
get out to the ball park during the week when games are
played in the afternoon. So here is some advice for those
who are reluctant to write day baseball out of the history
books; For yourselves and the fans, get rid of it now,
completely, before you lose even more of your waning
popularity.

To get back to the question of the dome
sure
there are problems, but they are not so great that they
cannot be worked out in the near future. We applaud
New York City’s plan to cover the Shea Stadium, and
maybe the others will soon follow suit. Perhaps slight
imperfections in these domes will bring day baseball to
an end before it was thought that they would. If that is
their result, they are worth every penny it takes to install
them.
—

Wiser.

The Colgate nine the Bulls host
tomorrow is sophomore-studded,
but has already had two weeks
of experience under its belt due
to a series of games in the South.
Captain

Brian

Edgerly,

who

last year outbatted even the fab-

ulous Rick Reichardt .449- 442 to
lead the country in hitting, is expected to be on the hill tomorrow
since the Red Raiders’ top two
pitchers, Mike Braun and Johnny
Allen, were slated to hurl against
Rutgers and Army earlier this
week.
With the exception of Edgerly
and junior second-baseman Del
DeWindt, the remainder of the
lineup is dominated by sopho-

The powers that be in Houston came up with an
idea to paint the dome, thus totally cutting out all light,
but without any natural sunlight the grass would die,
causing even more troubles. The natural green stuff
would have to be replaced by plastic grass which, aside
from being indestructible, would eliminate the need for
a groundskeeper and wreak havoc on the football players who take over the stadium for the first time this
fall. But no matter how often the ends fail to make
their cuts on the new plastic turf, it will still have to be
better than playing in the typical torrential rains of the
Texas fall and early winter.
The jury is still out on the question of the dome
however, so it would not be right to criticize it without
all the facts. Viewing it from the evidence now in, the
idea of a domed stadium is neither a blessing nor a curse.
It has made day baseball out of the question, but in
Houston the demise of that hallowed tradition has been
recognized now for four years. For the past twoj years
they have not even played bn Sunday afternoons, claiming excessive ground heat, but it looks as if the people
of Houston will still have to do without viewing the national passtime in natural light on the day of rest. Maybe
now is the time to take a stand.

The backstop position appears
sound with starting catcher Tom
Oatmeyer backed by Vince Sanchez, Nick Bremingan, and Fred

mores.
Two gridiron standouts, Tom
Wilson and Ray Ilg, whom Gilbert and Oatmeyer probably remember all too well from this
fall, will be in the starting lineup. Sophomore Wilson, whose
punt return set up Colgate’s
touchdown this fall, is a fixture
in left field, while Ilg, who spearheaded the Raider defensive line,
will assume the catching duties.

Head Coach JIM PEELLE
Bulls possess strong infielding,
adequate outfielding and catching, and a questionable pitching
staff.
The key to success this season
is probably in the hands of the
mound crew. Graduation took its
toll on the hill in the person of
fireballer Larry Gergley, the ace
of last year’s hurlers, and consequently Coach Peelle is attempting to bridge the gaping
chasm with a staff of Ron McEwan, Don Potwora, Bob Barto,
Tom Gill, Dick Hetzel, Gary
Hannes, and Bob Kohansky. McEwan is expected to get the nod
for the opening day assignment
tomorrow.

The Herd infield appears to be
team's strongest point, where
only first-baseman Dale DelBello
is missing from last year’s
around-the-horn quartet.
At the hot corner of the Bulls
will employ Co-Captain Steve Wasula, who batted at a .311 clip
last season, while Bob Pusateri
will handle the shortstopping.
Bill Barto, a former high school
All-America at Montgomery, Pa.,
and last year’s NCAA College
Division All-American Shortstop
with a .338 hitting mark for the
Bulls, has been converted into a
second-baseman, while Bill Riter,
who smacked the horsehide at a
torrid .429 rate in limited service last year, will patrol first
base.
Infield depth will be provided
by Ron Leiser, Doug Long, and
Gordy Shaw.
An entirely new outfield will
be unveiled tomorrow with last
year's flychasing group of Dan
Kraft, John Stofa, Gerry Montemarano, Lynn Johnson, and Doug
the

Lyons no longer playing. Co-Cap-

tain Earl Tomkins, the erstwhile

keystone-sacker who led last
year's club in RBIs, will start in
left field, with Don Gilbert in
center, and Carl Letson, the lone
sophomore on the starting unit,
in right, while A1 Peskowitz heads

the reserves.

Next week will be a very active

one for the team. Home

games

with Erie Tech on Monday and
Syracuse on Friday will be sandwiched around games at Erie
Tech on Tuesday and Gannon on
Thursday.

Ron McEwan, a junior righthander from Orchard Park, has

been given the starting pitching
assignment by UB coach Jim
Peelle in the opening game of
the local college baseball season tomorrow when the UB Bulls,
champions of the Western New
York Inter-collegiate Conference,
face Colgate’s Red Raiders at
Clark Field at 2:00 p.m.
Catching McEwan’s slants will
be veteran Tom Oatmeyer.
Peelle will use an infield of
Bill Riter at first, Bill Barto at
tJfjHft s’',- mp-

Gilbert, and either Ron Leiser

or Carl Letson, both sophomores
Letson will start if Colgate uses
a righthander on the mound, Leiser if a portsider toes the rubber

for the Red Raiders.
Colgate,
coached by Fran
O’Hora, will be bringing in a
club that has eight lettermen
from 1964 and which will be
playing its 12th game of the cur-

rent campaign, having opened
with a Southern trip last month.
Last year UB beat Colgate, 6-5,
at Hamilton.

BASEBALL
UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
1965 VARSITY
BASEBALL ROSTER
PITCHERS
No. Name
Pos.
38 *’Robert Kohansky
P iB
P
30 ’Ronald McEwan
18 ’Gary Hannes
P
9 Donald Potwora
.
P
.....

8

40
32

Robert Bart

Thomas Gill
Richard Hetzel

P
POF

CATCHERS

1 ‘Nicholas Bremingan
19 ‘Thomas Oatmeyer
Frederick Wiser
15 Vincent Sanchez

C
C
C

C
INFIELDERS and OUTFIELDERS
11 **Earl Tomkins
2B-0F
3B
4 "Steve Wasula
�
10 William Barto
SS-2B
IB
22 ‘William Riter
OF
17 ‘Don Gilbert
IF
3 Robert Pusateri
IF-OF
16 Ronald Leiser
IF
6 Doug Long
20 Gordon Shaw
5 Carl Letson
IB-OF
12 Allan Peskowitz
Head Coach: James E. Peelle
(No. 2), Purdue ’34.
A»s't Coach: Leonard Kosobucki (No. 13), Buffalo ’56.
Co-captains: Earl Tomkins
(No. 11) and Steve Wasula (No. 4)/
—indicates number of letters
previously earned.
Schedule (Home games in caps)
April 17, COLGATE; April 19.
ERIE TECH; April 20, Erie Tech;
April 22, Gannon; April 23.
SYRACUSE; April 26, CANIS1US:
April 27, Rochester Tech; April
30, ROCHESTER U.; May 1 (AM).
BUFFALO STATE; May 1
Niagara; May 3, Geneseo State;
May 5, St. Bonaventure (doubleheader); May 8, ROCHESTER
TECH; May 10, Canisius; May U.
NIAGARA.
1964 Record: Won 13. Lost 5:
Won Championship of Western
New York Intercollegiate conference for 6th straight year and
played in NCAA tournament for
2nd straight year.
Principal returnees from I’44hit .338 and was
BILL BARTO
selected first team shortstop on
NCAA College Division All*

_

—

America; EARL TOMKINS—-10“
team in RBI’s; STEVE WASULA
4
batted .311; GARRY HAN NBpitcher who was 3-0 and wa
second on staff in number of m
ings worked; BILL RITER
.429 in limited service.
Most promising sophomore
Pitcher Don Potwora,
Bob Pusateri and Doug Long.
fielder Carl Letson and eaten
Vince Sanchez.
Summary of 1965 prosper
adequa
Strong infield; outfield
although less power than &gt; a
year. Catching improved.
ing is question mark. If nun c Bob Barto, Tom Gill and D‘
Hetzel, none of whom was
team last year, come throug'
look for the Bulls to win anotn«
1
conference crown and P05 ?
another NCAA tournament Dio.
—

—

Froth Cooch LEN KOSOBUCKI
second. Bob Pusateri at short,
and Steve Wasula at third. Riter
batted .429 last year in limited
service, Barto hit .338 a year
ago and was first team shortstop
on the NCAA College Division
All-America. Pusateri is a fine
fielder for whom Bart has been
shifted to the keystone sack, and
Wasula, team co-captain, hit .311
in 1964.
In the outfield from left to
right will be co-captain Earl
Tomkins, who led the team in
RBI’s a year ago while playing
second base, football star Don

“

—

&lt;&gt;

■

PACE

P'J

,'

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FROM THE
PRESIDENT'S DESK

1

-

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

BASEBALL
PREVIEW

Q

VOLUME 15

w

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1965

i9&gt;

NO. 24

Student Senate Sets Goals Discriminating About Discrimination
Recognizes CORE Defeats Tactics of Movement Discussed
,

,

Student-Faculty Committee
President Clinton Deveaux set

a tone of progressive change in
his address to the opening meeting of the new Student Senate
pledging investigation of the Faculty-Student Association, concern

with academic freedom and improvement of the student’s role

in making university decisions.
The major portion of the meeting was devoted to the recognition of new student activities.
Included were the Italian, German, and Republican clubs which
were passed by voice vote after

brief debate.
Much greater discussion was
centered around the recognition
of the Faculty-Student Committee
for Academic Freedom. The name
of the organization seemed to occupy the greatest attention, although both Bobbi Grossman, A
S Senator, and James Rodgers,
Law Senator, expressed concern
&amp;

that the Senate might be giving
support to an organization that
might engage in direct action.

Dennis Giaquinto, Pharmacy Senator, suggested that the term
''Committee” was inappropriate
since organization was not a part
of the Student Senate. The “Faculty-Student” portion of the
name was taken exception to by
Curtis Montgomery, Engineering
Senator, in that it might lead

By HELEN

outsiders to think that this group
was a representative of all the
facets of the University.
Kim Darrow, chairman of the
Faculty-Student Committee and
U.C. Senator, pointed out that the
word “committee” was a generic
one, no more definitive than
‘'club” or “organization” would
be. If a chapter of SNCC (Student Non-Violenntt Coordinating
Committee)

were organized

on

this campus, inquired A&amp;S Sena
tor Jeffery Osleek, would it be
required to change its name? On
a point of information, President
Deveaux stated that a student
organization could change its
name at will without Senate approval since it was not a substantive change in their constitution. Debate was limited and recognition was defeated on a roll

call vote 10-11-5.
A University Chapter of the
Congress of Racial Equality was
then proposed for recognition.
After it was determined that

group was autonomous from the
national body in that it could
over rule national directives and
would not duplicate the functions
of the Civil Rights Committee of
the Student Senate, its recognition
was passed 16-4-5. Peter Ostrow,
CRO representative, observed
(Cont’d on P. 16)

Viet Nam Teach-In Held
By TRUDY

STERN
"This is one of the most successful of the 101 teach-ins staged
throughout the country.” “I am
proud that I am taking part in
this overwhelming show of student interest.” “Just amazingly
. .”
successful
These were the
comments of some of the faculty
members who attended the all
night discussions on Viet Nam
.

Monday.

The crowd that overflowed the

PETERS

Friday, April 2, marked the beginning of Part II of the symposium, Discriminating About
Discrimination. Last year’s symposium attempted an analyzation
of the historical, cultural, religious. and psychological factors
underlying discrimination. This
year, the consideration was basically therapeutic. Although the
Civil Rights Bill has become a
law, the schism between the two
races is yet too wide and too
deep. Action must bo taken and
the various aspects of action were
the topics of discussion of the
four principle speakers. Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, Dr. Thomas F.
Pettigrew, William Stringfcllow,

and James Forman.
Dr. Henry Lee Smith, Jr., the
Chairman of the Department of
Anthropology and Linguistics, introduced the speakers of the conference, the first of whom was
President Furnas. President Furnas noted that visual developments have allowed us to extend
our interests and knowledge beyond the periphery of ourselves.
However, it is these same visual
developments which thrust upon
us the more unsavory elements
of the news, rather than present
an impartial version of the facts.
There is, in the twentieth century, a revolution of rising expectations which is dependent on
our involvement for its fulfillment.
Keynote Speaker

Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, the keywith one of two possible lines of note speaker, has a long list of
thought on U.S. policy in Viet recommendations behind him. He
is Director of the Social DynaNam; pull out or stay there.
Early in the evening a small mics Research Institute and Progroup, who identified themselves fessor of Psychology at the City
to the Spectrum as engineers, College of City University of New
noisily gathered in the hall outYork. Since 1951, he has been
Social Science Consultant to the
side the Fillmore Room with plaLegal and Educational Staff of
cards denouncing all student demonstrations. Some signs read; the N.A.A.C.P. He was Chairman
“Youth Against Everything” and of the Board of Directors and
Chief Project Consultant during
“Why am I here?”
The teach-in, however, was the research and planning phase
of Harlem Youth Opportunities
Unlimited (HARYOU). Dr. Clark’s

most recent

Symposium Pan*I on Discrimination, Right to Left
Pettigrew, Mr. Stringfellow, Mr. Forman
eighty percent of ghetto students
are two to three years behind a
comparable group of white students in a skill as basic as reading. The salvation of these public schools, which do such an
effective job of establishing ra

cial discrimination, should have

already been planned. Masses of
Negro youths must receive at
least a minimum knowledge of
basic subjects to provide them
with practical job training (for

This remedial program
should work simultaneously with
on the job training.
This, however, is not so quickthem).

ly accomplished. The Negro youth
today is cynical and refuses to
believe in tomorrow, A motivation to learn and achieve, not
provided by the legal and judicial
decisions which do little more

:

Or. Clark, Dr.

than remove legal supports for
racial discrimination, must be obtained. It is too apparent that no
Negro can exercise the rights
granted a white man, in spite of
elaborate laws and bills vehemently maintaining that he most

certainly

can. Once

the Negro

learns and is allowed to change
his condition, this demonstration
of success will lead to the development of personal self-respect
and to the development of respect in other people. Once this
sense of powerlessness and defeat is overcome, the Negro will
have substantially annihilated a
source of discrimination.
Social Psychologist
Saturday, April 3, the second
speaker, Dr. Thomas F Pettigrew,
presented his lecture, "Profiles of
(Cont’d on P. 15)

Norman Walker Dance
Performs Tomorrow
The Spring Arts Festival will
complete its program for the
week with the performance of the
Norman Walker Dance Company

“In White America”, a documentary history of the Negro
movement, will be presented with
the cooperation of the Drama and

book, Dark Ghetto,

has just appeared. It is with this
{extensive and formidable) background that Dr. Clark approched
his topic, “The Ghetto—Symbol
of the Human Predicament” (An
Analysis of the Forces of Stagnation or Freedom).
Dr. Clark began with a discussion of the ghetto, the habitat of
low income groups, which flourishes so well, particularly in the
large cities of the North, (where

it was originally fostered). These
ghettos, undoubtedly a fundamental, problem, tend to be increasing in number. Because of

the

All Night Teach-In Drew Large Crowds
f illtnore Room at 8 p.m. approximately 1500 people, slowly grew
smaller after 2 a.m. About peopu'
remained at 4 a.m. and almos&lt; 100 blury-eyed individuals
slayed until 8 a.m. when the

'each-in officially ended.
In the twelve hours of speeches
and debates
on Viet Nam one of
most frequently mentioned
■.
rriticisms of both the speakers
ana the Presidents administration
] as that there is not enough re“able news coming out of Viet
■_am to allow for constructive
argument
Most of the people in
e room
an dall of the people
no spoke identified themselves

termed by most “an overwhelming success.” Monday night was

the first time in the history of
the school that womens curfews
were suspended and the student
union remained opened all night.
One of the night managers of
the union who remained on duty
said that he was quite satisfied
with the precedent setting event
and “the only problem for the
Union is getting the staff to work
these hours,”
The teach-in was co-sponsored
by Dr. Elwin Powell, Dr. Sidney
Willhclm and Mr. Bill Harrell of
the Sociology Department and

visible

difference between

Negro and white, there is no
problem in distinguishing the two
and employing this (distinguishable) difference to keep the Negro
from advancing up and out of
ghetto areas. The Negro inhabitant of the ghetto is imprisoned
there, not only by the basic
difficulty involved in changing
his social condition, but also by
the wall of hate and

prejudice

erected by the outside world. The
ghetto provides the venerable vicious cycle. Due to the poor housing and education offered, there
are no means of advancement
within its confines. Yet, it is virtually impossible to escape from
this den of dehumanization into
the world of “equal rights."
Public Schools Nood Assistant*

Dr. Clark urges action to improve this deplorable condition.
The public school is badly in need
(Cont’d. on P. 12) of assistance. It was cited that

Norman Walkar Company performs at Hunter's

on Saturday, April 10 at Bennett
High School, 2875 1 Main Street,
at 8:30 p.m. and the off-Broadway
production "In White America”
on Sunday, April II in the Fillmore Room at 3:00 p.m. and 8:30
p.m.
Mr. Walker has appeared at
Jacob's Pillow, at the Boston Arts
Festival with Pearl Lang, and at
Utah State University as artist-inresidence. His program will in-

clude

"Reflections"

which

he

choreographed and starred in on
CBS TV’s Repertoire Workshop
On Friday, April 9 at 7:30 p.m.
he will give a lecture-demonstra
tion in the Conference Theater

with the aid of several members
of his company.

Collate

Speech Department The script
was compiled from newspapers,
speeches and other actual documents.
The recipient of several awards,
the production was the longest
running dramatic presentation of
the 1963-64 off-Broadway season.
Included in the cast are many
actors familiar to theater and television audiences.
Tickets for both events may be
purchased at the Norton Ticket
Booth. Prices are $2 general admission, $1 faculty and staff, $.75
students. There are no reserved
seats. Doors for "In White America” open at 2:30 p.m. and 8:00
p.m.

�Academic Dishonesty Discussed
Two sororities on campus, Sig
ma Kappa Phi and Sigma Delta
Tau held a joint meeting Monday night, April 5, to discuss the
problem of academic honesty or
cheating on the UB campus. The
meeting, an informal discussion

of all aspects of the situation,
was • called in response to a request made by Peter Ostrow,
President of Phi Eta Sigma,
Men’s Honor Fraternity, that student organizations concern themselves with the problem. Mr. Ostrow had called two previous
meetings to discuss the problem
of academic honesty with leaders
of student organizations, interested faculty members, and several
,
administrators.
Present at the second meeting
were Dean Segal, Dean O’Rourke,
Dean Scudder ,and Dr. Friend of
the History Department. A panel

of Clinton Deveaux,
President of the Student Association, Gary Lighter of the Stu
dent Judiciary, Dean Segal, representative of both the administion and the faculty, and Peter
Ostrow, all of whom had attended
the previous meeting and who
held outstanding or opposing
viewpoints, was chosen by the
two sororities to lead the discussion Monday night.
Cheating Widespread

Mr. Ostrow initiated the discussion by stating facts which
illustrate the great amount of
cheating carried on at UB. These
facts, he stated, have led directly
to the need to formulate a plan of
action to both improve the stu
dent body's attitude toward cheat
ing and to install a punitive and
administrative system to be car
ried out on all three levels, student, faculty and administrative^
Dean Segal emphasized the im

portance of the awareness, in
terest, and action of the student
body at large concerning the
problem of cheating Students
who actually cheat may be few
in number but, as the Dean
stated, they necessarily endanger
the "civil rights" of all students
involved. Students who obtain
copies of an exam which “gets
out” to those who obtain answers
during an exam have an unfair
advantage over those students

who have studied and know the
material but who may receive
lower grades as a result of not
knowing the actual questions or
answers as do the cheaters or
who may be victims of a curve
raised by cheaters. The Dean restated the need for these students, who arc in the majority
as those students who suffer from
the effects of cheating, to encourage an atmosphere on campus which does not condone
cheating. At present, in large

sectors of the student body, cheat

ing is actually condoned by the
mass of apathetic, unaware stu-

dents.
Rigid

System

Friday, April 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Advocated

Gary Lighter, of the Student
Judiciary advocates a rigid system for the punishment of stu
dents caught cheating. He would
“clearing
propose
a central

house,” where instructors who
have definite proof of students
cheating would submit a form
stating the instance and students
involved in the cheating. A record comprised of these forms
would be kept on each student.
After the accumulation of three
forms, the student would be suspended from school. This plan
would necessarily require considerable responsibility on the
part of the instructor. As the system exists now at UB, students
are suspended only if caught
cheating in the same course on
three different occasions. Mr.
Lighter feels that this system is
much too lax. To support his

point, he stated that only two
students, an alarmingly low number when measured against the

number of students known
cheat and not get caught,
have been suspended from school
on the basis of the present system in the last four years.
large

to

Printed Exams

Clinton Deveaux, President of
the Student Association, proposed
a preventive plan on the administrative level. Under this plan,
all exams to be given would be
printed and kept in a central
office until immediately before
the exam is administered. After
exams were over, copies would

be printed, collected, bound and
distributed at several places on

campus, such as the libraries
and Norton Union. All old exams would thus be available to
students as study aids. The plan
would encourage instructors to
vary their questions and lecture
notes from year to year. This
plan is presently in successful

operation at

the

University of

Toronto.

Another suggestion was made
by a member of the-group that
all exams be administered in
small recitation sections. Such a
plan would eliminate the facility of cheating in large lecture
halls.

An important conclusion of the
discussion was that what is particularly needed is publicity—of
the amount of cheating actually
going on, of the apathetic attitude of the students, of the policy of the University toward
cheating, of the rewards of aca
demic honesty, and of faculty
responsibility.
Other Meetings Planned
Peter Ostrow plans to hold
other meetings with faculty, administration and student organization representatives to formulate a specific plan of action
which would integrate the several areas discussed at the meeting of the two sororities. Both
Sigma Delta Tau and Sigma Kappa Phi, as stated by their respec-

tive presidents Diane Sezzen and
Joyce Kaelen, intend to support
strongly any plan which the committee initiates.
The administration, whose spokesman is Dean

Segal, has also indicated their wil-

lingness to support such a plan

of action. Interested students, organizations, or members of the
faculty and administration should

contact Mr. Ostrow.

Creative Problem
Solving Institute
Set For June at UB
More than 150 of the nation’s
leaders in the field of creative
problem solving will be among the

faculty of UB’s Eleventh Annual
Creative Problem-Solving Institute to be held June 21-25 at the
University.
Participants in the program will
spend the first three days taking
the equivalent of a semester
course in the development of cre-

Gregory Corso Firing Protested)
Picket Staged at Crosby Hall
Monday evening from about
8:00 until 9:30 p.m. the Faculty-

Student Coihmittee for Academic
Freedom staged a picket in which
over 70 people participated, to
protest the firing of Gregory
Corso for' his refusal to sign the

played a sign which stated the
following: “Private, autonomous,
independent picket in behalf of
Gregory Corso, poet and educator,
offered in protest not by any
means to champion the right of
a Communist to teach at UB, but

ative behavior which will include
morning seminars and evening
symposiums covering the creative
process in the arts and sciences.
The remaining days will be devoted to teaching creativity to
non-members of the Institute.
Those who have attended previous
Institutes will participate in advanced sessions during the first
three days.

Dr. Sidney J. Fames, director
of the Institute, said that the
large number of faculty members
will "provide individualized attention to the special needs and
interests of the wide variety of
participants who attend the program.”

Over 2,000 participants in the
previous ten Institutes included
leaders in education, government,
business, law, journalism, health,
religion and the military from all
of the United States as well as
Canada, Australia, Italy, Japan,
South America, Puerto Rico, Ber-

muda and New Zealand.
Dr. Fames, who is also director
of creative education at the University, will deliver the orientation address to the Institute’s participants. The participants will be
welcomed by Dr. Clifford C. Fur-

nas, president of the State University of Buffalo.
Other key roles will be filled
by Dr. Alex F, Osborn, founder

and chairman of the board of the
Creative Education Foundation
and Dr. Robert F. Berner, dean of

Student-Faculty

Committee Picket Outside Crosby Hall

Feinberg disclaimer certificate.
The committee, after meeting for
a half hour in Norton, proceeded
to Crosby Hall where Mr. Corso’s
class was scheduled to meet.
The marchers, under the leadership of Kim Darrow, Henry Simon and Jeremy Taylor, student
members of the executive committee, carried signs calling for
the abolition of the Feinberg
Certificate and condemning Corso’s dismissal. The group sang
such songs as “My Country Tis
of Thee” and ‘Oh Freedom” and
raised such chants as “Feinberg
must go.”
For a time, a small group, not
participating in the picket, dis-

by virtue of the inherent and
universal apoliticality of the
poet.”
The pickets increased in number throughout the demonstration. To climax the picket the

demonstrators

marched

Berner, Dean of Millard Fillmore

College.
A spokesman for the group
expressed satisfaction with the
picket and indicated that there
would be an accelerated program
of action against the Feinberg
law and certificate.

Millard Fillmore College, evening
division of the University,
According to Dr. Fames, the
Institute’s five objectives include:

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS

1. Knowledge: comprehension
of the latest information regarding the nature and development

Amherst Driving School

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Hayes Hall, past Diefendorf Hall
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�Friday, April 9, 1965

Committee Appointed to Study
Plans For Commuter Council

ate. It will determine the areas
in which the commuter has definite problems and present these
problems to the Senate for appropriate action. It will act as an
active representative commuter
voice on the Senate and work
towards alleviating all commuter
problems both in the Senate and

Clinton Deveaux, president of

the Student Association, an-

at Tuesday’s Senate
meeting, the creation of a special
committee to investigate plans for
a commuter council, which would
become a permanent standing
committe of the StudentbySenate,
StewThe committee, headed
art Edelstein, has already prepared a questionnaire to deter-

nounced

with the Administration.
To determine student interest
in this project, and to acquaint
the committee with the immediate areas in which commuting
students feel a need for Senate
action and support, the committee has prepared a questionnaire
to be sent to ail commuting students. The questionnaire will be
mailed out this week. It is hoped
that the questionnaire will be re-

mine student attitude to the new

proposal.

contention that a commuter organization, functioning as a representative commuter voice in the Student Senate, has been long needed and is vital for a truly representative Student Association.
The creation of such a board is
one step in a larger plan to unite
the student body and increase
It

w4s Mr. Deveaux’s

turned as soon as possible so that
the proper plans for the council
can begin. Boxes will be set up

communication between the students and the Student Associa-

in all buildings and at the Norton Candy Counter, where the
questionnaire can be returned.

tion.

The commuter council will act

Extra copies of the questionnaire

as a special liason between the
commuting student and the Sen-

will also be available.

Spring Weekend

Activities Include
The Kingston Trio
The concert attraction for this
year’s Spring Weekend will be
“the Kingston Trio,” who will
appear at Kleinhans Music Hall,
Friday, April 30. The tickets will
be offered at special rates to all
UB students, and for a concert
by this group, the prices are
reasonable. They are one of the
top box-office attractions in the
business.

The Spring Weekend dance is
being held Saturday, May 1, from
9:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m., at the
Town Casino. The price of the
tickets will be $3.50 per couple.
Music is provided by Dave Ches-

Kemp Speaks Here,
Defines Left, Right

s

Sings in Haas Lounge

.

.

.

Social Commentary Set to Music

From the President’s Desk
There are many chanegs that

must be made in the structure of

both academic and non academic
activities at this university. Principles of collegial authority having been forgotten, we find ourselves facing a bureaucracy that
virtually eliminates the role of
the students in decision making.

where legislative certificates and
committees threaten the very
soul of an academic institution
by attempting to narrow and
weaken the foundation of freedom essential to a university community. Wa mutt demand a
change.

The students at each State Uni-

The Kingston Trio is made up
of Nick Reynolds, the “short
one,” John Stewart, the “civil
war bug,’ 'and Bob Shane. They
are three reasons why fold music
is so popular today. For years,
folk music has been performed
mostly for the arts-and-craftsy
set, but the Kingston Trio has
made this type of entertainment
fun for everyone. Each of the
three of them has his own way
with a song, but together they
deliver a song with a very direct
and personal warmth.

kin and his orchestra. Awards
will be presented to the winners
of the Stunt Nile, Float, and Mr.
Faculty contests. The highlight
of the dance will be the crowning
of the Spring Weekend Queen.
The entertainment will be pro(Con’d, on P. 14)

Phil Och

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Jack Kemp, quarterback for
the Buffalo Bills, spoke in the
Millard Fillmore Room on Tuesday, April 6. The talk entitled
“Football, Freedom and the Free
Market”, was sponsored by the
Allenhurst Resident Advisors.

Mr. Kemp is currently working for a masters degree in Political Science at Western California University. He has lectured throughout California and
has spoken at Buffalo State College, as well as before the UB
Law School.
Mr. Kemp re-defined the popu-

lar stereotypes of the left and

right wing. The gradient between
these two points is not one of
varying degrees of liberality. The
division is sharper than that. The
left wing is more appropriately,
“the omnipotent state” of government, whereby control, be it
in the guise of Fascism, Communism, or Nazism, is concentrated and total. At the opposite
extreme is the right wing which
assumes the values of total “disgovernment” or anarchy.

President Clinton Oovtaux
Insted of being consider a coordinate segment of the university with certain powers and responsibilities that derive from a
student's legitimate concern with
his education, we arc relegated
to a silent, fee paying excuse for

the institution to receive monies
from government. We must de-

mand a change.

The Senate must not fail to be
intelligently aware of those issues
which face us as members of a
greater community. It is imperative that the
student body
which affect
their roles as

elected voice of the
be heard on issues
these students in
students at the unimembers
of the Buffalo
versity,

and Erie County community, residents of New York State, and
in most cases, citizens of a great
nation which claims itself to be

the defender of democracy and
individual freedom. If we are to
be responsible citizens of this
wider community, we must inform ourselves to be the intelligent voices of constructive criticism.
Our concern is also the immediate condition of our university;
that is, the infringements on the
proper functioning of the intellectual process on our campus, as

come from within where
neither faculty nor students have
any direct control over academic
they

or non-academic functioning at
the university, and from without

was Mr, Kemp’s contention
“political freedom is depenupon economic freedom,”
that the existence of a free,
competitive economic market is a
prerequisite to attaining any degree of political liberty.

It
that
dent
and

"W* Will Realise Our Goals"
versity unit play as much of a
role, and have as much responsibility as they have been willing
to demand.
During the rest of this semester, we will carefully examine
the structure of the administration and faculty here at SUNYAB. We shall demand voices
in decision making on all levels.
This right is as much ours as
it is the right of students on
other state campuses. And last,
but by no means least, we demand that student government
be given full control of the student fee, that is all non-academic
funds that are paid to this university. This would not only be
consistent with the power held
by students at other units of
SUNY, but would give to the student the responsibility and control of that area of university
life in which he has the ability
to best contribute to the quality
of the greater academic community.
We students have for too long
been disenfranchised by the present structure. We must demand
now, I hope that every
student senator will work with
me toward this goal, and we as
the student senate shall work
toward having the entire student
body demanding this absolutely
essential change. We will realize

change

our goal.

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�Friday, April 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

jCetterd

.

Deu» Ex Albany
referred to as the “impending”
recently
was
What
dismissal of Gray MacArthur almost materialized at
three o’clock Wednesday. Mr. MacArthur received an
ultimatum from the Dean of Millard Fillmore College
informing him that if he did not sign the Feinberg Certificate by three o’clock Wednesday afternoon he would
be summarily dismissed. Mr. MacArthur then sent a
telegram to President Gould protesting this arbitrary
and oppressive measure and received the following reply:
Your telegram of April 6 has been brought to
the attention of Pres. Gould who is out of the
city. At his direction we are obtaining the full
facts, pending which, no further action will be
taken
(signed) John C. Crary Jr.
Council, SUNY
The Spectrum wishes to publicly thank President
Gould for his promptness and his apparent wisji to avoid
over-hasty action. I would like to ask the administration
at this campus, since President Gould obviously did not
wish Mr. MacArthur to be summarily dismissed, why was
the ultimatum issued in the first place? 1 suggest that
precipitous and ill-considered actions, like the ultimatum,
do much to damage the atmosphere of this campus and
create a feeling of tension and mistrust. An effective
educational system can not exist in the presence of such
coercion and fear. Academic, Freedom exists in part
to prevent such coercion and fear and therefore to promote the healthy atmosphere in which genuine learning
can thrive.
I can only hope that the “full facts” mentioned in
Mr. Crary’s telegram, will center upon Mr. MacArthur's
qualifications and potential as an educator, which remain
unquestioned; thus calling into .question the necessity
of so damaging an administrative procedure as the Feinberg Certificate.
We are all aware of the crowded classrooms and a
lack of excellent teachers. We are all also aware of the
storm of confusion occasioned by the imposition of the
Feinberg Certificate. I question the necessity, the practicality, and the efficiency of a procedure which robs
u* of excellent teachers and creates divisiveness and mistrust within the total academic community.
1 hope and trust that the entire Feinberg Law will
someday be struck down, at least as it applies to institutions of higher learning since it is in itself a terrible
infringement upon the intellectual and professional integrity of the university, but in the meantime 1 can only
urge that the wisdom of the present means of implementation, the Feinberg Certificate, be carefully weighed in
the light of its obvious disadvantages and dubious merits.
JKRRMY TAYLOR
Rditor-in-Chief
*

*

*

GUEST EDITORIAL
The Constitution of the United States states “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishments
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or
abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the
right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
Apparently the Student Senate of our University
denies the existence of these fundamental and basic
rights of all American citizens. At the Student Senate
meeting of April 6, the STUDENT-FACULTY COMMITTEE ON ACADEMIC FREEDOM requested recogni•

(Cont’d on

P.

5)

to

the Editor

Feeble Decisions Caused Viet Crisis
TO

further demonstrates our weakness and failure
THE EDITORr
The U S continue to
f br f rei g" P®
After reading Daniel Sohroeder’s letter to the lose
face among the free governments of the world
A
°

...

-

over the Viet Nam situation.
..

,,

,

"f

°

Ai— ■ ssxi
politics is a

The realization that-we „,ho
can never win the war
with the decisiveness necessary to accomplish our
original motive of protecting the natives’ freedom
of choice for themselves is indeed behind us. You
state that: “It is now whether we should finish
honorably what we have started honorably.” I do
not feel that this noble motive of protecting the
natives’ freedom of choice for themselves was ever
started honorably to begin with,
..

°

„

necessary game that must be played
with a tremendous amount of shrewdness which the

U_S.
has

lacks

In this keen

°ame

checkmateda.
cnecamat

constantlyy

been

’

the

tic

Granted, my dear Mr, Schroeder, the job of aidt y,e p e0 p]e 0 f South Viet Nam in repelling their
a ggressors and those who would force them to adapt
Communist ideals or limit their rights in any way,
s jjjj ex jst s However, the “use of every resource at
our command to bring it about and to keep it within
its natural limitations” is absurd at the present
At one point, a military decision was made to tj me xhe above action would probably result in a
aid the people of South Viet Nam. A decision of st jn more devastating blow to the little prestige
this nature should not have been rendered if we which the US. still enjoys,
were not willing to carry this threat of force through
In many ways, our time is like the time Dickens
with immediate, total support. A grant of aid was
made, but it lacked courage, fortitude, and vigor of described at the beginning of his book: “It was the
an America that is supposedly in a position of world best of times and the worst of times.” It is the
leadership of the free and representative govern- worst of times because we face the most severe
ments. Since World War II, American leadership challenge that we have ever faced. It is the best
has continually made apathetic decisions of the of times because we have a chance to strike a blow
above nature. Feebleminded decisions of this type for freedom. Certainly now is the time for us, in the
cause us to be faced with a dilemma of the Viet words of Walter Lippmann, “to come alive and to
be alert and show vigor.” In the Viet Nam situa
Nam nature a number of years later.
tion, we must, but with a reasoned vigor and a
continually
the
U
S.
to
It appears that
is forced
su btie blow. Because the struggle is hard, the vie
at
costs
(
all
uphold the honor of its commitment
0 ry will be more glorious,
Presiwhen the situation is practically hopeless.
Nam
Alois M. Hafner
dent Johnson’s decision to bomb North Viet
jng

U.S. Duty to Stand in Viet Nam
TO THE EDITOR
’

Within the past month, there have been several
incidents which have made me wonder if the college
student of today knows how to act his age. The
University’s purpose is to educate the young people
in order to prepare them to be the citizens of tomorrow. Wc, the student, have professed a desire to be
heard and listened to bv our superiors. Elected
representatives to a Student organization became
involved in a situation in which they had no damn
business. Seventeen “Mature” students serve as a
wonderful example of what to expect in our future
citizens. Three cheers for student riots as are
found in Russia and Japan. It is of no wonder
that the adults in our immediate community have
little or no respect for our desire to be heard. Academic freedom is a privilege and a right and must

ties are not diminishing and the streets of Hong
are not overloaded with refugees without
be»
country
od reas0
15 urduty as
liev
m freedom to keep a place open or hose
wishing to escape from behind the Wall. I we
back ut on our commitment in Viet Nam we will
lose he entire Southeastern Asian peninsula. Ko
all
rea Burma Viet Nam
he ga cwa y to India
will; be lost. Appeasement was tried be ore and the
P" ce of the co ntr ? et was high. Thinking such as
the ful dlr en t of fo™,er
hls can nIy &gt; ead
Kong

f°

f

°

"-

«

°

,

*

-

-

.

‘

,

“

”

l nS!
.

T T
,

,

Where would we be ifnthe French had not
u S in 1777? Does this mean that the blood
mllh ns of our young men will be wasted? Did
they rot in the steaming jungle 20 years ago
nothing? They rid that land of one sickness on
to see it invaded by another one. The American flag
has been stepped on and defiled too often. The bald
eagle is becoming extinct in our own land. May the
The Editorial in last week’s Spectrum pledged
clay never come when its imposed image on our
dismissing
to
the
Administration
memin
fight
itself
badge also become extinct. Thinking such as S.D.S.
all
arguWe
have
heard
the
bers of the faculty.
nation
ments against the Administration but we never ehn only lead to the destruction of our great
as the destruction of the free world.
as
well
say.
about
to
hear
what the Administration has
Their silence appears to me to indicate that they
I am no warmonger. I hate war, but in order
know what they are doing and that the students to defeat the enemy the battle must be carried to
of
business which is of their dens and they must be wiped off the face of the
should keep their noses out
no concern to them.
earth. Red China didn’t worry about sending help
in 1951 to Korea, let us not worry about sending
The biggest question of the day is the situation help in 1965. Freedom must be maintained no matin Viet Nam. The S.D.S. movement to march and ter what the cost. The waste of millions of dollars
voice an opinion such as theirs turns my stomach. on liquor and tobacco occurs yearly. The waste of
Did these “intelligentsia” ever read Dr. Tom Dooley’s money and lives
shall it
I leave it to you
book Deliver Us From Evil? Have they questioned continue or shall we perish?
the hundreds of thousands of refugees from behind
John Puchalski
the Bamboo, Iron, and Sugar Cane Curtain? Why
are they leaving? Maybe it is only because the grass Editor's Note: We find the “reasoning" in para
looks greener on the other side. Communist atroci- graph two of this letter extremely obscure.
West.

°

•

—

—

Try to Sell SPECTRUM
Ideally, these topics should receive nominal coverage with the editors’ views limited exclusively
It is our view that the Spectrum has become to the editoriai page . if you wish to maintain the
perverted from its correct purpose, i.e. to present present format of the Spectrum, we request that
news of campus activities and of interest to the you refuse all outside aid and test the Spectrum s
entire student body (the Spectrum's source of in- merit by selUng it on an open market
come) in contradistinction to news of interest
Robert Lebow, Melvyn Moskowitz.
largely exclusive to the small clique of administra
Philip Krupoff, Robert Bologna
tors who write and edit our journal. We look
askance upon your wholehearted devotion of the Editor's Note: The Spectrum wishes to apologize
Spectrum's theme to the “Liberal” cause as witness for the blatantly editorialized story in last Friday'
Ij
last Friday’s Extra which devoted two pages to the paper (appearing on Page 3). It was inadvertent
School Board sit-in in addition to devoting impor- sent to the printer before being read. We find tin'
“request” impossible tp consider seriously, however
tant space to the SOS’s views on Vietnam.
TO THE EDITOR

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass't News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
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Peter

Rubin

Barbara Strauss

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Jeremy Taylor
Allan Scholom
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David Edelman

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Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Manager
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Circulation

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Auerbach
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Howard

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Meryl Frank, Sharon Heend, Marion Michael, Debbie
Rubie, Scott Kurman. Jo Anne Leegant, Eileen Teifler, Sue Greene, Bill Cortes, Joey
Elm, Skip Blumberg, Terry Davis, Helen Peters, Joan Fox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria
Gigha, Chuck Cummings, Raymond Volpe, Jerome Taylor, Marsha Alt, Margo Wallach,
Alan Goldstein, Sue Zuckerberg
Werts Staff:

Chick Arnold,,, Richard Drandoff, Steve
Schuelem, Steve Oberstem, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro,

Feigin,

Stan

lichwala,

Steve

Harvey Starr

Photography Staff: David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Ledcr, Dave Fox,
AI Gruber

Csrcelatsee

Staff

Palmer, Lee Corey

/A
Pff*W

Diane Lewis,

Jane Herbrand,

Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary

ACR FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y.
Subscription S3 06 per year, circulation
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, line., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Yj

,

WMnSf

Lou

Where Were the Political Scientists ?
TO THE EDITOR

The reason I use the term "so called Teach-In

1 was appalled by the performance last night is because this was not an educational program
at the so-called Teach-In. I would like to know why was a discussion. I won't even honor it by callm
there were no Political Science professors present? it a debate. Both sides were not presented equa.ll&gt;

How can there be a competent discussion when
possibly the most informed people on the campus
are not present? Either they weren't invited; wherein the fault lies with the committee; or they were
invited and decided not to attend; wherein the
fault lies with the members of the political Science
Department. When the students show a desire to
learn something other than the normal classroom
routine, the professors have a duty to appear and
present the facts as they see them and. their corresponding opinions.

I have my own opinion on the subject and when
attended the discussion, I heard predominantly on
one side. How are we expected to obtain a correc
judgment on something of such great
when only half the facts are presented. I comment
Dr. Zimmerman for having the courage to be on;
of the very few to stand up and present his opm
in the face of the strong bias presented for
other side. To have a truly educational appro:
both sides must be presented. Judging by the a
(Cont’d on P
'

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the Slate University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

�Friday, April

9, 1965

gucinski.
A

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

.

COMMENTABT

.

By JOHN BONER

DEFOLIATION CAMPAIGN

Not long after I had daringly
exposed that infamous threat to
the peace and security of this
grand and glorious country (I
am speaking of this nation’s number one commie-front organization, the “U.S. Army" (one cannot help but suppress a snicker!),
not long after the said article
had gone to press and the usual
stream of threatening phone calls,
and sinister notes had begun to

in from the many Buffalo
cells, I began to wonder at the
innocence and naivete of the
average person. After I had reread the article over twenty or
thirty times, a thought flashed
with usual lightning clarity and
pour

quickness to my incredibly pellucid mind. With the usual uncommon alacrity bf my superior
intelligence, I saw that I had indeed been too subtle for the
great inert masses among whom
I condescend to walk. Do not
think, dear readers, that I am
merely carried away with
thoughts of my own immense,
and unbelievable mental abilities,
no, not that! It is sinewy that you
mortals, with your yet undevel-

oped powers of comprehension,
have not been searching as assiduously for these sinister powers
which lie ready to strike at the

very heart of this fair land! I,
however, through my vastly superior powers of reasoning have
become aware of this “menace
(Cont’d on P. 15)

oCetteri

to

the Editor

tucles presented, it seemed as if 85 percent of the
student body believes we should get out of Viet
Nam, I doubt this very much. The only thing accomplished last night was that a biased discussion
occurred and we as college students can not allow
such a farce to be perpetrated upon us.
Max H. Levy

Editor's
free 0

,c

”"'

Note;

dp

4

’

It is our impression that anyone was

a t the “teach-in". We also understand
'
,
,
that many faculty members reflecting many shades
of opinion were invited to speak. We suggest that
(

,

,,

..

the writer ask the political science instructors why
they were not Present

Picket Picketing Picket Attacked
TO THE EDITOR;
This week we

were treated to a spectacle of
ultimate asininity by a few of our fellow students,
On the evening of the “Teach In” and the demonstration against the Feinberg Law, a small group
of persons in a ludicrous and pathetic attempt to be
humorous organized a picket line. Carrying placards
with examples of piercing and incisive wit such as
“Burma Shave”, “Down With Student Demonstrations” and various bright remarks about Vietnam
they attempted to picket the anti-Feinberg demonstration. Unfortunately the latter had ended so they
spent some few minutes at the Tower side of Norton making noisy nuisances of themselves.
You may, (though I hope you don’t) wonder why
a stunt like this warrants indignation
a picket
line picketing pickets
a real gas. And after all,
&gt;aS
‘° e preSS
an °Pjr n ab0Ut

strate a great deal about the persons who took part
in it, is the miserable attitude and timing of the
participants. Despite what these witty souls may
think, a demonstration is a serious matter. It is
supposed to be a concrete demonstration of a moral
commitment and not an amusing way of spending
a pleasant spring evening after a pilgrimage to
Bitterman's,

Senate Considers Following
Amendments Tuesday:
ARTICLE IV STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE STUDENT SENATE
Section 1 The Executive Committee
A, Powers
1. It shall have the power of emergency action between meetings of the Senate and shall otherwise serve as the executive
body of the Senate. All actions of the Executive Committee shall be subject to review by the Student Senate.
2. It shall make nominations to the Senate for:
a. Chairmen of all standing committees.
b. Non-voting faculty members for all standing committees
not otherwise provided for in the by-laws.
3. It shall appoint two judges to the Student Judiciary.
B. Membership . . . the members shall be:
1. The officers of the Senate.
2. Three members elected at large from the Senate.
3. One or more advisors chosen by the committee.
Section 2 Student Activities Committee
A. Functions
the functions of this committee shall be:
1. To help to stimulate all extra-curricular student activities,
2. To executive the supervisory power of the Student Senate,
except as otherwise provided by University policy and
regulations, over all student organizations and activities,
a. To recommend to the Student Senate the sponsorship
of new activities, the development of new functions for
existing activities, or abolition of any student activity.
b. To recommend to the Student Senate recognition of all
student organizations and activities, upon petition for
recognition.
c. To keep records of all student organizations and activi-

...

ties.
d. To act as the liaison group between recognized student

organizations and activities and the Student Senate.
e. To call meetings of any individual organization or activity for the purpose of investigation and advice.
3. To serve as a consultant to the Finance Committee.
B. Membership . . . the members shall be:
at least three of whom shall be
1. Inteicsted students
chosen from the Student Senate.
2. One or more advisors chosen by the committee.
3. A chairman to be appointed by the Senate.
Section 3 The Finance Committee
A. Functions
1. Allocations. The Finance Committee shall recommend to
the Student Senate the allocation of the non-athlctic portion of the Student Activities Fee to recognized student
organizations and activities.
2. Financial rules. It shall act in accord with and enforce
the Financial rules of the Student Senate, which are set
forth in Appendix A of these by-laws of the Student Senate.
B. Membership . . the members shall be:
1. Interested students.
2. One or more advisors to be chosen by the committee.
3. The Treasurer of the Student Association who shall serve
as chairman.
Section 4 Elections Committee
A. Functions
1. To supervise and conduct the election of the officers of
-

the Student Association.

2. To supervise and conduct the election of the Student
Senate.

3. To supervise the Student Council elections.

(Cont'd on P.

Editorial

(Cont

d from p

12)

4)

tion along with such other groups as the new Republican Club of SUNYAB, from the Senate. This simply
entails use of the facilities of Norton Union, permission
to ask the Senate for funds (which may be denied), and
to be recognized as a legitimate group of students at
this University, who have the right to use the group’s
name in conjunction with that of the University. Recognition further implies that the Senate is cognizant that
i
there are a number of students who hold these beliefs
or interests. It does not in any way imply official sanction
nght
tnam
Issu
v
/•
Rnt th
J*f
of any of the group’s activities by anyone other than the
—'•&gt;« ••»—-■«
members of the group itself.
as we might charitably call it, since it does demonJohn Stiny
It is inconceivable that anyone on this campus is
opposed to the' discussion of the principles of academic
freedom. Yet the Student Senate voted against the
Informed Student Action Desired
right of these students to meet in the Union to discuss
TO THE EDITOR:
apathy from. It is the person, who does not want these ideas. In so doing the Student Senate not only
There is a large number of students (and non- to spend the time looking into the facts, (facts from displayed disdain for the beliefs of
these students, it also
student also) who reach an emotional view of an both sides), who should stay out of discussions and
contempt for the very doctrines which allow
issue and begin to exhort this emotionally founded demonstrations. We do not want to hear the view showed
view to all they meet. They do not take the time of these ‘‘meaning well do-gooders”. These people the Senate itself to meet and discuss ideas in a free
—

*

.

ssr tsttes&amp;s.
.

rrr

—

to look into the background of both sides of the
issue. Thus, they talk entirely out of an intellectual
vacuum. This only wastes the time of the people
who have given the time and effort to reach a rational stand on an issue. Regardless of the decisions
“*
faCti n

attempting''

These are the

°

people we want to see

“Publish
TO THE EDITOR:

or

more

I{ our fr i en ds had a serious opinion about the
Feinberg Law, or Vietnam or anything, they have an
obligation to make themselves heard but to make
a lot of incoherent noise, disturbing a serious discuss jon 0 f an important political issue which is
costing many lives and will probably cost many
more if it doesn’t kill us all is no place for idiotic
best the demonstrators exhibited an amazJ0^es
ing ack 0 f understanding of the issues at stake.
The right of assembly and protest is a precious
one it should be used and treated with respect and

are appealing totally to emotions. Give us more
people who can say ‘‘Here it is, now can you answer this.” Give us more action from the people
w ho have looked critically into the backgrounds
of the issues Give us on i y apathy from those whose
only view of any situation is emotional.
Charles McCarter

Perish” Stand Supported

Referring to the Open Forum contest of opinons expressed by Prof. Van Den Berghe and Ins,ructpr
Leonard Port, I must declare my solidarity
with Mr, Port and his quest for a teaching that is
oot jeopardized by
the consequences of the “pubtish or perish” policy adopted in this University,
Professor Van Den Berghe seems partial to
e problem since
whatever he says in these lines
15 true
according to certain colleges and special
case s. but must not
be confused with situations
Prevailing at our University. People do lose their
s for not completing academic work within a

stipulated period of time, especially if working for
a higher degree. Their teaching performance is
considered of minor importance, if at all, when the
academic reputation of the Department is at stake,
To deny this would be to ignore facts around us in
•,
this University.
I think nobody will doubt the benefits for
teaching coming from research and him who does
it. But again, it is a matter of perspective. Rarely
will the object of the study lend itself for direct
class use. On the contrary, in the process of claboration of anything new, a conflict occurs between
(Cont d on P. 11)

atmosphere.

The SUNYAB Republican Club, a partisan group by
definition, was, however, recognized in this same meeting. Obviously the only criterion for withholding recognition from the Committee on Academic Freedom is disagreement on the part of individual Senators with the
possible actions of the committee. Mr. Darrow, spokesman for the committee, was asked by another Senator if
his group would ever contemplate picketing. In reply
he said the possibility existed. We agree, as did our
founding fathers, that if free speech were ever significantly stifled (on this campus), that assemblying freely
in a picket would be a proper mode of seeking redress.
Is this being too extremist? The Student Senate seems
to think so!
We are bringing this to light in hopes of reconsideration of this group on the part of the Senate. No group
of students on this campus should be denied the right to
assemble and discuss their beliefs simply because a few
Senators do not believe in academic freedom!
Walter Hugh Peters
Richard H. Jaross

�Friday, April 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Educat ion and Cultural Affairs

Worlds of Crisis, Freshman Weekend Starts

Enthusiasm Greets Poets
Olson, Weiners, Sanders
A large, enthusiastic audience
crowded the Haas Lounge last
Tuesday evening, April 6, to hear
a ‘Dialogue” by Charles Olson,
John Weiners, and Ed Sanders.

Malraux, Camus Today, Activities Listed
By

Poems” and “The Ace of Pentacles”, his most recent book, in
eluding one entitled “To Ed Sanders and David Posner."
Ed Sanders, using a variety of

JOEY ELM

Freshman Weekend, which be-

gins today, lists events to interest all students. Sponsored by
the Freshman Class Council, the

“Wc are in an age of crises
and have always been in one,”
stated Andre Peyre, Chairman of
Allenhurst House Council, the
the Department of Modern Lan
Goodyear South House Council,
guages at Yale University, in a
and the Goodyear East House
lecture given here last Thursday
Council, the weekend includes a
on “The Crises of Modern Man
mixer, a basketball game, a
as envisioned by Malraux and
hootenany, a semi-formal dance,
Camus.”
and a free game day in Norton
Dr. L. Silber, Chairman of the Union.
Languages
Department of Modern
Tonight, from 8;30 p.m. to midhere at Buffalo, introduced Pronight, a mixer featuring the Four
fessor Peyrc to a capacity crowd X’s Band, will be held in GoodAs a finale to the weekend,
assembled in Butler Auditorium. year cafeteria. Refreshments will Sunday is a free game day for
Professor Peyrc was invited to be served, and the admission is Freshmen in Norton Union, RunBuffalo by the Senate Convocafree for Freshmen and 50 cents ning from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m., the
tion Committee. Dr. Silber, in
games and facilities of Norton
for all others.
his preliminary remarks stated,
Union, including bowling, ping
Tomorrow afternoon at 2:00
"Professor Pcyre is regarded as p.m. a basketball game is planned pong, billiards and pool, will be
a Prometheous in the field -of between the Freshmen girls and
available.
French literature,”
In Dr. Peyre’s estimation Malraux is a genius. Malraux, believes Peyre, considers man to
have a sense of the past, Man
Mr, Edward Sparer, Director of
ting is available for parents while
knows how to profit by the exLegal Services Unit of Mo- in training. Health and legal servthe
We
history.
of
have
to
amples
imagine that which we know in
order to meet the crisis of the
future. Malraux believes that men
of the arts such as he, have a
constructive awareness of the future. Many of the ideas advanced
by Malraux are based on the
philosophy of Kier Kegaard . . .
.“We live toreward but understand backward,” Both Malraux
and Camus are imbued with a
sense of history. They apply ideas
to find a remedy for evils of
present crisis
so people may
avoid pitfalls. These men measured what they have said. They
do not unnecessarily use words.
Suprisingly, Professor Peyre noted that neither Camus nor Malraux are clear thinkers but
rather men who have lived their
MYF Training provides Youth with Vocation
thought. Ideas which are not put
in the Conference Theater. The Press’ attention because of an
into action ai-e useless and not
lecture will include a general accusation of Communist infiltraprofitable. According to Malraux, introduction to the work being tion by Paul Screvane, Deputy
man must search for his own saldone by MFY as well as covering
Mayor of New York. Mr. Screvane
vation in fear and trembling. Malthe topic “Special Needs of Poor felt that since the organization
upper
an
raux was born of
midoperates largely through public
People for Legal Aid."
dle class Parisian family. He defunds Communist employees
to
of
cided
lead a life
adventure
MFY, similar to Haryou in should be eliminated from the
and abstained from identifying Harlem, has been doing social
MFY payroll. The controversy
himself with Western Europe.
welfare work among the slum
was resolved with the decision
His aim was to see Europe from neighborhoods of lower Manhatthat all MFY workers were doing
a distance. Therefore he voyaged
tan. It offers vocational educatheir jobs effectively. Political
to the continent of Asia to disideologies were not felt to be
tion to the unemployed and uncover what Europe would look
employable of New York City.
relavent to their ability to func(Cont'd on P. 15)
Nursery school or free baby-sittion in their separate capacities.
.

-j

Alik

J

the Freshmen boys. Scheduled to
follow this is the folksinging duo
of Haekett and Raven. .
Saturday night the weekend
will be climaxed by a semi-formal
dance at the Treadway Inn in
Niagara Falls, beginning at 9:00
p.m. and continuing until 1:00
a.m.; buses will leave Goodyear
Hall promptly at 8:15 p.m. The
cost is $2.00 per couple for a
night of music provided by the
Eddie Diem Band.

Sparer to Speak in Norton

ED SANDERS
The program, which appeared as
more a recital than a dialogue,
was part of the Spring Arts Festival .

John Wieners, a graduate of
Boston College and founder of the

S|

JOHN WIENERS

vocal effects, read a portion of
“Poem From Jail" and selection
from
You, a literary
magazine, and Peace Eye, a collection of poems published in
Buffalo this year. Sanders is
presently editor of a controversial
magazine, Marijuana Newsletter.

Charles Olson read a sequence
from New Maximus and his wellknown poem “The Librarian”.
Upon request of John Weiners,
Olson read an untitled poem written the past week.
The entire program, if not completely understood, was well-received. When talking with several students afterwards, Kd San-

ders said he felt the audience
to be very intelligent and sophis-

J-

'

CHARLES OLSON
read seven se-

magazine Measure,

lections from "The Hotel Wenllcy

ticated. He noted that the Buffalo
area appears to be having a
growth of interest in culture and
art that is not merely an imitation of New York. He commented on the "genuine concern in
arts” that is being shown in
Buffalo and on the university

campus.

—

WEEKLY CALENDAR
I TODAY—
12:00 noon Lecturer; Edgar,
May, deputy director of Vista,
Rockwell Hall, Buffalo State.
2:00 p.m. Lecturer: Edward
Sparer on Mobilization for

Youth, Conference
Norton Hall.

Theater,

4:00 p.m Reading: Gary Snyder,
Buddhist poet, 146 Dicfendorf
7:30 p.m. Lecturer: Norman
Walker on the Dance, Confer
cnce Theater, Norton Hall,
8:15

p.m.

Musical:

“Desert

Song" by Romberg, Cleveland
Hill High School.

8:30

p.m. Concert: Barbini
String Orchestra of Canada.

Baird Hall.

1 TOMORROW—
3:30

p.m.

Lecture-Discussion,

Edgar May, "People Against
Poverty," Upton Hall, Buffalo
State
|

I

I
I

1

6:30 p.m. Lecture-Discussion,
Charles Abrams, U. N. Consultant, “People Against Poverty, Upton Hall, Buffalo State.
8:30 p.m. Dance: Norman Walker Dance Company, Bennett

High School, 2875 Main St„
Tickets available at Norton
Ticket Booth

8:30 p.m. Flim: Private Life of
Henry VIII with Charles Laugh
ton, Pilgrim Baptist Church,
655 Michigan Ave., Students
75 cents.
8:30 P m Film: The Dancing
Fe t and DsNe-Kahata, Hindu
movle w,th En S hsh subtitles,
*

Conference
Hall, $1.00

Theater,

Norton

SUNDAY—

3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p..m. Play:
In White America, Fillmore

Room, Norton Hall. Ticket*
available at Norton JPitKet
Booth, Faculty and Staff $1.00,
Students, 75 cents.
'

8:00 p.m. Concert: Durufle's
"Requiem,” Trinity Episcopal
Church.
8:00 p.m. Concert: Mozart’s
“Requiem," Trinity United
Church of Christ, 115 Gold St.
8:30 p.m. Concert: D’Youville
College Chorus, directed by
Gerald
Reinagel, Kleinhans

Music Hall.

...

APRIL 9-16, 1965

MONDAY—WEDNESDAY—
Concert, State University Col9:00 a.m. Lecture: “Narcotics"
lege Band, directed by Dr, JoDr. Bruno Schutkeker, M. D.,

Chief, Neuro Psychiatric Services, Veterans Hospital. Upton
Hall Aud. Open to the public.
9:00

am.

Presentation
of
"Bobbie Bear" series of books
to the Campus School Library
by co authors, Mrs. Janet Bartlett and Mrs, Marilyn O’Lear.
Campus School, SUCB.

seph Wincenc. Soloist: Mr.
George D'Anna, tympanist Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
Rockwell Hall Aud. Open to the
public.
8:00 p.m. Folksongs from the
Southern Appalachians, presented by Kappa Delta Pi, featuring Mrs. Bernard K. Egan
accompanying herself on a dulcimer. Music Room of the College Union. Open to the public.
8:30 p.m. Concert: Walter
Trampler, viola, and assisting

Keller-Nash Gallery, 51016 Elm
wood, art sale of prints by Arp,
Picasso, Manet, etc., priced
$2.50 to $30, ends April 17.
House of Ritchie, 24116 Lexington, Abstract landscapes by
Robert C. Wilson, ends April

|

I
|

10.
Gallery 10, 499 Franklin, Paint
ings and charcoal drawings by
Joseph Piccillo, ends April 11

I

Carlton House, 60 Carlton, Oil
paintings by Carl Illig, ends
2:30 p.m, and 7:30 p.m. Film:
Antigone, Student Center Audi
April 18.
torium, Canisius College.
The Albatross, 3201 Main, Orig
4:30 p.m. Lecture: Professor
inal paintings, drawings, and
artists, works of Vivaldi, WeiAharon Katchalsky, “Polyelecsketches, continuing.
nick,
Hindemith,
etc.,
Baird
trolyte Theory and Biophysics,"
Hall.
A S C Gallery, 615 Englewood,
70 Acheson, continuing April
“Trees and Barns,” 70 water
13, and 16 at 4:30 p.m. and THURSDAYcolors by Ethel M. C. Davis,
12, 3, 6, 8, and 10 p.m. Film:
April 15 at 8:30 p.m.
The Savage Eye, Conference
ends April 25.
TUESDAY—
Theater, Norton Hall.
8:36 p.m. Concert: Walter
Filmart,
637 Main, Photography
8:30 p.m. Lecture: Guillermo
Trampler, viola, and assisting
by Dr. John E. Storr, marine
Diaz-Plaja,
y
“Unamuno
la
of
artists, works
Teleman,
biologist on UB faculty, ends
April
Brahms, Hindemith, Schumann, Literature,” in Spanish, 148

.

etc., Baird Hall.

p.m. Concert: Buffalo

Diefendorf.
CONTINUING EXHIBITS—

8:30
Philharmonic under Lukas Foss, Albirght-Knox Art
Today,” kenetic
works of Copland, Ives-Schuman, Prokofiev and Tchaikowoptical painting
sky, Canisius College.
tions ends April

Gallery, “Art
sculpture and

and construcU.

.

1

|

1

i
I
,

|

I

|

26.

Historical Society Bldg., “Niag
ara Power,” collection of 230
drawings, sketches and water
colors by Lewis Diera, ends
April 30.

|

i

I

1

�Friday, April

9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorised publication of the State
University of New York at Buf-

falo, for which the Spectrum as-,
sumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPE-

WRITTEN form to the Old Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General Notices
University College Students (ex-

cept Nursing): All University College students, except those on
strict academic

probation, will
register for next semester according to the following alpha-

betical schedule:
April 12 through April
K,

16—

R

AMP WOO THAT WE'K ID THE FIFTH ID®C Of
THE TERM, ONE MlfiHE W THAT H/E-W
HUP 1- [TAPE ACHIEUED A CEMW FAME-

W, G

WALLACH

Last week, Mr. David Hallowitz
from Psychiatric Clinic Incorporated, spoke here on “Field and
Problems of Psychiatric Social
Work.” The lecture was sponsored by the Social Welfare Club.

Mr. Hallowitz defined psychiatric social work as “the practice
of social work in relation to psychiatry" and then proceeded to
characterize three categories of
the field: positions involving 1)
mental hospitals, 2) residential
centers, and 3) clinics.
In a mental hospital, he explained, a psychiatric social worker serves as a link between the

patients

and their families, working in collaboration with the medical personnel of the hospital. At
the onset of the patient’s problems. the social worker meets
with the patient’s problems, the
social worker meets with the patient’s closest living relative, studies the environment from which
the patient originates, and takes
a case history of the patient—the latter being the main function of the social worker in a
mental hospital. The patient is
treated entirely by doctors; the
social worker in this situation is
not involved in any therapy. In a
mental hospital, then, the social
worker’s principal role is to meet
on a regular basis with the
patient’s family, to help them to
understand the patient and to encourage them to give the patient
'he

In

incentive to

recover.

Residential Center
Contact

—

,

been previously trained in psyehoterapy but learns several basic denominators of treatment
while working with the psychiatrists.
Schools of Social Work, Mr.
Hallowitz asserted, give special
courses in preparation for psychiatric social work careers. Such
courses often include Child Development and Psychotherapy.
Several key courses may be
taught by psychiatrists, and additional skills may be acquired in
school field work placements.
Case Work More Tangible
When requested to distinguish
somewhat between case work and
psychiatric social work, Mr. Hallowitz felt that the problems dealt
within case work are more tangible than those involved in psychotherapy, the latter being more
mental concerns.

David Hallowitz has worked
with the Psychiatric Clinic Inc.
since 1953, first as the Chief
Psychiatric Social Worker and
now as Assistant Director. Presently, he is on the UB faculty,
teaching a Course entitled “The
Dynamics of Social Behavior.”
Mr. Hallowitz received his master’s degree from the New York
School of Social Work at Columbia, and has since worked at the
Southard School of Menninger
Foundation, at the Denver Home
For Asthmatic Children, and at
the Pleasantville Cottage School.
He has also taught at Buffalo
State.

—

i

Novice Debate Teams
Participate In National
Tourney In Kentucky
Two novice debate teams composed of Robert Dragone and

Richard

I

'
Hallowitz most enjoyed
.Peaking 0 f social work in clin. or children because
his exrests &gt;n this type of posi
In some clinics, according
in
/,

.

k"'m &lt;

ihe social worker has no
ae "'hatsoever with the pa.
but merely helps the relaun&lt;l ersl a nd their problem
rpilrl0ns
’ where*s in other clinics
the S0Clal
worker works more
ri(,.„i
i V w
th the patients. In any
ca J the
social worker has.-.Dot
.
.

,

*

p^

'

‘

.,

scheduled times. At this time, the
Receptionist will give the student
registration cards and a list of
instructions to follow in the sub-

sequent registration procedures.
O.T. and P.T. students will make
appointments with Miss Greenman and Miss Heap directly. Nursing students are advised and reg-

istered through the

of

School

Nursing.

Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required
to register in Clark Gym. on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance register during the
scheduled publicized times. If
the Quality Point Average of such
students improves to such a degree that they become eligible to
continue in school, they will be
informed in June, after semester
grades are in, concerning later
registration dates. Students in
this category, however, who wish
to see their advisers are encouraged to do so. It would be helpful if these students could make
an appointment during the alpha
helically scheduled times, but, if
the problem is pressing, they
can make an appointment at any
time.

Fleisher

and

Allan

Wayne and Charles Liarakos at-

tend the National Novice Debate
Tournamnet in Louisville, Kentucky, last weekend. Both teams
encountered such formidable opponents as Notre Dame, the University of Kansas and Marquette
University in six rounds of
switch-side debate. More than

100 teams representing 23 states
and Canada attend the four-day

tournament.

May 14
All oral examinations must be over on or before
this date. The Graduate School
must be notified by departments

8:30 p.m.
Fine Arts Film—Savage Eya.

—

that prospective graduates have
successfully passed the examination. (This date also applies to
those students following the project route.)

All theses must be
May 28
in the Graduate Office by noon.
M.A. copies bound—Ph.D. copies
—

unbound.

—

Commencement

April 9
Poetry Reading
By Gary Snyder from his own works, Room
146, Dicfendorf Hall, 4:00 p.m.
April 12-16
Foster Lecture Series on chemistry
featuring Prof, Aharon
Katehalsky, Polymer Dept,, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel, speaking on “Polyelectrolyte Theory and Membrane
Biophysics.” The following lectures will , be held in Acheson
HalK Room 70:
Apr. 12
Equilibrium Properties on Polyclectrolyte Systems.
(Solutions, gels and ion exchangers will be considered.) 4:30 p.m.
Apr. 13
Transport Phenomena in Plyelectrolytes and Biopolymers, (Diffusion, transfer and
conductance in these systems will
be analyzed.) 4:30 p.m.
An Introduction to
Apr. 15
the Thermodynamics of Membrane Phenomena 4:30 p.m.
An Analysis of Simple and Composite Membranes. (Polarity and
—

—

—

—

—

April 16
Psychiatric Research
—

Seminar;

with Dr. Hans-Lukas Teuber on
“The Frontal Lobes and their
Function” at Meyer Memorial Hospital, 12:30 p.m.

Placement
Announcements
The University of Rochester
has announced two positions for
students who have completed
their junior year in the area of
Pharmacy. For full information
call the University Placement
Services, 831-3311.

p.m.

Apr. 16

—

Biophysical Applica-

tion of Membrane Thermodynamics. 4:30 p.m.

All inquiries regarding the Buffalo Health Survey should be referred to the Department of Pre
ventive Medicine facilities at 2211
Main Street, TF 3-2726.

The Faculty
Student
Committee for Academic
Freedom will hold a general membership meeting
for the purpose of considering amendments to
their constitution and electing members to the Fxecutive Committee in Room
333 of Norton Hall at 4:00
p.m. Monday.
-

Public Information Intern Program. Applicants must have com-

pleted the courses required for
a Master's Degree in Political Science.
Notifications of position vacancies are now being received in
the placement office in increasing
numbers. If you are an on-campus
active candidate, please obtain
such information from the Educational Placement
Division in
Schocllkopf Hall; off-campus ac-

tive candidates will automatically
be sent notifications of appropriate vacancies.

References required for gred-

uete school admission may be
sent to the Educational Placement Division which will collect,
reproduce, and distribute the references to the appropriate gradu-

ate schools.

TEACHER PLACEMENT
INTERVIEWS

April 9—West Seneca Central
Schools

April 14—Pearl River Union Free
School District 8, Pearl

River, N. Y.

April 13

—

Graduate Business Association

—will present Mr. Lewis H. T.
Dehmlow, president of a subsidiary of the chemical division of

Shell Oil Company in Chicago,
in Norton Hall, Room 335, from
12:30 • 2:30 p.m His topic will
be “Social Responsibilities of Business."
April 14

—

This study, which is supported
the National Institutes of
Health, has been approved by the
Erie County Medical Society.

A New York State agency is
considering applicants for its

circulation will be discussed. 8:30

—

The Buffalo Health Survey
a survey of various health factors
among a random sample of 500
Buffalo area women, is being conducted by the Department of Preventive Medicine of the State University of New York at Buffalo
School of Medicine.
by

Direct

On the other hand, in a residential center, Mr. Hallowitz conmued, the social worker may
avc direct contact with the pa■enls, may interview the
patients,
M may even perform
direct
crapy on the patients
in adwn to completing the tasks of
social worker in the mental

itorium,

date.)

—

P, C
May 3 through May 7
Students will make appointments with the University College
Receptionist in Diefendorf 114
one week in advance of the above
—

Psychiatric Social Work Described
By MARGO

this

quested to forward the project
title to the Graduate School on

Weekly Calendar

April 26 through April 30

"

Prof,

—

May 30

April 19 through April 24

B, F

Psychiatry, School of Medicine,
featuring Dr. Hans-Lukas Teuber,
and Head, Dept, of Psychology, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Boston, Mass., on
the subject "Perception and the
Brain” in Capen Hall, Butler Aud-

Graduate School schedule:
Last date for subApril 9
mission of theses for May 1965
graduation. (If a student submits
a project, the department is re-

The Red Scare
on WKBW
TV, 10:30p.m. channel 7. Dr. David
R. Kochery, professor of law, nar—

rates

this documentary which
probes the influence and effec-

tiveness of the American Communist Party.

Engineering Seminar: will pre-

sent Prof. Leonard I. Stiel, University of Syracuse, speaking on
“Optimization
Techniques"
in Chemical Engineering," in
Parker Engineering, Room 104, at
4:00 p.m.
April 15
Engineering Seminar: featuring
Dr. Richard P. Shaw. Assoc. Prof,
of Engineering in the Division of
Interdisciplinary Studies and Research, State University at Buffalo. on, “Propagation of Waves
—

April 15—Victor Central Schools
(located 14 miles from
Rochester)

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
April 9—

U S. Public Health Service
April 12—
YMCA—Town of Tonawanda
Upjohn Company
April 13—
Breckenridge —Job Corps Center, Camp Breckenridge, Ky.
Donner-Hanna Coke Corp.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
City Products Corporation, Des
Plaines,

111.

Factory Mutual Engineering

Division

April 14—

Pearl River Central Schools
Fisher Scientific

April 16
Erie County Savings Bank
—

PART-TIME AND

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
April 15

—

General

in Elastic Media," in Parker En-

Motor* Corporation,
Chevy-Tonawanda
summer employment. BS, EE. .IE, ME. Junior engineers (will accept Sophomores) for summer positions
in
forge, foundry, and engine departments.
Students employed

Modarn Language* Lecture Series
will present Guillermo DiazPlaja, Barcelona, Visiting Pro-

pany upon graduation.

gineering, Room 104 at 4-5 p.m.

—

fessor of Spanish, speaking in
Spanish on “Unamuno y la Literature", in Dicfendorf Hall, Room

148, at 8:30 p.m.
Piychiatrlc Cueit Lecture Series: sponsored by the Dept, of

—

for the summer will be allotted
credit towards full-time 18-month
training program if he elects to
take a full-time job with the com-

For interview appointment or
information, please call 831-3311,
University Placement Services.
Schoellkopf Hall.

�Friday, April 9, 196S

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

SUSLS5Q2 SdHDSS &amp;BW08
“Fe.tival Folly”
The award presentation of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences (a prosperous name for an
organization devoted totally to the commercialization
of the medium) was curiously timed. It took place on a
night when there wasn’t a single interesting movie in
the entire city of Buffalo that hadn’t been playing here
for about four weeks (excepting the feature at the Circle
Art, of course). Perhaps this is the case all over the country
and the awards are designed to take people’s
minds off the dreadful paucity of interesting films available. For me, they didn’t exactly succeed. 1 didn’t watch
them, of course. I never do. Hollywood isn’t terribly good
at producing a television show. But the results are in—

WRA To Sponsor Arts Symposium Discusses
Theater, Dance Its Relationship To Society
The Modern Dance Group of
the Women’s Recreation Association is sponsoring the showing of
two outstanding films on the
theater and dance. The films, A
Night at The Peking Opera, and
Martha Graham's, A Dancer's
World, will be shown in the Conference Theater at 3:00 p.m. and
8:00 p.m. Monday. A Night at the
Peking Opera is perhaps the
significant film on Chinese theater. The film is in color and
was made in the opera house in
order that the performances of
the dramas could take place
under the best possible circumstances. This exposure to the
theatrical techniques of the East
usually proves to be a revelation
for most Western theatergoers.
The use of stylized movement,
costume, and makeup combine to
produce a vivid theatrical experience.

the film A
Dancer's World, makes a general
By

comparison,

comment on

JULIE ANDREWS

REX HARRISON

teresting. I used to get a little bit angry at the Academy,
but since I’ve learned about what they are really trying
to do, I rather feel a paternal benevolence for their
rather ingenuous efforts. It’s kind of amusing to see a
cut-throat, short-sighted, immoral, cruelly inhuman, bigoted set-up like the American movie industry put on
a face that drips treacle.
Actually, what the Academy Awards do is probably
less harmful than the pretentious, arty, hokum of numerous European festivals. No pompous parasite postures
about the great contribution to “ART” and the like that
the various actors and directors have made. The whole
thing is a lot more down to earth
jus’ plain folks getting together, on the family farm . . . that sort of thing.
Nice people like Rex Harrison say nice things about pretty (“fair?”) leading ladies like Julie Andrews and Audrey Hepburn. Everybody tries to pretend that nasty Jack
Warner never really pitched Miss Andrews out of that
part she wanted so much. (“Nothing disrespectful to Julie
Andrews,” Warner said, “but she had never been in a
film at the time I cast My Fair Lady.")
Couple of years ago, Liz Taylor got an award for
almost dying from a strep' infection (8 to 5 says you
can't tell me the name of the picture she was in). After
a quarter century of loyal service to the industry, Gregory
Peck was awarded an Oscar for his over-wrought, uncontrolled portrayal of an appealing Lincolnesque lawyer
in a small southern town
just about 12 years after
his Oscar-caliber performance as the bone-chilling hired
killer in the little known The Gunfighter (1950).
What I discovered, finally, about the whole affair,
is the fact that the industry is actually doing three things
at once. It tries to repay its loyal troopers in the most
sentimental fashion possible; tries to build up the boxoffice of old pictures which have been hanging around
too long; and in a much smaller way, makes an honest
effort at rewarding publicly the efforts of the people
who make the whole machine go round. That is, the
whole host of minor awards which are really appreciated by the industry, but which completely baffle the audience. For instance can you identify the particular achievement of Petro Vlahos, Wadsworth E. Pohl and U. B.
Iwerks? They won an Oscar for a category cklled “Scientific or Technical Achievement.” But, for most of us. the
big awards are the only ones that matter.
First, I haven’t seen Mary Popping (a movie I understand is just fine for women and children of limited
sophistication). But, 1 think Julie Andrews is top-notch
and 1 believe that any of her performances dignify the
award. Rex Harrison-is a real pro and what ever he does,
he does superbly. Whether he ever tries anything especially demanding or really significant is anohter matter
but it’s hard to get angry about the whole thing. Of
course, the idea that anybody could have been chosen
over Peter Sellers is preposterous, but then the Academy
was pretty upset by Dr. Strangelove. I mean, what would
Hedda Hopper (who speaks, God help us, for the establishment much of the time) say about an ugly, upsetr
(Coat'd on P. 16)
—

—

the contemporary

American dancer and a specific
statement about the dance techniques and creative approach of
Bartha Graham. Miss Graham
serves as narrator for the film
and introduces members of her
company. They are seen in the
practice studio singly and in various groupings. As the title designates, the film depicts the arduous training demanded of the
contemporary dancer. It also
shows how this training can produce what Miss Graham has
called “that glowing sense of
one’s self as a human being and
as an artist.”
Both films are highly recommended. They will prove of special interest to anyone interested
in the arts of dance and theater.

The symposium on “The Arts
Today” took p.lace Monday, April
5, at 4:00 p.m! in the Conference

Theater of Norton Union. Albert
S. Cook, Chairman of the English
Department and moderator of the
panel, opened the discussion by
proclaiming the Spring Arts Festival an “important academic and
artistic activity.” Representatives
from the fields of art, music,
drama, and poetry first discussed
aspects of their particular medium in relationship to society.
Then an open discussion followed,, during which the audience was invited to ask ques-

tions.

Philip C. Elliott, Chairman of
the Art Department, first read
two quotes describing art today,
which showed the vast range of
possibilities afforded the artist.
He stated that there is an absolute freedom of expression which
the artist utilizes fully. Mr. Elliot
also felt that there are no bounds
or restrictions to stifle the artist’s prerogative.
Allen D. Sapp .Chairman of the
Music Department, maintained
that music is too omnipresent.
In his opinion, the composer’s biggest problem is finding silence.
He went on to state that music,
whose types run a gamut as wide
as those of art, is becoming more
theatrical in its presentation, and
by incorporating these other artistic elements, music is becoming more communicable,
Thomas S. Watson. Assistant
Professor in the Department of
Drama and Speech, began by differentiating between drama, that

which is written, and theater,
that wheih is presented on stage.
Theater, according to Dr. Watson, employs every art medium to
supplement its range. The theater, however, leans too heavily

Schaffer’s Plays Scheduled
For Baird Hall April 21-24
The twin British satires penned
by Peter Shaffer, The Private
Ear and The Public Eye will be
presented by the Department of
Drama and Speech and the Stu
dent Dramatic Society in Baird
Auditorium at 8;30 p.m. from
Wednesday, April 21 through
Saturday, April 24. The production is now in rehearsal under

the direction
Pardee.

Appearing

of
in

Mrs.

both

Julia

plays

is

Thomas Brennan, visiting lecturer with the Department of Drama
and Speech and member of the
Actors’ Studio. Also in the cast
of The Private Ear are Ronda
Lyon and William Cortes. Jeanette
Veling and Gary Battaglia play
the other principals in the sec-

SPRING WEEKEND
COMMITTEE
NEEDED: convertibles
to I** driven in the Heralding Parade. If interested
call 831-3664 or NF 42585.

ond comedy. The Private Ear and
The Public Eye enjoyed a hit
run on Broadway during the 196364 season where they helped to
establish the current trend for
British imports.

Humorous

tradition and, consequently,
retards its own advancement. It
is essential that the plays of the
new playwrights be produced extensively and properly.
on

Herbert N. Schneidau, Assistant
Professor in the English Department .declared that poetry is
more vibrant and alive than one
might have ever expected possi-

ble. With its rigidity and formality gone, poetry now appeals
to a wide range of readers. Poets
have “come back to the soil.”
The poet is no longer alienated
or exiled, but is rather trying
to make articulate things which
are implicit in life.

In the following more informal
discussion. Professor Sapp showed
concern at the influx of culture

which has flooded every person.
Professor Evergood maintained
that the speed of absorption of
art, rather than the amount of
it, will bring about a number of
neuroses, while Professor Sch'nei
dau reinforced the idea that poets
are coming to grip with American life very seriously. The
speakers, in mentioning other art
media, concluded that modern
dance is fraught with alienation,
and that the novel today is vital,
as is every other conceivable
art form in this era of rapid
cultivation and communication.

The Recreation Committee of the Union Board
will hold an Easter Egg
Hunt for children of the
Facility Sunday at 2:00
p.m. Between Baird Hall
and Towei’. All students
are invited to join in the

"ONE OF
THE GREAT
AMERICAN
MOVIES!

festivities and meet the
members of our

Faculty.

,

|i

TOWERING I YOU CANNOT
afford to miss m"
r-Jvdith Crid, H«foW TribuM

Parted
lorth
1428
AVE-*
HtRTEL

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"TRULY

BREATH-TAKING!

TF6-7411

ACADEMY AWARD SHI

NOMINATED FOR "BEST ACTRESS"
I r&gt; DEBBIE

A julie

Andrews

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laa-raai

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no cover charge or minimum

M

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ONE OF THE

t

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10 BESTI”

Wintttn, N,Y,

J

n

JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
SAM NOTO
PLAYBOY’S TOP JAZZ TRUMPET
nominee and star performer with:
•

•

COUNT BASIE

*

STAN KENTON

WOODY HERMAN
Fri., Sat., Sun., Nite at the
•

Will

PLUS

GOLDWHISKERS!

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

490 Pearl Street

By Popular Demand...

Buffalo’s

7:30-f:30

Parking in Rear

JAM SESSION

'

Top Jazz

SUN 9pm

Show!

“NOTHING
BUT A NUN'

to

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GNUS*
mm
3K5M*r«ft*tr

�Friday, April

9, 1965

GREEK NOTES

The Inter-Fraternity Council is

pleased to announce that this
a
ve ar's Greek Weekend was

complete success. The Friday
night party in Washington Hall,
when combined with the Greek
Ball at Kleinhans Music Hall,
made for a very enjoyable week-

end for all who participated.
This weekend was the first
evidence of a reincarnated InterFraternal Council. The goal of
the newly elected officers is to
make this body an integral part
of this University. With the sup,rt of the Greeks, the Council
ill take its proper place on
impus which is that of an imirtant influential body.
Barry Brenstoch. l.F.C.
pan HELLENIC COUNCIL
The Pan Hellenic Council will
hold its Installation Tea Monday
in Norton.
in the Charles Room,
The new officers who will be

installed

President, Cindy
President. Monica
Bauer: Second Vice President,
Beverly Bolles; Secretary, Christa flbricht; Treasurer, Geri Moreno. All of the new delegates
will receive Pan-Hellenic dangles,
in recognition of their new posiare;

Vice

Perl:

GAMMA

Saturday, ALPHA
DELTA held the IRD Reunion
luncheon with the alumnae.

Tomorrow, the pledges of ALPHA PHI OMEGA will hold a
party for the brotherhood at the
Hotel Buffalo. Dress is semiformal.
At the Elevsian

Dinner last

Saturday, the following CHI OMEGA'S were presented with awards:
Barbara Witzel, the Scholarship

Award:

Brenda

O’Hern,

Best

Pledge Award; Pat lacuzzo, Activity Award; and Pat Bany, the

Memorial Award,

Tomorrow evening, CHI OMEGA will hold its traditional, annual April Showers Dinner-Dance.

DELTA CHI OMEGA would al
so like to announce the election
of new officers, held this past
Monday evening, for the year
1965-66. They are: President,

Herb Ballard; Vice President,
Fred Hamann; Secretary, Bob McFadden; Treasurer, Stu Chasnoff;
Marshall, Steve Reich; Corresponding Secretary, Ernie Curtis;
Historian, Terry Angelo; Parliamentarian, Pete Andolino; and
Sergeant-at-arms, Terry Mace.
The winners of the Delta Chi
Omega drawing were: first prize,
OE. AM-FM radio, Jim Caruso,
■

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

from South Buffalo; and second
prize, twenty dollars, Bob Bond
of Fairhaven, New York.

PHI EPSILON PI would like
to announce the officers of the
Spring- ’65 Pledge Class: President. Sandy Finkel: Vice-Presi-

dent, Steve Linker: Treasurer,
Steve Michaelson: Secretary, Mark
Cohen.

This year as a community service project, the Pledge Class is
doing volunteer work for the
Red Cross.
The brothers and pledges are
having a semi-formal party at the
Hotel Richford tomorrow night.
The party, will start at 9:00 p.m.
Buses will leave Norton at 8:30
p.m.

PHI

KAPPA

PHI

is

looking

forward to the annual Tequila
Party tomorrow evening.

SIGMA DELTA TAU will hold
its Closing Affair tomorrow night
at The Charter House. A cocktail party will precede the affair and will start at 7:30 p.m.
The new officers of the Spring
Pledge Class of Sigma Delta Tau
are: President. Judy Kron; VicePresident. Elaine Rubinstein; Secretary
Treasurer, Gain Zamshnick.
-

SIGMA KAPPA PHI is looking

forward to a dinner which the
pledges are giving for them Monday.

SIGMA PHI EPSILON will en
tertain parents of brothers and
pledges this weekend. There will
be a dance Friday night from
9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. at Eduardo’s. A convocation tomorrow
will be followed by a buffet supper.

TAU KAPPA EPSILON is look

ing forward to a social this evening with the sisters of Delta
Sigma Sorority from Buffalo
State. Tomorrow morning the
pledges will challenge the broth
ers to a football game followed
by a closed stag sponsored by

the losers at the TEKE apart-

ment. Tomorrow evening the
pledges are presenting a closed
party for all brother? and their
dates as Bosela’s on Cleveland
Drive. The party will start at

8:30 p.m. The “Ft. Lauderdale"
theme was chosen to enable all
the Florida returnees to show
off their fading tans.
All roads will lead to 161 Grider where PHI LAMBDA DELTA
is holding its Annual Roman Toga Party tomorrow evening starting at 8:30 p.m.

Buffalo Takes Top Place in First
Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament
The University of Buffalo was
host of the first UB Intercol-

legiate Bridge tournament last
weekend. Teams that participated

included Buffalo State, Fredonia.
University of Rochester and
Clarkson Tech. The tournament
was conducted in two sessions and
the UB team of Bobby Lipsitz.
Roger Pics. Dick Flcichman, and
Ralph Bartlett took top position
for both sessions. The UB team
fought off all challenges to the
claim that they are the best College bridge tecam in the country
(American Contract Bridge League
Bulletin. February 1965). Their
first place finish will entitle the
University of Buffalo to keep the
rotating trophy until the next
tournament. It will be displayed
in the trophy case irt the recreation area.

The second and third places

ters. A large number of ■'kibitzers” turned out to see this tournament. The Tournament was run
by Buffalo's (op bridge player.
Mrs. Ralph Gordon,

were also captured by the Uni-

versity of Buffalo. These teams
respectively included Chuck Bro-

Lesniek. Paul Lubell,
and Jon Edelman: and Ed George.
Mark Hassenberg, Shicla Dowd,
and Bob Keating, For their efver, Henry

APRIL
23
ANNUAL

There will be a meeting of the
p.m.
in Room 327. Come on up and
meet our victorious players and
see how you can do against them.

Bridge Club Tuesday at 7:30

forts they received masterpoints-

which will help them to continue
on their way towards Life Mas-

International Club Fiesta Planned

SPRING
SALE

pherc, with the same table and
dance floor arrangements, In addition to a band, there will be
various performances, including
a rendition of a Japanese candlelight (lance,
by International
Dance groups in their native
costumes.

The International Club, of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, will again hold its annual international "Fiesta" April
23, at 7:00 p.m.
The Fillmore Room in Norton
Hall will be the location for the
evenings festivities. The fiesta
will have a night club atmos-

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

Native foods and delicacies
will be one of the many highlights of the evening.

They will
be served from booths by people
in their native costumes, representing their own country. A few
of these will be Italy, Japan,

The Lay-out Staff wishes to apologize to Gloria
Pardo of Theta Chi and
Kathy Salay of Sigma
Kappa Phi, for the om-

“On Campus”

China, India, The Ukraine, Lithuania, and the Middle Eastern
countries.

niission in last week’s
Spectrum of their pictures
as Greek Weekend Queen

Admission charge, which includes food, dancing and all en
tertainment for members and
non-members, is $1.50.

candidates.

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CANTERBURY

MUSLIM STUDENT

ASSOCIATION
A General Body Meeting will
be held Sunday, at 3:00 p.m. in
Room 330, Norton. Coffee and
drinks will be served.
NEWMAN

During Lent, Mass is said daily
at noon at St. Joseph’s Church
and at 5:00 p.m. at Newman Hall.
Just a reminder: Sunday is Palm
Sunday and the beginning of Holy
Week.

A business meeting is sched
uled for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m,
in the Fillmore Room.

Coming events: Sunday, April
25; Annual spring picnic. Wednesday, April 21: The Episcopalian Bishop of Buffalo will speak
at the meeting at 7:30 p.m. in
Norton 335. Wednesday, April
28: Closing Banquet.
STUDENT

Friday, April 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

CHRISTIAN

The Rev. John A. Buerk and
several SCA members will be par-

ticipating in the Spring Assem
bly of the Student Christian
Movement

in New York State
this weekend at Cazenovia, N. Y.
The conference will include students from state and private colleges and universities throughout
New York State. The main topic
of discussion will be “Peace
Where Do We Stand?—Where
Are We Going?—What Do We
—

Do?"

RELIGIOUS TIDINGS

Good Friday services of devotion for the Protestant Community of the University will be held
in the University Presbyterian
Church, corner Main St. and Niagara Falls Blvd.

The identical half hour services will be conducted at 12:10
and 3:10 p.m. by the Rev. John
Buerk, Protestant Chaplain to the
University, and the Rev. Robert
Jones, Methodist Campus minister.

Tuesday and Wednesday
2:00-3:00 p.m., the eleventh

at

in
the current series of discussions
of the "Gospel According to
Saint John” will be offered. Both
sessions will be held in Room
266 Norton. The specific topic
will be “Christ’s Trial, Crucifixion,. Death, and Burial” John
18:12 19:42. All students and faculty members are invited to attend either of the duplicate sessions.

In addition, there is a celebration of the Holy Communion
every Tuesday in the Veteran’s

Chapel at noon.

GRADUATE CLUB
The Hillel Graduate Club will
meet Sunday at 8:00 p.m. in the
Hillel House. Mr. Marvin Garfinkel, Educational Director of
Temple Beth El will speak on,
“Jewish Survival in a Free Society.”

The Graduate Club will also
meet for its weekly discussion
hour Thursday at 8:00 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Graduate students, single faculty members,
and seniors over 21 are cordially
invited to attend the meetings of
this group, to participate in the
discussions and programs, and to

enjoy the fellowship.

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
HILLEL

FELLOWSHIP

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: “What We
Believe About the Future."

Prayer meetings are being held
Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. There are also
Bible studies Friday at 9:00 a.m.
and Monday at 3:00 p.m. These
are all held in the CRO Office,
Room 217 of Norton Union.

Hillel will hold another of its

weekly supper meetings Sunday
at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Mrs. Miles Fox will present a review of Henog by Saul Bellow.

The Hillel office has been notified of a variety of Israel programs available to college stu
dents. These programs include

summer tours, work programs on
a kibbutz opportunities for study
both for the summer and during
the regular school year and the
newly devised “Year of Service”
program. Interested students are
urged to obtain additional information at the Hillel House.

Students who would like to look
into the possibility of working
as camp counselors this summer
should now inspect the various
announcements of job openings
at the Hillel House. Needed are
both general counselors and
specialists in such areas as arts
and crafts, dramatics, and swimming. The camps are located in
the Buffalo area as well as in
various other sections of the
United States and Canada.

The Seminar conducted by
Bruce Haan on “Personal Witnessing” will meet for its last
two sessions Wednesdays, April
14 and 21, at 4:00 p.m. in Room
344 of Norton Union.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is also sponsoring a series
of lectures on the Old Testament. These are conducted by
Mr. San Marco, Tuesday at 4:30
p.m. in Room 266 of Norton
Union. The last two studies will
be held April 27 and May 4. .
The Spring Weekend of IVCF
Chapters in Western New York is
being held this weekend, starting
this evening at 7:00 p.m. It will
be at Le Tourneau Christian
Camp on Canandiagua Lake. You
may still attend part or the entire weekend even if you did not
pre-register.
Our new slate of Officers for

next semester are as follows:
President, Billie Lee Knapp; Vice
President, Ann Judson; Secretary,
Patty McCarthy, and Treasurer,
John Kohl.

Pan-Hel Tea Honors Women
The annual Pan-Hellenic Scholarship Tea was held in the Dorothy Has lounge Sunday, March
28. The purpose of this tea was
to honor the outstanding achievements among sorority women.
The event began with a speech
by the author Mrs. Evelyn
Hawes. Mrs. Hawes is an alumnae of the school and also of the
Greek system. She spoke to the
girls about her work and the

AT

the fall class.
Seven senior women had been
considered (or the Senior Award
—the Lillian MacDonald Scholarship Tray. This tray is given
to the senior having the highest
accumulative average for the past
seven semesters. Miss Haas, PanHellenic advisor presented the
tray to Carolyn Osborne of Sigma
Kappa Phi.

Also awarded at this time was
the Pan-Hellenic scholarship. This
$100 award was presented to
Joanne Smith also of Sigma
Jappa Phi.

The

final presentation was
made to the sorority with the

highest average tor the two se-

FINE

STORES

NEW YORK
Albany, Frank Adams
Albany, Fuhrman's Inc.
Albany, Stuyvesant jeweler Inc.
Stuyvesant Plaza
Amherst, Adam Meldrum &amp; Anderson So.
Binghamton, Henry's Jewelers
Brewster, Addessi Jewelry Store, Inc.

books that she had written.

Following this, the awards
were presented to the girls.
Eighty-eight girls received flowers for attaining Dean’s List
averages either during spring '64
or this past fall, '65. This year
a new award was also presented;
the pledge who maintained the
highest average during her
pledgeship. For the spring pledge
class, the award went to Linda
Gunsberg, and Marjorie Nelson

THESE

Sorority Women honored by Pan-Hellenic Scholarship
mesters. This average is based
on the total hours and quality
points of all the members of the

individual sororities who are fulltime students. Dean Scudder presented the Scholarship Bowl to
Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority

Also new this year by PanHellenic is the sponsoring of a
Junior Pan-Hellenic made up of
pledges of each sorority. The
purpose of this is to help unite

the Greek system and also to
bring pledges more into the realm
of all sorority life. The new delegates of this group were then
introduced
Mrs.

.Faith

Moll closed the
afternoon ceremonies paying special tribute to the women who
have devoted so much time and
effort to Pan-Hellenic during this
past year, and praising them for
their excellent job.

Listen To VJBFO For Sports

Buffalo, A.M.&amp; A.'s —Downtown University
Buffalo, Sheridan, Thruway &amp; Southgate Plazas
Catskill, Hallenbeck's Jewelers, Inc.
Cheektowaga, Adam, Meldrum &amp; Anderson Co.
Cohoes, Timpane's Jewelers
Cortland, Harry Alpert Jeweler
Elmira, Deister &amp; Butler Inc.
Endicott, Henry's Jewelers
Hudson, Alger'* Jewelry
Ithaca, Schooley's
Jamestown, Baldwin Jewelry

Kingston, Scheneider's Jewelers, Inc.
Lockport, Scrito's Jewelry Store
Middletown—Serpentini Jlrs.
Medina, Limina's Jlry. Store
Newburgh, Wm. Griffin Jewelers
Oneonta, Jerry Halbert
Oswego, Conti Jewelers
Painted Post, Mallison Jlrs.
Plattsburgh, Henry's Jewelers
Rochester, Hershberg's Jewelers

Rochester, Wm. S. Thorne
Schenectady, Maurice B. Graubart &amp; Sons
Schenectady, Wallace's
Syracuse, Henry's Jewelers
Syracuse, H. J. Howe Inc.
Town of Tonawanda, Adam, Meldrum &amp; Anderson Co.
Utica, Evans &amp; Son
Watertown, Henry's Jewelers
West Senecd, Adam, Meldrum &amp; Anderson Co.

�Friday, April

9, 1965

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

jCetteri to the

m@ra’@

Sweite t
®SiD&lt;SiS

Editor

the two that results more often than not in tension,
let’s confess it
frustration, impatience and
in
poor preparation and diminished individual attention. I feel that Mr. Port is justly aiming at these
shortcomings in the system and should therefore not
be held responsible of the very justified criticism
Professor Van Den Berghe makes about the American student generally. 1 think everyone who has
some teaching experience can make
unfortunatesimilar observations. But this deplorable con1y
dition that has its deep and complicated reasons
in the structure of our society and the values we
.
oUa.i1/)
u n ]j should
not be used as an excuse ffor the true
hold,
disadvantage the “publish and perish” system brings
to teachers and students alike. As recently as April
2nd, Professor Henri Peyre, chairman of the Yale
Romance Languages and Literature Department,
told an audience at this University that in his opinion, too much stress is placed on “publishing at
any cost” and for reasons that have little to do
with teaching per se, not to speak of the mediocre
—

—

—

—

__i

i

i

..

,c

""'

r

d

51

value of many such publications. He also stressed
that this tendency of imposed specialization and
indispensible search for new things within one's
own field prevent many teachers from spreading
out in an attempt to correlate knowledge within
various fields in a truly human synthesis.
Last but not leasti and only since Professor
Van Den Berghe seefns to place so much importance
on an oversight of quotes in Mr. Port’s use of his
thoughts (the word was “excessive”), what have
0 think of the wording in his article, paragraph
(

.

nrn it
n AK om
nfKo
The problem,
3, where
rather,
is that teachsavs. itrrUn
’
n S ability is much more difficult to asses objectively . .
(I say “asses” -sic), if not he, like Mr.
Port, are probably only the victims of a printer’s
error or oversi ght?

0
.

.

„

|

_

_

...

*

Sincerely,

Paul Kohler
(Instructor of Spanish)

Greek Queen Pictures Omitted
TO THE EDITOR

It only two columns could be devoted, why weren’t
. .
,
all pictures left out, or the resumes shortened and
In the last 'ssue of the Spectrum, two columns a|] pictures
included
were devoted to Greek Weekend queen candidates,
pictures, and their resumes. Two pictures of can
The Spectrum is widely read on campus, and
didates were omitted from the article, which, we we feel that this omission had a possible effect on
feel, was in poor taste of your staff. No reason was the votes cast in our candidate’s favor,
given for this omission, yet your staff claims to
Sisters of Theta Chi Sorority
give equal coverage to all organizations in all areas. Editor's Note: See box under “Greek Notes."
.

..

,

,

,

Greeks Are Integral Part of Campus
TO THE EDITOR

Much has been said in the past about the Uni-

14-Zipper coat sweaters
34-44, red, beige, blue

Reg.
Price

Sale
Price

$22.95

$10.88

ing is to an extent a result of the Spectrum's put
ting its heel down upon the Greeks.

versity, the Spectrum and their relationships with
Of course the “real" news must be covered
and to the Greeks. The low esteem in which the and given the prime space in the paper. The responomnieient editors hold the Greeks, (manifested in sibility of a college paper, however, extends a
the low number of column inches devoted to the little deeper. The college paper should reflect the
Greeks) is evidenced when yoifc.say, “When they, campus and all the people who make it up. It would
(the Greeks) do something newsworthy they will be nice to go to a school at which a little of the
get into my newspaper.’ 1 That is a very safe posi- “rah-rah” spirit lives along with your apparently
tion to take because the Greeks will never be noted honest concern for serious academic supplement,
by what the Spectrum editors will consider “newsacademic freedom and stimulating analysis of our
world.
worthy."
Rosey Brothman
The University of Buffalo is a large, growing
concern. As such, it is surprising that it lacks much
of the aura of a going university. The “beer-blast- Editor's Note; Our position on “Greek” news has
ing, raccoonskin coat" spirit which the Spectrum always been to apply the same criteria of judgment
looks down upon, and which the Greek system to printing items concerning the “Greeks” as to
perpetuates happen to be an integral part of extra- any and all news sources, (e.g. R.O.T.C., campus
curricular collegian life. The apathy and lack of clubs, Student Senate, off campus news of concern
respect for UB which the Spectrum itself is fight- to students, etc.)

Contact Your Senator

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merit. Such contact can be made by leaving a message in the University College mailbox in the
obligated to make ourselves readily accessible to Student Senate office, Room 205, Norton,
Helene Friedman, Evy Weinrub,
our constituency. We therefore encourage any stuGeorge Bodner, Kim L. Harrow,
dent in University College to contact us at any
time about any matter related to student governRobert Potter, Raymond Volpe
TO THE EDITOR:
As senators from University College, we feel

9,25

New Senate Acted Irresponsibly

cable stitch) 38-44, black,
gray, green, heather

arguments which are not, and should not be amongst
rntena for recognition.
I was appalled by the fact that the 1965-66
. kill that was presented to the Senate to
Student Senate refused to recognize the “Univernlze
* University Committee For Academic
sity Committee for Academic Freedom” for totally E,
Freedom was the first piece of legislation before
irrelevant and irrational reasons. The Student Acew 65-’66 Student Senate. I can only hope that
tivities Committee unanimously recommended that
„
«p
t
,h.
«»«*«■
w. sro ■„
can add significantly to this University, yet, those the upcoming year.
on the Senate who voted against recognition used
Martin Feinrider
TO THE EDITOR

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government, I agree. Our system of government,
democracy, has one magnificent shortcoming. It puts
the ultimate decisions of morality into the hands of
I
those who neither know nor care about morality
I am slightly different, 1 have discovered what it is -—the people. And a society
is based on its morality;
I don’t like.
if the morality becomes rotten so does the society.
The best manifestation here at UB of what I
saw
Plato
this great shortcoming of democracy
don't like is the clamor of the students for alcoholic From the Republic VIII 563:
beverages on campus. What is it that disturbs and
“Putting all these items together, you can see
depresses me about the fight of the students for a
small convenience? T will be blunt. The students the result: the citizens become so sensitive that
don’t know what they are doing. They don’t know they resent the slightest application of control as
that they are erecting a gallows to hang the whole intolerable tyranny, and in their resolve to have na
American society. The whole American society, master they end by disregarding even the law, written or unwritten.
that is. which is to come after them.
TO THE EDITOR

I am an angry young man. Like my predecessors.
don’t like this world into which 1 have grown. But

"ON CAMPUS"

“Such then, 1 should say is the seed, so full of
In what way are they doing this? When the
students tear down (not change! the artificial mor- fair promise, from which springs despotism."
Just substitute artificial morality for
ality imposed by society they are opening the door
control:
to chaos, decay and pain far outweighing any
Stanley Dayan
to
pleasure
be gained.
Editor's Not*: This seems to prove that anyone can
One then admits that this is true but that nothing quote scriptures . . .
can be done about it. Under the present system of
(Cont'd on P. 15)

�Proposed Senate Amendments
(Corit’d

Friday, April 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

from P. 5)
4. To supervise or conduct any other elections when duly
requested to do so by any club or organization.
5. To proceed as follows in:
a. The election of the Student Senate and the officers of
the Student Association:
1. As of March first, using the latest registration
figures available from the Dean of Students’ Office,
declare the number of Student Senators to be elected
from each division represented in the Student Senate
on a divisional basis.
2. Verify the qualifications of candidates.
3. Outline and have approved by the Student Senate
no less than 21 days previous to the coming election,
rules and procedures of said election.
b. The election of Student Councils:
1. Have the members of the committee serve as commissioners of all Student Council elections.
2. When duly requested to do so, conduct the election.
6. All election inequities shall be directed to the Student

Teach-In Report

.

that “by pulling out of Viet Nam
we do nothing but further ap
peasing.”

.

slice of the world until democratic society will be overwhelmed
and die.
Those, who said that the United
States should pull out of Viet
Nam felt; (1) That the war in
Viet Nam is a civil war between
the people of the country and
the American supported regieme.
(2) The U S, is conducting an in-

from P. 1)
Students for a Democratic Society. S.D.S. is the organization
which is co-ordinating U.B. support for a march on Washington
to protest the war in Viet Nam
next Saturday. Dr. Willhelm said,
“The teach-in was an overwhelming success attracting large numbees of attentive students. I was
incorrectly Quoted by news media
tITr
clr
hr I looked
(Cont’d

;

.

human war against the women
id children of Viet Nam. (3) It

!

—

Jeremy Taylor, the new editor
of the Spectrum, said “I do not
believe we can fight Communism

,

by imposing a military regime
that the people do not want. If
we are to deal with the realities
of the day we must deal in human terms not military or political. Reality to the Vietnamese
and all men ■ is initially three
square meals a day." Mr. Taylor
suggested an Asian Marshall Plan
“I doubt that the Viet Cong would
continue to blow up American in
stallations if they were hospitals
and schools. How about a war on

Judiciary.

To conduct all student referendums

B.

Membership
1. Interested students.
2. A chairman to be appointed by the Senate.
3. One or more advisors to be chosen by the committee

5 National Student Association Steering Committee
A. Functions
1 It shall maintain communications with the National Student Association on matters such as education, academic
freedom, democratic student government, student welfare,
civil rights.
2. It shall take effective action in the above areas of concern,
when other committees fail to do so.
3. It shall make N.S.A. resources available to the Senate and
Senate committees.
B, Membership
its members shall be
1. Interested students
2. A chairman to be appointed by the Senate
3. One or more advisors to be chosen by the committee

poverty bevond the boundries of.

Section

Section

A.

B.

Section
A,

B.

6 Student Public Relations Committee
Functions
1. It shall maintain relations with the Buffalo Community
through the University Relations Office.
2. It shall serve as a reception group for speakers and visitors
to this campus.
Membership . , its members shall be:
1. Interested students.
2. A chairman to be chosen by the Student Senate.
3. One or more faculty advisors to be chosen by the com
mittee.

the U.S.?”

teach-ins as a "dissmal failure”
(Dr. Wilhelm has informed the
city papers of their mistake.) This
is simply not so. I was disappointed only in regard to the lack
of evidence sustaining the difference arguments. The speakers
did not present adequate facts
in arguing their positions. None
the less I consider the teach-in
highly successful and indeed one
of the most successful throughout
the nation."
The purpose of the teach-in,
Mr. Harrell told the Spectrum,
was “to get people interested in
the issue, think about it and be
concerned with it.”
During the night many arguments were presented both for
pulling out of Viet Nam and for
staying. Statements of speakers
were met with enthusiastic applause and cheering. Among the

7 Student Academic Affairs Committee
Functions
1. It shall serve as a channel of communications between
the Student Senate and the various faculties and University administration for academic matters,
2. It shall study and report to the Student Senate on any
academic matters.
Membership
its members shall be:
1. Interested students.
2. A chairman to be appointed by the Student Senate.
3. One or more advisors to be chosen by the committee.
...

Section 8 The Student Welfare Committee
It shall investigate, report, and recommend in
A, Functions
areas of student concern not within the areas of responsibility
of other committees of the Student Senate.
■

B.

Section

Membership
its members shall be:
1. Interested students.
2. A chairman to he appointed by the Student Senate.
3. One or more advisors to be chosen by the committee.
...

9 Convocations Committee

A. Functions
1. It shall provide and arrange speakers programs sponsored
or co-sponsored by the Student Senate.
2. It shall coordinate these speaking programs with those of
other students.
.
its members shall be:
B. Membership
1. Interested students.
2. A chairman to be appointed by the Student Senate.
3
One or more advisors to be chosen by the committee
Section 10 International Student Affairs
A. Functions It shall establish and carry out programs designed
to integrate the foreign student with university and commu■

B.

nity life.
its members shall be
Membership
1. Interested student
2, A chairman to be appointed by the Student Senate
be chosen bv the committee
3 One or more advisor

Section 11 Publicity Committee
A Functions It shall be available to the Senate and all Senate
Committees for the purpose of publicity
members shall be
B Membership
1. Interested students
2. A chariman to be appointed by the Student Senate
3 One or more advisors to be chosen b\ the committee

David Armstrong, Instructor in
Classic, said, “Large masses of
people are apathetic and would
rather have peace at the cost of
any form of government. To those
in favor of the administration's
policy nothing is more important
than the pursuits of our own inthat the U.S.
is fighting is one of pure interest
and not morality.”

arguments presented for staying
in Viet Nam were: (1) Prevent
another Munich. We can not back
down in the face of Communism,
We cannot afford more loss of
face. (2) If we allow the Communists to move into Viet Nam
they will continue to take country after country until we find
Communism at our back (and
front) door. (3) The Communists
will continue to take slice after
’

i

'

'

is ' csoting ‘ the U.S. two million
dollars a day to lower our prestige in the eyes of the world.
A few of the many statements
and ideas brought out .in twelve
hours of debate follow. Leonard
Port of the English Department
said; “In history there has never
been a time when two countries
are armed to the teeth that war
is not inevitable. This won’t be
an ordinary war . . The real issue is whether we are going to
live very long.”

Henry Simon, a former student
senator said, “Viet Nam is the
name of a million people and it
is the people that I am concerned
about. We have to stop talking
about which ideology we want
these poor peasants to follow and
let them live.” Professor Zimmerman of the Philosophy Department said, “The alternative to
dropping the bomb on woment
and children in Viet Nam is much
The
more and worse killing.
choice is not between killing and
not killing."
Mark Kennedy of the Sociology
Department answered Dr, Zimmerman saying “It is time we
started to think about other alternatives. How about a Peace
Race rather than an arms race?
Are we so deprived of imagination that we can’t think of alternatives? Why don’t we declare
our faith in humanity?”
Richard Migs, a member of the
English Department at Buffalo
State read a letter which 800 fa
culty members at 40 colleges sent
to President Johnson. It said, "We
are attempting to substitute military actions for political ones . ,
Weapons used against us were
most often our own
in this
unpopular cause . . . Our presence there seems to deepen rather than relieve the situation. . .
The events of the past week are
leading us to war,” Migs said, “the
U.S. does not own the world.”
Harold Bob, a student, answered
him saying, “Do you think that
South Viet Nam would be the
Vietnamese people’s country if
we left?” One young man stated

Fred Clifton of the Department
of Philosophy stated that “We
don’t recognize the fact that we
have been playing ‘big-daddy’ to
the world.” Mr. Clifton felt the
need for information hampered
any creative thinking on the Vietnamese situation.
Rick Salter, Graduate Student
in Sociology, equated the war in
Viet Nam with the threat to the
institution of the Military dealt
by the bomb. “The limited war
situation is justified by the preservation of a dominent institution.”

One tangible effect of the
teach-in was a proposal to start
a committee to bring speakers
to school who would be in informed positions such as a presi
dential aide. All interested people contact Aristiotle Scoledes in
the Philosophy Department.

...

CHEERLEADER
TRYOUTS

Beginning today at 3:00
p.m. tryouts will be held
for Varsity Cheerleaders
in Norton Hall. The schedule for practices is as
follows:
Today, 3:00 p.m., Norton Hall, Rooms 333 and
334.
Monday at 3:00 p.m..
Norton Hall, Rooms 331
and 337.
Tuesday at 3:00 p.m..'
Norton Hall. Rooms 333
and 334.
All aspirants must al
tend two out of three prae
tices.
The final and tryouts
will be held Wednesday
from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30
p.m. at Norton Hall in
Room 335.

M

'

brewed for braves...

-

A ME NOME NTS TO THE FINANCIAL REGULATIONS;
No money will be supplied to organizations whose members
receive academic credit for participation.
New sports groups will be supported for prily two years Thereafter they must obtain funds from other sources.

DOUBLE-HOPPED
for Extra Full-Strength

�9, 1965

Friday, April

Dr. Alatas Fourth Lecturer
Of Asian Professor Series

Syed Hussein Alatas, the
visiting Asian professor,
begun
is fourth in the series
Burvil
three years ago by Dr.
H Glenn. Professor of Education.
•

Dr

current

Dr Alatas, a sociology professor at the University of Malaysia
at Kuala hamper, received his
Masters and Doctorate degrees
from the University of Amsterdam, Holland. Dr. Alatas is an
authority on the sociology and
history of Malaysia and South
East Asia, and maintains specific
views on the situation in Viet
The Asian professor suggests
that the U. S. should seriously
consider the choice of leaving
Viet Nam. Along these lines he
feels that this country should “investigate the possibility of coming to a peaceful settlement with
the North Vietnamese.” He does
not agree that there would be a
resulting loss of Viet Nam. Rather. he believes that the Vietnamese, left to themselves, will
be a stronger bulwark against the
Viet Cong.
No Time to Risk War

In considering the idea of the
expansion of the U. S. borders as
an economic necessity, Mr. Alatas
does not think that this is, in fact

laudible. He states that world
powers of the past were powers
because of their size of their empires and the size of their military numbers, for example; the
British, Dutch and French, The
U. S., however, owes much of
her power to her atomic arsenel
and has the capability of destroying everything. Poor strategy and
little need to expand in order to
“insure a place for itself in world
politics.”

OEO Training Center
Planned in Kentucky
Oppor-

tunity through Southern Illinois
I Diversity will operate a Job
t'orps Training Center at Camp
Breckenridge Kentucky.
This facility

will have a student

filiation of about 2000. It will
devoted to providing vocaonal, academic and social skills

aining

to

16

to

20-year-old

ales of varied cultural
hnic background.

and

1 he Job Corps is seeking recent
male college graduates to serve
a&gt; student leaders at a minimum
salary of $425 per month.

:

student leaders will be
nsible for helping students
to a group way of living
to develop needed social

AH interested male students
ae invited to an informal meet-

ng
46
ab

Monday at 4:00 p.m. in Room
248 Norton Union, or if un, to attend, contact the Uni-

versity

Placement Office.

Plaza Shoe
Repair

UNIVERSITY

plaza

TF 6 -4041
Open 9 a.m

—

9 p.m

Stop Service Center

y °oc/ Dry Cleaning

Spring has invaded the Craft
Shop! A display of Ukrainian
Easter Eggs—called “Pysanky,”
from the word to write, since the
designs are actually written on
the eggs—are on exhibit. Traditionally the egg has symbolized,
earth's springtime renewal and
with the advent of Christianity,
the symbol came to include
spiritual rebirth at Easter-

Ukrainians have held the practice of hand-decorating Easter
eggs since very early times. The
raw egg Is painstakingly decorated with wax and immersed
into many dyes. The result—well,
come and sec for yourself in the
Craft Shop!

DR. SYEO HUSSEIN ALATAS
Moral Strength

However, disregarding the total
destructive capacities of the U. S.,
Dr. Alatas thinks that the U, S.
does need moral strength in the
war. This can only be gained by
leaving Viet Nam. “In the long
run this would be a better policy
because the present one merely
adds oil to the Communist fire”.

Demonstrations of how to make
Pysanky and do-it-yourself sessions will be held Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday in the Craft
Shop from 1:00 to 3:30 p.m.
Members of the Ukrainian Student Club will supervise instruction and give the demonstrations.

CRAFT SHOP

INSTANT SILENCE

Spring Arts..

for information write
Academic Aids, Box 968
Berkley, Calif., 94701

Win a Honda
just for being born

Below Viet Nam, lies Malaysia.

At the present time Malaysia is

threatened by the Indonesian
regime under President Sukarno,

Dr. Alatas does not think that
there will be an open war. However, a confrontation does exist,
and will exist for some time in
the form of subversive actions,

attempted landings and guerilla
warfare Sukarno’s objective is to
destroy the existing government
without risking direct reprisal
from Malaysia.

NOTICE
Applications are now
being accepted for the following committees: Homecoming 1965, Activities
Drives Committee, Personnel Committee. For further information contact
Joyce Biawitz at 831-4064.

ANNOUNCING

GRADUATE PROGRAMS
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leading to

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DEGREE with specialization
in

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graduate pharmacists for positions of responsibility and

leadership in management,
marketing, selling and research in pharmaceutical, cos-

metic and related industries
in the wholesaling and retailing of the drug trade; in
preparation for teaching of
pharmacyadministration; and
in the administration of the

Your own birth date may have already won you a
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graduate students it limited
ur Une

Ukranian Easter Eggs Exhibited

time.

Nam.

The Office of Economic

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�IFC Presents $250
To Scholarship Fund
Friday, April 2, the Deed of
Gift was signed by the University
of Buffalo Foundation and the Interfraternity Council, at a luncheon in the Tiffin Room in Norton
Union. The Foundation was pre-

Friday, April 9, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Foundation, Mr. Dallas Garber,

Interfraternity Council Faculty
Advisor, Skip Fohl, Interfraternity Council Scholarship Chairman, and Curt Montgomery, Interfraternity Council Treasurer.

Experience in Voter Registration
Canvassing Reported By Student
(Continued From Last Week)

TUESDAY, MARCH 16th
We taught Freedom School
again today. I read some poetry
to the children (such as Welter
de la Mare’s “Silver”) and I asked
them a few general questions
whether they liked the poems,
what was Whitman’s attitude" in
“I hear America Singing" toward
the working people, why did the
poet see everything as “silver?”
They were very shy in answering
because they weren’t used to analytic questions, and because most
of them weren’t too familiar with
poetry. We did some more math
and discussed history again, and
the children took turns reading
about Negro history in America,
-

a

Left fo Right: Skip Fohl, Scholarship Chairman; Mr. J. Siockman;
Curt Montgomery; Pallas Garber, IFC Advisor
The Interfraternity Council
sented with a check from the In
Scholarship will be presented to
the
terfraternity Council in
amount of $250, which is the the Fraternity Brother who qualifies (as pre-eminant) in the areas
amount of the annually presented
scholarship. Present were Mrs.
of scholarship, active fraternal
Norma Haas, Director of the Fiparticipation ,and need. The winnancial Aid Department, Mr. Thener will be announced at the
odore Sieckman, Assistant DirecSpring Weekend Dance, May 1.
tor of the University of Buffalo

Kingston Trio
from P, 3)
vided by “the Uncalled For 3,”
who will be appearing at the
dance straight from an engagement in New York City, They
are a bright, new comedy trio,

(Cont’d

...

ment, set aside May 1 as an evening that you won’t want to for

subject they were not very

familiar with. I asked my eighth
grade class to write a poem on
any topic they liked. These children, although rather bright, have
a severe reading problem. Their
vocabulary is very inadequate,
and although some of them read
well aloud, their understanding
and comprehension seems rather
poor. I think that this is due, to
a large extent, to their vocabulary deficiencies. Many of them
read poorly because they have
learned to read by memorization
rather than by phonetic groups.
It's amazing that they retain their
desire to learn after being subjected to so many meaningless,
obsolete educational methods. The
teachers (most of them Negro)
are the slowest moving group in

the Negro community. Most of
them are against the boycott. In
are
sale
for
these
Tickets
on
the South, teaching is a secure
two events starting Wednesday, and profitable profession for the
Norton
at the
ticket booth. For

get.

Your I .D Card
is Worth 10% at
.

6pk)wa«’$

Negro. The white people hire the
Negro teachers for Negro schools
and the Negro teachers are afraid
that they will lose their jobs if
they support civil rights. Most of
them are terrible. They are concerned with making money and
retaining their positions rather
than teaching well. It isn’t any
wonder that the children are almost illiterate. In school, they
spend most of their time doing
busy work, memorizing the text
and avoiding anything remotely
analytic. It is a truly deplorable
situation, but finally, the Negro
community has begun to recognize the importance of education
and is beginning to demand
changes. We rehearsed the skit
again, and I taught the children
a freedom song, “Walking and
Talking with my mind set on
Freedom,” I ate at Alberta T-Pler’s bourse. The Tipler family
is one of the loveliest families 1
have ever met. I have never been

treated with such warmth and
Tipler has
Mrs.
twelve children, and is quite poor,
but she is willing to share everything she has. I had dinner there,
and she invited the rest of our
group too, but they didn’t come.
She is one of the most active
members of the community in
civil rights. While we were eating, we found out that Bill Price
had landed in a ditch. The sheriff and two deputies who noticed
the car arrested Bill for reckless driving. In cases like this,
the driver is usually arrested,
sent to jail, then set free on bail
and given a hearing a few days
later. Bill, however, had an immediate hearing and was fined
hospitality.

the maximum penalty is
This surprised everyone.
We expected a maximum penalty,
as this is usually the ease in similar affairs involving “visitors” to
$43

-

$100.

the state.

That night we went to a church
meeting in Benton County. It was
one of the most exciting experiences in my life. First, everyone
sang Freedom Songs. Then, there
was a discussion about the merits
of continuing the school boycott.
I thought it was beautiful to hear
all of the people there discussing
in calm tones, the injustice they
had been subjected to, and then
suggesting ways in which they
might attain their rights as human beings. Person after person
stated that the boycott should

continue until all of the demands
were met. The minister, surprisingly, wanted the children to return to the schools since the
lawyer who represented the local
white interests, a man named
MacKenzie, had promised to consider the demands if the children
were sent back, A vote was called
and all of the people with the
exception of the minister decided
to continue the boycott until they
could meet with the school board
and have their demands accepted.
Our group was introduced and
each of us introduced ourselves
to the people. We expressed our
own views on the Freedom
Schools and we were gratified
by the warm reception We had
received.
(To

Be Continued Next

WIN A ’65V2 MUSTANG!!
The Union Board Spring Weekend Committee
presents its

SPRING WEEKEND RAFFLE

Sfatd

NET PROCEEDS WILL GO TO THE
JOHN F. KENNEDY MEMORIAL LIBRARY

BOULEVARD MALL

Drawing at the "U.B. Kami-Bull"
(on campus)

iNAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

SUNDAY, MAY 2, AT

8:30 P.M.

Tickets are now on sale in the lobby
of Norton Union.

DONATION 50c

U.S. Ked
TKs Kingston Trio will appoor at the Spring Waekand Concert on
April 30

who have appeared in many night
spots, including The Bitter End.
The three young men in the act
are Ron Prince of Hego Park,
Mike Mislove, also of Rego Park,
and Peter Lee, of Briarwood.
If you are looking for an eve

ning of fun, laughter and excite-

those who buy the “package
deal," which includes tickets to
both the concert and dance, free
passes to see “the Ugly Amercan" will be provided. This film
will be shown Tuesday, April 27,
at 10, 12, 3, 5:30, 7:30 and 9:30
p.m. in the Conference Theater.

Rappagallo

Viners Loafers

Bates Floaters
Florsheim
E ski loo and
Campus Boots
and many other brands

if she doesn’t give it to you...
get it yourself!
—

JADE EAST

PAISANO PIZZA
3242 Main St. (across from Campus)

FREE

DELIVERY

Pizza, Subs, Heroes, Soft Drinks

TRY OUR MEATBALL HERO
(made with choice ground round)

837-6120
Cologne, 6 oz., $4.50

We're Just Across The Street So Come and Join
Us For a Snack or a Meal
SCULPTURI CXHIBIT
Ry
SPRING ARTS FISTIVAL

"Here to Serve 'U' at U.B."

Week)

After Shave, 6 oz., $3.50
Deodorant Stick, $1.75
Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz., $8.50
Spray Cologne, $3.50
Buddha Soap Gift Set. $4.00
Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00
After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50

�if 1965

PACE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Discrimination Symposium

(Cont'd from P. 1):
Black and White Americans” (The
Response to and Avoidance of
Personal Encounter). Dr. Pettigrevv. having received his Ph.D.
in Social Psychology from Harcard University in 1956, is an
Associate Professor of Social Psychology there. He was the Research Associate at the Institute
of Social Research at the University of Natal in the Union of
he conSouth Africa. Frequently
tributes work to periodicals and
has had books published, notably
A Profile of the Negro American.
Dr. Pettigrew began by contrasting several social aspects of
whites and Negroes. At birth, the
life expectancy of a Negro is six
to eight years less than that of a
white. In industry, Negroes have
not yet broken through to the
major unionized industries. There
arc twice as many unemployed
Negro youths as whites. Negro
adults are paid less than similarly educated white adults. Housing for Negroes is vastly inferior
to that of their white peers. They
are often denied the vote. Education for them is hardly available,
accessible, or adequate.

jCetters to the

tated, impetuous violence. The
ghetto riots, unplanned and un-

Ghettos Should Exist

TO

THE EDITOR
It may seem insignificant to bring to light the
following, but I feel that I can no longer continue
to justify a passive attitude toward some of the
dress standards presently “maintained” on this
campus.

The Negroes

in America are
“sick and tired, and sick and tired
of being sick and tired.” It is despair, equally caused by white
apathy as by dreadful conditions,
not wrath, which arouses the Negro people. The despair is as
profound as white apathy is obstinate, Mayor Magner has made
a career of this active indiffer-

ho' wo r 1 11h i 1
this

*

i„

a

t

n1

rn m

has been reached
two groups.

between

the

Dr Pettigrew noted that sixtyfive percent of white Americans
maintains that Negroes are treated quite fairly. Sixty-five percent
also maintains that desegregation
must come gradually. Sixty-four
percent

feels that freedom demonstrations are hindering the Negro cause. This attitude, that
Negroes ard “pushing too hard,
too fast,” is substantially holding
up progress.
Real Identity Sought
Racism is inherent in the American social structure. There is a
standard role into which Negroes
a e east by whites.
By reacting,
5
tnc Negro changes this concept,
,

causes a major personality change
himself, and consequently

r anges

the heretofore firmly
nxed white attitude. The real
the movement is an in, ,
usivcness in the American society, which
will enhance the Ne,' dentit y’ not destroy it. Basic
P oblems like education must
be
SC
d arl(t they must be re-„i
&gt;oived immediately.
°

.

"illiam Stringfellow, a pracattorney in New York City.
‘T8
P c on
“Law—Arbitor and Ad

of Con™unity" (Values
in our Legal Codes
r c esscs)
thnr W ' h t * - Lecturer and au-

anH
no n
Dangers

l

,

highly recommendead
Death to his
credit** m rln,
stringfellow
was said
'
to hoe by
Time magazine, “one of
,

eri k

le
*

'

n ost . Persuasive
’

of Christian-

critics—from—within.”

•

Opportunities
,

For Violence
S trlngfellow began by say
ins th
nal
law. as an institution in
,
lety has Pretty much exha. J°j
lts functi on in the racial
cnsi lfter
denouncing his topic
in th S
Way - he began to cite the
odd, h
PPortunities for violence which
P
tyf&gt;rs t?Sent . toda y- There are
satisf y evfi ry taste and
Prooii.
Woe V1•? y
.
viQlence js preva ent
le y due
to the virtually inst an 0
60118 commun ication which
"e ha .e
of • 'I - The impact and images
lence are immediate and
imD
jajPressive. This violence, whose
,

’

*.
'

“

bo

cnnHn"

tionai

°

suppressed, can
a differn twee n tactical, intenviolence and unpremedi;

,

T'here is
~

'd

from p U)

neatly, comb their hair, or even take a bath or a
shower once in a great while. Some female students
seem to feel that
adornment of shabby, soiled
sweatshirts, dungarees and sandals is acceptable
for normal, everyday wear, while Bach, Brahms,
Beethoven, or UB sweatshirts are acceptable for

fae

bly
letter may never even
published but
.t is about time that such a complaint be lodged and
voiced publicly in behalf of those students who care
about their personal appearance.
Not meaning to be prudish, there is no reason
why “boys” (or “men”, as they might wish to be
called) can not shave, or at least trim their beards

Of course, informal attire such as sweatshirts,

garees sneakers, etc. is to be acknowledged, but
'
h Conscience
of the mature individual will
n 'y the
d,ctate wt! e and
here
a re a eeeptable
1 mlght ha
b .? en a blt ffac tlou but
.
is no excuse, other than a poor rationalization, why
students, male or female, can not endeavor to
achieve a neat personal appearance,
Kenneth E. Bernstein

d

°

7

"

th^f

r 'J'

f

f;

"Seeing the World as it Is'
from P. 6)
like from China. Malraux took
great interest in the application
of ideas to life. After the Russian Revolution he anxiously
awaited and even helped to precipitate the revolution in China.
For this action Malraux was condemned to prison and even tortured. With the aid of Andre
Gide and others who circulated
petitions in his behalf, Malraux
was released. Because of the experiences Malraux has gained in
struggle he is able to write. Malraux has gone a step further than
speaking of mere ability concerning. Malraux believes it is the
doty of a man of letters to descend from his ivory tower and
to commit himself to his convictions. It Is wrong says Malraux
for a man to remain superior,
sarcastic or cynical to action
around him.
Professor Peyre related that
(Cont’d

DR. FURNAS AT SYMPOSIUM
he worked on the Mississippi

ence. Of course, he says that
someone should do something,
but something has yet to be done.
He agrees that ghetto life should

be removed, but also maintains
that the ghetto itself should exist indefinitely. Mr. Stringfellow
insists that only if every ghetto
is destroyed can there possibly
be any relief from despair, any
hope or optimism.
We must stop concealing the
deprivation of the Negro. Tolerating ineffective demonstrations
is not constructive. Suppressing
ghetto violence in the name of

law and order is rank cowardice.

Procrastinating and appeasing ev-

eryone by promising anything is
by no means decisive action. A
turning point in the racial issue
has been reached. Nothing can
ever be the same again. It is indulgent to relax in the assumption that it is “all over but the
shouting.” Indeed, only the shouting is over and we are hopefully
on the threshold of advancement.
Selma will become an historic
turning point, if the ranks of
complacent, safe, wealthy whites
begin to understand what has happened to our country, how it is
being destroyed, and resolve that
this must not happen, even if
they must abandon their complacency and apathy to prevent it.
SNNCC Member

Summer Project.
Mr. Forman, one of the most
influential young people in this
movement, urges the commitment
of people to the program and to

action. In order that the white

personality might be wholesome
in the context of our society,
there must be involvement.
Every Negro is confronted with

his situation in life. For many,
as it was for Mr. Forman, it is
a shocking and poignant incident.
This brutal realization is universal to Negroes and damaging to
their personalities..
Must Be a Fair Share
In order to pursue this highly
desirable action, we must understand the nature of our basically
evil society. There must be a
fair share of the educational, po
iitical, and economical systems
allotted to the Negro. There also
must be a willingness to suffer

and to sacrifice. There cannot be
a social movement without a casualty. Even death must become
acceptable.

Once the action has been taken,
there will follow a scries of consequencics. There will be a massive upheaval which will result

in a better integrated society. In
the process of this upheaval, there
will be scapegoats who must en-

dure isolation and frustration.

James Forman spoke on “Confrontation and Commitment in

Building Community” (Marshalling and Disciplining the Powers
of the Human Personality). He
graduated from Roosevelt University in Chicago and attended
Boston University on a grant
from that school’s African Studies Program. In 1960, he left
his school teaching job to organize the Fayette County (Tennessee) Relief Program. In 1961, he
joined the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). As

executive secretary, he has directed SNNCC’s growth since
then. During the summer of 1964,

"No man is an island unto himself.” Everyone must assume a
personal responsibility which will
result in a concerted, united ac
tion, which will destroy the too,

too solid wall of segregation that

has been built.

There will be meeting
of the Civil Rights Committee Sunday night at
7:00 p.m. in the rooms
a

;m, 335,.m

All those interested in
joining the committee are
welcome to attend.

Malraux speaks in an imperious
way, as a man who is above us

all. Pyre considers Malraux to
a genius. Malraux deduces
from the past trends which will
be the trends of the future. According to Peyre, Malraux has
be

philosophized that man today
lives in an age in which there
are no absolutes. This discovery
occured early in the eighteenth
century. The insecurity of modern man is attributed to this
theory. Man no longer lives with
in the context of religion advances Malraux. Whether we believe in it or not, we do not
accept the religious context of
life. Relativism contends Mai
raux has entered the world and
has demolished the civilization of
the past. It is a nostalgia for
absolutes which gives mental security according to Malraux. Man
began to look for a new absolute.
He thought he had found it in
the worship of "reason.” From

this belief in reason he advanced
to a belief in progress. Man. has
renounced his belief in prograss
nowadays because he has learned
that progress docs not necessarily connote security or betterment.

Malraux believes we must see
the world as it is. It is filled
with violence, wars and death. It
is important to have imaginative
singular individuals in the world.
Democracy according to Malraux
cannot tolerate mediocrity. We
have got to develop more leaders.
We cannot afford to leave the
underprivileged people of the

I)

A

dom.

Professor Peyre regards Camus
as a noble moralist. Before his
untimely death, Camus was on
the way to formulating a nonChristian ethics as a substitute
for Christianity. Camus is antiChristian. Christianity rests on
the slaughter of the innocent and
is based on hope—the solution
is passed on to God. Camus does
not care about eternity. He cares
about what happens here and
now. Thus is rejection of Christianity. Camus was a man of uncommon ability and talent in addition to being an athlete. He was
struck by tuberculosis and was
advised to rest at a sanitarium.
This was an intrusion of absurdity into Camus’ life. (What man
would like to he and what he
actually is.)
In conclusion Professor Peyre
stated, “Men like Camus and
Malraux take upon them the mystery of things as if they were
the spys of God."

Commentary
from P. 5)
from within” and feel an obligation to allow you, the common
masses of this great and glorious
nation, to try in your own primitive way, to counteract it. To
this end, I give you all my great,
benefieient blessing!
I am with you.
Torhcit Asgard
(Cont'd

Himmcl

&amp;

Erde, 1962

The SPECTRUM
Published by

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erA
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world in misery or else a terrible
series of events will occur. Malraux believes we must establish
unity in the human species. This
unity can be attained through the
contemplation of art. Malraux believes each masterpiece is a purification of the world. History is
a translation of fate into consciousness. Art however, is a
translation of history into free-

We've gone put of business but wont to Thank You
for your past patronage, we've appreciated it.

WARM WEATHER IS BACK

,

.

CS

j

t

Strives For Rights
Although Negroes have gained

despair among Negroes, though
rising, is not predominant yet.
The southern Negro nurtures the
dream of a truly integrated society where color would be irrelevant. The northern Negro feels
that an unbreachable difficulty

eri

mUCh

'

Negro

advancements in this century, the
discrepancy between what they
have and what they could have
is causing frustration and the
consequent revolution. The Negro is striving for the rights provided to him as an American citizen. Dr. Pettigrew maintains that

(Cont

Dress Standards Criticized

prepared as they are, are a mani-

festation of despair. Mr. Stringfellow called most other riots,
which are quickly and incidentally
provoked, “a spontaneous combustion of violence."

Editor

SO IS PAT'S
WORLD

BEST

«'

HOTS^g

SHERIDANjlJ^ARKER^
"just me wav you nice

;

Friday, April

j

1

�Friday, April 9,

SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

UB Blues Place First at Inter-Collegiate
Talent Contest Last Weekend at Geneseo
The UB Blues Men’s Glee Club,
under the direction of Mr. Donald L. Conover captured first
place at the Inter-Collegiate Talent contest Saturday, April 3, at
Geneseo State College.
Groups taking part in the contest included folk singers, rock
and roll groups, solo vocalists,
pianists and jazz groups from Canisiusj UB, St. John Fisher,
Rochester, St. Bonaventure, Geneseo, and the Dominican Re-

UB BLUES, Left to Right (Standing): John Slattery, Lead; David
McDowall, Bast; Fred Hill, Tenor; Paul Whitcomb, Bass. (Kneeling);
Gerry Marmillo, Tenor; Ronald Capuano, Lead; Robert Van Slyke,
Baritone; Paul Sipson, Baritone

School Administrators Attend
Workshops, Hear Salisbury
A total of 40 top administrators and superintendents of New
York State public high schools

attended final session of four
“Social Sciences and Educational
Administration Workshops” at
State University of Buffalo Friday
through Saturday (April 2-4).

The administrators heard Dr.
Robert H. Salisbury, professor of
political science at Washington
University, St. Louis, Missouri,
discuss the application of political science to school administra
tion Saturday.
Nine of the participants in the
workshops were* administrators
from Western New York area
schools. They were Mr. Donald
Bartoo, Iroquois Central School;
Dr. Samuel Bennett, Maryvalc
Schools; Dr. Earl J Boggan, Jr.,
Cheektowaga Schools; Mr. Clarence Clemens, West Valley
Schools; Mr. Clifford Crooks, Clar
ence Central School; Dr. Kenneth
Fuller, Lockport Schools; Mr.
Harry H. Haten, Hamburg Cen
tral School; Dr. William Keller,
Williamsville Schools; Mr. Sherwood Miller, Kenmore Schools,
and Dr. John Schcller, Amherst
Schools,

The three-day session ended a
scries of four workshops which

began at the University in February. The program, involving the
areas of sociology, social psychol
ogy, anthropology and political

FILM

science, was under the direction
of Dr. George E. Holloway, professor md director of educational

administration at the University.
It was sponsored by the New
York State Education Department.
Workshops Urge New Bases
Dr. Holloway said the workshops were designed to encourage and aid educational administrators to adapt new scientific
bases to their profession.
“In recent years, school administrators have looked to the behavioral sciences for now concepts, theories and implications
they hold for the administration
of the public schools,” he said.
Dr. Holloway noted a time lag
between the acquisition of knowledge by the schools of higher
education and the application of
that knowledge by school administrators. He said that the workshops are designed to diminish
the lag by enabling administrators to acquire new learning content, discuss problems and analyze possible application of behavioral science concepts for public school administration.
Three University professors of
political science also participated
in this week’s session. They included Dr John C. Wahlkc, professor; Mr. Richard M. Johnson,
assistant professor and Mr. Donald J. Puchala, professor.
(Cont’d

.

.

from P.

;

UNDERGRADUATE
MATHEMATICS CLUB
Undergraduate
Monday, the
Math Club will present a program entitled “Defense of the
Math Curriculum at SUNYAB."
Three prominent members of the
Math Department faculty, Dr.
Danese, Dr. Montague and Dr.
Parker, will present their views
on this subject and will answer
questions from those present, A
short business session will be
held beforehand at which final
arrangements for the club sponsored trip to IBM in Endicott,
Aprill 22, will be discussed. The
meeting will be held in Room

cl

oar

24 Norton at 7:30 p.m. Everyone

is welcome to attend.
W. R. A,

The Women’s Recreation Association is sponsoring recrea
tional badminton for all women

on campus starting Tuesday from
7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in Clark
Gymnasium and running for three
consecutive Tuesdays. A tourna
ment will be arranged if request
ed by participants.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club today in Room
264 Norton, at 4:00 p.m.

Music.

SENATE
(Cont’d

from P.

..

.

1)

that this was dividing the effectiveness of the campus in the

civil rights field in half.
In that the sixteenth of April
has religious significance to both
Christian and Jewish students, the
Senate has passed resolution protesting the scheduling of classes
on that day. They further suggested that the University take
religious holidays into consideration in planning future calendars.

Several amendments to the constitutions were proposed. These
(Sec Page 5)

will be debated at the next Senate meeting, to be held next Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room of Norton.

Executive Committee elections

were held and Linda Gunsberg, 200 iludtnli marched on March 29 in formal protoft
of lack o&lt;
Bobby Grossman, and Dennis Gia- academic freedom at Brooklyn College. Immediate cause was the
were
to
dismissal
of
oath
which
Dr. Robert Sutton for abrogating the loyalty
Quinto
selected
serve for
faculty members are required to sign.
the next year.

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ting picture like that (which actually makes fun of important issues) winning an award? And Peter Ustinov
is always top notch. Can’t argue with that. As for the
Supporting Actress thing, Zorba the Greek still ain’t in
Buffalo, so who knows?
Now, even keeping in mind all of the things I’ve
been saying about the nature of the award presentation,
some things are kind of hard to take. I suppose My Fair
Lady was a noble effort, but it still wasn’t much more
than a dramatized stage play. But let it pass. The industry
is always going to honor the most expensive and lavish
production of any year unless it is a total fiasco like the
ill-fater, lugubrious Cleopatra. What I found harder to
accept was the award to George Cukor as Director of
the Year, or whatever. I think that we’ve gotten to the
point where the director, legitimately, is recognized as
one of the most important men in the production of a
motion picture
a "star” in his own right. Pictures are
now beginning to be advertised (as is the in Europe) as
“a movie by John Ford,” thus giving the director proper
acclaim as the real “creator” of the entire thing. Now,
I’ll admit that Cukor did a skillful and useful job, but
there was nothing imaginative about his work; nothing
really special no genuine cqntribution to the advancement of the cinematic arts. But then, his picture is making money, and for this, he has been rewarded. The lesson, unfortunately, is obvious: Go thou and do likewise.
That’s why we have no Fellinis or Antonionis, I think.
To keep the whole thing in some sort of perspective,
it ipight be worthwhile to remember that The Great Escape, a movie which is slowly being acclaimed as a real
achievement, wasn’t even nominated, while some years
ago, an easily forgettable and mediocre picture called
The Greatest Show on Earth cleaned up.
—

public.
Mr. Conover's group, which has
enlarged from a quartet this year
to eight members, perform regularly at UB Glee Club functions
as well as at other local and
campus affairs. Their repertoire
includes barbership singing, comedy, spiritual, and musical comedy numbers. Mr. Conover is a
senior in the Department of

Spectrum

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�9, 1965

Friday, April

PAGE SEVENTEEN

SPECTRUM

ICE BULLS EDGE ERIE TECH, 8-7
ICERS LOOKING FORWARD TO NEXT YEAR
AFTER ENDING SUCCESSFUL 11-3-1 SEASON
By Ivan

Makuch

The leers finished their season last Monday night at Erie,
Pennsylvania. Traveling to oppose
the Lions with a depleted squad,
they nevertheless edged out Erie
by a close score of 8-7, to compile a 3-0 won-lost record against
Erie, The rivalry has grown into
a tradition in only one season. In
November the Bulls were the first

team to face them in the new Erie
Arena. In that encounter the

Bulls won quite handily by a
score of 9-2. In that game the
leers roly-poly spare goalie, Steve
Ziegler, was fantastic.
During their second encounter
in January, when the Bulls had a
depleted squad of only nine men
to face the Lions, Dan Gorney
scored five goals as the Bulls won

9-7. In that game, Ziegler missed
a few fluke shots but was almost
miraculous as he stopped all six
of the Lions’ breakaways.
So last Monday another badly
depleted squad went down to
Erie for a final exhibition game
to end the season. Captain Jerry
Doherty collected three goals and

two assists

while

defenseman

Gregor Roberson and wing JimMVP

■

Most Valuable Player Ken Sherry

than a minute later, Erie took
advantage of a lapse in the tired
Buffalo defense and tied the
score. Thereafter the game seesawed until, with but a Tittle
more than a minute to go. an

Erie

player stole Ziegler's stick

and Alt broke in from the blue
line and scored. With one minute
and eight seconds remaining, the

highly partisan crowd went wild
and the Bulls almost despaired.
However,

eleven seconds later,

Lencgan slapped a 35-footcr
through a mixup in front of the
net and the puck got past the
startled Erie goal tender. This
revitalized the Bulls and with seconds ticking away, Paul Dewitt
slapped the puck to Jerry Doherty, who broke in along the
boards and. faking the goalie
out of his skates, slapped the puck
into the goal. The jubilant Bulls
controlled the puck for the remaining eight seconds of the
game.
Ice Chips

Coach
Right to Left, Kneeling: Al Moorhouse, Jim Bausch, Davl Kubiak, Day

Bill Mitchell, Jeff Proctor, Brian Frazer, Jim

Lenegan

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The slightly par-

tial Erie refs assessed Bill Savage five penalties, seven in all to
the Bulls, while only giving the
Liohs one. After such a successful season all the Bulls ask is
Hannah, Ken Sherry, Jeff Weaver,
varsity recognition . . . Hats off
also to Mr. Day Hannah, Sr., the
. . . Dewitt
iny Lenegan each had two goals team’s assistant coach
finally scored . . . Pierre Puck to
DeWitt
had
and two assists. Paul
broadcast Bulls information next
one goal and Bad Bill Savage,
season.
Evans
Jeff Proctor, and Pierre
The outlook for next year is
each had tow assists.
very promising. Although the
The game started out unevent- club is losing its captain, Jerry
fully and was quiet until 10:38 of
Doherty, Who was second in team
the first period when Lenegan
scoring with 26 points, the Most
scored. Within 28 seconds RoberValuable Player, goalie Ken Sher
son scored making it 2-0. Then,
ry, invaluable playcr-coach Karl
while Savage was off for elbowBalland, defensemen Bill Mitchell
ing, John Alt of Erie scored. Less

Right to Left, Standing: Marty Sadoff, Pete Evans, Steve
Rick Greenfeld, Mgr., Richard
Daffner, Buddy Bodanski, Mgr., Al Dever, Dan Gorney, Bill Leed, Jr., Pete Marrvs, Bill Savage, Tom
Robertson, Mike Whelan, Mike Roben, Jerry Doherty, John Flynn, Larry Polen, Mgr., Karl Balland,
Feigin, Mgr.,

and Boman Whelan and the leading scorer and runner-up for
M.V.P. Dan Gorney, they have 7
freshmen of this year's squad including speedy Jimmy Bausch
who in only four games scored
15 points. Bausch was sidelined
for the remainder of the season
with a broken shoulder. Another
freshman is Twinkle-toes Dewitt
who claims to have the hardest
slapshot in the league. The mainstay of the defense. Gregor Robctson is also a freshman. Of the

remaining players, sophs Pop Devon and Day Hannah have provided much of the club's scoring
punch this year. For goalie, the
logical choice seems to be Steve
"Kats” Ziegler, a converted soccer goalie from Queens, N Y. He
played all 3 games against Erie,
and ended up with a 5.33 goals

per game average.
The taxi squad hopes to add
some of its members to the club
next year. Hopefuls are: Pierre
Evans, Jeff Proctor, Nutz Flynn
and Saddy Sadoff. They played in
the three exhibition games in
Erie, Pa., and helped bolster the

team’s regulars since there were
only six of them, (Normally a
team has ten to twelve men on
the bench instead of three or
four.)

Special thanks to Richy Greenfeld, Larry Polon, and Stix Bradoff for the excellent managers
that they were. More praise to
their photographer who prefers,
ou of humility, to remain anonymous.

�Friday, April 9, 1945

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

SCOUTING

NATIONAL
LEAGUE
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
Next Monday, while the thumping of basketballs in the NBA
playoffs and the crashing of
hockey pucks in the Stanley Cup
playoffs continue in what year
after year seems to be longer
and longer basketball and hockey
seasons, the familiar cry of “Play
ball" will be heard and another
summer of baseball will commence.

“The Yankees is dead” said
Chuck Dresscn quite a few years
ago. “The Yankees can be beaten,” have been sentiments uttered by A! Lopez for about as
long as he’s been an AL manager.
Dressen, the Tiger skipper,
would probably be the first to
admit the Yanks have been anything but dead for about the last
15 years although just last week
he commented, "The Yanks can
be had this year,” but Lopez, the
not-so-good scnor who has been
manager of the winning AL team
both times the Yanks have been
stripped of the pennant in the
last 15 seasons is not about to
abandon his philosophy, which
in most years in the past hasn't
proven to be much more than a
method of dogmatic tenacity.
This year, however, the White
manager may have something going for him. It’s not that
the defending favorites for the
AL crown are without their usual
array of diamond ability, but the

Sox

fact that many of the past bridesmaids and also-rans of the AL
are vastly strengthened isn’t a

fact to be taken too lightly, not
even in the pompous Yankee
front office where even a mild
threat to its seemingly unconquerable dynasty is considered no
less than blasphemy.
Although it looked anything
but, in the World Series last fall,
the Yankees do possess what
amounts to the best defense in
baseball. They also own one of
the better-balanced and deepest
hitting attacks, accentuated by a
potent affinity for the home run
ball.
They also used to possess one
of the most effective mound
corps in baseball
but not any
more. In fact the depth of the
Yankee hill staff may be at an
all-time low. Whitey Ford can
—

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Rollie Sheldon, Steve Hamilton,
Hal Reniff, Pete Mikkelson, and
a group of not overly promising
rookies. And in all, unless some
hidden talent develops in a hurry
as has been the case in the past
with New York, this thinness of
pitching quality should snuff out
Yankee pennant aspirations.
The four most improved clubs
in the junior circuit appear to
be Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland,
and Detroit. The Orioles and
White Sox in particular should
offer the Yankees their stiffest
challenges.
The Orioles finished only two
games out of first last season,
and that was with the temporary

absences of John Orsino, Boog
Powell, Sam Bowens, and Luis
Aparicio from the lineup, while
a lame arm prevented Chuck
Estrada from even rounding into
form. Despite these handicaps the
Orioles still maintained one of
the top hurling contingents in

the AL and an infield second
only to the Yankees.
Although Estrada's arm caused
him to be s e n t down to the
minors, the return of Wally
Bunker, Milt Pappas, Steve Bar-

ber, -and Robin Roberts, with
depth supplied by Dave McNally,
Dave Vineyard, Frank Bertaina,
and a well-fortified relief corps
of Stu Miller, Harvey Haddix,
Dick Hall, and rookies H e r m
Starette and Ken Rowe, the Birds
should be “King of the Hill” in
the AL.
The already strong infield of

Brooks Robinson, Aparicio, Jerry
Adair, Norm Siebern, and pinchhitting ace Bob Johnson, should
be bolstered by rookie Dave Johnson, while the offensively dangerous outfield of Powell, Bowens, Jack Brandt, and Earl Robinson will probably have to find
room for highly-touted rookie
slugger Curt Blefary.
All this with a healthy Orsino
behind the plate should spell
P-E-N-N-AN-T for Hank Bauer’s

Birds.
Also expected to make a strong
bid for the flag arc Senor Lopez’s White Sox. The Pale Hose
have seemingly found a cure to
some of their major problems of
last year, although it cost them
Ray Herbert, Jim Landis, Mike
Herschberger, and Frank Bauman to
needed.

acquire what

they

Catching, a White Sox Achilles
heel since Sherm Lollar passed
his peak a few years ago, seems
to be a strong point now with
John Romano behind the plate
and Jim Schaeffer and J. C. Mar-

tin in reserve.

Backing Juan Pizzaro and Gary
Peters on the mound are Joe
H o r 1 e n John Buzhardt, and
Tommy John, with rookie Bruce
Howard a possibility. The bullpen
is unusually strong with flutterball artist Hoyt Wilhelm, Don
,

In the heart of New York and convenient

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HOUSE Y.M.C.A.

no longer be taken for granted.
A1 Downing’s control is still a
problem. Ralph Terry, Stan Williams, and Bud Daley are no
longer with the club. There
hasn’t really been an adequate
season-long stopper in the Yankee bullpen since Luis Arroyo.
teaves the Bronx Bombers
with only two dependable starters from last year, Jim Bouton
and Mel Stottlemyre, neither of
whom could be classified as superstarters, and an assortment
of run-of-the-mill pitchers headed by Pedro Ramos, Bill Stafford,

Mossi, and Eddie Fisher. Pete
Ward, Ron Hansen, and Bill Skowron lead a hard-hitting infield,
while Floyd Robinson, Dan Cater,
Dave Nicholson, and possibly
rookie Tommy Agee will patrol
the outfield pastures.
Chicago doesn't appear quite
as strong in all-around depth as
Baltimore, but in the hands of
the crafty Senor and through the
proper execution of "Go-go”

baseball, the flag could be wrested way by the Windy City boys.
The Cleveland Indians are probably the most improved AL team
and should battle their way up
to fourth behind the Yankees in
the standings. The Indian outfield of Rocky Colavito, Vic Davalillo, Leon Wagner, and Chuck
Hinton is a manager’s dream.
Probably Hinton will be shifted
to first base to complete an infield comprised of Max Alvis,
Dick Howser, Billy Moran, and

Gladding, Bruce Brubaker, John
Seale, and relievers Terry Fox
and Larry Sherry. If the Tigers
are to put up a fight, catching
should cause no problem with
strapping Bill Freehan assuming

the duties and young Mike Roarke

in reserve. The Detroit outfield

of A1 Kaline, Bill Bruton, Don
George Thomas, and
possibly rookie Jim Northrop appears strong, but the infield of
Don Wert, Dick McAuliffe, Jerry
Lumpe and Norm Cash is onh
so-so. Rookie Bill Roman could
possibly utility man Chico Salhelp out, but he, as seems to be
mon.
The pitching seems to hold the the story with the entire Detroit
key to how far the Indians could platoon, is a question mark.
advance this year, Dick Donovan Under these conditions the Tigers
appears to have shaken his can be considered no better than
a darkhorse.
slump of last season. Jack KraAs a devout Boston fan, I'd love
lick’s left arm seems sound again.
to say the Red Sox possess the
Luis Tiant left a favorable impression in a b e 1 a t ed major material to be a pennant contendleague debut after being 16-1 at er, but, alas, even the most chauvPortland for most of the season. inistic of Beantowers would enSam McDowell, Lee Stange, and counter great difficulty in forcSonny Siebert have shown a great ing these words through his lips
deal of potential. Ted Abernathy this year.
The deal which sent Dick Stuheads an otherwise weak bullpen.
art to Philadelphia for southpaw
The Indians have shown enough
Dennis Bennett has proved to be
faith in Jose Azcue to allow him
the most deplorable transaction
fulltime catching duties now that
since
the Indians sold Manhattan
Romano is gone. If Azcue and
Island to Peter Minuet for $24.
the pitching staff remain healthy
Bennett
never even pitch
for the season, the Indians could again, may a
battered condiin such
become a big surprise.
tion is his ailing shoulder. PromFifth place should go to one of ising youngster Jerry Stephenson
last year’s major disappointments, has also been shelved with a rethe Minnesota Twins. The homercurrence of a chronic arm inhappy Twins led the league in
flamation.
the four-bagger department last
This leaves the Red Sox with
porous
year, but a
defense, inept only a fragment of a pitching
relief pitching, and too many men staff in Bill Monbouquette, Earl
left on base combined to make Wilson, Dave Morehead, and
a loser out of them.
Butch Heffner. The starters are
The return of second baseman backed by a surprisingly strong
Bernic Allen, sidelined by a brokrelief staff of Jay Ritchie, Jack
en ankle most of last year, should Lamabe, Arnold Early and the altighten an infield including Rich most legendary flamethrower,
Rollins, Zoilo Versalles, and Bob Dick “the Monster” Radatz.
Allison. The Twin outfield is
The Hub infield ofis beginning
stronger than ever with Harmon to creak with senility where the
Killebrcw, Ji m m y Hall, Tony average age of Frank Malzone, Ed
pint-sized
and
“can’t Bressoud, Felix Mantilla, and Lee
Oliva,
miss” rookie Sandy Valdespino. Thomas is well over 30. YoungPinch-hitters Don Mincher and sters Tony Horton, Dalton Jones,
Frank Kostro contribute to an and particularly flashy Rico Petawesome offensive barrage.
rocelli, possess a great deal of
Reliable Earl Battey is set betalent, but need an equally great
hind the plate for another year deal of experience.
of receiving the offerings of Ca
The Boston outfield could be
milo Pascual, Jim Kaat, Dick its best since the 1957 days of
Stigman, Mudeat Grant, and Jim Ted Williams, Jim Piersall and
Roland. The likes of John KlippJackie Jensen. Tony Conigliaro
stein, Bob Pleis, A1 Worthington, and Carl Yastremski have virtualand Bill Dailey will attempt to ly clinched starting roles, whereplug the hole in the bullpen.
as the third outfield spot will
The Twin offensive power probably go to either a recuperatseems inexhaustible, but unless it ed Gary Geiger, Lenny Green, or
functions in a manner in which a sleeper that bears watching,
it can make most of its baserunrookie Bill Schlesinger.
Improving Bob Tillman gives
ners, who it seemed never made
it beyond third base last year the Red Sox adequate catching
without the assistance of a home while 18-year-old penom Gerry
Moses is being seasoned in the
run, unless the pitching and deminors.
fense become considerable strongMinus the booming bat of Stuer ,it will be another mediocre
art and without the arms of Benseason for Sam Mele.
Leading the second division will nett and Stephenson, this sumbe the Detroit Tigers. The Benmer should prove to be a harrowing experience for Billy Herman.
gals could become a great surprise if a number of interested
The Los Angeles Angels own
rookies succeed, but could also Dean Chance who was baseball’s
become an equally great flop if outstanding pitcher last year.
they should fail.
They also possess a 200-grand
Last year Dave Wickersham bonus baby named Rick Reichand Mickey Lolich collaborated ardt who is being groomed as the
to form the AL’s second most “next Mickey Mantle” but was
powerful 1-2 pitching punch beoptioned out to the minors. Behind Chicago's Peters and Pizarsides this, Billy Rigney has 3
ro-combo. Behind this framework,
other brilliant
youngsters in
however, the Tiger pitching was shortstop Jim Fregosi, catcher
just about as ferocious as that of Bob Rodgers, and reliever Bob
a Puddycat on a Geritol presLee. Watch out for the next step
cription; Hank Aguirre, Ed though, it’s a big one; the Angel
Rokaw, and Phil Regan suffered cupboard is quite bare beyond
horrible seasons, and promising the aforementioned group.
rookies Joe Sparma and Denny
The verdant meadows of ChaMcLain were forced into the rovez Ravine will be roamed by Lou
tation before they were ready, Clinton, Jim Piersall, Bob Perry,
where they did, however, gain
Albie Pearson, Dick Simpson, and
valuable experience.
Willie Smith, while F r e g o s i
the
Sparma,
former Ohio Slate
should sparkle like a rare gem on
quarterback, Wickersham and Lothe infield with Felix Torres, Bob
appear
lich
fit for this year but Knoop and Joe Adcock or Costen
Aquirre, Regan and Rakow must
Shockley.
return to form, while help is also
Chance is supported by a fairly
expected from McClain, Fred
efficient mound crew spearheadDemetcr,

ed by Ken McBride, Don Lee,
Newman, Barry Latman, Aubrey Gatewood, and Rookie Rudy
May . . . With Dan Osinski gone,
Bob Lee and Fred Duliba should
enjoy a very active summer.
Frank Howard, Phil Ortega.
Pete Richert, Nick Willhite, Ken
McMullen, Doug Camilli, Dick
Nen
sound familiar? No, it’s
not the Dodger roster or even
Spokane’s for that matter; instead
it’s a segment of the new-look
Washington Senators. This valu
able addition to the Senators, for
which the Nats shelled out $125,OOOin cash along with Claude Osteen and John Kennedy to the
made the Senators a stronger
club than last year; not strong
enough to compete on equal footage with most of the rest of the
league, but not as much of a
pushover either.
With probable starting lineup of
Howard, Don Lock, and Jim King
in the outfield, and an infield to
be selected from McMullen, Don
Zimmer, Woody Held, Chuck Cottier, Nen, Roy Sievers, Joe CunFred

—

ningham, Don Blasingame, and
Bob Chance, the Senators should
know the secrets of every other

club in baseball.
The pitching is still very thin
with Ortega, Riehert, Dave Stenhouse,, Tom Cheney, Buster
Narum, Bennie Daniels, Don Rudolph, and Jim Duckworth the
best Washington has to offer.
The Senators will make Gil
Hodges’ second year as mentor
slightly more rewarding, but it
still appears that ninth place is
as high a goal as they can hope
to achieve.
Kansas City will hold on to the
dubious distinction of league

doormat. The main reason John

Wyatt, made a record 81 appearances last year was the inability
of the other “A’s” pitchers. Only
Orlando Pena, Diego Segui, and
John O’Donoghue went the distance even occasionally (although
Fred Talbot should help this
year), while only the kindness of
humanity prompted the removal
of other relievers than Wyatt:
Wes Stock also saw almost daily
relief duty after being acquired
from Baltimore during mid-season.
The infield of Ed Charles.
Bert Campaneris, Wayne Causey,
and Jim Gentile is one of the A s
stronger points. Catching and outfielding, along with the hurling,
it
both need a substantial boost
the A's are to escape the cellar.
It seems very doubtful as if it
will happen this year, although
attendance shouldn’t falter too
badly with the likes of zany
Charley Finley, the novel geld

and

uniforms,

green

the

and

rightfield shepherd among the
foremost attractions to lure in
curious fans.

All in all, it should be a very
interesting pennant race in the
diAL, particularly in the first d s
vision where a great deal of
and but could determine the win
ner. From this corner it too*-'
s
like Baltimore in a photo ftm
over Chicago.
FINAL

STANDINGS
Ganies

1. Baltimore
2. Chicago

3. New York
4. Cleveland
5. Minnesota
6. Detroit

Won Lost
65
97
67
95
90
72
73
89

87
81
7. Boston
77
8. Los Angeles 71
9. Washington 68
10. Kansas City 55
Battling

Behind
"

'

75
81

85
91

94
107

Champion—A1

-

*

h au

Detroit.

Home Run Champion—Han
Killebrew, Minnesota.
In—Floyd Ro

Runs Batted

son, Chicago.

Rookie of the Year

Agee,

Chicago

Tonin'!'

�Friday, April

9, 1965

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

REPO RTS

AMERICAN
LEAGUE
By

Michael Castro

The National League race this
year promises to be unpredict-

able, unintelligible, irrepressible,
za ny. uncalled for, an Un-American,
In short, it will be a

rather typical baseball campaign
in the senior circuit. No less
than six teams must be counted
as legitimate contenders. Despite
these flagrant detriments to ac-

curate

prognostication,

spurred

on by an unhealthfully sadistic
editor, and inspired by public
acclaim over my pro basketball
prophecies, (the Warriors, who Ipickcd for first place, won 16
■games and lost 64), I fearlessly,
and even more, foolishly, submit
to you, dear reader, this mystic
ally arrived at portent.

San Francisco Giants
Cincinnati Reds
Los Angeles Dodgers
St. Louis Cardinals
Milwaukee Braves
Phildelphia Phillies
Pittsburgh Pirates
8. Chicago Cubs
9. New York MetS*
10 Houston Astros
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Giants Show Potential
Last season the Giants were a

team torn by dissension stemming from since departed Skipper Alvin Dark’s publicly annunciated racial views. They suffered through injuries to key
players. Willie McCovey had a

chronic foot ailment which
caused his batting average to
shrink 60 points, and more importantly his homerun production
(o fall off from 44 in 1963 to 18
last season. Jack Sanford, who
won a total of 40 games over the

previous two seasons, won only

5 last year due to arm miseries.
Jose Pagan, a brilliant performer
at shortstop in 1963, could do
nothing right last season. The
Giants, a team traditionally
feared for their batting strength,
finished 9th in club batting,
ahead of only the lowly Colt 45’s,
(now Houston Astros).
In spite of

all this the Giants were not eliminated from contention until the
final weekend of the season, and
finished only 3 games out of first.

The Giants are strong offensively. Willie Mays, who remains
the games greatest player at age
•IT, Orlando Cepeda, and rookie
Jim Ray Hart hit 109 home runs
between them, and if McCovey
is able to return to his 1963 form,
Giant power will be awesome.
1 hree 22-year-old rookies came
through magnificently for the
Giants last season; second base-

man Hal Lanier; third baseman

Jim Ray Hart; and outfielder
esus Alou. All are being countd on for greater feats this seajn, and Hart,
who carried the
am over the final months, could
develop into a super-star. The infivld with Cepeda, Lanier, Pagan,
ana Hart is excellent defensively,
and Mays and Alou are exceptional defensive outfielders.
The
catching is in the capable hands
llf Tom Haller. In addition,
the'
have the best bench in
giants
aseball headed by former all,ars Harvey
Kuenn, Jim Davenrt, and Ed
Bailey, along with
Matty
Alou, and Cap Peterson.
pitching
Giant
was surprislf J
ln fUy strong
last season thanks
0 the development of young
Pitchers such as Gaylord Perry,
Herbel, Bob Bolin. They will
team with veterans Sanford, Bob
Hend ley, and the
brilliant Juan
■ larichal to form a formidable

Jwn

staff.
ln

The Giants’

main weakness is

the bullpen where Bob Shaw
disappointing. Shaw, Jim
ttftalo, and perhaps rookies

Frank Linzy and Dick Estelle will
try to do the job if no trade can
be made.
The success of the Cincinnati
Reds depends largely on the question of whether youngsters Bill
McCool and Sammy Ellis, who
were spectacular in relief last
season, can have equal success as
starting

pitchers,

as

manager

Dick Sisler envisions. It they can,
they will team with Jim O’Toole,
(17-7), Jim Maloney, (15-10), Joey
Jay, Joe Nuxhall, with Roger
Craig and John Tsitouris in the
bullpen to form one of the majors

best staffs. Frank Robinson and
Vada Pinson head a strong batting attack, complemented by sin
gles hitters like Pete Rose and
Leo Cardinas. The infield will
have Gordy Coleman and T o n y
Perez platooned at first, Pete
Rose at second, Cardenas at short,
and a mad scramble for the third

base job between Deron Johnson,
Chico Ruiz, and Steve Boros, with
the hard-hiting but weaker fielding Johnson having the upper
hand. It is only fair defensively.
The Reds’ strength lies in t h e i r
pitching. Johnny Edwards has become one of the better catchers
in the league. Strong seasons at
the plate by Pinson and Robinson could combine with these
team strengths to produce a pennant in Cincinnati,

Koufax, Drysdale Lead Dodgers
The Dodgers are probably the
most unpredictable team in baseball. From World Champions in
1963, they dropped to a weak
sixth last year. Never noted for
their power, the Dodgers have
apparently abandoned the homerun as an offensive threat al-

together by trading Frank Howard to Washington. In return they
got Claude Osteen, one of the
best pitchers in the American
League last year, and John Kennedy, a slick-fielding, but weakhitting third baseman. The team
depends on singles and speed for
scoring, with the Davis boys,
Tommy and Willie, and Maury
Wills the main batting threats,
More importantly, Davis, Wills,

Derrell Griffith, Nate Oliver, Wes
and
Parker,
John Roseboro
all are fleet afoot. Roseboro is
one of the best receivers around,
and has improved his hitting considerably. The infield is the

Dodgers’ main weakness. Maury
Wills, the only established major
leaguer in it, is a poor fielder.
PeeWee Oliver at second base
has trouble making the doubleplay, and only hit .242. He may
lose his job to rookie Jim Lefevbre. Wes Parker, at first, is
an unknown quantity, although he
failed to set any worlds on fire
last season, and Ron Fairly could
win the job from him.
The Dodger pitching makes up
for all the teams’ weaknesses. A
staff headed by the great Sandy
Koufax and Don Drysdale, Johnny Podres, supposedly better than
ever after an arm operation, Osteen, Bob Miller, and Ron Per
ranoski, along with John Purdin.
a highly regarded rookie, barring
injuries, would win the pennant
for L,A Unfortunately, the Dodg
er staff is perennially injury
prone', and with Koufax’ arm already giving him trouble, they
are a poor bet.
Best Infield in Baseball
The world champion Cardinals
return with virtually the same
cast. The infield is probably the
best in baseball with Bill White
at first. Julian Javier at second.
Dick Groat at short, and Ken
Boyer at third. Tim McCarver is
one of the best young catchers
in the game. The outfield is also
strong offensively and defensive
ly with Lou Brodk (.314). C u r t
Flood (.311), and Mike Shannon
and Tito Francona. This is truly
a formidable club. Bench
strength, however, is only fair.

The big question with the Cards
is pitching. In an effort to
strengthen it they obtained Bob
Purkey from the Reds and Tracy
Stallard from the Mets. Unfor

Innately they gave up two pitchers who did a good job last year—
Roger Craig and Gordy Richardson, and the total gain may have
been slight Bob Gibson is the
ace of the staff. Ray Sadecki won
20 games last season, but has a
history of inconsistency. Curt
Simmons was brilliant last year,
but is aging. Barney Schultz
heads a weak bullpen. If the
pitching comes through, the
Cards could go all the way, but
there appear to be too many ifs.
Milwaukee is a team very similar to the Cardinals, only their
hiting may be a bit better, and
the pitching a bit worse. Henry
Aaron (.3281, Rico Carly (.330),
and Lee Mayc (.304), gives the
Braves the best offensive outfield
in baseball. Joe Torre, (.321), is
generally regarded as the best

catcher

in the

league. Felipe

Alou, at first, Eddie Mathews at
third, and Dennis Menke at short
are among the most dangerous
hitters in the league. The only
weak spot is second base, where
the Braves are counting on veteran Frank Bolling or rookie
Sandy Alomar. The infield is undistinguished defensively, with
Menke, a converted third baseman, at short, and Alou, a converted outfielder, manning first.
Only the Mets' pitching staff
had a worse earned run average
than the Braves' last year, and
the same group is back for Milwaukee this season, minus Warren Spahn. Their explosive of-

fensive attack make the Braves
a dark-horse for the flag, but un
less their young pitchers show
considerable improvement, this
event seems unlikely.
The

Phillies the Favorites
Phillies, who narrowly

missed playing in the World Series last October, arc rated by
the oddsmakers as favorites this
season. They appear to have
strengthened themselves by acquiring controversial pitcher Bo
Belinsky and slugger Dick Stuart. Stuart will add badly needed
right-handed power to an attack

which includes Richie Allen, John
Callison, and Wes Covington: It

must be remembered that 1963
was a year in which almost everyone on the Phils, from reserves
like Cookie Rojas on up, had out
standing seasons. In baseball,
such lightning very rarely strikes
twice. Jim Running and Chris
Short must prove that last season
was not a fluke. Jack Baldschun
is a fine relief pitcher, but the

rest of the staff

is uncertain. Art

Mahaffey and Ray Culp have had
chronic sore arms for over a year.
Belinsky, for all his publicity,
has a lifetime major league record of 21 wins and 28 losses.
In addtion, the Phillies may
have, with Stuart at first and
Allen at third, the league’s worst
defensive infield. Defense is an

aspect of the game which is generally not given the recognition
it deserves The Yankees and Car
dinals. while good hitting teams,
both arc great defensive teams,
and it is this that is the basis of
their success. Very rarely does a
poor fielding team win the pennant. The Phils will have to disprove this maxim.
Doomed to Seventh
The above six teams should
battle tooth-and-nail up to the
very end of the season The Pirates, just below them, appear to
be in a qttandry. They are not
quite good enough to be in the
same class as the Giants, Reds,
Dodgers. Cards, Braves, and
Phils, yet they are considerably

better than the bottom

three

teams in the league, and so they
are isolated in their own little

second division, seventh place,
from which there appears no escape.

The team is led by baiting
champ Roberto Clemente. Bob
Bailey at third, Willie Stargell in
left, and Jim Paglioroni behind
the plate improved greatly last
season, and appear to be coming
into their own. A1 McBean is
probably the best reliever in the
league. The rest of the team, with
the exception of second baseman
Bill Mazeroski, is undistinguished.
Bob Veale heads a pitching staff

which, after him. is mediocre.
Bob Friend, Vcrn Law, Don
Sehwall, and Roy Face all have
their best years behind them.
The Pirates appear to bo tailor
made for their familiar seventh
place.

The Cubs are a bad team, and
the sad part of it is, they don't
have the excuse of being an expansion club. They do have seve r a 1 outstanding performers
Third baseman Hon Santo, and
outfielder Billy Williams are two
of the league's best. Larry Jackson won 24 games last season for
an eighth place club. Ernie
Banks, while his greatest days
arc behind him, remains a competent performer at first base.
After this, there is little. The

catching is weak, both offensively
and defensively, and second base
and shortstop arc being handed
over to unknowns. The Cubs arc
hoping that George Altman can
recover from his exposure to the
Mets and be of some help in the
outfield, which after Williams appears empty.

The pitching, led by Jackson,
is aging but adequate. Bob Buhl,
Dick Ellsworth, and Ernie Broglio are the starters, with Lindy
McDaniel and Don Elston in the
bullpen.

fied with both Bobby Klaus and
Charlie Smith, and will probably
trade for help. The rest of the infield is well set. Roy McMillan, a
magician with the gloVAat shortstop. is invaluable despite his
weak bat. Ron Hunt, a fine fielder and dangerous hitter, is the
leagues
All-Star second baseman. Ed Kranepool, the young
first baseman, is developing rapidly. Chris Cannizarro is a fine defensive catcher, and showed surprising skill with the bat last
year. The outfield is led by Joe
Christopher, who surprised everybody but himself last year by
batting .300. The other two positions are up for grabs between
newcomers Ron Swoboda, Billy
Cowan. Johnny Lewis, and Cleon
Jones. The Mets seem more awesome than ever.
The Houston Astros move into
the new domed stadium this year
with mixed emotions. Their poor-

ly lit, spacious, muggy old home
was perhaps their greatest weapon against powerful opposition.

The Astros have a strong infield led by third baseman Bob
Aspromonte. Walter Bond at first

is the team's only power hitter.
The catching and outfield arc ex-

ceptionally weak.
The pitching, led by Bob Bruce,
Dick Farrell, Ken Johnson, and
Hal Woodeschick, all veterans, is
good,

but it remains to be seen

how much they will miss the spacious pastures of the home of the
former Colts.

There it is, submitted for your
and remarks, straight
from the Spectrum's magic crystal ball in the bell tower of Hayes
Hall. With it goes the wish that
all be forgotten by the time the
perusal

season ends.
'Let's Go Metsl

"Awesome" Mets
This could be the year for the
Mets to c|imb up the ladder of
success into ninth place. Casey
Stcngal has assembled a pitching
staff of which he need not be
ashamed. It abounds with strong
young arms such as Gary Kroll,
Dennis Ribant, Tommy Parsons,
Bill Wakefield, and Gordy Rich
ardson, and with the more experienced, yet still relatively young
A1 Jackson and Jack Fisher. In
addition, the Mets’ best pitcher
of two years ago, Carl Willey, returns after being injured all last
season, and the great Warren

Spahn has looked good in spring
training in his comeback bid.
Third base is- the Mets’ main

problem, as Stengal is dissatis-

Home

ATTENTION GOLFERS
All those interested in
playing varsity golf in the
fall of 1965 sign up with
Coach Surfustini at Clark
Gym for the Fourth Annual UB Intercollegiate
Golf Tournament to lie
held at Erie Downs on
dales to he announced
later. The event will consist of 36 holes of medal
play with prizes for the
first, second and third
places.

Decoraters. Inc.

Division of C. H. Stuart fie Co., Inc.

will be hiring

number of college men this month and
ne,\t month for
SUMMER EMPIXJYMENT
a

Gain valuable experience in merchandising this .summer.
Work will be in the Buffalo General Area
Applicants must have definite need of high summer earnings, Car is necessary. Drop a postcard in'the mail to:

Home Decorators, Inc.
Commercial Building
Newark, New York State
Attn; Jim Parker

�Friday, April 9,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

I

¥
*

—

1965

&amp;

i)!?®Sil'i&gt;*
©IP Hi © -tSTIBIUM
1—^=s&lt;=t==
=(—

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

Sandy Koufax
An American Tragedy
A little more than a week ago, the Las Vegas oddsmakers, who should know, installed the Los Angeles
Dodgers as the 2-1 favorites to win the National League
pennant. But, that was a little more than a week ago,
and since that time, one man’s elbow has changed all
that. The man is Sandy Koufax.

UNDERWAY

The University of Buffalo football team began spring practice
Monday afternoon at 3:30 p.m.
when 62 players, including 15
lettermen, reported to head coach
Dick Offenhamer.
The 1965 season will be Offenhamer’s 11th as mentor of the
Bulls and will be the 58th football campaign for UB. Offenhamer’s record is 53-24-3; last
vear’s club was 4-4-1.

Koufax entered organized baseball with the long
dead but not forgotten Brooklyn Dodgers in 1956, just
out of college with an extremely promising future. But
his first few years were undistinguished save a 1-0 loss
to the Chicago White Sox in the 1959 World Series. But,
starting in 19.61, things changed. Koufax won 18 games,
and at this point in his career he was being looked upon
as the next super-star of the mound. He substantiated
the confidence placed in him by winning his fourteenth
game of the 1962 season in early July. At that point,
Coach Richard Offenhamer
Koufax developed something called Reynaud’s Phenomenon, a circulatory ailment. He was finished for the
The most difficult to replace
year except for a few losing efforts at the tail end of of the 20 lettermcn gone from
the season while the Dodgers were in a state of collapse. last year’s squad is quarterback
Don Gilbert who established a
Because of Koufax’ finger, the Dodgers had lost the pennew
UB total offense record of
1,337 yards in nine games and
who also broke a school record

nant.

When the 1963 season began, Koufax was a ques- by passing for 869 yards.
The leading candidates at the
tion mark, but he answered that question in the most
affirmative manner. He won 25 games, pitched his sec- moment for Gilbertt’s job are
Capuana and sophond no-hitter, and won two World Series games against junior Nick Wells,
Rick
Capuana, from
the Yankees. To add to his laurels, he was voted the Cy omore
Utica, N.Y., is a converted tailYoung Award as the outstanding pitcher for the year, back
who averaged 4.8-yards per
and the National League’s Most Valuable Player award. carry running from the post last
feats
Koufax
to
these
as
Everyone looked for
duplicate
year. Wells, from Ithaca, N.Y.,
the 1964 season got underway.
displayed exceptional promise as
And duplicate them he did. By August he had won
19 games, was leading the league in strikeouts again,
and had pitched the third no-hitter of his career. But
then it happened again. Sports pages screamed, “Koufax Hurt,” and the Dodgers slipped down to sixth place,
where they were to eventually finish. Another injury,
this time to an elbow, had once again spelled defeat for
Koufax' team. He did not win another game in 1964
after this injury.
Spring training opened this year on an optimistic
note for the Dodgers. Koufax was all right, he said, thus
giving the oddsmakers a good reason for their choice of
the Dodgers as the probable pennant winners. But last
Friday it happened again. He woke up that morning with
a swollen elbow, just one day after pitching his second
complete
of the spring season. In an effort to stop
trouble before it had actually arisen, the Dodger management sent Koufax back to Los Angeles for a check-up,
and Monday the news was out. Sandy Koufax has “a

traumatic arthritic condition” that flares up under repeated stress. A major league pitcher cannot escape
this repeated stress on his throwing arm, so this condition could, and probably will, spell the end of Sandy
Koufax as a baseball player.
For an athlete of his magnitude to suffer like this
is a tragedy, a “catastrophe” as Arthur Daly of the New
York Times puts it. All I can say is that I agree with Mr.
Daly and hope that Sandy Koufax can come back, and
come back big
the way a super-star should. But, at
the age of 29, it is probable that these hopes will just
not materialize. And that is the shame of it all.
—

•

�

The other night we took a walk over to Clark Gym
just to throw a basketball around for a couple of hours.
When we got there, as in the case of Old Mother Hubbard, the cupboard was bare
that is to say, the gym
was closed. We’d like to take this opportunity to ask
the Athletic Department why. No more than just that.
—

Why????

Surfers Win Wrestling Crown,
Sig Ep Prevails in Squash,
As AEPi Continues to Lead
The

1964-65

Winter schedule of the
Intramural season has

ended with the recent completion
of the Wrestling and Squash
tournaments. At this point, with
five sports left (volleyball, fencing, softball, track and bowling),
Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity leads
Trophy
the overall Pahlowitz
standings, which are:
1. Alpha Epsilon Pi
295
2. Sig Ep
282
3. Phi Ep
280%
4. Sammy
5. Alpha Sig
6. Beta Sigma Rho
7. Teke

263

251%
206
204

The results in the Wrestling
tournament with respect to team
standings were:

points

Surfers (Ind)
Beta Sig
Phi Ep

73
36

28
20
AE Pi
Sig Ep
19
Alpha Sig
16
The following were victorious
in their respective weight classes:

lbs.
123

Team
Bob Reynolds
Surfers
130 Bob Flegenheimer Surfers
137 Sandy Kesend
Beta Sig

Full back Dennis Przykuta,
underwent a knee operation during the winter and will not participate in spring practice. Tackle
Bill Taylor is still recuperating
from injuries sustained in an
automobile accident several
months ago and is on the doubtful list for spring drills. Both

Richmond,
Delaware,
and Villanova.
Holy

U.,
Cross,

Dayton,

Colgate

191

Avery Stiglitz

Surfers
Surfers
Surfers

Independent

Independent
Tom Petit
The Squash tournament ended
in the following order:
Sig Ep won the tournament with
44 points, Sammy finished sec
ond with 36 points, and Alpha
Epsilon Pi finished third with 29
points. Steve Oberstein won the
individual championship.
With two weeks to go in the
volleyball tournament the standings are as follows:
Hvy

Wednesday League
Zygotes
4-0
Sig Ep
4-0
Alpha Sig 3-1
Sammy
2-2
Thursday League
4-0
AEPi
3-1
APD
2-2
Teke
Phi Si
2-2
There will be a meeting next
Wednesday of all managers of

softball teams at 3:30 p.m., in
Room 322 of Clark gym. It is
important

that

all teams are rep=

resented at this meeting.

Both seniors, Tompkins and
Wasula have earned varsity letters the past two seasons. Last
year Tompkins batted .284 and
led the team in runs batted in;
Wasula batted .311.

being.

Boston

167 Doug Aitcheson
177 Tom Dewey

baseball team.

Jim Robie, who was Gilbert’s
understudy in 1964, has been
shifted to tailback for the time

against Boston College September
18 and following with games
against Tampa, Massachusetts,

Phi Ep

Second baseman Earl Tompkins
and third baseman Steve Wasula
have been elected co-captains of
the 1965 University of Buffalo

of six games.

made up of UB alumni.
The Bulls have a ten-game
schedule for 1965, opening

Jack Brodrick

Pete Tiechner

TOMPKINS, WASULA ARE
BASEBALL CO-CAPTAINS

first-string quarterback on a
freshman team that won five out

Przykuta and Taylor, however,
are expected to be ready and in
the starting line-up in the fall.
The new college football rules,
which permit almost unlimited
substitution, have induced Coach
Offenhamer to install the twoplatoon system this season.
Nevertheless, the players will be
worked both on offense and defense during the spring practice, at least until the coaching
staff is ready to make an evalua
tion of the players' capabilities.
The installing of the two-platoon system means that this
year’s spring practice will be
more meaningful and will be
more experimental than usual.
In addition to the changing of
positions for players such as Capuana and Robie, there is a distinct possibility that Ron Pugh,
who earned a letter in his sophomore season at tackle, may be
tried at fullback.
Spring drills will run until
May 1, concluding with a game
between the varsity and a team

147
157

Tompkins is a graduate of Riverside High School; Wasula is a
graduate of Tonawanda High
School.

The UB baseball team will o
its 1965 campaign against
gate April 17 at Clark Field
'

SPORTS CIRCLE

SPRING GRID
PRACTICE

the UB campus.

UB Bowlei Broun Captures
Intercollegiate Tourney
The odds on winning a finalist
spot in the 1965 National Intercollegiate Bowling Championships
were 184 to 1 against him, but
the challenge proved equal to the
ability and detremination of Robert Braun

A 20-year-old senior at University of Buffalo. Braun finished
fifth in regional competition to
win one of the 75 spots in the
national finals at St. Paul, Minesota, April 25 and 26. He competed against 13,800 college
bowlers representing 185 colleges
and universities throughout the
country.

The

National

Intercollegiate
Bowling Championships are sponsored by the Association of Col-

lege Unions, American Bow
Congress, and American Mac!
&amp;
Foundry Company. The fit
tournament is literally the F
Bowl of intercollegiate bowl
with competition to detern
champions in team, sinf

doubles and all events.
Also at stake is the Morchead
,he
Paterson Trophy, named for s
later Chairman of AMF, which i
presented to the all events chaw
pion. By winning a spot in the
national tournament finals, Braun
cpl
took a big step in capturing
lege’s most coveted award.
He is the son of Mr. and
Louis Braun, 43 Webster Si
Malverne, New York.

Listen To WBFO For Sports

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

EXTRA
VOLUME 15

EXTRA

)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1965

_

No.

23

ALL NIGHT TEACH-IN

Corso Dismissed, Academic
Freedom Committee to Picket

The Faculty-Student Committee
for Academic Freedom will picket in front of Crosby Hall, on the
Diefendorf side, at 8:30 tonight
to protest the firing of Gregory
Corso for his refusal to sign the
Feinbcrg Certificate.
Mr. Corso

KIM DARROW
of Ralph Maud, George
Hochfield, George Starbuck, Harcases

ry Keyishian and Newton

By SUE

GREGORY CORSO
ver, members of the university
faculty who refused to sign the

certificate last year. Furthermore, the existence of a disclaimer certificate is not required by

that law.
Mr, Corso, who is a poet of national reputation, was notified
during the spring vacation that

his services would be terminated
due to his failure to sign the
oath.
Dr. Robert F. Berner, Dean of
Millard Fillmore College, declined to give details and stated only
that Mr. Corso did not fulfill
all the requirements for teaching.
Mr. Cook expressed regret at the
situation, but pointed out that
signing the disclaimer was an administrative technicality that
could be circumvented only by
officials in Albany.
The Faculty-Student Committee,
at its meeting on Monday, March
29, voted to picket outside the
class which Corso had been teaching and to send the following
letter to Dean Berner stating the
committee’s objections to Mr. Corso’s dismissal:
“Dr. Robert F. Berner, Dean:
The Faculty-Student Committee
(Cont’d on P. 2)

State System Changes
Cost of Room, Board
John Okoniewski, Director of

dressed

to all residence hall stu-

dents. For on-campus students,
nt room and board charges for
he 1965-1966
academic year will
represent a total reduction of
fifecn dollars, Allenhurst residents
realize a decrease of five
dollars.
reduction was the result of
■ate University directive issued
January of this year. In an at'Pt to provide uniform costs at
universities in the system, the
d set r00 rit
charges at a rate of
?
standard accommodations
telephones. This results in a
he

e of
l

between

eighty-five and

&gt;-five dollars to the average
Jt the system.
Practicality of the reduc"as assured by two state-

GREENE

Fillmore Room of Norton Union
from 8:00 tonight until 8:00 a.m.
tomorrow morning. The all night
marathon is being sponsored and
coordinated by Dr. Elwin H.
Powell, Dr. Sidney M. Willhelm
and Mr. Bill Harrell.

Gar-

Housing, announced the reduction
of room and board rates
at the
' a'versity in a memorandum ad-

S.D.S To Sponsor
All Night Seminar
A “teach-in” to discuss the
pros and cons of the war in Viet
Nam will he held in the Millard

was teaching an Eng-

lish literature course in Shelley
in Millard Fillmore College. Albert S. Cook, Chairman of the
English Department, secured the
position for Mr. Corso at the beginning of the semester upon the
request of Leonard D. Minsky,
who was originally assigned to
the course and is presently teaching it.
It is an administrative requirement that all new teachers sign
the Feinberg Certificate which
states that the signee is not a
member of the Communist Party
and that he has reported any past
membership to thuei President of
the University, anduthat he recognizes the Regent Rules on Subversive Activities as “terms of
his employment.” The constitutionality of the Feinberg Law is
presently being tested in the court

Rules Suspended; Precedents Set

The purpose of the “teach-in”
as expressed by Mr. Harrell is
“to get people interested in the
issue (Viet Nam), think about it
and be concerned with it.” The
sponsors feel that the Viet Nam
situation is “extremely crucial
and dangerous" and that it is
imperative that the level of public consciousness and concern be
raised. “The obvious place,” said
Mr. Harrell, “is on the university

campus."

Informal Format
The "teach-in” will be very informal. Plans for the format are
general: it will begin with
speeches by professors who have
been invited to participate. Each
will speak approximately fifteen
to thirty minutes, after which
anyone who so desires may take
the microphone and reply. Students and non-scheduled faculty
members may bring prepared
speeches or make impromtu ones.
The originally planned speeches
of the professors will serve basically as catalysts, to encourage a
free and lengthy exchange of
views.

Scheduled to speak are, among
(Cont'd on

P.

2)

“Reports of proposed last min
ute budget cuts for State Univer
sity as a whole, and the State University at Buffalo are most distressing." So stated Dr. Clifford
C. Furnas in a telegram sent to
legislators in Albany with regard
to the cutting of $6.8 million from

The January directive reverses

A further reduction in the total
sum required for residence hall
accommodations was affected by
the elimination of the twenty-five
dollar breakage fee deposit.

.

SDS Coordinators
—Photo by Rusted Goldberg

Union Open Curfew Lifted
All Night for For Teach-In
Discussion
The Fillmore Room in Norton
Union will remain open from
11:00 p.m. until 7:00 a.m. tonight
to accommodate those students
and faculty members participating in the “teach-in” on Viet

Nam.
The wing of Norton in which
the Millard Fillmore Room is located will be the only part of the
building open. The hall will be
closed off from the check room
on. The purpose in leaving the
entire end of the hall open is to
(Cont'd on P. 2)

Curfews will be lifted for all
residence hall women attending
the teach-in at Norton Union tonight. Permission was granted

Friday by Dr. Stanley J. Segal,
Dean of Students, and Miss Jeannette Scudder, Dean cf Women.
Women who wish to sign out
are required to make arrange-

ments with their head residents
prior to the time of their signing
out. Procedures will follow the
regular overnight sign-out system;
girls must return to their dorms
tomorrow morning to sign in.
Campus policemen will be in
Goodyear Hall at 2:00 and 4:00
a m. to let in anyone who wishes
to return to either Goodyear or
(Cont’d on P. 2)

�

“substantial, arbitrary cut in the
budget of State University . ,
could have most unfortunate re-

sults.”

Dr. Samuel Gould, president of
the State University system, vigorously protested the cuts in the

quality so the only recourse would
be to cut down on the number of
students to be admitted
This
step could have a very serious
impact, but it would appear that
it is the only path we could take.”
Senator Greenberg, chairman
of the finance committee ques-

budget. Senator Greenberg accused Dr. Gould of “playing politics" with the budget due to the
letter writing campaign fostered
by letters and telegrams sent out
by the presidents of the individual state colleges and universities.

expenditure.

universities involved.

.

University Allocations Jeopardized

more, Dormitory Authority money
which is deposited in the Dormitory Income Fund for equipment
and operating expense must no
longer be described as operating

to the discretion of the individual

.

�

wide innovations. Debt service
and mortgage payments, formerly
handled by the University’s Housing Office,, will be transferred
to the state system which can balance our losses with the increased
rates at other schools. Further-

the edict of the State system determined in a memorandum on
September 0, 1964. In this original directive, the determination
of room and board costs was left

Bill Harrell, John Coe, Rick Salter

PRES. SAMUEL COULD

the proposed State University
budget by the New York State

Senate finance committee. Speaking in behalf of the largest unit
of the State University system,

President Furnas

felt that this

The proposed budgetary cuts include: the entire State University
scholarship fund of $1,750,000
(this fund proposed to pay the
first $200 tuition of students
whose families earn less than
$1800 per year); $600,000 of the
library improvement fund; $625,000 to pay for a state-wide television network and $200,000 in
faculty salary increases. In addition ten per cent of the proposed
increase in funds for operation
of University centers, $889,515, is
slated for elimination. The total
loss to the University of Buffalo
is estimated at over half a million
dollars.

President Furnas stated "We
are determined that, insofar as
possible, we will not sacrifice

GOV. NELSON ROCKEFELLER

tioned the necessity of such reductions and felt the threat of
them was being used as a political lever. He went on to explain
that although he realizes the State
(Cont'd on P. 2)

�Dorm Curfew
.

.

.

Teach-In
Tonight, Norton Union will not close. The Millard
Fillmore Room will remain open 8:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m.
the following morning to accommodate the Students for
Democratic Society “teach-in” about American involvement in Viet Nam. We would like to congratulate the
administration for their co-operation in this exciting and
important venture and to congratulate the domitory officials for raising curfews for those students who wish to
participate. We heartily endorse this creative and informative “teach-in” on a subject of crucial concern to us all.

Feinberg Again
Gregory Corso, a poet of international fame, has
been teaching a course in Millard Fillmore College this
past semester. He has been fired for refusal to sign the
infamous Feinberg Certificate. We are appalled that
students at this University should be deprived of the
privilege of taking classes from a man whose imagination and creativity have been recognized the world oyer

because of the administration of a non-academic test of
questionable constitutionality which is severly oppressive
and is extremely detrimental to the academic community.
We fully support the Faculty-Student Committee for
Academic Freedom Picket in protest of this the latest
flagrant infringement of our academic freedom. We urge
all students and faculty to join the struggle for meaningful free education.

University Budget Cut
We join with administrator* of our campus and the
State Teachers College in protesting the proposed cut in
University operating expenses. This campus stands to
loose half a million dollars this year, if the budget cut is
approved by the State Legislature. We will feel this most
in the areas of: faculty raises, new books for the library,
and student scholarship. President Furnas stated that
it might become necessary to cut the number of in-coming
freshmen. Since campus expansion is to be drastically
cut back, we will be even more cramped than we are
now. We urge everyone to contact those who will be able
to effect the decision (see box) and communicate to
them our great concern for our education. The growth
of the University is imperiled. The quality of our libraries
is jeopardized.
Do not remain silent. This is a cause which unites
the concerns of administration, faculty, and students
alike. The entire academic community on this campus
is threatened.
JOHN KOWAL
JEREMY TAYLOR
Editor-Elect
Editor-in-Chief

Union Open
from P. 1)
make available lavatory facilities.
Doors on the Tower side of Norton only will be open.
(Cont'd

Dr. Elwin Powell from the sociology department and Mr. Rick
Salter, from the sociology club
conferred Wednesday with Dorothy Haas, Director of Norton
Union, on occupying the Fillmore

Room for the scheduled times.
This would be the first time in
the history of Norton Union that
anyone would be within its doors
during the early morning hours,
barring the maintenance staff
The decision to allow Norton to
be utilized during the hours it
is normally closed is solely up to
the director. Miss Haas, after
listening to the reason why the
room was wanted, agreed to relax
regular proeeedures for what she
believes will be an “educational
experience."

from P. 1)
University of New York is in a
period of growth, there is no need
for all this growth to take place
within a single year. He also felt
that the elimination of the scholarship program was only a technical elimination, since the federal
aid to education program, now before the Congress, will more than
make up the difference to lowincome families.
He further
pledged “We agree to replace the
monies in the supplementary budgt if in fact federal aid does not
provide the required help,”
The original budget for the
State University
system was
$185.3 million. Hearings with the
governor and his staff resulted
in a paring of the budget to

from P. 1)
for Academic Freedom deplores
the dismissal of Mr. Gregory Corso from the teaching of the Eng-

lish 489 course, "Major Literary

for his refusal
to sign the Feinberg disclaimer
certificate. The firing, based on
an entirely non academic reason,
is a flagrant violation of academic freedom. Furthermore, we feel

Figure: Shelley”,

Sen. Samuel

L. Greenberg
Chairmen of Finance Com.
State Senate
Albany, New York

WRITE YOUR LOCAL CONGRESSMEN:
(Buffalo area)

John H. Deerr
1M Lexington Avenue
Buffalo, New York

Frank J. Gltnakl
'7
1913 Bailey Avenue
Buffalo, New York
RnrdranW

from P.

1)

Clement before the dorms open
in the morning. For the women
residents of the smaller dorms, a
policeman will be in Tower, also
at 2:00 and 4:00 a.m. In case of
emergency at any other time during the night, a girl will be able
to call the campus operator, who
will arrange for her entry into
the dorm: The dormitories will
open at 6:00 instead of 6:30 a.m,
tomorrow morning.
Curfews for freshman and sophwomen will be extended to
12:00 midnight. The extension will
make it easier for the people on
duty in the dorms to know exactly
who is in and who is out, without
worrying about class.

omore

Any woman is free to attend the
teach-in. There will not be a check
up system to determine whether
or not a girl is actually in Norton
Union, Dr. Segal expressed his
viewpoint, as well as that of Dean

Scudder and the housing staff:
“We’re making the assumption
that the girls in the residence
halls are mature individuals, and
that they will take appropriate responsibility.”

Tonight will be the first time
in the existence of the residence
halls that curfews have been
completely eliminated. Dr. Segal
and Dean Scudder feel that if an
all-campus event is taking place,
resident halls should not be responsible for ruling any student
out of the activity. They brought
the necessity tor specific arrangements to the attention of Dr.
Elwin H. Powell, Dr. Sidney M.
Willhelm, and Mr. William J.
Harrell, all of the sociology department, who made the original
request.

A shuttle bus will be provided
for freshman boys to and from
Allenhurst and Lockwood Library.
It will run -continuously every
half hour from 2:00 to 4:00 a.m.

million. As President Furnas put it, “Our budget request,
which had been carefully prepared and which had been pared
to cover only our bona-fide needs,
had been approved by the State
University authorities and by the
Governor
If the legislature
should now arbitrarily force a
major reduction in available
funds, the results would be truly
$176.1

...

serious."

Since the University of Buffalo will be a “major victim of the
cut” the President urged alumni
and parents to write or calj their
state Senators, Assemblymen, and
other leaders of our legislature
requesting their aid in passing
the budget as originally proposed
by the governor.

Corso Picket...

EVERYONE WRITE;

Sen. Jecaph Zarettki
Senate Ma|erlty Leader
State Senate
Albany, Now York

(Cont’d

Proposed Budget Cut...
(Cont’d

(Cont'd

Since the Rathskellar closes at
11:00. arrangements have been
made by the sponsors of the
“teach-in" to provide coffee and
doughnuts for the participants.
They will first be served about
11:00. and then throughout the
night Provisions will be set up
in the small alcove where the
expressway cafeteria is set up.

Suspended

U

Ha A

102 Tumor Avenue
Buffalo, New York

that having a poet of the national
stature of Mr. Corso on the faculty is an advantage to the university and that his dismissal
is detrimental to the academic
community. We hope that action
will be taken to remedy the situation.
It is the committee’s contention that the dismissal is another
in a growing list of violations of
academic freedom caused by the
Feinberg Law. They also maintain that such treatment of a literary figure of Gregory Corso’s
stature is a detriment to the university. The committee’s present
action is part of a continued effort to ameliorate what it considers to be the poor state of academic freedom on this campus."
The influence of the committee
last week caused the Graduate
School to rescind the imposition
of the Feinberg Certificate on
certain graduate students not engaged in teaching.
*

"Hey, which cause were you guys arrested for?"
(From an

Idea by Richard

All-Night Teaching
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

others, Dr. Powell, Dr. Willhelm,
Leo Loubere, professor of
history, Mark Kennedy of the
Sociology Department. Dr. Loubere will present a general overall view of the South East Asian
situation and Mr. Kennedy is
speaking on “The Immorality of
War.” A1 Lefkowittz, English Professor, will speak on “Doublethink and the Misunderstanding
in Viet Nam” and possibly Mr.
Harrell on “The Defoliation and
Lateritic Soil.” Mr, Harrell will
be moderator.
Dr,

3,500 at Michigan
The idea for the “teach-in” was
suggested to Mr. Harrell, Dr.
Powell and Dr, Willhelm by a
similar one held at the Univer-

sity of Michigan, March 25, at
which 3500 students were present. Over 27 other universities
around the country are planning
“teach-ins” in the coming weeks
including the
Universities of
Texas,
Chicago, Pennsylvania,
Berkley, Harvard, Yale, Cornell
and M.I.T. An immediate stimulus
was provided by the “teach-in”
held recently at Buffalo State,
which was quite successful. At
the meeting at State, which lasted
from 10:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m., were
some members of the Sociology
Department of the University of
Buffalo, who reported that it
was both stimulating and profit-

Lowenthal)

...

Viet Nam . . . We intend to stimulate widespread discussion of
this issue in the University community which will hopefully lead
to an intelligent and articulate
program in opposition to the present Viet Nam policy of President
Johnson and his administration.
The Vietnamese conflict advances
along the gradient toward total
war each day and we are silent
.
we must do what we can
All sides of this issue need to be
presented and debated. If you are
in favor of the administration's
policy, or an even more aggressive policy, or any other policy
position on this important issue,
...

please plan to participate
Open Forum
Mr. Harrell

emphasized the
fact that this will be an open
forum, with anyone holding any
view on the crises in Viet Nam
welcome. The main goal of the
people who organized the “teachin” is to “create interest in and
concern over the issue and to
give them an opportunity to express their views.” Mr. Harrell
said, “people seem to be concerned whether we should be in
or out of the war in Viet Nam.
This is one of the reasons why
we are working so hard. There
seems to be doubt in the public
mind and an articulate account
might help people make a rational choice.”

able.

Will Have Effect

Hoping that they had found a
way to create interest and con-

He feels it is most important
for people to come to a decision
because now is the time "hen
atPresident Johnson might be
fected by the American Public
be
“There seems,” he said, “to
evidence that President Johnson
is listening to the “war-hawks
rather than the “peace doves in
Congress, but there is a
minority group in Congress
against the war, which is pr“ D
ably not getting press coverage
He continued, “Public demonstrations can bring this to
attention of the press and
President Johnson himself

cern in the individuals of the

University, the three Sociology
professors began to affect their
plans. Dr. Powell negotiated with
Dr, Segal, Dean of Students, Miss

Jeanette Scudder, Dean of
and members of Housing for lifting the curfew, and
with the Director of Norton, Miss
Dorothy Haas, for the use of the
room. Mr. Harrell reported, “The
administration has been very cooperative, and showed no relucWomen,

tance at all,”

Faculty Invited
The next step entailed drafting
a letter to all full-time members
of the faculty, in all departments,
to invite them to participate in
the program. The letter said;
"Several faculty members are in
the' process of organizing a
’’teach-in’’’ to dramatize the grave
situation that has developed in

;

Editorial Cdomment

‘

Mr. Harrell said, “Aeeoi
to an article in Newsweek,

President Johnson's own adv
are divided on the stand they
on the war. When there is a
in the opinions of persona
visors, expression of public
cern can have
IRTNKRS' PRESS. INC

effect.”

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'

BRICKS AND

*

BEHIND THE

*—

-

MORTARBOARDS

BULLS

VOLUME 15

No. 22

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1965

give Oughts group pickets school

o

Demands Resignation of Patti
A boycott of Public School 6,
due to complaints against the
principal, Mr. Phillip Patti, took
place last week by the mothers of

The committee began its action
in December, 1964, with the circulation of a petition asking that
Mr. Patti be removed. It was
taken February 2, with 250 signatures, to Dr. Manch, who promised to look into the matter.
Nothing was done, and a series
of meetings followed between the
parents and both Dr. Manch and
Mr. Patti.
Meanwhile, the membership of
the committee grew. It received
the support of Buffalo CORE,
NAACP, and the UB Civil Rights
group. Actual conflict did not
begin until Wednesday, March
24, when the parents attended a
board of education meeting, with
understanding
that
the
they would be given the opportunity to discuss their feelings
about Mr. Patti. But the question
which arose was: Should the
parents be allowed to speak at
all? Dr. Paschal C. Rubino, president of the school board, vacillated several times, but could
mt come up with a final deci-

the school children.

Complaints had been filed
against Mr. Patti ever since he
took office as principal a number
of years ago, (Previously he had
held the office in Public School
64, but was relieved of his duties
as a result of protest against him
on the part of the P.T.A.).
He has been severely criticized
by parents for his attitudes and

actions

toward

their

children.

They charged him with being
neglectful of the well-being of
the children with failing to keep
the parents informed as to the
progress of the children, with
manifesting an attitude of dis-

crimination toward the Negro
children in his charge. They feel
that their children are daily being
subjected to “possible threats and

abuse.”
For months, a small group of
parents had been meeting with
Dr. Manch, Dr. Wolcott, and Dr.
Hayes to discuss the administration policies of Mr. Patti. After
repeatedly receiving vague prom-

Buffalo State coed entertains at child-care canter in Lloyd Memorial Church. Children were kept from
school by parents in protest of Patti's questionable activities.

SDS to March
On Washington
The grave situation in Southsi Asia has evoked world-wide
iticism of American policy with
specf to

Vietnam. Many stunts in this country have been
ocked by the barbarism that
s been described in Vietnam
d have raised a collective voice
f protest. The Students for a
Democratic Society are presently
*

ta

believes that the current war is:
(1) A Losing War
well over
half of the area of outh Vietnam
is already governed by the National Liberation Front —the
political arm of the “Viet Cong."
(2) It is a Self Defeating War.

They feel if the U.S. objective
is to guarantee self-determination in South Vietnam, that objective is far better served by
allowing the South Vietnamese
to choose their own government
—something provided for by the
1954 Geneva Agreement but sabatoged in 1956 by the Americansupported dictator NgO Dinh
Diem. and never allowed since.
(3) It is an Immoral War. Everyday America is committing point-

less murder.
If you agree with the above
three points SDS invites you to
join with them on its planned
March on Washington to End the

Hi r !!!SSij3
SDS Table in Norton

e

,

most indignant organization
d as a. consequence have been
strumentai in rallying student
otest against the escalated war
V ietnam. A group of concerned
■dents are in the process of
ganizing a chapter of SDS on
is campus. “It is hoped that
pooling our energies we shall
able to exert pressure on the
dop this madness

War in Vietnam.
Busses are scheduled to leave
the University on April 16 and
return April 18. The total cost
of the trip will be $14. Tickets
and further information are avail
able at the SDS desk in the Norton Union lobby. If unable to
get the desk, contact David Gar
diner at 896-5324.

—

which could lead I
an

SDS

The Faculty-Student Com
mitfee for Academic Free
dom will be holding a dem
onstration in front of Crosby Hall at 8:00 p.m. to
issal
Gregory Corsoe for. failure
sign the f
Oath.

sion

ur. Lillian Wright, in protest
of the lack of democratic procedure at the meeting, walked but;
with her went at least 80 parents
and 14 students. They conducted
a singing demonstration outside
the meeting hall door, and then
(Cont’d on P. 16&gt;

ises, they formed the Organization of Parents Public School
No. 6, (the school docs not have
a PTA), with Mrs: Donald Moc as
the president.

Events Slated For Third Annual
Spring Arts Festival Next Week
Begging,"

The third annual Spring Arts
Festival, presented by the State
University of New York at Buffalo, will take place April 4
through April 11. The importance, indeed the necessity, of
art becomes more apparent as the
demands of today's society increase. The program planned has
an unlimited appeal. Art, literature, sculpture, drama, music, and
dance are included to satisfy the
interests and tastes of every uni
vcrsity student.
Sunda;
at 8:30 p.m. the Uni
rsity and Concert Bands, di

icriptidr

arrar

instrur
rmcd. Thes

Norton Ur
rticularly

“The Gods Go Awritten by Handel and
arranged by Beecham and Du
thoit; '‘Symphonic Fantastiquc,”
composed by Berlioz and arrang
ed by Foulds and Brown; “Pa
vane,” composed by Ravel and
aranged by Fogelbcrg; and "Symphony No. 5,” composed by Shosby Rhoades;

By HELEN PETERS

takovich and arranged by Righter.
There will be exhibits put on by

Union there

will be a symposium
concerning "The Arts Today."
The panel will be moderated by
Albert S. Cook. Chairman of the
English Department, and will be
composed by Philip C.' Elliot.
Chairman of the Art Department;
Allen D. Sapp, Chairman of the
Music Department; Herbert N.
Schncidau,

Assistant

Professor,

English Department; and Thomas

for

ind

mscrif
ifficu

which must be overcome in order
that the work might be performed
well. Until recent times trans-

criptions comprised much of the
band’s repertoire. Now original
band music is being emphasized
more and composers are begin
ning to provide worthwhile material;

The University Band, composed
of University students for whom
music is an avocation, will play
the following numbers: “Mardi
Gras” from the “Mississippi
Suite,” written by Grofe and ar
ranged by Leidzen; "Die Nacht,”
written by R Strauss and ar
ranged by Davis; “London Again,”
composed by Coates and arranged

NORMAN WALKER DANCE COMPANY

the Craft Shop and the Photography Club every day from April
4 through April 16 in Norton
Union. The prize photographs of
this year’s competition, “The
Night Mood" and those from pre
vious competitions will comprise
the Photography Exhibit, which
will be on the second floor of

S

Watson,

ture. and

wholl

Assistant Professor,

Department of Drama and Speech.
Beginning Monday and continuing through Sunday. April 11.
there will be an exhibit of sculpture. loaned by the Albright
Knox Art Gallery, in the Center
Lounge of Norton Union, Art today has come to be form, struc-self-expression, rather

lhap matter which relates direct
ly to the real world. The artist

ring

e House

■Ds

ur

from Vietnam. SDS

oi istI

Witnev

Nort
retict

Corn’d

Mus«

��Civil Rights Advocates to Speak;
Discriminating About Discrimination
A symposium featuring four of
the nation’s most prominent proponents of civil rights will be
held at the University of Buffalo
and tomorrow.

today

Entitled, "Discriminating About
Discrimination, Part II,” the'symposium follows one held last year
in which historical, cultural, re-

ligious and psychological factors

of discrimination were examined.
It is being sponsored by the Student Convocations Committee, the

Civil Rights Committee and the
Canterbury Association.

Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, professor
of psychology at the City College
of New York, will speak Friday
at 8:30 p.m. He will discuss, “The

Ghetto—Symbol of Human Pre-

Clark, who has
been described as “the scholar
of the civil rights movement,”
prepared a report in 1950 dedicament" Dr

Mr. James Forman, executive
secretary of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, will
complete the program Saturday
at 2:00 p.m. He will discuss, “Con
frontation and Commitment in
Building Community,” Mr. Forman, a graduate of Roosevelt
University, has been active in
civil rights since 1960. He has
guided “SNCC’s” growth since
1961 and spent last summer in
Mississippi working to improve

civil

rights

for

Negroes.

A panel discussion moderated
by Dr. Henry Lee Smith, Jr.,
chairman of the Department of

Anthropology and Linguistics at

State University at Buffalo, will
be held immediately following
Mr. Forman’s remarks.

scribing the effects of prejudice
on children’s personality development which was cited by the U S.
Supreme Court in its 1954 school

desegregation ruling.

Saturday at
10:00 am.. Dr.
Thomas F Pettigrew. associate
professor of social psychology at
Harvard University, will discuss

“Profiles

of Black

and

White

Americans'.” Dr. Pettigrew, who
served as a research associate at
the University of Natal in the
Union of Smith Africa in 1956, is

the author of two books entitled,

Christians in Racial Crises: A
Study of the Little Rock Ministry,
and A Profile of the Negro American. He is an Associate editor of

the

view.

Friday, April 2, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

DR. KENNETH CLARK

“American Sociological Re”

Mr William Stringfellow, a
New York attorney, will discuss,
Law Arbiter and Adversary of
Community." at, 11:15 a m Pri
(lay. Mr Stnngfellow. ii graduate
of Harvard Lav School, devotes
much of his law firm’s practice
to the. underprivileged in New
York s Harlem district. He is the
author of several hooks including
My People is the Enemy, Free in
Obedience, and Instead of Death.
He has served as a special Deputy Attorney General of New
York and a consultant to the Ne\v
York State Commission Against

\

m

*r

SCHOOL BOARD SIT-IN
from P. 1)
singing ‘‘America The beautiful,”
They locked arms and legs when
the officers began to execute the
arrest and refused to move when
they were disloged from the
(Cont’d

group inside the office.
The arresting officers seemed
prepared for such non-violent
tactics for they arrived equiped
with four-wheeled dollys, cushioned with carpeting on which

they placed the demonstrators to
wheel them to the elevators. “The
police were very careful not to
hurt us," one of the demonstrators commented.
The demonstrators were taken
by elevator to the basement
where Canine Corps trucks were
waling to transport them to Precinct No. 1 for booking. Some of
l he demonstrators consented to
walk through the mud to the
trucks but one or two had to be
carried to the paddy wagons.
At Precinct No. 1. headquarters
for the Metropolitan buffalo Police, the twenty-eight civil disobedients were booked and taken
to cells. By five o’clock a special
session of City Court had been
called to carry out official ar
raignment procedures. Attorney
Biram waved reading of the individual charge for each defendant and the case proceeded, under
Judge Bellano, with plaintif represented by Corporation Council.
It was first determined that of
the twenty-eight defendants,
seventeen were college students
and the rest were parents of
children, in the Buffalo School
system, and that all hut one of
them had no record of previous
conviction. After speeches from
Mr. Birzon and a comment from

the bench which noted Birzon’s
superior reputation as Well as his
function of officer of the court,
Judge Bellano released all twentyeight in the the lawyer's custody
and set the date of trial, for April
nineteenth.
Among those arrested were Jeff
Student Senator-for Arts

eienees, Henry Simon. Sena

tor Kmerilus. I’elcr Kubin, Man
amni;

Kditor of the Spectrum,

a;

well as several other students ac
live in campus affairs

Spanish Tutoring
In Native Speaker
Low Kates Call
837-6738 before 11 a .in.-or
from 6
8 p.ni.

Police remove demonstrators from sit-in at Rubino's office

Lansbury To Receive Grant
From Sloan Foundation
Dr. Peter T. Lansbury, associate professor of chemistry at
State University at Buffalo, was
named Monday, March 15 as a
recipient of an unrestricted grant
for basic research from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
He is one of 91 scientists from
52 universities and colleges in
the United States and Canada to
receive a grant in the $14 million
program.

Dr. Lansbury, a Sloan Fellow
for the past two years, will use
the renewed grant for basic research in organic chemistry. He
was nominated for the grant by
Dr. Gordon M. ( Harris, chairman
of the chemistry department at
the

University

The grant, effective in September, will give Dr. Lansbury
the freedom to choose whatever
scientific problems he wishes to
investigate. He will also be free

to change or modify his research
Dr. Lansbury, who joined the
University faculty in 1959. re
ceived his bachelor’s degree from
Pennsylvania State University in
1953 and his doctorate in 1956
from Northwestern University
Since 1960, Dr. Lansbury has been
the recipient of grants from the
National Science Foundation, the

Petroleum Research Fund and the
United States Army Research Of
fice.

Before joining the Univcr
Dr. Lansbury was a rese;
chemist for E. I. DuPont dc
mours and Company, Inc, an
lecturer and research assoc
at the University of Delaw
He is the author of numerous
tides on organic reaction meet
isms appearing in the “Journa
the American Chemical Socii
and

the

“Journal

of

Chemistry."

-

—

Discrimination.
DR. THOMAS PETTIGREW

Coming April 2
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and his new 8 piece
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�I
j SCHOOL BOARD SIMH
Police Remove Sit-ins from City Hall
Demand Patti Ouster

28 Arrests; 17 Students

•

'

V

Against the background of what
was perhaps the most coherent

School Board Meeting this

year, members of CORE, together
with parents of children enrolled
at public school No. 6, attempted

to present their complaints
against Phillip Patti, principle of
School No. (i. The - group had
march from school No. ti to City
Hall to present their complaint.
They had decided to attempt a
sit-in should the board refuse to
hear them. This would serve' to

—

to

«

Photo by Ivan N. Makuch

mooting of tho Buffalo Boord of Education...
—

Photo by Ivan N. Makuch

dramatise their seriousness and
comitment to the cause of civil
rights generally, and to the ousture of Principle Patti,
Parlatto convened
the
Mr.
special meeting of the board half
an hour after the announced
time of the meeting and proceeded with the agenda which
failed to include any discussion
of the school No. 6 controversy.
A spokesman of the parents'
group, Mrs. Haskins, asked to be
heard. Mr. Parlatto stated and
reiterated that complaints could
not be heard at this special meeting, since it was convened solely
for the purpose of finishing business left undone at the last meeting, and that reports on the school
No. 6 issue were not on the prescribed agenda.
At this junture, those members
of CORE and the parents organization who had previously decided to sit-in if the School Board
refused to acceed to their wishes,
left the meeting room and repared to Mr, Rubino's office
where they sat in and sang songs
associated with the civil rights
movement. The noise of the demonstration interfered with the progress of the special Board meeting, and Chairman Parlatto called
a recess to allow time to assess
the new

I
after being heard and having their request denied

...

Photo by Ivmn N. Makuch

—

before.
—

they

Photo by Ivan N. Mmkuch

removt demonstrators
—

Photo

by

Ivmn N. Mmkuch

Photo by

Iran N. Mmkuch

turn of events. 1 Soon

afterward. School Superintendent
Joseph Manch entered the outer
office of the Board of Education
to make an appeal to the demonstrators to dispurse and allow the
Board offices to continue with
their normal business, The demonstrators refused and continued
to sing and chant slogans like
•‘Patti must go!” and "We want

on carts to waiting paddy wagons

freedom!"

Later both Superintendent
Manch and Mr. Rubino repeated
their request to the demonstrators.

Attain

demonstrators

re

fused and continued to sit on the
floor of the office and voice their
desire for an end to de-facto
segregation
Principle

thay

tit down In protaat

Photo

by Ivan N. Makuch

the ouster of
practiced
who

racial discrimination and unduly
harsh discipline in the predominantly negro grammar school."
The police were called in, and
the
Inspector Lewis informed
demonstrators that if they did not
immedileave Mr. Kubino's office
ately they would be subject to
arrest on a charge of trespassing.
The demonstrators continued to
sit-in and to call for the dismissal
of Philip Patti as principal of
school No. 6. An hour's delay resulted in a final warning issued
by Inspector Lewis At this time,
the lawyer for the group, Mr.
Paul I. Birzon, informed the demonstrators of their legal right during and after arrest and cautioned
them against resisting the arrest
ing officers. During this period
Mr Parlatto ejected the remainder of the observers at the special
meeting. These people, the majority of whom appeared to be in
strong sympathy with the demonstrators, congregated in the
halls outside the education offices
and sang songs like "We Shall
Overcome,’’ "Turn Me Round,”
and “Oh, Freedom.”
When the arresting officers arrived. the demonstrators were
(Cont’d on P. 2)

which carry them to Police Hoadqwartort

.

—

nd

Buffalo City polka

art

eallad In
—

Photo by Ivan N. Makuc.

—

Fho4o

hr

*

OoUbfi

�Friday, April 2, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

cHetterA

.

to

the Editor

The events of the past week have done much to
undermine what little faith I had left in the psychological
and political fabric of the greater community in which
U.S. Weakness
Viet Nam Violence
I live. I am, for example, made accutely uncomfortable
by a world which forces me to agree in any way with TO THE EDITOR
eager to get permission to try out some more nonthe Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, but I am forced
lethel chemicals. If we could douse a hamlet conlie"
the
great
to
silent
is
to
said
“At times
be
to admit that President Johnson’s public pillory of the
taining Viet Cong soldiers with a temporary incapacibe
“For
silence
can
Spanish philosopher Unamuno,
four arrested klansmen is no better than the fear tactics interpreted as acquiescence.” Those of us who know tating agent long enough to go in and sort out the
of HUAC and of the Klan itself. 1 am appalled the nature of the Viet Nam conflict and refuse to good guys from the bad, this could be a boon to
the war effort argues one officer. While the vilwhen the chief executive of this country takes it upon speak out against the policy* of the American govern- lagers
might be a little unhappy at first, we’d make
deny
the
the
constitution
and
to
short-circuit
to
the
himself
esculation of
ment are materially contributing
clear
to
them that the only alternative would have
my
he
sworn
though
be
the war, to the murder of Viet Namese men, women
Bill of Rights to anyone, even
been shelling with high explosives’ Why, we must
enemy. 1 heartily concur that the Klan should be upand children, and to the moral bankruptcy of our
ask, is shelling the only alternative? We are not
rooted from our society like the evil cancer it is, but this own country. We must, therefore, ask:
formally at war with the Viet Namese people, N6rth
of
a
free
framework
accomplished
within
the
must be
Viet Nam, or the Viet Cong. Only Congress has
the
States
as(1)
planning a nuclear
Is
United
and moral society, or the act itself will be meaningless. sault on North Viet Nam, and possibly China? Army the power to declare war—and neither Congress
I have also been very disoriented by the “liberal” Chief of Staff Harold Johnson has stated that his nor the public has given consent for the indiscrim
outcry concerning the use of gas in the war in Viet Nam. recent mission to Viet Nam involved the designation inate devastation which is now being carried out by
I am appalled by the “reasoning” that argues that it is of targets for. nuclear bombing. Maxwell Taylor is the American military in Viet Nam.
air
somehow worse to immobilize a man with nausia than to now in Washington to discuss "possible
The resort to violence is not a show of strength
burn him alive with napalm. I am opposed to the war in strikes at the North Viet Namese capital, Hanoi.” but a demonstration of weakness. The effort to impose pur will on Viet Nam by force is a confession
Viet Nam; I am also conscientiously opposed to war in (Buffalo Courier-Express, March 28 ,AP release).
of the failure of our foreign policy and an indictany form. I do not expect everyone to agree with me,
(2) Does the United States intend to dispatch a
ment of the a moral cynicism of the American gov
but neither do I expect the people for whom I have a
large contingent of regular troops to Viet Nam, thus
modicum of respect to make irrational and medieval risking another Korea? 25,000 ‘advisors’ and 3,500 eminent. Everyday the war continues the stature
of the United States diminishes. Therefore,
the
statements at the mention of the word “gas”.
marines are now in Viet Nam, and one regular name of reason, conscience and patriotism weinmust
of
over
recent
turn
very
concerned
the
to
the
Hanson
I am also
army division is en route
area.
Baldan
immediate
war
Nam,
demand
end to the
in Viet
events in the civil rights struggle in Buffalo. Philip Patti, win, New York Times military expert whose prothe present principal of School No. 6 is an educator for nouncements usually reflect Pentagon policy, states
Powell
Elwin H.
must be prepared to commit 1,000,000 men
whom I have the highest contempt, and Pasqual Rubino that wewar,
Associate Professor of Sociology
to the
can
not
I
the
but
“educator,”
not
title
does
even deserve
Sidney M. Willhelm
condone the present action of picketing Mr. Rubino’s priAssistant Professor of Sociology
(3) Does the government plan further chemical
vate residence or his place of business. A man s right to warfare? William Beecher (Wall Street Journal,
Bill J. Harrell
privacy is crucial in a free society and I believe that even March 26) states: “Some U.S. officers are admittedly
Lecturer in Sociology
the most evil of men deserve the same social safeguards
afforded the just and the honest.
Chinese and Viet Namese Playing the Power Game
All these events have served to anger and dishearten
me. A great deal of that melancholy is a function of
in TO THE EDITOR
frustration because 1 have no means of participating
think, to ask ourselves what is the difference, if
the final resolution of these problems. This is not true,
any, between;
1 note with interest the strong indications of
however, of the impending “dismissal” of (Ireyson Mac—Germany's violent economic growth in the 30’s
opposition to the American commitment in
Arthur from his teaching position in Millard Fillmore student
and China’s in the 60’s or Russia’s in the 50’s.
Viet
Nam
the
expressed
Sound
on
both
news
and
editorial
Certificate.
Feinberg
to
the
sign
College for failure
—the admirable efficiency of the Wehrmacht
pages of your March 26 issue. Your implied charge
one,
am
sick
of
hearfamiliar? Well, it should, and I for
and the consumate skill with which the Viet
playing
politics
game
power
that
we
are
a
of
in
Univering it! 1 promise the administration of the State
Cong exploit guerrilla war.
Nam rather than simply "helping a free govViet
sity of New York and any and all subdivisions thereof ernment resist Communist subversion,” is well tak—the “carnivorous sheep” and the “blue ants.”
that the SPECTRUM will oppose the dismissal of Greyson en but some ways off the point since our friends the
—genocide and the liquidation of class enemies..
grounds
on
non-academic
MacArthur, or any instructor,
Chinese and the North Vietnamese are playing the
—“Why die for Danzig” and “Better Red than
surprise
same game, for very high stakes and I am sorry
with a vigor and a determination which will
dead.”
to say doing well at it. In Viet Nam, we are faced
them, and which may, dear reader, even surprise you.
—the “moral cowards” who appeased Hitler and
with the same agonizing choice the West faced in
the pacifists who would appease Mao Tse Tung.
Supplementary Editorial Wednesday Night
Korea, Berlin, Danzig, Munich, Austria, the RhineSince the setting of the above editorial I have obIn its day the former class of nightmares com
Ethiopia and Manchuria, “Play the game, . .
land,
served at close range the sit-in at the Hoard ot Education or default."
manded great popular enthusiasm, won referendums,
accomplished industrial and economic miracles and
offices at City Hall.
And we will continue to face this choice so displayed, amazing military skill and power. Today,
1 was shaken by the experience since it was charlong as our earth harbors powerful men eager to it is a blot upon the conscience of mankind. Power
acterised for me by an almost total breakdown of understanding among all parties. No one could deny the moral increase their power through intimidation or terror- politics is not an easy game but the past has taught
us that is is a necessary one. I think that some of
commitment and seriousness ot the demonstrators, but it ism, blitzkrieg or gucrrila action, race warfare or us
would be well advised to pay more exacting at
School
Board
or
the
police
for
either
the
was impossible
class warfare. Before condemning the American ef- tention to that past, least we forget.
disrupWith
the
Officials to connect these high purposes
fort-in Viet Nam out of hand we would be wise, I
David Lawlor
tive acts of the demonstrators.
Yet this connection is crucial to the whole meaning ot
the civilly disobedient acts ot last Wednesday. This is
Only Honorable One
U.S. Stand
the essence of the qualitative, difference between Wednesday’s sit-in and the demonstration at the airport over
a million of them would have stayed in North Viet
the phantom Thallus. But when this connection is not TO THE EDITOR
nam instead of coming into the South.
generally recognized, the value of the demonstration is
Your
articles in last week's Spectrum shocked
measured solely in terms of political benefit derived from me greatly. It
I have four friends who went over to Vietnam
is hard to believe that some of the
its nuisance value. But this is not enough. The value
(one won't be coming back), neither one of them
must also be judged in terms of the fiery baptism of each American youth, who were raised in a free society, thought U.S. efforts were unpopular or wasted
are willing to dishonor their nation’s name by True, the people of Vietnam are tired of war, but
demonstrator, the community ot moral feeling the demonthey cheered and thanked the Marines that have
stration generates, and the contribution to the health and breaking the pledge of help to South Vietnam.
landed there recently, for their willingness to pro
svmetric integrity of society as a whole.
agSuch
doomed
like,
"illegal and
statements
tect the freedom of South Vietnam.
.1KREMY TAYLOR
“U.S.
is
gression,"
intervention
self defeating,"
Editor-Elect
-

”

...

-

-

'

"immoral," and “We have no HONORABLE choice
but to insist on an immediate withdrawal of American troops," could only be made by a person who
has NO honor or pride, in himself or his country.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
EDITOR-ELECT

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass t News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

-

-

Peter Rubin
Barbara Strauss
Trudy Stern
Jeremy Taylor
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ar»n Qrstulak

David Edelman

JOHN P KOWAl

JEREMY TAYLOR
Bernard Dikman
Hov ard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander
Edward Joscelyn
William Siemenng
Dallas Garber

Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
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Faculty Advisor
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Jo Anne Leegant, E leen Teifler, Sue Greene, Bill Cortes Joey
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Gigha, Chuck Cummings. Raymond Volpe. Jerome Taylor, Marsha Alt, Margo Wallach,
Alar Gofdstem, Sue Zuckertserg
,

General Staff y'ick'
Rub*. Scott Kurman

Sports Staff

Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigm, Stan
Schuetem, Steve Oberstem, Martin , Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr

Steve

Photography Staff David Collins, Pete Bonneao, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank. Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder, Dave Fox',

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Fenmore.

Mary Lou

As for the armchair philosopher, wh
■elf the editor, he ought to check a !i
into the fee
of the South V

'

What happened, to the American ea,
used to scream and claw anyone who stooi
c

;

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N Y, Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May except for
exam penods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Dr. Nearing’s statement that the U.S. is tr
nig to build an empire, would sound more appi
priate coming from Moscow or Peking. If the 1
was out to create an empire, then by this time
would have very few places left to conquer. Tl
the
If
U.S, failed to honor its pledge in VietU.S. could have started its empire by taking Car
nam, no country on earth would trust us in the da after we beat the British during the Revolutio
future. The neutral nations would never come to How many nations did the U.S. occupy after tl
our side for fear of "punishment" from the com- many wars on different continents and how mai
munist bloc. We would stand alone.
of these nations do we now hold captive? Are the
The statement for pulling out of Vietnam and the signs of empire building?
allowing the people of Vietnam to settle their
"civil war" by themselves, is remarkable for its
Dr. Nearing with his socialistic and anti-capita
naivety. The U.S. would like to pull out but knows istic views is most likely blinded by a prejudic
damn well that this will only open the doors for toward any move made by , nations who are no
Red China to step in.
socialistic. I truly fail to see how a man who er
joys the freedom of this country, can compare Hi
Anyone with any intelligence knows that the ler's Germany with the U.S. Years ago, I used t
communist goal has been to conquer the world think that Socialism was the same as Communist!
and they have never abandoned or changed this now I wonder if I wasn’t right.
goal. With this in mind, how can any free born
Our honored dead of the many wars and batt
American advise withdrawal. A U.S. withdrawal
is a communist conquest. The reason our cities would turn in their graves, if they knew that so
grew during the major wars, is. because we did of their children no longer value liberty enough
not wait for the ertemy to reach our borders, before fight and die for it, if need be, and are too self
we fought We did our best to stop the aggressor to share the freedom, for which their fathers hi
as soon as he went beyond his borders.
died for, with all men in all nations.

pic

war." If the people wanted communism, then about

way

of freedom"

(.Cont'd on F

�Friday, April

2, 1965

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

gucinski

.

.

COMMENTARY

.

THE DRUMMER

Iti the, course of my research
in the area of the communist
problem within the United States,
one particular organization has
come to my attention. I will not
name this organization here, as
I know of all the powers that
these subversives can bring to
bear. I will, however, state that
this organization is very well
known. No one has yet seen, as 1
have through my great perception. and unquestionable ability,
the desperate designs of this
insidious front organization on
the American way of life.
This is a very old organization,
predating even the rise of Soviet

monolithic communism in Russia. It was started, 1 believe, in
the early, or mid-18th century, at
which time it hid under the banner of "patriotism" or a sort of

quasi-liberalism. As time went on
and the power of this sinister
group grew, they managed to
use even the free and great powers of our own beloved country
to further their own ends. They
did this by twisting and corrupt
ing, as it were, the spirit of
the founding fathers of this glor
ious country in such a way that

it appeared that the group was
needed to protect the very ideals
it desired to overthrow.' By the

early-20th century, this organization had persuaded the desperate leaders of our government to aid them in a mass conscription of the pawns, as it
were, whoni they eventually intended to train as promoters of
this monolithic totalitarian communist conspiracy. This they have
successfully dope as witnessed by
the fact that there are numerous
sub-cells of the group spread out
in every village and town in the
country under the guise of “legions", “lodges", and other over
aged boy scout groups. These
groups contribute money to char
dies and donate to the “canaille"
in order to win them, as it were,
to their ways (and we know where
communism has its roots.)

The training which the people
in this organization receives gives
away its insidious purposes. The
initiate to this “club" is first
taken to the primary training
camp of this militant organization. hidden carefully in the midst
of a great southern swamp. When
he arrives, he is made to tit a
uniform, so that he will not feel

cjCetterS to the
Position
after

A.

Paul Weber,

Der Trommler (1951)

Another View of Viet Nam
By ERIC STEESE
On my return to campus from
two years in the United States
Army 1 was rather delighted to
see the amount of open discussion on the subject in the Spectrum. On second glance I was
somewhat dismayed by the unanimity displayed by the articles.
To a man they agree we should
get out. In discussions with the
people I liked and respected in
the U.S, Army while I was stationed in Germany for the last
fourteen months I found no such
bloc of opinion. And I would
think it worth pointing out the

fact that those discussing stood
to lose much if the war in Viet
Nam were to be fought instead
of botched. Minimum, most of us

would have extended for six
months, some of us wopld have
probably wound up fighting there
but there was still not set group
thinking on the subject. In this
column I would like to discuss a
few of the other views that do
not seem to be appearing in the
Spectrum.

The argument that the people
in Viet Nam are not free to
choose their own course is one
that is often heard. Ate they going to be if we withdraw our
forces? I realize that I am an old
reactionary in many ways but the
idea of letting someone make a
free choice for communism has
always fascinated me. I would
not feel anything near so reluctant about Viet Nam if I could
be sure that the Viet Cong would
also be withdrawn and that no
other nations would aid the side
opposite the one we are abandoning. Because if we leave the
Viet Cong with its present sources of aid is going to slowly absorb enough of the countryside
•o starve out the cities and Fini,
another communist country. And
we have yet to have a single example of a country which has
been seized by “Revolutionaries"
to come back to being a noncommunist country, I do not like
'he argument that we are permitting no free choice in Viet Nam
when as soon as we permit that
ifee choice the amount of tree
choice the people will have will

become nil
edom

d

anyway.

is

something

that

not be sold for the prom

its perfect state they may not
have in Viet Nam now. 1 am willing to believe rather firmly in
the probability that they will get
much more of this scarce commodity from a government influenced by our side than from
our opposition. I am a snob and
a bigot. It is my firm contention
that freeddom to choose is something that should be given only
to those capable of bearing the
responsibility on a level other
than that of “how much food?"
Yes people, I realize I sound like
an old line imperialist in many
ways and I will probably sound
more like one before I am finished.
Before I go any further let me
point out that my standards of
responsibility do not only apply
to Viet Nam. There are multitudes of non-thinkers in this
country who vote, if they do, on
the same issue. “How much more
will I get from X than Y?” In our
own country, to myself at least on
returning to it after a fourteen
month absence, the rat race seems
even worse, the drive for Status, Money, and Sex seems to be
on the verge, in many areas, of
removing all freedom from some
individuals. In other words I grant

that this country is surviving with
the great majority of people voting on “HOW MUCH” criteria.
The way it is surviving makes me
hold to the view that responsibility is a basis that must be induced into the system in some
way.

Let us ring in a phrase that
should really upset many who
feel we should be leaving Viet
Nam. National Interest. Viet Nam
is essentially a conflict in a nice
old fashioned way about whose
"sphere of influence" it is going
to fall undef: That Communist
China and North Viet Nam are
interested in ousting the U.S. and
the present Vietnamese government for humanitarian reasons
only is something that I find difficult to believe. They- want ail of
what was Indochina for the same
reason we would like to hold on-

to it. The dirty nasty reason of
importance They want
it because they see it as a key
o Southeast Asia, we are protectfig it for the same reason. Laos
s shaky now. Thailand is moving
(Cont’d on P. 14)

military

on

the stigma of any class differences. Secondly, he is taken to
a great communal dwelling where
he is forced to live in a large
hall surrounded by other neophytes of the group (including
even some of different raca&gt;).
Each day thereafter, he is forced
to undergo with the members of
his group of dwellings, a program of intense military training
molding them into a mass of.monolithic slaves of the hierarchy.
Soon each learns (or is taughtl
that it is impossible to survive
without co-operation within the
mass. By the time he departs
from the assigned period of service with the organization, the
slave has been systemtically
saturated with the commie ideals
that are the holy word for this
great front organization.
I have more and more intensely felt the need . . . no, the obligation to expose this heinous,
subversive organization which has
through its vast cunning duped
the very government of this proud
and glorious nation, into serving
its own monolithic, totalitarian
cause.
Torheit Asgard
Linkoping, Minn.', 1962

£&gt;Jitor

Viet Nam Questioned

TO THE EDITOR

By the time I read to the editorial page of the
Spectrum I was already well aware of its position
on the Viet Nam situation. In fact, the front page
news story of the students’ march on Washington
was all but an appeal for support.
Despite the good intentions and significant
arguments of some who criticize our policy in Viet
Nam, 1 think they are motivated not only by good
reasoning, but by equal portions of misunderstanding and irresponsibility, with maybe even a bit of
cowardice: They generally question the motives of
our entrance into the war, our tactics in the war,
our chances in accomplishing anything by the war,
and the popularity of the war with even the South
Viet Nam population.
Since the early twentieth century the United
States has not entered a war for personal gain, but
always to defend. Some, say that what we have been
and are defending are simply our own long-range
interests. But I question whether the obvious disadvantage and bind we. have been in from the beginning of our military aid to Viet Nam has ever
been desirable to any political or economic discomfort accrued to the falling of another Southeast
Asian dominion. I think our real interests extend
much farther moraly than politically; we simply
feel it is our responsibility to keep any group from
forcing any idea or regime on another group. This
is the only system we believe in it cannot be wrong

because it allows for all beliefs within it - and it
is all we are defending in South Viet Nam, at least
ideally, for the people of South Viet Nam.
This is not the white man's burden but it is
the burden of anyone who is a part of mankind. In
our position of world leadership of free and representative governments we are responsible for everything that happens in the world f either by causing
or allowing it to happen. We cannot disown this
responsibility merely by shrinking from it.
So we are in the war, with some less certainty
than our noble resolve deserves. We find the native
government unstable and corrupt, the natives themselves apathetic or dissatisfied with that government. We find the enemy is almost part of the
country and its people while we are considered inane foreigners. Then we begin to feel the losses of
our own and we wonder how far our moral responsibility really goes and was John Donne right after

all? And finally we realize that we can never win
the war with the decisiveness necessary to accomplish our original motive of protecting the natives’

freedom of choice for themselves.
The question of motives is past. then. It is now
whether we should finish honorably what we have
started honorably. 1 believe we should, for the most
practical of reasons. We cannot hope to defend any
of our principles of universal value by a sometimes
necessary threat of force unless we are willing to
carry it through. Even if we were sure to loose the
war at great cost we must carry it on to this conclusion in order to uphold the honor of our comwith our immitment, which is all we have left
practical, tattered and slightly scarred but still unaltered purpose.
President Johnson’s decision to bomb North Viet
Nam viewed from this angle is entirely inconsistant
with our original purpose in the war, because it no
longer serves in any way to protect the people of
South Viet Nam from anything; indeed, it will bring
many more elements into the War, all of which will
harm those people even more. Just because our
goals are no longer ideally attainable is no reason
to obscure and violate them. I would rather see a
million Marines help push the bad influences out
than taking the war from the battleground. The
bombing raids should be stopped now.
On the other hand, the apathetic, know nothing
attitude of the general population of Viet Nam and
even the costly political intrigues may be disconcerting to our efforts but they arc not contrary to
them; the right to participate in government or not
give a damn about it without fear of being told
what to do are part of the rights we propose to
protect. Of course, if the people of South Viet Nam
show definite universal displeasure (which they have
by no means as yet) we must, by the nature of our
own purpose, leave immediately.
■

Our job still exists,
Viet Nam in repelling
who would force them
or limit their rights in
purpose and we must

to aid tha people of South
their aggressors and those
to adapt Communist ideals
any way. This is still our
use every resource at our

command to bring it about (and to keep it within
its natural limitations). Because the meaning is clear
the cost is irrelevant.
Daniel Schroeder

Spectrum Bigotry Criticized
TO THE EDITOR:
Last Friday’s edition of the Spectrum reached
an all time low in the field of objective news re
porting. It displayed to the student body that our
school newspaper is a bigoted journal; reminiscent
of that being printed in Russia today, namely
PraVda.
I do not argue the right of a newspaper, whether it be school or public, to editorialize its opinions.
I do object, however, when the whole publication,
including so-called objective news articles, are slanted to support the editor's stand. •
For example, in last week's edition, that of
March 26, the Spectrum advocated the United States
withdraw from Sbuth Viet Nam, To repeat, it is
their right to take a stand on current Issues, And
as support for their arguments, they printed slate
mcnts by Senator Wayne Morse. It would be ex
pected, though, that they would give other reputable 'Sources, including those on the other side, in

the course of reporting the news and in specifically
dealing with this issue. However, we found FOUR
articles, excluding the editorial, for the Spectrum
stand and NONE opposing the Spectrum stand. And
I might point out that such people as President
Johnson, both the Majority and Minority leaders
in both houses of Congress, namely Senators Mansfield and Dirkseh and Congressmen Albert and
Ford, dozens of other senators and representatives
and many other national leaders strongly back our
support of the South Vietnamese people.
In conclusion, I do not believe that the student
body desires to give $13,000 of its money to sup
port a small, prejudiced group of individuals to advance their own political beliefs. 1 would hope that
the Spectrum would review its discriminatory policy
and bring it more into line with responsble journalism -

Carl S

1-evine

Cont d on P

13/

�Friday, April 2, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Cultural Affairs
Education andWeekly
Calendar

Professor Van Den Berghe
Replies to Port's Column
lions. Student ratings of teaching are unreliable because they
are so' highly contaminated by
such extraneous factors as how
well the student does in a course,
or how easy the course is, or how
entertaining the teacher is. In
the relative absence of “solid”
evidence as to teaching ability,
professors tend to fall back on

more objective critreia in judg-

ing colleagues. . Typically, the notoriously bad teacher who
a
highly productive scholar is retained, but so is the non-publishing superior teacher.

4—The contention that a university exists primarily for its
students as opposed to the faculty is highly debatable. My
view, and that of many of my

DR. VAN DEN BERGHE
Mr. Port is certainly to be com
mended for taking the side of
the student, who in modern aca
demia has become the underdog.
In doing so, however, he misrepresents my posiiton and advances as “facts" data which are
complctley at variance with my
own experience, and indeed with
the realities of life. The misrep
resentation is to be found in his
last paragraph when he misquotes
men as speaking of “excessive
devotion to teaching." I deliberately put the word “excessive"
in quotation marks to indicate
my disagreement with this -adjective.' Conveniently the quotation
marks around "excessive” have
been deleted from Mr. Port's quo
tation. For an English lecturer,
this is a poor show, I think.
As to the substance of his remarks. I should like to refute
several of his propositions in
whole or in pari.

1—The assertion that he Who
docs pot publish perishes simply
docs not bear examination. Most
teachers in higher education
(something like GO or 70' .' ) never
publish anything, and most others
very little (i.c, something like
half a dozen articles in their
entire career). To be sure, such
teachers are concentrated in the
least prestigious institutions, and
do not get promoted as fast as
others, but they simply do not
perish or starve. With the rapid
rise in salaries, they even enjoy
a standard of living which is
somewhat above the national
average

2—The implicit assumption that
leaching and research are incompatible, rather than complementary activities is, at best, a half
truth Sometimes, the energies de
voted to one's teaching can detract from one's research, and
publciations. But there are many
cases of graduate seminars where
teaching and research are har
monoiusJy carried out together,
and many undergraduate courses
have been published as books or
articles. In fact, many “classics"
have been tested in the class
room

print.

'ore

t

There need not be any

incompatibility between godo lecTuring and original scholarly con

tributions.
3— It

is

plainly

aff,

incorrect that.
nob
ares

colleagues, is that a university
primarily exists not for its students, nor for its faculty, nor
for its administrators, but in or
der to disseminate and increase
knowledge for the benefit of the
collectivity at large. This view

makes

research

and

teaching

equally important functions of
the university. The faculty provides academic resources and the
students draw upon them, at considerable cost to the collectivity.
Both faculty and student have
thus a responsibility to the society as a whole. I regard myself
and my students as “civil servants" in the broadest sense of the
word.

TODAY—
Art Exhibition; Optic,

Kenetie,

Through
11. Albright-Knox Art

April
Gallery. Free.
3:00 p.m. Concert: Andrew

Dawes, Violinist. Baird Hall.
Free.
8:00 p.m. Symposium: “Discrim-

ination About Discrimination.”
Capen Hall. Tickets free at Norton ticket booth.
8:30 p.m. Pops Concert: Buf-

falo Philharmonic. Kleinhans
Music Hall. Tickets, $1.75.
TOMORROW—9:30 a.m. Symposium: “Discrim-

ination About Discrimination.”
Capen Hall. Tickets free at Norton ticket booth.
11:00 am. Concert; Moiart's
“Requiem” cprformed by the
Lutheran Chorale, directed by
John Becker. Buffalo Savings
Bank, Main and Genesee
Streets. Free.
3:00 p.m.
Concert:

Show. Masten Armory.
8:30 p.m. Lecture-Recital: Maurico Kagel, Sice Lecturer. Baird

Hall. Free.
SUNDAY—

Spring Arts Festival through
April 11. Refer to article on
Page 1 for list of events.

2:30 p.m.

Smit,

short-

American counterpart.

6—Mr. Port's educational philosophy seems to be that the-stu
dent has to be given a lot of in
dividual attention, to be led by
the hand, to be spoonfed learnmg in small digestible sugar
coaled doses, in short to be aca
demically babied. I find this kind
of paternalism degrading for both
students and staff My outlook is
to treat students as adults re
iponsible fof their own intellc
tual growth or failure. 1 trv to
provi( | e them with the highest
level of stimulation which I can
offer them, but I leave it to them
to hiake something of it or pot
7

\

Bricks and Mortarboards
REPORT FROM EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES LABORATORIES,
1964
INC., ON COLLEGE PLANNING AND BUILDING
—

Concert;

and
pianist-composer,
Dorothy Rosenbcrger, soprano.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
8;00 p.m. Concert:

Handel’s
"Messiah." Kenmore Methodist
Church, Landers and Delaware
Hoads.

8:30 pin. Concert: University
Band and Concert Band. Works
of Bach, Handel, Berlioz, Shostakovich, etc. Fillmore Room.
Free,

MONDAY—8:00 p.m. Lecture: Dr. Ernest
C. Pollard. 139 Capen Hall.
8:30 p in. Concert: Marian Anderson, Farwell Tour. Kleinbans Music Hall. Tickets available at Niagara Lutheran Home.

WEDNESDAY—-

7:30 p.m. Lecture: German
Writing Today (in English) by
Victor Lange, Professor of
German Literature, Princeton
University. 146 Diefendorf.

THURSDAY400 p.m. Lecture: Dr, Charles
Smoch, Professor of Psychology,

Purdue

IN THE ENP, WE gau UP 01/0? P£i.|&lt;S10US PlFfEfBICES—SHE WAS AN A6N0ST \i, I WAS AN ATHEIST.
'

"

Buffalo
Philharmonic.' Better Homes

wise operate under serious handi
caps. Furthermore, the conclu
sions drawn by Mr. Port do not
of

Atp

and Cybernetic art.

5—Study conditions at this uni
versify are far from ideal, and
students have many legitimate
grievances, However, conditions
for research (library, shortage of
space) also impose constraints on
the faculty, and the latter like

comings of the university. In my
own experience, I have been both
a student and a lecturer at universities in Mexico, Europe and
Africa which would make stu
dent facilities here seem palatial
by comparison. Yet in spite of
much greater handicaps, or per
haps because of them, I have
found students there considerably
more alive intellectually. I seri
ously wonder whether intellectual apathy among many American students is not a product
of comparative affluence rather
than deprivation. The average
Indian, Egyptian or Bolivian stu
dent is literally hungry, but
much more mentally alert and
politically aware than his satiated

m MfcHeAtf

BV

student

This calendar will appear weekly
and cover cultural events in the
City of Buffalo and its surrounding area including college campuses. Please send notices of
events to the Spectrum, Norton
Union, State University of New
York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New
York 14214, Attention Calendar.

Amherst
Symphony Orchestra, Isidor Saslav, finest artist. Works of
Brahms, Wicniawski, and MousSenior High School. Free.
4:30 p.m. Concert: “Songs of
Nature’’ performed by Leo

follow from his list

PR2Fe§sion*.

University.

Fillmore

Room,

7:30 pm. Music: "Bach and
Lent.” an evening of music by
Bach Student Christian Association of UB, 49 Heath
Street.

NSR DEADLINE
The deadline for the next
issue of the NEW STUDENT
REVIEW, literary and opinion
magazine, is Monday. Fiction,
Non-Fiction, Poetry, Art, Photography and Humor is cur-

Review by
DR. JOHN P. ANTON
Professor of Philosophy

Our nation is seriously committed to education.
Time and again our leading statesmen and educators
have offered messages in which they have expressed
their decision to rededicate the United States to the
grand cause of excellent and universal education at all
levels of instruction. It is part of our cultural attitude
to claim education as the firm foundation of the nation’s
future. To put it in the realistic language of business,
it is safe to say that unless we take education seriously
we run the risk,of inflicting decisive wounds on the body
of our economic and technological enterprises. This
excellent report from Educational Facilities Laboratories
titled Bricks and Mortarboards, A Report on College
Planning and Building, sponored by the Ford Foundation
must be read with the following principle in mind: that
the acquisition, dissemination and application of theoretic
and pratcical knowledge have become more than familial
landscapes in our society; by being essential ingredientin our cultural bloodstream they play dominant roles ir
the forming and executing of policy on both the domestic
and international fronts.
Collectively speaking, the colleges and the universities of our
country stand for nothing less
than the nerve system of a vast
and modernized society organized on the basis of complex
skills which in turn are sustained
by specialties, discoveries, re-

finements

of

fruitful
technoleffective
networks of communications.
Higher education has as rapidly
outgrown the ivy walls of monastic wisdom as the present forms
of social structure have proved
inadequate the political
and
economic concepts of the 19th
century. Comparably our social
and cultural values have outdistmethods,

applications, constant
ogical inventions and

anced the interpretive schemes
of even the more radical of
philosophies of the last centu

Phot
Either we

Peter E

i

THE OPEN FORUM

lea

rently being accepted.
mt'rt

�Friday, April 2, 1965

PACK SEVEN

SPECTRUM

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin it an authored publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in Typewritten form to the Old Faculty
Club, attention Mrs. Fix, before
2:00 p.m. the Friday prior to
the week of publication. Student
organization notices are not accepted for publication.

General Notices
University College Students:
Except those on Strict Academic
Probation will register for next
semester according to the following alphabetical schedule:
April 5 through April 9—M,
J, X
April 12 through April 24—
K,

R

April
G

19 through April 30—

W,

3 through May 7—P, C
Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
Number 114 one week in advance
of the above schedule times. At
this time, the Receptionist will
give the student registration
cards and a list of instructions
to follow in the subsequent registration procedures. O.T. and
P.T. students will make appointments with Miss Greenman and
Miss Heap directly. Nursing students are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required
to register in Clark Gym, on
Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
May

to advance register during the
scheduled publicized times. If
the Quality Point Average of such
students improves to such a degree that they become eligible
to continue in school, they will
be informed in June, after semester grades are in, concerning
later registration dates. Students

in this category, however, who
wish to see their advisers are
encouraged to do so. It would
be helpful if these students could
make an appointment during the
alphabetically scheduled times,
but, if the problem is pressing,
they can make an appointment
at any time.
Arts
Sciences Pre-Registration for Juniors and Seniors;
juniors
All
and seniors in the
College of Arts and Sciences who
plan to return in the Fall of
1965 may pick up the necessary
pre-registration materials in front
of the Bursar’s office in Hayes
Hall between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00
&amp;

p.m. Monday, Tuesday, and Wed-

nesday.
Students who do not wish to
pre-register or who do not obtain
their registration materials on
the designated days will have to
register September 9, the regular
registration day.

Weekly Calendar
April 2—
Psychiatric Research Seminar:

Dr. Michael J, Kehoe, Assist. Professor of Psychiatry, Research Division, University of Pittsburgh,
School of Medicine, will discuss
the “Emotions and Physiology of
the Stomach, “Meyer Memorial
Hospital, 12:30 p.m.

April 3—
Engineering Viewpoints Lecture: Presented by members of
the faculty of the School of Engineering in Room 70 of Acheson
Hall at 9:00 a.m. Open to the
public.
April 4—
University and Concert Bands:
“Concert of Band Transcriptions”
in Norton Hall at 8:30 p.m. Open
to the public.
April 5—
Symposium: “The Arts Today"
with Mrs. Philip C. Elliott, Dr.
Herbert N. Schneidau and Dr.
Thomas Watson, moderator, Mr.
Albert S. Cook, in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall at

4:00 p.m.
Lecture: Sponsored by the Department of Biochemistry, School
of Medicine, featuring Dr. S. A,
Barker, University of Birmingham, Chemistry Department, Birmingham,- England, “The Application of Induced Enzymes in the
Structural Determination of Complex Carbohydrates,” Room G-22,
Capen Hall, 3:00 p:m:

the University Placement Services for complete details.
“Salary Survey,” Report No.
2 of the College Placement indicates beginning offers through
Feb. 12, 1965. The report in-

cludes statistics for bachelor’s,
master’s and doctoral candidates.
These data are available for
study at the University Placement Services.

April

April 7—Cheektowaga Central
Schools
April 7—Montclair, New Jersey Public Schools

Placement
Interviews

April 2—
Connecticut Mutual Life Insur
ance Co.
Western Printing &amp; Lithographing Co.
April 5—
Bureau of Federal Credit

Unions of New York
Blaw-Knox Corp.
April 6—

John Deere Welland Works

April 8—

Buffalo Ceiling Co, Inc.
April 9—
U. S. Public Health Service
PART-TIME AND SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT

April 7—

General Motors Chevrolet
Summer Employment. BS-ME, IE,
EE.. College students for management training program geared
■

mer

Nursing Candidates: An opportunity has been announced for
Director of Nursing Services.
Some experience is preferable, as
well as a Bachelor of Science Degree in the nursing field. The
position is in Ohio. For further information, call University Placement Services.
Social Work Candidates: A Buffalo social work agency has requested resumes of Master’s Degree candidates in Social Work
for a career opportunity. Contact

—

motor, forge, or foundry.

H

STU
*"•» ok

D

CN

J

iimii
ItfiMi mximii
HKI«MI

li

if

ing

program

following gradua-

tion. Also interested in seniors
who would like to be interviewed
for full-time positions.
April 8—
Good Humor Corp. of Thomas
J. Upton Inc Summer Employment. Students in all programs
sought for summer work. Students must be at least 18 years
of age and be able to operate a

clutch transmission truck. Need
candidates who are eager to work
and must earn from $1200 to
$1500 during the summer months.

For interview appointment or
information, please call 831-3311,
University Placement Services,
Schoellkopf Hall.

Goldmans
She*

MO

BOULEVARD MALL
COUIbt

"0*1

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

Here’s how to get yours:
|

I

I
I

Dear Sheraton: Send me an application for a free Sheraton
student ID card for room rate discounts at Sheratons all
over the world.
Name_
Streel_
City

State

-Zip

Send to COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTOR,
Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington. D. C. 20008

\

95 Sheraton Hotels &amp; Motor Inns j

Compromise.

Sum

is Worth 10% at

OI t IS
IDENTIC 1C AT ION

IS EUROPE?
College life is such a busy one, what with learning the Maxixe,
attending public executions, and walking our cheetahs, that perforce we find ourselves sometimes neglecting our studies. Therefore this column, normally a vehicle for innocent tomfoolery,
will occasionally forego levity to offer a quick survey course in
one of the learned disciplines. Today, for an opener, we will discuss Modern European History.
Strictly defined, Modern European History covers the history
of Europe from January 1, 1904, to the present. However, in
order to provide employment for more teachers, the course has
been moved back to the Age of Pericles, or the Renaissance, as
it is better known ns.
The single most important fact to remember about Modern
European History is the emergence of Prussia. As we all know,
Prussia was originally called Russia. The “P” was purchased
from Persia in LS7-1 for $24 and Manhattan Island. This later
became known as tiny Fawkes Pay.
Persia without a “P” was of course called Ersia, This so embarrassed the natives that they changed the name of the
country to Iran. This led to a rash of name changing. Mesopotamia became Iraq, Schleswig-Holstein became Saxe-Coburg,
Bosnia-! lerzegovina became Cleveland. There was even talk
about changing the name of stable old England, but it was forgotten when the little princes escaped from the Tower and invented James Watt. This later became known as the Missouri

be credited
towards eventual 18-month train-

.

s
SHERATON

“Dobie Gillis,” etc.)

training will

Your I .D Card

This card saves you
money at Sheraton

{By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,

for ME, IE, and EE. Prefer junbut will consider sophomores Candidates will be selected who are interested in production management of a large
automotive manufacturing plant.
Candidates will be assigned to

April 9—
Poetry Reading; By Gary Synder from his own works, Room
146, Diefendorf Hall, 4:00 p.m.

A nnouncements

5
Baltimore County,
Maryland (near Balti-

more)

iors

Placement

yr

—

Towson,

April 7—

Discussion: “The Integrity of
the Artist Today,” with Philip
Evergood, Theodoros Stamos and
Harris Pryor, in the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Hall, 3:00
p.m. Open to the public.

V

Teacher Placement
Interviews

On Campus MaxQhuJman

U.S. Ked

Pappagallo
Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots

Only last week he invented the German short-haired pointer.

Meanwhile Johann Gutenbergwas quietly inventing the printing press, for which we may all be grateful, believe you me. Why
grateful?i’ll tell you why: Because without Gutenberg’s invention you would not have this newspaper to read and you might
never learn that Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades arc now
available in two varieties —the regular double-edge blade we
have all come to know and love, and the new Personna Injector
Blade, Users of injector razors have grown morose in recent
years, even sullen, and who can blame them? How would you
feel if you were denied the sjiced and comfort and durability ami
truth and beauty of Personna Stainless Steel shaving? Not very
jolly, I’ll wager! But injector shavers.may now rejoice—indeed
all shavers may—for whether you remove your whiskers regularly or injectorly, there is a Personna blade for you—a Personna Stainless Steel Blade which will give you more luxury
shaves than Beep-Beep or any other brand you might name. If
by chance you don’t agree, the makers of Personna will gladly'
buy you a pack of any brand you think is better.
Yes, friends, we may all be grateful to Johann Gutenberg for
inventing the means to spread this great news about Personna.
The next time you’re in Frankfurt-am-Main, why don’t you
drop in and say thanks to Mr. Gutenberg? He is elderly—408

years bust birthday but still quite active in his laboratory. Only
last week he invented the German short-haired pointer.
But I digress. Returning to Modern. European History, let
us now examine that cver-popular favorite, France.
Franco, as we all know, is divided into several Departments.
There is the Police Department, the Fire Department, the lias
and Water Department,-and the Bureau of Weights and Measures, There is also Madame Pompadour, but that is a dirty story
and is taught only to graduate students.
Finally we take tip Italy—the newest European nation. Italy
did nptbccome a unified state until 18*18 when Garibaldi, favour,
and Victor Emmanuel threw three coins in the Trevi Fountain.
This lovely gesture so enchanted all of Europe that Metternich
traded Parma to Talleyrand for Mad Ludwig of Bavaria. Then
evcrylxidy waltzed till dawn and then, tired but happy, they
started the Thirty Years War. This later became known as Pitt
the Younger.
Space does not permit me to tell you any more id suit Modern
European History, Aren’t you glad?
1UA5.
*

and many other brands

�

Mu Schi+Jiuttu

*

And aren’t you glad you tried Personna BladeYou'll be
even gladder when you try the tierfeet csirnpanion to Permmna:
new Burma Share*. It soaks rings around any other lather!
*

�Friday, April 2, 196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Experience In Voter Registration
Canvassing Reported By Student
By SIDNEY SUGARMAN

Sunday, March 15, 1965
We arrived in Holly Springs,
Mississippi, at 8:30 a m. We met
some of the COFO workers and
went out for breakfast. Afterward, Mike and Bill accompanied

—

jfdeiicjioiiS

pressed a desire to go but were
CANTERBURY
unable. In Tate County, the NeTuesday and Wednesday at 2:00gro comprises 10% of the population. It is one of the most 3:00 p.m., the tenth in the curdangerous counties in Northern rent series of discussions of the
Mississippi. However, we had no “Gospel According to Saint John”
trouble. That night, we went to will be offered. Both sessions will
a general meeting where it was be held in Room 266 Norton. The
specific topic will be “Christ’s
Prayer—and His Arrest” (17:118:11). All students and faculty
members are invited to attend
either of the duplicate sessions.
In addition, there is a celebration of the Holy Communion
every Tuesday in the Veteran’s
Hospital Chapel at noon.
There will be an open house
Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. at 1179
Elmwood Ave,, opposite the State
College.

Remember:

__

-

HOLLY SPRINGS CHURCHES

two COKO workers, UZ and How
in canvassing counties for
voter registration, 1 went to a
Negro church in Holly Springs.
The preacher talked about Selma
and' exhorted the people to do
all they could in the fight for
ard,

freedom After services, many
of the people introduced them
selves to Charles and me and

expressed interest in our work
mg for COKO, Most of the people
seemed to have great respect for
the work CdKO is doing. A num-

ber'Of the other

COKO workers
had tried to integrate some of
the white churches in Holly
Springs. They were thrown out
of the churches. Later in the

The

symposium

"Discriminating About Discrimination Part II'" will take place
this evening at 7:30 p.m. in Capen
Hall and will continue tomorrow
beginning at 10:00 a.m. Dr. Kenneth B. Clark will deliver the
first address followed by Dr.
Thomas F. Pettigrew, Mr. William Stringfellow, and Mr. James
Forman. A most cordial welcome is extended to all.

decided that we should teach in
the freedom Schools in Benton
County where the Negro school,

GAMMA DELTA

Lutheran students are invited
to attend the next meeting of
Gamma Delta, Wednesday at 6:30
to demand improvement of the p.m. in Room 344 of Norton
conditions in Old Salem, improveUnion. All members are requestment of the teaching staff, and ed to attend this meeting to
the revision of (he school board, finalize plans for the rest of the
including immediate representa
semester.
tion of Negro citizens in proCommuters will be meeting
their
numbers in the earlier for dinner at 5:30 p.m. in
portion to
population. In Benton County, the Rathskeller. A social hour
the Negroes comprise 50% of will begin at 8:00 p.m., followthe population. In Holly Springs, ing the business meeting. All
a demonstration had been planthose desiring to attend Lenten
ned for Monday. The schools services may then go in a group
had also been boycotted and a to
worship.
Old Salem, was being boycotted.
The purpose of the boycott was

list

of grievances presented to

HILLEL

afternoon. Charles and I accom
panied UZ and Howard to Tate
County to try to find a person
willing to go to Washington to
take part in the Freedom Demo
cratic Party. We were unable
to find anyone able to leave their
farms for two weeks. I was very
impressed with the Understanding
in outward awareness of the Civil
Rights Movement shown by these
families and by their warmth
and cordiality. Most of them ex-

Ihe mayor on Saturday. The people were demanding integrated
schools, the formation of a byracial committee to establish dialogue between the races, total
revision of the school board on
the basis of rotating membership

of two to three

year?,

including

immediate representation of Negro citizens on the board in proportion to the population. 751i
of Holly Springs is Negro. Also
(Cont'd on P. 16)

brewed for braves...

/

The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will give the fifth ser
mon lesson in a current series
on, “What We Believe.” An Oneg
Shabbat will follow.
A supper will be served this
Sunday at 5:30 p.m., in the Hillel
House. It will be followed with
a lecture by Mr, Leonard Port,
English Department, on: "Jewish
Values in the Work of Philip
Roth." This will initiate a new
series of lectures on the general
theme, “Jewish Values in Con
temporary Literature,” Reservations are necessary for the super.
Due to the return of Hillel
President Ted Shapiro to his
home in New York City, Max
Levy was installed in the office
of Hillel President at a recent
meeting of the Hillel Student
Council. Max has been serving
as Vice President and as a delegate to the National Hillel Leadership Institute at Camp B'nai
B'rith and the Regional Institute at Syracuse. Other officers
serving with him are: Howard
Wildman, Recording Secretary;
Terri Fertig, Corresponding Secretary; and "Susan Funt, Treasurer.

uf

Every effort is now being made
to wind up the campus U.J.F.
rdive. Students still holding
pledge cards are urgently requested to complete their solicitations
and to make their returns at the
earliest possible date. Returns
may be made at the Hillel House
during regular hours.

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsoring a series of
lectures on the Old Testament.
These are being conducted by
Mr. San Marco Tuesday at 4:30
p.m. in Room 26 of Norton Union.
The studies will be held April 6,
27, and May 4. Everyone is urged
to attend for they are informing

and

interesting.

Tonight Inter-Varsity Christian
Fellowship is holding their Annual Elections of Officers. The

meeting will be held at the apart:
ment of Peggy Adams at 7:00
p.m. Transportation will be provided at the parking lot in front
of Tower Hall at :15 p.m. All
members are urged to attend. Re-

freshments will be served.
The Spring Weekend of IVCF
Chapters in Western New York
will be held April 9-11 at LeTourneau Christian Camp on
Canandiagua Lake. Reservations
should be made this coming
week.

Prayer meetings are being held
Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. There are also
Bible Studies Friday at 9:00 a.m.
and Monday at 3:00 p.m. These
are all held in the CRO Office,

Room 217, of Norton Union.
Tommorow starting at 7:30
p.m. there will be an informal
get-together at the home of Carolyn DiPosquale to hear the tape
recordings of the Seventh IVCF
Missionary Convention that was
held at Urbana, Illinois during
the last Christmas Vacation.
NEWMAN
Just a reminder: today is the
First Friday of the month. Mass
will be said at noon at St. Joseph’s Church and at 5:00 p.m,

at Newman Hall.

The Sunday night discussion
groups meet each Sunday evening
at 7:30 p.m. at Newman Hall.

—

weekly discussion groups
meet each Sunday evening at 7:30
p.m. at Newman Hall. The weekly

The

discussion

groups

meet

each

Tuesday at 10:00 and 3:00 and
each Thursday at 3:00 in Norton
330.

Alfred Tech and Alfred University will co-host the Empire
State Province Convention April
9, 10 and 11. Registration begins
Friday, April 9 at 6:00 p.m. followed by a mixer and welcome
address, Saturday morning and

afternoon will be devoted to lectures and discussions. A semiformal dinner dance is scheduled
for Saturday evening in the
hotel’s ballroom. The convention
will close with Mass and a break
fast Sunday morning. The entire
cost will be $13 for Newman
members who pre-register. Sign
up at Newman Hall now.
Dr Ebert of the Geology department will speak at the Wednesday meeting at 7:30 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room. He will discuss “Current Events,”
STUDENT ZIONIST

ORGANIZATION
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. the Student Zionist Organization, presents a program on Schizophrenic
Germany an explanation of Germany’s conflicting attitude toward
Israel and the Jews today. Following the program there will be
an Israeli Dance Party with Refreshments, Everyone is invited

to come—to Norton 234.

STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

The next SCA meeting will be
held Thursday at the home of
Rev. John Burek, 49 Heath St.
Supper will be served at 6:00
p.m. for 50c. Please make reser
vations by calling TF 6-5806 or
TF 4-4250. The meeting begins
at 7:30 p.m. and we have invited two Mormon missionaries
to present a program and discussion. Visitors are welcome.

Anyone interested in the
job of M.C. for this year’s
Stunt night please leave
name and phone number
in room 323 Norton.

EUROPE
This is the last opportunity you will have to register for this
unique tour planned especially for students of the State
University of New York.
The low price of this trip is $850. and includes: ''charter flight
hotel, meals, sightseeing, etc. The tour is a 7 week trip eon
sisting of a 5 week tour and 2 weeks of free time for inde
pendent travel. The dates are June 29 through August 20.
For our brochure and detailed information call
Peatcr de Fidler
The American Express Co.
PL-9-7400 (212) day

L

Ronald Brandow
Tour Organizer
256 8358 (914) ev

Seat

are also available for charter only, ,to faculty and stu
if S.U.N.Y and their immediate families at $236. R. T

at Last

�2, 1965

Dr. Pollard to Speak Monday
On Structure of Bacterial Cell
Dr Ernest C. Pollard of The

Pennsylvania State University at
University Park, Pennsylvania,
will deliver his address “The

Fine Structure of the Bacterial
Fell, and the Possibility of its
Artificial Synthesis” as a 19641965 National Lecturer for the
Sigma Xi and its affiliated society. The Scientific Research Society of America (RESA) at a
number of colleges, universities,
and research laboratories. The
lectures will be presented by the
SUNYAB Sigma Xi Chapter Mon-

Pollard returned to Yale Univer-

sity with a decision to move out
of nuclear physics slowly, and
into biophysics. He began to develop biophysics as a group at

day.

The problem of the actual manufacture of a cell de novo would
be the major topic of discussion.
The methods of ascertaining
the present character of various
kinds of cells from viruses, and
“PPLO” to mammalion cells, will
first be discussed. This involves
a consideration of the basic nature of membranes, of organelles, of nucleic acid organization,
and of the possible methods of
synthesis of protein, nucleic acid
and polysaccharide.
Methods of determining the
structure on a scale too fine to
see will then be presented. These
are mostly theoretical extensions
of experiment, and involve calculations of rates of synthesis

and their relation to possible mechanism. Such studies suggest that
there is considerable small scale
order at a level below that visible

in the microscope, The nature of
this small scale order will be
discussed with schematic diagrams.

Finally the problems that are
involved in an attempt to imagine the synthesis of this kind of
cell in the laboratory will be
brought up and discussed.”
Ernest C. Pollard was born in
Vunnari Province, China, in 1906
anil educated in England at Cambridge University, taking a Ph.D.
■ &lt; He Cambridge Laboratory in
Physics.

inducted research in nu-

iysies at Deeds UniverKngland and Vale Univer-

1940. Starting in 1940,
Radiation Lab on Microanil Radar. Tn 1945 Dr.
irked for five years in the
mill

‘In White America’
Slated For April 11
In Fillmore Room
October 31, 1963, at off-Broadway’s Sheridan Square Playhouse,
In White America was premiered
with rave reviews. Sunday, April
11, at 3:00 and 8:00 p.m. the national touring company of this
documentary history of the Negro
movement will present this play
in Norton Union as part of the
third annual Spring Arts Festival., The production is being presented with the co-operation of
Dr. Thomas Watson and the Drama and Speech Department.

Richard Watts of the New York
, a moving, disPost called it
turbing, and thought-provoking
dramtic evening." The New York
Herald Tribune’s critic William
Bender described it as possessing
“beauty, power and deep emo-

tion.”

New Senate Urges Students
To Join Senate Committees

The new Senate has a realistic and well-organized
We believe that carried out
in the fbllowing year it will affect a functioning and
productive student government.
Student government, however, is only as well-organized as its committee system.
Once leadership is
offered by the Senate, its success or failure depends on
its committees. We need you in order to have such a
committee system.
Following is a list of Senate committees and their
areas of concern. We urge you to read this list carefully, ask any questions you may have (call 836-3388,
Ext. 4089 or 3079), and then apply. Applications may
be picked up and returned at the Student Senate Office.
Norton Candy Counter, Tower, Goodyear, and Clement
desks.
plan of action to offer you.

Academic Affairs Committee
this year will be concerned with investigating academic problems on this campus and communicating
with other colleges and universities in reference to solutions.
Among its projects will be course and teacher evaluations, in—

dependen* study programs, etc.
Student Welfare Committee
is concerned with the physical needs of
the students such as book and food prices, parking, "calendar
changes, etc.
Convocations Committee
establishes speaker programs sponsored
by the Senate and will coordinate these programs with other
student organizations.
National Student Association Steering Committee
it shall maintain
communications with the National Student Association on matters
dealing with education, academic freedom, international affairs,
and student welfare, and will take action to alleviate problems in
these areas when other committees fail to do so.
Personnel Committee
is responsible for reviewing committee applications and placing students on Senate committees. They shall
also meet with the Executive Committee to recommend to the
Senate students for committee chairmanships.
Studnt Activities Committee
its main purpose is to recognize student groups making them eligible to receive Senate funds, and
to stimulate student interest in campus activities through activity
drives, etc.
Elections Committee
it shall "supervise and conduct Student Association, Student Senate, and Student Council Elections,"
Public Relations Committee
it shall maintain relations with the
Buffalo community through the University Relations Office (perhaps by a weekly newspaper column), shall serve as a reception
group for speakers and visitors to this campus, and shall conduct
Senate referendums.
International Student Affairs Committee
will carry out the foreign
student orientation program which it established this year and
will continue its weekly discussions with foreign students on
current issues.
Campus Barrel! Committee
in the past it has collected money for
United Fund. This year, depending on student opinion, it will
sponsor. another organization.
Finance Committee
with the ■Treasurer of. the Student Association
as .its chairman, it shall review student group budgets and then
make recommendations to the Senate in reference to allocations
Publicity Committee
shall handle all publicity such as posters and
slingers for Senate and Committee programs
—

The script

compiled

was

by

Martin Duberman, assistant professor of history at Princeton,
from actual documents such as
letters, newspapers, and speeches.
The production received the annual Vernon Rice Award by the
New York Drama Desk for outstanding achievement in the offBroadway theater and Judith Rutherford Marechal, the producer,
received, the Margo Jones award
in 1964 at a White House presentation in recognition of her

DR. POLLARD

the University in 1949, a group
which steadily grew until 1955
when the department of biophysics was created. Work during
this time was largely on the effect
of radiation and heat on enzymes
and viruses. In 1960 his research
emphasis changed to the study of
structure of simple cells, notably
bacterial cells. Methods of study work with
new playwrights.
have involved theory, use of ionizing radiation, and ultraviolet
A British production of

light.

In 1961 Dr. Pollard transferred
to The Pennsylvania State Uni
versity and in 1963 the Department of Biophysics was created
there, where he has been working
ever since as head.

Dr. Pollard is a fellow of the
American Physical Society and of
the AAAS.

"

Nuclear

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

In
White America opened in London
in November 1964 to rave reviews.
Last summer The Free Southern
Theatre presented he play for a
special series in the South. Selec
led scenes from In White America were televised coast to coast
on the Steve Allen Show last
fall.

He has written the following
hooks: Applied Nuclear Physics presentation of (he
first and second edition, with Dr. Broadway season.

Davidson, Micro-Wave and Radar
Electronic with Dr. Sturtevant,
The Physics of Viruses, and Molecular Biophysics with Dr, Stet
low.

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

off Broadway production
January 3, 1965 after a
total of 498 performances, making
it the longest running dramatic

The
closed

1963-64 off

—

Tickets may be obtained at I he
Norton Union Ticket office or at
Denton, -Cottier &amp; Daniels, 32
Court Street. Or, call 831 2511..
.

Friday, April

—

(RECORDS
Over

Records especially selected for the College
market are now available in our NEW department...
and at Record Savings,.. Compare these prices.
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regularly $2.49 now only S1.98

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regularly $5.98 now only 54-59

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Our stock includes RCA Camden Columbia, Decca London Mercury and
others / Monaural and Stereo Special orders from Schwann can be filled
,n one
week.
,

,

,

,

,

/

UNIVERSITY

(BOOKSTORE

“ON CAMPUS

**

�is really nothing serious that one
can object to. The current offering at the Circle ATI, Nothing
But A Man, is in the latter category, Everybody who has seen it
has liked it, this reviewer in
eluded. The movie is so good for
such obvious reasons that all one
can do is to catalog some of its
virtues, reproduce a bit of the
plot and suggest that it’s worth
seeing.

is.
The movie has lots of

other

good things going for it

What it does is simple enough.
The movie is about a young Negro yard man on a Southern Railway. He is got as much money
as he is ever likely to make on
any job and a great sense of
mobility. The hanger is (hat he
meets a pretty preacher's daugh
ter and falls in love with her.
She wants him to settle down—he
is reluctant. Eventually, he gives

the rather carefree life of

the road, marries her, and tries to
get a steady job. For a man who
is used to taking orders from
no one, the transition is quite
difficult. To get a job in Alabama, a Negro has to kind of go
along with the system. The man
who speaks out, who stands up
for a few fundamental human
rights, is likely to be fired . . .
sometimes worse. Duff Anderson
is torn between his responsibility
to his wife and what he feels is
his responsibility to himself.
Eventually, he reconciles both demands, but there is no guarantee
of any kind that he will survive.
The meat-grinder of life for the
Southern Negro has broken some
pretty strong men and Duff's own
father (played superbly by Julius Harris), strong as he was.
was not tough enough. One feels
that Duff has a chance
especially because his wife is so unand
but
derstanding
sensible
the movie ends without any posi—

—

tive indication either wav.

It sounds simple enough, but
the key to the presentation is the
tone which the movie lakes. The
story is, basicity, about a man ...
just that. What matters is that
Duff Anderson has all the prob
lems that any young man about
to get married has That he is a
Negro is a crucial factor in Anderson's life, but the story deals
with him as a human being first
and concentrates on his problems as a restless, driven and

complex person, not as some kind
of a symbol of social justice, Aft-

As Duff

also.
Anderson, Ivan Dixon is

convincing and properly low-keyed in his performance. Abby Lincoln, in her first acting role (she
is an interesting singer), is very
competent and perfectly cast. As

Duff
Anderson’s
father and
“mother," Julius Harris &amp; Gloria
Foster (she was Duke Curtis’
mother in The Cool World) are

absolutely top rate. They deliver
character portrayals in depth and
provide a touch of real professionalism to the picture.

The movie was made by people
who are anything but professionals. It is the work of two young
men who wrote, directed, photographed and edited it without any
experienced assistance. Their imaginative insight into the use of
the motion picture camera as a
creative instrument seems to have
made up for their relative inexperience with the production of
films. The movie looks nice,
sounds good (much of the sound
track consists of Martha and the
Vandellas singing "Heat Wave"
and other favorites) and has a fine
sense of pace to it Most of the
supporting actors look like nonprofessionals, but the director
has got them to be themselves
and to enjoy themselves, and the
result is a life like representation
of the atmosphere in the country
side around Birmingham and in

the

city

“Singing journalist” or “musi-

An outstanding artist and a
museum director have been
named jurors for the 29th annual Western New York exhibition at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.
Theodore

Stamos, well-known

contemporary artist, and Harris
K. Prior, director of the Rochester Memorial Art Gallery will be
the jurors.

The judging will take place in
the Gallery April 5-7, with the
jurors guests at a reception for
all artists submitting works to
the show on April 5.
In recent years interest in the

exhibition has increased steadily.
A year ago, a total of 1,8000
works by 670 area artists were
submitted. Only 140 were accepted by the panel of judges.
The exhibit, formerly open to
the residents of 14 western counties of New York, is now limited

to the eight counties comprising
the Eighth Judicial District

—

Allegany,

Cattaraugus, Chatau
qua, Erie, Genesee, Niagara, Orleans and Wyoming.
The exhibition will open April
26 and continue through May 30.
Prize winners will be announced
at the opening.

deputy director of

the
the Peace
domestic version
Corps, and a Pulitzer Prize Winner for 1961, will discuss Federal
VISTA,

of

With telling lyrics and exciting
music, he describes the political
and social climate of the sixties,
and in so doing, Phil Ochs is
clearly emerging as one of the
important voices of his generation.

Festival. He has also performed
at Carnegie and Town Hall in
New York, Symphony Hall in Bos

ots, etc.

Phil was born in El Paso, Texas, and raised in Columbus and
Cleveland, Ohio. He majored in
journalism at Ohio State for three
years where he was first exoosed

to folk

music, and

where he

Phil has appeared at the 1963

and 1964 Newport Folk Festivals
and the 1964 Philadelphia Folk

ton, and in leading

The Annual Blood Drive, sponsored by Arnold Air Society,
made 250 pints of blood available to the City of Buffalo. The
American Red Cross was happy
to be a part of the drive and
stated that the blood would be
used for open heart surgery during the following two days. Peo-

pie who donated blood

Banquet tickets at $3.00 each to

NAME
ADPKESS

Chi Omega sorority was the
outstanding donor group with 24
per cent of their organization participating.

Do Re Mi and Impromphave been cancelled. Instead, the experimental
film “The Flower Thief
will be shown on Thursday, April 8 at 7:30 p.m.
and 9:00 p.m. in the Conlerenee Theater. Admission is free. Tickets can
lie obtained at the Ticket
Booth.
tu

lUWtMj

vAvt-:-;--; wxswfiCT-: ft':®

v

AMERICAN

MOVIES!

1 TQWERtMGIYOU CANNOT

will. There isn’t

much higher praise that one can
give to a movie.

:

AFFORD TO MISS ITI"

Judith Grid, H*roW Tribuam a

North Partial
1428 HERTEl

’’TRULY

AVt.« IF 6-7411 m

AWARDS NOMINCE
Peter Sellers George C. Scott

Home Decoraters, Inc.

•

BREATH-TAKING!
ONE OF THE

*

f

10 BESTI'

Arch»r Wintftn, N.Y, M

•—

,0r. Strangelovex

Division of C. H. Stuart Co., Inc.
will be hiring a number of college men this month and
next month for
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

hotline Biupeiue

&amp;

"riunr-*-

•

•*

*

•

aL

M

JH

mVWtoui SUM
■RWATER

no cover

charge or minimum

JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
SAM NOTO
PLAYBOY ’S TOP JAZZ TRUMPET
nominee and star performer with:
COUNT BASIE
STAN KENTON
WOODY HERMAN

If

NOTHING
BUT A NUN’

|

GOLDWHISKERSI

.

•

•

Commercial Building
Newark, New York Stale
Attn; Jim Parker

sx-

"ONE OF
THE GREAT

change to see a movie that is
easy to watch and still obviously
the product of a man with a sense
of film as art. Nothing But A
Man has something worth saying

Home Decoraters, Inc.

&lt;%\%

I

In any event, after Contempt
and Les Abyss, it if a refreshing

Cain valuable experience in merchandising this summer.
Work will be in the Buffalo General Area.
Applicants must have definite need of high summer earnings. Car is necessary. Drop a postcard in the mail to:

are elig-

ible to receive blood from the
ARC in case of need because of
accident or illness.
Seventy five UB students that
had pledged to donate did not
keep their appointments. However, they still can help UB meet
its goal of 300 plus pints of
blood by contacting Arnold Air
Society, ext. 3609, or Major
Ozenick, ext. 2945.

Conference at 3:30 p.m. in Upton
Hall Auditorium.
Teachers, college students and
concerned citizens are urged to
attend the conference.
For banquet tickets and reservations, please complete the fol-

itself.

and it says it

coffeehouses

around the country. His songs
have been recorded by Pete See
ger, Joan Baez, the Chad Mitchell
Trio, Ronnie Gilbert, the Modern
Folk Quartet, and other outstanding folk artists. Phil Ochs is an
intelligent, informed voice being
listened to by an ever-widening
circle of enthusiastic audiences.

Blood Drive Nets 250 Pints

aspects of anti-poverty program
at the afternoon session of the
lowing:
Mail to:
Conference on Community Living
Stale University College
Checks Payable to:
Faculty-Student Association
1300 Elmwood Avenue
Buffalo, New York 14222
Conference on Community Living
Please Send

guitar

playing and politics. After mak
ing his living by singing and passing a basket in New York City
for a year, his songwriting brout
for a year, his songwriting
brought him the recognition that
moved him into the front rank
of folk performers

May, on Anti-Poverty
Edgar May, recently appointed

learned the rudiments of

cal eonnentator" might best describe the work of Phil Ochs, a
leader in the current topical song
revival. Using the folk idiom as
his base, Phil discusses the various issues and events of the day,
including sUch varied and controversial subjects as Vietnam, Birmingham, Cuba, labor unions, cap
ital punishment, the Harlem ri-

-'

that do arc like My Fair Lady—-

national monuments that only
iconoclasts like Dwight MacDonald dare to carp about. Others
are just so well done that there

er the preaching attitude of most
movies dealing with the racial
situation in the U.S., and the
somewhat banal second-grade civics lesson tone of One Potato,
Two Potato, it was a pleasure to
watch what I felt to be an honest
and truthful account of a man’s
life. Instead of appealing to the
soft-hearted, soft-headed superfi
cial “brotherhood” instinct in
most us like The Defiant Ones
(where Sidney Portier actually
leaps off the train to freedom so
that he can be captured along
with his friend, Tony Curtis),
Nothing But A Man looked pretty much like the way it probably

;

:

"NOTHING BUT A MAN"

Not too many pictures get good
notices from every film critic
who sees them. Some of those

Phil Ochs to Appear
Hits Topical Issues

Stamos Named
Juror In Art
Exhibition Here

By LEON LEWIS

up

Friday, April 2, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

•

Wll

Ffi., Sat., Sun., Nite at the

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

490 Pearl Street

Parking in Rear

SUN 9pm
Buffalo's Top Jozr Show!

Popular Demand..

JAM SESSION

'

tO

?

PLUS

CRSS/4&amp;*
SKSMnraftMT Wt*

�2, 1965

Friday, April

School 6 Boycott
from P. 3)
marched from City Hall to School
withdrew their children from
the school, and picketed during
of the afternoon.
I he remainder
been
The parents felt they had
meetfurther antagonized at the
bv the stand taken by Dr
the
Kubino. He chose to support

ico'nt’d

•incipal.

The parents continued to pickand boycott School 6 Thursday
id Friday. March 26 and 27. At
ast half of the students enrolled
the school were absent. They
Ruso picketed in front of Dr.
ne's place of business Thurs25, and in front of
tv, March
his home Sunday and Monday,
March 28 and 29. Over the sanAe
weekend, the groups canvassed
the district School 6, seeking support and cooperation from the
mothers. Responses were positive.
The boycott resumed Monday.
The demonstrators planned to
continue until at least Wednesday, March 31, when another
strategy meeting was scheduled
to be held.
For the children who were kept
out of school, a tutoring program
was set up under Dr. E. H. Johnson, Associate Professor of An
thropology at the University of
Buffalo. Qualified professional
teachers who are no longer teaching, and students from the University of Buffalo, as well as
from Buffalo State taught the
classes.

Southeast Asia
Debate Topic
There will be a debate
Wednesday at 3:00 p.m.,
in the conference theatre
on The Crisis in Southeast
Asia. The participants will
lie Dr. Zimmerman of the
philosophy d e p a rtment
and Dr. Powell of hte sociology department. The
debate will lie broadcast
live over WHFO !

Spectrum
SENIOR WEEKEND

There will be an open Senior
Weekend committee meeting Sunday, April 3 at 3:30 in room 262,
Norton.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

CLUB

There will be a meeting of the
Occupational Therapy Club today
at 2:30 in Room 330, Norton.
All members are urged to attend
as nominations for officers will
be held, and final plans for the
Student-Faculty Luncheon will be
discussed.

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club today in Room
264, Norton Union at 4:00 p.m.
Members are reminded that Mr.
Elliot of the Art Department will
be present during the latter part
of the meeting to, discuss differ
ent picture-taking techniques.

CIVIL RIGHTS COMMITTEE
Officers of the Civil Rights
Committee for the year 1965-86
were elected Sunday, Mar. 28, at
a general Committee meeting.
They are: Charles Brewer, Chairman; Peter Rubin, Vice Chairman; Jeff Osleeb, Treasurer, and
Deborah Rubie, Secretary.
OPEN HOUSE
The Pharmacy School of the
University of Buffalo will pre-

sent their annual Open Hoi
today beginning at 7:00

The program will

guided

tours, van

isist of
is

displays

and refreshments ill be served
The public is coi rally invited.
MR. THOMAS F. HAENLE
Mr. Thomas F. Haenle, associate director of student activities in Norton Union at the State
University of New York at Buffalo will address the 42nd an-

Coming April 2
HERBIE MANN
and his new 8 piece
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ON THE MOVE

dSoarJ
Members?" will discuss responsibilities of unions and a new
work-study programs and its
effect upon unions.
Delegates to the conference
will consist of college and university officers and staff members who direct the operation of
900 college unions in North
America and 250 overseas cultural, ' educational and recreational centers.
STUDENT BAR

ASSOCIATION

The Student Bar Association is
pleased to announce a lecture
on Legal Services for the Poor
by Edward Sparer, Director,
Legal Services Unit, Mobilization
for Youth, New York City, Friday, April 9, at 11:00 a.m., Room
110.

GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS

The government publications
now on display in the foyer of
Lockwood Library will be of special interest to faculty and students in every University department.
The selection now being shown
includes publications of the U. S.
Government Printing Office, The
Queen's Printer of Canada, and
the State of New York. The University Library is a depository
for all three of these publishing
agencies.

PHARMACY SCHOOL

nual conference of the Interna
tional Association of College
Unions meeting in San Francisco
to be held April 4-7.
Mr. Haenle, who’s speech is
entitled, “Student Employees—
Hourly Help or Special Union

Harley-Davidson

PACE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Since government publications
are receded on a daily basis by
depository libraries, they are par•ffcularly valuable to patrons desiring the most current information available in a wide range of
subjects.
Such diverse fields as economics ,the arts, American literature,
public health, sociology, and history are represented by the library’s exhibit.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB

FEEL LIKE BOWLING 7 The
International Club is holding a
bowling party, for members only,
Friday, April 2 at 7:30 p.m

in

Norton lanes. Members will be
able to get reduced rates.

Thursday, April 8, Mrs. Peruyo
Guthrie, from the International
Institute in Buffalo, and a native
of Japan, will speak to the club
about Japanses customs and
flower arrangements. There will
be a coffee hour and social following the speaker in the club
room. Watch bulletins in Norton

for time and place.

Eunice Browning Shaul Named
Queen of Military Ball
The 14th Annual Military Ball,
sponsored by the Arnold Air Society, was held last Friday at the
Connecticut Street Armory. The
highlight of the dance was the
crowning of Eunice Browning
Shaul as the Military Queen by
last year s queen, Diane Scholl.
Miss Shaul, a member of Alpha
Gamma Delta Sorority, was presented with a dozen red roses
and her trophy by Lt. Col. Huddleston. She is a 20-year-old junior majoring in Physical Education.

,Chi Omega Sorority was presented with the Blood Plaque in
recognition of 24 per cent of its
membership donating blood. Captains Lilling and Kast, USAF,
were awarded honorary membership in Arnold Air Society.
Col. Stanley Smith, Commander
of Niagara Falls Air Force Base;
Mr. John Walker, Assistant Di-

of Admissions; Mr. Peelle,
Athletic Director; Dr. Horton,

rector

EUNICE SHAUL

Professor of History; Coach Surfustini, and Lt. Col. Parsons,
USAF Ret. were among the distinguished guests in attendance.

Senior Weekend Activities Planned
The senior class of 1965 will
celebrate its graduation through
the installation of the first annual
Senior Weekend. The committee
for this event is headed by Linda
Sapir, who has seen senior weeks

work successfully on other college campuses. The events of the
weekend are not exclusivly for
seniors; all students and their par
ents are invited to attend.

A picnic is being planned at

Ellicott Creek Park where food,
beer and a rock-and-roll band
will be supplied. Friday evening,
May 28, there will be a concert
with Dick Gregory and the Man
drell Singers in the Clark Gymnasium. The senior ball, to be
held Saturday night, has as its

tentative site, the Golden Ball
room of the Statler Hilton Hotel.
There will be a senior king and
queen contest, with the winners
being announced at the ball.
Sunday, May 30, graduation exer
cises will be held.
The events of the weekend
are geared to give the seniors

who have crammed and studied
for four long years a chance at
one last blast before leaving. We
hope everyone will join with the
graduating class to make Senior
Weekend a new tradition on this
campus.

���PAGE

C.A.O. Unifies, Forms
One County Group
SUSAN

By

tions was held Tuesday, Mar. 27,
at the Ellicott Recreation Center,
After hours of discussion, during
which time no progress was
made, Mrs. Kahn proposed that
ten members of Mrs. Cates’ CAO
be added to the original group,
and the six ex-officio members
from her group be withdrawn.
(This would give the group from
the neighborhoods a 13 to 12
voting majority over the agency

GREENE

Two Community Action Organizations of Erie County, one
headed by Mrs. Milton Kahn, and
the other headed by Mrs. Carol
Cates, reached an agreement
Tuesday, Mar. 27, and combined
to form one Erie County Com
munity Action Organization.

The original CAO established
in Erie County is the one headed
by Mrs, Kahn. Eighteen members
of the original committee (6 ex
officio) consisted of city or coun
ty officials. A group of citizens
of Erie County objected to the
CAO on the grounds that it violated the basic principle of a
CAO, which is that there
be “maximum feasible
pation of members of the
and residents of the areas
Buffalo
from UB
February,

CORK and

and government group.) The total
number of members would remain flexible, however.

should

particigroups

saved

students

demonstrated

early

in

protesting the composi-

tion of the membership of the
CAO, and succeeded in getting
the committee to accept three
new members repressing the
areas being aided. After unsuc
cessfully attempting to get CAO
to add more members from the
represented areas, they then
formed a second, ITmember Com
munity Action Organization, with
Mrs. Cates as chairman. The
group wrote to the New York
Office of Economic Opportunity,
and to Sargent Shriver, request
ing that, the old CAO not be
officially

Friday, April

SPECTRUM

TWELVE

recognized.

Then ten people elected to
merge with the original CAO are:
Mrs. Carol Cates, Chairman; Rev,
James Hemphill, First Vice Chairman, Mr. Roy Gore, Treasurer;
Mrs
Claudia Sims. Screening
Committee Chairman; Mrs. Norma Proulux, Budget Committee
Chairman; Mrs. Isaias Gonzales:
Miss Ollie Scott; Dr. Nathaniel
Webster; Mrs. Romie Darden;
Mr Victor Reed.

An orientation meeting will be
held Monday for all the full vot
ing members of the CAO Mon-

Greek Notes

Walker Dance Group
To Perform Aprilio

Repertoire

Park, on Union Road. The
“festivities”??? will begin at 7:30
p.m. and continue until —???
land

Workshop.

The Spring Pledge class officers are: President,. Joseph Toscano; Vice President, Paul Klieber; Secretary, Michael Lisiecki;
and Treasurer, Alan Laurita.

performance.

PHI ZETA CHI is looking forward to its party at Mary Ellis
Kocinski's home tonight, to be
held in honor of the pledges.

Mr. Walker now devotes the
majority of his time to choreographing and dancing with his
own company, but still teaches,
lecture demonstrations
across the country, and choreographs new works for other dance
companies. On Friday, April 9,
at 7:30 p.m., he will give a lecture demonstration in the Conference Theater.

Tomorrow evening the Sig Eps
will sponsor a “Florida Faction"
party to which the pale-faced
brothers are cordially invited.

ALPHA SIGMA PHI will hold
a cocktail party tomorrow night,
at 8:00 p.m., at the Parkway Motor Inn, Niagara Falls, prior to
the Greek Ball.

This work received glorious reviews from both Newsweek and
Time, which used words such as
“dazzling" and “refreshing” in
their descriptions of the piece and

gives

Chaplain, Steve Rambo; Corresponding Secretary, Randy Mills.

Tonight ALPHA PHI OMEGA
will hold a bowling party at Is-

Norman Walker, termed by the
Chicago Tribune as “fluid, lithe,
and powerful,” will be performing in Buffalo at Bennett High
School, 2875 Main St., with his
Modern Dance Company on Saturday, April 10, at 8:30 p.m. As
part of the Spring Arts Festival,
Mr. Walker’s program will include “Reflections,” which he
choreographed and starred in for
CBS-TV's

2, 1965

Proceeding tomorrow night’s
Greek Ball, THETA CHI FRATERNITY will hold a closed cocktail party for all brothers and
their dates.

THETA CHI SORORITY is cur
rently engaged in a charity project for the women's ward of Buffalo State Hospital. Our purpose
is to supply these women with
articles such as jewelry, perfume,
soap, scarves, ribbons, etc. Any
contributions of this nature would
be very warmly appreciated by
the hospital and these people. We
would be grateful for your support. Please note that glass bottles or any jewelry made of glass
cannot be accepted.

SIGMA PHI EPSILON installed
the following officers for 1965-66
Monday, March 22: President, A1
Holman; Vice President, Ed MaThe brothers of THETA CHI
rek; Controller, Lou Costanzo; Fraternity are looking forward to
Assistant Controller, Jeff Baker; Greek Weekend and will have a
Historian, Donn Chown; Recordcocktail party Saturday evening
ing Secretary, Mick Thompson; proceeding the Greek Ball.

day.

We can suit yon best
...

The next step was an attempt
to merge with the original CAO.
A meeting of the two organize-

naturally!

for 20th Century individualists!

/\rt (jarve d

new

DI\EAM DIAMOND

He’s finding it at Western Electric

P VINC

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id Kins', art

hey delight

the

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mi

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ary assignment t

sculf

tonal

ihev exp

Caree
Placement Of

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are looking T
moving care

ay, New Jersey, labs,
lent team on

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r-

detaile

lehge of the fi
d the
have the qualifies:
talk with us. Opportunities for fast
exist now for electrical, me:
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business majors. Fo
.'our copy of the Wester

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Keep (r

lepl

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N

See Dream Diamond Rings g«J{ at these Authorized Artcanred Jewelers

Gamlet's Jewelers
Buffalo, New York

lew assignme

ks. There, Tom is work

W.E.'sC
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interview whe n

develop

systems.

Western Electric

i edi

visits

mities bookie:

sure to arrange
:he Bell System recruiting tea:

'our camp

ply

Unit

of the bell system

(g)

�Friday, April

2, 1965

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

rjCetterS to the

Editor

&lt;Cont d from p

5)

Viet Nam Battleground of Ideas
Those who would insinuate that the U.S. is
THE EDITOR;
imperialistic have forgotten the lessons of Italy,
Viet Nam is a symptom of the problems men West Germany, the Philippines, Cuba, S. Korea,
for survival: a problem of food, flags, and North Africa, and Japan. What other nation in the
history of mankind has conquered so much and
taken so little.
some
men
ideas
for
these
must
die.
Faith in
are
happiness
and
but
have
words,
liberty,
Does the Spectrum Editor in quoting the illusc to mean so much that they cannot adequately trious People's Daily (said that they are ready to
words,
Viet
Nam
a
is battle- send men to aid the Viet Cong) remember the aid
lescribed by other
md of ideas-.
Communist nations gave to Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria,
East Germany, Poland, North Korea, Tiyes there is national pride in every Roumania,
Flags too
bet, Estonia, Lithuania, and finally to the people
from China, to Viet Nam, to the U.S.S.R., to of
Hungary on the "bloody streets of Budapest?”
C StA. Each person has a love and pride for the
on which he was born.
Does the Spectrum Editor condone such aid?
Would the Spectrum Editor have us become, a forforgotten
message
is
of
Viet
Nam.
Food
the
The tress America? It
would seem to me that those
eldest thing is that many of those who fight, suffer, people who cry out most for the freedoms
America
not
understand the world of flags and grants
id die do
would be among the first to defend their
ith that they serve. They are the pawns who so country and its Vietnamese policy.
any claim to represent, but who somehow are

TO

-

-

■ver really

represented.

Harold Bob

Kurman’s Reinstatement Wanted
around aimlessly, lost. Now he even wants to play.
And Scot Kurman, the Kibitzer, is a horrible
bridge player. He ruins all our pleasure and destroys
jbe festive atmosphere; when we forestall him from
.
,
he slts and sulks' or talks about the handsP 1^
(He doesn’t know what he's talking about, which
makes it all the worse.) So please let him babble
harmlessly in the Spectrum, before he inflicts ,permanent injury on the entire concept of hack bridge
But now, the kibitzer is no more. Since his in Norton. Please'
The Bridge Players
weekly column has been pre-empted, he flounders

TO THE EDITOR

Until a short time ago, we bridge players were
very happy. We sat in the cardroom in Norton and
nlaved the game we love. And there was always a
silent, but ever-watchful one among us, who just sat
in a corner and kept his mouth shut... the epitome
of a kibitzer. He was content to remain inactive,
He had a role to fulfill and did a masterful job
of filling it.
...

...

.,

,

„

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At the height of the noon time ruth on Norton, Wednesday, a
half a hundred people stood by the fountain and debated the U.S.'s
position in Viet Nam.
This was an open forum sponsored by the local branch of the
Students For a Democratic Society. The society plans a "peace
march on Washington during Easter weekend.
According to one
member, this organiiation plans several more public meetings this
year.

UB Bridge Club to Host First
Tournament in Fillmore Room
The University of Buffalo
Bridge Club will host their first
Inter-collegiate Bridge Tournament tomorrow in the Fillmore

Room of Norton Union. More
than one hundred and fifty
teams have been invited and the
club hopes to surpass the turnouts at the University of Rochester and University of Waterloo
The

UB

Bridge
team of Roger Pies, Bobby Lipsitz, Dick Fleischman, and Ralph
Bartlett has created a great deal
of interest by proclaiming themselves the best college bridge
team in the world in the monthly
Tournaments,

bulletin of the American Contact
Bridge League and offering an

to any college
team to dispute this claim. Thus
far this year the UB team has
finished third at U of R and first
at Waterloo. Also entered in the
tournament are the pair of
Shiela Dowd and Mark Hassenberg, who won the Carling Pairs
open challenge

w

k

■

at the Spring National Bridge
Tournament in Cleveland two
weeks ago, Bob Keating, S h i e 1 a
Shein, Dotty Gamby, Hugh Peters,
Allan Mollis, Herb Stein, Chuck
Bilich, Larry Brown, Scott Kurman, Paul Lubell, and M a i e r
Fox,

The

tournament will consist of

two sessions, starting at 2:00 p.m.
and 8:00 p.m. Directing the affair
is Mrs. Ralph Gordon, the top
ranking bridge player in Buffalo
and rated twenty-first in the
United States.

interested in bridge,

Anyone

whether from this school or any
other, is invited to drop in and

enjoy the action.
The UB Bridge Club meets
every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 327 of Norton Union. This
Tuesday night will be a Masterpoint Night
and prizes as well
as masterpoints will be awarded to the winners.
—

What Is Discotheque?

The Mixer Committee will present the Union
Board's first Discotheque featuring Bob Diamond
from WYSL radio.
It will be held in the Millard Fillmore Room,
Norton Hall tonight, from 9:00 p.m. until midnight.
Admission is 35 cents per person and 50 cents per

,|

prince of the guitar
has arrived in the musical world:
John Williams...God has laid a finger
on his brow, and it will not be long

couple.

There will also be a prize given to the winner
of the Big Foot Contest.
Don’t remain in the dark anymore about Discotheque. Come tonight, and be prepared to have a

■Sail!

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SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Viewpoint on V let Nam
Another
p,»

briefly point out that the question of “THE BOMB” and whether
or not it will be used in Vietnam
is an interesting one and of great
importance to those of us who
think. The basic question on this
subject may not be the bomb itself, but whether or not we can
avoid an eventual confrontation
with Communist China. The USSR
is a known, or at least less un-

sap

,«•„ *.

our minds that the prize
left at a nice steady rate since make up
is worth fighting for. The dethey have lost any faith they
situation is due to a
ever did have in the United States teriorated
fight. The United States
ability to win the war in Viet refusal to
is a peace loving nation and apNam. Communist China shares a
parently this image is worth more
Burma
alwith
border
common
than the lives of American Miliready and looms to the north of
tary personnel. It has only been
India. Should any more of Southin the last few months that we
Thaispecifically
more
Asia,
east
have decided that we known enemy, which is convinced
own
land, go more left than it already apparently
a real live shooting match that it can beat us on our
even
are
in
would
become
is, Malaysia
terms. This is a war which should
in which you fight and not walk
more of an impossibility to detroops adbenefit both parties as long as
fend than it is now. Malaysia around calling your any appearit remains “cold”. Communist
avoiding
two
and
visors
be
between
caught
would
imperialistic. Damn China has no such internal probbeing
ance
of
influence,
of
communist spheres
lems as have forced, or caused,
imperialistic but
with Indonesia on the south. If it, we arc being
an apparent change of view by
I think. Had we
cause,
with
due
mentioned,
here
the island chain
the Russians, she is dedicated to
to
determination
a
national
were
to
had
and
Indonesia,
Malaysia
the use of violence to extend her
when it began ten
fight
to
be
this
win
going
be menaced there is
to causes. Someone, unless you wish
willing
ago
been
and
years
the
nathree
a call from one of
ourselves rather than to stand on the sidelines and root
tions in S.E. Asia that I would commit
back
and let others die for hopefully for her to collapse go-of
responsihang
at this point consider
and
for
our principles, which her own volition, is someday
us
Philipthe
ble, these three being
yet
not
theirs, this prob ing to have to draw a line.
were
Zealand,
and Austrapines, New
have been solved
might
lem
well
lia. Given a direct line into IndoIs it a sign of responsibility to
the 1960’s
pass this choice ever down? Or
nesia there would appear to be a before we entered
to
both
and
at
a
much
lower
cost
expanisn’t it about time we decided for
limited area for further
sides in life than has yet been
sion in the southward direction.
once and for all if the principles
and
to
which
no
final
totalled,
Do we also get out of Australia
this country is based on are worth
sight.
count
in
seems
enough to fight for, on all levels?
when the time comes?
I do not think we, the western
Why should the Vietnamese world, can avoid Communist ChiIf we do retreat from Vietnam,
they
when
responsibility
be
show
rather conand what other phrase would
part? The na forever, I would and
accurate if we withdraw under have seen none on our
for all,
front her now, once
of
get
cry
that
we
should
out
and make clear that while what
fire, or under negotiation designwe
are
late,
in
is
too
ed to prevent us from being shot Vietnam
she does within her borders, disa mean
at anymore? I sec no great and Viet Nam, we are fighting
tasteful as it may be, is her busiconwar
which
can
dirty little
good reason why the rest of the
ness, but that exporting her presthe
of
influence
lives
nations of Southeast Asia should ceivably
ent form of Government by force
several hundred million people,
have any great confidence in our
is something we will not permit.
this
further
influfact,
abilities to defend ourselves, or and by
I would personally rather face
ence the entire world Well withThem, should they call on us to
her while her supply of Atomic
our
We
lifetime.
in the course of
do so in the face of overt ComWeapons is meager because I
we
arc,
are scared of being what
munist Aggression. We were beatmost militarily strong
don’t really think she is going to
en, that will be the cold hard fact one of the
nations in the world today, we
give much of a damn when and
that will be remembered by the
the force availhow she uses them when she does
leaders in Asia and in the rest of are afraid to use
to us, and by this I mean
getable
am
I
personally
the world.
have
a working stockpile and deconventional forces, and this fear
ting a little sick of losing.
rasies substantial doubts in my livery system. She does not seem
we do now beto be greatly worried about reAnd why are we losing? Why mind as to whether
straint. I suspect as my neck
can we look at the deteriorated lieves in the principles we claim
to. Apparently not enough to grows more precious and my prinsituation in.Viet Nam and say we
fight for them, and violence bearc being beaten? To a mean nasciples less so this viewpoint may
ing as coarse and as brutal as it
ty near old line imperialist like
change, 1 hope not. We, as a
to
going
non
is
not
is,
is
violence
there
a
situation
here
myself
Non violence
struggle.
this
win
country, have a choice to make.
very
seems
much
like
the
that
presupposes certain standards on I have four small nieces and neone that existed in Germany and
the part of those it is used.against, phews, 1 would just as soon make
our quarrel is with a concept that
Married couple wants
this choice now rather than pass
in the use of violence.
furnished apartment June 15 believes
As a footnote 1 would like to the buck to the next generation.
to September 1. U. B.
This Coupon Good for
Call
vicinity
Girls, preferably with experience
IBM 1410 DIGITAL
Tom Homburger TF9-3926
interested in a job as a waitress
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This weekend
of Savings Plan
The Catskill Mountains
Mail to: New York Life
10 Lafayette Sq.
call 831-3879. meals and room

Greek Weekend Queen
Candidates Are Announced
The Fifth Annual Greek Weekend will be climaxed by a ball
Saturday night at Kleinhan’s
Music Hall in the Mary Seaton
Room from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00
a.m. Today will see all the

Alexis Pile, “Cameo on Velvet,’’
of Kenmore is sponsored by Phi
Zeta Chi for which she is now
Pledge Mistress. She has also
been Second Vice President of
the Pan Hellenic Council. With
her history major, Alexis would
like to teach world history in the
secondary school system. Working with a dramatic group, singing, and dancing are among her
interests.

KATHLEEN KAYSON
Greeks at Washington Hall
a Dated Party.

for

Repair

views.

Kathleen Kayson is a 20year-old junior representing Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority. She
has maintained a 2.4 average
majoring in History and Economics. Painting, swimming, and
golfing are among her favorite
past-times, and she has been active in Spring and Winter Weekend

committees, dorm govern-

ment, and the Judicial Board.

Chi Omega’s candidate, Jeanie
McEvoy, is a 19-year-old Sophomore from Glen Cove, Long

“Learn

TF 6 -4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

to

Club, and worked for the Freshman Orientation Committee, in
addition to maintaining a part
time job.

Dry cleaning machines
-

8 lbs. S2.00

at Windspeor

terests.
JEANIE McENVOY

FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP
•

Cl caning

didate with the theme of
“Keane on Harriet.” Her aca
demic achievements placed her
on the President’s academic honor roll as well as the deans
list. Harriet also participated
in Schoellkoph Hall Committee,
chorus, and the election com-ce
mittee. Horseback riding, &gt;
skating, music and modern dance
are but a few of her varied in-

drive safely, and quickly"

3175 Main Street

Laundry and Dry

Harriet Somin, an 18-year-old
sophomore majoring in psychol
ogy, is Sigma Delta Tau’s can-

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Island. Jean is an Elementary
Education Major with a 2.29 average. She has participated on
Clement Hall’s House Committee
and is historian for Chi Omega.
Jeanie’s interests include swimming, and water skiing as well
as an appreciation tor the fine
arts.

brewed for braves..

SENIOR CONTEST
Applications for Senior King
and Quean may be picked up
at the Norton Union candy
counter today.

Ak
DOUBLE-HOPPED
for Extra Full-Strength

ALEXIS PILE
was on dean’s list last semester.
She has also been in Newman

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

“Kalypso Kathy” evokes the interests of Sigma Kappa Phi’s candidate, Kathy Salay, a 20-yearold junior. Her interests include
dancing, music, and swimming.
Kathy, an early childhood major,

At midnight one of these girls
will be crowned queen of the
1965 Greek Weekend. The ball
marks the end of vigorous campaigning in which the girls participated in a fashion show, coffee hour, and fraternity inter-

Buffalo, N. Y. 14203
Att: L. Parlato

provided,

—

mittee.

—

Plaza Shoe

Glad About
"Mad About
Gloria” is the theme for Theta
Chi’s candidate, Gloria Pardo.
Gloria, a 19-year-old sophomore,
is majoring in Sociology and professes interests in bowling, and
water skiing. Her activities have
included W.R.A. swimming, and
volley ball, Newman Club, Chap;
lain of Theta Chi Pledge Class,
and Freshman Class House Com-

Copy is now being accepted for the second issue
of the Bull, UB's humor
magazine. All humorous
articles and cartoons are
welcome. Please submit
manuscripts, together with
name and phone number
to: The Bull, Box B, Norton Union.

Elections for Greek Queen will
continue today from 10:00 am.
10
to 2:00 p.m. in the Norton
Lobby. All fraternity members
'

may

m
v

vote.

|

HARRIET SOMIN

"

"

�Friday, April

2, 1965

THE OPEN FORUM

Anton Review

tance, and to broaden the fron-

(Cont'd from P. 6)
in any of my classes.

I keep my
offering difficlasses small by
every
cult courses, and I make
effort to encourage the good student to become an independent
scholar. I reserve time for class
discussion, and I hold office
hours to see students. Yet, in
eight vears of teaching, I have
come across four or five undergraduate students who have truly
engaged in intellectual discourse
with me, as opposed to scores if
not hundreds who have come in
to have their grades changed,
to inquire about the nature of
the

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

next test, to petition me to

extend paper
deadlines, to rationalize their
failure and the like. May I suggest that there is something
wrong with the students rather
than with the faculty? True, there
are some “popular” teachers to
whom students flock in search
of emotional gratification, moral
support, etc!, but, in my view, the
teacher is not a therapist or father figure. He is a man paid to
impart his specialized compedrop my course, to

tiers of knowledge.
Lest my remarks be construed
as being “anti-student,” I must
reiterate that I consider the way
in which students are treated in
many Amercan universities both
degrading and scandalous. But
the way to remedy the evils is
not for faculty members’ hearts
to bleed over “poor,” "helpless"
students. It is up to American
students to organize, protest, congregate, demonstrate, boycott,
march, and strike, as their counterparts have done for generations in Tokyo, Paris, Saigon,
Cairo, Bogota and, thank heaven,
at last, in Berkeley. By and large,
students get the mediocre teaching they deserve by being indifferent scholars. Similarly, they
get the paternalistic tyranny of
most university administrations
which they earn by meekly accepting the democratic parody of
“student government.” If students
want the respect of their faculties
in matters academic, political and
ethical, they must earn it the
hard way by doing such things
as taking their studies seriously,
controlling cheating through an
code, and being politically
alert to their interests. So long as
most of them behave as a bunch
of apprentice suburban house-

honor

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wives and Fuller-brush salesmen
concerned about cars, football,
dating and similar frivolities,
they can expect to be treated
with condescension as faceless
cogs in a gigantic Skinner box.

Jack Kemp, star quarterback of the Buffalo
Bills, will speak on Football, Freedom, and the
Free Market on April 6,
at 7:30 in the Fillmore
Room.

(Cont'd from P. 6)
or suffer an inglorious fate and
sink under the pressure of its
unprecedented complexities, ending thus a chapter in human history in the not very original note
of dread and despair. Regardless
of how well this country’s unparalleled educational program
has served the people and aside
from its blunders and certain
inherent flaws, the American
educators are now called upon
to meet original pressures and
even anticipate the undisclosed
needs of the future. To be sure,
what is needed is bold and clear
vision in educational planning.
There is a good reason to believe that we have plenty of
falent and means at our disposal
to answer the call. Bricks and
Mortarboards is a sober statement
pointing the way and alerting us
to some of the most basic aspects
of the problem.

The question whether we are
heading for academic slums or

country club campuses is hardly
the most important one. The
more ultimate issue is whether
we are planning with wisdom and
good taste to fulfill our promises
to the new society and to lay
the foundations to provide intelligently for the needs of the
generations to come. Part of the
question is the demand that we

broaden our schemes of values to
liberate our imaginations and
stop thinking that the needs of
the future are mere variations of
the present. Nothing less than
the basic commitments of our nation is at stake here. When we
speak of expanding the facilities
in our colleges and universities
in terms of bricks and mortarboards, perhaps we should admit
openly that we are speaking of
what amounts to setting the stage
to usher in a new chapter in human history. This much is not
asserted in the Report, but what
this admirable document alerts

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us to is the details of a multiproblem, to coin a term, the
solution of which can hardly af-

ford postponement and if undertaken, as it must, nothing but the
best possible solution be sought.
The Report, though meant to
be read by students, faculty and
administrators, is primarily addressed to college trustees, regents, lawmakers, and others who
in one way or another are involved in policy-making bodies
that affect the future of our institutions of higher learning.
Bricks and Mortarboards is recommended reading for every college student. It would do our
students throughout the country
a great deal good to read this
book, for if nothing else it will
help them to become acquainted
with the great complexity of
problems the American society
must face in order to satisfy the
immediate demands of the expanding student populations and
to provide for the even greater
pressures of the future. If our
students need an object lesson
in social response, sacrifice, and
public generosity, this book supplies it in elegant and noble
form.
It goes without saying that the
direct participation of the American student in the planning of
campus construction to meet the

college expansion is not likely to
occur since the role of the student in matters of policy and university planning appears rather
restricted. Just the same it is
highly desirable that the American student realize the scope of
work, planning and the. magnitude of material wealth needed

for the adequate facing of the
educational future not only of
our own youth but also of the
people of those parts of the
world that turn to us for friendship and assistance. The best of
talent and trained personnel in

our educational world is gradually being mobilized to meet the
rising situation in all its urgency.
This book itself is a model of cooperation and comes to show how
the best of information sources
can be sifted and brought together to illumine the gigantic
issues that will confront us for
many a year. Not every facet of
the American campus has re-

ceived in this book the attention
it deserves, but what is said here
about the classroom, the laboratory, the library and the domitory
is not only reliable but also a
safe outline of the situation as
expected to develop in the decade ahead.
Many of us have at one time
or another poked fun at statistics
but we need better take a closer
look at the figures before we do
so in this case. If the present
number of students js 4.5 millions, by 1975 our colleges and
universities must accommodate
mope
than 8.5 millions. This

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short about $700 million per annum. Alarming as the shortage
may be, breath-taking expansion
is happening nonetheless. The
lead is now in hands of three
states, California, Illinois and
New York, with Florida and
Texas trailing.

Surging enrollments, faculty
shortages, the effects of technology on educational methods and
the rapid growth of information
together with the storage problems it poses, are realities that
are bound to shape the destinies
of our higher education. What
will happen to the present outlook of our colleges and univer-

sities and what campus life will
come to be like is anybody’s
guess. We can only say for sure
that the familiar pattern of traditional education is rather unlikely
to stay with us for very long. We
are about to witness a radical
transformation. Already with us
is the fact that certain instrumentalities can no longer be kept
in operation, let alone constructed, without the assistance
of our great technological advancements; such, for instance,
is the case of the university
library with regard to both its
Now,
design
and
furniture.
whether the lofty goals of education will continue to remain those
which the recent past fashioned
for itself and whether they will
still play a controlling role or
linger on as unchallenged assumptions in some sort of cultural
symbiosis, is
somthing else.
Sooner or later we will have to
face the risks of an open discussion on the impending reconstruction of our broader goals
and values. The longer we refrain
from this confrontation the more

formidable the difficulties in
meeting the problem will be,
and even more. so than that of
responding to the problem this
book so competently delineates.
Before closing the book the
reader knows that he has been
given a panoramic view of things
to come in higher education. Another thing that becomes increasingly clear is that the experience our universities make available to millions of Americans is
bound to modify more than has
hitherto
been
admitted
the
quality of our cultural and political affairs. If nothing else, this
book succeeds in awakening us to
the sort of consequences we must
take in case we fail to meet our

present responsibilities to provide
fully for the rising needs in
higher education.
They will
closely resemble the results of
a comparable insensitivity our
fathers displayed toward aesthetic and cultural considerations
when constructing many of our
college campuses and most of our
modern cities. All in all, this is
a fine book and it rises to the

occasion.

MALAYSIAN SOCIOLOGIST
A Malaysian sociologist will be
the final Asian lecturer to visit
State University at Buffalo dur
ing the 1964-65 academic year
under the sponsorship of the Vis-

iting Asian Professors Project.
Dr. Syed Hussein Alatas, professor of sociology and anthropology, religious systems and beliefs
and Malay culture.

single piece regular price

31 51 Bailey
Avenue at lost Amherst

simply means that in order to
meet these demands we must
construct between now and 1975
twice as many academic buildings
in capacity that this nation built
since the opening of Harvard in
1636. In monetary terms this
means spending for physical plant
only an amount in the neighborhood of $19 billion. Construction
activity, we are informed, falls

Dr. Alatas, author of several
articles published in various European and Asian countries, received his bachelor’s, masters and
doctorate degrees from the University of Amsterdam, Holland,
where he also served on the faculty.

iL

SHERIDANai PARKER
JUST THE WAV YOU UH£ €M

The project, now in its third
year, is under the direction of
Dr Burvil H Glenti, professor
of education at the University.
It is

designed

;e the Asian

�Registration Experiences
from P.

(Cont’d

Friday, April J, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

3)

students were
In Greenwood,
my school, there were 40 students
and just 3 teachers. Some of the
other Freedom Schools had as
many as 115 students in attendance. Considering the conditions,
the students were very well behaved . . . there was little need
for discipline. The children impressed be by their eagerness
and desire to learn. Even in their
spare time, most of them work
cd on mathematics or devoted
their time to other school work.
Although many of the children
were bright, their education had
been sadly neglected and their
ability to read and write was
quite poor. 1 taught children from
the 6th and 8th grades. In history, for instance, we covered
the development of the North
and South before the Civil War.
At lunch time, the children played outside, and I though it was
lovely to watch the way the older'
and the younger children got
along together. After lunch, we
taught for awhile and then each
Freedom School rehearsed a skit
for a talent show competition
knew where the

stated in the petition was the
demand for immediate up-grading of the schools and desegregation of all public facilities and
of the churches. The petition al
so exhorted the mayor to exert
pressure to insure full compliance with Article 7 of the Civil
Rights Act by local facilities

guaranteeing equal employment
opportunities. It stated that the
people felt the mayor should
issue a statement condemning the
police brutality in Selma. They
demanded that fair and impar
tial treatment be given to all
people by the public employees,

and law officers and
that all neighborhoods be provided with essential city services.
It said the mayor should use his
influence to support registration
of the Negroes and adequate representation in clerical and supervisory positions in the county.
We went to see the Church that
had been burned down in Tate

officials

County. It was a truly shocking
sight. The group decided that
we would try to raise money in

Buffalo to rebuild the church.
Monday, March IS

in the five freedom
schools which had been set up
schools had
in Benton County
been sot up in churches through
out the county. The children atWe taught

—

tending were from the 1st to the
8th grade. Most of the‘teachers
were high school students in Benton, some were from Rust College. There were five of us tak
ing part too. Things were rather
disorganized Since none of us

in their studies.

between the various schools. After school, all of the teachers
met at Ernestine’s house to discuss the problems encountered
during the day We found out
that only about 100 children out
of approximately 1,200 had not
taken part in the boycott. The
demonstration in Holly Springs
had also been quite successful,
peaceful and orderly. That night,
we stayed in the COFO office
watching TV, reading and talk-

Explores New Concepts
The Sculptor of Today
In America, we are approaching
a new era of awareness toward
the Fine Arts. The Arts are now
being explored more than ever
before as modern men seek some
medium to express their individuality in this age of technology
and mechanized living. The Sculptor, in his own attempt toward
self expression has left the familiar and is exploring all manner
of new techniques and mediums.
The reality of everyday living is
left behind as the artist delves
into his imagination to create the
abstract, the emotional, and the
fantastic. New, concepts about
art are coming to the fore: art is
form, structure, and self expression rather than concrete images
which identify with the real
world, "Art must not mean, but
be." Art today obeys its own
laws, not visual reality and is
actually an extension of the artist himself.

This exhibit will demonstrate

the new concept of the relation
ship of the artist to the world of
today and how, through his contacts with out ever changing environment, his works are born
pure expressions of the artist’s
conception of the twentieth century. Greenley’s work, L.F., exemplifies the new trends in sculpturing using unconventional mediums such as acrylic plastic. The
two pieces by Lyman Kipp, Di-

—

rectional I, and Lewp I, clearly
demonstrate the concept, art is
form.

Arts Festival Schedule
(Cont’d

from P.

3)

genheim Museum in New York
City.

Bruce Beasley, who specializes
in bronze and aluminum, will be
represented by his bronze piece.
"Maiad Nessus." Joseph A. Bolinsky, recipient of first prize
from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Western New York Art
Show for his stone carving, will

be represented by two of his

works, "Moses on Mount Sinai"
and "Eyil Within Us.” The Kroll"

will represent John Chamberlain
who has lately had exhibitions
at the Carnegie Institute Inter
national and at the Museum of
Modem Art. Fred W. Farr, an
instructor of Sculpture at the
Brooklyn Museum Art School,
will have his work "Combat" appearing in this show. "The Sleeper No. 2," a bronze figure by Paul

Granlund, head of the Sculpture
Department at the Minneapolis
School of Art. will be shown. Colin Greenley. who uses unconventional media such as acrylic plastic, will have his “Plastic Sculptures" in this exhibt. Lyman E.
Kipp. Jr., who instructs in Sculp

ture at Bennington College, will
be represented by two of his
works, “Directional 1” and "Lewp

I," which demonstrates the prevalent concept that art is form.
Harvey Weisk, teacher, author
and illustrator of six children's
books, will be represented by a
bronze work, “Departure from
Venice."
Also, beginning on Monday, and
continuing through April 16, there
will be an exhibit of students'
paintings in room 231 of Norton
Union from 10:00 a,m to 8 00
here wi
At 7:30 pm
be a "Dialogue" co-sponsored by
the Convocations Committee in
the Dorothy M Haas lounge in
Norton Union Among the poets
iresent will be Charlc
Olsor
and John Weiner
Rd Sander

the
Wenner-Gren Foundation.
Mr. Sanders, published in many
literary magazines in the United
States, has a solid background in
classics. Mr, Weiners, founder of
the magazine “Measure" and recipient of an award from the Poets’ Foundation in 1962, has had
published The Hotel, Wentlcy
Poems and The Ace of Pcntacles.
The topic of discussion for these
three poets will be modern poetry.

Also, beginning Tuesday and
ending April 11. there will be,
in room 223 of Norton Union
an exhibit of paintings by Philip
Evergood.

Philip Evergood, Theodore Stamos, and Harris K. Prior will present an open discussion, "The
Integrity of the Artist Today”
in the Millard Fillmore Room of
Norton Union at 3:00 p.m. Wednesday. Mr. Evergood and Mr.
Stamos. internationally Known,
are both very provocative speak
ers. Mr. Prior, Director of the
Rochester Memorial Gallery, is
intensely concerned with art today. Questions and coffee will
follow.

Also Tuesday there will be a
folk recital featuring Phil Ochs

at 7:30 p.m. in the Dorothy M.
Haas Lounge in Norton Union.

Admission for the recital is free.
At 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall Tuesday there will be a flute recital

by Karl Kraber.

The Friends of Lockwood will
sponsor a poetry reading by Gary
Snyder Friday, at 4:00 p.m. in
146 Diefendorf Hall. Gary Snyder. who figures importantly in
the West Coast "beat" society,

had a wide background of
study, which included mythology,
linguistics, classical Chinese, and
f'orma'I Zen training.
At 7.30 p.m. Friday, in the
Conference Theater of Norton

has

Walker, assisted
members of his company.

Union, Norman

by four

will

Leeturc-Demonstratior
he Dance. Norman Walker

give a

says of

him: “lie is bursting with
movement ideas. They pour forth
in huge phrases, often beautiful,
adventuresome, always imaginative.”
The

Norman

Walker

Dance

Company will appear at Bennett
High School. 2875 Main Street,
at 8:30 p in. Saturday, April 10.
This company is as celebrated and
praised as is Norman Walker him-

self. Of this company the New
York Herald Tribune says: “The
loudest applause along with roars
of bravo! and footstampings were
awarded Norman Walker and his
handsome company of accom-

As a
plished young dancers
choerographer he gives us lovely,
noble yet sensuous work, a thing
of sweeping beauty from start to
finish. Walker danced in heroic
style. In Cora Cahan he has a
partner of grace, dignity and dramatic perceptivity.” Newsweek
...

has this to say: “Walker’s Reflections (on CBS-TV’s Repertoire
Workshop) was worthy of its mass

exposure , . . choreographic style
is refreshingly outgoing
he
...

had outdrawn both ‘Wagon Train’
and ‘The Virginian’ on rival networks. Dance has finally outdone
the cowboys’’ Tickets for this
can be purchased at the Norton
Union Ticket Booth and at Denton, Cottier, and Daniels, Inc.
General admission is $2.00. Faculty and staff pay $1.00 and students pay $.75.
In White America, a documentary of Negro history in America,
written by Martin Duberman, a
Princeton history professor, will
be presented Sunday, April 11,
at 3:00 p m. and 8:00 p.m. in the
Millard Fillmore Room of Norton
Union. The off-Broadway production- of this play was the longest
running dramatic presentation of
the 1963-1964 off Broadway season The cast includes actors farm
ar to television and theater
idiences alike. Oscar Brand, the

‘11-known folk

singer-guitarist,

and artist, is the riius
director. Again, tickets car
purchased at the Norton Un
Ticket Booth and at the Den

imposer

AT

THESE

FINE

NEW YORK
Frank Adams
Fuhrman's Inc,
Albany, Stuyvesant Jeweler Inc.
Stuyvesant Plaza
Amherst, Adam Meldrum &amp; Anderson So.
Binghamton, Henry's Jewelers
Brewster, Addessi Jewelry Store, Inc.
Buffalo, A.M.&amp; A.'s—Downtown University
Buffalo, Sheridan, Thruway &amp; Southgate Plazas
Catskill, Hallenbeck's Jewelers, Inc.
Cheekfowaga, Adam, Meldrum &amp; Anderson Co.
Cohoes, Timpane's Jewelers
Cortland, Harry Alpert Jeweler
Elmira, Deister &amp; Butler Inc.
Endicott, Henry's Jewelers
Albany,
Albany,

Hudson, Alger's Jewelry
Ithaca, Schooley's
Jamestown, Baldwin Jewelry
Kingston, Scheneider's Jewelers, Inc
Lockport, Scrifo's Jewelry Store
Middletown—Serpentini Jlrs.
Medina, limina's J|ry. Store
Newburgh, Wm. Griffin Jewelers
Oneonfa,. Jerry Halbert
Oswego, Conti Jewelers

Painted

Post,

Mallison jlrs.

Plattsburgh, Henry's Jewelers

Rochester, Hershberg's Jewelers
Rochester, Wm. S. Thorne
Mai
B. Gfaubart &amp; So
Wallace's
Syracuse, H&lt;
s Jewelers
Syracuse, H. J. Howe
»dam, Meldrum
Schenectady,
Schenectady,

&amp;

lenheim Fellowships, also re
■d a grant In study .Mayan
iglyphics
iri Yucatan from

gifted of the younger generation

of dancers . :
bv the New York
Herald Tribune. Dance Magazine

era! admission is $2,00. Admission
for faculty and staff is SI.00 and

STORES

Sor

Watertown, Henry's Jewelers
WestSeneca, Adam, Meldrum

&amp;

Ander

&amp;

�Friday, April

2, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SEVENTEEN

leers Finish Second In League
Oswego Bents Bulls For

Title In Season Finale

The University of Buffalo
its chances for
a share of the Finger Lakes

tion, Oswego led only 3-2. Both
Karl Balland. But the
undermanned Bulls ran out of gas

hockey team saw

coach

hockey championship slip by, as
they dropped a hard fought 7-3
battle to powerful Oswego State.
The loss left the Bulls in a second place tie with Ithaca College,
as league play came to an end for
the ’64-’65 season.
The UB leers were severely
handicapped by the absence of
three front line performers,
Capt. Jerry Doherty, Mike Whelan, and A1 Moorehouse, They
also had to do without the services of speedster Jim Bauseh who
caught a hockey stick in his
Adam's apple early in the game
and was forced to sit out the re-

in the final period and State
pulled away. Pierce Belangu had
a hat trick for the victors.
Ice Chips
Bulls were runners-up last year also. Hope it
isn’t habit-forming
Goalie Ken
Sherry, who stopped 48 enemy
blasts in a losing cause was voted
M.V.P. of the team. He finished
with a very creditable 2.93 goals
per game . . . hockey Bulls main
weakness this season was penaltyitis. They were assessed 16 min-

mainder of the contest, Still,
after 40 minutes of gruelling acUB goals were scored by player-

Ardieta

The season has ended but the
memory lingers within each comMixed emotions about
the conclusion of a season are
always to be heard among the
petitor.

wrestlers. Some are overly happy

that the rough, gruelling sport
is over, others wish for a twelve
month season, but one thing can
be said, in the end the total effort was well spent.
Already the cycle of a new season has started to grow within
the sophomores and juniors who
will return and this year’s hopeful freshmen who are pressing
for a starting berth in tthe 196566 University of Buffalo Wrestling edition.

For the past nine years

wrest-

ling has been skillfully coached
at the University by Ronald LaRocque. The tall and amiable LaRocque is a graduate from Buf-

utes in 3rd period

vs,

LaHocque feels that be-

can compete in resve weight classes,
they are
apt to participate
in a sport
as their chances of winequalized in the weight
Mso, schools are starting
ze that wrestling can
be
ated into their physical
n curriculum with a minalteration and relatively
sivc equipment. This of
eeds and promotes wrestm the, bottom up so that
-rs become familiar with
early age there-

f

'

-

e

he

sport

at

an

coachin

0

1
1
0

FINGER LAKES

State

Oswego

12

10
9

Buffalo
Ithaca
R. I, T.

Brockport
Syracuse

Hobart

Rochester

Oswego

10
6
4
4
0

1

3
2
4

1 25

1 21
3
0

7 1
10 0

12 0
14 0

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

—

there is

an abundance of new

points up the tremendous growth
of wrestling in recent years.

outlook for next year’s
team is excellent, barring academic ineligibility and injuries.
Buffalo is losing only three varsity starters, Bob Ernst, Bob
Jackson, and Ed Lontrato. Returning will be A1 Glassman, George
Enresman, Bill Miner, Leonard
Ardieta, A1 Worden, and Norm
Keller. There is also a strong
The

possibility that the very popular
Grenard Poles will be in the line
up as heavyweight; Poles was
undefeated last year at 191 lbs.
Many of the above will have to
contend with the challenges of
this year’s Freshmen who naturally will be hunting for a starting berth. They are Gary Fowler,
John Cunningham, John Misner,
and Dick Heidt. Coupled with

RONALD L»ROCQUE

these factors is the prospect of

having some Intramural champions out for next year’s team.
It looks like another good year

for Buffalo. In the last few years

have dropped us
their schedules because
they feel we have become too
strong of a team for them to

some

from

schools

compete with. Coach LaRocque
points with pride, and rightly so,
that several of the better names
in wrestling have expressed a desire to engage Buffalo in the near
future. If this materializes, it
will benefit the school,, participants and will provide the stuto view
dent body the opportun'
wrestling in
if the bcttc
Eastern United States, W
LaRocqt

ulations and wish him we

are several, which

2

HOCKEY LEAGUE
FINAL STANDINGS

outlook is very bright for
next season as team loses only
Doherty, Sherry, and Balland.
They were all vital assets this
year and will be missed
but

has made tremendous strides

men

Evans

....

on graduation Coach Lane coached
football and
ling for his alma mater. Burns nine years of coaching
l|ng Coach LaRocque has
eight winning seasons.
menting on this seeason
LaRocque felt that it was
team, comparable to the
nt one of two years ago.
was pointed out that wrest-

1

INDIVIDUAL SCORING
Goals Assists Points
15
29
14
Gorney
26
12
Doherty
14

2
0

1
2
0
2
0
0
0

Algeier

Whelan
Mitchell
Marrus
Proctor
Dewitt

...

falo where he lettered in football,
wrestling, and baseball. Upon
-:r: '-duation
Mr. LaRocque was
awarded the Chancellor’s Medal
for his outstanding contributions
to the University in scholarship
and athletics. Mr. LaRocque resides in Amherst' with his wife
and three children.

n the last few years at Bufand throughout the country.

Next year the target is
first place and prospects couldn’t
he better.
....

—

Wrestling Coach—
Ronald LaRocque
By Lenny

prospects for ’65 ’66 . . . Doherty and Garney shared team scoring lead with 14: Dan led combined scoring with 29 points.
Bausch, only a freshman, scored
15 points in but 6 games. He was
out most of schedule with a shoul-

iext

season

j\irln
ACTION AT OSWEGO

der separation. Wait till next
year . . . Still no word on varsity status for the Hockey Club,
now in its third successful year
of operation. It is long overdue
. . , The club would like to thank
all the students who came out to
cheer them on despite late hours
of games and inconvenience of
Amherst Rink. Team averaged
over 550 admissions per game

-^4Lyolt &amp;

Bausch

Holland
Dever
Fraser

Printing

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Robertson
Lenegan
Savage

PreiS, Jnc.

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

Hannah
Moorehousc
Kuhiak
Weaver

t&gt;r.i

4-

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>J
STATE UNh/ERSlTY

NEARING
ON

h

VIETNAM

VOLUME

IS

FACULTY

APATHY

NO. 21

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1965

SENA TE OFFICERS TAKE OATH
Students Plan Washington March
In Opposition to Vietnamese War
fusal to co-operate with the Unit
ed States Government in the prosecution of the war in Vietnam”
and dissatisfaction with the government’s supressing “the aspirations of the people for political independence and economic
freedom.” In a slinger issued to
publicize the declaration, the
above organizations emphasized,
“We have no honorable choice
but to insist on an immediate
withdrawal of American troops
and an end to all military aid
to the Saigon government."
The SDS urges members of
campus groups to establish an
ad hoe march committee for their
own campuses. Such committees
would assume responsibility for
fund raising and educational programs about Vietnam. As the time
of the march grows near, the
groups would be responsible to
increase interest in the movement, sponsor rallies, and arrange
for student transportation to the

DAVID EDELMAN
In protest of United States “illegal and doomed aggression”,
the Students for a Democratic
Society (SDS) have called for a
march on Washington to end the
war in Vietnam. Their appeal for
march participants has been directed predominantly to “all students who agree with us that the
war in Vietnam injures both
Vietnamese and Americans, and
should be stopped.” The march is
slated for Saturday, April 17.
■ The demonstrations will begin
with a picket of the White House
to start in the morning. Marchers will meet below the Washington Monument in the early afternoon to hear the slated speakers;
Senator Ernest Gruening of Alaska and journalist I. F. Stone. The
march will then proceed down
the mall to the Capitol Building
where a representative group will
present a statement to Congress.
By

march,

Editorial

The Students for a Democratic
Society feel that the war is essentially a civil war which should
be waged solely by South Vietnamese against the prevailing

National publicity is expected
appear in the near future and
is scheduled to include ads in
The Nation, The Progressive, The
National Guardian, The New York
Times, and The New Republic.
March materials including posters
and buttons will be available by
writing the March on Washington
Office in New York City.

to

government. It follows, therefore, that United States intervention is self-defeating, for the

of self-determination
would much better be served by
allowing the South Vietnamese
to choose their own government
as provided in the Geneva Agreement of 1954. The SDS further
declares that the “foregone conclusion” is U.S. defeat, and that
our military maneuvers and strategies have been both dangerous
and immoral.
The Catholic Worker, the Committee for Non-violent Action,
and the Student Peace Union are
cooperating with the SDS in promoting a “Declaration of Conscience” which emphasizes “reobjective

MEETING
There will be a meeting of the Faculty-Student
Academic Freedom Committee Monday at 4:00
p.m. Look at daily calendar for location in Nor-

•

ton.

Peyre to Speak Thursday in Capen

DePresident-Elect
Clinton
veaux officially installed Tuesday
night at the last Senate meeting

of the

1964-65 student senate.

Rosemary Brown, Ellen Cardone,
and Sandy Seide ' were also installed as the new officers of the
Student Association.

The meeting called by Robert
Finkelstein, ex-President of the
Senate was a special joint meeting of the old senators and the
newly elected ones. The only
business to be coverecKwaSx the
hearing of final reports of'all
the Senate Committee and the
installations.

Immediately following this discussion. Gary Lighter, Chief
Justice of the Judiciary, was
called forward by President
Finkelstein for the purpose of
installing the new officers, Mr.
Seide, Miss Cardone, Miss Brown
and Mr. Deveaux were called

forward individually to recite the
following oath: I
do solemnly affirm that I will

room. In the words of one senator, “It appeared as if a true
spirit of bi-partisanship finally
appeared." President Deveaux
then took the gavel from cxPresident Finkelstein and his
first official act was to declare
the meeting adjourned.

to

The committees which reported
the senate were th Civil

A few comments were offered
by a number of the old senators
in the form of a farewell address. Robert Feldman,
VicePresident for the past year, addressed the floor directly be-

fore his term of office officially
ended. He warned the senators

against falling into commuting
the same errors as of the senate.
He expressed his fear of the new
senate’s proposed action On a new

constitution, and informed the
senators that this “senate has
absolutely no respect on this
campus” and that a revision of
the constitution is merely putting
the blame in the wrong place.
Henry Simon, the “oldest living
senator on the floor” supported
Mr. Feldman’s comments by adding that a sense of sharing and
commitment is vital to a good
working senate.

HENRY SIMON
.

.

.

oldest living Senator

faithfully execute the office of
and will to the
best of my ability preserve and
defend the statutes and by-laws
of this institution
When this was completed, Mr.
Dcveaux was given a standing
ovation by all present in the

Rights Committee

the Student

Welfare Committee, the Convocations Committee, the Elections Committee, the General
Grounds Committee, the National
Student Association Committee,
the Student Senate Discount Service, and the Activities Committee.

Rights Movement CORE Members Keep Vigil
Arouses Public
For Selma Marchers Safety
By DANIEL ACKER

During the past few weeks the
events

occuring

and

the

atti-

tudes manifested in opposition to
the voter registration drive in
Selma, Alabama, have brought
the nation closer to the civil
rights struggle. The much pub-

The Buffalo Chapter of CORE
a five day around-the-

clock vigil outside the Federal

the safety of the march partici
pants.
CORE, supplied with members

those participating in the march

of SUNYAB’s Civil Rights Committee. as well as local residents,
has maintained a 24 hour a day
vigil. Four pickets at a time are
constantly outside the Federal

began

Court Building in Niagara Square
on Sunday, March 21, Its purpose is to demonstrate support
and concern for the safety of

licized situation in the Alabama
"Black Belt” town has undeniably
aroused an array of feelings

among

the general public; but

involved in and
Professor Henri Peyre will speak on “The Crisis of to those already
dedicated to the civil rights moveModern Man as Seen by Malraux and Camus,’’ Thursday ment,
the trouble in Selma, alat 7:30 p.m. in Butler Auditorium of Capen Hall,
most of necessity, means much
ProSterling
Professor Peyre, internationally-known
more. More than any other event,
fessor of French at Yale University, and for 25 years the Selma struggle, including the
Chairman of Yale’s Department of Romance Languages, death of Reverend Reeb, has
made it unthinkable for the peois a noted authority on European literature
ple of America, whether pro or
Professor Peyre has a distingcon the movement, to avoid holduished reputation as author and
ing an opinion on the issue of

critic and has been described as
one of the few truly well-read
scholars in the country. In a New
Vork Times review of his book,
Writers
Critics” (1944), Pro-

civil rights. This accomplishment
of involving everyone in the
“Negro Question” has long been
a goal of civil rights groups. Of
course the support of every citizen Is the desired end, but the
defeat of apathy is an important

&amp;

fessor

Peyre was praised by Howard Mumford Jones as “the
author who has read everybody

step.

and Everything." Reviewer Jones
went on to conclude that “Professor Peyre . . , embodies his
own theory that scholarship has
a duty to the public to lead

Workshop Hold

adventurously.”
His three

most recent books

nave been “Literature and Sin-

■

cerity,” published in 1963 by the
a 'e University Press;
“Contemporary French Literature, A Cri,‘5'a* Anthology," Harper &amp; Row,
1964: and "Splendors of Christen
dom,” an illustrated art book
Published by Time &amp; Life magazmes in 1964.

Professor

Peyre served

as Presi

In view of these happenings,
rights organizations are
stepping up their activities, especially in the area of non-violent
demonstrations, so that they may
take advantage of the recent
awakening of the national conscience. A local preparation for
this increase in activity took
place here on campus Saturday,
March 13, when Luther Burnett,
Chairman of Buffalo Core, held
a non-violent workshop for civil
rights workers 6f the University
(Cont’d onP. 11)

civil

PROFESSOR HENRI PEYRE
dent of the Modern Language
Association in 1960 and also as
President of the American Association of Teachers of French
in 1959-1960

CORE VIGIL IN ITS

from Selma to Montgomery,
Alabama for voter registration.
Luther Burnette, chairman of
Buffalo CORE, said that he acknowledges the fact that the
Federal Government is doing all
it can to protect the marchers.
The demonstration is not a protest, but to show cocnern lor

FINAL HOURS

Court Building. The pickets work
on a three hour shift and will
continue to do so until the

marchers reach their destination.
The anticipated arrival at Montgomery is the afternoon of March
25, CORE is planning a ceremony
to be held at that time to mark
the end of the vigil.

�Debate Competitions
In New York, Cortland
Two varsity teams composed of
Clinton Devaux and Carl Levine,
and Robert Dragone and Richard
Fleisher represented the S.U.N.Y.
at Buffalo at the debate tournament at Brooklyn College in New
York City last week-end. Debating both sides of the national
topid, the teams emerged with a
total win-loss record of five and
seven, defeating such formidable
teams as M. I. T,, Mt. Holyoke,
Rutgers, and the University of
Vermont. The Carson Newman
team from eastern Tennessee
won the tournament with a 10-0
record

This week-end, Diane Hayes,
Hcdda Bcckmen, Ellen Ableson,
and Barbara Glegola will attend
the varsity division of the debate
tournament at the S.U.N.Y. at
Cortland. The topic for debate
will be: Resolved, That The Federal Government Should Estab
lish a National Program of Public
Work for The Unemployed.

Library Contest
The UB Browsing Library is
sponsoring its annual book contest now. There is still time to
apply. Students in all divisions
are invited to participate in the
contest. A first prize of $100, a
$50 second prize, and a $25 third
prize will be awarded.
The requirements are outlined
below:

1. A collection of books, hard
or soft covered, on a single topic
or within a limited field.
2, No fewer than 15 books or
more than 25 books. Submit
a
short paper telling why,
when and how the books were
collected are all that is needed
to compete. Presentation of the
awards will be made in April

Manuscripts, a UB literary publication, is now
accepting contributions for
its May, 1965 issue. Any
amateur unpublished poetry, short stories, essays,
etc. may be submitted. All
contributions are to be
typewritten if possible and
mailed or submitted to;

Support

Box 24, Norton
c/o Mike Taylor, editor
or to any current staff worker

Our

Advertisers
LAST CHANCE!!!
SUNY EUROPE FLIGHT

New Ideas Planned
For Spring Weekend
Spring Weekend 1965 will bei
held April 30 to May 2. There
have been many new ideas presented this year which the Spring
Weekend Committee feels will
add greatly to the whole idea of
Spring Weekend. The plans involve not only the whole campus,
but the citizens of our community.

The main event of the week-

end is the carnival which

us the name “UB Karni-bull.”
In conjunction with it will be
several other events during the
proceeding week which enclude:
feature films, Stunt Nile, the
heralding and float parades, the
concert at Kleinhans Music Hall,
the dance at thq Town Casino,
and the traditional Mr. Faculty
and Queen contests. The carnival
itself will include rides and game
booths and will be held on May
I and 2.

or organization may sponsor a
candidate. Applications must be
in Room 215 Norton by Wednesday, March 31 at 3:00. Also
available at the candy counter
are applications to work in the
same booths at the carnival. Any
student who wishes to help out
may choose his own time.

unusual

one-year program

Round Trip

Call 649-3115

JUNIOR TEAR

INTERESTED?
"A School District On The
Move" has openings in most
secondary areas for the best
experienced and new teachers
interested In a real team teaching experience, and in a nongraded, continuous progress
educational program.

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Three undergraduate colleges offer students from all parts of
the United States an opportunity to spend their junior year in
the stimulating environment of the University’s Washington
Square Center. Small classes; new residence halls.
Program open to students who are recommended by the deans
of the colleges to which they will return for their degrees.

Apply to the
Liverpool Central Schools
Liverpool, N. Y.
.

t

f

gives

Applications are available at
the Norton candy counter for
candidates for the Mr, Faculty
contest. Any group of students

MANUSCRIPTS

$243

Friday, March 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Washington Square College of Arts and Science
School of Commerce

School of Education

Plaza Shoe
Repair

Slaughter to Address
Christian Scientists
A Christian Science Lecture entitled “Where Are You Going?”
will take place Tuesday at 8:00
p.m. in the Conference Theater.
Elbert R. Slaughter will be the
featured speaker.
Mr. Slaughter is currently on a

tour of the continent as a member of the Board of Lectureship
of The First Church of Christ
Scientist, in Boston, Mass. He is
a native of Texas, and attended
Southern Methodist University.
Once a lumberman and vice president of a savings and loan association, he withdrew from business in 1945 to devote full time
to the Christian Science healing
practice. He resides in Dallas.
Mr. Salughter believes that
everyone is on a mental journey,
and his lecture is described as an

exploration of the journey to
“spiritual reality” which must
take place within the conscious-

Who: graduating engineers and scientists in
all disciplines.

Why: become a problem-solver and advisor
to users of IBM computer systems in areas
such as
•

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Open 9 a.m.

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communications-based information
systems
time-shared computer systems
graphic data processing
computer-controlled manufacturing
systems
management operating systems
engineering design automation

When: as soon as you graduate, IBM will give
you comprehensive training, both in the
classroom and on the job.
Where:

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Please send me the brochure JUNIOR YEAR IN
NEW YORK and the catalog for
□ Washington Square College of Arts and Science
□ School of Commerce
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I am also interested in
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ELBERT R. SLAUGHTER
ness of every individual. The lecture is being sponsored by the
campus Christian Science Organi

in all principal cities of the U.S,

How: see your placement director, visit the

A

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nearest IBM branch office, or write to R. W.
Bower, IBM Corporation, Room 301, 731
James Street, Syracuse, New York 13203.

IBM
data processing

division

�March 26, 1965

Friday/

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Interfraternity Council Elects
‘Time’ Editor Bruce Henderson Speaks
On Ethics and Responsibility of the Press Officers Mingle Is President
;

the
The first of two parts of
series
Committee’s
Convocation
dealing with the press was held
Wednesday, March 24. Bruce Henderson, a member of the Editorpreial Board of Time Magazine
topic
under
the
of
talk
sented a
Freedom, Ethics, nad Responsibility of the Press”.

■

view its own responsibility. In
presenting news, the press should
make it truthful, intelligent, interesting, provocative, and if possible entertaining. The goal of an
article is "not so much what you
get on paper but off paper into
the reader’s mind.”

tion over any more frequent one

The Interfraternity Council
as allowing greater research into elected officers for 1965-1966
Monday, March 22. Elected were:
the issue and stated, “Good rePresident, Don Mingle; Viceporting is a good search for truth President, Dave Franko; Treaswhich is not always so obvious urer, Curt Montgomery; Recording Secretary, Dave Cowen; Coras it may appear,” The responsibility of a publication can only
be discharged by presenting the
most accurate story. Responsibility and ethics overlap in the

Mr. Henderson stated that the
acts as' a constant discoverer of our problems. It is
like navigating an old fashioned
airplane by little corrections all
the time; the plane gets where
u is going. The free press should
not be taken for granted. To appreciate the essential job that
such a press performs, it is per-

world of the press.

free press

Interpretation when it is called
for is an ethical duty of the press.
It is as unfair to leave the reader with just the facts when they
are seemingly unconnected as
presenting the reader with erroneous information. When arguments which are false in content are to be presented it is
the publication’s duty to supply
facts to counter them if they are
available. The discussion concluded with questions from the
audience. The second part of the
series will take place today at
3:00 in Room 329 Norton.

haps necessary to experience a
lazy and/or censored press which

does not present the problems to
the people. Freedom implies re-

sponsibility.
The speaker felt that any moves
to “regulate” the press should be

viewed with extreme caution. It
is hard to pin down the fine line
between responsibility and suppressing the individual’s freedom. It is more desirable that
the press should determine and

Curt Montgomery, is majoring in
Engineering Science. He is editor
of the IFC Greek Handbook and
has served on the Engineering
Student Council. He was president of his freshman and sophomore classes in Engineering. Curt

BRUCE HENDERSON
Time Editor
Mr. Henderson expressed the
advantage of a weekly publica.

.

.

Your I .D. Card
is Worth 10% at

Gddmatfs
Sfaed

BOULEVARD MALL

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
U.S. Ked

Pappagallo

Vinors Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim
E ski loo and
Campus Boots

NEW IFC OFFICERS L to R; Chick Fohl, David Cowan, Dava Franko,
Don Mingle, Curtiss Montgomery, Barry Bienstock

responding Secretary, Barry BeinSergeant at arms, Ship

stock;
Fohl.

Don Mingle, a member of Tau
Kappa Epsilon, is majoring in

Business Administration. He has
served as Pledge Master of his
fraternity. In IFC, he is co-chairman of Greek Week end and
served as a representative to the
National Interfraternity Conference. A member of the varsity
tennis and squash teams, he has
maintained an overall average of
2.3.

Dave Franko is a member of
Phi Kappa Psi majoring in Psychology. In Phi Psi, Dave has
served as Corresponding Secretary and Vice-President. In IFC,
he is co-chairman of Greek Weekend and served as a representa
tive to a regional conference of
IFC’s at Columbia College. In
the recent school elections, Dave
was elected to a Senate position
from the Arts and Sciences Di-

Dave Cowen is a member of
Alpha Sigma Phi Fratrenity. He
is current Vice-President of his
fraternity. He is a Junior majoring in Geography. Within the
Council he has been Sports Chairman and member of the Greek
Week-end Committee.
Barry Bienstock, a member of
Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity, has
served on the council for two
years and has been a member of
the Violations Committee and cochairman , of the Concert Committee. Presently he is a junior
in Arts and Sciences.

Majoring in psychology, Skip
Fohl is a member of Alpha Kappa
Psi. He is Master of Ritual in
his Fraternity and is AKY’s Senior Representative to the IFC.
Skip has served the IFC by being
chairman of the scholarship committee and was instrumental in
establishing the IFC scholarship.

vision,

and many other brands

A member of Phi Lambda Tau,
was also elected to the Student
Senate in the past election.

There will lie a general
staff meeting of all Spectrum personnel anil those
who are interested in writing for the paper today at
3:00 p.m.
JOB OPPORTUNITIES

Looking For Vacation Employment?

Dude Ranches, Mountain ReFor information write Rocky Mtn. P.O.
Box 87, Kearney, Neb. Send
sorts A Hotels.

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Return this Reservation Blank with the Proper
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free illustrated brochure

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and price list.

machined

(one step
you may

so it can never freeze

with water,
won t have anything to do
fish.
So we saw no reason to name it after a

VOLKSWAGEN
Fall* Blvd.
1500 Niagara

Just North of

Address
Zone

ioolovord Moll,

app

Tw»o F*»r

Phone 836-4600

Buffalo Address

it's among

HILLEL Seder Friday, April 16, $2.00 per person
Lunch on Monday, April 19. 5 0&lt; per person
Lunch on Tuesday, April 20, 50r per person

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And it's so well
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add od
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a

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Supper on Wednesday, April 21, $1.00 per person

$

For Home Hospitality, CALL HILLEL HOUSE,
IF 6-4540 for arrangements

�Sartre
and Reneges

Senator Wayne Morris, in the
Magazine of January 17, 1965, commented, “Ten years
ago the United States embarked upon an adventure in
South Vietnam that was just about one hundred years
out of date. While Britain, France and the Netherlands
were terminating their rule over their Asiatic cplonies,
its own
the United States began trying to
beachhead on the Asiatic mainland.
“In the last decade we have explained our policy
as one of helping a free government resist Communist
subversion But South Vietnam never had a free government. In its ten years of existence its governments have
been picked for it by the United States and maintained
by our heavy doses of economic and military aid.
“The fraudulence of our claim has been starkly
exposed by the successive coups in Saigon and by the
by
piecing together of one government after another
the American Embassy. The major tools we have used
in manipulating political and military leaders have been
various threats and promises regarding our aid, which
now hovers around the level of $600 million a year in
This sum is exclusive
a country of 14 million people.
of the cost of keeping 2:5,000 American ‘advisers’ and
large contingents of aircraft in the country.
There is no question that we do not belong in
Vietnam. Further there is no question in our minds
that we should pull out.
The unpopular war is being (ought with American
weapons, not Communist. These arms have been captured and are now being used against us. With each
day we are putting more and more money into a lossing
battle. More important some of that money is being used
against us.

As of this writing the Red Chinese; in an editorial
in the official Communist newspaper People’s Daily,
have said that they are ready to send men to aid the Viet
Cong,

There is a strong possibility that Vietnam will bea secondary issue when the military of the
United States and China are matched against each
other. This is especially true when one considers that
the entire situation is under direct military control. We
distrust the military mind.
We raise the question how far the United States is
going to go with their policy of controlled escalation. We
When will we
are already bombing North Vietnam.
bomb the Chinese mainland?
While we are losing this military fiasco in South
Vietnam what is the United Nations doing? They are
powerless.
Hut what if North Vietnam was doing the
bombing, what charges would the United States bring
up in the. United Nations?
If China and the United States come to a confrontation over Vietnam will they use The Bomb? The world
and all of humanity can not wait for that possibility to
,

come only

occur.

THE MARCH
The Students for a Democratic Society are sponsoring a peace march against the war in Vietnam. The
march, scheduled for April 17, will be held in Washing-

(See news story page 1.)
The Easter season, traditionally associated with
peace, has been the time for many demonstrations and
marches. There could be no greater need for one than

ton.

now

We wholeheartedly support the march on Washing
ton and urge faculty members and students to go. Any
one interested should contact David Gardiner at 896-5324

student

SPECTRUM

of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, NY. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Publication

newspaper

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Ass’t News Editor
Feature Editor
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Peter Rubm
Barbara Strauss
Trudy Stern
Jeremy Taylor
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ann Orszujak
David Edelman

JOHN P KOWAL

JEREMY TAYLOR
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Alice 0»,r and?f
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Kurman, Jo Anne Leegant, Eileen Tcifter, Sue Greene, Bill Cortes, Joey
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by

MARGO WALLACH

Wednesday, March 17, Jean
Paul Sartre dispatched a telegram to Cornell Universitys

President James A. Perkins,
somewhat meritoriously breaking
his anxiously-awaited speaking
engagement at the University.
Mr. Sartre was scheduled to present a five-day lecture series from
April 7-14 on “Ethics and History.” His telegram follows:
"The politics of violence practiced in Viet Nam by the United
States Goverment with the approval of the majority of the
American people constitutes for
me a major obstacle to my coming to the United States. Deeply
regret being obliged to break
the commitment made. Beg you
to believe in my high esteem for
Cornell and for you. Letter follows."
Rumor has it that Mr. Sartre
forfeited $25,000 by' his refusal
to speak at Cornell. How can one
refrain from almost worshipping
a writer and philosopher who
lives every breath of his life by
and for his philosophy?
Existentialism
For those of you who are not
familiar with Sartre, he is an
existentialist. According to Web-

ster's

New Collegiate Dictionary,
existentialism is defined as “a

theory which states that the existence of the individual precedes
his essence." Philosophical exist“a theory
entialism involves
which stresses the individual’s
responsibility for making himself what he is." Sartre seems
willing to make some startling
sacrifices to live his philosophy.
How many other men can we recognize or name for such thorough and devoted endeavors to
uphold a ideology? Even small,
common, relatively untantalized
clergymen who voluntarily direct
their lives toward preaching,
teaching, and practicing the promotion of the ideals of a religion

seldom maintain such clear slates
relation to their ideals) as
that of Sartre (in relation to his
ideals). And it must be remembered that Sartre’s every move
is closely followed by news
media, who perhaps are holding
their breaths waiting to unmask
a discrepancy in Sartre’s conduct.
(in

Judgments Valid
The only aspect of Sartre’s decision that is questionable is his
certainty that the majority of
the American people approve of
the United States Government
oolicy of violence in Viet Nam.
After all. it surely is not the
majority of Americans who voice

their

opinions

in

newspapers,

and on radio and television. Perhaps those that oppose our policy
are afraid to speak their minds;
although if this is the case, their
opposition serves no purpose and
may as well be considered null
and void. But from what source
docs Mr. Sartre obtain his statis-

The Peace Corps—
Humanity's Boon or Fraud
The Peace Corps is America’s
newest sacred cow. After the ini-

tial

ultra

conservative

clamor

against it died down, not a single

harsh word has been uttered.
Its friends have been vocal, its
opponents have been converted
or convinced of the wisdom of
silence. A steady flow of propaganda floods campuses across
the nation promising high adventure in glowing terms;

“Africa.” The word is full of
exotic connotations. Images of

Mt. Kilimanjaro, big game pre-

serves, and vine-twisted jungles
comes to mind. Memories of Zan-

zibar, the Indian Ocean, and spectacular waterfalls remind us of
a rich and colorful history. But
Africa has a future, too, and it
is the job of the Peace Corps
Volunteers to help Africa realize
that fututre.”

At any moment one expects

to hear “Dr. Livingston, 1

pre-

sume.”

But what are the real aims and
accomplishments of the Peace
Corps? On the positive side, there
are real human relationships and
an increase of people’s knowledge
about other people. This means
aew textbooks for native languages aid customs, and new
living for many who once had
nothing but despair.
On the other hand, the motives behind the Peace Corps
and its function are less admir
able. Christian missionaries bringing the faith followed by armies
bringing colonialism are no longer effective methods of control
over the native people. We need
a more sophisticated method of
colonialism to render the indigenous population industriable;
that is, condition them to accept
our economic framework and a
role in our own system of economic relations. This genera'ly
means that they become a source
for raw materials, a market for
manufactured goods and a source
of cheap labor. None of the countries that have accepted volunteers are outride of the American
sphere of influence. Viet-nam,
for example, has no P. C. V’s, Our
puppet invited the War Corps,
instead, to protect American interests.
a
piecemeal approach to problems
the solutions to which do not lie
within the framework of the existing social order. The Peace

The Peace Corps provides

Corps pawn is often manipulated
and' undercut by the chessgame

of economic control. Latin Ameri-

ca has pressing social and economic problems which must be
recognized. In Brazil 62 per cent
of the arable land belongs to
3 per cent of the population; 0 5
per cent is divided up into 400,000 parcels of less than 5 hectares; there are 9 million landless peasants of whom 4 million
are not paid wages in money.
Similar conditions ‘exist in most

Of the other Latin American
Countries. Brazil has one of the
largest contingents of P. C. V’s
yet all of their efforts were
negated by a military coup at
with American weapons which
ousted the duly elected Goulart
government for attempting land
deform which was in accordance
with the Alliance for Progress
and approved by President Kennedy. The coup invented a Communist plot as an excuse for their
power grab. President Johnson
welcomed these champions of
tyranny in a speech on April 2,
1964.

“The American people have
watched with anxiety the political and economic difficulties
through which your great nation
has been passing . . . The relations and, friendship and cooperation between our two governments and peoples are
a
precious asset in the interests of
peace and prosperity and liberty
in this hemisphere and in the
whole world. I look forward to
the continued strengthening of
those relations and to our intensified cooperation in the interests of economic progress and
social justice for all.”
...

Latin American expenditures
for arms average $1.5 billion per
year and almost all of it is spent
in the U. S. on obsolete weapons.
The Alliance for Reaction, a coaltion among the local military
and

landed

oligarchs

working

hand in hand with the rightist
Catholic parties, Standard Oil,
the United Fruit Co., the Puerto
Rican Sugar Co., the Pentagon,
and the CIA successfully negates
any real social progress beyond
the industrialization of the people,

The Peace Corps must be
judged a success or failure only
in relation to how it promotes
American foreign policy. The

much advertised humanitarianism
is really irrevelent. If the Peace
Corps fails to extend the Ameri
can sphere of influence, we will
see this sacred cow slaughtered
as a white elephant.

TKE PLAYMATES

tics? Furthermore, if his judgments are valid, would not a
lecture-tour by him on “Ethics"
be all the more purposeful and
necessary for Americans?
Finally, members of the French
department here at U.B. have asserted that Sartre and his philosophy have had an amazingly sig

riificant effect

upon national gov-

ernments throughout the world.
They all fear his verbal attacks.
Perhaps the world could benefit
by a few more Jean Paul Sartres!

Steve

Photography Staff David Collins. Pete Bonneau. Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank’, Stanley Szymanowski. Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder, Dave Fox,
Al Gruber

Palmer, Lee Corey

By John G. Medwid

...

The War in Vietnam
A March on Washington
New York Times

THE

The Murder of Gonzago

Mary Lou

LISTEN
TO
WBFO

TICE

PLAYMATE CANDIDATES L to R: Barbara

Glegota,

Carol Ku

jawa, Joanne Sgroi, Wendy Baum, Anne Sachs

Tau Kappa Epsilon will sponsor the Playboy Party at the Camelot Motor Inn in Blasdell, New
York, tonight from 9:00 p.m. to
1:00 a m. The Hal Vincent Orchestra will play. Teke will elect a
playmate from one of five sorority candidates. They are: |Miss

Kujawa, Theta Chi:
Sax, Sigma Delta Tau: Wei
Baum, Chi Omega; Barbara
gota. Phi Zcta Chi: Joanne Sg
Alpha Gamma Delta.
Tickets may be purchased fr
any Teke inember and in-Nor
Lobby. The party is open to

Carol

(

the Editor

The official

Friday, March 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

�Friday,

March 26, 1965

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

•

•

•

Modern Dance at
The Buffalo Festival
By TOM HANNA
I was standing in front of Larry
Pouns’ “Orange Crush” with
Mike Melatonov, We were talking about The Dance. Merce Cunningham had done with Buffalo

and her festival. We had done
with Merce Cunningham, Mike
said he had just seen the Leningrad ballet in Philadelphia, and
he could not get over the feeling
that Ballet and Modern Dance
and Modern Dance and Ballet was

just about the same thing, no
say, new. It was the visible discipline of Cunningham that
stopped me: you can not help
feeling how hard they all work
at it. I wondered, and Mike did
too, if that was what dance was

all about. What did Cunningham
have to do with Larry Pouns, and
why not? But that’s OK, because
We had nothing against Discipline in the arts.
A half hour later, we attended
Jill Johnston’s lecture-collage on
the very subject. When it was
over, Mike was offended, and I
did not know. “C’est tout," she
said, and, indeed, that was true.
As it was, we did not know what
she was talking about, because
we had not yet seen The Judson
Art Theater. Mike took a plane
to Columbus. 1 was stuck in Buffalo. On the appointed evening,
I arrived at Upton Hall to find
out what it was 1 did not know.
1 found out some things. Some
would like to call what we
watched Events, to distinguish

Nearing Compares Vietnam
To the Marches of Hitler
Dr. Scott Nearing, author of
Dollar Diplomacy, The Twilight
of an Empire, and long time radical liberal spokesman, addressed
UB students and faculty this
week on the United States’ policy in Viet Nam. Dr. Nearing compared the “madcap adventures
of the Washington Government,”
in their position in South East
Asia to the marches of U.S. power
of Napoleon and Hitler.
Dr,

Nearing described the history of U.S. power in Asia following Japanese expulsion by the
Allies in 1945. He said that as

the Allied powers left the East
to the people of the area a power
vacuum was created. He said the
United States’ fear that mighty
China would flow into this vacuum resulted in the inauguration
»f the Cold War policy which
has
reached a hot climax in the Ko.
rean War.
Dr. Nearing said that the Asian
uthold gained by the U.S. in the
mean situation served as a base
or the
occupation of Taiwan Isund, the key to the vital chain
1 islands that form the defense
xTimeter to Asia." Dr. Nearing
uoted General MacArthur. say's that control of the chain of
'■lands from Korea to the head

1

Indonesia makes the Pacific
mean an American Sea.

1

'

pointed out that the present
Policy in Viet Nam dates
k as far as 1898 when after
rating the Philippines from
oush control, the “U S. found
mselves in- the embarrassing
■lion of having the Philippines
upied by Filipinos,” He added
Ihe U.S. has liberated them.

Ur

Nearing said

that accord-

’

to U.S. spokesmen, including
'■neral Maxwell Taylor, the U.S.
m Viet Nam to free the counfrom the threat of Commu!Sm - Dr Nearing asserted that
le U.S. is in
Viet Nam to make,
e Vietnamese free to do as we

•le said a friction is
maintained
U.S. is in South Viet
ni to preserve
the freedom of
South Vietnamese people. Dr.
ar ing felt
that the Liberation

at the

v

Front

in Viet Nam was representative of the majority of the peo-

ple.

He quoted Robert McNamara
as saying that the reason we are

involved in South Viet Nam is
the strategic importance of South
East Asia with rich Indonesia as
the chief prize to be gained. He
also mentioned U.S. interest in
containing Communism and preventing it from moving south of
China, “the logical center of Asian culture.” He called South
East Asia the bridge to the north
for U.S. power.

Dr. Nearing said that the socialist movement in Asia has potential for dealing a mortal blow
to the capitalist imperialists of
the world. “Raw materials and
resources become the property of
the people involved, and end good
markets, cheap labor and the resources for the U.S.”
“The United States is trying
to build an empire. The effort
is doomed in advance, just as
was Napoleon and Hitler’s”. He
said that the only hope for a
U.S. victory in its effort lies in
its huge nuclear stockpile which
would make it possible for us to
master over a populationless desert. He said that after eighteen
years of war South East Asians
have suffered a million casualties and it is only the beginning.
Dr. Nearing is a robust 83 years
old. In 1915 he was involved in
one of the first court eases involving academic freedom at the

University of Pennsylvania where
he was doing an investigation of
child labor laws. He served as
Dean of the College of Arts at

the University of Toledo. During
W.W. I he was acquitted df an indictment which resulted from his
writing of the Great Madness, declaiming the war. Dr. Nearing
has run for Congress on the Socialist Party ticket and he and
his wife are co-authors of one of
the only books on the art of maple sugar tapping.

them from Happenings. It would
take a while to explain those
terms to them what do not know
them, so I will rest with a standard term. They were dances. They
really were. Lucinda Childs, for
instance, performed a cold, nearly obscene, exercise with sponge
hotdogs and bread, flexible mesh
lettuce basket, blue polyethylene
bag, sheet, purple socks, standing plywood board, and chair
and table. Her dance involved
mouth, vanity, headstand, her

very own sense of running, walking, sitting, lying, and leaving.
Also jumping and stomping. That
is to say, that while she planned
it out as dance, in that old sense,
so did she, in fact, move according to who she is. What seemed
to be happening to the dance
was what has already happened
elsewhere in the arts. Discipline
was not gone. It was just that
we no longer felt that discipline
was more important than its ve-

hicle
the dancer. Now Jill
Johnston’s awkward playing on
the stage the day before seemed
to have an explanation. The
dance has escaped its own carefully constructed boundaries. Expressionism in dance was replaced by the thing itself.
That would have been enough
for me for one evening, because
it answered that question Mike
and I had been asking. But there
was much more: in fact, as it
turned out, the audience was put
in the postion of having to be
as straight about things as the
dancers. Miss Child’s “Carnation"
was succeeded by Robert Morris'
“Untitled.” This was not a coy
appelation, as It turned out. It
was simply that the piece had just
been finished that afternoon, and
was not ready to be named. Music
appeared in the program for the
first time. Verdi, I think. Also
words, a sort of author’s narrative of some facets of his crea
tion. Also slides. In fact the very
slides Mr. Morris told about in
his story. Of the three dancers,
two (Mr. Morris and Yvonne
Rainer) were naked throughout
the dance. The fact of their
nudity was both central and unimportant: that is, there wbuld
have been no dance had they
been clothed, but once the fact
was accepted, no one, least of all
the dancers themselves, paid
much attention to that particular
aspect Even the atendant policeman, once the Life photographer
had snapped his picture, relaxed
into an identity with himself
instead of his duty.
—

SKETCH
Metamorphosis
It is a warm day in the Spring
of 1963. We find Emily John
wandering through the streets
of her favorite city, New York.
She has never been in any other
city, but she knows New York is
her favorite. She has just come
from Central Park and a walk in
the fifties and is now strolling
through Greenwich Village. It
seems strange to look at the beatniks walking around dressed in
dungarees and sweatshirts with
their hair unkempt and long.
Emily is dressed as any respectable high school girl should be
dressed. She is wearing her favorite pair of brown penny loafers, kneesocks, plaid skirt and
wine color shell. In her high
school, Emily would feel totally
secure, dressed as she is. But in
the Village, she is an outsider
and knows it. To cover her feelings of insecurity in the presence of the beatniks, she tells
herself that she never would be
seen in such sloppy clothing and
that anyone who would wear such
outfits must be a degenerate and
a deviated prevert with subversive bodily fluids. Emily leaves
the Village and returns to the
security of her own little World.
She is going to a fraternity party
at Jamaica High School, This involves traveling, but Emily
doesn’t mind. The fraternities at
her high school do not compare
to the ones at Jamaica. Emily’s
life revolves around fraternities
and who she is going to go out
with Saturday night. In addition
to her interest in fraternities,

Emily

is

also

overwhelmingly

consumed with passion for her
sorority. She spends her life traveling with her sisters to different fraternities. Emily believes

the training she has received in
sorority life and her forays to Houston

highsehool fraternity and

Street for clothes has sufficiently prepared her

for college life,

This is Emily John. She is real.
There is nothing pseudo about
her. She is as real as her penny
loafers. Materialism is her doctrine of life because it is tangible. Her mind remains a vacuum, but ready to suck up what
college has to offer.
The second chapter of this
trauma finds our girl Emily on
the sprawling campus of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo. Emily is very impressed
by the ivy covered buildings
dripping with tradition and spirit. She is immediately accosted
by a brother of Beta Sigma Alpha and is invited to a closed
party that evening. Emily dresses
for this great event in her best
red, white and blue tennis
sweater, blue slacks, white socks
and her omnipresent brown
penny loafers, Emily’s life is one
merry round of parties, parties
and more parties. She sits in the
center lounge for hours every
day and is overjoyed at the immediate acceptance that she has
gained by the fraternities, even
though she has already ruled out
all other fraternities except Beta
Sigma Alpha. Life continued
along this gay path until Emily
met someone totally different
than what she had been accustomed to. It was at a dance and
he was not in a fraternity. This
fact startled Emily, as she had
been brought up to believe that
anyone who was anything belonged to a fraternity. He was
not interested in the life led by
the typical frater. Emily found
that small doubts were creeping
into her mind as she talked to
him, about whether or not reality
was all that she had believed it
to be. This was the beginning.
As the year went on, Emily
emotionally involved with this
person, who at first she had regarded as a toy. She found herself spending less time in the
(Contd. on P. 11)

Neighborhood House Motto:
Something For Everyone
Folks will not let you join the
Peace Corps, have not got trans-

portation to Selma, why not join
Neighborhood House? Located at
76 Orange St., Neighborhod
House is a United Fund organization providing education and rec-

to, but there isn't always time.
More volunteers could fulfill her

desires. .
After 3:30 p.m. the school chib
dren come to use the gym, the
craft shop, the art room and
sometimes have a special dance

"PAMELA LOVES TO BE READ TO"

:

to the community. It’s
motto is "Something for everyone” and ranges from pre-schoolers to Golden Age—from reading
classes and nursing clinics to
craft shops.. .The role of Neighborhood House is to take action in
the areas of prevention; intervention and remedial work to
further learning for a better
community.
Volunteers find the pre-schpol
very rewarding simply because
they are needed. The children as
well as you, the volunteer, benefit greatly frpm individual at
tention. Pamela loves to be read
reation

class or club. The House makes
available a place to go and something to do allowing for personal
interaction and growth. A tutoring program is held on Wednesday evenings and Saturday mornings.

The children are alive with the

joys of childhood, but also have
the problems of low income urban life. You can help with these
concerns in the community, and
the city, in your life and others.
Call Neighborhod House 8560363
Join! H«lpl and reap the rewards
of giving of yourself.

�Friday, March 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs
THE OPEN FORUM

Publish or Perish Is No
Explanation for Faculty Apathy

By LEONARD PORT
(Instructor ol English)
so you assign fewer papers and
1 certainly agree with Prnfcscut down severely on the cornsor Van Den Berghe that the
quality of teaching at American mentary). Now you have not got
universities is pitifully low. But time for essay questions {and so
give easy-to-grade short
you
I am astonished at his attempts
to explain the cause Of poor in- answer tests). Now you have not
struction. According to Professor got time to squeeze out that last
preparation (and so you cover
Van Den Berghe the present
method of survival for college
teachers, “publish or perish,” has
been greatly overstressed as an
explanation of faculty apathy
towards their teaching and
towards their students. I feel that

the extensive costs of this shallow procedure (forced publication) have not been
stressed
enough

difference and humiliation you
have experienced as a student
On to your students. Now in order
to be an exciting and effective
lecturer you must spend a great
deal of time digesting your subject matter and carefully plan
ning how you will present this
material to your students. Very
soon, however, it is made clear to
you that you will lose your job
if you do not use your time for
something else: i.e. the writing
of articles or books. And why
should these articles and books
be wrtiten? For the sake of hu-

man knowledge or scholarship?
Sadly, no. The articles are to be
written so that you will make
yourself and your department
famous. The articles are to be
written so that you can avoid
being fired. The articles arc
written so that you can provide
money for rent and . food (for
yourself, and probably also for a
wife and children). In Short, the
articles are written so that you
can survive.
So what has happened to your
teaching now that you have been
economically pressured into devoting your time to writing? Now
you haven't the time, or energy,
to prepare for classes Well
enough to clearly relate your ma
tcnal to your students. Now you
haven’t got the lime to present
your stuff not, merely clearly
but stimulatingly Now you rea
lire how many long hours are
needed to be a real educator for
fifty minutes Now you have ndt
got lime to see students at your
office Now you have not got lime
to grade papers adequately (and

“German Writing Today,” Victor Lange, Professor of German
Literature, Princeton University.
Wed., April 7, 7:30 p.m.
(in English)

"Unamuno ~y , la Literatura,”
Guillermo Diaz-Plaja, Barcelona,
visiting Professor of Spanish,
SUNYAB. Thursday, April 15,
8:30 p.m., Dicfendorf 148.
(in Spanish)
“Samuel Becket,” Jean-Jacques
Mayoux, Professor of Compara-

tive Literature, The

Sarbonne,

currently Visiting Professor, Harvard University. Friday, April
23, 4:30 p.m., Diefendorf 148.
(in French)

up, and take it out on the stu
dents, by giving a surprise quiz).
Now you have not time for personal attention for students who
need help for their shortcomings, or praise for their accomplishments. Now you have not
got time to teach.

“Goya, Espejo de la Espana de
su Tiempo,” Guillermo Diaz-Plaja.
Monday, May 3, 8:30 p.m., Crosby
125.
(illustrated in Spanish)

Spring Arts Festival Will Present Norman
Walker Dance Company, In White America’
6

The third annual Spring Arts
Festival, April 4-11, will present
the Norman Walker Dance Company and the off-Broadway play
"In White America” as the highabyss of disdain occupied by
lights of the week. Eileen Palley
hordes of other faculty members and Pat Jones, chairmen of the
who have, for the same reason,
Spring Festival, have organized
given up teaching as a serious a
week of diverse programs
concern. Your appearance at around the theme "Contempoeach class in front of a roomful rary America.”
of young people is, then, not
The week, which will be opened
teaching, but the guise of teachby a panel discussion lead by Dr,
ing. It is, at best, simply boring Cook on “The Arts Today,” will
or, at worst, horrifyingly fraudu
include “Impromptu,” a one-act
lent. Then what do you do with play by the Student Dramatic Sothe good students who make intellectual and personal demands
upon you? You do what any
human being does when he has
not got the goods he was supBy PENNY SPILLER
posed to deliver: you use your
The overpowering response to
position of authority to fake, to
the optic, kenetie and cybernetic
stall and finally to put tne stuart exhibition which will be held
You
there
is
down.
sec
dents
through April 11th at the Alalso no bill to be paid for disbright-Knox Gallery indicates the
couraging good students (and
public’s hunger for anything new.
to
enfailing
none
for
certainly
However, this response may have
courage mediocre or poor ones).
caused partially by the exbeen
not
you
do
even
have
to
In fact
tensive propaganda devoted to
worry about getting a reputation
of the Arts
as an incredibly bad teacher, the Buffalo Festival such festi
of
Today.
The
value
failure
as
a
bad teacher. Your
vals cannot be .denied but the
Your failure as a teacher is not
words, "new", “fresh” and difthe
to
be
conone of
criteria
ferent” have been applied with
sidered when contract time comes
that
around. And so you have become such appalling frequency
the actual meaning of the wOrds
a teacher who does not teach.
speciiic value of the
Therefore when you consider and the
becomq lost in the
that the "publish or perish” works may
stampede.
standard is adhered to by most cultural
The recent acquisitions of the
of the universities in this coun
right,
try—and when you consider that gallery are, in their own
most new teachers are put in just equally "fresh" and “different"
and have the distinction of histhis situation, you will see clearly
significance.
Perhaps,
why there is a dishearteningly torical
these additions to the Albrgihtlow quality of teaching in AmerKnox collection which are the
ican colleges.
products of previous art trends
Now, reader, remove yourself lack the brash charm and imfrom the uncomfortably . tight mediate excitement of the hewer
shoes Of the new teacher and re
works, but they do embody many
assume your real identity as a of the Same aesthetic Values
student at a university. Perhaps within their more familiar vonow you can best answer Prof
cabulary.
Van Den Bcrghe’s charge that
The additions to the permanent
"one of the basic reasons for collection include Jean Arp’s
(Cont'd on P. 10)
“Animal de Reve”. This beautiAs there is no penalty for poor
leaching (just as there is no reward for excellent teaching) you
can easily slip into the muddy

“mm&amp;, IFX EV0? TAKE ANOTHER
HAUL MV
SABBATICAL WITH VW),
heap bcamimep."

ciety; a “Dialogue” by the poets
Charles Olson, John Weiners, and
Ed Saunders; and an exhibition
of modern sculpture from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Phil
Ochs, a rising folk artist, will preform in Norton Wednesday evening.
Several university departments
are presenting programs in conjunction with the Festival, The
Music Department will present a
band concert Sunday evening,
April 4, and the annual music
comedy Do Re Mi will run from
April 18 thru 14. The appearance

of Philip Evergood is being sponsored by the Art Department.
The Drama and Speech Depart
ment is working with the festival
comittee as co-sponsor of “In
White America.”
The Spring Arts Festival committee hopes to present a program that will encourage student
interest in the fine arts and promote an awareness of the resources of both the University
and the Buffalo community. Tick
ets for festival events will go on
sale at the ticket booth next
week.

Gallery
New Paintings at Albright-Knox
modelled
of the
fully

and

sensitively

bronze captures and reflects light
as does Nicholas Schoffer’s color
organ, but where the qualities of
light produced by the organ are
often spectatcular, the light reflected by the organ are often
spectacular, the light reflected
by the “Animal” is subtle, even
understated. In addition, Arp’s
work is artistic in form and in
effect, whereas Schoffer’s work
is artistic in effect only.
Two works by Paul Gauguin,

“Noix Sculptee’ and "The Spirit
of the Dead Watching” document
this artist's versatility. The gallery now boasts two major works
by Gauguin, the famed “Yellow
Christ” of his Brittany period and
"The Spirit of the Dead Watching” of his Tahatian period. "Noix
Sculptee” contains the same type
of humor shown in Marisol’s
wooden sculpture of Napoleon
and Washington on horseback or
Lichtenstein’s monumental car
toons. Also, “Noix Sculptee” may
be. viewed as a well-executed
form enhanced by conceptual
figurative patterns in relief. Pop
art seldom shows such clever
treatment of artistic double-entendre. “Noix Sculptee has at
least two layers of visual mean
ing, the first spontaneous (the
aspect of humor) and the second,

surf
delayed (the study
articulation). Both Pop and
art rely primarily on the sr
taneous visual meaning. The
culation is merely incidental

a

the imediate effect and, hence

more

specialized.

Perhaps

era of specialization is

thus

fleeted by art.

Van Gogh’s “Tall House”
an immediate, expressionistic

feet, but this effect stands
under dissection of the form,
tent, color, and brush work tt

c

aged by a large amount of pathetic and apathetic teachers. You
are anxious to be a fine teacher.
You care not to inflict the in-

“The Crisis of Modern Man As
Seen by Malraux and Camus,”
Henri M. Peyre, Sterling Professor of French, Yale University.
Thursday, April 1, 7:30 p.m. Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall.

niques. Contemporary art is ni
specialized in that is usually
ploits only one of these arti
means. The newest art foi

make

their statements loir

boldly, and immediately. The
acquisitions make their st
merits with a more shadowed
subtle immediacy.
There is, of course, no

i

Perhaps I can best express my

ideas by asking each student who
is reading this letter to put himself in the shoes of a young
teacher. You are, then, recently
out of graduate school where you
have been wearied and discour-

lows:

judgement on

i

a classroom.)

The Department of Modern
Languages anc( Literature is presenting a Spring Lecture Series
of distinguished speakers. All
lectures arc open to the public.
The events are scheduled as fol-

for the value

different art forms. The Albr
Knox merely provides the
portunity to see many fine
amples of art from many per
The Member's Gallery now
a fine exhibition of Mexican
Columbian artifacts which
pear, at once, ancient and
ern and hence, prove, like,
recent acquisitions, that art
not be “new” to be “fresh

i

Is it known well enough that
the academic departments which
subscribe to this procedure are in
effect committing themselves to
a policy which will induce a
teacher to regard teaching as an
unprofitable burden? Is it known
well enough that the basis for
retaining, and promoting a teacher does not even include a
glimpse into his ability as a
teacher? (There is even good rea
son to use the terms “researcher”
or “writer” in place of teacher,
for how can you call a man a
teacher when his profession does
not care about his capability in

Language Dept.
Presents Spring
Lecture Series

“different”.

�Friday,

March 26, 1965

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
deans and are consistent with opportunities for some students
to elect additional courses in
the recommendations of the Assistant Dean's Council which re- physical education in the sophviewed this matter at some length omore year.
It is felt that this policy is the
over the past several months.
Further, these changes primarily appropriate one to be followed
affect students in University Col- until such time as physical edulege and have the approval of cation facilities are available on
TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old
both Dean Chapin and Acting the new campus after 1968. We
Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix,
Dean Plesur.
feel that this policy represents
before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
Basically, these are the changes: the best compromise in a diffito the week of publication. Stucult situation which has its basis
dent organization notices are not
1. Effective in September of
largely in the inadequacy of presaccepted for publication.
1965 AFROTC will be on a volunent facilities to handle the large
tary
for
but
basis
freshman
will numbers of students.
GENERAL NOTICES
of
who
sophomores
be required
SCIENCES Pre-RegisARTS
have completed the first year
WEEKLY CALENDAR
tration for Juniors and Seniors;
prograin during the current year.
All juniors and seniors in the to advance register during the
March 26-27—
2. Effective in September of
College of Arts and Sciences who
scheduled publicized times. If
Initial Teaching Alphabet
1966 the AFROTC program will
plan to return in the Fall of the Quality Point Average of
Teacher-Training Program: spon1965 may pick up the necessary
be voluntary for both freshmen
such students improves to such
sored by the Western New York
pre-registration materials in front a degree that they become eli- and sophomores.
3. Effective in September of Study Council, the speaker is Dr.
of the Bursar’s Office in Hayes gible to continue in school, they
Albert
Lchiph Uni1965 physical education will be versity,Mazurkiewicz.
Hall between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 will be informed in
Pennsylvania, in Room
after required
June,
two
semesters
for
of
p.m. Monday, April 5; Tuesday,
231,
semester grades are in, concernNorton Hall.
all freshmen who do not enroll
April 6 and Wednesday, April 7.
Fine Arts Film— 'The Bridge
ing later registration dates. StuStudents who do not wish to dents in this category, however, on a voluntary basis in AFROTC.
For the present membership in
Placement Announcements
pre-register or who do not obwho wish to see their advisers
tain their registration materials are encouraged to do so. It would the University Marching Band
The Family Counseling Servremains a substitute for physical ice of Somerset County, a suburon the above designated days
be helpful if these students could
will have to register September make an appointment during the education and those students who ban community, 35 miles from
elect the AFROTC program are
9, the regular registration day.
alphabetically • scheduled times, also excused from any physical New York City, has announced
an opening for a case worker
problem
pressing,
the
is
but,
if
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Stueducation requirement.
in the Gound Brook office. This
they can make an appointment
dents: except those on Strict
4. All sophomores 'who have
agency is a student training cenAcademic Probation, will register at any time.
completed one year of physical ter for
Rutgers University, School
for next semester according to
education will be excused from of Social Work.
AFROTC and PHYSICAL EDUthe following alphabetical schedphysical education and the curCATION REQUIREMENTS: EfThe Burroughs Corporation anule:
rent requirement for two years
fective in September of 1965 cernounces
a Total Career DevelopMarch 29 through April 2
will
physical
are
made
of
education
credit
in
being
tain changes
Training Program. Must
ment
H, Y, L.
Physthe
and
be
waived
these
cases.
There
in
regard to
AFROTC
basic accounting background
April 5 through April 9
M, ical Education programs. These will be limited opportunities for haveambition
and
and a desire to sell
J, X,
some
changes are made in cooperation
students to elect additional
Job Opportunity:
“Resident
April 12 through April 16
with the Air Force which has encourses in physical education in
Breckenridge Job
Fellow”
K, R.
the sophomore year.
couraged the University to move
Corps
Camp BreckenApril 26 through April 30
from its present compulsory pro5. The same situation will pre- ridge, Center,
Kentucky. Must be male
W, G.
gram in the first two years to
vail in September of 1966, that
and single with BA degree.
May 3 through May 7
P, C. an entirely voluntary one. Also is, physipal education will be reStudents will make appointthe extremely difficult physical quired of all vfrqshmcn but all
Teacher Placement
ments with the University Colfacilities situation which exists sophomores who have completed
March 26—
lege Receptionist in Diefendorf
the first year in physical cduea
in Clark Gymnasium and on the
Mineola Public Schools, MincoNo. 114 one week in advance of adjacent playing fields argues tion will be excused.
la, N, Y.
the above scheduled times. At for some adjustment. The changes
6. Physical education for women
Herricks Public Schools, New
this time, the Receptionist will which follow are made on recwill be required in the freshman
Hyde Park, Hong Island, N. Y.
give the student registration
ommendation of the academic year only. There-will be limited

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in

&amp;

cards and a list of instructions
to follow in the subsequent registration procedures. O.T. and
P.T. students will make appointments with Miss Greenman and
Miss Heap directly. Nursing students are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing,
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times, or who do not keep
them when fnade, will be required to register in Clark Gym,
on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted

—

—

—

—

—

—

March 29—
Pittsford entral Schools, Pittsford, N. Y.
Gates-Chili C. S. D., Rochester.

N. Y.

ence, N. Y.
Montclair, New
Schools.

•

Jersey Public

Placement Interviews
March 26—
U. S. Coast Guard
Bell Aerosystcms
Burroughs-Wcllcomc Co., Inc.

The Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
March 30—
Acme Markets
Mutual

Factory

Engineering

Division

March 31Burroughs Corp.
April 1—
Aetna Casualty &amp; Surety Co.
Part-time and Sommer

Employment
March 30—
New York Telephone
summer employment. BS, MS, PhD—
Gen. Bus., Eco., Mkta. BS, MS,
PhD—EE, IE, ME. Math, Physics.
—

Candidates must have
at least

completed-

their junior year by
June, 1965 and must be academically in the top half of their
class. Successful candidates will
be placed in the Summer Initial
Training Program.

Management

For interview appointments or

information, please call 831-3311,
University Placement
Services,
Schocllkopf Hall.

TUTORING

by Frenchmen

•

Y.

March 30—
Mt. Pleasant C. S. D. No. 1,
Westchester Co.
Corning Painted Post Schools,
Corning. N. Y.
March 31—
Clarence Central Schools, Clar-

FRENCH TUTORING
•

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Valley

Roundout

Schools, Accord, N.

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conversation

literature

Student.

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comprehensible.
This attitude

hurts Fred, for
ho is careful to select movies
which he feels will interest anyone who is intelligent and curious
about modern art and modern
life. When one of his presentations is dismissed with a cursory
plot summary and a few snide remarks about “foreign" films and
their decadent moral outlook, it
bothers him because he feels
that some one may have been
discouraged by the review and
missed the real enjoyment of a
genuinely satisfactory and en

gaging cinematic experience.

which

has been

playing for the last two weeks,
Godard’s Contempt, completely
fascinated Fred. I don’t feel that
there is any point discussing it
at length because the run ended
last Wednesday. And. unfortu
nately the current presentation,
the

controversial

Les

Abyss

opened too late to review. How
ever, I feel that I’d like to say
something about Fred's philosophy of selection and something
about his taste so it will be possible to have some idea about what
sort of film Fred likes. Then,
even if 1 am unable to review one
of his offerings in time for a particular run, you will he able to
depend to some extent upon
Fred's own taste and its relative
similarity or difference to yours.
I thought that Contempt was
thoroughly interesting and quite
worth seeing, hut 1 didn't really

like the movie very much Fred
was sorry to hear that I felt that
way. 'The trouble with you boys

j

"FATHER GOOSE"

VOILE
OXFORD

LEWIS
at the school,” he said "is that
you're caught up in the past.
You’re still loking for another

Braathless

(Godard's

Cary Grant
-

—

Leslie

AND

Caron

-

"LILY"

The lightweight
clessic.

Leslie Caron
Mel Ferrer
Jean Pierre Aumont
-

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first movie

—a magnificant effort). You still
yearn for Jules and Jim, when
Truffaut has gone on to The Soft
Skin." I told him I didn’t think
that was completely accurate and
asked him what he liked about

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Contempt.

“It is an excellent, probing
study of love in the world today,” Fred told me. “Godard is
not afraid to try new things, to
experiment with new and daring
techniques of cinematography

and he's talented and creative
enough so that his ideas and in
novations are always engrossing.”
In answer to my comment that
the movie seemed to lose control at times, to ramble and
wander unnecessarily, Fred said
that the scope and film was describing in an effective fashion.
This set up a balance or harmony between the themes and
parts (the movie has a mythologic
background which is designed to
inform the action by contrasting
a kind of Homeric simplicity

with contemporary complexity)
which led to an incisive and
probing investigation, Fred has
seen the movie 15 times or so
and is very proud of it. I'm afraid
I wasn’t as enthusiastic, but I
don’t think Fred's enthusiasm is
misplaced. It lakes a certain way
of looking at a film, I think perhaps my experience with the con-,
cepl of film as art is too limited.

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EVENINGS 8:15 PM
Mats. 2 P.M
EVENINGS (Sunday thru Thursday)
.

■

Les Abyss, the movie playing
at the Circle Art now, is a curious affair. All of the French critics loathed it. Then, a number
of notable intellectuals including
Andres Breton, Jacques Prevert,
Louis Aragon, Simon de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre delivered rave comments about it.
Again, when it opened in N. Y„
most of the local boys didn't care
much for it, but some seemed ,to
feel that a film with such good
credentials must have something.
Fred thinks that it is a fine film

unusual and starkly honest in its
psychological penetration of the
two girls (they go berserk and
murder their aunt . . . something
like

that)

it follows with clinical

precision. 1 haven't seen the
movie. 1 have no idea what it’s
really about. Most reviews don’t
help much—you can t trust a reviewer unless you really get to
know him, what he likes and why

he liked it But Fred thinks its
worthwhile so 1 guess I'll give it
a try. If you think you can trust

his judgment, you might
a try,

New Swiss

give

it

too.

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disI often find
agreement with Fred Keller, the
manager of the Circle Art Theater, but 1 am very thankful for
his presence in Buffalo. He’s got
to make p few dollars to survive,
of course, but he is not primarily
motivated by economic factors in
his choice of movies, sometimes
which 1 don't think I can say
about any other theater owner in
this town. Consequently;' I feel a
special responsibility towards his
pictures. The reviewers for the
two local newspapers don't seem
to pay very much attention to
what Fred has to offer—not be
cause they aren't interested but
because they arc forced to write
down to. the level of their readers. When they are faced with a
movie like Jean-Luc Godard's
Contempt, they find it easy to
adopt a pose of ironic detach
fnent, since they know that their
readers will dislike the movie or
be bored by it They do not have
to worry about trying to make
something
excitingly different
myself in

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—

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March 26, 1965

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

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SPOKEN ARTS
LITERARY RECORDINGS

I love a man in Van Heusen “417”
It’s wild, the way his long, lean
good looks come on strong in that
“V-Tapered” fit. Anyone can tell
he’s top man on my scene when he
steps out in the stepped-up styling of
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�Friday, March 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Greek Notes

Teaching Views
—

CANTERBURY

Tuesday and Wednesday at
2:00-3:00 p.m,, the ninth in the
current series of discussions of
the “Gospel According to Saint
John” will be offered. Both ses-

sions will be held in Room 266
Norton. The specific topic will
be “The World’s Hatred, Judgement, and Future” (John 15:1816:33). ALL students and faculty
members are invited to attend
either of the duplicate sessions.
In addition, there is a celebration of the Holy Communion
every Tuesday in the Veteran’s
Hospital Chapel at noon.
There will be an open house
Wednesday evening at 8:00 p.m.,
1179 Elmwood Avenue, opposite
the State College.
HILLEL
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will present another sermon lesson on: “What We Bclive.” An Oneg Shabbat will fol-

follow.
and undergraduate
will hold a joint Purim
Party this Sunday at 7:00 p.m.
in the Hillel House. The program
will be strictly on the gay side
and in the traditional Purim
spirit. Plans include a facility
debate on: “The Latke vs. The
Hamantash.” Purim refreshments
will be served.
Graduate

students

Arrangements for the observance of Passover should now be
made, (see ad in this issue of
the Spectrum).

The deadline for all reservations is Wednesday. A student
Seder, two lunches and a dinner
are being arranged for. Home
hospitality for the Seder will
also be available. For further details call Hillel House at TF 64540.

Students who have been working on the United Jewish Fund
Drive are urged to complete the
coverage of their cards and to
make their returns to the Hillel
House at the earliest possible
time. Returns will be accepted
every day of the week during
House hours.

NEWMAN
Dr. Glenn Leek, a well-known
authority on cancer and an extensive world traveler, will speak
at the weekly meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room. The talk on the USSR will
be highlighted with slides that
Dr. Leek took as he toured Russia. Everyone is welcome.

The weekly discussion classes

meet each Tuesday at 10:00 a.m.
and 3:00 p.m. and each Thursday
at 3:00 p.m. in Norton 330. The
Sunday discussions meet each
Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m, at
Newman Hall.

During Lent, Mass is said at
noon at St. Joseph’s Church and
at 5:00 p.m. at Newman Hall.
The Empire State Province
Convention will be hosted by Alfred April 9-10-11.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
The Student Christian Association will be participating in the
Student Christian Movement in
New York State Conference April
9, 10, and 11 at Cazcnovia, New
York, The
theme will be
“PEACE.” The
main speaker
will be Dr. Curtis Crawford, a
Unitarian Minister and a teacher
at N.Y.U. The cost will be fifteen
dollars, but the Campus Ministry
will subsidize this with grants of
five dollars per student in addition to providing free transportation. Information can be obtained from the Protestant Chaplain, John Buerk, TF 4-4250. TF

0-5806.

student attitudes of anti-intellectualism, or at least of nonintellectualism.” Perhaps now
you can tell Prof. Van Den
Berghe that it is not easy to stimulate your teacher when he is
forty rows in front of you and
discernible only as a human form
with a microphone. Perhaps now
you can tell Prof. Van Den
Berghe that it is not easy to
stimulate your teacher when you
can not even ask him questions
(or are not encouraged to ask
questions). Perhaps now you can
tell Prof. Van Den Berghe that
it is not easy to stimulate your
teacher when you are not given
the chance to write a paper on
a topic which really interests

you, but for the most part are
required to answer short-answer

IBM tests. (Can serious intellectual interest be aroused or
revealed by multiple choice question exams?) Perhaps now you
can tell Prof Van Den Berghe
that it is not easy to stimulate
youA teacher when your tests
(and grades) demand good memories and not necessarily good
minds. Perhaps now you can tell
Prof. Van Den Berghe that it is
hard to stimulate your teacher
when you are finding it increasingly difficult to even get into
the courses you desire. That because of inadequate staffing or
late registration or endless hours
of “required” courses you find it
rather exacting to be interested
in subjects you strongly dislike (Why should English majors
be forced to sit through a year
of Geology? Why should Geology
majors be obliged to find themselves in English courses?) You
might also mention that your
“advisor keeps advising you to
take any “open” class, when the
ones that you want are closed, to

Monday there will be a Fashion
Show for Greek Weekend Queen
contest in the -Millard Fillmore

Room between 3:30-5:00 p.m.
Each girl will model four outfits: formal wear, afternoon dress,
school outfit, and summer sportswear. Each candidate will answer
two questions that have been submitted by the participating sororities, All are invited to attend.
ALPHA PHI DELTA would like

to announce the newly elected

officers of their spring pledge
class: President, John Tighe; Secretary, Mike Hornik; Treasurer,
Jim Cocuzzi.
BETA PHI SIGMA announce
their newly elected officers; No-

ble Senior, Alex A. Cardoni Jr.;
Worthy Junior, Robert Cairns;
Exchequer, Robert Rubaha; Recording Secretary, Irwin Wechsler; and Corresponding Secretary,
Alan Levitt. The brothers are
also looking forward to a social
with D’Youville College students
tonight.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI announces
the officers for the 1965 Pledge
Class: President, Sue Schillo;
Secretary, Cindy Wolcott; Treasurer, Nancy Leitert; Social Chairman, Kathy McGee; Standards
and Scholarship Chairman, Jackie
Alessi.

PHI LAMBDA DELTA Prater

nity is having a “Ask Doug
Lyons” party Saturday night at
our unknown hidaway.
PHI ZETA CHI announces the
following sisters elected to these
posts:

Alexis

Pile,

re-elected

Pledge Mistress; Laura Desmond,
Scholarship Chairman; Barbara
Glegota, Senior Panhellenic Rep-

resentative.

THETA CHI Sorority will visit
a Ward at the Buffalo State Hospital. The sisters will be distributing gifts among the patients.
The drawing for the RCA portable television will be held today

at 12:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room in Norton.

be sure of carrying enough credits to graduate "on time” (on
time for what?) or to keep your

sible to graduate from a college
without speaking to a teacher .

GAMMA

PHI

Fraternity

will

scholarship.
Perhaps now you can tell Prof.
Van Den Berghe that it is difficult to stimulate your teacher
when the university does not provide any decent facilities for
studying whatsoever and that references to the dorms and the library can no longer be taken
seriously because they are both
excessively crowded, excessively
noisy, Perhaps, finally, you can
now tell him that it is not easy
to stimulate your teacher when
it is becoming increasingly pos-

K ini KM lo earn

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REGISTER NOW!
Your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid C
will set up an interview schedule for you. If you’n
your job is reserved until school closes.
And you may start work as early as April 1st.

EARNINGS ARE BIG WITH GOOD HU
Of the students working six or more weeks last
2 out of 3 earned $110 or more a week
1 out of 2 earned $118 or more a week
1 out of 4 earned $133 or more a week
HOW TO QUAUFY FOR INTERVIEW

!

—

(Cont'd from P, 6)
much bad teaching lies with the

1. Minimum age, 18
2. Have a valid driver’s license in State you'll be
working, and be able to drive a "stick” tran;
3. Pass a physical examination.

When Prof. Van Den Berghe
speaks of the necessity for “a
moderate amount of good teaching,” must we remind him that
school exists primarily for its students and not for its faculty?
And when he tells us that “excessive devotion to teaching can
be dangerous,” must we remind
him that what he is saying is
tantamount to lecturing patients
who are sick in the hospital on
the dangers of excessive health?
Leonard Port
Instructor

�Friday/ March 26, 1965

picketing and Sit-Ins
(Cont’d from P. 1)
Buffalo State Colof Buffalo and
lege.

Mr. Burnett, Reverend David

Prosser of the Lakawana Friendship House, and Marilyn Rappley,

Chairman of S.T.A.N.D. at Buffalo State, instructed workers in
non violent tactics. As the name
taught

implies,

the tactics

designed to be a means of

were
pas-

sive defense or protection from

physical

attack.

The

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

workshop

f

pushed or hit while marching in
a picket would fall limply away

from the attacker and draw himself into a ball. If others are attacked they fall on and around
those already on the ground in
order to protect others and themselves by crowding together. In
a situation just described there
are a number of ways to fall
without injury and to group once
down to afford maximum protection or all. As is probably evident

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covered both picketing and sit-in
demonstrations and stressed not
only protection but also the
aspect of being effective in a
demonstration through continuance of the demonstration and
avoidance of friction.
Techniques Taught
Among the techniques taught
was one in which a worker if

by now, always acting as a group
is important. The situation in
which this is most dramatically
represented is a "floor” sit-in.
In such a demonstration the
group links together with both
arms and legs to make it difficult
to remove them, in addition to
make them less susceptible to

harm.

Emily's Metamorphosis
(Cont’d

from P.

5)

center lounge and more time in

the Rathskellar with his friends.
Emily’s new “friends” sometimes
distressed her because they would
goof on her and the ideas which
they espoused about life conflicted violently with the gay,
romantic notions that filled
her mind.
Her Joe

College world was
tailing to pieces when she found
herself picketing in favor of the
abolition of the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities.
The time spent with these people
raised
in Emily’s
mind to set the stage for her

stay in Buffalo that summer. The

summer brought

total insanity
to Emily’s way of life. She saw
and heard things that completely

shattered ideas that she had ac-

cepted as a priori

truths in the

past. Confused, uncertain and
in"'cure, Emily now began to emulate the ideas and dress of those

hat she was associating with.

Her exterior change, typified by

dungarees, phys ed sweatshirt,
long hair, and the marked absence of her brown penny loafers saw Emily insecurely start
the new semester. Her mind, torn
and twisted between the two
worlds she had been exposed to,
was about to be influenced again,
but this time in a totally warped
way.

Her

values

and

Men ol the Campus!
Profit handsomely from advice
By Miss Ewa moron

beliefs

Changed every day, under the
domination of this new person,
who lived in her dormitory. At
first, Emily loved modern poetry. The next day she criticized
it baeuse of its lack of traditional
ingredients such as meter and

rhyme. After originally altering
her style of dress to conform to
her new friends, she switched a
third time, again for reasons of
conformity. Now one can only
question whether the metamorphoses that Emily has under
gone have brought about a filling
of the vacuum with something

other than dust.

D OF HAI

�Friday, March 26, 1945

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

t|-

-V

—-/

—f=

::=

■

—

==£===A==^===&amp;===tE==
By MICHAEL CASTRO

Wrestlers Miner, Jackson, and Ernst
Win 4-1 Individual Championships
LEONARD ARDIETA

By

The Renaissance
The ,1964-65 basketball season, just concluded, may

very well prove to have been, when looked at under the
cold eye of the future sports historian, a year of birth and
a year of rebirth.
It was the year in which the East, twice shaken by
ugly point-shaving scandals, was reborn as a region of
basketball leadership in the nation. Great teams were
turned out by St. Joseph’s of Philadelphia and Providence, each rated within the top five in the country
throughout the season. These teams both were predominately made up of sophomores, auguring two powerful
Eastern basketball dynasties. Villanova wound up rated
in the top ten. Princeton electrified the basketball world
with a series of upsets which led to a third place finish
in the NCAA tournament. St. John’s had a storybook
season, winning the Holiday Festival and NIT for retiring
coach Joe Lapchick. Penn State, Army, Connecticut, all
relatively new to the upper echelons of hoopdom, can be
said to have established themselves this season.
The Eastern Renaissance was bolstered by the presence of the two of the greatest, (and most publicized),
amateur players of all time in Hill Bradley ol Princeton,
and Lew Alcindor of Power Memorial High School. The
two personified the East’s emergence from the shadows
of the scandals. In short, it was the East’s most successful year in over a decade, and, hopefully, the “harbinger
of a new era’’ in college basketball in this section.
1964-65 could prove the year of actual birth of the
sport at the University of Buffalo. The fabulous success
and exciting play of the varsity led to what can be termed
acceptance of basketball by the student body. The acceptance was by no means overwhelming, but nevertheless,
it was achieved. It remains to be seen whether UB will
follow the examples set by Michigan, Princeton, Army,
UCLA, Amherst, Syracuse and other schools, where basketball. once completely subordinate to football, now
flourishes. Both sports can flourish with the support of
an enlightened, active, and alive student body.
The high quality basketball played by the Bulls
this season promises to continue with the return next
year of Poe, Barth, Goodwin, Bevilaqua. Goldstein, and
the members of this year’s fine freshman team. In addition. the schedule has been strengthened, with the addition of several “major college” opponents. Only time
will tell whether UB will be a part of the “Basketball
Rebirth" of the East.

RANDOM THOUGHTS
Cazzie Russell, Michigan’s All-American backcourt
man is slow when compared to most pro backcourt stars.
He must improve his ballhandling if he is to make it big.
6-7 Oliver Darden could turn out to be a better pro
than All-American teammates Russell and Bill Buntin.
Sophomores Edgar Lacey of UCLA and Sonny Dove
of St. John’s are future All-Americans.
Lew Alcindor will go to St. John’s. (A guess.)
could beat the Celtics at the Palestra
St.
Mild-mannered Bill Bradley is really Superman

Bowlers Place Second in Tourney
Saturday, March 20, a team of
five men' from UB participated
in the Utica Invitational Bowling
Tournament in Utica, N. Y. The
UB participants were Tom Bren

on, Bon Foster, George Maringer,
Robert Braun and Tony Verdi.
Out of a 27 team field, UB placed
second with the red-hot R.I.T.
team pacing the teams. The UB
team bowled a 2849 which is the
highest team total for three
games seen in many years of college competition.
The UB team took three other
trophies also. Tony Verdi won

the three game singles event with
a total of 628. Tony also placed
second in the all events with a
total of 1784 for nine games,
barely losing out to his teammate Robert Braun, who had a
total of 1789.
UB has had a very good bowling team in the past few years.
They are hoping that the Athletic
Department will be willing to

give the team support and act as
its sponser as the department
has done with the newly formed
Squash and Hockey Teams.

It was a tense evening on
March 13th at Case Institute’s
Gymnasium. The event was the
28th Interstate Intercollegiate In-

dividual Invitational Wrestling
Championships, The outstanding

(191 lbs.). To the recollection
of Coach LaRogue, the University
has had only two 4-1 Champions
in the past. One of these being
the Freshman wrestling coach
Jack Valentic. It was at the Finals
that Buffalo put the topping on
a fine 9-2 team season by win-

123

With

participants,

Buffalo

took 3 championships of the 10
weight classes in which championships could have been won;
a feat that students and the Uni-

ning three championships.

This gratifying accomplishment
was achieved by Bill Miner, Bob

'

Jackson, and Bert Ernst.

y

three

ship trophies at the conclusion

■

of their matches. With the award-

,

ing of each trophy and identical
one was presented to the coach
of a respective champion. It was
a very proud Ronald LaRoque
who approached the judges’ table
to receive the congratulations
and awards presented to him on

/I

the three separate occasions that

evening.

BERT ERNST
collegiate wrestlers of the midwest traditionally participate in
these Championships and frequently go on to compete successfully in the National Championships and in the Olympics. Thus,
this represents collegiate . wrestling at its best. With such high
stakes at hand one can imagine
the electrifying atmosphere which
hung over the finals of the 28th
4-1 Championships.
Coach Ron LaRoque saw fit to
enter six men in six weight
classes. They were; Robert Jackson (123 lbs,), Bill Miner (130
lbs.), Leonard Ardieta (147 lbs,),
A1 Classman (117 lbs.), Norm
Keller

(167

lbs.),

Bert

Ernest

Gridders to Play
Virginia in 1967
The University of Buffalo will
play the University of Virginia
in football on September 30, 1967,
at Charlottesville, Virginia.
This was announced today by
Buffalo Athletic Director James
E. “Jim’’ Pcelle.

The scheduling of the Cavaliers
represents another long stride
in the football program of UB.
Virginia joins such schools as
Boston College, Cornell, Iowa
State, Villanova and Holy Cross
on present and future UB schedules.

Last year Virginia defeated,
among others, Army by a score
of 35-14. Partly as a result of
this, the Virginia coach, Bill
Elias, was recently appointed
head coach at the Naval Academy. He has since been succeeded by one of his assistants,
George

In

Blackburn.

announcing

All

were presented Champion-

the UB-Virginia

game. Peelle disclosed that the
1967 Buffalo football schedule is
now complete with 10 games
also carded.

The 1966 slate has 9 games with
an open date on November 19.
Peelle said that he would fill
the date if a substitute opponent
is available.
This year the Bulls will play

10 games.

Spring practice will open
April 5.

on

Out of the 27 Schools and Universities that participated, the
University of Buffalo placed second in over all team standings.
Ithaca College placed first; Ithaca
by the way was defeated by Buffalo during the regular season.

BOB JACKSON
versity may take pride in. We extend our sincerest congratulations to Ronald LaRoque and his
University of Buffalo Wrestling
Team.

SPRING SPORTS TEAMS
ANNOUNCE SCHEDULES
University of Buffalo Athletic
Director James E. “Jim” Peelle
today announced the college’s
1965 spring sports schedules.

The UB baseball team is slated
for 16 games, with the season
opener on April 17 at home
against Colgate. One of tbje highlights of the campaign will be a
home game against Syracuse on
April 23, The Buffalo nine has
won the championship of the
Western New York Intercollegiate
Conference for the past 6 years
and has played in NCAA tourna
ments the past 2 years.
The perennially strong UB

WGR to Broadcast
1965 Grid Games
Radio Station WGR will broadcast the 1965 football games of
the University of Buffalo, according to an announcement
made today by UB Athletic Director Jim Peelle.

Peelle revealed that WGR Radio
had been high bidder for the
games and that an agreement
has been signed between the station and the UB Faculty-Student
Association, the parent body of
the UB Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.
Ed Edwards, Sports Director
of WGR Radio and WGR-TV who
does the play-by-play for the

Buffalo Bisons baseball and
hockey clubs, will be the “Voice
of the UB Bulls’’ on the air.
The agreement between UB and
WGR marks the return of .an association which last existed during the 1962 and 1963 football
seasons.
The UB gridders play a 10game schedule this year, opening at Boston College on September 18 and following with suc-

cessive contests against Tampa,
Massachusetts, Boston University! Richmond, Dayton, Holy
Cross, Delaware, Colgate and Villanova.

tennis team is set for 13 matches.
Sanford will be beginning
his 17th year as mentor of the
Bull racqueteers. During his tenure UB has won 174 matches
against only 30 losses.
The UB track team, under the
tutelage of Emery Fisher, will
compete in 8 meets, including a
defense of its New York State
Track
Field Association Championship at Cortland on May 15.
The complete schedules follow:
Bill

&amp;

BASEBALL

2:00
3:00
3:00
3:30
3:30
3:30
3:00

April 17—Colgate
April 19—Erie Tech (*)
April 20—at Erie Tech (*)
April 22—at Gannon
April 23—Syracuse
April 26—Canisius (•)
April 27—at R. I. T.
May 1—Buffalo State 9:00
May 1—at Niagara (*)
May 3—at Geneseo
May 5—at St. Bonaventure

a*

2:00
3:00

...—-

May 5—at St. Bona. (»)
May 8—R. I. T.
May 10—at Canisius (•)
May 11—Niagara (*)

1:30
2:00

-

3 30

3:30

TENNIS

3 ??
3: “r

April 17—at Alfred
April 19—Erie Tech
April 20—at Erie Tech
April 22—at Gannon
April 24—Syracuse
April 27—at Niagara
April 30—at Rochester U.
May 1—Cortland State
Colgate
May
May 7—Geneseo State
May 11—Niagara
__

3
3
3 3“
3
■"

;

SPORTS CIRCLE

3 3
33

TRACK

April 21—Colgate
April 24—Ithaca College
April 28—Brockport State
May 3 —at LeMoyne Relay
'
-

All

May 5—at Cortland State
Ithaca College

of Buffa
vitational Meet

May 8—University

May 12—at Niagara
May

'

.

15—at Cortland for
State Track
Ass’n Championsnif
&gt;

&amp;

‘

“

™

�</text>
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INTELLECTUAL ISM

VOLUME IS

MEW-EN

records

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, MARCH 12, 1965

NO. 20

MMP(/J ALLIANCE SWEEPS
DEVEAUX, BROWN, CARDONE &amp; SEIDE WIN

PRESIDENT DEVEAUX

VICE-PRESIDENT BROWN

Judiciary Suspends
Sargent Penalty
Lighter Says Committee
Had Not Acted Logically
While Senate candidates were getting in last minute

campaigning on the main floor of Norton Wednesday,
Presidential Candidate Nick Sargent was meeting with
the Student Judiciary on the third floor. The Judiciary
hearing was called as a result of a dispute between Mr.
Sargent and the Elections Committee. The Judiciary suspended a penalty of five per cent of his total votes imposed by the Elections Committee
The violation lodged against Mr.

Sargent by the Elections Committee was the result of
their findings concerning
the defacing of
a Campus Alliance
poster. The defaced sign, posted by C.A. candi-

appropriate penalty,” Mr. Lighter
said, "would have been the removal of a percentage of Mr. Sargent’s publicity."
.

Lighter also pointed out

ne fact that the election rules do
not specify the punishment
for
ne violation in question. “One of
e
'. . main contentions of the JuLighter said, “was
fta t by subtracting
the percentage of votes, the
people who had

ihC&lt;ai?'”

Record Vote

The following ere
the Election totals;

Overwhelming Victories

Campus Alliance

OFFICERS
Sargent (US)

Deveaux

1,277

(CA)

1,669

Vice-President
Silber (US)
Brown (CA)

1,126

Secretary
Witzel (US)
Cardone (CA)

1,746

1,306
1,516

Treasurer

1,060

Merlis (US)
Seide (CA)

1,759

Conigilo (US)
Franco (CA)

-Grossman (US)
Gugino (US)
"Gunsburg (CA)

.

Vice-President elect Rosemary

of 1746 to 1126. Brown had been
a member of various committees
and active in several organizations. Silber had been a Senator
from University College.

(CA)

"Darrow (CA)
(CA)

The final results of the contest
for Secretary show Ellen Cardone
a victor over United Students
candidate Barbara Witzel by a
vote of 1516 to 1306. Secretaryelect Cardone was co-chairman of
the Senate Convocations Committee among her other activities.
Her opponent Barbara Witzel had
been a representative to the Senate from the Panhellenic Council.

Guggenheim (US)
�Potter (US)

Segan (US)
Sickler (Ind)
'Volpe (CA)

�Weinrub

(US)

BUSINESS

�Goldstein (US)
�Radley (US)

'.
...

EDUCATION
ing slighted."
A statement issued by the Elections Committee after the hearing
is as follows: “This committee is
in unanimous disagreement with
the decision of the Student Judiciary this afternoon, which removed a 5 per cent vote penalty
against Nick Sargent. We intend
to appeal this decision to any
level necessary to reverse it."

_,
"

Brown defeated United Students
candidate Daniel Silber by a vote

u.c

'Friedmann

1669 to 1277. President-elect Dc
veaux had been a University Col
lege Senator, Freshman Class
Council Vice-President, a member

lations Committee among other
hin

"Levine (CA)

Bob (US)

tion offices for 1965-66.
With the final vote tallied, Clinton Deveaux (Campus
Alliance) defeated Nick Sargent in the Presidential race,

of the Senate Executive Committee and Chairman of the Union
Board House Committee. Mr. Sar
gent had been Presidential-Aide
and Chairman of the Public Re

A&amp; S

�Bodner

endorsed the candidate were be-

The largest number of students in the history of the
University, (3095), went to the polls Tuesday and Wednesday and elected Clinton Deveaux, Rosemary Brown,
Ellen Cardone and Sandy Siede to the Student Associa-

President

Silver (US)

NICK SAROBNT

TREASURER SEIDE

ELECTION
RESULTS

Lieb (US)
"Osleeb (CA)

date Sandy Seide, contained Mr.
Sargent’s name. It was the opinion of the
Committee that in light
of the evidence Mr. Sargent was
guilty of willfully defacing it

Mr. Sargent appealed the decision of the Elections Committee
to the Student Judiciary on the
grounds that the penalty imposed
was excessive for the crime committed. Chief Justice Gary Lighter said that it was the opinion
of the Judiciary
that the Elections
ommittee had not acted logical*a^*n
8 away a percentage
ofr w
Mr. Sargent’s vote. “A more

SECRETARY CARDONE

�From (CA)

....

�Chappel (US)

52
49

ENGINEERING
(Ind)

�Montgomery
Petz (Ind)

?r
30

LAW
Meyers (CA)
�Paglia (Ind)
�Rodgers (Ind)

33
33
73

PHARMACY

Gia Quinto (US)

69

In the race for Treasurer Sandy
Siede won a decisive victory over
United Students candidate Michael Merlis Seide had been
Treasurer at Monroe Community
College and a member of this
year’s Finance Committee. Merlis
had been President of the School
of Business Administration.

The total number of votes cast
this year exceeded last year's all
time total of 2700.

ARTS AND SCIENCE
n
u of he race for
Results
the seats
from tbe C l,e
f Ar s and
ence show Linda Gunsberg (410),
B bbl Grossman
?! ceb
363b D™; Franco (336). and Carl
vine
C S R° na| d
., 8
a United o!
Students candi
c
s
d
da '
a enate *&lt;■*' b one
vote. (316). Of the five seats
Campus Alliance has four.
-

°

,

f

‘

°

°

j

™

“

&gt;

*?5

,

&gt;

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
University College students
elected Kim Darrow (1100), Ray
Volpe (1032), Helen Friedman
(926), George Bodner (857), Bob
Hotter (852), and Evy Weinrub
(849) to the Senate from that division Of the six Senate seats
from University College the Campus Alliance Party controls four

of them.
Other election victories were
scored by Curtis Montgomery (Independent Engineering); Mike
—

Pets (Independent—Engineering);
Bruce Goldstein and Ross Radley,

both from United Students candidates from the School of Business; Rhea From (Campus Alliance) and Helen Capell (United
Students) from the School of Education; Paglia and Rodgers, both
Independents, from the Law
School; and Kathy Pietrasel from
the School of Nursing Dennis
Gia Quinto, running unopposed
took the Senate seat from the
School of Pharmacy.
Of the twenty-five seats on the
Senate 13 are controlled by Campus Alliance, seven by United Students and four by Independents.
The remaining Senator being coendorsed.

�UB Varsity Debaters
Place 5th in Tourney
and Diane
Hedda
Hayes, representing the SUNY at
Buffalo at the Boston University
Debate Tournament in Boston last
weekend, emerged from six
rounds of debate with a five win,
one loss record and fifth place in
the varsity division of the tournament. The team, debating both
sides of the national topic; Resolved That The Federal Government Should Establish A National Program of Public Work
For the Unemployed, defeated
Beckman

such formidable teams as Harvard, Brandeis, Boston University and Hunter Gollege. Thirty
teams from throughout the eastern United States participated in
the varsity division.
This weekend, the varsity
switch-side team of Clinton Devaux and Carl Levine and the
novice switch-side team of Richard Fleisher and Robert Dragone
will attend a tournament at
Brooklyn College in New York
City.

Publications Board Elects
Editors
By

Friday, March 12, 1945

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

After

MARTIN GUGGENHEIM

At a Publications Board meet:
ag yesterday, Jeremy Taylor and
Michael Henry were elected Edi-

!

tors-in-Chief of the Spectrum and

Alienation Issue:
Student Review
Has New Format
The New Student Review will
go on sale Monday, March 22.
The issue will feature material
dealing with the topic of alienation.
The staff of the Review have

changed the format of this issue
considerably. An effort was made
not to exclude but to correlate
contributions to give greater
unity to the magazine. It was felt
that by focusing on alienation,
a concept close to the college
campus, and by presenting it in
as many ways as possible, the
issue would be more interesting
and meaningful to readers.

Included in the forthcoming
issue are articles by students and
faculty. Paul Piccone has written
an historical survey of alienation;
post was Paul Nussbaum. AppliSheila Surfe’ categorizes types
and
recommendations
cations
students in a satirical vein.
were read for both candidates Of
Karen Bilinky, author of “the
opened
floor
to
and the
was then
Genuis,” examines through ficquestions. Robert Finkelstein adtion and author and professor
dressed the board and endorsed discussing
the same novel. PhotoMr. Nussbaum.
graphs examine the alienated inJohn Kowal, present editor, dividual.
recommended Mr. Taylor for the
The next deadline will be April
job. In a letter to the Board, Mr.
Kowal said, “Mr. Taylor offers a 5. Included in the forthcoming
wide range of experience includ- issue will be a column of Letters
to the Editor. Comments of this
ing the Spectrum, the New Student Review and a long Isit of type, as well as fiction, non-ficother publications. His experition, poetry, humor, and art may
be submitted.
ence while working for the Beacon Press in Boston and his
write up in the Saturday Review
speak for themselves . . . There
is no doubt in my mind, as there
is none in the minds of the edi-

Hot Debate

Pan-Hel Sponsors
Scholarship Tea

Pan-Hellenic will sponsor its
annual Scholarship Tea in honor
of the scholastic achievements of
the Greek women, Sunday, March
28. The purpose of this function
is to take special notice of these
girls who have attained a distinctive average. Acknowlegement will be distributed to those
who have made Dean’s List, while
special awards will be given to
the girl who maintained the

JEREMY TAYLOR
Spectrum

respectively. The
Spectrum vote was ,5-1. Mr. Henry
Buffalonian

highest average during her pledg-

was unanimously elected.

ing.

George Neuner, Chairman of
the Publications Board, read the
application and the recommendations for Mr. Henry and it was
felt by the Board that due to his
experience in publications, he

In addition to these recognitions, the Tea will serve as a social function in which members
of all the sororities can become
better acquainted with one
another and take pride in the
scholarship of their sister Greeks
rather than in simply their own

was most qualified.

The discussion for editor of the
Spectrum was more heated. Much
objection was taken by the fact
that in the last issue of the Spectrum a questionable headline was
used declaring Mr. Taylor the
new editor. Mr. Taylor was endorsed by the editorial board at
that time and no mention was
made in the news article of the
fact that the Publications Board
must finally elect all editors.
The other applicant for the

MICHAEL HENRY
. Buffalonian
Editor
.

.

torial board, that Jeremy Taylor
is best qualified for the position
of Editor-in-Chief.”

Mr. Nussbaum was previously
Re-Write Editor of the Spectrum
and Mr, Taylor was Feature
Editor.

BU Students Protest Booktore Profit
(ACP)—An ad hoc committee’s
demand for a discount in book

prices at Boston University was
rejected by the Board of Trustees
February 17. The trustees offered instead a mark-up on prices
paid by the bookstore for used

books, the BU News reports.
The Ad Hoc Committee for
University Reform circulated a
petition protesting the bookstore's
profit-making policies, demanded
an immediate 10 per cent discount (later cut to five) threatened a boycott of the store if the
request was not granted.
Julian Huston, leader of the
group, justified the boycott threat
on the grounds that the University has no right to "make profit
at the expense of the students .”
The committee said it aimed at
the establishment of a non-profit
operation such as that of New
York University.
The petition, with 2,700 signatures, was presented to Mrs. Margaret Merry, executive assistant

the president. Mrs. Merry
called the request "impossible”
but said the committee’s other request for a joint committee to
study bookstore finances “would
be carried out.”
The Faculty Senate and Student
Congress' meeting with the Committee, recommended a 5 per cent
text discount and further study
of possibilities of a 10 per cent
discount. The 5 per cent offer
was referred to the Trustees. A
statement from the Trustees said
that “the present bookstore margin on the sale of new textbooks
does not justify a discount." Effective March 1, the statement
said, books would be bought for
up to 60 per cent of their original
cost. The bookstore now pays up
to

to 50 per cent.

Ad Hoc Committee declared a "moratorium” on the issue “in order to throw our full
support behind our Student Congress" in its attempts to effect
reforms.
The

New Union Board Officers
On Tuesday, March 9, the new
officers of Union Board were
elected. The results were: President, Joanne Osypiewski, First
Vice President, Jill Mantin; Second Vice President, Rhea Fromm;
Third Vice President, Eileen Palley; Treasurer, Mark Edelstein;
and Secretary, Sandra Atlas.

Weekend and Silver Ball. The
Third Vice President, Eileen
Palley, a sophomore, will be in

Joanne Osypiewski, a junior
majoring in English, has been
active as Copy editor of the
Buffalonian, as a sophomore
sponsor, and as chairman of Fine
Arts Committee and Secretary of
Union Board. As

President, she

plans to have next year’s Union
Board better known to the student body as the group that

will listen and program for the
students. Secondly, she hopes
to improve the “leadership traits
in Union Board chairmen.” Miss
Osypiewski believes “that the
fullest development in these two
areas will develop better committee members, A mere informed Board will realize its
scope and influence.”
Next year’s First Vice President, Jill Ann Mantin, is a junior
majoring in psychology. She was
previously Chairman of the Music Committee. Second Vice President Rhea Fromm, a sophomore
majoring in education will primarily by responsible for coordinating the standing committees,
eg. Mixer, Music, Recreation, and
the
special committees, eg.
Spring Weekend, Homecoming

JOANNE OSYPIEWSKI
charge of the fine arts committees.
The new Treasurer, Mark Edelstein is a junior and an accounting major. As Secretary, Sandy
Atlas, a junior majoring in
Political Science, plans to extend
her secretariat duties to include
Union Board publicity and com-

munication

with

the

Scheduled Civil Rights' Picket
Cancelled, Agreement Reached
The scheduled picket of the
Civil Rights Committee, to be
held last Monday, was called off
when the committee came to a
settlement with Mr, Harry Poppey, director of personnel, and
Mr. A1 Welk, director of maintenance. The committee planned
to protest the hiring practices of
the maintenance staff on the
SUNYAB campus.
Members of the Civil Rights
Committee planned the picket
after a meeting held wtih Mr.
Welk, to discuss the hiring of
Negroes, proved fruitless. After
speaking to Mr. Poppey and Mr.
Welk, however, the committee
decided the picket would be unnecessary.

A committee consisting of Mr.

Poppey, Mr. Welk, Mike Lappin,
chairman of the Civil Rights Committee, Dr. Gilbert Moore, faculty
advisor to the Civil Rights Committee, Jeff Osleeb and Bill Price,
members of the same committee,
met Wednesday, March 3. Two
hours were spent in discussion
before an agreement, which was
mutually satisfactory to both
parties, was reached.

All interested students
desiring to work on Fresh-

Orientation should
and return an application at the candy
counter by Wednesday,
March 24 at noon.
man

fill

out

group.

The Scholarship Tea emphasizes the importance placed upon
high academic accomplishments
by the sorority system. A 1.0
average is necessary before a
girl can even consider a sorority.
Sororities are not meant to be a
hindrance to one’s average, but
rather its ideals are to promote
scholastic achievement among
its members. The Tea serves to
remind us of this, to congratulate these girls, and to prove to
those who use sorority as their
excuse for a lower average that
it can be done.

student

body.

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS
“Learn

to drive safely, and quickly”

Amherst Driving School
3173 Main Street at Windspear
FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP
•
•

Classroom Lectures
Pre-Permit Classes

•

•

Road Lessons
Refresher Courses

PHONE IF 7-5550
ully Insured -College Trained Instructors

•

Dual Co

H’!?|

�Friday,

March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

Peace Corps Medical Program Explained Foreign Advisor and
By JAY KATZ
group of 100 interested stuatdents and faculty members
tended a lecture featuring Doctor
of
Charles Houston, a memberheld
the Peace Corps, which was
to acquaint members of the medical profession with the needs
and advantages to be had by
joining the Peace Corps, The
Conference was held as a part of
the activities scheduled for what
was officially Peace Corps week;
the conference was held in the
Medical B u i 1d i ng, Thursday,
March 4. Doctor Houston is currently a Special Assistant to Sergent Shriver, the head of the
Peace Corps. The doctor was,
until accepting this new assignment, a director of Peace Corps
The program
activities in India. was
for the evening
threefold.
Doctor Houston planned to first
give a background of the Peace
Corps, then to explain the medical program of the corps, and
then to show slides of India.
\

Peace Corps—Wonderful Unit
Four years ago, many people
scoffed at the very idea of a
Peace Corps as presented by the
late President Kennedy. In fact,
Doctor Houston was among those
who thought the idea to be preposterous. In only four years of

existence, however, the Corps has
grown in both size and in quality. Even though the Corps is
not as good as many would believe, it is still a wonderful organization, which, for the most
part, must be attributed to Mr.
Shriver. Doctor Houston brought
out three points: it would be better to send people than almost
any type of goods, they would
do more good; the benefits to the
United States will be better than

most people expect: and the vol
unteer will personally benefit

greatly. At the moment there are
some 13,000 volunteers in the
Corps. There will be another
6,000 to 8,000 in training this
summer. Volunteers range of ages
is amazing to behold, some are in
their seventies. The Peace Corps
works better than most suspected,
and the only hope is that thh government will not interfere too
greatly with the running of the
Corps.

Doctors Needed
Until recently, there has not
been a supply of medical help
large enough to send to all the
countries that would have asked
for help. In fact, these countries
were told not to request such
help. Some four hundred nurses
have been sent, but now tliere
is a drive to enlarge the number
of qualified doctors. Doctor
Houston hopes that it would be
possible to recruit up to a thousand doctors. Health problems in
other countries are important.
The efforts of these doctors can
only help the American image to
appear better, The image of
America is not as good as it
should be, and it can be improved.

What will be the goal of the
Peace Corps in the field of medi-

cine? Curative medicine, it is
hoped, will be only a small part

of the labors of those who volun-

teer. A teaching technique is what
is most desired; it was this technique that led to the control of
malaria in India, This was
brought about by a change in

the attitudes of the Indian peo-

ple. “Leave something behind,”

this is the basis of the

Corps.

Aerospace Briefing Team Presentation

Part of AFROTC Enrichment Program

Director of Nurses
Talk to Faculty Wives
By MARGO WALLACH
Thursday, March 4, a foreign
student committee workshop was
presented by the Foreign Student
Committee of Faculty Wives in
Norton Union. The main speakers were Mr. L. N. Smith, advisor on foreign affairs, and Miss
Ruth E. Rives, director of nurses
at Deaconess Hospital.
Mr. Smith, upon finding himself the sole male in a room of
females, humorously compared
his situation to that of a lion
in a den of Daniels, Growing serious, he discussed the orientation
and programs of foreign students
and their life on the American

university

campus,

PAGE THREE

Arnold Air Society Holds
14th Annual Military Ball
The Arnold Air Society is
sponsoring the 14th Annual Military Ball Friday, March 26. This
year’s ball will be held at the
Connecticut Street Armory.
Connecticut and Niagara Streets,

the dance will be from 9:30 p.m.
1:00 a.m. Music will be provided by Jay Moran and his

to

orchestra.
All students are invited to attend the Ball. Tickets arc now
on sale at the Nortoh'Union Ticket Booth. Cost is $5 per couple.
All cadets may purchase their
tickets by signing a waiver which

tation from Arnold Toynbc: "Our
age will be remebered
because it is the first generation
...

since the dawn of history to believe it practical to make the
benefits of civilization available
to the whole human race.’t, Accordnig to Mr. Smith, “international education” is a unique historical consequence of our age.
There are presently 70,000 for-

students

in the United
9,300 of these arc
European and about 8,500 are
Canadian. Of the African nations,
Nigeria and Kenya are the biggest student exporters.
eign

States, About

Foreign Students Strain on U. S.
Among the foreign students in
the U, S., approximately six per
cent are supported by their own
governments, thirteen per cent
are aided by private organizations, forty per cent are selfsupporting, ten per cent are aided
by the United States government,
and twenty-two percent arc supported by their respecive American universities. Thus, foreign
students arc a severe strain on the

Moreover, not only is the pres-

country a financial strain for us,
but foreign education can be
harmful to other nations and to
the students themselves. After
studying in the United States,
many students become alienated
from their native lands. Often
they become accustomed to our
standard of living and cannot readjust to their own. Many for
eign students (especially Taiwan
and Indian students) never do re:
turn to their homes. Often foreign students experience the
despair of not being able to use
their new knowledge upon returning home because their fel-

low citizens do not adapt readily
sudden change. Therefore,
both exported and imported stu
dents must be carefully screened,
maturity being a definite prerequisite for a successful educational experience.

will deduct the $5 from their
deposit. Instructions
for table reservations are enclosed in the tickets.
Highlight of the Ball will be
the crowning of the queen by
last year’s queen, Diane Scholl at
midnight. The queen will be selected by the cadets from the
four candidates.
Peggy Adams, a 20 year old

AFROTC

junior, is representing Phi Zeta
Chi Sorority. She is a member
of the International Club, Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, and
Student Nurses Association. Upon

LISTEN

i

r the power necessary to
launch the Gemini and Apollo

manned space flights.
Also of interest was the maner of orbiting a space vehicle
•reach the moon, Mars, or some
planetar y body and the
,
eeds to man to sustain him dur'g the
voyage to outerspace. A
umber of possible orbits, from a

arabolic to a hyperbolic
lrV was discussed as well
m| ng

trajecas the
to
required
hit the objec-

FOXHILL

Orientation Most Difficult
Mr. Smith contends that no college's standards should be low
ered to admit foreign students,
but that they should be judged
equally wih their fellow American students. Perhaps the most
difficult problem of the inter
national student exchange is that
of orientation. Orientation should
be a continuous process, beginning in the student’s homeland
artd concluding with the preparation of the student for his return
(Cont’d on P. 5)

VILLAGE

STABLES

6161 Genesee Street Lancaster
English Pleasure Riding and Lessons
300 Acres of trails and indoor arena
Special Rates for Groups
-

NT 3-9755

NT 4-4400

Ask for John Shaffner, manager or
Barb Snyder, instructor.

ing. Active in her dorm and her
sorority, Betsy is also on the
Special Events Committee of
Spring Weekend, The field of
Public Health Nursing appeals to
her.

A

physical

education

major,

Kunice Browning Shaul is rep-

resenting Alpha Gamma Delta
Sorority. A 20 year old junior,
she is active in AWPENNEYS and
her sorority. Presently, she is
planning to go into the Health,
Physical Education and Recrea

lion field

The New Student Review, featuring material
on alienation, will go on
sale Monday, March 22.

TO

to

Major James, Major

majoring in sociology. She is
Civic Service Chairman for her
sorority and has worked on the
Greek Weekend Queen Committee and is presently working on
the Senior Week Ball Committee. Faith hopes to go to Graduate School after graduation and
eventually into Social Work.
Representing Sigma Kappa Phi.
Betsy Mitchell is a 19 year old
sophomore majoring in nurs-

introducing

ence of foreign students in this

Hewitt, Lt. Col. Huddleston, Lt. Col.
The Air University Aerospace
Man’s needs of oxygen, water
Briefing Team presented the “U. and foods shows that many of
s Space
Program” as part of the
the ecological problems are being
'.IROTC enrichment program to solved, such as regenerating
members of the faculty, AFROTC wastes to keep man alive in
t'adets and the general public this space.
week.
Added to the briefing was the
deHighlighting the program was significance aircraft play in Proveloping the U. S. Space
current space program and
i it progressed from the in- gram. These include the X-15,
uow
noculous beginnings following XXB-70, XF-12A, F ill (TFX) and
V orld War II. The advances from
the M-2 shape. The M-2 shape
he VII and the WAC Corporal
is for reentry. A capsule shaped
missiles to our Saturn boosters similar to a teardrop, without
save awe to the impressive thrust power, whcih produces lift.
Power a space vehicle requires to
mnch our satellites. In partic-

go
*

his talk with a very effective quo-

U. S.

AEROSPACE BRIEFING TEAM: Left to Right:
Sweeney.

graduation, Peggy hopes to

into public health nursing.
Chi Omega's candidate, Faith
Miller, is a 20 year old senior

WBFO

BUFFALO
EVENING

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is Worth 10% at
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FOR MEN AND WOMEN
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NEWS
is on sale daily
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rom

the Editor

...

No Time (or Sargent and
The End of the New Campus Deal'
In the privacy of the election booth, with a secret
ballot and drawn curtain, the people have made their
choice
Mr. Sargent and his party have lost. All but one
Campus Alliance candidate won. The people have made
their will known. They want change.
The United Students and Mr. Sargent were symbols,
correctly or incorrectly, of the present administration.
Some called it “Finkelsteinism” while others preferred
to label it the “New Campus Deal.” Regardless of its
name it has been rejected. Too many are discontented
with non-commital, all talk-no action student govern-

ment.

The present administration became a symbol of the
no action government. It. was apparent that the United
Students slate was offering a continuation of this type of
Senate
Taking this into consideration, the people weighed
in the balance the offerings of the two parties. They

made their choice.
As this university grows its problems tend to compound rather than lesson and the need for reform is
obvious. It was especially obvious in student government. The Campus Alliance party offered change, reform and qualified action.
Now they have been elected.
Now they must prove themselves.

Last of the Good Fights
With the appointment of Jeremy Taylor as Editorin-Chief of the Spectrum and Michael Henry as Editorin-Chief of the Ruffalonian the last of the ‘good fights’
is over. The results are obvious.

A Comment on the Future
With a new Senate dedicated to a progressive and
active student government and a new editor dedicated
to a better student newspaper and the liberal cause the
future looks very bright.
It is now up to them to materialize their ideals
into the action that we have long waited for.

Narcotics
On Campus
ITHACA, N.Y. (CPS)—For the
second time in less than two
years, an investigation of the use
of marijuana by Cornell University students has been undertaken.

No arrests have been made yet,
but James A. Perkins, Cornell
President, said that “several”
students were using marijuana
and that the university viewed
with “utmost concern" its availability and use by "even a few
students."
Cornell began its investigation
when they were notified that a
student at Connecticut College
for Women in New London had
obtained marijuana
allegedly
from a Cornell campus source.
The Connecticut student became
ill and a preliminary investigation by her college traced the
drug to Cornell.
In discussing the probe, Perkins said: “Cornell hopes the
investigation will lead to the real
offenders in this vicious business,
the organized network of producers and agents who prey upon
the young people and persuade
them to experiment with habitforming narcotics.”
“Cornell intends to do all within its power to remove the opportunity for life-long harm that
grows out of the availability of

narcotics here,” he said.
In 1963, on the same day that
Perkins was inagugurated as
president, an earlier marijuana
scandal swept the Cornell campus. The investigation, however,
resulted in no convictions and
cases against two students were
dropped because of insufficient
evidence.
During the past two years, 13
young people, including students
at Cornell and Ithaca College,
have been arrested in a continuing investigation of marijuana
traffic in the college community.
College spokesmen declined
further comment until the district attorney reported findings
from his investigations.
Elsewhere, three men were convicted recently on charges of peddling narcotics in the neighborhood of Harvard Square in Cambridge, Mass.
Judge Edward Pecce, who imposed suspended fines and jail
sentences on the three men, said:
“The situation is alarming . . .
the use of drugs among students
is depressing.”
Although none of the three
men was associated with Harvard University, the New York
Times reports ihat the university
administration is known to be
aware that some students are customers of drug peddlers.
Harvard students estimate that
from one-fifth to one-half of the
12,500 students studying at the
university have tried marijuana
while in Cambridge. Administraspokesmen state privately
that they have no idea how many
students might be involved.
Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, Director of the University Medical Services Center, has said "We arc
particularly concerned with educating students to the dangers of
the misuse of drugs without a
medical prescription.
“We arc opposed to the use
of threats." he sard, “and we
know there is no sense in trying
to establish rules; they know how
to get around rules.”
"As a matter of fact," Farnsworth said, .“students in general
use better judgement than the
general public in the use of
tion

THE
The official student

SPECTRUM

of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus. Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
newspaper of the State University

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass't News Editor

Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

Peter Rubm
Barbara Strauss
Trudy Stern
Jeremy Taylor
Allan Scholom
:ia Ann Orszulak
David Edelman

-

JOHN P KOWAl

Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
Re-Write Editor
Photo Editor
Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor

Bernard Dikman
Howard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander
Paul Nussbaum
Edward Joscelyn
William Siemenng
Dallas Garber
..

Oonhral Staff Vicki Bugelski, Marge Rakita, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann,
Sharon Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Manon Michael, Debbie
Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leegant, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teitler, Sue
Duffy, Bill Cortes, Sue Fuller, Nma Kostraba, Lorn Klipstein, Joey Elm,

Meryl Frank,

Rubie, Scott
Greene, Sue

Jim Blogetl,
Skip Blumberg, Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis, Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters, William
Saloman. Joan Fox. Joanne W.sniewsk Mar.a Gigba, Harold Bob, Chuck Cummings,
Raymond Volpe, Jerome Taylor, Ann Gruber. Benoit Bourgois, Sue Melvin, Linda Coply,
Susan Thomas. Marsha Alt, Nancy Simonoff, Rebecca Citron, Rebecca Weinberg, Jay
Nisberg, Margo Wallach, Elame Barron, Alan Goldstein. Sue Zuckerberg
Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan lichwala, Steve
Schuelem, Steve Oberstem. Mart.n Jaffe, Mike Castro. Harvey Starr
Photography Staff David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Worfman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski,
Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff Diane Lewi’s, Jane Herbrand, Elbe Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary Lou
Palmer, lee Corey

Sports Staff:

f A

4

~

Friday, March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

A CP
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class. Poslaga Paid at Buffalo, N Y,
Subscription

950C

$3.00

per

year,

circulation

Represented for .national advertising by
National Advertising Service, ■ Inc , 420
Madison Ave., New York, N Y

drugs,"

Recent reports have indicated
an increasing use of marijuana
among college students through
but the nation. One leading educator has commented that, "Undoubtedly more students are
smoking marijuana than there
were five years ago." Specific instances in the Massachusetts area
have been reported from Brandeis University and the University of Massachusetts.

-yCc fieri

to

the Editor

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

History Offers Solution to Conflict
TO THE EDITOR:

After

following your conflict

of words for several weeks and

feeling disturbed that you have
not yet recognized the only solution to your dispute, I feel called
upon to help you.
History has proven that religious arguments only lead to general warfare: the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, The English Civil War, the Thirty Years
War. Therefore gentlemen, it

would be wise for

you to consider
the possibility of personal combat. Such combat (history will
also show you) leaves the victor a hero to future generations,
decides matters quite decisively,
and involves a minimum of bloodshed.

I feel that it would aid your
cause and clarify your position
to the spectators if you would
pick your costume and weapons
carefully before you enter the

lists. A blank shield would be
suitable for Mr. No-God and the
Crusader’s cross for Mr. Yes-God.
Since to one of you the prospect
of death is not ignorable: tor the
best is yet to be; and since to
the other the prospect of life is
some what essential, the necessary arrangements should not be
troublesome.
May you both aid humanity
and be remembered as the heroes
of mankind, and may the most
just cause win!
Linda Nieman.

Existence of God Questioned
TO THE EDITOR:
I would like to make a few
comments in response to the letter written by the medical tech-

nologists, appearing in the March
5 edition of the Spectrum.
Being a registered nurse, I too
am acquainted with “the mysteries of life,” and death, I might
add. I am also an athiest. When
you go into the hospital and see
people suffering do you ever ask
yourselves how an all-powerful,
all-god God could permit such
things to be, much less ordain
them so. There are two logical
answers to this question. 1. There
is no God, 2, If there is a God,
He is not all-powerful nor allgood. If God is not all-good and
all-powerful, then why put your

faith in Him? If you insist that

there is a God, you can then
answer only by saying, it must
be His will. Why then do you
presume to go against God’s will
by relieving suffering?

I shall never cease to be amazed
by the intricate and wonderful
way in which the human body
functions and lives, but this is

no proof Of the existence of God.

Has not man created substances
with living qualities by combining certain elements in the right
proportions? Along with Mr.
Gross, I maintain that “theism is
incompatible with the scientific
outlook.” Science is based upon
empirical evidence. There is no
empirical evidence supporting
the existence of God.
Karen Fincken

“New” Side of Taylor Revealed
TO THE EDITOR;
After following Mr. Taylor’s
column and all the criticism
which accompanies it, I feel that
his column of last week has at
least (and at last) revealed a
new side to his personality, perhaps the side which governs his
whole output of ideas.

The intellectual atmosphere
which he usually upholds with
remarkable objectivity, completely disappeared in his “frustrated love letter,” in a sea of
maudlin sentimentality remniscent of Salenger at his worst.
Amos Student is certainly the
ideal Jeremy Taylor; so the “new
University” which his articles

describe is limited to the same
romanticized visionary ideal.
For me this throws doubt, not
only on Taylor’s plan for the
University, but on all his “radical
proposals;” his entire point of
view. The sentimental view of
life looks much better in Rover
Boys books than in discussions
of the institutions and beliefs
which shape men’s lives.
I find it irresistably appealing,
however, if only because we sophisticated students show this aspect of ourselves so seldom, probably for fear of this same censure that I am now giving to Mr
Taylor.

Daniel Schroeder

COMMENTARY
JOHN BONER
It strikes me as rather amusing
that I should be writing this afterward to the election before the
event has even taken place. However, 1 would like to congratulate
the members of both party factions on a really honest campaign.
In saying this, I do not mean to
imply that the tactics used during
the course of the campaign were
honest. I mean rather, to say that
never in my experience have I
seen so many needless, underhanded political tactics so
proudly advertised. The first of
these brought to my attention was
a letter to the editor in the last
issue of this paper, although 1 am
not quite sure that you could call
this strategy, deliberately planned, on the part of the faction
involved. It is my opinion that
this paper should not have
printed that letter even if they
did support the opposing party,
as it seems that it had very little
to do with the issues at stake.
On the other hand, I cannot say

I condone the ‘extra" edition of

the BULL, which appeared on

Monday. I myself have at times
enjoyed this publication, and 1

that it does have some
valid critcisms. However, many
of the statements made in that
grant

"extra” were, to my knowledge,
totally erroneous. Humor is good
when it is pure good humor,
but when the wrong people pub
lish it, it can cease to amuse. The
BULL is a basically good idea,
a little oil helps liven up a sometimes dull campus, but unfortu
nately, it has shown a good deal
of irresponsibility and common
journalistic politeness. However,
in principle I am for it, and I
look to see a lot more bull,

before I leave this great institute
of higher learning. As for campus
politics, well . . .', I hope to see
the most important part of the
platforms carried out

that

is; the

soon,

and

establishment of some

type of new book store, complete
with reasonable prices for the
students. It seems to be too lat
to reform the one already extan

�Friday,

March 12, 1965

gucinski.

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

.

Cunningham Dance
Concert Reviewed

.

REFLECTIONS

By BOB HOGG
During the intermission following the second dance called Crisis, a small boy, dressed in navy
blue jacket and horned rimmed
glasses, and looking as erudite
as he ever might, unabashedly
approached me with upturned
face and the question: "Did you
understand it?" I fought back the
colors that were forcing their
way past the sphyncter of my collar. I was forced to honesty as
well as embarassment, “It’s not so

much that you have
it means,” I said.

to know what

"But I felt
something. The dancers made me
feel something like, they seemed
to feel, as though in moving, they
moved me too.”
And then he was gone down
the corridor, fingers touching the
contours of brick along the wall.
And I was left to contemplate
among the smokers how difficult
it is to express yourself to a
child who does not understand
your terms.

Which led me directly to the
dancers, to the movements they
made, to the ryhthms of their
naked feet. Why did they dance

Orientation Is Most Difficult Problem
(Cont’d from P. 3)

home. The wives of married students should be included in the
program because otherwise a
break in family comunications
has been discovered to result.
Wives too often do not understand their husband’s school problems or their overly conscientious
devotion to their work. Finally,
a health insurance program for
all foreign students will be required in the near future.
At UB, there are pow 380
foreign students enrolled, ranging anywhere from the ages of
seventeen to fifty. Of these, 114
are married, and forty-four have
families in the United States. A
large proportion of the foreign
students (approximately 185) are
graduate students. The most popular field of study among these
visitors seems to be in the healthscience area. In contrast to the
large number of international students studying at UB, only ten
IB faculty members are abroad
this year.
"African Jaunf"
Following Mr. Smith’s formal
presentation, the women discussed his information, and then
a luncheon was served. Miss Rives
spoke about and showed slides of
her recent trip to Africa, after
iunch, in a talk called “Africa
Today." Her material for this
speech was printed in the “Deaconess Digest” under the headline "African Jaunt,” which is
Printed below, with her permis

Dr. Cleora K. Handel and I
spent two
weeks in Sierra Leone,
”est Africa this past November,
‘he visit was made at the invitation of some of the missionaries to assist with clinics and
hospitals conducted by the missionaries in that area. Arriving
[jj Paris via Air France and
thence to Freetown, the trip was
tnade to Mayoso by car via Port
t-oko. The journey inland took
mPst of the day but a great deal
of the interesting countryside
Was seen en route, driving along
a, (llrt road
between high elephant grass or
trees with many

beautiful song birds and-multic°lored butterflies darting about
! n the bright sunlight. The mud
houses with their thatched roofs,
“are children and partly bare
toothers were among the first impressions, as well as the non-

descript dress of most of the men
to wear whatever

*ho seemed

was available. Everyone was
friendly to “the strangers.” The
time was spent largely with the
Timme Tribe but living with the
missionaries in their homes. It
was near the end fo the rainy
season and the fierce storms at
night were threatening. They
were preceded by sudden heavy
winds and amazing downpour of
rian but each new day was beautiful. At the first church service
the national pastor prayed fer
vently and at the end of his

prayer the elders turned and
loked at us voicing a loud Amen.
The pastor’s prayer had been that
we would not return to the
United States but stay there with
them. They needed help of many
types and CARE is doing a great
deal for the children by providing dry milk, baby foods, cod
liver oil, soap, and baby powder
for the infants. The generous
hospitality of the missionaries,
the wonderful Co-operation by the
various church groups, and the
sweetness of the natives are
things never to be forgotten.
Leprosy Clinic Visited
One day was spent at a leprosy
clinic where 177 lepers attended.
(Cont’d on P. 9)

Late Incentive Awards
Cause Financial Distress

Many students are facing financial difficulty due to the late
scholarship incentive awards. One
of Robert Finkelstein’s last official acts as President of the
Student Association was the
drafting of a letter to the State
Education Department in Albany
asking them to take remedial
action on the situation.
The Bursar's Office of this Uni-

explained the problem
Student applications for the
awards of the semester in which
they were due were filed late
stuand there is a multitude of
dent awards to be granted.
Mr. Finkelstein told the Regents Center, "The fact remains
that many students who applied
at the proper time as well as
tardy, are still without awards
from the Fall 1964 semester. This
causes hardships on students
which are very serious and too
An example
numerous to list.many
students,
might be that
anticipating arrivals of incentive
checks, are still without textbooks for the semester.”
versity

in relation to themselves? Why
was their footfall, the tinkle of
the piano, the turning of their
their hands, the contortion of
their bodies, each in its own turn,
an unrelated but simultaneous
gesture in and to itself? The music was like the lighting, surely
planned before hand, yet instantaneous, coming from outside,
from offstage, I had thought
Dance to be an extension of music; but the dancers had ears to
another music, and the pianist
heard no count in their feet. Col
ored light fell upon the dancers,
catching them in hues of red, of
yellow, showing them motionless,
slowturning; arms and legs akimbo, sheathed in tight costumes,
serious, keeping their distance,
creating spaces between them.
Who can break the lines? Who do
they not touch?
Night Wanderings, a duet, she
wears a crude gown of furs, split
open to allow the grace of all
womanhood, the color of flesh
upon her legs. Her elegance, her
mastery slips out as her arms
do, naked, a gesture to him. Who
moves in behind her, primitive
hide about chest. But she is away
and he is at back stage, turned to
himself. He crosses her path who
does not dance away, but around
him, she lets him touch lightly.
They are rigid above-waist, lithe
below. He is drawn to her as the
light is. His gestures play upon
her, move her to bend, to bend
his way. Their spiral becomes a
circle. They are enclosed. She is
upon him from behind, thighs
about waist, arms crossed his
chest. He stands as though spreadeagled to the air as she rides
him, rides him to win. Who would
be a conqueror falls.
Their dance is familiar, more
delicate, perhaps, than ours; but
the ritual is common ground, the
dance-floor, our area: one woman,
one man, one dance. He is become a bed, prone, back arched
from the floor, open to her lying
back upon him, swayed gently,
rhythmically, both won and al-

lowed.
The ritual is old, but the dance
is their dance of love. The audience knows the red fire of his
loins, the terrible control: The
music cascades. And then the curtain falls. The watchers are set
free in their acclaim.

Tower Leaning

Pisa's famous 175-foot leaning
Italy leans a little
farther each year but local residents are not worried. The tower
has survived 1000 dropped on
the town during World War H,
more than 100 seismic shocks and
two attempts, in 1838 and 1935,
to strengthen its foundations.
tower in

By

JEREMY TAYLOR

The sentiment of the campus

has reflected itself in an overwhelming majority for the Cam
pus Alliance slate. The Student
Publications Board weighed the

merits of the contending parties
for editor of the Spectrum and
ratified me for editor. I believe
that both decisions were correct,
as far as they went. The success
of the new senate, as well as
the success of the paper now depend on the number and quality
of students who arc willing to
work actively for a better student press and better education
for the entire academic community. The prospects for the coming
year are exciting, to me at least,
and I hope that sufficient numbers of you will also be excited
by the prospect of a dynamic campus and that you will respond to
the recruitment drive for Spectrum staff, and will work on the
standing and special committees
of the senate, particularly com
mittccs like the National Student
Association Committee, the Stu-

dent Welfare Committee, the Convocations Committee, to name only three.
Selma and the World

The events of the past week

have exposed to the world the
incredible moral decadence woven
into the fabric of our present way
of life. A white minister from
Boston, Rev. James Reeb, who
went to Selma to demonstrate his

indignation at the immoral treat-

ment of many American citizens
in the South is, at this writing, ly-

hospital with his life
ebbing away, as a result of being
brutally beaten by southern "gen
tlemcn”. Over two hundred uniing in a

versity students, not very different from any of us, sat in at the
United States Embassy in Toronto. They were protesting the police brutality in Selma. They
themselves were forcibly hauled
from the premises by Toronto’s
finest when the embassy security
officers called for help. Our own
University, together with many

from State Teachers
marched and chanted in downtown Buffalo in front of the Federal Court Building calling for
Federal intervention in Selma to
halt the mass beatings and instudents

junctions against the constitutionally guaranteed rights of citizens,
incidents tike those in Seim* must
never be allowed to happen again)
I call upon the student senate,
the Faculty senate, the entire
academic community to voice its
indignation over the incidents in
Selma; I urge any who can to go
to Selma this vacation and join
the ranks of the integrationists
who are fighting, not only one

hundred years of American history, hut who are now resisting
the attacks of a fascist police state
and its “legal” representatives. I
urge the Civil Rights Committee
to charter a bus to Selma to take
those students whose concern is
genuine, but who could not otherwise afford to go. Inaction in th*
face of such horror is immoral!
I congratulate those Canadian
students who were dragged from
the embassy. It is their business.
It is our business. It is everybody’s business.

Rev. Reeb, like Chaney, Goodman, and Schwcrner, is beyond
congratulation. We can only stand
dumbly shameful before their
sacrifice.

Foss and Gage Conduct
Buffalo Philharmonic
By BARB STRAUSS
The combined talents of con
ductors Lucas Foss and John (!age
commenced the first of the musical events associated with the
“Buffalo Festival of the Fine Arts
Today",

Sunday

Kleinhans Music

afternoon

at

Hall.

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra devoted the entire concert to new innovations and concepts of avant-garde music composed in the last decade. The resulting sounds confounded some,
antagonized others, but also tho
roughly amused and enthralled
many in the large audience.
The radically different performance began with Edgar Varese’s

The stringed section
was entirely absent throughout
this performance; the brass, woodwind and percussion participated
in a variety of seemingly uncoordinated sounds, with the fiveman percussion section busy chiming and banging on various instruments. However, this group
was dominated by a tape recorder
described by Varese as “organized
sound translated on two channels
by means of a stereophonic system to provide a sensation of
spatial distribution of the sound
sources to the listener . . . producing the sensation of movement
in space." The actual sensation,
however, was one of eerie screech"Deserts,”

ing.

Dedicated to Hiroshima
The selection "Tren” was written by Krzysztof Penderecki, in
dedication to those who died at
Hiroshima. Before the pigee was
performed, the audience viewed
a complete shift in orchestra, the
brass being replaced by strings.
The work, for fifty-two solo

strings, emphasized long tones,
or
high notes and sliding notes
glissandoes. By rapping, slapping
and knocking their instruments,
musicians simulated approaching
and retreating aircraft. Extreme
ranges of the instruments were
achieved by the unorthodox divi—

sion of strings, playing behind the
bridge, and exploiting the extreme high and low ranges. This
piece received perhaps the best

response from the somewhat disconcerted listeners, who were perhaps praising

the imagination and

courage of conductor Foss more
than they were voicing apprecia
lion ami understanding of the

music presented.
In the third work. "The Swallows of Salangan," by New York

composer Morton Feldman, the

Krnmanuel Temple Chorale joined
members of the orchestra on stage
only. The choir sang no words,
but only vowel sounds, attempting to emulate the sounds of the
instruments.
Performance in Noise
It could be said that the climax
of the strange program was a performance in noise conducted by
non conformist conductor-composer John Gage. His “Concert for
Piano and Orchestra" included the
setting off of alarm clocks, ringing of bells, banging on the inside of a piano with a hammer,
shooting off of a cap pistol, bursting of balloons and blowing of
noise makers. All of these sounds
were intensified through the placing of tiny microphones on all
instruments. The audience, quite
confused as how to react to this
revolution in sound, reached a

compromise in unabashed hilarity. There were several boos
and also some who bravoed the
performance, demonstrating the
divergence of opinion.
The last contribution to the
concert was a similar work of
scratching strings entitled “Riff
62," by Wojciech Kilar. The word
“Riff’ is a jazz term denoting a
break, a more or less improvisatoy passage, taking off from an
established pattern. In this case,
the term "Riff' could be aptly applied to the entire concert, for
it certainly was a radical break

from any previously established
pattern of music.

�Friday, March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs

Non-lntellectualism and Teaching

Quality on American Campuses
By PIERRE L. VAN DEN BERGHE
Associate Professor of Sociology

Elliott Expounds
NihilisticLiterature
A Destructive Force
By C. CUMMINGS

The basic problem to which I shall address myself
is the relatively low quality of teaching in American universities. The “publish or perish” argument has been
widely advanced as an explanation for this phenomenon,
but, in my view, it has been greatly overstressed. In many
cases the non-productive scholar is also a mediocre lecturer who has found in academia a restful sinecure. Intellectual sterility in research,
writing and teaching often go together very nicely. Furthermore,
in the wide-open academic market of today, the non-publishing
professor docs not perish; he
simply progresses somewhat more
slowly than the active scholar.
Of course, in the physical sciences when the pace of research is
quite intense, “excessive” devotion to teaching can be dangerous; but, in the humanities and
social sciences, good research
and publication are fully compatible with a moderate amount

Mr. Elliott described nihilism
as a destructive force that opposes existence and strives for
oblivion. He added that a piece
of literature, by the power of
its presentation, can reorganise
and alter the reader's ideas. By
using pornography and profanity
and by describing violence, the
writer can generate disgust and
loathing in the reader. The writer
can then direct these strong emotions against anything he wishes
to attack.

Mr. Elliott mentioned William

of good teaching (up to 6 or 9
hours a week, the normal teach-

ing load at almost all major universities).

I should like to argue that one
of the basic reasons for much bad
teaching lies with student attitudes of anti-intcllectualism, or
at least of non-intellectualism. By
this I mean that the majority of
students have no intrinsic interest in or respect for learning, but
rather view education as an instrumental means to an end (e.g.
meeting a future spouse, getting

Professor van dc Berqh
timate causes for this state of
affairs are beyond the control
of the students who are largely
the victims of inadequate intellectual stimulation at home, in
primary and secondary schools
and in the mass media, and of a
broad undercurrent of anti-intelleetualism in American culture.

a secure, well-paid job, moving
up in social status, etc.). The ul-

(Cont’d on P. 7)

Realism’s Myths, Aspects
Discussed By Dr. Fiedler
The writings which symbolically
destroyed women later turned to
a 'feministic' mode.
Dr. Fiedler described his division of 'pop-art' as writing in
which one has the impression that
it was written by a cretin. This
may also be known as creativity.
It entails man’s manipulation of
words and, with this, man is able
to Produce without women. The
birth of this idea comes as the
world is stripped of a god, of a
mother, and looking into the
bowels of life, one sees nothing!
the religion of nothing where
"the only possible ritual, the only
possible prayer, is a yawn.”
Dr. Fiedler received his A.B.
from New York University, and
his A M, and Ph.D from the University of Wisconsin before coming to Buffalo, Along with many

Dr. Leslie Fiedler discussed
the term realism and its aspects
Friday. March 5. Dr. Fiedler ap
peared. as a guest of the Graduate School's “Conference on
Modern Literature." In discussing realism in literature, Dr.
Fiedler stated that he once associated the term with ‘culturally backward works' and refused
to consider it. This he attributed
to his own "cowardess. laziness,
and snobbishness.”
He stated that there arc four
myths in realism parody, pornograph, propaganda, and pop
art. The rise of realism can be
seen as a progress in literature
fantastic to actual, and also as an
from bondage to imagination,
emancipation from orthodox religion.
Propaganda:

In Russia, the Marxist formulation of realism was utilized. It
stresses the truthful, historical,
concrete representation of reality. The writings from Russia tend

teaching positions, including As-

to be sternly pessimistic and opposed to romanticism.
Pornography:
The realist writings ridicule the
■pure young girl' and the ‘Joan
of Arc' images. The degradation
of women attacked class lines and
held the ideal of the lady’ apart.

sitant Professor, Associate Professor, Professor, and Department
Chairman, Dr. Fiedler is also a
Rockefeller Fellow at Harvard,
a Fulbright Fellow and Lecturer,
Junior, Resident and Kenyon Review Fellow.
A few of his publications include Love and Death in the
American Novel, No! in Thunder,
Pull Down Vanity and Other
Stories.

GET OUT OF THE POOL!
you

|p

can

.

.

.

you are a student with a "B" average
or better, and have a good driving record,
No increase in Rates for accidents or

violations.

Literature can profoundly affect people’s ideas, and therefore, it is an important weapon
of nihilism. So George P. EHiott,
author and teacher, told an audience of close to 100 in a symposium given Saturday entitled
“The Use of Literature for Nihilistic Purposes.”

CALL TX 5-1239

Burroughs, Hubert Selby, and
Henry Miller as examples of modern nihilists. He said the vulgarity and extremes found in the
works of these men are deliberate attempts to unsettle and to
provoke the reader.
In addition, Mr. Eliott argued
that however shocking nihilism
in literature is, it is unimpressive beside nihilism in action. He
gave Nazi Germany as an example of the latter.

Expressing his

own

aversion

to nihilism he concluded, “a man
should look at, understand, and

then turn away from the ideas
of nihilism toward ideas that

offer more

hope.”

The deadline for the
New Student Review is
April 5. Address contributions to Box 40, Norton or

bring them to Room 302,
Norton. The Editor will he
available to answer questions every Wednesday and
Thursday from 3:00 until
4:00 p.m. in Room 302.

Browsing Library

Annual Contest

The UB Browsing Library is
sponsoring its annual book contest now. Students in all divisions are invited to participate
in the contest. A first prize of
$100, a $50 second prize, and a
$25 third prize will be awarded.

Full-Fashioned

Lambswool

The requirements are outlined
below:
1. A collection of books, hard
or soft covered, on a single topic
or within a limited field.
2. No fewer than 15 books or
more than 25 books.
This collection, accompanied by
a short paper telling Why, When,
and How the books were collected are all that is needed to compete. Presentation of the awards
will be made in April.

Saddle shoulder

V-neck pullover

Further information and appli-

cation forms may be picked up at
the Candy Counter of Norton or

in Norton Board Office next week.

$15.95
Light Blue, Yellow
Bottle Green, Navy, Burgundy,

Campus
Corner
3260 Main St.
IF 2-3221
10 - A Tum., Wed.. Set
10 ■ 9 Mon., Thurs., Fri.

�Friday,

March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

Course Evaluation Unit Behavioral Sciences
Is Sponsored By NSR Conference Today
A program of course evaluation
is now under way. A student committee under the sponsorship of
the New Student Review is now
engaged in the preparation and
distribution of questionnaires to
faculty and students. These forms
include questions on course content, grading, texts, and other related topics. The information is
being gathered on first semester
classes of the 100 200 level in
the hope of coralating and distributing it to incoming freshmen
before their registration at the
summer planning conferences.
-

The committee has been

pleased by the faculty and stu-

The department
chairmen thus far approached
have given their support to the
project and the rate of return
of the faculty questionnaires has
been high. Distribution of the
student forms in classes will
begin after the vacation. Anyone
interested in aiding this evaluation program is requested to
leave his name and phone number in the NSR office, room 205
Norton, as soon as possible.
dent response.

Today, the State University of
New York at Buffalo will sponsor
its annual Spring Conference of
the Behavioral Sciences. From
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. there will be
three noted professors of psychology speaking in the Conference Theater of Norton Union.
At 9:00 a.m. there will be a
lecture by Dr. Leon Festinger of
Stanford University concerning
“Attitude Change and Behavioral
Change.” Dr. Irving L. Janis of
Yale University will discuss
“Role Playing, Group Interaction,
and Attitude Change” at 10:00
a.m. “Personality and Attitude
Change” will be discussed at 1:30
p.m. by Dr, Milton Rokeach of
Michigan State University. At
2:30 p.m, three guest lecturers
will hold a “Symposium on Attitude Change and Behavior
Change.”
The University’s

School of
Business Administration and the
departments of psychology and

sociology are sponsoring this program for the faculty, graduate

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fik, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General Notices
All University College Students,
except those on strict academic
probation, will register for next
semester according to the following alphabetical schedule:
March 22 through March 26—S
March 29 through April 2—H,
Y, L.
April 5 through April 9—M, J

April 12 through April 16—K, R
April 19 through April 24—B; F
April 26 through April 30 —\V.

invited guests.
tickets may be
obtained in Room 216 of Crosby
Hall.

students,

and

Complimentary

McLuhan Lecture
By Daniel

John Zimmerman
Marshall McLuhan, director of
the Center for Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto, and author of such books as
Galaxy and Understanding Media, in a lecture given
at Baird Hall last Friday afternoon, described some of the revolutionary effects of electronic
technology on modern life. When
Gutenberg

environment becomes pervasive, as technologies tend to,
they become unacceptable and the
demand for an anti-environment
is obviated. Techne means art,
and is an extension of the body,
in every sense. When established
technology is supplanted by a
new type, its form is assimilated
as the content of the new, and
the content of the old becomes
art, i.e., an anti-environment.
After the neolithic age, whose
any

technology was nature, was ended
by the industrial revolution, Romanticism made are of what man
had previously been merged with,

the natural environment which
had been too pervasive for any(Cont’d on P. 9)

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the above scheduled times. At
this time the Receptionist will
give the student registration
cards and a list of instructions to
follow in the subsequent registration procedures. O.T. and P.T.
students will make appointments
with Miss Greenman and Miss
Heap directly. Nursing students
are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
times, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym, on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance register during the
scheduled publicized times. If the

Quality Point Average of such
students improves to such a degree that they become eligible
to continue in school, they will
be informed in June, after semester grades are in, concerning
later registration dates. Students

in this category, however, who
wish to sec their advisers are encouraged to do so. It would be
helpful if these students could

any time.

The Air Force Officers Qualifying Test (AFOQT) will be ad
ministered Tuesday, March 23, in
Room 140, Capcn Hall beginning
at 9:00 a.m. Persons interested
in an Air Force Commission
should take this examination as
soon as possible. This includes
possible candidates for the advance AFROTC course for cither
the two-year or the four-year program and Women-of-the-Air Force
(WAF) and AFROTC cadets who
wish to upgrade to pilot (IP) or

NEW
TIEINC.
LAND
•

Students will make appoint
ments with the UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE Receptionist in Diefen
dorf 114 one week in advance of

at

the Opening

•

May 3 through May 7 —P, C

make an appointment during the
alphabetically scheduled times,
but, if the problem is pressing,
they can make an appointment

We Are Proud
to Announce

navigator (IN).

Reserve your-seat by calling
2945 by March 22,

*•«

no cover charge or minimum

JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
SAM NOTO

Psychology and the Department
nf Sociology will be held today in
Norton Theater. This Symposium
on Attitude Change and Behavior
Change is being held for faculty,
graduate students, and invited
guests. Complimentary tickets for
the morning and afternoon sessions may be obtained in Room
216. Crosby Hall: Room 312, Hayes
Hall; or in Room 306. Townsend

Hall. Speakers are:

Professor Leon Kestinger, Stan
ford University; "Attitude Change

and Behavioral Change"

Professor

Irving L, Janis, Yale

University: "Role Playing. Group
Interaction and Attitude Change”

Professor Milton Rokcaeh, Mich

igan State University; "Personality and Attitude Change"

March 22

—

Peter Frevert, Assistant
Professor of Economics will present a paper, "Economic Behavior Under Uncertainly: An Experiment," when the Faculty Re
search Workshop meets at 4:00
p m. March 22, in Room 333 Nor-

Dr.

ton Hall.

Fine Arts Film—"Eclipse"

Placement
Announcements
The Marine Engineering Laboritory of Annapolis. Maryland is
currently recruiting for ME, EE,
ChE, Physics, Mathematics, and.
Chemistry majors. Although the
firm’s representatives will not be

available for on-campus interviews they are accepting resumes
of interested candidates. Literature and specific information con

procedures
are available front the University
Placement Services.
cerning

application

The Federal Bureau of Investi-

gation is currently receiving ap
plications for positions as Special
Agent from candidates with a
minimum age of twenty-three,
U S. Citizenship and who (1) have
a BS degree with strong academic
grades in science, or (2) have a
four-year degree and a fluency
in a foreign language other than
French, German, or Spanish. Oncampus interviews will not be

available. For further information, contact the University Placement Services.

school
admission examinations and teach
er examinations that arc required
in certain school districts, their
application deadlines, and dates
of test administration
Forthcoming

graduate

Boston Public Schools: Register
before July 15, 1965 Examination
date is August 18, 1965

Graduate Record Examination:
General information and applica
tion forms can be obtained from
the Student Testing Center, 316
Ilarriman Library Examination
dales: April 24, and July 10, 1965

•

•

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL

Parking iri Rear

tO

San Francisco Unified 5.D.: El-

ementary and Mentally Retarded.
Registration closed March 22,
1965, written—March 27, Oral—
May 19.
Fontana Unified School District, San Bernardino County, Fon-

tana, California (located 48 miles
east of Ix&gt;s Angeles, 11 miles
from Riverside). Candidates interested in teaching in this area
are required to have a personal
interview. The nearest college to
Buffalo where recruiting will be
scheduled is Youngstown University in Youngstown, Ohio. For
further information regarding
openings or appointments for an
interview contact: Director of Personnel, Fontana Unified School
District, 9680 Citrus Avenue, Fontana, California.
References required for admission to. various graduate schools
may be sent to the Educational
Placement Division which will collect, reproduce, and distribute the
references to the appropriate graduate schools. The original references arc retained in the candidate's permanent personal cre-

dential file for utilization upon

completion of the advanced degree.

Teacher Placement
Interviews
March 12
Central Square Central Schools,
General Square. N. Y.
—

March 23
Eden Central
—

N.Y.

Lyndonville

Schools,

Schools,

Central

Lyndonville, N: Y.

March 24

Eden,

—

Montgomery

Public

Rockville, Maryland

Schools,

Rochester Central School District, Rochester, N, Y.

March 25

—

Niskayuna Public Schools

March 26
Mineola Public Schools. Mine—

ola, N. Y.

Placement
Interviews
March 12

—

U S. Dept, of State
March 22
—

All-State Insurance Co.
U S Dept, of the Treasury (Internal Revenue)
Armour Grocery Products

Investors
March 23

Buffalo

Planning Corp.

—

Savings

Bank

Boy Scouts of America
New York State Dept, of Public Works

March 24

—

The Gannett Co.
Falls Gazette
William S Merrill Co
-

March 25

Niagara

—

University of Rochester
Jewel Tea Co.. Inc,

Lincoln Rochester Trust Co.
March 26
Coast Guard
—

Bell

Aerosystems

PART-TIME AND SUMMER

EMPLOYMENT
March 22
-Tele
American Telephone
graph
Summer Employ
—

&amp;

—

•

JAM SESSION SUN 9pm
Buffalo’s Top Jazz Show!

March 12—
Annual Spring Conference of
the Behavioral Sciences: sponsored by the School of Business Administration, the Department of

Miller Analogies Test: The ex-

TCP JAZZ TRUMPET
nominee and star performer with:
COUNT BASIE
STAN KENTON
WOODY HERMAN
Will Perform FriSot., Sun., Nite at the

tular Demand...

Weekly Calendar

amination may be taken at any
time by contacting the Student
Testing Center, 316 Harriman.

PLAYBOY’S

490 Pearl Street

PACE SEVEN

?

New York City Examinations:
Candidates are urged to apply
immediately to the Board of Education. Seniors are eligible only
for the Substitute Examination
which will be scheduled when
sufficient applications have been
received. Apply to: Board of Education. The City of New York,
Office of the Board of Examiners,
110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn
I, New York.

ment

March 25

—

Iroquois Gas Co.
Employment
Jewel Tea Co ‘ Inc
Employment

Summer
Summer

For interview appointment* or
information, plea** call 831-33)1,
Univarslty Placement Service*,
Schoellkopf Hall.

�Friday, March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

Stunt Night
To Be Held
Mud Weekend

saswwsM®

By LEON LEWIS

work, Dog Star Man. The MarkoStunt Night is the traditional
poulos film was often very beaubetween fraternities and
contest
tiful, and the technique was quite sororities in which they display
promising, but somehow, I felt their talents (acting, singing,
that it was unnecsesarily repitidancing, etc.). It is one of the
tious and not fully realized. Still, few chances given to the Greeks
a good and honest failure (perat UB to publicly display and
haps that is too strong a word) symbolize the enthusiastic comcheap,
more
than
a
is worth
petition and pride of each indilimited “success.”
vidual group.

yond Sunday's offerings), a single
theme or structuring concept
might have helped a good deal in
producing an effective series.
Apparently, some committee
composed of “patrons of the arts”
met and screened about 40 films.
From this rich lode, they have
mined about 10 which they have
selected for public presentation.
How they selected the films they
have programmed is beyond me.
They are all non commercial, but
otherwise, they do not seem to
have much to do with each other.
Some are obviously experimental,
and others use fairly common
techniques imaginatively. Some
are relatively concrete and direct

and others abstract and disconnected. None of them are really
arotic or obscenely daring, which
means that fully one half of the
work (some of the most interesting and best stuff too) of the
independent film makers has
been ignored. One suspects that
a timid selection committee took
pains to avoid antagonizing any
easily offended and influential
local burghers. The selections
for the series were not announced
until the day on which the first
screening took place, and I would
imagine that some frantic reshuffling took place after the Jill
Johnson dance troop upset some
delicate sensibilities by daring to
present the human body, naked
and beautiful, in motion.
The afternon program included Stan Brakhagc's Blue Moses
and the renowned Twice A Man

by Gregory Markopoulos. To
satisfactorily deal with these
movies as serious and total cre-

ative efforts, I think that I have
to discuss the philosophy of composition and film theory which
Brakhage and his friends have
reveloped (see the Brakhage
isue of Film Culture). Instead,
let me discuss, briefly, the content and form of the films to
give some idea of what has been
and what will be. This program
will be repeated tonight for those
who missed it the first time
around.

Brakhage believes that a director must hold the camera himself, and be able to edit and cut
and rework any single frame of
a movie. His vision is intensely
personal and very ( forceful. Blue

deals directly with the
emotive response of the audience
by mixing the sensational aspect
of it with the ideational component of the pre-conditioned
viewer. The various masques of
the film-maker are replaced by a
number of unusual postures and
the entire effect is of a total
confrontation of the film, the
film-maker and the viewer. It is
not completely successful, but
the subject matter makes that
impossible. It seemed quite en-

Mows

grossing to me. and was a good
prelude to the chef d'oouvr* of
the festival, Brakhage's longer

Strangely, while Markopolous’
film seemed repetitious, Andy
Warhol’s incredible Eat film almost didn’t. Despite the speeding
up and cutting off which some
idiot did to it, it managed to get
its effect cross. I have always
felt that a cardinal rule of art
is not to try to show "boredom”
by boring the audience. Warhol’s

whole film, the 40 odd minutes
we saw (out of a rumored two
hours), is, so help me, a full face
—half abstracted shot of a man
eating mushrooms, looking around
and playing with a cat. As Warhol has said, even the smallest
change becomes crucial when
nothing is happening. It helps to
have a number of wits around
you in the audience while the
thing goes on (there is no need
to hold a respectful silence)
“it looks like he’s going to eat
the cat”
but the picture itself
is actually interesting much of
the time. As Tom Benson said,
ideally, a viewer ought to come
—

—

to the thing unknowing, so that
he will be alert for a plot of
some kind, some changes, and
then really be slaughtered by the
hopelessly static condition of the
thing. Then, eventually, he may
get caught up in Warhol’s mystique. I don't know if I’d recommend too much of this sort

of

but one venture into

thing,

the area is worthwhile.

Ingreen, by Nathaniel Dorsky,
is fatuous rubbish. Lots of artsycraftsy stuff—says little and says
it with a heavy hand. Montagnes
Magiques by the young French
director Robert Enrico, is at least
a fine travelogue-commentary on
the world, nature, science and
religion, and maybe more. It had
a certain quality of honesty and
direction to it that distinguished
an appealing sincerithe tone
ty. one might say. And it was
quite beautiful. There isn’t anything wrong with the traditional
artistic concept of the artist revealing and creating anew the
wonders of the world.

With the cooperation of the
Union Board, the date for Stunt
Night has been set for Thursday
night, April 29. Stunt Night is
now incorporated into the activities of Spring Weekend. This has
enabled an adequate amount of
participation, giving all groups
the opportunity to take part in
the Spring Weekend activities
on campus, Flo Gerber, Chairman, has stated that: “Stunt
Night will survive despite its
although
many woes this year
more enthusiasm on behalf of the
Greeks is urged for this enterprise.” Many surprises and detailed planning should make this
the best Stunt Night yet and a
rewarding, worthwhile experience
for all the participating groups.”
—

Alpha Kappa

ternities,

Psi would like to

announce its newly elected officers: President

—

Vicce President

—

Tom Rogers;
Herb Reck-

linghausen; Recording Secretary
Dave Cook; Corresponding
Secretary
Jim Burt; Treasurer
Ron Capuano; Master of Ritual
Skip Fohl.

—

—

—

—

March 27 Alpha Phi Omega will
hold a date bowling party at the
Island Park Lanes, Union Road.
The party will start at 6:30 p.m.
The Spring Pledge
Gamma Phi has elected
They are: President
Genau and Treasurer
Specter,

—

—

Chi Omega announces the officers of its Spring Pledge Class:
President: Ann Kohler; Vice
President: Pat Dray; Secretary;
Sophie
Guadagna; Treasurer;
Diane Kile.
Phi Kappa Psi extends an invitation to all other UB students
to their open party March 19 at
the Sun Colonies, Ft. Lauderdale,

class of
officers.
Richard
Richard

Theta Chi Fraternity would
like to announce their new officers: President —Henry Willett,
Vice-President
Tom RutherTom Hines,
ford, Secretary
Treasurer
Skip Stirner,
Doug Sandburg, ChapMarshal
lain
Peter Fischer, Historian
Garry McGovern, LibrarianBill Marx, Guards —. Mike Gerrie
and Bruce Underhill.
—

—

—

—

announces

Theta Chi Sorority

the officers of its Spring Pledge
Class: President, Barb Tysha; Vice
President and Chaplin, Karen
Hanson; Secretary, Veronica
Lovas; and Treasurer, Pat Con-

—

—

nors.

A drawing for an RAC Portable Television will be held
March 26.

Last week, the chapter room
of our fraternity house was dedicated in memory of our late
brother E. William Theodore,
who was taken from us by an
automobile accident.

Campus Acclaimed

CHAD MITCHELL TRW

A meeting held of all Stunt
Night chairmen from various fra-

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL, Sun., Mar. 28th, 8:30 PM

sororities, and other

recognized groups showed that
many more were willing to take
part in Stunt Night since the date
had been changed to coincide
with Spring Weekend. It was decided that Wednesday, March 24,
all script applications would be

*

$2.50-3.00-3.50-4.50 —All Seats Reserved

�
�

�

TICKETS

GO ON SALE MARCH 18
AT NORTON HALL TICKET BOOTH

1

T

due and should be left with the
1FC secretary in Room 323 Norton. A deposit will also be due
by this date. Any group which

did not attend the previous meeting, or that has any questions,
should contact Miss Gerber (8375487) before March 24. April 5 is
the script deadline and another
meeting will be announced prior
to this. It is requested that anyone interested in working on any
phase of the overall Stunt Night
Committee
from usher to M.C.
should leave their name with
the IFC secretary, Mrs. Kendall.

The Inner Circle Coffee House
at 3191 Bailey Ave.

—

the Circle Art Theatre)
Friday, March 12 Saturday, March 13
(near

—

■

THE GROSVENERS

—

After my original carping, it
may sound like the films shown
Sunday were almost all interesting. They were, but I have some
idea of what’s being done, and
good as this may have been for
a start, they could have brought
things that were really exciting,
instead of settling for a cut above
comfortable mediocrity. In addition, the prospectus for the rest
of the series sounds like much
more of the same. Instead of a

varied and representative showing, too much of it is cut from
the same cloth. And worst of all,
Dog Star Man, the best of the lot,
has been cut by the board to
avoid upsetting “the old lady
from Dubuque." This is avantgarde

.

.

art today?

At Conference

Cadets
Nine members

of the Arnold

Air Society Richard C. Browning
Squadron attended an Area E-l
conclave at Pennsylvania State
University last weekend. Eleven
schools from the northeastern section of the-United States participated in the program. The weekend activities included an informal dance, luncheon, formal Military Ball, and Dining-In. Major
General Jerry D. Page was the
honored guest at the Dining-ln
and spoke on "Air Force Policy

and Strategy.”

I42B HERTtl AVE.- TF6-74M

“

-»

&gt;

.

«.t

the Luck
Ginger (ji

Coffey:
ROBERT
SHAW lltfi

'

MARY

"CONTEMPT!"

pga
ONE

WWD

BWBAM BARRIE

(so

what

is it ain't

eating a

PALAHCE

Andy Warhol

mushroom for
hours!
It's Bardot

(««•

BRIGITTE
BARDOT
JACK

salutes
Buffalo's Festival
of the arts with

■

2 OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST!"
r. rmcs

JOStPH E. L£V#ff

THE CIRCLE ART

49 Edward
TL 2- 9338
BUFFALO FOLK CENTER
to serve your entertainment needs

■

The dominant philosophy behind the Buffalo Festival of the
Arts Today seems to be one of
exposure. Some of the most interesting and varied work in the
world of kinetic, optic has been
gathered for display. The very
dissimilarity of many of the objects seems to increase the interest of each one as as individual artifact. Even the curious
juxtaposition of James Whistler’s
portrait of his mother in a place
of prominence with the more
modern work seems to work. The
idea of laissei-faire for the collection is a good one, and the
wild reaction to the music, dance
and theatrical presentations
seems to indicate that it has
worked in those areas of artistic endeavor too. However, from
what I have seen of the so-called
"avant garde” Film Series (the
deadline of this number prevents
me from discussing anything be-

Greek Notes

two

(never nudier!)

.

IN COLOR
maeiissV
AND FRANSCCE news must
.

and it's in color!)
nightly at 7:30 and 9:30

Royal Arms
19 W. Utica 885-6262

Last 3 Mites

Stan Getz
Quartet
Sunday

afternoon concert 4-7
Opens Monday
YUSEF LATEEF Quartet
Coming March 22

Horace Silver Quintet

3KSMMY*JtiMT m*»L

Hitchhike to THE TOWERS
(948 Hertl Avenue)
With Your Ball and Chain
Shake and Quake to the Excellent Dance Music of
Recording Artists

MAT NIXON
and his Sizling Sepian Band
King of blues, jazz you name it, they'll play if
-

Every Wednesday, Friday, Saturday,
Sunday from 9 p.m. until ?

�Friday,

March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

Clinics Work to Raise Standards
(Cont’d from P.
ularly to
5)

McLuhan

on

Realism

from P. 7)
one to get outside of; the aesthetic distance was lacking.
other medications for worms,
Now we are confronted with
even
vitamins
colds, rashes, and
the automated, electronic revoINTER-VARSITY
were administered. A special
lution. The notions of individualCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
ity and realism, so much emphashed is provided for treating
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowulcers and these were trimmed,
sized in the wake of the indusship is sponsoring a scries of
cleansed, and dressed by a man
trial revolution, are becoming
studies on the Old Testament
who had been trained by nurses
untenable as we revert, in a way,
to do this; he, too, was a leper.
to the Inore magical and tribal conducted by Vincent San Marco.
They will be held Tuesdays at
We also visited the leprosarium
principles necessitated by the
4:30 p.m. in Room 266 of Norton
at Masanga where those needing
fact that the individual cannot
Union. The studies will meet
bed rest were cared for. The
keep up with his new technoMarch 23, 30, April 6, 27, and
clinics begin with prayer and to acquire.
logical environment
circuitry
May 4.
singing and a short religious
The land is fertile and grows is too fast for intellectual reflecservice; unless the people are things readily such as rice, yams tion
man
must
revert
and
to
March 26, Inter-Varsity is havthere for the service, they would
and cassava. It would be a
ing a business meeting at Peggy
good techne, to art. Mr. McLuhan
not be accepted as patients. They experiment to try to grow soy says: "What we call Realism is Adam's at 7:30 p.m. Please keep
began to arrive about 7:00 a.m,
beans to provide a valuable proan extreme form of abstract art.”
this date open.
and often times we were not
tein food for the adults and soy That is, a representation of what
The following Friday, April 2,
through seeing the patients until
we
not
see,
a making of what we
milk for the infants. The farmers
IVCF will hold their annual elecafter dark. Yaws, too, is prevaknow with all our faculties, not
work hard planting and protectlent and it is a very serious ing their rice and the women just sight, which is the only form tion of officers. Everyone is
urged to attend.
disease in the tropics. A British
do the weeding, coking, houseof perception with inherent conphysician, Dr. Campbell, had carkeeping, and care for the chiltinuity.
The Spring Weekend of IVCF
The traditional environment of
ried on a campaign against it dren. It would be good to have
chapters in Western New York
throughout Sierra Leone giving a better water system to save visual space requires its antiwill be held April 9-11. Reservalarge doses of penicilin to all
and filter the copious rain water thesis, non-visual space (perhaps tions can be made anytime.
who would take it—and they will during the rainy season. Rain
extra visual is better), to accomoor
take anything given by needle, river water is the only drinking, date to technical change. Of
The seminar conducted by
a “chuke,” because they think cooking and bathing water
Bruce Haan on "Personal Witcourse, visual space must still be
availthis works better. Yaws had been able. There is need for an instudied, but a progressive society nessing" will not meet next week.
well controlled in the country
tensive immunization program for requires expansion through the The final two sessions will be
for about four years but is insmallpox, diptheria, whooping enrichment of all its capacities.
held April 14 and 21 at 4:30 p.m.
creasing again.
cough and poliamyelitis. One Automation creates leisure time, in Rooom 344 of Norton Union.
The children brought to the does occasionally see the effects in which one may pursue a
Prayer
baby clinics have many troubleof the latter where it has been hobby. Mr. McLuhan pointed out Tuesday meetings will be held
at 3:30 p.m. and Thurssome conditions, among which
missed. The natural resources that hobbies use all of one's faculare Kwashikor (protein defiare tremendous, the country is ties, whereas a job uses only a
ciency), dietary deficiencies of beautiful, and the beaches are few; yet the job tires, while the
other types, worms, bronchitis, wonderful playground areas hobby relaxes and revitalizes.
rashes, teething problems and which no one seems to use. The With more and more people becoming dissatisfied at the prosthere are hundreds of umbilical possibilities even in this
small pect
hernias. The mothers love their country stagger one’s imaginaof spending an entire life at
babies but often were not well tion, and Africa has so
one job, the study of non-visual
Arnold Air Society
much
enough themselves to give them more than this tiny area to despace can lead to an even more
Wednesday, March 24. the
the best care but they come regadvanced technology in which Arnold Air Society will
velop.
continue
work may be diversified and
its presentation of Air Force
pleasurcablc. Electronics is a
oriented films. The first movie
non-visual field, as is nuclear will be shown in the
conference
physics when it probes the untheater at 2:00 p.m. Admission
seen and much of modern art, is free and all students
are in(Cont’d from P. 6)
literature, and music. For intor the professor are small classvited.
Wherever the responsibility for es of better than average stustance, John Cage emphasizes instudent non-intellectualism may dents,
A. I. A. A.
some of whom may become terval (i.e., quantity) as a strucThe Student Chapter of the
lie, I submit that the stock of stimulated to enter the world of tural principle of his music. In
American Institute of Aeronaut
enthusiasm and dedication with scholarship. But, of course, the literature, the change from Realwhich many young professors elitist approach
tics and Astronautics will host a
clashes with the ism to Symbolism may be constart their careers
dinner meeting with the Niagara
gradphilosophy of mass education, sidered as a dimensional expanbecomes
ually eroded, and in some cases
and discriminates to some extent sion of the verbal universe, of Frontier Section Chapter Weddegenerates into cynicism when against
thought-space, in which both
nesday, March 24. This affair will
the student with an inadcollege faculty face year after
artist and reader create their
take place in the Fillmore Room
educational
equate
background.
year apathetic,
indifferent or even Superior Teacher—Superior Cre- own, relativistic space time. The of Norton Union at 6:30 p.m.
hostile students whose paramount
Mr. John Tormcy, Rocket EnOrient offers the greatest conative Scholar
academic concerns are grades, exAn occasional pedagogue of tinous history of no-visual space gineer at Rockctdyne Co., Mcaminations and minimization of genius can combine the best as- as a basis for a techne. Haiku Gregor, Texas, will be the guest
speaker. The winning entry in
effort. Basically, this generates pects of these
and the art of flower-arthree approaches poetry
three types fo lecturing styles and
the Student Paper competition
the all-around “superior rangement are discontinuous in
be
and philosophies;
teacher,” As often as not, he is terms of visual space, and depend will also be presented.
1. The
histrionic approach also a superior creative scholar upon arrangement, rather than
Junior Nursing Class
llc
vi ews teaching as a special as well. That exceptional person connection, to provide a cohesive
The Junior class of the
form of mass
structure.
School
entertainment aimwho manages to remain a superof Nursing is holding its annual
ed at conveying a superficial
We suffer from “information
ior teacher after ten or more
Junior-Senior
Banquet
22
April
'eneer to students and at
years of frustrating experiences overload.” We rapidly force a
miniin honor of the graduaing class,
the learning trauma. Comvisual fraction of ourselves to
mizing
battling against hordes of untuThe banquet will be held at the
bmed with easy grading
the point of exhaustion and col
and light tored Philistines does indeed deCarriage House. Cocktails will be
reading assignments, this is the
lapse, while allowing our other
serve a pedestal and a halo. Hapserved at
p m, and dinner
■['Urest recipe for student popu- pily, he frequently gets them. As aspects to lie dormant and un- will follow6:30
at 7.00 p.m. There
though obviously not for to the legendary “good teacher tapped. The strategy of our dewill be a guest speaker and enearning the respect
fense lies in myth-making, in the
of the thinkwho does not get promoted,” may
tertainment. We hope all stuminority. The professor be(much
form
of
pattern-recognition
I suggest that he is often an acadents and faculty members in
comes a genteel academic comeakin
to
epic
the
formula
which
winner
demic comedian and
of
the Pre-Service Baccalaureate
an. This role naturally
requires student popularity contests whose enabled the ancient Greek oral will attend.
poets
se
to
long
poems
nse
of
remember
humor
.
ahd some claim to excellence is a mask for
aient which means that
like the Iliad and the Odyssey
Tickets will be on sale from
mediocrity?
mar performers are rare.spectacfor instant recital). When we ex
March 22 through April 15. They
Badly
ru
peditc our possibilities as india PProach can be paincan be obtained from your spe,
ur the faithful and compulviduals within a society, Mr Mccial class representative
and
few who actually
Luhan believes, we expedite a from junior class representaattend lecby
keeping
better
life
up
with
tives.
Students can check with
Education Law No. 807 (Fire
our environment enough to make
cyn ' ca * approach which
junior class representatives
Drills) has recently been signed
in
ai s teaching
living
an
art.
regards to transportation.
as an unpleasT
by Gov. Rockefeller requiring
U
unavoidable necessity, the administrator of every public
,u
he student as an
incidental or private college or university
product of
the university. This within the state having more than
P* teaching is often perfunc25 students to have personnel
repetitive, routinized, outevacuated from buildings by
and poorly organized. Unmeans of drills. Such drills shall
ataple ln form,
this style of be held at least three times each
ung can, however, be someyear.
ncher in content than the
It is fully realized that most
They were treated with Dapsone
for leprosy but they needed many

the nurse with their
The diet is low in protein content and protein
deficiencies begin in infancy. They
have fruit in abundance such
as
papaya, oranges, grapefruit
avacados and cassava roots, but rich
is their “staff of life” and unless
they have had their rice they
feel
hungry. Fish are available
in the
streams, bush hens and grey
monkeys also provide some protein in addition to the few chickens and cows the family are able

PACE NINI

(Cont’d

problems.

—

—

—

—

day at 4:30 p.m. Friday at 9:00
a m. a Bible Study will be held.
In place of the Bible study that
was held Thursdays at noon we
are now holding one at 3:00 p.m.
Mondays.
NEWMAN

The next meeting of the Newman Apostolatc will be held Wednesday, March 24 at 7:30 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room. Mr. Marvin
Garfinkcl will speak on “Jewish
Culture and Religion.” Everyone
is invited.
During Lent, Mass is said at
noon at St Joseph’s Church and
at 5:00 p m. at Newman Hall.

The Sunday discussion groups
each Sunday evening at
7:30 p.m. at Newman Hall. The
weekly discussion classes meet
each Tuesday at 10:00 a.m. and
3,00 p.m, and each Thursday at
3:00 p.m. in Norton 330.
meet

Alfred State College will host
the Province Convention the
weekend of April 9.

Call Board

Three Types of Lecturing Styles

f

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brewed for braves..

’

,

one. These mediocre profes-

J;aeh,J* bebuthighly

productive in
often are equally

rounded mediocrities in all
f th e !r academic job.
Tu°
he elifisf approach which
■sses
itself mostly to the stuaverage intelli,Bof,above
anc' niotivation,
happiaves the mass toandsink
or
, beared at a high level

i

.

uncompromising

of quality,
caching is often combined
ough grading and heavy
o assignments. The rewards

buildings on Campus are fireproof, however, contents are not.
The University is not concerned
as much with flame as with the
dangers connected with smoke
and suffocation. The drills are
for the expressed purpose of
causing students, faculty, and
staff to evacuate buildings in an
orderly manner.
Drills will commence, in the
near future. In an effort to fully
comply with the provisions of
Education Law No. 807, the cooperation of all is solicited.

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�Friday, March 12,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

1965

AKRON STOPS BULLS, 69-58
ZIPS QUICKLY END BUFFALO TOURNEY DRIVE
AFTER 81-69 TRIUMPH OVER RANDOLPH-MACON
By STAN LICHWALA
The University of Buffalo’s
Basketball Bulls continued to rewrite the record book as they
soundly trounced Alfred in a
game played in Clark Gym last
week. The Alfred game was the
last chance the Bulls had to
sharpen up before traveling to
Akron, Ohio, last Thursday for
the National Collegiate Athletic
Association Tournament’s MidEast Regionals.
The Herd looked much like a

tournament-bound
team when
they took to the floor against Alfred. The high-scoring contest
featured the red-hot shooting of
UB’s Jack Karaszcwski who paced
the Bulls with 26 points, the highest point total for any UB player
in a single game this season.
Jack missed only once in 14 field
most of them
goal attempts
—

from 15 lo 20 feet from the basket. This tied the record for the
most field goals in a single game
for a UB player under Coach Serfustini. Norb Baschnagel and
Harvey Poe scored 15 points each
and Dan Bazzini followed closely with 13. The Bulls had a fine
55 per cent shooting average from
the field to Alfred’s 36.8 per
cent. When the scoring spree
had ended, Buffalo had gained
victory number 18 against two
defeats by the score of 108-73 and
had extended its win streak to
13 straight victories. This thirteenth consecutive victory set a
record for a Serfustini-coached
team and the season record tied
an all-time school record for
games won in a season.
Last Thursday, the UB Basketball Team left the friendly surroundings of Buffalo and traveled to Akron, Ohio to meet Randolph-Macon, Mason-Dixon Conference Champions, in the opening round on the following day.

the Bulls and were playing before a very friendly crowd anxious to see them win.
As the game began, it was obvious that the Zips were going
to take full advantage of their
superior height. They overwhelmingly dominated the boards forcing the Bulls to take one good
shot at a time. Their zone defense proved not to be impenetrable,, but the eagers from Buffalo were simply not hitting.
Nevertheless, the Bulls were able
to keep it close throughout the
first 20 minutes of play and at
intermission, the score was Akron
32 and Buffalo 28,
The second half saw the Akron
Zips slowly pul) away from the
Buffalo Bulls. Jerry Sloan led
the Zips who were able to feed
six-foot eight-inch Bill Turner

and 6-4 Don Williams under the
basket. Under Sloan’s direction
the Zips built a lead that was
never to be headed. In this half
Jack Karaszewski broke onto the
scoreboard with 11 points as the
Bulls seemed to stage a rally.
But with the Zips hauling in

most of the rebounds and going

into the one and one bonus situation with 7 minutes and 38
seconds to go in the half, the UB
rally proved to be short lived.
These two points, Akron’s reboundings and Buffalo’s fouling
led to the ultimate defeat of the
Bulls. The Zips scored 23 field
goals and Buffalo also penetrated
their zone defense for the same
number of field goals. The difference came at the free-throw
line with the Zips scoring 23 to
the Bulls’ 12 foul shots. The final
score read Akron 69 and Buffalo
58.

Norb Baschnagel lead the Buffalo scoring with 14 points, followed by Jack Karaszewski and
Bill Barth, each with 11. The
Bulls finished with a 37.1 per cent
average from the floor and pulled
in 28 rebounds to Akron’s 50 big
rebounds. Thus Akron will go to
the quarter-finals of the NCAA

per cent from the field.

ever for a team coached by Len

The UB players also picked an
All-Opponent Team, as follows:

ances in Memorial Auditorium,
including a 79-53 thrashing of
Steubenville, one of the top small
college teams in the country; and
victories over LeMoyne, to shat-

Bill Turner (Akron U.)—scored
28 points to lead team to 65-68
win over UB in NCAA Tournament.
Larry McIntosh (Tennessee)—
scored 25 points to lead team to
79-54 win over UB at Knoxville.
Richie Tarrant (St. Michael’s)
scored 28 points to lead team to
93-86 win over UB in Le Moyne
—

Holiday Tournament.
Gary D eY u 1 i a (Le Moyne)
tournament in Evansville, Indiana, to face St. Michael’s scored 26 points against UB;
of Vermont, but the Bulls can game score: UB 62, LeMoyne 59.
Tom Lenney (Niagara)- -scored
proudly look back upon one of
the finest seasons,.# University of 24 points gainst UB; game score:
Buffalo Basketball team has ever UB 74, Niagara 63.
had. Their record will be rememThe University of Buffalo basbered for a long time and will
ketball team, in closing out its
be very difficult to duplicate.
194-65 campaign with a 19-3 record, can look back upon a recordNOTES
breaking year that saw the Bulls
Norbert Baschnagel, 6-3, 205-lb. vault to the fore of Eastern small
senior forward from Buffalo, colleges.
N. Y., has been selected by his
The 19 wins represent the most
teammates as the Most Valuable that any Buffalo team has ever
Player on the 1964-65 Univerwon in a single season and the
sity of Buffalo Basketball team.
winning percentage of 86.3 is the
Baschnagel, who has now won best UB mark since 1930-31 when
three varsity letters on tthe hardUB’s basketball team posted a
wood, was third in team scoring 15-0 mark.
with a 10.0 per game average and
second in rebounds with 163,
This year’s edition of the Bulls
just 3 short of Bill Barth. He was broke school records for most
regarded as the most consistent points scored in a season (1865),
performer on the team.
most field goals made (735), highDan Bazzani, senior guard from est field goal season percentage
Niagara Falls, N.Y., and Jack Ka(47.2), and best offensive averraszewski, senior forward from age (84.2).
Buffalo, were chosen honorary
The team also established recco-captains for the season. This ords for most points (132), most
was the first time that two men field goals (55), and most rewere picked for this honor.
bounds (85) in a single game.
Bazzani, who exerted a steadyIn the individual column, Haring influence throughout the vey Poe set a new UB record for
with
campaign
a display of poise free throws. He netted 79 in 94
and maturity, averaged 8.7 points tries for 84.0%. Bill Barth caged
per game.
75 of 132 field goal attempte for
Karaszewski was the team’s sec56.8%, also a new UB recoil.
ond leading scorer with an 11.4
Highlights of the season were
per game average. He shot 52.0 a 14-game winning streak, best
College

—

Serfustini; four unbeaten appear

ter that team’s 15-game winning
streak, Buffalo State, and Niagara. This year’s team scored over
100 points in five of its games

and was the first UB club ever
to defeat Colgate at Hamilton,
N. Y., in the Colgate gym.
The top individual performance
of the season, and possibly the
best in UB basketball history,
was Jack Karaszewski’s successfully shooting 13 field goals in
14 attempts against Alfred at
Clark Gym.
Two team members, Harvey
Poe and Norb Baschnagel, were
selected to the NCAA College
Division Mid-East All-Tournament team as the Bulls finished
runner-up to host Akron University for the regional crown. In
that tournament, Buffalo defeated Randolph-Macon, the champions of the Mason-Dixon Conference.

Three seniors—gaurd Dan Baz
zani and forwards Norb Baschnagel and Jock Karaszewski —will
be lost for next season. Returning will be such stalwarts as
guard Harvey Poe (the team's
leading scorer) and center Bill
Barth. Norward Goodwin, who
missed the last six games is an
anticipated returnee
for next
year, along with Jim Bevilacqua,
Paul Goldstein and Dick Helzel,
all of whom saw lots of action
this year.
Also, help can be expected
from this year’s freshman team.
The Baby Bulls wound up wilh
a 10-6 record, including wins over
Canisius and St. Boiiavenlure,
and some of this year’s freshmen
indicated that they would make
their presence felt on next year’s
varsity.

19-20

The Bulls s t a r t c d slowly, and
were barely able to manage a
33-31 halftime advantage. The
second half saw UB dominate the
contest until the final score was
UB 81 and Randolph Macon 69.
The Bulls showed excellent shooting from the outside in the final
20 minutes as they hit 21 of 32
field goal attempts for 65.6 per
cent. Added to their 41.2 per
cent first half performance, the
hoopsters from Buffalo wound up
the evening with a 53 per cent
field goal'shooting average.

Jack Karaszewski continued
his red-hot shooting as he made
eight of his 12 field goal attempts
and finished the evening with 18
points. Yet, Harvey Poe edged
Jack for individual scoring honors when he poured 21 points
through the hoop hitting on nine
of 16 Shots from the floor. Bill
Barth contributed 14 points to
the UB effort and hauled in
eight rebounds. Norb Baschnagcl
led Buffalo in rebounding with
niric of the 47 rebounds UB was
able to grab. The Mason-Dixon
Conference Champions came up
with 48 rebounds and shot 42.6
per cent, but they could not stop
the Bulls from scoring their
fourteenth consecutive victory
and their nineteenth win of the
season against two setbacks. Thus,
the stage was set for the final
deciding game of the NCAA MidEast Regionals.

In the big game last Saturday

night,

UB

was

pitted

against

Akron, the Ohio Conference representative which beat Steubenville the night before. Akron
boasted a record of 20 victories
and six defeats and had won the
Mid-East Regional® in all eight
years the tournament' has been
in existence. Besides that, the
Zips had much more height than

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�Friday,

March 12, 1965

SPECTRUM

Fencers Foiled By Syracuse;
End Season With 9-3 Record
By LARRY ZOLINGER
Saturday, Feb. 27, the Syracuse
University fencing team defeated
the Fencing Bulls 16-11 in the
final match of the season for
UB. The loss gave the UB squad
a 9-3 record for the year. UB won

5-4 in both foil and sabre but

falo and Syracuse trophies six
times in the past 14 years.
Representing the Bulls in the
North Atlantic’s will be Joe Paul
and Jim Mondello in foil, John
Houston and Frank Pocenco in
epee, and Dave Kirschgessner and
Bob Frey in sabre. Paul, Pocenco and Kirschgessener will also

m

m

Mermen Set Eight School Records
In New York State Championships
By STEVE RON IS

Last Friday night, March 5, the
UB water bulls invaded Syracuse
University for the Upper New
York State Swimming and Diving
Championships. There were thirteen collegiate squads entered,

including Syracuse, Colgate, and
Union. The competition was
strung over a two day period,
with trial heats run Friday evening, and Saturday afternoon. The
finals were held Saturday evening, winding up a hectic two
days of competition. Under the
rules governing this championship
meet, there is no provision for a
team championship. However, if
a record of team scoring was
compiled, Colgate University

1C’

would have been the victor.
The UB varsity squad swam its
way into seven final events, and
eight new UB school records. The
first pool record fell when Buf
falo’s powerful 400 yard medley

w

Buffalo and Syracu:

lost in epee 1-8 in an almost exact
reversal of the victory over Syracuse earlier in the season.
In foil, Joe Paul was 3-0 while
Bob Toth and Jim Mondello were
1-2. Bob Frey was 3-0 and Dave
Kirschgessner was 2-1 in sabre,
Frank Pocenco with a 1-2 record
won the only bout for UB in
epee.

Saturday, the Bulls will be host
at Clark Gym to eleven other

Fencers in Action.
represent UB at the NOAA Championships one week from Saturday in Detroit. Past North Atlantic Champions who will be competing here Saturday are Paul
Schuman of Syracuse in foil, Jim
Owen of Drew in epee, and Steve
Krapes of Jersey City in sabre.

t

�

schools for the 15th North Atlan-

PAGE ELEVEN

relay dropped under the four minute mark for the first time during this season. The foursome
was composed of Charles Zetterberg, Howard Braun, Wayne Worthing, and Carl Millcrschoen. This
relay streaked to a fourth place
in the finals with the fine time
of 3:59.1,
Bill Fleishman, UB's individual
medley ace, was involved in a
tricky interpretation of the rules.

Although Bill qualified for the

last berth in the finals, the judges ruled that a swimmer from

Hoffman, a freshman swimmer.
Steve, following in the third heat,
bettered the mark just posted by
Worthing, by a tenth of a second
(2:31.5).

In the 200 yard backstroke,
Charles Zetterberg renewed an
old rivalry with Buffalo State’s
backstroking ace, Dave Mangus.
They had each beaten one another once in regular season competition. In the finals Charlie
scored a dual victory. He posted
a new school record of 2:12 3, and
he copped fifth place just ahead
of Mangus.
Howard Braun, UB's speedy
sophomore breaststroker, continued the record breaking ways
of the water bulls. In the trials
he set a blazing pace and a new
school record (2:28.4). Then Howie came back in the finals and rebroke the record he had established in the afternoon. Braun
put up an amazing fight for third
place, but he was just touched
out for the third spot. However,
he broke UB’s record again by
over two full seconds (2:26.3).
The 400 yard freestyle relay
ended the record breaking spree
of the water bulls. The relay,
composed of Mike Perkis, Bill
Fleishman, Carl

style; and Jerry Chapman competed in the one-meter fancy diving.
The freshman team, coached by
Bob Bedell, handicapped by a
small freshman squad placed Rick

Rebo, freshman diver, fourth in
the freshman competition. Rounding out the freshman contingent
were Hoffman. Miller, and Nochaiski.
Varsity coach. William Sanford
III, disclosed that he sincerely
believes that this is the finest
team that he has coached in his
16 years at the University. In
fact, he is convinced that next
year’s team will be even better,
due to the fact that none of the
swimmers on the trip were seniors. Coach Sanford plans to conduct a weight lifting program for
his swimmers, after he returns
from a trip to Iowa where he will
help judge the swimming nationals, in his capacity as an official
of the Rules Committee.

Millcrschoen, and

Roy Troppman churned through
the water to a well earned third
place in the finals, behind Syracuse and Colgate. They clocked a
new school record in the time of
3:31.8.
Although Roy Troppman did

The SPECTRUM

tic Fencing Championships. The
teams entered in the tournament
are Jersey City State, Hobart,
Syracuse, Fairleigh Dickinson, R. I. T,, Pace, Drew, RutgersNewark, Johns Hopkins, St.

now printed by

-

Peters, Paterson State, and Buffalo.
The teams are competing for
four trophies. These are the
Broadsword Trophy, which is a
circulating trophy given to the
team champion; the Buffalo
Trophy, awarded to the best foil
team; the Syracuse Trophy for
the winners in epee; and the Santelli Trophy for the outstanding
sabre team. The Bulls have won
the Broadsword and Santelli
trophies nine times and the Buf-

Parln ers preii, -3nc j
’

.

Kigali

mill Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

Phone 876-2284

TF 3-8180

.•rigghui i

i

SPORTS CIRCLE (Cont'd from P. 12)
ent reason. Some have suggested that the reason he was

originally allowed to turn professional was that he did
in him at thirty-eight years
old, and would therefore do badly in professional bouts.
The image of a beaten Papp would serve as a reminder
to the young that venturing into a capitalistic (professional) version of the sport was an ideological error. But
rapp, fighting in West Germany, France, Italy, Austria,
spam, and never at home, amassed a small fortune, which
ot course he brought into Hungary, where he lives
111 the plush residential
section of Budapest. Then he
"as ordered to retire, but the National Bank of Hungary
stepped into the dispute and pointed out the value of
loreign currency which Papp had been earning and
ould continue to earn while he was still boxing professionally. It seems that ideology or not, Papp will conto box professionally at least until the end of the
tfnue
f ear - Could it be that when the Utopian Socialist dogma
!*
'n the pocketbook, it is a little more flexible than
its spokesmen
would like to let on?
Many college basketball coaches, downtrodden due
t" the.
turn of events this season have looked upon their
misfortunes in a rather humorous vein. Here are some
2. the more ludicrous comments:
Johnny Dee, Notre
«me coach, says he has a sure-fire way to get fired.
All 1 have to do is give a scholarship to a kid in Florida
no has been pestering me for one. His name is Johnny
-oldfarb.” . . Tex Winter, Kansas State coach, in a
°cker room talked to his team after using every player
n an attempt to halt
a losing streak, had this to say:
everybody show up for the practice tomorrow—and
bring a friend.”
Boyd Coffie, Rollin’s College coach,
commented after his team had lost 75 of its last 85 games:
Ajlave a few problems.” . . . Shelby Metcalf, Texas
coach, advising one of his players who made four
“Son, it looks to me like you’re spendjn?8 an d a D,
too much time on one subject.”
and THAT WAS THE WEEK IN SPORTS!!!
nbt have much boxing left

"

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UB Swimmers make a splash; record eight school marks.
Colgate had beaten him in a pre- not make any new individual asliminary heat even though his saults on UB record books, he
time was slower than Bill’s. The made his way into both the 200
stage was set for a swimoff be- yard and 500 yard freestyle finals,
tween the two swimmers. From
In the longer distance he barely
the blast of the starter's gun unButler, covered the 50 yard freetil the last lap, the Colgate in- got nosed out of third place. He
dividual man held a slight lead, nailed down fourth place with a
5:36.6. In the 200 yard freestyle
In the last lap Fleishman put on
a burst of speed and glided past
event Roy proved to be too much
his opponent. The result was a for all but one of his opponents,
new school record (2:17.5), and a
He copped a second place in the
position in the finals.
time of 1:56.2.
The 200 yard butterfly saw two
Five other outstanding UB naschool records broken. Due to the tators competed in the championseedings, Wayne Worthing and ship meet Mark Grashow, swam
Steve Ronjs were placed in difthe 200 yard backstroke; Irv
ferent trial heats. Wayne, swim- Puls, competed in the 200 yard
ming in the second heat, splashed Individual medley; John Danahy,
turned in a fine performance in
his way to a 2:31.6, bettering the
old school record set by Craig the 200 yard breaststroke; Barry

Coupon good for free test ride

WALTER A. KOHL
6955 So. Transit Rd.

Lockport, New York

.

RIVERSIDE 55 YAMAHA ROTARY VALVE

.

,

$295.00

.

.

.

said:

Authorized YAMAHA Dealer

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TP 6 -4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines
-

8 lbs. S2.00

—

�Friday, March 12, 1945

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

¥

sjpstg'ffiats&amp;o ss&gt;®iafi* A
=fe=ife=^t=A=*=
*

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN

SCHOLOM

“T W3”

If you do not know what the title mean* it’* time
you found out!!!

Olympic swimming star, Dawn Fraser was suspended for ten years by the Amateur Swimming Union of
Australia last week. The official reason given for this
action was her attending opening day ceremonies at the
Tokyo Olympics in defiance of an official order. However,
it was rumored that her unique training habits, which
consisted of more than an occasional beer during her
erratic practice schedule, was the real reason for the
suspension. In addition, it was reported from confidential
sources that pressure from the Japanese government was
put on the A.S.U.A. to punish the unpredictable Miss
Fraser. It seems that Dawn had violated a sacred Japanese shrine, and to complicate matters had attempted
to escape capture by swimming aero** a moat to freedom;
but alas, she tripped and fell, enabling the police to catch
up with her. It was reported by an observant onlooker
that she did not exactly trip, but rather that she was sort
of staggering around in an apparent drunken stupor until
she collapsed and was unable to even stand up, no less
swim across a moat. It seems as though there was more
involved to Miss Fraser’s suspension than meets the eye
—perhaps several swigs of “juice” which met the mouth!
Buffalo football fans were somewhat less than
shocked last week by the trade of the Bill’s All-League
fullback Cookie Gilchrist to the Denver Broncos for fullback Billy Joe, A.F.L. Rookie of the Year in 1963. It was
rumored numerous times that Cookie would be traded
last year but nothing materialized. Then he was thrown
off the team toward the end of the season and subsequently reinstated when he promised to be a good, red-blooded,
clean-cut, All-American boy. But everyone, including
Coach Lou Saban, knew that this was definitely not
Cookie’s cup of tea. So the Bills searched the league
for a place to peddle off their “Dennis the Menace”, until they found the perennial cellar-dwelling Denver Broncos in a receptive mood. The Broncos, recently purchased by the Phipps Brothers, whose first official move
was to assure the City Council that the team would remain in Denver for the ’65 season (this move clinched
a losing season at the gate), made their second mistake
of the new year in obtaining the volatile Gilchrist, who is
far from a good team man (this move clinched a losing
season in the standings). But, then again, at the rate the
Phipps Brothers are going they might not even have a
team by September!

St. Louis Hawk’s super star Bob Petit, an 11 year
N.B.A. veteran, announced his retirement from basketball last week. Petit, now 32, is the highest scorer in
N.B.A. history with 20,841 points, a 26 points per game
scoring average. It was reported that St. Louis owner
Ben Kerner, on hearing the news of Petit’s retirement,
broke down in tears. But don’tfeel sorry for Ben; he can
always take out his grief on his coaches. He has only
fired one so far this year.
Ex-heavyweight champion, Sonny Liston was acquitted of a drunken driving charge last month by a six
man jury in Denver. It was reported that Liston, obviously guilty as charged, had threatened the jurors, thus intimidating them into returning a verdict of not guilty.
When Cassius Clay, or rather Mohammed AH, heard
about this deplorable miscarraige of justice, our lawfulminded heavyweight king decided that he would take
the law into his own hands. He was reported to have
"Hu drunken ways will be his doom.
said

Wrestlers Pin Ithaca;
Finish With 9-2 Slate
The University of Buffalo
Wrestling Team concluded its official season last Friday night

A
BOB JACKSON

by downing powerful Ithaca College, 16 to 14. It was sweet victory indeed for Ron LaRocque’s
deserving squad. During the regular season Ithaca had defeated
one of two teams that Buffalo
had bowed to: R.I.T. 14 to 12
February 19. Buffalo’s second
loss came at the hands of Oswego State College.

Ehresman (130 lbs.); Bill Miner
(137 lbs..); Lenny Ardieta (157
lbs.); A1 Warden (167 lbs.); and
Norm Keller (177 lbs.). The, above
wrestlers coupled with this years
developing freshmen who will be
eligible for varsity competition

next

year promise to provide

a

fine competitive squad for all to

enjoy.

The conclusion of the season
marks the end of dieting and the
taking up of food delicacies denied weight conscious wrestlers
durng their stringent training
routines. That is all but five of
the varsity members who have
been chosen by Coach Ron LaRocque to enter the Four I's
Tournament at Case Institute in
Cleveland, Ohio. This tournament
draws wrestling competitors from
schools all over the Eastern half
of the United States. It is here at
the Four I's Tournament that
competitors from Eastern America come to compete for honors
in the collegiate wrestling realm.

&gt;

«
MIKE DONAHUE

dieta at 147 lbs.; Junior, Norm
Keller at 167 lbs.; and Senior,
Burt Ernst at 191 lbs. The above
boys were chosen by Coach Ron
LaRoque on the basis of over all
performance records and personal attitude.

BASEBALL TRYOUTS
Baseball Coach Jim
Peele announced that the
Varsity and Freshman
Baseball Practice will start
Monday, March 22, in
Clark Gym.

The squad’s wrestling performance this season was no doubt
anchored in its triumphant season by four senior members.
They are: undefeated Burt Ernst
(heavy weight); undefeated Bob
Jackson (123 lbs ); Mike Donahoe
(167 lbs.); and Ed Lontrato (137
lbs.) All four fine athletes will
be missed on next years wrestling edition.
Though Buffalo is losing four
letter men it will have a strong
nucleus returning from this years
club. The tentative returners are:
A1 Classman (123 lbs.); George

as follows: Sophomore A1 Glassman at 115 lbs.; Senior Bob Jack
son at 130 lbs.; Junior Lenny Ar

Varsity

Now that everyone knows how fixed Profe»»ional
Wrestling has become over the years, the promoters are
even willing to admit their own underhanded practices.
Ed McLemore, a Dallas promoter, had this to say: ‘‘Why
they’ve accused me of all kinds of jobs. They’ve even said
I used blood capsules to make my wrestlers look bloody.
But I’ve looked all over for them and I can’t find such
a thing anywhere.”
Laslo Pspp, the European middleweight champion,
was ordered to retire from the ring by the Hungarian
Government’s Supreme Sport’s Body last month, because
his pro career was not “compatible with socialist principles”. This week that order was rescinded for no appar(Cont'd on P. 11)

re-

Freshman Candidates re-

BURT ERNST
Those chosen by Coach LaRoque to enter for Buffalo are

port at 5:15 p.m.
Bring your own equipment.

NO

:

Because I’m ready to lower the boom.
I’m gonna sober up that ugly bear,
With a punch that’ll till his bead with air.’’

Candidates

port at 3:30 p.m.

I WAS A 'COIRWIND VMUO
iULNNOvn U.B.’STO'JRHEX VAOVCS
AGAINST AKRON—A? TER A f VAST i
MASSACRE 0? RWNOS-tAKWi

IflCON

\v

J

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                    <text>SPECTRUM
CHARGES

r—
1 STATE UNIVERSITY
—

—

OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

}—

UB CAGE

-

preview

analyzed

VOLUME 15

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 26, 1965

NO. 18

Activities Drive Excites Student Interest
Vermont Debaters Finish 1st Peace Corps to Visit
In Annual International Meet Campus Next Week,
of Vermont
swept UB’s Tenth Annua! International Tournament Friday and
Saturday of last weekend. The
winning team consisted of Bob
Ballard and Michael Schoenfeld,
The

University

unemployment with Dr. Shister,
moderator. Later that evening,
they were hosted at dinner at the
Old Dost Inn, Williamsville, by
faculty members ot the UB Drama
and Speech Department and So-

Activities Drive Familiarizes Students
With Campus Extra-Curricular Events

Convocation Planned

A statement by President Fur
nas announces the week-long
?Uay of a Peace Corps team.
"During the week of March
1-5, a team of Peace Corps representatives and returned volunteers will be on our campus ti
talk with interested students.
Members of this team will also
be available to participate in
classroom discussions should any
instructor desire their attendance.
I am pleased to designate the
week of March 1, Peace Corps
Week, and to welcome to this
campus a distinguished group of
Peace Corps volunteers."
C. C. Furnas,
President

The UB Activities Drive, spoil&gt;ored by the Union Hoard and
chaired by Allan Mollis, was a
notable

success. Over H.'tO stu
the various orsail
izations. committees, and clubs

n
dents

joined

live material and informed persons.
Ulan Mellis. chairman of the
Drive
aid "joining an activity
Iocs not end the drive. This
■chool is rapidly growing academically and it is only suitable

This visiting Peace Corps team

will be from Washington, D.C.
There will be a convocation

-hen Adler, negative. They scored
10-0 debate record over 23 teams
from four states. Schocnfeld and
Ballard also took two of the four
trophies given to the best speakrs among the 120 men and women competing. Colgate University,
vith a 9-1 record, finished second
in team standing while Canisius
college, 8-2, received the third

i

a

place team trophy. The tournament winners appeared on the

half-hour broadcast of the UB
Roundtable at 7:00 p.m. Saturday,

Feb. 20, to discuss their ideas on

Barbara Glegota were tournament chairman and co-chairman,
respectively. Among the schools
which competed were Westminster College. LeMoyne, Wells, St.
Bonaventure, Gannon. Cortland
State, Clairion State, Rosary Hill,
and D’Youville.

There will be a very important

Society meeting Monday at 6:30
357. Details of
the tournament will be reviewed
and officers for 1965-66 will be
elected. All Society members are
urged to attend.

p.m. in Norton

Monday in the Conference Theater of Norton Union at TOO
p.m. The speaker at the convo-

cation will be Jonathan R. Me
Labe, the director of Far Eastern

Operations of the Peace Corps.
After the speech, there will be
an open discussion with former

Peace Corps volunteers and the
Peace Corps staff. A movie, "A
Mission of Discovery", will also

be shown.

Information Center in Norton

There will be a Peace Corps in
formation center run by the Peace
Corps staff in the main lobby
tCont'd on P. 4)

Activities Drive in Norton

which participated

in

the mem

bership drive

The Activities Drive Commit

tee had set as its goal "the fam

ilianzation with the extracurricular activities available to stu
dents on the campus." The turn
out affirmed that this goal had

been met and surpassed. Almost
every organization was, at some

lime during the week, represent
ed by a table, laden with informa

that the amount of committee
participation outside of class

should increase Everyone
Should involve himself with one
of the many activities offered
by his school outside of class
Mr, Mellis also extended his
thanks to David Kdelman, bruce
Kosen. Josh I.undquisl, Mark
work

Tracton, Ladd Stevenpiper. and
everyone else who worked for
the committee

Sig Ep Presents Annual Queen of Hearts Ball Tonight
age.

The New York Epsilon Chapter
Phi Epsilon Fraternity will present its 11th Annual

Linda !..infer, a speech therapy
student with a 1.8 average. Linda
.
Irom New York City and has

Itoad.

served on the Panhellenic Counul as well as being a member of
he Speech and Drama (tub.

Tickets are $3.50 per couple
and can be bought at the door
or from any of the brothers. Jay
Moran s eight piece band &gt;vill be
featured. The fraternity will present each couple with a favor.
The dance is open to the entire
campus and everyone is cordially
invited. Liquor setups range from
$10-$12.

The highlight of

LORA DESMOND

the evening
will be the crowning of the Sigma
Phi Epsilon Queen of Hearts for
1965 by Miss Marlene Vowinkel.
a sister of Sigma Kappa Phi
irority and last year’s ueen.

Theta Chi's .candidate is Eileen

19 year. old physical
student Eileen, a resident of New Hyde Park. Ixmg
Island, has participated on the
domatory judicial board and in
the I Physical Therapy Club.

Lloyd, a

therapy

/

M

CYNTHIA HARRISON

This year there are six candidates entered in the competion.
Lora Desmond
a 19 year old
English major is Phi Zeta Chi’s
candidate. Lora-with a y.P.A. of
1.4, is a native of Buffalo, and

participates in swimming

Margolin

is

Alpha

EILEEN LLOYD

ternoon at 3:30 p.m.
will appear before
a group of four faculty-judges in
the Conference Theater of Norton Hall. The judging, which is
based on poise, personality, and
appearance, comprises 50": of
the total while the balloting of
rii.s

activi-

a

six girls

the brotherhood

' .Sigma Kappa Phi sorority has
selected Keora Dobrmdt, a sopnomore socialogy major as its candidate. Kedra is active in outdoor sports and here at UB has
participated in the variety show
and the queens committee while
also acting as a sophomore
sponsor

other half.

■ makes,

up the

accepting applications for the editor and
business manager' of the
Spectrum for the school
1965-66. Applications are
available in Hoorn 205
Norton
is now

Cynthia Harrison, a native of
Pennsylvania, is Chi

Montrose,

KEDRA DOBRINDT

Dorothy

Gamma Della s candidate. Dorothy s mam interests lie in read
ing, music, and the theater She
was a member of the Silver Ball
Committee and the Buffalonian
staff

these

ties

present
Omc
is a junior in the School of Nursand has a 2.1 overall aver

Della Tau has entered

Sigma

Queen of Hearts Ball this evefrom 9:00 n.m. 2:00 a m.
ning,
at the Camelot Motor Inn. Mileslrp

Her interests include horse
riding and skiing.

back

of the Sigma

LINDA LAUFER

DOROTHY

MARGOLIN

�Friday, February 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Food-Population Problem Will Be Overriding
Perplexity of Last Quarter of 20th Century
Famine

Approximately 170 years ago,
in 1798. an English economist,
Thomas Richard Malthus. developed the theory that people multiply faster than does their food
supply. He further hypothesized

that a population increases up to
the limits of the means of subsistence and then is checked by war,
by pestilence, or by famine. During the last hundred years, Malthus' theory has been discredited
because of the innovations in agricultural technology. However,

Predicted

Dr. Ewell contends that if present trends continue, a serious fam
ine will plague India, Pakistan,
and CommunistChina in the early
1970’s and not long afterwards
will reach serious proportions in
Indonesia, Iran, Turkey, Egypt,

per year in North America, 0.9
per cent in Europe, and 1.7 per

cent in the Soviet Union. Deducing from growth rates of 1960
data from the same source, Dr.
Ewell predicts that the annual
growth rate of the under-developed areas between 1960 and

today the Malthusian Doctrine is
once again in good standing.

UB campus.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

All. students have the
the fines on reassonable grounds. These cases
are then reviewed by the Judiciary.
Campus police have also
been ticketing cars which do hot
have permits, assessing fines of
ten dollars.
Mr. Murray stated that measures may be taken to extend the
enforcement to night hours in
order to cope with the existing
problem. This problem arises because the regular force of police
is finished with work at 4:00 p.m.
Additional police may be needed to clear the roads at night,
Mr. Murray, also added a comment on the addition of the 27
fire alarms several weeks ago.
Since this time, three false
alarms have been turned in. One
was initiated by a short circuit,
another by a detector in a furnace room and one due to the
firemen’s raiding of Goodyear
during a planned fire drill. The
new fire alarms are connected
with those inside building and
both are connected to the fire
dollars.

The food-population problem is
now commanding unprecedented
attention throughout the, world.
Lyndon B Johnson has become
the first American President to
ever discuss population control in
a major public address. He said in

his recent Statc-of the Union address,
1 will, seek new ways

to use our knowledge to
help deal with the explosion
ip our world population and
the growing scarcity of world resources Eisenhower, who once
asserted that population control
was no business of the United
States government, demonstrated
his change of opinion by accept
ing an honorary national chairmanship of the Planned Parent
"

gram go into effect, the research
on the population problem done
by Ur Raymond Ewell. UB's vice
president, for research, is expect
ed to play an important role in

attacking the problem
Influential

Dr. Ewell spent several days
in Washington earlier this month
talking with Dr Frank Parker,
deputy director for agriculture in
the Agency for International Development (AID). Dr. Bruce Jess
up, head of the population research branch of AID. and officials of the Food for Peace program He also addressed the annual meeting of the American

Chemical Society last September
A copy of this address was left
on President Johnson's desk and
the President read it with great
interest. It is understood from inside sources in the White House
that Dr Ewell's paper had a significant influence on the Presi
deni's State-of-the Union message has been carried in nearly
a thousand newspapers around
the world, having been translated
into French. Portuguese, German,
Japansese. and other languages.
to date about one
He has
thousand letters requesting more
information. This week Dr.
Ewell's message “Famine and
Fertilizer" will be published in
full in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, translated into
German In October it was pub
lished in French in the Gazette
(Switzerland)

According to Ewell, "The foodpopulation problem will be the
overriding problem of the last
quarter of the twentieth cen
tury The political and economic
consequences of the problem will
be massive and far reaching "It
seems unlikely that stable governments can be maintained in
countries Where a large part of
"

the population is starving
The
food population problem will supercede such problems as the
threat of nuclear war, commu
nisni. the space race, racial con
(employment. B t
letnam.--.eic.
"

Contraceptive Loop, and Dr.

Brazil, and several other countries. In brief, three entire con

tinents will be afflicted by famine; Asia (with the exception of
Japan, which has already reduced

its population growth rate loss
than 1 per cent per year), Africa, and Latin America. The only
regions of the world with high
rates of food-production are the
United States, Canada, Europe,
the Soviet Union, Oceania, Japan,
and a few smaller countries
There will he no threat of fain
me. for example, in the United
States for at least fifty years if
not for much longer. A famine
of this extent has never before
been experienced in the world's
history. Furthermore, the famine
seems doomed to become steadily
worse each year
Fooif production in Asia, Africa, and Latin America has re-

mained approximately constant
for the past five years as has the
birth rate of these areas. The
basic cause of the population explosion is the rapid drop in the
death rate since 1945 with the introduction of penicillin, DDT. and
other medical practices Moreover. since the death rate is si ill
relatively high in these three re
gions, the population can be expected to explode further in the
coming years.
Growth Rate High

Ewell

1980 will be about 2.5 per cent
as compared to 1.3 per cent in
the developed areas.
Estimated World Population
Up to the Year 2000
Time of Christ
Vi billion
1600 1650
Vz billion
1 billion
1830-1850
2 billion
1930
3 billion
1960
4 billion
1973
5 billion
1984
6 billion
1993
7 billion
2000
Solution Listed
There are three possible solu-

tions to the food-population probImprove agricultural tech
nology, institute a program of
birth control, or a combinaton of
both. The significant requirements of an advanced agricultural technology are 1) the op
lem:

timum use of fertilizer, 2) the op
timum use of water in irrigation
and drainage, 31 improved plant
varieties, 4) use of pesticides, insecticides, fungicides, and herbi-

wearing
those creasy

kid slacks?
,

1*51
m,

departments thus providing a
fairly complete and adequate protection.

1

M

,

A program concerning

United States involvement
in Viet Nam will be presented Monday at 7:00
p.m.

in the Conference
*

Theater. The program,
which is sponsored by the
Liberal Religious Fellowship. will present ojfposing
views of the issue through
a film and speakers.

(Contd.onP.il)

iff

.

Population growth rates above
1 per cent per year were rare
anywhere in the world before the
twentieth century. Yet, according to the United Nations Demographic Yearbook of 1963. the
average population growth rates
from 1958-1962 were 2.3 per cent
per year in Asia. 2.3 per cent per
year in Africa, and 2.8 per cent
per year in Latin America, as
compared with 1.7 per cent per

Are you still

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KIND OF WORK YOU ENJOY

he

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dude ranches nark concession

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sli GUIDE TO SUMMEREMPLOYMENT

goverr

industry, international youth organ
programs,
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etc
izations, exchange

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Name

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in the 1Q65 EDITION of the GUIDE TO I Strwl
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (now in
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J

It is likely that some form, of
family planning aid to underdeveloped countries will eventually
become official United Slates pol
icy. In the past, a nationwide pop
illation control program was hindered by political and religious
hazards When plans for this pro

Dr. Lippet, holding

.

hood Federation of America.

de Lausanne

CARLIE ORESKOVICLY

Mr. Eugene Murray, Chief of
Security, reported that the strict
enforcement of existing parking
regulations has proved successful. The number of cars that
have necessarily been towed away
has been lowered to approximately ten per day.
The clearing of roadways is
necessary because of the width
of the roads; they must be clear
in order to insure access to all of
the buildings. Cars found in violation of the restrictions are
towed to a parking area beside
Baird Hall ,and the owners are
fined ten dollars for the towing
charge; five dollars for the parking violation: total fine—fifteen
right to appeal

Population Control Discussed

Message

By

Manuscripts, an official
publication of SUNYAB,
will go on sale March 8,
Topics range from sex to
religion to education today, in short, a broad
sampling of the best of undergraduate writing on the

i

,,

School

('

lock

M.O.

,
. •

Get into some wised-up
Post-Grads that know where
a crease should always be and
where it should never be, and
how to keep things that way1
The reason is the Koratron
fabric of 65% Dacron*/35%
cotton. No matter how many
times you wash and wearthese
trimly tapered Post-Grad
slacks, they'll stay completely
neat and make the iron obso
lete. In tan, clay, black, navy
or loden, $6.98 in poplin or
gabardine, $7:98 in oxford.
At swinging stores.

:

By MARGO WALLACH

Strictly Enforced
Rules Pay Off

Press-Free

Post-Grad
slacks by

hj.s
• PuyQWfS

WEQ. TM

row PQLYtSTCW Fl&gt;t»

�Friday, February

26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE THREE

Senate Elections De Gaulle and French History
Drawing Near
Inseparable Fox Tells Group

Med-Dent Association Desired
By

'

is the last day that I.D,
be validated if stu
the Gendents want to vote in
t,,ai spring Election March 9-10.
to
Every student is encouraged
exercise his voting privilege for
senators and officers, but a valiIf
dated ID. card is necessary.
students have not already had
their cards validated, they should
do so today in Room 2 of Foster
Hall.
Today
ni&gt;

may

"Never fear, someday I shall
die”. These were the words of
Charles de Gaulle, president of
France, in reply to his opponents.
De Gaulle wishes to see a nationwide expansion in his own
country along with the rest of
Europe.

Dr. Edward Fox, presently at
Cornell University, addressed the
History Club at a meeting Mon-

army and the history of France.
De Gaulle comes from the “pe- ate by Cary Presant, are petitite noblesse" of the Burgandy tioning for a Med-Dejit
Student
area. His family was poor and Association
apart from that of
its only pride was serving in
the army. He was raised with the undergraduate association.
almost a religious devotion to the This idea, which was unanarmy. Charles De Gaulle's fa- imously supported by the junior
ther was an intellectual. But not
class of the Medical School, is
the intellectual we know today.
He was a devout Catholic and scarcely a new one.

the Spectrum Sunwill commence
Tuesday, at 6:00 a.m. and will end
March 10 at 5:00 p.m. March 8
from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
has been set aside for outdoor
publicity, including stunts, parades, motorcades, and bands on
for

day Campaigning

to be adequate but are too severely budgeted. The medicaldental students feel that this restriction of expenditures has
caused them to miss many opportunities such as films and

the grounds between Acheson
Hall and Clement Hall. Two debates for those seeking officership have been scheduled for the
week preceding the election. The
first debate will be at 8:00 p.m.
in the Tower Private Dining Hall
Sunday, March 7. Mr. Robert
Pacholski will moderate the second debate in the Conference
Theater at 2:30 p.m. Monday,
March 8. Everyone is encouraged
to attend and to hear the issues
and the positions of the candiThe election will be held from
3:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in the first
floor lounge in Norton March 910. In addition, booths will be set
up in Tower Hall, Clement Hall,
and Godyear Hall from 11:00
a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.
to 6:00 p.m. March 9 and from
11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and 3:00
p.m. to 5:00 p.m. March 10. The

Law School will vote in the Student Association Office and the
Medical School in the basement
lounge. The election results will
be announced Wednesday, March
1C. in Room 231 Norton.
I.D. Cards must be validated
today in Room 2, Foster Hall,
to vote in the spring election.

Why Spring

Weekend?
Why Spring Weekend? Have
,'ou ever asked yourself that
question? Well I have, and being
a person of great inquisitivity,
1 decided to find out. The next
question was, how does one go
about finding out why? Being
a Person of tremendous percep'•'i’y, i perceived the magnanim&gt;&gt;.'
of the question involved and
decided that the best way to find
out why was to ask the common
everyday people, in this case students, why they felt that Spring
weekend ought to be. I could
■eel myself rapidly approaching
'he solution to
the problem and
after further thought. I suddenly
realized that I would have to find
'be students in order to
ask them;
1 asked myself,
.°
“Self, where
does one go to
find out why?”
ran imagine what obstacles
add further
complications this
presented . . . but, being a
Person of overwhelming perse1 decided that nothing
ou b&gt; stop me
now. So I persear|d struck out
into the
of UB to find out “Why
:

that the University should be
a body unified in its interests
and projects. The medical-dental
students feel that both the existing Student Association and the

For years the medical dental
students have fell that they have
little in common with the University students. Besides a lack of
similar interests, there is another
problem. The funds appropriated
by the Finance Committee to the
medical-dental students arc felt

All candidates will be inter-

viewed

HELEN PETERS

medical-dental students,
represented on the Student SenThe

speakers.

A particular issue that brought

Dr. Fox Speaks on Do Goullo

day evening concerning Charles
de Gaulle as a world figure and
his place in history. Preliminary
remarks converning Dr. Fox and
his work were made by Dr. Loubere of the History Department
who has just returned
from
France where he has been studying under a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Political Career Created

“Charles De Gaulle is the focus
of history and French politics.
De Gaulle and history are inseparable.” According to Dr. Fox
great political careers-do not occur by accident. A career is created and hand made by the person himself. De Gaulle has made
his career since his youth. De
Gaulle sees his own career integrated with the development
of France. “With intensity and
vigor”, stated Dr. Fox, “Charles
De Gaulle has elevated himself
to an aspect of French history.
During World War I, De Gaulle
served as a combat officer and
spent time in a German prison
camp. During the period between
the two World Wars, he turned
professional historian. In one of
his works, The Edge of the
Sword, he draws a picture of the
ideal abstract leader of France.
Devoted to Army
De Gaulle sees no difference
between the history of the French

conservative. Originally a law
yer, he turned to teaching and

became Professor of Philosophy
at a private high school in France
run by the Jesuits. His job was
to indoctrinate his students with
civic and political morality.
His son, Charles, was in Professor De Gaulle’s class and no
doubt the professor had. a lasting influence on his son.
Die Gaulle sees his task today
as the creation of a modern
France within a modern Europe.
De Gaulle sees Europe as a balancing force between the U.S.
and England on the West, and
Russia on the East. The president of France would like to see
a European society led by France.
Dr. Fox felt that it in inevita
blc

that a united

Europe

will

take its character from one
country. Will i tbe the coun
try where the French Revolution occurred or the country
of the Third Reich? The French

the problem to a climax was that
the medical-dental students want
cd to have published resumes of
experiments done by the students
themselves. These articles would
be distributed in hospitals and
libraries, and could also aid fu
ture students. The Student Sen
ale denied the funds to publish
due to the limited scope of the
subject matter. Had the medical
dental students been in autonomous possession of funds they
feel there would have been no
problem.

The

Student Senate

believes

CARY PRESANT
advocates separation
proposed division would profit
more by separate groups. They
believe that the stability of school
spirit and unity could hardly
break by the secession of a few
. .

.

members.

If the medical-dental students
are allowed their own organization, they feel it would not at all
imply a complete break from the
Student Senate. Liaison could be
established with comparative ease.
It is the contention of the medical-dental students that there
would be only gain and no con
ceivable loss from such a vcn-

Dr. Raymond Simon to Conduct
Seminar on Journalism Monday
Dr. Raymond Simon of Utica
College will conduct a program
concerning the basic problems
ol journalism, Monday at 3:30
p.m. in Room 233. The first part

of this program, concerned main
ly with good newspaper writing,
will be a two hour lecture. After
a forty minute break Dr. Simon
will cbnduct a workshop where,
participants will have the oppor
(unity to work with materials and
acquire a practical application
of the skills discussed. The sem-

ioar is open to all interested stu-

dents.

Dr. Simon is Associate Professor of Public Relations and Chairman of the Division of Business
Administration at Utica. He is a
member of the Association for
Education in Journalism and
serves as coordinator for the Cen
tral New York Slate School Press
Association His experience ranges from feature writing in Berlin
for the Associated Press to his
present affiliation with the Utica
"Observer Dispatch,"

Revolution has been the symbol

of Europe for centuries. Accord
ing to Dr. Fox, de Gaulle is not
popular in France. The old political parties are concerned with
local interests and de Gaulle is
concerned with nationwide expansion. The old politics in
France have become irrelevant.
De Gaulle has been an influencing factor in this change.

s

s

°'&gt;

1

■luino

Weekend?”

When

you

about jt, that’s a pretty big
*
happen to come across
", n ?
o? thing, I’ll let you
know, being
person of enormous
generosity.
k

LISTEN
TO

WBFO
Cologne, Allot Skive, Tik, DeotSotml, Soap let, Gill Seh

Cltyl «ickit*, Sew

Yoti

�Peace Corps
•.

SENATE COMES THROUGH:
PUB BOARD STILL AN ISSUE
After a year of nearly constant editorial criticism,
we would like to compliment the Senate for its actions
Tuesday night. They allocated the necessary funds to
permit the Spectrum to expand. This will enable the
paper to come closer to its aim of covering comprehensively every issue of importance to the student body of
this university.
Contrary to some of the Senators’ opinions, the main
issue on the floor Tuesday night was the expansion of
the paper. The additional allocations were necessary to
make this expansion possible. In spite of this paper’s
critical comments on many of the activities of the Senate
and its members, the majority of the body rose above
any personal animosity they may have had in order to
promote a better newspaper in the interests of the entire
student body. For this, they are to be complimented.
When it came to voting on the issue of expanding
the paper, the Chairman of the Publications Board abstained. This was to be expected. People who do not
understand the concept of a publication can not vote on
issues concerning it. Thus we can not expect the Chairman of the Publications Board to take a stand on the
expansion of the campus newspaper.
Further insight into the nature of the operations of
the Board is offered in the letter from Mr. DeVries, General Secretary of the United States Student Press Association (see Letters to the Editor). In view of this letter
and Tuesday night’s action is it surprising that we ask
for the abolition of the Publications Board?
FREEDOM TO TRAVEL AND
THE STATE DEPARTMENT BAN
In an article in the Western Edition of the New York
Times, Monday, October 21, 1963, Henry Steele Commanger stated, “What is important is the right to travel.
What is important is the claim of the State Department
to decide who may and who may not travel. What is
important is the State Department assertion that travel
is an instrument of foreign policy and that it alone should
decide what is “in the best interests of the United
States’.”
Mr. Commanger went on further to explain, “But
beginning in the forties, and feeding on the crises, real
and alleged, of the fifties, the State Department took the
position that travel was not a right to be exercised at the
discretion of the citizens, but a privilege to be exercised
at the'discretion of the State Department.”
The Spectrum agrees and applauds the decession of
the Supreme Court in Kent v. Secretary of State (June
16, 1958) when Mr. Justice Douglas stated, “Freedom of
(is)
movement across frontiers in either direction .
a part of our heritage. Travel abroad . . . may be as
close to the heart of the individual as the choice of what
he eats, or wears, or reads. Freedom of movement is basic
to our scheme of values
“As Chafee put it,
An American who has
crossed the ocean is not obliged to form his opinions
about our foreign policy merely from what he is told by
officials of our government or by a few correspondents
In many different ways direct contact with other
countries contributes to sounder decisions at home.’ .
“In part, of course, the issuance of the passport carries some implication of intention to extend the bearer
diplomatic protection . . . But that function of the passport is subordinate. Its crucial function today is control
over exit. And
the right to exit is a personal right
included within the word ‘liberty’ as used in the Fifth
Amendment. If that liberty’ 1 is to regulated, it must pursuant to the law-making functions of Congress . .
And
if that power is delegated the standards must be adequate
to pass scrutiny by the accepted tests”
In the case of Aptheker et al v. Secretary of State
(June 22, 1964) Mr. Justice Goldberg stated, “Freedom
to travel is a constitutional liberty closely related to the
rights of free speech and association.”
Mr. Justice Douglas concurring stated, “Freedom of
movement is the very essence of our free society, setting
us apart. Like the right of assembly and the right of association, it often makes all other rights meaningful
knowing, studying, arguing, exploring, conversing, observing and even thinking. Once the right to travel is
curtailed, all other rights suffer, just as when curfew or
home detention is placed on a person.
"America is of course sovereign; but her sovereignty
is woven in an international web that makes her one of
the family of nations. The ties with all the continents are
close,
commercially as well as culturally. Our concerns
are planetary, beyond sunrises and sunsets. Citizenship
implicates u,s in those problems and perplexities as well
as domestic ones. We cannot exercise and enjoy citizenship in a world perspective without the right to travel
abroad; and I See no constitutional way to curb it unless,
as I said, there is power to detain.”
The Spectrum concurs wholeheartedly with the opinions stated above, and supports the idea that freedom to
travel without restriction is a basic right that should not
be limited in any way.
.

.

...

.

.

.

.

.

...

.

—

—

.

.

oCetterA

to

the Editor

USSPA Criticizes Publications Board

It is important that no group i n
We have watched with great the university be beyond criti.
cism
this, it seems to us. Is as
concern the dispute over the operations of the Spectrum that has important a facet of academic
been developing at Buffalo since freedom as a student's right tc
last fall. We feel that in this case, disagree with a professor or a
professor's freedom to disagree
as in most, a debate over the purwith a textbook.
pose and role of the campus
newspaper is a healthy thing and
More specifically, we believe in
something that could profitably two principles that are
relevant
take place on many campuses. to this case. First, the newspaper
of
such
a
howdebate,
The value
must take the responsibility of inever, is lost 1 when it becomes a
suring that all sides of the conan
editor
or
campaign to unseat
troversy are given space in its
of
a battle for effective control
pages. This appears to have been
the publication. This, it appears,
done. Second, we believe the job
has been the ease at Buffalo.
of the Publications Board is to
The Student Publications Board
insure
that the newspaper can
is, of course, within its rights in
function as freely and as well as
calling for a meeting to discuss
possible. The Board should not be
the newspaper. It is out underthe agent (conscious or unconstanding, however, that no qualiscious) of those who would hindfied representative of the Specer the paper or interfere with the
to
or
trum was invited to the Decemeditors. By holding closed sesber meeting of the Board when sions and reaching conclusions
the charges later printeo in the before allowing arguments to the
paper were first made. Further,
contrary to be presented, the
the list of charges as printed do
Board appears to have failed in
not seem to us to furnish adeits primary responsibility to both
quate evidence of the failure of
the university community and to
the editor or incompetence of the
the newspaper.
strongly,
put
To
it
more
staff.
any
We shall continue to watch the
were,
in
some of the charges
context, absurd. It is especially situation and are willing to aid
serious that these charges were the Board in reaching an ademade and a letter of censure quate solution to the problems
drafted without giving the editors that have been raised. The priof the Spectrum any opportunity mary work of the staff and editors of the Spectrum is to pubto discuss them with the Board.
This circumvents the most basic lish the paper. It is to their advantage to have this situation
guarantees of due process and
should any action to remove the resolved as soon as possible so
that their efforts may be devoted
editor be taken on the basis of
fully to their publication. In the
that meeting, there would be
grounds for a legal investigation meantime, the United States Student Press Association will be
of the proceedings.
most willing to do anything in its
Following that meeting, we una speaker must be made immedderstand that the editor of the power to help to mediate the
iately by calling Mrs. Steger at Spectrum along with the editors dispute.
Sincerely,
831-2516.
of the yearbook and literary magTom DeVries
azine jointly signed an editorial
Volunteers Needed
General Secretary
critizing the Publications Board
There are nearly 10,000 Volunteers working or training for
Student
the Peace Corps, and requests
for thousands of additional volTO THE EDITOR
there exists an immature and ir
unteers are still being received.
A very serious problem has responsible minority, students are
the
fields
of
The projects in
been brought to the attention of denied this right and must therehealth, teaching, agriculture, pubthe Student Welfare Committee fore suffer. The talking, paper
community
devellic works, and
concerning the irresponsibility of airplane-throwing, and card playopment require no highly deing must be eliminated immedistudent conduct in showing reexperiveloped skill. Practical
spect for the rights of others in ately.
necessary.
but
not
ence is helpful,
We earnestly request students
the Harriman and Lockwood liAs Mrs. Nancy Carter, an official
braries. Unfortunately, home and
of this university to exercise a
in the Peace Corp office of Pubdormitory conditions are not aldegree of restraint in the librarlic Affairs, said, "Actually, libies. For those who wish to talk,
ways conducive to study and there
eral arts graduates with the right is a necessity for students to use
we would ask them to use those
personality characteristics, the library facilities. The purpose
facilities in the student union.
a strong sense of commitment, of these facilities is for study and
Respectfully,
and emotional maturity can sucnot for socializing, but because
Student Welfare Committee
cessfully fill many assignments
after completing our training
Library Misuse
programs." All applicants will
TO THE EDITOR:
We have greatly increased the
be notified within two months of
Every student and teacher in
number of students. More grabtheir eligibilty for the training
fying is the fact that students tothe University knows how crowdprograms which begin almost eved the Libraries *are. The pros- day are of a high quality who, I
ery month, but, are concentrated
think, love learning and, I know,
pect of fine new buildings in
in February and in the summer
three or four years sustains us seek books and places to read
months.
in our daily difficult situation, them.
and the future makes the present
Yet an immature minority perConsultant for Firms
(Cont’d on P 5)
tolerable.
The background of Mr. McCabe, the convocations speaker,
and that of the other representatives is most interesting and
extensive. Mr. McCabe, who reThe official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo,
ceived his undergraduate degree
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Publish*
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except tor
from Loyola University and did
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
graduate work at both Loyola and
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JOHN P KOWAL
Harvard Universities, has been
involved in international work
Bernard Dikm
Business Manager
Managing Editor
Peter Rubin
Advertising Manager .Howard
News Editor
Barbara Strauss
since 1949. First a consultant
Auerb^
s,r n
Alice P
Trudy
Manager
Stern
Editor
Circulation
Ass't News
f
for a U.S. firm whose clients
.Paul Nussba- v
Jeremy Taylor
Feature Editor
Re-Write Editor
Edward Josce
Sports Editor Allan Scholom
Photo Editor __1
were international Middle EastSieme
Faculty
William
Orszulak
Advisor
Copy Editor
Marcia Ann
r
ern and European oil companies,
Dallas Gar
Layout Editor
David Edelman
Financial Advisor
then a Relations Representative
Meryl
Eismann,
Vicki,
Bugelski,
Marge
Nancy
Migdol,
General Staff:
Don
Raklta,
and Personnel Director of anSharon Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Marion Michael, Debbie Rubie, '
Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leegant, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teitler, Sue Greene ’
other large oil company He joinDuffy, Bill Cortes, Sue Fuller, Nina Kosfraba, Lohi Klipstein, Joey Elm, Jim Blog i‘
ed the Peace Corps in 1962.
Skip Blumberg, Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis, Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters, VS
Dear Mr. Kowal

—

Conduct Questioned

THE

SPECTRUM
-

j,

“

Dana Rogers, once a Volunteer
in the Philippines and now a Selection Officer in the Washington
office, will be a second member
of the team. Charles Graham,
who is a third representative and
who is the Venezuela Operations
Desk Officer in the Peace Corps,
was formerly a Rotary International Fellow at the University of

San Marcos in Lima, Peru, and
then was the Industrial Relations
Department of Gulf Oil in Venezuela for six

years.

Saloman, Joan Fox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Giglja, Harold Bob, Chuck Cum-;
Raymond Volpe, Jerome Taylor, Ann Gruber, Benoit Bourgois, Sue Melvin. Linda
Susan Thomas, Marsha Alt, Nancy Simonoff, Rebecca Citron, Rebecca Weinberg
Nisberg, Margo Wallach, Elaine Barron, Alan Goldstein
Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, ■’ Stan Lichwala,
Schuelein, Steve Obersfein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr
Photography Staff David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch,, Susan Worfman
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder

Sports Staff: Chick Arnold,

1

.

.

(Cont’d from P. 1)
of Norton Union every day of
the visit. All questions of interested students will be answered and pertinent literature on
particular Peace Corps projects
will be distributed.
From Tuesday-Tuesday, March
9, non-competitive aptitude tests
will be given several times a day.
No knowledge of a foreign language is necessary and the tests
are given only for the proper
placement of the volunteers. The
Peace Corps questionnaire, which
is available at most Post Offices
and which can be obtained from
Dr. Richard I. Wilson, Associate
Coordinator of Student Activities,
must be filled out by any interested junior, senior, or graduate
student and returned to one of
the Peace Corps representatives.
The Peace Corps staff members
wi&lt;l speak to classes and campus

1945

.

the Editor

.

Friday, February J6,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Circulation Staff:

Palmer, Lee Corey

Diane Lewis,

Jane Herbrand,

EI lie

Gold, Joyce Fenmore,

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
A CP
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.

Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation
9500
Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Mad .son Av’-e New York, N. Y.

Ma'y

-

•-

�Friday, February

26, 1965

SPECTRUM

•

•

PACE FIVE

Gould's Address

•

REFLECTIONS

Draws Comments
Of Student Body
By

JOHN STINY

In light of President Gould s
commencement address
"A Citadel of Mind and Soul’’
which dealt with the academic
problems of the undergraduate
student in a large university,
the Spectrum interviewed various students at random to hear
their opinions on the argument
which President Gould presented.
Several students expressed agreement with the speech but
fell that the problems raised did
not really concern them. These
students felt that on the whole
they were receiving roughly what
they had expected upon entering
the University. A disinterest was
expresed in faculty-student rela
tionships, The main concern was
that the instructor have a grasp
of the technical material in the
field taught. One of the students,
a senior, stated:
“As long as he knows what he
is talking about I do not care
about intangibles."
In the same vein, a freshman
expressed the opinion that the
emphasis on research is a healthy
trend because it insures that in
professors
structors and
. . would have to keep up with
the times.”
A number of students agreed
with the statement in President
Gould’s speech that:
“The undergraduate student in
the large University is gradually
but steadily becoming a misplaced person,.”
They expressed the hope that
any policies resulting from the

. . with a new and bigger campus toon being realized we all may
—dear ladies and gentlemen—rejoice and look toward the bright
future of a university which will have solved its most pressing problems through more and better buildings and superior recreational

facilities

...

I"

cjCetterS to the
from P. 4)
sists in using the Libraries more
for social than intellectual pursuits, disturbing by their actions
the serious readers. Flagrant misuse of the Libraries must be dealt
with by the Librarian, but I request that the students show more

(Cont’d

Editor

restraint on minor matters such
as conversation. They will receive

the thanks of their fellows and
relieve the Attending Librarians
of an unattractive duty.

Sincerely yours,
Oscar A. Silverman

Director of Libraries

Terms Questioned
TO THE EDITOR:

Jeremy Taylor’s “Reflections,”
published in the Spectrum have
always proved to be, I’m sure,
well intended and provocative.
The last essay printed in the
Spectrum of February 19, concerning certain revisions in our
academic community left me
somewhat provoked but to a
greater degree quizical.
May I question, with sincere
intent, some of the assertions and
assumptions there offered?

Grades and other sanctions
estimations of academic
achievement and ability serve
and false

—

only to stultify the academic eommunity and to obscure the real
sources and purposes of learning,
as well as scholarship.”

In reference

to

your

quote

above: (I) What are the criterion
or establishment of a "true” esti-

of academic achievement?
mation
1 would it be possible to in-

eulcate a “true estimation” system in a large university community? (3) What are the “real
sources and purposes” of learning and scholarship in our culture? Is it as you imply “knowledge for knowledge’s sake” or
something quite different? (4)
What is the formula in your system that would prevent stultification and obscurity of academic
endevor? If this be intellectual
fervor ,what criterion would you
establish for selecting those with
sincere intent?

Indeed, Mr. Taylor, would not
your revisions, by necessity, carry
with them those very same devices for assessment and purpose
that are presently used, only in
modified form? And, if so, can
not the conflict you pose be resolved into a question of necessity and efficiency, this to be
answered only by precise expli-

cation of how your system will
work?

John Cimasi

“Ideals” Not Practical
RE: MR. TALYOR:
Do you know that of some 2500
entering freshman in 1961, only
n°ut 1500 will graduate this
■ ar that most of these students

top out annually due to failing

that

hn ards
„,'

rease;

those

“advancing

yOU spoke of are on the

that college doors are

Sln g: and that the idealistic
R oposal you
"envisioned" last
’ | of a n ungraded, unmeas,,

i

.

of

'ntellectual

atmosphere, if
t0 the realistic proolems
ministration, would neees-

,

1 result
-

in chaos?

•f your
personal educational
S Phy com
Pcls you "to deV(.|nn
Ur own (academic) schedale" .°
*°
m
ake
a
|,'
“tareer” out of
°

Cn

read

de

h '

weii

,tlaving attended three aiyou refuse to "set-

°!^n

anc * “8e t anywhere”;

that s your Problem. But
'V0U su 8gest this “uniformitv" '"corporate
your ideals, you
_
wh&lt;.„

i i

recent

«!

President’s speech would have
tangible results such as an improved system of undergraduate
advisement, resulting in "less
confusion”, and the employment
of more instructors to allow
smaller classes.
Students Skeptical

Those students who were open
ly skeptical as to the intent of
the speech beyond its immediate
publicity value made reference
to a section where the President
said:
“There is a deep commitment
to conformity in America and
our Universities are doing little
to counteract it. Indeed, every
aspect of the students’ academic
and social life, over which a University has control, appears to
be designed toward limiting rather than freeing him and moving
him to maturity.”
and compared it with a statement
made February 10, at a meeting

with the executive committee of
the Academic Freedom Commit
tee, reported in the Spectrum
February 19:
“At this meeting he said that
imposition of the Feinburg Cer
tificate on this campus has caused
unrest but although he was concerned with academic freedom,
he did not feel that it could be
placed at the head of the list of

priorities for the University."

begin to look like a round peg
in a square hole rattling around
with a determination not to fit
in, making noise with idealism—like a bubble in Welk’s machine,
interesting to the point of distraction, as it bursts about the
cooperative efforts of the orchestra as they try to make music.
While the bubbles do manage to
divert attention, they serve no
practical f unction towards the
general Uni-harmony. In short.
Mr. Taylor, 1 do not believe you
can present a practical plan for
the implementation of your ideals

in education.

In regards to the Certificate, I
would like to extend my congratulations on the proposed efforts
to obtain some kind of data on

the "implied” unconstitutionally
involved in the implementation
instead
of the Feinberg Law
of simply re hashing all last
year’s drivel.
Edward D.Nagel
—

By JEREMY TAYLOR

Interests in Present System
In gathering reactions to President Gould’s address we gathered statements ranging from “who
is Gould?” to outright and sometimes unprintable cynicism. Most
students who had heard or read
the speech expressed themselves
in terms of what might be termed
“watchful skepticism”, best dem
onstrated by a junior:
“It sounds good but what does
it mean?”
The opinion of most students
was that there are a good many
vested interests in the present
system. It is probably more convenient, from an administrative
point of view, to organize a University in the basis of numbers
and punched cards. Under the
present system of grants and
with the pressure of the faculty
to publish many students feel
that there is no real incentive to
improve teaching.

The New University *3
This is I he last of my scries
of suggestions and radical pro-

for the planners of the
new University. It is slightly
phantasmagorical, and really not
journalistic, but I hope that re
ationships I am discussing will
be none the less clear and substantial for the fictionalized treatment. In fact, if one reads this
as a frustrated love letter, rather
than as a column in a'monopoly,
weekly paper, then the intent may
become more clear.
Amos Studentis rises at ten
o’Colck Mondays. His room is private and well lighted, with a
northwesterly exposure of tall
windows. He washes in the lavatory shared by the four adjoin
ing suits. He walks out of the
building and down a sloping walk
shaded on both sides by stands of
trees to the commissary where
he works, clearing tables and
running the dishwasher one evening a week to pay for his meals.
After breakfast he retires to the
spacious library which is open
fourteen hours a day for the con
venience of students on differing
schedules. He uses the microfilm library which he has been
taught to manipulate without
assistance and at one-thirty, he
eats a quick lunch at the express
cafeteria situated in the center
of the campus;
After finishing his noon meal
he goes to a lecture on the rela
tionship of scientific innovation
to current philosophical concepts.
This is one of the open-ended lectures at which any student may
ask questions and raise objections. After this lecture, Amos
retires to one of the comfortable
cornon rooms where he talks with
friends and reads until three
o’clock when he has made an
appointment with the teacher he
has selected as scholastic advisor.
From three to seven that evening they discuss the ideas with
which Amos is concerned and
Amos gets an impression of the
paper he is contemplating. Dr.
Scribendi does not feel com
pletely qualified to discuss the
anthropological implications of
Amos’ aesthetic argument so the
two of them join Mr. Obscuratis,
a visiting lecturer and resource
person, to continue the discussion over supper. After supper,
Amos joins Clara and they use
one of the free automobiles available to students to drive into
town to a movie and afterwards
to a party given by married
friends in town.
They return early in the morning and Amos retires to his room.
Next morning, he arises at nine
and attends an open lecture by
an instructor in physical science.
Some of the concepts and questions are not completely clear to
him, but he understands that the
posals

distinction between matter and

energy is primarily semantic and
that electron research being carried out on the campus has isolated a statistical curve which
tends to weaken the Heisenberg
principle. He has lunch with
Clara and spends the afternoon
with her helping her improve her
voluntary paper on the sciopsychological significance of Orphic drama. After much re-writing and even more personal byplay, Clara leaves for a rehearsal
for a motion picture being produced by members of the academic community.

Amos shoots pool fill supper.
At supper, he meets with some
friends and discusses the activities the chances of the track and
field team in the impending college Olympics. After supper, he
attends a colloquium of faculty,
students, teachers, and financial
supporters, concerning modification of the “certifying” process.
The conservatives argue that a
comprehensive exam should be

compulsory before certification,
but the liberals argue that the

student should be free not to
take the exam if he does not
wish to, and 'that the recOmendation of his scholastic advisors
together with his record during
his stay should suffice, since
the educated student knowns the
areas he is competent in and and
an examination is no real reflection of the lasting quality of
what he has learned.
Amos returns to his room to
write after the meeting but is
interrupted by one of his suitmates who feels that he is rebdy
for certification. He and Amos
argue and discuss most of the
night in Amos’ room which is
designed to assure privacy and
to minimize the carrying of

noise. The suitmate retires after
Amos makes several telling points
to reconsider making his application. Amos realizes that he
knows even more than he
thought, and suspects that allhough he has been in attendance only two and one-half years,
that he may well be ready for
certification himself in a matter
of months.

Next day he rises in the after
noon and tries to make an appointment with his scholastic advisor. His hours are already
scheduled, but he invites Amos
to his home that evening for supper. Amos arrives in time to'
share cocktails with Dr. Scribendi
and his family. They have dinner and after the children arc
in bed, Amos discusses his field
with the doctor and his wife.
The doctor is incouraging about
Amos' hope of early certification but points out certain areas
where Amos is weak and requires
more thought and study. After
the discussion of Amos' particular situation they talk about the
problem of certification in general. Dr, Scribendi argues vehemently that the certification examination is merely an atavistic
convention, and that the only
real security a student can have
is in knowing

that he knows

enough to do what he wants to
do, and in knowing that he can
trust his facts and mental processes. Amos is not convinced and

argues that the certificate makes
the student more confident and
allows him to secure work more
easily. Dr. Scribendi points out
that only if the student is adequately educated will he be able
to hold his job and feel any sense

of accomplishment.
Amos leaves very late and
walks back past the athletic
parks and landscaped groves to
his residence. He is too excited to
sleep and so he calls at Clara's
residence. She comes down to
join him and they talk till sun

rise . . .
The education which Amos receives in this parable is, I believe, attractive to almost everyone. The freedom with which he
must come to grips puts him in
a position of real responsibility,
for his own action and his own
education. He pursues those ideas
with which he is most concerned,
not in isolation, but in a constant
dialogue with scholars who serve
as checks upon his objectivity

and insight.

It is possible to realize that
Amos would “graduate" knowing
more ,and being more sure of

himself and his abilities and limitations than any of us will. Is it

possible, however, to imagine
Amos being comfortably assim

ilated into the same world in
which we must find a place? I
think that if students were educated as Amos is, then their presence would change the world I
also believe that if the pressure
of our insane world were relaxed
and societies were made to serve
human need, rather thari to control and subjugate it, that educations like Amos’ would become
a common place. This may be a
“chicken and egg" problem, but
it is a problem to be solved.

�Friday, February 26,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

1945

Education and Cultural Affairs
Conference on Modern Literature
Buffalo Festival of

Thursday, March 4

gram “The

John Crowe Ransom, A Reading of his Poems at 4:00 p.m. in

The Arts Today."
Speakers for the conference
include:
George P. Elliott, Professor of

5

"Friday, March

Geoffrey Hartman, Symposium,
"Literature and Ideas”, 10:00
a m. in Baird Hall.
Marshall McLuhan, Symposium,
"New Media and the Arts” at
2:00 p.m. in Baird Hall.
Saturday, March 6
George P. Elliott, Symposium,

"The Use of Literature for Nihilistic Purposes”, 10:00 am. in
Baird Hall.
This evening has not been programmed by our conference in
order to allow our visitors to attend the poetry reading and concert presented by The Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy in its pro-

English, Syracuse University.
Geoffrey Hartman, Professor of
English, State University of Iowa.
Iriving Howe, Professor of English, Hunter College, Founding

Editor of Dissent.

Marshall McLuhan, Professor of
English, University of Toronto,
Director, Center for Culture and
Technology, University of Toron
to and Editor of Explorations
Magazine.

John Crowe Hansom, Founding
Editor (1939-59 of the Kenyon Review; Winner of the National
Award; Winner of the Bollingen
Prize for Poetry; Winner of the
Kussell Loines Award in Poetry
from the National Academy of
Arts and Letters (1951); Professor Emeritus of English at Kenyon College.

Dr. Friend Presents Views
On the Struggle in Vietnam
By DR. THEODORE FRIEND
Associate Professor of History

The problem in Vietnam has reached a crucial stage
at which President Johnson must make a clear “in or
out" decision. Any further procrastination, any more sedative measures, will only make more difficult the execu-

tion of a clear choice.
What should that choice be? A year ago Secretary
McNamara’s goal was “winning the way in Vietnam,”

and he has not apparently
changed his mind. In the last
year,

however, the Viet

Cong has

society"

in Vietnam.

out. But how? And where to?

This development is the con
fusion of duties between students
and the university, particularly
in the liberal arts.
The duties of the student

in

securing an education are frequently overlooked, but if seems
to me that there has been a
reversal in what is expected of
the university and in what is
expected of the student.
It used to be that a university’s
role was, to educate the student
in the traditions and culture of

the civilized world. The university
was then a guardian of the civilization’s heritage; it strove to instill in the student a precious
sense of history and a knowledge of the great works of man.
The student’s role was that
of an active participant in the
process and he was expected to
concentrate on learning the traditions, Taking care of the technical
details and the narrow, special-

ized knowledge needed to secure
employment
matter.

was

a

personal

In a sense then, the university
was faithful to its elemental purpose
serving as an island amid
the hustle-bustle of society where
the knowledge and wisdom of cen-

The roles are now being re-

.

Nations

Tim* To Deal With Chin*&gt;*
The alternative, then is to get

—

versed.

ted States would still have to
fight without Western allies and
against the disfavor of the United

"better

—

portance.

nuclear level and be limited geographically, as in Korea, the Uni-

continuing anti-imperial resistance from the very people it
sought to defend. Building the
“Great Society" will be difficult
enough at home; it is too late for
Americans to attempt even a

The crises facing the univerthe loss of the
sities of today
student’s identity, the trend toward multiversities, the concentration on faculty research
have tended to obscure a less
dramatic but deeply significant
issue which has slowly been developing over the years.

turies could endure. The student,

cal initiative. To defeat the Viet

Buddhist priests without goals—that even with military victory a
viable state might not be possible. The United States would
very likely have to commit itself
to a period of surrogate government, and thus let itself in for

Service)

too, realized the importance of
gaining an insight into the heritage of civilization and thought
of the technical job-getting knowledge as being of secondary im-

Cong would require committing
American troops to battle without qualification or restraint.
North Vietnam would then engage openly in war, assisted almost surely by Chinese “volunteers," and very probably by
Russian equipment. Even if the
battle could be held to a sub-

of South Vietnam. One wonders
how much meaning survives in
this aim. After a quarter century
of almost constant strife, the
Vietnamese peasantry are tired
and terrorized The politicallyminded arc anti-white and anticolonial, tending to sec an American as a new kind of Frenchman.
The policy is so fragmentedcivilian leaders without power,
generals without popularity, and

CARROL CAGLE

—

gained considerable territory, won
a majohty of classic as well as
guerrilla battles, and obtained a
firmer psychological and politi-

Polity Fragmented
Even if the war were "won"
in the military sense, one must
ask "for whom?” There has always been a political corollary
to the American effort: to defend
freedom of choice for the people

By

DR. FRIEND
comments on Vietnam policy
Any talks will have to be con
ducted with ourselves in a state
of military poise, ready to pounce,
and to warm up the war if necessary. "Negotiation from strength"
, .

within South Vietnam

itself is

already a bygone possibility, but
the United States can still use its
naval and air power to reinforce
its diplomatic hand. This also may
be the time to deal face to face
with the Chinese; to include them
in any conference on Vietnam and
begin a process of realistic adjustment to them—such a process
as, after all these years, has finally put us on a fairly sure footing
with the Russians.

Adjustment, yes; accomodation,
no. Even if a reduced South Vietnam did not for long outlive a
peace conference, a firmer military-political stand might be
made on behalf of Thailand;
more effectively still with Malaysia, to which the the British are
by treaty and policy committed,
at the very least. Western power
has such a vast air and naval advantage that it could hold, without difficulty, a minimal line of
Japan-Taiwan-Philippines. If Communist China were to say that
the United States had proved to
'

(Cont’d

on P.

9)

Look at the university of today.
Its class schedules are crammed
full of courses where students
learn how to administer a personnel program, or how to grow
hybrid corn, or how to understand
the Russians, or how to prograpr
a computer. But its students are
not being taught, as they should
be, the fundamental disciplines.
Herein lies the reversal of functions. It is now up to the student
to read the great books, to become acquainted with the arts,
and to steep himself in the cul-

ture of Western civilization.

The university has abrogated its
traditional responsibility of acting as guardian of the best of our
culture, and has become a training ground for technicians, administrators, and experts of all
types.

I do not speak in absolutes.
There still arc universities which
are concerned with the funda
mentals, witness St. John’s College of Maryland and New Mexico. But too many schools arc
overly concerned with technicalities and trivia.

The fundamental shift in the
duty of the student and the duty
of the university is disturbing.
Universities have been haphazardly adding classes and departments which are of fleeting interest to someone arid
which, undoubtedly perform some function.
The student is left to flounder,
picking up in a piecemeal fashion
the important knowledge of our
culture

■

Baird Hall.
Irving Howe, Symposium “The
Idea of the Modern” at 8:30 p.m.
146 Diefendorf Hall.

Loss of Identity
Major Problem

'anew m mww m'mum or
he moms 'Fibbh on mw."

The Campus Newspaper:
PR Arm or Life Laboratory?
By MELVIN MENCHER
Associate Professor of Journalism
Joseph Pulitzer Graduate School of Journalism
Columbia University

This article is reprinted with permission from the
of PHI DELTA KAPPAN

If the purpose of education is

to help students develop a disciplined, independent, and critical approach to knowledge, then
journalistic experience demands
a fair hearing. For the production of a newspaper is a daily,
or weekly, exercise in the use of
a skilled, disciplined, and questing intelligence.
Almost all colleges and universities have newspapers. But for
reasons we shall examine later
most of these publications are as
valuable to the education of students as cheerleading. The average campus newspaper is not
much more than a bulletin board
that requires of its staff members stenographic skills and little
else. A good newspaper, however,
can help its staff members develop skills that are useful to the
physics or education major as
well as to the student interested

in journalism as a career.
See Editorial
Among the dozens of discussions, plans, programs, and enterprises that make up the reform
movement in higher education,
none involves the campus newspaper: This is not surprising. On
most campuses the student newspaper is at best tolerated by the
administration, condescended to
by the faculty, and ignored by
the better students. Yet there is
no classroom that can better
serve the aims of education than
the student newsroom.

See Senate Story

Most educators agree that a
emerge from his
undergraduate years with some
skills, a few basic attitudes and
values, and a smattering of know-

student should

January

1965 issue

ledge about the past and the present. Specifically, one of the skills
he should command is the ability

to communicate what he sees and
feels. He should, of course, be

open to experience, and he should
be willing to go where the evidence and his reasoning take him
The student newspaper allows its
members to range freely over
the world and to describe what
they experience—no matter how
unpopular that vision may be—is assisting in the educational pro
cess.

Usually, the justifications a
vanced for the existence of a si
dent newspaper are concern'
with its utility. Where there a
journalism programs, the nev
paper is a good training grour
In general, the newspaper is si
posed to function as an aid
the development of the consens
necessary to make the camp
function properly, But there a
insufficient justifications if
newspaper does not provide t
student with an educational &lt;
perience worthy of his invo
ment of time and energy
The newspaper that does
nutures independence, raatu

and responsibility. It teai
young men and women to im
gate before they accept re
made solutions. Serving on a
dent newspaper that is fret
examine issues and then to d
its conclusions is. a small

sure step away from the I
sures on youth to, accept.
passive, to go along. Few stun
seem interested in control'
the overwhelming forces aro
them. Nothing, they say. can
done. Others, equally P as;
bury themselves in social thi

and in the great

movement-

history,'never facing the hui
ache and misery under tt
tides.

(Cont’d

on

P

�Friday, February 26,

1965

SPECTRUM

Senate Approves
Senior Week and
Spectrum Budget

PAGE SEVEN

Plesur Named Dean
Dr. Milton Plesur, assistant
dean qf University College, has
been named Acting Dean during
the sabbatical leave of Dean

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Bradley Chapin.

Tuesday night the Student Senate appropriated $1342 to the
Senior Week Committee. Senior
Week, the election platform of
Linda Sapir, will take place
Thursday through Saturday prior
to commencement in May. All
members of the student body will
be welcome to attend a concert,
a ball at the Statler Hilton, a
picnic and other festivities planned. Senator Kenneth Burnstein
pointed to the fact that an im-

Dean Chapin, who has taken
the sabbatical to conduct research, will return to the Uni-

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State

versity in September.

University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old
Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix,
before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

portant tradition was about to be
inauguarated at UB.

General Notices

Two hours of debate on the
Senate floor resulted in an in-

Graduate School deadlines
March 5—Last date for resigning
from a course without an "F"

creased appropriation of $1482
for the Spectrum. The additional
funds will allow the paper to
continue to print an average of
twenty pages per issue and as
Editor John Kowal said, “expand
and improve the quality of the
newspaper.” When asked if he
recognized the authority , of the
Student Publications Board Mr.
Kowal bluntly replied “no”. During the course of discussion Mr.
Kowal was labeled an “anarchist”
by Freshman Council President
Martin Guggenheim because he
“flaunted authority and broke
the laws.” The authority and laws

penalty.
April 5—Last date for filing Ph D
program for February 19(ifi
graduation.
April 9—Last date for submission
of dissertations, theses, and pro)ccts for May 1985 graduation.
April 9—Last date for filing applications for Graduate Record
assumes new position
Examination to be given April
Dr. Plesur, who was appointed
24, 1965.
assistant dean in 1959, is also
an associate professor of history. April 10—Foreign Language Examination. Applicants are reHe received his bachelor s de
quired to file applications with
gree from State University Col
Modern Language Department
lege at Buffalo and his master's
at least 12 days previous.
degree from U. B. He received
A reminder: Applications for
Mr. Guggenheim was refering to his doctorate from the University
Make-Up Examinations for the rewere the Publications Board and of Rochester in 1954.
moval of Incomplete Grades will
the Finance Committee of the
be accepted no later than March
Dr. Plesur has published sev
Student Senate which had plann8, 1965. Make-up examinations
ed appropriations to cover an eral articles in professional jourbegin April 12, 1965.
nals and he is a member of vari
average of sixteen pages per isous professional organizations.
University College Students:
sue. The Senate voted the extra
(except Nursing students) Regismoney to the Spectrum by a 15tration for next semester, Sep2-2 majority. Secretary Linda Letember 1965. for all University
venthal said, “The question here
College Students (except those on
is not one of editorial responAt 9:00 a.m., the chairs slumsibility, that is the jurisdiction bering upon the rug, the books strict academic probation) will beof the Publications Board. Mr. and magazines resting upon the gin Monday, Students whose last
names begin with the letters desKowal has gone through the proshelves are awakened by the flick
ignated below will see their ad
per channels to achieve financial
a switch. Another day has visers,
of
aid."
plan their programs
begun. They prepare for all the register for courses on the and
folpeople who will be appreciating lowing days:
A special committee to investiduring the day. March 1 through
their
services
gate changes in the school calenMarch 5—1), Z.
The books and magazines arand those students who received
dar was established. Senator Myrrange themselves neatly upon
special instructions requiring
na Freed moved to ammend the
the shelves, the chairs group
them to register this first week.
symmetrically
themselves
about
_existing Student Association ConMarch 8 through March 12—A. E,
the rugs. Curtains slide across
I, N, 0, Q, T, U, V
stitution to limit debate on the
the windows; sunlight floods in.
Senate floor on any question to Everything is in readiness for March 22 through March 26—S
March 29 through April 2—11, Y.
one hour. The
ammendment you. Can you resist the comfy
L
would take the form of an addichairs, the sunny room, the April 5 through April 9—M, J, X
tion to Section III, Article 3, and peaceful air, the nice good April 12 through April 16—K. It
will be discussed at the next books, the entertaining maga April 19 through April 30—W, (i
regular meeting of the Senate, zine articles that await you? So May 3 through May 7— P, C
Students will make appoint
March 23, That meeting will be walk in anytime—The facilities ments with the
University College
a joint meeting of newly elected
are very obliging. If you have Receptionist in Uiefcndorf 114
Senators and the old Senate. a few minutes, an hour, or a one week in advance of the above
Elections for new senators will whole afternoon, you are wcl
take place March 9 and 10.
come,

Browsing Library

Student Asked to Fight Poverty

VISTA
Volunteers In Service to America
this month
launched a full scale effort to
recruit college students for aclive service in the nationwide
war against poverty.
A major part of this admini—

—

stration’s anti-poverty
'

program,

ISTA is sending its recruiting

staff to colleges and universe
lies across the nation. Upon in-

utation, recruiters will tell students of the opportunities VISia offers for personal participation in the struggle to
eliminate the poverty engulfing onefifth the nation's population.
Often described as the Peace
! or Ps a
home, VISTA is seekmg men and women over 18 who
are willing to give a year of
their talents and energies to
the poor help themselves,
h*jP
ISTA Volunteers will live and
work with the poverty-stricken
m migrant laborer camps, Indian reservations, urban slums,
rural areas, and institutions for
'd® Physically handicapped, men
a*ly ill and mentally retarded,
Current plans call for 5,000
volunteers to be selected, train®d and assigned to local proj®®ts throughout
the
United
*

'

Volunteers to take part in
these projects began training in
January and will report to their
assignments after four to six
weeks of intensive instruction
and field experience in poverty
environments,

VISTA has received applica
tions from over 6,000 Americans
volunteering to combat poverty,
and its efforts. Many of these

applications are from younger
people
Glen Ferguson, Director of
VISTA, said that all college students are eligible to be Volunteers. A sampling of correspondence at VISTA headquarters
shows that many undergraduates
think that a year of such pracr
tical experience will be a valuable asset when they return to
As Voluncomplete studies.
may discover
teers students
careers in nursing, teaching,
social work, social welfare or
other public programs.

the subsequent registration pro-

cedures. O.T. and P.T. students
will make appointments with
Miss Grcenman and Miss Heap
directly. Nursing students are advised and registered through the
School of Nursing.
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required to register in Clark Gym,

examination with the Department of State. Applications must
be filed by Monday, Mar. 15, 1965,
and is opened to U.S. Citizens, if
naturalized, citizens for at least
7''j years, between the ages of 21
and 31. and want service abroad.
The candidate must be willing
to serve on a world-wide basis.
More information is available at
the University Placement Services.

The U.S. General Accounting
Office announces a new career
opportunity for students with

Master's Degrees. More detailed
on Registration Day in September. information is at the Placement
Students on Strict Academic Office. The representative from
Probation will not be permitted this governmental agency will be
to advance register during the
on campus today.
scheduled publicized times. If the
Quality Point Average of such
TEACHER PLACEMENT
students improves to such a deINTERVIEWS
gree that they become eligible to
continue in school, they will be
March 1
Dado County Public
informed in June, after semester
Schools, Miami, Florida
grades are in, concerning later
March 2
Ravena ■ Coeymans ■
registration dates. Students in this,
Selkirk Schools
category, however, who wish to
see their advisers are encouraged
Appointments arc necessary for
to do so. It would be helpful if all interviews!
these students could make an appointment during the alphabetPLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
ically scheduled times, but, if the
problem is pressing, they can Feb. 2fv
Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.
make an appointment at any
Kemper Insurance
time.
U S. General Accounting Office
Factory Mutual Engineering Dintil March 15
vision
New Process Gear
Division
Dante Exhibit: To commemorate the 700lh Anniversary of Danof Chrysler Corp
te’s birth an exhibit of rare items
March I—
Gen. Motors Corp —Chevy-Ton
and materials in Lockwood Liawanila
brary.
March 2-4
U S. Marine Corps
The Air University, Maxwell Air
US. Naval Air Development
Center.
Force Base, Albania, Aerospace
Briefing Team will present "The
March 2
U S. Space Program" to AFROTC
Manufacturers &amp; Traders Trust
Co.
cadet, University faculty and the
general public during the w.eck
March 3
in Diefendorf, Room 147 Slides
Retail Credit Co.
John Hancock Mutual Life Inand film clips outlining the U.S.
space program will be narrated
surance Co.
by a three man team. Showings
Jewel Tea Co., Inc
will be as follows:
Rausch &amp; Comb, Inc.
March 4-'
March 2 4:00 p.m.(AS-l)
Graphic Controls
March 3—4:00 p in. (faculty &amp;
public)
City of Detroit Civil Service
March 4—3:00 p m. (faculty &amp;
Commission
public)
March 5—
U S. Coast Guard
4:00 p in. (AS-1)
Bershire Life Insurance Co
American Oil Co.
For interview appointment or inThe USIA will hold its next
formation, please call 831-3311.
examination for Foreign Service University IMacement Services,
May I. 1965. This will be a joint Schoellkopf Hall.
—

Weekly Calendar

—

Placement

Announcements

UBSTUDENTS

the doodle huo

See Germany

"fk

this Summer !

States and its Territories dur
ing 1965. By January 18, Sar
gent Shriver, Director of the Of
fice of Economic Opportunity,
had announced the assignment
of 239 VISTA Volunteers to projeets in 20 states,

scheduled times. At this time,
the Receptionist will give the
student registration cards and a
list of instructions to follow in

394 Hertel

nresents

WoejO^S'*

Live Music Every
Fri. ond Sot.
Home

(

near

Military)

Doodle

of

Bug

the

Donee

Prearranged summo
Bu f fLufthouse Scheduled Je
Rate
all Art

Lqzarowl

»z

*

1

The SPECTRUM

I

now printed by

part,,

erS

YOUNG SET
-Smitl Prinlitiy

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware}

Phone 876-2284

(IMITATED BUT NOT

DUPLICATED os Western New York’s largest
group for single persons over 20)
IS LOOKING FOR the girl who wants to be MISS
AMERICA OF 1965
If you ore single, over 19, and possess any talent (dancing,
singing,
dress desiytmg, art, etc.) OR can give
short talk on your vocation
See
TYS Rep. Tim Buckley, Wed., March 3rd, 2-4
pm in Norton
Union room 240 for mote information, or attend tonight’s Friday
dotce
of TYS at the Continental Inn Fkilel
Western New York's Social
Crossroads (or single people, 3456 Delaware Ave. near
Sheridan.
9:30 pm to 130 am, BIG BAND
MUSIC
heels and ties. Tell Your Friends.
sociol

„

-

�Dress Code Delayed
Discussion on the impending
decision of the Inter-Residence
Council concerning a dress code
for students was put off this week
because of a backlog of other
business. The new constitution
which the council has adopted is
being amended to increase the
efficiency with which it may han
die resident student’s problems.
A resolution to increase the doling out of ice cream to Goodyear
Residence was passed to increase
it to a serving of seconds after
every lunch and dinner fi;om
Monday to Friday. Goodyear stu
■dents will be glad to know that
the problem of the “peeping-

Toms” that inspect their dress
habits at dinner will be discussed with the person in charge.
Residents are starting a campaign to stop the carrying of
food out of the cafeteria at the
insistence of the Food Management. A few students are get
ting sick from eating spoiled
sandwiches and, since food-poisoning is an everpresent danger
this seems like a reasonable re
quest,

&gt;

The IRC has allotted $200 toconstruct a Queen's Float for
Spring Weekend, either by actual
student participation or by having it made. Students who are in
terested in supporting this event
should contact their Resident Ad
visors. The IRC would also like
to inform students that tickets
for the Lemoyne-CB game can
be purchased at the Gym for
one. dollar. The game will be
played tomorrow at Memorial
Auditorium.

oCetterA

Faculty and Students Discuss
American Image Abroad;
Snyder and Johnson Debate
17, at approximately 3:00 p.m., a group of
some forty people, mostly stu
dents, met in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge of Norton Union to discuss, with Dr. Johnson of the
Anthropology department and
Dr. Snyder of the Political Sci
once department, the image of
Wednesday, Feb.

America in other lands. The discussion was sponsored in conjunction with the Union Board
Activities Drive. The work of
setting up the student-faculty discussion was in the capable hands
of the Public Relations Commit
tee of Union Board, under the

leadership of Sandy Atlas. The
discussion began when Melinda
Chilcott introduced the guest
speakers. Dr. Johnson spoke first,
and his opening remarks were to
provide the framework on which
the discussion would build
In
his opening ideas, Dr. Johnson
stated his belief that there is an
altitude in the world not of hate,
or mistrust
for Americans as
people, but, instead for the Amor

to

the Editor

Atheist Criticized
sists only of things logically or

TO THE EDITOR
Last week, in the Spectrum a
letter appeared denouncing the
Newman Club as “phony liberals”
and ‘'bigots.” To me, the claims
and style of that article are just
about as close to bigotry as anything I have ever seen in the

forces of Communism, is actually
trying to further her own im-

perialistic ambitions. Therefore,
the problem was how to make
people feel that the United States
actually had no imperial ambi-

tions.

Spectrum.

Imperial Holdings Detrimental

To set things straight, I am not
Catholic. I was brought up in a
Jewish family, “Primitive beliefs” were not shoved down my
throat by my family, (and maybe
it would have been better for me
if they had). In fact my family
shoved almost nothing down mv

Dr. Johnson felt that a major
part of America’s problem is the
continued reliance on old allies.
It was felt that the support, by
America, of foreign governments
that had imperial holdings and
ambitions was, indeed, detrimental to the welfare of the United
Slates and her image in other
lands. As an example, Dr. Johnson referred to the recent stand
of the United States in the Con
go. There was a bit of haggling
between the speakers as to the
definition of several terms and
their fine distinctions Finally,
several students decided to enter the discussion, and it was
then that the success of the
coffee hour was assured.

throat.
The

author

of

that

article

eulogized the “logic empirical
philosophies” and denounced religion, as if he knows there is no
God. I should like to ask him then
what his ultimate unquenchable
enthusiasm” in the “vigorous
search for knowledge.” In the
first place 1 would not believe
him. I do not think he really
knows what knowledge is. He
would say that knowledge con-

objectively provable. (Because if
he believed in subjective truth
he would be including feelings,
beliefs, faith and finally God). I
guess he does not realize that all
logic is based on assumptions:
and that one cannot justify his
existence or give real meaning
to his life with something based
on assumptions.
I would also like to ask the
writer of that article one more
question. From whence does he
derive the notion that reason is
supreme? Ah. yes, his reason
tells him so. But a Catholic will
tell you tha't religion and specifically Catholicism is supreme
because Catholicism tells him so.
That writer has fallen into the
same situation as many Catholics;
an all-the-ends-tied-up system:
and hence has lost touch with
reality.

On the other hand, if an “inner
voice” tells him, reason is best.
His listening to it is an act of
faith; and faith is the center of
religion.
Stanley Dayan

ican government.

Motives Mistaken

However, Dr, Snyder disagreed
Johnson. He felt that
there was, indeed, an anti-American feeling in many parts of the
world. He stated further that
part of the problem which faces
the United States is the tendency
of other peoples to mistake the
motives of America. There is a
with Dr

tendency to believe that Amerin attempting to stop the

ica,

r
r

Friday, February 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

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26, 1965

SPECTRUM

The Kibitzer

-

-

By SCOTT KURMAN

to the
The Kibitzer is back. Due
abysmal lack of response from
(ho

the

last semester,
$5 prize are being
albeit. At any rate,

school populus

contest and

dropped:
here's

a rather trivial double-

dummy

problem to mull

over.

Spades are ruffers and you need
four of the tricks. Lead is with
south, and The Kibitzer is vulnerable, Go

.

. .

NORTH
S: Q 9 4

D: 7 4 3
C: 6

EAST

WEST

S: 5 3

H: A K J

C: K Q 9 8

Q 9 8 6

D:

C: A
SOUTH

H: 7 5 4 2
D: A 5
C; 8

When you do that, trade the
ace and icing of clubs and see if

you can rap it.
When you kill those, here’s another with a little more merit.
Still spades, and now you need
five of the six.
NORTH
S: 9 3

D: A J 5
C: 5
WEST
S: 8 2
H: 9
D: 5 3
C: A

EAST
S: 4

H: 7 6 3
D: 8 2
C:

—

SOUTH

H: Q J 8
D: 9 6
C: 6
One of the tools often used by
the modern crop of killer-diller
bridge players is the weak notrump. This is opening one NT
on flat hands of 11+ to 14 highcard points and reserving minor
suit openers for stronger hands.

This has
no-trump
pre empt
calls and

many advantages; the
bid serves as a mild
against one-level overoften induces opponents
to venture down the dark paths
of 500 point sets. There is this
compulsion to overcall a weakie
(as it is lovingly
called by its
devotees) on nine points just because they know that they would
not have dared to bid it. The
partner of the no-trump bidder
sits happily with his ten or eleven
goodies and eventually Ik
heard
"ith a smiling, (and occasionally
unethically resounding flush, or
belt, or pound on head, or tee-

hee-ho-ho, or crash, or any other
of the idions of the initiate that

prelude disaster).

The notrump must be met
intelligently. Sure, maybe you
may miss two of a major, but

that is the purpose of the bid.
If you have some sort of yasafrax,
keep your mouth shut, especially
in second seat. When you have
something you feel like’ bidding,
and considering the vulnerability,
you are reasonably sure you're
not going to go for a bath, then
cry out. Don't come in without
distribution. (Exception: with a
monster, double, and have an
orgy!) If you have some sort of
very good 5-card major, or reasonable sixer, what to do is easy
enough. On the other hand, if
you are, say 5-4 in the majors
and want to compete, there are a
number of courses open, Landy
is merely a 2-club bid that says
Stayman by any other name still
a 4-card major. Ripstra calls
for majors too, but instead of
confining itself to 2C, bids the
better of the two minors, (Now
you do not need four, but something that resembles support for
a weak five-bagger will suffice.)
As far as these two conventions
go. I may well be wrong on the
incidentals, because the pros I
kibitz do it right. It’s called
ASTRO, and it’s a winner. In its
simplest foiTn, 2C says, I have
hearts and a minor, 2D cries
spades and a lower suit, and two
of a major means what it looks
like. If you want to find out
pard’s other suit, bid 2NT. But
you need some sort of mild boat,
because otherwise the three-level
may find you shafted, even with a
four-four fit. In most cases you
merely acknowledge partner’s major and tell with it. You do need
some of them, though, because he
may only have four. The next
step up denies good major fit,
announces something playable in

bid suit, and passes the buck.
If Astroer’s other suit is that,
fini. If his major is five goodies,
he tells you. If he has an outside
unmentioned spread, and something resembling a hand, he so
declares. Common sense; that’s
all.
You’re going down the sewer,
Tom double-talked.

Watch for the Browsing
Library Contest! Applications will he at the candy
counter and Union Board
Office soon.

‘The Balcony’ Presented As Part of Arts
Festival, Opens Wednesday In Baird Hall
CORTES

By WILLIAM

Jean Genet's play The Balcony
is being co-produced by the Department of Drama and Speech

mental producers to meet the
fantastic and elaborate specifications of Genet's bizarre and lightning-packed

promise

to

this presentation of Th#
Balcony one of the most attractive, exciting. and memorable productions ever to have been seen
on the UB campus.

and the Student Dramatic Society
this coming week as their con
fribution to Buffalo’s first Festival of the Arts Today The production, under the direction of
Mr. Thomas Brennan, will give
performances in Baird Hall audi-

Dr. Friend
(Cont’d

from P.

a horrifying, mocking vision of
man and his society which places
the pillars of society in a brothel
that is located in a country plagued by civil war In Madame
Irma's state protected "House of
Illusion s," the world-famous
Grand Balcony, men of everyday

A special student-discount admission price of 75 cents has been
introduced for The Balcony to encourage all students to take full
advantage of this unique and
startling theatrical
experience.
Faculty admission is $1.50, and
general admission, $2.50, Tickets
for all four performances are now
on sale at the Norton Union ticket

booth, and, beginning Monday,
at the liaird Hall box office, until

the end of The

Balcony's engage-

ment.

...

6)

be a “paper tiger," the saying
would only hold true for guerilla
war on land; for the United States
could always prove China a “paper shark” at sea, or a “paper
eagle” in the air.

Just now, however, the United
States must accept a loss of face
and seek to negotiate its way out
of a situation in which American
lives and money are being spent
without commensurate gain. The
humiliation may be severe, but it
is preferable to profitless death
in the jungles of Vietnam.

Editor Fired

CLEVELAND, Miss. (CPS)—The
editor of the student newspaper
at Delta State College has been
removed from his position by
school president James M Ewing.
Jack Steele, editor of the weekly Miss Delta, was fired for use
of a "sordid” headline in the Jan
uary 12 edition of the newspaper.
In an official statement Ewing
referred to the headline as "uncalled for, sordid, and beneath
the dignity of college or profes-

1428 HERTEL AVt

*

script

make

I

ers c*«s$ by his brother,
Second Lieutenant Lawrence Barksdale,
recent graduate of the Marine Corps' 10 week officer candidate
CQ Urse
will attend two six-week summer training sessions and
b
commissi on#&lt;j a Second Lieutenant in the Marine Corps upon gradu•Mon.

scantily clad whores! In Genet's
“absurd" tour de force, sham,

Co-ordinated by Dr. Thomas
Watson, Director of Theatre, as
scene designed, Miss Esther Kling
as costume designer, and Mr.
Brennan as director, the energetic
efforts of the student and depart-

NorthPark^
If
b
le

functions and ceremonies before

Genet’s macabre play presents

revelation

paragraph about the moive “Goldfinger" came near the end of the
story. Miss Galore was mentioned
once.
Barnes Carr was appointed to replace Steele. Carr, a sophomore,
said "I feel that 1 am ethically
bound to share the blame with
Jack, because I believe the dismissal was brought on with deep
er and more complex aspects."

Barksdale, sophomore end Beck of the Yeer for the Buffelo footeam ' s
being sworn into the U.S. Marine Corps' platoon
h

familiarity become generals, bishops, judges, heroes, etc., assuming grotesque physical statures
and solemnly peforming their

torium at eight p.m. each evening, Wednesday, March
3rd
through Saturday, March 6.

illusion, and 'real" appearance
merge to effect an electrifying

sional journalism."
The headline appeared above a
movie review written by a staff
member and read: ‘Pussy Galore’
Typical of James Bond's Girls.
Most of the 16-inch story was concerned with the movie version
of "My Fair Lady". A three inch

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■1

The Inner Circle Coffee House

BAIRD HALL

8:00 P.M.
831-3408

STUDENTS 75«

FACULTY -STAFF $1,50

�iouS

GRADUATE CLUB PROGRAM

STUDENT ZIONIST
ORGANIZATION
Sunday at 8:00 p.m. the Student
Zionist Organization will present
a program on Americans in Israel. what they are doing and
what the opportunities are for
you there. We have a new very
Inexpensive program for visiting
Israel that we'd like to let you
in on. loo. The meeting, in Norton 234, will be followed by food,
an then Israeli singing and dancing. Everyone, members or not, is
invited to come.

Tuesday and Wednesday of next

2:00 3:00 p.m., the sixth
in the current discussions of the
"Gospel According to Saint John"
will be offered. Both sessions will
be held in Room 266 Norton. The
specific topic will be "Who Is
Jesus" (John 8:12-10:42). ALL students and faculty members are invited to attend either of the duplicate sessions.
-

In addition, there will be an
open house Wednesday at 8:00
p.m. 1179 Elmwood Avenue opposite the State College.

HILLEL
The B'nai BTith Hillel Foundation is sponsoring a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will give another sermon
lesson in a current scries about:
“What We Believe.”

Hillel will hold another of its
weekly suppers this Sunday at
5:30 p.m. in the Hillel House. Mr.
Oscar Stromberg, Supervisor with
the Jewish Family Service Society. will speak on: "European
Jewry and the Forces of Accul.

.

The Campus Division

Fred Ostroy, Chairman of the
Hillel Graduate Club, announces
that the group is planning a gettogether for Sunday, March 7,
at 8:00 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Rabbi Max Ticktin, Director of
the B'nai B'rlth Hillel Foundation
at the University of Chicago and
the Department of Leadership
Training, will be the special guest
of the group at that time. He will
speak on, “The Six Milljon and
the Man of Faith.” A group discussion and a social hour will
follow
INTER-VARSITY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

CANTERBURY

turation.”

—

is pres-

ently conducting its 1S165 United
Jewish Fun campaign Volunteer
workers are urged to complete
their solicitations and to return

their cards and their collections

to the Hillel House.

Plans are now being formulated
for the observance of Passover.
There will be a Hillel Seder Friday evening, April 16 There will
also be opportunities for home
hospitality for the Seder in local
homes. Two lunches and one
supper will be served in the Hillel House during the Passover
Week. Reservations for any of
these functions can be made at
the Hillel House.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsoring Bible studies
Thursday at noon and Friday at
9:00 a.m. Tuesday at 3:30 p.m.
and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. prayer
meetings are sponsored.
Wednesday afternoons at 4:00

p.m. Bruce Haan, member of 1VCF
Staff, is conducting a seminar on

“Personal Witnessing" in Room
344 of Norton Union. All are invited to attend.

March 10, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsoring &lt;f
guest speaker, James W. L. Hills,
Minister of Bethlehem Presbyterian Church. His topic will be
"The Meaning of Life”. The meeting will be held at 3:30 p.m, in
the Millard Fillmore Room of
Norton Union We hope to see you
there.
NEWMAN
A social will be held in New
man Hall tonight at 8:30 p.m. Ad

mission is free.

rjCetterd

To Current Problems

“Discussion” Editor Attacks Gross

By JOHN

BONER

The United States has its troub-

les, internally and throughout
the world. In this, the first of
a series of articles in a new direction for the Spectrum, I will
attempt to deal with one of these
problems. We are all vitally concerned in the many, seemingly inin which this
extricable
country is presently mired. I am
not attacking the U.S. government for being involved, mind
you. (No,

I would never think of

doing that!) I will now present,
objectively, completely with my
opinions, prejudices, biases, and

occasional smears and nasty
swipes, that make me such a beloved journalist.

Mr. Gerald Misehe, who is associated with the Diocesan Association for International Students,

will speak at the weekly meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room. His topic will be
"His Experiences in South America".
The theology discussion groups
are continuing Tuesdays at 10:00
a m, and 3:00 p.m. and Thursdays
at 3:00 p.m. in Norton 330. The
Sunday night discussion groups
meet each Sunday evening at 7:30
p.m. in Newman Hall
The Communion Supper and Social is scheduled for Sunday. Mar.
7 at 4:00 p.m. Sec the bulletin
hoard for further details and tick-

et information.

Just a reminder: Wednesday is
Ash Wednesday and the beginning of l ent. Mass is said daily at
noon at the Hall.
Keep in mind that nominations
for next year's officers will take
place Wednesday, Mar. 10.

TO THE EDITOR

In the last issue of the Spectrum, Mr. Gerald Gross, a “true”

liberal (whatever that means) attacked a publication edited by
members of the Newman Club.
Mr. Gross and his colleagues,
supposedly the “entire student
body,” feel that members of Newman Club have no right to express their views on religion and
philosophy unless these views
agree with his stereotyped and
incorrect image of Newman Club.
The purpose of Discussion and
the Sunday night discussion
groups is to welcome everyone's
ideas and to provide an oppor-

most people know,

Viet-

Nam is a small kingdom, well
. . . that is, it is a small republic,

or something of the sort, located
in that southeastern appendix
below Burma and China, The
funny thing is that no one knows
how it is governed anymore. The
latest authoritative source that
I have been able to obtain says,
merely, that France gave VietNam, Cambodia, and Laos their
independence in 1954; after that,
it is anybody’s guess. My information, I am afraid to say, gaps
here and, I am led to believe,
a rather tenuous situation continued to flourish as the U.S.
took control from the French.
By 1957, Ngo-dinh-Diem had nominal control of South Viet-Nam
and the communist "Viet-Minh”
or “Viet-Cong” (I may be getting
confused here but, anyway, they
were communist ' (not a dirty
word), had virtually taken over
North Viet-Nam (Laos, too!). In
1963, Ngo-dinh-Diem was assassinated in an internal putsch, and
there ended the longest continuous governor since the country
Since then,
was “libereated."
there has been constant inner
turmoil in South Viet-Nam, The
last time 1 heard, the strong man
was, an airforce general Nguyen
Chanh Thi, who has come a long
way since he served as a corporal
in 1959 and a leader of the rebel
faction opposing then president
Ngo-dinh-Diem. I am probably
out of date already. The trouble
with the U.S, policy from the
beginning (and, incidentally, much
of the CIA policy) was the immediate concern with perpetuating the present rulers, who were
none to popular with the people,
by supplying the government of
the country with arms, which
they all too often turn against
their own people.

tunity for new thoughts and phi.
losophies to find a receptive and
thinking audience. We are not
trying to explain a "new apologetic” and we are not trying to
represent or defend any insti
tution or club. Although most of
our contributors are followers of
organized theism and thus can
not be “truly” liberal or “truly”
intelligent according to Mr. Gross,
we are trying to develop our
intellects as God intended so that
we might become better human
beings through a liberal “edu-

cation.”
Daniel Waterman,
Editor of Discussion

Taylor Told to Go Elsewhere

Case in point; Viet-Nam
As

to

1965

the Editor

Viet Nam History
Reviewed; Prelude

1

—

week,

Friday, February 26,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

TO THE EDITOR:

In reference to Mr, Taylor’s
plans for University No. 2, I feel
that his comments reveal his own
withered position as a pupil.
Grades need not be a “false estimation of academic achievement”
—to me a grade is a welcomed report on the worth of my academic efforts. The “lasting" of learning is dependent on the student
alone. If Mr. Taylor has learned
on dexedrine and masterplots, he
has deprived himself of the pleas-

ures of learning and possessing
knowledge.
A total of 19,157 people chose
the State University of New York
at Buffalo in September, most of
whom were prepared to endure
the present program, Perhaps, if
Mr. Taylor feels it to be so important that the student have a
choice of programs, it should be
pointed out that there are 720
other public institutions for high
er education in the United States,

Laurie Wilson

Ebert’s Methods Applauded
TO THE EDITOR:

of his students do appreciate his

As a member of his class who
does not cheat on exams, I want

efforts

publicly

to

complement

Dr.

Ebert of the Geography Department for his efforts to prevent
cheating oh the Geology 111R
hourly last week. His use of different test forms, a covered
answer sheet, ample proctors and
many other techniques shows that
this is a teacher who really cares
what

his

test grades mean. All

this is extra work for him, but
at least he should know that some

Besides forcing habitual cheat
ers to study, his policy discourages those who are tempted to
cheat only to compete with other
cheaters. Perhaps there are other
teachers at UB interested in get

ting more from their exams than
just any distribution of grades
to turn in to their office. They
might find Dr, Ebert’s methods
useful in getting more valid test
results.

•

Taylor Welcomes Criticism
TO THE EDITOR

take strong exception to the snide
ad hom
P ersonal attacks and
inem” arguments in which they
“

I would like to point out to
Mr. Nagel, and my other critics,
that 1 welcome coherent criticism
of my positions. I do, however,

indulge.
Jeremy Taylor

PATRONIZE OUR
ADVERTISERS

Now we seek to give our lead
ers an easy way out by blaming
the rival leaders for the great
disunity which now abounds. We
are confusing the symptoms with
the causes.

Your I .D Card
is Worth 10% at
.

HAIR CUTTING

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�Friday, February

26, 1965

&lt;jCetterA to the

Editor

Club’s Stand Defended
TO THE EDITOR

PACE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

earnestly welcome letters and essays from all students, just as

Ewell’s Population
Explosion Theory

proximately three billion persons
in the world and three and a half
billion agricultural acres in the
world
0.85 persons per acre.

(Cont’d from

used agricultural technology even
approaching that of Japan, the
world could support at least ten
billion persons
and probably
considerably more." One encouraging step toward improved technology is the International Rice
Research Institute founded in the
Philippines by the Ford and

P.

2)

improved agricultural
implements, 6) improved planting

cides,

5)

—

“If all the countries of the world

high degree of effectiveness.”
The Lippes Loop was first used
in 1960 and is now used in fortytwo
of the world and
in every lirge city of the United
States. Recently, the Indian government adopted the Lippes Loop
as the nation's official birth control method.

countries

and cultivation methods, and 7)
optimum matching of crops to
Program
soil, climate, and water supply.
Fifty percent of the agricultural
In conclusion, Ewell urgently
There has been much talk reimprovement program will probrecommends the following procently, on and off campus, about ably have to come from increased
grams; 1) shipment of surplus
the need for dialogue, and the use of fertilizer.
Rockefeller Foundations in 1962. fod from food-surplus countries
need for re-examination of beThe minimum goal of the
to food-deficit countries, 2) shipliefs. To assert that most of the underdeveloped countries, Ewell Lippes Loop Recommended
ment of fertilizer from fertilizerMr. Gross seems to have placed
student body is competent and suggests, should be the producHowever, Ewell claims that a
surplus countries to fertilizer-defengage
willing to
a rather unassuming and innocuin dialogue is, tion of sixteen ounces of grain, rapid increase in agricultural proicit countries, 3) expansion of ferallow
a more optoous publication, the “Discussion” of course, to
their most important food, per duction is very difficult to tilizer manufacturing industry in
mistic opinion than Mr. Gross,’
person per day. This, the present achieve. An increase of more fertilizer-deficit countries, 4) re(which, as far as I know, is writnutritional level of these regions, than 1 per cent a year is very difduction in birth rate below 20
ten by some members of the
On the Atheist Philosophical probably cannot be raised until
ficult to attain. An increase of
per 1000 and population growth
Newman Club but is not specificSociety, and its rejection by the the birth rate drops. To produce 2-5 per cent per year is possible rate to less than 1 per cent per
Council of Religious Organizaally a Newman Club publication)
year in food-deficit counrties.
this grain, the underdeveloped on a crash program, but this rate
tions: Suppose the University had nations presently consume about could be maintained only for a
on his personal Index. He discovDr. Ewell has held the posia Math Club, a Chemistry Club, a four million tons of fertilizer. If few years and that only with the
ers that the “entire student body
tion of vice president for reBiology Club and a Physics Club, they are not using quantities of investment of much capital.
is shocked to disbelief” at this
search at SUNYAB since 1957.
all memebrs of a “Council of Scifertilizer approaching 30 million
Furthermore, an increase in
He received a B.S. in 1928 from
“obvious hypocracy” (sic) “and
entific Clubs.” Some students de- tons by 1980," says Ewell, “they agricultural production
could
the University of Toledo, an M.S.
cide
that
science
is
a
terrible
be
engulfed
acalmost
certain
to
are now seriously considering
arc
provide for population increases
1930 from Purdue, an M.A. in
in
and
unite
under
the
name
These
thing
in widespread famine."
tion against such an insult to
only for twenty to thirty years
1935 from George Washington
of Humanists United to Abolish countries now produce two milat the most. Then, a birth contheir intelligence.” What this acUniversity and a Ph D. in 1937
Computerism (HUAC). Are they lion tons of fertilizer and may
trol program is an absolute nefrom Princeton. During World
tion might be is fearful to imentitled to belong to the “C.S.C”? produce three or four million cesstiy.
War II, Dr. Ewell served as techThe analogy is not perfect, of tons by 1970 or perhaps five or
agine. A letter to the Publications
At this point of the problem, nical aide in the National Decourse; science and religion are six million with the aid of a crash
Board? No jurisdiction. An infense Research Committee and as
Dr. Jack Lippes of the SUNYAB
But did not the program. The remainder of the
different
matters.
to
junction
keep the horrendous
A.P.S. apply to the C.R.O. merely necessary fertilizer will have to School of Medicine and medical operations analyst in the U.S. Air
Force. For his war work he rething from being circulated on
the Planned Parentto prove that it would not be adbe provided by the rest of the director of
campus? Many people in New mitted and would, consequently, world, which now only produces hood Center of Buffalo steps into ceived the Presidential Medal for
Merit, the highest civilian decora few
York State are adept at this sort be entitled to Student Associa- thirty million tons altogether. By the limelight. Dr. Lippes,
ation of the U.S. Government.
years ago, redeveloped and im
tion Funds?
probably
the
have
1980
world
will
of action and might cooperate.
After the war, he was a chemical
proved the intrauterine contraa hundred milproducing
to
be
How about a public burning of
ceptive, originally invented some economist for the Shell Chemical
As for the issue of Atheism
lion tons to meet all requireforty years ago by Grafcnberg. Corporation, manager of chemical
thousands of copies of Discusa short letter could not do justice ments.
economics for Stanford FoundaGrafenberg developed a gold or
sion? Direct protest might be
to
plants
The cost of fertilizer
to an side. But this is where the
tion. Dr. Ewell has served as a
ring contraceptive, but due
silver
up
to
nice.
raise fertilizer production
dogmatism of Mr. Gross’ “libconsultant to the governments of
complications, its use was conto
the
Ewell’s recommended level in
India, Philippines and Egypt. He
eralism” is most apparent. All
sidered to be wrong, to be "devnext fifteen years will be ten to
Meanwhile, however, the “true
is presently a consultant to the
work." Lippes' IUD, the
are
such
il's
us,
he
tells
“theists’,
have
been placed
liberals”, who
fifteen billion dollars.
famed Lippes loop, is made of U.S. Agency for International Dein a state of great intellectual because of “the chains of primiIncrease Needed
plastic,
is very inexpensive, lasts velopment, United Nations, and
ferment and danger, will be retive beliefs forced down their
Ford Foundation.- He has trav6,2
and is highly effecindefinitely,
Japan
presently
supports
lieved to learn that they “look throats by parents”, whereas (to
elled widely in Asia, Africa, Latin
tive. Popular oral contraceptive
acre;
agricultural
persons
per
upon this publication with disthis astonishing metaare more expensive ($25, a America and Europe and has
pills
United
acre;
1.1
enlarge
person
per
India,
gust” and that they will soon,
written over seventy articles on
year), and patients must be literif they belong to the category of phor), "All truly liberal students States and Soviet Union, 0.4 perchemistry, chemical engineering
ate to use them effectively. The
to
According
per
son
acre.
“all truly intelligent students”, welcome this young river of
and economics. Besides being
Lippes Loop “is the only contraJapan’s example, it should be pos
“tell these phony liberals to shut thought”
atheism. This degree
presently availvice president for research in the
ceptive
the
method
triple
agridouble
or
sible
to
up and will soon chase them all
University, Dr. Ewell is also proable which is suited to mass apof restraint might be peculiar, in cultural production in Asia, Afriaway.”
fessor of chemistry and engineerthis decade, to Mr. Gross’ relica, and Latin America. On a plication in underdeveloped counworld wide basis, there are ap- tries with any expectation of a ing.
Throughout his letter Mr. Gross gion, To belong (to the True Libmentions three issues: the newserals), we must also affirm that
letter “Discussion”, the status of
“Whatever Catholic liberalism
the Atheist Philosophical Society,
it is . . . not . . that of
and the general rationale for may be,
the true liberals who are working
atheism. First, on "‘Discussion.”
He asserts that it is “designed to
in many areas to eliminate disgive us the impression that the
crimination, ignorance and loud
Newman Club takes a liberal
mouthed intolerance.” Most adview of things.” Actually, the
they are among
mirable goals
newsletter is not a public relations blurb aimed at brainwashthe main goals of the Newman
MARCH 17-18-19-20-21
ing Mr. Gross. It is the result of Club (see any issue of the NaSunday night discussions at Newtional Newman News, available
man Hall, and is a serious atUniversity
Deluxe round trip transportation on an air conditioned, bar equiptempt by some students to work at Newman Hall, 15
ped, lavorotory equipped scenicruiser
out some considerations that are Avenue). Perhaps the possibility
accomodations for 5 days and 4 nights at the world famous
‘Hotel
Mr.
of
between
Gross'
important to them. The literary
Dialogue
HOTEL
AMERICANA
and philosophical merit, which
followers and students of other
*Round trip refreshments featuring UTICA CLUB on tap to and
Mr. Gross does not discuss, is faiths, might be found in just
(like everything else) open to
from New York City
these areas, if people are willing
question. What is at issue is that
*St. Patrick's Day Parade on Fifth Avenue (Wednesday)
to
discuss.
some students are honestly con‘National Invitational Tournament (basketball) in Madison Square
cerned with these questions and
—Ellen Cardone
Garden (Thursday and Saturday)
York Harbor
Jour of on Ocean Liner (Thursday), Cruise of New
(Friday), and tickets to various ‘‘live” television shows.
‘Baggage handling, tips, and New York City hotel tax.
(IMITATED BUT NOT DUPLICATED as Western New York’s largest
20)
social group for single persons over
Accomodations at the Americano
Buses leave Tuesday night and return Sunday night.
IS LOOKING FOR the girl who wtnts to be MISS AMERICA OF 1965
$2.50
per
person extra per night. Single
occupancy
is
Double
triple
occupancy.
at
Hotel
If you are single, over 19, and possess any talent (dancing, singing,
All rooms are fully air connight.
per
extra
$5.00
per person
private accomodations are
dress designing, art, etc.) OR can 9 ive a short talk on your vocation
bar. Group rotes are available.
refrigerator
ice-maker
and
radio,
television,
with
ditioned,
See
TVS Rep. Tim Buckley, Wed., March 3rd, 2-4 pm in Norton
Union room 240 for more information, or attend tonight’s Friday dance
John P. Morrissey, President
Send check or money order to:
of TYS at The Continental Inn Hotel
Western New York s Social
Intercollegiate Alumni Assn.
on-refundable)
(n
$20
Deposit:
Odssroads for single people, 3456 Delaware Ave. near Sheridan.
e/o 318 Voorhees Avenue
Late fee: $5.00 (after Mar. 8)
9:30 pm to 1:30 am, BIG BAND MUSIC
Buffalo, New York 14216
heels and ties. Tell Your Friends.
Limit: 360 persons (10 buses)
Mr. Gerald Gross’s interesting
letter to the Spectrum last week
demonstrates an unusual refinement a species of thought that is
widespread in this University:
dogmatic-liberalism.

—

the discussions are open to all
persons and topics.

—

—

5th ANNUAL
INTERCOLLEGIATE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

—

NEW YORK CITY EXCURSION
*

$60.00

*

YOUNG SET

—

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Al
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*

City residents) Deluxe round trip transportation on a
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�JSoard

Spectrum

ing the “Crisis in the Congo” at
4:00 p.m. today in Norton 233,

CRAFT SHOP
Monday

Basic instruction in jewelry
1:00 3:00 p.m.
Basic instruction in enameling
—1:00 -3:00 p.m.
Enameling workshop
7:30 •
9:30 p.m.
—

■

—

—

Basie instruction in handbuilding ceramics—1:00-3:00 p.m.
Silver casting workshop
7:30—

9:30 p.m.

Potter’s wheel workshop—7:309:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Basic instruction
1:00 3:00 p.m.
—

in leather

-

THURSDAY

—

Basic instruction in jewelry
1:00 3:00 p.m.
■

FRIDAY

tend.

SOCIAL WELFARE

CLUB

The next meeting of the Social
Welfare Club will be held Monday at 7;00 p.m. A moive “The
Maladjusted Child” will be shown.
All are invited to join us in Norton 246,

—

Basic instruction in potter’s
wheel
1:00 -3:00 p.m.
—

CHEMICAL SOCIETY

The American Chemical Society
Student Affiliates recently held
a combination banquet, lecture,
and election of officers in the
Tiffin Room of Norton Hall. Guest
speaker for the evening was Dr.
Curtis Hare, Assistant Professor
of Chemistry, who spoke on “Crystal Spectra of Transition Metal
Ions,” Newly elected officers for
1965 are: President—Jesse Strash,
Vice President—Kirk Robey, Secretary
Alice Armstrong, and
Treasurer—Philip Bolalek.
—

COMMITTEE TO DEFEND
BILL OF RIGHTS

The Niagara Frontier Committee to Defend the Bill of Rights
will show the first of a series
of five film classics at 8:30 p.m.
tomorrow in the Pilgrim Baptist
Church education building at 655

Michigan’

Ave.

The first film is "The Informwinner of four Academy
Awards and named the best
American film story of the year
in 1935. The classic story of betrayal and punishment is set
against the background of the
1922 Irish Rebellion. It was directed by John Ford.
The movie stars are Victor McLaughlin. Preston Foster, Margaret Grahame, Heather Angel,
Wallace Ford and Una O’Connor.
Other films will be shown March
13 and 27, April 10 and May 1.
ei

Welch, who did his undergraduate work at Harvard and received his Ph.D. from Oxford,
has recently returned from an
extensive study, under a Ford
Foundation grant, of the attempts
at uniting the French- and English-speaking countries of West
Africa. His talk today will deal
with the domestic factors involved
in the current Congo situation
as well as the implications for
international relations. All those
interested are encouraged to atDr,

—

TUESDAY

Friday, February 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

”

OVERSEAS STUDY

A second student meeting on
Overseas Study of Foreign Languages will be held March 4, 7:30
p.m. in Norton Hall. Room 329.
As at the former meeting held in
December 1964, the program will
include a general introduction to
foreign study as well as particulars on various foreign study programs in Europe and South America, and information on student
transportation. The meeting will
be conducted by the following
members of the Department of
Modern Languages and Literature:
Bruno Arcudi, Lecturer in Italian; Peter Boerner, Associate Professor of German; Miss Wilma
J Newberry, Assistant Professor
of Spanish; Julio Rodriguez, Assistant Professor of Spanish; Gordon R. Silber, Professor of Romance Languages and Chairman
of the Department of Modern
Languages and Literature.

POLITICS CLUB
The Politics Club will present
Dr. Claude Welch, of the Political Science Department, discuss-

The Education Committee of
the Civil Rights Committee held
a short meeting Monday, Feb. 22,
to elect officers. They are: Sheila
Bob and Billy Golden, chairmen;
Debbie Ruble, corresponding secretary. The meetings have been
changed to
7:00 p.m.

Sunday

nights

The Community Action Organi-

zation held its first open meeting
Friday, Feb. 18. The Rev. Porter
Phillips presided over the meeting. There were approximately
50 people in attendance; they
were members of the committee,

and people from the depressed
areas which the committee would
like to help. The purpose of opening the meeting to the public was
to obtain ideas and suggestions
for effective operation of the

UNION BOARD EVENTS

Monday, Mar. 1 to Friday, Mar. 12:
Crafts exhibit by Craft Shop

staff, second floor Norton Dis-

cases.

play

Tomorrow, Sadie Hawkins Dance,
8:00 p

in.

to midnight in

the

Fillmore Room; $.25 per person.
Thursday, Applications for Union Board officers’ positions are
due in the Board office; anyone
wishing to apply for a Union
Board officer position may pick
up an application in the Union
Board office; elections will be
held March 9.

GREEK
NOTES
Chi Omega congratulates the
following sisters for their election to office: President: Cynthia
Harrison, Vice President; Carol
Andersen, Recording Secretary:
Janet Zidow, Corresponding Secretary: Cheryl Seifert, Pledge Mis-

tress:

Linda Letta, Herald; Gene

Knapp.
Sigma Kappa Phi

Founder’s
Feb. 24.

Day

last

held their
Wednesday,

will hold
a semi-formal dance-cocktail party
Gamma Phi Fraternity

tomorrow evening at 9:00 p.m. at
99 Englewood.
The Brothers would like to extend their thanks to Dr. Charles
Ebert for speaking at their formal
Rush Dinner.
Phi Lambda Delta is holding a

party tonight in honor of their
newly inducted pledges at the
Club 161.
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, president of the State University at
Buffalo, was honored by the University's Pi Lambda Tau fraternity at an initiation dinner Wednesday, Feb. 3 at the Old Post
Road Inn.

The engineering fraternity presented Dr. Furnas with its first
bi-annual honorary brotherhood

award. The award acknowledges
the contribution of outstanding
engineers in Western New York,

Sigma Dalta Tau would like to
congratulate Karen Kleinman for
winning the Best Pledge award
of the past pledge class.
Sigma Phi Epsilon announces

that the Ilth annual Queen of
Hearts Ball will be held this evening at 9:00 p.m. at the Camelot
Motor Inn. Tickets can be bought
at the door for $3.50. Previous
to the dance, the Sig Eps will
hold a cocktail party at Randy
Mill’s apartment, 78 Englewood.
Tau Kappa Epsilon is holding a
closed Victory party this Saturday evening. The party will be
held at the Hotel Worth, immediately following the UB-LeMoyne
basketball game.

FRENCH TUTORING
by Frenchman
•

•

•

conversation

II

terature

.

grammar

CALL 836-4990 Eves

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

at

committee.

#

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a meeting of the
Photography Club today in Room
266, Norton, at 4:00 p.m. Even
if you know nothing about Photography, but would like to learn,
you are welcome to join.

Civil Rights Groups
Consider Questions
Concerning CAO

The Labor Committee of the
Civil Rights Committee on campus, and members of CORE, who
picketed the composition of the
membership of the committee a
number of weeks ago, have raised
the following questions concerning the CAO: Why, after announcing that CAO meetings
would be open to the public have
they been open only to the Press?
Why did the committee try to
borrow $3,000 from the Erie
County Treasury to attend a CAO
convention in New York City?
Do they have official recognition
of the federal government as a
CAO? About the latter there appears to be some controversy.

Peace Corps In World
Health Houston Topic

On Campus MaxShuIman
(By the author
,

of “Rally Round the Flay. Boys!”.
“Dobie Gillis," etc.)

THE BEARD OF AVON
Topic for today is that perennial favorite of English majors,
that ever-popular crowd pleaser, that good sport and great
American —William Shakespeare (or “The Swedish Nightingale” as he is better known as).
First let us examine the persistent theory thatShakespeare(or
“The Pearl of the Pacific” as he is jocularly called) is not the
real author of his plays. Advocates of this theory insist the plays
are so full of classical allusions and learned references that they
couldn’t possibly have l&gt;een written by the son of an illiterate
country butcher.
To which 1reply “Faugh!” Was not the great Spinoza's father
a humble woodcutter? Was not the immortal Isaac Newton’s
fat her a simple second baseman? (The elder Newton, incidentally, is one of history’s truly pathetic figures. He was, by all accounts, the greatest second baseman of his time, but baseball,
alas, had not yet l&gt;een invented. It used to break young Isaac’s
heart to see his father get up every morning, put on uniform,
spikes, glove, and cap, and stand alertly behind second base,
bent forward, eyes narrowed, waiting, waiting, waiting. That’s
all—waiting. Isaac loyally sat in the bleachers and yelled “Good
show, Dad!” and stuff like that, but everyone else in town sniggered derisively, made coarse gestures, and pelted the Newtons
with overripe fruit —figs for the elder Newton, apples for the
younger. Thus, as we all know, the famous moment came when
Isaac Newton, struck in the head with an apple, leapt to his feet,
shouted “Europa!” and announced the third law of motion: “For
every action there is an opposite and equal reaction!”

Dr. Charles Houston, special
assistant to Sargent Shriver, will
speak here Thursday on “The
Peace Corps in International
Health.” Dr. Houston’s speech is
sponsored by the Society on International Medicine, which invites the student body to this
session, in Room 139 at the Medical School at 8;30 p.m.
Dr. Houston, a Colorado internist, received degrees from
Harvard and Columbia. He has
been Director of the Peace Corps
program in India and will present slides of India in conjunction with his talk. In addition,
Dr. Houston has done cardiac and
high altitude research and is an
internationally known mountain
climber.

Cadets Tour Base
At Biloxi, Miss.
Seventy degree temperatures
greeted 24 AFROTC cadets on
their trip to Kessler Air Force
Base. Biloxi, Mississippi.
Following breakfast at the Officer’s Club, the cadets went to
Headquarters for Technical Training where they were briefed on
the function and mission of the
base. After the briefing they
were briefed on the function and
mission of the base. Atfer the
briefing they toured the different
branches of the technical school,
observing officers, enlisted men,
and foreign students who were
studying the use of navigational
equipment, ground control systems, and radar. Other stops on
the tour of the base included the
school for Ground Control Approach (GCA) and the Communications School.

The Computer Training Center
proved an interesting experience
for the cadets as they watched
the computer carry-on a conversation, play music, and play TicTac Toe.

(How profoundly true these simple words are! Take, for example, Personnu Stainless Steel Razor Blades. Shave with a
Personna. That’s the action. Now what is the reaction? Pleasure,
delight, contentment, cheer, and facial felicity. Why such a
happy reaction? Because you have started with the sharpest,
most durable blade ever honed —a blade that gives you more

shaves, closer shaves, comfortable!' shaves than any other brand

on the market. If, by chance, you don’t agree, simply return
your unused Personnas to the manufacturer and he will send you
absolutely free a package of Bee|)-Beep or any other blade you

think is Iretter.)
But 1 digress. Back to Shakespeare (or "The Gem of the
Ocean” as he was ribaldly appelated).
Shakespeare's most important play is, of eourse, Hamlet (or,
as it is frequently ealled, Macbeth). This play tells in living color
the story of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, who one night sees a
ghost upon the battlements. (Possibly it is a gnat he sees; I have
a first folio that is frankly not too legible.) Anyhow, Hamlet is so
upset by seeing this ghost (or goat) that he stabs Polonius and
Brer Bodkin. He is thereupon banished to a leather factory by
the king, who hollers. "Gel thee to a tannery!” Thereupon
Ophelia refuses her food until Laertes shouts, “Get thee to a
lieancry!" Ophelia is so cross that she chases her little dog out of
the room, crying. “Out. damned Spot!" She is fined fifty shillings
for cussing, but Portia, in an eloquent plea, gets the sentence commuted to life imprisonment. Thereupon King Lear and Queen
Mab proclaim a festival—complete with kissing games and a
pie-eating contest. Everybody has a perfectly splendid time until
Banquo's ghost (or goat) shows up. This so unhinges Richard III
that he drowns his cousin. Butt Malmsey. This leads to a lively
discussion, during which everyone is ki|led. The little dog Spot
returns to utter the immortal curtain lines:
Onr hero now has croaked.
An&lt;lso'sonr (.rima donna.
Hnl he of cheer, mg friend*.
You'll always hare Personna.
X 1965.

�

�

Max Shulman

�

) e&lt;i and
eerily. And when next thou buyest Personnabuyest
also some new Burma Share*, regular or menlhoi, which soakelh rings around any other lather. Gel thee to a pharmacy!

�Friday, February 26,

196S

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

Campus Newspaper: Public Relations Arm Or Laboratory of Life?
(Cont'd from P. 6)

The student press has developed commitment, passion, and enthusiasm,

necessary

ingredients

in a democracy, which functions
best when its metabolic rate is
the highest. It has exposed students to individual joy and sorrow, the human dimension behind textbook statistics. Good
campus newspapers have provided students with an atmosphere
that has led them to discover

that by caring enough and acting
on that concern they can change

the world.
To make the student newspaper an educational instrument
the university or college must be
a committed participant. The administration must pledge:
1. No censorship of the news
or editorial columns.
2. The employment of a competant educator-journalist as adviser to the news staff,
3. Adequate financing in the
form of subsidies.
The primary reason most student newspapers are so bad is
that the administration on the
great majority of campuses opposes a free campus press.

Many administrators have denied this, but few student newspapers pass the ultimate test: Can
the administrator or his subordinates prevent the student from
publishing what he wishes to publish? Whenever the answer is yes
there is censorship. At this point
t h e administrator’s response
should be considered.
The reply generally takes the
form of the contention that the
only reason he seeks restraints
on the campus press is to protect
the dormitory cook from being
libeled and to prevent some disappointed student actor from
making, in a play review, broad
hints about the private life of
the head of the drama department.

But it is demonstrably not true
that restraints are placed on the
student press because of a concern over libel and the possible
use of suggestive language. Those
who limit the student press do
so for far better reasons and
they demean themselves when
they talk nonsense about the dangers of libel and lack of good

taste.

Why do administrators talk
this way?
They are a worried and unhappy lot, and the student press
adds to their problems. Many institutions must still struggle to
meet the demands of a collegehungry youth. The administrators
of tax supported institutions must
cajole funds from reluctant legislators, too many of whom are
from rural areas. Education, it
seems, must still prove itself to
to these guardians of the public
purse. Private institutions are
similarly disadvantaged. Their
treasurers apparently serve by
sitting and waiting until an alumnus decides to loosen his grip on
his portfolio. Administrators of

church-connected schools live precarious lives, too depending, in
the ultimate, I suspect on the
collection plate.
Most administrators do not
spend their time in the classroom.
They are forced to spend much
Of their time in legislative halls,
explaining charts to finance committees, and in bleak hotel dining
rooms where, after partaking of
chicken potpie, they bring alumni groups up to date. They are
brave men and women to undergo these hardships; without question they have a deep and abiding affection for the schools they

serve.

But they have a locker-room
view of the student newspaper.
No matter what they say to the
contrary, most of them want a
solid, clean newspaper that boosts
the university the way a winning
football team does.
Unfortunately, the student is
unable to concentrate on upbeat
news in a downcast world. Student editors who take their jobs

seriously are concerned about segregation, including the kind in
their own town and on their
campus. They are
wondering
about a state department policy
that prohibits student travel to
Cuba. They campaign to remove
legislative and campus prohibitions against “radical” speakers
appearing on campus. Some edi-

bama, Kansas, Ohio State. MichiIllinois. Chicago, Wisconsin. Minnesota, and elsewhere
—especially on several small
campuses in the South—have led
their communities toward the
realization that the most important domestic issue of this decade
has been the Negro Revolution.
These newspapers have dug into
tors in church-connected schools the story to describe the local
openly question the taboos ensituation, and they haye crusaded
forced by administrators. (At one to eliminate social and educaEastern university the student tional barriers to Negroes.
editor’s rebellion against dress
Contrast this with the perrequirements and other edicts he
considered authoritarian led to formance of the commercial
press. With few exceptions, these
his dismissal. The student reaction had to be put down with fire newspapers continued to look
hoses.)
upon the Negro community as
they had for decades, as being
Many editors fresh from a political science class suddenly dis- outside society. Only the overt
cover that, contrary to what they action was reported—violence, ochave been told all these years, casional picketing, a speech now
socialism and communism aren’t and then. Few newspapers sent
the same beast—and they share reporters into the Negro sections
this discovery with their readers. to learn what was happening as
Editors who have been espousing the result of the Supreme Court's
the right of Communists to speak epic opinion in 1954 on school seon the campus are examining in gregation. But when the aspiratheir editorial columns what this tions of Negroes suddenly confronted the wall of white resistposition implies when an American Nazi seeks to speak. These ance in Birmingham, the Negro
explorations take student editors Revolution moved into the newsinto problem areas such as the papers as daily news. It took the
cattle prods and fire hoses of
maintenance of a balance betwethe Birmingham police to put
en individual liberty and the cohesion of the community. By this story and what it implied
press.
grappling with these problems, into the commercial
students pierce the surface to
The student press sensed the
get at basic concepts, which once
press
grasped, are used to cope with failure of the commercial
years ago. This is why the young
specific issues.
editor of the Crimson-White asSome editors wonder about an
serted at a student editors’ coneconomy geared to defense exUniversity
penditures. Some of them see ference at Columbia
early in 1963: “The college press
inconsistency in federal assistthe only press that’s telling
ance for language instruction is
the truth about race.” (The editor,
but none for the humanities; they incidentally, was
later prohibited
sense some fudging here, and
his university administration
no
to by
having

special provinces

protect, they wonder aloud.
There is, in short, a great ferment brewing and bubbling on
some campuses where good news
papers are taking the lead in
ferreting out issues and commenting on them. But it disturbs many
administrators, even those not
susceptible to outside pressure.
These administrators question the
kind of journalism they sec in
student newspapers. They do not
see its like among the commercial
newspapers they read. Surely,
they reason, a campus newspaper
should set for itself the same
standards that guide the commercial press. Unhappily, administrators do not realize, first, the
limits a commercial newspaper
must place on its coverage of
the campus and, second, the rapid
changes coming about in journalism.

There are, of course,
fine newspapers in college
mities. But even the best
neither the staff nor the

many
com-

have
space
to devote to depth coverage of
the campus. When the president
makes his welcoming address to
freshmen, the downtown newspaper may carry much of it. The
student newspaper will, too. But
the good student newspaper will
go beyond this. It will, in its
editorial columns, assess the talk;
it will measure past promises and
pledges against performance. It
will interpret what the president’s
call for a new library means to
the campaign already under way
to raise money for a new engineering building. In its news
columns, the newspaper will carry
interviews with the librarian and
the head of the school of engineering. Did the fraternities
merit his criticism? Fraternity
presidents will be interviewed.
Last year, the president promised

to emphasize the smaller, seminar-type class. Why wasn't this
mentioned again? The, president
will be asked for comments on
what was pot said as well as
what he did say.

Probably the most distinguished
service the campus press has
rendered over the past ten years
has been in the field of civil
rights. Newspapers at the Universities of Colorado, Texas, Ala-

gan State,

from serving as a campus correspondent for press associations
and newspapers. The administrations rescinded the edict when
word of it leaked out.)

Contrast the enthusiasm and
passion of this young college editor with the remark of the city
editor of one of the largest news-

papers in the country. He asked
at an editors meeting recently:
“Is this race business really as
big as we’re making it?"

Of course, many newspapermen
are aware of the full dimensions
of the news. It is from this group
that a college wishing to establish a good campus newspaper
should take a man as the adviser to the staff. The current practice of drafting a young man from
the public relations division or
the English Department usually
leads to a mediocre newspaper.
Most of these men arc junior
faculty members, untenured and
underpaid, and thus unwilling
to devote time to an activity that
cannot advance them but can
impede them.
As a consequence, these advisers find it advisable to camp
near the Establishment. The an-

nals of the national organization
of college newspaper advisers con
tain many cases of advisers
denied promotion and salary in-

creases because they believed in
a free campus press and provoked their charges to examine
social reality instead of being
content with the social facade.
Few administrators can endure
the youth who points out that
the emperor is naked.

The college that cannot afford
to employ, pay well, and grant
tenure to an educator-journalist
may turn to the nearby commercial newspaper for part-time
assistance. Every sizable newspaper has at least one editor or reporter who is aware of the public
service obligations of a news-

paper.
In addition to employing a
competent adviser and granting
press freedom, the administration must finance the newspaper.
If the lewspaper is seen as an
educational instrument, then it
deserves the same kind of support as the physics department
and the school of education. Few
campus newspapers can support
themselves. Those that do arc
so filled with advertising their
staffs cannot adequately present
news and opinion. When a student
newspaper cannot make a go of
it unless advertising takes up
more than half the pages, or when
advertising is nol available, then
the college must step in. The
subsidy should be generous and

without strings. The financial
burden should not be passed on
to the students by way of high
activity fees.
The college or university administrator who is. willing to experiment with these suggestions
is entitled to some guarantees.
He has the right to expect an
editor and a staff who are dedicated to the betterment of the
university or college, who have
wide tolerance for differing
points of view, whose appreciation of human dignity is not circumscribed by rank or role on
the campus, and whose search for
truth is unceasing and is as independent of personal opinion
as this search can reasonably
become;
What keeps a newspaper operating at a respsonsiblc, compet-

ent level is its own traditions, its
internal restraints and demands.
No

system

regulates

the

Yale

Daily News, the Harvard Crimson,
the Columbia Spectator. But trade
lions do not develop overnight,
especially on those campuses

where newspapers have been sup-

pressed and where advisers arc
more concerned with the administration’s

reaction than with
that of the student readers. On
these campuses with their third-

rate publications, the newspapers
are staffed by third-rate students.
Once the administration makes
it its business to remove the
fetters from the campus press
and to give financial and professional assistance, the newspaper will be on the way to developing a tradition of journalistic excellence.
As for a system of selecting
editors, most universities and

colleges establish publications
boards and empower them to
select the editor of the newspaper, yearbook, and literary and
humor magazines. A few schools
allow the student body to elect
editors, but the device has few
supporters. Applicants for the editorship may nominate themselves
to the board and/or be nominated
by the current staffs. Generally,
they are required to present
recommendations.

An ideal system would have a
board made up of representatives
of the administration, the faculty. and the students, with the
students having slightly more representation than the sum of the
faculty and administration members. Two of the student members
should be from the current newspaper staff, the editor and the
business manager. Other publications should be similarly represented. The other student mem-

bers should be from the elected
student government organization.
The board should also have the
power to remove the editor. Most
boards can expel an editor with
a majority vote, but this often
has led to removal in the heat of
crisis. A two-thirds or threefourths vote seems more logical.
The board serves in an advisory
capacity to the editor; it should
not dictate editorial policy.
In assessing applicants for the
post of editor, boards arc usually
guided by grades and past newspaper experience. Some boards,
in fact, require applicants to have
a certain grade average, usually
B— or better. Experience as a
reporter and as an executive
counts heavily, for the board
members usually prefer an editor

who knows the tradition of the

newspaper.

The few newspapers that op-

erate completely independent of
campus control have rigid selection procedures. Even those students who would become reporters must compete for open-

ings. But few campus newspapers
arc so overwhelmed by volunteers
that they can have competition
for any but the major posts. It
is, however, a good practice to
allow the newspaper staff full
control over all jobs but that
of editor and business manager.
During the past four years I
have counseled, on a regular
basis, the editors of almost 100
daily and weekly campus newspapers. Not more than a dozen
of these newspapers are worth
publishing. Most arc little more
than a campus activity, a diversion, an entertainment for their
staff members These newspapers
have been made so by disinterested administrators and incompetent or unconcerned advisers,
not by the students. The students
would prefer it otherwise. But
they go on endlessly reporting
the election of campus queens,
the titles of speeches by the
president, and the names of all
those passing the English Proficiency Test. There would be few
mourners if these newspapers
were to be quietly interred.

brewed for braves...

Ak
D0UBLE-H0PPKI)

for Extra Full-Strength

I

�PAGE FOURTEEN

Bulls Near Tourney Bid
After Albuny Victory
By STAN LICHWALA

Norb alternated between
his forward position and the center position because regular center, Bill Barth, was hampered by
a bad cold; by the time the final
buzzer had sounded, Baschnagel
had played 38 out of the 40 minutes, Jim Bevilacqua also had 12
ance.

The University of Buffalo Bas-

ketball Team rallied to defeat
Albany State by a scorg of 6958 last Saturday night and proved
that their earlier victory over
the same team was far from an
accident. The Washington Ave,
Armory was jammed with 3,500
enthusiastic spectators, one of
the largest crowds to see a collegiate basketball game at the
state capital in several years.
As the game began, Coach Serfustini had his regular starting
five in the lineup—forwards Norb
Baschnagel and Norward Goodwin, center Bill Barth, and
guards Dan Bazzani and Harvey
Poe. Still, Albany jumped off to
a 10-1 lead as the Bulls could
manage only two shots from the
field in the first five minutes.
Buffalo then employed its strong
half-court press and was able to
contain the Reds and pull within
one point of Albany, 10-9. The
first half remained even as the
score was knotted at 29-all shortly before intermission. Before the
conclusion of the first half, Albany was able to gain a one point
advantage as the score stood at

points and displayed very good
form. Dan Bazzani played a fine
game and tossed in II points for

Buffalo.

By defeating Albany State, Buffalo accomplished a very great
deal. The Bulls ended the Reds’
winning streak at 12 games and
stretched their own win streak
to nine games while bringing
their season record to 14 wins
against 2 losses. The victory

over Albany made the chances of
a post-season tournament bid
much brighter for UB as the
final stretch run begins. But,
this final dash will be run by
the Bulls without the help of
starting forward Norward Goodwin. Norward was declared scholastically ineligible for the remainder of the season and will
be replaced by Jack Karaszewski who has seen quite a lot of
action thus far. On Wednesday,

UB encountered Rochester U,
another team determined to gain
a tournament berth and this Saturday night, the Bulls move to
the Memorial Auditorium to face
still another tournament hopeful
in LeMoyne.

Bulls Smash Albany State

31 30.
As

the

second

half

started,

Harvey Poe hit on a quick jump

shot that put Buffalo ahead. Poe
got the Bull's attack moving as
Buffalo slowly pulled away from
the Reds who were contained by
the tight defensive play of UB.
Once again, the pressing type of
defense worked successfully for
the Bulls.

Harvey Poe again led Buffalo
with 17 points. Norb Baschnagel
followed with 12 points and
turned in a sparkling perform

Basketball Statistics

LISTEN

Individual Scoring
Harvey Poe
Jack Karaszewski
Norbert Baschnagel
Bill Barth
Dan Bazzani
Jim Bevilacqua
Paul Goldstein
Larry Brassel
Dick Smith
Dick Hetzel
Dave Fratangelo
Tom Gill
Jim Ringler
Norward Goodwin
Bill Bilowus

TO
WBFO

SPECTRUM TOP TWENTY
6. Davidson
7. Duke
9. Minnesota
8. LeMoyne
........

10. Wichita

.

5. Providence

281

249
247

20
216

208
199
175

178
161

(8)
(2)
(1)
(1)

(1)

.

11. San Francisco

12. Vanderbilt
13. Indiana
.

14. Tennessee

IS. Evansville
16. Villanova
17. Arizona
18. Illinois
19 New Mexico
20. Iowa
.1:
..........

158

143
140

120
127

(1)

111

107 (1)
94
73

69

.

.

that’s right, the younger brother
of Sammy Glick, found himself
intensely interested in what the
older man was saying.
section of the country that went
Before either knew what was
undefeated for over ten years. happening they
were out of the
PudFinally the school, Royale
racing to Cecile’s laborastadium
ding University, received its
tory to plan what had become a
comeuppance when its trainer
joint enterprise; stuffing hot
ran out of oil. You see, no one
dogs and peanuts down their
knew it, but the team was really
throats as they sped across town
just a bunch of robots—fast ones
since their project would be allwith long legs, tall ones with encompasing
and they didn't
bulky legs, and some that were
know when they would get anbuilt so close to the ground that
other chance to eat.
they looked as if they had ho
Thus was born the world’s
legs at all.
greatest football team, one with
It was really something to see a 295 pound fullback who could
good ol’ R.P.U, practice because
run the hundred in 9.1 seconds.
all their good-looking, young
Coach Glick didn’t want to
debonair, Southern drawling arouse too much interest in any
coach had to do was to press a
of the individuals on his team
button for the team to take two by allowing anyone to set any
laps around the track, or anrecords. He believed in team
other one to hit the tackling spirit, since he was in actuality
dummies. The only thing he had the entire team, and he thought
to worry about was when the himself a prettly good person.
mechanism jammed and his His wife was also pretty happy
about the arrangement because
horde of fine young ironized
behemoths centered their attenhe didn’t have to run around
tion on encircling their goodthe country in the off-season relooking, young, debonair, Southcruiting high school seniors. All
ern-dwelling coach and stomphe had to do each year was
ing upon him with their built-in
spend a couple of days with his
engineer boots until the coach buddy Cecile re-arranging the
was ready for retirement and
bodies and faces of his talented
false teeth, which changed his collection and mesmerize himmanner of speech to a rather
self thinking up new names for
advanced form of mumbleitis.
his boys. He could then spend
the rest of his time sleeping late
Luckily, his mechanism
jammed only once a year on the and watching television since his
sole responsibility to the school
average, and since his team had
was the football team.
to play only eleven games anEverything blew up in Click’s
nually—ten regular season ones
and the inevitable bowl game on face last week, however, when
his trainer for many years,
New Year’s Day because of a
contract the coach had with the Arnold Whirlpool, told him that
the formula for the special type
inventor turned promoter of the
Magnesium 2 chloropropanoate of oil that they used to lubricate
the ball players had been deBowl who was the only other
stroyed in a bloodless revolution
person in the world besides the
coach and the trainer who knew in Saudi Arabia. All of his players were stiff, and since he had
that the clean-cut brood of typical American boys were nothing a contract to play Sandtrap Unimore than robots. The promoter, versity for the League Championship, he had to recruit players
Cecile B. Have-yourself, had
been an atomic research scientist from the intramural and fraworking for the government in ternity touch football leagues to
field a team.
Houston. One day he had gone
to the dome stadium on one of
The game of course wasn’t
his infrequent outings and had
even close. Sandtrap U. set a
noticed an Iron-Mike pitcher new record by defeating Click’s
being used in pre-game baseball
team 312-0. Ceeile B. Haveyourpractice. All at once he felt a
self hadn’t revealed the formula
tremendous surge of feeling—a for the oil, and had signed
thumping in his breast—he ima contract with the coach of
mediately looked around him to
Sandtrap U. to give him the
rights to a more advanced form
make sure that it wasn't a member of the opposite sex who had
of robot that worked without
aroused him to this exalted state. oil. Ironically, the student-body
He found himself staring at the
of Royale Pudding University
Iron-Mike, and decided to spend took the loss very well .After 10
the rest of his life building lifeyears of being “the greatest,”
sized models who could perform they were very happy to feel
all athletic tasks as well as peothat their team was human again
ple. Just then he felt another
because they never saw any of
fantastic urge and hurriedly
the players around school, and
left his seat to swiftly reach the thus couldn’t identify with any
nearest rest room. It was in this of them. They were so happy,
preoccupied state that he found
in fact, that they carried Coach
himself sharing the same toilet Click off the field after the
with a good-looking, debonair game with the drum majorettes
young man. Nothing was said
in the lead, and to show their
until the Professor began to appreciation threw him in the
mumble about his new idea. Then shower. There was only one
our young friend, Irving Click, problem, however, he rusted.
By

STEVE OBERSTEIN

Once upon a lime there was a
football team from a warmer

-

69 Albany 58.

Michigan
2. St. Joseph's
3. UCLA
4. Buffalo

THE END OF
AN ERA

•

Buffalo stayed close to the 50
percent mark from the field as
they hit 23 of 50 for 46 per cent
whereas Albany was able to manage 22 field goals out of 55 attempts for a 40 per cent mark.
Personal fouls hurt the Reds as
they lost two starters on fouls
and ended the evening with 24
personal fouls while UB had 19
personal fouls and had no players foul out of the game. The
Bulls took advantage of the Reds'
mistakes as they scored 23 points
from the free-throw line to 14
points for Albany. This proved
to be enough of an advantage
as the final score stood Buffalo

J

Friday, February 26, 1965

SPECTRUM

�Friday, February

26, 1965

PACE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

US CAGE PREVIEW

LEMOYNE GAME TOMORROW APPEARS CRUCIAL;
BUFF STATE AND ALFRED ON TAP NEXT WEEK
STEVE SCHUELEIN

By

a time this
If
season when the UB cagers would
enjoy seeing a game stashed away on the plus side of the hardwood ledger, it would undoubtedly be tomorrow night when the
Bulls play host to LeMoyne in
the Aud in the highlight of a
frenzied final week of hoop acthere was

ever

tivity.

fi

$

JmL

£** £

enabled him to become the lone
sophomore on the Bull’s all-opponent five. DeYulia, who is currently averaging twenty a game,
is ably supported by a cast that
includes Co-Captains Dan Fraw
ley and Mike Lawler, Tom Mullen, Mike Downey, Gerry Close,
and Dick Reece.

BILL BARTH
Bulls, who have completed
the first three quarters of their
schedule with a 14-2 slate, their
finest showing ever, are now prepared for a torrid neck and neck
stretch drive with the ever-dang-

Green Dolphins to see who
will forge into the lead for the
NCAA tourney bid. The fray
should be rated as close to a tossup since the Syracusans are running the inner rail on the
strength of two narrow victories

erous

over St. Michael’s, which inflic-

ted one of the two Herd defeats
this season, but the SUNYAB’s
familiarity with the Aud floor
figures to counter this advantage.

All in all, one thing seems relatively certain: the NCAA small
college tourney seems insured
for the

lot is

winner, while the loser’s

questionable.

UB certainly has had the tough
cr garden to hoe up to this point.

With Coach Serfustini at the
helm, he has had to steer the
Bull vessel between the Scyllas
and Charybdises of Niagara, Colgate, Albany St., and U. of Rochester in the last two weeks just
to make it this far. If all these
efforts went for nought, it would
certainly be an unfitting reward,
but such conceivably could be the
case if the Bulls were to be jolted by Tommy Niland’s Dolphins.
The

white-hot Dolphins, who
have cruised to 15 consecutive
triumphs after splitting their
first four contests, have indicated they are at least as strong as
•he quintet that dumped the
Bulls, 65-63, in Clark Gym last
&gt;ear. Although graduation has
stripped them of diminutive dribbling wizard and playmaker Tom
* ooney, who last year ran circles
around the usually successful
hall-hawking antics of Harvey
p °e, and
ace rebounder Bill Myers, the Dolphins nevertheless
Possess a strong nucleus of veterans and standout sophomores
10 continue their successes.

Heading this group is versatile
junior Gary DeYulia, a

'

2

oach s dream of an all-round
'allplayer. As a sophomore last
e r DeYulia
showed the poise
in d polish
of a veteran in ’ conributing heavily to the Bull deeat by counterbalancing Nor
'ard Goodwin’s sparkling longange artillery
show. His efforts
*

h
n

they have nevertheless been unable to get rolling. Unless they
perform something eye-catching,
such as pulling the rug out from
under the Bulls, their stpadily
diminishing NAIA tourney chances may completely disintegrate.

An extra attraction is added

to the And bill in the second

game when Canisius hosts St.
John’s. Although Joe Lapchik’s
Redmen have been bogged down
by a recent slump, the Michigan
conquerors still rate as one of

the top teams and drawing cards
in the East.

After the hectic battle anticipated for Saturday night, the
Bulls will enjoy only one day’s
rest before incurring the wrath
of Buffalo State there on Monday night. Sparked by deadeye
Chuck Mancuso, State, which has
been floundering in mediocrity

The

Although the cross-city rivals
have cushioned their depth with
three second-semester additions,

by'LeMoyne, 83-58, last Saturday
night.
The Bulls will be attempting
to handcuff the highest scoring
individual they have yet tangled
with this season when Ed Mandell, a senior with a 29-point
average, steps onto the floor.

since the Bulls burst their perfect bubble in January, has had
injuries finish Joe LoTempio and
Jim Degnan to further complicate their miseries.

Along with their heated rivalry

with UB, this is a do-or-die game
for State, .whereas the Bulls
might be expected to be some-

what deflated after the draining
LeMoyne game of two nights be
fore. If there was ever a night
when the Bulls might be caught
with

their defenses down, this
could be it. And everyone on
the Elmwood Avenue campus has
his fingers crossed.

Wednesday, the Bulls will continue one of their busiest two
weeks of basketball when they
encounter Alfred in Clark Gym.
Alfred has compiled a 14-6 log
on the year which includes a 104
97 victory over Buffalo State and
a light 79 77 defeat at the hands
of Colgate, but was steamrolled
:

va-

er in the country, and for
riety has also maintained

a
Dean’s List average. If he con
tinues at this pell-mell hardwood
and academic pace, he is liable
to receive intimidating letters
from this guy at Princeton, Bill

somethmg-or-other.
Expected

to round

out

the

five with Mandell an
Joe Drohan, Phil Vance, Gar*
Gross, and John Woychak

starting

The tourney-sniffing Bulls an
heading down the homestretch
of the season. Despite all the
trials and tribulations they have
successfully encountered, the'
know a letdown now could still
prove disastrous. They also rea
lize If they play their games one
at a time as they have done with
brilliance this season, a tourney
slot is a definite probability

And the pivotal LeMoyne tilt
at the Aud tomorrow night ap
pears to hold the key to the des

NORWARD GOODWIN
Mandril has already netted over
500 points this season, and his
three-year tally stands over the
1100 mark.

The high-scoring senior, who
canned 46, 44, and 42 on
three separate occasions, is the
12th ranking small college scor

has

tiny

of the Bulls.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

Y" -n

;

UB Varsity Rewriting Record Books
The University of Buffalo basketball team, presently sporting
a 14-2 record and a 9-game win
ning streak, is rewriting the UB
record book. This year’s Bulls
are the scoringest team and pos
sibly the winningest team in UB
cage history. They may, incidentally, be the best College Division team in the East,

No less than 11 team records,
many of long standing, and 2
indivdiual standards have been
or are in the process of being

erased by the 1964-65 Buffalo

team.

.

Buffalo is averaging 87.8 points
per game, far surpassing the 74 6
mark of 1959-60. At their present
pace the Bulls will also overtake
the records for most points in

a season (1805 set in 1956-571,
most field goals in a season (686
in 1951-52), most rebounds in a
season (1166 in 1960-61), and highest field goal percentage for a
season (43.1 in 1961-62. Right
now the team is shooting 4,5%
from the field. This figure is
paced by center Bill Barth s
59.5% in 50 baskets in 84 at
tempts, comparing to the record
of 52.9% on 45 of 85 attempts
during the 1959 60 campaign. Harvey Poe has sunk 63 of 76 foul
shots for 82.9% and is in a close
race against the record of Gerald Filipski in 1961-62 on 52 of
62 attempts.
The team has already broken
single game records for most
points, most field goals and most
rebounds. The Bulls tallied 132
points and 55 field goals against
this past De
Western

Ontario

ccmber 16, breaking records set

the previous week of 115 points
and 45 field goals against the
University of Windsor. The old
UB standards for field goals and
points in a single game had stood
for 13 years. In the Windsor
game the Buffalo team hauled in
85 rebounds to eclipse the mark
of 72 set in the game against
Puerto Rico in 1956

A sweep of the remaining five
games on the regular season
schedule wojjjd give the Buffalo
team 19 wins in 21 games, I more
victory than the 1960 61 club post
ed in 23 games and the 1956 57
club in 25 games. A tournament
bid would give the team a chance
to further enhance its record
team’s current winning
percentage is 87.5. The modern
Buffalo record is 85.0 set by
Mai Eikcn’s five in 195556 Art
Powell's “Wonder Team" of 1930
31 won all 15 of its games. The
most consecutive games won by
a a Len Serfustini coached team
is 12, in 1957-58. The mark is
in definite danger.
One of the interesting features
about the prolific scoring of the
The

Buffalo team is that only two
players are averaging double fig
ures. Harvey Poe, 61 junior
guard from West Orange, New
Jersey, is averaging 15 points per
game, and Jack Karaszewski, 6-3

senior forward from Buffalo, is

averaging 10 points per game.
What the Buffalo team does have,
obviously, is the balanced attack
that all coaches strive to attain
The Bulls are not dependent upon
any one man,
basic offense is the

Buffalo’s

GET OUT OF THE POOL!
YOU CAN
1C

r

.

.

rcpeloire

Buffalo is a poised, veteran
club, extremely anile defensively.
There are only two sophomores
on the rosier and they have seen
only infrequent duly. UB is reap
inn the rewards of havinn players
who have

played lonether

and

know each other well. On defense
the Bulls are extremely aRgrcs
St«f and force their foes into
A well-discierrors,
plined and well conditioned team
are the hallmarks of lam Scr
fuslinilype coaching and this
year Serfustini appears to have
reached his zenith Good exam
pies arc the last two names when
Buffalo beat Colgate and Albany
State on the road. In both con
tests the Bulls trailed at half
time but came back to win going
away. The Colgate team, by the
way, was the same club that car
ried Syracuse to a triple overtime four nights later before bow
ing at Syracuse. Albany State had
won 12 straight games until de
railed by Buffalo.
This week the Buffalo team is
interested not so much in records
as in results. Eager for an NCAA

numerous.

College Division

tournament

lation, UB faces two teams thiweek that are also gunning for
the same prize Wednesday night
at Clark Gym the Bulls will face
The
Yellowjarkc!-.
Rochester.
have their finest team in years
and are 13-3 on the season. Go

Saturday night at Memorial Audi
torium the Bulls play .LeMoyne.
possessors of a 17 2 record and
a 15-game winding streak Th
Bulls, confident in their owe
abilities, look upon these game
not as tests but rather as upper
(unities to prove what they their
selves feel they are: the best Co
line Division team in the Eas
an one
of the best in th
country

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6 -4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9 p.m.

Your One Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines
-

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invi

PAISANO PIZZA

3292 Main St. (across from UB)
(formerh Regina ) NOW OPF.N even nite

Free Delivery
PIZZA, SUBS HEROES, SOFT DRINKS

.

you ore a student with a "B" average
or better, and have a good driving record,
No increase in Rates for accidents or

violations.

shuffle, and frequently in the
past Buffalo teams have been
accused of playing slow-down
basketball. Shooting figures, how
e\er, show that the Bulls get off
more shots than their opponents,
and anyone who has seen them
in action this season knows that
the fast break is part Of their

CALL TX 5-1239

837-6120
Here to serve

at

IB

COME OVER AND JOIN US
FOR A MEAL OR A SNACK

—

�Friday, February 26,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

K � siPB&amp;v-iBuaa
SPORTS CIRCLE
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

SATURDAY NIGHT IS
THE LONELIEST NIGHT...
It’s not hard to picture what will occur at Memorial
Auditorium tomorrow night. It will be about 9:30 and
•he contestants in the second game of the double header,
St. John’s of New York and Canisius, will be coming
&gt;ut on the floor to begin their warm-up drills. At about
hat time, three thousand people will enter the arena,
included among them about five hundred University of
Buffalo students. Ordinarily, it would not seem so odd
hat five hundred UB students would be going to see a
tame in "which me of the teams is just about the beat
if the New York City area, but the first game of the
larticular double header in mind involves the University
if Buffalo oaaketball team.
Yes, Virginia, the University of Buffalo does have
jasketbail team/Vs a matter of fact, it is a very good
ilasketball
team, iith an excellent chance, if it wins tonorrow night's game, to go to the NCAA t'ollege IJiviion post-season playoffs. UB will be playing against LeMoyne. a team that also has an eye on this region’s spot
n the tournament. So, to put it into layman’s terms, if
UB comes through and wins the game, the playoff spot
will be virtually sewn up. And by the term "UB.” I do
iot just mean the basKetball team which represents this
■chool. That term refers to UB as a school, with 10,000
students, and, supposedly, a spirit. If the team could someiow find a couple of thousand kids from the school sitting
n the stands, maybe it will be a bit more inspired, if it
ndeed needs more inspiration.
This column is not meant to try to get students to go
10 the UB-LeMoyne game and to ignore the second congest of the twin bill. If you are planning to go, or better
vet, if you are not planning on going, by all means consider the possibility of enjoying not one game, but two.
St. John's and Uanisius are good teams, and, as such, they
deserve your attention. And, it is not even bad if you go
to the game with the sole intention of seeing those two
tangle. But. if you do go, by all means get there early
and root for your school. It would not hurt those guys
who are representing you to look up into the stands and
see a few familiar faces. They are not glory seekers, they
are not out to gel a professional contract for their basketball ability, and they are not asking for praise when
hey are seen on the campus. They are representing YOU
and your school, and maybe they will be able to bring
-ome glory to this institution. If they are to do that, they
must have support. And your support it the only form of
support which is sufficient. So, whatever vou are planning on doing tomorrow night, give a thought to changing those plans and go see the UB-LeMoyne game. You
might enjoy it.

~=tA—:

� A
~/'=

AEPi LEADS IN RACE
FOR INTRAMURAL TITLE
By ALLAN

SCHOLOM

Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, on
the basis of a decisive victory
in the recently completed handball tournament, has vaulted into
the lead in the intramural standings. At this point, with six of
fourteen sports completed and
three others underway, AEPi
holds a twelve point lead in the
competition for the most coveted
award of all, the Lawrence Pahmwitz Memorial Trophy The
trophy, which was donated by
Alpha Epsilon Pi in memorium
to a late brother, is symbolic of
intramural sports supremacy
among the fraternities on campus.
For the past three years it has
been won by AEPi. The present
landings are:
1.
7.
3
4
5.
6.
7.

Beta Sigma Rho

cham-

Ron Salmonson, Steve
Walsh, Mike Shindcn. and George
Cole. The final for the top four
was: in order of finish, AEPi,

pions).

Sig Ep,

SAM, and Phi Ep.

The squash tournament began
last Tuesday and will continue for
the next few weeks. At this point

there are still too many contestants left to list the standings
accurately,

workouts.
The volleyball

tournament is

schedule to start March 24.
Games will he played Wednesday and Thursday nights start-

Mike Castro, Jeff Mann, Barn
Brotman, and Gary Harrison. The
Zygotes are made up of Varsity
Football players and Physical Education majors.
The final fraternity basketball

league standings are:

Thursday, 8:30 p.m.
1. Alpha Epsilon Pi
2. Alpha Sigma Phi
3. Alpha Phi Delta
4. Gamma Phi
5. Phi Epsilon Pi
6. Pi Lambda Delta
..

Thursday, 9:30 p.m.
■I. Sigma Phi Epsilon
2. Beta Sigma Rho
3. Sigma Alpha Mu
4. Alpha Phi Omega
5; Tau Kappa Epsilon
0. Theta Chi
*Sig Ep defeated Beta Sig in
the playoff game which entitles them to the league
championship. AEPi beat
Alpha Sig in both the league
and the playoff games, thus
giving them their league
championship.

now:

As far as the handball tournament is concerned, the victorious
AEPi team, which was coached
by sports chairman Ivan Edelson,
was manned by Roy Ageloff and
(doubles

Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday
nights from 6 to 8 p.m. In order
to be able to wrestle one must
attend five of the seven scheduled

ing at 7:30 p m Each league will
consist of a maximum of eight
teams. Entries are being accepted

Alpha Epsilon Pi
Phi Epsilon Pi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Mu
Alpha Sigma Phi
Tau Kappa Epsilon

Bob Kohansky

The wrestling tournament will
be held on Saturday, March 6,
al 4 p.m.. following the varsity
match against Ithaca. The prelinminary bouts are scheduled for
next Friday at 8 p.m. Weigh-ins
for these bouts will take place
from 9 a m. until 12 p.m. Friday
morning, while the final weigh-ins
are set for 11 a.m. Saturday
morning. The remaining practice
sessions
will be held tonight,

The Intramural basketball tournament came to an end last night
with the Campus Championship
game between Alpha Epsilon Pi.
the Fraternity Champions, and
the Zygotes, the Independent
Champions. The story on this
game will appear in next week’s
Spectrum.
In the semi-final rounds, which
determined the fraternity and in-

dependent winners. Alpha Epsilon Pi trounced Sigma Phi Epsilon by a 41-21 score, while the
Zygotes took the measure of the

Stalks, 42-36. On the victorious
AEPi team, coached by ex-Nassau

Community star Oeorge Cole,
were Ron Salmonson, Barry Cohen, Bob Kohansky, Steve Walsh,

Frosh Cagers at Clark Gym

The final independent league
basketball standings are:
Monday, 8:30 p.m.
1. Yamaka Bombers
2. Beach Boys
3. Fetters
4. Players
5. Little Apes
6. Spreglers
7. Law School

•»«••*•*****•�****»****�«****.****tny&gt;*.*********

\

TOMORROW NIGHT
AT MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM
.

j
!
�

&lt;•

&lt;•

THE UB BULLS

-

I
:

|

�

VS.
THE LEMOYNC DOLPHINS
PLUS
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
—

—

ST. JOHN’S vs. CANISIUS
********************************************

VV'
5

4
4

...

.....

3

,

2
:

1

1

Monday, 9:30 p.m.

1. Zygotes

2. Bunnies
3. Untouchables

4. Moppers
5. Buddhawanas
6. Gunners
7. M Squad
...........

Playoff:
Zygotes

57
55

Yamaka Bombers
Friday, 8:30 p.m.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Stalks
Tribunes
G D Ts
Regals
Playboys

Bombers

6
5

0
1

3

3
4

....:

.......

7. Do-nut Kings

Professional athletes do many things in the off
eason, including making razor blade commercials, but
here is the case of one who does something different to
supplement his football income. Roosevelt Grier, the mammoth defensive tackle of the Los Angeles Rams, has beome a professional''singer. With a repertoire including
oik and fock and roll. Rosey will be making his first professional singing appearance in Buffalo beginning Monday night. He will be here for a week, so if you get a
chance, go and see him. It might even be as interesting
as Saturday night’s basketball game.

1945

.2

1

5

0

8

Playoff:
Stalks

Tribunes

LeMoyne Coach
To Speak on W6F0
Wally Blatter, WBFO

sportscaster, will interview
LeMoyne Coach Joe Niland on Sopris Talk over
WBFO AM and FM tomorrow at 6:00 [’•'"■
Coach Niland is a former
Canisius College basket
ball star and will comment
on the game in a 15 minute

telephone interview. In

ai

''

s con-

dition to tomorrow'
test with LeMoyne. WBFO

will also broadcast the upcoming Alfred game which
will be played next Wednesday in Clark Gym.

j
!

|
|

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>THIS

WEEK

Education and Cultural Affairs

GOULD'S

—C~ ST*J E

—

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

AT BUFFALO

-

»&lt;■«««
FROSH

}

BASKETBALL

t

VOLUME 15

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 19, 1965

NO.

17

Annual Debate Tournament

Begins Today in Union
Thirty schools from the United

States and Canada are expected

to participate in the Tenth An-

nual International Debate Tournament on the UB Campus today

and tomorrow. Each team consisting of four members will participate in five rounds of intercollegiate debate on the national
topic: Resolved: That the Federal
Government Should Establish a
National Program of Public for
the Unemployed. There will be
a total of 150 debates throughout
the weekend.
Hedda Beckman, Society President, will briefly welcome the debaters at an assembly at 4:00 p.m.,
after which Diane Hayes, Tournament Chairman, will announce
the schedule and teams. This evening there will be debates commencing at 4:30 and 7:30 p.m.
Following the last debate there
will be a social in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge. Tomorrow
the
rounds will begin at 9:00 a.m.,

President Clifford Furnas will
assist in presenting trophies to
the winning teams at a banquet
in the Millard Fillmore Room
tomorrow afternoon. Awards will
be given for the first, second,
and third place units of four debaters, as well as the two best
affirmative and negative speakers.
Certificates will also be awarded
to other high-ranking tournament
speakers. The schools competing
in the tournament include; Canisius, Vermont, LKica, Westminster, Cornell, Wells, Brockport, Le
Moyne, Rosary Hill, Ithaca, D’Youville, Cortland, UB, St. John
Fisher, Clarion, Mi Union, Gannon, Colgate, and the University
of Rochester. Acceptances are
still being received.
The winning college or university will appear tomorrow evening on UB Roundtable, The action of the newly formed Faculty-Student Committee for Acabroadcast may be seen on WBENcommittee,
TV at 7:00 p.m. Afterwards, De- demic Freedom. This drawn
whose membership is
solely from the faculty, students and
staff of this University, was created to express the feelings of a
segment of the academic community which has become aroused

bate Society officers and faculty
of the Department of Drama and
Speech will entertain the winning
team an its coach at dinner at
the Old Post Road Inn.

Winners Announced in ACU
Tourney Held on Campus
By JO ANNE LEEGANT
The Association of College Unions sponsored its third annual
tournament at UB February 12
and 13.
Mr, Joseph Paffie, assistant director of the recreation center at
-Norton Union, and regional recreation advisor, commented, ‘‘Buffalo did well and we were
quite happy
with the results and
with the turnout,” This year
about 350 students participated
from all over New York State
and part of Canada, which represents a 20% increase in partici-

also from Brock
port, came in third with 586.
Brockport came in first after all
the events had been compiled,
with a score of 1758. Cortland

Larry Mosher,

The men’s bowling team event
as won by Brockport with a
otal pin fall of 2764, Rochester
ristitute of Technology came in
vcond with a total pin fall of
:fi 90, and Delhi was
third with
total pin fall of 2645.
Hickert and Lesko carried the
nen s doubles events for Ithaca

1

*'

'■th a

score of 1160. Albany’s
am, consisting of Piatowski and
fenberk, followed with a score
1139, Moszak and Kelsey came
third for Alfred Agriculture
d Technology with 1124.
■ary Centner led the singles for
’rtland with 614. Brockport’s
'b Casey followed with 593, and

..

ACU POOL COMPETITION

was second with 1714, and Alfred
Ag &amp; Tech was third with a total
score of 1699
Five men have been chosen to
represent region 2 in the National
finals at St. Paul, Minn., April
24, 25 and 26. They are, Larry
Mosher from Brockport, Gary
Centner, from Cortland, Kelsey
from Alfred Ag and Tech, Piatowski from Albany, and Robert
Braun from UB.
(Cont’d on P. 12)

of academic freedom on this campus was belter than on many
other campuses. After discussion
with the committee about particulars of the cases of those released from service at the University in connection with the
Feinberg Certificate, he suggested
that the committee prepare specific proposals for the meeting

arrangements. President Furnas
in turn met with the six man executive
committee Wednesday,
Feb 10, to discuss their grievances and to solidify the arrangements for them to meet with
President Gould on the following
Friday, the day of commence-

Degrees Awarded
At Exercises
Moore Wins Medal

Civil Rights Committee
Undertakes New Projects

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University president, awarded 650 degrees and certificates to graduates at the midyear commencement exercises Friday, Feb. 12
at 10:30 a.m. at Kleinhans Music
Hall. Dr. Samuel B. Gould, president of the State University of

By SUE GREEN
A general meeting of the Civ.i
Rights committee was held in
the Conference Theater Wednes
da&gt;, Feb. 10. The purpose of
the meeting was to recruit new
members, and to hear reports of

f"'&gt;•*&gt; chr

'•&gt;

of

"

with President Gould.
At 9.00 a.m, Friday morning,
President Gould granted a press
interview at Klcinhans Music
Hall attended by the SPECTRUM
and members of the local press
(Cont'd on P. 12)

They cited the two main

areas

with which the committee is concerned.

The first is cultural depravation. The project which will
offer a great amount of help is
the tutoring programs. The com-

New York, delivered the main
address on the theme “A Citadel
of Mind and Soul". Dr. Furnas
also presented the 38th Chancellor’s Medal to Mr. Frank C.
Moore, chairman of the Board of
Trustees of the State University
of New York. This medal is
awarded each year to an outstanding community leader in
Western New York.
Dr. Gould's speech was concerned with the major trends of
American universities today. He
discussed the fact that our universities are becoming larger in
size, relating this to the increased
preoccupation with research rather than teaching, the overshadowing of humanistic values by science and technology, and the

growing tendency toward conformity. He stressed the idea that
any university “must be a citadel

pation.

the body's intention to demonstrate their deep concern over
the state of academic freedom at
this campus, and asking for a
meeting with him . on or before
the dale of Mid-Year Commencement. President Gould replied
promptly and asked President
Furnas to make the necessary

over alleged infringements of academic freedom, and most immediately to deiil with events occasioned by the imposition of the
controversial Feinberg certificate.
The executive committee of the
organization, composed equally
of faculty and students and prc-

,

11:00 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. All students and faculty interested in
observing the debates are welcome. A schedule will be posted
in the Debate Office, Room 357.

also stal

of both mind and soul.”
Seventeen students graduated
with honors Graduating magna
cum laude was R. T. Schuder and
Joan E. patrie. Graduating with
highest distinction was Howard
W. Joy and Lawrence 0. Monin.
Michael J Worden received his
degree with high distinction.
JoJhn H. Bauer, Audrey H. Denault, Carol Ann
Ronald
C. Main, Clarence Rcgula and

Hope L. Jolley were graduated
cum laude. Graduating with distinction were Paul R. Christie,
Nancy M. Halligan and Yolanda
F. Principe,

NEW EDUCATION COMMITTEE
various subcommittees. Mike Lap
chairman of the committee,
stated the two principal goals of
the Civil Rights group: "We aim
toward both a maximum possible
impact of the Civil Rights move
ment, and also a broader base
program to encourage participation."
The first meeting of the education committee was held by
Mr, Lappin Monday, Feb. 8. Miss
Shiela Bob, a graduate student
in psychology, and Mr. Billy
Golden, an undergraduate stu
pin,

dent, were appointed temporary
co-chairmen of the committee.

in the programs already in effect

at

St. Augustine's. They hope
that by so doing, they will gain

enough experience to enable
them to form their own program
in the future. Ixmg range programs in the area of cultural de
pravation are: the organization
of a summer enrichment program for public school children,

and the formation of after school
clubs for students in high
schools.

The second area of investigation is discrimination. Most of
the work at the present time is
,
(Cont'd on P. 12)

�Friday, February 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

UB Debate Teams
Take Fourth Place
At St. John Tourney
The University of Buffalo Debate Team, composed of three
varsity and one novice, won fourth
place at the weekend tournament
held at St. John Fisher in Rochester. Ellen Abclson and Barbara Glcgota (affirmative) scored
a four win —■„ two loss record, as
did their negative counterparts—
Carl Levine and Bob Dragonc
(the novice member of the unit).
The representatives of Bcllarmine
College, Louisville, Kentucky, who
waged a practice debate with UB
teams in Buffalo last week, were
the winners of the six round

tournament. Our debaters met opponents from Vermont, West Vir-

ginia, Columbia, and New York
University.
Due to extremely poor weather

conditions in Buffalo, Society ad ;
visor Terry H. Ostermeicr was
forced to cancel plans for the annual Harvard tournament scheduled for last weekend. Hedda
Bcchman and Diane Hayes were
originally scheduled to participate.

Mr. E. Richard Suttel), assistant debate coach, will accom
pany a team of four varsity debaters to Kent State, in Ohio, tjyis
weekend. Representing the University of Buffalo arc Allan
Wayne, Charles Liarokos (affirmative) and

Richard Elcisher, and
Bob Dragone (negative). The res
olution being debated for the remainder of the year is: Resolved:
that the Federal
government
should establish a national program of public work for 'lie un-

SZO Calls for Demonstration to Cases Confronting Judiciary
Protest Russian Persecution of Jews Include Theft, Contempt
Gary Evans, Regional president
of SZO, has called for a student
demonstration to protest the pe£secution of Jews in Russia The
demonstration will take place
Monday at the Russian Embassy
in Ottawa.
Mr. Evans cited the words of
SZO Consul General David Rivlin

who called the editor of the Sov-

ietish

Heimland

“the

greatest

butcher of Jewish culture”, and
attacked Russia’s only Yiddish
newspaper as a Russian mouthpiece. It is in response to this
accusation and other charges that
SZO has prepared an 18 point protest charge demanding improvement of the USSR’s policy towards its Jewish citizens. Specifically, the protestors are seeking
the reestablishment of the
dish press, theaters, artists
ferences, and reopening of
three hundred synagogues

Yidconover
now

barred to the Jewish people. Most
important, they want Soviet-Jewish religious leaders to have the
privilege of communicating with
their brethren in the west as are

Applications are

now

accepted for the
chairmanship of the 1965
I' i e s h man (h ientation
Program. Deadline for
filing is Friday., February
26, 1965. Applications
should he submitted to the
Senate Oflice, 205 Norbeing

employed

Question of Alcohol on Campus
Again Raised by Student Senate
By MERYL FRANK

Student Senate President Robert P Finkelstein announced that
at the January 15 meeting of the
Council of the SUNY at Buffalo,
careful consideration was given
to a request that the rules concerning the consumption of alcoholic beverages by students on
campus be liberalized.

After full discussion, the Council agreed that the following action be awaited, (a) await the fi
nal action taken by the New York

State Legislature at its present
session concerning the possibility
of raising the permissable age for
legal consumption of alcoholic
beverages from 18 to 21 years of
age; (b) continue study of the
experience of other universities
including those that permit the
use of alcoholic beverages on
their campuses, as well as those
that do not permit its use; and
(c)
obtain additional opinions

allowed other religious leaders
in Russia.
The demonstrators have obtained a clearance with the Canadian
Government and will have police
protection. Five chapters of SZO
will participate. They will represerit the Universities of Rochester, Toronto, Buffalo, and Montreal’s Universities of McGill and
Sir George Williams. Zionists

front the faculty and parents on
the subject.

Dr. Stanley J.
Dean of
Finkelstein that

Sjegal, Acting
assured Mr.
the

alcoholic

beverages decision would definitely be made in May at the next
meeting, provided that all the
pertinent information is obtained.
Working

towards that

end, the

Seriate has already begun their
efforts to secure the data necessary to the Council's decision.
Questionnaires on the matter aro
being prepared to be sent to parents Plans also include the compilation of a list of schools to
obtain the specifies, such as
where liquor should be served
and when. Using these other universities as guides, the most effective means of actually dealing
with the alcohol can be procured.
Also the Faculty Senate will be
queried and asked for opinions
on the matter.

EARN EXTRA MONEY
Working Part Time
Opportunity tor College men to
sell for notionally-known mono

facturcrs.Call onserviccstotions
and garages locally. Must drive
own car.
High commissions.

E. LaRUE
393 Seventh Ave.
New York, New Yoth 10001

GARY EVANS
tion! UB will leave Sunday at
6 p.ni. by bus and return Monday
evening. Students interested in
going to Ottowa may contact Gary
Evans at 877-7354. Transportation fee is $5.
'

Peace Corps Team
To Hold Convocation
On Monday, March 1, there will
be a convocation of the Peace
Corps team in the Conference
Theater , of Norton Union. The
team consists of five members
from Washington, D.C., who have-

The Student Judiciary has tried
cases this semester ranging from
theft to reckless driving. Gary
Lighter, Chief Justice said that
he hopes that publicity of the
Judiciary’s actions will “elucidate
students as to the importance of
the Judiciary and the type of
problems it handles.” Perhaps,
Mr. Lighter continued, “student
awareness will help to serve as
a deterrent to student crime. The
Judiciary has the power to suspend or recommend expulsion,
fine up to one hundred dollars,
impose social probation, enter
letters in the students’ confidential file and numerous other measures.” He said that the Judiciary
has worked this year toward rehabilitation, rather than punishment.
“For example, two girls at the
beginning of the year, came before the court as a result of their
theft of a mattress from a nap
room in Norton.” The girls had
taken the mattress during finals
week in June, when tension was
high and the campus was fairly
disorganized. The state of disorganization is evident in that
some maintenance men helped
them out of the building with
their take. Before they came before Judiciary the mattress was

returned and the theft was admit-

ted. Both girls were found guilty
of “conduct unbecoming a stu-

dent” and treated leniently since
the dean of their respective colleges had imposed social prohibi-

tion on them and their parents
had previously been informed of
the matter. One girl stated, “1
did not realize the seriousness of
the matter and we certainly did
not think we would get away
with it.” The judiciary suspended
their I D. card privileges.

Another case reviewed by the
Judiciary involved a boy who was
charged with stealing a pitcher,
a pillow and an ashtray from a

local motel, total value: $9.45.
The young man’s parents were
registered at the motel at the
time and his father appeared before the court to testify that he
had taken the items in question;
not his son. A conviction in this
case would have been quite serious because the boy had previously been involved in an offense
resulting from a fraternity prank.
The Judiciary felt that there was
insufficient evidence for a conviction in this case and dismissed
the charges.
Failure to stop at a traffic sign
and disrespect for a campus policeman resulted in a fifteen dollar fine for one young man. The
complaining officer charged that
the “boy flaunts all authority on
campus and still continues to do
so after several talks with him."
The offender admitted that he
never stopped at signs but “did
slow down and look both ways be-

fore acoellerating.” The Judiciary
forbade him to bring his car back
on campus this year.

Your I .D Card
.

is Worth 10% at

G&amp;idmaus

had actual experience working
for the Peace Corps and are wellequipped to answer all pertinent

questions. For

, the
duration of
the week there will be a booth
outside the Dorothy Haas Lounge
in Norton Union where the representatives will offer information to interested students. Also
films concerning the Peace Corps
and its functions will be shown

BOULEVARD MALL

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

during the week and the representatives will be meeting with
various classes and student organizations. Tests will be given
to applicants every day of the
week in Boom 327 Norton Union.
International Student ID Card
for discounts in USA and 28
countries. STUDENT SHIPS to
Europe,
CHARTER FLIGHTS
within Europe.
Write: Dept. CP, U.S. National
Student Assoc. f 265 Madison Ave.
New York. N. Y. 10016

MS

530 Niagara Falls Blvd.
next to Tops Market
TF 5-9343
JOSEPH G. VILARDO, Prop

and many other brands

PAISA NO PIZZA

If found call Hall Younq,
633-9796
HAIR CUTTING

Campus Boots

March Eighth

LOST
Theta XI Fraternity Pin.
Initials H.L.Y. on back.
Kappa Lambda Chapter Guard

VILARDO'S BARBER SHOP

U.S. Ked
Rappagallo
Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and

(formerly Regina) NOW OPEN every nife
|

Free Delivery

i

f

Pizza, Subs, Heroes, Soft Drinks

)

j

I

837-6120

"Here to serve 'll' at UB"

CONTACT: E.

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS
“Learn

to drive safely, and quickly”

Amherst Driving School
3173 Main

Street at Windspear

FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP
•
•

Classroom Lectures
Pre-Permit Classes

•

•

Road Lessons
Refresher Courses

PHONE IF 7-5550
Fully Insured -College Trained Instructors

-

Dual Controls

brewed for braves...

/

.L

•

I

�Friday, February 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

Kenneth Koch Reads

FCC Proposes New
Organization Plan

Contemporary Poetry
Dr. Kenneth Koch, a noted
contemporary poet, gave a poetry
recital February 5 in Diefendorf
Hall. Dr. Koch was sponsored
by the Friends of Lockwood Memorial Library, the Charles Abbot Reading Fund, and the Uni-

His works also deal with the
universal theme of man attempting to comprehend the world
and situations in which he finds
himself. He must face this

versity.

Dr. Koch is a graduate of
Harvard, and received his doctorate from Columbia University
where he is now a professor of
English. He was a recipient of
Fulbright and Guggenheim Fellowships, which enabled him to
study abroad in France and
He has published two
Italy.
poetry anthologies, Permanently,
and Thank You and Other

bill.
At the last Council meeting a
resolution was passed which established a Humanitarian Projects Committee "to search out
and to organize activities which
can bring to those people in need
the important feeling that there
are others who care." Harold
Bob was appointed chairman of
the committee and announced
that there would be a meeting
Tuesday in the Union that any
interested student can attend.

Poems.

In the poems selected for
reading by Dr, Koch, many conventional themes were dealt
with, but by no means in the
conventional manner. Among the
poems presented were: “Spring,”
“Taking a Walk With You,”
“Aus Einer
Kindheit,” from
Thank You and Other Poems,

“Sand After the River Runs
Through Paris,” and “The Return of Yellow Mae,” a satire on
the play Guinevere.

His works portray a contorted
world; a world which accentuates the evil present and removes any form of traditional innocence from all. Even in the
memories of an episode from
childhood in “Aus Einer Kindheit,” the child is shown to have
had an unnatural perception of
the evil in the adults he found
himself in contact with.
He
shows a certain criteria for love,
beauty, and innocence in
“Spring.”

The Freshman Class Council
sponsored a dance Friday,. Feb.
5, to help pay the legal fees of
Arthur Schein, the “Thallus”. An
additional $68.90 was obtained by
the Council through collections in
Goodyear Hall. President Martin
Guggenheim of the FCC appointed two people to present a check
for $217.02 directly to Scheih's
attorney. Mr. Birzon, the amount
to be deducted from Sehein’s

DR. KENNETH KOCH
dilemma alone, for those around
him are completely unconscious
of his struggle. The lack of traditional values in the world as
he describes it does not mean
that it is completely unrighteous;
it merely defines terms in a different manner.

Allen Larson resigned as vicepresident of the FCC January 27.
The council voted: "to thank Mr.
Larson for the fine job he did
during the first semester.” George
Bodnes was then elected as the
new vice-president and is presently representing the freshman
class in the Student Senate.

Helene Freidman moved that
the Freshman Class Council work
with other Councils for a Freshman Weekend in the near future.
Tentative plans to include; Friday night, a mixer; Saturday
night, a dated formal; Sunday,
various competition. The motion

He holds a unique position in
the literary world due to the
publication of his poem emulating epic form and length, Ko,
or a Season on Earth. It deals
with inter related plots in areas passed unanimously.
as far apart as Cincinnati and
President Martin Guggenheim
Tibet. He has also written seva number of problems reraised
eral plays including: George garding the Council's relation to
Washington Crossing the Delaother school organizations and its
ware, The Death of the Kanvalue as a form of student govgaroo, and Little Red Riding ernment. It was suggested that
Hood.
a Commuters Council for Freshmen be formed and that the
Freshman Council be composed of
representatives of this council,
the Allenhurst Council, and the
Goodyear Council. It was suggesone
on
essentials
of
feast:
the
ted that this would give council
purpose
one
on
of
Islam and
the
members closer ties to their conRamadan. After a question perstituency than the present methiod, a film on Egypt and a film od of elections through Freshman
on Pakistan were shown. In the Conference Hours, There Will be
Dorothy Haas Lounge a display a special joint meeting with the
was exhibited of jewelry, cloth,
other mentioned councils to dispictures, hand-made frames, boxcuss this proposition tomorrow.
es, and other products of the
Arab countries.

PAGE

THREE

Elections Committee Announces
Procedures; Sponsors Debate
After weeks of planning, the
Student Senate Elections Committee is announcing the procedures
for the General Spring Election
on March 9-10, 1965. The election
will be held in Norton Hall, first
floor lounge, from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. In addition, booths will be
set up in Tower Hall, Clement
Hall, and Goodyear Hall from 11
a.m, to 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 6
p.m. on March 9 and from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. on
March 10. The Caw School will
vote in the Student Association
Office and the Medical School in
the basement lounge. Any student interested in working as an
election clerk on Tuesday or Wednesday, March 9-10, should leave
his

name and the hours he is

available to work in Room 205
Norton with the secretary.
The Elections Committee is also sponsoring two debates for
those students seeking an officership in order to better acquaint
the students with the candidates.
The first debate will be held on
Sunday. March 7. from 8 p.m. to
10 p.m. in the private dining hall
of Tower, The second debate is
scheduled for Monday, March 8,
from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in
the Conference Theater in Norton. Bob Pacholski will be the
moderator for this second debate.

Petitions will be available today in Room 205 Norton. They
must be completed with the prop
er number of signatures and signed by the Dean of the school in
which the candidate is enrolled.
The proper number of signatures
is five per cent of the enrollment

in the division in which the candidate is registered of a minimum
of fifty signatures, whichever is
greatest. Officer candidates must
secure 500 signatures. All candidates must attend a mandatory
meeting Wednesday from either
2 p.m. to 3 p m. or 4 p.m. to 5
p.m.

The Constitution of the Student
Association states than any student may be elected to the Senate so long as he is a full-time
■student during the semester he
is elected and in his previous semester. During his term of office, he must also be a full-time
student in the division which he
represents. Each student seeking
election must have a 1.0 overall
average and a 1.0 the semester
previous to his election. Students
who seek an officership must possess a 1.0 average the semester
previous to election and a 1.3
overall.

Every student is encouraged to
exercise his voting privilege
ing the election on March 9
10. However, only students
validated I D. cards Will be

By MARGO WALLACH

lem feast of Eid and the conclusion of the month-long fast of
Ramadan. The feast, sponsored
by the Student Moslem Association, is traditionally observed in
all Arab countries of the world.
Ramadan is the name of a month
the Arab Lunar Calendar.
Characteristically, the month is a
on

joyous one although the people

fast every day from sunrise to

sunset.

At the student Eid such Arab
foods as baclava, a pastry consisting of cracker-like layers
filled with honey, and Egyptian
stuffed cabbage were served. Two
lectures were given after the

tonite

-

tonite

-

There is a vacant seat
on the Publications Board.
Anyone interested in applying is asked to submit
a letter of application to
Robert P. Finkelstein,
President of the Student
Association.

Election.

Petitions for the Spring
Election are available today
in Room 205 Norton.

tonite

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
for Seniors and Graduates in

tonite

-

tonite

ENGINEERING MECHANICS

t

COLLEGE PIZZA
O
N

Yt

APPLIED MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS and

P
R

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
MONDAY, FEB. 22
Appointments should be made
in advance through your
College

Pratt

Rircraft

tonite

-

tonite

-

tonite

|
-

tonite

Placement Office

y

&amp;

Whitney

TF 2-9331
-

ENGINEERING PHYSICS

:

FRIDAY, FEB. 19

tonite

mechanical,
AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL,
ELECTRICAL,
and METALLURGICAL
ENGINEERING

-

O'VUION Or

and
with
per-

mitted to vote. Therefore, students should have their I D. cards
validated on Friday, Feb. 26, in
Room 2 of Foster Hall, if they
have not already done so. The
Elections Committee is planning
for a record vote in this Spring

Feasf of Eid Held in Norton
Approximately 300 students
gathered in Norton, Saturday evening, Feb. 6 to celebrate the Mos-

dur-

COMP,

°

An Equal Opportunity Employer

SPECIALISTS IN POWER
. POWER FOR PROPULSION
POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT. MISSILES. SPACE VEHICLES. MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

�the Editor

...

—

great

minds

are accompanied by great

hearts”

President’s Gould's Commencement address, the
text of which apears on page six, offers a starting point
for the needed understanding and negotiations between
the faculty, students and administration.
Never before have we heard so beautiful a speech
as A Citadel of Mind and Soul. While pointing up the
problems in American Universities, President Gould
shows his deep understanding of the problems as they
exist. Now is the time to help him solve them. With the
understanding of the President of the State University
system and the joint efforts of the faculty and student,
there can be no problem too big to solve.
MORE DIALOGUE
to
an
effort
offer a place for the needed dialogue
In
concerning the dimensions of education the Spectrum
has instituted an Education and Cultural Affairs Page.
On this page, which we hope will grow into a whole
section, the problems and issues of higher education
will get argued. On Education is a column that will offer student, faculty and administrative opinions on various topics concerning the academic community. Education will be defined in the broader sense so that cultural
affairs and off campus activity can be covered.
This page will also include the Professional Student
cartoon, an education and cultural affairs Calendar as
well as news and feature articles about related activities
and topics. The page will also include articles dealing
with higher education, such as President Gould’s Ad-

dress pn

jCelteri

UB Vivarian Center

ACTION AND COMMITMENT
RESULTING IN CHANGE
As the dialogue of social change goes on, it snags
itself and revolves in a circle. Students want leadership
and the faculty wants the students to commit themselves
to a position before they will act.
Students continue to argue and gripe. The faculty
femains dormant. There are no leaders and there is no
action. The same rotten conditions exist and time passes.
that
The situation at Berkeley showed one thing
effective student action is not impossible.
The basic problem is with each and every student.
When each student, regardless of his condition, makes
a commitment to solve those problems that face him
then, and only then, will those problems be solved.
It is time for some honest and real soul searching.
If you want to pay more than lip service to academic
freedom, the problem of identity and the idea that students should have some control over their destiny then
now is the time for action. This action has to and must
be based on a firm and solid commitment. This commitment and dedication has to be one of no turning back.
For when the administration realizes that they are fighting a Solidly committed force of faculty and students,
dealing with problems that are real and effect them,
they will give. For give they must.
Since power (and that is what we are dealing with)
is taken and not dealt out like playing cards, action is
called for. Power by its very nature is something that
is desirable and as long as student government and other
groups sit around and ask for it, there will be no action.
The action will only come when a strong group, with
a commitment, demands that which they feel should be
theirs. Such was the case at Berkeley.
Once there is a clear understanding of the problem,
once student and faculty have joined together in a common effort to rid common problems,, then is the time for
action.
The plan for elevating the problems that face students and faculty is a simple one.
First, each member of the faculty and student body
must make a wholehearted commitment to solving the
problems that face them. Secondly, the faculty and students must join forces in order to solve these problems.
At this time, common problems and their solutions must
be discussed. Then an accptable and reasonable answer
must be agreed upon. Third, the administration, through
the proper channels, should implement these changes.
If after a reasonable time there is no change or explanation for it then the students and faculty should take
collective action in whatever form is necessary in order
to achieve their goals.
What is now needed on the part of the administration is a symbolic action showing their good faith. Such
action would be reinstating George Starbuck, Paul Sporn
and Harry Keyishian and the end of harrasments for
the other non-signers of the Heinberg Certificate.
“Unless

Friday, February 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

this week’s page. Announcements of meetings,

Of Animal Research
The Vivarium is the center (or
animal research at UB. By using
animals, the experimenter can
study complex processes, such as
learning, in somewhat simplified
form, and the results quite often
provide insights into human behavior. The rat is probably the
most frequent non-human subject
in psychological research. Dr.
Edward Hovorka’s learning experiments with rats arc designed
to provide a unified theory explaining learning in precise mathematical terms.

Work on reptiles is rare in experimental psychology. Dr. William Hayes’ research with turtles

and lizards is directed towards
mapping the area of brain function. Although the reptile brain
is relatively simple, this is still
a complex task, involving measurement of electrical activity and
removal of various parts of
brains. Dr. Charles Smith is engaged in similar research on more
complex animals, such as cats
and rats.
Humans arc the subjects for research in the social and clinical
fields. Studies in these areas
range from Dr. Marvin Feldman’s
work on nightmares, to the study
of infant vocalizations
the behavior that eventually leads to
—

speech development
by Dr.
Egan RingWall and Dr. Raymond
—

Hunt.

Students at the University arc
subjects for many experiments.
Dr. John Marcia has been studying the process of ego-identity in
the late adolescent. This phenomenon is described by the commonplace terms, “finding one's self
and finding one’s place.” People
differ in their ways of achieving
ego-identity. Some seem to accept
a complete “self” and “place”
without question, from their parents. Others are, apparently, con-

tinual rebels, and still others
achieve personally meaningful
and relatively stablt identities.
Dr. Marcia’s experiments present
a situation of “concept-formation,”
in which common elements must
be abstracted from complex sets
of things. It has been found that
people who participate in active
ego-identification are also more
adept at concept-formation in an
abstract problem.
In the same area, Dr. Leroy
Ford is investigating the oftenconflicting needs for social approval and self-expression.
In the clinical field, Dr, James
Geer and Dr. Edward Katkin are
working on physiological measures of anxiety phobias. In simple terms, these studies are based
on the theory that phobias, persistent fears of particular things,
arc acquired through conditioning. and that it should be possible to find the means for reversing the process and deconditioning (in other words, curing) them.
Ellen Cardone

Danish Prints
Shown at UB
The Union Board Fine Arts
Committee is sponsoring an art
exhibit of Contemporary Prints
from Denmark which is now on
view in Rooms 231 and 233 Norton Hall. This will be open to
the public and campus personnel
until Wednesday

Due to a lads of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request, All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before l;00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

Hiring Practice Investigations

—

10

a m. to 8 p.m;; Saturday and Sunpjn. to 4:00 p.m.

close as can be estimated for.
the next six months, and for
the next twelve month??
2. How will the turnover be
affected by your proposed April

TO THE EDITOR;

The following letter is being
sent to Dr. Furnas, Dr. Puffer,
and Mr, Welk, Supervisor of
Buildings and Grounds as a result of the Civil Rights Committee’s investigation into the hiring practices of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
February 16, 1965
Dear Sir:
This letter is in regard to the
interview of Febraury 16, concerning the hiring practices of
your Department. In view of the
fact that you employ 350 people,
less than .5% being Negro, we
would like you to supply us with
the following information:
1. What is your turnover, as

budget?
3. Given the
over, if enough
es apply, what
you prepared to

estimated turnqualified Negrocommitment are
make for a sys-

tematic increase of the number
of Negroes on your staff?
We would appreciate a prompt
reply in regard to these issues.
Thank you for your coopera
tion.
Sincerely,

Alvin Pam
Chairman, Labor

Committee

Library Protest
would only serve to ameliorate
the immediate problem. College
students have proved that they
cannot live up to college, let alone
secondary school standards of conduct. With this thought in mind,
I propose the implementation of
high school behavior procedures.
The situation demands immediate recognition. The University
is a place for intellectual as well
as social advancement; and each
has its own time and place. The
library is most definitely not a
place for the social set.
Stephen S. Soroka

TO THE EDITOR
I would like to lodge a protest
against the deplorable study con-

ditions existing in the

library

system on campus. The study
areas in Lockwood and Harriman
Libraries have been relegated into social centers for fraternal organizations. To me, this is a gross
injustice to those students who
are vitally interested in their stu-

dies.
Various avenues of correction
arc open to the administration.
The opening of added study areas
in Diefendorf or Crosby Halls

Club Position Questioned
TO THE EDITOR:
Students should take notice of
the Newman Club’s publication,
Discussion, in which the “new

A.P.S. honestly presented its purposes to all present, but the delegates, led by the Newman initiative, chose to vote us out on the
grounds that the Atheist Club
would not support “religious welfare.” When asked to define “religion” these same delegates did
not have any clear notion of
what it meant except that it
ruled out atheism (and therefore
non theistic and anti theistic
world-views). Thus the Student
Senate has over-defined “religion” to include atheism
in order to prevent the A.P.S. from
gaining recognition
while the
C.R.O,
under-defined “religion”
to exclude atheism for the same
purpose. These joint actions to
discriminate against all non-believers, non-theists, and anti-theists does not fool true liberals
who know bigots when they see

apologetic” is explained to the
student body and which is designed to give us the impression
that the Newman Club take a
liberal view of things. All students who 1 are true liberals and
who have worked hard to make
this a progressive and liberal
center of higher learning look
upon this publication with disgust. Whatever Catholic liberalism may claim to be, it is certainly not of the same kind as
that of the true liberals who are
working in many areas to eliminate discrimination, ignorance,

-

but

was

muffled.

—

them.

The entire student body is
shocked to disbelief at the obvious hypoerasy of the Newman
Club and are now seriously considering action against such an

somehow mysteriously
At this meeting the

THE

-

—

and loud-mouthed intolerance.
The news about the result of
the C.R.O meeting at the end of
this last semester, at which the
Newman Club delegation led the
member delegates in an action to
prevent the Atheist Philosophical
Society from being recognized,
never reached the SPECTRUM

(Cont’d on P. 5)

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Ass'f News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

Peter Rubin
Barbara Strauss
,
Trudy Stern
Jeremy Taylor
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ann Orszulak
David Edelman

-

JOHN P

KOWAl

Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
Re-Write Editor
.
Photo Editor
Faculty Advisor . .
Financial Advisor

Bernard Dikman
Howard Auerbach

Alice Ostrander

Paul Nussbaum
.Edward Joscelyn
William Sienienng
Dallas Garber

General Staff; Vicki Bugelski, Marge Rakita, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann, Meryl Frank,
Sharon Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Marion Michael, Debbie Rubie, £cotf
Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leegant, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teifler, Sue Greene, Sue
Duffy. Bill Cortes, Sue Fuller, Nma Kosfraba, Loni Klipstein, Joey Elm, Jim Blogeff,
Skip Blumberg, Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis, Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters, William
Saloman, Joan Fox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Giglia, Harold Bob, Chock Cummings,
Raymond Volpe, Jerome Taylor, Ann Gruber, Benoit Bourgois, Sue Melvin, Linda Coply,
Susan Thomas. Marsha Alt, Nancy Simonoff, Rebecca Citron, Rebecca Weinberg, Jay
Nisberg, Margo Wallach, Elaine Barron, Alan Goldstein

Sport, Staff: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve feigin, Stan lichwala,
Schoelem, Steve Oberslein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, ■ Harvey Starr
Photography Staff. David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman,
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff: Diane

Palmer. Lee

Corev

The hours for viewing are as
follows
Monday through Friday

the debtor

to

V
-

Aa

PRESS

Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore,

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS
HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo. N. Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madison Ave , New York, N. Y.

Steve
Don

Mary L

/A'^^Pvv-\

�Friday, February

19, 1965

gucinski

.

.

More Entries Are
Needed for Floats

.

The Spring Weekend Float
Committee is sponsoring a drive
to increase participation and
competition in the traditional
Float Parade which is held
Spring Weekend. The committee feels that the entire Buffalo
business community could, and
should participate in the float
activities.
"There are, as yet, many untried possibilities to improve the
parade. In the past the parade
has been largely limited to fraternity and sorority entries because of the lack of finances in
many other campus groups who
would otherwise have enjoyed
making a float. By negotiating
with local industries, the committee could engage these businesses to contribute financially
to these floats. Everyone would
profit by such a set up: the companies would receive unique advertising; the groups would gain
additional unity by their joint
effort; the campus would thrive
under the increase of spirit.”
"We

iputcr

_
regL
.
..
procedure
will i
and a more complex, logarithmic "c red it-a s-you-go-or-no t-as-you-gonol-point-grade-syslem" to the administrative program of our honor-

able institution

...

I"

Editorials

.

(
.

.

Cont d from P. 4)
’

lectures, recitals and other activities will be gathered
and put together in one place. Finally, the page or section will include the Open Forum, a ‘letters to the editor’ column where everyone can take part in the dialogue.

The Float Committee plans the
parade- rpute co operating with
city officials to obtain the necessary permit and police escort.
The Committee is expected to
'

work hand in hand with the
other Spring Weekend Committees, especially with the Special
Events Committee, in order to
have a greater student audience
at the float judging. The Committee will establish and enforce
the rules for the floats, obtain
judges, and award trophies.
This year’s float parade is FriApril 30, in conjunction
with Spring Weekend. It has

day,

EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL PAGE
The controversial and important speech given by
Dr. Samuel Gould, President of the State University of
New York, reprinted on this page, initiates a new section of the Spectrum, the Education and Cultural Affairs
page. Here on this page will be collected fact and poinion, information and inquiry focused on that elusive
concept, education. This page will include important
statements, like President Gould’s speech, as well as
the comments and dialogues concerning the implications
and ramification of such statements. There will also be
cartoons, feature stories, news stories, and announcements, all designed to inform our readers about the educational and cultural affairs, not only of this University,
but of the greater community as well. It is hoped that
items like the Calendar and the stories highlighting the
the activities of the University and community will be
of assistance to our readers in broadening and deepening
their educations, for education and culture are not things
which cease to be relevant outside the classroom, but
which enhance and richen our whole lives.
The Educational and Cultural Affairs page will attempt to print, in one place, annonucements of activities
of educational and cultural interest as well as to serve
as a free forum for opinion and dialogue about “education”. This is a new venture
and one which we of the
Spectrum hope will make this an even better and more
interesting paper for you to read. If you have any suggestions or would like to contribute letters or articles
in this new section of the paper please contact the Editor-in-Chief, or the Feature Editor.
—

rjCetterA to the
(Cont'd

from P. 4)
insult to their intelligence. Many
believers for the first time now
see organized theism in the true
iight and

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

are seriously looking

into this thing called "atheism.”
Hundreds of students everyday
are throwing off the chains of
primitive beliefs forced
down
their throats by their parents,
and are seriously studying and
reading about logico-empirical
philosophies. Science students are
gradually realizing that theism is
incompatible with the scientific
outlook and turning away from
theism. All truly liberal students
welcome this young river of
thought and want to see it grow
jarger. On the other hand, the
theisls, want to dam up all curi-

Editor

osity and healthy inquiry despite
their protestations of “liberalism.”
Eventually the

monolith of or-

ganized theism will burst asunder and the forces of free thought
will prevail. Even those students
who are sunk in abject apathy
will be carried along by this
new stream of intellectual activity. This University can become
a truly great center for higher
learning and scholarship where
all students participate with unquenchable enthusiasm and vigorously search for knowledge. Let
us students take the initiative, I
know that all truly intelligent
students will tell these phony liberals to shut up and will soon
chase them all away.

Gerald Gross

always proved to be one of the
highlights of our past Spring
Weekends. With your help it can
be even bigger and better than
ever in 1965. Float Committee is
sponsored by the Panhellenic and
Inter-Fraternity Councils, but
committee membership is open
to all students. Independents are
so-ely needed on a committee
such as this and will be welcomed with open arms. Applica
tions are available at the Candy
Counter and should be filled out
and returned to Box D, Norton

Union.

Tamari, Math Head,

To Deliver Lecture
One question that has been considered at length by the Undergraduate Math Club relates to
what it can do for the students
of SUNYAB, particularly those invested in mathematics. The answer has come in the form of a
special lecture series entitled
“Popular Lecture Series in Elementary Mathematics” to be sponsored by the Math Club with the
cooperation of the Department
of Mathematics. As the name implies, these talks will deal with
interesting phases of mathematics
presented at a level all undergraduates can understand and appreciate, freshmen and seniors
alike. Speakers will be drawn
from the faculty of the Math Department and distinguished mathematicians from other campuses
whenever possible.

The guest speaker for the first
program in this new series will
be Dr. Dov Tamari, Chairman of
the Mathematics Department,
speaking on "Decimal Fractions.”
The essential figures are as follows:
Date—Wednesday

Time—7:30 p.m.
Place—Diefendorf 147
Refreshments will be served following the talk.
Everyone is cordially invited to
attend regardless of his or hey
abundance of or lack of sophistication in mathematics.

nmecTioHS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

The New University #2
After President Gould’s remarks at Mid Year Commencement (reprinted on the new Education and Cultural Affairs page,
Page 6) I feel somewhat justified' in my initial remarks (last
column) about the purpose and
function of education at the new
University, or any other for that
matter. This week I hope to
deal with some of the subjects
and techniques of university education. The situation I envisage
is certainly not the norm in this
country, but against the inevitable cries of “It would never

work!" I can only answer that
it has, and quite successfully in
fact, in a few colleges and universities in this country and
many more in England and the

continent.
The system I propose is one of
no grades and no compulsory
class attendance.
Grades, and
other sanctions and false estimations of academic achievement
and ability, like the celebrated
"publish or perish” syndrome,
serve only to stultify the academic community and to obscure
the real sources and purposes
of learning, as well as scholarship. Concurrent with this abilition of the phony ritual of grades

and examinations is the destruction of arbitrary and unreal distinctions between departments
and majors. It is impossible today to fragment the physical
sciences into biology, chemistry
and physics; it is just as impos
sible to fragment the study of
art and culture into literature,

psychology, anthropology and cociology—to say nothing of drama
and speech, linguistics, and all
the other attendant "disciplines"
which arbitrarily define their
limits and make it almost im
possible to even begin to deal
with the ramifications and in
terrelations of any one subject.
No examinations, no grade, and
no “departments"—what will re
place them? First of all, 1 do
not believe that any bad institution need necessarily be replaced by anything (need we substitute for slavery or war something to take their place?). In
the place of the outmoded and
evily restricting institutions one
finds, in the colleges and uni

versifies where

these “radical”

proposals have been in effect for
some lime, that they arc "replaced by genuine excitement,
and the kind of learning that
lasts, rather than the kind with
which we are all too familiar,
the kind which raises our grade
a letter point on an exam
(thanks to

dexodrene and master

plots) but which exaporates like
morning dew minutes after we
leave the examination hall.

We
find that in freer institutions
than our own studying is recogisably less boring, that the students and faculty tend to lose
the nervousness

that character-

izes our frantic and superficial
scramble for grades and pres
tige, and that the graduates of
such instutitons excell in scholarship, Imcium their scholarship

is genuine, as well as excelling
in the human arts and sciences
of the truly educated man.
In an institution such as the
one I am envisioning, the sub-

jects of education

will reflect

the needs and intellectual concerns of the students, and I
would include faculty in the defi-

nition of genuine students. For
my own part I would be free to
study the causes and cures of
modern intellectual illnesses like
anomie and alienation as they
relate to my concern for the
visual and literary-dramatic arts.
Students of social and individual
psychology would be free to
carry out living experiments in

the

search

and

evolution

of

utopian and anarchist thought—experfimental and bionic communities, dedicated to the total i
education of the participants,

within

the

framework

of

the

university community.
The arts would play a real role
greater

in the education of the artist
and the audience, rather than
the prestige and lip-service roles
they play in our present educational system. A slogan of the
current struggle for freedom and
dignity in this country has it
that: "The Truth Shall Make Us
Free;" I believe also that freedom will allow us to see the
truth.

I realize that many college
students and perhaps fewer faculty would presently feel awkward and threatened in a situation lacking in formal structure,
such as the one I describe. However, I can not help but believe
that it is a situation which is
inherently more meaningful and
stimulating, and one in which
that phantom "responsibility”
takes on some shape and character. I do not feel, on the other
hand that freedom of the sort I
describe should be forced on
anyone, any more than I believe
that the present situation should
be forced on us, with no choice,
as indeed, it is.
Therefore, the concrete proposal for the planners of the
new university is that two alternative and equivalent programs
be established; one, the standard
situation which we are operating
under at present, yet which does
not serve the educational needs
and aspirations of a significant
portion of the students and faculty, and another; constructed
and designed along the lines I
have mentioned to serve these
needs of these creative and at
present, greatly frustrated people. I doubt whether these two
systems could function completly separate of each other, or
even if they could, whether or
not this would be desirable, but
I am totally convinced of the
desirability of being free to make
a choice between these fundamentally different approaches to
the broad problem of university.
This choice is not one which we
are free to make at present. !’
firmly believe that if these two
systems were allowed to function side by side, the worth and
value of the system I propose,
as well as the value inherent in
the situation of free choice on
the part of both faculty and students between these systems
would prove itself, by even the
most empirical of standards in
a matter of one or two years.

It

happened elsewhere,
certainly could happen

has

and it
here.

Fox to Speak on De Gaulle's Position
The History Club in

&lt;j»njtspc-

tion with the Department of History will present a lecture by Dr
Edward Whiting Fox, Professor

of Modern European History at
Cornell University, Monday. The
Cornell Professor will speak on
"The Place of General Db Gaulle
in History". The program will be
held in Norton Hall, Rooms 24048, at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments
will be served following a discussion period.

Dr. Fox received his doctorate
from Harvard University in 1942
and was associated with the Untied States Department of State
from 1945 to 194ti His larger
publications include the Oxford
Atlai of European History and an
Atlas of American History. This
noted historian on contemporary
French

History has published
scholarly articles in recent issues of the Virginia Quarterly
Review and in Current History.

�Friday, February 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Education and Cultural Affa irs

Foss to Moderate
Gonld Raps Research
Festival Symposium
In Commencement Address On Arts’ Progress
It is a pleasure and privilege to be here this morning and to participate in these Commencement ceremonies. Occasions such as this are cause for rejoicing.
Faculty, students, parents
all have a share in celebrating a time of achievement and all are to be congratulated. One might truthfully say that every day in our
lives is an end and a beginning, but this is a very special

The

fututre outlook

for the

development of the arts will be
discussed by a distinguished
panel during the Buffalo Festival of The Arts Today.

—

day marking a very special end
and an equally special beginning.
When we think of the collectivfc

The symposium will be at 8:30
p.m. Sunday, Feb. 28, in the
auditorium of the Albright-Knox

sum of the hours of study and
teaching and research represented in the group seated here,
and when we add to this the
total sacrifice that is represented
by parents, the full significance
of Commencement begins to be
put into proper perspective. And
when we think of the potential

Art Gallery.

Participants will be: Richard
Casey, actor and director, who
is directing the American Premiere of four plays by Ionesco
as part of the Festival; Gregory
Corso, widely known contem-

porary poet and member of the
faculty at the State University
of Buffalo; Morton Feldman,
composer, whose work, “The
Swallows of Salangan," will be

contribution

of these young—a
contribution of intellect and skill

The one superfluous element
of these exercises is the Commencement speaker. If there was
ever a time when a total audience
is less inclined to want to listen
to an address, it is now. Most of
you as parents have your minds
on your children and the possi
bility that you may now be able
to get the domestic budget back
to some sort of normalcy; you
want to see your son or daughter
get that diploma handed to him
so that you can be sure. The
faculty have sat through more
commencement addresses than
they care to remember. And you
students arc going, through what
you all hope is your last expert
encc as a captive audience, a state
of being I am sure you have commented upon frequently and explosively during these past years.
The commencement speaker represents the continuation of a
barbaric custom that has no basis
on logic nor paradoxically any
hope of eradication. Whether it
be in our most benighted or opr
most progressive colleges and
universities, he is always to be
found. The gaseous energy he
creates each year is a prime
example of conspicuous waste in
one of its most virulent forms.
Think of what power this energy
might engender if it were turned
to some more profitable use!
But your President

felt it his

duty to invite me, and so I am
here. And I must confess that
I'm glad, since I have never had
the opportunity before to see a
large representation of you
gathered together (You suddenly
give life and meaning to my daily
tasks and make me more willing
to bear my share of the enormous
load of planning and building and

EDUCATION

&amp;

contemporary painter; and

old
PRESIDENT SAMUEL GOULD
creating that will transform the

State University at Buffalo physically and strengthen it academically. You, as students and faculty, are the reason, the primary reason, for the shaping of a
completely new campus tor this
institution, for the establishment
of new programs and the bolstering of the old, for the creation
of a splendid home where intellect and culture and humane ambitions can be nurtured, a home
that will give the City of Buffalo
a new dimension of progress.)

I did not come here to
speak about the physical campus
you are soon to acquire, exciting
though this may be. I thought
I would take my few minutes today (and be assured that they
will be few) to touch upon some
of the matters that have been
my major preoccupation for the
past ten or fifteen years as a
college and university administrator- namcly, the present trends
in the universities of America. In
so doing, I shall not be talking
about Buffalo specifically, although much of what I say is
bound to have a certain amount
of relevance. You will have to
determine for yourselves what
that amount is.
But

It is perhaps interesting to note
that the major trends which

characterise universities today are
closely interrelated and in most
cases represent logical cause and
effect. One characteristic helps to
bring about a second, which in
turn effects the third, and so on.
Thus a chain of circumstances
comes into being, circumstances
that ultimately shape the institutions in fheir totality.
(Cont'd on P. 9)

CULTURAL AFFAIRS CALENDAR

Saturday—Guitar

Recital—Stanley Silverman. Baird
Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday;—U. B. Band Concert—Norton Union, 8:30 p.m
Tuesday—-Buffalo
8:30 p.m.

gwsm mtm
V mwrm
&lt;imraw-wete i m etn mm&amp;

performed by the Philharmonic
the
during
Festival; Larry
Rivers, internationally known

and leadership—we realize all
the more how important it is to
set aside this day and to surround
it with traditional ceremony. May
I congratulate you all for having
come this far and may I wish you
well as you move on

Lukas Foss, conductor and
music director, Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will moderate
the symposium, titled “Tomorrow?”.

Philharmonic—Kleinhans Music Hall
,

Thursday—Fine

Arts Film Series—"Mein Kampf
Norton Union, Noon, 3. 6, 8 and 10 p.m.

Any person or organisation scheduling an avant of educational
oj cultural interest is cordially invitad to submit announcements
Hr this weekly calendar.
—

-

—-

a mi mo mmu

Hor-

osult«,*

Rosenberg, author and cri-

tic.
The panelists will discuss pos
sible future trends and develop

THE OPEN FORUM

mcnts in the arts.

Faculty, Student
Committee Statement
The

Faculty-Student Commit-

tee for Academic Freedom wants
to express support for President Gould's stated positions on
academic freedom,
and
asks

that he put these beliefs into
such actions as abolition of the
Fcinberg Certificate. Our membership, drawn entirely from
the faculty and student body

here,

believes

that

President

Gould's opinions are consonant
with the liberal tradition at this
campus on the principles at issue, and that the Feinberg Cer

tificate threatens this tradition,
jeopardizes the academic standing of the new University, and
constitutes a most unprofessional demand on the faculty. In addition to being a repressive political test, the certificate goes
beyond even the onerous Feinberg law by demanding that individuals expose political episodes from their past careers.
The law itself, however much
we object to it, does not mandate any such ex post facto procedure, or indeed any certificate
at all.

We expect our administrators
to lead the fight against this
imposition, not to make the kind
of questionable use of it that
has resulted in the controversial
events of the pa$t year. This socalled loyalty oath has stopped
no subversive conspiracies, but
it has succeeded in producing
bitter divisiveness in the university community. We not only
deplore the violations of due process and legalistic excuses that
have already attended the recent dismissals and harassments,
but we are also deeply concerned about the baneful influence
that will be with us for years
to come if this certificate is not
abolished: distinguished faculty
members have already resigned,
and more are sure to be deterred
from coming here. With this requirement hanging over it, the
future of our University is in
doubt,

TO THE EDITOR:
You asked for a note on education—I agreed but I wish I
had not. I find myself writing at

the last possible moment, just
like a term paper, because the
subject is distasteful.
About
eight years ago, I decided that
I was interested only in teaching, not education. The two are

not synomymous.

Education,

has

to

do

with

power, prestige and position just
like any other institution. Teaching’s concern is honest person to
person relationships in which

the older help the younger to

change.

An example from the past
month to point up the difference. I was one of the teachers
who took a small group of young
interested suburbanites to Lackawanna. They wanted to know a
little bit about poverty. One
phone call, and an informed
guide led us through the town.
After the trip the natural enthusiasm of those kids prompted questions like “What can we
do to help?” "When can we get
together?” A Negro leader and
a white leader began to trust
one another and I think to share
an honest admiration for the unashamed idealism and actions of

youth;

two

men strapped by
paper and formality which too
often results in nothing but
‘sound and fury’!
of

Back on the campus, the sound

education was quite in evidence.
Dr. Gould in many,
nlany words said that we are in
the 'publish or perish business’
and that he will consider academic freedom. Hopeful statements to be sure, but hardly
new. I would reserve judgment
until I see those statements
translated into action. Personally, and this may bother you, I
preferred the speech of Commander Koguteck. He Stands on
what he says and as long as I
teach I will know where the opposition is. Harold Taylor gave
us the “understood child;” I
wonder if Dr. Gould is not giving us the “understood sutdent”
and thereby confusing' the opposition. Who do you argue with
now?

But the Spectrum unashamed
idealism, is healthy and therefore let me suggest what you
might realistically ask for.
The university (or uniformity,
whichever you prefer) will grow
larger. Classrooms will be expanded and therefore:
1. You might ask for freshman
seminars which are interdisciplinary and will entertain the
crucial problems of the day as
well as those of each of the disciplines.

2. You might ask for Senior
seminars of 15, in your major
field. In the middle years, forget
class size.
3. Since the President’s time
will undoubtedly be pre-empted
by buildings you might consider
Ordway Tead’s suggestion that
an academic dean be placed in
charge of campus “climate.” As
I
observe Chancellor Capen
Strolling across the campus, I’m
not sure that he wouldn’t have
gotten lost today. But his
speeches of the thirties are still
pertinent and a faculty and student body might take heart with
such an ally.
4. If you really plan to study
education, review the work of
John Dewey—old but solid. Incidentally, in spite of the noise, I

can point to no genuinely progressive school in this area. If
you’re swinging to the left check
Brameld or Godman and most
importantly Harold Taylor. If
you’re swinging to the right read
Bestor or Hutchins or Conant
(yes Conant is on the right). As
you may have guessed there is
no middle ground.
If this sounds a little tired
and not as ‘dynamic’ as you had
wished I am sorry, I find it difficult to get excited about education. A, local newspaper ran a
column recently headed by “The
Education of Teachers Is Big
Business in This Area.” How true
and how unfortunate. But don't
misunderstand. The classroom is
the best of all possible worlds. I
would hope you would join the
ranks of the good teachers rather
than good educators, and along
the way, if you can stop the
witch hunting without becoming
head hunters, more power to
you.

Ralph

.Race

�Friday, February 19, 1965

Best of The Bull' Concerns UB

1 i if Em m

By JOSEPH SED1TA

After months of frantic preparation, The Bull has
finally made its debut on the' SUNYAB campus. In case
vou missed all the advanced publicity and the hoop-la
at the sales desk in the union lobby (which is pretty unlikely) The Bull is our own “official” humor magazine.
The brainchild of Messrs. Penn and Ostrow, two
self-admittedly suave men about campus, this first attempt has elicited mixed response
from the student body. The in|L,jL
dividual’s reaction to this magazine seems to bear a direct relationship to certain conditions.
One of the most important of
these conditions is whether or not
you elected to begin your perOF NIW YORK
usal of the magazine with one of
the wordy stories. The “humor”
AT BUFFALO
of these gems is, to say the least,
dubious, and chances are that
your interest would begin to
wane rather quickly. If, however,
you were pressed for time, and
only scanned some of the shorter
illustrated pieces, you might find
facture humor. I hope that future
matter for a few hearty chuckles.
issues will be more heavily
weighted with material of the
Among these, the pictorial article
former type.
on the Student Senate (Pp. 33-35)
deserves unqualified praise. The
satire of the Spectrum, though
Students needed for tuslightly libelous, is also amusing.
toring. Education Majors
Unfortunately, the magazine does
will be able to fulfill their
not maintain the standard of
these sections throughout
Junior year requirements
Perhaps the greatest failing of
by working at either St.
The Bull is that too much of its
Augustine Church or for
content deals with “in” type
the Urban League. If you
you
to
happen
humor. Unless
spend a good deal of your time
are interested in St. Auon the second and third floors
gustine, please call 831of the Union, much of the maga3861. If you wish to work
zine’s “humor” might leave you
for the Urban League call
shaking your head in bewilderment.

In conclusion, I think it will
be observed that the best of Bull
is that which deals with the humor inherent in an institution
this size, and the worst of Bull
is that which attempts to manu-

885-4787, between 6:008:00 p.m. Wednesdays.
Non-education major volwill also be wel-

unteers
come

Spectrum
INTERNATIONAL CLUB
Thursday the International Club
will hold a discussion on “Work,
Study, and Travel for the International Student.” The talk will
be led by Mr. Smith, the adviser
for foreign student affairs at the
University of Buffalo and also
the personal adviser to the International Club. All students are
welcome. There will be a coffee
hour following the meeting.
Watch for posters in Norton as to
the room number.
ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY
The Arnold Air Society will
hold a “Get Acquainted Party”
tomorrow evening so that the
members and prospective members can get together on a friendly basis.

OCCUPATIONAL

THERAPY

CLUB

The Occupational Therapy Club
will meet today in Room 242,
from 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. There will
be a short meeting and two sci-

entifically oriented movies will
be presented: “The Growth of
apillaries and Endothelium Subcutaneous Tissue” and “Feelings
(

of Depression.”

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

(f^oarcl
SOCIAL WELFARE CLUB

Monday, in Norton 242 at 7:00
the Social Welfare Club
will present Mrs. Cornelia Allen
of the UB Department of Social
Work. All students and faculty
members are invited to hear Mrs.
Allen speak on the timely problem of “Child Welfare”.
p.m.,

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State

University of New York at Buf-

falo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old
Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix,
before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General Notices
Registration for next semester,
September 1965, for all University College Students (except
those on strict academic probation) will begin Monday. March
1. Students whose last names begin with the letters designated below will sec their advisers, plan
their programs and register for
courses on the following days:
March 1 through March 5—D,
Z, and those students who received special instruction requiring them to register this first
week.

March 8 through March 12
A, F, I, N, O, Q, T, U, V
March 22 through March 26 —S
March 29 through April 2-11,
Y, L
April 5 through April 9—M, ,1

—

April 12 through April 16—K, R
April 19 through April 24—B. F
April 26 through April 30—W, G
May 3 through May 7—P, C
Students will make appointments with the University College
Receptionist in Diefcndorf No.
114 starting Wednesday for week
of

March

1.

At this

time, the

Receptionist will give the student
registration cards and a list of
instructions to follow in the subsequent registration procedures.
O.T. and P.T. students will make
appointments with Miss Greenman and Miss Heap directly. Nursing students arc advised and registered through the School of
Nursing.

Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
times, or who do not keep them
when made, will tie required to
register in Clark Gym, on Regisstration Day in September.
Students -on Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance register during the

scheduled publicized times. If
the Quality Point Average of such

ikumi™

students improves to such a de-

gree that they become cligiblp to
continue in school, they will be
informed in June, after semester
grades arc in, concerning later
registration dates. Students in
this category, however, who wish
to see their advisers arc encouraged to do so. It would be helpful if these students could make
an appointment during the alphabetically scheduled times, but, if
the problem is pressing, they can
make an appointment at any time.
Junior History Majors:

There

will' be a meeting of all current
juniors who are majors in history. The purpose of the meeting is to describe in some detail
the program of senior colloquia
in 1965-66 which will be required
of all seniors during that year:
The meeting will be Tuesday
at 3:00 p.m. in Room 147 of
Diefendorf!

Weekly Calendar
February 19Psychiatric Research Seminar;
Dr. Avery A. Sandberg, school of
medicine, will speak on “Cytogenetics and Psychiatry''. Meyer
Memorial Hospital, 12:30 p m.
UB Opera
featuring "The
Kitchen Sink,” by Susan I,a mot he
and David Posner. General Admission: $1.50: Faculty, Staff &amp;.
Students: $1.00. Baird Hall 8:30
p.m. with a matinee only on February 21 at 3:30 p.m.

February 21—
Band Concert— open to the pub
lie at Norton Hall, Fillmore Room,
8:30 p.m.
February 25—

The Departments of Bacteriology and Immunology -present Dr.
Michael Heidelberg, school of
medicine, speaking on “Immunochcmistry and its Contributions

to Chemistry, Biochemistry and
the Biological Sciences in Gener
al," in Capen Hall, Buller Auditorium, at 4:00 p in
Fine Arts Film entitled ‘Mein
Kampf’
March 2-4
The Air

University.

Maxwel

Air Force Rase, Alabama, Aero

space Briefing Team will presen
"The U.S. Space Program" t(
AFROTC cadet, university faculty

and the general public durint

the week of March 2 through
March 4 at Diefendorf, Room 147.
Slides and film clips outlining the
U.S. space program will bo nar
rated by a three man team. Showings will be as follows:
March 2
4:00 pin. (AS-1)
March 3
4:00 p.m (faculty
—

and public)
March 4

and public)
March 4

3:00 p m. (faculty

—

—

4:00 p.m

(AS-1)

Placement

Announcements
Many candidates have already
made arrangements to accept
full-time career employment opportunities upon graduation in
May. If you have registered with
the University Placement Services, check the bulletin board announcements of company recruitment dates and call, 831-3311 to
make an appointment to see the
representative. If you have not
registered, do so at your earliest
opportunity.
Summer Employment: Students
who arc interested in summer
employment should register now.
Those completing their junior
year, or any level of graduate
study, will be eligible for selected
positions related to the academic
major.

Teacher Placement
Interviews
February

19
Chenanago Forks Ccn. Schools
February 23
Birmingham Public Schools
Cental Washington St. College
Liverpool Central Schools
February 24
So. Glens Falls Central Schools
February 2(i
Plainview Old Bethpagc Public
Schools

Placement
Interviews
February 19—
Carnation Co.
Swift &amp; Co.
State Farm Mutual. Auto
suranco Co.

In

February 22—
Dow Chemical Co.

Parke-Davis
Co.
Pratt
Whitney Aircraft
&amp;

&amp;

February 23—
Union Carbide
Linde Div.
February 24—
J J. Newberry
F. W. Woolworth
U S Navy Recruiting Station

Mutual of New York
California State Personnel Bd
Moog Servocontrols
February 25—
Ashland Oil &amp; Refining
McCurdy &amp; Co.
R. J Reynolds
If. J. Heinz
U. S. Geological Survey
February 26—
Ortho

Pharmaceutical

Kemper Insurance Co.
US. Gen. Accounting Office
Factory Mutual Eng. Division

New Process Gear

—

Division

of Chrysler Corp.
For interview appointment or
information, please call 831-3311,

University Placement
Schoellkopf Hall,

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

Services!

�Friday, February

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Highwaymen, Cosby
Draw Capacity Crowd
By BARBARA J. STRAUSS,
News Editor

A capacity, standing-room-only

audience enthusiastically welcomed the folksinging Highwaymen. and comedian Bill Cosby
Saturday evening in Clark Gym
The concert was one of much humor, song . . . and. for those who
were observant, quite a bit of
surprise

Those who expected to sec a
folksinging group similar to the
young, men pictured in the publicity advertisements, saw instead
an entirely new group The reason: approximately six months
ago, the original Highwaymen

—

l^eiicfioud ZJidin&lt;^S
Canterbury

NEWMAN

of Bill Cosby. Cosby, whose career has surged upward with meteoric speed, kept the audience
in the palm of his hand from his

The Communion Supper and Social scheduled for this Sunday
has bden changed to Sunday,
(Cosby, noticopening remark
March 7, Mass will be said at
ing that many students
were 4:00 p.m. in the Catalician Cenforced to sit on the floor surrounding the stage due to lack of ter followed by supper and a
seating, remarked, “Well, 1 see social at Newman Hall.
I'm just in time for the sit-in
The Sunday night discussion
to his legendemonstration,”)
groups are continuing each Sundary “Noah and the Ark” routine. With an almost unassuming, day evening at 7:30 p.m. at the
natural style, Cosby excellently Hall. The weekday discussion
demonstrated that a successful classes meet each Tuesday at 9:00
comedian need not resort to conand each
stant, stinging, Mort Sahl satire. a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
Thursday at 3:00 p.m. in Norton
Instead, Cosby chose such common subjects as his first day 330. Mass is said daily at noon
at the Hall.

Tuesday and Wednesday of
next week, 2:00-3:00 p.m., the
fifth in the current discussions
of the “Gospel According to

will have a social next
Feb. 26 at 8:30 p.m.

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: ““What We
Believe About Man.”

—

—

Newman
Friday,

Syracuse University will host
the Spring Educational Weekend
February 26, 27 and 28. Rigistration begins Friday, Feb. 26 at
6:00 p.m. followed by a keynote
address and a mixer. Saturday
morning and afternoon will be
devoted to lectures and discussions. The semi-formal dinner
dance is scheduled for Saturday
evening in the hotel ballroom.
The convention Closes Sunday
morning with Mass followed by
a breakfast.
Mrs. Gertrude McGee will speak
at the weekly meeting. She will
speak on “The Position of the
Lay Woman in the World and on
Campus.”

THE HIGHWAYMEN

turned in their guitars and re
turned to a variety of occupa
tions and study. Their musical
arranger
the only remaining
original member remarked that,
it would have been senseless to
allow the Highwaymen name to
die. Consequently, hundreds of
singing applicants wore auditioned, and were narrowed down to
the present Four. Their format
was entirely different than that
—

7

presented three years ago here
at UB
Rather than sticking
strictly to "straight" (olksinging,
the new Highwaymen livened up
their act with satires on rockand-roll, good-natured ingroup
humor, individual performances,
and even a jazzed-up version of
“Michael," the granddaddy of the

in

with

his first
horror
hilarious re

radio

with
suits. Satire was not completely
absent from his repertoire, for
Cosby poked fun at T.V. westerns,
sympathizing with the Lone Ranger’s mistreated horse, Silver. Coshy's humor is subtle, completely
unique and wholly refreshing,
and he made this concert at least
the most laugh-filled in many
years.
shows

Now if only the “powers that
he" could do something about
uncomfortable,
crowded,
that
smoky gym

satire the group also sang a med
ley of popular folksongs includ
ing "If 1 Had a Hammer." "Green
back Dollar” and "Walk Right
In.”
The climax of the evening was.
without a doubt, the brilliant wit

Support
Our

Advertisers

patible. The thesis is reviewed
by a panel of economists, sociologists and theologians. Supper is
available, and is served at 6:00
p.m. Please make reservations by
calling TF 6-5806 or TF 4-4250.

Christ’s teaching and the Trip
to Jerusalem” John (6:60-7:52).
All Students and faculty members are invited to attend either
Of the duplicate sessions.

In addition, there will be an
open house Wednesday at 8:00
p.m., 1179 Elmwod Ave. opposite
the State College.
HILLEL

HilleTs Annual South Sea Island Party will be held tomorrow in the social hall of Ahavas
Achim-Lubavitz Synagogue, 345
Tacoma Avenue. The affair is
scheduled to begin at 9:00 p.m.
A band will provide music for
dancing. The traditional HASSIP
refreshments will be served. Admission is free to members of
Hillel. There will be a charge
for guests. Buses will leave from
Norton Union at 9:00 p.m. Tickets
for the ride must be obtained at
the Norton ticket window.
Hillel will sponsor another of
its Sunday evening suppers at
5:30 p.m. Rabbi Arnold Sher,
Temple Beth Zion, will give the
third in a series of lectures on
“The Jewish People and the Contemporary World.” Rabbi Sher's
subject will be: “The Jews Under
Russian Communism.” Reservations for the supper should be
made at the Hillel House.

BUFFALO
EVENING

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their brief association.

tertaining act, attuned to college
audiences. In addition to thejr

The next meeting of the Stu
dent Christian Association will
be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Chaplain’s home (49 Heath
St ). The subject will be Capitalism and Democracy. This is a
tape prepared by the “Center
■For the Study of Democratic Institutions". It presents the thesis
by Stanley Sheinbaum that capitalism and democracy are incom-

Saint John" will be offered.
Both sessions will be held in
Room 266 Norton. The Specific
Topic will be “the reaction to

NEWS

This reincarnation of
"Michael," a song which was at
one time synonymous with beach
parties and campfires, was perhaps going a bit too far with the
remodeling, however, in general,
the New Highwaymen have, conput together a quick moving, en-

Student Christian Association

kindergarten, ami

association

folksongs.

sidering

Association

\

"Here to serve 'U 1 at UB"

V

|p

.

.

.■

you are a student with a "B" average
or better, and have a good driving record.
No increase in Rates for accidents or

violations.

CALL TX

Bookstore
Norton
Candy Counter

GET OUT OF THE POOL!
YOU CAN

|

5-1239

and

Goodyear

Bookstore

19, 1965

NSR Editors Named
Harriet Heitlinger and Don Grayson have been appointed Editor
and Business Manager of the New
Student Review.
As a literary and opinion magazine, the Review is planning its
forthcoming issue around the
theme of alienation. Included will
be short stories, non-fiction, poetry and art. Contributions may
be addressed to Box 40, Norton
Union or left in Room 302, Norton. Deadline is Monday.

Aiming toward a more cohesive
and relevant magazine, the staff
has decided to center their efforts
around a central topic each issue. Alienation was chosen this
time because it appears to be
particularly pertinent to the University student, and can be examined from many postions. Articles
dealing with birth control and
alienation, the influence on the
“hippies” and alienation as it affects those who leave school are
being planned. Short stories and
poetry will also deal with the
problem.

Students interested in working
on the Review staff are encouraged to stop in to the office. The

present editorial board is anxious
tCrxincrease its size and scope

We Are Proud
to Announce

the Opening

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description of your manly
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persuasive fragrance of By
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Tell us your tale in 100
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Need some success to tell
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�Friday, February

19, 1965

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

Gould Mid Year Commencement Address
(Cont’d from P. 6)

most obvious
trend we can identify for modern
universities is that they are becoming larger. Some are actually
becoming immense on their original campuses, and others are
The

first and

proliferating with branches and
satellites that will match the
mother campuses in population
before many more years pass. The
State University of New York is
often criticized for its efforts to
counteract this trend, and many
would be happier if we were to

concentrate

on creating

one huge

campus that would really represent the University. It would be
a simple way toward unity and
identification, but it might also
be catastrophic in its consequences. Our own feeling, actually,
is that we have built into our
structure the great advantages
of having many campuses that
cover the State and make possible a reasonable size in any one
location. But even within this
plan there are dangers that some
campuses will be too large.
The necessity for great size as
a factor in the realities of educational life underlies and affects
a truly considerable part of university progress. The modern
yearning for bigness in everything we attempt is ofen inter-

preted as leading inevitably toward something better. Indeed, it
must be admitted that having
greater numbers and a larger
percentage of our youth attending
colleges or universities is potentially a desirable and worthwhile

circumstance. But as Lewis Mumford points out,
“Mere increase in size no

more signifies improvement,
or even adaptation, than
technological expansion ensures a good life. The very
dynamism of growth, as in
the change from hand weapons to the hydrogen bomb,
only increases the area of
possible destruction.”
Only when educational objectives and programs are adapted
to the new realities of size can
we expect to be successful in
meeting the challenge which this
problem presents. Although the
basic mission of the university
remains comparatively unchanged
from decade to decade, the physi-

cal

growth

of

the

institution

brought about by population pressures is bound to have a relationship to the methods by which
the mission is to be accomplished.
To put the matter timply universities cannot meet new conditions with old organizations and
methods, clinging to these merely
because they are traditional. Bold
and imaginative changes are essential, starting with the way
Physical facilities are planned and
touching upon every phase and
tool of the learning process. Un/

fortunately, there have been
only half-hearted and timid at-

tempts thus far on the national
to adapt to the
realities of the future. Too many
times the pressures of size are
leading universities to an escape into efficiency for its own
sake, and uniformity of plan and
action is more and more apparent
even when it is decried.
Another trend of modern uniis their tendency to place

educational scene

versities
more emphasis
ar

upon the cusodianship and expansion of know,
edge than upon the cbmmunicat'on of such knowledge.
Teaching
e* an art is in
a state of steady
decline in higher education. The
who is the key
teacher-scholar,
0
civilization's progress, is more
and more research-oriented and
ess and less pre-occupied
with
e problems of how
to inform,
"t’C’late, and even inspire stuents. On niversity levels, and
particularly jn graduate work,
r V little
if any attention is
lv en to
ways of discovering and
evelopihg creative minds, enj

ouraging independent thinking,
r making the
teaching process
ore dynamic.
Such matters are
n f eul, V meeting agendas
net often enough on the
°

•

*

priority list of the individual
faculty member. Security, promotions, prestige—all the rewards
of academic life center around
research rather than teaching,
and the young scholar who happens to think otherwise is rather
promptly brought into line by his
colleagues.
The undergraduate student in
the large university, under such
circumstances, is gradually but
steadily becoming a misplaced
person. In an environment where
research and graduate study are
per-eminent in importance, he
finds himself instructed more and
more by graduate students rather
than by senior professors. Such
instruction is rarely inspired,
since the graduate student is primarily and perhaps justifiably
engrossed in his own progress
toward an advanced degree. Yet

the Importance of ondergirding knowledge with appreciations and aesthetic sensigrasped

fact that he equates his educa- cling to them regardless of the
tion so much more closely to a needs of the present; who are
potential iob than to a potential so involved in our own search
life leads him to look for safe, for knowledge and pursuit of the
conformist directions to follow, truth that we forget to lake our
directions that will allow him to students along during the hunt;
be lost easily in an unidentifiable who are so engrossed in matters
mass of his peers. Independence of the intellect that we forget
of thought is associated first with about attitudes and values and
eccentricity, then with bad taste humanitarian needs.
A university must be a citaor even boorishness, and finally
with subversion depending on the del of both mind and soul. When
it forgets or is diverted from
degree to which one is vocal.
There is a deep commitment to either of these two elements, an
conformity in America today, and incompleteness results that
our universities are doing very damages the future of all who
little to counteract it. Indeed, come under the influence and
therefore the future of the
virtually every aspect of the stu
dent’s academic and social life world. It is the only place where
ideas can be born and nurtured
over which a university has control appears to be designed honestly, impartially, farnkly,
it
toward limiting him rather than unequivocally; is similarly one
of the few places where matfreeing him or moving him toward maturity. There is an almost ters of the spirit can be sustainstrength.
ed

and given
Unless
minds are accompanied by
great hearts in the academic
leadership, the university can
easily become mechanistic in its
outlook and oblivious to human
needs. It must be a place where
new intellectual vistas are opened
and
exciting discoveries
emerge from dedicated scholarship; simultaneously it must be
a place where man learns to recognize his inner and better self,
and to use that better self as
an instrument for the shaping
of an enlightened society.
These two elements within
this citadel are particularly important to the undergraduate
student in the university. Unless
he has food for both mind and
soul, he emerges from his exgreat

STUDENTS AND FACULTY PICKET
IN SUPPORT OF PRESIDENT GOULD
universities are insistent upon
pernicious and stultifying rigidity
having a large percentage of their
in his academic course requirepopulation on the undergraduate ments and the patter of examinalevel, even though they are untions. Similarly, regulations rewilling to recognize that the ungarding social life seem to be
based upon the assumption that
dergraduate student needs a type
of instruction, a degree of guielements of trust and individual
dance, and an over-all attention responsibility are never part of
far different from those of the the student’s inherent make-up.
more advanced student. Much, alIf he yields to the system and
does nothing of consequence in
though not all, of the present unrest on university campuses exareas of social action, he is acemplified so dramatically by recused of being apathetic; if he
cent events in California stems
is outspoken and active, he is
from this realization and this considered a troublemaker and
sense or inequality on the part
sometimes even treasonable. And
unfortunately in some cases stuof the undergraduate.
Even the research patterns in dents themselves have contribmany disciplines have become
uted to this latter judgment by
dangerously pedestrian. In many relying upon defiance and demcases these patterns have resulted
onstrations rather than upon
in what one observer has called reasoned negotiation of points at
"the proliferation of devitalized
issue. There is much to be exknowledge, knowledge treated as plored by all concerned admina substitute for responsible acistrators, faculty and students as
tion, not an instrument of
to the degree of mutual particilife ..." There is a name for this pation and communication that
“Alexandrianism”— can and should be elements of
approach
coming to us out of ancient histhe campus atmosphere. Othertory and the great metropolis wise, minor items of disagreement can quickly become major
founded by Alexander. The libraries of that magnificent city were crises.
filled with the treasures of knowI have not, up to this point,
ledge, but scholars used all these
painted a very favorable picture
treasures merely to turn out of the American University, and
“suavely empty productions.” We
I must remind you that there
have far too many modern counare trends which counterbalance
terparts of this. The trenchant those I have mentioned. There
comment has been made that “this are oases in the desert where
sterile, academic knowledge, like magnificent achievements can be
a dangerous virus prudently killed
noted, where enlightened lead
and diluted, must, if we can judge ership is being offered, where
by present experience, often give
excitement for learning is grow
complete immunity against origiing, where the atmosphere of
nal thought or fresh experience
a campus is intellectually invi
for a whole lifetime.”
gorating. I wish there were more
of
The overwhelming impacts
of these oases or that their exscience and technology have, of ample affected their neighbors
very
stamp
a
clear
course,, placed
more dynamically. But they are
upon our universities and those
not in a majority, as yet, and
who inhabit them. Concentration
will be hard to hold their own
upon what is tangible and measagainst today’s pressures. Nor
urable and even useful has led
can the blame be placed upon
to a gradual blurring of the huthe intellectual inadequacies of
values.
Students
and
famanistic
students, for this generation of
surrounded
and
culty are
students is equal, if not superior,
squeezed by materialistic presto other generations of youth in
sures to such an extent That any
America. They can do whatever
talk about matters of the spirit
is demanded of them; they need
has an unreal quality, as though
only to be fortified with a high
one were discussing a different
degree of wisdom and inspira
era or a different planet. Much
tion on the part of-their elders,
lip service is given to the importand they will meet whatever
ance of character and leadership
challenges arise. No, to a large 1
development or the "whole man"
extent, the blame belongs to
concept, but in reality the stuthose of us who are so mesdent is judged only on hjs acamerized by materialistic concerns
demic achievement as represented
that we let them thoroughly per
by a collection of grades. Furthermeate the academic structure;
more, his own goals tend to be
who are so bemused with the
more and more vocational. The
traditions of the past that we

perience

inadequately

equipped

for his next steps of specialization. He runs the danger of being
powerful in intellect and yet
puny in understanding. He runs
the danger of never having

tivities.

I realize full well that this
is an unpopular and unacceptable view among many in our
universities. They maintain firmly that the cold Igiht of scholar
ship is all that is needed or even
desired to illuminate our path:
they insist that the university
should have no interest in or
concern about the student, un
dergraduate or graduate, except
for his academic growth. And
indeed, as time passes and our
universities grow larger, this in
sistence will develop still further
and become even more dominant
simply because of practical cir

cumstances. It may eventually
to the complete rejection
by university authorities and
faculties of any responsibility
lead

for the welfare of students other
that that relating to their courses of study.
I am still convinced, however,

that the citadel of learning we
try to build must have room for
both the intellect and the spirit.
Man's achievements are charted

by carefully reasoned plans and
logical discoveries; they are consumated with
the
most far
reaching consequences, however,
when reason and logic are stimu
lated and inspired by deep and
even
tremendous emotional
forces, forces that stem from the
inner yearnings and transcen

dent dreams of the individual
I fervently hope that in the
future of the American university there will be a new awakening to this realization.

Again, I congratulate you who
are graduating; may you find
in life the fulfillment of that
which is worthy of thj trust
being placed in you. You have
much to give to a troubled
world; give it unstintingly and

■

cheerfully.

KLEIN HANS
Dnanm Buffalo

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�The Kitchen Sink' Is
Set for This Weekend
entirely in

BUGELSKI

By VICKI

The Kitchen Sink, opera by music student Sus'an LaMothe, with
libretto by English faculty member David Posner, will be pre-

sented tonight and Saturday night

at 8:30, and Sunday afternoon at
3:00 p m, AIT performances will
be given in Baird Hall. General
admission is $1.50; students and
faculty $1.00

Miss LaMothe is a senior in
the music department, and has
studied with several of the Slee
composers. Her compositions have
been presented on many student
concerts in the past.
The Kitchen Sink, an opera in
two acts, is thus titled because it

incorporates music from several
famous operas, and
includes
scenes of almost every type common to opera: mad scenes, poisoning, battle, love scenes, and death
scene. The libretto is written

verse, and the plot

deals with identity, alternating
scenes of a highly serious nature
with slapstick type comedy. Each
character takes on traits of other
characters, and at times the characters become quite confused.
William Cox, a 1904 graduate
UB, will be the musical director. The principal characters, and
respective singers, arc: Floribcl,
Marlene Badger; Don Jose, Robert Kaye on New York; Joe, Lawrence Bearce; Duessa, Carol Plantamura. A chorus of eight will
of

complete the cast: John Slattery,
Pamela Dadey, Margo Husin, Maxine Vaughp, James Jiminez, Thomas Pautlcr, Stuart Wylie, and Donald Conover.

The staging is by Henry Wickc,
Jr., and lighting will be by Joshua Freedman. The orchestra for
the performance is largely composed of students.

First 1.1 Peter F. Fox from
Wright Patterson Air Force Base
addressed the Advance Course
AFROTC cadets February 5 at
Niagara Falls Air Force Base at
their Spring Semester Dining In.
Lt. Fox spoke on, "What a junior officer does in the Air Force
and what he can expect." Me related his experiences as a project
officer for the RC 135A aircraft.
In this position he is the financial manager for the project
handling $40 million a year. His
job calls for dealing with representatives of large companies that
are working with the Air Force
on the RC 135A.

Lt. Fox went on to illustrate
the benefits of service life with
examples of its numerous present advantages: financial, educational, and medical while he env
phasized that a young officer is

immediate

responsibility

with no lengthy breaking-in period as in civilian industry.
An Officer Training School
(OTS) graduate, Lt Fox emphat-

ically stated that he wished that

learning.”

C/Capt.

on i t e

Assistant Director of Admissions
for UB. Contrary to tradition,

three academically outstanding
sophomores were present.

tonite

-

Vt

tonite

-

Vice President, David
Treasurer, Ross Radley;

Mills;
Cowen;

hatchet.
Sigma Delta Tau —The execu
live board would like to extend
an invitation to the sisters to
attend an informal party Mon-

Recording Secretary, Peter TropDavid Oliver; Marshal, Ed Black:
Andolina;
Michael
Custodian,
News Editor, Richard Champney;
and Rush Chairman, Phil Mas-

day night following the meeting.

terleo.
Tomorrow we are holding a
“purple passion” party at the

LISTEN

:

Hotel Worth at 8:30 p.m.
Kappa Psi wish to congratulate

their newly elected officers and
wish them success. Among them
are Jerry DeLanay, Regent; Lou
Kudla, Vice-Regent; Dick Matand Chuck
Treasurer;
thys,
Napierala, Corresponding Secretary,
Phi
ruary

TO
WBFO

Psi, founded Feb19, 1852, celebrates its’s
113th anniversary today. The
undergraduate chapter and the
Western New York Alumni Association will hold a Founders
Day dinner at the Cordon Bleu
Restaurant, 3909 Genesee St. toKappa

MS
March Eighth

BOCCE

Will the person who was accidentally given the wrong
Herringbone Sport Jacket at

The Needle and Thread TailShop last week, please
pick up your own jacket.

IF 3-1344

or

Jazz /

Jazz !

SAM

Jazz!

NOTO

PLAYBOY'S Top Jan Trumpet Nominee
who has performed with

� COUNT BASIE
� STAN KENTON
� WOODY HERMAN
will perform Friday and Saturday

nights at the

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL
490 PEARL STREET
Parking in Rear

brewed for braves....

—

l

|j^7

tonite

IF 2-9331
ite

announces
Alpha
the new officers for the coming
President, William
year are:

I
-

FRIDAY, FEB. 19

ton

Phi

—

COLLEGE PIZZA
O
N

Sigma

William Martin.

Dining-In guests included: Col.
Stanley Smith, Base Commander;
U. Col. Flemming, Catholic Chaplain; Maj. Hollands, Protestant
Chaplain; and Mr. John" Walker,

t o n i te

Phi Lambda Delta is holding
a cherry tree chopping party tomorrow night in honor of George
Washington at the Club 161.
Everyone bring their oftm

jacket.

During the Dining-In five cadets were honored as Distinguished Cadets, They arc: C Col.
Stephen Mitchell. G/Col. James
Wozniak, C Lt. Col. Karl'Kristoff,
C/Maj. Stanley Kantanie, and

837-6120

t

leaders.

Tomorrow night we will hold
our annual Sewers of Paris party
at The Hotel Markeen.

Alpha Kappa Phi is holding a
rush party tonight at Santera’s Restaurant, 2500 Main St.
at 8:30. Dress will be tie and

dated

gram,

"Here to serve 'U 1 at UB"
on i te

quainted with the members and

tonite -.tonite'- tonite

19, 1965

Greek Notes

A question and answer period
brought out that he is active in
a Base Little Theater as well as
in civilian little theater groups
and is a Sunday School Teacher
in addition to being a student under the Air Force Education Pro-

Pizza, Subs, Heroes, Soft Drinks

f

February 25 and 26, Mrs. Joy

meet University administrators,
faculty and
other student

Free Delivery

t

largest project is the
compilation of a Student Activities Handbook which will contain a brief description of every
organization on campus. The in
formation will be presented in
an interesting, concise and upto-date manner and will be available to the entire student body
early in the fall of 1965. One
of the problems on our campus
seems to be that many students
are not aware of the activities
offered to them. Currently, there
is no central list readily available to all students of every organization, committee and team
in existence.

The

Dining-In being an outstanding
example of “spreading-out the

been much easier to assimilate—

(formerly Regina) NOW OPEN every nite

-

Cap and Gown is presently
working on several projects
which are part of the organization's goal to he of service to
the University and provide leadership in needed areas.

he could have had AFROTC in
college as the learning now taking place on his part would have

PAISANO PIZZA

V

Cap and Gown Acts
On Service Projects,
Supplies Leadership

Molton will visit here. Mrs. Molton is a representative from
Mortar Board, the national senior women’s honorary society, to
which Cap and Gown is applying
for membership. Many gatherings and appointments have been
planned in order that Mrs. Molton might become personally ac-

First Lt. Peter Fox Addressed
AFROTC Cadets at Dining-In

given

Friday, February

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

LAST 4 DAYS
No more Free Hamburger or Free Filet-O-Fish
Coupons Accepted After Monday Feb. 22
,

HAMBURGER
DRIVE-IN

3424 Sheridan Drive
at Sweet

Home Road

(North on Bailey to Sheridan Drive, turn Right)

�Friday, February

19, 1965

SPECTRUM

svanid
By LEON LEWIS
MY FAIR LADY
People who go to see My Fair
Lady at the Granada during its
rumored six month run are
going to have to contend with
Gatsby syndrome. Jay Gatsby, you may remember, developed an idealized conception of
Daisy during their five year separation which culminated in a
vision of her as the paragon of
womenly virtue when he finally
saw her again, he could not help
but be disappointed. No one
could live up to the picture he
had in his dreams. Similarly,
after ten years of whistleable
tunes running through one’s
mind in supermarkets,' restau-

The

Genet’s ‘The Balcony’ Directed By
Brennan; Set for March 3-6
The

ering a subtle, shaded and expertly controlled performance,
and injecting a sense of high
spirits and off-hand bravado into
it at the same time. Although
he may be getting just a bit too
old to function as the serious
suitor of young “baggage” like
Audrey Hepburn, he is everybody's idea of Professor ‘Iggins
and his performance can not
really be faulted. Miss Hepburn,
usually considered incapable of
anything beyond the evocation of
a kind of wraith-like innocence
(she seems doomed to wander
eternally through the fabled
cartography of W. H. Hudson’s
Purple Land), was a pleasant

PACE ELEVEN

Balcony,

Jean

Genet’s

great contribution to contemporary threater will be presented
on the Baird Hall Auditorium
stage every evening at 8:00 p.m.

from Wednesday, March 3 to Saturday, March 6, under the auspices of the Department of
Drama and Speech and the Stu
dent Dramatic Society. Directing
Genet’s internationally known
play is Mr, Thomas Brennan,
member of New York City’s Actors Studio and currently a visiting lecturer in the Department
of Drama and Speech.
At present Mr. Brennan is in
the midst of rehearsing a large
cast of 26 actors, as required
by Genet’s famous script. Heading the cast are Georgia Hester,
Gary-Gerace, Susan Sturgeon
Michael Guastella, Gary Battaglia, Ronda Lyon, and Larry
Coleman.

Plaza Shoe
Repair

The Balcony is being presented as this semester’s first major

production. Peter Schaefer's twin

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

satires, The Private Ear and The
Public Eye will follow in April.
To encourage all students to
take advantage of these exciting
theatrical experiences on campus, Dr, Thomas Watson, Director of Theater, has introduced a
special student discount ticket,
nominally priced at 75 cents,
which can be purchased by students for any performance of
the plays upon presentation of
their I.D. cards. The faculty admission fee is $1.50 and General
Admission is $2.50.
Tickets for The Balcony will
on sale in Norton Ticket
Booth from Wednesday and at
the Baird Hall Box Office beginning Monday, March 1, and
through the run of the produc 1

TF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

-

9

p.m.

Your One,Stop Service Center

Laundry and Dry Cleaning

—

Dry cleaning machines
-

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be

tion.

Are you still

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©
O

M

COLUMNIST LEON LEWIS
rants and elevators; two sets of
gushing reviews turned out by
the press “Critics” of the NY
papers for the play and then the

,

movie, and several hundred academy award nominations, most
movie goers are likely to walk
into the theater expecting one
hell of a picture. The pity of
the thing is that My Fair Lady
is not a bad job. Much of it is
entertaining and some of it is
really delightful. However, in
the back of one’s mind, that
haunting refrain keeps echoing
softly: “Look what might have
been.”
First, the movie is not, by
any means, the play. Any linebyline comparison is likely to
be fatuous. The spontaneity and
intimacy of the stage are ideally
suited to muscial comedy and
they are not going to be completely captured by an director,
no matter how skillful he may
be. On the other hand, one
should not expect a filmed version of the play. The whole
point of the cinematographer’s
art is space, size and variety.
There are things that a movie
ean (and should) do that dwarf
the capabilities of the stage. The
intensity of color, range of lightmg effect, perfect timing, nearly
infinite scope and angle of apprehension, unrestrained control
of pace and the capacity for high
Polish and refinement are just a
few of the techniques with which
a director may control
and shape
his artifice. When a director
mooses to re-make a play by
building the world’s largest
sound stage in an old barn and
•hen shoots his own re-creation
of the stage
production, some’hmg is invariably lost:
This is what George Cukor has
done and in the process, he
* s os f that small something
"hieh
the memorable from the momentarily amusmg, the work
of the creative
J rtist
from the competent copy
*he highly skilled draftsman.
’

J

,:

more

concrete terms, the
movie is just a bit tiresome durthe second half and never
ally breath-taking during
the
'*
the ingredients seem
e there, but the stew
is not
tasty as we had hoped—somellng must have gone wrong
in
le cooking.
As for the ingredients, Rex
urnson is top-notch. What a
ueasure it is to watch this ex
”

“

’

r

JS

taientefT

«wr

deliv-

7

II

surprise for me. Quite a few
people feel that their “Fairest
Lady” was occupied elsewhere
(in Mary Poppins at the Century,
to be exact) while this picture
was made, but Miss Hepburn

makes the emotional transition
from Mayfair Flower-Girl to
Ascot Lady without any serious
signs of stress. She gets a fine
assist from Marni Nixon, who
gives her a rather lusty singing
voice for such a delicate girl.
All of the rest of the things
which made the play so famous
are there too, but not as they
were. Stanley Holloway does his
British Musical Hall, copy righted
Cockney scene in high style,
strutting and cavorting all over
the stage as if he owned it. Wilfred Hyde-White is fine as Higgins’s good friend and collaborator. However, the indoor
and
scenes, while attractive
carefully, arranged seem curiously inert—the "life" which is

supposed to take place there
seems staged and planned. The
illusion of a real city is absent.
That almost indefineable quality
of random happening, chance and
the high potential for the un
expected and the exciting which
makes London what it is, is not
present. Even Cecil Beaton’s
grand costumes at Ascot and
then at the Palace reception are
more like wrappings for animated manequins than graceful complements for people genuinely

aristocratic and tasteful.
What all this amounts to is
that the movie is enjoyable and
probably has enough of the original magic (going back to Shaw’s
“original”) to make it interesting fare for nearly anyone's pal-

ate. But there is always a sense
of something missing; of what
might have been, what could
been done. Hollywood
have
played it safe as usual. The

result: Lots of money for all involved. Plenty of praise. Maybe
plenty of awards, too. (Although
the direction ought to get a special award for massive troop
movements —it had little to do
with any kind of acting). For
the audience? Well, the uncritical majority will be very satisfied. They have been conditioned
for this sort of thing. However,
for those who still demand something special, who aren’t satisfied just because the stifling
cloud of mediocrity has been
slightly displaced, this won’t be
enough -to dear-the air.

-■

I

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OPENS MONDAY

n

FEB. 22nd.
SHOW

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from the center of
The Creative and Performing Arts at U.B.
under the direction of Lukas Foss

The New Thing in Jazz Rhythm

Last 3 Nites:

JACKIE and ROY

Get into some wised-up
Post-Grads that know where
a crease should always beand
where it should never be, and
how to keep things that way
The reason is the Koratron*
fabric of 65% Dacron*/35%
cotton. No matter how many
times you wash anowear these
trimly tapered Post-Grad
slacks, they'll stay completely
neat and make the iron obsolete. In tan, clay, black, navy
or loden, $6.98 in poplin or
gabardine, $7.98 in oxford.
At swinging stores.

Press-Free’
Post-Grad
slacks by

Ills
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�Academic Freedom
(Cont’d from

...

P. 1)

and other news media. At this
press conference he responded
to a question concerning loyalty
oaths and political tests for teachers by saying that he did not believe that

Friday, February 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

“teachers should be

subjected to any tests which were
not applied to anyone else.”
Immediately after the press conference President Gould met with

Civil'Rights Projects

ACU Tournament
(Cont’d from P, 1)

UB took first place in the women's bowling team event with
2235 total pin fall. Ithaca followed with 2207, and Cortland
was next with 2151.

Olsen and Martino led the women’s doubles for Ithaca with 978.
Second place in this event was
taken by Karis and Leupp, also
from Ithaca, with a score of 939.
Davidson and Kratz, from UB
came in third with 924.

the executive committee of the
Committee for Academic Freedom. At this meeting the committee presented their, proposal
for the abolition of the Feinberg
Certificate as an administrative
UB took first place in women’s
procedure for the implementation singles with Davidson scoring
of the Regents Rules on Subver542. Cullen, from Ithaca, scored
sive Activities (commonly known 518 for second place, and third
this
Law).
At
Feinberg
as the
place was Taylor from Alfred
meeting, President Gould exAg &amp; Tech.
for
law
the
and
pressed distaste
its
repeal.
said he hoped for
After all the women's bowling
At noon of that day, the full
events were compiled, Davidson
demonstration
committee held its
from UB took first place with a
in front of Goodyear, supporting total score of 1661. Ithaca took
President Gould’s stated policies both second and third places, Kaon academic freedom, and calling
ris scoring 1489, and Martino
for their implementation. The
scoring 1415.
placards carried by the demonstrators carried quotes from PresApril 10, 11 and 12, the regional
ident Gould and Chancellor Cawill meet at Portrepresentatives
pen, as well as statements like:
land, Oregon. Representing Re“A Free University and a Free
gion 2 will be Mary Davidson
Society”, “No Political Tests for
UB, Pat Karis — Ithaca, Anncla
Teachers ”, and “Abolish the FeinTaylor—Alfred Ag &amp; Tech, Janet
berg Certificate", There were alSherridan
Cortland, and Carol
so slogans calling for the repeal
Jackson—Waterloo Lutheran Uniof the Feinberg Law and the
versity, Ontario.
Page 6)
press release (sec
of
the
by
the
leaders
given
UB's Robert Frederick took first
expressed con
demonstration
place in men's pocket billiards,
corn for the future of the new
lie was followed by Dale Baker
university if the Feinberg Law
from Ithaca and Ira Yaffcc from
force.
The
demonremained in
Syracuse. Women’s pocket bilby
were
the
strators
instructed
liards was led by Elizabeth Kearn
campus police to keep moving
of
Cornell. Karen Bock, from Alsang
while
they marched they
and
bany, took second, and third went
like
“Turn
songs
“America” and
to Cara Harvey from Ithaca.
Me Around", both connected to
this
and
fights for freedom in
Gary McRay took first place in
other areas. The high point of
men’s three-cushion billiards for
the demonstration came when the
Alfred Ag &amp; Tech, with UB’s Alguests were arriving for the lunvin Epstein following. Third place
cheon in greatest numbers, the
went to Ocrs Kclcmcn from Cordemonstrators chanted, “We’re nell.
out in the cold for President
Gould, but where is he for us?"
be
A national tournament
Tlje committee is now in the held at Kaufman Union will
in St.
proAss of investigating every Paul, Minnesota, April
2 and 3.
castf where they believe academic
Each winner of the regional tourfreedom has been violated on this nament will probably meet with
campus, as well as establishing
other regional winners at a site
contacts on other campuses of the
as yet undetermined to choose
■State University with an eye to
those who will play in the nacoordinated action throughout the
tional tournament.
whole State University system.
They plan to publicize the results
Men's table tennis singles was
of the specific investigations and
led by A1 KaU of New Paltz.
to engage in further direct acKaonf Kamel took second place in
tion to clarify their positions and
singles, for Cornell, and UB's Arto influence further changes.
thur Applcman was third. Kamel
and Gukurova took first in men’s
W-BFO NKWS
doubles. Ithaca’s Chun Limb and
Two big games this
Malcolm Weiss came in second
and third place went to Larry Apweek for the basketball
plcman and Arthur Albers of
—

—

Bulls and both will lie
aired over WBFO-FM
(88.7 me.) and AM (780
me. closed circuit to the
dorms).

Tomorrow, Wally Blatter will follow the Bulls
to the Capital City to re-

lay the UB-Albany Slate
game starting at 8:15
p.m. Winning eleven in a
row, Albany has not last-

ed defeat since, their loss
the Bulls here in Buf-

to

falo in Dec ember 1964.
They will lie out to stop
the Bulls winning at eight.
Wednesday, the Uni*
versity of Rochester, another tournament hopeful
leant face the Bulls at
Clark Gym. The pre-game
show will begin at 8:15
p.m. with the play-hy-play
to start at 8:30 p.m.
Follow UB Basketball
both home and away over
WBFO “the New Voice of
the Bulk*’

UB.

In women’s table tennis, Cornell took both first and second
places in the singles match, Anne
Wilber and Karen Helms coming
in first and second respectively,
Marilyn Pardo, of UB, came in
third in that event. Anne Wilber
and Karen Helms took first place
in women’s doubles for Cornell.

Second place went to Jeanne Fierslen and Franke Manteufcr from

Ithaca. UB’s Marilyn Pardo and
Carol Marcus came in third.

were only two places
awarded for chess, and both went
to Cornell. First place went to
Joseph Roscnstein, and second to
Peter Berlow.
There

tournament was
The winning
NS team was from UB, Ralph
Bartlett and Roger Pics. The winning E team was also from UB,
Alan Mellis and Herb Stein. The
bridge hands will now be evaluated by a team of experts. If the
scores are the highest in the region, the players will be invited
to attend the national tournament
in Chicago, May 7 and 8.
The

bridge

held February 9

in research. The committee is
going to look into the present
Buffalo School Budget, to learn
what is being done with the
money. It will also do a survey
on Buffalo school districting, to
determine the percentage of Negroes in each public school. It
will investigate the number of
Negro teachers there are, where
they are, and it there are any
or assistant
Negro principals
principals.
Committee members will examine the planned facilities of
schools in Negro ghettos, to get
information as to whether or not
they are equal.
On the national level, the committee would like to work with
the NAACP to investigate textbooks currently in use. Based
on the contention that Negro
contributions have been slighted
in texts, especially in history
books, the NAACP has begun investigating text books in San

Francisco and New York. The
education committee hopes to
carry on investigations in Buffalo.

To carry out these investigations, and to act upon them in
due time, the committee is attempting to set up liason with
a committee at Buffalo State,
which although now inoperative,
it would become quite active
with the support of the UB committee.
Other future plans include:
strengthening the PTA’s in the
“ghetto" schools; 'establishing liason with the UB law school, to
offer assistance in investigations
of student violation cases; investigating libraries in the “ghetto”
schools, and, if they prove to be
inadequate, conducting a book
drive for Negro colleges in the
south
The main emphasis at the
present time is upon research
and investigation. Action will
begin when facts are established.
Students interested in participating in the work of the education
committee would be welcomed.
The next meeting will be this
Monday. Also, tutors for the
tutorial program are desperately
needed. Anyone with any background in music would be most
helpful. Contact either Mr. Golden or Miss Bob at the student
senate office.
The housing committee, under
Mr. Barry Lewis, is launching a
three-pronged project. The first
part involves investigating the
problem of abandoned houses in
the city. The problem is being
studied by a number of members
of the clergy. Their objective is
to find legally abandoned houses,
and to bring the fact of their
existence to the attention of the
city officials, who might then
destroy them.
From

this,

the

committee

hopes to gain support for its
next project, urban renewal. It

discovered that upon the land
from which Negroes were forced
to move, instead of low-priced
housing for these people, $15,000
dollar houses were built. This
has

There are openings on
four Student Senate committees for the position of

My, Luther Burnett, chairman

(Cont’d from P. 1)

direct

bearing upon the
third project, which is to try to
get apartments built in or near
the Negro ghettow, and to get
the people who will live in them.

The labor committee, tinder
the direction of Mr. A1 Pam,
has been functioning effectively
since last semester, and is currently involved in a number of
projects. For some time it has

been

investigating the hiring
practices of several banks in the
City of Buffalo. It is trying to
work with
chapter in

the Buffalo CORE
trying to get the
Community Action Organization
in Buffalo to accept new members from the areas to be aided
by the program. So far. four new
members have been added to the
original 21. The latest project
is the investigation of the employment practices on the UB
campus, to see if any discrimi-

nation is involved.
S*« Lottors to Editor

of Buffalo CORE, and Mr. Richard Prosser, director of Friendship House in Lackawanna and a
Presbyterian minister, appeared
at the labor committee meeting
of Tuesday, Feb. 9. A discussion of the role of UB students
in the Civil Rights movement
took place, after which Mr.
Prosser outlined the main Civil
Rights problems in Buffalo. Mr.
Prosser is working with Mr. Sol
Alinsky towards organization of
an Industrial Areas Foundation
(IAF) for the forming of a Negro
community in Buffalo. Mr. Pam

chairman. Anyone interested in applying for the
chairmanship of the Activities Committee, Academic Affairs Committee,
Convocations Committee,
or Welfare Committee, is
asked to submit a letter
of application to the Senate Office, 205 Norton,
by Tuesday, February 23,
1965.

wishes to announce following:
“We are presenting a series

of articles in Alinsky’s IAF, because there is a great likelihood
that Buffalo will be the scene
of such a project in the near
presently
are
future. Funds
being raised to organize the
latter. Although the local press
has devoted much attention to
the IAF of late, we feel that
the other side of the coin should
be presented.” The next meeting of the labor committee will
take place Tuesday at 7:00 in
Room 205 in Norton.

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What will you be doing in 1965?
First, If you are single and over
20 you are invited to Western
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1:30 AM at W.N.Y.’s “social crossroads" for single
9:30 PM
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Second, if you will be dining out, buying clothes, ordering flowers,
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Save Money. The YOUNG SET “Value-Savings Book** can sav e
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RESERVATIONS 831-3408
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�Friday, February

19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

FROSH BASKETBALL

UB CALVES INDICATE
LOTS OF POTENTIAL
By CHICK ARNOLD

Very often, the future of a
major league baseball team is
largely dependent upon the
youngsters they have on their
farm teams. These teams are supposedly made up of ballplayers
who hope to be able to join the
parent team in the future, ballplayers who are on trial in the
minors, and, if they make it, are
promoted to the parent club.
The same holds true for basketball. Professional teams are
largely dependent upon colleges
for a majority of their player
personnel. These college varsity
teams, in turn, depend almost
wholly on their freshman teams
to supply them with players. At
the University of Buffalo, freshman coach Ed Muto speaks very
enthusiastically about this year’s
team, causing optimistic thoughts
about next year’s varsity.
Before Wednesday’s game, the
frosh had compiled an 8-4 wonlost record, admirable especially
because eight of these games
were played against major college opponents. The team’s latest victory came at the hands of
Colgate last Saturday night, by
an impressive 85-68 score.
In the words of Coach Muto,
“the freshmen have done an outstanding job this season.” Sparked
by the rebounding of 6’4” Artie
Walker, and the scoring of guard
Bobby Thomas, this year’s edition of the Baby Bulls have pleasantly surprised a lot of people.
Walker is a big center, averaging
11 rebounds and 11 points per
game, in addition to inspiring the
team with his leadership. He has
an eye-catching statistic in the

fact that he has led the team in
rebounding in every game so far
this season. Thomas, in 12 games
thus far, has scored a total of
198 points, for an average of
16.4 points per game.
The most improved player for

This past Saturday, Feb. 6, at
UB mermen evened
their season’s record to 4-4. UB
displaying great speed and depth,
swept nine out of eleven events,
trouncing Cortland State 69-26.
I he finmen came very close to
breaking many pool records and
succeeded in the 200 yard freestyle event. Roy Troppman,

out-

standing junior freestyler, cracked the Cortland State
record by
almost two full seconds. Roy
hacked up his victory in the 200
yard

1

freesyle, in which he hit
58.6, with first place honors
1,1 *he
loo yard freestyle. Roy
'Plashed this distance in the fine
time of 52.4. To complete his
afternoon’s work, Roy anchored
L B s winning 400 yard freestyle
felay. To round out this relay
"ere Carl Millerschoen, UB’s
eaptain, Bill Fleischman, and
-Mike Perkis.

■

Other varsity standouts includCharles Zetterberg, who swam
the 400 yard medley relay and
m the 200 yard backstroke;
a.vne Worthing, butterfly man
the relay and winner of the
&gt;0 yard butterfly; Carl Millerhoen, who swam on both winng relays;
Bill Fleischmann,
yard individual medley
winJerry Chapman, winner of
e fancy dive;
and Howard
aun, 200 yard breaststroke win"

t

UB the necessary depth
to w n&gt; were J °hn Dana '
«n
"ike Ferrel, Mike Perkis,

wing

*

Mann and Jack Howells lead the

reserves, and Dan Curran, Len

Mr. Defense of Buffalo’s freshman team this season has been
Mike Grys. He's a big rebounder,
and is also a big factor in UB’s
scoring punch. His best game this
season was against St. Bonaventure, when he held their big scor-

Banach, George Henry, and Frank
LaTona round out the crew. Doug
Bernard was averaging 16.3 points
per game through eight games
this season, but is no longer play-

ing with the team.
The team this year has been

“Every member on the freshman basketball team definitely
has varsity potential," said coach
Muto. They sport some real
strong rebounders, and next
year's varsity could be one of
the strongest rebounding teams
in the school's history.

The freshman games are exciting. The next home game is this
Wednesday against Rochester.
Let’s all get out and support th*
Calves and the Bulls!

SPECTRUM

TOP TWENTY
1.

272

(5)

2. UCLA

258

(1)

3. Providence

255

(3)

4 St. Joseph's

247

(1)

20

(1)

203

(1)

192

(1)

106

(1)

71

(1)

Michigan

5. Buffalo

6. Davidson
7 Duke
8. Tennessee
9. Wichita
10. Vanderbilt

11. Minnesota
12. Indiana
13 San Francisco
14 Arizona
FRESHMAN CAGERS

the Frosh has been 6'2" Jon Culbert, from Niagara Falls, who is

currently averaging 11 points per
game. Culbert has been coming

in strong for the latter half of
the season and was largely responsible for UB’s last few victories.

MERMEN EVEN SCORE;
SINK CORTLANR 69-26
Cortland, the

The bench has been very important in many of UB's victories
this season. In the close games,
the reserves count immeasurably, and here’s where our frosh
have a decided advantage. Rick

Barry Butler, Irv Puls, Steve
Ronis, Mark Grashow, Walt Eisenbeis, John E d e 1 m a n, and
Marvin Mitzel.

Two Saturdays ago, in Clark
Gymnasium, the UB mermen
played host to Oswego State. The
UB swimmers, coming from a
hard fought defeat dealt them by
the Brockport State swimmers,
were “up” for the meet. The
61-33, UB on top.
final outcome
The varsity swimmers also established three new school records.
—

for the frosh is Niagara Falls’
Jim Williams. Williams is averaging 6 points per game, and is
the man with the ball in the
picture.

ered the breaststroke leg; Worthing the fly; and Carl Millerschpen anchored. This fine relay streaked the 400 yards in the
time of 4:04.8. In the freestyl.
relay, composed of the foursome
of Butler, Fleischmann, Millprschoen, and Troppman, another
old record
cpvered

fell. This foursome
the distance in 3:33.7.

The third and final record was

set in the 200 yard breaststroke.
Howard Braun churned his way
through the water in the time
of 2:32,7

With four dual meets remaining
on the mermen’s schedule, Coach
Sanford expects a respectable record for the 1964-85 season.

consistent hint' scorer. They
have gone over the century mark

a

16 Rochester

three times so far, and sport an
86.9 per game average. The team
has a defensive average of 72 6,
which can be attributed largely
to the free-wheeling game of bas-

18 Evansville

ketball they play

20

17 Illinois

19. Cornell
Albany

St

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*St. Patrick's Day Parade on Fifth Avenue (Wednesday)
‘National invitational Tournament (basketball) in Madison Squure
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‘Tour of an Ocean Liner (Thursday), Cruise of New York Harbor
(Friday), and tickets to various "live" television shows.
‘Baggage handling, tips, and New York City hotel tax.

$60.00

Varsity Relays Outstanding
Two of the three records established were set in the relays.
In the 400 yard medley relay,
Charles Zetterberg led off with
the backstroke leg; Braun cov-

15 Iowa

er, Jim Butter, to 13 points
Rounding out the starting five

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or money order to:
Deposit: $20 (h on-refundable)
Late fee: $5.00 (after Mar. 8)
Limit: 360 persons (10 buses)

John P. Morrissey, President
Intercollegiate Alumni Assn,

Send check

SPECIAL:

c/o 318 Voorhees Avenue
Buffalo, New York 14216
(New York City residents) Deluxe round trip transportation on a
bar equipped, lavoratory equipped scenicruiser with refreshments
included to and from New York City. $20 00 round trip or $10.00
one-way

(to or from)

Additional information

TF 6-3527 (or) TR 7-2220

Serving
UTICA CLUB BEER exclusively
****WEST END BREWING

COMPANY

-

BUFFALO, NEW YORK’**'

�Friday, February 19, 1945

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

BASKETBALL SUMMABY

bulls win Eighth straight,
TOP WAYNE, NIAGARA, COLGATE
By STAN LICHWALA

The UB Basketball team showed
strength and poise in extending
its winning streak to eight games
as the Bulls defeated Wayne

at 7:30, but Taps Gallagher was
not able to pull his rattled players together. Tom Lenney, hot
from the field all night, missed
twice and Buffalo took over at

State, Niagara, and Colgate. The
eighth straight victory now brings
the season record to 13 wins
against two defeats with six
regularly scheduled' games re

17:45. The Bulls showed great

1

maining.
Wayne Stale

poise as they poured it on and
forced Niagara to foul them in
their desperation to get posses-

traveled from Detroit to meet UB in Clark Gym
on February 9th. Last year, the
Bulls were just able to squeeze
by the Tarters 73-72, but this
year, they had no trouble putting
the game far out of reach as they
scored over 100 points, for the
fourth time this season and established a new accuracy record
from the field.
The starting five for BuffaloNorm Baschnagel, Norward Goodwin, Bill Barth, Harvey Poe, and
Dan Bazzani opened up an early
23 point lead which Wayne State
never came close to overcoming.
Then, the Bulls lost the range
and turned cold as they started
to foul. As quickly as they lost
the range, the Buffalo hoopsters
again started to hit as their very
aggressive defense held Wayne
State. The Detroit coach called a
time out, and when his team returned to the floor, a full-court

sion of the ball. The Bulls did
not miss a free throw in the final
five minutes and hit steadily from
the field, as they scored victory
number twelve by a score of 7463.

press was employed to slow the
Bulls. Buffalo did slow down, but
Wayne State could not take advantage because of their own
poor ball handling. UB maintained good position under the
boards and ran up a 54-24 halftime lead.
The second half saw Jack Karaszewski loss in ten points to
round out his scoring with 17
points for the evening. Norward

71.

Poise was the key word in the
University of Buffalo's victory
over Niagara in a Memorial Auditorium contest. The Bulls were
able to come through when the
pressure was on as the Niagara
hoopsters were visibly shaken by
the pressure
The first half proved to be a
sloppy one for both teams, and

the Bulls put themselves in foul
trouble early in the game. Coach
Serfusfini was forced to start
substituting after the starters had
built up a 21-13 advantage. In
this first half, Dan Hazzani hit
for ten field goals to counter the
sharpshooting Tom Lenney. At
the end of the half, Buffalo had
a slim 33-29 lead.
In the first minutes of the second half, Niagara outscorcd UB
6-2 and knotted the score at 41-41.
The score remained very close as
the lead exchanged hands many
times. The Bulls again regained
the lead 46 45 on Bill BartlTs set
shot from the foul line at 7:35.
Tom Lenney hit for two points
from way out at&gt;7:45. Lenney had

February 10, at the University

Toronto the UB Wrestlers
downed all but one match The
victory upped UB's record to
5-1.
of

Last Saturday the University
of Rochester's home crowd saw
+

their squad rolled under by Buffalo. UB conceeded only one loss
and a draw to the Yellow Jac-

kets.

Friday night

SAT.
FEB.
20
9 P.M.

Members Free upon presenting
Membership Cord
Non-Members $2.00
Buses leave Norton Union
8:30. Free bos tickets at
Norton ticket window.

now printed by

Partners' Press, ~9nt

starts at

9 p.m.

at

Ahauas Achim Lubavitz
Synagogue, 345 Tacoma.

GymCollegiates

nasium the Buffalo

a strong Rochester
Institute of Techno'ogy club.
This writer had the opportunity
to see R.l.T. against Ithaca last
Saturday and found that they
are a good club and should prove
to be a real match for the Bulls.
The UB Wrestlers face R.l.T.
with a 61 record at stake.

The SPECTRUM

Band

TL 2- 9338
49 Edward
.UFFALO FOLK CENTER
to serve your entertainment needs

at Clark

encounter

SmtlL Printing

HILLEL'S
ANNUAL
SOUTH
SEA
ISLAND
PARTY

at

Grapplers Active

&amp;

Bill Barth turned in his greatest effort as he hauled in 11 rebounds and tossed in 15 points to
lead the Bulls, He was cool under
fire and came through at crucial
moments, time and time again:
Dan Bazzani scored 14 points, Harvey Poe 12, Norb Baschnagel 10,
and Norward Goodwin had 8 to
round out the starters’ scoring.
Last Saturday, the Basketball
Bulls traveled to Hamilton, New
York to encounter Colgate University in Huntington Gymnasium.
UB had never won on the Colgate
court, but before the evening was
over, the hoopsters from Buffalo
had gained a 75-59 victory.
The first half proved to be a
nightmare which Coach Serfustini
will long remember. The Bulls
shot an unforgetable 32.5 per
cent from the field and could get
no position under the boards. In
this first half, Colgate shot 50
per cent of its field goal attempts
and dominated the boards. Ed
Muntner had 11 rebounds in the
first half as Colgate built up a
large rebounding edge. The score
at the half was Colgate 39, UB 33.

CAGERS BATTLE FOR REBOUND

Goodwin followed Karaszewski
with 14 points and Norb Baschnagel had 12 The Bulls sank 43
of 69 shots from the field for
62,3 percent—a new school record—as the final score was 106-

—

seven field goals in the second
half, all “swishes” from the outside. This was Niagara’s last lead
as Barth tied the score 47-47 with
a free throw and Poe followed
that with another free throw at
by
9:30. With the Bulls leadingbasthree on Norward Goodwin’s
ket, Barth stole and “dunked” the
ball at 17:25. This was the clincher as Niagara called a time out

PIZZA
3-1344
TF

brewed for braves,

j
The University of Buffalo
wrestlers lost their first match
of the season to powerful Oswego State ,17-9, while approximately 800 spectators looked on.

1311 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

The only three to win for Buf-

.

..,

falo were Robert Jackson, Norm
Keller, and Burt Ernst.

'full

'

Buffalo was faced with the unusual situation thus far in this
season of trailing at the half. As
the second half began, the Bulls

employed a three-quarte'rs court
defensive press that seemed to

confuse and rattle the Red Raiders.

Colgate made many

mis-

takes and UB was able to take
full advantage of these blunders.
Early in the second half, the
Bulls scored four field goals to
the Red Raider’s single free
throw, and UB was ahead, 41-40
The Basketball Bulls continued
to snap out of the deep freeze as
Norward Goodwin scored eight of
Buffalo’s next ten points. UB continued this pace and finished the
evening shooting 44.5 per cent of
their field goal attempts. The
Raiders held the edge in rebounds 43-44, but Buffalo led on
the scoreboard at the end of the
game.

The Buffalo scoring was led by
Norward Goodwin, who scored 12
of his 14 points in the big second half. Goodwin was followed
by Harvey Poe with 12, Jack Karaszewski with 11 and Bill Barth
with 10. Thus, UB extended its
win streak to eight straight and
has greatly enhanced its chances
of a post season tournament bid.
Tomorrow, the Bulls travel to

Albany to encounter Albany
State, a team which has won its
last 11 games since losing to
Buffalo 89-65 in Clark
December 12. Rochester Uiuver
sity comes into Clark Gym next
Wednesday for one of the last
three home games of this season.

J&amp;ym/

LISTEN
TO
WBFO

�Friday, February

19, 1965

SPECTRUM

CAGE PREVIEW
With

Tourney Hopes Riding

Albany, U. ofR. Contests
By

STEVE SCHUELEIN

What are our tournament
chances at the moment? Excellent!”, replied Coach Leonard
Scrfustini confidently as he
looked back upon the recent court
successes of the Bulls against
the likes of Steubenville, Niagara,
and Colgate. “The next three
sanies should hold the key, however," Coach Serfustini mentioned
prophetically, “since our three opponents in these contests, Albany
State, University of Rochester,
LcMonye, are all bidding for the
same tournament berth as we
To

say

that

the

14-3 Albany State in the premiere
of the important showdowns. Although their schedule is not exactly indomitable, the Reds, spearheaded by 6' 4" Dick Crossed
and former Broome Tech star Jim

against common opponents /Toronto and Niagara, similar style
of play, and equal height, point
to all the earmarks of a tossup
in which those intangibl lr ar
immeasurable variables km
hustle and motivation, ii
case for a possible tourn

nt performances of the Herd,

will be of little consolation

ould they stumble now, for a

at the hands of either

morrow night the Bulls will
I to the state capital to face

also in the thick of the battle
for a tournament invitation. Led
by Phil Yurceka of Johnson City,
Ken Cook of Elmira, Bob Easton
of Dansvillc, Dave Deutsch of
Flushing, and Ron Brown of
Brooklyn, the lethal sting of the
Yellowjackcts has included Harvard 73-71, Amherst 74-62, CCNY
63-53, Alfred 82 75, and Niagara
75-69, (who it seems has been
beaten by everyone in Western
New York except the KB Yo-Yos
this year) among its more promThe statistics of both University
of Rochester and UH, similar type
of schedule, similar performance

is week’s basketball showings
ight be classified as a gross unrstatement. Despite the cur-

bany or University of Rochester
&gt;uld prove catastrophic and unubtedly give the victor the
bde track at that tempting
I. And since tournament inations are about as scarce as
Ideal mining shares at the
iment, any team in the running
a berth will be doubly cauus about any mistakes.

On Wednesday night the Bulls
return to the friendly confines of
Clark Gym to face the University
of Rochester. The 11-3 Yellowjackets, who have suffered two
of their three losses to major
colleges, Navy and Cornell, arc

inent victims.

post-season

ornament slot the Bulls hopelly are working for hinges upon

[back

tussle as slight favorites, but
with the homecourt advantage, a
tournament bid in the offing, and
the momentum of an 11-game
victory skein, the Albany exprbss
might prove difficult to derail.

COACH SERFUSTINI

nevertheless a
vastly improved club over the one
the Bulls trounced, 89-64, in Clark
Gym in December, and have impressively reeled
off eleven
straight wins to prove it.
The SUNYABs should enter the
O’Donovan, are

PAGE FIFTEEN

ATTENTION
FACULTY

ANNUAL
SALE
Caps Gowns Hoods

bid. should determine which
will emerge triumphant
With these two games o
this week and the LeMoync
only

a few

days

later, this'.'

to hi
week of truth for the UI5
wood Bulls.
undoubtedly

prove

do-it-yourself
career quiz
YES

NO

□ □

Do you like to work independe
Are you interested in a company that
promotes from within?
Do you like to get out and move among
people?

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with a company that will have 450 management openings in the next five years?

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Do you want a career with the world's
largest resource of business information?

□ □

RETAIL CREDIT
COMPANY

If you answered yes to the
talk to you. And'you definitely w
Retail Credit Company.
you are interested in a sound
portunity to achieve

If

on campus interviews
All

Wednesday, March 3rd
DATE

held

v

Day

TIME

Call Placement Office at

831-3311 for appointment

PLACE

sSISb
Home Office; Atlanta. Ga

Order must be placed with
prior to February 23rd

us

�Friday, February 19, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

Y

K

I

=fA==^==
Ice Bulls Defeated Twice;
=i

&lt;

SPORTS CIRCLE
By

Drop

RICHARD DRANDOFF

from

Two surprising upsets, sandwiched around an easy 2-0 win
over Rochester, dropped the UB
hockey team to second place in
the Finger Lakes League. Both

“FISTICUFFS’’

It is now almost one full year since a young man
by the name of Cassius ('lay entered the ring in Miami
Beach to tangle with that “Big Ugly Bear,” Sonny Liston. The entire sports world laughed at this loudmouthed, egotistical young man, but he proved them wrong
by doing what no one else had ever been able to do.
He knocked out Liston, hud been proclaimed the “Heavyweight Champion of the World,” and within the time
of a few short months, through the mininterpretations
of his actions, he rendered the boxing game undeniably,
inescapably dead.

Actually, Clay (or Muhammed Ali—whichever you
prefer) did not kill boxing, he merely buried it. The
rash of boxing deaths which proceeded the Clay-Liston
fight were responsible for the actual defni.se of the
“game” in the public eye. Perhaps Clay could have
.changed all this
he was, as far as the devotees were
concerned, a clean-cut youth who could once again return a favorable public image to the sport. He could
conceivably have won over the sports-conscious youngsters and shown them that boxing wasn’t as bad as their
elders had told them, but Cassius Clay, in his own inimitable manner, chose another course of action which
was not condoned, and this permanently buried the
sport of boxing.

Ithaca and BIT caught the ice
Bulls day-dreaming about the big
Oswego upset and dropped them
from the ranks of the unbeaten.
Buffalo now sports a 5-2 record.
fthaca edged the Bulls 2-1, in
the friendly Cornell University
rink, in an abbreviated contest.
The UB players arrived an hour
late, mainly because when their
bus could not negotiate a steep

First Place

stretched legs of UB net tender
Ken Sherry. His linemate, Laske,
added a goal at 4:43, and the Engineers carried a commanding
lead into the few minutes of the
period. Frahm turned back several UB shots and made a good
save on a breakaway by Balland
which looked like a sure score.
But at 17:25, the 400 fans had

visions of another patented UB
comeback, when captain Jerry
Doherty score to cut the BIT
lead in half.
This time, though, the ice Bulls
were not up to the occasion.

cause it seems that Massachusetts and New York are
the only states in which Clay is recognized as the champion. and Liston cannot get a license to fight in New
York, Apparently the fight will go on if Liston is not
in jail at the time, but the winner will be Champion of
two states.

Amherst Arena. There will be
free busses leaving from Norton
Union.

REMAINING SCHEDULE

Hobart—Home

Tomorrow
Sunday
Tuesday
February 27

Syracuse—Away
Brock. St.—Home

Ithaca—Home
Brock. St.—Home
Oswego St.—Home

March 7
March 13

Fencing Team
Cops Last Three
The fencing team has participated in, and won, three meets
since the last issue of the SPECTRUM. The team made its record
for the season 9-2 by defeating
MacMaster 20-7, HIT 21-6, and
Hobart 15-12.

—-

Perhaps 1 look at the situation now facing the
“manly art of self-defense" will explain the proceeding
statements. After Clay Won the title, he loudly (naturally) proclaimed that he was a Muslim, and was officially changing his name to Mohammed Ali. These
events, in themselves, should not be considered to be
bad
after all, a man’s religion is his own business and
no one else's. Hut the National Boxing Association, a
group of self-righteous individuals, though differently.
Under the pretense of doing it because Clay had not
defended his title, they vacated the championship and
announced that a series of elimination bouts were to be
held to determine the new titleholder. The four principles in this scheme were ex-champ Floyd Patterson, new
number one contender Ernie Terrell, Cleveland Williams
and either Eddie Mac-hen or George Chuvalo. The last
two were to fight to decide which of them would be
ip the “tournament." At that point someone refused to
fight someone else (nobody really knows what happened) and the whole thing was off. The eliminations were
cancelled, but two weeks ago. Patterson outpointed Chuvalo in what appeared to be the birth of a new scheme
to determine the champ. In the meantime, Clay, who
T;isC(Tn-"rm'n rematch iast No-was—supposed
vember. came up with a hernia the night before the
fight, and it was cancelled. Hut last week. Clay received
permission from his doctor to resume training, and he
and Liston will presumably fight again in Boston this
spring. It is necessary that the fight be held there be-

tomorrow they tackle Hobart U.
Game time is 10:00 p.m, at the

DAN GORNEY
grade, and they were forced to
hike the final three miles to the
rink, They seemed to have left
their game on that hill as they
were unable to pressure on.
Sunday, February 14, archrival R1T avenged an earlier season loss to the Bulls with a 5-3
win, at the Amherst Arena. Buffalo jumped off to a quick 1-0
lead, as player-coach Karl Balland
beat Tiger goatlie Frahm at 1:35
of the opening period. The visitors tied it up late in the same
period, as Bob Westfall found
the net on a power play. It was
Westfall again, as he gave RIT
the lead, for good, at the start
of the second period on a shot
which rolled under the out-

FACING OFF
Laske noticed his second goal at
the two minute mark as Sherry
was screened out on his 35 foot
blast and never saw the puck as

In the meet with MacMaster,
UB won in all three weapons with
a 6-3 record in sabre and 7-2 records in foil and epee. Against
Hobart, the Bulls won the sabre
6-3 and the foil 5-4 while losing
in epee 4-5. The sabre squad had
its first perfect day of the season, defeating the BIT sabre
team 9-0. The UB foilmen and
epeemen both defeated their HIT

scores.

opponents by 6-3

The fencing team is idle this
weekend but next Saturday they
it hit the right post and glanced will be host to a triangular meet
into the net. Dan Gorney closed at Clark Gym between UB, Syrathe gap again for Buffalo at 11:51, cuse, and Fenn College.
but when the Tiger's Sullivan
stole an errant UB pass in front
of the net and caught Sherry
off-balance, barely 4 and a half
minutes remained on the clock.
The Bulls were unable to cash

LISTEN
TO

in on a 2 man advantage so,
thereafter, went down to defeat
for the second consecutive weekend.
Last night the ice Bulls played
a visiting York University team
in a non-league contest and

WBFO

60- MAN-GO

Lj

/

y

I

o

Some may argue that the 19,100 people who crowded into Madison Square Garden to see the PattersonChuvalo contest indicates that boxing is still very much
alive. Hut this presumption is weak. It is not very diffiult to gather that many people in a metropolitan area
over 12 million
even for a fight. The people who
ended were the last of a dying breed
the fight fan
f style. And going out of style with them
—

—

port

attributed t
'oxintj

has done that.

self. But this death of an era cannot be
ne man and one man-alone. The very idea
seating your opponent into submission
—

HcftnuAxAt,

Ate CMNES

In essense, though, things are quite a bit more confused than they seem, and it is doubtful if anyone really
knows what is going on in the minds of the kingmakers
of the fight game.

/

er

/

/

/

/S'

m,

dw
s

*

Qon«\ie^\ote!

Ji

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                    <text>HOCKEY BULLS

-T~

,

STATE

K

TOP

VOLUME 15

SCHINE
DANCE

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 5, 1965

Discussion Set for Monday
All fulltime undergraduate,
graduate, and professional students are members of the Student

Association of the State University of Buffalo, and as such are
entitled to attend convocations,
join campus organizations, hold
office in student government,
and, in general, take part in any
and all activities that are offered
to students at this school.
The Student Senate, which is
presently the governing branch
of the Student Association, is now
involved in consideration of a
new constitution for the Student
Association. The new constitution,
if passed, would organize the
Student Association along the
lines of the Federal Government.

between organizations. (3) Norton
Union, under the Union Board,
fuctions to promote all aspects of

ft

legislative branch, is empowered
to recognize and coordinate stu-

dent activities and represent the
entire student body in matters
of policy. (2) The Student Judiciary has the power to summon,

DAVID FREY
social life on campus. (4) The
Student Publications Board has
the power to recognize alt ■student
publications and appoint all editors.
The New Constitution
The new constitution provides

adjudicate and impose penalties.
Its jurisdiction lies in matters of
constitutionality of any act of any
part of the Student Association,
disputes

(Cont'd on P. 6)

UB, CORE Picket New CAO
By SUE GREENE
from UB joined
Students
members of CORE in a demonstration against Erie County’s

The Highwaymen, a folk singJohn Gruber, Managing Editor ing group, and comedian Bill
of the Daily Cardinal at the Uni Cosby will appear in concert Satversity of Wisconsin at Madison, urday, February 13, in Clark Gym.
has been attacked on the floor The concert, which will begin at
of the State Legislature for his 8:00, is being sponsored by the
alleged political beliefs. In a Interfraternity Council. Tickets,
letter to Mr. Arthur De Bardc- priced at two dollars per person,
leden, president of the Board of are now; on sale at ' the ticket
Regents, Jerris Leonard, assist
ant majority leader of the Legia
lature, scored Gruber’s alleged
political beliefs based on the
fact that Gruber lives in the
same building as the son of Eum
gene Dennis and two other mem-

tASSra

for three coordinate bodies: (1)
The Executive; (2) The Student
Congress (divided into a Senate
and a House of Representatives);
and (3) the Student Judiciary.
The Union Board of old would become the “Union Board Commit-

student behavior and

Assailed for Beliefs
By State Legislature

the federal government for funds

to effect* or expand local projects. Although there is no spedfication as to the number of
berthr
th?
'

CIVIL RIGHTS DEMONSTRATION

The purpose of the demonstration was to protest the makeup
of the membership of the CAO.
The two groups feel that the
present membership violates the
basic principle of the antipoverty bill. According to the
bill, any group of people desiring
financial aid for its community,
may form a Community Action
Organization (CAO) and apply to

_„,

oto by

B,. nk

sponsors the committee, the bill
does state that there be “maximum feasible participation” of
those persons who are residents

of the area and members of the

groups served.

This bill is unique in that for
the first time, the impoverished
will be given a chance to play
an instrumental role in the improvement of their own living
conditions. Previously, all aid
has been on a welfare or charity
basis. The latter makes it impossible for the recipients to
identify with any program. Supporters of the plan for the CAO
(Cont’d on P. 10)

Special Session Senate Assemblies
Called to Consider New Constitution
“A Community View of Academic Freedom at UB” is the
topic of a panel discussion to
be presented by the StTident
Senate Monday at 3:30 p.m. in
the Conference Theater of Norton Union. The four panelists
from the Buffalo area will be
Herald P. Fahringer, Richard
Lipsitz, Leon L. Sidell and Michael J. Kogntek. Moderating the
program will be Student Senate
President Robert P. Finkelstein.

The purpose of the discussion
as stated by Mr. Finkelstein is
"for a searching intellectual stu :
dent populatmn who wishes to
hear these views regardless of

*

spiritual, which sold over a mil
lion copies.
They followed this with a suc-

cession of other hit singles, including “Cotton Fields," “Well.
Well, Well" and "Practoria,” and
a I b u m s, “The Highwaymen,"
"Standing Room Only," “Encore"
and “March On, Brothers." Their

WWI

a w

Saturday, January 30, the day
following Leonard’s letter, Gruber was notified of the action
taken’ against him. Gruber, while
in New' Yory City attending the
United States Student Press Association Conference, issued the
following statement:
“I have not seen the full text
of Senator Leonard's letter; I

do not wish to comment fully
until I have seen it. However,
some observations are in order:

“First, I appreciate Mr, Leon
ard's concern with the quality
of education the student are receiving, I trust this will also be
manifested when the biennial
budget comes up

in

whether or not they coincide with
those of the students. This freedom of expression is necessary
on a University campus. It is
to this end that the program is
dedicated.”
The topic of academic freedom
has been frequently discussed by
students, faculty and the administration of the UB campus.
However, it is felt that committee reactions are of more value
to the University students. Many
members of the committee have
shown strong feelings about
academic freedom at the University and its purposes in terms
of privileges and responsibilities.

THE HIGHWAYMEN

booths in Norton Union, Canisius,
E.C.T.I., at the main desk of all
Twin Fair stores, and at Records
Unlimited in the Abbott Road
Plaza.

the near

future.

“Second, there has been a
traditional since the Cardinal was
founded 73 years ago that it is
a student publication, without
regard to the opinions expressed.
We are a paper receiving no financial subsidy from the state
or the university; we make our
own way financially in the tradition of free enterprise.

“Third, the substance of Mr,
Leonard's charge is curious. I,
and several others, live in the
same house as the son of a one
time Communist Parly leader
who is the member of a political
ly left group, the Du Bois Club
This makes me somehow suspect
1 used to frequent Rennebohm’s
Organization, the local administrating organ of the antipoverty
bill, Thursday, January 28. Picketers marched for an hour on
West Eagle and Franklin Street,
in front of the Erie County
Building.

Highwaymen, Cosby to Appear
At Clark Gym Next Saturday

bers of the Du Bois Club.

The Old Constitution

As presently constituted, the
Student Association is divided
into four coordinate bodies, encompassing all phases of student
life. (1) The Student Senate, the

Wisconsin U. Editor

16

NO.

drug stores. I am not a Rcpubli
can. I use Kohlet plumbing fa
eilities. I am not a conservative
I have lived in three other room
ing houses and I am frankly
shocked that the house I live in
should be the basis of an allegation as to my ‘associates.’

“Fourth, The Cardinal is open
to all shades of political views.
We have had in the past members of all species of political
beliefs, far right to far left.
We have interviewed Gus Hall,
Community Party leader, and
Dean Manion, Birch Society
leader. This is our function. The
day we are frightened or intimidated into curtailing the scope
of our political and social comments, that day we will betray
the legacy of a University which
has seen fit to trust the students
of this school to think for themselves,

“The students, the faculty,
the presidents, the Board of Regent
have consistently supported the freedom of The
Cardinal. I know they will do so
now. This University had grown
and achieved because it has been
free. I have enough faith in
the democratic system to believe
that college students need no

protection through suppression.
They can spot the foxes for

themselves.

"Finally, Mr. Leonard will begin receiving copies of the paper
so he can read more than isolated comments. He might even
learn that J. Edgar, not Herbert,

is head of the FBI.”

BILL COSBY
The Highwaymen have had a
number of hit recording including their very first recording.
“Michael,” a pre-Civil War Negro

success on records led to personal appearances'at leading colleges
and universities in the country,
on the Ed Sullivan and ‘ Tonight"
television s h o w s and in such
major night clubs as the Blue
Angel in New York, the Casino
Royal in Washington, the Hungry
i in San Francisco and the Living
Room in Chicago.
The Highwaymen began their
career when they were honor

students at Wesleyan University,
Middletown, Connecticut, Class of
1962. They were members of the
same fraternity. At one of the
fraternity's social functions, members were invited to offer impromptu entertainment, and they
volunteered a program combining
the latest rock 'n roll chants with
some serious folk songs.
The Highwaymen offer an approach to folk-music that is international in scope, technically polished and stirring in its energetic
originality. Rather than confine
themselves to three guitars, banjo
(Cont’d

on

P.

6)

21 Schools to Participate in 3rd Annual
A.C.U. Tournament February 12-13
By HELEN PETERS

The

Association of College
Unions is sponsoring a tourna
ment beginning at noon Friday,
February 12, and ending at 4:00
Saturday, February 13, The tour
nament, which will consist of
bowling, billiards, table tennis
and chess, will take place in the
recreation area of Norton Union.
Mr. Joseph Paffie, assistant di
rector of recreation since Norton Union’s creation, is also the
regional recreation advisor. Mr.

Mike DiGerlando is the assistant
advisor. Region two,
which includes all of New York
State except New York City, as
well as Southern Ontario, is
comprised of 21 schools. The 350
contestants will include students
from Alfred University, Alfred
Technical, Canisius College, Cornell, Hamilton, Ithaca College,
Keuka College, Manhattanyille
regional

College, Niagara County Com
munity College, Rochester Institute of Technology, University of
Rochester, State University of
New York at Albany, Brockport.

Buffalo, Cortland, Delhi, Fredonia and Oneonta, U. S. Military Academy at West Point,
Utica College and Waterloo Uni
versity. This annual tournament,
the third for region two, shows
a marked increase in participa
tion.

Participants are determined by
a cOmpetaitivc elimination procedure early in the year. Eligibility for participation in the tournament is also dependent on a
1.0 average. The tournament is
open to women, but competition
in each field is segregated except in chess. Separate contests
lake place and separate prizes
are awarded to the male and female champions of each division.
Region two is one of the two
regions in the United States
which has the women's table tennis tournament apart from that
of the men. This year's woman’s
bowling includes twelve teams,
substantially more than
last
year's

five

Region

team

two

entry.

contestants, who

will stay at Mphawk Manor, will
also attend an awards banquet

Saturday, February 15, at 4:30
in the Millard Filmore
pin.
Room of Norton Union. Plaques
and trophies, in honor of first,
second and third place winners,

will

be

awarded

speeches will be

and

short

given at this
This tournament is not strictly
confined to statewide competition. There is room for national recognition in men's and
women's bowling and in men's
pocket billiards. A.C.U. is also
sponsoring a bridge tournament
Tuesday, which is on a national

basis.

�Student Judiciary Plans
Action on Shoplifters

A recent surge of shoplifting
from the University Bookstore
has been accompanied by an increased load of cases on the docket of the Student Judiciary. The
Judiciary has the power to recommend suspension or expulsion,
subject a student to social probation, and fine up to onc-hundred dollars in such cases.
Harry Chaskey, manager of the

that fifteen cases involving book
store theft were tried last semes
ter These cases comprise approx
imately three-fifths of the Judici
ary's business.

Rottenberg Analyzes Economics
Of Slave-Trading Investments
Dr. Simon Rottenberg, professor of economics, is currently undertaking an evaluation of the business acumen
of an 18th century English slave trader named James
Rogers
Contrary to the popular belief that slave trading was
extremely profitable, Dr. Rottenberg feel that his analysis may reveal a completely different financial picture.
Having studied the economics
of slace trading, Dr. Rottenberg
says it seems likely that the average return from an investment
in slave trading would be no higher than any other business venture of the period.

Bookstore, reports that increased
security measures are being

Friday, February S, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

taken

now and if necessary, the management might install a closed
circuit television system to curtail
shoplifting. Most students who
are involved in a theft are spotted by the plainclothes detectives
as the potential "non-paying shopper" wanders around the store,
either “casing" the personnel or
gathering the courage to take
something.

“Indeed, the occasional occurrence of high profit may have
attracted large numbers who overestimated the probability of success and this large supply of ventures offering slave trading services may have caused the average
return to investment in this activity to be lower than in others,”
according to Dr. Rottenberg.

Shoplifhters have been prosecuted this year for theft of such
seemingly inconspicuous items as
paperclips and ballpoint pens, in

Dr. Rottenberg feels that the
belief that slave trading was uniformly lucrative is based on the

addition to more costly articles

of clothing and books.
A student who is apprehended

is automatically reported to the
Dean of Students. Action is consequently taken by the Student
Judiciary. A record of the theft
and the Judiciary's findings is
placed in the student's confidential file and therefore may be
seen by any future school or employer to which the student may
apply. In some cases where leniency is called for, the record of
the theft may be removed at graduation Parents are also informed
by the Judiciary
Mr. Chaskey said that although
students who steal seem to feel
some justification by compensating for the high price of books
of their inability to pay, theft is
a most serious issue which may
affect their entire lives. "It is
too bad," Mr Chaskey continued,
“that a student would take a huge

risk with his future for something
as petty as a “dare" or “getting
hack at the Bookstore." He said,
"I would rather stop a thousand
thefts through increased student
knowledge of security, than Catch
ten."
Up also said that if pilfering
continues, the controlled system
now utilized by (he text book
division on the lower level will
have to be expanded through the
store; He said that stealing books
has become somewhat of a game
and that most students who had
been apprehended had the money
in their pockets to pay for the
stolen items, People who are in
no way affiliated with the school
have also been stopped on occasion.
Gary Lighter. Chief Justice of
the Student Judiciary, reported

Why Not?

calculations of differences in the
and selling prices of
slaves, without deducting busi-

Dr. Rottenberg discovered the
rare papers belong to Rogers in

the Public Record Office (national archives) of London during a
visit in 1958 under a grant from
the Social Science Research Council.
Rogers, who was a merchant of
Bristol, England, was heavily engaged in slave trading from 1785
through 1792. Included in the
papers are correspondence from
ships' captains on purchases in

Africa, sales

prices and
values.

Hand it quicker than tha aye

in

West

Indies,

changes in market

Rogers, who apparently never
left' England but hired out ships
and'crews to, buy and sell the
slaves, eventually ended up bankrupt in 1793 due to poor specu-

lation in cotton investments.

ferent course of the meal. This

new approach enabled the rushees to get better acquainted with
the individual sororities.

DR. ROTTENBERCER

Following completion of the
ship’s triangular voyage (England to Africa to West Indies),

the business would be dissolved

following distribution of profits
or losses according to equities
held by each person.
Some excerpts from the papers
reveal some of the problems encountered by the captains as they
wrote back to Rogers;
“When 1 first arrived in Africa
1 made a barter with a gentlemen by the name of James Ormond
for 90 slaves payable
the 13th September but on account of his death I have met
...

with nonpayment till the 22nd
January when and then all his
affairs in this country will be
settled."

A letter from the West Indies
Rogers: "Your cutter
Sloop Fly arrived here today the
23rd March in thirty days from
the coast with 53 slaves
19
men, 16 boys, 8 women, 10 girls,
one girl and one boy very poor,
the men in general very good
boys and girls very small, the
women unsaleable, although the
whole are healthy and every commendation is owed to Captain

informed

...

fek

In 1959, Dr. Rottenberg received
grants from the American Philosophical Society and from the
University of Chicago to have
the Rogers’ papers microfilmed.
The exposures arc now being
blown up in order to be examined more easily.
Dr. Rottenberg will separate
the papers as they relate to separate slave-trading voyages and
make a detailed analysis of the
business transactions.

T^lt?
Coast it claar

Previous research by Dr. Rottenberg has shown that individuals involved in slave trading included attorneys, grocers, barbers and tailors. Many of the ventures

simply “once and
done" affairs in Which an "ad
were

hoe" business firm would be
formed by several individuals.

Hassip Is Coming
February 20, 1965

—

Rogers

.

All cars that are parked
vio lation of the U niver
sity parking rules and n
uiations will be towed off
the Camp
The Grover Cleveland
parkin lot will lie used to
in

violation

The reason for this drastic action is because of the
congested road conditions
and inability of emergency
equipment to maneuver on
the Campus

l i t;KM'. J. MURRAY
Security Director

.

The coming week will consist
of primarily off-campus parties
for the rushees. Sunday, the sororities will sponsor informal
parties in Norton Union between
1:30 and 5:00 p.m. There will be
an international theme, each sororities’ food and decorations corresponding to the nation of their
choice.

the rushees will pick
the off-*
will take
place from Monday evening
until the following Tuesday, FebMonday,

up their invitations to
campus parties, which
ruary 16.

The Union Board has
planned three days of special activities for this coming week. The action begins Sunday for all you
young, vibrant and daring
sports enthusiasts. A toboggan party has been
planned at Chestnut Ridge.
Buses will he provided for
the Occasion, leaving Norton at 5:30 p.m. Tickets
are on sale now at the
ticket booth in Norton
just
Price per couple
25 cents

.”

Dr. Rottenberg expects to continue the research throughout
the summer and fall of this year
to be followed by an article to

be

published in a professional
journal containing his conclu-

sions.

Petitions for the general
Spring Election will he
available Tuesday in

Plaza Shoe
Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

IF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

—

9 p.m.

Room 205, Norton.

Your One Stop Service Center

BOCCE

Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Dry cleaning machines

IF 3-1344

brewed for braves....
Oop»l

The sororities today concluded the first week of Panhellenic
Rush, during which interested
rushees were informed about the
offerings and opportunities in a
sorority and were introduced to
sorority women. Rush Convocation, Sunday, January 31, presented a description of sorority
life both through speeches by
Dean Scutter, Miss Haas, Mrs.
Moll, Barbara Witzel, president
of Panhellenic Council, and Cindy
Perl, and through the following
mixer tea. The other highlight
of the week, the progressive dinner, Monday, was a great success. Each sorority served a dif-

buying

ness expenses.

Sororities Hold
Pan-Hell Rush

-

/

uf

8 lbs. S2.00

L

—

�Friday, February

5, 1965

Zong, New Asian Professor
Mr. In-»ob Zong, citizen of the Republic of Korea,
every Thursday in Foster Hall from 4 :30 to
speak
w ill
g:30 p.m. on many varied topics, based on a survey of
Korean culture. These lectures may be attended by contacting the office of Dr. Burvil Glenn in Foster Hall.
Mr. Zong is one of four Asian professors invited by
the State Department under the Visiting Asian Teachers
Project in conjunction with host
universities comprised of Central
Michigan, Farleigh Dickenson,
Bradley and Buffalo. After March
19, Mr Zong will leave Buffalo
and go to Bradley to complete
his tour. There he plans to attend summer school in linguistics

and speech.
Mr. Zong is considered a leading writer, having in 38 years,
written over 200 books, articles
and poems. He is also an active
.member of many literary societies, participating in such capacities as president, representative and organizer. Mr. Zong received his Bachelor of Arts and
Literary degrees in Britain, his
Master of Arts and his Decorate

Discount ID Cards,

Student Periodicals,
Offered By NSA
Two new student benefits have
been made available through the
NSA (National Student Association) Committee of the Student
Senate.

The first of these is the travel
discount ID card available to all
registered

«

h

MR. IN-SOB YONG

university

students.

The ID cards enable students to
obtain large discounts in room,
board, dining and entertainment
charges in many nations throughout the world and also in various cities, including New York,
in the United States. In certain
countries abroad, this ID card
may also be used as an official

identification. Interested students
should apply for the International
Travel ID discount cards by calling 83 1 4089.

Secondly, NSA offers students

the temporary use of a variety
of periodicals on student affairs.
The periodicals are located in the
these, professor at Chosen Christian College, Tend University and Student Senate Office on the secSeoul National University; lecond floor of Norton Union. The
turer at the University of London
following periodicals are availand
Dean
University;
and Kyoto
at Chungang University, where he able: “Academic Freedom,” “Aims
at present holds the position of of Education,” “Better Education
Dean of the Graduate School.
for More College Students,” “BibCommenting on the Asian situation, Mr. Zong showed concern liography: Higher Education in
Democracy,”
“Course Evaluanot only for Vietnam, but also
tion,” “Entering the Academic
for Korea. “We were fortunate to
have the UN forces help, but I Vocation: What Can Students
fear that the compromise after Do?” “In Loco Parentis,” “Pothe Korean War left the Asian litical Speakers at State Universities:
Some Constitutional
and many other small underdeConsiderations," “Problems in
veloped countries doubtful of the
United States’ support and trust.” Student Rights and Freedoms,”
-Mr. Zong urges that Korea not “The Development of Student
be sacrificed to the communists. Values in Higher Education,”
“Rebels With a Cause,” “The
This, he feels, would be the reCivil Rights Movement,” “Camsult of a compromised, neutralipus Internationa! Programming,”
zation of Korea with the com"Student Government and Formunists of North Korea.
eign Student Programming," StuMr. Zong refers to the split
dent Services,” “Relationships of
between Russia and China as beStudent Government with Caming merely “show business,” and
warns the American people that pus Organizations and Interest
Groups” and “Student Governthey should be wary of this sitment Bulletin,” This collection
uation. His idea is that the comthunist countries are acting stra- will be implemented by a foreign travel and foreign study litegically with the aim of weakenbrary planned for the near fuing the defenses and alliances of
ture.
democratic countries. He compares the conflict to that between
the United States and the United
Kingdom, where it is naturally
expected that in times of stress
they will be closely aligned, regardless of preceding disputes.

n

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Korea. He has held many positions at universities, among

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

Pres. Gould To Address Graduates Varsity Debaters
Plan Tournament

Dr. Samuel B. Gould, president of the State University of
New York, will deliver the main
address at UB’s Midyear Com
mencement exercises to held Friday, Feb. 12 in Kleinhans Music
Hall beginning at 10:30 a m.
Dr. Gould, who assumed presidential-duties in September, will
discuss, "A Citadel of Mind and
Soul.” The Reverend James E.
Streng, Catholic chaplain at the
University, will give the invocation and pronounce the benediction. Approximately 625 degrees
and certificates will be awarded.
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University president, will present
the 38th
Chancellor's Medal

awarded each year in recognization of a person who “vivifies
public service in the eyes of the
citizens of Buffalo . . . and whose
achievements are truly great and
ennobling, dignifying the performer and Buffalo in the eyes
of the world.”
A.B.
Dr. Gould received
degree from Bates College and
New
York
Uni
his M.A. from
versity He ha,s been the recipient
of honorary Doctors of Law degrees from Bates College and
Wilberforce University. He did
graduate work in England's Oxford and Cambridge Universities
and at Harvard University.

Two varsity debaters. Hedda
Beckman and Diane Hayes, are
participating this weekend in the
three-day Annual Invitational
Tournament at Harvard University. Eight rounds of switch-side
debates are scheduled, half defending the affirmative position
on the resolution and half defending the negative. In addition, four
more rounds of finals take place
before the winners of the tournament arc determined. Over
sixty colleges are expected to be
represented at Harvard. Mr. Terry
H Ostermeier. faculty advisor,
will accompany the two UB debaters.

Bridge Club Plans

ACU Tournament
This Tuesday at UB
This Tuesday the UB Bridge
Club will run the National Inter-

collegiate Bridge Tournament
sponsored by the Association of
College Unions. The tournament
will consist of 16 par hands. On
each hand, there will be a bidding
par and a playing par which
should be reached by the con-

for
each par, and the teams with the
highest scores in the country will
compete in the finals held in the

testants. Points are awarded

Midwest. All rubber bridge players as well as duplicate players
are invited to play. These par
hands have been set up by some
of the top players in the country.
This is a good chance to see just
how good your bridge game is.
The game will be held in Room
327 at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Last
year two members of our club,
Bobby Lipsitz and Dick Fleisch
captured first place with
a score.of 95 out of 100 possible
East-West points. The year be :
man,

fore, Ed

George

and Peter Wolf

captured third place in this par
hand tournament. Each team is
given an analysis of the hands
they have played, which makes
this tournament instructive as
well as challenging.

past Saturday, the UB
Bridge Club sent three four-man
teams to the University of Waterloo Bridge Tournament. This was
made possible by the Student
Senate, who passed an additional
appropriation for the Waterloo
Tournament. The University of
Buffalo team consisting of Bobby
This

Lipsitz, Dick Flcischman, Roger
Pies, and Ralph Bartlett, literally
walked away with first place.
They had a fantastic score of 39
out of 48, which is virtually unheard of in bridge tournaments.
Their final score was actually
38'/2, since they were penalized
M&gt; point for coming in two minutes late after lunch.

UB Astronomers Club
Promotes Interest
In Travel Research
The UB Amateur Astronomers,
under the guidance of Dr. Lyle
Borst, was formed last Seplem
ber for the purpose of promoting

interest in astronomy
and space travel. Since the group
is working under, the auspices
of the Department of Physics anil
Astronomy; it has at its disposal

general

the complete facilities of the
department, including the excel
lent
ten inch newtoman cassa
grainian reflecting telescope

atop Hochstetter Hall The organization also has full access to
all necessary accessory equip
inent, including an optical micro
meter, an ocular spectroscope,
and sundry photographic equipment. Membership is open to all
full-time day students. No previous knowledge of astronomy is
necessary, since many of the

club's

activities have

the sole

purpose of familiarizing mem
bers with the basics of general
astronomy.

In the past, the club has spun

sored public observation nights,
exhibitions, and lectures by mem
bers of the club and distinguished guest speakers. This year
these activities are being continued with the addition of special observation projects and research programs. A greatly in
creased budget, as provided by
the Student Senate, has enabled

the Amateur Astronomers to start
a program Of valuable scientific
research in the fields of planetary observations, solar promin
ence studies, and infrared spectroscopy.

Meetings are held weekly at
4:00 p.m. Wednesdays in Room
111 Hochestetter Hall.

Richard
Simultaneously, Mr
Suttell, assistant debate coach,
will accompany Barbara Glegota
and Ellen Abclson (affirmative)
and Bob Dragone and Carl Levine
(negative), to St. John Fisher in
Rochester. There will be six
rounds of traditional varsity debate.

Plans arc being completed in
preparation for the Tenth
An-

nual International Debate Tournament at UB the weekend of February 19-20. Diane Hayes, vicepresident of the Society, is chairman of the event and Barbara
Glegota. co-chairman. Timekeepers for both Friday night and
Saturday morning of the tournament arc still urgently heeded.
If any students are interested,
contact Ruth Shapiro or any officer of the Society in Norton
Room 357, or call Extension 3601
on campus.

Air Force Officer
To Address Cadets
Over 109 AFROTC cadets in
the Advanced Corps and mem
bers of th“ faculty will attend
a formal dinner at Niagara Falls
tonight. The purpose of the affair is to gather in fellowship
and at the same time hear a
young officer speak on his Air
Force career.
First Lieutenant Peter F. Fox.
graduate of Southern Methodist
University, will give his impressions of his present job in the
Air Force, He currently is a
KC-135 Project Officer at WrightPatterson Air Force Base, working on the Air Force Jet Tanker
Aircraft. He holds an Industrial
Management degree and in ad
dition to his most responsible
position, is a member of the

Wright Patterson
Counsel,

Junior Officers

Admitted grad lawyer
needed immediately for
Civil Rights case.
Box HA Spectrum
or phone 941-5629

The NEW

STUDENT
literary and
opinion magazine of SUN1 \ B. is planning their
next issue
around the
theme of alienation.
Contributions will he
welcomed on any topic, although particular stress is
being placed on ficton,

REVIEW,

poetry, humor, non-fiction
and. art related to some aspect of alienation. Interested students may leave
•heir work in the NSR oflice, 302 Norton. Dead
line is February 22.

of our shoppe for
wear and spring fashions.
Your Shoppe Keeper recommends
browsing now for Buffalo's most
ruise

exciting collection of sensibly priced
cruise and spring wear. You'll discover
shifts, dresses, slacks, shorts, skirts,
sweaters, and the whole "look of
-1

going away. Many lines exclusive at
the Country Corner. Why not drop
anchor today?

THE C0HHTH7
3384

MAIN

STREET

com

4

.^gg

�Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

the Editor

...

SHOULD KNOW”
Joseph Pulitzer
We can only deplore the present situation at the
University of Wisconsin concerning the present attack on
the Cardinal (see story on Page 1) . Hopefully the school’s
administration will see through the charges and recognize
them for what they really are. A ebirth of the witchhunting that was originated by that state’s famous Senator Joe McCarthy.
Two significant dimensions of the problem are: first,
the nature of the charges and second, the threat to freedom of the press and expression. The nature of the
charges are a clear indication of the entire situation. Mr.
Gruber, the Cardinal’s Managing Editor, is being attacked on the basis of his place of residence. The charges
are so ludicrous that they barely need to be mentioned.
The threat to freedom of the press and expression is also
obvious.
You may be shocked at the problem that the Cardinal now faces. But it is far from being uncommon, for
right here on this campus a similar situation has existed
and has yet to be resolved.
This paper was attacked among many other things
on the basis of the number of words in the letters to the
editor. The rest of the 1 charges were just as laughable.
If it were not for the serious consequences of the attack
we could easily find the whole affair amusing.
The Publications Board's action shows an uncanny
similarity in the nature of the charges and the threat to
freedom of the press. We find intolerable the fact that
this Board of experts (with no training or experience)
could pass judgment on this paper without investigating
the charges or asking for an answer to them.
We also find equally intolerable the fact that this
paper’s Constitutional rights of a due process and the
right to a fair and honest trial by an impartial jury were

“THAT THE

oCetterA

AAUP Issues Statement

PEOPLE

totally ignored.

Some claim that not notifying this paper or its advisor of this hearing, for that is what it was, was just an
accident. These same few claim that (he disregard shown
for the civil liberties of a defendant, guaranteed under
the Bill of Rights, were also a mistake in the Board’s
standard operating procedures. These arguments have
some merit. But they are all refuted by the Board itself
because in a subsequent meeting a motion was brought
up to re-examine the events of December 7. The motion
was not even seconded.
CAMPUS PRESS

The scope of a university newspaper can vary. It can
concern itself solely with the reporting of student news,
or it may involve the entire academic community. A press
which is wholly student oriented fails to relate students
with what should be their prime interest
academic
pursuits. On the other hand, a campus newspaper may
serve as a forum for discussion. It is the only medium
through which all can observe and participate in the needed dialogue.
During the present consideration of the construction
of a new campus, the generaldiscussion has been one of
square feet, parking lots, and architecture. Important
issues, such as publish or perish, the extensive concern
over research grants, the professionalization of athletics,
and a commitment to.education, are largely being ignored.
It is equally' important for the faculty and administration to voice their opinions, as if is for the students. The
dialogue is incomplete and meaningless without the participation of all three groups. The best forum for this
,
dialogue is the campus press.
■
While a student press would concern itself only with
the physical aspects of the new campus, the university
newspaper can be the medium for discussion of the larger
academic issues.
—

(I.P.)—Members of Boston University’s chapter of the American Association of UniversityProfessors recently discussedxa
published statement of faculty
responsibility for students’ acfj
demic freedom. The statement,
published in a recent issue of the

outlines
for freedom of student newspapers and
governments, classroom freedom
of expression for students, and
freedom from unjust administra
tiv,e punishment.
faculty

Chairman of English Department
Agrees With Jeremy Taylor

Bulletin,

association’s

responsibility

The statement declares in its
preamble that "freedom of inquiry and expression are essential attributes of a community
of scholars." It goes on to pro

the Editor

to

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

RE; MR.TAYLOR

lish a list of people who fail or
receive Completes, and will di
rec f mY office staff accordingly

Your column brings to my attention for the first time a practice of the English Department
which I deplore as much as you
do. I agree we should not pub-

Sorry

Albert Cook,
Chairman

:

pose students should be allowed

Spectrum Editorial Praised

to "take reasoned exception" to

any information or views a professor may teach his class, and
demands “protection against un-

just grading and evaluation due
to incompetence, error or prejudice.”
In the Student Publications
section, the statement projects
the belief that “editors and managers of student
publications

should be selected democratically
on the basis of competence, and
in accordance with established

TO THE EDITOR

and developer of the twentienth

procedures.” Neither student control nor a student governing body

Student punishment or dismissal for “alleged
misconduct”
should be for offenses defined
"as clearly as possible, avoiding
such vague phrases as 'undesirable conduct,’ the report adds.
”

Dr. Koch to Read
Poetry Selections
Dr. Kenneth Koch, professor
of English at Columbia University, will read selections of his
poetry today at 4 p.m. in Room
146,

—Thomas C. Rogers

Union Theft

should “limit editorial freedom,”

the statement continues.

century,”, aptly illustrates both
his universality, and all that the
world owes to this truly extraordinary and yet exceptionally
human man, this ‘‘Homo Sapientissimus.” The Spectrum is to be
congratulated for its fitting and
meaningful tribute to the most
outstanding man our era will see.

In the face of the malignant
publicity the Spectrum is presently receiving, I feel that it
should be vigorously praised for
last week’s editorial on Sir Winston Churchill. The writing was
as forceful in its profound simplicity as was the giant to which
it duly paid homage. “A product
of the nineteenth and a founder

TO THE EDITOR

them put it into his pocket, and
they both left. Unfortunately I
did not know at the time that
the girl had paid with a tendollar bill. It was after they had
vanished that the girl came back
after discovering her mistake.
I would suggest that the two
students mail the money to the
candy counter as this would
spare them an unfortunate encounter with me on campus.

Last Saturday, January 30, 1
witnessed a deplorable event.
The scene was the candy counter
at Norton Hall. A girl purchased
30 cents worth of candy. She
picked up 70 cents in change,
absentmindedly leaving another
9 dollars on the countermand left.'
Just then two students who happened to be standing there noticed the mistake, and when
querried by the clerk, claimed
the money was theirs. One of

Diefcndorf Hall.

John Paulidis,
A Greek Exchange Student

Senate Attendance Scored

Dr. Koch is the author of four
books of poetry including ‘‘Ko,
or A Season on Earth” and “Permanently.” His poems have also
appeared in “The New American
Poetry” and the “Partisan Review."
Seven plays written by Dr.
Koch have been produced in offBroadway theatres and include,
“Little Red Riding Hood," “The
Election."
"Pericles,” and
“George Washington Crossing the
Delaware." the latter recently
published in the “Paris Review."
He is currently writing, a novel.

Df. Koch, a native of Cincinnati,
Ohio, graduated from Harvard
University in 1948, He received

his PhD.

from Columbia University and studied in France and
Italy under Fulbright and Guggenheim grants.

cent manifestations of the prob-

lem.

Student apathy on our campus
is manifest in many forms. There
is an acute need for participants
in almost all of our major activties, yet the various drives sponsored this year by campus groups
brought little, if any, response.
The most often cited and, to my
mind, the most distressing incidence of apathy is the fact that

A major (if not the only) undertaking of this year’s senate
has been the revision of the out-

dated constitution of the Student Association. An important
problem such as this at least deserves the attention given to
many of the more trivial problems dealt with at the regularly
scheduled senate meetings. Yet.
at the specially convened senate
assemblies, attendance plunged
to the lowest abyss in its history.
At this point, I am far too un
impressed with the quality of
leadership on tap in our campus
organizations to expect or even

this year's senate attendance is
at an all time low.
The general problem of lack

of “spirit” and indeed the specific problem of senate attendance
has been discussed numerous
times in both the SPECTRUM ediitbrials and Letters to the Editor
column. I see no need, therefore,

hope for change. By voicing my
views, at least 1 can feel that I
did my duty.
Rosy T. Saibin

to belabor the point; 1 merely
wish to point out the more re-

-

; T)rr Koch dras"giverT readings of
FINANCIAL PROBLEM
his poetry at numerous colleges
This year, even though understaffed, we have out- and universities including Yale
grown our budget. At the present time the size and staff University, Brown University,
College, Hamilton College
of the paper by far exceed the present allocation given to Bard
and Vassar College. His poetry
it. This, coupled with a lack of advertising revenue, comreading at the State University
pound the paper's financial problem.
at Buffalo will be sponsored by
Last week the SPECTRUM was 12 pages, while we the Friends of Lockwood Library,
had enough copy for 24 pages. This week we have copy the Charles Abbott Reading Fund
for 32 pages and yet we can only afford to print 20 pages. and the University.
But the end is not in .sight. In some future edition at least
eight pages will have to be cut in order to balance the

TO THE EDITOR

budget.

Financial restrictions should not limit the size of the
newspaper. As much of the news as possible should be
printed. This means more money
If the paper is to meet tin rofc
nal criteria tha
has been set for it, it
business, not an
extracurricuiar activit
equipment and
facilities that meet pro! ssionai standari
New and more
typewriters and telephon
as we
s press cameras and
an addressograph are nec ssar
All in all the financial situation boils down to the
need for more money if the paper is to serve the academic
community as it plans.
To injure a responsible campus press the SPECTRUM
must maintain its financial integrity as well as its
freedom.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at
Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
periods,
Thanksgiving,
exam
Christmas, and Easter.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

-

The next regularly scheduled SPECTRUM will appear
Friday, Feb 19. Copy deadline for this issue is Tuesday,
Feb. 16, at 11:00 a.m.

P KOWAl

Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manage
&gt;pv

le, Ed
Editor

E

Faculty

NEXT ISSUE
'

JOHN

Financial
General Staff

Bernard Dikma
Howard Aoerbac
Alice Osfrande
Paul Nussbaur
Edward Joscely
Wilfiam Siemerini
Dallas Garbe

Don Eismann, Meryl F
:hael, Debbie Rubie,

;

\

Sports

SALVATION
William

ARM\

Hi
Tlu

Si

Photography

Circulation
S

CLA&amp;S

office

countries and 147

Staf

Staff

pntsa

language

HONOR

'

RATIN

9

�5, 1965

gucinski.

SPECTRUM
.

PAGE FIVE

Fraternities Remain

.

REFLECTIONS

Integral in Colleges
(I P.)—The growing sophistica-

By JEREMY TAYLOR

tion and academic drive of today’s college students tend to de
emphasize both the prestige of
fraternities and the intense fra
ternity loyalties and fervor that
characterized the 1920's, believes
Charles R. Dalton of the University of Rochester Office of Institutional Studies and Planning.
He lists the following major
trends that have been observed
in the role of fraternities na-

The New University »1

This institution is in a process

of startling and painful growth.

The Uniformity, will soon move

out on Millerssport Highway to a
new physical plant, about which
we have heard a few fragments,
but plans for which arc not easily available, if they ejfist at all.
I am very concerned over the
complete lack of student participation in the plans for the new
university, both the physical and
financial plans, and the all im
portant plans and projections
concerning the quality and di-

tionally:

"Yes, my dear friend, this is the administration building.
is your ticket and off you go for the spring semester . .!"

Here

.

School Teachers, Students to Attend

Tuition-Free Mathematics Programs
A total of fifty teachers and
twenty-five students will be selected from high schools throughout the country to participate in
two tuition-free mathematics programs at UB this summer. The
programs, to be held from June
28 through August 6, are sponsored by the National ScienceFoundation.

The teachers program, leading
to a master of science degree, will
be aimed at teachers ot grades
10 through 12 with three years
experience who have had at least
one full year of calculus. Participants may complete course requirements for

the master’s degree by attending four summer
institutes at the University.
Junior high school teachers and
teachers who wish to attend for
one summer may also be accepted.

Courses in algebra, geometry,
history of mathematics, statistics,

calculus, and finite and computer
mathematics will be taught by
Dr. Harriet F. Montague, professor of mathematics, Dr. Frank
R. Olson, associate professor of
mathematics and Dr. Kenneth D.
-Magill, assistant professor of
mathematics.
In order to demonstrate how
topics from these courses can be
presented, participants Will teach

and observe a demonstration class
composed of the twenty-five high
school students selected for a

study and research program in
mathematics at the University.
Students who have completed
the eleventh grade in June and
who will be graduating in June
of 1966 will be selected from
high schools with limited opportunities for students of high
ability in mathematics. The pri-

mary purpose of the program is
to bring outstanding students
from public, private and parochial
schools in direct contact with
college teachers and research scientists.
The research activity, which ac-

counts for two-thirds of the stu-

dent’s program, will be under the
supervision of Dr. Magill who
will discuss methods of problem
solving and the use of reference
materials. Students will choose
research projects and will be
guided in developing them by
Dr. Magill,
Applications for the teacher's
program must be postmarked no
later than February 15 to guarantee consideration. The 'student's
application must be received by
March 15. Requests for application forms and more information
can be made to Dr, Montague,
director, 22 Michael Hall, at the
University.'

Discord Among Nations Topic
At International Club Meeting
By SUZANNE SHERBELL

The International Club held its
meeting of the new sem-

1 rst

“ter Thursday, January 28, in
he cafeteria of Norton. Dr. Kb■ert of the Geography Departnent spoke to the group on the
epic of “International Relations."
n his speech he briefly outlined
iiid probed the reasons for disord among the nations of the
''orld. He encouraged the partiipafion of all with an open hand
nd an open heart in order to
“solve these differences. His
peech was followed by a quesion and answer period'.
The President of the organizaion,
Roby Maronian, sketched
ome of the plans for the new
crm. On Saturday. February 6
here will be a Toboggan and Ski
arty for all members. On ThursFebruary

finest

speaket.

February 25 there will be a Panel

Discussion of job opportunities
for foreign students.

Under the leadership of Mr,
Maronian, the International Club
has enjoyed a diverse during the
past term. They have had a Roller Skating Party, an Evening of
International Poetry, a panel discussion of the contrasting ■ role
of women in different societies,
a speech hy Dr, Poudell on the
culture of Nepal, an International
Song Festival, a Talent Show
whose participants were the members, and a Christmas party.

All these activities help to fulfill the purpose of this organization, which is to further the understanding of

On Thursday,

students with the various active
ties of the school On Thursday

different cul-

(CPS)

—

The doors to

universities and land-grant
tutions which once opened
to the nation's graduating
school students are slowly

stale
instiwide

high

clos-

ing, according to a report of the
Office of Institutional Research
of the Association of State Universities and Lang-Grant Colleges.
Traditionally,

these

the

institutions

purpose of
been to

has

provide opportunity to all who
might benefit by a college edubecause of the
cation, but now
pressures created by increased
enrollments and a shortage of
facilities—they must sift through
applicants and take only those
—

with better than average grades.
Some institutions find they
have no room at all for marginal
students, while others must turn
down or screen “C” students.
And some are even faced with
the necessity of having to refuse

admission to qualified students.

Of the 86 institutions that responded to the survey, 21 said
they had always been selective
to some degree and 59 said they
had originally admitted all graduates of accredited high schools
within their states. Of these 59,
however, only 22 have been able
to hold to a relative open-door
police and 2Q have become selective in the past five years
Even amon# those institutions
ual(*s of accredited high sclu
within their states, the door
not wide open. The University of

ment. was formerly high school
graduation, will begin next fall
to limit crtrollment to 4,000 freshdentlc requirements have prevail
ed for some time at the universe
ty’s college of liberal arts;
Although there are no specific
differences in the entrance' re
many

institutions said that hous
students is limi-

ing for women

the free and open exchange of
ideas. This has been achieved

ted. This automatically makes for

both

icial lex
Anyone

an. intellectual

and

greater

selectivity

and

higher

a

crested in joining
may do so simply by going to
their club room, 340, and paying
a nominal fee of one dollar for
a membership card.

university.

I am devoting this column, and
one or two future columns to a

discussion of the function and

engaged in).
As far as the whole university

is concerned, the size of the
classroom is of crucial impor
tance to the seminar method.
There is, of course, the detrimental psychological effect upon a
few people meeting in a huge

means of the good university,
in hopes that the suggestions and
criticisms will provoke thought classroom, but more important
and activity in the student body
than this, there is the whole
concerning this vital change, and
question of using limited space.
in the hope that those legendary The university can not afford
figures in whose hands the futo use classrooms which seat
ture of the new university, lies
four or five hundred students
will heed some proposals includ
for a four hour seminar of Seven
ed in this column, and in the in
students. Thus, if the university
creasing campus dialogue.
builds huge classrooms with the
The principles in which this goal in mind of larger classes
discussion is based are predi
and more students, it is taking
caled upon the assumption that
great steps toward the destruceducation matters
to the intion of the . whole seminar and
dividual student and teacher, to tutorial system, and indeed the
that nebulous creatune, the "sowhole principle of quality educiety", and ultimately to the cation.
to the ensurvival of culture
These are the kinds of decitire world. This may sound tersions that are being made every
ribly grandeous, but I believe
day (or so we are told) about the
that it is factually true. The dial
future course of this University,
lenge and responsibility of the
They are being made, if not in
good university is not merely one
secret, at least in inexcessibility.
of producing "x" number of gradI hope that the students and fac
uates trained to minimal compeulty at this campus will engage
tence in strictly limited disci
in a debate over the future and
plines, but rather the maintenfunction of the new campus, exance and advancement of the
amining problems, like the size
human enterprise.
and purpose of classrooms and
Fundamental to the education
living. accommodations, in relaat enterprise arc freedom (and its
tion to the truly staggering reconcurrent responsibility), relesponsibilities of the university,
coherence
vance,
excitement,
to the world and to the quality
and depth
If all of these are
of education itself
present, the enterprise can not
help but be success. It is the
responsibility of faculty and stu
lie sure to attend Tuesdents to seek for these elements,
day h i g li t s g a in c
in and out of the classroom, and
is is the function of the admin
against Niagara at Meistration (the sole function, I
morial ~rium. Startmight add) to facilitate these ef—

—

'

forts. Thus

the

administrative

function in planning for the new
campus must be yiewcd in this

light.

Most educators would agree in
principle with these statements:
the problems arise when human
principles are applied by admin
istrators whose, primary concern
and "protocol''
is “efficiency

ing lime for the varsitv
i&gt; IIn the preliminary. the Calves will
lake on the Niagara Frosh.
\dmission is free for
hoth games with the presenlalion ol vonr ID card.
contest

(

):

"

Administrative decisions

should

A Former Halfback
Named Director of

r«

I Mrs

lifford C. Furnas
con in the Good

t-

nth

Alumni Relations
arsily

Honor Gould
r

Dining Room

riday

ing institutions indicated they
probably will be forced to become
more selective in the future
particularly for out-of-state stu
—

dents.

February

be held

football halfback has be

nor both
aker Dr

Minnesota’s General College,
whose basic admission require-

tures of the world and to promote
&lt;&gt;n

bruary 18 there will bo a-social
ar in conjunction with Union
aid activities to familiarize the

the

College Enrollment Up

rection of the advanced education to be offered at the new

students and teachers involved
becomes diminishingly important. and the intellectual give
and take, upon which the seminar
is founded, can not be freely

•

-

1. Fraternities have suffered
same loss of. prestige.
2. National fraternities do not
inspire the same chapter loyalty
they once enjoyed.
3. Fraternity membership is
based more upon practical considerations of living and social
facilities and less upon emotional
fraternal loyalties.
4. Both the national fraternity
organizations and their chapters'
are attempting to answer criticisms by the introduction of more
constructive programs to replace
the objectionable features, ’
5. Though fraternities may have
less prestige and less fraternal
meaning, the growth in numbers
gives evidence of their continued
appeal and vitality.
6. The changing fraternity
world may have different impacts
upon different types of institutions. It appears doubtful, how
ever, that fraternities will vanish as an integral part of the
life in most American universities within the foreseeable future.

be based upon the quality of ed
ucation which results. For ex
ample, the seminar is an educational device of great potential
and merit, but its efficacy depends upon mundane things like
when the class meets and how
large it is (there should in my
opinion be no more than seven
people in a seminar, for if it exceeds that size, the ability of the

■

Friday, February

In his new dutif

Mr

Ryan w
ami

ntalion

Mr Ryan, former resident of
Danville. Pennsylvania, received
his bachelor’s degree from the
State ..University at.-Buffalo; .Thins senior year, he received the
"Most Valuable Back" and "Most
Improved Player" awards
He was born in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania and married the for
Sally
Kay
Wlntenight o!
liter

Mr Ryan is currently studying
for his master's degree at the
University and resides with his
wife at 226 Princeton Court, Eg

gertaville, New York

lunnu

he

which
akes
coimuencenien

is. have

of

the wmnC

Meda

riancellor

the

be

l ’diversity's
if the

board

f
Meda

Buffalo

Foundation.

ecipi

,f the.

invitee

Various highlights of the Medal
winner’s life w‘ill be symbolized
in the table decorations

�PACE SIX

International Union of Students Holds

The Highwaymen

Eighth Congress; Signs of Sino-Soviet
Conflict Appear in Agenda Decisions

(Cont'd

The
SOFIA. Bulgaria (CPS)
Eighth Congress of the Inter
national Union of Students (IUS),
the Communist-dominated inter
national student organization, was
the sight of the first open indication of the Sino-Soviet conflict
—

since Khrushchev fell from power in October.
The Congress, which took place

in early December, was high
lighted by a struggle for control
between the pro-Soviet and pro-

Chinese delegates, while the less
committed delegations tried to

bridge the conflict.
Principal points of disagreement were whether or not criticism .of "imperialism" was to
include the phrase, "imperialism
headed by the United States,"
whether or not the Nuclear Test
Ban Treaty was to be, supported,
and whether “peaceful coexistence between states with different social systems" was the most
important international problem,
as the Soviets argued, or "the
struggle against U.S. imperialism.” as the Chinese argued.
The

Chinese

took hard

lines

imperialism," the
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, and
peaceful coexistence.
against

"U.S

ideological clash was evident the first day of the Con
gress. During approval of the
agenda, the Chinese objected to
the phrasing of the first point.
They insisted that the phrase
"against imperialism, colonialism,
and neo-colonialism," which was
An

part of the title of the Executive
Committee's report on its work
and developments in the international student world since, the
last Congress, be amplified by
adding "headed by the USA".
The Chinese proposal was defeated after a sharp debate. The
Chinese then submitted an “emergency motion" against alleged
US, aggression in the Congo.
Argument over the motion centered on the question of specifi-

cally naming the United States

and its President

After an. extensive 8-hour debate. during which the Russians

presented a series of telegrams
concerning the Congo situation,

the Chinese resolution passed. In
the process, the Chinese had all
of the wind taken out of their
sails Later in the Congress, the
Chinese attacked the Russians
on a connected point

“While representatives of So
viet students speak about sup

port of the Congo's people; mount
ed police dispersed recent demonstrations of African student.'
organized in favor of the Congo,’
the Chinese said

The Executive Committee re

port,

day

Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

presented on the second
of the Congress, affirmed

suppot for peaceful coexistence,
national liberation, the Test Ban
Treaty, and the World Youth
Forum
where, interestingly
eonugh. a similar dispute flared
last Sept between Soviet and
—

Chinese delegates.
Mention of the Test Ban Treaty
led representatives from Nigeria
and Japan to condemn the recent
Chinese nuclear explosion. The

from P. 1)
and bass, the group augments its
wide range of vocal interpretations with a variety of precise instrumental techniques.

Chinese delegation said that its
explosions were an inspiration

to peace-loving people.
An attempt to bring about closer cooperation between the International Student Conference, an
international student organization composed of North American, European, and non-aligned

national unions of students, and
the IUS was made by ISC Secre-

tary General J. Gwyn Morgan.
His remarks were not well received, however Morgan and two
other ISC delegates, who had said
that “given a positive attempt
on the part of all concerned to
create an atmosphere of genuine cooperation, a real advance
could now be made in the de-

velopment of international student relations,” was rebuffed in
speeches by over 20 delegates,
most of them violently attacking
his position.
The role of UNEF, the French
National Union of Students, is
symbolic of the difficulties involved in attempting rapproachement between the ISU and the
ISC, which have been feuding
ever since the latter was founded to protest 'he former.
UNEF quit the ISC in 1962,

subsequently announcing its intention of trying to bring international student organizations
back to strictly student problems
and away from politics. When
UNEF decided to join the IUS,
it was with the goal of unifying
the two major international student organizations on a basis of
“education before politics” and

also in the belief that the IUS
was becoming less dependent on
the Soviet Foreign Ministry.
To test this belief, UNEF announced prior to the Congress
that it would support the application of the National Union of
Israeli Students (NUIS) for IUS
membership. UNEF's support,
however, was not strong enough
to overcome Arab resistance. Israel was the only applicant refused membership (the vote
against was 114-16 with eight
abstentions).

UNEF won its “education before politics" battle, however. It
was responsible for the adoption
of a resolution that the national
unions of students conduct a
study of the problems of uriiver
sily structure and recruitment,
and the socio-economic position

of students.
In the final vote, the lack of
substantial strength for the Chi-

nese position within the organization was again evident
as it
had previously been in votes on
resolutions. In a confidence vote,
the leadership of the 1US, which
has been strongly pro-Soviet, carried the majority of the partici—

pating organizations.

The vote of the 78 delegations
entitled to cast ballots was 39 in
favor of the leadership, two
against (China and Albania), six
abstentions, and 31 not taking
part (because the vote took place
early in the morning).
The Congress re-elected Zbynek
Vokrouhlicky of Czechoslovakia
as IDS president, and N. A. Razrak Hussein of Iraq as Secretary
General. The IUS maintains its
headquarters in Prague, Czechoslovakia.

During a concert, they may Use
a score of instruments. In addition to the guitar, their unorthodox instruments include fivestring banjo, recorder, autoharp,
maracas, ten-string South American charango made from an armadillo shell, and a guitarron, a
Mexican bass. They also sing in
English, French, Hebrew and
Spanish, which is why they are
able to bring international sophistication to each song in their
repertoire.
A native of Philadelphia, Bill
Cosby was a football player in
his college days, but he forsook
the sport to pursue a career in
show business. His material ranges far afield—from an incredulous Noah building his ark to
Clark Kent explaining to a cop
why he is using a phone booth
to change into his Superman garb.
Other targets for his wit are the
White House, TV commercials,
parking on a hill and athletics.
Cosby’s advent on the theatrical scene is the result of a strange
series of circumstances. Upon
being discharged from the Navy
medical corps, he entered Temple
University on a track scholarship.
He took a part-time job bartending after his final exams in his
second year there and became a
•ather loquacious dispenser of
spirits, regaling t h e customers
with his odd brand of whimsey
as he pushed potables across the
mahogany. Pretty soon he had
collected his own coterie of followers and somehow the word
spread to New York. He was
booked into the Gaslight Cafe in
Greenwich Village, “discovered”
by a New York Times reporter,
and publicized ecstatically in the
pages of that august, journal of
current events. Other club en
gagements followed promptly and
the doors to the top television
variety shows spran ; open.
He has played the Gate of Horn
m Chicago; Mr. Kelly's in that
same city: the Hungy i, San
Francisco; the Shadows, Washington; the Bitter End, New York;
and the Fifth Peg, Toronto.
Immediately preceding his appearance at UB. Bill will host
Johnny Carson’s “Tonight Show”
Thursday.

If nationally acclaimed talent
such as the Highwaymen and Bill
Cosby arc to be presented in concert on campus, the all-out support of the student body is needed. If this forthcoming concert
is not successful, similar programs
at UB will be a thing of the past.

Senate

(Cont’d from P. 1)
,

,

,

tee” under the auspices of the
Student Congress. The Publications Board would become “The
Publications Committee” and retain their former obligations, except in the case of removal of
an editor, when the Student Senate will be asked to rule.
The Discussion Begins

Thursday, Jan. 28, the Student
Senate met to begin debate on
the new constitution. At this
meeting, George Orlando, the
president of Union Board, rose
to object to the elimination of
Union Board as an autonomous
body in the new constitution. He
moved to amend the new constitution to recreate a Union Board,
which would be independent of
control of the Student Senate.
His motion was defeated.
Mr. Orlando said, “Since 1958,
we have been operating under
The present structure
I feel
that the present structure has
carried out its purpose, and I see
no evidence that in the future it
will fail to do so. There is no
excuse for changing the entire
structure of the Association,
...

“1 will admit that the old constitution-of the Association needs
to be updated as the Union
Board's was last year, but I do
not see why the entire structure
needs to be changed.
“In 1957, when the present
constitution was inacted, the situation which the new constitution proposes was in existence;
that is, there was a Board of
Managers which appointed all
committee chairmen. The Executive of the Association has the
power we abolished in ’57, This
was done away with initially for
the following reasons: (1) The
functions of the Student Senate
and the Union Board are completely different and cannot be
grouped under one head, and (2)
The positions were appointed and
hence, drew less respect from
the students and a lack of participation due to the lack of responsibility involved.”

the Union Board should be answerable to the elected body,
representing the students. He
added that the system of cheeks
and balances would be adhered
to in the proposed system of
Executive appointment of Union
Board officers. He said, “The
budget objection raised is legitimate; however, remember who
is objecting to what section. Does
the Union Board object to the
fact that we are taking power
from the Board? We must consider this new constitution for
one and only one reason; a better
campus for years to come.”
Tuesday evening the Graduate
Student Association announced its
unanimous desire to withdraw
from affiliation with the Student
Association. The present constitution defines members of the
Student Association as all undergraduate, graduate, and professional students. Under the new
constitution the graduate students would be fully autonomous.
The Graduate Student Association is presently recognized by
University authorities as completely independent from the undergraduate group. The change
in the Student Association Constitution will clarify a long standing constitutional contradiction.

Constitutional meetings will be
held every Tuesday and Thursday until further notice. If and
when the constitution is passed in
the Student Senate, it will be
considered in the Faculty Senate. The final step toward adop
tion will be a general referendum of Student Association members. Copies of the constitution
are available in the Senate Of
fice, Room 205.

The SPECTRUM
now printed by
’

Mr. Orlando also pointed out

that the financial burden the
Union Board on the Student
Senate Treasurer would be impossible to efficiently handle.
Treasurer Bill Burger agreed
wholeheartedly.

David Frey, the chairman of
the Constitutional
Committee
felt that within the framework
of a democratic government, any
group with the responsibility of
the handling of funds, such as

*3nc.

sAliyolt &amp; Sknith printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284
••**§3^14

!

�Friday, February

5, 1965

SPECTRUM

®

—
—

Canterbury Association
Tuesday and Wednesday at 2:003:00 pm., the third in the current discussions of the “Gospel

Saint John" will be
Both sessions will be
held in Room 266 Norton. All
students and faculty members are
invited to attend either of the
duplicate sessions.
According to

offered.

In addition, there will be an
open house Wednesday evening,
at 8:00 p.m., 1179 Elmwood Avenue opposite the State College.
Hillel

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: “What We
Believe About History.”

Hillel will have one of its evening suppers Sunday at 5:30 p.m.
in the Hillel House. The speaker
will be Dr. Charles Ebert, Chairman, Department of Geography,
Dr. Ebert’s subject will be: “The
Jewish People and Arab Nationalism.” This will be the second
meeting in a current series on:
"The Jewish People and the Contemporary World,” Reservations
for the Supper should be made at
Hillel House,

Hillel is now inviting students
to enter a national essay contest
on the subject: “The Jewish Con-

cept of Freedom: Legacy and
Challenge.” Three prizes will be
awarded. Any full time undergraduate college student is eligi-

ble to participate by submitting
an essay before May 15. Further
details are available at the Hillel
House.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship

Our new Bible studies will meet
Thursday at noon and Friday at
9:00 a m. during the second semester. The prayer meetings will
be held Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. and
Thursday at 4:30 p.m, in the
afternoons. These meetings will
be held in the CRO office in

Norton Union, Room

21'^^

Wednesday, Feb. 17, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsoring a guest speaker, James W.
I- Hills, Minister of Bethlehbm
Presbyterian Church. His topic
will be “Is There Meaning in
Life?” The meeting will be at

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

Students to sell growing
line of home products.
Easy. No risk. Commuters preferred.
831-3657—Tony Gerace

3:00 p.m. The room will be announced next week.
Everyone is cordially invited to
come to all of these activities.

Liberal Religious Fellowship
There will be a meeting of the
Liberal Religious Fellowship Sun-

day in Room 248 Norton at 7:30
p.m. The topic is Patchen. All
are welcome.
Muslim Students Association

Request the pleasure of your
company at a gala Eid Celebra-

tion (the Muslim day of rejoicing)
Saturday in the Conference Theater—129 Norton Hall, at 7:00
p.m. Besides introductory speeches on Islam, an added feature of
festivities would be the delica-

cies from different Muslim countries of the world, and a panorama of films and songs.
Newman

Mr. Gerald Mishey will speak at
the weekly meeting Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
His topic will be “South America”.

PAGE SEVEN

IF TO DM

Library. Selections of Joyce manu
scripts and books from the exten-

Official Bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an
authorized publication of the

State University of New York at
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to the Old
Faculty Club, attention Mrs. Fix,
before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General Notices
NOTICE OF
MAKE-UP EXAMINATIONS

Applications for make-up examinations for the removal of INCOMPLETE GRADES must be
filed in the Office of Admissions
and Records, 201 Hayes Hall no
later than MARCH 8. 1965. Makeup examinations begin APRIL 12,

The next S.C.A. meeting will be
held Thursday at 49 Heath Street,
the Chaplain’s home, at 7:30 p.m.
The speaker will be Mrs. Ruth
Becker. Mrs. Becker is a graduate of Vassar and spent a year
in Germany under a Fulbright
scholarship. She is married and

the mother of two children. She
will discuss the subject, ‘‘How to
Be a Woman in a Neuter W'orld.”
Supper Will be served at 6:00
p.m. Please make reservations by
calling TF 6-5806 or TF 4-4250.
The second study session on the
“Theology of Genesis” will be
held Wednesday in Norton Room
226, at 4:00 p.m. All are welcome.

U of Texas Defeats
Bi-cameral Measure
(CPS) —A proposal to establish
a bi-cameral student legislature
at the University of Texas has
been overwhelmingly defeated by
the Texas Student Assembly, the
present student legislative body.
The measure, which was voted
down 23-4, would have established a Student House of Representatives to discuss matters of
state, national, and international
importance. The present Student
Assembly would have become the
Student Senate, and would have
continued to deal with campusoriented matters as it presently
does.
Student Body President Greg
Lipscomb, who co-authored the
proposal termed it “a progressive
idea in the sense that we’d be
doing something new.” He said
the idea had caused interest
around the country, and that the
Universjty of Utah proposed a
„

similar system when it learned
of it.

Speaking against the measure,
representative said he
felt the only possible effect of
the voicing of political views
would be to ' alienate people and
organizations which might possibly be of value to students on
valid student problems, or have
no effect at all."

another

sive collection of the State University of New York at Buffalo,
Lockwood Library, will be on display.
February

Weekly Calendar
February 2-9—

First Annual James Joyce Day

Exhibit ■ to commemorate his
birth will be held in the Joyce
room o( Lockwood
Memorial

5—

by Kenneth
from his own works, in
146 Dicfendorf Hall.

Poetry Reading

Koch
room

Psychiatric Research Seminar

featuring Dr. Marvin K. Oplcr,
department of psychiatry, school
of medicine, whose topic will be
"Social Psychiatry: Some General
Trends and Specific Studies”
Meyer Hospital, C. Basement conference room, 12:30 p in.
February 11—
Fine Arts Film - entitled "1 Am
a Camera"

February 12—

Concert featuring Mtscha Sch
neider and Leo Smit, 8:30 p.m.
Baird Hall.

Placement
Announcements
The

Veterans

Administration

Hospital has announced a training position for library work for
candidates interested in a Master’s Degree in library science.
U.S. Dept, of State interviewer
will be on campus March 12 to
discuss careers in the Foreign
Service of the United States.
The National Teacher Examination - will be administered March
20 at SUNYAB. Deadline for application is February 12.
Orange Unified School District Mr. Bruce J. Julian, the representative tor the Orange Unified
School District; Orange, California, will be in the Ohio area the
week of February 21. For an ap
pointment to see him, contact him
at the following address: Mr
Bruce J. Julian, Administrative
Assistant, 370 North Glassell £t.;
Orange,

California.

'

INTERVIEWS

February 5—
Monticollo Central School
District No 1
February 8—
White Plains Central Schools
Greece Central Schools
February 9—
Central Square Central Schools
February 12—
Hornell Central Schools
Appoinmtents necessary for all
placement interviews

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

February 5—
Carborundum Co.
Equitable Life Assurance Co.
General Adjustment Bureau
Ford Motor Co.
Stamping Plant
Ingersoll Rand Co.
February 8—
Niagara Machine &amp; Tool Works

-

Phoenix of Hartford
Insurance Co.

Remington Rand

Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Manzel Division

1 l[
I

Motorola, Inc.

February 10—
REA Express
Burroughs Corp.
American Telephone &amp;
Telegraph
February 11—
Owens-Illinois
The Higbee Co.
W. T. Grant Go.
The Chase Manhattan Bank
Wright Patterson AFB
Aero-Systems

heretofore
people" who h r
thetic beautaken pride in th.
ty of their campus However, as
with most innovations on the
the
UB campus, the addition of
fireboxes will serve a very ef
ficient purpose.
Mr. Matthew Andrews, custodian of Lockwood Library, revealed

-Photo

A.

by

Division

For interview appointments or
information, please call 831-3311,
University Placement Services,

Schoellkopf Hall.

(IP)
The experiment in coeducational existence for the 233
students living at Ellsworth and
Carruth-O’Leary halls and attending the 1964 summer session at

.

the University of Kansas is being hailed here as a success, according to a survey taken by the
Association of University Resi-

dence Halls (AURH).
Not only did the converted coeducational halls provide opportunities for summer students to

meet and date the opposite sex,
the unique living situation
brought about improved manners

and behavior, the survey found.
Students found few inconveniences in coeducational living.
Women students complained of
the inaccessibility of the snackbar facilities in Ellsworth after
closing as late night hunger could
mean a trip to the candy machines in hair curlers.
Lack of a senior key system
during the summer meant en-

forcement of closing hours for
graduate and senior women and
drew

complaints from residents.
General approval of the living
system was evident in students'

statements

LOCKWOOD'S NEW FACE

-

—

that the fireboxes mark a change
in the system of fire protection
on the campus. With
system, the alarm was connected
only to the building. When the
alarm was set off, the fire department had to be contacted.
With the new system, the alarm
will automatically, ring at the fire
house, thus causing the fire en
lines to arrive more quickly
Mr. Andrews expressed his dis

*

Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.
Marine Trust Co.
Union Carbide
Chem. Division
February 9—
General Mills, Inc.

Co-ed Living Tried

Fireboxes Add New Safety,
Efficiency to Former System
Most bright-eyed, wide awake
students returning to campus
after intersession have undoubtedly noticed several new additions to many of the buildings:
large, red fireboxes which have
been attached to such buildings
as Crosby, Baird, Diefendorf and
most noticeably on the front of
Lockwood library.
These additions have probably
upset those “artistic, sensitive

TEACHER PLACEMENT

Ross Laboratories

1965.

1965 Midyear Commencement:
Commencement will take place,
The Sunday night discussion Friday, February 12 at 10:30 a.m„
groups will continue each Sunday
Music Hall. Candidates
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the Hall. Kleinhans
for degrees should be present at
Theology classes begin Tuesday, the Mary Seaton Room of Kleinand Thursday. Courses 102 and hans Music Hall no later than
401 are offered Tuesdays at 10:00
9:30 a.m., February 12. Detailed
a.m. and 3:00 p.m., respectively, instructions may be obtained
Course
207
ThursNorton
330;
in
through divisional offices.
days at 3:00 p.m. in Norton 330.
Rehearsal will be held at KleinMass is said daily at noon at the
hans at 3:30 p.m., Thursday, FebHall.
auditorium.
Newman will have a Toboggan ruary 11, in the main
plan to be
should
candidates
All
Friday,
Cars
leave
will
Party
there. Candidates Unable to attend
Newman Hall at 7:00 p.m.
the commencement exercise must
Just a reminder: the next Eduto receive
cational Weekend will be held make arrangements
their degrees by contacting the
February 26, 27 and 28 in Syraoffice of their academic dean.
cuse.
Student Christian Association

IILI if D CD

®

Marc L*vin«

like of the placement of the new
fireboxes. He is afraid that some
“students will fool with them
and accidentally set them off’be
cause of their prominent loca
tion He is, however, hoping that
students will be sufficiently mature to realize that the new system is for their own safety.

that

they

did not

find the changes necessitated by
co-ed living inconvenient. Over
80 per cent added that the situation did not cause them to feel
ill at ease, either at meals or in
the residence hall and recreation
areas.
About 50 per cent of the residents indicated they had dated

another resident hall student
Nearly two-thirds reported they
had attended at least one hall
social function during the summer Over 60 per cent of the students surveyed felt the co-educ*tional system should be extended
to cover housing during the regular academic year

�Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Demonstration at UC
Tells American Legion
Manner
Concrete
Questions inJOSEPH SEDITA
Speaker Ban Needed

‘Noetics’ Seriously Considers

CAMPUS PERSONALITY
Kim Darrow, a freshman from North Collins, New
York, is Vice President of the Liberal Religious Fellowship, student Co-Chairman of the Faculty-Student Committee on Academic Freedom, and a seriously committed
citizen of the academic community.
Kim’s involvement in these crucial areas is not the
result of euphoric frosh idealism, but of a clear, logical

By

Another “.small" magazine is emerging from the
Unlike many of its “Artsy-Craftsy”
counterparts, Noetic* is a serious, thoughtful publication.
An attempt of a group of students and faculty at Syracuse University, Noetic*, in the words of editor Robert E.
Morrisson, is “a national magazine dedicated to the de-

By

groves of academe.

velopment of a new human im
age for our age, an image that
beyond
locates the substance
despair. ;and the expression of
human possibility beyond pro-

We might well be suspicious
of such grandiose abstractions,
except for the fact that Noetics,

at least in this first issue, comes
to grips with these problems in
an honest and concrete fashion.
Thoughtful and provocative questions about concepts like community1 and committment are
dealt with on both a personal

MAUN SWOPE

The Daily Iowan

The national commander of the
Ammerican Legion has said that
the recent student demonstrations
on the University of California’s
Berkeley campus indicate a need
for a ban on Communists speaking at educational institutions.
The commander, Donald Johnson, told 250 Legionnaires in
Lodi, California, .that the Ber
keley demonstrations were “an
example of defiance of our laws
and abusive actions against our
peace officers.”
Police arrested 801 demonstrators December 2, following a sitin in the university’s administra-

grasp of questions which arc vitally important to all members

tion building as a climax to

months of student protests
against the school’s regulations

and social basis..

activity

governing political

on

campus
The

fiction is competent and

“I think the recent events at
the University of California arc
new evidence of the need for
the (Communist speaker) ban,”
Johnson said.
“Who is to deny that young
minds are impressionable, and

at times absorbing, 'the poetry
appears to he carefully selected,
and if not actually brilliant at
least shows a urcat deal of promContributors include Ur.
Meadows, chairman of the
part merit of Sociology and
thropology at Syracuse I’.,
Drs Diamond and Mi/ruchi.

Paul
de
An

tion.

is published by the
Fugitive* Press and is available
at The Student Hook Store and
the t’niversity Book Store at sixty cents a copy.

More Responsibility,

GSCLB Student

and

also

that institu

social scientists at

Noetics

Honor-Bound Students Writes Handy Guide
At Dickinson College

(I.P.)
Fewer rules and more
responsibility are the keynotes of
women’s government on the Dick
insnn College campus, according
to Professor Barbara Wishmcycr,
—

Dean of Women
All resident
women are now living under a
new dormitory honor system, she
reports.
Each girl is honor bound to a

code making her responsible to

herself and to her fellow students
for maintaining the integrity of
the dormitory community She

must abide by all dormitory rules
arid, procedures, report herself
for any violations of these regulations. and report on any other
resident who has violated a rule
if she is unwilling, after a warn
ing, to report herself .
The portion of the code con
corning the reporting of fellow
students was the most conlrover
the exlensiv
aluation of women's rules con
ducted by the Womc
last ve.a

Carol Anne Uaskopf, preside!

Ginhy Winslow, col-

(ACPI

umnist for The Forty-Niner, California State College at Long
Beach, has come up with her own

handy-dandy Guide of Things to
Sec at Cal State,
Chronologically speaking, the
first thing you see upon entering
CSC1.U is the smart-looking green
This
and white Cal-State sign
sign is seen from your car window as you wait for a break in
the line of traffic so you may

enter the

campus. The best time.
To really observe the sign is about
five minutes to t) a m., when you
often can sit and look, at it for
10 to 12 minutes at a time.
Then there’s the famous cam
pus coffee machine, which performs several entertaining routines with coffee, cups, cream and
your money. Example: You, may
put iti a dime and receive coffee and a papier cup In that ur-

eter.

who would knowingly submit his
own children to the teachings of
a known Communist or one who
is thoroughly indoctrinated in
Communist ideology?”
The student demonstrations are
closely tied to a drive by the
American Communist Party to
speak before high school, college,
and university groups, he said.
The Communists consider their
effort worthwhile if they convert
but a single student to their
cause," he said. “It was Gus Hall
himself, the general secretary of
the American Communist Party,
who said the youth program of
the party is so important that
he would go anywhere to meet
with young students even if but
one student were met."
Johnson said he was confident
that the vast majority of American youth was not* gullible enough

to swallow Communist ideology.
“Yet," he said, "we know there
are some who arc susceptible,
and this was proved at Berkeley."
"Some 800 out of a total of
27.500 students docs not seem
like much, but it is too many.”
The American Legion opposes
the appearance of “spokesmen
for the Communist conspiracy on
tax-supported properties,” Johnson said. "thus using these fa
cilit ies for sounding boards for
Com tmunist propaganda.”

•Let's conclude our imaginary
ip w ith a main attraction
fabulous, newly-enlarged campus

of this institution. He feels that
the concept which is central to
his activities, academic freedom
is basic to the reason he is at
the University, to achieve a lucid
and honest understanding of our
world. Kim wants "no restrictions on the legitimate search
for meaning.” His committee will
strive to oppose political tests for
teachers and pressures from external groups, and will attempt
to secure a greater degree of
autonomy for the academic community

At the present time, Kim is
uncertain as to what his major
field will finally be. "My main
concern is what I study while
I’m here,” he says. It might be
aided that he is also very concerned about HOW he studys it.

KIM DARROW

Publish or Perish Rule Viewed
As Sheer Nonsense by Educator
“The dedicated scholar has not

(I.P.j
Unless an educator has
something important to say, it
might be better for him to perish
than to publish, according to Dr.
Perry E. Gresham, president of
Bethany College.
—

only need to read and study, but
also to converse with his scholarly colleagues and to think accurately about his discipline. This
will be accomplished only, in my
opinion, if he systematically
writes out his ideas whether they
find their way into some recondite periodical or not.’’

Chairman of the Commission
on Colleges and Universities of
the North Central Association of
Colleges and Secondary Schools,
Dr, Gresham believes that “publishing for publishing’s sake is
sheer nonsense. It is stupid for
university and college administrators to insist on publication
without attention to the significance of the material published.

SUPPORT

THE

"Among scholars a reputation
is enhanced by honorable and important published material. Trivial and unworthy material may
greatly harm the reputation of
the scholar. There is something

BULLS

to the old proverb. ‘Oh, that mine
would write a book,'

enemy

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�Friday, February

5, 1965

War Cry' Suggests
Corruption of Youth
James Bond Effect
BOB EWEGEN
The Colorado Daily
By

The British Salvation Army
weekly, War Cry, recently suggested that the “violence, illicit
sex, gambling and gormandizing”
of the late Ian Fleming’s James
Bond books may be demoralizing
British youth.
“Violence in the Bond books
reaches psychopathic degrees.
Cruelty seems to be for the love
of cruelty: sadism is present,

too,” the newspaper said.
It then suggested that, “As
most Bond fans are youngish, it
may not be coincidence that the
. , criminal statistics for England and Wales show a nine per
cent increase of indictable offenses, including robbery, murder, and other crimes of vio-

lence.”
Well, the British Salvation Army is doubtless correct in its
analysis of the effects of the
famed British novelist’s works.
Violence, gambling, and illicit
sex are enough to corrupt any
callow youth. Their standards,
however, raise some interesting
thoughts about another, even
more famous, work of literature.
This book also includes many
scenes which, by British Salvation
Army standards, must be judged
quite degrading for “youngish”
readers. Among them:
An exotic dancer, by a shameless display of her charms, so bewitches a head of state that he
orders the brutal beheading of a
ranking religious figure.
A city is beset by an invading
force which “utterly destroyed all
in the city, both men and women,
young and old, oxen, sheep, and
asses, with the edge of the sword,”
after its walls are toppled by a
horn blast.

A swashbuckling young hero,
easily equal of secret agent 007,
tears a lion asunder with his bare
hands, lights torches to fox’s
tails to burn down grainfields
and kills a thousand men with a
jawbone of an ass (surely a greater feat than the havoc wrought
by the karate blows of Goldfinger’s henchman Odd Job.)
The hero, unfortunately, is seduced and betrayed by a woman
he had trusted. Blinded and held

captive, he still destroys three

thousand of the enemy in his

dying act.
A rebel leader destroys an enemy army by luring into the path
of two huge tidal waves where
it is drowned to the last man. Earlier he conducted a number of
terroristic acts against the same
enemy, including arranging for

the destruction of children, po-

CUNY Students Volunteered
As Remedial Tutors in Harlem
NEW YORK (CPS)—More than
150 students from the City University of New York (CUNY) have
volunteered this semester to tutor
children in remedial subjects at
schools, churches and community
centers in Harlem.
By teaching basic skills, such as
reading and arithmetic, to youngsters who require educational encouragement and guidance, they
hope “to give these children some
kind of ambition, something to
look forward to,” one tutor said.
Yhe projects were started during the past year by various student groups that wanted to help
culturally deprived children in
Harlem. Participants are required
to serve from One to three hours
weekly at schools and churches
in the vicinity.
The concept of Student tutorials
was originated several years ago
by students at northern universities, Such projects have already
proved to be highly successful in
a number of large cities in the
north, and notably in Chicago,
where students from the University of Chicago have operated
such a program for some years
now.

The

Northern Student Movement, a civil rights organization,
and the United States National
Student Association have actively encouraged the establishment
of tutorial programs for some
years now, and it is expected that
President Johnson’s War on Poverty will give the projects addipossibly by utiltional support
izing VISTA volunteers.
The CUNY tutors are enrolled
in various voluntary programs
sponsored by five undergraduate
—

agencies; Sigma Alpha, an honor-

ary

service society; the Baruch
School Committee on Human
Rights; Student Government; and
the school's chapters of the Congress on Racial Equality, and
Newman Club.
only
The newest but largest
two months old
is sponsored
—

—

by the Congress of Racial Equality. Coordinated by Dennis Raveneau, a freshman electrical engineering major, the program

benefits 60 Harlem youngsters.
Fifty City University students
staff the CORE program which is

A new concept in an
(I.P.)
interrelated area studies program
is in preliminary planning stages
at The University of Texas under
the guidance of Dr. William
Goetzmann, new director of the
University’s
American Studies
—

Program.

The ruler of a great nation commits adultery with the wife of
one of his generals and orders his
chief of staff to send the general
in the fore front of the hardest
fighting, and then draw back
from him, that he may be struck
down and die. A son of the ruler
rapes his own sister, another son
betrays his father and leads a
rebellion, etc.
The book includes one of the
great erotic poems of history,
other tales of conquest, rape and
plunder, a detailed account of
the sadistic torture and brutal
death of a carpenter who was
captured by a ruthless conqueror
which had bribed one of his confidants to learn his whereabouts,
descriptiops of wild banquets
and numerous other instances of
"violence, illicit sex, gambling,

the undergraduate offerings in
American Studies, placing special
emphasis on Southwestern culture and the traditional interrelations between Latin America and
the United States. “The country
is starting to look North and
South instead of East and West.
Texas is the logical place for an
interrelated program in two area
study fields: American Studies
and Latin American Studies,” Dr.

and gormandizing.”

Perhaps the British Salvation
Army or some other censorship-

minded group should become

aroused and attack this book as
corrupt and degrading to our
youth.

Who knows, if they did, people
even start to read it.

might

held afternoons Monday through
Thursday in two Harlem church-

es.
In addition to teaching one or
two afternoons each week, the
tutors attend training seminars
every Saturday where qualified
techers help them prepare lessons for their pupils. To gain
insight into a child's specific
problems, tutors are instructed
to watch for the rmj£t common
pitfalls
word-recognition, vocabulary, spelling, and comprehension.
The approach to the children is
informal. Ravencau said, "since
one can't sit a child down with
a book right away.”
The tutors and third to sixth
grade children use a large room
at the church. Here they play the
piano, sing songs, or play word
games in order to become acquainted with each other. Only
after child and tutor have developed a friendly relationship
will the tutor begin to introduce
formal academic instruction.
One aspect of the program involves children who do not need
remedial work. Many of the 25
involved in it are actually reading above grade and to have
above-average academic potential.
Rav.eneau said his tutorial team
is seeking to retain and expand
the interests of these children
so they will be encouraged to
think of college later on.
He has started a mimeographed
literary magazine which incorporates stories, articles, and puzzles by the children. They are
also encouraged to read novels
and other advanced books brought
from home by the tutors.
In spite of some problems —some parents are unwilling to

Dr. Goetzmann hopes to expand

Goetzmann says.

“At Texas in this respect we are
fortunate in being able to build
on strength, since a number of
professors whose interests lie in
this field are already here,” he
points out, naming Drs. Mody
Boatright, Gordon Mills and Wilson Hudson in English, Drs. Joe
Frantz and John Sunder in history, and Dr. Richard Adams in
anthropology.
Inaugurated two years ago, the
present integrated area program
draws from various disciplines
(English, history, anthropology,
philosophy, sociology, economics
and government) to deal with
problems involving the use of

ATTENTION
FACULTY

—

ANNUAL
SALE
Caps Gowns Hoods

let their children attend tutorials
—Ravencau feels the program is
accomplishing something.
“The children get a great deal
of fun out of it,” he said. This
is most important, he continued,
since, “their greatest problem is
in overcoming the defeatist attitude they develop when they see
their own brothers and sisters,
most of them school dropouts, on
the streets without jobs.”
“If we can show them that life
is not hopeless,” he said,“we will
consider the program a success."

New Concept in Interrelated
Studies Planned by U of Texas

luting water, and destroying crops

and livestock.

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

cultural, scientific, governmental
literary or historical data.

r j
M

I

y
§

Dr. Goetzmann believes this
type of academic program to be
a more realistic approach to any
real life situation, “since you
do not compartmentalize your
own life,” he notes.
The American Studies Program
includes junior and
senior students. Dr. Goetzmann
hopes to expand the seminar and
research course offering in American Studies to make a more
fully-rounded program. This year
he is teaching a junior course,
"20th Century America and Its
Historical Antecedents” and a
graduate seminar in American
cultural history.

presently

■ In 1965-66 he hopes to teach a
basic course on American institutions and ideas and to develop
a comparative culture course on
the American character. He hopes
later to expand the American
Studies Program to include such
courses as 'Leadership and Social Change in America,” “The
Artist in America" and a research
seminar in social science.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

Order must be placed with us
prior to February 23rd.

�Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

l'\e(i(jiou5

The

THE CRO
Council of Religious

Civil Rights...
—

(Cont’d from P. 1)

Catholic student on campus
is a member of the Newman
Apostolale and- is encouraged to
lake an active part in the club’s
activities. Religious activity of
the Apostolate includes a daily
noon mass in the Newman Hall
chapel, as well as three masses
on Sunday at the Catalician
Center Communion breakfasts,
novenas and the annual retreat
complete the religious program.
Meetings are held Wednesdays,
1:30 p in. in. Norton, flick StepEvery

Or-

ganizations represents all religious groups on campus in University affairs. Presently there are
nine affiliated organizations
which send representatives to
Council meeting, alternate Wednesdays at 4;00 in room 217. The
purpose of the Council is to
promote religious welfare at UH.
The Council sponsors Kampus
the
Karnival, participates in
World University Service and has
a voting scat on the Student
Senate,

Gamma Delta, the International
Association for Lutheran Stu
dents, is open to all Lutheran

undergraduates and graduates.
Topics of interest to the group
are discussed at each meeting,
alternate Wednesday nights at
6:00 in room 044 Retreats arc
held each semester for spiritual,

intellectual and social growth.
Interested students may contact
Reverend Cattail at NF.0-5177.
The Canterbury Club seeks to
a desire to pcrcicve

stimulate

andnvespohd to God. Membership
is open to all. Currently the
Club's programs include study
of Ihe Gospel of Staint John, a
series on the New Testament,
and study of the Episcopal
Church Interested students may

,

find Father Beatties-.in. the RathskellerI ■ Tuesdays and Wednesdays 11;0() 1:00 p.m and in room
206 from I 20-4:00 p.m
,

Eeelurcs pertinent to college
activities and yearly workshops
activities of
it,, Christian Science Organize
tion This groyep also services the
three areas on campus where tin
Christian Science Monitor is &lt;1 is

newski, TK 5-9596 may be contacted for further information.

The Student Christian Association is ah ecumenical Protestant
organization. Membership is open
to all students interested in participating in the student Christian

movement through study, discus-

and work projects. Meetings are, held every other Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
John A Buerk, Protestant Chaplain, 40 Heath Street or at the
University Presbyterian Church,
Recent
discussion themes included . two sessions on “Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf,” led
by Conrad Bromberg, playwright
in residence, and “The Problem
of Identity in our Culture," by
Professor Jesse Nash. Contact
John Buerk, TF 4 4250 for more
sions

information.

The Wesley Foundation is a
part of the Methodist student
movement. It is open to any Protestant affiliated student and
meetings include supper and a
program every Sunday at the
Church,
University
Methodist
Minnesota and Bailey. Information may be obtained from Ted
Brook's, 837-6182.
,

—

Religious

activity

on this, cam

pold

a

11(17:1

iv the C'UO and directed by the
aeal organizations, students have
chance to learn about, explore

with

that any hostility which
might have risen on the part of
the recipients toward the welfare workers can be removed and
more can be accomplished if the
feel

impoverished are given the opportunity to help themselves.
Further, they arc more aware
of their needs than any outsider can be.

CAO committees, which are
beginning to be formed throughout the country, are already being taken over by the local governments. The issue at stake is:
Who will administer the antipoverty bill, the local officials or
the representatives of the people themselves? In the south,
control seems to have fallen into
the hands of the segregationists,
who arc using the committees for
their own purposes. Drew Pear
son, in the Saturday, January 30,
the Courier-Express,
issue
wrote the following:

“J. P. Dean of Corinth, Missis-

sippi, to be head of the anti-

poverty program for five Mississippi counties despite the

fact that one year ago, February
14, Dean boasted that he would

use federal urban renewal funds

and relocate ‘82 Negro families
who live within a block of our
white high school, and solve a

potentially dangerous situation.’

similarly

interested

collca

Hillel

for college
House, 40 Capon

Authority.

Six ex-officio members were
then chosen for the council by
the above members. They are;
Commissioner
County
Health
Mosher, County Welfare Commissioner Burke, Buffalo Superintendent of Schools Manch, Rev.
Wozniak of the Catholic Charities, William McFarland of the
United Fund and Chester Gorski, president of the Buffalo
Common Council.

When the above sixteen council members had been chosen,
■NCAAP anti the Urban League
protested that there were no
members of any of the groups
that were to receive the aid. The
next three members to be chosen
were Negroes:
Rev. Porter W. Phillips, pastor of Humboldt Parkway Baptist Church; Mrs. LeRoy Coles
Sr., of the United Negro College
Fund Organization, and Dr. Herbert C. Holmes, vice-chairman of
the Michigan YMCA. Two more
members were finally added:

William D. Roesser, president
of J. W. Clement Company, and
Gerald Saltarelli, president of

Eric County CAO is indicative of
these committees. The CAO has
21 members: 18 are cither city
or county officials. While three
arc Negroes Puerto Ricans, Indians and poor whites arc not
represented. Of the 21 members,
five were appointed. from the
county government by Mr, E.

Mike Lappin, heat
Rights committee ot
sity, gave the foil
ment to the Friday
issue of the Couf'

County

Supervisor.

They

County Planning Commissioner
Barnes. County Personnel. Commissioner Neff, County Budget
Stiller
Tchcrowicz

torney

,1
i
participate in the activities of the
Hillel Foundation a Jewish or

iianization

”

Lutheran Church and Mrs. Milton Kahn, member of the executive board of the Community
Welfare Council; Harlow Swift,
president of Erie Bank; James
J. Kane, president of the Buffalo
AFL-CTO Council, and R. Sip
prell, of the Municipal Housing

In the north, the issue is that
CAO is perpetrating the same
problems which plague the administration of welfare.
The

Rath,

;m.s is, vanet

their local organization Meetings
are held, each'Thursday evening
7 ft p.m in Norton 1144 Question

Five more were appointed by
William Marcy of the Community
Welfare Council. They are: Rev.
Ralph Loew of the Holy Trinity

and

Supervisor

Houdaille Company.

Je

Civil
Jniverstate-

jry

29.

?Ss:

"It is our feeling that the
membership of the CAO does not
comply with the spirit of the
antipoverty bill's statement that
the membership should be broadly representative of the community. We feel that this represents
the larger problem which seems
to be troubling many welfare
programs in that it fails to provide, the impoverished with mechanisms for self-help."

Dissatisfied with the CAO, Mr

Lappin spoke to Mr. Russo, exec
utive assistant to Mr. Rath. Although Mr. Russo agreed in part
with Mr. Lappin's principles, he
did not seem to think they were
of great enough concern to merit
his changing the present situa-

tion. He insisted the committee
was broadly representative of
of the community.

To alert the public to the situation, to make a definite statement of protest, and to put pressure on the CAO to recognize its
membership, students and CORE
members proceeded to demon
strate. Thirty-five people took
part in the demonstration.
CORE, along with other Civil
Rights groups, labor councils and
religious organizations wrote to
Sargent Shriver and President
Johnson, asking that they recogunize the CAO that CORE will
form, or that they combine the
existing CAO council with the
one formed by CORE. By writing
they are serving the double purpose of initiating changes in
Erie County and bringing the
situation to the attention of the
President so that he might investigate the CAO’s forming
throughout the country.

The CAO told the Courier-Ex2, that
it will take immediate steps to
“contact groups in low-economic
sections
to
determine
their
needs.” Mike Lappin commented
upon this:
press Tuesday, February

“I hope that their actions will
be commensurate with their
words. I feel that the people
representing the poor should be
on the CAO and not merely consulted from time to time when
the CAO sees fit."

For anyone interested in the

problem of the CAO, or the Civil
Rights committee in genera),
there will be a meeting Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. in the Confer
ence Theater.

PIZZA
IF 3-1344

students
Hlvd is

from 105 pan.. Monday
Wednesday and Friday and from
10-10 pan on Tuesday and Tlturs
day Social activities include hay
rides, dances and Sunday suppers.
Emphasis is placed on religious
services and celebrations in a
open

Speaker
home
Jewish' 'c.ullure and cdnlributioi

Think
Village Stampers

for

Folk-Dixie

Think

limit/ 1/ Greco

for
Oriffinaliti

/

Think

Hamit n ,To

for

Excitement

Inter Varsity Christian Fellow
seeks to strengthen and en-

ship

velop an active concern anion
Christian student
missions Each week there art

speaker

and the reality of God There is
one social event each month such
as a fellowship supper, a hayride
appear weekly in the
Spectrum For more information
contact Dick Snedaker. 836 1155

meetings

LN 24130 BN 26130*

Liberal Religious Fellowship is
for those interested in the area
of religion in its broadest sense
Time and place of meetings vary
In the past lectures and rallies,
such as one protesting the Fein
berg Oath, have dealt with areas
of ultimate concern to students
of this campus Delegates from
this campus attend the national
conferences held each year For
further information
act Pet
Oslrow. TF 3 2155
The National Newman Federa
tion is' a club consisting of 320,OtX
catho.

Think

•Stereo

LN 24131/BN 26131*

C EPicj for Entertainment

�5, 1965

Criterion for Conscientious

Objection: Belief in God
PS)
The American Civil
a brief
l iberties Union has filedSupreme
with the United States
Court contending that the requirement that conscientious objectors avow belief in a Supreme
Being as a qualification for draft
exemption is unconstitutional.
The friend-of-the-court brief
submitted in behalf of three men
who were refused conscientious
objector status because of nonadherence to orthodox religious
beliefs and were convicted for
contends the redraft evasion
quirement “creates a governmentally sanctioned form of religion
and thus directly affronts the
First Amendment.”
who had exTwo of three
pressed “religious faith in a purely ethical creed”—won reversals
of their convictions in the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
which ruled that Congress “has
transgressed the limits imposed
by the Constitution” in enacting
the requirement.
The conviction of the third,
however, was upheld by the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals. The
ACLU is asking the Supreme
Court to uphold the decision of
the Second Court and reverse that
of the Ninth.
The ACLU brief left unchallenged the constitutionality of
confining” exemption of consci
entious objectors to “religious
grounds,” but questioned the gov(

—

—

—

—

ernment’s right to define the kind
of religious beliefs which qualiCiting the Supreme Court's interpretation of the clause
that
neither a state nor the federal
government “can pass laws which
aid one religion, aid all religions,
or prefer one religion to another”
—it contends that the Supreme
Being requirement “aids religion
in general as against non-believers, but more particularly it aids
religion based upon a belief in a
Supreme Being as against other
religions having different be—

liefs,"
The requirement, the ACLU
contends, violates the free exercise of religion clause of the
First Amendment, because by excluding non-believers in a Supreme Being from conscientious
status, it penalizes them. The

brief refers to several high court
decisions which have condemned
imposition by the government of
any “burden upon the free exercise of religion . .
“Religious beliefs have always
been a matter of individual conscience. Government cannot test
their validity,” the Brief says. It
contends that the Supreme Being
test “is in effect an Establishment
by Congress of a monotheistic religion,” and that “its limitation
only to those who meet (it) is a
burden on the free exercise of
those who believe in non-theistic
and polytheistic religions.”

Civil Disobedience on the Rise;
indicates a Need for Change
The increase in civil
disobedience on the contemporary American scene reflects a
need for change in U.S. social
institutions and practices, two
leading educators said recently.
(CPS)

—

The two, Morris Keeton, Dean

nf the Faculty at Antioch College,
and 'Charles L. Black, Jr., of the
Vale Law School, spoke at a University, of Texas Law School proram on “Violation of Law as a
Form of Social Protest."
Black said “much of what has
lately been referred to . . . as
civil disobedience is really not
that at all” but is a “solemn assertion of the nation’s law.”
He said it is “facile and misleading” to assume that “no one
is

obligated to obey any law he

thinks wrong,” but added “there
may be circumstances, going far
beyond a simple conviction of
injustice, in which such disobedience is both justified and compatible with the general edntinnance of the legal order.”
Black said that “very little in
the last years’ protest against racial injustice, that no major component in that protest up to now.
bears the character of disobedito law
These people (those involved

civil rights protests against
do, indeed, act in con&gt;us violation of, what is asted to be legal authority, and
y do offer themselves for arby the constituted authori-

t

ustice)

ties. But they do so in the belief,
more- or less clearly held and

more

or less clearly warranted,

that the law itself is on their
side, and that the law’s processes,
in the end, will uphold them, or
will fail to do so only through
an error in law,” he said.
Black said that “nothing in our
Constitution makes such action
incompatible with federal allegiance.”

Keeton echoed this view, saycivil disobedience was not
directed “toward overthrow of
ing

law and order,” but rather “works
within the upholding of that

order to rectify specific wrongs

within the legal system."
“Civil disobedience is neither
right nor good in arid of itself,”
he said. “It is both beneficial and
right under certain conditions.
These conditions can be very
complex.”

Keeton said historically “dissent has cost us dearly, but it has
also enlarged our freedom and
multiplied its fruits.” He said
“there are overdue reforms to

which

the

civil

disobedience

movements are an adaptive re-

sponse. In particular,” he said,
“our progress in effective provision of equal rights to the races
is too slow and too restricted
in scope.”
Neither speaker referred directly to the recent disturbances
at the University of California’s
Berkeley campus.

Clement Activities Drive

Jewelry Workshops

The Clement House Council
will sponsor an activities drive
next week. The committees need
members to staff the varied activities which the House Coun
cil will sponsor this semester.
Among the groups involved are
the Social Committee, Scholarship Committee, -Cultural Com
mittee. Sports Committee, Publicity and House Committee. Some
events whcih are being planned
include a ' Sports Nile,” a Clement Side Chat" and various

yOur

jewelry
rings, pins, cuffnks, and tie tacks? Well, here
3ur chance! Beginning Tues
the Craft Shop will sponsor
—

cries of jewelry workshops
centrifugal casting. All incsted students, faculty, and
ft will have a chance to make
nr dwn silver and gold jewel-

GU Professor Cites
Catholic Birth Control
Policy as Inefficient
A Georgetown University pro

fcssor of Theology recently termed the Catholic Church's arguments against birth control as
“completely inefficient."
The professor, Louis Du.pr e,

told a Notre Dame symposium on
the subject that although the
Church might have the correct
stand, its method of explanation

is faulty.
"I myself have no position on
this,' Dupre said. "I will wait
until the Church speaks out. But
right now, it is a problem to

movie

•m*

Dupre's view was shared by
Dr. John Higgins, a professor of
clinical psychiatry at St. Louis
University.
Dr. Higgins also spoke on the
psychological a n d physiological
problems involved in the use of
the rhythm method of contraception, which he termed “as unnatural as any artificial method

of birth control.”
"The marriage act is the essence of the relationship of persons united in the state of marriage,” he said. "Rhythm, if only
for a short period of time a

month, fosters the idea that it is
not necessary, not integral to
marriage. This does not meet the
nature of the sex act.”
He said, however, that the system of birth control chosen “must
conform with personal moral requirement, as well as the nature
of human sexuality."
Dr. Higgins said any birth con
trol method must also be convenient, easily learned, reliable
and effective. It must fulfill the

On Campus M&amp;ShuIman
(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Bays!",
“Dobie GUlin," etc.)

y'

be discussed."

ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH
Today I lx*gin my eleventh year of writing this column in your
campus newspaper
1 wasn’t sun' I’d lx* coining hack this year. After a decade of
doing this column, 1 had retreated to my country seat, tired hut
happy, to enjoy a nice long rest. Hut last night as I sat on my
verandah, peaceful and serene, humming the largo from .1 Long
Dag's Sight and worming my dog, a stranger suddenly appeared
before me.
He was a tall, clean-limbed man, crinkly-eyed and erookedgrinncd, stalwart and virile. “How do you do,” he said, “My
name is Stalwart Virile and I am with the Personna Stainless
Steel Razor Blade people."
"Knehanted." I said. “Take off your bombing and sit down."
I clapped my hands sharply . “Norman!” 1 called. "Another chair
for Mr. Viriie!"

person’s moral requirements as
well. Methods other than rhythm
fulfill these other requirements,
but exclude personal morality, a
need which the rhythm method
fulfills,

he

said.

Ralph Kenck, a Chicago
obstretician and gynecologist, disagreed with Dr. Higgins' view of
Dr.

rhythm.

will work if you want it
to work," he said. "If a woman
tells me rhythm will not work
for her because she cannot remember to take her temperature
every morning, then I seriously
doubt that she could remember
to take a pill every day for twen"It

ty days, either. There has to be
proper motivation,”

Dr. Kenck said doctors arc
bound by certain eh.tical impli
Cations on the question of birth
control
When a patient tells me her

confessor has given her permis
sion to use the pill," he said, 'it
puts me in a very awkward po
sition. 1 feel 1 should be bound
by what the F’ope says. It all
seems to come down to a question
of ‘who’s in charge here’?”

A fourth speaker, Notre Dame
sociologist Donald Barrett, said
he felt the Church “would be
derelict in its duty if it left
fertility regulation and its choice
of methods completely up to in-

dividual conscience," but said he
was "an ardent advocate of birth
regulation.”

Craft Shop Sponsors
'Would you like to make

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

A nation must look ahead 20-40
years in its planning, he said,
but in what sense, is a couple

"permitted to limit births by
legitimate means, to assist oth
ers?’\ Further, he said, should a
couple in the US. limit their
fertility to help people in India'’
How far are we “our brothers'
keepers,” he asked.

I uothrr rhntr for Mr
with a
Obediently my-dog trotted away and returned d
fallback chair of Malayan rattan, lie is.I he smart
block.
;tiil M
’itili
"I suppose voure wondering why I am here
•seating himself.
“Well, sir,” I replied inv old eves twiuklinx roKiiisli
wager you didn’t come to read mV melt
You can imagine how we howled at Ihal om
“That’s adoozy!” cried Mr. Virile, finally catching hi I treat It
“I must remember to tell it to Alice when, I get home."
“Your wife'”’ I said.
“My father," he said.
' “()h,” I Said.
“lint enough of wit and humor,’’ he said, "bet us get
a cam|
css. Him would’ you like lb wri
miiii Stainless Steel liazor Hindi's?

i

Friday, February

\

lie said
Mv liiinil, si

1 said

1 his. W

till* I
UlKOU.r,-

to s|H*ak

•‘Win
Mr. Virile when he was able to talk agal
jell explosive

And will v

(\

say a pleasant w
Steel Razor Made
“Sir; ’ 1 sail! simply, “what
could I possibly say alnnit B&lt;
to

ke,.l Mr Vi
Iexcel

which Kive I
luxury shaves than Beep-Beej
butt*. I
.hi M
“Another of my products is Hurma’Shay*
“Can you find it in your heart to mention Burma Sha

sionally?"

“But of course'” I declared

whisker-wiltingest

“For

i&gt;

not Burma SI

lather i

And then
shook niv h;
gone —a tall silhouette in iii({ erectly into the sot
“Farewell, good tohsorialistl" I cried after him "Aloha
And turned with a will to i
wa*

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

artie

Virih

The maker*of Peraonna* Blades and Burma Shav.e'

m sun

art-

happy to bring you another season of Max Shulman's
uncenaoreti. uninhibited, and unpredictable column.
We think you’ll be happy too u hen you try our proiiuctf.

�EHWHWaSS® ifM®
By LEON

"WOMAN OF THE DUNES"
As I left the Circle Art Theater Monday night, 1 overheard
fragments of a conversation con
eerning the Japanese movie,
Woman of the Ddnes. “The way
I saw it," a fellow remarked to
his friend, “its significance is

primarily soeio-ecological. The
Japanese have always been con
cerned with the political situa
tion in their films. Even their
monster movies preach the dan-

gers of Nuclear holocaust. In
this one, the woman with her acceptance of the status-quo, repre
sents the way of life Communist
China stands for. She endures
without questioning her exist
cnce. The man stands for the
principle of free inquiry into
ones environment. His Western
empiricism is contrasted favor
ably to the mongrelization of her
mind."
I reproduce this creative in
terpretation not because I feel it
is especially accurate or infer

mativc, but because its

singular

ingenuity is demonstrative of the

LEWIS

restricts his personal
freedom. The crux of the story
is the man’s gradual realization
that freedom is not something
that can be measured in terms
ability to come and
of a
go. After a series of shattering
experiences in which the man is
forced to confront the very essence of his being, he slowly
comes to the realization that the
artificial supports which his
shaky ego rests on are useless
since they have nothing whatsoever to dp with anything' essential. By the end of the movie,
when the man is able to draw
severely

water from the dangerous and
totally indifferent sands of his
environment, he has come to an
understanding which makes escape back to the city unnecessary,

There are several factors
which make the movie very effective. First, the direction is
excellent. Although a number of
people felt that there is some
superflous and repetitious material near the end which more

Cello, Piano Recital
Set Friday at Baird
Leo Smit, pianist, and Mischa
Schneider, cellist, will present
a duo recital Friday, February
12, at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall.
General admission is $2.50, faculty $1.25; students may receive
free tickets according to the
usual procedure. Works of Beethoven, Debussy, Bach, the Can
tata-La Musette of J, P. Rameau,
a French baroque composer, will
be performed. An unusual feature of the program will be
L’Operaton de la Talle, of Marin
Marais (1725), with Creatvie Associate Lawrence Bogue as narrator. Mr. Schneider is cellist
with the Budapest quartet and
teaches master classes in cello
and chamber music here. Mr.
Smit is also on the faculty, teach-

ing composition and piano and
given many recitals of a
wide and varied repertoire. He
will be conducting the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra Febru
ary 20 and 22, in his own work,
Symphony No. 2.
has

Creative Associates will be
a concert of concert
music Monday, February 15, at
8:30 p.m., in Baird Hall, admis-

sion free. The performers will
be Carol Plantamura, soprano;
Karl Kraber, flutist; Sherman
ist. Trios of Loeillet, Haydn and

Beethoven will be presented,
along with the "Blake Songs” of
Ralph Vaughan Williams, “Five

Canons" of Webern, “As it Fell

upon a Day" of Aaron Copland
and a work of Mr. Sahl, the

“Foundation Song.”
Robert Middleton and Polly
Middleton, duo piano team, will
present a recital featuring the
works of Mr. Middleton, Febru
ary 16, at 8:30 p.m:, in Baird
Hall, admission free. The works
to be performed are the Piano
Sonata, Inventions on the Twelve
Notes and the Sinfonia Grande
for four hands, all works of Mr.
Middleton.
A Moment of solace amidst the rigors of life in the dunes.
It

has inter

ested

nearly everyone I have
spoken to and even those people
who felt it was unsuccessful were
quick to admit that there were
many things in the movie that
engaged their attention.
The most interesting thing
about the movie, I feel, is its
unhackneyed presentation of a

very basic, overdone theme The
story, if I may risk a simple
re statement of a very subtle and
skillfully developed idea, is about
a man who learns how to see. In
the beginning of the movie, he is
hardly more than a cipher in an

Orwellian nightmare. His position in society is fixed by the
coordinates of his social secur
ity card, various permits and cer
tificates and the other paraphenalia of an overgrown industrial
nightmare His highest expecta
tion is to get his name next to
the illustration of a new specimen of insect in a book which
no one will ever look at
His
condition is superbly illustrated
by an early shot in which there
is a quick cut from the man him
self to an insect he is inspecting.
At first, the insect appears as
large as the man. Then, we real
ize that we arc seeing the insect
through the lens of the man's

camera
As the picture progresses, the
man becomes trapped in a sand
pit with a woman whose only oh
ligation to her village is to shovel
the ever-advancing sands back
away from her hut so that the
village will not be buried in the
dunes. She accepts her lot, but
her passivity is more the prod
uct of assimilation than adjust
ment. She knows no other exist
ence, and for all we know, she is
as eternal as the dunes them
selvesFor the man, the situation is
entirely different. He feels cut
off from his environment and
trapped in a worthless task that

efficient editing might have removed, the tone was totally convincing, The fact that the movie
is set in Japan makes it just
exotic enough so that the ruralisms have a primivtivc significance. The acting seemed excellent. but to me. it looks top-rate
in all Japanese movies. Maybe
an Oriental critic would be more
exacting in his appraisal. And
much of the photography was
very clever. As my friend, Quentin Muckbloke, pointed out in his
letter from London, there are
too many "Hey, Watch me do
this!" shots, but I did not find
them as distracting as he did.
The setting is so superb that it
seems unlikely that it could not
have been effectively used, but
there are many moments in
which the photography seems

just right
completely appropriate without being obtrusive.
Finally, the director, Tchesshingura, has an excellent un
derstanding of the nature of the
symbols he is using. When you
are dealing with such useful but
dangerously general abstract—

universal like Water, Sand and
the Ocean, it is quite crucial
that you have a tough-minded
understanding of the evocative
power of these primal elements.
It is much loo easy to show
someone gazing woefully at the
sea. This kind of obvious senti
mentalism rarely enhances the
meaning of anything and tends
to obscure the usefulness of any
kind of symbolism. Tchesingura,
on the other hand, has gotten
back to the original power of his
symbols and because of this, they
function in truly symbolic fasti
ion That is. they tend to create
a wider sense of meaning around
a man's actions which make the
action more incisive with respect
to the individual and, at the
same time, applicable to the
creature Man in a universal
sense,

(daH idoard

Spectrum
International Club

merit of personality and emotion-

Thursday, t h e International
Club will have as its guest speaker, Dr. Raymond Ewell. Dr, Ewell,
vice president in charge of research for the University of Buffalo, will speak about the Pressures, Problems and Principles of
today’s world in his topic, “World
Populations.”
All faculty and students are
invited to hear Dr. Ewell S[leak
at 7:30 p.m. in Norton.

al behavior in children. Plans for
the coming meetings will be discussed, as well as the trip to McGill University in Montreal, All
interested persons are welcome
to attend. For further information, call Jeanne McDougall at

Tf 5-4915.

Student Zionist Organization

Sunday evening Student Zionist
Organization will present an 'Israeli Song and Dance Party'.
Group singing and dancing will

Occupational Therapy Club
The Occupational Therapy Club
will hold its first meeting of the
new semester today at 2:30 p.m.
in Room 244. All are urged to
attend,

be the main feature. Included in
the party will be some exotic
Israeli food. The party will take
place in Norton Room 329 and
will begin at 8:00 p.m sharp. In
addition, a summary of SZO’s
Regional Seminar will be shared
with participants. All students are
cordially invited to SZO’s first
“hootenanny’ of the year. A
meeting will take place Sunday
at 8:00 p.m.

Psychology Club
Monday in Norton Room 224 at
7:30 p.m,, the Psychology Club

will present the flim, “The Conscience of a Child," which will
discuss the growth and develop-

giving

Friedland, clarinetist; Jay Humeston, cellist; Michael Sahl, plan

picture's richness.

Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Smith Speaks to Club

All students interested
in being election clerks in
the general Spring Election should have their
names and the hours they
are available to work in
Room 205 Norton Union

Henry Lee Smith, professor of
Linguistics and English, and
Chairman of the Department of
Anthropology and Linguistics,
spoke to Newman Club members
and guests January 27.
Speaking on the topic of “Language is More Than Words”,

Dr.

Smith emphasized that without
language, society could not function. From a tracing of its prehistoric beginnings, Dr. Smith
concluded his talk on language
by demonstrating the gestures
peculiar to the English language,
with a promise than once noticed,
they will affect an individual’s
attention immensely.

with the

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�Friday, February 5,

1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

Student Zionists Participate in Regional Conference
entists in Egypt, 25 of whom are
top-r a t e scientists working on
military material that would constitute a threat to Israel. The
threat of the military materia!
is that it represents a force Is-

Region.”

resolution: "that 'SZO establish
a framework to facilitate Aliyah,
that the 'Year Program’ be
broadened to maintain regular
contact amongst graduates of
$&gt;ZO in Israel, that Aliyah chair
men of SZO in America coordin
ate Aliyah dates and help in
their preparations." A second
resolution was passed by the del
egates calling for the publication
of anti-semetic attacks on Jews
and the Jewish community in

Ambassador

to

Canada, Gershon Avner; Israel’s
Consul General, David Rivlin;
The National Shaliach to SZO,
Ben Zion Feinstein; Mr. Avner
Shenker, the secretary of the
American Zionist Youth Founda-

Argentina

A

SZO.

legiate press representatives.
Press Conference

The relaxed attitude and friendly personality of Ambassador
Avner rarely- rises above the feeling of
and necessity
conveyed to listeners by his con
vcjsation with them. It was precisely this tone that was struck
at the press conference. The format adhered to that of the televised “Meet The Press” news
show. Press representatives were
present from Montreal’s Universities of McGill and Sir George
"illiams, and the Universities
of Toronto and Buffalo.
The Ambassador was asked
lat Israel’s reaction was to the

AMBASSADOR GERSHON AVNER AT PRESS CONFERENCE
disrupt the balance of power now
world Jewish communities. The
Israeli government has no bonds
existing between the two countries. “The Arabs will go to war
with Jews of other nations; how
when they think they are strong
ever, the Jewish people do feel
enough.”
a sentiment, share a common culThe Ambassador was asked if ture, and sense an affection to
Israel. The Jewish religion is
petitions to the Soviet Government concerning Soviet Jews only a part of that mutual affection; a sense of common his
were to any avail. He commenttory also unites the Jewish peoed that protocol prevented him
from discussing Soviet problems ple. Some believe they are part
in another country. Also, this is of a single nation.
not considered an Israeli probThe Jewish claim to Israel as
lem but rather a Jewish problem.
their home is based on more
He said, however, that if leadthan biblical grounds. Historic
ers in the Soviet Union know ally, Israel is the original home
of the concern of Jews and non- of the Jews. “Jews have lived in
Jews, that then there is a chance hundreds of places and have
that they may change their polbeen driven out by just as
icy to allow greater freedom to many." Also, the Ambassador
Jewish citizens.
said that persecution of the JewWhen asked what the reaction
ish people the world over has
of Israel would be if the waters created a need for an Israeli
state. Finally, the U.N. has legalflowing into the Jordan River
ly granted the land to Israel.
were stopped, he replied that if
The Ambasador related that it
the waters were stopped just to
is the desire of the Israeli state
spite Israel that the action would
that the May 8, 1965 Statute of
Limitation of prosecution of German war criminals be extended
on the grounds that justice
should be served. A time limit,
it is feared, would bring immunNazis in
ity to
exile.

r answ-ered that the problem
‘s an infernal Canadian probn and that as a foreign amssador to Canada he didn’t
'e the right to comment on the

raoli

ie

replied

that
uch

at

if

th

pi

olitical

friendship

be

tween

Plenary Session

1

to

amic

of in

Hood

Jordan ind Israel have

dive •rt waters
The Ambassad lor said th hat I
is r
for any ac
b States m: light take.
ask them to think Itwice
prepared, hut we
ask t
hink twice,
he Ambas, dor sa
that
problem s fai
is firsi
he extern al Ih

righ

ants.

At

t he

Plenary

Session

the Ea:

passed resolutions to be d

ed at the National SZO d omen
iter this year. The newly
officers include
Presi
ary Evans of I
jffalo
inai

Newman of Sir Geor
I'.: Co-Editors of th
letin Jack Shapiro

Th

presentl.

SZ

also attacked the “one class"
He said that
officials, top
scientists, and- heroes, such as
the

F

hairrnan
Sir

id

Gcoi

Ar

astronaut

are

enjc oymg

a

that is quite like th le West
world in their style

&gt;f living,
c nts.

hes, and cultural eve

Rivlin Tells of Soviet Problems

e towards lessening the dif
fcren ices that occur between
SZO's s. “This is not the case in
the majority of countries, but
they do occur and distract from
the over all movement." The
and aims

the move
ales intro
ducedd three resolute tins to the
ling for the
Portfires:
to vote for SZo delegates to
goals,

of

ment. The SZO dele,

Congress, especia
dealing with

illy

rtgani

tion
the r
he t ongress;

s.

elite group is
rest of Russi

at

mention
ed effor

lize

the

luntne

the pn blcm of
fail to
nmun dties veh
lelicate existence
re they are no'
imc

Mr, Fcinstc

are
ui iphea

fo

Feinstein Address
Zion Feinstein sp

Aral

pheava

:1

hen

jn

■enunar

or p

regarciin

foi

the

ure by Mr r Avran Shcnker on Jewishh prob
n oth
nmtrie
such as
Argonthat the Jewish
'Pie are coi mink uml er anti
acks every tin ie there

ictivitics o
and

is

But

nail and
fa ,r below

Other Events

in com

the youth
izations; for mo: ire informa

;es

proble
ie;

prayer

image of Russia
high government

itrate
;e

with blackmarkct opera
the anti-semi
tism that temporarily subsided
during most of Stalin's regime.
Local newspapers, he said, that
Western eyes rarely sec are filled with anti-Semitic attacks.
There are three million Jews in
Russia and the Israeli government is the only power that has
tried to help them. The Soviet
Government has tried to discour
age Israel's concern with political blackmail. "They have told
us," Mr. Rivlin said, “let your
hands off the Jews in Russia and
you will have it a little easier."
“We are losing a great deal by
keeping our embassy there."

books or import
They are also in great
need for places to worship The
Jewish people are also unable
to organize any national ties
amongst themselves. Mr Rivlin

Membership

an

wou
How

att

citizen of Russia. He said that
though some Jewish citizens are
quite happy in Russia, many others are facing difficult problems.
Mr. llivlin emphasized that there
are problems facing Soviet Jevts
and that those who don’t believe
it should go to Russia and see
for themselves, as he had done.
The national scandal Russia is

them

The Is-

i

military

David llivlin. Consul General
to Canada, spoke on the Jewish

print

gpvernmen it,

book, “The Depu uty”, which criticizes the papacy for its action
and lack of actioi
Ambas: ;ador A\n ncr said that I
rad's
oward Canada
ly jealous of h
that it
natural resource
man pi owcr. and that there is a

established cities.

ish problems and Jewish active
ties was recommended as a
method of recruitment.
Russell Stone, in his report on
the 26th Congress of the World
Zionist Organization in Jerusalem, listed three issues that faced
Mr, Kivlin said that Russia is
the Zionist youth that attended becoming sensitive to Western
the Congress. SZO should first
opinions of them and cited cases
emphasize the Zionist education where people have asked him if
above the fund raising activities the Americans believed that Rusthat are now occupying their
sia does want peace, and questime. Also, Zionists should not
tioned whether t h e Americans
concern themselves with the in would help Russia if they were
ternal political affairs of Israel
attacked by the Red Chinese. Mr.
at the Zionist Congresses. Sec
Rivlin also attacked the "Sovietondly, youth organizations must ish Ilcimland,” the only Jewish
newspaper in Russia, a.f a Russian mouth piece. He said: "the
editor is the greatest butcher of
Jewish Culture." Mr. Rivlin said
that though Christian churches
arc allowed prayer books and
have several places to worship
the Jewish people arc denied to

;6S on the
o langed in

:

Plan

as a

1

whC

be rc garded

1

•
'

time

campaign in recruiting new mem
bers for SZO. Exposure of Jew-

said the Ambassador, hasn't any attitude towards the anti-C 'atholic play and

Meet. He did mention that the
°blem is in the hands of the

times would be better and
need for funds would be les
led. He added that immigra
n is morally and financially
1 different problems and that
immigration of "new comwould remain as the first
ncern. When asked whether he

the National

:

concerning Arab
Gaza Strip wouli (I bo
the coming Oii.

groups. The Ambassa-

nadian Jewish Congress and
at they do have the right to
mile the matter. When asked
the Law of Return (granting
Jews the right to enter Israel
&lt;i claim citizenship) was reeling Israel’s progress, he anered that the state of Israel
for immigrants
. “exists
st -” Without the immigrants

from

/

i

ctht-wing

report

Executive Committee was given
by Charles Klcinhaus, National
President of SZO. Mr. Kleinhaus
stressed that SZO is not to bo
considered an “inner directed"
group of people but rather an
“outward directed movement."
He called for a more vigorous

The Ambassac
said hr did
not expect that the UN policy

te literature being distributed
the University of Toronto by
States Rights Party and other

already

Jewish Problem in Russia

facing

.

Problems discusssed under the
theme of “World Jewry” ranged
from absorption of immigrants
to Israel, the assimilation of
Jews into other societies, and
Jewish concerns in various countries such as Russia and Argentina. The program also included
organizational matters of the region, election of new officers
and a report of the recent 26th
Congress of the World Zionist
Organization, The program was
highlighted by a press conference
with Ambassador Avner by col-

the

(ions has revived

Reports Given

tion and Deputy Member,of the
Jewish Agency Executive; Russell Stone, “Rosh” Canadian
Young Judaea; and Charles
Kleinhaus, National President of

culturally. The absorption of
"new comers” is Israel's major
problem: “people come to Israel
broken and not ready to work
with the state because of mistrust learned'from recent history.
These' people must have been
through hell . . . Israel has to
restore their humanism." Mr.
Feinstein closed with a suggestion that new immigrants to Israel should settle the undeveloped regions rather than stop at

Evens also introduced a

Mr.

the conference
guests which in-

Israel’s

cluded

are between 300-500 German sci-

the blockade of the Suez has received a scholarship to Hehas been injurious in that milbrew University in Jerusalem,
lions and millions of dollars are where he will continue his studlost in trade but not to the exies after graduation. Gary Evans
tent the Arab nations had hoped has visited Israel before, apd is
for. The economy has not been therefore familiar with the sobroken; the handicap has pro- cial economical conditions existduced a response to this chal- ing there today. In a statement
lenge that has made Israel more after his election to the Regional
self dependent.
Presidency, he said that one of
The Ambassador said that Is- his goals is
“to create
rael is a spokesman for itself closer ties between the chapters
of SZO in the Eastern Canadian

i

honorary

of German scientists in Egypt
was a threat to Israel’s security,
he answered that presently there

with

i

ties. Addressing

were

presence

i

Each winter weekend spartan
ski enthusiasts brave s u b-zero
temperatures- to travel the modern Laurentian Autoroute north
of Montreal to winter resort villages that dot the snow-crusted
peaks of the lofty Laurentians.
Last weekend, at the invitation
of UB. Zionists, two Spectrum
reporters journeyed to the hamlet of Ste. Agathe des Monts
to cover the annual Eastern Canadian Regional Seminar of the
Student Zionist Organization.
Four University chapters of SZO
met at the Castle des Monts to
participate in an analysis of the
world’s major Jewish communi-

ture. When asked if the

1

migrants to drop off in the fu-

RAY VOLPE

By

structure

ea;

replac

1KCU

n'ventior

Training

Ziomsn

Year I

wa:

�Frat Guilty of Discrimination

Dr. Jaffee to Continue Research Here
On Cause of Congenital Heart Defects
Research concerning the development of congenital heart defects will continue here under
a renewed grant received from
the National Foundation—March
of Dimes

A $14,060 award was announced
jointly Tuesday, January 5 by
Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice-president for research at the University, and Mr. Basil O’Connor, pres-

ident of the National Foundation.
Director of the research project
is Dr. Oscar C. Jaffee, assistant
professor of biology.

Dr. Jaffee has succeeded in
duplicating in chick embryos two

of the most common congenital
heart defects seen in man. He
has been able to observe the cf
feet of these defects in blood
flow patterns in the heart.
One such defect is called the
ventricular septal defect in which
the barrier wall, between the

left ventricles of the
heart is perforated. Dr. Jaffee
and his associates produced this
abnormality in experimenal chick
embryos by treating them with
a dye, trypan blue, during the
second and third day of incubation.

In the embryos that succumbed

to the harmful influence of the
dye, however, analysis of the
blood flow showed blood passing
from the left to right ventricle
through the spot where the mem

branous part of the septum forms.
Higher than normal pressure in
the left ventricle is believed to
be the cause of the abnormal penetration of the septum
Another almost equally common heart defect that Dr. Jaffce

has simulated in chick embryos
an
is patent ductus arteriosus
open pathway between the aorta
—

and pulmonary arteries.

Abnor-

mally large pulmonary arteries
and small aorta result. This de-

feet is a frequent complication in
babies born to mothers who had
German measles during early

pregnancy.

Again trypan blue produced the
defect. This particular abnormality was created by administering

the dye to less-than-one-day-old
embryos.
Dr. Jaffee plans to try to bring
some of these experimental embryos through to the hatching
stage to observe the effect of the
too-large pulmonary arteries and
too-small aorta when the chick

is

breathing.

Pinpointing such

defects

and

their immediate causes
such
as abnormal blood pressure and
flow
was made possible by
—

The University of Michigan Interfraternity Council Executive
Committee has found a campus
fraternity guilty of practicing religious discrimination.
The case marks the first time
the Michigan IFC has taken ju-

dicial action against discrimination in one of its member fraternities.
In a statement, the IFC ex-

ecutive committee

Alpha Phi Delta will hold a
date party for prospective rushers tomorrow night at 9:30 p.m.
at the Club Bar, Admittance by
invitation only. Semi formal dress
is required.
Omega will

hold a

free open rush stag at Bosela's,
1500 Cleveland Kd„ at 8 00 p.m.
Chi Omega is looking forward

to becoming

better

acquainted

with the rushees, and invites them
to come to our table every noon
between 11:00 a m. and 1.00 p.m.
in the Fillmore Room in Norton.
Congratulations to the newlySigma Kappa

elected officers of

Phi. They are: President, Joyce

Kaelen: First Vice President,
Mary Leary; Second Vice President, JoAnn Smith: Recording
Secretary, Pat Silfer; Treasurer,
Monica Bauer: and Rush Chair
man, Dede Rupp. Rushees are
invited to join Sig Kap Phi at
the lunch table in Norton
Theta Chi Sorority is looking
forward to having Dr Pleseur

speak at their meeting Monday
night.

Epsilon Pi would like to
congratulate the new officers for
this semester. Superior—Bennetl

Phi

Epstein; Vice-Superior
Seigel;

Treasurer

—

Arthur
Tom Roth
—

mann; Recording Secondary
Altman; Corresponding
Secretary—Neil Sapin

—

Robert

Tonight Phi Ep is holding a
Beer Slag for all interested rushees Buses will be at Norton at

8:30 p m
Tomorrow night we are having
a Rush Party at the Temple
Emanu-EI: Buses will again be at
Norton at 8 00 p m The party
is by invitation only Special guest
will be "Sarah Wolf"

During the next few weeks,
Seta Phi Sigma will host several
functions. Monday at 8:30 p.m.

f,ound

the

Trigon Fraternity guilty of violating an IFC by-law which pro-

hibits member fraternities from
discriminating “in the selection
of members on the basis of race,
color, creed, religion, national
■origin, or ancestry.”

—

Dr. Jaffee's earlier work which
established normal blood flow
patterns in the developing heart.
Following initial research with
frogs and tadpoles, chick embryos
were chosen for the next stage
of these heart studies because a
chicken has a four-chambered
heart as do human beings.
Motion pictures of normal blood
flow in the developing embryo
hearts were compared to plastic
models of the embryonic heart

which were painstakingly copied
from serial sections of cardiac tissues. These comparisons aided in
defining the normal routes of
blood flow.
As the project advances, Dr.
Jaffee will go on to test more

The statement said

found
religious discrimination to exist
“in the requirement of Trigon
Fraternity that prospective initiates repeat a vow which may be
repugnant to persons of many

it

religious faiths.”
"Despite the contention of Tri-

gon that its mandatory vow is not

intended to be discriminatory in
nature,” the statemment continued, “the Executive Committee
has found that the wording of

the ritual required commitment
to religious convictions which are
unacceptable to many students
attending the University of Michigan, and thus has the effeect of
discriminating on religious
grounds.”
“The Executive Committee recognizes that Trigon, in its attempt
to integrate a strong religious
background into a social fraternity, does indeed nurture a “spiritual ethical development” which
is not incompatible with the prine i p 1 e s of the Interfraternity
Council or of Michigan fraternities; however, in this attempt
Trigon has violated an Interfraternity Council Bylaw which is
necessary to a fraternity system
operating within the framework
of a public university,” it said.

The council has not yet decided on what penalty, if any,
it will hand down in the case,
but under IFC bylaws, it is empowered to withdraw recognition
from Trigon if it chooses to. If
such action were taken, the group
could no longer participate in
IFC-organized rush, fraternity
intramural athletics, or receive

Cadets to Receive
USAF Commissions
Completing the degree require
ments at UB are: GIAMPA, Luigi

KRISTOFF, Karl W.; PUR.
DY, Alton J., and STEARNS, Ger
aid L.
During graduation ceremonies
they are to be commissioned as
second lieutenants in the USAF
and will enter active duty or
continue studies at graduate
schools of their choice.
Parents of the to-be new lieu
tenants will bfe hosted at Norton
Union Saturday. At that time they
will hear the oath each new ofant takes and will be able to
discuss the military-civilian job
P.;

potential of the graduate.

other privileges coexistent with
IFC membership.
No decision will be taken, however, until after spring semester
rush. Even if the IFC withdraws
recognition from Trigon, it would

still retain student

government

recognition as a student organi-

zation. The student government
could initiate its own action
against the fraternity if it chose
to, however.

Trigon is a campus fraternity
with no national affiliations.

substances known or suspected to
be potential causes of congenital
heart defects of children. With

the knowledge he has developed,
the effects of each treatment can

be determined rapidly and precisely by checking the blood flow
of the treated chick embryo for
deviations from the normal.
Research here is part of The
National Foundation
March of
Dimes’ nationwide program to
combat birth defects.
-

Greek Notes
Alpha Phi

Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

John Lauritzen wanted further knowledge

in Health Science 204, a film and
speaker from the Multiple Sclerosis Society will lecture. Thursday, a rush party will be held at
Chet's and Alice’s. Finally, Monday, Feb. 22, at 8:30 p.m. in
Health Science 204, a film and
speaker from the Muscular Dystrophy Association will speak. For

further information about these
contact any brother.

e\ ents,

Phi Lambda Delta is, holding a
Stag this evening at the
Club 161 starting at 8:30 p.m.

Rush

Pi Lambda Tau is looking forward to their social tonight with
Sigma Kappa Phi. Also coming
is our annual Engineering Stag,
Friday.

Feb.

14.

Rho

Pi Phi, pharmaceutical
fraternity, will have a date affair
at the Sheridan Lanes, 3860 Sheridan Dr., tomorrow at 9:00 p.m.
All freshman, sophomore and
junior pharmacy students are invited.
Tau Kappa Epsilon is holding
an informal rush party tomorrow
evening. All rushees are invited.
For information or rides, call
836-6248. The party is to be held
at the Hotel Markeen, Main and
Utica streets.
Theta Chi Fraternity will have
a rush stag this Friday at the
Night Owl Tavern, 242 Bailey
Ave . at 8:00 p m. Tomorrow, they
will have a rush date party at
Bosnia's Restaurant, 1500 Cleveland Drive, at 9:00 p.m. This
Monday there will be a rush
smoker at the Theta Chi House
at 2:00 p m. through 6.00 p.m
All are invited to this smoker, at
2 Niagara Falls Boulevard.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

He’s finding it at Western Electric
When the University of Nevada awarded John
Lauritzen his B.S.E.E, in 1951. it was only the first
big step in the'learning program he envisions for
himself. This led him to Western Electric. For WE
agrees that ever-increasing knowledge is essential
to the development of its engineers—and is helping John in furthering his education.
John attended one of Western Electric's three
Graduate Engineering Training Centers and graduated with honors. Now, through the Company-paid
Tuition Refund Plan, John is working toward his
Master's in Industrial Management at Brooklyn
Polytechnic Institute. He is currently a planning
engineer developing test equipment for the Bell

Western Electric MANUFACTURING
AN

EQUAL

OPPORTUNITY

ing system.

If you set the highest standards for yourself, both
educationally and professionally, we should talk.
Western Electric's vast communications Job as
manufacturing unit of the Bell System provides
many opportunities for fast-moving careers for
electrical,. mechanical and industrial engineers,
as well as for physical science, liberal, arts and
business majors. Get your copy of the Western
Electric Career Opportunities booklet from your
Placement Officer. And be sure to arrange for an
interview when the Bell System recruiting team
visits your campus.

AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM

EMPLOYER

pai manufacturing

Engineering

System's revolutionary electronic telephone switch-

locations

Research Center. Princeton,

itlesDOperatng centers -in many of these same
N □Teletype Corp., Skokie, III., Little Rock, A

lus 36 others throughi
’al Headquarters, f,ew

ie

U.S.

York Citv

�Friday, February

S, 1965

BIG LEWIE

Freshman Class Sponsors Dance;
Proceeds Go For Schein Defense
Council
The Freshman Class
tonight feaa
dance
sponsor
ll
wi
turing the Four X’s in the FillTickmore Room of Norton Hall.
at fifty
ets for the dance, priced
be purcents per
profits
chased at the door. The
from the dance will be contributed to help defer the cost of
the Arthur Schein trial. Schein,
who masqueraded as the Thallus
for
of Marchantia, owes $250.00
previous legal work and needs

S300.00

for an appeal.

Freshman Class Council Vice-

President George Bodner stated,
The Council does not condone
what happened at the airport

but we feel that Arthur Schein
should not be singled out for

By BOB WIEDER

What is the antidote for a bad
ease of Hate? The creed of the
Medic holds that to effect a cure,
one must understand the cause,
one must diagnose the disease.
Well, just what is the disease?
The disease is one of challenge
and pretense. The symptoms are
contention and insistence, and
the characteristics are kinky hair
and a curious coloring of the
flesh, ranging from rich bronze
to tar! Our patient: the American Negro.
The Case History: one of Demand and counter-Demand. The
Negro wants to go to Congress.
(No, the Negro just wants to go

to Mississippi.) The Negro wants
a home in Brentwood. (The Negro would be willing to settle
for just a home.) The Negro
wants to be treated like a King.
(The Negro would LIKE to be
treated like a man.)
The Area of Contamination:
America . . . where you can go
to the Draft Board (but not the
Restroom) of your choice. America, where you are free to worship as you please, but not
WHERE you please. Welcome to
the House of God (White Only.)
America, where the only requisite for becoming a policeman, a
student, or a retail consumer is
a distinct lack of melanin.
Dixie” may still be the Theme

Song of the South, the sweetest

music this side of Auschwitz, but
it is being hummed in Dallas, in
Phoenix, in Chicago, and wherever the War Winds Blow. Bias

and bigotry, unlike freedom and
justice, make no distinction regarding race religion, or ethnic
background. Violence, by prejudied and out of anathema, is still
violence, whether born in Little
Pock or nurtured in Harlem. And
the swords of turbulence and riot
Pjvrce white flesh as smoothly
as black. And THIS
the hate
and the violence and the death
is our disease. And the
...

■

1 he cause is found in the Ameran birthright. Our ancestors
'loaded a cargo of grief with
ch cargo of slaves. The black
pments disembarking at
Charlton, Savannah, and New Orans consisted not just of men,
"
of fear and distrust and ahllsh The situation was not one
hatred. It was, rather, one of

norance reflected

'ACE

of the slave.

c toAmerican
slave

in the EXIS-

1

colonists had,
the
trade, absolutePractical knowledge of the
o slave, or for that matter,
ie Negro. They established,
fore, a society based on in)n
The foundation was npt
'dice; it was a ‘’logical” sysof racial inferiority. The
became a part of the liyean asset to the landholder
"hat akin to the mule.
he mammalian hierarchy
i'seSro was placed a full notch
w man, and just a hair above
'

°

By

MICHAEL CASTRO

punishment.”
In addition to the resolution
passed to sponsor the dance, the
Council also passed a resolution
stating that while publicizing the
dance, Arthur Schein in no way
was to be considered the Thallus

1 remember Lewie from the
days when we were little kids
trying out for the St. Judes
Comets, a baseball team in the
neighborhood Little League. You
couldn’t really call Lewie a “little” kid though, for although
of Marchantia.
he was ten years old, he stood
Schein was convicted on a sec-, six feet, four inches. He was
tion of the penal code covering a first baseman, in those days,
the causing of the riots. Over (where else could you put a six
$600.00 was raised to help defer foot four, ten year old?). Big
the cost of the damages done to Lewie understandably lacked cothe Buffalo Municipal Airport as ordination, and he couldn't field,
a result of the activities there on and he couldn’t hit, but he was
December 16, 1964.
the most determined tdn year
old you’ll ever see.

Scar Spangled Banner
UCLA Daily Bruin

IE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

the Anthropoid Ape. Bigotry’ No.
Stupidity? Yes. Colonial America denied its descendants the
acceptance of the Negro as a
man because it denied the Negro

the basic competence to become

one.

Discrimination is not a hereditary trait, like flaring nostrils or
a cleft chin. It is a part of the
environment, or more important,
it is a part of our culture. Discrimination, like smallpox, is communicable.
then cannot discrimination, again like smallpox, be
cured? With all the sophistication the American people have
collected, like so much lint, we
have been unable to break the
fetters of our heritage. Why is
this? Simply because our prejudice against the Negro, its myriad ugliness notwithstanding, is
an older and more integral part
of our culture than either democracy or freedom.
Why

The slave preceded the Constitution, because the essence of
slavery has precluded the essence
of democracy. Unfortunately, the
twain have met, and the impact
makes good headlines every day.

When you reflect upon your
childhood, there is usually one
image that comes to mind which
illuminates an entire period, and
the picture I always get of Lewie
in the Little League is that of
a ground ball going through his
spindly legs, and big, gangly
Lewie chasing it full speed down
the righ field line, falling, getting
up and continuing his futile pursuit as if punishing himself as the
batter trotted around the bases.
It would be nice to say that the
coach, impressed with Lewie's
desire, kept him on the team,
but the Comets were defending
champions and could not afford
to keep such a raw rookie, and
Big Lewie, one fateful day was
shipped to the minors.
1 didn’t see Lewie for about
three years after that, although
he lived six blocks from me.
During the interval my sports
interest had changed from base
ball to basketball and so ap
parently had Lewie’s. It was in
evitable that I should bump into

him On the basketball court, for
from the time he was eleven
years old to this day, that is
where he spent the major part
of his time.

My friends and 1 had entered
the Mirror League, a city-wide
basketball tournament run by
the now defunct New York newspaper. We had a pretty fair team,
and after rolling over our first
opponents, we confidently expectlittle trouble in going all the
way to the city finals. After all,
we had Bobby, Jefferson, 6-2 who
went on to earn all-city recogni

tion in football and

basketball

at Brooklyn Tech, Eddie Johnson, 6-4 who later starred at Adelphi Academy, plus a few teammates of mine at George Washt
ington, and we were entered in

the 13-15 age group. Our second
opponents, however, were a team
of four guys and Big Lewie, now
thirteen, and about six foot nine.
Lewie killed us. He blocked shot
after shot, and although still a
little clumsy, he was uncontrollable on the offensive and defensive boards.
For the remainder of the year
we played a lot of ball in the
playground of the Dyckman Pro
jeet where Lewie lived. Lewie
was always there and his improvement was rapid. His shooting improved, his defensive tim
ing was superb, and most important he lost the clumsiness
that most young giants possess
all their lives. It was no fun playing with Lewie unless you were
on his team. On defense he would
just about everything that was
thrown up, but on offense he was
content lb let the other guys do
the bulk of the shooting and con
centrate on rebounding.

‘Academic Integrity"
Cited as Professor
Claims Pressures

WASHINGTON (CPS)—An American University professor has
raised a storm here by charging
that parental pressure caused a
ily jewels, an estate consisting failing grade he gave to be eradof 1) a doctrine of equality, and icated from a student’s record.
2) a philosophy of discrimination.
At issue, says the professor who
And we, the fortunate (and oh, so has full tenure, is his “academic

What it all amounts to, buddy,
is that your great-granddaddy bequeathed you, along with the fam-

intellectual) heirs, have never integrity.” A faculty member, he
really been able to resolve the feels, should have complete auto
painful paradox of our legacy.
omy in doling out grades.
The Negro is justified in his
Apparently the American Uni
eruption, for it is based on our versity administration disagrees,
inherent ideology of equality and and the professor has sent writfreedom. And, in a sense, the ten complaints to his chapter of
bigot is justified in his savagery, the American Association of Unifor it is based on our equally versity Professors (AAUP) and to
inherent ideology of discriminaa campus faculty relationships
tion and inferiority. And the tor- committee.
is
that
no
man
menting fact here
The failing grade was given to
is to blame for the resulting cataaccording
clysm. No man is to blame for a summer student who,
his culture, and no man or group to the professor, plaigiarized a
of men are obligated to answer large part of her take-home final
the
for the mores of their social in his literature course. When
student’s parents complained to
order. Nonetheless, the shopkeepers of Philadelphia were made to the university, and ad hoc admin
answer for a national patrimony istrative committee met and votof prejudice this summer, and ed to erase the grade. The stuthree men in Mississippi were dent's tuition was also refunded
made to answer for a lineage of
The committee decided that the
liberty. But these two conflicting professor’s plaigiarism charges
entities cannot coexist, and as were unsubstantiated, even though
long as we seek the answer in the the student’s parents reportedly
streets, their proponents cannot did not expressly deny the chargcoexist.
es, The parents are said to have
And herein lies the beauty of claimed that the take-home final
encouraged copying.
the Civil Rights Law, and Propos- in fact
Rudolph von Abele, the proition 14. For, whether these documents will eventually live or die, fessor involved, claims that the
the important thing is that they committee pressured him into
will do so b; the pen, and not agreeing to expunge the grade.
the sword.
The committee does not feel there
was any pressure on von Abele,
When we finally replace dcsuniversity administration
struetioh with debate, we have and the
decided and referred the
taken an initial step toward a has
campus’ Facul
final solution And until the flow controversy to the
of blood is stopped, the flow ty Relations Committee
of resolution cannot begin. Better
Von Abele has filed a "formal
to have a dark-skinned neighbor, grievance" with the faculty comthan to have no neighbor. And mittee. The grievance included
better to live \yith bigotry, than a charge of administrative ‘‘innot to live at all.
fringement of academic freedom,"

When Lewie entered Power
Memorial High School, the next
year, he stopped coming down
to the project courts! His coach
Jack Donahue, like most high
school coaches, believed school
yard ball bred bad habits and
risked injury, but he was one
of the few coaches who was ef
fective in keeping his boys off
the playgrounds. lx&gt;wic was an
instant success.
He teamed with his pal Arthur
Kenney, a year older, -'so from
the Dyckman Project, and St.
Judes Day School where Lew had
attended up to the eighth grade,
and overnight Power Memorial
became a national high school
power. Lewie grew to seven feet,
and under Donahue's patient

in every facet of the game. After
an All-American in his
sophomore and junior years of
high school many believe Lewie,
seventeen years old, to be the
best big man ever
After his
junior year in High School, last
year, Lewie was invited to try
out for the US. Olympic Team,
but coach Donahue vetoed the
idea.
being

Today Big Lewie Alcindor is
being sought by colleges through
out the nation. Southern schools
are willing to break the color
barrier to have him attend. Colleges are offering Coach Dona
hue head coaching jobs if he
brings Lewie with him. The big
question is, where will Lewie go’
The word is Lewie will stay in
the East. Unofficially he has nar
rowed it down to three schools,
Fairfield
of - Connecticut, St.
John's and Boston College. BC
is at the present only a dark
horse, and Fairfield is given a
slight edge over St. John’s for
several reasons. First, Lewie’s
best frienjl, Art Kenney, is already there. Second, Donahue is
said to have been offered the
head coaching job Third, Fairfield is starting to go big time
in basketball, and Lewie could
“put it on the map", so to speak

St. John’s, on the other hand,
has its great basketball tradition,
plus the opportunity to play in
New York City, the greatest athletic city in the world. Whatever
school Lewie goes to will be a
basketbal power for his three
years of eligibility, but despite
the

extreme

pressures

being

levelled on him by college recruiters, Lewie remains calm and
collected. He is a mature young
man who is presently intent upon
maintaining

Power's

69

game

winning streak.
Years of athletic accomplish
ments await Lewie on the ama
tour and professional level, and
no doubt Bifi Lewie will be star
rins in professional basketball
for many years to come. But, I
will still remember the bis skin
ny kid with the cap pulled over

his eyes, chasins the boundins
ball down the risht field line.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

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T.M.I. Co

�Toronto Drowns Mermen;
Frosh Edge Intermediates

Wrestlers Win
Four in a Row
By LENNY ARDIETA

In their first outing of the 1965
season, the University of Buffalo
wrestling team downed the Ontario Aggies of Canada

With the exception of one loss
and a draw, the UB Collegiants
made a clean sweep of the afternoon

Ironically, Bill Minor, one
of UB’s most superior wrest
lers was the only loss of the
afternoon. There arc definitely
extenuating circumstances which
no doubt contributes to Bill’s
loss. The Canadian rules of elligibility vary considcrely from
American qualification. Minor’s

opponent had wrestled four years

at Cornell University. Upon termination of attending Cornell he
metriculated to Ontario, where
by Canadian rules he was legally
clligible. As long as a Canadian
student is progressing towards a
degree he is elligjble for Intercollegian competition. One example was cited where a graduate student was studying for his
doctorate and had played varsity
soccer for seven years!
Aj*ain on January 23. Hon LaRoque’s capable squad defeated
Colgate b\ a commanding 21-9
tally. Considering Colgate’s team
one
I its best fur many
years, it was a sweet victory for
the Bulls who were defeated last
season by the same. Colgate's record was 4 1 pior to their encounter with the Bulls.
was

Two pins wore had for Buffalo

b.v Bill

Minor (1117) and Mike
Donahue
1 1(17). Norm Keller
added to the record by wrestlinp

his

Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

opponent rapped

to the point

where C'olpale's member was disqualified for stallinp. Al War
slen lost by only one point (7-6)
to Small, who last year was second in the 4 I s toilrnament. Bob
Jackson, throuph plapued throuph
the week With a serious knee injury, displayed his competitive

By

spirit by pinning his opponent.
Mike Donahue, current editor of
the yearbook, not only worked
all day Saturday, but was enroute
to the meet while his teammates
had started competition. As soon
as he was in uniform he came
into contact with his Colgate
man pinning him in 2.50 of th.e
Third period. Burt Ernest one
again displayed his tremendous
speed for such a big man by outwrestling his opponent 8-5 in
what proved to be a truly exciting exhibition of college wrestling prowess.

STEVE RONIS

Friday night, January 22, the
University of Toronto swimmers,
taking advantage of Canadian eligibility rules, outclassed the UB

Mermen 60-34. Under the rules
governing Canada’s intercollegiate athletic events, Canadian
schools are allowed to use members of faculty, part-time students, and all full time students.
Coach Sanford expressed optimism concerning the return meet
between the two universities, to
be held at Clark Gymnasium.

yd. freestyle relay. The 400 yd.
medley relay foursome, composed
of Stan Walker, Mike Chapelle,
Gaene Barber, and John Weekes
splashed the distanct of 4:00.5.
A very strong and versatile swimmer for UT was Barber. He netted double victories in the 200
individual medley and the 200
yd. butterfly.
Strong

Individual Performances

Although UB lacked its usual
sharpness, individual swimmers
provided some first place victories for the UB Mermen. In the
200 yard backstroke, UB’s power-

The
University of Buffalo
added to its wrestling laurels by
defeating Western Ontario 30-0
and the University of Waterloo
380, giving them four victories

in

a row.

The

weekend provided both
the Canadians and the UB colle-

giates with opportunity to make

personal contact and exchange
information on wrestling as to
techniques and training proce-

anticipated

indoctri-

wrestling into the Ca
nadian high schools, the sport
will no doubt rise in Caliber.

first victory. They clipped the
Toronto
intermediates, 4442
There were many strong performances by UB freshmen in this
meet. Rick Rebo piled up 199.95
points in the event to highlight
the victory. Another strong performer was Mike Conroy. He
posted double victories in the
200yd. individual medley and the
100 yd. butterfly. The freshmen
scored heavily in non-freestyle
events where they possess good
power and strength.
This week on the UB swim
card, there are two home meets
scheduled. Wednesday, January
27, Borckport State visits Clark
Gym, and Saturday afternoon Os
wego State take UB on.
Meet Summary
Toronto 60, UB 34
medley' relay—T o r o n

THE START OF THE 100 YD. FREESTYLE

The reasons for this optimism
stem from the fact that Toronto
will have to swim under NCAA
rules.
Toronto Relays Powerfully
Toronto finmen swept both the
400 yd. medley relay and the 400

ful sophomore backstroker,
Charles Zetterberg, streaked to a
first place in the time of 2:19.5.
Roy Troppman provided back to
back victory for our finmen. He
copped the 500 yard freestyle in
6:02.4. One other high spot for

Chapman (UB) 174.9 points. 200
(T) 2:14.4.
100
free—Peter Richardson (T) :51.2
200 back—Charles Zetterburg
(UB) 2:19.5. 500 free—Roy Troppman (UB) 6:02.4. 200 breast—
Chapelle (T) 2:27.7. 400 free relay
—Toronto (Van Ryan, Richardson, Don Wheeler, Verto) 3:55.9.
butter—Barber

Saturday, the UB prapplers
face their most powerful oppon
ent to date. At 11:00 p.m., at

Clark Gym, UB plays host

to

powerful
Oswepo State.
This
promises to be as excitinp as any

meet in the past history of UB
wrestlinp. It would be beneficial
to both spectators and squad
members for the student body to
attend and support the team.

Swordsmen Stab R.I. T.
By LARRY ZOLINGER

The fencing team has participated in three meets since the

Toth was 2-1, and Joe Paul and
Mike Howard were 1-1. In epee
Frank Poeenco was 3-0, John
Houston was 2-1 and George
Stumph was 1-2, In sabre Dave
Kirschgcssner and Bob Frey were
2-1 and Larry Zollinger was 1-2
Last Friday night' the UB fencg team lifted its season record
6-2 by defeating KIT in Clark
Mil. The score of the match was
to I! with the foil team havig the best record. 8-1. Sabre
was (i-,3 and Epee' went 2-7 for
the match. Individually, in foil.
Joe Paul and Hob Toth were 2-0.
Jim Mondello went 3 0 and Mike
Howard went I-L In Epee', Cap
lain Frank Pecenco's record was
01. followed by John Houston
at 1-2, Lee Cory at 1-2 and George
Stumpf at 0-2. In Sabre, individually. Bob Frey was 2-0 and
Steve Edelstein went 1-0 for the

i

last issue of the Spectrum. On
December 22 they traveled to
Syracuse where they bea) the
Syracuse University team 14-13.
Last weekend they went to South
Bend. Indiana where they defeated Hies University of Chicago
15-12 and
Notre Dame
by w.eapi

cusc

3.

Howard

In

e meet InK score
foil: UB 4.ASyra
&gt;e Paul and Mike

wi

Mike How
defeating y

i

use’s former North
an Paul Schul
in a disputed
ail by
tor. In sabre
lave Ki
ler and Larry
2-1. In epee John
0. Fanrk 2 | and
George
SI
was
12. The
Syracuse Krosh defeated the L'B
rosh
F
178 Tony Wildosz was

jutstanding

UB

freshman

with a 3 0 record for the day.
In the Notre Dame meet the
score by weapons was; foil UB
3, ND 6. sabre UB 1, ND 8. and
epee UB 2. ND 7 In (oil Jim Mondello was 1-0, and Joe Paul and
Mike Howard was 1-2. Prank
in epee with a 2-1 record- Larry
Pocenco won both bouts (or UB
Zollinger won the only sabre
bout (pr UB and was 1 2 for the
meet

Against Chicago the score by
weapons was (oil, UB 4, Chicago

5, epee UB 6, Chicago 3, and
Mbre UB 5, Chicago 4. In foil Bob

day. Dave Kirschgessner, Larry
Zollinger and Rick Fitchittee
were 1-1 for the match.
This Friday night, in Clark
Gym at 7:30, the team fences
McMastcrs, a Canadian school
from Hamilton. Ontario. UB has
never met McMasters and Coach
Sidney Schwartz'thinks that his
swordsmen might be facing a
pretty powerful team this Friday night.

BOCCE
TF 31344

1o

Walker, Mike Chappellc,
Graene Barber, John Weekes!
4:00.5. 200 free—Tom Verth (T)
1:56. 50 free—Ted Van Ryn (T)
:22.8. 200 individual medley—
Barber (T) 2:19.9. Diving—Jerry

Note—The Canadian high

With the
nation of

UB Freshmen Edge
Toronto Intermediates
The UB freshmen scored their

400

schools have very limited wrestling programs to date. Because

of their American counterparts.
That is not to say that Canada
possesses no superior wrestlers.

at 2-2.

(Stan

dures.

Canadian college wrestlers do
not have the benefit of wrestling
experience prior to college exposure, they, generally speaking,
lack the finesse and experience

UB came in the one meter diving event. Jerry Chapman carded
a total of 174.9 points to take
this varsity event. The loss Frl
day evening, evened UB’s record

Arrow Cum Laude, a gutsy button-down oxford In pure, unadulterated cotton. High cdlla
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rpe*'

�Friday, February 5,

1965

PACE SEVENTEEN

SPECTRUM

ICERS LEAD FINGER LAKES
HOCKEY BULLS RALLY TO
TOPPLE OSWEGO AND R.LT.
By

STEVE FEIGIN

The U. of Buffalo hockey team
returned to action last week in
impressive style as they twice
overcame three-goal deficits to
defeat R.I.T. and Oswego State.
These two victories vaulted the
undefeated ice Bulls into first
place in the Finger Lakes Inter-

collegiate Hockey League.
The big news was the Herd’s
stunning upset of previously unbeaten Oswego. The Lakers had
rolled over their four previous
league foes, amassing 74 goals
while giving up only 3. It looked
like number 5 for the home team
as they took a 3-0 lead in the second period. While goalie Ferguson held Buffalo at bay, the
home team scored the games
first goal at 10:15 on a power
play. Two quick tallies followed
and a disappointed UB six went
to the dressing room with a
seemingly impossible gap to
bridge.
They came back on the ice
a different team for the second
period. This was evident, as they
needed but 1:19 to break the
ice on a 15-foot slap shot off
a rebound by defenseman Tom
Robertson. They continued to
press the attack and barely missed scoring on a breakaway at
10:35 while two Oswego skaters
were serving penalties. Nine seconds after the teams returned
to full strength, A1 Dever took
a pass from Brian Frazer and
beat the Laker goalie with a 25-

foot blast.
It took only two minutes for
the home team to regain its two
goal advantage, as their power
play clicked for the third time.
goalie
Buffalo
Ken
Sherry
blocked three shots but the
fourth one slid by his outstretched leg into the cage. UB
hopes seemed to fade, as Oswego
now owned a commanding 4-2
lead with little over a period of
action left.
With barely 43 seconds remaining in the second period, the
momentum suddenly shifted back
to the visitors, as captain Jerry
Doherty scored with UB a man
up and the lead shrank to a single goal. Ferguson protested to

the referee that a Buffalo player
had kicked in the puck. He was
consequently slapped with a
two-minute penalty for swearing.
The Lakers now had two players off the ice and this was the
opening that the Bulls were
looking for. With but 7 seconds
showing on the clock, defenseman Day Hannah drilled a shot
from the blue line that caught
the right corner of the cage.
Ferguson never saw it. The score
was now all even at 4-4. On
the ensuing face-off, Ames of
Oswego stole the puck and broke
in on Sherry. The highly partisan crowd went wild as the shot
was true, but the buzzer had
sounded a few seconds before.

The ice Bulls made short order
of the Lakers in the final 20
minutes as Dan Gorney scored
the two deciding goals on breakaway passes from player-coach
Karl Balland. Sherry had 16
saves to add to his already im-

ploded for six goals and an 8-4
win. Robertson scored at the 2
minute mark and Doherty, Gorney, Dan Algier and Jeff Weaver
followed in rapid succession. In
a little over five minutes, UB
had catapulted from two goals

shoulders when they were checked hard into boards and defenseman whose nose was broken from
deliberate blow from opponent’s
stick . . . First line of Gorney,
Doherty and assorted subs for
Bausch accounted for 10 goal?
and 13 assists in the games Doherty tallied 4 times and assisted on 3 others, while Gorney
had 3 goals and 6 assists . . .

Sherry had 43 saves in Oswego
game and

left fans awe-struck
with his spectacular play . . .
Team was greeted in Oswego

FINGER LAKES
HOCKEY LEAGUE
STANDINGS
Buffalo
Oswego

Ithaca

Brockport
R.I.T.
Syracuse

Rochester
Hobart

SPECTRUM
TOP TWENTY
291

Michigan

St.

Joseph

U.C.L.A.
Providence
Vanderbilt
Davidson
Buffalo
San Francisco
Wichita
Illinois

Right to Left, Standing; Marty Sadoff, Pete Evans, Steve Feigin, Mgr., Rick Greenfeld, Mgr., Richard
Daffner, Buddy Bodanski, Mgr., Al Dever, Dan Gorney, Bill Leed, Jr, Pete Marrvs, Bill Savage, Tom
Robertson, Mike Whelan, Mike Roben, Jerry Doherty, John Flynn, Larry Polen, Mgr., Karl Balland,
Coach
Right to Left, Kneeling; Al Moorhouse, Jim Bausch, Davl Kubiak, Day Hannah, Ken Sherry, Jeff Weaver,
Bill Mitchell, Jeff Proctor, Brian Frazer, Jim Lenegan
pressive total and wrapped up
the big upset for Buffalo.
The R.I.T. contest, played a
few days before the Oswego
game, was very similar The
Tigers, the closest thing to a

traditional rival for the Bulls,
jumped off to a 3-0 lead in the
first seven minutes as the sluggish UB defense showed the effects of the month-long layoff
for exams. The Herd looked
like it was going to lose its third
game in a row to the Engineers,
including their only two setbacks last season. R.I.T-. goalie
Frahm seemed to have shaken
off the effects of a pre-season
stab wound and eyed his first
shutout of the campaign Then,
at 19:21, Frazer tapped in the
rebound of A1 Moorhouse’s shot
and UB was back in the game.
It didn’t take long for the
home team to get back that goal
as Wharity bested Sherry at the
30 second mark of the second
period. That proved to be the
Tigers last score, but for the next
15 minutes of play it looked like
Buffalo’s also. The visitors controlled the puck, but the rugged
R.I.T. defense was able to con
tain them Finally, after 17 minutes of the period had gone by,
Doherty found the range and
the period ended with the Bulls
trailing 4-2.

The dam

finally

burst in the

final period as the visitors exdown to a commanding 7-4 lead.
Doherty’s third goal of the night
(and seventh in his last two
games) at 16:05 ended the scoring.
Tonight the ice Bulls, 4-0,
travel to Cornell University to
meet the Ithaca hockey team
and on Saturday they're on the
road against the U. of Rochester,
an early season 16-1 victim. Their
next game is scheduled for February 14th when they’ll battle
with R.I.T. again Game time is
10:30 pm at the Amherst Rink.
BULL SESSION

—

teams were guilty of

All three

over-aggressive play. Fights were numerous
as tension mounted. Paul DcWitt
of UB had the distinction of be
ing ejected from both games.
Hard skating Bulls totaled 18
penalties and 44 minutes in
penalty box. Opponents had 22
and 50 minutes. Part of this can
be attributed to poor officiating.
. . . Bulls excellent play was even
considering
more remarkable
loss of 2 top scorers, Jim Bausch
and Moorhouse, due to separated

NEXT ISSUE
The next regularly scheduled SPECTRUM will appear
Friday, Feb. 19. Copy deadline for this issue is Tuesday,
Feb. 16, at 11:00 a.m.

paper by article entitled Can
Anybody Play This Game of
Hockey?, a reference to home
team’s earlier opponents They
got their answer last Saturday
night.

N. Carolina St
Iowa
Arizona
Wayne State

Tennessee
St,

John's

Evansville
Minnesota
Niagara

Steubenville

SUPPORT THE BULLS

SPECIAL SALE
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3.50«.

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February 5, 6 and 8 ONLY

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TF VM21
Daily � »
Man., Thors., Frl.—»-�
-

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

(7)

�Friday, February 5, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

U8 CAGE PREVIEW

STREAKING BULLS TO FACE

tomorrow night, and it appears
that only a real Act of Providence
could get the Niagarans past the

WAYNE STATE AND NIAGARA
79-53
of Steubenville last
week, the UB hoopsters return to
the cage wars tomorrow night
against Wayne State in Clark
Gym, and then will encounter NiFresh from an arou.sing

lambasting

agara in the Aud Tuesday night.
The surging i Bulls, who have
been about
and unstoppable since'New Year’s as
the Buffalo winter weather, will
put a modest five-game winning
skein on the line for Wayne State
tomorrow night. Under the reins
of Joel G. Mason, the Detroiters,
who will also be sporting a fivegame victory streak and a 7-2

mark overall, will be striving to

reverse last year’s verdict' when
the Bulls prevailed in a 73-72 cliffhanger.

In 5'ir guard Fred Wolcott,
singed the silk for 30 mark
ers in last year's tilt, the Tartars
possess what the UB hardwood
coaching staff calls “possibly the
best guard we will see this year.”
A prime factor in Wayne State’s
recent success has been Tom Carl-’

who

son, who canned 33 in his last
outing after being scholastically
ineligible for the first semester;
the return of Carlson and top'
reserve Jim Perry has taken much
pressure off Wolcott and diversified the Tartars' attack. Also expected to start for the Tartars
are 67" center Frank Dmuchowski, 6’3” Paul Widdoes, and 6T'
Marty Letzmann.

Coach Scrfustini, who was ebulliently lauding the Herd’s rugged
rebounding, unselfish teamwork,
parsimonious defense, and uncanny field goal and foul shooting in their triumph over Steubenville last week, expected his
forces to be as “up” for tomorrow's fray as they were in their

“finest hour” last week.
In the 6; 15 preliminary, the
colorful UB freshmen will have
their hands full as they tangle

with the talent-laden St. Bona-

venture frosh.
Tuesday, in Memorial Auditorium, the Bulls will collide with
long-time rival Niagara. Looking
at Niagara’s disappointing 3-9 rec-

Intramurals
By MARTY JAFFE

Last, week the

of con-

myriad

testants were eliminated in the
intramural

handball tournament
leaving Jeff Wasson and Bcrnie
Stein, two freshmen independents,
to play in the singles finals. Wasson and Stein, partners in the
doubles finals, fought out three
hard games with Wasson winning
the championship two games to
one. In the doubles final Roy
Agelofc and Bob Kohansky of
Alpha Epsilon Pi defeated Was
son and Stein.
The fraternity basketball league
is now at the halfpoint of the

season. At this point. Alpha Epsilon Pi, and Alpha Sigma Phi
are tied for first place in the
Thursday 8:30 league. Sigma Phi
Epsilon and Beta Sigma Rho are
tied for first place in the Thursday 9:30 league.

The

Fraternity standing

;s

are as

follows

4. Alpha Phi Omega
5. Theta Chi
(i. Tau Kappa Epsilon

Yamaka Bombers
Potters
Beach Boys
Blayers
Law School

Little Apes;
Spieglers
Monday 9:30
Zygotes

very, very bad, and when they
were good, they still were not
much better.

Last week, Taps Gallagher’s
Purple Eagles showed sighs of
snapping out of their winter-long
lenthargy by dumping Youngstown, 55-42, but they quickly
returned to their doldrums by
absorbing a merciless 97-59 shellacking at the hands of the perennially tough DePaul Demons
only a few days later. Niagara did
not look much better in earlier
disasters against Dayton and Villanova, and matters rose to such
a high pitch on the Niagara campus that Coach Gallagher was
hanged in effigy by some rebellious students after the Eagles
were grounded by Buffalo State,
63-58, something which happens
about as often as the appearance
of Halley’s Comet. To make matters worse, the Eagles must contend with the only major undefeated college in the country

Goodwin to Speak
On WBFO Sport Talk
1
0
0

2
3
3

The standings of the Indepen
dent League are as follows:

Monday 8:30

ord, one might say in reviewing
their performance this year that
when they were bad, they were

1

By STEVE SCHUELEIN

won lost
0
5
3
1
2
2
2
2
3
1
3
1
1
4

Bunnies
Moppers

Buddhawanas
Gu nners

M. Squad
Friday 8:30
Tribunes
Stalks

Playboys
D 1) Is

Bombers

Re gals
Do Nut Kings

WBFO, the student radio station, will broadcast, live and exclusive, the play-by-play of to-

morrow night’s basketball game
between the Bulls and Wayne
State. The game can be heard
on either the FM band 88.7 me.
or on campus AM, 780 me.

Friars.
The Purple Eagles have shown
only sporadic glimmers of hardwood excellence this year in
squeezing past St. Anselm’s, 48-41,
Villa Madonna, 69-60, Youngstown, 55-42, as well as giving
Miami, 67-74, LaSalle, 59-67 in
overtime, and St. Bonaventure,
66-71, rough battles before succumbing.
Despite all the court deficiencies that the Eagles have exhibited this year, the Bulls nevertheless expect a furious struggle
from them. Many of the key reasons for the Niagara decline this
year will not be factors on Tuesday. First, the Bulls will be one
of the smaller teams the Purple
Eagles will face this year, and
•Niagara has demonstrated in the
past that it is not afraid to go
up on the boards. Second, the
return of guard Pat Broderick
from ineligibility first semester
has given the Niagarans a capable
scoring companion for Tom Lenney. Third, Captain Joe White
has been hampered by intermittent bouts with the flu for the
last month, but should be completely recovered by Tuesday.
Along with , the two other prob-

able starters, George Phillips and
Art Coleman, this means that the
Purple Eagles will probably be
utilizing their strongest team of
the season. If Niagara is as up
for the Bulls as they are expected
to be, an all-out effort from the
SUNYAB’s will be necessary for
victory.

Another exciting game seems
in store for the 7:30 freshman
preliminary when the Calves
face the Baby Eagles, to whom
they dropped a narrow 84-81 decision in their first meeting.
Although the Bulls pleased
everyone rooting for them Saturday night with their brilliant per-

formance, the paucity of backers
from UB was a major disappointment and put a damper on the
Bull triumph. Unless a marked
improvement in attendance is
shown when the Bulls play Niagara Tuesday, the chances of improving the schedule in the future seem very remote. Again,
the decision is up to you. Support
the Bulls.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS
"Learn

Dick Flcicher will open with
his pre-game analysis at 8:15.
Wally Blatter will call the shots,
starting at 8:30. Back the Bulls
by listening to WBFO, the New
Voice of the Bulls.

to

drive safely, and quickly”

Amherst Driving School
3173 Main

Street at Windspear

FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP
Norward

Goodwin, the.

high

jumping forward from Erie, Pennsylvania, will be the special guest
on SPORTS TALK tonight at 6:00
p in. with Wally Blatter. "Goody",
last year’s leading scorer and last
week's big gun in the Bulls’ win
over Steubenville, will review the
season to date and point out some
of the barriers still to be moved
(Niagara. Colgate, U. of R, etc.)
on his team’s road toward an

•
•

Classroom Lectures
Pre-Permit Classes

PHONE IF 7-5550
Fully Insured -College Trained Instructors

8:30

won lost

1
2.

Alpha Epsilon Pi
Alpha Sigma Phi
3. Phi Epsilon Pi
4. Alpha Phi Delta

5. Pi Lambda Delta
Gamma Phi

6;

Thursday

1.
2.

0
0
1
1

3
3

9:30

Sigma Phi Epsilon
Beta Sigma Rho

3. Sigma

3
3
2
1
0
0

Alpha

Mu

3
3

2

0

0
1

(SPORTS CIRCLE Cont'd from P. 20)
ill politics, but I don’t belong
a Republican.

to an organized party. I’m

Another sought after speaker, Bob Devaney of Nebraska, saw fit to attack the T:V. commercials that he
feels are ruining the televised college games. He. was
heard to declare that “during the Rose Bowl game I
thought the White Knight scored the last three touchdowns."

-

Dual Controls

if she doesn’t give it to you.

NCAA tourney bid.
—

Thursday

Road Lessons
Refresher Courses

•
•

get it yourself!

JADE EAST

■

AND THAT WAS THE WEEK IN SPORTS

M

Cologne, 6 oz., $4.50
After Shave, 6 oz., $3.50
Deodorant Stick, $1.75
Buddha Cologne Gift Package. 12 oz.. $8.50
Spray Cologne, $3.50
Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00
Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00
After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50

,

■.

**

�Friday, February

5, 1965

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

Bulls Notch Fifth Straight
BARTH SPARKLES IN TORONTO PASTING;
GOODWIN, POE LEAD STEUBENVILLE ROUT
By STAN LICHWALA
The Basketball Bulls went over
the 100-mark for the third time
this season as they defeated Toronto 105-63 in a game recently
■played at Clark Gym, Coach Serfustini got a well balanced performance as all his players hit
the scoreboard in the important
preparatory game for the big
Steubenville encounter.

great, had ten points and proved
to be strong under the boards
again. Norb Baschnagel grabbed
eight rebounds and hit for eight
points as UB chalked up victory

In the opening minutes of play,
the. Canadians were able to stay
close to the Bulls, but with about
seven minutes to play in the first
half, UB broke the game wide
open and built up a 58-30 halftime lead. In the second half, the
Buffalo cagers were able to outscore the hoopsters from Canada
47-33 as the UB bench was emptied, allowing all the Bulls to
see action. The UB field goal
percentage remained near the
usual 50 per cent mark as the
Bulls sank 40 of 73 field goals
for 54.8 per cent, to 24 of 81—
30 per cent for the Canadians,
Playing well under the boards,
UB was able to gain a 67-42 re-

RADIO BROADCASTS

bounding advantage.

Bill Barth, 6-5 center, turned in
bis finest performance for UB.
Replacing Bill Bilowus who graduated, Barth proved worthy of
his starting position as he

led

the Bulls with 23 points and turned in a good job under the boards.
Barth hit eight of nine field goal
attempts and brought his field
goal percentage to slightly under
60 per cent.
Dan Bazzani and Paul Goldstein
followed Barth with 12 points
each. Jack Karaszewski tossed in
10 and Norward Goodwin found
the mark for eight points. Missing from the UB lineup for the
Toronto game was top scorer
Harvey Poe who suffered a pulled
muscle in his thigh during a prace session before the Toronto
me. Poe, averaging 15.8 points
game, did not dress for the
me and hoped to be ready to go
ainst Steubenville. Dick Hetze!
placed Poe and looked good in
first appearancce since the
cning game after being sidecd by illness. .

2
3

Ringler

Hctzel

4

West

6

6

Baranowicz

3
1

40 25 105
FG FT T
5 4 14

Totals
TORONTO
Holowachuk

Kane

Woloshyn
Kimcl

7
1
0

a

Callahan
Kantor
Lockhart

1

0

Tomorrow night, the Bulls will
entertain Wayne State in Clark
Gym. A Memorial Auditorium
game with Niagara is scheduled
for Tuesday.

f

Greene f
Holley c

10

Osbornt’
Hue

Quinn

McCloskey
Strafacc
Sonedecker

Barth c

Bazzani g
Goldstein g
Baschnagcl

6

Poe

Smith
Karaszewski
Hctzcl
Brassel
Fratangelo
Hinglcr
Gill

88 7.3
81 6.7
46 6.5

46
4
11 18 10 46
10 14 11
39
9
6
19
7
3
6
3 0
3
2
4
0
9 26
60
8
12 422 238 1082

Barto

FG
3
7
4
2
1
2
4
2
2

BUFFALO
Bevilacqua f
Goodwin £

F TP Avg
45 173 15.7
26 120 10.0
27 111 9.2
29 107 8.9
13 103 8.5

12

23

Totals

UB Individual Scoring

33

UB ECAC College Division AllEast Nomination for Steubenville
game: junior forward Norward
Goodwin (Erie, Pa.); led team

0
1
0
0
0
0

Barto

4,6
4.1

Smith
3.9
Gill
2.1
Hetzel
2.0
1,3
Ringler
*Bilowus
6.6
Totals
90.1
*Graduated; no longer eligible.

Totals
Halftime:

NORWOOD GOODWIN DRIVES FOR BASKET
The Box Scores
BUFFALO

Bevilaqua
Goodwin

Barth
Goldstein
Bazzani
Barto
Karaszcwski

FG
3
3
8
3
5
1
4

FT T
1
7
8
2
7 23
6 12
2 12
2
4
2 10

&gt;

asf Saturday night, the Bulls

t

highly regarded Steubenville
a Memorial Auditorium ennter. Steubenville boasted an
record with big victories over
rshall, Wesleyan, St, Francis
Pennsylvania, Gannon, and
Jngstown. UB brought a 9-2
ord into the game and a four
ae winning streak.

Buffalo 38,

ville 20.

SEMI ANNUAL

m

CLEARANCE

1

'

ON

MEN’S
SUITS

-

TOPCOATS

-

SPORTCOATS

1

FURNISHINGS AND ACCESSORIES

EAGLE CLOTHES

t

MANHATTAN

-

-

STETSON

RUGBY

-

SWANK
McGREGOR
-

and others I

—

'

rward Goodwin, completely
ng. any signs of his early
a slump, led UB with 16
s and hauled in nine reds. Harvey Poe, still botherhis sore thigh, which limhis action, tossed in his 15
a and Bill Barth, looking

HARVEY POE HITS FOR TWO ON JUMP SHOT
and re-

bounds (91; all-around sparkling
floor play. Second nomination of
season

for

Goodwin.

Bulls’ surprisingly easy win
over Steubenville was termed by
Coach Len Serfustini as one of
UB’s finest basketball hours. The
Barons were 11-1 coming into
the game and had faced some of
the top small colleges in the
country. About time the wire
service polls begin to notice Buffalo.

4
0

2

0

Brassel

Smith
Baschna e)
Fratangelo
„

Gill

2
3
2
0
1

0
1
1
1
0

4

This is your opportunity to take advantage of
our Annual February CLEARANCE SALE on
Fine MEN'S APPAREL

5
1

ShS
Crest

—

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

univeksity

PLAZA
BUFFALO, N
837-5090

»

2

7
FT
0
2
2
0

3
4
7
0
2
0
0
1
0
2
0

53
T

6
16
10
4

5
8

15
4
6

0
2
1
0
2
0

28 23 79
Steuben-

SAVE
20% 50%

in- scoring (16 points)

4
15

12 4
10 3 23
0
0 0
4
2 10
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
0
0

Vogel’ger g

UB-Wayne State on WBFO-FM
(88.7 me.), Wally Blatter doing
play-by-play,
UB-Niagara on WGR (550), Ed
Edwards doing play-by-play
Tickets—UB-Wayne tickets on
sale day of game, beginning at
5:30 p.m. at UB Athletic Ticket
Office, 104 Clark Gym. Reserved
seats, $1.50; general admission,
$1.00; high school students, 50
cents.

Goodwin
12 38
Goldstein
12 24
Bevilacqua
7 20
Brassel
10 21

15
9

FG FT T
0
8
4
10 2

STEUBENVILLE
Curry

Hummell g

G FG
11 64
Poe
Karaas’ski 12 47
Baschnagel 12 47
.
Birth
12 39
Bazzani
12 45

3
3
2
1
2
0
0
0

Totals
24 15 63
Halftime: Buffalo 58, Toronto 30.

number ten.

r

teubenville opened up a 10-6
i early in the game, but watchit quickly disappear as UB,
ired in six straight points for
12-10 advantage. The Barons
'tied the score at 12-12, but
Id not contain the Bulls’ scorspurts. At the half, the Bufcagers had jumped to a 38-20
f The second half saw the
Is put the game away and roll
79-53 victory, greatly, enhanctheir chances of a post-season
rnament bid. Again, Buffalo
rebounded the opponent
ime by a margin of 5749.
«'as the first time this seateam had been able to outnd the Ohioans. Slipping
their usual 50 per cent averhe Bulls sank 28 of 69 field
attempts for 40.6 per cent
the Barons hit on 23 of 80
17 per cent.

0
0

—

TRANSITOWN

PI A2A
W ILLIAMSVHLI
434-5533

�Friday, February 5,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

1965

¥

K

-t=
Dewey Wade Named New Lina Coach;

—=i—^

==&amp;—^

SPORTS CIRCLE

Ryan Promoted to Chief Assistant

T W 3”

WE HOPE THE TITLE IS SELF EXPLANATORY
Joe Namath, the highest paid player in professional
football history ($100,000 by the Jets) underwent knee
surgery last week which will eventually determine whether-or not he will physically be able to play football again.
It was reported that in order to gain some dividend from
his investment, Jet Owner, Sonny Werblin, installed a
closed circuit TV in the operating room so that the surgery

could he viewed before
at Shea Stadium.

a

capacity paid T.V. qudience
J

The National Broadcasting Company last week purchased the rights to the American Football League Championship and All Star games for the next five years for
more than $7,000,000. This completes an earlier A.F.L.N.B.C. transaction which also covered a five year period
for the A.F.L. regular season schedule for $.'56,000,000,
bringing the total to a record setting $43,000,000 T.V.
contract. It was reported that N.B.C. president, General
David Sarnoff, hired a team of investigators to check up
on the financial stability of the A.F.L. teams before he
would authorize the deals to insure that the venture
would be a success. This sounded like a reasonable precaution for such a costly investment, but it turned out
that without one A.F.L. game being televised on T.V., the
General and the network are $56,000,000 in the red. It
seems that it cost him $13,000,000 to pay for the investigators.

Dewey S. Wade, coach of freshman football for the past five
seasons, has been selected by
head coach Dick Offenhamer to
,be the new offensive line coach
at the University of Buffalo.
Wade succeeds Charley Reeves
who resigned earlier the month
to enter private business in Texas.
The appointment of Wade is subject to approval by the Faculty
Committee on Athletics.
The 33-year old Wade is a native of St. Joseph, Missouri. He
played four years of college football, two at Kansas State University arid two at the University
of Houston. His college career was
interrupted by a stint in the U.S.
Marine Corps from 1953 to 1955.
While with the Devil Dogs he
played for the San Diego Marines
and was named All-Service tackle.
In all, Wade played in 70 college
and service games at four differrent positions: tackle, guard, fullback and defensive end.
Prior to coming to Buffalo in
1960 he was line coach and art
supervisor at South High School
in Omaha, Nebraska. He holds a
degree in art education from Hou-

ston.

At UB he has been eminently
successful as freshman coach. His

Y. A. Tittle, who recently wrote his autobiography
entitled I Pass, officially retired from the pro-football
wars last week. It is reported, although not too reliably,
that a second edition of the book will soon be published.
This one is to be known as I Passed.
Monday night in New York, the Rabbit outpointed
the Washerwoman to further muddy the heavyweight
boxing waters. Mohammed AH, the ringside closed-circuit TV commentator, might have put it this way "I just
don’t go for this type of jive
And 1 can take them both

defeating Army, Syracuse, Colgate, Ithaca College and Manlius
School, while losing only to Navy.
Wade lives in Cheektowaga,

New

York,

with his

wife,

responsibilities
operation.

overall

ATTEND THE
UB-NIAGARA
GAME
TUESDAY
at 1
Memorial
Auditorium
JIM "BUDDY"

RYAN

former Shirley Marie Stanwood,
from Corpus Christi, Texas, and
their two children, Dickie Paul,
5, and Deborah Anne, 3.
In a further reorganization of
his staff. Coach Offcnhamer an-

ADMISSION

FREE
with ID Card

that

GAME TIME

9:15

In commenting upon the new
appointments, Coach Offenhamer

—

declared Wade had earned his
of the fine
work he did with the freshmen
and that his qualifications compared tii\jorably with the more
than 50 applicants for the post.
Offenhamer also stated that Ryan
would coordinate the team defense and would assume greater
promotion because

DEWEY WADE

the

the

ville and Marshall High Schools
in Texas before joining the Buffalo staff.

in five.’-’ In Italy last week, riots broke out at two different
soccer games for two different reasons. In one, the melee
started when the home team fell two goals behind just
before the final gun. The loyal fans just could not allow
their favorites to be defeated. In the other one, bedlam
broke loose when a game between Fanfulla and Biellese
ended up in a 1-1 tic. It seems that no one could pronounce, the names of the teams.
In Boston on Sunday, the fiery coach of the virtually

in

The head coach said that he
would continue screening candidates for freshman coach.

James “Buddy”
Ryan, defensive line coach for the
past four years, has been designated as chief assistant coach.
Ryan is a graduate of Oklahoma
State, where he won four letters
at guard. He coached at Gaines-

:

—

times and last year his
charges won five out of six games,
three

nounced

—

unbeatable Celtics, Red Auerbach, was “dismissed’’ from
a game after protesting vigorously Rill Russell's fouling
out of the contest against the New York Knicks. While
departing, Auerbach waved good-bye to New York coach
Harry Gallatin. Harry the Horse was so enraged at this
show of over-confidence that he openly challenged Auerbach, The Redhead, in another of his typical grandstand
maneuvers, responded by merely pointing to the scoreboard, which showed his team to be leading by 25 points.
A rather unreliable source explained the situation this
way: “Mr. Auerbach's actions should not be misunderstood. He was simply trying to explain to Mr. Gallatin
that things could get worse.” They did. Boston eventually won by 28 points.
Jim Marshall, defensive end of the Minnesota Vikings, was on his way to Dallas to pick up an award when
he made the wrong turn on the expressway and screeched
up to the airport late for his flight. Jim was in luck, his
plane hadn’t left yet, so he raced over to the boarding
area and hopped aboard. The only trouble was that this
plane was bound for Chieaigo . . . Now you might think
that this isn’t particularly newsworthy, but this is the
same Jim Marshall who picked up a fumble and ran 66
yards in the wrong direction with it, thereby scoring a
safety for San Francisco. The award? What else
“Bonehead of the Year”.
It’s that time of the year again when the collegiate
football coaches hit the banquet circuit to pass the months
between bowl games and spring practice (it’s more like
days lately!) They are expected to pass on their vast
knowledge of the pigskin sport to the audience. Sometimes, they tend to stray from the topic and tread in dangerous waters, Sayeth Ohio State mentor Woody Hayes
to the U.S. Trotting Association, “I’m keenly interested
(Cont'd on Page 18)

team defeated the Army Plebes

"Teams OnTheMovc

ALSO

—

CALVES
vs.

NIAGARA FROSH

L

/*/M

LAST \AJEEV\V\JAS l\

W/f STEvMHMlUi

-

1VS3

M M'rtUO'»

...u.
SW)

■

By ALLAN SCHOLOM

U

—

..."MUR MERMEN
SCHOOL

:C0W05,T0PP\H6

OSNMQbO s«*-nj

�</text>
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FDITORS

—

-J

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

h

STEUBENVILLE

V

PREVIEW

ANSWERED

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 29,

VOLUME 15

NO. 15

1965

Resigns As Dean, Rushing Starts Senate Considers New Constitution;
will
Proposes a Reorganization semester
A Bicameral Con gress Proposed
Dr.

Albrecht
The resignation of

Milton

College
C. Albrecht, dean of the
of Arts and Sciences at State
University at Buffalo, was an-

nounced

January

4 by Dr. Clif-

ford C. Furnas, University president.
■ It is truly with great regret
that 1 accept dean Albrecht's resignation,” said Dr. Furnas. “I
know, however, that he arrived

at his decision only after most
careful consideration and I can
only respect his wishes and his
judgment.” he added.
Dr. Albrecht, who was appointed dean of the College in
1958, will return to teaching and
research in June, according to Dr.
Furnas, In His letter of resignation, Dr. Albrecht said that the
decision was reached after careful deliberations and after consultation with his physician. He
also said the decision was in
agreement with an understanding

made with Dr. B'urnas five years

“My decision represents no essential disagreement with either
the administration or the faculty.
Indeed, in the total of ten years
that I have served in the dean’s
office, I have experienced the
utmost consideration and co-operation from President Furnas,
Dr.
G. Lester Anderson (vicepresident for educational affairs),
Dr. Claude E, Puffer (vice-president for business affairs), and
others in the higher administration, as well as from my fellow
deans. I have enjoyed the unfailing support .of department chairmen and of the faculty, individually and collectively.”

President Furnas said that Dr.
Albrecht's accomplishments in his
role as dean have been “truly
great.” He added: “All honor and
credit to him. As he goes forward
with his research and teaching
may he occasionally have time
to bask in a well-deserved glow

of satisfaction in the knowledge
of his firmly-established reputa-

tion for handling that most difficult position of being scholar
plus an executive leader."
A suggestion for a major reorganization of the College accompanied Dr. Albrecht's resig-

nation.

“The State University of New
York at Buffalo is transforming
itself into a new and different
institution, one that 1 feel sure
will ultimately achieve greater
national and international significance than in the past," he said.
“In this transformation, I believe that the College must be

thoroughly reorganized in order
to fulfill its future functions and
obligations."
Dr, Albrecht said that a better
administrative structure should
be devised in order to preserve

the effectiveness of the liberal

arts program and also foster the
development o f specializations
consistent with the grbwth of the
University as a graduate center.
The reorganization is needed

he said, because the next few
years will be cruceial in bringing
the College and the University to
its “full stature of greatness."

Regarding the reorganization,
Dr. FUrnas said that he was in
complete agreemment with Dr.
Albrecht and said he had appointed a committee to study the
reorganization of the College and
to make recommendations.
In emphasizing the importance
of the study, Dr. Furnas said that
the results would be as significant as the physical planning for
the new multi-million dollar campus in Amherst.
During Dr. Albrecht’s tenure as
head of the College, enrollment
has more than tripled. At the
time of his appointment, there
were approximately 1600 students
enrolled in the College. This year
there are approximately 5,000
students enrolled. Last April Dr.
Albrecht headed the 50th anniversary celebration of the College.

Today is the last chance this
that campus women
have to register for Sorority
Rush. Registration will be this
afternoon from 3:00 5:00 p.m. in
the Panhellenic Office. Despite
popular belief, this registration
does not obligate anyone to join
a sorority. Quite the contrary,
the sorority women of SUNYAB
invite all women to participate
in simply one of the most enjoyable experiences of their college
career. Come one, come all
non - believers, existentialists,
PEGS, nursing students, and shying violets. Come to see this pecular composite, a sorority woman, looks like.
-

Tuesday night, the Student Senate began deliberation on revised
constitution of the Student Association, the organization which

is the basis of student government on this campus. The con-

—

The format of rush has been

changed and extended this year
to enable the rushees to enjoy
the experience even more. The
new ideas being used were compiled at a regional Panhellenic
Conference last September. The
new rushing procedures are de-

rived from Panhellenic systems
from such universities such as
Syracuse, Cornell, Buchnell, and

stitution now under consideration
is the result of more than a
year's work by the Constitutional
Pennsylvania.
Revisions Committee of the StuConvocation
will dent Senate, presently under the
Sunday, Rueh
take place at 2:00 p.m. in Norton chairmanship of Mr. David Frey.
time
At
this
Conference Theater.
The new constitution proposes
the rushces will learn about sorovast changes in the present orintrority life in general and be
ganization of student government.
duced to sorority women. The It is loosely fashioned after the
progressive
following evening a
Constitution of the United States,
dinner will be held in Norton. embracing a House of Representadesign
The dinner is ingeniously
tives, a Student Senate, a Student
ed to allow each rushee to.meet Judiciary, and executive officers.
every sorority because each soroThe President of the Student Asrity will serve one course of the sociation would bo given the
meal. Tuesday a coke party will power to veto. The Vice-President
further aid the rushees in meetwould serve as the President qf
ing the sororities. Informal parthe Student Senate.
ties Thursday evening, February
Debate on the new constitution
4, will be based upon national began at a special meeting of the
themes. Each sorority will plan Student Senate last night and
its party around a theme pertainwill continue, Tuesday, at 6:30
ing to a different nation. Addip.m. in Room 335.
tional informal parties will be
At the meeting, The Senate also
scheduled in Norton Union Sun- passed a resolution which will be
day, February 7, based on intersent to the Department of Engnational themes.
lish stating its displeasure with
Each sorority will then hold the Department's new policy of
an informal party on a weekday posting failures and incomplete
evening, off-campus. These par grades. It stated that "the Student
ties will extend from February Senate deplores the public postThe final series of parties ing” of these grades, without the
will )take place from February knowledge or consent of the
16-24 These last parties of a instructors of the courses.
Formhk Dessert, are designed to President Robert P. Finkelstein
show Uv
kns more sombre side of opened Tuesday's meeting with a
sororltynfc. Hush will terminate speech outlining some of the
Friday, February 26, At this time goals the present Senate should
the rushee will bid for the soro- strive for. He said:
rity of her choice. In the after"I speak here tonight to disnoon, rushees will pick up their cuss a few items which will have
their
new
bids and be greeted by
little immediate concern to us as

Schein, Alias Thallus/ Fined $50TI
"

By MARGO WALLACH

/

's.Viik

Schein, the Thallus of Marchantia,
fined Monday, January 18, in Cheek-

Arthur A.
convicted and
towaga District Court for his participation in the recent
Thallus hoax. The defendant was convicted on the
grounds of disorderly conduct, “causing a crowd to cOf
lect,” which is a misdemeanor.

Paul I. Birzon, Schein’s attorney, explained in an interview

that the evidence given at the
and on-half hour hearing
centered around the gathering
of 1500 people, presumably students, at the Buffalo International Airport December 16. It
was acknowledged that at 1:50
p.m. Arthur Schein, “dressed
normally” with the exception of
a “piece of linen” around his
head, stepped oft an airplane
and was immediately taken into
protective custody without his
request for such protection.
It was shown that Schein used
his own identity on the flights
to and from New York City and
that he provided identification
upon request. Furthermore, no
proof of damage to the airport
was given at the trial.
In appealing the case, Mr. Birzon will base his appeal on the
contention that the crowd must
form after a defendant’s appearance on the scene in order to
effect a casual relation. Lieutentwo

ant Benedict L. Kostrzewski of
the Cheektowaga Police testified
that the large crowd which filled
the airport arrived and reached
its peak prior to the arrival of
the plane on which Schein was
a passenger.

However, Assistant District At
torney Gerald J. O’Reilly explain

v
ARTHUR SCHEIN

that the testimonies of Lt. Kostrzewski and others showed that
Schein was part of the hoax and
that it were his actions which
caused the crowd to collect before the arrival of the plane.
Schein admitted participating in
the hoax, but claims that he had
no knowledge of the crowd that
would congregate. According to
Birzon, Schein did nothing “but
step off a plane and get into a
police car,” Schein says that he

is willing to appeal his case up
to the State Supreme Court if
necessary.

sisters.
So register now for a month
of enjoyment, a new educational
experience! AH you need to register is $2.00, a 1.0 average, and
an open mind.

bu t
representatives,
which will have a great deal of
impact on future Student Associations at our university. I speak
of areas which need attention

student'

the student voice and
effectiveness on our campus will
continue to grow. One year, is
a short time of effecting major
policy changes within a university. If a student government is
to prove its worth, it must operate in two realms: First, it must
concern itself with those problems which it can solve. Secondly, and equally important,
however, it must concern itself
with problems which it cannot
either begin or finish within the
single year term of office. A student government, to be powerful
and worthwhile, must concentrate
in both these vital areas, I have
so that

spoken to you previously, on
more than a single occasion, on
topics within the first area of
consideration. Tonight, I wish to
address myself to the second
realm, that of beginning projects
which will be completed after
the 1964-65 Student Senate ceases to be. This Senate has completed some projects of previous
Senates and has laid or continued groundwork for future Sen
ates. I' wish to mention three
specific things which we must
now begin.
will receive
“Tonight you
copies of a proposed new Constitution for our Student Association. This culminates the report of a special committee which
has worked 1 Ms years to complete
this project. As we all know, the
present document is an inadequate one, and the revision has
been anxiously awaited. An enormous amount of work has gone
into this preparation. I feel it
is of the utmost importance, and
I have worked closely and extensively with the Chairman of
the Revisions Committee. A great

deal of time, energy and discussion precede tonight’s recommended Constitution. By revital
izing our structure and organization, we are setting the stage
for future Student Associations.
The issue is of such importance
that I plan to call special meetings at the rate of at least
twice weekly for the sole purpose of discussing the new Constitution. I plan to do this until
such time as the Constitutional
discussion has ended. I ask that
you cooperate in this, probably
our most important task this se-

mester.

"Second, as a result of the
special meeting of the FacultyStudent Association, a new type
of meeting is to be scheduled.
It may bo extremely lengthy, per(Cont’d on P. 4)

$200 Million Scholarship Program Presented
By LAURA

GODOFSKY

(CPS) —A Federal scholarship
program that would aid up to
140,000 students next year heads
the 260 million dollar education
program President Johnson has
presented to the 89th Congress

this

year

the
Approval by
scholarship program and Johnson’s other education measures
spring

of

was predicted by Congressional
and education leaders.

the House, Adam Clayton
Powell (D-New York), the chairman of the Education and Labor
Committee, is aiming for subcommittee approval by mid-February. and full committee approval by March 1. If the House Rules
Committee, which schedules committee-approved bills for floor
debate, does not act on the education measure in 21 days, Powell plans to take advantage of the
new House rule that will enable
In

him to by-pass the committee and
call the bill directly to the floor.
In the Senate, Wayne Morse
(D-Orcgon), chairman of the Labor and Public Welfare Committee, said hearings on the bill
would start January 26 and would
probably last three weeks. He

thought the education measure
might, come to the floor during
the first two weeks of March.
The possibility that this year s
huge Democratic gains in the
House might prove temporary
could explain the speed of
planned action.
According to Powell, “what we
don’t pass in Congress we probably won’t be able to pass in the
next generation.”
The scholarship program will
be augmented by several other
huge aid measures:
Expansion of the work-study
program initiated this year under
the Economic Opportunity Act of
1964. Work-study aid, which is

currently restricted

to students

from low income families, would
be extended to (treater numbers
of students and to students from
middle income families.
Partial federal payment of interest on (tuaranteed private loans.
Expanded aid to medical students
The loan measure was presented as "a more effective, fairer,
and far less costly way to provide

assistance than the various tax
credit devices that have been
proposed," Johnson said in his

education message to Congress.
A 1.2 billion dollar price tag
has beeh put on tax-credit pro-

posals.
Tax credits were defeated 48
45 in a bitter Senate battle last
February, upon administration
promises of support for loans,
scholarships, and work-study programs Senator Vance Hartke of
Indiana last year introduced an
omnibus student aid bill with

such programs

(Cont'd

on P

9)

�Friday, January 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

New Committee Forms

Faculty-Student Association Handy Analyzes Behavioral Sciences
Rollo L. Handy, associate professor and chairman
Goals; Quality and Service of Dr.
the department of philosophy, has published his second book during

Monday, more than 50 students
and faculty members met to ratify the constitution of the new
Student-Faculty Committee on
Academic Freedom. The com
mittee, which is still open to
membership, states its constitu
tiopal purpose as “to promote the
principles of academic freedom
vital to an open minded, educa
tional atmosphere."

1964.

By DR. CLAUDE E. PUFFER
I ire President for Business Affairs

Entitled, “Methodology of the Behavioral Sciences,”
Dr. Handy analyzes the “alleged limitations” of a scienBefore the University of Buffalo merged with State tific investigation of human behavior. Published last
University in 1962 it operated the Student Union, the month, the 182-page book focuses attention on the “supUniversity Bookstore, Intercollegiate Athletics, Vending, posed differences” between the
and related activities as a part of the total administrative behavioral and physical sciences.
structure of the University.
The first book, "A Current ApAt the time of merger it w
apparent that the a .ctivi- praisal of the Behavioral Scienoperated with less red- ces,” was published last March
ties mentioned above could
and is an analysis and comparitape and more efficiency if a new
of
behavior.
son of sixteen fields
It was coedited by Professor Paul
Kurtz of Union College, Schenec-

corporation were treated. The
corporation that
into existence is named the Faculty-Student Association. Since it is a
membership corporation, it must
have members in order to exist.
There arc 11 members consisting
of 7 principal administrative officers of the Unitecr/ity, 2 students who arc the'Wesident and
Vice President of the Student
Body, arid 2 faculty members.

caitc

The members of the Association annually elect the Board of
Directors who are responsible
for the day to day operations
and the basic policies of the Association. The current directors
are President Furnas, Vice Presidents Anderson and Puffer, and
Assistant Vice Presidents Bacon
and Balkin. President Furnas is
also President of the Faculty
Student Association. The presence of two students and two
faculty, members in the member
ship of the Association provides
a channel of communication be
tween the student body and the
faculty and the University of
ftcers who are also the officers
of nhe Faculty-Student Associa
tiom
At the time of merger and for
two years thereafter, the Food
Service on campus was Operated

by 'Cease Commissary Service.
Since July 1, 1964, it has been
operated by the Faculty-Student
Association. The reason for the
change was simply to discontinue
certain payments to the Cease
organization and to use these
funds to improve the quality and
quantity of food served.
The price policies of the Fac
ulty-Student Association are the
same as those which prevailed
prior to merger. In its Food
Service the Association endeavors to end the year with neither
a profit nor a loss. It endeavors
to provide the best quality and
greatest quantity of food that it
can with its income believing
that it is not fair to the students
to make any profit on food opera
tion.

tady.

His latest work emphasizes the
terminological problems within
the specific disciplines and accross disciplinary lines. Other
topics discussed include the role

of models in the behavioral scithe general relation of theory to empirical research, and the
relation of important human
problems to the techniques available for their solution.
Prior to serving at the University at Buffalo, Dr. Handy, served
on the faculties of Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, Union College, and the University of South
ence,

DR. PUFFER

tees from games played at other
gifts
from
institution., and
friends in the community. It lives
within this income. It has no
access to any additional support
from the Faculty-Student As
sociation or the University.

tion. The Association endeavors
to keep the Bookstore prices at
approximately the same level as
the competitive Bookstores
across the street or elsewhere in
the area The Association does
not wish to compete unfairly
with any private enterprises that
may also wish to sene student
needs.

The

Intercollegiate
Athletic
Department operates on a balanced budget each year. It re
ceivcs the Athletic fee paid by
students, gate receipts, guaran

Dakota
Dr. Handy, who is associate director of the United States Editorial Center for the Bibliography

of Philosophy, received his bachelor’s degree from Carleton College in Minnesota. His master’s

:

Whatever profits are made
om the Bookstore, the Vending
achines or any other enter
the Facultyise operated by
Student Association can only be
used for purposes connected with

the recreational, social and extracurricular education activities of
the student body and the faculty.
The modest profits reduce the
fees that would otherwise be
necessary to charge the students.
No officer nor director receives
any compensation from the Association.
In brief, the Faculty-Student
Association is (Simply one arm
or one agency by which the University administration can supervise and operate a very signi-

ficant part of the total educational effort of this institution.

Plaza Shoe

Forty-nine University of Buf-

falo Air Force ROTC cadets visited Air University at Maxwell
Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama, during intersession.
The cadets toured the base,
and received a briefing on the
Air University Library, TV station, Squadron Officers' School,
and the Air University’s functions.
Brig. Gen. Bindley, Air Force

ROTO

C'ommandani,

Stone,

Area

and Col.
Commandant for

and staff members of UB, intends
to investigate, discuss and take
action on all cases which seem
to involve a threat to academic
eral philosophy journals.
freedom.
The Student-Faculty Commit
te on Academic Freedom is the
result of a small group of people
UB, held a conference with the who were interested in the prin
cadets at which the Air Force ciples of academic freedom, mainROTC Program was discussed. At ly in relation to the recent disthis time the cadets had an op- missal of Paul Sporn, The first
portunity to question General effort to organize was a rally
Lindley.
the last week in the semester
The cadets had a chance to Speakers at the rally were Jerelife
and
to
sample military
quesmy Taylor, Henry Simon, Martin

He is a member of several professional organizations and has
been a contributing writer to sew

tion many of the high ranking
officers there about the Air Force
as a career. During their free
time some of the cadets visited
Huntingdon College while others
visited Montgomery or enjoyed

the base’s recreational facilities.

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9 p.m.

Blaze, Robert Feldman, George
Hochfield, and Robert P. Finkel
stein.
The next meeting of the Student-Faculty Committee on Academic Freedom will be Monday
at 4:00 p.m. in Room 329.

FREE

.

TF 6-4041
Open 9 a.m.

The committee, which is open

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HAVE YOUR MID-YEAR
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Thors. Feb. 11-Sun. Feb. 14

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

DR. HANDY

degree was received from Sarah
Lawrence College in Bronxville.
After completing graduate study
at the University of Minnesota, he
received his doctorate degree
from the State University of Buf-

Cadets Visit Southern Base

SPECIAL RATES

Repair

The price policy of the Book
store (or any other venture in-

volving the sale of commodities)
is dictated chiefly by compete

“The committee proposes to de
fend these principles,” the con
stitution continues. “The right of
teachers and students to free in
quiry, discussion
and
belief
should not be abridged, academic
ability should be the only criterion for selection, retention,
and promotion of faculty members, and political association
should never be a condition of
employment or attendance at a
university. Furthermore, it shall
be the purpose of this committee
to work for the elimination of
all obstacles to academic free
dom, such as: political tests for
teachers; economic and profes'
sional harassment of dissidents:
and attempts by external groups
without academic responsibility
to interfere with decisions right
fully made by the academic com
munity alone.”

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�I
1965

Friday, January 29,

SPECTRUM

Civil Rights Committee Seeks
Changes in Hiring Practices
The labor subcommittee of the
Civil Rights Committee of the
Student Senate, is working toward its goal of helping to alleviate the problem of Negro unemployment in the city of Buffalo. Headed by A1 Pam, a graduate instructor in psychology, the
ommittee has developed and
Town tremendously in scope in
he past few months, and is now
working vigorously to initiate
changes in the hiring practices
of certain industries.
It has concentrated most on
the banks of the city. In an organized manner, its members
have investigated the situations
in many brances of the banks,
and have uncovered a definite
pattern of discrimination.
Not realized by most students
of the University is the fact that
the committee actually can be,
and has been effective. Only recently it was responsible for the
management of Twin Fair, a
chain of stores, to promise to
increase considerably the amount
of Negroes employed.

The committee is attempting to

ties with local Buffalo
committees on Civil Rights. Working in cooperation, the committees will be able to accomplish
more in a shorter period of time.
Overlapping of activities will be
prevented. More important, the
committee of the University
would be in closer contact with
the very people it is ' trying to
help, for members of local committees are actual representatives
of this group.
Unfortunately, the Christmas
vacation and finals period have
interrupted the work of the past
lew months. The first meeting in
four weeks was held Tuesday
night. Students are needed to
create

with

the

Directors Elected

Professor of Physics,
Dr. Lyle
Cites Potential of UB in State U System;
Conducts Liquid Helium Research Here

The Student Bar Association has
held its elections for the Board
of Directors for the 1964-65 school
Technically, the Student
year.
Bar Association includes ail student of the School of Law. More
specifically, the SBA has come
to represent the Board of Directors. The members of this body
are: Dale Volker, president; John
Girando, vice president; Carl
Mooradian, treasurer; and Brian

in Buffalo is of concern to comBy RUSSELL GOLDBERG
mittee members. An important
consideration in connection with
B,
Lyle
Borst,
a professor in the Department of
Dr.
the work they are doing is the Physics,
is well known in scientific and academic circles.
moral aspect of the Civil Rights
University, his teaching positions
movement. Discussions of perti- Before he came to the
nent questions are an integral included Chicago, MIT, Utah, and New York University
(where he was Chairman of the Physics Department).
part of the meetings.
Members also realize that the
work they are doing comprises
but a small segment Of a very
large movement taking place all
over the country. One facet of
the Civil Rights problem in the
country of which they are aware
is the attitude of the people in
the South toward northerners involved in Civil Rights. To try
to create a greater personal understanding, A1 Pam has suggested a plan for sending students
from this University to the University of Mississippi to study
during their junior year. It is
hoped that in this way southern
and northern students who come
in contact with each other wilL
acquire a greater awareness Coft
the attitudes and viewpoints of
each other. Mr. Pam would like
anyone who is interested in this
project, for either the summer
or next year, or anyone who
would like to know more about
it, to contact him.
The Labor committee has made
gains in the first semester and
has hopes for achieving even
greater ones during the next few
months.

He has also worked

the atomic bomb project at Clinton

on

Rhatigan, secretary.

and Oak Hidge Laboratories and
was in charge of the reactor at
Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Dr. Borst came here because he
believes that this University has
the potential of being one of
the foremost institutions of higher education in the country since
it has become a part of the state
university system. Presently he
is conducting research on theoretical bases for the behavior of
liquid helium
Certain unique properties set
helium apart from all the other
materials at this low temperature. It exists as the sole member of a new class of matter
called quantum liquids. These
properties become evident when
helium four (the isotope containOR. BORST
ing two protons and two neuAnother interesting phenomenon
trons) is cooled below 2,18 degrees Kelvin. Suddenly we pass is “creep". This is exhibited when
the liquid is placed in an open
“through the looking glass” into
topped container. The container
a realm where many of the old
gradually empties itself, not by
rules no longer hold. For exevaporation, but rather by the
ample it is impossible to keep
liquid climbing up the walls and
this liquid helium in a container
over the edge. Because of these
because it loses all character of
of atomic structure, becoming in and other properties liquid helium is referred to as a superfact an Aristotelian liquid
influid, It should be noted that
finitely divisible. For this reathese characteristics arc not shar
son it passes through the wall
of any container even, though ed by helium three (the isotope
neuthese walls have no holes large containing 2 protons and 1
tron).
enough for the passage of atoms.

Senior Representatives (carry
Sekula, Erie Williams, Jack Cellar, Robert Boasberg and Joe Terrissi,
overs): Jerry

Junior Representatives: Roger
Aceto, Dennis Denny, John Cirando and Tom Leaden.

Freshmen Representatives (newly elected): David Bolm, Hugh
Flynn, Carl Mooradian and Brian
Rhadigan.

The UB School of Law is located at 77 West Eagle, several miles
from the UB campus. This isolates it from the campus, but on
the other hand, makes it more
convenient for the faculty in that
(he Buffalo courthouse is nearby.
The law school is relatively small,
housing 300 students, yet surprisingly, there is a lack of unify
since all students commute. Purchase of a building to be used
as a dormitory is under consideration.

However, most of the campus
life and unity which is present
is contributed by the Student Bar
Association. The SBA has its own
newspaper, the Opinion, as well
as an informal publication, the

—

Newsletter. It also puts out its
own

yearbook,

the Advocate.

Headquarters for

SCHOOL

already existing

SUPPLIES

members, to increase the number
of projects able to be effectively
conducted.
More than just labor problems

PART TIME or
FULL TIME WORK

Sll&lt;*'

Pens and
and Pencils

fi

ARE YOU A FORMER BELL SYSTEM

OPERATOR INTERESTED IN PART TIME
OR FULL TIME WORK AFTER SCHOOL HOURS':
Filler
\?

SO

.

.

•

Pap

1

Dissecting Sets

PLEASE CALL

ng Equipment

MRS. BETTY HOELZLE, Chief Operator
at 887-8355 or 833-9991

d Supplies

for further details
\\

|p

.

,

.

you are a student with a "B" average
or better, and have a good driving record.
No increase in Rates for accidents or

violations.

T)(

.

f

Brief Cases
„

„

.

E\W
YOU CAN

j

''
/\TT'\

GET OUT OF THE POOL!

~jj[

f

oi
r“»
Staplers

and

Staples
spies

'

join

PAGE THREE

—

An Supplies

~

/rVV
-j

NeeOea Supplies

�Friday, January 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Jrom the Editor

Finkelstein Speech
(Cont’d
...

from P.

rjCetteri

...

1)

Winston Churchill Without Tears
After a full and long life, Sir Winston Churchill has
passed away. As a politician, statesman, historian, artist,
warrior and writer he was unequalled.
,

He was not a man of this century, as so many claim,
but rather a product of the nineteenth and a founder and
developer of the twentieth century. Sir Winston Churchill
had a personality, commitment and dedication that is
rarely seen among men; one that is a necessary part of
great men of history. And he was certainly that.

Rut his life must not be worshiped, as is so often
the case when great people die. It must be remembered
that he lived in a different time with different conditions
and he had such rare quality and ability that although
he may be emulated, he can never be equalled. His death
was a natural and peaceful one. No more can any man
ask.

After serving six British monarches and earning,
among his many other accomplishments, the Order of

Merit, the Nobel Brize for Literature and the second
honorary American citizenship ever offered, and becoming a Knight of the Carter, Winston Churchill will be
layed to rest in a hallowed grave near the palace he once
called home.

As with the passing of any great personage his life
must be evaluated and history must be the final judge.
History will judge Sir Winston Churchill a great man
and a fine human being. No more than that can any
man ask.

Unified Leadership

a

This past semester has been a poor one for student

leadership,

as

it has been for general student action.

Now is the time for change

With President Finkelstein's address at this week's
Senate meeting, we arrive at a point where till student
leadership can rally. The bookstore pricing policy, as
with the food pricing .policy, is badly in need of change.
The plan for a bookstore cooperative is an idea that
should be agreeable to the liberals and conservatives,
barnburners and wet blankets as well as anarchists and
autocrats

Now is the time to forget the past and forget those
personality conflicts that have barred a unified student
leadership.

Only, through

coherent collective action can these
and other necessary changes be.made. The first job falls
on the shoulders of our campus leaders. Their success
at unification is the starting point for all further action.

THE
The official student

Publication
weekly

SPECTRUM

of the State University of New
Norton Hall University ' Campus, Buffalo 14
fust week of September to the last week m
newspaper

Offkr at

from the

EDITOR-IN CHIEF

JOHN P

-

Manai,

York at Buffalo.
N Y. Published
May

except

for

KOWAl

Business M.tnai
Advertisnu M.

News

Bernard D kr

Auerb

DWiird

Ni'SSl'

Dallas Garbe
General Staff V.ck. Bugelsk
Marge Rak.ta, Nancy Migdol, Don E-smann, Meryl Frank,
Sharon Heend
t
Solomon, Phyll.s Shap.ro, Manon Michael
Dehh.e Rubm Scott
Korman, Sue A-now Jo Anne Leeyant Judy .Schacher E leen Teller, Sue Gteene, Sue

u
P,Slop

Co,, !
s «■
B
N ''a Hostraba, Lon M.psten Joey Elm, J.m
BL-mbery J..dy, Aoodri ff Terr&gt; Daws Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters
Wisniewski. Mana
a, Harold Bob
lylor. Ahn Gruber, Bei
Bourgois, Sue M.
*

Bloqett
William

l

"&gt;

iff
Sports

Rebecca

We nt

Finkelstein

Staff

Stanley

Urns Pete Be
Marc Levme

S/y

Ivan Makuch
Susan
Watermarv Tobv leder

C irc elation

Staff
Palmer, lee Com

do before they call themselves
large
student leaders. Such
large groups of faculty and administration are composed of
both the helpful and the inconsiderate and disagreeable. A permanent committee of the sort
that I mention is needed to help
insure a fine communications system, one lending itself on all
sides.
The third thing I wish to
mention will call for more than
ideas, ideals, determination and
action. It will also call for funds.
The University Bookstore has a
pricing policy, a policy which is
an unfair imposition to the student on this campus. I have con
ferred with those officials of the

university who could alter the
pricing policy, but they have in
dicated to me that it cannot or
will not be done. It is admitted
that the University Bookstore is
a profit making, enterprise, the
profits to be placed in the Faculty-Student Association treasury.
It was also pointed out to me
that students do have a choice
as whether to buy books here
or not. I endeavored to have area
bookstores cooperate in our Student Senate Discount Service, so
that
discounts on textbooks
could be offered to students from
someplace. However, no store,
including our own wishes- to
budge, and this is very under
standable from their points of
view. So what is our next step?We cannot move these persons.
Must we accept the pricing policy? 1 think not. 1 have a special
committee composed of Nick Sargent. chairman: David Frey, Arnold Graff and Keaons Whalen
to determine what costs would
be necessary to begin a student
cooperative bookstore. Estimates
thus far have ranged up to several thousands of dollars If the
figue is concluded to be this
large, I shall then recommend
that the Senate allot a certain
amount of money from each
year's budget, so that within as
short a time as possible, the store
could be begun. Regardless of
what costs arc involved or when
it is begun, certain points should
be noted. It would be run on a
non-profit basis, and
would

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Dear President Finkelstein:
This is in accord with our recent discussions, and in reaction
to your December 21 letter concerning the SPECTRUM Editor-

ial of December 18, 1964.
I share your concern that the
student, government structure on
this campus is threatened unless
this matter is resolved, if the
persons signing the editorial ac :
tually believe that they have the

“right" or power to support their

refusal “to recognize the authority of the present Publications
Board." The three signers have
no choice but to abide by the
present legislative structure un-

til that is legally changed through
appropriate action of the student association.
1 would suggest that the various editors discuss this further
with the Publications Board and
th" |Executive Committee of the
.Student Association to clarify
any misunderstanding of their
role or the extent of their authority. This is a student problem
to be resolved by students; this
office will, necessarily stand be-

hind the decisions of the duly
elected representative students
involved We will also be willing
to help resolve this misunderstanding, and

help

clarify the

framework of the existing struc-

ture

It remains the prerogative of
the Student Association to reduce
or eliminate financial allocations
just, as the Publications Board
may remove any editor of any
publication, who, in the opinion
of the board, demonstrates a lack
of competence or responsibility.
If the Publications Board decided

to relieve any editor or if the
Senate wished to reduce financial allocations, the Dean of Students must stand behind regularly constituted channels., 1 have
communicated this message to
the adviser of each publication
and find them in
the Faculty-Senate
Committee on Student Affairs
also concurs that the editorial is
meaningless and the present legislative structure remains un-

concerned

agreement:

changed.

committee concludes its

tion:
"The

j-ations.

invest!-

“These three areas
consti
tulion. a permanent factuty-stu
deni administration committee
and the proposed bookstore' co
operative
are plans for the
future that we can and must be
gin
mm I .et u&lt; -do
■
—

*

.

PfftSf

*

’'t*-'

,

fc,

‘aDEuIIIIL

Dean of Students Backs Finkelstein

One could completely disregard
the SPECTRUM editorial if it
were not for the fact that many
readers need to have any impression erased that editors can
assume authority that can only

—

Second C ’ass Postage Pa d At Buffalo. N Y

Editorial

operate from rented space with
in our union. It is to be student
run. student operated, and all
profits could be awarded to each
student in terms of low book
prices. The special committee will
also determine whether or not

faculty and book manufacturers
would cooperate. I shall report
on this as soon as the special

Staff

Photography
Blank

Reb

the Editor

EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Due to a lack
haps occupying most of a day.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
It will be attended by several
All letters must be typewritten, double
Names will be withheld upon request.
of the ranking officials of the
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.
University, and certain student
leaders. This idea was proposed
by one of the University’s Vice
Presidents after I stated what
Replies to Spectrum
I felt were definite problems
at this university in terms of the
with its principle, but I do state
Kowal,
To: John
student voice and faculty-adminithat you have no alternative but
Spectrum
Editor,
strative-student relationships and
to realize its existence.
Michael
Donohue,
the relative importance of each.
The board is a legal entity. If
1 will endeavor to make this Editor, Buffalonian
you wish to change it, strive for
meeting a beginning of a series Judy Auerbacher,
this through the legal channels.
of such gatherings. I thing that Editor, New Student Review
However, the demerits of the
such a group should be perman- (to be passed on to successor,
Board which you articulate do
ent in nature. The benefits for when appointed by the Publicanot allow you to disregard this
the individual student on campus tions Board.)
legally-standing body.
could be extremely significant.
So long as the board exists, it
Student representatives at a uni Dear Editors:
will make decisions in accord
I have read your editorial
versity must never, and I emance with the powers given it
phasize, never, forget that a comments in your last newsin our Student Association Conpaper and have certain points
sound relationship with the fastitution. Any deliberate usur
which need to be mentioned.
culty and the administration inFirst of all, it is now, as it has pation of its powers will require
creases the probability of sucthe Student Association to take
cessful student programs. This been, obvious that you are op- remedial
steps.
cannot be used, as a device for posed to the Publications Board.
Sincerely,
However, there is a Publications
"in loco parentis” by a lazy stu
Robert P. Finkelstem
dent leader. However, students Board, ft does have power and
President
who consider that the way to it does exist. I do not ask that
Student Association
accomplish things is to follow the you must be in constant accord

His conduct through throe wars, including their
darkest days, has earned him a special place in the hearts
of free men everywhere. His courage in the face of overwhelming odds and near defeat has earned him the anti-admirtistration line, because
this is a sign of maturity, have
respect becoming a statesman of his stature.
a great deal of growing up to

The Need For

to

of space LETTERS TO THE

be awarded by the Association of
the Publications Board itself.
The following specific points
in • the editorial need clarificaeditorial

board of any

publication should, upon consideration of all applicants, have
the right to choose its next editor,"

This is presently not the case:
according to your present Con
slitmion, the

Publications Board

and not the editorial board of
the publication itself has the

right to choose editors. This is
not to discuss the merits of the
suggestion, and it has nothing to
do with the wishful thinking of
the editors. As long as the Con

stitution remains in its

present

form, the publication may not
choose its own editor,
“Student publications should
be responsible to the student
body. The right to remove an
editor should be given to the
student body in a general refer
endum.”
If through appropriate legisright to remove an
editor is to be determined
through a general referendum,
no objection would be raised.
The fact remains that this is not

lation the

the present situation and the
editors suggest a “right” which
is not theirs to determine at the
moment.

“The power of the Publica
tions Board is supreme at pres
ent. There is no higher authority
and their actions and decisions
can’t be appealed to anyone.”
The power of the Publications
Board is not “supreme” includ
ing the fact that budgets are
not under its control. It serves
primarily in an advisory capacity. There can be an appeal to
the Student Association to
change the Constitution, and its
decisions represent the student
voice.

“The authority of the Board
from the Administration
because the students on the
board,are chosen by the Administration. In order to correctly
choose members of such a Board,
they should be elected. Then candidates to the board could appeal
to the student body showing
comes

their ability, training and exper-

ience which would make them
desirable for such a position.”
It would be more accurate and
objective to spell out the present procedure clearly that this
group is not “controlled by the
administration". The Constitu
tion. as amended in the spring of

1964, reads as follows:
“ARTICLE III. MEMBERSHIP
“The Student Publications
Board shall consist of seven stu
dent members in a voting capacity, two non-voting faculty ad
visors, and the editors, of the recognized publications as non-voting, ex-officio members. The two
advisors shall be chosen in a
manner such that one is from
the faculty and one is from the
administration. No editor or bus-'
iness manager of a student publication recognized by the board
may sit as a voting member"
Publication Board members artrecommended by the Student
Senate tnroiigh its own Executive
Committee. The President of the
(Cont'd on F

�Friday, January

29, 1965

gucinski

SPECTRUM

.

.

PAGE FIVE

Wilson Grant Received

.

REFLECTIONS

The State University of Buffalo
has received a $2,000 grant from
the Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship Foundation to be used
for advancing graduate education

and providing assistance to graduate students.
The grant, one of 85 presented

to graduate schools throughout
the country, was announced Monday, January 11 by Sir Hugh Taylor, president of the Foundation,
Three-quarters of each grant
will be used to assist graduate
students who are in their second
or subsequent years of study with
the remaining funds being used
at the discretion of the graduate

schools.

Cornell to Sponsor
Psych. Test Series
Volunteers Needed
;

During this semester. Cornell
Aeronautics will once again sponsor a scries of psychological tests,
designed to observe the individ-

ual’s. capacity to interact in situ

c

jCetteri to the

iCont'd from P.

4)

University confirms the appointment of those persons suggested
by the Senate itself, a point invariably overlooked with the apparent hope that students will
lit'rally think that the board is

controlled by the administration.
Even in the case of a replacement, the present bylaws inform
us that, '‘the Student Senate shall
recommend students
for the

Editor

ted in its constitution over which
the students at this University

have absolutely no control,”

Whether

the

editorial

staffs

cannot in all conscience recog

:

nize

the present Publications
Board or its powers is not the
question; it has no choice under
the existing Constitution and it
must abide by the set rules. If
the Board requested the resignation of any editor, it is true that
the editor would no longer be

Chancellor’s consideration.”
in charge of that particular pubSince I have been on this campus, the President of the Unilication. Again, note that this, acversity has consistently displayed tion would be taken by students
selected according to the present
his faith in the ability of stuConstitution. The major point is
dents to pun their own affairs;
that the student body does, in
nor has the Executive Commitdeed, control its own Constitutee of the Senate presented more
than the required number of
tion, and they have the power to
names to consider, which means change it.
that the Board consists of stu“The irresponsible actions of
dents selected by students and the current- Board illustrates that
representative of students. If adabsolute power of the sort wieldministrative control of the Pubed by that body should not be
lications Board is possible, with wielded by a few students who
seven voting student members are in fact, merely carrying out
and two non-voting faculty memthe function of control of the
bers, it is difficult to see how
student press for the Administhis could long be the case or tration which appoints them.”
how any administration could
The “administration" on this
control the inner workings of campus does not censor the stu
he Publications Board.
dent press, and it believes in givIt is interesting to recall that
ing students freedom to conduct
hen the Board recently changed their own affairs. My full supits structure, from three voting port continues to go to the Presfaculty and four voting student
ident of the Student Association
members, to the present board of ahfl That body, and to the present
seven voting student members 'ublications Board unless or un
and two non-voting faculty, no
til its functions alter through
problems were encountered and
legislative change.
no attempt was made by an adThree editors have banded toministration, threatened
with gether to indicate that they will
what would apper to be a lesser appoint
their successors, run
voice. Again, however, if the
their own affairs, and not be acBoard is to be elected, the legiscountable for their actions to
lative change to effect this must their, peers. This appears most
come through proper student as- irresponsible; your concerns as
sociation channels.
Student Association President
"After consultation and considare also mine.
eration with our editorial staffs
we cannot in all conscience recSihcerely yours,
ognize the present Publications
Richard A. Siggelkow
Board or its powers as delineaDean of Students

r

"

Student Body Apathetic
To THE EDITOR;
it is generally conceded that
’■he student body is apathetic in
ms of supporting dances,
bs, sports events and other'
nton Board Activities. Seldom,
owever, is the apathy concerned
‘•h cultural offerings on camps mentioned. What is a uni-

ersity? Traditionally, it,, is the
mthplace of new vistas in the
"ts—the home of reform, of in

avation,

of creative

searches

and discoveries

.

.

foster parent of each
ly and of the great
all arts, the theater.
can only be what

. .

it is the

art separate-

combiner of
A university

the student

and on the UB
body makes it
campus, it , seems, no one cares,

ations involving' group cooperation. These experiments will cons i s t of interestingly arranged
“games” which indicate psychological patterns.
Dr. Terhune, one of the iniators of this program, explained
that undergraduate male volunteers are being recruited for these
experiments; for their effort, they
will be paid $1.25 an hour. The
results of these experiments will
be applied to a variety of social
problems, such as those involving
labor disputes, and interracial
and international understanding.
The information collected from
last semester’s series of experiments has yielded much promising material, Dr. Terhune mentions, but at this time, the nature
of any conclusions cannot be dis-

closed.

Catalyst Seeks
Students’ Work
Catalyst, the Sociology Club's
new journal, is inviting students
at SUNYAB to submit contributions to the publication. Undergraduates and graduates arc
asked to offer material with new
ideas and persepeefives of social problems.
Catalyst will also contain reviews of dissertations, books, and
other journals. Interested students wishing further information may contact the journal’s

editor, John Hillman, Box G, Nor-

ton Union.
The publication will seek most

citement? Students should feel
(Cont'd on P. 8)

A great deal has happened
within the Uniformity since the
last Spectrum went to press. The

mechanics of Drop-and-Add Day
were handled with surprising
efficiency and humanity and,
much as it galls me, I have to

those involved with
the planning and execution. It
would have been better if the
Drop-and-Add slips could have
been provided in the Gym, so
that students would not have to
trek back to Diefendorf before
congratulate

being admitted to the processing
center, but apart from that oversight and the one or two extremely unpleasant personalities
who always abound at such af
fairs; the whole maneuver was

carried off very well.
The Student Senate - at their
Tuesday meeting passed a motion
of censure directed toward the
English Department practice of
posting lists of all those people
who either failed dr received incompletes. This appalling prac-

tice has apparently been accepted
procedure for a number of semesters, but the abridgement of
privacy, dignity, and academic
ethics inherent in this kind of
action can never be justified by
"bureaucratic expediency,” and
the mere fact that it has been
done before can never make it
right.

A committee to defend

aca-

demic freedom composed of faculty and students working toget
her and sharing leadership responsibilities has had its first
meeting where a rather cumbersome and legalistic constitution
was discussed and adopted. This
committee has a tremendous responsibility, particularly on this
campus where academic freedom

is constantly placed in jeopardy
by short-sighted; ignorant, and
narrow mindejl administrators,
faculty, and student “leaders.”
The student turn-out for the initial meeting was gratifying, and
the level of debate over the proposed constitution was on a very
high level, although somewhat
ponderous and academic. The faculty turn-out for the initial meeting was dishearteningly small,
however, and led me to question
just what kind of faculty we arc
forced to take our instruction
from. The ostrich-like unconcern
and Pointius Pilate speachcs we

have been subjected to in the
past weeks is, at very least, disheartening and for my money is
immoral This is no minor charge;
The faculty has no right to be
unconcerned or neutral on the
issue of academic freedom. I do
not' expect that every faculty
member will be an avid defendant of this fundamental principle, but I do expect that anyone

its contributions from this
campus; however, work from other campuses and outside sources
will be encouraged. The first
issue of the Catalyst has been
tentatively planned for this se- who takes education at all seriously to be crucially concerned
mester in March.
of

—__

U.S. and Canadian
Debaters Tourney
Set for February
Climaxing the annual UB Ac-

tivities Week will be the 10th
International Debate Tournament,
February 19 and 20, sponsored by
the Debate Society. More than 30
colleges and universities from all
over the U.S. and Canada are expected to participate. Timekeepers for both Monday night and
Saturday morning- of that week
end are urgently needed. Those
students interested please con
tact Ruth Shapiro or any officer
of the Society in "wm 357, Norcampus
ton, or. call 360

—

Drama, literature, music, the fine
arts—all these should be alive
and controversial. Where is the
curiosity, the enthusiasm, the ex-

By JEREMY TAYLOR

There will be. an important
general meeting in the Debate
Room Monday, February 1 at

6:30 p.m. Vital details of the
Tournament will be discussed
and nominations will be accepted
for the Slate Committee,

with the problem, and I further
believe that anyone who does no*
take education seriously has no
business being a teacher.

To return to the Senate Meet’as you are all no doubt
aware by now, the Student Senate
has embarked on a massive reconstruction of the constitution
of the Student Association. I have
read the proposed constitution
carefully, and I am left in an

ing;

awkwardly ambivalent position, at

this writing. The new constitution
provides for a bi furcated legislature (House of Representatives
and Student Senate) and isi I
feel, needlessly complex.. The
powers of the President and the
Senate arc, I feel, disproportionately large and inclusive, particularly in Comparison to. the
[louse of Representatives. This
"House" is also, in my opinion,
hardly “representative,” the seats
being weighted greatly in favor

of the "sorority-fraternity-activities” students. Also the dormitory
residents greatly outweigh the

conimutors

in

representation.

There is also an arbitrariness inherent in the numbers of student
legislators (in the House and
as well as a total disregard of the numbers of student represented by any given
representative or senator.
Senate)

On the credit side, however,
there is a streamlining of the
existing functions of student gov-

ernment, like Union Board and
Student Judiciary, and a total
revamping of the infamous Publications Board,, turning it into
a meaningful and informed supportive body. There is also a set
of provisions for referendum and
re call which I for one hail as a
means of bringing and taking
student government back to the
students and take it out of the
hands of the self-propagating elite

in whose hands it has been for
too many years.

There is also another more
subtle and far reaching implication of this new constitution
which, as yet, has not been fully
realized and discussed. That is
the fact that this campus is in a
process of dynamic growth which
is going to necessitate a growing,
and increasingly efficient student
government. The “two-house system" is a bold and sincere attempt to face this problem. This
is a constitution which will have
to function smoothly, not only on
this present campus, but on the
new projected campus, of up to
twenty thousand students. I fear,
however, that the present proposed method of elections and
subsequent representation, sine*
it has no provision for representation by number, may tend to cripple the whole Student Association
ih years to come, unless it is
amended. of course,
———

Murray Discusses Parking
Regulations With Justices
Representatives from each of
the three Student Judiciary Parking Courts met with Chief of

Campus Security, Mr. Eugene
Murray, Wednesday, December
15, to discuss and clarify rules
and regulations for campus parking.

Mr Murray maintained that
students are far too lax in their
adherence to campus regulations.
Stickers, he stressed, should be
correctly affixed to the left window- of the car, and each student
should be well acquainted with
the parking rules, and fines, as
printed in the pamphlet which
is obtained along with each car
If for some reason, a
student does not possess a copy
of this pamphlet, Mr ,\!urray advises tljat he obtain one either
from the Security Service Building at 220 Winspear Ave., or from
permit.

the Bursar's Office in Hayes Hall.
Mr. Murray emphasized that
students should make use of the
newly added Main Street FREE
parking lots, rather than parking
on roadways or on the lawn. He
stated that beginning soon, campus police will tow away cars
parked on roadways, in driveways or in other fire lanes, as
stated in the book of regula-

tions From November 15 to
April IS, the police are. author
ized to tow cars away to facilitate
snow plowing.
Within the next month, all
campus parking meters will be
set on a 70 minute basis Students
who have only one class, for instance, may pay five cents to
park at a meter.

�Friday, January

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

1958 VOLKSWAGEN
Deluxe 2 Door Sedan, Radio
Heater, White Wall

—

Sacrifice for $300.00

Association
Father Beattie wishes to announce that the topic for consideration in this semester's discussion groups will be the
“Gospel According to Saint John."
As before, duplicate sessions will
be offered Tuesdays and Wedncs
days from 2:003:00 p.m. in NorCanterbury

at appropriate places will
indicate the place. The program
will include brief speeches on
Kamadah, Eid, Islam religion, and
pictures of Egypt and Pakistan,
tcrs

Arabic songs and music, recitation of the Quran and various
international meals, in addition
to American refreshments will
also be included.

phone 834-5389

Rides Available

to

N.Y.

Leave Friday, Feb. 5
Return Sunday
Share Expenses call TL 3-7412
-

266.
Events of note in this semester
Newman
include a trip to Trinity College,
Father O’Leary, an assistant at
the
weekToronto,
University of
St. John the Baptist Church in
end of February 13, to attend
Kenmore, will speak at the weekly meeting Wednesday at 7:30
a lecture on “Cybernetics and the
and
3,
the symChurch." April 2
p.m. in the Fillmore Room. His
posium on "Discriminating About
topic is the “Prc Cana Confertake
Discrimination, Part II” will
ence."
place. More information concernNewman will have an ice skating this will be available in the
mg party at Roosevelt Rink tonear future
night. All will meet at the Hall
In addition, the first weekly at 7:00 p.m. Skating costs 50 cents.
“open house" for students will be A free mixer at the Hall will
held Wednesday at Chaplain and
follow.
Mrs. Beattie's home, 1179 ElmMass is said daily at noon at
wood Avenue, opposite the State
the Hall.
College, 8:00 p.m.
Student Christian Association
Hillel
All meetings will be held at
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda49 Heath Street. Supper will be
tion will sppnsor a Sabbath Seravailable, but reservations must
vice this evening at 7:45 p.m. be made.
6:00 p.m.—supper (50c)—reser
in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
vations. TF 4-4250
Hofmann will speak on: “What r
We Believe About Creation." An
TF 6-5806
7:30 p.m.—S.C.A. meeting.
Oneg Shabbat will follow.
The first Hillel Supper of the
February 11—"How To Be A
Woman in a Neuter World"
new semester will be held SunMrs. John Becker will lead the
day at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel
House. A new scries of lecturediscussion. Ruth Becker is a graddiscussions will be initiated on uate of Vassar, studied in Germany under a Fulbright, and she
the general theme of: “The Jew
ish People and the Contemporary has two children. She knows what
World." Mr. Louis Glickman, Reshe is talking about, and she says
it well!
gional Director of the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B'rith,
February 25—"Capitalism and
will speak on: The Future of Democracy"— this is a Tape preCatholic-Jcwish Relations.”
pared by the “Center for the
Study of Democratic Institutions.”
The weekly meetings of the Hillel Study Groups will resume
It presents the thesis by Stanley
K. Sheinbaum that Capitalism and
Sunday. The classes in Elementary and Advanced Hebrew will
Democracy arc incompatible. The
thesis is reviewed by a panel of
meet at 2:00 p m and 3:00 p.m.,
respectively. Sunday. The Talmud economists, sociologists and the,

ton

—

class is scheduled again for
Thursday at 7:00 p.m. A new
study group on: “The American

Jew—Achievements and Challenges" will meet Thursday at 8:00
p.m.
The Kick-Off Meeting of the
Campus Division for the 1965
United Jewish Fund Campaign
will be held Thursday at 8:00
p.m in the Hillel House. The
program for the evening has been
arranged by Mr. Joseph
Bronstein, assistant director of the

United Jewish Federation. Arthur
Burke, the Chairman of the drive
on the campus, will chair the

meeting, and distribute pledge
cards to the workers. He will be
assisted by Howard Wildman and
Susan Funt, Vice-Chairmen in
charge of residence and non-residence students, respectively
Muslim Student's Association
The Eid prayers will be held
at 9:00 a m at 81 Ridge Road,
Lackawanna, New York, Tuesday.
For free rides and further information, please call Mr Razvi,
833 6310, or Mr Ghiasuddin, 8375738
It has also been decided to hold
the celebration of Eid festival
at 7:00 p m Saturday. February
6, in Norton Union, Suitable pos-

B 52.8 engine jet bomber with range of over 9000
miles Backbone of the Strategic Air Command

ologians.

A six week study of the Book
of Genesis will begin Wednesday.
All sessions will be held in Norton Union, Room 266, from 4:00

until 5:00 p.m.

Wesley Foundation
The semester activities of the
Wesley Foundation began January 24 with a film which is one
of a series of three films to be
completed in the next two weeks.
These movies, The Meeting Place
and Which Way the Wind, arc
directly related to the theme of
the coming Winter Week-end,
"How to be Human.” They would
be worthwhile viewing for those
planning to attend the Week-end,
and in and of themselves would
be worthwhile for all others.

Sunday, February 7. Dr. Dale

executive member of
the National Board of Social Concerns in Washington. DC., will
White, an

preach at the 10:45 a m. worship
service at the University Methodist Church. After the service
there will be a luncheon seminar
with Dr. White for Wesley members to consider Christian Social
Concerns. This seminar will be
by reservation only. Call Robert
A Jones or Ted Brooks for res-

Are you ready for

a multi-million-dollar responsibility?

ervations.

If you are, there's a place for you on the
Aerospace Team—the U, S, Air Force.
No organization in the world gives young
people a greater opportunity to do vital

chance to show it in the A
work can put you and your c
You can earn your com

Officer Training Schoo

Force. Youi
jntry
in

ahead

at Air F
ee-.montt

work.
course open to both men and women
For example, just a short while ago a 23
apply. you must be within 210 days of you
year-old Air. Force lieutenant made a startdegree.
ling breakthrough in metallurgy. And a
F or more information, cor itact the Profes
recent All-Amenca tackle is doing advanced sor of Air Science If your campus has n&lt;
research in nuclear weapons
r ftnpo AFROTC. see your local Ai
If you have talent, y
ave a UaOa All lUIwO Force recruits
responsible

..

*

29, 1965

�Friday, January

29, 1965

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRyM

OIF IF III DM MILi™
Official Bulletin is an
publication of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, for which the SPECTlftJM assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
the Old Faculty Club, attention
Mrs. Fix, before 2:00 p.m. the
Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for publi-

The

authorized

cation.

General Notices
,

1965 Midyear Commencement:
Commencement will take place
Friday, February 12 at 10:30 a.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall. Candiddates for degrees should be present at the Mary Seaton Room of
Kleinhans Music Hall no later
than 9:30 a.m,, February 12. Detailed instructions may be obtained through divisional offices.
Rehearsal will be held at Kleinhans at 3:30 p.m., Thursday, Feb.
11, in the main auditorium. All
candidates should plan to be
there. Candidates unable to attend the commencement exercise must make arrangements to
receive their degrees by contacting the office of their academic dean.
Summer Session: The tentative list for Summer 1965 is
available in the Summer Sessions Office. Students may pick
up a copy of the schedule in
Room 220-D, Foster Hall, weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00
p.m.

Weekly Calendar
Jan. 31—
over WYSL
Radio Broadcast
of a taped forum featuring Dr.
Butler, professor,
Arthur D.
chairman of department of economics together with Mr. Egon
Rassow and Mr. Paul Willax on
the subject of trade, food and
dollars sponsored by the Buffalo
Council on World Affairs as part
—

of its series
1965.”

“Great Decisions

Jan, 2-9—
First Annual James Joyce Day
Exhibit
to commemorate his
—

birth will be held in the Joyce
room of Lockwood Memorial Library. Selections of Joyce manuscripts and books will be on display.
Feb. 3—
Buffalo Academy of Medicine
will sponsor a lecture by Dr.
John Putman Merrill, Director
Cardiorenal Section, t’eter Bent
Brigham Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts entitled “Transplantation of the Kidney in Man, Present Status and Future Prospects"
in Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall
at 8:30 p.m.
Feb. 4—
Engineering Seminar -A sponsored by the school of engineering featuring Mr. Richard H. Gallagher, Chief of Advanced Air
Frame Analysis, Bell AerosysY„
tems Company, Buffalo,
whose topic will be “Discrete
Element Methods in Shell Analysis” in room 104, Parker Engineering Building, 4-5 p.m.
Feb. 5—
Poetry Reading
by Kenneth
Koch from his own works, in
room 146, Diefendorf Hall.
Psychiatric Research Seminar
—featuring Dr. Marvin K. Opler, department of psychiatry,
school of medicine, whose topic
will be “Social Psychiatry: Some
General Trends and Specific
Studies” Meyer Hospital, C basement conference room, 12:30
p.m.

ship. Additional information and
applications are on file at the
University Placement Service.

Placement

Interviews:

—

Jan.

29—

Scott Paper Co.
Edison Brothers
E. I. DuPont de Nemours, Inc
Gleason Works
Worthington Corp.

Feb. 3—
Roebuck Inc,
Sears
Griffiss Air Force Base
Clark Brothers Inc.
Feb. 4—
Household Finance Corp.
Iroquois Gas Corp.
&amp;

Speer Carbon Co.
Merke

Co.'

&amp;

Carborundum Co.
Feb. 5—
Equitable Life Insurance Co.
General Adjustment Bureau
Ford Motor Co,
Stamping
Plant
Ingersoll Rand Co.
—

Feb. 1—
General Motors
The Fircwel Co,
Feb. 2—
American Optical Co
U. S. Air Force

Feb. 3—Vestal Central School
District
Feb. 4—Attica Central Schools
Feb. 5—Monticello Central Sch
District #1
For further information please
call 831-3311, University Placement Services, Schocllkopf Hall.

■

TEACHER PLACEMENT
INTERVIEWS

Feb. 2—Burnt Hills Schools

LI).

CARDS

I.D. cards need to be
validated to vote in the
general Spring election.
T li e y may be validated
between January 27 and
February 10 in Room 2,
Foster Hall.

—

Placement
Announcements:
The following have indicated
openings available:
Escambia Chemistry Corp.
Cornell University
Abraham &amp; Strauss
City of Rochester
Argonne National Laboratory

Mellon Institute
VISTA (Volunteers in Service

to

America)

Further information may be obtained at the University Placement Service, Schoellkopf Hall,
Or by calling 831-3311.
The Dow Chemical Co.
has
announced a Patent Law Scholar—

YE GRANDE

OLDE

SENIORS

Insurance offers countrywide opportunities for
challenging careers in many
fields of activities. Informative material concerning
your future with The Phoenix and the Company's
training facilities is in
your Placement Office.
Why not arrange for an
interview with The Phoe-

nix representative Tuesday,
February 9th, or Mr. John
A. Gray, Secretary, Personnel Department.

THE
PHOENIX of HARTFORD
INSURANCE COMPANIES

61 Woodland St.

Hartford,

Conn.

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

�(All pn
and be

:rams arc in Baird Hall
at 8:30 pm

tet, with

icst pianist Mieczyslaw
in the final concert
nary chamber serie:
to be performed ar

,

Budapest String Quar-

The ,worl

have been performing frequently
here on campus and in the “New

ar Franck, Gener

tickets at the hi
presentation of

I

prop

in March

\ssociates Paul Zuk

Leo Smit, pianist, and Mischa
cellist, will present
a duo recital Friday, February 12.
General admission is $2.50; faculty-staff $1.23. Students may obtain free tickets according to the
usual procedure.
Mr. Smit is
Professor of Music here, and has
given many recitals here, among
them the performance of the entire Book II of Bach’s Well-TemSchneider,

pered

.■.ill present a recital
•mission free. All stufaculty are cordially
attend this program
.orary music "Night
f Mr. Crumb will he

invited

Music
presen

along

series at the Albright-

Music"

Piano Quin

es

Gunther Schuller, Ralph Shapey,
and Arthur Berger, An unusual
feature of the program will be
the. performance of, a composition for vibraphone and pre-recorded tape. All three performers

Knox Art Gallery.

Piano Trio

with works of

Clavier last October, and

recitals

of

modern

piano

music,

Mr. Schneider, cellist with the
Budapest Quartet, is also in residence here, and teaches master
classes. Works of Beethoven, Dchussy, Handel, and Bach will be

presented.

Cadet Division Commanders Change
Air Force ROTC
Division underwent
change of command ceremonies
December 22, 1964. The new Division Commander is C Id. Col.
Peter M, Terlccky. The members
of his staff are; Vice Commander,
C Id. Col Norman Mingle; Per

The
Cadet

.575th
An

sonnel, C Map Whiting; Material, C ('apt. Brush!; Operations,
C (’apt. Alois; Information, ('1st
Id. Kopycinski; Administration,
C/Capt. Weiss; Security and Law
Enforcement, C 1st Id. Storr.

Retiring Division Staff are: DivC/Col. Barry
Goble; Vice Commander, C/Col.
Clark Squires; Personnel, C/Lt.
Col. Later; Material, C/Lt. Col.
Hollands. Operations, C/Lt. Col.

ision Commander,

Olsen;

Inspector General,

Spectrum

Greek Notes

Pianist Horszowski Will Open
This Semester s Musical Slate
Horszowsl
of the .1

Friday, January 29,

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

C/Lt.

Col. Wopdhead; Comptroller, C/Lt. Col. Polay; Information, C/ld.
Col. Mingle; Administration, C/Col. Krauth; Security and Law
Enforcement C/Lt
Hart
shorn.

may
Norpurthis
album. However, there is a limited number available.
Alpha Phi Delta is looking forward to their rush, social tonight

Greek Sing record albums
be picked up in Room 323
ton Union. You may also
chase additional copies of

with Chi

Omega sorority.

It

will

be held at the Roc Mar bowling
lanes at 9:30 p.m.
Alpha Sigma Phi is looking

forward to their social with Theta Chi Sorority tonight, at the
Hotel Markeen, immediately following the IFC mixer. All rushees
are cordially invited.
Beta Phi Sigma would like to
invite all prospective rushees to
a rush stag to be held Thursday,
February 11. For further information contact any brother.
All rushees are cordially invited lo the Phi Kappa Psi Rush
Beer Stag tonight. Watch for posters announcing the lime and
place.

Pi Lambda Tau wishes to announce that a closed toboggan
party is scheduled for tomorrow
night. Afterwards, a party will
be held at Rappl’s Restaurant.
Tau Kappa Epsilon is presenting a dated rush party tomorrow at the Hotel Worth. All
rushces are invited. For information or rides call 836-6248.

UNDERGRADUATE
MATH CLUB

Wednesday, the Undergraduate
Math Club will hold its initial
program will include a business
session during which plans for
coming meetings will be discussed, and two talks on Recreational Mathematics by Jim Woeppel and Neal Felsinger. Also, the
club’s picture for the Buffalonian will.be taken, so all members
and those who wish to join are
urged to attend. The meeting
will be held in Room 335 Norton
at 8:00 p.m.
CHEMICAL SOCIETY
The Student Affiliates of the

American Chemical Society will
hold a business meeting Wednesday in Room 125 Achesoh Hall.
All members are requested to at
tend

.

Refreshments will be serv-

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
There will be a photo club
meeting today at 4:00 p.m. in

Norton. Check at the desk to
find out in which room the meeting will be held. The club is

open to all, even if you know
nothing about photography.
SKI CLUB
The Ski Club is at it again this
semester, skiing four nights a

week

Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday. Lessons

CORRECTION

The snow sculpture of
Snoopy in his house was not
built by Sigma Epsilon Phi
as reported in our last issue.
The prize winning sculpture
was built by the brothers and
pledges of Tau Kappa Epsilon
Fraternity.

COOl)

(daH

I’AY

delivering llie Spectrum
contact Buddy Dikman,

—

1965

JSoard

will be given Wednesday and Friday nights.
Sunday, February 7, there will
be an all day trip to Bristol Mt.,
a new one-million dollar area
with a 1050 foot vertical drop.
Of course all Schussmeisters can
get tow tickets and lessons at
reduced rates at this area. We’ll
be leaving February 1, at 7:00
a.m., so stop up in the ski club
office and sign up right away
The deadline for this trip is Tuesday evening.
Also the Ski Club will be traveling to the Holiday Valley Winter Carnival at the end of Feb
fuary.— a weekend where everything goes on the slopes.
For powder ski fans, a trip to
Huntsville, Ontario, where there
is always snow, cold, and 3 feet
of powder. Stay tuned to the of

fice window (320 Norton) for
word of a “Bad Luck” party Fri-

day, February 12.
OPERA
There will'be a meeting of the
new Opera Club. The organizational meeting will be held February 2 at 8:00 p.m. in Room 203
Baird Hall. Anyone with an inWicke Jr. will act as faculty ad-

terest in

any aspect of opera is
Mr. Henry
For further information

cordially invited.

visor.

call Miss Suzanne
TF 4-8115.

Goddard at

Browsing Library Buys New Books
“The Paperback Exchange”,, a
project of the Norton Hall Browsing Library, is back this semester
for the benefit of

the avid UB
readers. Individuals may trade
their old paperbacks on a “book
for book” basis, providing books

are in readable condition and are
of good quality.
The Browsing Library has pur-

chased new paperbacks to widen
the range of selection and boost
circulation. Come in and make
use of the portable and convenient “Paperback Exchange.”

—-

cjCetterA to the
arc willing to work to keep some
amount of culture in our lives
—but without the support of the
rest-of the school their prospects
are disi
For instance
the three one-act plays put on
earlier this season by the Stu
dent Drama Society
.
. one
night the entire audience for
this absorbing offering was, composed of eight people. And what
about all the applications the
New Student Review is getting
for the position of Editor-inchief?
Are we afraid to get involved
afraid to commit ourselves
even to arP A university
and
we who make up that university
can not merely exist, vegetate,
maintain the status quo and then
expect to graduate the leaders
of tomorrow'. We must do some
thing, challenge some existing
ideas, break away from the seeming security of imitation and
leave our unique imprint in the
meaningful world of art We all
have a responsibility in this re—

—

831-3610. Must have

Jazz!

car.

SAM
*

some suggestions,

funds from, the Student Senate
are essential for an expanded
program in any

We care

case
do you

East
House' Council

NOTO

COUNT BASIE
� STAN KENTON
� WOODY HERMAN

will perform Friday and Saturday nights at the

PRINCE EDWARD HOTEL
490 PEARL STREET
Parking in Rear

n

NOW PLAYING!

"A 0140*^
no^ : ::-;(ron ,tv&gt;.

Goodyear

Jazz!

PLAYBOY'S Top Jan Trumpet Nominee
who has performed with

and Goodyear East House
Council feels this responsibility
deeply. What can we do about
the existing situation? We have
sped,

but these can
only work if students start caring
and decide to explore the ans
wers that can .be found in the
theater and the other arts rather
than the rather dubious ones
generally found in the Grotto.
etc. Perhaps an inter-dorm coun
cil on the arts or an all-out publicity campaign for current cul
tural events would help
more

Jazz!

-

from P, 5)
deeply the lack of an adequate
dramatic theater on campus. We
are lucky enough to have a small
core of dedicated students who

(Cont'd

Editor

p°

»»»

on

0 vefP

c

ol' p

*

otion 1
itre»0

|»*

—

Cro*^

ef' n^

—

SUfer’'
Woman in
the Dunes
A

teshigahara Production

•

A

*&lt;fft £i/» OAada, Kyo*o Unhid*
Directed by Hiroshi Teshigahara
Produced by Kuchi Ichikawa and
Pathe Contemporary films Release

K* rm PtlM PE5T1VM SHOUT &lt;964 MONTKAI KM FISTIVAl ACCLAMATION

PLUS

49 Ed*ord
TL 2- 9338
BUFFALO FOLK CENTER
to itrve your ontortommonf needs.

AiAH 84JUS

LUDWIG
Moo-Ihu,.

BEMELMAN'S

MADELINE'

■ CANNES FILM FtSTivtl
7:15—9:30 PM

'964

Tadasni Ono

4MMRC MMMER 1964

CI8KA8*
WSBMVY*JMW

tfwb*

�Friday, January

29, 1965

lasswanwiMd
From the bottom of the barrel
Aside from the people who are

involved in the field of “exploitation" films (also called
“skin-flicks”), Holly-

wood producers have pretty much
given up the production of anything other than “Grade A” movies. This classification doesn’t
mean that they aren’t manufacturing a great deal of obvious
garbage. Quite the contrary. What
it does mean is that nearly every
movie made in Hollywood is a
professional, moderately

expen-

Quartet Opens

gir&amp;MD
I1

By LEON LEWIS

nudies” or

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

rest is padding. The characters
posture and look significant and
thoughtful during long stretches
of silence, while the camera angle shifts pseudo-artistically and
the light man goes through his
entire repetoire to create “atmosphere’’. This may be the most
boring movie I’ve seen in several
years.
The Circle Art has just completed a run of Truffaut’s lastest
movie, The Soft Skin and is go-

ing to have
Woman

the Japanese film
for the

of the Dunes

Music Series

production. The cheaper,
low-budget efforts without any
name stars or extensive publicity
come from independent studios,
ndividual specialists and from
he movie mills in countries like

aly, Japan and Great Britain
For a number of years in the
late 50's, almost every foreign
film released in the U.S. was an

interesting, unique work. Importers assumed that the "art film”

audience wouldn’t be interested
in anything less. This high standard led many people to believe
that anything from overseas had
something to recommend it and
importers, and distributors have

oeen abusing this misconception,
ever since. One inexpensive, amateurish foreign film after another has graced our shores durSome
ing the last few years.
sleazy commercial theatres, discovering that the cost of a good,
first-run American film was beand their means, have .taken to
ailing
themselves “Art Thea
res,' and have foisted upon a
datively naive
public, one
nece of trash after another from
mtside this country. (Japan, for
nstance, has the world’s largest
ilm industry . . . or, at least
hey make the most films. In
icldition to the work of Kurasawa
md K u h e u g i, a tremendous
imount of foolish trivia is reeased every year). Fortunately,
here seems to be evidence of
ome improvement in this attiJde. Judging from the double
'ature playing at the Paramount
aw, we may have a chance to
*e some of the middling films
reduced elsewhere, as well as
the best and the worst.
.Normally, I wouldn’t be interested in discussing The First
Man in the Moon, an adaption
the H. G. Wells classic, or its
mpanion feature, a surprisinggood historical movie errone
sly titled The Crimson Blade
ie hero calls himself “The

arlet

Blade” throughout the
However, there isn’t much
&gt;e around and these are the
rk days when any sort of enrtainment or escape is welcome
m).

d necessary,

Steve

McQueen's

w effort Baby the Rain Must
II is a hopelessly boring wrecke which even his and Lee Remt's interesting talents cannot
Kin to ,save. In the firs! eightn or twenty minutes of the

v ie.

one

gets, about

12 seconds

next week or so. I'm anxious to
see it because it has been highly
praised by a number of people

with excellent credentials, and

I hope that I’ll be able to review
it for next week’s number (assuming the paper hasn’t folded
by then , ; . or the school become
insolvent and closed up shopi.
After reading Dwight MacDonald's typically wdtty criticism of
My Fair Lady in the latest issue
Of Esquire, I doubt if I’ll have
anything to say about that movie,
although I’m sure that is is an enjoyable experience for almost everyone much ih the same manner
that Lawrence of Arabia had such
a wide appeal. Which brings me
back to the British grade-B double-feature at the Paramount.
The First Man

pleasant

in the Moon is

juvenalia,

delightfully

decorated with lots of amusing
special effects, some good stylized acting and an interesting
basic premise. It is really a children's movie that many adults
may find intertstihg too. I found
it a bit slow paced and predictable, but I enjoyed Lionel Jeffries
(the frantic cop in, The Wrong
Arm of the Law) as the excentric
scientist very much. And, in The
Crimson Blade, Jeffries is in a
class by himself. The movie revolves around the British Civil
War in which Cromwell and the
Royalists were at loggerheads
and the like. Jeffries plays a man
who is supporting Cromwell because that is where the cash (and
preseumably the winning side)
is. He is some kind of a local
commissar attempting to put
down a pocket of Royalist Guerilla resistance. The hanger is, his
daughter has fallen in love with

the “Scarlet Blade” and his
henchman has fallen in love with
his daughter.
The obvious bad guys die, the
reasonably good ones survive to
the picture's rather off beat conclusion and the whole thing is
great fun. The scenery is very
attractive (the cameraman work
ed on the justly famous Bridge
on the River Kwai) and best of
all, the direction is crisp and
forceful, with no foolish pauses
in the action. It is nothing special by any means, but it sue

ceds in wha
aims for and for
an unpretentious historical f
ad fun
cape drar
—

kind

of

change

.

.

(Cont'd from P. 1)

Senator Abraham Ribicoff

By VICKKI BUGELSKI

The Budapest Quartet, in residence here at the University,
opened 'he January series of
chamber music Monday night in
Baird Hall. Guest artist for the
evening was pianist Mieczyslaw

Horszowski.

The Quartet performed with its
usual high,standards and perfect
ensemble. The Haydn Quartet,
op. 64 no. 6, in E-flat, was played
very well, with good dialogue
among the instruments, and fine
technique and effect in the finale
which is marked presto. This
work is the only one on the program which featured the full
string quartet. Joseph Koisman
and Alexander Schneider, violins;
Boris Kroyt, viola; and Mischa
Schneider, ’cello.
Mr. Horszowski performed the
piano part in the Beethoven Trio
op. 11 with complete ease and
technical, agility, with hardly a
sign of effort. This work was
written for violin or clarinet plus
cello and piano, and this evening

Horszowski performed this
difficult’work with style and ease,
and the ensemble in general was
excellent. It is quite a feat for a
pianist to perform two very different and demanding works in
the same evening, and Mr Horszowski. will be performing still
Mr,

sive

.

(D-

the main proponent of
tax credit measures, will not be
giving up without a fight, however. Thirty-four other senators
have already joined him in introducing a bill to provide tax
credits of up to $325 for anyone
who pays the college tuition expenses of a student. Forty senators who supported this measure
last year arc still in Congress.
Four senators who opposed it
then, one who didn’t vote, and
three newly-elected senators arc
among its sponsors.
Another part of President
Johnson’s higher education program aid smaller colleges. Proposals in this area include:
Faculty exchanges with other
colleges and universities, as suggested last year by Congresswoman Edith Greene (D-Orcgon).
Conn.),

the violin version was chosen,
which perhaps gives better blending with the 'cello in some of
the passages. The, question of
choosing violin or clarinet re
mains a moot point, for each instrument will have its own advantages and supporters.
The last work on the program
was the Quartet no. 1 in C minor
for piano and strings, op. 15, of
French composer Gabriel Faure.
EUI OKADO AND KYOKO KISHIDA star in Women of the Dunes

Education Bill

different works during the week.
The Budapest Quartet itself will
a I s o be performing different

works during the series, choosing from their extremely varied
and extensive repertoire, and

have always played with complete
ease and fine ensemble any number of different works within a
short period of tiriic.
The next chamber scries given

the Quartet will be in March.
Individual recitals by members
of the quartet have also been
scheduled, and will be announced

by

shortly.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

asked to deal with several other
measures affecting students:
A Cold War GI Bill sponsored
by Senator Ralph Yarborough
(D-Tcxas) and 30 other Senators.
This would extend educational
and other benefits to veterans
who served after the GI Bill
lapsed in 1955.

Amendments to the Social {Security Act to enable fulltime
students to receive dependent
child insurance benefits to age 21
instead of age 18. Such amendments died last year when controversy over .medicare prevented
action over Social Security.
Moves to modify or end the
draft. It will be keyed to a defense department study due in
the spring.
The many higher education pro-

grams up for consideration this
year, however,, seem to be taking
a back seat to the 1.255 billion

dollar elementary secondary
school program.
This program includes $1 billion for aid to children of low
income families; $100 million for
school library resources and instructional materials; $100 mil-

Aid to faculty members of small
colleges to renew and extend
knowledge

of their fields.

Fellowships to encourage graduate students and instructors in
large universities to augment the
teaching resources of small cof
leges.

lion for supplementary educationservices; $45 million for educational research and training; and
$10 million to strengthen state

departments of education.

Development of cooperative
programs to make more efficient
use of college resources.

Provisions which would allow
parochial school pupils to share
public school facilities seems to

President Johnson has also rec-

have

dissolved

traditional

the

church opposition- to Federal aid

ommended support for the purchase of books and library materials; an urban extension program similar to the land grant
colleges agricultural extension
program: grants to universities
for the training of librarians and
the teachers of handicapped children; and increased support for
research in a .wide variety of sci-

to education

measures. They also
have evoked approval from the
powerful National Education Association and a number of Con
pressmen

REWARD for returning
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�Friday, January 29, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

BULLS BOOST RECORD TO 8-2
way in which he came to play for
us this season. He has been a
tremendous asset to us and we

Roll Over Oswego, Stale and Ithaca
After Losing to Tenn. and St. Michael's
By STAN LICHWALA

the last issue of the
the University of Buffalo Basketball Team has seen
plenty of action. The Bulls have
traveled to Knoxville, Tennessee,
to encounter Undefeated Tennessee; to Syracuse, New York to
participate in the LeMoyne Col
lege Christmas Tournament; and
have played host to Buffalo State
at the Auditorium and to lhaca
College at Clark Gym,
Since

Spectrum,

With an unblemished 5-0 record, the Basketball Bulls went
South for an intersections! encounter with the Southeastern
Conference’s undefeated Tennessee Vols. The powerful South
erners took command of the
game in the early stages when
the Bulls were unable to find the
scoring range and were never
headed .At the end of the first
half, the tall Vols led 41-18, but
Buffalo was able to cut the lead
to 13 points when they began
to score in the second half. Outrebounded 45-30, this is as close
as the Bulls came and the final
score stood at 79 54 as Tennessee posted victory number fou r.
Jack Karaszewski, with 16, was
high scorer for Buffalo followed
by Bill Barth with 11, Bill Bilowus and Harvey Poe, both with
8 points. Barry McIntosh scored
25 points for Tennessee and A.
W Davis had 17.

During winter recess, Buffalo:
St Michael College of Winooski

Vermont; LeMoyne; and
Oswego, participated in the Le-

Park,

Moyne College . Christmas Tournament. In the opener,- UB was
matched against Si. Michaels in
a thrilling encounter. Parly in
the game, the Bulls opened up a
40 lead, but the first ten minutes saw many ties and neither
team able to open up a significant lead until the UB quintet
turned cold. Ruring this chill,
Si Mike opened up a 19 10 lead
which Buffalo was never able
to overcome. The game was lost
at the foul line as the New Englanders sank 31 out of 34 free
throws while the Bulls sank 10
out of 13 free throws. The officials called 26 fouls against UB
and only 13 against St. Mike.

The following night, the Bulls
met Oswego, loser to LeMoyne
the night before. UB took command as Harvey Poe rontped for
25 points, and built up a 40-28
halftime advantage. Oswego was
left behind in the second half
and Buffalo rolled to an 88-59
victory. Buffalo’s well-bgjanced
attack had nearly every man in
the scoring column. Following
Poe’s example, Dan Bazzani had
10, Jirh Bevilacqua 9, Bill Barth
and Bill Barto each with 8. UB
gained third place in the, tournament and LeMoyne edged out St.
Michael by a score of 68-66 for
first place honors. Almost im-

mediately, preparations began
for the upcoming Buffalo State
game.

The work and effort put forth
for the Auditorium encounter
with State paid great dividends
to the UB coaches and players as
the Bulls humbled the high-fly-

ing Orangemen by a 92-66 score,
bringing their eight game winning streak tumbling out of the
clouds. State was able to employ
their fast break to good advantage in the opening minutes as
they built up an 189 lead. After
a lime out, UB began to roll and
was able to pull ahead 42-37 at

halftime. The Basketball Bulls
continued to pour it on in the
second half as Harvey Poe finished with 24 points, Dan Bazzani
with 13 points, and Norward
Goodwin, who finally found the
range with his looping oneBanded shot, contributed 11 points.
For State, Chuck Mancuso had
23 points.

The Buffalo State game was
the final game for 6-5 center

v

Bill Bilowus. After exams, Bill

St. Michael 93

—

Buffalo 86.

A

I

V

V.
,tkta

Forward JIM BEVILACQUA

V'v'S

I"’■»

By

STEVE FEIGIN

The hockey Bulls continued on
their winning ways,, as they routed a visiting Syracuse University six, 5-0, at the Amherst Rink.

Captain Jerry Doherty paced the
UB attack with four goals, as the
ice Herd completely dominated

tack

for the remainder of the
period. Their attack improved in
the final two periods, but Buffalo goalie Ken Sherry, with the
aid of some fine defensive plav
in front of him, repulsed all
their attempts to score. This was
his first league shutout, and establishes him as a leading candidate for All-Star goalie honors.
Stir Cmtir BILL BILOWUS

had' accumulated

enough

units

He has allowed but one enemy
shot to get by him in two games,
he

his degree al
mence m c n t

Mid-Year

Com

12
February
Leading rebounder this year, Bil
owus made a great comeback aft
er missing all last season be

brewed for braves...

/

lineup.

Last Saturday night, Ithaca
College came into Clark Gym to
UB, Ithaca scored the first
field goal, but after that, it was
UB all the way as the Bull’s
opened up a 12-2 advantage before Ithaca scored again. At the
half, the score was Buffalo 48,
Ithaca 25. The tall Ithaca team

meet

UB INDIVIDUAL SCORING
HARVEY POE
JACK KARASZEWSKI
NORB RASCHNAGEL
DAN BAZZANI
BILL BARTH
BILL BILOWUS
PAUL GOLDSTEIN
NORWARD GOODWIN
BILL BARTO
LARRY BRASSEL
DAVE FRATAtfGELO
DICK SMITH
JIM BEVILACQUA
TOM GILL
DICK HETZEL
TOTALS

Ithaca 64.
The University of Toronto trav
eled to Clark Gym last Wednes

day night. Tomorrow evening,
powerful Steubenville will meet

UB at the Memorial Auditorium
games.

6

FG
51
38
35
32
24
26
19
25
16
15
13
9

F
37
21
10

11
5

3

10

8

18
8
22
8.
5
4
5

10
5

0
9 319 173

TP Avg.
139 15.4
97 10.7
89
9.8
8.0
72
66
7.3
60
6.6
60
6.6
58
6.4
4.6
37
34
4.8
31
3.8
28
4.0
25
6.2
15
2.5
0
0.0
811

90.1

ICERS BLANK SYRACUSE
Buffalo wasted little time in
scoring. Right winger Brian Frazer slapped in a 20 foot shot
from a face-off deep in enemy
territory with the contest only
17 seconds old. This lightning
tally seemed to upset the Orangemen. as they were unable to
mount a significant scoring at-

rebounded the winners 47-45.
The Bulls' team effort was led
by Norb Baschnagel with 18, fol

Paul Goldstein with 10 points apiece. For SI Michaels, Richie
Tarrant, tossed in 28 and was
followed closely by E. Kryger
with 26, The final score read,

,

the game.

This is what made .all the difference as Buffalo not only outshot
the Vermonters from the field,
hitting on 38 of 79 shots , to 31
of 67 for St. Mike, but also out-

lowed by Jack Karaszewski and
Harvey Poe. each with 15, and
Bill Bilowus. Dan Bazzani, and

cause of a hunting accident.
Through the first nine games,
Bill had 73 rebounds and was
averaging 6.8 points per game.
Coach Scrfustini had this to say
about Bill, 'Bill deserves a lot
of credit for the way in which he
continued his studies after last
year’s mishap and also for the

hate to lose him, although he
congratulacertainly deserves
tions on his success, both in the
classroom and on the court.
There is no doubt that we’ll miss
him.” Bill Barth, also 6-5, will
replace him in the UB starting

began to play better in the second half but they had lost any
chance of catching the Bulls in
the first half, Harvey Poe turned
in another great performance,
scoring 19 points, while Dan Baz
zani scored 15. Jim Bevilacqua
turned in a tremendous rebounding effort and scored 8 points.
Norb Baschnagel and Bill Barth
also had 8. For Ithaca, George
Valesente had 21 points. The final score was Buffalo 87 and

sea

son's opener against Rochester,
seems to have regained his last
season’s form, as he racked up
his hat trick plus one. His two
goals in the initial period, one

a

kg

unassisted, gave the Bulls a commanding 3-0 lead and made it
easy sailing over the final 40
minutes of play. His second and
third period tallies were just
icing on the cake. Credit is also due to Jerry’s two wingers,
speedsters Dave Hannah and Jim
Bausch, who assisted on three
of the goals.

The hockey Bulls, after the
layoff for final exams, took to
the road Wednesday and did
battle with defending champion
R.I.T. Saturday they will venture up to Oswego in a battle for
first place.
BULL SESSION
This game
was more lively than the opener.
Eleven penalties were called,
seven against the Bulls. Syracuse’s Oakley was jeered by the
350 partisan fans for his unsportsmanlike conduct in the
nird period. He drew two roughing violations in the space of 3
minutes . . . unsung hero of the
night was Jeff Proctor. Rushed
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to the hospital after being gashed
in the forehead by an errant
stick, he did not heed advice of
doctor and returned to play the

final few minutes of game
.
7 new stitches
R.I.T. hat dropped two games sc
far and appears to be out of con
tention . | Oswego looks like a
good bet to cop league honors
in its maiden year of competition It has rolled over four op
ponents so far, registering a phe
nomenal 74 goals, while, allowing
only 4. They’ve shellacked Hobart 30-2, Syracuse 24-0, R.I.T
11-1 and Ithaca 9-1. Those are
hockey scores, not last season
football results!

—

sporting

.

�29, 1965

Friday, January

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

STEUBENVILLE PREVIEW

STEUBENVILLE'S SUPERIOR HEIGHT
POSES BIG PROBLEM FOR BULLS
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

Steubenville, a relatively unheard of city nestled in the Ohio
Valley on the Ohio-West Virginia
border, is a place with which one
would not be expected to be familiar unless he happened to live
in the vicinity, happened to enjoy memorizing the names of
American cities with populations
over 30,000. or happened to be
a collegiate basketball coach.

If such a collegiate basketball
coach, as is the case with UB
mentor Leonard Serfustini,
should happen to have his team
on the schedule of the Ohioahs,
he is more than cognizant of the
teeth and claws of this small
college tiger.

Coach Serfustini
and his well-balanced hoopsters
anticipate one of their stiffest
challenges of the season when
they face the 11-1 Barons at
Memorial Auditorium tomorrow
night at 7:30 p.m. in a double-

SPECTRUM
TOP TWENTY
283
265
251

U.C.L.A,

Michigan

Providence
St. Joseph’s
232
Wichita
211
197
Davidson
176
Vanderbilt
159
Illinois
144
St. John’s
Buffalo
20
Steubenville
120
Duke
108
Indiana
97
Tennessee
85
North Carolina St. 77
Minnesota
65
Miami (Ohio)
57
Evansville
44
Villanova
34
Princeton
28

(8)
(3)
(2)

header which includes Canisius
vs. Bowling Green in the nightcap.

Steubenville has been flirting
with the small college top ten
all year: their season has been
highlighted by stunning upsets
of both Youngstown, 50-48, and
Gannon. 65-62, two more small
college powerhouses who are
rated in the higher echelons of
small college roundball. The Barons, whose only setback was a
73-68 upset decision at the hands
of Central State of Ohio, possess
an abundance of height and muscle on the backboards in their
front line of 67’' Randy Greene.
6'6" John Holley, and 6‘3” Allyn

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pected to start at the guard positions, while top reserves ti'5"

Walt Osborne, 6T" Jim Quinn,
and 6'3" Paul Rue are all slated
to see plenty of action

Although the Bulls realize they
will have their work cut out for
them, they do not intend upon
rolling over and playing dead
for the Barons,
The midyear
graduation of 6'5" center bill
Bilowus will be fell under the
boards, but speculation lor sue
cess rings in an optimistic lone
since the reinstatement of for
ward Jim Bevilacqua and guard
Dick lletzcl from the medical

\

launches the arduous UB stretch
drive, a road packed with numerous pitfalls: the demanding February schedule includes clashes
with Niagara and LeMoyne in
Memorial Auditorium February
9 and 27, respectively, and tussles with Rochester in Clark Gym
and Colgate in Hamilton. These
games are all of vital importance
to the Bulls for they realize all
too well that they must maintain
or improve upon their current
9-2 record if they are to be con
sidered for an NCAA bid.
One of the, if not the most,
formidable obstacles standing in
the way of the Hulls seems to be
the Steubenville five tomorrow
night. The SUNVAB’s have run
their last two opponents, Buffalo
State

(92 66)

and Ithaca

(87 64),

into the floor behind hustling
Harvey Poe, who netted 43 in
the two tilts. In Steubenville,
however, UB faces a much taller
club than either of the two aforementioned. foes, and it should
prove quite interesting to see if
the rejuvenated Bulls can hold
their own against the rangy Ohio
invaders.

We again cannot overempha-

size the importance of your attendance in Memorial Auditorium on behalf of both yourself
and your college. Not only will
you be able to witness higher
quality basketball in a place bet-

suited both spacewise and
floorwise for the spectator and
player alike, but you will also be
performing
the indispensable
duty of showing your concern
about the Bulls in the Auditorium. which is the needed ingredient for a better basketball schedule, in the future. The only way
this can be accomplished
is through your attendance.
ter

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list, and the activation of 6'5"
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�Friday, January

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

E �

29, 1965

i)IP®SlirS)*
=tA=£===

===£=====/

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

THE ART OF DEFENSE

Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary defines defense as
“a defending: guarding against attack; keeping from
harm or danger.'* As far as the application of defense
to basketball is concerned, the ultimate objective is simply to keep the offensive players as far away from the
basket as possible, thus forcing them to take long shots
which, of course, are less likely to go in.
With the
many super-stars in basketball today, and the tremendous
scoring potential of almost all professional and most
college basketball teams, defense has become a “lost art”
in the eyes of today’s fans. However, defense is indeed
an art and there is perhaps-’ no better example of its
successful application than in the case of the UB basketball team.
Last Saturday night the Bulls defeated a much bigger Ithaca team. In spite of their height advantage, the
Bulls outshot, outran, and outhustled the Ithacans enroute to an 87-64 victory. However, more significant is
the fact that this “outing" of the Ithaca squad was manifested mainly in the defensive play of the Bulls. In other
words, the Bulls won because they played defense and
Ithaca did not. Throughout the entire contest, Ithaca
rarely got close enough to the basket for what coaid
be considered a good shot. iMost of the time they were
forced to take long jump and set shots from the outside.
In addition to this, the Bulls also played heads-up ball
in stealing numerous passes and fumbles. Perhaps what
is most ironic about the victory was that the Bulls even
“out’ rebounded the taller Ithacans.
AH in all, this game was another outstanding team
effort; for defense is not something that one man does by
himself it is five men playing together, and hustling
every second of the time. It is indeed a tribute to Head
Coach Leonard Serfustini that the team has done as well
as it has (eight wins, two defeats) in spite of the tremendous height disadvantage the Bulls were at in almost
every game. To make up for this, Dr. Serfustini has built
the Bulls into a hustling defensive ball club, not to mention the 1)1) point per game scoring average the Bulls
took into the Ithaca game which was among the nation's
best, in giving credit where credit is due we wish to congratulate the UB Basketball team, Head Coach Leonard
Serfustini and his assistant; Edwin Muto, William Monkarsh, and Lenard Koesobucki for the outstanding record
the Bulls have posted thus far this season.
-

UB Football News
COACH REEVES
TO LEAVE UB
Charlie Reeves, assistant football coach at the University of
Buffalo, has resigned to ertter
private business in Tyler, Texas,
according to an announcement
made by UB head coach Dick

SUPPORT THE BULLS
Tomorrow night the Hulls meet Steubenville at Memorial Auditorium, in the opening game of a doubleheader, featuring Canisius and Bowling Green in the
final. Steubenville, to acquaint those of you who are
not familiar with it. has an 11-1 record and has been
in the small college "top 10’’ for most of the year. Game
time is 7:30 p.m. and the price of admission is one dollar
for both games. The time has come for all you good
"Buffalos” to support the Bulls. As Livingston said to
Stanley (in a letter written shortly before his death asking him to take on the monumental task which he would
no longer be able to do) : "I leave it with you.” It is indeed. up to you.

ATTEND THE
STEUBENVILLE GAME
TOMORROW NIGHT

Philbin is at present taking

courses in Sociology in the

BULLS ADD DAYTON
TO 65 GRID SLATE
The University of Buffalo and
Dayton University will play each
other home-and-home during the
1965 and 1966 football seasons,
according to an announcement
made today by UB Athletic Di
rector Jim Peelle.

In submitting his resignation
Reeves stated that he enjoyed
his association with UB but felt
that in justice to his family he
could not afford to turn down
the attractive offer he received.

A replacement for Reeves will
be selected in the near future.

■If 4

rZ.
*

hi

The 1965 game will be played
at Buffalo October 23, while
the 1966 game will be played at
Dayton October 15. Both
games

York Jets

until, sidelined by a
shoulder separation last season,
will work with the UB coaching
staff during spring practice.
This was announced by UB
head coach Dick Offenhamer. Offenhamer also disclosed that he
was in the process of screening
applicants for the position on
the coaching staff left vacant by
the resignation of Charley Reeves
and that a decision would probably be made on Reeves’ successor in about two weeks.

season with the

In making the announcement
of the Dayton games, Peelle revealed that UB now has 9 games
slated for 1966 and 1967 and
that the 10th game for 1967 will
probably be scheduled in the
near future. UB would still like
to fill an open date on Novem-

ber 19, 1966.

The 1965 UB schedule is as fol
lows (5 home games, 5 away):
Sept. 18 at Boston College
Sept. 25 Tampa University
Oct.
2 at Massachusetts
Oct.
9 Boston University
Oct. 16 Richmond Univ.
Oct. 23 Dayton University
Oct. 30 at Holy Cross
Nov. 6 at Delaware
Nov. 13 Colgate
Nov. 20 at Villanova

Jets, The ex-UB

fortunes of his

open dates which were
This

year’s game will mark the first
meeting of Buffalo and Dayton
on the gridiron.

grid great declared that he was
happy to be able to do anything
he could to contribute to the

football

fill

on the schools’ schedules.

Jet Star GERRY PHILBIN

Philbin, who recently underwent surgery for the shoulder
separation, said that the operation has been pronounced a complete success by the doctors and
that he looked forward to a fine

Lin* Coach CHARLEY REEVES

Mil-

lard Fillmore College at UB.

Reeves has been in charge of
the offensive line for the Bulls.
Prior to joining the Buffalo staff
in 1962 he coached at Waller
High School and Marshall High
School in his native Texas. He
is a graduate of Stephen F. Austin College.

CALVES EXCELL
Anyone who arrived early for the freshman contest
saw a very exciting, fast moving Buffalo team. The
Calves, (how does that sound?) completely outclassed
the Ithaca freshman contingent as they rolled up a 101-60
score. In spite of the one sided score it was an exciting
encounter all the way, as the Calves passed the century
mark for the first time this season in the games waining
seconds. Thus far this season the frosh have been tremendous, holding a 5-2 record against rough competition
(Canisius, St. Bonaventure, Niagara, etc.) The future
does indeed look bright for the UB Basketball team.

Gerry Philbin, All-East tackle
for the University of Buffalo
during the 1963 season, and regular defensive end for the New

Offenhamer.

Coach Offcnhamer expressed
regret over Reeves’ leaving and
praised him for doing a fine job
while at Buffalo.

For his part, Coach Often
hairier stated that he was pleased that Philbin would be work
ing with the team this spring
and he predicted that Gerry,
would be helpful, considering
his ability, interest in the game,
and pro experience.

PHILBIN TO COACH
AT SPRING PRACTICE

Alma

Mater.

TwinBill AtThe "All D*

by

LET'S MAKE SV1RETHERE'S

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NDbVTORMM T OMORROM
HV0KW£ TV\E 0ViVA_S TME OH

STtUBEWmt IH

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�</text>
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                    <text>'

S'

v

*7/

Trudy St«rn

Vicki Bu9*l«ki

��Friday, Dacambar 18,

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

dt

y

%
mm

■

i

*6.95
from ’6.95
from ’2.95
SLACKS
from *5.95
’2.95
BLOUSES
SKI JACKETS
from *14.95
PIERCED EARRINGS from *2.00
SKIRTS
SWEATERS
KNIT TOPS

r

Also Jewelry, Hosiery, Lingerie, Gloves
and many other items.

Poise niyy
1086 Elmwood Ave. Between Bird
OPEN EVENINGS
-

&amp;

Say Season’s Greetings with A

Forest

Gift from

——

UNIVERSITY

BUFTAiO, N.T.
0740)0

THE LOOK IS TODAY

—

I

C?

Crest
_

AND YESTERDAYI

Long-)egged Naturals by famed

h.i.s blend modern,
styling with tried-and-true
traditional details, for instance, you wear
cuffless Naturals down on your hips; they’re tlgh
tapered and terrific! But tricks and glnmtcks ar
out: they’ve got traditional belt loops and regu

up-to-the-second

pockets

look,
...

•

that go perfectly with their stress)Ined
new shades and washable fabrics

m great
S.»t

fttgle6re*t

T1AMSITO*
WIUIAMSVI
utW)

.

.

.

1964

�J

section

——

Si

—

-a*r-—

f—

m

——

news

——

FEATURE

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18,

VOLUME 15

1964

NO. 14

Student Senate Posses Sporn Resolution
Dr. Hoyle Notes Changes
in The Human Species

“Today we represent a transition point in biological evolution.” We have mechanical means,
our mouth, vocal chords, etc.,
to convert our electronic thoughts
into sound waves to be heard by
another person. “We are unable,

IX

■r
I

Sa
DR. HOYLE

unfortunately, to carry on direct

electronic-to-electronic communiDo not think we are
cation
If
at the end of the road a species
we came in contact with
electhat could carry on direct
tronic communication, we would
be as powerless against them as
a dog is against the human race.”
So commented Dr. Fred Hoyle,
Monday, December 14, in a convocations lecture on “The Nature
of the Human Being,” sponsored
by the Department of Theoretical

Biology and the Convocations
Committee.
An important change in the
human species, as seen by Dr.
Hoyle, is the inversion of the

role of the chemical and electronic systems. At first, an electronic system, such as the brain,
helped the body, with the eyesight, for example, as a type of
radar system for the body.
“Now,” contends Dr. Hoyle, “the
body exists to supply the brain.”
He explained that the interaction of the raw physical properties of our environment and
random fluctuation form the
human species. Scientists understand the principles of the early
stages of life, but not the details.
“The details would tell if we
could expect life on other planets,” Dr. Hoyle remarked.
Dr. Hoyle predicts that a new
species of human being will
evolve in 3000 to 4000 years
though a process other than biological mutations. A rise and fall
cycle in population levels due to
the “instability of organizational
structures” (with reference to
food producing technology) will
“channel out a particular set of
characteristics.”
In addition to being the Plumian Professor Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy at Cambridge University, Dr. Hoyle has

written the well known book,
The Nature of the Universe and

more recently Frontiers of Astronomy.

Nunn Voted Mr. Formal;
Elias Is First Runner-Up
By ELLEN MURPHY
Charles Nunn of Beth Page,
Long Island, Sigma Phi Epsilon

sented with the winning trophy
at the Silver Ball, Saturday evening at Kieinbans Music Hall.

Manning Discusses
African Apartheid
Last Monday afternoon in the
Conference Theatre the
Convocation Committee of the
Student Senate presented Professor Charles Manning. The topic
of his lecture was “The Future
of South Africa.”
Professor Manning was born
and raised in South Africa and
educated at Oxford University.
He has participated in international law on various levels. This
background formed the foundation for the views expressed in
his lecture defending the policy
of apartheid and attempting to
rectify what he considers the
“lopsided portrait of South Africa” which has been presented
to most of the Western world.
He feels the official condemnation of South Africa by many nations is a result of decisions in
foreign offices based on what
would be in their own best interest rather than a true knowledge of the situation.
To Professor Manning, govern
Norton

1

w

A
CHARLES MANNING

ment is the art of the possible

and integration for South Africa
is impossible. A certain degree

of autonomy has been offered
the Negroid majority. He stated
progress is being made and that
the only reason for its condemnation is that is does not satisfy
the Organization of African Unities.

NUNN SELECTED MR. FORMAL
Fraternity’s candidate for Mr.
Formal, was announced as the
1964 Mr. Formal. He was pre-

INDEX
Editorial
Theater

......

...

Gucinaki
Kibitxor
Creak Notes
Callboard
Sports Roundup
Religious Tidings
Letters
v
Reviewing Stand
Sports Circle
Presidents Message
Reflections
Music
Official Weekly Bulletin
••�•••••

«*•.«

a

•
•

eee

*a*«aat.

Nick Elias of Alpha Sigma Phi
was first runner-up and Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity was the winner of the most outstanding campaign. Alpha Sigma Phi also won
the trophy for participation in
Winter Week-end.
Mr. Nunn, who campaigned as
the English Gentleman, received
the title of Mr. Formal as a
result of student voting, individual judging and campaign. Charles
was the third Sigma Phi Epsilon
to receive this title in three consecutive years. His victory enabled his fraternity to retire the
Mr. Formal rotating trophy
awarded by Sigma Kappa Phi
Sorority. Previous winners were
William D e e g a n in 1962 and
Bruce Sahrbeck in 1963.
Evelyn Chapin, chairman of the
Mr. Formal Committee, reported
that a student voting record was
set. Approximately 3000 votes
were cast in Norton Union last
Thursday and. Friday.

'Deplores’ Committee Action
The Student Senate Tuesday
night passed a resolution expressing its disapproval of the action taken by the Committee on

moved from his position for nonacademic reasons." It also stated
that "The evidence used against
him is of highly questionable

LITSITZ DISCUSSES SPORN SITUATION

Terminations of the State Uni-

and dubious nature.” The resolution sought “to act in defense of
academic freedom and for the
integrity of the University.”

academic freedom.
The Senate heard speeches by
Richard Lipsitz, attorney for Mr.
Sporn, and Dr. Marvin Zimmer
man. Academic Freedom Director
of the A.A.U.P. Approximately
three hours of debate followed

the Termination of Mr. Sporn
presented the. Senate with a 14page report including pertinent
Regents rulings, the Commissioner's Memorandum on the Administration of Regents Rules,
and an Outline from the policies
of the Board of Trustees of the
State University of New York
on terminations of service.
Mr. Lipsitz, who spoke by the
invitation of the Senate, divided
the issue of Mr. Spoxn’s dismissal into two parts; the Feinberg

versity of New York in the case
of Mr. Pafil Sporn. The resolu11-10.
tion, which was passed
reaffirmed the Senate's stand on

the speeches.
The resolution, originally pro-

by Henry Simon and
amended by Arnold Graf, staled
that academic freedom had been
placed in jeopardy in Mr. Sporn’s
case, and that “a teacher of unquestioned ability has been re
posed

A Special Senate

Committee

on

(Cont’d on P. 6)

Trophies Presented at Ball
By EVELYN CHAPIN

The annual Silver Ball was held
Saturday evening, December 12,
1964, at Kleinhans Music Hall.
A reception of faculty members
and students preceded the dance.
Students attending the reception
consisted of committee chairmen
for the dance, Union Board officers, Student Senate officers,
and Miss Formal and Mr. Formal

nity won first place for their
sculpture of Snoopy. Alpha Phi
Omega placed second with their
conception of Joy to the World
and Alpha Sigma P h i placed
third with their portrayal of the
night after Nick’s Night Out. This
snow sculpture complemented
their Mr. Formal campaign theme.
Alpha Sigma Phi also won the
over all trophy for outstanding
participation in Winter Week-

Admittedly biased, he believes
the government is doing nothing
that is morally wrong. He feels
that if enough people want a
reduction of the restrictions on
the majority of the population,
such a reduction will come to
pass. He then concluded his lecture with the hope that the U.S.
will never be faced with a problem as grave as that of South
Africa.

Library To Stay
Open For Finals
In response to expression of
many students, the
Welfare Committee of the Student Senate has contacted John
P. Herling, Assistant Director for
Readers’ Services of the University libraries. Mr. Herling has
consented to extend the hours of
Lockwood Library during the
final examination period.
Tuesday, Mr. Herling announced
to Ivan Edelson and Joseph Epstein of the Senate Welfare Committee that the “reading room on
the ground floor of Lockwood Memorial Library (current periodicals reading room) will be open
for examination week, January 6January 14. This room will be
open until 1:00 a.m., including
Saturday and Sunday. Books will
not be available after the regular closing time,’’

concern by

-

SILVER CUP PRESENTED AT SILVER BALL

candidates. The reception line
was headed by Pat lacuzzo, general chairman of Silver Ball.
The ball was an apparent suc-

cess with many couples attending.
Music was provided by the Ray

Westfield Band.
The climax of the evening came
when the midnight chimes rang.
At this time, the hardworking
groups received their rewards.
Cindy Nash, chairman of Winter
Week-end, announced the winners of the snow sculpture contest and awarded trophies to the
groups that made outstanding
contributions to Winter Weekend. Tau Kappa Epsilon Prater-

end. Theta Chi Fraternity fared

second in this category.
Mss Formal was also announced

at this time. Judy Petrocy of
Theta Chi Sorority was the honored young lady.
Pat lacuzzo extended her congratulations to the winners and
thanked her committee for a
fine job. She then turned the
program over to Evelyn Chapin,
who announced the winners of
Mr. Formal. The tension was
high, but it soon turned into
cheers and congratulatory kisses.
Everyone returned to their parties for celebration and reminiscing.

�University Bookstore
Thefts Are Rising
Thefts from the University
Bookstore appear (o be on a
marked rise. The situation has
reached the point where the store
has been forced to employ a
special detective to aid in the detection and apprehension of the
student theives. In the last two
weeks alone, twelve students
were caught in similar illegal
acts.
A typical case is reviewed below; Joe X, a sophomore, stole a
pair pf socks from the University
Bookstore, on a bet with some
friends. After having been appro
bended by the store detective,
the Student Judiciary found him
guilty (he immediately admitted
his guilt), sent a letter to his
parents informing them of the
incident, fined the boy $25, recorded the incident in his confidential files, and sent a letter to
the chairman of his department.
The Student Judiciary, whose
members include, Chairman Gary
Lighter and members Alan Feld

man.Les Foschio, William Slater,

and Alice Wittenberg, exercise
the following procedure when
sentencing offenders:
1—A letter is always sent to
the parents of the guilty party,
informing them what was stolen,
and the circumstances surroundnig the theft.
2—The student is fined up to
$100, which is given to the Samuel P. Capon Fund for needy students; a fund maintained by donations. "We believe that this
is something constructive," commented Chairman Gary Lighter.
"If the money was given to the
Faculty • Student Association, it
would not benefit the students
as directly as it does in the Sam
uel P. Capen Fund.”
3— A record of the incident is
put in the student’s confidential
file which is referred to by graduate schools, or in reference to
any serious academic decision.
“Ip-lf the incident is repeated,
the student will be suspended.
“The Student Judiciary always
has the option of suspending the
student on the first offense,”
Chairman Lighter added.

Student Judiciary Board
Jurisdiction Discussed

The Student Judiciary, one of
the four functioning groups of
the Student Association, the
others being the Student Senate,
the Student Union Board, and
the Student Publications Board,
is in possession of the highest
judicial powers of. the Student
Association. The judicial bodies
of all other organizations are
subordinate to this main one.
The Student Judiciary has the
power to

summon, to adjudge,
to inflict penalties. As a
penalty, Student Judiciary can
recommend the suspension or
expulsion of a student to the
Committee bn Student Behavior.
The erring student can also be
subjected to social probation or
to a fine, which can not exceed
one hundred dollars. Furthermore, a student or a group of
students, if such is the case, can
be excluded from participation
in campus activities. Student recognition of an entire organization can also be withdrawn. This
year more cases than ever are
being presented. However, this is
not due to a sudden increase in
campus crime, but to improved

and

methods of detection and apprehension. Before any final decision
can be reached, three of the five
board members oust be in agree-

ment.

The purposes and jurisdiction
of Student Judiciary arc in accordance with its powers. It is

meant to interpret the Constitu-

tion of the Student Association. It

also provides a fair hearing and
decision by students for breaches

of student conduct and carries
out all the functions specified in
the By-Laws. It has original jurisdiction in all matters concerning
the constitutionality of acts of
any of the member bodies of the
Student Association. It also has
original jurisdiction in all violations of the rulings of the Student Senate. The Student Judiciary has appellate jurisdiction
in cases referred by the judiciary
bodies of other recognized student organizations. Also it has
original or appellate jurisdiction

in

disputes

between

campus

Work Camp In Lackawanna
Gives Insight to Poverty
During the weekend of December 4-6, a Work Camp was held
in Lackawanna Participating in
this Camp were eleven UB stu
dents, Mr. John Hillman of the
Sociology Department and Mrs.
Hillman,.

Basically, the purpose of the
Camp was to give interested stu
dents the opportunity to work
and to live in Lackawanna for
a few days so that they might
obtain some insight into the problems existing for the people within the impoverished community.
The students lived in a Friend
ship House in Lackawanna, During their stay, Mr Proesser, the
Minister, attempted to give the
campers an idea of the problems
existing for the people of the
community. He explained to the

students that his desire was to
give these people an awareness
of their power. He hoped to in
still in them some understand
ing of the fact that if they worked as a unified group, they could
accomplish many things for themselves.
The members of the camp split
into three groups. The three
homes they worked in were suggested to Mr. Hillman by local
Social Workers. The students
were in these homes from about
9:00 Saturday morning until
about 8:00 that night. During
this time, they had materially
provided these families with
cleaner homes and a few freshly
painted rooms. Turning to the
non-material aspects, such as any
sense of rapport between these
families and the students or any
greater ability for the families

Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

to cope with their problems, sucMr. Hillman
cess is doubtful.
suggested that if anything non
material had been gained by the
families, we would not know it
for quite a while and then knowl
edge of any such accomplishment
would have to come from reports
of the Social Workers. The mem-

bers of the camp, however, felt
that they had acquired a significant non material gain. They had

experienced the impact of conditions which they could not have
fully realized from printed descriptions. Besides increasing
their knowledge, they had receiv
ed an opportunity to test their
motivations. The Camp provided
an opportunity for the students
to examine the extent of their
idealistic motivations when it involved not just words but labor.
The weekend College Work
Camps program is derived from
the more extensive summer camp

programs.

The

summer'

groups.
For this term, the five student

judges, appointed annually, are

Alan Feldman,

Leslie Foschio,

Gary Lighter, William Slater, and
Alice Wittenberg. The chairman,
Gary Lighter, is required to preside over meetings, and to schedule a meeting whenever it may
be necessary. Meetings must be
held, according to the Constitution, at least once a month, but
are actually held far more often

than that. The chairman is also
for any additional
duties that might arise. The secretary of the group is Audrey
Rothstein. There has been no
need for a vice-chairman this
year. Dean Richard A. Siggelkow
is the non-voting member from
the administration. Dr. Joseph
Fradin and Dr. John Lane are
the two non-voting faculty members. The faculty and administrative members act primarily in
the capacity of advisors. They are
meant to assist the student
judges, but do not, by any means,
attempt to overrule their judgresponsible

ment.

The parking courts are a topic
of student interest. There are
three courts, each composed of
three justices and a secretary.
The nine justices are Robert
Byne, Ellen Fleysher, Edward
Gartell, Gary Gerace, Carl Kristoff, Sam Ratick, Thomas Roth
man, Barbara Strauss, and Maury
Zeplowitz. The three secretaries
arc Loni Levy, Judith Ann Sherwin, and Criss Washuk. The parking courts, which are subsidiary
to the Student Judiciary, handle
all parking and traffic violations.
Those who feel themselves unjustly accused can petition for a
redress of grievances. The petitions can be granted, denied, or
suspended. In event of suspension, no fine need be paid, unless
another violation occurs, in which
case both fines must be paid. Of
the cases petitioned, 15% were
granted, 25% were suspended,
and 60% were denied.
The issue concerning the Publications Board is also an example
of the functions of Student Judiciary. The question that arose
was one of constitutionality. Was
it provided in the Constitution
that the Student Judiciary could
declared the entire function of
the Publication Board unconstitutional? A decision on this
case has been deferred until next
semester, when there will be
ample time for extensive consideration of the matter.
The chairman, Gary Lighter,
feels that the entire concept of
student judgment is an excellent

Snyder Talks on Vietnam
A discussion on U.S. commit-

ments in Vietnam was given by
Dr, Glenn Snyder. The discussion
was part of a series of lectures

sponsored by the Political Science
Club.

It was Dr. Snyder’s contention
that there were two main prob
lems that would have to be surmounted if we are ever able to
solve the situation in Vietnam.
The first of these was the military situation. At present, our
army is stationed in Vietnam

grams.
A further hope which Mr. Hillman expressed was that the work
ers themselves could gain some
sense of community during this
short time span. He feels that

the knowledge that there is a task
to complete and that the time is
short, helps to force people to,
lower personal barriers.

ernment.

:

merely in an “advisory” capacity.

Dr. Snyder explained that the
primary tactics of the South Vietnamese was that of “clearing and
holding”. Unfortunately, according to Professor Snyder, the Vietnamese army is having difficulty
in holding areas once they have
been cleared of the Viet Cong.
“The situation is deteriorating”.
While there are only about 30,000
hard-core Viet Cong, and 225,000
men in J.he army of the central
government, the insurgents seem
to be effectively resisting the
South Vietnamese. Dr. Snyder
felt, however, that the Viet Cong
would never effect a military
victory. He claimed that the apparent apathy of many Vietnamese was due to a “band-wagon
philosophy”. They are waiting for
some significant victory to see

which side they will pledge their
support.
In Dr. Snyder’s opinion, much
of Vietnam’s political unrest was
due to the poor representation
of the Vietnamese people in their
government. He stated that the
Current view of the population
is that a puppet-government is
controlling their country. Many
of these people look upon the
United States as imperialistic.
Professor Snyder reasoned that
much of the population feels no
particular loyalty to the central
government because of this.

DR. GLENN SNYDER
Dr. Snyder is an Associate Professor of Political Science here
at the University of Buffalo. He
received his B.S. at the University of Oregon, and attained both
his M.A. and Ph.D, at Columbia
University. He is the author of:
Deterrence and Defense, and
Strategy and Defense Budgets.
He has also contributed to the
Wall Street Journal, Journal of
International Affairs, World Politics, Journal of Conflict Resolution, The American Political
Science Review, and Political ScienceQuarterly.

EfnT\
I TiercedJ

one. Judgment by your peers,
who are well advised by capable
adults, is far less harrowing than
other types of jurisdiction might
be. The Student Judiciary stresses
rehabilitation of “wayward” students rather than severe punishment. Should a student still feel
that his ease has been unjustly
treated, he has the prerogative
of having the decision appealed
to the Committee on Student Behavior, consisting of five faculty
members and one student member. all of whom vote. The decision of the Student Judiciary is
almost always upheld in such ap-

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In concluding, Dr. Snyder offered some plausible solutions.
He stated that “we should continue our present military program. We must try to hold on
to what we have. If there is to be
any attacks outside of the border

camps

generally last for several weeks
and involve larger and more
meaningful projects. The weekend Camps were organized so
that the students who probably
could not be committed for such
long lengths of time could have
some taste of these summer pro-

of South Vietnam, they must be
made by the South Vietnamese.
We must stay in the background.”
He felt that our main objective
should be to prepare the country
for nation-wide elections. In this
way, the Vietnamese, free from
pressure, could choose their gov-

33BA MAIN STREET
Sat thru Christmas

10 A M to 9 P M Mon

�Friday,

December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIVE

Activities Drive Scheduled; ACU Tournament Winners Will
Contest Slated For Groups Compete Here In NX RegionsIs
As annuonced- last week, the
next Activities Drive will be held
February 15-19. The purpose of

this drive is two-fold: To help
organizations
and
solve membership problems, and
to present the wide variety of
campus activities, available to
UB students.
Since this is a campus-wide project, the cooperation of all interested groups is extremely necessary. A special feature of this
year’s drive, will be a contest,
open to all organizations, for the
best activity of that week. This
is part of a plan to create an
atmosphere of activities for the
Drive. The winning group will
receive a special plaque to be
displayed in the Activities Drive
Gallery which will be inaugurat-

committees

ed this year in Norton.
The drive wilj culminate in an
informative two-day program,
with exhibits set up throughout
the first floor of the union. These
will be planned and constructed

coordinate these activities. If your
group is interested in helping
this worthwhile cause, .please
contact A1 Mellis or Bruce Rosen
in the Union Board Office, Room
215. People also are needed to
make posters, and plan special
activities for the week of the
Drive. A sign-up sheet will be
available in the Union Board
Office.

The University of Buffalo was

record was achieved by four UB

also represented at R.P.I. by de-

debaters at the annual Univerof Illinois Intercollegiate
Tournament in Chicago last weekend. Nick Sargent and Clint DeVeaux (affirmative) scored four
wins and two losses while the

baters Gloria Alffieri and Ellen
Abelson (affirmative) and Robert
Dragone and Carl Levine (negative). Mr. Richard Suttell, assistant coach, accompanied this
group.

sity

—

in the event in which he is participating.
An interview with Joseph Paf-

fie, Assistant Director of Recreation at UB and coordinator of
the Tournament, revealed that
optimism prevails for UB to be
supplying many of the Region II
winners. All participants will at
tend a Banquet and Awards Presentation which will be held
the evening of February 13 in the

iu

A

ARLENE TARLOU
ter it is due to the active competition among students for places
on the team which will represent
UB at the American College
Union Tournament, which will be
held here February 12 and 13,
This is a national tournament,
with UB competing against the
schools in Region II, which includes all of New York State (except N.Y.C.) and Ontario. Some
of the schools that competed here
last year from Region II were
West Point, Ithaca, Brockport,
Utica, Cornell, Albany and Cortland. From here winners will be
sent to the national finals, at
still undetermined locations. Last
year Buffalo had 2 Region II
finalists; Sandy Finklestcin who
went to San Francisco for the
bowling finals, and Mary Davidson who went to Minneapolis for
the womens bowling finals.
To be a representative in a
sports event is a distinct honor
because this tournament composes the only national and inter-

Cap and Gown To
Prepare Handbook
One of Cap and Gown’s major
projects for this year is the compilation of a student activities

DEBATERS WIN

Beckman and Charles Liarakos,
not only won five out of their
six debates but also qualified
for best speaker certificates. The
entire unit was placed in the top
quarter of the sixty participating
universities, giving Notre Dame,
the tournament’s best two speakers, their only loss. Other opponents included representatives
of Wayne State, Illinois State,
University of Wisconsin, Indiana
State, University of Oswego, and
Augustana. Most of the schools
attending the tournament were
from the Mid-West and South.
Mr. Ostermeier accompanied the
team,

Phi Beta Kappa Taps
Twenty New Members
Fifteen University seniors and
five graduates of the class of
June 1964 were inducted into
the Omicron Chapter of Phi Beta
Kappa, December 13, in the Faculty Club.
Those honored with senior
standing were Joan Patrie of the
class of February 1965, and Steven Aszkler, J. Cruse Burton,
Pierce Cummings, Aleksandra
Gruzinska, and Mrs. Marjorie
Plumb of the class of June 1964.
New members invested with junior standing included Judith Haber, Edward Harow, Ronald Herroan, Robert Hoffman, Susan
Kardaman, Stuart Katz, Robert

Milanovitch, Carolyn Osborne,
Linda Perosa, Philip Prorok, Ross
Runfola, Virginia Lee Smith, William Slater, and Eugene Zawadski of the class of June 1965.

IN ILLINOIS TOURNEY
The Debate Society announces

the recent election of Richard
Fleischer to the office of Treasurer, succeeding Richard Nemi-

roff who is transferring to New
York City for second semester
studies. Dick Fleischer is a senior

in Drama and Speech and has
participated actively in debate
this past semester, representing
the University in intercollegiate
competition at Michigan State,
Wells College and Temple University, in Philadelphia. The officers and members of the Debate

Society would also like to thank
Richard Nemiroff for a “job well
done” as Treasurer for the ’64
fall semester.

Listen to
WBFO

national games which are sanctioned by all the U.S. colleges.
Even foreign competitors are welcomed, Qualifications and rules
are as stringent as in other collegiate athletic events
with
competitors having to meet requirements both academically and

by participating organizations.
There will be a meeting, Monday, January 25, at 3:30 for representatives from all groups to

Debaters Top Illinois Tournament;
Best Speaker Certificates Awarded;
Beckman, DeVeaux, Liarakos Named
An outstanding 9 win, 3 loss

By BARRY KROHN

If you have noticed a marked
increase in activity in Norton
Hall’s basement recreation cen-

handbook. The information will
be presented in an interesting,
concise and up-to-date manner and
will be available to the entire
student body early in the fall
of 1965. It is hoped that this
student activities handbook will
be used by students to select
groups that they are interested in
joining and enable them to appreciate the scope of “extra-cur
ricular” activities on our campus.
Presently, a committee representing the major categories of
organizations is in the process
of reaching every group of any
type on the campus. Each activity
is being asked to fill out a questionnaire. The answers will be
written in paragraph form and
should present an honest descrip
tion of the activity. If there are
any clubs or organizations which
have not been contacted by a
member of the committee, Cap
and Gown would like to ask a

group representative to pick up
the questionnaire in the Student
Senate office, Room 205 Norton,
and return it to the Activities
Committee mailbox in the same
office by December 21,

Norton Hall Cafeteria,

A partial list of those who will
represent UB as finalists in the
four major events follows;
Men's Bowlbig: Jack Bradrick,
George Maringer, Robert Braun,

Freshman Planning
Conference Discussed
Tuesday, Miss Ann Hicks, assistant coordinator of student activities .invited some members of
the student body and faculty for
an informal discussion to suggest
improvements for next summer’s
Freshman Planning Conferences.
The primary concern was to improve social events during the
two days. Representatives from
student activities in Norton Union, Housing, the Freshman Class
Council, and the Student Aids for
the conferences attended.
It is a questionnaire distributed
during the conferences, the recurring complaints were that
there were too many short waiting periods between scheduled
activities during the day and no
social opportunities to meet people in the evenings.
After the curfew the first night,
both the incoming men and women were given an orientation to
the dorm along with a discussion
with a Resident Advisor. The
freshmen felt that this was very
worthwhile. They also liked the
policy that was initiated last summer, that one commutor and one
future resident room together
during the conference. However,
the second night they thought
there should be a planned social
evnet. The freshmen felt that
last summer’s art lecture and library tour that was offered was
a poor idea since the majority of
students were not interested in
them.

DAN BIRMINGHAM
Ronald Foster, Robert Tisdale.
Men's Three Cushion Billiards;
Alan Epstein.
Men's Table Tennis:
Arthur
Appleman,
Girls Pocket Billiards: Arlene
Tarlow.

Sociology Club

Plans Publication
The Sociology Club, in order
to encourage greater activity in
the social studies by undergraduates and graduates, plans to publish a journal, the Catylist. Two
issues have tentatively been planned; one to appear in March and
another in August. The Catylist
will contain substantial articles
as well as reviews of dissertations,
books and other journals.
Students arc asked to submit
notes of interest offering new
ideas and perspectives of social
problems. The publication will
seek the main bulk of these contributions from this campus;
however work from outside sor
ces will also be encouraged.

Since the regular University
calendar of summer events is so
filled with movies, lectures, and
theatrical and musical productions, this affords the visiting
prospective freshman an opportunity to partake in a cultural

event it he is interested.

who may be interested.
In the course of discussion,
both the students and faculty expressed the idea that a definite
leadership on the part of ~the
University was necesasry to make
the event a success. They all felt
it was wrong to put the new students alone in a situation such as
a mixer and expect them to meet.
A strong, yet subtle leadership
is needed to ease the tensions

and get the people to feel at
ease.

Several suggestions were made.
Since the Kiver Cruise offered
last year to one conference was
so well responded to, they felt
that this should be given to more
groups. A large recreation area,
with records for dancing, a folk
singer, and games was also suggested. Late afternoon athletic
games were felt to be a good way
to get the students together. A
final idea was a bus tour of either
Buffalo or Niagara Falls, perhaps
combined with singing on the
bus.

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All

agreed that these events should
be announced at the meal previous to them, to inform all those

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831-2644
23,20 Genesee St. phone TX 2-0428

�PAGE SIX

Power Of The Press Cited
Although most newspapers are
private businesses operated for
profit, they have become an “in
stitulion" in the United States.
Their influence upon public opin
on is enormous; they help foster
commerce and industry hy open
ing lines of communication be
tween traders and craftsmen and
consumers; they speak out against
public and private excesses and
even provide a check on the government.

towns and large cities have reflected their community’s concerns . . . championed their

causes

The later papers of the 1700's
all weeklies
were devoted
mainely to news. Only a few
were outstanding for their edi—

.

With the approach of the Rev
olutionary War, the amount of
opinion content became greater.
Of 37 newspapers printed in the
colonics at the outbreak of the
war, two-thirds were Patriot. Such
great men as John Adams, Samand

John Hancock
for
unity among the colonies and
for freedom of the press. Fight
ing for the right of the press to
speak at will on important issues set a precedent which, ac
cording to many, has made Amer
ican newspapers great: the abil

stirring demands

ity to fearlessly reveal fact and
opinion for the sake of the public
good.

During the period from 1833 to
1860, Horace Greeley’s New York
Tribune appeared on the Ameri
can scene with the first real news 1
paper staff. It fought for the un
derprivileged and was a power
ful opponent of slavery. The Civil
War, called "the best covered
war," saw hundreds of reporters
at the scene of battle sending
observations to eager audiences
who then exerted opinion on gov
eminent conduct of the struggle.
Although reporting was more
widespread during the War Be
tween the States, newspapers
played a role similar to that of
Revolutionary papers: spurring
concerned citizens to think about
the facts: choosing the facts they
thought to have most importance
for the public welfare

Patriotic American editors and
newspapermen faced a frighten
ing dilemma that still confronts,
in varying degree, Very news
man: what facts should be print
cd? In presenting facts to their
readers, journalists from small

more complex.

American editors met the challenge during the middle of the
nineteenth century in a reporting
crusade which ended the widespread practice of unfair child
labor practices. As the 20th century rolled around, editors began
to report on the first White
House Conference On Children
and Youth
a forerunner of an
important change in America’s
attitudes towards children. Some
of the journalists who reported
this were on hand to tell their
readers in 1909 that the Child
Welfare League of America had
been organized to help communities help their children.
Most Americans appreciate the
far reaching power of the press,
and are not inclined to follow the
lead of the criminals in industry
and government who flung the
label "Muckrakers” at Lincoln
Steffens and Ida M. Tarbell when
—

these two journalists persisted
in exposing their wrongdoings.
The editors who gave space to

the stories of the famous pair,
by the way, had less room left to
report that barge traffic had begun on the Panama Canal.

Such reporting doesn't always
"make friends" for a newspaper,
its staff, or its editors. But that's
the chance papers take
the
risk of angering someone by deciding to print facts that may irk
or even infuriate someone by putting him in an unfavorable light,
or taking up newspaper space
that might have been devoted to
his interests.
—

Tha willingness to take such
risks is the strength of the American press; the far-reaching power
of the press is a testimony to
the courage of the men who make
it grow.

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unsatisfactory major. Questions
were raised about its professional
and vocational

content.

“They felt,” he said, “it was
not professional enough for a
professional curriculum or liberal enough for a liberal arts

curriculum."
The ultimate fate of the department is still under consideration. There are several possibili
ties for it, according to its chairman, Charles M. Hulten,
He said it could become a
separate
school, a graduate
school, or part of a group major,
such as Communications and
Public Policy.
“There will be a heavy emphasis on the graduate program,”
Hutton said. “This doesn’t mean
there won’t be a place here for
the journalism student. The
major

is

just

being

jl

J it

* *

changed.

You could still take journalism
courses. The only question is of
the major,” he said.
Several
students who had
planned to declare a journalism
major after 1966 said they were
worried about the number of
units they will have to make
up, since they had not prepared
for another major.

Town Meeting Planned
A Town Meeting has been or-

ganized by

UB’s Student Association to be held Monday at 3:30
in the Conference Theater.
The purpose of this gathering
is to answer any questions the
students may have concerning
any aspects of student life and
government. Student Senate President, Robert Finkelstein, will be
present to aid in answering questions and also to listen to and
offer advice on students' comp.m.

plaints.
Commenting on the Town Meeting idea, Mr. Finkelstein stated:
“This is the first time that we
have ever had a Student Association Town Meeting. I am doing
this in the hope that students
will come to the meeting and
discuss with me issues of importance to the student body.”
A campus political party previously sponsored the town meeting idea. It is the belief of Mr.
Finkelstein though, that a town
meeting should not be organized
by only a faction of student government. He feels that in this
type of student encounter, a cross
section of views must be presented. Thus, this year, the
Town Meeting has been sponsor-

ed by the coordinating body of
student government as a whole.

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BERKELEY (CPS)—The undergraduate major in journalism
has been discontinued at the
University of California’s Berkeley division.
A (notion passed by the executive committee of the school’s
College of Letters and Science
stipulates the major will be discontinued as of the spring semester 1966 and no new enrollments in it have been permitted
since September of this year.
Dean of Letters and Science
William Fretter said, “The committee felt journalism was an

transportation on

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Berkeley Ends Its
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ed to foster stuck to the vital matters.

_

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Adams

chastised their weak

...

ia Gazette. Franklin, like other
newspapermen, had a choice; he
could present and discuss the
pertinent facts of the day
or
delve into arrivals and departures of ships, petty thefts and
minor public disturbances. It is
to his credit that his paper and
the tradtion of reportng he help-

uel

.

facts about their teachers
reports of their summer
camps . . . recognition of their
achievements
and editorials
about their shortcomings are not
rare. But all the readers of a
paper cannot be satisfied with
the treatment given any of these
areas
a perfect formula for reporting on youngsters is yet to be
found. The challenge facing editors in this realm of news looms
larger as our society becomes

commentary, among them

Benjamin Franklin’s Pennsylvan-

produced

.

—

brought over on ship by passen
gers, and gossip "reported” by
captains of the sailing ships.
—

.

neses. Facts are the most impor
tant raw material an editor has
to work with, and his selection of
the facts which merit space is
the difficult job he has to face.
It is this selection well made,
which has created a powerful
American press.
Even when selecting items that
are non-controversial, an editor
knows that some people somewhere will question either his
judgment or hrs integrity or his
or all three. Yet:
diligence
select he must. And report he
will.
A good example of the difficulty of choice routinely faced by
editors is that of dealing with
news of children. Traditionally,
space is allocated to acknowledging the events of birth or death.
Some space is usually given to
speculation about their future

Early “newspapers" in Colon
ial America were really newsletters, sent back to England by
home-loving settlers, or distributed among the colonists. When
they wanted news of home, settlers could read information

torial

Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

Also, available; this summer in Europe,
student tours and full year study abroad.
ui
u/ c a
now; W.S.
Write
A.
7621 N. Van Dyke
Milwaukee 17, Wis.

Senate Takes Action
by passing judgment on what
went on at the meetings of the
Committee
on Terminations.
Linda Leventhal questioned rejection of a law which was part
of the legal statutes. Others considered the Senate’s moral obligation to academic freedom.
The Senate viewed the issue
from a number of standpoints.
Henry Simon said, “The University has lost a good teacher. When
a University gets rid of first
rate personnel it is doing itself
a disservice. Also, we must consider the Law. What ever a man
does in his private life has no
bearing on his teaching. Paul
Sporn is a conscientious teacher.
On another level there is the
question of whether or not he
lied. On the basis of the evidence presented there is no
proof that he lied. If he did, it
shouldn’t make a difference because what matters is what hap-

(Cont’d from P. 3)

Law, which he called “an abomination,” and the relationship between the Feinberg Law and its
affect on Mr. Sporn and this
university. The Feinberg Law, he
said, “was designed to guard you
people, young, tender, impressionable minds, from the influence
visited upon you by people who
think that changes may be considered in the United States government.” He pointed out that
the law was originally designed
for elementary and secondary
schools. He said the Board of
Regents adapted the law to institutions of higher learning by
the addition of the disclaimer
(The Feinberg Certificate). Mr.
Sporn was charged with missigning the Communist disclaimer,
in that the Committee on Terminations felt it had sufficient
evidence that Mr. Sporn had
been a member of the Communist pens in the classroom.”
Party. Mr. Lipsitz pointed out
that the only evidence presented
The Senate passed the budgets
to the Committee was in fact of The Student Council of the
hearsay. He asked the Senators,
Graduate School of Nursing, $296;
Bisonhead, $140; Cap and Gown,
“Would you as students, in serious pursuit of an academic sub$296, and The American Chemiject, rely on evidence of such a
cal Society, $435. The budgets
nature?” He said that any law of the Concert Band and the
which singles out men of the University Band were sent back
to the Finance Committee for reacademic profession for disclaimation of any political ideology is consideration.
an infringement on academic
Robert Finkelstedn announced
freedom. Mr. Lipsitz stated that
that the Faculty Student Asthe very existence of a Feinberg
sociation had tabled an amendLaw meant that there were legislators who believed that there ment which would allow a representative of the Student Asare teachers who do use the
sociation to sit on the Board of
classroom to subvert. He said that
there has never been any such Directors of the University Mr.
implication evident in the Paul Finkelstein said, “It it my opinion that a student voice should
Sporn ease.
be heard at all levels.” As it is
Dr. Zimmerman, representing presently constituted the Presithe Association of American Unident and Vice-President of the
versity Professors, said that the Student Association sit on the
case hinged on the Feinberg Law
Faculty Student Association but
and that the Law is “incomare restricted from membership
patible with academic freedom,”
on the Board of Directors. The
it
amendment
“If
weren’t for the Feinberg
was tabled until the
Law,” Dr. Zimmerman said, “the State University reviews its polwhole issue would never have icy on Faculty-Student Associaoccurred.” The A.A.U.P. passed tions in general.
a resolution in January 1964 statMr. Finkelstein also announced
ing its strong disapproval of the
that there would be an open
Town Meeting Monday at 3:00
law.
in. the Conference Theatre at
The debate on the resolution
which this issue would be dissplit the Senate into two major
cussed.
lines of thought. One group quesThe next meeting of the Stutioned the right of the Student dent Senate will take place
Senate to censure a law on the
Tuesday, January 26. A constitubooks of New York State. Vice
tional amendment which would
President Robert Feldman pointallow the student body a refered to the fact that the Senate endum at any
time will be diswas relying on hearsay itself
cussed.

WHAT WILL YOU BE DOING DURING THE NEXT 365 DAYS?
Will you be buying clothes, dining out, going to the movies,
buying flowers, practicing

your golf swing, going bowling, etc
Do these and many more things with foresight. In other

words, SAVE MONEY

NOW AVAILABLE AT

The University Bookstore...
The Young Set ©$£
VALUE SAVINGS BOOK
Save money on your Christmas Shopping
Makes Excellent Christmas Gift
$150.00 minimum value 71 Valuable Discounts etc
30 leading patrons.
1 book for $4.00
3 for $9.00
2 for $7.00
limited supply
Unconditional Guarantee The Young Set will gladly refund
your purchase cost if, within 90 days y ou do not realize
-

-

—

savings equal to the price paid.

The Young Set is Western New York's largest social group
Must be single and over 19
Tonight (Dec. 18) and Christmas Evening
at Continental Inn Hotel
3456 Delaware Ave. (near Sheridan)
9:30
Live music
For information CALL
-

Heel and ties

975-6070

(

Dec, 25)

pm

-

1:30

stag
tonight (6-9 pm)
-

am

�Friday, Daeambar IS, 1964

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Vima iFTOlM MlliTBGI
The Weekly Official Bullet-

tin is an official publication of
the State University of New

York at Buffalo, for which The
Spectrum assumes no editorial
responsibility. Notices should

be sent in TYPEWRITTEN
form to the Old Faculty Club,

attention Mrs. Fix, before 2:00
p.m. the Friday prior to the

week of publication. Student
organization notices are not accepted for publication.

College

Placement

&amp;

General Notices
Junior

academic career. C a n d i d a t e s ees. Candidates will be expected
should be willing to relacote.
to relocate but do not have to be
U.S.Army Material Command— draft exempt.
PhD-Bio. BS-MS-PhD: ChE, EE. Jan. 27—
IE, ME, ES, Math, Physics. CandiHarrison Radiator Division of
dates for assignments in research, General Motors Corp.—BS. BA:
design, development, product enHist &amp; Gov’t, Psych, Eng. Formal
gineering and test and evaluation training programs lasting from
of all material which is Army 6 to 9 months. Assignments range
Announcements:
Responsibility. Candidates will be from manufacturing supervision
expected to relocate, and must be to advanced product research.
draft exempt. Interested in wo- Candidate will not be expected to
Bamberger's, New Jersey, a division of R.H. Macy
Co., Inc., men candidates. U.S. citizenship relocate and does not have to be
will begin its first 1965 executive required.
draft exempt.
training program February 1. This
Jan. 25—
Factory Insurance Association
program has been scheduled to
The Pennsylvania Railroad Co. —BS: ME, EE, CE, ChE, IE. Qualoffer retail career opportunities —BA: Eco, Eng, Geog', His
ified candidates to act as Fire
to midyear graduates from colGov’t, Mod, Lang, Psych, Soc, B.S, Protection Engineers. U.S. Citileges and universities. Placement
Candidates for 18 months formal zenship is required.
Office at 131 Market Street, NewJan. 28—
training program in L.R. and Perark, N.J., or call MA 4-2400, Ext.
Corning Glass Works — MBA.
sonnel Administration. Candidate
595 to arrange for an appointwill be expected to relocate but BS-MS: Chem, ChE, EE, IE, ME,
ment.
does not have to be draft exempt. ES, CE, Math, Physics. OpportuSylvania Electric Products, Inc. nities exist in sales, accounting,
finance, also research, marketing,
—BS. Business graduates for InEngineering Students: Harrison
ternal Auditing, Data Processing, product development and related
Radiator, Division of General Moareas. All candidates will be exFinancial Trainee Program. Cantors Corp. is holding an open
pected to relocate but do not
didates will be expected to relohouce December 29, during the
have to be draft exempt.
Christmas vacation for all junior, cate but do not have to be draft
Insurance Co. of North Amerisenior, and graduate engineering exempt.
Republic Steel Corp BS: ChE, ca—-BS. BA: Eng, Geog, His
students from the Western New
Psych, Soc. Career opporYork area. They are inviting you EE, CE, IE, ME, ES, Physics. Gov’t,
tunties for college graduates arc
Qualified candidates for manage- offered through training proto spend a day touring their Lockment trainees for production and
port Plants and getting acquaintgrams, plus the opportunitiy to
staff positions. Candidates will
ed with their products, processes,
advance in accordance with their
and people. If you are interested, probably be expected to relocate
individual merit and ambition.
pick up your cards at the Univerbut do not have to be draft exOpenings in occupations common
sity Placement Services, Schoellempt. U.S. Citizenship required.
to business and insurance.
kopf Hall.
Lord Manufacturing Co
BSBuffalo Forge Co.—BS: IE, ME.
PhyMS-PhD:
Chem,
ChE,
IE,
ME,
at factory
U.S. Atomic Energy Commisgraduates for Positions are available
sics.
Technical
sion: The New York Operations openings
in Buffalo for sales, product defor the fore-,
which
exist
Office of the United States Atomand research enginementioned degrees for research velopment,
ic Energy Commission will inter&amp;
development, design, product ers, also positions in field sales
view candidates eligible for enoffices throughout the country.
development and materials reMechanical Handling Systems,
gineering and management trainDraft status will detersearch.
Inc.—BS-MS: CE, EE, IE, ME, ES.
ing programs until March 1, 1965.
eligibility
only
mine
candidate
if
Male, Candidates for comprehen
Written exams are not necessary is
committed for immediate servfor positions with the Commissive training program covering
ice. Candidate will be expected exposure
sion.
to all facets of Engine
to relocate. Interested in women ering.
Possible subsequent reasSocial Work: The County of candidates. U.S. Citizenship resignment to sales or other manuWestchester in White Plains, N Y. quired.
facturing facliities located in the
has announced examinations for
Jan. 26—
U.S., Canada, and overseas. There
career opportunities in the field
Chicago Pneumatic Co.
BS:
fore, candidates must be expected
of Social Work. Applications must
to relocate but do not have to be
EE, IE, ME. Male, top 50%
CE,
be submitted by Feb. 1 in order to possibly
75% of class. Positions draft exempt.
to be eligible for the exam given
available based on type of degree Jan. 29—
March 16. Exams will be in
and area of interest. Candidates
Scott Paper Co. BS. MBA. Out
the city where applicants are atmust relocate, sales and field restanding young men primarily
tending college or in near-by quired, some travel. Draft
status interested in field sales and mar
examination centers.
of minor importance. Must be
U.S. or Canadian Citizen or in
process of obtaining U.S. CitizenBeginning Jan. 4, the Health
Sciences Library will be open until 11, Mon.-Fri,, instead of to 10
as previously.

Graduates:

—

&amp;

If

you have completed junior college
and are finishing your degree at
UB, you should investigate Air
Force ROTC. A new law makes it

possible for you to complete the

program and become an officer in
the U.S. Air Force even if you
missed the first two years of the
program. Contact the Professor of
the Aerospace Studies, in Clark
Gym.

&amp;

Weekly Calendar
Deadline Dates for the Graduate
School:
Dee. 18—last date for submission
of theses for Feb. 1965 graduation.
Dee, 19—last date for MFC advance mail registration.
Dec. 31—last date for filing Graduate Record Exam application

for test given Jan. 15.
Jan. 11—last date to register for
the Foreign Language Reading

Knowledge Exam given Jan. 23.
Jan, 19—Graduate School Office

open for registration of NEW
MFC students only (6:30-8:30

p.m.).

Jan. 20—registration (Day Session
Graduate students).
Jan, 23—Foreign Language Read
ing Knowledge Examination,

Library Hours for the Holidays:

Lockwood Memorial Library—regular hours (Mon.-Fri. 7:30-11;
Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-11)) except closed
Christmas and New Year's and at
5 p.m. Dec. 24 and 31.
Harriman Reserve Library and
Art &amp; Music Library—same as
Lockwood except opens at 2 p.m,

Sundays.

Chemistry—Dec. 23-Jan. 5, Mon.
Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sat. 9-5;
closed Sundays. Closes at 5 p.m.
Dec. 24 and 31.
Engineering—Dec. 23

Mon.-Fri. 9-5; closed

and Sundays.

Jan. 5,

-

Saturdays

Physics—Dec. 23-Jan. 5, Mon.Fri. 8:30-1; 2-5; closed Saturdays
and Sundays.

23-31, Mon.-Sat. 9-5;
losed Sunday. Regular hours re
ume Jan. 2.
Law —Dec.

Health Sciences Library will be
as follows:
Wed., Dec. 23: 8 5
Thurs, Dec. 24: 8-1
Sat., Dec. 26: 9 T
Sun., Dec. 27: closed
Mon.-Thurs., Dec. 28-31: 9-5
Sat,, January 2: 9-1

open

—

ship.

Placement

Jan. 26-27—

Interviews:
Appointments should be made
one week in advance. Please call
831-3311.
Dec.

18-

American Photograph Co.—BA
Psych. BS. On-the-job training
leading to management positions.
Applicants must be single and
free to relocate. Men must have
served military obligation or must
be eligible for 6 months reserve
program.

BA MA
Roche Laboratories
Psych. MBA. BS-MS-PhD: Chem,
—

Bio, Pharm. Mature, enthusiastic
individuals interested in sales ca

Continental Can Co.—BS: ChE,
CE, IE, ME. Candidates interested
in Sales Manufacturing as train&amp;

EUROPE
Don’t assume the first tour you
hear of is the best. Send name

keting for consumer products. We
look for men who are above average in academic work or activities
pattern, Some relocation and travel is involved. Candidates do
not have to be draft exempt.
Edison Bros. (Chandlers Shoo
Store) —BS. BA: Eng, Geog, Hist
&amp; Gov't, Psych, Soc, Liberal Arts
and Business Adm. majors for onthe-job training program.
The
trainee receives a basic salary
guarantee and a liberal commis-

sion which enables him to earn
as much as his capabilities will
allow. Many fringe benefits. 100%

promotion-from-within policy.
Ingersoll-Rand Co.—BS. MBA with interest in Business Adm. &amp;
Accounting. Contact the Placement office for further informa-

tion.
Gleason Works- BS MS: IE, BS.
ME, Math, Physics. Male. Candidates majoring in the above for
opportunities in R
D, Design,
Sales, Manufacturing, and Application Engineering. Candidates
should be in top 50% of their
class during junior and senior
&amp;

years. Challenging assignments
range from independent research
on Applied Math, and Engineer-

ing projects, to responsibility for
technical phases of plant operations, to promotional and consulting activities involving travel.
Candidate will be expected to relocate but does not have to be

draft exempt.

Worthington Corp.—BS-MS: ME

Qualified graduates for Research
Development or Design Engine-

&amp;

ering. Also have positions open
for Engineers interested in Sales.
Candidate will not be expected to
relocate and does not have to be

draft, exempt.
For further information please
call 831-3311, University Placement Services, Sehoellkopf Hall.

TEACHER PLACEMENT
INTERVIEW:
Jan. 25—

Dunkirk Public SchooU Secondary level openings in the Dunkirk Public School System. Please
call the placement office to make
an, appointment to see the re—

cruiter.

I BOCCE IF 3-13441
AA AAA AA A AAAAAAA AA A AAAA i

for free booklet on an. unregimented lour.
Europe Summer Tours
255-C2 Sequoia; Pasadena, Cal

DUaoftdt-Watches

JEWELRY.

Watch and

Jawalry
Repairing^

reer cantacting physicians, pharmacies and hospitals to “detail"
Roche products. The men should
have shown development in their

UNIVERSITY PIAZA
TF 3-5415

ATTENTION U.B. STUDENTS
"Learn

to

drive safely, and quickly”

HAIR CUTTING

VILARDO’S BARBER SHOP
530

Niagara Fplls Blvd.

Tops Market
TF 6-9343

next to

3173 Main

JOSEPH G. VILARDO, Prop

Work at Unisphere Full
time all year round.
Call
Bob Hoffman or

•
•

Classroom Lectures
Pre-Permit Classes

•
•

y*

Road Lessons

Refresher Courses

-

-

Jim Biggs.
876-1250

PHONE IF 7-5550
Fully insured -College Trained Instructors

lWm»
1

ION

Street at Windspear

FREE CAMPUS PICK-UP

-

I

Amherst Driving School

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Dual Controls

Complete Luggage Center
3400 MAIN STREET Oppewta U. I.
Op «n Ivory Evonmg Until CKrittmot
Cowrtooy Diuounh to Univortity Focwity I Stwdont*

TF 3-1600

�PAGE EIGHT

Cait Board

Schwartz To Speak
On Post-War Escapes

INTERNATIONAL CLUB

Illegal Entry, an informative
meeting on illegal immigration
following World War II, will be
held in Room 234 of Norton,
Sunday at 7:45 p.m. The guest
speaker will be Mr. Ted Schwartz,

former member of the Irgun, the
Israeli Underground
Mr. Schwartz was associated
with the Irgun from 1947-48. During this time, the policy of the
British government, which controlled Israel, was to cut off
almost all immigration. Some
600,000 Jews were stranded on
Cypress, unable to enter Israel
by legal means. Most of these
people were refugees, with no
other place to go. Refugee camps
had been set up for them on
Cypress, in which living conditions were most unpleasant. The
Irgun was an organization that
helped smuggle these people into
Israel. This story should sound
familiar to those who have seen
or read Exodus.

Most

entries

were

made at

night. The immigrants were housed in different communities and

appeared to the British as mem-

bers of the families with whom
they were staying. When Israel
became independent in 1948,
this movement was abandoned.
Mr. Schwartz will speak on the
movement itself and its causes.
Following his talk, refreshments
will be served and there will be
Israeli dancing. All students are
invited.

Get rolling everyone, come to
the International Club Roller

Skating Riot tonight from 7:3011:00 at the Arena Roller Rink,
30 East Amherst. Sign up in

ENDURING SYMBOL OF
CHRISTMAS
The gaily decorated tree is an

enduring Christmas tradition in
homes across the country. This
tree, decorated in turn of the
century elegance, would still be
in style today.
The United states produces 33
million Christmas trees a year
and imports nearly 10 million
more from Canada. It is a 100-

million dollar business.

Association

Fathcr Beattie wishes to announce that the topic for consid-

eration in next semester’s discussion groups will be the “Gospel According to Saint John." As

before, duplicate sessions will be
offered Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 2:00 3:00 p m. Our first
meeting will be January 26. A
most cordial invitation to join us
is extended to all students, faculty members, and other persons
in the university community.

Events of note in next semester
will include a trip to Trinity College, University of Toronto, the
weekend of February 13, to attend a lecture on “Cybernetics
and the Church.” April 2 and 3
the symposium on “Discriminating about Discrimination Part II"
will take place More information
concerning this will be available
in the'near future.
The Chaplain, officers, and
members of the Canterbury Association wish to extend "Sea
son’s Greetings" to all students.

—

vitations have been mailed to students who indicated that they
would like to attend. The social
is open to all college students
who will be in the city during
(he winter recess. It is especialNEWMAN

will not

be held Wednesday.
Any member who would like to
donate money or canned goods
for the Kennedy family is asked
to do so this coming week. An
envelope is tacked to the bulletin
board at the Hall for contributions, while the canned goods
may be left in the hallway. Club
members are preparing a dinner
for the Kennedy family Sunday.
Important times to remember
for this coming Sunday: 6:30
Christmas carol practice at the
Hall. Carolers will leave Newman
Hall at 7:15 for St. Francis Hos—

pital

6:45—Members are invited to
trim the Club’s Christmas tree.

ree

,

The B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda
tion will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening, at 7:45 pm
in the Hillel House Dr Justin
Hofmann will speak

The final Sabbath Service of
the current semester will be held

Friday. January 6

Jeff Lewis, Hillel Social Chair-

man, announces that a Social will

be held Saturday at 8:00 p in. in
the Hillel House Recorded music
for dancing will be provided and
light refreshments will be served
Hillel's Fifth Annual Mid-Win-

ter Social will be held Sunday,
December 27, at 8:00 p m., in the
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blyd, In-,

IBOCCE

INTERNATIONAL PARTY
The International Club is having a Winter Season Party Sunday, from 2:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
in the center lounge of Norton
Union. Formal dessert, consisting
of pie, cake and pastry of the
different countries, will be

Entertainment, dances and a
variety of games will be presented. All members and guests are
invited.

�

trimming.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
The Occupational Therapy Club
will not hold a meeting today.
All those wishing to pick up or
make returns on the candy are
urged to contact Ruth Meikle
in 310 Macdonald Hall.

PHOTO CLUB
The final meeting of the Photography Club for this semester
will be held today in Room 264,
Norton, at 4:00 p.m.

■fr

tails.

Wesley Foundation

will
terminate its activities for the
semester with our Annual Carol

Sing. All interested singers will
meet at Goodyear Hall, 5:00 p!m.
Sunday. A dutch treat lunch will
serve as a refresher for the participants.

Norton Hall.

�

-A

STUDENT ZIONIST OR.
The Student Zionist Organization presents a program on “Illegal Entry." Ted Schwartz, a
former member of the Israel un-

derground, will be speaking of
his experiences with illegal infiltration of Israel following
World War II.

The meeting will take place
Sunday, in Room 234 at 7:45 p.m.
Everyone is invited to come and
ask questions. There will be singing and dancing afterwards. All
students are invited. Refreshments will be provided.

Your I .D Card
is Worth 10% at

Gipldwani!
Sfaed
BOULEVARD MALL

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

There will be no meetings at
University Methodist Class until
classes resume after exams in

U.S. Ked
Pappagallo
Viners Loafers

January.

/

�

SPRING WEEKEND COMM.
Applications for Spring Weekend Queens' Committee Chairman
are still being accepted in the

WESLEY FOUNDATION

TF 3-1344

�

.

Newman will have a New Year’s
Eve party at the- Hall for its
members and invited guests, see
the Club bulletin board for de-

The

�

Union Board Office, Room 215,

The weekly meeting

7:30—-Members arc invited to a
Christmas party following the
HILLEL

Room 340, Norton Hall, for free
transportation or meet at the
rink.
The cost is a mere 75c for admission and 25c for skate rental.
There will be free instruction for
beginners. Everyone is invited,
including medical students.
The next regularly scheduled
meeting will be some time in
January after the new semester
begins. Watch for the bulletins.

served.

AGAINST THE FACTS—
Even though it has been
shown that private shipyards can do the work much
more cheaply than those operated by the government,
the House has approved the
allocation of 65 percent of
ship repair work to government yards and only 35 percent to private yards.

—l^eiic^iouS diners
Canterbury

Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

I

Bates Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots
and

many

other brands

Promotions Reception Held

At Goodyear Hall Sunday
Members of the faculty and administration of State University
of Buffalo who have been prowere honored at a President’s
Reception held
by Dr.
and
December 12, from 3-5 p.m. in
the Tenth Floor Dining Room of
Goodyear Hall.
Invitations were extended to
members of the State University of Buffalo's Council and their
wives, members of the board of
directors of the University of
Buffalo Foundation, Inc., and
their wives, assistant vice-presidents and their wives, and members of the President’s office
staff.

honored
Dr.
were:
Anton, professor of philosophy; Dr. Thomas E. Connolly,
professor of English; Mr. Seymour Drumlevitch, professor of art;
Dr. Rollo L. Handy, professor of
philosophy; Dr. Karel Hulicka,
professor of history; Dr. Leo A.
Loubere, professor of history; Mr.
Donald E. Nichols, professor of
art; Dr. Francis D. Parker, pro-

Those

John P.

fessor of mathematics; Dr. Egan
A. Ringwall, professor of psychol-

ogy; Dr. Robert H. Stern, professor of political science; Dr. Dov

Tamari, professor and chairman
of the department of mathematics; Dr. D. Kenneth Wilson,
professor of drama and speech;
Dr. David A. Cadenhead, associate
professor
of chemistry; Mr,
Frank J. Cipolla, associate professor of music; Dr. Leroy H.
Kqrd, Jr., associate professor of
psychology; Dr. Joseph I. Fradin,
associate professor of English;
Dr. Theodore W. Friend, III, associate professor of history; Dr.
Elliott H. Grosof, associate professor of sociology; Dr. Milton
Pleasur, associate professor of
history; Dr. Calvin D. Ritchie,
associate professor of chemistry;
Mrs. Rose W. Weinstein, associate
professor of psychology; Dr. William E. Bennett, chairman of the
department of physics; Dr. James
S. Schindler, dean of the School

of Business Administration; Dr.
Milton H. Brown, chairman of the
department of fixed prosthesis;
Dr. Solon A. Ellison, professor
and chairman, department of oral
biology; Dr. Stanley P. Hazen, associate professor of periodontology; Dr. Harold R. Ortman, chairman of the department of removable prosthodontics; Dr.
Richard A, Powell, assistant dean
of the School of Dentistry; Dr.

Soren E. Sorensen, chairman of
the department of dental mate-

rials; Dr. Eugene Gaier, professor
of education; Dr. Gerald B. Leighbody, professor of education; Dr.
Robert H. Rossberg, professor of
education; Dr. H. Warren Button,
associate professor of education;
Dr. John Piscopo, associate professor of education; Dr. William
Eller, director of teacher education; Mr. Niels H. Juuf, associate
professor of mechanical engineering; Dr. Kenneth J. Tharp, associate professor of civil engineering; Dr. Dale M. Riepe, associate dean of the graduate
school; Mr. Thomas Buergenthal,
associate professor of law; Dr.
James C. Brennan, professor of
pathology; Dr. Felix Milgrom,
professor of bacteriology and immunology; Dr. Eugene R. Mindell,
professor of surgery and head of
the division of orthopedic surgery
in department of surgery; Dr.
James F. Mohn, professor of
bacteriology and immunology; Dr.
Samuel Sanes, professor of pathology; Dr. Warren Winkelstein,
Jr., professor of preventive medi
cine; Dr. Robert J. Mclsaac, associate professor of pharmacology; Dr. Ernst H. Beutner, associate professor of bacteriology
and immunology; Dr. Edward H.
Lanphier, associate professor of
physiology; Dr. Rapier H. McMenamy, associate professor of biochemistry; Dr. Noel R. Rose, associate professor of bacteriology
and immunology; Dr. Charles W.
Bishop, associate professor of biochemistry in department of medicine; Dr. Erwin Neter, professor
of clinical microbiology in department of pediatrics; Miss Ann
Marie Vacca, associate professor
of nursing and head of the department

of child health; Miss

Kathryn J. Cerato, head of the
department of maternal health;
Miss Coletta Klug, head of the
department of psychiatric nursing; Miss Irene R. Mahar, head
of the department of public
health nursing; Mrs. Helen C.
Ferine, head of the department
of medical-surgical nursing; Dr.
Eric Barnard, professor of biochemical pharmacology; Dr. Gerhard Levy, professor of biopharmaceutics; Mr. Paul J. Edwards,
associate professor and assistant

dean of social welfare; and Mr.
Gerald J Miller, associate professor and assistant dean of social
welfare.

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�Friday,

December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

Little Known Facts About Christmas;
World Origins of Yuletide Traditions
ever wonder about

Another story credits medieval as well as children. And approChristmas German drama with the origin priately enough, one of the finest
and most popular shaving lotions
customs celebrated in other parts of trimming and lighting a Christgiven as a gift for men has a ship
of the world? Or how the more mas tree. In their plays, the Germans used decked-out fir trees on the bottle.
usual ways of celebrating Yuleas the “tree of Paradise,” repWhile American youngsters are
tide came into being?
The Swedes and Danes make a resenting the Garden of Eden. putting their gifts under the tree,
Slavic, children go to sleep on a
Christmas practice of baking a When authorities frowned on publoaf in the shape of a boar-pig: lic displays of this sort, the tree bed of straw and hay on Christthe Yule Boar.
In some parts of Sweden, a
man is wrapped in a skin, and
he carries wisps of straw in his
mouth so that they look like the
bristles of a hog.
According to the Shulton Company, Queen Elizabeth really
made the most of the custom of
giving Christmas presents; she
depended on gifts from courtiers
to replenish her wardrobe! In
fact, ladies of the Court presented
her with the first silk stockings
worn in Europe.
To make sure that their crops
grew, Polish peasants used to
drive harmful spirits away during the 12 days between Christmas and Epiphany. They burned
pine resin all night to rout witches from their homes, and on
Christmas eve, they wrapped
cloth around the base of trees to
keep spirits out, and fired shot
into fields to prevent supernatural beings from harming the land.
While Christmas can mean
many things to many people, the
world itself has some peculiar
slang uses. “Christmas” can mean
a sparkling article of clothing or was used in the home; a custom
mas eve, to share in, Christ’s
jewelry. In World War n, fliers gradually evolved of decorating
humble birth.
used the word to describe a showit at Christmas time with cookies,
On St. Nicholas Eve, Dutch chiler of metallic foil dropped by an fruit and, eventually, candles. The dren fill their wooden shoes with
airplane to jam enemy radar sysstraw for Old St. Nick’s white
custom was introduced in Engtems. And a “Christmas tree” in land in 1841 by Prince Albert, horse, hoping to have them filled
the slang of drillers means the Queen Victoria’s German husin turn with candy and toys. In
derrick of an oil or gas well!
band. German immigrants Italy, children set out their shoes
by
the
French,
Called Noel
for the female Santa Claus, La
brought it to America, and the
Navidad by the Spanish, Natale first U.S. Christmas tree is dated Befana, to fill with gifts. Central
Weihnaehten
by the Italians and
American children enjoy the pln1832, in Cambridge, Massachuby the Germans, Christmas in our setts.
ata game: an earthenware jug
derived
from
part of the world is
The large part children play
is filled with candy and a child
the Old English term Cristes in Christmas is legendary. If he
is allowed 3 tries to break the
maesse (Christ’s Mass), a term was lucky, the 16th century child
pinata with a bat
when he
first used in the 11th century.
got a ride on a huge Yule log does, the candies are shared by
The earliest known Christmas when it was dragged into the all.
hymn is Jesus refulsit omnium manor house or castle. While
Happy parents and children owe
(Jesus, Light of All the Nations), caroling and feasting went a vote of thanks to King Henry
written by Saint Hilary of Poion during Christmas eve, the
VII of England, who popularized
tiers in the 4th century. However youngsters played Snapdragon, a gift-giving in this part of the
the first Christmas carol with the game in which the players tried world. The joy of that night,
traditionally lighter tone was born to snatch a raisin from a bowl when the sweet-smelling gifts
in Italy among the early Fransomehow magically appear, is imof burning spices and spirits.
ciscan monks.
During the hayday of clipper mortalized for children of all
Decorating the Christmas tree ships, in the 19th century, Amerages in a poem written in 1822 by
is attributed to several sources. ican seamen used to bring their Dr. Clement C. Moore, a PresOne story has Martin Luther putfamilies rare and costly presents byterian divinity professor; it beting candles on an evergreen to gathered from the Orient: spices, gins, “T’was the night before
represent the stars on Christmas silks, china and teakwood. ApChristmas . .
Eve. Another tells of St. Bonipropriately enough, St. Nicholas
And near the end it says, “Merface when he was a missionary in was the patron saint of sailors ry Christmas to all!”
Germany in the 8th Century. Trying to discourage a pagan regard
for the oak, he led a group of
People into a forest and gestured
at a fir tree. He said it pointed
to the Christ Child, and comWill pick up and deliver On Campus Monday-Friday
manded them to take fir trees into their homes as a sign of their
worship.
Did you

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Serendipity Singers / Joan Baez
Wes Monti’s Jazz Guitar
Herbie Mann / Live at Newport
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Complete Leonard Bernstein with
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Reservations for Christmas Parties
and New Years Eve now being accepted

“ON

CAMPUS”�

�Friday, Dacambar 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Semester Musical Undertakings Reviewed
By VICKI BUCELSKI

Musical activity has expanded
greatly during the past two or

three years, and has been especially noticeable this past semester. One glance at the concert schedule shows that there
are virtually more events presented than one could possibly
attend, especially when nonmusical entertainment such as
lectures, movies, and drama on
campus are added to the list,
plus Buffalo events, such as the
philharmonic series. No one can
dare to call Buffalo a “dead”
town anymore!

One notes the rapid progress
of student activity in musical
organizations. The
band has
been in existence only a few
years (the music department itself is only about ten years old),
but has easily tripled its size to
well over a hundred and thirty
members, who faithfully provide
the musical portion to all the
football games, and many of the
other sports events. Frank J. Cipolla, the director, has done much
to elevate the quality of the
musicianship, and directs the
Concert Band during the winter
and spring in the performance
of standard literature for band.
The chorus also has made much
progress, in size and in repertoire. Roberts Sacks, the new
director, is relpacing Robert
Beckwith, who is currently on
leave, but will return next year
and together the two men will

further expand the program. Appearances with the Buffalo Philharmonic, many joint concerts
with other leading college Glee
Clubs, an annual joint concert
tour, and the presentation of the
annual Christmas concert arc
just a few of the many scheduled activities. The chorus is
divided into two groups, the
Men’s Glee Club and the Women’s
Chorale, plus many vocal ensembles, such as the “UB Blues,”
the campus "barbershop octet.”
The UB Little Symphony, under
Dr. Robert Mols, has been presenting concerts every semester,

—

usually with student soloists in

concert!. The orchestra therefore
serves a double purpose: to enable students to perfom concerti with orchestra, and to give
the orchestral members the experience of reading standard literature. This organization also
has been growing in membership,
although not so rapidly as the
first two
Concerts are presented by student organizationss, student soloists, faculty, guest artists, Philharmonic members and Creative
Associates. The music faculty
has a large number of very
talented, professional performers,
many from the Philharmonic, and
also performers in residence,
such as the Budapest String Quartet and Leo Smit. Every semester there is a different composer in residence, who is the
Slee Professor of music, who
gives a series of public lectures
recitals, and teaches advanced
students in the department. This
semester, the department has
been particularly fortunate in
having Alexei Haieff, who has
given witty, informative lectures, and has invited many fine
guest artists. One was a special
concert dedicated to Poulenc.
Concerts in memory of composers, such as the Slee concert
just mentioned, are also being
made. The most recent was a
program dedicated to the late
Irving Fine.

Jazz has not been neglected by
the department, as those who
attended Leo Smit’s benefit concert for Pete Johnson will remember. Mr, Smit has included
many jazz compositions in his
recitals. It must be added that
an attendance of a few of Mr.
Smit’s recitals would give one
quite an insight into the scope
of piano literature, for Mr. Smit
has a remarkably varied and extensive repertoire, and a fine
sense of programming.
Certain events have become a
tradition, such as the annual
Beethoven Cycle given by the
Budapest. All seventeen string
quartets of the great master are

The Kibitzer
By

SCOTT KURMAN

You, South, hold:
S: 10 9 4 2
H: 5 3
D: 10 7 4 2
C: A K

—

Q

and the board comes down with
S: A Q J 5
H; J 7
D: A Q J 9 6 3

C: 4
West opens the king of hearts
on which his partner plays the 6

and continues the ace, dropping
his partner's queen. He then
shifts to a club, the 6 spot, which
you win in your hand. Your first
order of business is to take the
spade hook, which wins. Your
contract is now cold,, unless East
has four spades to the king and
defense has a diamond trick. So
you take the second spade finesse
and West plays the king. You
pull the last trump with the 9 in
your hand, and now are Worried
about the overtrick. As indicated, West showed out on the
third round of trumps. So you
cash some clubs, and on the third
round, West shows out. Now.
the play of the heart suit indicates that West had seven, and
you know he had two in each of
the black suits. Therefore he held
two diamonds. So it apparently
seems right to lake the finesse
because he holds two to East's
one. But West failed to open the
bidding with a seven-card major
to the AK and an outside king.
While some qon ■ hardy souls
mgiht well pass the hand, noone
would with 2 outside kings. So
you know the king is singleton
off-side. You lead a diamond,

and rise with the ace, while East
quietly curses and the walls come
fumbling down.
Here is the solution to the
problem I raised a while ago as
per a three-card squeeze on three
aces that is necessary to take the
rest:
Spades trumps.
East
West
North
South
S; A J
S: Q
S: K
S:—
H: Q J
H;
H: K
H. A
D: K
D: A
D:
D:
C: K
C: A
C:
C:
You lead the spade king and
East is raped. If she pitches the
heart ace, you overtake the king
and you hand's good. Otherwise
you cash the established king on
board throwing the heart king
from your hand.
Observe that
any other lead coups you, so you
and
the trump
ruff with the ace,
lead back to dummy allows East
to save the proper ace and gronk
dummy’s king at trick three.
Last week we had a masterpoint game, and the winning
North-South pair was Allan (Jose)
Mcllis and Herb Stein, with a
—

—

—

—

—

good, but not exciting, score, but
a real tip of the Kib's beret goes
to (Dr. Wilton) and (Doan Sigglekow) for smashing home EastWest with a fantastic 75% game.
Honored faculty members, come
more often. It docs my liver good
to know that the student ego is
still pregnable and that bridge
has not deteriorated to an undergraduate pastime. (Although
there are exceptions within the
clan, Mr. Pies.)
We had a ripping-good time at
Rochester, quoth Jose.

performed. Since the quartet has
been in residence, they have
been giving several other series

of chamber music, often with
guest artists, so that literature
for string with piano, or wind
instruments might be performed,
Opera has made great strides,
too. This is the one area that
will make the most obvious pro-

gressive “jump” forward when
the department moves to the
new
building, complete with
large opera theater. But in spite

of all the difficulties of the
Baird stage, several ambitious
productions have been done very
well, under the direction of
Maestro Giarratana. The annual
musical comedy, traditionally an
all-student event, including direction, will also have more possibility for experimentation and
expansion in the new, theater
The latest project undertaken
by the department is the Center
for the Creative and Performing
Arts, jointly directed by Allen
Sapp, chairman of the music de-

partment, and Lukas Foss, the
new conductor of the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra. Young
composers and talented professional musicians come here for
a year to work, perform and
compose, through a Rockefeller
grant. The “Creative Associates,”
as they are called, are an ambitious group, already having
given several recitals and concerts, plus appearances in university and local productions.
Anyone who wishes to hear the
very “latest” in contemporary
music would do well to investigate some of these performances. The Creative Associates
also perform some of the “more
familiar” music, as a word of reassurance to those who are just
a bit worried about too much
of “that modern stuff”—but they
might also listen just a bit, and
might find themselves quite surprised

and/or

V

PV

startled.

Efforts are being made to revive interest in some of the
“older music” too. Interest in
baroque music has increased
greatly on campus, since the acquisition of the university’s new
harpsichord. David Fuller, UB’s
harpsichordist, has been giving
concerts, and has also been
teaching the instrument. Many
visiting harpsichordists have now
been able to come, such as Ralph
Kirkpatrick, Albert Fuller and
tonight, Sylvia Marlowe. Other
groups are being organized to
perform some of the older music.
A recorder group is being formed, for example, and the university is in the process of acquiring many unusual instruments.
Concerts this fall entitled “An
Evening of Rare Instrumental
Music” were given, featuring
music of the renaissance and
baroque.

The only drawback to the whole

program of expansion is a problem that cannot be solved until
four years from now: Baird Hall.
It is much too small for the
large faculty and student body
that it must how accommodate.
In addition, a much larger recital hall is needed, as many soldout concerts prove. But hopes
remain high for an excellent
music building at the new campus, complete with several con-

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�Friday,

Activities Cited

fflSWESWSSI®

By VICKI BUGELSKI

By LEON LEWIS

Love and Adventure is the
stuff of our dreams. The reality
of our lives, on the other hand,
is distilled from the more common materials of Boredom and
Apathy. The web of haphazard
triviality which we are caught in
is devilishly hard to break, and
consequently, those people who
live in a realm where sex and

seem
to be operating on a larger ' dimension that gives their lives an
added significance. Perhaps this
is why James Bond and his legion of sometimes successful imitators are such popular figures;
so much fun to watch in action.
danger

are commonplace

The first movie made from one
of Ian Fleming’s thrillers, Dr. No,
started off superbly with all of
the taut, suspenseful twists of

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

December 18, 1964

Lecture.

from the laughable American
gangster boss whom he disposes
of (Fleming, a middle-class Englishman without much education
in spite of his expertise, felt that
any product from the “colonies”
had to be a bit shoddy) is his
unmistakable sense of style.
Goldfinger is ideally complemented by his main lackey, an
indestructible Korean who communicates only in gutteral mumbles and amuses himself in his
spare time by crushing golf balls
into rubber scraps with his bare
hands. He is called “Oddjob” and
is cut from the same cloth that
made Dr. No, and before him,
the archetype leader of the “yellow peril,” the well-known and
oft-copied, insidious Dr, Fu-Manchu. His final struggle with Bond

Slee
Alexei Haieff,
visiting Slee Professor of Music
this semester, will give his third

and final lecture of his series
tonight at 8:30 p.m. in Capen
Hall, Admission is free and all
faculty and students are cordially invited to attend. Guest
artist for the concert portion
of the program will be the worldfamous harpsichordist Sylvia Marlowe, and a number of guest performers from New York. They
will perform contemporary works,
among them, works of Carter,
de Falla, and Haieff.
Creative Associates Concert.
Creative Associates, composers
and performers here this year,
will give another in a, series of
several programs Saturday at 8:30
p.m. in Baird Hall. Admission is
free and all faculty and students
are cordially invited to attend.
An arrangement of the Strauss
Til Eulerspiegel will be performed. Some contemporary compositions will also be performed,
Some contemporary compositions
will also be performed, among
them works of Leo Smit, composer- pianist who is Professor
of Music here.
Ars Antjqua. The Ars Antique

JAMES BOND RETURNS IN GOLDFINGER
a high-class British spy thriller.
Then, it became a bit too fantastic to be credible. From Russia
with Love turned the cold, machine-like James Bond into a
witty, sardonic and occasionally
very human chap, but despite its
imaginative technology, it did not
succeed completely because there
was no villain of epic stature to
test Bond’s cunning and tenacity.
The most recent in the series,
Goldfinger, is certainly the best
of the lot. It improves on all the
virtues of the first two and tightens up the loose ends so that it
has no obvious weaknesses of any
consequence.
Agent 007 is no longer the totally efficient, impersonal operative
that British intelligence would
like him to be. He cannot help
poking fun at the stuffy designer
of his gadget-ridden custom-built

DB-5 Aston Martin; he becomes
so incensed that Goldfinger has
disposed of his latest mistress
that “M”, his boss, has to warn
him that he may be replaced by
008 unless he keeps his personal
vendetta out of his job. He is,
however, just as capable an adversary as he ever was and from
the immediate evidence of the
film, just as sexy. His final coup
is to convince Goldfinger’s righthand woman, that he, Bond, is
more attractive in the hay than
her lesbian flying circus. And he
is just as cool as ever, too. When
ihe insidious oriental Atomic device is about to blow up Fort
Knox, thus wreaking economic
havoc in the entire Western
world. Bond’s response to the
technician who has disarmed it
with seven seconds to go, is a
'aconie, “What kept you?”
The real secret of this film’s
smashing success, though, is its
villains. Auric Goldfinger is a
mad, wicked genius in the great
tradition of Rasputin, Mad King
l-udwig of Bavaria, Henry the
Eighth and Bluebeard. Goldfinger
is his name and “gold” is his
obsession. His ear, his clothes,
his weapons and his women are
"I wrought from
that precious
e t a 1. His insanity is. on the
-rand scale and he is completely
immoral. What distinguishes him
&gt;'

is especially appealing in that

Bond is reduced

ot a quivering

hulk before he is able to triumph
due almost to an accident of
circumstance. Oddjob perishes in
a holocaust that evokes the end
by fire of other fabled terrors
from the Orient like Godzilla.
As an actual member of the
British M.I. (main intelligence)
squad pertinently remarked about
Mr. Bond’s exploits, lie is fortunate to discover that his enemies
are just as wicked when he meets
them face to face as they seem
to be from their antics. Most spies
discover, to their dismay, that
their opposite numbers are men
astonishingly similar to themselves in the final confrontation.
But Sean Connery, who has fashioned Fleming’s original conception into a man much like himself in this movie—softening him
and fleshing out his character—never faces anybody with whom
the audience might have even the
slightest sympathy. Fleming, a
man who probably believed that
Britain did have the “white man’s
burden” on its shoulders, sees
most foreigners as slightly suspect and all of Bond’s antagonists as either faceless asiastic
hordes or insane, decadent, sadistic killers. This obscures the actual issues involved, but it permits the audience to identify
almost totally with the “good”

characters—Bond and his friends
or allies—a n d probably allows
for an almost complete escape
into Bond’s world. This sense of
total involvement is crucial to
the effectiveness of any thriller
and is one of the reasons that
this movie is so much fun to
watch.
Whether this movie has any
“enduring" value is questionable.
Whether it is enjoyable is not.
The fast pace, excellent direction, convincing acting (or “role
playing”, perhaps,) spectacular
action scenes and comfortable
moralism (the good guys always
win) make a fool-proof package
I loved it and everyone I have
spoken to who has seen a preview
of it loved it Unless you begin
to feel sorry for Goldfinger, you
will, too.

Rochester ensemble of vocalists
and instrumentalists, who are
dedicated to the performance of
medieval, Renaissance, and baroque music, will give a special
Christmas concert entitled “An
evening with St. Nicholas,” Sunday, at 8:30 p.m.
in the
auditorium of the
AlbrightKnox Art Gallery. Admission is
free and all faculty and students
are cordially invited to attend.
Ars Antique recently gave a very
unusual and fine performance of
“The Games of Siena”, a program combining drama and Italian music of ca. 1600. The ensemble always performs in costume of the period their musical program is.
The University choruses under
Robert Sacks will take a short
tour to New York City to perform Idomeneo of W. A. Mozart

|orthParka§
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K?M 0^H&gt;/RgyrOPS
1428 HERTEL AVE.* TF6-74II mm

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-

The annual Christmas choral
organized by the Department of Music, took place
on Friday, December 11, at 8:30
p.m, in the Millard Fillmore
Room of Norton Union,
The choir, composed entirely
of students, sang for approximately one hour to an audience of
adults and of fellow students.
The University Brass Choir,
lead by Mr. Frank J. Cipolla,
concert,

provided a preludp consisting of
t\Vo noels, Les Cloches and Les
Bourgeois dc Chastres of N.A. Le
Begue. After this the chorus

R0Cfc\00RB/T0Ny

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AL CECCHI Drums
—

Sunday, December 20
First Set at

ftere^

St""

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the new look in sound

presents

FOLK MUSIC

Sextet

December 18-19

tomorrow

4:30-7:30

JOE WILLIAMS

goes

sa

HERBIE MANN

Open MondayChristmas Week Show

auditioned.

Jerry Raven’s

Last 3 Nites

Featuring Herbie Mann

Elaine Sieffert, Musical Director,
Audition dates for "Do Re Mi”
will be January 27. 28, and 29 at
8.00 p in. in Baird Hall. Those
planning to audition should bring
at least one song from a recent
Broadway musical comedy. At
that time dancers will also be

4:30 pm

Greensfam

STUDENT DISCOUNT

afternoon

for the

AL FRANCIS-Uibes

With Proper I.D. Card

Concert

musical

The new Jazz Trio

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Don’t miss Special

The annual

Spring 1965 will be “Do Re Mi”
which will be presented in Baird
Hall for seven performances beginning April 8 according to

BUELL NEIDLINGER-Bas

719 Elmwood Avenue

Thurs.

Musical Listed

The original Broadway production starred Phil Silvers and Nancy Walker and is a take-off on
follower with the fanfare and the recent payola scandal in the
singing of the traditional Veni record industry. The musical recounts rollicking story of hard
Emanuel. The concert was accentuated by three readings given luck Hubie Cram who tries to
by Professor Stanley Travis of catch up with the American
the Department of Drama and dream of success. He gets involvSpeech. After the first reading, ed with gangsters and the juke
the Laudi alia yergine Maria. by box and record racket.
Guiseppe Verdi was sung only Hubie finds a new singing star
by the girls in the chorus. The in Tilda Mullen and a hit record
second reading was followed by ensues. The plot thickens when
the full choir rendition of Hecsome hanky panky is discovered
tor Berlioz' “Thou Must Leave by the Senate Rackets Committee.
Thy Lowly Dwelling," Five French
Hit songs from the show innoels, edited by Elliot Forbes,
“Make Someone Happy' and
were sung, adding a light, gay clude
note to the otherwise solemn “Cry Like the Wind”. The comic
Cram,
concert. Mcsse de Minuit pour leads are Hubie and Kay
played originally by Phil Silvers
Noel by Marc-Antoine Charpentier was followed by the third and Nancy Walker. The romanreading. The chorus took its leave tic leads include Tilda Mullen and
to the strains of the familiar John Henry Wheeler who is an
important figure in the record
carol, Joy to the World.
The featured roles inThe chorus was accompanied business.
by an organist, Mr. David Fuller, clude several gangster parts as
well as a dancing and singing
and also by an orchestra. The
arrangements of the selections chorus.
were enhanced by soloists, who
Mrs. Seiffcrt will be assisted
were also members of the chorby William Penn. The music will
us. Mr. Robert D. Sacks was the be staged by Henry A. Wicke
acting director of the UniverJr. and designed by Boris Baronosity Women’s Chorale and the vie. Wendy Pollock
will choreoUniversity Mcn’e Glee Club.
graph the show.

11

STUDENT RATES
Mon.

Annual Christmas
Choral Presented

December

20

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from the Bitter End &amp; Purple
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Open hootenany led by Jerry
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December 24-25 Lisa Kindred
28-29 Vanguard Recording Artist

7 E xciting Nites

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836-8960

�Defense of Taipei Cited As
Symbolic and Provocative
same secret
By JEROME TAYLOR

Conrad Bromberg, who has
been a guest of the university
for the last six weeks as a
kind of “playwright in residence,” is an author who has
the unique capacity for combining in his work the inventive
theatrics of Bertold Brecht with
the traditional dramatic values of
poetic and forceful language.

which his
eret, the
son knew and died for—our society is false. The discovery is
painful but necessary for Don
is he is to develop an identity
of his own. The play, as far as
I am concerned, was complicated
effectively in the sense that the
theme was hidden by the use
of “symbolism.” For instance,
the play’s title stems from a
skit in which Taipei, a U. S. mili-

CONRAD BROMBERG and WILLIAM WATKINS
STAR IN DEFENSE OF TAIPEI

valid and interesting characters
and a sound understanding of
man’s society. His first fulllength play, a work called “The
Defense of Taipei,” was presented in Baird Hall December

8 12 inclusively. The play was
a joint product of the school’s
Department of Drama and Speech
and
the Aldridge Playhouse
which provided two of the prinBromberg
Mr.
cipal
actors.
played one of the leading roles
himself and Tom Watson, Professor of Drama, directed the
play.
The “Defense of Taipei" reflects the hollowness of contemporary American society and
emphasizes our commitment to a
scheme of false values. Don and
his wife Jane, apparently typical. prosperous white Americans
were played by Mr. Bromberg
and Georgia Hesther. Aime and
his wife Viola, a seemingly satisfied Negro couple, were played
by William Watkins and Edythe
Davis. They appear to have accepted the pseudo-events and
stresses of the establishment.
Don, a social automaton, is terrified at the thought that Aime
may reyea 1 his own inner suspicion that the entire society is
based on false values. Aimc’s son
acts as the motivating force behind Aime's constant search. At
the close of the play, Aime
is nearly shattered because he
had discovered Don’s fearful se-

tary outpost, is defended heroiagainst Asiastic hordes.
This is an example and symbol
of our unwavering belief that
America will always be Amer-

ica—land

of

the

free;

ette Both actors recovered quick
ly after a few missed lines.
In contrast to this play, Miss
Julie had a more substantial plot
which provided the actors with
more diversification and which
succeeded in holding the attention of the audience. The play,

By JOHN WAKEFIELD

‘I have not found any spare
time, lately,” admits Sandy Atlas, a junior, majoring in political science. Sandy is a computer,
but most of her time is spent on
campus.

She is chairman of the Union
Board Public Relations committee, which consumes much fo her
time. The committee is sponsoring a project to improve studentfaculty relations, the organization
of informal student faculty discussions held in the Haas lounge.
Held mostly in question and answer form, these discussions allow students and faculty to speak
freely, not inhibited by a classroom. The Public Relations committee is also at work on a Union Board calendar for next semester. Sandy is also a member
of Publications Board. In order to
be on the board, the student must
be appointed with the recommendation of the Student Senate.
It is natural that as a Political
Science Major, Sandy is active in
the Political Science Club. She is
a member of the Executve Committee, which is now reorganizing the club. They are sponsoring lectures and faculty discussions so that Political Science majors and other interested students can get to know the department members better.
In addition to her student activities, Sandy is a working girl.

God's

chosen people.
The scenery was sparse and
yet it was quite ample. It set
the tone of each scene deftly,
without intruding beyond its essential function as background.
The play was quite humorous,
with some of the exchanges im-

aginatively witty, often ocUlt in
some savage excess that it became tragic comedy. If you laughed at the play, you were laughing at yourself, too. Curiously,
the opinions of the audiences
were varied, but generally complimentary. The greatest difficulty for the average playgoer
concerned the main idea or
theme behind the play. The problems probably arose from the
subtle use of off-meaning to un-

derscore the action and motive
of the characters. There were
perhaps a few meaningful scenes
that extended some of the motifs unnecessarily.
Mr. Bromberg’s play is to be
presented off Broadway this
season. 1 would not be surprised
if this play turns out to be one
of the most engrossing and provocative plays of the 1964-65
theatre season. If the production
is as excellent as the one here,
it surely will be.

itself, was a psychological study
of a female member of the aristocracy and in this way compares
well With Ibsen's Hedda Gabbler.
As a study in social classes and
the transition to a classless state,
this play is much like Chekhov's
Cherry Orchard. Elaine Heller as
"Miss Julie” displayed considerable emotion. Overlooking a very
minor speech problem, Gary Gerace as "Jean” was very effective in switching from the ostensible gentleman to the overt villain.

Today, the dramatic group will

present Tha American Dream and
The Zoo Story
both by Ed
ward Albee and directed by Corinee Jaffee and David Erwin,
respectively. In this same series
see an original play, The Coffee
Machine, by Grace Martin and di—

rected by Pamela Dadey.

is an interestis easy to miss
his own fault.
his secret. He
makes it all seem to easy. So
much so that you begin to wonder if he really means its.
Meantime, he is away solving
some difficult problems. Like
how to get a lyric poem going,
The burst of fireworks which
lasts in tHfe best lyric poems say
for fifteen minutes and so many
lines, bedevils even the best, like
Thomas. Another problem is how
to get it all in. By “it” I mean
experience, the trivia of the personal world. Or do I? For the
good poet transforms, makes it
not relevant, that sounds wrong,
but worth talking about. It becomes a question of values. What
do you do with all the milk
bottle tops, scraps of paper, of

Frank O’Hara
ing poet, but it
why. It’s partly
And it’s partly

conversation?
In Laforgue

and early Eliot
they still decorate. They are “les
statistiques sanitares dans les
journaux hebdomodaires”, that
degrade us, makes us suburban
or what you will. It is often no
more than a poetry of complaint
and O’Hara is the man who has
got to the other side of this
poetic impasse.
But O’Hara is still looking for
a way to talk. When he breaks
through he is worth listening to.
And speaking of what O’Hara is
beyond in this connection, well,
he is beyond Dr, Williams,
though of course deeply indebted.
Seeker and Warburg recently
published the Doctor’s complete
works in England. Mr. Alvarez
the
Observer's’ unexpert on
things American, said his piece.
He was cruel to the Doctor. But
for once I had to agree. The
structure of “Patterson” just is
not, and the connecting devices
dull. It remains, as perhaps we
always anticipated, a series of
lyric poems linked by prose
passages. Williams tried to solve
the long poem problem his way
and failed. You have to have a
language.
A vocabulary, sure he had

that, one that would deal with

She can be found selling candy
on the first floor of Norton. This
summer, Sandy worked at the
Summer Planning Conferences
for freshmen. She acted as stu-

dent aid, and helped incoming
freshmen plan their schedules.
On dates, Sandy enjoys going
to shows, bowling, and attending
concerts. Folk music is her favorite, but she is learning to like
classical music as well. Her ambiton is to play the piano, but has
been unable to find the time.
Another project postponed for
the same reason is learning to
knit.

Sandy feels that her idea of an
ideal husband is conventional. He
should be understanding, have a
sense of humor, and, with a faraway look on her face, she added:
"He should be someone you can
sit down and talk to.”

Spring Arts Festival
In Planning Stage
Ideas are needed; the Spring
Arts Festival is starting its committee work NOW!
The purpose of the Festival is
to encourage a greater apprecia-

tion and recognition
the dance,
music, painting, and
a larger number of

arts

—

campus.
Programs

of the fine
the theatre,
so on

—

D•camber 18, 1964

Audit Magazine Content
And Policies Reviewed

CAMPUS
PERSONALITY

cally

Two One-Act Student Plays
Presented Friday at Baird
Two plays, both of which were
acted and directed by students,
were presented Friday, December
11. The one-act plays were Man
with the Flower in hl« Mouth by
Luigi Pirandello and Miss Julie
by August Strindberg. Their respective directors were Bruce Glaser and Colin Bremner,
In Man with the Flower in his
Mouth. Barry Tannanbaum had
virtually a twenty minute mono
logue as a man who could not reconcile himself to his own impending death. In the meantime
"the customer", Dick Kawecki,
sat flicking ashes from his cigar

Friday,

.SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

to

students on

scheduled include the

Norman Walker Dance Company
and the off-Broadway production
of “In White America."
Any student interested in helping develop plans for any aspect
of the festival may contact Eileen
Palley at 831-3863.

anything from pretty girls with
trashy minds (Patterson 1) to
“Washington at his first inaugural.” No mean achievement. But
Mr. O’Hara is going on solving
the big problem of structure we
are still left with. His answer
is to keep his poem in a state

of solution. As for meter, a similar answer. If you put your feet
down too long in any one place
the Indians will get you. You
have to keep on the move.
Finally in the realm of subject-matter O’Hara is one of our
few autoboigraphers and novelists we have in poetry. How envious Shelly always short of breath would have been. Not only
-

-

-

new structures, bjit a new realistic approach tb old idealistic
themes. I sometimes think that
O’Hara must be the only poet
to have heard with Henry Miller, though its here for all to
read in his “Tropic of Cancer,”

what comfortable words Emerson
had to say:
These novels will give way, by
and by, to diaries or autoboigraphies—captivating books, if only
a man knew how to choose
among what he calls experiences
that which is really hit experience and how to record truth
fully.

Mr. O’Hara must have large
and delicate ears. What a good
place for a poet to start off from.
O’Hara is swimming in the
right rived and he is worth reading if only for that. My only
quarrel with the presentation
in “Audit,” and it may turn out
to be really a quarrel with Mr.
O’Hara himself, is that the quality of the poems is so mixed.
Nothing shows signs of comparing with his 1956 poem “In Memory of My Feelings,”
with
O’Hara starring as a Walt Whitman/Perseus hero slaying the
Medusa of himself. Yes, its
messy in that stream at present, but later I feel it may prove

profitable.

Editor's Note
“Audit” is a magazine concentrating on publishing one or a
few poets per issue. Future issues will see complete issues devoted individually to the poetry
of John Weiners, Robert Duncan
and at least half of one issue
to Ed Dorn. The present issue
consisted of solely the poetry of
Mr. O’Hara. The upcoming winter
issue will see the poetry of Mac
Hammond, Robert Kelly, Peter
Pinto, Diane Derrick, and Bill
Sylvester between the covers.

�Friday,

December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

ICE BULLS MELT ROCHESTER
HERD SHOWS POTENT ATTACK
IN OVERWHELMING 16 -1 WIN
By

On Tuesday, DecembeVath, the
University of Buffalo Hockey
team routed a visiting University
of Rochester six, 16-1. This impressive, lop-sided victory in their

terpart on the Bulls, Sherry, was
barely extended. He had but 8
enemy shots to block. Much

credit for this must go to the

opener raises the ice Bulls to
the favorites position in the
Lakes
Finger
Intercollegiate
League. Their aim this season
will be to dethrone the defending champion and land in first
place.

Eleven players tallied in the
balanced attack. A1 Moorhouse,
Jim Bausch, Dan Gorney, A1
Dever and Jeff Weaver each
contributed 2 goals apiece. Paul
Kibiak and Moorhouse both were
credited with 3 assists. Moorhouse, with 5 points for his
night’s work, was selected as
MVP of the game. The lone Yellow Jacket goal came at 4:02
of the final period and was
registered by their star center,
Hinman.

The contest did not take on
the appearance of the eventual
slaughter in the opening minutes
of the first period. For five minutes neither side was able to
get up a head of steam and
launch a successful attack. Then,
at the 5:10 mark, Buffalo’s second line broke the scoreless duel.
Moorhouse, on feeds by his wingers Dever and Brian Frazer,
slapped a 15-foot shot past the
tar of Rochester goalie Kunz.
Finding themselves behind, the
visitors came alive and mounted
their best attack of the evening.
But goalie Ken Sherry was able
to repulse all their attempts to
he up the game.
The Buffalo offense finally
got rolling at the 10 minute
mark, as Bausch connected with
two quick goals. The game suddenly livened up and in rapid
succession the Bulls added four
more tallies to push the score
to 7 0 at intermission. Noteworthy here was the lack of a single penalty for either team the
opening 20 minutes of the game.
Last season Buffalo led the
league in penalty minutes assessed and Rochester was no
stranger to the penalty box
either.
Content with their commanding lead, the Bulls played defensive hockey for a majority
of the second stanza.
Still, they
managed to pad their
lead as
they put the puck by a now very
rostrated Kunz three more
times. During the entire
course
the game, the UR goalie was

spired and brutal

play in the
last 20 minutes of action. Frazer
Knocked in an errant Moorhouse
shot at 2:15, but the fire of the
Bull’s attack seemed to be exworry during this period. When
Dever broke in alone on Kunz tinguished after Sherry lost his
and fired a close-range .shot at shutout two minutes hence. Hintne upper left corner of the cage, man stole the puck at mid-ice
the goalie was able to deflect and broke in alone on the UB
the puck but could not stop it goal. His point blank shot was
stopped by Sherry, but when he
was unable to recover and clear
the puck, Hinman punched in
the rebound.
Each team had a player in
the penalty box at the time of
the goal, and Buffalo suddenly
found itself one man down, with
only 4 on the ice, as Day Hannah
was detected hooking and was escorted off to the box for two
minutes. There he joined teammate Frazer who had been
guilty of elbowing 35 seconds
previous and Spence of Rochester, who was being penalized
for boarding. Buffalo sent in its
penalty-killing line, but what
followed was not anticipated by
the onlookers in the stands. In
the space of the next 56 seconds, the Bulls sent 3 shots into
the Yellow Jacket cage! The

tailed upon to make 46 saves
while, by comparison, his coun

STEVE FEIGAN

notion of doubling that total.
This was evident in their in-

score now stood at 14-1 and
any hope that Rochester had en-

tertained of closing the gap
after their lone score was gone.
At the final buzzer the scoreboard read, UB 16, UR 1.
The Hockey Bulls' next opponent will be Syracuse University who come td the Amherst
Arena tomorrow night. Game
time is 10 P.M. Free busses will
leave from Norton Union. All
tickets for the postponed Oswego
State game will be honored at
the gate, as well as at any other
home game during the season.

ATTEND
THE
SYRACUSE
GAME

TOMORROW

HOCKEY BULLS ROUT UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER

Buffalo defensemen who
for the
entire 60 minutes of action. The
defensive core also came up with
o goals to the credit, an unusually high number for players
who spend most of their ice
time protecting their own net.
Bill Savage, Mike Whelan and
Jim Lenegan each had a goal.
Aside from its scoring problems, Rochester had an extra

from going in. The puck, travelling at close to 75 miles per
hour, hit Kunz on his unprotected right calf and doubled
him up with pain. But after scveral anxious minutes, he gallantly shook it off and returned
to his post. This injury made
his sparkling performance even
more amazing.
With a 10-0 lead, the UB team
returned to the ice with the

rugged

played heads-up hockey

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�Friday, December It, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

BULLS ROUT WINDSOR, ALBANY
FROSH EDGE CANISIUS 79-76;
TROUNCE BUFFALO STATE 86-48
By

STAN LICHWALA

The University of Buffalo Bulls,
in a record-breaking spree,
routed the Canadian Intercollegiate champion, the University
of Windsor, by a score of 115-71
in Clark Gym December 9th. The

Canadian team was obviously outclassed from the beginning as
the Bulls unleashed a well balanced attack
which featured
seven men in double figures and
every man with at least one point.
In 1951, the Buffalo eagers
set a high scoring record of 108
against the Ontario Aggies, but
this year’s team broke that mark
by seven points. The total point
output by UB and Windsor of
186 points wrote another new
record in the books. In scoring
115 points, the UB Basketball
team set a new field goal record
of 45 and smashed the rebound
record of 72 as they hauled in
85 rebounds
Again, Norb Baschnagcl led
the team in scoring with 16 points
and hauled in plenty of the
team's rebounds. Scoring 13 of
his points in the first half, Norb
led his team as they quickly put
the game out of Windsor's reach.
Harvey Poe hit for 13 points
and showed very good defense
as he contributed 10 points. Norward Goodwin began to conn,
into his own as he started to

hit from the field and scored a
total of 11 points. Bill Bilomis
rounded out the starters’ scor
ing with 12 points and showed
up well under the boards. Paul
Goldstein came into the game
and proved his potential of becoming a real scoring threat as
he
tossed in 11 points and
showed a lot of hustle and spirit
out on the court.
The record-breaking shot was
tossed in by Bill Barto as he
connected for two of his 10

Bulls had opened up a 43-35 advantage as they hit 18 of their 28
field goal attempts for 64.3%.
From the free throw line the
Bulls hit for seven out of eight
for 87%.

Time and again, the Windsor
defense left huge holes as Buffalo was able to spring a man
loose under the basket for an
easy

two points. For

Last Saturday, the frosh en
countered rival Buffalo State in
another preliminary game in
Clark Gym. The first half wa
close as the UB frosh could not
hit on free throws to open up any
margin of an advantage. The Baby
Bulls hit six out of thirteen attemps at the free throw line for
a 46.2 percentage. At halftime,
the score was: the Baby Bulls 32
and the Buffalo State frosh 29.

Windsor,

Bob Hovrath tossed in 22 points
as he was the Only Windsor
player to score in the double
figures.

Last Saturday night, the Bulls
played host to Albany State University. Again, the Buffalo eagers
were able to unleash a well-balanced attack and score victory
number four, 89-65.
In the opening minutes of
play, both teams traded baskets
and stayed close to each other
as a tight game seemed to be in
the making. As the game progressed, the Buffalo defense
tightening up and the offense
began to find openings in the Albany defense. At halftime, the

It was during the second half
of this game that the frosh put
on their best performance. The
Baby Bulls’ defense in this half
was excellent in comparison to
the defensive showing that they
made in the second half against
Canisius, The hustling, alert defense held the Buffalo State frosh
scoreless for the first eight minutes of play and broke the game
wide open with their great defensive play. By the time the
Buffalo State frosh mounted an
offense, the game was over and
the UB Baby Bulls could well be
proud of their 86-48 victory.

and the

offense outscored the

IN SPORTS CIRCLE two weeks ago, we posed these win looked better than in preproblems to the student body as well as athletic depart- vious starts as he found the
ment.
After conferring with Dr. Leonard Serfustini, range on his looping jumpshot
Head Coach of the basketball team, we are prepared to and paced his team with 14
present what the department sees as the only solution. points. Bill Bilowus scored nine
he turned in a specSince the university will not be able to build a new field points, but
tacular performance hauling in
house before moving to the new campus, the bulk of the one
rebound after another. He
home games will have to be played in Clark Gym. The
position under the offen-

remainder will be played in Memorial Auditorium as
part of a double-header program, with Canisius playing
the first game and UB the second. This program was
iniated last year but overall was a failure due to, needless to say, lack of attendence.
At the present time, Canisius fills the double header
program first with St. Bonaventure and then, if there
are any dates left over, with UB. By the time these
dates are finally obtained, it is often too late for the
athetic department to schedule major teams, because
most times these schools have already made up their
schedules. It is now up to UB to prove to the Canisius
administration that the student body will support these
games by doing their share in filling up the auditorium.
The only way for the Bulls to obtain these more desirable
dates in the double header program and schedule top
teams is with the overwhelming support of the student
body in attending these games.
In the past few years the Bulls have played both
Army and Navy, among other major college teams.
Both, as well as Syracuse, Cornell and Boston, have
agreed to return the games owed to the Bulls, provided
that they are played in Memorial Auditorium, and of
course with the stipulation that the Bulls hold up their
end of the double header program. To do this, the student body must support the team. With it the basketball
prestige of UB could rise to unprecedented heights.
Within the next few years, with the improved schdule
of quality opponents, UB could become one of the top
eastern independents.
As was previously stated, last year venture failed,
with poor attendance at every game except for traditional
rival, Buffalo State. Until the new field house is built
on the new campus, Memorial Auditorium is the only
place the Bulls can go where they can bring in top
teams to play. The basketball team deserves the support
of the student body. We urge the students to attend
the basketball games, especially at Memorial Auditorium.
.

MB

-

Bob Thomas again led the scoring with 23 points and was followed closely by Doug Bernard
with 22 and a fine defensive performance. John Nowryta led Buffalo State with 18 points. Now
that the Baby Bulls have come
through with a fine defensive per
formance against Buffalo State,
after a slopy showing against
Canisius, the question remains in
everyone’s mind whether the
Baby Bulls’ performance against
Buffalo was a fluke or whether
this is the way they are capable
of playing for the rest of the
season.

BULLS SCORE IN VICTORY OVER AGGIES
Albany offense 46-30. Nor Good-

..

The Freshman Basketball Team
bounced back from their loss to
Niagara and defeated the Canisius College Freshmen by a score
of 79-76 in a preliminary game
December 9 in Clark Gym.

points.

(Cont'd from P. 16)
SPORTS CIRCLE
That the Bulls do have an excellent reputation and
deserve to play these top teams is evidenced by the simple
fact that these major teams respect the Bulls so much
that they do not want to risk playing them. This reputation is based upon the outstanding teams of the past
few years (1957, 58, 59, 60 and 63) when he Bulls received invitations to the NCAA College Division Tournament, and performed respectably in them.

f

hit for eight of 14 for 57.1 per
cent in the second half. With two
minutes remaining, the Bab y
Bulls held a 14-point advantage
when the Canisius frosh went into
a full-court press. The frosh from
Buffalo seemed to panic as they
made error after error; bad pass
es, a total letdown in their defense, and a deflated offense
allowed Canisius to come from
way behind to within reach of
victory. Coach Muto and Assistant Coaches Bill Monkarsh and
Len Kosobucki succeded in pull
ing their team' together after a
couple of badly-needed time outs,
and the Baby Bulls scored victory
number three against one defeat.
Bob Thomas led the scorers with
22 points for Buffalo.

December 20 and 30 at LeMoyne.
This year’s team looks strong
and should do well at LeMoyne
if they continue to work hard
and play the way they are capable of playing.

had

sive and defensesive boards

all

evening. Harvey Poe turned in
a good offensive and defensive
game as he put 12 points on the
scoreboard for Buffalo. Scoring
only eight points and fouled out
12 points, Dan Bazzani also
looked good on defense against
the taller Albany team. Norm
Baschnagel had a tough assignment containing Albany's scoring

threat. Dick Crosett, but he did
a terrific job as Crossett scored
of the game very early. In addition to defense, Norb tossed in
four points from the free throw
line, but his jump shot would not
go in. Jack Karaszewski had 12
points for UB and Paul Goldstein had nine. Bill Barth, still
ailing with a sore leg, came off
the bench to test his leg in the
closing minutes of the game and
wound up with eight points and
a few good rebounds.
Jim O’Donovan was high scorer
for Albany with 16, followed by
Dan Zeh with 14.
Wednesday, the University of
Buffalo played host to Western
Ontario, a team Buffalo had
beaten six times and bad lost to
them three times. Tomorrow,
the Bulls will face their greatest test thus far when they
travel to Knoxville, Tenn., to encounter the University of Ten
nessee, a powerhouse in the
South. Upon their return from
Tennessee, the Bulls will work
out in preparation for the LeMoyne Invitational
Basketball
Tournament which will be held

a nightmare for Coach Ed
Muto. The frosh hit on only seven

be

free throws and attempted 17 for
41.1 per cent. Scoring 17 field
goals in the half, the frosh from
Buffalo led 41-32 at the half.

The Baby Bulls came out from
their locker room and practiced
some free throws and jump shots
as they prepared for the second
half. Poor free throws kept the
frosh from gaining a great advantage over the Griffins as they

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This coupon Is good for 25 1
case If redeemed before
December 31, 1964.

a

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STOCK UP N0« FOR THE HOLIDAYS!

�Dacambar IB, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Mermen Open Season
By STEVE RONIS

This year’s UB swimming team
is destined to be the best in this

school’s history. Already having
trounced Buffalo State and the

University of Rochester, the water Bulls have set their marks
tor an outstanding season. The
varsity, having lost only three
letterman, and receiving a potent

freshman team, has obtained the
depth it has needed. Coach William Sanford HI is optimistic that
this year’s team will be one of
Upper New York State’s leading

teams.
Unfortunately, it seems that
the rising strength of the swimming team has been accompanied
by what seems to be a lack of
spectator support. One begins to

wonder, when the number of
spectators from the opposing
school outnumber UB students. A
good officials.
Buffalo’s first dual meet against
Buffalo State gave an indication
of this year’s strength. Three Varsity records were shattered on
Wednesday night, December 9th,
In the 400 yard medley relay,
the first record fell. Charlie
Zetterberg led off with a record
time of 1:00.2 for the 100 yard

ence will be felt against the likes

of Syracuse and Colgate.
Carl Millerschoen, the captain
of the water bulls is also a junior. Carl turned in a better than
average time in the 50 yard freestyle against Buffalo State. He
also anchored the record breaking 400 medley relay against
Rochester. He gives the team a
versatile freestyle swimmer, who
can cover a wide range of distances. To complement UB’s
sprinting combination, a hard
working junior fills the bill. Mike
Perkis, originally from Wingate
High School in Brooklyn, covered
the 100 yard free in 54.4, to cap
a 1st place in the Buffalo State
meet. Perkis and Millerschoen
gave the Bulls a fine sprinting
punch. Rounding out the sprinters is Buffalo born, Barry Buttler. Buttler is primarily used as
a 100 yard freestyler in both
the medley and freestyle relays.
This season finds the swimming
team with an exceptionally good
butterfly man, in Wayne Worthing. He has constantly improved
in practice and competition this
season, and is a good prospect
to watch.
UB has no lack of talent in
the individual medley depart-

ord setting
against UR.

Bulls Swamp Western Ontario

400 medley relay

Another promising distance
swimmer is sophomore, Steve
Ronis. He will most likely be
swimming in the 200 yd. and 500

yd. freestyle events.
Rounding out this year’s varsity, and adding depth to it are:
Mike Ferrel, sophomore freestyler; Bill Smith, a butterfly man;
Nawrocki, an all distance junior
freestyler; Russ Hughes, a promising sprinter; Milton Marks, a
senior individual medley swimmer; and veteran John Gdelman,
an all purpose swmimer.
Returning lettermen. in diving,
give the UB squad two good divers in Jerry Chapman and Marv

Mitzel.
Freshman Team—Lacks Depth

Suffering, from a poor freshman turnout, the freshman team
has had to rely on individual performances. Coached by Bob Bedell, the team lacks the depth to
carry the ever important second
and third places.
Mike Conroy, outstanding in
this year’s performances, has already copped the university 200
yd, butterfly record, in the swift
time of 2:35.4, against Rochester.
Mike is a versatile swimmer, and
a definite prospect for the varsity.

Built Swamp Western Ontario
In a record setting effort the
Bulls Wednesday night trounced
Western Ontario University 132
to 67. This is the second time
within a week that the Bulls have
rewritten the scoring records. The
freshman team scored its fifth
victory tor the season defeating
the Niagara Falls Air Force Base
by a score of 104 to 72.
The Canadian team was at a
disadvantage in that six of their
players, three of whom were
starters, didn’t make the trip.
The Mustangs are winless in their
four outings against U.S. teams.
In winning their fifth game the
Bulls raised their scoring average
to 98.2 points per game. Coach
Len Serfustini used eight players
in the first half running up the
score to 63-29, In the second half
five reserves were used and they
took full advantage of their un
usual assignment.

Another standout member of
the freshman team is Rick Rebo.
Rick is an excellent diver, and has
been used as a freestyle sprinter,
this season. He has the makings
of one of UB’s best divers, ever.
Under the guidance, of Bob Be
dell, former All-American diver,
he is developing at a good pace.
Craig Hoffman can cover the
pool is breast-stroke as well as
freestyle, and has been used in
both events. Larry Bloom is also

U.B. MERMAN WARM UP FOR TOUGH SEASON

backstroke, Howie Braun swam
the breaststroke leg; Bill Fleischmann covered the butterfly
stretch; and Barry Buttler anchored. The relay set a new mark of
4:07.2. An additional record was
bettered by Wayne Worthing in
the 200 yard butterfly. An outstanding performance was turned
in that night by Roy Troppman
in the 200 yard and 500 yard freestyle events. The final score of
that meet showed UB’s all around
strength with UB finmen on top,
65-30,

The water bulls faced their
second opponent, a speedy University of Rochester team, on Saturday, December 12th. UB again
came away with a hard won victory by a score of 55-40. The 400
medley relay record was rebroken by the same relay except for
the butterfly and anchoring legs,
which were swum by Wayne
Worthing and Carl Millerschoen,
respectively. The relay splashed
to a fine time of 4:06.0, bettering
the previous record by 1.2 seconds.
Sophomore backstroker,
Charles Zetterberg cracked the
old 200 yard backstroke mark,
and streaked the distance in
2:14.5.
Individual Swimmers Cited
Because little or no credit is
given to many of UB's fine swim
mers, an attempt will be made to
cover the swimmers of the varsity
and freshman squads.
Roy Troppman, UB’s outstanding junior distance swimmer,
opened the season with double
victories in the 200 yard (1:58),
and 500 yard (5:44.8) freestyle
events in both dual meets. Roy
is one of the most formidable
opponents in the Upper New York
State loop. He will present a
great threat to all the schools
UB faces this season.
His. pres.-

ment. Bill Fleischmann, a

prom-

ising sophomore, is doing an excellent job in this event. He is
at the present time, only 3 seconds off Jim Decker’s (last year’s
captain) record, in this event.
At Rochester

fine time

he turned in the
of 2:20.5. Bill also

swam the butterfly leg in the

record setting medley relay
against Buffalo State. Fighting
nip and tuck with Bill in every
meet is returning varsity letterman, Irv Puls. Irv has excellent
endurance, and displays it by
swimming the 230 yard butterfly
as well as the individual medley.
The backstroke department is
in very capable hands. Charles
Zetterburg has set school records
both in the 100 yd. backstroke
leg of the 400 medley relay, and
the 200 yd. backstroke. There is
every indication he will continue
on his record breaking ways, this
year. Another tremendous backstroker is returning letterman,
Mark Grashow. Mark gives the
swim team a strong 1-2 combination. Backstroke is definitely a
solid link in UB’s chain.
John Danahy and Howie Braun
are two fine breaststrokers, who
are battling it out for first place
honors this year. John, a junior,
and Howie, a sophomore, give
UB another strong 1-2 combination. Danahy took the 200 yd.
breaststroke in the Rochester
meet with a 2:34.8, and Howie
kept the pace up by swimming
the breast-stroke leg in the ree-

fPIZZA

a very up and coming freestyler
in all distances. In the backstroke
category are DeWitz and Bob Miller. Alan Flor does an ample job
in the breast-stroke department.
Filling out the freshman team are
long distance men Nachojski, and
Marc Jacobson.
Despite two early losses by the
freshman team, there is optimism, because of good individual
performances.
New Training Methods
One reason for Coach Sanford’s renewed optimism this season, has been due to the training
program he introduced this season. Modeled after Doc Coun-

The 132 total racked up by the
Bulls set a new all time high scoring total. The former record, set
last week against Windsor University, was 115.
WESTERN

Pv\

UB

ONT.

OFT

leather
j.oi

5 I II
1 1 3
3 4 12
7 5 19
5 3 13
3 0 4
0 0 0
1 1 3

Botclinaool
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ing, Ozols, Schloss)

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ATTACHE CASE

and swimming program, the UB
program has strengthened its

400 medley relay—(B) (Charlie
Zetterberg, Howard Braun, Wayne
Worthing, Carl Millershoen) 4:06
(school record). 200 free
Roy
Troppman (B), Lanny Dezew (R),
Steve Ronis (B) 1:57.2. 50 free—
Jim Schloss (R), Mike Perkis (B),
Bob Browning (R) :23.8. 200 medley
Bill Fleischman (B), Dave
Sadowski (R), Irving Puls (B)
2:20.5. Diving
Jerry Chapman
(B), Marvin Miezel (B), Stone (R)
153.7 points. 200 butterfly—Steve
Koop (R), Worthington, Dean
Cheavaczi (R) 2:35.7. 100 free
Schloss, Carl Millcrschoen (B),
Perkis :53.2. 200 back—Zetter
berg, Bill Siener (R), Mark Grashaw (B) 2:14.5 (school record).
Troppman, Bob Ozols
500 free
(R), Steve Ronis (B) 5:48.1. 200
breast
John Danahy (B), Sandy
Carpenter (R), Braun 2:34.8. 400
(R) Decew, Brown
free relay

f

2 0 4
2 0 4
4 19
7 4 11
Pm o
5 010
Bazzanl g
Karaszewskl 41 41 12
Smith
3
Goldstein
3 1 7
Fratangelo
7 1 15
Barth
5 4 14
Barto
4 0 12
Brassell
I 2 II
Gill
1 4 4
Totals
25 17 67
Totals
55 22 132
Halftime; UB 63, Western 29.

Vroncourt f
Mtlvlllof
Morten c
Baber o
Burton a
Campbell
Mlnoqua
Odegard

leather, FEELS
like ,oather .
OUT wt A itS

silman’s (Indiana Swim Coach)
famous weight lifting, isometric,

swimmers

The high scoring honors for the
Bulls went to Larry Brassel, a
former Amherst star, who tallied
a total of 18 points. He hit on
eight of 11 from the field, most
of them on jumping one-handers
from 15 to 25 feet away. Tieing
for the scoring honors was starter
Harvey Poe.

•

Friday,

CAMPUS"

�PACE SIXTEEN

Friday, December 18, .1964

SPECTRUM

*
—

ijpg©sawan
K-

—

—

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

THE REASONS

Three weeks ago, in a column entitled The Choice,”
we presented the problems now existing for the basket
ball team with respect to scheduling top-notch opponents.
Two weeks ago, in another column called “The Rift,”
we expounded upon these problems, mentioning some
of the specifics involved'. This week’s column will be
devoted to presenting the reasons for the schedule-making difficulties and the handcaps UB is under in this
respect.
Last year, the basketball team played Villanova
in Memorial Auditorium. At that time, with Villanova
ranked fifth in the nation, the Bulls came within two
points of winning, after leading most of the way. However, even with an attraction like this, the game attendance was a meager 1800, only a few hundred more than
can squeeze into the limited confines of Clark Peanut
Gallery—excuse me, Gym, This year, Villanova dropped
UB from its schedule. The reasons for this were: (1)
Villanova would not come into Clark Gym under any
circumstances; (2) the athletic department could not
pay the guarantees that Villanova demanded, and (3)
Villanova did not want to take the risk of a possible
defeat by the Bulls.

—

INTRAMURALS
MARTY 4AFFE

By

The UB intramural basketball
season got under full swing this
week as the fraternity teams competed in their first games. The
games were hard-fought and it
looks like we are going to have
an exciting season.
The results of the fraternity
games were as follows

No major college team will play the Bulls in Clark
Gym for several reasons, which are: (1) the composition
floor, which is harder on the players’ legs than the wooden floors used in most gyms and field houses; (2) the
inadequate lighting; () the tremendous amount of
humidity which builds up as the game progresses, making
the playing floor into a virtual steam bath, and (4) the
inadequate seating, of course. It is unfortunate that the
basketball team as well as the entire athletic deparment must suffer bcause of these numerous inadequacies. However, there is nothing that can be done until
th move is made to the new campus, where there will be
a modern field house. Therefore, Clark Gym is a problem
we must all bear with for the next few years, until the
"move" takes place.
The second problem concerning the financial incapacity of the athletic department to pay the guarantees demanded by these tpp teams is directly related to
the first in one respect. Because of the inadequate seating
of Clark Gym, the department cannot possibly take in
enough money in paid attendence to meet these guarantees. This problem also exists in Memorial Auditorium,
but not because of the seating capacity. In the Auditorium, the problem is attendence, or rather, the lack of it.
Here the poor attendance is responsible for the inability
to meet these guarantees. This, however, is a problem
which can be solved. All that is needed is the support
of-the student body by attending these games. Depending on the amount of support, enough money can be taken
in to meet these guarantees and possibly some left over
to help finance the basketball program which does not
receive any money for scholarships and is at a handicap
in recruiting. In spite of this, the recruitng program has
been excellent, as evidenced by the high quality of the
Freshmen team.
The final problem is a very delicate one in that it is
obvious to the athletic department, but the potential
opposition would not readily admit it. The fact is that
no top team will play a team of the high caliber of the
Bulls and risk a possible defeat while gaining no prestige
or financial reward, when they can play a "pushover”
with a big field house, which would be filled, and at least
be assured of some financial success, as well as a victory.
In other words, the Bulls cannot offer profitable guarantees or the prospect of a huge audience to play before.
All they can offer is a hard fought basketball game for
the opposition. This risk of defeat without anything to
be gained is obviously a situaton which is not desirable
to the top teams. The problem can be solved, but only
with student attendence, which would offer the opposition both financial reward and an audience to play before
to add to thfe"fame and prestige.”
(Coat'd on P. 14)

—

In the triangular meet held
Saturday in Clark Gym the feneing Bulls won one and lost one,
beating Case 17-10 and losing to
Cornell 19-8. In the meet between
Cornell and Case, Cornell won
16-11. The Cornell Freshmen defeated the UB Frosh 19-6. Tony
Wilkoz was the outstanding UB
freshman with a 2-0 record for
In the Cornell meet the Bulls

Thursday 8:30

'jh

—

Fencers Rout Case,
Lose to Big Red

the afternoon

12-10-64

was 2-1, Lee Corey 0-1, George
Stump! was 0-2, and John Houston was 0-3.

n
Case meet the sabre
team won by a big score 8-1. The
e Pee squad won 6-3 and the foil
lost 63 In sabre Da ve
*®.am
Kirschgessner and Larry Zollingr were 3 ® ar&gt;d Bob Frey was
2-1. In epee John Houston and
George Stumpf were 2-0, Frank
Pocenco was 2-1, and Lee Corey
*

®

Alpha Phi Delta
Phi Epsilon Pi
Alpha Sigma Phi
Pi Lambda Delta
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Gamma Phi
Thurdsay

9:30
22

Sigma Phi Epsilon
TKE
Sigma Alpha Mu

17
44

Theta Chi
33
Beta Sigma Rho
43
20
Alpha Phi Omega
The results of the independent
leagues were as follows:

�

These reasons, when placed in a broader context,
reflect the attitudes of Syracuse, Cornell, Boston U and,
for that matter, every big-name college basketball team
concerning whether of not thy play the Bulls. We will
now proceed to expound upon and explain their significance.

$&gt;—-

�

�

12-11-64
Friday 8:30

Stalks
Donut Kings

Regals
Playboys

Tribunes
Bombers

39
20
49
34

Monday 8:30

Yamaka Bombers
Beach Boys
Law School
Bolters
Little Apes

Monday 8:30
1) Yamaka Bombers
2) Players
3) Potters
4) Law School
5) Little Apes
6) Beach Boys
7) Spieglers

Spielers
Monday 9:30

Zygotes
M Squad

Buddhawanas
Untouchables

45

28

29
Moppers
Gunners
27
The standings of the independ
ent leagues are as follows;

R

TWI

FENCERS ROUT CASE
lost in all three weapons, in sabre was 0-2. In foil Joe Paul had a
3-6, foil 3-6, and epee 2-7. In sabre 2-1, Bob Toth was 1-1, and Mike
Bud Holzschuh was 1-0, Bob Frey Howard and Jim Mondello were
and Dave Kirschgessnes were 1-1, 0-2.
Rickey Fitcheete and Steve EdelThis Saturday the Fencing team
stein were 0-1, and Larry Zollwill go to Syracuse University.
inger was 0-2. In foil Bob Toth
Syracuse has lost several good
was 2-1, Mike Howard was 1-1, men through graduation and the
and Joe Paul and Jim Mondello
Bulls should win this one by a
were 0-2. In epee Frank Pocenco
fairly large margin.

Friday 8:30

1) Stalks
1) Tribunes
2) Regals
2) Bombers
3) Playboys
3) GDI’s
....

The present standings of the
Pahlowitz Trophy are
SAM
..161
AEPi
.460
Alpha Sigma Phi
.154
Phi Epsilon Pi
.161
Sigma Epsilon
...150
TKE

...147

The handball tournament is

under way but there are still too
many contestants to get any accurate results. By next issue,
there will be enough eliminated

to give the standings.

bj

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SECTION

-

—f

STATE

Dr. Richard A. Sigglekow, Dean
of Students, will go on sabbatical
leave January 1, for the duration
of the second semester. In Dean
Sigglekow’s absence, Dr. Stanley
J Segal, Director of the Student
Counseling Center and Associate

writing a book on student personnel services and higher education, He has recently under-

take n the editorship of the
National Student Personnel Administrators’ Journal, a profes-

sional quarterly, and he plans to
devote much time to this proj-

ect. Dr. Sigglekow will also travel

and visit other universities, including the University of California at Berkcly,
Dr. Sigglekow is a member of
the National Student Personnel
Administrators, a member of the
American Personnel and Guidance
Association and other professional organizations. He has written
innumerable professional journal
articles including: “An evaluation
Program That Works”, NASPA
Journal, 1964; “Are Modern High
Schools Preparing for College?”,

The Bulletin of the National Association of Secondary School
Principals; and “Were the Starkweather Murders Necessary?”,
School and Society, 1958.
Dr. Segal is the author of

DR. RICHARD A. SIGGLEKOW

Profesor of Psychology, will serve
as Acting Dean of Students.
This sabbatical will be the first
leave of absence Dr. Sigglekow
has taken since he became Dean
of Students of UB in 1958. Before
1958, he served as Assistant Dean
of the School of Education and
an Associate Director of the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Sigglekow received his B.A., M.A., and
Ph.D. at Wisconsin.
The new Acting Dean, Dr.
Segal, organized and developed
the program and philosophy of
the Counseling Center for the
University. He is also a consultant in Counseling Psychology to
Veterans Administration Hospitals in Michigan and Buffalo. Dr.
Segal said of his appointment:
“It represents a task which I
am willing to undertake and interested in carrying out. I see my
function as Acting Dean of Students as basically carrying on the
procedures and policies of Dr.
Sigglekow.’’

While Dr. Segal is in the Dean’s
Nathan Altucer, Assistant Chief of the Student Counseling Center, will be in charge
of the Counseling program.
Dr Sigglekow plans to make
productive use of his time away
from the University. He is now

office, Dr.

“A

Psychoanalytic Analysis of Personality Factors in Vocational
Choice”, 1961; “An Articulated

Framework for Vocational Devel-

Tuesday, at a special meeting
'f the Faculty-Student Associaion, the amendment allowing a
tudent to sit on the Board of
proposed

by

Senate

■esident Robert P. Finkelstein
id Vice President Robert C
Feldman was tabled until such
me as the State University
kes action to re-evaluate the
ructure of the Faculty-Student

i

tabling, President
nkclstcin said, "Naturally, 1
unhappy at the tabling of
amendment by the Faculty

fent Association. My feeling
even

though

the State
ng

the

:&gt;f the Faculty-Student
hould
r
un
willin
nstrat

uctur

Set for Hochstetter
The

University

of Buffalo Ama-

teur Astronomers announce an
observing program tor the coming lunar eclipse tonight from
7;30 to 11:30. Several portable
telescopes will be on hand in
front of the physics building
(Hochstetter Hall) to provide a
close look at the moon

An eclipse of the moon takes
place when the earth passes between the sun and the moon.
When this happens, a pronounced darkening of the moon's
surface occurs due to the block

mg of the sun’s rays from the
moon's surface by the earth. All
the rays arc prevented from
reaching the lunar surface, except for those which arc retracted around the earth by the
earth's atmosphere. The refraction of these light rays causes
the moon’s surface to glow a
wine-red or a copper color, offering a spectacular sight.
Also, as a part of the program,
the members will present a LIFE
MAGAZINE color slide series on
the Universe to be shown
throughout the evening in Hoclv
stettcr HI in conjunction with
the eclipse observation. Free refreshments will be provided.
Members of the Amateur Astronomers Club will be on hand
to offer answers to students’
questions. All students of the Uni
versify arc invited. (In case of
inclement weather the slide pro
gram will still be presented in
HI.)

Gamma Theta Epsilon
Conducts Field Trips
Like to visit the Tonawanda
Iron Company in North Tona-

DR. STANLEY J. SEGAL

opment,” 1963; “A Special Problem in the Vocational Counseling
of College Women,” 1963; all ap
pearing in the Journal of Counseling Psychology, and numerous
other articles. Dr. Segal teaches
Rorschach Method, Senior Psychology Seminar, Seminar in Psychotherapy, Abnormal Psychology
and supervises Doctoral Research.

anxiety to have a student eligible for membership on the Board
of Directors, Our hope now must
be that the State University
will decide shortly on the structure and that the amendment
will receive favorable considers

Vice President Feldman, com
menting on the Association’s ac
tioh, stated, “I hope that a tab!

o the amendment c loes no»t
meant that the Association i.&lt;
not amenable to the amendment
And if it's not, that the Assoc
iation will suggest to the StaU
mg

the

Eclipse Observation
And Slide Program

Hochstettcr

FSA Amendment Defeated;
Tabled For Indefinite Period

:hat,

EDITORIALS

■*

features

that indeed student
should participate in the dis
perccments of the students funds.
After all. there would be no As-

sociation if the students were
provide

funds

”

THE
Ki'm PRESIDENT’S
MESSAGE
The other day a student told
me he had a frightening dream
about the approaching Holiday
Season. He was skiing down a
mountain while typing a term
paper. He hit a tree, smashed his
skis and pammed his typewriter.
For the rest of the vacation he
could neither ski nor finish his
term papers.
Moral: Do not try to do both
at the same time. I do hope, how
ever, that this holiday period will
afford each of you the opportu
nity for a bit of recreation (ski
ing or otherwise) and for catch
ing up on those academic tasks
which you may have (probably ?)
been neglecting overly long. You
will have to apply your own
judgment as to the proper pri-

that anyone’s now attempts seem
repetitious, stale and trite. 1 am
tempted to try a new approach.
I suggest a bit of serious holiday reading
a short essay entitled “Teaching and the Expanding Knowledge,” in the December
4, 1964, issue of Science, page

ority;

nature are simple" and that “the
talk about the two cultures’ will
lose its meaning." In the closing
years of a long and fruitful life
he is still pointing the way to

Christmas messages are usually
a struggle to write and, I must
admit, very often a chore to read.
This should not be. The traditions of the Season are among the
finest in history of the human
Sterling virtues, mutual
race.
solicitude and well tempered joy
are supposed to dominate and
they often do, With such con
slructive material, why should it
be difficult to put down appro
priatc words for the occasion?

while things have been said so
many times, and said very well,

—

1278. It should be available in

most good libraries. It was written by Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgyi
who was a Nobel Prize winner,
19.27, and who is the Columbus of
Vitamin C, which keeps scurvy
from your door. His is not exactly
a Christmas message but it does
have a cheerful ring which is appropriate for the Season. At
year's end it is comforting for
teachers and students to learn

from his that “the foundations of

“open

up the endless horizons

and challenges of intellectual and
artistic life and make whole life
an exciting adventure.”
That’s a good thought with
which to season Christmas and to
begin the New Year. Mrs Furnas
joins me in wishing all the State
University of Buffalo family the
joy and benefits of both.
-Clifford C.

Furnas, President

wanda. the Bosch and Bomb Comin Rochester, or perhaps
Koch's Brewery in Dunkirk, New

NORTON HALL WINTER
RECESS BUILDING HOURS

that UB’s Beta

Building
Cafeteria

pany

York? If you would, then Gamma
Theta Upsilon, the national geographic fraternity, would interest you, for these are all places',

Alpha chapter
of Gamma Theta Upsilon has
visited in the past or plans to
visit in the future.
sional interest in geography, Gamma Theta Upsilon incorporates
field trips such as these into
a busy program including social
events, like the "Annual Spring
Banquet” and "Fall Kick off Picnic”, and programs of geographical interest, such as Dr Ebert's
talk on “The Hamburg Fire
Storm" and Dr. John Horton's
discussion of "Buffalo During the
Civil War."

To be eligible for membership,
one must have completed 12 se-

mester hours in the Department
of Geography, or have completed
only six hours with the intention of completing six more
Business meetings

are

held for

members at 7:30 p.m., every sec-

ond

Wednesday

of each month,

to the public, at 8:30 or 9:00
p m. Special mcctin
held at various time
school year to visi
other areas of inter

open

University

not there ,to

NO. 14

If you are interested in ob
aining further information, con
tact Tom Golden at TK 5-4784
or any member of Gamma Theta
Upsili
fratc

Thursday, December 24

7:30 AM-2:00 PM
7:30 AM-2:00 PM

Rathskeller

CLOSED

10:00 AM-2 00 PM
Friday, December 25
Building Closed
Christmas
Saturday, December 26
Building
7:30 AM-8:00 PM
Cafeteria
7:30 AM 6:30 PM
Tiffin Room

Rathskeller
Tiffin Room
Recreation
Sunday,
Building

Cafeteria

Rathskeller

Tiffin Room
Recreation
Monday,
Building

Cafeteria
Rathskeller
Tiffin Room
Recreation

'

Segal to Serve As Dean
During Sigglekow Sabbatical

After

—,-

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1964

VOLUME IS

'dors,

~V

J
■•MHB

CLOSED

CLOSED
8:00 AM 8:00 PM
December 27
Noon 7:00 PM
CLOSED

CLOSED
Noon-6:00 I’M

1:00 PM 7 PM
December 28
7:30 AM 8 00 I'M

7:30 AM 6:30 PM

CLOSED

10:00 AM 2:00 PM
8:00 AM-8 00 PM
Tuesday, December 29
Building
7:30 AM 8:00 PM
Cafeteria
7:30 AM-6 30 PM
CLOSED
Rathskeller
10:00 AM 2:00 PM
Tiffin Room
8:00 AM 8:00 PM
Recreation
Wednesday, December 30
■Building

Cafeteria
Rathskeller

Tiffin Room
Recreation

7:30 AM 8:00PM
7:30 AM-6 30 PM

CLOSED

10:00 AM 2:00 PM
8:00 AX 3:00 PM
Thursday, December 31
7:30 AM 2:00 PM
liuildinK
Cafeteria
7:30 AM-2 00 PM
keller
ED

10:00 AM 2 00 PM
8 00 AM-2 00 PM
Friday, January 1
New Year's Day Building Closed
Saturday, January 2
7:30 AM 8:00 PM
Cafeteria
7:30 AM 6:30 PM
Rathkseller
CLOSED
CLOSED
Tiffin Room
Recreation
8:00 AM 8:00 PM
Sunday, January 3
Building
Noon-7:00 PM
Tiffin Room
Recreation

Cafeteria
Rathskeller
Tiffin Room

CLOSED
CLOSED

Noon 6:00 PM

1:00 PM 7:00 PM
Monday, January 4
Buildin
30 AM 8:00 PM
7:30 AM 6:30 PM
Cafeteria
Rathskeller
11:00 AM-6 30 PM
Noon 6:00 PM
Tiffin Room
Recreation
8:00 AM 8:00 PM
Tuesday, January S
Recreation

Building

Cafeteria

Regular

Hours

Regular Hours
Regular Hours
Rathskeller
Room
Regular Hours
Tiffin
Regular Hours
Recreation
ARTS AND CRAFTS SHOP
HOUR
Mon , Dec. 21 1:00 PM-5 00 PM
Tuts,, Dec. 22
1:00 PM-5 00 PM
Dec. 23-Jan 21
CLOSED
Friday. Jan. 22
Regular Hours
LOCKWOOD LIBRARY HOURS
Thurs, Dec 24 7:30 AM-5 00 PM
Thurs, Dec. 31 7:30 AM-5 00 PM
Other days during Winter Recess:
Monday Friday 7:30 AM-I100PM
Saturday
9:00 AM-5:00 PM

�Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

EDITORIAL
Publications Board
Reconsidered
After long and careful consideration of the current
altercation between student publications and the Publications Board we have been able to separate in our minds
the petty, personal bickering from the more general and
more important issue of the Board itself.
The editorial board of any publication should, upon
consideration of all applicants, have the right to choose
its next editor.
Student publications should be responsible to the
student body. The right to remove an editor should be
given to the student body in a general referendum.
The power of the Publications Board is supreme at
present. There is no higher authority and their actions
and decisions can't be appealed to anyone.

Berkeley A A U P
Defends FSM

rjCetterd

the Editor

to

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

A meeting of university faculmembers passed a series of
resoultions generally critical of
the university administration’s
handling of the situation. At the
More Colleagues Support Sporn
same meeting, it was reported
University function competently
that a suggestion by members of TO THE EDITOR:
the Berkeley chapter of the
he should not be intimidated with
American Association of Univereconomic reprisals because of his
We want to endorse completesity Professors (AAUP) that Berkly the letter written by our colpersonal beliefs.
eley Chancellor Edward
The dismissal of Mr. Sporn has
W. leagues (see Spectrum Decemdeprived the students of this
Strong resign was applauded, al- ber 11) in which they protest the
though it was never brought to dismissal of Mr. Paul Sporn on university of a highly qualified
a vote.
the grounds that he is a man
teacher and has also pointed up
the University’s violation of acalacking in personal integrity. We
Nationally, a number of stu- agree with
the letter’s point of demic freedom. We respectfully
dent governments and student
view that the charge is false and request that the administration
groups have telegrammed mesthat it is a technicality being used
reverse itself in Mr. Sporn’s case
sages to the Free Speech Moveto “provide a smoke screen for and restore Mr, Sporn his repument (FSM), the organization of
the University’s violation of acatation as a man of integrity and
student groups which organized
demic
freedom.”
to
this University its reputation
the
the sit-ins and is protesting
We vigorously protest the pofor a pure and constant devouniversity’s ban on campus polisition taken by President Furnas tion to the principles of academic
tical activity. On some campuses, and
Gould that the disfreedom for which it was justly
sympathy demonstrations
are missalPresident
of Mr. Sporn has nothing famous and admired.
planned. Most major civil rights to
do with academic freedom but
organizations have voiced their
Martin Blaze
is completely a matter of “perInstructor
support of the FSM’s objectives. sonal
integrity” because as his
Professor
H. A. Boner
In Washington, the national ofW. H. Bonner
colleagues and friends we have
Professor
fice of the AAUP is studying
to be a man of intefound
Thomas E. Connely
the problem, and is expected to grity him
both in his teaching and in
Professor
issue a statement shortly.
personal relations with us.
Mae S. Hammond
At Berkeley, the university’s his
Furthermore, we belive that as
Asst. Professor
faculty held an “emergency meetlong as a teacher is fulfilling his
Leonard Port
Instructor
ing” to discuss the situation,
which some professors called “desperate” and a “disaster” for the
university. The meeting, attendSporn Support
ed by over 1000 professors, adopted resolutions calling for :
THE EDITOR;
pursuit and successful sacrificaTO
—Amnesty for all students intion of our quarry? After all is
volved in demonstrations up to
I am appalled by the lack of said and done, it is team spirit
present
time.
the
sporting instinct on the part of
that counts.
—Granting the faculty rather
those who persist in draping
But it is necessary to strike
than the administration ultimate
over the dismissal of
criticisms
the iron is hot. For my
while
for
stu
authority
dealing with
Mr, Paul Sporn. Can these mispart, I am joining with certain
cases
growing guided
dent disciplinary
petitioners not see that
colleagues (who prefer to remain
out of political action.
there is little point to a chase anonymous at this time) in start—Condemnation of the univerif no rabbit is ever presented ing a file of “personal integrity
sity administration for permitting to the jowls of the
demerits" concerning any numpursuing dogs?
to
the
police to be summoned
ber of likely faculty members
Apd to maintain expensive investcampus.
whose
igating committees, operating
philosophical positions dif—Formal implementation of both from
Washington, D.C., and
fer from my own. In this way,
the new policies adopted by the Albany, New York, without snarwe can be of help
for a price
university’s board of regents ing an occasional prey is
course
to the next invest!
of
wastegoverning political activity on ful and preposterous.
gating committee that happens
the campus “pending improveWhat is particularly upsetting to come around. And may I point
ment" of them.
to me (in fact I sometimes feel
out that the “integrity demerit
All the resolutions except that just sick) is that after all the
file” is one of the easiest ways
one condemning the calling of individual attention
to fight political apathy, since
lavished uppolice to the campus were passed on
suspension of it will be relatively simple to
Mr. Sporn
by unanimous or overwhelming the conventions of judicial evidinsert an item or so per week,
margins.
consisting of hearsay and meloence, administrative spot anThe resolution calling for the
dramatic fiction, keyed to widenouncements just before univerimplementation of the new resity festivals, poison pen letters, ly accepted biases.
gents policies referred to a rein the newspapers as well as those
I hope there will be much
gents ruling that granted stuteam support for this project,
delivered in person, special waivdents the right to engage in any
ing of his right to earn a salary
especially since it would show
sort .of “legal” activity on campfor which he was appointed, a lack of sporting innovation to
us, but permitting the uniyer
blacklisting to take care of his
have to revive Mr. Sporn each
sity administration to take disyear in order to have someone
present needs
after all this
ciplinary action against students
he continues to gripe, and to
to hurt. Surely there are other
engaged in activity that would
likely prospects who can, by
"knock" our fine institution, I
result in violation of the law—can only
that he is a graceful application of communipresumably sit-ins and other very poor conclude
loser and an all-around ty standards, be found guilty of
forms of civil disobedience.
bad sport. What do his private a lack in integrity.
The Free Speech Movement and selfish pains matter, after
all,
Cordially, and with simply
termed the ruling unacceptable when compared
with the joyous mounds of Integrity,
—many of the groups supporting
sense of social cohesion we have
it are campus affiliates of na
built up through our intrepid
Arthur Efron
tional civil rights organizations
—almost as it was adopted, and
the sit-ins in Sproul Hall, the
administration building, were in
part-'O protest of it. What changes in the policy, if any, the
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
regents will make is unclear at
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
this time, but there almost cerexam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
tainly will be a full review of
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JOHN P KOWAl
policies relating to student acManaging Editor
Peter Rubin
Re-Write Editor
Paul Nussbaum
tivities and administrative pracBernard Dikman
News Editor
Barbara Strauss
Business Managei
Jeremy Taylor
Acting Feature Editor
Photo Editor
Edward Joscelyn
tices in the near future.
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
Allan Scholom
Howard Auerbach
On campus, the FSM’s reaction
Copy Editor
Maraa Ann Orszulak
Circulation Manager,
Alice Ostrander
Faculty Advisor
layout Editor
David Edelman
William Siemering
to the arrests was to call for
Financial Advisor
Dallas Garber
the removal pt University PresiGeneral Staff; Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakifa, Sue Greene,
dent Clark Kerr and Strong, call
Eileen Murphy, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann, Meryl Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon
a class strike—which FSM spokesHeend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Marion Michael,
Debbie Rubie, Jeff Lewis, Margo Rakifa, Scott Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leegant.
man said was 85 per cent efRita Weinberg, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teitler, Sue Greene, Sue Duffy, Bill Cortes,
fective Friday, December 4—and
Sue Fuller, Nina Kosfraba, Lorni Klipstein,- Joey Elm, Jim Blogeft, Skip Blumberg,
Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis, Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters, William Salomon, Joan
hold rallies, which drew thouFox, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Grglia, Harold Bob, Chuck Cummings, Raymond Volpe,
sands, to explain the demonstraJerome Taylor, Alan Gruber, Benoit Bourgois, Sue Melvin, Linda Coply, Susan Thomas.
Marsha Alt, Nancy Simonoff, Nina Kostraba, Rebecca Citron, Rebecca Weinberg, Jay
tors' position
Nisberg, Margo Wallach, Elaine Barron, Alan Goldstein
The FSM has also arranged for
Sports Staff: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
professors to conduct a series of
Schuelein,. Steve Obersfein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr
seminars in the university stu
Photography Staff: David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Worfmdn, Don
speech
union
on
free
on
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski. Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
dent
the campus, student political acCirculation Staff: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary L
Palmer,. Lee Corey
tion, and educational policies
California Governor Edmund
A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
G.
Brown, who summoned
Second Clajs, Postage Paid at Buffalo, New York
the police to the campus, said he
Subscription S3.00 per year circulation 9500.
did so because the student acRepresented for national advertising by National Advertising
tion constituted "anarchy.” A
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave New York, N. Y.
ty

—

—

The authority of the Board comes from the Administration because the students on the board are chosen
V&gt;
by the Administration. In order to correctly chose members of such a Board, they should be elected. Then
candidates to the board could appeal to the student body
showing their ability, training and experience which
would make them desirable for such a position.

After consultation and consideration with our editorial staffs we cannot in all conscience recognize the
present Publications Board or its powers as delineated
in its constitution over which the students at this University have absolutely no control.

The irresponsible actions of the current Board illuspower of the sort wielded by that
body should not be wielded by a few students who are
in fact, merely carrying out the function of control of
the student press for the Administration which appoints
them.
1

trates that absolute

Without the democratic processes of referendum and
recall to offset it, the Publications Board constitutes a
grave breach of many freedoms, as well as the responsibilities of a democratic and representative student gov-

ernment.
We recognize a function for a Board similar in
concerns to the present Board to aid publications and
help to improve the effectiveness and quality of student
publications. An advisory board of this nature would
be welcomed by the publications on this campus.
Because of the difference in what we believe should
exist and what does exist, we refuse to recognize the
authority of the present Publications Board.
JUDITH AUERBACHER,
Editor, New Student Review
MICHAEL DONOHUE
Editor, Buffalonian
JOHN KOWAL,
Editor, Spectrum

The Thallus

—

—

—

More

—

—

—

—

THE

SPECTRUM
-

Affair

Fun is fun and thats the way the Thallus of Marchancia affair started. The news media fell for the
whole play. It is on their shoulders that the bulk of the
joke lies. But fun ceases to be fun when property is
destroyed and damaged.
This years freshman class can always look back on
spoof. The outside community will also
look back on it, and the University is the worse off for

their successful

—

'

(Cont’d on P. 21)

,

�Friday,

Decamber 18, 1964

gucinski.

PAGE TWENTY-ONE

SPECTRUM

.

FSM Defended

.

from P. 20)
group of students asked Brown
to grant amnesty to the 800 arrested, but the governor refused
(Cont’d

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

I am reminded as the snow
Kerr criticized the FSM for
swirls around my head and set“distortion," “irrationality,” and tles like the gentle hand of
"ill will," and said the issue
death on my shoulder, of Christhad nothing to do with free
mas in a clime where seasons
speech, but rather concerned are judged by shifts
in the tropipolitical action. The Free Speech
cal trade winds and bad weather
Movement leader Mario Savio in means
rain. Since the "instituturn branded Kerr a “factory
an allmanager" and to "lay our bodies tion” of Christmas is such
pervasive national enterprise it
on the gears and bring this mais good to have a different frame
chine (the university) to a halt." of reference in which to judge
So far there has been no of- the perrenial neurosis which asficial stand on the demonstrasails this country prior to Janutions and the strike taken by ary first. Living in Buffalo it is
organized labor, but members of very easy to understand Christa number of unions have honor
mas as , part of the "seasonal
ed the 500 pickets at the enmyth” which in one form or antrances to the campus, and food other, from Gilgamesh to Pardelivery and work on university cifal, has pervaded Western soconstruction projects has been ciety,
but in lower latitudes the
seriously disrupted.
significance of Christmas as a
The sit-ins and arrests climaxlandmark on a spiritual journey
ed two months of demonstrations is much more readily apparent.
a comapparently triggered by
plaint by supporters of Senator
Barry Goldwater in the recent
presidential campaign.

there is no more an English Department on our beloved campus, dear students. This is but a very small sacrifice if you consider
that the returns of our action are the maintenance and the perpetuation of personal integrity in our honored institution."

",

,

.

cjCetteri

to

the Editor

Third Political Party
TO THE EDITOR:

There is a rumor about the
campus which indicates the establishment of a third political
party. This party—if one can call
it such—has as its intention the
improvement of the Student Senate, hence the Student Association, in a way which would reflect the interests of the entire
student body.
It is said that,

in an endeavor
to initiate this improvement, the
“independent party” seeks to
capture some, if not all, of the
thirty-three senate seats which

will become available in the
spring. Since this rumor has been
associated with my name, I would
like to clarify the issues which
the people making up this “independent party” stand for, in
relation to student government.
1 cannot claim credit for having
established a new political faction for the 1965 election. Further, it is simply not true that, at
this time, a third party does in
fact exist. However, I do contend
that there is a rising need for
another party, to give the students of this university a choice
between real student governors
and the ill-assorted conglomeration composing our present “representatives.” We should seek a
change.
Certainly we would like to
capture a 11 thirty-three senate
seats in the spring elections. We
want a reflection of our interests
in the policies and legislation
of the Student Senate. We don't
believe we arc alone; we don’t
think that this is a unique or
even an idealistic desire. It is
the function of senators X, Y,

and Z to represent the student
in fact, not mythically. It is our
belief that the present senators
have fallen down in this, their
primary responsibility to us. And

the seed of failure is spreading

like a cold germ in a crowded
elevator.
There is room on this campus
for improvement. Our two parties
are nothing more than carbon
copies of one another. This is a
farce in any government, which
evenutally manifests itself in control of all student by adminis-

trative personnel. Administrative
guidance is helpful when exercised with discretion, but we
should be sufficiently motivated
to control, support, and maintain
our own interests. We are certainly capable of doing so.
One hears much about “apathy”
and “disinterest” on our campus.
Attend a Student Senate meeting, See the most apathetic, disinterested people in Buffalo. And
watch the enthusiasm on the
observer’s faces. (I couldn't resist
there
this piece of sarcasm
aren’t any observers. Ninety percent of the chairs reserved for
“interested students” remain
empty for the duration of the
meeting.) Our student government suffers because we have
elected what appears to be the
—

wrong people.

As one senator recently said to
me, "The student government suf-

fers from the poverty of ideas."
Is one to assume that this poverty of ideas in the Student Senate
symbolizes a poverty of ideas in
the student body? I would hope
not!
—Ronald E. Bunch

Spectrum Scored

TO THE EDITOR

Frankly, it's a wonder to me
that students still read the Spectrum. I guess everyone hopes
that maybe there will finally be
something worthwhile in it to
read when they do pick it up
Few will deny that the quality
of this once outstanding publication is at an all time low. And
perhaps its widespread “circulation" (after all, it is free) is not
surprising- Many

low quality

wspapers are widely read, dehe their lack of journalistic
area where the Spectrum
ailed most miserably involves
Matiohship with the student
•nment here on campus. If
organization

?

lacks

1 accom

plishments of direct benefit to
the student body, the Spectrum
is at fault. Good or bad, this
newspaper can have power. This
fact I have already established.
Yet the editor has provoked the
Student Government President
into attacking this paper on
every misprint and error (not to
mention bias and journalistic dictatorship) which could be peeled

from its pages.
If the President's attack was
unwarranted (which 1 seriously
doubt), then the Editor’s provo-

cation was equally out of place.
But the fact remains that the
Editor wants an organized pressure group on this campus, not
a student government. He will
do whatever he feels necessary.
Kichard Manch.
—

In past years, students have
used the plaza at the Sather
Gate entrance to the campus as
a “Hyde Park” area for debates,
rallies and speeches covering the
full spectrum of political thought.
This fall, long after the Republican National Convention,
pro-Goldwater students complained to school officials about the
manner in which supporters of
Governor William Scranton had
used the area to recruit backers
for the Pennsylvania Governor.

This eventually led the dean
students, Katherine Towle, to
invoke a long-ignored regulation
prohibiting the use of the area for
off-campus political purposes. Stu
dents defied the ban and began
of

the protests.

Revisions Committee
SGA
To Harmonize
Senate

The Student
Constitu
tional Revisions Committee has
recently embarked upon a plan
to coordinate the varying interpretations of Constitution policy
now existing. The Committee’s
aim is to alter and strengthen
the Constitution to create more

Christmas is significant as a religious observance only in direct
relation to Easter, for Christmas
is a promise, a contract, which
Easter fulfills. It is the seasonal promsie that in the midst
of winter, spring will come, but
in the tropic world where "winter” is a just and easy way of
talking about the calendar, it
is a promise that the entire world
may in some way be fulfilled.
I am purposely ignoring purely
interpretations
of
theological
Christmas, since my disbelief in
the explicit body of dogma relating to Christmas (indeed to all
dogmatic religion) is a matter of
public record. But, as ! have
stated before, I believe that to
ignore and reject the images of
man’s search for God is to do a
great injustice to the importance
of that search, no matter what
its outcome.
On Christmas in the town of
Charlotte Amalie there is a
street dance and a motley regatta in the harbor. The steel bands
and the colorful tourists are a
commercialism of a sortT but
remembering the spontaneous
good will which that celebration
generated makes it easier to
recognize the “commercialism"
of our own Northern Christmas
The grim and haggard crowds
fighting to buy cheap junk at
outrageous
“seasonal"
prices
form such a psychic contrast to
the happy crowds dancing in the
square in front of the governor’s
mansion one must realize that
“commercialism" is really a red

harmony among the four coordinate organs of student govern
ment.
The Committee indicates that
radical changes in the Constitution might be mandatory. One
frequently mentioned suggestion herring. Christmas should be a
is that action be taken on the time of case and good will as
problem of basic division of pow well as religious involvement,
ers among the Executive, Legisla but the simple fact is that buying
live and Judicial branches of does not make people happy;
happiness is involved with the
student government.
Commenting on the proposed heart and the spirit and not the
Most
critics
of
alteration, David Frey, Constipocketbook
t u t i o n a 1 Revisions Committee American Christmas say that the
Chairman, stated: "It has been “Christmas message" is lost in
the feeling of the members of the crush of compulsive spendthe Constituitonal Revisions Com- ing, that the religious signifimittee that a modified, return to cance of Christmas is lost in the
the basic and fundamental return hurly-burly of liquor ads and
to the Constitution of the United plastic Santa Clauses, but I say
States will serve not only to that the secularism of Christmas
heighten the efficiency of student is important to the satisfaction

government, but will allow for
the avoidance of the kinds of
conflictual problems which exist
under the present system.”
Robert Finkelstein, president
of the Student Senate, feels that
student government has many
strides, but sometimes in spite of
the Constitution, rather than be
cause of it. He comments that
“The Student Association Constitution has certain weaknesses
which can gravely hamper the
functioning of student govern

of the whole person, the whole
I argue with the Down
Town Merchants not so much
because they sell junk as because selling junk doesn’t make
society.

anybody happy. I just saw a
game (or sale in the Uniformity
Bookstore called “Acquire”; now
I’m not sure that as a game it
might not be fun to play, like
"Monopoly,” but as anything
more than a game it can only

leave the human animal unsatisfied. The public ceremony of
Christmas should satisfy the
social animal, just as the religious ceremony

should satisfy

the spiritual animal.
This may sound like hair splitting, but for one very important
reason I believe that it is not.
1 believe that there is a continuity between the environment
in which we must live and the
condition of our internal life. If
we are forced to walk around
down town looking at the miserable shoppers buying bedroom
slippers
for their
brothersin-law, then our whole apprehension of Christmas will be
subtly and radically
altered.
Every intelligent and sensitive
person must sooner or later suffer from “Christmas Syndrome”
when he is faced with bad music
and worse ads, all of which impinge on his sense of what is
right about Christmas by forcing to look only at what is
wrong. In the equitorial realms
all the “Rudolf the Red-nosed
Reindeer nonsense" just isn’t
relevant.
The economics of
sugar producing
islands are
minimal and compusive present
giving is prohibited by general

economic

lassitude.

Thus

the

true commercialism of Christmas,

the commercialism of convivial-

ity, make Christmas a joyous
holiday, and make the apprehension of the keregma
of
Christmas the natural outgrowth
of the Christmas experience,
rather than a laborous and
empty exercise.
Between the experience and
the institution of the Christmas
holiday lies the mysterious geography of our own lives. Ultimately it is we who must create
a meaning out of the lights and
the music, but in a much more
basic sense we do that every
moment. We travel through our-

selves from experience to community, and finally Christmas
precipitates us into the human
community. The institution og
Christmas places us all in a
common environment, perhaps
more than any other social experience short of war. We may
rail at the trappings and trimmings which inevitably accompany this event in this age, but
the experience of community,
whether it be in snow covered
hills with somber skys or on a
glaring beach where the breakers all but drown the sounds of
laughing children, must eventually be the emblem by which each
of us recognize Christmas.

on our campus. Therefore,
we are presently endeavoring to
compose a, structure more con
ducive to a powerful student as-

meht

sociation.”
Mr. Finkelsteir predicts that
the newly revised Constitution
will be presented to the student
body shortly after the commencement of the second semester The
revisions will he put before the
students in the form of a referendum during the annual March

READINESS TODAY . . Air Foret pilots rtet for thoir superionic
Convair F-102 Delta Daggers during an exercise at an air bate in
Viet-Nam. The F-102's were tent to Southeast Asia in August 1964
as part of Iho U.S. buildup fallowing the Gulf of Tonkin crisis.
(U.S. Air Force Photo)
(AFNS)
.

�Activities Cure For Apathy Scholarships

Greek Notes
Alpha Epsilon Pi would like to
congratulate the new Executive
Board for next semester; Master.

Steven Rosner: Lieutenant Master, Steven Smith; Sr Member at
Large, Samuel Ratick; Sentinel,
Gary Goldberg: Scribe. Steven
Rule.

Alpha Gamma Delta is holding
a dated Bohemian Party tonite at
Johnny's Night Owl.
Sunday the Alpha Gams will go
Caroling at the Veterans Hospital.
Sister Alice Wittcnburg has
been chosen as a member of Pi
Mu Epsilon, the math honorary.
Chi Omega congratulates Pat
lacuzzo and Evelyn Chapin for
their outstanding work as chair
men of Silver Ball and Mr For
mal, respectively.
The sisters will go .Christmas
Caroling with Theti Chi Fraternity tonight A social will follow
The sisters and pledges will
hold a Christmas party Monday
evening.

Sigma Delta Tau sorority is
looking forward to the volleyball
game between

pledges.
Alpha

the sisters

Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY-TWO

and

Phi Omega will hold
their annual Christmas party Saturday at the Orchard Park Mo-

-

The strongest defense against

Congratulations to the

newly

elected officers: Rich Angclino,
President; Hud Cicera, Vice President; Lee Schweichler, Pledge

Master: Danny Clements, Corresponding Secretary; and Carl Millerschoen, Recording Secretary.
Phi Lambda Delta is holding
a trct r trimming party Saturday

161 Grider Street.
Pi lambda Tau Fraternity will
hold their dinner-dance Saturday,
December 19, in the Ballroom of
the Hotel Markeen.
Tonight, Sigma Phi Epsilon will
sponsor a closed Christmas party
at Leonardo’s, featuring Jay
Moran and his band until 2:00
a m. Saturday, the brothers will
have a date party at Lou DeVincentis’ summer cottage.
night at

Theta Chi Fraternity will have
a social with Chi Omega tonight.
Saturday night, we will have a
party at brother Gcrric’s home
with a band and liquid refreshment provided. The brothers are
having a candy sale and will call
on you soon. Many brothers are
returning for New Year’s party
here in Buffalo and wish to extend an invitation to all their
friends.

any degree of apathy is interest,
a personal commitment of interest. Apathy is a term applied to
the masses, but interest is at
tributed to the individual. Upon
looking closely at the UB campus, one can see diverse individuals showing interest in a variety
of areas.
One such growing area is that
of student activities. The fact that
new organizations ranging from
Bridge Club to the Sociology Club

have gained recognition in the
year gives support to the

Available

are always welcomed. Any new
group with some structure of organization may pick up an application form for Senate recognition form for Senate recognition
in Room 235 Norton. It then receives six weeks temporary recognition, enabling it to use Union
facilities and publicize using the
university’s name. Upon review
and approval of their constitution, the organization is granted
recognition by the Student Senate and is eligible for Senate
financial appropriatons.

Two national scholarships for
college senior girls are offered
for 1965-1966 by the Katherine
Gibbs School. These awards were
established in 1935 as a memorial
to Mrs. Katherine M. Gibbs, founder and first president of the
School.
Each scholarship consists ' of
full tuition ($1,200) for the secretarial training course, plus an
additional cash award

statement that what appears to
be lack of interest on the part
of the students may actually be
a shifting of interests. The many
extra curricular o r eo-curricular
activities provide an expansive
area within which a student may
develop.

There is student interest, and
it is our goal to inform, the. students of the existence of organ

izations that can meet his needs
and interests, perhaps in this
way weakening the myth of cam
pus apathy.
It is realized that a group of
students may develop common
interest in an area not already
provided

for. New organizations

—

Providence.
Winners are chosen by the
Scholarship Committee on the
basis of college academic record,
personal and character qualifications, financial need, and potentialities for success in business.

How To End It All
(ACP)—If you flunk a test, and
all else fails, THE NAVIGATOR,
Jacksonville University, Jacksonville, Fla., suggests you walk
right up and say:

Each college or university may
recommend two candidates, anil
each candidate must have this

“Professor, over 100 years ago,
Charles Colton pointed out that
“Examinations are formidable
even to the best prepared, for the
greatest fool may ask more than
the wisest man may answer.”
And, Professor, that’s the trouble
in your class,”

official endorsement. Students
who may be interested in competing for one of these Katherine
Gibbs awards may obtain full
information from the college
placement bureau.

tel The Brothers would like to

express their gratitude to Mr.
Gondrec for sponsoring a Punch
Party at his house, and to thank
all the Brothers and Pledges for
their work on the Beer Mug
snow sculpture.
Beta Phi Sigma this preceding
week celebrated its 76th birthday.
Beta Phi Sigma was founded December 16, 1888. It is the oldest
Greek letter fraternity on cam
pus. This past week the brothers
also attended a cocktail party
at Brother Karam's house pre-

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
IS FAYING 50% OF LIST
FOR MANY OF YOUR
USED TEXTBOOKS NOW

ceding the Pharmacy School
Christmas Dance.
Beta Sigma Rho Fraternity is
proud to present their 16th annual Autumn Nocturn today at
the Parkway Inn at Niagara Falls,
New York Music is by the Jay
Moran Orchestra Dancing is at
9:00 p in. Donation is $3.00, Everyone is welcome.
Gamma Phi will hold a toboggan party at Chestnut Ridge to
morrow evening
The Brothers would like to extend their thanks to Al Bailey
for the use of his apartment for
their cocktail party last Saturday.
are planning a
Newrars Party. Anyone who is
interested in details should contact Hay at TX 5-1931, or Jim at
HR 3 3417
Phi Epsilon Pi will hold its
final party for the semester. It
will be a closed swimming party
and hootenanny at Kissing Bridge
Resort A bus will leave at 6:30

-•JSSf A S.
sffi

p.m
As in previous years, Phi Ep’s
Santa Claus will visit Saint Regis
Home for Retarded Children to
present candy canes and good
cheer to the children
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity will
hold their annual Christmas party
at the Chuck Wagon. Abbott
Road, tomorrow night. The New

"Be it resolved that .the PHAR
MACY SCHOOL STUDENT AS
SOCIATION COUNCIL, having
read both the Spectrum and
President Kinkelstcin's comments bn the Spectrum, fully en
dorse President Finkelstein un
his stand concerning the policies
lenient of the" Spec
Paul Scott Penner. Presiden
Judith Meahl. Secretary

LITTLE KNOWN PACTS
Old Spice or new toys,
of

Christmas

cedent: Kinr

ha
Henry

VII

€lf

at

TEXTBOOK

Year's Eve Party will also be
held at the Chuck Wagon.

Spectrum Scored

£

InStotk- PLENTY OF

REVIEWS
FOR FINALS
Littlefield, Adams College Outlines
Barnes &amp;,Noble
Schaums
Data Guides
Cliffs Notes
Monar

Reviews

'

AND MANY
OTHERS

of $500.

totaling $1,700. The winners may
select any one of the four Gibbs
schools for their training
Boston, New York, Montclair, or

past

——

OI!S for Kids

*"9»«e«r;.

•*Sr°Tho 'T**“
oraw,ng

•

unusual

D
AND

7

T

eoui

****t,o*al

'

M ‘”

ctfTJ

I

�Dacambar 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

The Solemn Art of Drinking
Had Religious Beginning

War Toys Are College Students and Faculty
Very Popular Problem of Identity Faces

-

Whether it’s skoal, salud or
cheers that’s exclaimed, the toast
is the shot heard ’round the
worid. It rings out wherever
there’s laughter, love and liquid,
Oddly enough, this happy custom had a solemn start. The
ancients drank to their gods and
their dead during religious rites,
It wasn’t long, however, before
some good-time Greeks got the

west, would stop at the tavern

for a last round of drinks with
the boys. The thought on everyone’s mind was: would the new
land be rocky and hard to plow.
or would the soil be soft and
rich, throwing specks of mud
into the eye of the man behind
the plow? The toaster hoped for
the latter when he said, “Here’s
mud in your eye”.

1

A man with the hostile voice of
police sergeant boomed
over the television airwaves a
couple of nights ago. He was describing guns, tanks, bombs. Then
he launched into a devious statement about "destroying whole
cities,"

No, this wasn't a scenario from
some Class C horror film: it was
an advertisement for kids’ toys,
With the Christmas gift season
quickly approaching the toy mak
ers are already making their
pitch. Evidently war toys are
really "going to sell like gangbusters" this

year.

The anonymous announcer, in
the most authoritarian tone he
could muster, vividly pictured
"Commando," a gift that can
make a boy into a calculating
kijlqr. Plastic hand grenades come
with this delightful toy which
includes the traditional rifle and
synthetic rubber bayonet.
Then there was another cute
toy, lovingly called “Atomic War-

fare.”
A second advertisement followed immediately, extolling the
virtues of a toy which molds plastic weapons. You must drop in a
wad of plastic, wait a minute, and
presto, you have a Bazooka. Every
home can become a simulated war

idea of drinking to the here and
now.

—

The Romans were even heartier.
They complimented their lady
friends by draining a cup for
each letter in the damsel’s name.
Undoubtedly the hostess with the
mostes’ syllables won the popularity poll. One of the noblest
fellow
a
Romans-about-town,
named Petronius, coined a phrase
that has come down through the
centuries. “Let us wet our whistles!” was his contribution to

conviviality.
Anglo-Saxon toasts were even
shorter, as might be expected
from the tough, fiercely-fighting
beer drinkers. (There beer was

called

Since then, we’ve toasted love
and war, mother and money
we’ve even toasted the bank.
There are tender toast? and dryly
humorous ones. Mark Twain’s
witticism: “Let us toast the fools
—but for them the rest of us

“mead” and made

from
honey.) “Waes hael!”
the drinkers would cry (literally
translated: “be healthy!”). The

fermented

hygenic beverage soon came to

be called “wassaij.”
It wasn’t until the 17th century that people called a toast
a toast. The term derived from
a quaint English custom of floating a piece of toast in the drink
to improve its flavor. The legend
goes that a lord once visited a
lady after her bath. The gallant
gent filled a wineglass with the
bathwater and announced that
he would drink to her health.
His sensible sidekick advised him
to pass up the drink and take
the toast instead
meaning the
pretty girl who had recently
floated in that particular ‘punch’.
For a long time after that,
ladies were called “toasts” and
toasts were drunk only to ladies.
Britons often toasted their true
loves on bended knee. Scots were
more athletic. Scotsmen have
drunk to auld lang syne for over
200 years with one foot placed
on the table, the other on the
chair. Try that next time you
say, “bottoms up!"
Although American toasting
procedure could’nt be simpler
ijust stand, clink and drink), our
toasts are among the most colorful in the world. Who hasn't
heard or said, “Here's mud in
your eye?” The phrase was born
in pioneer days when a farmer,
about to leave town and head
—

plant.
Finally

that

police

sergeant

turned toy salesman ended his
message. He was followed by
what first appeared to be an edu
rational show for kids about the
Wild West. It brought back marvelous memories of reading Land
could not succeed.”
Many toastmasters drink to the mark books about Wild Bill Hie
drink in their hand. “Here’s kok and Buffalo Bill.
But the host with the cherubic
champagne to our real friends,
and real pain to our sham smile wasn’t praising these heros;
friends.” Said English poet Lord he was debunking the legends of
Byron, “Let us have wine and the West. Buffalo Bill was a
women, mirth and laughter. Serdrunken bum who was often so
mons and soda water the day boozed up he couldn’t sit upafter.”
night in the saddle, he said. Wyatt
Not too surprisingly, the ladies Earp was never even a marshall
remain our best-toasted subject. in Wichita. He wrote a fictitious
“Here’s to the pictures on my autobiography which made him
desk. May they never meet,” is famous. General Custer was a
the college man’s dearest wish. stupid dandy who delighted in
The sailor raises his glass to scalping defenseless Indian chilthis one: “Here's to the ships dren.
of our navy and the ladies of
How could that man with the
our land. May the first be well round
angelic face do that to the
rigged and the latter well man kids who were watching him?
ned.” Not to be outdone, the
They would grow up as cynics,
Army man says: “Here’s to the looking for cracks in every hero
soldier and his arms/Foll in, men, who came along. They would profall in. Here's to women and bably never
collect autographs
her arms/Fall in, men, fall in." again.
Other diversions receive their
Maybe that's why war toys are
due. The amateur fisherman isn’t
the big sellers nowadays. Withforgotten: “Here’s to our fisherout a few unstained heros, vioman gold/Here’s to the fish he
caught/Here’s to the one that got lence is about all that's left.
away/And here’s to the one he

It seems that those who are
participating in the process of
higher education
students, faculty, and administrators all—are
being entangled in a problem of
identity. At the same time, higher education itself in these United States" has come to a point in
history where it must decide just
where it is going. In a sense, the
—

educational

Business as well as pleasure
Father of the American Christis commemorated. Salesmen toast mas card industry was German
their profession thus: “Here’s to born Louis Prang who in 1874
us. Never sell a salesman short." began making cards in Roxbury,
Farmers get a pat on the back Mass. By 1880, his presses were
and a clink of the glass: “Good turning out five million a year
luck to the hoof and the horn/ (the biggest U S. firm now prints
Good luck to the flock and the that many in a day.). Today,
cards
fleece/Good luck to the growers come in 50,000 different designs
of corn/With blessings of plenfrom 300 manufacturers.
ty and peace.”
There’s even a toast for those
who rarely work. Hobos raise
their mugs thusly: "Here’s to de
holidays! Bless de hull free
hundred and sixty-five of 'em!”
An in an entirely different vein
it is spoken by Tiny Tim in that
immortal story of Christmas good
will, “A Christmas Carol”:
“Here’s to us all ■—r God bless
us everyone.”

An Evening with

Shlomo CARLEBACH
Guitarist Folksinger
345 Tacoma Ave., near Colvin
Sunday January 3, 1965
8:30 P.M.
75&lt; per person
Tickets available at the door

process

and

those

participating in it must stop for

aVreassessment.

The problem of identity is ac
ccntuated by the switchover in
many universities to the computer system of registration. This
causes not only students to become known as mere numbers
but also affects professors. They
are confronted with a class roll
which is a list of numbers
—

numbers which must be matched
up with scat numbers. If the instructor is an advisor to undergraduates, he too probably has
a number.

The administrators fare no bet

ter. The university president (No.
I) turns to his dean of students,
“Say, A 41, I'm thinking of rec

ommending the student body
president . .
What's his number? F 108 789?
for that
graduate fellowship. What do you
...

think?’’
“Well, I’m not for sure. I have
a feeling we should talk to Professor 1067 first. | think he has
some number else in mind.’’

become enthused about higher education when it becomes apparent that he is a number, seated
numerically in a certain room
number, turning in assignments
to a numbered professor for a
numbered grade, to be averaged
at the semester’s end for a numbered grade point.
Now to examine the problem
facing the universities. Although,
private and parochial schools are
being hit hard, the main brunt
of the post-war baby boom is beinb borne by state land grant
colleges . As the "name" schools,
especially in the East, fill up, students are moving West and to
smaller state schools elsewhere.
This mass migration every fall
of students from one corner of

the country to the other has
caused the land grant colleges
to examine their philosophy.
Should they be concerned primar
ily with educating students in
their own states, penalizing outofstaters? Or should they raise
their entrance requirements, excluding in state students at the
expense of belter qualified inter
lopers?

The problem of identity—that
is, just what should the university be and what are its aims
—is one that faces higher education everywhere. And those
who are participating in the higher educational process must resolve the same problem.

The student finds it hard to

UNITED
AIR UNES
STEWARDESS
NEW PEOPLE
NEW PLACES
NEW YOU
•
•

SINGLE
HEIGHT

-

•WEIGHT
•

bought.”

Ahauos Achim Lubavitz Synagogue presents

-

PAGE TWENTY-THREE

.

Friday,

AGE 1914 26
5’9”
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SPRING
WINTER
SUMMER
CLASSES AVAILABLE NOW
-

WRITE TODAY

EMPLOYMENT MANAGER

UNITED AIR LINES

GTR. Pittsburgh Airport

brewed for braves.

-

Pittsburgh, Pa. 15231

An Equal Opportunity Employer

�Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY-FOUR

rjCetterd to the

ddditor

The History of The Christmas Tree:
Ancient Greece Through Modern America

To most modern Americans the
Christmas tree is a dazzling symbol of Yuletide gaiety. People
flock to see such famous firs as
nomic superstructure is the the giant tree
TO THE EDITOR
in New York’s
abundant supply of cheap! black Rockefeller Plaza. But many peoDr. Manning's lecture attemptlabor. Without it, this super-strucare unaware of the long and
ture would crumble—or at least ple
ing to justify the Republic of
fascinating history behind this
South Africa’s apartheid racial
be drastically reduced. Yet, if
familiar Christmas sight.
policy may very well have
apartheid is carried to it’c logiThe Bible tells how Jesus “bore
seemed quite rational Indeed the
cal culmination—as Dr. Manning
our sins in His own body on the
believes it should be—this is
situation in South Africa is ex(I Peter 2:24). According to
precisely what would happen. tree”
tremely difficult; and he is right
Oswald Hoffmann, who is
in proclaiming that the white
The labor pool which South Af- Dr.
30 million listeners on
electorate will not now—and will rican industrialists draw upon heard by
probably never in the future—- would be eliminated. In other radio’s The Lutheran Hour, the
words, successful apartheid can Christmas tree does have great
agree to some sort of integrareligious significance for many
tion. Yet, as Dr. Manning has only be virtually the economic people around the world. Howpointed out, something must be
suicide of white
as well as
ever, trees were not always
■done in an effort of achieving black—South Africans.
Without doubt, the present looked upon in the way we see
racial justice and harmony in
government of South Africa is them today.
that country He prefers to sup
In ancient Greece, for examport a solution which would stay perfectly aware of this; it canwithin the constitutional boundnot be infered that this sole ple, the fir was sacred to the
aim is for a complete and “just” worshippers of Dionysius, and a
ries established by the racist,
white rulers Apartheid may not apartheid is carried to it’s logi- branch tipped with cones and
be the best solution, he says,
a front for the rest of the world twined with ivy was carried in his
—especially the westhern world honor. The wood of the silver fir
but it is the only practical solution short of violence and revo--to see. They can now say; was used in the ceiling of Sololution.
“Sec! We are trying; we are sin- mon’s temple.
cerely trying to create racial jusApartheid, or complete racial
Romans of pre-Christian times
tice in our country!” But no ofseparation, has many shortcomdecorated a tall conifer in celeings—not the least of which is
ficial of that government really bration of the arrival of winter.
a reactionary reversion to tribalwants apartheid; he would inAnd primitive European tribes
ism. But it’s main disadvantage deed shudder at the thought. took fir trees into their homes to
lies in it’s economic effects: no These facts seemed to have please the “tree spirits” who
South African could sanely deny
slipped Dr. Manning’s mind.
might then reward them with imEugene Czora
that the foundation of their ecomortality.
In the Votjak tribe of early
Finland, the fir tree was regarded
as sacred, and certain branches
Campus Conditions Sighted
were thought of as family gods to
which sacrifices must be made.
Offerings of bread, meat and
TO THE EDITOR
A. The word '‘criteria’' is a
given to a tree placed
plural. One might expect drink were
on the mantle; and the Votjaks
, standard English in an ediAs a faculty member who is
believed that a new house could
torial.
generally sympathetic with the
not be built unless a fir was
“liberal" position that seems to
B. In self-defense, the faculty placed
under the roof, a cloth
be prevalent among our student
will have to request segrespread before the tree, and sacriam
body, I
gated washrooms. The studriven by certain confices laid out on the cloth!
ditions on campus to commend to
dents do not seem to have
The Ostyak tribe of Siberia
that
the
students the idea
liberal
ever learned the basic manused a fir pole to represent the
and other causes that you arc so
ner of using such establishfir tree, and they ,too, placed
vociferous in defending might be
ments.
sacrifices before it. According
better served if you attended to
to The Lutheran Hour’s Dr. HoffGeorge L. Trager
certain details of ordinary acmann, one of the probable reacepted behavior. I shall mention
Professor of Anthropology
sons for the popularity of the
only two:
and Linguistics
fir tree as a religious symbol was
the fact that it was an evergreen:
it always flourished through each
of the four seasons, and was symKlinger Rebuttal
bolic of a beloved God who was

candles replaced by electric light
bulbs as a safety measure, but
fondness for setting up a glittering tree remained strong.
Some people regard it as unlucky to have an odd number of
Christmas lights on the tree, and
there are many who believe it is

would follow if a fir tree outside
the home were struck by light
ning. And in medieval Bavaria,
poachers ate the seeds of a fir
tree before dawn on St. John's
morn to make themselves invisi
ble from lawmen!
In modern America, however,

necessary to remove the tree before Twelfth Night, or Epiphany.
Other people say it is important

the Christmas tree is looked upon
as a symbol of joy and good will
to others. And, although it’s
straight and green, many children
see it as curved and many-colored
—as the rainbow at the bottom of
which, on Christmas morning,
they find the treasures they’ve
waited for breathlessly.

,

Manning Questioned

—

:

TO THE EDITOR

Though I was very appreceia

live of the constructive nature
of Mr Gismondi’s criticism of
my views in last week's Spectrum, I nevertheless feel that
my views have been misinterpreted and therefore heed to be
clarified. Mr Gismondi’s letter
implied that I had advocated
"discourteous"
behavior. Nowhere in my letter did I say
the audience should have “banged their shoes," booed or insulted Dr. Apcthckcr, or engaged in any such impolite activity. What I said then and
still maintain was that Dr ApeIheker should not have been applauded and critical questions
should not be condemned.
Pertaining to the first point.
Webseter's Dictionary defines ap
plause as "praise" or “the expression of approval." Mr, Gismondi staled that he did not
agree with Dr Apetheker; yet
he criticized me both for not
favoring the applause for Apetheker. and for favoring the applause for anti-Communist panel
members. I can’t understand this.
Pertaining to the second point,
Mr. Gismondi slated "I do not
think that Miss Lcvanthal was
critical of the questions and
the impolite reaction to ques
lions was condemned The fact
is that in. her letter Miss Lcvenlhal wrote that “Dr Apethekcr
consented to the questions so
that we might be further enlightened
, the reason for this
"

’

question period was not to trip
up the speaker or snow him
un der
These questions
were not intended to put him on
the spot. . ■. This was clearly

the intention of the program.”
Thus it was both the critical questions and the applause for them

which Miss Levanthal had objected to, and 1 had supported.
Mr. Gismondi also stated that
“although he may be considered

.
dangerous by some people .
he is a man who was educated in
S,
and
the U.
had the highest
academic degree conferred upon
him,” Yet my quarrel with Dr.

Apetheker is not with his place
of birth or academic achievement, but rather his ideology—an idealogy which 1 might add

has caused other native Americans to betray their country by
becoming Russian spies.
It is this ideology which has
caused the deaths of so many
human beings in Hungary. Poland, Finland. Germany, China,
Cuba and the Congo. I wonder
whether a person from any of
those nations would have considered my suggestion to refrain
from applauding- Apetheker and
to ask him critical questions
to be too impolite; or whether
they would want to show a lot
more discourtesy than that. Yet
just because we were blessed to
be born in a free country—does
that mean that we Have no obligation to promote other people's freedom? And do we promote the freedom of these peoples by showing a Communist
leader that we “praise” or “approve of” their policies of denying freedom and mass murder?
I doubt it:
This then was the real issue
to which 1 was' refering in my

letter—the issue of freedom—and not an issue of semantics
about "politeness to a gentleman—Frank Klinger

immortal.
In ancient Germany, the fir was
said to cure gout! Some patients
believed that if they went to a
fir tree after sundown on three
successive Fridays and recited a
rhyme, they would transfer their
gout to the tree; if it withered
and died, the cure was thought to

be working.
Germans ot the Middle Ages put
on church plays in which a "tree
of Paradise" was used to represent the garden of Eden. When
authorities put a stop to public
displays of this nature, the tree
was transferred to the home,
where some families hung cookies
and fruit on it.
The first person to put candles

on a Christmas tree was the 16th
century German theologian Mar
tin Luther. The Lutheran Hour's
Dr. Hoffmann relates that while
walking home one night shortly
before Christmas, Martin Luther
felt a strong tie between the
lovely forest he was in, the star
ry heavens above, and his love
for God. At home he placed tapers on a little evergreen tree
to recapture the scene for his
children by showing them how
beautiful AIic stars had looked
high branches of the
ftf'forest as they winked in the

skies.
The custom of decorating a
Christinas tree spread throughout
Germany, and eventually through
out Europe. It was introduced in
England in 1841 by Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's German
husband.
German immigrants
brought the practice to the U.S.
19th
century. The first
in the
Christmas tree in America was
displayed in Cambridge, Mass., in
1832.
The early twentieth century saw

that decorations be removed before Candlemas (February 2nd)
or “misfortune” will follow.
In Central Europe it was
thought that death of the master
or mistress of the household

ING

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CALL TL 2-1606 FOR

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340 Delaware Avenue
BUFFALO 2, N. Y.

''ft*

�Friday,

December 18, 1964

aCetterS

the Editor

to

Sporn Case

PAGE

SPECTRUM

-

N M DuBois Club
Not Recognized

Three Issues

ALBUQUERQUE (CPS)
The
University of New Mexico admin—

TO

THE EDITOR

The recent dismissal of Mr.
Paul Sporn has triggered a barrage of charges and countercharges. It appears that there
are at least three separate issues
involved in the incident, and unfortunately these issues have been
thoroughly confused in the controversy. First,

is the Feinberg

certificate a reasonable and constitutional requirement of the
University, Second, was Mr. Sporn
a member of the Communist
party as an employee for willfully giving false information.
Only the last two issues are
significant in this cast. By agreeing to sign the Feinberg certificate Mr. Sporn presumably accepted its validity, at least it

could be tested in the courts. The
second issue was decided in a
hearing conducted according to
academic due process. The third
issue no one seems to question.
Hence any objections raised about
Mr. Sporn’s dismissal should be
directed to the conduct of the

The unfortunate part of this
entire incident is that Mr. Sporn's
case has been equated with that
of the small group of faculty
who had the courage to refuse
to sign the Feinberg certificate.
It is significant that, despite the
loud protests eminating from the
faculty, only a handful did no!
sign. The AAUP, instead of sponsoring a mass refusal of the
faculty to sign the certificate,
only issued vague reassurances
that those who did not sign would
be supported by AAUP. This is
rather cold comfort when ones
livelihood is at stake. The University might have taken quite
a different point of view had
they been faced with dismissing
500 faculty members rather than
5.

Let us not confuse the courage
of these few will) the other questions in Mr. Sporn’s dismissal.
Their case can only suffer in the

comparison.

Robert E. Mates
Asst. Prof, of Engineering

hearing.

Sarbin Answered
TO THE EDITOR

was to be carried out regardless

Rosy Sarbin’s letter of 2 weeks
ago, condemning the apparently
mollified state of the “hippys”,
although it approaches the problem symptomatically, is, in principle, praiseworthy, That is, what
it lacks in accuracy, it balances
in a call to action. The hip person is aware of the value of
institutions, the efficacy to action, and the general and gross
stupidity of the superstructural
appurtenances foisted upon the
individual. He is, incongruous as
it may seem, also aware of the
value of the Marlboro-smoking,
mohair set.

There is the inimation that hip-

pies are perpetually sedentary
and never risk action. HUAC was
cited as an example of this alleged hip lassitude. I was there.
And I do not remember seeing
an abundance of mohair sweaters.
The picket did not originate in
the Student Senate, but among
the “hippies”, who fought against

mohairers and other non-commiters for official sanction
not
for their own satisfaction, but
to find a safe and secure means
to include those who would not
take the initiative otherwise.
Picketing, you will remember,
—

of the decision of the Senate.
Many of these depricated “hippies” recently took part in voter
registration.

The hip, the aware person, is
interested in activities like the
soon-to-begin Quaker Weekend
Work Camps, which serve to oppose, if not overcome, stupidity
in all its forms. There are hangers-on in every movement
known generally as beatniks. The
origin of the term beat is, as
John Clellan Holmes points out,
beatitude, beatific. The living of
a good life, not impinging upon
the rights of others, fighting for
that assurance of freedom for
all men, and revising and creating realistic, workable values, is
the greatest contribution of the
hip person. He who is not aware
is not hip. Beatniks are not hip.
Beats are. Some who are not beat
are. The true “hippy” is one of
the most sensible and valuable
members of a responsible culture
(cultare, to tend) and society, and
is constantly seeking new matrices of active expression for the
economic and moral advance of
the world.
—

Daniel John Zimmerman

istration has turned "thumbs
down" on an application by the
Albuquerque chapter of the
W E B. DuBois Clubs of America
for recognition as a bona fide
student group.
The action came several weeks
after New Mexico President Tom
L. Popejoy announced the group
would be denied recognition if it
ever applied for it because F.B.I.
Director J. Edgar Hoover had
denounced the national DuBois
group as a "Communist-spawned

1 have recently spoken with
Dr Leonard Serfustini, our basketball coach, and would like to
Pass along some of our comments
to you. Dr. Serfustini is in a unique position, and needs our as-

sistance.

Our basketball team is one
which is gaining in stature every
ay However, our home court,
lark Gymnasium, because of the

nofficial

nature of the court

nd its limited spectator capa■ty, is unacceptable to many po-

ntial basketball foes. Therefore,
we are to have a ranking team,
e must play some of our games

Isewhere.
Because of this, Dr. Serfustini

contacted
the
Canisius
°Hege basketball team to have
he State University of New York
d Buffalo play three early games
n Memorial Auditorium, precedn S Canisius games. These games
arc:
urday, January 16—
Buffalo State

aturday, January 31—
Steubenville

These games will begin at 7:30
p.m., followed by the Canisius
game, which will begin at 9:30
p.m. The student price is $100
and covers both games. In addition, the State University of New
York at Buffalo will play in a

single schedule,

ruary 9, also at

Tuesday,

the

the Albuquergue DuBois chapter,
in a prepared statement called
for de jure and de facto recognition of the club as a legitimate
student group.
He said the constitution of the
student government specifically
stipulates that “No students shall
be denied full and equal rights'
in the student community for reasons of race, nationality, sex, religion, or political beliefs.”
“This is not . . . just a battle
over the recognition of the DuBois Club,” he said, “but rather a
fight for students over the right
of students to oreanize and narticipate on that basis as well as
others in student life. It is a
fight for freedom of speech and,

not open to public inspection or
inquiry.
“We are thus denied access to
any evidence that might exist
against us either
if any does
to determine its nature or to
clearly disprove it," Kennedy
'

„

ested).

Robert Finkelstein

mid year

stay with

us.

The Druids of ancient Britain

paid it more than lip service
they thought it could heal disease
neutralize poisons, and protect
against witchcraft! They wore
charm bracelets and rings made

—

of mistletoe, and fastened

the

plant over their doorways to ward
off evil spirits.

lucky man a kiss beneath its
beginning a smacking good custom.

branches

—

I

is

Walking home one night

Luther.

before Christmas, the Reformation leader felt a strong tig
between the starry night and the
love of God. At home, he placed
candles on a little evergreen tree
to help his children experience

the same wonder of God's heavens. The custom grew and spread
through Northern Europe, then tn
America.

The word “carol'’ means to dance
in a ring, and the man who popularized the practice was the beloved St. Francis of Assisi. To
bring the Christmas message vividly and directly to his 13th century villagers, most of whom
could not read, he arranged a
manger scene using real people
and animals. When the villagers
came to sec it, St. Francis led
them in joyous celebration
—

"caroling".

About those Christmas stock

(Sift

.

low

as

—

One of the most recent of the
popular Christmas customs is the
Christmas card. The first one was
sent in 1845 by W. C. Dobson, one
of Queen Victoria's favorite paint
ers. Louis Prang of Boston made
the first American Christmas
cards in 1875, but only during the
last 50 years has the practice of
sending Yuletidc cards become
widespread.

rsSr ss.

liras From

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one legend says that the
original St. Nicholas
who was
a charitable Turkish bishop
taking pity on a man too poor to
provide a dowry for his daughters, dropped gold pieces into a
stocking hung up by the fire to
dry.

inns:

History records many other
Christmas customs. But in all
lands which celebrate this an
cient holiday, the feelings of reverence and joy are the same.

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S

TH§
"

I am hopeful that you will take
advantage of these events and
support our basketball team. This
year will mean a great deal

ave your

COMMENCEMENT AND
WEEKEND GUESTS

It is important that we support
this Memorial Auditorium schedule, for the future of a fine basketball team may hinge upon this
year’s turnout. A possibility to
increase interest might be “After
the Game” parties. Your group
might also consider buying block
tickets for these events. (Season
tickets at a price of $3 00 each
are available, if you are inter-

stories about it.

popular

Of course, the Christmas tree
communication, freedom to dis- a center of attraction in most
seminate ideas, freedom to organ homes during the Yule season—ize and of assembly as students a place of honor, incidcntly, solidin the university community, by ly rooted in history. For thous
ands of years before Christ's
all students whatever their politbirth, evergreen trees were reical or social views.”
vered by German tribesmen as
Kennedy said “at least one faculty member” wrote Atty. Gen. symbols of immortality. When
pagans were converted to
Nicholas Katzcnbaeh asking for the
full documentation and evidence Christianity, they transferred
their feelings for the evergreen
of Hoover’s charges. He said Kat
zenbach’s reply was that all such to the new religion.
material in the Justice Depart
The first person to put lights
ment was classified material and on a Christmas tree was Martin

Feb

auditorium,
against Niagara. This game, will
be free.

While the exact origin of the
practice of kissing under the mistletoe is not known, there several

He also indicated the administration might be- willing to reshould the New Mexico
consider
student government approve the
DuBois charter.
James A. Kennedy, president of

said.
LeMoyne

*3ntereitinff (J3ec^innings

Hoover's charges.

—

Saturday, February 27—

(Customs

Marxist youth organization."
A Scandinaivan tale involves
Dean of Students Sherman E. Frigga, the goddess of love and
Smith, who announced the deci- beauty. Researchers report that
sion after receiving a formal ap
Frigga first made mistletoe an
plication for recognition from the emblem of love and granted some
president of the local chapter,
said, "The F.B.I., in matters of
this kind, is to be believed.”
Smith said, however, that the
door was not completely closed
to the club. He indicated the
school’s administration would be
willing to reconsider its decision
should the club be able to refute

—

Support Urged

TWENTY-FIVE

%
5000 Main Street

At esit SOW, N. Y. Thtuwiy

Wh olxble i-1If
&lt;

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

9

B|

�*

Friday, Dacambar 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY-SIX

ftP.lDIBTS

gI?IE(g'S“!aiP

WRESTLING PREVIEW
to the team and a definite crowd
pjcaser.
Bill Minor is a Junior who is
in the 130 pound weight bracket.
Bill attended Lehigh College in

For the last two weeks the
U.B. Wrestling team has been
preparing for what is hoped to
be a most favorable 1965 season
and with good reason. Wrestling
Coach Ron LaRocque points to a
number of factors that may very
possibly lead to an improved
season record over 1964's 6-4

his Freshman year and there he
was given the most valuable
Freshman award. Bill is of superior quality and has an almost uncanny working knowledge of the sport. He is strong,

mark.

quick, perceptive, probably one

First, last year’s squad connumber of sophohave now had a
year’s experience of varsity com-

of UB’s best.
Bob Jackson, a Senior in Physical Education, is Co-Captain
of the squad. Bob has been an

sisted of a
mores who

Sophomore and Junior years. Bob
is extremely competent and
shows an unusual ability to keep
cool under competitive pressure.
John Hessling will be a serious
contender for the 1947 pound
weight class. John has shown
much potential and is to be considered an excellent prospect for
his class. John moves well and
deliberately. Watch for superior
counter-wrestling from John.
Carmen Gautille is a 1960
graduate of Maryvale High in
Cheektowaga, New York. There
Carmen co-captained his varsity
football, wrestling and baseball
teams. In 1960 at UB he competed in Freshman wrestling and
baseball. In 1961 he wrestled at
147 pounds. In 1962 he entered
the six-month Active Duty program at Fort Dix, N, J. Carmen
entered UB once again this Fall
•md will again be a top contender for the 147 pound weight
class. Carmen improved immensely since the start of the
season. He promises to be a real
threat to this year’s opponents.
Norman Keller is a Junior in
the Physical Education Program.

Norm

has

earned letters in
and track. In high
school he lettered in football and
was awarded the Glen Gray Trophy for the outstanding athletescholar-citizen-leader. Norm is a
very strong participant at 170
pounds He most likely will be
wrestling at either 157 or 167. He
has been improving greatly.
Leonard Ardieta, like Carmen
Gautille, is returning after an
absence of one semester. In his
seven-year wrestling career he
has gathered a 61-4-1 record.
Mike Donahue had a very respectable record last season but
has been dividing his time as
editor of the yearbook and
wrestling this year and this has
kept him from devoting the
time needed to .promote peak
wrestling

Left to Right: Bob Mori 11, Norm Kollor, Carmon Gautile, John Mottling, Bob Jackson, Al Classman, Bob Minor, Ed Lettrota, Lon
Ardiota, Mike Donahue, Burt Ernst, Center Coach Ron La Raque,
Not Shown: Freshman and Assistant Coach Jack Valentic
petition to season them for the
coming wrestling campaign. Secondly, two former squad members have
returned
to add
strength and depth to the team.
They are Carmen Catille and

Leonard Ardieta, who have previously displayed their wrestling
abilities in past year.
Due to Coach Ron LaRocquc’s
dual role as the University’s football backfield and wrestling
coach, his duties keep him from
opening the wrestling season
until late November.
Other
Western New York colleges start
a full month before Buffalo’s
opening date. This presents a
time factor which the matmen
overcome by conscientious workouts from 4:00-5:45 at Clark
Gymnasium. It is still possible
for those students interested in
participating to do so by simply
contacting Coach
LaRouque
Practices are especially gruelling
because of the physically demanding nature of wrestling,
perhaps only surpassed in endurance and fortitude by the
loneliness of the long distance
runner.
Ahead lies the exciting world
of Collegiate Wrestling matches

for

fans

and

wrestlers

alike.

This year's wrestling squad will
be oo-captained by Bob Jackson
and Burt Ernst. Here are the
analysis of this year's starters:

A1 Classman is a sophomore
who wrestles at 123 pounds. A1
hails from Long Island where
he
Mepham
attended
High
School. While at Mepham, he
compiled an excellent 35-3-1 record During his senior year A1
was second only to the state
champion
of his respective
weight class while his team
copped the state title. Last year
he was awarded the most outstanding Freshman Wrestler at
the University At it a strong
competitor with good direction.
He looks to be a valuable asset

active

participant of wrestling
for eight years and during that
time pieced together a superior
record of 103-3. He has twice
won the Section AAA Wrestling
Championship. Bob has to his
credit one State Championship
and another taken at the Jewish
Tournament in Buffalo. Bob has
only lost twice in his High School
career and once while attending UB. Bob was a recipient of
the
Most Valuable Wrestler
Award as a Freshman and the
Team High Scorer Award in his

Burt is one of the fastest and
most colorful collegiate wrestlers in this part of the country.
He has an excellent number of
moves which he initiates in an
almost fluid manner to complement his tremendous strength,
Varsity Wrestling Schedule
Sat., Jan. 16, Ontario Aggies,
home, 2:00.
Sat., Jan. 23, Colgate, home,
3:00.
Fri., Jan. 29, Western Ontario,
away, 8:00.
Sat., Jan. 30, Waterloo (Ont.),
away, 2:00.

fBOCCE

Sat., Feb.
home, 2:00.
Wed., Feb.
7:00.
Sat., Feb.
away, 3:00.

Fri., Feb.
home, 8:00.
Wed., Feb.
9:00.
Sat., Feb.
borne, 3:00.
Fri., Mar.
home, 8:00.

6, Oswego State,
.

By LENNY ARDIETA

.

10, Toronto, away,
13, Rochester U.,
19, Rochester Tech,
27, Alfred, away
27, Cortland State,
5, Ithaca College,

Mar. 12
14, 4-1 Tournament
at Cleveland, O.
&amp;

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Burt Ernst is the University's
star heavyweight and Co-Captain
this year. Burt is hoping to
lower his weight to approximately 205 pounds which he

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he already is. For a heavyweight

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2900 Dolowort Avo., I(mimri, N. Y

�Friday, December 18, 1964

S P E C T R U M

PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN

THE WEST WILL BE BEST
veteran defensive genius G i n o

Colts and Chargers Choices
To Take Respective Crowns
By

RICHARD DRANDOFF

A few weeks ago, a nationally

distributed sports magazine devoted a few pages to explaining
why the Western Division of the
National Football League was far
superior to its Eastern counterThe reasons for this, to
ome, rash statement will not be

part.

■xamined here, but let it suffice
to say that this observer will not
cast a dissenting vote. In facf,
1 will even go further and say
that the Western Division of the
American Football League also
casts a shadow over its Eastern
rivals.
I realize that there will be quite
a few of you who will disagree
with me on these points, but I
can only say that—at least as far
as championship games are concerned—the record bears me out.
Let's take a close look at the

past three championship games
in each league and I think this
will aid me in getting my point
across.

National League
1961—Green Bay
York (E)
1962—Green Bay
York (E)
1963—Chicago

(W) over
(W) over

(W)

York (E)
American League
1961—Houston (E)

over
over

New
New
New

San

Diego (W)

1962—Kansas City (nee Dallas-W)
over Houston (E)
1963— San Diego (W) over Boston (E)
It is easy to see that in five
of the last six championship
games the Western Division representatives have prevailed and,
in most cases, quite handily. Last
season, the San Diego Chargers
thoroughly demolished the Boston Patriots to the extent that
Keith Lincoln, the Charger fullback, gained over 150 yards rushing in the first quarter alone.
After that, San Diego eased up
a little, but they still managed
to roll up over 50 points. This
might not have been a true indication of the relative strength of
the rival divisions, but it is by
no means an isolated example.
Green Bay beat New York 37-0
in ’61, and if we went back to
1958 and ’59, we would see that
Baltimore handed Now York two
more championship game defeats.
So, in the NFL, the Western Division teams have taken the measure of the East five times in the
past six games. As will be explained later, the trend is expected to continue this season.
Contrary to the past practices
employed in the “Grid Picks”
column, no scores will be predicted this week—just a simple
point spread. Maybe that way I
will not look quite so foolish if

my picks do not come through
National Football League
Baltimore at Cleveland
The
Browns looked tremendous in
their season-ending victory over
the Giants, but will it be enough
to take on the Colts? Don Simla's
boys really poured it on in the
Washington game after being accused of taking it easy once they
had the title clinched. With possible combinations of Unitas to
Berry, Unitas to Orr or Unitas
to Moore, it is easy to see that
—

the Browns’ secondary will be in
for a difficult afternoon. And we
cannot forget the Colts’ fine tight
end, John Mackey, who has discouraged many a defender in his
sophomore season. But passing is
not all there is to the Baltimore
attack. Lenny Moore, perhaps the
most versatile back in pro football. and this year’s Comeback
Player of the Year, is not only
a tremendous pass receiver, but
he is also one of the greatest
running backs in the league, as
evidenced by his record 20 touchdowns scored in '64. To comple-

ment Moore, the Colts have Tony

Lorick, the fine rookie halfbackfullback of Arizona State, and
Jerry Hill, a very effective young
fullback and excellent pass-blocker.

On the defensive side of things,
the Colts have onet of the finest
lines in football annals, led by

Marchetti. The linebackers,
cd-up by Don Shinnink and Steve
Stoncbrcaker, will have their
hands full trying to contain the
fabulous Jimmy Brown, but they
should be up to the assignment.
And the secondary will also have
their hands full, but the offense
should score enough points to
alleviate their problems.
The Colts do not have a monopoly in scoring punch, and. as
already noted, they will have
their hands full when the Browns
go on the offense. Frank Ryan,
the Browns' underrated quarterback. can pass to either Brown,
Ernie Green. Paul Warfield or
Gary Collins, w h o match the
Colts' receivers for talent. Perhaps Cleveland has the advantage
in the rushing department with
Jimmy Brown, but Baltimore has
to be given the nod as far as
passing is concerned.
The Browns’ defense has been
very effective in recovering their
enemies’ fumbles this season, and
if they can pry the ball loose
front the Colts this game might
go the other way, but the pick
here is for a Baltimore victory.
It will be the COLTS by 14.
American Football League
San Diego at either Boston or
Buffalo— It will be two more days

before the Eastern Division title
is decided, but no matter who
wins it. the Chargers are going
to take the title. Since it is not
known who will represent the
East, it really does not pay to
discuss both teams, so only thg
reasons for my expecting San
Diego to win will be discussed

here.

The Charger back field is one
which is hard to match, even
among the National League
teams. When either Tobin Rote
or John Hadl pass to Lance Alworth, this combination is easily
as good as any in football. Keith
Lincoln is no slouch at the fullback position, a n d with Paul
Lowe added, San Diego possesses
a devastating ground game. Norton and Kocourek are a great
pair of ends to back up All-Pro
Alworth. and regardless of who
the Chargers end up playing,
those men are always a bit tough-

er in a championship game when
all the marbles are at stake.
Aside from the great offense,
the Charger defense is not one
to be lightly regarded. The line,
with 300-pound Ernie Ladd and
Earl Faison to lead it, is about
lops in the AFL. The secondary
has allowed quite a few passes
to be completed but, like Baltimore. very few of these have
gone for touchdowns.
The defense is formidable and. as everyone who has seen them play will
testify, they never let up and
arc never caught napping.
In their four games this year
with Boston and Buffalo, the
Chargers have lost three of them,
but, as you all know, the defending champion is always a bit
tougher when someone tries to
take the title away. Now is the
time to answer the most pressing
question at hand—exactly who
will San Diego be playing? That
is one question I do riot Care to
answer. All I will say is that no
matter'who their opponent will
he, it will be the CHARGERS by
10.

COLLEGEBOWL UNEUP
Battle for Oranges Seen as
Top New Year’s Day Clash

1 t

(Dec.

25),

Blue-Gray (Dec. 26),

East-West Shrine

(Jan. 2), Hula
(Jan. 8) and Senior Bowl
(Jan. 9) because it is impossible
to come up with a sane prediction. Each team doing battle has

Bowl

its rank filled with numerous
All-Americans and pro draft
picks, so the outcome is usually
decided by which squad attains
lively

December 19: BLUE BONNET
BOWL:
Mississippi 9
Tulsa 21
Rebels (5-3-1
are here of
add prestige to the game.
This has definitely been an o
year for them. Maybe the Hur
canes (7-2) haven’t played as, sti

th

20,

GEORGIA

(6-31)

finished

1 Georgia T 'ech. but the
tiers (6-3-1) have All-Americ
Anderson, who
back Conn
do everyth!
and do it well
is their h ;t showing
mg ttie SWC
and they would
to cap off
ory before the partisan El
;i fans

practice.

My final record for the season
was 84-47-5; a .654 percentage
This was a pretty
(to be filled in by reader) record

26. SUN BOWL.

The Bui Ido: s

cohesion in the rela
little time furnished for

ORANGE BOWL
ALABAMA 10, TEXAS 6. This
is probably the cream of the crop
this January 1st and is just the
thing to make you forget your
hangover. These two schools are
ij
victories
year The same pits number one
Hama
itaunch defense against

lelback
of Arkansa:

Longhorn

nd that was

slimmest of

by

They would
ike to show th' ic cap aacity erowu
n Miami that t
should have
repeated as national champions,
The Crimson Tide (100) and
"Bear" Bryant will
it be ver
cooperative, but may have to call

1. ROl iSE BOWL:
21,
OREGON
The Beavers (8-2) have more
just the \V dverincs '(M) to
here They must also
their fellow: PAG m
•d this tn

inuary

1CHIGAN

a

m the servic

place kicker

ented

R

toe

ii

SUGAR ROWI

wl bid
appearan

on

ipcembcr

EXAS TEC

the most

rrv Rnom
■hola:

Liberty Bowl Committee has
come up with another loser. This
game holds very little interest
for the collegiate fan In a wildscoring battle, the Redskins (8 2)
will outscorc the sporadic Mountaineers (7-3). This bowl may
go out of existence if they don’t
line up better name schools,
get on the ball, men 1

I

'

a

clude the endless minor bowls,
Missile. Pecan, Camelia, Toilet
(?!), etc., because we
just heard
of half the teams participating!
I have also omitted the various
all-star
clashes,
North-South

i

over
for two weeks, but the next two
will see more games than on
an average Saturday during the
eason. For this is the time of
he bowl games, where supposdly the powerhouses of the reently concluded campaign meet
prove their superiority. Acally, the real reason behind
ese post-season extravaganzas
to make money for the spoors and bring further into the
otlight the major collegiate
aders. If you were to ask any
hletic director at any instiion where the game is played
one single event that would
ist bolster his recruiting promi, he would, without hestita
n. bring up the subject of a
d-season trip to one of the
merous bowl games held just
ore. during and after New
ars. A trip to a major concould also add up to $100.to athletic department coffers
itball can be a very successprofit-making business these
s if it is handled properly
I’m not writing this week's

I

football

1

collegiate

1

1964

point passes to Twilley
Utah 30, West Virginia 21. The

■

The

season has been officially

this year and have, graciously
accepted. I have neglected to in-

•

By STEVE FEIGIN

COTTON BOWL;
ARKANSAS 14, NEBRASKA 6.
The Ra/orbacks (10-0) seemed to
improve with each contest and
arc at the peak of their game.
Nebraska was robbed of a similarly perfect slate at the eleventh
hour when it was upset by Oklahoma in its season finale. The
Cornhuskcrs (9-1) were surprise
victors in the Orange Bowl last
New Years but will not be so
successful here.

when We

attack in the persons of Nance,
Mahlem and “Soph of-the-Ycar"
Little. They'll have no picnic,
though, for the Tigers (7-2-1)
arc ranked second in the nation
in both rushing and passing defense. The invaders from the
North arc given the edge here,
i n the strength of L.S.U’s poor
showing against Florida on the
5th, when they were soundly
thrashed,

206.

GATOR BOWL. January 2
FLORIDA STATE 27, OKLAHOMA 14 Just when everyone
was putting down Gomer Jones

for being unable to successfully

step into Bud Wilkinson's footsteps, his Sooners (6-3-1) tripped
unbeaten Nebraska and landed
in the Gator Bowl. But here is
where the success story ends.
The Scminoles' (8-1-1) passing
Fred
liilelnikoff rivals that of Notre
Dames record breaking duo of
John Hewart and Jack Snow to
lead the South's top independent
to victory in Jackson- illc.

SPECTRUM
ALL AMERICAS
HE—Howard Twillcy (Tulsa
-Ralph Neely (Oklahoma
Steve Delong (Tennessee)
Dick Butkus (Illinois)
Dick Butkus (Illinois)
-Tommy Nobis (Texas)
—E. Greeanrd Poles) Buffat
Larry Elkins (Baylor)
-Craig Morton (California)
dale Sayers (Kansa.
Tucker Ereden son (Au

�PACE

TWENTY-EIGHT

PART I

THE LITTLE WORLD
OF BABY SMAL
By MICHAEL

Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

CASTRO

Mama and Papa XT rolled out

of bed

almost simultaneously.
They weren’t really Mamas and
Papas for there were not little
XT's running around the cosy little two room apartment, on the
eighteenth floor of the big- big
building, on the long, narrow
street, in the big, big city, No,
the XT’s weren't really Mamas
and Papas, but all their friends
and neighbors on the long narrow

block called them Mama and Pa
pa simply because it seemed the
neighborly thing to do. After all,
the XT's had been living in the
big, big building 64 years, and to
call them Mr. and Mrs, after such
a long tenancy would have been
entirely too formal, and besides,
if you saw them you would have
sworn they were a Mama and
Papa, So naturally the names
stuck. The XT's each weighed
about 400 pounds, and each morning they would weigh themselves
and the heavier one would have
to take out the garbage. This was
no easy task, for it meant toting
the cast iron garbage pail down
and up eighteen flights of stairs,
as the big, big building had no
elevator. When the garbage was
taken care of, they would sit at
the kitchen table and glare at
one another. Then, each would
extend the right arm, and they
would arm wrestle. The loser
would have to cook breakfast and
clean the apartment. Mama XT
had not lost an arm wrestle in
twenty-six years. In fact she had
not taken out the garbage in
twenty-six years cither. It seems,
one night in 1938 Papa XT had
missed dinner, and as a result
Mama XT gained two pounds on
him. Papa XT never could regain the lost weight, for taking
the garbage down and up eighteen flights and his exhausting
job at the piano factory, forced
his weight to remain stable, in
spite of the enormous meals he
ate. Mama XT would just sit
around the house all day eating
to maintain her slight weight ad
vantage .and doing isometric ex-

:

ercises to stay in shape for the
daily arm wrestling match. (She
hated cooking, cleaning, and all
other housewife chores. In fact,
all she really liked was arm wrest
ling).

All this work kept Papa X 7 in
terrific physical condition. His

398 pounds was beautifully distributed on his rangy 5 foot 3
inch frame He was a former
football player for the greatest
sports school in the country, Maz
ria Tech, but was kicked out of
school after running the wrong
way for a touchdown which made
his team lose to their arch-rival
Schmill, The fatal play was the
X-7's play and he was branded
X 7 for the rest of his life.

ried pianos around all day. He
never got promoted in 71 years of
service, and except for a crummy
chicken he received every Christ
mas after his fifteenth year there,
his salary stayed constant at eleven cents ah hour. Papa X 7 at-

tributed this misfortune to his
lack of a college education, and
he swore someday to get revenge
on Mazria Tech for kicking him
out of school for a slight mental

error.
Anyway, on this particular
morning when Mama and Papa

XT rolled out of bed almost simultaneously something was dif-

ferent.

“Hey,” said Papa XT as he
looked around the room, “something is different.”
“You’re right," said Mama XT,
and pointed to the corner of the
spacious room where an enor-

mous carton lay.
They ran over to the strange
box, and tore it open. There,
gaping up at them was a darling
baby boy. At least it was a dar
ling boy in baby clothes, except
he was a trifle large for a baby.
In fact, he was 4 feet 6 inches in
his stocking feet, and tufts of
hair spotted his barrel chest. A
note hung around his neck, and
Mama XT read it aloud:
“Please love and care for this
dear little child for his Mama
and Papa have left him all alone
and only you are qualified to care
for him. Treat him right and he
can answer all your dreams.
Signed—a Friend.”
Mama XT said, “Oh.”
Papa XT said, “Oh.”
And they hugged and kissed
the four foot six inch little tyke
until it got downright annoying,
and finally the little tyke could
stand it no longer so he yelled
out, "Gel your crummy paws off
me.” And they got their crummy
paws off him.
"Who are you?" the tyke said,
imitating some toughy he had
once seen in a movie.
“We’re Mama and Papa XT,"
they replied together
“Ugh." said the little tyke.
“What a crummy name. You can
be my Mama and Papa only if
you never call me by my last
name."
“It’s a deal." said Papa X-7. "I
hate the name myself, for it sym
bolizes failure and disgrace. But
what shall we call you, my son?"
"I." replied the infant, “am
Baby Smah" And with that he sat
down, put his feet up on the
kitchen table, took off his baby
bonnet, and lit up a cigar.
(Drums and trumpets) See next
issue when Baby Smal takes on
Mama X 7 in an arm wrestle, and
Papa X-7 gets an idea as to how
to get revenge on Mazria Tech.

PRO FOOTBALL WAR
By STEVE OBERSTEIN

The most unhappy men in pro
football today are the veterans
who began their professional careers before the advent of the
American Fotball League. It must
be hard for a grizzled old pro to
accept a $100,000 untried rookie
on his team after he has given
his town years of blood, sweat,
and tears. The competition be
tween the more established National Football League and the
fast-rising American Football
League has reached such a peak
in signing collegians that players
not even drafted by EITHER
league are given a bonus to sign.
No matter what anyone says, the
name of the game is money—just
ask Scott Appleton of the Houston Oilers,
The art of signing players has
reached the extent that babysit
ting and handholding are expressions used by all knowledgeable
football men to describe how they
chose a boy in the college draft
that was held two weeks ago. The
reason that the old pros are downhearted is that although the two
leagues held the draft on the
same day, they did so separately.
Since they drafted most of the
same players (it is very hard to
hide a good college player today
even at Podunk Tech, because all
pro teams have so many scouts
that they get to see 99.44% of

Athletic Association has stated
that if it is proven that one of
the leagues held a pre-draft, thus
enabling that, league to talk to
its potential draftees, and perhaps
sign them before the actual draft
date, that drastic action will be
taken. In this ease, drastic action
means to keep all pro scouts off
the campuses where they find
out about a boy’s attitude by talking to him, his teammates, or his
coach. The pro teams would then
be drafting blind, and the risk
involved in drafting prospects
would be greatly increased.
To eliminate the problem of

football could then have a World
Series between the two leagues
or a round-robin championship
between the NFL’s Eastern and
Western Division Leaders and the
AFL champion. Public sentiment
for these plans is building, and
since the name of the game is
money, the pros can only enrich
themselves by adopting any similar plan that will cut spending
and ensure greater profits.

throwing away money to players
who just haven’t proved their

worth, and to prevent any government action because of the
failure of one of the leagues to
keep its word with the National
Collegiate Athletic Association,
the two professional leagues
should end their warfare that
can only lead to further difficulties. The television contracts that
each league have, throw out the
possibility that either league will
fold for any reason. The National Football League’s period of
resentment toward the American League is over; both leagues
are major leagues, and both
should draft together, as a unit,
to ensure their combined longevity. With one player draft, pro

the pro prospects

in the country)
the problem is to convince the
bright-eyed senior that he should
play for you. This is where the
fun begins.

Collusion is the name of this
game because each league now
works as a unit to prevent the
other from grabbing a collegiate
star.

Thus, the NFL draft rights

of Jack Snow of Notre Dame
were traded by the Minnesota
Vikings to the Los Angeles Rams

because Snow is from California,
and he had expressed his avid
personal dislike for Minnesota’s
below zero weather. Since the
San Diego Chargers of the AFL
had drafted Snow, the NFL had
to fight fire with fire by giving
Snow a chance to play in California if they were to retain any
hope of signing him, which the
Rams ultimately did. The point
is, Snow; would have given the
Vikings a third top end to go
with Paul Flatley and Hal Bedsole, and this impetus might have
been enough to make the Vikings
a definite contender for Western
Division honors next year. Now,
however, they will have to face
the Rams twice next year with
Snow (quite an ironic name) in
their lineup. Pity poor Norm Van
Brocklin, coach of the Vikings.
If that isn’t bad enough, there
was a report before the draft
that the American Football
League had held a pre-draft to
see which teams had prefernces
for individual players so they
could get a jump in the signing
race with the National Football
League. The National Collegiate

After being kicked out of col
lege, Papa X 7 took a lovely job
in a piano factory, where he car

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�Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY-NINE

64 UB FOOTBALL REVIEW
VARSITY
By CHICK ARNOLD
Now that all you sports fans
have returned from the ever-

so-short Thanksgiving vacation,
all eyes are anxiously turned
to the basketball court and the
UB cagers. But for those of you
who care to look over your shoulder at the just completed 1964
football season, there is a season’s story that combines the
elements of success and frustratipn, with a capital “F”.
Success in that Buffalo quarterback Don Gilbert broke standing
UB records of total offense in
one season with 1337 yards, and
most yards passing with 869;
success in that this season revealed the outstanding defensive
play of junior Greenard Poles;
and success in that a number of
promising sophomores were able
to see a substantial amount of
action,

Bob Pruett of Marshall, as twice
he outmaneuvered the Buffalo
secondary, and hauled in touchdown passes of 85 and 56 yards,
which proved decisive in the
Bulls secondary consecutive two
point less, this one at 14-12.
By this time the Bulls, as a
team were down. Many felt that
after three such disheartening
games, they would not be up for
the Homecoming game against
VMI. And for three periods, it
looked as though they were correct, as the Bulls trailed 10-0
in the fourth period. But the men
from Buffalo suddenly underwent
a
miraculous transformation,
sparked by the alert defensive
play of Jim Duprey, and fought
back with an inspiring 14-10 victory before 21,000 homecoming
fans. Their record was, even at
2-2-1 now, and the Bulls were
beginning to be tabbed as unpredictable and inconsistent.
But in the Halloween game on
October 30, the Bulls disproved
at least the second
this theory
part of it; for they showed their

FRESHMEN
By CHICK ARNOLD
Despite the many hours, days,
and weeks of frustration with regard to UB football this season, if
one pentrates a little deeper into
the Athletic Department, he can
indeed find some bright spots.
This season has been the play of
the Baby Bulls—our own fresh
man footballers.
Throughout the 1964 football
season, Buffalo fans spent most
of their time reviewing the varsity games, wondering when the
team would, if ever, realize their
great potential. However, at the
same time the varsity was struggling for an even record, the
frosh were compiling an outstand

back; young quarterback Jim Robie will most likely have another
chance to live up to his poten
tial; Greenard Poles will again
be back to do his outstanding
job on defense; and an exciting
consistency by again fumbling crop of this year’s sophomores
away a football game, this one will be back for their chance of
20-14 at the hands of Holy Cross. cracking the first team next sea
There is not much that can be son. All this, plus members of
said for Buffalo concerning this this year’s freshman team, which
contest, except that it may have compiled a strong 5-1
inbeen here that they learned their cludes victories over Army artit

ing 5-1 slate against teams widely
known for their football prowess.
The season opened for the Baby
Bulls at West Point against the
plebes of Army. After the game
got underway, the visitors from
Buffalo soon showed their superiority on the football field, and
went on to, an impressive 16-6
victory. The game proved to be a
stern indication of what could be
expected from the frosh for the
remainder of the season.
3,
October
the
freshmen
traveled to Ithaca, New York, and
met Ithaca College. Behind quar
terback Rick Wells, the Baby
Bulls piled up score upon score,
while the defense held the opponents scoreless—and our men returned home with an astounding
36-0 victory. Tiie game featured
the fine all-around play of Wells,
and the emergence of tackle Stan
Baranowski as the "man to watch"
on the line. The Buffalo team
showed good versatility in

this
encounter, something which prov-

ed extremely valuable to them
later in the season.

—

a 4-4-1 record—certainly not too
impressive. However, an additional 16 points scored at the right
times could have given UB an
undefeated season. That’s something to ponder over for awhile, lesson.
isn’t it? And frustration was carFor in the next game, they comried to the last possible moment bined all their previously hidden
as the final game of the year, talents in trouncing a heavily
the last chance for Buffalo to favored Delaware team 37-0, and
finish with an winning record, igniting a spark of hope in the
was cancelled at the last minute hearts of all UB followers. The
by a blizzard.
Bulls did everything correctly in
The Bulls started out strongly
this game, and it was here that
Don Gilbert emerged as having
enough, practically running Bosa chance to top a number of
ton University off the field in
the opening game of the season. Buffalo records. This game evenThe 35-0 score made the footed the Bulls record at 3-3-1, and
ball fortures for 1964 look exenabled them to acquire a rating
tremely promising for the agof tenth in the East,
gressive young Bulls. Buffalo
The University of Richmond
seemed to have everything for came to town the following Sata winning team
urday, and left at the bottom
a strong running attack, steady passing and
end of a 28-13 score. Buffalo
a staunch defense.
had scored a strong victory and
Things continued to look good had finally managed a winning
all the following week, and in
streak of two, and a winning
to the first period of the Cornell record. They made a number of
game. In adition to everything
errors, but because of a fine
previously mentioned, it looked
offensive attack, were able to
as though the Bulls finally could make up for them by scoring
boast of having their own genuine an impressive victory.
place-kicker, as Joe (later cleverThe Bulls once again used a
ly nicknamed “the toe") Oscsodal
familiar method, missing an
booted a 32 yard field goal early extra point, in dropping what was
in the initial period. Another UB to be their last football game of
score made the tally 9-0, and the season. In this tight defenBuffalo fortuner looked too good sive struggle, which was seemto talk about. But then, along ingly dominated by Buffalo, Don
with the Philadelphia Phillies, Gilbert was sloped inches short
the Bulls ran out of gas, and had of success in his two-point conto fight for their lives to salversion attempt; and with Gilvage a tie. Cornell quarterback bert, so were UB’s chanches for
Marty Spaunagle did a great job a winning season. Colgate was
of engineering the Big Red atone of the top defensive teams
tack. and was simply too much in the country, and the Bulls
for the Bulls to handle in the played their kind of football
final three quarters. Although against them. They just could
this game was counted as a tie not seem to get away from hard
on the record, Buffalo definitely luck for any prolonged period
felt it as a loss.
of time, and because of this their
It took only one more week, season ended at 4 4 1. However,
however, for Buffalo to sustain their record could have instantly
its first “official” loss of the been 9-0, or anywhere between
season, as they were dumped by the two
that’s what kind of
Massachusetts 24-22. In this game, a season it was.
weaknesses that would come back
As we all know, the season
to haunt the Bulls all season finale against Villanova was can
came to fore. Fumbles, and the celled
which may have proved
weakness for the “one big play” to be a blessing, as the Bulls
both proved costly for Buffalo
were picked as the underdogs.
i-’B fumbled twice within the last It is a'pity though that the playseven minutes within walking dis- ers of both teams were deprived
tance of the Missachusetts goal, of playing this game, one that
and Massachusetts quarterback
was certainly extremely imporJerry Whelchel found the long tant for all involved
bomb a profitable encounter
And so climaxed another sea
gainst Buffalo.
However, the son of UB football. Quarterback
ulls were up against a tough Don Gilbert dominated the of
?am here, and despite their
fensive statistics, as he was the
ard luck defeat, played a good team leader in passing, rushing,
'otball game.
and scoring. The Bulls will deThe string of dissappoihtments finitely be hurt by his graduation,
ent to three in game number
and the loss of other valuable
seniors.
°ur, as a UB team that out'layed its opponent was forced
However, a large number of
0 return home again victims of players will be returning next
he long pass. This time the an
year: The number two rusher on
agoqizer was 6 0, 190 pound end
the team, Nick Capuana, will be
—

Syracuse.
All in all, Buffalo can be said
to have suffered through a medi-

ocre season that could have been

more
lucrative
considerably
very easily. But it’s all over now,
and the cleats will have to be
put away until next year. The
1965 team should be a young,
fast, aggressive group of athletes
that could surprise a lot of people. We’ll see on September 18th
see
against Boston College
you then!
—

FOOTBALL
BUFFALO (4-4-1)
Buffalo 35 Boston U.
Buffalo 9 Cornell

0
9

The

with

Attendance

BUFFALO

TFJAM;

Passing

9,754
6,500
21.(XX)

20

8.136

8,253
8,007
8.635

0
13
7

(9 games)

in 9 games

OPPONENTS

155
453 for 1,728 (3.8)

3 &gt;6 for 1.199

(879 yards) 72, 1/152 (1,195 yards)

62/132

Pet. completion
Interceptions

Penalties

Fumbles

9 for 163

yards

17 for 168 yards

28 for 279 yards
24 (lost U)

52 for 363 yards
22

(lost

I

RUSHING
Player

Carried

Don Gilbert

35
63

Yards

Avg.

468
307
278

3.4
4.8
3.9

274

3.6

—

Nick Capuana
Diels Condino
Dennis Przylsu
Bob Edward
Jim Webber

—

l

Joe Holly, center linebacker
from Lyons, N.Y., has been elected captain of the li((!5 University
of Buffalo football team. The 6-1
210 pound Holly is a graduate of
Lyons Central High School where
he starred in both football and
basketball. This past season Holly
was selected for several pre-season All-East teams but a pinched
nerve in his left shoulder kept

6,600
17,000

103,885

1st downs
Rushes, net yds., avg.

70
75
37
30

160
151

4.3
5.0

PASSING
Attempts Completions Interceptions Yds. TOs
123
60
IS
869
8
7
2
Jim Robic
10
2
RECEIVING
Player
Receptions
Yards
TOs
Gerry Pawloski
177
I
Craig Helen brook
133
SCORING
Gilbert. 7 TD's rush, 2 PATK, 46 Pts.; Condino. 5 TD’s rush
Pts.;
Oscsodal, FG, 12 PATK, 15 Pts.; Oatmeycr’
TD rec, 36
2 TD's rec., I PAT rcc„ 14 Pts.; Edward, 2 TD's rush,
PATH
14 Pts.; Nichols, 2 TD’s ree., 12 Pts.; Przykuta, 2 TD's rush’,
12 Pis,; Dunn, I TO rec,,
PAT rec., 8 Pts.; Capuana, 1 TD
rush, 6 Pts.; LaFountain, 1 TO rec., 6 Pts.; Pawloski. 1 TO rec
6 Pts. Safety 2 Pts,; Total—177 Pts.
Player
Don Gilbert

1

I

I

—

Holly Named
STATISTICS Captain lor ‘65

14
10

Buffalo 6 Colgate
Nov. 21 Vi I la nova

brought

Bulls' third

straight victory—this one against
a powerful Colgate team. This was
a hard fought game, won by Buf
falo, behind the play of A1
Schnurr. Schnurr was the leading
rusher for UB, gaining (iO yards
in 16 carries. The victory tied
the Baby Bulls’ record for vie
lories in a season, making their
record 3-0.
October 24. the
freshmen
gridders travelled to Annapolis
to meet a powerful Navy squad.
And when they returned home,
they were a badly beaten team.
The plebes from Annapolis ran
over the Baby Bulls, and Buffalo
fans soon wrote this trip off as
a "loss”. The score of the game

Buffalo 22 Massachusetts 24
Buffalo 12 Marshall
Buffalo 14 V.M.I.
Buffalo 14 Holy Cross
Buffalo 37 Delaware
Buffalo 28 Richmond

week

following

it the Baby

1

Frustration, however, played a
larger part in the 1964 edition
of the Bulls. They finished with

was 480; let’s just leave it at
that.
The following week found Buffalo traveling to Manlius to clash
with Manlius Prep. They rebounded from the Navy defeat in a fine
way, coming home on the strong
end of a 21-14 score. Again, the
Buffalonians showed a-hard, good
game of football in bringing their
record to 4-1.
the
13,
Friday, November
Baby Bulls climaxed one of the
most successful frosh seasons in
their history in an appropriate
way, by out-dueling Syracuse 13-0.
The game was largely a defensive
battle, with UB's two scores coming on an intercepted pass and a
diagnosed fake punt by Syracuse.
Again, quarterback Rick Wells
provided the spark which ignited
the Baby Bulls, with pinpoint
passing and fine running.
And so ended the 1964 season
for the Baby Bulls
a season
marked by victories over such
perennial football powerhouses
as Syracuse and Army. Buffalo
finished with a sparkling 51 record, which perhaps can serve as
an indication of the rising foot
ball status of the University of
Buffalo. In the past few years,
UB football fortunes have been
on the increase, not being quite
as high as other Eastern schools,
such as Penn State, Syracuse or
Pittsburgh, though However, if
freshman teams like the 1964
edition of the Baby Bulls contin
ue coming into UB. it won’t be
long at all until the varsity finds
some really big names on their
Schedule.

1

him from performing at peak
form until the latter part of the
season. Despite his injury. Holly
missed only one game completely and displayed, the determination of purpose and qualities of
leadership that led to his being
chosen team captain. The 20-year
old Holly is majoring in History
at UB and hopes to become a
history teacher after graduation
In other voting, the UB players
tabbed E. Grcenard Poles, junior
guard from Rochester, N.Y., as
the team's most valuable lineman
Poles was four times nominated
for ECAC All-East and was picked for the All-East team for his
play against Massachusetts. Senior quarterback Don Gilbert, who
set an all-time UB record for
single season individual offense,
was named most valuable back.
Center-linebacker Joe Garafola,
of Gloversville, N.Y., was chosen
as the most improved player. Gar
afola was nominated to the ECAC
All-East for his play against Cornell,

The UB All-Opponent team for
1964 shows Milt Morin of Massa
chusctts and Bob Pruett of Marshall at ends, Joe Lilly of Holy
Cross and John Broken of Colgate at tackles. Bill Winter of

Marshall and Peter Pietz of Massachusetts at guards, Tom Good
of Marshall at center. Jack Lentz
of Holy Cross at quarterback, Lee
Woltman of Colgate and Donnie
White of V M I at halfbacks, and

Bill Wilson of Cornell at fullback.

�SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTY

By

Friday, December 18, 1964

LOOKING BAC

ST VE SCHUELEIN

As the curtain is being lowered
year of history, one
can look
ck upon 1964 as a
time peril of great importance
in many f Ids—science, politics,
labor, etc This year, however,
was also f.lled with a surfeit of
significaiit porting news for posterity. The highlights of the year
range from the inspiring to the
frustrating from the astonishing
to the expected, and include some
oddities, novelties, and blunders
that would put Fred Merkle and
Roy Riegels to shame

on another

OLYMPIC
GAMES
Undoubtedly, the most import-

ant sporting event of the

year
was the Olympic Games held in
Tokyo in October. The United
States showed a vast improvement over its 1960 effort, as the
American- ained a decisive edge
over Russia this year. Although
the USSR v.nn 96 medals, as compared to. 90 for Uncle Sam’s
team, the USA won 36 gold med
als to Russia's 30, and was awarded a 286 376 edge by weighing
the gold -ilver, and bronze medals with 6. 3. and 1 points, respectively

Brilliant individual efforts were
numerous for the USA, but prob-

ably the most inspiring victory
was 10.000 meter champ Billy
Mills, a virtual unknown from

Coffeyville, Kansas. The U.S.
monopolized the swimming events
as expected with baby-faced Don
Schollander of Lake Oswego, Oregon, arising from the foam with
four gold medals to his name.
Affable Bob Hayes and hulking

discus hurler A1 Oerter, who cophis third consecutive gold
modal despite a painful back injury, led the USA to an avalanche
of medals in the track and field
gold rush. The U.S. basketball
team kept its immaculate Olympic record intact by rolling to
surprisingly easy triumphs behind Bill Bradley, Lucious Jackson, Jerry Shipp and Company.

ped

New York Yankees in
games to capture a World Senes
marked by heads-up base running
and sloppy fielding. Fireballing
Bob Gibson, who set a Series
whiff record of 32, and colorful
batterymate Tim MeCarver shared hero roles for the Cards, who

were not thinking

very seriously

of even being in the World Series
a few weeks earlier. The Redbirds
were given the opportunity when
the Philadelphia Phillies fizzled
in one of the most startling collapses in baseball history. The
Cincinnati Reds appeared to be in
the driver’s seat going into the
final three days of the season,
Two shocking incidents happenbut the Phillies rebounded to
ed in boxing when a Spanish eliminate the Crosley crew’s penboxer belted the referee after nant hopes, while the Buschmen
being disqualified, and when a were forced to salvage the third
Korean pugilist went on a sitgame of a series with the New
down strike in the ring after also York Mets to cop the flag.
being disqualified.
In the All-Star game in Shea
Along with the unexpected sucStadium, the National League ralcesses, the U.S. was also forced lied from a 4-3 deficit in the
to absorb some disappointments. ninth inning to tie the AL, and
Such names as Tom O’Hara, Roy
with two outs and two on, Phillie
Saari, and Harold Connolly were outfielder John Callison smashed
prominent casualties, while Ralph a tremendous homer off Boston’s
Boston and John Thomas missed Dick "The Monster’’ Radatz to
gold medals by agonizingly nargain a 7-4 verdict for the NL.
row margins. On the whole, howA throng of rookies made auever, the 1964 Olympics was a spicious debuts in baseball this
rousing success for thej? United year. The AL’s Rookie of the
States.
Year, Tony Oliva of Minnesota,
led the junior circuit in batting,
while Philadelphia’s Richie Allen, the NL’s Rookie of the Year,
was a main factor in the Quaker
City pennant drive. Other top
The baseball world was involv- rookies included Wally Bunker
Tony Conigliaro of
ed in more than its share of memof
orable events in 1964. The St. Boston, Mel Stottlemyre of New
Louis Cardinals outlasted the York, Rico Carty of Milwaukee,
and Jim Hart of San Francisco.
Ken Boyer of the Cards and
Brooks Robinson of the Orioles,
key hot corner men for their
respective clubs all season, were
voted as MVPs of the NL and AL,
respectively, while Sandy Koufax
of the Los Angeles Dodgers, despite missing a large portion of
the season due to an elbow in-

BASEBALL

KLEINHANS

jury,

nevertheless

compiled 19

wins including a no-hitter against
the Phils.
On the debit, side of the diamond ledger, 1964 was a year
when the omnipotent dollar sunk
its voracious claws deeper and
deeper into the windpipe of baseball. Fans were stunned when
they heard the news that CBS
had bought the Yankees from
Topping and Webb, but true if
was. Front

offices shelled

out

fantastic sums of bonus money
to rookies; the highest one reported was the $200,000 bonus
the Angels gave Wisconsin star
Rick Reichardf. Just in the last

month, Paul Richards of Houston
offered Lee MacPhail of Milwaukee a reported $5 million and
his entire newly-dubbed Astro

Colt-451 outfit for the whole
Brave squad, but the flabbergasted MacPhail declined. The* New

(nee

York Mels have been trying to
buy established stars from around
the league for a cool half million apiece, but as yet have had

no nibbles. (And people thought

the Red Sox were crazy when
they offered Cleveland a million
dollars for Herb Score only seven
years ago?)
The Braves are going to have
to raffle away seats if they expect
any sort of attendance at County
Stadium this year. They are definitely going to stay in Milwaukee
in 1965, but they have also negotiated a 25-yr. lease with Atlanta starting, in 1966, which
ought to make them about as
popular as teetotalers in Milwaukee. Pity the poor Brave fan
who has the audacity to attend
a home game next year: after

the game he is liable to be clubbed to death at the nearest exit
with Benedict Arnold statues carried by some “loyal” fans who
wished that Grant had only done
a little better job of arson a century earlier.
1964 also possessed a superfluity of bizarre baseball events.
Only Harvey Haddix, who hurled
twelve innings of perfect ball
before losing in the thirteenth
frame, could justifiably ask for
a bigger crying towel than Houston’s Ken Johnson. The crafty
Colt southpaw threw a no-hitter
against Cincinati in the first
week of the season, only to be
beaten by a ninth inning Nellie
Fox error, 1-0, How often can
a mediocre pitcher be successfully altered into a slugging outfielder? Ask Willie Smith of the
Angels, who made the transition
this year. Jesus Alou of the Giants enjoyed one of the greatest
days in batting in recent years
when he completed a 6-6 day at
the plate this season. And who
can forget the harmonica incident involving Phil Linz and Yogi
Berra that rocked the Yankees
in the midst of their nearly disastrous August showdown with
Baltimore and Chicago?
After Berra managed to pilot
the Yankees to the pennant and
almost to the world championship, he was given the axe by
the New York front office. Who

was to replace

a record 82 appearance, and Radatz of Beantown with 79. extin-

more fires this summer
than Smokey the Bear and the
Redwood City Rangers combined.
Dean Chance of the Angels finally shed the badboy reputation
that he and his sidekick, Bo Beguished

brewed for braves....

tyling. College Shop.
$69.95

him? You guessed

it, skipper Johnny Keane of the
Cardinals who had quietly handed in his resignation before St.
Louis had finished the season.
Yogi was then sent to the Mcts,
but not before the benevolent
Yankee front office, the epitome
of magnanimity, could give Yogi
a $25,000 kick in the rear as a
good-by present. The Braves then
shipped their 43-yr. old mound
legend, Warren Spahn, to the
greener pastures of Shea Stadium to be united With Yogi and
Casey Stengel. What a trio that
should be next year!
Another note for the record
would have to include the increasing importance of relief pitchers:
John Wyatt of Kansas City with

as Fighter

linsky (who rates

of

the Year for the gallant effort
he displayed in flooring a 63-yr
old sports writer), had acquired
in the past. Chance was easily
the best pitcher in the AL as ho
won 20 games, recorded eleven
shutouts, and compiled a gaudy
1.65 ERA, the lowest AL mark
in 21 years, while winning the
Cy Young Award.

FOOTBALL
Baseball certainly had an abundance of noteworthy events, but
athletics achievements were not
just restricted to the diamond
The gridiron world also had a
bumper crop of important events
transpire this year.
The football year was launched
with a rousing start on New
Year’s Day with its annual array
of collegiate Bowl games. In the
most important game, undefeated,
No. I ranked Texas hosted the
highly rated Midshipmen of Navy,
under the reins of '63 Heisman
Trophy winner Roger Staubaoh.
60 football minutes after the start
of the game, little doubt remain
ed that the top rating the Longhorns had received was a fair
decision; backs Duke Carlisle,
Tommy Ford, and Phil Harris enjoyed a field day for the Lone
Star Staters, while Scott Appleton, Tommy Nobis, Charley Tal
bert, Pat Culpepper, and Co.
incessantly spilled Staubach for
losses as Texas, rolled, 28-0.
After an eight-month absence,
football returned with a bang
this fall. In the collegiate ranks,
the top story belongs to Notre
Dame, a team that missed Cinderella-like success, by less than two
minutes this season. The Fighting
Irish of South Bend, under the
acumen of Coach Ara Parseghiah
and the passing combination of
Heisman winner John Huarte and
end Jack Snow, lost both the
mythical national championship
and an untarnished record when
they were upset by Southern Cal
in the final two minutes in a
20-17 heartbrcaker, A boiling rebuke from Southern Cal came
about when the Rose Bowl committee awarded the home berth
to Oregon State instead of US(
after the Trojans had courageously rallied to shade Notre Dame
As a result of the USC win, Bear
Bryant’s Alabama machine back
ed into the No. 1 slot, while a
second undefeated powerhouse.
Arkansas, which finally severed
Texas' unbeaten string, finish' d
second ahead of the Irish. In the
smoldering Army Navy rivalry
which was incensed this year by
a squabble between Coaches Paul
Dictzel of Army and Wayne Har
din of Navy, the Black Knights
won for the first time in six
years, 11-8.
-

Tulsa's spectacular aerial du
of Jerry Rhome to Howard Twi
ley was probably the most pul
ficized combination since Charle

m

�Friday, Decambar 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTY-ONE

SPORTS OF 1964

Conerly to Barney Poole in 1941.
Rhome shattered almost every
collegiate passing record established, while Twilley grabbed a
record 95 passes.
In pro football, the top headlines were gained by the Baltimore Colts. Behind veterans John
Unitas, Lenny Moore, and Gino
Marchetti, the Colts steamrolled
over eleven consecutive opponents, and upset the favored Green
Bay Packers for the NFL Western
Division crown. They will face
the Cleveland Browns, who were
forced to win their last game of
the season for the Eastern title,
for the NFL championship next
week. Unitas was chosen as MVP.
Colt coach Don Shula was voted
top coach, and Charley Taylor of
Washington was the best rookie
in the NFL.
In the AFL, the Buffalo Bills
and Boston Patriots will meet
Sunday to decide who the Eastern representative will be to battle the San Diego Chargers, the
defending AFL champs.
Probably the biggest AFL incident revolved around Buffalo's
controversial Cookie 'Gilchrist;
the rambunctious 250-lb, fullback
was given up on waivers and then
reclaimed by the Bills in a 24-hr.
period in which Gilchrist made a
public apology for his detrimental acts toward the Bills.
Gino Cappelletti cracked the
AFL scoring record of 147 in only
13 games. Boston's clutch pass
receiver and place kicker has
accumulated 152 points with Sunday’s Buffalo game still remaining.

the list of football
foibles would have to be Minnesota Jim Martin’s sixty-yd. wrongway run with a fumble resulting
in a safety in a 27-22 win over
San Francisco* and Harvard quarterback John McCluskey, who
jubilantly threw the pigskin into
the air out of bounds after sweeping end for a touchdown against
Massachusetts; the referees ruled
he had flipped the ball away before crossing the goal line, however, and brought it back to the
1-yd. line. Another football oddity concerns Tufts’ Homecoming
game with Wesleyan. Tufts hired
a pair of elephants, symbolic of
their sobriquet, to calmly stand
on the sidelines during the contest, but the elephants’ owner had
to restrain his pachyderms, who,
it seems, become infuriated at
the color red, from attacking the
c r i m s o n-clad visitors in what
could have turned into a calamity!
High on

BASKETBALL

In college basketball this year,
top billings were garnered by
the UCLA Bruins, The UCLAn's
became the first team since the
32-0 North Carolina five of 19561957 to go through an entire season undefeated. Led by ballhandling wizard Walt Hazzard
and sharpshooting Gail Goodrich,
the Bruins subdued Duke in the
NCAA finals to complete their

slate of 290. Missouri
Valley representative Bradley
emerged victorious in the NIT
tournament in Madison Square
spotless

Garden,

Randy’s
Amoco Station
ATLAS PRODUCTS
QUAKER STATE OIL

300 KENMORE AVENUE
BUFFALO NEW YORK
phone 836-8961
,

In pro basketball, the incom-

parable Boston Celtic juggernaut
won an unprecedented sixth
straight NBA crown as they crushed Cincinnati and San Francisco
in the playoffs while paying deaf
ears to the growing reverberation
“The Celts arc too old to win
again.” Wilt Chamberlain of the
Warriors was scoring king once
more, while Jerry Lucas of the
Royals was the top rookie.
Shortly after the season concluded, one of the biggest deals
in hardwood history was trans-

acted. The Detroit Pistons traded
Don Ohl, Bailey Howell, Wally
Jones, and Les Hunter to the Baltimore Bullets in return for
Terry Dischinger, Rod Thorn, and
Don Kojis:

GOLF
In the world of long, lush, emerald fairways and colossal, undulating greens, Arnold Palmer
and Jack Nicklaus were still the
top names, but a handful of others also gained stature in the golfing world.
Palmer, the Masters winner
from Latrobe, Pa., and Nicklaus,
a consistent high finisher from
Columbus, Ohio, were so evenly
matched that it required a missed
15-ft. putt by Gay Brewer on the
final hole of the final PGA tournament, the Cajun Classic, to
determine that Nicklaus had won
a meager $81.13 more than the
general of Arnie's Army, as both
pocketed over $113,000 for the
year.

The most stirring comeback
this year was made by Ken Venturi, The 33-yr. old Californian,
who spent eight years in golfing

oblivion after blowing the 1956
Masters on the final nine holes,

staged a heart-warming resurgence as he withstood the 100
degree heat of the Congressional
CC.in Washington, D.C., to capture the US. Open.
“Champagne Tony" Lema,
whose flamboyant personality
and sizzling game made him an
immediate hit with fans and reporters alike, won the British
Open and the Buick Open. Bobby

Nichols executed incredible iron
shots and dropped remarkable
putts in the clutch to take both
the PGA and the rich Carling
Open. Mickey Wright again dom-

women’® golf, shooting
one very unwomanlike round of
62.

inated

by both Quadrangle and Roman

Brother in the Belmont Stakes,
the third leg of racing's Triple
Crown, Shortly thereafter, Northern Dancer injured a leg and had
to be retired. Bold Lad appears to
be the horse to beat next year in
the 3-yr. old division, judging
from his showings this year.
One of the greatest perform-

The brilliant but

abbreviated

LOTUS
Soles, Service

&amp;

Ports

Race &amp; Rally Equipment
Competition Sports Cars
prepared by

TOP

o'f the Year honors.
Amateur athletics in this country continued to be hurt as the

TWENTY
0-jdOi

1. MICHIGAN
2. WICHITA
3. SAN FRANCISCO
4. MINNESOTA
5. ST. JOHN'S
6. DUKE

7. UCLA
8 ST. LOUIS

MISCELLANEOUS

9. ST. JOSEPH'S
10. TENNESSEE
11. DAVIDSON
12. VANDERBILT

13. VILLANOVA
14. ILLINOIS
15. INDIANA
16. EVANSVILLE
17. NORTH CAROLINA
IS. BOSTON COLLEGE

19. OREGON STATE
20. KENTUCKY

f PIZZA IF 3-1344 1

CLIP

&gt;-

RACING

career of Northern Dancer was
the feature story among 3-year
olds. The E, P. Taylor entry
won both the Kentucky Derby
and Preakncss, but was beaten

SPECTRUM

in racing history was
fuming feud between the AAU
achieved only a few weeks ago and the NCAA reached dynamic
when 19-yr. old apprentice jockey proportions.
Mike Venezia booted home six
In auto racing, John Surtees’
winners and three seconds jn
nine races at Aqueduct, April, second placet finish behind Dan
1959, was the last time a jockey, Gurney in ftie Mexican Grand
Willie Shoemaker, had scored on Prix enabled him to nudge Graham Hill by one pdint for Driver
six mounts in one day.
In harness racing, Speedy Scot of the Year honors, A. J. Foyt
prevailed as the cream of the won the Indianapolis 500 crown
Memorial Day.
crop of pacing as he encountered
In bowling, Jim St. John was
little difficulty in remaining undefeated this year, while adding the hottest maple tamer of the
year as he captured numerous
the $50,000 Intcrnatonal at Roosekeglcr awards.
velt to his laurels. The best threeyear old pacer this year was pintThis year was also a tragic one
sized Ayres, who won the Hamin sports as football and auto
bletonian in DuQuoin, Illinois, in racing were hardest hit. The
the blistering time of 1:56.4. Twosports world will never quite be
year old honors went to Bret
the same with the untimely passHanover, a son of Adios, who won
ings of Chicago Bears Willie Gali
24 races in as many starts this
more and John Farrington, racers
year, and contributed nearly
Eddie Sachs. Fireball Roberts and
$200, 000 to the wallet of owner Bobby Marshman, ex Army signal
Richard Downing.
caller Joe Caldwell, and Boston
Celtic owner Walter Brown in
eluded.
1964 was not devoid of quips
and quotes, either. They included:
Notre Dame students labelling
their rejuvenation in football as
In other notable sports events
"The Ara of Good Feeling”; Paul
this year, the USA succumbed to
llornung replying to a fan's ask
Australia’s Roy Emerson and Fred
ing him “How arc you?" by the
the
Davis
Stollc, ' returning
self analytical remark. “Oh, 1
Cup to Australia, while another
can't kick"; and Dick Young of
"Down Under" star, Margaret the New York Daily News query
Smith, reigned as queen of the
ing if the Houston Colt 45's, after
nets.
being
forced to change their
hockey,
ice
the
Toronto
In
Maple Leafs upset the Chicago nickname to Astros, would also
Black Hawks for the Stanley Cup, alter their Oklahoma City farm
after the Hawks had been sparked
team's nickname from Colt-22's to
to the NHL title by Bobby Hull
Half
Astros?
Wharram,
Stan Mikita, Ken
and
Glenn Hall. .
1965 is certainly going to have
In track and field, Australia's
to strain itself for an encore if
Peter Snell ran a 3:54.1 mile and
it
is going to emulate this year
Dallas Long put the shot 67'11”
for new world records, while pole
in the world of sports.
vaulters continued to soar higher
and higher over the 17 ft. barrier.
In boxing, Louisville Lip Cassius Clay impressed few people
with his boasts of what he would
do to “that big ugly bear", Sonny
Liston, in February, but to the
amazement of the world of fisticuffs, Clay’s chants of "I am king”
were well founded after a seventh

ances

HORSE

In horse racing, the big news
was Kelso, the 7-yr. old gelding
who won Horse of the Year hon
ors for an unparalleled fifth con
secutive time. An impressive 5
length victory over its chief rival.
Gun Bow, in the Laurel Interna
tional clinched honors for Kelly

round TKO of Liston, His recent
rematch with Sonny was postponed for six months when the
loquacious Cassius injured him
self a few days before the show
down. Ageless Willie Pastrano,
meanwhile, was awarded Fighter

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTY FOUR

ioa ISSUE

1965

-

NEW
STUDENT REVIEW

BUFFALONIAN

featuring

“CURFEWS

"A PERMANENT

AND

REMEMBRANCE OF
YOUR COLLEGE DAYS"

THE COED"

“THE CLERICAL
CONSPIRACY"
"damn the draft"
•'sex and the coed"
plus much more

35 s

Friday, December 18, 1964

IN

NORTON

ON SALE

at the ticket booth
in Norton Hall

PR,CE

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deposit’^;—

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(•t Delaware)
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Phone 876-2284

�SECTION

STATE

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

NKWJ
FEATURE,

snow
VOLUME 15

BUFFALO, NEW Yi

sculpture

IRK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1964

NO. 14

THAUUS HOAX SUCCESSFUL
By TRUDY STERN

Photos By MARC LEVINE
Over 1000 students, arriving in
cabs, open convertibles and motor
scooters, descended upon the Buffalo International Airport Wednesday afternoon to "protest" the
arrival of the ThalluS of Mar-

chantia. Students brandished
signs such as "Thallus Go To
Dallas" and chanted “Thallus go
home!”

The whole affair grew from a
prank which originated with several

Crowd awaits arrival of the Thallus

Allenhurst residents.

The

biological term, Thallus Marchantis, which refers to a type of
liverwort plant, suggested the
name of an Aramaic dignitary.
A student was selected and sent
to New York City Wednesday
mprning, to return to Buffalo
that afternoon in the guise of
the Thallus, head of a small
Arabian state. Interest in the
prank spread rapidly due to the
coverage of the "Thallus’ tour"
by the Buffalo news media. Res-

got out of hand. An idea of "Why
not storm the building?" developed in the front lines of the
crowd. A mass rush into the
building ensued. Students ran
through the halls of the building
in an effort t6 view the Thallus'
arrival. Some furniture was overturned and a window was cracked. People in the terminal were
ruffled by the running students.
The plane arrived at 1:48 A
cheer from the crowd in the halls
of the airport greeted the turbanned Thallus as he emegred from
the plane and was placed in protective custody by the police. At
2:10 the terminal was clear of
all but for a few stragglers.
Reactions to the demonstration
have been varied. The airport
authorities were horrified. Dr.
Richard Sigglekow, Dean of Students. said; "The University re-

grots any damages which have
occurred. Under no circumstances
do we condone mob behavior or
property destruction by anyone.
This aspect of the matter must

rest with

the civil authorities.

The Student Personnel Division
of the University, through the
Student Judicial Branch of the
Student Government, will consider any cases resulting from stu-

dent involvement

in this inci-

dent,"

A policeman who was attemptto clear the building commented. "I know' -my son is in
there somewhere, and when 1
catch him,I'll break every bone
in his body.”
A member of the Freshman
Class Council said that if money
had to be raised to pay for damages, the Council would look into
it.

ins

ervations for the Thallus had
been made at the Hotel Lenox
in downtown Buffalo.
At 1:00 the airport was filled

with curious students. Airport
authorities, dismayed by the sud
den influx of humanity, requested the students to move to a
circle outside of the main building. The students did so. At this
time, the Chcektowaga Police and
the airport personnel were not
aware of the fact that the agitation against the fictional dignitary was a hoax,

At approximately 1:30. 18 minutes before the arrival of the

Size of crowd grows as arrival time nears

Thallus, the demonstration, which
started in the spirit of pood fun.

The Thallus arrives

SMU to Eliminate
Underclass Senators
(ACP) —' Moved by a desire
to rid Southern Methodist University (Dallas, Texas) of figure-

head titles, the Student Senate
is discussing the elimination of
underclass officers. The sgpatc
had studied the function of class
pfficers and concluded that, with
the exception of the seniors, they
have

none.

This proposed elimination, a
courageous move in that it may
be unprecedented, makes sense,

Bewildered policeman looks over crowd

says THE SMU CAMPUS, What
reason is there for staging an
election so 60 or 70 people may
campaign for nothing more than
another picture of themselves in
the yearbook -

is greeted by police

’

If the abolition of officers docs
take place, there is a subsequent

fc/r

fA

proposal to replace them with

class favorites Each of the three
lower classes would elect boy
and girl “favorites
Presumably
these would be the people with
the fewest enemies and the most
”

GL70-ish smiles during election

week

Why bother? The class officer
election

is under fire because
it, like an unfortunately large
number of other caqjpus contests, has deteriorated into a

popularity poll. There seems to
be no excuse for eradicating one
meaningless position only to ere
ate a new “Mickey Mouse" role
to replace it

Students wait for Thallus in Airport Terminal

Not if we want to make pro
gress,

and taken away

;nM

..

�'

at a private four-year college. At
a public four-year college, the
cost will be $2,112 and the junior
college cost is expected to reach

he said.

higher education.”

In 1960 it stood nationally at
$800 million, he said. By 1970
it will have risen to between $2
and $3 billion.
A financial aid survey for the
1963-64 academic year showed
that about 20 percent of American undergraduates were receiving some form of financial aid,
Smith said.
The aid in scholarships, loans,
and jobs totaled $251.1 million.
In the North Atlantic region,
where there is a high density
of colleges and universities, 11,050 undergraduates received almost $82.4 million, he said.
But Smith said even aid on
this scale will not keep pace with
soaring college costs.

Can the “Cool”
By JEFF GREENFIELD
There is nothing more telling
about the state of the young
American collegian than the obsessive desire he has to be “cool”.
This state has become the ultima
rule, the Holy Grail .pursued by
every man and woman on every
college campus in the country.
It is, in fact, nothing more or
less than the cancer of apathy,
the malignant indifference which

destroys a healthy involvement
and a commitment to a better
world.

Cool is defined by a dictionary
excited, calm; having
little enthusiasm or interest.”
And that is precisely what the
collegian means when he describes an object or person
(there is little difference in his
mind) as cool.
The cool man is the detached
man, unconcerned about the great
issues in which his country or
nation is embroiled. He is the
smooth man, searching not for
a better life but an easier one,
not for the nectar of the gods
but the dry martini, not for a
just life but a comfortable one.
He knows that to become committed to an abstract ideal is
to become ruffled; to lose that
admirable restraint which comes
only from polished and carefully
indifference to the plight of
others. You cannot keep a crease
in Ivy league slacks by marching on a picket lim; you cannot
impress others by forsaking a
party for a political meeting; you
cannot reel off the names of
foreign cities you have visited
by spending a summer in the
slums of New York or in the
fields of Mississippi.
The cool man knows this; so he
keeps his crease and his popularity and his scrapbook high by
consciously holding back from
anything in his existence to the
existence of others. He dates to
impress others with his stock
of females; he drinks to demonstrate the labels on his liquor
bottles; he parties to surpass
as “not

Goodyear Hall will hold
an Open House Sunday between the hours of 3:306:30 p.m. During this
time, male students will be
permitted to visit the girls
in their rooms. Refreshments will be served. Sunday dress is required.

Hie next issue of the
Spectrum will be on Janu-

others with the state of his boredom.
Somehow, somewhere, this perversion of manhood has become
ingrained as a value within ourselves. Even those who are politically or socially’ involved retain vestiges of the worship of
Cool; even those who refrain
from its pursuit long for its rewards. In some indefinable way,
the goal of American youth, by
and large, is to be Cool: Ivy
Cool, Bohemian Cool, Beachbum
Cool, Campus Cool.
I do not believe the general
malaise which hangs over our
colleges and universities will
ever be fully dispelled until this
Moloch is torn down from its
pedestal and is cosigned to the
wastebasket of false idols. Until we are able to say in full
honesty, to ourselves and to
others, that we reject this vision
of the future, the siren song of
an inbred, isolated, worthless
pose will haunt us in our efforts
to turn the world away from injustice and drift through the
active involvement of educated
men and women,
As long, in sum, as the institutions which are training the
“leaders of tomorrow” are engulfed in a value system which
places

a higher priority

on

a

casual indifference than it does
on a passionate involvement on
the world around us, then these
institutions will not turn out
men and women who give a
darn about making this a better
nation in a better world.
It was Dante who observed
that the hottest place in Hell is
reserved for those who, in time
of crises, maintain their neutrality. It is indeed ironic that in
the Hall of Heroes in today's
young society, the highest pedastel of all is reserved for those
who maintain their aloofness in
times of historic clashes among
conflicting moral systems.

Chastised Coed
VICTORIA,

BC. (CPS-CUP)—

A coed at the University of Victoria was chastised by a univer
sify residence director several
weeks ago (or dating a colored
East Indian foreign student.
Mrs,

Lola Moore, who report

edly asked the girl why she was
dating a colored student, said,
"1 asked her what her mother
would think:”

.

ary 29. All copy must be

■'When these girls are away
from home, I am like their
mother, and I have to look after
them," Mrs. Moore said.

typed and submitted by
11:00 a.m. Tuesday, Janu-

ia

ary 26.

Student Council president OlivBarr said, "Who a student
dates is his or her personal business. I am shocked such a thing
should have happened."

/of

SEATTLE (CPS)—A school
medicine letter recommending
suspension of campus cigarette
sales is being circulated to departmental advisory boards by
the University of Washington’s
business office.
So far only the school of medicine has banned cigarette sales
in its buijdings. The student
union advisory board decided to
keep selling cigarettes there three
weeks ago.
The university's assistant business manager, Tom Hutchinson,
said the next stop for the traveling recommendation is the
school's dorms. The dormitory
advisory board will be asked to
decide whether or not to suspend
cigarette sales there when it is
presented to them.
Dr. George Aagard, professor
of medicine, wrote the letter this
summer and sent it to the university’s president. Dr. Aagard is
currently in Malaya.
"The university business office
has prepared a report on the
financial aspects of campus cigar e 11 e s and is circulating it,"
Hutchinson said. "We are not
making any recommendations but

just

making

sure

all advisory

boards are aware of its existence."

Hutchinson said he felt the
health sciences recommendation
was more a demonstration of feeling than an attempt at curtailing smoking, since smokers could
obtain cigarettes elsewhere.
"Cigarette machines in health
sciences reflect more an illustration of research findings than
any restrictive measure,” he said.
There has been considerable reaction to the removal action in
the health sciences building, he
added. The cigarette machines
have now been reinstated, however.
Cigarette sales have been banned on a number of campuses
since a government report linked
smoking to lung cancer last year.
The University of Kansas banned cigarette vending machines
from the student union a few
days after the report was issued,
and since then a number of

schools have followed suit.
At the University of Minnesota, an attempt was made to discourage smoking by halting the
distribution of matches with cigarettes sold on campus. Rather
than slowing down cigarette consumption, however, it speeded it
up. People started chain smoking,
since they could not find a light.

...

.

.

. . . like good
wear different hair

sexy eyes

.

times

.

.

,

styles . . . are sincere
nice personalities

.

.

.

have

are easy
before marriage, but “chaste” on
the honeymoon
are quiet
. , . ladies, carry a conversation
, , , sexy . . . affectionate
.
.
sense of humor.
Women Like Men Who:
Have money . . . show up on
time . . . are considerate . . .
intelligent and good looking . . .
think . . . don’t bang doors in
your face . . . neat and clean
cut . . . call when th»y say
. . have many interthey will
thoughtful.
ests . .
A Good Teacher;
Is one who understands his
students . . . gets the point
across . . . good command of
subject matter, good personal
relationship with students, keen
interest in students and subject . . . answers questions . . .
...

...

.

understands himself
doesn’t
just repeat the book . . doesn’t
mumble . . . can express his
feelings
I don’t know or
.
care .
learns from his students . . . doesn’t only consider
grades . . . where?
...

.

...

.

What I Like On Campus:
. .
Men!
not
vacations
very much . . . fellow students
. . . the beautiful silence between
...

.

4:30 and 6 PM

. . .

the opportun-

ity to develop a program from
undergraduate to graduate level
stacks .
in my.specialty
.

.

.

.

series of film shows
think of anything .
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

can’t

women!

wide variety of "religion”

people you meet . . . snow!
. . . nothing really
great . . . Angle Flight . .
isn: t on campus . . . ROTC.
. .

.

. . .

Rat Hole

.

Embassarrment Is:

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

...

Rochester U’s IFC
Bans Sex in Its Area

.

.

overhear your conversation about
to be accused of cheathim
. . . fratinization
to be caught
staring at a girl’s upper torso
• •
• a girl who is faster than
you are . . . walking in the
Rathskeller and having everybody look at you.
Our Student Government:
Worse than our student government
in high school . .
needs help , . . has had it . .
...

ROCHESTER
Interfraternity Council at the University of Rochester has passed a
resolution outlawing sex in facilities operated by members of the
(CPS)—The

IFC.

The resolution, "specifically
prohibits sexual intercourse in
any fraternity house or (nonhouse) lounge,” The resolution
adds that the council "does not
want to legislate on the morality
of sexual intercourse, but must
prohibit such acts in fraternity
houses and lounges” because of
possible injury to reputations.
The code, said the student
newspaper, the Campus Times,
was passed in an attempt to meet
the demands of deans for uniformity in social standards
throughout the campus.
Student opinion varied concerning the university administration's new so-called “bedroom
rules" which prompted the IFC
resolution, but one student commented: “If you take a girl in
your room, you should be able
to entertain her anv way you see
fit."

shouldn’t

. does a
isn’t . ,
doesn’t represent the student
body fairly *i . . overrates its
inefficient in
importance
carrying out its duties . . takes
itself too seriously . .
classic
case of bureaucracy whose leaders serve their own function—not the function of students . . .
no opniion, don’t know
aloof
enough about it . . . too campusey
. . . tries . . . places less emphasis on student’s opinions than
on school’s public image . . .
reeks . . . irresponsible in its
criticism of the Spectrum . . .
Students Would Be More Unified:
If they were pasted together ...
participate in activities . . . had
a common purpose . .
with
more support of sororities, fraternities, student functions and
more interfraternal relations . . .
beer on campus , . . had a cause
.
.
they are . . . spent less
time talking, more time working in activities . . . classes were
smaller
if their rights were
.
threatened .
administration
listened to student requests
popular drive like beer on campus . . , more campus activities
to include more people . . .
were able to more directly voice
their opinions through referendums and publications
there
were fewer of them . . . less
.
,
administration interference
they all lived in the dorms.
What I Dislike on Campus:
“Joe college” .
whole at.
mosphere . . . indifference
pretentious people .
. secularism . . outragious rates at cafeteria and bookstore . . . ultraconservatism in politics, religion, morality and education . . .
quanity, quality and price of food
the informality
. lack
of space to study . . . overcrowding, messiness . . . extremely
large classes . . . ethnic groups
.
.
.
high prices of atrocious
food . . . teachers, marking
system . . . girls . . . parking
phonies
the coffee
noise
. “labelin Harriraan library
ing” of people, issues and opinions .
. exchange of classes in
the snow . . . intellectual snobs
. . .
boring lectures
Hell
. . . wonderful . .
something you
have to look for carefully
. .
. . . love is love is love
a
librarian who knows where the
books are
great!
for
clods
the only valid, mystical
experience available in the world
.
. wonderful, if it’s real . . .
searching for the good of the
loved one, a give and take re.
lationship betwen the two .
five feet of heaven and a little
poney tail, sways with a wiggle
when she walks .
what you
want it to be
. appreciating
the appreciation which someone
something
else shows for you
you find only once .
. worthless if it isn't meaningful . . .
fine if you can afford it . . .
blind . . . reserved for the un-

.

.

,

fairly good job

.

.

.

...

.

.

...

.

...

.

.

.

.

.

,

.

...

.

.

.

.

...

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Walking into the wrong “John”
. . . not remembering someone’s
name
not being prepared
. .
being belligerent when you’re
wrong .
.
.
nothing does
.
. being
tripping on a step
.
made a fool of by a girl
being broke
making stupid
,
comments
humility . . .
having a door slam whHe sneaking into class
to be criticized
. .
dirty finger nails . . falling
on the ice in front of Norton
.
. . when people
criticize my
clothing . . . having a professor
.

mostly ineffective .
become power-drunk

.

There is a lot of noise being
made about the lack of “lialogue" on this campus. In
answer to this outburst about
academic numbness, a questionnaire, ranging from the light to
the serious in nature, was solicited amongst the students and
faculty. Here are the answers
received—
Men Like Women Who:
Don’t wear designed stockings
. wear skirts
are friendly
. . . “nice” . . . easy to get along
with . . . feminine . . . mentally
independent . . . have nice legs

...

,

The director, Robert E. Smith,
described the pressures as both
economic and political. He said
President Johnson had endorsed
the principle of free higher edu
cation in declaring college train
ing to be "the only valid passport
out of poverty.”
Economic pressures are such
that higher education increasingly is being priced out of the
market for qualified students, he
said.
Smith said that by 1970 it will
cost $3,519 to finance one year

Smith said the gap between

what college education cost and
what families can afford to pay
is steadily widening. He termed
this gap the “national family dollar deficit for undergraduate

...

.

.

.

...

...

.

.

.

.

.

.

..

.

.

pretentious

.

.

.

something

.

.

where you find it . . . unselfish
affection .
terrible, and then
it’s great too . . . friendship . .
.

.

rare . . . contentment
a piece
of bread and butter folded over
...

...

lor the chosen few.

.

—

.

PHILADELPHIA (CPS) Pressures for the extension of universal free higher education beyond
12th grade are becoming “irre
sistible,” according to the program director of the College
Scholarship Service of Princeton,
N.J.

Campus Comments

By RAYMOND VOLPE and CAROL NOWAK

.

Becoming Distinctly Possible

Univ. of Washington
Petitions to Eliminate
Sale of Cigarettes

.

Free Higher Education Is

$500.

Friday, December 18, 1964

SFECTfcUM

PAGE THIRTY-SIX

Conflict Over Function of Student Paper
Results in Resignation of Entire Staff
LONDON, Ontario (CPS)—The
entire staff of the student newspaper of the University of Western Ontario quit last week after
the editor of the paper refused
to publish a story satirizing fraternity life.
The editor, Rob Johnson, is a
fraternity member, but none of
those who resigned are. The
seven walk-outs included the

managing, associate, news, and
feature editors. Remaining to
publish the next day’s edition
were only Johnson and the sports

editor.

Johnson, in an interview, said
his refusal to publish the story
was based not on its content but
on the fact that it would have
violated the University’s “silent
week". "Silent Week" is a period
in which prospective fraternity
members are given a chance to
consider their decisions and no
rushing is supposed to take place.
The resigning staff members
issued a statement saying their
w alk-out followed "months of con
flict over functions of a student
newspaper.”

�e
Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

A Student Condemns Campus Activism,
Says That Apathy Is Not Undesireable
Collegiate Press Service
Nothing is more disgusting than
student activism. On campuses

across the country there exist

small groups of individuals whose
sole function seems to be to embroil their colleges in some sort
of gigantic cause. They form political organizations, write for
their school newspapers, and occasionally run for their student
governments. During the last decade, they have tried to make apathy seem undesirable to the world
in the most intolerant and malicious manner. It’s about time that
someone put these people in their
places, before they destroy our
educational system and the student’s way of life.
The function of a college is not
to educate, but to train. The former concept is too broad. It involves more than the memorization of factual data. It demands
that fact be synthesized in the
form of opinions. It suggests the
thoroughly

erroneous proposition

that classroom learning can be applied to the “real” world. In

short,

the

term

“education”

means thinking, and thinking, as
we all know, is a useless, taxing, and even dangerous occupa-

tion.
Contrast this gibberish with the
precision of the word, ‘.‘training.”
To be trained, the student can
assume that he is unqualified to
think, as any college administrate/ knows. All he must do is to
attend classes five or six days a
week, copy verbatim the pearls
of wisdom emanating from the
sage at the front of the room, and
reproduce them on the exam. He
needn’t try to relate the data of
one class with that of another.
He needn’t discuss any of it with
his friends. He can render it as
irrelevant to his life as it really
is.

The trained mind is the happy
mind. It has learned to accept
authority, to adjust to its environment, and to filter all unpleasant
sights or sounds from its receptive organs. It knows that no
problem is serious enough to demand solution, particularly problems miles away from the student’s dormitory room. It recognizes that originality is merely
an excuse for egotistical arrogance. It is completely attuned to
the demands of a bureaucratized
society and will be rewarded upon
graduation with a good job, fast
promotions, and piles of money.
Under the circumstances, why
should anyone listen to an activist? His position is antithetical
to the demands of university life.
In choosing to act, he must decide. Decisions involve thinking,
which by its very nature impedes
the process of memorization essential to learning. This means
that the activist is fundamentally
an anti-intellectual, although he
often couches his arguments in
the most scholastic terms. It is
little wonder that so many activists flunk courses or leave
school, complettly unable to
adapt to the healthy environment
of the campus.
There are two kinds of activists: internal and external. The
former protests curricular structure, social rules, dormitory facilities, and other so-called "atrocities” of our educational system.
The latter registers voters, pickets for civil rights, and demon

strates against

the

House Un

American Activities Committee
-Some engage in both varieties.
Neither brand should be condoned, by the students or by a
college administration. Internal
activism violates the sacred maxmi that only a Board of Trustees
knows what’s necessary for a successful college or university and
•hat the student who disagrees
should leave if he cannot recognize the wisdom of their decisions. .External activism creates
bad relations with the communi•&gt;'.
blocks necessary alumni con

tributions, and gives the impression that all students are immature cry-babies. But the main sin
of both groups lies in the assumption that there are problems to
be solved
an assumption deliberately calculated to encourage
—

unhappiness.

Activism is the blight of our
educational system. It demands
thought at a time when thinking
is dangerous. It requires choice
at a time when neutrality is necessary for success.
It makes
noise at a time when silence is
golden. Let us cleanse ourselves
of this social rot, wherever and
whenever we find it.
There has been a great deal
written lately about the inability
of the average college student
to speak and write the English
language. We are constantly told
that Joe College cannot express
his thoughts coherently, either in
conversation or composition; that
he has not the vaguest concept of
the rules of grammar; and that
he is little more than a linguistic
illiterate.
With all due respect to the more
elderly of the campus sentinels,
I believe such a judgment ignores
the very real contribution to the
English language that American
college students have been making, By utilizing common features
of our society and incorporating
them into the language, today’s
younger generation has in fact
proven the inherent flexibility
of English, and has aided materially (no split infinitive for me!)
its growth.
Any campus visitor will sooner
or later be told, for example, that
a particularly difficult assignment or examination was “off the
wall.” Any baseball fans in the
house will recognize at once the
peculiarly appropriate nature of
that phrase.
Watch an outfielder race back
under a long, hard fly, then suddenly wheel around and play a
ball off the wall. It requires a

rare ability to judge a carom correctly, field the ball, and then
wheel around and throw to the
proper base; with runners on

The same sort of thing happened with the expression “Out to
lunch,” used to describe a square,
a yo-yo, a nincompoop, a mishugana (for New York schools only).

One-who was totally unaware of
the proper modes of dress, music,
opinion, and expression, was “out
to lunch." This was soon shortened to “lunchy,” a pithy adjective which encompasses everything contemptuous which a collegian can possibly say of a fellow.

It would be impossible to demonstrate fully the broadening of
the language which is taking
place across the Groves of Academe, and which is in part a legitimate extension and simplification of the requirements of communication. A television is a
“tube”; a movie is a “flick”; this
in turn derives from the most
basic evasion of responsibility,
the nap or “sack out.”
It may not sound like English;
it may not read like English; J.

Donald Adams may swallow hard
as he hears the mumble of the
Philistine hoard from beyond the
hills. But such is the growth of
language; and much of it is going
on right on the college campuses
populated by the inarticulate gen
eration. It’s a subject that’s off
the wall, but if you don't dig it
you're just a lunchy flame.

PACE THIRTY-SEVEN

Reading A College Catalog
Is A Complicated Chore
By WILLIAM C. WOOLDRIDGE
No reading is more melancholy
than a large college catalog.
Spread out before the inquiring
student are often hundreds of
little slices of history, literature,
language, and science, of which
in his alotted time he can con
sume a paltry sixteen or twenty.
Every completed year more closely constricts the range of possibilities open to him.
One student learns something
about the Romans and at the
same time of necessity passes by
the Greeks, Egyptians, and Babylonians, not to mention misty
peoples whose very names he never knows. He has tour years and
a catalog: out of the combination
he must create an education.
Every hall boasts a few fatuous
optimists who intend to fill in the
gaps with private reading and,
more rarely, someone who actual
ly makes the attempt. These in
trepid souls' inevitable failure reflects discredit on their sense of
perspective rather than their tal
ents; the uomo universale is impossible today, and no amount
of natural genius can compensate

for the condition of the times.
Leonardoes were rare enough
four hundred years ago. Since
then, the volume of the cranial
cavity remains about the same.

SEX IS FUN and NATURAL
Human
BALTIMORE (CPS)
sexuality should be considered
as inherently good and as a result of sex is fun, funny and
—

natural, the Reverend Frederick
G. Wood, Jr. of Goucher College
told his congregation recently.
Wood said students tend to
take sexual expression far to
seriously and that they should
quit doing so. It is separated

from the rest of one’s activities
and “assumed to be fraught with
all kinds of special meaning and

mystical significance,” he said,
"Sexuality itself is good,” he

Reasonably reliable methods
of birth control exist, Wood said,
but the control of fertility does
not appear to be the final issue.
•'Heterosexual union is always
at least potentially creative of
another person
a person, not
just some little baby who may
be viewed as a nuisance or an
—

unfortunate inconvenience, but
another person, for whom his
creators arc deeply and intimate-

ly responsible." To disregard this
potential creativity is to deprive
sex of much that makes it meanhe said.
“If sex is creative in the sense
of being a means of interpersoningful,

said, “from the structure of the
organism as male and febase, this can be one of the most human
male to every conceivable act
fulfillmcnt," Wood said, "then
difficult plays in baseball.
of sexual self-expression. There perhaps we need to acknowledge
Thus, an examination which is is nothing bad or dirty or perthat sex may have something to
“off the wall" is one which redo with those relations we charquires the highest efforts of the verted about it.”
acterize as love relationships;
The Reverend said he hadn’t
students, which is extraordinarily
the students “whether you that is, relationships marked by
difficult, and on which a student told
should or you shouldn’t, or even certain mutualities of respect,
who does not know the material
how far you should go,” because consideration and giving.
generdo
well
with
broad
cannot
to do so would be to violate
“The believer will find himalities and platitudes.
irresponsibly individual freedom. self raising the question whether
a
often
hears
Similarly, one
sex outside of such a love reHe said the primary implicadate described as a “flame." This
lationship is not at least poconcept
that
sextions
of
the
it
did
to
studoes not mean what
tentially destructive, rather than
sex
is
uality
good
is
are
that
quite
dents of a generation ago;
creative, and therefore less than
the contrary. A flame used to be fun and natural. "Because sex fully sex," he said.
chosen,"
freely
is
it
is
he
fun,
somehot stuff, an attractive and
Wood said marriage is a symsaid. “Because sex is fun, it is
what dangerous member of the
not to be understood in terms bol for this type of relationship,
opposite sex who was captivatingof a debt to be paid after a but the content can exist without
ly irresistable. Today a “flame"
is a disaster; and the derivation certain number of dates, or as the symbol, just as the symbol
does necessitate the content. The
of the term once again reveals conformity to the generalized exindividual is free to determine
the ingenuity of the American pectations of a group.”
his own actions, but he loses
college student of today.
By “funny" Wood said he was
the security and relaxation proreferring not only to the humor vided
by an established pattern.
Anyone who has ever seen a
to sex, but to its playattached
war picture is familiar with the ful,
All sexual activity is interaspects. "And this
creative
scene in which a fighter plane
personal, "whether that activity
that there are no laws
(ours or the enemy’s depending means
is heterosexual, homosexual, or
attached to sex,” he said. "I reon the point of the film) is shot
absolutely no laws. Anyautosexual (for such relationships
out of the skies and plunges in peat,
who tells you there arc may almost inevitably involve the
one
to
flames
the earth. This plane be guilty of mistaking social and fantasy of or the desire for a
has “flamed out.” Now precisely
relationship with another percultural custom for divine sancthat phrase is applied to a student tion.
son),” he said.
who has been caught unaware in
sex
is
natural
The biblical understanding iS
The
fact
that
class or who has flubbed an exam.
that for an interpersonal reladoes not relegate it to the posiCuriously enough, a victim may tion of being merely a natural tionship to be full, it must be
responsible, Wood said. Rather
say that “I flamed out” or "the function which has one specific
than use one another as things,
purpose and no other, Wood
exam was a flame out” or “I realwe should relate to one another
ly got shot down." All of the said. "Eating, for example, is
also natural, and has the natural
as persons. “And this plea is
slang reveals how the war picrelevant to any kind of interture has ingrained itself on the function of the nourishment and
personal relationship, whether it
young man’s conscience, and has preservation of the organism. But
become a part of his familiar most of my gourmet friends which is in bed. or playing tennis, or
frame of reference. With that be rather abashed if I told them singing a duet.
“From the biblical [Joint of
versatility commonly ascribed to they should engage in eating
view,” he said, "to relate to
Americans, the student has taken only for these purposes
Wood said that according to another person is to assume some
the verb “to flame out" ana converted it into a noun describing the Bible sexuality is more than responsibility for that person
good; it is creative, and from And the magnitude of the reany disastrous blind date or member of the opposite sex (“A this concept comes the possibility sponsibility is directly proporflame”). And once again the Ian
of distinguishing between a tionate to the depth of the rehedonist and a believer.
lationship."
guage moves forward.

This dichotomy is written down
in black and white on every page
of a college catalog.
A recognition of the irremediability of the situation does not
banish that recurrent autumnal
ennui which overtakes the student when
leafs through his
catalog to make a few more vistalimiting choices.
What will he ever know about
oceanography, the German enlightenment, seismology, medieval English drama, the Symbolist
movement? About Latin literature in the early middle ages,
English social history 400-1642,
Roman law? About the theory of
stellar atmospheres and about galactic structure?
The galaxy must largely remain
in shadows, it and most of its
literary, historical, and physical
components. Twenty or so little
slices we may investigate. What
should they be? No one can objcctivly say. What should they
not be?
Well considered discrimination
can at least begin to suggest omissions.
One obvious class of candidates
for the blackball need only be
mentioned. Other writers have
railed sufficiently against basket
weaving, modem dancing, physi
cal education, and related non
courses.

Baskets and basketballs are not
intrinsically evil, not special varieties of sin. When, however, so
many possibilities stand arrayed
before the student, choosing such
a subject as one of these is ludicrous.
Students now need little warning against the ridiculous. The
transitory proves more beguiling.
There is little profit in learning
as a sophomore what will be
obsolete at graduation two years
later. The category of transitory
includes all those tempting courses about the world today: current
events, minority conflicts, economic problems, politics in the
Middle East.

Too many students, fired up
with social conscience instead of

intellectual zeal, look at college
as a medical school to prepare
general practioncrs for the
world’s ills. They come out knowing everything about NATO and
nothing about the history of
France and England.
A passion to study “real life"
most often creates these intellectual ephemerids. "Real life”
last year meant the arms race,
and now means sit-ins. Next year
it will be something else again.
The student or “real life" is
grabbing for the newspapers
which will be thrust at all of us
quite soon enough. Now we have
the time to enjoy an education;
to cull the catalog for courses
which specialize in diagnosing
twentieth century headaches is to
throw away our brief respite.
Such courses may inform but
cannot educate.
It would be hard to find many
people who openly profess opposition to the ideal of a liberal
education, but the student who is
exclusively preoccupied with
“useful" knowledge of current
problems has utterly forsaken
that ideal.
This is not written to plead the
case of liberal education, but simply to point out that the economics major and his kin are not
getting one The country no doubt
needs these social technicians,
with the same undeniable urgen
cy it needs a reliable supply of
garbage collectors, but from the
point of view of a student confronted with a pearl packed catalog, the commoner stones should
have little appeal.
Thomas Jefferson late in his
life wrote John Adams he had
happily abandoned daily newspapers for Tacitus and Thucy
dides. Generalized, the remark
well defines an opportunity which
comes only in college and retirement.

�A Large School Alienates
The University Student
By ROBERT EBERT
Colltgiat* Pra»$ Service

The dilemma of the alienated
student, important on every
campus Which hopes to involve
its members in a community of
scholars, is doubly important at

a big, confusing university of
today. At this moment there are
hundreds of students who have
lost all contact with the world
their fellows inhabit and who

wander helplessly from classroom
to dormitory, room, not even
aware that they arc searching
desperately for a way to unlock these prison cells.
Many of these lost ones are
new this semester, and will drop
out in January or sooner. Others

have been here for several years;
they survive and even prosper
in their classes, perhaps because
the orderliness of classroom properly done is something to cling
to when all other order seems
unmasked as mockery and cant.
They are here because they
were sent here, for degrees or
mates to keep up the status of
their families back home in neigh
borhoods where personal contact
is so atraphied that status is
attached to public gesture. They
arc disorganized; they have no
pride in their work; they can
count no real accomplishments,
but only the frustrating and self
denying pseudo accomplishments
of academic busy work and hectic
student "activities" forgotten tomorrow. They have few purposes
and no goals. They drift.

Their existence is

increasing

ly in shadowy terms. To their
parents, they were once children,
and that was something, but now
they are often only subjects of

because Dad
Never Went to School. To the
dream fulfillment

University, they are all too inter
changable parts, and one student
1 know who is taking a half load
and working full-time was asked
if he realized he was “taking the
place” of a potential full time
student (as if a real person
could "lake the place" of a sta-

tistical

one!).

To their friends,

objects for conversation, witnesses to each other's
infinitely boring autobiographies.
To the people they dale, they
are companions but not lovers,
because they are afraid to lower
they

are

barriers and give of themselves.

The most urgent, crying need
of these lost ones is to be given
an opportunity to exist as in
dividuals working toward some
meaningful, self fulfilling goal. It
is an indictment of the Univer
sity that the treadmill toward
a diploma, with all of its mani
pulation of infinitesimal grade
points, no longer seems an im

portant goal on any level more
noble than simple survival. Paul
Goodman writes of students who
"do" New Trier to "make" M IX.
and "do" M I T. to "make" West
inghouse. But many of the wiser
students perceive that this is an
ironic deadend, because there is
nothing else to "do" Westinghouse for, not in the society we
have made for each other There
are no more noble goals, and- so
nobility perishes.

Some of my friends

Friday, December 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE THIRTY-EIGHT

in

the Ad

ministration tell me that there
comes a time when there are no

more honest reasons “why" a
discouraged and defeated student
should stay in college. Yet they
know that the student who leaves
the educationl production line
will be a "drop out” in a pro
found sense, a part of those dis-

mal government statistics about
the relationship between education and income. Often this confusion stems from a failure of
both the student and his teachers
to recognize that the subject matter is ABOUT something, and is
neither an end in itself nor
simply a means to job security
and $20,000 a year.

The unlucky ones survive this
system. The lucky ones break
down; and are sent to Counseling
to be treated as human beings.
It takes a physical or mental
collapse to attract urgently needed sympathy in this and the
other Institutions which fit them
selves
but not always their
into the Great Sociemembers
ty. Mononucleosis is as often
caused by a loss of meaning as
by a loss of sleep.
—

—

Efforts are made by the Administration to organize and order the chaos, but they are entirely the wrong efforts. While
students seek smaller communities within the disintegrating
whole, those concerned with the
problem urge an “identification”
wrongly based on the total campus and its most easily administered subdivisions, the housing
groups. Unadmitted, in the back
of very mind, is the realization
that this campus is too large to
continue as a single unit, and
that efforts to hold it together
only intensify the pressure on
its parts.
Pathetic attempts are made to
instill a sense of community in
those who pathetically desire it.
of empty spirits cry
out for comradeship, and are un
answered with the bureaucratic

Liquor Raid Film Is

Seized at Lehigh U.
(CPS)—
BETHLEHEM, Pa.
Agents of the Pennsylvania Liqour Control Board (LCB) seized
a roll of film containing pictures
of a raid conducted by the LCB
at Lehigh University last week.
The film was taken from David
Lewandowski, a photographer for
the Lehigh student newspaper,

the

Brown

and White,

under

threat of arrest. The Brown and

White later reported it had
learned that the LCB agents who
seized the film had “no legal
authority to do so.” In an editorial the paper demanded the
return of the film unexposed.
The raid was made on the Phi
Kappa Theta fraternity house at
Lehigh during initiation ceremonies. LCB agents confiscated $300
worth of liquor allegedly brought
into Pennsylvania illegally. Arrested in the raid were two members of the fraternity. Both were
released on $500 bond.
Brown and White editor James
Dulicai later complained to LBC
enforcement officer Rollo Jacobson that the film had been taken
illegally and asked that it be
returned. Jacobson argued that
the film was taken to protect
the identity of the agents and
to avoid a dangerous situation
he claimed had been created by
the picture taking.
Dulieai denied the existence
of any dangerous situation and
editorially supported the photographer’s attempt to record the
raid.
“The stupidity of the film’s
confiscation, and the strange arrogance of its continued impoundage is incredible," the editorial said. “But some small measure of wisdom might still be
shown by returning it to us, un-

exposed.”

Hundreds

inadequacy of served meals, compulsory house meetings, exchanges and bulletin boards for every
floor. These are ritual activities
which bring no human understanding and serve only to con
sume inadquacy.

Yet no voice cries out that
the king has no clothes. Real
estate is expensive, and so the
University reveals plans for more

dormitories, giant
skyscraper
residence hotels with dining halls
as intimate as automats. They
will do to house customers for
Conrad Hilton, but not students
for a community of scholars. The
spirits of their residents are
crushed by glass and stainless
steel and the soft, dead breath
of the ventilation equipment.
The greek houses are no better.
Once, perhaps, it was possible
to be brotherly to 40 friends, but
now the houses have grown to
GO or 80 “brothers," and new
wings are announced monthly by
proud alumni w-ho are destroying the comradeship they remember gratefully. The sororities expand more slowly, but their applicants increase in number yearly, until a rushce gladly subordinates her personality to an
Image she holds of the sisters,

the sisters artfully strive
to develop themselves in the imand

age the rushees expect. It is all
training for a vicious, genteel,
competitive hell they will all
create in the suburbs next year
while their husbands forage in
the city for money.

There arc still a few places
you can go. still a few indepen
(lent rooming houses where they
can ttnd~a”toundatron for the
thoughtful construction of an integrated, directed life as a real
student with loyal friends. But
these little houses are being torn
down, year by year, to make
room for the Baby Boom, and in
a decade there may be nothing
on this campus but the silent
scream of. loneliness, the efficient
click of brisk sorting machines,
and the

breathing

of buildings.

New Teaching Method
Revisions to Secure

Sufficient Educators
(CPS) —American colleges and
universities will need 35,700 new
teachers by 1969-70, and they
will have to revise their teaching methods in order to get them,
according to a report recently
issued by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of

Education.

The report said that the major
source for these teachers—doctoral programs in universities—will be producing only half that
number. And based on past experience, only about half of the
doctoral

holders—about 9000

—

will actually enter teaching.
The report, written by John
W. Gardner, foundation president,
said that teaching has lost its
status at most universities
especially teaching of undergraduates—as professors have been
lured by increasingly rich research assignments and often
given up teaching altogether.
"As a rule,” he said, “the university administration is so busy
maintain
the
struggling
to
strength of its huge graduate
and professional schools that it
neglicts the undergraduate. And
so does the faculty."
Gardner made several suggestions aimed at casing the
pending teacher shortage:
—

—Establishing , a

new

degree

short of Ph D. for those who do
not really need a doctorate.
—Shortening the period be-

tween bachelor’s and doctorate
for those who do choose to go on.
—Creating

flexable retirement

Harvard's Student Government
Has Moved to Abolish Itself
CAMBRIDGE (CPS)
The undergraduate student government
—

at Harvard has moved to abolish
itself, but balked at a proposal
that would have allowed the col-

lege to determine if it wants any

student government at all.
After about a two-hour discussion, the Harvard Council for
Undergraduate Affairs (HCUA)
overwhelmingly approved the recommendation of its executive
committee that a new constitution be written. It would replace
the HCUA with a Harvard Undergraduate Council (HUC) and a
Harvard Policy Committee (HPC),
which would divide the old council’s functions between them.
Probably the most significant
action of the meeting, however,
was the voice vote to table a
motion by Richard C. Minzner,
who suggested a student referendum after the new constitution
is written to choose between th"
old HCUA, the new HUC and
HCP, or nothing at all.
Dean Monro, who attended the
meeting with three Harvard residence House Masters, said that he

constitution back to the council
within a week.
The reorganization affects only
the undergraduate student government, or that of Harvard College. The university’s graduate
students maintain a Separate student government.
A second cause for protests
seems to be the feeling by students that university officials
are not consulting with them
on decisions affecting them. Apparently this is the main reason
for the demonstration at Michigan', and for a demonstration at
the University of Illinois, where
students are protesting an administration decision to build a
million dollar intramural build
ling without soliciting student
opinion on the project.
In some cases the two coin-

cided, as in New York where the
issue of free tuition was injected
directly into the campaign for
state offices. Students there were
able to take their case directly
to the voters; Senatorial candidate Robert Kennedy publicly
endorsed free tuition; and stuwas “not as discouraged with the
dents from City University camCouncil as it is with itself,” but paigned at the grass roots with
the precinct workers.
that he still favors the proposals
for revision. He suggested that
Of the six candidates they
the new Harvard Undergraduate specifically opposed, one was defeated and the other five won
Council would probably be a “potent committee.”
re-election by considerably reThe only objection Mon
duced margins.
If there is any one reason
voiced to the plan was to a provision that the number of faculty for increased student protests,
however, it would probably be
members on the Harvard Policy
the civil rights movement. The
Council be kept small, so that
movement, which involved large
the faculty delegation could not
form a bloc large enough to prenumbers of politically active stuvail whenever there is student
dents, convinced many of them
disagreement. Monro would be a
that non-violent demonstrations
member of the proposed HPC.
could be an effective device on
The ultimate number of faculty the campus. It also • served to
members was left unspecified in make them more sensitive of
the adopted resolution.
their own civil rights.
At Berkeley, a number of the
In a formal statement of its
groups protesting the political
proposed revisions, the HCUA’s
executive committee had charged activity ban are campus affiliates
that the limits to the HCUA’s of national civil rights organizastructure had condemned it to an tions. A number of the leaders
“all-to-inconsequential role in the of the protest there—as well as
College.”
protests on other campuses—are
veterans of the Mississippi SumThe executive committee listed
a lack of faculty respect for the
mer Project, Freedom Rides, sit
ins and other civil rights action.
HCUA, unawareness by the council of the university’s plans, and
Mario Savio, one of the leaders
the absence of opportunities to of the Berkeley protest, summed
learn of Faculty reaction to. it up when he said, “It took peoHCUA reports as the reasons the ple like us to get the civil rights
movement going, and now we are
council had failed.
A special seven-man committee
coming home to roost.”
was appointed to report a new

Private Negro Colleges
Supported by UNCF
privately-financed
America’s
southern Negro colleges are contributing an increasing number
of outstanding men and women
to society, reports a December
Reader’s Digest article, “Negro
Colleges; Their Product and Promise."

Author James Daniel notes
that some 70 of these colleges
today have an enrollment of

40,000 students. Among
their graduates have been such
distinguished Negroes as educator Booker T. Washington, scholar W. E. B. DuBois, author James
Weldon Johnson, singer Roland
Hayes, Judge Thurgood Marshall
and the Rev. Martin Luther King,
1964 winner of the Nobel Peace
Prize.
about

For the past twenty years fund-

for 32 of the Negro
schools has been carried on coraising

policies so that effective older operatively by the United Negro
professors can continue t« teach. College Fund, founded by Dr.
—Encouraging and using talFred Patterson, then President
ented women.
of Alabama's famed Tuskegee
—Enlarging the total supply Institute. To date the Fund has
of reducing the waste of ecocollected 46 million dollars for
nomic and social deprivation.
its member colleges, contributing
indicate
the
number
Statistics
to each a maximum ten percent
of students in college in 1970 of expenses.
By
be
6.9
1980
about
million.
will
Using an
incentive method
that figure should exceed 10
under which the more an indimillion.

vidual college raises internally
the larger the share it gets from
gifts raised by the U.N.C.F., the
Fund has stimulated substantial
increases in financial support by
Negroes for Negro colleges. Last
year Negro individuals and institutions contributed $1,500,000
to the colleges, A number of
other U.S. college groups have

copied the Fund’s innovation to
joint financing, the Digest notes.

Academic

standards

among

Negro colleges are rising rapidly,
the article states; graduates find
ready admission to top graduate
schools and are welcomed by
many large national corporations
The colleges began just after
the Civil War when New England missionaries poured south-

ward. “armed with Bibles and
an incandescent conviction that
the children of slaves could be
educated.”

Begun initially with bi-racial
admission policies, the schools
were forced to segregate by
southern legislatures after the
withdraw! of Union forces. Many

educators now forsec a return
to bi-racial policies. Faculties of
the colleges are already between

20 rc

and 50'1

non-Negro,

and

scholarships are available on a
similarly open basis.

�r
Friday, Decam bar 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE

By JACK AUSPITZ
and ROBERT HOROWITZ
The Harvard Crimson
Collegiate Press Service

Two hundred Harvard students
staged an angry rally recently
to protest the dismissal of several popular young instructors.
The instructors were asked to
leave the University for failing to

meet departmental requirements
of scholarly publication.
The University refused all com-

ment, claiming

that Pusey was

tied up in negotiations for purchase of the Boston Red Sox and
could not be disturbed.
The controversy swirls around
four teachers in the History of
Religious Department who have
published little.
One, an assistant professor,
taught a popular course in early
Christianity, but wrote nothing.
On mild days, he habitually shepherded his class to a small mountain for his lecture.
Departmental officials charged
that the lectures were given in an
unscholarly manner and amounted to little more than sermonizing. The Faculty was also concerned about the professor’s dubious parentage.
When questioned, the professor
said only, “They know not what
they do.”
Another instructor, a bearded
expert in Jewish theology, has

composed only ten sentences
while at the University. Even
these, the department charges,
were written by someone else.
Th instructor has been passed
over for promotion several times.
The Faculty also dismissed one
of the department’s more prolific
members, whose work includes 95
theses. The department had complained that nailing the theses
to the instructor’s office door did
not constitute an acceptable mode
of scholarly publication.
The final case in the Religions
Department involves an instruc-

tor in oriental studies who spent
much of his time sitting under a
tree with his feet crossed, contemplating Holyoke Center.
“I have no desire for promotion. In fact, I have no desire,”
students quoted him as saying.
His department charged “lack of
initiative,”
The controversy threatens to
widen when the Faculty takes up
other cases next week. In some

instances, failure to publish is
coupled with other criticisms.
An instructor in the Classics
Department, for example, well
known for his course in the history of the Trojan War, has been
charged with “lack of vision.”
The most scandalous case, however, involves an instructor in
Greek philosophy. He is accused
of copying all his published
works, word for word, from casual comments made by a senior
professor at cocktail parties.
This instructor is also suspected
of being a monarchist. He allegedly planned an abortive coup,
in which members of the Philosophy Department sought to rule
the University. Some students
also hint that he invited the very
youngest boys in his section to
“wild parties.”
One instructor of medieval theology however, has been jumped
to full professor. He recently
completed a treatise of some 50
volumes on matters of the highest
theological value. No senior Faculty member has yet read the
work, but all are greatly impressed by its table of contents and the
cute review it received ip the
Crimson.

While the demonstrations have
attracted a surprisingly large
number of students on the usually lethargic Michigan campus,
they have not been successful in
other ways.
The first demonstration started
°ff as simply a rally pressing for
university reform. In response
to a spontaneous suggestion from
the crowd, some 100 of the 200
present marched to the presi-

dent’s on-campus residence to
present the demands.
But President Harlan Hatcher
was in Washington. His wife received the demonstrators and invited them to regularly scheduled monthly tea the next day.
The next day, handbills were
circulated around campus announcing the "Michigan Tea Party" to be held at the Hatcher’s
that afternoon. The group was
“going to see President Hatcher
and present our demands. Every
student has an interest.”
Some 300 students met that afternoon. After brief, stirring
speeches by SGC member Barry
Bluestone and Voice chairman
Richard Horevitz, SAL’s organizers, the group marched to the

tea.

At this point, Bluestone backed
down. Hatcher objected to his
presenting the demands at a social function. Bluestone agreed
and left shortly thereafter.
Meanwhile, some 300 followers
milled around and lost all cohesion as any kind of a group.
There was no confrontation as advertised; at best some interesting
short discussions between some
students, Hatcher and two vicepresidents present ensued.
The leafletting of campus and
the second rally violated all the
university’s calendaring rules.

The rally was not calendared and
held by the General Library instead of by the Women’s League
as requested by the administration.
Whether

it will achieve anything is another matter. Both
leadership and membership are
young. Bluestone is a junior with
less than one year’s experience
in student politics. Horevitz is a
sophomore. They seek drastic action now on complex problems.
They demand the university reverse itself on several major
areas of policy.
University administrators are
not receptive to the "we demand"
tone of SAL. They are willing to
discuss SAL’s proposals, but believe their tone is juvenile and
out of keeping with an intellectual, academic community.
With 300 students, SAL lacks
the numbers needed to make the
administration take notice. There
are 29,400 students on campus;
thus more than 29,000 are disinterested or opposed. SAL is
hardly a mass action group.
Fueled by visions of reform
wrought by mass action, as it believes the change in political

group policies at Berkeley were,

and undaunted by its initial fail
ures, SAL prepares to do battle
with a disinterested campus and
an unconvinced administration.

Detroit's Major Newspaper
Run by University Students
DETROIT (CPS)
The major
daily newspaper presently operating in Detroit is being published by a Wayne State University
graduate student and being written with the aid of college editors
from all over the country.
The paper, the Detroit Daily
Press, was started by Michael
Dworkin, 24, a graduate student
in economics, shortly after a
strike shut down the city’s regu—

lar dailies, the Detroit Free Press
and the Detroit News last July
13. It has been appearing ever
since, and presently has a daily
circulation of over 250,000.
The Daily Press, which now
runs between 24 and 48 full
pages daily, provides Detroit
readers with full local, national,
and international news as well
as a broad spectrum of editorial
opinion. The paper’s more than
150 employees come from the
idled Detroit Free Press and from
college papers all over the country.

Editor and Publisher Dworkin,
a former editor of the Wayne
State Collegian, decided to start
the Daily Press when it became
clear Detroit’s regular papers
would be out of operation for
some time. Former Collegian Bus-

iness Manager Gary Stern helped
Dworkin line up advertisers, and
Wayne State publications advisor
Frank Gill aided in putting together a staff.

Dworkin said he started the
paper as “an interim measure,”
to fill the news gap in Detroit
during the strike. "It was a gold-

en opportunity,” he said. “For
years college editors have been
telling each other how they would
run the nation’s press, if they
got a chance. Suddenly I got
one. It still scares me a little

when I think about it.”
Dworkin says he feels

the

Dailey Press has done “a good
job” of providing Detroit with
a newspaper during the strike,
“We’ve improved steadily since
we started,” he said, “and we
will get better every day we
continue to publish.”
writers make up
most of the paper’s local news
Free Press

and sports staffs, but most of the
paper’s other departments arc
run by students, including the
amusement, religion, and editori
al page departments, Students
also make up the bulk Of the
correspondents who supply the
Daily Press with its national
news.

Economics Is Kid Stuff
As a college student, you may
be familiar with such abstruse
terms as “marginal analysis” and
"comparative advantage.” Both
are rather sophisticated economic concepts usually encountered by students in Eeon. I and
and soon forgotten
2 courses
by most of them.
Oh yes,
there’s another
group of American scholars familiar with these economic concepts. This group consists of
thousands of first, second and
third graders who are learning
basic concepts taught in college
—

—

courses.
lt’s all part of an exciting new
program of instruction devised
by Prof. Lawrence Senesh, a Purdue University economist and
aimed at relieving what amounts
to a major American affliction
economic ignorance.
Heart of the program is discovering economic principles in
everyday activities. For example;
—

a group of grade-schoolers was
assigned to keep order in the
classroom, without being given
specific tasks. The result was
chaos
until the teacher gave
individual assignments to different children: one swept the
floor, another cleaned the black
boards, still another emptied the
wastebasket. The work was thus
quickly done; more importantly,
the children learned the principle
of division of labor.
Mass, production is taught Tn
similar fashion, One, class made
gingerbread men, with each child
in one group carrying out the
entire process while another
group set up a production line.
The youngsters saw that specialization resulted in greater production, but that it had the disadvantages of monotony and of
breakdown if one member of the
assembly line failed to do his
—

job.

By PAUL DANISH
Collegiate Prei» Service

(CPS) —This is fast shaping up
to be the year of the student
protest at the nation’s colleges

and universities.
Students on campuses in all
parts of the country have staged
a rash of demonstrations and
protests on a wide array of national, international and local
issues, and no let up seems in
sight.

Protest action has been aimed

at everything from new regula-

tions governing the consumption
of alcohol at Trinity College in
Hartford, Conn., to policies restricting student political activity at the University of California and almost everything in
between.
At the University of Pennsylvania, several hundred students
demonstrated against the construction of a new fine arts
building on campus on grounds
that it would destroy one of the
few tree-shaded open spots at
the university.
At the University of Texas,
the campus chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society
picketed against the use of Black
Face in a campus minstrel show
jn grounds that it vas degrading to the Negro and the university’s Negro students.
At City University of New
York, students organized a twomonth campaign favoring free
tuition, and worked to defeat
candidates for the state legislature who opposed it.
At the University of Michigan,
a student political party staged
demanding
a
demonstration
"campus democracy now,” as
money
as
for
teaching,
well
more
new student housing, better facil-

ities, increased student wages
and a lower cost of living on
campus.
Much student protest activity
has centered on civil rights. At

the University of Colorado, the

campus chapter of the Congress
on Racial Equality picketed a

on Rise

restaurant which had refused to
hire a Negro girl. The restaurant

gave her the job within an hour
after the picketing began.
At Bradley, the university chapter of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored
People has been trying to get a
local barber to take Negro cus-

tomers.
The biggest, longest and best
organized of the protests, however, is at the University of California at Berkeley, where hun-

dreds of students

have

been

contesting a ban on campus political activity since last Sep-

tember.
Since it was instituted in September, the ban, which prevents
student political organizations
from distributing literature, recruiting members and i soliciting
funds in an area adjacent to the
university’s student union, has
sparked a number of demonstrations and protest violations, as
well as an administration threat
of mass suspensions.
At one point, a protest demonstration focused on a campus police car drew a crowd so large
that university officials summoned 400 riot police to the
campus.
Since then, a number of factions have tried to mediate the
two-month-old dispute but without much success. Neither the
students nor the administration
lias shown much inclination toward compromise.
There is no single reason behind all the protests, but a good
many of them—especially those
aimed at university administrations—have centered on the issue
of “In Loco Parentis,” or the
question of to what extent the
university can perform those disciplinary functions that would
normally be performed by a student’s parents.
The issue is central to both
In both cases students are claiming that tho university is denying them rights and privileges
they would normally enjoy if
they were not students.
the Trinity and Berkeley disputes.

Dissension in Campus Politics
(CPS)—National Republican dissention was reflected on two col
lege campuses recently, as Republicans at Colorado State and
Temple Universities attempted to
oust the leaders of their campus

organizations.
At Temple University in Philadelphia, Barry Gertzman, a Junior, called on “real Republicans
who supported such men as
Pennsylvania's Sen. Hugh Scott
to rally and regain control” of
the university’s Republican organization in order to dispell the
"extreme right wing which has
taken over the party nationally
and on this campus.”
At Colorado State University,
a petition sponsored by past
Republican
President
Young
Charles E. Nielsen and signed by
25 YR members called for the
resignation of the group's president, Eric Wrestling, a strong
Goldwatcr supporter.
Wrestling called the petition a
"bunch of garbage" and said
he would refer it to his lawyers.
The petition accused Wrestling
on five counts, including "flagrant disregard of the wishes of
the membership of the Young
Republicans with regard to the
political stand in the last election and the method used to ex-

it."
Other charges included;
—“The underhanded methods
used by Eric Wrestling to secure
the presidency of the YR’s.” (The
petitioners said Wrestling was
elected through the use of 15
last-minute absentee ballots.)
—"The. question of the YRs
under a constitution that has not
been approved by the YRs.”
—The flagrant disregard for
the ethical policies of debate."
—"The over sight of misrepresenting the speech by the author
of 'None Dare Call it Treason.’
press

“

”

The group said Wrestling’s advertisements of the speech suggested that the book's author

would appear in person. Instead,
the speech was on tape, causing

one-third of the audience to walk

out.

Nielsen said the move to elicit
Wrestling’s resignation should
not be interpreted as a “restatement of the liberal-conservative

views.”
"We are trying to rid the YRs
of the policies of Eric Wrestling,” he said.
Jim Smith, who ran against
Wrestling for the YR presidency
last spring and who co-sponsored
the petition with Nielsen, called
Wrestling an "extremist leader,”
,

Failing to Meet Publications Requirements

Student Protests
;

Harvard Dismisses Several Instructors

THIRTY-NINE

and said "The Republicans at CSU
and across the nation should re-

Schools Practice
Book Censorship
The bookburners are active as

ever.
Books such as

"Andersonville,”

"Catcher in the .Rye,” "1984,"
"Of Mice and Men,” “To Kill
a Mockingbird,” and “Death of
a Salesman," have been banned
in the past month alone in this
Country, mostly from schools.
We like to think this sort of
thing is on the decline, blit perhaps it is merely being done
more quietly. Would-be censors
might take a hint from the late
Pope John the XXIII, who took
a dim view of the Church’s "Index of Forbidden Books.”
Once when a Cardinal urged
the Pope to place Teilhard de
Chardin’s “The Phenomenon of
Man" on the Index because it
contained heresy, the Pope re
pliedf “Why, can you not refute
it?”

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                    <text>LETTERS

STATE

TO THE

"

VOLUME 15

UNTvE^SI^O^^^^^^TrBUFr*

MB

'

Jp

gR

$-

1

"

[—

AMERICAN
SUMMARY
t-ice ;m/?c fifteen)

:

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1964

NO. 13

Silver Ball Will Climax Winter Week
Student Senate Discount Service
Accepted By Buffalo Area Shops
Mr. William Berger and Mr. Stewart Earn announce
the institution of the Student Senate Discount Service,
whereby a student of the University, will be given discounts at area stores in Buffalo participating in the program,

Believing that the SSDS was really needed, Mr. Ber-

ger has been working closely with the
plan since the end of last semester, when the plan was first introduced in the Student Senate.
He appointed Stewart Karn head
ra
of a senate subcommittee to work
at forming the SSDS. Through
w
'
the efforts of Mr. Berger,
V
Mr. Karn and the committee,
which has spent the better part
of the semester at work, many
merchants in the city of Buffalo
have, for the first time, formed
an agreement with the University, for the sole benefit of the

senate on this

§
'

students.

Of the many stores contacted
by the committee, 27 have already agreed to participate. The
committee is confident that more
stores will be participating in
SSDS in the near future.
The only requirement for a
student of the University to obtain a discount at any of the
member stores is that he possess
a valid 1.13. card. Tins makes it
extremely easy for every student
to take advantage of the service.
Mr. Robert Finkelstein, very enthusiastic about SSDS, expressed
his hopes for its success:
"The SSDS will enable every
University student to obtain discounts from various concerns, and

Manning to Speak
In Union Monday
“The B'uture of South Africa”
will be the title of a lecture by
Professor Charles A. Manning,
Monday at 1:00 p.m, in the Conference Theater.
The professor’s appearance was
arranged by the Student Convocations Committee through the
Information Service of the Republic of South Africa.
Prof. Manning served as MontaBurton Professor of Ihternaional Relations at the London
c hool of Economics, University
f London, and is now emeritus
'rofessor of that chair.
ge

He has spent much of his life
South Africa and received part
of his formal
education there.
After his admittance to the bar
m 1922, Prof. Manning held sevral important posts, including:
Personal assistant to the Secretary -General of the League of
Laura Spellman Rockefeller Fellow at Harvard, Department Professor of International
Haw to the Council of Legal Education, and tutor in the Zimmern
School of International Studies in
in

Rations,

Geneva.

By presenting this lecture, the
Convocations Committee hopes to
contribute to the students' aware&gt;'ess of the political and social

forces confronting the nations of

Africa.

o

in
*

Stewart Karn and Bill Berger

I believe that this is something
that will be beneficial to the
entire student body. I am happy
that the Senate has been able to
work out such a plan, and we are
thankful that many merchandizers have cooperated. I am hopeful that students will take the

opportunity to benefit from this
plan.”

The SSDS will probably go into effect sometime the middle

of next week. Below is a list of
the recognized members of SSDS
and of the discounts offered;
(Cont'd on P. 13)

Annual Christmas
Concert Tonight
This evening the annual Christmas Concert will be presented by
the university choral groups in

the Millard Fillmore Room of
Norton Hall. The program will
begin at 8:30 p.m. with a processional. Basically, the concert consists of French Christmas music
sung by the Men’s Glee Club and
the Women’s Chorale. Some excerpts from the program are the
Midnight Mass and Christmas
Carols by Charpentier, and a
Christmas carol by Berlioz. Also,
the Women’s Chorale will sing a
religious piece by Verdi. Robert
Sacks will conduct and a small,
orchestra will accompany the
groups. The entire program will
be repeated Sunday evening.
Tickets can be obtained at the
Norton Union ticket office. Admission is free.

The Student Senate will
meet at 7:00, Tuesday
evening in the Fillmore
Room, Speakers have been
invited to represent the administration, the faculty
and Mr. Paul Sporn, before the body considers a
resolution concerning Mr.

Tomorrow, as Winter Week
an end, the traditional
Silver Ball will be held at Klein
bans, from 9:00 p.m.-LOO a m, A
red and silver color scheme will
be used in the decorations carry
ing out the theme of the Ball,
which is this year, Silver Bells.
Large silver bell mobiles will be
among the decorations to adorn
the Mary Seaton Room for the
occasion. Similar mobiles have
been seen during the past week in
Norton Union. Bulletin boards
have been decorated around campus with Silver Ball and Mr. Formal campaign posters. The highlight of the Silver Ball will- be
the annouftcement, at midnight,
of the winners of the Mr. Formal
and Miss Formal contests.

comes to

$3.00 per couple.

The Ball will be preceded by

Spectrum.

In the speech delivered to the
Board the same day, he attacked the Spectrum for being “Poor
in quality," and “Under the
biased, negative and ineffective
leadership of John Kowal,” In
enforcing his criticism, Mr. Fink
elstein cited ten “glaring errors”
that were apparent in the newspaper since Mr. Kowal assumed
the editorship. In conclusion, Mr.
Finkelstein urged the Board to
“Take any and all steps necessary” to insure the students of
a

‘‘School

the

newspaper worthy of
standards of our growing

University.”

6
Following Mr. Finkelstein’s remarks, Miss Linda Leyenthal read
an article published by the National Student Association enumerating the qualities of a good
iage

newspaper. Among these qualities listed were: The responsibility to use editorial powers unselfishly, freedom of the press
(rumors should not be printed;
editorial comments are danger-

ous), sincereity (relating only
some of the facts is an untruthful as is relating lies), absence
of verbal attacks on the University, and decency.
George Neuner, president of

COLIN

BREMNER

ifO

Sporn’s dismissal.
Also to be voted upon;
a Constitutional Amendment to provide referendum rights for the student
body.

NICK ELIAS

.

Association, Robert P. Finkelstein. The president remarked
to the Board that he felt he
could not restrain himself from
commenting on the quality of
the University’s newspaper, the

Block tickets are also available
for 10 or more couples—$2.75:
for 20 or more couples—$2.50;
and $2,25 for 30 or more couples.

The music for the evening will
be provided by the Ralph Westfield Band. Formal dress for the
Ball is optional. The first 200
tickets purchased will be accompanied by the presentation of a
Winter Weekend pin Tickets are

Pub Board Censures Editor
Publications Board, in its meeting this Monday, was addressed
by the President of the Student

a faculty reception from 8:00-9:00
p.m.

DON GILBERT

the Board, then read a letter
which he had composed to send
to Mr. Kowal concerning the
Spectrum's "biased reporting”,
“omitting articles of significance,” and “low standards”. Another Board member suggested
adding to the letter that Editor
Kowal had not competently at-

tempted to keep his promise
made to the Board during a
meeting October 2. At that time,
Mr. Kowal had mentioned that
the newspaper staff was small
and that he hoped to be producing a daily newspaper by Thanksgiving. He did not begin to increase the staff until December
7, two months later, and a daily
newspaper has not yet been produced. The Board made and seconded a motion to send the letter with the additional criticisms
to Mr. Kowal. One member of
the Board added, “It is not a firing; it is a censure." Chariman

Neuner added, “We still feel he
can handle the situation.”
tee

page 7

The Board also approved and
a Greek newspaper
on campus. Ed Marek would be
the editor; Thomas Robinson, the
business manager. The Inter-Fraternity Council would pay twothirds of the cost, and the Panhellenic Council would pay onethird. Marek said that presentrecognized

ly these two groups are having
differences of opinion on the
subject, but the Board feels that
there is no reason why the paper
should not be printed since the
Greeks are not requesting money
for the publication.

STANTON KING

CHARLES NUNN

IRC Rules on Student Dress
For Dormitory Dining Halls
By

JO ANNE LEEGANT

The Inter Residence Council
called an emergency meeting on
Tuesday, at which it composed a
dress code to be recommended to
the Administration. The code
passed was as follows;
1) Girls may wear slacks but
not dungarees at weekday dinner
meals.

2) For weekday evening dinner
meals, men are not allowed to
wear blue denim or sweatshirts.

3) Men must wear socks at all
meals.
4) On Sundays, men are to wear

jackets and ties and girls must
wear stockings to dinner.
The above proposal is applicable to both Tower and Goodyear
Dining rooms, It was passed 9-6.
There was much discussion on
the proposal before it was finally passed Originally, the first
part read: "Girls must wear skirts
at all evening weekday meals
(Cont'd on P. 2)

"

�Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Campus-wide Drive IRC Rules
Tenth Issue of NSR Dr. Hoyle to Speak
(Cont’d from P. 1)
On Sale Next Week At Biology Convocation To Boost Activities Some reasons for the change
were: The Buffalo weather—in
the cold weather, slacks are
The Department of Theoretical Set For February
The tenth issue of the NEW
warmer. We have reached a sufBiology, and
be on
the Convocations
is 35c.

Judy Auerbacher, Editor-in
Chief, when commenting on this
forthcoming issue, said:

“This issue promises to offer

Committee will sponsor a convocations lecture by Professor Fred
Hoyle, Monday, at 2;00 p.m. in
the Conference Theater. Professor Hoyle will discuss ' The Nature of the Human Being.” His
lecture is part of an informal,
closed
discussion on matters

the students their favorite topic
—sex. The fact that many of the
articles, poems and stories center
around this perplexing theme was
not planned by the editors. It
just happened that way. The Rev-

The committee is divided into

two subcommittees which will

erend Paul Carnes of the Buffalo
Unitarian Church has written an
article titled “Sex and the Coed”,
in which he attempts to explain
some of the causes of the present
revolution in sex relations, Stephen Banyasz has written a very
intelligent analysis of the curfew.
The female students might very
well want to begin an anti-curfew
strike after receiving some inspiration from this fellow student. Some of the other articles
covering different topics include
‘Damn The Draft’ by Ed Thibault,
‘New Faces of Africa’ by Dr.
Claude Welch and The Clerical
Conspiracy' by William De.

plan the drive. Judy Shermgn is
heading the subcommittee which
will take care of publicity, the
building up of the theme, and the
contacting of all organizations to
get them to participate in the

drive. Bruce Rosen’s subcommit-

tee will be taking care of the

activities during the week of the
drive. Allan Mellis, chairman -of
the committee, Jhid: “We will be

trying to create an atmosphere
of activities which will engulf
the Campus:” Interested students
who would like to help in this
drive are requested to contact
Allan Mellis, 831-3373, or to sign
the list in the Union Board Office
which is posted on the bulletin

Young.

Another area of interest is the
art section, which will feature the
work of Jeanne Frye, a 1JB art
student. The magazine will again

contain poetry from campus writers and national contributors
such as William Stafford, Philip
Whalen and Allen D e L o a c h.
Thomas Berdine and Jean Selezknow have both written short
stories which attempt to dial
lenge t h e imagination of the
reader
In total, the issue promises to
lively and attractive
than the last, as the NSH has
gained the help of more interested students. The magazine asks
your support now"

be more

HAIR CUTTING

VILARDO’S BARBER SHOP
530 Niagara Falls Blvd.
next to Tops Market
TF 5-9343
JOSEPH G. V1LARDO, Prop

The Union Board’s Activities
Drive Committee is planning a
Campus-Wide Activities Drive
that will be held the week of
February 15. The purpose of this
committee is to get students to
better understand student activities and what they can get from
participating in them. It is the
belief of this committee that activities are an integral part of
the college experience and as
such are necessary to the full
devlopment of the indivdual.

board under the Activities Drive
Committee.

DR. HOYLE
pertaining to the “prebiotic” era
on earth, probably embracing extra-terrestial biotics and the more
philosophical aspects of theoretical biology.

brewed ter

Dr. Hoyle is the Plumian Professor of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy at Cambridge
University, and has achieved an
international reputation as a pro-

Another issue argued w’as
whether or not boys should be
allowed to wear blue dungarees
to evening meals. Those in favor
of the dungarees were the Allen
hurst boys. Their point was that
dungarees are in style now and
are worn to classes. They are
warmer than chinos. To change
for dinner would require a timeconsuming trip back to Allen
hurst to change for dinner. An
amendment was submitted deleting the phrase “blue dungarees”,
but it was defeated, and the

ficient level of maturity to decide
for ourselves what should or
should not be worn. When slacks
are worn to classes it is inconceivable to have to change to skirts
for dinner. Because the dormitory is supposed to be our second
home, slacks should be allowed
to be worn. In encouraging high
dress standards, good grooming dungarees are outlawedi
The Sunday dress code was disis the only prerequisite, not the
cussed briefly. It was mentioned
type of clothing. Permission to
that many students miss Sunday
wear slacks does not forbid the
meals because of the dress rewearing of skirts. It was also
quirements. Sunday is a day on
mentioned that when the Clement girls signed up to take their which many students study, and
meals at Tower, they did so to change requires too much
time. The code was defended by
under the provision that they be
Gary Roberts, who said that we
allowed to wear slacks.
Those who argued in favor of are in a Christian-oriented society, in which Sunday is considered
wearing skirts stressed the ima special day, and it should be
pression of students on visitors.
observed.
They said that the impression of
students is very poor and slacks
The Food Service Committee
do not better the impression. has prepared a report to be subSlacks were called inappropriate mitted to all students. The policy
dress for dinner. Cold weather must be approved by the food
was declared not a valid reason committee. Any changes must be
made this semester, by the stu
due to previous years when addents. Next semester it will go
ministrative policies denied Wearing of slacks to dinner. Since
into effect if it is unchallenged.
skirts are a requirement in the
The eight page, booklet gives
business world, and we are here
the times meals are served, and
to be trained for the business
the menu plans. It also states the
world, we should dress now as quantities of foods served per
we will when we graduate.
portion, and shows which are limThe dress Standards Commitited. It explains the goal of food
tee, headed by Paulette Bohner, service and the procedure in
used the above as its reasons planning the menu.
,

STUDENT REVIEW will
sale next week in the lobby of
Norton Union, the Bookstore and
the Circle Art Theater. The price

for being in favor of the original
proposition—against slacks.

braves|

vacative scientific writer and
thinker. In his well known book
The Nature Of The Universe, he

first proposed his revolutionary
theory of the continuous creation
of matter. In one of his more
recent publications, Frontiers of
Astronomy, Dr. Hoyle examines
the

scientific

beliefs

of

DOl IMIITKII

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�Friday,

December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

New ROTC Law Explained Peace Corps Program, Drive Winter Weekend
two Sponsored
Today in Norton Events Reviewed
AFROTC
Sunday, University of Buffalo

cadets and their parents
look part in a forum' in the Fillmore Room of Norton Union. It
«as held in order to inform
parents of the new ROTC Vitalization Law which Congress passed October 13, 1964.

Colonel Thomas HuddlesProfessor of Air Science,
first explained the curriculum
of study for the four years of
Lt.

ton,

corps. Before this law, the
years was fulfilled only after
the four years of active tour.

About 300 ROTC cadets and
their parents attended
and
through a question and answer
period which followed, educational delays, physical and mental
qualifications plus other continuing aspects of the old program
were discussed. An individual
still may be commissioned and

The Peace Corps, a voluntary
organization staffed by 6,000
American citizens at present, will
sponsor a program and recruitment drive on campus today at
3:00 p.m. in the Conference The

atre in Norton.

A flim, “Mission of Discovery 1’,
narrated by Alexander Peoulby,
will be shown as part of the
presentation. The movie, which
runs approximately one half-hour,
relates to Peace Corps volunteer
work in Peru, the Philippines and
Tunisia. Also featured in the program are Mr. and Mrs; Richard
J. Zecher, who served in the
Philippines and Mr. David A.
Wangle, who has served the Corps
in Peru. They will discuss their
personal

Corps and answer students’ ques
tions concerning it.
Dr. Wilson, University liaison
for the Corps, has informed the
Spectrum that the organization
is planning to sponsor an even
larger program during the week
February 28 to March 6. At that
time, a major convocation, in
tense sessions, interviews, and
the Peace Corps test. The tests
are given monthly in the Post
Office at the Federal Building

in downtown Buffalo.
Students who are interested in
the Corps are asked to notice the
display on the second floor of
Norton and read the Peace Corps
publications which are available
in Norton. Room 22S.

experience with the

The University’s eight day
weekend, Winter Weekend, began
Saturday, December 5, with the
"Three for One" entertainment
program. “Three for One” opened
at 8:00 p.m. with the Folk Concert, which was followed by the
Jazz Jam Session and, thirdly,
the Rock ’n Roll Mixer,

The highlight of the Folk Concert was Jerry Raven, whose folk
singing and wit were enthusiastically received. This concert

also contained school talent.
At 9:30 p.nj., the second part
of “Three for One”, the Jazz Jam
Session, began. The jazz program
featured a guitar, bass, piano trio
including Mr. Raven. Both the
jazz and the folk concerts were
taped for WBFO.
Saturday’s schedule ended with
the ntixer, where approximately
300 students danced to the exciting music of the Avantis. A dance
contest was held, and the winners
each received a ticket to the Silver Ball.

Buffalo’s Debaters Attend

Temple University Tourney
Representing the University of. bert Dragonc and Martin Fein
Buffalo among sixty well known
rider (negative)
colleges at Temple University in
Participating in the annual
Philadelphia last weekend were
Freshman-Sophomore Tourney at
debaters Judy Schacher and Allan the University of Illinois in
COLONEL HUDDLESON INDUCTS CADETS
Wayne (affirmative) and Diane
Chicago are Hedda Heckman and
go
ROTC
how
civilian
to
program and
graduate Hayes and Richard Fleishcr (nethe
the
as a
on
Charles Liarakos (negative and
new law affected the ROTC cadet. studies by an educational delay gative). Students from American Clint DeVeaux and Nick Sargent
According to the law, ail juiors from the Air Force.
University, Princton, West Point, (affirmative). Schools from the
and seniors are required to enUniversity of Pennsylvania, Cormid west, the south, and the east
The
law
provides
also
that
a
list in the Ineligible Reserve
nell, and N.Y.U. participated in will attend this five round inter
transfer
student
can
take
the
Section of the Ready Reserves.
collegiate competition. Mr. Terry
the four round novice tournaadvanced ROTC without comThis assures that they will acment. Mr. Richard Suttcll, asH. Ostermeier, debate coach and
pleting
the
Basic
Course.
These
cept a commission and protect
Society advisor, will accompany
sistant debate coach, accompanipass
students
must
the
Force
Air
the
taxpayers investment of
group,
the two UB teams.
ed
the
qualifying
pass
officer
a
test,
S40.00 retainer pay given for
Suttell will also coach the
The Executive officers wish' to
Mr.
medical
examination, and have eight novice debaters attending remind all Society members of
each month of their two years in
all
documents
processed by May
Only
the
course.
advanced
the special election meeting to
1 so they may attend a six weeks R.P.I.'s tournament this weekend.
through willful violation of the
be held Monday at 6:30 p.m. in
Attending will be Gloria Alticrii,
summer
camp prior to being enreserve enlistment contract, may
Norton, Room 357. It is important
listed in the Ineligible Reserves Ellen Abclson, Daniel Katz, and
a cadet be called to active duty
Jean Trayor (affirmative) and
that all members, novice and
for two years in the grade of and enrolling in the advanced Barbara Straka, Carl Levine, Rovarsity, attend this meeting.
Airman Basic as stipulated in course with $40.00 a month retainer pay. They also attend the
the contract.
regular four weeks summer camp
all
Willful violation does not mean
UB students who have had
dropping out of school or being
Basic ROTC will attend between
dropped by the school or an
the junior and senior year or at
New York Secretary of State
honest change of program which
School, is presently on leave from
the end of the senior year.
John P. Lomenzo will be the
the faculty of St. John Fisher
is incompatible to commissioning,
Flight training for those qualiguest speaker at the first annual
College in Rochester.
but rather a person who takes
fied in the advanced course was State University at Buffalo Grad
the course only for the money
He has served as a faculty
and refuses the commission at
made a permanent part of the uate Business School banquet to
bill as well as a four year schobe held Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at member at Niagara University,
the time it is offered. An individual; at this point, would larship program of tuition, books, the Syracuse Restaurant, 4340 Rochester Institute of Technology,
and the American Instiute of
fees and $50.00 monthly retainer Bailey Avenue.
have completed the course and
Banking. He was named “Citizen
pay. The scholarship program is
Mr. Lomenzo was appointed sec
attended the summer camp.
of the Year” in Monroe County
retary of state by Governor Ncl
to be announced.
The benefits of the new law
The new bill does not change son A. Rockefeller in 1963. Prior in 1961. He was the Republican
were then explained. Besides the
nominee for State Comptroller in
anything for the person with to his appointment, he served as
$40.00 a month retainer pay, the
1962.
chief judge of the Monroe County
cadets will be able to ride “space honest intentions taking the adMr. Lomenzo, who attendavailable” on military transport vanced course except to raise Court.
airplanes. Also, bachelor officers his pay to $40.00 a month from ed Niagara University and receiv
month under the old
quarters will be available as
ed a bachelor of laws degree from
will $27.00 a
the University of Fordham Law
other facilities on Air Force program.
Bases to cadets. Lastly, it enables
the cadets to fulfill part of their
two years of inactive reserve
while they are in the advanced

Lomenzo Speaks Thursday

Sunday's activities, the Snow
Sculpture Contest and the Ski

Exhibition down the Lockwood
stairs, werer postponed,
because of weather conditions,
until later days of the “weekend."
The first movie, “Pepe”, a music
al comedy starring Cantinflas and

Library

approximately 35 Hollywood stars,
was shown in the Conference
Theater Sunday and Monday.
The third day of Winter Weekend commenced at 11:00 am.
with the Mr. Formal Skits, which
were followed at 2:00 p.m. by
the motorcade through Buffalo
with the Mr. and Miss Formal
candidates. The Theta Chi Frater
nity car and the Goodyear Hall
East and South car, respectively,
captured the first a n d second
prize awards for best decorations.
At 3:00 p.m., a Coffee Hour and
Dance was held in the Multipurpose Hoorn. Here, students danced
to the music of the Crossfires
and also met the candidates.

Tuesday, the movie “Umberto
was shown and Mr. Formal
skits were again presented. The
D”

skits concluded Wednesday, Then,
the candidates each modeled
three sets of clothes ranging from
formal to casual in the Mr. Formal Fashion Show. "The Man
from the Diner’s Club", a comedy
starring Danny Kaye, closed Wed

ncsday’s program.

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•..

FACULTY-STUDENT ASSOCIATION REFORM

Students Arrested
For Staging Sit-in
The fesBERKELEY (CPS)
tering political activity controversy at the University of California’s Berkeley campus reached
a new level of intensity last week
as California police arrested hundreds of students for staging a
sit-in in the university’s administration building.
Near chaos reigned on the
—

As it is presently constituted, the Faculty-Student
Association is misnamed since students are constitutionally barred from sitting on the board of directors It is
the feeling of the Spectrum that students should at least
have the right to sit on the board of directors to represent
the student attitude and reflect student concerns in the
running of this institution, from determining policy in the 27,710 student campus as state
police, acting on
bookstore to deciding the fate of athletics and overseeing and Berkeley
orders from California Governor
the uses and abuses of the food service'. These are all Edmund G. (Pat) Brown, hauled
areas of crucial concern to students, and students should away 801 student demonstrators
had “seized” Sproul Hall in
have a voice in the decision making process in such areas. who
a protest growing out of the uniThere is currently an amendment being proposed versity’s decision to ban student
political activity from the campmaking it possible for students to sit on the board of dius.
rectors, and the Spectrum wishes to inform the student
Most of those arrested have
body of this important question and urge their informed been released on bond totaling
over $72,000, which had been
and responsible participation in this vital area of acaraised for the most part by the
demic reform. The Spectrum further urges the present faculty..
members of the Faculty-Student Association to give seriThe Free Speech Movement,
organization of student groups
ous consideration to the proposed amendment. We feel
protesting the ban, called for
that to properly implement the stated aims'of the constiletters and telegrams of support
. to promote and cultivate
tution of the Association; “.
and sympathy demonstrations
from students across the nation.
educational and social relations among students and facThe students, who were joined
ulty
and to aid the students and faculty of the Uniby some professors, said they
versity by assisting them in every way in the education were setting up “The Free Uniand study, work, living, and extracurricular activities versity of California” in the building, and for 12 hours before
.” that student participation on all levels is
necessary. Brown ordered some 600 police.

.

.

.

.

.

�

�

to disperse the demonstration,
they sang freedom songs and
listened to lectures by student
leaders and professors.

�

BERKELEY AND BUFFALO
Although since the dismissal of Paul Sporn it has
been impossible to praise the quality of academic freedom on this campus, a glance at any news media will
show even the casual reader that in comparison to the

University of California at Berkeley, we have it pretty
good. The current controversy on the Berkeley campus
centers around the right of student to participate in “offcampus’’ political activity (particularly fund raising)
while on the campus, President Clarke Kerr has enforced
a University edict against “partisan” political activity,
with the help of state troopers and riot squads.
The Spectrum fully supports the principles of the
Free Speech Movement and has supported their attempts
to implement these principles in so far as they do not
infringe upon the Constitution and the laws of California.
We also note that here at SUNYAB the student body has
long been free to deal creatively in the civil rights issue
to the extent of distributing promotional literature and
selling freedom and equality buttons. It is precisely this
right which the students at Berkeley are currently agitating for, and we wish them every success. The right of a
student to participate in the political life of this country,
to speak freely and work for the goals of any organization is necessary if education is to remain germane to
the world for which we are all being educated, let alone
for the survival of the University as a meaningful institution dealing in intellectual controversy and growth. No
University hires a student to learn; students hire Universities to teach them, not to curtail their Constitutionally
guaranteed rights as citizens.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
JOHN P KOWAL
Re-Write Editor
Paul Nussbaum
Bernard Dikman
Business Manager
Edward Joscelyn
Photo Editor
Advertising Manager
Howard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander
Circulation Manager
Faculty Advisor
William Siemering
Dallas Garber
Financial Advisor
General Staff; Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita, Sue Greene,
Eileen Murphy, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann,' Meryl Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon
Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Marion Michael,
Debbie Rubie, Jeff Lewis, Margo Rakita, Scott Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leegant,
Rita Weinberg, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teitler, Sue Greene, Sue Duffy, Bill Cortes,
Sue Fuller, Nina Kostraba, Lorni Klipstein, Joey Elm, Jim Blogett, Skip Blumberg,
Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis, Sylvia Sternberg, Helen Peters, William Salomon, Joan
Fo*, Joanne Wisniewski, Maria Giglia, Harold Bob, Chuck Cummings, Raymond Volpe,
Jerome Taylor, Alan Gruber, Benoit Bourgois, Sue Melvin, Linda Coply, Susan Thomas,
Marsha Alt, Nancy Simonoff, Nina Kostraba, Rebecca Citron, Rebecca Weinberg, Jay
Nisberg, Margo Wallach, Elaine Barron, Alan Goldstein
Sports Stall: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
Schuelem, Steve Oberstein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr
Photography Staff: David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine. Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Stall: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary Lou
Palmer, Lee Corey
-

.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
Peter Rubin
New* Editor
Barbara Strauss
Acting Feature Editor
Jeremy Taylor
Sport* Editor
Allan Scholom
Copy Editor
Marcia Ann Orszulak
Layout Editor
.-David* Edelman

BkVy

Friday, December 11,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid*at Buffalo, New York
Subscription S3.00 per year, circulation 9500.
Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

As part

of the protest, uni-

versity graduate teaching assistants and the Free Speech Movement (FSM) the organization of
student groups protesting the
ban, called for a teaching strike
and class boycott on the campus
for Friday, December 4.
An FSM spokesman said he
thought the strike and boycott

was “about 85

cent effective.”
Labor organizations in the Bay
per

area seemed to be honoring FSM
picket lines at the university, as
food deliveries to university cafeterias and construction on university buildings was suspended.
The sit-in, which was one of
a series of demonstration rallies
that have been going on almost
daily since the FSM lifted its
“self-imposed moratorium” on

protest action last November 14,
apparently grew out of a decision
by Berkeley Chancellor Edward
Strong to take disciplinary action against four students involved in protest demonstrations
that took place last October.
Three of the four, Art Goldberg, Brian Turner, and Mario
Savio, leader of the FSM, had
been placed on “indefinite suspension” earlier this year for
their parts in the demonstration
which immobilized a university
police car for over 30 hours last
October 2-3.
The university’s regents recently reinstated Tunrer, and ruled
that Goldberg and Savio could
return to school in February.
At the same time, they ruled
that henceforth students had the
right to participate in any form
of “legal” political activity on
campus, but the university had
the right to take disciplinary action against students using the

to organize “illegal” activity, such as sit-ins and other
campus

forms of civil disobedience.
A few days later, Strong sent
letters to the four summoning
them for disciplinary action. Why
he did so is unclear.
The ban on organizing for civil
disobedience was probably in
part responsible for the sit-ins,
as many of the organizations supporting the FSM are the campus
affiliates of national civil rights
groups which use it as a matter
of course.
The arrests began shortly after
3:00 a.m., Thursday, December
3, after Strong urged students
to get out of the buliding of their
own accord. When only a few
got up to leave, the police moved in and started arresting de(Cont’d on P. 5)

rjCetterA

to

1964

the Editor

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request.
All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 PM. on the Tuesday before publication.

Staff Defends Editor
We, the members of the Spectrum staff, cannot in good con-

Concert Set for Baird Saturday
Evening.” If Mr. Finkelstein had
taken time out from counting
words in the “Letters to the

science remain silent in the face
of the irresponsible accusations
of President R. P. Finkelstein.
Editor” column, he would have
Although our editor refuses to discovered that the concert was
comment on these ludicrous “In the memory of the late Anier
charges, we feel that the campus ican composer, Irving Fine.” We
should be informed of the truly will not burden you with a point
foolish and petty nature of these by-point refutation of these assin
ridiculous accusations, A full cat- ine and petty remarks. The five
alogue of refutations would tax charges which do have some basis
your patience and waste ohr time,
in fact deserve some mention. Mr
since twenty-four of the twentyFinkelstein states: “The ‘letters
nine charges are totally untrue to the editor’ column, which Mr.
and the others are so petty that Kowal states will be limited to
we question whether they are to two-hundred words, included a
be taken seriously.
letter of four hundred and six
For example, Mr. Finkelstein
teen words.” Now really'
charges, “There was also an artiIn addition, we would point out
cle on the Students for Keating, that matters of this sort are techyet no such article about the
nical and solely the concern pf
students for Johnson-Humphrey- those people involved in putting
Kennedy was ever printed.” We
out the paper and. not the con
wonder if Mr. Finkelstein reads
cern of often overzealous, frethe paper he criticizes so heavquently ill-i nformed, student
ily, for in the same issue (Oct.
“leaders.”
23), there appeared a long story
In conclusion, we would like to
opposite the editorial page headreaffirm our belief in freedom of
lined Students for Johnson Greet the press from shrill and oppres
President, which included several sive attempts at control, whether
column inches of news about that they come from students, adminorganization. This charge of ediistrators, or the community: We
torial irresponsibility, like the further reaffirm our complete
other twenty-three, is totally ersupport of the editor of this
roneous, irresponsible and unpaper, John P. Kowal.
worthy of a temperamental fifth
Refer Rubin
Alice Ostrander
Arthur Burke
grader, let alone the president of
Berrtard Dikman
Jeremy Taylor
Barbara
Strauss
our not-so-illustrious Student AsAllan Scholom
Leon Lewis
sociation. Mr. Finkelstein accuses
Richard Dran’doft
David Edelman
Trudy Stern
Marcia Orszulak
the paper of editorializing in
Vicki Bugelski
Howard Auerbach
headlines such as “Fine Memorial
Edward Joscelyo
Paul Nussbaum

Colleagues Defend Sporn
TO THE EDITOR:

President Furnas and President
Gould have taken the position
that the dismissal of Mr, Sporn
has nothing to do with academic freedom but is completely
a matter of “personal integrity.”
(See Spectrum, December 4) We
believe that Mr. Sporn’s dismissal has everything to do with
academic freedom and that Mr.
Sporn’s personal integrity is not
a matter which the Terminations
Committee was in a position to
judge. We believe, furthermore,
that the use of this technicality,
whether it was intended to do
so or not, provides a smokescreen for the University’s violation of academic freedom.
Mr. Sporn’s colleagues and professional superiors, who have had
direct and sustained contact with
him both as a teacher and as a
man, are in a far better position
to determine Mr. Sporn’s personal integrity than this committee. Mr. Sporn has been
judged by his colleagues and his
academic superiors to be a fully
competent, and, indeed, a highly
qualified teacher. Those who
know him most immediately have
found him to be a man of integrity both in his teaching an in
his personal relations. Mr. Sporn
was fired because of an alleged
misrepresentation in
January,
1964. But Mr. Sporn has been on
the faculty for five years prior
to that date and during these
years his department and the administration had ample opportunity to examine his conduct ih
the classroom and his qualifications as a teacher and scholar
and they found him fit in all
these respects. What does the
University charge Mr. Sporn with

misrepresenting? They charge
him with misrepresenting his
past political associations. In a
free University, the administration has no business inquiring
into such matters. To force teachers under economic compulsion
to sign certificates regarding
their present and past political
associations is anathema to the
spirit of academic freedom. Mr.
Sporn was dismissed because of

the application to this faculty of
a law designed in its own wt4s
to “protect the children of this
state” by “prohibiting persons
who are members of subversive
groups such as the Communist
Party and its affiliated organizations from obtaining and retaining employment in the public
schools.” The very existence of
this law is a violation of academic freedom. It eliminates
those who may be highly qualified teachers and scholars but
whose political beliefs and assort
ations are abhorrent to the powers
that be. It imposes a political test
and political restrictions upon the
faculty. It dictates a political
standard for the selection and retention of teachers.
We believe, moreover, that the
application of this law in the
case of Mr. Sporn, which followed
so closely after the hearings here
of the House Un-American Active
ties Committee, must appear as
a threat to all members of this
University—-students and teachers
alike. Both the role of the Feinberg Law in this case and the use
by the Terminations Committee
of a paid government witness
who was also the HUAC witness
at the recent Buffalo hearings
can only be seen as government
intervention in the intellectual
life of this University designed
not only to eliminate Marxists
from the faculty but also to generate an atmosphere in which all
teachers and students will he

consciously or unconsciously more
cautious about going beyond accepted or acceptable opinion. For
the University administration to
be party to such intervention
hardly in keeping with the legacy
by
of Samuel P. Capen, described
Julian Park, University Historian,
as a “constant devotion to academic freedom” that “was 3

shield that hundreds of spearn
came to,be broken against
that shield gone neither teacher
nor student can feel secure
Denying that Mr. Sporn s di&gt;
missal has to do with acaderm
freedom easts a smoke-scrcc
nover the events which led to 5’
(Cont’d on P
"'

�Friday,

December 11, 1964

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Berkeley Arrests
(Cont'd

from P.

ajCetterA

4)

Police at first
elevator to carry
the building, but
cess proved to be

used a small
students from
when this pro
too slow, they
simply dragged them down the
stairs, sometimes as many as
four flights of them.
Although police had sealed the

tention facilities in the Bay area.
The first person to be arrested
was Oakland attorney, Robert

",

.
.

Treuhaft, husband of Jessica Milford, author of the best selling
“The American Way of Death ”.
Also arrested early ■ was Savio.
The arrests took a total of
12 hours, and before they were
over some students had already
been released on bond raised
by faculty members.
Students returning from jail
charged a number of instances
of police, brutality and unnecesmonstrators, who retaliated by

like Emerson? Man, who cares about Emerson!
All I want is an 'A'!"

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

I can testify, personally, to two
things: (1) Paul Sporn is an exacting and exciting teacher, and
(2) that he did not use
the class
as a device to disseminate radical views. Now I am an unashamed “lefist” and pretty sen-

sative to “lefist” arguments:
there were none in Paul Sporn’s
class.
Paul Sporn’s dismissal is concrete and irrefutable proof that
the State Uniformity of New York
either does not understand or
ripes not care about academic
freedom. I do not expect that
anyone is going to drop his paper
into his coffee after after reading that last sentence
it’s nothing new
but I maintain that
even though it is old news, particularly to readers of this column - it is still crucially import—

—

■ realize that the austensible
reason for Paul Spurn's dismissal

"as his supposed “falsification”
of the Feinberg
Certificate.
"
"ether or not there was indeed
a . falseification is
something
"inch may eventually be decided
m a -court of
law, but one fact
'fmains
clear throughout the
mreaucratic mess and incompetmce, and that is that no matter
ow you
.
Paul Sporn
slice it
15 oemg
dismissed as a result
?
P r ivate actions on his part,
sving nothing to do
with his
1 '*Y °r record as a teacher.
on those shining lights
of pubeducation, Dr. Gould and
Resident Furnas, have both admitted as much.
here are two other ways of
dting this problem. (1)
is
e
&gt; mng in a public Uniformity
■'ht, or a privilege? (2) Does
man w 'th radical views have
1{ r
’5ht to teach?. I have ans'ed these questions to my
satis-

,

—

ic

-

1

&gt;

'

,,

'&gt;

jetton.

Working for the State

more
■' xe,° to

Privilege than payv
'
that State (and I cannot
that anyone would se- e'e
r 8ue that being con' with SUNYAB is a privialso believe that regula
of a. man ’s
beliefs, views,
nni
nions is not the business of
tate, (regulating a man's
'

;

'

■

.

-J'
1
I

®

?

actions insofar as they are de
trimental to others is the role of

law and authorized law enforcers.) Therefore, I believe that a

man has a right to freedom and
inviolability of conscience, which
is not really that radical since it
is also incorporated into the Con-

stitution!
Now I argue

that

there

is

something wrong with this country if it can not exist by the
principles it was created to defend. You have to be pretty
hysterical to believe that this
current, “cool" generation of college students is going to fall
prey to the moldy and dated
leftist jargon, and then go out
and man the barracades in a communist coup. You also have to
be pretty dumb to believe that
freedom and security can replace

each other whenever you think
it is convenient. You also have
to be some kind of hypocrite to
say that freedom (academic or
otherwise) is all right unless it
is too unpopular. Either a man
has a fight to believe as he
chooses and live, being judged on
his merits and demerits as a
person, or he does not. Arid if
he does not, I will personally
go out and man the barracades
until he does. I believe that freedom of conscience is crucial to

He called for the removal of

police from the University of
California “now and forever,"

and for the removal of Univer
sity President Clark Kerr. He
also asked for amnesty for those
arrested "during the last few
hours.”
In Sacrcmcnto. Governor E.
Brown rejected a plea for am
nesty for the 800, saying "We

are not

going

to have anarchy

in the state of California, and
that’s (demonstration) anarchy."
It was learned that Brown and
Kerr “had reached a concensus”
on the sending of police to the
Berkeley,

campus

but

haps even to themselves, that
from P. 4)
dismissal. The denial indicates they have acted contrary to the
that the University administra- principles of academic freedom,
tion is unwilling to admit, per-Albert S. Cook, Chairman of the English Department; George Hochfield, Allan B. Lefcowitz, George R. Levine, Robert Rogers, Herbert
N. Sehneidau, Donald J. Silberman.

sponsibility

for

we ever
so.
Let me put it another way. The
only grounds a school has for
firing a teacher is being a bad
teacher. If the Committee on
Terminations had fired Paul
Sporn for being a bad teacher,
I would have had to disagree
with them about their estimation
of worth, not their right to make
the judgement. But when they
fire him for his political concerns, I say that it is just plain
none of their business.
Now, 1 do not expect that there
will be any spontaneous rising
to defend either academic freedom or Paul Sporn. 1 do not
expect that the Student Senate
will even have the guts to say
that they believe his dismissal
acaci lemic

them

sending

there.

In a prepared statement, Kerr

"bad Public Relations' 1 and they
are still nervous about what happened over HUAC. I do not think
that anyone is going to get ex(Cont’d

on P,

6)

faculty groups were readying re
soultions calling for the resignations of Kerr and Strong.

There was no official reaction
from the student government, al-

though at’one point student body
president Charlie Powell asked
those persons attending the rallyThursday to disperse. &gt;
'

NSA Issues Statement
The
PHILADELPHIA (CPS)
United States National Student
Association (NSA) has issued a
statement deploring the decision
to call police to the University
of California's Berkeley campus
to arrest students protesting, the
—

School's ban

on political

Faculty Defends Sporn
TO THE EDITOR

activity.

alifornia Governor Edmund
G. (Pat) Brown, University of
California officials, and the Associations 350 member schools.
ConCd on P

their

We write to endorse your editorial of December 4 concerning
the dismissal of Mr, Paul Sporn
from our faculty. We view with
alarm and unhappiness the continuation by President Gould of
the policies that preceded his ap-

pointment.

It had been hoped
that he would provide stronger

leadership against
the forces
tending to erode academic and
personal freedom. Instead he has

allied himself with those forces,
Mr. Sporn was among those who
last January protested vigorously
against the imposition of the
Eeinberg certificate upon the faculty. Together with many others
who had grave doubts about the
constitutionality of the certificate
he signed it in the atmosphere
of vague threats and blandishments created by the local ad
ministration at that time, an at-

with

dealings

the

small

group of non-singers who remain
with us,
It is indeed a travesty of academic procedure for selection of
faculty that Mr. Sporn was subsequently dismissed on the basis
of the allegations of a paid informer, revealed before the House
Committee on Un-American Ac
tivities, without any regard for
his, competence as a scholar and

teacher.
We console ourselves partly
with' the hope that the courts
will overturn the actions of the
University in the case of Paul
Sporn, and in the cases of the

non singers, Newton Garver, Harry Keyishian, George Hochfield,
Ralph Maud and George Starbuck But how much better it
would be if the University were
to reverse itself on these matters,
If faculty and students were to

show themselves more deeply
mosphere which to their lasting concerned, this might yet be possible.
dishonor, they still preserve in
Irwin J. Goldstein. Asst, Prof , Biochemistry; Arnold I,. McMullen, Prof., Biochemical Phar: Carl Moos, Asst Prof. Biophysics;
Peter Nichblls, Asst. Prof.', Biochemistry: Harold Segal, Prof, and
Chin., Biology; Sidney Shulman, Assoc. Prof., Immunochemistry &amp;
Biophysics; TungYue Wang, Prof, of Biology; Vincent Santilli, Assoc.
Prof, of Biology.

Editorial Scored
TO THE EDITOR

As both an instructor and a
student, I take exception to your
editorial statement that “the sole
criteria that should be used for
hiring faculty members is their
academic qualifications and abil-

ity to teach.”

I suggest that there* should he
a few more qualifications, such
as honesty, morality, loyalty, and
integrity. These are criteria not
only for teaching, but for any
job, however grand or menial:
Indeed, they are criteria for lead
ing a responsible, rewarding ex
istence.
Any organization has the right
to require these trails in its staff
A university has both the right
and the duty to do so, since a

teacher has the opportunity to
mold young minds. Should this
opportunity be given to anyone
who manages, to obtain a degree
No matter how
in education?
great or small an individual’s
teaching ability may be, his per
sonal goals and ideals are reflected in his teaching, even if only

indirectly.
In your frenzied fight in the

name of "academic freedom"

you

have repeatedly and blindly at
tacked restrictions on the personal conduct of the faculty. If
the integrity of its instructors
vVere not required, the result
would be not academic freedom
but academic chaos. To quote
Milton. "I.icense they mean when
they cry liberty.”
-Angelo F. Coniglio

Editor Defended

Brown

stressed that he took full re-

.denied that freedom of speech
had ever been an issue and said;
“The , protest has been over or
ganizing political action on campus.” He accused the members
of FSM of violating the law, distortion of truth, intolerance, in
decency, and ill will.
A mass meeting of university
all freedoms.
faculty passed a series of resolu
But the State Uniformity does
lions disagreeing with the uni
not seem to think so. Indeed this versity
administration’s handling
whole country seems to be in
of the situation, and there were
that
danger
forgetting
of
great
unconfirmed reports that some
thought

1

Some time ago, I took a cpurse
from the English Department
which, although the subject matter was not the most exciting
1 had ever come to grips with,
was taught by an excellent teacher. That teacher’s name is Paul
Sporn and he has since been
tired from the Uniformity. Now

going limp.
sary roughness. One demonstrator, a law student, claimed a
policeman deliberately broke his
finger.
An observer at the scene said
there was apparently "more bru
tality
than had
first been
thought.”
At a rally Thursday, Steve
Wesisman, acting leader of the
FSM during Savio’s incarceration, called for an investigation
of police brutality.

the Editor

(Cont’d

building’s entrances to prevent
anyone else from joining the

demonstration, students lowered
a rope from a second floor win
dow to sympathizers below, and
until they were discovered by
police, students were entering
Sproul Hall faster than police
could arrest them.
Police booked, photographed,
and fingerprinted students right
in the building, and then dispatched them in bus loads to
wherever they could find de-

to

•

TO THE EDITOR
I recently read a statement by
Robert Finkelstein (KF) lambasl
ing

the

Spectrum,

and'in * parti-

cular, its editor, John Kqwal. It
accused Mr Kowal of being “incompetent” and "biased,” and
preceded to give "evidence" for
these charges
in fact it went
on for a few pages. It also
charged that the Spectrum and
its staff did not voice “the opinion of the student body, "questioning sonic of the paper’s pro
cedure on rod tape
I would like to say that I find
those charges in direct opposition
to Mr Finkelstein's profession of
the belief in academic freedom.
It seems to me that Finkelstcin
resents the fact that Kowal has
had the fortitude to express his
views and to take a stand on
campus issues. Perhaps this is
because "politicians” like Finkelstein, arc so used to rlmning a
...

"middle of the line” policy .
sitting on the middle of the
fence for fear of offending someone, that a definite stand seems
"biased" to them. Let me say
that any statement which is in
direct opposition to the beliefs
of another, seems "biased" to that
person In the realm of opinions
what is truth for one person, is
“bias ’ for another. On what criteria does Finkelstcin base his
Any person who ever

did anything for humanity, did so in the
of
face
UNPOPULAR opinion

(Christ, Kepler, Copernicus, Darwin, etc.) In contrast, it could be

shown that most of those who

in-

spired The world’s mass atrocities
were hailed as heroes by their
society at the-time (Milter, Stalin,
Mussolini, etc.) When you get
down to the crux of the matter
are we not every one of us
biased? . . by our culture, our
upbringing, our likes and dislikes? So in charging that Mr.
Kowal is "biased." Mr. Finkclstein is asserting himself free
from bias, free of error. He is

judging what cannot be judged.
I find this hard to believe of any :
one, especially one endowed with
a public trust

Another

charge

levied

against

the paper and its editor by Mr.
Finkelstein was that it was not
representative of the student
body, but merely the voice of a
few staff members. Considering
the apathy and indifference of
our student body towards campus

matters (as Kowal well realizes),
I am glad that Mr. Kowal and the
staff of the Spectrum do not wait
for the opinions of the students
to arrive at the newspaper office.
If they did there would be no
publication whatsoever At our
University the so-called “voice
of the students" is a non-existent

verbalism. If Mr. Finkelstein
wished to labor under the illusion
that he is the "voice of the students" fine with me, but I resent
him

demanding

that

Kowal and

the Spectrum staff adopt a simi
lar illusion I say that there is
no "student voice” here on our
campus
breath,
only bad
(Cont’d ,on P. 12)

¥

�PAGE SIX

Greek Notes

Finkelstein Speaks to Pub Board
It is infrequent that I appear
before you with a message of
such great importance, but as
President of the Student Association I feel that there is a critical
situation facing this board and
this University, I have .not seen,
in my many meetings with representatives from other large
schools, a school newspaper for
a university the size of our own,
which is as poor in quality and
as biased in reporting, as is our
Spectrum The Spectrum, under
the negative and therefore ineffective leadership of John
Kowal, is a paper designed to
advocate the beliefs and opinions
of a handful on its staff, with
little or no regard for those of
our student body. In my latest
meeting with the students in an
attempt to gauge student opinion
on various issues, one question
frequently asked was “What has

happened to the Spectrum?” My
opinion oh this subject has been
requested many times, and I
cannot, in good conscience to the
student body, remain silent.
It is time for us all to face the
facts. We can no longer ignore
the fact of the poor quality of
the Spectrum leadership. We
have witnessed the decline of a
fine newspaper which once, under
Editors Flory and Mazur, was
something of which we could all
be proud. As a matter of fact,
the 1963-1964 Spectrum was given
a "first class honor” rating by
the Associated Collegiate Press.
It saddens me to have to speak
so strongly and so negatively,
about a newspaper which once
was of the highest quality. However, I feel an obligation, on behalf of a student body who has
been shortchanged
and who
knows it, to bring this to your
attention. And it is important
that this board encourage remedial steps to counter the down-

ward

Friday, December II, 1944

SPECTRUM

trend of the paper. We
paper of excellence.

must have a
We do not.

I have recently reread each
issue of our school newspaper
since Mr. Kowal assumed the editorship, Even without the closest
scrutiny, the following glaring
errors can easily be Righted:
October 9—The headline had
the featured speaker’s name
spelled incorrectly. There was
also biased reporting favoring
one senatorial candidate, that
being Mr. Keating. It was at this
time, before Mr. Kowal was appointed editor by this body, that
he represented himself as such to
the local press. There was no
cut line under the queen candidate picture, and Arthur Burke,
mentioned in the Senate article
as Presidential Assistant, was not
speaking in his official capacity.
October 16—The news article
on Mr. Smit was greatly editorialized, and the same name misspelled in the previous paper
was not corrected.

October 23—Editorial columns
were not placed on the Editorial
Page, and no action shots, only
the previously used public portrait was included on the Douglas
story. There was one headline
reading, “Hawkland Books on
Guide and Code.” This, is not a
proper headline. Former Presidential Assistant Burke’s resgination was given a great deal of
coverage, and, again, was biased

because the other side of the controversy was not allowed to be
printed until the following issue,
and then only after many became
indignant. A So called Senate
news article made this very board
out to be one which seemed disinterested, and this was quoted
out of context and not consistent
with the intent Of the statement.
There was also an article on the
Students for Keating, yet no such
article about the Students for
Johnson-Humphrey-Kcnnedy was
ever printed.
October 30—The headline read,
“Sapir and Johnson Score in Election.” This is similar to a headline from a New York City novelty shop, which prints any humorous headlines the customer requests. The Fenton lecture news
story was editorialized. The “Let-

ters to the Editor” column, which
Mr. Kowal states will be limited
to 200 words, included a letter
of 416 words. Not surprisingly,
this letter came from the newlyappointed Assistant to the Editor,

Arthur Burke,
November 6—This paper included seven pages of sports. The
Senate article was editorialized,
and the mention of a vote failing
by four votes was inaccurate. Another letter exceeded Mr. Kowal’s
200 word limit.
November 10—This was the
“special” noting Dr. Aptheker’s
scheduled appearance, and no
mention was ever made of the
fact that the final court battle
was approved by the Court of
Appeals. Had it not been for a
favorable decision here, Dr. Aptheker would never have been
allowed to speak, yet there was

wishes

to
Sigma Kappa Phi
congratulate Sister Carolyn Osoorne who was invited to become
a member of Phi Beta Kappa
with a 2.7 over all. Similar congratulations to Sister Pat Pundgnsky who was elected to Pi
Epsilon Mu, National Mathematical Honor Society.

The sisters of SKO and SDT
will go Christmas caroling Thursday, December 17, at the “Brothers of Mercy Home.” An informal
get together at the Sigma Kappa
Phi Apartment, 4 Flower Street,

will follow the

caroling.

The pledges of SKO will hold
a Shoe Shine in Norton Union
today from 10:00 a m. until 2:00
p.m.

no mention.

November

13—An article appeared, given a three column
spread, featuring the ideas of an
individual who advocated the
the abolition of the Publications
Board. The editor certainly is
free to take whichever side of
an issue he wishes in his editorial,
but should not equal space have
been given to both sides of this
issue? The Fenton story was again
editorialized, and there were
more letters exceeding 200 words
in length.

20—It was stated
that “Senate attendance is at an
all time low.” This is an outright
lie.
December 4—A headline story
on Mr. Sporn’s termination featured no picture of this individual, but rather one of Dr, Furnas. Other letters were over 200
words. It was in this issue that a
new Presidential Assistant appointment was announced, yet it
was given little over half the
space given his predecessor’s resignation, and it appeared in a
less desirous space.

November

Another
was

letter to the editor

more than 200 words, and

there was editorializing, this time
in a headline of a news story, on
a Memorial Concert article.
These arc but a few of the
many errors. In addition, Mr.

Kowal has made himself unavailable to an officer of the Student
Associatton, and once told this
same individual to “Go to Hell”
on a request to talk about the
Spectrum. He stated to me that
the only way to insure fair coverage of Senate stories was to
bring a tape recorder to the
meetings and then transcribe the
statements. I stated that he could
do this, yet it was never done
and the unfair coverage has continued. The situation is of such
gravity that even Dr. Furnas has
written a letter to Mr. Kowal,
commenting on the poor quality
of the paper.
A newspaper must be objective
and unbiased in its reporting.
Our Spectrum is neither. Even
considering that a statement such
as this one may open the door
for an irresponsible editorial attack, the student welfare must
supersede any personal consideration.
I have come today because we
have, I believe, a serious problem
facing us. I am not here to chastise. I am here to ask that we
face the obvious truth that our

school newspaper is not what it
should be, not what it can be.
and not even what is once was.
You all know that John Kowal
assumed the editorship with
promises, pledges and high-sounding ideas. My conscience and my
sense of responsibility obligate
me to tell you that this same
John Kowal has failed our confidence in him. and has failed
oiir student body and our university.
But I have not appeared before you to wage a personal
vendette against anyone or any
group, f am here as President of
the Student Association to urgently ask you to take any and

all steps necessary tp insure our
students a school newspaper
worthy of the standards of our

growing university.

For their Christmas Kindness,
Omega will give a needy
family food and gifts to help
make their Christmas a joyful
Chi

one.

pledges will
be selling Mistletoe in the lobby
of Norton Wednesday to Friday,
December 16-18. They are also
planning to carol for and have
a party and favors for “The
Georgian Court Nursing Home”,

The Chi

Omega

The pledge class of Alpha
Gamma Delta will hold a raffle
Friday, December 18. There will
be two prizes. The first drawing
will be a $15 gift certificate from
Jenss; the second prize a $5 gift
certificate. Tickets will be on sale
from today through Friday, De-

Reflections...

Theater. The pledges will be present from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
The Auction is Phi Zetd Chi’s annual pledge class money-raising
project. Proceeds from the Auction will be donated to charity.
Come and Bid!
Monday Sigma Delta Tau Sorority elected their new. slate of
officers. The results are as fol-

lows: President, Diane Sezzen;
1st V.P., Barbara Boakhout; 2nd
V.P., Susan Dicker; Treasurer,
Linda Wachner; Rec. Secty., Lucie
Einhorn; Corr. Secty., Sue Salsberg; Pan Hell, Elaine Greenberg
and Linda Laufer.
The pledges of Theta Chi Fra-

ternity wish to announce that
their liquor raffle will be held
today at noon in the cafeteria.
The wining ticket will be drawn
by Evelyn Chapin, Vice President
of Chi Omega Sorority.

There will be a cocktail party
tomorrow before, the Silver Ball
at Mark D’Arcangelo’s house
Next Friday, there will be a social
with Chi Omega Sorority.
Tau Kappa Epsilon has elected
officers for the coming year. The
officers are: Rich Anderson, president; A1 Classman, vice president; Keith Hoffman, Treasurer;
Jay Katz, Secretary; Bill Hug,
pledge trainer; Tom Thomas, historian; Chuck McKirdy, chaplain;
and Jerry Zielinski, Sgt. at Arms.

(Cont’d from P. 5)
cited enough, one way or the
other, to do anything. That's
about the strongest condemns
tion of this, so called “academic
community” that I can think of,
I am very interested in seein"
a “REINSTATE PAUL SPOR.V
movement started, not only because I feel it is criminal to lose
a man of his talent and concern for teaching, but because
his case is emblamatic of the
problem of academic freedom on
the teaching level. We have had
great success in defending the
principle on a visiting lecturer
level. Maybe we could work down
eventually to the level of stu
dents, although the publications
board issue gives me little rea
son to believe that fight will be
successfully waged in my student generation.

So, if there is any student in-

terest in this problem please
drop me a line either here at
the Spectrum or in the. Senate
Office. I am willing to devote
in an attempt to, at very least,

educate the campus to what
demic freedom is. While we are
at it we might be able to educate Dr. Gould and President
Furnas in this area where their
education appears to have been
so grossly neglected.

HERBIE MANN SEXTET
Coming Monday to

ROYAL ARMS
19 W. Utica

cember 18.

The

SUMMERTIME

Vv

brothers are currently
a raffle of a giant teddy-

bear, on display in the expressway cafeteria. Tickets can be purchased from any APD brother.
Donation $.10.

Delta Chi Omega announce
their new officers: Terry Angelo,
president; Fred Hamann, vice
president; Herbert Ballard, secretary; and Don King, Treasurer.
The brothers will hold a beer
stag tonight.
Gamma Phi will hold a cocktail
party tomorrow evening at the
home of Ron Ross. Many of the
brothers will then attend the Silver Ball at Kleinhans.

885-6262

PLANNING A
SPRING OR

The alumni club of Alpha Phi
Delta will hold a cocktail party
for their active brothers Saturday at the Williamsville Inn,
holding

-

WEDDING?
TEGLER'S IS HAVING THEIR ANNUAL FASHION
SHOW FOR BRIDES FRIDAY EVENING, JANU-

ARY 15th AT 8:00 P.M. IN THE GOLDEN BALLROOM, STATLER

-

HILTON HOTEL. ADMISSION

BY INVITATION ONLY.

The pledges of Phi Kappa Psi
will hold a party in honor of the
brothers tonight at the Walden
Hall.
The brothers are having a cocktail party prior to the Silver Ball
tonight at the S t a I 1 e r Hilton

Hotel,

Phi Zeta Chi Sorority invites
all students to participate in their
First Annual Auction, to be held
Friday, December 18, in NortonLobby, in front of the Conference

brewed for braves...,

CALL TL 2-1606 FOR

TICKETS.

Tellers
\

340 Delaware Avenue
BUFFALO 2, N. Y.

/

D01IBI1-H0PPE1)

Jr

•(P

�Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

Student Activities Committee
Works to Improve Relations
The Student Activities Committee of the Student Senate is
currently working with all recognized student activities in an
effort to solve problems resulting
from a lack of communication between these groups and the student body.
Letters have been sent requesting information to be used for
a series of Spectrum articles featuring campus activities. It is
hoped that this series will serve
to inform the student of the
existence of organizations that
can meet his needs and interests.
Each article will give information about the club’s activities,
meetings and purposes. All those
interested are encouraged to attend a meeting or contact the
President of the organization in
order to learn more about the
group.
New campus organizations are
always welcome. This semester
three activities have been formed
and recognized by the Student
Senate. Those forming an organization should pick up an application in Room 205 Norton
Union and return it to the Student Activities Committee as soon
as possible. Each application and
constitution of the new group is
reviewed by the committee. An
activity is recognized by a majority vote of the Student Senate
upon recommendation of the Activities Committee.

’

Recognition entitles each group

to use the name of the State
University of New York at Buffalo. Groups can also use rooms
in Norton for activities and meetings. Any activity, which has a
treasurer, recognition can apply

to

the Finance Committee of
the Student Senate for funds.
Criteria which a group must
meet in order to be recognized
are as follows: Membership must
be open to all day-time undergraduate students of/ the University who have an interest in the
organization. Also, the purposes
and goals of the organization
should be to contribute something
constructive and beneficial to the
campus life. For instance, in the
past year such clubs as the
Society on International Medicine
and the Bridge Club have been
organized and recognized. Each
group must have a faculty advisor
and hold at least one monthly
meeting. If an organization ceases
to function for more than one
academic semester it loses its
status as a recognized group.
The Student Activities Committee is working with Cap and
Gown, the Senior Womens’ Honor
Society, in publishing a Student
Activities Handbook. This Handbook, designed to list and explain
every activity open to students
on campus, will be available next
fall. Leaders of groups are urged
to reply promptly to the letter
which has been sent to them requesting information.

Publication Board NSA
Votes to Censure
University Paper

(Cont'd

TO

quest from

THE EDITOR:
The Publications Board has
voted to censure you for the following reasons:

1) There has been continuous
biased and irresponsible reporting in the Spectrum since your

appointment.

2) Articles of significance have
been omitted or poorly presented.
3) Promsies made October 2,
1964 have been ignored or forgotten and therefore your trust and
competence has been questioned
by the student body.
4) The Spectrum has markedly
declined from previous standards
in its journalistic quality, since

your appointment.
The Board feels that some
changes are necessary to cope
with the problems listed above.
We also feel that you are capable

of making these changes; however, if the changes are not im
mediately initiated from within
the Spectrum, the Board will be
forced to seek a new editor.
Sincerely,
George Neuner, Chairman,
Student Publications Board
HERBIE MANN SEXTET

In a further effort to meet the
needs of student activities, a
series of informal coffee hours
is being set up to talk over problems with representatives from
activities. At the one scheduled
for Monday, the Ski Club, Hockey
Club, Rifle Club and Women’s
Recreational
Association have
been invited to discuss membership and communications difficul-

Coming Monday to

ROYAL ARMS
19 W. Utica

•

885-6262

Berkeley Statement

from P.

5)

said NSA “deplores the interven
lion of non-University law enforcement authorities in the present crisis without a formal re-

ministration has Summoned four
students for disciplinary action
over the incidents of early October. USNSA fully agrees with
the position adopted by the Ad
Hoc meeting of the Faculty on
Thursday, December 3, in that
any further disciplinary action
against students relating to the
incidents of early October should
be dropped and that the summons be formally withdrawn.
The decision of University
Chancellor Edward W. Strong to
lake further disciplinary action
against four leaders of the Free
Speech Movement (FSM) for their
parts in a demonstration that
immobilized a university police
car for 32 hours last October
2 3 was the major reason for the
Sproul Hall sit-in and the subse-

the University."
"USNSA believes that the orderly regulation of campus ac
tivity should be the responsibility
of the University, and outside
elements should intervene only
when publicly asked to do so
by the appropriate official of
the University,” it said.
Brown had ordered some 600
police to the Berkeley campus
early Thursday morning, Decern
ber 3, to break up a student sitin at the university’s administra
tion building, Sproul Hall.
It was reported that Brown
had come to a "consensus” with
University of . California President Clark Kerr over the necesquent arrests.
sity for the arrests, but the
NSA commended the regents of
governor stressed that the full
the university for their decision
responsibility for the action was to reinstate eight students—inhis.
cluding three of the four who
NSA's statement said the As
were summoned for further dissociation "believes that any disciplinary action—but objected to
ciplinary action taken by the a regents' decision to give uniUniversity in any circumstances
versity officials the right to disand for whatever cause should
cipline students who used campbe based solely on the need for
us facilities for political activity
orderly regulation of campus ac
that would result in breaking
tivity, should never place the
the law, such as civil disobedi
student in double jeopardy (i.e.
ence.
if the student has been sum
The Association said the "de
moncd before the courts of the
termination as to what is plan
state and the community, the Ad
ning for unlawful activity or any
ministration should take no adattempt to enforce restrictions
ditional action), and should al
against such activity should be
ways guarantee due process.
the perogative of
the 'state
The statement said that NSA
and community, rather than the
"regrets that the Berkeley Ad
administration.
"

UNDERGRADUATE MEN:
Earn Money As
Psychological Subjects

ties.

Drama Society Presents Plays
Today, for the second consecutive Friday, the UB Student Dramatic Society is presenting a
program of one act plays to be
held in the Conference Theater
of Norton Union at 4:00 p.m.
This week the two act plays selected are Luigi Pirandello’s Man
with a Flower in his Mouth and
August Stindburg's Miss Julie.
Man with a Flower in his Mouth
is an expression of pessimism
which uses the “theater of the
absurd" as its vehicle. The east
includes Barry Tannenbaum as the
man” and Dick Kawecki as the

PAGE SEVEN

customer. The director is Bruce

Interesting, Informative, Profitable

Glaser,

Miss Julie, a play in the more
conventional and classic style of

The Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory will pay $1 .25 per hour to male students participating in a series of psychological experiments. Subjects will
perform a variety of stimulating tasks, ranging from imaginative tests to playing national leaders in an international relations game. Additional earnings
will be possible in some tasks. Volunteers will be able to participate from 3
to 30 hours, part of the time at the SUNYB campus and part at the Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory. (transportation provided)

the theater, is directed by Colin
Bremner .The characters are Miss
Julie, played by Elaine Heller,
Jean,, played by Gary Gerace, and
also Kristin.
Next week at the same time
and place, the dramatic society
will present two Edward Albec
plays—The American Dream and
The Zoo Story—to be followed by
The Coffee Machine, an original
play by Grace Martin.

You may volunteer for ONE of two groups, as follows:
Group 1: To take tests on Saturday, Dec. 19 from 9:00 AM to 12:00
noon in Diefendorf Hall, Room 147. (to continue rest of experiment next semester)
Group 2: To take tests and rest of experiment next semester.

If you wish to participate, fill in the coupon below and MAIL IMMEDlATELYtoDr. K.W. Terhune, Operations Research Dept., Cornell Aeronautical, P. O. Box 235, Buffalo, New York, 14221,
—

------CUP AND MAIL COUPON-"-

K.W. Terhune
J Dr.
Operations Research

■

—

---------

Dept.

I Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory
1 P. O. Box 235,
Buffalo, New York 14221
I wish to volunteer for the CAL psychological experiment. (Check one box.)
'
I will attend the test session on Sat. December 19 from 9;00 AM to 12:00
L_J AM in Diefendorf Hall, Room 147.

J

I II

cannot attend on Dec. 19 but would like, to participate next semester.

Your name
Last name
Address

First name

■

Universit

I

Telephone where you can be reached

Initial

Jr. (if applicable)

�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

■r

HOW ABO
A BOOK FOR CHRISTMAS, LIKE PEANUTS
OR ART

($5.00 TO $25.00), HISTORY

BOO^

AMERICAN HERITAGE ($12.95), WINSTON CHURCHILL ($7.50), GOLI
OR SCHWEITZER, FROST,

MacARTHUR, BIBLES, DICTIONARIES AND MANY, MA

THE BOOKSTORE’S NEW RECORDDEPARTMENT HAS A HUGE SELECTION OF

IN ALL SHAPES AND SIZES FROM

SOPHISTICATED GIFT IN GLASSWARE,

A MONTBLANC (FROM

;

PRICES, $1.69 TO $5.49). ANOTHER IDEAL GIFT IS A PEN,

LITTLE TROLL DOLLS

yk

TO

CERAMICS, PEWTER, WOOD
&lt;,0°°o

AND ON AND ON TO BEAUTIFUL JEWELRY,

|

I

°xf

PERFUME

SWEATSHIRTS (IN COLORS) AND IN JUVENILE SIZES TOO,
STATIONERY, TIE CLIPS, TIE TACKS, CUFF LINKS,
MORE GIFTS FOR ANYONE A

MERRY SHOPPI

�Friday, December 11, 1964

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

UBTS GxfthQfip
I H'

10UT GIVING
S

°

&gt;Op SUCH

R DR SEUSS

*® 2-°°

TO * 5 00 )&gt;

AS THE KENNEDY YEARS

cjlDEN BOOKS

($1.00),

($16.30),

PETER PAUPER BOOKS ($1.00),

OTHERS? MUSICALLY SPEAKING A RECORD

MAKES A WONDERFUL GIFT.

MONAURAL AND STEREO RECORDS ON ALL POPULAR LABELS
7.50 TO $33.00), OR A PARKER

JOTTER ($1.98).

THE BULL’S MASCOT

USTER”

FIGURINES, HANDSOME MUGS,

CLOCKS AND CLOTHING,
R

JACKETS

BLAZERS,

FROM SIZE 2-16. TYPEWRITERS, ATTACHE CASES,
MANY,

EVERYONE ON YOUR SHOPPING LIST.
6

G TO ALL FROM

TOE “Oil

OR PERHAPS A MORE

ASH TRAYS, CHEESE TRAYS

UB CAPTAINS CHAIRS,

AT POPULAR

GIVE A FUN GIFT LIKE STUFFED TOYS

($1.00 TO $6.95),

SUCH AS

(

�PAGE TEN

Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

CAMPUS PERSONALITY
CL ton 2) e eau
.

i

"A student campus and student
government can provide the closest approximation of pure democracy and it should attempt to
reach this goal,” believes Clinton
Deveaux, University College Senator in the Student Senate.
Clint, a sophomore from Flushing, New York, is a member of
the Executive Board of the Sen
ate. He is a Pre law major, and
hopes to engage in constitutional
or international law upon gradu

ation.
The Union Board Housing Committee, which determines, revises,
and enforces Union rules; is another one of Clinton's activities.
In addition to chairing the House
Committee, he is also a member
of the Convocations- Committee.
As a member of the Student
Faculty Executive Board, Clinton
is in a position to observe it
directly, and objects to its organization This is the Board to
which each student pays $91. The
Board controls these funds without regard to majority opinion.
Instead of using these funds to

the direct benefit of the students,

a profit is made each year. Clinton suggests that these funds
might better be employed to give
students discounts on books sold
at the bookstore.
"The present arrangement of
the Student Faculty Association
Executive Board," he asserts, “is,
as I see it, illegally constituted.
Not only does it require students
to invest in a corporation in
which they have no voice, but its
total control over all student fees,
iereby all student activities,
is detH lental to each student
and the
yersity as a whole."

Clinton is also a member of
the Debate Society. His debate
partner is Nick Sargent, newly.

/

/

CLINTON DEVEAUX

appointed presidential aide. This
year's national debate topic is,
resolved: The federal government
should establish a program of
public work for the unemployed.
This semester, Clinton and Nick
argue in favor of the resolution.
Next semester, they will take a
negative stand.' Debate is Clin
ton’s favorite spare time activity.
He likes it because it is excitng
and provides him with an opportunity to meet people from different schools. Another spare
time activity of his is cards. He
plays bridge and pinochle' Although he feels he is a poor
pinochle player, he is "addicted
to both" and has difficulty resisting the urge to try to win
just once more.

885-6262

Mr. Glena works solely for the
University Relations Department
photographing professors and dignitaries who have received new
appointments. He also photographs members of the faculty
whose books are going to be
published. His work differs from
that done by the Audio Visual
. . it
Department in that
is
more technical.” Mr. Glena further said “I deal with people,
people ask for certain types of
things, I have to make my photographs fit their specifications.”
. . it gives me more freeUB,
dom to express myself photographically.” He views his work
artistically saying, “you have your
usual run of the mill type of
photographs but, then if you have
a chance, you can try to create
something different!”

Mr. Donald Rizzo, in charge of
University Relations, commented,
“Mr. Glena will be serving the
needs of the university publications and will certainly be glad
to cooperate with any photographic needs that the faculty
has in regard to their publica-

FT A Talks
Seanies Attend
was

the
“Steps to the Future”
theme of the first Future Teachers Club conference Saturday,
December 5, at Buffalo State,
put on by representatives of the
University, Buffalo State, D’Youville College and Rosary Hill College, members of the Western
Region of SEANYS.
The Future Teachers Associations are high school groups of
students interested in teaching.
There are 14 in the Buffalo area.
In addition, representatives from
those high schools in the Buffalo
area without FTA groups were
invited to attend with hopes they
would go back to their schools
and start clubs.
After registration in Rockwell
Hall, there was a general orientation at which Dr. Richard Whitford, Assistant to the President
of Buffalo State delivered the
address. Displays on education
were set up, and the students

attended workshops on' the specialty area of teaching they were
interested in. Teachers in Buffalo
schools led the workshops.
Luncheon on campus was high-

lighted by an inspiring speech
given by Dr. Joseph Manch,
Superintendent of Buffalo Public
Schools, who spoke on “Teaching As a Career.” Mr. William
Cole, State Consultant for Student
Programs, also attended the conference. Guided tours of the
campus were made available
after the closing.
Representatives from the University were Nancy Migdol and

Marcia Berzon, Director of the
Western Region of SEANYS. Dr.
Burvil Glenn, SEANYS advisor,
also attended. It is hoped by
those who organized the conference that this co sponsored FTA
conference can be an annual
program.

McMullen To Head Interdisciplinary Department
Administrators of the UB
Schools of Pharmacy, Medicine
and Engineering are in the process of developing an interdisciplinary department, eventually
in the form of a major department or institute, which will be
engaged in satisfying the growing need for a more quantitative
approach to the problems of biology. This program will be concerned entirely with the theoretical aspects of problems in
biological systems.
As reported

in the May 16,

1964 issue of Nature, a start in
this development has been made
by Professor J. F. Danielll, with
his establishment of a theoretical
Biology Unit within the Biochemical Department, School of Pharmacy, This Unit, now engaged
on research into problems of
marco-molecular origin and replication, is under the Professorship of A. I. McMullen. Dr.
McMullen is cooperating in a
joint effort with Dr. F. Snell of
the Biophysics and Dr. I. Shames
of the Bio-Engineering Depart-

ment.

tions.”

Mr. Glena attended the School
of Modern Photography in New
York City and has been employed by several Buffalo and

Niagara Falls photography stu-

dios. An auxiliary photographer
for several area media, Mr. Glena
has published photographs in
"Life” and “U.S. Steel" maga-

Corning Monday to
19 W. Utica

Mr. Donald D, Glena has been
appointed staff photographer for
University Relations, The former
free lance photographer replaces
Mr. Thomas C. Fufold who resigned to enter private business.

Mr, Glena enjoys working at

HERBIE XlANN SEXTET

ROYAL ARMS

Donald Glena Named
University Relations
Staff Photographer

49 Edward
TL 2- 9338
BUFFALO FOLK CENTER
to serve your entertainment needs

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[" COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTOR
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Washington, D.Ci 20008
Dear Sheraton: Please rush me an application for a
ree Sheraton Student ID Card. understand it will get
me discounts on room rates at Sheraton Hotels
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�Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

aiOTWIM®

UB Little Symphony Presents
Haydn, Mozart Concert Here

STASIS)

By LEON LEWIS

By VICKI BUGELSKI

fortunately, I’ve

not seen any

of them yet and I can’t offer any
suggestions. But, a friend of mine
living in London saw the entire
festival When it appeared there

and I think that it would be
worthwhile to reproduce some of
his comments below since he is
a perceptive and thoughtful critic and aficianado of the cinema.
His letter begins as followed:
“A belated report from your man

in London, Quinton Muckbloke,
on the 8th London Film Festival (the 2nd N.Y. Film Festival),
For what it’s worth, and with
much bias. Best film of festival
and one of the best American
films of recent years: Nothing
But A Man. Sensitive and beautiful performances by Abbey Lincoln and Ivan Dixon. Film is honest, understated skillfully, and
left me very, very emotionally
moved. No “tricks” or artiness;
just a simple story told simply.
And realistically. It was a privilege to see it. Cinema as it should
be. I can’t say enough good things
about it.

Most overrated film: Woman of
the Dunes. Okay, fine. I "appreciate” its greatness and understand the profundity of its “existential allegory.” It’s just that
I’m so tired of it all. I suppose
that’s why I prefer The Magnificent Seven to Seven Samurai.
Intellectual snobs to the contrary,
a film must ENTERTAIN me (the
semantic rap of “entertain”
aside). And the camerawork.
Okay, it’s great. But it is as if
the cameraman is saying: “Now
watch this next shot, man, it is
really going to be something
else.” Self-conscious artiness. I
much prefer the work of Shirley
Clarke or Ed Emshwiller, the
Hallelujah the Hilli cameraman.
Most underrated film: A real
"sleeper” is To Love, a Swedish
comedy with Harriet Anderrson
and Zbigniew Cybulski. He is
great as always, and Anderrson
is just fantastic. Bergman is an
ass for always using her as foil
to Ingrid Thulin and always playing her as "tortured.” A very
funny, mature, fast-moving, and
well directed (John Donner) film.
Best New Director: Alain Jessua for his film Life Upside
Down. (La Vie a I'Envers). Next
to Man, the best film of the
Festival. Hard to describe, but
suffice to say it is almost
SWesque in its c o m i c-serious
irony. Superb texture and manipulation of point of view.
Most Disappointing Film: Nobody Waved Goodbye. Story of
adolescence didn’t sound promising to begin with but I figured
that since it was a Canadian Film
Board feature, it must be worthwhile. It isn't. It’s a lot of crap.
Biggest flaws are in dialogue
(embarrassing) and casting. I
laughed where I shouldn’t have.
Perhaps I’m getting old, but to
me the film is just a lot of crap.
(It must be obvious by now that
I think that the film is a lot of
crap.)

Film Most Easy to Lose Critical
Perspective On:
Godard’s The

Outsiders. Judged objectively, it
The UB Little Symphony, under
is a bad film, certainly a bring- Dr. Robert Mols of the music
faculty, will present a Haydn
down from Breathless, (my archetypical Byronic-pose film) and and Mozart concerto program
Vivre Sa Vie. But Godard, along with student soloists, Thursday
with Truffaut, is my favorite di- at 5:00 p.m.- in Baird Hall. Adrector. And Anna Karina is still mission is free, and all students
my archetypal dream waif. But and faculty are invited to atit fails because (AND I THINK tend.
The soloists and their respecTHIS IS TYPICAL OF MOST EUROPEAN DIRECTORS NOWAtive concert!, are Donald Ellis,
DAYS) the film turns inward, Haydn trumpet concerto; Charnot like Fellini Who made a les Walthall, Mozart clarinet concerto; Betty Banaszak, Mozart
masterpiece from the inner tension, but like Antonioni in Eclipse Piano conecrto in C minor, K.
who smothers his art. In this film, 491; Victoria B'uge.lski, Mozart
the in-jokes just cease after a piano concerto in C major, K.
while to be funny and tend to de- 467. All will perform one movetract from the mood and tone and ment.
Mr, Ellis is a junior, majoring
coherence. An important film because it may be (for good or ill) in music education. A student
of Frank Cipolla, he is the first
a turning point in Gordard’s career. He has run out of material. chair trumpet in the Little SymI hope he recovers because I phony, and in the Cheektowaga
Symphony, also under the di
like his films, and, despite myrection of Dr. Mols. He is also
self, like this one.”
member of the UB band and the
The letter continues some lowbrass ensemble, Mr. Ellis will
comic comments on the audience be performing his concerto on a
at the Festival and some of the small E-flat cornet, an instrument
hanger-ons, all of which are, uncloser to the one of Haydn's day
fortunately, unprintable in a pubthan the present orchestral trumlication of this kind, I don’ tknow pet.
how many of these films will ever
be readily available in this country, but I would imagine that all
of the ones which Bill liked
would certainly be interesting for
anyone who cares for the original
and provocative in films.
Creative Associates concerts
for Monday and Wednesday have
been cancelled. The next Crea
Tryouts for the Annual live Associates concert will be
Saturday, December 19, Works of
Spring musical comedy
Strauss, Smit, and
will
be
held
on
will
January be performed. The Walton
concert will
27, 28 and 29 at 8:00 in take place in Baird Hall, at 8:30
p.m., admission free.
Baird Hall. Musical DiThe last Slee Lecture and conrector for the comedy will
cert for the semester will take
he Elaine Seiffert, assisted place Friday, December 18, at
by William Penn. Those 8:30 p.m. in Capen Hall, admisfree. Alexi Haieff, current
planning to audition sion
Slee professor, will give the lecshould bring at least one ture. Guest artist for the concert
portion will be world-famous
song from a recent Broadharpsichordist Sylvia Marlowe,
way Musical comedy. Danwho will preforming contempor
ary works.
cers will also he audiAudition dates for the spring
tioned. The title of the
musical are January 27, 28, and
musical comedy will he
29, to be held in Baird Hall

Future Music
Events Cited

announced in next weeks
SPECTRUM.

Mr. Walthall is a senior, and
studied with Allen Sigel, and also
with Harold Wright at the Marlboro Music Festival. He is also
a member of the Cheektowaga
orchestra, and teaches clarinet
at the Villa Maria Institute of
Music. He is presently working
on a senior honors thesis on the
Mozart clarinet concerto, and is
studying some of the older instruments.

Mrs. Banaszak is completing
requirements for the Bachelor of
Fine Arts in music performance.
She has studied with Buffalo
teacher Laura Kelsey, and with
Livingston Gearhart at the University. She is married to Leonard Banaszak. a graduate student in music composition, who
is also a guitarist. The Banaszaks
are planning advanced study in
music at III ilois next year. Mrs.
Banaszak is currently teaching
piano in Buffalo.
The Little Symphony is composed of students from all divisions of the University. Its pur
pose is twofold: to give the members experience in the performance of orchestral literature, and
to give student soloists an op
portunity to perform works with
orchestra.

I.D. Card Offers
Students Services
If you're planning on traveling
or working abroad, you’ll want
to obtain the International Student ID. Card, which certifies

student status and entitles the
holder to price concessions and
other services on four continents,
including use of student hotels,
restaurants, transportation facilities and special student evenls.
Free or discounted admission to
theaters, museums, galleries, and
other entertainment are also
available.”

Each card will cost only one
dollar. If you arc interested in
obtaining one, or if you have any
questions, please call 831408!).
We need to know the number of
students who are interested by

next Tuesday—so please contact
us as soon as possible.

u

goes

HAVING A PARTY?
HAVE
HAVE

Wf

PIZZA

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TiiNV

Hudson \Datf/ RaNoait

WBFO Broadcasts
Christmas Concert
Other Shows Listed

;

Tonight there will be a live
broadcast of our own UB CHRISTMAS CONCERT, which will be
given at 8:30 p.m. for the special
listening of all of you unable to
brave the cold or to obtain tickets, Featured music will be of
French composers.
At 7 p.m. this evening, some
Schoenberg piano works will be
heard on "Contemporary Music

in Evolution,”
Also broadcast this weekend
will be the UB vs. Albany State
basketball game, tomorrow, at
8:30 p.m.

Sunday will feature several interestin gprograms, among which
arc a Donizetti OPERA with
MARIO CALLAS at 3:00 p.m.;
Bach CELLO CONCERTO and
Haydn HARPSICHORD CONCER
TO, both at 5:00 p.m.; a Johnson
Foundation talk on INDIA at 6:00
p.m.; a BBC Symphony Concert at
7:00 p.m., with works of Schubert, Berlioz, Schumann, and Debussy; a theater performance of
WAITING FOR GODOT with
BERT LAHR at 9:00 p.m.
Monday also is full of relaxing
music and interesting features,
among them being a program on
Thomas JEFFERSON at 4 :30
p.m.; Preludes to LOHENGRIN at
6:00 p.m.; works of COPLAND,
PALESTRINA, GRANADOS, and
RACHMANINOV in the 8:30 p.m.
Concert Hall.
Tuesday will be a review of
JOBS AVAILABLE FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS at 4:30 p.m.;
European Review at 5:45 p.m.;
a special program of GERMAN
OPERA of MOZART and WAGNER by the Royal Opera House
Orchestra at 6:00 p.m.; a scientific study on OUTER SPACE
COMMUNICATIONS; and a quiet
concert for evening listening at
8:30 p.m., featuring the Schumann Symphony

If 1.

HERBIE MANN SEXTET
Coming Monday to

ROYAL ARMS
19 W. Utica

-

885-6262

A-

/Ts*.SeND?Mfl nq_

£01 fE»w»Q
~foA**£4}(oT

'

Every Christmas, I look forward to catching up on all of
the esoteric movies that have
opened in New York City during
the fall. It gets rather frustrating to look at the N.Y. Times or
the Herald Tribune on Sunday
afternoons and see what’s opened —usually a fascinating collection of foreign and domestic movies which will never get to Buffalo. During the last two years,
the so-called New York Film Festival has offered a veritable
“Cook’s Tour” of the world cinema for two hectic weeks in the
fall. Many of these films have
subsequently opened in N.Y. and
quite a few of them are playing
in the city at the moment. Un-

PAGE ELEVEN

STUDENT DISCOUNT
With Proper I.D. Card

TF 3-1344

•&gt;

•&gt;

POLISH VILLAGE
TX 3-3621

1163 Broadway

Delicious Food
20 Kinds of Sandwiches
Draft Beer
Friday Night Sing a Long
Musicales featuring Roger Czarnecki (UB student)
-

-

-

Saturday and Sunday Nights
Music by The New Yorkers

-

Reservations for Christmas Parties
and New Years Eve

now being accepted
Doily

6 30 P M

Sot

*

S»n

UQ PM

�Ried, Pacht Lecture
On Civil Rights Law
December 7, the Sociology
Club held a lecture in Room 330
Norton entitled “Civil Rights
Law" at which Professor Herbert
Ried and Professor Newton Pacht
discussed the legal, social and
several of the political aspects
of the problems which every area
within a Negro community are
being faced with today.
A historical approach was takto analyze the difficulties produced by Southern integration.
Much emphasis was placed upon
the various means by which the
civil rights laws have been evad
ed, The impact of the 1954 intc
gration law in fields of recrea
tion and education was discussed.
Professor Ried described the
Southern programs of massive
resistance and massive compliance by delay which have imped
ed the enforcement of such legislation. The fallacies of such
doctrines as "separate but equal”,
once a bulwark of segregation
under a dozen different, labels,
was described as no longer an
effective enforcable policy.
An interesting aspect of South
ern resistance to integration,
which Professor Ried mentioned,
was the pupil placement program
employed by South Carolina,
which were actually an excuse
for continued separation by race
under the facade of intelligence

strata.

Among the more distinctly
northern issues discussed was the
neighborhood school, the tech
niques used by civic leaders to
disrupt integration, and
the
various problems correlated with
the problem of deterioration of
the core of many American

rjCetterA
—

During the question and answer session
which followed,
various techniques of defacto segregation and legal delay were
pointed out more completely. One
of the areas stressed was that
Negroes must come into the ur
ban community as complete
equals, in order to assume their
leadership completely.
HERBIE MANN SEXTET
Coming Monday to

ROYAL ARMS
-

885-6262

Canterbury Association
Tuesday and Wednesday of
next week (2:00-3:00 p.m.) the
final in the • current discussion
of the "Gospel According to St.

Mark” will be offered. The specific topic will be “The Resurrection Account,” (Mark 16:116:20). The Tuesday session will
be held in Room 220 Norton and
the Wednesday session in Room
266. Both discussion groups are
under the guidance of Fr. R.
Sherman Beattie. ALL students
and faculty members are invited
to attend either of the duplicate
sessions.
Fr. Beattie also wishes to announce that there will be an
“open house” Thursday from 8:00
to 10:00 p.m. at 1179 Elmwood
Avenue opposite the State CoL
lege.

Muslim Student Association

If you are a Muslim or if you
are interested to know about
Muslims or if you would like
to learn njorc about the religion
of Islam, please attend an informal gathering of Muslim students of all countries at:
3234 Main Street (upstairs)
Time: 3:00 p.m. Sunday.
Conversation will include arrangements regarding the coming of Ramadan (The Feasting

and Eid al-Fitr.
Muslim ladies have kindly consented to prepare coffee and tea
for the occasion.
For further details please call
Month)

TF 3-6310.

Hillel

The B'nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m
in the Hillel House. The speaker
will be Mr. Noach Orian, a native
Israeli who is now doing graduate
work in History in this country.
Mr. Orian will give a talk on:
"Israel and the Arab World."
He will also lead a discussion on

the subject at the Oneg Shabbat
following the service.
Hillel will hold its final Delica
lessen Supper of the semester
Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel
House. Howard Wildman, an En-

IWill pick up and deliver On Campus Monday-Friday

TR 5-5360

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19 W. Utica

Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

BRIGHTON AT EGGERT

KENMORE NEAR COLVIN

T'R 3-1330

ALWAYS FREE DELIVERY

gineering student from Rochester,
will make a presentation on:

“Judaism in the Far East.” This
will be the concluding program
in a current cultural series on:
“Judaism in Many Lands.” Reserviations for the supper should
be made at the Hillel House.
Hillel’s Fifth Annual Mid-Winter Social will be held Sunday,
December 27 at 8:00 p.m. in the
Hillel House. The social is designed to afford an opportunity
to Buffalo students attending
out-of-town colleges to renew old
friehdships. The atmosphere will
be informal. Recorded music will
be provided for social dancing.
Hot cider and cake will be served. Personal invitations are now
being' mailed out. Parents who
would like to have an invitation
-

sent to a son or daughter attending an out-of-town college
call the Hillel House at TF 6-

4540 at their earliest convenience.

Therefore, it is unreasonable for
Mr. Finkelstein to criticize the
Spectrum for not representing
this non-existent voice.
Lastly, was Finkelstein’s criticism that Kowal and the Spectrum Staff broke regulations in
allowing letter to the editor
which were over two hundred
words, and that Kowal was responsible for the misspelling of
twice. This
someone’s name . .
is a new low in the career of Mr,
Finkelstein Personally, I thought
he was more intelligent than that,
It appears that he is manifesting
his Organization Man training. He
seems taken back by ■ the fact
that exceptions are made to the
newspaper’s regulations. To me,

this does not seem astonishing.
It only goes to show that Mr.
Kowal and the staff are not
sticklers for red tape, and that
they are willing to be flexible.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
The General Meeting planned
for tonight at 7:00 p.m, has been

The Christmas Novena will be
said every day next week at the
Hall after Mass at noon.
Student Christian Association

Thursday at 6:00 p.m., the Student Christian Association will
hold its annual Christmas dinner
at the University Presbyterian
Church. The menu will consist of
turkey with all the trimmings.
The cost is only $1.00. Please
make reservations bv calling TF
4 4250 or TF 6-5806.

Liberal

Religious Fellowship

There will be

a meeting of
Libera] Religious Fellowship Sunday at 6:00 p.m. in Room 330

Norton Union. Reverend Paul
Carnes of the Buffalo Unitarian
Universalis! Church will speak.
The topic will be .'When the
Crutch Breaks." Refreshments
will be served. Everyone is in
vited to attend,

I tail to see how any of these
charges show that Kowal is “incompetent” or that the Spectrum
is not fulfilling its function on
campus. In fact, I would say that
the staff of the Spectrum and Mr.
Kowal in particular, have done
an exceptional job, both in upholding academic freedom and in
arousing and stimulating the in-

different student mind (as evidenced by this very dispute) as
well as, if not better than, anyone
could have done.
One last point I would like to
make is the fact that Finkelstein’s
statement was released a relatively short time after the Student Senate was identified with
the Mickey Mouse Club by Mr.
Kowal in an editorial in the Spectrum. Are we to believe that
this is mepe coincidence? Or is
it possible that Mr. Finkelstein
felt slighted or threatened by
this cogent analogy?
Bruce G. Marshall

Klinger Criticized
TO THE EDITOR

cancelled.
Tomorrow night Inter-Varsity
This letter is an answer to Mr.
Christian Fellowship Chapters of
Frank Klinger, who took issue
Erie County Technical Institute,
with Miss Linda LeventhaTs views
State University College at Bufregarding the speech of Dr,
falo, and the University of BufAptheker.
falo are having their second anMr. Klinger, you are quite right
nual Christmas Banquet starting
saying that “. . . some of us
in
at 6:00 p.m. The banquet will
are not . . . sufficiently well-edbe held in Booms 244-248 of
ucated and mature to listen to a
Norton Union.
current letter
Everyone is invited to the last Communist.” Your
is graphic proof of your convicof our Bible studies and prayer
meetings that will be held this tion.
However, 1 do not see the causal
semester. The Bible studies are
between applause for
at 3:00 Monday and 11:00 a.m. relationship
Aptheker and immaturity,
Thursday. The prayer meetings Dr.
since this is a conventional saluare held at 3:00 p.m. Tuesday
tation for an invited guest
and noon Friday.
speaker. Instead, it seems to me
that attempting to belittle an
During Winter Recess from
December 27, through January invited speaker is impolite and
more nearly related to immatu1, the 7th Inter-Varsity Missionary Convention will be held at rity. Naturally, asking critical
questions is part of intellectual
the University of Illinois in Urbana, Illinois, The speakers will inquiry, although the accompaniment of questioning by disinclude Ruth Lewis, student, Nacourteous applause cannot be suptional Negro Evangelical Associaported. I do not think that Miss
tion; Clyde Taylor, General Director, NEA, Executive Secretary, Leventhal was critical of the questions themselves; the impolite
Evangelical Foreign Missions Asreaction to the questions was consociation; Billy Graham, international evangelist: I. Ben Wati, demned.
Dr. Apthekcr, with whose views
Executive Secretary, Evangelical
Fellowship of India; and S. Stacy I cannot agree, since I am a
capitalistic business student, was
Woods, General Secretary, Interan invited guest speaker at the
national Fellowship of Evangelical Students. Anyone interested University, This is quite different
from the psychotic performance
may attend. Pamphlets concerning the convention’s speakers,
of a New York City soap-box radiprograms, costs and trasporta
cal, performing on Times Square.
tion arrangements are in the If Dr, Aptheker were Mr, Khruschev himself, or a successor, he
CRO Office, Room 217 of Norton Union.
would be due all of the courtesy
and respect normally accorded a
person of like position and rank.
Newman
We would expect this if an
American representative visited
A guest speaker will be preRussia. American people who are
sent at the weekly meeting Wed
educated need not bang shoes
nesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Fill
merely because our adversaries
more Room.
The Sunday night discussion
groups are continuing each Sunday evening at 7:30 in the Hall.

the Editor

do so.
In this case, the man was not
an enemy alien, although he may
be considered dangerous by some
people. Instead, he is a man who
was educated in these United
States, and has had the highest
academic degree conferred upon
him. Therefore, it would seem
fitting tor students and faculty
to respect his rank, regardless of
his philohophy. I cannot agree
with your view, Mr. Klinger, that
we should say “Hats off” to those
who try to embarrass this
“enemy.” The polite gesture of
removing one’s hat as a gentleman is certainly behavior that is
incongruent with an attempt to
embarrass a gentleman. Furthermore, Dr. Aptheker did not try
to “brain-wash” us. If he did,
we have nothing to fear on that
account.
According to convention, even
prisoners of war are entitled to
a measure of courtesy, whether
or not they receive it. Yet, some
of us wish to downgrade ourselves by downgrading an American scholar. Does not like behavior indicate a lack of selfrequest? Please note that my remarks are not to be construed
as supporting Dr. Aptheker or
any of his views, except perhaps
on Mr. Mahoney, as I feel that
Dr. Aptheker had a surprisingly
poor argument for his cause.
Nevertheless, my argument is
with the ideas of the man; I

would not wish to behave discourteously towards the man him-

self. Finally, in supporting Miss
Leventhal, 1 do not mean to

criticize Mr. Klinger; I merely
wish to take issue with his ideas,
in what is hoped will be taken in
the light of constructive criticism.
Robert A. Gismondi

Administration Blamed
TO THE EDITOR
Reams of paper have been
wasted on emphasizing the lack
of spirit inundating this campus.
The blame for this lack of school
spirit has been laid at the feet
of a seemingly lackadaisical student body, and yet I believe that
if one will discover that the true

blame for the absence of student enthusiasm can be indicted to the administration of our
school.
Any school that alienates its
entire male freshman contingent
by forcing them’to live- a mile
from the campus and houses its
on-campus students in block structures that have as much appeal
as a pillbox, can only suffer the
consequences of chasing its student body off the campus and
into private apartments away
from the influence of the school,
its problems and its rewards

The adverse stand taken by out
school in its relations toward
fraternities is another example

of how the university antagonizes
a major segment of its enrollment. The campus I.F.C, is not
an organization that works in conjunction with the various fraternities, but rather forces them to
conduct the major amount of
their functions off campus. The

position of the I.F.C. is not to
guide and suggest, but rather to
police and impose. Since fraternities are an influential, if not
vital, manifestation of our campus life, why aren’t they allowed
to have houses on campus? This
would allow the campus to be the
center of student social activity

instead of anathema.
Before

condemning

body for its lack of

the student

enthusiasm

and support, it would be wise for
the administration to reflect upon
its own position, because the UB
student could very easily answer
the" administration's query with

another: "El tu Brute?”

■Theodore Michael Altholz

�Friday, December 11, 1964

oCetterA
(Cont’d from P.

SPECTRUM

to

the Editor

Ca(( Board

12)

Help Sought For Miners
prison term. Beige Hensley, Clayton Turner, Herb Stacey and
Charlie Engle (all leaders of the

As winter comes to the hills
of Eastern Kentucky, the unemployed miner and his family face
the prospect of another bleak,
frozen season. He, and thousands
like him, are confronted with a
jobless winter that leaves him no
way to obtain clothes for his
children or foocb Tor the table.
For any one of the hundreds
who are part of the miner’s movement the outlook is equally dim.
Not only must he face the hardships of a jobless winter, he must
also face discrimination by local
public officials-. He must face
discrimination because he is organizing, speaking, and publishing a newsletter calling for “food,
jobs, and justice.” He must face
harassment because he is fighting
for his rights and is a threat to

status

miner’s
have been
framed and convicted on charges
of planning to dymanite a railmovement)

during a recent
strike. These men have been sentenced to six years in prison.
Paul O’Dwyer and 1.Philip Sipser,
attorneys for the Committee for
Miners, are how about to begin
the appeal process.
“There would not be Christmas
in Kentucky,” call the words of
a song written by Phil Ochs.
“There can be no Christmas in
Hazard, Ken'ucky, unless you
help,” says Berman Gibson, leader
of the miner’s movement. There
can be no aid to miner’s families
nor trial appeal unless urgently
needed funds are raised. Would
not you contribute as much as
possible, today, and help bring
Christmas to Kentucky.
road

quo.

To four of these unemployed
miners the Christmas season may
well mean the start of a long

bridge

Organizational meeting for all
chairmen of Senior Week Committees, and anyone interested in
working on Senior Week, who has
not signed up as yet, will be held
in Room 329 Norton at 7:30 p.m.

Thursday.

SOCIAL

WELFARE CLUB

The next meeting of the Social
Welfare Club will be held Monday in Norton 330 at 7:00 p.m.
A film, "The High Wall”, will be
shown. All are welcome!
PHOTO CLUB
There will be a meeting of the

Photography Club this afternoon
at 4:00 p.m. in Room 264, Norton.
Members are reminded to bring
their mounted photos to the meeting to be used in the lounge display.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

MODERATE-LIBERAL

and its cadets. However, we are
REPUBLICAN CLUB
not limited to national activities,
but also do our best to aid our
Republican
Moderate-Liberal
A
University as well as our comClub is being formed on campus
munity. To name a few activities
Anyone interested in being the
such as sponsoring the annual
Faculty Advisor should please
blood drive, Military Ball, and drop a note in the “campus mail”
charitable activities, it is necesto: Martin Feinrider, Tower Hall,
sary for us to conduct business
T 112.
on a daily basis as well as meeting situations as they arise. Thus,
MATH CLUB
it is necessary that we can be
Wednesday, the Undergraduate
reached at almost any time in
one definite place.
Math Club will present Mr. WilAiding us in our goal is Angel liam Fryer of the Cornell AeroFlight, the co-ed auxiliary, which nautical Laboratory, speaking on
also shares our facilities. Thus, “How Math Is Used at Cornell
you see our office houses not
Aeronautical Lab.” The meeting
will be held in Norton, Room 335,
one organization but two.
Should any question remain at 7 :30 p.m. Refreshments will
unanswered, please feel free to be served. All interested students
contact us.
are cordially invited to attend.
Harold G. Hartshorn
Commander,
Arnold Air Society

Mr. Wertheimer;

A student union, according to
the concepts of the University,
is meant for the students as
a place for them to meet, discuss
and study.
Seeing from your letter that
you are unfamiliar with the Arnold Air Society, let me take
this opportunity to acquaint you
with its concepts and projects.
The Arnold Air Society is a national, honorary, professional organization of the AFROTC cadets
with 170 squadrons in nearly
every college and university having an AFROTC Program. Its
purpose is to further the mission
of the Air Force at the college
level by encouraging greater
teamwork and co-operation. As
a national organization, we represent our campus and its student body, not only the AFROTC

NAME

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3300 Sheridan
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3776 Harlem
1565 Hertel

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The regular business meeting
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will take place today at 2:00 p.m
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has returns from the candy sale
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Arthur Gorson
Exec. Dir,, CFM

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SENIOR WEEK COMMITTEES

TO THE EDITOR

the

PAGE THIRTEEN

•

CLIP COUPON

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p REE

fr EE

�COLLEGE
WOLVERINES LOOM AS
TOP HARDWOOD SQUAD
By MIKE CASTRO
It is that time again. The persistent thumps on the hardwood

floors throughout the country,
the whistle, the scuffle, the swish,
the cheer, the groan, the sweat—it is that time again. Another
college basketball season is well
under way.
The top team in the nation, on
paper, appears to be

Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Michigan.

Coach Dave Strack has four of
the five starters, returning from
last year’s club which finished
third in the NCAA Tournament.
Two of these four, steady Bill
Buntin and the sensational Caz
zie Bussell, are All American
Being nuraero uno, though, is
a position no coach likes to be
in before play commences. Every
opponent in a murderous sched
ule which includes the Holiday
Festival in New York, and com
petition in the Big Ten, which
appears stronger than ever this
year, will be up for Michigan.
Lost via graduation is Bob Cantrell, last year’s unsung playmaker, who will be difficult to
replace. The playmaking load this
year Will have to fall on either
Russell or junior John Clawson.
If neither is up to it, look out.
The guess is that Russell can
handle it.
A notch below Michigan in the
Big Ten, Minnesota and Illinois,
both appear strong. Johnny Kundla's Golden Gophers have the
entire starting five back from
last year's 17 7 club, including
top scorer Lou Hudson, and rebounder Mel Northwav. Illinois,
led by 6 2 Tal Brody, 6-10 Skip
Thoren .and a veteran crew, already victors over national champion UCLA, cannot be counted
out of contention, Purdue, led by
6-4 junior Dave Schelhasc, and
Indiana, with the Van Arsdale

twins, both appear strong.
The tough Missouri Valley Con
ference should be a two-way race
between St, Louis and Wichita,
with the Billikins, on the basis
of two impressive victories over
Ohio State and Illinois, in the
first week, given the edge. Coach
John Bennington’s cagers, with
the entire starting five returning,
and center Gary Garrison, 6 8,
apparently free of the injuries
which have plagued him throughout his varsity career, joined by
two talented sophomores, Bob
Coleand and Tom Kilo, could conceivably bring a national ticket to
St. Louis. First, of course, the
Billikins will have to beat out
the likes of Wichita, and any
team with the great Dave Stallworth on it can beat anyone on
a given night. The 6-7 Stallworth,
who does everything for the
Shockers but turn on the lights
in the gym, graduates at mid
semester, though, and, needless
to say, will be difficult to replace.

Bradley, last year’s NIT champion, and Tulsa’s surprising 99-77
victory over Seattle, both cannot

be discounted.
Among the independent in the
Midwest, Notre Dame’s veteran
quintet {four seniors) led by All
American guard Larry Scheffield,
appears to be the best, with Dayton, featuring 6-10 Henry Finkel,
and Duquesne, with the sensational Willie Somerset, close behind.
The South abounds with talent
this year. Davidson, led by AllAmerican Fred Hetzel, has four

starters back from last year’s 22-4
club, and many experts feci they
are the nation’s top team. They
were stunned, however, in their

second game, losing to St. Joseph's 77-64 in the Palestra. The
club has plenty of talent and
should fight its way back up to
the top.
Duke lost All-American Jeff
Mullins from the club which was
number 2 in the nation and must
center its attack around height—6 It) Hack Tison—and strength,
6 6 Bob Reidy and 6-4 Jack Marin.
Vic Bubas' squad should have a
tough time fighting off North
Carolina for the Atlantic Coast
Conference title.
The Tarheels have All-American Billy Cunningham of Brooklyn, a 65 jumping-jack who ex-

cells on both offense and defense.
Teamed with him will be 6-3 Bob
Lewis, one of the most heralded
sophomores in the country, who
broke all of Cunningham’s freshman scoring records, Mark Mirkin, a fellow Brooklynite, who at
6-6, 2251bs. could add needed
muscle, and 6-2 Ian Morrison, a
20 point scorer for the frosh.
If the sophomores come through,
the Tarheels could be dynamite.
The Southeastern Conference
race shapes up as a dog fight
between Vanderbilt, Kentucky,
and dark horse Tennessee.
Vanderbilt has its entire starting five back from last year's

19-6 club, All SEC choices, 6-9
center Clyde Lee and 6-1 guard
Ed Miller, plus some talented
sophomores, and should be loaded.

Kentucky lost

All American

Cotton Nash, but no one is shedding any tears for Coach Adolph
Rupp. Returning arc backcourtman Terry Mobley and forward

Larry Conley, along with center
Larry Adams. The excitement in
the bluegrass country centers
around two sophomores, 6-10
Louie Dampier, a backcourtman
who is already being compared
with Kentucky great Ralph Beard
(26 ppg, for the frosh), and 6-3
Pat Riley (21 ppg), a former High
School All American at Linton
High in Schenectady, which produced Barry Kramer.
A third team which could challenge for conference honors is

BASKETBALL
Tennessee, led by center A. W.
Davis. Among the Southern independents, Miami, led by prolific scoring Rick Barry, should
be the best. Barry got off to an
auspicious start in quest of the
national scoring title with a 68
point performance in his opening
game against Tampa.
The East has a number of good

teams, and the outstanding ball
player in the nation is Princeton’s
Bill Bradley. Bradley, a one-man
team, has help this season with
6-9 Bob Brown, and 6-6 High
School All-American Ed Hammer,
and Princeton should destroy everyone in the Ivy League and
could surprise in the Holiday

Festival and post season tournaments.

St. John’s and Villanova should
be the best in the area. Joe Lapchick’s Redmen will try to make
this, the veteran coach’s last sea
son, a big one. The talent is there.
Back from last year’s club, which
won 9 of its last 11, in one of
the toughest schedules in the
country are the McIntyre brothers, Ken and Bob, who averaged
30 points between them in Lapchick’s balanced attack, 6-2 Jerry
Houston, -6 Bob Duerr, 6-5 Hank
Cluess, plus a sophomore group
from last year’s 21-1 freshman
team led by 6-7 Lloyd “Sonny”
Dove.

Villanova,

led

defensive
and rebounding whiz Jim Washington, and backcourtmen Bill
Melchionni and George Leftwich,
should be right up there with St.
John’s as the East’s representatives in the national ratings.
St. Joseph’s and Temple, with
whom coaches Jack Ramsay and
by

Litwack yearly perform
miracles, this year seem stronger
than in previous years. St. Joe’s
surprised everyone by beating

Harry

Davidson in the first week of the
season, and Temple has 6-8 Jim
Williams, their best big man ever.
These two teams are good bets
for post season tournament bids.
Syracuse, Penn State, and
Georgetown must be rated just
slightly lower. The Orangemen,
led by All-American Dave Bing,
and 6-8 Chuck Richards, were
rated in the top ten by most
pre-season polls.
However, an
81-59 defeat by Penn State, a
team grossly underrated, has
caused a lot of “experts" to do
some reconsidering. Syracuse has
talent to beat anyone on a given
night, but the relative lack of
exeperience (sophomores Rick
Dean and Val Reid, both very talented, start) and a schedule which
is much tougher than in previous
years, could make for rough
going in the early stages of the
season.

Penn

State,

which has four

starters back from last year’s
16-7 club, should pull a few more
surprises this season, and Georgetown, with All American candidate Jim Barry, and a good soph
in 6-10 Frank Hollendoner, will
be tough.
Out West, Kansas appears to
have the talent to take the Big
Eight title. 6-7 George Unseld

brewed for

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and 6-11 Walt Wesley,
two of the region’s finest players,
give the Jayhawks too much
board power for their Big Eight
opponents. Oklahoma State, led
by 6-1 guard Larry Hawk, should
furnish the chief opposition.
The class o fthe area independents should be Brigham Young,
led by 6-8 John Fairchild, the
best player in the school’s his(18,4 ppg.)

tory, four starters from last year,
and three 20 point scorers from
a great freshman team. BYU
should have its best season ever.
On the Coast, national champion UCLA has already had its

30 game winning streak snapped
by Illinois and is trying to adjust
to an attack minus Walt Hazzard.
All-American Gail Goodrich is
back along with Kenny Washington and 6-6 Doug McIntosh, all
double figure scorers. Also back
is junior Fred Goss, who sat out
last season, but is considered almost Hazzard’s equal as a backcourtman. The fifth starter is
sophomore Edgar Lacey, 6-6, a
High School All-American, who
is expected to become one of the
best players ever to perform on
the Coast. UCLA may have difficulty in its first few games, but
once the new men adjust, the
talent should carry them to
among the nation’s top quintets,
and a possible repeat national
championship.
San Francisco also has its eyes
on a national title. Coach Pete
Pelotta considers this team the
best at USF since the years of
Bill Russell and K. C. Jones,
Returning are 6-9 All-American
Ollie Johnson and starters 6-6
Joe

Ellis, 6-8 Erwin Mueller, and

6-0 Huey Thomas, plus 6-0 Larry
Blum, who broke all freshman
scoring records.
Seatte, 22-6 last year, has star
backcourtman Charlie Williams
returning, called by many the
best 6-footer in the country, plus
6-5 Elzie Johnson, 6-7 Tom Workman (23.4 ppg.), and 6-6 Rich
Turniy from an undefeated freshman team. It will take a while
for them to adjust, but if they
do by midseason, look out! Join
ing the team then will be perhaps
the best sophomore in the coun
try. He is Toteo Cruz, a 6- discovery of Lou Rossini, NYU
coach. Cruz, a Puerto Rican, led
his nation’s team to a fourth
place Olympic finish .
Now that we’ve covered the
nation from coast to coast, it is
time to stick our neck out and
submit a top 20 list, which we
hope will be forgotten at the
season’s end:

1. Michigan
2. St. Louis
3. Vanderbilt
4. San Fran.

5. Davidson
6. UCLA
7. Kentucky
8. St. John’s
9. Kansas
10. N. Carolina

11. Villanova

12. Minnesota
13. Brig. Yoqng

14. Wichita

15. Notre Dame
16. Illinois
17. Duke

18. Miami

(Fla.)

19. Seattle
20. Duquesne

Additional sophs to watch
Jay Warhaftig, Creighton; Malcolm Graham, NYU; George Carter, St. Bonaventure; David Latin,
—

Tennessee State; Leslie Scott,

Loyola of Chicago; Paul Presthus,
Minnesota; George Geros, St.
Mary’s; John Morrison and Andy
Anderson, Canisius; and Gary
Gray, Oklahoma City.

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�Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

CAGERS TOP AMERICAN
FROSH BOW TO NIAGARA
STAN LICHWALA

University

basketball

team

18 points. This high-scoring forward turned in a great
shooting performance in the first
half, and was under the boards
throughout the game as he led
Buffalo with ten rebounds. Good
position under the boards throughout the first half allowed Bufof his

in

three starts and it marked the

falo to out-rebound the taller
American U team 27-23, AU,
working the ball very poorly,
took many bad shots and lost the
ball to the alert Bulls several
times.

yf

The second half was much the
the first, except that
the Bulls did not cover the boards
as well in this stanza. Harvey
Poe tossed in eight of his twelve
points and Bill Bilowus contributed six of his nine points in
the final twenty minutes. The
hustling UB defense continued
its fine performance during this
time and held poor shooting
American U to 27 points while
scoring 37.
same as

S!

two-hundredth victory of coach
Serfustini’s coaching career.

Wednesday, the Bulls met the
Canadian Windsor University,

Tomorrow, UB will entertain Albany

State

Wednesday,

and

The high scoring UB freshman
cage quintet dropped an 84-81
thriller to the Baby Eagles • of
Niagara last week in a prelimin
ary to the UB-American U. Var
sity clash.
:

The Baby Bulls displayed an
exciting, quick-moving, well-executed style of basketball before
a packed Clark Gym as they coasted to a 44-33 halftime lead. The
“Mutomen” still held a comfortable 63-54 margin, midway
through the second half when a
scoring famine set in, and the
rejuvenated visitors forged ahead
on a ten-point flurry, 64-63.
Niagara steadily pulled away to
an 84-77 lead in the last minute
and then repelled the Bulls in a
futile attempt to catch up. The
Baby Eages were led by former
Syracuse Assumption ace Jim
Carno with 19 and towering 6’7”
center Emanuel Leaks with 15.
Despite the setback, numerous
hoopsters shone for the Baby
Bulls. Cat-quick 5’8" floor leader
Bobby Thomas of Erie, Pa., dazzled with his ball-handling and
outside shooting, while capturing
scoring honors with 23. Most of
the rebounding chores were ably
handled by 6’4” Artie Walker of
Cincinnati, who finished with 13.
Deadeyes Jim Williams of Niag-

American U was paced by Jim
Buffler with 12 points, followed
by Tony Jiorle and Ben Still, each
10 points.

DAN BAZZANI

By STEVE SCHUELEIN

Western Ontario will travel to
Clark Gym to meet the Bulls.

SPORTS CIRCLE (cont'd from P. 16)
With the race now going on between the NFL
and AFL to sign top collegiate players, one begins to
wonder just how anxious the leagues were to get started
signing ts the NFL took 27 hours and 10 minutes to select
280 players while the AFL took a mere 16 hours and 40
minutes to select 224 players. With an 11 \'t hour lead
(the AFL started its draft an hour earlier), the AFL appeared to have the jump, but when the smoke cleared
away, the NFL was the real winner, thus far signing 10
of its 14 first round choices and losing two to the AFL,
while the AFL signed four of its first round choices and
lost three to the NFL.
...

Just an added note concerning the draft The draft,
with its far-reaching financial effects, also had its effect
on family life. The wife of Bill Bidwell, co-owner of the
St. Louis Cardinals, gave birth to a baby boy last Sunday. Mr. Bidwell promised that next year his son would
be drafted as a “future,” saying that “It’s cheaper to
raise players than to sign them.” He most definitely has
a point.
-

ara Falls and Doug Bernard, a
former Iroquois League terror

from the Ilion team that reached
the Section 3 finals the last two
years and at one point registered
27 consecutive wins, added 11
points apiece to the frdsh cause,
while versatile George Henry of
Benjamin Franklin in New York
chipped in with 9.
Although they lost the game

to the highly-touted Niagara five,
the Baby Bulls guaranteed themselves a flock of fans for the
season with their action-packed
style of play, and demonstrated
the potential for a highly success-

ful future.

Wednesday night, the Baby
Bulls were invaded by the Baby
Griffins of Canisius in what prom
ised to be another tight tussle.

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In the opening minutes of the
game, both teams traded errors
in what appeared to be another
sloppy start, but Buffalo began
to roll after the first ten minutes of play, the Bulls commanded a 17-11 lead, Buffalo’s defense
took control of the visitors and

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another 17 points to give them
a 34-19 halftime advantage.

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The Basketball Bulls scored victory number two of this season
December 2 by defeating the
visiting team from American
University by a score of 71-46.
This was the first time a UB
team has defeated an American

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UHIVMSITY
wjm

TVANSITOWM
"*
_

trnin

SKI-LAND

Niagara Falls Blvd. at Eggert Road
Also at Aurora Lanes, East Aurora
Till 11:00 every Night till Christmas
Telephone Orders Accepted
Call TX 6-0300 or NL 2-2950.

�PACE SIXTEEN

Friday, December 11, 1964

SPECTRUM

SJPGWBTPS^
-=tA

�

#=

■■

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM and STEVE FEIGIN

ROUND-UP

There has indeed been a great deal happening in
the sports world lately. This week’s column will give
a brief resume of some of these developments, ranging
from the very weir known (pro football draft) to the
very unknown (Olympic Chess Tournament).
. U.S hopes of recapturing the Davis Cup, lost to
Australia this past fall, sunk a little lower this week
when the number one amateur in the world, Aussie Roy
Emerson, turned down a lucrative $85,000 offer to turn
professional. Emerson has never lost a singles match in
Cup competition and almost single-handedly took the
Cup from America’s finest in this year’s match for his
homeland.
. . . Willie Shoemaker and Bill Hartack usually grab
the headlines wherever they ride, but last week they had
to step aside for a nineteen-year-old apprentice jockey
from, of all places, Brooklyn. Mike Venezia had nine
mounts on that fateful day of December 7 at Aqueduct.
When the day’s racing was over at the “Big A”, he had
steered six of his horses to first place finishes and had
placed for the other three, for as great an afternoon of
horseriding as has ever been witnessed on any track,
anywhre. Watch for Mike’s smiling face-in the winner’s
circle at Churchill Downs on Derby Day very soon.
. . . Arnold Palmer
and Jack Nicklaus fired a combined total score of 554, 32 under par, to give the United
States its fifth consecutive Canada Cup victory. Nicklaus
surged from behind to win the individual medley on the
last round as his 2-under-par 70 gave him a two stroke
edge over teammate Palmer ,who had led from the start
of the international tournament. Arnie had bogey
troubles on the final day and finished with a horrendous
78. A significant sidelight is that Hawaii’s top player,
Ted Makelna, had a score Of 279, three shots behind
Nicklaus, and looks like an excellent prospect for next
.

.

year’s pro tour.

In the sixteenth Chess Olympiad (yes, chess!)
held in Tel Aviv, Israel, the Soviet Union was victorious.
Yugoslavia finished second, while the United States finished sixth. Bet you didn't read about that before!
.
. . Both the Amateur Athletic Union and the U.S.
Track and Field Federation staged two separate ten
thousand meter championships last week. Ironically,
both were run oh the same course but on different days.
It’s been said before and now we’re saying it again—it’s
about time this feuding comes to an end, as it hurts both
the individual athlete as well as the over all prestige of
U.S. track.
.
. . Jo»e Torres knocked out Bobo
Olson in the
opening round of a light heavyweight match in New Y'ork
last week. As a result, Torres will probably get a shot
at Willie Pastrano’s title. For Bobo, however, an exmiddleweight champion, it looks like the end of the road.
.
The confusing state of affairs now prevailing in
the world of professional boxing’s heavyweight division
was further complicated last week by the shooting of
contender Cleveland Williams in Texas, while allegedly
resisting arrest for drunken driving. Williams was scheduled to fight Ernie Terrell for the NBA’s version of the
heavyweight championship, since Cassius Clay is no longer recognized as the title holder. With everything in this
chaotic state, there may be a chance for ex-champion
Floyd Patterson to get a shot at the title again (NBA
title, that is). It would probably be against Terrell in a
few months. Better luck this time, Floyd.
. . . The Houston Colt 45s —excuse me, “Astros”—
announced that they had 53 delux boxes for sale, complete with closed circuit television, in their new $32,000,000 domed stadium. The price—a measily $18,000 per
box. So far, 35 have been sold. Now you know why
Houston General Manager Paul Rchards could afford to
offer bis entire team plus $5,000,000 for the Milwaukee
Braves. The Texas dollar appears as sound as ever.
. . Some very interesting statistics were revealed
last week concerning the amount of money spent on
various intercollegiate athletic programs at specific universities. The University of Nebraska dsclosed that for
the year ending last June 30 it distributed to all sports
a total of nearly $212,000, while the University of Kansas’ total approached $220,000. However, both schools
registered profits for the year due to the tremndous attendance at football games. Let’s hope UB can boast of
such a program som day. Maybe?
...

.

M

FENCERS WIN INTRAMURALS
OVER HORART Phi Psi Cops Swim
The UB Fencing team started
the season off with two victories
last week. Tuesday they defeated
the UB Alumnae 26-22 and Saturday, Hobart 17-10. The UB
Frosh lost to the Hobart Frosh
10-25. Chuck Stewart was the outstanding UB freshman with a

By MARTY

ral swimming competition in a
meet held on November 23. They
accumulated 64 points, almost
twice as many as the nearest
competitor. Penn sparkled as he
captured the 75 yard individual
medley, 50 yard breast stroke
and anchored the victorious 75
medley relay. E. Costine and R.
Schmidt also scored heavily for
the titlists.
Alpha Epsilon Pi came away
with two firsts. Mike Hilburn won

3-1 record.

In the Alumnae meet, the score
by weapons was, foil, varsity 12alumnae 4, sabre was tied 8-8
while the epee team lost 6-10. In
foil Jim Mondello was 4-0, Joe
Paul and Mike Howard were each
3-1, and Bob Toth was 2-2, In
saber Bob Frey was 3-0, Dave
Kirsohgessner and Larry Zollinger were 2-1, Rickey Fitchette
was 1-2, and Steve Edelstein and
Bud Holzschuh were 0-2. In epee
John Houston was 3-0, Frank Pocenco was 2-2, Lee Cory was 1-2,
and Joe Tringali and George
Stumpf were 0-3.
In the Hobart meet, the foil
team again won by a big score,
defeating the Hobart foilmen 7-2.
Bob Toth was 3-0, Joe Paul was
2-0, while Mike Howard and Jim
Mondello were 1-1. In epee, the
Bulls won by a 5-4 margin, Joe
Tringali and George Stumpf were
1-0, John Houston and Lee Cory
were 1-1, and Frank Pocenco was
1-2. The UB saber squad also won
5-4. Dave Kisrchgessner and Bob
Frey were 2-0, Larry Zollinger
was 1-1, and Steve Edelstein, Bud
Holzschuh, and Rickey Fitchette
were 0-1.

Saturday, there will be a triangular meet between UB, Cornell, and Case at Clark Gym. UB
has never beaten Cornell in fencing but Coach Schwartz thinks
that this year’s varsity may be
able to do the job. One of the
outstanding fencers who will be
competing for Cornell is Ronnie

Schwartz, son of the UB coach

and a member of the

1964 All-

America squad.

3. A E Pi

JAFFE

The brothers of Phi Kappa Psi,
led by J. Penn, won the intramu-

the 100 yard free style and Bobby
Weis took the diving competition.
Other laurels went to Jack Rosenberg of Phi Epsilon Pi who placed
first in the 50 yard back stroke,
and D. Smith of Sigma Epsilon
Pi who won the 50 yard free
style event. The Beta Sigma Rho
100 yard free style team consisting of M. King, R. Merril, R. Ostroff, and R. Hier set a new
record winning their event in
49.9 seconds, lowering the old
mark by 1.7 seconds.
The final team standings were
as follows:
1. Phi Kappa Psi
64 pts.
2. Beta Sigma Rho
34 pts.
:

33 pts,

4. S.A.M,
5. Sig Ep
6. Phi Epsilon Pi

32 pts.
29 pts.
27 pts.
The intramural basketball season started last week with the
independent terns playing their
first games. The season will get
into full swing this week when
the fraternity teams start competing against each other.
The results of last week’s in-

dependent games are:

30, 8:30 League
Law School 19
64 Little Apes 21

Mon., Nov.

Blayers 34

Yamaka Bom,
Speiglers 8
Potters 21
Mon., Nov. 30, 9:30 League
Bunnies 58
Untouchables 25
Gunners 46
Buddhawanas 30
Zygotes 43
Hoppers 37
Fri., Dec. 2, 8:30 League
Regals 24
Tribunes 44
Stalks 45
GDI 36
Bombers 38
Donut Kings 17
Mon., Dec. 7, 8:30 League
Blayers 47
Little Apes 29
Potters 45
Beach Boys 28
Speiglers 13
Yamaka Bom. 66
Mon., Dec. 7, 9:30 League
Bunnies 42
Hoppers 29
Zygotes 42
Gunners 28
Buddhawanas 39
H Squad 15

Swimmers Place Second
In New York State Relays
By ARNIE NATHENSON

The UB swimming team made
a big splash in the Upper New
York State Swimming Association
Relays at Brockport State last
Saturday. The UB Mermen swam
away with a total of 52 medals,
second only to Colgate, which
accumulated 64 medals. This was
a very impressive showing, since
the teams included highly-ranked
Colgate and Syracuse, along with

R.P.I., Brockport State, Geneseo
State, St. Bonaventure, Buffalo
State, and Rochester. The squad
qualified in 14 out of 16 events,
far better than the team has ever
accomplished before. Coach San
ford said the Mermen are in excellent condition, both mentally
and physically, with their spirit
and desire being exceptionally
good. The coach thinks this year’s
team is about the best he has had
in his long tenure at UB.

Support the Basketball Team

1^7

.

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                    <text>APTHEKER

H
lf v
HOCKEY
PREVIEW
„

TEXT

SHMDIWn
VOLUME 15

,.-

■

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rifhlrrn)

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1964

NO. 12

Sporn Dismissed By Terminations Committee
Wyatt Speaks on Literary Psychology
Dr. Frederick Wyatt, Director of the Psychological

Clinic at the University of Michigan, spoke here Friday,
November 20, on “Literature and Psychology, an Ancient

Partnership.’’ Dr. Wyatt’s talk was sponsored
by the Convocations Committee of the Student Senate.
Dr. Wyatt pointed out that here is psychological insight in all literature. “We take psychological penitration of character for granted.” He said that there are two
implications in the trend toward psychoanalyzing literature. The first is the common expectance of the idea of
personality as a product of its history and the second is
the search in literature for latent motivation of its characand

Uneasy

ters

Dr. Wyatt felt that, “aside from
these applications of psychologic-

al interpretation of character,
the relationship between the specialists in both fields is not good.”
He said that literary critics consider the psychologist’s entrance
into the literary world as “the
wild savage who comes and deposits refuse on the holy temple
of literature.” This, he labeled
an exaggeration of the sensitivity
of the literary man. Also exaggerated in the literary-psychological conflict is the ominous quality of the social sciences. Dr.
Wyatt felt that critics greatly
overrate psychology’s power to
understand and move people.
Commenting on the psychologist's attention to literature, Dr.
Wyatt felt that, “The worst that
can be said is that there is not
any;” that literature is viewed
as

an

enjoyable phenomenon,

entertainment alone, outside of

Sigma Phi Epsilon took- first
place over all and in the large
division, Sigma Delta Tau won
first place in the small division
and Chi Omega and Theta Chi
Sororities placed second in the
large and small divisions, respectively, at the annual Greek Sing
competition Friday, November 20.
Sig Ep won the coveted trophies with a total of 116 points,
narrowly topping Sigma Kappa
Phi Sorority, who scored 115
points. They presented three
songs reminiscent of the “Gay
’90s”: “Seeing Nellie Horn e,”
“Stars of the Summer Night,” and
“Good Night Ladies.” Sigma Delta
Tau’s original arrangements of
“Ezekiel Saw the Wheel,” “Green

Sleeves,” and “Echoes of Israel”,

a melody of Hebrew folk songs,

DR. FREDERICK WYATT
pretation of society per se, but

put them at the top of the list
in the small division.
Chi Omega sang “June Is Bustin’ Out All Over,” “Camelot” and
“Never On Sunday," songs which
the sisters felt depicted the various moods of the sorority. The
sisters of Theta Chi, dressed in
bright red sweaters, sang “Scarlett Ribbons” and “Lord’s Prayer.” Six sororities and fraternities were entered in the small
division and three competed in
the large division.
A large crowd heard the concert at both the 7:00 p.m. and
10:00 p.m. showings. The joint
sponsors, the I n t e r-Fratemity
Council and the Panhellenic Council, were quite pleased with the
success of the event.
Judges were Mrs. Vera Green,
Mr. Clide Clyne, Miss Kathryn R.
Kochli, Mr. Vincent Morette and
Mr. Robert Sacks.

the field of psychology. He said
that the psychologist has viewed
literature as too arbirtary, that
it presents psychological situations without evidence and unempirically. He said that the social
scientist abhors fantasy and its
works. This, Dr. Wyatt called, a
“crass misunderstanding of the
power of literature.” He pointed
to the fact that literature is not
concerned with empirical inter-

with the continuation of the
views of man at a given time, the
preservation of man’s culture. He
said that there is a much deeper
reason for society’s concern for
literature in that our way of life
is determined by it, at least indirectly. He said that literature
gives form and substance to the
human condition.
Dr, Wyatt further commented

Mr. Formal Choice
To Highlight 1964
Silver Ball Program

Spectrum Recruitment Drive to Start

The highlight of the Silver
ball is the presentation of the
winner of the 1964 Mr. Formal
fontest. Candidates for Mr. Formal are sponsored each year by
the various organizations on campus, a very general idea of
Mr.
r ormal is that he is well rounda
el man. Since
everyone excels in
some respects more than others,
however, the organizations run
'heir candidate on a theme which
centers around his characteristics, habits, talents, and activiles- All students are eligible to
'°te for their choice of Mr. For™al Voting will take
place in
Union next Thursday and
..orion
ftuay. The winner
will be seected on the basis of votes received, personal judging, and
ampaign which consists of posers and skits that will be preented in the Conference Theater Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday, between 11:00 a.m. and
p.m. I D. cards will be required for voting.
candidates will be prep d to
the students at a fashS 0W
"’i'ich will take place in
th ?,
hoi rtilmore Room Wednesday
oetween 3:00 5:00 p.m. Each
a t®
suit sweat wil1 model a tuxedo,
er, sportswear, and ski
rintu
** r
- William Deegan will
h» the
be
M.C.
Chi Fraternity presents
—(Cont’d on P. 7)-

i

Sig Ep, STD Take
1st Place in Annual
Greek Sing Contest

,

■

(Cont’d on P. 7)

(Cont’d on P. 8)

Starting next Monday for one

week the SPECTRUM will sponsor a recruitment drive for positions now open on the paper.
Since a great deal of expansion
is predicted for next semester,
a larger staff will be needed in
order to cope with the anticipat-

the meeting is 3:00 p.m. in the
Spectrum Office, 355 Norton
Union.
Tuesday, December 8: The Copy
and Layout staffs will meet at
3:00 p.m. in the Spectrum Office.
Wednesday, December 9: The
Sports staff will meet at 3:00
p.m, in the Spectrum Office.

Personal Integrity' Cited As Reason
Mr. Paul Sporn, formerly an Instructor in the Depart-

ment of English, has been officially dismissed as the re-

sult of the action taken by. the Terminations Committee
of the State University of New York.
In a letter sent to Mr. Sporn by Dr. Samuel B. Gould,
President of the State University of New York, he was
informed that his services were terminated, effective

Winter Week
Events Listed
Miss Cindy Nash, this year’s
Winter Weekend chairman, has
announced the schedule of activities which will kick off the weekend Saturday.
Saturday night: the Fillmore
Room will be the scene of a
“Three For One” entertainment
program. At 7:30 p.m., there will
be a folk concert featuring Jerry
Raven. Following the folk concert, jazz enthusiasts are invited
to a jazz concert, which will
take place in the small cafeteria
adjoining the Fillmore Room. At
the same time, students may
dance to the music of the Avanti’s, a rock &amp; roll group, in the
Fillmore Room. The small fee of
$.75 will entitle students to at-

tend all three events.
Sunday at 1:00 p.m.; judging
will take place for the snow
Sculpturing Contest. All campus

organizations
the

contest,

are eligible to enter

June 8, 1964. The grounds for
Mr, Sporn’s dismisale were stated
in the letter as being misre-

presentation in signing the Feinbcrg Certificate,

Editorial

Pag* 4

The Spectrum received exclusive interviews with Dr. Samuel
Gould, President of the State
University system and Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, President of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo.
When asked what he felt the

P*
'

,

r
%SS
jmSsi

and must submit an

application to Room 323 Norton
by 4:00 p.m, today; extra appli-

cations may also be obtained in
this room.
At 2:00 p.m.: The Schussmeisters will put on a ski exhibition
on the steps of Lockwood library.
In reality, Winter Weekend has
been extended to a full week this
year. A series of movies will
commence Sunday and continue
throughout the following week.
The first movie is Pepe, starring

Cantinflas, and will be shown
in the Conference theater, Sunday, at 4:00, 6:30, and 9:00 p.m.
This movie will also be shown
Monday at 6:00 and 8:30 p.m.
The Man From the Diners Club,
starring Danny Kaye, will be
shown Wednesday, at 6:00, and
8:30 p.m. The third movie, It
Happened to Jane, with Doris
(Cont’d on P. 6)

DR. CLIFFORD C. FURNAS
implications for the State University of New York would be in
light of his observations concerning academic freedom and
the function of the University
Dr. Gould replied “I don’t think
it has anything to do with academic freedom.” He went on to
state that he felt the recommendations handed down by the
Terminations Committee were
valid and he accepted them as
such. When asked if Mr. Sporn’s
teaching qualifications played
any role in the Committee’s decessions Dr. Gould replied "The
decision had nothing to do with
his teaching ability,"
The same questions were asked
(Cont’d on P. 13)

Sporn Committee Established,
Amendment Introduced Again
The Student Senate, Tuesday
night, made plans to hear a rep-

People Needed
following
scheded growth. The
ule has been arranged for anyone interested in joining the
SPECTRUM No previous expertence is necessary.
Monday, Dtcember 7: The Business, Advertising, Feature, News,
and Office staffs will meet with
those desiring to work in any
one of these positions. Tjrae of

To Fill

Vacancy

10: The
Feature and News staffs will
meet with those people interested
in these staffs but unable to attend the previous meeting The
time of the meeting will be 3.00
Thursday, December

p.m. in the Spectrum Office,
There
Friday, Dactmbar I Is
will be a general meeting at 3:00
p.m. in the Spectrum Office.

resentative of the administration’s
position, the Chairman of the
Committee on Academic Freedom
of the Association of American
University Professors and a speaker in behalf of Mr. Sporn. The
Senate also established a committee consisting of Arnold Graf,
David Frey and Chairman Robert
Feldman, to investigate the issues
surrounding the dismissal. The
debate on a resolution condemning the action taken in Mr.
Sporn’s case by the Committee on
Terminations of SUNYAB will
Editorial Pago 4
take place at the next meeting of
the Senate, Tuesday, December
15th.
The resolution, tabled until the
Senate hears the special committee’s reports and speakers,
states that: “A teacher of unques-

tionable ability has been removed
from his position for irrelevant
and non academic reasons. The
evidence used against him is of
highly questionable and dubious
nature. The employment of a
legal technicality of questionable
Constitutional status, (the Feinberg Certificate) has been used
to deprive this University of what
it needs most: educators of excellence. In terminating the employment of Mr. Sporn the University
has depended upon paid spies
and submitted to the worst kind
of anti-intellectual and anti-libertarian influence.” The resolution also points to the fact that
the Senate has committed itself
to the principle of academic freedom (formally in a resolution of
November 2. 1964) and has a responsibility to uphold academic
freedom which has been placed in
jeopardy by this case.

(Cont’d

on P.

8)

�PAGE TWO

Finkelstein Expresses Views

very similar in that they showed
similar goals for the Student
Senate and the student body. The
1963-4 Senate suffered from petty
party bickering and this impeded
Senate growth. Realizing this

tions do not necessarily show political leaning. I am in favor of
an academe course evaluation, national fraternities and alcohol on
the campus. These are changes
which I feel are vastly needed. If
being in favor of needed changes
such as these constitutes a liberal tendency, then I believe that
I am liberal. If being opposed to
change for the sake of change or
additional power classifies me as
a conservative, then there I stand.
However, the Student Senate, and

o~.

r

would

group. To achieve this end, I
have asked that partisan lines,
which would play up personali-

ties and play down issues, be
secondary. I feel, that as President, I should act as a spokesman
for the Student Senate and the
Student body and not a faction
thereof. 1 ran for election on a
positive and constructive platform, and have urged those with
similar goals to join with me to
achieve our objectives. When we
play down petty and factional differences, we will make progress.

The situation would bo very different were the parties' stands
on the issues very different. Howver, my function is to insure pro
gress in these areas, mutually
deemed necessary by both par-

ties.
Are you a liberal, a moderate
or a conservative? What relationship does this stand have to your
actions as President?
I consider myself to be a mod 1
erate. J have taken many stands
on significant issues, and I think
this appropriate to define my political complexion. However, stu-

dent government has basic obligations to our campus, in the educational and welfare areas, and
these problems and their solu-

I

l

government?

The answer to both questions
is an emphatic “yes.” At the first
meeting of the 1964-5 Student
Senate, I offered a “New Campus
Deal.” As a matter of fact, that
was the first time that such a
“package deal” was ever pre
sented. It outlined many projects
for certain committees, and I
have been in close contact with
the committee chairmen to gauge
the progress. We have made some
strides in these directions and
will continue. These areas point
up a policy, a direction, which
I believe is the essence of student government on our campus.
I am of the opinion that we
should pursue those goals which
will affect each student on the
campus, those being the on-campus projects in which we have
a chance to enact change. This
is where the student’s interest
mainly lies, and student leaders
must attempt to serve the students as well as possible.
What was your feeling about
the proposed Publications Board
and referendum amendments?
The Publications Board pre-

the leaders of it, whether liberal,
moderate or conservative must
concentrate on first things first
—those being the problems on
our campus. Here we have power,
and before we consent to allowing our student voice to exclu
sively become a pressure group,
and not strive for the betterment
of this campus, we are in a sorry
state. We must do that which
we' were elected to do
and that
means taking first things first.
Is there chaos and confusion
on the Senate floor, and if so,
—

whose fault is this?

Frequently, senators belabor
points and, for the sake of their
own publicity and exposure, re
state obvious and previously men
tioned points. They occasionally

irate at others' arguments. Chaos and confusion re-

become

sults. The student body should
know that it is the obligation of
every Senator to lead their fight
for a more effective student voice
on this campus. Chaos and con
fusion will reign supreme if sen
ators care only about their individual "pet projects" and will
not listen to those that others
present. When all thirty-five senators act like representatives of
the student body, then there will
be no more chaos and confusion,
and we will be an even more effective voice.

granted and realized powers can
differ. We, are presently composing a new Constitution which I
think offers a more adequate solution to the problem. However,
though some charges leveled
against the Publications Board
have merit, the amendment offered a solution less acceptable
than the present arrangement. To
grant the power of periodical recognition to the Activities Committee is less democratic than to
leave it where it now is. To allow editors to appoint their own
successors is to open the doors
for factional domination of a
a negativism which
periodical
we have unfortunately witnessed
on this campus.
The right of referendum is now
granted to the student body, as
it should be. HoWever, the
amendment would have granted
the right of referendum at any
time during the year. The problem involved here is that it is an
unfair imposition to the student
body to present, as is potentially
possible, weekly referenda, especially when a poor turnout on a
significant issue, such as abolition of the Publications Board,
could radically affect our student
government structure. This apprehension has merit and the
spirit of the accepted amendment
was valid.
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Leventhal Appointed to Head
Senate Expansion Committee
The Student Senate has estaba special committee on
Campus Expansion. Linda Leventhal has been appointed chairman
of the committee. Other members
are Myrna Freed, Allan Larson,
and Daniel Silber, Dr. Richard A.
Siggelkow, Dean of Students, is
advising the committee.
The
committee was established in
i order to make recommendations
! concerning the new campus and
to keep the student body informed as to developments in relation to the new campus.
The committee has spent several weeks familiarizing itself
with the background information
concerning the new campus. Four
subcommittees have been formed. They are: residence halls,
Miss Freed; academic facilities,
Miss Leventhal; general facilities,
Mr. Larson; and grounds, Mr. Silber. These subcommittees will
work within their areas ascertaining student opinion, examining present facilities and needs,
consulting other universities for
ideas and problems, and formulating reports that will be submitted to proper university authorities. In turn, these reports
will be forwarded to the State
University headquarters in A1

sented a plan establishing space
needs for the various university
i esources. After due considera
tion, the university officials suggested amendment in this plan
and generally requested an increase in the proposed space allocations.

lished

The architect for the new camMr, J. Boonshaft, from the
firm of Skidmore, Owens and
Merrill, visited pur campus earlier this year. Future efforts and
plans concerning the new site
will be directed through our university channels to the State Uni
versity Headquarters in Albany
Plans for the new campus arc
still indefinite. However, it is
anticipated that the main academic and residence hall complex
will be within the area bounded
by Millersport Highway, Skinnersville Road, Sweet Home Road,
and Maple Road. Present discussions reflect a trend toward lowrise residence halls for undergraduates to be located at the
northern end of campus. Married
student housing is being planned
tor the southern part of the campus,

pus.

The academic area is present-

ly being conceived as a concentration of interlocking units at
the campus center with provision
to connect all buildings by an
enclosed area. Only pedestrian
traffic is being anticipated within
the academic area. If present
plans are carried out, there will
be a need to incorporate a bus
service from the parking areas
and residence halls into the academic area.

bany.

The committee has learned that
traffic pattern surveys are presently being undertaken to determine the extent of present and
potential use of existing facilities and of projections for future
needs. Plans are being formulated on the basis of a traffic
flow during peak rush periods,
A private consultant had pre-

Debaters Attend Temple Tournament

ment in Binghamton, New York.
Debating as an affirmative unit,
they won two of their three c\e
bates. Also representing the University at Harpur were Judy
Schacher and Ray Duscher (affirmative), Charles Liarakos and
Robert Dragone (negative), and
Mary Schfter and Susan Melvin
Varsity debaters scored a four-

Assistant Debate Coach Mr,
Richard Suttell will accompany
debaters Judy Schacher, Diane
Hayes, Richard Fleisher, and Allen Wayne to

an Intercollegiate

Novice Tournament this weekend
at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. There will
be four rounds of traditional
debate on the national proposition, Resolved: that the Federal
government should establish a
national program of public work
for the unemployed.
Society members Clinton DeVeaux and Allen Wayne were
awarded certificates for excellence in speaking at the annual
Harpur College Novice Tourna-

six win-loss record at the University of Rochester Intercollegiate Tournament. Those participating were Barbara Glegota and
Martin Feinrider (affirmative)
and Ellen Abelson and Hedda
Beckman (negative). The group
was coached by Mr. Terry H.
Ostermeirer, society advisor.

NOW AVAILABLE AT

The University Bookstore...
I

student government

truly work for the betterment of
the students. Because the platforms were similar and the goals
similar, I have attempted to have
the Senate act as a cohesive

Have you presented a "package

deal" to the Senate and do you
have a definite policy for student

sents a major problem to our
student government in that its

President Finkelstein Queried On Issues

problem, 1 met with each newlyelected senator last April to in
sure that petty squabbles would
not hinder the Senate, and that

on Issues

j

Have you been a leader of your
party on the floor of the Senate?
Have you been a spokesman for
the US Party? Have you initiated
caucuses of the party to further
its objectives for the student
body? Why or why not?
Last year's party platforms were

the

Friday, Decamber 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

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�Friday,

December 4, 1964

Sengbusch Resigns
From Post as Dean
Of Nursing School
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, president of the State University at
Buffalo, has announced the resignation of Mrs. Anne Sengbusch,
dean of the University’s School
of Nursing. Dr, Furnas said the
resignation will become effective
in June of 1965.
In announcing the resignation,
Dr. Furnas said it was being accepted with “deep regret” and
praised the work done by Dean
Sengbusch in her 28 years at
the University.

“Throughout her association
with the University, Dean Sengbusch has made significant contributions not only to the University but also the community
in general,” Dr. Furnas said.
“Her work with

the National

University of Asuncion in Paraguay in our joint project with
that University will always be

remembered,” he added.

Dr. Furnas said Dean Sengbusch had resigned to be relieved of administrative responsibilities in order to devote full-time
to teaching and policy and planning matters at the University.
In her letter of resignation,
Dean Sengbusch said the next
few years would be particularly
significant in relation to setting
plans and direction for the future
of the School of Nursing.

“Since my tenure at the University before retirement will be
brief, it is a particularly appropriate time for the appointment
of a new dean who can become
involved in planing for the further development of the School
and who can provide the leadership for implementing plans developed by the faculty,” she said.
Dean Sengbusch received her
bachelor’s and master’s degrees
from the State University of Buffalo. She was appointed Dean of
the School in 1945 by the late
Chancellor Samuel P. C a p e n.
Prior to her appointment, she had
served as an assistant to the Dean
of the Medical School and as an
educational advisor to nurses. She
was appointed director of the
School of Nursing in 1940.
She is a past president of the
District 1, New York State Nurses Association and a member of

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Ranny Lectures SEANYS Hold 1st Program
On 64 Elections

“Meet Your Profs,” the first
program of the Student EducaFriday, November 20, at 3 tion Association this year, took
p.m. in the Fillmore Room, the place Tuesday, November 17th.
Political Science Club presented Dr. Toepfer, Assistant Dean of
Dr. J. Austin Ranny, professor of the School of Education, spoke
Political Science at the University on Professionalism in Education,
and a coffee hour followed. Mr.
of Wisconsin.
Sanford Seide chaired the meetDr. Ranny lectured on “Evalu- ing.
ation and Analysis of the Past
What does it mean to be a
Election.” Dr. Ranny presented a
brief revue of the San Francisco professional teacher? Dr. Toepfer, who has observed and workRepublican Convention and a precise behind-the-scene coverage of ed with teachers both here and
the events which had occurred. overseas, explained that two esIt was added that the widespread sential components of professionfeeling which had prevailed was alism are knowledge and skill.
that of “whoever is nominated, He stated, “The basic knowledge
has a slim chance of beating of a good teacher includes underPresident Johnson.” Dr. Ranny standing the psychology ' of the
also stated that Gbldwater’s main student, knowledge of the subsupport came from the so-called ject you’re teaching and knowledge of the society in which
“brass-color” and "white mosyou live.” Skill, which is exlem” vote. However, the Republican Party has tried to regain tremely difficult to measure and
its strength as a unified Party assess, is acquired through inregardless of its 1964 defeat, by struction in methods, education
shifting its concern from the and by getting out and actually
“Presidential candidate” question teaching.
and concentrating more on its
“From primary grades to the
important positions in Congress university level, teachers are the
and in the State Houses. Nevertheless, the fact that the Party
has now “adopted” a new aspect
—a struggling conservative wing,
which has previously only engagIn celebration of Bill of Rights
ed in non-party activities, must
be accepted as a phenomenon week the Niagara Frontier Chapter of the American Civil Liberwhich apparently is “here to
ties Union, in cooperation with
stay”.
the Civil Rights Committee of the
concluding,
reIn
Dr. Ranny
Erie County Bar Association, will
affirmed that the Democratic
conduct a symposium on “The
Party is still the majority party,
Supreme Court, Law Enforcethat
but
in order for the Rement and the Bill of Rights.” A
publican Party to again become
number of prominent members
a strong contender, it must find
of the bar will participate in the
a figure—a strong, non-political
program which will take place
national hero who will be fully
Wednesday, December 9th, 8:30
prepared to accept the responp.m., at the auditorium of the
sibility of a 1968 nomination.
Historical Society Museum, Elm-

potential personal model of attitudes,” Dr. Toepfer added. “The
basic requirement of those who

work in education is commitment
to the use of the intellect. How
you approach what you teach is
fully as important as what you
teach. A child’s mind is the most
important tool he has, and it’s up
to the teacher to help him utilize
it."
After Dr. Toepfer’s speech, Dr.
Burvil Glenn, Seanys advisor, explained what the group has been
doing this year and answered
questions from the audience. A
Student-Faculty committee has
been formed to meet and discuss
problems in education. December
5th, there will be a conference
for Future Teacher clubs in the
Buffalo area at Buffalo State
organized by Seany representatives from SUC of Buffalo,
SUNYAB, D’Youville College and
Rosary Hill Collage.
Faculty members who attended the meeting include: Mr. SL. MacArthur, Dr, Charles R.
Fall, Dr. Jack L. Nelson, Dr. Burvil H. Glenn, Dr. S. David Farr
and Dr. C. James Lafkiotes.

Bill of Rights Symposium Set
sideration of the Gideon case involving the defendant’s right to
counsel, and other related problems concerning legal assistance
for indigent defendants; problems of the inadmissability in
state courts of illegally obtained
evidence (Mapp v». Ohio); problems of pre-arraignment interrog a t i o n s and confessions; and
questions of the place of the
Federal district courts in reviewing state court determinations.

Freshman Council
Announces Plans
Wednesday night, November 18,
the Freshman Class Council met
to formulate plans for its annual
Winter Week. Cindy Nash, chairman of Winter Week, announced
the Council’s schedule for the
special week of December 5
through 12.

Activities slated include: Jazz,
Folk, and Rock and Roll Concerts,
Snow Sculpture and Ski exhibitions, the annual Mr. Formal competition, fine arts movies, and the
Silver Ball.
The Council established a new
committee which will organize a
series of speakers who are directly concerned with the problems faced by Freshmen, specifically, in their courses. Suggestions for speakers included teachers of the large one-hundred
level lectures, perhaps the heads
of the departments involved.
The Council also set plans for
a new committee which will offer
suggestions for Summer Planning
Conferences for Freshmen. The
Council feels extremely close to
the problems that are faced by
incoming students and agrees
that they are qualified to offer
constructive and creative criticism of the program.

The officers of the Freshman
Class Council are: Martin Guggenheim, President; Allen Larson, Vice-President and Student
Senate Representative; Martin
Jaffee, Treasurer; and R o n n a
Yosim, Secretary. Evelyn Weinrub is Union Board Representative and Harold Bob is Editor
of the Freshman Class Council
Bulletin, “The Baby Bull”.

wood at Nottingham,

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

Patln ers Press,
’

J)nc.

Slhgolt Of Smith printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE

the American Nurses Association,
She is also a member of the National League for Nursing, the
Western New York League for
Nursing and the New York State
League for Nursing.

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284
o'*®" II

The symposium will attempt to
present the current problems in
law enforcement stimulated by
recent decisions of the U. S.
Supreme Court vindicating the
constitutional rights of accused
persons. Participating will be:
John T. Curtin, U.S, Attorney;
Thomas R. Blair, attorney and
Deputy Police Commissioner;
Hon. James L, Tippett, Justice of
the Peace, Town of Tonawanda;
and defense attorneys, John W.
Condon and Herald Fahringer.
Professor Herman Schwartz of
the State University at Buffalo
School of Law will introduce the
program with a review of the
current state of law and will
serve as moderator.

r
*

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The program will include con

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•..

SPORN DISMISSAL
The Spectrum takes exception to the dismissal of
Mr. Paul Sporn.
The sole criteria that should be used for hiring faculty members is their academic qualifications and ability
to teach. This criteria should also be used to judge
grounds for dismissal.
Presidents Gould and Furnas state in a news story
on page one that Mr. Sporn’s dismissal had nothing to
do with his teaching qualifications.
The legacy left us by our former Chancellor Samuel
Paul Capen, as stated in his famous book The Management of Universities, leads one to believe that any university worthy of its name would select its faculty on the
basis of academic qualifications and teaching ability.
If the State system is to grow in academic stature it
must diligently guard and foster these principles of educational administration necessary for the growth of a
community of scholars.
Maybe more people should read Capen.

THE UNCOMMITTED GENERATION
As indicated by attendance at Senate meetings, student concern and participation is at an all time low. This
Tuesday’s meetings drew all of under a dozen spectators.
If the Senate is a Mickey Mouse Club, then every member
of the student body is a card carrying member.
The editorship of the New Student Review is open.
This key position is one that should be keenly fought for.
Yet no one has applied.
The Spectrum is running a recruitment drive. Yet
the response is almost non-existent.
As this University gets larger and larger, fewer and
fewer students are taking an active role in running it.
Student government, publications and even social activities show a marked decline in membership. If college
is to be an “experience” then participation is necessary.
Education doesn’t stop at the door of a classroom. If future leaders are to come from this campus then the future
looks rather dismal.

NORTON’S INFAMOUS LOUNGE
The middle lounge on the first floor of Norton Union
has many names. The difference in the name depends
on whom you talk to students (in and out of the lounge),
Norton Maintenance men, or the administrative staff of
the Union. Regardless of the name, one common fact
exists the lounge is a mess.
The House Committee of Union Board has been unable to stop the gross misuse of the lounge. The Administration has had it. This could result in the closing of the
-

lounge.

At this institution many students have fought for a
long time to gain the right to control student activities
and the responsibilities that are attached to them. The
day that the administration is forced to close that lounge
will be a black day for the students. The rights of many
students will be curtailed because a few can’t control
their animal impulses. It is about time that those using
that lounge change their behavior, if for no other reason
than preserving their privileges and the privileges of their
fellow students.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Publication Office at

Managing Editor
News Editors
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Peter Rubin

-

Paul Nussbaum
Barbara Strauss
Allan Scholom
Marcia Ann Orzulak

JOHN P. KOWAL
Photo Editor
Business

Myr.
Advertising Mgr.
Circulation Mgr.
Faculty Advisor

David Edelman

Financial Advisor

Edward Joscelyn
Bernard Dikman
Howard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander
William Siemering
Dallas Garber

General Staff; Vicki Bugelski,
Eileen Murphy, Nancy Migdol,

Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita, Sue Greene,
Don Eismann, Meryl Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon
Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Marion Michael,
Debbie Rubie, Jeff Lewis, Margo Rakita, Scott Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leegant,
Rita Weinberg, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teitler, Sue Greene, Sue Duffy, Bill Cortes,
Sue Fuller, Nina Kostraba, Lorni Klipstein, Joey Elm, Jim Blogett, Skip Blumberg,
Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis
Sports Stall: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
Schuelein, Steve Oberstein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr
Photography Stall: David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary Lou
Palmer, Lee Corey

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class,

Postage

Paid

at

Buffalo, New York

circulation 9500.
for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
Subscription

Represented

$3.00

per

year,

Advertising

Mt.C to Determine
Standards of Attire
The Inter-Residence Council has
elected its officers for this year.
The yare: Julian Burstein, Chairman; Stan Brodsky, Vice-Chairman; Joyce Black, Secretary; and
Gary Roberts, Treasurer.

csCetterA

to

the Editor

be limited to 200 words.
accompany each letter.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must
All letters must be typewritten, double
Names will be withheld upon request.
publication.
spaced and submitted before 1:00 PM. on the Tuesday before

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must

“Do-Nothingism” Criticised

To the Editor;
When an outsider steps into
the world of Norton Union, he
is slapped in the face with a
The Inter-Residence Council has panorama of humanity, gracelessly draped over furniture in the
provided many activities for resicenter lounge. At feeding time
dent students. Buses taking stuthis mohaired, Marlboro smoking
dents to the airport were sponsorarmy migrates to their respeced by I.R.C. during Thanksgiving tive boards in the No-Purpose
vacation, and foreign language Room and a smaller, but more
complex variety of undergraduate
tables will be set up during Dewild life may be observed . . .
cember in the Tower dining room.
the hippy.
The UB species of hippy does
The dress standards for female
residents will be decided upon NOT “philosophize with his pen”,
this week. There has been much he goes underground, to the" Ratcontroversy regarding the wearhole in most cases, to verbalize
his inner turmoil over the pressing of slacks to dinner, and I.R.C.
will decide when and if slacks ing issues of our nuclear neurotic
may be worn. Another change, world. He spills coffee on his
led by the Food Committee, has work shirt as he grimly nods in
agreement when his compatriot
begun a radical change in meal
service. “Seconds tables” are says that this bureaucratic university is smothering his indivibeing experimented with at
duality and is oriented toward
Tower, and menus are being postthe vocational slob whose only
ed outside the cafeterias.
goal in college is a B.A. or worse,
A movie, “That Touch of Mink,” an M.D. and a higher income
will be presented on December bracket. He has “discovered” that
11 in the Goodyear cafeteria at
mass education is fruitless and
8:00. There will be no admission comments, “Grades mean less
fee.
than nothing, as a matter of fact,
the degree means nothing if I
Many opportunities will be procan say I have absorbed some
vided by I.R.C. A resident tutoriknowledge, and grow intellectualal society is being considered, as
well as buses to basketball and ly.”Unfortunately,
that knowledge
hockey games. Cultural trips to
to
Toronto are also being planned. he seeks may have to come
way, through abAlso expected are a ski weekend him just that
sorbtion, via the coffee he conand a toboggan party.
sumes in the Rat-cellar. The hippy, realizing the hipocracy of the
500 seat lecture and grade competition and bureaucracy has not
only stopped attending class, but
has stopped his quest for knowl&amp;
edge outside of himself.
He
searches for truth through introspection and reflection, (no implication of my friend Jeremy intended.)

Dr. Mrs. Furnas
Honored at Dinner
By Cap and Gown

Cap and Gown, the senior women’s honorary society, held a dinner November 22, 1964, in honor
of President and Mrs, Clifford C,
Furnas, The faculty advisors, Miss
Haas, and Dr. and Mrs. Stout, attended the affair with ten of the
organization's members in the
Charles Room of Norton Union.
The purpose of the dinner was
First, Cap and Gown

two fold.

members hope that such an event
will become a tradition in future
years because it enables the women to meet informally with the
President to discuss mutually important matters. Secondly, the
members described their project
goals, and Dr. and Mrs. Furnas
gave their opinions as to the role
of Cap and Gown on the campus.
Several stimulating and

problematic topics were brought up
as one discussion led to another
—the lack of tradition at this
University as opposed to some
other big schools, the lack of student spirit and support for campus functions, and the large
amount of damage that has been
done to the school property, especially in and around Norton
Union. The Gap and Gown members also questioned the Presi-

dent about the new campus and
made some suggestions to him
which they thought might be relevant to the problems.

Two positions will be

the
student Publications
Board. Anyone interested
in these positions should
contact any officer of the
Student Senate at the Senate Offices, 205 Norton
opeii next semester on

Hall.

December 4, 1964

The hippy has fallen into a
pit which is lined and sealed by
his own personality. He is fight
ing a battle with his environ
ment, including the “damnable"
set of middle cl£ss mores he
brought with him as a freshman.
He is struggling for individuality intellectuality and maturity
without the benefit of an under
standing of philosophies which
preceeded him. He has found security in a work-shirt, a liberal
ethic and a standard set of answers to the problems of the
world, ranging from sex, to the
bomb, to segregation, to socialism.

this individual to find
solutions to the pressing
problems he asks by pulling himself from the pit of his own personality. The answers lie not
only in academics. It is a short
elevator ride from the Rathskeller to the Senate Offices on the
second floor and the Spectrum
Offices on the third floor, where
there are students who are fighting the same battles. The Nation
al Student Association, The Civil
Rights Committee and the Academic Affairs Committee, to indiscriminantly name three, need
people who CARE about what the
heck is going to happen to
H.U.A.C. and civil rights movements and institutionalized edu
cation. The Spectrum needs people who CARE. The newspaper
is existing on the bones of the
staff it would like to build.
I fail to understand why people
sitting and sipping coffee as they
read this may smile when they
think about those asses, playing
foolish children’s games on the
second floor, but they will put
down the paper and go right on
discussing the issues they could
be in on.
Rosy T. Sarbin
I ask

the

Mickey Mouse Club Defended
To the Editor:

I wish to protest vehemently

your unprovoked attack and uni-

lateral act of aggression against
a bulwark of campus society—
The Micky Mouse Club. For several years every afternoon, students gathered between short
homework breaks to see their
favorite rodent
dedicated to
—

God, country, and motherhood.
The implication in your editorial that this democratic institution is a part of the “Theatre
of the Absurd” is a low down,
mean, unjustified smear. Soon
you’ll be trying to tell us poor
college waifs that there is no
Easter Bunny. Such dangerous

extremism can no longer be tolerated.
It is high time factions on both
sides of important campus issues
stopped looking for scape-mice
and started to work for a sensible
compromise. Certainly undue cen
sorship should be eliminated and
the right to referendum preserv
ed—but these goals cannot be
obtained through loaded phrases
and weekly incriminations.
Heated invective can never
equal constructive thoughts—and
before we attack any system of
government, student or otherwise, we had better consider the
futile alternatives.
—Harold Bob
(Cont’d on P.

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT
AND CIRCULATION

1. Date of Filing—September 20, 1964
2, Title—The Spectrum
3. Frequency—Weekly

4. Office of Publication—Norton Hal!, State University of New
York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York

5. Location of Headquarters—Same
6. Publisher—State University of New York at Buffalo
Editor—John P. Kowal, 320 Roslyn Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 14215
Managing Editor—Peter J. Rubin, 3262 Main St., Buffalo,
New York, 14214
University
Owner—State
of New York at Buffalo
7.
8, Known

bondholders—None

9. Average number of copies issued during previous 12 months
—9,500 per issue
10, I certify that the statements made by me above are correct
and complete.
BERNARD DDCMAN
Business Manager

5)

�Friday,

December 4, 1964

cjCetterA to the

Editor

(Cont’d from P. 4)

Sargent Appointed

Presidential Aide
For Coming Year

Student Senate President Robert Finkelstein has recently apDonations
pointed Nick Sargent to assume
the position of Presidential AsAmerican Cancer Society were sistant. Mr. Sargent succeeds ArTo the Students of the
honored for their superb efforts thur Burke, who resigned from
University of Buffalo—
during the October 25 game the post October 20.
between the Browns and the New
Nick Sargent is a Junior enDear Students:
York Giants, In addition to your rolled in the Business AdminisYour participation with over 35
tration program. Newly elected
contributions, the Browns precolleges and universities across
sented to the Fund a gift of chairman of the Senate Public
against
attack
$15,000 from the game receipts. Relations Committee, Mr. Sargent
the country in the
has worked on the Special Bookleukemia is an inspiration to all
Next year we hope all the colstore committee and the Debate
of us. By honoring Ernie Davis
leges
your
CanAmerica
follow
in
will
Society. His new duties will be
in supporting the American
pioneering
lead
in
this great, tribto assist Mr. Finkelstein in adcer Society fund established in
to
one
of the outstanding ministrative chores and to aid
his name, you have done service ute
leaders of American youth. I wish in carrying out Senate policy. He
to your own great institution as
well as to one of the football I could thank all of you personwill continue to work with the
ally for your spirit and energy Bookstore Committee and will
greats of your generation. Ernie
in supporting this cause. I do assist Mr. Finkelstein in adminDavis, Syracuse All-American and
want to assure you that all memistering programs with which he
Cleveland Browns’ first draft sebers of the American Cancer Sois involved.
lection, upheld the highest traCommenting on his new posiditions of college youth, and you ciety are deeply grateful to you.
tion, Mr. Sargent stated: "Naturare continuing to do the same in
Cordially,
ally, I consider this appointment
his name.
to be a great honor. I have been
Speidel,
Jess
W.
II
The colleges and universities
afforded the opportunity to work
Vice President for Crusade
who participated in the Ernie
closely with a president sincereAmercian Cancer Society, Inc,
Davis Leukemia Fund of the

Appreciated

Student

Offices Questioned
To the Editor:

Friday, November 20, I attended a meeting of the Atheistic
and Philosophical Club (APC) and
was surprised to hear that the
Newman Apostolate, in a recent
letter to her members, had taken
a militant stand against the
Atheist Club. It was suggested
that the APC challenge Newman
to a public debate.

Well, first of .all, there was
no such letter. However, in a recent letter to parents of Catholic students, Father Streng, our
chaplain, mentioned the Atheist
Club. Part of the letter is quoted:

“There is now on campus a
group that calls itself ‘The Atheist Club”. This is not someone’s
idea of a joke. It is composed
of students seriously intent on
the non-existence of God
I
am not surprised at all. I am surprised that we have not had one
all these years
I am not
so much worried about the atheists as I am about the Catholics.
The Catholics are already organized, but they do nothing about
it. Half the student population
is Catholic the Newman Apostolate is the largest group on the
campus. Yet the university has
the public image of being an
atheistic, socialistic institution of
learning. If the Catholic students
"ere as active as the atheists,
this certainly would not be so.”
...

...

-

It seems to me this is a militant
attack on Catholic students rather than atheists.
Now in regard, to public dede, the Newman discussion

group meets every Sunday, 7:30
at Newman Hall. As soon
as the APC is organized, we will
invite them to attend one or more
of these informal meetings for
the purpose of discussing atheip.m.

sm.
I attended the APC meeting to
determine their viewpoints on
entering the Council of Religious
Organizations (Cp.0). It seems the
APC has been sent to the CRO
by the Student Senate. The Senate
believes the APC can be categorized as “religious”. However,
Gerry Gross, the pro-tern chairman of the APC, fold me that
his group did not desire membership in the CRO, but would
apply for membership as a technicality before (if rejected, of
course) returning to the Senate
for reconsideration. If then accepted by the Senate, the APC
would qualify to receive Senate

financing.
I agree with Gerry. I do not
think the scope of the CRO includes atheism. However, I do
not like the idea of spending
theist money on atheistic endeavors. (The CRO. by the way, receives no Senate financing and
even absorbs the cost of the
voluntary religious census cards).
The Senate should keep in mind
that, if the APC can distinguish
themselves to be “philosophical”
rather than “religious”, what is
to prevent other “religious”- organizations from suddenly realizing that they are, in actuality,
“philosophical” clubs and thereby merit Senate financing?

Bob Ryder, President
Newman Apostolate

Club Presents Stand
To the Editor;
Take a walk sonieday through
corridors of Norton Hall on
second and third floors. On
ns walk you cannot help but see
le act
&gt;vities that are in progress
a vast majority of
the rooms
tsl gnated
for campus organizaThe usual scene is one of a
&gt;|ns.
u °w eating his
meal and a
m ale companion
either study!' or chatting. The other scenes
e &lt;&gt;f, several
couples laughing
the room is empty. We
nstantly read of expansion
an-, and cries of inadequate fa-

1

"

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

cilities, but if the university is
to fulfill its primary function,
that of education, these rooms
surely could be put to better use
as studies, laboratories or offices.
Not to pick on one group in particular, but Arnold Air Society’s
room is too small for marching
and surely they do not have full

membership meetings daily, so
that they might reserve a room
for their periodic meetings as
everyone else does, and permit
some more creative or educational function

in this valuable space.
—Albert Wertheimer
fCont’d on P. 13)

Justice Dept. Interprets EOA
WASHINGTON (CPS)
A recurrence of the 1959-62 government-university conflict over disclaimer affidavits has been averted at least temporarily by Justice
Department interpretation of provisions in the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964.
At first glance it seemed that
the Act’s affidavit could apply
—

to the 150,000 students who re-

ceive federal funds under its
$72.5 million work-study program.
It also appeared that it might
apply to faculty members involved in federal anti-poverty projects and to volunteers in VISTA,
the domestic version of the Peace
Corps.
Late in the summer, however,
the Justice Department’s Office
of Legal Counsel advised that the
affidavit applied only to those
payindividuals who receive
ments “directly” from the federal
government.
Individuals receiving payments
through a legal entity such as
a state, an institution of higher
education, a business corporation,
or a local public agency would
not have to execute affidavits.
In 1959, Harvard led 31 universities out of the NDEA loan
program in protest of a require-

ment that loan recipient sign affidavits disclaiming support or
belief in subversive organizations.
Scores of other institutions registered formal protests but remained in the program. The disclaimer affidavit was finally repealed in October, 1962.

noted that the ACE had already
begun to receive inquiries about

the affidavit from some of its
1300 member institutions.
At least seven other major
higher education organizations
have indicated opposition to the
affidavit and would welcome OEO
decisions not to apply it. Complications could set in, however, if
such decisions are forthcoming.
John Bell Williams (D-Miss),
the Congressman who sponsored
the amendment to the poverty
bill which contains the affidavit,
could decide to protest what
seems to be a perversion or distortion of his intent. The affidavit was intended to apply to
all programs authorized by the
act, according to Williams.
In an interview, Williams explained that he intended the
filing of an affidavit to be a
prerequisite to the receipt of
funds by “any individual enjoying gains” from the anti-poverty
legislation.
“If money finally trickles down
to students,” he said, then they
too should have to sign an affidavit.

Williams said he "presumes”
the executive branch would try

to enforce his affidavit “in good
faith.” If not, he “would try to

get enforcement.” Williams said
his only prerogative would be to
seek an investigation. He declined, however, to say whether he
would actually go this far even
if his broad view of his amendment is further narrowed.
The Economic Opportunity Act
One section of the Economic
affidavits, like those that were
Opportunity Act states that no
funds to carry out the act can removed from the NDEA loan
be used to make payments to program and the National Scienany individual who has not filed
ce Foundation fellowship program in October, 1962, state that
an affidavit. Since the anti-poverty legislation contains a number the signer “does not believe in
of programs involving higher eduand is not a member of and
does not support any organizacation, the spectre of the NDEA
fight was raised.
tion that believes in or teaches
According to the Justice Dethe overthrow of the U.S. governpartment, “the only legally inment by force or violence or by
(of
any
the
afdisputable application
illegal or unconstituional
fidavit) is to Job Corps enrollees.”
methods.”
prothe
An affirmative loyalty oath
work-study
Students in
NICK SARGENT
gram would be exempt from the
remains in the NDEA and NSF
requirement because they receive
programs. No serious attempt has
ly devoted to the interests of our their money through their unibeen made to remove the oaths.
student body. In working with versities.
Universities opposing the affiMr. Finkelstein, an attempt will
The Justice Department did
davits have charged that they
be made to act on issues which not indicate whether the afficould lead to governmental inare real to the students and
vestigations of private beliefs and
davit must be applied to VISTA
directly affect their relationship volunteers and consultants. A
governmental interference
into
with the University.
CPS check with the Office of the conduct of universities. They
“For example, the price of Economic Opportunity (OEO) rehave also objected to singling
books should be lowered. Stuvealed that this decision is exout students for subjection to
hardunder
financial
dents labor
pected in mid-November.
affidavit requirements.
ships burdensome enough withThe OEO’s counsel is now
Proponents of affidavits
excescompounded
by
being
out
working on a reply to a letter argue, as does Rep, Williams, that
very
of
the
tools
sive prices for
about the affidavits from Logan "they are right and in the interest
our profession. We have taken Wilson, President of the Ameriof the country and our national
issue
on
vital
a step forward
this
can Council on Education. Wilsecurity.”
a
committee
by the formation of
son’s letter, dated September 3,
to investigate the determination
can
of prices and the steps that
be taken to lower them. We will
push forward from this beginning to exert every pressure at
our command and that through
the office of the student president this

wrong shall be recti-

fied.
“The prices of food in the cafeteria, and academic course evaluation are other areas among
which Mr. Finkelstein has asked
me to pursue and correct. It is
with these objectives in mind
that I welcome the appointment.”
When asked to express his
views concerning the appointment of Mr. Sargent, Mr. Finkelstein said: “I am very pleased
to appoint Nick Sargent as new
Presidential Assistant. He has exhibited intense interest in student activities. He is anxious and
capable to

serve

the student body

and is tireless in his efforts to
better the lot of the individual
student on otir campus. Nick is
very enthusiastic and a prime
example of what one interested
student, through an involvement
in student government, can accomplish. Nick wants to work for
the student body, rather than
recklessly and irresponsibly attacking it. This is the type of
person we need in student gov-

ernment—one who wants to fulfill the potential that student
government has to offer. He will
be a valuable asset.”

Freyre Speaks at History Seminar
By EILEEN

TEITLER

Doctor Gilberto Freyre spoke
on Tuesday at a seminar sponsored by the graduate school. He
was introduced by Dr. Arnold
Warren, Jr. The seminar concerned itself with the development of Brazil as a recial democracy, considered by Dr. Freyre
to be one of the most advanced
countries of the world racially.
Dr. Freyre is the author of “The

Masters and the Slaves,” and is
one of the leading figures in Brazilian culture. It is said that Dr.

Freyre “changed Brazil’s image

of itself." He studied in Texas,
and did graduate work at Columbia University.
The main contention of Dr.
Frcyre’s speech was that it was
the racial experience of the Portugese settlers of the fifteenth
century that created the proper
atmosphere for good race relations. He stated that the Portugese admiration for Moorish beauty led to a corresponding respect
for the dark skinned Brazilians.
Intermarriage among the Portugese and Brazilians created a
sense' of time very rarely found
elsewhere.
Dr. Freyre also commended the
;

Roman Catholic church for its
part in cementing good relations.
It brought Christianity to Brazil,
he said, rather than merely European religion.
He commented
favorably on the interpretations
of Christ and the Virgin Mary as
Negro or mulatto, and pointed to
the worship of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Dr. Freyre drew many contrasts
with the policy of apartheid in
the Union of South Africa, and
blamed the situation there on a
European elite which refused to
give civilization to the people

there without the maintenance of
strict control by themselves.
A native of Brazil. Dr. Freyre
received his education in the
United States receiving his bachelor’s degree from Baylor University and his master’s from Columbia. He has served as a visiting
lecturer throughout the world including universities in,the United
States, Peru and Germany. He has
served as a professor at Harvard
and also at Yale.
In 1949, Dr. Freyre served as
the ambassador from Brazil to the
United Nations. He has been the
recipient of several honorary degrees from universities in the
U.S. and abroad.

�Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

WINTER WEEKEND BEGINS
from P. 1)
Day and Jack Lemmon, will be
shown Friday at 11:00 a.m., 1:00
and 6:00 p.m. The movie tickets
are $.25 each, and may be purchased at a table in the lobby

(Cont’d
—

—

HILLEL

STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

Tht: B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening in the Hillel
House, The Service will begin at
7:45 p.m. Dr. Justin Hofmann will
speak on “Judaism and Hellen-

The Student Christian Association (SCA) is the official student

Christian movement of the Presbyterian, United Church of Christ,
Baptist, Evangelical and United
Brethren, Lutheran Church in
America, and Disciples of Christ
Churches. The program is sponsored by these denominations
through the Buffalo Council of
Churches. The program is open
to all students and involves a
critical look at our cultural situation based on the criterion of
Christian values. Meetings are
held usually every other Thursday at the home of the Protestant Chaplain. John Buerk, 49
Heath Street. For information
call the Chaplain’s office,
TF 4-4250 or his home TF 6-5806.
Thursday, the Student Christian Association will see the play,
The Defense of Taipei by Conrad
Bromberg. Mr. Bromberg has invited us to visit him backstage
after the play. Tickets for students are free, but they must be
picked up at the box office.
Thursday, December 17, at 6:00
p.m., S.C.A. will hold its annual
Christmas dinner at the University Presbyterian Church. The
menu will consist of Turkey, etc.;
the cost is $1.00. Reservation
must be made; please call
TF 4-4250 or TF 6-5806,

ism."

In celebration of Chanukah,
Hillel will hold its annual Latke
Supper Sunday, at 5:30 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Reservations
should be made at the Hillel
House. The program will include
a presentation of “The Light
Bringers,” an interpretive candle
lighting ceremony, and the singing of Chanukah songs.

NEWMAN
To raise money for the Newman Mission, Newman Club will
have a Pizza Party and Hootcnany at the Hall tonight at 8:00
p.m. Admission will be 50 cents.

There will be a business meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsoring a question and
answer period on Christian missions tonight: There will be a
panel to present general information and answer your questions.
The meeting will be held in
Room 242 of Norton Union, at
7:00 p.m.
Everyone is invited to the last
of our Bible studies and prayer
meetings that will be held this
semester. The Bible studies are
at 3:00 p.m. Monday and 11 a.m.
Thursday. The prayer meetings
are held at 3:00 p.m. Tuesday and
noon Friday.
During Winter Recess from December 27, 1964 through January
1, 1965, the 7th Inter-Varsity Missionary Convention will be held
at the University of Illinois in
Urbana, Illinois. The speakers
will include Eugene Nida, Translation Secretary, American Bible
Society; Charles Troutman, General Director, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, U.S.A.; P. T.
Chandapilla, General Secretary,
Union of Evangelical Students of
India; end Billy Graham, international evangelist. Anyone interested may attend. Pamphlets concerning the convention's speakers, program, costs and transportation arrangements are in the
CRO Office, Room 217 of Norton

The Sunday Night Discussion
group will resume this Sunday
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the Hall.

At 7:00 p.m, Tuesday: a Tobog-

“when can I
interview IBM?”
December 14-15

“for what jobs?”
Business Administration
Systems Engineering

WESLEY FOUNDATION

Are you looking for that bargain of a lifetime? Take a look
around at the Wesley RUMMAGE
SALE to be held at First Methodist Church on Potomac and
Baines tonight and tomorrow. If
you come tonight, 7:00-9.00 p.m.,
we ask only one quarter (25 cents)

for the privilege of first choice.
Tomorrow, 9:00 a.m. and 2:00
p.m., browsing is free.
The topic of discussion at the
supper meeting this Sunday evening will be "A New Quest for
the Historical Josus."

LIBERAL RELIGIOUS

FELLOWSHIP
“Wc must never allow anything
human to be unmentionable nor
beyond our concern,” Liberal
Religious Fellowship will meet to
discuss this idea Sunday, in Room
330, Norton Union, at 7:00 p.m.
Members and all others interested
are welcome to come.

Union.

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ols.
Winter Week will be climaxed
by the annual Silver Ball, Saturday, December 12, at 9:00 p.m.
The dance will be held in the
Mary Seaton Room, Kleinhans
Music Hall. Tickets are on sale
at the Norton ticket booth for
$3.00 per couple.

gan party will take place at
Chestnut Ridge Park. Special
buses will leave Norton at 7:00
p.m. returning to campus at ll:oo
p.m. Bus tickets are $.60 and
may be purchased at the theater
ticket table.
The Mister Formal fashion
show will take place Wednesday
at 3:00 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
Thursday: the Freshman Council is initiating a new program
into Winter Weekend; ihis activity, “hire a helper” will enable
students to engage the services of
a freshman for the price of $1.00.
The “helper” will then be required to carry books, open doors,
carry trays, and obey all reasonable demands of the employer on

Graduate Student Club
A Chanukah Social will be
sponsored by the Graduate Students Club of Hillel Sunday, at
8:00 p.m., in the Hillel House, A
program of folk singing has been
planned. Refreshments will be
served. There is a nominal charge
for admission. All graduate students, single faculty, and seniors
over 21 are invited to attend.

INTER-VARSITY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

Militello s

of Norton Union.
Monday afternoon: a Winter
Weekend motorcade will travel
through Buffalo and return to
Campus. The Motorcade will include candidates for Mr. Formal
and for Miss Formal. Following
the motorcade, there will be a
coffee hour and dance in the
Fillmore Room, beginning at 3:00
p.m. The Winter Weekend candidates will be introduced to the
student body at this time.

The annual Christmas concert

will be presented in the Fillmore
Room Friday, December 11, at
8:30 p.m. The glee club will present traditional holiday songs.
Free tickets may be obtained at
the ticket booth. Following the
concert, there will be a Christmas tree lighting ceremony, accompanied by the singing of car-

December 4, 1964

to University Faculty and Students
(Opposite UB)
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�Friday,

Daeambar 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

Greek Notes

Work Camps Formed

Greek Sing Record
offered until the
Album will beproduction
is comquantity of
pletely ordered. Orders will be
taken until further notice in the
office of Assistant Coordinator,
Mr. Dallas Garber, Room 316,
Norton Union.
The pledges of Alpha Phi Omega will have a party at the V.F.W.
Saturday at 8:00 p.m, All Brothers, Alumni and pledges are invited to attend. The theme will
be a “Roaring twenty” gangster
party and costumes are in order.
Please bring your own “gun
molls”.
Alpha Sigma Phi has chosen
Nick Elias as its candidate for
Mr. Formal. The theme is “Nick’s
Night Out.”

The

1964-65

The brothers will hold a social
with a sorority from Buffalo State
this Saturday nite at the Hotel
Markeen. Music will be by the
Rockin’ Robins.
We also wish to thank Bill
Potskowski who was invaluable
in locating the missing portrait
of Mrs. Goodyear, stolen last Saturday from Goodyear Hall.
Alpha Epsilon Pi will hold their
sixth annual dated Open Party
at Fazio’s Hall tonight. Free buses

will leave Norton Union at 8:15
dress, which will
be informal, is sweaters and
slacks for all men, and appropriate attire for their dates.
Chi Omega will hold their Big
and Little Sister Dinner Sunday
at the Coachman’s Inn.
Gamma Phi will hold a casual
party at the home of Jack Kiebala tomorrow evening.
The party will begin as soon as
the Brothers finish work on their
entry in the Snow Sculpture Contest, Work on the sculpture will
begin at noon tomorrow if there
is enough snow.
Phi Epsilon Pi is awaiting the
Fall ’64 Pledge Class party to be
held this Saturday night. The
pledges have decided on a pajama
party theme.
The Sigma Kappa Phi pledge
class will hold a tea for all sororp.m. Suggested

ity pledges Sunday.
Congratulations to sisters Bev

Painter and Joanne Smoth, winners of UB scholarships.
Tau Kappa Epsilon is having a
social tonight at 8:30 p.m. with
Theta Chi Sorority.
Theta Chi would like to congratulate their new president,
Douglas Sandburg. There will be
a poster party at the Theta Chi
House this Saturday at 8:00 p.m.

Miss Frankie Ayres and Mr. John
Hillman of the Sociology Department discussed Work Camps at
the Civil Rights Committee meeting held on Monday, November
23. The purpose of this meeting
was to introduce the idea of the
Work Camps to the Committee
members arid to arrange for UB
students to participate in such a

EDITOR NEEDED
The New Student Review, the campus literary
magazine, is now conducting interviews for the position of Editor-In-Chief for
the s p r i n g semester and

program.

a twenty-minute film,
showed how the Work
Camps functioned in Philadelphia, the two guests spoke to the
Committee about the Work
Camps project. The purpose of
the Camp, which the students will
be participating in, is to help
repair the homes of people in a
lower income community who are
willing to do the work but can’t
afford to finance the repairs.
Following

which

Upon the conclusion of the discussion, students were given the
opportunity to volunteer to participate in a local Work Camp.
Fifteen students, out of the thirty-five who signed up, have been
selected to participate in the
Work Camp program which will
be held this weekend. The money
to finance the project has been
donated by the Quaker Friends
and the Civil Rights Committee.

Arnie Graff, who presided at
this meeting, has stated that, if
this Work Camp is successful,
more Camps will be organized
during the year.
The Committee is also making
plans at this time for a Christmas
part yfor some of the children

in the poorer Buffalo communities.

Students whose last
names begin with the letters

E, I, J, 0, Q, T, U,

and V will see their advisors, plan their programs
and register for courses on
the following days: De-

cember 7 thru December
11. Students whose last
names begin with M, N,
and Y will make appointments with the University
College Receptionist in
Diefendorf 114.

EDITOR NEEDED

fall. Anyone interested should contact Judy
Auerbachcr at the N.S.R.
office, 302 Norton Hall,
or call extension 2319.
next

GREEK SING
(Cont’d from P. 1)

Chairman of Greek Sing was
Donald Mingle, Set-up Chairman
was Barbara Beekhout, David
Franko and Carol Anderson contracted the judges, Ticket and
Program Chairman was Linda
Lessner, David Cowen and Joan
Salwisz headed the Rules and
Regulations Committee, and John
Hessling was in charge of Publicity and Trophies.
Trophies were awarded at an
I.F.C. Pigskin Party, which was
held as scheduled Saturday, November 21, despite the blizzard
which canceled the Villanova
game that day. This was the first
year in which sororities and fraternities competed against each
other in their respective divisions.
Previously, the women and men
had been classified in separate
divisions.

PAGE SEVEN

MR. FORMAL CANDIDATES
(Cont’d from P. 1)
Colin Bremner as candidate for
Mr. Formal with the theme—“The
Critics Choice." Colin is a four
year member of Theta Chi Fraternity, and is a major in Dramatics. Colin is also a charter
member of this University’s chapter of the National Honorary Dramatics Fraternity, Alpha Psi
Omega. He is also an officer of
the Student Dramatics Society. As
a member of the Resident Company in Training at the Gateway
Playhouse in Bellport, Long Island, this summer, Colin appeared
in supporting roles in My Fair
Lady, Camelot, and The Sound of
Music and others. At the University, Colin has'' appeared in The
Misar, Guys and DolTs, The Bald
Soprano, and The Bear.
Colin Bremner is a 22-year-old
senior from White Plains, New
York. While a Columbia Pictures
talent scout “discovered" Colin on
the basis of his promise as an
actor, his talents are not limited
on.y to this field; the Theta Chi
candidate, "The Critics Choice”
participates in intramural sports,

Mr. Formal.
Phi Kappa Psi’s candidate, Don

Gilbert, transferred here from
Boston University. He began his
career by playing .football, basketball, and baseball. However,
due to a knee injury, Don was
forced to give up basketball and
concentrate on football. Since
that time, Don has become one of
the most valuable quarterbacks
this school has ever seen, breaking all the possible records except those saved by the Villanova
cancel.
Don is now a senior, doing practice teaching at some of the area
schools. In the future, he plans
to work on his master’s degree
in Physical Education and Condi-

tioning.
Presently, Mr. Gilbert has the
honor of having his average submitted for Scholastic All-American Honors. He has made the
Dean’s list four times in succes-

'

sion.
Charles Nunn, Sigma Phi Epsiion’s candidate for Mr. Formal
was born in Toronto, Canada, and
presently makes his home in

Bethpage, Long Island,
swimming, singing, writing; apIn high school, having gone to
Amherst Central here in Buffalo,
preciates all genres of music and
literature, and is a follower of Charles was a member of the Naroad racing.
tional Honor Society and the
Besides Colin’s regular class soccer and swimming teams,
schedule and the candidacy for
In college, Charles is a member
Mr. Formal as “The Critics o fthe Sigma Phi Epsilon FraternChoice” next week, he will ap- ity and has participated in such
pear in Chekhov’s Three Sisters
intramural sports as swimming,
at the Studio Theatre, and is also cross-country, bowling, football,
directing Strindberg's Miss Julie, track, and basketball. As a fresh
man, Charles was a member of
Stanton D. King, 20, is a resithe Allenhurst Council and cardent of Poughkeepsie, New York,
Mr. King is an avid sportsman, ried a Dean’s List average.
Charles, 21, is majoring in ecoHe especially enjoys skiing, tennomics and has a minor in hisnis, hunting, and is an ardent
equestrian. Mr. King has also
tory.
played intramural football and
His many and varied interests
fencing. He has been active in a. consist of swimming, surf boardnumber of extra-curricular activi-xing, water skiing, sports, governties including Schussmeisters and rtient and politics, travel, and
the UB band. Mr. King enjoys"—pocket billiards,
both jazz and classical music. His
Nicholas N. Elias’ home is in
favorite artist is Rachmaninoff.
Elmira Heights where he lives
Mr. King’s main outside interest with his parents and his brothers,
is Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity in He is a senior in the School of
which has has served as co-social
Business Administration and AIpha Sigma Phi s candidate for
chairman. He was also a particiMr. Formal.
pant in Phi Ep’s winning Stunt
Nick has participated in the
Night performance. Mr. King is
also a member of Mr. Froggy-the- following Inter-Fraternity sports:
Gremlin Fan Club. Academically, football, cross country, basketball,
volleyball, wresting, baseball
Mr. King is a junior in the Coltrack and Greek Olympia. In his
lege of Arts and Sciences and is
fraternity he held the position
majoring in English, His main
of Pledgemaster and has been a
concentration is in Drama. Phi
Epsilon Pi is proud to offer Stanmember of the Interfraternity
ton D. King as their candidate for Council.
“

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�Senate Meeting
(Cont'd from P. 1)
Henry Simon, who brought the
resolution to the floor, said,
“There is a need for a dialogue
in this matter. It should extend
beyond the confines of the Student Senate but the Senate should
take the leading role.”
Mr. Sporn was dismissed on
grounds that he misrepresented
himself in signing the Feinberg
Certificate. Mr. Simon said, “So
long as a man is competent in the
classroom he has a right to teach.
Mr. Sporn has not abused his responsibilities as a teacher. Educators all over the country deplore the fact that there are not
more qualified teachers. The State
University has deprived itself of
a highly qualified individual.”
Mr. Simon continued, "It strikes
me as undemocratic to suggest
that because of a man’s ideas that
he may hold privately he should
be deprived of his position, one
which he competently fills. I
know of no instance in which
Mr. Sporn has abused his classroom obligation.” The Feinberg
Law does not state what will happen to an individual who does
not sign the Communist disclaimer, Mr. Simon said that it would
be logical for Mr. Sporn to conclude that by not signing he
would certainly be fired.

Robert Finkelstein announced
that the Academic Affairs Committee of the Student Senate was
preparing a course evaluation program. The results of questionaires which will be circulated in
certain classes will be compiled
for the benefit of teachers and
department heads. The Welfare
Committee of the Student Senate
reported that it is progressing in
its effort to bring beer to campus. Mr. Finkelstein said that the
final decision regarding beer on
campus may come to the Deans
Council of the University rather
than from Albany.
Eight

justices were approved

for election to the Student Judiciary’s Lower Parking Court.
Strauss, Edward Gartell, Thomas
They are: Ellen Fleysher, Barbara
Rothman, Robert Byne, Samuel
Ratick, Maury Zeplowitz and Gary
Gerace.
The Senate approved the establishment of a Senior Week Com-

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

WYATT (Cont’d from P. 1)
that literature is manifold. “The
question often raised, ‘What does
elected
mittee and unanimously
it really mean?’ is an archaic,
Miss Linda Sapir as Temporary pre-logical way
of thinking.” LitChairman. Speaking to the moerature, he said, has the capacity
tion on establishing Senior Week, to say
the things, which we sense,
Ken Burnstein said, “For as long
but cannot say ourselves, and
as I can remember there has
indicative of great literature is
never been a great deal of tra•a blither of messages, not just
dition of any kind on this campus. one. “Literature speaks
of the
With the initiation of a Senior things we already
know, in and
of ourselves.”
The essence of great art, Dr.
Wyatt said, is expression of a
common fantasy, transformed and
disguised for society’s needs. He
said that the author must transcend his own needs by creating
fantasy to appeal to the group,
by means of illustration, imagary
and metaphor. Thus, Dr. Wyatt
labeled literature as, “the expression of personal wishes disI
guised through the use of form
and structure,” Because literature is formed specifically for
the group in this way, Dr. Wyatt
said that there can be a meaningful relationship between psychology and art, and art may still
remain autonomous. Literature,
as a statement of the human
condition, is in the province of
Simon Proposes
Sporn Resolution

Henry

Week maybe a foot will be placed
in the door opening into tradition
on this campus.”
Trudy Stern proposed a constitutional amendment which would
allow the student body to call for
a referendum at any time. The
amendment will he debated at the

next meeting.
Nick Sargent was unanimously
elected by the Senate as Chairman of the Public Relations Committee. The Public Relations Committee is responsible for enhancing the reputation of the University in the community.
Budgets passed by the Senate
this week include: Photography
Club, $330; Political Science Club,
$58; Industrial Relations Club,
$519,75; The Executive Council
of the School of Nursing, $900;
Student Zionist Organization,
$425; American Institute of Aero-

nautics and Astranoautics, $547.
At a special meeting of the Student Senate Tuesday November
24, the budgets of the Hockey
Club and the Ski Club were approved.

PART TIME DRIVERS
days
4 hrs. a night
arranged. Must own car.
—

ship,”

Dr. Wyatt received his Ph.D.
at the University of Vienna in
1936. He was a research assistant
at Harvard and has served as
director of Psychiatry at McLean
and Cushing V.A. Hospitals. Dr.
Wyatt’s publications include
Studies in Philosophy and Social
Sciences, Psychoanalysis and Education, Current Comments on
the Use of Symbol in the Novel,
A Psychiatrist Looks at History,
and Fiction Discovering Truth.

BOCCE

to be

SUNY Delivery Service
TF 4-4279 after 6

TF 3-1344

ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS
MATHEMATICIANS
Let’s discuss
tomorrow

In science and technology, the accomplishments
of today are hut direction lor tomorrow. Why?
Simply because resting on the accomplishments
of today is a luxury we cannot afford.
In Communications Engineering, where

others are content to modify, our mandate
is to CREATE.
In Electronic Data Processing Systems,
where others are content to innovate, our
mandate is to CREATE.

psychology.
Dr. Wyatt said that psychology
is in a position to provide literature with a theory of social
aspects, based on a triadic relationship between the author, the
work of art and the public. Psychology, he said, can take what
the author already knows and
relate it to universals. Psychol-

ogy can learn from literature in
terms of being made aware of
human experiences. “At present
the two are at odds. Psychology
is disdainful of literature and
the literary critic is ambivolent.
Both are missing out on the gains
of a profoundly natural partner-

December 4, 1964

This, then, is the philosophy .
the crux of
intellectual thought
at the National Security
Agency —ivherc the concepts of tomorrow are the
problems of today.
.

.

...

So let’s discuss the future
yours and ours

...

If you are a gifted and interested Engineer or
Mathematician, we have much in common—including
A COMPULSION TO SUCCEED.

Our future is contingent upon a constant input of
and creative
scientific talent
the
lifeline of any institution. Our success is embodied
in the technical capabilities of our professional staff.
To assure this, scientific employees are encouraged
to pursue graduate studies at local universities
under Agency sponsorship. Your future with NSA
will entail education
early responsibility
and unusually challenging assignments.
Why? Because
new

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

,

.

.

.

.

.

We MUST create completely new kinds of
communications equipments and systems embodying
concepts and techniques THAT HAVE NO
•

antennas, transmitters, receivers
PRECEDENT
and terminal hardware of a most advanced design.
.

.

.

We MUST assure the complete invulnerability
of message content through the novel .■. but never
static . science of cryptology.
•

.

.

.

We MUST develop special refinements for
computers and electronic data processing systems
experimenting with the latest semiconductors,
magnetic film and superconductive devices to provide
new logic circuits and memory units for increased
speed and capacity.
•

.

.

.

Interested?
If so, then LET’S DISCUSS
TOMORROW. Representatives of the National
Security Agency will be on campus in the near future,
Check with your Placement Office for details and
...

dates, or write to:

Mr. Phillip M. Coffey

College Relations Branch
Office of Personnel
National Security Agency
Fort George G. Meade, Maryland

I

-M. i.
WHERE THE

m

w

I

National Security Agency

Fort George G. Meade, Maryland

m, J an eocal

CONCEPTS

opportunity employer

OF TOMORROW ARE

THE

PROBLEMS OF TODA

�December i, 1964

Spectrum Call Board
HOSTEL CLUB
A Ho siding Club is being
formed in Buffalo under the aus-

pices of the American Youth Hostels. A.Y.H. is an organization
to the purpose
which is devoted
and
of helping young people
adults to gain a greater understanding of the world and its
people through outdoor activities,
recreational travel, and creative
group programs. Hosteling provides an inexpensive and interesting way to travel through both
the United States and abroad by
bicycle, foot, canoe, horseback,
or skis. The A.Y.H. sponsors organized trips through the U.S,
and abroad. The hosteler may
also plan his own trips alone or
with a small group, taking advantage of Hostel facilities throughout the world. Anyone who is
interested in joining the Buffalo Hostel Club or who wants
more information call Sharon
Fettes, TA 2-6873 or Peggy
Adams, TT 5-6399.

INTERNATIONAL CLUB
The International Club will hold
a roller-skating party Thursday.
Watch bulletins for time and
place. A small fee to cover rentals will be required. All are welcome.

METAL ARTS GUILD
EXHIBITION

The Fine Arts Council is presenting an exhibition of Metal
Arts December 7 through the 22.
Selections will be from the 1962
Annual San Francisco organization of professional craftsmen.
This group of metal craftsmen,
one of the few of its kind in the
country,, was formed in 1951 to
raise the standard of the craft.
Some of its 45 members work in
metal as a hobby, but most of
them earn their livelihood as artist-craftsmen. and have participated in juried shows and won
awards.
Among the work to be exhibited will be a brass mask, copper
planter, iron turtle, sterling silver tableware, enameled copper
tray and cupro nickel vase. Contemporary jewelry will comprise
the major portion of the show.
The display will be exhibited in
the second floor glass cases of
Norton Union.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
The regular business meeting
of the Occupational Therapy Club
"ill take place today at 3:00 p.m.
;n Room 333,
All members are
urged to attend as
the candy for
our annual canoy sale

nas

ar-

rived and will be ready for disribution. We will also discuss
Ians for our next guest speaker.
OVERSEAS STUDY
meeting
Foreign
anguages will be held Monday,
A0 p.m. in Norton Hall, Room
Che program will include a
icral introduction on foreign
dy, information on. student
nsportation, and information
various foreign study prows in Europe and South AmerChe program will be eonCf
by the following memf the Department of Mod
l anguages and Literature:
no Arcudi, Lecturer in Ital1’eter Boerner, Associate Proor of German; Miss Wilma J.
herry, Assistant Professor of
nsh; Julio Rodreguez, AssistProfessor of Spanish; Gordon
eiber, Professor of Romance
■Wages and
Chairman of the
artment of Modern Languages

informative student
Overseas Study of

An

o

‘

Literature.

PRE LAW STUDENTS
, Z) eam of recruiters from HowU!Uversity Law School will be
campus in Room 231, Norton
ymon, Monday, They wU1 bc jn .
"owing any persons interested
Law School from
1:00-3:00 p.mr
'

'

PAtfE MINI

SPECTRUM

PRE-LAW SOCIETY
Monday, from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30

in Room 231 Norton, there
oe a meeting for all interested pre-law students. Following
this recruitment meeting, we will
adjourn to The Sociology Club
lecture on Civil Rights’ Law. The
speakers will be Professors Reid
and Pacht from Howard University Law School. The lecture will
be held in Norton Room 335 at
3:00 p.m.
p.m.,

wm

PHOTO CLUB

There will be a brief meeting
of the Photography Club today
in Room 266 at 4:00 p.m. Following the meeting, the club will
present two narrated slide shows
from Kodak, entitled “Pictures
Outdoors at Night,” and “Adventures in Outdoor Color Slides.”
All interested persons, whether
members of the club or not, are
invited to attend.
PHARMACY SCHOOL

The Annual Christmas Dance
sponsored by the school of Pharmacy will be held Friday, December 11. For the second consecutive year it will be at the Charter House on Transit Road. Dane
ing will be from 9:00 p.m. to
1:00 a.m., with Dan Santi’s Band
providing the music. Canapes will
be served from 10:00 p.m. on.
There will be entertainment included during the band’s inter-

'Fair Lady' Sought
Columbia Record Distributors
is looking for a “Fair Lady” from
this campus to act as their official
emissary for the opening of Columbia Pictures’ “My Fair Lady”
at the Granada Theater on Main
Street on December 23. The girl
chosen will be Columbia Records'
“Fair Lady.” The promotion campaign will include newspaper,
radio and television coverage.
Any authorized student organization should submit their candidate’s name to Daniel Rose, Director of Radio and Television,
no later than Friday, December
11. There will be judging either
Friday afternoon or Saturday by
Mr. Rose and representatives
from Columbia Records Distributors.
The gifts that the “Fair Lady”
will receive include:
1. Dinner with the guest of
her choice at Santera’s Restaurant.
2. A $50.00 wardrobe awarded
from Sears Roebuck Company.
3. Columbia Records will award
$100.00 worth of albums.
4. Passes will be awarded to
see “My Fair Lady”,
Passes and “My Fair Lady" albums will be given to the sponsoring organization of the “Fair
Lady.”

1

Friday,

Fine.Memorial.Concert Set
Edr Baird Saturday Evening
i

By VICKI BUGELSKI

A special concert in memory of
the late American composer Irving Fine will be given Saturday,
at 8:30 p.m. in Capen Hall. Admission is free and all students
and faculty are cordially invited

to attend.

The concert is an unusual one
in that the performers include
music faculty members, local per
formers, including members of
the Philharmonic, and members
of the newly formed Center of
the Creative and Performing
Arts. All works to be performed
are those of Irving Fine.
The program will include the
Romanza for wind quintet, performed by a Buffalo Philharmonic
wind group. Leo Smit will play
the “Variations” from the “Music
for Piano". “Mutability”, a song
cycle, will be performed by soprano Dorothy Rosenberger and
pianist Dorrit Licht. Three choruses from the “Hour Glass” for
vocal ensemble will be conducted
by Robert S. Beckwith. The Fantasia” for string trio will com-

plete the program, and will be
performed by three of the Crea-

tive Associates.
Irving Fine (1914-1962) was a
graduate of Harvard, and one of
the first pupils of the famous
composition teacher Nadia Boulanger at the Conservatoire at
Fountainbleau. Allen Sapp, chairman of the music department,
was Fine’s first tutorial student
at Harvard. They became good
friends. Fine was a member of

the Boston “neo-classic” school,
and most of his works are in
that style. Later in life he became interested in twelve tone
music, and adapted some of the
techniques to his own style.
Lukas Foss, conductor of the
Buffalo Philharmonic, was also
a good friend of the late composer. Mr. Foss will be conducting the Fine “Serious Song”
at the Philharmonic concerts on
Sunday and Wednesday as a further tribute.
Mrs. Fine and the three Fine
children will be present for the

concert Saturday.

mission.

This semi-formal dance is open

to all students, not just those who
are part of the pharmacy school.

Tickets may be obtained from the
pharmacy office, on the first floor

Sciences

of the Health

Building.

The price is $5.00 per couple.
ROTC CADETS

The new Air Force ROTC legislation, as passed by the Congress
of the United States and signed
by the President October 13, will
be explained to the parents of
Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors
enrolled in Air Science courses
Sunday at 3:00 p.m. in the Fillmore Room of Norton Hall. Air
Science II, III and IV students
are invited.
SOCIOLOGY CLUB
Monday at 3:00 p.m. the Sociology Club will present the

second in its series of provocative lectures. The lecture will be
held in Norton Hall Room 335
with Professors Herbert Reid and
Newton Pacht from Howard University Law School. They will be
speaking on Civil Rights’ Law.

szo
“The Future of the Kibbutz"
will be the topic for panel discussion at this week’s Student
Zionist Organization meeting. All
students are invited.
When? Sunday, at 7:45 p.m
Where 9 Norton 234

good discussion

Why? For

and Israeli Dancing
lon't miss Sunday’s Meeting!

Food,

Kleinhan’s Pop Concert.
featuring Honan Zabach,
violinist, and sponsored by
the University’s J unto r
class seven nursing stu
dents will be held Decern
her 11. at 8:30 p.m. A
dance in the Mary Seaton
Room will follow the concert

Tickets
from any

available

are

Junior

Student, or

at

Nursing
the ticket

office in Norton Union.

He's carrying her away in his dashing
ADLERS but he's clean-white-sock
just the same
They’re headed for the primrose path but they’ll wind up picking flowers. That’s
knowing what to do and when to do it. That’s being clean-white-sock. An attitude
that colors everything you do no matter what color your socks. And you get it only
from Adler. Here all feet wear the Adler SC shrink controlled wool sock. Clean
A Division oI Bui
itfton
THE adler company, CINCINNATI 14. op
white or in eighteen colors. $1.
Indv;

�I

PAGE TEN

Defense of Taipei Opens
Conrad

Friday, December

SPECTRUM

Bromberg’s

powerful

contemporary drama, The Defense of Taipei, opens Wednesday
at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall. Prod u c e d by the Department of
Drama and Speech and the Student Dramatic Society, the play
will run Wednesday thru Satur-

day, December 12. The Baird Hall

box office will be open for advance reservations at 1:00 p.m.
Monday and each day thereafter
for the duration of the run.
Dr. Thomas Watson, assistant
professor of Drama and Speech
and Director of the production,
has announced that 100 free tickets will be available to UB students at each of the four performances on a first come-first
served basis and may be picked
up at the Baird Hall box office

fall, the falsity of living by such
illusions is driven home in a
climatic scene.
The two actors, one Negro and
one white, both wish to live in
a world where there are satisfactory answers to all of the problems of mankind: hate, poverty,
and death. The negro actor, Aime,
wants to believe that the white
man’s world, the world of “them”,
does have all the answers. In
building his own life on such a
foundation, he has been questioned severely about' it by his son.
As the play opens, Aime tells
Don, the white actor, that his
son has disappeared and that he
can no longer remember the boy’s
name. As Aime searches for his
son’s name and memory which
will reveal life’s secret, he comes

—

Ferrante and Teicher

The Kibitzer

—

By SCOTT KURMAN

Tuesday is master-point night.
The only Buffalo Tuesday night
game should not be left depopulated. Two-table Howells are no
fun, anyWay, But enough griping
about that, you’ll all come just
because you want some easy pickin’s. Everyone has a chance to
win; if Bobby Lipsitz and Roger
Pies, perhaps the top college team
in the country, only came in third
at the last one, evidently skill is

not an important factor.
Oh. speaking of Roger and
Bobby, they are teaming up with
Ralph Bartlett and Dick Fleischman tomorrow in Rochester to
slaughter various and sundry college teams in the U. of Rochester
Invitational College Team—of
Four Tournament, or whatever
they happen to call it. As one
of this country’s finest young
players told the editor of the
College Bridge column in the
ACBL Bulletin, ‘‘(This) is definitely the finest college bridge
team in the country.’ Vying for
second place will be; George
Chappel, Don Faix, Sheilda Dowd,

and The Kibitzer; Jose Mellis,
Herb Stein, Bob Keating, and Jon
Edelman; and Sheila Shein, Dottie Gamby, Mel Rosenblatt, and
Mark Hassenberg. Also playing
will be several teams from the
University of Rochester, Genesee-o, and other random schools
that think they have a chance.
William Watkins and Edythe Davis in 'Defense of Taipei'
This is a busy, busy week end for
on the presentation of the stuinto direct conflict with Don, who there will be a meeting of the
dents’ I.D. cards. Dr. Watson has knows that his “truths” are the Greek chapter of the Polytheistic
Society all day Sunday in the
“right” ones.
stated that "We want the distribution of tickets to be fair and
The leading character of Aimc Haas lounge. (See Religious Tidings for further data.) Bachanawill be played by William Watequitable. We will not be able
to hand out a block of seats to kins of Buffalo. Mr. Watkins is lian refreshments will not be
a member of the Ira Aldridge served.
a representative of a club or
fraternity. Each student must Players and has been seen localIt’s double-dummy time
ly in Antigone, Dark of the Moon
pick up his own ticket either durNORTH
and Come Back, Little Sheba.
ing the day or just before curS: K 9 5
Mr. Bromberg will portray Don,
tain time.” He also noted that
H: Q 7 5 3
"We hope, in future years, to
the other actor, acting for the
D: K 7 6 3
be able to make the entire thefirst time in one of his own plays.
C: J 4
atre program on campus availHe was featured last season on
EAST
Broadway in The Advocate. The WEST
able to students at no cost.”
S: Q 6 4 2
Mr. Bromberg, who will be
previous year, he performed the S: 8 7
H: K 10
playing a leading role in his own role of Eilcf in Jerome Bobbin’s H: 8 6 4 2
D: 9 5
play, describes the work as “one production of Brecht’s Mother D: A J 8 4
C: 9 8 7 5 2
Courage. He has been seen off C: K 10 3
that should prove very meaningful to young people, particularly Broadway in T e v y e and His
SOUTH
college students." The play deals Daughters and in The World of
S: A J 10 3
with the attempt to live in a Sholom Aleichem.
H: A J 9
world where false illusions beThe roles of the two actors’
D: Q 10 2
come the guide lines for man’s wives will be played by Edythe
C: A Q 6
very existence. Specifically, the
Davis and Georgia Hester. Miss
Davis is also a member of the
drama centers around two actors in a TV studio who act out Ira Aldridge Players and was
Work at Unisphere Full
spot commercials by and through seen in A Member of the Wedtime all year round.
ding two years ago at UB and in
which these false illusions are
Raisin in the Sun at the Studio
Call
Bob Hoffman or
created and upheld.
The play’s title is taken from Theatre. Miss Hester’s work in
Biggs.
Jim
the theatre has taken her from
one of these playlets in which
two grizzled soldiers stove off
California to New York. In Holly876-1250
successive attacks on Taipei, the wood, she worked at the Charles
capital of Formosa. The theme of Conrad School and in New York
Keep One Good Eye On
this scene is that Taipei will hold with the Equity Library Theatre.
out indefinitely. When during She is currently involved with
the course of the play Taipei does Canadian television.
-

-

-

More no-trumps.

4, 1964

(3

of them)

NORTH

S: Q 7 4 2
H: J 9 3

D: K 8 5 4
C: 9 7

SOUTH

S: A 6 3
H: K 5 2

D-QJ3
Q J

C: A K

0. L. is the heart 4. You insert
the 9 and East plays the ace,
returning a low one. It goes low,
you duck, queen, low. Now West
plays the 10 of hearts back. All
follow. Play it.
Last Friday, the nation-wide
charity game was held. Congratulations are in order for Donny
Faix, who with Mrs. Tillingham,
carried home the second place
honors. You know Donny; freshman, short, sound but completely
unimaginative bidder, and an animal on defense. Sheila Dowd and
Ed George fared moderately well
with some sort of section ward,
and the booby prize goes to
Robert Lipsitz and Roger Pies,
odds-on favorites to walk away
with the event. They got fixed
by their opponents, they got fixed
by their field, they got fixed by
their system, but essentially they
got fixed by each other. But let
us not dote on an off-night of a
brilliant pair; tomorrow is the
triumph. By the way, Bobby has
a five-for-five batting average on
his last team-of-four games, and
I’m booking him at 5-7 right and
2-1 wrong.

Concert at Kleinhans
Music Hall Saturday
At 8:30 p.m. this Saturday,
the piano team of Ferrante and
Teicher will appear at Kleinhans
Music Hall in a program entitled
Ferrante and Teicher “Off the
Record”.

These popular keyboard artists
have in the short space of three
years zoomed to the top of the
popular field with their record
ings of themes from films. These
include “The Apartment”, “Exodus”, “West Side Story", and
“Love Themes from Cleopatra”.

Comblmjig

for varied
with their extra
ordinary musical sensitivity and
technical perfection, and adding
this to their fine sense of humor,
Ferrante and Teicher have con
eeived a musical treat that is all
new and original. Their programs
range from show tunes and popu
lar music to the “pop” classics,
and exhibits their unique ap
proach to the Steinway that
makes the dignified instrument
sound like anything from a bon
go drum to a bass fiddle.

programing

a gift

Having been initially trained
in the classics, Ferrante and Teicher have made the transition
to more popular fare with facility and success, as witnessed by
their pressings of their LP recordings.

Tickets for the engagement are
available at the Norton Hall ticket
office.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

B'ive dubs, responds Tom to
B’wood, without control.

PIZZA
DELIVERED FREE!

837-6120
ALSO FEATURING SUBMARINES,
M'.ATBALL HEROES
ITALIAN SAUSAGE
SOFT DRINKS
—

Dramatic Series Planned
In the next three weeks the
Student Dramatic Society is presenting a series of one-act plays.
The plays will be directed and
acted entirely by students. They
will be presented in the Conference Theater at 4:00 p.m. today,
Friday, December 11, and Friday
December 18. All students are invited to attend free of charge
Today:
“Something Unspoken by Ten
nessee Williams

Randy

’*

“The Ugly Duckling” by A. , A.
Milne
December II
“Miss Julie” by August Strindberg

“The Man With the Flower in
His Mouth” by Luigi Pirandello
December 18
“The American Dream” by Ed
ward Albee
“The Zoo Story by Edward A1
■ bee
The Coffee Machine” by Grace
Martin

The

Amoco Station

Tiercad Ear

ATLAS PRODUCTS

3626 Main (near Bailey)
featuring pierced
earings and the

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300 KENMORE AVENUE
BUFFALO NEW YORK
phone 836-8961
,

pierced

look.

832 -7579

REGINA PIZZERIA
3292 MAIN STREET
Now Open Monday

�December 4, 1964

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

WSWUi

mmm

Chess Tourney Set

Attention, all chessplayers
from masters down to woodpushBy LEON LEWIS
ing patzers. In case you do not
already know, I take this opportunity to inform you about a
This column has not appeared The Outrage. The original, a special type tournament which
for several weeks, but that is not Japanese film directed by the we have initiated just for you.
because my enthusiasm for the extrordinarily talented Akira
This is a never ending informal
the cinema has waned. There Kurosawa from a 13th Century tournament which allows you to
not
much
Japanese
has
been
to
talk
was
one
folk-tale,
just
of find out exactly how you rate
about in Buffalo recently. And the finest movies of our generaagainst the others players who
unfortunately, because most of tion. It told the story of a man
are brave enough to enter. To
feel
that
a
holiand
his
wife
who are attacked enter, you pay
the distributors
50c to the presiprofitby
be
most
a
bandit
while ridings through
day opening will
or treasurer of the Chess
a forest. The wife is raped and dent
able for their best attractions,
and
sign into the register
Club
nothing special will be available
the husband murdered, or so it
book. Then you challenge any
seems. We get a chance to hear
until after the beginning of the
other entered player to a match
the captured bandit’s version of
Christmas recess when it will be
game which you arrange to play
loo late to do anyone much good
what happened, the distraught
at your own convenience. The
anyway. However, for those of wife’s version, the dead husband’s winner reports the names of the
you who may be seeking some (through a medium) and what players and the date of the
surcease from the often wearing seems to be an unbiased account and the outcome to Mr. R.game
J,
routine of classes and exams, 1 of a passerby who witnessed the Lewyckyj. He
is in charge of
have a number of suggestions. entire incident from a concealed keeping the score.
First, if you want to see a place. The point is that truth is
The scoring of the tournament
a very relative thing. The movie
really fine, exciting movie, catch
the revival of The Great Escape is a very subtle investigation of is the same as the postal chess
at the North Park For all of the
the necessity for manufacturing rating system. Each new player
a particular reality to satisfy a enters with a score of 900 points.
things that anyone sensible goes
psychological condition. By the From there he gains or loses
to a movie for
adventure, extime we have all four versions, points depending rfh his wins. If
citement, drama, artistic inventhe possibility of finding the equally rated players play, the
tion, insight into the human conwinner gains and the loser drops
“objective” truth seems remote.
dition and the like this picture
The Hollywood conception is 50 points. If unequally rated
has in abundance. But if you’ve
already seen it three or four something else again. By the players play, the higher rated
times and are beginning to say time the various characters have player gains fewer points if he
wins than he drops if he loses;
th&lt;
the lower player gains more if
he wins. In case of a draw, the
higher player loses and the lower
player gains some points. If the
difference in the ratings of the
players is 500 points or over, the
higher rated player has nothing
to gain while the lower rated
player has everything to gain.
The current score for the listed
players will be posted on the
recreation area bulletin board
bi-weekly or as often as needed.
You are all invited to join
this tournament and find out how
-

-

Boon* gestures dramatically! Jim Brown looks on.
and Richard Attenborough, you
might try one of the following.
Rio Conchos, an expensive,
colorful western now playing at
the Kensington is a ridiculous
movie but lots of fun. There is
no social commentary of any
kind, the plot is far-fetched, the
characters are hardly anything
more than interesting stereotypes
and the story is old-hat. But the
movie is far from boring anyway.
All of the best cliches of the
traditional western are delivered
in rapid-fire fashion. The expectations of the audience are superbly set up and then satisfyingly
fulfilled. When it looks like some
ugly minor character whom we
will never see again is spoiling
for a fight, one of the protagonists wips his hide in fine fashion. When Richard Boone and
Jim Brown (yes the great fullback! . . . and more than carrying his weight too in his “acting
debut”) are tortured by the “bad”
Indians, we know that they sure
will get even (and they do). Because of his honesty in the face
of overwhelming temptation, we
all hope that Stuart Whitman
will make it with the understanding and attractive Indian maid,
and as the picture closes, it looks
like he will.
Boone swaggers; Brown is stoic,
cool and tremendously heroic;
Whitman is doggedly honest and
joyal to his country; and Tony
Franciosa is amusingly despicable
as a larcenous, lecherous semiAmerican foreigner of apparently Spanish origin. Edmund O’Brien has a few wonderful scenes
as the unreconstructed Rebel
General who is building a fantastic Southern Mansion—m a gnolias, gables and all—in the
middle of the Brazos desert
south of the Rio Grande. The plot
-

is

too

preposterous to even begin
watching Boone

to relate, but

and Brown and the others going
through the motions con brio will
probably keep all but the most

serious-minded

relatively happy.
Another interesting effort in
the Western genre is the. Hollyw ood remake of Rathomon called

are too confused to really care.
Like many American movies, too,
the basic story has been juiced
up with some preaching about
man’s inhumanity to his fellow
creatures which comes across
with all the originality of a third
grade Civics lesson. The incident

itself, aside from the arty direction and the pseudo-oriental camera work, is not handled badly
and the acting is frequently quite
absorbing, sometimes for reasons
other than those intended by
the actors.
The first three times we see
the “outrage,” the story is pretty
heavy stuff. Lots of wailing,
shrieking, bleeding and fighting
all done with a high seriousness. But the story told by the
paserby is something else. The
director, Martin Ritt, has decided
to gag it up and the results are
not only a pleasant relief but

you rate compared to your
friendly opponents.
For further information, please

contact:

Graduate
Edward Thebault
Student Association
Rostyk Lewyckyj—ext. 4047
Garry Boldt—TL 3-2696,
—

Carrasco. He
mumbles, scratches, sweats and
appears to be enjoying himself
at all times. His enthusiasm is
cpmmunicated to the audience,
too. I would nbt call what he is
doing acting exactly, but he does
give a fine, thoroughly enjoyable
“performance.” Clair Bloom is
effective and occasionally moving
as the wife and Laurence Harvey,
Mexican bandit

although hardly a distinguished
actor, does a fine job in the last,

comic version of the story. For
the other three, he is bound and
gagged. This cuts down his expressiveness somewhat, but that
was never really his strong point
anyway. It’s not Rashomoh, but
then, it’s not really too bad. And
for that matter, if we waited
until another Rashomon came
along, we’d probably never go to

By

cussion ensemble.

The program is an especially
varied one, and includes music
from the sixteenth century to
contemporary. The Haydn Divertimento for wind quintet, which
includes the famous Chorale St.
Antoni, which Brahms used for
his “Haydn Variations”, will be
featured. Works of Buxtehude.
K.P.E. Bach, Mozart, Elliot Carter and Carlos Chavez will also be
included. Carlos Chavez was once
a Slee Professor here. Students
from all divisions of the university will be performing in the

1428 HERTEL 4VE-' TF6-E4II

#

—

■ MEUKAMERCOURI MAXIil lAR SCIEIL
■

(Wppu
Iwhere the /swell enjl

sion free.
The third Sloe Lecture and
concert has been postponed to
December 18, 8:30 p.m., Capen
Hall, admission free. Alexei Haieff, Slee professor, will give the
lecture. Guest performer for the
evening will be w o r 1 d-famous
harpsichordist Sylvia Marlowe,
who will be performing contemporary works.
The UB Little Symphony under
Dr. Robert Mols of the music
faculty will present a concerto
program with student soloists
Thursday, December 17, at 4:30
p.m. in Baird Hall, admission
free.

The .parking lot fronting Main Street near Baird

Hall is now completed and
all students are requested
to use this lot when other
lots are full.
Parking on the roadways is prohibited by the
University because of City
Fire Regulation. The City
of Buffalo provides the
University Fire Protection,
therefore the University
enforces this regulation.
The area in front of
the tower will be closed to
parking after midnight
during the winter months
in order to facilitate clearing of snow in this area.

Saturday night, at Capen. (See

The annual Christmas Concert,
which features t h e University
choruses directed by Robert
Sacks, will be given Friday, December 11, at 8:30 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room of Norton Union,
admission free. The concert will
be repeated the following Sund a y, December 18, at Trinity
Episcopal Church in downtown
Buffalo, at 7:00 p.m. The highlight of the concert will be the
performance of the Midnight
Mass of French baroque composer Marc-A n t o i n e Charpentier.
This composition- is based on
French Noels, or Christmas car-

vko
goes

“CHEERED
AND
HONORED

&amp;

M? V
•&gt;

•&gt;

.BocfcVDoRis/

Tomy

noOfiOM \Day/ RaNoatt

At The Cannes

Film Festival
It Deserves
Its Accolades!”

H&gt;J

•vj-SwdImb wju
f'tTr flMM *7)

—

Vm^-yfessssr
STUDENT DISCOUNT
With Proper I.D. Cerd

•

GREATESCAPE
RATES

THE NEW YORK TIMES

BARBARA BARRIE BEST ACTRESSAWAKO
CANNES FIM IBM
KME HAMILTON IS SflfNDIO!"
—

STUDENT
Mon.

Creative Associates will be giving concerts December 14 and 16
in Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m., admis-

article).

STIVE McQUEER JAMES GAHKER

THE

Mass is based.

ensembles.
Irving Fine Memorial Concert,

2nd SMASH WEEK!

MorthPari^^l

ols. and Mr. Sacks will also conduct this music' on which the

VICKI BUGEUSKI

An Evening of Woodwind,
Brass and Percussion Chamber
Music will be given tonight at
8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall (admission free).
Frank J. Cipolla, the director
of the University’s bands, will
conduct the brass choir. Richard
Rodean will conduct the woodwind chamber ensembles, the
clarinet choir, and the saxophone quartet. John Bergamo and
Jan Williams, who are Creative
Associates, will direct the per-

49 Edward
TL 2- 9338
BUFFALO FOLK CENTER
to serve your entertainment needs

...

are actually quite satisfactory as
straight comedy. One has the
feeling that this is what really
happened, which tends to undercut all that we’ve seen so far.
The fact that the character’s most
tangible reality lies in a comic
projection also gives them a curious kind of humanity which they
had lacked previously.
Paul Newman is fine as the

Coming Music Events Listed

—

i

Friday,

Th» N»w Yarktr

Thurt.

-

Fri.-Sat.Sun.
\

&gt;
o

A

if

WOODY HERMAN J
and His Orchestra

I

Royal Arms
19 W. UTICA
885-6262

XWEPOHia
1M0MD0D*
A CINEMAY PRESENTATION

CBMS*
13KSWiiirwM«r
Student Rates

7:30-9:30

�Friday, December 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Excerpts of Dr. Aptheker's Speech on Marxism

democratic.

,

Probably the single most common stereotype in connection with revolution in general and Marxism-Leninism in particular is to equate it with violence. In fact, the government's position is that Marxism-Leninism means essentially the advocacy of force and
violence for the overthrow of free enterprise social orders.
When the Communist Party points out that its Constitution specifically repudiates
any idea or advocacy of the use of force and violence against, the United States government
and provides for the expulsion of any member advocating such ideas or action, this is dismissed as Aesopian or self-serving.
When the Party points to the fact that it has several times in the past actually expelled people for such advocacy and or provocation, including police agents planted in the
Party, this also has been dismissed as self-serving and mere camouflage. The fact is that
equating violence with the nature and process of revolution is itself incorrect, I think.
Violence may or may not appear in such a process and its presence or absence is not a
determining feature of the definition.
How, then, should one view the relationship of violence to revolution?
First there is the historical view, the view conveyed in Marx's well-Known observation, "that force, is the mid-wife of every old society which is pregnant with the new."

This observation, however, is not advocacy; it is observation. It is taking the account
of the fact, certainly a fact when Marx was writing, that hitherto social changes sufficiently
t
fundamental to be called revolutions had not occurred peacefully.
It is also an observation which rules out the adoption of pacifism as an ideology fully
suitable for a revolutionary, but it most certainly does not constitute the advocacy of force
and violence by the revolutionary himself.
Often people fall into the error of thinking that one must be either a pacifist or a
flaming advocate of terror and violence a la Hollywood’s version of a revolutionary. There
are not, however, only these two alternatives, and most people are neither pacifists nor
terrorists. Most people, certainly in the United States, adhere to the position set fortli in
the Declaration of Independence and in the Constitutions of many of the states in our union.
That position is summed up in Jefferson's favorite motto, “Resistance to tyranny is
obedience to God."
When, as in Jefferson’s day, tyrannical and reactionary government sought to maintain itself in power here through the systematic employment of armed repression and assault, resistance to that effort which we call the American Revolution was just and proper.
The position of the Declaration of Independence on the question of force.and violence and
revolutionary process is the position taken by Marxism-Leninism. This is argued very

■

persuasively, I might add, by John Summerville, Professorof Philosophy at,Hunter College
in New York City, in his book, "The Communist Trials and The American Tradition,”
published in New York in 1956, and in making that point Professor Summerville is, in my
view, correct.
I think this needs to be added when one examines the full content of the Marxian
view concerning the historic relationship between the revolutionary process and the use of
violence; he finds that it is insisted that, where violence has accompanied revolutionary
culmination it has appeared because, the old class, facing elimination due to social development has chosen to try to postpone its internment by resulting to the violence oppression
of the challenging classes and forces. The source of the violence if and when It appears is
in reaction. It is in response to that challenge that resistance may be offered, and if such
resistance is successful, then the revolutionary process may come to fruition.
There are no more apt Illustrations of this principle than the first and second
American Revolutions; In one the British Crown turned to the policy of armed repression
to prevent the full implementation of the rights of Englishmen among, as the king said,
near-colonists.
In the second, dominant elements among the plantation slave-holding oligarchy resorted to violent counter revolution in art effort tp destroy what, was then the most advanced
democratic government in the world and
effort to make perpetual the institution of

■

Negro, slavery.

Resistance to the armed violence of reaction was often, in each case by the forces

of social progress, only after much- delay and vacillation. When finally it was offered
in the first place the
and was successful, revolutionary transformations occurred
elimination of a colonial, relationship plus considerable democratic advance; in the other
confirming the unitary nature of our republic and confiscating billions of dollars worth
-

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of private property through the illegalization of slave holding.
Since the source of violence lies in reaction, whether or not it will appear depends
not so much upon the will to use it but rather upon the capacity to use it. This is why in
the history of Marxism-Leninism there have been differing evaluations at different
times as to the possibilities of the peaceful or relatively peaceful transition to Socialism.
in the latter par; of the 19th century both Marx and Engels thought that this might
be, possible in the United States, Great Britain and Holland, largely, as they said, because
of the weli-deveioped bourgeois democratic systems prevailing there and the relative

absence then of

highly

concentrated

establishments.

military

be, the more irrelevant will be conspiracy, the more indiginous will be its roots, and the
x
more necessary will be the deepest involvement of the vast majority of the population.
It is counterrevolution which is antidemocratic and therefore conspiratorial
in nature. Counterrevolution, hostile to the interests of the vast majority, contemptuous
of that majority, elitist and exploitative, finds it necessary to operate by stealth through
deliberate deception and with dependence often upon the precipitation of violence.
Prime examples in our own era are the Franco rape of Spain and the CIA-engineered
overthrows of the Mosadaic-government in Iran, and the Arbens government in Guatemala,
and the attempted CIA overthrow of the Castro government in Cuba in 1961, These are
examples, 1 think, of truly unpopular and therefore secretive and conspiratorial and, by
■the way, foreign-based.
these are counterrevolutionary,
Governmental changes or attempted changes
not revolutionary. The ruling class charge of conspiratorial hurled against revolutionary
movements has the obvious inspiration, in my opinion, of serving to condemn such movements and as a pretext for efforts to illegalize them and to persecute their advocates
and adherents.
COMMUNISM IS NOT A CONSPIRACY AND COMMUNISTS ARE NOT CONSPIRATORS.
From Engels’ "Principles of Communism,’’ written in 1847, where one reads. "Communists know only too well that all conspiracies are not only useless but even harmful";
to Lenin’s "Tasks of Russian Social Democrats," written fifty years later, where Lenin
said of himself and his comrades, “They do not believe in conspiracies; they think that
the period of conspiracies is long passed away”; to Demetrov’s denial of the saying slander
at the Reichstag, Fire Trial; to Eugene Denis’ denial of it at the First Follev Square Trial;
to Elizabeth Gurley Flihn' s denial of it at the Second Follev Square Trial, both of the latter
under the conspiracy section of the Smith Act, Communists have always opposed and continue
to oppose conspiracy.
The late Professor Zachariah Chafey, Jr., in his standard work,"Freedom of
Speech in the United States,” wrote, "No one can soberly contend that the Communist
Party is a conspiracy.”
In our time, when the fullest implementation in every aspect of popular sovereignty
is on the historical agenda, the democratic and anticonspiratorial character of the revolutionary process is especially clear. This is why Engels, back in 1895 in an introduction to
Marx's “The Class Struggle in France,” was able to write, "The time of surprise attacks,
or revolutions carried through by small conscious minorities at the head of unconscious
masses, is past. Where it is a question of a complete transformation of the social organization the masses themselves must also be in it, must themselves have grasped what is at
stake and what they are going in for with body and soul. The history of the past fifty
years,” concluded Engels, "has taught us that.”.
I think the history of the years since has further confirmed this view. At any rate,
and certainly it is the view of Marxism-Leninism as Lenin insisted in his work," A Dual
Power,” ”We are not, blankish: we are not in favor of the seizure of power by a minority.”
A usual adornment to ruling class propaganda about the antidemocratic and conspiratorial character of revolutionary movements is to insist that they are also alien
inspired or in fact treasonous. This is a fundamental charge against the Communist Party
under the McCarrbn Act, and it always has been reaction’s special kinard against MarxismLeninism. For example, here are the words of Adolf Hitler: "The Communist Party is
a section of a political movement which has its headquarters abroad and is directed from
abroad. We look on Communism,” said Adolf Hitler, "as a world peril for which there must
be no toleration.”
This is precisely the view and the position of the McCarron Act. The basic source
for all such charges, I think, is the ruling class' rationalization for their own domination.
Such classes always insist that the orders they dominate are idealic and that nothing but
devotion and contentment characterize the people fortunate to live under their aegis.
Hence, when American Communists are labeled foreign agents, they have been
placed within very select companies, including Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, William
Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, Robert M. La Follette and William Edward Burghardt
Du Bois. The labeling was wrongand malicious in the past. It is wrong and malicious today,
BUT IS MARXISM-LENINISM IRRELEVANT TO MODERN AMERICA? I THINK NOT.
I think the essential purpose of it is the elimination of exploitation and oppression. In our
era this means, I think, the elimination of monopoly.capitalism, of racism, colonialism,
impoverishment and war. Were there no such conditions and relations, there would be no
revolutionary philosophy, no revolutionary movement, and no Marxism.
Said Marx in commenting oh the ideas and organization of Socialism just after the
Paris Commune had been drowned in blood, "The soil out of which it grows is modern
society itself. It cannot be. stamped out by any amount of carnage. To stamp it .out the
government would have to stamp out the despotism of capital over labor, the conditions
of its own parasitical existence."
It is here in the United States that a most respectable figure, speaking six months
after the guns had fallen finally silent in World War II, denounced the New Deal as a
foreign concoction, as, "a conspiracy to sterilize the strength arid paralyze the purpose
of Americans who saw us lie in the alarriiing image of Communist Russia.”
This distinguished figure then announced, "The brutal fact is that the war has left
us facing an uncertaining world of beggars or robbers, whom it has bankrupted of spiritual
and material resources for peaceful self-supporting life henceforth.”
Faced with this, condition this profound savant, still himself retaining spiritual
resources, urged that the United States, fully possessed of material resources, use those
to subdue the world. Specifically this was his program: "Let us offer the utmost capacity
of our economic power for reconstruction to every people who will undertake to abolish
all national military expenditure and disarm down to the level of the local constabulary,
"Let us secondly demand the unlimited right of continuous Inspection and control
of every industrial Operation and process, of every public policy which may have the most
remote relationship to armament and warfare. And finally, let us make, keep and improve
our atomic bombs for this imperative purpose. Let us suspend those bombs in principle
over every place in the world where we have any reason to suspect evation or conspiracy
against our purpose, and let us drop them in fact promptly and without compunction wherever
it is defied."
Had these been the ravings of seme village idiot they would still merit concern as
reflecting elements of societal sickness. Alas, however, they were the deliberate remarkof Dr. Virvil Jordan, then President of the National Industrial-Conference Board, made
at the Union League Club in Philadelphia on Lincoln’s Birthday, 1946, before an audienct
of 500 of the leading American financiers and industrialists who, the contemporary
,

Almost exactly two years ago my appearance at this University was objected to
initially by The Honorable Mr. Mahoney, Majority Leader of the New York State Senate.
As the result of the proceedings begun by him, it took a prolonged legal battle waged by
the University to make it possible for me to return to Buffalo.
I am happy to be here and I note that while I have returned to Buffalo, Mr. Mahoney
is not to return to Albany. Permit me to express the opinion that both are victories for
democracy. I now turn to my speech.
The main substance of the accusations against the Communist Party and against
Marxism-Leninism hurled a thousand times a day via all media of communication and embodied in the Sfnith-McKaren Acts amounts to charges of its being an alien conspiracy,
committed to the use of force and violence and the overthrow of democratic governments
such as that in the United States.
Let us briefly within the very severe limits of one afternoon's talk consider the
substance of each of these charges, i.e. advocacy of violence alien-inspired and anti-

s

With significant ..shifts in the situation, such, estimates altered, as when, during
World War 1 with its intense militarization. Lenin asserted that peaceful transition was
not possible. But it is to be noted that this was an estimate arising out of a consideration
of the strength of reaction and its readiness to use violence. When this same Lenin thought
he saw in April Ibl7 a profound decay in the strength of reaction in Russia, he projected
the possibility then in Russia of the advance peacefully to Socialism.
It is relevant to observe that tue Communist Parties of Portugal and Spain in reported, enthusiastically applauded.
recent policy- declarations affirmed that they saw the possibility, in their countries of
It is the material relationships and interests that produce such spokesmen,
the peaceful transition to Socialism, and this in countries where Racism rules.
morals, such vistas, that simultaneously produce their opposites. It is'out of such
’
The estiniate is based, on the relationship of forces in the world. And especially that the tree of radical dissent springs and it is out of opposition to such husband
ipside Europe today are the very precarious hold ■ that Fbanco stills has upon Spain, that the harvest of revolutionary transformation is reaped.
the developing force of public opinion and anti-Facist organisation -in Portugal, and the
Even here in our United States, in golden America, thrice blest with its continent
disintegration of her colonial empire. Here again the opinion is based upon an estimate size, its inexhaustible resources, its repeated invieoration by the coming of millions
cl the power ot reaction to prevent its own replacement.
people from the four corners of the earth decade after decade, its. separation from t:
Violence is not an organic part of the definition of the process of revolution. The continual
wars ravaging Europe and Asia and Africa, wars from which, on the who
conventional presentation which equates violence with revolution is false. The view which America grew richer, its parasitic relationship to the so-called underdeveloped peopi
places the oneness for the appearance of violence in connection with basic social change of the earth, especially in Latin America, peoples who are underdeveloped becau
If it does appear upon the advocates of such change is altogether wrong!
they have been over exploited, even here and still .today the four historic crosses
W here violence does' accompany revolutionary' transformations it owes its origin mankind
impoverishment, illiteracy, inequality and war---lie heavy upon, its bac
and takes its Impulse from the forces of reaction which seek to drown the future in blood.
Impoverishment
Somewhere between 30 and 50 million Americans and, a
Next to that stereotype which identifies revolution with violence, none is more cording to the National Bureau of Economic, Research perhaps as many as 77 mild
widespread than that which places revolution as anti-factual to democracy. One hears today lie in the grip of poverty in the pursuit of sufficient food to keep body togethe
frequently the question of social change posed as being between two alternatives
Meanwhile, about 5 million workers who desire employment find themselves totau
either the democratic- or the revolutionary, with the clear inference at least that the two without work and the impact of automation and cybernetics has just begun.
are mutually exclusive.
Illiteracy
Today, states the National Education Association, 11 million adu
The idea of revolution as being opposed to democracy carries with it also the view Americans are quite illiterate, and functional illiteracy afflicts perhaps twice as man;
of the revolutionary' process.as being conspiratorial and often alien-inspired.
There are indeed, says that Association, 17 states in our nation now where over W
If the widest possible popular participation at its most intense level be basic to the of the adult population can neither read nor write.
.
I
process
of
I think it is
meaning
democracy
then the whole revolutionary
and
Inequality
For this, percentages are not necessary. When it come? to th
and
the phenomena of racism, anti-Semitism and chauvinism, our nation is outstanding. Its su
culmination, far from being contrary to democracy, represents its quintessence,
more fundamental the nature of the revolutionary; process the more democratic it will ■prpmary in thU rpgarH iv Phallpngpd only pgrhnpr hy thp Rgpnhlir of Smith Africa.
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�Friday,

December 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE

THIRTEEN

Aptheker Excerpts (cont'd)
No'civilized human being can read the factual record as presented in the 2000 pages
of the 1961 and 1963 reports of the United States Civil Rights Commission without wincing
and no American who loves this country and takes pride in the dream of his land can read
those reports without tears of shame and outrage.
And war
The militarization of our society, the pervading and perverting Impact
of war preparations upon our economy, the scandal of the Bay of Pigs and the atrocity of
these, I think, need only be mentioned.
intervention in South Vietnam
It is not a Communist but rather the most honored historian of the western world
who writes in a book recently published by the Oxford University Press, "America is
today the leader of a world-wide anti-revolutionary movement in defense of vested interest.
She stands now for what Rome stood for. Rome consistently supported the rich against
the poor in all foreign communities that fell under her sway, and since the poor so far
have always and everywhere been far more numerous than the rich, Rome's policy made
for inequality, for injustice and for the least happiness for the greatest number. Lafayette,"
concludes our writer, “pays a high psychological price when he transforms himself into
Metternich.”

peace.

Now, for reasons not unconnected with the fact that I am being permitted to speak
here today and Mr. Mahoney is not returning to Albany, now voices are appearing more
and more frequently from eminently respectable scholars, insisting upon the deep relevance
of Marxism to the United States. Permit me a few examples. In Sociology, Professor
Kenneth Weintraub writes in 1964, "We could possibly tolerate our ideological neglect
of Marx in an era of extreme isolationism. With Africa, Asia and Latin America on the
move we become grievously Incapacitated to know what is going bn and how to participate
in events because of this indifference."
Sidney Linds, well-known writer, has devoted his most recent book to documenting
the point Professor Weintraub is making, namely that antl-Communism as a practice and
an ideological blinder has severely hurt the United States. Mr. Linds, in fact, entitles
this latest book, 1 am giving you the title, “The Futile Crusade, Anti-Communism As
American Credo." The results of that credo, Mr. Linds finds, "have been disastrous to
our world leadership, morally and politically."
The Reverend Dr. Males S. Ferry, Professor of Christian Theology at Andover
Newton Theological School in Massachusetts, speaking this month at the annual convocation
of the School of Religion at Howard University, urged their consideration of the necessity
for what he called a Christo-Communism. He suggested that Cuba today was a good example
of this kind of effort, and Dr. Ferry stated. "Cuba is definitely determined to achieve
progressive reconstruction on behalf of its people. The least the church can do is to understand, better still to accept and to help.”
William Appleman Williams, Professor of American History at the University
of Wisconsin, entitles his latest volume, published in October 1964, "The Great Evasion.”
Here is the subtitle of that volume: "An Essay on the Contemporary Relevance of Karl
jMarx and of the Wisdom of Admitting That Heretic into the Dialogue about America's
Future." In this work, Professor Williams writes, "Of all the evasions In which Americans
'have indulged themselves, the most serious one is very probably their persistent flight
from any intellectual and moral confrontation with Karl Marx,” and further, "the reality
of Marx offers insights and ideals that America desperately needs if it is to cope effectively
with the reality of its present and projected problems, and if it is to realize its great

j

I have quoted the words of Sir Arnold Toynbee from his book,"America and The
World Revolution," published in 1962.
In the face of this kind of reality and these kinds of policies, is a basically radical
critique of the United States as it is today outmoded? Is it irrelevant?
This, quite apart from its being labeled un-American or subversive or seditious,
words which no American who knows the finest traditions of our country and has the barest
inkling of its history, from the days of the Jeffersonians to those of the abolitionists, from
the days of that old rebel George Washington to those of that old jailbird Eugene Victor
Debs, words that no American so armed with knowledge can hear as applied to himself
without bristling and without contempt for the Ignorant slanderers.
1 say rather, that in the face of this kind of reality any effort to curb the fullest
and most radical critique and analysis of our society is the most serious disservice to
our country. If anything is un-American, it is, to use the words of a Supreme Court
Justice, the black pole of fear that hangs still over intellectual life and discussion in our
country as the result of over a decade of McCarthyism and McCarronlsm.
The majority of mankind still, as the reports of the United Nations tell us, the
majority are cronically hungry, are quite illiterate, live under conditions of inequality
and indignity, and carry the fearfulburden of pain for past wars and preparing for new ones.
In our era technical and productive developments and social organization have
reached a point where none of these need be endured any longer. Knowledge of this
momentous fact is out now. The people of the world know that they can end their suffering
and that they can make a life of fruitfulness, creativity, fraternity and peace. It is this
knowledge, and not thermonuclear energy, which is the greatest force in the world today and
and it will not be denied.
I think the Irrefutable confirmation, all facts considered, of that truth is the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics. No more difficult testing ground of Socialism could be found
than the one in which it first was tested, economically backward to begin with and this
backwardness intensified by the devastation of the First World War.
Mass illiteracy, mass hunger, mass superstition, a ring of hostility about her blockade and intervention her portion, and always the penalty of being first, as Thorstein Veblen
put it, and being first in the most difficult and most decisive undertaking yet to come before man.

hilaration in the skill and virtuosity of highly trained performers; there is respect for
the creative vocation. The people are learning unremittingly to take pride in art as in
learning. To be cultured is regarded as one of the highest goods."
These great historic, material and spiritual contributions of the Soviet Union are
the decisive features of the 1917 Revolution.
The failures, the tragedies, the crimes have been emphasized and over-emphasized
in the United States, but these are not the decisive things. The great accomplishments
despite everything are the decisive things. To be a friend of that event and a friend of that
effort, not a fanatical partisan, but a friend is, I insist, to be,a friend of freedom and of

potential."
Finally, while calling into court the testimony of American scholars, there are
the words of the late Professor C. Wright Mills, so tragically cut down at the height
of his powers when only 46 years of age. Like Mills, in the book that appeared on the
very day of his death, a book called "The Marxist” and marking really only the beginnings
of his efforts to develop his own rounded attitude toward Marxism, in that book the late
Professor Mills said, "Both Marxism and Liberalism embody the Ideals of Greece, Rome
■and

Jerusalem, the Humanism of the Renaissance, the Rationalism of the 18th century

enlightenment and,” he added, "Karl Marx remains the thinker who had articulated most
clearly and most perilously the basic ideals which Liberalism shares.” I think in seeing
this continuity the late Mills wrote truly, in an opposite way I would suggest.
Goebels expressed the same thought when, entering prostrate Paris with the vlctorlous Nazi troops, he exhaulted, "Now we will finish with 1789 and 1917.”
In dedication to the long and hard struggle to eliminate poverty, human indignity,
racism, cultural deprivation and above all, in this era. war, Marxism knows and emphasizes
that these goals are common to those held by partisans of the enlightenment and upholders
of the great religions.
But it is not only in the material groundwork that unparalleled advances, despite
Were Communists alone in this dedication, they would certainly fall. They are not
almost insuperable difficulties, have been achieved. In the words of Mr. Howard Towdman, alone, however, and together, all of us who stand opposed to systematized exploitation
writing in the New York Times in the summer of 1958, "There is a genuine dedication to and systematized extermination which means war will, exactly because we do stand'
artistic ideals in the Soviet Union; there is a pervasive love of beauty; there is an ex- together, overcome the forces of evil and fulfill the promise of man.
some 20 million killed. Alexander
And then the supreme test of World War II
Worth tells us in his latest book, 20 million killed, 25 million wounded, half the homes
destroyed, half the cattle slaughtered, schools, libraries, hospitals, factories gutted,
whole cities disemboweled, but victorious. And then, despite hostility once more, Respite
frightful human error and crimes again, still are the unbreakable foundations of Socialist
organization and will, rebuilding better than before and forging ahead with one of the fastest
rates of economic growth in the world, and already the second industrial power with some
possibilities of becoming first.

1

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DISMISSAL
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

of Dr. Furnas, Dr. Furnas stated
that he did not “see that this
has anything to do with academic
freedom. His (Mr. Sporn’s) case
was considered by committee of
his peers from the State University System.” President Furnas
further noted that no one on the
committee was from this campus
in accordance with procedures
of the State University for dealing with matters of this sort.
“All the due processes have been
followed and the decision was
entirely the judgements of his
peers.” Dr. Furnas which asked
about Mr. Sporn’s teaching qualifications commented that these
qualifications had nothing to do
with the termination of Mr.

Sporn’s position. It was completely a matter of his “personal
intergrity."
Mr. Sporn received his B.A.
at N.Y.U. and became a teaching
fellow at UB in 1959 and an instructor in 1960, The position he
held until his suspension on June
8, 1964.

SPORN STATEMENT

“In terminating my services as
a teacher at, the University of

Buffalo, the administration of the
State University of New York
has once again chosen to act unconstitutionally and to violate

academic freedom. The termina

'■on is simply another act in the
dirty work begun by the House'
I n-American Activities Commit'ce iHUAC), and in which the
L niversity administration h a S
Played a prominent and discreditable part. Its part has been so
wanting in regard for academic
freedom that there is reason to
believe it , fears the reaction of
,ts faculty and its student body.
The report of the Standing

Committee on Terminations,
which accompanied President
Samuel B. Gould’s letter notifying me of my dismissal, and the
transcripts of the two hearings
held this summer are reasons
enough for such fear. In the first
place, the report and the transcripts show conclusively that,
contrary to President F u r n a s’
claim early in June, the administration does not have substantial
evidence to sustain, its charge
against me. In the -second place,
the report and the transcripts
show' that, contrary to the UB
Council’s denial reported on
tober 10, the University’s action
is directly related to the HUAC
hearings held here in Buffalo last
April.
The report admits on its own
that the administration's case
hinges primarily on the evidence
of the paid government witness,
Andrew Berecz. who testified for
HUAC in April. The report ad
mils that this evidence is largely
belief, opinion, and hearsay rath
er than fact.
The report also
admits that the grounds it uses
to sustain the charge will not
bear judicial scrutiny.
The injustice of the action
taken and the weak argument
sustaining' it may explain why the
administration released the information the day before the
Thanksgiving holidays, when faculty and students were dispersing, although it had come to its
decision almost two weeks before
November 12 a n d had mailed
out its notification to me
November 16. The administration,
apparently, follows a pattern of
making information available on
the eve of major holidays. Last
year, it informed the faculty only’
a short time before the Christmas
holidays that they would have to

sign Feinberg Certificates. Now
it has chosen Thanksgiving. Is
the administration afraid to release these matters when its staff
and students can deliberate them
without distraction?
All this, apparently, demonstrates that at no step from the
launching of the charges against
me by President Furnas to the

final

decision of the Board of

Trustees, has anyone in the upper
echelons of the administration or
on the hearing committee had

sufficient courage, intellectual integrity, regard for academic freedom, or for the United States’
Constitution till oppose an action
which has already stained the
University’s reputation nationally-

oCetterA

to

(Cont’d from P. 5)
To the Editor:

According to general consensus,
when Dr. Aptheker came here to
speak, this was a great victory
for “academic freedom”. The ar
gument for this is that college
students should be sufficiently
well-educated and mature to listen to a Communist. I agree that
we all should be, but I say that
some of us are not—and the
applause for Dr. Aptheker showed it.

I wonder how much of what the
Communist said was believed by
enough of our “mature" and
“well educated" students to generate their applause? Did they
believe that communism is nonviolent when it has preached and
carried out the liquidation of
ant i-Communist elements wherever it has taken power? Did they
believe that communism is "dem
ocratic" when there has not been
a shred of democracy in any
Communist c o u n t ry anywhere,
from Stalin’s purges to Khru
shchev’s ouster? Did they believe
that communism is such a para
dise when it has to build walls
to keep its people from fleeing,
when its soldiers kill those who
try to go over the wall, and when
the armed might of the USSR
was used to crush a genuine
“people’s revoluiton” in Hungary?
Did they believe that Russia is so
prosperous, when it needs our
wheat to avoid starvation’

Instead, it appears that the administration has acted out of fear
and political expedience. In so
doing, it has allied itself with
such anti-intellectual and reactonary forces in American life as
HUAC and its system of paid
informers. Students and faculty
members, therefore, have good
reason to be concerned for the
quality of education and the right
to free inquiry, no matter where
it leads, at the University of
Buffalo. An administration prone
to sacrifice academic freedom to
political expediency cannot de
velop a free university or a first
rate school.
My next step is to ask the
courts to nullify the University's
action. The University has acted
under an unconstitutional statute,
the Feinberg Law. and it has
acted arbitrarily in terminating
my services on insufficient and
flawed evidence. If the adminis:
Did they forget about the Nazi
tration has not the will to remove Soviet Pact when Aptheker glorithe stain from its reputation, the fied the Russian role in WW2?
ruling of the co.urts, in my opin
Did they belie.ve that Communists
ion, will make it do so."
are genuinely concerned about
—Paul Sporn

the Editor
our minorities when they perse-

cute theirs in Russia? And did

they believe that the Communist
Party is not an alien conspiracy,

when it follows the Russian prop

aganda line, and many of its
members serve as Russian spies?
If they did not believe these
things—then why the applause?
Was it Dr. Aptheker’s "charm" or
“eloquence” that did it?
Even when I think that all truly

"mature" and "well-educated”
students will realize that the day
a Communist puppet can report
back to his Russian bosses that
he was applauded by a group of
American college students is a
sad day not only for “academic
freedom” but for all the freedoms
that we Americans enjoy.
1 take note of the fact that an
exactly opposite point of view on
this same issue was taken in last
week's Spectrum by Miss Linda
Leventhal, who fell that it was
Dr Zimmerman and other panel
isls who showed immaturity for
daring to applaud the questions
or even ask, questions critical of
Dr. Aptheker She slates that Dr
Zimmerman would not like it if
his students applauded questions
critical of his teaching. Yet to
compare Dr. Zimmerman's ob
jectiye teaching of philosophy
with Dr.

Aptheker's attempt at

brain washing, us is ridiculous. I
say hats off to Dr. Zimmerman,
Dr Halstead and to the other
members of the panel who asked
critical questions, and to all those
anti-communist students who
dared to “embarrass" this enemy
of our nation, by applauding at
the right times.
Frank Klinger

�News From Other Campuses

Hot Line
Demonstrations
Flare On
California Campus
BERKELEY—N e w demonstrations flared on the University of
California campus as student
groups opposed to the university’s decision to ban political
activity from the campus ended
what they termed a "self-imposed
moratorium on political activity."
University officials retaliated
by dissolving the student-faculty
administration Committee on
Campus Political Activity, which
had been reviewing the univer
sity’s policies governing political
action on campus since early October. The university administration also threatened to take disciplinary action against the
students and organizations violating the ban.
The Free Speech Movement
(FSM), the federation of student
organizations protesting the ban,
issued a statement saying it was
resuming demonstrations because
negotiations in the Committee
had deadlocked and appeared
headed “for a long series of
radical disagreements.”
“We must exercise our rights
so that the University is not
permitted to deny us those rights
for any long period and so that
our political organizations can
function to their maximum capacity,” the FSM statement saidDemonstrations resumed Monday, November 9, and continued
throughout the week Members
of the Free Speech Movement
set up tables on the steps of

Sproul Hall, the University administration building, which was
the scene of an all-night sit in
last October, and began soliciting
membership and funds in violation of university rules. The next
day they were joined by a number of graduate teaching assistants who staged a sympathy dem-

onstration.
University officials took the

of about 75 students involved in Monday’s protest, and
in a statement issued that even i n g by University President
.lames

Clark Kerr and Berkeley Chancellor Edward Strong said “students participating in violation
of rules will be subject to penalties through established proced-

ures.”
They did not spell out what
“established procedures” were,
but eight students involved in

similar activities last October 2
were placed on indefinite sus-

pension. An agreement ending
the October 2 demonstrations
stipulated in part that their case
would be reviewed by the academic senate. A specially formed
committee is presently doing so.
In their statement, Kerr and
Strong said the FSM “has abrogated the agreement of October
2 and by reason of the abrogation the Committee on Campus
Political Activity is dissolved.”
They said that in the future
they “would seek advice on rules
governing political action on campus” from the student senate and
the faculty senate as both groups
“have called for the use of peaceful and orderly procedures in
settling disputes.”
“We welcome proposals from
all interested groups,” they said-

The statement

said the Uni-

versity of California "is devoted
to rational discussion, to law and
order, and to freedom for students and faculty matched with
responsibility in the use of this
freedom.”
In response,

the FSM called
the dissolution of the committee
the “destruction of one more line
of communication between the
students and the administration
It makes the possibility of
intimate settlement even more
remote.”
The FSM received support in
its stand on the Sproul Hall steps
and solicited money and new
members for the movement in
...

Friday, Dacambar 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

violation of the rules.
Unlike Monday’s demonstrations, no administration official
attempted to determine the
names of those participating in
the rally. The FSM sent a petition to the administration, however—carried under an American
flag—containing the signatures
of 196 graduate students and
teaching assistants.
The

petition read:
,

“I Dean
did observe the follow-

ing (signature) manning tables
and soliciting funds in direct
violation of university rules.”
There were representatives
from every academic department
among the estimated 1,000 students observing the protest, and
there was loud cheering as each
department announced its support of the movement.
Names of undergraduates who
said they would sign petitions
stating that they were manning
tables and were in support of
those who signed were also col-

lected.
A student close to the graduate group said the graduate
signees “were willing to put their
careers and economic well being
on the line. This issue must be

settled now.”

The purpose of the rallies and

petitions, according to an FSM
spokesman, is to make the organization as strong as possible by
gathering as many supporters as
they can. The movement assumes
that by collecting a great number
of names on the petitions the
university would not be able to
lake legal action against all of
Ihcm,

The spokesman also said that
if legal action was taken it would
prevent the teaching of many
classes for many of the signees
are teaching assistants.
The present dispute over campus political activity started last
September when the university
told student political organizations that they could no longer
distribute literature, recruit membership or solicit funds at the
Bancroft Telegraph entrance to
the campus, a place where such
activity had taken place for some
time.
A series of demonstrations
protesting the action were staged
in early October, culminating
with a 32 hour sit in around a
police car which attracted several thousand spectators and moved
nervous university officials to
call out nearly 400 riot police.
The demonstration was ended
by a six-point agreement that,
among other things, set up the
study committee and pledged the
Free Speech Movement to a
moratorium on demonstrations.
Exactly why the university decided to enforce the ban, which
it said it was doing under a
■

clause in the California constitution that prohibits it. from participating in any secular political
activity as an institution, is unclear.
It was felt, however, that the
oan grew out of the unusually
heavy amount of political activity
that took place on campus this
summer. During the Republican
National Convention, s t u d e n t s
were recruited to demonstrate
for Scranton and picket against
Goldwater

Illinois Students
Arrested

CHAMPAIGN (CPS)
Three
University of Illinois students
face possible sentences of from
two to ten years in' the penitentiary for illegal possession of marijuana.
The trio was arrested by state
narcotics agents, university police
and Champaign police officials,
who found 15 to 25 grams of
marijuana and a marijuana cigarette.
Charged by Charles Moore,
state narcotics agent, wert Andrea Rubinoff, junior; Gail Mae
—

Pritikin,

sophomore; and Ira
Stanley Kamin, sophomore.
Kamin was released on a $5,000

bond. Miss Pritikin and Miss Rubinoff are free on $2,000 bond.
Kamin made a motion before
Magistrate G. Richard Skfllman to
have the charge dismissed. The
motion was set for a hearing at
2 p.m. November 24.
The two girls were arrested
together by Moore and a university security officer. The bulk
marijuana was found concealed
in their car.
Kamin was implicated by the
i
girls during the course of
questioning and was arrested at his
residence. A small quantity of
marijuana and the marijuana
cigarette were found hidden in
Kamin’s room, according to of-

ficials.
An appearance before Magistrate Skillman was continued to
November 24.
In an interview with the Daily

lllini, student newspaper at the
university, Joseph Healy, super-

intendent of the state division
of narcotics, said he felt the
arrests were individual and “not
extensive.”.
Healy said the “$64 question”
was where the trio obtained the
narcotics. He offered the possibility it was purchased in Chicago.

Penalty for conviction on the
charge of illegal possession of
narcotics is two to ten years in
a penitentiary, Healy said. “They
will be prosecuted by a state’s
attorney and probably will be
held over for a grand jury,” he
said.

The incident came less than
a year after a “dope scare” which
led campus police to investigate
the possibility of marijuana
smoking at jazz sessions in the
University of 111 i n o i s student
union. That investigation turned
up nothing.
Last year, students at the Uni-

versities of Wisconsin and Colorado were arrested on charges of
using marijuana. The Colorado
cases, which involved 11 students,
were thrown out of court last
April on grounds that marijuana
is not an addicting drug and
therefore does not come under
the state narcotics code, and on
grounds that sections of the code
relating to marijuana violated
the state constitution.

NS A Opposes Ban
By PAUL DANISH
United States National
Student Association (NSA) joined
the growing list of organizations
opposed to a ban on student
political activity on the campus
of the University of California
at Berkeley.
The

The ban, instituted this fall,
has been the center of a storm
for over two months now, and
has caused a series of protest
demonstrations.
It bars student groups from
distributing literature, recruiting
members, and soliciting funds on
the University of California campus and in an area adjacent to
the university’s student union,
where such activity has gone on
for years.
In a telegram sent to University
of California President Clark
Kerr, the Association said it
"strongly disagrees” with any
policies which prohibit “the collection of funds, the recruitment
of membership, or the planning
of functions for student political
and social organizations.”
NSA said it supported those
students at Berkeley “who responsibly seek recognition of all
their freedoms to advocate, persuade, solicit, recruit, and plan
activities for student political and
social organizations on campus/
The statement, which was issued prior to the resumption of
demonstrations by the Free
Speech Movement, the association
of campus groups protesting the

ban,

made ho mention

of the

recent “civil disobedience” protests of it staged by campus political organizations and Cal
teaching assistants.
In a reference to eight students
suspended as a result of last

month’s demonstrations, however,
the telegram said that students
“charged with violations of university rules, whatever the rules
are, should be accorded complete
due process.”
“It was unfortunate that the
violators of the Berkeleey campus ban were not originally accorded due process,” it said.
NSA also said it Was “with
deep regret and grave concern
that we note that the administration of the University of California at Berkeley rejected the
recommendation of the faculty
committee that the (eight) students (suspended as a result of
the demonstrations in early October) be immediately reinstated
pending further investigations.”
The recommendation was one
of the first acts of the Academic
S e n a t e’s Ad Hoe Committee,
which had been specially formed
to investigate the suspensions
after it was discovered that no
faculty senate committee on student conduct existed, and was
immediately rejected by the administration.
Referal of the suspensions to
an all-faculty committee was one
of the stipulations of an agreement which ended the October
demonstrations.
“This act on the part of the
administration indicates a lack of
respect for the faculty of that
institution,” the telegram said. It
urged the university administration to reconsider its action, “and
accord due process to the eight
suspended students.”
The American Civil Liberties
Union has already expressed opposition to the ban, as has the
Berkeley chapter of the American Association of University
Professors. The local AAUP group
also asked its officers “to communicate . . . this matter to the
national officers for possible action by the national organization.”

At Berkeley, the joint studentfaculty-administration committee
investigating the university’s political activity policies
which
was dissolved by Berkeley Chancellor Edward Strong in the wake
of the new demonstrations—had
passed a resolution calling for
“complete freedom of speech on
campus for all persons, in certain geographical areas,”
The resolution—introduced by
one of the student members of
the Committee—was passed 7-4
—

with 4 abstentions. Three of the
administration members voted
against it.
The University of California
said it instituted the ban because
of a clause in the California constitution prohibiting it as an institution from becoming involved
in any partisan political activity.

The university said it did not
realize it owned the area where
activity had taken place in the
past until recently.
The area was the scene of unusually heavy activity this summer as a result of the Republican
National Convention, which was
held in near by San Francisco.

UNC Students
Favor NSA
By HUGH STEVENS
Collegiate Press Service
CHAPEL HILL (CPS)—Students
at the University of North Caro-

lina voted "Yes” on the National- Student Association by a 2,966
to 2,471 margin in a campus-wide
referendum here last week.
The favorable verdict for NSA
ended a bitter two-week campaign that pitted Student Body
President Bob Spearman’s “Carolina Students for USNSA” against
a well-organized anti-NSA group,

led by Bayard Harris and Nelson
Schwab,, two members of the
Men’s Honor Council.
The campaign erupted into a
fight on the floor of the Student
Legislature when a bill was introduced to condemn the anti-NSA
group for distributing “distorted”
literature and making personal
attacks upon student leaders. The
bill was later passed after being
amended in order to censure unfair campaign tactics inf general.
Later, Spearman publicly blasted NSA’s opponents ior distortions and personal attacks and accusations.
y
The Daily Taf Heel, UNC student newspaper, joined in the
condemnation of the opposition’s
tactics, saying in an editorial on
Nov, 7 “it has become apparent
that many of NSA’s antagonists
willing to resort to any
means, no matter how low, to
are

achieve their ends.”
The paper said some of the
anti-NSA materials distributed on
campus had been reprints from
Y A F bulletins and “Human
Events”. The editorial labeled
both publications “sources of
questionable motive and veracity.”
The anti-NSA attacks were centered upon the costs of belonging
to the organization, the lack of
personal benefits to individual
students, and the political stands
taken in resolutions passed at
NSA congresses.
Spearman’s camp

distributed
materials claiming that the cost
of NSA on the Carolina campus
is approximately 13.6 cents per
student, and provided speakers
from various student organizations who told students of NSA’s
benefits to them.
The pro-NSA forces conducted
a door-to-door campaign in the
university’s 23 precincts, and
Spearman made appeals via radio
spots on a Raleigh “Top 40” station on the day before the vote
was taken.
Spearman called the result “a
vote of confidence for student
government and for NSA.” The
turnout of over 5,400 was the
largest in the history of the
school for a campus wide election.
Nationally, NSA affiliations are
running slightly behind disaffiliations so far this year. The 350
school association has affiliated
four schools so far, including Colgate, and lost at least six, includnig the University of Baltimore
and the University of Rhode Island.

Sale of

Contraceptives
Prohibited by Keel U

AuSTOKE, England (CPS)
thorities at Keel University have
forbidden students to sell contraceptives in a university store.
H. M. Taylor, vice-chancellor
of the school, said he has told the
president of the Students’ Union
‘that the proposal must be abandoned.”
The president, Roy Moore, 20,
said the students had decided to
sell contraceptives because they
wanted “to deal with modern
problems in a modern way, and
we don't want to impose a morality ban.”
“Not only are contraceptives to
be sold, but we are trying to
arrange for a family planning
concern to give sex lectures to
the students,” he said.
Moore said student leaders had
polled 1,000 students and professors before deciding to sell
the birth control devices.
He said he had found no objection from religious organizations on campus, but the univerChapsity’s Church of England
was
lain, George Youell, said he
“violently opposed to it.”
Relig“So far as I am aware,
ious organizations have not been
consulted. A facility of this kin
the
is quite out of place on
university campus,” he said.
—

1

�Friday,

December 4, 1964

Human Relations

Files Available
Now in Lockwood

The Human Relation Area Files,
Inc. consists of twenty-five member organizations which have
pooled their research in the field
of the sciences concerned with
mankind. Historical and ethno-

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

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graphic sources are analyzed page
by page, line by line. The material, organized topically, is duplicated and sent to each member
university. There it is filed in
eight major geographical areas—

Africa, Asia, Europe, Middle East,
North America, South America,
Russia and Oceania. Sample cultures have been chosen in each
of these areas. The resulting 2,500,000 file slips are then filed
into 709 specific categories, e.g.,

maps, art, religion, marriage, etc.
The files contain books and peri-

and geography.

Every month new areas and
are added to the existing files. The Central Office of

new books

the Human Relations Area Files
in Yale notified the participating
unversities that a National Science Foundation grant will
strengthen the File resources on
South America and Southern
Europe. It will be completed during the next throe years.

MSA
to Meet
convener
The

of the Muslim

Students Association has extended an invitation to the Muslim
Students from all countries for a

social gathering at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, December 13, 1964,
in his
apartment, upstairs, 3234 Main
Street.
Conversation will include arrangements for Ramadan and Eid
For further details, please call
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odicals in their entirety and in
translation whenever the text is
in a foreign tongue. Thus, source
material in obscure languages
may be checked against the original text.
The University of Kyoto, Japan
and Lockwood Memorial Library
successfully bid for the last remaining membership and became
participating universities.
After five months of filing
about half of the 250 major
culture groups are accessible for
research and term papers.
A visiting professor from Nepal
found the bibliography helpful
and assigned background reading
on his native country.
A political science class was
studying the Republic of Ghana
and the Ghana’s hierarchial structure of the ruling class. After the
tribes were identified it was easy
to find the categories which described the internal structure of
each tribe and to pin point conflicts which may result from multiple components of a new political unit.
A class in physical anthropoloby studied body mutilation and
found cross-cultural m a t er i a 1
readily available.
Ultimately it is hoped that all
units of the State University of
New York west of Cornell will
benefit by this new research pool.
As a pilot program twenty students from the State University
College were instructed in the
use of the Files and returned
for individual work on a class
project on the concept of race.
These future teachers were delighted to find so much information and will use the files for
their teaching of social science

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�(ACP) —She was elected to the
National Honor Society her senior
year in high school. She graduated from Tyler Junior College with
honors last year. Now she’s a
psychology major at North Texas
State University, Denton.

THE CAMPUS CHAT says Linda
Kay Nelson, who is deaf, attributes her good grades to the close
attention she must give in reading teachers’ lips. Unlike other
students, she can't let distractions
disturb her while a teacher is

THIS WEEK IN SPORTS
By STEVE OBERSTEIN
as I’m concerned,” said
University of Southern
Athletic Director, “it
the greatest injustices
ever perpetrated in the field of
intercollegiate athletics.” U.S.C.
had been told by the Pacific
“So far
Jess Hill,
California
is one of

Athletic

Conference

that if it

talking.

made a respectable showing
against Notre Dame last Satur-

However, since her eyes must
remain on the teacher in order to
“hear," it is hard for her to take
notes. Classmates have helped by
making carbon c o p i e s of class
notes for her.

day, It would become the West
Coast's representative to the Rose
Bowl. Both Oregon State and the
Trojans finished with 3-1 records
in conference play, although the
Beavers’ over-all mark was 8-2 to
the Trojans’ 7-3. Conference play

Being an expert lip reader, Miss
Nelson is able to enjoy television

had ended the week before the
Notre Dame-University of Southern California game, so the Pacific Athletic Conference should
have already chosen its champion
without taking an outside game,
albeit of national interest, into
consideration.
This new defeat off the football
field was doubly difficult for the
Trojans to take because it was
the second straight year that they
had lost the Rose Bowl invitation by a vote (last year to the
University of Washington). What
rankles this observer and the
Trojans, too, is that the P.A.C.
went back on its word to decide
its representative upon the Notre
Dame game. While taking nothing away from Oregon State,
which was good enough to beat
a strong Syracuse team that has
been invited to the Sugar Bowl,

'and movies, except when an actor
turns his back to the screen while
talking. Then, she says, “1 just
ask whoever is with me what the
actor said.”
As proficient as she is in lip
reading, she sometimes runs into

dificulties because different people move their lips differently to
pronounce the same words. And,
she adds, her greatest trouble is
with words that are pronounced
with the same lip movement.
Words she has the most trouble
with include "mad" and "pad,"
"mama” and “papa,” and "red”
and “green.”
Miss Nelson doesn’t mind people teasing her about being deaf.
She says "If people are relaxed

enough in my presence to tease
me, then I feel more at ease with

them."

She chose to major in psychology because she wants to be a
guidance counselor and possibly
work with handicapped children.

Miss Nelson, who has made herself as nearly normal as possible
by constant training and selfdetermination, as optimistic about
the future.
“There’s not anything that I
can't do that other people do,"
she said, "except hear in the
dark and talk on the telephone.”

UB Blues Highlight
MFC Winter Even!

December 4, 1964

35-7, the controversy begun by
the faculty representatives of the
P.A.C. will not be easily forgotten by U.S.C. or any of its fans.
Oregon State had better give
Michigan more than it can handle
on New Year’s Day, or the stink
from the West Coast will be
something

to behold.

Continuing on the West Coast,

there was a baseball trade last
week between the Los Angeles
Angels and the San Francisco
Giants that did not receive the
attention that it deserved. In the
deal, the Angels traded 22-yearold Jack Hiatt, catcher and
pinch-hitter, to the Giants for 21year-old Jose Cardenal, one of
the Bay City’s stable of young
outfielders. While both of these
players were in the high minors
last year, their statistics were
impressive. Hiatt hit .308 at Ha-

waii and Cardenal hit .289 at
Tacoma, both of the Pacific Coast
Leagu, with 40 stolen bases.
Hiatt’s appearance in San Francisco gives the Giants their long
hoped-for lefty-righty balance in
the catching department with
Tom Haller (lefty) and Hiatt
(righty). The trade also signals
the departure of Del Crandall,
a disappointment to the Giants
last season. Look for Del to wind
up with a manager’s job in the
minors shortly, as he is one of
baseball’s most astute individuals, as a ballplayer, as well as a
leader.

Albie Pearson, Los Angeles’
most haloed Angel in 1963, will
probably be traded or sold to
make room for Cardenal, who
along with Willie Smith and
$200,000 bonus boy Rick Reichart
form the Angels’ outfield of the
future. Pearson outlived his usefulness to Manager Bill Rigney
when his batting average dropped fifty points this past season.
With Jimmy Piersall coming off
a great year climaxed by his

winning the American League
Comeback Player of the Year
Award, Los Angeles now has the
blend of age and youth in its
outfield that it has been looking

Louis Hawks, George Wilson of
the University of Cincinnati and
the Cincinnati Royals, Cotton
Nash of the University of Kentucky and the Los Angeles Lakers, Walt Hazzard of U.C.L.A.
and the Lakers, and Mel Counts
of Oregon State University and
the Boston Celtics, have been
having their troubles in their
initial N B A. season.
Perhaps Red Auerbach, coach
of the world champion Boston
Celtics, expressed it best when
he said that Counts would be
much further advanced in the
Celtic style of play if he had
been able to play with the team
during the exhibition season.
Since the N.B.A. plays a gypsylike one night stand schedule,
it is very hard for the teams to
have regular practice. Thus that
the new players take longer to
get used to playing with their
new teammates. If Oscar Robertson of the Cincinnati Royals is
bringing the ball up to court
and he has veteran Jack Twyman
in one corner and rookie George
Wilson in the other, where do
you think the ball will usually
go if the “Big 0” decides to

pass off? To Twyman, of course,
with whom Oscar has played for
years.

Reed, incidentally, didn’t go
to Tokyo and thus was able to be
with the Knicks from the beginning of the training season. The
other former All-Americans
should start making their presence more fully felt as the N.B.A.
season progresses.

t

.

I

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

~3nc.

Parhieri

jihgott &amp; Smith P, 'in ting
1381 KENMORE AVENUE

(at Delaware)

I

+

.

Although two former stars
must be sacrificed in Pearson

and Crandall, the old baseball
axiom of “youth must be served”
will be heard again in the 1965
season.

A look at the National Basketball Association statistics shows
only one rookie, Willis Reed, (a
6-10 center from Grambling University and now a New York
Knickerbocker) among the leaders in any of the major categor-

ies.
One of the reasons for this was
the Olympic Games, which took
the nation s best collegiate basketball players away from their
new professional teams during

the crucial training period before
the season began. Many betterknown rookies than Reed, such as
Jeff Mullins of Duke and the St.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

Along with Don Conover's Band,
The Continentals, the main highlight of Millard Fillmore College’s
Winter Weekend is the group
called the UB Blues, also directed by Don Conover.

The UB Blues have not only
charmed audiences on campus,
but also in many of Buffalo's
places of entertainment.
This weekend the UB Blues will

delight the MFC students at Kissing Bridge in Glenwood, New
York, with a variety of numbers.
They include such Christmas
songs as Deck the Halls, My Lord
What A Morning, Winter Song,
Good King Wenseslaus, and The
Sleigh. Then, of course; there
will be favorites like Cipolla's

Band and the Alma Mater, The
MFC students will sing along with
the Blues on some of the old familiar favorites.
The fellows of the group are
all UB students. They are Fred
Hill and Gerald Marmillo, tenors;
Ron Capuano and John Slattery,
leads; Paul Sipson and Robert
Van Slyke, baritones; Dave McDowell and Paul Whitcomb, basses; and Don Conover, director.

An evening of enjoyment is
planned for all, but the success

of the affair will be contributed,
in the most part, bv the UB Blues.

This is big news for Pizza lovers. Santora's Pizza Patrol will
deliver an extra delicious, freshly baked and piping hot pizza
right to your door at no extra charge. Call Saritora's Pizza
Patrol any day from 2 P. M. to Midnight, and presto, your
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in advance for delivery to parties, meetings or other special
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FOR FRESH BAKED
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|

Silent Student Excels

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

837-5700

I4

�Friday, December,4, 1964

PACE SEVENTEEN

SPECTRUM

SPECTRUM

THE GAME IS TRADING
base, with a big year could supply
the punch to lead Baltimore to
Now that the Major League
Their main needs are infield the pennant. Estrada, an eighteen
Baseball Winter Meetings are in help, particularly at third, to game winner in his rookie year,
replace the retired Jim Gilliam, has been hampered by injuries
full swing, and the Phillies and
Red Sox have kicked off the inand pitching help to complement the past two seasons, and Hall,
with
the
ter-league swap session
Drysdale and Koufax. Their most who has been one of the leagues
deal which sent Dennis Bennett likely trade bait is Frank Howard, top relievers, is growing old.
who had a miserable year last Both do not figure prominently
to the Sox in return for controversial slugger Dick Stuart, it year, has expressed disatisfaction in Baltimore’s plans due to the
with his handling by the Dodgers, Birds’ great young pitching talent,
becomes time for all true adand still remain a slugger with yet both are capable of helping
mirers of the front office art to
unlimited potential. The next the Dodgers. Johnson was probengage in what is known as “the
ably the best infielder in the
game.”
question is which team would be
helped by Howard and has the minor leagues last year, yet it is
Imagine baseballs’ third estate
unlikely that he will be able to
surplus material to help the Doddumped all twenty teams in your
gers. He took to the American crack Baltimore’s fine infield, and
Commissioner
Ford
and
lap,
League and came up with BaltiSiebern with a change in scenery
Frick, in a rare display of activmore. The Orioles are deep in could return to the form which
ism, appointed you general manpitching and infield talent but made him one of baseball’s most
ager of each team, giving you a
are weak at first base, where dangerous hitters. He would have
to
day
period,
ten
short, say
Norm Siebern failed to come to be thrown in to replace How
meet with yourself in a special through as expected, and center ard and Fairly, who shared first
Inter-League trading session in
field. He can now swing a deal. base for the Dodgers. With luck,
order to strengthen each one of The Dodgers will send Howard an essential characteristic of all
your teams. Discount any conand outfielder and first baseman successful baseball executives,
flict of interest such a situation Ron Fairly to the Orioles in requestion marks such as Estrada,
presents. Remember, a good trade
turn for pitchers Chuck Estrada Howard, Johnson, and Siebern
is one which strengthens both
and Dick Hall, rookie infielder will have good years and both
clubs. With this in mind you are
Dave Johnson and Siebern. Fairly
teams will be strengthened.
ready to play.
Now that we are old hands at
will solve Baltimore’s centerfield
The Dodgers are a team which problem, and Howard at first “the game”, we can plunge on
confidently into other transactions, The Giants, searching for
left-handed pitching help for
SPORTS CIRCLE (cont'd from P. 20)
their bullpen, will obtain A1 JackThe reason for this poor schedule, as stated in the son of the Mets. In return, the
last Sports Circle,) may be attributed to poor attendance. Mets will get infielder outfielder
In 1963, Bulls went to NCAA College Division Regional Cap Peterson and pitcher Billy
Championships on the basis a 16-7 season record. Last O’Dell. Peterson is young at 22,
former Most Valuable Player in
year, because of the successful ’63 campaign, the schedthe Texas
and was conule of quality opponents was improved. In an effort to sidered theLeague,
Giants’ finest young
pick the stagnating attendance, several double-headers prospect, but in his two seasons
with Canisius were scheduled at Memorial Auditorium in the majors seems to have been
with the intent that if successful, all home games would lost amid the talent on the Gieventually be played there. This would of course further ants’ bench. O’Dell, at times a
enable the Athletic Department to schedule better teams, fine pitcher, is too inconsistent
which would in turn attract more people to the games, for a pennant contender, yet
thus creating a “schedule-attendance improvement could help the Mets.
Confidence in new talent is
cycle.’’ The only variable, of course, would be the play
in the trading of
of the team. However, this would not result in a problem often a factor
established veterans, Kansas
since the quality of the UB basketball has been steadtfy City’s
fine rookie shortstop Burt
improving over the past few years and there
Campaneris has made Wayne
reason for any reversal of form.
Causey, one of the league’s best
However this venture failed, needless to say, due to infielders, expendable. He will
a lack of attendance. As a result the 1964 schedule is be sent to the Braves for centerfielder Lee Maye, who hit .300
minus major college teams who were on last year’s schedlast sason, but with an outfield
ule. What is worse, this failure poses a paradoxical problem How can attendance be expected to increase when of Rico Carty, Felipe Alou and
Henry Aaron, plus minor league
the quality of the opposition in decreasing?
Player of the Year Mack Jones,
We can only urge the student body to support the is not counted on too heavily in
basketball team by going to the games. It is up to the the Braves’ future. Causey’s ac
Athletic Department to seek a tangible solution to the quisition would allow the Braves
problem.
to move Dennis Menke to his nat
The omission of the Bulls in numerous college basural position, third base, and
ketball preview magazines is a clear indication of what is make veteran Eddie Mathews
thought of the quality of UB’s schedule. Seeing that the trade bait. Needing a left handed
starting pitcher, having sold Warcage reputation of a school with as sizable an enrollment
as that of UB is at stake, it appears they should urgently
By MIKE CASTRO

slipped from World Champion to
the second division in one season.

TOP TEN

10-0
1. ALABAMA
9-1
2. NOTRE DAME
3. ARKANSAS
10-0
8-1
4. MICHIGAN
5. TEXAS
9-1
6. NEBRASKA
9-1
7. L.S.U.
7-1-1
8. OREGON STATE 8-2
9. PRINCETON
9-0
10. FLORIDA ST.
8-1-1

ren Spahn, we will send Mathews
to the L.A. Angels, where he
would fill a big third base gap
there, in return for Bo Belinsky.
If the Braves would only listen
to us, they would win the pennant.

Other players likely to be traded are Jim Davenport of the
Giants, one of baseball’s finest
third basemen, who lost his job
to rookie Jim Ray Hart; Eddie
Bressoud of Boston, who is being
pressed by rookie Rico Petrocelli
for his shortstop job; Joe Cunningham of Washington, and Ed
Charles of Kansas City, who were

WRESTLING TRYOUTS
All interested candidates
please report to Coach Ron
LaRocque in the varsity
lockerroom, Clark Gym,
Mon., Dec. 7 at 4:00 p.m.

disappointing last season; Gordy
Coleman of Cincinnati, who has
gone from star first baseman to
bench warmer in three season;

Russ Nixon, Boston catcher, who
has been highly critical of his
employers; Vada Pinson or Tommy Harper of the Redlegs, both
of whom produced less than expected last season; and Fred
Whitfield of Cleveland, who lost
his job to rookie Bob Chance.
The list could go on and on. The
“game" is never-ending.

Track Meeting
There will he a meeting
for the indoor track team
on Friday, December 11,
at 4:00 p.m. in the ROTC
room in Clark Gym. All
those wishing to try out
are urged to attend.

Baseball's big brass is playing
it ringy right now. Only they play
for keeps.

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seek a solution.
It is quite obvious that very few people are happy
with the basketball schedule. There seems little purpose
in playing almost every game knowing a win proves
nothing while a loss is degrading. Even an eye-opening
win-loss percentage will prove very little because so few
of the contests could be considered to have any value
for the Bulls.
The reputations of the football and basketball teams
are moving in opposite directions so rapidly that, unless
one turns around and spots the correct way the other is
taking, they may never see each other again. One road
leads to dignified success, the other to snow-shoveling.

RACE-A-RAMA
(just a few blocks from Campus)
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�Friday, December 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHTEEN

HOCKEY PREVIEW
Ice Bulls Have Eye on Title
In Season Opener With Oswego
By STEVEN FEIGIN
Saturday, the University of Buf
falo hockey team opens its 196465 season against Oswego State.
The ice Bulls, second to unbeaten
R.I.T. in the Finger Lakes Intercollegiate Hockey League last
year, are hopeful of improving
upon their 9-2-1 record and have
set their sights on first place.
Coach Karl Ballard is concerned
with the loss of 12 of his players
from last year's team, but has a
solid core of 8 veterans to build
around. Notable among the re
turnees are goalie Ken Sherry,

considered the top net-tender in
the league last year, and all star

goalie two seasons ago,
captain Jerry Doherty, a O', 205
lb. local product, Al Dover; a
high-scoring forward, and defensemen Bill Savage, and asst.
MUNY

at St. Lawrence U. Marrus was
the captain of his New Rochelle
H.S. six. Most of the other UB
icemen have had experience in
the MUNY leagues in and around
the Buffalo area.
The 20 starters are being pushed hard by a talent-loaded taxi
squad. Best of the lot here seem
to be Steve Zeiglcr, a converted
soccer goalie from Flushing, N.Y.,
Richard Daffner, a speedster from
Troy, N.Y., Pete Evans, a former
teammate of Marrus at New Ro

chelle, and Jeff Proctor, Alienhurst’s main contribution to the
team.

The Herd is again coached this
Ballard, head resident of Schoellkopf Hall. Mr, Ballard has excellent credentials,
having played his hockey as a
defenseman for K.P.I., a hockey
year by Karl

/

the conference title. If the preseason scrimmage is any indication of the upcoming season, the
Bulls will run away with the race.
Last week, the team, minus 9
starters, traveled to R.I.T. to
scrimmage the defending champs.
The game ended in a 5-5 tie. This
must be considered as a decisive
UB victory because of the absence
of so many players. This was last
year’s Finger Lakes final standings:

R.I.T.

BUFFALO

%

P'S
r?

\

1

HOCKEY TEAM SCRIMMAGE

fensemen, who last year led the
Finger Lakes in racking up pen
ally minutes. There's never a dull
moment in UB territory w i I h
these two around.
The gap left by the loss of 60'
of the '63 squad has been plugged
by some highly-promising new
comers. Outstanding in pre-season
practices have been centers Dan

power in the East. He was selected as captain in his senior year,
and was eyeing a berth on the
11)60 Olympics squad, when he
broke his shoulder. He was slated
to see some action this year, but
decided not to play when he saw
that his team was so strong. But

from

Toronto,

9-0-1
9-2-1
7-3-2

port from both the Student Senate and Athletic Department, but
the money provided falls far short
of the funds needed to run the
club. The players themselves must
make up the differences. A conservative estimate on the cost per
player is over $100, including
skates, padding, insurance not
supplied by the school, and meal

in sport is “one who is
a professional." Our
definition is that he is one who
plays for leisure, and only pleasure.
It is u pleasure to report that, despite
the prevalence of scholarships and
prerequisites, there really are amateurs
left in college sport—the University
of Buffalo hockey team, for instance.
Buffalo supports teams in 10 sports,
but not in hockey. The university has
no rink. Even so, some 40 hockeyloving students have pul together an
informal team and have maintained
it and a schedule that would have
discouraged most young men. They
must, for instance, practice in Canada
—at Fort Erie, Ontario. Because Canadian teams naturally get preference
at the arena, the Buffalo hoys usually
work out from 11 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Opponents are similarly informal
teams from colleges in the Finger
Lakes area—Ithaca College, Syracuse
University, University of Rochester,
Rochester Institute of Technology,
Hobart College and Brockport State.
It is wonderful what can be done
without coaches, athletic scholarships,
big budgets and press agents.
The situation has improved
since, but there are still many
tin amateur

not rated
own

as

deficiencies. The Student Senate
is threatening to cut off their
aid entirely next year, because
they feel the hockey team belongs
under the jurisdiction of the Athletic Department, while the Athletic Department feels it is unable
to support the squad because of

budgetary difficulties. Thus, the
hockey club may become extinct
after this season, even though
they are the league leaders. The
only thing that can save it is

student support.
The game tomorrow starts at
10:00 p.m. An admission fee is
necessitated to aid the players.
It will be $1.00, and 50c for
students, at the Norton ticket
booth.
SCHEDULE
Dec. 5—Oswego State
Dec. 8—U. of Rochester
Dec. 19—Syracuse
Jan. 27—at HIT
Jan. 29 —at Syracuse
Jan. 30—at Oswego State
Feb. 5—at Ithaca
Feb. 6—at U. of Rochester
Feb. 13—RIT
Feb. 20—Hobart
Feb. 23 —Brockport State
Feb. 27—Ithaca
Mar. 7—Brockport State

Squash Match
There will be a squash
match between UB and the
University of Rochester on
Wednesday, December 9,
at 4:00 p.m. in Clark Gym.
This will be the first match
of the year for Coach Andy
Feldman’s squad. Admission is free and all students are welcome.

KLEINHANS
Downtown Buffalo

5&gt;purt

Thrvway Plaia

Boulevard Mall

$hop Anil (Sollri}t S’ho}i

money at away games.

Last fall, Sports Illustrated
heard of the plight of the Ice
Bulls and were prompted to bring
it to the attention of the Ameri-

unusual

one year program

Gorney; Day Hannah, Al Moor
house, wingers Jim Bausch, Jeff
Weaver. Paul Dewitt and Paul
Kubiak, and defensemen Tom
Robertson. Bill Mitchell and Jim
Lenegan
Moorhouse is a Junior
“A" star

ILLUSTRATED

The cautious Webster definition oj

year.
All home games will be played
at the new Amherst Arena, which
is located on Millersport Highway, past Maple Road. This is
only a 10 minute drive from csmpus. The hockey Bulls need your
support this year. The team has
not achieved varsity status as of
yet, and is forced to operate as
a club. It receives financial sup-

*1

%

captain Mike Whelan. A bad knee
has hampered Savage, but he is
expected to be ready to team
with Whelan to lead the crew of
rough, tough, board-checking de

SPORTS

SYRACUSE
5-5
ITHACA
3-8-1
ROCHESTER
2-9-1
HOBART
2-10
Oswego State just joined this

•'

M

Reprinted by permission from
('Scorecard', December 2, 1963,
Copyright 1963 Time Inc.)

he is contemplating suiting up
against R.I.T. and Oswego, his
two chief concerns, when he
needs an efficient penalty-killer.
The coach was reluctant to give
this reporter any inside dope on
the special strategy planned for
the upcoming campaign. But he
did predict a very strong run at

BROCKPORT ST.

jjjt

can sporting public in the follow
ing article:
PURELY POUR LE SPORT

JUNIOR YEAR
NEWYORK
UNIVERSITY

while

Bausch. Hannah (a transfer stu
dent from E. Michigan) and De
witt played Junior "B" ball for
Fort Erie. Junior "A" and "B"
hockey is the minor leagues for
the professional hockey ranks
Robertson transferred from Ry
erson Institute in Canada, and
Mitchell received his seasoning

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�Friday,

December 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE

NINETEEN

BULLS BOMB BROCKPORT
WIN BY 84-61 SCORE
IN SEASON OPENER
By STAN LICHWALA
The UB Basketball Bulls travel-

ed

on Tuesday to Brockport

State

for their opening game of the
1964-65 season and soundly
whipped the outclassed Golden
Eagles in their home opener.
UB was paced by Norb Bachnagel
and Harvey Poe as they were
able to move the Bulls even when
the team began to slow down.
In the opening minutes of the
game, both teams looked a little
sloppy as they were unable to
score on a field goal until Buffalo scored at 3:57 of the first
half. Passes were missed and easy
shots under the basket could not
find their mark. This showing
can be explained by the fact
that this was the first game and
both teams needed a little time
to get settled down.
Harvey Poe carried the load of
the scoring in the first 2 twenty
minutes with 12 points. Norb
Baschnagel came off the UB
bench and paced the Bulls with
20 points, and just as important,
he came up with 10 rebounds

ft
&gt;3*

set a record for most fouls against
an opponent; the Bulls were
caught 38 times committing an

a

VI

tell.”

There are three man who will
be covering the “center duties”
whenever the Basketball Bulls
will be taking to the court this

vff It/

14

f

''

at all his prospects for the future
varsity team. Big George Henry
led the Baby Bulls with 18 and
Doug Bernard in 16 as Marshell
Reiff led Brockport with 12. The
prospects of this year’s frosh look
very good but as Coach Monkarsh
says, “The Niagara game will

'I

season.

Bill Barth is a 6'5" junior from

Fredonia, New York. Last year.
Bill played as a reserve, seeing
action in sixteen games. In high
school he was captain of both
the basketball and track teams;
presently he is majority in history. The experience he has
gained thus far should make this
returning letterman a valuable
asset to this year’s Bulls.
Bill Bilowus was'sidelined last
a result of a hunting
accident. Two years ago, Bill
lettered and gained valuable experience. This 6’5” center is now
a senior and comes from Buffalo.
He is a physical education major
and is described as an "aggressive rebounder.”
year as

Dick Smith is a 6’4" junior
from Spencerport, New York. He

saw action in 17 games last year
and gained experience while winning his letter, Dick has looked
good in early practice sessions
and looks as though he has a

good season coming up.

These men will carry the load
at the center position for the
1964-1965 Basketball Bulls, and
they will be seeing a great deal
of action throughout the year.
.Last night, the UB Bulls encountered American U. in a very
tough game. Wednesday, Assumption U. will travel to Buffalo to

meet

the Bulls. The Bulls have
started their season on a winning note and will be out to

continue to prove their potential
of becoming a very strong bas-

ketball team.

c-&lt;3&amp;

44
HARVEY POE

I

infraction of the rules, in the
eyes of the officials. On the other
side of the coin though, the Bulls
were able to break the old record
for most rebounds in one game as
they led Brockport 68-45 under
the boards. This may, in a way,
explain the reason for so many
fouls as the UB boys were really
fighting under the boards. This,
along with the full-court press
which Coach Serfustini used
throughtout mdst of the game,
made for a high-fouling game,
with UB taking the brunt of the

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STANTON D. KING

free-throwing frosh from Buffalo
snowed Brockport State under by
a score of 112-57. The frosh
looked very impressive and
should be a most exciting team
to follow. Coach Ed Muto freely
went to his bench and got a look

NORB BACHNAGEL

and looked very tough under the
boards. This is important since
UB lost last year’s leading rebounder, Gary Hanley. If Basehnagel can continue to turn in performances like Tuesday’s, UB
should have a lot of power under
the boards. Finally, Buffalo settled down and opened up a 44-24

halftime

advantage.

Jack Karaszewski played a
second half, tossing in 12
°f his 14 points in the second
stanza. Big Norwood Goodwin just
could not find the range last
night as he scored 10 points and
had his jump shot missing all
great

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For Brockport, the high scorer
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points
and fouled out of the
game in the closing moments.
The “Brockport officials” were
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�PAGE TWENTY

Friday, December 4, 1964

SPECTRUM

-r=/

■■

•|

¥

§ip®iairi*

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.

[

SPORTS CIRCLE
By STEVE SCHUELEIN and ALLAN SCHOLOM

The

Rift

Two twelve-year olds named Dick and Lenny approached Rotary Field on November 21; only to be greeted by a sign saying that the UB Villanova football
game had been cancelled by inclement weather. Despite
the disappointment of the fans and the two teams, the
cancellation appeared the only fitting end for a team
with such a proclivity for the uncertain, the unpredictable, and the unexpected as the 1964 gridiron Bulls.
-

The snowout was a shame for many reasons, such
as it deprived 16 worthy seniors of their last game, it
prevented Don Gilbert from adding the finishing touches
to a fantastic season by rewriting a few more records,
and most of all it denied the Bulls a final opportunity
to atone for a so-so record. Despite posting only a 4-4-1
mark, one can look back on the 1964 UB team as one of
the finest in the school’s history, if not the unluckiest.
Although the Bulls managed only a .500 season, the
team outmuscled and outhustled all nine of its reputable
opponents, and only bad breaks in crucial situations
kept the Bulls from recording a much better slate. Win or
lose, it was a team UB could be proud of.
On their walk home through the snow Dick and
Lenny discussed numerous matters pertinent to twelveyear olds.
“What are you going to be when you grow up?”
said Dick to Lenny.
“A snow-shoveler,’’ replied Lenny after taking a
prolonged glance at the fresh white powder.
“That’s pretty stupid,” barked Dick, “you could be
something much better if you wanted to; nobody will
respect you if you're just a snow-shoveler. I think if I
work hard, I can get into college and eventually become
a doctor or a lawyer. At least I know I’ll be respected
by my friends and myself for my effort, and if I succeed
I’ll be that much more respected.”
“Yeah. 1 know,” muttered Lenny, “but who wants
to put in all that time and effort, and then have to rise
to great challenges all one’s life. There’s no tedious
learning involved in being a snow-shoveler, and I know
if 1 just keep shoveling, I’ll neither fail in my work nor
worry about being fired. In the summer I’ll cut grass and
have a twelve-month income.”
“Well, I guess we each have a right to our opinion,”
said Dick, and the pair continued their journey through
the snow. At that moment a tattered newspaper blew
into the path of the boys and happened to contain the
schedule of the UB basketball team.
“When does UB play Villanova this year? They
almost beat them last year, remember?” asked Dick.
“I don't know, and I don’t see Syracuse, Cornell, or
Boston U. on the schedule either,” said Lenny. “The only
big schools I see here are Tennessee, Colgate, and Bucknell, and only Bucknetl is at home.”
“Gee, that’s too bad. I wonder why?” asked Dick
with a puzzled expression.
“Don’t look at me. 1 don't make out the schedule,’
replied Lenny with a sly grin.
The two boys, after taking divergent roads to their
respective homes, continued to trudge through the snow
and were soon enveloped in a blanket of darkness, but
their conversation that was soon forgotten by them merits
having some light shed on it.
It seems both an insult to the UB reputation, and a
paradox in light of the rapidly improving quality of gridiron opponents that this year’s UB cage schedule has
about as much appeal as the cafeteria food. The saddest
part of all is that this year’s “padded” schedule is really
not necessary since the Bulls have an excellent court contingent. The team proved itself a formidable foe last
December when it tangled with the Villanova Wildcats,
one of the nation’s top ten quintets, and dropped a 56-54
nailbiter in the last few seconds. Center Gary Hanley,
who completely outplayed 6’ 7” Wildcat pogo stick Jim
Washington in a dazzling performance, is the only starter
the Bulls have lost from last year’s team.
It seems an injustice that a team that has at least
two capable lettermen at every position should play other
clubs against which it has nothing to gain and all to lose.
It was quite evident that the fans were much prouder of
the team’s two-point loss to Villanova than they were of
the rousing "successes of the Bulls against the likes of
Muskingum, Albany State, and Bfockport State.
(Coat’d on P, 17)

SWIM MEET Fencers

TOMORROW

This year’s varsity swimming
team has the potential to have
an exceptional season. Coach Sanford calls this team “possibly
the best one” that he has coached
since he’s been at UB. The team
has lost only three lettermen
from last year’s squad and has
sixteen returning lettermen plus
six lettermen from last year’s
freshman team. At tryouts this

6=

iA

s

to Meet Hobart

Fencing is an age old sport, one
which is rich in tradition as well
as valor. But the days of D’Artagnan, fortunately or not, are over,
and with them, went the days
when a man who could handle
the flashing blades was “king of

team, has been head coach since
1941. In his 25 year tenure, his
teams have won 208 of 274

matches including the North Atlantic Intercollegiate Championships nine times since the tournament was inaugurated in 1950,
quite an admirable record. In ad
dition to winning matches, he
has developed three All-Americans, the last one being Bill Wilkenson in 1963. Perhaps another
will be along soon to add to
Coach Schwartz’ laurels as one
of the finest fencing coaches in

the hill.” Nevertheless, many
schools, UB included, have attempted to keep the sport alive
and so' far, they have been successful.
The University of Buffalo fencing team, ably coached by Sid
Schwartz, has been an extremely
the nation.
year there was an exceptionally fine one for many years, and this
high turnout. Coach Sanford had
year’s edition should not be difAll in all, it. looks like the fencto narrow down his squad from
ferent from its predecessors. The ing squad will bring more honors
49 to 29.
15
squad has
members and onlyto UB this year and will continue
tow are seniors to go along with on their winning ways.
The captain of the Mermen and
ex-Cleveland Hill star is sprinter four juniors and nine sophomores
1964-65 Varsity Fencing Schedule
Carl Millerschoen, Other notable but they all possess a great deal
of experience. The loss of many
Dec. 5—Hobart
returnees are back-stroker Charles Zetterberg, medley man Bill fencers due to graduation has Dec. 12—Cornell Case
Fleishman, breast-strokers John hurt the team, but this could Dec. 19—at Syracuse
Jan. 23—at Notre Dame
Danahy and Howard Braun, and prove to be a blessing in disguise
distance man Roy Trottman. A when, in the next couple of years, Jan. 30—Rochester Tech
the youngsters of the team reFeb. 12—at Rochester Tech
future star to watch is sophoturn as seasoned veterans to once
Feb, 13—at Hobart
more Mark Grashow, a backstrokFeb. 27—Syracuse and Fenn
er, who broke a couple of records again lead the squad to victory.
Coach Schwartz, himself a three Mar. 13—North Atlantic Champ
on the frosh team last year. This
ionships at Buffalo, N.Y.
year’s squad will be tested by year member of the UB fencing
some worthy opponents, including
Colgate, one of the best in the
&amp;

Coach Sanford has “high
hopes” for a very good season,
but only time will tell.
This year’s freshman team also
looks very good. It has an exceptional prospect in Michael
Conroy, ex-Kenmore East star,
who looks like he’s going to
break many records during his
tenure at UB. The freshman team
also has two exceptional divers,
Rick Reed and Dave Bogdanowitz.
Any freshman interested in being
freshman team manager, please
contact Coach Sanford at the
Gym.
VARSITY SWIMMING
Dec. 6—Upper N.Y. State Relays
East,

Home
Dec. 9—Buffalo State
Dec, 12—Rochester
Home
Home
Dec. 16—Syracuse
Away
Jan. 23 —Buffalo State
Jan, 27—Brockport State
Home
Jan, 30—Oswego State
Home
Away
Feb. 5—Colgate
Away
Feb. 6—Cortland State
Away
Feb. 9—Niagara
Away
Feb. 13—Geneseo State
Feb. 27—St. Bonaventure Home
Home
Mar. 3—Niagara
Mar, 5—Upper N.Y.S. Champion'

-pionships
Mar. 11-13—NCAA College

Div.

Championships (site to

be

chosen)

Mar. 25-28—NCAA Champion-

ships at Iowa City
Some 15 colleges and universities will enter teams in the
Upper New York State Swimming
Association relay carnival to be
held at the State University College at Brockport Saturday.
Colgate and Syracuse universities are expected to dominate the
meet, which will see among the
entrants swimmers from St. Bonaventure, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, the University of
Rochester, Union, and Buffalo.
Observers at the meet will have
a chance to see the NCAA 200
yard breaststroke champion in
RPI’s Jim Bradburn. Bradburn
copped his title last spring in the
College Division championships.
Another speedster who will
swim is John DeYoung, Syracuse
freestyler who covers the 100
yards in less than 50 seconds.
Starters for the meet will be
Mark Randall of Colgate, former
president of the American College Swimming Coaches Association, and Ted Webster of Syracuse, secretary-treasurer of the
same group.

Jim Fulton, swimming coach at
Brockport, is official host for the
relays.

WIN IN GEM BOWL
BULLS SPARK EAST
Four University of Bufgridiron standouts,
Gilbert. Bob Edward,
Jim McNally, and Leo Ratamess, participated on the
squad in the Gem Bowl at
Erie, Pa., Thanksgiving.
Gilbert, who sparkled
with his pinpoint passing
and evasive running, climaxed a 68-yd. touchdown
drive with the second half
kickoff with a 1-yd. scoring dash to put the East
ahead, 13-12. Later McNally recovered a West
fumble to set up the third
score as the East prevailed,
falo
Don

19-12.

POLES NAMED TO
ALL-EAST TEAM
We wish to

extend

con-

gratulations to defensive
lineman E. GreenarA
Poles, who received honorable mention on this
year’s EC A C All-East
squad. Poles, a 6 foot, 210
pound junior from Rochester, was a defensive stalwart all year for the Bulls,
making life miserable for
enemy r u n n i n g backs.
Greenard, who is also an
undefeated member of the
Varsity Wrestling team, is
expected to develop into
one of UB’s all-time great
grid stars.

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                    <text>—

NO MORE

—

STATE

CHARLIE
iff

UnTv^SIT^1^n1w^^^AT~^FFALO

VILLANOVA

PREVIEW
pagr

patff

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1964

VOLUME IS

NO. 11

Aptheker Speaks Here After Two Year Delay
Creeps To Compete Tonight In Sing Final Speaker in Political Spectrum Series
The annual Greek Sing sponsored by the Inter-Fraternity
Council will be held tonight in
the Fillmore Room in Norton
Union. Two performances are
scheduled at 7:30 p.m. and 10:00

Summer Night, Good Night La
dies
Chi Omega Sorority—June Is
Bustin’ Out All Over, Camelot,
Never On Sunday

p.m.

Small Division:

Four fraternities and four sororities will compete for one of
five trophies, first and second in
the large divison (15 to 30 members), frst and second in the small
division (up to 15 members) and
an overall trophy for the best
performance of the evening. The
trophies will be awarded at the
Pigskin Party in the Fillmore
Room, Saturday, after the UBVillanova football game.

Sigma Alpha Mu Fraternity
All My Trials, I Feel So Good

The selections of the singing
are as follows:

groups
Large

Division:

Sigma Kappa Phi Sorority—Go
Where I Send Thee, Les Birceaux,
Country Gardens
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity—
Seeing Nellie Home, Stars of the

—

About It

Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity—
No Man Is An Island, Gonna Ride
The Chariot
Theta Chi Sorority—A Preludian from “The Sound of Music”,
Scarlet Ribbons
Theta Chi Fraternity
I Believe, We’ll Rant and We’ll Roar
Sigma Delta Tau Sorority
Greensleeves, Ezekiel Saw the
Wheel
An L.P. recording of this year’s
Greek Sing will be made available by prepaid order of $4.00 in
the reservations office.
Tickets are still available at
the ticket booth in Norton Union
for $.75 and will be sold at the
door for $1.00.
—

—

“I am not offering Marxism as
if there is anything
in Marxism, it is that of one of
the critical approaches to our
society. Marxism belongs in the
dialogue; it is a serious, radical
critique; it is not a criminal con-

a panacea

...

spiracy."
This was the stated purpose to
a speech climaxing a two-year,
hotly contested appearance by
Dr. Herbert Aptheker, before
more than 1000 students, including those in second floor listening rooms of Norton. Dr. Aptheker appeared as the final
speaker of the series “A Political
Spectrum of the Contemporary
World.” The previous speakers of
this series, beginning in the fall

“This program was conceived
in order to present to the student
body the major political ideologies of our time. The five speakers we have invited . . . have
provoked a good deal of controversy . . . Controversy is a
fundamental principle of our
democratic system. Wherever controversy is suppressed, thought
languishes. Whenever we fail to
re-examine our beliefs and the
challenge presenfed to them by
other philosophical systems, we
invite intellectual stagnation and
cultural disintegration. On the
other hand, whenever we utilize
our freedom of thought and
speech, democracy flourishes . .
Blind opposition and unconsider
.

The second in the series of

One of Professor Rajasekharaiah main tasks while in residence will be to instruct the
survey in Asian Cultures course
under the aegis of the Education
department. Professor Rajasekharaiah will be lecturing on the
board topic of Indian Culture.
In addition to his formal duties,
he expects to address many campus and civic groups on a variety
of topics. Any campus groups
desiring to have Professor Rajasekharaiah address them are
urged to contact Dr. Burvil H.
Glenn in Room 313 of Foster
Hall, for the scheduling of lectures. Among the engagements
already verified are the following: November 30—at the Kenmore Rotary: M o n d a y—Dr.
Friend’s class meeting at 11:00
a m. in Diefendorf 203. The list
of tentative Lecture topics submitted by Professor Rajasekharaiah is most exhaustive, covering most aspects of Indian life,
literature and culture.

Professor Rajasekharaiah received his B.A. in English and
Philosophy from Mysore University in 1946 followed by his M.A.
in English Literature from Nagpur in 1956. He held the position
of Lecturer in English at the
University of Mysore from 194656 and the position of Assistant
Professor of English from 1956-58.
In 1958 he moved to Karnatak
University where he became
Reader in English which is equivalent to an Associate Professor.

Partnership.”
Born in 1911, Dr. Wyatt received his Ph.D. at the University
°f Vienna in 1936. He was a research associate ?t Harvard University from 1941-46 and from
1946 to 48. He has also served

Dr. ApttMkn- speaks at final lactura of Political Spoctrum Symposium

of, 1962, were Sir Oswald Mosely
on Fascism, Dr. Russell Kirk, on
Conservatism, Senator Eugene
McCarthy on Liberalism, and Mr.
Norman Thomas, speaking on Socialism.
Before introducing Dr. Aptheker, who spoke on “Marxism: Its
Relevance to the United States
Today,” Student Senate President
Robert Finkelstein read a statement delivered by David Bycina,
which has introduced the first
speaker of the political series in
September of 1962. Several of
the remarks very pertinent to
Dr. Aptheker’s appearance:

ed condemnation are senseless
and threaten our American System more than the presentation
of the views which are attacked
It has long been the role of
a university to champion the
cause of reason. What could be
more conducive to the dispassionate study of political theories
than the atmosphere provided by
a searching intellectual institution? It was in the tradition of
academic inquiry practiced by
such schools as Oxford and Cambridge (both of which have played host to today’s speaker) that
this program was initiated . . .
...

servation that “force is the midwife of every old society, pregnant with the new.” This statement, he pointed out, is merely
observation, not advocacy for
revolution. It takes account of
the fact that, historically, a nonviolent revolution has not taken
place. This however “does not
constitute the use of force by
the revolutionary himself. Where
violence has been accompanied
by social revolution, it has appeared because the o I d class,
faced with elimination due to
social developments, has chosen
to try to postpone its determent
by resolving to the violent suppression of the challenging for-

ces.”
Turing to the charge that Marxism is anti-democratic, Dr. Ap(Cont’d on P. 3)

Senate Opposes Referendum Amendment
An amendment to the Student

the opportunity to create a true
democracy, in every sense of the

would give the student body the
right to hold a referendum at
any time they deemed it necessary, was defeated by the Student
Senate at Tuesday night’? meeting. The proposer of the amendment, Miss Trudy Stern, voted
against her own motion after it
was amended by Mr. George

word.”
A letter from the Elections

Association Constitution which

Professor Rajasokharalah
Professor Rajasekharaiah lists a
book of short stories and a book
of poems as being among his
publications and researches.

Convocations Presents Wyatt
Today in Diefendorf at 3:00
Dr. Frederick Wyatt, Director
of die Psychological Clinic of the
University of Michigan, will be
ihe featured speaker of a Convocations Committee program at
3:00 today in Room 146 Diefenoorf. The title of Dr. Wyatt’s
'alk will be “Literature and Psychology, an Ancient and Uneasy

...

conspiracy.
Several different views must be
taken, stressed Dr. Aptheker,
when studying the relationship
of violence to revolution. First,
historically, he quoted Marx’ ob-

Asian Professor Visits Here
visiting Asian Professors is now
in residence. He is Professor T.
R. Rajasekharaiah, who is Associate Professor of English Literature at Karnatak University,
Mysore State, India. Professor
Rajasekharaiah will be in residence until December 23, at
which time he will move on to
Minnesota University for research
in Literary criticism. Before arriving at Buffalo Professor Rajasekharaiah was in residence at
at Farleigh Dickenson University.

The initial program is of enormous importance. The reaction to
it will determine the future of
academic freedom on our campus
To think, to question, and to
discuss; this should be our purpose at the University of Buffalo.”
Dr. Aptheker was born in
Brooklyn in 1915. He was educated in the New York City public schools, and received his bachelor’s, master's and doctoral
degrees at Columbia University.
He was, until 1963, editor of Political Affairs. He is presently
the director of the American Institute for Marxist Studies.
Among his best known works are:
American Negro Slave Revolts,
and American Foreign Policy and
the Cold War.
The substance of Dr. Aptheker's 45 minute prepared talk was
a refutation of what ho called
the falacious charges against
Marxism; specifically that Marxism advocates revolution by violence, has an anti-democratic
ideology, and is an alien inspired

as director of Psychiatry at McLean Hospital and the Cushing
V.A. Hospital.

Dr. Wyatt’s Publications include
Studies in Philosophy and Soeisl
Science, Psychoanalysis and Education, Current Comments on the
Use of Symbol in the Novel, A
History,

Looks at
and. Fiction Discovering Truth.
In addition to publication in
most of the major psychological
journals. Dr. Wyatt’s work has
been printed in many Liberal
Arts and literary publications.
Psychologist

on the condition that it would not
interfere with a regularly planned general election
According to the original

Mr. Neuner’s amendment to the original amendment

Neuner.

would have required two thirds
of the nurtiber of students who
voted in the previous general
election to cast ballots in a referendum to make the vote legitimate.
Speaking for her original motion, Miss Stern said: “The intent
of this amendment is to democra-

tize the system of student govern-

ment which presently exists. We
must give the student body, as a
whole, the opportunity to express

its interests and desires. We have

created

a representative govern-

ment here which functions well
in most eases, however, we cannot take the responsibility for

excluding any member of the student body from his government.
In a relatively small community
such as the university, we have

Committee of the Student Senate,
which would be responsible for
carrying out any referendum, supported the original amendment,
The committee felt that it would
be fully capable of handling a
general referendum at any time,

amendment, a petition signed by
ten per cent of the student body
would be required for a referendum to be called.
Mr. Neuner felt that the 1, student body could not be counted
(Coat'd on P. 5)

�By TRUDY STERN
Wednesday, November 11, the
Sociology Club sponsored a lecture by Jerry Ramotsky, art instructor and well known artist,
presently working at the University of Arizona.
Mr. Ramotsky attacked the tra
dition which is being set by modern artists when they concentrate solely on the superficial,
surface aspects of art. He' said,
“There is a truce between the
art principle, which they think
of as a play principle and the
reality principle-created whereby the artist may be creative and
individualistic as long as he never

gets into the world of ideas.” He

spoke of society's concept of the
artist as dealing in “lustful, sinful" world of sensuality.
The reason that the artist is
considered a “visual specialist”
rather than a philosopher, Mr.
Ramotsky said, is that the philosophy the artist is trying to convey is not considered as important as “composition, the rcla
tionship of forms, light and
space.” He pointed out the fact
that primitive society connoted
a kind of “magic” in art. Today,
“a painting is a visual experience which you can simply accept or reject, you may step up
to it or turn away from it. You
do not fight with it, climh into
it, live with it.” He spoke of “picture making,” as insignificant in
man's communcations with man.

Art, he said, has fallen into the
economic system, the “market
aspect” outweighs the artist’s ideology.

“It
with
fear
that

is a dangerous thing to deal
ideas visually. There is a
on the part of the artist
what' your ideas deal with
may overwhelm your tools.” Mr
Ramotsky said that this dilemma
is normal and natural. “But when
you read out of art, any potential
to say anything, what do you end
up with?”
The artist, he said, has been ac
copied in society for the first
time in hisory, he is considered
the specialist, an organization person. He said, “If you’ve been seeing more painting now, and are
enjoying it less, I think that you,
the people can change it all. Dismiss the idea of art as an absurdity limited to action and mood."
He feels that there is still power, potency as a communication
media in painting. Pop-art.. he
commented was a result of the
artist’s desperate fight to com
pete with the powerful Madison
Avenue artist, who does manage
to get to the people with 50 fool
messages in blazing neon.

Pizza

V

Group Protests

Persetution
Miss Roberta Rothstein has announced that an organization has
been formed to protest the persecution of Jews in the Soviet
Union. This organization will represent the National Struggle for
Soviet Jewry. It will seek the
aid of the B’nai B’rith Foundation and work in conjunction
with local and national organizations protesting Soviet discrimination of Jews.
The organization will present
several speakers beginning with
Rabbi Arnold Shcr of Temple
Beth Zion. Rabbi Shcr will speak
Monday at 3:00 p.m. in the Conference Theater. The speech will
cover the conditions in the Soviet
Union and what can be done
about them.
In addition to the speaker there
will be a film shown every half
hour from noon to 3:00 p.m. Mon
day. The film is entitled The
Price of Silence and is the same
film shown at the New York
Conference of Soviet Jewry at
tended by Senator Kenneth B.
Keating and Senator-elect Robert
F. Kennedy.
It was slated that a petition
will be circulated appealing to
the Soviet Union to uphold "the
dignity and equality of all men.”
Miss Rothstein explained that
the group feels even dictatorships are susceptible to public
opinion. She is much enthused
by the fact that Bertrand Russell
of Kngland has joined this struggle to end Soviet discrimination

and that the World Court has
placed this topic on its docket.
She urges all those who would
like to help in this campaign to
attend the convocation Monday
and feel free to contact her or
Arthur Burke by calling 8314088 or 836-8112 respectively.

ATTENTION
gency meeting of llie Slnilenl Senate this Tuesday.
November 24. at 7:00 in
Boom 242, Norton Hall.
The special meeting has
been called hy Senate
Treasurer William Berger
and I lit* I'inanee Committee. The Hockey Team and
the Ski Clnh budgets will
he discussed and voted on.
The meeting is open to
everyone.

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Secretary of the Air Force for
Research and Development, gave
what he described as a “Quick
flash impression of where the
Air Force is today and where it is
headed,” to 109 AFROTC cadets
at their Dining-In Friday night,
November 13. Dr. Flax spoke of
the research and development of
equipment and weapons systems

but stressed that the Air Force

cpnsists of people. He went on to
say that, “The Air Force is a vast
and complex organization which
is 50% larger than America’s
largest corporation, General Motors, and that a large reservoir of
talent must be brought in to manage such an organization. The
ROTC is a source of such talent,
supplying 40% of today’s Air

Force officers.”
Lt. Col. Thomas Huddleston
honored seven cadets as “Distinguished Cadets”.
They are
Cadet Col. Larry Goble, Cadet
Maj. Norman Mingle, Cadet Maj.

George Olsen, Cadet Maj. Clark
Squires, Cadet Capt. Milton
Marks, and Cadet First Lt. lionaid MacKenzie. The 575th Cadet
Air Division at UB was adopted
by the 4621st Air Base Group and
a certificate of adoption was presented to Cadet Col. Larry Go-

ble.
Groups respesented at the Dining-In were the 35th Missile
Squadron, the 4621st Air Base
Fighter Group, and the 91st Troop
Carrier Group. Representing the
State University of Buffalo were
A. Wesley Roland, assistant to

President Furnas; Dr. Parns, Department of Creative Education;
Dr. Serfustini, Basketball Coach;
and Mr. Warren, Planning and
Development at UB.
In conclusion Dr. Flax stated
that the future of the Air Force
is bright and although it is in
a dynamic state of change, the
Air Force has not lost any of its
old responsibilities but has acquired many new ones.

SPRING SEMESTER
ACTIVITIES CALENDAR: The Union Board
Public Relations Committee is compiling the calendar of events for next
semester. If your organization has not turned in a
list of Spring semester activities, it is necessary that
you do so NOW. An addition to the present calendar will be a section entitled “Going Out” and
listing Buffalo area restaurants and night clubs.
Turn in your information
to Union Board Office, 215
Norton. Deadline: 3:00
p.m. Friday, December 11.

“can IBM
use
my degree?”

There will he an emer-

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Flax Comments on Air Force
Dr. Alexander Flax, Assistant

|

Ramotsky Lectures
For Sociology Club

5

Friday, November 20, 19(4

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

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If your degree is in Liberal Arts, Engineering, the Sciences,
or Business Administration, you may very well find your
route for advancement at IBM. The marketing and application of computers offer opportunity to new graduates in
a variety of ways.
At IBM, Data Processing Systems Engineers study the best
ways to solve customer problems. They find the best
methods and select the best equipment to handle each
type of problem. If your college experience has taught you
to organize information and approach a problem systematically, see IBM.

An IBM Data Processing Representative shows customer
executives how IBM can help business become more efficient. In selling to business, industry, government, or
defense, you use your own initiative and individuality. Advancement comes as you develop skills acquired in college.
Thorough initial training will teach you the techniques of
data processing and marketing computers. If you are looking for opportunities to grow, join IBM. Your placement
office can give you our literature—or make an appointment with our interviewers. IBM is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.

Interviews December 14-15
If you caqnot attend the interviews, write or visit the near
est IBM sales office.
H.W. Bryce
Branch Manager
698 Delaware Ave,

Buffalo. New York 14209

■

JvK'

DATA PROCESSING

�Friday,

November 20,1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

3 Operas Open at Baird UB Debaters Place 1st, 2nd

aptheker

By VICKI BUGELSKI

(Cont’d from P. 1)

various aspects of the operatic
performance.

idea of revotheker said, “The
to democlution as being opposed
racy carries with it the view of

revolutionary process as being

the
conspiratorial, alien inspired.” He

said that the wide spread participation of revolution, far from
being conspiratory and contrary
to democracy, is in fact the “quintescence of democracy. It is counwhich is anti-democratic and therefore conspiratorial in nature.”

ter-revolution

Dr. Aptheker stated that the
theory is not irrelevant to modern America.
Marxism offers, he said, answers
to the problems of exploitation
and oppression, elimination of
monopoly, racism, colonialism,
impoverishment, and war. “In
the face of this kind of reality,
any effort to curb the fullest
and most radical critique and
analysis of our society is a disservice to our country.” He said

Marxist-Leninist

The opera for the fall semester
will be a program of three oneact operas, conducted by Vittorio
Giarratana, staged by Henry
Wicke Jr., and designed by Boris
Baronovic. Performances are Saturday through Monday, at 8:30
p.m. in Baird Hall; tickets available through the box office.
The program is entitled “A

Lyrical Triptych"—Love, Jealousy
and Egotism, and will consist of

Mozart’s Bastien and Bastienne,
Hindemtih’s There and Back, and
Hugo Weisgall’s The Stronger.
Mr. Wicke describes the program as offering a variety of mus-

"This program represents a
change in approach to opera at
UB. attempting to present a brief
but entertaining opera history.
Performers will include student
singers, and musicians, as well
as talented local performers.
Taeko Fujii, Lawrence Bearce,
and Robert Jantz will perform in
the Mozart They will also per-

form in the Hindemith, with Bar
bara Damashek, Virginia Schmidt,
Stuart Wylie, and Douglas Brown.
Miss Damashek will perform in
the Weisgall work also, with
Carol Plantamura, one of the
Creative Associates.

i

dent.

a member of
questioning panel, expressed
his opinion of Dr. Aptheker’s
long delayed appearance as “not
a victory in the sense of an end,
but a victory as the conclusion
of a series which was a fundamental manifestation of the principle of academic freedom. The
Student Senate has also contributed here to our constitutional
law by establishing a precedent
for academic freedom throughout
the state.”

Leslie Foschio,

(he

two-loss record after
with representatives
from Kent State, Western Reserve, Youngstown, John Carol
University and Bowling Green.
Mr. Terry H. Ostermcier, Society advisor, will accompany
varsity debaters Hedda Beckman
and Ellen Abelson (negative) and
Barbara Glegota and Martin Feinrider (affirmative) to the annual
University of Rochester Intercollegiate Tournament this weekend.
At the same time, Mr, Richard
Suttell, assistant debate coach,
will accompany novices Allan
Wayne and Clinton DeVeaux (affirmative) and Robert Dragone
and Charles Liarakos (negative)
to a debate tourney at Harpur
College in Binghamton, New
York. Last year, three of the
participating UB debaters were
awarded speaker certificates at
two-win

competing

lege (who placed first).
Attending the Greater Cleve-

land Forensic Debate Tournament

at Baldwin-Wallace in Ohio were

novices Daniel Katz

that Communism has relevance to
the United States’ answers to
these problems.

Following Dr. Aptheker’s prepared speech, he answered questions posed by a panel of faculty
and students consisting of: Dr.
Elwin H. Powell, associate professor of sociology; Dr. John P.
Halstead, assistant professor of
history; Dr. Marvin Zimmerman,
associate professor of philosophy;
Mr. Robert Fleming, professor
and associate dean of the School
of Law; Mr. Robert Feldman, vicepresident of- the Student Senate;
Mr. Henry Simon, Senator; Mr.
Leslie Foschio, former Senate
president, law, student, and member of the Student Juidiary; and
Mr, Charles Girard, history stu-

Taylor (affirmative) and Charles
Liarakos and Robert Dragone
(negative). Each team scored a

Novice debaters Clinton DeVeaux and Allan Wayne were
named first and second best affirmative speakers respectively
at the annual Wells College Debate Tourney in Aurora, New
York last weekend. The nega
tive half of their unit, Robert
Swanick and Richard Fleischer,
won two of its three debates,
losing the third by only one
point. This four-man unit placed
second in the entire tournament.
Also participating actively were
William Kautz and Alan Gerson
(affirmative) and Barbara Straka
and Rose Broadman (negative).
This was the first intercollegiate
debate competition of the year
for all eight novices. They met
opponents from Harpur College,
University of Rochester, R.I.T.,
Ithaca, Colgate, and Canisius Col-

and

Jean

this tournament.

see how the dorm is managed. There will he hosts
and hostesses who will he
glad to answer any questions that arise and give
you a tour of the dorm, if
von wish.

Schoellkopf

Hall is
open house
Sunday, November 22.
from 2:50 p.m. to 5:0()

sponsoring

an

p.rn.

Everyone is invited to
attend ibis open bouse and

YEAR OF THE ITURTLE
COTTON KNIT

ical experiences which will be
united by visual design,” although
each opera is in a different style.
“The visual impact of tomorrow night’s opera will be reminiscent of a traveling troupe of
performers, composers, and singers. It would seem that they have
come to town with their portable
stage and have set it up in Baird
Hall for the brief three performance run.

“The stage hands will be costumed as Commedia dell” Arte
characters known as Harlequins.
They will change the scenery in
front of the audience uniting the

The Civil Rights Com-

Long slv-zip back

pink, cranberry, white, mint,

Copy deadline for the
New Student Review is
Monday. Interviews for

the position of Kdilor-lnChief of the N.S.R. for
the spring semester ’65
and the la 11 semester ’65
are now in progress. Contact

Judv Auerbacher

at

the N.S.R. Office, 502 Norton. or call extension 2519.

tan, navy, dk brn., dk. green,

blue

Poise n lyy
1086 Elmwood

ave.

KLEINHANS
Downtown Buffalo

Thruway Plata

Boulevard Mall

S&gt;part £hop An5 (Halley $lmp

Due to the Thanksgiving vacation there will not be an issue
of the Spectrum next week.

The next issue will be Friday,
December 4, at which time excerpts of the Herbert Aptheker
Convocation will be presented.

mittee will meet Monday
at
i :()0 p.m. in the Conference Theater Any one
"ho is interested in parti
ipating in a work camp
&gt;inject should attend this

Ask For

Steve Aronson
of U.B.
at Kleinhans
Boulevard Mall

Taking another

ho-hum vacation

because

you think
traveling is expensive?

Cut it out.

SPORT

{" COLLEGE RELATIONS
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Senior in U. B. School of Business Administration will give
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By LARRY SIEGEL

Mickey Mouse Club
Student government is an integral part of student
should br It should '-ovidr
ither things,
can and
-

must

should
leals of
ion, the
iave ef\t least
lis cam-

exisl

are

in,nd stu:casion,

terei

dem

»se few
Sena
Senate
We congratulate those few sincere representatives for
continuing to serve in the face of constant petty quibbling and meriocrity. It is too bad that these Senators
must degrade themselves by being part of an organization
which has shown that individual integrity, a consideration
for the liberal tradition and basic democratic principles
are non-existent.
accoi

It is no accident that those Senators who seem to be

doing the best jobs are those whose loyalties extend beyond the groups or organizations that elected them. These
same Senators have shown a direct commitment to stu-

dent government and the democratic process.

The mediocrity of-the,,Senate is more than the faults
of the members of the Senate,
'v it is the result of the lack
of interest of the-jplpejit body,V The attendance at Senate meetings is at an all time loiw. This is in some cases
true even of Se;nators. For thd Senate to be the voice of
the people, stude
.students
1 must attend the Sei. meetings and
voice thei’
-•ir views thtoughtheir Senators or on the floor
itself.
'

_

-

,

'

.

'

\\

his past Tuesday evening the Senate reach icd its
height
Mjt of the Theater of the A’bsurd.
The coimic quality of the Senate could be
nuughed
at if it weren’t for the seriousness of the business that
they are silupposed l| be dealing with.

Democracy At Work

?

The argument was heard on the floor of the Senate
that a referendum is an impractical and possibly harmful
instrument of democracy. The proponents of this argument, Linda Leventhal and George Neuner among
them, expressed the fear that if only a comparitively
small number of students voted, a true representation of
opinion might not be obtained. Toward the purpose of
insuring a large turn-out it was proposed that at least
two thirds of those voting in the previous annual election
would have to vote in the referendum.
This, it would seem, is a bold and forthright denial
of the essence and spirit of the democratic process. It is
no more ethical to demand a certain number of votes to
be cast than to demand votes for the pro or con. Democracy, as we understand it, means not only the right to
vote but the right not to vote. There is no guarantee of
com'
"h the democratic method;
principles and ideas as
worl
voice of the people be
hea
democratic process becau
work hardly seems conson;
id commitment to repress
*

irn

abK
wer
ten*
ban
and
thei
min
feal
deplore

out to Vote on a ref-

utable, but hardly damnhat if only 100 students
these 100 should be Ussier their opinion, it is
noticed) those involved
concerned enough with
voi
Yet by demanding a
referendum could be dehy which we so greatly

The price of democracy is truly a high one but there
are still those who are willing to pay the price. It is
those people who we commend and it is to those who
oppose the dignity of man and who insult the student
body by doing so that we say that the hottest place in
hell is reserved for you.

The summer is over and more
than half of the one thousand
students who were in Mississippi
this summer have left and returned to their respective colleges and universities. Now, once
again, the Student Non-violent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
is left with only a handful of staff
workers and field secretaries to
carry out an enormous program
that one thousand people found
hard to carry out. This is not
new. SNCC has been faced with
this for many, many winters.
SNCC refuses to stop the work
that must be done because of
limited numbers of people. This
is what gives SNCC its vitality
and energy. The people who run
SNCC are young people like us.
They are people who have just
finished college, or are taking
leaves of absences, or have just
finished high school. They are
people who feel that what they
are fighting for is important, so
important that there can be no
let up. The Student Non-violent
Coordinating Committee has been
doing all the work in the South
for the past three or four years.
In Mississippi, the working organization is called COFO (Council of Federated Organizations).
This means that all civil rights
organizations are united under
one name and one purpose in
Mississippi. However, four-fifths
(80%) of the workers and the
staff of COFO are SNCC workers, SNCC volunteers, and SNCC
members. The reason for this
is pretty clear. SNCC represents
the students. It represents what
they stand for and it represents
the kind of action that students
feel must be taken
All over the country, students

who have returned to college
after their summer in the South,
have carried with them their experiences and their desire to continue the work where they are.
They realize the importance of
fighting continually, not just in
their spare time or in the summers. They realize that where
they are there are problems to
be faced along the same lines.
They realize that the problem of
discrimination does not exist
solely in the South. They realize
that for progress to be made in
the South the help of the North
is needed and more, absolutely
essential. We can see that the
call for help is felt on this campus, by the fact that we have had
a Fast for Freedor in conjunction
with scores of other colleges
throughout the country. This is
the kind of action that is necessary for us to do, but it is the
kind of action that cannot stop
after one experience. It is for
this reason, that of continuous
action, that groups called Friends
of SNCC are springing up
Friends of SNCC are made up
of students who want to do something. who want to help with
the fight that is being carried
on in the South, Friends of SNCC
is made up of people who also
want to do something in the
communities, towns, and cities in
which they live. I know on this
campus that they are many people who want to do something.
They have come up to me and
asked what they as students can
do. They, want to know what
organizations they can join in
order to help. Some feel that the
civil rights committee here on
campus is not active enough to
represent them. Some have heard
of SNCC and some have not.
People have told me that they
would be more active if there
was a Friends of SNCC on this
campus. It is my intent to have a
Friends of SNCC on this campus,
a Friends of SNCC that is active
and continually doing things.
Being part of SNCC would enable
students to be part of a nationwide group of students. It would
enable us to know what is going
op in the South and what is
happening on other campuses.

csCetteri

the Editor

to

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
All letters must be typewritten, double
Names will be withheld upon request.
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.V. on the Tuesday before publication.

Common Courtesy
was

To the Editor:

questioned by a panel of

students and professors. The reason for this question period was
not conceived to “trip up the
speaker” or to “snow him under."
The purpose was to ask intelligent questions so that one might
better be able to evaluate and
critically judge each speaker and
his philosophy. It was not a
game, but rather, it was meant
to be an educational experience.
I take personal exception to
the actions of one member of the
faculty who participated in the

I attended the final speech in
the series, A Political Spectrum
of the Contemporary World, and
I was greatly disturbed by the
actions I observed.
Dr. Herbert Aptheker waited
two years to speak to the students
of our university. The students
of our university could not even

wait two hours to listen to what
Dr. Aptheker had to say. This
educational program sponsored
as part of a series was meant to
be an educational convocation.
Dr. Aptheker spoke on Marxist
today. Mid-way through the convocation over half of the people
who had come to hear the speaker had left. I found Dr. Aptheker to be interesting, informative, and well versed in his area
of concern, but this is of no consideration. Even if he were a
boring, uninformed, incomprehensible speaker, common courtesy tells us not to walk out on
a speaker in the middle of his

panel. He persistently applauded
those questions he felt to be acceptable. I do not know what
criteria he used in judging whether or not to applaud, but one received the impression that he was
acknowledging the questions that
he felt were of the type that
would baffle the guest speaker.
At the same time this professor
actively solicited audience responce and applause. I believe
that this action was totally uncalled for. Dr. Aptheker consented to questions so that we might
be further enlightened as to his
philosophy. These questions were
not intended “to put him on the
spot.” A member of the audience
could easily get the impression
from the actions of this panel
member that it was the audience
against the speaker. This was
clearly not the intention of the
program. I wonder what reac-

address.

The University and the State
Board of Trustees fought for the
principle of academic freedom.
They did not do so in order that
people could see what Dr. Aptheker, or any other speaker,
looked like. They did so in order
that the student of this University might be granted the right
to learn and to critically evaluate anw and all speakers that
might appear on campus. The
principle of academic freedom
was established, and Dr. Aptheker appeared. It is too bad that
those in attendance were not mature enough to take advantage of
the opportunities and the rights
that had been established for

tion Dr. Zimmerman would have
if, in his classroom experiences,
he was met with applause every
time a student asked a question
in the pursuit of knowledge. Dr.
Zimmerman has long been a
strong supporter of academic
freedom on this campus. This is
commendable. But academic freedom carries with it maturity, obligation ,and objectivity that Dr.
Zimmerman has seemingly been
unable to comprehend.
A. Linda Leventhal

them.

This program was created in
order to present an educational
experience for the college student. Each of the five speakers

NSR Editor Queried
editor of NSR, is an ex-officio
member, thus her criticisms must
necessarily be directed to the
policies of last year’s Board.
Miss Auerbacker was selected
as editor of the NSR December
5, 1963 by the Pub. Board to fill
an unexpected vacancy. At this
time she was asked to resign
from the Pub. Board by the chairman; she refused, reasoning
, if (I) would resign it would
“.
be because the Board has failed
(Cont’d on P. 5)

To the Editor:

In the interview of Miss Judith
Auerbacker, a so-called “interested party” in the controversy
over the Publications Board, this
former Board member makes
many irresponsbile and fallacious
statements which must not remain without correction.
Miss Auerbacker is obviously
NOT the interested party she purports to be; she has not attended
one single meeting of the ’64 ’65
Pub. Board of which she, as the

.

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buff®
Publis
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. except
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May,
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Managing Editor
News Editors

Peter Rubin

Paul Nussbaum

_

Barbara Strauss

Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Layout Editor

Marcia

Allan Scholom
Ann Orzulak
David Edelman

-

JOHN
Photo

•

P. KOWAL

Editor
Business Mgr.
Advertising Mgr.
Circulation Mgr.
Faculty Advisor

—

Financial Advisor

Edward Joscelyr
Bernard Dikman
Howard Auerbach
Alice Ostrander

__

__

.

_

__William Siemermg

Dallas Garber

'
Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita, Sue G
Ann Suskmd,
Eileen Murphy, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann, Meryl Frank, Ruth
Heend, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Marion M‘
Debbie Rubie, Jeff Lewis, Margo Rakita, Scott Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leega
.
Rita Weinberg, Judy Schacher, Eileen Teitler, Sue Greene, Sue Duffy/. B, {J
Jim Blogett, Skip Blumoe
Sue Fuller, Nina Kostraba, Lorni Klipstein, Joey Elm,
Judy Woodruff, Terry Davis
Lichwala, Stev
Sports Staff: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan
_
Schuelein, Steve Oberstein, Martin Jaffe, Mike Castro, Harvey Starr
Worfman, Don
Makuch,
Susan
Photography Staff: David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary
Palmer, Lee Corey

General

Staff: Vicki

'

No More
Mr. Charlie

'

the Editor

erei

Friday, November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Postage Paid at Buffalo, New York
S3.00 per year, circulation 9500.
,n0
Represented for national advertising by National Adv#fti»
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Second Class,
Subscription

�Friday, November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGK PIVI

SENATE
(Cont’d from P. 1)

upon to turn out for a referendum. He scored the original
amendment on the grounds that
“the Constitution of the Student
Senate could be changed by the
minority. How can be allow 25
or 50 people to have the power
to change the Senate?” Mr. Neuner also pointed out that the
“apathetic student body would
allow the student government to
be perverted by special interest
groups.” Miss Linda Leventhal
agreed with him, saying that,
“The student body doesn’t deserve the faith of the Senate,”
and that “It (the right to referendum) would only increase student apathy” by making referendum an every day occurrence.
Peter Ostrow said, “I don’t want
the Constitution of the Student
Senate to be subject to the whims
of a passing majority of students.” Mr. Neuner then moved
to amend the original motion,
making it necessary for “two
thirds of the people who voted
in the last general election to
cast ballots.” His motion carried
and was added to the original
motion.

oCetterA

to

(Cont’d from P. 4)
to accomplish a constructive line
of action and policy for itself.”
Her continuing service on the
Board must then be interpreted
as nothing less than a strong en-

dorsement for the actions and
policies of the ’63-’64 Board. How
then, can she blatantly contradict herself by criticizing: “...

the Board fails to exercise its
power in a productive manner”?
Perhaps Miss Auerbacker was
confused, for her dual role of
Pub. Board member and NSR editor clearly resulted in a conflict
of interest which she refused to
recognize. I, however, recognize
it: She is on record for opposing
the recognition of two publications, i.e., “For Two Cents Worth”
and “Focus” because “(she) felt
that between the Spectrum and
the NSR, there is sufficient outlet on campus for commentary.”

the Editor
She is also on record for opposing the recognition of the Bull:
“(it) would be much too expensive and would be a detriment to
existing publications, specifically
the NSR, which needs much more
money if it is to improve.” Yes,
Miss Auerbacker, perhaps you
could say that
Board, or at
least some of the members, has
not been sympathetic to publications.
But the statement that is the
most ridiculous read; “Every time
the Board has a problem, it turns
to
IMPOR
SUPERFICIALLY
TANT things such as its CONSTITUTION.” This I find so ludicrous that to refute it would be
nothing more than an insult to
one’s intelligence. A hypothetical
attitude such as that which has
been displayed deserves no serious attention from any serious
inquirer.
Loni Levy

Cafeteria Policy Questioned
To the Editor;
After three years of being a
victim of UB circumstances, I
wish to initiate a formal protestation as to cafeteria regulations.
Women dorm students are being
rejected from the cafeterias for
a seemingly non-essential reason.
The wearing of slacks does not
fit into the realm of UB etiquette
for dinner time. Are the
hours
of 4:30-6:30 the bewitching hours,
or merely the time alloted for
foolish anachronisms? It seems
rather ludicrous that our daily
academic setting recognizes the
inconvenience resulting from imposed dress
standards.
On November 1, 1964, the UB
syndrone of Food and Housing
granted permission
for female
udents to use their discretion
'

about manner of dress. They then
revoked this decree due to the
unexpected warm weather. Why
is weather the deciding factor?
Why must there be any determining factors? Aren’t female
students responsible enough to
make their own dress limitations?
This archaic principle serves no
purpose except to create unreasonable demands.
Conventionality of this sort
makes a farce of the necessity
for rules and regulations. The
donning of something other than
skirts will not invoke chaos or
disrespect for authority. The real
principle lies in respecting the
perogatives of students in discerning their individual modes of
living.
Irene Yesner

I *C. Registration Schedule
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University College stujp
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—

David Frey spoke against the
revised amendment saying that
“There is no basis in democratic
theory which allows for decision
by apathy.” He agreed with the
senators who opposed the “twothirds” addition to the amendment on the grounds that in a
democratic system every man had
the right to vote. It makes no
difference in the principle underlying democracy, they felt, if that
right is not exercised by all. The
amended motion was defeated by
a vote of 9-for, 13-against, and 2
abstentions.
The Senate then discussed revisions which may be considered
by the special committee which
is revamping the Student Association Constitution. The suggestions
for a new constitution included
the exclusion of an autonomous
Publications Board and the creation of a system of control of
publications, by recognition alone,
through a representative organ
of the Senate. The existing Publications Board has been the subject of much heated controversy
in the last month. It was also
suggested that provision be made
in the new constitution for student body referendum. Clinton
Deveaux offered the idea that the
new constitution provide for control of student funds in a manner
which is more fully representative of the students. He said: “It
is a crime that the students are
required to invest large sums
into a closed corporation of administration and faculty. Students
dents have no say in how their
money is allocated.”

By JEREMY TAYLOR

I am once again smitten with
he weekly paralysis before the
;ypewriter keys. It is born this
week of an internal turmoil that
is not entirely cerebral. I have
discovered over the past months
that my ideas are becoming more
coherent and structured, but that
they are also ebbing farther and
farther away from the beaten
tracks of discourse at this (or

practically any other) uniformity.
It is becoming increasingly more

difficult to make my arguments

recognizable, let alone germane,
to the life of the statistically de-

rived student.
Perhaps the best way to over-'
come this obsatical is to talk
about teaching, as a career, and
as an activity crucial to society
as well as to the individual, but
that in itself is a prostitution of
what I have come to believe, i.e.
that the “society”
“individual"
dichotomy is phony and a block
to understanding. 1 hope to teach;
I have taught in the past and
achieved a high degree of success (in that I developed good
understanding of the academic
problems of the students) and
was able to watch an improvement in grades as I worked, but
I have become profoundly uneasy
with the whole concept of grades,
examinations, and the whole
hedged bet they represent. I do
not believe that education has
anything to do with grades as
we presently experience them,
and as they are presently taught.
-

It also occurs to me that teaching, perhaps more than anything

ing them as an “end” when ii
reality they are a “means”,
believe in education as an “end’
as well as a process. The meam
to that end is teaching, or more
precisely, teachers. I am forced
to question the practical validity
of my decision to be a teacher
if what I am committing myself
to by becoming a teacher is the
propogation of those very things
which sicken and revolt me. If
the Institution of teaching and
education has become as vital
a part of the Protestant Merchantile Ethic (which creates poverty,
ignorance, mediocrity and the
ossification of human values) as
we are constantly told by the
misguided apologists for chromium colleges, then I have no
business even toying with the
idea of teaching as a career, and
I am very serious about it.
But I have had enough good
and deep experiences with teachers and books that I can still
tell myself: “There is hope. There
is a possibility that enough stu-

dents and administrators still believe in education as an end that
there will be a place for a teacher
like me;” what I wonder is whether that hope is justified.
The ambivolence of the teachers position becomes a template
for the dilemma of any kind of
socially relevant action. The retreat of the Hipster is a retreat
from these very issues. 1 have
a great empathy for the Hipster
but I cannot participate in a retreat which cuts off the possibility of any confrontation, nay

Kremlin Turnover Discussed
November 18, the Union Board

sponsored a fireside chat to discuss the significance of the recent
turnover in the Soviet Union, following Premier Khruschev’s “retirement.” Participating in the
discussion were Dr. Charles
Ebert, Professor of Geography,

and Dr. Karel Hulicka, Associate
Professor in History.

Club, $435;
the International Club, $1210; the
Social Welfare Club, $275; the
Student Speech and Hearing Society, $445; the Men’s Glee Club,
$2028, and the Woman’s Chorale,
2404. Also approved was the
$1686 budget of the new Society
on International Medicine, which
is an organization which plans
to bring “good Western medicine”
to the places in the world where
it has not come.

Dr. Hulicka described the extent of our information concern“Nobody really
ing the coup.
knows all the facts as of yet . . .”
he asserted. Khruschev was allegedly relieved because of ill
health, being replaced by two
member of the Soviet heirarchy.

$950; The Astronomy

comrort, and caution, then I
one question the validity of teach

else, promotes all the innane and
immoral nonsense which appears dialogue.
at times to the staple of the
When I teach I will teach every“American Day Dream”. For inthing that my students want to
stance, are “language skills" know that I can teach them. I
taught on such a massive scale, will teach fundamentals of Enghere and elsewhere, to aid stulish to those who want them
dents in participating in the exwhether they want them for “betperience of literature and the
ter business” or better education.
intellectual discourse, or are they But I will not teach them that
perpetuated as ruin of tho gam*
the language is a tool; I will not
of success. As a friend of mine
teach them that literary experonce said, “You got to talk good ence is icing on the cake of
to talk to people who talk good”. "social skills”: I will not teach
If good grammar and vocabulary them that any measurement of
are merely the “tools” (sic) with man is better that the measure
which we achieve complacency, of their own hearts.

The Senate approved the budg-

ets of the Anthropology Club,

The $1865 budget of the Ski
Club, the “Schumiesters”, was
scheduled times. At this time, turned down by a 6-11-3 vote. It
the Receptionist will give the stu- was sent back to the Finance
dent registration cards and a list Committee because of questions
of instructions to follow in the raised concerning the group’s
function as solely a recreational
subsequent registration procedures. 0. T. and P. T. students activity, the dues the members
will make appointments with Miss are capable of paying, and the
the
Greenman and Miss Heap direct- question of whether or not
ly .Nursing students are advised Club was opened to all eligible
and registered through the School students as stipulated in the Student Senate Constitution.
of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
Discussion of the Hockey Club
appointments at the scheduled
budget was interrupted when a
time, or who do not keep them
was called for and was
when made, will be required to quorum
not achieved. The meeting ended
register in Clark Gym on Regisat 11:10 p.m.
tration Day in January.
Receptionist in Diefendorf 114
one week in advance of the above

nmccTioMS

According to Dr. Ebert, Khru
schev’s dismissal was at least partially a manifestation of a conservative-liberal feud in commu-

nist political philosophy.
Both men agreed that the SinoSoviet schism was definitely responsible to a great extent for
Khruschev’s dismissal, which offered the two governments a
scapegoat and an opportunity to
mend relations. Also, Khruschev’s

personality was an important
factor, causing accusation of nepatism and "old-fashionedness.”

Another factor which added
fuel to the political fire was the
growing number of young intellectuals. Although much of the
Soviet Union’s progress was dependent upon the efforts of its
youth, Khruschev was frequently
critical. Dr. Hulicka spoke of the
democratic elements operating
within the structure of Soviet society which probably irritated
Khruschev,

Ranney Evaluates Elections
Dr. J. Austin Ranney will address the student body today
at 3:00 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room. Dr. Ranney, professor of
Political Science at the University of Wisconsin, will give an
“Evaluation and Analysis of the
Past Elections.”
Dr. Ranney, who is an expert
on Political parties and voting

behavior, will discuss the November 1064 elections in depth.
Dr. Ranney, former professor of

Political Science at the University of Illinois, is the author of
Democracy and the American
Party System; The Governing of
Man; The Doctrine of Responsible

Government. He has contributed to the Southwestern Social Science Quarterly, The American Political Science Review,
Western Political Quarterly, and
the Yale Review. Or. Ranney will
address all Interested persons
this afternoon. The Political
Science Club urges all to attend.
Party

�PACE SIX

Friday, Novambar 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

AAS, AF to Initiate
New Pledges Tonight

UNIVERSITY
PLACEMENT. SERVICES

This Friday at 7:30 p.m. the

CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION
The ninth in a series of twelve
discussions of the “Gospel According to Saint Mark” will be
held Tuesday and Wednesday. Attention will be 1 given to “The
Ministry in Jerusalem” (Mark 11:
1-13:37). The Tuesday session will
be held in Room 220, Norton
Union and the Wednesday session in Room 266. Both discussion groups arc under the guidance of Chaplain R. Sherman
Beattie. All students are invited
to attend cither of the duplicate
sessions.
HILLEL

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House: Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on “Chanukah
In Jewish Tradition."
Hillcl House will be open this
Saturday evening for another in
a series of social-programs. There

will be social dancing. Light refreshments will be served. The
affair is scheduled for 8:30 p.m.
During the week of Chanukah,
candles will be lit nightly at
Hillel House, A candle lighting
service will be held Sunday, November 29 at 6:00 p.m. and every
day thereafter at 5:00 p.m. Students interested in conducting
their own ceremony will be
able to obtain candles at the
Hillel House.
A half hour film, The Price of
Silence, will be shown in Norton
Hall Monday and Wednesday during the lunch hour. The film depicts the anti-Jewish policies of
the Soviet government. Admission
is free. All students and faculty
are cordially invited to sec this

movie.

Sunday evening this film will

he preivev/cd at Hillel House at
7:30 p.m. Students are asked to
join a discussion on this subject
following the movie. Student
Zionist Organization will participate in the discussion.

NEWMAN
The Sunday night discussion
group will not meet this coming
Sunday. Discussions will resume
Sunday, December 6 at 7:30 p.m.
at the Hall.

There is no meeting this comign Wednesday. The next meeting will be Wednesday, December
2 at 7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room. Doctor Stephen Clement,
a psychiatrist at Strong Memorial Hospital, will speak on
Mental Health.
Just a reminder: December 4
is the First Friday of the month;
Mass is said daily at Newman
Hall at noon.
The Newman Club of Buffalo

State Teachers College has invited the Club to a mixer tonight at their Hall at 8:00 p.m.
at 1219 Elmwood Avenue. Admission 25 cents.
WESLEY FOUNDATION
As part of its Religious Arts
Festival, the Wesley Foundation
is sponsoring the nationally
known Bishop’s Company. A
travelling repertory group, they
will present George Bernard
Shaw's Saint Joan this evening
at 8:00 p.m. in University Methodist Church. This is a once in a
year offer. For information about
the Bishop’s Company itself consult the November issue of
Reader's Digest.
Sunday evening the Foundation will celebrate Thanksgiving
together with a complimentary
supper at 5:00 p.m.,

Methodist Church.

University

Coming Music Events Listed
Opera Program— Three one act

operas of

Mozart, Hindemith and

Weisgall will be given Saturday
through Monday; all performances in Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m.
Tickets are available through the

box office.

The UB choruses will be per-

forming with the Philharmonic
Tuesday and Thursday in Mozart’s
Idomeneo, concert version, under

Lukas Foss.

A concert of “new music” will
be given Sunday, November 29,
at 4:30 p.m. in the auditorium of
the Alb-ight-Knox Art Gallery
(admission free), and will
feature
some of the Creative Associates,
composers and performers here
this year on a Rockefeller grant.

William Penn, trumpeter, will
give a recital in fulfillment of
Bachelor of Fine Arts in per-

formance

requirements Tuesday,
December 1. at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hall (admission free). Mr, Penn
teaches trumpet at the Villa
Maria College of Music, and per-

forms with campus and Buffalo
ensembles. He is one of the stu-

dent directors of the
comedy this year.

musical

Howard Coif, cellist with the
Philharmonic, will give a recital
Wednesday, December 2, in Baird
Hall (admission free),
Concert-goers are reminded that
WBFO, the campus radio station,,
has the program "Concert Hall”,
every evening at 8:30 p.m. Program guides may be obtained at
the station, in Baird Hall, or by
mail request.

Carets of the Arnold Air

Joining the

cadets at the affair

will be the members and pledges
of Angel Flight, the Society’s coed auxiliary, and their dates.
The dance will be the first of
the 1964-65 school year, inducting the Fall Pledge classes of the
two organizations. These pledges
will be initiated in a brief, military ceremony before the dinner
Friday, at which they will be addressed by the Society’s advisor,
Lt. Col. Thomas L. Huddleston,
USAF.

Tiereed Ear
3626 Main (near Bailey)
featuring pierced
earings and the
pierced look
832-7579

December!

Administration, Law

&amp;

Liberal Arts Interview

CITY OF DETROIT CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
BA-Hist. fit Gov t., Psych., Soc., Eco.
BS with interest in Accounting, Cen. Bus.
S. D. LEIDESDORF fit CO.

Accounting MALE
PhD
FIRESTONE PLASTICS CO.
MALE
Accounting
BS. MBA with interest in
ARTHUR YOUNG fit CO.
BS, MBA,

December 1

with interest iu

-

-

-

December 2

-

BS, MBA with interest in Accounting
U. S. ARMY
Eco.. English, Ceog., Ceol., Hist, 6t Gov’t., Psych
BA. MA. PhD
Soc., Mod. Lung.
BS.MBA. PhD with interest in Accounting,Gen. Bus., I.R 6c L. R..
-

December 2

-

Vlktg., Sales, Retailing

NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD
BS. MBA with interest in Gen. Bus.. I.R. fit L. R.
YWCA
BA Psych., Soc. MALE
HASKINS 6c SELLS

December 3

-

December 3

-

December 3

-

MBA with interest in

BS.

-

Accounting

December 4

CARBORUNDUM CO.

December 4

MBA with interest in Accounting. Gen. Bus., Sales. Mktg.
B. F. GOODRICH
BS. MBA with interest in Accounting, Sales, Mktg.
-

-

JOY MANUFACTURING CO.
BS with interest in- Accounting
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
BA, MA
Soc..-Psych.. Mod. Lung.,

December 4
December 7
December 7

December S

Hist. 6c Gov't., Gcog.. Eco., Eng.

UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
Candidates interested in Grad. School at the University
XEROS CORP.
BS, MBA with interest in Eco., Mktg., Sales
NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD SYSTEMS
Accounting, Gen. Bus., Sales,
BS with interest in
GENERAL TELEPHONE OF PA.
BS with interest in Accounting. Gen. Bus., I.R. He L.R..
MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE

December 9

-

-

December 10

The Music Committee
of Norton Union Board is
sponsoring a Folk and
Classical Guitar Concert
in Kleinhans, Friday, December 4. The guitarists
performing will he Oswald
Rantucci and Robert Ma-

honey. There will be dancing in the Mary Seaton
Room afterwords. Busses
will l»e available for those
desiring them. This program is part of Kleinhans’
Winter Fops Concert and
is co-sponsored by other
area colleges in addition
to UB. The tickets are
$1,75 and will go on sale
Monday at the ticket booth.
Anyone desiring to take a
bus from campus should
sign up at the ticket booth
when they buy their tickets.

of Rochestci

-

December 10

BA. NJA
BS. MBA

Mkgt., Eco.
Mkgl,

English. Geog., Hist. 6c Gov’t., Mod. Lang., Psych., Sot.
with interest in
Acc’tg., Gen. Bus., I.R. &amp; L.R., Mkgt..

-

-

Sales, Retailing

December 11
December

NATIONAL BISCUIT CO.
BS with interest in- Accounting. Gen. Bus.
PEAT. MARWICK &amp; MITCHELL
BS with interest in Accounting
BUSINESS MACHINES
-

December

BS. MBA with interest in Accounting, Eco.. Mktg.,
HUMBLE OIL 6c REFINING CO.
English
BA
Accounting. Eco.. L.R. 6t I.R., Gen. Bus.,
BS
with interest in
Sales, 'Retailing
-

December

—

-

-

Engineering &amp; Science Interviews
November 110

CITY OF DETROIT CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
BS Chem.. CE, EE. IE. ME. ES
Male
MECHANICAL HANDLING SYSTEMS, INC.
BS. MS GE. EE. IE. ME. ES
Mule
HARRISON RADIATOR
BS GhE. EE. IE. ME. Math
SYLVANIA ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
-

November 30

—

-

November 30

-

-

November 30

BS. MS. PhD.

-

EE. ME. Math. Psvsics

BS
IE
SYLVANIA HOME ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
Sec Above
FIRESTONE TIRE 6c RUBBER CO.
BS
GhE. IE. ME
-

November 30
•December 1

-

MS

December

IE

-

TECHNOLOGICAL PRODUCTS-ELECTRONICS DIVISION

ERIE

-

BS.
EE. IE. ME
FIRESTONE PLASTICS CO.
ChE. ME Male
BS. ME
U. S. ARMY CORPS. OF ENGINEERS

December

-

December

-

BS-CE. EE.

ME

December

U. S. ARMY

December

UNION CARBIDE
PhD Chem.
CARBORUNDUM CO.
BS GhE. EE. IE. ME, ES

BS,

MS. PhD.- Bio, Chem..GhE.CE. EE. IE, ME. SS. Math Physics
-

December

-

MS. PhD. GhE, EE. ME, ES, Math. Physics
B. F. GOODRICH CO.
BS. MS. PhD Chem . Math. Physics. EE. ME. GhE
NEW YORK AIR BRAKE
BS
ME
-

December 4

-

December 4

-

December 4

DETROIT
OPPORTUNITIES IN
CITY OF

Engineering design ami construction ol
sewers, bridges. water treatment
plants, pumping stations. pi|&gt;elines and
municipal buildings; Budgeting. auditing
streets,

analysis, cost

accounting- Real ami

(KTsonal prt&gt;|H*rt\ appraising: Purchasing:
Personnel; Public bousing; Social work;
Recreation and physical education; Municipal lores! n; Analytical and control chemistry; I.andscape Architecture; Urban planning. Hospital and public health nursing:
Medical technology; Occupational ami physical therapy. Nutrition and dietetics.

7ke

Business
November 30

-

The event culminates a six
weeks’ pledge program for junior and sophomore cadets wanting to enter the Society, in which
they received intensive training
in military bearing; the mission
of the Air Force; and the structure, advantages, and projects of
the Society.

systems

brewed for braves....

Society

will hold a joint initiation-dinner
dance at the Officers’ Open Mess
of Niagara Falls Air Force Base.

I

'

CAMPUS
INTERVIEWS
N«\cnibcr 30. 1964
Scr your Placement Office

for an appointment

/

a

JOY MANUFACTURING CO.
BS
EE. ME Male
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
BS. MS. EE. ME. Math. Physics
PhD. EE. Math
-

December 7

-

-

December 8

PITTSBURGH PLATE CLASS CO.

BS, -ChE.CE.

EE. IE.

ME

MS
GhE
MS. PhD
Chem. (Analytical. Inorganic, Organic. 6t Phvsical)
INTERNATIONAL PAPER CO.
BS
ChE. GE. IE, ME
NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD SYSTEMS
Chem , ChE. CE. EE. IE. ME. ES. Math
BS
NIAGARA MOHAWK POWER CORP.
BS. CE. EE. IE. ME
GENERAL TELEPHONE CO. OF PA.
BS EE. ME. Math. Physics
SINCLAIR RESEARCH INC.
-

-

December 9

-

December 9

-

December 10

-

December 10

-

December 11

BS. MS. PhD Chem.
BS ChE
NATIONAL BISCUIT CO.
Chem.. ME. Bio.
BS
-

-

December

-

December

BUSINESS MACHINES

BS. ME. PhD

-

EE. IE. ME.

Math. Phvsics

ENGINEERING STUDENTS: Harrison Radiator, Division of General
Motors Corp. holds an open house during the Christmas vacation tor
all junior, senior, and graduate engineering students from the Western
New York area. They are inviting you to spend a day touring their
Lock port Plants and getting acquainted with their products, processes
no
and people. This year the date selected is December 29. There is the
attempt to recruit engineers at the December get-together. In
past, visitors have expressed their appreciation for the opportunity
to become acquainted with an industrial organization through a non
recruiting type of contact. If you are interested in attending this open
house, pick up your cards at the University Placement Services

Schoellkopf Hall. Make

vour reservations early!

INTERNSHIPS IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: Selected college
graduates, particular!) those with a Master’s Degree, have been train
ed each year for positions in the administrative Field in State govern
ment under the sponsorship of the Governor's Sponsoring Committee
for Public Administration Training. Appointments as Public Admini s
tration Intern will be for one year from July I/1965 to June dO
1966 at S6.300.

*

DOUBLE-HOPPED
for Extra Full-Strength
Taste

VP
,i

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

Appointments should be made at least one. week in advance ot the in
terviewing date. Students must complete registration in order to
eligible for Ccimpus interviews. If you have not done so, register i

!»*'

Telephone 831-3311

Schoelikoph Hall

For further information on these interviews, Check the bullet"
boards or call Universitx Placement Services,

�Friday, November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

Call Board

industrial relations club
The next meeting of the Industrial Relations Club will be held
Tuesday at noon in Room 329,
Norton. For those who are bored

by meetings, very interesting

movies will be shown.

RECREATION COMMITTEE
A Game Night, sponsored by
the Union Board Recreation Committee, will be held in the recreation area of the Student Union
Friday, December 4.

RUSE

There will be a meeting of
RUSE (Returnees University Student Education) in Room 344,
Norton Union, at 2:00 p.m. Monday, to discuss future programs.
Anyone interested please feel
free to attend.
SENIOR WEEKEND
A table will be set up in Norton from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
today for students to sign up for
the various Senior Week committees.

SOCIAL WELFARE CLUB
Civil Rights will be the topic
discussed at our next meeting.
Our speaker will be Mike Lappin, chairman of the Civil Rights
Committee. The meeting will be
held Monday at 6:45 p.m. We will
meet at the home of our president, Diane Winegar, 68 Duluth
Avenue. Anyone needing transportation should meet in front
of Norton Union at 6:30 p.m.
All are welcome, and refreshments will be served. Come and
get acquainted!

PAGE SEVEN

Greek Notes
Alpha Gamma Delta announces
the officers of the Fall Pledge
Class: President, Hilda Olson;
Vice-President, Mary Lou Fieri;
Secretary, Nina Impellittieri;
Treasurer, Barbara Coniglio;
Chaplain, Marjorie Nelson; Scholarship Chairman, Joanne Sgroi;
Activities Chairman, Linda Holt.

Next Monday, Dr. Custus will
address the sisters and pledges of
Chi Omega on Greek Background.
Alpha Epsilon Pi is looking
forward to their open party Friday, December 4.

Gamma Phi will hold a casual
party at the Sheridan Room of

the Sheridan Lanes this Saturday
evening at 8:00 p.m.
This Sunday at 7:00 p.m., Phi
Epsilon Pi is holding their annual Founders’ Day dinner. Dr.
Milton Pleasur will be the guest
speaker.

Phi Kappa Psi is looking forward to a joint party with Alpha

Sigma Phi Fraternity tomorrow
night. Congratulations to Bob

Malucci, winner of the annual

Solon E. Summerfield Outstanding Senior Award.
Sigma Delta Tau is looking
forward to an enjoyable card
party this Sunday in Norton.

Tau Kappa Epsilon will have a
date party at 8:30 p.m. Saturday
night at Boscella's. Doug Hunter
will attend.
Pledges of Sigma Kappa Phi
will hold a shoe shine today in
Norton from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00

p.m.

Sigma Phi Epsilon wish to thank
Howie Auerbach for arranging
the appearance of Patti Chandler,
co s tar of the motion picture
Pajama Party, at the Sig Ep pajama party last week at the Hotel
Worth.
A closed cocktail party will be
sponsored by the Sig Eps following the Greek Sing this evening.
The Sig Eps congratulate pledge
Jeff Baker for being elected
pledge class president.

Theta Chi Sorority would like
congratulate the officers of
the Fall Pledge Class. President
is Eileen Lloyd, Vice President—
Sue Wehrfritz, Secretary—Claudio Elliott, Treasurer
Penny
Reese, and Chaplain
Gloria
Pardo.
to

—

—

Theta Chi Fraternity will have
a game nite this Saturday at the
Theta Chi House, 2 Niagara Falls
Boulevard.

szo
Student Zionist Organization

will

join Hillel foundation this Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m. in a

discussion of the film The Price

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

of Silence, a documentary deal-

ing with the Soviet government’s
persecution of Jewish minorities.
The meeting will take place at
the Hillel House, 40 Capen. The

film will be shown at this time,
following which there will be a
discussion. All students are urged
to attend.
UNION BOARD

There will be an open Union
Board Meeting Tuesday in Room
233 at 7:00 p.m. The Movie Committee will present the film Lavender Hill Mob in the Conference
Theater, Tuesday noon, 3:00, 6:00,
8:00 and 10:00 p.m.
Union Board also wished to announce that there are still positions available on all standing
committees and on Spring Arts
Festival Committees.
Applications may be obtained in the
Board Office, 215 Norton, Also,
applications for Spring Weekend
Committee are being taken by the
Personnel Committee.

OCCUPATIONAL

THERAPY

CLUB

The Occupational Therapy Club
will hold a short business meeting today at 4:00 p.m. in Room
231. At 4:30 p.m. Mr. Jack C.
Anthony, director of the Cradle
Beach Camp for Crippled Children, will show a movie of the
camp entitled Our Little World.
The movie and lecture is open
to any interested students. All
Occupational Therapy and Phys1 ca
I Therapy students are especially urged to attend this
most interesting meeting.

ATTACHE CASES BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
,

Complete Selections of Name Brood Luggage
Courtesy Discounts

3400 MAIN STREET

to University

(Opposite

UB)

l:j

Faculty and Students

t ■

TF 3-16

\

1

v

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till 9 P.M.

\

*

/

f r/

V

'■

n

,

I

'

i

!'

1
UNIVERSITY
1

/

ALLENHURST COUNCIL
The

Allenhurst Council will
an Open House Sunday from
2:00 to 6:00 p.m. There will be
continuous free bus service from
Goodyear. There will also be free
refreshments and guided tours.

hold

“ON CAMPUS”#**-

�Friday, November 20, IM4

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Slee Professor Talks
On Musical Education
By VICKI BUGELSKI

Alexei Haieff, visiting Slee professor of music this semester,
gave the second in the series of
three lectures Monday night in
Capen Hall.

Hr. Haieffs topic was "Musical
Education and the New Styles A Speculation.” He stated that
musical training must be very
demanding, precise, and thorough
as the shortest way to the “new
freedom." This method, he added,
is also the “driest." The teacher
must give the “initial push," and
must always be on the “alert to
attack new problems.”
Musical training, according to
Hr. Haieff, can be compared with
scientific training or the training
of the precisely skilled, and
should be as demanding. In science, one tiny mistake could be
disastrous. “We are more fortun-

ate in the arts," said Mr. Haieff.
He explained this statement further, stating that “one false note

would not cause a loss of life”
or at least he hoped that it
would not!

■

Mr. Haieff continued with discussion on the training of composers, and then mentioned some
of the more recent trends in
music, with his opinions. He feels
that the composers of electronic
music are still far too preoccupied with exotic and weird effects, and the music will remain
superficial until they become
more concerned with the basic
and the fundamental. Composition is "quite easy” to say the
least, for composers who follow
the principle that any extraneous
sound becomes a valid entity in
composition
for example, ping
pong balls, street noises
even
the peeling of grapes, if someone
could make it loud enough thru
amplification. Only the amount of
time has to be decided. Anyone
could bo a composer then.
-

-

Mr. Haieff then summarized his
views on musical training as
these; (1) preservation of the

The Defense of Taipei'
Rehearsals in Progress

Casting for the fall major production, The Defense of Taipei by
strictest application of rules durConrad Bromberg, visiting artist
ing training, and the demanding in the Drama and Speech Deof the highest standards; (2) partment, has been completed
greater alertness, and freshness and rehearsals are now in progof mind, to achieve this standard ress for its opening Wednesday,
in the shortest possible time; and December 9. The play revolves
(3) guarding the openess of mind
around two couples, one negro,
and ears to the new style and the other white.
sound, for accurate and unbiased
Heading the cast is Mr. Bromjudgement.
berg. Previously he has appeared
The remainder of the program on Broadway in The Advocate and
as Eilef in Brecht’s Mother Courwas dedicated to the memory of
age. Off Broadway he has been
French composer Francis Pouseen in The Love Nest, P.S. 193,
lenc, who died in 1963. Jay Humand Tevye and His Daughters.
eston, cellist and Emmanuel Sinderbrand, pianist, performed Mr. Mr. Bromberg, the playwright, is
Haieff’s 1963 sonata dedicated to a member of the writer’s unit in
the Actors’
Poulenc. Mr. Haieff described the
three-movement work as “StateCast as Mr. Bromberg’s wife in
ment, Opposition, and ReconciliTaipei is Miss Georgia Hester.
very
ation." The first movement,
Miss Hester has studied her craft
melodic, and gracefully moving, at the American Theatre Wing
was very well written for the inin New York and with Charles
struments, showing the resources Conrad in Hollywood. She has apof cello technique. The second peared frequently in the latter
movement, more dissonant, had community; in the Miracle Workvery effective cello pizzicato, and
er at La Jolla Playhouse, First
the third alternated slow sections Lady at Equity Library Theatre,
with brilliant fast sections in a and as Lady Anne in Richard III
“moto perpetuo" style, and finat the Theatre Vanguard. Miss
ished with a quiet end. Both Hester has toured the several
performers played very well, with campuses of the University of
complete control, and much feelSouthern California with Which
ing for interpretation.
Way the Winds. For television,
Miss Hester has performed in
Special guests for the program
were Arthur Gold and Robert Studio One dramas on CBS. I
Playing the second couple uhF i z d a 1 e, internationally-known
der the direction of Dr. Thdmas
piano duo, who performed several
two-piano works of Poulenc, “le Watson are Mr. William 'Watgrand musicien francais”, in Mr. kins and Miss Edythe Davis, seasoned community players.
Haieff’s terms. The duo had perfect ensemble, fine interpretation
Mr. Watkins has worked with
of the French style, and sparklthe Ira Aldrich Players in Moon
ing, virtuoso technique, especially On a Rainbow Shawl, Come Back
evident in the rapid passages.
Little Sheba, and The Wooden
Dish. While attending Buffalo
The only disappointment in the State. Mr. Watkins appeared
in
whole evening was the audience Shaw’s Caesar and Cleopatra.
—there was not enough of it, More recently he played in Toys
which can be .a real setback to in the Attic for Seven
Arts Prothose about to perform, although ductions.
if any performers were disapMiss Davis’ acting credits inpointed in the audience, it cerclude Member of the Wedding at
tainly did not show in performUB and Kent State, Ohio; A Raiance.
sin in the Sun at the Studio TheaThe next Slee Lecture and Contre, and Purlle Victorious at the
cert will be Thursday, December Off-Broadway Theatre. Miss Davis
at
8:30 p.m., Capen Hall (ad3,
has been a disc jockey with
mission free).
WUFO.

Foreign Condition Discussed
At Medical Society Meeting
The Society of International
Medicine presented Dr. Pantera,
a professor in the University Dental School, and Sam Bodner, a
sophomore medical student, as
guest lecturers' at their meeting
Monday in 147 Capen. This was
part of the Society’s present
study of medical conditions in
foreign countries.
Mr. Bodner began the program
with the showing of a group of
slides which were taken on his
recent trip to Nigeria in affiliation with the medical student
group of Experiments in International Living. This agency sponsors a type of student exchange
program in which the participants are housed with native
families while carrying on research and public health activities.
The medical problems that
plague Nigeria are concerned
mainly with tuberculosis, malar-

ia, and other diseases common in
the tropics. Leprosy offers a special problem other than the tragic physical deformity, because
the infectious variety manifests
itself in nodules that may be concealed. Even though leprosy is

not hereditary, the leper’s children are forced to remain in the
colony, where they will eventually contract the disease through
contact. The distended stomachs
of almost 100% of the native

children are caused by a form of
malaria. A tuberculin test that
Mr. Bodner and his research
group ran in a village school
showed 30% positive.
Nigeria and other African countries are actively engaged in preventive medicine practices. Mr.
Bodner participated in a mass
polio vaccination in which 34,000
children between the ages of six
months and three years were immunized. On the Ivory Coast,
smallpox has been almost eradicated by the vaccination of over
three million people.
The film that Dr. Pantera presented pointed out several other
functions of Project Hope. 55,000

children were immunized

against

various diseases in Trujillo, Peru,
where the boat was docked during Dr. Pantera’s service. Vitamins were distributed as preventive measures. But the bottling
and dispensing of U.S. surplus
milk was appreciated most by
the children of Trujillo.

NOW!
FREE
DELIVERY

Committee Ends
The Union Board announced
that it has eliminated the Concert Committee as a result of recent revision of its constitution
and by-laws. President George
Orlando stated that the committee was abolished because of a
lack of student participation, plus
the fact that the Board felt it
would be useless to attempt to
supplement the events brought
into the city by Kleinhans Music
and the local night clubs. Instead,
Mr. Orlando hopes to work more
closely with Kleinhans, as will be
the case with the Folk-Pops concert December 4, for which the
Music Committee will sell tick-

(laiAom
PIZZA
PATROL

ets.

Mr. Orlando added, however,
that the annual spring weekend
concerts will continue.

The School of Business
will hold elections for the
Business
Administration
Student Council Decemlrer
7 and 8, for the offices of:
President, Vice-President,
Secretary, Treasurer.
Any person interested
in becoming a candidate is
to obtain a petition from
the business office, Crosby
151. These petitions, with
the required number of
signatures, are to be returned December 1, to
Norton Union, Room 205.

This is big news for Pizza lovers. Santora’s Pizza Patrol will
deliver an extra delicious, freshly baked and piping hot pizza
right to your door at no extra charge. Call Santora’s Pizza
Patrol any day from 2 P. M. to Midnight, and presto, your
favorite pizza will be on its way to your home. You may order
in advance for delivery to parties, meetings or other special
occasions'.

FOR FRESH BAKED
PIPING HOT PIZZA
call

837-5700

�IhMhr Ml IM4

The Kibitzer

—

My sincerest
Shiela Dowd, and now that I got
that off my mind,, on to whatever’s worth kibitzing. As concerns last week’s hand

S: K Q 3
H: A J 2

opposite

Now the story is as follows
NORTH

H: J

A J 10 9 6 4
H: 4
D: 6 3 2
C: K 9 6
S;

I have conceived of a plausable
bidding sequence to get to six
NT, and found out what actually
occurred, which is quite different.

D: 9

C: A 5

S: 2S (1), 3N (3)
N: 3D (2), 6N
(1) Weak
(2) Forcing
(3) Good spade suit and club

A or K

Actually:

1C, 2H, 6N
S: IS, 2N ?

N;

I do not understand the two
NT bid either, but if I could play
the cards like Ralph Bartlett, I’d
bid like him too!

spades first. You

duck the heart king, and win the
diamond shift with the ace. You
draw trumps, cash the diamond
king and heart ace, throwing a
diamond from your hand. Then
you ruff a diamond. If they split,
it’s all over. If East has the last
diamond, you run spades, coming
down to:

H: J
D: 9
C: A 10
S; 4
C: K 9 6

You lead the last trump, and
West must pitch a club so as not
to establish dummy’s heart jack,
you pitch the heart and East too,
must let go a club. The ace, king
and six of clubs take the last
three tricks.

If West holds the diamond, you
make it if he has one

can still

C; J

C: K 9 6

You lead the trump and West,
being unable to dispose of a red
card, plays a little club. Either
red card goes from the board,
and East pitches his heart. Now,
a small club to the ace drops the
queen, and you finesse on the
way back to your hand. (West
has a diamond and a heart left,
in two cards, so he surely doesn’t
hve the club jack.)

In six "NT, there is still a good
line of play. Again you duck the
heart K, and win the diamond
shift. You cash the two good red
cards, playing your red cards,
and start running spades. On the
fourth and fifth rounds you dispose of a little diamond and the
club ten. The last spade, again
assuming West to have one club
honor, allows him to relinquish
the fourth diamond, (if he has it)
the heart Q, or a club, stiffing
his honor, and allowing the
finesse. Therefore he has three
diamonds, or less. So you throw
the heart, and execute a squeeze
on East in the minors. Do not
suffer from any attacks of conscience; he probably supports
Publications Board and deserves
it.
Nobody will send in Tom
Bridgelies, so do not complain:
Three no, spake Tom, gamely.
By my green candle, 5 clubs,
pre-empts Mr. Appleby lengthily.

SPECIAL!!
Just show your I.D. cord st
our window and you can buy
our 100% Pure Beef Hamburgers for

to Hew York

12c

Thanksgiving Weekend. Leave

Cali

TL 3-7411 l-s

8 7

SOUTH
S: 4

Letters, Theses, Term Papers,
Reasonable prices. Mrs. Sol
Soloway, 18 N. Elmwood Ave.,
Kenmore, 14223, TF 6-0319

Return Sunday
Share Expenses

show and semi-classical which the
Music Room has always offered,
it now contains Tha History of
Music in Sound and Tho Works
of Shakospoare. Included in the
first category are “Ars Nova and
the Renaissance”, “The Age of
Humanism”, “The Growth of Instrumental Music”, and in the
second, “The Tempest”, “King
Lear”, “Hamlet” and “As You
Like It”.

announces that books from the

H: 8

C: Q 3

TYPING

Rides Available

to announce the addition of new
records to its collection. Besides
the jazz, classical, popular, folk,

Also, the Browsing Library staff

H: K
D: Q

Possibly:

Assume six

The Music Room staff is happy

or more club honors. If he has
both, just run spades, and he’ll
set up something. If he has one,
(call it the Q for illustrative purposes), you run trumps, pitching
as before, but letting go the club
ten instead of a small one.

D: A K 9 4
C: A 10 5

PAGE NINE

New Records Added
to Music Selections

—

By SCOTT KURMAN

public apologies'to

with the purchase of a drink
or French Fries.

fiction and biography sections
will be in circulation beginning
the first week in December. Not
for circulation, but available for
reading in the library itself, are
books of poetry, drama, non-fiction, humor philosophy and psychology, as well as magazines and
newspapers. The library has just
received new books of fiction and
biography.

New books are constantly being
bought for exchange at the “Paperback Exchange” located in the
comer of the library.

-&amp;

u BOC»\l&gt;p»W/

TONOf

Ranoafc

YOUR INVITATION TO

The Young Set

STUDENT DISCOUNT
With Proper I.D. Card

TONIGHT-—. 9:30pm1:00am
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Western New York's largest social group ever
300 people attend each of our (unctions
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Friday.

I
STAR DRIVE-IN

j

�Friday, November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

News From Other Campuses

Campus Food

Challenged
By DAVID FRIEDMAN
Collegiate Praia Service

There is some disagreement
within the academic community
about the quality of the food
provided for students. Extreme
opinions are often held on this
subject, both by those who are
of it, and by the faculty. While
the view that sand is intentionally added to the spinich may
perhaps be unrealistic, it is hardly
more so than the rosy picture
painted in the college catalogues.

1 admit that I am prejudiced

in this matter, having consumed
the product of a central kitchen
for three years. I admit that my
fellow students are similarly prejudiced. I admit that the situation appears, at first glance, in-

curable; institutional food has
semper et
and will be such
ebique. Nonetheless, I refuse to
give up my prejudice on the
word of those who eat such food
more rarely, and I refuse to believe that the motto above our
dining room doors must ever remain: Lasciate ogni sperenza voi
ch'entrate.
—

It is, after all, generally agreed
that the surest way to produce a
bad product is to give one producer a guaranteed monopoly of
its production and exclude all
possible competition. And is not
clear that the one way to make
the product even worse is to force
the consumer to pay the monopolist for the product, whether
he consumes it or not? Is this
not the way that our dining halls
are run? Indeed, it is a testimony
to the humanity of the administrators that they do not serve us
poison intentionally; after all, the
less of their product we eat. the
less food they must buy and the
more the ‘profit’ that appears on
their books.

Even if I concede that the
administrators of our kitchens
care little for paper profits, I
find the situation little changed.
However, great the compassion
of those administrators may be,
it cannot substitute for the forces of competition, for the “test
by market all things must come
to.” I, therefore, suggest that
dining systems should be made
subject to competition, by the
repeal of the usual rule forcing
students to pay for board,
whether they wish to or not.
To repeat my proposal: I suggest that American college students should be permitted to buy
their meals wherever they wish,
and that colleges should sell
board on whatever terms they
find most convenient.
The immediate advantage of
these proposed arrangements is

students
dissatisfied
obvious;
with university food could cat
elsewhere, without a large financial sacrifice. Furthermore,
the college would be provided
with 1 an objective standard by
which to judge the performance
of its kitchen. If the food were
so bad that large numbers of
students abandoned the comfort
and convenience of their dining
rooms, the responsible authorities could be fired (unless they
had tenure). This would give the
kitchen a real and direct incentive to provide good food, an
incentive which, apparently, does
not now exist.

A number of objections might
be raised to this proposal. First,
it n)ight be argued that the
kitchen would never know how
many people it had to cook for.
This objection, however, only
applies if board is sold by the
day; if it were sold in month
tickets, or if the tickets were
sold several weeks in advance,

the kitchen would have ample
time to plan. Indeed, since students who were not coming would
not buy tickets, the number who
came would probably be more
predictable than under the prepresent arrangements. Even if
tickets were sold by the day, the
kitchen would be no worse off
that the restaurants with which
it would be competing, The_)
kitchen would hardly have to
worry about everybody accidently deciding to come, or not to
come to dinner; The only likely
reason for wholesale boycotts of
the dining rooms would be the

action of the kitchen itself; after
a few such experiences, the
dietician might learn that French
fried banana peels sauteed in
bread crusts did not appeal to
customers.
Another possible objection is
that, in order to serve cheap
food, a kitchen must operate on
a large scale. While there are
undoubtedly economies of scale
in providing food, it is hard to
believe that they are still significant for a kitchen serving
several thousand people. If they
were, restaurants serving thousands of people should dominate
the big cities, by their ability
to undersell their smaller competitors. This is not the case.
It therefore seems reasonable to
suppose that the college kitchens
could not become considerably
smaller without greatly increasing their per unit cost.
One other argument which
might be used is that the college, being in loco parentis, is
responsible for the health of
the students, and that many students might be undernourished
if not watched over by the fond
her

eye of the

dietician. But pre-

sumably the parents, in whose
place the college stands, have
a better idea than the college
of the responsibility of irresponsibility of their children. The
college could easily send the
parents a letter, explaining the
system, and suggesting that they
save their darling from rickets,
scurvy, pellagra, and beri-beri,
by purchasing a year’s board in
advance. If the parents did so,
the student would be in the same
position as under the present
system.

Having disposed of possible
economic and medical objections
to my proposal, I should like to
consider those more serious problems connected with education.
It may be said, with some reason,
that the usual system of college
dining rooms

is

an

important

part of a college education, because it leads students to talk
with other students, who have
different viewpoints , and backgrounds. The question is then
whether a voluntary system
would be educationally inferior.
I do not think so.
The bringing together of students of diverse backgrounds
will be accomplished as well
under my proposal as under the
present system. Social stratification will be insignificant: any
student rich enough to be able
to afford to eat most of his
meals in expensive restaurants
under the proposed system is
rich enough to do so now. Of
course, some groups of students
might always congregate at certain restaurants; these would be
the same students who, now, sit
always at the same tables.
It is my opinion that, were
my proposal implemented,

most

of the students would still eat
most of their meals in the college dining rooms. The advantages, in convenience and congeniality, are considerable. Educationally, I do not see how
occasional meals at restaurants
or even occasional months outside of the system, would harm
them. Sporadic contact with the
world outside our walls might
even have desirable effects.

New
Teaching Techniques

New Fire System
Contract Let

ANN ARBOR, Mich (CPS)
Teaching of concepts will have
to supplement the teaching of
facts
for soon there will be
too many facts to learn.
This is the warning of University of Michigan Professor
Stanford Ericksen, director of the
Center for Research in Learning
and Teaching. Ericksen recently
spoke on educational trends in
the next 20 years.
He said that “knowledge is
getting away from us. The outpouring of knowledge is so fast,
we can’t keep up with it.”
Concepts, however, are more

Bids on a contract valued at
nearly $360,000 for the installation of a new type fire System
for the entire campus are now
being accepted by the State University Construction Fund.

—

—

durable, he said. Once mastered,

they enable students to “abstract
out of real-life situations, relationships that are the same he

learned in the classroom.”
To deal with the increased
stress of concepts, Ericksen noted that there will have to be
changes in three areas of education:
—Generalized procedures will
be needed to wrestle with the
increasing volume of facts;
—Values will become more
important as mankind must decide what it is going to do with
its technological power. Ericksen
said there was a need for a more
precise analysis of the meaning
of value words;
—Motivation for learning must
be made more genuine. More
stress will have to be placed
on learning for its own sake
rather than for other benefits
it may provide.
Automation in education can
be used to promote dissent and
individuality, Ericksen said. But
he warned, “the path of least
resistance seems to be teaching
the same thing to more and more
students.”
He suggested a system for
automated education that would
maintain individuality. A series
of automated carrells would be
part of a university library system. Each carrell would be linked to a computer and be equipped with various visual and aural devices. With this equipment,
the student could receive instruction in the factual matter
of a course.
Then, Ericksen continued, “the
professor will sit with students
as a teacher talking with a researcher,” Students and professors could discuss the advanced
areas of a subject where there
are no clear-cut answers.
However, Ericksen is pessimistic about the outlook for change
in education. “Education lags for
behind medicine and law in trying to bring about individualized
treatment. We feel more comfortable teaching the things we
learned as students.”

Illinois College
For Sale
For only $1.5 million, you
can own your own college.
Carthage College, Carthage,

Illinois, is for sale
classrooms,
dormitories, library, chapel, football field, and bird sanctuary,
among other facilities.
The college, which until last
month was a full-accredited, four
year liberal arts college for 600
students, was put up for sale
when the Illinois Synod of the
Lutheran Church, which ran the
college, merged with three other
Lutheran groups. As a result of
the merger, all college facilities
were moved to Kenosha, Wisconsin.
With an increasing numbeb
of high school graduates look~
ing for colleges, there certainly is a demand for Carthage’s
continued use. Any undergraduate would jump at the opportunity to run his own school
if
he had the $1.5 million.
—

—

State University Construction
Fund project Number 2887, is
scheduled for completion on
June 1, 1965.

Bids on the contract will be
opened at 2:00 p.m. EST, Tuesday, December 8 in the Offices
of the State University Construction Fund, 194 Washinton Ave
nue, Albany 10, New York.
Plans and specifications may
be examined in the offices of
the architect Milton Milstein and
Associates, Buffalo; at Dodge Reports, Buffalo; at Brown’s Letters, Inc. New York; at the Construction Industry Employers Association, Buffalo; and at the
Administration Building, State
University of New York at Buffalo.

King Opens

Freedom Fast

ing that it is up to civil rights
leaders in the North to decide

this.

Labelling the national election
a “bright day in American
history,” King stressed that it
was a “telling blow to the forces
of reaction” and a mandate to

as

President Johnson for an all-out
attempt to implement the Civil
Rights Bill.

Explaining the direction the
civil rights movement will take,
King noted that aside from the
great emphasis being placed on
the Negroes’ economic situation,
there will be pressure to em
power the Attorney General to
initiate suits in all infractions of
the Civil Rights Bill.
In his prepared statement, King
invited “all students in the United States to join with us in a
War on Hunger in Mississippi
this winter by signing up now
on their campuses for Thanksgiving Fast for Freedom.”

The 125 campuses now listed

as participating represent

the number that participated in
the Fast last year. Some $40,000
is expected to be collected for
the purchase of preserved meat
and dried dairy products. Distribution will begin in time for
Christmas.

By THEODORE HOFFMAN
Collegiate Press Service

NEW YORK—The Reverend
Martin Luther King officially
opened the National Thanksgiving Fast for Freedom at a press
conference here last week. Noting
that for Negroes in America “poverty is the rule rather than the
exception,” King called for students all over the nation to join
those on 125 campuses already
participating in the Fast.
King explained that students on
participating campuses have signed up to skip the evening meal of
November 19 and to donate the
money saved to a special fund
earmarked to provide food for
needy families in the South.

The Fast is sponsored jointly
by the U.S. National Student Association, me U.S. youth Council,
and the Northern Student Move-

ment, and will be administered

by campus representatives of the
organizations.

The twofold purpose of the
drive, King said, is that of “engaging in a practical expression
of concern,” and “arousing the
conscience of the nation to the
economic needs” of the Southern
Negro.
He announced that in sympathy
with the Negro families and in
help and support of the fasting
students, the Committee of Sponsors of the Fast also skipped
their evening meal November 19.

Sponsors include Roy Wilkins
of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People, Dr. Arthur Flemming, President of the University of Oregon,
Dr. 0. Meridith Wilson, President
of the University of Minnesota,
and Ralph Bunche, winner of
the Nobel Prize for Peace and a
U.S. representative to the United
Nations, and Dr. King.
Speaking in another vein, King
emphasized that, now that the
elections were over, “There will
be a resumption of demonstrations in Mississippi and the South
to further implement the Civil
Rights Bill.”

On being questioned on the
possibility of more demonstrations in the North, King stressed
that “as long as you have the
problems in the North, there will

be demonstrations to expose
these evils.” He would not comment on a definite time table
of Northern demonstrations not-

Students Arrested
in South African
Protest
Collegiate Press Service

Two former presidents of the
National Union of South African
Students (NUSAS) have been ar
rested in recent weeks under the
90-day detention law of the South
African government. A third former president, arrested by Portu
guese authorities in Mozambique,
has been released and is in Southern Rhodesia.
These developments follow a
long record of NUSAS opposition
to the “apartheid” policy of the
government. South Africa is pursuing a policy of “separate development” for the races.
Both Jonty Driver, immediate
past president of NUSAS, and
Adrian Leftwieh, president in
1961-62, were held by authorities.
Under the 90-day detention act,
sometimes known as the “Sabo
tage Bill,” the government has
the authority to jail anyone for
up to 90 days on suspicion of
activities seeking to undermine
the government. No charges need
be filed.
Driver was released from prison last week but Leftwich is still
being held.
Driver was arrested at his home
in Johannesburg August 13, one
day before he was to leave South
Africa to take a teaching P osl
tion in England. Leftwich was
arrested late in July while sening as a lecturer at the University of Cape Town.
The third former president at
rested was Neville Rubin, wh'
was jailed by the Portuguese
Lourence Marques, Mozambique
After being held for six days
solitary confinement, he was re
leased from jail and placed on
train to Southern Rhodesia

u
n

Driver is known to many Arne
ican students through his attem
auce at the 16th National Studei
Congress held last summer
Indiana University. At the tim
he predicted that the South A
rican government might step 1
its action against NUSAS durm
the year.
•

Hot Line

�Friday, November 20, 1964

Actress Presents
Beer Barrel Award
Last Saturday, the Beer Barrel
Award, sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity was presented
to the outstanding back and linemen of the previous week’s game
by actress Patti Chandler. Miss
Chandler a twenty year old blond
beauty attracted everyone’s attention as she walked onto the field
clad in a very short, pink negligee. By the time she presented
the award, along with a few kisses, to recipients Dom Piestrak
and Jim Weber, the public announcement had been drowned
out by 8,000 hollering fans.

as she had spent most of
her spare time with a cast and
crew of a motion picture company then shooting nearby. A week
after returning home, she answered an ad for a Bikini Girl
by American International Pictures, and was selected from
over one hundred other beauties.
Thus, Miss Chandler received her
role—as the Bikini Girl in Bikini
Beach. A few months later, she
was cast in a co-starring role in
AIP’s Pajama Party. She was here
in Buffalo for its premiere.
acting,

AIriumph —A Heartbreaks-^
FROSH

SYRACUSE

IrO

COL&amp;ME

BOtfW.0

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

Parlntri ■#.«, Ac.
4ifoll

Boas

&amp;

Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
KNOW I’D
BERUX UKETO
UNO XOUROWPEE

Miss Chandler, a native of California, was working as a water
sports counselor at a resort when
she first became interested in

Pro Picks (cont'd)

(Cont’d from P. 16)
After the disaster in Denver last

week, the Jets are all but out of
it. But they are not mathematically eliminated yet, so there is
still an incentive for winning.
The Raiders will be hard-pressed
to contain them.
Kansas City 14, Houston 10—
I have picked the Oilers to win
with an almost religious consistency, but their mediocre play
has finally made me realize that
they simply are not the team of
old. The Chiefs, like the Jets,
are just about eliminated, but I
am tired of picking a team to win
every week and seeing them lose.
Now watch Houston win.

College Picks (cont'd)

from P. 12)
ARMY 28, NAVY 24—Both of
the service academies have had
mediocre seasons, but this is THE
GAME for each.
The Middies
(3-5-1) will be going for their 6th
success in a row, but this is just
too much to hope for in this
ancient rivalry. The Cadets (3-6)
will go into this game as slight
underdogs because of the pasting
they received at the hands of
Pitt, but have too much at stake
to lose. Look for a wide-open
offensive battle between Stichweh and Staubach with penalties
prevalent. This year’s finish may
even outdo last year’s down-tothe-wire thriller.
NOTRE DAME 29, U.S.C. 14—
The Trojans will be up for this
battle, but will .not thwart Notre
Dame’s hopes for an unbeaten
season and national laurels. Huarte will have a dual reason to
win this game. He will be shooting for All-America honors and
will try to show the selectors that
he is better than Rhome of Tulsa
and Columbia’s amazing Archie
Roberts. He will have a good day
in leading his team to victory.
GEORGIA TECH 17, GEORGIA
7—The Yellow Jackets (7-2) have
lost 2 in a row, and may have run
out of luck. This is what the
Bulldogs (5-3-1) are counting on.
Unfortunately for them, Bobby
Dodd will be able to pull enough
tricks from his sleeve to finish
the season on a winning note and
probably earn a bowl invitation.

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

(Cont’d

2900 Delaware Ave., Kenmore, N.Y

(at Oalawara)

Phone 876-2284

�PAGE TWELVE

BABY BULLS TOP
SYRACUSE,; 13-0
football has been increasing at a
revolutionary speed in the last
few years, it is still quite obvious
that the Varsity is not at a level

By STEVE SCHUELEIN

The Baby Bulls climaxed one
of the most successful frosh seasons in UB history by outswapwith the elite of Eastern indeping a bigger Syracuse eleven,
pendents such as Syracuse, Pitts13-0, at Botary Field on Friday, burgh, Penn State, Army, and
the 13th, before 1800 fans. It
Navy. Judging by Friday’s perwas the first time in six years
formance, however, there is good
that the Baby Bulls had peeled reason to believe that the UB
the Tangerines.
trend toward t o p-rate football
In the first half both offenses
may be increasing faster than
drove well, but neither could ever. If the incoming freshman
muster a scoring play. The lone squads can continue to improve
UB score was tallied by the at the rate that the last few crops
defense when secondary man of Baby Bulls have, the team
Tom Hurd snared a pass thrown could find itself at a level with
by SU quarterback Rick Cassata,
top gridiron schools earlier than
a Tonawanda product, on the UB
might be expected.
15 and streaked up the sideline
So a Dennis Brisky block sprung
him loose for paydirt. Hurd then
footed the extra point, and UB
BULL SESSION . . . Highest
led 7-0.
offensive grades were garnered
The underdog Bulls struck by Gilbert, Oatmeyer, Nick Capuagain in the fourth period after ana, Jim McNally, and Leo Rataa fourth down fake punt by the
mess, while Dom Piestrak, Bill
visitors was diagnosed by the Taylor, E.G. Poles, and Jim Robie
Bulls, and the hosts gained posobtained defensive honors , . .
session on the Syracuse 17, After Gilbert and Capuana collaborated
a 15 yard penalty against UB,
for 162 of the 191 rushing yards
quarterback Rick Wells fired for the Bulls
It was very
back-to-back strikes to end Dick disheartening to see the UB puntAshley and Hurd. Three plays ers Choke on the field after perlater Wells, a former football and forming so admirably in prebasketball star at Ithaca High, game practice . . . Gilbert passed
skirted left end for the final six John Stofa’s old aerial yardage
pointer.
mark of 807 for one season by
Coach Dewey Wade said after 62 yards with a 91-yards performthe contest, "The team played a ance. The senior signalcaller also
upped his personal total offense
fine game.” He praised ends Brisky and Ashley, tackle Stan Bararecord to 1337 . . . Tackle Brian
nowski, guards Mike Rissell, Kent returned to full-time duty
Terry Finger, and Ted Gibbons,
for the first time since the Corcenter Rod Rishel, and backs
nell game . . . Pert actress Patti
Wells, Hurd, Tom Brennan, Tom Chandler made the loss a little
more bearable for Webber and
Hoke, and Bob Sinclair for standout performances.
Piestrak, to whom she presented
The triumph gave the Baby AEPi’s weekly Beer Barrel Award
Bulls a sparkling 5-1 record for before the game . . . Although
the season. Frosh scalps for the Villanova has dropped its last
Bulls included Army, Colgate, two games, the Wildcats should
Ithaca, and Manlius, as well as nevertheless prove to be the
Syracuse, while the only setback
toughest test of the season for
was suffered at the hands of a
the Bulls tomorrow.
...

Navy powerhouse.
STATISTICS
9
241
47

Friday, Novambar 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

First downs
Rushing yards
Passing yards

14
267
43

6-13
Passes
2-13
3
Passes intercepted by
2
3
Fumbles lost
2
penalized
55
Yards
40
This particular victory probably means more than the mere
satisfaction of subduing a favorite for the Baby Bulls. Although the quality of Buffalo

ZYGOTES WIN
GRID TITLE
Last Thursday, the intramural
football championship was played
between The Zygotes (Independent Champions) and Alpha Epsilon Pi (Fraternity Champions).
After a hard fought game, the
Zygotes emerged victorious by a
9-8 score. This was the result of
a last minute field goal, with the
Zygotes then trailing 8-6.
At the close of the first half,
the Zygotes enjoyed a 6-0 lead
after a long touchdown drive.
However, midway through the
second half, AEPi bounced back
with a score set up by a pass interception. The AEPs made the
two point conversion and led 8-6
until the Zygote field goal with
a minute left to play gave them
the victory.

College Picks (cont'd)

(Cont’d from P. 16)
ride to victory on the wake of
their upset of Ohio State. Pitt
(3-4-2) has finally realized the
potential of its rushing game, but
will find Penn State’s line tough
to budge. A talented toe could
very well decide the outcome

here.
BUFFALO 21, VILLANOVA 20
—The Wildcats (6-2) have lost
two in a row, and I’m hoping that
they’ve run out of steam. Buffalo
(4-4-1) is coming off a tough loss
to Colgate and will be fighting
mad. Come on, Bulls, make this
my first successful UPSET OF

SPORTS CIRCLE (Cont’d from P. 16)
creased in spite of this, due to the improved quality of
the team and the schedule of top notch opponents, not
to even mention school spirit which alone should bring
students to the games. We again urge the student body
to support the Bulls, for Villanova tomorrow will be a
tough nut to crack, being rated second in the East.
With the coming of the basketball season we are
reminded of the attendance problems existing for the
sport. Due to the inadequacy of Clark Gym in both seating capacity and court construction, the Athletic Department is not able to schedule top teams to play the Bulls.
If the Bulls don’t play the best they can never hope to
become in a class with the best. Thus, a few games each
year are scheduled for Memorial Auditorium, where neither of the above are problems and the Bulls are able to
play top notch teams. The only problem here again is
student attendance, which in the past has not been good
enough to insure the success of this venture. If successful all the UB basketball games would eventually be
brought into Memorial Auditorium where the Athletic
Department would be able to schedule top teams to play.
In conclusion all this boils down to these simple
facts: If the football attendance improves, all the games
will be moved into War Memorial; if the basketball attendance improves, all the games will be moved to Memorial Auditorium; and with and only with these moves
will UB emerge as a top major college football and
basketball power. The choice is up to you
.

(9-0) will sew up second place
in the Top Ten with this victory.
THE WEEK! It’s my last chance!!
ALABAMA 21, AUBURN 0—
This game was expected to decide the SEC championship, until
the Tigers (6-3) lost the services
of Sidle. Now it is just a prop
for the Orange Bowl for 'Bama.
Sidle is back, but even that won’t
help Auburn. The Crimson Tide

.

.

TEXAS 33, TEXAS A&amp;M 6—
By this game, the Longhorns (8-1)
will be officially out of the SWC
race, because Arkansas will have

snowed under Texas Tech on the
21st. With a bowl bid already
in its pocket, Texas may be a
little complacent, but has nothing
to fear. The Aggies (1-8) are incapable of upsetting anyone.
(Contd. on P. 11)

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�Friday. November 20, 1964

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

PREVIEW

BASKETBALL
CAGERS TO OPEN HOME SEASON
AGAINST AMERICAN U. ON DEC. 3
By STAN LICHWALA

With the 1964-65 basketball
season rapidly approaching, it

would be good to turn briefly
from football and to look at the
accomplishments of last year’s
Basketball Bulls. The record of
this team was fourteen victories
and eight defeats. The statistics
show that the UB basketball team
outscored, outrebounded and outplayed their opponents. In outscoring their opponents, the Bulls
averaged 67.8 points per game,
compiling 1522 points, whereas
their opponents averaged 61.0
points per game, rolling up 1236
points. Their rebound average
was 50.7 rebounds per game to
their opponents’ 44.5 rebounds
per game. Even the Buffalo field
goal percentage topped their opponents; Buffalo scored 38.8% of
their field goal attempts to the
37.3% successful field goals of
opponents. Last year’s team was
a young team that learned a
great deal while experiencing a
successful, winning season.
Coach Leonard T. Serfustini
says: “We have a strong nucleus
returning from last year’s squad
around which we can build. The
team has tremendous spirit and
very

good potential.”

lets up at all. Determined efforts
are being made by every man
and they have all looked very
good. The indications from practices and scrimmages thus far
show that this is a team with
great spirit. This is a hardworking team that has barely
started its work, but if the spirit
remains as high as it has been
and if the players continue to
give 100% every minute, Buffalo’s opponents had better be
very careful.
Now, let’s take a quick Iqok
at the individuals who make up
this year’s edition of the Basketball Bulls.
First, there is returning letterman Bill Barth, a 6-5 junior who

Jim saw action last year and is
a graduate of Bishop Timon High
School in Buffalo.
A new addition is a senior who
graduated from Lackawanna High
School in Buffalo. Bill Bilowus
has looked promising at center.
His 6 feet 5 inches should add
much needed height to the Bulls.
Another newcomer is sophomore Larry Brassel, who stands
5-9. Larry is a graduate of Amherst Central, Amherst, New

New York. A junior, Dick stands
6-0 and has been in the battle
for a guard position.
Senior John Karaszewski is a
6-3 graduate of Canisius High
School in Buffalo. This returning
letterman is also in the battle
for a forward position.
Harvey Poe is a junior who saw
action as a guard last year. Playing in all 22 games, 6-1 Harvey
averaged 6.5 points per game. He
is a graduate of Mountain High
School, West Orange, New Jer-

York.

Sophomore Dave Fratangelo is
a 6-1 graduate of Lyons High
School, Lyons, New York, who
shows promise as a guard.
Tom Gill is a 6-3 graduate of
Jamestown High School, James-

Six-four Dick Smith adds more
valuable height to the Basketball
Bulls. Dick is a center who saw
action last year and graduated
from Spencerport High School,
Spencerport, New York.
The coaching staff consists of
Head Coach Leonard Serfustini
and Assistant Coaches Ed Muto
and Bill Monkarsh.
Before we go to press again,
the Basketball Bulls will open
their season. On December 1, UB
will travel to Brockport State.
Right after the Brockport trip,
the Buffalo cagers will open their
home season on December 3, facing the American University basketball team which will travel
here from Washington, D.C. UB
has met American University

�

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO 1964-65 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM
Standing, L. to R.; Roman Birkiwski, Mgr.; Larry Brassel, Paul Goldstein, Harvey Poe, Bill Barto, Dick Hetzel, Dan Bazzani; Head Coach
Dr. Len Suerfustini, Ass’t Coach Ed Muto.
Kneeling, L. to R.: Jim Bevilacqua, Dave Fratangelo, Bill Barth, Dick
Smith, Bill Bilowus, Norb Baschnagel, Jack Karaszewski, Norwood
Goodwin, Tom Gill.
ba&amp; looked very good at center. town, New York. A junior, Tom
Bill\ s a graduate of Fredonia has potential at the forward poi High School, Fredonia, New York, sition.
Another junior is Paul Goldand is a welcome asset to the
stein; he is a graduate of Brighteam with his height.
Bill Barto is a 5-11 junior from ton High School, Rochester, New
York. At 5-11, he has potential
Montgomery High Shcool, Montgomery, Pennsylvania. Bill has
at the guard position.
Last year’s leading scorer, Norbeen in the thick of the battle
for a position at guard and also ward Goodwin, is again with the
Bulls. Standing 6-1, he averaged
saw action last year.
12.2 points per game last year
Norb Baschnagel was the third
and was third in rebounding.
highest point scorer last year and
This junior forward is a product
saw action in all 22 of the Bulls’
games, averaging 8.3 points per of Strong Vincent High School.
Erie, Pennsylvania.
game. Norb is a graduate of KenDick Hetzel is another returnsington High School in Buffalo
ing letterman from Wellsville,
and measures 6-3. This senior has
looked good in the forward position and has shown indications
toward team leadership.
Dan Bazzani, another senior, is
a 6-2 graduate of Niagara Falls
High School. He averaged 7.0
points per game last year and
has looked good in the guard
spot. Dan, too, has shown ability
FREE
FRE
as a team leader.
A 6-1 junior, James Bevilacqua,
is another promising forward.

f

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

1964-1965
1 at Brockport State
3 American University

9 Assumption (Ont.) U.

12 Albany State
Dec. 16 Western Ontario
Dec. 19 at Tennessee
Dec.

Dec. 29 at LeMoyne Invitational
&amp; 30 Holiday Tournament
Jan. 16 Buff. State at Mem. Aud.

Jan. 23 Ithaca College

Jan. 27 Toronto
Jan. 30 Steubenville at Me. Aud.
Feb. 6 Wayne State

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

9 Niagara at Mem. Aud.
13 at Colgate
20 at Albany State

24 Rochester
27 LeMoyne at Mem. Aud.

Mar. 1 at Buffalo State
Mar. 3 Alfred
Mar. 6 Bucknell

BUFFALO

season for both schools. For all
the seniors on the squads, this
will be their last regularly scheduled game. This game has special significance for both teams,
as Buffalo needs it to finish the
season on the plus side of the
ledger with a winning record,
while a Villanova victory would
enable the Wildcats to go to the
Liberty Bowl in Atlantic City.
This Villanova team is one of
the finest in the East and by far
Buffalo’s most formidable opponent this season. The Bulls will
have to play better than they
have all season to beat the tough

Wildcats
and if not? Well, it
could very easily be a very long
afternoon at Rotary Field.
Here are the probable stairting
—

lineups:

LE
82 Dave Nichols, 215
LT
74 Dom Piestrak, 195
.1X1
64 Bruce Hart, 205
C
52 Joe Holly, 206
RG
62 Jim McNally, 206
RT
77 Leo Ratamess, 260
RE
84 Gerry LaFountain, 210
QB
17 Don Gilbert, 190
LHB
22 Nick Capuana, 173
Oatmeyer,
RHB
180
42 Tom
36 Dick Condino, 210
:..

-

...

VILLANOVA
Emmett Michaels, 215
Tom Smith, 240
Jack McDonald, 220

LE
LT
LXI

C
RG

Roger Agin, 215

Mike Strofolino, 230
Al Atkinson, 230
John McDonnell, 200
Dave Connell, 195
Dick Sernyak, 180
Joe Santomauro, 185
Tom Brown, 195

RT
RE

QB

LHB
RHB
FB

Attend The
Villanova
Game

WBFO

~

�

BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

Listen to
“

�

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

(Cont’d from P. 15)

Missing

from the Basketball squad this
year will be Gary Ittnley who
graduated in June. Gary will be
missed very much because he
led his team in rebounding with
262 rebounds or an 11.9 average
per game. Not only was Gary the
leading rebounder, but he was
second in the scoring column
with 248 points or an 11.3 game
average.
Graduation also took
Dick Harvey last June. Harvey
had a 38% field goal average
and led his team at the free
throw line with 79%. Because of
a conflict in scheduling, Don
Thompson will be unable to play
basketball this year. With classes between three and six, it was
impossible for Don to make practices. Don has great potential on
defense and especially on rebounding; he is considered a very
big loss. The bright spot in this
picture is the fact that there
will be ten lettermen returning
to the team this year. These men,
in addition to the five new men,
have the potential to pick up
where they left off last year, fill
the spaces left by the men who
will not be returning, and become a very sound ball club.
Presently, the team consists of
two sophomores, nine juniors and
four seniors. There is a fierce
struggle going on for each position and no one can consider
himself a definite starter. There
are men to replace anyone who

sey.

twice in NCAA tournaments, but
the Bulls have yet to beat them,
so you can be sure that the Bulls
will be really up for this important game. If indications from
practices and scrimmages are
correct, the Bulls will defeat a
very tough American University
team on December 3.

_

FRE

'

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�Friday, November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

COLGATE BRUSHES BULLS
Raider Visible Shield Halts
Last Minute UB Comeback, 7-6
By

STEVE SCHUELEIN

the beginning of the show every

the line of scrimmage in a very
low trajectory, it probably would

what drab defensive affair for
3%. quarters with Colgate ahead
7-0, but midway through the final
quarter the Bulls turned on a
torrid stretch drive that nearly
overtook the visitors in the last
thirty seconds.
One might say that the foot
in football was the margin between victory and defeat for the
bulls. First it was the right foot
of Buffalo punter Bob Edward
which sent a screaming line drive
quick kick into the hands of Colgate safety man Tom Wilson, who
returned it 15 yards to the UB
16 to set up the Colgate touchdown in the second period. Second, it was Raider placekicker
and punter Lee Woltman’s kicks

have been successful if it had
sailed in a slightly different direction, As it was, the ball shot
directly at Wilson and he speared
it head-high on the Bulls’ 31,
from where he returned it to
the 16.

week. The

What’s the difference between

a team with a 9-0 record and one
with a 4-4-1 mark? In the case
of most clubs with a 4-4-1 record
the answer would probably consist of a balanced mixture of
both close and decisive wins and
losses plus a tie, so that a 9-0
dream would merely be a farfetched illusion. The testimony of

ttic UB Bulls, however, would be

a much different story. A grand
total of 16 points is the difference for the Bulls between a
mediocre 4-4-1 slate and an unblemished 9-0 record.
The method in which the four
losses and the tic were absorbed
makes it an even more exasperating tale for the Bulls. Missed

contest was a some-

Although the UB defense proved as recalcitrant as the Rock of

Gibraltar, the visitors managed

to score on a fourth down play
from the 3 when quarterback

Gerry Barudin threaded the needle to end Ed Berra in the end
zone. Woltman then converted
and that ended any scoring threat

until the Bulls awoke in the
fourth quarter.
Gilbert, who played his usual
outstanding game, injected some

life into the club when he drove
them to the Red Raider 30 with
his patented end sweeps as the
clock showed four minutes left,
but Colgate’s fourth pass interception appeared to tomahawk
the last chance for the Bulls. The
home forces were not ready to
throw in the towel, however, as
the hard-nosed defense forced
the Chenango Valley boys to
punt, and the SUNYABs regained
possession at midfield with only
2:40 to go. A 15-yd. pass completion to Craig Helenbrook on
the 35 and a crucial fourth down
toss to Jim Webber which advanced the Bulls to the 15 with
50 seconds to go, transformed
what had been a phlegmatic
crowd into a state of pandemonium.
Chances of scoring were considerably dimmed on the next
play when Gilbert, attempting to
locate his pass receiver, was pasted by a Colgate lineman and the
ball bounded back to the 32 before Dick Condino recovered. The
never-say-die Bulls had only 30
seconds left in the game, but

were determined to get that
elusive touchdown. On the next
play Gilbert scrambled for life
in his backfield and, with a
half-frenzied crowd growing more
hysterical by the second, arched
a perfect aerial into the arms of
hustling wingback Tom Oatmeyer in the end zone. The cacophony of the crowd resided into
almost a funeral-like silence
when Gilbert, rolling to the left
on the decisive extra point try,
was nailed an agonizing foot short
of victory.
The team may have lost the
game at that point, but it certainly didn’t lose the respect of
its fans or opponents for its valiant comeback.
STATISTICS

UB
18

Colgate

First Downs

10
107
46
5-19
Passes
6-12
0
Passes intercepted by
4
5-28
Punts
8-35
Fumbles lost
1
191
91

0

Rushing yds.
Passing yds.

Penalty yds.

Gilbert Cuts for Yardage

extra point attempts against Cornell (9-9) and Colgate (7-6), temporary lapses in the pass defense
against Marshall (14 12) and Holy
Cross (20-14), and a pair of crucial fumbles against Massachusetts (24-22) comprise the razorthin margin by which the Hulls
failed to capture those games.
In the four Bull victories, however. only one might have gone
the other way, that being the
14-10 cliffhanger over VMI. The
four Bull victories were scored
by a margin o f 91 points as compared to a deficit of 16 in the
losses, a figure which appears
impressive in the Sunday papers, but doesn't provide any assistance on the field the following week.

The story of last week's 7-6
loss to Colgate was just another
chapter in the 1964 issue of Buffalo gridiron misfortunes, a tale
that involves itself with a team
that has been plagued by almost
as many problems in close games
as the hapless cowpoke who tries
to draw on Marshall Dillon at

that provided the vital seventh
Colgate point and kept the Bulls
bogged on their half of the field
with his booming punts. Third,
il was a foot by which quarterback Don Gilbert failed to clear
the goal line in a two-point conversion attempt after the UB
touchdown in an effort to take

home all the marbles.
After the game. Coach Offcnhamer replied. “The boys outplayed Colgate offensively and
defensively, scored the same number of touchdowns as they did,
and certainly showed the great
deal of determination they have
by coining back the way they
did in the fourth quarter. They
sure put on a fine show."
The first half of play was completely dominated by the defenses of both sides as neither team
could penetrate the other's 25
until the opportunistic Hamiltonians received a break halfway
through the second stanza when
Edward attempted a quick kick
from his 10 on third down. Although the kick rocketed across

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�Friday,

November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIFTEEN

VILLA NOVA PnEVIEW 0

®

BULLS TO FACE
HUGE WILDCAT LINE
Well, sooner or later, all good
things must come to an end. Unfortunately, for the Bulls it was
sooner, as last week their modest
two game winning streak was
snapped by the Red Raiders of
Colgate. Buffalo outplayed Colgate through most of the game,

gaining 14 first downs to six
for the opponents: however, quar-

terback Don Gilbert was stopped
a few inches short on a roll-out
in attempting a two-point conversion in the last thirty seconds
of play, and the Bulls had to

sustain their fourth loss of the
season. In dropping this tight

defensive contest to Colgate, Buffalo greatly reduced their chances for a winning season, as they
go into tomorrow’s game with
potent Villanova possessing a 44-1 record.
Last week’s game added another link in the chain of hard
luck defeats suffered by the
Bulls this season. Colgate intercepted four UB passes, three
of them after they were deflected, making them anybody’s ball.
It just so happened that there
was a Red Raider in the right
place each time, giving the men
from Colgate a total of twentytwo interceptions this season.
Tomorrow, the Bulls will be
up against the toughest opponent
of the year in powerful Villanova.
This is a team which began the
season with a six game winning
streak, but has lost its last two
outings against Boston College
and George Washington University. The way these schools beat
Villanova was by holding down
the Wildcat runners. Villanova

average of an eye-opening 6.8
yards a try. If the Bulls should

be fortunate enough to stop
Brown, they will still be forced
to contend with the remaining
three quarters of the Villanova
backfield.
At the halfback positions, the
Wildcats have an explosive,
break-away runner in Joe Santomauro, and a hard, determined
runner in Dick Sernyak. Santa
mauro is 5-9, 185 pounds and he
can go all the way before the
defense knows what is happening. He gained much needed experience last year, and through
the Boston College game, he was
Villanova’s fourth leading ground
gainer with 225 yards in 66
carries for an average of 3.4

Fullback DICK CONDINO

averaged thirty points a game

in its first six contests, but was
held to six and seven respectively in its last two encounters.
A strong Buffalo defense is the
only thing that will be able to
topple the Wildcats tomorrow.
The offensive attack of the
Mainliners consists almost entirely of a strong, well-balanced
ground game. The four members
of the Villanova backfield all
run well and often, posing the
big threat.
They are led by fullback Tom
Brown, a 5-9, 195 pound junior
from Philadelphia. He is a fine
blocker and powerful runner who
was switched from halfback to
fullback to take advantage of
this. Before last week’s game, he
had accumulated 468 yards on
the ground in 68 carries for an

yards per try.
Sernyak is a

in scoring this season and also
does the punting, averaging 35
yards a kick. The Villanova offense doesn’t call for much of
an aerial attack but, when it is
needed, Connell has both the
poise and ability to come through
having thrown five touchdown
passes thus far this season. Connell resembles UB quarterback
Don Gilbert in that he is a dangerous running threat as well
as possessing the ability to pick
apart the defensive secondary
with his passes. He should be
providing the Bulls with a number of headaches tomorrow. They
will have to key on Connell in
order to stop the potent Wildcat
attack.
VMI coach John McKenna has
said that the Villanova line is
by far the best in the East. The
defense has held opponents to
an average of less than six points
per game thus far this season,
and definitely should be “the
hardest nut for the Bulls to
crack” tomorrow. The line is
anchored by 6-2, 230 pound
tackle A1 Atkinson. He is strong
bet for All-America recognition
this year, as he gained nothing
but praise from all opposing
coaches.
He, as Villanova’s co-captain,
has had the honor of starting
every game in his career, and he
now plays nearly the full 60 minutes in every game. Atkinson is
said to be a sure bet to succeed
in the pros, and is certainly a
large factor in Villanova’s standing in the top ten in the nation
in both rushing offense and rushing defense.
Teaming with Atkinson in putting terrific pressure on the passer is the other co-captain, end
Jim McDonnell, 6-0, 200 pounds.
He is a vicious tackier, outstanding blocker, and great competitor who never lets up. He too
played in every game last year

different type

despite a painful injury during

runner who, in addition to being

the last half of the season. The
Bulls will have a rough time
containing these two Wildcats to-

a threat as a ball carrier, is also
a fine pass receiver. He comor lack
pensates for his size
-

of it
with determination and
desire, and has the ability to
keep pounding that defensive line
until he finds running room. He
is presently number three in both
rushing and pass receiving for
the Wildcats, serving as a double
threat for Buffalo to contend
with.
At the controls of the Villanova offense will be junior quarterback Dave Connell. The offense
is built around him, as he is
a fine runner (second on the
squad in rushing) and a good
passer. Connell leads the team
-

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tomorrow, and should keep
them busy.
Buffalo will again rely heavily
on the play of quarterback Don
Gilbert. Gilbert has broken two
UB records this season, and has
three more in reach tomorrow.
He owns the total offense mark
for one season, 1337 yards, and
most passing, 869, in one year.
Five completions and two touchdown passes would set new season marks, and another mark is
with

Against common competition
so far this season, Villanova has
beaten Holy Cross and VMI by
considerable margins, while UB
dropped their game to Holy
Cross, and squeaked by VMI.
Both schools trounced Delaware,
Villanova beating them 34-0, and
the Bulls scoring a 37-0 triumph.
This is the last game of the
(Cont'd on P, 13)

The third defensive specialist
is Mike Strofolino, a 6-2, 230
pound guard from Brooklyn. He
calls the defensive signals for
the Wildcats and is said to
“thrive on hard work and action”. He is extremely fast and
mobile for his size, and has a
knack for “smelling out” plays.
These three linemen are the
mainstay of the powerful Villanova line, which outweighs the

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Halfback NICK CAPUANA

sure to fall as Gilbert needs only
six passing attempts to set that
record for one year. He will again
look to his running backs, Nick
Capuana, Dick Condino, and Dennis Pryzkuta for help on the
ground as all three of them have
gained over 250 yards rushing
this year. The offensive and defensive lines have the big problem this week. On offense, seniors such as Jim McNally, Leo
Ratamess, Bruce Hart, Dorn Piejstrak, and Dave Nichols, will
try to get the job done for one
last time, while these same stalwarts, with the addition of Joe
Holly, Joe Garafola, and Greenard Poles, will lead the defensive
unit.
Villanova leads the series between the two schools, two victories to one, with last year’s
game going to Buffalo on a late
score via a long pass. This series should be one of long standing between the two Eastern
schools.

morrow.

BANKEXAMINER AIDES
SALARY

Bulls by fifteen pounds per man.
This “best line in the East” will
be a lot for the Bulls to cope

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�PAGE SIXTEEN

Friday, November 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

A

�

f

f'‘

==#.—

-A

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

The Choice

As the 1964 UB football season draws to a close
tomorrow against Villanova we can reflect back upon it

as having its ups and downs as far as the play of the
team itself is concerned. At this point the varsity, has a

4-4-1 record, which, with a few breaks here and there

WBFO, the campus radio station, will broadcast all ten home
basketball games at Clark Gym
this season, plus at least five of
the Bulls’ road games.
In notifying the SPECTRUM of
the news, Sports Director Wally
Blatter said, “We’re very pleased
to be able to broadcast the Bulls’
games. This is the first time
WBFO has ever followed UB basketball on the road and also the
first time we’ve aired any games
. .
on AM
WBFO has picked
the perfect year to begin. This
winter’s team should be one of
the best in the University’s his.

One of the main reasons is probably the divided

campus within UB, comprised of resident and commuting students. It is the former group from which most of

the student support comes, possibly because of the convenience of walking over to Rotary Field to see a football
game, or maybe because they really wanted to see the
Bulls play. However, the choice is up to them whether to
attend or not, whereas those livings in the Buffalo area
may have other responsibilities at hime to take care of,
or it may simply be too inconvenient for them to go. For
the commuting student UB may seem like an advanced
high school if he or she does not participate in student
activities or support the varsity teams. There is indeed
much to be gained from taking an interest in the activities going on within the university and not just coming to
then going home. We therefore urge these
classes
commuting students, and moreover all students of the
university to “Support the Bulls.”
Another reason concerns the fact that in the increasingly materialistic society we now live in people
like to reap immediate benefits from their endeavors. If
they support a football team they want to see a winner.
In the case of the Bulls, who are now in the building
phase of their development into a top major college team,
it was a matter of not getting off to the kind of start
everyone had hoped and expected they would. Because
UB is not a school with a football tradition of a Big Ten
school for example (where the students will support the
teams strictly on the basis of past years performances
even though they might presently be doing badly) the
team must win in order to draw. Since the Bulls only won
one of their first four games the student body lessened in
haveJn«g&amp;ts
its^upportj—wjien
(Cont’d on P. 12)

%

SIPCDSiir© �
6=
WBFO to Covei
Grid Picks
Cogers on AM

could have been much better. When one realizes that
this has been the toughest schedule the Bulls have played
since becoming a major college team, this season has to
be regarded as a successful one, regardless of the team’s
final record. However, without further delving into a
summary of the season (mainly because the season is not
tory.”
yet over) this week’s column will be devoted to an anaAM service in itself will be
lysis of the sagging UB football attendance.
something new for the studentWhile comparing this season’s attendance figures run station. The station plans to
to last years, we found some very significant revelations. broadcast closed circuit to the
Last season the average attendance for the four home dorms as well as FM to the Western New York Area. As David
games played (including homecoming, which was at Rotary Field, approached 10,000, including students. The Ronan, Engineering Coordinator,
mentioned, “With a lot of work
average students attendance came close to 3,000 per
and a little luck, the AM transgame. This year for the five home games played thus far
mitter should be ready by the
at Rotary Field (not including Homecoming) the average opening of the basketball season.”
attendance was in the neighborhood of 8,600 per game.
The Bulls’ first game is TuesThe average per game student attendance for this year day, December 1, at Brockport
was about 2,100. If we count the Homecoming game at State. The game time is at 8:30
p.m. with the pre-action show to
War Memorial which drew 21,000 the total average atstart at 8:15 p.m. over ’BFO.
tendance will of course be higher. But the more signifiUB’s first home battle will be
cant statistic about this game was that there were only against
American University, two
2,200 students present as opposed to the 3,500 that atdays later, December 3, For that
tended last year’s homecoming at Rotary Field.
game, a Washington, D.C., station
which follows American U’s basIn further examining these statistics the most striking fact is that an average of 1,400 people less attended ketballers, will pick up WBFO’s
play-by-play and relay it back to
this year’s games than last year’s, 900 of which were stuWashington.
dents. From this we can draw the conclusion that it is
One of the highlights of the
most definitely the students and not the paying customers season will be when the Bulls
who have caused the decline in attendance this year. travel to Syracuse to participate
The comparitively insignificant drop in paying attendin LeMoyne College’s t w o-day
ance from 7,000 to 6,500 maybe attributed to the success Holiday Tournament on Decemof the Buffalo Bills, who are on their way to their first ber 29 and 30.
As of this article, WBFO is the
divisional title and perhaps the league championship.
only Buffalo radio station that
Thus, with all this excitement and concern over them, plans
to broadcast the UB games.
the Bills are really responsible for the comparitively A local station may pick up
one
slight drop off in UB paying customer attendance.
or two of the games during the
Therefore, the main reason for the fall off in UB
football attendance is most definitely a result of an acute
lack of support from the student body. The next logical
question to be asked is, “Why don’t the students support
the team?” Well, there are many reasons for this, and
to adequately explain them we would probably need
someone properly equipped to analyze the various psychological and sociological factors involved. But since
we don’t have someone, we will endeavor to give our own
explanation, however unprofessional it may be.

/

PROFESSIONAL

COLLEGE

By RICHARD DRANDOPF
Due to the fantastic resurgence
of Old Man Upset and a miser-

able 4-6-1 record on last week’s

picks, I think it only fitting to
make this introduction as short
as possible. All I will say at the

moment is that, in the NFL,

neither the Baltimore Colts nor
the Cleveland Browns are going
to be caught, and these two teams
will meet in Cleveland on December 28 to decide the League
Championship. Over in the AFL,
the San Diego Chargers will come
to Buffalo on Saturday, December
27, and when they return to the
Coast that night, they will be
the first AFL team in four years
to win back-to-back championships.

As I said, last week was a disastrous one for this forecaster,

and it lowered my composite record to 57-34-6, for a .626 percentage.
National Football League
Cleveland 28, Green Bay 17—
Ryan and Brown looked simply
great in the Browns’ smashing
win over the Lions.,The Packers,
on the contrary, looked awful in
their loss to the feeble 49’ers,
and will look even worse in Milwaukee Sunday.
Washington 31, Dallas 27
After the Redskins dispose of the
Cowboys this weekend, they will
move into a third place tie with
Philly. Jurgensen has been redhot recently, and with receivers
like Mitchell and Coia, Washington should enjoy the remainder
of the season.
New York 21, Pittsburgh 13—
The Giants are beginning to look
like a pro football team once
again, but they have nowhere to
go. They are already mathematically eliminated from the Eastern
Division Championship, but they
should not have any trouble with
coverage
but
no
other
is
season,
the Stealers.
expected.
St. Louis 24, Philadelphia 10—
So, to follow the Basketball The Eagles have been lucky lateBulls in action, this year turn to ly, and they will come out from
WBFO-FM (88.7 me.) or WBFObehind the clouds after this
AM (780 me.), the “New Voice of game. The Cardinals have a long,
the Bulls”.
uphill trip to catch the Browns
and it will not be easy. They
BASKETBALL GAMES TO BE
must win this one even to stay
in contention.
BROADCAST OVER WBFO
Baltimore 34, Los Angeles 21—
Dec. 1 at Brockport State
All winning streaks have to come
Dec. 3 American University
to an end eventually, but this
Dec. 9 Assumption University
week will not prove to be the
Dec. 12 Albany State
downfall for the Colts. They had
Dec. 16 Western Ontario
a close scare last week against
Dec. 29-30 at LeMoyne Invitation Minnesota, so close in fact, that
Jan. 23 Ithaca College
they cannot take any chances this
Jan. 27 Toronto
week.
Feb. 6 Wayne State
Minnesota 21, Detroit 20—In
at
Colgate
Feb. 13
danger of suffering a letdown
at
Albany State
Feb. 20
after their gallant effort last
Feb. 24 Rochester
week in Baltimore, the Vikings
Mar. 1 at Buffalo State*
will have to go all out to take
Mar. 3 Alfred
this one against a tough Lion
Mar. 6 Bucknell
defense. The bet here is that
they can avoid a slump and come
‘Tentative
out on top.
Chicago 28, San Francisco 17—
Whenever I pick the Bears to
win, they lose, and when I pick
them to lose, they win. Judging
from this experience, all I can
say is that the 49*ars, undoubtedly the worst team in the
league, will probably score their
NOTRE
1.
DAME
second victory in as many weeks.
After all, the Chicago team has
2. ALABAMA
a hex on it.
3. ARKANSAS
American Football Laague
Boston 28, Denver 7—In one of
4. NEBRASKA
the most startling upsets of the
5. MICHIGAN
season, the Broncos beat the Jets
6. OHIO STATE
last week, but they cannot do it
again. The Patriots realize that
7. TEXAS
they are not out of it yet after
8. OREGON
upsetting Buffalo last week, and
they will be going all out to win
9. GEORGIA TECH
the remainder of their games.
10. SYRACUSE
Naw York 21, Oakland 17
(Cont’d on P. 11)
—

SPECTRUM
TOP TEN

—

By

STEVE FEIGIN
This week marks the end of
ray column for the season. Many
people will rejoice, but others (I
hope!) will miss it on Fridays
to come. My record has been slipping for the past few issues, so
maybe it’s a good time for me
to quit. My record to date stands
at 74-42-5.
NEBRASKA 28, OKLAHOMA
14—The Cornhuskers (9-0) need
this one to capture the Big Eight
crown, Missou is only a game
behind, and breathing down their
necks. The Sooner* (4-3-1), despite a disappointing season, have
an outside shot to grab the marbles, also. But Nebraska will not
be too extended in gathering in
its second consecutive title.
ILLINOIS 24, M I C H I G A N
STATE 20—This has been a frustrating season for both the Fighting lllini (5-3) and the Spartans
(4-4) and both will be going all
out tomorrow to salvage at least
a little glory. Illinois rates the
edge here, as State is hurting
after being mauled by Notre
Dame. Michigan State’s main concern here is lllini fullback Grabowski who ran for 239 yards
last week to break a Big Ten
record held by the immortal Red

Grange.
MICHIGAN 21, OHIO STATE
17—When Purdue was knocked
off by Minnesota last week, it
left it up to this game to decide
the Big Ten champ. The Wolverines (7-1) Tiave lost a conference

game, but will still go to the
Rose Bowl if they can defeat the
Buckeyes (7-1), who have failed
to lose in conference Competition. They should win, as Ohio
State seems to be weakening
after steaming through a tough
schedule.
ARKANSAS 35, TEXAS TECH
13—The Razorbacks (9-0) need
this game for the SWC crown.
They will have a tough fight
against the surprisingly strong
Red Raiders (6-2-1). The game
should break open in the second
half.
OREGON 13, OREGON STATE
6—These two schools are about
as evenly matched as you can
get. Each has lost a squeaker to
Stanford, and each has posted
victories over the same opponents and by similar scores. Each
has a staunch, unyielding defense
and a strong passing game. The
game could go either way, but
with the Rose Bowl at stake, the
Webfoots (7-1-1) are my choice,
lately, their offensive punch has
been more effective than that of
the Beavers (7-2).
The
U.S.C. 24, U.C.L.A. 13
Bruins' (4-5) porous defense will
be their ruination. But the Trojans (5-3) must stop Larry Zeno s
passes to win. The Rose Bowl is
also a big factor here, with both
teams in contention.
FLORIDA STATE 14, FLORIDA 10—After this contest, the
residents of Florida will be wondering what hurricane hit them
This game could go either way
and could very possibly be decided by a lucky bounce of the
football. The sentimental choice
here is the Saminolas (7-1-1). because they have had live in "big
brother” Florida’s shadow for
years. But they’ll have to find
a way to contain Larry Dupree,
the Gators' (5-2) All-America fullback candidate.
PENN STATE 17, PITTS
BURGH 14—Disregard the records of these 2 teams. The last
three weeks, each has corrected
its inadequacies and come into
its own. My pick here is the
Nlttany Lions (54), who should
—

(Cont’d

on

F

u)

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                    <text>V E ESTT Y

HOT LINE

QpilEW YORK~
I

VOLUME 15

COLGATE

Sh
■

paf:r

■ W ■

Hi

*mi^m—mm—am^i^^amammm^ammam£

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1964

NO. 10

NS A Freedom Fast

Charney, Bromberg Discuss Greeks Slate Food Will Sustain Indigent Negroes
Modern American Theater Annual Sing In McComb, Mississippi Delta Area
Jordan Charney, professional actor, and Conrad
Bromberg, actor and playwright, described the new
trends in the modern American theater at a talk sponsored by the Convocations Committee Friday, November 6.
Mr. Charney was one of the 30 original members of
the training company of the Lincoln Center Repertory
Theater which failed to please the New York critics. Mr.
Charney commented, “The actors are good, however,
repertory theater is new in this country. It is difficult
for American actors to adjust. The Lincoln Center will
open new doors to the American Theater. Now actors
and directors who are used to working on a standard
stage will develop new techniques for the Center’s three
corner round.”
Mr. Charney felt that the biggest problem faced by the new
type of stage lies with the playwriters. He felt that there is
opportunity here, however, for
the writer to write with a knowledge of the stage his play will
be presented upon and the actors
who will play.
Mr. Bromberg added that the
American Theater does not yet
have writers of the caliber of
Moliere of the Comedie Francais.
The Lincoln Center had an artificial start aimed at building the
country’s cultural front. No playwright has yet developed a sense
of this new theater. He said
there is an artistic goal, but not
a philosophical goal.”

(Cont’d on

P.

4)

Lindemann Completes Series,
Discusses City's Social Roles
By SUE FULLER

The fifth and final Fenton Lecture entitled “Mental Health in
Large City Complexes” was delivered Thursday, November 5,
by Dr. Eric Lindemann, professor
°f psychiatry at the Harvard

Medical School.
Dr, Lindemann

began by

ed by the second group, or conduct controllers. The third group,

em-

phasizing the importance of the

transition of social roles in the
llfe cycle. These role transitions,
as in the case of high school
graduation, marriage, or retirement, may be disastrously disturbing to the individual. It is
then necessary for one of the
gatekeepers” or caretakers of
society to exercise his authority
t° integrate the individual into

his new role.
The caretakers were divided in
flye distinct groups
or circles
with the purely medical aspect
occupying the center position.
The first group is the power
structure whose laws are enforc-

EDITORIAL PAGE 4
This week petitions were cir-

culated in Goodyear and Tower
cafeterias. Those who signed

agreed to give up their evening

meal Thursday, All the money
which would normally be spent
in the meal’s preparation will be
sent to NSA to buy food for the
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
Negroes of Mississippi. For those
Small division groups are: Sigma
Delta Tau and Theta Chi sororities, Phi Lambda Delta, Alpha
Epsilon Pi, Sigma Alpha Mu and

is represented by this drive.
Jeremy Taylor, Chairman of
the NSA Steering Committee,
said, “NSA feels that it is crucial
to evolve the present college
generation in the pressing problems facing the world today. The
Freedom Fast is only one of a
series of programs sponsored
and carried out by NSA in an
attempt to enhance the quality
of education available to students
all over America.”
At the last meeting of the
Student Senate, a resolution was
unanimously

passed,

supporting

the “Freedom Fast”, and giving
it the Senate’s full endorsement.
Last year’s Freedom Fast sent

Trophies will be awarded for
first and second place winners
in both divisions and a trophy
will go to an overall winner.
Awards will be made at the I.F.C.
Pigskin Party at 4:00 Saturday,
November 21, after the Villa-

One of the great advantages of
the Lincoln Center is its economic independence. It can exist
without the support of the critics. Since there is a freedom from
popular public pressure and a
new found freedom of form, they
are in a position to take a chance
and experiment with new styles
or unpopular themes. Charney
said, “I would like to see the
Lincoln Center break all Broadway traditions, eliminate the opening night farce, invite the
critics to rehearsals.”
Mr. Bromberg felt that any
theater in New York City is confined to New York tradition, “It
is unfortunate that the response

Photo by Russ Goldberg

Thursday it is hoped that many
students will give up one meal
in an effort to help the Negroes
of the Deep South. The National
Student Association’s program entitled, “Thanksgiving Fast for
Freedom”, will include over 100
other college campuses in the
United States.

Theta Chi fraternities.

CONRAD BROMBERG

JORDAN CHARNEY

Friday, November 20, fraternities and sororities will compete
in the annual Greek Sing, to be
held in the Millard Fillmore
Room at 7:30 and again at 10:00.
This year’s Sing is unique in
that it is the first time that the
men and women wll compete
against each other. In the past,
sororities and fraternities were
judged in separate divisions.
There will be two divisions;
large, (for groups with thirty or
more members participating) and
small, (groups containing fifteen
or less members). Large division
contestants include; Chi Omega,
Sigma Kappa Phi sororities and

DR. ERIC LINDEMANN
by Dan Waterman
Photo

the educators, serve to instruct
youth in the proper social con(Cont’d on P, 6)

nova game.
Don Mingle, chairman of Greek
Sing explained, “With the two
divisions as they are set up this
year, all groups, large or -mall,
male and female, will have an
equal chance of winning one or
possibly two of the five trophies
being awarded.”
A long playing record will be
made of Greek Sing and will
be available to students for $4.00
per album. Prepaid orders may
be placed in the Reservations
Office by including a money
order in an envelope addressed
to, Greek Sing Record Album,

STUDENT SIGNING UP FOR NSA FREEDOM FAST

Photo by Peter Bonneau

who do not live in the dorms,

arrangements have been made
with Mr. Mahlon Bennett of the
New Food Service, to sell a 25c
“Freedom Cup of Coffee.” The
Food Service donated the coffee
C/O Mr. Garber.
Tickets for Greek Sing will go which will be sold in the Rathon sale Monday, November 16, skellar.
The basic idea behind the Freein the reservations office.
“As chairman of Greek Sing,” dom Fast is much broader than
Don added, “I sincerely hope that that of a simple charity drive.
Students who participate will be
all Greeks as well as other members of the student body will at- giving of themselves for the benefit of others. The spirit of the
tend this event.”
entire movement for civil rights

Annual Ball Honors
Fall Pledge Classes
The annual Pan Hellenic Ball
was held Satuday evening, Nov-

ember 7, at the Statler Hilton
Terrace Room. Prior to the dance
cocktail parties were given by the
sororities for the sisters and their
escorts.
A receiving line composed of
sorority Social Chairmen and Pan
Hellenic Council members greeted guests at the Statler and presented the gentlemen with bou-

tennieres. Russet autumn colors
decorated the Terrace Room and
musical entertainment was provided by Eddie Diem and his
orchestra.
A brief program was held at
midnight. Monica Bauer, general
chairman, welcomed guests and
introduced the new pledges who
were presented with corsages.
The pledges and their escorts
then led all the guests in a
dance.
Special guests of the Council
that evening were: Miss Marilyn
Boucher, Dr. and Mrs. S. Ciancio, Miss Dorothy Keller, Mr. and
Mrs. R, Moll. Mr. and Mrs. F.
Rhodes, Dean and Mrs. R. Siggelkow, Dr. and Mrs. Wilson, as
well as all sorority advisors.

approximately 80,000 pounds of
food to over 60 Negro families in
the Deep South. This year, much
of the proceeds will be directed
toward McComb, Mississippi,
where racist bombings have left
several Negro churches, businesses and homes in ruin.
Participation in the "Thanksgiving Fast for Freedom” will
give students an opportunity to
join the fight for civil right for

all

Americans. The overwhelm-

ing support of the student body
is expected.

Aptheker to Lecture Today,

A.A.U.P. Releases Statement
Dr. Herbert Aptheker will speak
today on “Marxism: Its Relevance
to the U.S, Today,” at 3:00 in the
Millard Fillmore Room. The lecture is the last of a series of

political speakers sponsored by
the Student Senate.

The doors to the Fillmore Room
will be opened at 2:00, when
students will be admitted by presentation of a ticket and an identification card. Tickets can be
obtained by presenting your I.D.
at the ticket booth in Norton
or a validated temporary I.D.
card from the audio-visual department. Other rooms opened
for hearing Dr. Aptheker's lecture will be the Conference Theatre, rooms 231 and 233.
Following the lecture, a panel
of faculty and students will discuss Dr. Aptheker's talk, then the
floor will be opened to questions
from the audience. This is the
format that was followed throughout the entire Political Spectrum
series.

Robert P. Finkelstein, President
of the Senate, made (he following

comments in regard to Dr. Aptheker’s appearance: "The Student Senate is sponsoring this
lecture and has sponsored this
entire series as an educational
■and intellectual experience, and
it is our belief that it is in the
highest traditon of academic freedom on a unversity campus. It

is unfortunate that this presentation could not have taken place
on its originally scheduled date
so that in terms of time as well
as content, the political philosophies could have been compared.
However, a basic principle of an
intellectually searching univer
sity has been upheld by the Ap
pellate Division of the Supreme
Court and the Court of Appeals,
and the Senate will now complete
its goal of educating the student
body with regard to the basic
political ideologies.”
“I am hopeful and

confident
that the students who attend this
lecture will accept it as a mam
testation of our overall goal and
see it in the light of what our
intention is—ap educational experience."
(Cont'd

on I’.

Uj

�Civil Rights Committee Begins
New Program to Do Research
The Civil Rights Committee,
under the direction of Mike Lappin, is instituting a program of
combined research and action to
fight the problems of civil rights
here in Buffalo.
"It is far easier to develop a
course of action in the South,”
Mr. Lappin remarked, "because
the problems which have to be
faced are easily recognized. In
the North, however, the problems
are more covert, harder to detect."

“The facts, however, are there,"
he continued, “as evidenced in
the state of the housing facilities, employment opportunities,
and educational of Negroes.”
The purpose of the research
committees is to find out more
about conditions, and to devise
some proposals for remedying
them. The three committees deal
with the problems of labor, education and housing. Alvin Pams,
a graduate student in psychology,
and Larry Siogal, graduate stu-

dent in the physical education
department, arc chairmen of
labor and education, respectively. The chairman of the housing
committee has not been selected.

Eight students, delegates and
four faculty advisors attended
the sixteenth annual regional
conference of the Association of
College Unions held at the University of Rochester last weekend.
George Orlando, Joanne Osypiewski, Ladd Sievenpiper, Joseph

Board as Unsympathetic and Ineffective'

Vincent Nowlis, Rochester professor of psychology who gave
the keynote address, “Faculty
Student Relationships,” and Dean
Joseph Cole, also of Rochester,
who discussed “Public Relations.”
Related workshops followed the
talks. In Workshop I, “Faculty
Student Relationships” the ques-

turns to superficially important
things such as its constitution.
“Last year we sppnt God knows
how long trying to patch up the

constitution. What difference
did it make?” Miss Auerbacker
said that the trouble with the
Publications Board is not structural, but functional in the sense
that "its members don't realize
how the Board could act positively and with the publications."

She said that the Publications
Board has not been sympathetic
to the problems of publications.
"Bast year the Board said, innumerable times, ‘It’s the editors, problem: if you do not do
it we’ll let you know.' There is
a definite lack of understanding
of what a good publication is.”
Also criticized was the Publications Board’s tendency to generalize basic ideals of publications, such as “responsibility".
“No one is sure specifically
what it means.”
She also feels that the Board
is too concerned about the image
of the school. This, she said, is
the problem of the administration. "In the end we, the students, arc not responsible. That
is why we have advisors and activities coordinators. I’m not saying that the Board should not
want publications to be respectable. I’m just saying that their
basic reasons are unsound.”
Miss Auerbacker forwarded a
plan for a reconstructed Board,
one which would be effective.
"The Board should encourage
good relations among publications and act as a unifying body.
The present Board should be
abolished because it is perpetuating itself and what is wrong
with it. The power of recognition, which the Student Senate
Amendment dealt with, seems
very formal and of very little
Basically a Board
substance.
should fill the gap we have on
this campus in the absence of a
school of journalism. There does
—

UNION BOARD DELEGATION TO ROCHESTER CONVENTION
L»ft to Right: Joanne Oiypiowiki, Richard Miller, George Orlando,
Cindy Bock, Ladd Sievenpiper, Pat Jones.
Photo by Ed Joscelyn

Hughes, Cindy Bock, Richard Miller, Patricia Jones and Clinton
DeVeaux were accompanied by
advisors Miss Ann Hicks, Miss
Dorothy Haas, Mr. Mike Diger-

lando and Dr. Frederick Thomas.
Friday, a meeting of the regional board was held and Dr.
Kenneth Cameron, an English instructor at U. of R. spoke at a
luncheon for workshop chairmen
on the topic “Leading Discussion
included

Dr.

1964

Former Publications Board Member; Now
Editor of New Student Review, Criticizes

Each committee will not only
decide which problem in its general field to tackle, but also
attempt to become personally
identified with what they do,
Due to the recent controversy
Before the committees can go over the Publications Board, the
into effective operation, howSpectrum interviewed Judith
ever, they must recruit interested Aucrbacker, Editor of the New
and willing members. Any stu- Student Review and former memdent interested in the problem ber of the Publications Board,
of Civil Rights, and willing to in order to obtain her views as
work toward a satisfying goal, an interested party on the issues
is welcome to join the Civil involving the Board. Miss AuerRights Committee. There will be backer criticized the Board from
work available both in the rethe standpoint of having been a
searching and actual relations voting member of the Board in
people.
sign
up,
the
To
merewith
1963 and an ex-officio member
ly stop in at room 205 Norton this year.
during
day.
any time
the
Miss Auerbacker feels that “the
If there is a large enough re- Publications Board fails to exersponse, a fourth committee, on cise its power in a productive
Civil Liberties, will be organized. manner. It is aware of its power
This will deal with problems such and forces itself to make decias academic freedom on campus. sions and policies which it can
The Civil Rights Committee has not really back up.” She referred
already planned work camps, to to the fact that the Board feels
begin the first weekend in Dethat it must use the power which
cember.
it constitutionally has and does
so
in a manner which is aimed
arc
to
particiStudents
unit'd
at blocking the actions of publipate in resolving important probrather than helping them.
lems in the lives of all Americans cations
She went on to say that every
today.
time the Board has a problem it

Eight Union Board Delegates
Attend Regional Conference

Groups.”
Other speakers

Friday, November 13,

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

tion of union responsibility for
furthering student faculty relationship was discussed. “Academic Pressures: Their Influence
on Extra Curricular Activities”
was the topic of Workshop II.
The third group discussed “Public Relations.”
The Conference ended with a
Banquet Saturday at which the
speaker was Miss Rossi Drummond, Assistant Director of
Community Relations with the
Peace Corps.

1

'

exist a huge gap between our
educational orientation and our
student publications. The Board

An example of what an effec
live Board could do would be to
initiate a one credit journalism
course, like Debate, in which a
staff member of the Spectrum or
the Buffalonian would receive
credit for his work. Miss Auerbacker said that when this idea
was discussed by the Board last
year it was discouraged as being
too difficult a chore. “Even if
the future plans for the University include a Department of
Communications, why should not
the intervening gap be filled?”
Miss Auerbacker did favor the
Student Senate amendment which
would abolish the Publications
Board. Her only reservation lies
in the fact that the Activities
Committee, which would have
accepted the responsibility of
recognizing publications, may not
be able to handle the job. She
saw an effective solution to this
problem, however, in the possibility of setting up a sub-commit

JUDY AUERBACKER

tee of Activities which would deal
specifically with publications.

should not interfere with editorial policies but should exist as a
body that editors would want to
bring their problems to. It should
serve to educate their staffs. It
could bring in speakers
this
would be a good, productive Publications Board.”
—

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

GREYHOUND
For Holiday Rates
Special arrangements for Greyhound bus transportation
at very favorable rates during Thanksgiving and Christmas
recess are being made available to students through the
ticket booth in Norton Hall. The arrangements will include special rates to New York City at $22.10 round
trip, with departures direct from the campus. Those students interested in securing bus tickets for special service
to New York City should indicate and register their reservations at the ticket booth between 10:00 A.M. and
2:00 I’.M, on November 17th, 18th and 10th. After an
inventory of requests has been taken, tickets will go on
sale on November 23rd and 24th.

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�Friday,

November 13,' 1964

A.C.U. Tournament Planned;
Eliminations to Begin in Table
Mr. Joseph Paffie, Assistant
Director of Norton Hall, and
Recreation Advisor for Region II
of the Association of College
Unions, announces that this year’s
Regional A.C.U. Tournament will
be held here at UB Friday and
Saturday, February 12 and 13,
1965.
Notice of elimination matches

UB has had Both a man and
a woman who have qualified for

National Tournaments each of
the past two years. These students have received expense-paid
trips to the American Bowling
Congress Tournaments in Buffalo,
New York, and San Francisco,
California, and to the Women's
International Bowling Tourna-

VIManova; William Redden,
Last Year's ACU Winners, George Walko,
Finkelstein,
LLB.
Sandy
New Hampshire;

the school representatives will be posted on the
Recreation Bulletin Board. Any
eligible student, male or female,
may enter these eliminations.
Only those persons who complete
the eliminations will be eligible
for the final matches.
The number of school repre
sentatives to be selected is:
to determine

5—Men’s Bowling

5—Women’s

Bowling

1—Men’s Pocket Billiards

1—Women's Pocket Billiards

1—Men’s 3-Cushion Billiards

1—Men’s Table Tennis
1—Women’s Table Tennis
2—Men’s Doubles Table Tennis
2—Women’s Dbls. Table Tennis
4—Chess (two 2-person teams)
Bridge—as many players as

desire may play.

ments in Memphis, Tennessee,
and Minneapolis, Minnesota. This
year there will also be a National

selections

he presented.
Dugan, with no introduc-

Mr.
tion of his own, began reading
selections from his newer poems,
including “Pigeons Making Love,”
in which he implied that the
act of love leaves one “free to
be again whatever else I am,”
He went on to the topic of war,
beginning with Robert Lowell’s
"For the Union Dead”. Dugan
made no attempt to strike the
use of obscenity from his poems

Civil Rights Committee's Panel
Reviews NSM. Conference

Debaters Place
At Oswego Meet
Members of the UB Varsity
Debate team scored a 6-win 4loss record at the annual Sheldon Debate Tournament held at
Oswego State College last weekend. Participants included Barbara Glegota and Diane Hayes
(affirmative) and Ellen Abelson
and Richard Nemiroff (negative)t
Each team won three of their
five debates. Miss Abelson received a rating of 95 speaker
points, missing a second place
trophy by only one ))oint. In
recognition of their debating record, both the affirmative and
the negative teams representing
UB were awarded tournament
certificates with the- names of
the debaters recorded on each.
The group met such formidable
opponents as Canisius, Brockport,
Utica, St. Lawrence, LeMoyne.
Colgate, Cornell, and the University of Rochester. The debaters
were accompanied by Mr. Richard
Suttell, assistant debate coach.

Monday, November 9, the Civil
Rights Committee held an open
meeting to discuss a convention
sponsored by the Northern Stu
dent Movement which 12 of the
Committee members attended.
The convention, entitled “Crisisin Black and White” was a con
ference on myth and reality in
the civil rights movement, Octo
ber 30, in New York City,

The students who participated
in the convention were: Sue
Karshmar, Lauren Jacobs, Lenny
Gerson, Elenor Waldman, Syd
ney Sugarman, Marc Moskowitz,
Mike Gardner, Diane Garvy, Lor
raine Kouze. Ruth Shapiro, Sara
Lee Rubinstein and Fern Robertson.

The convention theme hinged
on the change in the goals and

methods of the civil rights movement, especially in the north.
The conference journal included
an article entitled "Civil Rights
Six teams, comprising twelve and the Northern Ghetto" which
members of the novice division, stressed the new life of the norwill compete at tournaments at thern movement.
Wells College (Aurora, New
It stated, “The fundamental poYork) and at Baldwin-Wallace
reality today is that there
College (Ohio) this weekend. The litical
is little basis for a “civil rights"
affirmative units attending Wells movement
in the north. With
College include Allan Wayne,
some exceptions Negro workers
DeVeaux,
Kautz,
Clinton
William
and the Negro bourgdise alike
and Allan Gerson, while the negahave formal political and social
of
tive team consists
Rose Broad- rights
in the North . . . What is
man, Barbara Straka, Richard really at issue
is the creation of
Fleisher, and Robert Swanick.
economic and social opportune

ties for Negro workers as a
whole, opportunity which can only be won when they, allied with
others, exercise political (rower:
on one level, the problem is the
specific kinds of social and economic priorities in our system,
and on another, the source of
poltical initiative and control.”
Miss Diane Garvy noted, "The
point of the conference, I felt,
was that we must encourage the
people to play a part in their own
destiny. The people must build
a political basis as well as an
educational foundation. We must
instill the feeling for the need
for political initiative in the
community."

Lenny Gerson, who chaired the
discussion, spoke of the moral
pressure on the white people of
the United States as the most
fundamental drive behind the
civil rights movement in the past,
“The one good thing about Buffalo," he said, noting the local
situation, "i_s that we can learn
from others’ mistakes
because
Buffalo has not done anything
—

yet!"

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

Tournament in Billiards which
will be held at the University
of Minnesota, St. Paul. Minnesota,
April 1, 2, 3, 1965.

Open Your
mg

The only changes in this year’s
program are the addition of
Women’s table tennis and a new
standardized format for playing
billiards. Each billiard player is
allowed 20 alternate turns at the
table or 20 innings. He may make
no more than 14 balls in one inning, Winners will be determined
on an average-per-inning basis.

IW

Watch the Recreation Bulletin
Board for further details.

Alan Dugan Reads His Poetry
Mr. Alan Dugan, winner of the
Pulitzer Prize in 1962 and a graduate of the academy of Rome,
read his poems on Friday, November 6. Mr. Dugan covered
a wide range of topics in the

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

of war. He told the audience: “I
use obscenity when the subject
I am treating is obscene itself. I
also use it because obscenity is
the language of passion.”
“How He Heard the Name”
was the highlight of the group
of classical poems. In this selection. he ridicules the “Baa Baas”
who worship as gods the "debris
the from past.” He was implying
directly to Alexander the Great
as a leader in wars.
Mr. Dugan read slowly and
articulately; it was easy for the
audience to grasp what he had
to say. Mr. Dugan was forced to
conclude in the middle of a poem
on the City, due to a light cold.

COLLEGE

D. HAYES
B. GLEGOTA
R. NEMIROFF
Mr. Richard Suttell
accompany this group.

will

also

AT LIBERTY NATIONAL BANK
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Debating at Baldwin Wallace in

and Jean
Taylor (affirmative) and Robert
Dragone and Charles Liarakos
(negative). Mr. Terry H. Ostermeier, Society advisor, will coach
Ohio are Daniel Katz

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�Friday, Novambar 13, 19M

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

...

\

FOOD AND FREEDOM
It isn’t often that we can contribute directly to the
fight for civil rights, but one such chance is before us.
Next Thursday the National Student Association will
sponsor their annual Freedom Fast.
In the dorms students will be asked to sign a petition giving up next Thursday’s evening meal. The money
that would have been spent will go for food to McComb,
Mississippi.

In Norton Union a Freedom Cup of Coffee will be
sold. Coffee has been contributed by the Food Service
and the 25 cent charge will go down south with the
money collected in the dorms.
The support, given by the Freedom Fast, is crucial
to the civil rights work being done in Mississippi. If the
many civil rights projects are to be continued in the south,
then the Freedom Fast must be a success. The fight for
civil right, and the dignity of man needs your support,
please help.

ACADEMIC FREEDOM AND RESPONSIBILITY
Today will end a long and hard fought battle, not
for a speaker but rather for an idea academic freedom.
The State University Board of Trustees, our school’s
administration and the Student Senate have fought a list
of court battles in order to set a precedent. The precedent is not that a communist speaker should be allowed
to lecture, rather that the idea of a free and searching
University should be upheld, regardless if it is a private
or state institution.
All eyes will be focused on the University this afternoon. What Dr. Aptheker will say may be important, but
even more important is what we the students say. We
must show through our conduct that we can handle the
responsibility that accompanies academic freedom.
Today students must demonstrate their ability to
comprehend and question the proponent of a political
philosophy. Unless we can make todays convocation a
meaningful experience, free of emotionalism, we will let
down not only those who have fought for us but the very
idea that we have all been fighting for.
-

THE SUCCESSFUL NEWSPAPER
The maintenance of a free press in a free society
has always been a problem. A free press in a college community has been an ever greater problem. To compound
the problem the college newspaper has traditionally been
understaffed. Add to this classes and examinations and
you have the situation the SPECTRUM now faces.
In order to remain free and independent a newspaper must have financial integrity. That is to say that
the Senate or the Finance Committee should not be able
to control the purse strings in order to effect any kind of
control.
A good newspaper should be the conscience of the
community that it serves. To this the SPECTRUM is
dedicated. The guiding light of any newspaper is truth,
for without it there can be no concern for human decency
and human betterment.
The staff Of the newspaper, through its pride and
competence, must breath life into the weekly record of
history that is the SPECTRUM. This can only be done
when the .paper’s pages are lively, imaginative, humorous, and thought provoking.
The SPECTRUM presents to its’ reader’s a forum
for criticism and comment. The Letters to the Editor
column is open to everyone, the only requirement being
that the letters be as brief as possible and in good taste.
Through the editorial and feature columns the SPECTRUM presents a commentary on those issues of the day.
With truth as its’ guide the newspaper should never
deviate from the path that it has chosen. It should oppose that which it believes to be dishonest and unlawful,
and uphold that which is honest and lawful. The newspaper should act with the courage of its’ convictions. It
should expose that which is corrupt and honor that which
is good. It should help to protect all the rights and privileges that its readers are guaranteed under the law.
Furthermore it should be an active voice of. the student
body and it should offer leadership whenever and whereever it is necessary.

In order to better fulfill its' goals the SPECTRUM
will need a bigger staff. Here is where you the members
of the student body come in. Positions are now open in
all departments of the SPECTRUM. With an anticipated
growth pur needs will just about double.
No experience is necessary and the opportunities are
endless. There will be a general meeting for all new and
interested members this Tuesday at 3:00 p.m. in the
SPECTRUM offices, 355 Norton Union,

to the new Arthur Miller play
(which did not cater to the taste
of the public en masse) was taken
like any other New York play.
The Off-Broadway theater has
traditionally been the place for
experimentation. Mr. Charney illustrated the Off-Broadway Theater’s problems with the example
of his last Off-Broadway play. It
closed in one night. The play had
been produced by a politician’s
wife, a woman with no knowledge
of the theater and only a desire
to amuse herself in a new way,
She fired the director the night
of the first performance and
closed the production after “luke
warm” reviews panned it. ($70,000
went down the drain in this instance.) The experimental theater
of Lincoln Center may eventually

eliminate this type of theatrical
disaster.
“One of the reasons I came
to Buffalo,” said Mr. Bromberg,
“was the unhappy situation in
New York. Broadway, Off-Broadway and the Lincoln Center are
in rough shape.” Mr. Bromberg
is a member of the Writers
Unit of the Actors Studio, a workshop for professional actors. He
is a visiting artist in residence
in the Department of Drama and
Speech at UB.
“Broadway,” he said, “perpetuates itself, because for every 20
flops there is a Hello Dolly. Every
producer on Broadway believes

that his show will be that Hello

Dolly. Even shows that do not
get top reviews can run a few

months because of the demand
for shows on Broadway.
“There was a time when theater-going was a pastime for all
of New York. With the great
move to suburbia, a night at the
Theater now means the expenditure of $50 to $100. Cut out of
the theater going public are students and working people, the
broadest base of the people, the
most aware audience.
“Art serves you as a tool for

evaluating yourself—to a degree
it requires money, but not in all
cases. The theater is a prime

communications function. The
audience experiences together, a
kind of ritual of enlightenment,
joy, heightened-emotions, through
the spoken word, and the human
form. The Theater is the only
form of art that has not gained
broad distribution. It has never
come out of New York City."
Mr. Bromberg feels that the

new life blood of the theater will
come from outside of New York.

The Actors Studio, with the help
of philanthropic organizations,
such as the Ford Foundation,
want to encourage “the trained
art outside of New York City.”
He encouraged young actors to
go to New York to study and develop, but then leave to start
new theaters. “The need is for
real theaters, challenging communications, experimentation in
form and content and work on
the artists’ approach to the soul
of the play.”

Mr. Charney compared television acting to the stage. He had
worked with a “soap-opera” company for six months. He described television as a tremendous
mass communicative operation
and said that TV must eventually
wake up to the fact that they
have a larger role in communication to fulfill than they do now,
Mr, Charney, who studied acting under Lee Strasburg, answered a question from thei audience
on Mr. Strasburg’s methods by
demonstrating some of his “exercises” which are aimed at relaxing the actor. Some of these included sustaining a note while
bouncing up and down (“usually
reserved for the more physically
bestowed women in the class,”)
and thrashing about on the floor
in an effort to attain “emotional
freedom". Mr. Charney said that
although he may take exception
to some of Mr. Strasburg’s methods, he considers him one of the
most brilliant men in show business today and holds the deepest
respect for him.

the Editor

to

space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR rpust be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P M. on the Tuesday before publication.

Due to a lack of

Kurman Attacked; Pub. Board Defended
power to appoint the editors and
will have the power to abolish
any publication. Is this not a challenge to freedom of the press?
According to Mr. Kurman, it
must be. But there appears a
fallacy of equivocation. If the
school is allocating money to a
publication, there must be a regulatory body which can check
upon these publications. If an
editor is mis-using funds or wasting student money, taking away
his powers would not be stifling
freedom of the press at all.

To tho Editor;

I would like to consider sev-

eral statements made in last
week’s letter on the Publications
Board. In reference to Mr. Kurman’s statement on duplication
of powers, apparently he was not
acquainted with the fact that the
activities committee themselves
do not feel qualified to appoint
editors. Even if they were, the
Senate would be making the final
decision.

In reference to Mr. Kurman’s
statement on freedom of the

There is one final complaint
brought up by Mr. Kurman. That

apparently he feels that
the Senate is an unbiased though
well-qualified body which could
pass sound judgment on student
publications. It is evident to me
that the Senate is composed of
political factions dedicated to
the achievement of their goals—be they unconstitutional or otherwise. I therefore do not see how
his proposal would cause a better appointment of a responsible
editor.
press,

is the fact that many frivolous
and immaterial points are being
brought up in reference to the
amendment. There is no such
thing as a frivolous point in this
case. Mr. Kurman says that these
points can be worked out later.
What he is actually saying is that
he does not like this plan but he
cannot think of a better workable one. My only response is that
I cannot think of a better workable plan either.

His mention of freedom of the
out an issue
that is quite distorted and false.
If the publications board is abolished, the Senate will have the
press is bringing

Martin Guggenheim
President, Freshman
Class Council

Spectrum Scored For Half Truths
Mr. Kurman also states that if
an editor wants to “remain edi-

To The Editor:
After reading last week’s editorial and the letter to the editor
concerning the Publications
Board, I believe that it is necessary to give a reply to rrtany of
the half-truths presented.

tor, he must conform with their
(the Board’s) wishes as to what
he prints.” Not only is Mr. Kurman’s reasoning poor at arriving
at this statement, but he is
WRONG! The fallaciousness of
this conclusion can be seen in the
fact that the Publications Board
does not agree with Mr. Kowal's
views on his campaign against
the Publications Board, but his
editorship is in no danger because of it.

In Mr. Kurman’s letter, he stated that the “Publications Board
is a body appointed by President
Furnas.” President Furnas does
“appoint” the members of the
Board, but only after, (1) candidates fill out applications which
are (2), approved by the Executive Committee of the Student
Senate and then (3), voted on by
the Student Senate. The names
are then sent to President Furnas who “appoints” them.

In last week’s editorial, Mr
Kowal quoted the Constitution of
the Publications Board giving it
jurisdiction over all publications
“identified by title, address, or
content as produced at the State
University of New York at Buffalo”. This covers a large area,
but since student .publications
are YOUR voice, is it unfair to
have a publication approved before it can use the name of the
University and to represent you?
—Gerald N. Matross

This year, because there were

not enough qualified applicants,

the Dean of Students recommended four students. It should also
be noted that the administration
places no commitment on, or even
suggests that, any of the Board
members act in any special way.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JOHN P. KOWAl
Managing Editor
Lay-out Editor
Peter Rubin
David Edelman
News Editors
Paul Nussbaum
Copy Editor
Marcia Ann Orzulak
Barbara Strauss
.
Mgr.
Business
Bernard Dikman
Faculty Advisor
Advertising Mgr.
.William Siemering
.Howard Auerbach
Financial Advisors
Dallas Garber
Photo Editor
.Edward Joscelyn
Sports Editor
.__Alice Ostrander
Allan Scholom
Circulation Mgr.
-

_

the Editor

jCetterA

Charney and Bromberg
(Cont’d from P. 1)

__

General Staff:

Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita,
Sue Greene,
Gary Lyman, Gary Chilcotf, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann, Meryl Frank,
Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou Kozlowski, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro,
imi
Aginsky,
Larry
Siegel,
Skip
Jill
Venneri, Sharon Richter, Diane Holtzman, Diane Hayes,
Marion Michael, Erol Sull, Ellen Lorig, Linda Wachner, Debbie Rubie, Jeff Lewis,
Terry Davis, Bernice Cohen, Margo Rakita, Scott Kurman, Sue Arnow, Jo Anne Leeganf,
Weinberg
Rita
Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
:
Schuelein, Skip Blumberg, Mike Castro, Lenny Gaby, Bruce Goldstein, George Jackrel,
Steve Obersfein, Eric Snyder, Harvey Starr
Photography Staff; David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan
Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Eilie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary Lou
Palmer, Lee Corey
fc'leen Murphy,
*

-

i

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, New

Subscription

$3.00 per year,

circulation

Represented for national advertising by
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York,

York

9500.

National
N. Y.

Advertising

�Friday, November 13, 1964

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

MHICTIOMS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

I am at odds with the world
in which I live, and I am constantly frustrated by my efforts
to change both it and myself. 1
have carried on in this column
■Jrom time to time about the good
as well as the bad in my experience but before every copy deadline I am stricken with a paralysis which borders on hypocrisy.
Every time I write Reflections 1
feel as though I am hedging my
bets, not because 1 do not believe
in what I write, but because the
very act of writing for a monopoly college newspaper, indeed,
of writing for anything is an act
of capitulation to a world and a
system for which I have no real
respect. The more strongly 1
state my case, the more removed
it seems when I see it on the
page. I write this column, not to
see myself in print (that novelty
wears off when the weekly deadline becomes habitual), but because I believe that what I have
to say may be of interest, if not

Medical Advisor To
Students Retiring
By JO ANNE LEEGANT

Dr. Helen G. Walker, who has been Medical Advisor
for Students for 22 years, announced her retirement at a
Tea for Department Heads given in her honor Wednesday, November 11.
Dr. Walker was born and raised in Buffalo. In 1917,
she received her BS from Columbia University Teacher’s
College in food and nutrition. After teaching at Buffalo

State and doing extension work
at Maryland State College, she
received her MA in Supervision
of Education in 1924. In the fall
of that year, her greatest dream
was realized: she was enrolled in
the School of Medicine at UB.
In 1928, she graduated from the
Medical School, and in 1940 was
made a Fellow in the American
College of Chest Physicians. The
following year, she was made a
Fellow in the American College
of Physicians.
She received her training at
the Edward G. Meyer Memorial
Hospital, where she later became
attending physician on the chest
service. She joined the staff of
Millard Fillmore Hospital in 1941.
Four years later she became Attending Internist. At present she
is consultant on the Medical Service
During her years at Meyer Memorial and later at Millard Fillmore, she taught nurses and
medical students in classes and
on wards in addition to teaching
clinical medicine to interns and
resident physicians. From 1949
until five years ago, she held the
position of Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine on the staff
of the UB Medical School.
Dr. Walker became Medical Advisor to Students at UB in 1942.
At this time her premedical
training in foods and nutrition
proved especially valuable to her
both in her capacity as Advisor
and in her private practice.
The University had grown tremendously and with it, the Student Health Service, The Health
Service started with small quarters in Clark Gymnasium. The
Service was staffed by two docand a nurse, and had no
infirmary. The doctors gave physical examinations to all students
at the beginning of the term, and
held office hours for those who
felt ill. These same doctors were
also consulted by students with
personal problems.
With the
growth of the school, the Health
Service expanded. It now occupies the
entire first floor of
Michael Hall. Dr. Walker attributes much of this change to Dean
Sengbusch, Dean of the Nursing
School, who served for many

tors

DR. HELEN WALKER
years as head of the
mittee.

Health Com

Dr. Walker retains her private
practice, for which she will have
more free time. She also plans
much of this free time to pursue
her many interests.
Dr. Walker’s own words explain her feelings about retirement: “Working with young people at the University has been a
most interesting experience and,
in a sense, a real education. I

will miss my work very much.
It will be a pleasant memory in
years to come.”

SUPPORT N.S.A.
FREEDOM
FAST
November 19

�

�

,

�

of importance, to more people
than myself. I write this column
to stimulate and participate in a
kind of dialogue, if you will.

Spotlight
on

Civil Rights
By LEONARD GERSON
most immediate consequences of the recent presidential election were the nation’s
rejection of Conservative Policy
and the reorganization of the
Republican Party; however, from
an historical perspective, one
hundred years from now the

The

election of 1964 may very well
be remembered due to the introduction of a new, potent political
force in American society—the
Negro. Not since the end of the
“Reeonstructionist South” has the
American Negro wielded a comparable amount of political
power. Unlike the former period
in which the power was gained
through Northern white benevolence and greed, in 1964 it was
the Negro people themselves who
through bitter struggling and determination forced themselves to
be counted.
A brief look at some of the
more important contests in the
post election will illustrate the
often decisive role of the Negro
vote. In our own Senatorial race
the Republican incumbent, Kenneth Keating, felt the full brunt
of this new force in his defeat.
It was estimated by civil rights
organizations that 97 to 98 per
cent of the more than 400,000
registered Negroes voted straight
Democratic, while the Democratic victor, Robert Kennedy, had
a plurality of 600,000. The impact
was even

more dramatically

in-

dicated in the Illinois gubernatorial race in which the Democrat, Governor Otto Kerner, defeated his Republican rival,
Charles H. Percy, by only 200,000
votes. It has been estimated that
almost all of the state’s more
than 400,000 Negro voters supported the Democratic nominee.
It seems evident that the highly
publicized “white backlash” played only a minor role as compared
to the Negro “frontlash.”
The basic question now confronting the major civil rights
groups is how to increase and
mobilize this new voting strength.
If the potential leadership of this
group is allowed to be coopted
in the sterile and conservative
regular line political structure,
the Negro minority of our nation
may very well remain an impotent, disorganized voice in our
society. A statement made by a
high CORE official following the
recent election reflects the nyw
mood and reorientation of strategy of civil rights groups—“There
is no question that our direction
from now on will be toward increasing our political involvement, both North and South.”

But every so often, for example, that dialogue seems to beg
the question, like a method of
saving my liberal face without
jeopardizing my conservative stomach. I indulge in a number of
gestures of speech and dress
which characterize my dissatisfaction and discontent, but these
are also abandoned at crucial
moments like job interviews and
honorary benefits. I say to myself that these discontinuities are
not really inconsistencies, that
one can not be totally uninhibited and rudely honest at all times
and still have a meaningful set
of relations with the world at
large. Sometimes I wonder if
that kind of rationalization is not
in itself an insidious attempt to
falsify the evidence that the
world places before each of us.
When I examine that evidence
carefully, I am appalled. Absurd
statistics spring to mind: America spends more on tobacco than
on education and cancer research
combined. We are the only nation to have engaged in nuclear
warfare; the average middle-class
family throws away enough food
every day to keep a starving man
alive for a week. I think of all
the ways we devise to avoid
thinking about just how bad
things really are, and 1 think that
this column may perhaps be just
another sop to Cerberus, just another crumb to keep the con-

science alive, to avoid genuine
action. But like most evil situations, the one is a little more complicated than that.
In the past, one could say all
the things I’ve just said and then
go on to, say. that .leftist politics
were an answer. One could go off
and fight in Spain where the situation was polarized, and where
fighting made a difference. But
now we all remember Hungary,
and the war, and how little we
can do, and how we have an ex-

about the "good old days”; I'm
preaching revolution. I am saying, like Herzog, that things are
so bad and getting worse that

inaction, in the face of wrong of
such an order is immoral.
Some people react to the whole
problem by putting on social
blinders and leading personalized
lives. The current generation of
Hipsters with their mockery of
politics and their religious adherence to the importance of personal gesture epitomize this retreat.
Other people reduce the world to
huge abstractions which they vehemently condemn.
This approach has the advantage of
maintaining large horizons without all the problems that real
involvement would generate.
I feel sometimes that I’d like to
blow up the whole mess and start
over with a copy of Peter Kropotkin in one hand, and somebody
else’s hand in the other. But that
is, I fear, partly a reaction against
the intricacy of our current condition.
There are some means available
for coming to grips with the situation. There is the NSA’s Freedom Fast which allows college
students not only to help in fighting the total effect of our segregated society, but also to do something themselves to make that
fight heal and personally relevant. There are the Quaker WeekEnd Work Camps which do even
more to promote involvement, cooperation and real change. But
these projects, and others like
them, fall prey to an odd arbitrariness in our own emotional
categories. To some people, when
measured against the abstract
evils they are designed to combat, they seem insignificant and
useless; to others who measure
on the overly personal scale, the
projects seem too cumbersome
and diffuse, too institutional. I
do not believe that either of these
arguments makes real sense, however, and 1 believe that they are
merely more symptoms Of the
malaise. I am crucially involved
in both these efforts and I believe that they offer a kind of
solution (to the 20th century dilemma) which is both individually
meaningful and socially effective.
But projects like these can never satisfy the need for real upheaval, the desire that most people I know have to throw off the
great weight of wrongs, oppressions, mediocrities that burden
us all. This column can never
satisfy that need for me, because
it does not affect the things I
write about directly. That tension will always exist, and I am
afraid that injustice, stupidity,
mediocrity and ugliness will endure, as will their more solid and
uncompromising advocates. But
uncomfortable as that tension
may be,, every man must allow
himself to be pulled by it, because without it there is no real
decision to be made, only the
intolerable weight of wrong
crushing us until we can think
only in terms of the immediate
and necessary, rather than the

1,600 ROTC CADETS ATTEND "OPERATION TURNOUTIN ROTARY FIELD

�Friday, November 13,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

FENTON LECTURE (Cont'd from P. 1)
duct. Those responsible for the
preservation of these traditional
values comprise the forth group.
Finally, the welfare associations
are engaged in helping the needy.
Dr. Lindemann then discussed
a clinical study in which he had
participated. A group of psychiatrists entered a suburban
town which contained a relatively large percentage of intellectual inhabitants in order to study
the social structure. Even though
it was hoped that this specific
group would be cooperative, there
was a marked distrust of the re-

searchers.
One of the most interesting
observations was of the continu
al population movement caused
by the change in social roles.
As a family moved upward on
the social scale, different neighborhoods became available for
occupancy and different businessmen were patronized.

There was also a striking system of integration involving the
newcomer. The real estate agent’s
function was to determine the desirables. As a result, he was a
representative of the value system in the community. The Welcome Wagon instituted a period
of pseudo-mutuality; and was replaced by a hierarchy of clubs
and organizations. This chain of
contact
companionship
and
brought about a gradually ef-

fective absorbtion into the social

structure.

BOCCE

d^oard

Committee Looks Into
Bookstore Price Policy

will show a film concerning his
A committee consisting of Roexperiences on the Ship" Hope.”
Also, Stan Bodner, a sophomore bert Finkelstein, president of the
Medical School student will speak Student Senate, Nick Sargent, and
about his experiences in Nigeria Kearons Whalen is in the process
this summer.
of conducting an extensive inStudent Speech and
vestigation into prices of items
Hearing Association
in the University Bookstore.
Student Speech and Hearing
Association will hold a meeting
Preliminary observations have
Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m. in Room
revealed that the prices of most
231, Mrs. Wendy Schreader and
textbooks are either set or sugMiss Kathie Hayes will speak on gested by publishers, rather than
“The Language Project in the by the managership of the bookPublic Schools.”
store. In addition, all profits in
excess of operating cost are said
Political Science
to be returned to the student
Friday, November 20, Dr. J,
Austin Ranney, Professor of body through the Student Faculty
Association. In theory, at least,
Political Science at the Univerthe Bookstore operates for the
sity of Wisconsin will address
benefit of the student.
the Political Science Club at 3:00
p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
In the past, the prices of used
books have been one of the chief
Dr. Ranney’s topic will be an
areas for student grievances. Ac“Evaluation and Analysis of the
cording to the bookstore, howPast Elections.” Dr, Ranney, an
expert on political parties is the ever, used books still in use are
author of Democracy and the repurchased at 50% of their
American Party System,
The
value and sold at 75%; books
Governing of Man, and numerous
not currently in use are pur
articles in professional journals. chased at 25% of their original
value and returned to the pub
All interested students are invited to attend.
lishers.

Occupational Therapy Club

The regular business meeting
of the Occupational Therapy Club
will lake place today, at 2:00
p.m. in Room 330. Jim Mills will
continue his report on the Denver
Convention of the A.O.T.A. All
members and interested Occupational Therapy students are wel-

TF 3-1344

Several stages of difficult transition were prevalent. School pho

&amp;Jkecul in

Spectrum

bias were common, and a kindegarten investigation indicated
that many were caused by personality conflicts with the teachAlpha Lambda Delta
er. Dr. Lindemann suggested the
Dr. Ronald Peterson of the
use of social pathology in school
Department of Biology will be
systems to predetermine the type the guest of Alpha Lambda Delta,
situation
which
in
of learning
the freshmen women’s honor
a student will be successful. The
society, speaking at an informal
from
to
youth
anxious transition
coffee hour about science and
adulthood was found to be based our modern society. All mem
on the lack of clearly defined
bers are cordially invited Tuespurposes and identities.
day, at 3:00 p.m. in Norton, Room
Dr. Lindemann concluded by 234.
discussing his involvement with
International Club
the Boston West End relocation.
Boston found it desirable to reStep right up folks! Get a view
move this partial slum, and the of the greatest show on earth!
problem of resident transference Dancers,
musicians,
vocalists,
became apparent. On approval of skits long to be remembered!
entercity officials, researchers
(Sorry folks, no belly-dancers),
ed the area to determine the Thursday, the International Club
social condition and its implicais presenting “International
tionsi This was the first systema- Show-time” at 7:30 p.m. in Nortic study of the working class in ton Hall. Watch bulleting for
a forced transition. The extensive room number. Everyone welcome!
kinship system became an obMathematics Club
stacle to cooperation. Existence
“Magic” will be the subject
was defined only within the
limited geographical region. A of this Wednesday’s meeting of
crisis reaction occured when the the Undergraduate Math Club.
family was exposed to isolation. Jim Woeppel, the main speaker,
The loss of human interaction will discuss how mathematics and
resulted in a marked apathy. logic can be used to explain cerThere was an increase in the tain magic tricks. The meeting
number of mentally disturbed will be held in Norton 244 at
within a test population.
7:30 p.m, Everyone with an interest in mathematics or magic
is invited to attend.

1964

ion

come.

Photography Club

DAINTY, DANGLING EARRINGS
for pierced and unpierced ears

Join the Photography Club today at 4:00 p.m. in Room 266,
Norton.

Society

719 ELMWOOD AVENUE, BUFFALO, NEW YORK

Your I .D

.

on International Medicine
The Society on International
Medicine will meet Thursday, at
8:00 p.m. in Room 233, Norton.
Dr. Pantera of the Dental School

Card

is Worth 10% at

Goidmaus

Pine Ridge Furniture

Leu^..-

Sfaed
BOULEVARD MALL

U S. Ked

Pappagallo
Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots

and

many

other brands

brewed for braves....

BRAND NAME,
QUALITY MERCHANDISE -GUARANTEED
no down payment necessary
credit terms

10a.m. 9p.m.
Saturday 10a.m. -5p.m.

open WEEKDAYS

Milt Page

-

Campus Representative
Biology Stores Rm 23
Health Science Building
-

831-2644
2320 Genesee St. phone TX 243428

/

/.

This is big news for Pizza lovers. Santora's Pizza Patrol will
deliver an extra delicious, freshly baked and piping hot pizza
right to your door at no extra charge. Call Santora's Pizza
Patrol any day from 2 P. M. to Midnight, and presto, your
favorite pizza will be on its way to your home. You may order
in advance for delivery to parties, meetings or other special
occasions.

1

NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

FOR FRESH BAKED
PIPING HOT PIZZA
call

837-5700

�r

Friday, Novamb*r 13, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Tuesday and Wednesday (at
p.m.) the eighth in a

2:00-3:00

series of twelve discussions of
“The Gospel According to Saint
Mark” will be offered. The specific topic will be “The Journey to
Jerusalem,” (Mark 9:30-10:52).
The Tuesday session will be held
in Room 220, Norton Union and
Wednesday in Room 266. Both
discussion groups are under the
guidance of Chaplain Beattie. All
students and faculty members are
invited to attend either of the
duplicate sessions.
Fr. Beattie also wishes to announce that there will be an
“open house” Thursday, at 8:00
p.m., 1179 Elmwood Avenue, opposite the State College.

HILLEL
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: “In The
Land Of The Bible.”
Hillel’s Annual Roller Skating
Party will be held Saturday in
the Arena Roller Rink, 30 Amherst Avenue, at 8:00 p.m. Roller
skates will be available for a
nominal charge. Tickets for the
party should be purchased at the
Hillel House. Don Zelman is
chairman of this event.
Hillel will sponsor a Delicatessen Supper Sunday, at 5:30 p.m.
in the Hillel House. The supper
will be followed by a talk on the
‘B’nai Israel of India” to be
given by Dr. Justin Hofmann,
Two Buffalo Hillel officers.
Vice President Max Levy and
Recording Secretary Howard
Wildman, will attend a Hillel
meeting in Rochester this weekend.
Inter-Varsity
Christian Fellowship

Tonight TVCF is holding a
general meeting at 7:00 p.m. in
Room 330. We urge all to attend.
Saturday, November 21, IVCF
is sponsoring a hayride at 116
Genesee Street, Lancaster, New
York. It will start at 7:00 p.m.
Transportation will be provided
in front of Tower Hall, leaving
at 6:15 p.m. All are welcome.
Bible studies are continuing
at 3:00 p.m. Mondays and 11:00
a m. Thursdays. Prayer meetings
are held at 3:00 p.m. Tuesdays

and Fridays at noon. These are
open to everyone.

NEWMAN
Newman will have a Corn Popping Party tonight at the Hall
from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.in.
Members are free; non-members:
50 cents.
The Sunday night discussion
groups are continuing at the Hall
each Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m.
Mass is said daily at noon at the

Hall.
There will be a business meeting Wednseday in the Fillmore
Room, at 7:30 p.m.
The Formal Dance scheduled
for Saturday, November 21 has
been canceled.

Student Religious Liberals
The Student Religious Liberals
will meet in Room 337, Sunday,
to discuss orangizational and affiliatory problems. All interested
in being redeemed are cordially
invited to attend.
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Superstitious? Celebrate this
day at Wesley’s “Game Night for
the Superstitious.” To add to
your delight the admission is
13(with a minimal additional
contribution to cover the cost
of food), and there are nearly
13 games to keep everybody occupied. The festivities begin at
7:30 p.m. at University Methodist
Church.

After the Colgate game Saturday, Wesleyans have a special
treat—a dutch treat. The place
is a secret, but the prices are
fabulous. The only way you can
find out where it is, is to meet
at University Methodist Church
at 5:30 p.m.
This week-end marks the beginning of the Religious Arts Festival. The first program will be the
presentation of religious expression through music by Wesley
members and interested persons.
The program will be presented
Sunday, in University Methodist
Church, as the evening program
of the supper meeting.
Just a reminder of the forthcoming attraction—the Bishop’s
Company, a travelling theatre
group which performs tn
churches around the nation. The
date? Friday, November 20.
Time? 8:00 p.m. The play? G. B.
Shaw’s Saint Joan.

Meeting Thursday
Students interested in the fine
arts are welcomed to an open
meeting of the Union Board Fine
Arts Committees Thursday, at 7
p.m. The meeting, to be held in

the Charles Room, 245 Norton
Union will be opened by Pat
Jones, third vice president of the
Union Board, who will give a
brief introduction to the purpose
of the committees. The Art, Literature, Fine Films, Arts and
Crafts, Music, and Spring Arts
Festival Committee will be represented and informal discussion with the chairman will follow. Refreshments will be served.

Ekch of these committee

a vital role in tjie

cultural

plays

activities of the campus. Each needs
sincerely interested
members
who are willing to give a little
time and thought to such activities. Any student who would like

to see expansion or change in
fine arts programs at UB can
make his opinions heard through
a committee. This is an important part of education and its
quality is largely the responsibility of the student body. Applications for all groups are always

available in the Union
Board office for those who cannot attend the meeting Thursday.

UNIVERSITY
PLACEMENT SERVICE
Senior Candidates

sue of the Spectrum there
was a mistake in the room
numbers listed in the article about the extension of

library hours.

The room numbers for
the Harriman Library
study areas are 55S and
56S. The time is from
5:30-10:00 on Sundays
thru Friday each week.

Company

-

ments to

on

campus

see

these company representatives now.

The United States Civil Service ComWhite House Fellowships
mission has announced a program for White House Fellows to give
-

first-hand and high level experience with the workings of the Federal
Government. Fellows will ’be chosen. from business, law, the universities, and other occupations. Fifteen White House Fellows will
serve for a period of 15 months. One Fellow will be assigned to the
office of the Vice President, one to each cabinet member, and four
to members of the White House staff. The program is being supported
by a grant from the Carnegie Foundation. Fellows must be 23-25
years old, an American Citizen, and a graduate of an accredited
four-year college. Women as well as men are eligible. The deadline
for applications is December 15, 1964. Fellows will be announced in
the Spring of 1965 and will begin their training period on or about
June 1, 1965. For further information, contact University Placement
Services.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
be made at least one week in advance of the
interviewing date. Students must complete registration in order to be
eligible for campus interviews. If you have not done so, register now.

Appointments should

Business Administration, Law,

&amp;

Liberal Arts Interviews

November 23. 24

BETHLEHEM STEEL CO.
US with interest in Accounting

November 23

CORNING GLASS

-

BS, MBA with interest in
November 24

-

-

Male

Accounting. Gen. Bus.

I.R fie L.R

Sales
ATLANTIC fir PACIFIC TEA CO.
BS with interest in Accounting, Gen. Bus.
THANKSGIVING RECESS
NO RECRUITING
CITY OF DETROIT CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
-

November 25-S7
November 30

BA

Hist, fir Gov't., Psych.. Soc., Eco.

-

BS with interest in Accounting, Gen. Bus
S. D. LEIDESDORF fit CO.
BS. MBA. PhD with interest in Accounting
FIRESTONE PLASTICS CO.
-

December 1

-

December 1

BS, MBA with interest In Accounting
ARTHUR YOUNG fit CO.
BS, MBA with interest in
Accounting
U. S. ARMY
BA. MA
English'. Hist, fir Gov’t., Psych.. Soc
Eco., Mori, Lang.
BS, MBA with interest in
Accounting, Gen. Bus
-

December 2

-

December 2

-

-

Gcog.. Get

IH

L.R

fit

Mktg , Retailing, Sales.

December 3

NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD
BS. MBA.with interest in - Gen. Bus., I.R. fir L.R
YWCA

HA

-

I'svch., Soc.

HASKINS

SELLS

&amp;

US’, MBA with

PIZZA

representatives recruiting

usually reserve one day for interviewing. Most representatives will
not return during the 1964-65 recruiting year. Make your appoint-

CORRECTION
In the October 23rd is-

ISI-llll

Scbaellkapf Hall

.

Canterbury Association

December 4

interest in

Hint hi)'

CARBORUNDUM CO.
MS, MBA
B.

With intru st

nnting. (

in

F. GOODRICH CO.
BS, MBA with interest in
Sales Mktg.

-

Fine Arts to Hold
—

Bus

Accounting,

Adi

JOY MANUFACTURING CO.

TF 3-1344

BS with interest in

-

Account*

Engineering &amp; Science Interviews

November 23, 24

BETHLEHEM STEEL CO.

November 23, 24

E. I DUPONT DE NEMOURS. INC.
BS. MS (diem,, ChE, EE. IE. ME, ES, Physics

.

BS Chen. GhE, CE. EE. IE. ME. ES. Math. Phvsic
CORNING CLASS CO.
Chen.,, Bio., ChE. CE. EE. IE. ME. ES M
BS. MS
-

lath; Fh

-

November 25November 30

THANKSGIVING RECESS NO RECRUITING
CITY OF DETROIT CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
BS Bio., Chem , CE, EE. ME. Math, Ph\ sics
MECHANICAL HANDLING SYSTEMS. INC.
BS, MS CE. EE. IE. ME. ES
HARRISON RADIATOR
BS ChE. EE, IE. ME Math
SYLVANIA ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
BS. MS PhD
EE. ME. Math. Phvsics
-

-

November 30

-

November 30

-

-

BS

-

IE

SYLVANIA HOME ELECTRONICS SYSTEMS
HS, MS. PhD - EE. ME Math. Phvwcs
BS

-

IE

FIRESTONE TIRE &amp; HI BRER CO,
BS ChE. IE. ME
MS IE
ERIE TECHNOLOGICAL PRODUCTS
-

-

BS-EE. IE. ME
FIRESTONEELASTICS

-

ELECTRONIC IS DIVISION

CO.

BS, MS Chem . ChE. ME
U. S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
BS GE. EE. ME
U. S. ARMY
Hi
BS. MS. PhD
-

save i slice

-

loi pm

EE. IE

ME. ES, Math

Phami , Physics

UNION CARBIDE
PhD Chcm.
CARBORUNDUM CO.
HS ChE . EE. IE. ME. ES
MS. PhD
ChE. EE.IE. ME. ES. Mall. Ph
B F. GOODRICH
BS. MS t Chcm.. Math. Phvsks. CE. EE. IE. ME. ES
NEW YORK AIR BRAKE CO.
BS ME
JOY MANUFACTURING CO.
BS EE. ME
-

-

the

birthday in your family?

Then telephone your best
birthday wishes. A phone
call makes all the difference . . , and it's the nextbest thing to being there!

New York Telephone

December 4

,

-

Can’t get home for

-

-

For further information
on these interviews, check the bulletin
arcls or call University Placement Services

ChE

�Friday, November 13, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Greek Notes

Drama and Speech Announces Promotions
Professor Stanley D. Travis,
Chairman of the Department of
Drama and Speech, recently announced changes and promotions
affecting several members of his
faculty. Dr, D. Kenneth Wilson,
an Associate Professor of Speech
Pathology since 1961', has been
named a full professor. Dr,
Thomas S, Watson and Dr. Michael H. Prosser, formerly Lecturers in Drama and Speech,
have been appointed Assistant
Professors. Newly appointed as
an Assistant Professor of Speech
Pathology and Audiology is Dr.
Derek A. Sanders, Replacing Dr.
Ernest C. Thompson, Jr. as Director of Varsity Debate is Mr.
Terry H. Ostermeier.
Dr. Wilson joined the UB faculty in 1961 after serving as the
Chief Speech Pathologist at the
Child Guidance and Speech Correction Clinic in Jacksonville,
Florida, from 1956 to 1961. Prior
to this, he had held faculty positions in Speech Pathology at Northern Illinois University, Purdue
University, Washington Univerversity in St. Louis, and the Alexandria, Minnesota Public Schools.
While in the Air Force, Dr. Wilson served as a Psychological
Assistant. Among the Profession
al Organizations which Dr. Wilson is associated with are the
American Speech and Hearing Association, the American Association for Cleft Palate Rehabilita
tion, the New York Speech and
Hearing Association, and Mu Iota
Sigma, the Honorary Fraternity
for Teachers of the Deaf. He has
published numerous articles and
has presented scholarly papers
at national and regional Speech
Pathology conventions. Dr. Wil
son received his Ph.D. at Purdue
University and has done postgraduate work at the University
of Miami Medical School and the
University of Colorado Medical
School. The Wilsons have two
children.
Dr, Watson became a member

of the UB faculty in 1963. He
has an M.A. in Dramatic Arts,
an M.F.A, and a Ph.D. from Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. He has served as the
Technical Director of Playhouses
in Vermont, Massachusetts, New
York, Michigan, Ohio, Delaware,
and Connecticut. He has also
served as Scene and Lighting Designer at the University of Delaware, Western Reserve University, the Cleveland Institute of
Music, and the Connecticut College School of Dance. Presently,
he is the Director of Theatre at
UB. He has designed the stage
for Hamlet, Mr. Roberts, Much
Ado About Nothing, Skin of Our
Teeth, and Mother Courage. He
directed the 1964 UB production
of The Miser. Dr. Watson is As
sociate Editor of Theatre Design
and Technology and is a member

of the Executive Committee of
the United States Institute for
Theatre Technology. He also has
two children.
Professor Prosser completed
his Ph D. at the University of Illinois this past autumn writing his
dissertation on the speeches of
Adlai E, Stevenson in the United
Nations. Dr. Prosser has recently
been elected Executive Secretary
of the New York State Speech
Association for a four year term.
In this office, he will handle
especially matters dealing with
the Association’s long-range direction, membership, and the budget. Dr. Prosser is interested in
increasing
student enthusiasm
for the Association and speech activities in general. He chaired
the Association’s panel last spring
on “Diplomatic Speech” at the annual convention and will chair a
similar panel in March, 1965 on
"Speech in Polities.”
Born and educated largely in
England, Dr. Derek
Sanders
joined the faculty in September.
received his Licentiateship
from the College of Speech Therapists in Ixmdon, his M.S. as a
He

Fulbright Scholar at Syracuse
University, Syracuse, New York,
and his Ph.D. at the University
The Inter-Fraternity Council is
of Manchester in England. From happy to announce that this
1961 to 1964 he was the Director year’s Greek Sing will be reof the Hearing Clinic at Central corded. Records of the performMichigan University. While there, ance will be available at the
he served as a consultant for regular long playing album price
the Dow Chemical Co., the Midof $4.00. All chairmen should
land Society for Crippled Chil- bring money and orders to the
dren and Adults, and Was Direcreservations office Monday. The
tor of Special Education in the council needs 50 pre paid orders.
Mt. Pleasant School System and
Notice to all sing chairmen:
the United Cerebral Palsy FounDo not forget the dress rehearsal
dation, Dr, Sanders founded and
tonight at 8:30 p.m.
served as President of the Mid
�
Michigan Association of Parents
Alpha Phi Omega has accepted
of Children with Auditory Disorders. He was the Assistant Edithe challenge of APO at RIT
tor of Report on International to play them in a touch football
Congress on the Modern EducaSaturday.
game at Rochester
tional Treatment of Deafness, After the game a mixer will be
printed by the Manchester Uniheld in Rochester for both chapversity Press. He has participated ters. The brothers will also be
in several panels and conferences assisting at the mixer tonight
concerned with the problems of sponsored by the girls of Cledeafness.
ment Hall.
*

As Director of Varsity Debate,
Mr. Ostermeier is assisted by a
graduate student, Mr. Richard
Suttel who works primarily with

»

*

�

is looking forward
Chi
to the arrival of their National
Visitor Monday.
Congratulations to pledge officers: Sue Wood, President;
Jean McEvoy, Vice President;
Christa Ubricht, Secretary; Sue
Omega

the novice debaters. Mr. Ostermeier participated in debate as
an undergraduate at Wisconsin
State College at Oshkosh, and he
later served as an assistant deDuffy, Treasurer.
bate coach while studying at MarThe pledges of Alpha Gamma
quette and Michigan State UniDelta will meet in front of Norversities. He is currently completing his doctoral dissertation as an ton Saturday morning for their
experimental speech study at work project.
Michigan State. He is a member
of speech honor fraternities and
Saturday at 8:30 p.m., Phi
several professional speech as- Epsilon Pi is holding an informal
sociations. Last year, Mr. Osterparty in the Temple Emanu-El,
meier was the University of Bufcorner of Colvin and Tacoma,
falo Director of Novice Debate.
Last Friday, the traditional
sophomore vs. junior-senior football game was held. The contest
ended in a 12-12 tie.

Phi Kappa Psi is looking forward to its annual Roaring “20’s”
party tomorrow night. Sunday
the fraternity will attend en
masse the Buffalo Bills Boston
Patriot game having purchased a
fifty seat block.
The pledges of Pi Lambda Tau
wish to announce that they are
looking forward to tonight’s social
with Delta Sigma.
Sigma Delta Tau wishes to congratulate the newly elected officers of the fall ’64 pledge class
under Karen Kleiman, president.
Tau Kappa Epsilon will attend
a Pajama Party given by their
pledge class tonight at Johnny’s
Night Owl.
Theta Chi Fraternity will hold
a party at the Sheridan Bowling Lanes this Saturday night
with the Intruders furnishing the
entertainment.
■

The Pledge Class of Phi Lambda Delta would like to thank the
brothers and the students for
their support in our Cadillac
Smash. The brothers of Phi Lambda Delta would like to congratulate Bob Hammond on his recent
pinning to Miss Mary Lou Chick.
GAMMA PHI

The Brothers of Gamma Phi
will hold a party at the Sundown
Motel this Saturday evening.
Sunday, several Brothers will
be attending the Buffalo BillsBoston Patriots professional football game.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sig Ep will hold a closed “Pajama” party this Saturday evening at the Hotel Worth.
Lou Costanzo was elected as

Assistnat Controller.

Big 4 Cleaners
[Will pick up and deliver On Campus Monday-Friday

TR 5-5360

toys)

�Friday,

November 13, 1964

Hot Line
Protests Bombings

The
PHILADELPHIA (CPS)
"proliferations of bombings, beat—

and arrests” in Mississippi
has brought a protest to President Johnson from the President
of the U.S. National Student Asings,

sociation.
NSA President

Stephen Robbins noted that more than 100
students had gone to the state
to participate in voter registration projects and in the 1964
Freedom Vote Campaign. He
asked the President to “fulfill
(the federal government’s) lawful responsibility and, through
the presence of sufficient force,
insure the safety and the rights
of those who are working for
freedom and equality in Missi-

ssippi.

NSA represents some 350 stu
dent governments.

Student
Suicides Rise

The number of stu(CPS)
dent suicides has risen alarmingly in the United States during
the past few years, according to
a report in the November issue
of the NEA Journal, official
magazine of the National Education Association.
“Depressed boys and girls, victims of inner turmoil and increasingly difficult outside conditions, are taking this way out
of their troubles,” Marguerite
Clark of the Cornell University
Medical College declared in the
current issue. In 1962, about 550
young people between 15 and
19 years old took their own lives.
Cornell University conducted
a study of suicide among college students. Dr. Leif Braaten,
former psychologist of Cornell
and author of the study, outlined
four motives for student suicides
in his report.
—A desire to destroy themselves because they can no longer tolerate the discrepancy between how they appear to themselves and how they would like
to be.
—A need to punish others who
hurt them.
—An urge to repent from some
—

“Please
—A cry for help
me. Don’t leave me alone.”
Surprisingly, the Cornell doctors found out that the studentpatient who gets the highest
marks is the one most likely to
commit suicide. “Students with
suicidal tendencies, were, as a
group, good or very good students. Nonsuicidal students, on
the other hand, were often doing
poorly in their academic work,”
the study noted. “The bright
students were often overreaching themselves, measuring themselves by their own standards,
which were much higher and
more demanding than the minimum standards of the University,” the report concluded.
—

resuce

Five Year College
(CPS)

Francis H. Horn, president of the University of Rhode
Island, Kingston, urged that colleges extend their undergraduate curriculum to five years instead of the traditional four.
In an article in the November
issue of the National Education
—

Expert Instruction
Okinawa School of

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Mon .

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....

News From Other Campuses

Association’s NEA Journal, Horn

NSA

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

charged that the task of educating the college student for today's world is an "impossible

one.”

“Although the time required
lor college remains the’ same as
it was in the 17th century, the
amount of the world's knowledge has increased manifold,”
he said. In addition to acquiring
this expanded body of general
knowledge, today’s student is
also expected to specialize in
preparation for a job or to meet
the requirements of graduate
study.

“Faced with so
ing demands, it
that colleges and
as well as they

many conflict-

is remarkable
universities do
do with their
students,” Horn said.
The Rhode Island University
president
dismissed the two
major arguments which have
been raised against lengthening
the time a student spends in
Admitting that
our
college.
changing educational system to
eliminate repetion could cut a
year from the total now required,
he contended that it is still desirable to have five years for
the bachelor’s degree because
“knowledge is continuing to proliferate at such a rapid rate and
post-baccalaureate study is largely specialized.”

The argument that students
will not stay in college another
year, Horn said, is specious. The
trend is toward more education,
and today graduation from colis as common as graduation from
high school was half a century
ago.

“The idea of an additional
year for an undergraduate degree
should not be shattering,” he
said.

Parking Problem
LOS ANGELES (CPS)—A yearlong fight for student parking
privileges was given a major shot
in the arm last week by a Los
Angeles Municipal Court judge.
Judge Richard Wells ruled that
Mrs. Ellen Tavakoli could not be
held liable for a $5 parking ticket
she received a year ago for parking in violation of “no parking”
signs the UCLA campus.

that public

Judge Wells said

streets are for the benefit of

“not for the
sole benefit of abutting land owners.”
The verdict ended a trial that
had lasted through five months
and as many sessions. Attornies
for Mrs, Tavakoli had argued that
Los Angeles traffic commissioners
had exceeded their authority in
restricting parking for reasons
other than traffic flow patterns.
The parking restrictions had
apparently been made after petition of residents owning property along the street.
The Los Angeles police department has indicated that it will
continue to enforce the signs until otherwise ordered by the
everyone and are

Newark, New Jersey, noted a
renewal of self-confidence, “a
sense that something can be
done," within a community that
has achieved certain improvements by organizing for that pur-

“The function of the movement

now is the creation of a vehicle
by which people can speak for
themselves, because neither the
traditional liberal ideology nor
the Goldwater alternative speaks
for us,” William Strickland, ex-

pose.

ecutive director of NSM, declared.
Political organization of the
ghetto developed the theme of
the conference and possibly as
the direction of future civil
rights activities. Charles Silberman, keynote speaker and author
of “Crisis in Black and White,”
charged that “Negroes have been
unable to take their rightful
place in American society because of a power imbalance. The
American creed was never intended to include Negroes,” he
added.
Silberman defined the present
imbalance as resting on the patronizing, condescending relation
of the white man to the Negro
and the goal of the protest movement as a restructing of Negrowhite relationships. "When forced to negotiate with Negroes,
whites will begin to see Negroes
as equals, as men,” he said.
Silberman said that in the
process of gaining political power
the Negro is “no longer addressing himself to white prejudices, he is not trying to change
minds and hearts, but simply
change actions.”
Stanley Aronowitz, trade-union
organizer for the AFL-CIO, described a self-perpetuating power
elite which “maintains control
of this country in its own hands

Hayden declared that “urban
renewal is a political and economic conspiracy to prevent Negroes from expressing themselves
as an organized political force.”
customary, grit, was determined
to produce a school banner. But
she hadn’t taken a doctorate in
home ee, and she certainly was
no Betsy Ross. Consequently, she
ended up with 129,000 shreds
of burlap and organdy—and no
banner.
“She brought her problem to
the college president, who called
a meeting of the board of trustees. He told the board that the
church had seen fit to present
the annual grant of 40 bolts of
material to Lewis and Clark
College, and if the church heard
of it being reduced to this condition, the college might be bypassed in the awarding of future

a hatter, proposed to take the
129,000 pieces of cloth and make
21,500 beanies. He explained: You
start a tradition. You make all
the new freshmen wear beanies
for a week or two.’
'"Oh, come on now,’ laughed
the President. ‘Do you really
think they’ll swallow that?'
“'Well,' answered the hatter,
‘After all, they are Lewis and

Clark students.’
“And to this day, the administration has been working fervently to use up that vast supply
of beanies. In fact, that’s the
main reason they’ve strived over
the years for increased enrollment and lower admittance standards."

SUPPORT N.S.A.

grants.

FREEDOM
FAST
Movemher I*)

At last, one of the trustees,

by absorbing any potential revolutionary force,
“Using tactics of appeasement

and distribution of some power
in a bargaining situation, such
as the poverty program, the
power elite is not distributing
resources, we have to regain the
power to make decisions rather
than just bargain for an influence in the decision-making process,” he declared.
Aronowitz saw the mobilization of poor communities into an
alternative political movement as
the vehicle for gaining power.
“It is a question of developing
class consciousness on specific
self-interest issues: urban renewal, housing, poverty, education,”
he remarked.
Both NSM and Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS) have
community
action
developed
projects designed to organize
ghetto inhabitants into political
pressure groups. Tom Hayden,
leader of the SDS project in

N. Y

courts.

NSM Convention

A new
NEW YORK (CPS)
direction for the student civil
right movement which would
force a “radical reconstruction of
American society took form last
weekend at a conference sponsored by the Northern Student
Movement (NSM).
—

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�SPECTRUM

PAOE TEN

Concert Slated
For Baird Hall
By VICKI BUGELSKI
Tonight, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.:
First concert given by the Creative Associates, performers and
composers here this year on a
Rockefeller Grant.’ This recital
will feature Carol Plantamura, soprano; Sherman Friedland, clarinetist; George H. Crumb, pianist,
performing works of Schumann,
Berg, and Schubert. Miss Plantamura is from Occidental College,
California. Mr. Friedland is the
former principal clarinetist of
the Milwaukee Symphony and
Boston Civic Orchestra, and graduated from the New England
Conservatory. Mr. Crumb, who is
also a composer, teaches at the
University of Colorado. Miss Plantamura recently performed Mozart with the Kenmore-Tonawanda Symphony under music faculty
member Carlo Pinto; Mr Friedland and Mr. Crumb will be performing for the first time in Buffalo tonight. (Admission free).
Tomorrow night, Norton Union:
UB-Colgate Glee Club concert,
also will feaure the UB Blues, a
barbershop octet. Tickets available in Norton, (see article).
Monday, Capen Hall, 8:30 p.m.:
Alexei Haieff, Slee Professor of
composition this semester, will
give the second in a series of
three lecture-recitals. Mr. Haieff
will lecture on “Musical Education and the New Styles
A
Speculation". The second half
of the program will feature works
of Poulenc and Haieff, and is
dedicated to the late French composer, Francis Poulenc, who died
in 1963. Jay Humeston, cellist,
and Emmanuel Sinderbrand, pianist, will perform the Haieff
Sonata for Cello and Piano which
is dedicated to Poulenc. Mr.
Humeston is one of the Creative
Associates. Mr. Sinderbrand is a
graduate student in music, and
has performed often at the University, most recently with Leo
Smit at the Pete Johnson benefit
—

concert.
Additional special guests for
the program are Arthur Gold and
Robert Fizdale, internationally
known piano duo. They will perform two sonatas of Poulenc, one
of which is dedicated to them
(1953). They will also include
the Elegie (1959) and the Capriccio d’apres le Bal Masque (1952),
also of Poulenc.
The opera program will be given November 21, 22, and 23, all
program in Baird Hall at 8:30
p.m.; tickets available at the box
office. Three one act operas will
be presented: Bastien and Bastienne of Mozart: Hin and Zuruck
(There and Back) of Paul Hindemith, and The Stronger of Hugo
Weisgall. The program is under
the direction of Vittorio Giarratna, with staging by Henry Wicke,
Jr.,.and design by Boris Baronovic.

Dance Club to Show

Films In December
A series of films will be shown
by the Modern Dance Club, December 1, at 3:00 p.m. in the Conference Theater. “A Dancer’s
World,” with Martha Graham &amp;
Co. gives an idea of the long,
arduous training necessary to produce the finished performances

of “Lamentation” With Martha
Graham and “Moor’s Pavane”
with Jose Limon.
By becoming acquainted with
some of the elements and purposes of dance, it is hoped that
students will be encouraged to
acquire further knowledge of the
art form that has been largely
ignored in this area.

Dance, the outward expression
and communication of an idea or
feeling, is total activity, that is,
all parts of the dancer are exercised
the physical, the emotional, the mental. Since an education attempts to develop the
entire student, it would be unfortunate to concentrate on the
mental aspect of his personality,
to the exclusion of the others.
Dance develops and coordinates
all three aspects to result in a
healthy self-awareness and a polished instrument for controlled
movement. Dance, is not and
should not be purely recreational;
it is exhilarating, satisfying, and
fun.
—

All who are interested are welcome to come to the Women’s
Gym at Clark Gymnasium any
Tuesday at 3:00 p.m. to join the
Modern Dance Club under the
direction of Mrs. Bernice Rosen.
Previous experience in dance is
not necessary.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

Friday, November 13,

Play to Open

The Kibitzer

—
The nationally known Bishop’s
Company of Burbank, California,
By SCOTT
will appear in person in highlights from
George Bernard
Shaw's classic play Saint Joan
Friday, November 20, at 8:00 p.m.
I would like to welcome our
in the University Methodist new director to the ranks of the
Church.
courageous. Sheila Dowd, who by
the way won last week with Ralph
The roles of the men who comin turn is one of
pleted Joan’s history provides a Bartlett, who
the staples of basement-Norton
great portion of the excitement in
bridge and one of Buffalo’s finer
this unusual evening of theatre. players,
has taken Mr. Edelman’s
Meeting the challenge with deftpost, in addition to her duties as
ness and skill, the actors present
vice-president of the UBBC.

their several roles: the pompous
Squire de Boudricourt; forceful
and staunch Dunois, Captain of
the French forces; the sympathetic but militant churchman,
Ladvenu; the childlike and whimpering Charles,
the Dauphin,
France’s uncrowned King; the
sincere and sinister Inquisitor;
and also
the archbishop of
Rheims Cathedral.

As the panel has not met since
last week, I’ll let the bidding
problem’s ride. You are sitting
South with:
S: A J 10 9 6 4
H: 4
D: 6 3 2
C: K 9 6

Your partner opens 2NT, showing
21-22 pts., and all of a sudden
The Bishop’s Company was your hand looks better. You bid
founded in 1952 by Mrs. Bokar three spades, asking partner, if
and is in its twelfth year of he has three; he says yes, 4
bringing fine drama into the spades. You blackwood, find him
houses of worship in America with three aces and 2 kings, and
and Canada. It has appeared in think, oh boy, this is duplicate;
over 6,000 churches of all denomall the other poor slobs are going
inations and has a touring record to be in 6 spades, and you know
of over a million miles.
you have, in notrump, 6 spade
tricks, 3 outside aces, and 2 kings.
The Bishop’s Company will appartner has 3 or 4 pts. still
Also,
pear under the sponsorship of
floating around. A brave fellow,
The Wesley Foundation, State
you bid 6 no. (Now we cheat; I
University of Buffalo.
suddenly realize that the bidding
sequence I’ve created has the contract played from the wrong side,
and I can’t think of any normal
sequence that gets you there with
The Art Committee is currently you declarer, so we assume there
is one, you used it, and are playsponsoring an exhibit of “Creative Toys,” in the display cases ing 6 no as declarer. Opening
on the second floor of Norton. lead is the heart king. Dummy
spreads:
The exhibit, circulated by RuS: K Q 3
dolph Steiner Exhibitions, will
H: A J 2
continue until November 23. The
D: A K 9 4
hand-carved wooden toys were
C: A 10 5
adapted from toys made by
Junior High School students at
Play it. (If you duck the heart
the Waldorf Schools. The color, king, opponent shifts to a diagesture, fantasy and imagination mond.) For that matter, play it in
of the toys reflects the freedom 6 spades, assuming same opening
and creativity nurtured at these lead, and if duckage, same low
schools.
diamond continuation.

Toy Exhibit Here

49 Edward
TL 2- 9338
BUFFALO FOLK CENTER
to serve your entertainment needs

KURMAN

As a different type of problem,

devise a three-card

double-dummy
problem wherein you squeeze one

out of one of three
aces to take all three tricks, and
opponent

where this is the only way to win
all three tricks, i.e. no cross-ruff,

etc.

What do yoq lead from three
small? In Culberson’s “Bluebook,” ca. 1930, he states that
some players lead top, some bottom, but none middle, that serving no useful purpose. But the
times, they are a changing, and
all of that noise, bridge-wise as
well as world-wise, and although
Mr. C. is not as antiquated as
the Republican candidate in a
recent presidential election, a
new theory has come into acceptance. To wit, leading the middle
card. As you lead top of a doubleton, and low from four, it is
construed advantageous to have
a distinguishable lead from three
nothings. However, once you’ve
led the middle card you don’t
want partner to think you have
a doubleton, so you dare not
peter, (which is synonomous with
echo or high-low); therefore you
play high on the second round.
But cry the defenders of top or
bottom of nothing, then you are
tossing away your highest card
wantonly. If you think it is an
important spot, you don’t open
middle. As a general rule, lead
Middle-Up-Down (=MUD) from,
9xx, low from Jxx, and decide
from lOxx. Mud helps; it is descriptive, accurate, easy to read,
and DOWN WITH PUBLICA
TIONS BOARD generally valuable.
Guess I’ll dig up a bid, says
. one
spade.
Tom’s partner .
Three clubs, shouts Tom, force.

fully.

And may all your strip-squeezeendplays have nothing to do with
bridge.

from
Clement Hall

In French and Spanish
from Graduate Student

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SPECIAL
Drawing on two

Aptheker Speaks
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

SNOW TIRES

AAUP Releases Statement

Dr. Marvin Zimmerman has released the following statement
for the American Association of
University Professors: “Academic
freedom is as important for students as for faculty. It is an
essential ingredient in a democratic society. The test of commitment to academic freedom is
not the abstract lip service paid
to it.

It is measured rather by how

NO OBLIGATION
Just fill in coupon and bring it

3620 Main Street (across from Clement Hall)
NO

on SAT., Nov. 21st. at
at 5 p.m. (after Villanova Game)

one confronts specific situations

where academic freedom is
threatened, as did the Student
Senate and the University Administration two years ago when
the Political Spectrum series began."

to

MANTIONE’S UNIVERSITY SERVICE
Drawing to be held at Station

OBLIGATION

ADDRESS

UjinJl
/

MHCljJ

PHONE

Make and

1964

year of car

�Friday, Novambar 13, 1964

SPECTRUM

PR Committee
Sponsors Talk

CAMPUS PERSONALITY
Marilyn would like to see groups

in the stands with flashcards.
Judy Chiswell, an occupational
therapy major, is a junior. She
feels that school spirit at UB is
increasing, but that it cannot be
forced on anyone. Judy, who is
a member of the Student Christian Organization and the Arts
and Crafts Committee, likes
crafts, outdoor sports and playing the piano. Judy says, “I’m
the type who can’t sit still so
it’s best rget out there and jump

Election Year.”

Participating faculty members
were Dr, Halstead of the history
department, Dr. Johnson, representing the political science department, and Dr. Jullian, a social psychology professor.
Both faculty and students exchanged interesting and informative ideas pertinent to the elec-

tion year.

READER WANTED
31

Genny Clapt, captain of the
squad, is a senior majoring in
nursing. She is a member of
Sigma Kappa Phi Sorority.
Marilyn Schanzer, a senior in
early childhood education, enjoys

cheerleading because “it’s away
to show my enthusiasm and it
keeps me fit.” She is a member
°f the Student Senate, Theta Chi,
and Cap and Gown. One of her

most interesting experiences in

cheerleading has been
bottom one on the

being the
pyramid.”

|
I

Photo by Dave

“CHEERED
AND
HONORED

Collins

At The Cannes

around. I get so excited I’m afraid
I’d injure somebody if I sat in
the stands.”
Penny

Hemming,

Film Festival
It Deserves
Its Accolades!”

co-captain,

has the dubious distinction of
being the only girl to have stolen
two UB footballs! Penny is a
junior whose major is physical
education. Secretary of the WRA,
she is a member of the Ski Club
and Sigma Kappa Phi. Her interests include swimming, ice

—THE NEW YORK TIMES

BARBARA BARRE BEST ACTRESS AWARD
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL
"BERNIE HAMILTON IS SPLENDID!"

skating and skiing. Penny hopes

that everyone will learn the Alma
Mater and stand still to sing it
at games, as she feels it is a
very impressive tradition.
Jo-An Knickerbocker, a junior
majoring in nursing, is an R.A.
and a member of Theta Chi. She
says, “I feel very proud to be
part of this school.” However,
Jo-An wishes students would remain at the games until they are

—

The New Yorker

m1

r&lt;r m

Parln cr.s Press,
&amp;

~

|

c.

Rose-Ellen Reynolds, a junior,
feels, “UB has a lot to offer
those who try to get something
out of it.” A physical education
major, she plays field hockey
and belongs to Ski Club and
W.R.A.
Janice Willey, a sophomore
physical education major, likes
cheerleading because she feels
support our
everyone should
teams. She is now pledging for
Theta Chi sorority. Janice believes, “Students should show
more concern for the school because the student body makes
it what it is.”
The cheerleaders would appreciate any suggestions for new
cheers or things the student body
would like to see to increase
school spirit.

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YOUR INVITATION TO

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3456 DELAWARE AVENUE (near Sheridan)
Western New York’s largest social group over
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Meet the Students from State, Rosary

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tion of music student Donald
Conover. The members of the
octet are Fred Hill and Gerry
Marmillo, tenors: John Slattery
and Ron Capano, leads: Bob Van
Slyke and Paul Sipson, baritones;
and Dave McDowell and Paul
Whitcomb, basses. Among their
selections will be an old barbershop favorite, “Toot, Toot, Tootsie, Goodbye,” a novelty song,
“All Kinds of Women,” and a
spiritual, “My Lord, What a
Morning!”

Watch and

-f

The SPECTRUM

bershop octet” under the direc-

1

cheerleaders:

sion, $1.50. The tickets may be
obtained in Norton
The Colgate Glee Club will
perform for half the program,
and the UB Men’s Glee Club the
remainder. Both Glee Clubs will
join at the end of the program
in the performance of the Alma
Mater of each school.
The UB Men’s Glee Club is under the direction of Robert Sacks,
a new faculty member in the music department. They will perform a varied program, including a Bach duet, a German hunting song, and an unusual feature,
an imitation of a marching song,
dedicated to the UB Marching
Band.
An “added attraction’’ to the

program is the UB Blues, a "bar-

JEWELRY.

CHEERLEADERS

Selected by a panel of judges
last spring, the girls on the squad
are Genny Clapt, Marilyn Schanzer, Judy Chriswell, Penny Hemming, Jo-An Knickerbocker. Rose
Ellen Reynolds, Roslyn Sciarrino,
and Janice Willey. JoAnne uiPalma, Fran Jaharis, and Mary
Allis Pyke are the substitutes.
The girls are also assisted by
Pete Luke, Clark Squires and
Nick Elias, who have provided
half-time entertainment.
Here are brief profiles of the

A special feature of the UBColgate weekend will be a joint
Glee Club concert
tomorrow
night in Norton. Tickets for students arc $1.00; general admis-

Diamonds-Watches

0

promote the team. Before the
VMI game they held pep rallies
on campus and at Saltier’s, boostUB. Riding down Main Street on
the WGR float to the airport,
where they gave the team a sendoff before the Boston game, was
another way they made the community aware of our activities.
The cheerleaders also held
practices at which they taught
several cheers to girls trying out
for the freshman squad in October. Currently, they are revising
old cheers and practicing new
ones which will be effective indoors at basketball games.

...To help Blind Student in
SOCIOLOGY 101
Coll TR 7-1281 after 6 p.rn.

Colgate Glee Club to Perform

.

Regardless of the weather or
the score, our enthusiastic varsity
cheerleaders are always at the
field cheering the team on. Ever
wonder where they get all their
energy and devotion? Genny
Clapt, captain, explains it this
way: “I love being there because
I like sports. Cheerleading makes
me feel I’m participating in a
way.”
In addition to bringing their
spirited voices to the games, the
cheerleaders do a great deal to

Wednesday at 3:00 p.m., the
Public Relations Committee of
Union Board presented the second in their current series of
Faculty-Student discussions. The
timely topic of this discussion
was “Political Trends in This

PACE ELEVEN

-

,

Live Music

Hill and Canisius Colleges

�PAGE TWELVE

INTRAMURALS

Grid Playoffs Underway
By ERIC

SNYDER

A.

Friday, Novambtr 13, IN4

SPECTRUM

As the football season draws to
a close, many tense, action-packed
games are being played to determine who will take the championship in minor-minor league football. Last week in the Monday
League, the Zygoes beat the CMen 6-0, which gives them a
7-0-1 record going into the playoffs. This past Monday, the Fantastics played Williams House to
win 6-0 in sudden death overtime.
This makes the Fantastics champions in the Wednesday League
and gives them an 8-0 record
going into the playoffs. Last week
in the Fraternity League, it was
Beta Sig over SAM 12-8, giving
Beta Sig a 5-0-1 record going into
the playoffs. Alpha Epsilon Pi

in the
rain and cold in which they beat
Alpha Sig 12-0. This gives AEPi
a 60 record going into the playoffs, The campus champions will
be determined by a game between
the Independent League champions and the Fraternity League
played

an exciting

game

*

champions.

Handball:
Entries for handball must be in
by Friday, November 13. The
tournament will begin on Monday, November 16. Competition
will be held in singles and
doubles. A team may enter eight
singles players and four doubles
teams. Individuals may also compete in the tournament. The singles matches will be held on
Mondays at 4:00 p.m., and on

S1VH QLJJO

—

'1

pQa

.To E..G. PoWsV/Vxo
°r—W
V*»”
•

Tuesdays at 4:00 and 5:00 p.m.

s.

The doubles matches will be held
on Thursdays at 4:00 and 5:00

•

•

*'“*• tc«n\ 0*f«n*»vc
Ma$n»f
VJecU i

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p.m.

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633

Basketball:
All entries for basketball must
be in by, Friday, November 20.
I
Leagues will begin play the week
•••.To DonOWerV x4*r
...JoCuGaUr*
of November 30. The IndependV/Uo
Sc\
**Uw
VJ.ft.
V).6.
VA°
X n.
ent League teams will play on
Otfome
RetorA
OHtme HetorA
Mondays at 8:30 and 9:30 p.m.
Pilofmj9 \.e.
Virile Pt\oVm
&gt;s
and on Fridays at 8:30 p.m.
Ni«c
Ni»c
HvcV«mon^i
R*cV&gt;moni^
Teams in the Fraternity League
will play on Thursdays at 8:30
and 9:30 p.m. The Friday league
games will be played on Wednesalumnus Glynn Griffing, and then
day night whenever possible, but ranking by playing in any postthere will have to be some games season contests.
the school team lost more games
played on Friday nights. The
BUFFALO 14, COLGATE 8
than it has in the past 3 years
leagues will be limited to seven Bulls beware! The Red Raiders combined. And they are not finteams each and will be filled on (5-2) have improved considerably ished yet.
a first come-first served basis. over last year. They have lost
WASHINGTON 24 ,U.C.L.A. 16
only to Cornell and Princeton and
Someone ought to clue in
have proved very stingy when it Coach Barnes and his Bruins
The winner of this game picks
(4-4). Their battle plan is to give
comes to giving up points. Their
up all the marbles in the Ivy
opponents have scored but 5
Larry Zeno the ball and let him
League. Both are undefeated, but times so far. This may prove to be
pass. Sure, they score a lot, but
the Tigers (7-0) have shut out Buffalo’s toughest game. Whoever
the opposition scores more! You
their last four victims. The Elis wins, it will be close down to the could say that U.C.L.A.’s defense
(6-0 1) will score, but by then it
wire. I am picking the Bulls is weak, but that would be comwill be too late.
because I have lost too many plimenting them. Air Force ran
NOTRE DAME 28, MICHIGAN friends already!!
for 382 yards oh the ground last
STATE 13—The Irish (7-0) played
ARKANSAS 38, SM.U. 0—The week. The only thing that will
last week like they did not want Mustangs (1-4) will be playing a stop Junior Coffey and his runto be number one. Well, they game on Saturday—it is called ning teammates tomorrow will
are not anymore. We are award“catch the greased pig”.
The be the Pacific Ocean.
ing it to 'Bama this week. The Porkers need this one to go to
T.C.U. 9, TEXAS 7
I just
boys from South Bend had better the Cotton Bowl as SWC reprecould not resist. One of these
get a move on if they want it sentative. Everyone thought that weeks, I may get one of these
right. The Longhorns have played
back. They will find Michigan they would fold after their elevvery sloppy ball ever since the
Stale (4-3) very uncooperative. enth-hour upset of Texas. But
The Spartans are cocky after last they seem to improve with every Arkansas disaster and have been
week’s drubbing of number ten game. The only question mark very lucky in remaining in conPurdue. Too bad. State, you have here is whether S.M.U. will be tention. Their title hopes are all
had your fun. Notre Dame just able to score at all.
but dead and the Horned Frogs
(once upon a time called the
TENNESSEE 7, MISSISSIPPI 6
had a bad week and will roll
again on Saturday. Let us all The Vols (4-2-1) switched to the Froghorns!) will administer the
stand up and give three rousing T-formation this season and must last rites. T.C.U. (3-4) has taken
boos to the N.D. athletic depart- be asking themselves why they three in a row. Why not go for
ment who, according to school had not done so years ago. This
four, boys? Another in that amazpolicy, will not permit the top has been a sorry year for Ole
ing series entitled UPSET OF
team in the nation to defend its Miss (4-3-1). First the Giants cut THE WEEK.

\1

—

—

COLLEGE PICKS

Cross Country
(Cont’d

from P.

from P. 16)
ARMY 20, PITTSBURGH 17—
The Panthers (2-4-2) racked up
199 yards against the top defensive team in the nation (Notre
Dame )lasl week, but the Cadets
(3-5) scared the life out of Syracuse and will turn this otherwise
meaningless game into a real
slugfest. They rate the edge here,
because of a more balanced attack and home crowd advantage,
but mainly because they are my
favorite team.
ALABAMA 10, GEORGIA TECH
TECH 9—This is the top attraction in the South and may be a
preview of the Sugar Bowl. The
game means a lot to Bobby Dodd
and his Yellow Jackets (7-1) They
would like nothing better than
to knock off the SEC champ and
earn sweet revenge. They won't
get their wish. The Crimson Tide
(80) has trained so hard that it
could take on the Viet Cong.
PRINCETON 22, YALE 14
(Cont’d

13)

as automobiles. In a more subtle
fashion, every runner must arm
himself with some brilliant and
cutting repartee to deliver to
strolling wise-crackers. Most runners politely ask the offensive
loudmouth if he would care to
accompany them on a lap, but
many of the really effective responses which the runners use
are not at all printable. In addition, a practice session has
never been canceled due to inclement weather of any kind.

This Saturday at 1:30, the team
will run in the Canisius Invitational meet at Delaware Park.
20 teams from Canada and the
U.S. will comprise a very touch
field. The course record is held
by Bruce Kidd, the Canadian
Olympian. The team hopes to
make a respectable showing
They have no chance to win. The
last home meet of the season
will be run against Gannon at
the Grover Cleveland golf course
next Wednesday. The meet starts
and finishes at the Club House
at 4 p.m Needless to say, the
team would like some support.
They won’t be too disappointed
if nobody shows up, though. It
won’t be the first time.

—

—

HIGHLIGHTS
from

PAGEANT
MAGAZINE

ONE YEAR LATER
A Special Report:

J.F.K.
A Final Tribute By Adlai Stevenson
Harry Golden Joseph Alsop Art
Buchwald U Thant James Reston
•

•

•

•

WHAT WE
HAVE LEARNED
by Hubert H. Humphrey

Plur

HOW GOOD ARE
THE ’65 CARS?
Over 30 rewarding articles including features by James Baldwin, Bob
Hope, Cindy Adams and Sidney
Skolsky

PAGEANT
MAGAZINE

AMERICA'S LIVELIEST
THOUGHT PROVOKING
MAGAZINE!
(Leek tor thin MfhlifhU Mtt Mitkl

NOW ON SALE!

Are you head over heels but staying on your toes? In a spin
but never dizzy? No? Swing into Adlers and U.R.C.W.S.
we’ll spell it out for you: you are clean-white-sock.) A
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goes to every length and color to make you clean-white-sock.

(O.K.

Her Adler Flare-Up over-the-knee sock, $3 00.
His Adler SC shrink controlled wool sock, $1.00

ADOER

�Friday,

Novambar 13, 1964

PACE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

CROSS COUNTRY SUMMARY
By LEON LEWIS
One of the most exciting mo-

ments of the Tokyo Olympiad
occurred when Billy Mills, an

unsung and almost unknown

American Marine lieutenant, sped

past Ron Clarke, the Australian
world record holder, to win the
10,000 meter run. Mills is 27
years old and he has been running seriously for at least 10
years. His training program
would stagger the imagination of
most people, but anyone who
saw Mills at the moment of victory would probably have agreed
that anything he did was worth
it. However, long distance running is a funny sport. Not everybody who ran at Tokyo was as
successful as Mills or Bob Schul
who won the 5000 meter run to
complete

an

unprecedented

“double” in the distances for
the American team. Bud Edelen,
the best marathoner in the history of the U.S., finished a very
creditable sixth, but got no
medal. Pete McCardle, a balding
34-yeaT-old bus mechanic, finished after most of the leading

EM Lontrato, a senior who is
the team’s captain, seems typical. He is not blessed with any
real natural speed and consequently, he has had to work especially hard. During this past
summer, Lontrato figures that he
clocked nearly 500 miles on the
hills and roads around Schenectady getting into shape. He is
running faster now than he has
ever before. Unfortunately, he
is handicapped in his training
program by a full schedule of
student teaching (he is a phys
ed major). Lontrato was one of
the few athletes in the school to
win three letters last year (wrestling—137 lbs.—and track, in addition to cross-country) and he is
the acknowledged team leader.
The only other senior on the
team is Bob Hoffman. Hoffman
has a rather ungainly running
style and has worked his way up
to the third position on the team
by sheer persistence and plain
guts! This is his sixth year of
competition in cross-country. He
started running because “it was
just something to do” in high

to think that he has a great

potential for the future.
The team is coached by Emery
Fisher, who is, as Hoffman put
it, “greatly admired by all of
the men on the team,” Fisher
was a star hurdler in his undergraduate days at UB and began
the track team (officially) in his
senior year with a group of his
friends. He has been coach ever
since (14 years). He is basically
a quiet, serious man who doesn’t

believe in rah-rah pep talks. He
has gained the team’s confidence
with his obvious concern for the

welfare of all of the men, and
with his very knowledgeable approach to the techniques and
methods of training distance runners. He has had to cope with
a continuing series of bizarre

developments, something not really unusual for anyone involved
with distance ruiining. Bud Edelen went to Britain to become a
school teacher so that he might
train in a country in which distance runners are not considered
strange or odd individuals. Many
of the runners on the UB team
must have felt a similar impulse

on occasion.
The team trains on Grover
Cleveland golf course across from
the school. Irate golfers and misdirected golf balls constitute the
most serious hazard to the run
ners’ health and well being. When
the team takes to the roads for
training on hills, perplexed mo-

torists

often try to get close

enough to them to see what sort
of strange

animal this is and
sometimes miscalculate. In the
resulting collisions, runners have
definitely not proved as durable

(Cont'd on P. 12)

1——■

This is Creighton’s

Herringbone Stripe
are you man enough to wear it?

$

Top Row, From Loft: Bob Martin, Bob Hoffman, Jack Mrowfa, Jack
Kernt. Middle: Bill Suedmayar, Dick Genau, Larry Elsie. Bottom;
Ed Lontrato, Norm Nelson.

marathoners had already begun
to take showers. They are much
more typical of that strange
breed of athletes, the long dis-

tance runners.

The runners on the University
of Buffalo cross country team
are much more like McArdle
than Mills. The team has had a
fair record, winning about half
of its dual meets and finishing
midway amongst the pack in the
larger meets, but the runners
themselves are no less dedicated
than the world champions. Similarly, they find the same joys
and challenges in running, even
if their efforts are rewarded
more with personal satisfaction
than with a trinket of precious
metal. The team motto might be
framed in words like McArdle’s,
who, when asked why he kept
running in the 10,000 meter trials
even after a bad stitch in his side
had made it impossible for him
to place, said: “I never quit.”
Perhaps because they haven’t
tasted any real glory, perhaps
because their fierce dedication to
their task has humbled them so
that they consider themselves un-

important as public figures, I

found it hard to get them to

say

anything about themselves. The
conversation, at least to an outs:der, consists of general compliments to their team-mates.
He’s a hard worker. He’ll do
real well," they’ll say, but don’t
want to be quoted. The only way
to find out just how hard they
work and how they react to the

curious conditions under which
they have to operate much of

the time, is to watch a few
practices and listen to them in
unguarded moments.

school, and now, he tells me that
it has gotten into his blood. He
speaks for the team in that respect.
The number one man on the
team, when he is healthy, is Dick
Genau. He is only a sophomore
but according to the other runners, he is the best natural runner in the area. He set a school
record as a freshman last year
and has lived up to his promise
this season when he has not
been hampered by a variety of
respiratory ailments and a recurring stomach condition stemming
from a strained ligament in his
side. Along with Lontrato, he is
considered the team’s “cheerleader.” He and Larry Elsey are the
only members of the team with
any natural speed and perhaps,
fittingly, they are the most outgoing and outspoken members
of the team, too.
The rest of the team consists
of juniors, many of whom have
not run before in varsity competition. Bob Bijak is running in
college for the first time. He
is the most consistent man on
the team and has improved steadily through the year. Jack Kearas
sustained such a severe knee injury in high school playing football that no one expected him
to compete in anything again,
but he started practicing last
April and succeeded in making
the team. In the tradition of
common place athletic nicknames, he is known as “Jack the
Ripper,” perhaps to differentiate
him from Jack Mrowka, who is
called “Jack the Shot” because
of his penchant for fast starts.
Mrowka is also running for the
first time and everybody seems

it... Creighton’s Herringbone, accented with
a classic that becomes
widely spaced bold multi-color stripes
modern. Button down collar, back pleat and hanger loop, naturally.

We make no bones about

...

A COMPLETE SELECTION OF

CREIGHTON SHIRTS
available at

"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, November 13, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

BULLS ROUT RICHMOND
32
Yards rushing
286
Yards passing
193
107
Passes
10-23
10-18
2
Passes intercepted by
1
4-44
Punts
2-27
Fubles lost
2
85
36
Yards penalized

Late First Half Score
Sparks UB in 28-13 Win
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
The UB Bulls coupled consecutive victories for the first time
this season as they crushed Richmond, 28-13, before 8,000 spectators on AFROTC day at Rotary
Field Saturday, The triumph
boosts the Bulls over the .500
mark at 4-3-1 for the first time
this season since the opener.
Quarterback Don Gilbert and
defensive lineman E. G. Poles,
who spearheaded the offense and
defense respectively, two weeks
ago against Delaware, maintained
their positions, with two more
masterful performances against

the Spiders.
Gilbert, who scored two touch
downs, a two-point conversion,
and passed for a third six-pointer. gained 121 yards on the
ground and 107 through the air
to set an alltime UB total yard-

spired Spiders capitalized on' the
situation as halfback Rick Payne
pilfered a lingering Gilbert pass
on his 44 and returned it to the
UB 40. On the next play, Silvi
fired a strike to end Kirk Kressler, to whom an oblivious sec
ondary was paying a minimum of
attention, and he paraded to the
4 before being caught from be
hind. Four plays later fullback
Ron Gordon plunged across the
goal line from a yard out and CoCaptain Joe Stromick booted the
extra point to give the Virginians
a 7-0 lead.
The Bulls appeared on their
way to the equalizer when wingback Tom Oatmcyer made a phenomenal circus catch of a Gilbert
aerial on the Spider I!) on (he
last play of the first quarter,
but the drive ran out of Has after
reaching the 5. On fourth down

GILBERT SCORES THIRD
age record of 1168 for one season.
After a slow start in the first
quarter, the senior field general

earned momentum and eventually
wove the Spiders into a web of
frustration with his passing and
running. Coach Offenhamer paid
tribute to the performance by
commenting, “Gilbert had about
as fine an afternoon as a quarterback can have.”
Many football followers believe
a good rush is the best defense
against the pass, and this philosophy was executed to perfection
by

the Bull defensive line. Rich-

UB TOUCHDOWN

Coach Offenhamer elected to go
for the jackpot instead of a seem-

ingly safe three points, but a
Gilbert to Dave Nichols pass was

baited

down and

the invaders

look over. A spectacular 75-yard
quick kick On third down remov
ed Richmond from a deep hole
and forced the Bulls back to their
own 12.

The Bulls finally scored in the
waning seconds of the first half
when a diversified drive consisting of Gilbert sweeps and passes,
Dick Condino line smashes, Nick
Capuana and Jim Webber pitch

since the capers of General Grant
in that city.
Later in the third stanza, linebacker Joe Garafola swiped Ron
Smith’s only aerial attempt near
midfield and returned it to the
Richmond 33. Gilbert, Capuana,
Condino, and Helenbrook teamed
to advance the ball to the 9, from
where Gilbert cut through the
left side of the line for the third
L'B tally. Joe Oscsodal converted
and flip Jnargin widened to 21-7.
The game was slowed by num-

BULL SESSION

.

.

.

Highest

PRO PICKS
from P. 16)
erately good showing against the
Colts last week, the Bears still
have failed to impress anyone.
The Rams, now tied for second
place in the West, have more
incentive for winning, and win
(Cont’d

they

will.

American Football League
grades were obtained by Gilbert,
Buffalo 27, Boston 17—I should
Webber, Capuana, Oatmeyer, Condino, Leo Ratamess, Bill Taylor, have known better than to pick
and Dunn, on offense, while top against the Bills, and I have
defensive ratings went to Dom learned my lesson. They are not
Piestrak, Jim McNally, Ratamess, going to lose a game, especially
Taylor, and Dan Sella . . . Coach to the Patriots, at least until they
Offenhamer lauded overall team travel to San Diego later this
play and the defensive rush in month.
New York 24, Denver 10—Degeneral, and Gilbert, Sella, Capspite their loss to the Bills, the
uana, Webber, and Poles in particular for keying the triumph ,,. Jets still remain one of the better teams in the league.
In explaining the seeming paraerous 15-yard penalties around dox in Poles’ great play on the
Houston 35, Oakland 31—When
this time, most of which were field and only average grades on these two teams get together,
assessed against the home team, paper, the Coach explained, “Like the result is always an air show
and neither club threatened again Philbin, he’s so aggressive he can comparable to any that have
until late in the fourth stanza make mistakes and still turn the taken place at the Niagara Air
when the visitors, temporarily play in.” Since the coaches don’t Force Base. This week will not
avoiding the stampeding hooves mark via the ends justifying the prove to be different, and the
of Poles and his demolition outmeans basis, the result in Poles’ Oilers, who have to win eventualfit in the Spider backfeld, mancase is great play, average grades ly, will come out on top over the
aged to put together a scoring . . . Gilbert is within 30 yards of Raiders.
drive with Gargantuan end John John Stofa's passing record of 807
San Diego 28, Kansas City 14
Hilton, who has already been for one season. He should have —The Chiefs have to win this
drafted by the Bills and the little difficulty in breaking it tocontest in order to remain alive
Lions, devouring a yoeman share morrow . . . Gilbert, Sella, and in the Western Division race, but
of the yardage with his recepHart were pre-game recipients of the Chargers do not possess much
tions. Halfback Ken Stoudt dove AEPi’s weekly Beer Keg Award sympathy for their cause. The
for the final two yards and the . . . Coach Offenhamer, a Colgate '63 champs should be further envisitors were still in mathematical alumnus, admitted a “special intrenched in first place come Suncontention, 21-13.
centive” in trying to knock off his day night, but not without quite
In the final five minutes of the Alma Mater tomorrow .
a battle.
game, the Bulls stealthily utilized
some chicanery on their final
drive to paydirt. First on
fourth and two from the Richmond 43, Bob Edward was sent
in to punt. On the ensuing shift
Jt
into punt formation, the entire
Spider line, apparently not expecting a punt, was lured offside,
and the Bulls gained a valuable
first down. After a Gilbert sweep
Oar Siki Package Is
I rcrifone
positioned the Bulls deep in SpidSans
The Best In Town!"
er territory, the march was
abruptly halted at the 9 with
Hickory Frassino Ski with Kofix Base
thirty seconds left in the game.
Garmisch Double Boot
Oscsodal entered the lineup in
Dartmouth Aluminum Ski Poles
what appeared to be a field goal
Miller Step-in Bindings, and Safety-straps (Installation included)
attempt, but to the dismay of the
Barrecraf ters Boot Trees
bewildered Spiders, Gilbert rose
SKI BREAKAGE GUARANTEE
from his holder’s position after
receiving the snap, rolled to his
$110.00 VALUE FOR
right, and hit end Gerry La Foun
tain for the final marker. Joe the
Toe converted and UB triumphed,
2813, as time expired moments

*79“

3776 Harlem Rd. IF 3-1529

(BETWEEN KENSINGTON

later.

STATISTICS
RICHMOND

First downs

10

&amp;

CLEVELAND DRIVE)

open evenings
Also Opening Holiday Valley Area Shops November

1

�Friday, November 13, 1964

PACE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

COLGATE PREVIEW 0

Qs

The two

REJUVENATED BULLS TO TEST
STUBBORN COLGATE DEFENSE
By

CHICK ARNOLD

The Bulls have won two in a
row and they are finally beginning to look like the football
team they are capable of looking
like. In two short weeks, they
have turned their season from a
gloomy one into one of success
by successfully defending against

a fine runner in Bill Hopkins
of Delaware, and a fine passing
dup in Ronnie Smith and John
Hilton of Richmond. Led by the
outstanding offensive play of Don
Gilbert and defensive play of

Greenard Poles, Buffalo has finally caught the attention of football enthusiasts throughout the
East.

Tomorrow’s game against Colgate has all the makings of a
genuine “knock-down, drag-out”
battle. In its last two games, UB
has scored 65 points, while the
Colgate defense has limited its
opponents to a total of 18 points
in its last six games. As a result
of these “conflicting” statistics,
look for a clash between the
harsh, sturdy defense of Colgate,
and the moving, thundering of-

small college team in the East.
Against

the team with good on-the-field
leadership.

common competition so

far this season, Colgate has fared
considerably better than the

However. Buff Platt, a 6-2, 190
pound Junior, will probably be
at the helm when the Raiders
take the field tomorrrow. He is
14 for 25 for 204 yards this year,
and also has thrown one touchdown pass. Coach Hal Lahar probably feels that P1 a t t's added
weight will be advantageous
against the powerful Bull de-

Bulls. Earlier in the year, the
Red Raiders defeated Cornell,
8-3, and shut out Holy Cross,
10-0, while Buffalo battled Cornell to a 9-9 tie, and dropped a
20-14 decision to Holy Cross.

attack. However, the Red Raiders have the ability to pass successfully often enough to keep
the defenders alert and on their

row’s contest.
Sharing most of the running
for Colgate is left halfback Tom
Carpenter. Carpenter is 6-0, 186
pounds, and has been switched
this season between the fullback
and the left halfback position.
He is a strong and powerful runner with fine moves and a knack
for changing pace unexpectedly.
He also has the keen ability to
work through a broken field.
Thus far this season, he is the
second leading Colgate rusher
with 326 ,yards gained in 90 carries for 2 touchdowns. Look for
Carpenter to be bulling his way
into the UB line often tomorrow
when the Bulls “key” on Wolt-

Ill

Star Lineman E. G. POLES

fense that has taken over the
helm of the Bulls,
Of course, the other components of the two squads cannot
be completely overlooked. The
UB defense has given up a total
of only 90 points through eight
games this season—an average of
only a little over 11 points per
game, which is quite respectable.
And while the Colgate offense
has scored only 108 points in
seven games, it features a strong,
well-balanced attack that should
provide the Bulls with a number
of headaches tomorrow.
The offense and defense of the
Red Raiders from Colgate has

combined

to bring to Rotary

Field an impressive 5-2 record,
including a win last week over
Bucknell, the number one ranked

46 points, and has accounted for
more than 50 r ; of UB’s total
offense for the season. In addition, Gilbert has also run or
passed for 14 of the team’s 21
touchdowns. All this, plus outstanding field leadership. Quite
a record!
Junior Grecnard Poles has been
doing an outstanding job on the
UB line. Very often last week, at
the bottom of the pile, the fans
would see big number 63 emerge
with a triumphant look on his
face, anxiously awaiting the next
play. This was Grecnard! It is
good to know that be will be
back with the Bulls next year.
This is the ninth meeting between the two schools, with Colgate, leading the series 5-3. However, under Coach Offenhamer,

his old alma-mater for the third

straight time, and Coach Lahar
of Colgate will be out to avenge
last year’s 23-0 mauling. The Red
Raiders have not scored a point
off the Bulls since 1960 (the
schools did not meet in 1961).
Look for a hard clash between
a top notch defense and a rolling
offense. If the Bulls can maintain their alertness on the field,
their overall fine play, and avoid
looking ahead to the Villanova
game next week, they should take

their fifth

victory

of the season

tomorrow.
Here are the starting line ups:
BUFFALO
LE
82 Dave Nichols, 215
LT
74 Dom Piestrak, 195
LG
64 Bruce Hart, 205
C
52 Joe Holly, 210
62 Jim McNally, 206
RG
RT
77 Leo Ratamess, 260
RE
84 Gerry LaFountain, 210
QB
17 Don Gilbert, 190
22 Nick Capuana, 173
LHB
RHB
49 Willie Shine, 205
FB
36 Dick Condino, 210
COLGATE
84 Peter Beaulieu, 205
70 Jerry Miller, 204
68 Ray Miller, 225
58 Bob Negley, 200
66 Craig Bell, 205
72 Chet Kasprzak, 208
82 Ed Berra, 182
QB
12 Buff Platt, 188
LHB
48 Tom Carpenter, 186
RHB
22 Lee Woltman, 183
FB
II Jim Klein, 199

for 241 yards and one
touchdown. He is also a quick,
strong, hard hitting defensive
end, and should be a problem
for the Bulls.
At the other end of the line
will be 182 pound Ed Berra. He
is the third leading receiver on
the team with 11 grabs for 161
yards.

The guard positions arc strong
ones for Colgate, being occupied
by Craig Bell, 60, 205 pounds,
and Ray Miller, 6-2, 225 pounds.
Bell is a converted fullback, who
alternated between second and
third strings last year, but who
is coming along fine to provide
the Raiders with the added line

punch they needed this year.
Miller is a big strong guard from
Buffalo who is especially durable
and tough in a hard fought game.
The Raiders were hit especially hard at tackle by graduation.

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Limit of 4 Burgers
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SHERIDAN DRIVE
at Niagara Falls Blvd.

Tomorrow's contest should be a
good one with Colgate having
won three in a row, and the Bulls
coming off their own modest two
game winning streak. Coach Offenhamcr will be fighting to beat

Record Breaker DON GILBERT

Just show your I.D. card at
our window and you can buy
our 100% Pure Beef Hamburgers for

Henry's Hamburgers

a Colgate alumnus, the Bulls have
taken two of three, including a
6-0 shutout in 1962, and a 23-0
pasting last year.

passes

man.

Another hard-nosed runner is
fullback Jim Klein. At 6-0, 199
pounds, Klein is the heaviest man
in the Colgate backfield. He has
carried the football 21 times for
71 yards and one touchdown so
far this season. Klein is a good
blocker and rounds out well the
Colgate backfield.
Quarterback is a rich position
for the Red Raiders of the Chenango Valley. The top man is 6-1,
160-pound Gerald Barudin, He
has completed 34 passes out of
76 attempts this season for 439
yards and one touchdown, while
also gaining over 130 yards on
the ground for Colgate. He is a
fine quarterback, and provides

to cheer about itself, recently.
UB senior quarterback Don Gilbert has rolled up 1168 yards
total offense so far this season,
breaking the UB record of 1092
set by Don Holland in 1951. Gilbert is also closing in on a num-

ber of other marks. He has 778
yards p a s s i n g in comparison
with the school record of 807 set
fense.
by John Stofa in 1961, and 55
The leading receiver tor the completions against the school
Red Raiders this year has been record of 64 held pointly by Stofa
sophomore end Peter Beaulieu. and Holland. His 117 attempts
passing compare to Holland's recHe did not play last year because
he was out of school, but so far ord of 128, and he has thrown
this season, he has caught 14 seven touchdown passes against
the school record of nine set by
Gordon Bukaty in 1958. He also
leads the team in scoring with

The Colgate attack is featured
by a strong, well-balanced ground
game and a fairly effective aerial

toes.
Captain Lee Woltman is the
leading Colgate ground gainer
with 357 yards and two touchdowns in 87 carries. At 5-10, 183
pounds, he is the team’s most
valuable man. He is a fine runner, excellent pass receiver, kickoff and punting specialist, and
an outstanding defensive player
as well. His pass receiving record
this season shows 15 receptions
for 172 yards. His right halfback
position should be counted on
to see a lot of action in tomor-

starting tackles are both
converted ends who were moved
inside to help alleviate the situation. Chet Kasprzak, at 6-3, 210
pounds, is a fast lineman who
has developed into a fine one;
and Jerry Miller, at 6-4, 205
pounds, can look mighty big to
a runner when coming at him
full speed
Buffalo has had a few things

49 Court Stroot
Walbridgo Bldg.
«a.

mm

W

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�Friday, November 13, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

¥

'

=h.

-

/

SPORTS CIRCLE
By RICHARD DRANDOFF

-=i—tA

Scene Near

MAYBE??

Anyone, who for one minute
thinks that football has been the
only athletic activity taking place
on campus, is very, very mistakLast Saturday at Jack Coffey Field in the heart of en. One look in Clark Gym bethe Bronx, The Game was renewed after a lapse of 12 tween the hours of 3:30 p.m. and
6:30 p.m. any weekday afternoon
years. Fordham University defeated New York Univercliff hanger, but the
was not reveals a squad of basketball
sity

in a 20-14

outcome

important. What was important about this seemingly
insignificant game is the fact that, through the efforts
of many unselfish students at both campuses, big-time
college football may now possibly be reborn in New York
City.
When this last statement is examined, one might ask
—why is college football so important? In the light of
the recent increase in injuries resulting from football,
why is it necessary to build-up the sport in a city where
college football is almost nonexistanl ? The answers to
these questions are not simple ones, but the basic and
most significant one is that the students and fans want
the sport revived, and have indicated this desire through
concrete efforts. For example, the coach of the Fordham
club—and it is a club, not a recognized team—is a senior
psychology major who received no salary and who, in
fact had to delay his trip with the team to a game in

players working out to get into
shape and to sharpen their shooting.
Since October 15—that is four
weeks and one day for those of
you who do not have a calendar
handy—the team has practiced
heavily, even though they have
not been heard above the roar
of the football activity. The team
thus far has given those present
at their scrimmages plenty to
roar about as they have shown
great determination and a lot of
team spirit. Up until now, the
candidates for the UB Varsity
Basketball Team have scrimmag-

ed the Freshman Team, the Alumni Team and the Canisius Varsity
Basketball Team. Although there
Maine because of an exam on the afternoon of the team’s are no official scores for these
departure. All of the players, contrary to those of other games, Coach Leonard T. Serfusschools, are volunteers without athletic scholarships, and tini said, “From all indications
very well,”
the students even had to.build their own “stadiuhi.” As our team fared
At this point, the team has
far as, the fans are concerned, 13,200 of them attended been
cut to 15 members. There
the game, some of them coming from as far away as are four seniors, nine juniors,
California. This desire on the part of the students and and two sophomores to round out
fans seems to warrant further consideration on the part a well balanced squad. All indiof the administration to at least give football another cations point toward a very exciting team with an interesting
“trial period” at both Fordham and N.Y.U.
schedule. This edition of the
Perhaps the main reason why the administrations of Basketball Bulls should be well
these two schools have not yet reinstated football as a worth following and produce
varsity sport is their concern that it may become a huge many surprises and thrills. Coach
financial burden, but, if this is the case, this concern is Scrfustini had this to say about
unfounded by truth. Last weekend in New Y'ork, 37,552 our forthcoming basketball seapeople attended the Syracuse-Army game at Yankee son: “On the basis of the scrimand response from pracStadium, another 61,929 attended the Buffalo Bills-New mages
tice sessions, we will have an
York Jets contest at Shea Stadium, and yet. another exciting, aggressive ball club.”
63,031 were on hand to see the Dallas Cowboys defeat
the New York Giants on.Sunday, also in Yankee Stadium.
That makes a grand total of 162,512 people viewing the
three major football contests that the Big Town had to

Actress to Present

offer. In view of these figures, it can definitely be stated
that a major college game between two New York City
teams would be a tremendous financial, if not artistic,
success. Therefore, a game between Fordham and N.Y.U.
would not only benefit the students of these schools in
giving them a real reason to yell their heads off, but it
would also benefit the administrations by giving them
an extra source of much-needed income.
Judging from this single example, it stands to reason
that if the fans and the students want it, and can support
it, college football should.be. brought back to those places
which have sorely missed it in the past few years. New
York is obviously not the only city which throws its full
support behind its athletic representatives. Right here
in Buffalo, hundreds of thousands of football fans
go wild every time the Bills win, so it might be safe to
assume that if one of the other local colleges also had
a football team, a nice rivalry might develop. And
maybe a game between UB and Niagara U., let’s say,
could conceivably fill Rotary Field some fine Saturday
afternoon.

AEPi Wins Grid Title
Alpha Epsilon Pi won
the Fraternity f o o t h a 11
championship last Tuesday, defeating Beta Sigma
Rho hy a 20-8 score. AEPi
combined a well-balanced
offense with a tough de-

fense in capturing the coveted football title. The
Campus championship was
played yesterday between
the Zygotes (Independent
champions) and AEPi.
The story on that will be
in next week's Spectrum.

Beer Barrel Award

This week’s Beer Barrell
Award, sponsored by the
brothers of Alpha Epsilon
Pi Fraternity and given to
the outstanding hack and
lineman of t h e previous
week's game, will be presented by actress Patti
Chandler. Miss Chandler,
a blonde beauty, is co-starring in American International’s new comedy release, PAJAMA PARTY.

WBFO to Broadcast
Locker Room Show
A locker room interview with
the UB Bulls can be heard tonight
on “UB SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS”,
at 6:15 p.m. over WBFO-FM (88,7
me.). Wally Blatter will talk with
a number of the football stars
including Don Gilbert, Willie
Shine, Dick Condino, Joe "the
Instep” Oscsodal, and Greenard
Poles.

They’ll voi.ee their feelings on
the season to date and give their
views on how they’ll do in their
last two games against Colgate
and Villanova.
Liston to WBFO, the new “Voice
of the Bulls”, tonight and every
Friday night at 6:15 for “UB
SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS” and
every Monday at 5:45 for Dick
Fleisher’s Sports Show.

=6=

Grid Picks

Basketball
By STAN LICHWALA

M

PROFESSIONAL

COLLEGE

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

By STEVE

Professional

football offered
virtually no surprises last, week
and the teams which were picked
as favorites must have sighed
with relief at the conclusion of
the week’s action. All of the
games (with the possible exception of the Dallas-New York contest) held true to form and the
oddsmakers had to be very thankful for this development. The
season has now gone through its
ninth week, and last week was
the first in which there was not
at least one upset of major proportions, helping somewhat the
“experts” to regain a portion of
their lost prestige. By no stretch
of the imagination am I claiming
to be an expert, but still, I was
one of the people who benefitted,
in an indirect manner, from the
return to form of pro football.
I had but two incorrect picks (the
Buffalo-New York and HoustonBoston contests) to go along with
nine right ones, so my record to
date . now stands at 53-28-5.
This week’s picks:
National Football League
27, New York 17—

St. Louis

Once again, mistakes proved to
be the Giants' downfall in their
loss to Dallas. If they are to have
any hope of winning this contest
against the second-place Cardinals, the New Yorkers must play
as they did two weeks ago when
they defeated the Redbirds at
home. This one is in St. Louis,
however, and it will not be an
easy task.
Cleveland 24, Detroit 10—This
is the top game of the week, the
one which bears the most watching, So far, the Western Division
teams have run roughshod over
their antagonists from the East,
but the trend should be reversed
here. The Browns have developed
that winning habit, and if they
do not get caught looking ahead
to next week’s game against the
Packers, they should make fast
work of the Lions.
Dallas 34, Philadelphia 21
After finally reaching their potential, the Cowboys like the feel
of third place, a position which
they will not be so willing to
relinquish. The Eagles have finally come back down to earth,
which is spelled fourth place.
Washington 17, Pittsburgh 7—
A sporadic air-game has been the
undoing of the S t e e I e r s, and
should further add to their woes
this Sunday. Jurgensen and Mitchell will lead the Redskin attack
as they try to bounce back after
last week’s defeat inflicted by
the Browns.
Baltimore 35, Minnesota 14
Out to avenge their only loss of
the season, the Colts have a
double objective this week. They
are attempting to stretch their
winning streak to nine games in
addition to making the Vikings
pay for embarrassing them in the
season opener. They should have
no trouble accomplishing both
—

—

goals.

Green Bay 28, San Francisco 13
The Packers are starting to
roll, but it is too late already.
They are now three full games
behind Baltimore, and with only
five left to play, they will need
a major miracle to overcome the
leaders. It will not, however, deter
them from taking the full measure of the 49'ers in the Golden
Gate City this Sunday.
Los Angeles 24, Chicago 16—
Even though they made a mod(Cont’d on P. 14)
—

FEIGIN

With three weeks remaining in
the 1964 collegiate football season, it’s all over but the shouting
in the Southern sector of the nation. As a rule, conference championships are not decided until
the final whistle is heard on the
final day of the season, but not
so this year. There will be an
obvious lack of suspense as the
Dixie schools wind up the season.
In the Southeastern Conference,
Alabama (7-0) clinched the championship by coming from behind
to beat its chief rival LSU (2-1-1),
17-9, With only one conference
foe still to face, the Crimson
Tide canot be overtaken by second-place Georgia (4-1) and have
earned their trip to the Sugar
Bowl. Big disappointments this
year have been the pre-season
c o favorites, Mississippi (1-2-1)
and Auburn (2-2). The Tigers
have an excuse. They have lacked the services of their triplethreat All-American QB, Jimmy
Sidle, who has been hampered
by injuries. But there is no ex
planation for the complete col
lapse of Ole Miss. It just wasn’t
their year.
North Carolina State (5-1) back
ed into the Atlantic Coast Conference last week, as pacesetter
Duke was stunned by the "Mouse
that Roared”, Wake Forest, 20-7
The Wolfpack boasts a mediocre
5-3 record, but they have won
the right games. And how did
State react to all this wonderful
-

news?—they went out Saturday
night and were racked up by
Virginia Tech, 28-19. They’re still
not in the clear, though. Duke
(3-1-1) has not blown it all and
a Blue Devil success against
North Carolina (3-2) next week
will force State to win. And
guess who they play?—Who else?
Wake Forest (3-2)! And to add

to the confusion, both the

Tar

Heels and the Demon Deacons
(very appropriate name) have out
side chances for a slice of the
cake. Of course, both Duke and
State must lose to aid their cause.
It seems very unlikely that anyone but N.C. State will head the
ACC.

The top Southern independent

appears to be Georgia Tech

(7-1).

The Yellow Jackets dropped their
affiliation with the SEC this year
and seem to have gotten the better of the deal. They’re definitely
bowl-bound. Florida State (6-1-1)
closes out a very successful season against two toughies, N.C.
State and Florida. Victories here
will earn the Seminoles a bowl
invitation, possibly the Bluebon
net. This has been a rebuilding
year for Miami (2-4-1). The loss
of All-American Mira and most
of his cohorts left Coach Tate
with empty hands and a murderous schedule. Andy Gustafson got
out just in time!
The West Coast did not give me
any trouble' last week, but the
rest of the nation sure did. My
7-6 record lowered my slate to
a respectable!?) 69-37-5. Maybe I
should go back to tossing coins'
There were a few bright spots.
I finally picked the exact score
of a contest (Alabama over LSI
17-9) and missed on the UB game
by one point. That was not misprint, 1 really did pick the Bulls
to win last week.
DUKE 27, NAVY 21—The Blue
Devils (4-2-1) beat Maryland and
Maryland outscored the Midd |,s
(2-5-1), 25-21, last week, so b&gt;;
careful analysis and Philosophy
203, Duke will win. But will the.'
(Cont’d on P-

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

BEER ISSUE

&gt;—

RICHMOND

PREVIEW
'"•'■p-*'

, ’‘"

1

,ser

VOLUME 15

"

NO. S

Publications Board
Amendment Killed

Dugan To Read Today

Today at 3:00 p.m. the Convocations Committee will
sponsor a talk to be given by professional actor Jordan
Charney, and Conrad Bromberg, actor and dramatist,
in Room 231, Norton Union. A coffee hour, at 4:15 p.m.
will be given in Room 233.
Mr. Charney, who will speak on “The Theater in New
York,” is a graduate of Brooklyn College’s Speech and

and National Book Award for his
Monday, the Student Senate devolume Poems, will read selecfeated the constitutional amendtions of his works today at 4:00 ment
which would abolish the
p.m. in Room
146, Diefendorf Student Publications Board, by a
Hall.
vote of 16 in favor, 12 against
Born in New York City, Mr.
and 2 abstentions. A two-thirds
Dugan attended Olivet College, majority was required to pass the
Michigan, and the University of amendment.
Mexico City. In 1962, he publishThe Student Publications Board
ed his first work, Poems, which
has the authority to recognize all
was part of the Yale Series of
student publications, elect pubYounger Poets. Poems was hailed lications editors
and replace any
by critics for its power and depth member
of a publication's staff
of perception. In this work, Dugan at any
time. The
indedraws on a variety of subjects pendent of
thdxStudent Senate
including waterfalls, house plants, with its’ members
appointed
love, war, religion and the Irish. the administration. The intent of
The voice and style of Mr. the defeated amendment was to
Dugan show a clear, hard perceptake the power, which was said to
tion and harsh observation coube potentially dangerous, out of
pled with the blending of myth the hands of this independent
and lyric in a unique manner. body and place any control of
George Starbuck says, “Dugan’s student publications,
in the hands
got imagination. He makes poems of the representative body of the
that count for something. More
important, just reading his clear
voice off the page make me feel
a lot better about being ‘American.’

Theater department, and he was
honored with the Elizabeth P.
Casey Theater Award from that
department. He has studied under such actors as Uta Hagen and
Lee Strasberg, voice directors
Arthur Lessac, Sue Seton and
Julio Berrocal, and dance instructors Anna Sokolow and Frank
Wagner.
Mr. Charney’s

By NANCY MIGDOL
Mr. Alan Dugan, winner of the
1962 Pulitzer Prize for poetry

stating, “no single philosophy of
a publication can dominate the
entire field of student publications; no single individual is empowered with the responsibility
of selecting the editor of a major
publication, or upholding the
quality of any publication representing the University; no unin-

terested group of students is del-

egated these functions as a secondary responsibility; no recognition of student publications is
made by the faculty or administration; no restriction is placed
on freedom of expression except
that deemed necessary by the

)students

themselves.”
The Senate passed a resolution
which unanimously expressed
their desire to see the student
members of the Student-Faculty
Association made eligible for
election to the Board of Gover-

”

JORDAN CHARNEY

first produced at the “Festival of
Two Worlds” in Spoleto Italy,
and which was recently produced
on campus by the student dramatic society.
Included among his T. V. script
credits is “Police Emergency,”
written for the Dupont Show of
the Week. He also collaborated
on a script dealing with the life
of Ernest Hemingway for the
same program.
Mr. Bromberg’s acting credits
are represented by his roles in
The Advocate starring James
Daly, Eilef in Breck’s play Mother Courage directed by Jerome
Robbins, off Broadway, in The
Love Nest by Derrick Washburn,
P. S. 193 by David Rayfield,
Synge's Deirdre of the Sorrows
and in the playTevye and His
Daughters on which the new
musical Fiddler on the Roof is
based. In 1957, Mr. Bromberg
was the balladeer at the American Shakespearian Festival at
Stratford, where he acted with
Alfred Drake and Katherine Hepburn. Mr. Bromberg will speak
on the comic disasters in theater.

Following Poems, Dugan published Poems II, “an ugly and
beautiful book,” as Dudley Fitts,
editor, comments, “powerful, as
very little poetry is powerful
today. These poems have the curious virtue of seeming perpetually new, and reading them is a
matter of being constantly driven
to fresh questions and illuminations.” Poems II was written in
Europe, where Mr. Dugan spent
a year as a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Letters
in Rome, Italy.
His works have been well received by reviewers of The New

Yorker and The New York Times.
Dugan’s themes have a certain
satisfying plainess with nuances
of rhythm, run, imagery and
phrasing. As the New York Times
quotes, “His poetry is sinewy, full
of unexpected—and often delightful—turns of the imagination; its
linguistic texture hard to the
point of being brittle. Not everybody’s cup of tea, this, but good
strong tea all the same and hot
enough to scald the lips of the
most calloused taster.”
Dugan has published his poems
in Accent, Poetry, Partisan Review, Saturday Review, American
Scholar, New Yorker and Spektrum.

Wade Speaks Out On Negro’s Uniqueness
In American Society In 4th Fenton Lecture
The fourth lecture in the Fen-

ton Lecture Series was delivered
last Thursday, October 29, by
Dr. Richard Wade, professor of
American History at the University of Chicago. His topic,
“Civil Rights in the Metropolis,”
dealt with the problems of the
Negro in American Cities.
Wade began by emphasizing
the uniqueness of the Negro’s
position in American Society.
Their uniqueness and present position in our cities and our society, asserted Wade, is due to
their earlier experience in our
country. The Negroes as a group

were enslaved and their color
was made a distinct factor in
determining their lot in Ameri-

can life. In short, the Negro experience was completely divorced
from any other immigrant group

which came to America. Allied
with this was the unfavorable
situation under which the Negro
gained his freedom. The emancipation occurred at
the time when
the Negro was residing in
the
country and
declining rural areas of the
country and to the cities, thereby depriving these areas of any

fil, n&gt;

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964

Charney, Bromberg to Speak
On Theater Today In Norton

off Broadway
credits include roles in The Zoo
Story, Telemachus Clay, A Place
For Chance, The Pinter Plays and
Hang Down Your Head and Die.
He has become a familiar face to
daytime television viewers
through his role of Julian Dark
on “The Secret Storm” and his
parts in “Faith For Today” and
“Great Decisions.” On January 28
he will be seen on The Hallmark
Hall of Fame.
In the classical vein, Mr. Charney has played the male lead in
Romeo and Juliet, Fenton in The
Merry Wives of Windsor, Monsieur Jourdain in Le Bourgeois
Gentilhomme and lachimo in
Cymbeline. He has also played in
summer stock at Woodstock, New
York, North Madison, Ohio, and
Wilmington, Delaware.
Conrad Bromberg, who is the
visiting artist in residence in the
department of Drama and Speech,
will remain at UB to act in the
production of his own play, The
Defense of Taipei, and also to
lecture to classes in theater. The
production will be given at Baird
Hall December 9-12. Mr. Bromberg believes that this play is
“an excellent one for young people, especially directed toward
this group.”
Mr. Bromberg is a Member of
the Writers Unit of Actors Studio
in New York. He is the 1964 recipient of the Rockefeller Foundation Writing Grant. His plays
include The Defense of Taipei,
which was first produced at the
Actor’s Workshop in San Francisco. He also has several one
act plays to his credit, including
The Teacher and His Victim

p"*'

potential sources of strength.
Moving on to the gist of his
presentation, .Wade turned to a
comparison ofvthe .Afferent tactics employed by the Irish immigrants and the Negro population to escape the urban ghettos
in which they were imprisoned.
Led by Booker T. Washington,

LINDA LEVENTHAL queries ROBERT FELDMAN during Publications Board debate.

Senate. It was felt that student
publications should be given the
opportunity to seek recognition
on the floor of the Senate through
the Activities Committee of the
Senate rather
than
Student
through the ultimate and final
authorityoof the seven independent members of the Publications
Board. Under the present system,
student publications that do not
no
recognition have
receive
means of appealing to a higher
authority.
The amendment failed to
achieve the necessary two-thirds
majority by four votes. The Senate received letters from the
Freshman Class Council, the editors of the Bull, and the Student
Senate Activities Committee,
urging the defeat of the amendment. The Activities Committee
under Harriet Heitlinger stated
that, “it is our feeling that to
delegate the power of recognition
of publications to the Activities
Committee is not a satisfactory
solution to the problem under
consideration. Although we feel
that changes may be warranted
concerning the Publications
Board, we cannot see how the
present amendment will rectify
the situation.” Natalie Gold, University College Senator and member of the Activities Committee,
said, “it is our constitutional responsibility to recognize all student organizations and activities.
Student publications most assuredly fall under the category of
student activities. There is no
reason why a sub-c o m m i 11 e e
under the Activities Committee
could not be organized to this
end.”
Jeremy Taylor, Chairman of the
National Student Association
Committee, quoted the NSA’s official stand regarding freedom of
the press and student publication
boards. NSA condemns any such
control over student editors.
The Publications Board issued

the Negroes were encouraged to
advocate a policy that was in
direct constrast to the policy
advocated by the Irish. They
were led to follow a course which
set forth to help the Negro raise
his lot economically and socially.
In so doing Washington reasoned
that by raising the Negroes’ social status in the Community he
would gain acceptance, and from
this acceptance his political
power would naturally emanate.
The Irish, on the other hand,
because of their overwhelming
numbers, advocated a policy of
political maturity first and then
from this a renewed social and
economic standing. As it turned
out the policy of the Irish was
the more efficient one and led
to their rise as a body politic
and body social and economic.
The Negroes did not progress
and thus remained a stagnant
and oppressed group in society.
Professor Wade then turned
to the situation of the Negroes in
the City both in the past and in
the present. Again he stressed the
unique aspects of their situation
as compared to the lot at other
(Cont'd on P. 2) results

of

(he

existing

system

nors. The Student-Faculty Association is a body which meets annually “to promote and cultivate
educational and social relations
among students and faculty of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo—a non-profit educational
institution under the laws of the

State of New York
and to
aid students and faculty of the
University by assisting them in
every way possible in their education and their study, work, living and extracurricular activities.” The resolution, which was
proposed by Robert Finkelstein,
and seconded by Robert Feldman,
asks the Student-Faculty Association to remove some of the
qualifications for membership on
the Board of Directors of the
Association, which meets frequently. The qualifications are:
“all directors shall be members
of the Association and also mem..

..

bers of

the administration or
faculty of the University."
Robert Finkelstein, president of
the Student Assocition, said, “it
has been pointed out that there
are many necessary requirements
for a director which a student
might be unable to possess. I
refer specifically to the age requirement, the time requirement,
and the fiscal year availability.
However, these are arguments
which should be used in assessing

that individual's worth. Now he
is constitutionally prohibited
from being considered.” The
members of the Student-Faculty
Association are the President,
the Vice President for Business
Affairs, the Vice President for
Educational Affairs, the Dean of
Students, the Assistant Vice President for Business Affairs, the
President and -Vice-President of
the Student Association and two
faculty members.
Among the clubs seeking Senate recognition was the Athiests
Club. The Senate questioned the
club’s standing as a religious organisation and reaoived to tend
(Coat'd on P. 7)

�Welfare Acts
On Beer Issue
Positive action has recently
been taken by the Student Senate towards the recognition of
beverages on campus.
Following the precedent set by
previous Senate administrations
to hopefully secure this privilege,

alcoholic

President Robert Finkelstein has
announced marked advance in the
fact that State University President Samuel Gould now has in
his possession a formal letter of
request from Dean Richard A.
Siggelkow. Enclosed in this letter as evidence to defend this
campus’ stand, are the Student
Senate’s Final Welfare Committee report of 1963-64, the Initial
Welfare Committee’s stand of
June, 1963, and resolution of the
1963-64 Senate.

Stern, Robert Finkelstein,

continued due to the Publications

ate, by Robert Finkelstein and
University College Senator Trudy
Stern. The Publication Board
Chairman, George Neuner, was
unable to attend.
The panel discussed the right
of student publications to exist
without the authority of an independent, powerful Publications
Board over them. Jeremy Taylor
quoted the NSA’s position in
relation to publications boards.
NSEA, to which UB sends voting
representatives, condemns
all
forms of publications boards
which may stand over editorial
policies, staff members, or content of any student publications.
John Kowal, editor of the Spectrum, pointed to the record of
the Publications Board as evi-

dence

of

the

dire

need for
change. As a point of their inconsistency he related the matter
of the Publications Board’s election of a manager on the Spectrum and the next year the
Board’s question of the same
manager’s right to his manageship. Mr. Kowal pointed out that
the Board was powerless in the

Board.

Trudy Stern stated that the Student Senate, as the agency of all
daytime students in affairs concerning the student body as a
whole, had the duty to take the
responsibility of publications since they are the only organ of 'campus life that does
touch the student body directly.
The Activities Committee, she
went on, was already constitutionally responsible to student
publications because they are student activities.

In the absence of George Neuner, Robert Finkelstein defended
the Publications Board. He recognised the need for revision of the
Student Association Constitution
but pointed out that the Publications Board was one of the four
coordinate bodies specifically outlined in the Constitution. He stated that the Publications Board’s
abolition would do no more than
reorganize the existing confusion
and act as no benefit to publications.

Fenton Lecture
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

immigrants in the city. He began by asserting that the Urban
neighborhoods have always been
in flux. The immigrants have
come from Europe and settled
in an ethnic neighborhood and
then as political power gave them
greater status they moved out
to the suburbs. The historic function of the American city has
been to act as “the staging
ground for the upward mobility
of the foreign elements on the

economic and social ladder.” The
Negro never appropriated this
staging - ground as a method 4
escape. Now that the Negroes
have finally begun to Utilize this
avenue out of the city the escape routes have artificially clogged. The Negro cannot escape
the ghetto because the ghetto
follows him wherever he goes.
The results of this fact have a
far-reaching implication both for
the Negro and for the whites of
the city. This outward movement
on the part of the Negro runs up
against the rear guard of the
retreating white neighborhoods.
Thus the conflict occurs between
the vanguard of the outward
moving Negro and the rear

Participate at Oswego Today
UB

debaters

among sixteen

placed

fourth

teams in the an-

nual Michigan State Group Action Tournament last weekend
in East Lansing. Those participating included Diane Hayes, Linda
Leventhal, Neal Felsinger, Richard Fleisher, and Robert Swanick.
This group submitted a written
report defending the status quo
on the position of Federal programs of public works for the
unemployed. In addition to this,
the debaters were questioned intensively for thirty minutes on
facts and evidence relating to
their report. Having placed first
in its group in the preliminary
rounds, the UB unit proceeded
to the finals where a second
analysis and another thirty minute questioning period took place.
On the basis of these final interrogations, the University of
Buffalo participants received a
trophy in recognition of their
commendable performance.
Novice members Gloria Alfieri
and Nick Sargent (affirmative)
and Robert Dragone and Charles
Liarakos (negative) attended their
first intercollegiate debate competition last weekend at Carnegie Technical Institute in Pittsburgh. They had a three-five
win-losS record, meeting such
formidable opponents as Fordam,
American University, Duquesne,
Dayton, and California State University.

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Felsinger, Fleisher, Swanick
Leventhal, Hayes
Varsity debaters Ellen Abelson, Barbara
Glegota, Diane
Hayes, and Richard Nemiroff
will participate in a five round
tournament this weekend, November 6-7, at Oswego College near
Syracuse, New York. They will
be accompanied by Mr. Richard
Suttell, Assistant Debate Coach.

The national proposition at
such intercollegiate debate tournaments is Resolved: that the
Federal Government should establish a national program of
public work for the unemployed.

crease of Lockwood Library’s
hours from the former 2:00 p.m.
to 11:00 p.m. Sundays to the new
hours of 1:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.
Handled by Joe Epstein of the

Welfare Committee, this has been

regarded by Mr. Finkelstein as
“a precedent for further things.”
Also, petitions have been sent to
Dr. Kaiser of the Office of Admissions and Records to try and
secure the postponement of
spring vacation to make it co-

ria
Big 4 Cleaners

incide with that of other schools.

Wi

SUPPORT N.S.A.
FREEDOM
FAST
NOVEMBER 19

The Young Set
(must be over 19 &amp; single)

3456 DELAWARE AVENUE (near Sheridan)
Western New York’s largest social group over
300 people attend each of our functions

11 pick

up and deliver On Campus Monday-Friday

TR 5-5360

jerry

raven’s

(Hi

—

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&amp;

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Stag
TELL YOUR FRIENDS
’

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Meet the Students from Stete,
it VI.tS

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Other recent Senate advancements have been made in the in-

YOUR INVITATION TO

Heels

.

*rr*a

see that the issue of alcoholic
beverages on campus is now before the President of the State
University system. I am hopeful
of positive action at the earliest
possible date. I’ve long been an
advocate of serving alcoholic beverages on campus ds a realization
of the student as a rational and
mature adult, who can successfully enjoy this privilege.”

—.

A Professional
Portrait
reasonable rate
Steve Heit
TR 6-4217

members of the uneducated lower
class whites. It is upon this class
of whites, the most ill-equipped to
handle such a delicate problem,
that the full burden of the integration crisis rests.
Wade concluded with a plea
that the Negro be given free
access to this traditional escalating and escape mechanism of
the American city. He also pointed out that the United States is
closer to solving the problems
of civil rights than any other
country in the world. In this
fact lies our historical mission
for the future. For if we can
solve this most pressing problem,
then we shall serve as a model
for emulation for all other countries faced with this problem.

Commenting on this latest ad-

vancement, Mr. Finkelstein stated, “naturally, I’m heartened to

TONIGHT'
1:00am
9:30pm
CONTINENTAL INN HOTEL

The Ideal Gift...

at a

guard of the retreating whites.
The tragedy here is that the
Negro vanguard is the cream
of the Negro intelligensia and the
rear guard whites are usually

Due to the efforts of the Welfare Sub-Committee, this latest
stride has been made possible.
The Welfare Committee has sent
letters to other colleges to find
out if alcohol is permissible on
their campus and if so, what
type of problems may be expected. To add further strength to
th argument, the results of a
Welfare Committee referendum
taken last year proved that 1,372
students were in favor of serving beer in the Rathskellar within certain hours, while 465 were
opposed. Also, 1,492 favored the
serving of alcoholic beverages
for special weekends and dances,
while 270 students opposed. As
further evidence, it was noted
that more student participation
in campus affairs would be
brought about in advent of oncampus alcohol.

Debaters Place 4th in MSU
Group Action Tourney, Will

[

&lt;gh..

_

Friday, November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Rosary

"

&gt;

Live Music

Hill and Canisius Colleges

Folk Singing

-

Jazz

-

Theater

3191 BAILEY AVE.

�Friday,

November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

Panel Reviews Election

PAGE THREE

Wesser Heads Convention Delegation

Flax Honored
By AFROK

Dr. Robert Wesser, chairman
the ideological approach to probof the American Studies departlems is not acceptable in the
United States. Also that people
ment, headed a group of 15 faculare voting “against” issues raDr. Alexander Flax, Assistant ty members and students who atther than “for” issues. People Secretary of
the Air Force for
tended the semi-annual American
fear the radical right as well as Research and Development,
will Studies Association convention,
the radical left, Dr. Powell stated be the
Honored Guest at the
that “Goldwater, awhile ago AFROTC Dining-In
at the State Univerto be held October 31,
would have been called a fascist.” on
sity at Oswego.
13th at the NiaNovember
He criticized the optimism gara Falls Air
Force Base Officreated by laughing off GoldMembers of the Association, atcer’s Club.
tending from colleges throughout
water’s ideology. The undercurNew York State, heard four parent of the radical right wing
Dr. Flax received his Ph.D
will not stop when the election from UB in 1958 and is a member pers given under the general
topic of “Religion and American
of the, Buffalo Club. He has pubis over. The panel recognized the
lished numerous technical papers Culture.” Mr. William J. Lome
danger of right wing organizaof the Liberal Studies department
tions such as the John Birch in aerodynamics and is a reat Clarkson College of TechnoloSociety and agreed that they are cipient of the Lawrence Sperry
gy spoke on the “Undergraduate
Award of the Institute of Aeropreparing to reaffirm the moveand Religion,” in which he read
ment following the election with space Sciences.
papers written on the subject of
the eventual end of gaining conreligion by college freshmen and
trol of the federal government
seniors. He claimed that the enthrough their influence in the
vironment of individuality and
Republican Party. Dr. Gutman
freedom offered by colleges was
stated that “the only way the
not responsible for the attitude
Republican Party can win the
of doubt taken by many toward
machinery of the national governreligion; rather, this attitude was
ment is to get the votes that
fostered previously in the home.
have traditionally gone to the
Melvin Bernstein, representing
Democrats.”
The Republicans
the English department of Alwill, he said, blame defeat on
fred University gave “Some Rethe sell out by the Keating,
flections on the Jewish AmeriRockefeller, eastern moderates
can Novelist.” He pointed out
press
and the
and radio.
that Jewish novelists primarily
Dr. Macridis felt a significant
attempt to Americanize the charaspect of the post election period
acters of their works just as the
will be to pin-point the “dangerpeople themselves endeavor to inous activities of such thing as
tegrate themselves into the sothe John Birch Society.” Dr.
ciety. In his talk on “Religious
Smith thought that the affect of
Liberty: Some Continuing Legal
a Goldwater loss, on the far
Problems,” Mr. David Mannering
right groups, would be insignifiof the Hobart and William Smith
cant.
President Furnas and Lt. Col. Political Science department disThe significance of this elecThomas Huddleston will accomcussed the church-state issue repany Dr, Flax to the UB-Colgate
garding prayers in public schools.
game on the following day, NoFollowing a cocktail hour at the
vember 14th.
Century old Bates Richardson
Mansion, those in attendance
heard a paper delivered by Mr.
Winthrop Hudson, author of ProThe 1964 James McCormack
testantism in America, who spoke
Mitchell Lecture will be given
on “Nativism and Americanism'
on November 9, 1964, at 3 p.m.,
in the Empire State Suite of the- in the Late Nineteenth Century.”
Statler-Hilton Hotel. This year’s
As Dr. G. Turner, acting Presilecturer is Paul Freund, the Carl
dent of Oswego College remarked
M, Loeb University Professor at
as he addressed the Convention:
Harvard University. His topic will
be, “Reflections on the Effective
Limits of Legal Action.” Professor Freund is one of the nation’s
outstanding authorities in the
field of constitutional law. In addition to his years of teaching
at the Harvard Law School, he
now printed by
served from 1935-39 and 1942-46
on the staff of the Solicitor GeneLeft to Right: Dr. Gutman, Dr. VandorVall, Dr. Macridis, Dr. Vinacke, ral of the United States, presenting the Government’s position to
Dr. Smith, Dr. Powell.
the Supreme Court in many of
moral terms. The domestic and
Republican Party, The “know-nothe important war time cases. He
—mill
international complexities have thing” faction of the Republican is the editor-in-chief of the combeen narrowed.”
Party will not disappear with a prehensive history of the Su1381 KENMORE AVENUE
Dr. Vinacke pointed out that Republican loss.
preme Court now being written
(at Delaware)
under a commission from Congress as a memorial to Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
Phone 876-2284
I
6870 Moin St. at Transit
“Issues have not been discussed in this campaign . . . Goldwater’s campaign was represented not even by ‘me-too-ism’ but
by 'your another-ism’ ”, so said
Dr. Henry Lee Smith, Chairman
of the Dept, of Anthropology
and Linguistics who inaugurated
the discussion given by the Convocations 'Committee’s panel on
“The Significance of the' 1964
Elections” Friday, October 30.
The panel, which dealt with
the far reaching implications of
the political scene today, also
included: Dr. W. Edgar Vinacke,
professor of psychology; Dr. Elwin H. Powell, associate professor of Sociology; Dr. Marinus
Vandervall, professor of Sociology; Dr. Herbert G. Gutman,
professor of History and Dr. Roy
Macridis, chairman of the Department of Political Science.
Dr. Smith, who acted as moderator, went on to call the election discussions “low level and
emotional,” channeled toward the
“direct democracy” of the Fedralists rather than what is workable with the present system. He
stated that the use of terms in
the campaign, such as “conservatism” has been bad. The present
“conservatives” are representative of the “small, middle-western, businessman; not conservative, but a throwback to the know
nothing radical of the turn of
the century.”
Dr. Gutman added that “one
of the reasons the campaign has
failed (to bring forth meaningful discussion) is the traditional

-

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DR. ROBERT WESSER
“The significance of this association is that it brings together important elements of American
society
history, literature, and
the arts.”
Among the faculty members
who attended the Convention
from UB were Dr. Robert Wesser,
Dr. Lyle Glazer, Miss Ellen Kenny, Miss Louise Duus, Miss Carlotte Johnson and Dr. Margaret
—

Schlaeger.
The Spring Convention will be
held sometime in April at Hobart and William Smith College

in Geneva, New York.

Classicist to Lecture
Astin, of the
of Belfast,
Northern Ireland, will speak on
“The Prelude to the Roman Revolution: 151-133 B.C.”. The talk,
sponsored by the Department of
Classics, will be given next Thursday, November 19 at 4 p.m. in
Room 329 of Norton Hall.
Mrs. Astin, a graduate of the
University of Oxford, is presently at the Institute for Advanced
Study, Princeton, New Jersey, A
knowledge of Roman history is
not a prerequisite to understanding the lecture.
Mr.

Queen’s

Alan E.

University

�Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

•..

The Good Fight

After three hours of debate and deliberation, the
Senate Monday night voted on the proposed amendment
to abolish the Publications Board. (For details see news
story, page 1). The vote, 16-12-2, did not achieve the
needed two thirds for the required passage of a constitutional amendment.
Although the amendment was defeated, the underlying principle behind it was upheld by a majority of
those Senators present. The SPECTRUM has made a
commitment to the principle of freedom of the press,
which has been upheld in both party platforms in last
March’s election. It seems rather inconsistant that Senators, elected by the students on their respective platforms, should completely disregard their promises after
the election.
The SPECTRUM has been criticized for entering the
political arena and becoming involved in the Senate’s
business. Our reply is that freedom of the press is our
business. Involvement in the Senate amendment is the
right and obligation, of the newspaper, if only to protect
itself. But self protection is not the only reason why the
SPECTRUM will fight for the abolition of the Publications Board. The Greeks, Newman Club, the School of
Pharmacy and an almost unending list of organizations
desire or have publications. They too must be protected.
According to its’ Constitution th.e Publications Board
has jurisdiction over all publications “identified by title,
address, or content as produced at the State University
of New York at Buffalo.” This jurisdiction includes the
“eligibility to distribute the publications” and “to appoint
the editor and business manager of the student publications.” It is our contention that the Publications Board
is an evil concentration of power which must be abolished. Robert Kolken, Senator from the Law School,
best stated our position when he talked about the principles involved, rather than the mechanics and wording
of the proposed amendment.
When we came to college we didn’t leave our freedoms and rights on the curb at the corner of Main and
Bailey. The first Article of the Bill of Rights protects
freedom of the press; freedom of the press must be protected here. So once again the SPECTRUM reaffirms
its previous stand to ABOLISH THE PUBLICATIONS
BOARD.

More Good Fights
Referendum Amendment
A proposed amendment brought up this week would
allow the student body the right of a general referendum
within three weeks after the presentation to the Senate
of a petition signed by at least 10% of all day time
students.
The SPECTRUM, because of its strong beliefs in the
liberal tradition and civil liberties, believes that thi»
amendment mutt be passed. Through this amendment
the student body will have the right “to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances." For a democracy to work it must be accessable to the people, and
this amendmeent would do just that.
Faculty Student Association
President Robert Finkelstein and Vice President
Robert Feldman are to be commended for their efforts to
increase student involvement in the Faculty Student Association. One of the main functions of this organization is to deal with financial matters. Possibly, because
of a greater student involvement, the Senate could receive more funds and other financial gains could be made.
Food Service Investigation
The Senate and the SPECTRUM have jointly formed
a committee to investigate the food prices here, hoping
that possible price changes can be effected. To date the
price of milk and ice cream has been lowered. Further
investigation is under way concerning food prices.
Bookstore Investigation
The Senate has also taken steps to investigate the
pricing policy of the Ijookstore. The action concerning
the bookstore and food service have resulted from requests from the student body.

the Editor

to

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited

to 200 words.
Due
ipece
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
All letters must be typewritten, double
Names will be withheld upon request.
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

to a leek of

Union Board President, George
Orlando, and a delegation of
board members plan to attend
the Association of College Unions
Conference, which will discuss

Abolish The Board

Faculty-Student Relationships today. The other delegates who will
attend the conference are: L.
Sievanpiper, R. Miller, J. Osypicuski, C. Deveaux, P. Jones, C.
Bock and J. Hughes.

TO

A Pigskin Party, sponsored by

the Recreation Committee will be
held after the football game tomorrow. A live band will provide
music for the occasion.
A Poster Design and Techniques
Workshop, sponsored by the Publicity Committee will be held
Monday in Room 307 Norton. At
this time applications for Spring
Weekend Committee chairmanships will be accepted by the Personnel Committee. The Spring
Arts Festival Committee needs
people to fill many vacancies and
all those who are interested in
working on this committee are requested to come to the Union
Board Office on this day.

The very concept of freedom of
the press is challenged as long
as the Publications Board remains in existence! The board
has the power to eject any editor
of any publication because they
feel that he is incompetent, or
not fulfilling needs of the student body; this is very vague,
and they weild a gigantic axe
over the head of every editor.
If they disagree with his views,
they can dispose of him. Therefore to remain editor, he must
conform with their wishes as
to what he prints. (Shades of

THE EDITOR:

Monday evening I attended a
meeting of the Student Senate;
the major business of import
to be dealt with was the question of a constitutional amendment abolishing the Publications
Board. There was a good deal
of debate culminating in Mr.
Ostrow priding himself on his
good taste simultaneously wearing
a Goldwater button; a call on Mr.
Ostrow for using disorderly
words, and a whirlwind call of
the previous question to avoid
the senate body vote on Mr. Ostrow’s libel, and a ridiculous de-

Sovietism?)

However, if student publications are under the jurisdiction
of the Senate, through the Activities Committee, they are in
effect in the hands of the student body, where they belong.

feat of the amendment.

There is now a reasonable probability that the issue of Publications Board will come before
the student body as a referendum.

As you will be called upon to
There were many frivilous and
decide this important issue, I feel
immaterial points, raised, debatthat the facts should be put beed, hashed, rehashed, and genefore you. The Publications Board
up
is a body appointed by President rally successfully muddying proMatters of
Furnas, with absolute regulatory the whole issue.
cedure, of the organization of
body appointed by President Fura Publications Subcommittee, for
nas, with absolute regulatory
example, and picayune points repowers concerning student publications. Immediately there is a lating to technicalities of the
duplication of phraseology in the constitution,
dichotomy, a
powers. Everyone will grant that (which can be circumvented tristudent publications are student vially) serve solely to obscure
the underlying issue, that of
activities. There exists a commitfreedom of the press on our
tee of the student senate, the
campus.
Student
Activities
for
Committee,
Saftey education is “an educaI feel that every student on
the specific purpose of chartering
tion we cannot get along withcampus must make it his perproblems
with
the
of
coping
and
out,” according to Mr. John J,
sonal responsibility to see that
Jones, new safety supervisor at student activities. Therefore I
the Publications Board is aboclaim
that
for
this
reason
alone,
SUNYAB. Mr. Jones has worked
lished, and that control of the
the
Publications
Board
should
be
in this important field for 20
campus publications is in the
years investigating hazards for abolished.
hands of the people who read
such industries as Dupont Corp.
them. . . . YOU!
However, there is a more imprinciple at stake here.
—S. Kurman
It is the job of Mr. Jones and portant
his committee, made up of representatives from each building on
campus, to inform the students of
Lecturer
safety hazards and investigate
all accidents no matter how triTHE
TO
EDITOR:
tists. (For shame, doctor; you, of
vial.
all people). "Don’t you know that
The “Hypnosis” lecture on MonThe aim of the educational day evening by
the AAEH has many reputable
Dr. Philip Ament, physicians,
psychologists, and
phase of the program is to proD.D.S., left a number of questions dentists, and one of the latter,
mote understanding of the hazards which may cause accidents, unanswered by the good doctor. Dr. James Joule, is the president
such as fires, broken sidewalks One polite guest was asked to of it?
and careless use of laboratory leave after he asked the following
Dr. Ament gave permission to
facilities. Training in fire drill
procedure and information on questions and identified himself a student to tape the lecture for
shelter zones are also provided. as a certified hypno-teehnician in research. Why did the doctor and
,
,
the Association to Advance EthicThe second phase of Mr. Jones
several others coerce the student
.
. .
job is the investigation of every al Hypnosis. Question: What is
to give up the tape? What had
accident to eliminate hazards. He the school in Florida that issues to be covered up? Why? Why not
Ph.D.’s
hypnosis
(or
anything
in
example
report
as
an
the
cited
just ‘amend” any “mistakes”? The
of a student who was injured else) for six or eight correspondwhen she tripped on a broken ence lessons?” Have you had time lecture was good and enjoyed by
sidewalk. The safety department to look this one up, doctor? all; it should have been left to
immediately ordered the hazard 'Question two was in response to
posterity.
the doctor’s statement that “The
repaired.
—Inquirer
group
stage
hypnoof
AAEH is a
Mr. Jones stressed the importance of reporting every accident
to facilitate prevention. The state
demands complete statistics, and
any student with such information should call Mr. Jones in his
office at 831-2701 between the
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
hours of 9:30 a.m. and noon or
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in AAay, except for
2:00 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

The film “Girl in Black”, presented by the Film Committee
will be shown at noon, 3:00 p.m.,
6:00 p.m., 8:00 p.m. and 10:00
p.m. Wednesday in Norton Conference Theater. There will also
be a Union Board meeting, in
a room which will be posted in
the Board office, on this day.

New Safety Director

Questioned

„

,

,,

,

„

„

THE

According to the safety director, the major cause of campus

accidents is carelessness, such as
haphazard disposal of cigarettes
and failure of students to watch
where they are going. He feels
can be an excellent
that
remedy to combat the safety hazards found on campus.

Support The Good Fight

In the past the voice and wishes of the student body
have been a powerful force. Your support is needed
for the GOOD FIGHT.
You can take an active part in the Good Fight by
attending Senate meetings, scheduled every other Tuesday night in Norton Hall. The next meeting is November 17. Voice your opinion on the floor of the Senate
or through your Senator, If time will allow, join a Senate committee and aid the GOOD FIGHT.
Only through student support can the GOOD FIGHT
be won.

oCelterA

SUPPORT N.S.A.
FREEDOM

SPECTRUM

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editors
Editorial Advisor
Financial Advisors
Sports Editor

Peter Rubin
Paul Nussoaum

Barbara Strauss
William Siemerlng
Dallas Garber
Allan Scholpm

-

JOHN P. KOWAL

Lay-out Editor
Copy Editor
Business Mgr.
Advertising Mgr.
Photo Editor
Circulation Mgr.

David Edelman

Marcia Ann Orzulak
Bernard Dikman

Howard Auerbach
Edward Joscelyn
Alice Ostrander

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita, Sue Greene,
Murphy, Gary Lyman, Gary Chilcott, Nancy Migdol, Don Eismann, Meryl Frank,
Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou Kozlowski, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro,
Jill Aginsky, Larry Siege!, Skip Venneri, Sharon Richter, Diane Holtzman, Diane Hayes,
M'anon Michael, Erol Suit, Ellen Lorig, Linda Wachner, ,Lee Cory, Debbie Rubie, Jeff
Lewis, Terry Davis Bernice Cohen, Margo Rakita, Scoff’Kurman
Sports Staff; Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
Schuelein, Skip Blumberg, Mike Castro, Lenny Gaby, Bruce Goldstein, George Jackrel,
Steve Obersfein, Eric Snyder, Harvey Starr
Photography Staff; David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Dot
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary Lou
•
Palmer

Eileen

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

FAST

Second Class,

Postage Paid at Buffalo, New York

S3.C0 per year, circulation 9500
Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
Subscription

November 19

'

the Editor

Union Board
Lists Activities

Novambar 6, 1964

Advertising

�Friday, November 6, 1964

•

•

U. C. PRE-REGISTRATION

•

Students whose last
names begin with the letter S, will see their adviser plan their programs
and register for courses on
the following days: November 9 through November 13. Students whose
last names begin with A,
B, will make appointments
with the University College
Receptionist in Diefendorf
114. At this time, the Receptionist will give the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow in the subsequent registration procedures.
Students who do not
make their appointments
on time, or who do not
keep them when made, will
be required to register in
Clark Gym on Registration
Day in January.
NUMBERS

",

.

.

See You After ROTC Leadership Lab, Francine

cjCetterd to the

.

.

.1"

Editor

Spectrum Scored
TO THE EDITOR:

One of the functions of a minority party in a pluralistic society is to be available for voters
who cannot accept the candidates
of the majority parties. This protest is important to the democratic process because is shows candidates that they do not have a
complete mandate and it encourages other voters who might
just stay home that they have
an alternative. This protest vote

is important only if it is publicized. In the recent mock election, the results of the two major
candidates were given; the

minority parties were not only
omitted on the ballot but the
write-in vote was ignored. Eric
Haas, the Socialist Labor Party
candidate received at least ten
votes. Why did the Spectrum decide not to publish these?

John G. Medwid

Spectrum Applauded
TO THE EDITOR:
I would like to compliment you
on the fine article on Josh Lundquist. I hope the “Campus Personality” column will be a permanent feature of the Spectrum.
It is about time that these campusus personalities receive their

well earned credit. It is this
small minority of hard working
people that make up for the vast
majority of APATHETIC students
who occupy (in the physical sense only) the University of Buffalo
campus.

Alan Mellis

Atheists Club Supports Senate
TO THE EDITOR:
We of the Athiest Club support
the Student Senate’s firm stand
in defense of academic freedom
against the reckless charges of
former Congressman Pillion. In
an age where our fundamental

rights are in constant danger, it
is important to reaffirm our com-

mitment to them. This includes
not only freedom of speech and
the press, but freedom of religion.
The Atheist Club

The Insignificance of Math
By GARY FALK

Not since kindergarten (or was
it the 1st grade?) have I enjoyed
school and learning as much as
I have recently by attending lectures in the greatest of all gaf
courses—Math 117.
Labelled the “Significance of
Math” by the Administration, and
“Mickey Mouse” by the students,
the course is more aptly described by the latter title (though I
think the mouse definitely suffers from the comparison).
Although I’ve only been to two
lectures and one recitation, I’ve

jjheady learned

many things.

Things which most fourth grad-

ers aren’t even aware of yet.
Greatest and most comical of all,
! s the method by which the stuff
&gt;s taught. Sitting in class, I can
vividly recall the image of my
fat and lethargic third grade
arithmetic teacher struggling
through the same colorless examples of mathematical nonsense

that are being
scrawled in yellow

chalk on the blackboard before
me. Only it’s a lot funnier now
because I took it seriously when
I was 8. It’s hilarious to sit and
hear wild stories (with improvised illustrations) of Martians
who count on twelve fingers (two
thumbs)
Humans, I am told,
use a system based on the ten
digits, which, although less than
most Martians, is still a hell of
a lot more than certain species
of goats employ. In case you
haven’t had the opportunity to
sit in some of the lectures or
recitations, there is a certain
herd of magic goats (who, I guess
inhabit some fairy land on the
other side of the Moon) who stand
erect and count on their hooves.
Most ironic and certainly most
ridiculous of all is that someday I will make some $250,000
more in my lifetime than the
ordinary run of the mill high
school graduate just for laughing
through all of this.
That is, if I go anymore.

By FRANK KLINGER
One day, while wandering
around the UB campus, I happened to meet a fellow freshman

and friend of mine.
“Hello there, 107271,” he called.
“Oh hi, 932584,” I replied. “How

are you?”

“Well, to tell you the truth,”
he answered sadly, “I think I’m
suffering from a loss of memory.”
Not believing that this could
really be the case, I decided to
question my friend a bit and
find out what he’d forgotten.
‘“Do you know your student
number?” 1 asked.
“932584,” he replied.
“What’s your Tower Cafeteria
number?”
“493,” he answered.
“And your Goodyear Cafeteria
number?”

“375.”
“Apartment number?”

“459B.”
“Social Security Number?”
“327-95-1684.”
“Draft Number?”

“25-12-63-510.”
“ID Card Number?”

“205-324."

“ROTC Squadron and Division
Numbers?”
“573 and 24,”
“Regents Scholarship Number?”

“345763.”

Guest Editorial

—

Thu SPECTRUM, in an uffert to prasant idaas from oth#r camputaa, will from Hmo
tima run Ouatt Editorials from ottiar collosa nawtpapars. This waah Notra Damn's
nawspapar, THE SCHOLASTIC, commants on tha honor systam thara.

/ to

THE BURDEN OF HONOR

(ACP) —Someone is playing a dirty trick on us, says

The Scholastic, Notre Dame, Indiana.
This honor system isn’t the happily-ever-after thing
it looks like—it’s more of a bombshell. The funny part
of this trick is in the way the system forces one to lay his
character right on the table for inspection. This is no way
out of showing everyone what Notre Dame students really
are like, be it good or bad.
Really, the situation is more than a little frightening.
You see, you aren’t supposed to cheat, not even when
you’re flunking a course or when you need good grades.
It even seems that the more idealistic parts of Goldwaterism are being tried via the new honor system: Total initiative for the individual is allowed by the program, possibly with the purpose of emphasizing the virtues of preFall man.
It seems to be pretty much necessary for the success
of the honor system that everyone must follow it, but we
find it a little discomforting to note that the number
voting to accept the load was far from unanimous. But
there is something for everyone, and the untrustihg “realists” are told that, in dase of emergency, they are merely
to “squeal” on their/plagued buddy or on the friendly
football player next (to them.
Yet we have
far and, like other decisions,
this one can’t be reversed. The burden has been accepted
and the only thing to do is to perform the task wholeheartedly. The only obvious alternative is to get out of
Notre Dame.
But the wholehearted acceptance necessary for success will have the administration displaying a patience
they have thus far kept hidden in condemned parts of
the main building, and we will have to see the Notre
Dame student use a courage he does not know he has.
We have to go at this thing with what will probably
be a somewhat panicky zeal. The success of the program
will be difficult to achieve and will require the approach
of a zealot. But the cost of failure will be so great to ND
that the situation should almost automatically produce
some small mental panic.
Any of our other campus programs could fail and we
wouldn’t have as much cause to worry.
This honor system could be destroyed, though, by
only a few clumsy fools, students caught in organized
cheating. And would our critics ever enjoy that! Notre
Dame would never hear the end of the drivel about the
simple failure of the system. It would not be looked at
as the success of a normal, opportunistic human nature
but would be spotlighted and underlined as a typical example of “Notre Dame’s lack of Christian spirit
Not
even at Notre Dame, the Catholic university, does the real
nobility of Catholicism survive.”
So even though it is a dirty trick, the system must
work. And it will require more than the monentary effort
of a Saturday afternoon football game. Our characters
are to be on display for the whole of the time that we are
here. The administration wants to see the results of our
training, what we are really like, and so we will show
them.
Noble parents and gentle CSC’s, the moment of revelation is at hand!
—

“Classroom numbers?”
“A 194, D147, HO 119, C125 and
E204.”

“Well, then, what in Heaven’s
it that you’ve forgotten?”

name is
I asked.

“Oh, nothing really important,
I suppose,” he replied. “Just my
name.”

FOOTBALL TICKETS
Millard Fillmore College students can receive
$3.50 reserved seat tickets for UB Bulls games at
a 50% reserved seat tick$3.50 seats on the 50 yard
line are available for
$1.75. Tickets may he purchased in Room 361 Norton Hall, Monday-Friday
from 6:00-10:00 p.m. preceding each of the remaining Saturday games. This
offer is good only when
tickets are purchased at
Room 361. Tickets at the
gate will Ire offered at
their regular price. MFC
students support the Bulls
and receive tickets to the
game at half price!

CAMPUS PERSONALITY
To say that Andy Feldman is
prominent in UB sports is definitely an understatement. Andy,
a senior majoring in history, was
captain of the tennis team, and
was voted most valuable player.
A nationally ranked squash player, he is classified as a Class A
player and ranks as one of the
top 15 players in the city.
This year, one of Andy’s longrange athletic goals was realized
when he became official coach
of UB’s first Varsity Squash team.
Although he devotes a considerable amount of time and energy to
his coaching position, non-gratis,
Andy feels that his efforts are
worthwhile. He has, since his entrance to the University, been
deeply concerned over the lack
of encouragement for an organized Squash team; the fact that a
student organized group met with
a University of Rochester team
last year was sufficient evidence
to him that enthusiasm for the
sport existed on campus.
Athletics do not occupy all of
Andy’s time. Expecting to graduate in January, he is planning to
attend a Medical or Dental school..
In preparartion for the added expense of professional school, Andy is currently involved in a variety of part-time jobs. Several
times a week he is an instructor
at a local religious school, and is

■

gucinski

PACE PIVI

SPECTRUM

ANDY FELDMAN
also active in youth groups at
the Buffalo Jewish Center. And
when Andy is not bussing tables
in the Norton Union Tiffin room,
he is employed as a part-time
professional pall bearer!
With all of his outside activities, Andy has managed to maintain a B- over all average, and
also holds the position of Secretary in his fraternity, Tau Kappa

Epsilon.
Both Andy's athletic and scholastic accomplishments make him
an outstanding campus personai“y
rv

�Soard

Spectrum
szo
“The Jordan River Project” will
be the subject of this week's
Student Zionist Organization
meeting. The discussion will take
place in Norton, Room 234 at
7:45 p.m. Since last June, Israel
has been using the Jordan Kiver
as a source of precious water.
Embittered Arab nations have
declaimed this “agressive” act of
Israel, since the effects of a successful project in Israel means a
step further to self-sufficiency.
Hear both sides of this heated
see how the Jordan
dispute
project can be both a harbinger
of peace and a shadow of war.
All studehts are cordially invited.
Israeli dancing will be taught afterwards by SZO members.
—

•

•

•

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

The Photography Club will hold

a general meeting today at 4:00

p.m. in Room 220, Norton. Whether you are a long time photography veteran, or are just interested in learning a little about
come on up! It’s
your camera
still not too late to get terrific
price reductions on your photo
needs.
—

*

•

«

TRYOUTS

Tryouts for three one-act plays;
The Coffee Machine, Cafe Diablo,
by Grace Martin; The American
Dream, by Edward Albee; and
The Zoo Story, by Edward Albee,
will be held Monday and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Norton, Room
312.

All interested and aspiring actors are urged to attend.'

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
CLUB

The Occupational Therapy Club
will hold its regular meeting Friday at 2:00 p.m. in Room 333 at
which time Miss Osborne, a new
faculty member, will speak on
matters pertaining to the field of
Occupational Therapy. Also Jim
Mills, our representative to the
Denver Conference for the formation of a National Student Association of the A.O.T.A. will report to the group.
All members and Occupational
Therapy Students

invited.

Friday, Novambar 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

are

cordially

STUDENT PHARMACEUTICAL
ASSOCIATION
Thursday, Mr. Weiss, of the
Stewart Benson Travel Agency,
will speak at the monthly meeting of the Student Branch of the
American Pharmaceutical Association. His speech will include
aspects of planning a trip to Europe, that is, what you will need,
the best way of “packing a suitcase”,
in general, items of
general interest to anyone planning to go to Europe. The meeting will be held in Capen 140 at
8:30 p.m. Everyone is invited to
attend.
—

«

�

�

CIVIL RIGHTS
COMMITTEE

The Civil Rights Committee will
p.m. in
the Conference Theater in Norton. At this time a panel discussion will be held discussing the
“Myths and Realities of the Civil
Rights Movement." The participants will be those students who
were delegates to the recent Northern Student Movement Convention in New York City.
Any students who have not
previously signed up for one of
the research projects of the Civil
Rights Committee may do so at
this time, The projects concern
themselves with housing, education, labor and civil liberties.

meet this Monday at 3;15

International Club
Thursday the International Club
will hold a panel discussion entitled “Guys vs. Dolls Around

the World.” There will be five
panelists from five continents
discussing the role of women in
society. A question and answer
period will follow during which
all may participate. A coffee
hour will also accompany the discussion. The debate will be held
in Room 244 Norton Hall at 7:30

ANGEL FLIGHT

&amp;

LADIES' CLUB

AFROTC Angel Flight and
Cadet Ladies' Club are sponsoring an all-you-can-eat smorgasbord Sunday, November 8 at the
NFCA Clubhouse, Maple Road at
North Forest, Williamsville. The
dinner begins at 3:30 p.m. at a
cost of $2.50 per person or $4.50
per couple. Everyone is welcome.

Greek Notes
The Annual Pan Hellenic Ball
Hellenic
Council will be held tomorrow
evening at the Statler Hilton Ter-

UNIVERSITY

sponsored by the Pan

race Room.

The ball is in honor of the 74
new sorority pledges according
to Monica Bauer, general chairman. The decorations will focus
upon the “Fall Preview” theme,

and Eddie Diem and his orchestra will entertain guests from
9:00 p.m. until 1:00 a.m.
The Intra-Fraternity Council is
happy to announce that this
year's Greek Sing will be recorded. Recordings of the performance will be available for
the normal long playing album
price of $4.00. The council needs
fifty pre-paid orders. All sing
chairmen please deliver orders
with money to the reservations
office by Monday.
Alpha Gamma Delta are looking forward to their cocktail par-

ty before the Pan-Hellenic Ball;
it is to be held in the home of
sister Lynn Douglas.
Chi Omega will hold a cocktail
party Saturday evening before
the Pan-Hellenic Ball at the home
of sister Karen Sanford.

Sigma Kappa Phi will hold a

cocktail party for its sisters 7:009:00 p.m. Saturday, before the
Pan-Hellenic Ball. It will be held
at the home of Sydney Heigaard,
100 Villa.

PLACEMENT SERVICES
831-3311

Schoellkapf Hall

The City of New York Dept, of Personnel City Civil Service
Commission has opportunities for college students with New York
City Government. There ate many opportunities for interesting,
challenging employment. In the fields of personnel administration,
urban renewal, recreation, real estate management,-budget administration, management analysis, and public health, they have
established training programs designed to attract outstanding
college students. Further information is available at the University Placement Services.
-

While House Fellowship
The United States Civil Service
Commission has announced a program for White House Fellows
to give first-hand and high level experience with the workings of
the Federal Government. Fellows will be chosen from business,
law, the universities, and other occupations. Fifteen White House
Fellows will serve for a period of 15 months. One Fellow will
be assigned to the office of the Vice President, one to each cabinet member, and four to members of the White House staff.
The program is being supported by a grant from the Carnegie
Foundation. Fellows must be 23-25 years old, an American Citizen, and a graduate of an accredited four-year college. Women
as well as men are eligible. The deadline for applications is
December 15, 1964. Fellows will be announced in the Spring of
1965 and will begin their training period on or about June 1,
1965. For further information, contact University Placement
—

Services.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

Appointments should be made at least one week in advance of
the interviewing date. Students must complete registration in order
to be eligible for campus interviews. If you have not done so,
register now.

Business Administration, Law

Liberal Arts Interview

&amp;

Roslyn

Sciarrino was elected
President of the Fall 1964 pledge
class. The Secretary is Betty
Mongellow.

November 16

Phi Kappa Psi is looking forward to the social with Theta Chi

November

INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

CENTRAL

BA, MA-Ceog., Hist
PhD Psycholog)'
BA. MA, PhD Eco.

&amp;

Govt.

-

-

AAS See.
HOOKER CHEMICAL CO.
-

tonight.

16

BS with interest in Accounting
GENERAL PRECISION CORP. - LINK DIVISION
BS with interest in Accounting
ERNST fit ERNST. INC. S. N. HALE
BS. MBA with interest in Accounting
Male
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Accounting. Cen. Bus.. Eco., I.R. fir L.B.
BA. BS with interest in
-

November 17

-

Beta Sigma Rho Fraternity is
holding a T.G.I.F. party from
3:00-5:00 p.m. today in the Fillmore Room. The music is by the

November 17

-

November 17

Magnatones. Everyone is invited.

Admission is free.

November

18

November

19

Tomorrow night Theta Chi is
having a cocktail party at the
Park Lane on Delaware Avenue
before the Panhellenic Ball.

-

-

November 17

Theta Chi Sorority is looking
forward to its social tonight with
Phi Kappa Psi which will be held
in the Rathskellar of the Hotel
Markeen.

-

Mktg.. Sales, Retailing
English, Geog., Hist, fit Gov't., Law, Mori. Lang., Psych., Soc.

BA

-

REMINGTON RAND COHP. Jack Hoelclc
BS with interest in Accounting Male
CO. Paul Dowd
TRAVELERS INSURANCE
BA, BS. LLB
Acct'g., Eco.. English, Ceor., Hist.,
Law, Mktg., Lang.. Psych., Soc.
ROCHESTER TELEPHONE CO.
-

-

-

BA. MA English, Eco.
BS. MBA with interest in

L.R.

I. R

fir

-

November

18

Accounting.

-

Mktg., Sales

Gen.

I.R.

&amp;

L.R.

-

-

November 20

Bus..

ALL DIVISIONS
Donald Langham
FORD MOTOR CO.
Male
BS. MBA with interest in Accounting. Finance
MORSE CHAIN CO. .
BS with interest in Gen. Bus.. Mktg.. (Technical Background)-MaIt?
-

-

-

November 20

AMERICAN AIRLINES, INC.

BA. BS with interest in Accounting. Gen. Bus., Eco., I.R.

Mktg.

MBS

with interest

Ccn. Bus.. Mktg.,
STEEL CO.

November 23.

BETHLEHEM
BS with interest in

November 23

CORNING

24

November 24

November

in
-

-

-

&amp;

L.R..

Mule

Accounting

GLASS CO.

BS, MBA with interest

Sales

in

Accounting, Gen. Bui

-

I.R.

&amp;

L. R

ATLANTIC fit PACIFIC TEA CO.
BS with interest in - Accounting, Gen. Bus.
25- THANKSGIVING RECESS
NO RECRUITING
-

Engineering &amp; Science Interviews

November

16

November

16

November

16

NIAGARA MACHINE TOOL CO. Robert
Male
BS ME
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
BS. MS, PhD
EE. Chem. Math. Physics
&amp;

-

-

R. Pullen

—

-

HOOKER CHEMICAL CO.
BS, MS Chem, ChE, ME
GENERAL PRECISION CORP.
Link Division
BS EE. IE. ME. Aero-Space Engn.. Math. Physics
TRAVELERS INSURANCE CO. Paul Dowd
-

November 17

-

-

November 18
November 18

-

ANY

MAJORS

CUTLER HAMMER CORP. H. E. Johnson
Male
BS. MS EE
TEXACO. INC.
Chemistry
BS. MS, PhD
MOORE PRODUCTS CO. OF PHILADELPHIA
BS ChE. EE. IE. ME’. ES Male
ROCHESTER TELEPHONE CO.
Male
BS. MS-EE. IE. ME. Math, Physics
FORD MOROT CO. All Divisions Donald Langham
Male
BS. MS ME. ChE. IE. EE. CE
MORSE CHAIN CO.
Male
BS ME
THE TRANE CO. Richard Lehman
-

-

November

18

November

19

—

-

You’ve seen these giant size Pickett teaching
models in your classrooms. Now choose your
personal slide rule trom our complete selection
ot pocket and standard size models. Lifetime
guaranteed all-metal accuracy.

-

tfl QC

-

November

19

November

19

—

-

-

-

November 20

-

...

..

}JJ. I3

CHOOSE THE RIGHT SLIDE RULE FOR YOUR FUTURE

November 20
November 20

—

—

-

BS. MS

EE. CE, lEt ME

-

—

Male

HOOKER CHEMICAL CORP.
PhD. Chemistn
November 23. BETHLEHEM STEEL CO.
24
BS Chem. ChE. CE. EE, IE. ME. ES. Math, Physics
November 23 CORNING CLASS CO.
Chem . Bio.. ChE. CE. EE, IE. ME. ES. Math.
BS. MS
-

-

-

Ccol.
November 23, E. I. DUPONT DE NEMOURS. INC.
24
BS. MS Chem.. ChE. EE. IE. ME. ES. Physics
November 25- THANKSGIVING RECESS - NO RECRUITING
-

For further information

"ON CAMPUS"

on these interviews, check the bulletin
boards or call

(Jniversitv

Placement Services

Physic

�Friday,

November 6, 1964

PAGE $EVEN

SPECTRUM

SENATE MEETING
ing

—

CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION
The seventh in a series of

twelve discussions of the “Gospel

According to Saint Mark” will be
held Tuesday and Wednesday
(2:00-3:00 p.m.). Attention will be
given to “the two-stage cure of
the blind man—Messiahship and
suffering” (Mark 8:22-9:29). The
Tuesday session will be held in

220 Norton and the Wednesday session in Room 266, Both
discussion groups are under the
guidance of Chaplain R. Sherman Beattie. ALL students, faculty members and other persons in
the university community are invited to attend either of the duRoom

plicate

sessions.

GAMMA DELTA
The next meeting of Gamma
Delta will be Wed., and it is an
important meeting for several
reasons. A nominating committee
will present a slate of candidates
for the election of this year’s
officers. The election will be held
at the following meeting.
We must know by this meeting
how many are definitely going
to the retreat November 14 and
•US. All who tentatively signed
up for it at the last meeting and
all others interested should let
Kaia Joks (TR 5-6460) know definitely by the meeting. The meeting will be held as usual in Room
344 of Norton at 6:30 p.m. with a
supper hour at 5:30 p.m.

HILUEL
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Founda-

(Cont’d from P, 1)
them to the Council of Religious
Organizations for recognition. Jeremy Taylor, an executive of the
Liberal Religious Fellowship, sugMethodist Church, Bailey and gested
that although the Club did
Minnesota.
not represent a religious belief,
In way of preview, the Wesley it did fall under the auspices of
Foundation will sponsor a Rethe C.R.O. because the Athiests
legious Arts Festival the week of are concerned with “religious or
rather anti-religious dogma.”
November 15-22. Included in the
The “Thanksgiving Fast For
activities will be an art display, Freedom,” a program sponsored
an expressional program, and the by NSA, received the unanimous
Bishop’s Company’s presentation support and endorsement of the
of “Saint Joan” by G. B. Shaw. Senate. The “Fast For Freedom”
place November 19 and
Our scouts are on the lookout for will take
will entail students giving up one
talented people to present their meal, the cost of which will be
modes of religious expression. In- sent to buy food for indigent
terested? Call Teddar Brooks: Negroes in the deep South. Petitions to the food service, explain837-6182.
—

sponsor a Lox and Bagel Brunch
Sunday at 11:30 a.m. in the Hillel
House. A discussion on: “The

Election Results, Their Meaning
and Implications,” is planned.
Fred Ostroy is chairman of the
group. Reservations for the
Brunch may be made by calling
the Hillel House.
The group is also planning a
Coffee Hour and informal get
together every Tuesday evening

from 8:00 until 10:00 p.m. in the
Hillel House.

HILLEL FELLOWSHIP
An invitation has been extended to faculty members and their
wives to attend the meeting Sunday at 8:00 p.m. in the Hillel
House, The meeting is designed
to provide an opportunity tor renewing old friendships and for
getting acquainted with new faculty members. Professor Joseph
Bolinsky will make a brief presenttion on: “Highlights Of A
Two Year European Sojourn.”

the “Fast” are now being
prepared by NSA. Last year
NSA’s program sent 80,000 pounds
of food to over 60 poor Negro
families. Over 100 other colleges
will participate.
Budgets passed by the Senate
included $162 for the Accounting
Club, $410 for the American Society of Civil Engineers, $258 for
the Mechanical Engineering Society and $910 for the Pharmacy
School Student Council.

An amendment to the constitution was proposed by Trudy
Stern. The amendment would
change the existing means of calling a referendum of the student
body. Presently, a general referendum may be called only at the
time of a general election.

NEWMAN

There will be a Communion
Breakfast this Sunday. Mass will
be said at 10:30 a.m. at the Cantabrian Center followed by breakfast in Norton.
Dr. Plesur, professor of History
and Dean of University College,
will speak at the weekly meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, in the
Fillmore Room. He will speak on
“Pressure Points of the World.”
All are welcome.

Graduation was only the beginning
of Jim Brown’s education

�Lectures Presented by Engineering School

The Kibitzer

-

-

By SCOTT KURMAN

Our batting average is improving; only one gross error in last

week’s article: the tournament,
master-point type, is Tuesday, the
tenth, not Wednesday, the 11th,
Response on my various and
sundry problems has been minimal; aside from the regular
bridge-bums, there has been only
one correct solution to any of the
problems received. Evidently you
people do not believe my claims
of great and glorious prizes. They
are true; we are bickering as to
cash vs a trophy or a combination
thereof, but there will be some
sort of award.
In the hand of two weeks ago,
displayed below the killing solution is to lead a diamond, ruff
it, lead the club lady off the
board, and if East ducks, overtake, ruff another diamond, play
the remaining trumps pitching
clubs and lead the Spade K.
Whether West wins or ducks, you
make a Spade tirck. If East hops
on the first club lead, you win
the red return on the board, pull
the ruffers, pitching spades, and
hook the club 8 spot for the rest.
If East exits with a club, you cash
two clubs, pitching a spade from

the board, which becomes rather
potent, being all good trumps.
NORTH
S: K
H; K
C:
WEST

Q J7

Q 3
EAST

S: A J 5 4

H: 9 8
D: A Q
C: A 9 7

D: 7 5

C: J

SOUTH

king. True, it is a trick, but it
cannot possible help the cause,
for cashing it at any time forces
the board to ruff, or pitch a club,
on the diamond ace, therefore
reducing it to the importance of
the deece. Now, back to growing
a progressive squeeze position.

Lead the spare queen; if West
ducks, you pitch a club, cash
th diamond king, play a heart to
the jack, cash the diamond ace,
and claim the good board. Thus
he covers, you ruff, and lead the
diamond to the ace. At this point,
East has the high spade and
club control. We are almost in
readiness. Give him a diamond
and the world is ours. So we lead
the diamond jack; if West ducks,
we pitch a club, ruff a diamond,
and lead a heart, squeezing East,
Therefore he rises to the occasion ,and dummy ruffs. Now
you lead a trump off board, giving East ulcers. A club pitch
allows you to take the last four
tricks with the good clubs on
board, and if he pitches a high
spade or diamond, you cash the
card he set up, squeezing him
in clubs and the other suit.
The paltry response to problems, induces me to wonder
whether it is worthwhile to continue double-dummy problems.
Please send views. There is even
an elevator in the union, so somehow you can find time to trump
up and deposit, comments, criticisms, solutions, witicisms, or anything else you please in my box.
We have a panel of experts . . .
therefore he have bidding problems, with varying numbers of
points awarded to various bids,
depending on reasonability of bid.
(*) I know it’s
not a word, but it
says what I want.

Okay, bid it. You’re vul, North,
in fourth seat, after:
East
West
South
North

S: Q 3

IS

P

D: K J
C: K 8 2

IS

P

IS

P

To last week’s hand, below,
there were no correct solutions

with:

?

H: 7 5 3

East

D: K
C; K Q 4 3

2H

EAST
S: J 9
'

D: 9 5 4
C: J 7 5

South

West

North

3D

3S

(all

suit take-

2S

Weak, """"Fishbein

out)

with:
vul
East—S:
South—H:
West—D:
North—C:

The State University of Buffalo will present a lecture series
November 7 through December
12 designed to assist Western
New York high school juniors
and seniors in choosing a career
in engineering.
Sponsored by the School of
Engineering’s Division of Interdisciplinary Studies and Research,

the six lectures will be delivered
by the School’s faculty members
on Saturdays from 9 a m. to 11
a.m. in Room 104, Parker Engineering Building.

4

Gooney-bird’

Plane Retire^
The “Gooney-bird” has been
retired. She was the mainstay of
transportation for AFROTC cadets making visits to various Air
Force bases last year. The AF
C-54 (DC-4 equivalent) has taken
her place. The larger bird (C-54)
had her maiden flight October
22, taking 24 cadets to Langley
Air Force Base. The thrill of
flying is always with us, but the
feel of the control and the actual
flying of the airplane adds to

this thrill.
The group arrived at 1:30 and
had lunch at one of the large
Air Force Officers’ Chibs and
spent the remainder of the day
sight-seeing at the base. The cadets also had an opportunity to
see movies, participate at Club
activities and a dance in the
sports room with billiards or

H: J
D: A J 8 2
C: 9
Problem: to take lots and lots

of tricks, namely all of them. Off
the top you have three hearts,
two clubs,
the ace of diamonds
Therefore you have to invent two
tricks. You can grow one by ruf
fing a club in your hand, except
that sets up West’s 8. Therefore,
a progressive squeeze is called
for, that is, a squeeze to create
a squeeze. Therefore one person
must have control in three suits.
By now some of you are holler
ing, hey, you forgot the diamond
&amp;

Friday, the 23rd, the cadets
had a See-and-Hear Presentation
on Tactical Air Command, the
owners of our nation’s composite
air strike force. They also were
able to view the psychological
training center, operations com-

mand posts, and the base aircraft operation center. The adjoining Bomarc Base was visited
and cadets saw first-hand the
size of the delivery vehicle and
warheads the Bomarc packs.

against not

was strictly business,
for the cadets were able to visit
Williamsburg and Yorktown battlefields and see much of what
is part of our national heritage.
They saw the oldest university,
William and Mary.

On the return trip to Buffalo
the novice pilots tried their
hands at flying again.

K J 10 9 7 5 2
J 9 3
A 6 2
or, finally, vul against not again

with:
East—S: 10 7
South—H: A Q 6 3
West—D: A Q
North—C: A J 10 6 5
where the bidding has gone:
South

1C

2H

West

ID
P

North
IS

3C

The lecture dates, topics and
lecturers from the Division of
Interdisciplinary Studies and Research are:

November 7, “Power Systems
of the Future,” Dr. David Shaw,

assistant professor; November 14,
“Biology and Engineering,” Dr.
Cora G. Saltarelli, assistant professor; November 21, “The Sonic
Boom,” Dr. Dale B. Taulbee, assistant professor; November 28,
“The Sciences in Engineering,”
Dr. Irving H. Shames, professor
and head of the Division; December 5, “Exploration of Outer
Space,” Dr. Tsu Teh Soong, assistant professor; December 12,
“Engineering
Preparing for
the Challenge of the Future,” Dr.
Herbert Reismann, professor of
—

engineering.

Take Your Car to

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—

SOUTH
S: Q 4

The program will also include

a tour of the Western New York
Nuclear Reactor, an experiment
in bio-engineering, and various
other demonstrations. Engineering students at the University
will be available after each session for further discussion of
the topics.

NOW ON SALE
AT

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South—H: 9 4 2
West—D: Q
North—C: A K Q J 10 9 4

NORTH

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D: Q 7 6 3
C: 6

2D

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East—S;

sent in.

WEST
S: K 3

Friday, November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

SUPPORT N.S.A.
East
P
P

Number your solutions problems
1-5, respectively.

FREEDOM

Student Campus Puts of
Personal Items

Female Pat Value over M700
Male Pat Value over M2 00
You Pay Only *2 S0

FAST
November 19

Claiming, alternately ruffing
clubs on the board and spades in
my hand, said Chris crossly.

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

�Friday,

November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

Baird Plans Cited Cadets Honor
programs at Baird Hall,

(All

—

retirement from the Air Force.
Colonel Parsons entered the Army Air Corps in 1942 and after

—

the Baird Hall box office.

The Ars

—

By BILL CORTES

A parade and review was held
by the 1900 Air Force ROTC Cadets October 29 to honor Lt.
Colpnel Edward B. Parsons on his

Tonight
Final concert of the
Budapest Quartet for the semester
works of Haydn, Barber,
and Dvorak. Tickets available at
Sunday

Three For Two' Showcase Praised

Col. Parsons

8;30 p.m.)

completing

aviation

training was

commissioned a second lieutenant (AAF) as a pilot. Stationed in
England in 1943, he was shot
down over the European continent flying the P-38 (Black Widow). The Colonel spent a number of months as a guest of the
Third Reich and was liberated at
the end of the war.

Antiqua en-

semble of Rochester presents
“The Games of Siena” (see article). Admission free.
Thursday, Dr. Andries Roodenburg, violinist, and Lois Phelps
Lines, pianist, will give a recital
featuring the works of Max Re-

ger, Leon Kirchner, Mozart, and
Maurice Ravel. Dr. Roodenburg
is a prominent Rochester performer, and is a physician by profession. (Admission free.)

Wednesday through Saturday.
The first play, The Tiger, by
Muray Schisgal, which had a successful run in New York City
prior to its performance here, is
the story of the abduction of a
suburbanite housewife by a frustrated non-conformist known as
Ben. John Cimasi portrayed Ben
with a frightening reality. Jeannetter Veling, as the suburbanite, in spite of the comic aspect
of her attire, retained a dignity
that gave her performance a pol-

Ars Antiqua Ensemble
Will Perform at Baird

Friday, November 13: The first
recital of the semester to feature
some of the Creative Associates
of the music department, performers and composer's who are
here on a Rockefeller grant. This
first program will feaure Carol
Plantamura, soprano; Sherman
Friedland, clarinetist; and George
Crumb, pianist. (Admission free).

Other coming events include a
choral concert November 14, and
the second Slee Lecture, to be
given by Alexei Haieff, November
16 (at Capen).
He has been a pilot, Squadron
Commander, and Fighter Pilot.
Major duty assignments took him
from the United States to England, Japan and Okinawa. During
the past years, his decorations
include the Air Medal W/3C,
WW II Victory Medal, National
Defense Service Medal and Korean Service Medal. In 1947 he
attended the Air Force Airborne
Electronics School, and in 1962
the Academic Instructors Course,
Maxwell AFB, Alabama. He graduated with a BA in General Studies at the University of Maryland
in 1961 and did graduate work
for 2 terms (1961-62) at the University of London. He will be associated with the History Department at UB as a fellow.
,

snobbish, witty, and utterly delightful. J. Robert Kirseh, as the
insane little violinist, gave one
of the zaniest performances seen
on the Baird stage in a long time.
Gary Battaglia, as the stage manager, drew an admirable volume
of laughter for the size of his

He now resides with his wife,
Eleanor Parsons and their three
children, Sharon, David and Alice
at 6 Cindy Drive, Williamsville,
New York.

Royal Arms

part.

885-6262

19 W. Utico

The Teacher and His Victim by
Conrad Bromberg tells of an aggressive man who tries to teach
a brutal lesson to a willing victim. Ronda Lyon, as Elbe, displayed great insight into the character. Peter Levitt, as Bob, was
both bewildering and exciting.
David Goldfarb, as the secondary
young man in the play, gave a
first-rate performance, ,

LAST 3 NITES
Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
MAYNARD FERGUSON
]| Concert
Concert——*
Special

Sat.

Aft . 4:30-7:30

The occasion marked the first
latter two

Open Mon.

presentation of the
plays.

«

I9GI

Simplex Motor Scooter,

The Ars Antiqua ensemble of
Rochester will give a special performance entitled “The Games of
Siena” Sunday evening at 8:30
p.m. at Baird Hall, admission
free.
The ensemble is one dedicated
to the performance of Renaissance and Baroque music. The
program to be given here has
been described as “A ‘Veglia’ or
of
Evening's Entertainment
intellectual contests and games of
wit, debates on love, caprices
set to muand merrymaking
sic. The dramatized production
will combine the games With such
singing and playing of instruments such as the intellectuals
of the ‘Academia degli Intronati’
of Siena shared in each other's
homes ca. 1600.”
The program has been divided
into five sections: (1) Secrets and
Riddles, (2) Games of Imitations,
(3) Games of Love, (4) Humours
and masks, (5) Games of Cards
and Feasts.
The vocal concert will feature
the following performers: Masako Toribara, Martha Rock, sopranos; Joyce Castle, mezzo soprano; Gordon Gibson, tenor; and
John Ingram, baritone.
Instrumentalists will be Alvin
Fulton and Robert Eliscu, recorders; Phyllis Rick, lute; Bruce
Smith, tenor viol; Dorothy Amarandos. viola da gamba; and Madeline Ingram, harpsichord.

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The program will be given November 21, 22 j and 23 at Baird
Hall; tickets will be available at
the box office.

The Spider, a hilarious farce by
Ruth Swayze, concerns a violinist
who falls in love with his recital
partner’s cello. Corinne Jaffe, as
the lady cellist, was devilishly

By VICKI BUGELSKI

...

—

The performers in the Mozart
will be Taeko Fujii, Lawrence
Bearce, and Robert Jantz. They
will also perform in the Hindewith, with Barbara Damashek,
Virginia Schmidt, Stuart Wylie,
and Douglas Brown. Miss Damashek will perform in Weisgall
work also, with Carol Plantamura,
one of the Creative Associates.

Last week, this drama critic
was treated to a most refreshing
student showcase of three one-act
plays. Under the program title of
Three for Two, a triple bill was
presented by the Student Dramatic Society at Baird Hall. This
showcase production ran from

ished effect.

The opera for the fall semester
will be a program of three short
operas, conducted by Vittorio Giarranana, staged by Henry Wicke,
Jr., and designed by Boris Baronovic. The program is entitled “A
Lyrical Triptych
Love, Jealousy, and Egotism”, and will consist of Mozart’s Bastien and Bastienne, Hin und Zuruck (There
and Back) of Paul Hindemith, and
The Stronger of Hugo Weisgall.

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�Friday, November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

PROFESSION AI
bound. Oscar then takes the ball

EAST
By STEVE OBERSTEIN

There should be a lot of surprises in the Eastern Division of

the National Basketball Association this year. The Boston Celtics,
perennial champions, and the
New York Yankees of basketball,
will lose their regular season title
to the Cincinnati Royals, but they
will come on in the play offs to
defeat the Royals and then the
Western Division representative
to again win the league’s over all
title. This is an unusual year for
the N.B.A. because most of the
number one draft choices of the
clubs played on the Olympic
team and have just recently gotten back from Tokyo. Thus, they
will have to get to know their
new teammates during the regular season, and this will take
time. Look for these rookies to
be more of a factor in the postseason playoffs than during the
regular season.

The New York Knickerbockers
will come on strongly in the second half of the eighty game
season to take third place from
the Philadelphia 76ers, but they
will be easily conquered by the
Celtics in the first round of the
play-offs in March. Let’s take a
closer look at the teams.
Cincinnati Royals; The Big 0,
Oscar Robertson, the Royals’ doall leader will again show the
way for them, although this year
he should get more help from second-year man Jerry Lucas if he
can stay away from the back and
knee injuries that bothered him
last year. Lucas will be better
adjusted to the league this season, after sitting out a year after
college. This should make him
more offensive-minded, and the
addition of 6-8 George Wilson of
the University of Cincinnati will
lake a lot of the rebound pressure off Lucas, number three in
the league in rebounding last
year, and powerful Wayne Embry,
the Royals’ center.
Cincinnati employs the f a s t
break extensively, which has
made them the highest scoring
team in the league. Forward Jack
Twyman breaks downcourt when
the opposing team shoots, leaving
the other two big men and Robertson responsible for the re-

downcourt, looking for Twyman
breaking for the basket. You can
generally beat the Royals if you
can stop their fast break, but with
the Big 0 leading it, that is easier
said than done.
Cincinnati also looks for support from N.Y.U.’s Happy Hairston up front, although it has
additional d e pt h in handyman
Tom Hawkins and Bud Olsen.
Adrian Smith and Arlen Bockhorn alternate as Robertson’s run-

ning mate at guard, and they
complement the high-scoring
Oscar perfectly with steady play.
Second year men Tom Thacker
and Jay Arnette are backcourt
reserves who can be counted on
in a pinch,
Cincinnati’s rookies of last year
should be able to shoulder more
of the load, and the Royals’ greater depth will stand them in good
stead over the long regular season.
Boston Celtics; In the past three
years, Bill Sharman, Bob Cousy,
Jim Loscutoff, Clyde Lovellette,
John McCarthy, and Frank Ramsey have retired. Going into the
1964-65 season, the Celtics sjicfw
a roster of only seven pi/oven
players, and this lack of depth
will be felt later in the season,
although over a short seven-game
play-off scries, the Celtics still

are the best around.

With retirement of Cousy, the
Celtics have changed from a fast
breaking offensive-minded team
into the s e c o n d-best defensive
team in the league behind San
Francisco. It is no coincidence
that these two teams made the
finals of the play-offs last year.
The emphasis in the league has
shifted from high scoring to defense, and the reason the Warriors and the Celtics won their
divisions was because they anticipated this change. For years Boston has drafted last because of
their tremendous record, but they
have always come up with at least
one good rookie a year whose
forte is defense. John Havlicck
and "Saleh" Sanders both made
the Celts on their defensive talents as did K.C. Jones,
has
stayed in the league for years
now on his defensive ability.
When they have drafted an offensive-minded ballplayer, such
as Tom Hcinsohn, they have been
able to make him realize that he's
just a member of a team, and
that to win he cannot be the
only star. This is what Coach Bed

Auerbach will have to do with
rookies Ron Bonham, who has
yet to learn the meaning of defense, seven-foot Mel Counts, and
6-10 John Thompson if the Celtics
are to compete on an equal level
with Cincinnati this year. Counts
will only be needed if Bill Russell gets hurt, in which case the
Celtics might as well pack up
and forfeit the rest of their
games. Sam Jones and Willie
Naulls provide the rest of the
Celtics’ veteran depth who will
need a lot of rest between games
to get through the season,
Philadelphia 76'ers and New
York
Knickerbockers; These
teams can be grouped in the
same category—they both have
fine backcourts, but they both
need help up front to compete
against the league’s superstars.
The Knicks are hoping that 6-10
rookie Willis Reed can make it
as center. They are also counting
on first draft choice Jim Barnes
at forward. Don’t bet on it,
though, because the good teams
don’t depend on rookies, and thus
do not have to pay for first year
mistakes in early season losses.
The Knieks also have two good
backcourt rookies in Howie Komives and Emett Bryant. Komives might be the consistent
outside shooter they have been
looking for since he was the
leading scorer in the nation last
year. Bryant, a real speedster,
had a reputation for being injury
prone during his collegiate career at DcPaul, and it is not
known now whether he can physically take the rough play of the
N B A. John Egan, obtained from
the Detroit Pistons last year, sophomore Art Heyman, and Tom Gola
are New York’s other experienced
backcourt operators,
Barnes, Lcn Chapell, and Bob
Boozer, last year’s leading scorers, and John Green give the
Knicks fine depth at the forward
position. New York should surprise in the second half of the
season, when their rookies and
other key players obtained in
trades last year begin to work

big men Lucious Jackson and Ira
Harge, If they come through,
Philadelphia will have a chance
—if not—they will again be the
worst defensive team in the
league. Predicted regular season
finish: 1) Cincinnati; 2) Boston;
3) New York; 4) Philadelphia.
(Cont’d from P. 14)

portunity to run the club midway
in the fourth quarter. He ran
well, but was somewhat disappointing in other categories
Hopkins, who last year went un-

noticed with All-East halfback
Mike Brown receiving all the
raves, will probably set a Delaware season rushing record. He

gained 85 yards in 15 carries
Saturday, but half bf that came

in the final seconds of the first
half when the Bulls employed a
Tailback
prevent defense
Bob Edward appears to have his
work cut out for him in trying
to regain his starting job at tailback. Capuana and Webber appear to have the inside track
after last week’s performances
..

The air lanes should be
saturated with passes tomorrow.
Richmond’s Ron S m i t h-to-John
Hilton combination is one of the
best in the country.

Randy’s

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BUFFALO FOLK CENTER
to serve your entertoinment needs

rAmherst Central

300 Kenmore Ave.,
Buffalo, N.Y.

Phone: 836-8961

PTa"|

High School

30th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION presents

I

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SAM LEYENSON

|

Wednesday, Nov. 18 8 p.m.

Amherst Central Junior High School

|

—

Kings Highway, Snyder

Tickets $2.00
Now on Sale

-

Norton

|

Hall, Ticket Booth

KLEIN HANS
Downtown Buffalo

£&gt;part £hap

as a team.
Philadelphia had more injuries
last year than most football
teams. Lee Shaffer. Larry Costello, and Dave Gambee were each
out for niore than one half of
the season. Solid players such
as Hal Greer, John Kerr, and
Chet Walker need help—especially Kerr on the boards. This was
the reason that the 76’ers drafted

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�Friday,

November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGI ELEVEN

BASKETBALL

WEST
By MICHAEL CASTRO

Way out west they have a name
for Reign and Wind and Fire.
Reign is Wilt. Chamberlain and
his Warriors should Reign for the
next few years, as western division champions.
Wind is Petit, Hagen, and
Guerin. The veteran trio of the
St. Louis Hawks must have Wind
enough for one more good year
if the Hawks are to be serious
contenders.
Fir* is Bullets. The trade which
brought All Stars Howell and
Ohl, as well as Ferry, Wally Jones
and Les Hunter to Baltimore, may
light a Fir* under the Bullets
which could carry them to the
divisional title.
This year’s race could be one
of the closest ever in the West.
Four clubs, the Warriors, Hawks,
Bullets, and Lakers have a good
shot at the title. The league as a
whole seems vastly improved.
Even the lowly Detroit Pistons,
winners of but 23 games last season, will be better this year.
Detroit’s management has been
crucified for the big trade which
sent Bailey Howell, Don Ohl, Bob
Ferry, and rookies Les Hunter
and Wally Jones to Baltimore in
return for Terry Dischuger, Rod
Thorn, and Dan Kojis. The trade
should help both clubs. The Pistons have decided that their future success lies in youth and
speed. The trade was made with
this in mind. Dischuger, Thom,
and Kojis are all young players
who have not yet hit their prime.
Thom is a smooth backcourt man
who displayed All Star potential
last year, his rookie season. Dischuger, a two year man, scored
20.8 points per game last season
and should improve on that production at Detroit, where the
club’s attack will revolve around
him. Rookie Joe Caldwell, 6-5, has
blinding speed and should add
scoring punch to the backcourt.
Detroit’s strength is up front
where Dischuger is teamed with
6-9 Ray Scott, the team’s leading
rebounder. The backcourt, with
Thom and Caldwell likely starters, has great potential, but lack
experience. Center is manned by
7 foot Regge Harding, two years
out of high school, who appears
to be a future star, but is a year
or two away. The bench of Kojis,
64, Hub Reed, Donnis Bucther,
Willie Jones, Eddie Miles, and
Dave DeBusschere to very weak.
Detroit will show flashes of brilliance but a lack of depth plus
the inexeprience of starters Caldwell, Harding and Thom will

keep them on the bottom.
Fourth place I have designated
to the Los Angeles Lakers. The
Lakers still have the unstoppable
1-2 punch of Elgin Baylor and
Jerry West. Baylor appears to

have recovered somewhat from
the knee trouble which plagued
him last season, holding down his
point production to a “meager”
25.4 per game, but he still can be
counted on to bear his rebounding load of previous years. Dick
Barnett and Rudy LaRusson provide additional scoring and rebounding punch respectively, but
the Lakers failed to plug the hole
at center, which has been their
Achilles Heel for yours. Leroy
Ellis, Gene Wiley, and Jim Krebs,
who have proved inadequate in
the past are back again, along
with 6-10 Darral Imhoff, who has
the dubious distinction of being
discarded by the Knicks and
Pistons. None of this foursome
is the answer to the Laker’s woes.
Rookie Walt Hazzard should
prove useful as a backcourt playmaker, but here too, the Lakers
were weakened by the retirement
of Frank Selvy. Lack of rebounding, poor reserve strength, and
the vacuum at center should keep
the Lakers from the title, despite Baylor and West.
The big trade with Detroit appears to have made a contender
out of the Baltimore Bullets.
Walt Bellany, the leagues fourth
best scorer (27.0) and rebounder,
will get plenty of help from
Bailey Howell 21.6 points per
game, and a rugged rebounder.
Gus Johnson, last year’s prize
rookie is also a fine scorer (17.3)
and rebounder. Ohl score 17.3
points a game for Detroit and will
team with veteran Si Green to
form a solid backcourt. With
three established All Stars, Bellamy, Howell, and Ohl in the
starting lineup, along with Johnson, a coming star, the Bullets
will be tough for everyone. The
bench is the only question mark,
and if rookies Wally Jones and
Gary Bradds make it big, the Bullets could go all the way.
The Hawks surprised a lot of
people by finishing second last
year, and it appears that they
have strengthened themselves sufficiently to remain there. The big
question here is, if veterans Bob
Petit, Richie Guerin, and Cliff

Hagen, all in their thirties, have
one more good year left. Petit,

6-9, had another great year last
year scoring 27.4 points per game
and was fifth in rebounding. He
has been an All Star ten straight
years. Hagen and Guerin are still
effective, particularly” in the
clutch, and in Lenny Wilkins the
Hawks posses a fine backcourt
man. Zelno Beaty, the 6-9 center
was beset by injuries last year,
but his outstanding play in the

playoffs encouraged Coach Harry
Gallatin to expect a big year from
him. The bench, always the key
to success in the rugged pro game
was strong last year with 6-8 Bill
Bridges, 6-7 Mike Farmer and
6-3 Charley Vaughn and should
be stronger this year. Rookies
Paul Silas of Creighton, the nation’s leading rebounder all three
years of his college career, and
Jeff Mullins, a brilliant shooter
who led Duke to the finals of the
NCAA tournament, should add
strength to both the front and
back courts. The Hawks appear
strong, but should Father Time
creep up on their veteran nucleus, they will collapse spectacularly.
The pick to repeat this year
is the San Francisco Warriors.
Wilt Chamberlain, at the sacrifice
of a few points on his scoring
average became the complete ball
player last season. He still managed to lead the league in scoring, and rebounding, while finishing fifth in assists and playing
spectacular defense. The Warriors
as a team led the league in defense, giving up fewest points
per game. They have overpowering height and weight in Chamberlain, Wayne Hightower 6-9,
and 6-11 Nate Thurmond. Thurmond, who could be an outstanding center on most teams, proved
effective as a corner man last
year. In addition, the Warriors
have Tom Meschery an excellent
corner man, and Guy Rodgers,
second only to Oscar Robertson
as a playmaker. The speedy A1
Attles heads a bench which appears to be strengthened considerably by rookies. The Warriors
main weakness over the last few
years has been lack of a good
outside shooter, They appear to
have solved that problem with
this year’s rookie crop. Barry Kramer of NYU was their main hope

but he has been disappointing in
pre-season drills. Kramer has not
returned to the form of two year
ago when he was a unanimous AllAmerica, though the ability is
still there. The big surprises
have come from Bud Koper of
Oklahoma City and McKoy MacLemore of Drake. Koper is a 6-6
backcourt man with a devestating
outside shot. He could be the
“sleeper" of this year’s rookie
crop. MacLemore is an outstanding rebounder with a surprisingly
good shooting touch, who shocked
a lot of people by even making
the team. Their added height
make the Warriors appear even
more awesome. Only if Chamberlain is seriously affected by the
strange kidney ailment which has
sidelined him so far, or if the
Warriors return to their disorganized, selfish brand of ball displayed prior to the arrival of
Coach Alex Hannum, only then
will they fail to repeat.

Grid Picks (College)
(Cont’d from P.

13)

the last 29 seconds knocked Oregon from the unbeatens. They'll
be looking to make the Troians
(4-3) their second straight victims.
But USC will not be very obliging. Their one point loss to Washington last week forces them to
tighten up their belts and makes
it imperative that they sweep the
remainder of their games.

ARMY 20, SYRACUSE 19
The Orangaman (5-2) need this
one to sew up the Lambert Cup,
but their trophy case will have
to remain bare for at least another year. The Cadats (3-4) have
played mediocre ball so far, but
are bound to bust out. They are
always inspired when they play
in their “home away from home,”
Yankee Stadium. This will be
Dietzel's week to howl, after his
Black Knights make Syracuse another of those highly-successful
UPSETS OF THE WEEK.

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INTRAMURALS

G.D.I. Wins Track
By

M#TY

Friday, Novambar 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

blanked Phi Ep 16-0, Beta Sig
whipped T.K.E. 32-6, and Alpha
Phi Omega overcame Pi Lamda
Tau 16-8.
The games to determine the
champions of the Leagues were
played this past week, Thursday.
AEPi and Alpha Sig who were
previously tied for first place
fought it out for their league
title while 6h Tuesday Beta Sig
defeated SAM 12-8, in their chami
pionship game.
The standings in the Fraternity
Leagues are as follows
Tuesday League—
W L T

JAFFE

The UB itW'amurals program
was spotlights this week by the
long awaited Boss Country Track
meet. The ■cet was held last
Friday, Octcroer 30 ,at Grover
Cleveland Gold Course.
The meet was won by a team of
independents, the G.D.I.’s, whose
members placed first, second,
third, and fourth. They beat
about one hundred and fifty fraternity and independent runners.
Sigma Ep placed second and
T.K.E. came in third.
In the football leagues the
teams are winding up the season.
In the Thursday league AEPi
trounced Theta Chi 32-0, Alpha
Kappa Psi blanked Gamma Phi
12-0, and Alpha Sig shutout Sig
Ep 20-0.
In the Tuesday League SAM

5 1
5 0

.
SAM
Beta Sig

Thursday League—

1
1

W L T

5 0 0
Alpha Sig
5 0 0
The standings in the Independent Leagues are as follows:

AEPi

SPORTS CIRCLE (eont'd from P. 16)
resulting from football injuries up to mid-seasbn. At the

same time last year there were 10. It seems time for
some serious investigation of this problem plaguing a
pastime.
sport that will eventually become
w L T
The Baltimore Bullets were sold for a little over a
Monday League—
Zygutes
.5 0 1 million dollars to three Washington business men, in5 0 1 cluding Earl Foreman (49% owner of the N.F.L. PhilC-Men
Losers .1
4 2 0 adelphia Eagles). The sale is subject to the approval of
W L T the N.B.A. Board of Governors. However, it should go
Wednesday League—
6 0 0 through without any trouble.
Williams House
4 1 0
Scott House
The American Football League Club Owners voted
James House #1
3 2 0 Monday to increase player rosters next season from 34
Friday League—
W L T to 36 and permit each team to carry two more players
Fantastics
5 0 0 on injury reserve list. It’s about time the AFL followed
Winners
4 10 the example set by the National Football League, for in
3 1 0 a sport as injury-prone as pro football, a team needs
Stefans
every man it can get.
N.S.A.
To end this week’s column we would like to quote
a few words from the post-mortem of Chuck Mills, U.S.
Merchant Marine Academy coach, after his team lost
FREEDOM
to Bucknell 37-0—“Fortunately, we were up for this
Moral?—
game or else we would have been killed.”
FAST
Even though things are bad, they can get much worse.
(For the pessimists). Or, even though things are bad,
November 19
there is still a lighter side to them (for the optimists).
.

.

SUPPORT

.

.

.

.

...

Football Statistics
Nat Avg. par

97

Yds.
269

Carry
2.7
3.9

37

221
182
156

4.4
4.9

AH.

RUSHING
Don Gilbert
Den. Przykuta
Dick Condino
Nick Capuana
Bob Edward
Jim Webber
Willie Shine
....

261

66
50
36

5.2
2.3

46

Totals

340

PASSING
Don Gilbert
Jim Robie
Bob Edward
Ron Ridolfi
Totals

Att.
86

1251

3.6

Comp.

Int.
9
9
0
0
11

45

7

2
10
1
0
95
47

SCORING
Don Gilbert
Dick Condino
Bob Edward
Joe Oscsodal

4.3

79

15
20

No.
RECEIVING
13
Gerry Pawloski
Bob Edward
5
Dave Nichols
5
Craig Helcnbrook 5
4
Dick Condino
Willie Shine
4
Jim Dunn
3
LaFountain
3
Gerry
Nick Capuana
3
Tom Oatmeyer
1
Dennis Burden
1

Yds.

TD
1

75

2

97

75
64
49

1

48

1

27

1

681

6

47

47

Totals

177

INTERCEPTIONS &amp;
RETURNS No. Yds.
Dan Sella
3
7
8
10
D. Condino 2
OOF. Geringer 1
64
0
0
Jim Duprey 1
60
6
1
681
G. LaFount’n 1

Yds.
671

TO
6
0

“what can
my job be
at IBM?”

Points
...

....

_

5 TD’s rush, 1 PATE
4 TD’s rush, 1 TD rec.
2 TD’s rush, 1 PATE
1 FG, 10 PATK

32
30

14
13

2 TD’s rush
2 TD’s rec
1 TD rec., 1 PAT rec.

Dennis Przykuta

Dave Nichols
Tom Oatmeyer
1 TD rec., 1 PAT rec
Jim Dunn
Nick Capuana
1 TD rush
Gerry Pawloski
1 TD rec.
Safety (Massachusetts downed ball intentionally in end
Total

12
-v 12
8
8
6
6

...

(7 games)

BUFFALO TEAM
First downs
Eushes, net yds., avg.

87

340 for 1,251 (3.6)
47/95 (681 yds.)
49,3
8 for 140 yards
21 for 194 yards

Pet. completions
Interceptions

Penalties
Fumbles

22 (lost

143

OPPONENTS

115

Passing

2

zone)

301 for 1,031 (3.4)
56/117 (956 yds.)

47.8
11 for 135 yds.
40 for 297 yds.

19

9)

(lost 13)

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In IBM Data Processing, your job can be full of variety.

Especially when you consider all the ways computers are
used.
As an IBM Data Processing Systems Engineer, you would
be helping customers get the most from their computers.
They could be customers in science, government, education, defense, industry, or business. You might even specialize in one field.
Or, as an IBM Data Processing Representative, you would
present to customer executives your ideas for doing their
work better with computers. Your own imagination and
initiative are the limits of what you can accomplish in
marketing IBM products.
If you are working toward a degree—in Liberal Arts, Engineering, the Sciences, or Business Administration—find
out what IBM can offer you in the way of achievement.
Thorough training at special IBM schools will prepare you
for work in either Systems Engineering or Marketing.
See your college placement officer for literature on these
careers—and make an appointment with our interviewers. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Interviews December 14-15
If you cannot attend the interviews, write or visit the
nearest IBM sales office.

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Branch Manager
698 Delaware Ave.
Buffalo, New York 14209

■■ wtJ H T Hi
DATA PROCESSING

�Friday, Novambar 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

Grid Picks (Pro)
16)

(Cont’d from P.
an empty sport without them.
Last week’s picks were a slight
bit more successful than the proceeding week’s going from a 6-5
record to a 7-4 mark. Some of
my projected upsets simply did
not materialize, so again the upset proved my downfall. This
week, in an attempt to try something new, I’m picking the teams
I hope will win, not necessarily
those which I think will win. It
should prove interesting when
the results are in. Maybe this will
be my lucky week. To date my
record is 44-26-5, and here are
this week’s picks:
National Football League
Dallas 28, New York 24—This
is probably a pipe-dream, but I
simply cannot get myself excited
about the Giants' win over St.
Louis. My friends who root for
the New York club are becoming
intolerable since their team won
a game, so this pick is designed
merely to get them excited. Remember, I am only hoping for
this result, not guaranteeing that
the Cowboys will win, so don’t
bet on it.
Cleveland 35, Washington 21—
This is a “think” as well as a
‘hope” pick. The Browns currently occupy the top spot in the
East, so there’s no reason for me
to believe that the Redskins will
upset them. Jimmy Brown is too
much for the other teams to
handle, and the other teams (at
least most of them) are better
than Washington, despite the
presence of numerous players
from Arizona on that team (another slap at an antagonist).
St. Louis 31, Pittsburgh 14—
The only reason for picking this
game to come out this way is my
fond wish that the Browns do
not run away with the title. I
would hate to see them walk
away in the East uncontested, so
come on, Cardinals, beat those
Stealers, and make a race out of
it! They are too good a team to
lose three in a row.
Lot Angeles 21, Philadelphia
20—It is always gratifying to see
a young team wreak havoc among
the more established teams, and
it would be nice to see the Rams
finish second in a rough division.
On the other hand, it would hurt
deeply to see them destroy the
Eagles, another young team
whose only shortcoming is their
inability to beat Washington. I
hope that L.A. will triumph, but
let them do it without embarrassing Philly.
I
Baltimore 35, Chicago 13
have a confession to make. As
much as I dislike rooting for a
winner (I am also a Met fan), the
Colts are my favorite team. But
I have suffered through many a
lean season with them, so I feel
that I am entitled to some happiness when they are winning. I
simply cannot disavow my support for them, but I find it hard
to see another 52-0 romp over
the Bears even though I cannot
stand the Chicago team.
Green Bay 28, Detroit 7—Ever
since they traded away Bobby
Layne, I have hated the Lions,
but that is not influencing my
“pick” in this game. It is hard
to see a good team losing, so I
can only wish that the Packers
come through on Sunday and
beat those Lions. A loss for the
Detroit club here will also give
the Rams a better shot at second
—

place.

Minnesota 42, San Francisco 14
—It would be absurd for me to

Pick the 49'ers after the way they
have been playing. They have
given up almost 30 points per
game, a horrible record even in
the light that they are the worst
team the league possesses. The
Vikings could be title bound in
a few years, so why not let them
get on the right track now by
romping in this game?
American Football League
New York 3S, Buffalo 28
I
have already said that I am a
Met fan, so I guess it follows
that I also have an affinity for
the other occupants of Shea
Stadium, the Jets. It is also very
—

annoying to see a team

go

lin-

PAGE

defeated, even for eight games,
so ! hope that the Bills succumb
to the Jets this Sunday in New
York. This one can also be classified as a “think” pick because
Buffalo has to lose eventually,
so why not this week?
Houston 28, Boston 14
If
George Blanda’s arm didn’t fall
off after throwing 68 passes
against the Bills, the Oilers
shouldn’t have any trouble winning this one. But there is also
an ulterior motive behind this
pick (and it is a pick, not only
a hope)—it the Patriots lose and
the Jets win, N.Y. will move into
second place in the East.
Kansas City 24, Oakland 14—
My hope for a good record this
week is just as strong as the hope
(hat those other teams will win,
so I find it essential to pick the
Chiefs in this game. The Raiders
are not too bad, however, and
they should make a contest out
of this.
San Diego 42, Denver 17—It is
obvious that if Kansas City wins
the Western Division title, the
championship game will be a
joke with the Eastern team coming out on top, so I hope that the
Chargers can beat the Broncos,
which will just about guarantee
them a place in the title game.
I also would be lying if I said
that I did not think San Diego
would win, because they are just
about as strong as any NFL team,
and the Broncos are the worst
team in pro football. This game
could turn out to be an even
bigger slaughter than predicted.
—

Grid Picks (College)

most people didn’t notice about
the game was that “Jolly Roger”
was back on target after getting
off to an injury-riddled start this
year. He should be able to penetrate the Terrapin (2-5) secondary
often enough to seek out a muchneeded Navy victory. Maryland is
not a pushover, and will make

the game very close.
BUFFALO 27, RICHMOND 13
—What can I say after last week’s
“slight miscalculation”?
VILLANOVA 19, BOSTON
COLLEGE 14—The Wildcats (7-0)
are the surprise team of the East
this season and still entertain
delusions of a perfect record. The
Eagles (3-2) have had 2 weeks to
bone up for this game, hilt Villanova has the incentive. If Boston
College is unable to knock off the
high-flying Philadelphians, then
Buffalo will.
PURDUE 26, MICHIGAN
STATE 10
The Boilermakers
(5-1) can't remember their last
Big Ten championship, so this
year is very special for them. If
they get by the Spartans (3-3),
they’ll coast to the Rose Bowl.
But State has already upset USC,
and is looking forward to adding
Purdue to the list.
NOTRE DAME 35, PITTSThe Irish (6-0) are
BURGH 1
now the top college eleven in the
nation and expect to stay there.
The Panthers (2-3-2) must stop
the Huarte to Snow aerial barrage if they want to have any
chance of winning at all. It hasn’t
been done yet, and it won’t be
on Saturday. Parseghian has
‘Coach of the Year” honors all
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GEORGIA TECH 14, TENNES-

SEE 6—The Yellow Jackets (7-0)
cinched a bowl invitation last
week after rolling over a previ-

ously unbeaten Duke squad. Now
their main concern is a 10-0 record. The Vols (3-2-1) will give
them a run for their money, but

will fall short of their goal. The
Engineers' chief concern is ’Bama
on the 14th.
ALABAMA 17, L.S.U. 9—The
winner of this brawl will be able
to claim the SEC title. Needless
to say, this will be a close, hard
fought encounter. The Crimson
Tide (7-0) rates the edge here, as
the Tigers (5-0-1) barely overcame
a so-so Ole Miss 11-10 in the last
minute of play. But L.S.U, may
get a rematch in the Sugar Bowl.
use 23, STANFORD 10—The
Indians (3-4) pulled off a big upset last week when a field goal in
(Cont’d on P. 12)

a

Dash

Gdoentuie

IN YOUR WARDROBE
Com* To
&gt;900 DELAWARE AVE.. KENMORE. N. Y

THIRTEEN

�Friday, November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE FOURTEEN

BULLS PLUCK HENS
Gilbert Leads 37-0 Rout
As Bulls Finally Reach Peak
less rushes and vice-like tackles
of the entire defensive wall, with
rugged E.G. Poles leading the onslaught, caused one to wonder
whether the Delaware backfield
would be declared a disaster area.
Even the usually vulnerable pass
defense dazzled a good percentage
of the time and allowed the
Diamond Staters only 85 yards.
Coach Offenhamer summarized
the game by briefly replying,
“we finally put four good quarters together. Our mistakes were
kept to a minimum and we took
advantage of some of theirs. This
was one of the best teams we

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
“We have a good football team
this year. It seems that one or
two mistakes at the wrong time
have cost us every game we have
lost. One of these Saturdays* however, we are going to get a couple
of good bounces and some team
will have to pay the price that
Boston U. did in our opener,”
These are the words Coach Dick
Offenhamer has been reiterating
weekly since the opener and last
Saturday turned out to be that
long overdue date with destiny
as the Bulls pulverized the Delaware Blue Hens, 37-oJ with an
awesome display of power, speed,
and determination before an exuberant gathering of over 8,000
at Rotary Field. The Bulls finally reached the celestial heights
of gridiron achievement of which

they are truly capable by playing
a full sixty minutes of heads-up
football, instead of only the spor-

adic spurts of excellence which
had been the pattern in their
last five outings.
The Bulls had never feasted so
lavishly as they did Saturday
since the Gettysburg drubbing of
1962. which they won 44-0. The
hosts removed the cocky strut of
the Blue Hens with a first quarter
score, completely defeathered
them with two more second period tallies, roasted them to a golden brown with a third stanza
marker, and after stuffing themselves on chicken dinner via an
early fourth quarter TD, left the
bones to be disrespectfully strewn
about the field by the reserves
for the remainder of the game.
Henchman award for the Hen
annihilation would have to go to
senior quarterback Don Gilbert,

who scored three touchdowns,

passed for two others, and fired
two more extra-point aerials. The
5’H”, 190-lb. signal-caller, who is
now Within striking distance of

both Don Holland's total offense
and John Stofa’s passing yardage
records for one season, was ably
assisted on offense by a pair of
battering ram fullbacks in Dick
Condino and Denny Przykuta,
two lightning heeled halfbacks in
Nick Capuana and Jim Webber,
and an offensive line which opened holes big enough for the Alienhurst bus to coast through.
The Bull defense, however, deserves as much credit as the offense, as in indicated by the four
goose eggs (or should it be chicken eggs' registered on the scoreboard by the visitors. The merer
1

)

w

feed yardage. The gun sounded
minutes later with UB capturing
one of its most impressive victories in recent years, 37-0.
Statistics
UB
Delaware
24
First Downs
6
Rushing Yards
255
66
85
Passing Yards
125
Passes
10-21
9-19
1
Passes Intercepted
4
Punts
7-37
2-21
0
Fumbles Lost
2
25
Yards Penalized
30
Highest
BULL SESSION
grades went to Capt. Pawloski,
Bruce Hart, and Gilbert on offense, while Russ MacKellar, Bill
Taylor, and Condino scored highest on defense
Pawloski
suffered severe damage to his
knee after receiving a second
quarter pass, his unlucky 13th
catch of the season, and will
probably be lost for the final
three games. The end problem
doesn’t appear too pressing, however, with La Fountain, Dunn,
Nichols, and Craig Helenbrook
on hand. They were all impressive at times Saturday
Coach
Nelson didn’t enhance his popularity in Buffalo after the game
when he laconically snapped, “No,
Buffalo didn’t play that well.
Anyone would have looked great
the way we , played” ..
Jim
Robie was finally given an op(Cont’d on P. 10)

ware defense and blocked Romberger’s punt attempt near midfield. The massacre continued as
five plays later on the 28, Gilbert

faked the often-used look-in pass
and then dropped back to find
Oatmeyer alone in the end zone.
The senior wingback grabbed the
Bulls led, 7-0, midway through pass for the six-pointer and Joe
the first period.
the Toe split the uprights to fatLate in the second period, after ten the lead to 30-0.
the Bulls had a long march haltIn the last period, the Bulls
ed by an interception, linebacker added another dab of icing to the
Joe Garafola met Hen fullback already overfrosted Buffalo cake
Dave Burslem at midfield with as Condino intercepted a Van
the impact of a runaway Mack Grofski aerial on his own 47. The
truck, causing the soph, fullback infrequently-used Webber, racing
to fumble, and Garf quickly fell with the speed of a scared jackon it. Webber, Przykuta, and Conrabbit and knees churning like
dino combined nifty runs to the a pair of well-lubricated pistons,
10 from where Gilbert again callgained most of the yardage on
ed for his pet play, the delayed the final drive, climaxed by a
keeper on the left side. He broke
10-yard flip from Gilbert to senaway from one tackier at the ior end Dave Nichols. Joe the
line of scrimmage and left a trail Toe’s conversion was again true
and applied the final touches to
the disastrous 37-0 trip for the
Newark boys. They came in an
effort to gain Coach Dave “The
Admiral” Nelson his 100th career
victory, but left town with the
most lopsided defeat ever inflicted upon their coach in fourteen
years.
To augment Delaware

..

woes,

the Bulls cleared the bench in
the final seven minutes, and even
the reserves found little difficulty
in holding the Hens to chicken-

GILBERT SCORES SECOND BULL TD
have played, and we beat them, of would ,be tacklers sprawled
across the gridiron behind him
37-0
The first quarter started on a as he trotted into the end zone
standing up. Gilbert then dropped
shaky note for the Bulls. On the
first play from scrimmage, Hen back and lofted a soft pass to end
Jim Dunn for the two extra points
quarterback Tom Van Grofski
arched a long pass into the open and a 15-0 UB advantage.
Only minutes later, the ruffled
arms of Bill Hopkins with nobody
behind him in Bull territory. The liens were confronted with a
star halfback hobbled the ball, punting situation on their 35, but
punter Jim Ftombcrger couldn’t
however, and the Bulls were behind the throttle the rest of the
handle a wide snap from center
way.
and the Bulls took over on the
25. Three plays later, Gilbert rollAfter receiving a Delaware punt
ed to his left from the Hen 9,
on their own 27, the Bull express
methodically chugged u p f i e 1 d and after appearing to be on his
way out of bounds at the 5, perwith Gilbert engineering the
drive. The Delaware defensive formed a tightrope act down the
sideline and squeezed into the
line, which at times appeared to
corner of the end zone for the
be hitting with the authority of
a well-toasted marshmallow, was third touchdown with less than
a minute remaining in the half.
easy prey for the Bull line, allowing the backs to knife through Gilbert then feigned a placement
attempt and lobbed a two-pointer
for five yards per try. With Condino and Capuana consuming to Tom Oatmcyer, who made a
leaping picture catch. The Bulls
most of the yardage, the Bulls
ruled at half time, 23-0.
drove to the 2, from where GilHalfway through the third
bert used his delayed keeper over
the left side for the first score. period, junior end Gerry La FounJoe the Too converted and the tain muscled through the Dela-

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�Friday, November 6, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

RICHMOND PREVIEW O
BULLS TO FACE RUGGED AERIAL
ATTACK IN TOMORROW S CONTEST
By

CHICK ARNOLD

Last week’s 37-0 victory against
Delaware, came as a surprise to
many people, prompting them to
ask themselves if the Bull’s could
finally be realizing their potential. Delaware brought a fine
football team into Rotary field
last week, and returned home
with a tattered and torn one. The
Buffalo ground attack and defense was just too much for the
Blue Hens to handle.
Buffalo
Tomorrow, however,
will be up against an even bigger
test; not because the Richmond
team is stronger than Delaware
not at all. The Spiders from
Richmond
are the mediocre
owners of a mediocre 3-4 record
against mediocre opposition. However, this mediocre team has
something that has been plaguing the Bulls throughout the season so far, in the not so mediocre
passing of quarterback Ronnie
Smith, and receiving of end John
Hilton. Last week the Bulls
showed that they could successfully bottle up a fine runner such
as Bill Hopkins of Delaware, but
this week they have to show
their ability to stop the passing
game of the air-conscious Spiders.
Smith is a big, strong 6-4, 225
pounder who can fire a bullet
pass with deadly accuracy. He is
a fine drop-back passer who is
presently leading the Southern
Conference in passing. Already
drafted by the Los Angeles Rams
and the San Diego Chargers,

tensive player also, he was
named the All-Southern Conference team last year.
Britton is a tough slashing type
runner who broke into the Spider
lineup last season. He is small
5-9, 165 pounds, but is still hard
to bring down after catching a
pass.
Co captain Kenny Stoudt, is
what is known as a fine all
around back. He is a good breakaway runner, an excellent pass
receiver, dangerous on check-off
returns and an excellent pass de-

fender. He also is small, 5-9, 167
pounds, but still a threat. He has
been hobbled this year by a foot
injury suffered in the season
opener against West Virginia,
missing some early action. However he should be ready against
the Bulls, forcing them to keep
at least one eye on the ground.
The starting Richmond fullback
will be, Junior Ron Gordon, 6-1,
208 pounds. Gordon is a great
blocker, excellent linebacker, and
hard runner, who avereaged 5.3
yards per carry last year, as a
sophomore. In addition, he also
handles the punting for the Spiders; averaging over 35 yards a
punt.
The taskle positions in the Richmond line are occupied by John
Deeter and Dick Hodsdon. Deeter,
at 6 2, 215 pounds, is a good offensive and defensive player who
is greatly depended upon, for the
success of the team this year. A
lot is also riding on the shoulders
of Hodsdon, a 6-1, 215 pounder,
who did a fine job last year as a
sophomore. However, he needs a
little more experience on offense,
if the Spiders are to be strong at
this position.
At guards Richmond has W.D.
Strickland, 6-0, 205 pounds, a converted end, and Ray Tate, 6-1,
230 pounds who has been shifting back and forth between tackle
and guard. Terry Smith, 6-2, 218
pounds, will be the starting

-

Smith is averaging 130 yards
passing a game. Against VMI,
he completed an amazing 15 of 17
passes for 142 yards and two

TD’s. His name should be among
those mentioned for All-America
recognition this year.
Hilton at 6-5, 220 is Smith’s
favorite target. He led the Southern Conference is receiving in
1961 and 1962, and is now returning after a year in the service, to lead the conference again
Against Davidson this year he
established two school records by
grabbing 9 passes for 147 yards
including touchdown catches of
21 and 30 yards. He also holds
the career record of passes received which he increases every
time he catches a pass. Big John
is also an outstanding pro-prospect, already having been drafted
by the Detroit Lions and our own
Buffalo Bills.
Although Hilton is Smith’s favorite target, he has other capable receivers in end Pete Ernelianchik and halfbacks Pete Britton, Norris Alridge, and Kenny

tion, Richmond beat VMI 20-14,
while we whipped them 14-10.
Holy Cross beat both schools,
taking the Bulls 20-14, and Richmond 36-22 last week.
Look for this game to be another stern test for the Bulls. The
air should be loaded with Richmond footballs, but if UB can
put together four quarters similar
to those of last week, they should
take their second in a row.
Probable Starting Line ups
BUFFALO
Dave Nichols, 215
Dorn Piestrak, 195
Bruce Hart, 205
Joe Holly, 210
Jim McNally, 206
Leo Ratamess, 260
Gerry LaFountain, 210
Don Gilbert, 190
Nick Capuana, 173
Willie Shine, 205
Dick Condino, 215

is a 6-2, -210
who is an outstanding
short recevier. An excellent de-

RG

RT
RE

QB
LHB
RHB
FB

LE

LT
LG

SPECTRUM

TOP TEN
1. Notre Dame

2. Ohio

State

3. Alabama

4. Nebraska

the first half of last week’s win
over Delaware, and could be
lost to the Bulls for the remainder of the season. Dave
Nichols will start tomorrow in
place of Pawloski.
UB quarterback, Don Gilbert,
has a season offense total of
940 yards. He needs just 152
yards tomorrow against Richmond
to break Don Holland’s UB record of 1,092 set in 1951. This is
the first game between the two
schools. Against common competi-

pounder

LG

RICHMOND

Pete Emelianchik, 210
John Deeter, 215
W. D, Strickland, 205
Terry Smith, 218
Roy Tate, 230
Dick Hodson, 215
John Hilton, 220
Ronnie Smith, 225
Kenny Stoudt, 167
Pete Britton, 165
Ron Gordon, 208

center.
Injuries will play a large part
in the plans of UB tomorrow.
Captain Gerry Pawloski, leading
pass receiver for UB is awaiting
results of X-Rays to determine
his availability. He suffered an
injury to his left knee during

Stoudt.
Emelianchik

LE
LT

5.

Arkansas

6.

Georgia Tech

7. Buffalo
8. Texas
9. L.S.U.
10. (Tie) Purdue
Oregon
~
“

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I

�Friday, November 6, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

=tA=-£=

=4

—

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

GOLF STAR
STEVE WATTS

ROUND-UP

.

This week’s column will be devoted to a brief resume
of developments in (to use a very trite but appropriate
cliche) the wide world of sports. First however, we’ll
attend to UB sports which also are a part of our wide
world.
.
.
It was indeed a successful weekend for UB football
as both the Bulls and their freshman counterparts were
victorious. The Varsity inflicted the worst defeat Delaware has suffered in the fourteen year tenure of Head
Coach Dave Nelson. The Bulls, in an overwhelming 37-0
triumph, displayed their VMI fourth period form throughout all four quarters of play against Delaware. In a
game in which everyone looked good, perhaps the most
promising development of all was the outstanding play
of the. younger Bulls. Sophomore defensive back Dan
Sella (who was named Sophomore of the Week by the
Eastern Collegiate Athletic Association), halfback Jim
Webber—a transfer student, sophomore fullback Jim
Barksdale, and quarterback Jim Robie were all highly
impressive during their various playing stints. In this,
the Bulls’ greatest victory of the season, there may indeed have been more than the win itself to be happy
about, for the future prospects now look brighter than
ever before.
. . The frosh, rebounding from a defeat at Annapolis
to the Navy Plebes, handily took the measure of Manlius
School, 21-14. The freshmen, now 4-1, conclude a very
successful season next Friday at Rotary Field against a
powerful Syracuse team, whose only loss was also at the
hands of the Navy.
The Outside World
.
. World Olympic Committee Chairman Avery Brundage hinted that boxing might be banned as an Olympic
sport due to the unsportsmanlike conduct of several
fighters (one staged a sit down strike, refusing to leave
the ring after being disqualified, while another slugged
a referee). In spite of this, it seems as though the
committee is trying to get rid of the problem instead of
trying to solve it
. . The Houston (ex)
Colt 45’s will no longer travel
with the Colt Patent Fire Arms Manufacturing Company,
forcing the team to change its nickname. The West has
finally been conquered.
.
Ex-Yankee Manager and new Special Player Consultant Yogi Berrra was offered a coaching job with the
Mets. He is presently considering both and will make
his decision in the near future. To stay or not to stay—that is the question. If he follows the script, Mr. Berra
will b‘* the Yankees’ new SPC.
. . . Former Cincinnati Manager Fred
Hutchinson was
listed lo oe in serious condition Sunday in a Florida
hospital. A spokesman said his condition was “not good.”
Hutchinson, who -was stricken by chest cancer last year,
will remain in the hospital indefinitely. We wish to
express all hopes for recovery.
A.B. (Happy) Chandler, Commissioner of Baseball
from 1945-1951, said that “Most of the owners in baseball
today couldn’t care less aboiit the future of the game.
They have no interest in, nor any consideration for, the
American people, who pay the bills.” He was probably
referring to the completion of the Yankee sale to CBS
as well as the proposed moves of the Braves, Indians,
and Athletics to other cities.
. Notre Dame took over this week as the number one
college football team in the country, according to both
AP and UPI polls. It’s been a long time for the Irish
but they finally made it back on top.
. Gordie Howe scored goal number 626 of his National Hockey career Sunday night in a Detroit victory.
This tied him with former Montreal star Maurice Richard
for lifetime goal-scoring honors. It seems as though
Howe, nearing 40, will go on forever.
Jack Nicklaus shot a 67 to win the Australian Open
Golf Tournament Sunday in a play-off against Bruce
Devlin, for his first tournament victory in three months.
The dry spell hath ended.
Dan Gurney drove a Brabham to victory in the
Grand Prix of Mexico, but a second place finish by John
Surtes in a Ferrari proved much more significant, as it
enabled him to beat Graham Hill by one point for the
1964 World’s Driver’s Championship. Better luck next
year, Graham.
.
Dr. Floyd Eastward, Chairman of the Injury and
Fatality Commission of the American Football Coaches
Association, disclosed that there were 22 deaths directly
(Cost'd on P. 12)
.

.

Steve Watts has played an important role in the impressive
record that the UB Golf Team

has compiled during the past
three years. With six years of
golfing experience behind him,
Steve won the qualifying flight
for a position on the golf team
in his sophomore year. It was
during his first year of varsity
competition that the UB Golf
Team went undefeated. In the
qualifying round for the ECAC
finals, Steve finished sixth in a
large field of fine golfers to
lead his team to a qualifying position for the ECAC finals held
at Drumlins in Syracuse. The
First Annual
Brook-Lea Golf
Tournament was held in 1962 and
the UB golfers added to their
reputation by taking the first
place trophy.
As a junior Steve returned to
the golf team and again the team
was undefeated in dual match
competition. That year Watts
placed first in the ECAC qualifying round held at Cornell University, and again led his team
to qualify for the finals of the
1963 ECAC. Returning to Rochester for the Second Annual
Brook-Lea Invitational Golf Tour-

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.....

Grid Picks

-

By STAN LICHWALA

STEVE WATTS

nament, the UB Golf Team again

placed first with Steve placing
fourth in a field with some of the
finest collegiate golfers in the
state. In the spring of last year,
Steve won the UB Tournament
defeating fellow members of the
team and many others. At the
close of the 1963 golf season,
the team had a record of twenty-

two consecutive dual match vic-

tories.
As the 1964 season got under
way, Steve won the qualifying
flight for the number one position on the team. Again, the
team returned to Rochester for

the Brook-Lea Tournament. Steve
Watts was low medalist for the
entire tournament; and the UB
Golf Team placed first for the
third consecutive year. Although

the golf team did not qualify
for the ECAC finals this year,
Steve, along with Kearons Wha-

individually qualified and
represented UB in the finals of
the ECAC at Beth Page Park,
Farmingdale, Long Island. The
string of dual match victories
len,

continued until it reached the
number of twenty-nine, A strong
Canisius team, once upset by
Buffalo, broke the victory string.
The team concluded this season
with a record of eight victories
and one defeat, making a total
of thirty victories out of thirtyone matches—Steve Watts played a part in each of these matches and added greatly to the impressive reputation that the UB
Golf Team has established in the
past three years as one of the
finest teams in the East.

s

PROFESSIONAL

COLLEGE

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

By STEVE FEIGIN

The world of pro-football is
a cruel and heartless one
a
world where its inhabitants,
strangely enough, are not expected to last very long. If someone
were to approach the head coach
of one of the twenty-two “major
League” football teams in the
—

U.S, and inquire as to the expected longevity of one of the
participants in the football wars,
it is unlikely that he would receive answer exceeding seven or
eight years. However, there are
many notable exceptions, and
some of them will be mentioned

here.
The first name that comes
to mind is Y. A. Tittle, the ageless 38 year old quarterback of
the New York Giants. Tittle is
currently in his fifteenth year of
pro-football, and though it is
likely to be his last, he still retains the remarkable capacity to
electrify crowds with his exceptional passing prowess. Up
until last Sunday, most football
observers, myself included, were
convinced that Tittle was through
—that is to say that he just didn’t
have it any more. But nevertheless, the old timer managed to
come back and throw four touchdown passes in leading his team
to a startling upset over the St.
Louis Cardinals in New York.
This might be his last season, but
Tittle apparently still hasn’t lost
the magic which has made him
one of the all-time greats.
Another exeception to the rule
is Johnny Unitas of the Baltimore
Colts, who is enjoying his finest
season in ’64, Although he has
been in the league “only” ten
years, Unitas has accomplished
more than any other active player
with the possible exeception of
Jimmy Brown, himself merely an
eight year “youngster”. The Colt
quarterback is not setting passing
records this year as he has in
the past, but that is not to say
that he is less effective. The
Colts currently enjoy a comfortable lead in the NFL’s Western
Division due to Unitas and another veteran of ten years, fleet
halfback Lenny Moore, the league
scoring leader
with thirteen
touchdowns in eight games. It
might be considered a “young
man's game,” but where would
pro-football be without the ageless veterans to guide its fortunes?

My last two examples of age
old combattants engaged in the
seemingly endless guest to score
points are both football players in
the true sense of the word. Placekicking is a difficult art to master, but these two are perhaps the

best examples of masters that
sport has to offer. The first is
Lou Groza of the Cleveland
Browns, who still kicks them
perfectly and the second is Ben
Agajanian, who has been around
so long that nobody remembers
when he broke in as a green
rookie. Groza came out of his
first retirement a few years ago,
and I shudder when I think what
would happen to the Browns
without him. Agajanian was activated by the San Diego Chargers of the AFL just last week,
and he successfully came out of
his fourth retirement to boot
three extra points and a field
goal in the Charger’s victory
over one of the 45 year old placekicker’s former teams, the Oakland Raiders. The way these two
are going, it seems that old age
is never going to catch up with
them, and football would seem
(Cbat’d on P. 13)

THE MIDWEST

Before last week’s action, it
looked like Ohio State (4-0) was
a shoo-in for the Big Ten championship. Suddenly the Buckeyes
find Purdue (4-0) hanging onto
their shirttails. The Boilermakers
ran over a tough Illinois eleven
on Saturday and thus tied for the
lead. Ohio State still has stubborn
contender Michigan (3-1) to face,
while Purdue has it relatively
easy from now on. If they can
subdue Michigan State this week,
they’ll have only sporadic Indiana and feeble Northwestern to
handle. It is unfortunate that the
size of the Big Ten does not allow
all of its members to face one
another during the conference
battle. The Buckeyes could conceivably go undefeated through
its entire schedule and still miss
a trip to the Rose Bowl because
Purdue plays one more conference foe.
In the Big Eight, the race seems
to be much more clear cut. Nebraska (4-0) is on it’s way to a
perfect season and it’s second
consecutive title. Only Kansas
(4-0) stand in it’s way and that
situation should be rectified tomorrow, when the two schools
clash for the conference lead.
The Jayhawkers have explosive
halfback Gale Sayers, but little
else. Two of their victories have
come by the margin of a single
PAT. The dark horse here is
Oklahoma State (3-1).
But the
Cowboys have yet to face a rough
conference contender. The Big
Eight dropped its affiliation with
the Orange Bowl classic this year,
so Nebraska will be a choice
catch for any New Year’s game
this year.
Well, the West Coast did it
again to me last week-three incorrect predictions. My record
now stands at 62-31-5. Let me express my utmost congratulations
to the fighting UB Bulls. I was
never more happy at making a
mistake in my entire life. Keep

it up.
MICHIGAN 24, ILLINOIS 14—
The Fighting I Mini (4-2) saw their
title hopes go down the drain last
week and the rest of the season
holds little for them now. The
Wolverines (5-1) also bowed to
Purdue, but still have an outside
shot at the trip to Pasadena,
They’ll be going all out tomorrow
OHIO STATE 27, PENN STATE
10
The Buckeyes (6-0) had a
close scare against Iowa (21-19)
and now know that one Big Ten
defeat could be disastrous. The
Nittany Lions (3-4) have come
back in the last few weeks after
a very poor start. The Buckeyes
will be out to show the nation
that they deserve to be put back
in the number one spot.
PRINCETON 28, HARVARD 7
—This is the Crimson's (4-2) last
hope for a piece of the Ivy crown
The Tigers (6-0) will not be had.
though. lacavassi is putting in his
bid for All-American honors and
will be very tough to contain.
Princeton will have it easy here,
btit they had better beware. Yale
looked real strong after polishing off Dartmouth,
NEBRASKA 33, KANSAS 14—
There will be numerous bowl
committees in attendance, and the
Cornhuskers (7-0) would like to
put on a real good show for them
Kansas (5-2) will be dissected be
fore a crowd of over 40,000
screaming witnesses.
NAVY 14, MARYLAND 13
The Middies (2-4-1) were slaughtered by Notre Dame, but what
, V,
(Cont’d on P. 13)
—

—

.

.

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RAHN

STATE

VOLUME 15

Considers Challem

DELAWARE
PREVIEW

—

J

HONORED

NO. 7

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1964

ies

Irresi nsible

Finkelstein Defers New Appointment
Robert P. Finkelstein, President of the Student Senate, announced this week that no new
appointment of a Presidential
Assistant has been made to date.
Mr. Finkelstein does, however,
have plans for such an appointment in the near future.
In the wake of former Presidential Assistant Arthur Burke’s
sudden resignation last week, the
President went on to express his
feelings on this and other related matters. Mr. Finkelstein said
that “many irresponsible charges
have been leveled at the 1964-65
Senate since it assumed office
last April. I think that this is a
proper time to answer these unwarranted claims.”
The present Senate has already
proven itself to be an active one,
and there are many accomplishments which attest to this fact.
Under the auspices of the Senate,
ROBERT FINKELSTEIN
various speakers have been presented, including Senator KenA course evaluation program,
neth B. Keating and Robert F. whereby
students will evaluate
Kennedy. Plans are now in the
the material and the way it is
processing stage to bring conpresented, is also in the works.
troversial Communist orator HerIt is expected that this program
bert Aptheker to campus. Mr. may
be begun during the present
Finkelstein added that “this is in semester. The Senate has also
keeping with the principle of acainitiated legislature to extend lidemic freedom, which the Senate brary and student facilities, and
will uphold.”
to bring about a more favorable
The Senate Expansion Commitspring vacation. Petitions in suptee has begun to lay the foundaport of the latter program will
tion for its plans for the univerbe presented to Dr. Kaiser this
sity’s new campus. The commitweek.
tee has been working with the
faculty and the administration in
Mr. Finkelstein concluded with
order to bring the student’s inthe following remarks: “Student
terest into the limelight. The Government has a great deal of
potential on this campus. When
President stresses the fact that
“The present campus has not
the people who truly care about
been neglected.”
our student body put their time
Mr. Finkelstein indicates that and effort toward building on
by working with Mr. Carl Lipsius
this foundation, instead of sarof the Student Placement Office, castically and irresponsibly tearthe Senate has greatly increased
ing it down, then, and only then,
the number of campus positions can they be considered student
now available to students. In parleaders and an asset to the stuticular, food service jobs have indent body.
creased significantly.
“I think the student body of
“More positive steps have been
this university is intelligent
and
more
taken,
results achieved, enough to realize that major
in the fight to serve alcoholic changes in university policy canbeverages on campus, than with
hot be made overnight. However,
any previous Senate.” A special
we must not allow senators and
sub committee under the Welfare
committee chairmen to use this
Committee has been set up, and
fact as an excuse for inaction; I
this committee expects to achieve have never allowed this, and
its objective this year.
never will.”

C
f

1. Articles of Organization Article I “, and
-

-

the Student Publications Board”
2. Articles of' Organization Article I “four”
3. Constitution Part I
Article 1 Section 2
“and
Sub-section B
IV,”
-

-

-

4. Constitution Part IV
5. By-laws Part IV
Amend by addition:
I. Articles of Organization Article I “and”
2. Articles of Organization
Article 1
-

-

-

“three”
3. Constitution Part I
Article I Section 2
Sub-section B “and”
4. By-laws Part I Article
IV Section 1 subpart
-

\

-

-

\

-

-

-

“The Executive Committee shall approve appoint-

the editorship of
student publications made
by the current editor.”

Panel Discussion
In order to inform the student
body on the proposed amendment now before the Senate the
Spectrum will sponsor a panel

discussion, “Freedom of the Press
and the Proposed Senate Amendment”. The discussion, open to
the public, will take place ih the
Conference Theater Monday at
■’■on n m. A question and answer

Board, and John Kowal, editor
of the Spectrum. The discussion
will be chaired by Arthur Burke,

HP.

Association Plans New Land
Purchase For UB Expansion
The Faculty-Student Association plans to purchase 505 acres
of land in the Town of Amherst,
214 miles north of the new university campus site for use as
a recreation center.
According to Dr. Puffer, Vice
President for Business- Affairs,
this land is to be used for recreational purposes for the facu,ty and student body. Present
Plans include a golf course, a boat

marina and summer camps. Construction on the golf course is
expected to begin in the spring
of ’65 and it is hoped that other
areas of development will also
be undertaken at that time.
The land for this recreation
area is being pruchased from
Pearce and Pearce Realty of Buffalo, and 40% from Mrs. Edna
Skillicorn of 25 Halladay Lane,
Town of Tonawanda, New York.

Running

as (an

Independent,

Miss Sapir polled 273 votes—or
59.9% of the juniors and seniors
who participated in the election.
The United Student’s candidate,
Alan Gerson, polled 94 votes,
while Joshua Stein, representing
the Campus Alliance Party, polled 87 votes.
A transfer student from Cortland State College, Miss Sapir
emphasized the need for more
personal relationships between
senators and students in her
campaign. Following her election,
she stated: “I intend to present
legislation to the Senate which
will establish closer contact and
better relations between each
senator and those he represents;
to institute a Senior Week as an
annual UB tradition, and to lend
support in the New York State
Colleges and Universities’ fight
for free tuition,”
,

open to suggestions and

will be

glad to present all opinions of
constituents on the senate floor."

To accomplish her goal of closer student contact, Miss Sapir
hopes to institute a monthly senate poll, which would be distributed among students to ascertain
their views on senatorial action,
and their ideas for future action.
Remarking on her victory, Miss
Sapir added: “My campaign was
based not on empty words and
popular cliches, but rather on a

program which I feel would be
in the best interests of the Arts
and Science students. I will be

Mock Elaction

In the mock election for President and New York State senator, held on the same day, students overwhelmingly elected Mr.
Johnson, with 899 votes, or 80.9%
to Mr. Goldwater’s 201 votes, or
18.1%.

The Democrats were also victorious in the senatorial contest,
with Kobeit Kennedy polling 638
votes or 57.8% to Keating’s 460

or

41.7%.

ments to

versity College, Jeremy Taylor,
NSA Chairman, George Neuner,
Chairman of the Publications

&gt;CHOtLLIS

In Monday’s senate election,
Miss Linda Sapir won the open
senatorial seat from the College
of Arts and Sciences.

-

will be Robert P. Finkelstein,
President of the Student Senate,
Truly Stern, Senator from Uni-

///£

Sapir and Johnson
Score In Election

-

will follow.
Participating in the discussion

Cv,
&amp;E

The Student Senate
scheduled for
Tuesday, November 3,"will
be held Monday, November 2 at 7:00 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room. In accordance with Article IV of the
Articles of Organization
of the constitution of the
Student Association the
constitutional amendment
to he voted upon at that
meeting is here presented:
Amend by election:
meeting

■ ■

t

In last weeks SPECTRUM the caption under
the Senate picture was incorrect. The picture of
Linda Leventhal speaking
did not concern the Pillion resolution. Rather
Miss Leventhal was speaking against the resolution

sponsored by the Student

Zionist Organization which
urged the recall of German
nationals employed in the
development of genocidal
weapons. The picture was
taken when Miss Leventhal
rose to urge that Senate
time not l»e taken up with
non constructive legislation.

NSA Sponsors Freedom Fast
On Over 100 U. S. Campuses
The National Student Association Committee of the Student
Senate, under chairman Jeremy
Taylor, is cooperating with over
100 other NSA campuses in asking college students to give up
one meal next month in order to
send food to Negroes in the deep
south.
The

“Thanksgiving Fast for
Freedom” is sponsored by the
United States NSA.
Students who eat in the dormitories will sign a petition to the
Food Service which will request
that the money for the one meal
that they sacrifice, be forwarded
to the NSA drive. In the Union,
“Freedom Coffee” will be sold
for fifty cents per cup. Forty
cents will be sent to the “Freedom Fast,” Negotiations with jthe
Food Service are now in progress
for the project.

Last year NSA's “Freedom
Fast” raised over ten thousand
dollars which bought eighty thousand pound of food for impoverished southern Negroes. The
food was distributed to over 600
families by the Council of Federated Organizations. Other sponsors of the drive include the
United States Youth Council and
the Northern Student Movement.
This year food will be shipped
to McComb, Mississippi where XI
bombings in the Negro area within 27 days has left shops, church-

es and homes in ruins, and the

economic effects of segregation

are the most strongly felt.

The Student Senate will be
asked to give the "Fast" its full
support and official endorsement
when it meets Monday night.

Significance of Elections
Convocations Panel Topic
"The Significance of the 1964
Elections" is the topic of a panel
discussion to be held today at 3
p.m. in the Millard Fillmore
Room. The Convocations Committee of the Student Senate in
its attempt to present educational and interesting programs to
the student body, has gathered
professors from five different
fields to present their opinions
on this year’s election. They are;
Dr. Henry Lee Smith, chairman
of the Department of Anthropol-

ogy and Linguistics: Dr. W. Edgar Vinacke, professor of psychology; Dr. Elwin H. Powell, associate professor of sociology;
Dr. Marinus Vandevall, professor
of sociology; Dr. Herbert G. Gutman, professor of history and
Dr. Roy Macridis, chairman of
the Department of Political Science.

After their presentation, a question and answer period will be
held, followed by a coffee hour
in the Dorothy Hass Lounge.

�Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

USA Upholds
Campus Press
The United States National StuAssociation, during its Sixteenth annual convention held
this year at the University of
Minnesota, reiterated its stand
on the freedom of the student
press. The delegates passed a
basic policy decision concerning
the functions of an effective student press and condemning in
terference with this functioning.
The current debate on campus
over the constitutional amend
ment abolishing the Publications
Board makes this statement esdent

pecially pertinent.

USNSA believes and endorses
"that a free and vigorous press
is essential to a democratic society and that freedom of ex-

Ernie Davis Fund
Established Here;
Over $400 Raised
The Ernie Da&gt;.a Leukemia
Fund, a week long campaign
conducted in the Union the week
of October 12, was capped by a
collection at the Homecoming
game in War Memorial Stadium.
In an announcement released
yesterday, it was reported that
more than $400 was turned into

the National Leukemia Founda
lion by Sigma Alpha Mu Fra
ternity, the sponsor of the drive.

Originated last year at Brock
port State College, the Ernie
Davis Leukemia Fund has spread
to several campuses throughout
the country. This year's drive
was the first at the University
and it is intended that it become
a yearly program. Bob Simon

pression and debate is basic to

the effectiveness of the educational community in a democratic

society.”

“It is the duty and aim of the
student press both to develop
and serve its community and to
cultivate freedom of expression,
stimulation of thought and response in the community; this
must be done as its editors believe just and fitting, the editor
must bear all responsibility for
his policies.
Further, "the aims of the stu
dent press cannot be fully achieved unless independence from all
forms of external interference or
censorship is maintained inviolate.”

“Although the student press is
often formally owned by an organization other than itself, it is
essential that the press be free
from control stemming from own
ership if it is to function well."
USNSA then stated, “the following fundamental rights and
privileges of the student press
necessary for the effective exe
cution of responsibilities, con
any abridgement of
them.
The student press must be com

demning

and Hibbie Leiberman, committee chairmen, wish to thank
those who contributed to the
fund.

MGM Representative
Norman Rader Here;
Lectures On Movies
Last ■Thursday, Norman Pader,
field representative for MGM pictures, gave a talk and showed a
film segment from a new release, “The Young Lovers”, in
Harriman Library.
The film portion was entitled
“Evolution of a Love Scene"
and depicted the actual shooting of the beach scene which
climaxes the picture. After the
showing, Pader conducted a question and answer session, in which
the new picture, its stars, and
the motion picture industry in
general, were discussed. Par
ticipating in the session were the
students of the Drama Workshop,
which is conducted by Dr. Tom
Watson.

plctely self directed. Within the
legal restrictions of civil or criminal law against libel, pornogra
phy or indecency. The student

press must be free from control.
It must be permitted to function
free of all student or non-student
administrative devices, e.g. publication boards, student government, civil or ecclesiastical agen
cies. Further, it must be free of
all direct or indirect financial
pressures.
The student press must be a

The film deals with the “revolution in morals" of today's un
dergraduates, and is currently
being shown downtown, at the
I’arariiount.

Seminars Set
The School of Engineering will
in solid
mechanics during the 1964-1965
academic year.
The lecture series will be aimed
at researchers, graduate students,
and practicing engineers working in the field of solid mechanics
sponsor nine seminars

and such related areas as structural analysis, materials science,

machine design, and applied
mathematics. The lectures will

be

given by University faculty

members and industrial engineers
active in solid mechanics research.
Dr. Herbert Reismann, professor of engineering in the division
of Interdisciplinary Studies and
New lots to alleviate parking problem
Research and chairman of the
seminar program, said the hourlong lectures will consist primarily of presentations of previous and current research by
faculty members and research,
'
workers in industry.
All seminars during the first
ing sticker program. Stickers are
Construction of the two newest
semester will be held in Room UB parking lots, located near still available in the Bursar's of104, Parker Engineering BuildBaird on Main Street, will shortfice, or directly from the maining at 4:00 p.m. The room number ly be completed. The area will be
tenance department for anyone
for the second semester seminars covered with blacktop within the who has not yet obtained one.
Parking problems arise because
wijl be announced at a later date. next few days. Mr. Eugene MurThe seminar dates, topics and ray, of the Maintenance Departapproximately 70 per cent of the
lecturers are:
ment, believes that parking probcars on campus accommodate
Thursday—“Recent Developments lems will be greatly alleviated by
only one person. Anyone interin Nonlinear Viscoelasticity,” the new facilities, accommodating ested in forming or entering a
car pool should contact the MainDr. Frank 1 A. Cozzarelli, assist354 cars, and can be further imant professor of engineering in proved by student and faculty tenance Department. It is hoped
the division of Interdisciplinary cooperation.
that the opening of the new lots
and the organizing of car pools
Studies and Research;
The cooperation of all vehicle
will bring an alleviation of parkNovember 19—“Response of
ing difficulties.
Plates and Shells to Moving owners is requested in the parkLoads,” Dr. Reismann;

Two Main Stl Parking Lots

Rapidly Nearing Completion

December

11—“Response of a
Consolidating Soil to Thermal

Gradients,” Dr. Robert E. Paaswell, assistant professor of civil

engineering;
February 4—“Discrete Element
Methods in Shell Analysis,” Mr.
Richard H. Gallagher, chief of
advanced air frame analysis, at
Bell Aerospace Company;
February 18—“Instability of a
Rectangular Elastic Solid (in
plane strain) subject to Asial
Load and Lateral Hydrstoastic
Pressure,” Dr. Sam Tang, assistant professor of engineering in
the division of Interdisciplinary
Studies and Research;
March 4—“Influence of Residual
Stresses on the Stabiliy of
Structural Members,” Dr. Robert Kctter, professor and head
of civil engineering;

for understanding all facets of
issues affecting the university or
college community in order to
accurately assess the community’s problems and activities.

A STATUS SYMBOL FOR YOU
BLACK SHEEP
TAKE PRIDE

11x14 Black Sheep

Name
Address
State

Coat-of-Arms Certificates

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ppd. with the following name(s)

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victory over Syracuse University.

SHIRTS

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Be proud that you are an individual
one who conquers greater "odds" to be successful or is trying to
do so.
Become a member of the fold of the BLACK SHEEP
SOCIETY and have your own distinctive, personalized
Coat ol Arms in black and gold on 11x14 parchment,
suitable for framing.
Simply send your full name and address (name as
wanted on your certificate) with $3 98 ppd. to Prestige
S I, P. O. Box 397, Sliver Springs, Florida 32688. Check,
cash or money order
no COD’s please. Allow 2
weeks for mailing.
A, unique gift for friends who also stand as individi
uals.

Please, mail me

Becker, JoAnne Cretacci, Carolyn Dollmann, Sonja Miller, and
Sue Schillo. Pam Centron, Janet
Donnelly, Donna Tracy and Carol
Weitsman were chosen as alternates. November 7 the freshman
cheerleaders, under the guidance
of Mrs. Mary Plotkin, will cheer
the frosh football team on to a

OPEN

rfL

of all matters of human concern.
The student press must have
access to information necessary

each

In response to requests from
interested students, arrangements have been made for a special on-campus administration of
the Peace Corps Placement Test.
The noncompetitive test, used
only in assisting in the placement of potential Volunteers,
will be given November 18 at
3:00 p.m., Room 327 Norton.
In addition to the more than
8,000 Americans who will go into training in 1965, 1,000 Juniors
will enter Summer, 1965 training
to begin preparing for overseas

Wednesday, October 21, approximately 30 girls tried out
for the freshman cheerleading
squad, after participating in three
days of exhausting practice. The
girls selected by the panel of
judges are Sandy Baco, Carol

See P. 11

forum for free expression, having
the right to undertake discussion

PRESTIGE

Squad Picked

Peace Corps Test
Set for November

Tweeds

�Friday, October 30, 1964

Students Work
On Civil Rights
The Civil Rights Committee,
under the leadership of Mike
Lappin, has become one of the
most active campus organizations
due to the success of such projects as the voter registration
drive.
The overall purpose of the
committee, as expressed by Lenny
Gerson, member of the executive
committee, is to establish good
relations with people in Buffalo
whom it is trying to help, as well
as to contribute to Civil Rights
activities throughout the United
States.

The Voter Registration project,
first activity of the year, was
successful and satisfying to participants. Two hundred students
covered three wards of the city,
encouraging people who would
not otherwise have registered, to
vote in the Presidential election.
Weekend Work camps, sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee, which is now
affiliated with the Civil Rights
committee, are already being organized. The first is scheduled
to take place November 21. This
entails students going into the
homes of those people in Buffalo
needing assistance, to do painting and repair jobs. There were
two such work camps last year.
To establish an Inter-campus
Committee is a future goal of the
Civil Rights Committee, The Civil
Rights committees of all colleges
in Buffalo will be coordinated, to
make it possible for a broader
program to be carried out, and
to eliminate overlapping of work
in Buffalo by each individual
school. In most of the other colleges in Buffalo, Civil Rights
committees are in early stages.
Twelve members of the committee will attend the Northern
Student Movement Conference to
be held at Columbia University
Saturday. Representatives from
all schools belonging to the National Student Movement will
attend this conference. The topic
for the weekend is “Crisis in
Black and White”. The program
will include speakers, such as
Bayard Rustin, workshops, and
other activities.
Before the committee undertakes any further projects, it will
be reorganized. There will be
three research groups—one on
housing, one on education, one
on labor. The groups will work
independently, then take appropriate

measures to rectify objectionable situations in Buffalo.

The Civil Rights Committee is
in its third year of existence on
this campus. Last year, under
Jean Trayor and then Hilda van
Landingham, it initiated a civil
rights column, sponsored a book
‘ r ive, and brought speakers, such
as Mae Mallory, to the
campus.
Although it now has a hard core
of members, membership is always open. The committee meets
every other week, with the next
meeting to be held sometime during the coming week.
(

SPECTRUM

U. of Paris Honors Dr. Kahn
One of the most distinguished
honors by the University of Paris
will be given to Dr. Herman
Rahn, chairman of the department of physiology at the University.

Dr. Rahn, who is also a Lawrence D. Bell professor of physiology, will receive the "Docteur
Honoris Causa” at the Sorbonne
in Paris Thursday. The award is
being given to Dr. Rahn for his
outstanding work in the field of
physiology, particularly in the
area of cardiovascular research.
Dr. Rahn received his A.B. de-

gree from Cornell University and

his Ph.D. from the University of
Rochester. He has participated
in various research projects including a most recent study of
the physiological adaptions of Korean women divers.
He was named Bell Professor
and chairman of the department
of physiology at the University
in 1956. Prior to serving at the
University, Dr. Rahn was associated with the University of
Rochester for 15 years in the
Schools of Medicine and Dentistry.

BFO to Present Greek Plays
A series of Greek dramas produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation with a distinguished cast will be broadcast
Sundays at 9:00 p.m. beginning
Nov. 1 on WBFO (88.7 me.). Included will be The Oresteian Trilogy of Aeschylus, “Electra” by
Sophocles and “The Medea” by
Euripedes, starring Elsa Verghis, one of the finest interpreters of classical Greek drama.
C .A. Trypanis introduces his
new translation of the works of
Aeschylus by stating, “The Or**teia is undoubtedly the greatest

achievement in classical Greek
tragedy. In this trilogy the robust poetic imagination of Aeschylus gave dramatic form to one
of the crucial events in the developments of Western culture:
the transference of the punishment of bloodshed from the family to the state. Conceived in
mythological terms and expressed in bold imagery, it traces the
destiny of the House of Atreus
as it moves from the murder and
horror to relief and happiness.”
The dramas are scheduled as
follows:
Nov. 1—The Oresteian Trilogy
Part I; “Agamemnon"
Nov. 8—The Oresteian Trilogy
Part II: “The Choephore”
Nov. 15—The Oresteian Trilogy
Part III: “The Eumenides”

Class Will Sponsor
December Concert
On December 11, 1964, the Junior Class of the School of Nursing will sponsor a Pop Concert
at Kleinhans Music Hall featuring Florian Zabach.
The proceeds will help finance
the annual Junior-Senior banquet.
Tickets will be available at
the ticket office of Norton or
from any Junior nursing student.

Nov. 22—“The Medea” by Euripides starring Elsa Verghis
Nov. 29—“Electra” by Sopho-

PACE THREE

Third Fenton Lecture

Blake Speaks On U.S. Cities
The third Fenton Lecture entitled “The American City, Today and Tomorrow,” was delivered on Thursday, October 22 by
Peter Blake, editor of The Agricultural Forum Magazina.
Departing somewhat from the
usual method of delivery, Mr.
Blake adopted a different approach to the problem of imparting a specific message to his
audience. Slides, illustrating his
talk were employed throughout.
These, coupled with his lively
and witty talk, made the evening
a most rewarding one.

tax laws which exist today. These

laws, contends Mr. Blake, stifle
any attempts on the part of build-

ers to erect aesthetically pleasand architecturally sound
edifices. Mr. Blake went on to
criticize the role politicians have
played in the cities of today, and
the role they will undoubtedly
play in the cities of the future.
“The only reason," asserted Mr.
Blake, “we lack good cities is because the politicians do not understand the process involved.
We have so many specialized
ing

planners

working at

cross-pur-

poses the cities cannot become
organic units. Instead they become different parts put together
by different people working toward different ends.”

He chose to divide his subject
cles
into three parts (or acts as he
Other new programs for Novcalled them); a scenic tour of
ember include:
beauty spots in America, a tour
Moment! 01 Culture Italian*, of a medieval Italian city, and
with literature and songs of Italy illustrated examples of what we
This led Mr. Blake to the germ
conducted in Italian and English can'do to revitalize our cities and
of his talk: what to do to make
by William Leparulo, Instructor our civilization. His first act conthe cities of the future excellent
sisted mainly of pictures illusof Italian at UB; broadcast Tuesplaces in which to live and work.
days at 5:45 and repeated Sum trating some of the more flagrant
to Urbino, he
days at 8:45.
architectural aberrations of our Going back again
pointed out that this city was an
country.
displayed
He
the
usual
Prof. Charles Ebert, Chairman
example of an organic whole. The
of the Department of Geography pictures one sees of billboards city was
conceived and planned
will combine his academic study cluttering our highways, along with one objective in mind and
with his first-hand experience with examples of uninspired
was constructed as a unit. Probuildings. In the second, we were
traveling abroad to provide valceeding to the future, Blake asuable background material on treated to a tour of Urbino in serted that we must first of all
Italy. Mr. Blake classified Urbino
Foreign News Perspectives to be
replace all the different agencies
as a city of the past built with
heard Thursdays at 5:45 and reand planners with one unit that
its inhabitants in mind. He caupeated at 8:15.
will co-ordinate all phases of
pay
tioned
the
audience
to
close
University Convocations Tuesplanning and construction. The
attention
to
Urbino
because
of
its
and
day
Thursdays at 7:00 p.m.
next step is ot build the city
features talks by distinguished lessons for cities of the future.
around a central skeleton of supvisitors to the campus and this
ply. This skeleton must provide
The rest of the talk was demonth will include the address
voted to a discussion of the cities for the greatest flexiability in
by Justice William 0. Douglas of the future. One of the most erecting new buildings while at
and, Robert Theobald on “The pressing problems facing the city the same time making provision
Effects of Cybernetics” and by
of today and of tomorrow is that for the existing structures. The
campus visitors last summer.
dealing with city planning. By
city of the future must be a
Detailed information about the city planning Mr.
“Plug-in City.” With the existBlake included
month’s schedule can be found not only the actual planners but ence of such cities the problems
in the monthly guides available also those people in charge of the of scattered architecture and
at the Norton candy counter and various city agencies. His contenfaulty planning in our cities will
in the dorms.
tion that one city agency never be eliminated. Instead, we will
knows what the other agencies have cities that act as organic
are doing, was amply documented units, and are so flexible as to
and illustrated to be a very perbe readily adaptable to any and
suasive argument. In addition, all changes and modifications in
Blake criticized the zoning and our varied civilization.
Two university faculty members addressed the Bennett High
School American History II honor
classes Thursday.
Mr. Wade J. Newhouse, Jr.,
professor of law, discussed Constitutional Law and Civil Rights”

Bennett Hears Faculty

at 8:55 a.m.

At 11:10 a.m., Mr. Michael H.
Prosser, lecturer in drama and
speech, discussed “The United
States’ Role ip the United Nations,” Mr. Prosser also addressed
the South Buffalo Kiwanis Club
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. in the
South Buffalo YMCA.

Milltello's sssasas

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEFCASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Nome Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students
TF 3-1600
3400 MAIN STREET (Opposite UB)
till
9 P.M.
evening
and
Friday
Open Monday, Thursday

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

�Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

Jrom the Editor

...

“It Doesn’t Make a Difference Who You Vote For But.
But it does make a difference, because you will be
choosing the leaders of the state and nation and in effect
you will be determining policy. In a democratic society
the last and final decision is left up to the people. Now
it is your turn to be heard, and your only voice is the
vote. The idea of “just voting because you have to” is
incomplete. As such, voting is unimportant, only when a
responsible voting public examines the issues, ideas and
candidates does voting take on the importance of picking
leaders and determining policy.
■
right vs. responsibility

All to often the college community isolates itself
from the “world outside.” It is impossible to do this for,
if college is to make any sense, it must encompass the
entire human experience including all that is good and
bad in the outside world.
Tuesday it is not your right to vote; it is your responsiblity. The same is true of a newspaper. It is not
a newspaper’s right to endorse a candidate, rather it is
a responsibility. This is the responsibility and the role
of a free press in a free society. It is a responsibility
that the SPECTRUM recognizes.
In endorsing candidates for Tuesday’s election the
SPECTRUM has examined the issues, ideas and backgrounds in each race. Unlike a sports writer with his
Grid Pics, we are not using calculations to pick winners.
Some of, the people we are endorsing may lose, but we
are confident in our belief in them and their ideas and
goals.

Johnson vs. Goldwater
Although President Johnson has had a difficult time
filling the vacuum created by President Kennedy’s death,
we feel that he has exhibited both the ability to continue
progressive legislation as well as to initiate new and
meaningful programs of his own. Specifically we refer
to his War on Poverty and his statesman-like reaction to
the recent power change in Moscow.
Senator Goldwater on the other hand, has made
several rash and foolish statements and jeopardized the
integrity of his own position through his consistant equivocation. We refer to his questionable statements on the
conduct of nuclear warfare, America’s role in the U.N.,
and his outdated isolationism.
The distinction between Vice Presidential candidates is even more noticeable. Sen. Humphrey has supported the Constitution and the liberal wing of the Democratic Party in such areas as civil rights, increased prosperity and a humane and strong foreign policy; while
Representative Miller has contented himself with parochial issues and personal politics.
For these reasons the SPECTRUM endorses the Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates of the Democratic Party.

Keating v». Kennedy
Although it is a hard decision to make, the SPECTRUM, in view of the record and experience of Senator
Keating, has decided to endorse the Republican candidate for the Senatorial race.
Senator Keating’s twelve years in the House of Representatives and six years in the Senate along with his
voting record on issues such as civil rights, education
and area redevelopment has proven his ability as a responsible leader and Senator. The SPECTRUM applauds
his courageous refusal to endorse the candidacy of Senator Goldwater.
Pillion v». McCarthy
The SPECTRUM endorses Democratic candidate
Richard McCarthy for Representative from the
39th District. Mr. McCarthy has worked extensively in the
Buffalo area in an attempt to strengthen this area
economically, as well as culturally. His proposed
policy on tax
reductions, fiscal security and improvement of public
education along with his reasonable and liberal
attitude
make him an ideal candidate.
SPECTRUM readers need no introduction to Representative Pillion and his political
views. While in office Mr. Pillion engaged in such irresponsible
acts as introducing a bill to abolish the State Department,
opposing
the Test Ban Treaty and saying that we were spending
too much money on the development of the peaceful
uses of atomic energy.
(Cont’d on P 5)
'

cjCetterA to the

No More
Mr. Charlie
By LARRY SIEGEL
In writing about my experiences this summer in Helena, Arkansas, working for SNCC on a
voter registration drive, I feel
I have neglected a very vital
point. Just relating experiences
to a reader does not involve the
reader. He or she must see how
these experiences are relevant to
them. In other words the reader
must be able to see how he fits
into the picture, I do noP want
people left with—“O.K., I feel
terrible about what’s been happening. I want to do something,
but what can I do?" What to do
and how to do it are the big
questions I feel that are of concern to students in the North.
You see many different groups,
such as: Muslims, Nationalists,

NAACP, CORE, SNCC, and SCLC.
All these groups cause a great
deal of frustration. First, frustration within civil rights groups
themselves about agreeing on
strategy, tactics, and direction.
Second, frustration within you,
about which group to follow and
also how to break through something that seems so unbreakable.
The frustration is real, but there
are definite reasons for feeling
it. The solution to this problem
has to be radical, because the
white man has made it so. He
has done such a good job of putting the Negro in his place and
such a good job of elevating himself that solutions now always
infringe on someone else’s rights.
I feel there are one of two
things to do. You either start a
revolution or step on those toes.
How dare people talk about their
rights being violated when for
so long they have helped in violating the rights of Negroes by
either directly doing so or being
complacent about others doing it.
Look how PAT, in one year’s
time, is screaming in New York
City about their rights being vio 1 a t c d, concerning bussing of
children. Multiply this times TOO
years that the Negro has been
screaming inside himself and
nothing being done about the
same violations and you see what
you have. The white man has
started it so he should not be
surprised by what is happening
and what is going to happen.
This problem is nbt sectional
as some would like to think it
is. We saw a summer of violence
in almost every major city in the
North. It was no accident. Putting down a human being can
only result in one thing after
a while. He gets tired of it and
explodes. What happens in Mis
sissippi, Arkansas, Alabama, and
the rest of the Southern States
now also means New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit,
Rochester, and even Buffalo, the
“City of Good Neighbors.” This
is why everyone is involved
whether they like it or not.
Our generation has started the
kind of direct action that is
needed to break this problem. It
started with the freedom rides,
then the sit-ins, then the formation of SNCC, the Mississippi
Summer project and the Northern violence this summer. All
this was started by our generation. We have not seen local,
state and federal governments
do much of anything. So the answer must be up to us. We have
not been brain washed. We are
young, energetic and active and
can do something.
The kind of programs being
carried out in the North and
South are very different. It is
much easier to know what to do
in the South, because the problem is right down to the “nitty
gritty:" Students can go to Mississippi and they know what to
do. They know who is against
them. The leadership for the
most part is from people of our
generation who know what they
want and how to get it. The
North is different, however. We
(Cont’d on P. 5)

Editor

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete Identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

Neuner Letter Answered
TO THE EDITOR:

I would like to reply to the letter of last week which defended
the Publications Board.
First, I would like to take issue
with some of the statements the
writer made. The author stated
that “AH of the voting members
are appointed by the President
of the University, after having
been recommended to him by the
Student Senate.” I hasten to point
out that only two of the seven
members presently on the board
were recommended by the Senate. Then, in regard to the present board, the author is in error.
Secondly, the author stated that
none of the members of the board
“are actively engaged in any student publication, nor were they
selected solely for their publications background.” This statement is one of the prime reasons
to eliminate the board. When a
lawyer attempts to enter the bar
is he judged by people lacking
a background in law? When a
man attempts his doctorate in
history is he judged by doctors
of medicine? The answer is obvious.

Third, the author stated that
the board serves as a check, so
that no one philosophical group
can dominate publications; nor
does it empower the editor to
choose his own successor, thus

perpetuating a given philosophy.

I would hasten to point out to the
author that only once in the past
six years has the Publications
Board not accepted the choice of
the previous editor. Thus, if we
grant that this is a function of
the Board, we must also concede
that this is a funtcion which it
does not exercise. The author
stated that “no restriction is
placed on the freedom of expression except that deemed necessary by the students themselves.”
1 question where the Publications

Board, which has 70% of its
members appointed by the administration, has the right to decide
that its decisions are those “deemed necessary by the students
ihemselves.”
It is stated that the board is
“a concerned group of students
representing all the student
body.” I question the right of this
board, appointed through the administration, to pawn itself off
as representing the student body.
I would like to quote a man
by the name of Towers, who said
“the trouble with bureaucrats is
that they sometimes forget that
they are still ultimately responsible to the people.” It is to this
end that we who ask the abolition
of the Publications Board are
working. Some yell we are anarchists—I say we are democrats
and too much democracy is not
a bad thing.
—Art Burke

Amendment Questioned
TO THE EDITOR;

We understand that one criticism of the present Publications
Board is that they are not a
qualified group to judge and
handle the problems of publications. Certainly the Activities
Committee could be similarly
criticized. There is quite a difference between considering the
recognition of an activity as com-

The Student Activities Committee, after considering the proposed Student Senate amendment
to abolish the Publications Board,
is particularly concerned with
the delegating of the duty of
recognizing new publications to
our committee.

pared to

It is the unanimous feeling of
the Activities Committee that this
added function is not a practical
and feasible idea. The intent of
the amendment is not clearly stated. Our group questioned whether we are to establish a new
procedure for recognition of publications, adopt the procedure already in existence, or use the
procedure applied to new groups
seeking recognition. We presently use as our primary criterion in
deciding recognition whether or
not the needs of the student body
are being served by a new activity, and we rarely deny or revoke
recognition. This policy might
lead to five newspapers on campus, all recognized publications,
free to apply for funds.

THE

a

new publication.

Whereas the present system for
selecting Publications Board
members by Presidential appointment can assure a Board composed of individuals with experience in the publications field, the
open membership policy used by
the Activities Committee offers
no such potential. Although we
might suggest that this potential
has not been utilized, its existence insures a body of knowledgeable students which the proposed amendment ignores.
The Student Activities Committee feels that these factors should
be considered carefully. It is our
feeling that to delegate the power
of recognition of publications to
(Cont’d on P. 5)

SPECTRUM

official student newspaper
Publication Office at Norton Hall,
The

of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Managing Editor
News Editors

Advisor
Financial Advisors
Editorial

Sports Editor

Peter Rubin
Paul Nussbaum

3a;bara Strauss

William

Siemering
Dallas Garber
Allan Scholom

-

JOHN P. KOWAL

Lay-out Editor
Copy Editor
Business Mgr.
Advertising Mgr,

Photo Editor
Circulation Mgr.

David Edelman
Marcia Ann Orzulak

Bernard Dikman

.

PAGE FOUR

Howard Auerbach
Edward Joscelyn
Alice Ostrander

General Staff; Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita, Sue Greene,
Eileen Murphy, , Gary Lyman, Gary Chilcotl.i Nancy Migdbl, Don Eismann,' Meryl Frank,
, n Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou Kozlowski, Rita Solomon, Phyllis Shapiro,
Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Skip Venneri, Sharon Richter, Diane Holtzman, Diane Hayes,
Manon Michael, Erol Sull, Ellen Lorig, Linda Wachner, Lee Cory, Debbie Rubie, Jeff
Lewis, Terry Davis, Bernice Cohen, Margo Rakita, Scoff Kurman
Sports Staff: Chick Arnold, Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
Schuelein, Skip Blumberg, Mike Castro, Lenny Gaby, Bruce Goldstein, George Jackrel,
Steve Oberstein, Eric Snyder, Harvey Starr
Photography Staff; David Collins, Pete Bonneau, Ivan Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don
Blank, Stanley Szymanowski, Marc Levine, Dan Waterman, Toby Leder
Circulation Staff: Diane Lewis, Jane Herbrand, Ellie Gold, Joyce Fenmore, Mary Lou
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-

�Friday,

October 30, 1964

gucinski

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

KtHSCTIOMS

Spotlight

...

on
Civil Rights

r

By JEREMY TAYLOR

By LEONARD GERSON

i

ddditoriai
Mahoney vs. Doerr

As the presidential campaign
reaches its feverish climax,
Barry Goldwater is increasingly
smarting under the charge of irresponsibility. Doubts about the
Republican nominee’s capacity
have been intensified by the questionable assertions of many of
his supporters, UB students had
an excellent opportunity to hear
such debatable declaration at
Dr. Henry Paolucci’s lecture last
week in the Conference Theater.
Dr. Paolucii, who is the Conservative Party candidate for the Senate seat from New York, and who
is also a devoted follower of
Barry Goldwater, believes that
“the Negro problem in the U.S.
exists because Negro society here
and in Africa is matriarchal and
because the family unit is not
important in American Negro
culture.” This analysis of our
nation’s most important domestic
problem is not only shallow but
is also a misrepresentation of
the present situation.

The SPECTRUM endorses John Doerr, the Democratic candidate for the 55th District of the State LegisDr. Paolucci’s first error oclature. Mr. Doerr’s stand on academic freedom and noncurs when he describes the Afconcerning
speakers
intervention
at
political
legislative
rican society as matriarchal. The
a State school make his election highly important to the practice of polygamy, which was
in African
academic community. His stand on “the Albany mess” formerly prevalent
societies, necessarily gave the
key
are
also
to
this
and a code of ethics for legislators
mother the main responsibility
election.
for rearing the offspring; howthe essential economic and
ever,
to
exception
grave
SPECTRUM
takes
Further the
political decisions were made by
Senator Mahoney’s refusal to recognize the principle the man. As the African nations
have gained their independence,
of academic freedom as well as his unsubstantiated atthis primitive practice has discampus.
this
tack on the mentality of the student body of
appeared in the cities.
In the Amercan plantation sys-

oCetterA to the Editor (cont’dj
the Activities Committee is not
a satisfactory solution to the prob-

lem under consideration. Although we feel that changes may
be warranted concerning the Pub-

lications Board, we can not see
how the present amendment will
rectify the situation,
Sincerely,
Student Activities Committee

Resident Council Scores Apathy
TO THE EDITOR:

There appears to be a great
deal of disinterest and apathy on
this campus. This is apparent not
only on the part of the students,
but also on the part of the faculty, as exhibited by faculty participation in the Tower Hall
Open-House of October 25,
The resident students of this
university are as much a part of
this school as are the academic,
vocational and administrative departments. Invitations were sent
to all Deans, administrative officials, and faculty on this campus

week prior to the Open
House, and of all those invited
only one faculty member attended. We realize that some of those
invited had previous engagements
planned for that day, but out of
over six-hundred invited, surely
more than one could have attended.
A goal of this university should
be to further faculty-student relationships which are an integral
part of higher education. The residents took a stride in this direction by opening their doors to
faculty and administrators.
Tower House Council
one

New York at Buffalo at the
U.S. Customs 175th Anniversary the AFROTC drill team performed
in front of 15,000 people. The planes in, the background are used
*&gt;/ the
Air Force Thunderblrds.

Representing the State University of

tem, economic and social expedience forced the slave father to

take a secondary role. His selling
price would have been greatly

lowered if he had to be sold with
his wife and children. Although
the younger children needed a
mother, there was no reason why
the father couldn’t be separated
from his family. The legal status
of slave children was taken from
their mothers, so as to avoid
complications that would arise in
determining the legal status of
the offspring from the numerous
sexual relations between plantation owners and their women
slaves. It was not tradition but
the will of American slave owners that prevented the slave
father from assuming his proper

role.

The elections are upon us. Anyone who has read even one of my
columns should be able to guess
that I support Johnson over
Goldwater, Doerr over Mahoney,
and McCarthy over Pillion, so to
devote a whole column to the
obvious reasons for my choice in
each of these contests would be
at the very least, redundant.
I have not, as yet, made up
my mind who to vote for in the
senatorial race. Keating has served New York and the country
well during his years in office,
but Kennedy during his term as
Attorney General accomplished
really staggering changes and re-

forms in the fabric of American
society in the areas of civil rights
and curbing the rackets. He did
this through the use of highly
questionable means, however. I
have no great love for Jimmy
Hoffa, but Kennedy nailed him
with little regard for his constitutional liberties. Kennedy has
also agitated for “liberalization"
of wire-tap laws and the protection guaranteed to the mails and
to personal communication. As a
civil libertarian, I must oppose
him in these efforts since these
measures, like the infamous “no
knock” laws and the ‘stop and
frisk” laws, would intrude the
state into the private and personal affairs of any citizen. Yet
Kennedy, despite t h e charges
laid against him by many hard
core civil righters, did perhaps
more than any other single government official to elevate civil
rights for all men to the stature
of real and enforceable law.
Choosing between Keating and
Kennedy is a difficult task. Keating is a liberal Republican, a
man with the courage of his convictions, but with little or no
imagination, a politician of the
old school, Kennedy is a liberal
Democrat, young, vigorous, and
with vision and imagination but
somewhat intemperate and “issue oriented”, as opposed to
dealing with principle as the

irreducable factor in any decision. Keating tends toward irreproachable mediocrity, but it may
be argued that a liberal should
vote for him over Kennedy in
an attempt to preserve the two
party system which Goldwater

has done-so much to destroy. As
far as the “carpet bag” issue is
concerned, I believe that it is
a red herring and totally irrelevant, although I must say I wish
Bobby Kennedy had decided to
run against his dim wilted brother in Massachusetts and left
Keating alone.

If the Keating-Kennedy contest
is a hard one to decide on, the
others are easier than they should
be in a healthy society. Goldwater, a dangerous personal visionary with tendencies toward
crypto-fascism, should not, I believe, even be given serious
consideration in a society whose
goals are clearly defined as working for “Liberty and Justice for
all”; the very fact that he is able
to run for the presidency of this
country as a serious contender
offers profound cause for worry
about the quality of American
democracy in this era. Pillion,
who in many ways is worse than
Goldwater, and Mahoney, whose
insurance interests I feel should
be carefully investigated with an
eye to "conflict of interest”, both
represent shrill, oppressive, and
dangerous tendencies in American government, and in all the
above cases, although we are presented with a choice of evils, the
choice is clear.
I am upset by the extreme positions many men have adopted
in this election year as a reaction against Goldwaterism, Norman Mailer has said in Esquira
that “the wars are upon us” and
that “the revolution of the soul”
is in full swing. People talk glibly about emigrating if Goldwater
is elected, and the stock exchange
is exhibiting an unhealthy palor.
This is not an election to shatter
illusions or change the course
of American life. It is a system
to avoid violent revolution and
provide a continuum of government and political leadership. If
Goldwater wins it will show that
the people of this country are
more conservative than we all
had supposed. In either ease, it
will be a triumph of democratic
principle—but democracy it a
tool of government, not a guarantee of the right government. I
am voting for what I believe to
be the right government. I hope
you will do the same.

Dr. Paolucci is even on dubious
ground when he attempts to link

African civilization with that of
our American Negro. In his now
classic study, The Myth of the
Negro Past, anthropologist Melville J. Hershkovitis attempted
to link the New World Negro
with his original African culture,
but since its publication in 1941,
his thesis has been highly contested. In his brilliant book entitled Slavery, Stanley M. Elkins
while recognizing the African
influence on the Latin American
Negro, carefully and categorically refutes Mr. Hershkovitis’ contention concerning the African
tradition in the American Negro.

In his bestseller, Crisis in Black
and White, Charles E. Silberman
describes the Negro family as
being “that weakest of all institutions;” yet, this weakness is
not so much a cause, as an effect
of the Negro’s subordinate position in our society, especially
that of the male; Due to discriminatin in hiring and inferior enucation, the unemployment rate
of Negroes is much higher; although, they comprise only 10%
of the working force, they account for 20% of the unemployed. It is much easier for a Negro
woman to find employment
—

cooking, cleaning. The perverting
effect that such a situation has
(Cont’d

on P. 6)

No More Mr. Charlie
(Cont’d from P, 4)

have sophistication and complication and people who would like
the cloud the issues. Our leaders
preach equal opportunity and
equal justice. But I still see
school zones surrounding the
ghetto. Middle-income rather than
low-income housing projects are
still being built. There is still
discrimination in housing and
employment. Negroes still work
in the back of the plant and
whites work in the front. These
are real facts that can no longer
be clouded. All this exists in the
North and no amount of rationalization can remove these problems. However, we can help to
remove them by taking the lead
with direct action.
One thousand students went to
the worst state in the Union—
Mississippi. Why can’t 1,000 students in each city in the North
do something similar. The University of Buffalo has 15,000 students and the Metropolitan area
of Buffalo has 1,000,000 people.
One thousand young men and
women is small compared to this
figure. We have to get the facts
for ourselves. We have to do our

own research into all areas of
importance. We can get all this
information for ourselves and not
depend on others for their facts
and their interpretations. We
can carry out our own negotiations. We can picket in large
numbers, sit-in and fill the city
jails. There should be one interschool civil rights organization
to act as a unified group. We
have to change our focus of intellectual concern to direct positive action. Our program has to
be varied and be on many levels

—from work programs in brokendown homes to negotiations with
the political power structure
from after school programs for
children to civil disobedience.
—

I am trying to stress that we
do not have to wait for others
to act. We can take the initiative. This is very hard work and
it will take much patience. But
through the kind of action the
problems can be solved. We have
seen that “going slow" has produced a great deal of frustration
and violence. Continuing past
practices will eventually lead to
a huge crisis where much blood
will be spilled.

�Spotlight
(Cont’d

from P.

Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

5)

family is penetratingly
explored in John A. Williams'
novel, Sittie—“Sissie’s perpetual
reply was, ‘Sure, I’m your wife,
but I’m not the man in the house;
you’re the man, but you don’t
act like it. Somebody’s got to be
the man here and make some
money to bring in here, and it
sure ain’t you!’ . . . Sissie was
left in the vacuum of silence
which was broken only by the
questions pul to her by her son.
She would ask herself: “Why
couldn’t he find work? Why was
it that all the men paced the
streets in the mornings, heads
bent, steps slow? At what point
had she become the man and he
less the man than he had seemed
to be? . . . She wanted him to
be a man but knew he couldn’t.
Vaguely she perceived that the
fault was not his, yet she couldn’t
upon a

find out whose fault it was

.

.

.”

In her study on the depression’s effect upon white Protestant family life, Th* Unemployed
Man and His Family, Mira Komarovsky found that one-fifth of
the unemployed had lost a substantial amount of authority and
respect in their households and
their family life was deteriorating. It seems that the basic reason for Negro family instability
is much more universal than Dr.
Paolucci’s statement would lead
us to believe. As long as the
Negro male is prevented from
assuming the customary “bread
willing” role, the chaos and matriarchal tendencies that have
plagued Negro families will continue.
There are a few basic interrelated factors that are responsible for the present Negro problem; however, I find Dr. Paolucci’s statement concerning the
unique importance of the family
unit to be more of a distortion
than an aid to understanding. It
is unfortunate that the intelligent and respectable conservative element in our state could
not have found a more responsible spokesman for their cause.

Dr. B. P. Poudel Hot Line
Speaks on Nepal
Dr. Bishnu Prasad Poudel, visiting Asian professor at the University addressed two civic groups
and a group of grammar school
students Tuesday and Wednesday.
Dr. Poudel, a Nepalese historian, discussed “Nepalese Culture,”
at a meeting of the Buffalo Junior
Chamber of Commerce at 12:30
p.m., Tuesday, in the Towne
House Restaurant.

At 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, Dr. Poudel spoke on, “Nepal," at a meeting of the Lockport Lions Club
held in the Park Hotel, Lockport,
New York. He delivered the same
lecture the following day to
seventh and eighth grade students of Buffalo’s School 72 at
2:30 p.m. in the School’s auditorium.
Dr. Poudel, the first of four
Asian professors to visit the University. during the 1964-65 academic year, is sponsored by the
Visiting Asian Professors Project,
designed to rotate the foreign
professors on a monthly basis
among universities participating
in the project. Dr. Poudel is
scheduled to appear on the campus of Bradley University in Illinois following his stay at the
State University of Buffalo.
Mr. Tumkur Rudraradhya Rajasekharaiah, Indian lecturer in
philosophy and English literature,
will be the second visiting Asian
professor at the University this
year, Mr. Rajasckharaiah will
serve at the University from
November 9 through December
23.

The Student Judiciary is
well aware of the fact that
some students are promiscuously “lending” their
I.D. cards to others, and
thereby allowing for illegal entrance into football
games and other such
events. Any student who is
found to lie committing
this act will he brought
before the Judiciary.

—

News from Other Campuses

VALPARAISO, Ind. (CPS)—Officials at Valparaiso University
have cancelled a university theatre production of Arthur L. Kopit’s "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama’s
Hung You in the Closet and I’m
Peelin’ So Sad.” No explanation
was given for the decision.
Valparaiso is a privately supported institution. It was founded
by the Lutheran Church.
play was to have been
presented October 29 November
The

-

1 under the direction of Dr. Fred

Sitton, of the school’s department
of speech and drama
Planning for the production
of “Oh Dad” began last spring,
at which time students interested
in obtaining roles in the show
received scripts. The play was
cast September 24 and 25. When
the actors reported for the first
rehearsal September 28, they
were told “Oh Dad, Poor Dad”
would not be presented at Valparaiso University,

The play’s cast, however, for
the most part protested it. Several actors questioned the cancellation as “a violation of the
freedom of artistic expression.”
“This kind of thing could
spread beyond the Department
of Speech and Drama, and that’s
what frightens me,” one cast
member was quoted as saying.

However, another actor said
the producer of any play must
consider the attitudes of his audience and, in that context, questioned the appropriateness of
presenting the play at Valparaiso.
“Oh Dad”, written while Kopit
was on a traveling postgraduate
fellowship from Harvard University, has been presented professionally and by stock com-

panies, amateur theatrical groups
and college drama clubs in va-

rious parts of the country.
Most actors were reported agreed that the cast and others involved wjere most offended by
the fact that fhe show was not
called off until after it was cast.
An editorial in the Valparaiso
newspaper, The Torch, termed
the cancellation “a blatant act
of censorship” with “frightening”
implications. The paper urged its
readers: “Don’t sit still, ask for
a performance
demand a performance! Or lose the right to
see or hear anything controversial again at Valparaiso Univer-

Tea Scheduled by
Honor Societies
Phi Eta Sigma, freshman men’s
honor fraternity, and Alpha
Lambda Delta, freshman women’s honor society, will hold a
tea for prospective members Sunday at 3:00 p.m. in the Dorothy
Haas lounge. Invitations have
been sent out to those freshmen whose previous records indicate that they may qualify for
membership.

In order to qualify for membership in Phi Eta Sigma or Alpha Lambda Delta, a student
must attain a 2.5 average dursity.”
ing the first semester of his
The school’s drama department freshman year, or a 2.5 cumulaannounced that “Biedermann and tive average during the entire
year.
the Firebugs,” by German playAlthough their names would
wright Max Frisch, will replace
“Oh Dad.” Both plays are con- seem to indicate that the two
sidered representatives of the societies are only for freshmen,
theatre of the absurd. Sitton will Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Lambda Delta are continuing organialso direct “The Firebugs.”
zations, whose membership is
composed largely of sophomores
and juniors. They sponsor a free
tutoring service, invite speakers
to regular meetings, and engage
—

SUPPORT N.S.A.
FREEDOM
FAST
NOVEMBER 19

in social activities. In addition,
Phi Eta Sigma is taking part in
intra-mural sports this year.

NOW!
FREE
DELIVERY

Buffalo Jazz Festival is proud

to announce that Bob Dylan,
America's Folk Singing Poet,
will appear at Kleinhans Music
Hall on Sunday, November 1st
at 8 p.m.

PIZZA
PATROL
This is big news for Pizza lovers. Santora’s Pizza Patrol will
deliver an extra delicious, freshly baked and piping hot pizza
right to your door at no extra charge. Call Santora's Pizza
Patrol any day from 2 P. M. to Midnight, and presto, your
favorite pizza will be on its way to your home. You may order
in advance for delivery to parties, meetings or other special
occasions.

FOR FRESH BAKED
PIPING HOT PIZZA

call

837-5700

�Friday, October 30, 1964

Insaurralde Feted

CAMPUS PERSONALITY

For Medical Work
Presentation of a bronze plaque
and a certificate to the rector of
the National University of Asuncion in Paraguay hightlighted a
convocation held at the University Wednesday.

Dr. Crispin Insaurralde, who
in Buffalo for one week
beginning Sunday, October 25,
was honored by the University
for his leadership and administration in a joint medical-nursing
program between his University,
State University of Buffalo, and
the United States Agency for
has been

International

Development.

Mr. William C. Baird, vicechairman of the University’s
Council, presented the plaque
and certificate to Dr. Insaurralde.
Speakers at the convocation included Dr. Clifford C. Furnas,

University president, Dr. Peter
F. Regan, III, vice-president for
health affairs, Dr. Douglas M.
Surgenor, dean of the School of
Medicine, and Mrs, Anne Sengbusch, dean of the School of Nursing. Dr. Insaurralde also spoke
following the presentation.

Last year, Dr. and Mrs. Furnas
visited the Paraguayan University
where Dr. Furnas was presented
with a doctor’s degree, Honoris
Causa, from Dr. Insaurralde.
The joint program between the
two Universities was began in
1956 when the dean of the Medical School, the late Dr, Stockton
Kimball, visited Paraguay and discovered poorly trained doctors
and ill-equipped medical facilities throughout the country.
federal government approached UB and a contract was
worked out through which medical and nursing faculty members
served at the University at Asuncion and upgraded teaching and
The

Although located in its Baird
Hall studios and offices, WBFO
is a part of the University that
literally extends beyond the campus. Its music and other programs
reach the Buffalo community and
soon will be heard throughout
most of the Niagara Frontier. The
problems of producing programs
that appeal to both a college and
a ■ community audience, and are
educational, enjoyable, and useful fall into the hands of Henry
Tenenbaum, Musical Director of

training.

WBFO currently broadcasts classical, jazz, folk, and show music,
with popular music as a nearfuture addition on a closed circuit
AM station to the dorms. In
supervising the contents of these
programs, Mr. Tenenbaum stresses the value of “presenting rele\ant and unique educational programming." He believes that if
the WBFO broadcasts are merely
copies of other stations, they will
have no significant value. Working by this ideal, he initiated
programs like the current “While
the City Sleeps” which presents
classical music from the Renaissance to Contemporary, and he
is planning to broadcast student
musical productions and a program by the Creative Associates,

been

purchased.

-*y

HENRY TENENBAUM

both artists and composers, at
UB, on a Rockefeller Grant.
Henry began his career with
WBFO last year, as a freshman,
working as a programmer and
announcer for Concert Hall, a
nightly broadcast of classical
music. Henry stresses the significance of classic music and Would
like to create a greater interest
in it, and provide the opportunity for students to further acquaint themselves with it.

FANNIES ARE BACK
We Fit Them All

The Short
&amp;

The Toll
$5.95-$14.95

A

fntar’n
Doily til 5:30
Thors, til

Early this year, a new basic
science buiiding at the University
was dedicated to the memory of
Dr. Kimball. A central blood bank
has been built and hospital laboratories have been enlarged
and improved. New X-ray and
other medical equipment has

y.

SPECIAL

WBFO.

health standards.
With financial support from the
U.S. government, State University
faculty members have improved
medical and nursing teaching and

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

9:00

Mr. Thompson

Peerless
Stonbury

Jane Colby

Jmj

1086 ELMWOOD AVENUE
Bet. Bird

8. Forest

Phone

See P. 11

UNDERLINER
THEY

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MCP accepted

We're really Open

STAND
OUT!
WE

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WENT SO

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GOT

AND

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SAVE 30*
ON EACH UNDERLINER
AT THE

UNIVERSITY
(BOOKSTORE
—-i
r
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v
ccv

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low you're

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You get action when you telephone

THIS COUPON IS WORTH

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but what about the folks

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—

30*

YOU

back home? When you
smash an exam, share the
glory. Phone the family
and bask in ever lbving
praise. Remember, a telephone call is the next best

—

I

UNIVERSITY
“ON CAMPUS”

—(OFFER GOOD UNTIL

W**
13,

1964)

m

�Five members of the Debate

“Leaders or Leadership?—That
Is the Question” was the theme
of this year's annual Fall Leaders
Conference sponsored by SEA
NYS, the Students Education Association of New York State. The
conference took place October
22 24 in the Schine Ten Eyck
Hotel in downtown Albany.
Representatives from colleges
and universities throughout New
York State attended the conference including four officers of
UB’s SEANYS chapter: Marcia

Marcia Berzon, President and Di
of the Western
Region; Sheryl Taub and Nancy
Migdol, Vice Presidents; and
Barbara Van Order, Secretary.
Dr. Burvil Glenn, SEANYS advisor and UB education professor
accompanied the group.

rector-at-Large

An executive board meeting
was held October 22. Friday,

October 23, those students who
were not members of the state
executive board, registered and
hard a speech entitled “Leaders
Or Leadership?”
David
H. Jenkins, Director of the Group
Dynamics Center asuf professor
of education at TempV University.
explained “that
part of supervision is giving help
as well as direction." He further
averred that to delegate authority we should not go about it
negatively, and it is up to the
leader to clearly state what a
task entails and define its responsibilities. Asked what the
word “professional” means, Dr.
Jenkins stated that we are work
ing for “known standards of performance, using our ability to
create, using a body of practice
based on knowledge and a code
of ethics in our relationship to
others."' He emphasized the fact
that, “it is not ethical to treat
kids the way some teachers treat
Jenkins

Society will represent the University at a two day Group Action tournament at Michigan
State University in East Lansing
this weekend. Those participating

include Linda Leventhal, Diane
Hayes, Neal Felsinger, Richard
Fleisher, and Robert Swanick.
The group will be coached by
Mr. Terry Ostermeier, Society
advisor. Each participating unit
will be requited to submit a report on some designated phase
of the national proposition, which
deals with federal programs of

public work for the unemployed.
Awards will be presented on the

basis of the written entries and
a 30-minute oral questioning of
the judges concerning their re-

ports.
Since the annual Michigan State
tournament is the only one of a
group action nature; the Society
endeavors to attend it each year.
Last year, the UB Debate Society
fifth among all participating
units.
Novice members will debate at
their first tournament of the
year to be held at Carnegie

Technical Institute in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, Saturday. Participants include Gloria Alfieri and
Nick Sargent, affirmative, and
Charles Liarakos and Robert
Dragone, negative.
There will be a general meeting of all debaters, Monday at
fi:30 p.m. in the Society office,

Room 357 Norton,

kids!"
That evening a banquet took

where

Edward

palange,

stale president Of SEANYS', show
ed slides and gave a report on

The music department
announces that, the location of the concent given
hy I he Toledo String
Quartet has hcen changed

from Itaird Hall to the
Norton Conference TheaThe

Saturday morning the small
workship groups met again and
discussed “Solving Our Problems.” After this there were regional meetings where the stu-

dents discussed how communication among the regional chapters
could be improved and their current programs. At the closing
general session Mr. William F.
Cole, State Consultant for the
New York Teacher’s Association,
expressed his appreciation to the
chapters for their attendance and
work in making the Fall Leaders
Conference a tremendous success.
■

["

FREE

Tonight at 8:30 p.m. we are
having an informal, closed party
in the Stanford room at the Hotel

Markeen', Main and

Utica,

Again this year the pledges
will be doing volunteer work at
Veterans’ Hospital, They will be
assisting in the neuro-psychological ward.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
ACCOUNTING MAJORS; A Career Panel for Seniors and interested Junior Accounting majors will be held in Room 335, Norton
Union, at 3:00 p.m., Wednesday, November -1. Information on
Federal Government employment opportunities and graduate study
writ Be flte theme. Dr. James Schindler, Dean, School of Business
Administration, will speak on graduate study in the field of
Business.

PhD CANDIDATES IN PHYSICS: American Cyanamid Co. has
openings in this field at the Stamford Research Laboratories and
will be recruiting for them on campus, Thursday, November 5.
The general areas of interest are: semiconductors, magnetic materials, thermoelectricity, electro-optics, and thin film phenomena.
Some specific projects at Stamford include improved thermoelectric
materials, investigation of magnetic semiconductors, and electronic
control of visible light transmission. This work will be under the
general supervision of a Group Leader in the Physical Research
Dept, at the Stamford Laboratories. In addition, the efforts at
Stamford are coordinated with the work of the Solid State Physics
Group at the Cyanamid European Research Institute in Geneva,

THE CITY OF NEW YORK DEPT. OF PERSONNEL
CITY
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION has opportunities for college students with New York City Government. There are many opportunities for interesting, challenging employment. In the fields of
personnel administration, urban renewal, recreation, real, estate
management, budget administration, management analysis, and
public health, they have established training programs designed to
attract outstanding college students. Further information is available at the University Placement Services.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Appointments should be made'at least one week in advance of the
interviewing date. Students must complete registration in order to
be eligible lor campus interviews. If you have not done so, register
-

Sigma

will hold a

Kappa Phi

social with the UB Law School
Fraternity, tonight at 8:30 p.m.
at the Hotel Worth.

Sigma Kappa Phi invites all
Greeks to a Halloween Open
House, Saturday at 4 Flower
Street before the football game,
from noon to 1:00 p.m.
Chi Omega are looking forward
to their social with TKE tonight.
Lambda Delta is holding a
Pumpkin Party tomorrow night
at the Club 161.

Psi will hold a
closed Halloween Costume Party
at the Upper Level, Saturday.
The Fraternity has purchased a
block of tickets for the Bill’s
Phi

Kappa

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION, LAW, is LIBERAL ARTS INTERVIEWS

Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold
a social with the sisters and
pledges of Theta Chi sorority
this evening. Saturday the Sig
Eps will have a closed dated Hal
loween party. Sunday afternoon,
many of the Sig Eps will attend
the Bills Houston football game.

TOUCHE, ROSS, BAILEY

Nmember

U. S. NAVY AREA AUDIT OFFICE
BS with interest in Accounting

9

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November 17

ERNST 6c ERNST

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in Accounting - MALE
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November IS
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ANY MAJOR
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November 20

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Fridays and Sundays upon presentation of ID Cards

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Sauteed Fresh Jumbo Shrimps Chinatown

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NEW YORK STATE DEPT. OF CIVIL SERVICE
All'majors at degree, level*

November I:

$250

COMPLETE LUAU DINNERS START AT
Tropical and American Drinks
Luncheons
served from
Banquet rooms available
up to 300 persons
11:30 A.M.
Dinners Served 4 P.M. to 10 P.M.
kitchen open til 2:30 A.M.
CALL NF 4-4404 or NF 4-4421

Nmemli

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November 17

BOCCE

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MALE
NEW YORK STATE DEFT. OF CIVIL SERVICE
ALL MAJORS AT ALL DEGREE LEVELS

Alpha Phi Omega will have a
game night Halloween party with

concert

Si' SMART
BS. MBA with interest in Accounting

November !l

game Sunday against Houston,

will he
given tomorrow night at
o:.'5() (i.m. (adm. free)
tre.

the summer National Education
Association convention in British
Columbia, Entertainment was provided by the “Statesmen", a boys
choral group from the State University of New York at Albany,

and an informal mixer followed.

Saturday, WKBW Radio and
Phi Epsilon Pi will hold a Halloween Hop in the Fillmore
Room at 8:30 p.m. Proceeds will
go to the WKBW Scholarship
Fund. Donations are 35&lt; per person. Tickets may be purchased
in advance from any brother or
pledge of Phi Ep or at the Phi
Ep table in Norton.

'

At Annual SEANYS
Albany Conference

place

Greek Notes

Debaters Go to
Michigan State

leadership Is Topic

Dr,

Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

««#«&lt;

r-

■»■«»&lt; t

THE JR ANE CO.
B* Ms EE. C*
-

II

Mt

-

\K.U

K

�Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

Barry Jr. Speaks
Thursday, October 22, the son
of Presidential candidate Barry
Goldwater stopped briefly for an
informal question and answer session with students, in the Dorothy Haas Lounge.
Barry Goldwater Jr., 26, has
been campaigning for his father
on various campuses and cities.
He attempted to answer questions posed on Goldwater Sr.’s

foreign policy theory, graduated
income tax policies, the morality

issue, and the draft.
He spoke of Goldwater’s recognition of Communism as it exists
“as an enemy of the free world.
The way to guarantee freedom
and peace is to maintain firmness and preparedness; military,
economic and moral strength.”
Goldwater Jr. described vicepresidential candidate Bill Miller,
as “a good American, concerned
with the American way of life
and dedicated to the free enterprise system.” On the topic of
“present moral decay in Washington,” he spoke of the increasing disrespect for law enforcement agencies in America’s youth
and the influence on youth by
“older people.” The first example in the nation is the White
House. “People like Billy Sol
Estes and Bobby Baker make
you wonder. We need an individual in the White House who is
not questioned for integrity and
honesty.”

When questioned on his father’s
foreign policy theory young Goldwater replied, “I’m not so sure
it’s a theory.” He went on to elaborate on his father’s position on
world Communism and military
preparedness. Barry Jr. spoke
of his father not only as a “good
American,” but as a “very good
father”.

Arnold Air Society
Hosts Children
Approximately 20 children of

CIVIL RIGHTS

COMMITTEE

There will be a Civil Rights
the 10-12 age group from the
Child Care Center in Delaware Committee meeting Today at
Avenue had their first taste of 4:00 p.m. in the Conference Theflying last Saturday afternoon as atre.
guests of the UB Arnold Air
HARRIMAN STUDY CHANGE
Society, national, honorary, proThe Spectrum incorrectly anof
fessional society
AFROTC canounced the two new study areas
dets.
in, Harriman Library as rooms
Transportation was supplied by 55S and 65S; this should have
a private pilot, Mr. Richard Penn read 55S and 56S. The Welfare
of Elma, New York, in a 4-pasCommittee hopes to expand upon
senger Cessna aircraft. Mr. Penn,
these new facilities in the near
who is pilot at Buffalo Air Park, future.
offered his services to the Society
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
in an effort to further its proCLUB
gram of community service.
The Industrial Relations Club
The co-ed auxiliary of Arnold
is sponsoring a trip to the SylAir Society, Angel Flight, had vania Company Wednesday.
All
young women on hand to assist
those who wish to attend should
those children not in the air. Sobe
sign the list that will
placed
ciety members and “Angels” enCrosby Hall.
tertained the children at a party in
INTERNATIONAL CLUB
following the flights in a hangar
Thursday, The International
at the Park.
Club is sponsoring a film about
Egypt which will be presented
by Dr. Mufti, from Egypt. Everyone who is interested ifl seeing
this film should report to the
International Club Room, 340
Norton, at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 12, there
will be a panel discussion on
“The Women’s Role in Society,"
Thursday, November 19, the
International Club will hold a
talent show and will sponsor a
300 Kenmore Ave.,
hayride Saturday, November 21.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Every Friday afternoon at 3:00
Phone; 836-8961
p.m., the International Club is

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

by

-A r t:c aurve cl

CADET LADIES CLUB

—

ANGEL PLIGHT
The Cadet Ladies Club in con
junction with Angel Flight is
sponsoring a Smorgasbord Dinner Sunday, November 8, from
3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the
N.F.C.A, Clubhouse, Maple and
North Forest Road. The cost is
$2.50 per person or $4.50 a couppe. Tickets may be purchased
from any member of either organization, Free dinners will be
given to a few lucky patrons.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

There will be a general meeting of the Photography Club to
day at 4:00 in Room 266 Norton.
New members will be welcome.
PUBLIC RELATIONS
COMMITTEE

Applications are now being accepted for the chairmanship of
the Student Senate Public, Relations Committee. Applications
may be secured in Norton 205
and must be returned by Monday, November 9.

Approximately 150 counselors
attended the Third Annual Regional Meeting of Western New
York Guidance Counselors, held
Thursday (October 29th) in the
Norton Conference Theatre.
University President Clifford
C. Furnas welcomed the delegates to the meeting which was
cosponsored by UB and State
University College at Buffalo.

A luncheon in Norton Union
and a tour of the campus followed a panel discussion moderated
by Dr. Phillip R. Bonner, director of admissions at State Univer-

sity College.

Other panelists who discussed
“Admission Policies and Procedures at State University at Buffalo and State University College” included Mr. John Walker,
assistant director for admissions
at the State University pt Buffalo: Mr. George Johengen, director of guidance at Frontier Central School in Hamburg; and Mr.
John Fahey, director of guidance
at Clarence Central School in
Clarence.

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CANTERBURY
This semester's topic for discussion is "The Gospel According to Saint Mark.” Duplicate
sessions, under the guidance of
Chaplain R. Sherman Beattie and
assistant Chaplain Robert Cain,
will be offered Tuesdays and
Wednesdays from 2:00-3:00 p.m.
This week the Tuesday session
will be held in Roon) 220 Norton
and the Wednesday session in
Room 266. The specific topic
will be “The Ministry beyond
Galilee.” The references are
found in Mark 6:1-8:21. A cordial invitation is extended to ALL
students.
HILLEL
The B'nai BTith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will present a sermon lesson in a current series on “Sab-

bath Symbols."
HilleTs Annual One-Day Institute will be held Sunday in the
Hillel House. Invitations have
been extended to the Hillel
groups at Alfred University,
University of Rochester, Rochester Institute of Technology, McMaster University in Hamilton,
Erie County Technical Institute
and the State University Colleges
at Buffalo, Fredonia and Cortland. Registration of delegates
will begin at 11:00 a.m. A Ixjx
and Bagel Brunch is scheduled
for noon, to be followed by a
lecture on: “A Sociological Approach to Intermarraige."
There will be a discussion per
iod following Dr. Sklare’s presentation. A tour of the Albright
Knox Art Gallery is planned for
the afternoon. A supper and social will conclude the day’s pro

iors over 21 are eligible to join
this group.
NEWMAN
There will be a business meeting Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m. in
the Millard Fillmore Room.
The Sunday night discussions
are continuing at Newman Hall
at 7:30 p.m. The weekly discussion groups meet in Norton 330
at 9:00 a.m., 10:00 am., 2:00
p.m. and 3:00 p.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays. Just a reminder: Sunday is All Saints day; Monday,
All Souls day; and Friday, November 6, the 1st Friday of the
month.
Newman is having Communion
Breakfast Sunday, November 8.
Mass will be said at 10:30 a.m. in
the Cantalician Center followed
by breakfast at 11:30 a.m. in Norton. Tickets are available in the
Norton and Newman offices.

I’rice is $1,00. Deadline for ticket
sales is Monday.
Because of the Empire State
Province Educational Weekend,
the Halloween party scheduled

at Newman Hall
has been cancelled. This convention, hosted by Buffalo State
Teachers College, begins with
registration today at 6:00 p.m.
and closes Sunday morning with
a Communion Breakfast.
for Saturday

STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

Thursday evening, November
5, the S.C.A. will present an evening for listening and discussion related to the original Broad

way production of Albee’s “Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Wolfe”. The

meeting will be held at the home

Dr. Townsend Urges
Cultural Enrichment
Dr. Townsend, a member of
the English Department, concluded the series of lectures in the
Freshman Women’s Orientation

Program, Tuesday, October 20.
He spoke to a group of girls
about their college years, “a time

for cultural enrichment.”
Dr. Townsend reminisced about
his own experiences as a student
at Princeton University, contend-

ing that the college years are a
fine time for enjoyment, not enrichment. It follows that one
would come to appreciate the
arts, then, because the arts are
fundamentally for enjoyment. A
humorous aside that “Bitterman’s
is just as good as Baird" brought

forth laughter from the audience.
Several anecdotes about his teaching experiences at a Southern
Girls’ Seminary and remembrances of his first time at the
Opera made up the bulk of his
talk.
Dr,

Townsend ended his talk

by producing “the best bargain
in town—all the cultural events
of any worth in Buffalo" this
year, for the price of $49.50. This
package offers events ranging
from the movies at the Circle
Art Theatre to concerts by the
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
He urged the girls to take advantage of some or all of these
opportunities in the next four
years, claiming that after these
cultural experiences “bowling
and becring” would seem very
dull!

Next week there will be a
in the Dorothy M. Haas
l.oungc for all Freshmen Women.
This will be the final event in

tea

&gt;f

gram.
Reservations, for the Institute
are bein;; accepted at H i 11 c I

House.
Tickets arc now available at
the Hillel House for a Bowlins
Party to be held Saturday, November 7, at 7:00 p.m. in the
Arrovy Lanes.
HILLEL GRAD
STUDENTS CLUB
At a recent meeting held in
the Hillel House, a group of grad
students organized and planned
a calendar of events. The first
meeting of the newly formed
organization took place Sunday,
October 25 in the form of a Cof
fee Hour. Graduate students,
young faculty members and sen-

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Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

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Enjoy the Browsing Library
To browse, according to Webster, means to look over books,
to decide what one wants to

A browsing room he describes as a section in a library
or a room designed to allow
patrons an opportunity to freely
examine and browse in a collection of books. Norton Union has
a room which fills the description. It is open to anyone who
wishes to engage in a little

read,

browsing.
The Browsing Library contains
novels from Bronte to Salinger,
poetry from Chaucer to Eliot,
plays from Shakespeare to O’Neill. This is but a part of the

literature offered to the student

by the library. New books are
continually being added to the
collection, in order to establish
a good range of classics from
every category—fiction, biography, poetry, drama, psychology,
philosophy, history; and three
daily newspapers, including the
New York Times, and 70 magazines, ranging in subject from
amusement, to sports and world

events.

The atmosphere is one conducive to browsing-a n d-skimmingthrough books that the library

advocates. The Browsing Library
is not a place for the student
to study, but a place for him to
spend a few quiet hours, familiarizing himself with the books
and magazines.
Included in the library is the
Paperback Exchange shelf, where
a student may exchange a paperback book of his own with one
from the library. The selection is
constantly changing, not only because exchanges are made, but
also because new books are often
added.
Adjoining the Browsing Library
is the Music Room, where one
may enjoy music while studying,
reading, or just resting. The student has a choice of listening
in the Music Room lounge, or of
secluding himself in a private
booth with one of 300 records
from all classifications (classical,
opera, folk, jazz, semi-classical
and popular) which the Music
Room has to offer.
The Browsing Library and the
Music Room are open from 9:00
a.m.-5:00 p.m.; 6:00-10:00 p.m.
Monday

through Friday;

noon-

6:00 p.m. Saturdays, and noon10:00 p.m. Sundays.

Math Club Lectures Manned
The Undergraduate Mathematics Club, in an attempt to enlighten students interested in
Math and areas of its application,
is sponsoring a series of talks
stressing the application of Math
to various fields. Speakers to date
have included Dr. Rodine of the
Statistics Department speaking on
Probability and Dr. Wallace,
Chairman of the Department of
Management Science speaking on
Management Science as it relates
to Math. Topics planned for future meetings include Magic,
Creative Problem Solving, Employment Opportunities in Math
and Computers. A tour of this

school’s computer center and a
trip to an industrial firm are also

being planned.

Each of the bi-weekly meetings
has, in addition to the main
speaker and a short discussion of
Club business, a problem solving
session involving a few interesting and solvable mathematical
puzzles. Refreshments follow
every meeting.

All students who are interested
in mathematics and its application are cordially invited to come
to Room 244 Norton at 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday and hear Dr. Baumer
speak on Mathematics in Philosophy.

�Friday, October 30, 1964

Want a New Book?
Stop at Paperback

Exchange, Norton
Have you finished those paperbacks you brought with you in
September? If you would like
new ones to read, Norton has

established

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

a paperback exchange

system. All you need to participate is a paperback book in good
condition. Simply sign out the
book you want, and sign in the
book you have brought. The
book you take is yours to keep as
long as you wish. After you finish it, you may exchange it for
another. This method of borrowing books eliminates the fear of
overdue books and library fines.
You’ll always have book on hand
for those rare periods between
hourlies.
As more students participate in
exchange, the amount of
books will increase. There is a
varied selection. Classics are
there, such as Tale of Two Cities. If you want something light,
try Good Morning, Miss Dove.
There are a few books of short
stories, and some on hobbies.
Drawing Self-Taught may develop a potential artist. Old memories may be stirred by the sight
of Silas Marner. The paperback
library is located in a corner of
the brousing library on the second floor of Norton.
the

Band to Host
High Schools

Quartet Concludes

The Kibitzer

-

Series Next Week

-

By SCOTT KURMAN

Tomorrow the “Pride of the
East” will play host to 12 visiting
high school bands. The fourth annual high school band day will
include bands from Arcade, Bemus Point, Fonda-Fultonville,
Lancaster, North Collins, Niagara
Falls, Savons, Southwestern,
Sweet Home, West Seneca, Whitesville and Williamsville. Led by
Drum Majors Don King and Craig

Otenstein, the UB Marching Band
will introduce the half time spectacular with one of their precision drill movements which have
von them wide acclaim. For the
introduction of the high school
bands the “Pride of the East”
v/ill form a giant star which the
high school bands will fill in
order to play a number of “mass
band” arrangements.

In the weeks ahead the “Pride
of the East” will begin forming
the two concert units of the University, the Concert Band and the
University Band. The Concert
Band performs some of the best
literature that is available for
bands and the University Band
is organized for those students
who wish to participate in musical activities as an avocation.
Another of the Bands future activities will be an open mixer
this evening at 8:00 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room. Jack Lis and his
Merrymen, one of Buffalo’s leading rock and roll groups, will
furnish the music.

Color my face red! But not as
the trumps in last week’s problem. Yes, the hand is rather
challenging as presented, and
this time the Spectrum cannot
be blamed for the error. Therefore, please do try again with
hearts trumps. Index of triviality soars immensely.
Again hearts arfe trump and
you need the rest. As usual the
lead is in
your hand. G’luck.
'
NORTH

H: 7 5 3
D: K
C: K Q 4 3

WEST
S: K 3

EAST
S: J 9

H: 8
D: Q 7 63

D: 9 5 4

C; 6

C: J 7 5

SOUTH
S: Q 4
H: J

tournament. Mr. Director (J. Edelman) directed, and the winning
pairs were: Brown
Billings,
EW, and Adel
Peters, NS.
November 11 is master point
night; color all the bridge-hacks
standing in line. There will be
many ,many tables; would it not
indeed be funny to see Mr. Director turn lavender or green or
both if he has not sufficient
boards. It would be such a shame
to see Mr. Director feeling unwell. We only need 32 V2 tables,
&amp;

&amp;

or 65 pairs. So everybody come.
(And bring your friends—make
friends to bring—and relatives.)
Anyone interested send 250
with estimate of number of participants and percentage score
of winning NS pair. Winner receives 92% of take. Kibitzers
must eat.
Ruffing, said Tom heartlessly

The Budapest Quartet, in residence here, will conclude ‘heir
series of chamber music for the
fall semester next week with a
special series featuring French,
Viennese, and contemporary
works. Tickets are available at
the Baird Hall box office. All programs begin at 8:30 p.m.
Monday: Haydn Op. 50 No. 6;
Hindemith 1943 quartet; Ravel
Quartet in F.
Wednesday: Mozart

Quartet K.
499; Piston Quartet No. 4; Debussy Quartet in G minor, Op.

Friday: Haydn Quartet Op. 54 No.

1; Barber Quartet in B minor;
Franck Quartet in D,

D: A J 8 2
C: 9

Bobby has

finished the elemental in his course and now
is the time for all of you to get
over to the bridge club Tuesdays
(7:30 p.m. in 327 Norton) to really brush up on the fine points, to
smooth up your style, to avoid
some random nudge who’s been

hounding you to go to dup games
with him, to reinforce your abilities in any particular area of
play, or to learn how to solve
the Spectrum problems.
Last week, as always, we had a

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�Friday, October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Senate Resolution Condemns Pillion Speech
The Student Senate of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, having examined the extension of remarks made by Rep,
John R. Pillion of Hamburg,
N.Y. in the House of Representatives on May 11, 1964, and carried in full in the Congressional
Record of the House for that
date, pp. 10117-10118, makes the
following observations and com-

ments:
The address, entitled “Academic Freedom or Spiritual-Intellectual BlackSut?” is a sweeping
indictment against the administration, faculty and the student
body of SUNYAB.
Not within the recollection of
many of the members of this
Senate, have we heard such total
ly irresponsible accusations and
unsubstantiated charges made by

a supposedly responsible public
official. We take special note
that these remarks were made
under the immunity protections
of Congress, and that the Congressman has made only a few
generalities in referring to the
same subject in public appearances subsequent to his speech.
A blatant disregard for truth
and fact is found throughout this
attack on our University and her

students. We find at least six
instances in Mr. Pillion’s talk in
which there is cause for action
under group defamation should
the same specifics be made without the protection of Congressional immunity. Making such
charges on the floor of Congress
where there is no recourse by
those injured, is in the tradition
of the late Senator McCarthy.
The Congressman departs from
the facts even in his reference
to the recent hearings in Buffalo
of the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities, HCUA,
which declared in its own opening statement that the investigation was to determine the nature
and activities of alleged “proMao” splinter Communist and
Trotskyite organizations functioning in the area. It is to distort
even the committee (HCUA) to
declare, as Mr. Pillion did, that
“one of the purposes of the hearings” was to determine "the extent of the infiltration of Communists at SUNYAB.”
The address continues with
other outright false statements,
cither in error or deliberate untruth,
The SUNYAB is not
as Mr. Pillion says, “composed
of more than 30 colleges and universities.” Burton White did not
speak on campus “last year,” but
in 1962 when the university was
the University of Buffalo, then
a private institution.
Mr. Pillion talks in conspiratorial terms about so-called “pipelines” for the Communist Party
into the University faculty and
student body. If such absurdities
were not to be taken at face
value by uninformed members of
the community, or spread by
those anti-intellectual elements
who always seize upon such attacks in their drive to make
conformity on tax-supported universities a reality, this Student
Senate would not give cognizance
to them.
If there are such “pipelines”
then it is the concern of the
State University authorities and
not a congressman seeking his
own seat again in an election
year. Mr. Pillion emphasizes that
the only “remedial action” (as he
terms it) for his alleged findings
of campus subversion is through
the Governor’s office or the State
Legislature. Had he such information or knowledge, and were he
sincerely interested in his supposed purpose, he might better
direct it, with full documentaton,
to the State University authorities or other state agencies.
But this is quite obviously not
what the Congressman wishes. He
seeks to make a sweeping allegation against all, in either the
student body, members of the
faculty and the administrative
staff who have either
1. Exercised their rights as

American citizens to protest the
abuses of a congressional committee, H.C.U.A., through picket-

ing, petition or public meeting.
2. Stood for the right of a
great university to explore and
expose their students to contro-

versial issues without government interference.
He intimates that the orderly
picketing of H.C.U.A. sponsored
and directed by this Student Senate on April 29 and 30, 1964, at
the McKinley Monument in Niagara Square, was a “Communist
organized and inspired group of
students at SUNYAB.”
This intimation is a deliberate
defamation and charge of disloyalty against every one of several hundred students of this
university, who through their own
decision, joined in this protest,
under the auspices of the Student
Senate. We challenge the Congressman to make the same
charge without the privilege of

congressional immunity.
Several references are made to
“Communist or p r o-Communist
student activities and agitators”
and a "Communist-dominated student group.” This Student Senate
takes special exception to the

latter citatioi. tor the congress-

man says that it “has invited
a number of outstanding Communist agitators to deliver lectures at the university.”

Another reference is to the
“Communist core” which extended the invitation to Dr. Herbert
Aptheker and the invitation to
the British Fascist Sir Oswald

Mosley “deliberately arranged by
Communists.” Both statements
are pointed directly at this Student Senate, which rejects the
charge as infamous and a deliberate lie.
We challenge Mr, Pillion to
make the same statements on
this campus either before this
body or another campus group
which he may so designate, with
full opportunity for student ques-

tioning. We do not expect, however, that he will leave the immunity of the hall of Congress
to repeat this calumny.

As is well known, the 1962
Political Spectrum series was organized with full knowledge and
co-operation of the State University (then University of Buffalo) authorities on both the
administrative and instructional
levels. The invitations were issued to the five speakers with

You could be
one of the
most important
persons

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this year!

the full approval of the then
chancellor of the university.
To imply that this series was
“Communist directed” is a direct
reflection upon the university as
well as r the Student Senate. To
suggest that only those supporting this principle of academic
freedom are those in his “Communist pipelines” is to ignore the
fact that it gained the backing
of the chancellor, the faculty,
the university trustees after it
became SUNYAB, and the New
York State Court of Appeals.
Both daily newspapers in Buffalo, including that which Mr.
Pillion quoted in his talk, supported the decision as preserving
academic freedom and the freedom of inquiry.
Mr. Pillion talks of “serious
and increasing infiltration of
Communists” into the University
and a “highly organized and dangerous group of pro-communists
on the faculty” at SUNYAB
Does he mean by this, those students and faculty who have dared
to protest against this congressional committee (H.C.U.A.) or
who have spoken up for academic freedom?
Was the Student Senate also
part of his “Communist pipeline”
when it invited Fulton Lewis III,

formerly of the H.C.U.A. committee staff, to debate the H.C.U.A.
issue on campus last year? And
was the Senate also so motivated

when in 1962 it invited Mr. Pillion to defend H.C.U.A. on this
campus (and who, it will be
recalled, declined a formal communication saying he would not
participate)?

Most serious of these absurd

charges, we believe, is his suggestion that “it is obvious that
corrective action to cleanse our
public colleges and universities
. . . will not be initiated by edu-

cators and administrators of the

State University of New York at
Buffalo.”
These too, then, come under
his “Communist pipeliiie” allegations. And it is quite obvious that
any who stand for free inquiry
on campus and in the classromm
will not be free from the charges
and attacks made against the
university by the congressman.
We may assume that even his
colleagues in the House who
voted against the appropriations
for this investigative body
(H.C.U.A.) are also under this
cloud, and this despite the fact
that their 20 represent some of
the finest members of the Congress
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�Friday, October 30, 1964

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Grid Picks (College)

(Cont’d from P. 16)
knocked from the top ten last
week by Oregon State, and hopefully have learned their lesson.
Luckily the Panthers (2-2-2) are
having an off-year and will give
Syracuse a chance to get back on
the right track.
DELAWARE 37, BUFFALO 14
The Blue Hens (4-2) do not
have as strong a squad as last
year’s small college, leaders, but
they’d be a match for any eleven
in the nation this year. The Bulls
(2-3-1) have failed to live up to
expectations so far, and are over
their heads in this contest.
FLORIDA 21, AUBURN 6—The
Gators (4-1) came within seven
yards of upsetting ’Bama last
week. Those seven yards may
have cost them the SEC crown.
They still have a chance, to stay
in contention, but they have to
win. Disappointing Auburn (4-2)
will not worry Florida too much.
DUKE 13, GEORGIA TECH 6
—This game could very easily go
either way. Neither team was
particularly impressive in registering victories last week. The
nod here goes to Duke (4-0-1).
The Yellow Jackets (6-0) have a
staunch defense (only 18 points
yielded so far) but they lack an
equalizing scoring punch. The
Blue Devils have better balance.
OHO STATE 35, IOWA 7—On
land or thru the air, the Buckeyes (5-0) are tops. They are living off the fat of the land, biding their time ’til Michigan visits
them the 21st. The Hawkeyes
(3-2) are a second division club
this year.
OREGON 20, STANFORD 0—
The Webfoots (6-0) have their
sights on a perfect record. The
possibility exists. Their one big
obstacle is arch-rival Oregon
State. Meanwhile that game is
not until the 21st, but little
stands in Oregon’s way before
then. Certainly not the hapless
Indians (2-4).
U.S.C. 24, WASHINGTON 7
The winner of this battle will
represent the A.A.W.U. at the
Rose Bowl. The Huskies (2-4)
went last January, so they will
not be too disappointed when
they do not get a repeat trip. But
all will not be roses for the Trojans (4-2) after this game. There
is still U.C.L.A. to take care of.
ALABAMA
14, MISSISSIPPI
STATE 9
The Crimson Tide
(6-0) had a close scare with Florida last week and still can not
breathe easily. The Maroons (3-3)
have gotten off the ground after
a slow start and are in the market for upsets. Last year, in practically the same situation, 'Bama
eeked out a 20-19 victory. But
they have to win this year, they
connot afford to lose any games
in the tight SEC race.
L.S.U. 14, MISSISSIPPI 12
Last year the Rebels (4-2) romped over the Tigers (4-0-1), 37-3,
in a surprisingly easy game. L.S.U., upset by last week’s tie with
Tennessee, will be charged up
and anxious to reverse that
score. Ole Miss has had to scramble so far this year, but may be
up for this game. The Tigers
will have to save a little for next
week when they tackle ’Bama.
ARMY 28, IOWA STATE 14
The Cadets (2-4) have made too
many mistakes this year. They
have had four game-winning TD’s
called back because of penalities
They will not have to worry
about the Cyclones (1-5), but they
had better straighten themselves
out before they tackle Syracuse
at Yankee Stadium the 7th. The
Black Knights had better start
here, if they want to have any
chance at all of salvaging this
—

—

have their work cut out for them.
In the next four weeks, they
will meet the four strongest contenders for their Big Eight crown.
They have the manpower to go
all the way. They’ll start with
Missou this week, and then handle Kansas, Oklahoma State and
Oklahoma, in that order.
TEXAS 28, S.M.U. 6—The Longhorns (5-1) had a close scare
against Rice last week and had
better beware. They are waiting
for an Arkansas upset, but if they
lose another, it’s all over. The
Mustangs (1-4) will be very
obliging Saturday.

Grid Picks (Pro)
(Cont’d from P. 16)
old. Fumbling is the worst habit
that a team can get into, and
it should prove the Giants’ downfall on Sunday they get buried
even deeper in the cellar.
CLEVELAND 34, PITTSBURGH
17—All alone in first place for
the initial time this year, the
Browns still are not playing up
to par. Their offense has not yet
responded to Ryan, and if he continues his inconsistency, he will
lose the job he fought so hard to
get. This should be the week
where the offense finally jells,
and Cleveland will keep their
lead after they down the sputtering Steelers.
PHILADELPHIA 28, WASHINGTON 21—Ollie Matson is running like a rookie and Norm
Snead is passing like a seasoned
veteran; the main reasons why
the Eagles seem to have found
the secret of success. The Redskins came out on top in the
first meeting of these two clubs,
but that was before Matson began
his heroics. Philly should be comfortably settled in third place
come Sunday night.
DALLAS 24, CHICAGO 10—
Their reputation as “The Monsters of the Midway” no longer
helps the Bears to scare their opposition ito submission. The Mere-

dith

-

led

Cowboys

have been

tougher than their 2-4-1 record
indicates, especially in the offense-department, something

which

the “Monsters”

will be

hard-pressed to contain.
MINNESOTA 24, GREEN BAY
20—This has been a long season for the once invincible Packers, and it will seem even longer

to them before it is over. The

youth movement is in vogue in
(he NFL, and the Vikings have
the youngest team. This does not
guarantee them a win this week,
but it certainly does help. It will

be close, however.
LOS ANGELES 24, DETROIT 14
—The Lions are stumbling without Morrall because Plum cannot seem to do the job. They are
down to one-half of a quarterback (Plum is slightly injured)

and if he is hurt any more, they
can forget about even finishing
second. After this one the Rami
and their magnificent combo of
Poman Gabriel to the “Cawtawba
Claw” (Bucky Pope) will be all
alone in second place in the West.
BALTIMORE 35, SAN FRAN
CISCO 7—Anything said in favor
of the Colti will have to be a
gross understatement after the
way they have been playing, All
systems are “go” and their defense is just as effective as Chicago's was a year ago. They are
playing near perfect football and
perhaps will not lose another
game all season. The hapless
49'ers just do not have the guns
to stand in their way; it seems
that nobody does.
American Football League
NEW YORK 24, BOSTON 17—
The once-beaten Patriots came
back strong against Kansas City
after being tied by Oakland, but
they still have not convinced me
that they possess a powerful enough squad to go all the way
again this year. The Jets will be
playing this one before the home
crowd once again and this could
be the decisive factor. The New
York folks seem to inspire them
to go all out, and go all out they
will, beating Boston amid cries
of “Wahoo” and “Let’s go Jets.”
BUFFALO 28, HOUSTON 24—
A mad team is a difficult one to
beat, and the Bills will discover
this Sunday when they face the
hopped-up Oilers in Buffalo. Houston lost to San Diego last week
on a disputed field goal attempt
which missed according to the
refs. They are fighting mad and
will pull all stops to make up for
it this week. However, the boys
from Texas will have little to say
about the race in the East this
year, and will be sent down to
defeat by Buffalo as the Bills go
for their eighth straight.
SAN DIEGO 42, OAKLAND 34
—The Chargers have finally attained the form which made them
the ’63 AFL champions, and now
look like they’ll have a minimal
amount of trouble on the way to
their fourth Western Division
title in five years. The Raiders,
however, will not prove to be an
easy match, coming off their first
win of the campaign. They rolled
up over 600 yards against Denver,
and San Diego will have a tough
time trying to hold them.
KANSAS CITY 28, DENVER 10
—The Chiefs’ offense has not
been going especially well this
year, but they will not have much
trouble rolling over the feeble
Bronco defense. Kansas City lost
any hope it had of a division
title when it lost to Boston last
week, but they are still powerful
enough to make life miserable for
a few teams before the campaign
comes to a close.

—

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but will still lose his passing
duel with Morton.

NEBRASKA

27, MISSOURI 17
-—The Cornhuskers (6-0) will probably (beside? Princeton) be the
the only 1963 conference champions to repeat
in ’64. But they

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SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Octobar 30, 1964

20-14
H.C. UPSETS BULLS
up

Bull Blunders Costly Again
As Crusaders Rally For Win
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

Christmas is still a distant eight
weeks away, but it seems that the
UB football team is staging rehearsals for the essence of this
holiday, judging by the Santa
Claus like ease in which they have
given away four of their last
five outings in accordance with
Yuletide generosity and benevolence. The Bulls, who have developed a penchant for losing close
contests emulated only by the
Green Bay Packers, Richard
Nixon and Perry Mason’s opponents, continued their 1964 trend
of beating themselves by their
own mistakes by dropping a 20-14
decision to Holy Cross after a
one-week reversal of script
against VMI.
The Bulls were guilty of more
miscues Saturday than they have
been recently, but were nevertheless precariously holding the
heavy end of a 14-12 count halfway through the final period.
This quarter was a harrowing
experience for both sides as it
appeared that each wanted to give
the other the game. After the

Crusaders’ John Bachini stubbed
a 15-yard field goal attempt short
of the uprights to end the third
quarter, the Bulls took over on
teir own 20 and the comedy
of errors began. On fourth down,
Purple and Silver center Tom
Nissi permeated the UB line to
block Bob Edwards' punt attempt,
but on the next play the visitors
fumbled back to the hosts. Only
moments later, the Bulls, displaying a kind-heartedness surpassed
only by the Good Samaritan himself, gave their adversaries another crack at the scoring column
by fumbling on the 29. The
Worcestcritcs were equally ready
to fall flat on their faces after
gaining a first down at the UB
two. After a run and two feeble
passes failed to gain yardage,
quarterback Mike Cunnion, a
Clarence native, completed a

short pass which lost two yards,
and the reluctant hosts were
again faced with the task of moving the ball.
Captain Gerry Pawloski appeared to have succeeded in removing
the Bulls from a deep hole via
a picturesque 56-yd. quick kick
to the 24 of the invaders. But the
Bulls were yet to demonstrate
before a disillusioned Rotary
Field crowd of over 8,000 how a
quarterback can escape the grasp
of six linemen and how an end
with the fluid grace and blinding
speed of an arthritic duck can
surreptitiously waddle fifteen
yards behind a supposedly quick,
alert, and adaptable pass defense.
The Crusaders combined these
ingredients at the eight minute
mark of the final stanza as Cunnion sidestepped a herd of Bull
linemen just long enough to spot
lumbersome end Bill Sexton gazing at the backs of the UB secondary while they in turn stood
rooted to the ground in pure
admiration as they witnessed
Cunnion performing his Houdini
escape act. The sophomore signalcaller floated the pigskin into

Sexton’s hands and he trudged
into the end zone to give Dr.
Eddie Anderson, in his last season as one of the deans of American football coaches, his 197th
career victory in his 39th year
as Crusader mentor.
The first quarter started promisingly for the break-s t a r v e d
Bulls. Holy Cross quarterback
Jack Lentz's frist aerial attempt
was purloined by defensive specialist Dan Sella on the Crusader
44, and after Don Gilbert passed
to Edward at the 1, fullback Dick
Condino plunged over for the

in mm

rll

sion attempt went awry and
Bulls led, 7-6.
Late in the opening period,
Bulls again struck oil after
Holly recovered a fumble on

—

the
the
Joe
the

Holy Cross 30. An eight-yard gain
by Willie Shine and two key
Gilbert-to-Pawloski pitches placed
the hosts on the Purple and Silver 6, from where Gilbert swept
end for the score. Joe the Toe’s
second successful placement liftend the score to 14-6.

Late in the second quarter, the

deceptive Lentz again broke loose
for a 51-yard dash to the UB 19.
Moments later, he smashed across

from the 1, but he was crushed
in
his two-point conversion attempt.
The half terminated shorty after
with the Bulls leading, 14-12.
The hosts found themselves behind the eight ball most of the
third quarter, but refused to yield
a score, halting Crusader drives
on their own 13 and 8. Then came
the disastrous fourth quarter with
the visitors forging into the lead
on the long bomb.
Time still remained for another Bull drive following the
Holy Cross kickoff, but after an
effective march to the Crusader
20 highlighted by Gilbert passes
to Craig Helenbrook, Jim Dunn,
and Shine, the Holy Cross line
rose to the occasion and spilled
Gilbert for sizable losses. To Gilbert’s chagrin, the first loss from
the twenty resulted when the
senior field general appeared to
have clear sailing on an end
sweep, but the ball rolled out
of his hands with nobody near
him, and by the time he retreated to it a gang of Crusaders was
there to greet him. A desperate
fourth down pass from midfield
slipped through Edward’s fingers
and appropriately symbolized the
pattern in which the Bulls have
allowed most of their games to
slip through their fingers this
season. Minutes later, the final
gun sounded with the score Holy
Cross 20, Buffalo 14.
short of the final lime stripe

STATISTICS
Holy Cross
14
First downs
Rushing yardage
233
55
Passing yards
200
131
9-16
8-16
Passes
Passes intercepted by
1-28
Punts
Fumbles lost
35
15
Yards penalized
Bull Session
Gilbert, Nick
Capuana, Mike Lucici, Holly, and
Leo Ratamess received the highest offensive grades, while Paw.

.

loski, E. G. Poles, and Sella gained defensive honors . . . Gilbert
has had no less than seven accurate areials dropped in the
last two games . . . Coach Offenhamer expressed extreme displeasure at the impatient conduct
of the student body at the game.
He said if a student is truly loyal
to his school, he will stick with
them during the bad bounces as
well as the good ones. He also
mentioned that the longer, tougher schedule each season demands

a proportional improvement from

the team, but the schedule seems
to be growing progressively
tougher quicker than the team is
.
,
.
Denny Przykuta (twisted
knee), Dom Piestrak (sprained
ankle), and C o h d i n o (broken
nose) head the injured list, but
they are hoped to be ready tomorrow for the Delaware invasion

. . The formidable Blue Hens,
fresh from a 46-8 lambasting of
Lehigh, should prove to be an
austere test indeed for the Bulls.
.

SPORTS CIRCLE (Cont'd from P. 16)
the closing ceremony. I felt that everyone in that stadium, when all
the lights went out and people lit torches, I felt for two minutes, as
though everyone in that stadium was human. In other words, that the
blacks, the yellows, the oranges and the whites were one. And I had
a sort of feeling that here I was, all of us were witnesses before our
time of an inevitable world society. All of us felt second what a
toad of bloody nonsense it was to go around chopping each other up
and arguing and fighting.”

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score.

Alter the (ollowing kickoff,
Lentz weaved his way around end
through the UB secondary 70 yds.
to the host 4. Two plays later,
Earl Krimser dove across the
goal line for the first Crusader
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�Friday,

October 30, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIFTEEN

DELAWARE PREVIEW
BULLS OUT TO EVEN RECORD
AGAINST POWERFUL BLUE HENS
By

CHICK ARNOLD

When the National Collegiate
Athletic Association Rules Committee modified the 1964 football rules to allow practically unlimited substiution, some observ
ecs predicted that most college
teams would have special units
for both offense and defense. But
not so at Delaware, where Rules
Committee Secretary Dave Nelson is starting his 14th season
as head coach of the Blue Hens.
“We don’t have enough players to play that way”, says Coach
Nelson, “and besides, I’d rather
have my best football players in
there going both ways.”
This is just as it has been at
Delaware, too, in the past 13
seasons under Nelson.
He has
compiled a remarkable record of
78-35-2 at Delaware, and an overall log of 99-41-6. The “admiral",
as he is called at Delaware, will
be shooting for the 100th victory
of his coaching career tomorrow.
Although he lost nineteen lettermen from his 1963 club, which
won the tough Middle Atlantic
Conference Championship, the
Lambert Cup which goes to the
top small college team in the
East, and United Press International recognition as the top small
college team in the country, Nelson has many of the same operators who dealt the UB Bulls a 34-6
humiliation last year.
Quarterback Tom Van Grofski
and halfback Bill Hopkins pace
the Delaware attack, an attack
which last week splattered Lehigh 46-8, for its third win of the
campaign against two losses. One
of these losses was suffered at
the hands of powerful Villanova,
the only undefeated major college team in the East, while Gettysburg accounted for the other
one, upsetting the Blue Hens
22-19 earlier in the season, snapping a thirteen game winning
streak.
Van Grofski is a junior quarterback who is taking over the
job of Chuck Zolok, the fine
quarterback the Blue Hens had
last year. At 6-1, 185 pounds,
Van Grofski is both a fine runner and a fine passer. So far this
season, he has completed 52 of 98
attempted passes for 702 yards
and five touchdowns, while having only three passes intercepted.

gX

liST^v

yards per carry, using his blazing
speed to the fullest. His 6-1, 185
pound frame should be one seen
a lot by the Bulls tomorrow,
mostly from the rear.
At the other halfback position
is 6-0, 193 pound Paul Mueller,
a junior who won a letter while
carrying the ball only four times
last year. His 109 yards gained
in 24 carries makes him the
team's second leading rusher this
year, and he should provide UB
with some added headaches tomorrow.

Hopkins has managed to dominate the running statistics of
Delaware in continuing his rec-

orjl pace. He has carried the ball
98 times for 698 yards and has
scored 42 points thus far this
season. This is an average of
nearly 130 yards a game gained
rushing. The entire Buffalo team
is averaging only 166 yards rushing per game. Hopkins is in excellent position to break the Delaware record of 874 yards gained
in a season set in 1958. Last year
he rveragtd a spectacular 9.1

land's record of 1,092 yards total
offense set in 1951.
The series between Buffalo and
Delaware stands at 2-1, with Dela
ware leading. Last year's 34-6
Delaware victory was the worst
Buffalo defeat of the season.
So far this season, Buffalo has
not been playing good football
•

not at all living up to pre-season expectations. There are many
reasons for this, but near the
top of the list is the lack of active fan participation. Against
Holy Cross, Buffalo drew only

-

country.

Here are the probable starting

Manny Insua
Denny Toddings
Herb Slattery
Bill Spangler
Ron Bianco
Tom VanGrofski

QB

LHB

Bill Hopkins

RUB

Paul Mueller
Mike McCrann

FB

The I I! Hockey Team
will hold three practices
this week. The first will
he Sunday, November I al
10:15 p.m. al the fort
fiie Kink. The other Iwo
practices will held Tuesday and Thursday. November 5 and 5 at 10:15
p.m. at I he Amherst Kink.
All team members arc requested to meet in Tower
Lobby one hour prior to
each game

line-ups:

BUFFALO
Gerry Pawloski

Dom Piestrak
Nick Castiglia
Joe Holly

Another junior, Mike McCrann,
will be the starting fullback for
Delaware. McCrann is a more
seasoned player than Mueller,
however, as last year he punished opponents relentlessly with
bull-like charges through the
line. He finished the season with
204 yards, good enough for third
best on the team.
Holding down the right end of
the Delaware line is team captain Ron Bianco. Coach Dave
Nelson has called him “the finest all around football player I
have ever coached”. Bianco is a
fine blocker at his end position,
in addition to being the owner of
a fine set of pass-catching hands.
Wes Frith, a 6-2, 195 pound
senior, is at the other end po-

sition. Frith has been the leading receiver of the Blue Hens
thus far this season with 22 receptions for 227 yards and two
touchdowns in his first five
games. Earlier this year, he set
a record single game high with
eight receptions against Hofstra,
and is now in excellent position
to break the record for a season’s
total receptions of 30. He is definitely the man the Bulls will
have to watch carefully, as the
“big play” has proved costly to
them so far this season.
Sophomore Herb Slattery and
fiery Manny Insua are the starting guards for Delaware, with
All-Conference candidate Jay Gibbons and Bill Spangler starting

three.

mueller, Jr. hb

Concerning last week's

Wes Frith
Jay Gibbons

8,136, the poorest home crowd of
the season. A college football
team needs to hear students pul
ling for it in the stands and this
is something the Bulls lack. So
let’s all get out to Rotary Field at
1:30 p.m. tomorrow, and watch
the Bulls take on one of the top
small college teams in the

at the tacklq positions. Denny
Toddings is set at center, giving
v the Blue Hens a line average of
214, outweighing the Bulls by

Paul

DELAWARE

The University of Buffalo has
some other problems besides Delaware going in tomorrow’s game.
Pullback Dennis Przykuta is on
the ailing list with a bad kneea doctor’s report will determine
his availability for tomorrow’s
game. UB’s other fullback, Dick
Condirio, suffered a broken nose
on the first plaiy of the Holy
Gross game; despite this, he played offense all the way, and was
the team’s leading rushing leader for the game.
Quarterback Don Gilbert completed 9 of 15 passes for 131
yards and hiked his season offense total to 776 yards last week.
Gilbert is in pursuit of Don Hoi-

Jim McNally
Leo Ratamess
Gerry LaFountain
Don Gilbert
Nick Capuana
Willie Shine
Dick Condino

QB

LHB
RUB
FB

•All those interested in
joining the Squash team
please come to any practice session. Practices are
held on Monday. Wednesday. and Friday from 5:00
to 5:00 p.m. on the squash
courts in (dark Gym. No
experience

is

19

&amp;

single)

9:30pm
1:00am
CONTINENTAL INN HOTEL

TONIGHT

i
]

i
|

.

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Western New York’s largest social group over
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5

cent

deposit

on

I sticks,

j e rs e y s.
team is
and
the
pucks
covered liv $250 deductible insurance. This means
that any medical bill costing less than.,$250 must
has to be paid for by the
player himself. To clear
up any vagueness, it was
meant that last season the
team was not covered by
insurance and had to supply their own gear.
ment

|

There will he a meeting
of all those interested in
joining the Ski Team Tuesday, November 5 at 7:00
pan. in die Ski Club office.,
room 520 Norton. II you
can't attend, contact Joe
Koetler in the ski club
of I ice.

IUA

The Young Set
over

hockey editorial, there are
a few clarifications. The
Athletic department does
supply the hockey team
with a minimal of equip-

necessary

YOUR INVITATION TO
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2 bottles (no

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SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

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Golfers Rebound
Alter First Loss
By STAN LICHWALA

The Olympics
A young French nobleman once said that “the important thing is not winning but taking part.” The
man’s name was Baron Pierre de Coubertin; the words
are from the Olympic Creed. Several years later, g,t the
inspiration of our idealistic Frenchman, 295 athletes representing 13 nations in Athens, Greece (the site of the
first ancient Olympiad) to inaugurate the modern Olym-

pic games.
Last Saturday, the flame that had been lit by a
torch from Mt. Olympus was extinguished, signifying
the conclusion of the eighteenth modern Olympic games.
There had been €600 athletes from 99 countries competing for 499 medals in the massive spectacle symbolic of
the Olympic games. However, the aim of athletic competition as axpressed in the Olympic Creed of Baron de
Coubertin is a far cry from the aims of certain non-athletic factions of the world.
Prior to the opening of the XVIII Olympiad, Soviet
periodicals had been subtlely but clearly reminding the
Russian team of the vital importance of “winning for
the forces of Socialism.” They further explained that the
Russian people “do not want tourists on our Olympic
team,” and that if their performances in Tokyo should
in any manner, shape, or form, resemble the disastrous
Russian defeat in the U.S.-Soviet dual track meet last
July in Los Angeles, it would be “difficult to explain
to the population.” In other-words—win, or be shipped
to Siberia, or something else to that effect.
Fortunately, politics end when the torch is lit, and
the athletes get down to doing what they came fortrying to do their best in the glorious tradition of
Olympic competition. When the athletes move into the
Olympic Village, the atmosphere symbolic of all Olympic games prevails over the various external political
pressures that may be involved, and the games proceed
under the aegis of Utopian sporting endeavor.
The XVIII Olympiad marked the rejuvention of the
United States as the dominent athletic power. The American team which had unexpectedly led throughout! the
games in the unofficial team medal scoring was beaten
out by the Russians on the final day of competition. However, the United States had already made its mark, as
it harvested more medals than it ever had before. In
total, the American team accumulated 36 gold, 26 silver,
and 28 bronze medals, as opposed to 30 gold, 31 silver,
and 36 bronze medals for the Russian team.
The American team was strong in swimming and
track and field as usual, and in fact, it was the best
U.S. performance ever in these, the Olympic showcase
sports. However, in the all-important sports of gymnastics and wrestling where the Russians scored heavily,
the U.S. did not win a single medal, mainly due to the
fact that most Americans don’t even regard them as sports
in their narrow-minded concept of athletic endeavor,
w'here the only “real” sports are football, basketball
and baseball. Thus they are not emphasized in our training of potential Olympic athletes.
In weight lifting, where the U.S. was once supreme,
and in boxing where the United States is considered to
be the capital of the world, the American team was outclassed by the Russians, who captured the lion’s share of
the medals. There seems to be no valid reason for the
decline of the U.S. in these once American dominated
sports, but one thing is certain
if the U.S. is to complete its resurgence and once again become the world’s
foremost athletic power it must regain its supremacy in
boxing and weight lifting, as well as markedly improve
in gymnastics and wrestling by the time the XIX Olympiad opens in Mexico City four years hence.
However, taking everything into consideration, these
eighteenth Olympic Games were a great triumph for
the United States. The Soviet athletic machine was sabotaged to the extent that there may very well be numerous athletes and coaches “shipped to Siberia,” while the
rejuvenation of the United States was successfully commenced. By 1968, the bitter struggle for world athletic
supremacy will have run full-circle, with the United
—

States, once again coming out on top.
We would like to conclude this week’s Sports Circle
with a few words from a one-time Olympic athlete in
Rome, and more recently, coach of the British track and
field team in Tokyo:

“There was only one thing that moved me in Rome, and that was at
(Cont’d on P. 14)

Golf Team encouna very tough “Little Three
Champion” last Thursday, October 20. The highly respected
Canisius Golf Team was out to
avenge the defeat handed to
them by our golf team earlier
this year. Avenge they did as
the golfers from Canisius very
decisively defeated the golfers
from UB by the score of 14-4,
In this tough match, Steve Michaels was the only UB golfer to

The UB

tered

win his individual match. The
team’s first defeat abruptly and
without question halted the win
streak at thirty consecutive dual
match victories.

Nevertheless, the UB team was
not to be caught thinking about
their single defeat when they
wound up their season by meeting McMaster Golf Team on Friday, October 23. The UB golfers
rebounded from defeat to crush
the Canadian Intercollegiate
Champions by an 11-7 score, and
thus, the UB Golf Team ended
their season in their winning
style and applied the finishing
touches to a very successful season.

The team record in dual match

competition wound up at eight

victories and one defeat. The
as a whole won first place
in the Brook Lea Invitational Golf
Tournament at Rochester, N.Y.
At the qualifying round for the
finals of the ECAC, the UB golf
team had two members gaining
medalist honors; representing UB
in the ECAC Finals held at BethPage Golf Course, Farmingdale,
Long Island. Steve Watts shot an
82 for twelfth place and Kearons
Whalen fired an 88. Every member of the team contributed at
least one individual match victory to the team’s success. The
individual scoring went as follows with the figures indicating
won-lost-tied record of each member; Steve Watts 3-4-1, Gary
Weiss 5-3-1, Kearons Whalen
6-1-1, Jim Bruce 5-3-1, Mike Lawler 7-1-0, Ralph Goodrich 2-3-1,
and Steve Michaels 4-1-0. Graduation will remove four of these
men from the roster next year.
Steve Watts, Jim Bruce, Kearons
Whalen, and Gary Weiss played
their last match against McMaster, Coach Serfustini says, “There
will be a tremendous gap left
by the graduating seniors. It
will be difficult to fill, but the
returning veterans and the new
talent will do their best to equal
the success this year’s team has
team

experienced.”

Offenhamer to Be
Interviewed on WFBO
Dick Offenhamer, head football coach at the University of
Buffalo, will be the special guest
on “UB SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS”
tonight at 5:45 p.m.
The show, with Wally Blatter
as moderator, can be heard over
WBFO-FM ((88.7) meg.), the student campus radio station.

Mr. Offenhamer will recap the

season to date and give

a preview

of what can be expected of the
Delaware Blue Hens, the Bulls’
next opponent.
Listen in for all the

latest

sports news every Monday with
Dick Fleischer and every Friday
with Wally Blatter over WBFO,
the new “Voice of the Bulls”.

Grid Picks

PROFESSIONAL

COLLEGE

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

By STEVE FEIGIN

The week of the upset is past.
There is one every year in the
NFL, but the way things have
been going this season leads one
to believe that another may soon
be upon us. Last week saw the
fall of the mighty, and, in some
cases, the death knoll of the
once-mighty. It is now clear beyond a doubt that the New York
Giants and the Chicago Bears are
Ex-Champions, not to be heard
from again until at least 1965.
The Green Bay Packers, perennial
power-house that they were, have
fallen and fallen hard—they can
only look forward to next season
and hope that what happened this
year is not an indication of things

It seems like no one wants
the Lambert Trophy this year.
Every major Eastern independent
has lost at least 2 games so far
this season, and the bloody intrasectional battles have barely
started. As of today, the leading
contender for the Cup, symbolic
of Eastern supremacy, is undefeated Villanova (Who?). Let’s
take a closer look at the situation.
At one time or another this

to come.
This season has brought some
new and powerful teams to the
fore, teams like the Los Angeles
Rams, the Minnesota Vikings and
the Philadelphia Eagles, It was
also thought by many pro-football
“experts” that the Baltimore Colts
were quietly building another
dynasty, but who would have
thought that it would expose itself so soon? Led by old reliables
like Unitas, Moore and Berry and
supported by an excellent crop
of newcomers like Lorick, Matte
and Cuozo, the Colts are the best
of ’64 and probably will be the
best for a few years to come.
This is especially for those of
you who have criticized me for
not giving enough attention to
the AFL:

summer, Syracuse, Army, Navy

and Pittsburgh were all found
on the pre-season top tens. Now
with the season seven weeks old,
none of them is near the top

echelon of the college ranks.
Army (2-4), after rolling over its
first two opponents has thrown
away four games in a row. Navy
(2-3-1) lost Heisman Trophy winner Staubach for three games and
has been unable to generate an
offense, Pittsburgh (2-2-2) seems
to have lost too many top players
from last year 9-1 squad and have
been very inconsistent. Syracuse
(4-2), after being upset by Boston
College in its season opener,

looked like the class of the East
when it racked up its next four
rivals, but last week was ambushed by Oregon State, 31-13.
Most of the other major elevens
have had disappointing seasons
also. Notable among these has
been Boston College (3-2), Penn
State (2-3), Holy Cross (2-3) and,
of course, Buffalo (2-3-1). Villanova (5-0) has been the surprise
The Buffalo Bills, like the Baltiteam of the area so far, outscormore Colts, are dominating their ing their opponents 149-13, and
league as it has rarely been
boasting shutout victories over
dominated before. As everyone Delaware and Holy Cross. But the
knows, the Bills are the only Wildcat do not play the major
undefeated team in pro-football, schedule that is demanded of
and they’re likely to hold onto
the Eastern representative.
The favorite here looks like
that distinction for a few weeks
Syracuse. The Orangeman play
to come. But reality must be
their last Eastern foe (Army)
faced, and anyone who is forecasting an unbeaten season for next week, and a victory should
the Bills must realize that the send them to the top. But what
if they lose? Still in the rungame is simply too competitive
for a team to play 14 games ning are a couple of unbeaten Ivy
without losing. The opposition League teams, Princeton (5-0) and
Yale (4-0-1). The Tigers were very
will not just roll over and play
dead when they face the Bills; impressive last week in routing
on the contrary, they will be Penn, 55-0. But usually the selecgiving it that little extra-effort tors shy away from the Ivies, because it is felt that they play an
so they can be the ones who ruin
the “perfect” season.” The New inferior brand of ball. Anyway
York Jets did just that last week, you look at it, this year’s Eastern
and for three quarters were on
leader will not be of the calibre
the verge of the season’s biggest
of previous Trophy winners.
The Ivy League race seems cut
upset. But, again as everyone
knows, Lamonica came off the and dry. Princeton looks like it
bench and fired up his team just is well on the way to its second
enough for them to come back
consecutive title. There seems to
and win their seventh straight. be no one else to seriously chalPerhaps the next time they face
lenge the Tigers. The Elies,
the Jets, the Bills would not be though undefeated, have had a
quite as hungry or fired up and
few close calls already and face
the tougher remaining schedule.
will finally taste defeat.
The championship will be decided
November 14, when Princeton deAs 1 said, last week was the
molishes Yale.
Week of the Upset, and it showed
in my record. Dropping from a
I was 9-4-2 on last week’s
10-0-1 record to one of 6-5 can be
“guesses,” so my record to date
hard on the ego, but nevertheless is 53 25 5 for a .682 percentage.
I will continue to plod along unILLINOIS 21, PURDUE 13—
daunted. My record to date is Thp surprisingly strong Boiler37-22-5, and here arc this week’s makers (4-1) have yet to lose to
picks:
a Big Ten opponent. The FightNational Football League
ing lllini (4-1) will have someST. LOUIS 21, NEW YORK 14 thing to say about that. But they
—Last week was one which the
had better concentrate on this
game and not get caught looking
Cardinals will not soon forget,
although they wish they could.
ahead to Michigan.
Not only did they lose their
NOTRE DAME 28, NAVY 13—
“Jolly” Roger Staubach has reshare of the lead in the Eastern
gained his '63 form for the MidDivision, but with it their brilliant end Sonny Randle in their dies (2-3-1), but he lacks last
year’s supporting cast. The rash
loss to the Cowboys, Randle suffered a severe shoulder separaof upsets so far this season has
tion and will be lost for the restarted the Irish (5-0) thinking
mainder of the season. The Giants about the number one spot. A few
were not beaten as badly by
breaks, and they could be naCleveland as the score indicated, tional champs.
but it showed once and for all
SYRACUSE 26, PITTSBURGH
that these are not the Giants of 12—The Orangemen (4-2) were
(Cont’d on P. 13)
(Conf’4 oiv P. 13)
-

-

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f-=~

STATE
|

HOLY CROSS

PREVIEW

CAMPAIGN

w!

page

VOLUME 15

Presidential Assistant, Arthur
W. Burke, has resigned after
Tuesday night’s Senate meeting.

Upon asking Mr. Burke to elaborate on the statements in his
resignation, the following statement was made.

Fenton Topic

ramifications
tomorrow.

ARTHUR BURKE
action our support of an NSA
resolution stating that no publications board, student or faculty,
should sit above student publications. Consequently, the Student
Senate has paid only lip-service
to the NSA resolution, and failed
to act.

In addition, some of us worked
part of the summer attempting
to get the Easter Vacation
changed to Easter and not to
Winter Vacation No. 3. Finally
(Cont’d on P. 8)

Douglas Addresses Graduates,
Stresses Law For Survival
At the fourth annual Graduate Student Convocation Saturday night, Supreme Court Justice Mr. William
O. Douglas warned that the holocaust of nuclear war
can be prevented only by “legal concensus” in the form
of international arbitration and world laws.
Addressing a capacity audience of approximately
700 graduate students and faculty members, Justice Douglas

The Honorable
WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS
can count on is the self-interest
of those 700 million people.”
Concerning the break between

Russia and Red China, Justice
Douglas drew on some interesting
comparisons in Chinese and Russian ideology. Standard of living
has much to do with their differences. Russia’s higher standards have made her eager to
begin enjoying the fruits of her
labor, whereas China is still a
struggling, underdeveloped nation economically. China also
possesses a deep racial fear. Her
population of 700 million is increasing by 15 to 20 million per
year; naturally, she is looking
for places to put her rapidly expanding number. Thus many of
(Cont’d on P. 12)

of the

cities

NO. i

Senate Assails Pillion;

Urban Life
The underlying theme to Gott-

p.m.

claimed that in this nuclear age,
the abolition of nuclear weapons
is not enough. “If a dispute broke
out, the victor would be the
country which reproduced the
bomb with most speed.” The Justice maintained that we must
think of survival only in terms
of prevention of war.
Justice Douglas defined legal
solutions for the danger of war
in terms of mediation, conciliation, and arbitration/through
such agencies as the Common
Market, OAS, NATO, but mainly
through the United Nations and
the International World Court.
Speaking on the United Nations,
Justice Douglas strongly advocated admission of Red China as a
member nation. “Red China’s
bomb will be used purely for
prestige in Asian politics. How do
we get along with Red China, who
now represents one quarter of
the entire world population? As
of now we have drawn a Bamboo
Curtain around them. But we
must adjust them to our world!"
Justice Douglas added that it was
a “mystery” to him that the U.N.
could exist as a representative
world body without the membership of Red China. In answer to
a student’s question as to whether
Red China would adhere to the
decisions of the U.N., Justice
Douglas replied: “What are your
alternatives? The U.N. is now
composed of vastly different nations. The political reality is that
one fourth of the world’s people
are Chinese; they now have the
bomb; how are you going to live
with them? The only thing we

*

man’s discourse was the concept
of radical change that will take
place, not in the far distant future, but perhaps even within
the next ten years. The cities of
1970 will contain so many new
innovations as to make them
almost unrecognizable to us were
they present today. When one
adds to this the fact that in the
next 20 years as much housing
will be built as now stands, the
inescapable conclusion is one of
a society that bears very little
resemblance to that which we are
familiar. Our new way of life
will come about as a result of
our use of the new facilities and

The resignation was dated
Tuesday, October 20, 1964, 11:00

examples: the publications board
serves as a censor upon free expression. By abolishing this board
we would simply be proving by

pa e

By DONALD A. EISMANN

In a letter of resignation filed
with President Robert P. Finkelstein. Mr. Burke said, “I regret
to inform you at this time that 1
must resign my position as Presidential Assistant, Due to our
widening differences of opinion,
in regard to the scope and purposes of student government as
exemplified in recent developments both on and off the Senate
floor, I must submit my resignation effective immediately.”

To further elaborate on these

tBL

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1964

Presidential Aide Resigns;
Burke Protests Inaction

“I am rather shocked and annoyed at the spinelessness and
slothfulness of a majority of the
Student Senate and its officers.
I refer specifically to the failure
of the publications board amendment, the Easter Vacation change,
the Student Zionist Resolution,
the food service fight and myrades of other examples.

■

of

One of the major problems
facing the cities today is, what
Gottman
Mr.
termed, Urban
Sprawl. He pointed out that there
are three components integral to
this problem. Urban Sprawl
occurs and is recognized when
personal services begin to scatter,
the pillars of city growth (Manufacturing plants and the whorehousing and wholesale trade)

Amendment Delayed
The Smdent Senate, Tuesday
Night, resolved to condemn the
remarks made by Congressman
John R. Pillion on the floor of the
House of Representatives, which
tabled U.B. as a “Communist"
center. Congressman Pillion’s address, entitled “Academic Freedom o r Spiritual Intellectual
Blackout?” was called a sweep-

ing indictment against the administration, faculty and the student
body of S.U.N.Y.A.B.”
The resolution spoke of Pillion’s comments as “irresponsible
charges.”
and unsubstantiated
Representative Pillion’s address
was concerned with the so called
“pipe-lines for the Communist
Party into the university faculty
and student body.” It was precipitated by the recent appearance of the House Committee on

Un-American Activities in the
City of Buffalo. The resolution
states that Mr. Pillion “intimates
that the orderly picketing of the
H.U.A.C. sponsored by the Student Senate on April 29 and 30,
1964 was a Communist organized
and inspired group of students
at S.U.N.Y.A.B,”

The resolution continued; “We
challenge Mr. Pillion to make the

effective instrument -in aiding
student publications,” and it has
attempted “to stifle academic
freedom of speech" by setting
inconsistent and arbitrary standards. The amendment would delegate the responsibilities of the
present Board to the Student
Judiciary, The Student Senate Activities committee and the editors
of student publications, with the
approval of the Student Senate
Executive Committee. The Publications Board currently has the
power to elect editors of student
publications. The supporters of
the ameendment also feel that
this responsibility could be more
successfully carried out by the
editorial staff of the publications,
themselves.
The Publications Board issued
a statement which urged the
defeat of the amendment. They
stated their concern for student
activities. “None of the present
members are actively engaged
in publications, nor were they
selected solely for their publications background . . . This results in the formation of an un-

biased, disinterested group of
students.”
The Senate also defeated a re-

break up and scatter, and the
area known as suburbia grows
and takes on an increasingly
greater signifigance. Mr. Gottman
added however, that this was
not too evident today because of
the rise of the Megalopolis in
the developed countries. This latter condition has tended to offset
to a degree the ravages of Urban
Sprawl. There is a trend today to
have a large segment of the
population concentrated on a
small land area. This is illustrated
in the situation present in the
North Eastern Megalopolis in the
United States. The area from
Boston to Washington, D.C. represents one eighth (53,000 sq.
m.) of the United States land
mass yet it contains 20 per cent
of our countries population. This
is true not only for the United
States but applies also for such
developed countries as West Germany, England and Japan. Coincident with the rise of this Megalopolis is the emergence of a
new nomadic class of citizen. The
necessities of urban mobility have
STUDENT SENATE CONDEMNS PILLION
changed the living habits of millions of Americans today and will same statements on this campus solution which requested the recontinue to do so in ever greater either before this body or another moval of German scientists curdegrees as we near the 70’s.
rently engaged in creating nucampus group which he may desfor clear weapons for Egypt. The Stuopportunity
with
full
ignate,
Mr. Gottman now proceeded to
questioning.” The resoludent Zionist Organization prepostulate the causes for this student
tion will be sent to Congressman sented the bill in hopes of indichotomy between Urban Sprawl
fluencing the German governthe press.
and the centralization tendencies Pillion and
ment to recall its scientists. Secof the Megalopolis. The reason
retary
Linda Leventhal urged the
of
the
constituConsideration
for this apparent twofoldedness
rejection of the resolution on the
lies within the realm of the White tional amendment, abolishing the
Publications Board was delayed grounds that the Student Senate
Collar Revolution. Gottman concannot take the time to debate
tended that over 50 percent of until the next meeting of the
moral issues. She quoted the preStudent Senate by President Rothe labor force today is in the
amble to the constitution which
bert Finkelstein, The amendment,
white collar catagory. The greatstates the purpose of the Senate
as presented to the body at their
est demand for labor today within
as being “to promote the general
the realm of the metropolises, last meeting, required stylistic
welfare of the day-time student
changes which did alter the porcomes from the mass media combody, provide for the proper and
munications fields. These labor port of the Amendment. For the adequate management of student
be considered by
fields concentrate within the amendment to
affairs,” Arthur Blake also quotdowntown areas of the cities and the Senate, it is required that the
ed the constitution in his deas a result oust whatever housing changes made in the wording are
fense of the resolution, stating
acceptable to the majority of the
space is extant. Thus we have
two
the duty of the Senate is to
senators.
After
close
votes
in
(to
explained the outward
the
narrowly
“maintain
the responsibilities of
changes
were
which
the
movement
suburbs)
of the people
the students to the university,
acceptvote
on
the
rejected
the
movement
and the inward
of the
the community and the world,
ance of the stylistic changes was
cities. There is, however, another
and exercise the fundamental reFinkelstein
cast
President
tied.
problem connected with planning
sponsibilities and rights of a defor the cities of the future. his tie breaking vote to reject the
It
is
now
mocratic society." The resolution
changes.
amendment’s
Should the planners design the
was defeated; 9 for, II against.
necessary to wait two/ 1 weeks to
hew cities for the new laborBudgets passed by the Senate
communications force or should reconsider the amendment.
include, Med-Dent Student Counthe cities be designed to attract
The amendment to the Student cil, $3,450; Student Law Council,
the now-d e p a r t e d semi-heavy
Association would eliminate the $2,815; The Debate Society. $4,manufacturing that has been
Publications Board on the 275; and the Sociology Club,
(Cont’d on P. 3) grounds that it has been an “in$1,575.

�Terry Neal Named Queen
Of Homecoming Activities
“One is Silver and Other’s
Gold," was the theme of this
year's Homecoming Weekend,
which took place October 1617.
Festivities got under way Friday night with a gigantic pep
rally, attended by well over 1500
enthusiastic participants. Stu-

Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAG! TWO

presented with a b
ers from Preside

uet of flow-

urnas, after
which the 1939 (ju football team
was introduced to the crowd.

Saturday evening, the spotlight

shifted from the Stadium to the
Mary Seaton Room at Kleinhans
Music Hall for the Homcoming

Engineering Dept.
Gets Accreditation
The mechanical engineering department received official accreditation Friday, October 16, from
the Engineers’ Council for Professional Development.
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas made
the announcement following receipt of an official letter from
the organization which represents
12 major technical societies and
engineering education societies in
the nation.

Dr. Furnas welcomed the accreditation as an essential step
toward developing one of the finest Engineering Schools in the
country.

Markins the second of six de-

in the School to be
accredited, the announcement will
prove valuable to graduates in
obtaining employment and continuing graduate work at other
universities, according to Dr: Furpartments

nas.

Carolyn Cooper crowns Terry Neal

the annual Homecoming
game, held this year in War Memorial Stadium. UB came from
behind, in the final quarter to
defeat a powerful VM1 team 1410. The 21,000 alumni and students on hand enjoyed both the
game and the half-time enter
tainment. The 1964 queen was

Ritchie Speaks
Dr. Galvin D. Ritchie, associate
professor of chemistry, discussed
Enthalpy Entropy Effects at the
Conference on Linear Free Energy held in Durham, North Carolina Wednesday thru today.
Dr. Ritchie, who is serving on
the organizing committee of the
conference sponsored by the Army Research Office in Durham,
will also speak to the Baltimore,
Maryland Chapter of the Ameri
can Chemical Society in November when his topic will be "Solvation of Polar Groups.”
Dr. Ritchie, a former analytical
organic chemist with the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration
and Department of Health, Edu

cation, and Welfare from 195fr
60, received his B.S. and Ph D.
degrees from George Washington
University where he was an associate in chemistry for a year.
The author and co-author of several articles published in chemistry journals. Dr, Ritchie served
on the faculty of Rice University
before coming to Buffalo in 1961
He is a member of Sigma Xi and
the American Chemical Society.

vided the entertainment for ap
proximately 750 students in attendance. The high point of the
dance came with the presentation of awards. Chi Omega Soror
ity look first place in the poster
contest. Their entry was representative of the alumni theme,
the “Old 39“ Locomotive, and
was entitled “Stop, Look, and
Listen.” Runner up in the poster contest was Sigma Kappa Phi
Sorority, whose poster was a com
parison of the 1939 and 1904
Worlds Fair. Theta Chi Fratern
ity received a trophy for their
winning firedragon, and
Art

bant and Professor Paul E, Mohn,
head of the mechanical engineering department, for their leadership, ably buttressed by the excellent faculty members.”

Dean Trabant said “The report
from the E.C.P.D. compliments
the School and the department on
the research efforts of the faculty. The expansion of the faculty
and the general improvement of
the quality in the staff, curricula
and facilities was also commended. Specifically, the report said
that the faculty members are well
qualified and dedicated to doing
excellent teaching at both the

Goetzmann candidate of the Ar
nold Air Society, was named

level.”

for the best Ugly Man skit. Those
queen finalists present were in
trodueed and the two runners-up
were given gold charms. Then
the queen received her trophy
and was presented to those at-

“This further recognition of
quality and excellent gives additional evidence of the School’s
ability to contribute ideas and
provide leadership in the continued growth of engineering-science
education, research, and development in Western New York,” he

Ugly Man in the competition
sponsored by APO Fraternity,
The Society also won a trophy

tending.

Rhea From, chairman of the
Special Events Committee remarked: “I was glad to see that
the extent of student participation in this year's Homecoming
Weekend was greatly increased
over previous years, especially
as far as the Pep Rally and dance
were concerned. 1 would hope
for even more active involvement

in future

years.”

undergraduate and graduate

added.

Professor Mohn said the recognition by the E C.P.D. was highly
gratifying and reflect the high
morale of the faculty and students
in the department and the School.
The accreditation received today runs until 1969. Last October,
the School’s department of civil
engineering received similar accreditation.

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where they were greeted by a
raging bonfire. Once at the rally,
the students were entertained
by Ugly Man skits presented by
Arnold Air Society and Theta
Ghi Fraternity. Participants in
the Fire Dragon Contest were
Schoellkopf Hall and Theta C'/ii
Fraternity. Schoellkopfs’ entry
consisted of a wooden model of a
dragon, while Theta Chi’S effort
resembled a float, complete with
smoke. For the first time at any
Pep Rally, the football team was
interviewed by a' reporter from
the Spectrum. Students enjoyed
the extemporaneous and spontaneous questions and answers
asked and received from the players. The Rally was climaxed by
the coronation of the 19fi4 Homecoming Queen, Terry Neal, bylast year's queen Carolyn Cooper.
Those named to Terry’s court
were Mady Yanuck and Gail Edwards. The newly crowned queen
then lead students to Norton for
a mixer in the Ratskellar. Music
was provided by Rocky l.ucci and
his band until 1:00 a m.

“To say that I am highly
pleased with the accreditation, is
an understatement. A 11 credit
should go to Dean E. Arthur Tra-

Fraternity Chapters Comply
With University Regulations
NEW YORK &lt;CPS)—All sixteen
social fraternity chapters at Columbia University have complied
with the school’s requirement that
they file a “Declaration of NonalPractices,”
Discriminatory
though one house had to disaffiliate from its national organization in order to do so.
The loca] chapter of the Sigma
Chi fraternity found it necessary
to resign from the national fraternity. The resignation was accepted, effective October 1, 1964,
by Harry V. Wade, national president of Sigma Chi.
The requirement was originally

stated as a university policy in
1953, with the date for compliance set as October 1, 1960, and
later extended to October 1, 1964
The university said that after

this date “no fraternity, social
or other student
group shall be permitted to function on the university campus if
‘it is compelled by its constitution,
rituals, or government to deny
membership to any person because of his race, creed, color,
or national origin.”
The prohibition would not apply to “a student group that is
organized in good faith for devotional purposes or for the study
or propagation of a religious
faith.”
The University also required
that alumni organizations responsible for the local chapters, and
the national organizations of the
fraternities, join in the “Declaration of Non-Discriminatory Pracorganization,

tices.”

�Friday,

October 23, 1964

Conservative Candidate

Paolucci Supports Goldwater

of New Mexico,
President Tom L. Popejoy has announced his school will not extend recognition to any organization which the FBI has charged
is Communist-tinged.
—University

Popejoy issued the statement
although he conceded that the
organization concerned, the

Dr. Paolucci’s stated purpose in

running for office is to support
the national Republican ticket

answering questions concerning
reapportionment and race relations, he stated that the “possession of property” should be important in voting qualifications
and that “the Negro problem in
the United States exists because
Negro society here and in Africa

PROFESSOR PAOLUCCI
the students for Goldwater-Miller
group on campus, stated that the
purpose of bringing Dr. Paolucci
to the campus was to acquaint

the student body with the Goldwater positions and to make them
aware of Dr. Paolucci’s candidacy.

Any students or faculty
members interested in a
UB chartered jet to Europe
leaving in early June and
returning in late August,
please contact Howard
Auerbach in the Spectrum
Office.

is Matriarchal and because the
family unit is not important in
American Negro culture.”

Dr. Paolucci closed the discussion with a request that all New
York Republicans who vote for
Senator Keating write Senator
Goldwater and tell him of their

misplaced loyalty.

Kearns Whalen, spokesman for

Sales to Start
Student Review
The first of the fall semester
issues of the New Student Review
will be on sale next week in the
lobby of Norton, the bookstores
and the Circle Art Theatre.
The magazine promises to be
very readable and attractive as
is begins its third year of publication. For the first time, the
issue will include poetry from
nationally known poets, such as

Kirby

Congdon, Larry

Signer,

and William Stafford, in addition
to the regular student authors.
Two short stories, one by Thomas
Berdine and one by Jeremy Taylor, demonstrate completely different techniques in fiction writing. The non-fiction section includes several very thought provoking articles; Ralph Race discusses his views on education in
“Some Supposing,” Lyn Alexander describes her experiences in
Mississippi, this past summer as a
civil rights worker and teacher
and Robert Feldman expresses
some observations about the national NSA convention he attended. Once again, the New Student
Review will publish illustrations
done by artists from the University’s Art Department.

Urban
Life
(Cont’d
from P.

1)

driven out of the city?
Without answering this seemingly unanswerable question, Mr.
Gottman concluded that urban
planning also involved a problem of aesthetics. People as voters
still hope that their area or city
should change and provide for all
the new needs without really
changing. This aesthetic resistance is transferred into political
action. Politicians are very wary
of change because if their constituency changes character the

DuBois Club Banned
From U. of New Mex.
ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico

Monday, October 19. at 4:00
p.m., a group of approximately
125 students assembled in the
conference theater to hear Dr.
Henry Paolucci, conservative
party candidate for the Senate
seat from New York. Dr. Paolucci, Associate Professor of History and Political Science at Iona
College, (New Rochelle), is a native of New York City and a
graduate of CCNY and Columbia
University, (MA and Ph.D.).

and to voice his views on the
true issues of this important election which have not been discussed by either side. “The basic
issue,” he said, “involves two
different philosophies of government and two philosophies concerning the condition of man.”
Dr. Paolucci went on to state
and support the platform of Senator Barry Goldwater. A heated
question and answer period followed Paolucci’s short speech. In

PAOB THAI!

SPECTRUM

Freshman Council
To Publish Paper
By

EILEEN TEITLER

The Freshman Class Council,
headed by Martin Guggenheim, is
holding weekly meetings every
Wednesday night at 7:30 in Room
334 in Norton. These meetings
are open, and all interested freshmen are invited to attend.

Other officers include: Allen
Larson, Vice President; Ronna
Yosim, Secretary; and Martin
Jaffe, Treasurer. These officers
were elected by other members
of th Council, who were themselves selected by their Conference groups.

W.E.B. DuBois Club, has not
made an application to be recognized as a student group.
The club, which contends it
is a socialist and not a Communist
organization, was recently formed
in Albuquerque, the bulk of its
membership being university students.
Popejoy said his decision was
based on a report last week in a
bulletin by FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover that the national DuBois
group is a “Communist-spawned
Marxist youth organization.”
“I admit the usual procedure
for turning down an application
is after it is received,” Popejoy
said. He added that the administration decided to make its statement only after it appeared the
group would seek affiliation.
The existence of the Albuquerque chapter was revealed by publication of a letter by James
Kennedy, club president, in the
University of New Mexico student
newspaper, the Lobo. Kennedy
commented on a Lobo editorial
which said that certain forms of
socialism are needed in the
United States.
After the publication of the
letter, the two Albuquerque daily
newspapers reported in front
page news stories the existence of
an organization called “Communist-spawned” by Hoover.
The local press also reported
that the Lobo will carry a leftwing column by Kennedy. A Lobo
editorial staff member said he
had arranged with Kennedy for
the column before any controversy had arisen and that it
still would be carried.
Popejoy indicated he would
take no action to prevent the
publication of Kennedy’s column.
He said any such action would
have to originate in the Board
of Student Publications and that
he did not anticipate it materia-

The United
PHILADELPHIA
States National Student Association (USNSA) is asking the nation’s college students to skip one
meal next month in order to
send food to indigent Negroes in
the South.
—

The

program,

called Thanks-

giving Fast For Freedom, calls
for students with prepaid meal
contracts to abstain voluntarily
from one dinner meal November 19, the money being used
to buy food.

Student governments at individual schools are being asked to
direct the drive on their cam-

puses.

Last year, an estimated 17,000
students at 42 schools participated in the fast. Some $10,250
was raised and used to purchase
more than 80,000 pounds of food
at wholesale prices.
The

food,

mostly

preserved

meat and dried milk, was distributed to 600 families by the Council of Federated Organizations
(COFO), which directed this summer’s voter registration drive in
Mississippi. Each family received
a one-week supply.
The program, directed by NSA,

is jointly sponsored by the United
States Youth Council, NSA, and

Northern Student Movement.
It has been endorsed by Roy
Wilkins, Executive Secretary of
the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People;
James Farmer, National Director
of CORE, and John Lewis of the
Student Non-violent Co-ordinating
Committee.
(he

It has also been endorsed by
Nobel Peace Prize winner Martin
Luther King.

Support Your

UNITED
FUND

Last year food was shipped to
families in six Mississippi towns.
The fast’s sponsors hope to expand the program. Plans presently call for shipping part of
the food to the McComb area,
where a number of Negro
churches and businesses were
destroyed recently during
period of racial unrest.

Students whose last

names begin with the letters G, P, will see their
advisers, plan their programs and register for
courses on the following

days: October 26 through
October 30. Students
whose last names begin
with R, W, will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf 114. At
this time, the Receptionist
will give the student registration cards and a list of
instructions to follow in
the subsequent registration
procedures.
Students who do not
make their appointments
on time, or who do not
keep them when made, will
be required to register in
Clark Gym on Registration
Day in January.

BOCCE
IF 3-1344

lizing.

Kennedy did not indicate what
action, if any, his group would
take toward university affiliation,
but he asked Popejoy if the Attorney General’s list of subversive orangizations should not be
used rather than Hoover’s directives as a criterion for rejecting
applications.

The Freshman Class Council is
presently in charge of Winter
Weekend, with Cindy Nash as
chairman of the committee. Anyone interested in working on the
committee is invited to join.

Popejoy said, in effect, that he
would leave the door open to the
group, and if additional information shows Hoover’s report to be
inaccurate, the DuBois Club still
may be recognized.

A newspaper will be published
by the Council, to inform mem-

Kennedy scored Hoover’s statement in an article published Friday in the Lobo, saying his group

bers of the freshman class of
activities. This bulletin will be
published before Nov, 1.

N.S.A. Asks For Food Fast
Food to Go South

is merely socialistic and not

con-

nected with the Communist Party.

Other possible activities include
mixer, a freshman bulletin
board, a suggestion box, improved
bus service for Allenhurst, and
more communications between
commuting and residence students.
a

Members of the committee are:
Harold Bob, George Bodner, Helene Friedman, Martin Guggenheim, Martin Jaffe, Lynn Kramer,
Allen Larson, Betty Latosi, Cindy
Nash, Robyn Smith, Kathleen
Swann, Evelyn Weinrub, Ken
Yackel, and Ronna Yosim.
voting patterns may change. This,
concluded Mr. Gottman, leads to
the effort on the part of national

and local politicians and politics
to prevent the growth of the
large metropolis.

SHOW HOURS: Fri. 6-10 PM. Sat 11 AM-10 PM, Sun. 2-10 PM
ADMISSION: Adults $1.50, Children 50C

MASTEN AVE. ARMORY
Frl. Sat. Sun.
OCTOBER 23-2S, 1964

IN THE
WORLD OF
SKIINO

a

�Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACK POUR

Jrom the Editor

Jn
ffimnriam

•..

Article One of the Constitution of the United States
protects the right of freedom of religion .This right offers
to any citizen the right to, as well as the right not to,
affiliate with any religious group or belief.

cjCetterA to the

Publications Board Defense

TO THE EDITOR:
The Student Publications Board
consists of seven students as voting members, one non-voting faculty member, and one non-voting
member from the administration,
with the editors and advisors of
the major publications as ex-officio members. All of the voting
members are appointed by the
President of the University after
having been recommended to him
by the Student Senate. This Publication Board is empowered to
uphold and improve the standards and quality of student publications, appointing the editor(1874-1964)
in-chief and business managers,
and consulting with them on policy, as well as to preserve the
The 31st President
the freedom of student publications consistent with responsibiloj the United States
ity.
In view of the aforementioned
structure, the Publications Board
wopld like to comment on the
editorial published in the Spectrum on the abolishment of the
Board.
WHAT IS THE PUBLICATIONS
BOARD? The present Board consists of members selected on the
The Student Welfare Commitbasis of their concern for stutee and Communications Committee of the Student Senate an- dent activities and academic renounce that petitions to change sponsibility; it consists of students concerned with the relaSpring Vacation from the second week in March to the last tionship of student publications
to the student and the communweek in March are now being circulated. The change requested ity. None of the present members
actively engaged in any stuis due to overwhelming student are publication,
nor were they
dissatisfaction with the present dent
dates, which do not coincide with selected solely for their publications background. No editor or
the majority of vacations granted
manager of a student
by other major universities in business
publication is a voting member
the country.
of the Board. This exclusion
The Welfare Committee found,
necessarily results in the formasampling
a
random
of
uniin
versities throughout the country, tion of an unbiased, dis-interestthat 67% of these universities ed group of students. Such a
given the support of the
hold their vacations either during group,
student body, and the guidance
the last week in March or first
week in April. In an informal poll of the administration and the
faculty, can devote their energies
conducted in Tower Dorm earlifor the best interest and welfare
er this month, it was found that
of all students and the university,
88% of the residents favored by
preventing a single group or
such a change.
political faction from dominating
The Communications Commitand controlling the manner and
tee has distributed the petitions
means of any publication on camto all the dorms, throughout the
pus.
bulletin boards in Norton Union,
Because the Board does repreand have posted the petitions on sent an interested but diversified
departmental bulletin boards. The
group of students with various
committee urges all students who
attitudes and beliefs, the followare interested in effecting this
ing necessarily results:
change to read and consider the
—No single philosophy of a
motion seriously.
publication can dominate the entire field of students’ publications.
—No single individual student
is empowered with the responsibility of selecting the editor of
Today from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. a
national mock election will be a major publication, or of upholding the quality of any publiheld in the Fillmore Room. The
cation representing the Univerelection sponsored by the Student Senate Elections Committee sity.
—No uninterested group of
is open to all
students is delegated these funcStudents representing each of tions as a
secondary resposibility.
the four major candidates will
—No recognition of student
present their respective positions
publications is made by the faculwith an opportunity for questions ty or administration; no restricfrom the audience, l.D. cards will tion is placed on
the freedom of
be necessary in order to vote.
expression except that deemed
necessary by the students themselves.

HERBERT
CLARK

FREEDOM OF RELIGION
On this campus an Atheist Club is attempting to
establish itself. The citizens of this community, the students, should have the right to, as well as not to, join
this group.

FREEDOM OF ASSEMBLY

Many of the “liberals” of this campus are in direct
opposition to the establishment of this group. After already violating the right of freedom of religion, these
“liberals” are now stifling the right of assembly.
It is worthy to note that these same “liberals” are
the ones always defending the Bill of Rights, yet they
somehow can’t apply these freedoms to a living experience,

FREEDOM OF SPEECH
The Bill of Rights also guarantees freedom of speech
During Mr. Keating’s appearance on campus a Gold-

water supporter walked into the crowd carrying a Goldwater sign. She was subsequently harassed and mistreated. Granted, that this may not have been a wise move
on the young ladies part, but her right to carry a sign
was equal to that of any other person there.
Again the great “liberals” showed themselves to be
what they really are fakes.
-

Principles

&amp;

A DICOTOMY:
The Immediate Circumstances

There is in each of these cases a dicotomy. First, on
one level the principles of civil rights and civil liberties.
Second, the immediate social context.

A true liberal would recognize this dicotomy
defend those principles which are of a paramount
portance. The social context, possibly defending an
popular idea, athlisism or Goldwaterism, should be
ondary of consideration.

and
imunsec-

Only when these absolute rights are upheld under
all conditions are they absolute rights. Otherwise civil
rights and civil liberties will fall back into the meaningless garble of the upfusgating politician.

All civil rights are for all people at all times and
under all conditions.

THE

SPECTRUM

Th« official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
at Norton Hall, University Campus,
Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Publication Office
weekly from the

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editors

Peter Rubm

Nussbaum
Barbara Strauss

Paul

Feature Editor

JOHN P

-

KOWAL

Sports Editor
Lay out Editor
Copy Editor
Business Mgr
Advertising Mgr
Photo Editor
Circulation Mgr.

Allan Scholom
David Edelman
Marcia Ann Orzulak
Bernard Dikman
Howard Auerbach
Edward Joscelyn
Alice Ostrander

Gary Falk
William Siemermg
Dallas Garber
Thomas Haenle
General StaH; Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita, Sue Greene,
Eileen Murphy, Gary Lyman, Gary Chilcott, Nancy Migdol, Jeanne Stoll, Don
Eismann.
Meryl Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou Kozlowtki, Rita Solomon,
Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky, Larry Siegel, Skip Venneri, Linda Leventhal, Sharon Richter,
Diane Holtzman, Diane Hayes, Manon Michael, Erol Sull, Ellen Lorig, Linda Wachner
Editorial

Advisor

Financial Advisors

Staff; Chick Arnold, Richard
Drandoff. Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
Schuelein, Skip Blumberg, Mike Castro, Lenny Gaby Bruce Goldstein, George Jackrel,
Steve Oberstein, Eric Snyder, Harvey Starr

Photography Staff;
Blank
Circulation Staff;

Palmer

David Collins.

Diane

Lewis.

Pete Bonneau,

Jane Herbrand,

Ivan

Makuch, Susan Wortman, Don

Elne Gold

Joyce Fenmoce,

Mary

Lou

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Claw,
Subscription

Postage Pa.d at Buffalo, New

S3.00

r&gt;er

York

vear circulation 9000
Represented for natonal advertising
by National Advertising
3erv;oo, Inc., 42C Mad son Ave. New York, N. Y

HOOVER

Vacation Change
Petitions Signed

Mock Election
scents.

Birth of the Nation, a
classic in the motion picture field, will be shown
in the Norton Union Conference theater Tuesday,
at noon, 3, 6, and 8 p.m.
This eontroversal movie,
which is sponsored by tbe
movie committee of Norton, deals with the Kn
Klux Klan during tbe Civil
War. It was silent when
made in 1915, but was
later remade with sound.
Tickets for the four performances can be obtained
at fbe ticket booth by showing your ID card.

Editor

In essence, a concerned group
of students representing all of
the student body is empowered
with the responsibility of encouraging, aiding and promoting student publications.
IS THE BOARD EFFECTIVE?
History speaks for itself, but it
does not determine the future.
The present Board recognizes
that problems exist within its
own constitutional structure, and
within its delegated responsibilities. It is presently giving considerable time to the job of looking
at its internal organization, and
evaluating its effectiveness, and
to preparing a study of Publications Boards at other similar institutions. At the end of this
study, the constitution will be
evaluated in light of new information and appropriate changes
will be made.
To abolish the Board and to
adopt the amendment presently
being submitted to the Senate
(the legality of which is question 1
a,ble) is to admit student failure
and to defeat the philosophical
principles implicit in the establishment of the Board.
The established Board does not
prevent consultation with the
Student Judiciary for the legal
problems that publications present.

To give the Student Senate Activities Committee the further
burden of recognizing new publications would be a disastrous
misuse of their time.
To give any one student the
power to choose an editor is not
only dictatorial, but may also
perpetuate a single philosophical
belief or a political faction in
control of a publication.
To give this safeguard against
the dominance of a publication
by any one interest group to the
Executive Committee of the Student Faculty Association is not
only to admit the irresponsibility
of students, but also to deny the
students a voice in the choice of
its publications leadership, and
to give this power to the administration and faculty.
And finally, to abolish the Publications Board is to remove a
division of powers between the
several branches of student government, to remove a student
organization pledged to preserve
the freedom of student publications consistent with responsibility and to remove the only
unbiased group of students—representing the entire study body
—empowered with the sole responsibility of encouraging, siding and promoting student publications, is to admit defeat.
It is concluded that if the
students who are working so hard
for the abolition of the Publications Board would spend as much
effort in working with the Board
to make a better Board, they
would be doing a much greater
service to their fellow students
and the University.
—George W. Neuner
Chairman, Publications Board

SZO Scores Student Government
TO THE EDITOR
Recently the Student Zionist
Organization, sponsored a meeting entitled “Genocide?", a factual report concerning the existence of West German scientists
working in the Egyptian armament industry specifically on missiles capable of delivering nuclear
warheads. Since the purpose of
this educational group is the edification of college students concerning all aspects of Middle
Eastern affairs, I call the student
body’s attention to the following:
In the August issue of Atlantic
Monthly, Terence Prittie, English diplomatic correspondent
to Egypt, reported the existence of 500 West German
technicians and scientists in the
employ of Egypt engaged in the
manufacture of destructive arm-

aments. By 1966 Nasser will have
nearly 1000 short-range missiles
capable, as he puts it, of “burning
out the cancerous growth of Israel.” For sixteen years a state
of war has existed between Israel
and Egypt, despite Israel’s numerous requests for peace negotiations, submitted to both Egypt

the U.N. Nasser is determined in his aims to eradicate
the “Zionist-imperialist problem”
once and for all.
According to Prittie’s article,
there have been reports that
Egypt is developing weapons of a
genocidal nature, capable of poisoning the earth with radioactive
fallout. It is not our purpose to
estimate the veracity of these reports, but merely to give fact.
One obvious fact remains: the
(Cont’d on P. 5)
and

�Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

gucinski

By LEONARD

GERSON

“This is a problem of the mind,
not a problem of the lawyer and
the Senator.” Those were the
words of the Republican presidential nominee, Hairy Gold-

water, following his negative vote
on the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Hopefully recent international
events the non-alligned nations
conference, the awarding of the
-

my hypothesis is that strong electric
Oh yes Dr. Buss!
shock elicits pupillary reflexes, eye lid reflexes, and eye movements
."
in Nero
.

.

.

...

.

oCetterA
(Cont’d

from P,

to

the Editor

4)

presence of West German scientists engaged in the development
of these weapons constitutes a

danger to Israel, the Middle East
and the world. The German Federal Republic has repeatedly refused to take responsibility for

the actions of its nationals.
At the Student Senate meeting,
Tuesday, October 20, the Student
Zionist Organization presented a
resolution urging the German
Federal Republic to recall its nationals engaged in the manufacture of destructive armaments.
The Student Zionist Organization
pointed out the moral issue involved. Most senators wholeheartedly concurred, yet some of these
same senators denounced the resolution on grounds that universal
moral issues are not in the realm
of Senate affairs. Miss Leventhal
stated that the Senate’s function
is to serve the student body, and
deduced from this obvious fact
that Senate affairs are limited to
an area between Main Street and
Bailey Avenue. Mr. Kolken, who
also supported SZO’s moral stand,
further expressed his conviction
that Senate support of the resolution would be effective in helping to augment the removal of

these scientists. He then proceed-

ed to denounce the resolution on
the same grounds as Miss Leventhal. (The resolution was defeated
9-11-2).

Can these be our intellectual
leaders? Have we elected representatives who believe that student government should be silent
in affairs that effect the very
future of our world? It is one
thing to disagree with the issue;
but to agree and not speak out
is a repudiation of our civil obligations.
The Student Senate has been

negligent in its moral responsibility to the student body; for it
has by its inaction turned the
University's back on issues which
we as conscientious students must
face. The resolution is now circulating as a petition. We urge
the faculty and students of this
University to sign the petition,
thereby repudiating the Senate’s
provincialism. We hope the Student Senate will reconsider its
stand on issues outside the aura

of campus life. To remain silent
in protest, by implication, is no
protest at all.
—Gary Evans, Pres,

SZO

Art Theft
TO

THE EDITOR:
As there is no exhibition gallery on campus where art works
may be seen regularly by students, faculty and staff, the Art
Department policy has been to
create a gallery atmosphere in

various places on campus. One
area is Hayes Hall foyer, another
Notron Union (in cooperation
with the Student Activities Committee) and most recently Baird
Hall, There have also been requests
from other facilities on
campus for student shows.

Favorite

comments from stu-

KtriCCTIOHS

Spotlight
on
Civil Rights

...

i

*

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

dents and staff, and positive reactions in the form of requests
to purchase works from the exhibits seems to justify the need

for continuation of this program.
However, the disappearance
(theft if you will) last Saturday
of a small, non-objective painting
by Richard Huntington from an
exhibition of student work on
view in Baird Hall, threatens to
Curtail our exhibition activities
on campus. Certainly in future
we will exhibit work only in
areas where security can be main(Cont’d on P. 13)

Nobel Prize for Peace to Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. - have had
an enlightening effect upon the
Senator from Arizona and have
made him more aware of the political consequences of our racial
situation.
The “fading ghost of colonialism” was the major theme of the
conference of non-aligned nations that took place two weeks
ago in Egypt, and the United
States came under vehement attack for her involvements in
Vietnam, the Congo, and Cuba.
Although there are many people
even in our own country who
find our activities in various
parts of the world objectionable,
the bitter criticism that we received in Cairo seems strikingly
harsh. I believe this severe censure to be largely a reaction to
the racial injustice that plagues
our nation. When you begin to
speculate about a possible basis
for Guinea’s President Toure’s
assertion that “the policy of social
integration of Negroes in America
. . . is the reason for the murder
of John Kennedy,” then you get
an inkling of the potent and distorted impression our racial dillema makes upon other nations,
especially the newly developing
African nations like Guinea.
This is not the first time that
our policy concerning the nations
of Africa and Asia has been relevant to our Negro population.
At the turn of the century when
the United States initiated some
imperialistic ventures in Asia and
Latin America, the liberal Northern influence which for the previous 25 years had been a vital
force in preventing the Southern
governments from adopting a
racist policy, disappeared. In his
excellent study of the development of the Jim Crow laws, C.
Vann Woodward, Professor of
History at John Hopkins University, described the position the
Northern politicians had placed
“No Republican
themselves in
leader,” declared Senator Tillman of South Carolina, “not even
Governor Roosevelt will now dare
to wave the bloody shirt and
preach a crusade against the
South’s treatment of the Negro.
The North had a bloody shirt of
its own. Many thousands of them
have been made into shrouds for
murdered Filipinos, done to death
because they were fighting for
liberty.” Since then more than
half a century has passed, and
the nations we once attempted to
forcibly dominate we are now
trying to win over with vast
economic assistance. If in 1900 we
allowed a change in our attitude
toward our Negro citizens in
order to make it compatible with

By JEREMY TAYLOR

career is somecheckered; four different
grammar schools, three different
high schools and three different
colleges, with “sabbatical” leaves
between the changes. Many people for whom I have the utmost
respect look askance at that record and tell me that I’m never
going to “get anywhere” unless
I “settle down”. They’re right,
and I know they’re right, but
settling down is not merely an
act of will—it has to come out
of more than a desire to get a
degree. Scholarship is important
to me; I think it is worth a great
deal and should command more
respect than it currently does,
even among scholars. I believe
that a college education should
deal in scholarship and not merely in learning the tools of an
intellectual or mercantile trade.
I did not come to this conclusion
while I was in school, however,
and I'm fairly sure I would riot
have come to it if all I had done
was go to school.
My academic

what

Education, together with
growth, is a total process, and

when one's intellectual education
exceeds one’s physical and emotional education, it is time to get
out of school for a while and
catch up, if being a whole person
is crucial, which I believe completely. I probably will not “graduate with my class", but that in
itself is unimportant if when I
do graduate I am educated to the
extent of my abilities, or as close
to that goal as this institution
is capable of bringing me. I could
still take heavy loads and complete my requirements and get
out “on schedule”, but I do not
think that amassing credits is all
I have to do to graduate
I am
responsible for deciding when I
am educated, not the admissions
—

and records office. I do not believe that one four-year time
table can be adequate for every
student in college in this country, and I do not think that anyone should feel pressured to conform to arbitrary and artificial
scale of human value like that
one.

So I am not going to stop writing this column and take more
classes and hurry up and grad-

uate, because I do not know how
to do what I want to do when I
get out, and an adequate college

education should at the very least
give me an indication of that. I
am convinced that the way I am
going about getting an education
is the best one, for me and perhaps for anyone who shares my
attitudes and goals. It may seem
a bit slow and cumbersome by

the world’s standards, but then
believe that students should
be vitally engaged in friendship,
family, sport, creative endeavor,
politics, and a host of others
as well as academic scholarship
—and to do all that takes time.
I

1 realize that in the eyes of
teachers and administration this
may be even worse heresy than
agnostic atheism; after all, they
have a vested interest in getting
each one of us out of here as
soon as possible, if only to make
room for the advancing hoards.
But I refuse to be hustled along
and dispensed with, educated or
not, by this or any other institution.

I said in one of earlier columns
that I felt that it should be the
function of any society to maximize the potential for human endeavor of each of its participants.
As a corollary of this I think that
every person in a society should
be willing to ignore and resist
the pressures of a society that
fails to do this. If the university
society does not provide you with
a schedule of achievement that
corresponds with your needs and
abilities, then you should feel
free, it not compelled, to develop
My own
your own schedule.
schedule is based on what I know,
what I need to know, and what I
can do, and not on how old I am
or the number of hours I have
on my transcript. When I graduate I am going to know just what
my degree means, and I want
very much to be comfortable with
that knowledge.
So do not buy everything anybody wants to sell you. If the
Uniformity wants to sell you a
piece of parchment that you can
trade for a job or a chance at
graduate school and you want
more than that—do not take it
until it is more than that.

-

our foreign policy, why isn’t a
similar action equally politically
expedient in 1964, when instead
of lynching and deprivation the
product of a consistent foreign
and domestic policy will mean
freedom and justice to our Negro
population?

Few people would question the
view that Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.’s dedication to the philosophy
of non-violence has saved the
United States a great amount of
bloodshed; however when he was
recently awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize many people had difficulty
in seeing the international significance of his work. At the present time racial conflict is only
evident in isolated areas
the
United States, the Union of South
(Cont’d on.P. 12)
-

Students For Johnson
Welcome the President
“Students For Johnson and
Humphrey”, the new Democratic
Party student group on campus,
is taking an active part in the
National campaign, both on campus and in the City of Buffalo.
The 336 members of "Students

for LBJ and HHH” have invited
speakers, held rallies and registration drives and been on hand
for the reception of Democratic
dignitaries.

Their goal, the insurance of the
election of Johnson and Humphrey, has been strived for by a
voter registration. 84 “Johnson
Girls”, headed by Miss Roni
Acker, lend an aura of campaign
spirit to the organization. The
“Johnson Girls” were responsible
for greeting President Johnson
at the airport last week when he
visited Buffalo. The Chairman of
the UB “Students” is Mike Lappin.
Western New York coordinators
of the student movement, which
has been started at all the Colleges and Universities in the
area, are Anthony LaRiisso and
James Fox. Mr. Fox said of the
group, “It is the student’s responsibility as active citizens, to

insure the present progressive
administration policies and decisions, so important to our way
of life. This, the ‘Students for
LBJ and HHH’ feel, can be best
accomplished by maint a i n i n g
Lyndon Johnson and the Democratic team in Washington. Only
by doing this can we be sure of
an administration which is responsive to all people concerned
with the problems of our times
and realizing the possible consequences of each decision.”
Last month Richard “Max” Mc-

Carthy, the Democratic Congres-

sional candidate for the 34th
District, spoke before a meeting
of the students. Mr, McCarthy
attacked the irresponsible statements made against the students
of the University by Congressman
Pillion at the time HUAC was in
Buffalo last year. Mr. McCarthy
outlined plans to create a Western New York Research Center,
which would benefit both the
community and the University.
Students who are interested in
campaigning for Johnson, Humphrey and the Democratic ticket,
are asked to attend a meeting
this Saturday at 10:30 a.m. in
Room 205.

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Dr. Jones Delivers

Cell Structure Lecture
Dr. Oliver P, Jones, professor
and head of the department of
anatomy,, delivered a speech entitled, “The Fine Structure of
Hemoglobiniferous Cells,” at Tulane University, New Orleans,
Tuesday.

Dr. Jones’ talk was one in the
Mstinguished Lecturer Seres sponsored by the Department
if Anatomy at Tulane, which indies outstanding anatomists to
)resent the findings of their re-

iearch. Dr,

Jones also advised

graduate students in anatomy
about his specialty field of hematological research.

Jeffrey Lewis and Martin Feinrider with Senator Keating

Keating Students Organize
The chairman of “Students for
Keating” at UB, Jeffrey Lewis,

and another UB student, Martin
Feinrider, have been appointed
co-chairmen of Students for Keating in Buffalo. In this capacity,
they are not only organizing this
campus, but Buffalo State and
Canisius as well.

The past activities of “Students
for Keating” here on campus have
included several meetings, a welcoming for the Senator when he
visited campus, a personal welcome for him at the airport this
past Saturday, and distributing
campaign materials on campus
and in the city of Buffalo. This
is relatively little in comparison
to what the organization has planned for the last ten days of the
campaign.

Tomorrow, Students for Keating, in conjunction with Independent Citizens for Keating, has

planned a motorcade which will
visit the many shopping plazas
that surround the city of Buffalo.
The motorcade will form at 10:30
a m. and start at 11:00 a.m. from
University Plaza, and will end at
approximately 4:30 p.m. at University Plaza. Over 30,000 pieces
of literature arc expected to be

distributed during the motorcade.
All students wishing to help are
invited; there is a special need
for “Keating Girls." A car is not
necessary, but will be greatly appreciated. Anyone wishing to volunteer may do so by calling
831-3287 or 831-3398 any time to-

day or tonight, or by coming to
University Plaza tomorrow morning.

Future activities of Students
for Keating will include wel
coming Senator Keating next Saturday, October 31, his last campaign visit to Buffalo.

The professor has been associated with the University since
1937 and has gained wide attention for his research into the
origin and relationship of blood
cells under normal, pathologic
and experimental conditions.

Dr. Jones received his bachelor’s degree from Temple University and his doctorate in philosophy from the University of
Minnesota. In 1956 he received
his Ph.D. in medicine from UB.

Poet to Speak
Mr. Richard Murphy, an Irish
poet, will read selections of his
poetry today at 4:00 p.m. in Room
146, Diefendorf Hall.

Mr. Murphy is the author of

The Last Galway Hooker, The Archaeology of Love and Sailing to
an Island.

He will be the third poet to
participate in a series of poetry
readings at the University under
the sponsorship of the Friends
of the Lockwood Library, the
Charles Abbott Poetry Reading
Fund and the University.

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(

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For a translation of this ad. and an opportunity to win a European trip for two
larSIream Jet. write Sen ofNew Haven. Dept. C, 95 Hamilton Street. New Haven Conn.

Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

�Friday, October 23, 1964

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�Friday, October 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Burke Resigns (cont'd)
(Cont’d from P. 1)

Dr. Kaiser intimated to us that
if we could get a poll of student
opinion early in September supporting such a change, he felt a
solution could be reached. I spoke
before the Senate as did others
pointing this fact out but we
were voices whistling in the wind,
indeed, the hurricane of obsolenees. Thus the vacation resolution was sent to a committee. The
decided to circulate a petition
which was finally posted in the
middle of October, The petitions
are still hanging and the next
Senate meeting is the beginning
of November a full two months
too late. Calendars are made up
two years in advance. Thus half
of the student body will not see
an Easter Vacation. Again the
Senate has failed.
■

The Student Zionist Organization asked the Senate to support
a resolution asking for the recall
of German Nationals employed
on Egyption Government nuclear
missile projects. Thus hoping to
publicize this situation and aiding, however minutely, in bring
ing public opinion to bear on the
German Government. The Senate
claimed it should not take stands
on national or world issues, thus
our only representative body on
campus refused to use its and
our constitutional rights to free
expression. Therefore I feel that
it has failed the student body
again.

The food service was another
interesting problem. A few of us
in the Senate, Union Board, and
the Spectrum felt something
should be done about the food
situation in the union in view
of the many complaints we had
received. Consequently, feeling
it would be a long and cumbersome task to take this problem
to the Senate, we decided to act
as an ad hoc group of student
leaders. After achieving success
in the lowering of milk prices,
and after student interests and
support of our questionnaires

had been aroused; I was then
asked to chair a food committee

under the Senate. The representative body on this campus fails
to act until it is pushed into, a
corner by student opinion.
In view of these and other dc
velopments, on and off the Senate
floor, 1 felt I had to resign. This,
I believe, is a time for action. We
as students should express our
views on any issue. Some student
leaders say we can take care of
this or that problem next week,
of next semester, or next year, or
on the new campus; but, there
are a few of us who say now is
the time to act. By resigning my
position I hope to stir enough interest in student affairs to force
the Senate to sit up and take
notice that we the student body
will not sit idlely by and watch
our representatives shirk their
duty to represent us.“

�

—t

1

j

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

Partners

Press, J)nc

£t Smith P, in IIn y
1381 KENMORE AVENUE

I

Lab Session
Ends Seminar
“Man and His Environmental
Reactions” was the title of the
second physiology seminar pre-

sented Monday and Tuesday by
the department of industrial engineering.
Dr. Ralph F. Goldman, chief of
the military ergonomics branch of
the United States Army Research

Institute for Environmental Medicines, and Dr. Lucien A. Brouha,
chief of the physiology section of
the Haskell Laboratory for Toxicology and Industrial Medicine,
discussed various aspects of man’s
interaction with his environment.
These included the role of the
circulatory and respiratory system, temperature regulation
mechanisms, effects of body composition and structure and physical conditioning and training.
A laboratory session was also
held during which measuring of
the physiological costs of work
was undertaken. These measurements included metabolic heat

production, oxygen requirement,

and associated cardiovascular, respiratory and temperature regulatory stresses of physical work.
The third seminar will take
place November 16-17.

Support

Our
Advertisers

(at Delaware)

Spectrum Cdali JSoard
THE OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPY CLUB
The occupational therapy club
will hold a business meeting today in Room 337, Norton Hall.
After the meeting the program
committee will present a movie,
Personality in Conflict. The
movie is to start at 2:30 p.m.,
thus we would hope to have all
business completed by that time.
There will be no meeting
Tuesday.

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

Hi, Photography Fans! Great
news for those of you interested
Mr.
in professional photo tips
Fitzgerald, of the Fitzgerald Stuhere
today in Room
dio will be
344 Norton at 4:00 p.m., to lecture on composition, and to answer any questions you may have
about your own photographic
problems. Come on up! And while
you’re there, why not sign up for
the Photography Club
it’s a
great opportunity to learn more
about the art, to take field trips
to many scenic spots, to have access to a fluorishing darkroom,
and to get really top price-reductions on your photo supplies.
See you this afternoon!
—

Norton 333. The guest speaker
of the
will be Nelson
Buffalo Urban League, talking
on “The History, Function, and
Present Problems of the Urban
League”. A coffee hour will follow. All are welcome!

�

SOCIAL WELFARE CLUB

�

MUSIC CLUB

The Music Club will hold a
coffee hour in Room 101 Baird
Monday, from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Anyone interested in joining the
club is cordially invited to attend. Membership this year is
extended to anyone on campus
who is interested in music, not
only to music majors.
Allen Sapp, chairman of the
music department, will speak at
this time. Paul Kroll, president
of the club, will welcome the
members and with Lois Shriver
will explain the purposes and activities of Music Club.

—

The next meeting will be held
Tuesday evening, at 7:30 p.m. in

,

�

�

�

OPEN HOUSE
The Tower House Council has
announced that it will sponsor an
Open House Sunday, from 2:30
to 5:30 p.m. The Dorm officers
stressed the fact that Sunday dinner dress regulations must be
observed by all participants. Refreshments will be served on the
first floor throughout the afternoon.

Phone 876-2284
11

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

WHAT PRICE BLACK FREEDOM?
MAE MALLORY
on national tour- sentenced by
North Carolina Court to 16 to 20 years on
false kidnapping charges.
I cannot adequately express my indignation at, the cruelty and
injustice experienced by many gencratians of American Negroes
I sincerely hope that a vast" movement of protest will
ar ise on behalf of the Monroe defendants.
BERTRAND RUSSEL
--

...

SATURDAY 8:00 P.M.

OCTOBER 24

Door Contribution $1 (students 50
Buffalo Labor Forum 831 Main St. 2nd floor
to MONROE DEFENSE COMMI ITF P 605 Brown St. Monroe N.C.
for appeal costs

-

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OPEN

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new breed of dress shirt for

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RIVERSIDE MEN’S SHOP
7S3 TONAWANDA STREET (Corner Ontario)
Phono: TR 5-8400

Shop 9 AM. to 9 P.M. Daily

Cxrf®*"

�Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

Hot Line

.....

News From Other Campuses

U of C “No Politics” Policy Modified By Student Demonstration
BERKELEY (CPS) —A truce be \ /‘The two deans first asked the
to suspend their activitween students and University )
of California Officials has ended- ties. They agreed to (although
Vh days of demonstrations on they didn’t) and apply for a
the university’s campus, but the permit—which would not have
future of the ban on partisan permitted them to recruit mempolitical activity that caused the bers or solicit funds,
Murphy and Van Houten then
uproar is still in doubt.
The demonstrating broke up bypassed the CORE table, which
had a permit, but which was
when Mario Savio, one of the
spokesmen for the protesting stusoliciting funds in violation of it,
dents, climbed on top of a police and approched SNCC’s stand,
The table was manned by Trucar that had been immobilized
ner, who greeted the deans by
by a sit-in for over 36 hours and
demanding theat they show protold some 1500 demonstrators
and a crowd which had swelled per identification. The two did,
to over 10,000 that a temporary and then Murphy asked Truner
sixpoint agreement had been
if he realized he was “subjecting
reached with the university adhimself to disciplinary action.”

Socialists

ministration.
The pact did not settle the
issue of whether student political groups would be allowed to
distribute literature, recruit members, and solicit funds at the
Bancroft Way-Telegraph Ave. entrance to the campus, but it did
point the way to a possible solution to the problem.
The agreement stated that university President Clark Kerr was
in favor of deeding the disputed
area to the student government
or to the city of Berkeley so that
the university’s no-politics regulations would no longer apply to
it.
The agreement also provided
that the university would drop
charges against Jack Weinberg,
a member of the Congress of
Racial Equality (CORE), whose

arrest during a Thursday morn-

ing (Oct. 1) demonstration had
sparked the massive sit in around
the squad car, trapping Weinberg
and two campus policemen inside
for IVi days.
In addition, the agreement
stipulated that students would
refrain from using civil disobedience or protest university regulations; that a special student-faculty
administration committee
would be set up to study all
aspects of student political activity, and the cases of eight
students placed on “indefinite
suspension” for their parts in
the demonstrations would be considered by the faculty senate’s
-

student conduct committee.
The eight were Savio, Mark
Bravo, Don Hatch, and Bryan
Truner, all of the Friends of
SNCC (Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee); Art Goldberg and Sander Fuchs of SLATE
(a liberal student political party);
and David Goins and Elizabeth
Gardner.
The student conduct committee
—which normally reviews all sus
pension

cases—is not expected

to

deal too harshly with the eight
—and several professors have indicated they will instruct them
no matter what the committee

decides.

The truce ended a period of
demonstrating that began Wednesday, Sept. 30, when university

officials began taking the
names of students violating the

ban on partisan political activity
in the Bancroft-Telegraph area.
The students, mostly members
of campus political organizations
which had chosen civil disobedience as their means of protesting
the ban, were distributing “directly persuasive” literature, recruiting members for their organizations, and soliciting funds
for political activities.
At least four groups
Friends
of SNCC, SLATE, Students for
a Democratic Society (SDS), and
the DuBois Club—had been doing
this since Monday, Sept. 28 and
the administration had taken no
action.
Shortly after noon on Wednesday, however, Assistant Dean of
Students George Murphy and As
sociate Dean Peter Van Houten
moved to stop the violators. At
the time three roganizations—the Young Socialist Alliance,
CORE, and SNCC—were orepating stands in the
area.
—

*

«

S

PA01 MINI

“I don’t want to stab my group
in the back by leaving,” Truner

replied.

He was then ordered to report to the Dean of Student’s
office. Hatch immediately filled
Truner’s seat, and was also ordered to appear. The deans left
and the demonstration began.
Savio climbed on a chair and
urged a gathering crowd to sign
a list of those “who also manned
the table.”
“I urge everyone here who has
any concern for freedom of
speech to sign this list and demand the same treatment given
to these two (Truner and Hatch),"
he shouted. By 3 p.m. 435 persons had signed.
The signers marched to Sproul
Hall, the university administration building, and with Savio as
their spokesman, demanded a
hearing.

Dean of Men Arleigh Williams

met them, and suggested they
leave the names with him so

he might determine what further
action should be taken. He said
the university could deal only
with “observed violations, not
unobserved.”
“We will leave,” said Savio, “if
you will give us equal treatment
for all the people on this list
and drop all actions already initiated until the university policy
is clarified.”
Williams said he cound’t do
that, and the group, which numbered about 400 sat down in
the Dean’s office and in the
hallway to wait for the administration to comply with its demand.
At about midnight, a spokesman for the university Chancellor
E. W, Strong announced the eight
students whose names had been
collected that afternoon had been
suspended indefinitely for their
“willful misconduct in deliberately violating the rules of the university.”
Strong’s statement said the university “regretted” the action but
that it was necessary to keep the
university from “endangering its
future as an independent educa-

tional institution.”
The statement said that “when
violations occur, the university
must then take disciplinary action,”

Countered Savio when he heard
he was suspended: “This university is a factory and the product
is the people who won’t join us
in protest. They go in as adolescents . . . , and never is any
provision made for their taking
a position as free men.”
The students remained in the
administration building until past
noon Thursday, when “as a good
gesture” they agreed to leave
for a few hours, with the intention of returning before 7 p.m.
closing hour.
The administration, however,
attempted to close the hall at
6:30 p.m. When the demonstrators realized what was happening,
they rushed the last open door,
and after some brief scuffling
with campus police, succeeded in
keeping the building open, although shortly afterwards they
decided to leave of their own
accord

.

Meanwhile, on Thursday morning protesting groups again set
up tables in the Bancroft-Telegraph area—this time equipped
with large numbers of chairs so
that a number of persons could
violate the ban “legitimately.”
A rally was scheduled for noon.
Shortly before noon, the police
car drove into the area, and a
campus police officer asked Weinberg, who was manning the CORE
table, to produce his identification.
Weinberg, who is a graduate
student, but who was not registered for classes this' semester,
refused, and was arrested.
As police tried to take Weinberg to the car, students blocked
their path. When they finally
got him into it, the demonstrators
were packed so tightly around
the car that it could not move,
At this point, Savio jumped
on top of the car, and addressed
-the crowd, which by this time
had grown to three or four thousand, on the reasons for the demonstrating and the right of
free speech,
He was followed by a string of
speakers on the same subject,
Loud speakers were set up on the
car’s roof, which by this time
was sagging under the weight,
the speeches continued for 15
hours, as the crowd varied in
size depending on the hour.
At 3 a.m., the speeches stopped
and several hundred students
bedded down around the ear to
keep it in place. The demonstrators provided Weinberg and the
police
still in the car
with
food, water, and bed-pans
Speech-making resumed Friday
morning and continued throughout the day. By this time the
police car’s tires were flattened
its suspension was collapsing, and
its roof and hood were caving in.
The car bore a number of politiapparently discal stickers
tributed in spite of the ban.
—

—

At 5 p.m. protest spokesmen
were able to meet with Kerr and
an informal faculty committee.
The committee offered the sixpoint compromise, which both
sides accepted.
At about the same time, 225
police officers
many of them
on motorcycles
took up positions on the campus. Authorities
apparently feared that violence
might erupt between the demonstrators and the crowd of onlookers, not all of whom were in
sympathy with the protest.
Savio announced the agreement
to the demonstrators at around
9 p.m., and the protest,broke up
shortly
afterwards.
He asked
those who were taking part in
the demonstration to think over
the agreement during the week
end and to re assemble at noon
Monday, Oct, 5 to vote on whether or not to accept it. Acceptance at that time was, con—

—

sidered assured.
University officials were particularly relieved to have the de
monstration end Friday night,
since the university had a football game and a “parents day”
scheduled for Saturday, both of
which would have drawn thou
sands of persons to the campus
and increased the possibility of
violence.
What the final out come of the
dispute would be, remained uncertain but it appeared likely
that some provision would be
made to establish the BancroftTelegraph area as an open form
probably
for political activity
by deeding it to the city of Berke-—

ley.

The area had been used by
students for political activity for
several years previous to the university’s ban. An unusually heavy
amount of activity in it this summer due to the Republican National Convention in San Francisco is said to be responsible for
the school’s decision to crack
down this fall.

Rev. Paul Views Pre-mantaI Sex
OTTAWA—A chaplain at Carleton University, whose views on

ment of eligible students throughout the country.

premarital sexual relations aroused a nation-wide controversy in
Canada recently, will continue as
university chaplain.
And seemingly unscathed by
criticism of his outspoken article
on extra-marital relations, Rev.
Gerald Paul has written a second

The statistics on college attendance appear in an article,
“Jewish College Students in the
United States,” by Alfred Jospe,
director of programs and resources of the B’nai B’rith Hillel
Foundation. The publishers are
the American Jewish Committee,
pioneer human relations agency,
and the Jewish Publication So-

religious teaching.

ciety.

article for the student newspaper,
The Carleton, criticizing outdated

A six-man committee representing the United, Anglican, and
Presbyterian churches of Ottawa
which sponsor Rev. Paul at Carleton, said this week it will "propose no action” on the matter.
The committee made the announcement after meeting to discuss an article Rev. Paul wrote
for the Carleton, which appeared
under a headline “Premarital Sex
Can Be OK.”
In a statement to the press the
committee said, “The views expressed by Rev. Paul are his own,
not the official views of the sponsoring churches. They do reflect,
however, an aspect of the current
debate on sexual morality which
is taking place within the church.
At the same time, we regret certain lapses of taste and weaknesses in the presentation of the

argument.”
A spokesman for the six-man
committee which met to consider
Rev. Paul’s article said, “The
important thing is for Rev. Paul
to get back to work.”
Rev. Paul’s article said, in part
“Only if we are certain the sexual
relationship will help more than
harm our partner, in the long
run as well as in the immediate
encounter, are we justified in
premarital sex,”
In his latest article, on “that
old time religion,” he said much
of what passes for religion today,
belongs to the past. It is grandpa’s religion, taken in here and
there with a hurried stitch, but
grandpa’s religion just the same.
And grandson, he adds, is not at
ail happy with grandpa’s hand-me
downs.
Quoting an agnostic, writing in
a Northern Ontc|rio newspaper,
ho says, “Church members are
getting tired of old ideas
tired of the trinity, of the mud
man, of the rib woman, of the
walking talking snake, tired of
the flood of Noah, of the astronomy of Joshua, the geology of
...

Moses.”

A massive action and demonstration program to improve Negro educational opportunities in
the South was launched recently.
The techniques used in the “Education Improvement Project (ElP)” are expected to be applicable
to Northern areas too.
The project, sponsored by the
Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools and the College Entrance Examination Board (CEEB) and aided by foundation support, is the single most ambitious effort of its type. Its first
five years are expected to cost
approximately $20 million.
EIP has two parts. First, centers will be set up by the Southern Association in at least five
cities to carry out a comprehensive attack on obstacles to Negro
educational progress. Each center will bring together its city’s
predominently Negro and predominantly white colleges.
Second, the CEEB and 18 colleges and universities will cooperate with 11 selected school
systems in identifying promising
Negro youth in the 7th and 8th
grades and work with them
through high school towards the
goal of college admission. This
part of the EIP is known as “Pro-

ject Opportunity.”
At the centers, efforts will be
made to improve teaching at all
educational levels, provide better
learning materials, assist students
financially to stay in school, provide counselling for parents and
students, and encourage Negro

educational, cultural, and civic
involvement.
The Negro colleges will have
much to gain from the centers.
They will be given assistance in
conducting self-surveys and in
strengthening faculty and

cur-

predominently
riculum.
The
white institutions will aid them
with in-servee training, summer
institutes, recruiting, use of resources, and early identification
and preparation of gifted students.
The first center is in Nashville and involves George Peabody College for Teachers, Fisk
and Vanderbilt Universities, and
selected local public schools.
Plans are now being made for
centers in Durham, Houston, New
Orleans, Atlanta, and Huntsville,
although none is expected to begin operation before the end of
the year.

Anyone who tries to believe
in grandpa’s religion for grandson’s world is running away from
real issues of life, Rev. Paul said.
“Young people are fed up with
old fashioned religion”, he said.
“They know this is an old world
—billions of years old. They know
that the world took a long time
to evolve and that stars are still
coming into being. They know
this is a shrinking world where
In project Opportunity, special
prejudice (religious and social)
seem out of place.
teaching devices, stipends, learn"The thinking youth of today ing materials, course work, and
counseling and guidance technibelieve that talk about ‘my salques will be used to help Negro
vation’ and ‘Are you saved?’ is
irrelevant in a world that could
children from deprived families
be knocked out any day by nureach college. College admission
clear weapons.
and the financial aid needed to
“The stories of Noah’s Ark,
enroll will be guaranteed to parand David’s sling, of Ezekial’s
ticipating students who successfully complete the program.
wheel and Daniel’s den are interesting. But they seem juvenile
The 18 participating colleges
in our present context. They have have agreed to admit program
nothing to say about the mushgraduates who meet their enroom cloud or the population trance requirements, set aside at
explosion, the space race or the least four financial aid awards
loss of values. Yet these probfor those enrolling, help teachlems are in the minds of every ers in the project high schools,
young person who is aware of
and maintain close contact with
our times.”
the project students,
Nearly 80 per cent of American
The 18 institutions are Berea,
Jews of college age are enrolled Centre, Davidson, Dillard, Duke,
in schools of higher education Emory, Fisk, Mary Baldwin, Morein the United States, according house, North Carolina State Colto the 1964 American Jewish lege of Agriculture and EnginYear Book.
eering, Spelman, Spring
Hill.
This figure is about three times Tougaloo, Transylvania, Tulane,
higher than the overall national
Tuskegee. Vanderbilt, and the
average of 27 per cent enroll- University of Virginia.

�Friday, October 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Craft Shop Offers Five Workshops Haieff Opens
The Craft Shop in Norton Hall
is sponsoring, through its Union
Board Arts and Crafts Committee, an exciting series of five
workshops in Enameling on Metals. The workshops will take
place Tuesday evenings from
7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. this Tues-

ROY KENYON

■

ous enamels at America House
and George Jensen, N.Y.C.; Woodstock Craft Shop, Woodstock,
N.Y.; The Arts Incorporated, Coconut Grove. Florida; Birmingham Arts, Birmingham, Michigan; and Mari Gallery, Woodstock, New York. He has shown

ARTIST-CRAFTSMAN

day, Nov. 3, 10 and 17, in the
Craft Shop Room 7
The vitreous enameling demonstrations and instruction will
be presented by Ray Kenyon, cur
rently artist-craftsman whose
enameling has won many prizes
and honorable mentions in juried
shows throughout the United

States, and his work is represent
ed in many private . art collections. His enameling was recent
ly selected from the American
Craftsmen’s Council, America
House Exhibit, by Good Housekeeping for the Formica House
decor at the New York World's
Fair to represent current Amer
ican craftsmen’s work.
During the Enameling on Metals Workshop, Mr. Kenyon will
use this background to demonstrate traditional enameling techniques, such as: cloisson* plique
a Jour, champlive, limoges, sten
ciling, overglaze, and foil over
lay. The process of vitreous ena
moling is the same process cur
rently used to prepare space cap
sules and rocket nose cones for
reentry, Mr. Kenyon, who is a

science educator, will relate the

art of enameling to the scientific
use of the media to outer space.
Mr. Kenyon is a member of the

American Craftsmen’s council,
Woodstock Guild of Craftsmen,
and is currently marketing vitro-

and exhibited at the George Wal
ter Clement Smith Art Museum
Mississippi Municipal Art Gallery; Marvin House, New York
State Art Teachers Association;

St, I’aul Galleries; Munson-William Proctor Art Institute; and

Annual Woodstock Guild of
Craftsmen Show.
The workshops are open to all
students at this University, beginners as well as experienced
cnamelists. Each member of the
workshop will purchase materials
from the Craft Shop at nominal
cost.
Mr. Bill Hcdwig, the new assistant director of the craft shop,
added; “We arc interested in
developing the student’s manual
and imaginative dexterity. We
do not draw a line, so to speak,
between fine arts and creative
crafts. They’re approached with
the same desire, the same intent,

By LEON LEWIS

By VICKI BUGELSKI
Alexei Haieff, Slee professor of
music this semester, will give the
first in a series of three lectures
Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. in Capen
Hall. Admission is free and all
students and faculty are cordially invited to attend.
The program will consist of
two half-hour films separated by
discussion. The films are presented by the “Little Players. Inc.”,
and feature the “Standwells” or
five puppets. Mr. Haieff will discuss the relationship of music
and the theatre.
Mr. Haieff was Slee Professor
here once before, in 1962. Those
who attended his lectures will
remember Mr. Haeiff as a witty,
entertaining
and
informative,

The managers of most of the Tuesday, the Board presented
Browning’s
weird, offmovie theatres in Buffalo follow 'Tod
beat and compassionate study
the national pattern of distribution in most cases. This means of the life of a close-knit group
of people living in a circus side
that they consistently under rate
the intelligence and maturity of show. The movie, called Freaks,
appropriately enough, was unmost of their potential customers,
Fred Keller, the manager of the available in the U.S. for about
20 years after its production in
Circle Art, is a fortunate excepthe late 1930’s, and it has retion to this sorry, pattern, but
he is restricted in his choice of mained as an underground milemovies for exhibition by a rather stone in the history of American
limited budget. Consequently, cinematography.
The program continues next
many people living in Buffalo
can do little more than gnash week with the silent classic, Birth
their teeth in frustration and of a Nation, a real treat for anyanger whenever they look, by
one interested in a genuine landmark in the progress of the
chance, at the entertainment section of the N.Y. Times. Most of cinema as an art form. And, durthe really interesting movies ing the last part of the semester,
made out of this country never the droll British comedy, The
speaker.
appear in Buffalo at all.
Lavender Hill Mob (with the
He studied at the Julliard
young Alec Guinness at his best),
The students of this university
School of Music and also with are more fortunate than the pubthe totally original and brilliant
Nadia Boulanger. Among his lic at large. The Fine Arts Film “plastique” venture by Francois
many honors and awards are the Series, under the diligent and
Truffaut, Shoot the Piano Player,
medal of the American Academy very able direction of Stu Gertand the neo-realistic Italian movie
the
MeBoulanger
Rome,
Lili
man, has chosen for presentation Umberto D, will all be shown.
in
prize
the
of
the
Award,
morial
The movies are usually offered
in the Norton Union Conference
American Academy of Arts and Theatre a wide variety of fasthree or four times during the
Guggenheim
two
fellowLetters,
cinating and unusual movies. The day on which they have been
shops, an American Academy in movies are from a number of the
scheduled, and the admission is
the
New
Rome fellowship, and
world’s film capitals (including free. Tickets ought to be picked
York Critics Circle Award.
the U.S., curiously enough), and up at the ticket boot to insure a
Mr. Haieff has composed much cover an astonishingly wide range
seat for the more popular shows.
music for piano, instrumental of viewpoints. Some of them are If any one is interested in workmusic, two symphonies, a piano comparatively recent (the fine, ing on the committee to choose
concerto, chamber music, the heart-warming Russian film Balmovies for next year or to assist
“Ballet in E”, “Divertimento” for lad of a Soldier) and some date
in any other aspect of the Film
small orchestra, “The Princess from the vintage days of the
Board’s affairs, Stu Gertman, the
Zondilda and her Entourage", a cinema. Last week, the Film hard-working chairman, will be
ballet; “Eclogue la Nouvelle HeBoard offered Akira Kurosawa’s more than glad to discuss the
loise” for harp and string quar- stunningly pictorial conception of matter in the Union Board Office
tet, and sonatas.
Shakespeare’s Macbeth (1959). on the second floor of the Union.

49 Edward

and the same symbolic content."
Mr. Hcdwig, who received his

BS and MA in art, has exhibited
both nationally and internation
ally in both watercolor and silvcrcraft. In the past, he has
taught experimental seventh
grade, but has returned to his
original preference, art.
The, craft shop is open for the
recreation and enjoyment of the
students six days a week; the
schedule is available upon request in the shop.

Exhibition to Open Tryouts Set For Today
An exhibition of Contemporary
British Painting and Sculpture
will open at the Albright Knox
Art Gallery, Tuesday,
Director Gordon M. Smith said
the exhibition will focus on the
gallery's own strong collection of
British works, as well as Ihe most
current British works on loan
from leading London and New
York City galleries.
The gallery's own collection includes work by such famed artists
as Henry Moore, Francis Bacon.
Lynn Chadwick, Barbara Hep
worth and Graham Sutherland,
among others.
The exhibition was organized
by Samuel C. Miller, assistant to
the director. It includes 72 works,
oils, watercolors, drawings, prints
and sculpture.

mswwwm® svassid

Capen Series

Dr Thomas Watson, Director
of Theatre in the Department of
Drama and Speech, announces
tryouts for the first major production of the season. The Defense of Taipei, by Conrad Brom-

berg. The new play which will
be performed in Baird Hall, December 9-12, has roles for two
young married couples; one Negro. Aime and Viola, and one
white. Don and Jane. Mr. Bromberg will be on campus for six
weeks as a visiting artist in
Drama and will take the role of
Don.

Ballroom. Dr.
will direct.

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�Friday, Oetobar 23, 1964

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Musical Here
—

music department announces that plans for the musical are underway, although the
name of the musical is not available for publication as yet.
The

shortly.

The Toledo Strings
To Play at Baird
The Toledo String Quartet of
the University of Toledo will
give a chamber music concert
at Baird, Saturday, October 31
at 8:30 p.m, Admission is free
and all students and faculty are
invited to attend.
The members of the quartet
are William Steck and Helen
Shklar, violinists; Jerry Horner,
violist; and Yuan Tung, cellist.
They will perform the Quartet
op. 74, no. 1 of Joseph Haydn;
the Quartet op. 95 of Beethoven;
and the Quartet op. 96, called the
“American” quartet, of Antonin

—

By SCOTT KURMAN

Last week’s problem was the
“Whitfield Six.” purportedly the
toughtest six-carder devised. Here
is the hand reprinted for those of
you who don’t remember it. The
lead is with South, hearts are
trump, and you need the rest:
NORTH
S: Q J
D:

WEST
S: A 9
CORRINNE JAFFE AND JAMES KIRSCH IN 'THREE FOR TWO"

Q

C: A K 8

EAST

S: K 8

D: 7

D: K J
C: Q 6

C: 9 7 5
SOUTH

Theatrical Season Opens
By

WILLIAM CORTES

The Student Dramatic Society
will open the 1964-65 campus
theatrical season at the Baird
Hall Auditorium, Wednesday evening, October 28th with a program of three one act plays under
the title of “Three for Two.” The
evening will feature two new
plays, The Spider and The Teacher and His Victim; the occasion
marking their first presentation
anywhere. The third play, The
Tiger, has already enjoyed a successful and lengthy run in New
York. Collectively, the plays are
billed as a student showcase,
being entirely produced, directed,
acted, and managed by UB students. The production will be
given four performances, nightly
Wednesday
October 31.

through

Saturday,

title, “Three for
Two,” alludes to the fact that
each of the one-actors is essentially a two character play. For
example, The Spider spins its
web around a woman cellist and
a violinist while they prepare for
a recital. Corrinne JafTe and
James Kirsch will enact the roles
of the concert artists under the
direction of John Lund. Gary
Battaglia will realize the third
character in this avant garde
farce written by UB alumni,
Winifred Ruth Swayze.
The program’s

The second play to have its
premiere production through the
student showcase is Conrad’s

which is being directed by
Burke.

H: A K
Gary

The Tiger by Murray Schiegal

had its initial presentation in
New York City where the author’s
new full length play, Luv, will
shortly arrives on Broadway. The
Tiger captures the satirical confrontation between a non-conformist and a suburbanito-housewife. John Camasi and Jeanette
Veling compose the cast of the
under the direction of Miss Susan
Sturgeon. This will be Miss Sturgeon’s first directorial effort.
The Student Dramatic Society,
member of the National Honorary
Dramatic Fraternity, presents the
showcase with the purpose of
displaying and further encouraging the diverse efforts of all
such interested and capable students. After “Three for Two” the
Society looks forward to preparing another Student Showcase
for the Spring semester. In the
meantime it will co-sponsor with
the Department of Drama and
Speech the December Major Production of Bromberg’s The De-

D: A 2
C: J 4
The key to the hand is leading
the club jack at trick one, unblocking the suit. You win the
ace on board and ruff a spade
back to your hand, both opponents following low. Now you
lead your last trump, West and
dummy pitching diamonds, and
watch East squirm. He can’t toss
a diafiand as that sets up your
duece, an surrender of the club
lady allows you to finesse against
West’s 8; thus the spade king
goes. Now you lead the diamond
spade squeeze. Next hand . . .
Now spades are trump, again the
lead is in your hand, South, but
now you only need six of the
seven remaining tricks:
NORTH
S: K

Bromberg’s The Teacher and His
Victim. Mr. Bromberg is an actorplaywright
member of New
York’s famous Actors’ Studio. His
full length work, The Defense of
Taipei, will be produced by the
Drama and Speech Department in
December. But currently Peter
Levitt and Rhonda Lyons, respectively, play the title roles
in the one-actor, The Teacher and
His Victim. David Goldfarb joins
them thereby completing the cast

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productions can be purchased at
the Baird Hall Box Office or by
season subscription. Tickets for
“Three for Two” are available to
UB students staff and faculty at
$1.50 and at $2.50 to the general
public. Season subscriptions consisting of four open tickets sell at
$4.00 (faculty and students) and
at $7.00 (general public).

Spectrum.)

FRI., OCT. 23 thru SUN., OCT. 25

H: K Q J 7

fense of Taipei.

In most variations.
will duck the first club lead!
Please keep responding, and
make sure your solution is signed;
and include all defensive lines,
and your parries to each.
December 5 is the date that
four UB teams will descend on
Rochester with great expectations
and a reasonably fine assortment
of sixteen players. UB claimed
first place last year and there’s
a pretty big impressive-looking
trophy downstairs in Norton
somewhere to show for it.
Last week’s winners were Van
Meckelin and Siegel in a Howell
Another @!$%e*#?$!* Yarborough, curses Mr. Swift, polntlessly, (Anyone with other Tom
Bridgelies, please advise. That’s
Scott Kurman, care of your local
Warning:

East

.

Henry Wicke of the music department will be the stage director. Emphasis this year is on student participation, and heading
the list is the new musical director, Elaine Seiffert. Mrs. Seiffert, the former Elaine Braun,
will be assisted by William A.
Penn. Both Mrs. Sieffert and Mr.
Penn are students in music.
Mrs. Seiffert has a versatile
musical background, performing
A French
many instruments.
horn major, she performs that
instrument in the Cheektowaga
Symphony under Robert Mols,
and is also the orchestra’s librarian. She plays cello in the UB
Little Symphony, and harp in
the Community Music School Orchestra. Her experience with
musical comedy stems from high
school days. Here at the university she had the leading roles
in On the Town, Guys and Dolls,
and performed other parts in
various productions. She is married to Stephen Seiffert, who is
the first French hornist of the
Buffalo Philharmonic. She plans
to teach music in the public
schools.
Mr. Penn is taking graduate
work in music. A trumpeter, he
performs in the Cheektowaga
Symphony, and is a member of
the University Brass Ensemble.
In the past he has performed
with many orchestras and especially in all of the UB musical
productions. He is a student assistant for the band under Frank
Cipolla. Mr. Penn is now teaching trumpet at the new Villa
Maria College.
Both student directors have
stressed the importance of student participation, both orchestrally and on stage. The goal is
an all-student production. Audition dates will be announced

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�PACE TWELVE

Friday, October 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

Arts &amp; Science Senate Race; Douglas
Candidates List Qualifications
(Cont’d

ALLAN GERSON
Junior Arts A Sciences
Pre-Law
United Students Candidate

Activities: Chairman, Student
Welfare Committee for Alcohol
On Campus; Secretary, Pre-Law
Society; Novice Debate Team; Interfraternity Council Delegate;
Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity.
I affirm the rights of academic
freedom and am opposed to any
infringement upon them. I support national fraternities in their
desire to maintain national affiliation. There are other things
which I feel are important, other
proposals which, if implemented,
can make UB a better and more
progressive campus.

1. Boor in tho Rathskollar and
cocktails at University parties—
We all know how deserted this
campus is on weekends and how
meager the attendance at Univer-

ALLAN GERSON

Activities;

Student Senator at
State U. College at Cortland;
Chairman of Anti-Tuition Committee; Delegate to the Albany
Mock Assembly; President of the
Debate Society; Social Chairman
of Freshman Dorm.; Member of
At UB: On the art staff of the
New Student Review; Member of
Spring Weekend Committee;
Member of Drama Society.
From what 1 can see, the Student Senate at UB does not actually represent the students. The
contact between student and Senator seems to end immediately
following elections. Senators seldom, if ever, seek out constituent opinion before they vote in
the Senate. I believe that any
issue concerning the public image
of the University should be voted
upon by the students in referendum. Senators, as representatives of the students, should
speak and act for the student
body. But we should not be spoken for by a handful of people
who arc out of touch with our
opinions.
If I become a student Senator,
I will work toward accomplishing
the following:
1—Establishment of a committee to conduct a monthly personto-person poll to find new areas
in which the students want the
Senate to act.
2—Elimination of tuition at UB
in conjunction with the N.Y.
State Colleges and Universities
anti-tuition campaign.
3— The establishment of an annual Senior Week to take place
in the interim beginning with
the end of finals and ending with
a Senior Ball the night before
graduation. It would include:
picnics, beer blasts, a concert,
etc.

Spotlight
(Cont’d from P. 5)

the actual armed battles between
Africa, Angola; unfortunately
Russia and China have resulted
there is reason to believe that
from disputes over the claims of
the sphere of racial strife may
China to “ancestral land,” which .increase. At the recent confershe feels is rightfully hers. Red
ence of non-alligned nations the
China is an ambitious, expansionmilitant line was carried by the
ist nation, but we must not forget non-white nations of Indonesia,
that Russia is equally as devious, Tanganika, Zanzibar,
Guinea,
as exemplified in the Cuban crisMali, and Burundi, while the priis. Justice Douglas added that, marily Caucasian inhabited naagainst such nations as Red China tions of Yugoslavia and the
and Russia, a powerful U.N. can
United Arab Republic led the
act as security for small nations.
moderate faction. In 1961 when
“So far, the U.S. has pretty much Indian troops marched into Goa,
had her way in the U.N. But we Prime Minister Nehru was distmust prepare for the day when
ressed by the division of opinion
small Asian and African nations
around the world
“to put it
will out-vote us. And we must very crudely white and black
also realize that the U.N. is not . . . We are developing a mentaan instrument for solving Amerility of black against white, discan problems alone. Its most sigtrust of each other, dislike of
nificant achiavamants have been
each other, suspicion of each
in terms of law—outlawing agother.” Now since the widening
gressive wars, such as Korea, the
of the Red Chinese-Soviet split
Congo, and Cyprus.”
and Red China’s recent indicaJustice Douglas believes that
tion of future nuclear capability,
the second essential instrument
the likelihood of a war of whites
to be developed for the settlevs. non-whites as opposed to capiment of disputes is the World
talists vs. communists seems
Court. Of the World Court, the
much more imminent. The possiJustice said: “It is one of the bility is indeed frightening and
greatest law bodies, but under
gives one cause to speculate
the Connally Amendment, the
about the extent of satiric exagUnited States said she was not geration in Jonathan Swift’s
bound by its decisions. We said yahoos.
that we would not recognize
Barry Goldwater 5s basically
cases tried unless we agreed with correct when he says that prethem; this Amendment has greatjudice is a “problem of the
ly cut down the number of cases.”
mind;” however, to consequently
He said that the United States reject any political or economic
must abrogate the Amendment
attempts to remedy the situation
so that cases such as the Berlin
seems both naive and more imdispute can be settled by this
portant fatal to our society. I
court rather than by force.
believe that Louis E. Lomax in
NATO and OAS were among his fine account of the civil
other instruments of internationrights struggle, The Negro Real arbitration expounded on by
volt, very eloquently describes
Justice Douglas. “OAS has no the only possible avenue to peace
internal court. Why don’t we
and justice—The crisis of modern
create one to peacefully settle man is spiritual; the surface condisputes among nations of this
flicts East vs. West, white vs.
hemisphere? Had there been a
non-white are but symptoms of
strong OAS military agency, the a malady that afflicts all the
democratic leader of the Dominiworld. The basic ailment is man’s
can Republic would still be in
inhumanity to man, the perpetual
power.” The organization SEATO
assault upon the dignity of some
has lost power because it has not
individuals by other, more powerbeen able to deal with the comful individuals. This is the toxin
plicated situation in Viet Nam. now flowing through the univer“The people are up North, and
sal bloodstream. And the cure,
the food is down South; people like most antidotes, is a rearwon’t be kept long from food. rangement of the elements found
The solution is on the legal level,
in the poison itself; that is to
where trade agreements allow
say, the policial and economic
food and supplies to freely move, power forces that were joined to
and where security is protected
produce inhuman treatment must
by the great powers.”
now be rearranged to stop it, and
Justice Douglas concluded: “The then manipulated to bar such
new administration must make scourges as racialism and poli1965 a “rule of law” year. We tical domination from all lands
are now facing the most crucial occupied by civilized peoples.
problems that have ever existed,
and the solution to them is in
law, not force!"
-

-

-

JOSHUA B. STEIN

pation in affairs outside the walls
of this University.
On the “Home Front,” so to
speak, I am on the Food Committee sponsored by the Spectrum
and the Senate. This committee
has already succeeded in lowering milk prices and is presently
attempting to get an across the
board decrease in food prices.
If elected senator, I will be
able to urge the investigation of
bookstore prices and possibly
succeed in this as we have just
begun to succeed with the food

will suport the National fraternal
system on- this campus.

i
LINDA SAPIR
1 have several other ideas—among them are the extension
of library hours and plans for

maintaining the national frater-

nal organizations on campus. 1
will be happy to discuss any of
my plans in person with interested students. I can be reached
at Extension 2776.

now presents

....

——— ———

Ike

present the

’Fall cml
0

Phi Ep Pi, corresponding secty.,
pledge master; Member of Campus Barrel Committee; Research
Member of Food Committee,
which is attempting to bring
down food prices in the Union.
I believe that, if elected, I
can bring my aforementioned experience to the Senatorship. I
would also like to state that I
believe in a student government
that does not end its scope and
influence at Main and Bailey. The
preamble of the Constitution
states that we establish this constitution to “Maintain the necessary and proper obligations and
responsibilities of the students to
the University, the community,
and the world.” Thus, if elected,
I will join the ranks of the members of both parties who urge
greater democracy for the students as well as increased partici-

pric
Being a member of Phi Ep, it
would go without saying that I

BETA PHI SIGMA

K /y

JOSHUA B. STEIN
Activities; Allenhurst Council;

„

sity dances are. It doesn't have to
be like this. At Cornell, NYU,
Wisconsin, to mention a few, the
campus is "alive" during weekends. They have liquor on cam
pus. As Chairman for the Student
Welfare Committee for Alcohol
on Campus, I have been working
for a resolution of this matter.
After conferences with the Ad
ministration and after having the
Student Senate reaffirm a proposal for liquor on campus, the mat
ter is now under''consideration by
the State Trustees at Albany.
2. Many campuses allow visitation by members of the opposite
sex in the dormitories. This has
been successful at many other
campuses, for example, Bodiester, NYU, Tufts. If it has proved
successful at so many other
campuses, why not have it here,
at least on a trial basis?
3. The prices at the University
Book Store are unusually high. I
propose to attempt to establish
an effective student book exchange of the type in operation
at Columbia and CCNY.
4. 1 want to sec the names of
instructors posted with each
course. Some instructors are more
capable than others. In obtaining
an education, let us Have the
right to choose the instructor
from whom we can most benefit.

r™—

LINDA SAPIR
Transfer Student S.U.C.C
UB Two Years

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�Friday, October 23, 1964

czCetterS

SPECTRUM

to

the Editor

Poudel Speaks
U.S. Seen by Asia

(Cont’d from P. 5)

To the Editor:

tained. The moral issues of theft
do not overlook the possibility
that this act might be regarded
as a prank) need no elaboration
here. But a few thought on related factors and those affected
by the theft are timely and may
be of interest.

I am not the author of the egregious farrago attributed to me in
the Letters to the Editor section
of the Oct. 16, Spectrum.

(I

Let’s assume that the thief
stole the painting because he enjoys it and feels he wishes to
live with it. This makes him a
collector of sorts and an admirer of the talent of the artist.
Historically, the art collector has
played the important roles of
diletante, patron and discoverer.
Often he has been wealthy and
politically powerful, as the Medici
of 15th century Florence, or intellectually involved with artistic
expression and change as were
Gertrude and Leo Stein of early
20th century Paris. Whatever his
motivation for collecting art, the
collector takes pride in his acquisitions sharing them with
friends and communities. I wonder if the “collector” of Richard
Huntington’s painting will take
pride in revealing his method of
acquisition to his friends? Or
like Monsouir Flambeau in G.K,
Chesterton’s Father Brown Mysteries, seek in perverted solitude
to keep it all to himself?
What of the artist in this case?
He may be flattered momentarily,
until he realizes that a unique
moment of his life is lost. He

cannot reproduce the painting,
nor refer to it as a record of his
development and achievement.
He will surely feel it a financial
loss. The cost of paint and canvas
is not negligible to a student.
He might have sold the work a great source of encouragement
and flattery to the artist.
I must agree with the choice of
the thief, though not with his

act. Obviously, he is knowledgeable about art with highly developed sensibilities. Who else
would enjoy abstraction but an
aficionado? Further, he choose
a provocative yet restful work

done in greens, whites and ochres.
Not at all disturbing in content
or size, about 24” x 30”, reflecting an expressionist point of view.
One word of advice to the
thief about hanging the picture.
Avoid chartreuse walls! White
or neutral grey will best show it
olf.

Robert Kushin

Band Budget
TO THE EDITOR:

The Convocations Committee of
the Student Senate will sponsor
a speech by the visiting Asian
lecturer Bishnu Prasad Poudel at
3:00 p.m, today in Norton 242.
Dr. Poudel, a lecturer in the Department of History and Political
Thought at Tribhuban University
in Nepal, is a specialist in Southeast Asian history. A coffee hour
will follow.

Recently, at a meeting of the
Student Senate, there arose the
question of budget allotment for
the UB Marching Band. The statement was made that the band
was purely for the enjoyment of
the students taking part, and that
the student body and school do
not derive any pleasure or benefit. This statement was especially
surprising to me because I transferred here from a Big Ten
school. In that conference, the
marching band is considered an
important factor in the football
season.
I decided

‘‘unnecessary” group which devotes 7-12 hours a week to preparing a presentation for their
own enjoyment. To that end I
have found that you need only
ask any member of the band
to reflect the true nature of
things. I found that the band has
more spirit than any other single
unit on campus. Practices have
taken place in rain and cold
weather, and physical hardships
have been endured.
Since the question of necessity,
benefit, and school-wide satisfaction has arisen—let’s look a little
closer at the student senate.

Bash

All juniors and seniors
in the College of Arts and
Sciences who expect to re-

turn for the spring semester should pick up their

pre-registration materials
between November 2 and
6 (9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.)
in front of the Bursar’s Office, Hayes Hall.

CAMPUS PERSONALITY

$o*lt oCundquist

—

integral parts of
weekend or any
other school affair are the gailycolored posters which remind
Students of meetings, announce
speakers, warn of deadlines and
keep people informed of miscellaneous activities.
One of the

homecoming

Responsible for the myriads oi
signs and posters seen around
the campus is Josh Lundquist, a
sophomore in University College,
chairman of the Publicity Committee of Union Board. She and
her staff, armed with paint
brushes, magic markers, and as
sorted paraphenalia, enjoy a lovely view of Room 307 as they attempt to make eye-catching, original posters. Coordinating their

to investigate this

—Harry L.

PAGE THIRTEEN

BISHNU PRASAD POUDEL

The 28-year-old scholar received his BA at Patna University
in India in 1956, his MA at Delhi
University, and his PhD at the
Indian Scholl of International
Studies in 1963.

efforts with the many active
committees of Union Board, such
as the Mixer Committee, the
Publicity Committee is also assigned the almost impossible task
of keeping the bulletin boards in
Norton Union neat and orderly.
The purpose of this committee
is to publicize the events which
Union Board sets up in such a
manner as to arouse student interest, which is a difficult thing
to do in this school, Josh added.
This includes trying to slate activities which will be culturally,
socially, educationally in the interest of the most students.

Asia.” Within this theme, he will
present an Asian interpretation
of U.S. policies such as the use
of the Peace Corps, military alliances, economic aid, and military
aid. Dr. Poudel will comment on
whether or not the Asian people
believe that the United States is
a “champion of freedom and
democracy,” contributing to the
maintenance of peace.

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Josh’s chief delemna, and that
of Union Board in general, is
the problem of student support.
Josh, along with a lot of other
students, feels that “this ain’t
such a bad school,” and that by
being “afraid to get involved,”
it is likely that one will miss a
great deal of what a university
has to offer. Any artistically inclined students are invited to
join Josh’s publicity committee
anjoy the beautiful view in Room
307.

Support The Ernie Davis

The topic of Dr. Poudel’s
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�PAGE FOURTEEN

—IfdelifyiouS
The B’nai BTith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will present a sermon
lesson in a current series on,
"Sabbath Symbols.” An Oneg
Shabbat will follow.
Hillel will serve another of its
Sunday evening suppers Sunday
at 5:30 p.m. The guest speaker
will be Judge Ruth Vogel on the
subject: “Intermarraige, A View
From the Bench.” This will be
the fourth presentation in a current series on: "Intermarraige
in Perspective.”

A group of students interested
in Israeli Folk Dancing will meet
Sunday at 8:00 p.m, in the Hillel
House.

The annual Hillel One-Day Institute will be held Sunday, Nov.
I. Details of the program may
be obtained at the Hillel House.
Registrations for the Institute
are now being accepted and stu
dents who wish to attend should
now make reservations at the
Hillel House.

HILLEL GRADUATE CLUB
A new social group, the Hillel
Graduate Club, is being formed.
This group is designed for single
seniors, graduate students and
young faculty men and wom£n.
A varied program of activities, social and cultural, is planned (and
all suggestions for future events

will be welcome).
The Hillel Graduate Club will
hold its first social this Sunday
at 8:00 p.m. at Hillel House, 40
Capen Blvd. Free refreshments
will be served.
GAMMA DELTA
The next meeting will be our
Founder's Day Celebration Wednesday. The plans call for a pizza
party. We will meet at 5;30 in
front of (he cafeteria inside Nor
ton. Money or tickets must be
turned in at this meeting. Don’t
forget, and sell all you can to
make it a profitable venture for

Gamma Delta.

Also, keep the fall retreat,
Nov. 14 and 15, in mind. The

cost will be around $6.50 for

the weekend. Here's hoping we
have a large turnout for an en
loyable

weekend.

—

Newman is having a horseback
riding party at Hilltop Stables
Sunday. Cars will leave Newman
Hall at 1:00 p.m.-iand 2:00 p.m.
The riding fee is $1.50 per hour.
The Sunday night discussions
are continuing at Newman Hall
Sundays at 7:30 p.m. The weekly
discussions meet each Tuesday
and Thursday at 9:00 a.m., 10:00
a.m., 2:00 p.m., and 3:00 p.m.
Mass is said daily at noon in
Newman Hall. During October,

devotions follow Mass.
Because of the Empire State
Province Educational Weekend,
the Halloween party scheduled
for Saturday, October 31, has
been cancelled. Pre-registration
for the convention begins Friday at 6:00 p m. at the Hotel
Buffalo, Washington and Swan
Streets. A mixer will begin at
8:00 p.m. Friday followed by an
excursion to Niagara Falls at
9:30 p.m. Saturday morning and
afternoon is devoted to lectures
and discussions. A dinner dance
is scheduled for Saturday night
at 7:00 p.m.; a Communion breakfast for 9:00 a.m. Sunday morning, All lectures, discussions and
socials will be held at the Hotel
Buffalo. The convention will
hosted by the Newman Apostolal
at State Teachers College. Regi
tration fees will be discussed at
the weekly meeting.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

program at 5:00 p.m., University I

Methodist Church.

LIBERAL RELIGIOUS
FELLOWSHIP

Attention, Members, heretics.
gooders,

Jeremy Taylor

“fan

and “opponents," atheists, agno
tics, and all other liberals no
included: There will absolutely
positively be a meeting of th

Liberal Religious Fellowship thi
Sunday at 7:00 p.m. in Nortoi
337. Mr. Leonard Minsky wil
speak with the group. We cha
lengc you to attend.

Tau Kappa Epsilon are having
parents’ day, Saturday. The
brothers, their dates, and their
pai'ents will attend the UB-Holy
Cross fotball game, then a cocktail party and conclude the day
with a dance.

Thata Chi Sorority would like

to than the brothers of Alpha

a

Mr. Ivan Edelson, Chairman of
the Campus Facilities subcommittee of the Student Welfare
Committee of the Student Senate,
has announced a change in the
study hour facilities of Lockwood and Harriraan Libraries.
Lockwood Memorial Library
will be opened at 1:00 rather than
2:00 as in the past on Sundays,
and will remain open until 11:00.
In Harriman Library, basement
rooms 558 and 658 will be reserved for study purposes Sunday through Friday from 5:30
to 10:30.
These recent additions in student study facilities were worked
out by Mr. Edelson and Miss
Ellen Friedman, who represented
the student body and Mr. J. Herling, Dr. D. Silverman, and Mr.
John Warren, who represented
the University.

Thata Chi would like to thank
Dr. Gratwick for speaking at the
fraternity house last Friday. This
Friday at 2:30 p.m. Dr. Zimmer
man will speak to the brotherhood.

Zata Chi were honored by
from Dr. Bishnu Prasad
Poudel, Visiting Asian Professor
from Nepal, to their meeting
Monday evening. The sisters hope
he has gained some insight about
sorority life at UB.
Alpha Phi Omega would like
to thank the student body and
especially the participating organizations for their support in
the Ugly Man Contest.
The brothers would also like
to express their gratitude to Steve
Coniglio for the cocktail party
last Saturday.
A date party will be held at
the Burman Inn Friday.
Phj

a visit

Chi Omega would like to thank
the new sisters for the pledge
party Sunday, October 18.

,

Kappa Psi for the football game.
The sisters are looking forward
to the initiation of the F a 11
Pledge Class Monday night at the
home of Midge Rainforth.

Bata Phi Sigma this evening
will present a “Fall Crawl” featuring a rendition of contemporary music by the “Cuff Links”
including the Monkey, Shimmy,
and Ball and Chain. The “Crawl”
will begin at 8:00 p.m. and will
be held in the Millard Fillmore
room (multipurpose) of Norton.
Admission is 49 cents per person,
74 cents a couple. Refreshments
will be served.
Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a
nurses’ social at the Williamsville
Inn this evening from 9:00 p.m.-?
The brothers welcome their 15
fall pledges.
Phi Kappa Psi has purchased a
100 seat block for the Buffalo
Bills game this Saturday night.
After the game there will be
a party at the Hotel Marqueen.
The brothers would like to congratulate Brother Don Gilbert on
his being ranked tenth in the
nation in total offense last week.

THE BELL SYSTEM

WESLEY FOUNDATION

The Wesley Foundation is spon
soring a hayride this evening at
Fox Hills Stables. The cost is
$1.00 per person, and rides are
available from Allenhurst at 6:30
p.m. and Goodyear at 6:45 p.m.
A change of program has been
scheduled for Sunday. The “Elec- J
tion Reflections” planned fori
after (he coming election have fi
been moved up and replaced with
“Election Previews.” You’ll nbt j,
want to miss this informative h

Greek Notes

Committee Extends
Hours For Library

represented by

J

HILLEL

Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

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OCT. 28-30
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

NEWMAN

There will be a guest speaker
at the weekly meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore

Support

Room. He will discuss the “Racial

Our

Question".

Hawkland Books
On Guide &amp; Code
Mr. William D, Hawkland, dean
of the School of Law, has recently
had published two volumes entitled, A Transactional Guide to
the Uniform Commercial Code.
The two volumes, totaling 1105
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�Friday, Octobar 23, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Feature

BASEBALL’S BIG HEADACHE
By STEVE OBERSTEIN

The Cincinnati Reds drew a
total of 26,000 fans to Crosley
Field for a three game series
against the St. Louis Cardinals
during the last week of the baseball season. There is nothing unusual with that attendance figure
considering that the action occurred so late in the schedule
except that the two teams were
fighting for the pennant, along
with the Philadelphia Phillies and
the San Francisco Giants. No baseball games were ever more important to the individuals involved in the climactic atmosphere of
that final week, but you would
never know it judging from the
reaction of the Cincinnati fans.
Is baseball losing its position as
America’s national pastime? If
so, just what are some of the
reasons for baseball’s apparent
decline in the public image?
The deal in which the Columbia Broadcasting System bought
control of the New York Yankees
has definitely helped to continue
the image that the owners have
created of trying to make a buck
whenever and wherever possible.
It is impossible to consider baseball as a sport when certain interests control the majority of
capital that is invested in the
sport. How can the Washington
Senators ever expect to compete
with the multi-million dollar
C.B.S. organization? Teams such
as the Senators do not have the
money to pay the number of large
bonuses required to sign the quality stars of tomorrow. Baseball
should, I believe, scrap its present bonus structure that is harmful to the game, and instead
inaugurate a plan similar to the
draft that football and basketball
use to equalize their sports. Baseball would have to hold its draft
near the end of the high school
year so that it would be able to
draft all eligible high school seniors. The only change between
the baseball draft and the one
used by football and basketball
would be that even if a boy who
was drafted decided to go to
college, he Would have to sign
with the team that originally
—‘

chose him when he graduated
from high school when he decided to sign. Boys who were not
drafted, and who thus are free
agents, would, of course, be able
to make the best deal possible
for themselves with any team
that they desired as long as there
was a stringent limit on the bonus
allowed to these late tyloomers.
With such a program in progress, expansion, which with the
exception of the haloed Los Angeles Angels, has been a farce,
would ultimately let the havenots change places with the
haves. Imagine how much fun it
would be to see the proud New
York Yankees buried in the
depths of the American League
cellar! Perhaps then the other
American League owners will
stop giving the New Yorkers the
pennant on a silver platter as
Gabe Paul did early this September when he sent veteran righthander Pedro Ramos to the
Yankees for two players to be
named at a later date. One only
hopes that the Indians’ part of
the deal will be pretty sweet, say
Phil Linz or Pedro Gonzalez and
Steve Hamilton. Either Linz or
Gonzalez would plug the Indians’
second base problem and make
them a contender—or should I
say pretender—to the throne that

the Yankees now own.
It is getting so that now it is
more fun to watch the manipulations that derive from the game
than the game itself. Managerial
changes is a big game that is
played every year at this time. In
some cases, perhaps the administration should be bounced instead of the poor manager who
is doing the best he can with a
bunch of sad sacks, but after
Bing Devine was fired by the
Cardinals in mid-August, only to
see the Redbirds rally to win the

the owners have
is that with the
of baseball games,
see them has gone
down. Thus, the owners persist
in their moving of franchises
which started only a little over
a decade ago, but is now old
hat. We are even approaching a
new era—that of the second generation movers—if one should
care to listen to the pearls of
wisdom now being expounded by
the Kansas City and Milwaukee
owners respectively. Another
pennant, no self-respecting owner grevious claim against baseball’s
is going to stick out his neck as owners can be made against CalGussie Busch of the Cards has vin Griffith of the Minnesota
done when it is so easy to get a Twins, who moved his team from
new scape-goat
oops, manager. Washington just when they began
In this respect, Buzzy Bavasi of to reach respectability after many
the Los Angeles Dodgers is to be years in the second division, and
lauded for keeping Walter Alston left Washington’s long-suffering
on as manager in the face of fans with another cellar-dwelling
constant criticism, because he outfit.
thought, and rightfully so, that
When Will baseball stop trying
the Dodger collapse this season to milk the public, and realize
could not be blamed on Alston’s its position as one of the cornermanagerial techniques.
stones of America? It is genuineA major part of the cause for
baseball’s demise in the public
image has to be directed at the
greedy owners, who, with their
expanded schedule and night
games on get-away days at the
end of a series, have done everything possible to exhaust the
players. What
yet to realize
greater supply
the demand to

—

ly hoped from this corner that
baseball changes its objectives
and reverses its trend that will
only lead it to oblivion with such
measures as those already mentioned as well as others, such as
a definite speeding up in the
length of the games, before it is
too late.

Hockey Practice
The UB Hockey Bulls
will hold two practices this
week at Fort Erie Rink.

They will be Sunday, from
8:00-9:00 p.m. and Monday, from 6:00-7:00 p.m.

Team members are requested to meet in the
Tower Lounge one hour
before each practice.

SUPPORT THE HOCKEY TEAM

HERE ARE GREAT NEW POPULAR IP'S!

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By

Friday, October 23, 1964

SPECTRUM’

PAGE SIXTEEN

METAMORPHOSIS
business where net profit is the
ruling factor.

MICHAEL CASTRO

You get to wonder about baseball, a game referred to by a
our "national pastime.” You were
diminishing number of people as
bothered in 1958 when they
moved the Giants and Dodgers
out of New York. The rivalry was
a part of you. Their tradition was
your tradition. The National
League was your league, and
suddenly it was no more. You
thought about it and decided that
you hated Walter O'Malley, who
moved the Dodgers out of Brooklyn, where baseball’s most loyal
fans had made him a lot of money,
shifting them, roots and all, three
thousand miles away in order to

O’Malley
more money.
became your personification of
greed. His fat frame turned up
in all your fantasies, foreclosing
mortgages, or penniless widows,
or plotting sinisterly to corner
the country’s money market. You
displaced all of baseball’s evil
into O'Malley’s evil, and that
seemed to temporarily resolve the
conflict between a great tradition
steeped national game, and a

make

Pro Picks

Then came expansion. A great
thing, you thought. It would bring
major league baseball to cities
which had deserved it for a long
time. (You

later became rather

cynical about what a city must
do to “deserve” big league baseball). The outrageous prices payed
for players in stocking the new
franchises didn’t concern you too
much. It was the quality of the
new clubs that appalled you. You
watched t h e Senators, Angels,
Mcts, and Colts, and you came to
realize that the main beneficiaries
of expansion were not the baseball fans in the expansion cities,
who were stuck with teams with

three strikes against them before
they started. The main beneficiaries were Walter O'Malley and
his fellow owners, who, rather

than part with capable major
leaguers, had gotten outrageous
sums of money for players who
considered a good day getting hit
by a pitched ball. The great progressive expansion program became reduced in your mind to a
mere sham, a scheme to line the

already bulging pockets of base

ball’s robber barons.
You saw your image of the
tradition-laden, nostalgic national
pastime, beloved by young and
old, blur. Casey Stengel, 70, was
fired by the Yankees after the
most successful managerial reign
in baseball history. You saw the
old man become a symbol of protest against the corporation system basball had become as leader
of the helpless Mets. You could
still watch baseball as you were
strangely drawn to the Mets, and
you became a part of the cult of
the downtrodden, followers of lost
causes, who could sympathize with
this team, hopelessly stepped on
in a cruel baseball world.
You tolerated it until this year.
Baseball’s worldliness became too
much, even for you. Amid the
furor over the Civil Rights Act,
Alvin Dark, Manager of the Giants, complained about the inborn lack of pride in his nonwhite players. C.B.S. bought the
Yankees, terming it a “good investment.” You heard that the
Milwaukee Braves, after setting
attendance records in the place

they called the Beer City home,
were about to move to Atlanta
where “untapped television revenues" awaited them. Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Kansas City, and
Pittsburgh were also said to be
contemplating moves. Yogi Berra
was fired by the Yankees after
leading them to the pennant-in
his rookie year as manager. Apparently, he was blamed for the
Y a n k e e s’ disappointing attendance in comparison to the Mets.
Johnny Keane quit after managing St. Louis to the World

Championship, rather than be a
puppet of the team’s front office.
You thought to yourself in the
vernacular. “Baseball is low, a
low sport in a low world.” You
thought of the days of Pee Wee,
Campy, Duke, Furill, of the term
“national pastime”, of the poem
Casey at the Bat.
You smiled.
You could deceive yourself no
It was
longer about baseball.
more profitable to follow the
stock market.

Support The Hockey Team

Bhmmiio Diet

(Cont'd from P. 20)

will be out for a repeal perform
ance. It will be close.
Minnesota 35, San Francisco-21

—With a well balanced, high-gear
attack, the Vikinos (.3-3) have
been tough. The 49'ers (2-4) have
not been very alert defensively,
but the presence of George Mira
at quarterback will help them
to mount at least a semblance of
an offense
American Football League
Kansas City 17, Boston 16
Both of these teams have been

r

mo, on

:

;kmao

FROSU ftRt

,

To
CWEVX UP

NfXVY

o

—

unimpressive in their last two
outings, but the Chiefs (2-3) rate

the nod here because of their
the quarterback post.
The Patriots (4-1-1) were lucky to
get away with a tie against Oakland, but their luck won't hold
out tonight in Boston.
depth at

How to be
a good talker
in any crowd

New York 28, Buffalo 24— The
Bills (6-0) are undefeated, but last

week's second half collapse points
towards an impending defeat. A
rugged defense has been the
strong point of the Jets (3-1-1)
and it should lead them to pro
football’s upset of the young season as the New Yorkers continue
their climb to the top. The team
that gets the breaks will be victorious in this Saturday night
War Memorial contest.
Oakland 35, Denver 24—The
Raiders (0-5-1) cannot bo denied
much longer. They finally broke
out of their scoring slump with
43 points against Boston, but the
inept defense gave up the same
number. The Broncos' (1-5) defense, however, is just a trifle
more inept and it should send
them into the Western Division
cellar.
San Diego 38, Houston 21
Hadl finally started a game for
the Chtrgerrs (3-2-1) and proved
his worth when he passed for
two touchdowns and scored a
third in leading his team to a
rout of Denver last week. The
Oilars (2-4) will find themselves
completely out of the title picture after they lose this one to
the Western Division leaders.
—

Start by reading The New York Times every
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Start working out with The New York Times now
Arrange with your campus representative for convenient
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STEPHEN SOKOHA
Tower Dorm

�Support the
Hockey Team
By ALAN SCHOLOM

Just an added note about a
group of dedicated and unselfish guys. We are speaking of the
UB Hockey Bulls. Hockey is not
recognized as a varsity sport at
Buffalo so the team is organized
as a club. Because it is not a
-varsity sport, it receives very
little financial support from the
athletic department. In fact, in
order to get the team off and
skating, each member has to
contribute $20 out of his own
pocket. In addition, they must
supply their own equipment, and
pay for their own medical insurance. The squad gets no compensation for this outlay, except
for the satisfaction of representing their school in active competition. Last year, the Herd had
a record of 9-2-1 and finished second to BIT in the Finger Lakes
League. HIT, it should be noted,
carries hockey as a full-status
varsity sport and is thus able to
recruit some of the top icemen
from the U.S. and Canada. The
Bulls have no scholarships to
dangle in front of prospective
players, and thus have to make
their own ends meet. Even with
this tremendous disadvantage this
year, UB will field a powerful

By JO ANNE LEEGANT

walls.

The Robert Graves collection is
also extensive. It covers 5,000
pages. He saved every poem he
wrote in his youth, so poems written at age 13 may be compared
to those written when the poet
was 70.
The room has been called by
Mr. Charles D. Abbot, its founder,
a sort of laboratory where scholars, critics and poets may analyse
their work. At present there is
an exhibition of poetry by faculty
members who have published
their work. Included are the
works of Saul Touster, Lyle Glazier, Ralph Maud, George Starbuck, Charles Olsen, Albert Cook,
Mac Hammond, Irving Feldman,

College Picks

(Cont’d from P. 19)
Stichweh is unable to do it by
himself, he needs help.
SYRACUSE 23, OREGON
STATE 13—The Orangeman (4-1)
have an unbeatable ground attack

centered around Nance and the
amazing Little. The Baavars (4-1)
have a tight defense, but their
offense is lacking. State has had
AND STEVE FEIGIN
its share of victories for the year.
KANSAS IS, OKLAHOMA
squad and one that the school
Cowboy* (3-1) find
wili be very proud to be repre- STATE t—The
themselves on top of the Big
sented by.
Eight as college football enters
This week, the budget for the into its 6th week, but they had
Hockey Club goes before the better enjoy the heights while
finance committee of the Student they can. The Jayhawkart (3-2)
Senate, which has already spoken will be hard to stop, especially
out against the team. It feels that after their upset of Oklahoma. '
hockey should be handled solely Sayers and Co. want the top post,
by the gym department. The and a victory here will give it
money that is being asked for, is to them.
ARIZONA STATE 24, UTAH 8
sorely needed to pay for practice
ice time and traveling expenses. —The offense-minded Son Davils
so
As it stands now, these funds will (4-0) face their toughest test
have to come from the team far this season in the person
of the Radskint of Utah (3-2).
members themselves. This is realThey won’t win in a runaway, as
ly a sad, sad state of affairs.
is usually the case, but they won’t
Last year, Sports Illustrated, be hard pressed either.
FLORIDA 7, ALABAMA 0—
the leading sports magazine in
Triple-threat Joe Namath will be
the nation, praised the UB Hocmissing from the Criimon Tide
key players for their spirit and
(5-0) line-up and this is just the
determinism in the face of numerous obstacles. This column-long break that the Gators (4-0) have
article was more coverage than been looking for. The ’Bama forward wall is like a stone wall,
any Buffalo sports team has attained in the school's history. but Larry Dupree will go over it.
Yet the Student Senate seemed Florida will score very little in
this game, but whatever they
unmoved by all this of publicity.
score, it will be enough. This
defeat will knock Alabama from
The Spectrum Sports staff urthe SEC race and make them vicgently requests the Senate to retims of the UPSET OF THE
consider its position.
WEEK.

Poetry Collection at Library
A world famous poetry collection may be seen at Lockwood
Library. The collection includes
every poem written in the English
language by a twentieth century
author. It does not consist of
books of poetry alone, but includes biographies of poets as
well. Critical studies of individuals and movements may be
found along with memories of
non-poets which include biographical data about poets. There are
also books of philosophic, psychologic and technical theory which
may help the student to interpret
the poetical impulse.
The room houses a collection
of poetry magazines. To enable
the student to analyse the poetry
better, worksheets of the poets
have been assembled. These
sheets may be seen on microfilm,
and enable the student to trace
the thought processes of the poet.
Some poets use a typewriter.
Others draw pictures. On some of
these sheets, every word change
may be seen.
There are letters from poets
to their non-poet friends as well
as to other poets. Some of these
letters explain compositional methods. Others provide insight into
the life of the poet.
There are also notebooks kept
by poets. Some of these include:
Dylan Thomas, Stephen Spender,
W.H. Ordan, Louis Mac Niece,
and Edward Thomas.
The James Joyce collection,
housed in a separate room, is
considered one of the finest in
the world. Pictures from the actual home of Joyce adorn the

PACK

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 23, 1964

Leslie Fiedler, Frank O’Hara, and
James Dicky. The worksheets of
Ralph Maud and George Starbuck

are on display and may be compared. Those of Ralph Maude are
handwritten. Crossings-out may
be seen, as well as doodles and
drawings. George Starbuck’s
worksheets are typewritten. Here
too, crossings-out may be seen,

and corrections have been made
in longhand. Probably as a guide
to himself, he has made notes
of the intonation and definition.
These notes can help the student
further in tracing his thoughts
as they progress in the creation
of the poem.
This exhibit may be seen on
the second floor of Lockwood
Library.

The poetry room is open to all
students between 9:00 a.m. and
9:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00

p.m. Saturdays.

INTRAMURALS

Tennis Ends

center lounge.

Coward to Speak
Dr. Stuart J. Coward, post doc
toral associate in the biology department, will address a University biology seminar today at 4:00
p.m. in Room 134, Health Sciences
Building.

The standings in the fraternity leagues are as follows:

By MARTY JAFFE

The UB Intramurals program

The intramural Cross Country

meet will be held Friday, October 30, at 330 p.m. at Grover

Cleveland Golf Course. The starting point will be across from
Capen Hall. Entries must be submitted by Monday, at Room 213,
Claris Gym.

The football leagues played
exciting football last week. In
the Thursday league, AEPi trounced Sig Ep 30-0, Alpha Sig beat
Gamma Phi 20-8, and Phi Kappa
Psi whipped Theta Chi 260. Tuesday, Phi Ep overcame Alpha Phi
Omega 2-0, Phi Lambda Tau trimmed TEKE 6-2, and Beta Sig won
its game 14-8.

Tundiy Ln|M

—

began its fourth week of sports
activity with the completion of
the tennis tournament as Posner
and Solomon took this year’s
doubles championship. The singles championship was won last
week by Peter Lederman who defeated Dave Solomon in matches
of 6-2 and 6-3.

W LT
3 0 0
3 0 1
3 0 1

Sam

Phi Ep
Beta Si£
Thursday Laagua—

W L
3 0
3 0

AEPi

Alpha Sig

3 1
Phi Psl
The standings in the independ
ent leagues are as follows:
Monday Laagua—

W
....4
4
4
3

Zygotes
C-men

Losers
Ravens
Wednesday Laagua—

Williams House
James House #1
James House #2

....—

Friday Laagua—

L
0
0
1
2

3 0 0

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Hawaiian Baked Ham Cherry Coudote
Sauteed Fresh Jumbo Shrimps Chinatown

$295
$255
$235
$250

COMPLETE LUAU DINNERS START AT
Tropical and American Drinks
Luncheons
served from
Banquet reams available
11:30 A.M.
up to 300 persons
open
til 2:30 A.M
to
kitchen
10 P.M.
Dinners Served 4 P.M.
—

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nnr

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CALL NF 4-4404

or

1
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Main St. at Tran»it
STUDENT DISCOUNT
10%
announces
Sundays
upon presentation of ID Cards
and
Fridays

KING STEAK

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Winners
Fantastics

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KAI
HSOBA.
6870

THE

Senate Seat
Monday, students in the College
of Arts and Sciences will have the
opportunity to elect a senator to
represent them.
The following are candidates
for the senatorial seat: Josh Stein,
Linda Sapir, and A1 Gerson, all
juniors from A&amp;S. Students may
vote for their choice in the center lounge of Norton Union.
On the same day, a mock election will be held to determine
both the Presidential and New
York State senatorial preferences
of the student body. All students
may vote in the mock election,
which will also take place in the

SIVINTMN

NF 4-4421

�Friday, October 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

BULLS OVERCOME V.M.I.
will carry the team the remainder
of the season.

Duprey Theft Sparks Rally
As Bulls Gain 14-10 Verdict
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
For three quarters of play
last Saturday it appeared that
the UB gridiron Bulls would
continue their seemingly endless
slide to the abysmal depths of
futility, but a courageous fourth
period rally enabled the home
forces to capture a 14-10 decision
from VMI before 21,000 fans at
War Memorial Stadium. The
Homecoming triumph lifts the
Bulls’ season record to 2-2-1.
Heroes were numerous in the
exciting battle, but if one individual had to be cited for turning
the tide of events, the nomination would have to go to linebacker Jim Duprey, The burly
Peru, New York, junior, who is
popularly tabbed “Ringo” although he is not the famed
Beatle drummer, was certainly a
Starr in his own right Saturday.
With the Bulls trailing 10-0
early in the fourth quarter and
the aerial-minded Keydets marching toward another touchdown,
hopes for a SUNYAB victory
were rather dismal. Then it happened! On a second and seven situation on the UB 3, VMI quarterback Charlie Snead, kid brother
of the Philadelphia Eagle signala short pass

caller, flipped

to

the left side which was swiped
by Duprey. Behind a barricade of
blockers the 5’ 10", 215-pounder,
who is no stranger to long interception returns as was demonstrated twice in last year’s Colgate clash, rambled all the way
to the Kcydet 6 before being
dragged down from behind. Three
plays later fullback Dick Condino
smashed over the goal line and
the hosts were back in the game.
Don Gilbert sliced the deficit to
10-8 with a two point sweep of
right end on the conversion attempt.

After the ensuing Keydet drive
ran out of gas on the UB 31
with nine minutes remaining, the
home forces continued to roll
with the momentum which had
been triggered by the pivotal
Duprey interception. Nick Capuana ran over, between, and
through no less than six would-be
tacklers in a sparkling individual
effort to the VMI 35. With quarterback

Gilbert befuddled the
Keydet defense with a well-mixed
assortment of gridiron goodies.

**:-v

-ju\
?»y*
;

r.

**

V

-•*?*

&lt;

4

.

son, a delayed quarterback keeper play up the middle. The interior line opened the gap beautifully and Gilbert flew across
the final line parallel which had
been so begrudgingly adamant to

N

#

—

In the third quarter the Lexington Institute, behind the pinpoint passing of Snead who completed nine of his first ten, pene-

—

trated to the UB 4 from where

they settled for an 11-yard field
goal from Parker.

After
the ball
lofted a
shirted

regaining possession of
Snead faded back and
little pass which a blueNo. 50 named Ringo

plucked out of the air, altered
the whole complexion of the
tussle, and ignited the impetus
which all devout UB fans hope

tackle. Tackle Brian Kent, sidelined since the Cornell game with
a fractured hand, should be ready
for action tomorrow.
Bob Edward’s punting has been a pleasant surprise in the last few
games. One punt from midfield
Saturday was downed by Condino
on the VMI 1, Edward’s season
—

—

—

STATISTICS

UB
First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passing
Passes
Passes interc. by
Punts
Fumbles lost
Yards penalized

Partners Press, JU.

The fired-up Bulls corralled the
visitors deep in VMI territory
after the ensuing kickoff and
were contented to run out the
clock after regaining possession
of the ball in the final minute.
Coach Dick Oftenhamer summarized the contest in a post-

’

&amp;

(at Delaware)

analysis by commenting,
“Breaks arc of the utmost importance when two evenly matched teams meet. We have had less
than our share against Cornell,

v

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VMI
9
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Massachusetts, and Marshall. For
almost three quarters Saturday
it appeared the same way as VMI
capitalized on a forward fumble
and pass deflection for its first
score. We evened the count in
the breaks department when
VMI lost a long pass interception return due to a clipping
penalty and on the Duprey interception, which turned out to
be the difference in the outcome of the game.”
The two Keydet breaks in the
first half both came on a VMI
touchdown drive. After a long
pass completion had carried the
invaders to the UB 20 late in the
first quarter, the rugged UB defensive wall stopped VMI halfback Tom Rhodes on fourth
down short of a first down on
the UB 11, but the ball skipped
away to the 9 where Virginia
guard Bill Reed recovered for
a vital first down. On the next

14
215
39
4-15
2
2-43
1
15

The SPECTRUM

the Bulls the last three weeks.
UB missed the conversion, but
its consequences were pot felt
as the 14-10 margin proved suf-

f, ■

j

i'

-

After the heartbreaking catasthat have struck the
Bulls in their last two outings,
one could not help fearing some
similar macabre incident would
yet occur with five minutes remaining and the ball resting on
the VMI 6. But the Bull juggernaut was not to be denied again.
Przykuta ripped to the 4, and
with 3:12 remaining on the clock,
Gilbert, the eminent Bennett
High alumus, resorted to another
successful tactic used this seatrophes

Highest grades
Bull Session
were obtained by Gilbert, Condino, Capuana, Mike Lucidi, and
Bill Taylor on offense, while Russ
MacKellar, Jim McNally, Craig
Helenbrook, Taylor again, and
Dan Sella were recipients of the
The only
top defensive marks.
question mark personnel wise for
tomorrow’s Holy Cross encounter
is Przykuta, whose knee buckled
under him during a third quarter

average is just under 40 yards
a try.
Shine has returned six
kickoffs a distance of 188 yards,
better than 31 yards per return.
Duprey replaced Joe the Toe
for the final kickoff in order to
gain some height on the kicks.
The Keydets forgot to block Ringo, enabling him to flatten the
kickoff returner in his tracks
with a bone-rattling, head-on
tackle.

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6

NAMtUROIII

PRZYKUTA DOWNED BY KEYDETS

wingback Willie Shine and Capuana collaborated for another
first down inside the 25. After
a damaging offside infraction appeared to have halted abruptly
the UB drive, the wily Gilbert decided the time was right to play
the ace in the hole which has
proved so successful for the Herd,
the look-in pass. It clicked again
to Captain Gerry Pawloski for a
substantial gain, and two plays
later fullback Denny Przykuta
picked up an all-important first
down by cracking to the 6.

back Hill Ellett rifled a pass
into the end zone which Capuana
batted away, but the carom landed in the arms of an astonished
Rhodes. After Rick Parker’s conversion boot, the visitors led, 7-0.
Late in the second stanza tackle
Dom Piestrak pounced on a Keydet fumble on the VMI 21, but
a few plays later Shine, on a
power sweep to the left, was
separated from the pigskin at the
3, and the Keydets again took
over. The half ended with UB
op, (he short end of a 7-0 count
#

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NINETEEN

HOLY CROSS PREVIEW

INJURY RIDDLED CRUSADERS TO
FACE BULLS ON PARENTS DAY
By

PAGE

SPECTRUM

Friday, Oetobar 23, 1964

CHICK ARNOLD

Tomorrow is the day that members of the University of Buffalo
football team will have a chance
to show off for the parents of
students here. Tomorrow’s first
annual parents day game promises to be a good one between
two teams who are both coming
off sorely-needed victories. Last
week, Holy Cross blanked the
Quantico Marines 16-0 for their
first victory of the year; and UB
whipped V.M.I., 14-10, evening its
record at 2-2-1.

Looking at statistics of the
Holy Cross team can be quite
deceiving. In their first two
games, the Crusaders gave up a
ghastly total of 66 points while
scoring a meager 8. However,
these games were played against
Villanova and Syracuse, two Eastern powerhouses. Fortunately,
Syracuse is not on our schedule,
but we will meet Villanova later
in the year. Let’s hope we fare
better than Holy Cross did. In
their third game, Holy Cross was
beaten by Colgate 10-0, giving
their offensive a three game total
of 8 points scored. Last week’s
victory, however, proved that the
Crusaders are capable of winning,

and should prove instrumental in
starting them on their winning
ways.

Coaching the Crusaders is Dr.

Eddie Anderson, the dean of the
nation’s active major college head
football coaches. This is Dr. Anderson’s last year as coach, as he
has decided to retire upon completion of the 1964 years. Heading into his 39th season as a head
football coach, twenty-one at Holy
Cross, Dr, Anderson has compiled
a 196-131-15 record as coach. His
Holy Cross teams, from 1933 to
1938, compiled a record of 47-7-4,
one of the greatest six-year records ever in college football. In
addition to his fine record at
Holy Cross, Dr. Anderson twice
coached the College All-Stars in
the annual August classic in Chicago against the professional
champs. In 1940, his team of collegians lost to the Green Bay
Packers in one of the most exciting games of the long series,
45-28. In 1950, the All-Stars, under
Doctor Anderson, upset the Philadelphia Eagles, 17-7. As head

)

accident and probably will be out
for the entire season. Much of the
success of the Crusaders depends
on how well sophomore quarterbacks Mike Cunnion and Jack
Lentz can replace the injured
Coughlin. Thus far, they have
done a good job; but both still
lack experience. Lentz, 6-0 175
pounds, will be the starter in
tomorrow’s game. He is a good
roll-out type quarterback, and
once he gets his varsity legs,
could become a star for Holy
Cross in the future.
A lot also will be on the
shoulders of another sophomore,
Pete Kimener, 6-1, 190 pounds.
Kimener is a good young end who
runs pass patterns very well. He
will be starting at right end in
place of injured Tom Haley.
Still another sophomore, John
Bachini, will be the starting fullback when the whistle blows to
start the game tomorrow. Bachini,
who is 6-0, 210 pounds, is a battering type fullback with good
speed and a knack for squeezing
through openings in the line. The
Bulls should see a lot of him
in tomorrow’s game.
The Crusaders are well set at
tackle. Captain John Dugan, 6-4,
225 pounds, and Junior Joe Lilly
could well be one of the best
tackle combinations in the East.
Dugan is a rugged two-way player who blocks well and is an
aggressive defender, and as captain, should give the Crusaders

have been wondering what that
strange automobile with “UB” or
“Bulls” painted all over it is;
it’s the official “Boost the Bulls”
car. It was donated for use by
Bartlett Buick to the Bulls for
the season. It’s been driving
around town, and people have
been asking about it.

Here are the starting line-ups

BUFFALO
Gerry Pawloski
Dorn Piestrak
Nick Castiglia
Joe Holly
Jim McNally
Leo Ratamess
Gerry LaFountain
Don Gilbert
Nick Capuana
Willie Shine
Dennis Przykuta
HOLY CROSS
Dick Kochansky

LE
LT
LG

........

QB
LHB

RHB

FB

...

College Picks

(Cont'd from P. 20)
they have a more consistent at-

tack.
L.S.U. 20, TENNESSEE 0—The
Chinese Bandits have been the
backbone of the Tiger team this
They have been very
season.
stingy, giving up but 16 points.
The Volf (3-2) will become L.S.U.’s
fifth victim of the season on

Saturday.
BUFFALO 22, HOLY CROSS 7
—The Bulls were hard-pressed to
down V.M.I. last week, after playing a strong game. They will find
the Crusaders (1-3) an easier
match. With Przykuta busting
thru the line and Capuana skirting the ends, UB will grind Holy
Cross into the ground.
OHIO STATE 32, WISCONSIN

6—A few years ago, this game
would have very likely decided
the Big Ten race, but this is
1964 not ’62. The Buckeyes (4-0)
are still a powerhouse, but the
Badgers (2-2) are rebuilding. Now
that Woody Hayes has successful
ly combined his strong running
game with a surprising passing
attack, the Ohio State offense is

UB BULLWAGON

Tomorrow’s game should be a
chance for Buffalo to make it two
in a row. However, the Crusaders
are improving with every game,
and can’t be counted on to roll
over and play dead. If UB can
play as well as they did last
week in downing VMI, they
should have a 3-2-1 record by

Joe Lilly

Brian Kavanaugh

Bill Morris
Joe Costatini

John Dugan
Bob Kimencr

Jack Lentz
Jim Gravel
Earl Kirmser

Joh-

QB

LHB

RHB
FB

devastating.
ILLINOIS 27, U.C.L.A. 14—The
Blue Devils (3-0-1) are now clear
favorites for the ACC champion
ship, after having knocked off
their chief competitor, N.C. State,
35-3.
DUKE 28, ARMY 14—The Cr
dets (2-3), after 3 tough losses in
a row, will be trying to straighten
themselves out, Stichweh is un
able to do it by himself, he needs
help.
tough losses in a row, will be try
ing to straighten themselves out
(Cont'd on P. 17'

inspiring leadership.
The injury of fiery little Pat
Higgins, a two year letterman at

center, also has hurt the

Crusaders. Another sophomore. Bill Morris, has filled in adequately, although hobbled by an injured
knee.
Buffalo has never beaten Holy
Cross. Holy Cross leads tjie series
3-0-1 with last year’s game ending in a 6-6 tie.
Center Joe Holly will be back
in the starting line-up for the
Bulls against Holy Cross. He had
been bothered by a pinched nerve

in his left shoulder.
Latest statistics show that sophomore Nick Capuana is UB’s most
effective ball carrier on the basis
of average yards per carry. Nick
is averaging 5.4 yards every time
he gets the ball . . , Willie Shine
is averaging 31 yards per trip

\

HOLY CROSS TACKLES JOE LILLY AND JOHN DUGAN (Rlsht)
on kickoff returns, which should
annual East-West Shrine game in put him among the nation’s leadSan Francisco, he came off with ers . . . Dick Condino, who did
a 14-13 victory. On several other
not score at all in his first years
occasions, he has served as an on the team, leads the club in
aide in this game. The loss of that category with 24. Tom Butler
Dr. Eddie Anderson will truly be
led last year’s squad with 26
a great one for Holy Cross—and
points for the entire season. The
for all collegiate football.
UB season record is 90, set by
The Holy Cross team is one Lou Corriere in 1942 . . End
that has been hit especially hard Gerry LaFountain made two
by injuries so far this season. On
tackles to keep V.M.I. from gain■the Saturday before the season ing on two key plays late in the
started, number one quarterback game.
Fran Coughlin suffered a freak
In case any of you sports fans

#

Coach of the East in 1955 in the

.

3260 Main St.

TF 2-3221

�Friday, October 23, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

*

i IPs ©
(*=

-

fir-

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

The Turning Point

For fifteen consecutive quarters the Bulls had

played frustrating football. They had played well in
general, but were beaten twice, both by two-point margins, and both due to a seemingly endless procession
of bad breaks and mistakes, on which the enemy always
somehow managed to capitalize. After three periods of
play against VM1, the Bulls appeared headed for another
defeat in a pattern almost identical to that of the two
previous losses. They had gotten their usual share of
bad breaks, with VMI making the most of them.
By the end of the first quarter VM1 had a 7-0 lead
on a pass deflected by a UB defender into the waiting
arms of an enemy receiver (bad break number two).
Appropriately, the touchdown pass was set up with a
hard luck play on which the Bulls had seemingly halted
the VMI drive as they had stopped the Keydet runner
on fourth down, a yard short of a first down, on their
own eleven yard line
or had they? The ball was
fumbled And recovered by VMI for a first down on the
UB njnA (bad break number one).
—

At This point it would seem that the Bulls were a
fated team, but we must add that it wasn’t all breaks and
bad luck. VMI quaretback Charlie Snead (younger
brother of Philadelphia Eagle quarterback Norm Snead)
had completed six of six passes in the first half, while
his understudy, southpaw Hill Ellet, clicked on two of
four passes, one of which being the deflected touchdown pass, which might have prompted some of the
Bulls to pinch themselves and hope they were dreaming.
The Bulls’ only serious scoring threat in the first
half came on a fumble recovery on the VMI twenty-one
yard line, but the ball was promptly fumbled back two
plays later on the VMI three (bad break number three).
Thus, when the Bulls retired to their dressing room at
half-time they might have been wondering if maybe
somebody up there didn’t like them (or something like
that).

After VMI had added a field goal midway through
the third quarter, Which was also set up by Snead’s
pinpoint passing, something happened which eventually
caused the complexion of the game to change. The UB
defensive line rose up to the occasion and gave it that
little bit extra-—the second effort, which raises the winners above the ranks of the mediocre. It was the charge
of the defensive line that eventually led to Jim Duprey’s
key interception which turned the tide of battle. With
the increased pass rush the defensive secondary limited
VMI to six of fifteen completions in the second half
as opposed to the eight of ten given up in the first half.
Jim Duprey’s interception was indeed the turning
point of the game, as they Bulls then prpceeded to score
two straight touchdowns, and with them the victory. It
could very well be the turning point of the season as it
ended a period of frustration stretching over two and
three-quarter games. As Head Coach Dick Offenhamer
. we are
optimistically, declared after the game: “.
over the hump.”
From this corner we can only hope the Bulls are
over the hump and can play the kind of football the
remainder of the season, that they did in the._final quarter against VMI, when all four branches of the team
clicked together. With the defensive line applying the
big pass rush enabling the secondary to cover effectively
enemy pass receivers, and the offensive line making the
holes for the backfield to run through, the Bulls looked
.

unstoppable.

There are five tough games remaining on the schedule, of which all are to be played at Rotary Field. We
hope to see capacity crowds at all these games to support
the revitalized Bulls. Tomorrow they tackle Holy Cross.
If they can duplicate last week’s fourth quarter performance they will win again. Moreover, from this corner,
we feel that they will beat all their forthcoming opponents if they can display this fourth quarter form.
Only time will tell if they do.
*

»

sso

sipoiafs* M

\

Golfers ‘Putt’
Team on Top
By STAN LICHWALA

Defeat has been thus far unknown to this year’s UB Varsity
Golf Team. Their record for the
year now stands at seven victories and no defeats as they head
down the home stretch, driving
for their third successive undefeated year.
On October twelfth, the UB
golfers had their first serious
threat as they hosted a strong
Buffalo State team. Both teams
were closely matched throughout
the eighteen holes as each man
fought to win three points for his
team. As the pairs came in, the
scoring was very even, and when
all the men had finished their
matches except for the final twosome, the score was Buffalo State
eight and UB seven. The match
was to be decided on the final
hole by the final twosome as
Mike Lawler and his opponent
approached the eighteenth green.
Lawler knew the importance of
his match and shaking off the
pressure, he two-putted to par
the eighteenth hole. This gave
him a 'l'k to
win over his
opponent and his victory gave
UB a 9'/2 to 8V2 decision over
a tough Buffalo State team. Even
though the margin of victory was
small, this win was a big one
as the UB golfers registered their
twenty-ninth consecutive victory
in dual match play.
Following their tight match
against Buffalo State, our linksters traveled to Hyde Park Golf
Course 0 n October fourteenth,
where they were the guests of
Niagara. Their record went unmanned as they scored victory
number thirty by a 13 to 5 margin. To date, the team members
have been rewarded for their
efforts by victory without defeat.
The golfers who have carried the
load deserve all the credit. These
members, listed in order of their
position, are 1) Steve Watts, 2)
Gary Weiss, 3) Kearons Whalen,
4) Jim Bruce, 5) Mike Lawler,
and 6) Steve Michaels.
Ralph
Goodrich, who is recovering from
an illness, should see action in
the last two matches and will
even more
powerful team.
add

strength to

This week closes out the 1964

golf season. On Tuesday, our

team

entertained Canisius, the Little
Three Champions, in a tough
match at Audubon. Today, UB
will entertain McMaster for their
final match, rounding out a very
successful season for Coach
~—-Scrfustini’s linksters.
—*

-t-

PROFESSIONAL

COLLEGE

By RICHARD ORANDOFF

By STEVE FEIGIN

Well, it was a long time coming, five weeks to be exact, but
I finally came up with a perfect
(10-0-1) record last week. Right
now I’m wondering what in the
world I can do for an encore
and it’s beginning to worry me.
In the unpredictable world of
professional football anything is
possible, and last week’s record
could just as easily have been
0-10-1. Just in case this week
proves to be as disastrous as a
couple of others I have had, I’m
trying my best to keep from
boasting; it’s just as easy to go
from “expert” to “bum” as it is

Up until Sunday, I was seriously
considering entitling this week’s
column as “Will Success Spoil
Steve Feigin?”, but after my esteemed cohort, Mr. Drandoff,
racked up a perfect slate, I de-

the other way around. So, in the
name of moderation and self-control, I’ll restrain my present (and
probably short-lived) enthusiasm
and merely announce that my
record to date (this is the first
time that I have had the courage
to tell it to anyone) is 31-17-5
for a .646 percentage.
This week’s picks:
National Football League

Cleveland 35, New York 17—

It took a last ditch interception-

turned-into-a-touchdown for the
Browns (4-1-1) to defeat Dallas
last week, but they won’t be in
for quite as hard a game when
they go against the hapless Giants in Cleveland on Sunday.
With the poor play they have
exhibited so far, the New Yorkers are lucky even to have their
mediocre 1-4-1 record.
St. Louis 38, Dallas 21—The way
the Cardinals (4-1-1) have been
treating their opposition almost
leads one to believe that St. Louis
might have two world champions

in ’64.

QB Johnson has been

(and who
wouldn’t be with receivers like
Randle and Conrad?), so the
Cowboys (1-4-1) will not make
much of a contest out of this one.
Philadelphia 27, Pittsburgh 14
—Philly sports fans can find some
consolation in the unexpected fine
play of the Eagles (3-3) this season, and this Sunday’s game
against the Steelers (3-3) should
further add to their joy. These
two teams will fight it out for
third place in the Eastern Division behind the Cardinals and
highly effective

Browns.

Chicago 28, Washington 20
The Redskins (1-5) are coming off
two fine performances against the
Eagles and Cards, but how long
can they keep it up? The Bears
aren’t quite as bad as their 2-4
record indicates and should prove
it in this week’s inter-divisional
—

Baltimore 24, Detroit 14—Eas-

Spectrum
Top Ten
1. Ohio St. (4-0)
2. Notre Dame (4-0)
3. Alabama (5-0)

4. Arkansas (5-0)
5. Georgia Tech (5-0)
6. Texas

7.
8.
9.
10.

(4-1)

L.S.U. (4-0)
Syracuse (4-1)

Nebraska

(5-0)

(Tie) Florida (4-0)
Arizona St. (4-0)

Attend the
Holy Cross Game

-

Grid Picks

contest.

*

For those of you who viewed our most inauspicious
debut as an interviewer at the Pep Rally last Friday
night—-thanks for bearing w'ith us. It was sort of an
impromptu thing, due to the fact that we found out we
were going to do it just a few hours before the rally
actually started. Well, you know the rest—

a

=tA

ily the class of the league so far,
the Colts (5-1) haven’t lost since
the opening day of the season.

The old combination of Unitas,
Moore and Berry is clicking again,
and this year there are also some
pleasant surprises in the persons
of Lorick and Matte. The Lions
(4-1-1), however, will not be easy
going as the league’s best offense
(203 points for Baltimore) meets
the league’s best defense (only
71 scored against Detroit). An upset seems unlikely, but if one
does occur here, the Lions will
take over the inside track to the
Western Division title.
Green Bay 28, Los Angeles 20
—Disappointing is not the word
for the Packers' (3-3) performance
to date, and this will not be an
easy game for them. Hornung’s
kicking— or lack of it—has cost
them three games already, and
that is their total of losses so
far. Gabriel’s four TD passes led
the Rams (3-2-1) to a smashing
win over SF last week, and they
(Cont’d on P. 16)

cided that I should climb down
off cloud nine and get down to
the business at hand—that is,
“guessing” about this w e e k’s
major college contests.
Utilizing some lucky bounces
last week, I managed to compile
a very respectable 11-3-1 record.

Each of the three games that I
picked incorrectly was decided
by the margin of a single point.
A few converted FAT’s here and
there, and I could have boasted
an unblemished record for the
week also. By the way, I’m happy
to report that my two “friends”
from last week’s issue have decided to retire after rather disappointing results. My “hat-picker”
was 7-7-1, while his ‘buddy’, the
“coin-tosser”, was even worse at
6-8-1. I rest my case.
My record now stands at 44-213. My efforts are finally being
appreciated, though. A Goodyear
girl (let’s call her Miss X) called
me up at 4:00 a.m. to congratulate
me on “a job well done”.
NOTRE DAME 34, STANFORD
0—The Indians (2-3) travel to
South Bend to tackle the Fighting
Irish (4-0) after upsetting Rice
and scaring Washington and
U.C.L.A. They will be out for
bear, but Notre Dame will bag
the limit.
OREGON 14, WASHINGTON 7
—The Huskies (2-3) are the disappointment of the West this
year. Their place has been filled
by the surprisingly strong Webfoots (5-0). It is unfortunate that
Oregon does not play enough
games to qualify for the AAWU
crown, or they could find themselves in the Rose Bowl on the
first of January. A mild upset
here.

U.S.C. 32, CALIFORNIA 20—
The Trojans (3-2) will rebound
from their loss to Ohio State and
commence their campaign toward
the AAWU championship. The
Golden Bears (3-2), with Morton
passing, are

always dangerous.

John McKay’s boys will have to
be on their toes for the full 60
minutes.
TEXAS 24, RICE 0—When the
Longhorns (4-1) failed to convert
that 2-point conversion against
Arkansas, they may have lost
more than a game. The SWC
crown and a repeat trip to the
Cotton Bowl may be just a dream
now. Texas now has to pray for
an upset. Meanwhile, they had
better concentrate on their own
problems. The Owls (2-2) have not
lived up to expectations so far.
but they are liable to bust out at
any time, Texas will certainly
get a bowl bid this year, but they
are kind of fond of the game
held at Dallas.
MICHIGAN 27, MINNESOTA 10
—The Wolverines (3-1) are in the
same boat as Texas, A missed
PAT may have cost them a trip
to the Rose Bowl. They’ll bide
their time until Nov. 21, when
they come face to face with Ohio
State. The Gophers (2-2) will not
stand in their way.
PITTSBURGH 20, NAVY 14—
Before the season, this game was
picked as a pivotal one in the
East. Now it’s just a battle of
also-rans. The Middies (2-3), even
with the return of Staubach, have
yet to jell. And last week, they
lost their crack fullback, Pat
Donnelly. The Panthers (2-2-11
have not impressed either, but
(Cont’d on P. 19)

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STATE

UN1VERSITy"oF

NEW YORK AT

BUFFALO

I
VOLUME 15

iHHj

PREVIEW

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964

NO. 4

Eric Haas To Speak In Norton Monday
Senate Moves Socialist Candidate Talks About Race
Haas, Socialist Labor Party candidate for PresiTo Cut Board dent Eric
of the United States, will speak Monday at 3:30

Homecoming Lists Activities;

Queen Candidates Presented
The

ten

queen

finalists

for

Homecoming Weekend were chosen at a coffee hour Friday, October 2", in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge, and they were presented
to the student body on Wednesday in the Conference Theater.
Students who saw the queen candidates have the opportunity to
win a free dance ticket, which
will be given away at the Pep
Rally. The queen finalists appeared on Pic-A-Polka Saturday
and will also appear on Meet the
Millers today and on Liz Dribbon
Thursday.
The Annual Ugly Man Contest
will be sponsored once again this

the

marching band,

students,
fire dragons
proceed from there to Ro-

cheerleaders, and

will
tary Field. During the rally, the
queen candidates will be escorted
to the platform by members of
ROTC, and Carolyn Cooper will
crown the 1964 Homecoming
Queen. The members of the UB
football team will also be presented. In addition, the winners
of the oilcloth and fire-dragon
contests will be announced. The
trophies will be presented at the
dance. All groups are invited to
bring effigies to burn in the
bonfire. A mixer will follow the
Pep Rally in Norton Union.

HOMECOMING QUEEN CANDIDATE FINALISTS
year by Apha

Phi Omego Fraternity. The donations to the contest
will go to the United Fund drive,
and students may vote for the
candidate of their choice during
the week prior to Homecoming.
The Ugly Man contestants will
present skits at the Pep Rally
and the winner will be announced
at the dance Saturday night. A
trophy will also be presented.
In addition to the Ugly Man
skits, the Pep Rally will offer
a varied program of entertainment and fun. The Special Events
Committee is sponsoring a FireDragon Contest, and each firedragon entry will also present a
short skit. The Pep Rally will
originate at Clement Hall, and

Bus transportation directly to
and from the UB-V.M.I. game at

War Memorial Stadium will be
available. Round-trip tickets may
be purchased for 35 cents at the
Norton Union ticket booth from
Monday until Friday afternoon.
A limited number of tickets are
available. The buses will leave
campus at noon on Saturday and

will return after the game.

The Student Homecoming
Dance, featuring the music of
Gus Farrel, is at Kleinhans Music
Hall. Tickets are now on sale at
(he Norton ticket office for $3.50.
Special block prices are available
for tickets in groups of 10, 20,
and 30.

UC Registration For Coming
Semester Starts October 19
Registration for next semester
for all University College students, excluding N u r s e's, will
begin Monday, October 19. Students whose last names begin
with the letters designated below
will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for courses on the following days:
Oct.

Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.

Dec.
Dec.

19 through Oct: 23—C, F.
26 through Oct. 30—G, P.
2 through Nov. 6—R, W.
9 through Nov. 13—S.
16 through Nov. 20—A, B.
23 through Nov. 25—H, X.
30 through Dec. 4—K, L.
7 through Dec. 11—E, I,
J, O, Q, T, U, V.
14 through Dec. 18
M, N, Y.
21 through Dee. 23—D, Z.
—

Students will make appointments with the University College
Receptionist in Diefendorf 114
one week in advance of the above

scheduled times. At this time,
the Receptionist will give the
student registration cards and a
list of instructions to follow in
the subsequent registration procedures. 0. T: and P. T. students
will make appointments with Miss
Greenman and Miss Heap directly. Nursing students are advised
and registered through the School
of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments -at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day

in

January.

The second meeting of the Stu-

dent Senate got underway with
a recommendation by Mr. Berger,

Chairman of the Financial Committee, that the New Student Review receive an appropriation, of
$605 for the first issue of their
magazine. The Financial Committee would then review the
issue and decide whether or not
to allocate money for the following issues.
Speaking for the New Student
Review, Mr. Robert Feldman proposed an amendment that the
Senate appropriate $2440 total
subsidy for the year. Mr. Feldman explained that the Review
is “an embro magazine” and
could be a national magazine if
allocated $2100 for production.
He also stated that the large
sum of money would enable the
a better imuniversity
age to the community.” After
some
further discussion, the
Senate voted in favor of the
appropriation of $2030 for the
New Student Review.
Miss Gunsberg's motion, concerning a letter to Dr. Kaiser
from the student body proposing a rescheduling of spring vacation, was voted upon and
passed.
Also considered by the Senate
was a document condemning the
accusations and remarks made by
Representative John R. Pillion,
of Hamburg, in the House of Rep
resentatiyes on May 11, 1964 in
his address entitled “Academic
Freedom or Spiritual-Intellectual
Blackout?” Representative Pillion’s speech implied that “pipe
lines" for the Communist Party
lead into our University's faculty
and student body. He insinuated
that the Student Senate sponsored picketing of the House
Committee on Un-American Activities, on April 30 and 31, last
year was coordinated by a core
of small but “highly dangerous
pro-Communists” and made several references to “Communist or
pro
Communist student agita
tors.” He referred to the picketing of HCUA as a “Communist
organized and inspired group of
students” from SUNYB.
The motion, condemning Pillion’s speech, will be voted upon
at the next meeting of the Senate, pending its examination by
legal consul for the Student Senate. The motion proposed by
Henry Simon, was described by
David Frey as “perhaps one of
the most important documents
which this Student Senate will
ever make; It behooves us to
resist invasion of liberty of conscience and freedom of thought
in the case of others, for their
case, may become our own.”
The Senate also reaffirmed its
position on alcohol to be served
on campus. Rena Fisch, of the
Welfare Committee, moved that
Senate support the campaign to
bring alcoholic beverages to cam-

p.m. in the Conference Theater. After his speech there
will be a question and answer period as well as a coffee
hour in the Dorothy Haas Lounge. The program is sponsored by the Sociology Club.

Mr.

Socialist

Haas is editor of the
Labor Party’s official

newspaper, The Weekly People,
and is the author of a number
of books on socialism including,
Americanism of Socialism, Captiaiism: Breeder of Race Pre-

judice, and Socialistic Industrial
Unionism—The Workers Power.
His lastest work is The Reactionary Right—Incipient Fascism.
Organized in 1890, the Socialist
party claims to be the
original party of socialism, and
the only one which has survived

Labor

up to the present year. It has
entered candidates in every
presidential election since 1892
and in many state and city elections. Mr. Haas, there times candidate for president, is running
under the SLP platform which
advocates a classless society based
on collective ownership and control of social service, administered by a Socialist Industrial
Union government. Production
would be carried on for consumer
use instead of for profit. This

The president of the National Association of Women
Deans and Counselors, Miss Helen B. Schleman, will be
the main speaker at the dedication of UB’s seventh dormitory today at 11 ;00 a.m.
The $2,462,000 nine story dormitory, which will
house 500 upper-class women, will be named, “Carolyn
Tripp Clement Hall,” in honor of the late Mrs. Stephen
M. Clement, a distinguished community leader and philanthropist, who served on the University’s council for
-

21 years.

Miss Schleman has been Dean
Women at Purdue University
since 1947. Before joining the
Purdue staff in 1934 as director
of women’s residence halls, she
taught physical education for six
years at Ohio State University.
She is currently a member of the
President’s Education Committee
and the Committee on Employment of the Handicapped. She is
also a member of the National
Women’s Committee for Civil
Rights, and just completed a

of

three-year appointment as a mem-

ber of the Defense Advisors
Committee for Women in the
Service and chairman of the subcommittee on Education.
Aside from the significance of
the new dormitory to UB as a
growing institution, one hundred
years from now, local historians
legmonetary worth of the
acy, the century-old inheritance
will be highly prized by archivists of 2064 for its historical
value. The coins, representing
each denomination, including a
John F. Kennedy half dollar, have
been sealed in a copper box to
be placed in the cornerstone of
the new dormitory. University
officials expect that by 2064, the
contents of the box will be taken
out and presented to the Buffalo
and Erie County Historical Society.
Among the publications which

The last item of business for
the session was an amendment,
proposed by Henry Simon, to
abolish the Publications Board.
This amendment would delegate
the powers now held by the Publications Board to the Student
Judiciary, the Activities Committee of the Student Senate and
the editors of all campus publications.

'

government would be composed
of democratically elected representatives from all the industries
of the nation. The SLP program
also calls for a peaceful change
to solialism
from capitalism
through elections. The workers
would be organized into one
United Socialist Industrial Union
and would use their economic
and voting to realize the Socialist
Labor Party’s aims.

Clement Dorm Dedication Set;
Miss Schleman Will Speak

pus.

The pending amendment is the
result of charges that the Publi(Cont’d on P 8)

ERIC HAAS

HELEN B. SCHLEMAN

historians will find sealed in the
box are a "Buffalo Evening News
Almanac," a telephone directory
listing the faculty and staff at
the University during the 19634 year, a summation of the history of UB leading to a merger
between the former University
of Buffalo and the State University of New York, copies of President Furnas’ Annual Reports,
and a photograph of Mrs. Clement with news articles regarding
her achievements and her death.
The dedication ceremony is
open to the public.

�PAGE TWO

Dormitory officers for the 1964
■65 House Councils were selected
during the week of September
27. Each hall elected a president,
vice-president,
secretary,
and
treasurer. Inter residence Council (IRC) representatives were
also chosen in accordance with
one student representing one
hundred and fifty residents

Tower Hall selected John Der
president, Sandy Simon
for vice-president. I’etc Himmcl
for secretary, and Gorden Necy
for treasurer. The IRC representative is Allan Mellis. Two
other students from Tower will
be elected during the general
election for IRC officers, which
will take place Monday from
noon to 7:00 p.m. in Goodyear,
Clement, and Tower lounges.
vay for

The officers for Clement Hall
are: Susan Orlofsky, Lauren Ja
cobs, Linda Ross and Betty Monjellow for president, vice president, secretary and treasurer, respectively. Paulette Bohnen, Susan
Landerson, and Barbara
Landefield were elected the' IRC
representatives.

Mary Ellen Frazier was chosen
by Cooke Hall residents as president. Other officers are Susan
Weinstein, vice-president; Joan
Breckenridge, secretary; Kathy
McDonald, treasurer; and Ann
Hamilton, IRC.

Newly elected president of McDonald Hall, Ellen Murphy, said.
“MacDonald Hall, as all dormitories, will be as active as her
residents wish her to be. Since
MacDonald houses mainly senior
women, this year's program will
be geared toward the plans and
opportunities of the residents
following graduation." Evelyn
Chapin, Isabelle Goldberg, Barbara Toph, and Donna Weinstein
were elected vice president, sec
retary, treasurer and IRC repre
sentative, respectively.

dorm, Schoel-

Ikopf Hail, Gary Soehner was
elected president, Barbara Barna
was elected vice-president, and
Sue Shulman, John Mossey, and
Dick Butt were elected secretary, treasurer, and IRC repre

sentative

respectively.

Separate elections were held in
Goodyear East and Goodyear
South. Goodyear East elected
Helene Friedman as president,
Marilyn Saladin as vice-president,
Donna Lisson as secretary, Sara
Silverstein as treasurer, and Mar
sha Himmler and Judy Goldstein
as IRC representatives. Helene
Friedman expressed her feelings
about the dormitory's objectives:
"Our responsibility is study, our
aim is warmth, our home is Good
year

Convocation
Program Begins

Gould Appointed President

Samuel B. Gould, former c :hancellor of the University
of California'and president of the Educational Broadcasting System, became the new president of the State University of New York by ap ipointment x)f -the trustees,
September 1, 1964. As new State University President,
hopes to transform the Uni iversity from a “loose federof the he
unity,” resembling the
program ation” to one with “a sense of

The appearances of Senator
Kenneth B. Keating and Mr. Robert F: Kennedy before the stu
dent body Friday. October 2 and
Saturday. October 3 respectively,

marked the beginning
1964-65 Convocations
under the chairmanship of Joe

Sedita.
Mr. Sedita believes, “The purpose of the Committee is to pro
vide a service to the academic
community as a whole." In keeping with such a goal, such controversial personalities as Mr.
Keating and Mr. Kennedy provide students with a valuable in-

sight into the issues concerning

politics and

politicians.

multiplexity of the University of

raised in New York City. After
receiving his Bachelor’s Degree
in English Literature from Bates
College in 1930, where he was
also elected to Phi Beta Kappa,
he earned his Masters from New
York University. In addition, he
holds two honorary doctorate
degrees, one from Bates College
and the other from Wilberforce
University. He studied at Oxford
.in 1931 and at Harvard in 1941.
Before World War'll, Dy. Gould

Reminding the student body
that "no matter what the program, all are geared to the level
of the general lay audience,”
Mr, Sedita feels certain that all
students will be alble to benefit
from at least some of the speakers who will be presented.

Paldo Speaks
An associate professor of mar
keting from the State University
of Buffalo will speak at the
American Marketing Association
Conference to be held in Chicago,
December 28.
Dr. Kristian S, Palda will speak
on “An Examination of the Hypothesis of Hierarchial Adver
Using Effects." He will also be
chairman of a panel discussion,

“The Measurement of Advertising Effects,"

The Czechoslovakian born professor his been a Canadian citizen since 1956 and has taught
at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes
Commerciales, Montreal, and at
Faculte de Commerce, Universite
Laval,

Quebec.

He received his bachelor 's and
master's degree from Queen's
University, Kingston. Ontario,
and his Ph.D.- in 1963 from the
University of Chicago.

Massachusetts.

During the War; he served as
a naval officer, and was honored

with the American Theatre Ribbon, the Pacific Theatre Ribbon,
two combat stars, the Commendation Ribbon, and the Presidential
Unit Citation with bronze star.
He is presently a Lieutenant Commander in the United States
Naval Reserve.
Dr. Gould was president of
Antioch College, and Chancellor
of the University of California at
Santa Barbara. In 1960 he travelled to Yugoslavia to select a
delegation of Yugoslavian leaders
to visit the United States. While
in that country, he studied the
higher education system of totali-

tarian nations.
More recently, Dr. Gould
served as president of the Educa-

tional Broadcasting System, dur-

ing which time he brought to the
New York metropolitan area its
first non commercial VHF educational television station.
Civic affairs occupy much of
Dr, Gould’s time. He is a trustee
of Salzburg Seminar, Bates College, the Broadcasting Foundation of America, the Thomas Alva
Edison Foundation, the Charles

tional Institute for Labor EducaF. Kettering Foundation, the Nation and Wilberforce University.
He is vice president of the Division of Education and Home
Safety, Greater New York Safety
Council, and a member of the

At a meeting of the Publications Board Friday, October 2,
John P. Kowal was elected new
Spectrum editor, replacing Mar
tin Kriegel.

Mr. Kowal served as Managing
Editor of thQ Spectrum for two
years previous to which he was

California.
Dr: Gould replaces Dr. Thomas
VV. Hamilton, who resigned January 9, 1963 to become president
of the University of Hawaii. The
new President was born and

In the future, the Convocations
Committee plans to bring to the
campus noted
lecturers from
various departments,' to supplement students’ education. With
the help of Dr. McMullen, a
biology series will begin in late
November. Also tentatively scheduled is another “Damn Good taught English and Speech at a
Sampling Series,” possibly in- senior high school in West Hartvolving American poets. The ford, Connecticut. In 1936, he
Committee also hopes to pre- married Laura Ohmar. Following
his marriage, he was appointed
sent an increased variety of programs in the social sciences and head of speech arts in Brookline,

liberal arts.

Kowal Elected
Spectrum Editor

’

Inter-Residence
Council Chosen

From the co-ed

Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

DR. SAMUEL B. GOULD
Circulation Department Committee, New York Public Library

Board of Trustees, and the Citizens Advisory Committee to the
Office of Cultural Affairs of the
Mayor of New York.
In his "leisure” time, Dr. Gould
enjoys such sports as mountain
climbing, swimming and tennis.
Although he and his wife now re-

side in an Albany home, he plans
to travel extensively, for both
business and pleasure.

Student Senate

from P. 1)
cations Board has been ineffective in aiding student publications and has attempted to stiffle
academic freedom, freedom of
speech and of the press by setting inconsistent and arbitrary
standards. The amendment was
defended by Presidential Assistant Arthur Burke on the grounds
that the Student Association Constitution states implicitly that
the Student Senate is responsible
to act as the agent of students
in the presentation of student
opinion in all matters effecting
student affairs. The Student Senate has all powers to implement
this. The Student Publications
Board has no place in the presentation of student opinion. It
has served to thwart student
opinion in all matters.
The Senate will vote on the
amendment at their next meeting
Dct. 20. The last major constitutional amendment was adopted
(Cont’d

ft
JOHN KOWAL

News Editor and special reporter.
He was co-editor of both the R
and the Alternative, forerunners
to the present New Student Review publication. In addition, Mr.
Kowal was Sales Promotion Editor of the 1964 Buffalonian.

Currently, Mr, Kowal is preparing a series of articles for
publication in several national
magazines, and is the author of
a book on the • techniques of
journalism. He will serve as Editor for the 1964-65 school year.

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What every

Susan Gallaurosi, president of
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point
said
“I

-

—

�Friday,

October 9, 1964

Keating Speaks
On Issues
Last Friday Senator Kenneth
B. Keating, the Republican incumbent candidate for the Senate seat from New York State,
addressed the student body from
the outdoor terrace of Norton
Union. After being met at the
airport by representatives, of the

PAGE

SPECTRUM

Kochery Named Executive
By American Bar Association
Mr. David R. Kochery, profes-

sor of law at the State Univer-

sity of Buffalo, has been named
Executive to the American Bar
Association Section of Judicial
Administration.

Professor Kochery, who will
retain his position at the University, will be responsible for
the administrative supervision of
the National Conference of State
Appellate
Trial Judges, the
Judges Conference, and the Coordinating Committee for Effective Justice.

A member of the University fa-

culty since 1953, Professor Kochery received his law degree from
Yale Law School in 1949. He also
attended Indiana University and
the Indiana University’s School
of Law. Prior to the State University at Buffalo, he taught at
the University of Kansas,
He conducted judicial seminars in various states under, the
auspices of the Joint Committee

for tthe Effective Administration
of Justice. He has been utilized
for several years as a labor arbitrator by management and
labor.

Faculty Reception
Invitations have been mailed to
all State University of Buffalo
faculty members inviting them
to attend the annual faculty reception to be held by Dr. and
Mrs, Clifford C. Furnas.
The reception, held in honor
of all new faculty members, will
take place Sunday, from 3:00
p.m. to 6:00 p.m. in the Goodyear Hall Tenth Floor Dining
Room on the campus.

THREE

Those interested in running as a candidate for
the position of senator
from the College of Arts
&amp;
Science must pick up
petitions on Monday in the
Senate Office, Room 225
Norton.

KLEIN HANS
Downtown Buffalo

import $hop

Boulevard Mall

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SENATOR KEATING

DELIVERY

Student Senate he proceeded by
motorcade to the campus.
Complete Text

of

Keating Address
12

see page

After his speech the Senator
visited President Furnas in his
office. While there, President
Furnas asked Senator Keating to
sign the guest book, and he did
so bv writing, “U.S.S. N. Y. 196465”.

Kennedy Attacks
Goldwater

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else. I have ties here. We
pay taxes in the State of New
York."
Before leaving Mr. Kennedy
added a little friendly advice. He
said that we are dependent upon
an educated people and that we
must, “face up to the problem
and do something about them”.
While discussing the role of the
educated person he said that,
'we have an opportunity and a
responsibility” When asked if
the Senatorial seat was a stepping stone for the Presidency
Mr. Kennedy remarked, “Then,
New York state is going to get
MW. J&gt;ke Senator.''
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Last Saturday, Democratic candidate Robert Kennedy spoke to
the student body as the second
part’ of the Convocations Committee’s program.
The bulk of his speech was an
attack on Barry Goldwater. Following his talk there was a question and answer period. When
asked how he felt about the afternoon football game he said,
“I’m for the University of Buffalo.” When asked if he had
ever run for elected office before
he said, “No. Have you?” When
asked why he chose the State of
New York he replied, “I lived in
New York State longer than any

College Shop,

Downtown

�Jrom the Editor

.

.

A New Crime Series:

.

ABOLISH THE PUBLICATIONS BOARD
Article One of the Student Publications Board Constitution states:
“Publications under the jurisdiction of this board
shall be those Student Publications: (a) receiving
income from the Student Activities fee or other
State University of New York at Buffalo funds, or
(b) offered for sale to the student body or to the
general public, or (c) those identified by title, address, or content as produced at the State University of New York at Buffalo.”
What is the Publications Board?
The board is a body consisting of seven students all
of whom are appointed, not elected. The board also has
two non-voting advisors, one from the faculty the other
from the administration. It is worthy to note that:
“No editor or business manager of a student publication recognized by the board may sit as a voting
J
member.”
Thus those people with direct knowledge of publications and their problems are filtered out. Granted that
these board members may be men of good will, not wishing to misuse their power or authority, they still lack the
experience necessary to execute their duties.
How has the boards powers been used?
A good case in point would be that of the ALTERNATIVE. A personality clash between certain members
of the board and the editors resulted in this publications
demise. Later the same editors came back with the ‘R’,
the results were the same. After the passage of a year
and the changing of several board members the publication was approved
it’s name
the NEW STUDENT
REVIEW.
Is the Board Effective?
Granted that the board can regulate or eliminate
any responsible publication and its editor. What can it
do about the fly-by-night publications that give collegiate
journalism a bad name? Consider, for example, a “news
letter” that appeared on campus during last year’s Senate elections. It made an extensive and hear libelous
attack on the Spectrum’s financial policy. When the
Spectrum’s editor brought it to the attention of the Publications Board, he was assured that the Board would
prevent such distorted publications in the future. The
next day the “news letter” was being distributed in
Norton. Again the Board failed.
What can be done about this gap in student governr
Abolish the Publications Board.
What about the powers that the Board has?
According- to the amendment, now on the floor of
the Senate, the powers of the publications board would
be delegated in the following manner:
(1) The legal powers be delegated to the Student
Judiciary. The reason being that the Judiciary is
far more prepared to deal with the legal problems
that publications present.
(2) The power to recognize new publications
would be delegated to the Student Senate Activities Committee. The reason being that all new
activities a re recognized by this committee.
(3) The power to choose an editor be given to the
previous editor with the approval of the Executive
Committee of the Student Senate. The reason being that an editor is the best judge of Journalistic
talent, ability and potential. The Executive Committee is a safeguard against a publications dominance by any one interest group.
It behooves the Student Senate to pass this amendment to the Constitution for several reasons. First, it
would eliminate a useless and potentially dangerous
branch of student government. Second, the Board as an
institution has been a failure- This is largely due to the
lack of knowledge of the student members of the board.
Third, the division of powers between several branches
of student government would prevent the exercise of
dictatorial control over student publications.
—

THE

—

SPECTRUM

official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

-

JOHN P KOWAl

Editors

lay-out Editor
Paul Nussbaum
David Edelman
Copy Editor
Barbara Strauss
Marcia Ann Orzulak
Gary Falk
Spotts Editor
Alan Scholom
William Siemenng
Bernard Dikman
Business Mgr
Advertising Mgr.
Dallas Garber
Howard Auerbach
Thomas Haenle
Photo Editor
Edward Joscelyn
Staff Vicki Bugelski, Trudy Stern, Peter Rubm, Jeremy Taylor, Marge Rakita,
Sue Greene, Eileen Murphy, Gary lyman, Gary Chilcott, Nancy Migdol, Jeanne Stoll,
Don Eismann, Meryl Frank, Ruth Ann Suskind, Sharon Heend, Mary Lou Kozlowski,
Rita Solomon. Phyllis Shapiro, Jill Aginsky,. Larry Siegel, Skip Venneri, Linda Leventhal,
Sharon R.chter, D-ane Holt/man, Diane Hayes, Manon Michael, Erol Sull Ellen Long
Linda Wachner
Feature Editor
Editorial Advisor
Financial Advisors

■

Photography Staff
Blank

David Collins, Peter Bonneau,

Ivan Makuch, Susan Wertman

Don

Staff
Chick Arnold. Richard Drandoff, Steve Feigin, Stan Lichwala, Steve
Schuelem, Skip Blumberg, Mike Castro, Lenny Gaby, Bruce Goldstein, George Jackrel,
Steve Oberstem, Erie Snyder, Harvey Starr

Sport*

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
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New

By JAMES B. GREEN
As you remember, dear reader,
we last left our hero, the Krist
of Monte Carlo, in the clutches of
his arch enemy Smash Smersh.
who was about to bury Kris
under a landslide of Bobby Kennedy buttons. How did our hero
escape such an ignominious end?

Don’t ask stupid questions.
Suffice it to say we now find
our hero in his Tower Penthouse,

furnished in State Unmatching,
sipping a snifter of Mogen David
'56 and reading his News of the
Week in Review. Suddenly, there
is a knock or two at the door,
and Kris, his every instinctive reflex acting instinctively, jumps
behind his chair, his Daisy .25 at
the ready (unfortunately the
ready was over on the nighttable).

“Entree,” said our hero in his

suave soprano voice.

“No thanks, I just ate,” came
the reply from behind the door.
“I meant ‘come in’.”

With that, the door flew open
and there stood a faceless girl
with hair on her neck, a Harley
Davidson gear shift in one hand,
a pineapple in the other, and
her Living Bra dying of malnutrition. She was covered in a bulky
sweater, a bulky shirt, bulky paisley leotards, and her hair hung
straight down over her shoulders
and face.
“What are you?” asked our
hero, laughing convulsively.
“I'm a beatnik.”
"No.”

I’m also a liberal.”
"You’d have to be. Say, do you
have a face under that unkempt
growth?” ■
With that, the girl took a rubber band off her wrist and, in
less time than it takes to say
House Committee on Un-American Activities, she had tied her
hair straight back so tightly she
had two mouths where her nose
should have been.
“Better?" she asked.
“You didn't get hit with the
ugly
swallowed it. And
what is that odor you’re wearing?"

“Toilet water."
“Figures. Well, what can I do

for

circulation 9000
Advertising

&lt;jCetterS

to

TO THE EDITOR:

In my brief experience as a
college student, I have often
become annoyed and despondent
in the effort to gain a higher education. I have, many times, envisioned this brain factory as a
huge psychological laboratory,
processing thousands of subjects
through a maize, which I affectionately termed the University,
in order to prepare them for the
rat race of human life. A continuous cycle is put into effect
from the start of the experiment
to the end, where, as many as
four hundred subjects are crammed into a small room. At the
beat of the hour, the knowledgeable one, who already has been
through this rat race, steps up
to the podium and delivers his
message to the edification and
thrill of his students. Some fifty

minutes later the student emerges
from this clustered little sanctuary to delve into the newest
textbook, costing $7,95 or more,
to study and expand upon what
the knowledgeable one has said.
And so, on and on goes this rat
race until you pile up enuogh
little
goodies, called
quality

points and credit hours, to enable
the subject to receive that little
piece of pressed wood pulp which
will enable him to proceed out
into the world and lay the same
at his feet.
Yes, that’s the way college life
often appears to me. Professor
Gotta To Get-Paid steps up to
the desk to deliver his lecture in
order to get it over and get out,
leaving problems and questions

in the hands of his “most capable” graduate student assistants.
Once in a while, as has happened today, a prof steps up and
conveys a message of more than
just required material. As his

To the Editor

At its annual meeting held at
Hartwick College on May 2, the
New York State Conference of
American Association of University Professors, representing 2000
professors on the staff of 33 col-

the Editor
mouth opens and closes, rays of
interest are emitted from between
his nicotine stained teeth, that
tell the student that this is more
than just another teacher, but
one who actually takes an interest as well as pride in conveying
his message to his students. Professor Sincere Interest, as I
choose to call him, gives a sin-

cere and honest message
one
which says that all this toil and
effort is not worthless, but useful and practical knowledge. Prof.
Interest does more than lecture
on his own little corral of knowledge, but expands and talks
about the ever-changing world
about us and helps us to envision
that there is a need for us college
students in the world of today.
It is my belief that an educathe aforementioned
tor with
ability and interest in his students, as well as his work, can
make a world of difference to the
people who take his course. Regardless how insignificant his
subject may be to our future
station in life, he is far more
-

valuable than his counterpart,
Professor Gotta Tu. Get-Paid. For
he not only educates the mind,
but helps to develop it outside
his sphere of influence, showing
the students the value and pleasure of understanding and helping his fellow man.
Thus, I openly make a plea, not
only to the professors of this
institution, but to all the educators of our country, whether on
college, high school, or grammar
school level to inflict a little of
yourself into your classes. Show
the students you are human!
Show the students that you are
interested in them and it will
make a world of difference, both
to your own attitude, and especially, to that of your students.
Roger Schleicher

freedom of thought and freedom
to question; and took the initiative to resist the challenge to
these freedoms by the House
Un-American Activities Committee at its hearings in Buffalo.

Dr. Rozanne M. Brooks
Secretary, N. Y. State
AAUP Conference

leges, unanimously passed a resolution commending the students
of State University of New York
Units who displayed their deep
concern for freedom of speech,

State University College
Cortland, New York

you?”

"Well, I'm here on behalf of
Youth Against. We need help.”
"No kidding."
“Really. We were trying to
organize a Youth Against Blank

Week and . . .”
Blank
"Yes. You fill in whatever you

want and the organization then

comes out against the

three
blanks with the most votes. Anyway, wo were trying to organize
this week on campus, but we got

“Well, what can I do to help?”
asked out here, smelling both
adventure and toilet water.
“You sec this gearshift? It used
to belong to our club's president:
someone ambushed him as he was
braving our rally in the basement
of the power-plant last night, and
this was all we found of him or
his bike. We want you to track
down the dirty fascist-conservative-meanies who did this to him.
All we can give you is this gearshift with a fingernail print on
it to go with ummmmmmm . . .
You know what .1 mean. Will you
take the case?”
“You bet,” said Kris.“But what
about the pineapple?’’
“I like pineapples. Do you
mind 0

York

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Krist-Monte Carlo

bogged down in red tape, of all
things."

The

News

Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Will Kris really take the ease,
or will he Settle for a fifth? Will
Youth Against get the help it so
desperately needs” Will Dondi
trap Chuck and exonerate Dave?
Who cares?

TO THE EDITOR;

On October of this year Senator
Keating spoke on the campus
of the State University of New
York at Buffalo. At this same
time a person, carrying a Goldwater-Millcr poster, walked in
front of the Norton Union terrace
where people had gathered to
hear the Senator. The person was
met with heckling, booing, and
daring words. As she approached
the center of the arena where
people had gathered, fellow “human beings” pulled at her sweater; grabbed at her sign; persecuted her with words, such as
“whore,” "bitch,” and “wench;"
and literally deprived her of one

of our most cherished privileges,
that of self-expression.
They who vexed and humiliated
this courageous person figuratively tore the hairs from her
body and caused her to sweat
blood. These “human beings," one
would surmise, were protesting
the candidates. If those persecutors supported other candidates,
we question vchmently whether
these persons were really supporting the principles to which

their candidates must adhere. Is
it not the duty of the President
and the Vice President to uphold
the Constitution of this "democratic’' land? If you answer "yes"
to this question, how can you possibly say that you support your
potiential candidates when you
check the very principles for
which they must stand? Stated in
our Bill of Rights is the privilege

freedom of speech. How can you
possibly be a Human Being, and
supposedly uphold these high
principles and privileges, and yet
negate them for your own ultraistic goals? Is this not a personification of the “old story,” it is
wrong for him to do that, but for
me, it is fine.
The attitude of direct hostility
toward someone endeavoring to

express his views reminds us of
the statement, “I may not agree
with what you say, but I will
defend with my life your right
to say it." Just try to understand
this statement. This part* will not
hurt! The part that may hurt is
injecting this proposition into action, and in doing so, allowing
others to speak, and express
themselves freely.
We, are positive that the persons persecuting this poster carrier will express or have in the
past expressed their privilege of
speech in many ways. We, also,
feel confident that they would
not appreciate attempts by others
to deprive them of their privileges. Let us all, now and in the
future, respect other person’s
rights and privileges, and act
like Human Beings, thereby
bringing

compassion,

humility,

and respect for others into our
campus lives, and thus set an
example for the whole nation to
view.

Adopted by the Wesley Foundation, October 4, 1964,

Teddar Brooks, President

�Friday, October 9, 1964

Xiberally Educated Man Aim
Of UB's AFROTC Program
As new freshmen quickly learn,
they are required to enroll in

Basie AFROTC for their first two
years at UB.
This can be a profitable and
interesting experience or it can
bC a drudgery for the students
profitable if viewed
involved
from the standpoint of experi—

ence gained through fellowship
with other classmates, from learning to work as a team, and from
examining such subjects as the
difficulties we must overcome before we land on the moon; drudgery if approached with the wrong

attitude.
What is the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps
(AFROTC)? What can I gain from
AFROTC? What will AFROTC
and the Air Force require of me?
These are questions asked by UB
freshmen during Orientation
Week and the purpose of this
article is to answer these questions for you.
What is the image of AFROTC
at UB? Does ii conform to the
popular concept of long tedious
hours of marching to and fro
across a drill field, or more mo-

notonous lectures on map reading: how to disassemble an M-14
rifle? No! This concept does not
exist at UB. We believe in education, not indoctrination. The
purpose of AFROTC is to select
and educate qualified young men
who, upon graduation, arc commissioned Second Lieutenants
in the United States Air Force,
To meet increasing demands
imposed by current technology
and management requirements,
the four year AFROTC program
is academic. It is designed to
provide the background and education necessary for you to compete and excel in a vital and
challenging job. AFROTC, then,
is the opportunity to use your
UB education to become a leader,
manager, expert—an officer in
the finest and largest organiza-

tion in the world.
Since AFROTC is

academic, it

complements your UB program

and prepares you to accept the
responsibilities of a United States
citizen. During the first two
years of Air Science, students explore the foundations and fundamentals of aerospace power and
how it is related to our national
policies and goals. Advanced students undertake a thorough study
of such subjects as leadership,

management, organization of the
Defense Department, and the
characteristics of the solar systern. Practice in the communicative arts—writing and speaking—is started in the sophomore year
and continued until excellence
is achieved in the senior year.
Air Science courses provide opportunity for independent research, student symposiums and
projects which encourage selfexpression. The AFROTC curriculum is not a training program

designed to impart pure military
skills but. rather, to further the
UB concept of the liberally educated man. Its purpose is to make
you aware of the importance of

the individual, of aerospace
power and its functions, and how
American ideology and policy influence world relations.
Extracurricular activities include Operation Turnout, November 7, where all cadets attend a
football game as a Corps, Arnold
Air and fchennault Societies initiations and dinner parties, and
the Air Force Dining-In at the
Niagara Falls Officers’ Club. As
a freshman you will have the
opportunity to join the Advanced
Course cadets on base visitation
flights to such places as Keesler,
Wright-Patterson and Patrick
(Cape Kennedy) Air Force Bases,
flying to these locations in Air
Force aircraft. You can join them
at the Military Ball, April 17, to
da*nce to the Air Force Band and
Singing Sergeants at the Connecticut Street Armory. (This
affair is restricted to AFROTC
cadets, their dates, and invited
guests). Prior to this function you
will be asked to donate your
blood to the American Red Cross,
March 25.
In all these events, including
the outdoor leadership laboratory
program, you will be given an

opportunity to lead others. Your
four years of AFROTC can be
profitable and interesting.
Today, the Air Force places
emphasis on youth, education,

The young Air
and initiative.
Force officer is, a leader-manager
first and a specialist second. He
has responsibility and decisive
power comparable to senior management in industry. The strong
academic and leadership education of AFROTC will prepare you
to meet such challenges as an
Air Force officer or as a civilian
business executive.

Orientation Program Planned
Announcement of an orientation program especially designed
for freshmen men has been made
by Dean Roger W. Gratwick, Dean
of Men, after the weighing of
many variables so as to select
topics of the greatest value to
entering men.
The success of the freshmen

women’s orientation program has
motivated a similar program for
freshman men beginning Monday.
It will consist of three presentations as follows:
Monday—The History And Traditions Of Our Campus—Its Development, Color and Humor. A

panel

discussion

standing senior

by three outprofessor: Dr.

Willard H. Bonner, Professor of
English; Dr. John T. Horton, Professor and Chairman of the History Department; and Dr. Oscar
A. Silverman, Professor of English and Director of Libraries.
October 19, 1964—The Conduct
of Sex—A frank discussion by
Daniel A. Nichols, M.D., designed
for college men concerning the
psychological and physiological
aspects of sex in a heterosexual

environment.
October 26, 1964—Our University in Transition and Your Future in It. Effects of the merger
of the University of Buffalo with
the State University of New York
and implications of our movement to the new’ campus for men

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

of the class of 1968 will be discussed by Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow. Dean of Students.
The syllabus was chosen because it expands the academic
aspects of the general orientation program. Student interest
in such a project and the ability
to secure the best possible speakers for the topics suggested, were
other factors taken into consideration.
All presentations will be made
in the Theater-Conference Room
of Norton Hall. Each will be followed by a small group discussion
(20 students or less) and a reception coffee hour.

Literature and Drama
Committee of the Union
Board presents:
David Posner
on

“MODERN POETRY
WITH READINGS’'
Lecture and Coffee Hour
Thursday, Oct. 22
3:00-4:00 p.m.
Room 344, Norton

REFLECTIONS

No More
Mr. Charlie

By JEREMY TAYLOR

By LARRY SIEGEL

1 walked up to an old weatherbeaten shack to find out if the
people who lived there would
register to vote. No one was
home, but from the back of the
shack I could hear noise and
laughter, so I went around to
see what it was. There were four
or five dark-skinned, big-eyed,
beautiful children playing. Their
laughter stopped when they saw
me. Their faces grew long and
their eyes went to the ground.
Almost all movement stopped. 1
went over to a little boy and
asked him if his mommy or daddy
was home.
"No sir,” he said.
I stooped down next to him and
said to him that my name was
Larry and that he did not have
to call me Mr. Larry. 1 tried to
explain that there was no need
to say "ya sir'' and "no sir" to
me. Slowly he lifted his head and
saw that I was smiling at him.
And almost as slowly his long
face turned into a broad smile.
When the other children saw
this, they started to giggle and
moved cautiously closer. 1 asked
them all their names. I think
they sensed that 1 was not their
enemy, but their friend, because
they eagerly told me their names.
After a while we were all sitting
on the ground talking and getting to know each other. They
wanted to know if I was a "freedom fighter.” They knew about
the civil rights workers in Mississippi and got very excited
when they found out that there
were people like this in their
ow n town. Soon the air was again
filled with the same noise and
laughter that I had heard before.
Many incidents like this one
occurred throughout the summer.
I found out that these children
were eager to talk and to be
talked to. The children are often
neglected, because both parents
work long hard hours and when
they get home they are so tired
and sometimes angry that they
pay no attention to their children.
In fiict, no one really pays any
attention to them at all. They
yearn for attention so much that
they are almost bursting. School
is not good for them, because
the teachers have to teach what
the state tells them, to teach. And
you can imagine what the slate
of Arkansas tells the Negro teachers to teach. If they don’t comply, they will be fired. Children
go to school with no books, because books have to be bought.
They do not go to school when
cotton has to be picked or when
any other work has to be done.
Like all children, these young
people want to be needed, they
want to learn, they want to be
cared for, and they want to express what is inside them. But
adults here arc so bitter about
the system they live under that
often times they take it out on
their kids. Also parents spend
most of their time trying to make
ends meet so there is little time
for anything else,
Even though these children arc
young, they know what’s going
on. They wear their SNCC buttons so proudly. And if another
youngster tries to take it away,
you’ll see a terrific fight. Somehow they know things are changing and they want to be part of
that change. Being with these
children so much during the
summer made me realize exactly
why I was doing this voter registration work. It is for their lives
that I am fighting for freedom.
If you saw the looks on their
faces when you play with them,
teach them something or give
them a book for their very own,
you would cry, Their look shows
a hunger for attention, for concern, and love. I wonder if I can
give them anything approaching
what they need. I know there
isn’t anything I will not do for
them and I know that other
people will not forget them.
—

'

Since I was brought up loosely
as an Episcopalian, the first step
in my search for a personal faith
was to leave the realization fore
ed upon me that all faith was
personal, and no matter what
anybody said, all men, even Episcopalians, believed and acted as
they pleased without regard for

revealed truth; that the act of
belief was personal. This realization came synonymously with
a great spiritual discomfort about
the possibility of pain and mis
erys being “part of God’s plan.”
The thought appalled me, although the question seemed beyond human proof.
Having begun my search at
this intellectual point, the crucial
question seemed to be, “Is there
Goa;
Later, the question was
rephrased to "Is there a God?”
I then decided that if 1 asked
that question, the answers I
could hope to find were themselves questions, and I began a
search for the right question.

The methodology I employed was

solitary and purely intellectual;
I thought about God in a preadolescent vacuum until eventually I stumbled on Liberal Religious Youth. Through the fellowship of people my own age, 1
broke the impasse and began to
experience my search totally instead of with my mind alone.
The question was then, “Is there
right and wrong?” Through exploration of this question, I eventually abandoned the absolu
tism of "right and wrong” and
faced for the first time a world
where spiritual certainty was an

impossibility, where
tentative
truth could only be substantiated
by the quality of my own experience, The question then became, "How should we live?”
This is the question with which
I live now. I believe it has answers, although the crucial step
toward those answers was taken
even before I began to question
“God's plan.” That step was to
Take my life seriously, to believe
that life could have meaning.
Without that attitude, I would
never have begun the search.
The faith by which I live now
grew out of that search for the
right question. I believer that
human life, of and by itself, is
meaningless. I believe that there
is no God, although I believe
further that the question itself
is of little importance. I believe
that “the human community” is
a reality and not just a shibboleth, constructed by liberals to
prove their point.
The highest endeavor of this
human community is love. I be-

any person in the
world can love any other person
and that the function of society
should be to maximise this potential in every individual, or,
more precisely, to open the maximum number of channels to the
individual's potential to love. The
primary method through which
this potential is expressed is
that human exchange
dialogue
in which all participants are altered in direct proportion to the
quality of the encounter. The
quality of the encounter is governed in great degree by the
element of risk in the encounter,
that is, the degree to which the
participants are willing to haz-

lieve that

—

Monday through Saturday, October 17 will be a
very special week at UB.
This is the week during
which students will be
given the opportunity to
help conquor a killer leukemia. Sigma Alpha Mu,
in conjunction with the
Ernie Davis Memorial
Foundation will sponsor a
-

ard and expose those things
which they believe are of importance. It is through dialogue
and risk that the reality of the
human community is recognized,
and that love is made genuinely
possible.

The ethic which I have devethis vision of the
world is that I must never betray
the possibility of the dialogue.
I must never withdraw from that
encounter which, no matter how
dangerous or painful it may be,
has in it the possibility of meaningful confrontation with “otherness". According to my ethic,
the refusal to withdraw from
such encounters is not sufficient;
there must also be an effort to
initiate and seek out such dialogues and multi-logues.
I began my career in higher
learning with a great interest
in philosophy but soon discovered that academic philosophy
(with the possible exception of
existential criticism of arts and
politics) was arid and totally
unrelated to the pressing questions of life taken seriously. I
am no longer engaged in academic philosophy, but I hope
that the philosophic considerations I am engaged in at the mo :
ment are no less vital for that
reason. I have turned to literature and the arts in my search
for a method of making my
search for a personal faith more
the
relevant and meaningful
multi-logue of images. The human
experience cannot be distilled into terms and verbal relationships,
although I have tried to capture
the broad outlines of my own
search here. The literature of
images, and most particularly
the cinema, have become my
chosen means of expressing those
things which I believe to be of
crucial importance: love, creativity, dialogue, and risk.
1 have also come to believe that
the commitment of creating a
meaningful life can not be fragmented into disciplines. I believe , that I must live my commitmeht to the meaning I have
found in my life, and to the
means by which I discovered it,
as a total effort. My ethic has
led me to "conscientiously object” to war as a means of settling political and social differences, and to expend my energies in efforts to reform institutions in order that they may
better recognize and serve the
needs of the human community
and enhance the human experiloped from

—

ence.
My search for a personal faith
is no longer totally philosophical.
It continues, based on an existential commitment to the pos-

sibilities of human life, which
itself is in a constant state of
dynamic reappraisal. It is involved with such questions as,
"How do I love those whom I
love?”, "How may I best make
my position relevant
to the
specific problems which I.face?”
and “How best may I engage
in a dialogue with a world which
is frightened, fragmented, and
disillusioned?” My search is involved with ideas and images,
with people and meaningful edu
cation, and also with writing this
statement which, because of the
nature of my search, can never
be complete.

fund-raising drive, the proceeds of which will go to
the Foundation for research and development of
a cure for this fatal disease. The final boost for this
worthy cause will lake
place at the V.M.I. game
in War Memorial Stadium.
Contribute today for a
...

Cure tomorrow.

�Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Payne Cited 'Dentist of Year
Dr. S. Howard Payne, profes
sor of prosthodontics at State
University of Buffalo, was given

the “Dentist of the Year

award

at the 62nd Annual State Uni
versity of Buffalo Dental Alumni
Meeting last Tuesday at the Ho

tel Statlcr Hilton.
The three-day joint meeting of
the Dental ‘ Alumni and. the 8th
District Dental Society which
ended October 7 was held in
honor of Dr. Payne. The award
was presented at a dinner dance
honoring Df. and Mrs. Payne
Upon graduating from the
State University of Buffalo's

Dental School in 1937, Dr. Payne

began his teaching career at
the University. He became head
of the Department of Prostho-

dontics in 1945 and assistant dean
of the School of Dentistry in

1950, two posts from which he
has since retired.
Dr. Payne is a native of Buffalo
and graduated from Kenmore

School in 1932, He has
written articles for several Dental
publications and is a member of
the American Dental Association
(ADA), Buffalo Dental Society
and the 8th District Dental SoHigh

ciety

October 9, 1964

All students interested
in being the secretary of

the Student Judiciary
1964-65, will please make
lion through the Student
application for this posiAssociation Office, 205
Norton Union. Applicants
must he of at least junior
standing and should have
at least a 1.0 cumulative
The ability to
type is strongly recommended. Deadline for applications is Friday. October 16, 1964.
average.

rm

GRAND OPENING I
Now available...a special opportunity

TO SELL FAMOUS AVON GROOMING PRODUCTS
FOR MEN
By special arrangement with the. college, there is an opportunity for a resident
student to represent Avon, world's largest manufacturer and distributor of grooming
products for men and women. The Collegiate Representative will enjoy a unique
earning opportunity: an exclusive franchise to offer Avon's famous products to fellow
students on campus. Because Avon has an international reputation, the high quality
products, not available in stores, are in great demand. Student Representatives in
other colleges are pleased with the acceptance of and demand for Avon, and with
their substantial earnings.
For more information, please contact

Mr. Lipsius
Placement Office

Featuring the finest in men's sport jackets, suits,

traditional sport and dress shirts, slacks and
I

A

accessories.

scons
Other Store

—

5 Minutes from the Campus

NORTHTOWN PLAZA
3125 Sherid an Drive

Lockport Shopping Plaza

—

-

Lockport, New York

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO STUDENTS HAVE MADE US FAMOUS

�October 9, 1964

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Sen. Keating Expounds On Election Issues
"I am told that you would like
to have me discuss the issues
in this campaign as I see them.
Actually, I have been trying to
get my' opponent to discuss the
issues ever since the campaign
began. As an incumbent Sena-

BEV-MAID Coffee, Soups
and Hot Chocolate
Ingredients sealed in cups.
Just add hot water.

now

Available at

The University

Part,,

Delicatessen

I

3588

should be the issue in this campaign. I am proud of my record
of service to the people of our
State in the Senate of the United
States. I aspire to no other of-

rJ

&amp;

Main St

tor, up for re-election, my record

printed by

Pres., Ac.
Smith Prinliii y

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Ideal for

fice.

Dorm use.

As a Senator, I have Considered
it my duty to represent all the
Republipeople of New York
cans, Democrats, and indepenthose who may have
dents
voted for me and those who may
have voted against me. No one
who has ever crossed the threshold of my office door with a problem involving the Federal gov-

j

The SPECTRUM

I

Friday,

.•*£?&lt;-it
*

+

—

—

-—

—

a classic made from Imported
not cowhide
Scotch Grain

—

ernment has ever been asked.
■ Did you vote for me?" or. “What
are your politics?" If a person
has a problem where I can legitimately help, I have considered it
a privilege and a pleasure to lend
a hand, I have never favored or
opposed any bill because, of its
party label. My support or opposition to any program has been
based not on the source of its
sponsorship, but on my best
judgment as to whether is was in
the interest of the people of the
nation and of the State of New
York. That has been my standard
during service under three Dem-

ocratic Presidents and one Republican President. I have been with
them when I felt they were right,
and opposed them when I felt
they were wrong, I have never
used the high office of United
States Senator to attempt to develop a political power base. My
aim is to serve, not to rule.
I have never ducked or dodged
an issue in my 18 years of service in the Congress. My stand
on every issue is a matter of pub
lie record. The people of New
York are entitled to demand that
my opponent say what he would
do differently before they be
asked to surrender a New Y7 ork
Senate seat to an invader from
Massachusetts, brought into this
State under the auspices of a
handful of powerful political
bosses. I am proud of my record
of service to the people of New
York. I am proud of measures
I have advocated and supported
to reduce unemployment and
stimulate the growth of. our private enterprise system which is
the greatest source of new jobs.
I am proud of measures I have
advocated to combat crime and
communism, but without compromising our traditional safeguards of individual rights, as in
my wiretapping bill. I am proud

of successful recommendations I
have offered to strengthen the
Social Security system, as well
as my support for increased bene
fits under Social Security and

Unemployment Compensation. I
am proud of successful legislation I sponsored to curb U.S. aid
to dictators and petty tyrants like
Sukarno and Nasser. I am proud
of legislation I put through Congress to tighten up on illegal exports of strategic materials to the
Soviet bloc. I am proud of the
work I did on the drafting of the
1957, 1960, and 1964 civil rights
acts to advance racial justice and
harmony. I am proud of my
fight to keep government officials from concealing the truth
about critical problems confronting our nation
in Cuba, Viet—

nam, in Indonesia, in the Middle
East;
}

am proud of my efforts jn

Washington on behalf of thousands of New Yorkers from Ni-

agara Falls to Montauk Point, to
ed tape and expedite th
solutions of problems with the

Federal

government. In case my

doesn't know it. .Montauk Point is at the end of Long

opponent

Senator Kenneth Keating addresses students under sponsorship of
Senate Convocations Committee.
Island, not at the end of Cape
Government is America’s biggest
Cod
business. It too must plan for
the future. In no field is this
But I am not appealing for
more vital than in tax policy, on
votes just because of the record
which so much of our nation's
of what 1 have done in the past
future depends.
six years in the Senate. I am
asking New Yorkers to vote for
Before I close, I'd like to share
me because they have confidence
some thoughts with you about the
biggest visiting road show to hit
that 1 will effectively serve our
nation and our state in the fuour State since the Beatles. The
ture. The future challenges to
Democratic political bosses have
our nation are equally as great wheeled their new star onto the
as those we have met so ably in
New York stage, and cast him in
one of the highest roles any true
the past. The basic aspirations
of the American people at home New Yorker could aspire to:
and abroad can be summed up in representing our State in the
a few words. Abroad, we seek
U.S. Senate. Well, the voters of
peace among nations
a peace
New York State are very discernnot
ing critics. They won't stand for
based on mutual respect
on mere expediency. To build
this. My Senate opponent may
such a peace, we must remain be humming the "Lullaby of
Broadway" now. But Tm confisecond to none in our military
strength and we must exert wise
dent that in November he will be
and temperate leadership in the singing "Carry Me Back to Ole
community of nations. There is
Virginny." What does my oppo
nothing partisan about our asnent from Massachusetts know
about the special problems of
piration for peace with freedom.
It is the broad common ground
our Empire Statte? Nothing. I
of all Americans. At home, our
am the candidate of the Repubnational goals are manifold. We
lican Party —- not the candidate
want safer, cleaner, more comof old line, iron hand bosses. I
fortable cities. We want equal
am the only candidate for the
U.S. Senate who can make this
opportunities for every citizen.
statement. My opponent offered
We want good schools for our
youngsters, adequate transportahimself to the bosses only after
tion, decent housing and health
he had been turned down by the
President of the United States
care for our older citizens. We
want adequate recreational areas
for the Vice Presidency and for
and opportunities for our people
the Ambassadorship to Vietnam.
to pursue cultural and humani
If my opponent isn't good enough
tarian values in their leisure
for President Johnson, he isn't
time
good enough for the people of
We want a good family
environment in which children
New York. I believe our. people
are going to vote for a man, not
will be brought up as conscientious and upstanding citizens.
a name. They won't go along
And perhaps most importantly of
with a glamorous political hitchall, we want a strong growing hiker who is riding a bandwagon
economy with jobs for all.
steered by the kind of machine
bosses who for generations have
But, our Federal Government
plagued the cause of good govgreat as its impact may be
ernment in this state. I believe
they will reject a candidate who
provide the real
cannot alone
seeks high office in a state where
driving
force of econom
he isn't even eligible to vote.
ic advance in our country. The
What happens to me as an indimost Washington can do is to
vidual is not important. What
foster an environment in which
counts is the future of representative government in New
the real engine of economic
York. I have no higher ambition
growth can function at peak efthan to go on representing the
ficiency, and that real engine of
best interests of all the people
economic growth is our American
of my native state
not only on
system of free, competitive entcrtheir special problems, but on
irise. employing a skilled, pro
he broad issues that concern us
uctive, well-paid labor force. To
II as American
make this engine run smoothly in
the future, I favor a realistic and
flexible “plan ahead" Federal
tax policy. Such a policy must be
sufficients flexible to take fully
The annual Graduate
into account economic conditions
and trends as they develop. In a
Convocation will take
—

—

—

economy
growing
aur Federal
tax take increases about S6 billion a year. We must use this S6
billion "nest egg" in the best and
most effective w’av possible. It
is for this reason that I favor
tax policy to

achieve three basic objectives
First, to abolish "nuisance" con
sumer Federal excise taxes. Sec
ond,

to

make

further cuts, as
n c om

taxes

ame of this
to the state
Federal "ne
nd local governments with no
attached. Any. efficient
itring;
business make

place Saturday at 8:00
p.rn. iii the Millard Fillmore Room. The guest
speaker for the evening
will he Justice.William 0.
Douglas of the United
States Supreme Court. The

Convocation is open to
graduate students hy invitation only. Please return
your reply card promptly.

full

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not

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not single machinedstifched
Best looking, longest
wearing, most comfortable in any
class. In hand polished antiqued
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1595 18 95

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3240 MAIN STREET

tiouARDjounson'i

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en

ALL YOU CAN EAT
FRENCH FRIED POTATOES
ASSORTED BREAD

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COLE SLAW

BUTTER

$1.39
Every Monday Nite 5-9 P.M.

BOULEVARD MALL
MAIN STREET AT THRUWAY

�Dr. Poudel History Lecturer
First of Visiting Professors
Dr. Bishnu Prasad Poudel, first
of a series of four Visiting Asian
Professors to instruct UB students. is currently lecturing both
on campus and in the surround
ing area

School

&gt;

The club is very diverse, ranghard core of very
to people who are
the game, (and getbridge education as
The

Nepal, his homeland, is smaller
than the state of New York, but
it is also a country with a rich
heritage. To its north is Red
China, and to the south lies
India. Sandwiched between two
giants, the little country has

managed to remain independent
throughout its long history. Nepal
is a sovereign, independent kingdom with a democratic government. The people has seen enormous expansion in education
and economic development under
the dynamic leadership of King
Mahendra. Nepal has diplomatic
relations with thirty countries
and is a member of the United
Nations.
As a representative of his tiny
but proudly independent country.
Dr. Poudel is vitally involved

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: "The Kiddu»h." This will be the second
in a series of sermon lessons on
‘Sabbath Symbols.” An Oneg
Shabbat will follow
Hillel's Third Annual Hayridc
will take place tomorrow evening.
Buses will leave from Norton
Union at 7:30 p.m. Reservations
must be made at the Hillel House
and only members of Hillel are
eligible to participate.

The second in a scries of programs on “Intermarriage" will be
held Sunday at 5:30 p.m. A panel
consistnig of Reverend John A.

Buerk, Dr Howard W. Post and
Reverend James E. Strcng, will
present the views of various

Christian denominations on "Intermarriage.” A supper will be
served for which reservations are
necessary'

The

Hillel Study Group in
Judaism will meet every

Thursday at 12:45 p.m, for a
ing session. The discussions
be broadcast over WBFO,
university radio station. The

tapwill

the

program may be heard every third
Wednesday at 5:45 p.m. begin

ning

this

Wednesday.

The “Live and Learn” Coffee
Hour will meet Thursday at 3;00
p.m. in the Hlllel House. Mrs.
Norman Fertig will coordinate
the series.

Hillel at State will sponsor its

first Delicatessen Supper of the.
academic year Sunday at 5:30
p.m. in the College Union. A program consisting of Israeli dancing

and singing has been- planned.
INTER VARSITY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

This semester our Bible Studies
are being held Monday at 3;00
p.m. and Thursday at 11:00 a m

Prayer meetings are being held
every Tuesday at 3:00 pm. and
Friday at noon. These meetings

executive

is

very

friendly; there is Jesc, president,
an over-bidder with a chronic

twinkle in his eye;

DR BISHNU PRASAD POUDEL

with all the students with whom
he comes into contact. He is often
heard to remark; “I have unlimited time to spend with those
who are interested in learning.’'
Ur. Poudel will remain in the
States for one year. His time is
divided between three universities. After his two month stay at
UB which will conclude November 3 he will leave for a midwestern university and will complete his tour at a school on the

west coast.

f^eiiqiouS
HILLEL

club

will all be held in the CRO ofTict
in Norton Union, Room 217.
Tonight IVCF HgJjavfhg a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Room
246 of Norton Union. Refresh-

Bob, life

master and club instructor, (which
is something like a golf pro, 6nly
more so), and vice president
Sheila, the most kibitzed player
around, however strongly she may
wish it to be otherwise, and the
best reason for learning bridge
I know. Countless others work in'
less glamorous positions but deserve credit for organization,
paperwork, and for resolving a

behind-the-scenes

confusion that

is as hectic as registration day to
a freshman. The least respected

and dorwnright dirtiest job belongs to Jon, our director, who
is as beloved as a baseball umpire and as appreciated as an 8:00
a m. Saturday class. More credit
to more slaves: Sheila Shein and
Dooty Gamby are secretaries and
right now, Treasurer Felsinger is
facing the Student Senate Advisory Board in an attempt to keep
the club fluent.
Wc had our first tournament
September 29, and, as is the current habit of the club under Jose,
it was a smashing success. The
amalgamation of duplicate veterans and virgin-players (bridge,
that is) led to a wild and hectic
18 boards of fun.

Congratulations to Elains Stone
and Toby Marcus for winning
the meeting.
East-West and to Sheila Dowd
for carrying home the NorthThe weekend of October lbSouth honors despite a despicably
18. the Inter Varsity groups from bad partner, me.
the colleges and universities ia
The club offers more than the
Western New York will meet for
a retreat at Letourncu Christian thrill, fun, and ACBL Master
Points of tournaments. Bobby
Camp on Canadaigua Lake. Everyone is cordially invited to come Lipsitz, one of the finest players
in the country, conducts lessons;
to all of these activities Transno matter how fine or poor your
portation will be provided.
game, you will benefit.
It's a great gang and a great
WESLEY FOUNDATION
game and a terrific way to vent
at some setni-rapid chcm
The Wesley Foundation will your ire
to forget that such
have its weekly meeting at the lecturer and
exams even exist, for
foundation
center. University nemises as
hours
Methodist Church at 5:00 p.m.. at least a few
Here is a hand of merit, fn it.
Sunday evening. The topic for
an apparently unavoidable loser
discussion is “Christian Selfhood." as related to the Wesley gets avoided and West must have
Weekend and last week's discus- a very fine love-life, for most
sion
declarers would go down at the
vul. slam.
The Wesley Foundation is sponNorth and South are vulner
soring a bowling party at the able,
and hold a plethora of point
Foundation Center lanes. Saturcount;
day. Bow ling, dancing, games, and
West Hand:
North Hand:
refreshments will be yours for
S: K 6 4 2
S; A 7 5
the asking. There will be a nomH; J 9 5
K 6 4
H:
inal donation of 50c. The bow ling
D:965
D: 8 7 4 2
will start at 7:30 p.m. and will go
C: 10 8 6
C; A Q 4
ments will be served following

to

?

7

NEWMAN

Apostolate is
sponsoring a spaghetti dinner at
Newman Hall. Sunday at 5:00 p.m.
Members. 50c; non-members, 75 c.

The

Newman

There will be a special political
program entitled "Issues of the
Election," Wednesday at 7:30 p.m
in Norton 240-248. Two representative? from the Young Demo-

crats and Young Republicans will

participate in the debate. All are
invited to attend.

The theology classes arc con-

tinuing Tuesday and Thursday in
Norton 330 at 9:00 a m., 10:00
a m , 2.00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. Mass
is said daily at Newman Hall at
noon.
.

Attention Fraternity Rushees
—

SCOTT KURMAN

ing from a
good players
just learning
ting as fine a
anywhere.)

Studies in 1963

Basic

By

was an ever,(September 22
whelming success with conservative estimates of the turn-out in
three figures.

of International

Greek Notes

The Kibitzer

—

Greetings and salutations Unlike J. T , we welcome you all
to' the bridge club Tuesday evenings at 7:30 p.m. in 327 Norton
Our first meeting of the year

Dr. Poudel, a lecturer in the
department of History and Poll
tical Thought 'at Tribhuban University in Nepal, is a specialist
in Southeast Asian history The
28 year-old scholar received his
B.A. at Patna University, India
in 1956. his M A at Delhi University and his PhD at the

Indian

Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

East Hand
Sooth Hand:
S: Q J 10 9 8 S: 3
H: 4 2
H: Q 10 8 7 3
D: Q J 10
D A K 3
C: J 9 3 2
C: K 7 5
The bidding proceeds as follows:
East
South
West
North
2 N. T.
Pass
Pass
1 S
Pass
Pass
5 S
4 NT
6 S
All Pass
Not Blackwood, because of the
previous no-trump bid. South has
a fine hand, much too exciting to
diddle with a three-spade bid.
and his spade suit is too weak for
a jump to four spades. North s

five-spade bid three-card support
and an interest in slam. That's
all South wants to hear: he goes
to six.

West opens the 9D, and the
goes down. Slowly, declarer's smile fades as he realizes
1
that a diamond must be lost. Al
apparently hinges oh the trump
finesse. Without further ado, he
dummy

leads the QS. which holds the
trick. He follows with the JS.
East discarding the 3H declarer s
hopes are severed like an umbilical cord.
The diamond loser is still unavoidable, and West’s K 6 of
trumps is an apparent sure trick,
under dummy’s singleton A.
But South sees a ray of hope,
an end play coup: He cashes
three rounds of clubs ending on
the board, everyone following, so
far so good. He takes the AH and
KH. and trumps a low heart in
his hand with the 8. Now he stops
to take stock: West started with
four spades, that he knows only
too well, at least three clubs and
three hearts. Therefore the opening lead (9D) was from a singleton. doubletoh, or tripleton. At
any rate, he quite probably does
not have the Q. J, or 10, as a
nine-lead generally implies topof-nothing. Declarer now knows
that if West started with specifically three diamonds, the hand
could be brought in.
At this point, the situation is as
follows:
North Hand: South Hand
S: 10 9
S: A
D: 8 7 4
West Hand:
S: K 6

H:
D: 6 5
-

D: A 3
East Hand
H;
D;

Q
Q J

C:
C: J
He cashes the AD. West plays
the 5, dummy the 4. and East
follows with the Jack, It appears
that West has a low diamond
left. South leads the 3D, West
plays the 6. dummy covers with
the 7, and East is in, and faced
with the gruesome requirement
to lead. It is immaterial: he can
lead a heart or a club. In either
case. .South ruffs with the 9 and
East is faced with the prospect
of either over ruffing or underruffing. thus ensuring South the
last two tricks.
Enough pounding for a while:
I hear the muted roar of pasteboards being distributed, and
somewhere in the world, a voice
is crying “fourth for bridge.”
-

Robbe-Grillet To Lecture Here

Alain Robbe-Grillet, one of
France's most-read and most-discussed novelists today, will give
a lecture here Wednesday evening under the auspices of the
Department of Modem Languages
and Literature.
One of the leaders of the socalled "new novel" in France. M.

speak
Robbe-Grillet
will
in
French on the subject "Nouveau
Roman et Nouveau Cinema." His
most of which have enjoyed as much of a critical success in translation in the United
States as in his native country,
include La Jalousie. Dan le laby-

novels,

rinthe. Le

Voyeur, and Les Gottimes. He is even better known in

Preferential bidding for fraternity rushees will take place Monday and Tuesday between the
hours of 9;00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
in the Interfraternity Council Of-

fice. Room 346 Norton Hall. All
men who registered and rushed
this semester, and now wish to
pledge a fraternity, must bid the
fraternities of their choice at
this time. Rushees who did not
show a copy of their grade transcript when they registered last
month must bring one with them
and present it when they bid.

The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta are looking forward to their
social tonight with Pi Lambda
Tau.
Chi Omega is looking forward

to meeting all women rushees at
the Convocation Tea Sunday. The
sisters wish to invite all rushees
to their coke parties, to be held
in Room 344 Norton. Monday and
Room

333.

Tuesday.

Congratulations to sisters Ellen
Murphy and Evelyn Chapin, Presi-

dent and Vice President, respec-

tively, of MacDonald Hall. Also
congratulations to sister Dawn
Henry, Secretary of the Senior
School of Nursing.
The sisters of Theta Chi Sorority are really looking forward
to meeting the fall rushees this
Sunday. We urge a good attendance for Convocation, and hope
it to be a success.
We would like to congratulate
Chris Furiani for receiving the
outstanding sister award and
Ginny Woolams for receiving the
outstanding pledge award at the
Fall Dinner Dance last Saturday
The sisters would also like to
thank the Spring Pledge class for
their party last Sunday at the
home of Sue Swartz in Lewiston,
Sigma Alpha Mu also wishes to
its newly initiated
welcome
fratres into the fraternity.
The Brothers of Tau Kappa
Epsilon would like to take this
opportunity to publically thank
Dr. Milton Plesur for his speech
at the Rush Dinner last Thursday
night. It was appreciated and enjoyed by all.
The Brothers are holding a
Closed Party at Johnny’s Night
Owl this Saturday night.
Phi Epsilon Pi is holding a
Mixer tonight at 8:30 p m. in the
Millard Fillmore Room. The entire student body is invited. Re-

Class!

freshments will be served and
band music provided.
This afternoon a group of
Alumni will challenge the present executive committee to a
football game.
The Brothers of Gamma Phi
wish to welcome their newly inducted Brothers. Gamma Phi are

holding a Toga Party, Saturday.
The brothers of Beta Phi Sigma
extend their heartiest congratulatiofis to members of the alumni

which have been honored this
past week. Mr. Howard Kohler
has been elected president of
the UB Alumni Association; and
Mr. James Kovach along with
Mr. Jack Getman are new members of the UB Participating
Council. Mr. James Kovach is
also a new member of the UB
Athletic Committee. The brothers
wish them success in their new
endeavors.

Alpha Phi Omega would like
to thank the rushees who came
to the stag, and would like to
invite them to a mixer tonight.

Any other rushees who would
like to pledge are also invited
and should contact Mr. Steve
Coniglio about details, telephone
M. Robbc-Grillet's lecture will TF 7-5584.
take place in Diefendorf 148 at
8:30 p.m. and is open to the pubPhi Kappa Psi is happy to anlic. His current tour in the United
nounce that Dave Franko is the
States is under the sponsorship of campus representative for Utica
the Cultural Services of the Club beer. Any fraternity social
French Embassy,
chairman interested in getting
beer for parties at the normal
distributor price; should contact
The Music Department Dave
at TF 5-0090 or at the Fraannounced the cancellation ternity table in Norton Union.
of the Slee Composers (Kegs or cases are available)
The fraternity welcomes all
Concert, originally schedrushees to the date rush party
uled for Monday at Baird.,
at the Hotel Marqueen tomorrow

the United States today as the
author of the scenario of Last
Year at Marienbad

night.

�Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

The Dean ,of the Yale Law
School, professor Eugene V Bestow?'delivered the first Fenton
Lecture at the State University
of Buffalo last night.

Professor Rostow, who discussed "The Legal Health of Cities,"
replaced Mr. Peter Blake, managing editor of 'Architectural Forum" magazine, who. because of
scheduling
had
difficulties,
switched speaking dates with professor Rostow. Mr. Blake will
deliver his lecture, entitled. "The
.American City—Today and Tomorrow," October 22 at 8:30 p.m.
in the Conference Theatre.
The complete,' revised schedule
is: October 14, Mr. Jean Gottman. professor of geography,
Ecole des Hautes Etudes, Paris,
"The Challenge of Planning a
New Urban Way, of Life;’’ October 22, Mr. Blake; October 29,
Mr. Richard C. Wade, professor
of American history 1 at the University of Chicago. “Civil Rights
and the Metropolis;” and November 5, Dr. Eric Lindemann, professor of psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School, "Mental
Health Issues in Large City Complexes.” All of the lectures will
be held at 8:30 p.m. in the Conference Theatre.
Departing from the usual Fen-

ton Lecture format of several
unrelated lectures, this year the

University has selected a central theme: “Megalopolis: Urban
life and Urban Condition." Each

of the lecturers will discuss the

subject from their professional
point of view.

Professor

Rostow, a former
Guggenheim Fellow, has served
an
as
advisor to the State Department and as the assistant
executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Europe in
the United Nations.
He served as a member of
the Attorney General's National
Committee for Study of the AntiTrust Laws in 1955 and was
honored by France with the
Chevalier of the Legion D’Honneur in 1960.

Budapest Here
By

VICKI BUGELSKI

The Budapest String Quartet,
quartet-in-residence here, brilliantly opened the annual Beethoven cycle Monday night in Baird
Hall.
It has been some years since
the quartet has performed at
Baird. The players have been
shifted to many different locations on campus, mainly for the
purpose of accommodating a
larger audience. Baird Hall,
which could hardly be considered
ideal, is the best hall on dampus
for chamber music. Although the
audience must be smaller, the
sacrifice is well worth the improvement in acoustics. Perhaps
the demand for concerts (the
complete Cycle has been sold
Out) will persuade the Budapest
to perform more frequently!
Joseph Roisman, first violin:

Alexander Schneider, second violin; Boris Kroyt. viola; and Mischa Schneider, cello: performed
Beethoven s Quartets op. 127, op.
18, No. 1, and op. 59. No, 3. The
performance was one of the very
best that the Budapest has given
in recent years here. Intonation
was perfect, the ensemble was
incredibly impeccable, and the
general dynamic range was unusually brilliant and extremely
well controlled. Rich tone quality and smooth phrasing predominated throughout the performance.

Mr. Mischa Schneider is to be
commended for his fine pizzicato
in the second movement of the
op. 59, No. 3. All the players
performed marvelously well in
the last movement of the same
quartet, probably the most technically exacting movement of the
a type , of perwhole program
petual motion in fugal style. The
performers thus have a double
problem with which to cope. The
Budapest players, with their virtuoso technique, had no real
—

this movement,
but seemed to be having great
fun with it. The audience really
problems

with

enjoyed this work too, perhaps
the most of any on the program
(although all three works are
masterpieces), and responded
with cries of "Bravo!” and a
standing ovation.
The Budapest are performing

the third concert of the series

TYPING
THESES
TERM PAPERS
reasonable rates
Mrs. Hammond, 24 Hillcrest Dr.

TF 5-3793
DUaioftds Watches
-

JEWELRY,
Watch and
Jewelry

Repairing
SERVICE
AHf*d G

Fmcfc.Op*ici«a

UNIVERSITY PUZA
TF 3-5415

tonight at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hall. The Cycle will be concluded with three concerts Oct. 19,
21, 23. The Quartet will present
an additional scries of chamber

music Nov. 2, 4, 6, also at Baird,
and will be appearing in the
Buffalo Chamber Music series
this Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. in the
Mary Seaton Room of Kleinhans
Music Hall.
Alexander Schneider, violinist
with the Quartet, will conduct a
string orchestra in a special concert Friday, Oct. 16, at 8:30 p.m.
in Baird Hall. Admission is free.
The program will be a repeat of
the dedication program of the
new Buffalo Public Library. All
are cordially invited to attend.

Paii@
North
llair
1428 HEKTUAVE.-Tf 6-7411

ft

r
&amp;

A Looking Glass

Leo Smit to Perform Bach’s
Well-Tempered Clavier Here

A photographic exhibit featuring the world of microorganisms
in color will be shown at Norton
By VICKI BUGELSKI
Hall, 2nd Floor starting today
continuing through October 23.
Leo Smit. pianist and composEntitled •Small World Through er, will give his performance of
the Looking Glass. " a name dethe entire Book II of Bach's Well-ived from lenses employed in Tempered Clavier tomorrow night
making the photographs, it is on at Baird, beginning at 5:30 p m.
loan from the Department of There will be a dinner intermisArts and Sciences of International
sion, to be given at the Faculty
Business Machines Corporation.
Club.
The exhibition consists of 21
Instrumental tuning as we
feet,
color photos. 3 feet x 2
of know it today, called "well-temmicroscopic organisms enlarged pered" tuning, did not exist until
from 25 to 50.000 times actual the time of Bach. This system
size. The pictures were taken by makes certain pitches equal, or
Or. Roman Vishniac, biologist and "well-tempered", and enables a
photographer, who designed speplayer to perform in different
;ial microcopes and developed keys. There are 24 major and
unique lighting techniques to minor keys in use today, which
photograph his tiny subjects.
came into use in the late Baroque
By projecting a combination of era. Previous to this, only a few
ordinary and polarized light into keys could be employed, because
translucent microorganisms, for of the difficulties in tuning.
example, he made them in effect
Bach wrote a prelude and a
fugue in each major and minor
transparent. It was then possible
to photograph the insides of their key. making a total of 24 in Book
I and 24 in Book II, or fortyliving bodies. Bacteria at work,
the birth of an amoeba, and eight in all. Thc prelude (a comstentor feeding on algae arc position in a strict form, based
among the studies Dr. Vishniac
on imitative entrances of one
single theme, called the subject)
has chosen for his camera.
The exhibition is one of nine were standard forms of composition during the Baroque.
touring art shows and four touring science shows that IBM lends
to museums, colleges, libraries
and other non-profit institutions
throughout the country. Last year
the company’s touring exhibitions
visited 130 cities in the United
States and were viewed by well
over a million people.

Mr. Smit will be performing
all of Book II A most versatile
performer, he plays many different kinds of music extremely
well, ranging from Bach to modern composers and jazz. Those
who missed his fine performances
of Copland at the Pete Johnson
concert should certainly make an
effort to attend this concert.
Those who attended the Pete
Johnson concert most likely have
already reserved their tickets. Mr.
Smit has a third concert scheduled. all modern piano music, for
next Saturday, October 17, at
Baird.

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

Final 5 Days
PETER
SELLERS
ELKE
SOMMER
ceuniMiaE
Starts Wednesday

Superlative Satire!
NOTHING BUT THE BEST
in color
TL.
h

*-

THE INNER CIRCLE COFFEE HOUSE
is now open at 3191 Bailey Avenue
)
(• near the Circle Art theatre
•

6605

Fri.

Jerry Raven Folksongs
Sat.
Sun. A Dramatic Reading
&amp;

-

—

—

NO I!omt or Entertainment Charge on Fri or Sal Nile

m

TWO TOP
FEATURES

f9L

SOPHIA

NS

Small World In

.

Rostow Gives
First Lecture

PACE NINE

LOREN

\

MARCELLO

mnntbi/iA/

MASTR0IANN1
VITTORIO D SICAs
»

Wifi |P

CARLO PONTI in COLOR
SHATTERING All
THE SEASON’S MOST ARGUED ABOUT FUJI!”

UF€

m

TECHNICOLOR

A

T

mes Film Release

Student Discount with I.D. Card
Monday thru Thursday

I

I

1I

�Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Ugly Man
Contest
The LB chapter of Alpha f’h
Omega will sponsor the 17th An
nuai Ugly Man Contest, the ser
vice

fund rais
year, the fund

fraternity's yearly

ing drive Thi
again will be
United Appea

donated
for whu

S400
In th&gt;far
was collected
jjst-d from this
past, the mom
contest has he
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�Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE ELEVEN

THE CRUELEST SPORT

Several years before he was killed in the mountains
of Italy in the last running of the “Mille Miglia." the
Marquis de Portago said. “If you are awake and alive,
you can live more in three hours on a Sunday afternoon
than most men can in ten yearg.” Europeans say that
there are three ways in which men may test themselves
to the ultimate degree aside from war. These are bullfighting. mountain climbing and auto racing. The Mar. the
quis was referring, of course, to auto-racing
"crudest sport.”
.

different country and is designated the Grand Prix of that
country. There are only two on
the North American continent,
the one in Watkins Glen and the
last one of the year which
decides the 1964 championship at
Mexico City. The cars are unlike
anything on any road in the
world. They are not street machines modified for the track or
stock cars souped up to run
around an oval. They weigh 990
lbs., have 210-230 hp, enormous
brakes and five-speed gear boxes.
They can go 175 mph and accelerate from a standing start to 60
mph in 3H seconds. Their engine displacement is only 1.5 liters (a 426 cu. in Chevy engine
is about 7 liters).
The cars are so small that they
must be designed to fit the individual physical specifications
of the driver. He sits between
two huge gas tanks which are
welded to a metal frame which,
in turn is actually placed almost
on his back. His legs extend in
front of him to the nose of the
car. Behind him. the engine sits
exposed - its ray power extremely
evident and menacing. There are
no exhaust pipes to muffle the
engine's brutal roar. At 11.000
rpm, the eight short tubes which
emit the waste gasses (sometimes
6 to 12 depending upon the number of cylinders in the engine)
produce a totally unforgettable
noise. It is the sound of raw
powe rand it is shockingly out of
place anywhere but on a grand
prix circuit away from the nor-

mal niceties of civilization.
The Grand Prix of the U.S. at
Watkins Glen this year is considered especially important because the driver’s championship
is so close. A driver may count
his six best finishes out of the
ten races, and with two races to
go, Graham Hill (in a BRM) had
32. John Surtees (in a Ferrari)
had 30 and Jimmy Clark, the defending world champion (for Lotus) had 28.
The winner receives
9 points, 2nd place is worth 6.
third place 4 points and so on to
1 point for sixth place. Because
so many men were still competitive. every single important rac
ing team and driver in the world
was at the Glen.
Most of the cars and drivers
are British. The famous marques
of the antique days of racing are

no longer competitive

now that
the limit for Formula I has been
reduced to 1,5 liters, and consequently, such names as Alfa

Romes, Mercedes Benz, Maserati,
Bolzano and Porsche are no long-

er competitive. The British BRM,
Lotus, and Cooper teams have

1

Most people in this country
have not had the opportunity to
see any international auto racing. The only place in the U.S.
where Formula I races are held
is at Watkins Glen in upper N.Y.
state. Otherwise, Formula I cars
are available only two or three
years after they have been used
in
competition,
International
when they are already relatively
obsolete.
There are 10 races held during
the year for the driver’s championship. Each one is held in a

.

dominated the competition during
the last five years with Comraandatore Enzio Ferrari providing them with fierce competition.
This year, the Honda firm in
Japan has decided to enter a car
in the Formula I class because
it is impossible to sell anything
to the European market without
the publicity of having a competitive racing machine. It doesn't
matter to the older firms like
Maserati or Porsche, but the
Honda is unknown in Europe
outside of a small coterie of motorcycle enthusiasts. The best
way it can get any publicity is
by competing in Europe in the
major races. At Watkins Glen,
the amount of attention it drew
was unusual. The announcer kept
telling the crowed over the public
address system how exciting it
was to have "a Jap car” in the
race. Stirling Moss, the already
legendary driver who handled
the microphone during the race,
put the matter in perspective by
pointing out that the Honda was
running last for most of the race.
It was. Moss said, impressive that
it w as" running at all and most

camping equipment. Nearjy

ev-

ery conceivable type of camping
apparatus covers the infield and
almost all of the sports cars available in the western world vie for
parking space.
During the night, camp fires,

drunken revelry, sexual debauch-

ery on a limited scale and a great

deal of nonsensical shouting preanyone from getting much
sleep, but the carnival atmosphere tends to increase the ten
sion which has been slowly building up towards race time. In the
time trials. Hill, Clarke. Surtees
and Dan Gurney of the L’.S. had
times within .4 of a second and
occupied the first four places on

vents

the starting grid (the cars line
up in pairs). Most of the crowd,
estimated at about 65,000 was
rooting for Gurney, but no one
gave him much chance. He may
be the best driver in the world,
world champion—1960 and 61—
but his car. a Brabham i a model

manufactured

by the
former
from Austraiiia). is not. Nevertheless. the course was dotted with
"Gurney for President" signs and
one wag had even painted that
legend in shaky white paint on
the roadway during the night.
(Another
joker had lettered
"Slow—School" on the end of
the long straight where the cars
were clocking 155 mph through
the traps).
Sunday afternoon was slightly
misty, mostly sunny. The temperature was in the low 60 s. The
conditions, except for occasional
gusts of wind (one of which blew
Hill off the track while he was
he recovknowledgeable spectators were safely in the lead
surprised that it lasted as far as ered). were ideal. For the first
the 75th lap of the 110 lap race. fifty laps. Clark and Hill alterAt Watkins Glen, the road
nated in the lead, with Surtees
course is 2.3 miles. The race is and Gurney following about 1
designed to cover 110 laps since or 2 seconds behind Then, sudthere is a rule that requires a denly. Clark was nowhere near
Formula I race to last for at least
the leaders. His car was failing
due to ignition trouble emanating
two hours, Graham Hill, the evenfrom a defective spark plug
tual winner and defending champion, set a new course record by
averaging nearly 113.5 mph and
consequently, he was on the road
for just under 2 hours and 20
minutes. The spectators array
themselves around the course in
the flimsy, skeletal grandstands
which the management has provided at a small extra charge, or
sit in the infield and follow the
race from several favorite vantage points on the course. Time
trials for post positions start
(price • 62c). Shortly afterward
Friday, continue through SaturGurney also pulled out of the
day morning. The spectators berace (oil leak) and it looked like
gin to arrive on Thursday afterHill, driving steadily in his red
noon and start putting up their
...

nosed black BRM and Surtees,
on his tail in his
blue and white Ferrari, were going to have a stirring battle to
the finish. Then, Hill was alone.
Swtees had spun out and by the
time he had recovered, he was 15
seconds behind.
From then on. Hill motored
along smoothly while Surtees
drove frantically in an attempt
to make up the ground, or so it
seemed. While Surtees appeared
to be going deeper and deeper
into the 90' turn without hitting
his brakes. Hill was keeping a
roaring along

steady, even pace.

20 odd cars that started. 3 didn't last a lap. At the finish only 8 were running. The
Honda did well to remain for 78
laps. The course was not especially difficult, but car attrition was
high. Hill, the "hot-rod business
executive," as he calls himself,
is a classic "Madison Avenue"
Britisher. He is tall, lean, dapper
(he has a fine mustache) and sensible. He has a fine sense of
humor and his own comment on
the race seemed to summarize the
afternoon. Amidst all of the hogwash about the mystique of
speed, the crucial brush with
death, the intricacy of the cars.
Hill, when asked why he raced.
Of the

"I have always enjoyed driving. It's nice to be able to make
a living at something one enjoys." One recognizes the inevitasaid,

ble understatement of the cultured Englishman gently debunk
ing his own skill, but Hill's attitude seems the only sensible one
in a sport where nearly all of
the heros of the past are dead.
While Clark (the world champion and Brabham (former world
champion) drove them cars off
the track with mechanical difficulties. Hill got the most out of
his car and finished the race in
front.

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�Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

Feature

PREDICTIN
By

STEVE OBERSTEIN

its becoming harden and harder for the fearless prognosticators
of pro football to go about their
business this year Defenses are
tougher, trades have turned out
differently than expected size
able home crowds have influenced and spurred on supposedly
inferior teams, and injuries base
played an increasing part in the
strategies of p ro football s 22
coaches
Defense
nuite different
from those
if'the bulks froi
partly becai
dominant toda;
lour, whicf
for ex
•s Ham
The Cos A
i thi'ir hfst start
ample, are
because of the
in recent
play of their four behemoths
Lamar Lundy. David Janes, Mer
Olson
in
Grier. While these heroes coule
be any of today s young strong

men, collectively they have thor
oughly annoyed all of the quar
terbacks they have faced the
year
This' quartet, which aver
ages 270 pounds per man. is
considered just a little bit larger
than the usual four man line that
most defenses today employ The
San Diego Chargers of two year
ag'o had an even bigger one whon
II-

four

the mot
Ernie Ladd
by

Different variations of the blit
in which one. two, or three line
backers or safelymen charge on
the snap of the ball with the
intent of gunning down the’op
posing quarterback, have also impaired the advantages of the defense's- arch enemy the Offense
The Philadelphia Eagles used
this procedure successfully in defeating-the N V Giants 38-7 in
both teams' opening game of the
year. Safetyman Don Burroughs
of the Eagles caught Giant star
Y.A; Tittle four times for losses
and continually disrupted t h e
New York offense by threatening
the blitz at various times through
out. the KamiDefensive
secondaries w h o
have been given the chance to
play , together for two or three
years also have contributed to
the ever-growing emphasis on de
fense. It stands to reason that any
combination of men
will play
better together when they know
each other s capabilities This is
true also in the douhleplay combination in baseball and doubles
in tennis. Just multiply all of
these sport s problems by two
and it’s easy to realize how dif
ficult it is to find four men whe
can perform capably as a unit

in the defensive backfield

Trades such as the Washington
Philadelphia one which involved
Sonny Jorgenson and Norman
Snead have turned out differently
than most “experts" predicted.
The well-shuffled Eagles are still
in the middle of the Eastern Division race while the Redskins,
who were supposed to have gotten the better of the deal when
they acquired Jorgenson, are wallowing in last place still looking
for their first victory of the
campaign Other unexpected occurrences, such as rookie Bill
Musons emergence as a coming
star with the Rams, have left the
so-called critics at a loss for

words. While Munson and the
more unheralded Gary Wood
of the Giants play and get valu
able experience in the intricacies
of playing quarterback in the pro
ranks, other more highly priced
freshman such as George Mira.
Jack Concannon. Don Trull, and
Pete Beathard are gathering* only
splinters in this, their inaugural
even

seasons.
The partisan home crowd has
especially been evident in the
A.F.L. this year where the play
of the New York Jets and the

pectations New York's great attendance increase hasn't gone unnoticed by any dedicated football
fan. although no one has ever
been able to measure what exjelly a sizeable partisan crowd
means to a team The Jets’ 17-17
tie against the A.F L. champion
San Diego Chargers last Saturday
night has to be considered as the
shining example of a home crowd
helping its team to win The New
York Giants have done well 1 at
home for years and one of the
t important reasons has been
sell-out crowds which are
a fixture.at all their home "amts.

These staunch supporters have
been known to take a loss to their
heroes as a personal insultinjuries. have also played a

any results that
have occurred in the pigskin profession Just think, for instance,
of the Cleveland Drowns without
Jimmy, the Kansas City Chiefs
playing with a sub-par Abner
Haynes, or the Giants courageously led by an injury-riddled V
A Tittle, and then try to predict
that their teams would still be'in
contention for their division tit
lies. The New York Giant Cleveland Brown struggles have been
titanic battles ever since their
inception, but none will be more
rememberetd than the one of
three years ago when Coach Paul
Brown had to keep his mealticket
on the field even though Jim
Blown had suffered a mild concussion from the hand of violent
Sam I lull Paul Brow n, of course,
had no choice than to keep his
big gun in there because no one
else could do the job-for him
The Giants went on to , w in the
game decisively, although the
Browns were favored by two
touchdowns before play began
that day Kansas City’s troubles
last year and the Giant’s this year
can be directly - related to the

-meat part

in

PRO FOOTBALL

Frosh Blank Ithaca
By STEVE FEIGIN
varsity

While the LB

squai

was going down to defeat at the
hands of Massachusetts, on !Sat
urday. the freshman football pla.
ers were routing Ithaca 36 0 Thi.
game, coupled with last week
16-6 triumph over the Army Piebes. gave the Baby Bulls a 2 0
season slate. This was Ithaca s
season debut.
The standout for the frosh. in
the encounter, was quarterback
Hick Wells, a 511". 180 pounder,
who was responsible for 21 of
the points registered on the score
board He was playing before a
hometown crowd, having starred
at Ithaca High School before coming to Buffalo Rick passed for 2
TD's. ran for a third and added
3 extra points.
Wells opened the scoring in the
second quarter, hitting fullback
Tom Hurd on a 30 yd scoring
strike He then ran for the 2 extra
points. In the 3rd quarter, he
snuck over from the one on a
quarterback keeper and kicked
the placement to give the Baby
Bulls a 15-0 advantage. Late in
the final period. Rick again found
-

Hurd open and this time it was
-ood for a 15 yd. touchdown.
Halfback Brian Hansen added the
PAT

The Baby Bulls piled up the
as they crossed the goalline twice more in the 4th quarscore,,

Washington sprinted

Ben

ter

through the Ithaca line on a 12
yd jaunt to paydirt, and a few

plays
lanky

later.
6’ 2"

John

QB

Kennedy, a
from Niagara

Falls combined with back Dave
Nitterauer on a spectacular 60
yd TD pass Hansen added the
PAT after each tally.
y«eo«(k yuKymrmc

|

Singled out. by coach Wade, for
their outstanding effort in the
game were: End Dick Ashley,
tackle Stan Baranowski. guards
Mike Rissell and Terry Finger,
and backs Wells. Hurd. Hansen.
Washington, Jbhn Davis, Ton
Bremen and A1 Schnurr. The
coach was particularly pleased

with his defensive units. The
Ithacans were held to 75 yds. on
the ground and had 4 passes off
by the alert Buffalo secondary
That gave the Baby Bulls a total
of 10 enemy aerials pilfered so
far this season.

-mo?.

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and Tittle have had
Thus, as pro football has be
nine mure and more com [ilex

creased. It's far easier to relax
and enjoy the names Ilian to go
out on a limb and try to decide
who will be the leaders and losers
in another ere.it season of pro
football.

First Annual
Parents' Day
The fl! Holy Cross football
game on October 24 at Rotary
Field will be the first annual Parents Day It will enable students
the chance to entertain their
parents and sit with them at the
Tickets will be handled in the
following manner: For

Arrow Cum laude, a gutsy button-down oxford in pure, unadulterated cottdn. High collar
band that doesn't get lost under a sweater or jacket. Long, swooping collar points that
button up a perfect collar roll. Square-shouldered, taper-bodied, ''Sanforized” labeled.
15 more like it in stripes and colors you never saw before. $5.
j |j /)/) IJ
A bold new breed of dress shirt for a bold new breed of guy.
\ (/

For ARROW Fashions it's

RIVERSIDE MEN’S SHOP
(Corner
7»3 TONAWANDA
Ontario)
STREET
Phone: TR 5-8400
Shop 9 A M. to 9 P.M. Daily

|

I

«q«k«c

Haynes

each two
tickets purchased for parents, a
third ticket will be issued to the
student free of charge In other
words, if a student buys two reserved seats for his parents, a
third reserved scat next to the
other two will be his with no
additional charge.
If groups wish to reserve blocks
of scats in the Parents' section
for this contest, contact the Ticket
Office in Clark Gym. Extension
2926 These tickets will be held
until Tuesday. October 20. One
fraternity. Tau Kappa Epsilon has
already reserved a block of tickets and it is hoped that others
will follow suit. If any further
details are required, contact the
ticket office Response to this ini
tial venture will largely deter
mine the future of Parents Day
on the campus. Many students
have indicated a desire to sit
with their parents at a L'B football game and this, contest with
the Crusaders is one of the best

I

�Friday, October 9, 1964

PACE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

THE PHILLIE STORY

*

By MICHAEL CASTRO

Philadelphia is a city of slums,
dirt, streets that are too narrow,
the Liberty Bell. Ben Franklin,
tradition and the Phillies. Connie
Mack Stadium is an integral part
of this eastern metropolis, and it
too is dirty and steeped with
tradition. It has served as home
for the Phillies and Athletics, two
professional baseball teams, with
an astounding historical affinity

for defeat. The Athletics, whose
consistent rivalry with the old
St. Louis Browns for basement
tenancy in the American League,
were finally, in despair, shifted
to Kansas City (where they operated as a Yankee farm club for a
while, before becoming a vaudeville act under Charles 0. Finley.)
The Phillies though, like death
and taxes, remained in Philadelphia. No team in National League
history has finished last more
times than the Phillies. Theirs is
a tradition of frustration, of defeat. of mediocrity. Only the
beauty inherent in such a perennial lost cause and the soft spot
in the heart of every outwardly
coarse Phillie fan, have made
Philadelphia's marriage to the
Phillies a happy one.
Once upon a time, in 1950. the
Phillies won the Pennant. These
were the "Whiz Kids”, young
players such as Robin Roberts,
Curt Simmons, and Richie Ashburn, who were destined for
stardom in the next decade. Success, however, did not spoil the
Phillie fans. They refused to
lake the team seriously, continuing to boo them and wait for the
inevitable reversion to true Phillie form. The image remained intact as in subsequent years the
"Whiz Kids” became the “Fizz
Kids”, and like a weighted down
murder victim sank lower and
lower to the murky depths of
the National League standings.
N o w the masochistic Phillie
fans were more comfortable. They
could come out and boo. boo to
their hearts' content, boo for a
just cause. They could boo washed up veterans like Elmer Valo
and Frank Sullivan, who classified his stay with the Phillies
as "the twi light of a mediocre
career.” They could boo raw

bonus babies such as Ted Kazanski and Seth Moorhead who were
desperately thrust into action.
They could boo rookie phenoms
such as Casey Wise and Chico
Fernandez and watch them fizzle.
They could boo the young players such as Clay Dalrymple and
Johnny Callison. brought into
major league competition before
they were ready.
Managers came and went. Eddie
Sawyer, in his second term at
the helm, took one look at Ted
Lepcio, a journeyman who the

front office claimed would solve
his infield problem, and exclaimed: “He's the worst ballplayer I
ever saw in my life!” Sawyer,
rather than suffer through a long
season with a hopeless team, quit
after two games. His successor
was Gene Mauch, a young, fiery,
imaginative man. who people
said had the makings of a great
manager. But who could be a
great manager with the Phillies?
Mauch s first year was a nightmare. The club wasted no time
in settling in last place, and,
despite Mauch's desperate shifting of personnel, grew worse as
the season progressed. He even
tried 240 pound Pancho Herrera
at second base, to the amusement
of some and the embarrassment
of Pancho. The fans booed Mauch.
booed Herrera, booed the hot
dog vendors, booed everyone, and
loved it. This was the year the
Phillies set a major league record
by losing 23 games in a row
Upon returning to the city after
snapping the losing streak, they
received a tumultuous welcome
in a heart warming display of
civic pride.
This is the tradition of Philadelphia and the Phillies. It is
no wonder that Phillie fans refused to take them seriously
when they made belated runs
for the pennant in '62 and '63
(A “run for the pennant" in Philly means not being eliminated
until the final month.) They accepted the fact that Mauch was
performing miracles, but a pen-

nant in Philadelphia would be
ridiculous. Thus, when the Phillies led at the All-Star break this
summer, Phillie fans would shake
their heads knowingly and say.

"Wait till we play the good
teams."

When Johnny Callison won
game after game with batting
and fielding heroics, and when
catcher Dalrymple cut down
enemy runners with uncanny
consistency, the hippies down on
South Street blinked a few times,
but then recalled these players
when they played in typical bumbling Phillie style. They smiled
in their beers, nodded and said.
"Phillies
BOO!”
Even when the Phils swept the
Giants to lead by five games in
August, the fans were not convinced. They still saw visions of
fat Pancho Herrera nimbly pivoting at second, they still remembered the 23 game losing streak
They sat on their hands, said
“Wait till September.” and booed.
When with two weeks left in
the season and the Phillies ahead
by 6 L j games, even old time
Phillie fans were convinced. This
was the year. Despite Richie Allen’s defensive lapses at third
base, despite lack of hitting from
their shortstops Wine and Amaro,
despite a chronic, weakness at
first base, despite a team weakness against lefthanded pitching,
despite the arm miseries of key
pitchers Mahaffey and Culp, despite manager Mauch’s scrambling, shuffling and platooning, the
Phillies were in. They even printed World Series tickets.
Harsh reality. This is twentieth
century America, there is no
Santa Claus, and they are the
Phillies. The Phillie fold has
to be rated the worst in baseball
history. Yet the Phils simply had
too many weaknesses as mentioned above to win the pennant.
Gene Mauch has to be given
credit for a masterful job in
keeping them up there. Philadelphia’s losing tradition thus adds
another chapter to an infamous
chronicle.
Gene Mauch is a winner and
he will return to try again to
buck tradition. The Phillies are
for real and they will return next
season a little older and a little
wiser. The fans too will be back,
in musty old Connie Mack Stadium. booing the Phillies and loving every minute of it.
..

_

Grid Picks (Col.)

By

GEORGE JACKREU
The 1964-1965 Intramural Season got off to a fast start this
month with three sports presently
in full swing. For the last two
weeks the tennis tournament has
been in progress, and is now into
the quarter-final rounds. The Golf
Tournament was held last Friday
at Grover Cleveland Park The
results will be printed in the
next Spectrum because all of the
score sheets have not yet been
tallied.

The Cross-Country meet is set
for October 30th and all entries

must be in by October 27th.
The football leagues began playtwo weeks ago and here are the
standings of the top teams.
INDEPENDENT

2-0-1

C-men
Ravens
Passers
Losers

24)-1

2-1
2-1
2-1

Wednesday

Williams House
James House
Emerson House

2-0
1-0

1-1
1-1

Scott

Kertmore Ave.,
Buffalo, N.Y.

Phone; 836 -8961

day night contest.
MINNESOTA 27, DETROIT 24
—Viking QB Fran Tarkenton will
have to outscramble a rugged
Lion defensive line in order to
lead his team to victory. He did
it against the Packers, so who is
to say that he can't do it again?
LOS ANGELES 35, CHICAGO
27—The Bears have experienced
complete defensive collapse, a

KATE1UL SUCCESS

weakness that Munson and the

rest of the Rams will be only too
happy to exploit.
GREEN BAY 42, SAN FRANCISCO 17—You can be sure that
Starr, Hornung and Co. will be
out to insure that what happened
last week won’t happen again.

The Packers should make fast
work of the 49'ers in Milwaukee
on Sunday.
American Football League
BOSTON 24, SAN DIEGO 21—

A

The Patroits are undefeated so
far and should remain so after
tonight’s encounter with the ail-

ing Chargers.
NEW YORK 28, OAKLAND 17
—The Raiders have yet to win a
game and the Jets have demon-

strated how tough they can be
before the home crowd. Shea
Stadium will be a happy place
Saturday night after the NewYorkers dispose of the have-nots
of the Western Division:
BUFFALO 27, HOUSTON 24—
After almost being knocked off
by Oakland, the Bills had better
wake up and realize they aren’t
unbeatable. The Oilers could pull
this one out, especially since this
game is being played under the

Tweeds and tbe attractive

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this ilk which the proprietor
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friendly Texas stars.

$65oo

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Gagers Meet

CampttB
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The First Day of Official Practice for all Varsity Basketball Candidates
is October 15 at 3:30 p.m.
in Clark Gym.

3260 Main St.

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Assist full time man.
Earnings average $2,50 an hr.
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For

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Winners
Fantastics
Bummies

SOMETHING SPECIAL

FRATERNITY
Tuesday

■

Phi Epsilon Pi
Sigma Alpha Mu

Pi Lambda Tau
Beta Sigma Rho
Thursday
Alpha Sigma Phi

Phi Psi

Alpha Epsilon Pi

Gamma Phi

-

2-0
2-0

MCDONALD'S NEW

1-1

1-0

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'O
FISH

2-0
2-0

1-0
1-1

Try this McDonald's exclusive in good eating—you're
sure to agree it's the best

Crid Picks (Col.)
(Cont’d

AEPi'on Attack

Station
Amoco
300

in the World Series has necessitated a shift to Baltimore where
the Colts will enjoy a distinct
home-field advantage in this Mon-

Friday

Monday

Zygotes

Randy’s

(Cont'd from P. 16)

Intramurals

Leagues Underway

*

against Gamma

Phi

from P.

fish sandwich anywhere.
ONLY 24 CiNTS

15)

220 lb. powerhouse. They may
find that their hands are literally
empty on Saturday as Willard
leads North Carolina to a mild
upset.
COLUMBIA 24, HARVARD 20
—Archie Roberts has had 2 sensational games in a row, but he
needs a team to back him up.
When the Lion* jell, theyTl be
capable of beating anyone in the
Ivies. The Crim*on have had two
rough games so far, and will be
vulnerable. Mr. Roberts should
have a field day on the 10th and
Harvard will suffer this weeks
Upset of the Week

look for tho golden arehetl

McDonald's
uiDOM.lO

•

COMMATKM

&lt;M4

falB

NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD AT MAPLE ROAD
(S

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from

tempo*,

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OPENING SOON)

SHERIDAN DRIVE AT SWEET HOME ROAD

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minutti from

cjmpwt,

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�I

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

October 9, 1964

REDMEN SCALP BULLS
~/sy/HG

Fumbles Prove Costly Again
As UB Goes Down to Defeat
By

STEVE SCHUELEIN

The 1964 edition of UB football
took another step down the
tough luck trail Saturday as it
dropped

a heartbreaking

24 22

decision to Massachusetts at Rotary Field. Although the Bulls
completely dominated the statistics, they nevertheless managed
to finish on the short end of the
tally due to a rash of inoppor
tune mechanical miscues. Coach
Offenhamer said: “The team has
had more tough luck in these
last two games than any Club
deserves in a season. The boys
performed so well Saturday I
couldn't even yell at them in
practice this week. Not even
these last two heartbreaking
games seem to dent their spirit.
When we eliminate our mistakes
as we did in Boston two weeks
ago, some opponent will be in
for a long Saturday afternoon."

This quote pretty well summarizes the agonizing defeat the
Bulls suffered last week. Twice
in the last seven minutes of
play the Herd was denied touchdowns due to fumbles within
shot put distanct of the Redman
goal line. Mass. Coach Vic Fusia
labeled the fray as a “strictly
offensive game”, but this slate
ment is misleading since the Red
men only scored once on any sort
of a sustained drive. The other
seventeen points can be attribut-

Early in the second stanza,
the Redmen were again deep in
UB territory due to one long
gainer a 50-yard scamper around
■

left end inside the host 10 by
senior speedster Ken Palm, The
UB line stiffened against any
further advance, but the Massachusetts lead rose to 10-0 as
quarterback Jerry Whelchel split
the uprights from the 12 on'4th
down.
At this point the Bulls snapped
out of their offensive lethargy
and displayed a punishing, diversified attack that was to be
the pattern for the rest of the
game. With field general Don
Gilbert astutely blending quick
openers and roll outs with lookin passes and delayed quarterback keepers, the Redmcn found
themselves in a labyrinth of bewilderment. On fourth and goal
from the 3 Edward skirted right
end with a pitchout and under
a full head of steam, carried 3
Massachusetts defenders just over
the goal line with him.
With their lead slashed to three
New
points the
Englanders
bounced back with their only
sustained march to recushion
their margin to ten points. The
march was capped by a 22-yard
pass over the' middle from Whelchel to sure-handed end Bob
Meers. Shortly after Whelchel
toed the second of his three
successful placements, the in-

To

Fino

lj

Twe

sophomore end carried the mail
the rest of the way thanks to
a path-clearing block by Nick
Capuana, and the Bulls surged
to a 20-17 advantage.
After the SUNYAB’s kicked
off again Whelchel, finding the
UB defensive line tougher to
penetrate than Jack Benny’s
vault on payday, decided to

switch to the air lanes and test
his mammoth ends who tip the
scales at a combined wieght of
450 lbs. From his own 40 Whel-

STATISTICS
Mass.
13
148

126
8-11

Buffalo
18
184
112

First Downs
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing

Passes
7-13
0
Passes intercepted by
2
2-42
3-28
Punts

Fumbles lost
15
Yards penalized
Bull Session . . Although the
entire line deserves credit for
a tremendous team effort, Capt.
Pawloski and Russ MacKellar received the highest “grades” on

25

i*r

.

Mass. End MILT MORIN
chcl arched a soft aerial to 6’4”
240-lb, end Milt Morin, who en-

countered little difficulty in bowling over the Lilliputians in the
Bull secondary and galloping into the endzone for the final Red-

SHINE LEADS PLAY AS GILBERT SWEEPS END

ed to UB magnanimity or “the
one big play” for Massachusetts.
The first score for the Bay
Staters came late in the first
period after a wild snap from
center on a fourth down kicking
situation caused UB punter Bob
Edward to desperately fling the
ball downfield to the first Blue
shirt he could spot. The shirt
belonged to an interior lineman,
however, and after the consequential fifteen yards and loss
of down penally, the Redmen
were given possession of the ball
on the Buffalo 12, a generous
gift indeed. Four plays later fullback Mike Ross barrelled oyer
from the 2. and Massachusetts

led 7-0

vaders vaders carried a comfortable 17 7 lead into the locker
room

at halftime.

The Bulls that received the
second half kickoff continued to
devastate the highly touted Redman defensive line. With the
versatile Gilbert in the driver's
seat, the Bull vehicle was steered to its second touchdown. Edward's second six pointer from
three yards out plunged the Herd
back into the thick of the battle
at 17-13.
Only minutes later Gilbert
sparked another drive to the
visitors’ 20. On a second and 8
situation he drifted to his right
and rifled a pass to Jim Dunn in
the clear at the 10. The rangy

was

one of

bitter frustration for the hosts.
A booming sixty yard punt to
the Mass. 7 by Edward put the
Redmen in a deep rut midway
through the period. Three downs
later the visitors were forced to
punt into galelike winds. The
air currents played havoc with
the boot and finally blew it dead
on the Mass, 18, 8 yds. behind
the line of scrimmage! The Bulls
seemed on their way to recapturing the upper hand, but destiny
had a few surprises in store for
them. On first and goal from the
7 the ball was pried from Gilbert's grasp and recovered by
the Indians. The stubborn UB
defensive wall forced them back
to the 2, however, and Mass, decided to concede two points via
an intentional safety rather than
kicking into the teeth of the
howling winds.
Three plays after Dunn returned the ensuing kickoff to midfield, Gilbert lofted an aerial
to the 23 which the glue-fingered Rhode Islander hauled in
with a spectacular leaping circus
catch. With two minutes remaining the determined Bulls appeared capable of still pulling the
topsy-turvy donnybrook out of
the fire, but Denny Przykuta
hobbled a handoff on the next
play and a whole swarm of Mass,
linemen covered the ball and extinguished the last ray of hope
on the UB horizon.

schedule anymore. Each game
will require 100% effort.”

Harriers
Win Twice

The Cross-Country Varsity last
week completed what will be the
most strenuous week on its schedule, defeating Canisius and Rochester Tech, losing to Buffalo
State and finishing eighth in a
field of 15 teams in the LeMoyne
Invitational.
Dick Genau placed first in both
winning efforts and second
against State. Other place winners were Ed Lontrato, Jack
Kerns, Bob Hoffman and Bob Bijak, At the Le Moyne meet, the
team was weakened by the illness of Dick Genau and Bill Sued-

man score.

The fourth quarter

actly four times as much as he
gained in the first two contests
combined, forged into the rushing
lead with 140 yards gained. His
total yardage figure balooned to
.
an impressive 413 yards
When asked about how he rates
Marshall for tomorrow night’s
game, Coach Offcnhamer replied,
“We have no pasties on our

meyer.

Star Defenseman

GREENARD POLES

offense, while Ron Pugh, Jim
Piestrak, E. G.
Poles, and Mike Lucidi scored
highest on defense. Diminutive
Tom Oatmeyer topped all backs
on both offense and defense . . .
The Bulls suffered no serious
injuries last week so the squad
should be strong personnelwise
for Marshall tomorrow. Tackle
Brian Kent, who is still nursing
a broken hand, will be sidelined
at least another week , . . The
lethal look-in pass succeeded four
times without failure Saturday:
that makes it six-for-six this season, five of which Pawloski has
The Lincoln Park,
snared
Mich., Captain leads the Herd in
receptions, 7 good for 99 yards
.
.
. Gilbert,
whose 112 yards
McNally, Dom

...

gained rushing Saturday

was

ex-

During the same week, the
Frosh defeated Canisius and
Rochester Tech, lost to Buffalo
State and finished a strong fourth
in the Le Moyne Invitational. Bob
Stephenson placed first in both
the Canisius and Rochester Tech
meets and was fourth in the losing cause.
Against Rochester
Tech, in the first home meet of
the season, Stephenson set a
new UB Frosh course record,
breaking the old record established by Genau in 1963, Other
frosh place winners were Paul
Rogovich, Ray Syracuse, Dave

Latham, Bob Brodfuehrer and
Terry Timblen.
Both the Varsity and Frosh
teams travel to Colgate this Saturday to face a very strong Red
Raider squad. Thus far the Colgate Varsity has defeated Cornell
and Syracuse and lost to Army
by only 2 points.

�Friday, October 9, 1964

PAGE

SPECTRUM

FIFTEEN

PREVIEW
AILING BULLS OUT TO AVENGE
LAST YEARS STARTLING UPSET
By CHICK ARNOLD

The time is Saturday night,
and the place is Fairfield Stadium, Huntington, West Virginia.
Marshall University anji the University of Buffalo are near the
end of a hard-fought, tightly played game in which Buffalo is
leading 10-7. However, Marshall
has the ball on the Buffalo 3
yard-line. It's fourth down, and
they need these 3 yards on this
play. This is their last chance.
The ball game is riding on this
play. The Marshall quarterback
gets the hike from center, and
hands off to fullback Jim Brown.
But the keyed-up Buffalo line
stops him in his tracks, and the
Bulls take over on downs.
Imagine the Bulls having to
stop Jim Brown!! Sounds highly
unlikely, doesn’t it? Yet this is
one of the problems the Bulls
will be faced with tomorrow
night, as they travel to Huntington to meet the Big Green of
Marshall. Oddly enough, their
fullback is named Jim Brown.
And Brown and the rest of his
teammates will be out to even
their record this week at the
expense of the Bulls from Buf-

he tossed a 73 yard touchdown
pass to Jack Mahone, enabling
the Big Green to beat UB 10-8.
Mahone is back again this year,
too—and better than ever. His
run after catching that pass from
Miller, is one that will be long
remembered in Buffalo. Last season, Mahone finished as the third
leading rusher in .the nation, in
addition to being a fine pass receiver (2nd on the team). He is
5T1". 190 pounds, and extremely
fast. His quick starts and breakaway ability have.left many linemen holding air in the past, and

this week. If Buffalo can shake
its acute case of “fumblitis” (14
in three games), and hold down
Cure and Mahone, the Bulls will
come home with their second
victory of

the season.

Here are this week’s probable
starting line-ups:
BUFFALO

Gerry Pawloski

that it can't last, but they said
the same thing last year when
State tied for the championship.
No one has told Alabama "this,
though. So look for the Crimson
Tide to roll on, as Joe Namath
runs circles , around State. With
both Mississippi Auburn falling
before Kentucky, the road is open
to the SEC crown.
MISSISSIPPI 24, FLORIDA 6—

The Rebels rebounded from their
loss to Kentucky by routing a
tough Houston squad. Florida,
with all-SEC Larry Dupree, giving

O

fits to the linemen, is undefeated,
hut has not had a hard game yet.
Ole Miss will be out to redeem
itself and may cause more damage

to Florida than Hurricane Dora.
NORTH CAROLINA 14, L,.S.U.
9—It took a hurricane to stop the
Tigers last week (their game with
Florida was postponed). The Tar
Heels don't have a hurricane, but
they may have the next best
thing in devastating Ken Willard.

The Chinese Bandits will have
their hands full containing the
(Cont'd on P. 13)

Dom Piestrak

Bruce Hart
Mike Lucidi
Jim McNally
Leo' Ratamess
Gerry LaFountain
Don Gilbert
Nick Capuana
Willie Shine
Dennis Przykuta

QB

LHB

RHB

FR

MARSHALL
Bob Pruett

Fred Anderson
Bill Winter
Tom Good

—

Clyde Owens
Bill Bobbitt

Jim Cure
Howie Miller
Jack

QB

Mahone

LHB
RHB

Ray Henderson
Jim Brown

FB

falo.

Grid Picks (Pro)

Marshall University has a team
quite similar to Massachusetts,

which defeated the Bulls last
week. Again, Buffalo will be outweighed on the line
this week
by an average of eight pounds
per man. The Big Green has two
fine ends, like Massachusetts, in
Jim Cure and Bob Pruett, an al-

(Cont’d

Sophomore Scatback
NICK CAPUANA

—

ways

dangerous quarterback in

Howie Miller, and halfback Jack

Quarterback DON GILBERT

Mahone, a quick starting speedster with excellent speed and balance. These were virtually the
same qualifications submitted by
Massachusetts last week. However,
although the Marshall line is big,
they are not as strong as the
Redmen, nor are they as fast.
From tackle to tackle, the Bulls
should prevail. Look for an interesting battle throughout the
game between Leo Ratamess and
Bill Bobbitt of Marshall. Leo is
a large 260 pounds, but he will
still be 20 pounds short against
the 280 pound Bobbitt.

Coach Charlie Snyder of Marshall relies heavily on the passing arm of his quarterback,
Howie Miller. Miller, as a sophomore last year, was the surprise
of the team. He didn’t start the
opening game; played in the second. and held on to his position
for the remainder of the season.
He then went on to lead in the
MidAmerican Conference in
passing. Miller is comparatively
small, :(5'11”, 170 pounds), but
he uses this as an asset in getting
away from onrushing linemen.
He is a fine passer, and, works
the roll-out and option very well,
As Buffalo fans everywhere re
member, he is also quite capable
of .throwing, tye
)'W-

promises to offer more of
the same this year.
At right end', the Big Green
has “the best offensive end in
Marshall football history, and
one of the best ever in the MidAmerican Conference”, in the
person of Jim Cure. At 6’1”, 200
pounds, Cure holds virtually all
Marshall. University and MidAmerican Conference pass receivng records, and should put
many of them out of reach for
years to come. For the past two
years, he has been named to
the All-Conference team, and last
year, he finished third in the
nation in pass receiving. Cure
has a fine pair of hands, and is
a dangerous running threat after
catching a pass. He also excels
on defense.
At the other end of the line
is another strong end, Bob Pruett,
6', 190 pounds. A converted fullback, last season Pruett went
both ways, playing both offense
and defense. His great speed
makes him the - standout he is
on defense, and he likes to play
a rough game of football. Look
for the Bulls to have their hands
full keeping this pair of ends
he

down.

Buffalo’s

first string center,

Joe Holly, and tackle Brian Kent,
who started the first two games
of the season, are on the doubtful list for tomorrow’s game.
Holly, although he played against
Massachusetts, showed that he is
not fully recovered
from a
pinched nerve in his left shoulder
incurred during the Boston University gamO; Kent has a fracture

of the third finger of his left

hand.

i

Nick Gapuana,, the sophomore
scatback from Utica, will start
in place of senior Bob Edward.
The two have been alternating
at the position since the season
began.

Don Gilbert, who played a good
game against Massachusetts, will
quarterback

both

the first and
;s

wee

This is the last game between
Buffalo and Marshall, for a few
years. UB has no Mid American
Conference opponent next year,
but starts a home and home
series with Kent State in 1966.
Marshall University should pro-

yltlg Ibc .Bulls .with, a -good, test

from P.

16)

the Ivy League race, though Yale
has an outside chance. Both teams
are unbeaten, but the Tigers will
be the only ones with an unblemished record after this one.
The Dartmouth line will be hardpressed to stop bruising Cosmo
lacavassi, who is having another
great year,
KENTUCKY 27, F L O R I D A
STATE 20—Unbeaten Kentucky,
with successive upsets of Ole Miss
Auburn rate as the surprise team
of the year. The Seminoles are
also 3-0, but against lesser fees.

They will be hoping for the
Wildcats to have a lot-down after

their last two games.
SYRACUSE 26, U.C.L.A. 21—
The Bruins come East to battle

theOrangemen, after having taken
the measure of 2 Eastern powerhouses on the Pacific Coast. They
will be a very disappointed lot
when they return home. The
punishing Syracuse ground game
will knock the Californian’s, from

ranks of the unbeaten.
ARMY 23, PENN STATE 9—
This is the first time in Penn
State history that they have failed
to win at least one of their first
3 games. If they’re looking to get
(he

into the win column after this
game, they are sadly mistaken.
This annual rivalry has always
been close (Army has won the last
three games by the margin of a
field goal or less, but this year
the Black Knights just have too
much for the Nittany Lions

BUFFALO 28, MARSHALL 6Buffalo will be able to re-group
its forces, here, after a tough loss
to Massachusetts, The Bulls were
very impressive, even in a losing
.cause. They will surprise, may a
team before the season is over.
Marshall will be unable to repeat last year’s upset victory.
TEXAS 28, OKLAHOMA 13—
The Sooners have had two weeks

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-a godsend for today’s

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day of the short, dinky collar is gone,"
J say London’s famous Custom shirtmakers.
Hathaway agrees. Hence the new London Polo
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It’s the very same collar that is being'worn
by London’s smartest men. Note the longer
points, set closer together—with just the right
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The overall effect is marvelously dressy
especially with today’s slim suits.
We have a selection of these handsome new
Hathaways in stripes of Olive,Brown,Blue . I he
fabric is a particularly fine imported broad-

iirpHE

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~

to lick their wounds from the
USC game. They have a great
potential, and last week the Longhorns showed that they were not

invincible. But Texas has its eyes
on a second unbeaten season, and
the number one ranking and will
let no one get in its way. Look
for Texas to win convincingly, as
and audience of millions watches
the contest on T.V.

ALABAMA 30, N. C. STATE 14
—No one paid much attention to
the Wolfpack in the pre-season
polls, but here they are, unbeaten
and leading the.A.C.C. People say

a

Dash ojj Odcentule
IN YOUR

WARDROBE

Corns To
i&lt;*KV

OCLAWARf AVE..

N. V

�Friday, October 9, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

GOODSIDE AND
THE BAD SIDE-PART II
THE

Well, here we are again, sports fans, back with Part II of our
newly inaugurated sports serial featuring the UB football teams in
the starring roles. However, we wish to make it clear that this
follow up column was not our original intent, but rather was written
because it seemed to be the most appropriate, when one considers
the striking similarities between the past two week ends of UB football activity. If the picture presented does appear to be superficially
similar to that which was in last week's initial installment, there is
IT IS. However, there are
one most significant reason for this
some pertinent dissimilarities between the two sets of games which
deserve some examination and explanation. Thus, the reason for
this week’s continuation.
—

This time we'll start with the bad side, which actually was not as
bad as it might have seemed. First there were many points for
which the team as a whole deserves commendation. Most importantly,
the Bulls displayed the kind of spirit usually exhibited by a winning
team, continually “coming back" after receiving numerous setbacks,
each of which had seemingly knocked them out of the game. Perhaps this is the most commendable characteristic any team can hope
to display, and in giving credit where credit is due, we applaud the
Bulls for their magnificent effort.
Now you are probably wondering what is bad
are; aren't you?). Well, the fact remains that
of the Brills is a far cry from what it should
is to have a winning season. The Bulls made

about this (sure you
the executional play
and must be if UB
several key miscues,
which to all intent and purposes, lost the game. Twice the Bulls
fumbled on drives deep in enemy territory in the closing minutes of
play cither of which could have provided the winning touchdown.
What was so ironically tragic about the fumbles, was that they were
made by two players who had distinguished themselves in that game
as well as the two previous encounters. Don Gilbert had offensively
dominated the game as he ran for 112 yards and passed for 112
more, while Dennis Przykuta has been the. Bulls' top runner this
season. Thus, we can see the reason for Coach Dick Offenhamer's
post-game comment "I’m heartbroken, not for myself, but for the
players. They played too hard and too well to lose."

In more objectively analyzing the situation, the Bulls hail better
stop making mistakes or they will lie losing heartbreakers like this
all season. In the three games played thus far UB has lost the hall
seven times on fumbles, plus four other times on pass interceptions.

Five of the fumbles occurred in enemy territory, stopping potential
UB scoring drives, while another was deep in Buffalo territory setting, up a touchdown for the opposition As ■previously stated, mistakes such as these can not be made it the Bulls are to entertain any
hopes of enjoying a successful season. Bet's hope that they can
straighten themselves out against Marshall tomorrow. From this
corner it looks as if they will.

Now, after the bad side, which really had more good than bad in
it, we naturally come to the good side, which most of us would rather
have reversed with the bad side (???). Well, in any case, the Baby
Bulls (we still haven't thought of a better name) handily defeated
Ithaca College“at Ithaca by 36 to 0 score. The game was highlighted
by the play of quarterback Rick Wells, who put on an amazing show
before a hometown crowd, by passing for two touchdowns, running
for another, kicking an extra point and running for a two point conversion. There were of course, numerous Other standouts in this
tremendous overall team effort which turned the game into a onesided affair, all of which adds up to future success for the Baby Bulls
and eventually the “Big" Bulls. Judging from the first two games,
simply because that is all there is to judge from, this year's edition
of the Baby Bulls could very well be the best ever. Let s hope their
winning ways rub off on the Bulls, so maybe next week we can title
this column
“THE GOOD SIDE AND THE GOOD SIDE—PART I"
—

Support The Ernie Davis

Leukemia Fund

Grid Picks

Linkers Win
Brook Lea Professional
The UB Golf Team has proven
its ability in all types of competition this year. In dual matches, its record is 3 victories and
0 defeats, but its most impressive
showing came with

the victory

in the recent Brook-Lea Country
Club Invitational Golf Tourna
ment.
Friday, October 2, the
golfers were matched against
best men from a field of
colleges and universities in

UB

the

ten

the

Third Annual Brook-Lea Invitational Golf Tournament. The men
from Buffalo convincingly met
this challenge as UB captured
its third straight first place trophy. UB has placed second to
none since this tournament was
originated. The number one man
for Buffalo, Steve Watts, achieved low medalist honors with a
fine 76 over the tough Rochester
-

golf course. He was closely pursued by a fellow teammate,
Ralph Goodrich, who scored a
79 which was good enough for

third medalist honors. Kearons
an 82 and Jim Bruce
added a 90 to round out the four

Whalen shot

man team representing Buffalo,
The combined team effort was
a total of 327, which was low
enough to convince all that Buffalo still reigns supreme in this
tournament.

The victory in Rochester was
not the only one for our team
in the past week. Tuesday,
September 29, the UB golfers
trounced Niagara by a score of
16-2. For the team’s twenty-third
victory in
consecutive
dual
matches, the UB golfers traveled
to Sheridan Park Golf Course
where they defeated Buffalo
State 117 on their own home
course. These victories came as
a result of a fine team effort
with each man doing his best
and contributing to the overall
success of the team.
Coach Serfustini described this
week as “the critical week of
this year's golf season." On Monday, October 5, the team played
host to Canisius, a group highly
regarded as the Little Three
Champions. On Wednesday, Octo-

ber 7, UB traveled to St. Bonaventurc to try to make it two
straight over the Bonnies this
season. Tomorrow, Coach Scrfustini's men will have one of the
greatest tests of the season. The
ECAC qualifying round will be
held at Colgate University and
the UB squad will be out to
duplicate last year's first place
in the qualifying round. Coach
Serfuslini described last year's
team as "one of the finest in
the East. " By all indications, this
year's UB Golf Team is living
up to this reputation and exerting every effort to become the
finest golf team ever to represent UB.

The UB Hockey Club
will hold a meeting on
Tuesday, October 13. in
Norton Hall, Room 330,
at 7:30 p.m. It will be
mainly organizational in
nature but there will be
some chalk-board talk, so
all members

asked to
come. Anyone interested
in joining the team is wel
come also.
are

College

By RICHARD DRANDOFF

By STEVE

The fourth week of the professional football season has come
and gone, and with it, also, a
few surprises. Last week, in
major upsets, the Minnesota Vikings beat the Green Bay Packers,
and the Chicago Bears, the defending NFL champions, were
humbled by the once lowly San

Francisco 49'ers. With more than
the usual amount of upsets so
far, a person who has no knowledge of the NFL proceedings
this season would look at the

standings in complete bewilderment. The Baltimore Colls, led
by the amazing Johnny Unitas,
are on top in the Western Division with Los Angeles and Detroit
close behind. Green Bay has lost
twice already and is tied for
fourth place with Minnesota and
San Francisco.The division cellardwellers?—the Chicago Bears,
who have given up more points
so far this season (134 in four

games) than they did all of last
year when they permitted their
opponents but nine points per
game.
The Eastern Division presents
fewer problems, but the big surprise is indeed a very surprising
one. Not many experts expected
the New York Giants to repeat
their divisional triumph of 1963.
but I’d venture a guess that not
one of them had predicted a total

collapse of both the offense and
defense. To date the Giants have
yielded 101 points, third highest
total in the league, while scoring
a meager 47, the lowest total of
all the 14 NFL teams. The two
teams tied for first, St. Louis and
Cleveland, arc, to say the least,
cyenly matched. Each owns a
3-0-1 record and they battled to
a 33-33 tie a few games ago. The
rest of the teams, Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh. Dallas and Washington, appear to be of the run-ofthe-mill variety and offer virtually no surprises. It looks like it
will be strictly a two team race.
After this analysis, (it's short,
but still it's an analysis) a season
prediction seems to be in order,
so I'll go out on a limb and say
that the Baltimore Colts will
journey to St, Louis on December
27 and when they return home
that evening, they will be the
National Football League's 1964
Champions. The Miami RunnerUp Bowl contestants? —Green Bay
and Cleveland.
This week’s picks:

National Football

League

CLEVELAND 28, PITTSBURGH

14—The Browns are rolling along
and appear to be unstoppable for
the time being. The Steelers are
having trouble regaining their
’63 form and will be in hot water
in Cleveland Saturday night.
DALLAS 17, NEW YORK 10—
A defensive slump is difficult to
snap out of and the Giants will
find that out when they run into
the offensive-minded Cowboys in

Dallas.

PHILADELPHIA 21, WASHINGTON 14—The Redskins have
to win a game eventually, but the
guess here is that it will not be

against the Eagles this week.
BALTIMORE 38, ST. LOUIS 31
—In what will probably be the
rehearsal for this year's championship game, the air will be
filled with footballs thanks to
Messrs. Unitas and Johnson. This
game is an out-and-out toss-up.
and the guess is that the Colts

will shoot down the Cardinals
if only for this week. The game
was originally scheduled to be
played in St. Louis, but the baseball Cardinals’ unexpected arrival
(Cont’d on P. 13)
-

FEIGIN

Many people have taken offense
to my last (unsuccessful) Upset of
the Week, where I picked Army
to defeat number-one ranked
Texas. They point to the final
outcome (17-6) and ask how I
could have possibly made such a
blunder. If they would look further into the game, they would
find out. The Black Knights could
have very easily emerged fromSaturday’s conflict with victory in
hand. The hard-hitting Cadets
were penalized the amazing total
of 140 yards and had 2 touchdowns called

back because of
minor infractions. Still, as the
game moved into the final quarter, Army led 6-3. In the 4th quarter, the dam burst and the rest
is history. The final outcome
could very well have been Army
on top by at least a 20-3 margin.
The Cadets are led this year
by a man who, in my estimation,
may make people forget about
“Jolly” Roger Staubach of Navy.
This gentleman. Rollie Stichweh
by name, has personally accounted for 457 yards in 3 games
and has contributed 30 points to
the Army cause. And all this
while averaging less than 20
minutes playing time per game.
A popular sports magazine suggested that he "may become the
first All-American who will not
play enough to earn a letter.”
With Stichweh in charge, Army
has the horses to win the Lambert
Cup this year.Keep your eye on
the Army-Syracuse game, November 7th, at Yankee stadium. It
may be one of the greatest games

in Eastern football annuals.
Since four West Coast elevens
had upset my choices so far this
year, 1 picked two of them to
win last week. Naturally, they
lost, so my season's record stands

at 24-12-2. Just an added note
the prognosticator for Sport’s Illustrated boasts a 31-27-1 record
OHIO STATE 17, ILLINOIS 13
—The win’’ r of this “ame w;ill
go on to challenge Michigan for
me liig ten crown. The Buckeyes
seem to have the edge here, with
their grind-it-out, possession attack. All-American center Dick
Butkus and the Fighting Illinois
will keep the game close, though.
MICHIGAN 27, MICHIGAN
STATE
14—State tripped up
powerhouse U.S.G. last week, but
will be unable to repeat. The
•

”

Wolverines, with their strongest
squad in years, have been very
impressive so far. They should
leave the field on Saturday with
the Paul Bunyan trophy, for the
first time in nine years.
GEORGIA TECH 28, NAVY 7
—The unbeaten Yellow Jackets
will have an easier time with
Navy than expected. The Middies'
offense, without the services of
the injured Staubach, will be unable to get rolling. Tech looks
like the top independent in the

South this year.
NOTRE DAME 33, AIR FORCE
14—The Falcons have looked
..sharp so far this year, but they
are outclassed here. The Irish,
dormant for the last few years,
have finally come alive under
Parseghian. Their massive forward wall and talented backfield
will wreak havoc in the Midwest
-

this season.
U.S.C. 34, TEXAS A

&amp;

M 9—

The Trojans, ranked number 2
until they met up with Michigan
State, will have a breather here
before they plunge into -their
tough A.A.W.U. schedule. The
Aggies will win few games this
year, certainly not this one.
PRINCETON 23, DARTMOUTH

14—This

contest should decide
(Confd on P. 15)

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NEW DORM
TO BE DEDICATED

Bu^^B

STATE

T

NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

N.

■

BOSTON

PREVIEW

mm

«B|Hk

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l________^_

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■

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER

IE 15

NO.

18, 15

1

U8 EXPANDS CAMPUS
President of Student Senate New Campus In Amherst
Addresses Freshman Class
FRESHMEN;
I am sure

that by now you
have been welcomed to our uni
versity countless times. I hope
that you will excuse the repetition, but I too sincerely wish to
welcome you to SUNYAB, this
time on behalf of the student

(Ti
r7

To Encompass 1024 Acres

Early this Summer the state announced plans for
the construction of a new campus for the State University of Buffalo. According to Mr. Robert J. McVeigh,
Director of Public Information for the University, the
new campus will be located in Amherst approximately
three miles from the present campus. The State Univerand
sity is the present owner of 24(J acres in Amherst
800 acres

body.

I hope that you will accept my
brief comments as discourse from
one student to another.
First, there is no doubt that
our main purpose here at the university is one of academics. This
is certainly nothing to fear, yet

o

H

nothing to forget. However, ours
is a friendly and an intellectual
atmosphere. It is also a most rewarding feeling to grow educationally, socially, and extra-curricularly as the university itself
grows
and I can tell you that
since this university affiliated
with the SUNY, the growth can
easily be noted. And with the
new campus, increased courses,
new professors and countless
.this university is
doors opened
truly expanding by leaps and
bounds. It is very encouraging
to witness this
and to be growing educationally at the same
—

—

—

time.
You

remember, howwe must remember,
that there are other advantages
of which you should avail yourshould

ever, and

selves. Social activities should be
encouraged
whether this be
in the form of fraternities, sororities, union social activities
or special weekends and activities.
Student participation, in my estimation, is one of the most significant aspects of college life. Take
—

o
u
iii

Injunction Granted

To UB Fraternities
A temporary injunction pre
venting the State university of
New York at Buffalo from inter
fering with nationally affiliated
fraternities and sororities on
campus was issued September 8
by Supreme Court Justice Alfred
M. Kramer.
He has yet to decide whether
the organizations must sever their

ROBERT FINKELSTEIN
an active interest. Find out about
our Student Assn.—involve your
self. Our doors arc open at all
times. We want and actively encourage your participation. Please
do not fail in this area.
All in all, let me say one stunational ties and become local
dent at the university to another, organizations;
that ours is a fine institution and
The injunction directs Richard
productive and enjoyable years A, Siggelkow, dean of students,
are ahead. But do not lose sight
from interfering with the rushof the fact that your education ing, pledging and initiating of
is your most important activity. students into fraternal organiDo not think there is a stereozations.
typed pattern for success in this
Dean Siggelkow, when asked
methods
which
are
ar»a Study
to comment, said, “Any state
nothing
for
■beneficial
some yield
ment altering implementation of
for others. Determine, by experipolicy concerning disaffiliation of
your
own
mentation, which are
national social groups would need
best means of preparation. Let us
to be directed by the State Unialways take something out of that versity of New York.
which is placed before us.
‘However, we hope that any
Consider for secondary importaction initiated by supporters of
ance extra-curricular and social
national groups is based on good
outlets. I conclude by asking all and reasonable grounds and, in
students at this institution to be
their best judgement, in the ina part of the university comterests of all the students con
munity in its entirety.
cerned. To perpetuate unduly the
ROBERT FINKELSTEIN present uncertainty and insecurity among those undergraduate
members of the various groups
directly affected would be most
unfortunate.”
Dean Siggelkow was acting in
compliance with directives from
the trustees of the State University of New York, which started
breaking national fraternal or
ganizatiohs on state campuses
The students also had an op under their control in 1953.
The policy became effective
portunity to hear divergent views
here after UB became a state
regarding the alibity to learn.
“Approach to Learning” panels school in 1962. The tie-breaking
is to be completed by June 1967.
were composed of faculty mem
The Dean declined to comment
hers from several academic areas
specifically about the expected
who shared their . individual apoutcome of the case because he
proaches to learning.
felt the matter was in the hands
The academic convention, com
of SUNY at Albany. He did indiposed of University faculty members, was divided into six panels cate that the injunction was a
with each group discussing a perfectly legal maneuver on the
current issue. Students had their part of the social groups and
choice of which panel discussion there would be no administrative
pressure until Justice Kramer's
to attend.
decision is made. The decision
Topics discussed included:
Men and is expected before the end of
“Role Conflict
Women in Our Changing Society.” the semester.
The action was brought by four
“Civil Rights—Is It Too Late
fraternities, Beta Sigma Rho,
to Avoid Violence?”
Sigma Alpha Mu, Phi Epsilon Pi
“Election Year —1964.”
and Phi Kappa Psi, and two
“Arms Control, Disarmament
sororities, Sigma Delta Tau and
and Survival."
The festival of arts held Phi Sigma Sigma.
at'
10,
7
Thursday, September
p.m. offered the new students a
choice of four performing arts
presentations. Presented were:
A play written by John MortiPositions are now open
mer, "Dock Brief," a study of the
on the Spectrum staff. No
relationship between a lawyer
and his client who is to be tried
experience necessary
for murder,
A movie entitled, "Good SolStop up today at 3 p.m
dier Schweik," a satire on war
355 Norton
in
foibles.
and human
xMr. Robert Mahoney, a balla
dter, who appears at the Green
sleeves Coffee House in Buffalo.

Intrinsic Values' Theme
at Orientation Program
Conveying the intrinsic values
of university life—both academic and cultural—was the aim of
the 1964 orientation program for
freshmen and transfer students
at the State University of Buffalo
September 9-10.
Composed primarily of an “academic convention” and a festival
of the arts, the program goal was
“the communication to the new

students the traditions and the
atmosphere of a community of
scholar s,” according to Dean
Richard A. Siggelkow, University
dean of students.
“The orientation program is an
opportunity for the students to
experience in a two day period,
academic, cultural and social
events typical of those found
during a college year.”
In addition to the convention
and .the festival, three special
sessions for the students were
incorporated in the program.
For the enrollees who have
selected a major, faculty members from each of the schools
and departments discussed with
them training, opportunities, empioyment a n d—expectations in
each field.
Staff counselors met with the
new students who have not decided on a major, to discuss
self-evaluation in assisting in a
decision for an area of concern

tratibn.

—

plans to acquire another
bringing the total acreage of the
new campus to 1064. This will
increase the present University
of Buffalo campus sevenfold.

The first phase of construction

is due to be completed by 1970
and is expected to cost $130 million. This is not to imply that the

program will reach fruitation by
1970. This will only mark the beginning phase of the transition.
It is estimated that the entire
project will not reach completion
till 1980. The present campus
will be used exclusively for the
development of a Health Science
Center which will include a new
medical school and teaching-re
search hospital, and expansion of
the present schools of medicine,
dentistry, pharmacy, and nursing.
It is hoped that a new Erie C'oun
ty Hospital will also be located on
the old campus. Dr. Clifford C.
Furnas, President nf the University said, "This step will lead
to a degree of cultural and economic wellbeing for Western
New York which will exceed any
vision which we may have dared
to express up to this time.” Dr.
Furnas estimated that the most
pressing needs for the new camp
us would be classroom buildings,
a library, residence halls, a fine
arts center, another student center, and buildings for engineering, physics, physical education,
and administration.
As a result of this expansion
move on the part of the Uni
versity the projected enrollment
by 1970 is expected to be 27.000
compared to the present enrollment of 17,000. When both campuses arc operational there should
be dormitory space for 10,500
students. The net result of this
division into two distinct units
will be to house the professional
disciplines on the old campus
and contain all undergraduate
and graduate arts units on the

new campus.
The reasons given for this farreaching change are many and
varied. Briefly they are as follows:
1. The need for a larger camp-

2. The distance (three miles)
is not too far for the maintenance of excellent communications facilities between the two

units.

3, Land is available which will
enable the university to avoid
high construction costs necessitated if they had to buy the costly city and residential areas adjoining the Main Street campus.
4. The establishment of a Western New York Medical center is
in the best interests of the university

and the community.

5. Appropriate long range use
of the old campus can be made
when the new campus is ready.
6. The transition from old to
new’ can be effected with a minimal amount of effort and confusion.
A bill approving this project
has passed the state legislature.
The funds have been appropriated.

�Friday, September 18,, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

To The Class
of 1968:
The university exerts a significant influence upon its students.

important, the university
exists to challenge its students.
It is the true student who ac
ccpts this challenge and uses
the educational opportunities for
More

his betterment
Education has been defined in
many ways by many people. One

such definition is: education is
the individual's continuing per
sonal discovery of the ideas of
men and the things in their
world. The formal elements of
instruction —classrooms and lec
lures, libraries, papers and books
—arc only a small part of the
process of education.
The role of a student involves
a commitment to an educational
process which revolves around
classroom training, yet extends
beyond that training. It involves
also the attainment of knowledge
and the development of skills
and ways of thinking necessary
for responsible participation in

the affairs of government ami
all levels.
A student Who develops these
ways of thinking is one both dedi
ealed to pursuing the truth and
to preparing himself for leader
ship in a democratic society. He
will be prepared to face the
challenges of modern life, and
will be able to confront the cm
cial issues of public policy that
affect him beyond the classroom
and that determine the course,
if not the survival, of his society.
Students can learn a great deal
from their instructors and from
each other inside the classroom,
but only if the student realizes
that, in college, education is to
be found outside the formal academic structure will he desire
education,, and be able to seek
it in later life, when that si rue
ture is no longer an immediate
factor m ms lite
It has been my experience that
both the better student and the
student leader, and they are often
one and the same, are active,
informed, and responsible partici
pants in the domestic life of the
campus, local, slate, national, and
international communities Each
of them, ;is students, seek with
interest' those problems which
lead to responsible involvement
in social and political action; and
in this connection, they are eon
cerned not simply with the prob
lems of direct relevance to the
academic community, but they
society on

arc concerned; as welt, with those
problems and issues of our na
lional and international life.
I would therefore suggest that
each of you extend your interests
beyond the narrow college coin
munity. and to develop an active
involvement in tbe broader com
munity. I would further su
that each of you extend your
sociations to individuals

Visiting Profs.
Project ’64
-

The Visiting Asian Professors
excepProject will, again bri
tional cultural talent to ae campus during the school year of 1964
1965. Under the cooperation of
Dr, Burvil II. Glenn, four lecturers will be,attending the University from Sept. 13 through
11,

May

Professor Bishnu Prasad Poudel
of Nepal will be on campus from
Sept. 13 through Nov. fi. He is
a lecturer in the Department of
History and Political Thought at
Nepal National College. Mr. Poudel. is awaiting his Ph.D, results
from the Indian School of international Studies. He is also the
recipient of the Itoyal Nepal Academic Award on Nepalese Poetry.
Professor Poudel is prepared to
give lectures on: History of Political Though!, Nepalese History,
Culture, Political Theory, Education and the Constitution.
Professor Tumkur Rajasekharaiah will lecture fhom Nov. 9 to
the end of the semester. He re :
eeived his 15.A. in English and
Philosophy and his M.A. in Eng
lish Literature; he has written
a Book of Short Stories and A
Book of Poems and is a know
h Igable lecturer on all aspects
ill Indian literature.
These lecturers will be avail
able this semester for classes,
faculty groups, and student clubs
both on this campus and at other
area universities and it is hoped
(hat both classes and private or-

The Executive Committee of
Union .Board, in cooperation with
all campus organizations, is planning the first annual Norton Open
House, Monday from 3-5 p.m.

Dr. Dov Tamari, professor of
mathematics at the State University of Buffalo, has been appointed chairman of the department
of mathematics at the University.
Dr. Tamari, a native of Germany. received his master's deLadd Sievenpiper, chairman of
from the Hebrew University
the event, said that he hoped the gree
in Jerusalem and his doctorate
Open House would become an
in mathematics from the Univerextended annual affair. Its pursity of Paris. He was appointed
pose is "to inform students of
a professor of mathematics at
the existence and purposes of the University in September
of
various Organizations, and also last year.
Prior to his appointgive them an opportunity to sign ment,
he served as a professor, of
up for particular groups.”
mathematics at the University of
Caen, France. Dr. Tamari has
Each organization will have its
served as a member of the school
own room assigned in Norton.
of mathematics at the Institute,
The center lounge will be closed
for Advanced Study at Princeton
to students between 3-5, and University
and as a professor of
tables will be set up, consisting
mathematics at the University of
each
representatives
general
of
of
Rochester.
field: student publications, reDr. Harriet F. Montague, who
union
ligious organizations,
board
has served as acting chairman of
and senate, greeks and military
department since 1961, has
groups. These representatives will the
taken a sabbatical leave and will
direct interested, students to
In (lie future it is hoped that
the' 'Open House program can
he expanded in order to better
acquaint students with all available activities on campus, and
thus give them an opportunity
tu make the most objective choice
of organizations in. which to par-

There

and

return to her teaching duties in
January of next year. Dr. Mont-

has been associated with
the University for 35 years beginning as an instructor in mathe-

ague

matics in 1929.

ticipate.

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Each of you should be partie
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and through your student govern
ment, so that it may become
your representative spokesman
and agent in issues and activities
both on and off campus!

Most important, each of you
has the responsibility to your
self and to your community to
prepare yourself adequately in
the profession which you choose
Success Comes to those who
prepare for it, and those Who
prepare from the beginning stand
a better chance of succeeding
The best of luck to all of you
throughout your college career.
Bill Berger, Chairman

Freshman Orientation
Committee. 1964

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�SPECTRUM

Friday, September 18, 1964

M.F.C. Begins Its 41st Year
In Continuing Education
With four decades of experi-

granite-like
foundation, the State University
of Buffalo’s Millard Fillmore College enters its 41st year shouldering a threefold responsibility.
ence

serving

as a

College, expected to provide an education
to nearly 7,000 persons this fall,
seeks to educate the high school
graduate who, for financial or
other personal reasons is unable
to continue his i-ducation as a
full-time student. Similarly, many
adults, awakening to the demands
of the ’60’s which make college
education a necessity, are building a better future for themselves by attending the College.

Millard Fillmore

The schoo's purpose also includes rehabilitating students
who failed when they first entered the field of higher education,
A second chance is provided these
students by Millard Fillmore College. They must, however, prove
themselves capable beyond the
regular “C” average in order to

restore themselves to good academic standing.

A second major responsibility
of Millard Fillmore College is
to provide a vital lifeline of Symposiums, conferences, and workshops for the educated populace
who must be kept abreast of the
constant increase of knowledge
in their respective fields. Today,
when research is filling the voids
of knowledge at an extremely
rapid rate MFC seeks to provide
continuing education to the people of this community.

President Clifford C, Furnas
expressed his feelings regarding
the continuing education concept
in this manner: “It is more and
more apparent that only those
persons who are committed to
continuing education will be able

to keep up with the dynamic
changes which will shape our
future. It is my hope that the
institutions of higher learning
in the community and in the
nation will meet this challenge
by providing materials and experiences to adults on a continuing basis so that as- a nation we
shape events through our sense

of purpose rather than be enin events shaped by

gulfed

others.”

Offering a variety of special
non-credit courses for people who
do not desire to work toward a
degree but seek to improve their
present skills and knowledge is
the the third major responsibility
of the College. Such courses are
offered in banking, real estate,
all designed
and many others
to supplement an individual’s
knowledge in his particular field
—

which will result in ultimate selfimprovement.

The $130 million dollar expan-

sion program at the University
will undoubtedly allow Millard
Fillmore Colege to broaden both
its program and responsibilities
in its continuing influence upon
the adults residing in the Niagara Frontier area.

PAGE THREE

SUNYAB’s Seventh Dormitory
To Be Dediacted on Friday,
October 9: Clement Hall
The State University of Buf
falo’s seventh dormitory will be
dedicated Friday, October 9 in
honor of the late Mrs. Stephen
M. Clement, a distinguished community leader and philanthropist
who served on the University’s
Council for 21 years.
The $2,462,000 nine-story dormitory, which will house 500 upperclass women, will be named.
“Carolyn Tripp Clement Hall” at
the dedication and cornerstone
laying ceremonies scheduled to
begin at 11 a.m.

In

of

1941 she asked

the Westminster Church’s parish

house during the same year en-

dowed the Cihair of Christian
Methods in Yale University’s
School of Religion. In memory
of her daughter, Marion, she
opened a summer camp for underprivileged children at Angola
in 1918

the Council accepted her resignation with this comment recorded in the minutes of the meeting: “Her service on the board
covered a period of 20 years of
constructive, sympathetic and
generous service for which the
University will always remain
her debtor.”

Seven months before her death,
Mrs. Clement was the recipient

of the Achievement Award of
the American Association of University Women presented annually to a Buffalo woman who “holds
firm to the basic fundamental
things of life, who has broad
vision and intelligent, devoted
sympathy for the people in the
world who heed help.”

The nine-story, red brick “high
rise" dormitory, located at the
extreme northeast corner of the
Main and Bailey campus, will
contain two main lounges on the
first floor and various recreation
and studying facilities in the
basement.

Mrs. Clement, who died in 1943

at the age of 82, was prominent
throughout her lifetime in community affairs. She contributed
$80,000 to the University during
various capital fund raising cam
paigns and was one of the first
women to serve on the former
Council of the University of Buffalo. Throughout her years of
service on the Council, Mrs.
Clement took an active interest
in university affairs, taking particular interest on the buildings
and grounds committee.

June

that she not be re-elected to the
Council. In granting her request,

In addition to her dedicated
work at the University, Mrs.
Clement made numerous other
contributions to the area. In June
of 1941 she contributed her palatial home at 786 Delaware Avenue to the American Red Cross.
Earlier in tier life, in 1914, she
and her family gave the land for

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store to the rafters with quality merchandise for college budgets.

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You will recognize the names
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�SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

SPECTRUM

THE

off*i.iI student newspaper
Publication Office at Norton Hall,
The

of the Stale University of New York at Buffalo.
University Campus, Buffalo 14, NY
Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor

Harvey

MARTIN D KRIEGEL

-

Zimmerman

Copy Ed.tor
Sports Editor
Advertising Mgr.
B s ness Mgr
Editorial Assistant
Photo Editor

I

Pa.
N. ssbaum
Barb »■ i St ..uss
Gary Falk
William Semenng
D iltas Garber
Thomas* Haenle

Feature Editor
Editorial Advisor
financial Advisors

Marc a

Ann

.

Orszulak

Alan Scholom
Howard Auerbach
Bernard Dikman
Henry Cagan
Edawrd Jbsceiyn

General Staff Vicki Bugelsk
Lorna Wallach, Judy Green, Gary Falk, Allan Scholom,
M ke Sulfamk Barbara Strauss, Rohmc Bromberg, Pal Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry
Nancy la, en, Trudy Stern, Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker,

r

Frankie,

Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray Crawford. Jane Sommer, Robert ‘Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen
Chicko. Chnstme Cunningham, Lillian Kalasfem, Marcia Ann Qrzulak, Fran Marfuff,
Sandra Olm,
Banyasz, Joseph Lang, Fred Roseberg, Linda Wachner, Su/anne
Peugof, Nancy Schultz, Ronme Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Saralee Rubensfem, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Barry Gulterman, Susan Weiner, Diane
Hayes, Terry Clark, Paul Nussbaum Asst. Sports Edifpr
Photography

Staff

Joel, H.ivees,

Toby

Leder.

Charles Lotsof

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo,

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Represented fur national advertising by
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Service,

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Welcome to learning
M. K

Advertising

Friday, September 18, 1964

�Friday, September 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIVE

Site For \nr (.nmfms
w s

�Friday, September 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Navy Display Set

Spotlight on Civil Rights
by

LEONARD GERSON

The charge of excessive organized action is frequently leveled
against the American Negro in
his attempt to achieve social
equality. One of our nation’s most
cherished ideals and legacies is
the opportunity afforded immigrants to individually attain an
equal place in our society in a
relatively brief period of time.
Why, after a century of freedom. does the black population of
our country find it necessary to
join together in a vast move-

ment and enlist the support of

a segment of the white community in order to accomplish the
same objective? The complex historical and sociological reasons
for this unique phenomenon are
intelligently and perceptively discussed by Stanley M. Elkins in
his book, Slavery.

The most obvious dissimilarity
between the American Negro and
other immigrant groups is the
circumstances under which they
came to this land. While the
Pole, the Jew, the Irishman, and
other ethnic groups came to our
shores by their own volition seeking a better life, the Negro was
compelled to come here in chains,
a slate which he endured for 200
years. It is the influence of those
two centuries of bondage that has
placed the American Negro in
his present plight.
The perverse effects of our
peculiar system of slavery is most
strikingly evident When we com
pare the past and present condition of the Negroes in Latin
America with Chat of the Negro
in the United States. While they
all experienced the same agonizing march to shore and transpor
tation to the West Indies, once
the slave in Latin America reached his destination he had some
of the rights and responsibilities
of an adult restored to him, but
his brothers to the north only
became tools of the capitalist
economy. Unlike his Latin Amcr
ican counterpart, the American
slave was devoid of all property
rights or even the ability to enter
into the state of marriage—all
slave couples lived in concubinage. It was the power of the
church and formally established
statutes that prevented an identical situation from developing in
Latin America. The long-reaching
effects of this disparity in treatment are indicated in the com
parative status of the former
slave groups in today’s world.
While the Negro in Latin America is now considered on an equal
level with other ethnic groups,
the American Negro is still in
many areas considered an object
of contempt.
Evidence of the psychological
effects of such loss of stature and
dignity is contained in the presence of the “Sambo" in Southern
folklore. The typical plantation
slave was attributed with the
immature characteristics of being
"docile but irresponsible, loyal
but lazy, humble but chronically
given to lying and stealing; his
behavior was full of infantile silliness, and his talk inflated with
childish exaggeration."
In probably the most perceptive part of his book, Mr Elkins
compares the relationship between the plantation owner and
the plantation slave to that of
the SS guards and the inmates of
the German concentration camps
during World War II. Although
Mr. Elkins took great pains not
to equate the two systems, in
both cases they were omnipotent,
and a working adjustment to
either system required a “childlike conformity.” bike “Sambo"
the inmates regressed to juvenile
forms of behavior, even to the
extent of wetting their beds. The

ianijlitatHllilliHMSii

most shocking and significant effects of the imprisonment was

that almost all of the inmates
upon regaining their freedom
were unable to shed the roles
they had adopted in the concentration camps. It took a few years
before most of then were capable of functioning as normal
adults. What effect could 200
years of an analogous situation
have upon the Negro personality?
Even a century after the Emancipation Proclamation their black
skins prevent them from completely detaching themselves
from their former stigma of servitude. It has only been within
the last 30 years, especially
through the work of anthropologist Melville Hershkovitis, that
the true merits and advanced
state of the West African civilization have been revealed. The
complex historical and psychological factors involved in the
American Negro's background
make it impossible to equate his
situation with that of any other
immigrant group.

,

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PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 18, 1964

REFLACTIONS

New Post Created
A field supervisor of the Travelers Insurance Company has
been appointed to the newly
created post of associate director
of alumni relations at the State
University of Buffalo.

-

By JEREMY TAYLOR

Freshmen, you are not welcome. I know that everybody has
told you that you are the life
blood of the ‘Uniformity’ and
that this whole establishment is
poised and waiting to help you
“become all that you are capable of being” (1948), but for my
money you are not welcome at
all. You are interfering with my
education. You are creating classes that are much too big and
draining the incentive and enthusiasm of the faculty. You are
propogating the poverty stricken
notion that the end of a college
education is a degree and financial security. You are cluttering
the parking lots and cramming
the living quarters. You are getting in the way of the few students left on this appalling campus.

Admittedly, it may be argued
that it is not entirely your fault
that you are a set of docile sponges. Some of you have been subjected to mediocre education
most of your lives and most of
you have been fed on an unremitting diet of semi- and halftruths so that wbat little curiosity
of spirit you may have has been
efficiently weeded
out. The
half-truths and untruths you have
been fed during orientation are
a case in point. It is my feeling
that to call this ‘Uniformity’ an
institution of higher learning is
an act of the grossest charity,
and at this moment I do not feel
too charitable. For those of you
who didn’t hear during orientation that the state legislature has
imposed a loyalty oath on the

faculty and gone through the motions of setting up a speaker
ban. Apparently our faculty is
woefully underpayed and our

going on in class “will be on
the exam”. It’s an old bone to
pick but you are a new class
and unless you participate in
some way in making the education available at this school a

Clarence J. (Cy) Young, Jr.
will be responsible for reorganization and direction of the national alumni clubs located
throughout the country. The University currently has 29 alumni
little better, I’m not interested in clubs, according to alumni relahaving you around. Go away; tions director, William J. Everett.
there are other ways to beat the Within the next year, the number
draft and better places to find of clubs is expected to reach 41.
husbands. There are even places
A graduate of Amherst High
where parties, sex, and exercise
received his
are more available. If your prime School, Mr. Young
bachelor’s and master’s degrees
interests are in those areas
from the University of Buffalo.
you’re only cluttering the campus
like so much scrap metal.
Your I .D Card
There’s another kind of freshman that I sincerely wish would
is Worth 10% at
leave; the “knowledge seekers”
who are really seeking information. Their academic interest is
genuine, but their understanding
of what the educational process
involves stinks. I suggest that
you leave because I don’t believe
that this Uniformity will do anything to enlighten you—I don’t
BOULEVARD MALL
believe it’s good enough to make
learn. There are a few teachers
NAME BRANDS
who may awaken some kind of
involvement ki you, but they are
FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
tired and disillusioned and so
scattered that your chances of
stumbling on them are very Slim,
So don’t believe everything you
U.S. Ked
hear or read. This is not a very
Pappagallo
good school and you are not
Viners Loafers

bookstore and cafeteria make obscene profits. Our administration
is unaccessable and to all appearances no longer in the business
of aiding the faculty and students
in the academic endeavor.
If this freshman class is similar
to others—and as yet there is no
reason to believe otherwise—you
will proceed blindly through your
four years of programmed learning and come out on the other
side little changed, and uneducated. That’s why you are not
welcome. You bring nothing but
money to this institution. Now
from the institution’s point of
view this is just fine. They have
a contract with greater academy
and the business world to produce replacement parts for the
machine of American Society,
parts with uniform specifications
and tolerances. I want an education, and being packaged with
a lot of interchangeable gears
and bolts doesn’t help me to get
it. It doesn’t help the faculty
either. Those few teachers that
are left Who would like to participate in a total learning process with vital and involved students are faced yearly with rows
of faces who ask whether what’s

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�Friday, September 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Fuller to Lecture Today in Baird
By LEON LEWIS

THE SCEPTRE or THE CROWN?
"BECKET"

The story of King Henry II and
his friend, the “worldly” Thomas
Becket, has been one of the favorite themes of Christian tragedy
ever since Henry apparently ordered the murder of his former
friend in Canterbury Cathedral.
Now, seizing upon the racy and
warm blooded events of the story
as well'as the usual more pius
aspects dealing with the martyr
dom of a High Churchman, Peter
Brook has turned Jean Anouilh's
famous play into a visually attractive and intellectually engaging motion picture.
The word "spectacular” is bandied about too often these days.
Any film that is made in color,
cinemascope and is more than
hours long is usually called
“A Spectacular” by Joseph Levine
or one of his cronies in the field
of distribution and propaganda.
Backet, however, is worthy of the
designation. There arc no massed
armies, no real riots, very little
sweeping scenic vistas and little
martial music, but the interiors
of the church at Canterbury and
the rough stone of Henry's castle
arc superbly suited to the action.
The movie adheres rather closely to Anouilh's d r a m a, which
means that it rarely takes real
advantage of the logistical potential of a motion picture camera,
but the somber and dark-hued
backgrounds provide an effective
setting for the gradual but steady
increase in tension between
Henry and Becket.
The outdoor scenes which open
the action underscore the easy
comaraderie which Becket and
Henry shared in the early days
of their friendship, and the final
confrontation between the two
men on the coast of Normandy
is in marked contrast
the
pastel shades of a British country
summer in the salad days of their
rakehell friendship have been
transformed into the cold grey of
Henry’s castle and B e c k c t’s
church, seen this time in the
gathering thunderstorm which
swirls about their final rupture.
Between these outdoor interludes,
the story proceeds primarily in
the court, the church and the
private chambers of the two men.
And

the story,

of the performances is good and
the other almost great. To take
the more conventional one first,
Richard Burton, in what is probably his first decent movie role,
is properly anguished as Becket,
The contrast between his lusty
wenching in the early moments
of the film and his eventual conversion to the role of a servant
of the lord is done satisfactorily,
although Burton seems to be
more effective as a wordly counselor to the king than as an
archbishop, tormented by his
duty to his king (who is his
friend) and his duty to his God.

Albert Fuller, internationally
known harpsichordist, will give a
lecture today at 4:30 p.m. in
Baird Hall and a recital of Baroque music tomorrow night at 8:30
p.m., also in Baird Hall. Admission is free for both.events and
all students and faculty are cordially invited.
Thfe recital on Saturday has
been made possible through the
generosity of the late Frederic
and Alice Slee, prominent Buffalo music patrons who are responsible for the Slee lectures,
concerts and many other chamber
music series, including the an
nual Beethoven cycle.

Mr, Fuller will perform five
pieces of Couperin, six of Rameau, the Handel Suite No. 3,
and six early sonatas of Scarlatti. He holds a Master’s degree
from Yale School of Music, and
was awarded the Ditson Fellowship there, the university’s most
coveted musical prize. He made
his New York debut in 1957, and

since

then

has

concertized
throughout western Europe and
the United States. He has performed at the Festival of Two
Worlds in Spoleto, Italy, the Library of Congress and Dumbarton

Oaks in Washington, D.C. and
the Metropolitan Museum in New
York.

interest in Baroque music, and
especially in harpsichord music
has greatly increased here since
the acquisition of the university’s
harpsichord last year. A fine
Harpsichord Festival was given,
featuring the university’s harpsi-

chordist and teacher, David Fuller (not a relation of the visiting

harpsichordist). Many concerts
and recitals featuring harpsichord
music are planned for the coming season, but this concert is
one not to be missed.

On the other hand, Peter O’Toole is really excellent as King
Henry, Here is a man who must
learn to use power properly and
realize that he is the sovereign
of England. His delight with the
techniques of Kingship, his love
for the vulgar and his almost too
passionate affection for Becket
make him an unusual and idiosyncratic ruler and O’Toole is
able to convey all of the facets of
his character with great skill and
considerable gusto. His growing
seriousness and his sorrow as he
learns what it is to be king is
much more- touching than Becket’s conversion to a total commitment to Christianity and its
ways because O’Toole seems to
be able to command a much
greater range of theatrical devices than Burton. His part is

more sympathetic, too, because
his loss of his friend is not compensated for. To learn to be king
is not nearly as satisfactory, apparently, as to learn to know
one’s god, and to serve the Eng(Cont’d on P. 13)

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�Friday, September 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

President's Honors Banquet
Addressed by Dr, Anderson

Rosen Appears
In Frosh Program
by VICKI BUGELSKI
Charles Rosen, internationally
known pianist, gave a recital as
part of the Orientation program
last Thursday evening. Mr. Rosen
has apperaed here several times
before, including the previous
year’s Orientation program.
Capen Hall, however,. the location of the concert, is hardly
the place for a distinguished artist to give a recital, or for an
audience to sit comfortably for
more than twenty minutes. The
acoustics are not good, and the
air conditioning even worse.
Opening the side doors at intermission did not improve mat-

ters.

Under these trying conditions
of heat, location, and unusual
time (7 p.m.), Mr. Rosen performed admirably well, although
his interpolations of Beethoven
do not compare to his performances of Debussy. He performed
two Beethoven sonatas which represent opposite ends of the master’s piano writing: the small,
technically simple opus 49 no. 1,
followed by the massive and masterful “Hammerklavier” sonata
opus 106. Mr. Rosen gave a romantic and rather powerful performance of these works, especially noticable in the latter. Sometimes the effects were overpowering, but one cannot really blame
the performer who is playing
under the unpredictable conditions of Capen Hall, and of Buffalo weather.
The second half of the program consisted of the Davidsbundlertanze, opus 6, of Schumann. Mr. Rosen’s style and
technique are much better suited
to this type of music, and he
gave a very fine performance of
this work. The high point of the
concert, to this listener, was the

performer’s encore, surprisingly
Chough. Mr. Rosen chose the Debussy “Etude for Eight Fingers”,

which

showed off his virtuoso

technique, control, and interpretation of impressionistic music.

Those who heard him last year
will remember his marvelous performance of Debussy’s “Poissons
d’Or”. Let us invite Mr. Rosen
again, but hopefully to a fine
concert hall (at the new campus
perhaps) with requests for a
program entirely of Debussy.

The roll of the drums and the blast of the trumpets can again
be heard to signify the start of another great football season for
the “Pride of the East”. For the fourth consecutive year the State
University of New York at Buffalo marching band began their activities with a four day “band camp” where the fundamentals of marching were sharpened to a keen endge. Under the direction of Mr.
Frank J. Cipolla and assistance of Mr. Richard Fagan the marching
band promises to be one of the best in the University’s history.
Leading the band on the field will be drum majors Don King and
Craig Ottenstein. The marching band will make its debut September
26 at the Cornell game in Ithaca, N Y. where the theme of the show
will be “Hello, Bands.” The Pride of the East will return to Rotary
Field on October 3.

New Grad Grants Available
Because of the importance of
inter-American relations, the United States Government is offering special opportunities to U.S.
students for study in Latin America. In addition to the grants normally available under the Fulbright-Hays program,
approximately 80 grants for the 1965-66
academic year will be available
to beginning graduate students
and graduating seniors through
a program supervised by the
Board of Foreign Scholarships
and administered by the Institute
of International Education (HE).
This program, which was started in 1963, will send young
Americans to those republics in
which the number of U.S. students has traditionally been
small, such as Venezuela, Guatemala, Bolivia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Dominican Republic, Costa
Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Panama and Uruguay.
Candidates for the awards must
be U.S. citizens and single, with
at least a bachelor’s degree by
the beginning date of the grant
and proficiency in the language
of the host country. Preference

will be given to applicants in
the following fields; humanities,
history, social sciences, political
sciences and law.
Grantees will live in university
housing when available and will
be expected to participate in the
academic and social student life
of the country of assignment. Candidates should have a lively interest in the Latin American area
and specifically in the country or
countries for which they are applying.

Information and
application
forms may be obtained from the
Fulbright Program Adviser on
each campus. Application procedures are described in the brochure, “United States Government Grants for Graduate Study
Abroad, 1965-66,” published by
HE (809 United Nations Plaza,
New York, N.Y. 10017).

The Royal Arms Show Bar

McQuone.

University College: Robert
Adaraski, Leslie Babian, Stephen

Berke, Barbara Blizniak, Marie
Brand, Carl Ohertock, Eris Dail,
Carol A. Day, Sherry Derwin,
Arline L. Engel, Roberta S. Engel, Walter Fierson, Michael
Fruth, James Gapinski, Jane
Goldin, Jacelyn Hailpem, Edward'
Hyman, Kathleen Kayson, Katherine Kus, Francyne Laatz, Ralph
Larson, Marjorie Linhardt, Frances Marfurt, Marjorie L. Nelson,
Adda B. Pauli, Charlene Ritter,
Mary Booke, Harriette J. Royer,
Marilynn Royer, David Schriber,
Marie Scibetta, Jonathan D. Swift,
Rodney Tabaczynski, Dona Thurston, Eugene Tonucci, Erik Turner, Susan Weinstein, Sam Weissmman, Theopbile Worosz, Arthur
Wright, Susan D. Yoemans, Mary
Ellen Yeostros,

are:

College of Arts and Sciences:
Stephen E. AszMer, Susan E.

Cohen, Roberta A. Crowell,
Pierce A. Cummings, Richard
Giannicchi, David F. Hayes, Ronald I. Herman, Judith A. Hillery,
Gary D. Karch, Stuart B. Katz,
Gerald R. K r i e g e r, Carol A,
Locke, Marcie D. McCreary, Hope
B. McDonnell, Charles R. McKirdy, Douglas A. MacLeod, Miarilynn K. Miartin, Joan E. Patrie,
(Mrs.) Mary S. Paxon, Robert L.
Pfleegor, Jr., (Mrs.) Dorothy M.
Powe, James M, Riley, Robert G.
Rose, Joseph P. Runfola, Ralph
T. Schuder, William R. Slater,
Virginia L. Smith, Barbara J.
Strauss, Arthur R. Strong, Charles
L. Walthall, Gary S. Weintraub,
James J. Woeppel, Ross T. Runfola.
School of Business Administration: Philip C. Ackerman, Lawrence 0. Monin, Joseph V. Parlato, Jr., William R. Pietz, Marco
J. Silvestri.
School of Education: Sharon
Lillian Botko.
School of Engineering; Milton
D. Marks, Jr., Robert L. Potter,
Prabodh L. Shah, William Edward Sweeney.
School of Nursing: Diane Suzette Kampas, Lois M. Kopp, Joette Ann VUtahza, Judith Ann
Bumbalo, Nancy Marie Halligan,

Annual election of members of the GSA Executive
Council (Graduate Student
Government) is set. Nomination forms may be filed
by any GSA member in
Room 311, Norton Hall.
Ballots will be mailed at
the end of September.
Free coffee is available
every Friday afternoon at
social hours in Graduate
Student Lounge, Room
356, Norton Union. This
is Open to all graduate stu-

dents and guests.

WE
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THE PERFECT COMEDY!

somMER

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Jean

PETER
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Harry Belafonte Discovered

Door Cover

Edith Eileen Maiizia, Patricia

A total of 93 students at the
State University of Buffalo who
attained an average of 2,80 or
more during the spring semester
were honored Tuesday, September IS, at the President’s Academic Honors Dinner held in
Norton Hall.
More than 30 percent of the
students honored by University
President Clifford C. Furnas carried a perfect “A” (3.0) average
during the semester. Dr. Lester
G. Anderson, vicepresident for
educational affairs, addressed
the students. The honor students
and the schools they represent

Today

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�Bridge Club Lists
Coming Activities
This coming year promises to
be the most successful in the
history of the Bridge Club.
Among the events planned are:
The Club is open to all students,
faculty and staff. Meetings will
be held on Tuesday nights at
7:30 p.m. in Room 327. Norton
Hall.

Below arc listed the dates and
topics of the instruction program,
as well as a tentative schedule
of events for the coming school
year.

Sept. 22—GET ACQUAINTED
MIXER for all those interested in
the Bridge Club.
Sept. 29—Lesson I: Prelimin

arics.
Oct. 6—Lesson 2: Point Count
Evaluation.
Oct. 13—Lesson 3: Responses
to opening bids.
Oct. 20—Lesson 4: Rebids by
opener.

Oct. 27 —LcsSon 5: Rcbids by
responder
Nov. 3—Lesson

6:

No-Trump
bidding—Stayman Convention.

Nov. 10—First Master Point
The
(no instruction).
Rochester Invitational Tournament will be held in November.
Nov. 17—Lesson 7: Defensive
Night

bidding.

Dec. 1—-Lesson 8: Slam bid
ding—cue bids and Blackwood
convention.
Dec. 8—Master Point Night(no

instruction).

Jan, 26—Lesson 10: Play of the
Hand—using Auto-Bridge device.

Feb. 2—Lesson 11: Defensive
play.

Feb. 9—Master Point

Night

instruction).

Feb. 16—Lesson 12: Modern Bid
ding Conventions and A.CMJ
Tournament
Feb, 23—Modern Bidding Con
vcntlons and A.C.U, Tournament

Mar. 2—Student-Faculty Bridge
Night.

Mar. 9—Master Point
Apr.

3 —UB Intcrco 11 e g i a t e

Bridge
date)!
Apr.

Night

Tournament (tentative

6—Master Point

Night

May 4—Master Point Night

Greek Notes

l^ehcjioui
INTER VARSITY
Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship is an interdenominational
group of students who share a
mutual belief in Jesus Christ as
a personal Savior and His substitutionary death for our sins.
The group provides warm Christian fellowship, regularly scheduled bible studies and prayer
meetings, and frequent special
events.

This semester our Bible studies
will be on Monday at 3:00 p.m.
and Thursday at 11:00 a.m. Prayer meetings will be held every
Tuesday at 3:00 p.m, and Friday at noon. These meetings will
all be held in the CRO office
in Norton Union, Room 217.
Inter Varsity will be represented at the Norton Union Open
House on Monday. On Saturday,
September 26, there will be a
freshman get-acquainted picnic.
There will be no charge; rides
will be leaving from the front
of Goodyear Hall at 3:00 p.m.
All freshman residence and commutor students, and anyone intererested in Inter Varsity is cordially invited to attend. If you
plan to attend, please call Dick
Sncdakcr 836-1155 or Billie
Knapp 831 4168 by 6:00 p,m, Wed-

Phi Kappa Psi congratulates its
its new officers for fall 1964:
President, Bob Gerace; vice-president, Dave Franko;
secretary, Bud Cicero; corre-

tion supporting the national fra
ternity system at UB.

year in

Ep will sponsor a rush
stag this evening. All interested
rushees contact any brother or
find out the details on the bulletin boards in Norton Union.

of Indiana.

Sig

sponding secretary, Rich Angelino;
treasurer, Jim Fell;
pledge master, Carl Millerschoen.

The fraternity would like to
thank all those UB students who
attended the party at Lake
George over Labor Day weekend.

Saturday evening, Sig Ep will
the school year with a
date party at the Hotel Worth.

open

The brothers of Alpha Phi
Omega continued their service
to the campus by assisting the
girls moving into Goodyear and
Clement halls last week. We will
kick off our social season with
a date party at the Sheridan
Lahes this Saturday night, and
would like to extend our congratulations to our new officers:
Ed
Bystranowski
(president),
John Kogut (social chairman),
Dick Kolbas (1st vice president),
Steve Coniglio (pledgemaster),

Sig Ep was honored this summer with an Outstanding Chapter
Operations Award for the second

a row at a Leadership
Academy held at the University

The brothers of Tau Kappa
Epsilon are having a date-rush
party and invite all prospective
rushees to attend, at the Hotel
Worth, this Saturday, at 9:00 p.m.
Sigma Kappa Phi Sorority will
annual Rummage
Sale at 850 Roadway Friday and
Saturday. Friday 3-9 p.m., Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
sponsor their

Theta Chi Rush

and Jim Wozniak (treasurer). The
brothers also wish to commend
the 1FC and the Pan Hellenic
Council for their success in gaining the temporary court injunc

Positions

open

for up-

perclass men for Union

nesday.

Dec. 15—Lesson 0: Opening
bids at the two level or higher.

(no

Friday, September 18, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Board Personnel ComNEWMAN

The

Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a Mixer on Friday,
from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room. Admission is
$1.00. Live music will be provided
by the Soul Brothers Quartet.
A Communion Supper will be
held Sunday. Mass will be said at
4.00 p.m. in the Cantalician Center and supper served at 5:00 p.m.
in the Norton Union.
Mass is said daily at noon at
Newman Hall. Theology classes
will begin Tuesday and Thursday
in Norton Room 330. Classes meet
at 9:00 a.m., 10:00 a.m., 2:00 p.m.
and 3:00 p.m.
A business meeting will be held
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the

mittee, Apply Room 215

All Rushees are invited

3 p.m., Mon., Sept. 21,

Fraternity House, 2 Niagara Falls Blvd. corner of

1964,

Main St., today at 3 P.M.

to

attend a smoker at the

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�Friday, September 18, 1964

Carol Angello Wins Fulbrlght
Award For Mexican Studies
A January graduate of the State
University at Buffalo has been
awarded a Fulbright Fellowship
for study at the University of
Guadalajara in Mexico during the
1964-65 academic year.

Miss Carol Angello, will study
the influence of the 1910 Mexican
Revolution upon the novels written during the following twenty

Miss Angello, currently serving
as a graduate assistant in Spanish
at the University, will leave for
Washington at the end of this
month for a two-day orientation
program at the State, Department.
She will then travel directly to
Mexico.

year period,

Following her year of study,
Miss Angello will return to the
State University to continue graduate work.

Rodean Appointed

Coffee Hour Held

With the appointment of Mr.
Richard Rodean to the position
of Assistant Director of Bands,
many new musical activities will
commence. Mr. Rodean received
his Master of Music Degree, with
distinction, from the Eastman
School of Music of the University of Rochester. As a member
of the George Eastman Philharmonia Orchestra, Mr, Rodean has
traveled on clutural tours of
Europe and the Middle East and
the Soviet Union. His duties will
’include University Band, Woodwinds Techniques and small ensemble programs. Presently Mr.
Rodean is engaged in theoretical
and applied research in muisc
with emphasis upon the scientific aspects of music, music psychology, applied with program
med learning and audio-visual
techniques in music instruction,
and music curricula as related
to all art studies.

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

There will be a meeting
of the Student Senate Civil
Rights Committee on Wednesday, September 23 in
Room 233, Norton. A voter
registration project and a
student tutoring project
will he discussed. All students are welcome.

There will be a meeting
of “Students for JohnsonHumpbery” on Monday,
in the Millard Fillmore
Room at 4:15 p.m. All
students are invited to
attend.

The Reviewing Stand
(Cont'd from P. 10)

ilish

people and their nation is
not as fulfilling as the service
of the lord. In any event, O’Toole
is always fascinating in his joy

and his rages, and Burton is
certainly touching at times in
his attempts to project a person
nothing like himself. After all,
when they found Becket murdered in his church, he was supposed
to be wearing a lice-infested hair
shirt

haps because of O’Toole’s virtuoso performance, I found myself
troubled at times by Anouilh’s
approach to the story. Becket's
murder has always been considered a tragic moment in British
history, but most of the facts

The movie is almost always
engrossing due to the fine direc-

tion and Anouilh’s mature and
witty play upon which it is based.
It is, however, a play first, and
it tends to be almost too slow
paced at times. In addition, per-

around the issue are lost in the
limbo of historical speculation
and interpretation. One feels,
somehow, that Henry might have
been more justified in his action
than the movie suggests. Becket,
in spite of his intense desire to
serve the Church of England
first, might have remembered
that his friend, the King, still
needed him too, and that the
Church and the Crown together
are a part of God’s domain.

A coffee hour and general
meeting was held last Wednesday, September 16, by the University Debate Society. Over 50
interested students joined the
varsity debaters in an informal
get-together and discussion of
the intercollegiate debate program. Miss Hedda Beckman, Society president, extended a welcome to all those present and
introduced the following officers
for ’64-’65: Diane Hayes, vice
president; Ruth Shapiro, secre-

tary; and Richard Nemiroff, treasurer. After a brief explanation
of intercollegiate debate, a tape
recording of the first affirmative
speech at the West Point National
Finals was played. A question
and answer period, which brought
all areas of debate and oratory
into consideration, ended the
evening’s program.

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�PAGE FOURTEEN

ibar 18, 1964

Friday,

SPECTRUM

BOSTON UNIVERSITY PREVIEW
Powerful Boston U. Ground Gome
To Test Bull's Defensive Strength

Intramural
Preview
Students on the U.B. campus

are looking forward to an exciting season of intramural sports
beginning soon this month. Starting off the season will Ibe the
football league. Entries must be
in the Intramural office, Room
212, in Clark Gym by Friday,
September 18; Leagues will start
to play Monday, September 21.
Games will be played from 3:15
to 4:15. The leagues will be playing on the following days:

Monday

Independents and

dorms.

Tuesday—Fraternities.
Wednesday—House plans.
Thursday—Fraternities.
Friday
Independents and
—

dorms.

Independent leagues will be
limited to a maximum of nine
teams. Fraternity leagues will be
limited to seven teams.

Tehms' entries must be registered by Friday, September 18.
Teams will be limited to 8 singles players and 4 doubles teams.
Independent players

may enter
individually. Singles
matches will be Mondays and

and compete

and Wednesdays from 3 to 4.
Doubles matches will be Fridays
from 4 to 5.
The golf tournament will be
played Friday, October 21. Start
ing times will begin at 1 P.M.
Entries must be in by September
28. The tourney will be 18 holes
of medal play. Teams will be limited to six men with the score of
the first four counting on the
tgam score. Independents may
also enter and compete for the
medalist prize. The tournament
will be held at Audobon Golf
Course. Each participant must
provide his own equipment and
green fees.
There will be the first meeting
of the sports managers on Friday,
September 18, at 3:30 P.M in
room 322 in Clark Gym. This is
an organizational meeting; have
your fraternity represented.

Center Joe Kelly, frequently mentioned as a pre-season
All-East Squad member, could
prove to be the most valuable
man on the team. Other centers
are Mike Lucidi and Jim Duprey.
The all new UB backfield boasts
four retutrning lettermen includ
ing Don Gilbert at quarterback,
Bob Edward and Tom Oatmeyer
at the halfback positions and full
back Dennis Przykuta. Backup
men for the first stringers are
sophomores Jim Robie (quarterback) and Nick Capuana (tailback), plus junior college transfer Willie Shine (wingback) and
Dick Condino (fullback).
The only true specialist the

Kellar.

i

The University of Buffalo opens
its 57th season of intercollegiate
football tomorrow (Channel 2 at
1:30) when the Bulls will be the
guest tof Boston University in
the Season opener for both
squads. UB head coach Dick Offenhamer, beginning h i s 10th
year as the Bulls’ mentor, is
brimming over with optimism,
and not without good reason. Despite the loss of last year’s entire starting backfield and All
American lineman Gerry Philbin,
Offie’s squad boasts an impressive array of talent to take the
field against the BU Terriers.
As far as the line is concerned,
there are few better in the East.
Led by Captain Gerry Pawloski
and lettermen Gerry La Fountain,
Craig Helenbrook and Dave Nichols, the UB ends should add a
few gray hairs to the heads of
their opponents!. And add this
name to the list of those to remember—sophomore Jim Dunn, a
6’4” import from Cronston, R.I.,
who has impressed the coaches
greatly in pre-season scrimmages
with his pass catching ability. The
tackles have size, speed, and
deptth led by veteran Leo Ratamess and backed up by Dom Piestrak, Brian Kent and Bill Taylor.
The guard posts are handsomely
filled by lettermen Jim McNally!,
Greenard Poles, former Most Valuable Freshman Lineman Dick
Dunbar and junior Russ Mac-

Bulls possess is Joe “The Toe”
Oscsodal, who originally hails
from Budapest, Hungary. With
the ability to kick a 50-yard field
goal with either his right or left
foot, it’s easy tot see that “The
Toe” will be a valuable addition
to the UB lineup this season.
It’s a big, fast, sound team with
plenty of depth and this reporter
can’t see how the 1964 edition of
the Bulls can help being anything
but a highly successful one.
This week’s opponents, the Bos
ton University Terriers, are going
to be tough as usual. The series
between UB and BU started in
1960 with Boston walloping the
Bullls by the onesided score of
42-14. However, Buffalo has proven to be worthy opposition since

that time, defeating the Terriers
for the past three successive
years. In ’61, UB won 24-12 and
followed that up with a 27-24
victory in 1962. Last year, BU
suffered through a 1-6-1 season
and a 22-13 loss to Buffalo.
The Terriers boast 9 returning
lettermen on the starting squad

STATE U.
BUFFALO
1964 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
-

Sept. 19—BOSTON UNIVERSITY
Sept. 26—CORNELL
Oct.
Oct.

Oct.

Oct.
Oct.

3—MASSACHUSETTS
10—MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
17—*V.M. I
24—HOLY CROSS

p.m.—Away
p.m.—Away
p.m.—Home
p.m.—Away
p.m.—Home

1:30 p.m.—Home

1:30 p.m.—Home
1:30 p.m.—Home
1:30 p.m.—Home

31—DELAWARE
Nov. 7—RICHMOND

Nov. 14—COLGATE
Nov. 21—VILLANOVA
’’War Memorial Stadium

plus two highly prized sophomore
linemen, Dick Stawitsky, a 190
pound center, and Bill Rafferty,
a 220 pound tackle. Junior quar-

1:30 p.m.—Home

Back to Campus
Special

terback Dave LaRoche has Boston

football fans wide-eyed with his
running prowess. In the fin a 1
Spring scrimmage, LaRoche carried 16 times for 168 yards, including an 84 yard touchdown
romp which has caused him to be
compared with Jack Concannon,
last year’s All American from
down the street at Boston College. Another key man in BU’s
hopes is junior fullback Pete
Hayes, a 6 foot, 200 pounder from
Rye, N.Y. Hayes gained the starting fullback spot midway through
last season and impressed all who
saw him play with 213 yards
gained in 49 carries for a good
4.3 average. With LaRoche and
Hayes in the lineup, BU can be
counted on to be a big ground
threat in the coming year.
It should prove to be an exciting game, with the result dependent on the ability of the UB defensive line to contain Boston’s
punishing running attack.

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PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 18, 1964

'63 Football
Highlights
The past year was a golden one
for the University of Buffalo football team. The Bulls finally came
into their own as a major college
college power and issued a warning to all that they will be mighty
tough in the coming years.
The 5-3-1 record posted by the
team does not give a true picture
of the Bull’s strength. They led
the nation’s major colleges in
pass interceptions with 21, were
6th in percentage of opponents
passes intercepted, were 2nd na-

tionally in interception return
yardage, 18th in rushing defense
and 5th among point after touchdown leaders. The only major
problem encountered last year
was penalties assessed against the
fighting Bulls, who were 3rd in

the nation in this category.
Another major plus to last
year’s effort was Buffalo’s first
consensus
All America, Gerry
Philbin, He was also the first
UB athlete ever to be chosen in
the player draft of the NFL and
the AFL, being picked as 3rd
draft choice of both the Detroit
Lions and the N.Y. Jets. He chose
-

Star Lineman GERRY PHILBIN
to sign with the new tenants of
Shea Stadium and is currently
the Jets starting defensive end.

The Bulls rocketed into the
ranks of the top 20 in the country when they got off to a surprising 3-0-1 start. In the first
game of the
season Buffalo
crushed a visiting Gettysburg
squad 34-0, Five players scored
TD’s as the Bulls took to the
air for 214 yards on 11 passes.
The brilliant defensive line held
the Bullets to only 16 yards on
the ground.
The defense sparked again in
the second game as Ohio University went down in defeat 7-0 in
a very exciting contest. The alert
Bulls recovered 4 fumbles and
intercepted two passes. With 13
seconds left in the game, Gerry
Pawloski, this year’s captain intercepted an Ohio desperation

just under the cross bar.
The Villanova game opened on
a high note as Jimmy Ryan ran
back the opening kickoff 95 yards
for a touchdown, leaving 11

shocked Wildcats behind. After
Villanova regained the lead at
7-6, Stofa, who had 176 yards in
total offense for the day, threw
a 22 yard TD pass to Tom Butler
and won the game 14-7. Four
interceptions aided the Bull’s
cause.

Marshall U. finally slowed
down the previously unbeaten
Bulls by upsetting them 10-8 before a shocked crowd of over
10,000 at Rotary Field. The Big
Green ripped UB’s secondary for
196 yards, including a 73 yard
TD pass to Jack Mahone, who
was the Bulls chief nemesis. The
Bulls offense broke down as Stofa was unable to complete a pass.
The Bulls rebounded for Homecoming, though, taking the measure of Boston U., 22-13. Butler
was the star of the game as he
scored 14 points, including two
touchdowns, recovered a fumble
and intercepted a pass.
At this point, Buffalo reached
the tough part of its schedule and
was unable to regain its early
season form. The next two weeks
saw the Bulls beaten by Boston
College, 15-0 and by Delaware,
last year’s small college winner
of the Lambert Trophy, 34-6. In
the Boston College game, Terrier
star QB Jack Concannon was a
one man star as he passed for
169 yards and ran for 65 more
on the ground.
The season ended on a high
note as the Bulls played their
best game of the year in routing
a tough Colgate team, 23-0. The

Front Row, Left to Right: Blair, Gartz, B. MacKellar, Dunbar, Botula, McEwen, Robie, Capuana, Miceli,
Schleifer, Finochio, Sella, Ryan, Barksdale. Bonner, Dunn, Wilbur.
2nd Row, Left to Right: LaFountain, Edward, Ratel, Duranko, Oatmeyer, Poodry, Piestrak, Ratamess,
Capt. Pawloski, Gilbert, Hart, Castiglia, Nichols, Garafola, McNally, Lucidi, McNamara, Taylor, Holly,
Helenbrook.
3rd Row, Left to Right: Oscsodal,

T. Ridolfi, Plummer, Geringer, Shine, Basta, R. MacKellar, Poles,
Burden, Wuest, Kent, Dechowitz, Popp, Duprey, Vittorini, Przykuta, Webber, R. Ridolfi.
4th Row, Left to Right: Mgr. Lisiecki, Ass t Trainer Shakan, Ass't Coach Wade, Ass’t Coach LaRocque,
Head Trainer Sciera, Ass’t Trainer Pecorella, Mgr. Zeif.

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defense, was spectacular as they
intercepted 5 passes Center Jim
Duprey pilfered 3 of these, and
ran them back for a total of
114 yards. The entire Bull’s line,
led by Philbin, put a tremendous
rush on the Red Raider’s quarterbacks. Philbin was selected
after the game for the All-East

team for

the fifth time.

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NORTON
CANDY COUNTER
New Captain GERRY RAWLOSKI
in the UB end zone. “Long
John” Stofa, Buffalo’s star quarterback scored the game’s only
TD on a nine yard run. In another
defensive battle, the Bulls were
held to a tie in their third game
by the Holy Cross Crusaders. The
PAT try by Gerry Ratwitz was

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

Friday, September 18, 1964

�

gIPI|(giriai0!M gH ®Sll'g
)

mmmfm

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN SCHOLOM

~] Cross-Country
Preview

Grid Picks

The Cross Country season opens
this coming Wednesday, the 23rd
of September, with the team

The Best Ever

journeying to Brockport to meet

About this time, everyone is probably wondering
what has happened to the Spectrum (we hope). Well,
here we are, back for another year of sports, advertisementts, news, advertisements, features, advertisements,
editorials, advertisements, and other assorted goodies,
which we hope will entertain, as well as inform.
Plunging right into the thick of the fall sports
season, we bump head on into the football team—figuratively speaking, of course—but none the less significant,
for how this brawny bunch fares this fall will depend on
how well they bump into others —teams, of course. From
this corner, it looks as though they will most definitely
be knocking down a good many of them.
This season could develop, into the most successful
in the annals of U. I!, football history. Sound good? Well,
it is, but just to eliminate any ambiguity in this statement and in the title, let it be known that the U. B.
football history being referred to here, and in other
future articles, dates back only a few years ago, when
the Bulls were instated as a major college team, as the
march toward national stature began.
The '64 edition of the Bulls will present a combination of speed and power, two very necessary ingredients
if the Bulls are to improve their record this year, and
continue to raise their status in the ranks of the major
college teams.
Offensively, the team looks as strong as ever. From
end to end. both ways, the linemen are big, experienced,

the Golden Eagles.

With the early start of competition and less than two weeks
of practice, it is a little early"
to size up the potential of this
year’s team.

Most of the varsity runners reported back to school in better
condition than ever before anil
this has been very evident in
the early workouts.
The team is a little thin in
depth this year so that an injury or two would have a very
damaging effect. But it is a very
hard-working group which goes
all out each and every day.
The returning letter men are
Captain EM Lontrato, senior; Hob
Hoffman, senior; Stu Katz, senior;
juniors Bill Suedmeyer and Hoy
Mueller and newcomer John
Kerns who did not run his first
two years. Up from last year’s
Frosh team are Dick Genau and
Bob Martin and a lone transfer
from Hudson Valley Community
College, Norm Nelson.
At the present time the outlook for the Freshman team is
the best that it has been in the
last four years. We have fifteen
trosh working out and all of
them will bear watching in the
future. It is too early to pick
the top five but there will be
a great battle for these positions,
all of which makes for a really

and as fast as Head Coach Hick Offenhamer has ever
had during his tenure at U. B. Outstanding among this
year's 18 returning lettermen are center-linebacker Joe
Holly, who could become as valuable to the Bulls this
year as Gerry Philbin (now a starting defensive end
with the New York Jets) was last year. Captain Gerry
Pawloski is both an excellent tight end as well as a real
team leader. Guard Jim MacNally is another standout hustling team.
in the Bulls’ powerful interior line.
The Cross Country team is
The backfield poses the biggest problem, actually coached
by Emery Fisher, beginthe only problem. The brightest hope here is sophomore ning his 14th year at U.B, He
quarterback Jim Robie, who has all the raw materials to is ably assisted by Frank Vogel,
become a great quarterback size, speed, and a strong
arm. But he is inexperienced. The rest of the backfield
is a question mark, being composed of veterans with
potential but comparatively untested as starters. Only
time will tell how the backfield shapes up.
This could be the year that Buffalo football stocks
soars to win all-time high among the major college teams,
The 1964 Track season was one
but jt won’t be easy. There are no pushovers on this
of ups and downs. After posting
year s schedule. Each opponent is capable of beating
an unimposing 4-5 record in
the Bulls on any given day. But on the other hand, the meets and a 4th place finishdual
in
Bulls are also capable of taking the measure of any of our own U.B. Invitational, the
their foes on a given day.
team capped the season on a winI'rom this corner, looking at the prospects, very, ning note by placing 1st in the
Very optimistically, and also because it’s a nice day,
17th Annual New York State
Track and Field
Association
its the Bulls to have their best season ever, finishing
7-3. Championship.
Let’s hope the weather holds out.
:

'64 TRACK
SUMMARY

The New York State meet was
held during final exam week for
us, thereby preventing part of
the team from competing. U.B,
won the meet by a half point over
the University of Rochester with
fourteen other schools following.

Alpha Epsilon Pi
Wins Pahlowitz Trophy
The goal of every fraternity
competing in the intramural
league is to win the covoted

Lawrence Palhowitz Memorial

Trophy presented by Alpha Ep
silon Pi Fraternity. Each year’s
winner is determined by the lar
gest number of participation
points obtained through compe

tition in the intramural sports
during the season
A small breakdown of last
year’s major events goes as follows:
Tennis;

Sigma Alpha Mu
Beta Sigma Rho
Alpha Epsilon Pi

Football:
Alpha Sigma Phi
Beta Sigma Rho
Alpha Epsilon Pi

Basketball:
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Gamma Phi
Swimming:
Beta Sigma Rho
Phi Kappa Esi
Alpha Epsilon Pi
.......

Valley Ball:
Alpha Epsilon Pi
40.
Sigma Alpha Mu
38.
Wrestling;
Sigma Phi Epsilon
34.
Phi Epsilon Pi
33,
Alpha Epsilon Pi
32.
Bowling:
Alpha Epsilon Pi
34,
Alpha Sigma Phi
33,
Beta Sigma Rho
32.
Softball:
Alpha Epsilon Pi
38,
Alpha Sigma Phi
36
Tics for this place not included.
At

the close of the

1963-64

season, the Lawrence Palhowitz
Memorial Award was awarded to
Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity for
the third consecutive year. Sigma
Alpha Mu and Sigma Phi Epsilon
finished second and third, re
spectively. The margin of victory
was the highest in the history

of the award.
The top 10 fraternities finished
as follows:
Alpha Epsilon Pi
466.
Sigma Alpha Mu
434.
Sigma Phi Epsilon I
426.

The gold medal winners for
U.B. were Captain Don Lee in
the pole vault, Tom Cionek in
the javelin and Ron Reiber in
the 220. Other place winners were
Reiber, 2nd in the 440, Don Dan
+

I

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

f-^artneri' Press,

Jn,

Jhyoll &amp; ~Sm ill Prinlintf
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

PROFESSIONAL
By

COLLEGE
By STEVE FEIGIN

RICHARD DRANDOFF

National Football League
Pittsburgh 27, New York 24—
It will be close as usual, but the
Giants just don’t have it this

WASHINGTON 17, AIR FORCE
The Huskies' punishing

14
ground
—

will prove too
formidable for the low-f lying

year.

Falcons.

Washington 34, Dallas 17—
Jurgensori will have no trouble
pcntrating the porous Cowboy

ALABAMA 35, GEORGIA 7—
The Crimson Tide will roll to
another great year in ’64, aided
by a talent-rich baekfield. The
Bulldogs should not stand in their

secondary. Look for the Redskins

to surprise a number of football
buffs this year.
St. Louis 17, Cleveland 14—
With a beefed-up defense and a
healthy John David Crow, the
high-flying Redbirds will be tough
to beat.
Philadelphia 42, San Francisco
10—The Eagles are coming off
a big, big win over the Giants
and they’re up in the clouds—for the time being anyway.
Detroit 28, Los Angeles 17—
Hot and cold Detroit quarterback
Milt Plum is burning up and
should lead the Lions to an impressive victory over the young
and inexperienced Rams.

Minnesota 21, Chicago 20—So
far, Tommy Mason and Fran
Tarkenton seem unstoppable and
the Vikings have yet to lose. They
took five exhibition games and
their season opener in an impressive manner. This could be
the upset of the week when the
defending champion Bears fall
before the new upstarts.
Green Bay 27, Baltimore 21Watch

out,

n.f.Li., Hornung

is

back! The “Golden Boy” proved
that he’s fit against the Bears
and should more than offset
Unitas' tosses in this big one.
American Football League
Houston 42, Oakland 35—Offense is the key here. Blanda
has the long arm, however, and
the Oilers will win their first.
San Diego 23, Boston
10—
Lincoln, Lowe and company have
been giving the rest of the league
fits through the exhibitions and
opening game. This week won’t
be any different as the Champs
take their second in a row.
Buffalo 34, Denver 14—The
Bills finally won a season opener and appear ready to roll,
Sestak and friends will deal the
Broncos their second defeat in
as many games.

Tickets
On Sale
Tickets to the UB-Cornell game at Ithaca on
September 26 are now on
sale at the Athletic Ticket
Office, 104 Clark Gym.
UB students may obtain
these tickets for $2.00 apiece. The tickets are regularly priced at $4.00,
but are specially priced
for UB students. All of
these tickets are between
the 30 yard lines on the
Bulls’ side of the field.
sereau, 2nd in the discus, Stu
Katz, 2nd in the two mile and
third in the mile, and Ed Haug,
3rd in the triple jump.
With the loss of only Lee and
Dansereau through graduation,
the 1965 outlook looks promising.
Ronald Reiber was elected captain for 1965 and also was chosen by his teammates as M.V.P.
for the 1964 season. The team
is coached by Emery Fisher, who
is aT)ly assisted by David Brogan.

way.

SYRACUSE 32, BOSTON COLLEGE 13—The Orangemen, boasting a fearsome line and a backfield with the likes of Nance
and “S o p h o m o r e-of-the-Year”
Floyd Little, are too strong for
a Coneannonless Eagles squad.
No contest here.
BUFFALO 24, BOSTON U. 8—
The Bolls' tough defensive line
and solid, all-around game, will
make it 4 straight over the in
experienced Terriers. The loss of
Offie’s entire ’63 starting backfield will not be felt in Buffalo
because of the presence of a
sparkling crop of sophomores,
notably Robie, Capuana and Dunbar.
DUKE 28, SOUTH CAROLINA
0—The Blue Devils are co-favored with North Carolina to win
the Atlantic Coast Conference
and the Gamecocks will be unable to put a dent in their championship hopes.
FLORIDA STATE 14, MIAMI,
FLA. u—Miami lost George Mira
to the pros plus most of his
teammates. The Seminoles, led
by tall Steve Tensi, will overcome
the rebuilding Hurricanes.
GEORGIA TECH 21, VANDERBILT 7—The newly independent
Yellow Jackets will have easy
time with old-SEC rival, Vandy.
The loss of triple-threat quarterback Billy Lotheridge will not
hurt as much as expected.
KANSAS 20, T.C.U. 14—The
Jayhawkers will have a rough
time this year in the Big Eight
but Sayers and Go. will have no
trouble with the visting FrogHorns.
L.S.U. 23, TEXAS A&amp;M 3—
The Tigers' inexperienced sophomores are now mature juniors.
With 27 lettermen returning,
L.S.U. will send the Aggies back
to Texas very dejected.
OKLAHOMA 40, MARYLAND
6—Not much can be said here.
The Sooners will be number 1
this year and have little to fear
from the Terrapins who no longer have the passing of Dick Shiner.
NAVY 28, PENN STATE 21—
“Jolly” Roger Staubaoh and his
shipmates Will tame the Nittany
Lions and hand in their bid tor
the Lambert Trophy.

NORTH CAROLINA 33, N.C.
STATE 14—The Tar Heels have
a genuine All-American fullback
in bruising Ken Willard and will
manhandle their cross-state rivals, who were severely weakened
by graduation.
NORTHWESTERN 20, OREGON STATE 14—The Wildcats
have the best quarterback in the
Big Ten in Tom Meyers. His
passing and a hard-hitting line
will prove too much for Tom
Prothro’s boys.
MEMPHIS STATE 7, MISSISSIPPI 6—The Rebels, with a powerful forward wall and a speedy
backfield, rate as tops in the
South. Memphis State has come
into its own in the last few years
and has been priming for this
game ever since last year’s scoreless tie. Watch for Ole Miss to
be caught looking ahead to its
meeting with L.S.U. They will be
in for a big surprise in this
week's UPSET OF THE WEEK.

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE

UNIVERSITY

OF NEW

YORK AT BUFFALO

tiDVrTDVT If
VOLUME 14

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY,

NO. 27

APRIL 28, 1964

Student Senate Demonstration
Against HUAC Set For Tomorrow
Cohen Receives T.R. McConnell
At Honors and Awards Ranquet
Michael

Cohen,

President

of

the Student Association for the
past year, received the coveted T.
Raymond McConnell Award, as

the graduating senior who has
contributed most to scholarship,
leadership and service at the University. The Award was presented
by President Furnas at the Honors and Awards Banquet late Sunday afternoon.
Name Inscribed
Mr. Cohen’s name will be inscribed on the permanent plaque
in the entrance to Norton Hall.
Mr. Cohen was cited by President

Furnas for outstanding contributions to student government.
The Banquet was sponsored by
the Student Association Honors
and Awards Committee. The com-

Robert Greeley,
Reads Works
By BARB STRAUSS
NANCY LAURIEN

&amp;

Robert Creeley, noted poet,
spoke from his works, and combined these readings with explanatory commentary, Friday,
April 24th at 4:00 in Baird Hall.
Mr. Creeley spoke at the invita-

tion of The Friends of the Lock
wood Memorial Library.
Projective Verse has as its aim
expression of the rhythm which is
the emotion in a specific situation. In the words of Mr, Creeley,
"form fits and gives articulation
to words, and presentation is
what gives meaning. If the form
is sufficiently articulate, pauses
will be unavoidably present at
the end of lines.” Mr. Creeley admitted that when privately reading his works, he would not give
as great a stress to the lines; however, he wanted his audience to
gain a finer distinction which in
turn would give the articulation
more range and meaning.
Mr. Creeley’s unique manner of
presentation is united with the
intrinsic value of his words, by
emotions which are the words.
“If the poem has structure parti
cular to itself, there is an equation between the man and his
poem.” “The poem is set in a
confusion of feeling; thus, each
pause is an issue of the poem.”
Mr, Creeley strives to impart
thoughts with “a sense of the
volatile whose value is determined by the extent to which
they stimulate creative thought,
long after their presentation.
Over the last eleven years, Mr,
Creeley has published 7 books of
poems; For Love is the only com.r'fte, collection. In review of the
most recent effort, the critic
Hugh Kenner wrote, “Us author
is one of the very few contemporaries with whom it is essential
to keep current."
Mr. Creeley’s informal yet unique presentation caused him to
be well received, and in his own
words, he felt “Very much at
home.”

mittee presented Gold Keys, Silver Keys, Certificates of Merit,
and Citations to students excm
plifying service to the University
in the order as listed. The Ban
quet also served as a medium for
societies and organizations to con
fer awards.

outstanding contributions to stu
dent activities. The two keys went
to Mr. Cohen and Arnold Mazur,
Editor in Chief of the Spectrum

for the past year.

New Standards
Under a new set of standards,

In all, about 150 awards were
given out. The nine Silvef Keys
went to Frances Biletzky, (rerald
Catanzaro, Terence Gerace, John
Kowal, Loretta Mazza, Jean

only two Gold Keys were awarded
for excellence in leadership and

Sehoembs, Peter Scholl, Michael
Shapiro, and Joan Wilkins.

All Student Protest Set
With Buffalo Police Dept.
The Student Senate will sponsor a protest demonstration against the House Un-American Activities Committee
tomorrow and Thursday at Niagara Square opposite the
Federal Court House. The protest march is in accordance
with the adoption, by the Senate, of the National Student
Association stand to abolish the House Committee.
Busses will leave Norton Hall in the morning at nine,
ten, and twelve. Return transportation will be provided at four
and five o'clock in the evening.

Between the hours of twelve and
four there will be shuttle service
between Niagara Square and

Robert Finkelstein, that this is
to be a separate student picket
and student identification cards
will be required to join the picket
lines.

To insure a lawful, orderly demonstration a system of supervision has been created with Bill
Sherman, coordinator of demonstration, the chief official. Three
other marshalls will work under
Mr. Sherman. They are Henry
Simon, a student senator, Michael
Cohen, the past Student Association President, and Leon Lewis,
a teaching fellow and graduate
student. Twenty five monitors
In addition to the announcement of float winners and the crowning of the queen, Mr, will serve under them, and any
Faculty of 1964 will also be honored Friday night at the Spring Weekend Dance. The problems that may arise at the
be forcandidates for this year are Mr Frank J. Cipolla, music department; Dr. Mope Ritter, demonstration ofshould
these monitors.
biology department; Dr. David B. Stout, anthropology department: and Dr. John warded to one
For purposes of identification
Warfel, anatomy department. Students may vote for their favorite candidate today all monitors will wear white arm
and tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m in the Dorothy Haas Lounge- The Mr. Faculty bands while the three marshalls
candidates will be wearing their name tags throughout the week. Dr. Charles Ebert, will bear blue arm bands inMr, Faculty of 1963, will crown
scribed with letter "M" in white.
per couple. Students who are in
this year’s winner. The 1964 winAll students are asked not to
at
terested should sign
the ticket
ner will be awarded a trophy
make any statements to the press,
booth and pay their transporta
and many other exciting sur
but to refer all questions to a
tion fee. The buses will leave
monitor.
prises.
Norton Union at 8:30 Friday
It has been approximated that
night and will return at the end
500 students will protest the twoof the dance.
day hearings. Picket signs have
A heralding parade will prc
been printed by the Senate bearcede the float parade, and will
ing five basic slogans, two of
commence at 9:30 Friday mor
which will be quotations by Chief
ning. Its route will include the
Justice Earl Warren and our late
Allenhurst Apartments and the
President John F. Kennedy.
U.B. campus, and it will consist
Mr. Sherman expressed his conof motorcycles, and convertibles.
cern for the importance of a
Also included in the parade will
participation by
Norton Hall

Emphasis has been made by
Student Association President,

Spring Weekend Begins Fri.;
Mr. Faculty Voting Tomorrow

large

student

saying, "The problem of Hl'AC
is one of the most important and
significant issues we face. What

JOHN WARFEL
cherry pie, and a candy bar. Commuters may purchase their tickets
for 95c at the Norton Union
ticket booth beginning on April
27. The tickets will be on sale
until 12 p.m. Saturday. Resident
students will use their regular

FRANK J. CIPOLLA
The Spring Weekend Dance
will have a night club atmosphere
and thus the dress is semi-formal.
The tickets are on sale at the
Norton Union ticket booth for
$3.50 per couple. Bus service will
also be provided for two dollars

DAVID B. STOUT
Carolyn Cooper, the 1963
Homecoming Queen; Diane
Scholl, the Military Ball Queen;
Linda Chipkin, the Greek Week-

be

end Queen; and Barb Witzel, Kar

en

Kelley,

Fran

Lutzky, Lou

Forosci, Chuck Wagner, Dan Baz
zani, Sharon Bidder, Jerry Paw
loskv, Tom Butler, Stan Salomon,
Rick Jaross, and Peter Scholl. The
heralding parade will also lead
the float parade.
On Saturday, May 2, there will
be an All-Campus-Picnic from 5
to 7 p.m. in the area between
Tower and Goodyear. The menu
will consists of southern fried
chicken, potato chips, macaroni
HOPE

RITTER

salad, orange

drink, &gt;n apple,

meal number and their guests
may obtain tickets through Goodyear and Tower Management Offices. All students may pick up
their dinners upon presentation
of their tickets after the Alumni
Football Game and until 6 p.m.
The cafeterias in the dorms will
not be opened. Therefore, residents not wishing to eat their
dinners outside may pick up
their dinners in the cafeterias
from 11 a m. until 6 p.m. Commuters will obtain their dinners
from the cafeteria in Tower. In
case of rain, commuters will eat
in Tower and the residents will
eat in the cafeterias in which
they normally take their meals.
The third annual band concert
will conclude the Spring Weekend events on Sunday at 3:30 p.m.
This concert will include the combined university and concert
bands, under the direction of
Mr. Frank J. Cipolla. In addition
to the music of the bands, there
will be a percussion ensemble.

happens here in Buffalo may very
well be the turning point in the
future of the Committee. The
effectiveness of the demonstra

lion will, depend upon a signifi-

cant number of student pickets."

Wendt Delivers
Fenton Lecture
By JUDITH C. GREEN

Gerald Wendt delivered the
final Fenton Lecture for the 19631964 season, "World of the Fu
ture," in Butler Auditorium on
Thursday, April 23, to an audi
cnce of professors and community
members.

Dr. Wendt, originally from Iowa
but earning his A.B, and Ph.D. at
Harvard, has devoted himself for
the past 20 years to the education
of the public in science. He has
delivered over 2,000 lectures in
his 36 year career as America’s
foremost spokesman for science.
Dr. Wendt works closely with the
United Nations and UNESCO, is
the former Dean of the School of
Chemistry and Physics at Penn.
State, and is author of You and
tha Atom His lecture covered a
wide range of topics.
(Cont'd

on

P.

7)

�Tuesday, April 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Senate Allocates $441
To Finance Protest
The Student Senate has al
located $441 to the special HUAC
Committee to finance the demonstration slated for today and
tomorrow. The money will be
used to rent busses which will
shuttle students to and from
the picketlines on Niagara Sq.,
opposite the Federal Courthouse,
where The House Committee on
Un-American Activities will be
holding hearings. Also included
in the budget is the expense of
printing flyers and making placards. Students will be asked to
help cover the expense of the
demonstrations by paying ten
cents to take the bus. A new
committee has been co-ordinated
to organize the demonstration.
A suggestion to inaugurate an
inter collegiate convocations committee was forwarded by Cary

Senator from Medical
School. The new committee will
consist of various area colleges
such as Deauville, State Teachers,
Canisus and Rosary Hill. Since
the convocations program on this
campus, as on all campuses, has
always been considered by the
Senate as benificial to the aca-

Presant,

i

Authorized Artcarved Jewelers

demic atmosphere it was felt that
a broader convocation program
than currently exists should be
established. Any student interested in working for this committee would be welcomed. A chair
man has not yet been elected.
The Academic Affairs Commit-

JEWELER LISTINGS
STATE: NEW YORK*

tee was mandated to investigate

the possibilities of starting a
closed circuit television station
on campus. This station would
operate on a regular schedule as
does W.B.F.O. and probably
broadcast to the dorms and Norton. Programs would include
news interviews, special lectures,
discussions, meetings, recitals,
cultural films and athletic events.
The responsibility for inaugurating the station will be placed in
the hand of the Communications
Committee under the chairman
ship of Paul Nussbauin.
Election of committee chairmen
continued.
Diane Scholl was unanimously
elected Chairman of the Publicity
Committee by the Senate. The
Senate’s two appointees to Student Judiciary are Alan Feldman
and Gary Lighter.

Senate HUA CResolution
Whereas: The Student Senate
of the State University of New
York at Buffalo has a responsibility both to the students and
the University to take a responsible and rational course of action,
and
Whereas: the same Student
Senate in affirming the NSA position has committed itself to opposition to the House Committee
on Un-American Activities and its
activities, and
Whereas: it is the responsibility of this body to accomplish
this aim in the most effective way
possible, and
Whereas: civil disobedience has
not been effective in accomplishing the aim we have set,
that is the upholding of the NSA
position, nor is it complimentary
to a responsible attitude that this
student body should take, and
Whereas: there is always a
possibility of irresponsible activity if direction is not employed
in concerted mass activity;
Be It Resolved:

See Surf Star only at these

1. At ths time, in view of what
is known concerning the Buffalo
hearings we, the Student Senate,
discourage any civil disobedience
on the part of the students at this
University during the HUAC
hearings in Buffalo and do not
condone or support any such
action.

Town
Albany
Bablylon
Boonville

Jewelers' Names
Morse Jewelers ,lnc.
M. Weitzner
Freeman Jewelers
A M &amp; A Co, Inc.
Harry Gamier, Inc.
Allen Jewelers
Ray Jewelers

Buffalo
Buffalo

Cobleskiil

Corning

Elmira
Hudson
I lion

Elmira Jewelers

Johnson City
Little Falls
Mamaroneck
Middletown

Micdletown

&amp;rjft*

A

..

Olean
Olean

HEwSurfStar

Ossining
Oswego
Plaftsburg
Port Chester

Riverhead

•

••

'Xsjefx

Sag Harbor
Schenectady
Schenectady

Maratskey Jewelers
&amp;
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Messner's Jewelry
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2. That we the Student Senate
urge all students not to take any

action until after they have made
an investigation of the facts or
have read the presentation of
facts by the Senate’s HUAC
Special Committee,

3. That all action taken by the
Students at this University, in the
name of Students of the University, be co ordinated through the
Special HUAC Committee set up
for this purpose to insure responsible and effective action.

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PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Lewis,F ahringer D ebateHU AC
By NANCY LAURIEN
Fulton Lewis III, former director of research for the House
Un-American Activities Committee, editor of “Operation Abolition,” a controversial documentary film on the reaction of San
Francisco to HUAC’s presence
there in 1957 and 1960, and field
director for the Young Americans
for Freedom confronted Harold
Fahringer, local attorney and
counsel for the Buffalo chapter
of the American Civil Liberties
Union, in a formal debate on
Thursd.
il 23 ii ;he No-

issues involved, thus enabling
them to take responsible and
thoughtful action in accordance
with their consciences.
Mr. Lewis opened with an indication of'the controversial areas
whinch must be studied when the
worth of HUAC is being debated.
These included national security,
its nature and function; the current threats posed to national security; the legal credentials of
HUAC, and its procedures: the
problems the nation faces, and
how they can be solved. He emphasized that “it is essential that
we remember our national civil
liberties” as indicated in the Constitution; “it would be senseless
for us to destroy the Constitution
in the process of discovering the
solutions to our national problems." The HUAC, in Mr. Lewis
opinion helps maintain our vital

the eyes of HUAC is not, an “economic study group,” but rather
a group united only by its aims
and objectives here; that is, overthrow of the government by force.

Legitimate political organizations
are not united with external governments, are persuasive rather

than absolute control groups, and
are protected, by rather than outside of the content of the Constitution. Fulton Lewis stated “If
the Communist Party in America
could be proven to be a legitimate
political group, I would person
ally campaign to have the House

against externally inspired action by internal forces,
in short, protection from externally guided elements directing

ton Conference Theater at the
invitation of the Student Association.

The purpose of the debate, as
explained by Student Association
President Robert Finkelstein, was
to enlighten the students in the

119Sophomore Sponsors
Announcedfor 1964-65
by the dean and her aides, by
a vote of all participating sponsors. Selected to serve as general
chairman was Miss Mary Lee

The Sophomore Sponsors for
the 1964-65 academic year have
been announced by Miss Jeannette Scudder, dean of women.
Over 119 co-eds will serve during the coming year.
The Sophomore Sponsors is an
honor group of young women
currently enrolled in the University who are selected on the
basis of their high academic
standing, leadership ability and

Newburgh.
Twenty-five of the Sophomore
Sponsors are actually juniors at
the University and are used to
supplement the sophomore force
in view of their additional experience. The juniors, too, are
asked to participate in view of
their academic, leadership, and
personality qualities.

freshmen’s critical months.
Four officers were selected,
from a slate of candidates picked

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from The Spectrum Staff

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Un-American Activities Commit

tee abolished.”
Thus, Mr. Lewis sees further

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include investigation of the na
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(Cont'd on P. 9)

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groups within the nation in the
active overthrow of our govern
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limit the rights to information,
free association, personal privacy,
free movement and working privileges of certain individuals in
order to benefit the country as a
whole. This is necessitated by the
nature of the Communist Party
in .America; it is not isolated or
distinct, and thus cannot be
dealt with as a unit; and it is not
a political party in the sense implied in the Constitution, and
thus is not entitiled to the rights
and privileges given to genuine
political groups by that document. The Communist Party, in

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�PAGE FOUR

SPOTLIGHT

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at, Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter,

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

-

MARTIN D. KRIEGEL

Special Assistant to the Editor
Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Editorial Advisor

Alan Newman
Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel

Allan Scholom

Marcia Cooper
William Siemering

Staff:

Joel Havens,

Toby Leder,

Subscription
PRESS

$3.00 per

Charles Lolsof

Paid

CIVIL RIGHTS
By ALAN NEWMAN

A.C.P. FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Postage

ON

John Kowal

Business Manager
Pat Launer
Bernard Dickman
Asst. Business Manager
Advertising Mgr.
Lawrence Singer
David Irwin
Layout Edifbr
Circulation Mgr.
Lois Hessinger
Financial Advisor
Thomas Haenle, Jr.

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, Judy Green, Gary Falk, Allan Scholom,
Mike Sultanik, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry
Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker,
Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford, Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen
Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian Kalasfein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt,
Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Lang, Fred Roseberg, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Saralee Rubensfein, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Barry Gufterman, Susan Weiner, Diane
Hayes, Terry Clark, Paul Nussbaum (Asst. Sports Editor)

Photography

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

at

Buffalo, New York

year, circulation

9000

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

President John F. Kennedy
called the mining area of Ken
tucky “the most severely distressed area in the nation.” On Nov
ember 15, 1963, Congress denied
President Kennedy’s request for
$45 million for emergency relief
of starvation, and 1,000 jobs for
four months.
President Johnson speaks of
“pockets of poverty.” The Ap
palachian area, extending from
eastern Pennsylvania to Alabama,
considered the nation’s worst
“pocket of poverty,” is now awaiting a major program for the
social and economic rehabilita
tion of the area.
proposed program has
needed since 1947 when
mechanization layoffs began affecting the area.
Last month I had the opportunity to see a benefit show for
the Kentucky miners at the Village Gate, in New York City. At
the time, I went only to listen to
the music and a fine show it was.
Dave Van Rbnk, Phil Ochs, Leon
Bibb, Judy Collins, and many of
the other greats in folk music
appeared. Ronnie Gilbert made
her solo debut after the dissolu
tion of the Weavers. But before
the evening was over I found myself dedicated to a stirring cause,
the plight of the
Kentucky

This

been

EDITORIALS

-

HOUSE COMMITTEE
After canceling its April 14 and 15 hearings in
Buffalo, the House Committee on Un-American Activities has rescheduled its appearance for tomorrow and
Thursday in its unending search to find “un-Americans.”
It is now time for students at this University to reexamine their ideals, goals, and sets of values. The quesand, indeed, it is a
tion of the House Committee
touches those precious liberties which we
question
hold dear in calling our country the “land of the free
It is a question which must be resolved within ourselves.
The abstractions of the First Amendment to the
Constitution, which we quote in full below, are the very
basis of the construct of our society—“ARTICLE I. Congress shall make no low respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assembly, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances-”
To have such high, abstract ideals as the law of the
land not in effect makes for a moot form of democracy.
It would be a dictatorship of the legislators, rather than
a government of the people.
Our judicial system is conceived to protect the innocent. Our legislative system is conceived to act as a
formulator for laws within the framework of the constitution- Our executive system is conceived to take care
of the administration of the government for the benefit
of the people. The methods of the House Committee are
anachronisms in our time. It would be best for Congress
to revise the functions of the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities.
What is most appalling is that the definition of “unAmerican” is left to the Committee itself- According to
current Committee policy this includes the investigation
of “externally controlled groups” within the country, advocating the overthrow of the government by force, notably the Communist Party. Granting a communist danger,
and the need for corrective legislation in that direction,
we feel that the reorganization of the House Committee,
with a specific definition of what is meant by “un-American,” and perhaps, what is meant by “American” would
be in order. Would not most Americans agree that the
Ku Klux Klan and the American Nazi Party are most
assertedly “un-American” by any definition?
In our society there most assertedly is a danger to
our way of life- And that danger lies in the restrictions
of the freedoms guaranteed to the people. We concur
with Justice Brandeis—
that without free speech and assembly
discussion would be futile; that with them, discussion
affords ordinarily adequate protection against the
dissemination of noxious doctrine; that the greatest
menace to freedom is an inert people; that public
discussion is a political duty; and that this should
be the fundamental principle of the American government.”
We support the Senate in its protest against the
House Committee, and support its reaffirmation of the
United States National Student Association standIf you plan to protest tomorrow and Thursday, do
so in the separate student picket line from the University,
and in an orderly, peaceful manner. We urge you not to
affiliate yourselves with any persons whom -you do not
know, or any groups with whose final goals you are not
familiar.
END OF YEAR
This is the last issue of the Spectrum for this year
Final examinations and senior comprehensive examinations are rapidly approaching. It is close to the end of
another year, and we hope it has been a most profitable
one.
We wish all the graduating seniors luck and success
in their future endeavors
We who will be here at UB for the next few years
can look forward to a growing University.
We wish you all a most enjoyable summer recess.
—

—

”

“

.

miners.
Hazard, Kentucky

In September, 1962, 4,000 coal
miners called a strike after their
hospitalization cards were re
yoked because the mine owners
had stopped making payments to
the Pension and Welfare Fund.
The strike quickly spread to other
counties, eventually involving
close to 50,000 men.
Since 1950 wages have dropped

from the union wake of $24.25 to
$5-10 per day.
Their union, the United Mine
Workers of America, has not sup
ported the strike. Since 1952,
75',I of its members have been
lost to mine mechanization. They
have no program for the jobless.
In 1959, a strike called by the
UMWA suffered a serious defeat
ending in damage suits of millions of dollars.
Lack of funds has caused the
picketers, weary and dejected, to
abandon the picket lines. Poverty
has forced many miners to return
to work in non-union mines where
wages arc as low as $2-5 per day
and shifts are up to 12 hours. The
miners arc forced to choose between extreme or somewhat lessened deprivation.
In addition, the local leadership
has been harrassed and persecuted by FBI agents, state and local
police. Berman Gibson, leader of
the striking miners, has had his
home ransacked and dynamited.
He, along with seven other men,
has been arrested for allegedly
conspiring to blow up a railroad
bridge.

It is interesting to note that
Berman Gibson was miles away
from the bridge at the time it
was supposed to have been blown
up. It is also interesting to note
that if you take several miscellaneous part-truth, distort them a

little, and put them together in
an orderly fashion you have a
nice, neat conspiracy. This is the
charge brought against Berman
Gibson, a man who only sought to
keep his fellow workers from
starving.

Gibson’s arrest was the high
point in the attempts to cripple
the movement by the use of the
courts. Last election day, Gibson
was arrested again, with three
others, as they stood in line waiting to cast their ballots for Judge
Courtenay Wells, a judge whose
impartiality in labor eases made
his re-election important to the
miners. Gibson had been cam
paigning for him and was charged
with armed robbery and assault
(Cont’d on P. 11)

cjCetterd

to

the (Editor

A Muddling of Ideals
Suppose you’re not a Communist.
You can’t explain dialectical
materialism, and you’re not sure
you could hold your own in a
debate with a Marxist, but suppose that, to the best of your
knowledge, your idea of human
destiny differs from the Communist idea. Suppose your religious beliefs preclude Communism, or you’ve become acquainted by chance with some Asian
country and seen it destroyed by
a Communist rebellion, or known
people who were disillusioned
and driven from their homes in
Eastern Europe, And you’ve sure,
for now and for yourself. You’re
planning to learn more, and maybe you'll change your mind, and
maybe you couldn’t change anyone else’s mind, but you’re sure
for yourself.
And there’s the Constitution.
Perhaps you’ve made a commitment to it, either suddenly or
over years. People you admire
have lived by it. You’ve never
been in public office or civil service, so you haven’t taken an oath
on the subject, but you feel, as
a citizen, a commitment to defend
the Constitution against its enemies, domestic and foreign.
This doesn’t apply to all of
you. Some of you may be socialists, some couldn’t care about
anything political. Or you differ
in other ways. You hate Communism, or you’ve made no decision. I’m suggesting it does apply,
in a general way, to some of you.
Naturally I am leading up to
the HUCA hearings. To use another
“perhaps”-—because the
whole issue is a mass of doubts
and possibilities—perhaps the evidence, when you allow yourself
to think about it, overwhelmingly indicates to you that HUCA
does no harm to Communism and
infinte harm to Constiutional
principles.
But you’ve “heard” or you have
a “feeling,” that some of the
people who oppose HUCA, here

elsewhere, are Communists
You have no way of knowing, un
less they’ve told you, which I
doubt. You don’t claim any right
to accuse them, it’s just a feeling, and feelings are real. They
are responsible for action and inor

action.
It’s a problem, isn’t it? Unless
you’re terribly isolated, you know

people who have been struggling
with this problem, and you might

ask them how it feels. But ask
yourself, if you’ve cared.
Assuming all these opinions for
the moment, suppose you don’t
want to get “mixed up" with
groups or people whose ideas are
repugnant or unkown to you. You
might feel that Student Senate
endorsement of the protest will
not keep you free of associations
and implications. Not all the
demonstrators will be student
groups, but the public and the
press are likely to think of all
the demonstrators as a unit. You
don’t think you’re afraid of being
“duped,” but for your own peace
of mind, it would be better not
to get involved.
But, think of this. If you disagree with HUCA and with Communism, but you refuse to recognize and enter the controversy,
you're entrusting “unknown elements” with something very important. You may be letting the
defense of your freedom depend
on people who couldn’t care less
about it, people who are opposing
HUCA because it makes their
"mission” more difficult.
If you are against HUCA as
well as Communism, and you
leave them to “fight it out” between themselves, what are you
for? A personal commitment to
the Bill of Rights and to the
ideals of American justice implies, doesn't it, a personal active
defense?
I’ve set this down to make the
question clear to myself, and now
it is. Perhaps you owe it to
yourself to do the same.
Ellen Cardone

Secretary Declaration
We, the secretaries of Norton
Hall, in order to form a more
perfect Union, establish justice,
insure domestic transquilty, provide for the common defense, and
promote the general welfare wish
to state the following:
The April 17 CIRCUS defines
office secretaries as being tragedy
masks that type. Keeping an open
mind, and seeking a glad heart,
we at Norton believe we, have

found a way to change our baleful expressions to smiles of bliss:
In the future, STUDENTS WILL
KINDLY DESIST FROM RE
QUESTING THE FOLLOWING
MINOR FAVORS DURING THE
8:30 TO 5:00 P.M. OFFICE
HOURS, thus keeping us smiling
cheerfully henceforth.
Place long distance calls, one
after another.
(Cont'd on P. 11)

�Tuesday, April 28, 1964

Pierre Aubery A warded
Guggenheim Fell'ship

The Circus
By BOB

This is the last Spectrum of the
I’m not sure how many
students or faculty members will
be crestfallen by the news,
though I’m sure some will miss
it: married students will now
have to find something else to
squoosh spiders or line garbage
can with; maintenance men will
now have to start incinerator
fires with some other combustible material; my mother will
have to find out where I’ll be
killing dead hours now that the
office is closed.
Others might conceivably be a
trifle upset: professors who will
have to look at student’s faces
in Friday lectures instead of
reading “Sports Circle” from the
lectern; the post office clerks
who will have to figure out if
the paper weighs three or four
grams and at 3 cents per milliweight that comes to let’s see
times nine thousand that’s . ..;
the debate society members who
can no longer wait in our office
until theirs is opened up; the
maintenance men who won’t have
any more coffee stains to trace
up to the office door.
Still others will be in a mighty
rage; the student senator whose
scathing indictment of the Salvation Army didn’t get published;
the restaurant owner whose name
was misspelled in this issue’s ad;
the letter to the editor writer
who will have something reaily
bug him tomorrow; the Rathskeller denizens who will have to
read a textbook or The New Student Review on Fridays.
Now, at the end of the year,
I find many things unsaid, many
things that should have, been
said differently; but they remain
for another time.
Now, at the end of the year,
I find a strange mellowing, and
the old whip feels more like a
noodle.
Now, at the year—at the end
of four years—'this is the time
for gratitude; to those who offerthe help I didn’t take; to those
who offered the advice I didn’t
follow; to those who extended a
hand I shunned; to those Who
extended the friendship I ignored; to those who put forth the
knowledge I refused to learn; to
those who put forth the wisdom
I refused to hear. I am grateful,
though the poorer.
There are two stories (pardon
me if 1 ramble; it’s the Senior
year.

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

MILCH
Syndrome) sum up this last year’s
feelings, so if you care to hear:
There was an old man who
wandered from village to village
through the Himalayan Mountains in Tibet, and through he was
dressed in only the shabbiest of
clolher, and though the way was
long and hard, he had many followers. He would come into a
village and people would see
him and say “He must be a very
wise man; we will follow him

and

hear

the

wisdom he

has

to give us.”
So the little old man would
totter along the steep trails and
mutter to himself, and behind
him strung out a line of people
ever so many miles long; they
just followed, and he just muttered to himself.

Somewhere in the back of the
line one person thought, "If he
is so wise, why don’t I go up to
the front of the line and hear
what he has to say instead of just
walking back here?” So he pushed his way to the front of the
lipe, and got in step with the
old man. He put his car down
next to the old man’s mumbling
mouth and heard, “I love a parade.”
The story leaves off there, in
case you’re still looking for the
punch line. No one will ever know
what the listener did afterwards,
though I suppose the possibilities
are limitless. And if you haven’t
had enough, there’s the story
about Koholeth, who sought after
wisdom; after all his searchings,
all he found was that “To everything there is a season, and a
time to every purpose under the
heaven; A time to be born, and
a time to die; a time to plant,
and a time to pluck up that which
is planted; a time to kill, and
a time to heal; a time to break
down, and a time to build up; a
time to weep, and a time to
laugh; a time to mourn, and a
time to dance; a time to get, and
a time to lose; a time to rend,
and a time to sew; a time to
love, and a time to hate; a time
of war, and a time of peace.”
I wish the only thing I had to
lament was a poor sense of timing.
Oh yeah, and the whole story
of Koholeth is in Ecclesiates, You
can find it in a Bible. And if
you don’t have one, try the Rare

Book Room.

Dr, Pierre Aubery of the Department of Modern Languages
and Literature has just been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship
for the study of Mecislas Golberg (1868-1907), a Jewish writer,

born in Poland, who wrote in
French.

Aubery's major interest is the
formulation by literature of
social problems and social tensions. He is the author of a study
o|&gt; the Jewish Question in France
as reflected in literature which
is now in its second printing. To
him, Mecislas Golberg’s’ life and
works epitomize the condition of
the destitute outcast intellectual
in a highly centralized and bureaucratized society. Golberg's
works provide abundant material
for a study of anarchism, symbolism, art criticism and art theater as seen from a radical point
of view at the turn of this century. Aubery’s thesis is that literature and the arts are more significant and revealing when observed from a militant proletarian
view point than from the purely
aesthetic and escapist point of
view of most middle and upperclass critics.

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR
A good deal of water and, unfortunately, a lot of blood has
flowed under a lot of bridges
since I submitted my first Reflections column. I am tempted
to give thanks and congratulationstions to all the students,

teachers and administrators who
have helped and befriended me
this past year, but the list is
so long and so specific that it
would fill the entire column—so I will pick three and hope
that all the others know who they
arc and accept my appreciative
thanks. To Arnie Mazur, I give
my sincerest thanks for his
friendship and the opportunity
to present this column to the
campus every week; to Dr Joseph Fredin, a salute to his humanity and his tremdenous contribution to the quality of instruction on this campus; and
Dr. Richard Wilson, my sincerest
thanks and profoundcst respect
for the job he has done to pro
tect the principles of education
and to help individual students
“become all that they are capable of becoming”.
1 have taken the liberty of

who learned spoken® exploring my position as a stuAmerican GI s when dcn am j a human being in this
he was working as a longshore- column and although I have been
man in Le Havre m 1944 and accused of inconsistency, I can
1945, has been a journalist in ,oniy say that all the things I
Pans before teaching in this have said are
part of coherent
country at Duke University, body of comm iu m e n to living
Mount Holyoke College and in an (hc possibilities of our lives.
Canada at the University of Al
There are a great number of
berta '
things which arc profoundly
wrong with the systems in which
we must live, but they all exist
Anyone who is interin a dynamic state in which our
own actions arc the critical facested in becoming a memtor. We are now faced with the
ber of the Publications
moral obscenity of the House
Committee on Un-American AcBoard for the coming year tivities;
earlier it was the Feinberg Certificate and the MacNiel
is requested to sulmiit Ins
Mitchell Bill, but these are only
name, address, telephone
symptoms of the ills of this uninumber, and qualifications versity and this world, I worked
on the Friends Weekend Work
to the Student Association
project in a house that was not
Office, Norton Hall, room fit for human habitation, but the
landlord was not served with any
205, by Monday, May 4.
summons from the Department of
Sanitation, and even if anyone
had tried to serve him with one
It might have been a little difficult, since tic was vacationing in
Florida The situations which
cause two adults and ten chil
dren to live in a decaying hovel,
and cause teachers to be fearful
for their jobs will continue
whether the HUAC appears in
Buffalo or George Starbuck wins
his court battle. Politics have
almost nothing to do with it; it
is the principles, the human committments of our lives that make
the difference. I have been attempting this past year to explain my personal committment
to such human principals
the
Aubery,

Enghsh from

(

t

Listen to

WBFO

—

principle of creative interchange
between human*beings, the principle of freedom, the possibility
of love, the creation of situations where something can be
important, woith our committment. To paraphrase Thomas Jefferson, “I have sworn eternal op 1
position to any form of tyranny
over the human spirit.”
My interpolation of these prin
ciples demands of me that I oppose wrongs wherever I recog
nize them and call upon others
to do the same. 1 urge every
student to join the Student Sen
ate picket line when and if the j
House Committee comes to town, i
I call upon people to live as j
though what they believed made ;
a difference. There is a very in- j
sidious thing in operation at this (
Unversity and indeed at insti- j
where, and that is the fact that
every student must work absolutely alone. There is no community of work possible when
every student must listen, write,
and study in lonely silence. We
see each other between classes
and on weekends, but there is no
endeavor which we can join in
together. That was perhaps the
greatest thing about the Friends
Work Camp, There we worked
together, the job could not have
been done by people working
separately. 1 had to hold up the
plywood while Rob Kleinschmidt
drove in the nails; and two of
us could not have repaired the
Washington’s ceiling if we had
worked separately, but we can
not work together at school—none of us can. There is no way
to help anyone; there is no one
you can turn to for help. In
school there is almost nothing
you can do for anyone but your-

self. If one of your best friends
leaves school, you miss him, but
it makes no difference in the
amount or quality of work that
you arc capable of alone. This
situation isolates us and makes
it possible to believe that we

are only what we can generate
in solitude. I do not believe this
so.
Exams and the discontinuity of
summer are switfly approaching.
Few of us have any certainly
about what or who we will be in
another two years. Without a hu
man commitment to the qualities
of our lives that depend only on
our ability to love and share with
others, this uncertainty can fill
our world, but if we find that

there are parts of this great game
that matter, then there is more
than uncertainty, there is risk
but there is also victory. I salute
you all and thank you. Special
thanks to A1 Abgott for cigarettes
advice, and good company. Spe
cial thanks to you all for being
more than you were.

Burke, President Assistant
Speaks at Dinner in Tower
Senate Presidential Assistant
Arthur Burke spoke to a receptive audience in the private dining room of ower Dormitory at
the recent Inter-Residence Council Dinner. Mr. Burke attended
in he absence of Student Association President Robert Finkelstein,

who was attending an emergency

meeting of the HUAC Committee
of the Student Senate.

Burke’s address covered four
crucial areas of student affairs.
He began by clarifying the ad
ministration’s position on Cease.
He then went on to describe the
key points of Finkelstein's New
Campus Deal, which was outlined
by the President at the first
meeting of the new Student
Senate.

It

places

i

emphasis on

issues that directly affect the
student on this campus, accord
ing to Burke. The advantages of

this program to those in the
residence halls and the advantages it holds for the commuter
were both milliner in detail at
the dinner.

Burke indicated that the Student Senate offices arc always
open so that the senators and
officers can discuss pertinent issues with any interested students.
He concluded by urging all students to act responsibly and in
cooperation with the Student Association if they desire to take
part in the scheduled demonstrations concerning the House
Committee on Un-American Activities. If a student here wishes
to picket, he should take part
only in the picketing organized
by the Student Senate HUAC
Committee.

�SKETCH
BY

bAVID BERGEN

and

PETER RUBIN

Besides being indebted to Arnie
for the chance to do the colmun,
we are also indebted to him for
it’s title. Sketch is the name of a
cut on an album by the Modern
Jazz Quartet. Many times our
ideas on the subject matter for
this column differed with his, and
his blue pencil did a lot of damage. As this year is drawing to a
close there is one issue pending
that we feel deserves more than
casual attention. That is the
House Un-American Activities
Committee. We had originally
planned to run a spoof on the
Committee under the title Edwin
E. Huac. However, pressing mat
ters prevented the writing of that
column. Our stand on HUAC is
one of opposition to the Committee in a favor of its abolition.
Since our space is limited this
week we cannot go into our reasons, other to say that we support the Senates stand affirming
NSA’s resolution to abolish HUAC
and that we are in favor of the
Student Demonstration that is
being coordinated by Bill Sherman. We urge you to consider
both sides of the argument. An
argument that has been presented
intelligently, both pro and con
by thp Senate, by sponsoring the
debate and showing the movies,
Operation Abolition and Correction.

This week Sketch returns after
a two week absence. For those of
you who remember our last
column, the one about fraternities, let us ressure you, we were
not done in by any frater. Since
this is the last issue of the Spec
trum, we felt that we would de
part from our usual interview
style and write a straight column.
As this is being written on Sun
day night and the galleys are al
ready up and ready to be laid
out, we have an opportunity to
s6e what some of the other columnist chose to write about tor
this week’s paper. Both Bob Milch
and Jerry Taylor, in their inimitable styles have chosen to review
the year and thank the people
that they have come in contact
with working for the paper and
in other endeavors. In a farewell
column, that doesn’t leave us
much more to say. There are a
number of people that we could
thank for this and that. However, the one person who comes
to mind foremost, is Arnie Mazur,
Because of him, and to the chagrin of some people, Sketch came
into existence. The original conception of the column was to bo
a straight interview with various
people who we felt had something
to say. As the year progressed we
altered our style somewhat, and
leaned towards a humorous angle.

r

ANNUM

ij

JUNE 8 12/ GROSSINGER, N
Wnte for colored brochure
W

23rd St

,

New York, N

Y

The hard working
victorious over such schools as
Canisius, Niagara, Alfred University, and the host school St. Bona
venture. Their production of The
Soprano was the same one presented here on campus last week.
The winning director, Susan Gilman, received a trophy and a
check for fifty dollars as the winning prize. The University of
Buffalo was also successful in
the Best Acting categories. Rich-

category for her portof Mrs. Smith. Others in
this prize-winning cast inculded
Sue Sturgeon, Colin Bremner,
Bruce Glaser, and Corinne Jaffe.
Jane Groden served as the stage
Actress

rayal

manager.

This is only the beginning of
what the Drama Society hopes
will be a long list of successful
kudos. The play will again be
presented at the Alfred State Performing Arts Festival on Saturday, May 9 in Alfred.

contestant as well as the

group he represents. Applications may be secured
in the Union Board office
in Norton Hall, room 215.

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The objective of the contest will be to finish an entire'pizza in the fastest
time. The field of contestants will consist of fraternities, clubs, and dorm representatives. One individual may represent each
organization. A trophy will
lie awarded to the winning

Roth, Student Dramatic
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ard

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The Student Dramatic Society’s
"touring company” of The Bald
Soprano captured the award for
the best production of the St.
Bonaventure Drama Festival, on
Wednesday and Thursday, April
22 and 23.

Campus U.B. from Minutes 6

GOYA GUITAR COMPANY
53

trophy, for the event
which is scheduled to com-

a

Dramatic Society Is
Awarded Trophy

(

FOLK "FESTIVAL
k

The Union Board Recreation Committee has announced that it will sponsor Pizza Eating Contest,
May 8, 1964, near the
fountain behind Norton
Union. There is an entrance fee of $3.00, to cover the cost of the pizza and

Inverted At Advertisers Request

~

j,H

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

1088 Kensington Ave.
(Just off Bailey Ave
5 min. from Campus)

to

examination
Take vanilla in a British type

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Shoes and Purses Refinished
and Dyed
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Stock for Replacement
or Re-styling

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA
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Open 9 A.M.

•

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10:00-9:00 Mon., Thun Fri,
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�Tuesday, April 28, 1964

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Wendt Speaks World of the Future
4

...

are a necessity.
Not only will a greater number

of Americans be found abroad,
but the population explosion has
allowed for more people here.
Most nations have experienced
a doubling population because of
an increased life span due to the
rise in the standard of living
made possible by the World
Health Organization of the U.N.
In the United States our problem arises from an increase in
birth rate. This had led to extreme urbaniaztion and psychological problems created by the
curse of crowding. Todays environment is people they need to
be understood. City dwellers are
using their homes as refuges
from other people.
Psychological study is also
being done in relation to space
and the pressures on an astronaut. DrW6ndt believes that we
have (f5Re more research on the
strains of living in a small cap-

sule and what is to be expected
in space travel than Russia. The
Russians may get someone to
the moon before we do, but our
man will come back. We wish to
do personal exploration in space
but electronic eyes will have to
do the real job summer cruises
to the moon will not be offered.
The gap between young and old
and changing world must be eliin the acceptance of the new
minated through education. Material must be presented differently. If children are still
taught that heaven is in the sky
and then learn that there is no
sky, a conflict will grow to increase the already existing belief
differences among the generations.
In the world of the future,
social consequences will be inby rutomation
creased
and
change. Our industrial problems
will result from overproduction,
and we need to plan ahead. The
future not only holds automatic
production but “automatic
wealth” to challenge today’s
youngsters. Dr. Wendt suggests
that we find an expert in semantics to create a word which has
the power of charity but means
taxes. Everyone is aware of what
he needs and cannot buy; hospitals, schools, park systems can
only function by community and
public action.
Public support is' needed to
plan for future endeavors in
using the 80 hours a week of
free time for each individual,
with allowances for 32 hours of
-

work a week and 8 hours a night
of sleep. What are we supposed
to do with all this spare time?
Dr. Wendt feels it is time to ask
oneself questions: What is Time
for? What is Life for? A change
in the educational system of
our country is a must to necessitate training for the real life
ahead. Extra-curricular activities
are good for discovering ways to
spend leisure time,
Dr. Wendt offered his philosophy of life to a most enthralled
audience. We live on four levels.
First, the practical side of life
which prepares us for basic training in a vocation, elementary education, and usefulness. Secondly,
an individual has a cultural level
—understanding of others and
“interstanding.” A college education puts one in touch with all
fields of human thought. Thirdly,
and individual needs devotion—one area that offers to you its
own rewards. One field that you
have discovered after searching

—

Listen to WBFO

of UB Poetry Collection)
translation of Philoctetes,
intro., Virgil Thomson, in
THE CHARIOTEER, no.
6. and poems, in April
POETRY, and STAND,
no. 3.

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Attention SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Students

AdiiR

David Posner’s (curator

"The girl who tang with
Louis Armstrong"

JUNE 8-14

Urcip

«

ETHEL ENNIS

and now find this particularly intriguing. We cannot understand
another’s devotion. Last in his
divisions of life, but most important, is creativity. This is a
supremely humart function with
which we are born but often
lose. All through our educational
experiences creativity must be
stressed, whether it be in research, art, science, or literature.
We are given our own motivation
through our own creations.
Dr. Gerald Wendt ended his
most exciting lecture with the
warning that if we are not pre
pared ,for the “World of the Future" the results will be as disastrous as a bomb.
Next years Fenton Lecture season will be of even greater advantage to this University, Five
successive lectures will be held
in the multi-purpose room and
guests will be asked to remain at
U.B. for an additional day or
two to conduct seminars and
group discussions.

JUNE 1-7

-

Available now:

NOW!

-

from P. 1)
The fundamental process for
developing the newly emerging
nations is one of education, states
Dr. Wendt. The people of the
country must learn to know themselves, thus, the language barrier must be removed so that
the United States can responsibly send in the near future a
supply of over 100,000 teachers
to the rest of the world. English
is quickly becoming the second
language in all countries and the
language of international cooperation. Our educational system must put greater stress on
foreign languages to keep up with
the present impetus for change
which exists in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and
the World.
Every year UNESCO publishes a
listing of 130,000 free fellowships
and scholarships made available
for our students to study abroad.
Soon it will be commonplace to
find Americans studying all over
the world and foreign languages
(Cont’d

’

(Must

Heels

near

LIVE MUSIC

be Single and Over 20)

and Ties

im

Sheridan

1 A.M.
9:30 P.M.
Tell Your Friends
—

�Tuesday, April 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Sophomore Art Student
Paints Eagle Title Win
Steven Carver, a 19 year old
Dean’s List sophomore, enrolled
in the UB art school, has just
completed a painting which is
to be a gift for the new owner
of the Philadelphia Eagles, Jerry
Wolman.

After submitting a portfolio of
his work and conversing by phone
with the Eagles’ accountant, Steve
was commissioned to do the 3by 4 foot painting. It portrays the
9-yard end run by half-back Ted
Dean, which caused the 17-13
win for the Eagles over Green

is a native of Brooklyn and a
graduate of the High School of
Music and Art in New York City,
Before beginning his commer
cial painting job, Carver studied
films and action photographs of
the game in New York City. This
oil painting, which called for a
month’s efforts, in his largest and

most profitable undertaking.
The picture was framed and
presented to the office of Wo-

man’s construction firm yesterday. It will be presented at a
dinner tonight in Washington,

Debaters Finish Fourth
At Pace College Tourney
On April 3 and 4 at Pace College in NYC a four man team of
Richard Nemiroff and Gerald Catanzaro, affirmative, and Carol

Zeller and Linda Leventhal, negative, achieved individual ratings
of “special distinction” and a
team rank of fourth out of the
29 schools in attendance.
An affirmative squad of Gerald
Catanzaro
and Ruth Shapiro
teamed with a negative of Karen
Morris and Harriet Heitlinger

The SPECTRUM

I

now printed by

I

I1
I

Parln erd’ PreSi,
9

~

|

c.

Prihtinq

Ii
-

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

the eleventh.
The weekend of the 17-18 of
April saw novice debaters of the
university: Michael Cohen, Clinton Deveaux, Ruth Shapiro and
Robert Gesmondi debating at
Norwich University. At the same
time a varsity affirmative of
Richard Nemiroff and Gerald Catanzaro and negative of Karen
Morris and Harriet Heitlinger
were placing fourth in the New
York State Championship Tournament at Cortland State Teachers College with an impressive
6-4 record.
Last weekend debaters participated in the New York State In-

M 1Ua1 1 S
IVUlllBllO

I

tercollegiate Peace Speech Association Extemporary and Oratorical Finals at Utica College.
Ray Major, placed third in the
men’s extemp speaking and Ellen
Ablesan was first in the women’s division. Neal Felsinger participated in oratory. These same
debaters then proceeded to ob-

serve the national final debates

at West Point.
The year will culminate next

Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
at the Legislative Chambers in
Albany where debaters will take
part in the annual student legislative assembly, an opportunity

to familiarize

parlimentary
state issues.

themselves with
debate and vital

'

A

1

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.

participated in a nine school, one
day contest at Utica College on

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Bay and led to the NFL title in
Dec. 1960. Included also are the
key blocks, opening Dean’s way
to the end zone, by fullback
Billy Barnes (33), center Chuck
Bidnarik (60), Gerry Huth (65),

and Packer end Willie Davis.
This year Mr. Carver’s subjects
include sculpture, figure draw
ing, painting, and pictorial design. Next year he will begin
specializing in illustrating. After
graduation he hopes to continue
his studies in an art school
abroad. He plans to become a
free lance illustrator. The New

V

D.C. An invitation has been extended to Steve.
His attendance at the affair has
been halted because of conflictions with studies. Steve Carver
will remain at the University
while his painting is being appreciated and admired.

Student Review, Tower publica-

tions, illustrating assignments for
professors, and work as the
AEPi artist keep Steve busy. He

gStudy In The Summer-Teach ln|The Fall
college graduates who have not majored In Education!
A CAREER IN TEACHING FOR YOU

IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Enroll today in the
Internship Program in Elementary Education at
Syracuse University.
Write: Mr, Henry S. Balmer, Elementary Education Dept
752 Comstock Avenue
Syracuse, New York 13210

"Polish
as a Modern Language”
Would you enroll for a course in Polish Language
and Literature, if you would earn college credit for
its selection?
Write your desire or opinion to: John J. Mikulski,
Pres., Polish American Congress, Inc., Western New
York Division 1081 Broadway, Buffalo, N. Y. 14212
-

University of Buffalo Students Have Made Us Famous

�Tuesday, April 28,, 1964

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Capacity Audience Hears
Senate Sponsored Debate
(Cont’d

from P.

Having A Party ?
or Taking a Break

*

...

3)

movements in the United States,
and recommending legislation to
Congress, based on the information uncovered by the committee
through its investigations.

Call for a

Bocce Club
PIZZA

The method of investigation
utilized by the committee were
than outlined by Mr. Lewis, with
emphasis placed upon the measures designed to protect those
appearing before the organ. In

order to be subpoenaed by the
HUAC, an individual must be
identified by two known subversives and be known to have attended Communist cell meetings,
and must have participated in
subversive activity after 1950. The
witness is entitled to counsel.
His name will not be released to
the press before the hearings
commence, and the press will not
be present at the hearings themselves without the consent of the
witness. Mr. Lewis concluded
with a statement supporting the
maintenance of HUAC as an organ vital to our security which
must be maintained and improved.

HUAC is the most Un-Ameri
ca,” This quotation, taken from
a statment made by Harry S.
Truman was included in the opening remarks of Mr. Harold Fahringer. John F. Kennedy’s statement to the American Civil Liberties Union regarding the investigating committees of Congress,
also opposed the existence of
HUAC, since: “(they) are effecting the disgrace and degradation
of our private citizens.” These
two statements served as introduction to the main theme of
Mr. Fahringer’s aim: “to question
the authority of the House Un-

American Activities

Committee,

and indicate the areas in which
it has abused its power, and used
power not delegated to it,” The

committee originated, Mr. Fahringer continued, as a means of
providing information to the
House of Representatives which
would be employed in designing
future legislation. However, “It
is irrefutable that the committee
does NOT really find facts, but
rather exposes for the sake of
exposure.” An example of such
functioning was shown in the
course of the proceedings when
HUAC came to Buffalo in 1957.
The first two days of the hearings, the counsel for the defense
of two witnesses (Mr. Fahringer)
informed the committee that
neither individual would respond
to any of the questions posed
by the interrogators. Nevertheless, the questions were asked,
the Fifth Amendment invoked by
the witnesses, but the press was

MW

r
FULTON LEWIS III delivers opening address

excluded. The third day of the
hearings, the same witnesses were
recalled, asked precisely the
same questions, but in the pres
ence news reporters and television cameras, thus exposing them
to the community, and in effect
“blacklisting” them,
although
“no information as to their guilt
or innocence had been uncovered
in the hearings."
Mr, Fahringer further criticized
HUAC for its laxity in defining
what activities are Un-American,
while it operates to abolish UnAmerican Activities. The committee “utilizes judicial and executive power” not delegated to a
legislative organ by passing judgment on and punishing witnesses,
thus violating the procedure followed by the American Bar when
examining a witness.

witness cannot be punished
without a fair trial

1) A

formal charge must be
sworn to by the prosecution
before the accused can be

2) A

m

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Batiste gets an Oxford education

brought to trial
3)

The accused is presumed innocent until proven otherwise

4)

Both the defense and prosecution lawyers have the right to
cross-examine.

“HUAC has violated all points of
this procedure.” Witnesses are
punished in that association of
their names with the HUAC hearings implies guilt. No formal
charges are made witnesses are
subpoenaed to appear without
specification of the charges being
laid, if any. He noted HUAC often
confronts the witness with his
alleged own words and actions,
assuming his guilt is affirmed
whether or not he responds to
the accusations.
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Mr. Fahringer’s rebuttal of Mr.
Lewis’ opening speech included
his statement of confidence in
the FBI’s ability to deal with the
Communist problem, belief that
HUAC’s impact has “stifled freedom of speech, impaired freedom,
and prevented the dissemination
of information,” and in doing so
has hampered the conduction of
a democratic, free, society.
Mr. Lewis’ indicated in his rebuttal that the function of the
FBI was to enforce standing laws,
not recommend further legislation, and that the committee restricted “only those groups or
activities which are against the
Constitution” and circumvent its
dictates.”

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�PAGE TEN

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

Thirty-nineROTC Cadets
Day;
on A
Honored
Award Given to Riley
At 4 p.m. Thursday, Clark Gymnasium will be the scene of the
Annual Air Force ROTC Awards
Day Ceremohies. Thirty-nine awards for outstanding military
and academic achievement will
be presented to freshman, sophomore, junior and senior members
of the cadet corps.
Two of the most coveted awards
will go to seniors. Cadet Colonel
James Riley will receive the
Chancellor’s Award from Doctor
Furnas, and Cadet Colonel Jon
Swift will receive the Lawrence
D. Bell Award from Mr. Peter
J. Wacks, Vice-President of the
Bell Aerospace Systems.
The cadet corps will also be
honored this year when Cadet
2 Lt. Milton Marks receives one
of twenty awards made by the
Society of American Military En-

1

gineers to outstanding juniors
majoring in engineering through-

out the country. This award will
be presented by Mr. Rex Schriver,
President of the Buffalo Chapter
of the Society of American Military Engineers.

Other awards to be presented

are:

School of Business Administration Medal, C/Col Armstrong;
College of Arts and Sciences
Medal, C/Lt Col Marcussen;
School of Engineering Medal,
C/Capt Olsen; University College
Medal, C/AB Kirk Webster; Captain Philip Healy Plaque, C/Col
Hammond; Buffalo Reserve Officer Association Gold Medal,
C/2nd Lt Marks; 914th Reserve
Officer Association Silver Medal,
C/2nd Lt Loncar; Niagara Mo L
hawk Trophy, C/Lt Col Purdy;
Buffalo Evening News Plaque,
Sq 22, C/lst Lt Hartshorn; 8th

District American Legion Gold
Medal of Merit, C/Col Cream;
8th District American Legion
Gold Medal, C/Col Haight; 8th
District American Legion Silver
Medal, C/2nd Lt Mitchell; 8th
District American Legion Bronze
Medal, C/TSgt Powell; Erie County American Legion Gold Marksman Medal, C/AB Kasparzyk;
Erie County American Legion
Silver Marksman Medal, C/2nd Lt
Haug; Erie County American Legion Citizenship Medals, C/TSgt
Amelee and C/SSgt Miller; Erie
County American Legion Medal
for Best Flight Commander,
C/Capt Goble; Erie County AFlight Sgt,, C/TSgt Loncar; Veterans of Foreign Wars Medal,
merican Legion Medal for Best
C/Col Kreiger; Sons of the Amcrican Revolution Medal, C/A2C
Sunseri; National Sojourners Award, C/Major Kristoff; Air Force
Association Silver Medal, C/Col
Swift; AAS Squadron Award,
C/lst Lt Morgan; AAS Blood
Plaque, Phi Lambda Delta; General Dynamics Award, C/MSgt
Lumley; Chicago Tribune Gold
Medal, C/Col Shine; Chicago Tribune Gold Medal, C/Col Heubusch; Chicago Tribune Silver
Medal, C/Capt Quinn; Chicago
Tribune Silver Medal, C/Capt
Jackson; Detachment Commander’s Trophy, C/lst Lt Hartshorn;
Detachment Commanders’ Marksman Trophy, G/AB Kasparzyk;
AF Communications and Electronics Award, C/2nd Lt Galvin.
The Angel Flight and the Cadet
Ladies Club will also present
several other awards for outstand
ing contributions to their organ
izations.

House Suitable for Faculty Member
100 yards from University Campus
3 bedroom plus den or study,

2 story

colonial house.

Attractive yard.
2 car garage.

Owner on Medical School faculty-leaving Town.
$20,500.

Phone: Mrs. Shanley
Office: NF 3-8666

Residence: NF 4-4527

That particular mark of a
well dressed man is not
something that happens by
chance; but from a carefully
compiled wardrobe. Shirts
must have that all important
roll to the collar, single
needled stitching and slightly tapered body.

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1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
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SHERIDAN
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DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
(Adjacmt Tbe Boulevard Mall Piezo)
Open Friday a ad Seterdey mil 1:00
Operated by Hm JERRY BROWNROUT CORF.

A

�Tuesday, April 28, 1964

csCetterA

SPECTRUM

to

the Editor

Secretary Declaration

(Cont’d

from P.

4)

Allow use of our faculty, student and city directories (over
and over and over.)
Make appointments with staff
members whom you MUST see,
immediately if not sooner.
Perform minor sewing repairs,

and other miscellaneous items,
do rush orders, needed at least
one hour prior to delivery, page
students for all purposes—social
and otherwise, give time of day,
provide a shoulder to cry on, lend
staplers to the SPECTRUM, find
2 horses with saddles and blankets for special weekend, wake
students in the nap rooms, retrieve stapler from SPECTRUM,
unravel typewriter ribbons, give
advice on various and sundry
problems, give dimes to get students out of the parking lots.
PROVIDE SHOULDER TO CRY
ON.

Give out the following as
needed: scotch tape, straight pins,
safety

pins, candy, staples,
stamps, envelopes, masking tape,
paper clips, cigarettes, matches,

bandaids, mercurochrome, kleenex, needles and thread. PROVIDE SHOULDER TO CRY ON.

Decipher undecipherable hier
oglyphics while trying to prepare the student directory (that’s
why we all wear glasses!!, PROVIDE SHOULDER TO CRY ON.
One of Webster’s definitions of
“2.* smile, as to look with
amusement, or ridicule,” reminds
us also that since the 11:00 to
2:00 p.m. hours present special
problems at Norton, we secretaries wish to go on record as
stating our smiles of joy will
surely flow forth as the rain-

smile is,

bows if the kiddies will please
the first floor corridors
free of cigarette butts, candy
wrappers, old Spectrums, elbows,
whiskers and other debris, thus
enabling us to gain access to the
cafeteria. (Well-fed secretaries
smile frequently.)
Thank you for your cooperation

keep

in making our days happy ones,
and together let’s work for more
diplomatic relations.
Sincerely yours,

Secretaries at Norton
Members of M.I.L.C.H,
(Militant International League of College Heirlooms)
Local #2511344635423602
P.S. We really do enjoy working
with you.

SPOTLITE ON CIVIL RIGHTS
(Cont’d from P, 4)
to kill with a deadly weapon.
They were arrested early in the
day although the radio broadcasts
carried word all day that Gibson
was still being sought. Judge
Wells was not re-elected and Gibson is now awaiting his trial.
Councilman Paul O’Dwyer of
New York, has put his political
career in jeopardy by journeying
to Kentucky to defend Berman
Gibson in what is sure to be a

kangaroo court. Legal expense
will run into the thousands. Students all across the country are
engaged in fund raising campaigns to aid in the legal battles,
and to help subsidize student and
adult relief projects. Food, clothing, and blankets are also being
sought.

Contributions can be sent to the
Student Committee for Miners;
96 Greenwich Avenue; N. Y. C.

Paperbacks now available.
For H U A C readers:
The Un-Americans, Donner.
The Yahoos, Newberry.
A Quarter Century of Un-Americana, Pomerantz.
HUAC; Bulwark of Segregation, Braden.
Point of Order, de Antonio.

Student Book Shop
3400 Main Street

PAGE ELEVEN

Phone: TP 3-7000

Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

"I want a

Paul Nussbaum, chairman of the Communications Committee of the Stu-

BIG
ring!"

dent Senate has announced
that the Committee will
hold its second meeting
3:00, today in the Senate
Office.

Buy All Your Jewelry

This year, the committee
is enlarging its domain in
order to study such diversified problems as the separation of room and
board contracts, the lack
of student interest in campus activities, the possibility of establishing a student operated close-circuit
television station, and in
general, any problems that
may arise during the year
with respect to student
communications. The goals
of the committee are vast;
they can only be met with

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�Tuesday, April 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

I

SS&gt;S©if!B®aQ

7-2;
Netmen Defeat
Mingle Remains Unbeaten

SPORTS CIRCLE
By PAUL

It 's

,

NUSSBAUM

Been AGood Year

By

TERRY CLARK

Last Thursday afternoon the
University of Buffalo tennis team
defeated Buffalo State Teachers
College by a score of 7-2. This
victory brought the netmen’s record to four wins against one loss.

What Kind Of A Year Has It Been?
Its been a year when the football Bulls scrambled to a
5-3-1 record. With All-East tackle Gerry Philbin, and
With the season nearly half
“Iceman” John Stofa leading the way, Buffalo beat four over, the tennis team has demajor college teams—Boston University, Villanova, Ohio, feated Canisius (twice), Erie Tech,
and Buffalo State while losing
and Colgate- Coach Dick Offenhamer’s Bulls served notice, to all those involved that Buffalo is a team to be only to a powerful Colgate team
in a closely contested battle at
reckoned with.
on the list
April
Its been a year when the University of Buffalo cagers
compiled a 14-8 script that included victories over such
top-flight competition as Colgate and Gannon College.
The basketball Bulls also came heartbreakingly close to
upseting powers of the caliber of nationally ranked Villanova, and NCAA small college titlists Youngstown and
IthacaIts been a year that has seen Buffalo’s swimming team
close with a flourish in capturing 6 of its last 7 meets
enroute to an 8-4 season’s log- In post season competition,
UB swimmers and divers captured 22 medals in the Upper
,
New York State Championships.

UB on
22. Still
of strong opponents to be faced
this year are Syracuse University
and Rochester. These two teams
annually produce very powerful
teams and should prove to be
very stiff competition for the UB
team. However, Coach Sanford,

“

£P2(Sii)35IM IPISOTHW

Don Mingle is the only remaining undefeated singles player on
the team and singles champion
Andy Feldman has been elected
captain of this year’s squad. With
these and several other powerful members of UB’s tennis returning next year, the prospects
for the future do indeed look

some

“

but has been shifted to fullback
to take advantage of his great
speed and blocking ability, and a
highly touted 225-lb. sophomore
from Detroit, Wes Bonner.
Bob Edward, a 210-lb. speedster, will get the initial call at
tailback. Although he has won
letters for two seasons, Edward

has never

really

come through

with the type of performances
his talent would allow. The
coaches are hopeful that 1964
could be his year. If Edward
falters the Bulls have available
Nick Capuana, a hard-driving
sophomore who has impressed
all who have seen hipi perform,
and Jim Webber, a transfer from
Wooster College who comes highly recommended.
Don Gilbert, who understudied
John Stofa the past two years, is
the tentative Number 1 quarterback. A better runner than he
is a passer, Gilbert, like tailback
Edward, has never really fulfilled the high hopes held for
him. In back of Gilbert is 6-3,
202-lb. sophomore Jim Robie.
Robie seemingly has everything;
size, tremendous speed, and desire. His progress has been hampered by injuries last fall and
■this spring and until he is further developed it will be Gilbert
at the signal-calling post. Robie,
however, has too much talent to
be kept out of the line-up and all
observers agree that he is eventually headed for stardom. Ron
Ridolfi, a junior who saw no service in 1963, has been showing to
good advantage in practice, and
will undoubtedly be given a good

Wade To Coach Alumni In Bid
For Second Straight Victory

LeHermen Lo$t —14, including the following first-stringers: John

Stofa, quarterback; John Cimba, fullback; Jim Ryan and Gerry
Ratkewicz, halfbacks; Larry Gergley, end; Gerry Philbin and
Armand Martin, tackles; and Dan Nole, guard.
Lettermen Returning—18, including at least one at every

position.
Outstanding Veterans
Joe Holly
C
Jim McNally ..
G
Gerry Pawloski
E
Dennis Przykuta ■_ FB
Don Gilbert
QB
Outstanding Sophomores
Roper Galinas
T

Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr,

Sr.

6'

1”
5’ 9"

5’11”
510”
510”

210

Lyons

206
195

Kenmore
Liri. Pk.,

205

Depew

192

Buffalo

Mich.

3”
250
Orchard Park
Jim Robie
202
6’ 3”
Williamsville
QB
Jim Dunn
6’ 4”
190 Cranston, R. I.
E
Nick Capuana
5’ 9”
175 Utica
HB
Dick Dunbar
G
511”
203
Dearborn, Mich.
Strongest Teams in Upstate New York
1—Syracuse
2—Buffalo
4—Colgate
3—Cornell
6’

very promising.

The results of the UB, Buffalo
match are as follows:

State

SINGLES—1. Andy Feldman
d. Jim Lynch (BS), 6-2, 6-2.
2. Roger Hauck (BS) d. Bob Bar
rett (UB), 1-6' 6-2, 6-4. 3. Denny
Brezinski (UB) d. Bob Bell (BS),
60, 6-1. 4. Len Schneider (UB) d.
Pete Stadell (BS), 6-1, 6-1. 5, Don
Mingle (UB) d. Ralph Connelly
(BS), 6-2, 6-0. 6. Steve Oberstein
(UB) d. Joe Lotempio (BS), 3-6,
7-5, 6-1. DOUBLES—1. Lynch and
Hauck (BS) d. Feldman and Brzezinski (UB), 5-7, 6-3, 6-3. 2. Barrett
and Yuschik (UB) d. Sumi and
Connelly (BS), 6-0, 6-0. 3, Siegel
and Melnick (UB) d. Stapell and
Lotempio (BS), 11-9, 6-2.
(UB

Grid Bulls Dealt Severe Loss
As Entire Backfield Graduates

The Buffalo team will suffer
severe losses through graduation. Among them will be the
entire first-string backfield, most
notably John Stofa who quarterbacked the Club for 3 straight
seasons and set the all-time UB
offensive record. The principal
loss in the line will be All-East
tackle Gerry Philbin.
Despite these losses, the Bulls
should have a good team in 1964.
Its been a year when individuals, like Sandy Finkelstein, The line is loaded with veterans
performed admirably in placing very high in the National from end to end, and some of
Bowling Tournament, and the National Pocket Billiards these boys are standouts. Especially noteworthy are Joe Holly,
Championships.
a center-linebacker who could
Its been a year when the Spectrum Sports Editor spoke well bid for All America honors;
described
out in a truly American tradition by calling attention to Jirii McNally, a asguard
“mechanically
by his coaches
the deficiencies of a university sponsored team
perfect;” Captain Gerry PaWloIts been a year of high hopes for Buffalo’s spring sports. ski, a crashing end; and a pair
tackles, Leo Ratamess
Hopes, that the baseball, tennis, and track teams will of veteran
Dom Piestrak. These huskies
preserve the winning slates that have been presented by and
will be bolstered by sophomores
every University of Buffalo varsity athletic team this Jim Dunn, a 64 end who’s an
year.
outstanding receiver; Roger Galia 2501b. tackle, and Dick
Yes, Agatha, its been a good year for Buffalo on the nas,
Dunbar, a tough guard.
field of athletic achievement.
The Buffalo line will be hard
to move against and should be
more than adequate offensively;
The big problem for the Bulls
is the backfield, particularly the
quarterback and tailback posiHead Coach—Richard W. Offenhamer, Colgate '36
tions. Veterans Dick Condino and
Dick Vittorini, along with a fine
Record—49 Wins, 30 Losses, 2 Ties in 9 years
sophomore, Jim McEwcn, will be
the wingbacks. Dennis Przykuta,
1964 SCHEDULE
1963 RESULTS
a letterman last year could be
Sept. 19—at Boston U.
(W-5, L-3, T-1)
Sept. 26—at Cornell
Gettsburg 0 the stkr of the backfield. He's
UB 34
runs with determination, and
Oct. 3—Massachusetts
UB 7
Ohio U. 0 fast,
Backing up
Oct. 10—at Marshall (N)
Holy Cross 6 is a good blocker.
UB 6
be Greenard Poles,
Oct. 17—V. M. I. (H)
UB 14
Villanova 7 Przykuta will
at guard last year
Oct. 24—Holy Cross
UB 8
Marshall 10 who lettered
Oct. 31—Delaware
UB 22
Boston U. 13
Nov. 7—Richmond
UB 6
Delaware 34
Nov. 14—Colgate
UB 0
Boston Coll. 15
Colgate 0
Nov. 21—Villanova
UB 23
(N)—Night Game
85
120
TOTAL
(H)—Homecoming Game

Its been a year when the University of Buffalo wrestling
team grappled to a 6-4 record. Led by footballer Greenard Poles, the matmen overcame the handicap of inexperience in posting their winning recordIts been a year when UB’s fencing squad dueled to a
9-6 season’s total under the direction of Coach Sid Schwartz. The fencers also brought distinction to the university by capturing individual honors in the North Atlantic Fencing Championships.

who is very confident about his
team’s ability this year, feels that
his netmen should fair quite well
in these and the remaining
matches of the year and thus
emerge from the season with a
very good record. He also expressed regret for the bad weather that has prevailed so far this
year and has greatly reduced the
team’s chances for practice sessions.

The University of Buffalo Athletic Department and the UB
Scholarship Fund will sponsor
the fifth annual Varsity-Alumni
football game Saturday May 2
in Rotary Field. Game time for
the classic is 2:00 p.m.
The Alumni team, which won
last year’s contest 32-16, will be
coached by Dewey Wade, the
Bulls freshman coach. By virtue
of their victory last season, the
Alumni evened the series record «tt 2 games each.
The following former football
stars have indicated their inteh-'
tion to play in the game:
Ends: Larry Gergley, Jim Bow-

den, Bill Selent, Bill O’Neill,

Charley Keats, and Nate Bliss.

Tackles:

Gerry Philbin,

Armand

Martin, Kevin Brinkworth, Bob
Miller, and ack Dempsey.
Guards; Dan Nole, Paul Gagliardi, John Michno, Jim Wolfe,
Jack Hartman, Bill Rood, Joe
Shifflet, Stan Kowalski, and Gene
Gollarny.

Centers:
Reale.

Dick Hort and Lou

Quarterbacks;

John Stofa and

Gordie Bukaty.

Halfbacks and Fullbacks:

Jim

Ryan, John Cimba, Tom Butler,
Ken Kogut, Bob Baker. Ron Clayback, Roy Sommers, Willie Evans,
George Maue, Jim Burd, Jack
Valentic and Larry Gergley.

Admission for everyone is $1.00
The proceeds of the game will
go to the UB Scholarship Fund.

shot at the job.
Coach Offenhamer, a vigorous
opponent of the 2-platoon system,
would prefer to work with 2
units, each unit capable of playing offense and defense. However, unless some of the newcomers come through in a big
way, the Bulls have a depth problem. In view of this, Offenhamer
can be expected to do considerable adjusting and manipulating
to get the most from his material.
Team speed is excellent. The
defense is sturdy. Again, the
question is one of sufficient
scoring punch.

Overall, it would appear that

despite the question mark back-

field Buffalo has sufficient guns
in its arsenal to continue its
climb among the ranks of major
Eastern independents.

Radio station WEHR
will broadcast the 1964
of Buffalo
University
football games.
Arrangements were com-

pleted today, with Athletic Director James E.
“Jim” Peelle acting on behalf of the university, and
David Leopold, General
Manager of WEBR, Inc.,
acting on behalf of the station.

Jack Sharpe,

well-

known to listeners as the
voice of the WEBR Trafficopter, will do the playby-play. Sharpe has previously done the commentary for the televised film

highlights of UB football.
Charley Bailey, sports
columnist for the,CourierExpress and Sports Director of WEBR. will do the
color and sidelights of the
games.

Mr. Peelle, in disclosing that the agreement
covered only football, staled that UB will advertise
for bids to the broadcasting rights to its 1964-65
basketball games as soon
as the basketball schedule
is completed in the near

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                    <text>STATE
Mr. Faculty

a

VOLUME 14

OF

UNIVERSITY

NEW

YORK

AT

BUFFALO

■ 7l

T

Hi j

I

Football Bulls
for

I

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1964

NO. 26

Foods Take Over

Contest Begins
Queen
Qeale Gealei Spring Weekend Campaigns Start Monday

Universit

-

By

BARBARA J. STRAUSS

July 1, 1964, the
Student-Faculty Association will
take over the food service which
has been previously run by the
Cease Food Service. In a statement issued jointly by the Student Senate and the Food Service committee, it was announced
that “SUNYAB has relinquished
the contract with Cease Food
Service for the campus. The University Student-Faculty Associa-

Effective

tion will direct the food service
beginning July 1. The contract
was not cancelled because of
dissatisfaction, but because the
new situation will enable the University Student-Faculty Association to eliminate the middle man
and save money.”
Robert Finkelstein, Senate president, commented that the move
to replace Cease was in partial
response to student pressure exerted through questionaires distributed by the Student Welfare
Committee. In these questionnaires, students were able to express their complaints concerning the preparation, variety and
cost of food; this almost unanimous dissatisfaction was instrumental in instigating the change.
Mr. Finkelstein went on to explain that food supplied by the
University Food Service will
hopefully provide better food at
lower prices, and will undoubtedly make future complaints easier
to eliminate.
Several of the recurrent complaints which have been voiced
against the present food service
at the present meetings of the
Food Service Committee are: no
variety in eggs, dislike of powdered potatoes, foods too starchy,
too much fat on food, food is
served cold, desserts are often
stale, the coffee is not tasty, the
food is often greasy, attitude of
personnel is frequently uncooperative.

Mr. Bennett, Director of University Food Service reported
that as a result of statistics and
suggestions taken from polls in
Tower and Goodyear Cafeterias,
the following improvements will

be made: The cafeterias will attempt to grill steaks more eveulj
the steaks will be of a different
quality so as to have less fat;
the amount of starchy foods will
be noticeably cut; the coffee urns
are being overhauled at an approximate cost of $500, and the
cafeterias will try a different
brand of coffee; heat lamps wifi
be used along with the steam
tables to keep the food warm
until served; bread dispensers
will also be installed to keep
bread soft; rolls and baked goods
are now being baked daily and
are distributed to residence halls
the same morning. Mr. Bennett
continued, that more of a variety
in meats, salads and desserts will
be attempted.
Mr. Bennett said that he would
make every effort to work with
the students to make the last part
of the semester as enjoyable as
possible.

the queen campaigns will commence Monday, followed by a week and a half of
hard campaigning The skits will be presented on Wednesday and Friday, from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. in the Conference Theater The candidates will model the latest fashions on
April 27 in the Millard Fillmore Room at 3:30 Students voting will be in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge on April 28 and 29 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. A trophy will also be awarded
for the best campaign
Theta (’hi's candidate, Peggy Madden, is a
from Kenmorc, ,N. Y. She attended D’Youville College, where she
was a recipient of the Mother
D'Youville Academic Award. She
is pledge mistress of Theta Chi
—^
Sorority, and she was co-chairi
\
man of the Transfer Student
juf
Orientation Committee. Peggy
currently has a 1.8 overall and
has maintained a dean’s list aver
age for the past two preceding
\

*

semesters.

Peggy’s

campaign

a 19-year-old sopho(her-

more

Moshe Ofer Talks
UN Israeli Consul

—

spectacular
Two of the
events of Spring Weekend are the
dance at the Parkway Inn in
Niagara Falls from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. and the float parade at 10:45
a.m. May 1 Louis Marino and his
15-piece band will provide the

music for the dance and four

A Peace Corps team will be coming to the University this Monday in correlation
with the announcement by President Furnas that the week of April 20-25 be proof
claimed, “Peace Corps Week”. Peace Corps liaison. Miss Jeanette Scudder, Deanand
Norton
Hall
Room
223
in
headquarters
Women, stated that the group will have its
will be here for recruitment and informative purposes.
There will be a convocations meeting Monday night in the Conference Theater of
quesNorton Hall at 7:30 where the film “Mission of Discovery” will be shown with a
tion and answer period following.
. ■
I

Members of the Peace

Corps
Burgess,
Peace Corps representative in In-

team

include:

David

donesia; Michael Vallentine, representative concerned with community development in Ecuador;
•less Stone, representative in the
Dominican Republic; Richard
Thomel, former representative
in Ghana; Fan Sedgwick, assistant Peace Corps director; and
Nancy Carter, campus relations.
This team will be administering
tests daily as well as meeting with
as many student and class groups
as possible. A special table will
t&gt;e set up in the Rathskellar to enable the team to meet with the
students on ah informal basis.

■

A

i

4«|bmBv
i

;

I. to r.: JANICE WILLEY, PEGGY
JUDY MARCKLINGER, PAT SILFER

Queen Candidates,

Pat’s artistic abilities and her interests. She is corresponding secretary of her sorority, a member
of the House Committee, and
chairman of her dormitory. Pat
has a 1.9 average.
Janice S. Willey, 20, is representing Goodyear South with the

Spring Weekend Features
Dance, Float Parade Friday

Peace Corps Visits Campus

The film will also be shown continuously between 11 and 1 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday afternoons;
a schedule will be posted listing
the exact times of the showing of
the film later in the week.

\

j

theme will be "Peg o’ My Heart.”
Judy Marcklinger, Chi Omega’s

a 2.4 accumulative average and
has been a member of House Plan
Council. Goodyear House Council,
Norton Union Open House ComCommittee, and Sophomore Spun
In
she
the
By GARY EVANS
Campus Alliance candidate for
Secretary of Student Senate and
Moshe Ofer, former Israel conis business manager of Spring
Weekend. Judy's campaign “Like
sul to the United Nations, Consulgeneral to Washington, D.C, and a Southern Belle, Our Smiling
assistant consul-general to New Beauty Judy” emphasizes her
York City, will speak this after- grace and charm as well as her
noon in the Conference Theater sparkling personality.
at 2:00 p.m.
Pat Silfer, representing Sigma
Mr, Ofer’s talk will be on "Is- Kappa Phi Sorority, is a 19-year
rael, After Sixteen Years,” com- old sophomore in fine arts. Her
memorating Israel’s Independence campaign theme “Pat, Portrait in
Day, which was yesterday. To- Pastels” was chosen because of
day’s program will be concerned
with Israel’s progress during the

past one and one-half decades, its
hopes and needs of the future.
Mr. Ofer will also be speaking
at Buffalo State today.
This program, under the auspices of Student Zionist Organization, will consist of Mr. Ofer’s
talk and a short question period
Following the speaking portion of
the program, SZO will present a
documentary film, narrated by
Rod Serling, “The Twice Promised Land,” depicting Israel’s
(Gont’d on P. 3)

l!)-year-old junior majoring in English

m

nationally known night club acts

will also appear.
The dance team of Stevens and
fine spots. Patti Leeds, billed as
“Belle of the Blues,” will be the
singer. She is sensational in voice
and appearance. Carol Joy who
performs her novelty act on her
own lighted table will thrill
everyone.

The varied night club acts with
M. C. Jim LaBelle and the music
of Louis Marino will provide a
most sensational evening in a
night club atmosphere. Tickets
will go on sale, Monday.
Heralding for the float parade
will commence at 9:30 a.m. with
campus leaders, sports leaders,
and cheerleaders announcing the
parade. The parade itself will begin at 10:45 a.m at Main and Exchange and will consist of a
motorcycle brigade, the ROTC
color guard, Angel Flight, the
queen

candidates,

convertible

cars, a hundred-piece marching
band, and the 14 floats, under
the general theme, “A Moment
to Remember.”

The themes of the individual
floats in the $100 class are: Alpha
Sigma Phi, “We Are The Greatest;” Hillel, “Exodus;” Phi Lamb
da Delta, “A Noble Experiment;"
Sigma Delta Tau, “A Garden of
Eden;” and Sigma Kappa Phi,
“Dam It.” Themes for the $400
class are: Alpha Gamma Delta.
"The Day Champagne Was Invented;” Chi Omega, "The Birth
of Spring;" Phi Epsilon Pi, “Don
Quijpte;” Sigma Phi Epsilon,
“Once in a Lifetime;” and Theta
Chi Sorority, "With This Hand."
Two fraternities have entered in
the $800 class: Alpha Epsilon Pi
with “Meeting of the Giants”
and Sigma Alpha Mu with “St.
Gaorga Slays the Dragon."

MADDEN,

theme “Jan-of-all-Sports.” Jan is
a physical education major from

St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada,

and will use “Canadian Sunset” as
her theme song.
Her favorite

pastimes are swimming, diving,

track, and varsity cheerleading
at UB.

Panhel Council
Scholarship Tea:
Awards Presented
On Sunday, April 12, the PanHellenic Council held its annual
Scholarship Tea. Among the
honored guests were Miss Jeannette Scudder, Dean of Women;
Mrs. Shiela Rhodes, Instructor of
Philosophy; Mrs. Faith Moll, Advisor of Panhellenic Council; Mrs.
Clifford Furnas; and Miss Dorothy
M. Haas, Director of Norton
Union.
The program began with a welcome speech by the Scholarship
Chairman, Chris Furiani. Barbara
Witzel, President of Panhellenic,
then spoke on the purpose and
function of the Council.
Mrs. Shiela Rhodes, teaching
here on a fellowship in Philosophy, highlighted the tea with a
very inspiring talk on the role
of women in society.
The purpose of the Scholarship
Tea is to honor the outstanding
academic achievement among
sorority women. Each year the
Panhellenic Council makes 4
scholastic achievement awards.
Three of these awards were given
Sunday. The Scholarship Bowl is
awarded to the sorority with the
highest total sister and pledga
average in the Spring 1963 and
Fall 1963
Sigma Delta
Tau was announced recipient of
this award with a sorority average of 1.741. The remaining sororities ranked as follows: Alpha
Gamma Delta, Sigma Kappa Phi,
Phi Zeta Ohi, Obi Omega, and
Theta Chi. It was noted that the
lowest sorority average this year
was above last year's highest average of 1.651. The second award
is the Lillian McDonald Tray
which is awarded to the senior
with the highest average for the
past seven semesters. Sandra
Strome of Sigma Delta Tau was
(Cont’d on P 5)

�Friday, April 17, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Gamma Delta Sponsors
Tonite
Party
Playboy
Folk Concert by Stereotypes
'r

Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
its
Seventh
Annual Playboy
Party from 91 am. tonight at
the Cordon Bleu on Genesee St.
near the Buffalo airport. There
will be a door prize given away
Snd costumed “Bunnies" will add
the "Playboy” touch to this year's
party Dance

music, vocals, and

night spot.

The election of Tele’s Playmate for this year should prove
to be a very close one, since five

sororities have put up "candidates
who could be a Playmate in any
body's book.”
The Theta Chi candidate is
Bernie Popielasz. She is a blond
19 year old sophomore majoring
in Psychology. Bernie’s outside
interests include jazz music and
knitting.
Sue

Licker, from Sigma Delta
Tau, is also a 19 year old sophomore. and she is majoring in
Sociology. She has been on the
business staff of the Spectrum,
and expects to be a social worker in a reform school when she

TKE Playmate Candidates, I. to r.: BERNIE POPIELASZ, BEVERLY
BOLLES, SUSAN LICKER, KAY HANNA, CHRISTINE WASCHUK
ed children when she graduates.

Her hobbies include water and
snow skiing.

The sisters of Sigma Kappa
Phi have nominated as their cam
didate, Christine Waschuk. Chris
is a 20 year old sophomore majoring in modern languages. She
expects to work in the diolomatic
service when she graduates and
her present interests include
reading and snow skiing.

Listen
to

WBFO

graduates.

Chi Omega has nominated Kay
Hanna as their Playmate candidate. Kay is a 20 year old junior
majoring in marketing. She likes
to sew, dance and play tennis
and is a member of the “Red
Heads Club".
Beverley

Bolles

from

-

Tuesday, the Stereotypes will
hold a Folk Concert in the Millard Fillmore Room of Norton
Union. All are welcome to attend the performance of George
W. Anderson and Miles Mounteney who have been singing together for some time now and
have been professional for a year.
The concert will be from 8 p.m.

risque humor will be provided
by ihe Beachcombers who are
recently playing in a Niagara

Falls

•

Alpha

Gamma Delta is a sophomore of

19 who is majoring in psychology.
She expects to work with retard-

Eft

■f®

,

Co*r*to*i, Ky.

OPEN ALL YEAR
M* drlv-tn with thm mrehmm

McDonald's

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Vi Mil* North of SHERIDAN DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
(Adjocoot Tha BooUrord Mall Plaxa)
Opaa Friday aad Saturday antil 1:00
Oporotod ky tLa JERRY MOWNROUT COUP.

A

to 9 p.m.
George is a Junior at UB majoring in Sociology. Miles is
studying to be a draftsman at
E.C.T.I. Among their perform
ances are C.Y.C. youth group con
certs, S.U.C.A.B. on Elmwood
Avenue, and at the Marine Trust
Bank. The Stereotypes will be
sponsored by Gamma Delta.

�Friday, April 17, 1964

Committee Chairmen Elected
At Senate Meeting, Tuesday
By TRUDY STERN
The Student Senate Tuesday
ight, elected nine new chairmen to Senate Committees.
The Senate also passed a resolution supporting Peace Corps
Week, April 20-25. Dean Jeanette
Scudder called the Senates attention to the coming of Peace Corps
representatives in a brief in-

Richard
active
member of this committee for the
past year. His plans for next semester include a program to bring
academic honesty to U.B. Student
Activities’ Committee chairman
is Harriet Heitlinger, a past committee member, Buffalonian staff
member and Spectrum Feature
Editor. Communications Committee ohair will be taken by Paul
Nussbaum, who is a first semester
this semester. Mr.
freshman
Nusbaum said that he hopes to
act as a bridge between the Student Body and the Senate.
Elected to Convocation Committee Chairmanship was John Stiny
who has been working with his
committee as acting chairman
all semester. Lois Mentor of
Union Board was elected as
Chairman of the Elections Committee. General Grounds Committee chair will be filled by Ron

from Page

1)

for independence in
1948. The movie, shown several
weeks ago on television, was part
oi Perspectives on Greatness, a
series concentrating on events
and history which mold the times.
Gary Evans, president of SZO,
states, “We are looking forward
to an interesting and informative
talk by Mr. Ofer and sincerely
hope the whole student body will
t%e advantage of this educational
struggle

A (V.!
ft
■'Fw» vVti-'l
„

$

The chairman of the Academic

Committee

Israeli Program
Features Movie:
Promised Land'
(Continued

troductory statement.

Affairs

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

|

is

.laross who has been an

DEAN JEANETTE SCUDDER
Zovodney, senator from Engineer
ing.
Jeremy Taylor was elected to
National
Student
Association
Steering Committee Chairmanship. Mr. Taylor has much experience in working with N.S.A.
on the national level and has
served in the past on Joint committees with N.S.A. and The
Liberal Religious Fellowship
which he now heads. Public rela-

tions Committee,' the link between
the campus and the community
is to be chaired by Bob Gerace.
Joe Epstein was elected Chairman
of Student Welfare Committee.
He promises to devote much of
his committees’ energy to the
calendar problem and the liquor
issues on campus.

opportunity.’’
SZO functions on campus to
educate the college student objectively concerning all middleeastern affairs. Several weeks ago
Dr. Mohamed El-Behiry, an
Egyptian political science professor at Buffalo State, presented an
illuminating talk on the Arab
refugee problem. SZO also spon
sons study and work programs in
Israel, among them being a new
year course .at the University of

Jerusalem.

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Joan Baez Appears at UB
For HUAC Demonstration
Joan Baez, renowned folksinger,
appeared in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge of Norton Hall, last Friday afternoon to dramatise her
protests against war, segregation
and the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities.
Miss Baez was invited to address the student body by the
Liberal Religious Fellowship. At
the University and at her concert in the evening at Kleinhans
Music Hall she encouraged her
audience to join in student demonstrations when the House
Committee reaches Buffalo, stating: T think in this case, especially since HUAC has subpoenaed people quietly, moved in quietly, taken people to court quietly,
and will ruin them quietly without anybody knowing about it
or putting up any resistance, a
demonstration can be very effective. I understand the committee has never made it clear—they never do—why a person is
subpocnoed. In Buffalo this could
be for racial reasons: setting up
a school (Woodlawn Junior High
School) in a negro district or per
baps because these people refuse
lo sign a loyalty oath which
should not exist."

JOAN BAEZ

Mort Saul's favorite line “Is
there anyone here I haven’t offended?” may well have been
a steal from Ibsen’s dying words.
The nordic theatrical thunderer
was fond of calling folks bad
names from public places and
what better place than the public
stage?

Herr Ibsen’s An Enemy of the
People, the play in which he was
most careful to insult everybody,
will be the Drama and Speech
Department’s spring production
at Baird Hall, April 22, 23, 24
and 25 at 8:30 ($1.00 for students
and faculty).

Dialogue Teaching Presented
Lt, Colonel John R. Sala, AFROTC Headquarters, Maxwell Air
Force Base, Alabama, presented
a demonstration of Dialogue
teaching to members of the University faculty and visiting AFROTC instructors from Hobart,
Syracuse and Rochester.
Dialogue teaching rests on the
principal that all effective learning is a result of conversation—unspoken between the instructor
and the cadets or between the
cadets themselves. Thus any
method of instruction which acti-

vates the learner’s

conversation

makes for more effective learning.

The size of the class makes no
difference—the method can still
be used. Triggering the mind of
the listener to identify himself as
a participant must be done clearly and fairly, else he becomes a
non-participant.

Teams, committees, working
parties or similar sub-groups are
established to work out problems. The problems are discussed
—the

Dialogue

in action.

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University of Buffalo Students Have Made Us Famous

�THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

-

Alan Newman
Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Allan Scholom
Marcia Cooper
William Siemering

John Kowal

Business Manager
Pat Launer
Bernard Dickman
Asst. Business Manager
Lawrence Singer
Advertising Mgr.
David Irwin
Layout Editor
Lois Hessinger
Circulation Mgr.
Advisor
Haenle, Jr.
Thomas
Financial

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, Judy Green, Gary Falk, Allan Scholom,
Mike Sulfanik, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry
Frankie, Nanc;y Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker,
Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford, Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen
Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian Kalasfein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt,
Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Lang, Fred Roseberg, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Saralee Rubenstein, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Barry Gutterman, Susan Weiner, Diane
Hayes, Terry Clark, Paul Nussbaum (Asst. Sports Editor)
Photography

Staff:

Charles Lotsof

%

Class
Second Class,

&amp;

n
Postage

Paid at Buffalo,

New York

$3.00 per year, circulation

Subscription

9000

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

Editorials
PEACE CORPS
President Furnas has proclaimed the coming week as
“Peace Corps Week.” The Spectrum wishes to extend a
warm welcome to the member of the Peace Corps coming
to visit Buffalo this week.
The Peace Corps team was very well received at many
other universities throughout the country this year. The
purpose of the visit is to inform the University students
about the activities and aims of the Corps. An ad hoc
committee is being coordinated by Dean Scudder, with
representatives from Cap and Gown, Bisonhead, the
Inter-Fraternity Council, the Panhellenic Council, and the
Inter-Residence Council, in addition to the Student Senate
The Peace Corps mission is a sincere one. The challenge
of Peace Corps work is great- We ask all students to attend the informative lectures and programs throughout
the week.

NEW CAMPUS DEAL
Student Association President Robert Finkelstein has
outlined a master plan for the Senate for the coming
year. The plan, in view of the political orientations of
the past year, is appropriately called “The New Campus
Deal.”
The Spectrum fully supports President Finkelstein’s
plan, and hopes that he will not allow it to stagnate,
but rather constantly expand upon it. This is the first
time in recent years that any all-encompassing basis
for Senate productivity has been presented. The plan
is obviously well thought out. It now must be put into
action. We strongly urge all Senators and committee
chairmen to start working within its frame.
Following the orientation of the New Campus Deal,
the Senate cannot help to be but productive. It offers a
unification of the power and drive which was randomly
oriented this past year. We cannot more strongly urge
the new committee chairmen to set a strong foundation
upon which to build than did the President in his opening
address to the Senate: “Each committee, instead of wandering into many areas will begin with one, making this
its prime consideration. I hasten to add that this need
not be the only area of the committee, but merely the
“We are trying a revolutionary
main consideration
idea—priorization of projects in committees. We must
have a multitude of accomplishments in several areas,
not several accomplishments in a multitude of areas.”
The greatest challenges of the New Campus Deal faces
the United States National Student Association Steering
Committee, under the newly elected chairmanship of
Jeremy Taylor, the Academic Affairs Committee, under
the chairmanship of Richard Jaross, and the Communications Committee, under the chairmanship of Paul Nussbaum. The N.SA. committee has declined during the
past year. But it has great potential. It will be up to
Mr. Taylor to once again rebuild its structure. As a start,
we feel it would be advisable for the Academic Affairs
Committee to concern itself with the publication of a book
giving a detailed evaluation of courses offered at the
University, as suggested by President Finkelstein. A great
contribution would be made to on-campus living if the
Communications Committee would follow the plan in
being instrumental in separating the room and board
contracts, as in the plan.
.

HUAC

.

Earl S. McCullough, lecturer in
engineering, has received an
award for the Summer Institute
in Structural Engineering at
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Sponsored by the National
Science Foundation, the Institute
lasts nine weeks beginning June
8.
Mr, McCullough was one of
40 teachers of engineering in the
United States to receive the

grant. Each award consists of
free tuition for graduate study
plus a stipend for the participant
and his family.

p
A.C.P. FIRST CLAS
CLASS
HONOR RATING

&amp;&amp;

PRESS

Toby Leder,

Joel Havens,

gm®®®

MARTIN D. KRIEGEL

Special Assistant to the Editor
Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Editorial Advisor

Friday, April 17, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

.

The Senate committee investigating the facts behind
the House Committee on Un-American Activities has published its fact sheet this week. The effort for a well
balanced report is a sincere one- We recommend that all
students read the fact sheet and study as many of the
reference as possible listed at the end of the sheet.
Again, concerning the Senate committee coordinating
the student protests against the House Committee, we
caution all students wishing to protest to participate only
all-student groups, and to remain independent of external
affiliations with groups with whom they are not familiar.

The largest computer facility
at any State University of New
York’s 56 units is being installed

this month at UB.
Business
The
International
Machines 7044/1401 system is
also the first in the country with
the new two-millionth of a second retrieval speed, according to
Rudolph Meyer, director of the
University Computing Center.
The $2-million-plus computor
which will be rented from IBM,
will service the research needs
of the University and its affiliates. It has been installed in the
basement of Goodyear Hall. The
Center also maintains two 1620
computers, one in the Engineering Building and another in Sherman Hall. The Center is operated
by the Division of Research,
headed by vice-president Raymond Ewell.
Thomas J. Crowley, photographer at UB, has received national
recognition for two of his photographs taken at the University.
Mr. Crowley received the honor

awards at the national conference
of the Association of University
Photographers at Harvard University, April 2-4. The two prints
will become part of a photographic exhibit which will be circulated to colleges and universities
throughout the United States.

Harry W. Chaskey, manager of
the University Bookstore, will be
a program participant at the 41st
National Association of College
Store NACS annual meeting in
San Francisco, April 27-May 1,
Mr. Chaskey, a NACS trustee,
will participate in a session entitled “Planning the College
Store” on April 28.

Phi Beta Contest
Deadline Monday
The Omicron Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa announces an annual
essay award in the memory of
the late Professor Hildegarde F.
Shinners, In the spirit of Mrs.
Stunners’ abiding interest in the
encouragement of good writing
among undergraduates, this
award is to be made for the
best-written critical essay submitted in competition by any undergraduate at the State University
of New York at Buffalo in any
field. The prize will consist of a
$25 book certificate and the winner will be announced at the
Spring initiation ceremony of the
Omicron Chapter.
It should be noted that (1) any
essay written by an undergraduate is eligible, whether it has previously been submitted in fulfillment of course requirements
or not; (2) the essay can be in
any field, subject or discipline;
and (3) neither the subject matter
nor the length of the essay, but
the quality of its writing, will be
crucial.
Essays should be submitted no
later than April 20, 1964, to the
Secretary of the Chapter, Dr.
Evelyn Lord Smithson, at 333
Diefendorf Hall

Baird Hall Site of Upcoming
Concerts, Recitals, Lectures
A number of concerts, recitals,
and lectures have been scheduled
by the Music Department for the
remainder of the semester. All
programs take place in Baird
Hall and begin at 8:30 p.m., no
admission charge, unless specified.
An all-student recital featuring
applied music students will begiven April 28, Richard Warren,
pianist, will give his graduate
recital April 29, and Donald Rafferty, oboist, will give his second
senior recital (the first was a
piano recital) April 30.

A Slee Composers Concert has
been scheduled for hjay 1. Music
of different Slee Professors will
be performed. The Slee professors
are famous present-day composers
who have held a professorship
in composition in tihe University’s
Music Department. The present
Slee professor is George Roch-

berg.

Heinz Rehfuss
in a song recital
annual outdoors
will be held May

will be heard

on May 2. The
Band concert
3 at 3:30 p.m..

permitting. A special
“Computer Concert” is scheduled
for May 4. Maestro Vittorio Giar
ratana will present his voice students in a special recital May 7.
Maestro Giarratana is well-known
as the opera coach and conductor
here at UB, and also teaches

weather

voice.

Many music department events
have already been scheduled for
the summer term. Concert-goers
should check the bulletin boards
in Baird Hall and on campus for
details.

The Spectrum has been
awarded a First Class
Honor Rating by the Associated Collegiate Press.
The judgment was made
on a competitive basis witii
all weekly college newspapers representing campuses having more than
4000 students enrolled.

Libraries To Commemorate
Shakespeare's 400th Birth
To commemorate the fourth
centenary of Shakespeare’s birth
(Apirl 23, 1564) the UB Libraries
will exhibit the first editions of
Shakespeare’s four folios. They
will be shown in the Main Reading Room of the Lockwood Memorial Library Wednesday. Thursday and Friday.

Among the many treasures in
the Lockwood rare book collection, these original folios are the
most noteworthy. The First Folio,
published in 1623, is generally regarded as the most important
book in the whole range of English literature. It was largely set
up in type directly from Shakespeare’s manuscripts, and
is
therefore our closest approach
to the originals, all of which have
perished. The few surviving examples have become infinitely
precious to scholars and libraries.
In 1960, a copy sold at auction for

$83,965.00, The second, third, and
fourth folios which followed are
also excessively rare. We should
congratulate ourselves for being
among the few Universities to
own a complete set.

�Friday, April 17, 1964

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Committee Slates
Mr. Faculty '64

The Circus
By BOB MILCH

Once there was a man named
William Overbury who lived in
the dark ages of the seventeenth
century. Despite this handicap,
however, he managed to make
several contributions to our present enlightened age. His name,
for example, has given some poli
ticians the notion that they have
been buried and dug up over and
over again. But more permanent
than that footnote to history is
the format of character sketches
which he perfected, taking a person dominated by a particular
trait and describing him for posterity’s sake. Had he lived today
might he not have written . . ,?
A student advisor is a spiral
with office hours; never talking
straight, he never really talks in
perfect circles either. Though
holding several degrees, the one
book he has never read is the
university catalogue. His favorite
seafood is eel, and his favorite
meat is tongue.
An office secretary is a tragedy
mask that types. She has perfected the baleful look of a lion
and combined it with the disposition of a skunk; consequently,
one can never know with certaim
ly with wlhich end she will attack.
A campus patrolman is Like a
two day old bagle; hard on the
outside, he is mouldly within. He
is an accomplished carpenter,
friend of dogs, and a prolific writer of sorts.
A newspaper editor is a contradiction in terms. He believes
both in tyranny and laissez faire,
thinks like Bertrand Russell and
Mad Anthony Wayne, is afflicted
with bed sores and hemmorhoids,
and is thick skinned in some
areas while extremely sensitive
in others.
A letter to the editor writer is
an excited glutton; while he is
unsatiated if his letter is unprinted, neither is he satisfied if
the letter is printed and fails to
draw storms of controversy. He
frenetically digests each publica
tion in search of a morsel which
he hopes will nauseate him and,
in proving difficult to pass, will
stir him in hiis distress to typewriter action midst a torrent of
words and gas.
A part time student is an athlete. His time is divided among
eating, training, and endorsing
scholarship cheeks. His general
physical condition is red-booded,
as is his attitude towards sex,
though the former degenerates in
the off season.
A graduate student is neither
fish nor foul; considered a student by the faculty, he is con-

sidered as faculty by the 'students. His hours are long, his
nerves frayed, his pay low. his
book bag patched, and his favorite expression “wait and I’ll
check with Professor .
A professional agitator is a
salaried nuisance. He is a pest in
the offices of student organizations, a menace in the offices of a
publication, and a louse in the
hair of those institutions he attacks. The most difficult task he
faces is keeping track of the
names his home office uses, as
otherwise his checks are null and
void. He considers himself a
Quixote, though his lance is a
shotgun and his horse afflicted
with the mange.
A thoughtful student is a
throwback. His genesis lies with
Aristotle, his deuteronomy with
Shakespeare, and his exodus with
Ian Fleming, His extinction is expected momentarily, and his resurrection is dubious.
Correction
A deletion accidently appeared
in last week’s column. The third
paragraph of column two should
.’

read;

“Finally, there is much overstatement in many of the attacks
ad hoc organizations opposed to
HUAC make, Huac is not a com
mittee “which deprives Americans of their liberties,” but a

committee which in the past has
deprived some Americans of
some of their rights. The difference between the two is enormous,”

So too, now, is the meaning.

Once again the Spring Week
end Committee is sponsoring a
Mr. Faculty Contest. Competing
for the distinguished position of
Mr. Faculty 1964 are the following candidates: Dr.. Frank J. Cipolla, Dr. Hope Ritter, Dr. David
B Stout, and Dr. John H. Warfel. Voting wdll take place on
April 28 and 29 in the Haa
Lounge.

Dr Frank J. Cipolla, a native
Buffalonian, is a member of the
music department and a graduate
of the Eastman School of Music.

He also studied at the Vienna
Academy, Vienna, Austria. Dr
Cipolla directs the UB band and
was at one time professor of
music with the trumpet in con
nection with the Kansas City
Philharmonic Orchestra His band
activity climaxed with an Orange
Bowl performance on New Year’s
Day. 1961, in Miami.

Dr. Hope Ritter is a graduate
of Cornell University and received his doctorate at Lehigh
University, where he also taught
for nine years. For four years
Dr. Ritter instructed and did research at Harvard. A member of
the biology department, he is a
member of Sigma Xi, a national
science society.
Dr. David B. Stout, a graduate
Wisconsin and Michigan, received his doctorate at Columbia.
He was assistant professor at
Syracuse and the University of
Iowa and is from the anthropology and linguistics department.
In 1940, he was the project
supervisor for an anthropological
expedition to Bast Panama. Dr
Stout was on the board of directors of human relations area
files at Yale and was secretary of
the American Anthropological
Association from 1947 to 1951.
oi

Sorority Awards
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

the recipient of this award with
a 2.577 overall average. The third
award is a $100 scholarship for
a sorority woman. This award was
given to Carol Kujawa, a Sophomore History major with an overall average of 2.1. Carol is a

member of Theta Chi sorority.
The fourth award of a $100 schol-

arship for a non-sorority woman
will be presented at the Awards
Banquet, April 26th.
Carnations were then presented
to 102 sorority women Who during the Spring 1963 or Fall 1963
semesters carried a full time load
and achieved a 2.0 or better average. This represents over one
third of all women having Deans
List standing.

Refreshments followed the a
wards and concluded the after
noon.

Dr. John H. Warfel is a mem
her of the anatomy department
and a graduate of Capital University and Ohio State. A native
of Indiana, he received his doc
torate at Western Reserve Uni
versity. Dr. Warfel moved to
Buffalo in 1949. He is the author
of the section on antomy in the
Lincoln Library Encyclopedia and
the co-author of two anatomical

sketches.

MUD Events Feature
Serendipity Singers
On Wednesday. April 29, at
7:30 p.m, in Clark Concert Hall,
the Spring Weekend festivities
will begin with the presentation
of the two hottest folk-singing
groups in the country today; The
Serendipity Singers and the popu
lar duo, Joe and Eddie.

hit record,
result of their
“There’s a Meeting Here Tonight”
and their numerous television appearanees. They specialize in a

rapid-fire delivery of folk songs

and humor.
Tickets are now on sale at the
Norton Ticket booth at $1.50

The word “serendipity” means
the unexpected discovery of a
new and happy event.’ This
versitile group from the University of Colorado have been taking
the country by storm. They have
been featured on six ABC “Hootenanny" programs and have been
one o£ the outstanding groups
on the college concert tour. Their
song “Crooked Old Man” is now
number 10 on the record charts
* n Buffalo. In looking at their
accomplishments, The Serendipity
Singers have chosen a most appropriate and descriptive name.

mto national prominence as a

By JEREMY TAYLOR
As

many

of you

may

have

gathered, the House Committee
on Un-American Activities has
postponed their appearance here
in Buffalo until April 29th. Since
no reason was given for the postponement, just as none was given
for the initial appearance, one
can only surmise about the reason. My guess would be that the
Student Senate decision to support the National Student Association stand opposing the HUAC
and to support a student demonstration when the Committee ar
rives, and the subsequent ap-

Baez, sponsored by the Liberal Religious Fellowship contributed to the Committee’s nervousness and that
they decided to postpone the
hearings in the hopes that the
furor would die down and that
they could appear relatively unopposed in two weeks, as they
did in 1957. It is my profound
hope that the postponement will
have precisely the opposite effect, in that it will allow the
campus dialogue to continue and
a greater portion of the student
body will be able to be informed
and arrive at a position. I believe that anyone who examines
the facts (even those judiciously
selected facts on the Senate fact
sheet) will realize that the committee violates the American Democratic Process.
Arthur Burke, chairman of the
Student Senate Fact Finding
Committee, overstepped his au
thority and his responsibility
when he attempted to bar the
press from the Liberal Religious
Fellowship meeting where Joan
Baez spoke. The Saint Lawrence
District of the Unitarian-Universalist Association supported the
Fellowship in a letter to President Furnas and the Continental
Office of Student Religious Liberals, the organization with which
the fellowship is affiliated has
expressed its support of the Fellowship’s entire program. Such
support is gratifying and goes
further to show that opposition
to the Committee comes from
within this society, on grounds
which are totally separate from
partisan politics. It also seems to
go some small way to disprove
the allegation made the president
of the Allenhurst Council that
opposition to the Committee came
pearance of Joan

from "bcatnicks and derelicts".
It is my hope that in two weeks
it will become clear that opposition to the Committee comes
from the entire community. The
New York Times has condemned

the Committee and called for its
abolition, but whether or not
you feel the Committee should
be totally abolished, opposition
to the Committee as it now stands
is, 1 feel, mandatory for the preservation of an accessable government which exists for the maintenance of democratic freedom.
Mrs. Ann Brayden, wife of civil
rights leader Carl Brayden, told
in a meeting Sunday night how
the Committee harrassed the
leaders of the civil rights movement in Atlanta and New Orleans.
In the meeting, held in the Hum
boldt Baptist Church, Mrs. Brayden showed how the Committee
supplied dossiers and professional wittnesses to the local courts
in an attempt to preserve the

segregated character
of the
South. The White Citizens Council smear campaigne directed at
Rev. Martin Luther King made
use of the files of the Committee.
The picture which purported to
show Rev. King at a communist
cell meeting, was taken by a
secret Committee cameraman.
During the Chairmanship of Representative Walter, the Committee council was "moonlighting”,
working for a foundation whose
published purpose was to scientifically “prove” the genetic inferiority of negroes.
Although these tactics may
seem unreal and far removed
from our situation here in Buffalo, these are the selfsame tactics which are used here by the
Committee. The local police antisubversive Squad has made its
files available to the Committee
and the tatic of guilt by association is used by these ministers
of "justice” as well. It works like
this. If there is a meeting (like,
say, the Mark Lane meeting)
which for some reason is “suspect”, the Anti-subversive Squad
will appear and take down the

license numbers of those who
attend the meeting. They then
check the registrations and ob-

tain the names of the people who
drive the cars to the meeting and
start “files" on their “subversive”
activities. At peace walks or civil

rights demonstrations they photograph the crowds and start (or
add to) files of those present. An
organization (like, say a Church
discussion group) which has
among its members, people who
are "suspect”, then the entire
membership becomes “questionable" and they in turn have files
started on them. The Committee
has announced that they have
files on over a million Americans, and the files of the Antisubversive Squad here in Buffalo
have been estimated as high as

twelve thousand.
These tactics are very danger-

ous to the constitutionally guaranteed rights of freedom of assembly and petition for the redress of wrongs. The essential
nature of democracy is not static.
Any effort by the government
to “freeze” political, or any other
beliefs is a violation of the basic
democratic principle that the people rule. There are certain inherent dangers in the democratic
position; your enemies must be
as free to speak and assemble
as you are. But the rightness of
the democratic position demands
that you take these risks, A society must protect itself, but not
at the cost of the very principles
of that society.
Anyone who signs a petition,
or walks a picket line, or writes
a letter to his congressman, or
does anything, in effect which
disturbs the status quo, runs the
risk of having such a file set up
on him. If you then seek any
job which demands
“security
check” then this file may be used
to brand you a security “risk,”
This is how things stand now.
I believe that this whole system
of secret security files is wrong.
The Committee is, along with its
other iniquities, the symbol of

this whole diobolical system. In

opposing HUAC I am also taking
a stand categorically opposed to
this kind of witch hunting.

The Freshman Class Council is sponsoring a forum
on smoking to be held here April 21 and 22. The
object Of this “Smoking Clinic*’ will be to educate and
inform students of the medical, social and psychological aspects of smoking.
Tuesday, April 21, 5:30-7:00 in the Conference
Theatre, a doctor from Roswell Park Medical Institute will speak here and present a film produced
by Roswell. The Institute has been working extensively with the problems of smoking and cancer.
Wednesday at 5:00 a Psychologist and Sociologist
from U.B.’s faculty will lecture on the psychological
and sociological reasons for the extensive acceptance of smoking.

The other half of this show

features Joe and Eddie. This exciting vocal duo have ,surged

RCFHCTIOMS

SERENDIPITY

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-

Men’s socks

Children's l /i Back sweatshirts
Girls’ black plastic rain coats
139 Men's long sleeve sport shirts
82 Men’s short sleeve sport shirts
28 Men’s short sleeve dress shirts
22 Men’s long sleeve dress shirts
Childrens melton jackets navy
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Girls’ Hot dog pants (to match)
14 Men’s summer weight sport coats
(assorted plaids and checks)
35 Men's wool sport coats
(assorted plaids and checks)
30 Men’s beach bags
313 Girls' blouses (long sleeve, roll-up
and sleeveless)
20 Girls’ bermudas
27 Men’s sweaters
125 Girls’ U.B. silk headscarfs
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CLOTHING
Men’s Ties
Men’s lightweight cotton slacks
Girls’ long pink sweatshirts
Men’s socks

-

1.98

.98

6.95
2.49

3.98

1,39

UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE CON CAMPUS)
VALUE
from 2.00

-

5.00

.79

SALE PRICE
Vi off
Vi off
1.79
8.95

SUPPLIES

VALUE

SALE PRICE

Markers

.39-.89

.19 or 2/29

.

2,98
13,95

pkgs. Typewriter cleaner
Scotch Brand
All occasion address books
Phillips Pub. Co
Correspondence cards

4
3

Panasonic Transistor radios
Panasonic Transistor raidos
15 Big Ben alarm clocks
9 Baby Ben alarm clocks

Twine
23-

—

1.00

House of Ideas Inc.
Comic note pads
Week at a Peek
White &amp; Wycoff
Fine line drafting pens
Esterbrook
Weekly tax tab
U. B. note pad books
Briefolio binders
#FZ-76-PC
Briefolio binder

Quickies

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VOX, KAPP, MONITOR
(Mono or Stereof)

10
1

.59

.59

.59
.39

1.19

22

4
13

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1.19

30

9

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colored

pen and pencil holsters
pen and pencil holsters

Card protectors
Penn State book covers
NBB book covers
Rubbermaid desk scratch paper set
Stylecraft desk basket
Desk caddy
Handy caddy
Photograph albums and scrap books.
Typewriter ribbons
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Stationery (assorted colors)

4.98

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GABRIELI Sacrae Sym. Hollard, Cond.

HANDEL: Royal Fireworks Music Teleman Society Orch.
MOZART: Flute Qts A Maj, D Maj Wanausek, Europa Qt
WILLIAM BYRD: Mass Four Voices Bach Choir, Little, Dir.
HANDEL Recorder Sonata
HUMMEL Clarinet Qt. Kohon Quint.
VIVALDI 5 Oboe Cone. Caroldi.
VIVALDI Four Basson Cone. Bianchi
MOZART Piano Cone 19 &amp; 20 Haebler
BARTOK Piano Cone 1. Sandor
BARTOK Piano Cone 2 &amp; 3
Sandor
DUKAS Sore. Appren. Remoortel
Mandarin
Rolf Reinhardt
BARTOK Miraculous
SHOSTAKOVICH Sym. No. 5 Horenstein
GLUCK Orpheus and Eurydice A. Raveau
—

KAPP
HANDEL Organ Concerti 11 in G Min, 2 in Bb. L. Moe. Organ
BAROQUE Italian Music for Strings Cambridge Soc., E. Bodky, Dir.
HANDEL Messiah Adele Addison, Sophr.
HAYDN Qt in C. Paganini String Qt
9052 GUITAR MASTERPIECES, M. Gayol
9054 TCHAIKOVSKY/SUK; String Serenades Emanuel Vardi
Beautiful Listening
Opera Without Words
Rome Symphony Orch, Domenico Savino, Dir.
9015 VERDI’S “LA TRAVIATA”
9027 BELLINI’S “NORMA"
9018
9024
9025
9045

—

9035

BIZET'S "CARMEN”
Famous Trumpet Virtuoso
Roger Voisin
of the Boston Symphony Orchestra
Works of Purcell, Vivaldi, Haydn
1
Works of Dahl, Hindemith, Sanders
Works of Ga'brieli, Pezel, Reiche
Works of Biber. Torelli. Manfredini
Works of Daquin, Bach, Telemann
Works of Stradella. Fischer, Lully
—

•

9017

9020
9028
•

•

•

9033
9050

9062

9070

Works of Scarlatti, Neukomn, Fux

MONITOR

SALE PRICE

.19

.05

.03

.25
.50

4.98

18028
18030

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.19

SALE PRICE
1.98

ea,

or 5/9.00

MOZART Piano Sonatas 14 in C, 11 in A, Fant in C.
Paul Badura-Skoda
BEETHOVEN Trios No. 3 in C, Op. 1; 4 in Bb, Op. 11,
Fournier, Badura-Skoda
MOZART Posthorn Ser. No. 9. Barylli Qt.
MOZART Quin. No. 5 G Min, 7 in Eb. Amadeus Qt., Aronowitz
HAYDN Quartets,. Opus &gt;64, Nos 2 and 5. Vienna Quartet
LISZT Pagani and Concert Etudes Edith Farnadi, Piano
MOZART Sinfonia Concertanti Barylli Quartet
DEBUSSY &amp; RAVEL: Quartets, Curtis Quartet
SCHUMANN Piano Works, Demus.
BUXTEHUDE Organ Works All Linder
TCHAIKOVSKY Sym No. 1—Golovanov
Janigro
BACH Solo Cello Sonatas
JOLIVET Martenot &amp; Harp Concertos Laskine, Jolivet
PALESTRINA Missa Papae Marcelli Vienna Choir, Theuring.
WALTON Symphony (1935) Phil Arch, Sir Adrian Boult, Cond
BACH Cantatas 32, 152 H. Scherchen
BACH Cantata 198
H. Scherchen
BACH Cantata 210 “Wedding” Scherchen
BEETHOVEN String Trios, Opus 9, No. 3 Pouchet, Pini.
POULENC Stabat Mater, Bal Masque Brumaire, Fremaux
ALBENIZ Tango, Tango Enchaniz
GRANADOS 12 Spanish Dances Echaniz
BRAHMS Sonata No. 3 Badura-Skoda
CHAIKIN Balalaika Cone. Kazakov
DEBUSSY Viol, Cello &amp; Flute Sonatas—Janigro
TCHAIKOVSKY Manfred Sym. USSR Sym
DVORAK Piano Quintet, String Qt. Edith Farnadi
GIROUST Missa Brevis; Motet
FRANCK Piano Quintet Sokoloff
TELEMANN, HANDEL Trio Sonatas Brenner
PERGOLESI Concerti Nos 1, 3, 4, 5, Ephrikian
SCHUTZ St. Matthew Passion V. Kammerchor
TARTINI Devil s Thrill Son. Morini.
TCHAIKOVSKY; Capr. Italien. H. Scherchen
HAYDN Quartets, Op 64. 3 &amp; 4 Konzerth, Qt,
HAYDN Piano Trios 4, 17, 27, 29. Paul Badura-Skoda
SOLER Harpsichord Sonatas. Valenti
VILLA-LOBOS Wind Qtet. New Art Qt.
BARTOK For Children. E. Farnadi
ITAL. TROUBADOUR SONGS. Cuenod
FRESCOBALDI &amp; GUESALDO. Madrigals. Randolph Singers
PACHELBEL Chorale Partitas. Owen
MOZART Kleine Nachtmusik; Petit Riens, Redel.
BACH Ital Cone, in F. Chromatic Fant. &amp; Fugue. Badura-Skoda
WEBER Cantatas and Lieder
BRAHMS Handel and Paganini Variations, Lateiner
ARTHUR POISTER ORGAN CONCERT.
—

—

—

—

•

VALUE
.25

WESTMINSTER

VIVALDI Cone, for Oboe &amp; Basson Gli Acad. P. Santi Cond.
HAYDN Cone, for Trumpet in Eb Gleisle, trump, Reinhardt
BACH Musical Offering Muncher

•

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19.95
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VALUE
WESTMINSTER

VOX

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17.95
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(A PARTIAL LIST OF CLASSICAL RECORDS)
VALUE
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GIFTS
Assorted fragrances
Assorted jewelry
125 Hayes Hall plastic key cases
11 Place mat sets
11 Panasonic Transistor radios

&gt;

2003 ALBENIZ to ZARZYCKI. D. Oistrach
2010 BEETHOVEN Trio #7 Bb Gilels. Kogan
2014 SHOSTAKOVICH Viol. Cone, Op 99 Oistrakh
2018 VIVALDI Viol, Cone. G. Minor. Kogan
2026 SCHUMANN Cello Cone. A Min. Horn Cone. Rostropovich
2027 SCHUBERT Sonata A Minor. Richter
fLP’s Available in Stereo Designated by

—

*

��PAGE EIGHT

Friday, April 17,

SPECTRUM

Sperandino,KappaPsi Regent
Receives Key to City of B uffalo

By LEON LEWIS

in a more concrete sense, he is
unable to carry the work on his
present movie any further. His
ittempts to decide upon the next
scene for his movie reinforce his
attempts to discover some meanng in his life, and his picture (as
ell as Fellini’s) involves an inestigation of both his thoughts

nd attitudes towards his associates in the present, and a series
of reflections and fantasies about
the life he has lived until now.
“What Fellini has done, in
other words, is to give us an objective look at the workings of
his own mind. Even the title is
completely personal Fellini has
made 6 feature-length films, 1
documentary and 3 shorts; thus,
tiie sum of his individual efforts
is “8V movies. What accounts
for the movie's success, though,
is not the confessional nature of
the material, nor the very personal vision of life which it conveys (certainly Cocteau, Antonioni and Ford have equally interesting personal conceptions of
life and art), but the consumate
mastery which Fellini has with
the tools of his trade
the
camera, his actors and the structural possibilities of a motion
■

-

picture.

ter Kowal. A

Dr. Glen J. Sperandino, Grand
Regent of Kappa Psi Pharmaceutical Fraternity, a national professional fraternity, was given
the key to the city of Buffalo
at a banquet given in his honor
Saturday, April 11, at the Lord
Amherst Motor Inn. The banquet was sponsored by Gamma
Iota Chapter and Buffalo Graduate Chapter of Kappa Psi.

standing ovation
this rare and unique
honor, and Dr, Sperandino accepted the key with humility and
dignity, stating that, “I truly do
consider Buffalo my second homer

Dr. G. Sperandino was visiting
the city on a speaking tour, and
addressed the Buffalo Chapter cf
the American Society of Hospital
Pharmacists at a special seminar
which was given by them. The
seminar was organized and directed by Jacob Caraotta, Kappa
Psi.

Globe Artists Agency

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We have such fun in our bridal department . . . the only
thing we think about is arranging other people’s weddings.

ACADEMY
Our gift

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"Best Foreign
Film of the Year!

to have any really adequate con-

clusion. Fellini has settled for
the next best thing an ending
which suggests that the story
which we have seen is universal
and will probaby be repeated.”
The version at the Circle Art
lias been dubbed into English. In
most cases, this is a woeful process. 1 haven’t seen this effort
yet, but I've heard two strong reactions. One person who had not
seen the movie before felt that
the dubbing was very successful
and the over all effect excellent.
The other, a passionate advocate
of Fellini’s work who had already
seen the movie a number of
times, felt that it was an incompetent travesty of an important
work of art. That’s what makes
horse races, I suppose.
-

Joseph E. Levin* »»»«■»«■

FEDERICO FELLINI S
\

BUFFALO 2, N. Y.

Bridesmaids from
Wedding Gowns from
Eves.: 7:00-9:30; Sun. Mat.: 2-4:20

3KSBm*MW

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8 lbs. for $2.00

For Your Winter Clothes

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Shoe Repairing

Shoes and Purses Refinished
and Dyed
*

All Types of Ladies' Heels In
Stock for Replacement
or Re-sty I ing

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6-4041
Open 9 A.M. -9 P.M.

Thurs. until 9:00

DIXIELAND

ond The Yankee Six

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with

every fri. and sat.
Sunday Afternoon Jam Session 5-9

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Open 10 -5:30

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$25.98

Castle Supper Club

C(££&lt;48*

presents

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Steaks from King Arthur Char Pit

Filet Mignon $2.95

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SPECIALIZING IN PERMANENTS
and HAIR COLORING

1

BAILEY it KENSINGTON ■ The Curtain Goes Up On
The Warmest Human
TEL. IF 3-8211

Drama Ever Portrayed.
The Story of MOSS
HART, His Love, His
Conflicts, His Joys.

...

Filmed With All The

Splendor and Excitement
of Broadway On Opening

Night.

Carmen’s Barber
Home
Shop
•t&amp;i Proprietor;
of the

Carmen Covers
Appo intments

TF 4-9227

GEORGE

JASON

JACK

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1088 Kensington Ave.
(Just off Bailey Ave
5 min. from Campus)

"

Jones

tjC'

FOLK 'FESTIVAL
JUNE 8 12

After Dr. Sperandino’s stirring
and enlightening speech, brother
Jacob Garaotta presented the
Grand Regent the Key to the
City on the behalf of MayoNChes-

ACADEMY AWARD

"ENTERTAINMENT"
THE SOCIAL

:

’’Not unlike many other modern
writers and directors, Fellini is
unite concerned with the effect
hich Time (as an abstract entity)
has on the life of a man. In a
i ry
interesting manner, Fellini
seems to be working with the
idea Chat all of the action of a
person’s life may be seen in each
moment of awareness of an immediate and momentary event.
We see the influences of the past
id our hopes for the future int vtricably intertwined with the
ream
of the present. Con, quenty,
as in La Dolce Vita,
lere is a particular emphasis on
ie vivid moments in time in a
i erson’s life at the expense of
jaditional cinematic coherence.
In addition, there is a constant
mterplay between scenes in time
past, the present, and in the
nebulous regions of Fellini’s
antasy world. He projects the
houghts and desires of the preent upon the past as it was and
s he wished it might have been,
. ad combines these images with
a series of fascinating conjec‘ures about the future. The normal course of a man’s life is presented in terms of more than
one sense of reality, and the
nature of “reality” itself seems
to Shift and change constantly.
“The great thing about 8Vi is
that it, like Fellini’s work in
general, gives us a sense of complexity with a genuine lucidity.
There is nothing conventional
about the constant shifts in per
spective, but if one has some
familiarity
with conventional
nematic techniques, or has seen
ome of Fellini’s other work, the
istortions in normal chronology
do not seem really confusing. Fel-

lini is careful to make clear to
the viewer in just which realm
he is operating at any moment.
"The other aspects of the
movie (those other than compose
tion and structure) are all done
with Fellini’s professional devotion to his craft. The acting
is nearly totally convincing, the
camera work very imaginative
and original, and the sets always
appropriate to the action. In spite
of the seriousness of the subject
matter, the tone often is wry and
humorous, especially in the mar
velous “harem scene” ■ a cinematic fulfillment of everyman’s
wishdreams.
“My only objection is to the
eonculsion. Fellini’s co-writer
suggests that the conclusion of
this movie was just as difficult
to manage as the conclusion to
the movie Mastroanni is having
so much trouble with. In this,
ease, life seems to.be imitating
art and this I find quite fitting.
There aren’t many instapees in
which a person’s life may be
divided into dramatic situations
with satisfying conclusions. Fellini’s movie is too close to the
process of a man’s life to be able

,

“tVi is an intensely personal
vision of a movie director (expertly played by Fellini’s alter
ego, Marcello Mastroanni) who
lias become intellectually bankrupt. Surrounded by all of the
trappings of success, he has become perplexed abodt the value
cheme which has carried him
this far, and his doubts and in
trospetive conjectures him ren
Jered him practically inoperative,

1964

-

Student Discount Tickets Available With Proper I.D.

Cards

�Friday, April 17, 1964

SPECTRUM

Mi'IiIaUa'a

The Jazz Gallery
By RAYMOND

The University of Buffalo was
the testing ground for the Chastain, Hendricks and Bavan group
which appeared here in concert
Saturday, April 11. The group,
which has had trouble with personnel, has made a couple of
significant changes and still has
more to go.
About five years ago a new
jazz vocal group appeared which
Downbeat Magazine called “the
hottest new group in jazz." The
group was comprised of Dave
Lambert, Jon Hendricks, and
Annie Ross, and were affectionately called L. H. and R. Their
popularity stemmed from their
ability to imitate bands, combos
and instruments. They could
sound like Basie’s saxophone section or Jon Coltrane’s
They did fine work with their
"scabting” and their songs had
witty lyrics, and they had the
ability to write words to a tune
even down to the solos. The man
who has made this all possible
is Jon Hendricks who made the
group and at the present has
been the backbone of each group
to appear. The more famous songs
are ones that Hendricks has written such as “Gimme that Wine,”
and “Cloudburst.”
When in London about 2Vz
years ago, Annie Ross decided to
stay, and a young Indian actress
Yolande Bavan appeared to work
with the group. Bavan was the
perfect replacement for Ross.
After returning to tihe States and
doing a few college gigs the
group hit New York and Bavan
was an instant success. The group
had not lost its sounds and was
able to do everything that it had
done before. So L. H. and B. was
formed and no one regretted the
loss of Boss. The group went to
Newport and cut a record and
also did another fine job on another record. Jon Hendricks, like
before, was writing words to
many jazz hits, and on the whole
*

Lambert left the group, and there
was a big job in filling his place.
After deliberation. Dave Lambert

picked Don Chastain, an actor,
singer, composer, etc., who was in
the “Broadway” bag. The concert
here was his second appearance
on stage with the group and
it showed like a sore thumb.
From the beginning I’m going to
say I don't see the logic in think
ing that Chastain is anywhere
near a replacement for Lambert.
He, taking into account his inexperience, doesn’t have that
swinging look that the group

had before. He looks like Winston
Churchill trying to sing “When
the Saints Go Marching In." Besides the obvious displeasure in
not knowing the words to the
selections, he can’t scat, can't
improvise, and doesn’t at first
listening, blend in with the group.
To top it all, he ruined Billie
Holiday’s “God Bless the Child."
So I think Chastain was a bringdown and I think I could see it
in the eyes of Hendricks and
Bavan, which is a reason why the
two did most of the work that
night. Besides Chastain, the group
was enjoble. They did their old
favorites plus some from their
newer albums. A highlight of the
night was when the group, backed
by the Gildo Mahones Trio, did
a song called “Jon Coltrane Loves
His Cousin Mary.” At the end
they were sounding just like
J. C. and Hendricks and Bavan
soloed, imitating the saxophone
of Trane. Another was a Frank
Foster tune “Shiny Stockings,” in
which the group sounded like the
Basie Band. So on the whole
they gave the “select” crowd a
chance to see what they can do,
and an inkling of what they once
did.
The big news for me was that
night was the last one, that Bavan
would do. She is leaving possibly

I'm WOMAN

I'm MAN

The SPECTRUM

Patln
-AL9 ott

’

eri

&amp;

p

re Si,

WE'RE

J)nc.

WE

SEX

SYMBOLS T

GET TOGETHER

TIE BAR

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ONLY

FLORENTINE C3
U
FINISH

Phone 876-2284

$4.50

P.P.O.
F.E.T. INCl.

SEX SYMBOL, BOX 8460
ST. LOUIS, MO. 63132

NO C. 0.D.

ALLOW 3 WEEKS DELIVERY

(A Paid Advertisement)

Y. D. of W. Y. N.
ARE YOU;

Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
3400

Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students
MAIN STREET (Opposite UB)
TF 3-1600
Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till 9 P.M.

racking.

New Student

Review
on Sale
Next Week

|y

It's here
r
u
It's great
And it's live

J

From New York Chicago and all
-

parts of the couatry. Entertainment

you have seen on T.V., and heard on

records. Now see them live in person!

*

Interested

;

in the political, civic, and social problems of the day
a political club that has an intellectual base and a
practical purpose?
Interested in a club with a planned political, educational, and
social program?

Interested in

then JOIN NOW ! THE Y. D. of W. N. Y.
Monthly meeting: Tuesday, April 21, at 8 PM at Hotel Richford
210 Delaware Avenue
HEAR A PERTINENT LOCAL SPEAKER
*

*

because of the retirement of Lambert and a new replacement. Pat
Harris will fill her spot, and in
time the "Hendricks Singers" will
emerge. The thing to see is will
the sound be the same and will
Hendricks be able to write as
before and not have to be hampered by the incapabilities of the
other singers. This will be a big
job for Jon Hendricks and a
lot of practicing will be done
after this week.
If you remember 1 wrote about
Stan Getz awhile ago and this
you have a chance to sec for
yourself, the unique personality
and music of Getz. As you can
see its the Koyal Arms again
which is bringing the name bands
to Buffalo. After this weekend
of Stan Getz, the exciting exBasie singer, Joe Williams will
be in town with the Junior Mance
trio. This should be a very enjoyable evening for any college student. The Royal Arms will be

-

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

ATTACHE CASES BRIEFCASES
HANDBAGS and GIFTS

ON THE

SEX SYMBOL

Smith j-^rintiny

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER G00DS ST0RE
,

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ao

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now printed by

M11116110 S

CRAWFORD

everything was “groovy."
A couple of weeks ago. Dave

PAGE NINE

Young Democrats of W.N. Y.

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week

&amp;

Evenings and Satnrday

Requirements; Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instructions

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Col Mr. Craig 853-0837

“A real jubilee

at

SPRING WEEKEND
DANCE

rS£:&gt;

PARKWAY INN
9-1 A.M.
MAY 1, 1964

_

,

�PAGE TEN

SPECTRUM

l*\eii&lt;^iou6

GAMMA DELTA

Gamma Delta will sponsor the
Stereotypes in a folk concert in
the Millard Fillmore Room, Tuesday at 8 p.m.
Our next meeting will be Wednesday, at 6:30 p.m. in Room £144
Nortop. Join us for dinner at
5:30 p.m.

McClosky to Talk
On Voice Sunday
At 8:30 in Baird

the last of this year, will be
served. Call Hillel at TF 6-4540
for a reservation.

By VICKI BUGELSKI
David Blair McClosky, professor of voice and speech at Boston University, will give a special lecture-demonstration, “Your
Voice at its Best” Sunday at 8:30
p.m, in Room 101 of Baird Hall.
All students and faculty are invited to attend.
Mr. McClosky is accomplished
as a concert singer. He studied
at the New England Conservatory of Music. He has given several recitals at Town Hall in
New York City, and has appeareu with the Boston Symphony
and the New York Philharmonic,
and other major orchestras. He
was the voice consultant of the
late President John F. Kennedy.

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP

Tonight, Inter-Varsity will have
Rev. Will speak on “Discipleship."
The meeting will be held Norton
Room 234 at 7:30 p.m. Everyone
is welcome.

HILLEL

The third and final program
in a scries on, “The World of
Yiddish Culture” will be sponsored by Hillel, Sunday at 5:30
p.m. in the Hillel House. The
program will introduce students
to the rich heritage of Yiddish
music. Hope Jolley, Cultural
Chairman, is in charge of the
evening. A Delicatessen Su^er,

WESLEY FOUNDATION

The UB Wesley Foundation
will join the Wesley Foundation
of Buffalo State for a softball
game tomorrow, at Ellicott Creek
Park. Transportation will be
provided at Goodyear Hall at
3:00 p.m. After the game, we
shall adjourn to “MacDonald’s”
for supper.

CATHAY GARDEN

Spectrum daH (/Soarc!
ASTRONOMY CLUB

The Astronomy Club will hold

an open “Observatory Night,”
Saturday, at 8 p.m. in Hochstetter
Room 111. Displays and actual
viewing of the sky will highlight
the evening. Everyone is invited
to attend. Refreshments will be

served. In case of inclement
weather this event will be held

Sunday, at 8 p.m.

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
Following a short business
meeting of the Photography Club
today at 4:00 p.m., entries in the
Photo Contest will be judged by
Mr. Fitzgerald, of Fitzgerald
Studios. Photographs should be
brought to room 353 before 4:00

MINUTES DRIVE FROM UB
•

SOCIAL WELFARE CLUB

The Social Welfare Club will
hold its final meeting of the year,
and a coffee hour, Thursday,
at 4:30 p.m. in 333 Norton.
Mr. Joseph Bronstein of the
Jewish Center of Buffalo, and
Camps Lakeland and Centerland,
will discuss Social Group Work,
Elections for next year will be
held and all members are asked
to attend. All students interested
in social work are cordially
invited.

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WHY HUAC POSTPONED
On Friday morning, April 10, two more subpoenaes were issued by
HUAC returnable on April 14, the date on which the hearings were originally scheduled. On Friday evening after students had manifested
their willingness to demonstrate in front of the courthouse
after the
appearance of Joan Baei before over 1500 students
telegrams were
issued postponing the hearings until April 29th.

of the campus and the community are intensified. Furthermore, the postponement indicates that the form of opposition that concerns HUAC most
is demonstration.

-

-

We believe that the postponement was the result of the opposition to
HUAC that has come from the community and the campus ail week and
which culminated on Friday afternoon with Joan Baez’s appearance,
Sponsored by the Liberal Religious Fellowship. At the same time, we
believe that the postponement may be a delaying tactic. HUAC may
hope that this opposition will begin to dissipate. The postponement
suggests that the opposition to HUAC can succeed provided the efforts

While the wide opposition. to_HUAC that has come from so many different groups in Buffalo, including the Student Senate and Youth Opposed to HUAC, is gratifying, a small sour note has been struck this week.
Little informal HUACs have begun to emerge, to engage in their own
techniques of insinuation and innuendo, and to attempt to interfere with
the rights of freedom of the press, peaceable assembly, voluntary association, and freedom of expression. But this small sour note was largely
lost in the great crescendo of campus opposition to HUAC. We now
know that the demonstration scheduled for April 29th outside the courthouse will successfully achieve our common purpose to oppose HUAC.

PICKET HUAC, APRIL 29th,

FEDERAL COURT HOUSE, NIAGARA SQ.
AD SPONSORED BY THE BUFFALO COMMITTEE TO OPPOSE HUAC

-

�JTApril

17, 1964

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Grid Bulls Recruiting World Mourns Death
The same high school in Pennsylvania that sent the University

of Buffalo such past football
stars as Jim Ryan, most valuable
back of the 1963 season, and
Dick Hort, center and co-captain of the 1962 Bulls, is sending
another outstanding player to
Buffalo. .
Greg Williams, who played
both halfback and quarterback
for the Danville, Pa., High School
team, will enter. UB this September.
At Danville High Williams was
captain and most valuable player
on his team and was named to the
Susquehanna Valley All-Star
team. He also received Honorable Mention for All-State and
the Pennsylvania “Big 33.”
Williams' coach, Jay Livziey,
describes him as “the best prospect offered you since I have
been coaching
ing athlete, can

...

an outstand-

do everything

well."
UB backfield coach Bob Doming, indicating that Williams
would be ticketed for a halfback post, praised Williams for
having “speed and aggressivenes.”
Deming said that Williams is a
genuine triple threat and could

Congratulations
the Brothers of
BETA OMEGA XI

to

Of US Ski Champion

develop into a truly great player.

Besides playing football, Dm
Williams also has earned_ 3 woodie earned his letter with the
varsity letters in baseball and Kenmore East wrestling team
basketball. In the recently con
and he was a shot-putter on the
eluded basketball campaign he
track team.
was named the most valuable
defensive player on his team
The 6-0, 183 lb. Williams will
major in Education at UB.
An area schoolboy who stars
in the classroom as well as on
the athletic field has decided to
enroll at the University of Buf
tab this September.
Hd*s Rolfe Dinwoodie, of 71
Halladay Lane. Tonawanda, who
will be graduated in June from
Kenmore East High School.
Rolfe, who is 6 : 0 and weighs
215 pounds, made first-team
tackle on both the Buffalo Evening News and the Tonawanda
Neews Niagara Frontier League
All-Stars.
I APARTMENT FOR RENT I
FOR SUMMER
A member of the high school
National Honor Society, Dinwoo ■ 3 room (1 bedroom) suite. Lux-|
uriously furnished suite. Fully a
die will major in Aeronautical

SUPPORT

THE

BULLS

By LEON KELLNER

The world was shocked this
week by the death, on April 12,
of Bud Werner at St. Moritz,

Switzerland. The United States
skiing star was killed in an avalanche caused by unusually high
spring temperatures. He was in
Switzerland filming scenes for a
movie on ski fashions.
Bud Werner was a leader in
American skiing for close to a
decade. He competed in two
Olympics, 1956 and 1964, missing
the 1960 Olympics due to a
broken leg which occurred dur
ing practice. He competed during
a period when American skiing

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The funeral will be held in
California sometime the week
Among other friends and well
wishers attending will be a major
part of the American Skiing team
The Sugar Bowl Ski Competition
will be postponed until April 2r&gt;
in his honor. The "Saturday Sla
lorn," of that meet has been n
named the Buddy Werner Men,
orial Slalom.

*

Engineering at UB.
UB coach Dick Offenhamer expressed pleasure at Dinwoodie’s
decision to come to UB and observed that the young man has
the potential to be an outstanding player.

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�PAGE TWELVE

Friday, April 17, 1964

SPECTRUM

SS&gt;S(BVIBUBQ SI?®® IPS
Diomond Men

SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALLAN

Are Victorious

SCHOLOM

By

LOOKING AHEAD

GARY FALK

The University of Buffalo Bulls
opened the 1964 Baseball Season
last Tuesday by shutting out
Ganisius College, 12-0.

Joel Chandler Harris, of Uncle Remus fame, once
oclared on rendering advice to writers of the Daily
ress, “When you’ve got a thing to say, say it!’’
Next year’s Spectrum Sports editorial policy will fol&gt;w these few literally simple, but far reaching and all
ncompassing words. -Much has been said and will be said
mcerning freedom of the press on all levels of literary
roduce. From the world renown New York Times to the
nallest, most insignificant “home-town” newspaper, the
ght to say what one thinks is indeed the most sacred
eedom with which the newspaperman has been enowed.
Right about now you are probably saying to yourIf, “Where does all this journalistic idealism fit into a
torts column?”, or words to that effect. It all boils down
an introductory explanation of my views concerning
litorial coverage in general. As far as sports go, I inend to continue and expand upon the editorial policy
f my predecessor.
Next year’s Sport’s Circle will be devoted principally
coverage of the story behind thhe scenes, the so-called
inside story” Of course, there may be times when such
column may possibly be distasteful to the Athletic Deartment of the University. Let it be known, here and
&gt;w, that I do not intend to intentionally degrade or con&gt;mn, in any manner, shape, or form, the athletic policy
the University in general or the actual methods with
hich intercollegiate and intramural sports are conacted.
However, since there are very few infallible systems
i practice today there may be times when an editorial
ill be devoted to constructive criticism. If and when
ae need arises for such a column, it will only be written
an attempt to correct, rather than pick apart whatever
bortcomings may exist in the UB Athletic Department
id its activities (if any?).
Let me also make it known that this will not confute the only area of editorial concern. On the conary, next year’s Sports Circle will delve into all the
elds of athletic endeavor. There will also be many other
icets in the Spectrum coverage of sports news.
Next year a new sports column will be inaugurated,
be written by the assistant sports editor, a position
eated to aid in the increased Spectrum coverage of UB
&gt;orts as well as outside sports.

Three U.B. pitchers combined
for a three hit, sixteen strike out
effort against the Canisius squad.
Bob Kohansky went to the hill
for the Bulls and pitched four
successful innings, giving up but
two hits while fanning eight. He
became the winning pitcher. He
Was relieved in the fifth by Larry
Gergley who went three innings,
allowing one hit and striking five.
Sophomore, Gary Hannes capped
the effort for the Bulls, coming

&gt;

r

/

-*
*

&gt;

three.

Rather than draw out this preview any further with
oring specifics I will sign off this year’s Sports Circle
ith a good luck (and all that stuff) to all our spring
ports teams in their respective seasons which I might
dd will open victoriously in baseball and tennis.

Intercollegiate Baseball Conference title which they have won
or shared for five year running.
The game, played at U.B., was
the opener for both squads.

fense of the Western New York

Netmen Whitewash Canisius, 9-0;
Seigei, Feldman, Oberstem Shine
each man would be of the most
value to the team as a whole.
The results of Tuesday’s match
are as folows:
SINGLES: X. Andy Feldman
(UB) d. Ed Burke (C) 6-2, 62. 2.
Denny Bezezinski (UB) d. Paul
Matty (C), 6-1, 6-0. 3. Bob Barrett
(UB) d. Jeff Thier (C), 6-0, W). 4.
Schneider (UB) d. Bill Kruczynski (C), 6-2, 6-2. 5. Steve Oberstein (UB) d. Lou Battaglia (C),
6-1, 6 3. 6. Mingle (UB) d. Jim
Phillips (C), 6-2, 6-0. DOUBLES:
1. Branoato and Yuschik (UB) d.
Burke and Matty (C), 6-4, 3-6, 8-6.
2. Siegel and White (UB) d. Battagia and Thier (C), 6-4, 6-1. 3.
Siudzinski and Braun (UB) d
Phillips and Kruczynski (C), 6-2,
6-4.

way.”

WBFO-FM

(88.7

campus radio

high jumper.
Following Saturday’s meet at
Troy, U.B. will entertain Canisim
and Buffalo State next Monday,
Coach Fisher feels that State
looks “pretty good” while Canisius is “not too strong”. It is
believed that because of our
strength in field events we will
overpower our two competitors
next Monday.
Turning to long-range plans, it
is much too early to prognosticate
the outcome of the entire season,
but if the runners Coach Fisher
is relying on, including Lee, Dansereau, Reiber, Ernst, Haug, and
most notably Stu Katz run up to
their capabilities, the Bulls will
make a reputable showing this

season.

Erie Thursday at 3:30 p.m. and
will meet R.I.T. at 2:00 p.m. Saturday, April 25.
If you can’t make it over tc
Ross Field to see the games, b
sure to tune in WBFO for thi
live play-by-play broadcast. Bur
Vogel, Fred Brickell, Dick Fleischer, and Wally Blatter will W
at the mike to relay the excitin
action.

Don’t forget to tune in WBFO
”UB Sports Highlights” Frida;
at 6:15 with Wally Blatter am
Monday at 6:15 with Barry Wai
ner. You’ll hear all the up-to
date sports news from this ant
other campuses around the coun
try on the show that’s becomt
the talk of Buffalo. Remember
WBFO is growing . . with you
.

support!

Intramurals
By KIM

BLACKMAN

Outfoiling all opponents in the
campus intramural fencing championships was Howard “Ringo”
Goldstein. Second place went to
Bob Capan. E. Holl, an independeent, came in third.

with Phi Ep second, Alpha Sip
third, Sig Ep fourth, and SAAi
sixth.
The intramural track meet will
be held on Friday, April 24. All
entries must be in, on an off j
entry blank, by Tuesday, April
Plans are being formulated now
for the intramural awards dinner. Further details will be given
in nert week’s issue.
The highlights of the evening
will be the presentation of the
Lawrence H. Pahlowitz Trophy
for the all around participation
supremacy. The standings are a
follows:
322
_
AEPi
303
Sig Ep

\

...

30o4

SAM
Beta Sig
Phi Ep

:

Backhand stroke gains point

and broad jump. New additions
tp the team are Burt Ernst and
Ed Haug. Ernst, a former heavyweight wrestler will throw the
shot while Haug will run the high
and low hurdles. Runner Stu Katz
will have to miss the Saturday
meet to take law boards.
Three promising freshmen will
be running at the R.P.I. meet.
U.B.’s hopes ride on Dick Keneau, a miler, Davee D’Amato, a
sprinter, and Charlie SJvabsels, a

Baby Bulls Open 1964
Facing U. ofRochester

meg.), the
station, will cover
both of the Bulls home games
this week. The UB baseballers
go up against Gannon College of

BILL BARTO slams a triple
on in the eighth nining and
finishing strongly by whiffing

-

bright newcomers. Returning
from last years squad will be captain Don Lee, who won the first
place gold medal at the Maple
Leaf Games in Toronto for pole
vaulting; Don Dansereau, defending New York State champion
discus thrower, who is expected
to be entered in the discus, shot
put, javelin and the hop, skip and
jump; and Ron Reiber, New York
State 440 champion, who will
compete in the 100-yard dash, 220,

Outfielder John Stofa missed
opening game. The football quarterback had to travel to Boston,
where he was to receive an award
naming him, Boston University’s
“Outstanding Opponent.”

4

With the opening game last
Tuesday, U.B., opened their de-

On Tuesday afternoon, the
' niversity of Buffalo tennis team
wept to victory in its first match
■A tne season by shutting out the
acqueteers from Canisius College
by a very impressive score of
9 to 0.
In handing Canisius their first
defeat of the campaign, Coach
Sanford used a tota of twelve men
in an attempt to give each member of the team a chance to gain
in the experience department. At
the same time, Mr. Sanford was
able to evaluate the ability of the
members of this year’s team,
especialy the newly added members, and determine to some extent in which type of competition

early to give an accurate run-

down of our trackmen’s ability,
since there have been only two
practice sessions so far in the outdoor season. However, the teams
performance will most probably
depend upon a strong nucleus of
returning runners and a few

The U.B. nine took an early
lead in the first inning and kept
it throughout. Don Kraft headed
the U.B. offense, going three for
three with three runs batted in.
He also scored three times. Craig
Lyons had two hits and two
RBI’s, while scoring once.

'

porting events.

By TERRY CLARK

By ALLAN MELMED

The UB trackmen under the direction of Coach Emery Fisher
will open the 1964 outdoor season
this Saturday against R.P.I. Both
varsity and freshmen will compete. Coach Fisher feels that the
meet will be a “toss-up” and will
go to the team which has gotten
in the most practice sessions. U.B.
has defeated R.P.I. in two out of
their last four meetings.
Coach Fisher believes it is too

The UB freshman baseball team
will open its season Saturday
when it goes up against the University of Rochester in an away
double header.
The team’s first home date is
Monday when they face Buffalo
State at 3:30 at Ross Field. Brockport freshmen will end out the
week’s action when they come
into town for a single game Friday, April 24 at 3:30.
Bill Monkarsh, a former major
league star, in his third year as
coach, feels the boys have great
potential and “could go all the

fi,. w.-JCv?

Next year’s Spectrum will contain numerous articles
eekly concerning national and international athletic
&gt;mpetition. Thus, future coverage will be much more
&gt;mplete and diversied than in the past. When the readr picks up the Spectrum he will not only find more UB
ports news but a summary type roundup of the week’s

Outdoor Track Opens

249 It

2434

Apha Sig
Gamma Phi

...

tH
HOWIE GOLDSTEIN

Champion Fencer

217
202

It has just come to the
tion of this writer that a m
was made in as week's issu .
Ep did not win the overa
tling championship. Pht
second
first pace with Sig BP
.

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                    <text>STATE

'~r*"

UNIVERSITY

OF NEW

YORK AT BUFFALO

rm IB WT mM

T)

"JUU I HU ItM

I

VOLUME 14

—

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964

NO. 25

Dr. Dieter Drill Speaks J\ew Senate Sets Plans
on universal Relativity HUAC Hearings Set in Buffa 0 Next week
|

Dr. Dieter Brill, fifth in a series of lecturers speaking on the
question, “Is Einstein Obsolete?”,
addressed a capacity audience
in the Conference Theater Tuesday, April 7th, from 3-4:00.

Dr. Brill, a universally accept
ed expert on gravitational phys-

•O

Dr.

Brill's general topic was
"Universal Relativity," He began
his talk by praising the stability
and uniformity of physical laws,
then restricted his lecture to the
discussion of Einstein’s theories
in relation to the laws of gravity
With the aid of slide diagrams.
Dr. Brill defined and analyzed
the gravitational laws by describing the famous experiment of
Galileo. This early Italian scientist dropped two masses of different weight from the Leaning
Tower of Pisa, proving that the
gravitation of particles of different constitutions, and the acceleration of these particles are always the same. Because gravity
does not distinguish between
types of matter, it is possible to
determine gravity by geometry.
Because a gravitational field will
bend the particles in a line, Einstein theorized that straight lines
could be defined as paths of test
particles; this would constitute a
new kind of geometry. As an illustration of this gravitational
geometry, Dr, Brill investigated
the geometry of a curved surface.

Senate Reaffirms USNSA on Tuesday

The first session of the 1964-65 Student Senate met Tuesday. President Finkelstein
opened the meeting: with several announcements and then delivered the first Presidential message in the history of student government on campus. President Finkelstein
called for a "new campus deal,” in. which all the branches of student government
would join together in a unified attempt to accomplish a set of broad objectives pertaining to the welfare of the student body.

The President’s message outlined a new departure for the Senate and its related
committees. In his talk he addressed himself to the direction
The Student Senate elected pointment as chairman of the Stuof student government, and out
three members to its executive dent Activities Committee, is Arts
lined tasks that he hope the comcommittee, Henry Simon, Clinton and Sciences representative,
mittees would perform. (The text Deveaux, and Cary Presant. AnLinda Gupzberg.
of President Finkclstein's speech
Clinton Deveuax, representaother member of the executive
appears on page 10.)
tive from University College,
committee, by vitue of her apcalled upon the Senate to make
its position known regarding the
House Un-American Activities
Committee in light of its appear
ance next week at the U.S. Court
House in Buffalo, Mr, Deveuax
sponsored a two part resolution
which states:
1—1 move that a special committee be established by the
president to present a fact sheet
DR. BRILL
on the HUAC to the student body
within one week.
ics, was born in Heidelberg in
Geometrically-fixed lines rep2— I move that the 1964-65 Stu1933. He entered Princeton Uniresent the most approximate type
dent Senate of State University
versity in 1950, and upon graduof straight line in this case; the
of New York at Buffalo reaffirm
ation spent a year at the Eidonly bending would be due to
the stand taken by the United
genossische Teohnische Hochnatural curvature. Dr. Brill reStates National Student Associa
schule in Switzerland. He then
emphasized the significance of retion in calling for the abolishment
returned to Princeton, where he placing Newton's gravitational
of HUAC.
completed his doctoral work. Dr.
laws with Einstein’s theories of
The first part of the resolution
Brill held a post-doctoral fellowgeometrical gravity, for the latSPECIAL STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEE
was passed by the Senate 24-1-1;
ship to the University of Hamter equations give the most accuburg, spending part of the year
the second half passed by a vote
rate estimate of gravitational
visiting colleagues in Europe and
of 18-5 4,
straight lines. Dr. Brill also disbehind the Iron Curtain. For the
cussed the views of Friedman and
Discussion of HUAC continued
past three years he has been on
when Kosa Lynn Brothman, the
Tolman on Cosmology, again in
the faculty at Yale, and has also relation to his major interest,
Senate representative from the
been involved on a contract with
general relativity and gravitation
Freshman Class Council, spon
NASA.
physics.
sored a resolution which urged
8:30
Tomorrow evening, al
Committee will, present the "holthe Senate to circulate a petition
P.M. in Clark Gym, The Music iest vocal group in jazz”, Chasin opposition to HUAC among the
tain, Hendricks, and liavan, as
student body. The resolution stipthe climax to the expanded ulates that the reasons for the
Spring Arts Festival.
Senate’s objections to HUAC be
These Columbia Recording ar
stated as “disfavor of the comlists have been on the concert
;
mittee’s past intimidation of peoand night club tour since their ple or organizations which have
inception in 1959. After their not been shown as being subverfirst album, “Sing a Song of sive.” The petition,
according to
The
Jubilee
Concert
be
Room
of
Kloinhans
for
all
who
will
Student Association President
Basic", this unique trio has ap
the motion which the Senate
given Sunday evening at 8:30 wish to attend. The UB Blues,
pea red at the many jazz centers passed
Robert Finkelstein has announcwill be circulated after
p.m. in Kleinhans Music Hall. The popular campus barbershop quar
ed a three-point policy for stuof our country, including The the special committee’s
fact sheet
tet, will help provide the enter
dent government and has made concert marks both the concluChicago,
Royal
Blue
Note
the
in
is made public.
Spring Arts Festival tainment.
Arms in Buffalo, and Basin
known his first two key appoint- sion of the
Buses will be provided at UB
ments since taking office March and the celebration of the 50th
Street East in New York City.
Anniversary of the College of for anyone who has need of
Just recently, one of the origiArts and Sciences. Lukas Foss’
transportation to and from Klein
nators of the group, Dave LamIn describing his policy for
cantata for chorus and two pianos hans. Students are reminded that bert, retired. But, before step
the coming Senate term, he inPsalms, will be performed by the
tickets at a 50c
ping down, he helped in choosdicated first that “the Student University Mixed Chorus with a they can buy general
admission
ing his own replacement. EvenSenate offices will always be number of other interesting discount. The
tually, a talented singer who actis $1. Tickets are still being sold
open” in an attempt to encourage
Band in Baird and Norton Ticket Of
pieces.
choral
The
Concert
all interested students to come
ed as Edie Adam’s leading man,
perform contemporary Amerfrom
will
are
available
fices and
also
Ron Chastain was selected. Jazz
and voice their opinions and
all members of the UB Men’s
critics all over the nation now
Upon the recommendation of
ideas on current issues to the ican works.
be
Women’s
After the concert there will
Glee Club, the
Chorale,
acclaim the group as even more
senators and officers.
Che
Dean of Students and the Coa reception in the Mary Seaton and the Concert Band.
sensational than before.
Secondly, he feels it important
ordinator of Student Activities,
with Chastain, HenAppearing
dial all students be encouraged
Grant-in-Aids are being awarded
dricks and Bavan is the Gildo
,u attend the Student Senate
to the President, the Vice-Presi(Cont’d on P. 9)
meetings and that they feel free
to speak at these meetings, even
dent. the Secretary and the Treasif the individual is
urer of the Student Association.
not directly
involved in Student Government.
The Grant-in-Aids are equivalent
Mr. Finkelstein’s third policy
to full-time tuition for the PresiA
.Peace
team
Corps
Point involves the de-emphasis of
dent and a lesser amount to the
will he coming to campus
student party affiliations in the
other three officers. The funds for
Student Government. The presithe
week of April
during
these Grant-in-Aids are being
dent feels that "we must have
provided from funds other than
20-25 with headquarters at
only the most qualified persons
those allocated by the Student
erving our school in Student
Norton Union. President
Senate These linancial aids will
overnment, regardless of the
Furnas has designated this
be given to these officers at the
arty with which they choose to
end of each semester and are
week as “Peace Corps
associated, the political parawarded for the time they spend
Week” and there will he
os on campus provide an indisin performing the duties of said
ensible service by presenting
special tests administered
offices. This is done in response
ualified candidates to oppose
to a nation-wide trend to give
hy the team daily. Also,
aoh other in the student elecfinancial assistance to students
°ns. Since their institution here
there will he a 28-minute
holding such responsible posiUB they have increased the
film shown in the Confertions, inasmuch as they do not
tal vote in campus elections
have sufficient time, if they perence Theater at various
such a great degree that the
form Che responsibilities com
times
during that week.
udent Government can now be
mensurate with the position durnsidered a truly representative
ing their term of office, to obtain
(Cont’d on P. 3)
part-time jobs.
JUBILEE CONCERT GROUP
..

ft

Chastain, Hendricks, Bavan
Featured at Clark Gym

Pres. Finkelstein
Announces Policy
Appoints Two

Jubilee Concert Sunday
Ends Spring Arts Festival

Grants Given to
Senate Officers
for Coming Year

e

�Friday, April 10, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

SigEp Queen of Hearts Ball
*

This year, the New York Epsilon Chapter of the Sigma Phi

Epsilon Fraternity is celebrating
their tenth anniversary as a national fraternity on the UB campus. To commemorate the occasion, Sig Ep is sponsoring a
Tenth Anniversary Celebration

■

Weekend for parents, alumni and

brothers.

The celebration will take place
this weekend. Phil Marcello is
chairman of the weekend and
Don Hemstreet is acting as co.1
11
ordinator.
Friday, will be highlighted by
the 10th Annual Queen of Hearts
Ball to be held from 9:00 p.m.
to 1:00 a.m. at the Camelot Motor
Inn, Blasdell, New York.
The climax of the evening will
QUEEN CANDIDATES
be the crowning of Sigma Phi
Epsilon’s Queen of Hearts for
PresThe weekend will close on Sunatmosphere.
informal
in
an
1964 by last year’s queen, Merident Bruce Sahrbeck will speak
day, with a religious lucheon to
leene Watson of Alpha Gamma
on the overall view of the frater
be held from 12:00-2:00 p.m. in
Delta Sorority. The candidates innity and such chairmen as sports,
the Norton Hall cafeteria. The
clude Lucie Einhorn (Sigma Delfloat, stunt nite, and Mr. Formal Rev. Mr. Robert Jones, director
ta Tau), Kathy Lewis (Theta Chi),
will describe their respective acof Wesley Foundation, will be the
Linda Nashqlds (Alpha Comma
guest speaker.
tivities to parents. Sigma Phi EpDelta), Peggy Pascarella (Phi Zesilon’s unlimited fraternity diviParents will observe Sig Ep’s
ta Chi), Diane Scholl (Chi Omesion winners of 1964’s Greek Sing
traditions and reputation. The
ga), and Marlene Vowinkel (Sigwill sing their selections for the Brotherhood hopes to convey to
ma Kappa Phi).
parents. The program will conparents all these things and one
Voting for the Queen by the
clude at 4:00 p.m.
more
the feeling that they are
brothers look place Monday,
not affiliated with Sig Ep mereApril 6. Judging will be done by
At 6:30 p.m. parents, alumni
ly because their sons chose to
faculty members this afternoon and brothers will have cocktails,
be a member, but that they are
followed by a buffet Founders’
in the conference theater, based
an integal part of the fraternity.
on poise, personality, and appear
Day dinner at 7:00 p.m, at Laance. Judging is 50% of the total, Caribe Restaurant in the Conas is voting.
tinental Inn, Sheridan Dr. at DelThe Parents’ Day Program will aware Ave. Dr. Charles H. V,
begin at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday Ebert, Professor of Geography
in the Dorothy Haas Lounge, with and Chairman of the department,
an informal coffee hour to allow
will be the guest speaker. Miss
the parents to meet the brothers
Evelyn Mann, a junior majoring
in music at UB will be Sig Ep’s
honorary guest for giving her

Humanities Service Is Cited
Citations to U B Faculty
Citations for “Distinguished
Professional Accomplishment in
the Humanities,” will be presented to five members of the
faculty and staff of UB by the
College of Arts and Sciences at
a dinner, Saturday, in the Faculty
Club. Held in observance of the
50th Anniversary of the College
of Arts and Sciences, the dinner
will be followed by a lecture in
Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall.
The speaker will be Dr. John H.
Finley, Jr., of the Harvard University faculty.

The citations will be presented
to Dr. Willard H. Bonner, James
A. McNulty, Professor of English;
and Dr. Oscar A. Silverman, Director of Libraries, for their contributions in English; Mr. Stanley
D. Travis, Chairman of the De-

Advisor to the Graduate School,
and Miss Emily H. Webster, Assistant Vice-President for Business Affairs, for their contributions in Administration. The citations will be presented by Dr.
Milton C. Albrecht, Dean of the

College.
Dr. Finley’s address will follow
the theme of the weekdong An
niversary observance, “Tasks of
Today and Tomorrow.” Dr. Finley
is Eliot Professor of Greek Literature and Master of Eliot House at
the Cambridge, Mass., campus.
The public is invited to hear Dr,
Finley’s presentation.
A Jubilee Concert will conclude
the Anniversary celebration Sun
day, in Kleinhans Music Hall.

The U.B. Concert Band and
Choral Groups will perform and a
i

ipus.

—

Support

much appreciated help to Sigma

The Spring Arts Festival regrets to announce
that the Norman Walker
Dance Company performance scheduled for tonight
at the Circle Art Theater
has been' cancelled. All
who have purchased tickets may receive a refund
at the Norton Ticket Booth.
The Company may appear
in Buffalo late this Spring
in Buffalo late this spring

Phi Epsilon’s Greek singers.
The dinner will be followed
by a flower-making party for
Spring Weekend’s float compete
tion to which parents are invited
to meet brothers and other par
ents and see the machinery of
the fraternity in action.

Our

Advertisers

Here is Hathaway’s
Club Shirt

or next fall.

with Raglan Sleeves
Exclusive at Roger Lewis
softly rolled collar to small, discreet

From
buttons-this shirt is tailored in the classic
tradition
Also, notice how trim the cut is around the
mid-section. That’s because Hathaway tapers
the body of the shirt —and makes the tails
extra-long so they can’t bunch up or pop out.
The fabric Hathaway uses is Batiste Oxford

si.

R
,

Covington,Ky.

WHAT'S GROWIN’ ON HERE?
"Spring Sala Starts April 17th'

are

icket

IjOi a Dash o| Odoentule
IN YOUR WARDROBE
Come To
V
2900 DELAWARE AVE.. KENMORE. N.

�Friday, April 10, 1964

Finkelstein Appoints Burke
As Senate Presidential Aide

(Cont’d from P. 1)
voice of the students. But we
cannot let political affiliations interfere with the operation of
the student government. This is
important. Every elected representative has a responsibility to
the students to express their
views, and not those of a few
individuals in his party.”
In line with this area of his
policy, Mr. Finkelstein has appointed Arthur Burke as his Presidential Assistant. Mr. Burke is
now chairman of the Campus
Alliance Party, while Finkelstein
is affiliated with the United Students Party. The President answered queries regarding this appointment in saying “I feel that
Mr. Burke is well qualified. He
will be aiding me in various administrative and other tasks, and
I know that we will be able to
work well together.”
In addition to being Campus
Alliance Chairman, Mr. Burke is
also in charge of the Campus
Barrel (United Fund, April 1522) and is a member of the Feinberg Committee. Burke indicated
that he hopes to help the President achieve a “coordination of
Senate goals” by which he means
“to move all Senate committees
on to a common goal, mainly student welfare”. He hopes to achieve results on such problems as
campus parking and beer on the
campus in the near future. He
feels that “there is a definite
move for party cooperation in

Seriate activities” and is very optimistic about the future of Student Government here.
The idea of a Presidential assistant is not a new one and
was last used, according to Mr.
Finkelstein, during the 1961-62
Senate.

Richard Manch was appointed
as liason between the Student
Senate and the Spectrum. With
regard to this appointment, Finkelstein said, “I have a great deal

of respect for Mr. Manch’s literary style and objective criticism.
He should be a valuable asset to
us in this newly-created post of
Senate-Spectrum liason.”

U.C. Registration
Moment to Remember" Weekly Schedule
University College students
Great Music, Talent
whose last names begin with the
The Spring Weekend Dance at
the Parkway Inn in Niagara Falls
will include something new in the
way of entertainment and will be
another “Moment to Remember.”
The music will be provided from
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. by Louis Marino
and his band, most of whose members have previously played with
Stan Kenton, Billy May, Tommy
Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey, and other
equally famous bands. In addition to the fifteen-piece band,
there will be four nationally wellknown and highly-rated night
club acts along with M. C. Jim

LaBelle.

The dance team of Stevens and

Michaels has worked in all the
finest spots from Las Vegas to

New York City and at Lake Tahoa
and exclusive Reno supper clubs.
Carol Joy has appeared in Montreal, Quebec, Toronto, Boston,
and other large eastern cities
with her novelty act. Miss Joy is
an excellent acrobatic who performs on her own lighted table.
The international comedian
Billy Meek will continue to highlight the evening with his sparkhng wit and bis charming Scottish accent. Mr. Meek has enthused audiences on three continents and has recently finished
Playing in Toronto. His act will
mclude his novelty musical instruments and dancing comedy—all of which will certainly make
the night more enjoyable.
The singer will be Patti Leeds,
who has been billed as the “belle
°f the blues,” and she is certainly
worthy of this cognomen as the
evening will prove. Miss Leeds
15 Sen
sational in voice and appearanee, and her husky voice can
? 80 hold the high notes. She
Pas appeared in
Toronto and

London, Ontario.
The varied night club acts with

Jim LaBelle and the music
provide a
°st sensational evening in a
Sht club atmosphere.

Louis Marino will

The dance

cutainate with the anhouncefloat winners and the

ent of

wiring of the

tai°'"if 1

®

’

Mr.

Tickets for this enter-

evening will go on sale

APnl 20.
.

queen and

T he Bald Soprano En Route
To Corning Drama Festival

Dr. Wilkins Receives
Large Grant for
Chemistry Research

By RAY MAJOR
The Student Dramatic Society
A UB chemistry professor has
of the State University of New
received a $65,000 grant from the York at Buffalo will take its proNational Science Foundation to duction The Bald Soprano, by
support research entitled “Rapid
Eugene Ionesco, to three collegiInorganic Reactions in Solution.”
ate drama festivals this semester.
Dr. Ralph G. Wilkins, ProfesThey will begin their tour this
sor of Chemistry, will be studyevening as they open the drama
ing the rates at which certain festival at the Corning Glass Cenchemical substances combine with ter, Corning, New York. They
metal salts in aqueous solution to next journey to St. Bonaventure
University on April 22 and 23.
form complex compounds.
They finish up their tour on
The formation of such compounds is important, he said, for May 5, 6, and 7 at the Alfred
example in the suppression of University Drama Festival.
The Bald Soprano is the ‘Theacalcium and magnesium ions
which cause hardness of water. ter of the Absurd” play which in-

Traces of metals often “dull"
the shade of dyestuffs and the
color can be restored by the addition of chemicals which remove
the metal ions from solution by
complexing with them.

Spring Weekend

1

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

letters designated below will see
their advisers on the following
days;
April 12 through April 17—A, B
April 20 through April 24—G, H
April 27 through May 1—P, Q, R
May 4 tborugh May 8—E, I. N, 0,

T, U. V., X, Y

Such compounds are
also
formed between metal ions and
amino-acids, peptides and proteins and are important in biological processes, Dr. Wilkins
said. It is important that the
factors which govern the rates of
combination of metal ions with
these substances be determined.
Now special techniques have
been developed so that the rates
at which these reactions take
place can be measured, even
though times as low as one millionth of a second may be in
volved. The measurement is accomplished through perturbing a
chemical system by very rapid
changes in temperature, pressure,
or electrical field.

“These techniques have carried

us to the point that

of considering a statement
concerning the actions of
the House Committee on
Un-American
Activities.
All members of the GSA
are urged to expreses opinions concerning this matter either in writing to box
68 Norton Union, or by

attending this special meeting. The meeting will he
held at the Graduate Student Lounge in Norton and
is open to Graduate Students

only.

-

order to arrange for a student to collect the goods.

no Chemical reaction too fast for
us to measure,” Dr. Wilkins says.

Civil Rights Comm. Program
Wednesday evening, under the
sponsorship of the. Civil Rights
Committee of the Student Sen
ate, Mr. Clark Foreman, a noted
civil libertarian, addressed an

Students on Strict Academic
Probation can not register during
scheduled times.

see

4:00 p.m. for the purpose

The Inter Fraternity
Council is sponsoring an
emergency drivp to aid the
hard-pressed-survivors of
the Alaskan earthquake.
Donations of non-perishahle goods and materials
for these peoples’ use have
already been collected, and
I.F.C. is continuing the
drive today. Clothing,
hooks, emergency equipment, etc., are being requested. All students interested in donating to the
drive should telephone the
I.F.C. office, 831-3709 in

there is now

Students will make an appointment with the Receptionist in
Diefendorf 114 one week in advance of the above scheduled
times. Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times or who do not keep
them when made will be required
to register in Clark Gym on Registration Day in September.

They are encouraged to

A special meeting of the
Executive Council of the
Graduate Student Association will convene today, at

eludes such elements as a scene
in which a husband and wife
discover that they are married,
a maid proves to be a detective
and the fire chief rushes in to
tell the group some “stories.”
This play met with great success in the student dramatic
societies December production,
and was chosen to represent the
University at these festivals.
The play will be presented
again, at UB, Wednesday in the
Conference Theater at 12:00 and
3:00. This play will be cosponsored by the Fine Arts Committee and there will be an admission charge of 35 cents.

their

advisers, however, if they wish
to do so.

on

HUAC

audience of students and faculty
on the House Committee on Un
American Activities.
Mr. Foreman outlined the history and development of the
Committee and then spoke of his
own appearance before them and
his subsequent struggles to re
tain his passport. At the close of
his formal address, Bob Finkel
stein, Student Association President, read a prepared statement
in which he noted the Student
Senate stand apposing the House
Committee passed at the last
senate meeting and urged students to exhibit maturity and
caution in any action they might
take to oppose the Committee. He
further urged them not to affiliate with any organizations
which they themselves did not
create and which they did not

TOPICAL PREFERENCE

1 jm
i

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at

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lx: in proper balance,

gentleman’s

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summer,

wardrobe should contain
at least one pair of these
traditional fine tropical
pure worsted slacks.

control.

Free Storage
For Your Winter Clothing
Why go through the Bother and Expense of dragging your winter clothes home
and back again?
You

have all your clothes cleaned and stored for the price of cleaning alone.
pick up your clothes at your dorm, clean and store them,in our vault and deliver them

can

Big 4 will

when you want in the fall.

(10% Discount for cash and carry)

JR 5-5360

Campus

Comer

BIG 4 CLEANERS
2484 ELMWOOD AVENUE

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(8 short

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10:00-9:00 Mon., Thors Fri
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[262

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TF 2-322

�SPECTRUM

University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University )C«mpus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of ,September tb the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and caster.
The official student newspaper

of the State

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
•OITOR-IN-CHIEF

Special Assistant
'�ant to

Editorial Advisor

-

MA*TFriN

tfir)C Editor

Alan New nan
Martin Kriiiegpl
el
renkrCt I
Lawrence Frr
Alan Nev
iwma
ian
Marcia rCbopef
or
r
‘
•femering
William- ■5F
..

_

*'

D.
—

KRIEGEL

John Kowal

Business Manager
Pa» Launer
Asst. Business Manager _ Bernard Dickman
Advertising Mgr.
Lawrence Singer
David Irwin
Layout Editor
Lois Hessinger
Circulation Mgr.
.Thomas Haenle, Jr.
Financial Advisor

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, Judy Green, Gary Falk, Allan Scholom,
Mike Sultanik, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry
Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker,
Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford, Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen
Chicko, Christine Cunnmgham, Lillian Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt,
Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Lang, Fred Roseberg, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Saralee Rubenstein, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Barry Gufferman, Susan Weiner, Diane
Hayes, Terry Clark, Paul Nussbaum (Asst. Sports Editor)

Photography

Staff;

Joel Havens,

Toby Leder,

Second Class,
Subscription

Postage Paid at Buffalo, New York

$3.00 per year,

circulation

9000
Advertising

Editorials

The Senate and HUAC
The Senate, Tuesday night, acted to reaffirm the United
States National Student Association stand against the
House Committee on Un-American Activities, and called
for the formation of a committee to present a fact sheet
to the student body before the circulation of a petition.
The House Committee has scheduled hearings in Buffalo for the coming week, and has subpoenaed persons
from the university community as well as from the city
of Buffalo to appear before it at that time.
The USNSA stand in the sixteenth codification, the one
adopted by the Senate, is divided into two parts. The first
deals with the general nature of the limiting of freedom
of speech, as guaranteed in the first amendment to the
Constitution, in the United States. The basis of the declaration comes from the statement of Justice Brandeis of
the Supreme Court, noting that the founders of this
country knew
that without free speech and assembly discussion would be futile; that with them, discussion affords
ordinarily adequate protection against the dissemination of noxious doctrine; that the greatest menace to
freedom is. an inert people; that public discussion is a
political duty; and that this should be a fundamental
principle of the American government
“that it is
hazardous to discourage thought, hope, and imagination; that fear breeds repression; that repression
breeds hate; that hate menaces stable government;
that the part of the safety lies in the opporunity to discuss freely supposed grievances and proposed remedies; and that the fitting remedy for evil counsels is
good ones.”
The second part of the resolution deals specifically
with the House Committee, calling for the necessity of
its abolition. The promptness of the Senate’s response to
the importance of the situation at hand was commendable. However, it would have been better if the senators
had some time to become informed about the specific
purposes and past record of the House Committee. It is
well that the Senate establish a fact-finding committee.
But, it’s purpose now seems to be a moot one, considering
the strength of the resolution passed.
We support the view of Justice Brandeis and the Senate
relating to this specific issue, as we feel that valid dissent is basic to democracy and progress and should not be
suppressed, in any manner.
We hope that in a matter of such vital personal importance, you will analyze all facets of the situation carefully, rationally, and independently. Do not sign a petition of any group with whose final aims you are not
familiar. And, for those of you who plan to protest, we
offer a last word of caution—do so as individuals, and
independent of groups with whom you are not familiar—and do so in a mature manner, so that in the end you will
maintain your personal integrity.
.

.

.

Alaska Relief

.

.

The Spectrum urges all students and members of the
community to contribute to the Inter-fraternity Council
emergency drive to aid the survivors of the disastrous
earthquake in Alaska. Clothing, books, emergency equipment, and non-perishable items are requested. The drive
has been going on for the past two days, and is continuing today. A collection booth will be in Norton today.
In addition, by calling the IFC office, any donation will
be promptly picked up at your home.
IFC and its member fraternities are to be commended
for their action.
■
_____

•

1 i

I

i

i

fcwa-

i

i

-J

I

in spirit and the constant
improvement of our foot-

ball team, this should be
one of the year’s greatest
events. All students are encouraged to join a Home-

Charles Lotsof

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

MAN ON CAMPUS
LITTLE
T
/-t~~~
u

Applications are now
available for Homecoming 1964. Personnel Committee is seeking a general chairman, secretary &amp;
chairmen and members for
the following committees:
Special Reporter, Business, Special Events, Dance, Publicity, and Queens.
With the steady increase

,

THE

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor

Friday, April 10, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

coming Committee. Applications are available at the
Candy Counter and in Rm.
215 Norton. All completed
applications must he turned in at these two places
no later than Wednesday.

WITH

rjCetterA

A LINE THIS 10N&amp; ITMUST BE A

to

‘*NAP&lt;"

the Editor

Alternative Protests to HUAC
TO THE EDITOR

A subcommittee of the UnAmerican Activities Committee
of the United States Congress
is scheduled to convene a public
hearing’ here in Buffalo in the
near future. There is a rumor
around campus of a proposed
demonstration by students in protest of the operation of this committee. From my own association with some of the supporters
of this action, and I might add,
supports of the previous demon
strations against the Feihberg
oath, it is my conclusion that
these people are contending that
it is a cornerstone of democracy,
which proclaims the right of rampant individualism, on the part of

the members of the society, and
the duty of the society to protect this individualism. It seems
to me that these people are neglecting an equally important concept of a democratic society—the responsibility of the individual to the— society, and the responsibility of the society to

turn this rampant individualism,

it does not affect the
very existence. Society may not ask the
subjection of the individual, but
the society can and must subject, to the safety and the preservation of itself, those forces
which would by there very nature
destroy it. I believe that this
is the intended goal of the committee.
so that

rest of the societies

Naturally, there will be times
when the individual will feel that
the society has been unjust, ami
he is given a means to protest.
How many of these complainers
have corresponded to their Con
gressman about the committee?
Has anybody thought of a petition? I’m sure that either is a
better alternative to a demonstration which will be neglected
if peaceful and have disasterous
affects if violent. May I call your
attention to the similar demon
stration in San Francisco several
years ago which ended in the
students being branded Commies!
Let us accept our responsibilities
AND those of society.
Sincerely,
Eugene E. Roberts

Comment on April Fools
TO THE EDITOR:

Obituary of William Sundance.”

1 must say that I always appreciate well-meant satire and
good humor. Each year I always
look forward to the April Fool’s
issue of the newspaper and its
humorous pot shots at the campus
police, red tape, the Student Senate, and the Athletic Department.

It is appropriate to make fun
ol an election or of a political
party, for such things are sometijes taken all too seriously.
But this article does not deal
with an election, a political party,
or even a point of view. It dealt
with a person, and is the type of
material under the classification:
“part of the news that isn’t fit

I do emphasize the role of the
newspaper in printing well-meant
criticism. I question its use to
grind personal axes or to ridicule

particular people. One article did
just that. It was called “The

to print.”

The printing of this article,
which is one of many in this
year’s Spectrum, places it far out

of the range of the type of news-

paper so vociferously desired by
the editor—a campus newspaper

approaching the

quality of the

New York Times.

The many friends of the person so attacked take offense at
this type of journalism. I would
hope that the students in general
expect more from the newspaper
and that efforts will be made to
improve the editorial taste which
governs such matters.
Sincerely your,
Howard Gondree

Federal Government and Civil Rights
There should be no such thing
in the United States as secondclass citizenship. Likewise, public
functions of both the States and
the Federal Government must be
open to all citizens regardless of
face, color or religion. It is surprising, dismaying and
even
shock that there should be any
need to legislate such things.
In all this controversy about
civil rights, certain essential

fundamentals of government
shine clearly if we will but think
carefully. And now is the time
for us to think carefully even if
some parts of the Nation appear
to let their emotions run away
with them on this subject. In
other lands we have seen what
happens when the leadership has
chosen to follow the path that
the end justifies the means.
We cannot ignore the wisdom

of our Constitution or for that

matter the plain and simple truth
that even the Federal Government is one of limited power

What does this mean in respect to the subject matter included in the proposals that have
been called the civil rights bill?
It means that we must adhere

to the Constitution and this in
turn means that we may impose
requirements of this type in
things Federal or upon activities
in the several States that are
truly State action, and no more.
-

It means finally that there is
no power in the Congress to
legislate as proposed in the socalled civil rights bill in regard
to private lives, private business,

and individual activity within and
among the several States haung
nothing to do with interstate com-

merce and not constituting State

action.
And it is the sheerest hypocrisy
to contend that by so defining
such private conduct that it be

comes constitutionally amenable
to Federal law when the power
to enact that law was never given
to the Federal Government in the

Constitution.

If enacted, we would pay an
awful price for it in loss of constitutional protection for each,
citizen of the United States, because if the Federal Government
can legislate itself into priy-tl*

business

by drafting

of human rights for the express
purpose of modifying the Con
stitution without a legitimate
process of constitutional amemment, virtually anything
next.
Congressman

Louis C.

can

Wyn

New Hampshire

"f

�Friday, April 10, 1964

Dr. Robert Harnack
Doing Research On

The Circus
By

BOB MILCH

For those of you who have not
vet read the news story on page
one, the editorial on page four,
Jerry’s column on page five, or
the ad on page twelve, the House
Un-American Activities Committee is holding hearings in Buf
falo. This is not as disturbing
to*“ me, however, as are the reactions many people have shown
at the news that we are going

to reason: Martin Luther King
has never been before the com
mittee, nor has Ralph DuBard,
leader of the civil rights program in Buffalo, to cite only two
examples. If Mr. Alexander's
point is unquestionably valid,
why resort to half truths?
Another slinger received in the
Spectrum office from “Youth
Against HUAC.” This mimeographed sheet contains the follow
ing:

to have visitors.

“Washington DC.. 1962—Dagmar Wilson, head of Women's
Strike for Peace, was investigated
for alleged infiltration of her or
ganization. She charged that the
investigation was an attempt to
divert her work for peace. She
further claimed: 'We do not qsk
an oath of loyalty to any set of
beliefs. Instead, we ask loyalty
to the race of mankind.”’

Personally, I have little truck
with HUAC. In the past, more
harm than good has come from
its investigations; people have
been unjustly slandered, suffered economic and social sanctions without ever having been
declared guilty, and many people
have been deprived of certain
of their liberties. This notwithstanding, I also feel there is a
definite need for an investigating committee such as HUAC,
though one will operate completely within the letter and
spirit of the law with proper regard for the rights of these questioned, and introduce its recommendations for congressional legislative action.

The appeal of world brother
hood is great, admittedly; world
brotherhood
is an admirable
goal. The means of achieving it
is another matter altogether. If
so totally in the right, Miss Wilson need make no apologies for
the members of her organization,
as it appears she is doing. Neither
is there in this statement any
denial of subversive elements in
her organization.

What I object to first is the
demand for a black or white
stand which both the advocates
and enemies of HUAC seek from
interested parties, and the types
of some of the organizations
which attack the committee. The
first objection is based on a personal belief that no issue can
be wholly good or bad, totally

there is much overstatement in many of the attacks
ad hoc organizations opposed to
HUAC make. HUAC is NOT a
committee which in the past has
deprived some Americans of their
liberties. The difference between
the two is enormous.
Finally,

right or wrong.

Whatever the position one ultimately takes on HUAC, let it
be a rational one calmly arrived
at. Don’t let it be one into which
an emotional fever or pressure
has stampeded the crowd, such
as the rabid “me tooism” the
student senate demonstrated in
affirming the NSA stand on
HUAC without either informing
the student body such action was
to be considered, or sampling
student consensus. Think carefully and impartially; then stand

Of more import is the fact
that the controversy has aroused not only many conscientious
students, but also many people
whose honest concern is dubious
and whose methods are flagrantly reprehensible. For example, a
slinger from “Richard Alexander”
entitled “The UuAmerican Activities Committee is at War With
Our Profoundest Principles” says
in part “The functions of the
committee are: To intimidate
fighters for equal rights of the
Negro people . .
This is a
blatant half truth which seeks
to incite to emotion rather than

up.

Visiting Professor E. Jorpes

Famous Swedish Biochemist
Dr, J. Eril Jorpes, head of the
Chemistry Department II and professor of physiological chemistry
at Karolinska Institute in Stock
holm, Sweden, has been appointed
visiting professor of biochemistry
in the School of Medicine at UB
for a six week period beginning
this week.

of the

outstanding bioJorpes

chemists in the world, Dr.

will be consultant and lecturer in
special seminars at the University, and will teach graduate
courses and conduct seminars at
several local hospitals in Buffalo.
He will also lecture at various
Eastern universities, including
New York University and Wayne
State University in Detroit.
A native of Finland, Dr. Jorpes
has done outstanding work in the

held of blood research, and in
Particular clinical and fundamental

reserach in hemophilia, a
blood disease, and clotting disorders. He was one of the disof the clinical usefulness
covers
°t heparin, a natural substance
which prevents blood from clot-

ting.

He is a member of the Swedish
Academy

1

of Science.

Applications are available at the Norton Candy
Counter and in Room 215
for chairman and committee members for the Union
Board Concert Committee.
All students interested in
promoting bigger and better concerts on the UB
campus are encouraged to
apply for this committee.
The committee is responsible for bringing such
people as The Four Preps
and Lionel Hampton to
our campus. All completed applications must be returned

REFLECTIONS

'Brilliant Assistant"

We Must Think Rationally

One

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

to

the candy count-

er or to Room 215 Norton

by Wednesday

.

By JEREMY TAYLOR

Dr. Robert S, Harnack is researching an unprecedented plan
which would make the 1401 computer a “brilliant assistant" for
every

classroom

teacher.

The

plan has at least two far-reaching ramifications:

1. It would make every teacher a virtual “expert with up-tothe-minute data (bn a vast variety
of sources available to him on
a few minutes notice."
him to byprecious classroom hours
of experimenting with the best
approach to a given subject,
which means more time available for helping individual pupils to progress at their own
rate. The computer would accomplish this by supplying the
teacher with a set of flexible
teaching approaches on a prede
termined subject, together with
a nearly inexhaustive list of
source materials suggestions for
large and small group projects,
and individual assignments tailored specifically for each student
in the class.

2.

It would enable

pass

Dr. Harnack, professor of education, and director of the Center for Curriculum Planning, who
has received a $48,616 grant from
the Cooperative Research Program of the Office of Education,
U.S. Department of Health, Edu
cation, and Welfare, knows of
no other project like it in the
country.

Dr. Harnack says the project
is based upon the unit system
of teaching, a method widely recommended as more effective
than the traditional textbook approach. With the unit method, a
single topic is studied from a
wide variety of approaches. For
example, a teacher choosing
“transportation” as a topic, would
dig out source material on the
subject as it relates to history,
social
economics,
geography,
change, and many other areas.

The benefit of the unit method
is that the student learns to consider as many factors as possible
in drawing conclusions about a
body of knowledge. He also
learns the relationships between
such subjects as history, economics,. and sociology by stdying
them in action in practical situations. The unit method has been
slow to develop, however, because as Dr, Harnack estimates,
it takes 1200 hours of research
to thoroughly gather all source
materials on a subject, not to
mention working out the introduction of material, class projects, individual attention for students, and finally tests and analysis.

Dr. Harnack’s object is to put
the unit method of teaching in
the hands of the average classroom teacher, by making computers do the detail work. This
frees the teacher to spend a
great deal more time with the
individual pupil, and even here
the computer can assist.
The teacher Will be able to
submit individual characteristics
of each student in his class, such
as IQ, reading level, and interests.
He will also pick from a list of
55 to 60 goals which he has in
his mind for a particular project. Based upon this material,
the computer will examine the
pre-programmed resouce unit on
a given subject. Dr. Harnack has
already programmed two resource
units
the U.S. Consititution
for 11th grade, and transportation for 3rd grade. The computer
will then print for the teacher:
—

1. A subject matter outline.
2. Suggestions for large groups
introductory, developmental, and
culminating activities.

You can always tell when it’s
really spring because that’s when
all the circuses begin to travel.
A subcommittee of the House
Committee on Un-American Activities has scheduled an appearance in Buffalo beginning Tuesday, April 14. This committee,
whose supposed function is to investigate for the purpose of proposing legislation (but which has
not provided any such legislation
in the past ten years) functions
in reality as an inquisition, smearing many of those brought before it without regard for the
dignity of any man—and in flagrant violation of those rights
specifically guaranteed by the
constitution. Bertold Brecht said
after his appearance before the
Committee that the only thing
which distinguished it from the
Nazi inquisition which condemn
ed him during the war was that
the committee allowed him to
smoke which the Nazis did not.
Many individuals and organizations, ranging from the American
scholar Perry Miller to the United Auto Workers of the AFLCTO, have condemned the Committee and called for Congress
to abolish it. The reasons these

people have given for their opposition to the committee, al
though phrased differently, boil
down to roughly six points:
(1) Although H.U.A.C. is supposed to provide legislation—it
does not do this.
(2) Even if it did provide legislation—it would still make a
mockery of demcratic freedom
since “unAmcrican” is not a definable term (says the Supreme
Court) and bears no necessary
correlation to "subversive” or

“treasonable”.
Therefore
the
Committee is free to call anything un American.
(3) It violates the guaranteed
right of every man to be assumed
innocent until proven guilty.
(4) It denies the guaranteed
right of due process of law even
further by not allowing those
called before it to be represented
by council and to cross-examine
their accusers.
(5) It causes severe

hardship
to those subpenaed (loss of jobs,
social ostracism, etc) although
there is no trial and the committee has never produced any
proof of any subversive activity.
(6) It creates an atmosphere of

fear and coersion which is detrimental to the democratic process and which stifles open discussion and free exchange.
The above reasons are the core
of my opposition to the Committee. I feel further that the
Committee represents a very dangerous tendancy in the American
mood which chooses to “protect”
America by attacking all those
who oppose the status-quo with
total disregard for the principles
of freedom and democracy upon
which this country was founded.
The people whom 1 have met
who have been subpenaed all
come from the academic com-

3. Suggestions for small group
activities, such as research projects or field trips.
4. Suggestions for instructional materials for the total group,
including films, pamphlets, books
many
magazine articles, and
others.

5. Suggestions for special studies and projects for individual
students. The students are listed
by name, and the projects are
specially designed to suit the IQ,
reading level, special interests,
and other personal factors of
each individual.
6. Suggestions

of measuring
devices to examine the effectiveness of the program.
With two units- of material al

munity, the labor movement, the
peace movement, and the struggle
for civil rights. It is possiible
that the Southern bias of the
Committee is reflected in this
last set of subpenas. Chairman
Willis, was a signer of the in-

famous

“Dixieera't

Manifesto”

proclaimed open defiance of the
Court and the Federal Government, and pledged the signers
to fight unceasingly for a segregated South. Chairman Willis
signed this document and encouraged others to sign. The Committee in its interpretation of
“un-American” has only investigated the left —leaving the extreme right completely free. It
occurs to me that if you choose
to talk about “un-American" activity, that the Klu Klux Klan,
the White Citizens Council, the
American Nazi Party and. the
Knights of the White Camelia are
open to charges not only wt “unAmerican” activity, but of true

subversion of the American democratic process.
Opposition to the Committee’s
appearance here in Buffalo has
mobilized on several sides thus

far, although at this writing, the
Liberal Keligious Fellowship is
the only campus organization to
have openly stated this opposition
I feel that it is of vital importance that any opposition to the
Committee and its appearance
be voiced on a political grounds
o avoid the situation arising, as
it has in the past, of the com-

mittee being attacked only by
those organizations whose members have been called before it.
There is a peaceful demonstration planned at the court house

on Niagara Square on April 14,
the announced date of the Committee's first hearings and I
would like all who take the American idea of democracy to join.
Tentative plans for civil dis-

obedience have also been made,
but all of the suggestions I have
heard would contribute to the
circus atmosphere of the hear
ings, rather than demonstrating
any serious opposition to the
Committee and its tactics. I would
be in favor of any dignified expression of opposition, be it civilly disobedient or not, because I
feel that the issues involved are
themselves of the utmost seriousness, and the dignity of any support of democratic freedom
should not be subverted by any
wild or illconsidered action. I
will express my opposition to the
committee by picketing, and other
means which will do justice to
the position. I hope that other
students will do the same. I urge
all organizations to issue statements opposing the Committee
—particularly the Student and
Faculty Senates and the AAUP.
The H.U.A.C. is an onscene blot
on the American history and
should
be
abolished.
Their
methods are, I believe, unconstitutional and inhuman. If this
is reason enough to stand up and
be counted—then do so!

ready developed, Dr, Harnack
plans on developing four more
over the next year. Testing will
take place in 60 local classrooms
with evaluation of programming

and teacher reactions scheduled
to follow.

Another important feature, ac
cording to Dr. Harnack. enables
the resource unit to be easily
updated after it has been record
ed on magnetic tape. By simply
running punched cards through
the computer, obsolescent material inserted. Therefore, after the

unit has been programmed, it
is a relatively simple matter to
keep it current, as opposed to
standard printed resource units
which become obsolescent in
months in many cases.

�Friday, April 10, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Pan-Hellenic Council Initates
New Delegates at Ceremony
The Pan-Hellenic Council has
begun a new tradition of initiating new delegates and officers at
a formal ceremony held Mohday,
April 6 in the Charles room.
Miss Dorothy M. Haas, the key
note speaker, reminded the new
Council members and guests of
the expanded role and responsibilities of the Council in Greek
affairs.

Bolles, Carol Anderson, Elaine
Tober, Doris Marx, Peggy Pascarella, Peggy Adams, Cindy Perl,
Sue Salkow, Barbara Boekhout,
Joyce Kaelen, Monica Bauer,
Mary Leary, Marilyn Zaccharine
and Joe Anne Knickerbocker.
Rose and crysanthemum corsages were presented to both
Presidents. The new officers of
the Pan-Hellenic Council are: 1st

WBFO SCHEDULE
FK/tollY.

lands

April 10. 196i

4:30
5:00
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
8:30
9:00
9:10
10:30
10:35
11:30

°°

5:00
BUFFALO HISTORICAL SOCIETY (rebroadcast)
PATRICIA MARX INTERVIEWS (rebroadcast)
6:30
EVENING MUS1CALE
NEWS

U. B. SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS with Wally Blatter
6:45
COMEDY, INC. with Bob Gottesman
OPERA ON THE AIR with Jack Shapiro "Die
Fledermaus" Part II.
NAEB SPECIAL OF THE WEEK programs of
timely interest recorded chiefly in Washington,
D. C.
NEWS
Debussy: La Mer; Faure:
CONCERT HALL
Ballade for Piano and Orchestra
NEWS with Dick Boy
SWING SHIFT with Ray Caruana
MUSIC TIL MIDNIGHT AND A HALF with Dick 7:00
7:30
Boy
-

-

-

12:30 SIGN OFF
SUNDAY, April

4:00

5:00
6:45

-

The

Netherlands

It.

8:30

THE TASKS OF TODAY AND TOMORROW
The theme of the 50th anniversary of the
College of Arts and Sciences.
Kenneth W.
Thompson V. P. of the Rockefeller Foundation
will discuss the social sciences in relation to the
general theme.
CINCINNATI SYMPHONY Alfred Wallenstein
conducts an All Wagner Concert
-

-

9:00
9. jq

iQ:30

10:35
11:30
12:30

CHALLENGES TO DEMOCRACY (repeat)
EVENING MUSICALE
NEWS

U. B. SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS with Barry Warner
European
PROFILE
TRANSATLANTIC
-

leaders and problems reportedby Radio Nederland

PORTRAITS

OF

POWER

-

Hendrik

Dr.

Verwoerd
(The rise to power and dominance of this austere
and
fanatical man is analyzed by BBC
correspondent Peter Flinn, Anthony Sampson,
former editor of the African magazine. Drum,
the Rt. Rev. Ambrose Reeves, Bishop of
Johannesburg for 11 years until expelled by the
South African government, and Lord Fraser,
businessman
and
former member of

Parliament.)
UNIVERSITY THEATER OF THE AIR
AFRO-AMERICAN MUSIC with Bill Tallmadge,
Associate Professor of Music at the College at
Buffalo
JEFFERSONIAN HERITAGE "The Return of
the Patriot"
-

NEWS

CONCERT HALL R. Strauss: Death and Transfiguration; Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks
BOOKS IN THE NEWS Robert Oram, U.of 111.
Iboks at current books
MUSICAL SHOWCASE with Terry Lee
WORDS AND MUSIC with Phil Skill
SIGN OFF
-

-

INTERLUDE
TUESDAY, April U, 196i
NEW SOUNDS IN CHORAL MUSIC with Roberts.
Music
and
Assistant
Professor
of
Beckwith.
EXPLORING THE CHILD'S WORLD "You Got
3
Choral Director at U. B.
to Be Violent”. .Danny is 15; he is a Catholic
7:30 SUNDAY CONCERTwith Ronald Biscaro Ives;
but says he does not let this interfere with his
in
Fantasy
Major,
Schumann:
C.
Symphony #2;
activities which Include assault and battery,
Concerto for Viola and Orchestra
David;
drunkenness and larceny.
10:30 SIGN OFF
3:30 BASEBALL U. B. vs. CanlsiuS Uve broadcast with play-by-play by Wally Blatter. Barry
Warner and Fred Brlckell
HONDA V, April IS. 1964
5:00 EVENING MUSICALE
6:00 NEWS
6:15 WASHINGTON REPORT John Lewis for NAEB
3:00 WAYS OF MANKIND
-“Nether3:30 MUSIC FROM THE NETHERLANDS
comments on Washington developments
7:00

After the initiation of the new
delegates and the new officers,
the outgoing President, Loretta

Mazza administered the oath of
office to the new President,
Barbara Witzel and presented her
with the Presidential gavel.
The highlight of the ceremony
included the presentation of pink
roses and the Pan-Hellenic badge
to the new delegates, Joan Salwisz, Eileen Townsend, Beverly

Vice President, Christine Furiani;
President, Cynthia Perl;
Secretary, Joyce Kaelen; Treasurer, Joan Salwisz. Norene Hersch was Marshall of the Initiation
2nd Vice

Ceremonies.

Guests present included sorority presidents Nancy Johnston,
Nancy Bugielski, Barbara VanOrder, Linda Lessner and Marilyn Schanzer, and the Pan-Hellenic advisor, Mrs. Faith K. Moll.

String

Schubert, Pi] per and

Dvorak

4:

3:00 AFRO-AMERICAN MUSIC (rebroadcast)
4:00

Soloists”

Quartet plays works by

-

.

-

-

-

-

University of Buffalo Students Have Made Us Famous

�Friday, April 10, 1964

S Awards
Citations in Special
Slee Professor
Lecture Thursday Physical Sciences
George Rochberg

VICKI BUGELSKI
George Rochberg, visiting Slee
professor of music this semester,
will give his third and final lecture Thursday, at 8:30 p.m. in
C-apen Hall. There is no admission charge, and all students and
faculty and invited to attend.
Dr. Rochberg. who is currently
on leave from the University of
Pennsylvania where he is chairman of the music department,
will discuss “The Computer, the
Brain, and Music.” Guest artists
for the recital portion of the program will be the Philadelphia
String Quartet. They will perform the Rochberg String Quartets, Nos. 1 and 2. The second
string quartet includes a part for
voice, which will be sung by
Janice M. Harsonvi.
By

Thus far, Dr.

Rochberg has

been discussing twentieth-century
music in many of its aspects:
form, styles, characteristics, per-

formance media, and has been
to illustrate his

using tapes
paints.

Other events of contemporary
music on this semester’s calendar
include a Slee Composer’s Concert on May 1 and a most unusual
event, a “Computer Concert”
May 4.

Pres. C. C. Furnas
Speaks at Lunch
Honors Hyman
Pres. Clifford C. Furnas will
speak at a testimonial luncheon
in honor of Dean Jacob D. Hyman of the School of Law at 12:30
p.m. on April 19 at Oliver’s Res-

A

&amp;

Spectrum

Nine citations will be awarded
this weekend by the UB College
of Arts and Sciences for “Distinguished Professional Accomplishment" in the social and physical
sciences. Dean Milton C. Albrecht
will present the citations at dinners in the Faculty Club commenorating the 50th Anniversary
of the College.
At the social sciences alumni
dinner on April 3, the three
honorees from the University
faculty were Dr. Adelle H. Land,
professor of education; Dr. Olive
P. Lester, chairman, department
of psychology; and Dr. John T.
Horton, chairman, department of
history. Also cited was Dr, Morris E. Opler, professor of anthropology at Cornell University.

The physical and biological science citations were presented at
an alumni dinner on April 4 to
Dr. Harriet Montague, acting
head of the department of mathematics at the University; Dr.

Richard D. Schafer, head of the
department of mathematics: and
Dr. Dietman Seyferth, professor
of chemistry, both from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Vladimar E. Wolkhodoff.
senior resident scientist, Coirs
Porcelain Company, Golden,
Colorado; and Dr, Edwin Mirand.
assistant to the institutional director, Roswell Park Memorial
Institute.

There will be an Astronomy
Club meeting on Monday, April
13 at 3 p m. in Hochstetter, Room
111. Nominations and election of
next year's officers will be held.
On Saturday, April 18, there
will be an open “Observatory
Night", starting at 8 p.m. Displays and actual viewing of the
sky will highlight the evening.
Everyone is invited to attend.
The observatory is located on
top of Hochstetter Hall. In case
of inclement weather this event
will be held on Sunday, April
19, at 8 p.m. Refreshments will
be served.

The Accounting Club's annual
student-faculty banquet will be
held on Wednesday, April 22 in
the Mahogany Room of Hotel
Buffalo. Mr. George O’Connell,
CPA, Comptroller for the City of
Buffalo will be our guest speaker.
Cost of the event is only $3.50
per person. Cocktail tickets are
available from: Ronald Zackem,

Guest speakers at the dinners,
which began at 5:30 p.m., followed by the address in Butler
Auditorium, Capen Hall at 8:30
p.m., were Kenneth W. Thomp-

taurant, 2095 Delaware Avenue.

The Law Wives Association of
the University’s School of Law
is giving the luncheon honoring
Dean Hyman, whose resignation
as Dean of the Law School becomes effective June 1.
A special guest at the luncheon
will be Mrs. Carlos C. Alden,
wife of the dean of the Law
School from 1904 to 1936.
Committee members making
the arrangements for the luncheon are Mrs. John D. Bridge,
chairman; Mrs. Bruce Schmidt,
co-chairman Mrs. George W. Narby; and Mrs. Thomas L. David.

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

&gt;I3oartl

Dick Amacher, Burton Notarius,
and the club officers.

An IFC meeting will be held
Monday, April 13 at 4 p.m. in

Tuesday, April 14, the
Bridge Club will have its monthly
Masterpoint Night. The winners
will receive a Full Masterpoint.
The following Tuesday, April 21,
we will hold our Annual StudentFaculty Bridge Night. All students and faculty members are
invited to attend. We will play
party bridge with prizes awarded
to the winners. Refreshments will
be served. Meetings are held
every Tuesday night at 7:30 in
room 327 Norton Hall.

meeting will be open to all fraternity and sorority members as
well as to any interested nongreeks. All Greeks are urged to
ask and discuss any pertinent
problems.

the Millard Fillmore Room. The

This

The Undergraduate Mathematics Club will hold its next meeting Wednesday, April 15, at
7:30 p.m, in Diefendorf Hall, Rm.
146. An hour long colored film
“Mathematical Induction” will be
shown as well as Part I of “What
Is An Integral.” Everyone is urged to attend. Refreshments will

campus.

Call Howard orNeileven-

5—7 and 11 —I
TF 5-7522

ings between

at

CATHAY GARDEN

il Showers”

512 Niagara Falls Bhrd.
3 MINUTES DRIVE FROM UB

THE DAFFODILS

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EXPERTLY PREPARED

m\
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TAKE OUT ORDERS
TF 7-3444

REASONABLE PRICES

with a gala

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2896 DELAWARE AVE.
KENMORE, N.Y.

m

Dinner
4:00 P.M. 9 P.M.

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ALSO

3124 BAILEY AVE.
AT AMHERST ST.

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

2. $60.00 cash recruiting and training fees on
each person in your organization.

.

will be complete
the remainder of the school year.

during

Use of a car is necessary and remuneration

3. 6% overwrite on all orders written b/your
organization.

4. $80,00 monthly gas money.
Please send resume and personal information to

is

follows:
1. 31% commission on all personal orders plus
10% additional bonus on cash orders and
volume.

April 17th

.

Chesterfields,

Trench Coats, Reversible Coats, Capes, Silks,
Tackle Twills, Madras and washable Poplin.
Sizes 5 to 15; 6 to 20.

Home decorators will hire four (4) men with direct
sales experiece Home decorators is the largest
field.
company of its kind in the table appointment

as

. .

array of Rain and iShine Coats in

SUMMER SALES MANAGEMENT

Management training

ARC

READY! ARE YOU,

POLYNESIAN—CHINESE

Luncheon
11:00 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

"Spring Sale Starts

person.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
During Summer
Spacious 3 room (1 debroom) apartmeht. Furnished beautifully in
"Early Poverty". 5 minutes from

EXOTIC DRINKS

GROVVIN’ ON HERE?

The cadets of the 575th AFROTC Detachment are sponsoring
“A Friday Night at the Movies”.
On Friday, April 17, they are
invited to attend "Act One”, the
autobiography of Moss Hart at
the Kensington Theater. Show
time will be at 7:30 and 9:30.
Tickets will be on sale to ROTC
cadets through their Squadron
Commanders until April 16, Other
interested students and faculty
members may purchase tickets
at the Norton Union Ticket Booth
beginning Monday, April 13. Admission will be only $1.00 per

son, vice-president of the Rockefeller Foundation, on April 3, and
John Tuzo Wilson, professor of
geophysics at the University of
Toronto on April 4.

Alto Featuring

WHAT’S

be served

treasurer and committee chair
man, Larry Monin, Paul Christie,

Bart Corwin
Regional Sales Mgr.
Home Decorators
Commercial Building
Newark, New York
We will arrange for a personal interview.

�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Friday, April 10, 1964

Israel Study Plan Announced
The American Student Program
for one year study at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem has been
launched for the tenth consecutive year, it was announced by
Professor Oscar I. Janowsky of
the City College Of New York,
who is chairman of this program,
the American
sponsored by
friends of the Hebrew University.
Professor Janowsky said

that

interviews of prospective participants are already under way, and
urged other interested college
students to submit their applications as speedily as possible.
The program encompasses undergraduates who have completed
at least two years of college, as
well as recent college graduates.
Some elementary knowledge of
Hebrew is required, and candidates are expected to begin to
study Hebrew while still in
America as preparation for the
year in Israel:
A number of partial scholarships are available to qualified
students who are in need of financial assistance. In 1962, the Abe

\Vouk Foundation, of which the

author Herman Wouk is president, undertook an experimental
program of scholarships for
participants in the American Student Program. The Foundation’s
program will continue in 1964.
In a statement issued on be-

half of the American Student Program Committee, Professor Janowsky described the program as
follows: “It enables American
students to savor another culture

Senor Camile Cela
Speaks in Acheson
Senor Camile Jose Cela, noted
Spanish novelist, will speak on
April 14, in Room 362, Acheson
Hall, State University of New
York at Buffalo on “Spain, the
Spaniards, and things Spanish.”

Worth Partial
I428HERTEL

AVE

*

IF 6-7411

a^j

at first hand; and, through the
presence of a group of serious
students, contributes to a better

Law, the School of Edand
other
Schools.
Among subjects available to such
students are Philosophy, History,
Archeology, Geography, Classics,
ucation,

understanding in Israel of Ameri-

can and American-Jewish
and institutions.”

and

fence

ideals

Comparative Religion, PsycholSociology (including the
Sociology of Jews), Economics,
Political Science, Arabic Langogy,,

A committee of the Academic
Council of the American Friends
ol the Hebrew University examines the qualifications of applicants,
determines scholarship
grants, selects the annual contingent for study in Jerusalem
and maintains contact with the
students and their parents. Members of the Academic Council in
various American and Canadian
colleges and universities assist in
personal interviewing of appli
cants.

uage and

Literature, Mathematics,

Physics and Chemistry.

During their stay in Israel, the

American students share dormitory rooms with Israeli students
on the University campus at Givat
Ram, Jerusalem. Special trips to
places of historic and contem
porary interest are arranged by
the University faculty.
“For the serious student,”
Professor Janowsky said, “the opportunity is offered to acquire
proficiency in the Hebrew langu
fundamentals of Jewish thought,
history and literature,

Students are selected for the
project on the basis of scholarship, character and seriousness
of purpose. During their first four
months in Israel they are taught
Hebrew at a special language
training center (Ulpan) on the
Hebrew University cartipus; they
then pursue their studies for the
remaining eight months together
with the Hebrew University’s stu
dent body, consisting of over
3.000 young men and women of
many national origins, from every
part of Israel and from many
foreign lands.

|A ACADEMY AWARD
IV NOMINATIONS
Including BEST PICTURE
The whole world'
Iopc«

7«»«

vt

Dr. Jones to Present Paper
At Denver Anatomist Meet
Three faculty members and six
graduate students from the UB
School of Medicine are attending
a week long meeting of the American Association of Anatomists
in Denver, Colorado.

Dr. Oliver P. Jones, Head of
the Department of Anatomy at
the school, is National Program
Secretary of the Association, a
position he has held for the past
nine years. This year Dr. Jones
has scheduled a total of 380
papers on anatomy and related
studies, three to be delivered
from the local Medical School.
On Thursday, Mr. Roger J. Ferguson, a graduate student in the
UB school will deliver a paper
entitled “The Skin Homograft
Reaction in Mice in Reduced
Barometric Pressure,” followed
on the program by Assistant Professor T. Yamadori, a visiting
Boswell Fellow at the University,
whose work is “The Development

Jones

EARN *200° 0

"

FAsnyuMcniM

Students may select courses in
the field of Jewish Studies and

related subjects, which include
Hebrew Language, Hebrew Literature, Bible, Biblical History
and Archeology, Mishna and
Haggada, Jewish History, Palestinography. Trends in Jewish
Thought and Contemporary Israel. Students devote approximately 24 classroom hours per
week to these and other studies.
Those with sufficient mastery
of Hebrew may select courses
from the regular curriculum of
the Faculties of Humanities,
Social Sciences and, with special
permission, the Faculties of Sci-

Shop
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AGENT WANTED TO SOLICIT
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"1963-

DRY CLEANING
8 lbs. for $200
AT THE
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best VOCAL
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APRIL 11

Laundry Shoe Repairing
Shoes and Purses Refinished
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CLARK GYM

All Types of Ladies’ Heels In
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Plaza Shoe Repair
WHAT'S CROWIIM' ON HERE?
'Spring Sale Starts April 17th

8:30

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PLAYBOY

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Open 9 A.M.

EWITHAN’S TAILOR SHOP
10 Summer St.
Tel: 886-1855

WALTER ZUALEKO

(at Delaware)

A FLASH

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STARRING ANNE BANCROFT
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On Same Program

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The SPECTRUM

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(Just off Bailey Ave
5 min. from Campus)

worker

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THE SOCIAL SEASON IS HERE
Artists Agency has the perfect entertainment for all occasions.

The Globe

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Professor Richard Webber of the
Anatomy Department. The graduate students, attending through
a Public Health Service Grant
for Training in Anatomy,

PLES. PROVEN METHOD NOW

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OF
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DRAMA!

CORSAGE

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NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED.

Attending from the University
faculty, in addition to Dr. Jones
and Dr. Yamadori, will be Professor E. R. Hayes and Associate

FREE SALES KIT. FREE SAM-

Carmen’s Barber
Home of the

Entertainment

Adult

of the Thalonic Nuclei and Their
Fiber Systems in Human Embryo.” Dr. Jones’ paper will be
the concluding paper of the convention and is 'titled, “Decrease
in Pinocythosis Accompanying
Maturation of Erythroblasts.”

LAMBERT,

In

HENDRICKS

&amp;

BAVAN

1962 Yolande Bavan replace

Ann Ross and the group was ac-

claimed as being "The Best Voca
Group in the Nation." Again the
group has sought to better itself

t

replacing David Lambert with Ron
Chastain and again the group promises to be even better

�Friday, April 10, 1964

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

By VICKI

from P. 1)
Mahones Trio. Aside from being
an accomplished jazz pianist Mr.
Mahonis has served as the- trio’s
accompaniment for many years.

ferable sections of the Clark concert hall. The reserved seats are
being sold on a first-come-firstserved basis at the same price as
the unreserved seats.

The Music Committee, which
is working in conjunction with
the Concert Committee, is trying
a new reserved seat plan for this
concert. The first 700 tickets
sold will be seated in the pre-

Try not to miss this outstanding jazz attraction. Tickets are
now on sale at the Norton Ticket
Booth and will be on sale again
tomorrow night at the door at

(Cont’d

$1,50 per

ticket.

The Political Science
Club will have an organizational meeting, Thursday, April 16, in room 337
of Norton Hall at 1:00
p.m. All interested parties
are invited to attend.
STARTS THURSDAY!
The Life of Playwright
MOSS HART

ACT
OKE
Tickets

on

BUGELSKI

The UB Little Symphony, under
Dr. Robert Mols of the music
faculty, will give a concert Wed
nesday, at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hall. There is no admission
charge.

Emmanuel Sinderbrand, pianwill be the featured
v the first movement soloist
in
of the
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4
in G major, op. 58. Mr. Binderbrand is a student of Leo Smit,
and recently gave a performance
of the Bartok Sonata for Two
Pianos and Percussion with Mr,
Smith, A graduate assistant in
music, he is also a composer. His
cantata “Time Present,” on a
poem of T. S. Eliot, was recently
performed at Baird,
The orchestra, composed mainly of music students, and also of
students from other divisions of
the university, will perform the
oveture to Die Entfuhrung aus
dem Serail and the Haffner Symphony (No. 35 in D) of Mozart.
ist,

of 55% under regular
commercial prices.
4.) Once in Europe the participants will be tree to travel on
their own. For those who are
making their first trip, guided
group tours at reduced rates will
be available.
5.) It is urgent that you get
in touch with the charter committee immediately, as they must
make final reservations and sign
a contract with the airline this
coming week. It is also important
that participants be able to make
a down-payment shortly in order
to demonstrate to the committee
that they are seriously interested
in making the trip

Response to the article in last
week’s Spectrum was encouraging
however, some seats are still

saving

available.

Briefly for those students and
faculty who missed reading about
our planned charter:
1. A group of students and
faculty, who had previous plans
to go to Europe this summer,
met together and decided to
charter a flight and split the
fares equally, taking advantage
of reduced

group rates,

2. All students, faculty and

other university employees, as
well as their dependents and

to participate
in the flight.
3. The charter will include 1st
class accomodations by air from
Buffalo to London, England, and
returning from Paris France to
Buffalo. The flight will leave heVe
on about July 20th, and return
from Paris to Buffalo during the
first week of September. The
cost will be approximately $245
per person round-trip. This is a
parents are eligible

Program Director needed to Act
as General Manager for a
Children's
Theatre and Dance Workshop
—

Experience Preferred

Call Miss DeMike

JA

—

5-4235

Joel Havens
Photography
1

8

-

x

10 print

5-2x3

sale for "Act One'

at Student Box Office

Seats Are Still Available for
European Charter Flight

Mols to Conduct
Little Symphony
Concert In Baird

Chastain, Hendricks &amp; Bavan
To Appear Tomorrow Night

—

I

or

prints

$100

Morton Hall.

c/o

Contact me
Spectrum Office

I

si—ftr

■OflfiOOCC

THE RED-HOT SUSPENSE STORY THAT'S
ROCKING AND SHOCKING THE WORLD!
Royal
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SPECTRUM

Friday, April 10, 1964

Finkelstein Addresses Senate
The signs are down, the oilclothes have been disassembled, and the slingers have ceased to be. The campaign has ended and the jobs of office, along with the
problems, are now upon us. We have much to do
but
what is it that we have to do? What are our duties and
responsibilities? What is the Student Senate? What is
a Student Senator?
—

Let me explain.

We are not

United Students; we are not Alliance. We are representatives.
We are not dorm residents; we

are not commuters. We are rep We aren’t Greek or
independent. Arts and Sciences
or University College. We are
representatives. We speak for
9,700 students. We owe them a
great deal.

resentatives.

"NEW CAMPUS DEAL"

making this its prime consideration. I hasten to add that this
need not be the only area of the
committee, but merely the main
consideration. Committee reports
need not be long and multi-numbered. They can be concerned
with a single topic. If completed,
we will have our “MEW CAMPUS
DEAL”. If not we shall have
attempted. And so in keeping
with this, I ask the following committees to consider the following
projects:

I have a master plan to present to you this evening. It has
been formulated by the four officers and the Presidential assistant, It is your decision to
make whether you will accept or
reject this plan. I only hope that
you will consider this idea. This
is not a year-long plan it is
—

a beginning.

To me, the Student Senate has
not been quite what it is capable
of being. We have begun. The
1963-64 Senate has done a good
job. But we must build and build
in a different manner. This is
a crucial year for student government and we cannot fail. The
open-ended policy of original jurisdiction of our committees must
slightly alter. The “above-theclouds" unrealistic nature of our
existence must be altered. I hereby issue a challenge, to you as
Senators. If I may paraphrase
Franklin D. Roosevelt, I challenge that our Senate be one
known as, and acting for a “NEW
CAMPUS DEAL”. Each committee, instead of wandering into
many areas will begin with one,

Marper

'tT

—

Executive

Committee:

overall

supervision
Activities Committee: recogni-

tion of the hockey and ski
teams as varsity sports
Finance Committee: additional
funds for Senate expenditure
N.S.A. Committee: national fra
ternity problems, including
seating in the cafeterias and
at sporting events

Public Relations Committee:
student book exchange and
increased Allenhurst
bus
service
Communications Committee:
separation of room and board
with all students able to eat
in all cafeterias
Academic Affairs Committee:
course booklet, detailed in
character

Committee: beer on
campus and a change in the
calendar
General Grounds Committee:
parking problems

Welfare

Civil Rights Committee: human
relations
Publicity Committee: a swing
committee to help all others
United Nations Committee: an
international U.N. committee

THREE POINT PROGRAM

Others, too can be attempted, but emphasis must be
placed on the primary issues.
2.Individual Senators, as summoned by the President to
fill the gap, and
3. Motions and debate on the
Senate floor concerned with
these areas primarily
and
herein lies the true test
—

—

Each committee must endeavor
without deviation toward its individual goals. No possible means
of success should be overlooked. But with unit projects, we
can more adequately represent
each student, and we must reach
each student on an individualistic
basis. We must gain their faith
in Student Government and the
way to do it is by giving maxi-

mum priority to campus problems affecting each student on
an individualistic basis; secondarily problems affecting students
collectively, and thirdly, those
areas touching in neither of the
aforementioned aims. We must,
and I ask that we represent the
student body in the areas in
which they wish to be represented. If we do, the “NEW CAMPUS
DEAL” will be a success.
We are trying a revolutionary
new idea
priorization of projects in committees. We must have
a multitude of accomplishments
in several areas, not several accomplishments in a multitude of
of areas. There will be gaps between the committee structures.
The President must, periodically,
call on individual senators to aid
on various projects. In addition,
it is hoped that each of you will
join at least one committee. If
we can work together, once again
—

with:
1. Emphasis on

certain goals
within the committees.

to keep Senate meetings as
outgrowths of this master
plan.

DIRECTION —FORWARD

Radio, TV Stations
Soon to Broadcast
On Discrimination
Special radio and television
of portions of the
symposium Discriminating About
Discrimination wjll be broadcast
at the following times:

programs

April 14 (Tues.), at 3:00 p.m.—

Dr. Rose, Address No. 2, "The
Varied Sources of Discrimination"

April 16 (Thurs.), at 7:30 p.m.,
April 21 (Tues.), at 3:00 p.m.—
Dr. Tannenbaum, Address No.
3, "The Negro A Comparison
Between North &amp; South America"
April 23 (Thurs.), at 7:30 p.m.,
April 28 (Tues.), at 3:00 p.m.—
Bishop Burgess, Address No. 4,
"Religio-Cultural Dynamics in
•

I wish to emphasize, and there
are many who attack this stand,
that this is not meant as a form
of totalitarianism. It is merely
as a form of direction and priorization. I am not asking complete
overlooking of other functions,
merely emphasis on that which
gives us direction. Totalitarianism? No! Direction? Yes! This
is not a be-all and end-all plan.
It is a beginning from which we
can spring. Let us start here.

THEN and only then, can we
“NEW CAMPUS

truly offer a
DEAL”.

Discrimination"

April 30 (Thurs,), at 7:30 p.m.,
May 5 (Tues.), at 3:00 p.m.—
Panel Discussion moderated by
Dr. H. L. Smith, Jr.
May 7 (Thurs.), at 7:30 p.m.,
May 12 (Tues.), at 3:00 p.m.—
Dr. Kitagawa, "Concluding Observations &amp; Summary"

It must be a general spectrum, WKBW TELEVISION
into which fits all committee suc- (Channel 7)
cesses. We have a wheel and we April 19 (Sunday) from 12:00must install the spokes and the
1:00 p.m.— Discriminating Aname of the wheel is the “NEW
bout Discrimination —an hour
“Special Feature” of enlightenCAMPUS DEAL”. This idea has
been formulated at an officers
ed and enlightening conversameeting, and there was general
tion featuring the four Symposium Speakers and moderaassent. We feel that this is our
best avenue. It is up to you to
ted by Dr. H. L. Smith, Jr.
decide. It is my hope that we
WKBW RADIO
can do this. I will sincerely endeavor to do so
but I need (1520 on your AM dial)
your help, everyone of you. Think April 19 (Sunday) from 9:00-10:00
over our proposals and make
p.m.— Discriminating About
Discrimination—the “s o u n dyour decisions. You are the determinants of this plan. Thank
track” of the above Television
—

you.

Program,

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Erich Fromm: The Art of Loving: An Inquiry into the
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Carl N. Decler; Out of Our Past: The Forces Thai
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John W. Gardner; Excellence: Can We Be Equal and
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Richard Hughes: In Hazard (fiction).
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Edmund Stillman and William PrArr; The New Politics: America and the End of the Postwar World.
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E. L. Woodward: History of England: Roman Times
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Aldous Huxley: The Doors of Perception and Heaven
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L C. B. Seaman: From Vienna to Versailles; European
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John Horne Burns: The Gallery (fiction). CN/9 $1.75
Stuart Chase: The Proper Study of Mankind; The
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Robert Strausz-Hupe ef al.: Protracted Conflict:, A
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Study of Communist Strategy.
Hugh Thomas: The Spanish Civil War. CN/12 $2.95

A. Grunwald, Ed.: Salinger: A Critical and
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D. W. Brogan: The French Nation: From Napoleon to
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Neeson Algren: Never Come Mdrning (fiction).
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Chester Wilmot: The Struggle for Europe; World
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Joyce Cary: The AfricanWitch (fiction). CN/18 $1.75
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Henry

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Student Book Sho
3400 Maiif Street Buffalo, N. Y.
-

-

Phone: IF 3-7000

parking in rear ol book shop

TONAWANDA * and ONTARIO

�Friday, April 10, 1964

CjreeL
Alpha

Phi

Omega

returned

from a very
Conference
held at the
ester. The

successful Sectional
this past weekend,
University of Rochbrothers had the
largest turnout of all the other
chapters present with a total of
14 men in attendance. In the
discussion groups and workshops
many ideas were conveyed to the
other chapters. Important points
and ideas brought forth by fellow representatives were listened
to intently by U.B.’s A Phi 0 men.
Tonight the brothers will have
a date party at the Red Sleigh
Inn at 8:30 p.m.

Tau Kappa Epsilon held executive elections Monday, and the
officers elected for the coming
semester are: Richard Anderson,
Prytanis; A1 Parisse, Epiprytanis;
Dave Cooper, Grammateus; Steve
Mitchell, Crysophylos; Chuck McKirdy, Histor; Joe Kogut, Hypophetes; Bill Hug, Pylortes; and
Don Mingle, Hegmon.

TKE will hold their Playboy
Party at the Cordon Bleu, Friday,
April 17, starting at 9 p.m. Admission will be $3.50 in advance or
$4.00 at the door, Bunnies will
be available.

Phi Epsilon Pi is holding two
parties this weekend at the Kenmore Avenue hall. They are dated
from 8:00 till 2:00 both Friday
and Saturday nights. Work activities for the Brothers will continue until 6.00 a.m. each night.
Phi Epsilon Pi would like to
congratulate the members of all

the fraternities and sororities that

participated in Greek -Sing for
making it a success.
Alpha Kappa Psi, the professional business fraternity, wishes
to congratulate its newly elected
officers:

President, Thomas Johnston;
Vice-President, Dade del Bello;
Secretary, Richard Baer; Treasurer, William Varney; Master of
Rituals, Kearons Whalen; Delegates to I.F.C.
Junior, Thomas
Johnston; Senior, Kearons Whalen.
■

SPECTRUM

ru

-

Phi Lambda Delta Fraternity
would like to congratulate George
Ehresman, winner of the Charles
K. Bassett most valuable wrestler award.
-

Phi Lambda Delta has challenged the pledge class to a beer
chase this Friday.
Pan-Hellenic Council on behalf
of all the sororities would like to
congratulate Sigma Delta Tau,
Sigma Kappa Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Phi Epsilon Pi on their
Greek Weekend victories. The
Council wishes good luck to
Sigma Phi Epsilon on their coming Queen of Hearts Ball.
Pan-Hellenic Council would like
to announce the Scholarship Tea
to be held this Sunday, April 12
from 3-5 p.m. in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge. Sororities and in-

dividaul members will be honored
for scholastic achievement in the
past year.

The pledge class of Sigma KapPhi will hold a shoeshine from
10 o’clock till 4 o’clock in Norton
Union today. The pledge class
will also honor the pledges of
the other campus sororities with

pa

a tea on Sunday, April 26 at 4

Flower Street.
Sigma Delta Tau is to be congratulated on having the Greek
Queen chosen from their sorority

for the fourth consecutive year.

Chi Omega congratulates sister
Barb Witzel on her installation as
president of the Pan-Hellenic
Council. Gail Robertson has contributed a painting to the Fine
Arts Festival on campus.

The pledge class of Chi Omega
are starching and ironing blouses
as a pledge project. Anyone interested in this project should
contact Brenda O’Hern at
831-2061 or any other pledge.

AAS, Angel Flight
Partake in Annual
National Conclave
Denver, Colorado, site of the
16th Annual Arnold Air Society
National Conclave, attracted 14
Richard C. Browning Squadron
members of the Arnold Air Society and Angel Flight. The con
clave, which began Wednesday,
will continue thru Sunday in
the Denver Hilton Hotel.
Sponsored by the Christman
Squadron of Colorado State University, the conclave will include
among its activities: business
meetings-Wednesday thru Friday;
an opening luncheon Thursday
afternoon; and an awards banquet Friday

evening. Saturday

afternoon will be highlighted by
a tour of the Air Force Academy
in Colorado Springs, and topped
off in the evening by the Military
Ball and the crowning of the
queen, who is known as “Little
General.”
Speakers at the conclave will
be A.F. General Scriver, Astronaut Gordon Cooper, and Mr.
James Strauble, Executive Director of the Air Force Association.
Among those in the Buffalo
delegation are: Lt. Col. Thomas
L, Huddleston, Professor of Air
Science and Arnold Air Society
national and local advisor; Charles J. Heubusch, the present National Arnold Air Commander;
and his staff; James Riley, Herbert Feldmann, Joseph Argenio,
Gerald Krieger, and John Hollands HI. Representing the Buffalo Squadron are: Charles B.
Wagner, delegate and Squadron
Commander, and Alton J. Purdy,
alternate. The Angel Flight is
represented by Lorie Foroscij,
delegate and Commander, and
Mary Ann Lucchino, alternate.
Also accompanying the Angels’
is their advisor Mrs. Thomas L,
Huddleston.

WHO

SAID

AKPsi held a successful cocktail
party the night of the I.F.C. Ball,
Saturday. April 4, at the Sheraton
Motor Inn.
At the Ball the fraternity was
with the trophy for
the highest fraternity grade point
average.

presented

Phi Kappa Psi will have a Mexican tequilla party this coming
Saturday night. Congratulations
to Brothers: Bevilacqua, Donohoe,
Gilbert and Millerschoen for receiving varsity letters at the
Block B dinner last week. Special
congratulations to Mr. Donohoe
and Mr. Millerschoen because Mr.
Donohoe received the “most improved wrestler” award and Mr.
Millerschoen was named captainelect of the 1964-65 swimming
team.
Congratulations to Gerry Philbin for receiving the Dom Grossi
memorial trophy given each year
by this fraternity in memory of

one of its greatest members.

Of course, it’s
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•

Sigma Phi Epsilon wishes to
'hank Mr. Paone for a fine job in
directing us to winning the un-

limited fraternity division of
Creek Sing. Special thanks go to
bvelyn
Mann for shaping up the

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Congratulations go to Sigma
vappa Phi for their winning the
overall trophy for Greek Sing,
and to Linda Chipkin for being
crowned Greek Weekend Queen.

Mr. Eliason will have a cocktail
party before the 10th Annual
Ween of Hearts Ball tonight at
hls apartment at 7:30 p.m.

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PAGE ELEVEN

Societies Celebrate Initiation
Of 15 Members at AF Base
Thirty-two couples celebrated
the initiation of six new Arnold
Air Society members at the Niagara Falls Air Base Officers Club
April 3. The new members are
AFROTC cadets: Stanley Tumidolski, Arthur Woodhead, David Agro, Glenn Bridenbaker, James
Maxim, and Donald Moyer.
Nine pledges were initiated

April 4 into the AFROTC Chennault Drill Society at Niagara

Falls. New members are James
Sunseri, Brian Van Houten, Charles Wilson, Gordon Van Such,
Robert Reiss, Leonard Kwiatkowski, Robert Huyck, Howard Gillette, and Donald Eddy.
The combined membership of
these groups at UB it 72.

�PAGE TWELVE

Friday, April 10, 1964

SPECTRUM

H.S. 'Welcome Day' Exhibitions
Departments Give Demonstrations
Students in the UB School of
Engineering have prepared a
special series of exhibits in con
ncction with “Welcome Day", on
Sunday.

Welcome Day program
1000 high school
students and their parents to the
University»campus for a morning
of discussion on college admissions in general and particular
programs at the University. Divisional open houses follow be
ginning at 11:30 a.m.
Among the displays at the
School of Engineering will be
a ground-effects machine. This
experimental vehicle has two
large rotary blades which enable
it to skim along the ground on
a cushion of air. It will be demonstrated in the parking lot
behind the Engineering Building.
Future Transportation in Western New York. This display, by
The

brings abqut

the Civil Engineering Depart
ment will feature a scale model
of a complete scheme for the area
including super highway com
plexes and monorails.
A

remote

control

car.

The

HILLEL NEWS
Sabbath Service
To mark the Bar Mitzvah of
Lance Fertig, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Fertig, Hillel will join
the congregation of Beth David

three-wheel vehicle built by the Ner-Israel for this week’s Sab
Dept, of Electrical Engineering, bath Service. The service is sche
will be completely controlled by duled to begin at 8:30 p.m. in
radio transmitter.
the Temple located at 500 Starin
Instant coffee making process. Avenue. Hillel extends a hearty
Students in Chemical Engineering Mazel-Tov to Lance and his family
will demonstrate the way in on this joyous occasion. Mrs. Nor
man Fertigf is the Secretary of
which instant coffee is manufactured from the ground beans. Hillel House.
Interfaith Sports Event
Purification with activated char
Hillel has invited the Wesley
coal. This display will demon
for a basketball game
strate the manner in which acti- Foundation
be held on Sunday, April 12
vated charcoal tends to purify to
Center. The game
an impure sugar solution through in the Jewish
by a Delicates 1
followed
be
will
absorption.
sen Supper in the Hillel House
Students guides will be availwith the members of the Wesley
able to conduct visitors to the Foundations as guests. For de
exhibits.
tails and reservations call Hillel
House.

Election Results
Hillel recently held its annual
election of officers. The following
were selected for the 1964-65
academic year: Ted Shapiro, president; Max Levy, vice-president:
Terri Fertig, corresponding secrttary; Howard Wildman, record

ing secretary; Susan Funt, trea
surer. Installation of officers will
lake place at the Closing Affair
on May 3.
U.J.F. Drive
All students who have taken
U.J.F, cards for solicitation are
urged to cover their cards and
to turn in their collections by
Thursday evening at the Hillel
House. We are anxious to bring
the drive to a successful conclu
sion and request the cooperation

of all the workers.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

The Student Christian Associa
tion will hold its next meeting

on Wednesday, April 15. The pro
gram will involve a trip to the
Albright-Knox Gallery. We shall
meet at the home of the Chaplain,
49 Heath Street, at 7:30 p.m
Supper is available at the home
of the Chaplain for 50c. The
meal is served at 6:00. Reserva
tions may be made by calling the
S.C.A. office (TF 6-5806) by Tuesday, April 14.
WESLEY FOUNDATION

Two brothers, Mr. Richard M,
Reid and Mr. Russell Reid, will
be our guests Sunday, April 12,
at the 5:00 supper meeting. The
former a missionary and the latter a local pastor, will represent
the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mor
mons) in our study of the beliefs
of various religions.
Remember! The deadline for
registration for the Spring Conference of the New York State
M.S.M. is April 14.

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

The Bald Soprano Mystery
Winner Gets Concert Passes
Who's the Bald Soprano? The
slueth who uncovers the identity
of the Bald Soprano will receive
two tickets to the concert Wednesday night, April 29, by the
Serendipity Singers and Joe and
Eddy, part of the Spring Weekend events. If there are two
such sleuths, the second prize
will be two tickets to the Circle
Art Theater.
Even if you don’t win, you
have an opportunity on Wednesday, at 12:00 and 3:00 to see
The Bald Soprano. Second in the
series of three of one-act plays
to be presented. The presentations are being co-sponsored by
the Student Dramatic Society and
hte Fine Arts Council of Norton
Union Board in Norton Confer-

ence Theater to enable more stu
dents to see the talent of SUNY
AB students and become aware
of the dramatic arts. This production is the Student Dramatic Society’s entry in the dramatic
festivals at St. Bonaventure and
Alfred University.

The cast of The Bald Soprano,
by Eugene Ionesco, includes:
Francine Zumpano, Colin Brem
ner, Sue Sturgeon, Dick Roth,
Corinnc Jaffe, and Bruce Glaser.
The production is directed by Susan Gilman and Dick Toth. Stage
Manager is Jane Groden.
Tickets for The Bald Soprano
may be purchased at Norton ticket booth, the lobby table, or at
the door.

U.B. Chennault Drill Society
Enters National Semi-Finals
UB will be represented at the
Intercollegiate Drill
National
Team Championships in Washington, D.C, this weekend by the
AFROTC Chennault Drill Society’s Exhibition Drill Team.
The national finals attract the
fifty-four finest drill teams in the
nation to compete against each
other in both exhibition drill and
in the famous Cherry Blossom
Festival Parade.
The Chennault Team is composed of sixteen experienced drill
team members and is commanded
by Cadet Major Karl Kristoff.
Cadet Kristoff has already led
the team in successful competition at the Gannon College and
University of Detroit Invitationa
Drill Competitions.
In 1962, the Chennault team
placed 3rd among the more than
500 units represented in the
Cherry Festival Parade. Locally,
the team placed first in the Senior Men’s Drill Team category in

the recent
Parade.

St.

Patrick’s

Day

Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice-president of research at UB, will be
the guest speaker at the banquet
of the Western New
York
Glaucoma Symposium at 7:30
p.m., April 12, in the Georgian
Room of the Hotel Statler Hilton.
“The

Coming World Famine”

will be the topic of Dr. Ewell’s
address.

Dr. Ewell has traveled extensively over most of the world
during the last 25 years. During
the past three years, he has
visited India three times and also
Thailand, Pakistan, Iran, Turkey,
and Egypt investigating the production of fertilizer and food in
these countries. He was one of
the chairmen of the United Nations’ conference on chemical
fertilizer held in Bombay, India,
November 18 to December 2,
1963.

THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES
(HUAC) IS COMING TO BUFFALO
Hearings will be held at the United States Courthouse (Niagara Square)
April 14th and 15th.

The object of this committee is not to seek legislation but to supress dissent.
Although it has one of the highest budgets in Congress, it has in fact produced
very little legislation.
The committee has sought to undermine, discredit and divide those groups and
individuals who support movements for civil rights, decent working conditions and
peace.

The committee violates our constitutionally protected rights. It assumes the
guilt of those subpoened, denies the right of cross-examination and persecutes
people for their beliefs and associations.
The committee is well known for its distrust of free inquiry and the free exchange of ideas. It has repeatedly attacked the intellectual community and sought
to abridge the academic freedom of both students and faculty.
Among these groups and individuals who are opposed to the Committee are:
The National Student Association
Erich Fromm
The National Federation of Catholic
Martin Luther King
Professor Harry Mi Her
College Students
The National Council of Churches
Linus Pauling
The American Jewish Congress
Alfred Kazin
The National Association for the Advancement
James Baldwin
of Colored People
Reinhold Niebuhr
The United Auto Workers AFL-CIO
Professor PhilipMorrison

A DEMONSTRATION WILL BE HELD ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY, APRIL
14thand 15th in FRONT OF THE UNITED STATES COURTHOUSE ON NIAGARA
SQUARE STARTING AT 9:30 A.M.
Sponsored by: The Buffalo Committee to Oppose the House Un-American
Activities Activity.

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�Friday, April 10, 1964

PACE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Spring Practice Opens
By

Coach Dick Offenhamer, who
believes that football is never out
of season, and who is equally
vociferous in his belief that practice makes perfect, has recently
inaugurated the basic foundation
upon which next year’s varsity
football team will be based
Spring Football Practice!
—

It is with a feeling of cautious
optimism that the coaching staff
approaches the problems that
must be ironed out if the Bulls
are to enjoy another successful
gridiron season. Buffalo has been
dealt its share of graduation
losses; the Bulls have lost at least
one starter at every position.
Gone are such notables as AllAmerica Tackle Gerry Philbin,
multi-honored quarterback “Long
John” Stofa, Co-Capt. Larry Gergley, and backfield men of high
caliber, Tom Butler, Jim Ryan,

%Ym

PAUL NUSSBAUM
backs. Letterman Bob Edwards
is a powerful tailback, but Nick
Capuana and Ron Holly are
breakaway threats here. Dennis
Przykuta is the only letterman
at fullback, but Dick Vittorini

Gerald LaFountain, and Craig
Helenbrook are all lettermen.
Tony Miceli and Tom Popp, who
are sophomores, give Line Coach
LaRocque youth to blend with the
experience of his awesome veterans. Powerful 250 lb. tackle
Leo Ratamess is the biggest sen
ior lineman on the squad. Leo
sets the tune for a host of can
didates who give the Bulls depth
at tackle. Lettermen Dorn Pies
trak heads this group which includes junior Wm. Taylor. Roger
(Whale) Galinas and swift sophomore Fred Sprague.

The interior line appears to be
just as strong as the outside line
is, as six lettermen are returning
to fill the guard and center positions. Undefeated wrestler E.
Greenard Poles, Bruce Hart and
James McNally form a solid nucleus at guard. Understudy positions are up for grabs among
sophomores
Richard
Dunbar,
Richard Dechowitz, and Charles
(Packy) Botula. Joseph Holly,
Mike Luicidi, and James Duprey
have all won their letter at center, and with the addition of
Bruce MacKellar from the freshman squad, the Bulls are 4 deep
in the center of the line.
Don Gilbert, who understudied
Stofa for two seasons, is a fine
passer, however Gilbert is such
a fine open field runner that his

MM

On the sunny side of the hori-

zon, there are at least two lettermen returning to each of the
line positions, and at least one

&amp;

This meeting is to discuss the
Trophy standings, Softball, Track, and the plans for the
Intramuals Awards Dinner. Please
have your representative present
so we can make plans for the
awards dinner.

Pahlowitz

AH Softball entries must be in
by Friday, April 10th. The fraternity leagues will play on Tuesday
and Thursday. The Independent
leagues will play on Monday and
Wednesday. Because of the short
time remaining, there will be
only six teams. A two dollar fee
is needed for entrance into the
intramural leagues. Divisions will
be set up on a first come first
served basis.

All entries must be submitted
by Tuesday, April 21st,
.

-

Support

Our
Advertisers

End GERRY LaFOUNTAIN
should provide strong relief for
Przykuta.

The Bulls compiled an interesting set of team statistics during
1963. They led the nation’s major
colleges in pass interceptions
with 21, were 6th in percentage
of opponent’s passes intercepted,
2nd nationally in interception re
turn yards, 18th in rushing de-

Fullback BOB EDWARDS

Lisfen To WBFO For Sports
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CH5D

Quarterback DON GILBERT
talents may be put to use at tailback if sophomore Jim Robie, or
junior Fred Geringer come on as
mature quarterbacks. Dick Cbndino, Tom Oatmeyer, and James
Barksdale are all speedy wing-

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There will be a meeting of all
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April 16, 1964 at 4:00 p.m., room
322, Clark Gym.

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veteran to each of the baekfield

Capt. Gerry Pawloski heads an
excellent crop of ends who are
returning for the 1964 season.
Senior Dave Nichols, and juniors

Information

B.M.O.C.

Captain GERRY PAWLOSKI
John Cimba, and Jim Burd

slots. Although it is not as yet
clearly definite as to who will
receive the coveted starting assignments there are a number of
stickout candidates for these jobs.
No matter who receives the starting positions across the line,
UB’s Monsters of the Midway will
pack plenty of wallop.

fense, 6th in kickoff return defense and 10th in punt return defense. UB was 7th in kickoff returns and 5th among point-aftertouchdown leaders. On the negative side of the ledger Buffalo
was 3rd in penalties assessed
against. While these statistics
keep the computers happy, the
only set of records that the Bulls
are out for in 1964 is an Undefeated Season!

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�PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday, April 10, 1964

SPECTRUM

Baseball Season Starts Soon
Bulls Open Against WBFO Set to Broadcast All
Canisius Tuesday Nine UB Home Ballgames
Coach Jim Peelle’s hardballers
will open at home on Tuesday
against Canisus, on Wednesday
they’ll play host to Erie Tech,

and on Saturday they’ll play
Syracuse at the Salt City.
Larry Gergley, captain, captain
of last season’s UB football team
who is a big, strapping righthander with a humming fast ball, will

toe the rubber

for

the

Bulls

against Canisius, Gergley, the
subject of “attention by major
league scouts, also will draw the
nod to go against Syracuse. Bob
Kohansky will start against Erie

Tech.

With two exceptions, the UB
nine will be a veteran club. Tom
Oatmeyer who didn’t play last
year because of spring football
practice, has been excused from
spring football and will handle
the bulk of the catching chores
this season. Sophomore Billy Bar
to, who made high school AllAmerican at Montgomery, Pa.,
High, will be at shortstop.
The rest of the club is all
veterans: Dale DelBello at first

2nd Baseman EARL TOMPKINS

For the first time in recent

history, the University of Buffalo

baseball games will be broadcast
by a local station.
WBFO-FM (88.7 meg.) will be
nine home games including both
covering the play-by-play of all
halves of a double header with
St. Bonaventure May 5.
Sports Director Wally Blatter
announced that the entire sports
staff will participate in relaying
the playby-play. He, along with
Burr Vogel, Dick Fleischer,
Barry Warner and Fred Brickell
will work the games in teams of
three. In doing this, it is felt
that, listeners will be allowed a
variety of opinions on the games.
Depending on the response to
the baseball broadcasts, both
home basketball and football
games may be aired beginning
next semester. The student-run
campus radio station has taken
large strides over the past year
in bringing the student body
closer to the many on campus
athletic events. However, it has
not yet reached the level of
sports programming seen at many
of the other large colleges
around the nation.
Although it’s unique for a
Western New York college to
have its baseball games broadcast,
it is not unusual in other pares of
the country. Cornell, Syracuse,
and Colgate, three of the Bulls
opponents, are all followed both

regional finals at North Carolina.
There’s a genuine feeling of op-

home and away by their respective school radio stations.

timism that the record will be
bettered this spring.

This could be the ideal year for
WBFO to recontinue announcing
baseball. After a mediocre basketball season, UB followers are
anxiously looking toward the
baseball team to bring them a
big winner. Student interest is
high and as Coach Peelle noted,
“We have the best material, the
strongest nucleus of any baseball
team I’ve ever coached . .

home schedule follows:
Live
14, CANISIUS
broadcast with play-by-play Wally
Blatter, Barry Warner and Fred
Brickell; April 15, E.C.T.I.—Dick
Fleischer, Burr Vogel and Barry
Warner; GANNON—Fred Brick
ell, Barry Warner, Burr Vogel:
Wally Blatter, Dick
R.I.T.
Fleischer, Fred Brickell; NIAGBarry Warner, Wally
ARA
Blatter, Fred Brickell; BUFFALO
STATE
Barry Warner, Wally
Blatter, Dick Fleischner; ST
BONAVENTURE
Dick Fleisch
er, Wally Blatter, Burr Vogel:
GENESEO
Fred Brickell, Burr
Vogel, Barry Warner. Remember.
WBFO is growing . . . with your
support.
The

April

—

—

The Bulls, in bidding for their
ninth straight W.N.Y. Conference Championship, have virtually their entire team back from
last year. In addition to last
season’s holdovers, high school
All American Bill Barto is expected to give additional help to
the already strong infield.

—

—

—

—

Last spring’s team won 15 of
their 18 games in reaching the

Yov
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3rd Bateman STEVE WASULA

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Steve Wasula at third, and Gerry
Montemarano, Dan Kraft, and
Craig Lyon in the outfield.
Last year’s team was 15-3 on
the season and finished second
in the NCAA college division
tournament at Hampden-Sydney,
Virginia. The general feeling on
the North Main campus is that
this year’s edition of the baseball Bulls will prove to be the
best in the history of the school.

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�Friday, April 10, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

STOFA HONORED BY BOSTON

BOSTON (April 8)—A senior
football player from the University of Buffalo, who began his
collegiate grid career by almost
single-handedly beating the Ter
riers, is the 1964 recipient of the
Boston University Varsity Club’s
'Most Honored Opponent" Award.
“Long John” Stofa, a native of
Johnstown, Penna., and a physical education major at Buffalo,
will fly to Boston April 14, to take
part in the annual BU all sports
banquet at the Sheraton Plaza.
He is the first football player to
be so honored in the three years
that the award has been made.
Previous winners were hockey
players Dave Johnston of Harvard
and Art Chisholm of Northeastern

University.
In 1961, a young Buffalo team
that wasn’t given a chance to defeat the Terriers, came to Boston
for the season opener. To complicate the Bull’s problems, their
starting quarterback, Gene Guerrie, had been injured and they
had to start an inexperienced
sophomore named John Stofa.
Stofa showed little evidence of
the fact that he was playing in
his first college game, and appeared unimpressed that Boston
had ended the 1960 season by
trouncing Buffalo 41-12, The 6-3,
200-pounder proceeded to call
arid pass an exceptional game,
completing 13 of 19 attempts for
150 yards and two touchdowns in
leading Buffalo to an impressive
24-12 upset victory.
Stofa and the Bulls returned to
in 1962 to again open the Terrier’s season, Already established
as one of the top quarterbacks
in the east, Long John found BU
Field as inviting as it had been

a year earlier. Although the Terriers were able to hold down his
completions, they were unable
to stop his damage. In all, he completed two touchdown passes, the
second coming on the last play of

driving for a convincing score on
their opening series of r downs.

However,

the

Buffalo defense
the two teams
battled even, before the Bulls
drove across from the three for
tliejr first score. A two-point conversion try failed by substitute
quarterback Don Gilbert, and BU
led at the half 7-6. The Terriers
came right back to score on the
first play from scrimmage in the
second half on a 51-yard pass
from Phil Caito to Bob Horton.
It appeared as though the game
was in hand when the Bulls
tightened and

came roaring back. Capitalizing
on a BU fumble on the Terrier
32. Buffalo took just nine plays
to convert the break into a touch
down Once again Stofa proved
the BU nemesis, when he connected on a two-point pass to send
the Bulls ahead 14-13.

included 2,233 yards through the
air. In addition to three varsity
letters in football, versatile John
earned two varsity letters in baseball and one in basketball to receive a special E.C.A.C. medal
this year.
Upon being informed of the
award by telephone from Varsity
Club President Leo Mullin, Stofa
said “this is the greatest thrill of
my career." Coach Offenhamer
said, “I’ve never heard of a college honoring an athlete from another school I think it’s great,
and John will be in Boston for
the banquet, if I have to carry
him down there on my back.”
In years to come, when “Long
John” looks back over his very

JOHN STOFA

The Terriers had to face Stofa
more time. Last fall they
traveled to Buffalo, once again
favored to trip the Bulls. BU had
just taken the measure of Holy
Cross a week earlier, 18-6
a
team the Bulls faced in a scoreless tie for their season opener.
It appeared as though the BU
offense had finally started to click
and that the Terriers were back
on the winning trail.
The game started out according
to the pre-game script, with BU
one

sity—“the perfect host,”

SUPPORT

THE

-

BULLS

KLEIN HA.NS

The fourth quarter forced the
Terriers to the air in an attempt
to overhaul the hosts, but this
only resulted in setting up the
clincher for the Bulls. Once again,
Stofa passed the two-point con"Most Honored Opponent”
the game to give Buffalo a thrilling 27-23 upset victory.

successful college career, it seems
that he will have good reason to
always remember Boston Univer-

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offense, ending his career with
an impressive 2,730 yards for
three seasons
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�Friday, April 10, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

g SPUD'S IB
SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALAN NEWMAN

Baseball Preview

Yanks Will Win Again

The once supreme American League is beginning to
look weaker each year. Since 1946 when Jackie Robinson broke into big-time'baseball the National League has
improved immensely with the addition of Negro ball
players. For some reason the junior circuit has shyed
away from hiring Negroes and this has been a main factor in their downfall. Most of the greats of the game
today are dark-skinned (e.g. -—Mays, Aaron, Clemente,
Robinson. Banks, Gilliam, White, and McCovey), and
they all play in the National League. A close glance at
the spring training statistics shows nine of ten National
League teams above .500; the only team below that mark
is the Mets. All the Americans, however, are at or below the .500 mark. The natural argument is that spring
training is a poor indication of regular season play, but
the fact remains it is the only indication.
My predictions are as follows:
New York will take the flag without too much difficulty, What little talent the American League possesses lies in the hands of the Yankees. Superb pitching
a tight infield, and of course, Mickey Mantle, make the
Bombers a,shoe-in for first place.
Baltimore looks strong for second place at this point.
The Orioles have handed Stu Miller a left-handed partner in the bullpen in the form of Harvey Haddix and
starters Steve Barber and Milt Pappas are at top form.
Luis Aparicio always can be depended on at shortstop
and Willie Kirkland has been playing superior ball this
spring in left field. If Chuck Estrada can come back
after his injury the Birds should have no trouble taking
the number two position.
Chicago bolstered its outfield with the addition of
Minnie Minosb to Jim Landis, Dave Nicholson, and Floyd
Roginson. Gary Peters, “Rookie of the Year”, figures to
have another fine season as does third baseman Pete
Ward.
With Detroit the big question is Frank Lary. For
my money though, any team with A1 Kaline, the best
all around player in the league with the possible exception of Mantle, cannot finish out of the first division.
Boston will be in the thick of the fight for second
place. Dick Stuart has been playing fine spring ball and
Yastrzewski. Malzone, Mejias, and Bressoud round out
a well balanced ball club. Dick Radatz is the best fireman in the league and the big surprise might be basketbailer Gene Conley who could win twenty.
The preceding four teams diave the best chance for
the first division. My predictions for the second division
are as-follows:
. Los Angeles Angels
Sixth Place .
.
. Minnesota Twins
Seventh Place
. Cleveland Indians
Eighth Place
Ninth Place
Kansas City Athletics
Washington Senators
Tenth Place
�

�

»

The Boston Celtics once again proved their supremacy in the National Basketball League by trouncing the
strong Cincinnati Royals. Bill Russell showed the Royals
why he is the best defenseman in the history of the game
by completely dominating the backboards.
issell’s ex-teammate from San Francisco, K. C.
Jones surprised everyone by containing Oscar Robertson. Th he Big 0 had the height edge on Jones by almost
four | hi ches but the Californian didn’t let that bother
him. R Uibertson shot far below his average and could
not pro )duce in the clutch.
The University of Buffalo football team will play Iowa State
University
1968.

oh

September

14,

The game, the scheduling of
which has been approved by the
UB Faculty Committee on Athletics. will be held at Ames, Iowa.'
Negotiations for the contest
were conducted in UB Athletic
Director Jim Peelle and Iowa
Stale Athletic Director Gordon
Chalmers, two longtime friends.
The scheduling of the Hurricanes is another milestone in
UU's upward march to gridiron
fame. The game will be the Bulls’

Netmen Open Season
Against Ganisius lues.
Coach Bill Sanford’s racqueteers will also entertain Canisius
and Erie Tech on Tuesday and
Wednesday respectively. On Saturday they will be on the road
to engage Cortland State at Cortland.

Although only 5-6, Feldman, a
junior from Kenmore West High
School, figures to be the No. 1
player. His strong points are experience and steadiness.

The perenially strong UB tennis
team will be strong again this
year. Coach Sanford, under whose
tutelage the tennis Bulls have
won 164 matches and lost but
27 in 15 years, has 6 returning
lettermen: Andy Feldman, Bob
Barrett, Bob Brancatoj Art White,
Tony Pegnia, and Andy Weber.

Brzezinski, the Section IV singles
champion from North Tonawanda; Steve Oberstein, a 6-3 strongboy from Great Neck, Long Island; Paul Siudzinski from Kensington High; John Demtrak from
Binghamton; Bob Siegal from
Irondoquoit High; and Matt Yuschik from Bishop Fallon.

Coach Sanford has a number
of promising sophomores: Dennis

Coach Emery Fisher’s track
team will be in Troy on Saturdaj
to take on Renssalaer.
Coach Fisher has 3 standouts
for the nucleus of his track team
Capt. Don Lee won the pole vault
at the Maple Leaf Games in To
ronto this past winter, senior Don
Dansereau is the New York State
record holder in the discus, ami
junior Ron Reiber is the New
York State champion in the quar
ter mile. Reiber will carry the
mail in the sprints and the 440

The wet spring weather has
delayed the conditioning of all

of the UB teams. However, all
have been working out under
cover and will be ready to go
when competition begins.

Sanford Honored

CSCAA Service Award
—William H. Sanford III, head
wrmming coach at the UB, was
one of 30 men who received
15-year service awards from the
College Swimming Coaches Association of America here tonight.
The award to Sanford, who is
also head tennis coach at Buffalo,
was announced at the annual dinner meeting of the association,
held in conjunction with the
NOAA Swimming and Diving
Championships which begin

-

tomorrow at Yale University

A native of Buffalo, Bill San-

ford attended Amherst Central
High School and graduated from
the University of Buffalo in 1949.
Before going to college, Bill
served four and

one-half years
in the U.S. Army and won the
Bronze Star while serving in the
European Theatre of Operations
during World War II.
Now in his fifteenth year as

swimming and tennis coach, he

was undefeated in two years of
tennis competition as an undergraduate.

Sanford is a past president and
past secretary-treasurer of the
New York State Swimming Officals. He served as a member
of the NCAA Diving Rules Committee for three years, and is
currently chairman of the Nominating Committee and a member
of the Special Awards Committee
of the Colleges Swimming Coaches Association.

INTRAMURAL SPORTS
By KIM BLACKMAN

Probably the most exciting recent intramural event was the

battle for the basketball championship between Alpha Epsilon
Pi. Fraternity and the Zygotes.
AEPi beat the defending champions, in overtime, 58-57.
With the score tied at 53-53
and twto seconds left in regulation
time, the Zygotes were awarded
a free throw which was missed,
sending the game into overtime.
The Zygotes broke into an
early 14-4 lead, but AEPi, led by
the scoring of Ron Salmonson
and the rebounding of Bob Ko-

hansky oame back to lead 30-28
at half time.

AEPi was paced in scoring by
Ron Salmonson with 16, Barry
Cohen with 13 and Steve Walsh
with 12. George Clark and Bob
Edward had' 12 each for the
Zygotes.

AEPi

Cohen
Salmonson
Walsh
Kohansky
Zellroan
Fields
Feinstein
......

....

o,

FG

FT

T

6
7

1
2

13
16

5

2

2
1

0
0

3
2
26

first appearance west of the Mississippi and their first against a
team from the Big Eight Conference.
UB Coach Dick Offenhamer expressed pleasure at having Iowa
State on the schedule and recalled that in his own playing
days at Colgate he traveled to
Iowa City to play Iowa University of the Big Ten.
In making the announcement
of the Iowa State game, Athletic
Director Peelle said that there
would be future announcements
of attractive additions to the Buffalo football schedule.

Trackmen Train

0
1
6

12
4

2

6
5
58

-

Zygotes
FG

1

Helenbrook
Clark
Edward
Hussar
Tomkins

......

:

5

1

5

0

4
4
0

10
12
10
6

19

57

12

Last Sunday, AEPi clinched the
bowling championship by defeating Sigma Alpha Mu, AEPi won
the first of the three game series
by three pins, however, Sam came
back to win the second. AEPi
rallied to sweep the third and
final game to take the series and
championship. Bowling for AEPi
were Dennis Block, Howard Briber, Artie Finker, Marty Rothschild, Ken Seglin, and Bill Zel
man.
In intramural squash, Andy
Feldman (TKE) won the singles
championship for the second consecutive year. Roy Ageloff, came
in second for ABPi. The overall
team standings ran as follows:
Sig Ep, (39 pts.); AEPi, (35 pts;):
and TEK, (33 pts.)

Sig Ep captured the ov
wrestling with 45 points. Foing close behind was Phi
AEPi, and Alpha Sig in

order. The individual chann

were

Heavy Wt.—Neal Szatmary,
191—Don Grayson, Phi Ep
177—Jerome McAmberg, In
167—Dennis Bruschi, Alph:
157—Russ Pettit, Ind.

147—John Cuspino, TKE
137—Joe Melnick, Beta Sig
130—Jim Beidcombe, Ind,

NEIL SZATMARY, Heavyweight Wrestling Champion

T
7

5
4
3
3
19

.....

Gergley

FT

123—Ken Burgs, Sig Ep

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                    <text>STATE
MUD Weekend
Schedule Set
(see

page

Volume

fire)

h

UNIVERSITY

At Tuesday night’s Senate meeting the body unanimously adopted a resolution, strictly condemning acts of
academic dishonesty on this campus. The resolution suggests a minimum penalty for such an act F “with cause”
in the course.

A second part of the resolution
offers suggestions to students
who wish to end academic dishonesty in their classes. It is
felt that “student vigilance against academic dishonesty can be
effective even without revealing
the names of guilty parties to
authorities.” It was therefore resolved that students can protect
themselves and raise the standards of the university by (1) Let
any person guilty of dishonesty
know that he has been observed,
and the act disapproved. (2) Let
the instructor know the nature
and extent of any dishonesty in
his class, and (3) Let the department chairman and/or appropriate dean know of any case in

Greek Weekend 1964
Sing at Conference Theater TonightBall Saturday at Sheridan Motor Inn

Greek Weekend begins tonight with Greek Sing, to be held at 7 p.m. in the
Conference
Theater and at 9:30 p.m. in the Multipurpose Room. The Greek Ball will
which the instructor seems unbe held tomorrow night at the Sheridan Motor Inn from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. The winwilling or unable to curb disners of the Greek Sing and the Queen Contest will be announced at the Ball.
honesty in his class.
Tomorrow one of these girls will be queen of the 1964 Greek Weekend. The
the girls and their
Other suggestions included in Ball marks the end of two weeks of vigorous campaigning inwhich
the resolution include distribution of fact sheet of rules concerning dishonesty at the start
of a course, request department
chairmen to impress their faculty with the fact that students
are deeply concerned with the
problem, and a faculty-student
group be established to consider
the feasibility and practicality of
the student judiciary or a faculty-student committee to take on
the responsibility of hearing any
appeal cases concerning academic

gp

sponsoring organizations participated. The candidates are:
Mary Ansuini, 19, representing
Theta Chi sorority. Mary is a
sophomore majoring in Education. Her campaign, “With a
Song in My Heart” was chosen

fHBh,

because of her musical and

MARY ANSUINI

LINDA CHIPKIN

dishonesty.

The resolution is the work of
the Academic Affairs Committee
and was brought to the floor by
Chairman Gerald Catanzaro. Mr.
Catanzaro said that the passing
of the resolution is the beginning
of the creation of a whole new
academically honest and free atmosphere for learning on this

T^T

the
be held
The Second Annual Spring Arts Festival
program
diversified
a
chairmanship of Betsy Nordstrom, the committee has planned
that should interest student and non-student alike.
week-long program These
Exhibits will constitute an important portion of the
work
of sixteen artists e
consisting
of
the
Exhibit
Canadian
Artists’
will include a
p y
art, a
contemporary
?
schools
of
various
cognized for their work in the
demon
will
Club
which
Photography
Exhibit prepared by members of the student
strate photography as an artistic
Arts and Sciences, Mr. Beckwith
medium; the Student Craft Exis the author o! Black Nativity
and
Mr. Cipolla will conduct a
Shop
Craft
at
the
presented
of
the
Norton
be
hibit
which will
8:30 p.m. April

1^ to^^
&lt;

leather, and

jewelry,
enameling; and a

Student Art Exhibit of selected
paintings, drawings, and sketches presented by the Art Department. All of the exhibits will be
located in Norton Union and
open to the public admission free
Monday through Sunday
A nightly musical will be found
in the Baird Hall Auditorium
April 2-7 at 8:30. Tickets to hear
Cradle Will Rock by Marc Blitzstein and Trouble in Tahiti by
Leonard Bernstein can be obtained at the Baird Ticket Office.

On Tuesday, April 7, Earl Robinson, an outstanding contemporary composer, will lead a student discussion group in the Dorthy M. Haas Lounge at 8:00 p.m.
Mr. Robinson is well known
among American composers for
his ability to bring the warmth,
charm, and strength of folk music
to the concert stage. His works
include Ballad for Americans;
The Lonesome Train and Joe Hill.
This discussion is open to the general public admission free.
Some of the leading musicians
of our campus will participate
in a musical sampler to be presented in the Conference Theater at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday,
April 8. Admission to this Student Participation Day is free.
Langston Hughes, a guest poet,
can be heard in the Conference
Theater on Thursday, April 9, at
3:00 pm. This distinguished poet

1964 N. Y. World’s Fair. The
public is invited, free of charge,
to this lecture sponsored by the
Convocations Committee of the
Student Senate.

Dr. and Mrs, Stout, in conjunc-

tion with the Union Board, will
sponsor a coffee hour at 3:00 p.m.
on Friday, April 10, in the Browsing Library, room 255 Norton
Hall, where the results of the
Browsing Library Contest will be
announced. All are invited to
attend this informal session and
to examine and discuss the manyfaceted entries.
Also on the tenth the Norman
Walker Dance Company can be
seen at 8:00 p.m. at the Circle
Art Theater, 3165 Bailey Avenue.
This group is well known through
its appearances on the "Bell Telephone Hour” and CBS TV’s “Accent as well as the Jacob’s Pillow
Dance Festival. The New York
Herald Tribune has referred to
the group’s work as a “lovely, noble, yet sensuous work, a thing
of sweeping beauty from start to
finish.” Tickets can be obtained
at the Norton Ticket Booth: students—$1.00; public—$1.50.
Saturday, April 11, will see
Chastain, Hendricks, and Bavan
in Clark Gym at 8:30 p.m. The
Music Committee of the Union
Board is sponsoring this famous
vocal jazz group. You can obtain
tickets at the Norton Union Ticket Booth for $1.50 each.
In commemoration of the 50th
Anniversary of the College of

Jubilee Concert at
12, in Kleinhans Music Hall. The
U.B. Chorus and Concert Band
will be featured in this musical
tribute to learning. Norton Ticket Booth has tickets available.
This Second Annual Spring Arts
Festival promises to be a catholic
approach to the fine arts; there
should be something to satisfy
any preference.

The next meeting of the
will be held
Tuesday, April 7, at 7:00
p.m. in the Millard Fillmore, formerly the Multipurpose Room.

students

Joan Baumgartuer, a 20 year
old sophomore Nursing student.
Joan is a member of Chi Omega
sorority. At U.B. Joan ehas an
overall average of 2.0. She has
been a member of the Executive
Council of the School of Nursing
and the notifications committee
for the Collegiate Nursing Conference that will be held here

Linda Chipkin, 20, a senior majoring in Early Childhood Education. She is from Merrick, Long
Island. She was Sigma Phi Epsi-

SYDNEY HEIGAARD

■F

n
j

MERLEENE WATSON

VOTING—
Elections for the Greek Queen
w'll continue today, from 10 a m.
to 2 p.m. in Norton Lobby. Only
members of Sororities and Fraternities may vote.

lon’s Queen of Hearts in 1962,
past corresponding secretary of
Sigma Delta Tau (her sponsoring
group) stunt night chairman, and
a Pan Hellenic Representative.
Sydney Heigaard, representing
Sigma Kappa Phi sorority, is a
19 year old junior in Arts and
Sciences. She is majoring in psychology and plans to make her
career in the field of social psychology. Although active in U.B.
organizations such as the mixer
committee and drama productions, her interests likewise extend to water skiing, modern jazz
music and a good deal of traveling.

Merleen Watson from

Alpha

Gamma Delta sorority is a 20
year old junior from Huntington,

Long Island. Merleene is majoring in sociology and plans to go
into personnel work after gradu-

ation. Her main interests include
sports.

Robert Duncan, Noted Poet

Student Senate

All

danc-

ing interests. Mary has participated in Student Dramatic Productions on campus and also at
Melody Fair. Horseback riding,
swimming, and tennis are also
among Mary’s favorite past-times.

April 11-12.

~f

campus.

Canadian Artists Exhibition Featured
Festival
At Second Annual Springwill Arts April
6-12. Undet

ceramics,

(see page eleven)

NO. 24

JOAN BAUMGARTUER

displaying

1964 Baseball
Preview

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1964

&lt;

intellectually damaged by any
act of academic dishonesty. Many
students are deeply concerned
about the widespread instance of
ac
mic dishonesty that occur
on 1’campus.

YORK AT BUFFALO

SPECTRUM

Senate Passes Resolution
ocus-Academic Honesty

It was felt by the Senate that
the student body is basically an
honest one and as a whole is

OF NEW

are

wel-

come to attend the iheeting.
Robert Finkelstein, the new

Student Association President,
will continue his
policy of allowing all students, not just senators to
speak on the floor of the
Senate.

The agenda for the meeting is as follows: 1) election
of three members-at-large
to thee Executive Committee; 2) election ot the Personnel committee chairman.

To Speak in Baird Today
By BARBARA STRAUSS
Robert Duncan, poet, lecturer
and editor, will present a selection of his works Friday at 4:00
at Baird Hall,
Mr. Duncan was born in Oakland, California in 1919. He began his career as editor of the
Experimental Review, and later
edited the Phoenix. He also
taught at Black Mountain College
and was assistant director of the
Poetry Center at San Francisco
State College. For a number of
years, Mr. Duncan has been considered among the major figures
of the “avant garde” poets of
this era who, with several other
influential men is responsible
for the famous "San Francisco
Renaissance” of the mid 50’s,
Heavenly

City, Earthly City,

Mr. Dunfcan’s most famous poem
was written on a farm in 1946.
It is arranged chronologically,
shaped toward an apothesis written at the end of the year. He

has acknowledged: “I owe much
in the development of poetics to
the work of such moderns as
Wallace Stevens, D.
Lawrence,
the Spender Translation of Rilk’s
Duino Elegies, and Edith Sitwell’s
Street Songs. For my psychological concept I am indebted to
Sigmund Freud, Karl Barth, and
particularly to “Dark Night of
the Soul" by the 16th Century
St. John of the Cross."
Selected Poems brings together
in one volume much of the poetry
upon which Mr. Duncan's reputation has been founded, including
“The Venice Poem” as well as
“The Temple of the Animals"
f6r which he won Poetry's Union
League Prize in 1957.
About his own poetry Robert
Duncan says: “I make poetry as
other men make war or make
love or make states or revolutions: to exercise my faculties at
large.”

�Friday, April 3, 196

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Jubilee Concert to Conclude
Second Spring Arts Festival
By JOE LANG
A rare opportunity for U.B.
students, faculty members, and
the general public to be inspired
with a sense of pride in their
University and to participate in
its spirit of celebration will be
provided by the April 12th Jubilee Concert in Kleinhans Music
Hall. To be performed by the University Mixed Chorus, under its
director Robert S. Beckwith, and
the Concert Band, conducted by
Frank J. Cipolla, this concert will
be both a commenration of the
50th Anniversary of the College
of Arts and Sciences and the
finale of the Second Annual
Spring Arts Festival. In addition,
it will be of particular significance to the Buffalo public since
it will give Buffalo its first real
look at Lukas Foss as a composer.

Mr. Foss’ Psalms, a cantata
which he composed in 1955, will
be performed by the chorus and
two pianists, Carl D. Pinto, instructor in piano at U.B., and
Emmanuel N. Sinderbrand, a

and teaching
music. The work,

graduate student

assistant in
which forms a setting for several
of the biblical Psalms, is a lively,
joyful and yet reflective creation,
very appropriate for the commemoration. Mr. Foss plans to
return to Buffalo from engagements in New York City to help
in the preparation of it.
The program will feature music
by a number of American com
posers, as well as original works
for band. It has been planned
“primarily to be interesting, entertaining, and varied, but will
also emphasize the University
Music Department’s great concern for creative American composition,” says Mr, Beckwith.

The University Mixed Chorus
consists of the Women’s Chorale
and the Men’s Glee Club, The
Chorale, organized in 1962, made
its debut in February with the
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
under the direction of Lukas
Foss in its performance of Debussy’s Sirencs. Later this Spring
the group will visit Colgate University for a joint weekend concert with the Colgate Glee Culb,
The Men’s Glee Club, reorganized in 1962, made its first public
appearance at the Canadian TriUniversity Concert at the University of Toronto in the Fall of
that year. The Lockwood Library
Christmas concert was its second large undertaking, in which
the Glee Club joined with the
Women's Chorale in a very successful performance of Bach’s
Magnificat.
Later that same
Spring, the Glee Club and Chorale
sang at Niagara University and
took part in the Alfred University Festival of Performing Arts.
In the spring Slee Composer’s

Choral concert the two groups
performed Beethoven’s Mass in C
Major as well as works of that
season’s Slee composer, Virgi

Thomson.
This year both groups presented their Lockwood Christmas
concert, which was devoted to
Eastern
and Russian
choral
pieces. Earlier this season, the
Men’s Glee Club also performed
with the Buffalo Philharmonic in
Schoenberg's Survivor from Warsaw. During the Spring vacation,
the choruses went on their first
major tour through New York
State.

An interesting feature of the
University’s choral program is
the important role taken by student choristers in planning the

season’s activities. The officers of
the Chorale include Joyce Gianni,
Ann Anner, Sharon Hagan, and
Katharine Parker. Glee Club officers include John Slattery, James
Grapes, and Lebert Puma.
The program of band music at
the Concert will include Canzona
by Peter Mennin, Folk Song

Suite by Ralph Vaughan-Williams,

Ballad for Band by Morton Gould,
Dance Rhythms by Wallingford
Kiegger, and Washington Grays

March

by

Cludio Grafulla.

The Concert Band is one of
four members of the three-yearold family of University bands.
The Marching Band, called “The
Pride of the East,” presents halftime shows at all home football
games plus one out-of-town game.
Organized at the conclusion of
the football season, the University
Band is composed of students
from the general University population for whom music is an
avocation. The total band enrollment is divided into several small
units, called Pep Bands, which
alternate performing for home
basketball games and other student activities. Each student
participates two or three times in
this capacity during the year.
This year’s band officers are
Curtis, Gary Churchill,
and Barbara Glatz. Under Mr.
Cipolla’s leadership, the Band
has more than doubled its membership during the past three
Ernest

years.

A 50lh Anniversary phonograph
album will be made during the
Jubilee Concert and will be available to the public.
Tickets are available in Baird
and Norton ticket offices as well
as from all members of the Women’s Chorale and Men’s Glee Club.
They are 500 for students and
faculty, $100 for the general
public. A reception will be held
in the Mary Seaton Room of
Kleinhans Music Hall following
the concert, and all are cordially
invited to attend.

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Can you avoid
living in “Jamsvllle”?
It won’t be easy. By 1980 most Americans will live in 40 large metropolitan areas—each with more than a million population. To keep your community from becoming a “Jamsville”
will take people with ideas ideas
that can help cities move more traffic
swiftly, safely and economically.
Someof the ideas come from the men
and women of General Electric who,
in effect, form a “Progress Corps.”
In major cities, they’re helping to
develop balanced transportation
built around rapid rail-transit systems
and they’re providing
advanced equipment to power and
control the trains. They’re also developing a TV monitoring system that
enables a single engineer to control
miles of auto traffic
a jet engine
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jet engine to lift travelers over traffic
via turbocopter at 150 mph.
Traffic is only one of many problems General Electric people are
working on. Their numerous projects, in this country and around the
world, demand a variety of talents:
engineering, finance, marketing, law,
physics and many others.
If you’d like to join the “Progress
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�Friday, April 3, 1964

History ofRadio Astronomy
Traced in MoffeWs Speech
Tuesday, Dr. Alan T. Moffett,

third in the Convocations

'mittee’s

Com-

series

in the Revolution in Astronomy: “Is Einstein
Obsolete?”, spoke on “The Radio
Universe.”
Dr. Moffett traced the history
of Radio Astronomy and illustrated the sources of great radio
emmission.
From far beyond the Milky
Way come radio waves originating at the “point sources” which
dot the radio universe. These
points result from tremendous
explosions which have torn apart
whole galaxies, hurling out immense clouds of energetic elec-

trons. These electron clouds pro-

duce the radio emmissions which
we receive and study, emmissions
so intense that galaxies may be
detected at distances far greater
than any known objects.
Dr. Moffett is a native of Minne
sota. He received his B.A, from
Wesleayn University and his
Ph.D. in Radio Astronomy from
Cal, Tech in 1961. He joined the
staff of Cal Tech’s Owens Valley
Radio Observatory in 1962 after
spending a year in Germany on

a Fulbright Scholarship.
His work in Radio Astronomy
has been mainly concerned with
mapping out the structures of

distant Radio Galaxies.

Observances to Begin Today
Arts Sciences Anniversary
,

From April 3rd through April

12th, the College of Arts and
Sciences will conduct its 50th Anniversary Observance with the
program: “The Tasks of Today
and Tomorrow.”
The ten day observance marks
the half-century of progress of
the College of Arts and Sciences
from 1913-14 ,1963-64. The program divides itself into three
parts: The Social Sciences, April
3rd; The Sciences, April 4th; The
Humanities, April 11th. The Observance will be climaxed April
12th, with the Jubilee Concert,
featuring the U.B. choruses and
■

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

concert band. The alumni chairman for the event will be Wells

E. Knibloe, BA, ’47; LLB, ’50.
The commemoration is especially designed for alumni who desire to renew old acquaintances
with former faculty members as
well as classmates, while at the
same time meeting the newer
members of the faculty and staff.
Alumni are invited to attend any
or all three “alumni” programs
featuring cocktails, dinner, awards and addresses by three
prominent leaders in the
Sciences, Social Sciences, and Humanities.

UB Site for Nursing Conference
UB will welcome to its campus

April 11-12 young women from
throughout the State of New
York. They will be attending the
Third Annual Conference for Collegiate Nursing Students.
The purpose of the Conference
is to unite these students so that
they will have an opportunity
to share ideas and explore a
major area of nursing in depth.
It is hoped that through intelligent discussions and exchange
of ideas, new insights can be
gained and new concepts assimilated. The Conference will also
provide opportunities to discuss
common problems and to compare educational programs. It is

hoped that this will enhance the
participants educational development and will benefit the student body of each university that
is represented.
Miss Hildegarde Peplau, pro
fessor of nursing and chairman

NURSING CONFERENCE

COMMITTEE AT PLANNING SESSION

committees are Miss Lois Kopp,
programming; Ann Fitzsimmons,
housing; Patricia Larson, finance;
Ann Linda Balletti, publicity;
Mary Couchman, talent; Diane
Kampas, notification; Kathy Pietrezak, cultural; Doris Hynsik,
food; Peggy Adams, calendar;
Lois Reeves, transportation; Betty Grove, welcome; Sandra Olin,

of the advanced program in psychiatric nursing at Rutgers University, will be the guest speak
er. Her topic will be “Interpersonal Relationships in Nursing.”
Overall Chairman for the Conference is Miss Garnet Chart; assisting Miss Chart is Miss Muriel
Pinches, Conference Secretary.
Faculty advisor is Miss J. Baird,
assistant professor of medicalsurgical
nursing.
Conference
chairmen and their respective

arrangements.
Incluuded in the activities planned for the Conference are panel
discussions, films, workshops,
work shop discussions and special lectures by guest speakers.

Students will have the opportunity to meet at coffee hours, teas,
luncheons and the banquet dinner.

Schools of Nursing which will
be represented at the Conference
include: D’Youville College, Adelphi College, Keuka College, Columbia University, Cornell University, Hunter College, Skidmore
College, Niagara University, Robert Wesleyan, Hartwick College,
Plattsburg College, University of
Rochester, Wagner College, Syracuse University and Russel Sage
College,

ISBRgni •

PaBB ei IVJWIJFlVJBa
Kenneth E.

Bouiding:

General Theory.

Conflict and Defense: A
TB/3024 $1.95

Crane Brinton: A Decade of Revolution, 17891799. Ulus.
TB/3018 $1.95

Martin Buber: Pointing the Way. Edited with an
Introduction by Maurice S. Friedman.
TB/103 $1.43

Arthur 5. Link: Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era, 1910-1917. Ulus. TB/3023 $1.9S
Perry Miller &amp; Thomas H.

Johnson, Editors: The
Puritans: A Sourcebook of Their Writings.
Volume I, TB/1093 $2.75
Volume II, TB/1094 $2.75

E. Mowry: The Era of Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of Modern America, 19001912. Ulus.
TB/3022 $1.95

George

Rousseau, Kant and Goethe. In*
troduction by Peter Gay.
TB/1092 $1.25

Ernst Cassirer;

Ernst Robert Curtius; European Literature and
the Latin Middle Ages.
TB/2015 $2.93

Sir Lewis Namier: Vanished Supremacies; Essay*
on European History, 1812-1918.
TB/1088 $1.25

Foster Rhea Duli.es; America's Rise to World
TB/3021 $1.95
Power, 1898-1934. Ulus.

Arthur Darby Nock; St. Paul.

Harold U. Faulkner; Politics, Reform and ExpanTB/3020 $1.95
sion, 1890-1900. Ulus.

Penfield Roberts: The Quest for Security, 17151740. Ulus.
TB/3016 $1.95

Leo

Bertrand Russell, et al. The Philosophy of Bertrand Russell. Edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp,
Volume I, TB/1095 $1.95
Volume II, TB/1096 $1.95

Gershoy;

From Despotism to Revolution,
TB/3017 $2.25

1763-1789. Ulus.

Etienne Gilson: Dante and Philosophy.
TB/1089

L.

on Ethics. Introduction

by Lewis W. Beck.

C&lt; Rachel

TB/105 $1.75

Religious Conceptions of the
Slone Age and their influence upon European
thought. Introduction by Henri Frankfort.
TB/106 $1.95
Slut,
Levy;

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$1.75

Goodrich : A Short History of the
TB/3015 $1.75
Chinese People. Ulus.

Carrington

Immanuel Kant: Lectures

TB/104 $1.45

Ferdinand Schevill; Medieval and Renaissance
Florence. Volume I: Medieval Florence. Illut.
TB/1090 $1.75
Volume II: The Coming of Humanism and
the Age of the Medici. Ulus. TB/1091 $1.75
G.

J. Whitrow : The Natural

Philosophy of Time.

TB/563 $1.95

John B. Wolf: France; 1815-1919: The
a
Liberal-Democratic Society. TB/3019 $2.95

Student Book Shop
3400 Main Street

-

Buffalo, N. Y. 14214 Phone: TF 3-7000
-

parking in rear of book shop

University of Buffalo Students Have Made Us Famous

�Friday, April

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

THE

SPOTLIGHT

SPECTRUM

York at Buffalo.
Th« official student newspaper of the Slate University of New
14, N. Y. Published
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
ARNOLD S. MAZUR
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
EDITOR ELECT
MARTIN D. KRIEOEL
__Pat Launer
Business Manager
John Kowal
Managing Editor
Bernard Dickman
Martin Kriegel
Asst. Business Manager
News Editor
Singer
.
Advertising
Mgr
Laurence
Frenkel
Editor
Lawrence
Feature
David Irwin
Layout Editor
Sports Editor
Alan Newman
Lois Hessinger
Marcia Cooper
Circulation Mgr.
Copy Editor
Thomas Haenle, Jr.
Editorial Advisor
.-.William Siemering Financial Advisor
Green, Gary Falk,
Oeneral Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, JudyBromberg,
Charles
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Trudy
Jean
-

-

Stern,
Lotsof, Pet Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien,
Crawford, Jane
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray
Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian
Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng,
Fred Rosenboag, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo, Terry Sweeney, Tom Kenjarski,
Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie
Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Kilpstein, Saralee Rubenstem, Douglas Gelia, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rpbin, Carolyn Cooper, Barry Gutterman,
Susan Weiner.

Photography Staff: Joel Havens, Pamela Reid, Toby Leder.

Second Class,

Postage

Paid at Buffalo,

Subscription $3.00 per year,

New York

circulation 9000.

Represented for national advertising by
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York,

National

Advertising

N. Y.

Editorial

The Challenge ol the Free Press
There is a very basic purpose to a newspaper in a
university such as ours. The newspaper must serve as
the main agent of communication within the university
community. As it is partially supported by the student
body, the newspaper is designed to serve the student
to communicate his activities to his fellow students and
to the community at large. As an officially recognized
periodical on campus, it must also serve to cover the
administration, as they, too, are a part of the academic
community. It must fairly record all events of interest,
and not be used as a tool for any one branch of the community it serves
A free and responsible press is basic to the foundation of a free and democratic society. It must constantly
fight for progress and reform, oppose injustice and corruption, and operate for the benefit of the community.
It is indeed the champion of the public good. The right
course is not often a popular one. The challenge of the
free press is to fight for the right with courage and independence.
The challenge of this freedom to the collegiate editor is great. And the editor’s maintenance of this freedom implies a great responsibility
a responsibility to
the student body, to the university, and to himself. To
the student body he owes his dedication to their ideals,
to their searchings, to the betterment of their future. To
the university, he owes his dedication to upholding its
name, to the stimulation of its growth. To himself, he
owes the dedication to accept the challenge of the freedom. He must have the courage to uphold the right as
he sees it, and the integrity to maintain his personal independence.
The appointment to the editorship of the Spectrum
is indeed a very great honor. I am assuming the position
of editor with a full awareness of the responsibility that
the position entails, as with the assumption comes an
awakening to responsibility, and a deep feeling of humilty as well as pride.
The Spectrum itself is dedicated to the growth of
the university. But, as the university’s students are dedicated to the future, so must be the newspaper. Now is
a time when people are just as conversant measuring
distance in light years as in miles, time in eons as in minutes, and destructive force in megatons of TNT as constructive force in horsepower. The present generation has
an insight into the future such as no previous generation
ever had.
In order to grow with the times, the Spectrum will
no longer limit its scope to campus affairs. Although
campus affairs are of the most immediate importance, a
perspective of events must be maintained.
Coverage will be extended to national and international affairs. Summaries of world events will be presented weekly, along with political commentary in several new columns. The feature staff of the Spectrum
will be expanded to insure in-depth reporting of campus
affairs. I am confident that considerably more than the
basic news and feature requirements of a collegiate newspaper will be supplied.
Opinionated columns and feature stories broaden
the education of the thinking student. It is in this area
that the newspaper achieves its greatest potential. A
free collegiate press serves to add breadth to the student’s scope of learning as well as depth to his understanding. It can become a challenge to his intellect, and
a lively forum for the exchange of ideas. It is in this
manner that the newspaper grows, for that exchange of
thoughts is basic to the growth of every phase of the
academic community.
The goals have been stated; the ideals are set forth..
The true test lies ahead.
MARTIN KR1EGE1
—

—

3, 1964

ON

CIVIL RIGHTS
On Thursday, March 26, bigotry prevailed in Buffalo. On
March 26, the Buffalo Board of
Education demohstrated that it
was ten years behind the times.
On Thursday, March 26, it was
decided by a vote of 6 to 1 that
the newly constructed Woodlawn
Junior High School would be
districted in such a manner as
to promote segregation.
When one realizes this same
week of March 26 witnessed mur
der and racial violence in Jacksonville, Florida and the conclusion of the first stage of the
heated civil rights debate in the
Senate; the decision to continue
racial imbalance in the Buffalo
school system seems incredible.
The most shocking aspect of the
whole affair is that Dr. Lydia
Wright was the only member of
the Board with enough courage
to take a negative position. Anthony J. Nitkowski, a fellow
Board member who was expected
to join with Dr. Wright stated
that he voted “yes” in the “interests of unity and in view of
the superintendent’s statement.”
Does Mr. Nitkowski believe that
his primary concern should be
the maintainment of a public
image of a unified school board
rather than the welfare of the
community and his responsibility
to his own conscience? Superintendent of Schools Dr. Joseph
Manch declared that it would be
“the better part of wisdom” to
adopt the segregated zoning of
the school in order to avert “the
many problems and obstacles”
that the integration of Woodlawn Junior High School would
entail. Henry Steele Commamger,
a famous and respected historian,
described the development of our
nation in these words: “America
was born of revolt, flourished
on dissent, became great through
experimentation.” The decision of
the Buffalo Board of Education
to allow Woodlawn Junior High
School to have a Negro enrollment between 96% and 99% has
not contributed to this image.
The critical situation in the
local schools is poignantly described in this excerpt from the
United States Civil Rights Commission Report on Segregation
in Buffalo Schools:
“Buffalo is at a crossroads. One
path leads to a continuation of

the pattern of extensive school

segregation; the other to less integration, This is most apparent
at the junior high school level.
The opportunity to set up new
junior high school districts, without the interference incident to
changing long established zones,
gives the Board a dramatic opportunity to change the racial
pattern of schooling for three
grades (which) conceivably might
affect the higher grades as well.”

The Buffalo Board of Education
has chosen it’s course, but it is
the course of blindness and cowardice. The racial separatist precedent established on March 26
must not be allowed to endure.
I whole-heartedly endorse any
non-violent responsible actions
that will lead to the abrogation
of the Woodlawn school districting decision. Any student interested in righting this situation
should attend the meeting of
the Civil Rights Committee Mon
day.

Applications for Business
Manager and Assistant Editor, and other editorial po-

sitions for the 1964-65 Buffalonian are now being accepted . Interested students
should send a letter of application containing qualifications, past experience, activities, and a statement of
grade point average to
Mike Donohoe, Editor in
Chief, Box K, Norton Hall

rjCetterd

to

the Editor

Election Responsibility
TO THE EDITOR:

A
press

responsible undergraduate

can be the conscience of the

college community, but moral responsibility must rest in free-

dom: freedom both of the press
and to criticize the press, for
these two freedoms are symbiotic.
Just as freedom to criticize the
press can be perverted to become

censorship, which cannot be allowed to exist since it destroys
a basic tool of the democratic
educational process, the right of

freedom of the press carries with
it its own responsibilities and
obligations.

Here at U.B. there is only one
campuswide newspaper: the Spectrum; consequently the Spectrum
has a monopoly on news reporting, and this is indeed a powerful tool. In view of such a monopoly, it is an integral part of the
editor’s responsibilities to give
adequate news space to points of
view divergent from the paper's
own editorial policy, and above
all, to be as factual and unopinionated as possible.
In the edition of the Spectrum
published on Tuesday, March 24,
editorial endorsement was given
to four of the candidates running
for Student Association officerships in an editorial appearing on
the front and second pages of the

paper. Although I firmly defend
Mr. Mazur’s privilege to decide
what will or will not be pub-

lished, I also feel that he has

partially overlooked his corresponding obligaton to be as un-

opinionated as possible. The endorsements themselves were
beautifully done; there is no
question about that. They show

both

careful consideration and

high journalistic quality. Nevertheless, I feel that they were entirely out of place, and the Spectrum editor’s responsibility would
have been fulfilled had they
merely presented the information
they obtained from each candidate in his or her resume and

interview, and then let the
readers themselves make their
own choice of whom they wanted
to vote for. In addition, I also
take issue with the article entitled Editorially Speaking in
which the Spectrum advised the
voters to cast their ballots for
one list of candidates and to
definitely avoid voting for people
named in another list, but without attempting to justify these
endorsements in any way. This
article is the one editorial in the
paper which indicates poor judge
ment on the part of the editors.
In closing, I would strongly
recommend that the next editor
of the Spectrum, Mr. Kriegel,
consider these remarks carefully,
evaluate the existing editorial
policy of the Spectrum, and then
to develop for himself a policy
which he feels utilizes fully the
privileges which are rightfully
his, but which shows a conscienti
ous regard for the obligations
necessary for a responsible c°l'
lege newspaper.
Peter

K. Scholl

Stu Katz Hailed
Dear Sir:

In the Spectrum’s coverage of
the disputed “track situation” on
March 27, many views were
voiced. As the articles went on,
it came to my mind that an
Editor can attack and answer attacks as part of his job, but what
about someone such as Stu Katz
and the consequences to him. Stu
felt an injustice was being done,
and instead of accepting the
status quo and not questioning
the situation, he allowed his name
to be used in an article concerning this situation., One of those
views had a headline, “Sports
Editor Courageous.” As
the
Sports Editor said then, it is his
duty to write, if and when he
feels he sees an injustice. What
aboqt a person on the inside of
the whole mess? He has more to

suffer than anyone else, if he supports openly such an attack. The
opinions of the coach and the
team members following the
coach will naturally be against
Stu. Some members of the teamfeeling for themselves the shortcomings of the coach in their
events, realized the Administraany
tion was not about to make
change, and remained silent while
the debate ensued. This probabl!
hurt Stu more than anyone elseStu stood also as the guilty part.'I would like to say this, Stuwhether right or wrong, at h’ 35
had the courage of his convjj.
tions to act, and this seems to
a rare quality these days.

Bill Suedmeyer
track
x-country team
and ’63-’64)
(member

�Friday, April 3, 1964

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Fine Arts Council
Presents Exhibits

The Circus
By

BOB MILCH

The Sad Story of
Once the Indian
Once Upon A Time was an
Indian; they called him Once the
Indian for short. The Silent
Woods was his squaw, and he was
always walking all over her. But
that’s neither here nor there.
Old Once was a member of the
Igglethorp Frammis Collection of
Indians, a large federation of
various tribes which, at one time,
had been very powerful organization, but which now did little
except have a weekend picnic
once a year. That and elect a
queen every now and then. But
that’s digressing (it’s also fun,
but back to our story).
At any rate, there came from
the big chiefs (Big Chiefs) in the
central wigwam in a place far
beyond the woods on the scenic
banks at the source of the Hudson a decree almost as ridiculous
as that sentence was convoluted.
It said that all national tribes
(such as Once’s IFC tribe) had to
be out of the forest by 1967.
Well, when this notice came to
the camp, all sorts of things happened. People got excited, for
one thing. Then they got mad,
[or another.
“Who,” Antlered
Deer asked fleetingly, “do they
think they are?”
“Yeah!” said Big Mouth Bass.
“Shut up, Big Mouth,” said
Once the Indian.
“Shut up yourself Once,” retorted Big Mouth Bass. “Do you
think you can walk all over me
like you trod The Silent Woods?”
“Ah,” Your Mother Wears Combat Boots replied, “the both of
you guys give me a pain.”
Of Bee, the chairman of the
protest meeting, tried to call for
order and end the interfaction
fighting. “Now if we can just have
some decorum ...”
“I think baby pink would be a
sweet decorum,” said Tinher
Belle.
“Quorum? We don’t even have

a minion!” said
tarian.

the parliamen

“If I can’t get decorum, how
about, some order?” Of Bee
pleaded.
“Ham on rye here,” said Crushing Cliffs.
“Order 1?' Crushing Cliffs," said
Of Bee.
“To you, of Bee, I give nothing
but orders. Order for yourself if
you’re hungry.”
“I quit," said Of Bee.
“Before you order?” asked
Crushing Cliffs.
“Then double mine,” said Ox

Nostril.
Once the Indian looked on the
disrupted meeting and shook his
head sadly. He knew that if they
didn’t stop fighting amongst
themselves they would never get
anywhere.
Hey You Guys was taking The
Words out of My Mouth by This
Time and heading for the river
to drown him. And there were
several small skirmishes going on
elsewhere as well. There was only
one way Once could stop the
fighting.
“Hey wait, You Guys. I have an

idea!”
With this

earth shaking announcement, All Fighting stopped, as did the others.
“Let’s start a law suit to stop
those guys from taking our turf.”
We Might Even Convince Them
said just that.
“Convince them of what?” Once
asked.
“That we’re not such bad guys
after all and don’t deserve such a
dirty deal.”
You Think We Have a Case
said “Sure We Could is a good
lawyer; he could do it.”
So if anyone should ask you
just what the future of national
tribes in that neck of the forest
is, just tell him to see Sure We
Could. But I doubt anyone will
ask you. Things have been pretty
quiet around the reservation
lately. The only thing you’ll hear
is Once the Indian trodding The
Silent Woods.

In conjunction with the Spring
Arts
the Fine Arts Council is presenting an exhibition

of paintings by Canadian artists,
a photograohy exhibit represent
ative of the University Photography Club, an exhibit of student
work in the Art Dept., and a
display of arts and crafts done
by students in the Craft Shop
of Norton Union. These exhibits
will start Monday and run thru
to the end of the month, with
the exception of the Art Department work which will be displayed during Spring Arts week only.
In recent years, Canadian artists have gained increasing recognition. Paintings by Canadians
have been purchased by museums
in Sao Paolo, Lugane, and Buffalo. Exhibitions of contemporary
Canadian painting have been seen
in Australia, Mexico, Yugoslavia, Poland, France, Germany, the
Netherlands, and the United
States. Major New York galleries
have given one-man shows to
Canadians and New York’s Banfer Gallery recently exhibited
a special show of “New Images
from Canada.”
The artists whose paintings are
shown in this exhibit do not represent a “Canadian School,”
their work is as varied as con
temporary paintings. The paintings are on loan from the Mem
ber’s Gallery of the AlbrightKnox Gallery,
The Photography exhibit will
consist of varied subject matter,
including human and nature
studies. The Craft Shop display
will consist of students’ works
in ceramics, leather craft, pottery,
Easter egg designing, silver cast :
ing jewelry, silk-screen art, and
enameling.

According

to

Mrs.

Lahr, Craft Shop supervisor, the
Cralft Shop’s facilities are available, free of charge, to all in
terested students. The examples
of craft activities will be shown
in the cases on the second floor
of Norton Union the entire month
of April.

MUD Weekend Events Slated
In keeping with the theme of
Spring Weekend, the Union Board
Steering Committee with chairman Bonn Kenderian is working
diligently to truly make the week-

end “A Moment to Remember.”
The events will commence on
April 20 with the beginning of
the week and a half queen campaigns.

Queen campaign skits will be
April 22 and 24

presented on

in the Conference Theater betweenll a.m. and 1 p.m., and
on April 27 the candidates will
model clothes during a fashion
show in the Multi purpose Room.
Student voting will be in the
Dorothy Haas Lounge on April
28 and 29. Again this year there
will be a Mr. Faculty contest.
On April 29 and 30 “La Dolce
Vita," an Italian movie with English sub-titles, will be shown at
12, 3:30, and 7 p.m. The Serendipity Singers and Joe and Eddy
will appear at the Concert Wednesday night, April 29, in Clark
Gymnasium.

Returning after a year’s ab-

sence is the float parade, spon-

sored by the Greek organizations
°n campus. The parade will be
heralded in at 9:30 by sports
leaders, campus leaders,,and the
cheerleaders. The parade itself
will include a hundred-piece
Marching band, a color guard,
members of Angel Flight, and the
floats which are being
fourteen
huilt by Hillel, Alpha Gamma
Delta, Chi Omega, Sigma Delta
hau, and Sigma Kappa Phi Soronties, and Alpha Epsilon Pi, AIPha Sigma Phi, Beta Sigma Rho,
hi Epsilon Pi, Phi Lambda Delta Delta, Phi Psi, Sigma Alpha
u &gt; an d Sigma
Phi Epsilon Fraternities—Alpha Phi Omega is

f

,

Spring Weekend Committee from left to/ right: RHEA FROM, JAN
ZIDOW, SANDY ALTAS, RONN KENDERIAN, CAROLYN OSBORNE,
PENNY JAFFER, and LOIS MENTER. Absent were FRAN MICHAEL
and JUDY MARCHLINGER
building the queen’s float. All

floats will be under the theme

“A Moment to Remember.” The
parade will start at 10:45 on
May 1 at Main and Exchange Sts.
and will proceed northeast on
Main to the campus.
Highlighting the weekend will
be the dance at the Parkway Inn
in Niagara Falls from 9 to 1 a.m.
on Friday evening, May 1. Featured at the dance will be a fifteen-piece band and four night
club acts in addition to an M.C.
At midnight the queen will be
crowned, the queen campaign

winner announced, the float winners presented with trophies, and
Mr. Faculty of 1964 will be honored.

The activities will continue on
Saturday at 2:00 with the annual
Alumni Football game in Rotary

Field,

and

are being

many

more events

scheduled.

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR
For a campus of this size, in
a community of this size, there is
a really deplorable lack of stu-

dent involvement in the local
situation. There is a great deal of
poverty and ignorance in this
community and although these depressed situations may not have
any direct effect on you as students at the University, the subtle
and profound effects of human
suffering and misery affect our
lives deeply.
The Friends Meetings on North
Parade Street and a number of
concerned faculty members, recognizing this fact, have instituted
a week-end work project in the
metropolitan area in the hope of
educating the University Community in the human problems of
poverty and awakening the spirit
of responsibility in those who
believe that equality and opportunity are vital to achieve a productive human life. This group of
faculty members presented a
detailed outline of their projected
activities to the International
Club a week ago and today the
first week-end work project will
Sumner
Methodist
begin at
Church. I have participated in
similar Friends’ work projects
and from my own experience 1
can testify that such an experience is uniquely valuable to all
involved. These work projects are
arranged to run from Friday
through Sunday and involve living in the area where you are
working. They are coeducational
and the time you spend is divided
about evenly between the work
of direct service and the workshop, where discussions and informal talks with your fellow
workers and members of the community enhance your understanding of the situation you are working in and deepen the quality of
your involvement.
Unlike some other organizations involved in this type of
endeavor, the friends have no
desire to proselytize and are without any religious or political bias.

Their concern is solely with the
people involved, how best to increase their understanding and
effectiveness, and have to better
their lives. This is as true - of
those working in the work project
as it is of those for whom the
work projects are instituted. It
is as much a learning and growing
experience as it is an act of
service to your fellow men. This
double-ended approach to the
social problems of our age has
proved very successful in the
past, both in terms of the service
accomplished and in the enriched
experiences of those who have
been involved in the projects,
both directly and indirectly.
The first week-end work pro
ject begins today with members

Student Welcome Day,
Open Houses Listed Apr. 11
About 1,000 high school students and their parents are ex-

to attend the Annual
Welcome Day and the divisional
open houses which will follow on
pected

Saturday, April 12.

The Spring Weekend
float committee would appreciate it if students who
own late model convertibles would offer their automobiles for use in the float
parade. The students who
can cooperate in this manner can drive their cars if
they wish to.
The float parade will be
held on May 1, and students are asked tp please
notify the committee by
April IS, in room 323 Norton.

of the International Club and
other interested faculty and students. There is another project
scheduled for two weeks from
today as the second step toward
a coherent and long range plan
of service and education in the
Buffalo area. Any and all who are
interested in this possibility of
service and growth should contact Dr. Friedenberg in Boom 218,
Acheson Hall, Phone 4001. It is
hoped that these week-end work
projects will not only be of invaluable service to the areas
where they are carried out in
improving living conditions and
lessening social tensions, but will
also be of great value to the
University community as well,
by providing an avenue of expression for mature and responsible
social concern and by bringing
students and faculty together
with members of the community
in an atmosphere of commitment
and mutual respect. There are
many of those who feel that a
University education is too academic and that the Ivory Tower
is cut off from the “real world”
and its Human concerns and problems. If this is so, then what
better way is there to make an
education relevant than by serving other men while you are still
in school in such a way that you
may confront the real world
directly while you are doing it?
In most service projects of this
nature there is a minimal fee involved to help defray the expense
of food, housing, and transportation. The cost of this project in
Buffalo has not yet been set but
it will certainly be no more than
live dollars and probably less.
The members of the faculty who
have instituted this project do
not wish any one to be presented
from participating in the project
merely because he or she does
not have the money for meals,
lodging, and transportation, and
thus has set up a number of
"scholarships” for those who wish
to participate but can not afford
it.
I have taken the liberty of presenting this situation to you this
week because it is my sincere
belief that the Friends’ approach
to the problems of our age is
by far the most Human and fruitful and because I feel that the
student body should be aware of
this possibility. I hope that many
of you will participate in the project two weeks from today and
that these projects will be continued and extended in the weeks
and years to come. If we show
sufficient interest, I am sure that
all this will come about, since
this is also the desire of the
faculty members involved, the
Friends’ Meeting, and I am sure,
the communities to be served.

The program:
8:15-8:45 a.m.—Registration and
refreshments, Dorothy Haas
Lounge, Norton

Hall..

9-9:15 a.m.—Welcome address by
Clifford C. Fumas.
9:15-10:15 a.m.—Faculty Panel,
Dr. Arthur L. Kaiser, director
of admissions and records, Dr.
Allen Kuntz, director, Student
Testing Center; Dr. Bradley
Chapin, Dean, University College; Dr. Richard Siggelkow,
dean of students; and Mr. Arthur Pankow, College Advisor,
Amherst Central School.
10:20-11:30 a.m.—Program area
meetings. Three 20 minute
periods in which students will

visit any three programs.
The schedule of program meetings all in Norton Hall; Arts
and Sciences and Secondary education, Conference Theater;
Business Administration, 231;
education, 233; engineering,
332; pharmacy, 329; non-preference, 344 nursing, 333 pre-professional (law, medicine, dentistry), 355; medical technology
234; occupational therapy, 330;
physical therapy, 337.
Divisional open bouses following the program area meetings
will include; Art Department,
third floor, Foster Hall; Chemistry
Department, Acheson Hall; School
of Engineering, Karr Parker Engineering Building; Medical Technology, Room 136, Capen Hall;
Occupational Therapy, Room 330,
Norton Hall; School of Pharmacy.
Pharmacy School, Health Sciences
Building; Physical Therapy, 264
Winspcar Avenue.
■

�Friday, April 3, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Old, New Senates Gulf Oil Co. Awards Proposed Budgets
Professor Study Grant For 64-65 Year
Exchange Ideas
Dr. Robert J. Connor, associate Needed by Senate
professor of industrial engineerA proposal to require all poli-

tical parties on campus to register with the Activities Committee

was passed by the Student Senate
at its Tuesday evening meeting.
The motion, made by Fran Biletsky, will make it possible for
parties to use the facilities now
available to all other recognized
groups on campus and to use
the name of the university.
Also passed at the meeting was
a resolution concerning Academic
Dishonesty on campus as proposed by Gerald Catanzaro of the
Academic Affairs Committee.
The Senate met with both old
and the newly elected senators
and officers. They reviewed the

work of its committees, and stated their goals for the coming
year.

Reflecting on the many accomplishments of the Senate’s
committees served to enlighten
the new senate as to the poten-

tials and the real purposes of
a student government.

Support
Our

The research will involve voyages on vessels of Gulf’s fleet
and visits to district offices in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and
Port Arthur, Texas. The study
will be aimed at evaluating the
economics and efficiency which
may or may not be derived from
use of a standard inventory
aboard ship.
Dr. Connor joined the University faculty last September, having previously served as assist
tant professor of production
management, Graduate School of
Business, University of Chicago,
1960-63. He was visiting professor
in the School of Business at
U.C.L.A. during the summer of
1961.

Advertisers
Inverted

ing has been awarded a Gulf
Oil Summer Grant for 1964,
Dr. Connor will head a study
to determine “if supplies and inventories carried on the U.S.
Flage Fleet vessels and the requisitioning of these items could
be put on a more standardized
basis.” The study, part of the
Gulf Oil Corporation Aid to Education Program, will begin June
1 and end July 31.

He received the B.E.S. and
D.E. degrees from Johns Hopkins University. He is a member of Tau Beta Pi honorary
and received a National Science
Foundation Fellowship for Summer Study in 1959.

dSoard

Spectrum

PSYCHOLOGY CLUB
opportunity for guests to see
There will be a meeting of the the displays of the major pharThe Finance Committee has not Psychology Club this Friday, Apr. maceutical companies, showing
many of their nonprescription
as yrt received the proposed 1964- 3, at 3:00 p.m. in room 334 of
65 budgets from the following Norton Union. Plans for the trip products.
High school students interested
to Rochester Brain Research Inorganizations.
stitute will be discussed and in pharmacy as a career are inAny organizations that have finalized at this meeting. Anyvited to attend, along with any
not submitted their budgets to one interested in going on this
one else wishing to observe prethe treasurer by April 15 will be trip should plan to be present sent-day methods in the education
at this meeting.
subject to penalty.
of a pharmacist.
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
szo
Budget forms may be picked up
Student Zionist Organization
The University of Buffalo
in the Senate Office room 295 in School of Pharmacy will hold will present another of its stuNorton Union.
its annual Open House on Friday,
dent forums this Sunday, April
If there are any questions April 10, from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 5. The topic will be “Israel’s
Water Line: A Threat to or Harplease direct them to Allen p.m.
binger of Peace?” This subject is
Under the' supervision of ProHorowitz, treasurer and finance
fessor Arthur H. Martin, and
the basis for much controversy
committee chairman. He may contacted in the Senate Office or by Class President Chester Hejna now in the middle-east, and could
prove to be the spark that will
and A1 Gravazzi, the third and
calling TF 2-7085.
set the mid-east afire. The meetfourth year students will conduct
American Chemical Soc., Aning will begin at 7:45 in Norton
tours of the Pharmacy Buildings.
thropology Club, Bisonhead, Busi233. Refreshments will be served.
ness Ad. Student Council, Cap The tours will show how a new
SOCIAL WELFARE CLUB
drug is developed, including the
and Gown, Debate Soc., EngineerThe Social Welfare Club will
ing Student Council, Glee Club, medical chemistry research inhold its next meeting Thursday,
volved, the testing of its theraGraduate Nursing Council, Interpeutic usefulness in pharmacApril 9, at 4:30 p.m. in 334 Nornational Club, Labor and Industton. Mr. Hodges and the U.B.
rial Relations Club, Law School ology laboratories, the developSchool of Social Welfare will
Student Council, Manuscripts, ment of proper dosage forms for
administration will be seen in present a program on Social WelMarching Band, Med Dent Stuthe biopharmaceutics laboratory, fare and Community Organiza
dent Council, New Student Reand finally the actual dispensing tions. All students interested in
view, Photography Club, Seimssmeisters, Social Welfare Club, of the drug to the public in the social work and its relarcd fields
are invited to attend.
pharmacy. There will be ample
Spectrum, Student Speech and
Hearing Soc., U.B. Women’s Chorale, Undergraduate Math Club,
Attention SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Students
Accounting Club, Marketing Club,
La Tertulia Club, Sociology Club,
WHO NEED SOME FINANCIAL HELP
IN order to complete their
Student Zionist Org., Student
EDUCATION THIS YEAR AND WILL THEN COMMENCE WORK.
Dramatic Soc., Political Science
Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC.
Club, A.S.C.E. Organization.
A Non-Profit Educational

Fdn.

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�Friday, April 3, 1964

BERQEN

and PETER RUBIN

This week Sketch traveled all the way to the center lounge in
Norton Union, commonly known as “Fraternity Row." The reason lor
this trip was to interview a brother ol Beta Sigma Alpha
B&amp;B: What do you feel is the
Brother Juniper; Well there was
purpose of joining a fraternity'’
this unfortunate incident in
Brother Juniper; To foster and
which We went' hunting, one
night.
maintain among its sons a
spirit of mutual moral aid and
B&amp;R: What does hunting have to
support . . .
do with it?
Brother Juniper; Well it seems
B&amp;R: Is this what you really
we went hunting for the Mambelieve?
mies with BB guns, and for that
trivial little thing we got put
Brother Juniper; Not really. This
on Social Probation.
is what we were brainwashed
into believing during pledging. B&amp;R: Tsk, Tsk. How do you feel
about the IFC representation
B&amp;R: What do you think you have
on the Senate this year?
gotten out of being a member
Brother Juniper; To say the least,
of a fraternity?
it was often loud. Michael
Showoff was in there plugging
Brother Juniper: Besides the
all the time. Of course I never
things I mentioned above, I
heard him say too much about
have also gotten cirrhosis of
the IFC, but he did say a lot
the liver, a broken leg in an
about everything else. We hope
intramural football game and
this year’s new president, Steve
curvature of the spine from
Salad, will be more concerned
sitting in the lounge all day.
with fraternity matters than
with points of query.
B&amp;R: How many hours do you
B&amp;R: How are things going with
figure you spend in Fraternity
plans for MUD weekend?
Row each day?
Brother Juniper; Not too bad. AlBrother Juniper: I usually drop
though we did lose six pledges
into the lounge after breakfast
when they were buried under
three tons of paper flowers.
in the upstairs cafeteria, and
stay there until eleven or
We’ve already reserved three
twelve. Then I eat lunch at our
motels for our girlfriends and
table and come back to the
we’re getting a huge discount
lounge until four.
from a distillery for buying in
B&amp;R: It sounds like MUD will be
an interesting weekend.
Brother Juniper: I imagine it will
be. That is, if I can get out of
the lounge.

I

VC Registration

I

College students
whose last names begin with the
letters designated below will see
their advisers on the following
days:
April 6 through April 10—F, W, Z
April 13 through April 17—A, B
April 20 through April 24—G, H
April 27 through May 1—P, Q,
R
May 4 through May 8—E, I, N,
University

Presentation at Baird
By VICKI

The nuclear reactor on campus,
part of the Western New Yoitk
Nuclear Research Center will be
closed down temporarily April
17 for conversion to a more powerful pulse-type reactor.
The pulse type reactor allows
for more power, by releasing extremely short pulses of neutrons.
Dr. Ralph Lumb, Director of
the Center, expects the reactor
to be in full operation again by
the middle of June, allowing a
month for the installation of new
equipment and fuel core, and an
additional month for the testing
of the reactor.
The cost of the new fuel core
is $300,000. The United States
Atomic Energy Commission is
expected to pay about one-third
of the cost, Tbe designing and
building of the new unit will
cost an additional $175,000, to
be shared by the Center, and the
Atomics division of American
Machine and Foundry Co.

BUGELSKI

A special concert will be given
at Baird Hall Friday, April 10 at
8:30 p.m„ no admission charge,
featuring a “musico-dramatic”
presentation of Hugo Wolf’s
Italian Song Book. The Performers will be Margot Blum, mezzosoprano,
James Schwabacher.
tenor, James Schevill, poet, and
Alden Gilchrist, pianist.
“In the belief that a new approach to the presentation of
famous song cycles is needed, the
singers, Margot Blum and James

Schwabacher, commissioned the
poet and dramatist, James Schevill, to do a modern translation
of Hugo Wolf’s masterful song
cycle about romantic love, The
Italian Song Book. At the successful premiere of this work on
August 16, 1963, in Hertz Hall
on the University of California
campus. Mr. Schevill read his
translations before Miss Blum and
Mr. Schwabacher sang the songs
in the original German. By this

-

April 10

method, together with the concert staging conceived by Matthew Famiggio of the San Francisco Opera Company, the performers give the audience a true
idea of the relationship between
text and music . . a relationship almost always ignored in the
usual song recital. The precedence for .this dramatic presentation fs Hugo Wolf himself who
liked to read the texts of his
songs out loud before performing
them.”

Wolf was born in Austria in
1860, and died in Vienna in 1903.
He is known mainly for his writing of the Med, or German artsong, although he did compose a
work for small orchestra and
also for string quartet, the
ItaMen Serenade, and miscellaneous works for string quartet and
also for the piano.
Mr. Schwabacher, the tenor, recently gave an excellent performance here in Buffalo of the role
of the Evangelist in the St. John
Passion of Bach.

OPEN ALL YEAR
Ivia with

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1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Vi Mila North of SHERIDAN DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
(Adjacent The Boulevard Mall Plain)
Open Friday and Saturday until 1:00
Operated by tha JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

femorsff

O, T, U, V, W, X, Y
Students will make an appointment with the Receptionist in
Diefendorf 114.

I

BLAZERS

Made to Order With Your

School Crest

|

pose Room?

Brother Juniper: I guess it might
be what they call group identification, the herd instinct or
something like that.
B&amp;R: Don’t you feel that with all
this group identification you
tend to lose your individualism?
Brother Juniper: Of course not.
Just because I dress my brothers, eat with my brothers, sleep
with my brothers and talk like
my brothers doesn’t mean that
I’ve lost my individuality.
B&amp;R: During pledging, what are
some of the more typical things
that are done?
Brother Juniper; Stealing manhole covers and spending the
right in jail for one thing. Then
there are always the kidnapping attempts by the pledges
which usually end up in us
calling out the goon squad and
riding around after the pledges
on the sidewalk. Of course,
there are always little stunts
like blindfolding a pledge and
taking his clothes off. Then we
take (he blindfold off so he
can see the iguana we put on
his chest.
B&amp;R: Why is it that we never see
any of your pledges with their
dinks on?

quantity.

Buttons

EWITHAN’S TAILOR
10 Summer St.
Tel: 886-1855
Repairing

j

B&amp;R: What is it that brings you
to Fraternity Row each day for
such extended periods of tame?
Brother Juniper: Once I was in
the infirmary for a week and I
missed out on twelve pinnings,
thirteen depdnnings and our
whole pledge class depledging.
B&amp;R: Why is it necessary to have
your own table in the No-Pur-

Hugo Wolf- Italian Song Book

Nuclear Reactor
Closed in April
Increase Power

SKETCH
BY DAVID

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

SHOP|

Place your orders now for class rings.
April 25th is the lost day we will

Reweaving

accept orders for graduation delivery.

SUMMER
WORK
WE NEED 10 MEN IN THE BUFFALO AREA
Start training now to be qualified for a full time Summer position with a national organization. Work part time
while in School and earn Scholarships Awarded to those
who qualify. First 10 men accepted will earn over $100 per
week this Summer. Car necessary.

Call Mr. Hines at TX 6-2520 or TF 4-1896
between 5-6 p.m.

Sample on display at our jewelry counter.

�JU (jatttry
By

RAYMOND CRAWFORD

The greatest jazz composer, arranger and pianist of our time
has arrived in Buffalo. The man
is Thelonious Monk and he has
come in all of his idiosyncratic
glory. Thelonious Monk is every-

thing that the neophyte to jazz
would expect. He is weird, neurotic, unpredictable, sarcastic,
hip, aloof, and finally a musical
genius. In other words Monk is
‘‘the jazz man.”
Monk is finally beginning to
get the recognition he deserves.
His music was not accepted until about ten years ago by the
jazz fan. One reason is that
pianists were unable to be influenced by his music because
they could not copy his style and

C^radie’ and
By JOE LANG

Two musicals began at Baird

Hall Thursday night, April 2nd,
will continue through Sunday, the 5th. They are Cradle
Will Rock by Marc Blitzstein and
Trouble in Tahiti by Leonard
Bernstein. In the way of musicals,
these are two of the most thoughtprovoking as well as musically
interesting ever to be performed
and

at U.B.

*

therefore Monk’s music took time
to direct the sounds of the other
jazz instruments.
Monk’s music is a direct result of his hands. He has a very
large span and he does not spread
them in the conventional manner—he spreads they in a flat
plane instead of the arched way
of making chords. Thus Monk hits
other notes while making a certain* chord. While accustoming
his ear to that sound Monk began to do things that some people had never heard. Thus with
Monk's technical characteristic
and his uncompromising attitude,
Monk was rejected. But we see
at least Monk knew that he could
not chage his music to suit the
"squares” and soon the fellows
on “52nd street” were understanding. Since then it has been
an upward climb to fame and
almost immortality.
Monday night Monk blew in
“round about midnight,” almost
2V4 hours late. They say he went
to get a sandwich and after that
he went drinking with a few
friends. So Mank made it to the
Royal Arms with little worry as
to his tardiness and went up
stage with his bassist Butch Warren, Ben Riley the drummer and
Charlie Rouse, the tenor saxophonist, who had been with him
for a long time. These three musicians seemed to be thoroughly
unconcerned with his antics on
stage. Monk, though seemingly
unable to play, was at his best.
He played many times the same
tune twice in a set, but each performance was a gem. After stating the theme and possibly accompanying one chorus for Charlie Rouse, Mr. T got up from the
piano to listen, and do his little
dance. This of course brought
forth laughter from the “dudes”
who came to have a drink and
see this person who causes all
the fuss from the people in jazz.
So there was constant pleading
for silence while Monk was there.
Monk was oblivious to it all. He
got at all times generous applause from the crowd but one
wonders if they did At only because it was expected. One happy
note was that they did recognize
“Round About Midnight” one of
the most beautiful jazz melodies
ever written. Monk took his last
number, made his first gesture
to the crowd, and left, back stage.
Immediately Monk walked down
the street to get another sand-

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-

Friday, April 3, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

AT THE
Stop Sorvico Center

Cradle Will Rock is being performed as a special tribute to
the late Marc Blitzstein. It is one
of his most controversial and
satirical operas. The production
at U.B, will be the first proper,
complete performance ever given.
The Cradle is scheduled to be
given at some later date by
Leonard Bernstein in N.Y.C.

wich and came back fifteen
minutes late, asking "where’s the
cats”, meaning his players.
Once again on stage Monk asked for an amazing drink, cognac
and coke, and proceeded to play
“Five Spot Blues”, Till the end
Monk was into something. Charlie Rouse with his unpretentious
stance unlike other loud saxophonists, was smooth and talkative, blowing with the experience
of years, one among the few
who could, under the obvious
duress of Monk’s music play without allowing Monk to cramp his.
They are totally compatible and
Monk’s rythem section is a gas,
Warren plays a bass like trumpet,
full of ideas and sounds, and Ben
Riley is one of the better drummers in the business who can so
wonderfully accent the tunes of
Thelonious Monk,

Rock could

very

Cradle Will
well be given the alternate title
“Prostitution.” For, indeed, it
deals with prostitution of all
American
phases of modern
society—prostitution of the body,
the soul, and the mind, of art
and education, of labor, medicine,
and business. It particularly butts
the young rebels and “liberals”
of our present-day society. Hence,
the musical should be especially
interesting to young people.

Originally, an attempt had been
made to produce the Cradle Will

Rock under the Federal Theatres
Project of the W.P.A. program.
However, because of its satirical
and controversial nature, production was prohibited by W.P.A.
Loyal patrons of the musical
tried all sorts of devious, evasive
measures to procure a theatre and
piano in order to produce tie
Cradle, and finally, after they
marched up Broadway in a
grandiose, theatrical style, they
were able to present it.
This production was, however,
far from what Orson Wells, its
director, had intended it to be.

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1962 Yolande Bavan replaced

replacing David Lambert with Ron
Chastain and again the group promises to be even better.

,

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Tickets are $1.00 for students
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.

-

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

sicals.

group has sought to better itself by

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William Cox is conductor of the
singers and orchestra, and Henry
Wicke, Jr. has staged the mu-

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IN
8:30

Trouble in Tahiti is a satire on
suburban life. Its
husband-wife sequence, which shows us the husband
about his daily business in the
world of secondary relationships
and the wife about hers, and
then their meeting at home after
the busy activity. Is two main
characers are Sam, the husband,
played by Clifford Chapman, and
Dinah, the wife, played by Patricia Yanello. There is a chorus
Jones,
consisting of Richard
Elaine Braun, and Donald Cono-

contemporary
plot presents a

Ann Ross and the group was ac-

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Donald
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Daily, Douglas Brown; Doctor
Specialist, Donald Parsons; Junior
mister, Richard Jones; Sister Mister, Barbara Damashek. It must
be stressed that there are really
no “main” characters in the musical. There are many stereotype
personalities, all of whom are

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Some of the major characters
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much that his music is perpetuated. He is the contemporary
musician, uncompromising, whose
music is full of passion, deep
thought and finally humor. As
Martin Williams, one of the first
men to understand Monk, once
said, “He makes uncompromising
emotional demands on a listener
on occasion, but he has the talent
to involve us in his playing so
that we seem to be working
things out together.” That is
Thelonious Sphere Monk, a giant
among men. .

MiIiIaII

It was performed from a bare
stage, with only its creator, Marc
Blitzstein, seated at a piano
blaring music out to cast members who were seated in the
audience. When each actor received his cue, he stoop up and
performed his part. This potentially great musical drama was,
then, thus corrupted only because of the actors’ sense of
equity and refusal to disobey the

CHASTAIN, HENDRICKS

In short Monk is an artist, a
complete man. He directs toward
new things with compositions and
influences other musicans so

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�Friday, April 3, 1964

Schneider-Sapp Featured
Give Duo Recital in Baird

sanwasiwiMd
By LEON LEWIS

Aside from Dr. Strangelove and

some interesting revivals at the
North Park, there isn’t very much
worth talking about on the
cinema scene at the moment.
Fred Keller has brought an engaging production of Wm. Shakespeare’s
Dream

Midsummer

A

Night's

to the Circle Art, but in-

spite of the fine language spoken
by some of the Old Vic players
(headed by Richard Burton,) the
idea of watching puppets instead
of people acting out the play is
rather disconcerting for me.
Otherwise, the movie is not a
bad one, although the small but
important tragic element in the
play is lost entirely.

So, since Capt. Newman is an
incompetent travesty, To Bed or
Not to Bed a hopeless bore inspite of its provocative title, and
It's Mad . Mad World relatively
inaccesible due to price and location, you may be tempted to see
what all that fuss about Cleopatra is about now that the “greatest attraction of all time” has
been condensed into a relatively
.

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

.

brief three hour venture offered
for a reasonable price at the Elmwood. My advice is that you reconsider, if this is your inclination. Or, leave the movie theatre
when Rex Harrison dies. He, as
Ceasar, is the only interesting
part of the movie. Liz Taylor,
moderately competent actress
that she is, cannot cope with a
series of completely ridiculous
lines and postures. She is pretty
enough to look at for three hours,
but the truly rotten direction and
garish sets and costumes which
surround ber do a great deal to
“wither her infinite variety.”
Richard Burton, I understand, has
an interesting way of reacting
when he knows he has been unlucky enough to have been caught
in a turkey. He just doesn’t give
a damn. As one of the “pillars of
the ancient world,” he hardly
ever rises even to the height of a
small pile.

Harrison, on the other hand,
is the genuine article. No one
knows who wrote what in this
curious melange, but Harrison’s
lines, cribbed rather effectively
from Plutarch and Shakespeare,
are worth listening to, and he
delivers them with such sophistication and power that one
actually cares what happens to
him. As I said, the picture dies
with him (Caesar’s assasination).
The personal magnitude which he

generates vanishes with his departure and the movie just gets
duller and duller as it wends it
weary way along to the traditional conclusion of the story.
The most staggering thing about
this epic fiasco is that it is so
dull. One would think that for the
amount of time and money spent,
the producers would have been
able to capture, at least, some
semblance of the epic granduer
of this powerful story about
genvinely dynamic people. The
fact that they have failed so
badly indicates once again that
money and effort do not equal
talent and taste. A movie like
Les Quartre Cents Coups (by
Francois Truffaut) which the Norton Union Film Series Board
showed yesterday cost about one
hundreth of the price and is immeasureably better. What a fine
spectacle this might have been if
a man like Truffaut had got his
hands on all of that capital and
talent - but he probably wouldn’t
have been interested in such an
extravagant undertaking.
The closing lines of the poem
Sad Captains” by Thom
Gunn, the young British poet,
seem to epitomize the extent of
the failure. Whereas Antony,
Caesar and Cleopatra ought to
dominate the action and bestride
one’s imagination like the venerable Colossus they are compared
to, we see them, instead:

in a violin, or cello sonata. This
concert will be unusual due to
that fact and should be a fine
one, judging from Mr. Schneider’s
rare talent and Mrs. Sapp’s excellent ability in chamber music.

Mrs. Sapp, wife of Allen D.
Sapp, chairman of the music department, has appeared many

times since her arrival in Buffalo

two and a half years ago. She
has performed with the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra several

times under different conductors,
most recently under Lukas Foss
in a composition of Mr. Sapp. She
has performed in countless Baird
Hall programs, in solo piano
work, concerti, and most often in
chamber music. She has given

excellent programs with several
different musicians, sometimes on
relatively short notice, but always
extremely well-prepared and with
fine ensemble.

Prior to spring recess, the Debate Society elected its new officers for 1964-65. Chosen were
Hedda Beckman, president; Diane
Hayes, vice-president; Ruth Shaand Richard
piro, secretary;
Nemiroff, treasurer.
The members of the Society
also wish to express their thanks
to the outgoing officers—Jerald
Catanzaro, president; Linda Leventhal, vice president; Karen
Morris, secretary; and Russell
Goldberg, treasurer—for the successful debate program of this
past year. Sincerest congratulations to our past vice-president
Miss Leventhal, on her election
to the secretariat of the Student
-

Senate.

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By VICKI BUGELSKI
Mischa Schneider, cellist, and
Norma Bertolami Sapp, pianist,
will give a duo recital next
Thursday, April 9, at 8:30 p,m.
in Baird Hall. Admission is free
and all faculty and students are
invited to attend.
Mr. Schneider is the cellist
with the Budapest Quartet, now
in residence here. He has been
coaching student chamber groups,
mainly string quartets and string
trios. Last week, he participated
in the Budapest’s String Institute
for gifted high school performers.
Of course, he is the most wellknown in his role as cellist with
the quartet, performing in the
many different chamber music
programs now possible because
the quartet is in residence,
Because Budapest performers
seldom appear outside of the
quartet, one almost does not
think of the “individual” player

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Officers Elected
1964-65 Season

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

CjreeL
Alpha Phi Omega's pledge class
carried out their service project
Easter Sunday at Childrens Hospital. Easter baskets were distributed to the children who happily received them. Tomorrow
the brothers will journey to Rochester for a sectional conference

which will conclude its activities
on Sunday evening. The brothers
are eagerly awaiting the opportunity for fun and fellowship
that unites the brothers of this
great organization of college
men.

Alpha Sigma Phi announces a

cocktail party will be
day night before the
This function will be
to 9:30 at the Hotel

held Satur
I.F.C. Ball.
from 8:00
Markeen.

The Brothers of Gamma Phi
a party at
brother Ron Ross’s apartment on
Sat. at 8:00 prior to the Greek
fraternity will hold

ru

Quartet Directs
String Institute

PANHELLENIC NEWS

Panhellenic
Council
wishes
good luck to all the Greek Weekend Queen candidates.
Sigma Kappa Phi would like

to congratulate Genny Clapp on

being elected cheerleading captain.
The pledges of Sigma Kappa
Phi will hold a shoeshine on
April 10 in Norton,
Theta Chi Sorority pledge class
are knitting bandages for lepers
in Georgia as ther charity pledge
project.
Sigma Delta Tao would like to
congratulate the officers of their
spring pledge class and hope that
its president, Geri Gruson will
help make it a successful pledge
period.
Alpha Gamma Delta wishes to
thank-Pi Lambda Tau for a very
enjoyable social last Monday evening.

High School string players attended the String Player’s Institute at the University Monday
through Friday, studying under
the direction of the Budapest

String Quartet.
Offered as a public service to
young string players, the Institute was sponsored by the Department of Music at the University. Registration fees and the
expenses of the meals and hous-

ing were paid for by the Institute.
Enrollment was open to students in grades nine through
twelve, music directors, string

teachers, and interested persons.
Other features of the program
included a student reception at
4 p.m. on Tuesday in the Baird
Orchestra Rehearsal Hall, and a
banquet honoring the participants
at 6 p.m. in Norton Hall, and the
“finale” in Baird Hall from 7
to 10 p.m. on Thursday.

Ball.

Phi Kappa P$i will have a
cocktail pprty at Brother Peter
Greenlaw’s house this coming
Saturday night preceeding the
Greek Ball. The Brothers would
like to wish all of the Queen candidates the best of luck.

Alpha Phi Delta would like to
congratulate the following brothers upon election to their respective posts:
Chuck Giglio,
sergeant at arms; Ray Nattrass,
senior IFC representative; Sam
Muffoletto, chaplain; and Bob

Vacca, historian.

Tomorrow night the brothers
will hold their Golden Anniversary Dinner Dance, in celebration
of the founding of their fraternity.

Theta Chi wishes to congratulate their new officers and wish
them the best in the coming year.

President,

Lawrence

Schulz;

vice-president, Michael Boumansour; secretary, Henry Willett;
marshall, Peter Collins; chaplain,
Glenn Bruno; historian, Thomas
Hosie; librarian, Gary Churchill;
first guard, Kenneth Swartz; second guard, Lawrence Scarborough.

We would also like to congratulate the pledge class on the fine
effort they have shown thus far.

Hall Scholarship Committees
Make Future Tutorial Plans
By

now printed by

Parlneri
-y4/&gt;yoll

&amp;

’

~3nc

ELLEN MURPHY

The Scholarship Committees of
Tower Hall and the four upperclass women’s residence halls
have been working on a program which will provide a free
tutorial service for resident students.
The proposed tutorial system
is designed to give capable and
interested students the opportunity to help others while also
helping themselves. It is felt that
such a program will be of special
value to education majors, although the program is open to
students in all fields of study.
A second purpose of this program is to help resident students
who are having difficulty in un-

gained by the tutored student. In
addition, this is an excellent opportunity for review prior to final
examinations.
Students interested in serving
as tutors of any subject are asked
to contact their resident advisor
or Tom Folino, at 831-3689, for
application forms. After a substantial number of tutors have
indicated their interest, students
desiring their help will be given
the opportunity of receiving it
from fellow students.

HILLEL NEWS

Sabbath Service and
Oneg Shabbat

The B’nai BTith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath and
Passover Service this evening at
7:45 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak
on: “Theological Implications of
the Exodus.” An Oneg Shabbat
will follow.

Delicatessen Supper Sunday

The second meeting in a series
of programs on: “The World of
Yiddish Culture” will be held
this Sunday evening at 5:30 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Rabbi Nathan
Gaynor will give a talk on; “Yiddish Humor.” Reservations are
necessary for the suppe.'.
"Live and Learn" Thursday
Another discussion hour in the
“Live and Learn” series is planned for Thursday, April 9. It
will be held at 3:00 p.m. in the
Hillel House. Mrs. Norman Fertig coordinates the series. Refreshments will be served.
GAMMA DELTA

The next business meeting of
Alpha Delta will be on April 8th

at 6:30
Commuters are invited to join us in the cafeteria
for 5:30 dinner. Then we will
proceed to room 344 Norton. Rev.
Cattau will lead the discussion.
We will also discuss the Folk Con

cert which the

group is sponsor

ing for the Stereotypes.
WESLEY FOUNDATION

We will continue the series on
religions of the world this Sun
day with a study of the teach
ings of Christian Scientists. We
welcome our guest lecturer, Mr.
Robert Gangwish.
Supper begins at 5:00 and the
program follows.
NEWMAN CLUB

There will be a social and taf
fy pull Sat., April 4 from 8:00
to 11:00 at Newman Hall. 50c for
non-members. No admission for
members.
Nominations of club officers for
next year are rapidly approach
ing. Those interested members
should begin planning for the
office they would like to run for,
Tues. at 3:00 p.m. in Norton
262 there will be a discussion
on Judaism.

The John Harman Jazz
Trio, well received in the
past three weeks, will once
again be on campus in the
Rathskeller, Wednesday,
April 8, from 2 to 5 P.M.

derstanding a particular subject.
By utilizing the help offered by
fellow students, it is felt a deeper
knowledge of the course may be

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The SPECTRUM

Friday, April 3, 1964

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SPECTRUM

FACE ELEVEN

Baseball Preview

March 20. However, in the hearts
of every true-blooded American
sports fan, spring does not receive official status until the
man in blue yells ‘Play Ball!’ For
those who follow the University
of Buffalo baseball Bulls, the
incipience of Spring occurs April
14 when UB meets traditional
rival Canisius.
Last season Buffalo enjoyed
one of its finest campaigns in
many years, finishing the season

Lettermen Ed Wianecki, Bob Kohansky, Bill Zelman, and Mike
Whelan bolster a strong staff.
Last season a team weakness
was the catching slot. Coach

Peelle is confident that Bill Bilowus, Marty Rothchild, or Tom
Oatmeyer will ably fill the void
behind the tools of ignorance.
Another former sore spot, the
first base position, should be
come a team asset with return
of slick hitting Dale DeBello to
the lineup.
Earl Tompkins, the team sparkplug, who performed so admirably as a sophomore last year,
is returning to the keystone sack.
Moving over to shortstop from
3rd base is Steve Wasula. Steve,
who hit .324 during the past
campaign will have to enjoy an
even finer season if he is to fill
the gap left by Jim Plezia who
connected for a sizzling .405. Basketballer Billy Barto appears set

to leave his mark in the hot
corner.

The Bulls’ outfield is a veritable murderer’s row. Boasting
two .379 hitters in Gerry Montemeranno and Dan Kraft, and the
squad slugger, John Stofa, of UB
football fame, the flychasers are
a very potent trio.
Fire-Bailer

LARRY GERGLEY

Adding

with a 15-3 mark. Highlighting
record were the second place
honors that the Bulls captured in
the Atlantic Coast NCAA Region-

Championships at Hampton,
Virginia,
al

Having lost only one starter,
shortstop Jim Plezia, from last
year’s proficient diamondmen, the

-

the

aforementioned

I

Bulls appear to have unlimited

potentialities on paper. There is
that ever present reminder however that games are won on the
field and not on the roster. Coach

Jim Peelle, who feels that the
squad has great depth, is openly
optimistic about his team. It is
his belief that UB may very well
field its finest team ever.
The key to the success of any
club is its pitching, and Buffalo
has a fine crop of hurlers this
season. Bellewether of the mound
crew is senior Larry Gergley.
Gergley, who throws a lightning
like fastball, was a co-captain
of the football team this year.

Star Southpaw BOB KOHANSKY

depth to the Bulls’ attack are
pitchers Bill Schaefer, Gary Han-

Albert “Al" DeLuea, former
head football coach at St. Vincent’s College, Latrobo, Pa., the
■principal speaker at the annual
Block “B” Athletic Banquet of
the University which held on
Wednesday, at 7:00 p.m., in the
Norton Union. Bob Powell, jovial
sportswriter
of
the
Buffalo
Courier-Express, Master of Ceremonies for the affair.
DeLuea, a prominent traveler
on the Eastern banquet circuit,
has been spotlighted at the Maxwell Dinner in Philadelphia, the
Tidewater Banquet in Norfolk,

Standing (L. to R.)—Bob Powell, sportswriter for Buffalo Couric
Express; Jim Peelle, UB Director of Athletics; Dr. Anthony S. Gugir
Chairman of Faculty Committee on Athletics; Dick Offenhamer, he&lt;
football coach; Bill Maier; Joe Marein, Sports Information Direct®
Bill Everett, Alumni Director; Dr. Len Serfustini, head basketb.

the Post-Gazette All Scholastic
Banquet in. Pittsburgh, and the
Penn Slate Quarterback Club.

coach.

Kneeling (L. to R.) —Dick Johnston, sportswriter for Buffalo Evenii
News; Ted Siekmann, Ass't director of UB Foundation; Jack Sharp

A graduate of Duquesne University, where he was at one

UB Ticket

time head football coach, DeLuea coached football at St. Vincent’s for 15 years, including the
the 1949 season when the team
was unbeaten, united, and winner
in the Tangerine Bowl at Orlando,
Florida. De Luca, a World War II
veteran of the U.S. Navy, is at
present an associate professor of
education and director of student teachers at St, Vincent’s.

By ALLAN SCHOLOM and

and infielders Bill Ritter and
Jim Fell. Peelle expresses the potential of the Buffalo outfit when
he says, “even the managerial
spot has been strengthened with
the addition of experienced Jon
Edelman to the team.”

championship beating the Zygotes
(Physical Education Majors) 58 to
57 in overtime. High scorers for
AEPi were Ron Salmonson and
Steve Walsh, with Barry Cohen
and Bob Kohansky handling the
rebounding. Billy Zelman, Alan
Fields, Dennis Block and Jerry
Feinstein also played outstanding
games. Earl Tompkins, Larry
Gergley, and Bob Edwards paced
the Ziygotes.

Upwards of 400 people UB
dinner which serves as the medium of presenting varsity letters
and freshman numerals to the
athletes representing the university in ten sports. Most Valuable
Player trophies were present for
each sport, along with a number
of special award. Highlight of the
evening is the Dom Grossi Award
to the UB “Athlete of the Year.”
This award perpetuates the memory of the great UB athlete who
was killed in action on Iwo Jima.

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President Clifford C. Furnas
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Streng, Chaplain of the UB Newman Club.

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Friday, April 3, 1964

giPStgi'saijjjM i)!p®iii iiri)
SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALAN NEWMAN

Baseball Previei

Reds Will Steal Flag
Spring has arrived (although it is impossible to tell
start of a
ew baseball season. With less than a month remaining
n the Grapefruit and Cactus League schedules it is now
ime for this columnist’s “fearless forecasts” on the outome of the 1964 baseball season. I will begin this week
..’ith a preview of the senior circuit and conclude next
isue with my predictions for the American League.
The National League flag will be up for grabs and
t could very easily go to any one of five or six clubs,
.coking the best so far is Cincinnati, a team whose appeite was whetted in 1961 and this year might just go all
he way. The Redlegs boast fine defense, speed, power,
nd pitching. Right down th complete lineup there is
trength. A ball club could not ask for a better left fieldr in super-star Frankie Robinson and Vada Pinson in
enter is blossoming into one of the greats of the game,
lacking up this one-two punch is swifty Leo Cardenas at
hortstop and “Rookie of the Year” Pete Rose at second
)ase. Bod Edwards is improving each year behind the
date, and Bob Skinner will add power to the batting
ineup. As for the pitching the Reds will have Jim Maoney who is one of the finest pitchers and strikeout
rtists in the game today. Backing up Maloney is Jim
J’Toole, Bob Purkey, and Joey Jay. If Jay and Purkey
remain in top form the Ohioans will be hard to stop.
Second place honors must go to Los Angeles. Last
ear the Dodgers proved unequivocally the value of
dtching and defense
pitching is the best defense when
,i club wins the pennant scoring 160 less runs than its
leanest contender (Cards). The Bums have the best pitchng in the Majors with Koufax, Podres, Drysdale, and
’erronski. They have hitting and speed in Wills, Gilliam,
ind the Davis Boys, but lack the home run punch. If
'’rank Howard doesn’t play, the flag will not remain in
.os Angeles.
St. Louis most probably has the finest batting lineup
n baseball with Groat, White, Boyer, Javier, and Flood.
Musial’s retirement will undoubtedly hurt the Redbirds,
but how much remains to be seen. The Cardinal’s future
•ests in the hands of the hurlers and the addition of
Roger Craig to the pitching staff of Broglio, Burdette,
Simmons, Gibson and Sadecki will be of great benefit to
he team.
San Francisco cannot be counted out of the pennant
■ace by any means. McCovey will have another great
year and old reliable himself, Willie Mays, can always
be depended on to turn in a tremendous performance.
The Giants have power and pitching but lack speed. Jim
Davenport is one of the finest fielding third sackers in
baseball, and Cepeda does an adequate job at first base
but at times is lukewarm. The pitching is strong with
:i mound staff lead by Marichal, Sanford, O’Dell, Bolin
and Shaw.
Philadelphia will be in the thick of the fight after a
fine 1953 performance. The Phillies have an excellent
-ight fielder in Johnny Callison and a better than average
hitting club. Tony Taylor will handle second base chores
and Bobby Wine and Roy Sievers will complete a fine
double play combination. Jim Running, Cal McLish, Ray
Culp, and Art Mahaffey, will be the pitchers that will
put the Phillies in the first division.
Ageless Warren Spahn will win twenty for Milwaukee this year but the competition will be too keen
for the Braves to go any higher than sixth place. Hank
Aaron, Felipe Alou, and Ed Bailey will provide the hitting punch. The Braves look too unbalanced this year
to make any serious threat. Ed Mathews will turn in another poor season.
This will be a rebuilding year for Chicago, a young
club that has a fine future ahead. Lou Brock is a good
right fielder and Ron Santo will have a productive year
at third. Mediocre pitching and most important the death
of Ken Hubbs will be a deterrent to the Cub’s attack.
Houston is still a young inexperienced team and at
this point cannot be considered a serious contender. The
Colt ,45’s do have, however, an adeouate pitching staff
led bv Hal Woodeshick and will finish in eighth plaice.
Pittsburgh was the big disappointment in the National League last year as they will again be this year.
The Pirates will finish ninth.
A new stadium and even a world’s fair cannot stop
the amazing Mets from a dead last finish. Stengel’s
snuad will continue to provide the fans with thrills and
as a result the New Yorkers will outdraw the Yanks.
y the weather), and with spring comes the

—

Finkelstein And
Seglin Win Bowling
Ten men represented the University of Buffalo in the Utica
bowling tournament March 21,
1964. They did extremely well,
being victorious in two events.
The team comprized of Finkelstein, Seglin, Zelman, Verdi, and
Brannen won 2nd place, losing
1st place in the team event to
Canisius by only 33 pins. Sandy
Finkelstein and Ken Seglin won

SANDY FINKELSTEIN

the doubles event with a combined score of 1248. Don Burnett
won the singles event with a very
creditable 644. Braun, Tisdale,
Maringer, and Flavin did not find
the lanes to their liking but gave
creditable performances nevertheless. Trophies were awarded to
all winners. For Sandy Finkelstein this was good practice for
his pending trip to Oakland, California, to bowl in the A.B.C. Tournament, Collegiate Division; his
well deserved prize for winning
the recent Region II, A.C.U. Tour-

Fencers Foiled
By BRYNA MILLMAN

For most of the fencing team a
rather undistinguished weekend
spent at the North Atlantic
Championships marked the end
of this years season. UB took a
six man team to Paterson State
College in Paterson, New Jersey
which was host for the event.
Next year the competition will return to Buffalo for the second
time in four years, to the credit
of Coach Schwartz who has done
so much in promoting the sport
in Western New York.
For the second time in a row,
Drew University of New Jersey
took the North Atlantic title,
pioing up a team total of 61
points. In second place, but still
far behind Drew in points, was
Syracuse with 48 points, and then
Paterson with 47 in third place.
UB with a total of 30 wins came
in and tied for tenth place.
Individually, the break down
of the Bulls total is as follows;
epee squad won 12 bouts, four of
those won by Walt Ostrum and
eight by Dick Willert who was the
only member of the UB team to
qualify for the individual finals.
In the finals, Willert tallied 3 &amp; 2
taking a silver medal. The top
spot was taken by Bill Owen of
Drew with a score of 4-1. Saber
squad composed of Mark Fox and
Dave Kirschgessner split 24 bouts
evenly (12-12) each winning 6,
Joe Paul and Frank Pecenco
represented the Bulls in foil,

Paul won four and lost eight and
Pecenco, who is an experienced
epee, was called in at the last
minute to replace co-captain
Barry Canter who took sick. Pecenco was 2

&amp;

10.

The Bulls placed 21st in a field
of 38 schools which competed
for national honors, last week at
Harvard University. Coach Sch
wartz said he was pleased with
the showing the boys made again
st such foes as Princeton, N.Y.U.,
Columbia and Navy, who ranked
1, 2, 3, 4 respectively. He also
stated that the experience gained from the competition was immeasurable and therefore he
would like to plan on bringing
some underclassmen to the meet
next year so that they could ap
ply the benefit of their experience while still engaged in collegiate competition.
' CO-captain Barry Cantor represented the Bulls in foil and placed 14th, winning 18 bouts and
losing 14.
Dick Willert who took a silver

medal

in the

individual

epee

North Atlantic Competition plac
ed 22 in the Nationals, winning
14 bouts and losing 18.

Mark Fox, also co-captain, plac
ed 18th in saber competition,
winning 15 bouts and losing 16,
Ronny Schwartz, son of UB’s
Coach Sid Schwartz, placed 3rd
in foil and was named-to the top
All-American team. Ronny fences
for Cornell.

nament.

Spring Sports

Schedule Stated
The UB baseball team is slated
17 games, with the season
opener listed for April 14 at

for

home against Canisius. One of
the highlights of the coming
campaign will be a game at

Syracuse on April 17. Last year
the Buffalo nine posted a 15-3
record and place second in the
NCAA College Division Tournament at Hampdon-Sydney, Virginia. Candidates for this year’s
squad have already begun workouts in Clark Gym, and with a
strong nucleus of veterans on
hand, the team Will be shooting
for another NCAA post-season
bid.

The perennially strong UB tennis team is set for 13 matches.
Bill Sanford will be beginning his
16th year as mentor of the Bull
racqueteers. During his tenure
UB’s tennis record is 164 wins
and 27 losses.
The UB track team, under the
guidance of Emery Fisher, fielded

UB FENCING TEAM 1963-64

a predominately sophomore squad

in 1963, but still finished third
in the New York State Meet and
eighth in the Atlantic Coast District 1, 2 &amp; 3 Regional Championships

at

Petersburg, Virginia.

With most of the ’63 squad returning and a number of outstanding freshmen coming on the
outlook for 1964 is extremely

promising.
The complete schedules follow:
Baseball (Coach: Jim Peelle)
April 14, Canisius; April 15,
Erie Tech; April 17, at Syracuse; A(«ril 18, at Erie Tech;
April 20, at Canisius; April 23,
Gannon; April 25, Rochester
Tech; April 27, Niagara; April
28, at Cornell; April 30, Buffalo

State; May 1, at Rochester U.;
May 2, at Rochester Tech; May
5, St. Bonaventure (doubleheader); May 7, Geneseo State;
May 9, at Colgate; May 13, at
Niagara.
Tennis

April

(Coach: Bill Sanford)

14, Canisius; April 15,
Brie Tech; April 18, at Cortland
State; April 20, at Canisius;

April 227 Colgate; April 25, at
Syracuse; April 27, Hobart;
April 29, Niagara; May 2,
Rochester U.; May 5, at Erie
Tech; May 8, Gannon; May 11,
Alfred; May 13, at Niagara.

Track (Coach: Emery Fisher)
April 18, at Rensselaer; April

20, Canisius and Buffalo State:
April 25, at Ithaca College;
April 28, Cortland State; May
2,' at Colgate; May 6, Oswego
State and Brockport State at
Brockport; May 9, University of
Buffalo Invitational Meet; May
13, Erie Tech and Niagara.

Freshman Baseball: April 18, a'
Rochester U.; April 28, Bryant
Stratton; May 2, Rochester
Stratton
U.; May 13, Bryant
&amp;

&amp;

Freshman Track:

April, 18, at

Rensselaer; April 25, at Ithaca
College; April 28, Cortland
State; May 2, at Colgate.
Freshman Tennis: May 2, at
Rochester U,

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>'•

STATE
ALLENHURST

1
VOLUME 14

UNIVERSITY

wm

vi

M

Mil

‘Don ’tWallowin YourWaste
A former Presidential aspirant,
Richard “Duke” Nixhorn, has
just issued a highly provocative
policy statement concerning domesticated affairs. Speaking before a joint session of the Small
Man’s Business Association Which
Has Pretentions of Someday
Growing Up, SMBAWHPSGU, Mr.
Nixhorn declared that the United
States should not allow itself to
“wallow in its own waste,” but
rather should push ahead for
“progressive measures which will
insure the superiority of Americans and American individualism.” He further stated that the
nature of our society being such,
“American” should heretofore
refer only to able-bodied veterans

||

’

correct the poor image he presented, Nixhorn said that all
southpaws should immediately be

investigated and proposed that
the sufferage be withdrawn from
women. A possibility the Duke
suggested might be to force all
right-minded americans to give
birth to many more right-minded

1
NO. 23

By BOB MILCH

it

new

was them ROTC guys parading

around on night manuevers. But
that wasn’t it either ’cause then
Sophy, who’s got thb second floor
been emasculated by “the pinks" comes running in. I says ‘Sophy,
that they have lost the ability how many times I got to tell you
to have children. I for one am to stay out o’ the boy’s john?’
pregnant four months.” Mr. NixBut she was really scared, an’
when she tole me the buildin'
horn looked smug as he concluded his speech.
was sinking, we really got out

No One to Speak Here
On Vital Uses of Widgets

Dr, No One came to national
prominence when he published

1

Americans. A member of the
,
The Office of Campus Affairs revealed that Diefendorf Hall is slowly sinking
press questioned the exact nature
of Nixhorn’s last proposal, upon into the mud. George Gerkin, publicity manager, released the following statement
which Nixhorn said: “I know you for
a Spectrum exclusive:
guys are looking for faults in
“Diefendorf Hall is slowly sinkme; you always have. However,
ing into the mud.”
this proposal which I have offerGeorge Gerkin,
ed is impeccable. There is no
Publicity Manager
reason why “Americans,” even
Evidently, the spring thaw has
though they all be male, cannot
ground around the
effectively assert themselves in turned the
mish mosh
the last respect of giving birth. building into a loosegrass
seeds.
It is only because Americans have of gook and dead
Consequently, the foundation of
the building has slipped several
feet, and Diefendorf now lists
twelve degrees to the right.
Because of the critical situation, all classes for Diefendorf
have been rescheduled to meet
at the fifth tee at Grover Cleveland golf course, where a

The Convocations Committee today announced that Dr. Hans No
One has accepted an invitation
to speak on campus. He is scheduled to address an assembly in
the Conference Theater Friday,
speaking on his special field,
“The Use, Application, and Purposes of Ambivalent Widgets.”

¥T

Diefendorf Sinking;
Clnsses Rescheduled

liberal arts building is scheduled
to be built in 1968.
The first to notice the building’s plight was custodian Wilbur
Orfice, who had this report:
“I had just finished sweeping
out the boy’s lavatory in the basement when I heard this gurgling
sound. I thought, ‘My God, someone’s been sucked into a toilet!’
But that wasn’t it ’cause just then
the building starts to tilt to the
right, see? Then I thought maybe

who have defended U.S. industry
abroad and who have “not allowed themselves to be pushed
about by leftist proletarian sympathizers and women.” Questioned as to what can be done to

7

SPAGETTINI

T^M
A Ml, U 1TM

rip

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1964

Nixhom to SMBA WHPSGU:
By JOAN FARBER

NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

OF
.

Juo-/

o’ there.”
A passing student informed the
Campus Patrol, and several cars
drove up to survey the scene.

Sgt. Peter Hotchkiss said, “There

is nothing in the parking rules
manual about this.” The police
departed, returning later with the
entire Campus K-9 force to “make
sure nothing gets out of hand,”
as Sgt. Hotchkiss said.
State engineers were notified
a short time later, and arrived
at the sight. Several shook their
heads sagely, and one was bitten
by a dog. Robert Mansfram had
this announcement after surveying the building:
“Diefendorf Hall is slowly sinking into the mud.”
Robert Mansfrom,
State Engineer
Work crews are scheduled to
begin straightening the edifice
tomorrow.
Hayes Hall has just released to
following
the Spectrum the

“Most Urgent Directive”:

“Diefendorf Hall is slowly sinking in the mud. Because of this
most unusual situation, electric
lines are being severed, and electric service to the university is
being disrupted.
Therefore, all students living
in university residence halls are
requested to report to the Maintenance Building between threo
and five o’clock this afternoon to
receive candles which will help
to alleviate the lack of enlightenment on campus.
Moreover, the campus police
have been alerted to prevent
looting, which might occur when
the campus is plunged into darkness. Their orders are to yell
first and ask questions later. The
students have been warned.”

FLASH

tides including, “I’ll Tell You
A special news release reveived
Widgets,” “So from Albany was received in the
About Those
You’re Going to Have a Widget!”, Spectrum offices today. It states,
and “The Widget That Devoured “It has happened before. The
the World’s Fair.”
Diefendorf situation is not unique
Dr. No One is currently en- in the state university system.”
gaged in vital research on gromThe first such incident occurpits, which are widgets that have ed at Moosejaw Normal School
gone wrong. "This research,” he in 1922 when the gymnasium
says, “may revolutionize the en- collapsed just as the three huntire field of widgetry. If the dred students were entering for
mechanism by which widgets a sewing class. This apparent
paradox is explained by the fact
that Moosejaw Normal only had

one building at the time, and
all classes were held in the gym,
therefore, see?
Another tragedy occured when
the tide came in early one day
and washed away half of the
buildings at Sandy Hook U. Similarly, the Hudson River overflowed its Albany banks in 1929 and.
despite valiant attempts by several officials to keep out
the flood with brooms, many administrative facilities were wiped
out, and have not been since

replaced.
More recently, in 1959, a Greek
amphitheater at the University
of Buffalo collapsed when water
being drained from the swimming
pool to provide sanitary conditions for dormitory residents
seeped into the foundation of
the structure. The ruins can still
be seen on the Main St, side of
the campus.”
The news release concluded,

“Forewarned is forearmed. We’ll
be ready next time.”

Graduates Wear Caps aad Cleats
la New Offside Coaiaieaceaient
By BARBARA STRAUSS
In its typically brilliant way of
finding unusual answers to the
persistent problem of over-crowdedness (note the long of trailerclassrooms gracing the entrance
of Tower parking lot) SUNYAB
has scored another first: the graduating class of June ’64 will not
commence to the quaint old tune
of “Where once the Indians
trod . .
seated ih full battle
array in front of 'Lovely LockOR. NO ONE DEMONSTRATES WIDGETRY
Library’ . . Nosirce! This
Ws Feh Award winning thesis metamorphosize into grompits wood
year's lucky grads will stampede
entitled “How About Those Wid- can be understood, why just onto Rotary Field, to the appro
gets?” in 1912. Since then he
think! Now get out of here and prigte accompaniment
of such
has published many related ar- let me work!”
,

:

stirring songs as “On Wisconsin,"
the MNotre Dame Fight Song,”
and other melodies of equal solemnity. Because there may be a
few individuals who have somehow remained incredibly ignorant
as to the procedure followed
when graduating in a football
field (although this total obliviousness seems impossible), the
Spectrum Special Events Depart-

ment has taken it

upon itself

publish the standard

to

procedure

for “Football Graduations," used
successfully in the past by such
infamous universities as Okee
Fenoke State, Mount Moosehead

U and the University of Transsylvania. Of course, each college
must alter standard regulations
somewhat, to fit in with its campus

institutions. HERE THEN,

IS THE TENTATIVE SCHEDULE
FOR GRADUATION DAY, JUNE
1964:

7:30 A.M.; Parents and friends
will file in orderly fashion to
their bleacher seats: (it was decided by the men at the top that
a relatively early morning ceremony would be best, so as to

avoid the numerous unfortunate |J
incidents of sun stroke which oc- ’ .
(Cont’d on P. 2) |

*

�PAGE TWO

U.B. Patrolman
injured Badly
While on Duty
By

Wednesday, April 1, 1964

SPECTRUM

SUSAN PARKER

A near fatal accident occured

near Clark Gymnasium yesterday
morning. After returning from
Deco’s where he was drinking
coffee alone, Mel Pudgey, a
campus policeman, parked his
car behind the gym. Patrolman
Pudgey, it has been learned, was
attempting to look around the
bushes which huddle next to the
gym for the possibility of finding an illegally parked automobile-—one \\hich he thought might
not have even had a campus
sticker affixed to its windshield.

Whatever his motives, Officer
Pudgey tripped, we have learned, interviewing him at his hospital bed. Pudgey fell near the
bushes on top of a thorney bush
from which he was unable to
break loose. In pain, Pudgey cried
out. No Matter, to his dismay
only a stray civil servant from
the K-9 Corps heard his anguish
and immediately rushed
patrolman, ripping into his flesh
in order to protect whatever

examinations may be locked within one of the many Clark Gym
lockers. “The dog stopped chomping at me once his appetite had
been satisfied," the good but bad
ly eaten Pudgey gasped, as a
nurse administered bandages to
his torn body.
Chief of Police Hans Collie has
commented: “We are obviously
disturbed by the incident. You
know, no matter how much protection this campus, gets, and
the protection has been just the
greatest, we cannot prevent accidents."

-

®l|£ ©bituarg rtf

By BOB MILCH
William (Billy the Child) Sundance, noted leader of the Allied
Party, was found without much
blood or life in the fountain late
Thursday evening. A coroner’s
report lists death attributable to
a torrent of inuendoes and accusations which lodged in his throat
causing, him to expire by suffocation.
Sundance was a familiar person
on the university political scene,
striding about the student senate
office in large circles while giving orders to his heavies, and
his success as a party big shot
is a rags to riches story worthy
of Horatio Alger or Boss Tweed.
Not content with the meager attention showed a court favorite
of the Established Party, he
struck out on his own to form a
party which would give him ample room to strut his stuff.
Strut his stuff he did, and it
wasn’t long before everyone realized that he was too potent a man
to cross. For example, his feud
with the campus newspaper completely emasculated that publication’s ability to sway public opin
ion. Moreover, he was a big favorite with the lollypop crowd, as
he fed their habit.

Support
Our

-

rjCetter
to the Editor
TO THE

EDITOR:

You will notice that I did not
begin with the customary “dear”.
That should prove to you, wise
guy, just how really really burned up I am.
Last week I handed to that
buddha that sits behind the
Managing Editor’s desk a publicity notice for our fraternity’s
Orphan’s Beer Blast. Why, I ask,
wasn’t it published?
Is it because that rag of yours
doesn’t consider it as important
as civil rights or Aptheker? Is
it because you guys are prejudicthose,
Whose sense of ethics you of- ed against the Greeks. Huh? If
you guys don’t shape up, well,,
fended.
And when we; heard that you had just don’t say I didn’t warn you.
died,
Wishing you a long painful life,
Our tears were most lugubrious,
Wilferd Papandopoulis
“Could it be . . .?” Oh! “COULD
Editors Note; After publishing
IT BE . . .?
reports of his fraternity's ChastiWe think the answer’s obvious.”
Sundance is survived by ten ty Day, Olympic Loser's Party,
"Let's Annex Tierra Del Fuesenators, and a host of disappoint- and
go" Movement, we felt that the
ed candidates who can be seen
moping around the student sen- Orphan's Beer Blast was a bit
ate door still trying to get into superfluous, and ran an ad for
the Salvation Army in its place.
the office.

SUNSET FOR SUNDANCE

His untimely demise has left
the campus in a deeper stupor
than usual, Poet-in-Residence Yorick Graves has penned this
eulogy for Sundance:
Oh Billy, dear Billy
Your fearful race is run,
You’ve shown your last

fight

movie,

Beer and pizzas now are done.

We’U miss

you Billy, yes, we will,
Now that your life is ended,
Though we can’t say the same for

USAF F-105, unleashing air-to-ground
rockets at simulated enemy target.

Advertisers

Grads Will Have to Block
To Receive College Degree
(Continued

from Page

1)

curred at the previously men
tioned schools.)
7:45 A.M.: (it is a slightly tight
schedule): Explanation of the
game by that eminent sportscaster Bill Blazer will continue as
follows:
The game will be played in min
ute sections; each section will be
composed of the different schools
. . , (Arts and Sciences, Engineering, etc.) Students will line up
at the 1 yard line and
here
come the opposition onto the field
boy, don’t they look like a
mean bunch: As you can sec,
each member of the opposition
has his or her name and occupa
tion painted on the back of his
U.B. sweatshirt. If you will follow
along with me in your program
books (which you may keep as
souvenirs of this memorable
event for a small nominal fee):
No. 41
Mrs. Ina Digestion,
chief cook and bottle washer (?)
at Norton Cafeteria: No—. 42—
Mrs. Flo Maine, who holds the
same position at Tower; No. 62—
Mr. I. Nothing—venerable class
advisor, responsible for the fact
that many of our June ’64 grads
are not quite sure what they’re
graduating in; No. 63-69: Mr.
Nothing’s loyal proteges, who
have managed to confuse almost
as manly students as their teacher; No.’s 1-25: a strong offensive
—correction, offense of those
“men in blue” who guard the
valuable lives and property of
U.B. students so well. As you
can see, many students on the
sidelines are already getting into
the spirit of things by pelting the
policemen with stones , . . well,
there go those industrious little
police dogs after the mischief
(scratch
Engineering
makers
—

—

—

School)

No.’s 26-40, 70-100 are the carefully screened professors whom
your sons and daughters have
held in honorific respect for 4
years, These dedicated men and

women have been chosen scien-

tifically through an extensive bat-

lery of tests which show that
they:
1) have latent homicidal tendencies; 2) give all hourlies the
day after holidays or vacations;
3) spring at least 3 surprise quizes per semester on their classes;
4) don't give higher than a D4
because they believe a student
should work for knowledge nol
grades.

Well, I can see that both teams
so I will
briefly, clearly and accurately explain the rules as only I, Bill
Blazer, can: as the potential grads
begin running toward the oppo
site goal posts, the opposition will
attack. The first 3 students to

arc straining to begin,

reach the goal become Summa
Cum Laude, the next 3
Cum
Laude, and the rest should feel
lucky to be alive and in one piece.
Please refrain from rushing onto
the field if you see your child
run down: go instead to the in
firmary w'hich has been set up on
the front lawn.
9:00: Recessional march of the
victorious graduates.
9:15: Wild exit of parents,
friends, and strangers off the
—

street.

9:30: Parade of the maintainance crew onto the field to
straighten things up;
The Spectrum sees only 3 alternatives for those who for some
insane reason do not desire a

“Football Graduation”:
1) If a sizeable group of those
of you who have become more or
less immune to the food, lines,
drop and add days, etc, would volunteer to fail your comps, your
fellow classmates could then continue that glorious tradition of
‘Lovely Lockwood Library’ graduation;
2) If some of you who by some
chance have saved your Anthropology notes could bone up on
regulation Indian Hain Dances,
you could arrange a nice cozy indoor graduation;
3) Or
you could convince
your parents to send you on a
nice graduation Ocean cruise, and
watch the proceeding on T.V..

.

.

school’s Out.
Right now, graduation seems way, off in the
wild blue yonder. But it’s not too early to start

planning. In the future, you’ll look back on
decisions you make today with satisfaction...
or regret.'
What can an Air Force career mean to you in
tangible gain? The opportunity to take on executive responsibilities you might otherwise
wait years to attain. And a head-start into one
of a wide range of possible careers in the
exciting Aerospace Age.
As an Air Force officer, for ex- ■■ q
ample, you may be flying a su- ||a Wi
,

.

personic jet...helping to keep America’s

guard up. Or you may be in an Air Force
laboratory, working to solve an intricate scientific or technological problem.
Doing jobs like these, you can hold your head
high. In addition to being essential to your
country, they’re the beginnings of a profession of dignity and purpose,
For more information, see the Professor of
Air Science.
If there is no AFROTC unit on your campus, contact your nearest Air
■
Force recruiter.

AIP lOPCv

�Wednesday, April 1, 1964

The Circus
the Africans
It is widely held in many circles that the Africans, after numerous attempts at orderly self
government, have had it. The
result has been chaos, anarchy,
and worse anti-American feel—

ing.

—

Item: In 1938 there were six-

teen African “states,” thirteen of
which were colonies. Today there
are thirty-five states, thirty-three
of which are completely or semiautonomous. Certainly the only
people such a situation benefits
are stamp collectors and flag

makers; for everyone else, especially history students, it is extremeny confusing, what with

States has taken oyer the eonti
nent. The legend is as follows:
1. This island will be given to
the Cypriots. Archbishop Markarios will have the northern portion, as it is beset by gale force
hot winds; his competition with
this wind will leave the inhabitants time to settle their differences peacefully.
2, This land will be given to
the architects of the University
of Buffalo. As most of the land
area is desert, there will be
plenty of material for cinderblocks.
3. This, area is to be given to
Walt Disney to do with as he
wishes, though an Old World Disneyland is recommended.

4.
3k,

learning new boundaries and the
U.N. needing more chairs.
Item: The

names of the emerg-

ing nations are aesthetically offensive. For example, can one
seriously imagine singing “Mauritania the Gem of the Ocean” or
“Gabon, Gabon, God Shed His
Grace on Thee”? Can one honestly consider
“Upper Volta
Uber Alles” a stirring national
anthem? I think not.
Item: The names of the leaders
of these

nations are atrocious.
The reader is asked to try saying Ahmadou Ahidjo ten times
as quickly as he can say Smith
or Shriver. Or Fulbert Youlou
as quickly as Jones or Johnson.
Try Felix Houphouet-Boigny before one brushes his teeth in the
morning and then try to speak
distinctly for the rest of the day.
Item: Many critics in Washington dislike Africa and Africans.
Senator Byrd of Virginia, for example, said “We call them nations, but they’re little more than
tribes . . .” If this is so, my plan
tor Africa should be quite popular around Richmond, if nowhere
elise:
Consult the map, noting
changes made after the United

ALLENHURST

EXPOSE'

By BOB MILCH
The Shortest Way With

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

4. This land is to be given to
the Israelis. They will make it
into a lusciously green golf
course, and then sell it to the
University of Buffalo.
5. This area will be left in the
hands of the Egyptians for the
testing of their rockets on the
condition that the proving
grounds be named Germany II.
6. This land will be given to
Hugh Heffner for a Playboy Club
on the condition that he uses Mau
Mau leopard men instead of bunnies.
7. This area is to be given to
the Florida East Coast Railroad.
There hasn’t been an explosion
in this area for years, and their
engineers may need a quiet place
for recuperation. Of course, they
will have to change their name.
8. This land is to be held jointly by the members of SANE, the
Committee to Hear Mark Lane,
and the Students Against War
and Fascism because, with the
existing state of socialism already
in this area, they can slow down
their activities and live a more
leisurely life.
9. This is the bone to be
thrown to the Africans,

WRETCH
By LEE TAYLOR and

By BOB KNIGHT

At the risk of severe repercus
sions from those who inhabit the
place, I feel it imperative that
attention be focused on “the goings-on” in what the school dares
to call “the beautiful Allenhurst
Gardens Apartments”. Having recently transferred to S.U.N.Y.A.B.
in January, I was appalled at the
conditions under which I, a devoted student, was expected to
live. However, I refrained until
now to air my disgust and nausea,
for fear of personal harm. Now,
I find that in all good conscious

I can no longer keep to myself
what I feel has to be said. So,
with chest out and a deep breath,
I now endeavor to bring to light
the story behind “the beautiful
Allenhurst Garden Apartments,”
which threatens not only the two
or three “real” students, like myself, but also the entire community.
Before describing the beastly
conditions there, in earthy prose
and sparing none the vulgar de:
tails, I must point out first that
behind what I consider the “Allenhurst Scandal,” is a group
of racketeering Freshmen who
call themselves proudly, the “Allen Nostra”, which I suspect
roughly translated, means “Our

Allenhurst.” These Freshmen,
mostly from notorious Appellatia, N. Y., the scene of the famous
“crime convention” a few deays
ago, have organized atight, secretive syndicate at Allenhurst
which for all practical purposes,
controls completely the lives of
the residents there, who do what
little homework they do in constant fear of exposal by the syndicate’s spies. These spies are
just one branch of the militarylike set up the “Allen Nostra”
has. Being one of the most security guarded agencies, lit makes
the C.I.A. seems like kid stuff),
one can never tell just who a spy
may be. Therefore', since studying is considered a mortal sin in
Allenhurst, all such activity must
be done by those who wish to risk
it, must be done in secret, in
places like the laundry room, in
the garage, (with the water running to make it sound like you’re
washing dirty sweat socks), in
the kitchen, (with the water running to make it appear that you’re
rinsing out a pair of dirty sweat
socks) or in the john, (with the
running, of course, to make
it'seem like you’re soaking some

dirty sweat socks.). For getting
caught red handed with an open
book, one must pay the full price
—serving for one full month on
the “K-9 Corps”, which a term
the syndicate uses in reference
to the poor young lads who do
there bidding day and night, and
serve such serflike purposes as
running double time to the University Delicatessen for change
for poker games, buying beer for
the mob with their own money
sent from home by a frail and
bony mother whose one dream in
life is to see ser son graduate
from college, and stealing parked
cars from “Gleason’s” on Sunday

afternoons for the

“Allen Nos-

This week Sketch
Officer Joe Fuzz of
Police. Officer Fuzz
ate of UB where he
Criminology.

interviewed

the Campus
is a gradumajored in

T&amp;W; How did you get your
present job as a Security Officer
at this University?

Officer Joe: After graduating
from the University, sooner or
later, I did my post graduate work
with the FBI and the CIA, After
working with the government until compulsory retirement forced
me to resign, I got my present
job at UB, by answering a want
ad in the Buffalo Evening News.

T&amp;W: Have you found any difference between working for the
government and working for UB?
Officer Joe; Not really. In my
government days I was connected
with a former Senator from Wisconsin who had me tracking down
subversives and criminals in the
government. At UB I have been
engaging in the same type of
work.
T&amp;W:

Do

there are

you mean

subversives

to say
on this

campus?

There are
subversives all over this campus.
We know who our enemies are.
We’ll get them all.
Officer

Joe:

Yes.

T&amp;W; Can you tell us who they
are?

Officer Joe; Well I should
check with Security to see if you
are cleared to receive such classified information but I guess
since you work for the paper you
are OK. Among the subversives
on this campus are the people
who have illegal keys to the faculty parking lots, fake parking
stickers, gate crashers, overtime
parkers and those who park on
the roadways.

Diefendorf to be Landmark
The Student Senate has unamiously approved a resolution proposing that Diefendorf Hall be
'oft in its present tilted state. In
an astonishing display of unanimity, the senators passed the
motion of Byron DeLay Action,
"hich stated:
“Whereas there have been
many complaints about lack of
scenery on the campus, and
"hereas Buffalo has no tourist
attractions other than Niagara
Fa lls, and whereas we could use
toe money, be it resolved that

Diefendorf Hall be left at its
present list of twelve degrees
and a publicity campaign begun
billing it as “The Pisa of the
North."
There were no objections to
the motion, and only a brief flare
of tempers when another senator
tried to amend the name to “The
Pisa of the Northern Hemisphere.”

As yet, there has been no official reaction from either Hayes
Hall or Albany, nor is any ex-

pected very

soon.

T&amp;W: Judging from the number of crimes committed on this
campus, do you think it is necessary to carry a gun?
Officer Joe: You can never tell
when there will be serious trouble, Someone might try to rob
the Bursar’s Office or hold up the
Tower Bookstore. Of course we
have orders to shoot to kill if we
ever catch the vandals who steal
the gates. We also have fire
hoses and riot guns in case the
students ever get up enough enthusiasm to have a panty raid'
T&amp;W: Do you ever have any
opportunity to employ the K-9
Corps?
Officer Joe: Just the other
night Glassie, our best dog, sniffed out two people at the Pillars
and chewed them severely. Occasionally we like to play Hound

of the Baskervilles and set Pluto
loose on some unsuspecting stu-

dent alone at night.

T&amp;W: Is there a quota that
must be met as far as parking
tickets go?
Officer Joe: There is no official quota, but I like to give out
my usual fifty a day. We do give
an award to the officer who gives
out the most tickets each week.
Last week I won the case of beer.
T&amp;W; Well, Officer Joe, thanks
for the interview. We know you
are anxious to get back to the
clubhouse.

Officer Joe: Of course. A sub
versive is a communist.
T&amp;W: Isn’t that getting a little
far fetched to call people who
park illegally, communist?

Officer Joe: It’s the Communist
policy to disrupt the rules and
regulations of the governing
body. In this case, illegal parking
and all that.
T&amp;W; Do

you feel

that the

night patrols by you and your
fellow officers adequately protect the lives and property of this
campus?

n ini nnyy

f..

«

Officer Joe: It has been written
in the Security Officer's Journal
that UB leads the nation in maximum coverage of its campus.

f?

T&amp;W: What about the mysterious disappearance of all the parking lot gates that has occurred
during the year?

Officer Joe: As near as I can
figure out, there must be some

es" must walk home after handing the stolen auto over to one
of the “Boys”, as they infrequently refer ot themselves.
Being nailed with a closed book
exacts somewhat less punishment,
although certainly too severe for
now printed by
the “crime.” I, myself, was convicted of this crime by the “Allen
Nostra Senate" the judiciary
branch of the syndicate. I was
caught when a spy entered my
&amp;
Smith ft-in tin y
room a tthree A.M., drunk and
staggering and just barely seeing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
the boog before I could throw it
(•t Delaware)
under the bed The spy turned
out to be my R.A. At the trial the
Phone 876-2284
R.A. admitted that he had come
home from the crap game at
Tower, with his usual load on,
and could not dishonestly say that �-

i‘VU7

The SPECTRUM

know you're
smart...

Partners' Press, 3nc.

-Ahifoll

(Cont’d on Pg. 4)

sort of contest going on to sec
who can break the most gates and
get away with it. We think the
person responsible is a short,
slim individual, who drives an old
car. He somehow always seems
to strike while we’re at Decco.

T&amp;W; Are you sure you know
what subversive means?

tra’s Sunday races along Niagara
Falls Blvd. (Of course the “pooch-

Student Senate Announces

ROBERT WAKEFIELD

j

but what about the folks
back home? When you
smash an exam, share the

glory. Phone the family
and bask in ever-loving
praise. Remember, a telephone call is the next best
thing to being there.

4 NewVwhiefetlwie
Y°°

•C»*00 «rt»*n you lofophont

�Wednesday, April

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

1, 1964

Allenhurst Expose HICK...
(Cont’d

from P.

3)

he caught me with an open book,
so I managed to get off with a
lighter penalty—I had to burn
three of my textbooks and cut
classes for a week and a half. And
the Adminerstation wonders why
97.5% of Allenhurst is failing out
of school)

I found out later that all the
R.A.'s were receiving payola from
the syndicate and in fact R.A.
stands not for “Resident Adviser”
as stated in the handbook, but
rather for "Resident Allen Nostra".

The headquarters of the syndicate, surprisingly enough is not
the so called “Garden Apartments”, but rather in a suite on
the fourth floor of Goodyear Hall.
The suite is shared by the leaders of the mob and a few of their
Freshman girl “secretaries”, who
have organized recently the “Allen Nostra Debs”. The suite is
known as the “Grand Pad.” (The
Allenhurst apartments are known
as “Allen Pads”).
Besides their never ending cam

which the winner is crowned
“Pocket Pool Champ of the
Month” by president of the “Allen Debs,” “and gets to spend a
week at the Grand Pad, with all
its conveniences and privileges.
The syndicate also publishes a
trade magazine called “SLUT”
. .
. The
magazine devoted to
trash.” Each month a Goodyear
girl is selected as the “Slut of the
Month” and given a full page
spread in the center of the magazine. The “Slut of the month”
also spends a week at the “Grand
Pad”, with all its conviences and

each May at Grossinger’s, and
Man, I am really hopped up
their attempt to organize and control a “Maintenance Nostra”, about this Italian flick I saw last
which I suspect roughly translat- night. It is one of the most exed means, “Our Maintenance citing flicks to burst upon the
Men”, and which would give them stagnant American scene in many
ultimate control and use of all a moonless night. It is Frederico
buildings on campus. As a final Cacitore’s epic, classic, and really
plea from a serious student who great production called II Comis only interested in finding the ensura De La Franehesca Compra
tree of knowledge and NOT such Sur Las Bostra In Qua Gollora
silly things as sex, gambling and Frestra Mella Dome Waturena";
drink, I implore someone to do in English, that’s “Francisco’s
something about this plight, this Crazy Meatball.”
disease, this outrageous situation
It has a lot of realism in it,
existing at the “Allen Pads.” I
like women who don’t shave their
live to see the “Allen Nostra" destroyed. That’ll fix them for not armpits and eat onions for breakfast. It really gets off to a fanletting me join!
tastic start when the gorgeous

privileges.

There is also the selling of prophylactics in Norton Union by
“Allen Nostra” members to raise
money for their annual orgy held
|

l i!l l|!!ilII!PI!''«il!»llliniiiWIIII1iniIllinil)!i»lllllinilllllillltllll1IIIIIIIlllIlltlltll[lllllll)llllllllllltllllllllll!IISIIIIIIIIII!1l!!!! 11IIWI ini nil l l!l il!l1l lil l l Hlllillllllllllll
,

illllllil

paign to stamp out study, which
seems to be their main goal, the
“Nostra” members indulge ip
such activities as daily drinking
bouts held in the “lounges" in
which the winner of the ChugA-Lug Elimination Tourney gets
to compete in the regionals held
every summer at Apalatian, N. Y.
There is also a pocket pool championship held every month in

Spectrum Sports
Spagettini Advocates Slow Break;
Player Morale Reaches Zenith
By

ROCKY VERSACE

in a frantic search for filler
material, the Spectrum presents
the long sought after interview
with that gem of the hoop world,
a man who divides his time equally between coaching the basketball team and surfing, Dr. Leo-

pold (Surfer Joe) Spagetinni. Dr.
Spagetinni, who prefers to be
called Surfer, turned down a ten
year contract to coach basketball
at Ohio State and ventured to UB,
because he claimed, “Ohio State
did not have enough player material for my type of game.” Surfer
earned his coaching fame in basketball by leading P.S. 42 to three

You know; slow game,

scheme.
teamwork, sacrifice, and all that
slosh. Besides, 1 suffer from a
sticki-wicki case of vertigo. Man,
do fast breaks get me dizzy!”
Question: “Thank you Surfer,
1 imagine your fans get the point.
Now, 1 understand that you work
the h
out of your boys. They
are in better shape than any team
you play, but you still refuse to
run with the ball, Wouldn't a run-

-

.

don’t know much about basketball?”
Surfer; “Oh pshaw! Of course
not. Coaches at this school never
have to worry about losing their
jobs. We are as snug as bugs in
a rug. Why, look at the guy they
Fishey,
have coaching track
or what ever his name is. Are
you kidding? We are in.”
—

"I hear that the
morale of the varsity cagers is
simply great. Is this true?”
Surfer: “Oh definitely. The
players love me,”
Question: “I’m sure; I mean
I agree. Anyway, thank you for
the enlightening talk. Have fun
at the beach, and if you have
time, take a look at this year’s
best seller, "How to Win and
Look Sick."

successive undefeated seasons in
the Ten and Under city league.
Says Surfer about this feat, “It
was really nothing." Fame within
the collegate ranks came swiftly
to Surfer, in his first game
against Kaplunk State, when, not
knowing what do, and with panic
rapidly ensueing, he established
a basketball first by sending the
water boy, the manager, and his
three year old niece into the contest as substitutes. This delayed
the game for approximately 90
minutes, while Surfer and the officials discussed the strategic
move. Meanwhile, the 1500 fans
in Clark Memorial Dungeon as
well as the 23 athletes sitting on
the bench, enjoyed the duel immensely. Interview:

Support

Basketball

as range war.

Shussmeisters
To Debate on Skis
At Kissing Valley
The Schussmeisters and the
Debate Society are going to have
a joint party at Kissing Valley
Ski Area next week. The party
is to be the climax of another
one of the Debate Society’s contests; this one is the 23% Janitorial Marathon Contest.
Beside a debate on skis, other
parts of the contest will be: a
talking contest between the student senate and Angel Flight; an
obscurity contest between the
New Student Review and Jeremy
Taylor, and a fight to the death
between teams composed of former and present members of the
Buffalonian Staff.

"ENTERTAINMENT"

Advertisers
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THE SOCIAL SEASON IS HERE
The Globe Artists Agency has the perfect entertainment for all occasions.

Globe Artists Agency
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TL 3-4300

ning team seem to be in line with
theory on conditioning?

your

Don’t you think that Buffalo
could run about twelve of our
padunk opponents on its padunk
schedule off its padunk courts?”
Surfer; “I suppose we Could,
but I really wouldn’t want to disappoint the fans and the students
by such a move. You see, they
are so used to dull, slow, monotonous type basketball that a drastic move such as speeding up the
game or scoring points would be
an iusult to them. Besides, I don't
know how to pull off a fast
break.”

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week

&amp;

Evenings and Saturday

Requirements: Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instructions

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
CaH Mr. Craig 853-0837

The audience can not help but
notice the professional, yet artistically pleasing manner in
which the lettuce leaf is eaten
by the gorgeous heroine Gina
Mammamia just before you know
what happens. She was coached
for this scene by Fred Schwartz,
who was hired especially for this
movie. He also coached the dinosaur in “The Thing That Devoured Five Towns,” the jello in “The
Fly in the Jello,” and the hand
grenade in that immortal army
training film, “How to Disarm
a Hand Grenade..”
The part of the rapist is played by Antoni Horni who, like
Schwartz,, had had much previous
experience in this field. His performance is a satisfying one,
though not up to his usual stuff;
as his mother said, “Eh, he’s done
better.”

1 heartily recommend this
movie for anyone who likes this
kind of movie.

,

has symbolism too. It has
a central symbol of the lettuce
leaf, which the gorgeous heroine
Gina Mammamia eats just before
It

In the event there is no snow
the whole thing is called off.

Our

Question: “Dr. Spagetinni, now

that the long hard season has
reached its ebb, there must be
one, perhaps two players who
provided the extra spark needed
to find victory in the close matches. Could you cite these athletes
for the reading public?”
Surfer: “No. I have no stars on
my team.”
Question; “But, Surfer, surely
you must have at least two stars
on the team. Why I know for a
fact that on the team are two ex
high school All Americans, three
All-States, and ten All-League
athletes. They were stars in high
school; are they not stars now?”
Surfer; “Well, I suppose they
could be, but that type of player
would not fit into my battle

Question: “Surfer, you have
to be the most outspoken man 1
have ever met. Aren’t you worried about losing your job for
onutwardly admitting that you

Question:

MAMMAMIA eating
fateful leaf
heroine Gina Mammamia gets
raped by an itinerant kazoo player. It has a lot of trouble keeping
audience attention from there on
in, but it makes up for it with
seven realistic stabbings, three
realistic shootings, and a realistic shootings,, and a realistic TexGINA

she gets raped. It —that is the
lettuce leaf, not the rape—is a
plant, and plants grow in the
earth when, with the proper water
and sunlight, the process which
we all know so well as photosynthesis can be brought off. It,
that is, the lettuce leaf again,
is the symbol for the way we
should fight against the Way
science makes automatons of us
all. It, that is, in this case, the
rape, is therefore good, because
it is non-scientific and is a way
we were meant to live by with
humanism and the like.

The Office of Personnel
Services announces several
openings for Student Advisors in the coming year. No
previous experience is required, the only prerequisite being a two year course
in either double talk or
sandscrit. Busy peopl ewith
little time to devote to the
job are preferred.
Those desirous of such a
position should come to the
Office of Personnel Services

and see someone there, or
try to make, an appointment
with his own advisor, who
will probably tell him to go
there anyway.

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                    <text>STATE
NEW SCIENCE

.

breakthrough

UNIVERSITY

wm ti

VOLUME 14

By NANCY LAURIEN

Mr. George E. Starbuck, noted
poet, instructor of English and
member of the UB library administration since October 1, 1963
is confronted with the possibility
of dismissal from his position
and ousting from the State University system because he chose

at least until the pertinence and
necessity of such a question are
properly explained to me.” The
expected reaction of the university was a call for a hearing as
guaranteed by the rules of the
Board of Regents and Board of
Trustees of the State University.

to respond to one question on
a Civil Service employment form

with his own query rather than
the customary “yes” or “no”.
The question is worded as follows: “Have you ever advised or
taught, or were you ever a member of any society or group
of persons which taught or advocated the doctrine that the
Government of the United States
or any political subdivisions
thereof should be overthrown or
overturned by force, violence, or
any unlawful means?” It is part
of the questionnaire administered, theoretically, to all state

employees (although investigation
by Mr. Starbuck has indicated
that SOME not ALL new employees of UB hired since the
state takeover have been requested to do so) and is accepted
as a legal matter of form in the
hiring process, despite the fact
that research by Mr. Starbuck
and his lawyer, Mr. Richard Lipsitz, have failed to uncover any
reference to the same in the
state laws, codes or ordinances.

Completion and acceptance of
the form has also been thought
to be a condition for employment,
while, in fact, Mr. Starbuck has
been on contarct since last fall.
The poet’s answer to the ques :
lion above entailed the following
ideas: “I prefer not to answer,

LAWRENCE S. FRANKLE

The major business before the
Student Senate’s Tuesday meeting
was the Feinberg Resolution and
the general election rules for
the Spring election.
The proposed Feinberg Resolution came as a result of a student
committee studying the action to
be taken on the law. The resolution reads as follows:
WHEREAS: The Feinberg Law
and Disclaimer affidavit have
numerous implications and ramifications, and

WHEREAS: A faculty member
may refuse to sign because of
conviction based on any
of the following or some other

personal

reason;

a. no single factor should be
decisive in the employment

of faculty members other
than academic qualifications.
b. the enforcement of signature to the disclaimer is an

liberties.

on , personal

c. belief that the academic
community should determine the requirentents of

its educators.
WHEREAS: The dismissal of
such individuals who refuse to
sign narrows and confines the
realm of educational opportunities offered to a student under
such a system,
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED: That the Student
Senate of the State University of
New York at Buffalo,
1- Supports the right of legal
due process of any faculty
member who refuses to sign,

Library Contest
Is Sponsored By
Professor Stout
The House Committee of Union
Board is offering a first prize
of $100 and a second prize of
$50 to the students with the best
student library. Professor David
B. Stout of the Dept, of Anthropology and Linguistics and Mrs.
Stout are sponsoring the contest for the second year.

for the best collection of books
in a specific subject area. Thej
collection may not exceed more 1
than 25 or less than 15 books. I
No applicant may spend more
than $40 bn books purchased
within a year. A short paper must
be submitted with the books ex-

Senate Meeting Discusses
Election Rules and Finance
and his right to retain his
position.
2. Communicate with the stu-

dent governments of other
units of the State University indicating the relevant
facts concerning the status
of the Feinberg Law on
their campus,
3. If response to initial communications dictates, the
committee will coordinate a
conference with the purpose of issuing, in the name
of the students of the State
University of New York, a
resolution indicating their
position.

An amendment was made to
this resolution, but, before a vote
could be taken on the amendment, a quarom was called for
at 10:22. The seventeen members
necessary to hold the meeting
were not present and at 10:35
the senate dismissed. No action
was taken on the resolution at
all.
The general election rules
came up earlier in the meeting.
26 have
The dates of March 25
been decided on as the days on
which voting will be held. Petitions will be available from the
Student Senate office on Mach 6.
Each candidate for office must
have a petition containing 5% of
the enrollment from their appropriate division of the school.
A special Senate meeting will be
held next Tuesday for the purpose of reviewing other election
rules. .
The Medical and Dental School
budget of $3,000.00 and the
Hockey Club budget of $601.00
&amp;

were passed.

plaining why, when and how
the applicant became interested
in building his own personal li
brary. In addition, five books
from the collection must be an
notated. While the entry of books
concerning a professional school l
are not to be discouraged, an
emphasis will be placed on the
broad areas of the humanities.
Dr. Stout has related in an interview, that he has chosen to
support the student library con
test in order that students should
discover the pleasurable aspects
of reading and learning. Dr.
Stout regards books almost as
sacred objects, especially those
of scholarly and literary interest,
for these are the books which
give insight into the thoughts
and understanding of great men.
Dr. Stout wants to have. students make these discoveries
through collecting and keeping
their own personal libraries.
Applications for the Browsing
Library Contest are available at
the Norton candy counter. For
contact
further
information,
Barbara Hoffman, 831-2865.

Today is the last
the Publications
Board will accept applications for the position of Editor-inChief of the Spectrum.
I n t e r e sted students
should write a letter
of application to the
Publications Board explaining their reason
for applying, their attitudes and ideas concerning the Spectrum,
a list of their qualifications and past experience, and a statement of grade point
average certified by
the dean of their division. Letters of recommendation may also
accompany the application. Applications
should be submitted
directly to the Publications Board office,
Norton 205, or mailbox No. 50.
day

NO. 17

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1M4

All students on the undergrade
ate level are eligible to compete

Instead, however, he was notified by the university of his dismissal as of Feb. 7, 1964. Mr,
Starbuck appealed to Federal
Court, where Judge John 0. Henderson and the court issued a
temporary restraining order preventing the state from firing him,
and postponing the hearing and
decision until March 2.
“The issue concerned, as in the
Feinberg case, is not whether or
not a faculty member has Communist or Fascist leanings, but to
what extent our Constitutional
right to free discussion and opinion can be abridged without its
being part of our political system
(Cont’d on P. 3)

LATEST MATMEN

rwn n wt mm

BUFFALO NEW YORK,

Court Grants Injunction
To George E. Starbuck

infringement

OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Debate Tournament
Here This Weekend
The Ninth Annual International Invitational Debate
Tounrament is being held on campus today and tomorrow.
Thirty teams from New England, New York State, Pennsylvania and Ohio will be competing.
Linda Leventhal, tournament chairman, reports that
this will be the largest intercollegiate debate tournament
ever held on this campus. All
rounds of debate are open to
the public, and it is expected that
a large number of students and
faculty members will attend. A
complete list of schools and
rounds and rooms will be listed
in Norton 357

180 Debates Being Held
Each team will participate in
six rounds of debate on the national debate topic; Resolved:
That the Federal Government
should guarantee an opportunity
for higher education to all qualified high school graduates. There
will be a total of one hundred
and eighty debates throughout
the weekend. This evening there
will be debates commencing at
4:30, 7:15 and 8:45. Following
the third round of debate there
will be a social in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge. Tomorrow the
rounds will begin at 9:00 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., and 1:30 p.m.
There will be power matching,
after the third and fifth round
of debate. Utilization of this
system enables teams to meet

teams of comparable
strength.
Awards to be Presented
Trophies will be presented to
the winning teams at a banquet
in the Multi-purpose Room tomorrow afternoon. Awards will
be given for the first, second and
third place units of four debaters
other

as well as the best affirmative
and negative two man teams.
These awards will be given on
the basis of the team’s total winloss record. Speaker awards will
also be presented to the top four
debaters. These awards will be
based on the total speaker points
that the individual debaters accumulate in the six rounds of
debating.
Colleges &amp; Universities Attending
The schools competing in the
tournament include: Emerson
College of Boston, the University of Vermont, Ohio University,
Clarion College, Cornell, University, State University College of
Forestry, Mount Union College,
New York University, Le Moyne
Colleg, State University College
at Cortland, D’Youville College,
Houghton College, Allegheny College, State University College at
Brockport, Geneva College, State
University College at Buffalo,
University of Pittsburgh, Utica
College, Gannon College, University of Rochester, Ithaca College

Rochester Institute of Technology, St. John Fisher College,
Canisius College, St. Bonaventure
University and St. Andrews Seminary.
The

winning college or university will appear tomorrow
evening on U.B. Roundtable. The
broadcast may be seen on WHENTV.

New Engineering Extension
Laboratories Complete in 64
Completion of the new laboratory extension of the
Parker Engineering Building is scheduled for summer '64.
The extension is being built with funds from the State
University and will add much to the already existing
facilities. According to E. Arthur Trabant, Dean of the
School of Engineering, “Our new lab shall be utilized
primarily for projects relating to aerospace engineering
research and studies; thus, it is under the Division of
Interdisciplinary Studies and Engineering Research.’’
This division of the university,
only two years old, has been
organized to maintain a pace
equal to that of technological
progress. For as technology adv
ances, engineers encounter areas
of study that do no fall squarely
within the bounds of traditional
engineering fields. Therefore,
many of the problems of new
fields of inquiry, as exemplified
by magnetohydrodynamics and
and aerothermochemistry, involve
the fundamentals of many engineering sciences. The Division
of Interdisciplinary Studies serves
as the categorical “catch-all” for
these newly arising fields of
aerospace and nuclear technology. This department is under
the direction of Dr. Irving H.
Shames.

Dr. Shames pointed out that
this extension would add five
thousand square feet of space
when completed. This lab wjll
profit mostly seniors in Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Science courses, as well as
graduate students and faculty
members associated with these
fields. At their disposal will be a
supersonic wind tunnel with a
six-inch by six-inch test section
having a variable Mach number
capacity up to four (four times
the speed of sound). This installa-

tion is completely instrumented
with a Schlieren optical system
and a very accurate strain gage
balance system.
Also, a plasma jet facility, ac-

companied by high speed photographic equipment for the study
of plasma jet flow, has been designed by an associate professor.
Dr. David M. Bencnson, Dr. Dale
E. Taulbec, an .Assistant Professor of Engineering, has contributed to the lab by designing
both a low speed, low turbulence
wind tunnel for the investigation
of aerospace acoustics and a rare(Cont’d .on P. 3)

�Second Fulbright Honor
Awarded to Dr. Barnette
Dr. W. Leslie Barnette, Jr., Director of the Vocational Counseling Center and professor of psychology, is
to India, for
the recipient of a second
the academic year 1964-65.
His assignment for the coming year is to assist the
United States Educational Foundation in India in establishing an Advertisement, Testing, and Evaluation Center
for the Indian students who plan to come to America
for graduate work with the help
of the Foundation
His work will involve consultations with guidance bureaus in
various Indian states as well as

with

university

personnel.

universities with useful data
•about Indian graduate student ap-

University of Buffalo in 1932
and 1936 respectively, and the
Ph.D. degree from New York
University in 1949.
Prior to joining the University
faculty in 1950, he had assignments at Buffalo Collegiate Cen-

ter,

State University College at

Buffalo, Pace College and New
York University.

,

The Association of College
Unions Intercollegiate Tournaments for the Region II will be
held here on Friday and Saturday, Feb. 21 and 22. Norton
Hall will be host to men and
women from over twenty schools
from New York State and Southern Ontario, Canada.

College Unions Region II tournaments.
Miss Janet Sheridan of SUNY
College at Cortland, last year’s
regional winner in the women’s
bowling division went on to win
the National Tournament at
Memphis, Tennessee, and will be
here again this year.

The schools will be represented
by the best eligible amateurs in

Bowling Division, the five highest all events winners from five

tournaments.
Quite often these tournaments act

as a springboard to professional
activity for some of the more

talented.

and women),
table tennis, billiards, and chess
will be engaged in by the following schools:
(men

Alfred University, Alfred Tech,
Delhi College, Pace College, Siena
College, Utica College, Cortland,
University of Rochester, U.S, Military Academy, State University
Maritime College, Waterloo Lutheran University, New York University (Loeb), State University
at Albany, College of Mt. St.
Vincent, Keuka College, Ithaca
College, Cornell University, and
our campus.

This

year’s registration has
already surpassed
1963 with
men’s bowling having about 50%

more schools and

women’s bowl100% more. Table tennis,
chess, and billiards are running
ahead of last year also.

ing

The Region II tournaments will
be concluded with a banquet,
Saturday. Feb. at 4:30 p.m.
in Norton Hall Cafeteria at which
time all winning participants and
schools will be awarded plaques
for their accomplishments.

Mr. Thomas Haenle, Region II
Recreation
Advisor and Mr.
Joseph Paffic, Region II Assistant
Recreation Advisor will coordinate this year’s Association' of

Co-Edifs New Book

Provided By SUNY Funds

'Colour of Saying

'

Dr, Ralph N. Maud, assistant
professor of English, is the coeditor of a book recently published by J. M. Dent &amp; Sons, Ltd.,

of London.

Dr. Maud collaborat-

ed with Aneirin Talfan Davies of
the British Broadcasting Co. on
The Colour of Saying, an anthology composed of verse by other

poets which Dylan Thomas had
selected for public readings. The
volume was published in commemoration of the tenth anniversary of Thomas’ death.

Dr. Maud, who received his
Ph.D from Harvard University,
has taught at the University at
Buffalo since 1958. He was a
Dexter Traveling Fellow at Harvard for the summer of 1958 and
received a Grant-in-Aid from the
American Council of Learned
Societies in 1961.

ACU Tournaments Region II
To Be Held Next Week-Norton

each of the various

Research Equipment, Space
(Cont’d

from P.

twenty and a supersonic magnetogasdynamie facility.
How will reserach projects
which will make use of the new
lab extension be financed? “There
are actually seven proposals now

1)

fied gas dynamic facility for the
study of flows which will be encountered as a space vehicle
leaves the earth’s atmosphere.
In addition, a mass spectrograph
will be available, along with a
computation room, individual

into federal government agencies,” said Dr. Shames. “Three
have been requested from the
National Science Foundation, two
from the Office of Naval Research, one from Army Ordinance, and one from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration. All of these requests involve phases of research which
will utilize the new lab facilities
extensively. However, we are still
awaiting word on the outcome
of these proposals,”

desk calculators, and office space
for supervisors. All of these
things should be 'finished by this
summer and fully operational by
the beginning of next fall’s
classes.

Press.

plicants.
In anticipation of

some of his
work in India, Dr. Barnette will
confer with officials of the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, New Jersey, concerning the
Indian use of the Graduate Record Examination, an ability
measure frequently used by
graduate schools as part of their
admissions procedures.
Dr. Barnette went to India on
his first Fulbright Award in 195253 to help develop and strengthen the vocational guidance movement. As a result of these earlier
efforts, the first All-India Conference on Vocational and Educational Guidance met in Delhi
under the leadership of Dr. Barnette, From this confernce the AllIndia Vocational and Educational Guidance Association was
formed, and Dr. Barnette was
made its first honorary member.
Dr. Barnette received both the
AB. .and M.A. degrees from the

1964

Dr. Ralph N. Maud

However, this is not the extent
Another book by Dr. Maud, of the equipment. Tentatively
Entrances into Dylan Thomas’ planned in the near future are
Poetry, was published in October a hypersonic wind tunnel with a
by the University of Pittsburgh Mach number capacity up to

A
to

major effort will be made
provide American colleges and

Bowling

Friday, February 14,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The finalists in the Women’s

different schools, will compete
with other regional finalists at
the Women's International Bowling Congress Co-ed Competition
in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on
April 11, 12, and 13.
The finalists in the Men’s Bowling Division, the five highest all
events scorers from five different
schools, will compete with other
regional winners at the American
Bowling Congress Collegiate Competition in Oakland, California on
April 4, 5, and 6.
The winners in each billiard
division, men’s pocket billiards,
women’s pocket billiards, men’s
3-cushion billiards will compete
in the sectional tournaments prior
to the International Face-to-Face
Tournament at Tucson, Arizona
on April 30, May 1, and May 2,

Personnel Wanted
The
Committee is taking applications for election
personnel for the options in March. Anyone interested in
working, please apply
by leaving your name,
telephone number,
class and activities at
University written on
a sheet of paper in the
Elections
Committee
box in the Student
Sepate

office.

Notice of Make-up
Examinations
A p p 1 i cation for
make-up

examinations

for the removal of IN-

COMPLETE GRADES
must be filed in the

Office of Admissions
and Records, 201
Hayes Hall no later
than MARCH 2, 1964.
Make-up Examinations begin April 6,
1964.

Starbuck Refuses to Sign Certificate
of U.B., President Clifford C.
Furnas and J. L. Murray, head
of the State University system.
The plaintiff has also charged
violation of the First and FourAmendteenth Constitutional
ments as well as a breach pf

(Cont’d from P. 1)

in name only,'
official.

stated a campus

Mr. Starbuck as the plaintiff in
the impending case, charges, in
reference to the Civil Service
form question the words “advised” was vague, and “ever”
questioned “beyond the right of
legitimate inquiry.” Defendents
in the case have been listed as
The Board of Regents of the State
University, the Board of Trustees

ci idc i
OUI\C
.

7ayfat

contract.

A recipient of the Guggenheim
Fellowship, and an American
Academy of Arts and Letters
grant in recognition of his outstanding writing, Mr. Strbuck is
well known in literary circles.

YOU CAN p,CK up YQiUR
AIRLINE tickets at

Senvlce,

3588 MAIN—Next to University Plaza
If you hove already made your reservation with
the Airlines, you may pick up your ticket here
and save a trip to the Statler or the Airport.
OR
We will make your reservations for you and

furnish the tickets.

NO EXTRA CHARGE

...

THE FARE IS THE SAME

BRAND NEW
SELECTION

All fRINIS
(matted)

BUFFALO

And

TRAVEL

POSTERS
$100

TEXTBOOK
STORES
3610
Main Street

�Friday, February 14, 1964

Seven Students
Elected, Initiated
Phi Beta Kappa

Gen. Hatch Addresses
AFROTC at Dining-in
Speaking before a group of about 100 U.B. Air Force
ROTC Cadets and Faculty members, Brigadier General
Royal C. Hatch, Commander of the First Reserve Area,
Stewart Air Force Base, New York, gave importance to
the role the Reserve officer plays in the Defense of the
United States. Although strssing the opprotunities of life
as an Air Force Officer, General Hatch gave credit first
to the Universities and Faculties for the training of the

students, whose unusual
ly distinguished scholastic records merited their election to
Phi Beta Kappa at the end of
their Junior year, have been
initiated by the Omicron Chapter
of New York at the State University of Buffalo.
Seven

10.000 new officers needed yearly
by the Air Force and the wise
choice made by the young cadets
for choosing the Air Force ROTC
Program. While each is committed to serve on active duty
after graduation the fact that
they leave the service for civilian
pursuits keep them in the forefront of our national security.
The ready reserve is the first
to be called to active duty, as in
the Berlin Crisis and have always

served with distinction. For those
officers who are to make the Air
Force their career, educational,
.lob and travel opportunities are
unlimited. General Hatch, himself a career reservist on active
duty said advancement to high
rank and responsibility is open
to each, according to his ability.
He also stated that each person
should seek and serve in some
public endeavor.
Following the speech General
Hatch spoke informally with Doctor Arthur E. Trabant, Dean of
the School of Engineering, Doctor
John T. Horton, Chairman of the
History Department, Mr. John
Waler, Assistant Director of Admissions and Lt. Colonel Thomas
L, Huddleston, Professor of Air
Science on the expectations the
Air Force places on the Universities, Faculties and young men
of AFROTC

Founded cn 1776, Phi Beta'Kap
pa is both the oldest national
scholastic honor society and the

oldest Greek letter organization
in the country. It now comprises
171 chapters, of which Omicron
of New York was chartered in
1938.

The initiation ceremonies, attended by members of Phi Beta
Kappa and friends and families
of the initiates, took place in
Norton Union on the campus of
the State University of New York
at Buffalo. A reception followed
in the Red Room of the Faculty
Club.
Those initiated
Cadet Colonel Bertram W.
Cream, his staff and other cadets
presented General Hatch challenging questions on scientific,
engineering and other fields of
endeavors they could look to as
part of their active military tours
as Air Force Second Lieutenants.
During the awards ceremony of
Dining-in, Cadet Major Peter G.
Greenlaw was presented the AIR
FORCE TIMES AWARD for his
outstanding ability and initiative
as a Cadet in bringing constructive attention to the Air Force
Reserve Officers Training Corps
of SUNYAB.

White Avalanche Brings Extended
Winter Weekend Events to Climax
'

-talked off with first

By BARBARA STRAUSS
'

For

first time

the

in

four

years, there was plenty of snow

for Winter Weekend, and the
Frosh Class Council used the
white avalanche to good advantage as they brought the ‘Winter
Thing’ to an exciting close. Saturday afternoon, students enjoyed ice skating and an exhibition
ty the U.B. hockey at Lincoln
Park. This event was followed by
people-sled” races on campus.
And, the traditional snow sculptor contest provided an outlet for
all artistic geniuses. Alpha Sigma
Phi’s entry—a huge St. Bernard
complete with cask, and entitled
"A Remedy for the Winter Thing”

place

honors.

Alpha Sigma’s candidate for
prince of the Winter Thing, Robert Woodhall, was also victorious; his princess was Doris Marx,
Phi Zeta Chi’s entry. The two
presided over the “Northern Star
Ball” at the Hotel Buffalo, Saturday night.
Proceeding the weekend, cochairmen Francine Zumpano and
Joseph Tringali provided an
eventful week of fine movies, student basketball games, and a folk
concert starring Hackett and
Raven.

‘Winter
Thing’ provided interesting activities for almost every student.
This

new

extended

AFROTC Cadets 1700 strong, will
be viewing pictures displayed
throughout the campus to decide how to cast their vote on
20 Feb. for the “Queen of the
Military Ball”. Diane Scholl, a
sophomore
Math Department;
Mary Ann Wartenberg, a sophomore-Speech Department; Mary
Ann Lucchino, a senior-Histpry
and Education Department; and

man, Anthropology Major of
Buffalo, N. Y.
Mr. David J. Partington, Psychol
ogy Major of Mohawk, N. Y.

Mr. Robert L. Pfleegor, Physics
Major of Orchard Park, N. Y.
Mr. Edwin A. Stromberg, Political Science Major of Buffalo
N. Y.

Harvard Tourney
Attended by Two
LINDA LEVENTHAL

Two members of the Debate
Society attended a tournament at
Harvard Jan. 30-Feb. 1. They competed along with one hundred
and twenty other teams representing colleges and universities
throughout the nation.
There were eight rounds of
switch side debate. Carol Zeller
and Gerald Catanzaro debated
both the affirmative and negative in alternate rounds of debate. Their total record was five
wins and three losses. This record placed the university in the
top quarter of all those competing.

Miss Zeller and Mr. Gtatnzaro
defeated teams from Capital Uni
versity, Columbus, Ohio; Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa;
Luther College; Clarion College,
Clarion, Pa.; and Augustana College, Augustana, South Dakota.
Other teams they met were John
Carroll University, Dartmouth,
and Loyola of Chicago.

Sue Duffy, a sophomore-History
Department are candidates for
this year’s honors. The queen will
be crowned at midnight by last
year’s queen, Pat Hoffman, and
by the Professor of Air Science,
Lt. Colonel Thomas L. Huddleston, USAF. Tickets are going fast
for this gala event and may be
purchased in the Norton ticket
office. Cadets can buy tickets
against*their AlfROTC deposit.

OPEN ALL YEAR
the drlve-ln with the mrchee

McDonald^

were;

Miss Victoria Bugelski, Music Major of Buffalo, N. Y.
Miss Sally Ann Finch, Biology
Major of Alden, N. Y.
Miss Alice L. Friedland. English
Major of Roosevelt, N. Y,
Mrs. Carolyn Emerson Needle-

By

Cadets to Cast Votes Thursday
For 'Queen of the Military Ball

-

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

m

BLVD.
1385 NIAGARA FALLS
MAPLE ROAD
Vi MUe North of SHERIDAN DRIVE atPlaxa)
(Adjacent The Boulevard Mall
Open Friday end Saturday until 1:00
Operated by the JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

Organizations to Submit
New Budgets by April 15
In order to facilitate more efficient processing of the financial budgets for the 1964-1965
school year, all organizations that
receive financial allotments from
the student senate are requested
to submit their proposed budgets
for the 64-65 year by April 15.
Budgets not received by the
above deadline will be subject
to penalty unless an authorized
explanation is given which will

be reviewed by the finance committee.

Please pick up the budget forms
from the secretary in the senate
office at Norton (room 205) and
place them in the treasurers
mail box upon completion.
If there are any questions or
problems, please direct them to
Allen Horowitz, terasurer and
finance committee chairman. He
may be contacted in the senate
office or by calling TF 2-7085.

�PAGE FOUR

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Kowal
Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Alan Newman
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

,

Sports Editor
Photography Editor

Editorial Advisor

-

John

Managing Editor
News Editor

Feature Editor

ARNOLD S. MAZUR

Business Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulation Mgr.
Financial Advisor

i.

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessinger
Thomas Haenle, Jr.
..

General Stall: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Judy Green, Gary Falk,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Charles
Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray Crawford, Jane
Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian
Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng,
Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo, Terry Sweeney, Tom Kujarski,
Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie
Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Kilpstein, Saralee Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin

Photography

Staff: Joel Havens, Pamela Reid

Oao

•SaXVc

Entered as second class matter February 9, 1961, at the Pest
Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of postage provided for in
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951
Subscription

PRESS

Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

$3.00 per

year,

circulation 9000.

Represented for national advertising by National Advertising
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Editorial
Our Student Senate

People

and
Politics
By DANIEL RUSSELL
SPOTLIGHT ON CIVIL RIGHTS

The civil rights movement in
Buffalo is fast becoiping a dynamic, meaningful force in U.B.’s
city. Last year saw the formation
of three new groups, each adding
an important facet to the struggle in Buffalo.
One of the newly arrived
groups, The Congress of Racial
Equality (CORE),

specializes in

the much needed “direct action”
technique. Square Partee, head
of CORE’S Action Committee,
says, “More people have become
aware of the need for direct action. Many people thought that
it wasn’t necessary. Since CORE
has come to Buffalo, many have
realized that it is. CORE has
provided an impetus to action
throughout Buffalo,”

Another muscular “newborn"
is the Citizens Council on Human
Relations (CCHR). This organization, composed of three standing
committees (education, employment, and housing), addresses itself to the whole problem of inequality in Buffalo. Newton Carver, the Executive Secretary of
the CCHR, sees a reshaping of
public opinion: “People realized
there was a serious problem that
had to be met. People’s attitude
changed markedly. There is a
greater awareness of the problem; a greater recognition of the

Student government is an integral part of student life.
It should provide, among other things, an effective organ
through which student action may be channelled. Its
role and scope should extend beyond campus issues. Unfortunately, the abstraction, the principle, is not the
reality. Some campuses have effective student governments. The majority act at least part of the time. The
student government on this campus unfortunately resembles a Mickey Mouse Club. Gratification of the ego,
the cheese which these mice seek, seems to be the primary
goal of the U.B. leadership.
Granted that this is a generalization. Granted that
there are students serving on the Senate who are sincerely interested in the principles of student government
and student action. Granted that the Senate does, on injustice . .
occasion, accomplish certain things. It is too bad that
these few senators are lost in the faceless faction which
A key problem facing the Necomprise the majority of the Senate. We ( congratulate gro today is his inability to do
those few sincere representatives for continuing to serve the “simple” thing of living
Housing Opin the face of constant quibbling and frustration. It is sad where he pleases.
Made Equal (HOME),
that these Senators must degrade themselves by being a portunities
1963, is trying to open the
part of an organization which has shown over the past born in neighborhoods.
closed
Their metyear that individual integrity is almost non-existant.
hod is to act as “middleman”
.”

Compare the achievements of last year’s Senate with
this year’s and one can judge for himself the difference
between an effective body, and a hopeless adolescent
jungle. And the student body itself is at fault for not
caring. Minority groups control elections on the campus,
and the quickest way for a person and the organization
to which he or she belongs to climb to the top rung of
the ladder of mediorcrity is to elect someone to the Senate.
It is no accident that those Senators who seem to be
doing the best jobs are those whose loyalties extend
beyond the groups or organizations which elected them—whose loyalties are not tied up with dying social traditions.
How many of those currently serving on the Senate
know what the Kerr Directives were? What NSA’s decision concerning in loco parentis implies? How many of
those who will wallow in psudo-righteous outrage at this
editorial will even bother to find out? How many of those
who solemnly nod their heads in assent, or laugh, when
reading this editorial will then try to do something about
the state of the Senate? HoW many are willing to commit
themselves? Commit themselves (yourselves) to more
thah sitting around the lounges of Norton wondering
about who to go out with Saturday night. Commit themselves to doing more than a sitting in the Rathole, stroking
their long hair and bemoaning their outcast fate.
It is time that those who are interested in significant
student action combine forces and ACT. It seems almost
impossible to work within the present two-party structure
on this campus. If the principle which these parties are
undermining by their sqabbling weren’t so important,
that is, real student government;, it would be indeed
laughable. You can’t save a house whose foundations are
crumbling by repairing one room. You must build a new
house. Perhaps another party is in order; perhaps not.
What is necessary is concern, something definitely lacking within the present campus government.

W« wiah we could be dispassionate

..

but, we can’t.

between seller and buyer, and educate the residents of the soonto-be-opened neighborhoods. Reverend Howard Fuller, the President of HOME, reflects the optimism of many of our community leaders. “I think the situation has picked up some since
the spring of 1963. I’m more
hopeful now than I was a year
ago, but there still is an overwhelming amount of work to be
done.” On the prospect of continued stepped up activity in Buffalo, he says, “I think the situation is going to warm up. If the
Senate doesn’t pass the civil
rights bill, things will really
warm up.”
The Regional Director of the
New York State National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP), Rafael
Duhard, expresses a similar sort
of optimism. “I feel there is a
general step up of concern. There
has been some improvement in
Negro integration into the community in Eggertsville. This has
been a hopeful sign. Other such
signs have occurred. Some of
these people are getting used to
the idea that this is American.”
Optimism is the keynote, but

the Battle Hymn of the Republic
is still the tune. The civil rights
movement in Buffalo is growing
and gaining every day. The
chances for Buffalo to become
truly the “City of Good Neighbors” is growing with it. And,
incidentally, so are the opportunities for student participation.
The next meeting of the Civil
Rights Committee will be held
Monday, February 24, 5:00 p.m..

Room 330, Norton Union. To
find .out. what YOU can do, be
.,
.
theft.. .
,

It would be bad enough if certain of the self-appointed
“leaders” of the senate were merely intellectual dwarfs.
What is frightening, is to see these gutless wonders act
as demagogues.

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

,

......

..

cjCetleri

to

the Editor

Comments on Feinberg
TO THE EDITOR;

I enjoyed reading the various
comments which you published
on the Feinberg Act. There are
few things more amusing than
Ritualistic Liberalism. Noting
that you did not have opportunity
to outline the case for the Act,
I must presume that your readers
do not wish to consider the view
that a refusal, however pure in
motive, to sign; the Certificate
does not contribute to academic
freedom.

Yet allow me to ask one question: When Dr. Barghoorn was
arrested in the Soviet Union,
what did the AAUP do? Did it,
for example, thank the United
States Administration for its efforts to defend Dr. Barghoorn's
freedom?
Very truly yours,B. Raphael Sealey
Assoc. Prof., Dept, of
Classics

Student Senate Reviewed
TO THE EDITOR
I attended a meeting
Student Senate and was

of our
amused,
astonished, exasperated and, finally, very upset. After three
hours, the proposal for action on
the Feinberg Certificate was finally presented. Within fifteen
minutes, a quorum was called
and the meeting adjourned. The
problem of the signing of this
disclaimer has faced our faculty
since December; the deadline for
the actual signing was January
31. The Senate has done nothing
as of February 11. It seems that
there are more pressing matters,
such as a very lengthy and
erudite discussion on the question of having our two major
photography darkrooms unite.
More important, though, is the
question of the nature and purpose of our Senate. Time after
time, a Senator uses the floor to
politely and formally degrade,
insult, and embarrass one of his
cohorts. The latter not only gets
back at his playmate, but also
receives support from his gang.

The Feinberg Oath and such important matters are marvelous
vehicles for their game at these
Tuesday evening club meetings
And yet, I can’t help wondering if their lack of interest in
you is a result of your lack of
interest in them. You have probably heard all the beautiful, well
inspired sermons on apathy. Well.
I don’t care if you are apathetic,
as long as your apathy does not
somehow give you the power to
harm your school. Most of you
don’t care if the Feinberg Oath
never gets discussed or for that
matter, if the Senate never meets.
But do you, as representatives
of American college youth, care
if action unfavorable to you is
passed? Will you care if one
Senator achieves his goal by initiating a plan so that his frater
nity can control your school organization? Perhaps this meeting
of pettiness and personalities can
become a meeting of intelligence
and meaningful action.
Sincerely,
Gail Edwin

Blazer Committee
TO THE EDITOR:
The Blazer Committee is a new
innovation at the University of
Buffalo. It is functioning as a
part of the Public Relations Committee of the Student Senate, It
was an honor for me to be the
first chairman of this newly formed group; The idea for this group,
that of selling emblematic blazers
of the University, was first set
up by Robert Finklestein. The
functioning of this group went
along very smoothly and the sale
of the blazers to the student body
should begin soon. It has been
a pleasure being able to. work
oh a cotamittee such, as this one,

but due to my not meeting the
academic standards that I ha\e
set for myself, I have found that
I had to resign my position on
the committee. In order for me
to complete my studies and go
into a graduate course, I fin i
that I must maintain some high
er grades. This kind of work
with different committees has always been one of my favorite
tasks. In order to be able to
work on committees in the future
I find that I must take off from
my extra-curricular activities this
semester and concentrate on my

studies.

Haryey, ,J. Breijne

�Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

'Impressions of an

The Circus

-

danellas.

We went to Gibraltar’s home at
the appointed time, and were

ushered into the

living room by
her father. There on a sofa at
one end of the room sat the recorders
of “Ba-Wump-WumpBaby,” while arranged on other

furniture sat assorted
“Which one of you ladies is
the spokesman for the group?”
we asked.
“I am,” said the one on the far
right. Actually, I should have
known, because the four others
were turned towards the left,
while she sat facing forward.
“How did you get the name
relatives,

Gilbraltar?”

we next queried.

“I was born with it, wise guy."
Oh, if only the board could
have seen us then. “Well, how
did the group get the name Dar-

danellas?”
“It’s the
took when
you heard
Bosporus?

stage name my sister
she left home. Maybe
Dardanella
o’ her
She’s an exotic dan-

cer.”
We professed our ignorance,
and this brought strange rumblings from the relatives, one of
whom gurgled rather audibly
“Well, whadayawant from a college kid?”

“Does the group have a manaor agent?” we asked.
“Yeah. My ole man takes ten
per cent an’ chaperones us.”
the father be
“That’s ri
ger

”

gan to say.
“But mostly he takes his

ten

percent,” said Dardanella No 3.
“Shut up, Grade,” Gibraltar
said without moving her lips,
and the relatives began to rumble again, and one of them hissed

depart.

“Well, ladies, I think I
Thank you
much for your time, and
luck in Philly.”
“Don' ya wanna hear us
enough here.

have
very

good

sing
our new song?” Gibraltar asked

with this kind of kicked-puppy
look on her face.
We thought of the board and
some of the fiercer looking relatives stationed at strategic exits,
and said “Yes, of course.”
‘Beedle-I-Doop“It’s
called
Shoop,” she said as the group
placed themselves, the Dardanelles facing to the left, Gibraltar
staring straight ahead. Then the
Dardanelles began to swing their
left arms in unison and almost
in time to the music, like a locomotive picking up steam.
“I got that idea from a locomotive I saw picking up steam,”
said the father.
“Beedle-I-Doop-Shoop, babyeee
(“Ba-Wump” from the Dardanellas)
Beedle-I-Doop-Shoop, hoyonee
(“Thhht,” from the relatives)
Yaaya yea.” (“Enough!’’ from
our own lips, which kind of surprised us, because after so many
Friday afternoon sessions we
thought we could take anything.)
“Well, I really do have to be
off now. Thanks again. Good
song. Great. Really. Well, so
long.”

“But you ain’t heard the
chorus . .
And somehow the thought consoled us.

Exam for Foreign Students
Tests Language Proficiency
English rapidly becoming
“the” international language?
The January issue of Overseas
magazine explores the development, teaching and testing of
English as a second language in
three special articles. Overseas,
the Magazine of Educational Exchange, is published from September through May by the InIs

stitute of International Education.
Melvin Fox, associate director
of the Ford Foundation’s International Training and Research
Program, describes the growth
and role of English as a second
language as a “factor in the educational, social and economic development of an increasing number of countries.”
Mr. Fox states that it is as necessary for the United States, England and 6ther English-speaking
countries to assist developing nations with programs to teach English as a second language, as it
is to give them technical aid. He
emphasizes the need for cooperation between government and
academic communities in furthering scholarly development and
technical assistance in this field.
In the second article, Clifford
Prator writes about the trends in
the methods of teaching English
to foreign students. Dr. Prator
is professor of English and vicechairman of the Department of
English at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is responsible for UCLA’s English
courses for foreign students, and
for its rapidly growing graduate

program for the preparation of
teachers of English as a second
language.

The radical new English proficiency test for foreign students,
soon to be initiated overseas, is
the subject of the third special
article written by Dr. David Har-

ris, program director of the National Council on the Testing of
English as a Foreign language.
This Test of English as a Foreign Language, called TOEFL for
short, is designed to help the
U. S. academic community, and
government and private organizations assess the language competence of foreign students seeking admission to colleges and uni-

versities in this country.
In addition to the special section on English as a second language, the January Overseas features a report on the outlook for
democratic government in Latin
America. Pat M. Holt, consultant
to the Foreign Relations Committee of the United States Senate,
presents the hypothesis that the
poliical problem in Latin America is due to the inability to devise a workable mechanism to
operate a government based on
democratic ideals.
This month’s “In View” personality in international educational exchange is Wayne- L.
Congressman Hays has
Hays.
Kepi esenserved in the House of He
is retatives for 16 years
sponsible for the Mutual EducaAct
tional and Cultural Exchange preof 1961 which broadened the
viously existing Fulbright Act.

Some six months ago while
still in doubt what I would do
after taking my degree, I was
offered the opportunity of graduate study at Buffalo. Even
though I knew little about the
city, except that it was very near
Niagara Falls, I decided to accept
the invitation. A decision which 1
shall no doubt look back on with
mixed feelings.

The idea of university buildings set in a verdant campus ap
pealed as a welcome change from
a London college. The colleges of
London are curious and varied as
to architecture. Admittance to the
one I attended
was gained
through a shabby little entrance,
no bigger than the typewriter
repair shop and stationers that
flanked it on either side. Emerging from its cloistered, academic
atmosphere one
is suddenly
thrust into the hurly-burly of
commercial London.
I had a slight suspicion that

the mode of instruction would
be somewhat different from what
I was used to. I was not prepared, however, for the considerable differences that do exists be-

tween an English and an American university. It was a long time
before I sorted out the purely
semantic difficulties of the term,
“credit hour.” A credit hour
seemed a very short time until
I learned that it met one lecture
of an hour’s duration per week
one semester. And woe betide the
student who tries to get graduate credit for a course which is
only offered for undergraduate

gle for the quality of education
growing out of committed opposition to the Feinberg Certificate and all that it implies it
appears that a lull has come.
George Starbuck, a poet and

teacher for whom I have the
warmest respect and regard, has
been fired for his refusal to
capitulate and sign the Certificate. He has obtained an injunction postponing his dismissal
until court proceedings determine the legality of his appeal.
The legality of his appeal may be
in question, but the morality and
courage of his stand, and the
stand of all the other educators
who have refused to sign the
Certificate, is beyond question.
We heard at the Student Senate
meeting that this issue was of
comparitively little importance,
that it was “a matter of degree,”
but the danger and hardship
these educators face as a result
of their commitment to descent
education and the sanctity of the
human spirit is no matter of

about the Senate, the Administration and the AAUP. None of
these organizations has been willing to come to the defense of
Mr. Starbuck, or, to the best of
my knowledge, of any of the educators who are defending the
idea of a university with their
jobs, placing their futures in jeopardy. My condemnation of these
organizations does not stem from
my disagreement with those who
support the Feinberg law. It
stems from my horror at the conspiracy of silence which has
clouded the whole issue. Each of
these groups has said that they
oppose the law, but none of
them has been willing to support
those who will lose their jobs
for adhereing to their conscience.
In the face of such an evil, silence is just as immoral as sup-

credit.

The idea of awarding a degree
based on an accumulative assessment from individual grades
obtained from a large number
of varied courses taken over a
three of four years period, is
quite foreign to English system.
After three years of study at an
English University, one takes an
extensive series of examinations
designed to test the candidates
depth of knowledge and ability
to express original interpretation.

port.
Not

all the students at this
will loose teachers
when the orders to fire the nonsigners are carried out, but we
all stand to lose a number of
good educators. Our teachers will
soon be fired, for being teachers,
teachers who take their profesuniversity

The American system of continual examinations for each individual course and an emphasis on
factual knowledge minimizes the
deminanee of subjective evaluation that a defect is found in the
English University, The total replacement of examiner, however,
with all their human foibles, by
an IBM computer, is not an entirely satisfactory solution In the
English system there is more
emphasis on the essay as an
indication of ability, in the sciences as well as the arts. There
is an attempt to evaluate more
nebulous aspects of scholastic
achievement, such as the depth
of background knowledge and
clarity of expression and thought.
These are basically subjective
judgements which are very difficult to standardize. This is not
to say that such laudable attributes are not valued in an ameri-

sion seriously enough to place

their livelihoods in jeopardy to
protect the quality of education
we students can and should expect at a university that is
worthy of the name. An emotional list of the kind of privations these teachers will face
when they are fired would be an
invasion of their privacy, but

most of them have families to
feed. One may indeed wonder
how they supported their families
on the abysmally poor pay of
teacher in the first place, but
after they are fired, how will they
do it? I gave a fairly full discussion of my reasons for opposing
the Feinberg Law and the Certi-

the reasons others
for opposing them,
but this week I think that the
question of deeper commitment
deserves some attention.
I have heard some truely appalling statements since this
whole issue arose, “A matter of
degree" being just one of them.
“It’s not my problem" is another; I can only say that if the
protection of the American ideal,
the democratic process, and the
concept of academic freedom is
not "Your problem” then I am
a little unclear as to just whose
problem it is. Just those people
who choose to make it theirs? If
that’s so, then what exactly does
it mean to be an American citizen? “If the teachers don’t have
the guts to make a stand then
why should we?” Some teachers
do have the “guts” to take a
stand do we? A number of our
teachers are going to be fired.
ficate, and

might have

•

-

Its our problem.

If questions of morality, principle, and professional ethics are
unimportant to you, I submit that
you

have

very

little business

being in college, or preparing for
a professional career. If teachers
and educators are subject to the
politics of the state in the discharge of their duties, then
whose to say lawyers, doctors,
el al should be. But even if the
principles at stake have no meaning for you
the lives of your
own tearhert should, and it has
reached the point where the effects of these “high principles”
are being felt on this campus.
I call on you to sign the peti-

tion included in this column. I
call upon the Student Senate to
take some effective action to support their teacher, those who
have signed under duress and
“feel dirty about it, as well as
those who have refused to sign.
I call upon the AAUP to protect
its own intergrity and to jusify its
existance as more than a private
club. I call upon the administration to break the conspiracy of
silence and to take a stand cither
opposnig or supporting the teachers who have not signed. I call
upon everyone in the academic
community to inform themselves
on this issue (My last column, the
AAUP report, and the Student
Senate ‘fact sheet’ should present
a sampling of fact and the most
prevalent opinions) and to take
a stand on this state of affairs
which is of the utmost importance to each of us.

March of Dimes Project
Of Alpha Sigma Phi Men
The pledge class of Alpha Sigma Phi along with the pledge
classes of the sororities Alpha

can university. But, I cannot see
how they can play a part in
determining the quality of the
degree obtained,' based as it is
on the individual course grades.

The graduate student in England is a gentleman of leisure
compared with his hard pressed
counterpart in the states, who has
to contend with course work as
well as research. This may well
produce a more well-informed
student, but not necessarily a
more able mind. If one was being
realy nasty, one could say that
the necessity for course work in
the graduate program was simply
to correct deficiencies at the
bachelor level. I think, however,
that the personal variation in
this is too great for such a general criticism to have any validity.

There comes a lull in almost
every battle when one must pause
and examine not only what one
is fighting for, but the way one
is fighting as well. In the strug-

degree.
I said some pretty bitter and
harsh things in my last column

j

third. We

“Are you excited about your
spot on Bandstand?” we asked,
trying to speak in the native
idiom.
“Oh, yeah. ‘Course, we ain’t
new to this racket. We been on
Polka Time an’ won second place
on the Chamber o’ Commerce’s
Teen Night Talent Search. We
don’ get excited ’bout this stuff
any more.”
We thought of the board and
blushed for having asked such an
obvious question. It appeared an
opportune moment for us to

By JEREMY TAYLOR

By HAROLD K. KIMELBERG

j

I

j

I

the first person instead of the
were also informed
that we had been demoted to
getting an interview with a local
rock and roll singing group that
was going to be on American
Banstand Gibraltar and the Daring

whadya-

j

nalism we had violated, like misplacing quotation marks and us-

quite audibly, “Well,
want from a bum?”

|

seems our last column was
not too well received, as we were
called before the board and informed of some very basic jour-

tmecTioits

Academic Refugee'

By BOB MILCH
It

PAGE FIVE

Gamma Delta and Theta Chi,
combined their efforts in a joint
pledge project. The project consisted of handing out canisters—the small coin holders that you
see near the cash registers in
many stores—for the National
Foundation. The National Foundation is the organization that
sponsors the March of Dimes,
up tomorrow as part of the project.

Ross Radley, chairman of the
pledge project committee for
Alpha Sig, in keeping with the
spirit of ‘‘cooperation among the
Greeks” asked Alpha Gam, represented by Beth Bowls and Theta
Chi, represented by Marilynn
Zaccerine, if they would like to
work together on their pledge
projects. The sororities contributed ten pledges each and Alpha

Sig chipped in with twenty. The
project started from Tower Hall
the National Foundation providing the cars. The volunteers
covered the city in dragnet fashion, distributing over five hun-

dred canisters to local merchants,

although hampered by bad weather. The canisters will be picked
up on February 1 as part of the
project.

Said Mr. Dave Getman, the
head of the local chapter of the
National Foundation, “We are
very grateful to these kids for
helping us out. Before they volunteered we were afraid we would
have to pay people to hand them
out."

Each Alpha Sig pledge is responsible for doing a pledge project. Alpha Sig attempts to choose
the project that will help the
community the most and create
a better image bf fraternity life.

�Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Chance to Study Abroad
Students Live With Families
;

SKETCH

BY DAVID BERGEN and PETER RUBIN

T. Beahan. A native of
The subject of our interview this week was Dr. Laurence
presently employed
Buffalo, Dr. Beahan is a graduate of the U.B. Medical School He is
the
Health
Service.
of
Student
psychiatrist
on the staff
at a part time

workers feel need medical attention such as drugs or hospitalization, then these cases are referred to me.
B&amp;R: Do you feel that the Uni-

versity is adequately staffed to

handle the needs of the student
body?

Dr. Beahan: No. We hope to
have more psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers as soon
as possible. This could only be
made possible if the authorities
would give us more money. With
myself here only on a part time
basis the proper time cannot tbe
given to the number of patients
that we have. Many patients have
to be referred to private psychiatrists or clinics.
B&amp;H: A recent study has shown
that seventy percent of the population of New York City is neurotic. Is this true?
Dr, Beahan: This is probably
true and not surprising. Emotional illness is about the most common illness there is. One in ten
people during their lifetime are
at one time or another hospitalized for psychiatric treatment.
There is a greater acceptance of
psychiatry in New York. New
York is a center of psychiatric
help and people from there are
more willing to go to a psychiatrist. People from small towns
with their provincial attitude
would not be as willing to go to
a psychiatrist.
B&amp;R: To what do you attribute
the enthusiasm shown towards a
"singing” group, The Beatles,
that has come to be known as

"Beatlemania?”

University

students
may now obtain tickets to any Sunday concert of the Buffalo
Philharmonic for $1
upon presentation of
their I.D. card at the
Kleinhans Music Hall
box office.

f

*

V

*

can belong. They

r-.

can wear their

hair and dress as the Beatles do
and this gives them a feeling of
identity and belonging. This same
sort of thing happened with
Frank Sinatra. All idolization occurs because of the need for

group identity. In extreme cases
this can go as far as becoming a
Nazi or a Communist. However,
in the U.S. this would suggest
a much greater degree of person-

ality disturbance.

B&amp;R: There have been rumors
that there have been suicides on
this campus. Would you comment
on this.
Dr. Beahan: There have not
been any successful suicide attempts on this campus.
B&amp;R: What is the treatmenl
for anyone who has attempted
suicides or suicidal tendencies?
Dr. Beahan: The basic treatment for attempted suicides is
to make sure that the person
does not succeed. I would estimate whether they will repeat the
attempt and if I feel they would,
I would put them in a hospital
where they could not carry out
any attempts. I would call the
relatives of such a person and
arrange treatment in the individuals home town where their parents would be responsible for the
person.

B&amp;R: Can you personally recommend a person’s dismissal
from school?
Dr. Beahans: I do not have the
power to personally dismiss anyone from school. If I feel that
a person might try suicide again
I would have the parents brought
up to school and ask them to voluntarily withdraw the student
from school,
B&amp;R: If a student were dismissed from school could he or
she apply for readmission?
Dr, Beahan: Yes. If the student
writes to the Dean of Students
the case will be reviewed. This
would entail an interview with
the student, how the student progressed under care and conferences with the student’s psychiatrist. This information would
then be submitted to a committe consisting of members of
housing, counseling, and the
and with their
Dean’s office
recommendation the student
could be readmitted.
B&amp;R: What would happen if a
student Would not wish to “voluntarily” withdraw from the Uni—

versity?
Dr. Beahan: I would recommend the dismissal of the student if he is potentially dangerous to himself and others, to the
Dean of Students. In most cases
the Dean Would probably comply

with my recommendation for dismissal.
I would 1'ke to make it clear
that there are only two instances
in which I will discuss a patient’s
case with any one bsides himself: (I) If I think the patient
is a danger to himself or&gt; others,
(2) If he gives me written per
mission.

First Prize Photo
Nowon Exhibition
"Miss Liberty," photographed
by Jan Johannisson, is typical of
the photographs being exhibited
in the lounge on the second floor

of Norton until Feb.

22.

"Miss

Liberty" took first prize in the
huge international picture contest conducted by Popular Photography magazine for 78 Scandinavian photographers who visited the United States. Pictures
from the contest were made into
the first International Photography Exhibit on Travel, which is
her through the sponsorship of
the Fine Arts Committe. The display is a fascinating catalog of
the visitors' views of New York

Teaching Positions
In Pittsburg System
Pittsburgh—Public Schools are
engaged in an extensive recruit
ment program to interest talented teachers in the advantages of
living in the “Renaissance City”
and teaching in a large progressive city school system with one
of the best salary schedules
$5,000 to $9,550 in twelve incre—

ments.
The Pittsburgh Public Schools
will have 400 teacher vacancies in
its 114 elementary and secondary
schools in September 1964 and
they aim to fill these positions
with highly rated personnel.
Pittsburgh teacher needs are in
art, chemistry, physical education
for girls, physics, special education, mathematics, industrial arts,
foreign languages, vocational education, and all elementary school
fields.
Frank H, Crowley, vice-principal, will visit the campus on Feb.
18 ,1964, to interview college seniors and experienced teachers in
this area who may wish to consider opportunities in the Pittsburgh public school system. Candidates interested in an interview
should contact the Placement Office.

PART TIME WORK

LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week

&amp;

Evenings and Saturday

Requirements; Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instructions

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Cofl Mr. Craig 853-0837
•%-£

&gt;

Members of Classrooms Abroad
will live with private families in
each city, eat many of their meals
with their hosts and share the
activities of their sons and daughters. They will have ample opportunities to met young people
from student, religious, and political organizations. Regular attendance at theatres, concerts,

and movies as well as visits to
libraries, factories,
museums,
youth organizations, and other
points of interest are included in
the program. Each group will
follow its seven-week stay in a
city or town with an optional two
week tour of German, French,
Spanish, or Italian areas. Since
most programs end in mid-Au
gust, - participants have a chance
to remain in Europe for private
travel after the program.
We have found through many
experience that it is
quite possible, even if you don'i
know a word of the language, to
learn more than a year’s worth
of college German, French, Span
ish, or Italian in the course of a
summer”, says Dr. Hirschbach,
Director of Classrooms Abroad,
“provided that we get serious and
mature students who are willing
to mix business with pleasure’
Dr. Hirschbach, who also heads
the German language groups,
teaches at the University of Min
nesota. The French and Spanish
groups will be directed by John
K. Simon, Professor of French
and English at the University of
Illinois, and Robert E. Kelsey,
member of the Romance Lan
guage Department at Yale. The
Italian group will be led by
Charles Affron of Brandeis Uni
versity. Classrooms Abroad, now
in its eighth year, has grown
from eleven students in 1956 to
an anticipated three hundred in
1964. Its former students represent some two hundred American
years of

-

colleges.

Full information can be obtained by writing to Classrooms
Abroad, Box 4171 University Sta
Minnesota
tion, Minneapolis,
55414.

City.

.nr,*

..‘‘A-Ai., 1? ivi.tlt

I

Counseling Center?
Dr. Beahan; If a problem comes
up at the Counseling Center
which the psychologists or social

BeatlemaDr. Beahan: This
nia” involves people in the adolescent and late adolescent age
groups. These are people who are
searching for identity and this
gives them a group to which they

I

B&amp;R Dr. Beahan, what did you
do before coming to the Univers jt y7
Dr. Beahan: After graduating
from the University I interned
at Staten Island Hospital and
then served by residency at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital,
From there I served with the U.S.
Air Force in Japan for four years
before coming to Buffalo.
B&amp;R: After dealing with military personnel for four years, do
you find any similarities between
their problems and those of men
and women in college?
Dr. Beahan: Yes. Many servicemen are the same age as our college students. They suffer from
a mutual problem, that of being
away from home for the first extended period in their lives.
B&amp;R: What do you expect to
achieve at the University?
Dr. Beahan: The immediate
goal is to provide medical management of acutely ill students. I
hope that this can evolve into a
larger mental health program
where more treatment can be
given and possibly some prevention.
B&amp;R: Why is it that you are attached to the Student Health Center and not the Counseling Center?
Dr, Beahan: I was hired by the
Student Health Center to work
for them and being a Medical
Doctor I work in the Medical
Center.
B&amp;R: Are you in any way involved with what goes on at the

Twelve groups, each containing
twenty to thirty selected American college students, will form
seminars in various European
cities next summer to study the
language, culture and civilization
of these countries during a nineweek stay. Designed for the serious student who does not plan
to see all of Europe in a short
summer, Classrooms Abroad tries
to give him a more profound experience through a summer of
living in one of the following
cities: Berlin, or Tubingen in
Germany; Vienna or Baden in
Austria; Besancon, Grenoble, Pau
or Rouen in France; Neuchatel in
Switzerland; Madrid or Santander
in Spain; and Florence, Italy.
Graded classes in small sections of six to ten students, each
under the supervision of American and native professors, will
deal with the reading of classical
and modern texts, the daily press,
contemporary problems, conversation and composition, pronounciation and grammar. Students
will also hear lectures on history
and literature and meet with outstanding personalities. They will
have full auditing privileges at
the university in each of the selected towns and cities and will
participate in all academic and
social activities with German,
Austrian, French, Swiss, Spanish
and Italian students.

Senate
This is a questionnaire designed to help the Student Senate to bring Student Govern
ment closer to you. The Public Relations Committee is trying to gauge a cross sampling
of student opinion.
Please fill this out at your earliest convenience and return to
Room 205.

HOW, DO YOU FEEL ABOUT
THIS CAMPUS

WHAT

THE WAY STUDENT GOVERNMENT IS BEING HANDLED

NEW AREAS WOULD YOU LIKKE

WHAT CHANGES WOULD YOU

SUGGEST

TO SEE

IN

THE SENATE DISCUSS?

THE PRESENT SET-UP?

ADDITIONAL COMMENTS:

Uilitello s

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,

HANDBAGS and GIFTS

Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts

3400 MAIN STREET

to

University Faculty and Students

TF 3-1600

(Opposite UB)

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday

evening

till 9 P.M.

INVERTED AT ADVERTISER'S REQUEST

Campus U.B. from Minutes 6

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�Friday, February 14, 1964

Rossi, Mills to Speak
At Bus. Ad. Conference
Behavioral Sciences

Borst Discovers Cause
Of Neutron Reflection

j

trons.
Dr. Borst is preparing a report
on his discovery for Physical

Review Letters. He also expects
to deliver a paper on it before
the spring meeting of the Ameri-

can Physical Society.

A professor has proved that
the ceaseless, infinitesmal vibrations in matter have the power,
under certain conditions, to
bounce away powerful streams
of neutrons—the so-called “atomic bullets.”
The discovery was made in the
past two weeks in the unversity’s
Nuclear Research Center by Dr.
Lyle B. Borst, professor of physics and astronomy.
It has been known for more
than a decade that neutron beams
are reflected from certain metal
surfaces when they hit at a
small angle.
But it was thought that this
happened because the neutrons
collided, like billiard balls, with
the nuclei inside the surface
atoms of the substance serving
as a “mirror.”
Dr. Borst’s pioneering experiment has shown that actual collision is not necessary. The invisible atomic vibration in the
material can be enough to reflect
away a 1,500-mile-an-hour stream
of neutrons.
Dr. Borst’s test substance was
a strip of lead foil only a few
thousandths of an inch thick.
The atoms in the lead, as in
all substances, are in constant

A conference on the Behavorial
Sciences and Business will be
sponsored by the School of Business Administration on Feb. 28,
from 10 a.jn. to 5:30 p.m. in room
231 of Norton Hall.
Guest speakers and their topics
include: Dr. Peter H. Rossi, University of Chicago', “Business, Industry and the Local Community”; Dr. Amitai Etzioni, Columbia University, “The Organization
of Science”; and Dr. Theodore M.
Mills, Yale University, “Authority and Group Emotion”.

covering principles, as opposed
to applied research.

“We first noticed these effects
two weeks ago; it is too early to
suggest practical applications,”
he explained.
However, there certainly will
be some. This will be an effective and useful tool, for example, for the study of vibrations in solids and liquids,” he
said.
Such basic-research studies in
the past have led directly to the
eventual development or transistors, supermagnets and similarly-useful devices.
Dr. Borst and the three students started out a year ago in
an entirely different field—a
long-term study of vibration in
glass and water. It was supported
by a grant from the State University in Albany.
“We built thin mirrors for our
experiments, making them out
of aluminum foil, beryllium
plated on an aluminum base, or
sheet steel," the scientist recalled. “Then we tried a mirror
made out of lead foil.”
We got such unexpected results
that we stopped our original research program to investigate
what was happening.”
As his research tool, Dr. Borst
used a stream of neutrons from
a port in the base of the university’s nuclear reactor.
(Cont’d on P. 9)

Dr. Rossi, director of the National Opinion Research Center
and professor of sociology at the
University of Chicago, is a former
editor of the American Journal
of Sociology. The author of several books, he has written numerous articles and publications,
dealing primarily with sociological factors in community organizations.

I 1

all matter have the power to
powerful streams
of neutrons.
The discovery was made in the
University’s Nuclear Research
Center. It was previously thought
that neutron beams were reflected from certain metal surfaces
like billiard balls in collision.
experiDr. Borst’s pioneering
ment has shown that actual collison is not necessary. The invisible
atomic vibration in. the material
can be enough to reflect away a
l,500-mile an-hour stream of neubounce away

vibration. But they move back
and forth only one ten-billionth
of an inch—which is why, to the
naked eye, the lead appears solid.
Dr. Borst has tested the reflectivity phenomenon only with
lead so far, but believes it will
also be true of some other substances such as bismuth, tin and
zinc.
Helping to work up the data
are three students who assisted
Eric Stusin the
nick of New York City and Karl
Schulze of 227 Hartford Road,
Amherst, graduate students, and
Fred Rosenberg of Brooklyn, a
senior majoring in physics.
Dr. Borst’s work is basic research into the nature of the
physical world, aimed at dis-

I

Dr. Lyle B. Borst, Professor
of Physics and Astronomy, has
proved that the tiny and ceaseless vibrations taking place in

Dr. Etzioni, who received his
doctorate degree at the University of California, Berkeley, is
professor of sociology at Columbia University. He is the author
of five books and several publications on the socio-political elements within our American society.

Dr. Mills is professor of sociology and director of the Interaction Laboratory at Yale Univer-

sity.

The purpose is to

encourage

outstanding graduate student
teaching assistants with demonstrated ability in that work to
continue it and thus give to undergraduate students to go into
teaching as a career. Recipients
are chosen by the universities.

The award was announced in
connection with Du Font’s annual
program of aid to education, with
grants totaling more than $1,800,000 awarded to 166 universities
and colleges. The largest part of
the program is to help strengthen
the education of scientists and
engineers.

VB Scientists Experiment on HeartDefects;
Jaffee Gets National Foundation Grant

Why do newborn babies have
heart defects? A possible explanation has been suggested by an
investigator at SUNYAB, whose
research will continue under a
renewal grant from the National
Foundation-March of Dimes.

The award of $13,140 was announced jointly today by Raymood Ewell, vice-president of the
University’s Research Foundation
and Basi! O’Connor, president of
the National Foundation.
The research project, which
has begun to show that the destiny of the developing heart depends on the way blood flows
through it, is headed by Dr. Oscar C. Jaffee, assistant professor
of biology.
Babies born with heart diseases
may have enlarged hearts, impaired valves, or heart chambers
of uneven size. Dr. Jaffee suggests that the cause of these detects may be an interference in
blood flow to the heart during

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Dr. Jaffee says that interferthe period of its formation before
once of blood flow in the animal
birth.
Working with experimental ani- hearts forced the partitions bemals, such as frogs and chicks, tween the chambers to grow to
grow
he found that the amount and one side. Normally they
the
force of streaming blood actually down the middle, dividing
controls the overall shape of the chambers equally. Heart disease
heart, the size of its inner Cham- of newborn human babies is often
bers ’ and the conditi 0n of its associated with deviated parti
; (which are supposcd t0 pretions
,
backnow y
These defects in the newborn
He devised ways of interfering
may be crippling or may lead to
,
developing
b
flow
t0
the
Hh ood
death. Nevertheless, they are ushearts of these anima is, an d saw ually well-tolerated before birth,
enlarged,
that the hearts became
according to experts in the field,
the valves impaired, and the in- who point out that the fetal heart
The
resemner chambers uneven.
has one main job
that of pumpblance to what many defective ing blood through a single circuit
hearts
like
at
birth
look
human
of arteries and veins.
was impressive.
»—

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SEVEN.

Writers Guild Offers Prize;
Encourages Future Writers
Three awards totaling $2,250

are to be given American univer-

sity students by professional
screen writers in Hollywood.
A first prize of $1,000, a second
of $750 and a third of $500 will
be awarded graduate students
on October 1, 1964 in an unprecedented script writing contest
announced today. Submissions
close on Aug. 1, 1964.
In a joint statement from
Writers Guild of America National Chairman James R. Webb
and WGA West Screen Branch

President Allen Rivkin, the announcement said:
“With fewer and more expensive pictures being made, it has
become increasingly difficult for
a young writer to break in. These
awards are designed to aid him
in making that all-important step.
Though the awards are substantial enough to be of help financially, an even greater benefit is
expected to result from bringing
the winners’ talent to the attention of motion picture executives
who are in a position to purchase
screenplays or to employ writers.”
Contestants will be limited to
graduate students regularly enrolled in courses in Dramatic
Arts as a major subject, as well
as to graduate students in other
fields who are presently studying, or who have as undergraduates studied dramatic writing. No
contestant with professional experience as a dramatic writer in
either motion pictures, television
or the theater will be considered,
the Webb-Rivkin statement continued.
Entries are required to be in
accepted screenplay form and to
range in length from 120 to 150
typewritten pages, except in the
ease of “musicals”, which need
to be no longer than 100 pages
in order to allow for the film
footage taken up by song and
dance numbers.
“As the motion picture industry is primarily concerned with
fiction, documentary screenplays
will not be eligible, although
entries may have a basis in fact
and a documentary style is permissable if it adds to the verisimilitude of the story,” the announcement added.
Final judging will be done by
a panel of experienced screen
writers (members of the screen
branch board of directors) all of
whom are familiar with present
trends in the film industry.
Entries are limited to one from
each author, but two copies must
be submitted, one in a separate
sealed envelope. As a protection
to the author, the sealed copy
will be deposited with the Guild
registration service without payment of the usual fee, and only
the other will be read by the contest judges or anyone else. On

the cover of both scripts should
appear the student’s full name,

university and personal address.
Manuscripts are to be received
at the Guild office not later
than midnight, Aug. 1, 1964, and
the awards will be announced at
a press reception on Thursday,
Oct. 1, 1964. In the event that
the contestant transfers from one
university to another during the

interim between the two academic
years, his entry will be credited
to the original institution and
announced as such.
The reason for limiting this
contest to graduate students, the
announcement stated, is in order
to reward and assist those students who are most likely to take
advantage of the opportunity to
professional
become
screenwriters.
Undergraduates,

though they

may well have equal

talent, fre-

quently have not yet made up
their minds even as to the type

of career they wish to pursue.
“It may seem strange that the
awards are to be presented at
the beginning of the academic
year rather than at the end. One
purpose is to give the contestant
added time during part of the
summer months to complete or
refine his screenplay. Preferably
he would be allowed the entire
summer, but the judges can spare
only so many hours from their
profession, and if the entries are
as many as hoped for, the twomonth period from Aug. 1 to Oct.
1 will afford little enough time
for a thorough and just comparison.

“Another purpose is to ensure
the winners and their universities
as much local and national publicity as possible. The more notice
the awards receive, the greater
their value. At the close of the
academic year the news media
are crowded with mention of all
manner of scholastic achievements, whereas the fall is a relative desert in this respect and
these Awards, the first of their
kind, should receive the attention which they deserve,” it was
stated.
Pertinent questions will be welcome and should be addressed
to Chairman, Student Awards
Committee, Writers Guild of
America, West, Inc., 8955 Beverly
Blvd,, Los Angeles 48, Calif. The
manuscript submissions should
be similarly addressed, the announcement concluded.
The Student Awards Committee was chaired by Mr. Webb and
consisted of screen writers Herbert Baker, Isobel Lennart, John
Lee Mahin and Daniel Taradash.
In addition to these, who also will
be finals judges, are: Eric Ambler, Michael Blankfort, Ernest
Lehman, Harold Medford, Robert
Presnell, Jr., Melville Shavelson
and Allen Rivkin.

�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Three Compositions Premiere
At Chamber Music Concert
tonal composition, the rhythmic
element being perhaps the most
outstanding feature.
Lester Trimble is an American
composer who studied with Nadia
Boulanger and Dar ius Milhaud,
He has set four of the most wellknown Canterbury Tales for soprano, harpsichord, flute, and dark
net. The voice part is treated as
the soloist. The other instruments
accompany, with the exception of
the work is its “color” harmony,
which shows a Balinese influence.
“Tone-painting” is apparent in
this non-dissonant work.

By VICKI BUGELSKI

gciaKchamber

music conluring the Buffalo pref three twentieenth-cen-

was presented

in the Norton Confereatre. The student activities committee sponsored the concert, which was open to faculty
and students only. There is no
admission charge.
it

Two of the works featured the
harpsichord. David Fuller of the
music faculty performed on the
university’s new

instrument.

Mr.

Fuller gave highly successful performances during the Harpsichord Festival last fall. He joined
the faculty last semester and is
teaching the Introduction to Music course, and advanced music
history courses in medieval and
Baroque music, in addition to
harpsichord lessons.

The works performed were the
tre of Ingolf Dahl,
Four Fragments from the Caunterbury Tales (the original spelling) of Lester Trimble, and the
Concerto a

Concerto for Harpsichord and
Ensemble of Manuel de Falla.
Ingolf Dahl is a Swiss-born
composer who now lives in California. His work, in one movement, is termed a “concerto” because of the virtuostic writing for

the three instruments, clarinet,
violin, and cello. Each instrument
is a solo. The work influence of
Stravinsky in his neo-classic
period, and of American composer Aaron Copland. It is a

for instrument and orchestra, but
a chamber work) was written in
1928 for world-famous harpsi-

chord Wanda Landowska. Mme
Landowska, of Polish birth, led
the movement for revival of interest in harpsichords and Baroque music. De Falla wrote the
concerto for her which shows the
harpsichord’s

The university’s new harpsichord, built by Eric Herz of Boston, was used in this concert. At
present this is the only concert
scheduled this semester which
features the harpsichord.

-

Mflaw Kwsftfciw-ia n*®*
GREGORY PECK

TO Kill A

MOCKING BIRD
DORIS DAY,

and
JAMES GARNER

THE THRILL OF IT ALL
with

ARLENE FRANCIS

l

STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET
for oil programs may be

purchased upon presentation
of I.D. card.

-

-

ACADEMY AWARD
CONTENDER

*Jom
Jones.
EASnUNCOUM

K
V.

RAYMOND CRAWFORD

By

I’m happy to announce the discovery of a folk supper club on
the corner of Broadway and Sherman. The Ram’s Horn combines
the music from the “soil” of
America, folk and jazz, with a
group who plays the complex
rhythms of Africa and the Caribbean. The Ram’s Horn is a perfect spot for a homesick Villager
or a curious student interested in
tasting exotic dishes and drinks.
The atmosphere is quiet and
intimate with an occasional flourish from the afro dancer and
drummers. Make it down this
week end and see what’s happening.

The music departannounces the
postponement of the
opera, Rossini’s Barber
of Seville, originally
scheduled to open Feb.
20. New dates will be
announced shortly.
The production is under the musical direction of Vittorio Giarratana and stage direction of Henry
Wicke.
ment

.

Buffalo is beginning to have another one of those weeks where
it seems everybody is in town.
Last week the Ray Bryant Trio
was “cookin” at the Bon-Ton.
This week at the Bon-Ton is the
tenor saxophonist Lou Donaldson,
at the Royal Arms is the great
trumpeter Art Farmer, and at the
Pine Grill, the jazz organist Jimmy McGriff. I’m going to see all
three and I’m sure that you would
enjoy seeing any one of these
fine groups. In the near future a
lot more shows will be in town.
I understand that Herbie Mann
will be in town soon at Buffalo
State College.
With the closing of the Town
Casino ’til the Easter weekend
a lot of fans will miss out on
a place to go on the weekend.

A concert featuring the com
positions of David Diamond’s stu

If any of you are interested,
the Ram’s Horn gives a talent
show, hoot, or jam session (which
ever you wish to call) every Tuesday and the winner gets an engagement pne night on the weekend. Be it jazz, folk, or popular
singing, the coffee house is interested in seeing you, so long
as you are an amateur. On the
weekend is when the place jumps,
and you shouldn’t miss it.

wa

STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKETS
Available at both theater* upon presentation of proper J.D. cord

•

[

Baird Hall. Admission is free and
all students and faculty are in
vited to attend.

Mr. Diamond was Slee professor
of music last semester, and
taught a special class in com
position for advanced students
in the music department. Many
of the student composers will be
preforming their own works. Assisting in the concert will be
other music students, faculty, and
members of the Buffalo Philhar
monic Orchestra.
The works to be performed,
with their respective student
composer, are a cantata, Time
Present, of Emmanuel Sinderbrand;Sonata for viola and piano
by Linda Rosenbaum; Andante
and Scherzo for clarinet quintet
Susan LaMothe; Guitar Trio by
tet by Gladys Fisher; Sonatina for
two violins of Mrs. Theodore
Rossman; and Piano sonata by
Raymond Messier.

Smothers Brothers
Roman and BJF

leinhans Music Hall
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ALL SEATS RESERVED

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BILLY LIAR.

ment tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in

SUNDAY*
Feb. 16th*8PM
by Murray

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dents of last semester will be
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Student Selections
Set for Baird Hall
Tomorrow at 8:30

Presented

HASSIP
Sat. Feb.

adaptability as a

modern instrument. The influence
of Spanish folk and religious
melodies can be found in the
work, combined with skillful
writing for the ensemble and
virtuostie work for the harpsichord. The ensemble consists of
flute, clarinet, oboe, cello, and
violin.

I

The other performers on the
program are well-known Buffalo
musicians and are frequent performers in Baird Hall concerts
as well as in the city. Allen Sigel,
clarinet; Alta Mayer, cello; Robert Mols, flute; Ronald Richards,
oboe; Dorothy Rosenberger, soprano; Harry Taub, violin form an
impressive list, judging on previous appearances. All are music
faculty members, with the exception of Mr. Ta'ub, who is the associate concertmaster of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, and
teach their respective instrument
at the university. In addition, Dr.
Mols and Mr. Sigel teach in the
music theory department.

Manuel de Falla is considered

by many to be the most important Spanish composer since the
Golden Age of the Renaissance.
The Harpsichord Concerto (not

I

npositions

Friday, February 14, 1964

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SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER
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�Friday, February 14, 1964

aswwiM©

By LEON LEWIS

Billy Liar

The North Park movie theatre
in the
seems to be specializing
plight of the underdog these
days. Last week they offered a
The Small World of Sammy Lee,
an acting tour-de-force by Anthony Newley about a pretty
grafter and burlesque comedian
who has five hours to raise $900
to pay off a gambling debt. Newley’s frantic flight around London in an attempt to raise the
money is strangely engrossing in
spite of the fact that it is rather
difficult to feel much sympathy
for Sammy Lee. Because the producers felt that the movie would
have greater impact if they concluded with an obvious, downbeat ironic ending, Newley is unsuccessful in raising the entire
sum and is forced to take a typical movie beating (lots of makeup and side effects). The jarring
conclusion in no way mitigates
the sentimentality of the film
with its loveable eccentrics and
tough guys with hearts of gold.
Their current show is Billy Liar
a less sentimental but more incompetent story of a young
dreamer who is also an underdog and a misfit. Billy is a young
man growing up in a midlands
city several hours by train from
London. His parents are grotesque parodies of the satisfied
working class who support all
of the slogans of the labor party
and try to make the best of their
unexciting lot. His mother, for
instance, has her heart set on
writing a letter which will be
read on a local radio show about
the “average housewife”. He is
engaged to at least two girls,
neither of whom he really cares
for, and is actually in love with
a third, who is so attractive that
Billy, as well as everyone else,
finds her nearly irrestible. He
works for an undertaking firm in
a hopelessly dull clerk’s job and
finds his prospects for advancement there, as well as in life
in general, desperately bleak.
It is not too surprising then,
that to escape from the mindcrippling sterility of his environment, Billy begins to utilize his
fertile imagination to form a
series of fantasies in which he
depicts himself in various exciting and glamorous roles. These
are the best moments of the
movie. Billy swaggering as the
leader of an army (dressed very

mmm

contemporaneously as FideliStas),
machine gunning his parents or
his tormentors at work, or posturing as the great statesman,
inventor, artist or athlete is a
fascinating creation and Tom
Courtenay, who did a superb job
as Colin Smith, in The Loneliness
of the Long Distance Runner, is
marvelously inventive and very
skillful in depicting Billy’s fantasy life, as well as the facts of
his drab every-day existance. Unfortunately, Courtenay’s excellent
acting and the infrequent appearances of Julie Christie (a
ravishing wench) as his real love
are not enough to rescue the
picture.
The fault lies, primarily, in
the really awful direction of John
Schlesinger. People ask me, on
occasion, what I consider to be

the differences between good
and bad directing. It’s difficult
to explain the subtle differences
between good and inspired direction, but the embarrasingly low
quality of Schlesinger’s work is
obvious. The story has no continunity, the camera work varies
from ordinary to poor, the emphasis of the important scenes
is lost or misplaced, the pace
lags consistently, the actors often
stand around as if they had nothing to do and the style is totally
derivative of the worst in contemporary “realism,”
Even with Courtenay’s good
work, Billy’s problems seem unimportant, his motivation not entirely convincing and his eventual
decision to cop out on his trip
to London with , Miss Christie
nearly incomprehensible.

Somehow, it becomes difficult
to care about what happens to
a person of so little actual ambition (he wants to go to London
to become a screen writer for a
fifth-rate TV comedian) and so
little real anger (like that which
Colin Smith had).
And yet, that is part of the
appeal of the picture too. Just
the fact that a person as likable
and enthusiastic as Billy has nothing to inspire him in the society
in which he lives, as well as no
real chance to do anything with
his life, rather depressing al-

though not actually tragic by any
means. And even Schlesinger’s
bad direction cannot completely
obscure the delightful performances of Tom Courtenay and Julie
Christie. The picture is flawed
but not fatally so.

Mehdi Vakil,
UN Iran Rep.,
Will Speak Here
Mehdi Vakil, Iranian ambassador to the United Nations, will
speak Friday, Feb, 21, as a guest
of the United Nations Committee of the Student Senate.
Ambassador Vakil is SecretaryGeneral of Tehran University,
and Professor of Diplomatic History, Faculty of Political Science,
of Tehran University.

Neutron Experiment Very Promising
from P. 7)
Neutrons are atomic particles,
produced in the fission of uranium, which have no electrical
charge. They have a wide variety
of characteristics and p.our out
by the billions, traveling at dif-

ferent

speeds.

Dr. Borst’s first task was to
turn this heterogeneous flow into
a stream of relatively-uniform
neutrons. He did this by bouncing
the stream off a series of mirrors,
first steel and they beryllium, so
fabricated that they filtered out
all but the slowest neutrons. The
stream then was directed against
the lead foil.
Dr. Borst explained: “When
the neutrons hit a target—in this
case, the lead—at right angles,
they penetrate into the substance.
In fact, they go right on through
unless they’re stopped by collision with the nucleus of an atom.”
“Reduce this angle of the
stream with the target’s surface
to a critical point—an angle of
about one degree, in the case
of lead—and the neutrons suddenly all are reflected off the
surface instead of penetrating.”
What
happens, Dr.
Borst
speculated, if you change the
temperature?
He cooled the lead foil by
building a styrofoam box around
it and pouring in liquid nitrogen

(350 degrees

below zero, Faren

heit).
Although the chilled lead mirror remained at the "critical
angle,” it suddenly lost its reflective ability. The beam pierced
the lead surface. Seine of the
neutrons were captured and the
remainder passed on through.
But when the liquid nitrogen
mirror
the
evaporated and
warmed up, it began reflecting
the neutron beam again.
Dr. Borst reasoned that the
reflectivity of the lead surface
must be, caused by whatever
changed in the lead when the
temperature dropped,
“The number of atomic nuclei
remains the same in lead when
you lower the temperature. But
the reflectivity disappeared. That
means the reflectivity could’nt
have been caused by collision
with atomic nuclei in the first
place, because the nuclei were
still there.”
“When you lower the temperature, what changes is the amount
of nuclear vibration in the lead,
the number of directions- in
which the vibration is taking
place.”
“The conclusion must be that
the surface reflection is caused,
not by collision with the nuclei,
but by the fact that they are
vibrating.”

Smothers Brothers in Buffalo
At Kleinhans Hall Sunday
take
but no talent
If.you have a yen to sing
heart. Here’s your opportunity, for the SMOTHERS
BROTHERS, who will be at Kleinhans Music Hall on Sunday, want to encourage people to come out of the shower
and try their vocal cords in public
—

Tom and Dick Smothers, the
known folk singer
comedians have a few suggestions to offer: The first step is
learn to sing. To do this, sing the
lowest note you can, then sing up
the scale to the highest note you
can reach . . . this is your range.
Now find the center note of
your range. This is YOUR note.
Start all your songs on this note,
for you can thus sing up and
down and around it and still stay
in your range even though you
have to sing in only one key!
It is recommended that you obtain a guitar . . . preferably in
playing condition, but even a
broken one make a nice prop!
Dress in old, torn clothing and
above all, DON'T GET A HAIRnationally

but only in this way will you
establish a name for yourself.
The concert starts at 8 p.m. and
tickets will be available at Dentons, 32 Court St:; Sample-Hertel
Ave.; Brundo’s Music in Niagara
Falls, Norton Union, Ticket

CUT.

The

Smothers

Brothers

clude their advice that

conyou take

advantage of every opportunity
to sing for your friends. You
will probably lose alt your friends

MEHDI VAKIL
He joined the United Nations
Secretariat in 1950, and was Advisor on Coordination to the Secretary General in 1951. For the
seven year period, 1952-1959 the
ambassador held the position of
Secretary of the United Nations
Economic and Social Council, and
was Secretary of the Third Committee of the General Assembly
from 1953-1959.
The Ambassador is director of
the cultural exchange program
and supervisor of all Iranian students in Europe, and was Execu
live Assistant to the Minister of
Education, Director of Cultural
Relations, and Director of Higher
Education in Iran in 1938. He
is a graduate of the Faculty of
Law and Political Science, Tehran, 1930.

Ambassador Vakil has served
abroad, mainly in France, Bel
guim, and Switzerland, in addition to the United Nations. He
has participated in the following
International Conferences: Con
ference Diplomatique des Relations Intellectuelles, Paris, 1938;
Conference Annuelle Bureau International de 1’Education, Gene1939-1945; Conference Constituante de 1’UNESCO, London,
1945; General Assembly, United
Nations, 1949 and from 1959 on.

He is a Decorated Officer of
the Legion of Honor from France,
and Grand Officer of the Order
of the Crown, Iran.

Booth.

To Award EnginVng Degree
MFC Initiates New Program
Millard Fillmore College, the
evening division will begin a new
program in September of award
ing ohe general degree in engineering instead, of specific degrees in engineering specialties.

UP

\

He has been Ambassador and
Permanent Representative of Iran
to the United Nations since 1959.

ve,

(Cont’d

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

The college’s baccalaureate degree programs in chemical, civil,
electrical, industrial and mechanical engineering will be dropped
after the current classes of engineering juniors and seniors arc
graduated.

Pl
£

\

R

3199 MAIN ST. (formerly Big Mothers)
SERVING YOU

Pizza and Beer
on the

UPPER LEVEL
and in the RATHSKELLAR
Open

7 Days

a Week

From

3:00

p.m. to

3:00

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DELIVERY TO THE DORMS AND ALLENHURST
UNTIL 1:00 A.M.

Phone 136-9490

SPECIAL ONE-DAY ONLY

m

WASHINGTON’S
BIRTH DAY

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Campus Comer
3262 MAIN STREET

2 .3221

*5% Additional For Cash
HOURS;

10:00 9:00

MON., THURS., ond

FRI.
10:00 6:00 TUES., WED., ond SAT.
-

*

�PAGE TEN

Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

College Queen Contest’
Craft Shop Open to All Enter Notional
Do-It-Yourself Jewels Winner Receives Trip, Car, Wardrobe, Money

Now is your chance to learn
a new skill and at the same time
produce a work of art. The place
to go is The Craft Shop in Norton
Union where a Jewelry Workshop
in Centrifugal Casting will be
offered to interested students,
staff, and faculty.

in the number of participants.
However, the first workshop on
Thursday, will be open to everyone since Mr. Wilson will be
showing colored slides of his
work, and demonstrating the design of cast jewelry, the construction of wax models, and

ISP

This Workshop will be held on
five consecutive Thursday nights
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., starting
Thursday. Mr. Duwayne Wilson,
Assistant Professor of Design at
State University College at Buffalo, will lead the workshop. Mr.
Wilson is a highly accomplished
craftsman, his work having received many honors in exhibitions.
Since metal casting is such a
highly specialized, individualistic
and precise craft, the workshop
sessions may have to be limited

transforming a wax design into
a finished product by forcing
molten metal into a negative
mold by centrifugal force.
Those who are interested in
taking part in these workshops
are advised to go to the Craft
Shop now and sign up for the
sessions to be held on Feb. 13,

20, 27, and March 5. There will
be a fifty cent charge for each
workshop. There is no charge for
the first demonstration on Feb.
6 and everyone is welcome to
attend.

Buffalo Fine Arts Academy Presents
Award Winning "Man for A II Seasons'
Presentation of “A Man for all
Seasons" on Saturday, Feb. 22
in Kleinhans Music Hall, is the
best theatrical good news for
Buffalo since long before the
closing of the Erlanger Theater,
A giant on the drama horizon,
Robert Bolts great play about
Sir Thomas More would have
skipped Buffalo on its national
tour had it not been rescued by
Seymour Knox and the Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy, parent organization of the Albright-Knox
the Century Theater of Buffalo
Art Galley. Its cancellation by
Mr. Knox not only to arrange
that it should appear here, but
to establish it as the pivot for
a resplendent 1964 local theater
series to shift from the Kleinhans
Hall to the Gallery Auditorium
as the size of the production
warrants. These following productions will be announced soon.
Star-studded and measured for
a crown uniquely and magnificently its own by winning the
New York Drama Critics’ Award
and five Antoinette Perry (Tony)
awards for the best play in New
York last year, A Man for All
Seasons” comes to Buffalo not
only as great theater but as a
notable civic event. Not in the
memory of a whole generation
of local play goers has such a
play with such a cast been seen
in this area.
Star among the stars is Robert
Harris, a famous British actor,
whose leading ladies have ineluded Helen Hayes, Katherine
Cornell, Jane Cowl ■ and Dame
Judith Anderson. His most recent acclaim was for his performance in a TV production of
Anouilh’s “The Lark”. Others in
the cast whose stage credits are
comparable in stature and
achievement are Rober Donley,
Dick O’Neill, Jeff Morrow and
Vanya Franck, Splendid supporting players are: Mercer McLeod,
Lois Kibbee, John Scanlan, Colgate Salsbury, Amelia Romano,
Paul Milikin, Bernard Hiatt,
Richard Branda, and Jack
Gianino.
“A Man for All Seasons” is
the story of the famous Chancellor of England, Sir Thomas
More, who Mood up to King
Henry VUI.
refused to con“

dome his King’s disdain for vows
to marriage and church. It
is the story of a man’s passionate
convictions that the world may
take from him everyhting but he
must remain faithful to his conscience even to death.
—

One of our students, here on
this campus, could be the next
National College Queen.

The

annual search is now

underway to select and honor
“the nation’s most outstanding
college girl.” Young women attending this school are eligible
as candidates. A special invitation has been extended to our

students. The winner will receive more than $5,000 in prizes,
including a trip to Europe and
an automobile.
The

1964

National College
Queen Pageant will be held in
New York City, and this year
Pageant officials will award 50
free trips to the World’s Fair.
One college girl from every state,
including Alaska and Hawaii, will
be flown to Manhattan to compete for high honors.
This

Pageant is

the annual

event which gives recognition
to students for their scholastic
ability. It is not a “beauty contest." Judging is based on academic accomplishment

as well
personality. The judges are seeking
a typical American College girl.
—

as attractiveness, charm and

For ten years the National College Queen Contest has been
growing, until it has become a
tradition at hundreds of colleges
and universities. This year, one
of our students can win and bring
nationwide recognition to our
school. The National Finals are
held during mid-June. The event
is a highlight of the “New York
is a Summer Festival” celebration, which is sponsored by the
New York Convention and Visitors Bureau.
For full details
and a free
entry blank
just write to:
National College Queen Contest
Committee, 1501 Broadway, New
York 36, New York.
—

—

SPECIAL!

All undergraduate girls, from
freshmen through and including
seniors, are eligible. A candidate
may send in her own name. Or,
she can be recommended. Classmates, friends, sororities, fraternities or campus club groups can
nominate the girl of their choice
—by mailing her name to the
above address.
College girls on this campus
have an excellent chance to become a State Winner, If you are
chosen to represent our State,
you will travel to New York as
a guest of the Pageant, all ex-

penses paid. Imagine yourself
spending ten days in Manhattan,
seeing Broadway shows, touring
the World’s Fair, appearing on

television. For two years “Life

Magazine” has photographed all

the National Finalists, and in
1963 all the college girls appeared on “The Tonight Show” with
Johnny Carson on NBC-TV.
It’s easy to enter the contest.

nationally-famous Oleg Cassini,
The winner will receive a shower 0 f gifts from Westinghouse
Electric Corporation. These prizes
include an electric hair dryer and
many other portable appliances
for her future home. For hair
styling and good grooming, she
w in be presented with a full
year’s supply of Bobbi cosmetics
and White Rain beauty products.
These prizes, and many more
—including a vacation trip to
Europe—are waiting for the 1964

winner.
So, here’s one final reminder
from the judges: “The student's
academic record, extra curricular
activities and hobbies are important. The winner will be someone who is active in several
phases of campus life. She does
not have to be a scholastic genius
nor have to have the beauty of a
Hollywood movie star. The next
National College Queen will be
a typical American college girl
—bright, alert and personable,”

Nothing to buy. No slogans to
write. The National College
Queen Pageant is sponsored by
several leading companies, as

People interested in
applying for positions
on the Spring Weekend Committee may
now pick
applications in Norton 215
and from the posters
on the main floor of
the Unioo. The applications will be recalled
in two weeks and the
Personnel Committee
will begin interviewing for the positions.

their annual salute to outstanding college students. They present more than $5,000 in prizes.
For example:

The next National College
Queen will win a new automibile.
She will receive a Renault sports
convertible, the latest “Caravelle” model. In the field of fashions, she will be awarded a
complete wardrobe
of suits,
dresses and sportswear. She can
select $500 worth of her favorite
styles
designed by the inter—

KLEIN HANS
g&gt;port

(Enllpyr g&gt;ljop

op

Semi-Annual
Clearance

SALE

The University Bookstore
has for sale 1 set each of the following:

Natural Shoulder

Encyclopedia Britannica 1963
23 Volumes PLUS
1 Vol. Index
2 Vols. I and II World Language Edition of
Funk and Wagners Dictionary
1 Vol. World Atlas.
$1QQQ0
TOTAL COMPLETE SET 27 VOLS. IYO

SPORT COATS

-

$

-

(
'

The Encyclopedia Americana 1962
30 Volume Set Including Index (1 Vol.)

M49 00

Collier's Encyclopedia 1961
20 Volume Set
(Including Index and Bibliography)

UNIVERSITY

BOOKSTORE

on Campus

Rich, all wool sport coats,
drastically reduced for this
sale! Styled by Donald Rich
ard innatural shoulder models
Plaids, checks and mixtures.
Take your pick
and save.
.

.

.

ALL WOOL SLACKS

»12»

*

'70"’'

USED ENCYCLOPEDIAS
REAL SAVINGS

24

7S

This selection is from our regular
Sport Shop stock
now priced
Long wearing reway, way low.
verse twists, flannels and smart
gabardines. Pleated or plain front
styles in a wide choice of popular
....

Worsted Flannel Slacks
Donald Richard Suits . . . . v . .
Donald Richard Suits in Imported
Fabrics

$10.95
$49.75
$54.75

�Friday, February 14, 1964

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Tabachnick Speaks;
Suicide in LA.'
Is His Topic

Spectrum Call Hoard
BRIDGE CLUB

Dr. Norman Tabachnick, associate clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Southern
California (Los Angeles), spoke
about “Suicide and the Los An:
geles Suicide Prevention Center,”
at 8:30 p.m., Thursday in Butler
Auditorium, Capen Hall.

Dr. Tabachnick is the psychiatric guest lecturer in a series
sponsored by the Department of
Psychiatry, University School of
Medicine, in cooperation with the
Buffalo Neuropsychiatric Society
and the Mental Health Association of Erie County.

Committee Sponsors Oil
Lamps Exhibit in Norton
of lamps ranges from oil or wax
night lights and courting lamps to
medicinal vaporizers and opiumburners. The display shows both
the fine quality and pleasingly
functional design of the loder
lamps and the more ornate styles

s

s'''

Dr. Goemer’s degree is from
the Technical University of Dresden, A member of the technical
staff of Bell Aerosystems since
1954, Dr. Goerner is presently
Manager of the Advanced Research and Development Section
whjch is conducting applied research in the major areas of
advanced communication and
control techniques.

will entertain. Refreshments will
also be provided at no admission
cost to the student body. It is
expected that students from such
neighborhooding colleges as Niagara and Buffalo State will attend.

•:•

SPAGHETTI DINNER
Angel Flight is sponsoring a
Spaghetti Dinner, Sunday, February
16th, 1964. Angel Flight
members and Arnold Air Society
are supporting the dinner in
order to raise money for the
funds. The dinner will be $2.00
a plate. Angels will hold their
coffee hour rush party February
18, 1964, Tuesday night at 7:30
p.m., the room will be announced
on posters throughout campus.

1

:

M

February 21

‘CLOSED LOOP ANALYSIS OF
AUTOMATIC LANDING SYSTEMS."

The Mixer Committee will hold

a Valentines Day Mixer tonight
in the Multipurpose Room from
8-12:00. The dance, “Cupid’s Caper” will feature ice sculpture
as its unique decoration. Roccky
Lucci’s band, “The Sportsmen,”
featuring vocalist Jimmy Horton,

SPRING ARTS
Student Participation Day of
the Spring Arts Festival has been
designated to be April 8. It will
consist of a drama program In
the afternoon followed by a musical in the evening.
Any student wishing to participate in either of these progams
should obtain an application at
Norton candy counter or Baird
ticket office. Applications should
be submitted no later than Monday, March 2.

\ •

-X-.

\

&amp;&amp;&amp;£

\

■&gt;&gt; S:

’64 JET-SMOOTH LUXURY CHEVROLET—Impala Sport Coupe

Mrs. Walter Rusnak, on “ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECT OF THE
AIRCRAFT CARRIER ENVIRONMENT ON AUTOMATIC LANDING.”

/JSU.
...

m

Mr. Rusnak has his B.S, degree
from C.C.N.Y., and his M.S. from
Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute.
He rejoined Bell Aerosystems in
1955 and is presently Program
Manager of the Lunar Landing
Research Vehicle Program.
Room 104 Parker Engineering
Building. Coffee Hour preceding
the talks at 4:30 p.m.

.
...

i

Dr. Johannes

MIXER COMMITTEE

#

At Engineering Seminar
G. Goerner, on

Hand Tournament should prove
to be interesting as well as instructional.

produced.

Goerner, Rusnak to Speak

February 14

Hand Tournament instead of the

regular duplicate game. This
tournament is one of the National
A.C.U, tournaments which are
held at this school. Meetings are
held in Norton Room 327 at
7:30 on Tuesday nights. The Par

I

The Fine Arts Committee of
Union Board has placed on view
a representative collection of antique and modern ornamental oil
lamps. The exhibit is located in
the show cases in the second floor
lounge of Norton. The collection

Today at 12:30 p.m. Dr. Tabachnick will give an address entitled
“Lnterpersonal Aspects of Suicidal Phenomena,” in C-Basement
Conference Room, Meyer Memorial Hospital as a feature of the
Psychiatric Seminar Series.

Tuesday, the Bridge Club will
hofd the , Intercollegiate Par

ALL-NEW
?

a

CHEVELLE-Malibu Sport Coupe

yKK
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ig 1

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—

’64 THRIFTY CHEVY H-Nova Sport Coupe

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’64 SPORTY, MORE POWERFUL CORVAIR-Monza Club Coupe

cm*
4

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’64 EXCITING CORVETTE-Sting Ray Sport Coupe

YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER HAS MORE TO OFFER;
luxury cars, thrifty cars, sport cars, sporty cars, big cars,
small cars, long cars, short cars, family cars, personal cars

45 DIFFERENT MODELS OF CARS
Why one stop at your Chevrolet dealer’s is like having your own private auto show

And if we had room here we could go on and list all the engines Chevrolet offers,
ranging up to an extra-cost 425-hp V8 in the big Chevrolet. And all the different
transmissions. And the umpteen different exterior and interior color choices.
And the models with bucket seats and those without. And the hundreds of
different accessories, including the new extra-cost AM-FM radio. But that’s best
left to your Chevrolet, dealer. That and exactly how reasonmsJ/Ufkwrm
able the price can be for you to be able to enjoy so much car.

•F®

Covington.

Ky.

THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS Chevrolet Chevelle Chevy H Corvair Corvette
See them at pour Chvrvlft. Slwu rootp
•

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•

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'VV’.V

�WBFO Schedule
Albeniz, Rimsky-Korsakoff and

17, 1964

Monday, February

3:00—Ways of Mankind—“Desert
Soliloquy”—a study in education

3:30—WBFO Pops Concert
4:00—Challenges to Democracy—“Education; For what and For
Whom?” Speakers; Robert M.
Hutchins, President, Fund for

the Republic; Admiral Hyman
Rickover; Rosemary Park, President, Barnard College

Chopin

5:00—News
5:10—Evening Musicale

6:00—News
6:15—Over The Back Fence
6:30—Shakespeare Drama—“The
Tragedies, introduced by John
F. Danby with Donald Wolfit.
Excerpts from: “King Lear” &amp;
“Hamlet”
7:00—They Bent Our Ear

5:10—Evening Musicale

7:30—Challenges to Democracy
(rebroadcast) —Robert M. Hutchins, Admiral Hyman Rickover; and Rosemary Park

6:00—News

8:30—Concert

5:00—News

My

Line"

7:00—U.B. Radio Drama

11:00—News

7:30—B i 11 Tallmadge—Afro-American Music Lecture
8:30—Shakespeare Talk—Leslie
Hotson on "The Man From
Stratford”

8:45—Smoke?—“Once Burned,
Twice Warned”
9:00—News

9:05—Concert Hall—Haydn: “Oxford” Symphony. Cleveland
Orchestra. George Szell conducting

10:00—News
10:05—Musical
Terry Lee

Showcase

with

11:00—News
11:05—Words and
Phil Skill

Music with

12:00—Sign Off

Tuesday, February 18, 1964

3:00—WBFO Special—Dr. Tran
von Chvony, former South
Vietnamese
ambrassador to
U.S. Father of Mme Nhu:
“War in Viet Nom”

Radio

Drama

(re-

broadcast)

4:30—Talk on Drama
5:00—News

6:00—News
6:15—Washington Report

6:30—BBC Playhouse—“To Share
The Shadow"

7:00 —Campus Concert
College

Quiz—U.B.

campus organizations compete

in question and answer game
for championship trophy.

9:00—News
9:05—C oncert Hall—Poulenc:
Concerto for Organ, Strings
and Timpani, Berj Zamkoehian,
Organ

10:00—News
10:05—Jazz
Crawford

Gallery

with

11:05—Night Flight with

Pete

Brevorka
12:00—Sign Off
Thursday, February 20, 1964

3:00—D r a m a Interview—“The
Art of Mime”
3:30—WBFO Pops Concert
4:00—Exploring The Child’s
World—“The Last of Harry"—
Harry discusses his parents’
marriage and his own career
objectives. He' expounds his
feelings about women and marriage, and offers his opinion
on the nature of cops
4:30—Shakespeare Drama (rebroadcast)
5:00—News
5:10—Evening Musicale
6:00—News
6:15—Meet the Faculty
6:30—International Music Hall—
Daris Marx
Dollar—“Capital
7:00—Yankee
Investment"—Edward
Dress,
President, American Hospital
Supply Co., International, Mexico City; Dr. Ernest W. Walker,
Professor of Finance, University of Texas, and a specialist
in the field of Corporate Finance

7:30—WBFO

Special—Dr. Nor-

Tabackmich, Association
Professor of Psychiatry USC,
Los Angeles Suicide Prevention Center, "Suicide is Our
man

Society”
8:30—Concert Hall—Brahms: Violin Concerto. Szeryng, violin
with London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Pierre Monteaux

5:10 —Evening Musicale

8:30—U.B.

Hall—Beethoven:
Serenade Opus 8. Heifetz, Primrose and Piatigorsky
10:00—News
10:05—Swing Shift with Ray
Caruana

Opportunity in Europe:
Summer Study Abroad
Nearly 19,000 American students attended foreign universities during 1963, while 78,000
foreign students were enrolled
in American schools. The rapidly growing trend toward international studies is world wide, a
phase of the “education explosion.” More than a quarter of a
million students are at schools
outside their own countries. They
are aided by thousands of free
fellowships and scholaships.

.

6:15—Tranatlantic Profile
6:30—Goon Show—“What's

4:00—U.B

Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Ray

11:00—News
11:05—To be announced
12:00—Sign Off

Wednesday, February 19, 1964

3:00—French Chamber Music—
Camille Saint-Saens: “Sonata
No. 1 in D Minor” (piano);

Gabriel Faure: “Mirages"
(Soprano and Piano); Florent
Schmitt: "Andante St Scherzo
for Harp and String Quartet”

4:00—Interview—"Talking About
Music”—Gerald Moore, Anthony Hopkins and A. L. Lloyd,
introduced by John Amis
4:30—Legendary Pianists—Artur
Rubinstein playing works by

10:00—News

10:05—Folk Music with Fred
Brickell
11:00—News
11:05—To be announced
12:00—Sign Off
Friday, February 21, 1964

3:00—Bill Tallmadge (rebroadcast)—Afro-American Music
Lecture
4:30—Peace Corps Plus 1
5:00—News
5:10—Evening Musicale
6:00—News
6:15—U.B. Sports Highlights with
Wally Blatter
6:30—Comedy, Inc. with Bob
Gottesman
7:00—NAEB Special of the Week
7:30—Opera on the Air—Jack
Shapiro—Donizetti: Lucia di
Lammermoor, Part I. Maria
Callos, Soprano
8:30—Music Interview—Mainly about Herbert Von Karajan,
Imogen Holst, Walter Legge
and the recorded voice of Herbert Von Karajan.
9:00—News
9:05—C oncert Hall—Strauss:
Hindemeth
Metamorphosen.
Furtwangler conducting the
Berlin Philharmonic
10:00—News
10:05—Sound of Broadway and
Hollywood with Jerry Segal
11:00—News
11:05—Music ’til Midnight with
Dick Boy and Hank Tanen
baum
V.V. . .V.V.
,12:00—Sign -Off,

The 1964 edition of “Study
Abroad,” just published by the
Unesco Publications Center in
New York, lists the opportunities
for support in advanced studies
outside the United States. More
than 130,000 scholarships and
fellowships worth hundreds of
millions of dollars are available
to assist the world’s traveling
generation of students.
The
grants cover every growth of
learning and come from universities, governments and foundations in 116 countries. Some are
for periods of a few weeks, others
extend for as much as seven

The book lists 105 different
fields of study, ranging from “administration” to “zoology.” Many
of the opportunities for foreign
study are offered under broad
headings such
as literature,
languages or science. Others are
more specific. For example, an
American student of oceanography, consulting “Study Abroad,” can find more than sixty
grants in his specialized subject
available in countries as diverse
as Canada, the Domiinican Republic and Monaco. But a student of acting would find only
five opportunities specifically
earmarked for the theater, all of
them from the International
Theater Institute.

Support
Our

Advertisers

years.

Cjreeb looted
FLASH: I.F.C. has announced
the beginning of preferential bidding. Bidding will take place aI
the I.F.C. office, February 17, 18,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Gamma Phi fraternity will hold
their rush dinner, Thursday, at
7:45. The dinner is by invitation
only.

Alpha Phi Omega serviced the
campus the past week, by distributing campus-pacs of personal
grooming articles. Prospective
pledges are invited to Bosella’s
Restaurant tonight, by invitation
only.
Sigma Kappa's Kathy Sullivan
was elected best pledge, Sydney
Heigaard won a scrapbook, and

Bev Painterd and Jo Ann Smith
won the pledge scholarship
awards at an informal Hawaiian
rush party Monday.

Chi Omega will hold an informal party for rushees at the College Club of Buffalo, Tuesday,
Feb. 18. A thanks is in order to
Alpha Phi Delta for sponsoring
a social.

Rho Pi Phi invites all pre-phar
to the ROPES valentine party tomorrow evening at
9:00 at the Howard Johnson Motor Lodge. Food, drink, and danc
ing will be offered free.
macy students

MOVE AHEAD WITH

IBM.
DATA PROCESSING

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Extensive training programs will prepare you for a future limited only
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achieve better business management and controls through data
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Systems Engineering: I IBM Data Processing Systems Engineers are
men and women who study customer requirements in depth, devise
an approach, define a preferred machine and operational solution,
and assist in implementing this solution. I

february is, 19
Our representatives will be on your campus soon to discuss typical
careers, various training programs, the advanced-education program,
and other benefits that go with working for one of America’s leading
companies. I Make an appointment through your placement officer.
■ He can also give you additional information on the career of your
choice at IBM...an Equal Opportunity Employer. I
If the interview date is inconvenient for you, please write or call: I
H. W. Bryce, Branch Manager, I IBM Corporation, 698 Delaware Ave
Buffalo 9, N. Y., IT 6-4550.1

�Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

HILLEL

CANTERBURY CLUB

Hillel’s Annual South Sea Island Party will be held tomorrow
at 9:00 p.m. in the social hall of
Ahavas Achim Lubavitz Synagogue. Admission is by Hillel membership card. There is a modest
fee for non-members and guests,
Morton Zelman and Howard Kurs
are co-chairmen of the affair. A
well known band will provide
music for dancing. Buses will be
in front of Norton Hall at 8:30
p.m. Tickets for the bus ride may
be obtained at the Norton ticket
office. The buses will return to
the campus at the conclusion of
the dance.

Wednesday night will be open
house at Chaplain Beattie’s, 1179
Elmwood Avenue and Friday will
be open house at Chaplain Bollman, 69 Minnesota, from 8 p.m.
Fr. Beattie will continue his discussion of ICORINTHIAS, Wednesday 2-3 p.m., and the study of
the book CHRISTIAN WHOLENESS on Thursday from 2 to 3
p.m., Norton 264. A NEW class
in Basic Theology will be beginning on Tuesday at 2 p.m., Norton, and the Basic Theology Class
Part II, will be continued on Friday from 3 to 4 p.m. Everyone
is welcome.

HASSIP SATURDAY NIGHT

PAGE THIRTEEN

Scholarships for Study Abroad
Offered by Education Institute

The Institute of International
Education announces that a limited number of scholarships for
1964 summer study are being
offered to qualified Americans by
two Austrian and four British
universities. Adolf-Morsbach awards for summer study at most
German universities are also
available. All programs are administered by the HE.
The historic University of
Vienna will hold a special summer session at its St. Wolfgang
campus in Stroble, Austria, from
July 12 to August 22. Courses

available to students will include
law, political science and liberal
arts courses and German language
courses. The St. Wolfgang program is open to candidates who
have completed two or more
years of college and will cost
approximately $335. An optional
four-day trip to Vienna at a small
additional charge is also avail:
able
The aim of the Salzburg sum
mer school at Salzburg-Klessheim,
sponsored by the Austro-American Society, is to provide students with an opportunity to
learn the German language and
to acquire a firsthand knowledge
of Austrian culture and foreign
policy. Although most courses (in
art, music, economics and politics) will be taught in English,
attendance at one of several German language courses will be
mandatory.

Total cost for the Salzburg
program will be $260; $245 to
cover room, board and tuition,
plus a $15 registration fee. Applicants for the six-week session
(from July 5 to July 25) must be
between the ages of 18 and 40
and must have completed at least
one year of college.
High-point of the two Austrian
summer sessions will be the opportunity for students to attend
the famed Salzburg Music Festival, including one opera, one concert and Hofmannsthal’s drama
“Everyman." Festival tickets are
included in the schools’ fees.
Summer school opportunities in
Great Britain include a choice of
subjects and historical periods,
with study to be carried out at
the appropriate university concerned. The study of Shakespeare
and Elizabethan drama will be
offered at Stratford-upon-Avon by
the University of Birmingham;
the history, literature and arts
of 17th century England will be
taught at the University of Oxford; 20th century English literature at the University of London;
and British history, philosophy
and literature from 1688 to 1832
at the University of Edinburgh
in Scotland.
The Universities of London and
Oxford will hold their session
from July 6 to August 14; the University of Birmingham, from July
5 to August 14; and the University of Edinburgh, from June 29

to August 7. Fees, which include
room, board and tuition, for all
schools except Edinburgh, will be
$296; and for Edinburgh, $282.
Courses for all four university
summer sessions are designed
for graduate students, but undergraduates who have completed at
least two years of university work
may apply.

Eight Adolf-Morsbach awards,
worth approximately $125 each
are being made available to qualified Americans by the German
government for summer study in
German universities. They are
open to candidates with a good
knowledge of German who have
not received other grants for a
full academic year’s study in Germany.

Further

information

plications for all

and

summer

1964 Summer Travel
To Univ. of Hawaii
Now Being Planned
The 1964 Summer Travel Program to the University of Hawaii
Summer Session is now accepting

reservations, Dr. Robert E. Craille
Executive Director,. The Adler
University Study Tour to Hawaii,
announced today.
Special rates for students and
teachers for the 6 week (47 day)
Summer Session Tour begin as
low as $585.00 and includes Pan
American round-trip Jet air travel from the West Coast, deluxe
accommodations in Waikiki Beach
hotels, a fabulous schedule of
over 22 sightseeing trips and
tours, cruises, dinner dances,
I.uau and beach activities.

For earning extra credits transcolleges, both
students and teachers can attend
classes at the University of
Hawaii’s famous Summer Session.
An unusual and wide range of
subjects will be offered again
this summer by a distinguished
visiting and resident faculty. Enrollment normally exceeds 8,000
men and women who come to
Honolulu from all over the world.

ferable to Mainland

This year’s Program will deAmerican Jet on
June 25, 1964, from Los Angeles
and San Francisco. Registration
for those members attending
Summer Session is Monday, June
29, 1964. The Program returns
August 10.
part via Pan

Considered to be the outstand-

ing travel program to the Islands,
it is described in a new, 24 page

illustrated Bulletin. For

free

copies including 1964 Application

Forms, write: Dr, Robert E.
Cralle, Executive Director, the
Adler University Study Tour to
Hawaii, 345 Stockton Street, San
Francisco 8, California. Telephone: SUtter 1-4544.

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sions and awards may be obtained
from the Counseling Division, Institute of International Education,
800 Second Avenue, New York 17,
N. Y. Completed scholarship applications to the British schools
must be received at the Institute
by March 1,‘ 1964; applications for
admission by March 31. Austrian
scholarship applications must be
received by March 1; admission
applications by May 1, 1964. Closing date for completed German
government awards is April 1,
1964. Travel arrangements to and
from Europe are the responsibility of each student.

0 ©PHARMEOtCA LABORATORIES,MENLO PARK, N

J.

�Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Me, Wheee! Blaik Predicts
Grid Change
By BARRY GUTTERMAN
Tuesday night,

group.

During the past year and a
half the public has been subjected to idle boasts and ridiculous poems from Mr. Modest
himself, Cassius Marcellus Clay.
The question that is now prevalent in our minds is whether
Mr. Clay will be able to live up
to his predictions of a 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, or
15 round victory. We are all
aware of Cassius’s classic rhyme
and his "excellent” example of
iambic pentameter which goes
along with each fight prediction.
There is little doubt in many of
the sports educated minds who
will triumph. Most sports writers
believe that the bull, and not
the bull-thrower, will be victorious.

Cassius is quicker than Sonny,
a better boxer, and a cuter. Unfortunately this bronzed Apollo
of the verse lacks the urute
strength, experience, and overall
size of his not so cute opponent.
Sonny Liston can be beaten, for
he is not god on earth. The supergreats of the boxing ring—the
Sullivans, the Dempseys, and the
Louises had their weak points,
as does Mr. Liston. Sonny lacks
great speed and is not a very
good dancer. The reason he is
now champion, and probably will
remain champion for some time,
is
there is nobody in
boxing at the present time that
matches his strength. Liston is
not just a Primo Camera, a massive powder-puff, but he is a
truly fine specimen of the physical man, with more than adequate
knowledge of what to do with
his magnificent Herculean
strength. Cassius Clay would be

wise to

take Uncle Sam's bid
to join the Army. If he went
into the Army, he could get what
the armed forces give to every
young American male under their
auspices, twenty pounds of bulk.
With this additional twenty
pounds and three years of age,
Clay could easily become a giant
feller.

Col. Earl (Red) Blaik, longtime Army coach, predicted that
colleges would return to twoplatform football in 1964.
Writing in the current issue
of Look Magazine, Blaik declared:
“When the rules committee (of
the National Collegiate Athletic
Association) meets at Fort Lauderdale, Fla,, next January, they
will very likely legislate for free
substitution. This will open the
way to two platoons and the caliber and tempo of play that the
college game deserves.”

Blaik noted that in the period
between 1949 and 1952 when colleges played separate units for
offense and defense, this twoplatoon football “proved to be
the most effective, most exciting
and safest football in the history
of the college game.”
Blaik characterized the present
substitution rule as “merely another in a series of complex, ineffectual, tedious compromises.”

In his Look article, Blaik based
his prediction about the return
of the free-substitution rule to
college football on three developments:

1. A growing conviction among
the members of the rules committee that continued opposition
to .the free-substiution rule in
he face of the strong wishes of
75 per cent of the coaches would
intensify discontent and antagonism, and almost certainly hurt
the game.
2. The
League

request of the Ivy
for a free-substitution

In the UB-RIT hockey match held Wednesday at Memorial Auditorium, UB lost a hard-fought, penaltyridden game.
The Bulls narrowed the margin to 3-2 early in the second period on goals from Jeff Clayton, assisted
by Mike Whelan and John Cimba, while Dave Crone scored independently. Clayton’s goal climaxed a
three-way pass pattern, while Crone confronted the entire RIT team, decked out their goalie and
scored. Crone countered again in the third period, and was assisted by Jeff Clayton and Dave Laub, but
the effort was too late in the period to be counted, resulting in an 8-3 defeat of the Bulls.
UB will play at Ithaca College and Syracuse University this weekend. The next home match scheduled
will be Tuesday, Feb. 18 at Fort Erie Arena with Brockport State Teachers College.
rule

.

.

,

The about-face of the

Ivy League will influence faculty
people everywhere.
3. Increasing realization among
coaches that they probably can
help their chances of gaining free
substitution with the approval of
professors by also proposing safeguards for current ceilings on
player recruitment. One of the
principal, and invalid, arguments
of the anti-platoon group is that
the two-platoon game require's

more players, more recruiting,
more coaches and inflated bud-

gets.

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think that Liston would knockout Clay in even less time if
it were al all possible. This is
inaccurate. Patterson’s virtues
were completely overshadowed by
Mr. Liston. The only advantage
Floyd had over his opponent
was his speed. However, Clay is
faster than Patterson and should
have a much better chance of
staying away from Liston, and
a much better chance to stay off
the canvass longer. Clay's chances of beating Liston are about
as good as a bee felling a man;
however, this has been known to

-

7. All Fall-Winter Jackets

-

-

Ski etc.

-

1/2 price

....

Now I predict that the poet
will be licked. He'll meet his
Waterloo toward the end of two,
but if he stays free he’ll last for
three, and only if there is a fix
will Mr. Cassius see six.

HASSIP
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to Hillel Members
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Writing Instruments Elegantly
Styled, Handsomely Appointed,

Floyd Patterson could most likely beat Mr. Clay. Taking into
consideration that Patterson was
knocked out by Liston in a ilttle
more than two minutes of round
one, many people would tend to

occur.

S

:

February
25, in Miami Beach, the long
awaited bout between “the big
ugly bear”, champion Sonny Liston, and the “Louisville Lip”,
Cassius Clay, will become a part
of boxing annals. The American
public will finally have jts chance
to see whether the poet laureate
of the pugilists will be able to
capture the champion-crown from
the “Quasimoto” of the same

On

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�Friday/ February 14, 1964

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Motmen Lose to Oswego; Hoopsters Outclass Gannon, 51-46;
Meet Case Tech Today
Hetzel and Baschnagel Leading Scorers
By GARY FALK

Last Saturday, the U.B. wrestling team traveled to meet Oswego State in a dual match, held
in the Oswego gym. The U.B. matmen lost, 18-8. Their record now
stands at 3-1. Oswego State, who
boasts of having three N.Y. State

Collegiate Wrestling champs on
the squad, remained undefeated
at 5-0.

The final score would have
been closer, 18-11, had not the
Oswego coach refused to allow
the 191 lb. class battle to count

at the time on a take down and

a predicament.
U.B. got off to an early 3-0
lead. Bob Jackson, one of the
two juniors of the squad defeated
Jerry LaMonica, 5-2. LaMoniea is
the defending state champ in the
123 lb, division.

Oswego State’s L. Furrer, also
defending state champion in his
class, knotted the meet at 3-3 by
deeisioning U.B.’s George Ehres-

man8-2, in the 130 lb. skirmish.
Oswego State then proceeded
to build an 18-3 lead before
heavyweight Ernst pinned his

By

PAUL NUSSBAUM

The

University of Buffalo’s
cagers scored an impressive 5146 upset victory over highly
touted Gannon College, Saturday
night in Memorial Auditorium.
The win gave the Bulls an 114
overall record while keeping their
tournament hopes alive. It was
the fourth straight victory for
UB, while the loss dropped Gan
non to a 12-4 slate.
Even though the Bulls could
not match their scoring output of

8 rebounds for the night. Goodie
Goodwin, who had the tough job
of guarding the ballyhoocd A1
Lawson, captured 9 rebounds for
UB. Jerry Bodnar, a junior guard,
led the Gannon hoopsterS with
14 points.
UB trailed by 7 points, 22-15,
late in the first half, but timely
buckets by Hetzel and Jim (Bevo)
Bevilacqua sent the Bulls to the
dressing room with a slim 23-22

halftime lead.
The contest picked up momentum when UB broke away from a

was a pressure packed,
“must game” for the Bulls.

what

GANNON

Alford

_2
4

Warren

3
.5
1

Lawson
Bodnar

Wiley

„._3

Durant

....

Cipalla
Chatterton

Totals

0
1

19

mmmm

UB GRAPPLERS IN ACTION AGAINST OSWEGO
officially. The 191 lb. class, is
what Coach LaRocque termed an

“informal” division. Because not
ail schools carry wrestlers in this
category, it is not an official
weight division. In inter collegiate
matches, two schools having
wrestlers in this category, can
agree before hand to have the
match count officially in the
scoirng.

In Saturday’s encounter however, U.B.’s Kgar Poles 6-2 victory over the defending N.Y,
State champion Joe Custainis
was not reflected in the final
score.

The only pin of the meet came
in 3:58 of the 2nd period of the
heavyweight encounter, when
U.B.’s Bert Ernst nailed Oswego’s
J. Cousins. Ernst was leading 4-0

man to end the match.
Three of U.B.’s matmen remain-

ed undefeated. Bob Jackson (123
lb.) and Bert Ernst (heavyweight)
stand at 4-0, while Edgar Poles
(191 lb.) is 3-0.
In College Wrestling, the team
scoring is a follows: 5 points
are awarded for a pin, three for
a decision, and each team is given
two points if the match is a
draw.

In individual matches, points
are awarded for take downs, espredicaments,
capes, reversals,
near falls and others.
The young U.B. squad consisting of two juniors and seven
sophomores travel to Cleveland
for their next meet, Friday, Feb.
14 against Case Tech. They return home the following Wednesday to face Rochester.

GOODWIN (24) puts it up as HETZEL (32) and BEVILACQUA (50) look on in Saturday's action against
Gannon.

the recent Brockport encounter,
they hit on 21 of 66 attempts for
a percentage of 31.8. The invading Golden Knight connected on
19 field goals for a percentage of
35.8, but Buffalo held a substanial
lead in the key rebound depart-

ment, 51-43.

Dick Hetzel and Norb Basehnagel paced the Bulls by scoring
14 points and 10 points respectively. Baschnagel popped in all
of his points in the crucial second half, in addition to snaring

a

tie at 35 with a 7 point splurge
which put the Bulls ahead to
stay. Baschnagel started the rally
with a 3 pointer which Hetzel
followed with two quick baskets.
Coach Len Serfustini then had
the Bulls protect their advantage
by having them press the visitors
from Erie the full length of the
court. Dr. Serfustini was radiantly pleased with UB’s victory over
a N.C.A.A. contender. He felt
that tight defense and strong rebounding made the difference in

BUFFALO
G
Baschnagel
4
Goodwin
3

Hetzel

Barth

113
9
51
Totals 21
Halftime—Buffalo 23, Gannon 22
Bevilacqua

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�PAGE SIXTEEN

Friday, February 14, 1964

SPECTRUM

Spectrum Sports
Buffalo Swimmers Defeat Niagara

SPORTS CIRCLE

By TERRY CLARK

By ALAN NEWMAN

This issue of the Spectrum will inaugurate a new
policy in presenting sports to the student body. For the
first time major national and international sporting
events will be reported on a regular basis. This policy
will in no way decrease the coverage of the university’s
athletic contests. All campus sports will receive the same
attention as in the past. For example, in this issue a preview of the controvertible Liston-Clay fight can be
found. Sports Circle will be devoted to both campus and
national sports in the future.
During the past week there were many occurrences
in the world of sports. Four of the nation’s top-ranking
college basketball teams suffered losses in upsets Saturday night; hte ninth Winter Ollympic Games came to a
close with the Soviets taking 25 medals to remain undisputed champions; and Bill Crothers was chosen “athlete
of the meet’’ of the Los Angeles Indoor Games despite
the fact he finished second in the 1000 yard run.

The University of Buffalo swimming team, under the helm of
coach Bill Sanford, last Tuesday
mermen of
overpowered the
Niagara University by a score of
70 to 25 in the Cataract City.
The only double winner of the
contest was UB’s Roy Troppmann
who set a school record in the
500 yard freestyle with a time
of 5:50.1. This broke Roy’s own
record of 5:56.9 which he set
last week against Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute. Jim Decker
of UB, captain of this year’s
varsity team, also established a
school record when he swam the
100 yard butterfly in 1:02.0. This
record was previously held by
Ron Ushold of UB who established it in 1961.
The UB squad, with a record of
5-4 at present, has also defeated
Cortland, Rochester, Oswego, and
RPI while losing to top-rated
Syracuse, Colgate, and Brockport
State. February 5 saw the UB
mermen drop a very hard fought
battle to a determined St. Bonaventure team by a score of 46 to
48 at Clean. The decisive points
in this contest did not come until
the final event in which UB lost
by a ‘matter of inches.’

In what proved to be college basketball’s most surprising weekend thus far, Villanova, Loyola, DePaul, and
Wichita had their winning streaks put to an abrupt halt
by opponents of lesser ability.
LaSalle overcame an early deficit and went on to
squeak past sixth-ranked Villanova, 63-59, in handing the
Wildcats their first loss in 14 games.
Loyola of Chicago, ranked ninth in the standings and
Coach Sanford, confident that
national champions last year, lost to St. John’s, 71-69, U'
thr
when Willy Lawrence sunk two free throws with seven
seconds remaining. Memphis State completely overwhelmed the DePaul five in scoring a 98-67 victory over
the country’s tenth ranked cagers.
Wichita, seeded fourth nationally, had its ten game
winning skein snapped by Bradley as the Wheatshockers
lost their first game in Missouri Valley Conference Competition. With one second remaining Leon Hill sank a
20-footer to give Bradley the 76-74 triumph.
The University of California at Los Angeles scored
its 19th straight victory without a defeat as it edged California, 58-56, to remain the top ranking team in the nation. Second-ranked Michigan had a much easier time
than the Bruins. All-America candidates Cazzie Russel
and Bill Buntin combined for 65 points in the 93-82 route
of Illinois.

It is not an unusual practice for a sportswriter to
extol a player or team after a poor showing in some type
of athletic endeavor. This occurs, more often than not, in
world competition when national prestige is at stake.
Red Smith, Courier-Express sports columnist, attempts to make a serious case in defense of the U. S. athletes who “competed” so disappointingly at Innsbruck
these last two weeks. No honest appraisal can possibly
find virtue in the American’s performance. The facts are
there, cold and hard as they may be; the Yankees were
completely humbled by the Soviets. There can be no excuses.
The 1964 Winter Olympic Games closed with the
Russians taking 25 medals. This is the third consecutive
By TOM KENJURSKI
victory for the Soviet Union since their entry into the
six
United
States
with
placed eighth
games in 1956. The
The intramural handball tour
medals including one gold.
nament results are as follows:
It is true that the Americans have taken fewer
Finals, singles: Bill Huff (Teke)
medals on previous occasions. Mr. Smith points out that defeated Andy Feldmann (Teke)
on 1936 in Garmisch the American team won a mere four 21-12, 18-21, 21-10. Doubles: Bill
Oatmeyer (Teke)
medals. It is also true, however, that since 1936 there Huff and Tom Ageloff
and Bob
defeated Roy
have been many more events added.
Kohansky (AEPi) 21-18, 14-21,
Squaw
at
the
American
team
won
Valley,
In 1960,
the gold medal in hockey. This year it finished in a tie 21-11.
The team results for the tournaThe blame for this deficiency rests almost solely on ment
are;
the lack of government supported facilities. There is a
57 points
AEPi
and
bobsledding
dire need for larger ice skating rinks
52 points
SAM
slides. A better organized Olympic training program
47 points
TEKE
should be in order. Unless a direct step forward is taken
35 points
BSR
by the government on this matter, the same results can
The intramural squash tournabe expected in the 1968 games at Grenoble.
ment started on Monday and will

remaining meets, feels that his
squad “has worked very hard
this year and has improved considerably over the course of the
season.” He also pointed out that
“we will be even stronger next
year due to the fact that the
team will lose only three men
after graduation and will have
the needed depth that will be
supplied by the upcoming freshman squad.”
The freshman team, coached
by Bob Bedell, has also proved to
be strong competition this year.
Thus far, they have compiled a

record of five wins and

one de-

feat—losing only to Syracuse
University. Several members of
the team have been outstanding
this year. Among them are
Charlie Zetterberg and Howard

Braun who have broken records
in the 200 yard backstroke and
200 yard breaststroke respectively.
Following

schedule

is the remaining
for the 1964 varsity

swimming team.

Feb. 22 (Sat.)—Geneseo, home,
2 p.m.

F'eb. 26 (Wed.)—Buffalo State,
away, varsity 8 p.m., frosh

■

-

7 p.m.
Mar. 4 (Wed.) —Niagara, home,
8 p.m.
Mar. 7 &amp; 8—Upper New York
State Championships at Buffalo

Bill Grothers was chosen as “athletic of the meet” in
the 1964 Los Angeles Indoor Games after a brilliant second place finish. Grothers was running a close fourth
with two laps to go when someone stepped on his heel.
He fell, rolled along the boards and injured his left
knee. To the rear of the crowd Grothers got up and went
on to fail by inches of beating Jim Dupree. Both were
clocked at 2:11.9.
7
“

—_

■■

mann.
Currently

the basketball leagues are in progress. All teams
in the Wednesday’ night league
are asked to check the schedule
in the gym"for make up dates.
:

The overall fraternity standings
for the Pahlowitz Memorial Trophy taking the top five spots
are:
Alpha Epsilon Pi
189 points
184% points
Sigma Alpha Mu
Beta Sigma Rho
183 points
Sigma Epsilon Phi
182 points
149 points
Phi Epsilon Pi
The Intramural Fencing Tournament will be run by Coach
Schwartz. Registration for the
tournament will be held on
March 17, Tuesday at 7 p.m. in
the Clark Gym basement.

SPORTS
Be sure to listen in tonight at
6:15 to WBFOs “UB Sports Highlights.” a fifteen minute program
covering all University sports
both intermural and intercollegi-.
ate. Tonight’s Highlight will be
an interview with Ron LaRocque,
varsity wrestling coach. Join the
Highlights” with Wally Blatter,
crowd and tune in “UB Sports
tonight and every Friday night
over WBFO-FM, 88.7 meg.

400 yd. medley relay, 1. (UB)Mark Grashaw, John Danahy,
Knute Wiedeman, Mike Perkis
2. (N) —no entries, 4:45.0
200 yd. freestyle, 1. Roy Tropp.
mann (UB) 2. Mike Nelson (UB)
3. Dick Van Allen (N), 2:03.9
50 yd. freestyle, 1. Barry Kerber
(N) 2. Ken McNaughten (N) 3.
Royce Collister (UB), 30.4
200 yd. indiv. medley, 1. Irv Puls
(UB) 2. Roger Moylan (N) 3.

Carl Robiner (UB), 1:56.8
Fancy dive, 1. Marv Mitzel (UB)
2. Tom Hurley (UB) 3. Pat Dockery (N) 146 points
100 yd. butterfly, 1. Jim Decker
(UB) 2. George Doble (N) 3.
Wilbur Smith (UB), 1:02.0
100 yd. freestyle, 1. Carl Millerschoen (UB) 2. McNaughten (N)
3. Kerber (N), 56.5
200 yd. backstroke, 1. Grashaw
(UB) 2. John Edelman (UB) 3.
Dockery (N), 2:42.5
500 yd. freestyle, 1. Troppmann
(UB) 2. Walt Eisenheis (UB) 3,
Van Allen (N), 5:50.1
200 yd. breaststroke, 1. Danahv
(UB) 2. Doble (N) 3. Haase (UB),

2:35.9
400 yd. relay, 1. (UB)-Barry Butler, Dave Hearn, Mike Nawrocki, Royce Collister 2. (N)Kerber, Smith, Moylan, Me-

WBFO

Intramurals

be played on Mondays, Tuesdays,
and Thursdays. All pairings and
results are posted in the locker
room. The defending singles
squash champion is Andy Feld-

The results of the UB-Niagara

meet are as follows:

**

-

Sports

WBFO-FM, the campus radio
station, will cover the remaining
three home basketball games of
the 1963-64 season. Barry Warner
and Wally Blatter will be at court
side to relay the play by play of
the Bulls games. The pre-game
warm-up and half time show will
be done by Dick Flisher.
This Will be the first time in
the history of the school’s radio
station that basketball games are
broadcast live. The move has been
made in an effort to expand the
sports programming to please
more of the station’s student listeners. It is felt that the airing
of the UB games, by UB students
will be welcomely accepted by
all Bulls followers. They now will
have the chance of hearing the
broadcast of the game from their
fellow students’ point of vie"'.
There will be no commercials,
just an hour and a half of exciting basketball.
The pre-game warm-up of this
Saturday’s game against Colgate
will begin at 8:20 p.m., with the
game starting at 8:30. Be sure
to listen in over WBFO-FM, 88
meg.

;

1

7

—

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                    <text>r

DISCRIMINATION
■

FP'CC
three)

STATE

UNIVERSITY

OF

NEW

YORK AT BUFFALO

SPECTRUM

VOLUME 14

ZL i
NO.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1944

22

finkelstein landslide:
ALSO FELDMAN, LEVENTHAL,
BERGER, SWEEP INTO OFFICEI

Q
iJtfMigi
■■BHPwBMra M
IH

ROBERT FINKELSTEIN

ROBERT FELDMAN

WILLIAM BERGER
The largest number of students in the history of the University
went to the polls Wednesday and Thursday and elected Robert Finkelstein, Robert Feldman, Linda Leventhal, and William Berger to the Student Association offices for 1964-65. The more than 2,700 students
who voted stood in long lines both days, culminating the hard fought
campaign waged by the two parties.
With the final vote tallied, Robert Finkelstein (United Students)
decisively trounced Michael Lappin in the Presidential campaign, 1,633
to 884. President-elect Finkelstein was a representative from the College
of Arts and Sciences on the past Student Senate and chairman of its
public relations committee. Mr. Lappin, rejected by the student body,
had been Vice President the past year.
Robert Feldman (United Students), also a past Student Senator,
won the Vice Presidency, beating Joseph Turri 1,314 to 1,064. Feldman’s victory was a tremendous upset in that he had refused to do
any major campaiging, preferring to remain “non-political.”
The latest returns on the contest for Secretary showed Linda
Leventhal (Independent) edging out the Campus Alliance candidate,
Judy Marcklinger, 865 to 803. Beverly Rosenow (United Students)
trailed far behind in the three-way race with 699 votes. Miss Leventhal
has been active in the Debate Society and an outspoken student at
Senate meetings, although she has not held elective office on the body.
Another election sweep was chalked up by William Berger (United
Students), now Treasurer-elect, smashing his Allianc opponent, Kearons
Whalen, by more than 500 votes, 1,440 to 902. Berger has been
Senator and finance committee member for the past two years.

LINDA LEVENTHAL
Final election results from the College of Arts and Sciences have
named Henry Simon (225), Kenneth Bernstein (224), Robert Gerace
(254), Arnold Graf (222), and Linda Gunsberg (273) to be Senate
representatives from that division. The Campus Alliance Party won
four of the five seats.
University College students have elected Clinton Deveaux (1,049),
Rena Fisch (620). Trudy Stern (768), Richard Kronenfeld (626),
Daniel Silber (578), and Natalie Gold (674) to represent them. The
United Students won three seats to the Alliance’s two in th U.C. division. Miss Gold ran as an independent candidate.
Other election victories were scored by Marilyn Schanzer and
Myrna Fried (Education); Richard Zavodny and George Neuner (Engineering) Doris Hyr.cik (Nursing)
Cary Present and John Constantine (Medicine); Roy Ageloff and Tony Martino (Business); Bill
Kockin (Law); Gia Quinta (Pharmacy); and Barry Rochlin (Den;

;

tistry).

The party lineup for the incoming Student Senate shows 12 United
Students Senators, 10 Campus Alliance Senators, and 5 Independents.
The results of the referendum balloting was nearly as strong as
that for the candidates. The proposal to support the possible Student
Senate bid to have beer sold on campus was endorsed by 1,227 students;
432 students voted against the proposal. The other referendum which
asked for support to have alcoholic beverages served at social occasions
and dances was supported by 1,355 students as opposed to 254 votes
against.

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

GREEK WEEKEND
Greek Weekend 1964 will be
held the weekend of April 3-5.
This is the weekend which is
run by fraternities and sororities
for all UB students whether or
not they are affiliated with any
Greek organizations. This year’s
.Greek Weekend has greatly been
.expanded to cover many interesting and entertaining events
and affairs.
As with all featured weekends,
a queen is to be selected. This
queen is to be elected from a
group of contestants which re
presents several of the sororities
on campus. The contestants are
Mary Ansuini, Theta Chi; Joan
Baumgarfuer, Chi Omega; Linda
Chipken, Sigma Delta Tau: Syd
:

ney Heigaand, Sigma Kappa; and
Merleene Watson, Alpha Gamma

Delta. The girls will be campaigning from March 23, to March 31.
Elections for queen will be held
on Thursday and Friday, April
2 and 3, from 10-2 in front of
the conference theater.
All members of fraternal organizations belonging to the I.F.C.
are entitled to vote.
On April 1, the Greeks will
sponsor a fashion show in the

Rathskeller. This show will be
free of charge, and all students
are cordially invited. Models will
show off the latest in spring and
summer wear, ranging from formal evening gowns and cocktail
dresses, to the latest chic beach

and sun apparel.
The Annual Greek sing will
take place Friday night. There
will be two shows; one at 7:00
in the Conference Theater, and
one at 9:30 in the Fillomre Room
(formally the Multi Purpose room)
Students wishing to see the early
show are advised to purchase
their tickets early, due to the
small unmber of seats available
in the Conference 'Theater, There
will be trophies awarded to the
winners of Greek sing and Greek
Weekend, Trophies to be awarded for first place for both large
and small fraternities; first place
for the best sorority, and first
place
overall. The scholastic

Friday, March 27, 19t&gt;4

LOST
K

BOYS!
WALKING TOO FAR?
Newly decorated and fur-

E Slide Rule
on March 17.

&amp;

nished rooms
from Campus.

on Campus

laundry,

3 minutes

Kitchen,

Really nice.
1st Weeks rent
FREE

etc.

836-6933.

IF 9-2181

Reward.

-

(Cont’d on Pg. 9)

Gold on ‘Continuous Creation’—Einstein
This Tuesday Professor Thomas
Gold spoke on “Continuous Creation
the second in a series of
five authorities on the question
“Is Einstein Obsolete?” Professor
Gold is presently Chairman of the
Department of Astronomy and
Director of the Center for Radiophysics and Space Research at
Cornell University. Dr. Gold's
speech concerned itself with the
reasons for inventing and discussing theories of the large scale
structure of the universe. He also
considered
the methods and
problems of extropolation from
laboratory physics to the largest
scale, and the Steady State Theory of Cosmology,
Dr. Gold is a fellow of the
—

PROFESSOR THOMAS GOLD

American Academy of Arts and
Sciences and of the American
Geophysical Union as well as a
Past Councilor of the Royal As
.tronomical Society.
In 1948 he was co-author, with
H, Bondi, of the paper on the
“Steady State Theory of the Expanding Universe.” Dr. Gold received his training at Cambridge
and was elected a Fellow at Trinity College in 1947. During the
war he was connected with radar
research
and development of
work of the British Admiralty. He
has held, among other positions,
the Senior Principal Scientific Office—at Royal Greenwich Observatory, and Professor of Astron
omy at Harvard.

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�Friday, March 27, 1964

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Discrimination Symposium Held Board Names Mike Donohoe
As New 'Buffalonian' Editor

NANCY LAURIEN
“Three hundred years from
now, the mid-twentieth century
won’t be remembered for the development of movies, the airplane, television, or even the
atomic bomb, but rather, in the
long view of history, for making
the benefits of civilization available to all mankind.” Friday,
March 21, Dr. Furnas opened the
lecture series “Discriminating
About Discrimination
a symposium for responsible citizens”
with this statement by Arnold
Toynbee to establish the reason
for considering the problem of
world wide segregation in this
—

manner.

Dr. Daisuke Kitagawa, an outstanding theologian of Japanese
descent and first speaker on the
program further defined the significance of the problem in these
words: “A person gains his identity through his social relationships in the community. No man
can be a whole person without
being an integral part of the
group he identifies with.” Thus,
denying a person membership in
the society within he exists is, in
effect, denying the person.
Dr. Arnold M. Rose, professor
of Sociology at the University of
Minnesota and noted social critic
drew the same conclusion in his
Varied
exploration of “The
Sources of Discrimination”. The
caste system which developed in
thte South as a means of keeping
the Negroes and whites separate
after the liberation of the slaves
had as one of its tenets the idea
that Negroes have no legal
rights. If the law doesn’t recognize you, you in effect, do not
exist.”
This racist policy spread and
was transferred to other minority
groups. Dr. Frank Tannenbaum,
NYU historian, in his discussion
A Comparison
of “The Negro
Between North and South America” carried the argument fur
ther by stating: “A man may be
a bondsmen, but morally, a human being. In the United States,
the attitude is that the Negro is
a slave (or poor) because he is a

Irf you begin by saying
that this man has no moral character, and is incapable of having
one, how can he make the transition from slave to free? Since
the law doesn’t know who you
are, you have no identity
you
don’t exist. It required the Civil
War to give the Negroes legal
status. The implementation of
that is yet to come."
Dr. Tannenbaum continued “If
you look at the history of slavery
in the Western Hemisphere, you
can make the following assumption: an invisible contract was
signed by the first slave and
master which is still being executed. It has four parts: 1) I,
the slave am committed to ultiNegro.

—

mately becoming involved in, and
a carrier of, your culture. 2) He
who tills the land shall ultimately own it and conquer it. 3) When

two peopules live together, the

freedoms of one are those'of the
other. Ultimately the grandchildren of each shall be equal morally and under the law because
4) the great grandchildren of the
slave will also be the great-grandchildren of his master. This is
inevitable.”
The Reverend John M. Burgess
explained this revolution is being

thwarted in his discussion of the
“Religo Cultural Dynamics in
Discrimination”
’contradictions
within the religious community
(Cont. from Pg. 5)
-

—

Publications Board met
and selected
Michael Donohoe as editor-inchief of the Buffalonian for the
coming year. Mr. Donohoe has
been for the section devoted to
academic affairs, for this year’s
Buffalonian, scheduled for distribution May 1.
The Board also granted a temporary recognition status to a new
publication which will be entitled
Focus, Robert Milch, a Spectrum
colmnist (The Circus) has been
named editor of the proposed
magazine which will be devoted
to commentary on news and camThe

Monday afternoon

pus affairs. Working in conjunction with Mr. Milch are two
Board members, Peter Scholl and
Howard Gondree. Focus has per
mission to publish two issues,
after which the Publications
Board will decide on whether
or not to fully recognize the
magazine.

Listen to
WBFO

JOBS ABROAD
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permanent career opportunities in Europe, South

America, Africa and the Pacific, for MALE or
FEMALE. Totals 50 countries. Gives specific
addresses and names prospective U S. employers
with foreign subsidiaries. Exceptionally high pay,
free travel, etc. In addition, enclosed vital guide
and procedures necessary to foreign employment.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Send two dollars to Jobs
Abroad Directory—P. 0. Box 13593—Phoenix,
Arizona.

—

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5 min. from Campus)

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�THE

SPOTLIGHT

SPECTRUM

ON

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for

exam

periods, Thanksgiving,

-

EDITOR ELECT
John Kowal
-

Editorial Advisor

By DANIEL RUSSELL

ARNOLD S. MAZUR
KRH-GEL

MARTIN D

Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Alan Newman
Marcia, Cooper
William Siemering

Business Manager
Pat Launer
Asst. Business Manager
Bernard Dickman
Advertising Mgr
Laurence Singer
. David
Layout Editor
Irwin
Circulation Mgr.
Lois Hessinger
Financial Advisor
Thomas Haenle, Jr.
-

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Judy Green, Gary Falk,
Allan Scholom,. Mike Sultanik, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Charles

Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray Crawford, Jane
Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian
Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng,
Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo, Terry Sweeney, Tom Kenjarski,
Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie
Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Kilpstein, Saralee Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Carolyn Cooper, Barry Gutterman,

Susan

Weiner.

Photography

CIVIL RIGHTS

Christmas, and Easter.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor

Friday, March 27, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Staff: Joel Havens,

Pamela Reid,

Toby Leder.

One major result of the suppression of the .Negro in America has been, naturally, the development of a “strike back” philosophy among many Negroes. The
animosity of some Negroes for
all things white, and the feeling
of powerlessness among many
others, seems to be justified. The
Negro, since 1863, has been a
free man. Free to cram himself
into a ghetto, free to miss a job'

when the color of his face is
seen, free to pay high prices for
rent and food free to keep smiling in the face of misery. The
frustrations at having to tolerate
the intolerable manifest themselves in the growing movement
to stand up and fight. Thus, there
is widespread sympathy for the
attitude of such people as Malcolm X and Elijah Mohammed.
-

Second Class, Postage Paid

Subscription

at

$3.00 per year,

Buffalo, New York

circulation 9000,

Represented for national advertising by
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York,

PRESS

National
N. Y.

Advertising

Editorial
A PART OF THE CYCLE

Before we go into specifics, just
consider what your reaction
would be if someone reviled you
because of your religion, or race,
or any other inherent quality.
Would you hit back hard? The
answer in many cases is “yes.”
The feelings of frustration and
intense resentment on the part
of the Negro can be seen only in
this light.

The new year really begins with spring. The fresh
smell of the season creeps slowly out from under the ice
and we feel the pangs of rebirth quite as much as those
While most Negroes do not
things which are more closely related to nature. It is
accept Malcolm X’s solution to
joyful experience we have come to expect and apprecithe problem (separation), many
ate; and, no matter how Buffalo may .regress into the accept his diagnosis of, and atwinter’s silence, we all do know that warmth and a pleatitude concerning the situation.
surable sense of freedom is as inevitable as last week’s The feeling is that the non-violent groups that try to work withvernal equinox. Hojydays which commemorate the resurrection and a people’s flight for freedom occur just at in the system cannot possibly sucthis time rather ancient
but nonetheless fitting. ceed because the ultimate power
lies in white hands. The Negro
We wish everyone, then, a hearty “happy new year.”
has made virtually no progress
;

BUSSING

in the last hundred years and will
get only “tokenism” in the future.
No matter how militant these
non-violent groups are, they maintain, they cannot possibly accomplish their ends.
&gt;

Furthermore, they are sick of
There has been much discussion and protest the turning
the other cheek. They
bussing
winter
past
concerning the
of children in order continue to turn the other cheek
to fully integrate city school systems. There is much to and get slapped again and again.
say about the proposals, especially the Princeton Plan, The Negro, when struck, should
and The Spectrum wishes to add to the editorial opinion strike back. Form rifle clubs and
already expressed by other newspapers.
be prepared to use violence

We have been careful in the past not to fall into the
typical “liberal” approach to civil rights, which passively
permits itself to grant equal opportunities to Negroes sp
long as those opportunities do not affect or impinge upon
the complacent comforts of the white middle class.
We observe the above attitude in the activities of all
the women who have picketed the New York City Hall
in opposition to Ngro demands for full integration of City
schools. These people still do not see the issue in terms of
the Negro revolution, and we cannot sympathize with
them. They have approved the 1954 Supreme &lt;”ourt decision, and remain blind' to the fact that when you compare schools in Harlem with those in Queens the situation
is separate and unequal.
Although the only lasting corrective to the problem
is the integration of neighborhoods, The Spectrum -endorses a program which would bus Negro, Puerto Rican,
and white students. It is unfair and hypocritical to think
in terms of bussing only the minority groups, a ploy of
tokenists which, among other things, would not upgrade
the quality of facilities and teachers in the urban slum
areas.

However, we do have one reservation in that we do

not feel elementary school children should be bussed. It

seems to us that the younger children would be alienated
from their schools if they were bussed, and this would
impair the learning process. Urban children grow up in
“u neighborhood,’’ and their school should be as closely
related to their lives as can be. This is not merely a white
luxury, but one which exists for all, and should continue.

CONGRATULATIONS
The Spectrum congratulates the new Student Association officers and Student Senators. It has been a hard
campaign, and the newspaper has been strong in its endorsements. No matter, we wish the elected students the
best of luck and hope that they will work together for
the progress of student government.

whenever struck.

Many people, though they don’t
subscribe to the philosophy of
such men as Malcolm X, feel that
his

movement serves a highly

useful function. It serves to show
whites that unless they accept
and bargain with the milder
groups, they will have to face
Malcolm X in the future. It serves
to “wake them up.”
who
Those
maintain
that
groups operating within the system, in an attempt to bend it to
their own needs, cannot succeed
in the face of white control maintain a defeatist attitude. Many
people in the early days of or-

ganized labor felt that the capitalists had such a dominant position that violent revolt was the
only answer. They felt that the
system simply couldn’t be reformed from within, as the
A. F. of L. was trying to do. They
pointed to the lack of improvement in the workingman’s lot
over one hundred years, and to
the dominant sway big business
held over the politics of the
nation. They felt frustrated and
powerless in the face of over r
whelming odds—exactly as many
Negroes feel today. Yet precisely
the “tame” organizations such as
the A. F. of L. and the C. I. 0.
are the ones that have succeeded.
By not accepting the position that
capital and labor are incompatible because of their very
nature, by not resorting to violence, and by massing their nonviolent weapons, they succeed in
creating an equal place for them-

selves within the system.

Many maintain that they cease
to be

non violent in their
(Cont.

from

pro-

Pg. 5)

«jCetterA

to

the Editor

‘Who is George Spelvin

’

Dear Mr. Spelvin:

If I knew who you were
‘George Spelvin’, I might be able
to understand why you wrote
such a derogatory critique of
The Miser. I am a senior, interested in the dramatic productions of the university, I do not
profess to know it all, nor to say
that you were totally wrong or
unkind, but I would like to ask
you a few questions. How many
productions have you seen at
UB? I have seen several and
none done as well as this. If
all plays were done the way you
seem to favor, there would never
be any originality on the stage.
You see, this was an attempt to
stage an "educational” play in
an original and clever, if I may
add, manner. When has this university ever staged a play in the
round with such simple and well
done scenery so as not to take
away from the acting? A very
lovely display was constructed
outside to help people like you

get into the “Moliere Mood,” Did
you happen to look at it? If you
had, you might have known that
the costume worn by John Lund
was not so ridiculous, but was

representative of seventeenth
century France. Another important factor was that this was one
of the first recent UB plays acted
by students only and not by imported professional actors. Did
you happen to consider that?

Have you really read Moliere
in the foreign language? in English? at all? I doubt that you
know so much about it since this
was one of the Moliere plays that
was not written in actual “poetry.” You have said, and I won’t
bother to quote you, that the
play lacked interpetation. I’m not
sure whether you misuse the
word interpetation or whether
you don’t know the meaning at
all. An interpetation is neither
right nor wrong. It is merely
one’s own “conception of a work
of art.” Therefore, how can you
possibly say that the director’s

interpetation “must be called into question?” It is my opinion
(and please don’t forget that opinion lies in the same category
as interpetation, for it too is
neither right nor wrong) that you
are incapable of “interpreting”.
You were so interested in tearing apart a group of hard working students that you were mentally blocked from all the good

that could have been taken into
consideration. For one thing, consider the movements of Lawrence
Bartlette. You know, of course,
that each person make individual
ly distinct movements which
characterize him from all other
people. His moving hand, which
displayed a diamond ring necessary to show his wealth since
his costume didn’t, was necessary
to his character and seemed to
fit the image perfectly of Harpagon in one of the outside displays.

Burlesque, you say? Did you
know that this play is a farce
in the theatrical sense of the
word? Many of Moliere’s plays
were. Those actions and gags you
criticized, weren’t they necessary
farcical elements?
something peragainst S. Sturgeon? I
thought her smile very sweet, as
Do

you have

sonal

that of Elise should have been.
How about Collin Bremner? Did
you know that Valere, the character he represented, was supposed
to be calm in appearance and
voice?

Every

audience

is

different,

you know. It could have been
that you audience was appreciating some of the more serious

sides of the humor rather than
splitting its sides in laughter.
I did not write this letter in
order to cause another personal
campus riot, I merely feel that
where credit is due, it should be
given. UB and the Drama depart
ment deserve it, for a change.
Are you someone who never gets
any?

Susan Salamon

All Campus Libraries will be closed
Easter Day, Sunday, March 29th

�Friday, March 27, 1964

SPOTLIGHT

The Circus

(Cont’d

By BOB MILCH

There are some subjects for
which one’s wonted style is unsuited. It so happens that the
subject of this week’s column
the manner in which the routines
of administration are carried out
on campus with all the grace
and efficiency of a decerebrated
amputee is deserving of nobler
treatment than my poor style
can give it. Thinking of slightly
more illustrious writers than myself, I have tried to express my
thoughts as they might have.
-

-

Chaucer:

Whan that Aprille with his
shoures soote,
The droughte of March hadde
perced to the roote,

Than to pre-registracioun we

wende,'
Where inefficiencies go without
ende.
Samuel Johnson: It can only
remain as the horrendous perplexion of any rational gentleman, that the gross inefficiency
so manifestly evident in the administrative facilities of the state
university system here, and the
lax discharge of the responsibilities those administrative officeholders present, would not be
exorcised, rather allowed to continue, despite two year’s supervision by the elect company of
educators in the legislature.
Jonathan Swift: It is particularly noticeable that the cubicles
in which these people work are
permeated by a most noxious
odor which, being lighter than
air, seems always in the ascendency; this syndrome, one of the
inhabitants explained to me, is
found in most administrative offices of the system, from supervisors’ to counsellors’, being due
in part both to, the system and
to the inhabitants.
Charles Darwin: It is noteworthy that such laxity is an inherited characteristic, transmitted from predecessor to follower.
Whereas the former is interested
only in getting paid for eight
hour’s work, and has no qualms
about the quality of the work
done, this attitude is subsequently
manifest in the progeny of the
genus and species.

William Shakespeare:
The king doth feel with feeling

most unjust
That once he’s ruled the job
is thereby done;
And so his subjects, going
through the motions,
In darkness work, and never
see the sun
J. D. Salinger: I mean, these
people just have a who gives a
damn attitude. That, and they’re
not too long on smarts to begin
with. You think they ever think
who they might be screwing up?
They’re just a bunch of civil
services phonies. And if there’s
one thing I can’t stand u s a
phony. I mean, of Course they

don’t have

the best conditions

or anything, but still, wouldn’t

you think they’d give a damn just
once in a while.
Ford Maddox Ford: A good
tommie just doesn’t do things
like that, screwing up his buddy
. . . not for two bob or ten guiIf a man can’t be conneas
scientious in his job, what are
...

all the candlesticks for? The red
tape and their attitude are well
matched for themselves, but when
it comes to people, it’s a very bad
show.
Damn
Tennessee
Williams:
their eyes. What in hell do they
think they’re in an office for in
the first place? To jap me an’him?
Who in hell ever taught them
how to work? Who in hell gave
’em their jobs? Come here baby.
Let’s have another drink.
Alexamder Pope:
Pretentiousness ’tis rank and
fills the air,
That bureaucrats should call
the foul fair;
Performance recommends them
to the lax,
Expedience unto the nearest
■

axe.
e e cummings:

don’t think
that I’m in favor
of what goes on I’d rather
strangle than angle a
;

bangle to jangle
at getting things done any
faster though; you
can’t fight hayes in haze.
I’d trade any number of master
cards, or even a place up front in
the registration line on a cold
and windy morning to be able to
write as they did. I really would.

Democracy in Civil Rights
(Cont’d

from P.

PAGE

SPECTRUM

3)

“Something must be done to right
the wrong that exists, yet too
many sound off on brotherhood
and bely their words by not acting upon them, thinking that
their words by not acting upon
them, thinking that their duty is
discharged with their expose of
the existing evil. We wonder if

Christianity hasn’t withdrawn into
moderacy, where it is satisfied
with the status quo. This attitude is a more formidable enemy
than the blatant bigot. Violence
is beginning to sound like Uncle
Tomism: white is to liberalism as
damn is to Yankee. Freedom is
a tantalizing mirage -r- it is good
now as a slogan only if it is to
include everyone, and be undergirded with responsibility and
action.”
Dr. Kitagawa summarized and
concluded the symposium by indicating how individuals may act
to eliminate discrimination universally, and emphasized its im
portance in this way: "If Ameri-

can society fails to give equal
rights to the Negroes and other
racial grounps, it isn't the civil
rights movement that fails but

democracy itself. The future will
bring either a society where peace
and justice rule or the destruction of all peoples. Telling people
to be nice to other individuals
°f their races is pretty innocuous. Individual crusaders are almost powerless. Although the situation is desperate and time is
short, strategy and calculated action i? required. We mustn’t be

carried away with our emotions,
or, on the other hand, wait for
people to vote for this or that.
We must learn to work in concert
with each other; alone we cannot
achieve discipline, sociological or
political action. We must take the
social climate very seriously,
(since this will determine our actions success), but we must also
act and work to build a social
climate which is receptive to in
tegration. The majority of the
people aren't evil or racially
prejudiced, but lose backbone and
give in to small but loud groups
of bigots. Thus', this minority
searching for security by attacking others determines the social
climate. Determining the social
climate can be and is in our
hands through mutual communi
cation, cold, calculating community action, and by preparing
ourselves for moving into the

future.”
The “Discriminating About Discrimination” lectures will be
broadcast by WBFO-FM (the UB
radio station) at 82.7 me Tuesdays
at 3:00 p.m. and Thursdays at
7:30 p.m. They were also recorded by WBEN radio and WKBWTV and will be broadcast at a
date yet to be announced.
The Reverend R. Sherman
Beattie, advisor to the Canterbury
The Episcopal
Association
is deservChurch on campus
ing of special recognition, since
he initiated the idea of the symposium and was “the moving
spirit” behind its organization,
functioning execution, and thus,
—

—

success.

from P.

SKETCH

4)

tests and strike back. Striking
back would, though, limit the
Negroes’ ability to work within
the system. Is a mass demonstration feasible when rifle bullets
fly? Non violence limits the police
to beatings and jailing. Carrying
and using them would
amount to giving the police a
licence to murder. Such as voter
registration drives become less
feasible too in the light of gun

rifles

FIVE

BY DAVID BERGEN and PETER RCJBIN

This week Sketch interviewed Bill Sherman, a teaching fellow
in the Department of English. The reason for the interview was to
find out more about Mr. Sherman’s plans for making a motion picture.
BAR: We understand that a group
of people at the University are
planning to make a motion pic-

battles. Thus violence would be
ture, Who is involved in this
a grand victory for the segregaendeavor besides yourself?
tionist—who would delight in Sherman; Jeremy Taylor, an unleaving the Negro alone with no
dergraduate; and Leon Lewis,
means at his disposal to better
a graduate student and teachhis condition.
ing fellow also in the English
Some people say that radical
department.
groups serve the function of preprompted you to unsenting the whites with the threat B&amp;R: What
dertake such a project?
of having to deal with them if Sherman: This is something that
they don’t come to terms with
I have been wanting to underthe moderates. This reflects a
take for several years. My inmisunderstanding of the situation.
terest stems from the belief
The object of the non-violent
that the cinema is the most
movement is to mobilize Negro
limitless of all art forms. Of
political power. The key to succourse, many other people are
cess is not in convincing “borderproducing films independently.
whites
to
be
but
nice,
in
line”
I think that the making of a
gaining a significant share of
motion picture will be not only
to
political power in order
force
an exciting project, but a valuaccount
the system to
to them.
able experience which might
But just as violence is out, so
turn out to be a valid artistic
is gradualism. One doesn’t “gradendeavor.
ually” intergrate a kindergarten.
B&amp;R: Who is connected with the
The children don’t care (“You’ve
actual making of the film?
got to be taught," as the song Sherman:
The script for the film
goes). The very fact that the
is based on a short story by
complex socio-economic problems
Jeremy Taylor titled Howard's
responsible for the Negroes’ conMadness which Jeremy is
dition will take generations to
turning into a scenario. Leon
solve is all the more reason for
Lewis is going to supervise the
immediate action, now. A society
photography and work on the
doesn’t change quickly. Nor can
other technical aspects such
society.
our
But
violence change
as editing. Dr. Fcbcl of the
tip toeing through the sensitiviAudio-Visual
center has informties of subtly prejudiced people
ed me that he will allow us
won’t change it either. Only full,
to use the cameras and sound
active support of those who work
equipment of Audio-Visual.
for basic changes of the power
B&amp;R: What is your role?
structure within our system will. Sherman;
Besides acting as a coproducer with Jeremy and Leon
I am directing the film.
B&amp;R; How long do you expect the
film to run?
Sherman; It will run approximately half an hour. It will be
a 16 millimeter film with synchronized sound.
B&amp;R: You said that Audio-Visual will aid you with equipment. Will they give you any
At the March 17th meeting, the
Freshman Class Council discussother assistance?
ed revisions in its Consititution. Sherman: Dr. Febel has told me
The Council and its advisors feel
that he will supply us with an
experienced cameraman and
that these amendments will help
the future Councils in conductsound technician,
ing their business in a more ef
B&amp;R: Could you tell us something
ficient manner.
of what the story is about?
The preparations for Dr. BarSherman: Basically, it concerns
nette’s lecture Wednesday were
itself with the possibility of
completed and the Council urges
meaning in a society which
all students to attend this intends to stifle human communiformative talk.
cation. It deals with the probMr. Garber, the advisor to the
lems of commitment in a fragFreshman Class Council, brought
mentary world. I feel that the
up the discussion Of the Freshman Orientation Program, The
members all felt that a revision
of the program is in need, and
they plan to continue discussion
of the topic at a future meeting.
On Wednesday, the Freshman
Class Council and the Councils
of the Freshmen dormitories are
sponsoring the second in a series
of three lectures. Dr. Barnette
from the Psychology Department,
By JAMES B. DECKER
will speak on "Career Opportunistudent —TF 4-0322
ties in the Field of Psychology.”
The lecture will be held in room
MR. E. J. SAWERS
233 of Norton Union, from 3:30
faculty member
649-3115
to 4:30 p.m. There will be an
Are you interested in flying to
open discussion and refreshments
Europe at “wholesale” cost this
will follow.
summer? A group of students
and faculty at S.U.B.N.Y. are
planning to charter a flight to
Europe this summer. By chartering the plane and splitting the
cost equally among all of those
participating, the round-trip airfare from Buffalo to London, Eng
land and returning from Paris,
Beginning this semester, University College will no longer France to Buffalo will amount to
sefid warnings to students during approximately $238 per person.
the spring semester. Warnings
The trip will originate at the
Buffalo International Airport on
will continue to be sent to Freshmen only during fall semesters. about July 21st, and return about
,lt is felt that after the first August 25th, which will allow for
semester a jjtudent should be sufstudents and faculty members to
ficiently aware of his own acaattend the first session of sumdemic failures without the neces
mer school if they wish
The
formal warnings
cost of the charter covers the

FCC Includes
Dr. W. L. Barnette
Careers in Psych.

story is successful because it
deals with these old problems

in a highly original manner.
Where do you expect to

B&amp;R;

shoot the film?

Sherman: Most of it will be shot
here on campus. Some of it will
be shot at a Thruway rest station, and in a bar.
B&amp;R; Have you already assembled a cast for the film or will
you hold auditions?
Sherman: We are in the process
of casting now. There are five

major parts. Anybody interested in trying out for a part
should get in touch with me.

B&amp;R: When do you expect

to be-

gin shooting?
Sherman; We plan on beginning
by the middle of April.
B&amp;R: Where do you plan on
showing the completed film?
Sherman; If satisfied with the results, I would like to enter it
in the various contests for films

of this sort. I would also like
to have it shown at Cinema 16
in New York, and as a part of
the University film series.
B&amp;R: As a director, do you feel
that any contemporary direc-

tors working in cinema today
have been a particular influence upon you?
Sherman: Of those directors
working in cinema today, the
Europeans more than the Brit-

ish have been the greatest upon
my approach. The two directors
who have been the grestest conscious influence, Jules Trauffant and Fredrico Fellini, are
oddly enoqgh, quite different

stylistically.

B&amp;R: Asyan aspiring director,
what are your views on Ameri
can films?
Sherman: The situation is constantly improving. Americans
are finally realizing fully the
possibilities of the cinema as
an art form. However, too often American directors will
comprise their artistic standards to accomodate the demands of large studios and the
mass public. This, of course,
produces cinema which is at
best blandly entertaining, but
far from art.
B&amp;R: If your initial attempt is
successful, dto you plan on
making other movies?
Sherman; Even if the first attempt falls short, I would certainly like to continue working
in the field of cinema.

UB Charter Flight Planned
Summer in Europe'Wholesale
—

UC States Policy;
Omits Warnings

;

round-trip flight from Buffalo
and delux accommodations with
meals served during the flights.
The plane is a Lockheed Super
Constellation which seats 116 passengers.

Once' in

Europe, the particiwill be free to travel on
their own. However, for those
who are making their first trip
to Europe, guided group tours at
reduced rates will be offered for
those who desire them. All participants will meet together
in
Paris on the last day of the trip
for the return flight to Buffalo.
All students (full time, part
time, and Millard Fillmore) as
well as all faculty and any other
employees of the university and
their families are eligible to participate on this trip.
Anyone who is interested in
making the flight, or who desires
further information please c-m.
tact Mr E J. Sawers at 849 31.
pants

�PAGE SIX

Friday, March 27, 1964

SPECTRUM

Debate at Elmira
Four Recognized
Plan Pace Debate

the affirmative.

-

THE MANY FACES OF PETER SELLERS
final confrontation with March
are quite logical within the context of the situation as he sees
it. Kirk Douglas is moderately
effective in a subsidiary role (and
(Cont’d

on Pg.

8)

open,

however.

All
|

r0

IJ

UB

Students

10% ?;r.°

Discount

/

/°

Mon-Thur

You Must Show I.D. Card

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE
3637 UNION ROAD

BLAZERS

I

To deal first with the more
conventional, Seven Days in May
is the cinematic adaptation of
Fletcher Knebel and Charles
Bailey’s well-known book about
an attempt by the head of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff to take over
the government when he feels
that the President has made a
disadvantageous disarmament
treaty with the Russians. The
circumstances of the movie are
not ordinary by any means, but
the picture is convincing, nonetheles because it is made in
the best tradition of American
realism. The direction and pacing

Made

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Varsity members of the Debate
Society are planning to attend a
four round tournament at Pace
College in New York City on
April third. Those participating
are Carol Zeller and Linda Leventhal, taking the negative position, and Gerald Catanzaro and
Richard Nemiroff, debating for

of the democratic process and the
constitution. Burt Lancaster is
very appealing as the leader of
a man who
the conspirators
operates from a set of strong principles which lend to blind him
to the implications of his acts.
He is never a one-sided superpatroit easily hated and despised.
The most terrifying thing about
him is that his arguments in the

Buttons

(

—

quite appropriately, on
April Fool’s Day, deal with some
of the problems of the complex
political situation
of today’s
world. The particular approach of
the two movies is quite different,

by John Frankenheimer is competent and imaginative and the
tension slowly builds up to a
very satisfying climax in which
Frederick March as the president
delivers a strong speech in favor

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Now that John Glenn has begun his campaign for a seat in
the Senate from the state of
Ohio, we may expect, some political pundits tell us, to see such
national celebreties as.Cary Grant
or Mickey Mantle running for
office in the near future. Perhaps Hollywood in its usually
subtle fashion has already begun
to prepare the American people
for just an eventually. This is the
impression one might get from
two of the more provocative
movies which will be available in
Buffalo soon. Both Seven Days in
May (which has already opened)
and Dr. Strangelove, which will

:

“

By LEON LEWIS

s

Four debaters gained recognition for the University of Buf
falo at a tournament, March 7,
at Elmira College. Robert Gismondi and Ellen Abelson debated the negative side of the nationar proposition, that the Federal government should guarantee an opportunity for higher
education to all qualified high
school graduates.” Hedda Beckman and Carl Levine debated
the affirmative position. Miss
Beckman and Mr. Levine tied
for third best speaker rating and
were named the best affirmative
unit. Mr. Gismondi placed sixth
in overall speaker rankings. Each
team had a two win—one loss
record, thus placing UB second
in the three round tournament.
The affirmative team of Miss
Beckman and Mr. Levine qualified for the final championship
cross-examination round. The
Clarion
winner of this round
placed
State of Pennsylvania
first in the tournament.

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�Friday, March 27, 1964

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Simon Discusses

*Barber of Seville 9Received; Second Spring Arts Festival
UB Reviewer Is Lukewarm Varied Program is Featured
tricate
of music and
MAURI

;

By

Computers Man
-

interplay

GERALD

Of two operas scheduled for
the spring season at Baird Hall,
one arrived last week, albeit
a month late. Paisiello’s Barber
of Seville was dropped, and Rossini's version was the lone survivor of the planned double bill.
We thought that with the extra
month's rehearsal on the single
production we would be in for
a real treat. However, viewed in
this way “Barber” turned out
to be a flop. Judged solely on
its own merits, though, it was
passible due to the efforts of
the Rosina and the Figaro.
“Barber” should bubble with
laughter, but this quantity was
mostly lacking. The tepid translation of Ruth and Thomas Martin doesn’t capture the buffa
humour of the Italian, and the
singers were not coached enough
to overcome this handicap. Thus,
Don Bartolo as portrayed by Lawrence Bearce, a tenor, turned
out to be a crotchety old man.
He sang the bass role capably.
In fact, the whole production
by Henry Wicke was as bland
as the translation. His idea of
comedy is to make singers muggers instead of actors, and his
staging involved as little movement as possible. We suppose
that his philosophy is that if
you have the singers do as little
as possible, nothing much can
go wrong . . . and nothing much
did happen. The wonderfully in-

action in the second act finale
was played like a costumed concert version of the opera. Everyone lined up front and center,
like ducks in a shooting gallery,
and belted out his lines. Why
not save the cost of production
and give a concert version instead?
On the musical side, Vittorio
Giarratana conducted with vigor
but the lack of rehearsal was
evident in the orchestra,
William Wagner was a virile
Figaro. In another big part he
presented a handsome Barber,
handsomely, if not always subtly,
sung. Frank Maraschiello was a
thin voiced Almaviva, and Joseph
Chouninard a straightforward
Basilio.

The upcoming Second Annual
Spring Arts Festival, to be held
April 612, will present an excellent sampling of the fine art$.
The Festival Committee, chaired
by Betsy Nordstrom, has organized a multi-varied program.

The best singing came from
Marlene Badger, the Rosina. We
finally had an opportunity to hear
her in a leading role. She used
her full, bronze mezzo intelligently and sang gorgeously. When
she lets loose on a note it can
be heard on the top floor of
Goodyear Hall. Think of what
she could do with a dramatic role
like Laura Adorno. (Can you
imagine La Gioconda in Baird

present Wednesday, April 1 “Suppressed Desires”; a student-written drama which is the first of

Hall?)

Boris Baranovic designed the
atmosphereic costumes and the
raucous set.

I ‘One of the finest!’
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There will be exhibits on art,
Student and professional; photography; and crafts. A noted folk
composer,

Earl

Robinson, and
poet, Langston Hughes, will deliver discussion-lectures. Musical

programs will include several put
on by students and a popular
vocal jazz trio.
Perhaps the most spectacular
of all the events will be the appearance of the Norman Walker
Dance Company. The well known
group will perform at the Circle
Art Theater at 8:30 on April 10.
Tickets to see their “lovely, noble, yet sensuous work” can be
obtained at the Norton Ticket
Booth: students —$1,00; public—$1.50,

Dr. Herbert A. Simon, associate
clean of the Graduate School of
Industrial Administration at Carnegie Institute of Technology,
will speak on “Information Processing in Computer and Man”
at 8:30 p.m., April 6, in Room
C-22, Capen Hall, State University
of New York at Buffalo.

The Buffalo chapter of the
Society of Sigma Xi is sponsoring
the public lecture. Dr. Simon is
the Sigma Xi National Lecturer
for me Northeast Region this
year.

Norton Presents Suppressed Desire'
The Student Dramatic Society
in conjunction with the Norton
Union Fine

Arts

Council will

three one-act plays to be presented. The cast of the play by Susan
Gladspell includes Charles Mayo,
Barbara Wax, and Flo Jacobi.
Terre Paige and Don Squire are
directing the production.

The play will be presented at
12:15 and 3:00 p.m, in the Norton
Union Conference Theater. The
Student Dramatic Society and The
Fine Arts Council hope that by
showing the plays in Norton
Union more students will take
advantage of the opportunity to
attend the student productions
Inverted

at

Advertiser's

and develop an interest in the
dramatic arts.
On April 15, “The Bald Soprano” by Eugene Ionesco will be
given. The final presentation has
yet to be decided upon.
Tickets for “Suppressed Desires” may be purchased for
twenty-five cents at the candy
counter, lobby table, or door.

Dr. Simon is also professor of
Industrial administration and of
psychology at Carnegie Tech.

¥orth Partial
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�(Cont’d from P. 6)

1
f
a
r

always fun to watch even in his
lesser performances) and Ava
Gardner provides the only femi
nine interest ■ a totally extrane
ous one, I might add in a role
that would be better suited to
soap-opera. She seems finally to
have learned how to act and is
-

still very pretty.

An interesting thing about the
movie is hearing March in his
final speech comparing his ene'
mies (in 1970) to fanatics of the
past • "a McArthy, a General
Walker appear every so often,”
, he says. This sounds courageous,'
but actually, Hollywood is merely
reinforcing what seems, fortunately, to be a general trend
these days. This is worthwhile in
itself, but whereas this might
have been a really daring movie
five years ago, it is just an exciting and comforting one now.

,

■ i

(

Dr. Strangelove, on the other
hand, is a daring movie and a
very imaginative one too, I would
imagine that enough has been
written about this movie in Life
and Look and Time so that most
people will know that it is about
a lunatic Air Force Wing Commander (played with horrifying
intensity by Sterling Hayden) who
unleashes a flight of B-52’s armed
with H-Bombs against the Russians because, as he says, “the
communist conspiracy is undermining our country by diluting
our vital body essences through
flouridation.” The movie moves
back and forth from the B-52
base in Kansas (which Hayden
has barricaded with his own
troop), to the “War Room” in the
Pentagon where President Peter
Sellers tries to recall the planes
in a hilariously ineflectual manner, to the cockpit of one of the
planes where the pilot, Slim
Pickens, riotously leads his men
on to the apocalypse in a cheery
fashion that is a fine parody of
every air force movie ever made.
The end result is that the plane
gets through and the Russians, in
retaliation, set off a Dooms Day
machine which destroys all life
on the earth to the tune, “We’ll
meet again, don’t know where,
don't know when,” as the picture

Z/C l^efyiitration Alpha Gamma Delta Sponsors
Benefit for Cerebral Palsied
~

University College
students
whose last names begin with the
letters designated below will see
their advisers on the following
days;
March 30 through April 3—C, D
April 6 through April 10—F, W, Z
April 13 through April 17—A, B
April 20 through April 24—G, H
April 27 through May 1—P, Q,
R
May 4 through May 8—E, I, N,

O. T, U. V, W, X, Y

Students will make an appointment with the Receptionist in
Diefendorf 114 one week in
advance of the above scheduled
times. Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times or who do not keep
them when made will be required
to register in Clark Gym on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation can not register during
scheduled times. They are encouraged to see their advisers,
however, if they wish to do so.

-r

In 1947, the international organization of Alpha Gamma Delta decided to adopt a service project for the benefit of the cerebral palsied and physically handicapped. Alpha Gamma Delta now
sponsors a couselor training pro-

gram in this field which is administered by the National Association for Crippled Children
and Adults. $6,000 is provided
annually for fellowships to trainees in the program. This program
is a pioneer adventure, being the
first of its kind ever established
in the United States. The specialized training given these people
has enabled them to give immeasurable aid to the handicapped and to assist in establishing
many hundreds of cerebral palsied and other handicapped per-

--

sons in useful and gainful em
ployment.
In accordance with this project, the sisters of Alpha Alpha
Chapter of Alpha Gamma Delta
held a raffle on March 3 to provide funds for the training progrom. Diane Norman won a $25
gift certificate to the store of
her choice. The sisters held a
bunny hop in the downtown shopping district of Buffalo, on Saturday, March 21, Dressed in bun-

p.m.

The program will consist of a
tour through the chemistry building, Acheson Hall, giving the student an opportunity to see experiments performed by college
students as well as industrial representatives. Also, three short
talks will be given by professors
of the department on organic,
physical and inorganic chemistry,
explaining the general areas and

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The movie has been subject to
a variety of long sociological
anaylses. I doubt if this is important or necessary. It speaks
for itself, and it speaks in, an
original voice which sounds, once
again, like that strong voice with
which the American cinema led
the world’s movie industry back
before World War II,

The Student Affiliates of the
American Chemical Society at the
State University of New York
at Buffalo will conduct their annual open house on Saturday,
April 11, from 9:00 a.m. tq 1:00

suits, the sisters collected donations for the National Association for Crippled Children and
Adults. The following sisters and
pledges took -part; Marcia Graf,
Dawn McGee, Ann Meagher, Geri the future in each.
Moreno, Mary Ann Wartenburg,
and Alice Wittenberg. Barb Kast
and Carol Lowden were co-chairmen of the event.

ny

closes.

The special appeal of the movie
is that it moves beyond the horror of tragedy to the macabre
comedy of the totally absurd.
This movie is calculated to upset
nearly anyone of “serious conviction.” Leftists will call it irresponsible, rightists will call it
unpatriotic. Stanley Kubrick the
director, and Terry Southern, one
of our most promising young
writers, have decided that the
only way to look at a problem
of this serious a nature is by
seeing the inherent absurdity in
it. The high realism of the action scenes is combined with Sellers as President telling George
Scott (a good-hearted general)
after he has put a hammer-lock
on the Russian ambassador, “You
can’t fight in here; this is the
war room! ! with Pickens telling
his men, as they hurtle over
Russia, “You’ll all get a medal for
this regardless of race, creed or
religion;” with Sellers (again) as
British Commander Mandrake trying to call the president to tell
him the recall code after Hayden’s death, only to fail momentarily because the White House
refuses to accept collect calls,
and with Sellers (in his third
role) saying “Mein Furher" to
Sellers, instead of “Mr. President," as the mysterious Dr.
Strangelove, a former Nazi, now
a missle expert, who cannot conceal his delight with the Russian Dooms Day device.

Chemistry Society
Holds Open House
Saturday, April II

•

[Reviewing Stand

F

Friday, March 27, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

'64 Corvette Sting Ray Sport Coupe (98-in. wheelbase)

Chevrolet will go to any length
to make you happy
Things have changed a lot since a Chevy rolet and Chevy II (and between parking
was only a Chevy. Especially your ideas meters, with five whole feet left over).
of what you want a Chevy to be.
Then, too, there’s the sporty 15-foot
So now you have the Jet-smooth ChevCorvair, so right for so many people (you
rolet— YlYi feet of pure luxury, bumper girls, in particular) that we’ve never
to bumper. The size makes it a luxury car. touched an inch of it. And finally, CorBut not the price.
vette-still 14J-3 feet and still too much
Or you can choose the thrifty Chevy II, for any true sports-car lover to say no to.
a 15M-foot family car with all kinds of
The long and short of it is, you don’t
passenger and luggage space.
have to go to any length to find exactly
This year, your choice might be
the kind of car you want. Just
the new 16-foot-plus Chevelle,
see the five different lines of cars
sized to fit nicely between Chevat y0ur Chevrolet dealer’s.
.

THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS Chevrolet Chevelle Chevy U Corvair Corvette
See them at your Chevrolet Showroom
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anyone—man or woman—would
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Choice of white or pastel

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�Friday, March 27, 1964

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

Denial Honor Society Fetes
Ten New Members in May
Ten new members will be honored at an installation banquet
of the Lambda Lambda Chapter
of Omicron Kappa Upsilon, national honor society of the dental
profession, at the Saturn Club,
Thursday, May 7th.
Membership keys and certificates will be presented to the
nine men and one woman by Dr.
James A. English, Dean of the
School of Dentistry at the State
University of New York at Buffalo. The three faculty members
and seven students were selected
by the present faculty members
in the society at the annual business meeting last month.
To qualify for consideration for
membership a faculty member
must have served for three years
on the university staff and have
made a significant contribution

Sing Coming Soon
(Cont’d from P. 2)

Epstein,

Nicholas R, Marifano
and James Collard. New student
members, selected from the top
12% of the upper 20% of the
class, include Joan C. Staker,
Lawrence Bunsick, Pohn R. Boule,
Peter K. Doyle, James A. Gethonis, Neil H. Waldow and Anthony
J. DiLaura.
Omicron Kappa Upsilon was
organized in 1914 with the Buffalo Lambda Lambda Chapter
joining the national society in
1937. Officers of the local chapter for the current year are: Dr.
John M. Christenson; President-

Elect, Dr. Richard Powell; VicePresident, Dr. Nelson L. Blackmore and Secretary-Treasurer, Dr.
Harry E. Flynn.

WESLEY FOUNDATION
The Protestant ministry dbh
campus is sponsoring two identi-

cal, Good Friday serivces today.
The half-hour services will be
held at 12:10 and 3:0Qr p.m. at
University Presbyterian Church.
Wesley Foundation is sponsoring an Easter Breakfast this Sunday, 7:00 a.m, at University
Methodist Church,
HILLEL NEWS

Passover will be observed by
Hillel with a variety of events
scheduled for the Passover Week.
A special Student Sedar will be
held this evening at Temple Beth
David-Ner Israel
immediately
following the evening service in
the Temple. On Monday and Wednesday Passover Lunches will be

served between 11:30 and 1:30
in the Hillel House. A Passover
supper has been arranged for
Tuesday at 5:00 p.m.

Arrange-

ments have also been made for
Home Hospitality in local homes

for students requesting invitations. Participation in these activities is by reservation only.
The deadline for reservations was
March 18.

'Live and Learn' Thursday
The next meeting in the “Live
and Learn” Coffee Hour series
will be held on Thursday at 3:00
p.m. in the Hillel House. Carl
Berg will lead a discussion on:
“Second Chance or Not?” Mrs.
Norman Fertig is the coordinator
of the series.

trophy will also be awarded. All
awards, plus the crowning of
the queen will take place at
the greek dance.
The culmination of this weekend will be the Greek Weekend
Dance, which will be held on
Saturday night at 9:00 at the
Hotel Sheridan Motor Inn. Music
will be supplied by Jay Moran
and his orchestra. Because of the
new facilities in Norton, Greek
sing can now finally be opened
to the non-Greek studentry. This
weekend should help to promote
more interest in school social
functions, help promote school
spirit, and become a very enjoyable memory to all that attend, 8 fraternities and 9 sororities will be participating in
this weekend.

to the teaching or practice of
dentistry. Students
considered

for selection must have maintained a scholastic standing in the
upper one-fifth of their class for
the entire three and one-half
years of their dental education
and must “possess qualities for
future professional growth and
achievement.”
Faculty members installed in
May will include Dr. I. Irving

CjreeL l^jevuS

O'CONNELL

LUCAS

CHELF

3240 Main St.

Tf 6-4140

THE NEW HUE IN EAGLE BUTTON-DOWNS:
FORESEEABLE FUCHSIA

Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity started volunteer work again this
week at the Veteran’s Hospital.
Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold its
Tenth Annual Queen of Hearts
Ball, April 10, at the Camelot
Motor Inn from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
As a correction to last week’s issue, Sig Ep’s new president is
Bruce Sahrbeck and the vice-president is John Schermerhorn.
Final preparations are being
made for Tau Kappa Epsilon's
fifth annual Playboy Party, to be
held Friday, April 17. TKE wishes to thank Theta Chi for an enjoyable social last Friday.
Alpha Sigma Phi would like
to announce the successful completion of its pledge project. Under the direction of the Crippled
Children Association, the pledge
class, led by president Deke
Kaufman, marched with the St.
Patrick’s Day parade in Easter
Bunny
outfits and collected
money from the crowd along the
way. During the five-hour march,
$358 was collected for the Association. Plans are being made
to make this an annual project
in conjunction with the Association.
Phi Kappa Psi would like to
congratulate the officers of the
1964 pledge class: President
Guy Erickson; Vice-President
Ron Ansell; Treasurer —Jay Rich;

LOOKS

pinkfdoesn’t it? We chose the name for this color from among the entries in our recent
J competition for new color-names because of its aptness; we predict great things. Remember you
heard it here first. � What makes our solid pink new is that it isn’t solid pink: the vertical yarn
(or warp) is somewhere between a Robert Shaw Coral and a Lawsy Miss Scarlet; whereas the
horizontal yarn (or woof) is a sort of ’Enry Tggins Just You White. � Thus creating an illusion,
but of the finest oxford cloth all the same; with button cuffs and our dear, old bulgy collar, about
$7.00. If you don’t know where to buy this and other Eagle Shirts in your town, please write Miss
Afflerbach who does; at the address below.
*

•Use your imagination; this paper doesn’t print

■

—

—

Secretary
Bryan Hayes. The
Fraternity would like to thank all
—

UB students who attended the
party at the Sun Colonist, Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida, on March 11.
Greek Sing will be held
this year on April 3, tickets
will be on sale at the ticket
booth in Norton. Performances at 7 and at 9:30.
Chi Omega wishes to congratulate Brenda O’Hern on her election as president of the Spring
pledge class..
Alpha Gamma Delta would like
to congratulate the newly elected pledge class officers and their
president Alice Wittenberg.
Chi Omega and Alpha Gamma
Delta would like to thank Sigma
Phi Epsilon for a very nice social
held last Friday night.
Thefa Chi sorority would like
to congratulate their new pledge
class officers and president Ginny Woolams. They would also
like to thank TEKE for a very
enjoyable social last Friday night.
Sigma Kappa Phi welcomed
their Spring pledge class with a
dinner dance at the Cordon Bleu
March 20th. The president of the
pledge class is Penny Hemming.

Im&amp;m

in pink

©

1964, EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS. QUAKERTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA

.
.

�Friday, March 27, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Peelle to Be Interviewed
On 'UB Sports Highlights”

Cagers Bow to Niagara;
Compile 14-8 Season Total

A
tv

lights”

school.

The program begins at 6:15
and canbe heard over WBFO-FM

On Monday, at 6:30 over WBFO,
Barry Warner will feature sports
news from both local and national levels on “UB Sports Highlights”.

(88.7 meg.). Along with the interview, Wally Blatter will bring
you up to date on all other sports
activities on campus.

Heading the anticipated list of
returnees is Norward Goodwin,
the team’s leading scorer; Norbert Baschnagel, team leader in
shooting percentage; and guard
bidding for
Harvey Poe, who

in the latter stages of
the recently concluded campaign.
Coach Serfustini also expects to
have back Dick Hetzel and Dan
Bazzani, two regulars who sat out
the last month of the season because of scholastic difficulties.
The nucleus of veterans will be
needed as the UB freshman squad
was below par this year, managing to win only 7 of 18 games.
Academic troubles also handicapped the Baby Bulls and little
help can be expected from this
season’s yearlings for next year’s
stardom

The MOlOm /(MItakespleasure in
introducing you to a Thyal Treat

from ihe Tilynesian Islands to the

Bill Bilowus

mommi

While at the convention Serfustini will also take part in a
panel discussion on summer basketball. The UB mentor, by the
way, is the author of an article
in the current issue of the
coaches’ national magazine in
which he advocates spring practice in intercollegiate basketball.
While the

1963-64 edition of

the basketball Bulls finished the
season with a 14-8 record, the
eighth consecutive winning year
under Serfustini must be considered as a rebuilding year.
UB fielded a squad that was

heavily laden with sophomores
and juniors; only guard Dick
Harvey and center Gary Hanley
were listed on the roster as

Thruway Plata

Boulevard Mall

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one big reinforcement for next year is coming.
That’s Bill Bilowus, brawny 6-6
letterman who was kept out of
action this year because of a preseason hunting accident. Fortunately, Bilowus suffered no lasting effects and he will be ready
to give the Bulls some good
strength under the boards.
However,

’

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In the meantime, Serfustini and
UB frosh coach Ed Muto will be
scouring the hinterlands in search
of talent for next year's freshman club, the base upon which
future varsities must be built.

Luncheon 11:30

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Dinner Hours 4:00 P.M.
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Center

For the best in sports, tune
in WBFO, campus radio, every
Friday at 6:15 and every Monday at 6:30. Remember, WBFO
is growing . . . with your support.

Mr. Peelle, who last year directed the Bulls to a second place
finish in the Atlantic Coast Regionals of the NCAA, will pre-

varsity.

KLEIN HANS
Downtown Buffalo

seniors. Although Hanley has a
semester of eligibility left, it is
problematical whether he will be
available for play.

1

Coaches Convention in Kansas
City, March 18-21, in an effort
to line up the most attractive
teams available.

teams chances of winning the
ninth straight Western New York
Conference Championship for the

.

.

.

...

.

By PAUL NUSSBAUM
The University of Buffalo basketball team has concluded its
1963-64 season posting a 14-8
record. Late season losses to
Boston University, LeMoyne College, and neighboring Niagara
eliminated the Bulls from any
serious postseason tournament
consideration.
Catching fire in their sixth
game, the basketball Bulls won
ten of their next eleven games
before late season ineligibility
losses slowed UB’s flaming pace.
It is worthwhile to note that
four of the Bulls losses came by
the margin of one bucket or less.
Highlights of the season included victories over such topflight competition as powerful
Gannon College, and Colgate; the
latter by a 17 point spread. Even
in defeat the five played tremendous games against ninth ranked
nationally V i 11 a n o v a (56-58),
college titlists
NCAA small
Youngstown and
Ithaca, and
perenially tough Boston University (54-56).
UB is stepping up its basketball program. This was indicated
today when UB Athletic Director
James E. “Jim" Peelle revealed
that the Bulls will journey to
Knoxville next December 19th to
play the University of Tennessee,
one of the powers of the Southeastern Conference, The game
will be the first ever between the
two schools.
Although the 1964-65 schedule
is still incomplete, one thing certain is that UB will be seen
in action as part of three Memorial Auditorium doubleheaders.
Opponents for these games have
not as yet been selected but
Coach Len Serfustini plans to
make contacts at the Basketball

sent his outlook on this year’s

Mr. James E. Peelle, Director
of Athletics and head baseball
coach at UB, will be a special
guest tonight on “UB Sports High-

.

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�Friday, March 27, 1964

SPECTRUM

(Cont’d

from P.

to the Sports Editor (cont.)

~[ Letters

SPORTS CIRCLE

PAGE ELEVEN

(Cont’d from P. 12)
bers of the team. One member

12)

must have felt that
the departure time did not apply
to him and therefore missed the
bus. On the return trip , to Buffalo from Rochester, many derogatory and vulgar remarks were
openly directed at the coach by
the persons who support the article in question. Following the
meet, the coach received two
anonymous telephone calls in the
early morning hours stating in
obscene terms that he was inadequate and should be replaced.
These above-mentioned acts led
to point six, where the coach felt
justified in canceling the Frosh
trip to Cornell University.
To refute point nine
the lack
of facilities is certainly the concern of every —participating ath(Pete Stern)

his ninth place finish in the state
championships several years ago.
Surely a third place finish deserves as much attention as a
ninth place).
3. Since the manager is directly responsible to the coach, Mr.
Fisher cannot take excuse of the
incident . The manager’s incompetence was pointed out to Mr.
Fisher on several occasions. The
segment about the car was wrongly misconstrued to be an attack
against the coach. The car, should
have been inspected beforehand
by the athletic department.
4. The “star runner” had two
exams the next day and informed
Mr. Fisher days in advance that
he would be unable to attend the
meet
5. This is the one point I must
concede to Mr. Lee. Lee did not
appear on the program list as a
result I was led to believe that

Lee was not entered in the meet.
Fisher, however, was not present
for the first two hours of the
meet and did not get a complete

record of the times of the varsity
entrants.

6-8. The facts for these points
were completely twisted. Stern
was left running after the bus.
Nothing was brought out in the

rebuttal to the effect that Stern’s
equipment was on the bus at the
time and the sprinter left the bus
to go back to the dormitory for
his spikes. If the team was in
such a hurry then why did the

bus stop for 15 minutes along
the way for snacks for some of
the team members. In addition,
Mr, Lee states that the Freshmen
Invitational Meet at Cornell was
cancelled because of obscenities
thrown at the coach and two mysterious phone calls. I see no connection between the two. It also
seems to infer that the members
of the team were responsible for
the telephone calls, a fact I find
hard to believe.
7. I honestly challenge the entire track team to admit to the
fact that Mr. Fisher attended
more than two Saturday practices, I feel that Mr. Fisher exhibits less than a minimal knowledge in the distance and field
events as exemplified by the preceding points. How much pertinent advice, Mr. Lee, can you hon
estlyl admit to which was offered
to you by Coach Fisher?
I feel I have presented my case
as clearly and succinctly as possible. These two columns were
not intended, in any way, to detract from track or for that manner any sport at UB. It is my
fondest hope that the track situa
tion improves. I do not enjoy
writing columns such as these but
I feel it is my duty to the students of this university. I began
with a quote from Pulitzer and
now let me conclude with his
motto
“That the people shall
—

know.”

Matmen Close Season
The University of Buffalo wrestling team completed its 1963-64
season with a record of 6 wins
and 4 losses. Although this year’s
record wasn’t as impressive as
last year’s 9 and 1 record, the
UB matmen, in Coach La Rocque's words, “gained valuable experience and know how that will
greatly help them in the coming
year,”
In their last regular season
match of the year on March 7

the wrestlers defeated Rochester
Institute of Technology hy a very
impressive score of 26 to 6. This
victory marked the first time in
ten years that UB has defeated
RIT. In another way the victory
was a welcome reward for the
wrestlers for it was also RIT who
handed the matmen their only
defeat of last year’s campaign.
Highlight of the match was
George Ehresman’s defeat of
RIT’s captain, Doug Drake, in the
130 lb. class. Drake, who is a
very experienced senior wrestler,
was decisioned 15 to 6 by Ehresman, who is only a sophomore.
In post-season competition, the
UB matmen traveled to Cleveland, Ohio to take part in the

35

colleges largely from the
eastern and mid-western United
States, was conducted on an in-

dividual basis. In otherwords,
each wrestler competed in his
particular division for individual
honors with no team score being

compiled.
In regards to the future, Coach
La Rocque felt that his team,
which is young, experienced, and
marked with considerable ability,
‘should enjoy an even more successful season next year due to
the fact that they won’t be losing
any members due to graduation.’

18 Hrs. a Week

POLYNESIAN—CHINESE

��������������������������������������������•a-***

As a member of the community,
I take great pride in the State
University of New York at Buffalo and its activities and publica
tions. I am an avid reader of the
university’s newspaper, the Spectrum. In the last issue I read
the article in the Sports Circle
with great interest and zeal,
Today it is not often that we
find an individual who writes with
such conviction as that which
was displayed in the March 20
issue of the paper. I have great
respect and admiration for the
student who presented the ugly
facts of the athletic program on
campus. Perhaps the author’s
opinion was thought by fellow
students, but praise is due to
him for speaking out!

SUMMER JOBS
for STUDENTS
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EXCLUSIVE!

I am pleased to find that in
America’s youth there are some
who will stand by their convictions regardless of the risk of

personal punishment.
Respectfully,

Member of the Community
witheld by request)

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-

UNIVERSITY PLAZa

Members of Track Team
(written by Don Lee)
Ed. Note
see Sports Circle
for rebuttal.

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CATHAY GARDEN

AT THE
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It is also the consensus of opin
ion that a positive coaching phil

fered irreparable damage. We
hope that the persons involved
will realize the demoralizing effect; they have had on the participating members of the team
and publicly make amends.

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

8 lbs. for $Z00

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them.

—

that the tracg program has suf-

Requirements; Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instructions

DRY CLEANING
Laundry

For those who think the coach is
inept we have this to say: there
are some individuals who refuse
to train WITH the team, yet still
feel that their criticism of the
coach is valid. They participate
only in the meets which benefit

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN

tournament, which consisted of

-

Among the members of the U.B.
Team, certain thoughts
come to the fore. One group
states that the coach is inept and
should be replaced.
Another
group (representing the vast majority of the team) feels that the
job being done by Coach Fisher
has no reason to be questioned.

Track

osophy exemplifies the best for
the majority rather than for the
chosen few. Mr. Emery Fisher,
Coach of Cross Country and Track
plus Indoor Track (without pay)
is cognizant of this philosophy
and follows it to the nth degree.
Since Alan Newman and his informants, feels that he can write
an unqualified “truth" about a
situation which was not confirmed
by proper investigation, we feel

(Name

nationally sponsored 4-1 tournament held at Case Institute of
Technology on March 13 and 14.
As a result, UB’s Burt Ernest
emerged as a fourth place finisher
in the heavyweight division. The

One

lete in the school and cannot be
singled out as the fault of any
one person or group.

Dinner

4:00 P.M. 9 P.M.
■

PLENTY Or FREE PARKING

uwuv

.

�PAGE TWELVE

SPECTRUM

Friday, March 27, 1964

glPdDIB'ffg
SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALAN NEWMAN

Pages eleven &amp; twelve of this issue contain a random
sampling of the letters I have received concerning my
last column. The reaction was overwhelming and as to
be expected there were dissenting views. As a result, this
column is in the form of a reply to Track Captain Don-

ald Lee, which should prove conclusively the truth of my
last writing and close the issue completely.
Before I go into the mechanics of proving Mr. Lee
wrong I would like to say a few words about my journalistic experience and my responsibilities to the student
body which seems to be on trial by the nature of our
track captain’s first letter. Just as Mr. Lee has been in
track for a good part of his life, I have been in journalism. I have served three newspapers in both the editorial
and reporting capacities since junior high school. The
purpose of my last column was to bring the truth out in
the open. If there is necessary criticism to be stated it is
my job to do so. There is no reason to be content with the
status quo if there is room to improve. A good journalist
does not avoid controversy, but plunges into the thick of
it, championing the side of truth. As Mr. Lee points out:
“It seems that if we are a “sports editor” we can write
what we want and to hell with the people we hurt . .
The point is the we can write what we want as long as
it is factual and has some beneficial ends. Joseph Pulitzer
stated emphatically: “Our republic and its press will rise
or fall together. An able, disinterested, public-spirited
press, with trained intelligence to know the right and
courage to do it, can preserve that public virtue without
which popular government is a sham and a mockery.”
Let me say I sympathize with Mr. Lee and uphold
his right to criticize, but I deplore his method of presentation. There is no dignity in name-calling. I don’t rightly
know what he was referring to when he stated “Puppet
Alan Newman.” The article was my own and was written
by my own volition. It is my opinion that “there is a definite need for improved administration’’ and I feel it is
rightly justified by this column. As far as Mr. Lee’s point
concerning the publication of two articles, there was only
one article received and it was given to me on Wednesday, February 26, one day past the deadline for the issue
of the 28th. Since there was no issue on March 6 and 13
and since the March 20 issue was the date of my track
column the article did not appear in the Spectrum. I
thusly fee that Mr. Lee’s first letter is written in poor
taste, contains no conclusive evidence supporting his
opinions, and desperately reverts to a fallacious technique
labeled by logicians as ad hominem reasoning. Therefore,
I will concern the remaining portion of this column with
the complete refutation of the second letter which was
written by the track captain and submitted to the team

to sign.

Twill choose again the point by point summation in
answering Mr. Lee:

1. The team entry blank for the meet explicity stated
that only seven men can be entered. Furthermore, even
if the meet director stated that the number of men was
unimportant (which he did not), the meet director is a
championship is never permitted to allow more than
seven men to race. This is entirely up to the committee.
Mr. Fisher should have been aware of this fact for he
has been a member of the NCAA for many years.
2. The following is the original text of a letter received by Stu Katz from Fendley Collins, the manager
of the NCAA Cross Country Championships:
“Just received your letter of Nov. 13 requesting entry into the NCAA Cross Country Championships, University Division, November 25, 1963. Sorry you cannot
be accepted. There is nothing you, I, or your coach can
do about it to get you into the Championships here unless
you qualify in the College Division.
“The Director of Athletics at your school, several
months ago had the opportunity to indicate which division, university or college,, that you will compete in this
year. According to the report that I have from the NCAA
office in Kansas City, your school chose to stay in the
College Division. I am sure your coach, Mr. Emery Fisher,
and your Director of Athletics understand this new ruling. I wrote to Coach Fisher November 12 concerning
this ruling.”
The preceding letter is justifiable enough to permit
the word “oversight’" being used. The matter of finances
is an invalid point as previous to my last column no mention whatsoever was made of the expenses involved. Mr.
Katz was personally promised by Mr. Fisher that he
would be permitted to enter the nationals and that the
arrangements were being made. When Mr..Fisher found
out that it was too late to enter Katz in the meet at
Wheaton he called Wilfred Ketz, the Director of the
National College Division Meet, to see if Katz could be
entered. No mention was ever made of finances. (Incidentally, UB sent Don Stevenson to the nationals after
(Cont’d on P. 11)

LETTERS TO SPORTS

'

Track Captain Speaks Out
To the Sports Editor:
This is to thank puppet Allan
Newman and is puppetees for the
on sided and unwarranted personal attack on Coach Emery
Fisher and James Peelle.
I have been a member of the
UB track team for three years
and have yet to see or hear of
one instance of unjust or unwarranted treatment of any indivivarsity or freshman. I
dual
would like “Editor” Newman to
let me and the student body
know of all the “unjust treatment
of varsity and freshman members of the track team” which he
speaks about. Another statement
of Newman's is “There is a definite need for improved administration and facilities and in general, an encouragement of the
sport at our University.” I have
“In
but one question to ask
whose opinion is there a definite
need for improved administration
and how did he come by this
earth-shaking conclusion?”
The second part of his statement 1 must agree with
there
-

-

-

is a definite need for improved
facilities here at the University.
If the “all knowing” sports editor
had taken the time to ask, he
would have found that the administration (represented by James
Peelle) realizes the inadequacies
of the present facilities and also
agrees that new facilities are
sorely needed.
But, of course, the only way to
get better facilities and new
equipment is to judge the administration inadequate and to tell
the world of our “highly qualified” judgment. (It seems that
if we are a “sports editor” we
can write what we want and to
hell with the people we hurt or
the ultimate, long range consequences of what our poison pen
puts on paper for all the easilyswayed student body to read.)
As far as encouragement of
I see no greater
the sport
deterrent to this “encouragement” than a paper which refuses to print articles written by
the coach, complimenting Mr,
Stu Katz and thanking his train—

er, Atilla Matray, for all the time
he has spent getting Stu into his
present shape and readiness for
the coming season. I know also
of two articles plus an announcement pertaining to the opening
of the track season which, for

some unexplained reason,

were

witheld from publication.
1 feel that the point by point
summation of the complaints
against the administration are
for the most part ridiculous. Almost all of them are hearsay. I
regard the whole article as completely lacking in good taste.
I speak for the majority of
the members of the track team
which I say 1 was disgusted when
I read the article by the “Sports
Editor” and his friends.
If there is any comment or
questions I can answer, I can be
reached any Monday, Wednesday
or Friday in the track locker
room in Clark Gymnasium from
three to five o'clock. I am
Donald H. Lee
Captain of the
1964 U.B. Track Team

Sports Editor Courageous
To the Sports Editor:
For a change it was nice to see
an article printed that did not
glorify our university with all of
its shortcomings quite obvious to
the majority who lack the power
to do anything, but still see them.
Up to now it seemed that the
paper was the voice of the school
administration, not the students.

Maybe it will become more worthwhile to read and be able to say,
“Yes at the University of Buffalo, we practice the basic rights
allowed us in the Constitution
with the only fear of an argument, but nothing else.”
Congratulations are due to the

we should be ashamed and do
something such as giving track
scholarships rather than make
life easy for our other fine athletes who major in sports and
minor in school. Why not give
the trackmen the same opportunity?

sports editor for his courage. If
only half true, though I doubt it,

Kenneth Frenkel

Unemotional Consideration of the Facts
Dear Sir:
As one of several persons involved in the critique which appeared in the Sports Circle last
week, I feel impelled to make a
statement clarifying my inten-

tions and those of others who
took the stand which I took and
which I still take.
At the time of the article’s conception, I consented to give certain facts and to have my name
used if necessary for one and
only one reason: to make known
the present situation as regards
track and field here at the University so that perhaps some action might be taken to improve
the situation. It was not my intention in -giving these facts or
those of others involved to make
any personal attacks whatsoever
on the character of the persons

being criticized and it takes a
good stretch of the imagination
to misconstrue the article in such
a manner, though several overly
emotional people managed to do
so . Admittedly this attack was a
strong one but it was a last resort, for several times before a
great many misgivings held by

several members of the track

team were taken directly to the
coach in an honest effort to improve the situation. Nothing, but
nothing, was done. And so, I repeat, this was a last resort.
Furthermore, although it is not
necessary for me- to refute any
of the remarks made by those
defending the coach since they

elsewhere, I would like
that on practically all
points, particularly the crucial
ones such as 1 and 2, there is
appear
to say

unequivocal evidence to back up
the original statements as can
be plainly seen. The point is, the
original criticisms were logical
and valid and thusly should be
analyzed using the facts, free of

the emotion that comes about
when someone is publicly criticized. If there had been an easier way, it would have been taken.
And finally, may I add that
since I am as deeply involved as
anyone in this delivate situation
I have greatly appreciated the
support of the few members of
the track team who saw fit to
stock to their guns rather than
change their minds when under
such pressure (as several did) out
of fear that forjjnce in their lives
they might have to make a critical decision.
Stuart Katz

Support for the Nonresponding Coaches
Dear Mr. Newman:
Since Coach Fisher and Mr.
Peelle feel it is inappropriate to

"respond” to your point-by-point

summation of the complaints
against the’ administration, we,
the majority members of the 1964
Track Team, feel that these onesided opinions should be refuted and the other side made public.
Point one accuses Coach Fisher of entering eight men in the
NYS-XC championship, a place
where only seven men can participate. It also states that at the
starting line he was informed
that only seven men could participate, yet refused to take out the
eighth man. This is completely
false. The coach, wanting to enter as many Varsity runners as
possible, was informed by the
meet director prior to the meet,
that the number of men entered
was seemingly unimportant. However, after tha meat, the meet director apologetically informed

the coach to the contrary, that

such a rule did exist,

The second accusation states
that Coach Fisher “through an
oversight” did not enter Stu Katz
in the Small College Meet at
Wheaton, thus forbidding him to
enter the NCAA Meet. To answer this
the administration
felt that the expenses for a single individual were far too great
to warrant such a trip. Coach
Fisher is not the administration,
Point three accuses the coach
of leaving behind a baton, foncing us to borrow one from another team. It is not the coach’s
but the manager’s, responsibility
for any equipment taken on trips,
Also, an unequipped automobile
is not the coach’s responsibility.
Point four states that because
one of the cars had a flat tire
on the way to the Gannon Meet,
the runners arrived late and'did
not have time to warm-up and insped the course. Since the Gannon team was reputed to be so
—

inferior to U.B., we have but pne
question to ask
Where was the
"star” runner who could have prevented a dead last finish?”
Point five states “Don Lee, a
pole vaulter who has already
vaulted 14 ft. and is capable of
much more, was not entered in
the International College Division Meet at Toronto due to Mr.
Fisher.” If he was not entered,
why was he awarded a first place
medal???
Point seven
As a team, we
would like to know who accuses
the coach of constant absenteeism
at practice sessions. Also
of
having a poor knowledge of distance running and field events,
when we emphatically feel this
statement is unjustified.
Point eight relates directly to
point six; which states that Pete
Stern was knowingly left behind
in Buffalo before a meet at Roch
ester. The departure time was
known-in advance by ALL mem—

—

...

(Cont’d on P. 11)

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                    <text>Editorial

ELECTIONS II

Although the past Senate has been poo* and although even the
conception of student government can be criticized, The Spectrum prefers to defend the idealism of the institution and purposes that we all
participate in upgrading our only basis for unified action.
The editorial board of this newspaper interviewed at length nearly
all the candidates for office. We questioned these students as to what
they considered to be the purpose of student government, the qualities
and potentialities of our Senate, and their attitudes toward social probelms. The above considerations are of primary importance because
on matter the diversity or amount of experience the individual candidate posesses, the basis of future actions can only be measured in
terms of the individual’s mentality. Especially since many candidates
for the Senate have had little experience, our standard for measuring
their real qualifications has had to be their potential to lead; and, of
course, in what direction.
We are endorsing candidates, not because we wish to try the
power and influence of the press, but because we feel that we can
draw upon our careful analysis of past Senates and also because we
have taken time to carefully analyze the personalities involved and
whateverissues they have brought to bear upon the campaign. We must
here emphasize the necessity for discussing personalities, becuse both
parties (and the independant candidates) have not presented the student body with clear, alternative plans of action. The party platforms
which The Spectrum published last Friday simply present spent cliches
written in a vacuum of ambiguity which we cannot digest. For example,
Spectrum supports the right of campus fraternities and sororities to
have national affiliations; so do both parties. But what else? Neither
one of these vaguely self-seeking groups proposes any form of action
to demonstrate the generally sympathetic campus attitude on this matter. A curriculum evaluation program is proposed, but what is further
stated? Nothing. New campus study areas are envisaged within the
present physical plant? Where, is what we would like to know.
FINKELSTE1N ENDORSED
Again we must return to the personalities involved. The candidate
with the most experience, paperwise, is Michael Lappin, the Campus
Alliance candidate for President. Mr. Lappin’s qualifications appear
elsewhere in the newspaper, but what of his real accomplishments? His
administrative abilities have been tested, as chairman of the United
Nations Committee last year, and as Vice President. The U.N. program
was a modest failure, but he cannot be condemned for that for the
student body was undoubtedly disinterested in the program. However,
-

-

STATE
PROBATION
RULES
(See Page 2)

UNIVERSITY

OF

as Vice President he should have coordinated the many Senate committees, directing N.S.A. projects (a dismal disappointment the past
year) with, say, those of the student welfare or civil rights committees,
etc

Perhaps what disappointed The Spectrum most the past year has
been Mr. Lappin’s inability or indifference to lead his own party (which
should have been his role, as its highest elected officer). We note that
the Alliance was given leadership which proved to be destructive Of
the Senate’s group goals, precluding effective action.
Lappin’s opponent is Robert Finkelstein (United Students), a representative of the College of.Arts and Sciences the past year, an executive committee member, and chairman of the public relations committee. No doubt, Mr. Finkelstein is an ambitious young man, the quality
which makes him eager to serve and which must not necessarily be
put down. During the past year, Finkelstein has attempted to reach
the segmented campus by way of press releases through the newspaper
and slingers. That his measure of success was not so great can be attributed to the student body or any number of reasons; but we cannot
deny that his is energetic in applying himself to his work.
We have decided to endorse Robert Finkelstein for President primarily because we feel he has a greater growth potential than Michael
Lappin. Mr. Lappin has been permitted to demonstrate his capabilities,
and we feel that they are more limited than Finkelstein’s. Then again,
we question severely the degree of committment each of the two has
exhibited toward the more pressing problems and significant issues,
we support Finkelstein’s candidacy in this regard because Lappin has
had the greater opportunity to show something, and has not succeeded.
FELDMAN ENDORSED
The other candidates for the Student Association offices provide
us with clearer choices. As stated above, we do not consider experience
as a necessary pre-requisite for holding an office with distinction but,
we do demand an attitude which conveys a sense of sincerity and
knowledge. Concern is totally absent from the Alliance candidate for
Vice-President Joseph Turri. During our interview with him he admitted
to having no previous interest in the Student Senate, and, what is most
insulting to the student body’s intelligence, even as a candidate he exhibited an abysmal ignorance of what student government is, or what
the Student Senate can or should do; for he simply did not know what
the organs of student government are on this campus. How, we ask,
can a candidate who represents anyone or anything run for the Senate
(let alone, an office) without ever having digested the Senate’s own
Constitution?
(Cont 'd on Page 4)
-

NEW

YORK

AT

BUFFALO

SPECTRUM

VOLUME 14

ROBERT FINKELSTEIN

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH

®5&gt;!M
TO THE STUDENT BODY;
During this past year the Stu

dent Senate and student activities as a whole have received
much criticism and there has
been a general disillusionment
with student government on the
part of many students on this
campus. Many people have com
plained and have displayed much
concern over the situation.
These two days are the voting
days for the general student
elections on campus. I hope all
students, who are concerned and
this should include everyone, will
exercise their right to vote on
these two days. The Elections
Committee has tried to offer the
students every possible opportunty to cast their ballots with machines being set up in Goodyear,
Tower and Norton Halls on these
days between 9 a m. and 5 p.m.
All that is needed to vote is a
valid ID card.
On behalf of the committee, I
can only urge you to examine
the issues as presented in campaign platforms, as presented in
the resumes of the candidates
in the Spectrum and as presented
in two debates during the campaign which will be held in Tower and Norton Halls.
So I can only remind all students, everything has been done
to facilitate your opportunity to
vote and I hope all of you take
the Opportunity to help furnish
the University with the kind of
student government that you
would like to see it have.
Sincerely,
Robert S. Pacholski,
Elections Commissioner

24, 1964

PARTY
HISTORIES
(See Page 8)

NO. 21

MICHAEL LAPPIN

�Tuesday, March 24, 1964

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Senate-Union Board Slate
Annual Spring ArtsFestival
The Second Annual Spring Arts
Festival, sponsored J&gt;y the Student Senate and Union Board
has been set for April 6-12. Con
ceived to stimulate interest in
the fine arts, this year's program
will feature individual performances each day throughout the
week, with five continuing eydibits also displayed in Norton
Union.
This year’s festival will feature
composer, singer, and folklorist
Earl Robinson; the distinguished
American poet, Langston Hughes;
the Norman Walker Dance Company of “Bell Telephone Hour"
fame, and the famous vocal group

Sjoberg of Texas
Talks on Society,
Freedom &amp; Power
Dr. Gideon Sjoberg, Associate
Professor of Sociology at the University of Texas, addressed a
capacity crowd in Norton last
Thursday. Dr. Sjoberg’s talk,
sponcered by the Department
of Sociology, was “Freedom and
Power: The Hole of the Research in Modern Society.”
Noting that the status and
power of the social scientist is
increasing in both Europe and
the United States, Dr. Sjoberg
said, “Surely the increased power
and prestige of the sociologist has
facilitated his study of groups
that were not even researchable a
few decades ago,” Dr. Sjoberg
sighted the conflict between the
researchers goals and their conflict with any administrative controls. Commenting on the degree
oi freedom of the social scientist
he said, “Social scientists do not
often recognize how dependent
they are upon such institutional
protections for their very survival,” He went on further to sight
the protection given to socilogists
and social scientists in general by
the recent Supreme Court decission in the New York Times
Sullivan case.
Examining the academic com
-

of Lambert, Hendricks and Bavan
• Also featured during the week
will be outstanding student musicians from the University, a
joint concert of the U.B. Chorus
and Concert Band and a library
contest.

Mr. Robinson will speak on the
U.B. Campus at 8:00 Tuesday evening in the Dorothy M. Haas

Lounge of Norton Union. The
Student Musician's Concert, will
be held in the Conference Theatre in Norton Union at 3:00 Wednesday afternoon, and Mr. Hughes
will speak in the Theatre at the
same hour Thursday afternoon.
The Browsing Library Contest
will be held at 3:00 P.M. Friday
in the Union’s Browsing Library.
The public is invited to these ac-

tivities admission free.
On Friday evening at 8;00 the
Norman Walker Dance Company
will perform in the Circle Arts
Theatre at 3165 Bailey Avenue,
while the Saturday performance
of Lambert, Hendricks and Bavan
and the Sunday evening jointconcert of the U.B. Chorus and
Concert Band will be at 8:30 in
Clark Gym and Kleinhans Music
Hall respectively.

Tickets for these events may
be obtained at the ticket booth
in Norton Union.
munity Dr. Sjoberg said, “Actually there is considerable con-

fusion

within

universities

and

professional associations between

the administrative control-control and research functions. Such
often leads to ethical dilemmas.”
Dr. Sjoberg concluded his talk

by saying, “My major concern has
been with the need for a private
sector (apart from an administrative-control one) in order to enhance the freedom and objectivity

of the social researcher. The
social researcher seemingly must
be willing to sacrifice immediate
social power or control over administrative apparatus of social
achieve a
systems order to
broader perspective,”
Dr. Sjoberg, author of The
Preindustrail City, Past and Present, is the president of the South
Western Sociological Association.

Ciordi Specks to ‘Crowd’

John Ciardi, poetry editor of the Saturday Review,
addressed a standing-room-only audience Friday afternoon, as he spoke on changing literary trends and' their
effect on 20th century appreciation of poetry.
Sponsored by the Convocations Committee of' the
Student Senate, Mr. Ciardi presented his audience with
both readings of his and other’s poems, and a biting
criticism of 20th century schools,
which he feels “are still in the
19th Century, as far as poetry
goes." He praised liberal arts
schools for their attempts to teach
students to raise complex questions concerning poetry. Yet once
questions are raised, he continued, “they arc afraid to pursue
the answer." This fear, he
warned, constitutes an “intellectual sin

today should not be blamed on
confused poetry but rather on
our modern school systems, which
force students to state the mean
ing of a poem in concise terms,
how .they feel the poet would
have written it if he were alive
Today’s students of literature, he
added, have become prisoners of
mechanics. When one is compel
ltd to grind out a 1,000 word
essay as a course requirement,
he more often than not refuses
to sympathize with the passion
with which a poet has created.

The

student looks

Sanford Finkelstein, a native of

Cortland, New York, (218 South

Main Street), and a junior accounting major at the University, will be one of 55 finalists
in the annual A.C.U. National
Intercollegiate Bowling Championships in Oakland, California,
on April 5th and 6th. Sandy who
is 21, has a season bowling average of 194. His highest game in
league competition was 279 and
his three-game series high was
674.
The tournament is conducted

annually by the Association of
College Unions in cooperation
with the American Bowling Congress and American Machine

&amp;

Foundry Company.

Poetry For Youngsters
Because he firmly believes that
young children are the most
eager recipients of poetry but

Confusion In Literary Circles

Mr. Ciardi went on to say that
the attempt by sensitive persons
to anaylze changing trends in
literature has created a great
amount of confusion. The conception of love, for example, as
represented in the “high seriousness” works of the 19th Century, was forced to undergo a
transformation when subjected
to the writings of Freud. However, Mr. Ciardi condones the uncertainty expressed by students
of literature, for “if you’re not
confused, you haven’t been think-

speaking with students
ing.” Maintaining that the “courage of one’s corifusions is expressed in today’s poetry,” Mr.
Ciardi described 20th Century
works as “ambivalent,” “full of
discountinuity” and “rejecting
large bursts of emotion.”

Nevertheless, he continued, the
lack of real appreciation of poetry

Graduates of Medical School
Attend Spring Clinic Day
A group of 17 graduates from
the Medical School who represent close to 1,000 years of medical practice attended the 27th
Annual Spring Clinic Day, March
21 at the Statler Hilton.
The class of 1914 was honored
as seven of the 16 living classmates met for their 50th reunion.
They were: Drs. Harold T. Brown,
Pittsburgh; Elmer P, Weigel,
South Plainfield, New Jersey; and
from Buffalo
Drs. Herbert H.
Bauckus; Ernest G. Cramer;
Charles F. Dewitz; August Lascola; and Frederick T. Petters.
The “Old Guard” representing
docotors who graduated between
1898 and 1912 also reunited.
They were Drs. George G. Davis,
class of 1907; Herbert A. Smith,

1907; Walter J. Wurtz, 1908;
Julius Ridhter, 1904; A. H. Aaron,
1912; Hyman R. Levin, 1911; Robert J. Maichle, 1908; Faye H.
Palmer, 1912; Augutus Paul, 1911;
and Edward A. Sharp, 1898.

are, unfortunately, being stifled
in this enthusiasm by puritanical
teachers, Mr. Ciardi has begun
to write poems for early elementary grade students. In an
attempt to free the literature
of young children from the traditional “look Dick look" monotony,
he has created many brilliant and
witty poems, several of which
have been summarily rejected by
teachers in the conviction that
they threaten to “disturb the
minds” of these youngsters.
Throughout his lecture and
while reading both his poems
and the works of others, Mr,
Ciardi stressed the importance
of rhythm in giving a poem beauty and life and concluded by
warning that those too involved
in dissecting a poem merely for
its meaning would lose this essential rhymical quality. “You
don’t necessarily have to know
what a poem 'means’ to really enjoy and remember it,” Ciardi concluded.

tions, rolled at accredited schools,
to the national championships, now in their twelfth year.
Thirteen thousand students, representing 175 schools, Ijpwled in
the 1964 preliminary events, before the 55 finalists from eleven

'lead

Diamonds-Watches

"ENTERTAINMENT"
THE SOCIAL SEASON IS HERE
The Globe Artists Agency has the per
feet entertainment for all occasions.

Globe Artists Agency
1210 DELAWARE AVENUE

TL 3-4300

CATHAY GARDEN

1

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DRIVE FROM UB

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AMERICAN FOOD

EXPERTLY PREPARED
TAKE OUT ORDERS
TF 7-3444
Also Featuring

JEWELRY.

EXOTIC DRINKS

and

Repairing
Lr

Awards will be made for team,
doubles, singles and all-events
winners, the latter to receive the
annual Morehead Patterson Award, an impressive bronze sculpture that resides annually at the
college of the all-events winner.

•

Campus and regional competi-

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J MINUTES

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 3-5415

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11:00 A.M. 3:30 P.M,
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REASONABLE PRICES

for

”

■

S. Finkelstein to be a Finalist
ACU Bowling Championships

instead

symbolism "with a capital S."
Consequently, Mr. Ciardi believes
that too much meaning is often
read into today's analyses. “The
rational critic must remember he
is recreating a passion,’’

Dinner

4:00 P.M. 9 P.M.
■

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

on Campus

�Tuesday, March 24, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial
THE ELECTION: II (cont.)
On the above grounds alone, we feel that any student would be a more desirable Vice President. No matter, Robert Feldman, a Senator the past year, and the
United Students candidate, supports his candidacy by his
own self. Though not a particularly flashy personality,
Feldman is deeply concerned with issues such as civil
rights and liberties, the atmosphere of a university community, and other areas which have not received the
proper attention of campus oliticians. Mr. Feldman is not
a politician; his is an able, sensitive person who has a
tremendous potential to lead the Senate into the ideal
areas of’student action which The Spectrum supports.
BERGER ENDORSED
Perhaps the one office which

is being disputed by

who are grappling with an issue is that of
Treasurer. In this case the student body has been offered
the flashy Alliance statement which favors “deficit
spending.” The Alliance party and its candidate for
Treasurer, Kearons Whalen, propose that the Student
Senate allocate to different groups as much money as
these groups may request; even if total allocations eventually exceed the amount of money earmarked for the
Senate’s disposal. Mr. Whalen is fond of a game which
involves drawing lines and dots, the only way to successfully complete the game being involved with “going out
of bounds.” Well, as much as we have often supported
creativity, new ideas, etc., we cannot defend the plan
to spend more money that the Senate is entitled to grant.
Hopefully, the Senate’s budget will be increased and
more funds will be available for student activities: but
to spend freely is not so much “deficit spending” as it
is irresponsibility.
That aside, The Spectrum also distrusts Whalen’s
attitudes toward other campus and contemporary issues.
W-e respect him for his belief, that the Feinberg Law is
essentially sound, for he supports it. However, The Spectrum finds that law to be a violation of academic freedom and harmful to the campus, and cannot agree with
him. He is neither a social reformer nor is he even liberal
minded; in fact, he strikes us as being a part of that
group which Goldwater has termed the new campus conservatives. We wonder then how he can think in terms
of overspending, and we can only conclude that it' is an
expedient issue hoping that the student body will vote
themselves a flood of gold.
Although Mr. Whalen is inexperienced in student
government, his United Students opponent, William Berger, is perhaps the most qualified person to seek the
treasurership ever. That he has been a Senator for two
years (and student welfare committee chairman last
year) has given him fine background; but, most impressive has been his service on the finance committee, also
for two years. Campared to his opponent, we feel it is
unnecessary to judge Berger any further.

candidates

-

LEVENTHAL ENDORSED
The above is not to say, however, that mere Senate
experience or committee membership in the past will
insure a successful future. In Berger’s case, we are confident that he will be a more than able treasurer. The
same does not hold true for Beverly Rosenow, the United
Students candidate for Secretary. Miss Rosenow may be
qualified to prepare “Minutes,” but the Secretary is also
a member of the executive committee, the elite of the
Senate which should guide the general body. As a Senator the past year, Miss Rosenow has not really been
involved with student government. True, she attended
meetings; but we do not consider that to be a quality of
exceptional merit. Rather, evaluating Rosenow’s record
we wonder why she did attend the Senate meetings at
all
for she seemed never to have made a motion or
spoken out on any mat 1 r at all. (When we interviewed
Miss Rosenow, she noted that she may have seconded a
motion or two). The Spectrum has not favored this year's
Senate loudmouths, and the quiet but competent Senators
were more to our ta"te perhaps. Miss Rosenow, though,
was silent.
Of the other two candidates for Secretary, we cannot judge Judy Marcklinger very well. She has been involved in activities, but until now has shown little interest
in the Senate note. She is only a sophomore, and quite
frankly, a year of attending Senate meetings, working on
an interesting Senate committee, etc. should give her some
background as to what this student government, (if no
other) is capable of doing and what it accomplishes.
The above prescription is one which has worked well
for Linda Leventhal, an independant candidate for Secretary. Miss Leventhal has attended most of the Senate
meetings, and has been involved with a number of its
projects. Hers is a case of true interest; for very few
observers attend Senate meetings regularly. Leventhal
has proved herself to be an able organizer with a persuasive personality. We have little doubt that, if elected.
Miss Leventhal will be a very active officer, legitimately
transcending a boundary from "Minutes-taker” to real
student leadership.
We have reflected upon our values, and have made
the considerations that appear today. We urge everyone
to do the same.

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

rjCetter
to the Editor
TO THE

EDITOR;

The purpose of this letter is

to protest the-scheduling of this

University’s ‘Spring Recess

.

first and most obvious
complaint is that our Spring
Recess is in fact located in the
winter. Spring officially arrives
on March 20, live days after the
end of the recess in question.
Since the weather in this part
of the country is notoriously bad
at the beginning of March our
vacation seems to be convenient
tor the small segment of the student body who enjoys siding.
Postponing our vacation for several weeks would undoubtable result in a more wide spread enjoyment of the recess. Our second
The

complaint stems from the fact
that our “Spring Recess” doesn’t

coincide with the vacation of
other schools. This might not
appear to be important to the
administration but it is indeed
difficult to enjoy a vacation when
almost all of ones acquaintances
are still attending classes at their
schools. These people enjoy a
common vacation when the wea
ther is usually more favorable
while U.B. students are forced
to tramp around in late winter
slush alone. This is especially
true of resident students from
the smaller upstate communities.
We have heard that a possible
explanation for the scheduling
of our vacation is a desire not
to favor one religious group. To
us, this seems to be an entirely
futile moral gesture. Why must
U.B. students suffer to establish
a precedent they (and the rest
of America’s college students)
don’t appear desirous of making.
It seems that in order for an attempt to change established custom in a society to succeed the
participants must genuinely be
lieve in what is being done, This
seems to be lacking at this school
—witness the Christmas vacation
in the first semester. In order
to escape the charge of being
inconsistent this vacation should
also be rescheduled, an action
obviously desired by very few.
We don’t advocate oppressing
any minorities in the name of
majority rule since these minorities obviously , see that a more
universal agreement is reached
concerning changing Spring vacation, the widely accepted and
practiced Easter vacation is also

in their best interest.
This letter is respectfully submitted in the hope of putting
forth views we feel to be widely
held among members of the student body.
Sincerely yours,

iiy
ly, we have decided to en-

The interviews The Spec-

trum held with the candi-

dorse those who, on the basis of past activities and
their interviews, are most
likely to provide the student body with strong leadership and good sense:
(A. &amp; S.) Joseph Epstein,
Linda Gunzberg, Richard
Jaross, and Henry Simon:
Cary Presant;
(Med.)
(Eng.)
Ronald Zavodny:
Clinton Deveaux,
(U.C.)
Natalie Gold, Richard Kronenfield, and Trudy Stern.

dates for the Student Senate was a very meaningful
experience for the editorial
board. Not only did it provide us with material with
which we could justify our
choosing candidates to endorse, it also served to point
out to us all what a glaring
difference there could be
between candidates for office. Some were rather well
informed, other were not;
far too many candidates
were ignorant of what they
were really doing. One candidate went so far as to admit, (as Bob Milch mentioned in “The Circus” last
Friday) that he was a candidate simply because he
was approached by a party
and told that he could win.
What the Spectrum fears is
that such a prophecy may
occur!

-

-

-

-

We were shocked by
some of the candidates for
the Senate persons whom
we intend to list so that
everyone may avoid voting
for them: (Bus. Ad.) Alan
David
(Eng.)
Mollot;
Morris; (U.C.)-Rena Fisch,
Peggy Marano, Daniel Silber, and Joseph Tringali.
We do not claim to ever
have cornered the market
on wisdom. However, we
have judged all the candidates on an equal basis, and
have judged them care-

-

-

Because it would be impractical to review each
Senate candidate separate-

fully.

Richard Ehrlich '66

-

Richard Walter '66

THE
The official student

NOTICE

Juniors in the College of
Arts and Sciences who
qualify for nomination for
Woodrow Wilson Fellowships:
It is recommended by the
National Fellowship Committee of the Woodrow Wilson
National Fellowship
Foundation that applicants
for these fellowships take
the Graduate Record Examination in April. Registra
lion forms and fees for the
examination must be filed
at the Princeton Office not
later than April 10 for the
1964
April 25.
testing.
Forms may be obtained
from the Fellowship Office.
Acheson Hall 107.

SPECTRUM

of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
newspaper

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EDITOR ELECT

-

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Editor
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Managing

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John Kowal
Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Alan Newman
Marcia Cooper
William Siemering

ARNOLD S. MAZUR
MARTIN D. KRIEGEL

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Pat Laune’
Bernard Dickman
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Advertising Mgr
Laurence Singer
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Circulation Mgr.
Lois Hessinger
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Thomas Haenle, Jr

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda leventhai, Judy Green, Gary Falk.
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Charles
Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blacker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brothmah, Ray Crawford, Jane
Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian
Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng.
Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo, Terry Sweeney,.Tom Kenjarsk
Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie
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Staff: Joel Havens,

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�Tuesday, March 24, 1964

SPECTRUM

Wells E. Knibloe
Named Head of A&amp;S
50th Anniversary Fete

The Circus
By BOB MILCH

The Saga of Maxwell the Messiah
One morning Maxwell woke up

(which, in and of itself was an

accomplishment for Maxwell)
with a quite queer feeling (queerer, in fact, than usual). He looked
at his faithful dog sleeping at
the foot of his bed and knew
really knew ■ for the first time
that he was better than it. He
looked at his mother sleeping - or
nearly sleeping, at the breakfast
table, and knew that he was better than she (something he had
suspected for a while). He looked
at the closed bathroom door,
behind which his father was lurking in his morning ritual of
absolution and ablution, and decided not to even bother with
value judgments. Extrapolating
all this knew knowledge as he
boarded the 8:30 bus for school
(not all commuters drive Triumphs), he reached the only
logical conclusion: he, or rather,
He, was the long-awaited Messiah.
The next question was, what
to do about it? He realized the
crime he would be committnig
against humanity were he not to
let everyone in on this great
find. How best to serve his fellow man? He could bump off all
the campus policemen, or feed
arsenic cats to the dogs, or hire
a bulldozer to level Clark Gym
for a parking lot, or start a still
behind the counter in the Rathskeller, However, none of these
thnigs seemed of a high enough
plane, lofty enough for a Messiah.
He would become a senator, instead.
■

Maxwell found Mike Shapiro in
the IFC office, and broached his
knowledge and plan to him,
figuring no one would turn down
a vote getter like He was, and a
Messiah to boot! Unfortunately,
Mike didn’t think He had enough
of the “revolutionary fervor” necessary to be a Campus Alliance
candidate. He was scorned.
All right then! He tried Pete

Ostrow. “You know' we really
could use a Messian right now.
But you’re - excuse me You’ve
■ got a bad complexion, and that
wouldn’t fit in with our overall
campaign allusion of appealing
personalities. Sorry.”
-

Scorned by Alliance. Ridiculed
by United Students. It really was
tough to get people to accept a
Messiah. “Alright for them,” he
said in a most uncharitable fit,
“I’ll go it alone as an independent.”

Budget;

1. 2,000 pencils inscribed “Save

with Maxwell

.

.

.

$20.00

2. Movies of the 1926 Marathon
Dancing Championships

. .

from P. 2)

warned must decrease their overall quality point deficiency to at
least five in order to be allowed
to continue for the following semester (September 1964 for currently registered students). If a
freshman is dismissed in June, he
may be allowed to return to the
University on a strict probation
basis after one academic year has
elapsed. Summer Session attendance is possible but an academic
year’s “furlough” will still be required. The assumption is that
many freshmen “begin on the
wrong foot.” In order not to penalize him too heavily for his
errors, and since he is likely capable of doing better
work, he
ran be allowed a second chance.
Success at any institution of higher

education

depends largely on

objectives and motivation and it
s
&gt; our hope that in the year away
rom school, evidence can be pre-

sented by the students of consistent application and effort
and aceeptance of responsibility in some

worthwhile

activity.

Experience

suggests that very often a year
away from formal education will
result in the necessary motivation
nd that students
do better the
second time around.” During
6 off-year,
freshmen are en
eouraged not to do anything acaemic. But, he is encouraged to
et a job or keep busy in some
constructive way. It should be
n m n(f that students who
u,r 1 , must still overcome the
Ua
]ity point deficiency of the
°

°

rlt

*

That, He figured, just about
covered it. The Spectrum interview could be dispensed with because He didn’t have to answer
to anyone, and their pictures did
little to flatter one’s features, let
alone a Messiah’s. And as for a
platform, He’d just copy theirs,
promising eternal salvation instead of just political salvation
until the next election; besides,
everyone would forget promises
by September. All that could be
done now was to wait until election day and the results of the
big write-in vote for Him.
Needless to say, the big writein vote for Him did come (I try
to avoid stories with unhappy
endings), and Maxwell became
the Boss Messiah on Campus.
Bloody purge followed bloody
purge until He was the only member of the former Student Senate
left to do anything for or to the
students.

One morning Maxwell’s little
brother Melvin woke up (which,
in and of itself was an accomplishment for Melvin) . . .

ton, McNaughtan

and Saperston,

has been named general alumni
chairman for the 50th Anniversary observance of the College
or Arts and Sciences, April 3-12.

Mr. Knibloe, president of the
Arts and Sciences Alumni Association, is a graduate of both
the College of Arts and Sciences
and the School of Law.
The anniversary will be observed separately by graduates
in physical and biological scien
ces, social sciences, and humanities, representing the three areas
of study in the College.
Committee members of the physical and biological sciences
group are as follows: Dr. Vincent
S. Gelestino, Dr. Arnold Stern,
Mr. J. Stanley Nixon, Mr Andrew
Y. Anderson, Mr. James W. Cadwell, Mr, John E. Izard, Mr. Salvatore Schillaci, and Mr. Richard
G. Swan.
Observances will be April 3.,
social sciences; April 4, physical
and biological sciences; and April
11, humanities. Each evening will
begin at 5:30 p.m. with dinner
in the Faculty Club followed by
an address in Butler Auditorium,
Capen Hall. Award citations will
be presented to outstanding alumni at the dinners.
On April 12, the University’s
Women's Chorale and Glee Club,
under the direction of Robert
S. Beckwith, assistant professor
of music, will be featured in a
free concert at Kleinhans Music

Hall.

“Tasks of Today and Tomor
row” is the theme of the anni
versary celebration.

The next Convocations Program lecture
in the series, “Is Einstein Obsolete?” will
be March 24. Dr.
Thomas Gold of Cornell University will
speak on the topic
“Continuous
Creation.”

SKETCH
BY DAVID BERGEN and PETER RUBIN

This week Sketch interviewed Abner Apathy. Mr. Apathy, we
feel, is representative of a great majority of the students attending
this University. The nature of the interview concerned itself with
the upcoming elections for the Student Senate.
B&amp;R: Abner what do you think
of the election campaigns so
far?
Apathy; Well I think the oil cloth
posters are very nice, and all
the pens and matchbooks I’ve
received are very impressive.
B&amp;R: That’s nice, but what about
the candidates themselves?
Apathy: Well from the posters
I’ve seen, all the candidates
seem to be nice people.
B&amp;R: Have you listened to any
of the speeches by the candi-

dates?

Apathy; No,
B&amp;R; Why not?
Apathy; To be honest, it really

doesn’t interest me.
B&amp;R: Don’t ■ you care about
what these people are saying?
What if they’re advocating the
overthrow of the government?
Apathy: As I said before, I really
don’t care one way or the other
what they say or want to do.
B&amp;R: But these people are going
to represent your interests
while they’re serving on the
Senate. Don’t you care what
they will do?
Apathy: It really doesn’t matter
to me what they say or do.
B&amp;R; After your previous answers this question will seem
a bit ludicrous. Have you ever
gone to a Senate meeting since
you have been in this school?
Apathy; Well, never willfully. I
once wandered into the NoPurpose room by accident and
there was a meeting going on.
However in keeping with my
name and principles, I left immediately.

B&amp;R: But you were there, didn’t
you feel the least bit curious
to see what was going on?

Apathy; No,

not really.

I had
heard that there were two good
looking female Senators, but
they had apparently left before
I came to the session; so with
nothing more to interest me,
I left also.
B&amp;R: Do you intend to vote next

Wednesday?
Apathy; No, I don’t

care who wins
and I don’t care who loses. I’m
vote
casting my
for apathy.

BAR: Besides being apathetic,
you could still walk into a voting booth and pull the levers
with your eyes closed.
Apathy: It’s just too much of a
strain on my mind. I mean
decisions, decisions, all the time
decisions. I just can’t take all
this responsibility.
BAR; Do all of your friends have
this same apathetic attitude
that you do?
Apathy; Well all my fraternity
brothers feel the same way as
I do most of the time. Perhaps,
all of the time. That’s why
we’re brothers.
BAR: By any chance, did you
read the party platforms that
were printed in the Spectrum?
Apathy: A a matter of fact I did.
BAR: What did you think of
them?
Apathy; I thought they were very
interesting.
BAR: Why?
Apathy: Well I don’t like to be
pressed on any issue that requires thought, but I did think
there were some interesting
things mentioned. Both of the
platforms were so similar I
really can’t see why they try
so hard to be different at all
like using different catch phrases and gimmicks.
BAR: Would you like to see beer
on campus and national fraternities retained?
Apathy: I guess so. I don’t really
care one way or the other.
■

BAR: Well if you don’t vote for
officers and Senators in the upcoming election, how do you
ever expect to have these
things. Do you expect them to
happen by parthenogenisis or

spontaneous combustion?
Apathy; I thought that’s the way
it usually happened.
BAR: After that answer Abner,
we can only say that we hope
that there are some students
someplace that don’t have your
views and that they’ll do something constructive for a change
by voting for intelligent candidates instead of their friends
or the good looking girls.

Heard Through the Ivy,

..

SOPHOMORES

Sophomores in University College can not be given the option
of a year’s “furlough” since they
must have the requisite average
(normally 1.0) by the end of their
sophomore year in order to be
promoted to a senior division, In
some cases, these students can
also qualify for an Associate Degree and in selected cases will
be given the option of a fifth semester in which to earn that degree. Usually, sophomores whose
averages are deficient will be dismissed. Fifth semesters are offered only to those earning the
Associate Degree or those steadily improving in a new program.

Please remember that students

on Strict Probation who received
a special notice can not advance
register until seeond semester
grades are evaluated. However,
all students should plan a program with their adviser, University College would like students
who have questions to bring them
to their advisers when they come
in for either advance registration
or program planning!

'

addition, it may be possible
r a student
who is improving

Wells E. Knibloe, a partner in
the Buffalo law firm of Sapers-

but who has not made the necessary overall improvement to be
given a third semester in the College, but in a new program. Students should discuss these possibilities with their advisers.

*

lrst year.

.

$1.00
3. Lecture time in the men’s
lavatories . . . first come,
first serve

Furlough" is Recommended
For Freshmen Not Doing Well
(Cont’d

PAGE FIVE

Listen to
WBFO

All Is Quiet
tides of time swept

(ACP) —The

once again across the campus,
notes The Auburn Plainsman,
Auburn University, Auburn, Ala.
What came as a crisis left as
a mark of distinction.
We are very proud of the ad
ministration of the university and
our faculty and students. Calm,
simple dignity prevailed over the
integration scene.
If an individual were to be
picked from among the crowd for
actions of special import, our
choice would be Mr. Edwin M.
Crawford, director of university

riddled

with problems, says
Daily Universe, Brigham Young
University, Provo, Utah.
Often the downdrag of these
problems
financial, social, physical, spiritual or mental
causes a student to feel unable to

in one
final column.
But it was sufficient space to
note with nostalgia that, years
from now, what will be left of
these most hectic and memorable years will be a few yellow
and tattered copies of the newspaper in the library files.

self-appraisal, he packs his bags

in a Dither
out-of-tune zither
and a concertina were played at
a nighttime serenade, according
to dispatches reaching The Record, St. John’s University, Collegeville, Minn. However, some
persons within hearing range
suggested the music may have
been provided by a sackbutt, a
dulcimer and a tuba.
A Benet Hall freshman is rumored to have bounced from
bed at the height of the harmony
and conducted his entire floor
to the shelter area in the basement, where he sandbagged the
door and kept everyone until

—

—

cope with the pressures of university life. And, perhaps unaware of the growth which can
accure to him through a mature

and withdraws from school.
Provided on our campus is
perhaps one of the most complete
web of persons who truly care
and feel responsible for others:
professional counselors, advisers,
relations.
Auburn came out “smelling like bishoprics, home teachers, proa rose” in the news reports across
fessors, head residents and tuthe country. It is important to
by the .hundreds;
tors
remember that the reports which
Before any student leaves this
campus, he owes it to himself
the press turn out in times like
these are the sole basis for imto counsel with those qualified
pressions that thousands of pelto give him direction.
pie will form about Auburn Uni-— 'Hope is greater than wealth.
versity. We feel that the effecEducation is more valuable than
tive and efficient efforts of Mr.
wealth. Brigham Young University is an institution of hope.
Crawford to help these people
do
earn a living had a lot to
with the favorable reports that
What's Left
Auburn received from the news
(ACP)—Jerianne Roginski, edimedia.
tor-in-chief of The Collegian, University of Toledo, found her goodOn Your Way Out?
by space wps limited to five
(ACP)—It always will be diffiinches due to the overpowering
cult for you to evaluate yourself capitalistic instrument of adverobjectively, especially if . you are tising—hardly sufficient space to
—

appease all the enemies

The Campus

(ACP) —An

morning singing “Tenting Tonight.” He was described as
maintaining admirable composure
the whole time the attack was
going on.”

The Record is offering a reward for information leading to
the apprehension and destruction
of the instruments involved.

�Tuesday, March 24, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

CANDIDA TES REVIEWED
The following is a listing of candidates for the Student Senate
and their qualifications, arranged in alphabetical order:

Treasurer
William Berger, junior,

Secretary

Robert

P.

Finkelstein, junior,

(United

g

Michael Lappin, junior (Campus
Alliance):

Stu-

Mr.Finkelstein has serv
ed on the Executive Committee
of the Senate,
Chairman of the
Public Relations
dents);

&gt;

|| 3C

Linda Leventhal,

Mr,

Lappin is [ires
ently Vice Prcsi

QH|

junior, (Independent): Miss'

Leventhal's

M

it

Vice President
Association
of the Debate
a Member
'
Society. Secreof Honors and
tary of the Comh
Awards Com
MmBl m
mittce, President of the Western munications Committee and StuCommittee, NSA Steering ComNew York High School General dent Judiciary, House Committee,
mittee, Joint Day and Night committee for the memorial to the Assembly, and a Member of the Standards Committee and colate President Kennedy, Manager Senate Lemberg Investigating chairman of the Browsing LiCommittee. In his soph, year, brary. Her sophomore activities
of Student Senate portion of Stu
included membership in Hillel,
Mr. Lappin was a Student Senadent Association Week. Before
tor, member of Student Senate Pre-Law Society, Secretary for
coming to the University, Mr,
Finkelstein attended Cornell Uni Finance Committee, Chairman of the Novice Tournament and the
Varsity Tournament, President of
versify where he was a member Senate 1).N. Committee this enthe Debating Society, and was
tailed many things as head deleof the elections commission. Mr.
named Novice Debater of the
Finkelstein’s cumulative average gate to St. Lawrence Model Security Council, and President of Year. She was also active in her
qualifies him for Dean’s List.
UB’s Model Security Council. His Freshman year.
freshman year included treasurer
of Freshman Steering Committee, Judy Marcklinger, sophomore,
Financial chairman of winter (Campus AliiMiss
weekend, and member of Student ance):
M a r c k linker's
Senate Finance Committee.
activities tiave
included House 3*
•"
Vice President
Plan Council,
I
a

w

Robert C. Feldman, junior, (UnitStudents) :
e (I
Mr. Feldman is
f
presently a Sen
B
ator and mem
\
ber of the Exec*S!~ /t
utivc Committee

of the Student

Ai

Senate, Student

Activities Committee, WHKO
staff, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Public
Relations Committee, Co-founder
Students for Reform and Action,
Business Manager of the New
Student Review.

(lent

y

Joe

Mr.

livide.s
Sgl

and

House

Tur-

include:

at

Arms|jjW^Pjj3s|

IKC, 1FCM
Executive Com (H
for

Stand

ards Committee,BBBjT
Rush Chairman, Fraternity Inlra
murals, and President of Alpha
Sigma Phi Fraternity. He was
also a Mr. Formal- Candidate.
During his sophomore years, Mr.
Turri was representative of his

falonian.

Kearons J. Whalen, junior, (Cam

W
B
F
0

pus
Mr.

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i

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ties include member of the Mass.

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team, and Inter Fraternity Coun
eil Violations Committee.

Phone 876-2284

Our

BUFFALO 26, NEW YORK

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Washington Square
College
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New York 3, N. Y.

Junior ear
'*

:

of the Alpha
Kappa Psi Din
ner Dance, and
a representative to the Inter Fraternity Council. His other activi•w

«S/n it/i printing

•

**

Alliance)

Whalen is
Secretary of A1
pha Ka PP a Psl
Frat., chairman

«

Advertisers

I

Welfare Committee. At the close
of his sophomore year, Mr. Eery
er received a Student Association
Silver Key Award. Mr. Berger
now holds a position on the Stu
dent Senate as a Bus. Ad. Repre
sentative. He is am ember of the
finance committee, the welfare
committee, and is general chair
man for the Freshman Orienta
tion Committee 1964. He is finish
ing the details of the Student
Discount Service. Mr. Berger was
Treasurer Pro Tempore of the
Student Senate at the beginning
of this year.

Support

fraternity on IFC, Mis freshman
year included Tower Dorm Coun-

"VERSATILITY
PLUS”

member of the
Student Senate
j n ye, an( j serv ,
ed on the fi

nance commii
tee.
ties committee, the NSA Com
mittee, and was chairman of the

idence Student Coordination, and
Norton Union Brochure Committee. She was Pledge Mistress of
Theta Chi and is presently Chaplain. Miss Rosdnow is now a Senator from the School of Education, a member of the Senate personnel committee, and for the
past two years has been the photography coordinator of the Buf-

For All Campus Needs

Listen
to

A

LETTERPRESS

TEXTBOOK STORES, INC.

3610 MAIN (near Bailey

Ji

Soph o
more Sponsor
Chairman of Commuter and Res-

Bowling League Secretary, Goodyear House Council, Chi Omega
Sorority, Norton Union Open
House Committee,
Sophomore
Sponsors, Michael Hall Sports
Committee. Miss Marcklinger is
the recipient of a General Motors
Scholarship.

cil and Inter Residence Council.

It's BUFFALO

it

Miss

trum,

HouseSecretary,. fflj

Turri, junior (Campus Alli-

ance):

Students):

V

VST

has
Rosenow
served as Circulation Manager
and Office Man
ager
of Spec-

jun.

ior
eludes;

dent of the Stu

Beverly Rosenow, junior, (United

:

President

(United

Students): Mr,
Berger was a

■

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MAIN

BUFFALO

University of Buffalo Students Have Made Us Famous

�Tuesday, March 24, 1964

(JCl lididd tGS

«««««««{«

Arts
Kennath

Bernstein,

E.

ance):

Secretary of the Concert Com-

Sciences
man, Corresponding
Advertising Editor

Secretary),

o^uffalonian.

mittee, Personnel Committee,
House Committee, House Council
of Michael Dorm, Sports Committee of Michael Dorm, Sorority.

s?»»»^»»?^5W»»s?55SS555$s»W5«

ferred to UB where she was
President of the Spring pledge
class of Theta Chi sorority. She
is presently the Queen Chairman
of her sorority.

Hanry Simon, junior (United Stu
dents): Mr. Simon was elected

Treasurer of the
Student Senate
but did not
serve his term.

■

„*»

&amp;

junior,
A 11 iAs
a

(Campus

_,,_

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Bf

%

•—

member of Alpha Phi Delta

Arnold Graf, junior (Campus AlGraf

Mr.

was the Sports

Fraternity,

v

Bernstein

has
participated in
the Judiciary

Jr

Committee, IFC, Sports Committee, Mr. Formal Campaign (Publicity Chairman), and has been
Corresponding secretary. H i s
other activities include judge on
the Student Traffic Court, Desk
Receptionist in Cooke Hall for
the past two years.
Joseph Epstein, sophomore, (United Students) :
While in high
school, Mr. EpU
stein was a class
representat i v e,
'JZ,
Vice President
jr*
.«*

~

B
IB

■

of the Junior
Class and the
Assistant Editor

a.

.

dBHL

of his school
yearbook. In high school his outside activities included the VicePresidency of the Young People’s
League. Since coming to U.B. Mr.
Epstein has been on the Student
Welfare Committee, the Calendar
Revisions Committee (Chairman)
and was Historian of Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity. Mr. Epstein
is a history, pre law major with
a cumulative index of 2.0.
Robert

James

aliance);Mr,

Chairman for
his fraternity in
his sophomore
year.
He has
been twice
«sj4r
‘BL elected as VicePresident of his fraternity, has
been on the committee for the
Greek Sing, and has participated
in basketball and football intramurals. While in high school, Mr,
Graf was president of the Key
Club and was elected to represent the chapter as a delegate in
two state wide conventions.

Richard H.

|_

following
*»*

»

Linda Gunsberg, soph., (Campus
AllianceLTn her
'|
freshman year,
Miss Gunsberg / jH
was active in Al. S'*
pha

Delta

Lambda!
Women’s

A

~

'

H

i

Jaross, soph. (United
Students) : Mr.
Jaross has been
active on the
stu

governm c n t committees: Freshman

dent

JH orientation, Civil rights, Academic Affairs, (chairman of academic conventions
subcommittee) and the Special
Feinberg committee. He is presently president of the Political
Science Club and an active member of Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity.
During his freshman year, Mr.
Jaross was vice president of his
pledge class, member of the
marching band, concert band, and
freshman track team.
-

Stephen

I

W. Rambo, soph. (United
Students):
Mr.
Rambo is cur-

T'V('P f" r

'

‘

ri— A
jp

rently a sopho-

ory. At UB

Simon, junior (Campus
Mr. ■■■■

Alliance):

Lynn Miskell, junior,
Students): Miss

(United

Miskell’s freshHonor Society, Wm,
man year was
Mixer Commit TBi
■-»
tee, WRA, Silver Ball Publicity spent at BethiMS
any College in
Committee, Constitutional Revisions Committee of Girls’ Dorms, West Virginia
Stunt Night, Sports Committee of where she was
Goodyear South (Chairman), and a member of the
was Parliamentarian of Goodyear Christian Choir, Vice-President
South House Council. Miss Gunsof the Freshman Women’s Counberg’s sophomore activities in- cil and Committee Chairman of
Spring Formal. For her Sophoclude, Alpha Lambda Delta Freshman Women’s Honor Society, more year, Miss Miskell trans:

Simon was an
assistant in
writing his door
newspaper
in
Tower Dorm,
has been active

lege

on the 1962-63 Senate.

PT
gC\,

.

ff

H

By GARY EVANS

Student Zionist Organization
has announced the establishment
of a “Year Program in Israel”
beginning this June.
The new program was set up
to give American and Canadian
College undergraduate students
the opportunity to explore for
a year, various aspects of life

in Israel.
Included in the non-profit educational program is a sevenmonth period during which time
the student can choose either a
course of study at the Hebrew
University, Jerusalem, or work in
his professional field of interest
in the new immigrant development areas.

in his political
party, and is Social Chairman of
Beta Sigma Rho.
’’

Gerace, junior,
(Campus A 11 iance): Mr. Gerace has been, a

SZO Program

“The two-program choices
the Hebrew University or professional work
are being offered
to meet the North American college student’s needs of continuing his education while in Israel,”
states Gary Evans, president of
SZO at Buffalo,
—

—

member of the
Freshman Steering Committee,
General Chairman of Freshman February Orientation Committee, Chairman of Fashion
Show Committee for Winter Carnival, Member of Publicity Committee for MUD. He has received
Freshman Numerals in Tennis
and is a member of the Varsity
Squash team, Assistant Organization Editor of the Buffalonian,
Member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity (Vice-Pres., Social Chair-

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he
has been active
on the staff of the Buffalonian
and as a brother of Sigma Phi
Epsilon
Fraternity.
In high
school he was the manager of
the Student Government Store
and served on the executive committee of the Student Government. In addition, Mr. Rambo
was also the Vice-President of
the school band.
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�PAGE EIGHT

Tuesday, March 24, 1964

SPECTRUM

Campus Parties Reviewtu

Business Administration
Roy Agtloff, junior. (United Stu
dents): Mr. Age.
loff was Trea\
surer of Mich■
**
ael Dorm, mem-

By DENNIS HIRNLE

junior (Campus
Mr.

The responsibility that is inherent in the right to vote necMartino
essitates a consideration of curbeen limited in rent feelings and sought-after obnon academic jectives from the contending
R* activities, he has parties. This information is an
ber of A I p h a
—*
5 been an active obligation of the parties to the
Epsilon Pi (Cor
a
responding Secpatricipating students who will
vote, and will aid in the intelm..
Ak retary. Sports
Fraternity (Pres, of Pledge class, ligent casting of a ballot.
Chairman, Editor of the news
Pledgemaster, Bus, Chairman of
paper), a member of the Varsity
Track Team, intramural sports,
Annual Dinner-Dance,
Scholar
Campus Alliance Party
Mr. Ageloff has been on Dean's
ship Committee, Judiciary Com
One Year Old
List each semester of his attendmittee, Budget Committee), Mr.
Martino is an accountant on a
ance and- has made a 2.5 overall
The Campus Alliance Party was
part time basis in the Buffalo
index.
formed in 1963 through the efarea.
forts of Michael Shapiro and
Howard Auerbach, junior (United
Allen Falk; at their first formal
Students): Mr.
Alan R. Mollot, junior (Indcpend
party caucus, Shapiro was elected
ent): Mr. Mollet I
was
Auerbach
the party chairman, Falk was
one of the
is a member of
designated the party whip; Jim
Marketing
founders and
the
w
w
Titus and Frank Alessi were ap
the first TreaClub, Phi EpsilW
pointed as platform co-chairmen;
surer of Shusson
,i®t
FraterPi
i
and Ron Kubby became the secnity, and has
meisters. He is
retary-treasurer.
The
present
participated in
also active in
campaign is being directed by
Student
the Debate Society. Mr. Auerbacn
the
Arthur Burke, Steve Sunshine,
is the assistant advertising manWelfare Committee, the Norton and William Price.
has
Committee,
Union Rules
Tower
ager of the Spectrum and
Michael Lappin, the Campus
House Council and the Constitu
made Dean’s List 2 out of five
Alliance candidate for president,
tional Revisions Committee.
semesters at UB.
acted as the spokesman for his
group. “The total objective of
our party is good student govMedicine
ernment; there are different conceptions of what constitutes good
(Medical
soph.
John Boland Constantine, soph.
Cary A. Presant,
government, but our includes the
(Medical School
e
School R p.):
Presant
has
Mr.
Rep.): In
his
two years at the
been active in
0
0
the Gibson AnaMedical School,
.qV -'qV
■pV c
tomical Society Steven
,0
Mr. Constantine
Becker, freshman, (Cam
•kj®'
has been active
and Phi Lambda
pus
Alliance):
Kappa Medical
in the Gibson
Before coming
Fraternity as a
Anatomical Soe to Buffalo, Mr.
iety and is a member of Nu Sigmember of the Medical School.
Becker was acAr 1
As an undergraduate at this Unima Nju Medical Fraternity. Mr.
live on his high
O
versity, Mr. Present's achieveConstantine was graduated from
school swimments were: Freshman Steering
Princeton University, where he
ming team. At
AchieveChemistry
active
Class
of
1962
Mem
in
Committee,
was
the University,
ment
Freshman
Tennis
Committee,
Award,
orial Fund Steering
he has participated in homeCampus Fund Drive, Orange Key,
Team, Phi Eta Sigma Honor Fracoming Dance Committee, Treasternity (Vice-Pres., Advisor), AdFreshman Orientation Committee,
urer of Mixer Committee, Secto
the
Pre-Medical Society, Freshman
ministrative Assistant
retary-Treasurer of the ComPresident of the Student Associa- munications Committee, and eLightweight Crew, 150 lb. Foot
ball, and the Quadrangle Club.
tion, Vice-President of the Stu leeted Treasurer of the Freshman
dent Association, UB Delegate to Class Council.
USNSA National Congress.
.

Tony Martino,

lPMWjri|a Alliance):

™

.

Jm

'

cs
vk

™

Joyce Biawitz, freshman, (Campus

Engineering
David

Morris, junior (Campus A1
liance): As a
freshman,
Mr.
Morris attended
The University
of Wyoming
where he was a
member of the
Kappa Sigma
Fraternity, tennis team, and was
elected Secretary-Treasurer of
his freshman class. Mr. Morris is
a member of the junior chapter
of the American Institute of Industrial Engineers, and is presently pledging Alpha Phi Omega.

IO!
'

~

Va

Be-

Alliance):

Ronald Zavodny, junior. Mr. Za
vodny has boon
in
yoars at UB in
t h o following
capacities: Mem.

®F

A

bor of the
■=E nChemical
gineering Club
•r«r
for three years and Secretary
and Treasurer at present; Mem
her of the Engineering Student
Council, holding the office of
Corresponding Secretary of the
Council and Secretary of the
Junior Class.

fore coming to
Buffalo, Miss
Biawitz was active in her high
school Leaders

9

Organization, a
senator for the
Student Council, a representative
for her sophomore class, and Assistant Editor of the yearbook. As
a freshman she is the co-chairman of the Goodyear Scholarship
Committee.

John Calleri, freshman, (United
Students)

Mr.

Calleri, while in
high school,
served as treasurer of his Junior Class, was
"f
*0 W vice president
JKm of the Key Club,
and was president of his graduating class.
'

Education
Marily Schanzer, junior (United

Miss
Schanzer
has
served on the
Union Board, as
Chairman of the
Judges’ CommitStudents):

tee for Spring
Wee kend,
as
President of the Theta Chi Sorority pledge class, on the Personnel Committee, Greek Sing Chairman for her sorority, and Vice-

President tof the House Plan
Council. She is presently a Sen
ator from Education, President
of Theta Chi Sorority, a cheerleader, and the chairman of the
Senate Personnel Committee.

Vote
With
Care

William H. Varney, junior, (CamAlliance);
pus
Mr. Varney was
on Dean’s List

0

kO -ye
'a^1

for the first four

semester,

a

member of the
Business Club,
and Vice-President of his pledge class. He is
now an active member of the
Alpha Kappa Psi Fraternity.
®

Nursing
Doris Hyncik, junior (United Stu
dents): In her
freshman year,
Miss Hyncik
was Vice PresiT«- ’«v\t
dent of her class
a
and
member
of the School of
Nursing Student
Council. Miss Hyncik’s sophomore
activities included: President of
her class, Secretary of the School
of Nursing Student Council, and
President of the Student Council.
■

Clinton E. Deveaux,
(United Students): Mr.

Dc
veaux has participated in the
following activities: Freshman

“We must concentrate on stu-

dent wants and desires on campus
and the methods of obtaining
these wants after prudent consideration of all the implications.
However, our sphere of concern
should expand beyond the bounds
of local campus issues; students
as world citizens should have a
greater consciousness of current
problems and ideas in order to
deal with them more effectively.
President Cohen Speaks of
Senate and Parties

For the three-year period, 1960
1963, the United Students
Party existed as the only political
party on campus. Presently, Peter
Ostrow is party chairman; Allen
Penn, vice-chairman; Sandy Kugel, secretary; and Bill Berger is
treasurer; these four officials
make up the governing committee of the party, and together
with a member of each of the

to

a

Fisch, freshman,

(United

Students): Miss
Fisch is a freshman in University College who
is majoring in
Early Childhood
Eduaction. She
compiled a 2.2
grade point average last semester.
Since attending this University
she has been the Secretary of the
1963-1964 Freshman Class Coun
cil. In high school Miss Fisch was
a Student Council member for
three years and was the Secretary
ol the Student Council in her
senior year. In addition she was
also the Secretary of her Senior

Class.

Natalie Gold, freshman, (Indepen-

■ I.-ill

Mi

(I..Id

member
nf the Debate MBBpffifeffi
Soeiety and In- '«gH|
,MBr
ter
Residence B
Council. PreW
sently, she is a I
.jHr ■
member of the
Freshman Class Council, Chairman of the Activities Committee,
member of a sub-committee in
conjuction with Winter Week,
and is presently working on the
Constitution Revisions Committee. Miss Gold is Vice-President
of Goodyear East, Chairman of
Judicial Board, a member of the
Goodyeaor Co ordinating Council,
member of the Vice-President’s
Council and Goodyear East House
Council.

Michael Cohen, outgoing president of the Student Senate, represented his political organization. “The aim of our party is
to stimulate, activate, and direct
the Student Senate in such a way
that it supplements the educa
tional process of the individual
student. We feel that student gov
ernment should be a voice for
and of the student on issues of
concern to him, whether these
exist on campus, locally, nation
ally, or internationally.

“Our two-party system will 1
most effective, we believe, when
it is stabilized and seen in propc-t
perspective; the second party can
serve as an extra-constitution
check on the Senate. It must bo
kept in mind, however, that the
Senate is primary, and the
parties secondary and not ends in

themselves.
“The

future of

this student

governing body is hard to predict accurately; we do think that
this highly criticized year of
party conflicts over personalities
wll prove somewhat profitable
if it has stabilized parties sufficiently enough to deal with real
issues rather than personalities.”

Scinta, freshman,

Robert

B

plan

.'%imW jk
ga Fraternity.

(Cam-

pus
Alliance);
Mr. Scinta is
member of the
Publicity Committee. House

Heming

■

way House, and

Alpha Phi

Daniel Silber, freshman, (Cai.i;
A 11 i a n c e): In i
high school, Mr.
Silber was ac
government and
was a member

/

%-

of the Varsity
v
Basketball and '
it JR
Tennis teams. He was elected
president of the Manhattan Coun
ci) of high school representatives.
Mr. Silber is presently a member
of the Glee Club, representative
to the Allenhurst Council, and
President of the Freshman Class
He is pledging Sigma Alpha Mu
fraternity.

Vincent M. Smith, fresh.
pus
Mr,
_

•pP

.

•qV vjv®
0

(Cam
Alliance):

was

Smith

active in high
school as a par
tieipant on the
yearbook and
newspaper and

fraternity. He is
pledging Phi Kappa Psi Frater
nity and made Dean’s List in his
first semester.
Trudy Stern, freshman, (United
Students):
In
high school,
Miss Stern was J
m
k
|
active on the
Junior Council
on World AfA
_

Richard Dennis Kronenfeld, freshman,
(Campus
Alliance): M r .
Kronenfeld was
active in high
school as Presi-

BP

'VftjflRl

groups officially alligned with the
party and the candidates themselves, draw up the platform.

University College

Rena

freshman.

Class Council
JW
(Vice-Pres), Student Senate, Senate Convocations
Committee, Union Board House
Committee, House Plan (Poe
House), Debate Society. Mr. Deveaux was very active in high
school. He was Treasurer of his
school, a member of the Human
Relations Workshop, and the Student Activities Committee. Mr.
Deveaux is the recipient of the
New York Cooperation in Government Diploma, B’nai B’rith
and NCCJ Brotherhood Awards,
Board of Education Citizenship
Award (Knights of Pythias), and
he was voted "Student Who Did
Most For the School’ 1 by the Senior Class.

vital role of the second party.
“The effectiveness of the twoparty system can be measured
by the differentation between
petty points versus real issues
in the programs of the Student
Senate; because it is difficult for
a single individual to judge these
matters, it is the responsibility
of the person representing his
party to distinguish between the
real issues and the petty points.

,

CANDIDATES

AP
-O

jA-®’

dent of his
class, President
of Maine Association of Student Councils, and
Vice-President of the school student council. He is an upper
freshman at the University.
Peggy Marano, freshman, (United
Students): Miss

Marano

is

in

regular attendance at Student

1

Major

Staff of yearbook, and was an
editor of the newspaper and
literary magazine. Since coming
to Buffalo, Miss Stern has been
a delegate to the Model Security
Council, a Spectrum reporter, and
editor of the United Students
Newsletter.
Joseph A.

Tringali,

freshtr

WSjltZy,

ings, has served

■—V Sk

man Class Coun-

eil and the
Committee.

*

Winter

Weekend

***

jj

\

man

Fen

i

"TP aA Team, and II
burg Youth Jury Advisory
was chairman of the Win
Weekend Committee.

�</text>
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                    <text>SOUTHEAST ASIA

STATE
.—

,

UNIVERSITY

Ik W?

VOLUME 14

Dr. Thorton Page, professor of astronomy at Wesleyan
University, Connecticut, lectured on “The Extent of the
Universe,” Tuesday afternoon in the Conference Theater.
Dr. Page was the first in a series of five noted scientists
speaking on the theme: “Is Einstein Obsolete?—The
Revolution in Astronomy.” The lectures are sponsored by
the Student Senate Convocations Committee.

Dr. Page started his lecture by
defining the apparent extent of
the universe as including everything we can see or detact the
presence of by radio telescopic
means. Previously he also noted
the use of the photoelectric detectors at the 200-inch reflecting

granted the University

,

position.
Perform publicly in the various concert halls of the region,
but with concentration on the
Albright-Knox auditorium. Concerts will be open to the public
and serve as both laboratory
and terminal points for the
work at the Center.
Teach, when such teaching opportunities would be material
or useful to the growth of an

associate.
The following statement was
made by Mr. Sapp in accepting
the grant: “This generous grant
will strengthen immeasurably a
strong regional. musical scene in
Buffalo. It will demonstrate that
(Cont’d on P. 5)

Special Notices
Are Released By

Election Committee
The following notes on election
proceedings were made by Robert
Pacholski, Chairman of the elections committee, concerning the
upcoming elections.
Graduate students cannot vote

in the elections.

Validated ID cards are the only

ones which will be honored.

Nursing students and upperclass medical students can vote
between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. in
front of the Health Science Library on March 23.
Business Administration and
Nursing students can vote without ID cards, as their names will
be checked against a list that will
be at the voting booth.
If you are voting in Tower or
Goodyear and you are in a division other the University College
or Arts and Sciences, you must
use a general paper ballot. All
the divisional races will be listed,
but you can only vote for the

YORK

AT BUFFALO
CAMPAIGN

MB WT 1M/M
__
_

THORNTON PAGE
Addressing Students
telescope at the Palomar Observa-

tory.

The lecture discussed the methods of measuring intergalactic
distances, the nature of the most
distant galaxies yet discovered,
and how old they are. Alternative
theories were also presented.

Dr. Page is presently on sabbatical leave at the University of
California at Los Angeles. He is
currently

working

on

galaxy

formation, ageing, and death.

Symposium AndLectures To Be Given

A symposium will be held tonight and tomorrow in the Norton Union multi-purpose
room, entitled “Discriminating About Discrimination.” The program has been scheduled to “bring together leaders of different disciplines who are engaged in studying
these issues, and to provide an opportunity for reflection and analysis to suggest further avenues of inquiry and action to be pursued.”
Four speakers, each outstanding in his own field as well as that of social criticism
and commentary, will address the conference and participate in a panel discussion.
the Negro in North and South
America. Dr. Tannenbaum has
taught at Columbia, and has authored several books on the problems of South America, including
Ten Keys to Latin America. The
Ht. Rev. John M. Burgess will
speak at 1:30 on the “ReligionCultural Dynamics in Discrimination
contradictions within the
-

religious community.” Dr. Kitagawa will give the concluding
comments and summary.

Frank Tannenbaum, Historian

Identification and registration
of those students interested in
hearing the symposium Will take
place on the first floor of Norton
opposite the main lounge, and is
necessary for admittance. Admission for students is free; $2.50
for all others.

Beer on Campus, Amer. Studies
Program Discussed by Senate
The sixteenth meeting of the
Student Senate was held in the
multi-purpose room Tuesday evening. A resolution was submitted
by Pat Simpson, Chairman of the
welfare committee, advocating
that “alcoholic beverages be
allowed on campus (specifically in
the Student Union Building).” A

Hawkland Succeeds Hyman
As New Law School Head
William D. Hawkland, professor of law at the University of Illinois, was appointed dean of the Law School
by the State University Board of Trustees.
He replaces Dean Jacob D. Hyman, who last July
asked President Clifford C. Eurnas to accept his resignation sometime before June 30, 1964, so that he could devote more time to “thinking and writing about the law.”

Dean Hawkland’s appointment becomes effective June 1.

document was presented to the
the
body stating
arguments
against the introduction of beer
and/or liquor, primarily to be
served at social functions and
sold in the Rathskellar: the problem of showing proof of age
under state law, and the propriety involved. The two arguments were discounted by offering the use of identification cards
with birth dates imprinted, and
the knowledge that other campuses due serve the beverages
under question.
The advantages of having
liquor on campus was promoted
in the document by quoting from
a letter of a Cornell administrator
who said that Cornell’s “experiences have been nothing but
good.” Miss Simpson's report also
spoke of the profit which might
be reaped from selling liquor, the
return of many social events and

dances onto campus, and the imatmosphere on campus
that the presence of liquor would
stimulate.
After considerable debate on
the issue, which received a mixed
reaction among the Senators, the
Senate voted to seek out student
opinion via a referendum which
will be held along with the Student Senate elections.
proved

“The resignation of Dean Hyman after more than a decade of
service is regretted by the entire
University family,” said President Clifford C, Furnas. “However, in view of his deep commitment to the study of the philosophy and theory of law, we can
appreciate his desir eto be free
from administrative duties so
that he may focus full attention
on teaching and research.
“We have been fortunate, indeed, to have attracted Professor
Hawkiand, a law scholar of the
first rank, to assume the duties
of dean. His background will be
a source of inspiration to students and faculty alike.”
Professor Hawkiand, who holds
the Bachelor of Science and of
Laws from the University of Minnesota, has been in the academic
profession since receiving his
Master of Laws from Columbia
University in 1949. He was assistant professor of law at the
University of Tennessee, 1949-50,
He then joined Temple University, where he was promoted to
associate professor in 1951, and
1954.
Professor
professor in
Hawkiand spent 1956 as visiting
professor at the University o f

NO. 20

Discrimination Program
Following an introduction by
President Furnas, tonight at 8:30,
the Rev. Dr. Daisuke Kitagawa,
will draw on his long experience
as a theologian scholar, and humanitarian, in exploring and expanding the topic “The Kinds
and Patterns of Discrimination
Throughout the World.” Saturday,
the symposium will resume at
10 am. with an address by Dr.
Arnold M. Rose, Professor of
Sociology at the University of
Minnesota, and author of several
books dealing with human relations, behavior, and societies. He
will analyze the varied sources
of discrimination from a psychological and sociological point of
view. Dr. Frank Tannenbaum will
follow at 11:15 with a historical
survey of the social situation of

Creative Center
Established By
Rockefeller Aid

'

NEW

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1964

Capacity Crowd Hears
Page’s Scientific Talk

The Rockefeller Foundation has
of Buffalo
Foundation, Inc. $200,000 to
establish a Center of the performing and creative arts at UB.
The announcement was made
jointly Wednesday, March 11 by
Lukas Foss, director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, and
Aden Sapp, chairman of the Music Department at State University of New York at Buffalo.
The new Center, which will
feature 20 yearly grants to “crealive associates,” will be directed
by Mr. Foss and Mr. Sapp, in
close cooperation with the Albright-Knox Gallery and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. It
is expected that the Center will
begin operation in the fall under
the two-year grant.
The 20 creative associates will:
Study new music, including recent serial and aleatoric com-

OF

William Hawkland, New Dean

which he joined the University of
Illinois.
He is a member of the Order of
the Coif, the Illinois and Minnesota Bar Associations, the American Bar Association, the American Law Institute, Phi Alpha
Delta Legal Fraternity, and the
Editorial Board of the Uniform
Commercial Code, He is also the
author of a number of publica-

American Studies Program
The Senate, by a vote of 20-0-1,
passed a resolution in defense of
the American Studies program, a
major field of study which the
College of Arts and Sciences is
considering to eliminate, said
Jerry Catanzarro, sponsoring the
measure. The resolution considers
the program “in the interest of
the student, the university, and
higher education,” and feared
that "many students who planned
to major in American studies will
be greatly inconvenienced.”
Therefore, the Senate called for a
reconsideration of “any thought
of eliminating" the program and
“the possibility of expanding its
interdepartmental programs into
many other areas as circum-

stances warrant.”
By the same vote as that which
passed the basic resolution, the
Senate voted that the Executive
Committee be free to act accord-

strengthening
ready

the

position

al-

taken.

Finance Committee
The Senate passed the recommendation of the finance commit
tee to allocate $85 to the astronomy club.
Recognition of Political Parties

Fran Biletsky, Chairman of the
Activities Committee, made a
motion to recognize the Campus
Alliance Party and the United
Students Party. Until March 24,
the two parties are able to act
and use Norton facilities under a
temporary recognition which had
been granted them by the administration. Robert Feldman,
Senator from A, &amp; S. spoke
against the motion on the basis
that the parties are different
from other groups and need not
have the same recognition, and
also raised the question of the
adviseability of having parties
recognized at all. Jerry Catanzarro supported Mr. Feldman’s
remarks on the grounds that
“parties perpetuate
this body
(Senate) and no body should
recognize, per se, groups of this
nature."

Miss Biletsky countered these
remarks by hoping that students
would be able to control party
recognition on a fair basis, and
also supiported the motion on the
basis of having student control
via the Activities Committee
rather than administrative control, a compromise measure which
Robert Pacholski suggested. The
debate came to a vote which defeated the measure, 3-10-3.
Macneil Mitchell Bill
Jeremy Taylor called upon the
Senate to discuss the bill which
would create a state advisory
committee to advise and control
state campuses on guest lecturers
Mr. Taylor did so “with the hope
that it (the bill) will be condemned.” The Senate discussion
concerned the adviseability of
discussing the bill at all, and, before a quorom call ended the
session, Robert Pacholski spoke of
the danger of having such a discussion as “the thing that will
help defeat” the Senate’s ultimate
goal, the defeat of the Macneil
Mitchell bill. The next Senate

�PACE TWO

Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

Dr. Alvis Named to Med. Staff; Tasks of Today-Tomorrow'
Will Set Up Hyperbaric Center Theme of Golden Festivities
The Board of Trustees of State University last week
approved the appointment of Dr. Harry J. Alvis, as research associate professor in preventive medicine at State
University at Buffalo
Dr. Alvis will establish at the University the first information center on hyperbaric medicine in the world.
The Center is one aspect of a comprehensive research

and training center in hyperbaric
medicine which has been proposed by three area organizations,
The announcement of the overall program was made by Dr.
Douglas M. Surgenor, dean of the
Medical School at State Univertioy at Buffalo, who said that the
Veteran’s Administration and the
Union Carbide Corporation, Linde
Division, are co-developers of the
program.
Dr. Alvis will also supervise a
proposed high pressure chamber
at the Buffalo V.A. Hospital as
well as participate in the educational programs sponsored by the
Center.
A Captainytfi the U.S. Navy
Medical Corps., Dr. Alvis has had
wide experience with hyperbaric
research as it relates to submarine habitability and escape problems. He is a graduate of the
State University of Iowa School
of Medicine, and holds a Masters
degree in Public Health from the
Harvard School of Public Health.
Hyperbaric Medicine Program
Hyperbaric medicine involves
medical surgical treatment in
pressurized chambers.
Dean Surgenor indicated that
the proposed plan will consist of
three basic elements:
1. An advanced hyperbaric research and treatment unit
which is proposed for installation at the Veteran’s Administration Hospital and would be
used for the investigation and
development of human treatment methods for a variety of
medical conditions.
2. A world wide information center on hyperbaric medicine with
a staff of more than six people would collect, organize,
evaluate, and disseminate information related to all aspects
of the field. This would be the
only center specifically for this
purpose in the world.

DR. HARRY J. ALVIS
of postgraduate
seminars which
will enable established physicians and scientists in this area
to exchange information and

3. A program
courses and

develop new proposals.
In explaining the background
events which have led to the proposed establishment of the facilities, Dean Surgenor said, “During the past five years, the University’s internationally famous
Department of Physiology, has
been working under a research

grant from the Office of Naval
Research. The Department already has pressure chambers and
several specialized laboratories
staffed by highly qualified personnel. These facilities will continue to develop basic physiological experiments to be used in portions of the educational program
and in support of the new clinical research.
“For example, the Department
has developed an extensive high
pressure laboratory which is
staffed with specialized profes-

HELP WANTED
"Girl Friday” for busy executive part time work appearance, personality, imagination, drivers license of prime im-

portance -should be able to type

-

prefer
art ability helpful
sophomore or junior class must be stated send photo and
resume with statement as to why you think you are well qualified for a position of this type. Mail to Home Beautiful,
Amherst P. 0. Box No. 2667, Zip No. 14226.
*

-

-

-

*

CATHAY GARDEN
512 Niagara Falls Blvd.
)

MINUTES DRIVE FROM UB
•

POLYNESIAN—CHINESE
AMERICAN FOOD
EXPERTLY PREPARED

TAKE OUT ORDERS
TF 7-3444
Also Featuring

EXOTIC DRINKS
Luncheon
11:00 A.M.-3:30 P.M.
REASONABLE PRICES

Dinner
4:00 P.M.-9 P.M.
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

Graduates from the College of
Arts and Sciences at UB will
hear three addresses at special
dinners during the 50th Anniversary observance, April 3-12.
ical research. This will insure
Following the theme, “Tasks
the safety of patients and personof Today and Tomorrow,” the annel involved in the advanced niversary will be observed sepclinical research programs to be arately by graduates in the social
developed with the new facilisciences, physical and biological
ties.
sciences, and humanities, repre“At the V.A. Hospital, which is senting the major areas of study
affiliated
with
the Medical in the College. Each observance
School, a highly skilled team of will begin at 5:30 p.m. with
dinner in the Faculty Club folcardiac surgeons have an outlowed by an address at 8:30 p.m.
standing research program unin Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall.
derway which has a direct relationship to hyperbaric treatment. Award citations will be presented
to outstanding alumni at the
Also, the research and engineering development laboratories of dinners.
A concert by the University’s
the Linde Division are in Buffalo. The company has been an Chorale and Glee Club, directed
by Robert S. Beckwith, assistant
outstanding pioneer in the research, engineering, design and professor of music, and the conmanufacture of equipment for the cert band, directed by Frank J,
Cipolla, assistant professor of muhealth sciences. A variety of clinical research programs are being sic, in Kleinhans Music Hall at
carried out in the University’s 8:00 p.m., April 12, will conclude
the anniversary activities. A disother affiliated hospitals, including the Buffalo General Hospital, play at the Faculty Club will
honor active faculty members
the Children’s Hospital, the Edward J. Meyer Memorial Hospital,- who have teaching for 25 years
and the Millard Fillmore Hospi- or more in the College of Arts
tal.”
to
sional personnel
carry out the complex planning
of procedures for hyperbaric mednecessary

Dr. Surgenor also emphasized

that “faculty members at all Uni-

versity-affiliated hospitals would
have access to the Center which
is proposed for location at the
V.A. Hospital and the Medical
School.

“Officials at Millard Fillmore
Hospital, who recently announced
plans for installation of a hyper-

baric chamber, have indicated
that facility will fully cooperate
with the University program. It
is anticipated that Millard Fill(Cont’d. on Pg. 11)

U-IUJI

and Sciences.
The program includes:
April 3—Social Sciences (history
and political sciences, anthro-

pology, philosophy, psychology,

and economics, education, and

geography)
Speaker: Kenneth W. Thompson, vice president, Rockefeller

Foundation

April 4—Physical and Biological
Sciences (biology, chemistry,
geology, mathematics, and physics)
Speaker: John Tuzo Wilson,
professor of geophysics, University of Toronto
April 11—Humanities (arts and

music,

classics,

drama

College Pizzeria
FREE DELIVERY
TF 2-9331

’

V111J lullO

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
G00DS ST0RE
LEATHER
0

ATTACHE CASES BRIEF CASES
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
,

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Courtesy Discounts

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and

speech, English, and modern
languages)
Speaker: John H. Finley, Jr.,
Eliot professor of Greek literature and Master of Eliot House,
Harvard University

to

University Faculty and Students

(Opposite UB)

TF 3-1600

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till 9 P.M.

,

�Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Freshman Council Sponsors LIB Blood Drive Success Story;
Lecture Series On Campus Red Cross Turns Away 100
+

The Freshman Class Council,
in co-ordination with
the freshmen dormities, has been
sponsoring a series of lectures,
Uven by outstanding professors
working

on campus.
The first was held in March,
and featured Dr. Ebert as the
guest lecturer. Speaking on career

opportunities in the field of geoDr. Ebert broke his talk

graphy,

UB UN Delegation
Receives Awards
A delegation from Syracuse
University and a student at the
University of Western Ontario
have received top awards at St.
Lawrence University’s 16th Model United Nations Security Coun-

Named the outstanding delegation at the council was the Syracuse team of Ken Auletta, Ronald Mittleman and Alvin Davis,
which represented the Kingdom
of Morocco in the three-day session.

John Williams of the University of Western Ontario, representing the Kingdom of Norway,
was named the outstanding delegate. Mr. Williams, teaming with
Ruth Anne MeLellan, also gained a special commendation as
a delegation, as did the State
University of New York at Buf-

falo team of Robert Pacholski,

Trudy Stern and Les May, representing the United States of
Brazil.

Mr. Pacholski

earned

special

commendation as a delegate, as
into three main categories: Geography: The Discipline; Geography: The Profession; and The
Geographer. He pointed out the
increasing concern and need for
more advanced teachnology in
this field and the various branches which comprise it.
Dr. Barnett will be the next
speaker included in this forum.
He will speak during the first
week in April.
Smoking Clinic
The Council has also been discussing the possibility of holding a smoking clinic on campus.
It would be open to the university students, and perhaps the
city of Buffalo. They would like
to invite several prominent men
in the area to speak on the subject of smoking and cancer.
It should be stressed that the
purpose of the Freshman Class
Council is to co ordinate activities and handle the problems of
the freshman class. Meetings are
held every Tuesday, at 6:00 p.m.
in the Conference Theatre. They
are open to all freshmen and
their attendance and interest in
the" Council is desired.

did Peter D, Dimancescu of Dartmouth College, representing the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
Named outstanding delegation
aid was Penelope Ann Whitten,
a St. Lawrence sophomore from
Huntington. Laurie J. Lycan, a
sophomore from Spokane, Wash.,
was given special commendation
as a delegate aid.

on
University College students
whose last names
begin with
the letters designated below will
see their advisers on the following days:
March 23 through March 27—S
March 30 through April 3—C.'
D
Ap—ril 6 through April 10—F,
W. Z
April 13 through April 17—A,
—

H
Q,

April 20 through April 24—G
April 27

1—P,

through May

R

May 4 through May 8—E, I,
N, 0, T, U, V, X, Y
Students will make an appointment with the receptionist in
Diefendorf 114 one week in ad-

vance of the above scheduled
times. Students who do not make
their appointments at the schednr(ri

&amp;ClU
¥

AnpTM

LmaJL ill
AlllirDirA

AMERICA

uled times or who do not keep
them when made will be required
to register in Clark Gym on Registration Day in September,
Students on Strict Academic
Probation can not register during
scheduled times. They are encouraged to see their advisers,
however, if they wish to do so.

Carmen’s Barber
Shop

Home of the

so.

Proprietor;
Carmen Cavorsi
Appointments
IF 4-9227

1088 Kensington Ave.
(Just off Bailey Ave

-

5 min. from Campus)

How much do you know about Latin /\ 140-PAGE
i' me a About the Alliance for Prog- pcpnpT
ress? Are Yanquis to blame for Latinos' nnrn nrr ,
shortcomings? What does the Moscow- PREPARED FOR
Peking split mean to Lima, Caracas, TIME’S PUBLISHER
Managua? Can free enterprise cope | S AVAILABLE
"
8ger,nB P
™

’

,

of the questions that
TIME'S Special Correspondent John
Scott set out last summer to answer
HOF firsthand. "How Much Progress?" is
vIjAJOIj the result -a 140-page report to
TIME'S publisher.. It is the twelfth in
a series of annual studies Scott, has
been making for TIME, analyzing major
political, economic and social developments throughout the world.
“How Much Progress?” also includes a
comprehensive bibliography and comparative tables on Latin American population, GNP, exports, prices, monetary stability, U.S. investments, and

Tjp These are some

Ui

PT

food production.

A copy of Scott's report on Latin America is available to students and educators with our compliments. Write
TIME Special Report
Box 834, Rockefeller Center
New York, N.Y.T0020

TO COLLEGE
STUDENTS AND
EDUCATORS

The most successful Blood
Drive of UB’s history, sponsored
by the Arnold Air Society, AFROTC, took place March 5th in
Harriman Library. It was so successful that over 100 people had
to be turned away by the Red
:
staff.
For many, it was their first
experience in giving blood. The
first time you give blood, the
procedures and reactions general
ly follow a pattern:
It all started in Norton, where
a table was set up with signs advertising the Red Cross. You walk
over and, before you know it,
you have signed several forms
pledging to give away a pint of
your blood. Most people who
want to donate are under 21,
and leave with a parental consent
slip which the parent must sign
before the donation can be made.
The next scene is in Harriman
where you arrive at the appointed
hour. There is a mile-long line
in front of you, but you finally
reach the desk. A nurse takes
your consent slip and fills out
a large white card which she
staples to the consent slip before sending you inside, where
you are directed to another nurse.
About this time you get scared.
This nurse sits you down and
gives you a glass of juice. Next
she sticks a thermometer in your
mouth—leaving it there for five
minutes. Not being able to talk,
your tension mounts. She records your temperature on the
card, takes your pulse, and records that in turn. Finally, she
records your weight then you
are back in line.
When you reach the end of
this line you are seated at a
little table. There is a nurse at
this table, too! There are so many
nurses around, it is no wonder
you are shaking. This nurse records your blood pressure. Next
she pricks your finger with a
pin, like you were a voodoo doll.

She takes some blood and tests it
for iron content. All the time
she is asking questions: “Did you
have an operation in the past six
months? Have you ever had hepatitis?. . .
When she is finished
with you, you are sent to another
table where you hand your card
to the doctor. He looks at it and
decides whether or not you may
donate . . . Just you luck—they’ll
take a quart! The doctor sends
you to still another desk.
You hand them the card and
they hand you the little plastic
bag and tubing wherein your
blood will flow. Then you wait
in line until it is your turn. Here
you really start to worry. The
line dwindles and soon you are
first in line.
The nurse calls "Next", and
you walk in to sit on the table.
She rolls up your sleeve, and

swabs your arm with alcohol and
then iodine. She lays you down
on the table and hooks up the
apparatus. The most frightening
part comes when you see that
two-inch needle heading for your
arm. But after the needle is inserted, everything is alright. You
just lie there for the next 15
minutes while your blood flows
out of your body; it is really an
eerie feeling. After your bag
is full, the nurse unhooks it.
After it is all over you sit
down and have some coffee and
cookies. Now that you have gone
through it, you realize it isn't
that bad; and because that 14
year old boy successfully underwent open-heart surgery the next
day, you feel all the better. In
your own way you were making

it possible, regardless of your
blood type.

836-9490

UPPER
LEVEL

—

3199 Main

St.

ST. PATRICK’S DAY PARTY

Including

a

Bond

SUN., MARCH 22 from 5:00 P.M.
,

No Price Increases

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�ON
CIVIL RIGHTS

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR ELECT

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Feature Editor
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MARTIN D. KRIEGEL

By

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Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray Crawford, Jane
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A
PRESS

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Entered as second class matter February 9, 1961, at the Post
Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of postage provided for in
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951.
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1964

SPOTLIGHT

SPECTRUM

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

March 20,

Advertising

N. Y.

Editorial

Almost a week has elapsed
since the resident students have
returned to campus (or Allen
hurst); yet, traces of sadness
from recent farewells to dear
friends remain. True friendship
between human beings is a rich
prize, and can usually only be
achieved through long contact
and genuine understanding. These
two fundamental ingredients for
true intimacy make the integration of the public schools imperative.
In his essay The University of
Utopia, Robert Hutchins stresses
the need for the development of
a common basis of communica-

tion between the individuals of

a society. All of the efforts of
a childs’ early education are directed toward this end. Although
Mr. Hutchins is primarily concerned with intellectual pursuits,
the exigency for social communication is evident. The want of

free

The Upcoming Election:
The Student Senate has received more publicity the
past year than any in the past. It has been severely criticized from many quarters, not excluding its own, and for
all its accomplishments and failures the Senate has grown
considerably. Many more persons have attended its recent meetings and have discussed the nature of student
government as well as the personalities who have been
involved with the Senate.

Wednesday and Thursday elections will be held to
choose a new Senate. Though The Spectrum has stated
its definition of student government before, we feel it is
necessary again to offer our conception of the nature and
responsibility of the institution. For this, we have put
aside our frustration with the present leadership: for
otherwise we would almost be compelled to speak out for
the end of an inactive and irresponsible group. It should
also be noted that the Senate is not a totally innocuous
body, because in maligning the idealism which should be
a part and parcel of student government, a poor Senate
does an injustice to, and harms, what interested students
are concerned with deeply.
First, student government is a part of us all until
that time when it desists. If a student does not vote in an
election,
still cannot disqualify himself from the consequences which follow from those who do gain office.
And, though the Student Senate is not really a representational body (in that we do not recognize “constituents,”
though candidates often use that word) it acts as such.

The Senate should be the defense to which everyone
can turn. It should protect the campus from the beaurocratic nature of the University and from any impingements upon freedom from without. As a body, it should
do real work, confronting persons and issues who have
no proper role (though they may possess authority) to
invade the privacy of our halls. (Yes, even if those halls
are publicly financed.
The leadership role of the Senate should be pushed
to its fullest potential. It is, after all, the conscience as
well as the standard bearer, and as such should speak
out on any number of things which it has until now
avoided. The body should develop a tradition of principles, and, of course, act accordingly. Often, cynics regard civil rights and political pronouncements by groups
such as the Senate as meaningless, if not with outright
disdain. However, speak one must; and what is more important and overlooked is that the Senate can initiate ac-

tivity. An educated “elite” cannot afford to be amoral,
and the Senate should be involved in the problem of integrating Buffalo schools, raising money for the disin-

herited miners of southeastern Kentucky, and so on. Perhaps the Senate should influence University policy
if it
would be interested in social action, it might affect the
administration to add a special requirement for graduacommunity service
tion for all students in the form
project. (For example, a Spanish major should be required to tutor Puerto Rican students to learn English.)
The last year has offered no indication of what can
be done. The political platforms which appear in today’s
issue are not encouraging in themselves because we cannot digest such cliche ridden dotuments without questioning the sincerity of those persons who wrote them.
We can only avoid the bind that we are in, then by voting for persons who despite party affiliation show promise to act as we welcome it. Everyone, do not merely look
at the candidates when they approach you; question
them i

LEONARD GERSON

intercourse

between

the

light and dark skinned groups
in our nation is the greatest bar.
rier to integration.

The American Negro came to
these shores not as an immigrant
seeking religious freedom or a
new livelihood but as a slave.
Even after his liberation he has
remained the most deprived and
persecuted group in our nation.
This difference in background
and circumstance has caused him
to develop a culture that is distinct from that of the Caucasians
in many respects and one that
cannot be readily comprehended.
The only way by which the rest
of the population can acquire a
genuine understanding of their
Negro countrymen is by living
with them, and to a child such
an opportunity is presented in
school.

Due to the prevalent situation
of segregated housing facilities,
the sole method of bringing the
children together in most large
urban areas is by bussing. The

most frequent objection to

such

its enactment
would result in the abolishment
of school districts. I have yet to
discover any inherent value in
this system. In a previous era
it might have seemed to be a
perfect arrangement, but there
has been a drastic change in
thought and attitude recently. We
are confronted with the crucial
question of whether the advantages of immediate accessibility
to a school should allow us to
continue
the
separation and
alienation of two significant segments of our population?
a

plan

is

that

There is no simple or all inclusive answer to this problem.
The intellectual development of
our youth should be of primary
concern; however, the social development of our children and
their ability to communicate com.
fortably and intelligently with
their peers should receive grave
consideration. Although the stu
dent body of the University of
Buffalo may not be directly affected by this situation, as conscientious citizens and future
parents we should all open our
minds and search for a practical
solution.

rjCetterA to the

Editor

American Studies Issue
sonal experience, my Sophomore
year was one of uncertainty and
This letter is concerned not
confusion; I was equally interest
only with current and prospeced in English and history majors;
tive American Studies majors,
but also with those members of American Studies has satisfied
the faculty and administration both df my interests.
who., in recognizing the educaOne of the chief complaints
tional value of this inter-departvoiced against the American
mental program, are in opposiStudies program by the special
tion to its possible abolishment.
committee which has been esTo the students presently entablished to review the facts and
rolled in this fine liberal arts pass a
life or death sentence,
say
program, I need
nothing of
apparent lack of method
is
the
to
undergradits importance, both
of study. This claim is an invalid
uate students and to those anone, because the American Sin
ticipating graduate work
in
dies program has not one but
American History or literature. two
methods of study. It is our
Those of us who have sought out,
objective to approach American
and chosen this field of study, history
from a literary point of
(for true, it is a poorly publicized
view, and American literature
program and is thus over looked
from an historical point of view!
by many potentially interested
students) have been rewarded
To those Of the special com
mittee who maintain that there
by an inter departmental selecis no necessity for such a pro
tion of fascinating intellectual
gram on the undergraduate level
variey. We realize, and- appreciate, that the large number of I ask only: What is more essen
tial than a thorough knowledge
historical and-, contemporary
of one's own country, not merely
books which we absorb and disfrom the viewpoint of a dry hiscuss in seminar groups has not
tory text, but from the vivid and
only given us a broad foundation
perceptive pens of our most outon which to continue our studies
standing literary geniuses? .
of American history, literature,
philosophy, and culture, but has
We who have enjoyed the privi
also given us excellent pre-gradlege of majoring in American
uate school training. Specifically,
Studies appeal to those of you
a 1963 American Studies graduwho have an interest not only in
ate, winner of the Woodrow Wilthe continuance of this fine pro
son Scholarship, has reported
gram, but who also want to see
that in his graduate studies at
the purpose of liberal arts carried
the University of Pennsylvania, to its fullest extent, to express
he actually finds much repetithis interest in the form of let
tion of those courses which were
ters to Dean Albrecht, dean of
taken on the Junior and Senior
the School of Arts and Sciences
level at U.B.!
If this program is allowed to be
To those of you who, as Sophoabolished, the very motto of our
mores, are presently considering university, “Let each become all
an American Studies major, and
he is capable of being,” will be
I know you represent a sizable
come no more than a farce!
number,. I sincerely hope the proBarbara Strauss
gram will continue. Frpm per- Jr., American Studies
TO THE EDITOR

.

THE

Photography Staff:

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

-

—

All candidates for
the Senate and Student
Association offices are
requested to have their
pictures taken today.
The pictures which
were taken earlier
were not satisfactory
and everyone is asked
to return to The Spectrum office at 3 :00 this
afternoon.

Poor Show at Basketball
TO THE

EDITOR.
Saturday night (Feb. 29th) UB
basketball fans put on the worst
exhibition of unsportsmanlike
conduct I have ever witnessed
at an intercollegiate sporting

event. Their actions discredited

our university, our basketball
team and personally embarrassed

Coach Serfustini.
U.B. students littered the court
With programs and other debris
in the closing minutes of the
game, and caused the officials
to halt the game, until it was

cleaned up. Their littering ceas
ed only after Coach Serfustim
shamed them into submission.
I'm sure many of us still re
member Fred Lewis, whenevei
we hear the name Syracuse and
the disgraceful show he put on
in Clark Gym in 1962. Let’s not
have the name of our university
associated with mannerless fans
but rather fans that can appreci
ate an all-out effort by both

teams.

Sincerely,

Lance Hannes

�Friday, March 20, 1964

PAGE

SPECTRUM

Alaska Wildlife'
Film Sponsored

The Circus
By BOB MILCH

To the nominating committees
of the Campus Alliance and the
United Students Parties:
While the honor is dubious, I
been priviledged to know
the contents of many of the
interviews which the Spectrum
editorial board has conducted
with your parties’ candidates.
Wishing it were any other way,
the only feeling I have after the
most difficult digestion of these
unpleasant facts is indignant revulsion.
have

True, some of the candidates
were intelligent, informed, and
conscientious. True some were
a bit nervous. True, some were

most cooperative and pleasant.

BUT, I very much resent your
nominating a person for an Ex-

ecutive Committee position who
never even skimmed through
Student Association constitution.
I very much resent your nominating a candidate for the student senate who doesn’t even
know what the initials NSA stand
for, let alone what the organization does. I very much resent
your nominating a candidate for
the student senate who does not
know what the organs of the Student Association are, much less
what they do.
has

By Geog.Frafernify

I am indignant that
nomineees for the student senate
have never been to a student
senate meeting. I am indignant
that nominees for the student
senate do not know the scope
of student senate authority, delegated. or assumed. I am indignant
that nominees for the student

with the best music of the past.
Stimulated by the total range of
the University scene, the 20 Creative Associates will be a community of artists working in
unique
series and in parallel
in American University and metropolitan life.
“One of the most significant
aspects of the Center will be its
—

bringing
together performers,
scholars, and composers. Released

from daily pressures and encouraged to develop their own
strengths, the Creative Associates
will be a concrete expression of
a new order of University support
for the arts.”
Six key objectives have been
outlined for the Center:
To bring together young professional musicians so that they
may evolve to artists of breadth
and catholic experience.
To strengthen and expand the
intercultural relationships between performing groups and
the academic community.
To provide a stable economic base
for young musicians at a period
when they are most eager to
play demanding music but
when they have the fewest
number of opportunities.
To create a special combination
of musical persons of varying

backgrounds so that parochial
technical barriers break down
and wiser and more literate
careers can evolve.
To provide the optimal climate
for the study and performance
of new music, and an atmosphere of professional playing,
study, analysis, and criticism.
To produce useful research and
records by means of the Center’s work, possibly leading to
publication in musical journals
or to recordings.
“The project was born out of a
conviction that the young professional musican in general, and
the performer in particular, needs
musical guidance and financial
help at the critical moment when
he is just out of school, lest he

KCHCCTIOMS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

Moreover,

senate are

running,

to

para-

several replies, because
they were approached by party
leaders and asked if they'd like
to, or told that they had a good
chance if they did run.

phrase

Finally, the tact that a nominee
would have the unmitigated gall
to come to an interview not even
knowing what party he represented, and then ask “Isn't it
on my resume” is beyond reasonable comprehension.
Perhaps it's a bit of undisillusioned idealist that prompts me
to this position; I should think
that common sense, ‘if not a feeling of responsibility to the students you hope to have your

nominees represent would promto a similar feeling.

pt you

Perhaps you’re staring “what’s

wrong with student government”
right in the eye; too bad it’s too
late, again, to do something about

it.

Resignedly,
Bob Milch

Ideals Set Forth by Dr. Sapp
For Musical Center Grant
(Continued from Page 1)
Gallery, Philharmonic Society,
and University can and do work
toward common objectives. Young
musicians whom we shall assemble within the Center will have
an opportunity to explore freely
the new musical resources of our
time and retain an active contact

FIVE

The Department of Geography
in conjunction with Alpha Beta
Chapter of Gamma Theta Upsilon, national professional geographic fraternity, is presenting
a special film entitled Alaska

I have just finished reading the
party platforms for the coming
election. 1 am stunned. I am
also incredibly disappointed. It
seems a shame that our student
leaders can think of nothing else
Wildlife Adventure next Wedto say: “We oppose undo (misnesday, Mar. 25th. It will be nar
spelling Campus Alliance's, not
rated by Mr. Frank Koufel in mine)
state interference in stuDiefendorf 146 at 8:30 p.m. The
",
believe the
program is open to the public dent affairs or "We secure
pubadministration should
and there is no charge for adlic library cards for all resident
mission.
. . ." (United Students).
Mr. Koufel was graduated from students
Really: These incredibly courathe formerly combined Depart
written statement of Geology and Geography geous and well
at the University of Buffalo. He ments make no mention of the
Act, the proposed Macspent the next several years Feinberg
teaching in Alaska where much Neil Mitchell Bill, the question
of academic freedom, the inadeof his spare time was devoted
to hunting and filming Alaskan quate counseling facilities, affiliwith NSA, and numerous
wildlife. The result of his interest ating unimportant
items.
other
color
he
will
is the
film which
Both parties are supporting the
present. It has been acclaimed
right of national fraternities -to
by several Western New York
.remain affiliated and neither
naturalists.
party makes any statement what-

Faculty Children;
Egg-Roll Contest
The Annual Easter

Egg Hunt

sponsored by the Recreation
Committee of Union Board for
the faculty's children will take
place on Sunday, March 22, at
2:00 on Baird Field. About 75
children will participate in the
egg hunt. Giant chocolate Easter
Bunnies will be given as awards
to those children finding the most

lose himself in a commercial
situation,” Mr. Foss said.
A keen apprentice conductor

who is anxious to study new music will be sought to act as a
“catalytic agent” in the Center’s
activities. He will be given an opportunity to conduct the Buffalo
Philharmonic as well as various
chamber groups.
“Once out of school the young
musician, who until that moment
had thought of serving music,
finds himself in a situation where
he must think of music as serving
him,” Mr. Foss said.
“He often has a family to support, and we can hardly blame
him if his sole concern from one
moment to the next becomes a
search for a well paying job. I
could name here dozens of extraordinarily gifted men who never
enjoyed the fruits of their labor,

who never found themselves,
who sold out to what I called
previously the commercial situation.”
Mr. Sapp indicated that “creative associate” is a term developed by analogy to “research associate.” It implies a musician of
articulated professional abilities,
possibly post-doctoral, in the case
of the critic or musicologists,
who might or might not gain

some teaching experience. They
would, however, have all the resources of a fully developed
University, of a major Symphony
Orchestra sympathetic to the
creative arts, and a cultural
milieu focused on the contemporary scene.
The Center will operate along
lines similar to those of the
Society of Fellows, or of the Niemann Foundation, both of Har-

vard. As creative associates of
UB, they would be essentially unrestricted in pursuing educational
and artistic objectives.
“They will have an excellent
base of operations from which to
penetrate the musical life of the
city and region,” Mr. Sapp said.
“They will be available as a
cadre for workshops, experiment
ensembles, and as resident and
touring groups for in-school performances. In addition, they will
provide for the promotion and
realization for the performance of
special works with the orchestra,
which are not now possible in
this area,” he said.

eggs. Refreshments

will be served in the Multi-Purpose Room
for the faculty and their children. In case of bad weather, the
egg hunt will be held in the
Multi-Purpose Room in Norton.
The Recreation Committee is
sponsoring the hunt with the aid
of Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity.

Pre-Registration for

Juniors and Seniors

College of Arts and
Sciences: April 6-8

All juniors and seniors in the College of
Arts and Sciences who
plan to return in the
Fall of 1964 must reregister between Monday, April 6 and Wednesday, April 8. Students may pick up
their pre-registration
materials in front of
the Bursar’s Office in
Hayes Hall between 9
a.m. and 4 p.m. on
Monday, April 6, Tuesday, April 7, and Wed-

nesday, April 8.
Any student who
fails to pre-register at

this time must wait
until September: After
picking up their preregistration cards, students must clear their
accounts at the Bursar’s Office and have
their blue card stamped, before completing
pre-registration at the
Office of Admissions
and Records.
Students who are
not certain that they
will return, in September should pre-register
anyway, since it will
be simpler to cancel
registration than to
register late.

soever on what principles of stu-

dent government they plan to
function under. In the morass of
personal conflicts and egO gratifications, it is difficult to find
any one to support for office.
The following is a list of the few
people I can support in good conscience: (1) Bob Finklestein for
President; Mr. Finklestein is in
telligent and, I believe, sincere
in his desire to improve student
government. His party platform
(U.S.) is weak, but I have found
Mr. Finklestein to be strong and
thoughtful in his dealings on the
tor
senate, (2) Bob Feldman
Vice-President; Mr. Feldman is a
good man in my opinion and has
the courage of his convictions.
He has carried himself witth dignity and a candor which was uncommon in our last senate. (3)
Clint Devaux for senator of U.C.;
Mr. Devaux is concerned with

making the senate a responsible
and representative body of student concerns. He has also worked in the past to offset the
mood of compromise and ego
mania which prevailed in the last
senate. (4) Henry Simon for
Senator of A. and S:; Mr. Simon
is a man of great intelligence and
personal integrity. His efforts

have been tireless and fruitful in
the past and his insight into problems of the campus and beyond
is precise and his actions have
always been those of a sincere
and courageous man. My only
reservation on his candidacy is
that he is too good for our present student senate and I would
hate to see him waste his time
on it when he could be doing a

number of other

important

and

gratifying things, however, since
he has announced his candidacy,
I can only give it my sincerest
and most wholehearted support.
Unfortunately, there are no
others. I am not familiar with

every candidate, but those several
others with whom I am familiar,
I cannot support. My distrust for
the campus political parties is
profound but my distrust for Mi
chael Schapiro's Alliance Party
is much greater than my distrust
for
Finklestein's United Students. Therefore I am placed in
an odd position; I cannot support
I don’t think
a party ticket
that student government should
be turned over to any political
machine, but I would also hate
to see the Alliance have the whip
so, I can
hand in the senate
only say, when in doubt, vote
U.S.; your chances of putting a
knave or a fool in office are a
little less that way.
Finally I would like to take a
parting shot at the present senate
for their incredibly cofrupt and
inept term of office and say that
their failure to include a referendum on the Feinberg Issue,
the proposed MacNeil Michell
Bill, and the question of reinviting Herbert Apthecker before the
State Senate passes on the Mitchell Bill is just another example
of the incredible poverty of ideals
which is the rule of the past senate with the few acceptions I
have noted of those running for
re-election and a few others like
Jerry Catanzaro and Dan Shubert.
In closing I can only wish that
there would be some provision in
the voting procedure for voting
against a candidate other than
voting for him in most cases
equally innane opponent. It also
seems to me that a write-in campaign would be in order for some
of the offices, but this too is il
legal. The campus politicians
have once again stiffled the few
attempts to bring a few more students into the political arena.
The “elite", as well as being
small, is very exclusive. I can
only hope that this year the few
good students who will (I hope)
be elected will be able to maintain their sense of perspective
and not be sucked into that very
elite the way I believe, for example, A1 Epstein was the past
year. So, get out and vote for
good people and hope that the
current trend toward mediocrity,
self aggrandisement, and backroom compromise will be reversed by the people we put into
office.
—

—

Statler-Hilton: Site of Annual
SpringClinical Day-Tomorro w
More than 500 doctors, including 50 from as far away as California—, South Dakota and West
Virginia, have reserved places at
the 27th Annual Spring Clinical
Day, March 21 at the Statler Hilton Hotel. , The Clinical Day is
sponsored by the UB Medical

Alumni Association.

According to Dr. Charles E.
Wiles, president of the Association, both the junior and senior
classes at the Medical School
have been invited to the noon
luncheon and the Clinical Day
program at the Statler.
Highlight of the program will
be the Stockton Kimball Memorial Address which will be delivered by Dr. Ernest Witebsky,
distinguished professor and head
of bacteriology and immunology.
His topic will be “Autosensitization and Autoimmune Diseases.”
Speakers and topics at the
morning session include:
Dr., Oliver P. Jones, professor
and head of anatomy, Electron

Microscopic Approach to Jielatology;” Dr. Dexter S. Levy, associate clinical professor of medicine, “Some Uncommon Cardiac

Lesions;” Dr. John D. Stewart,
professor of surgery, “The Surgical Treatment of Gastroduodenal
An Appraisal;” and Dr.
Ulcer
David K. Miller, professor of medicine, “Boeck’s Sarcoid.”
Speakers and topics for the afternoon session:
Dr. Samuel Sanes, associate professor of legal medicine, "The
Pathologist’s Role in Identification;” and Dr. Erwin Neter, associate professor in pediatrics,
“Problems of Urinary Tract In—

fections,”
In conjunction with the Spring
Clinical Day, a symposium is

scheduled during the afternoon
of Friday, March 20. The Buffalo
Chapter of the American College
of Surgeons will sponsor a trauma program from 2:00-5:00 p.m.,
discussing cases from local hospitals, with a question session to
follow.

�Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Welcome Back Week
Sponsored by Tower
W

The Tower House Council is
honored and pleased to announce
that Mr. Banji Owolla has accepted an invitation to appear
at “A Night in Reno” this Friday night Mar. 20th to be held
in the Tower Residence Hall.
Mr. Owolla and his companions
have just returned from a cross
country trip. Owolla, formerly a

extra highlight to this extravaganza. The gambling will take
place from 8-11 p.m. and the floor
show will start at 11 p.m. in the
cafeteria. There will be prizes.
All contributions will be donated
to charity.

of New York, San Francisco, and
Los Angeles with his authentic

The Tower House Council is
also sponsoring a Saturday Night
at the Tower Movie, Saturday,
March 21, starting at 7:30 p.m.
in the Tower Cafeteria,

So try your luck this Friday
night as Tower Presents A Night
in Reno.

choreographer with the famous
Olatunji, mystified the audiences'

Fine Arts Exhibit Now Norton
HOW TO LOOK AT A.PAINTING will be on view on the 2nd
floor of Norton, sponsored by The
Fine Arts Committee from March
16 through April 5.Twenty panels of colored reproductions of works by a wide
variety of artists comprise this
exhibition designed to introduce
the general public of all ages to
the visual arts. The reproductions
were chosen by Mr. Bartlett H.
Hayes, ,Ir., of the Addison Gallery
of American Art, who also wrote
the accompanying text for the
show, which is circulated by The
American Federation
of Arts
under the sponsorship of The
New York State Council on the
Arts.

Mr. Hayes has said, “Painting
is often referred to as a ‘universal
language’ supposedly because
everybody who can see can therefore understand it. This is a
popular mistake very far from
actual fact. There are many
things in paintings which cannot
be understood unless you learn
about them . , . The purpose of
the exhibit is, to encourage the
student - whether adolescent or
adult to discover fresh meaning
for himself whenever he is confronted by a work of art.”
In the supplementary text Mr
Hayes has pointed out the difference between the subject of a
-

painting and its representation
by the artist. His discussion of
technique covers the basic problems in the representation of a
subject such as the artist’s choice
ol shapes, color, space, and line
and the influence of each of
these elements of design in a

Reproductions of
such works as Degas’ "Ballet
Glass,” Piccasso’s “La Femme
Bleu,” and Modigliani’s “Mme.
Zboroski” present different solutions to these problems.
In a discussion of symbolism,
Mr. Hayes has said, “To understand Art it is often necessary to
know something about Mythology,
composition.

Religion, Literature and History,
just as the artist had to do.” Tiepolo’s “Apollo and Daphne” and
Raphael’s “Cowper Madonna” are
among the works demonstrating
the artist’s use of symbols and

Senate Finance
Policy Stated

African “Watusi” dance.
Reviews in the New York
papers termed his act as ‘excellent, exotic, mysteriously different, and even wierd.” The
Owolia crew will present a two
hour show at this affair. The
entire program will begin at 8
p m. with a genuine Reno atmosphere in the snack bar. Materials
and props have been imported
straight from Reno to add an

film will be a John
Kennedy Memorial
film, followed by “Who Was That
Lady?”, starring Janet Leigh,
Tony Curtis and Dean Martin.
Admission is free.
The first

A new procedure has been instituted by the Senate Finance
Committee which will allow bud
gets to be reviewed earlier than
in the past. Treasurer A1 Horowitz has stated that the new rules
will be strictly enforced.

The Finance

Committee

ganizations.
Groups that have not submitted
their budgets to the treasurer by
April 15 will be subject to
penalty.

Budget forms may be picked up
in the Senate Office, room 205 in
Norton Union.

there are any questions,
direct them to Allen
Horowitz, treasurer and finance
committee chairman. He may be
contacted in the Senate Office or
by calling TF 2-7085.

If

please

Fitzgerald

'64 Jet-smooth Chevrolet Impale Sport Coupe (119-in. wheelbase)

visual accociations with reference
to established ideas and emotions
of the observer.
Mr.
Hayes reviews several
aspects of the nature of art and

its relation to reality, referring

to reproductions of paintings by
such artists as Monet, Cezanne,
Botticelli, Giotto, Rembrandt, and
El Greco to illustrate his point
that the understanding of a picture depends on the experience
and curiosity of the observer as
well as on the work of art itself.

New Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe (115-iri. wheelbase)

'64 Chevy II Nova Sport Coupe (110-In. wheelbase)

'64 Corvair Monza Club Coupe (108-in. wheelbase)

'64 Corvette Sting Ray Sport Coupe (98-in. wheelbase)

Chevrolet will go to any length
to make you happy
Things have changed a lot since a Chevy rolet and Chevy II (and between parking
was only a Chevy. Especially your ideas meters, with five whole feet left over),
of what you want a Chevy to be.
Then, too, there’s the sporty 15-foot
So now you have the Jet-smooth Chev- Corvair, so right for so many people (you
rolet—
feet of pure luxury, bumper girls, in particular) that we’ve never
to bumper. The size makes it a luxury car. touched an inch of it. And finally, CorBut not the price.
vette—still 14 feet and still too much
Or you can choose the thrifty Chevy II, for any true sports-car lover to say no to.
a
The long and short of it is, you don’t
family car with all kinds of
have to go to any length to find exactly
passenger and luggage space.
This year, your choice might be
the kind of car you want. Just
the new 16-foot-plus Chevelle,
see the five different lines of cars
sized to fit nicely between Chevat your Chevrolet dealer’s.
THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS Chevrolet Chevelle Chevy II
See them at your Chevrolet Showroom
•

•

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»

•

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•

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*

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has

not as yet received the proposed
1964-65 budgets from many or

*..

•

•

•

Corvair Corvette
•

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�Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Election Notices
Given by Pacholski

SKETCH

(Continued from Page h)

BY DAVID BERGEN and PETER RUBIN
+

On March 2 we discussed the situation in Southeast Asia with
an authority on the subject, Dr. Theodore Friend. An Assistant Professor of History, Dr. Friend has traveled extensively in Southeast
Asia, and has a book forthcoming on the United States, the Philippines and Japan.

B&amp;R: What are the foreign policy objectives of the United States
in Southeast Asia and do you
agree with them?
Dr. Friand: Broadly stated, our
objectives are to contain Communist influence. The means to obtain these objectives should stop
of things provocative
short
enough to lead to a full-scale war.
I agree with both the objectives
and means, as stated above.
B&amp;R; We have three choices to
follow in South Viet Nam: neutralization, continuing our present
efforts, or extending our forces
into North Viet Nam which would
possibly create another Korea.
Which one of these courses of
action do you think we will follow and which would you prefer?
Dr. Friend: I think neutralization, which is what General De
Gaulle proposes, is a poor choice.
Not because it was proposed by
DeGaulle, but because it would
lead to another Laos. Neutralization would be an umbrella under
which the Communists would take
shelter; it would be more to their
benefit than to the anti-Communists. Overt invasion or hostile
maneuvers would be unwise and
would lead to escalation. I would
prefer an intensification of our
present efforts. Not a phasing
out, but rather, a phasing in. We
have been in Viet Nam for nine
years and I do not feel we should
retreat passively. We are spending a million dollars a day there
now; perhaps we should spend
more to insure the freedom of
South Viet Nam.
B&amp;R: Should this intensification be in money and material aid
or an increase in our own military efforts?

Dr. Friend; I’m not enough of a
military expert to say how to
fight the war but I will say the
major problem in South Viet Nam
is an unstable government and
a somewhat indifferent population. If the U.S. sould lessen or
withdraw its aid, I would foresee
coup after coup, possibly a Viet
Cong coup. Such an event would
mean the defeat of all we have
been trying to establish or to
elicit from the more progressive
elements in South Viet Nam. The
basic need is to bring about a
government in the South which
offers more freedom than that in
the Norht. The trouble with Ngo
lay in being an absolutistic as Ho.

B&amp;R: What do you think of the
U.S. supporting a virtual dictatorship in Indonesia via foreign
aid?

Dr. Friend; To define the situation: 1 don’t think our foreign
aid keeps Sukarno in power. What
keeps him there is immense wiliness and in addition, great popularity, The amount of aid we give
to Indonesia is considerably less
than what which we give to South
Korea, Taiwan, or South Viet
Nam.
B&amp;R: Why has Sukarno pledged
himself to destroy the Federation
of Maylaysia?
Dr. Friend: Indonesia has a rapidly growing population, especially in Java; and poorly developed
resources. They have a hunber
problem there and is increasing
political discontent. Malaysia is
a purely diversionary scapegoat
for Sukarno. He talks peace in
Manila and in Koala Lumpur, and
then goes home and talks war. I

Ukranian Art is Displayed
Currently on display on the
second floor of Norton is Ukrainian art work including the traditional pysanky (Easter eggs). The
egg as a symbol of life has been
used since the earliest pagan
times. After the advent of Christianity, it became an important
symbol of rebirth at Easter-time.

Applications for the
position of Business
Manager of the Spectrum are now being accepted by the Publica-

tions Board. All interested students should
write a letter of application to the Board
including
qualifications, past experience
and a statement of
grade

point

For centuries, Ukrainians have

practiced the traditional art of
hand-decorating eggs at Eastertime. They carefully write designs on the egg with wax and
then dip them in various dyes

until a delicate, multi-colored design
This tradition
is
BMcticed today and the
ff
of Ukrainian handwork
wijl be on display in the second
*

f
1

lounge through next week.
Tania Krynytzky will.demonstrate the age-old art in the
Craft Shop Tuesday and Wednesday, March 24 and 25, from 2
to 4 p.m. Materials will be avail-

M-s.

able for those who wish to try

division checked off by the clerk.
Voting in more than one division
will invalidate the ballot.
You may vote for six senators
in U.C. and five senators in A.
and S., but you do not have to
vote for the maximum number.
You also do not have to vote for
all from one party.
Voting areas: Tower and Goodyear, A. and S., U.C., Bus. Ad.,
Eng. Educ., Phar.; Norton
A.
and S., U.C., Bus. Ad., Eng., Educ.,
Phar., and Nursing; Medical
School
Med., Dent.; Law School
Law. Officers are voted for in
all areas of the elections.
—

—

—

For anyone interested, election
results will be given from 6 p.m.
to 8 p.m. in Room 231 Norton.
Everyone is invited to attend.
Please do not carry any electioneering material on your person within open sight, when you
go into election areas.
Before voting, make an attempt
to meet and talk to all the officer
candidates and all the candidates
from your appropriate division.

thf

average

certified by the Dean
of their division. Letters of recommendation may also accompany the application.
The deadline for such
applications is Friday,
March 27.

m

iWb/v //

(Cont. on Pg. 14)

ME

THE MAUNA KAI TAKES PLEASURE IN
INTRODUCING YOU TO A ROYAL TREAT

-

From the Polynesian Islands to the MAUNA KAI
6870 MAIN STREET

Williamsville, N.

‘polcftteAia*

KING STEAK
LADIES STEAK

c

«.«

Place your orders now for class rings.
April 25th is the last day we will
accept orders for graduation delivery.

Y.

75
$2.95

Sample on display at our jewelry counter.

CHOICE OF: Baked Potato with Sour Cream or Butter
&amp; Butter
Chef's Special Tossed Salad Asparagus or Broccoli Roll
Tea or Coffee
-

-

-

COMPLETE LUAU DINNERS
START AT $2.50

NOW!
Try Our

LUNCHEON 11:30
DINNER HOURS 4:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M.
KITCHEN OPEN TILL 2:30 A.M.
DINERS CLUB
AMERICAN

CD

EXPRESS'

Take Out
Service
For Reservations

Call NF 4-4404

or

NF

4-4421

"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Readings are Held;
Slee Professor
Rochberg Speaks Wildy fo Direct

The Jazz Gallery

By VICKI BUGELSKI

By RAYMOND CRAWFORD
Sunday evening at Buffalo State
College, Nina Simone and Herbie
Mann were featured in a con
cert sponsored by Ford Motors.
Nina was the first to appear after
preliminary acts of a very com-

mercial folk group called the
Moonshiners and a delightful
young Israeli folk singer. Herbie
Mann finished off with what
proved to be a very successful
affair.

Nina was immediately seated,
waiting for silence and concentration to begin her famous song
“You Can Have Him." Unfortunately the air conditioning in
the gymnasium was very loud
and Nina very professionally
asked for it to be shut off. Realizing that the correct mood could
not be set she then went on to
her more swinging tunes including "Forbidden Fruit", and a
show tune that she admits “a
show hasn’t been written." The
song is called "Missippi God

Damn" and after the performance the audience rose to their
feet to applaud her. It w»as a
great performance and it’s a
shame that a groovier mood could
not be set-——for I believe she
was in the mood for her more
bluesy pieces. Her group included the guitarist Rudy Stevenson,
and the conga drummer, Montego
Joe.

And finally Friday, March 20,
Banji Owalla, the dance choreographer for Olatunji will be at
Tower Hall for Las Vegas night
with

his

fine

Afro-drummers.

Mr, Owalla has been with many
dance troupes travelling all over
the country, getting rave notices

from newspapers

including the

Times.

The Civil Rights
Committee will present
a speaker at its next

Monday,
meeting
23 at 5:00 in Norton

330.
Howard Fuller will
speak on the Housing
Opportunities Made
Equal (HOME) group
of which he is chairman. This group is
working in the field of
changing the pattern
of segregated housing
in the Buffalo area.
All are invited.

George Rochberg, visiting Slee
professor of music for the spring
semester, will give the second of
his series of three lectures tonight at 8:30 in Capen Hall. Admission is free and all faculty
and students are invited to at-

tend.
The lecture is entitled “Direction and Continuity in Music”.
The second half of the program
will consist of a performance of
two of Mr. Rochberg’s compositions: La Bocca della verita (1958)
and Dialogues for Clarinet and
Piano (1957). The performers for
these works will be Josef Marx,
oboist; Charles Wuorinen, pianist
and Richard Dufallo, clarinetist.
Mr, Dufallo is also an assistant
conductor of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
Mr. Rochberg is currently on
leave from his position as chairman of the music department at
the University of Pennsylvania.
His ifrst lecture last month was
a rather thorough survey of the
main forms of composition in
twentieth century music; He played tape recordings of portions
of specific works to illustrate
his points.

I love a man in Van Heusen "417”!

Herbie Mann and his jazz quintet appeared next with his fine
vibist Dave Pike and a great
young drummer named Bobby
Thomas who broke the place up
with a five minute ride at the
close of the concert. Herbie can
be termed a folk-jazz artist in
that he has travelled to countless
countries listening to indigenous
music and transforming it into
jazz. He has been to countries in
Africa doing work with African
drummers and flutists thus his
“Common Ground,” and his latest kick has been the Brazilian
rhythm bossa-nova which lends
itself so readily to the jazz idiom.
At this particular concert Herbie
brought his bass flute on stage
and did a Brazilian tune called
This sort of
"Confirmation.”
music seems to be Herbie’s bag
and he does so well with it. Of
course Herbie did “Cornin’ Home
Baby” from the “Herbie Mann at
the Village Gate” album which
could easily be the top selling
jazz album in history.
It was a pleasure to see

fine artists who know what

two

they

want and get what they want.
Everything about them is serious
and professional and because of
this Buffalo's State’s FREE concert was a success.
At the Bon Ton was the husband and wife team of Stanley
Turrentine on sax and Shirley
Scott on organ, Stanley is still
swinging but I did not hear a
really fine solo from Shirley that
night, although together, the trio
inculding the drummer, were a

fine show.
The Pine Grill featured the
blues singer B. B, King, who kept
things on the moody side for a
week. Although B. B. leans toward the rhythm and blues end
of things, his little orchestra can

He’s completely masculine and so-o-o
attractive in the V-Taper fit. Slim
and trim all the way. I like the
casual roll of the Button-Down and
the neat look of the Snap-Tab. For
that smart authentic styling —sport
or dress Van Heusen’s really got it!
—

VAN HEUSEN*

if

V-Taper—for the lean trim look.

swing.

OPEN ALL YEAR
thm drlvt-ln with thm mrchmm

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1385 NIAGARA

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BLVD.

Vi Mb North of SHERIDAN DRIVE of MAPLE ROAD
(Aifeeeet Tho Iwlwoif Moll Ptozo)
Opoo PrMoy wf SotoMoy ml 1:00
OpoWo4 by Mm JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

A

An Enemy Of The People,
directed by Donald Wildy, will
open April 23 and run till the
25, in Baird Hall. The Drama and
Speech department announces
readings for the parts in this
play. The readings are scheduled
in Harriman Library 26N, March
18-20, at 7:30. The Drama and
Speech department hopes the
cast can be filled with students.

NOW SHOWING

NorthParke
mf/

W

1428 HERTEL AVE.- TF6-741I

_

-ffOME OF THE MOST
1 Vfflj impressive

feveii

trzlffm
VBfc

MOVIES IN A
LONG TIME.”
—Harold Tribuna

MMyP POINT OF
M ORDER!

otOrtAniiy-McClrt^
Coming
"Yesterday Today and

Tomorrow"
"Empty Canvas"
"Two Are Guilty"

"Beat the Devil"

�Friday,

March 20, 1964

Lauded by Local Newspapers Reviews

Leo Smit to Perform
Tomorrow at Gallery
By

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Quartet to Conclude

,

Semester Concerts
With Haydn Festival

Campus Reporter Sees Miser Dimly

VICKI BUGELSKI

By GEORGE SPELVIN

Leo Smit, pianist-composer and
professor of music here, will appear in a special concert with

From March 4 through 7, the
Drama Department presented,
tomorrow
night for the benefit of the student
Hichard Dufallo
at the Albright-Knox Art Gal- body and the community, a
lery at 8:30 p.m. Admission is rather weakly assembled producfree and all faculty and students tion of Moliere’s play, The Miser
Incongruous, to say the least,
are invited to attend.
the local newspapers were exconcert
is
entitled
“An tremely generous in their proThe
Century
of
Twentieth
Evening
nouncements, and unless one had
"Music”. Both Mr, Smit and Mr, seen the play himself, he would
conducting
be
a
Dufallo will
have believed that a worthy prostring orchestra in contemporary
duction had been presented. Howworks. Mr. Smit will be conductever, it is necessary and only
ing the Buffalo premiere of his right that, as
students, we view
own Capriccio for String Orches- the play more objectively in an
tra.
honest attempt to place the
praise.
Mr. Dufallo, assistant conductor blame as well as the
of the Buffalo Philharmonic OrNeedless to say, a great inchestra, is also a clarinetist. He justice was done to the playwill appear in this role in works wright. The play is in itself beauof Bernstein and Berg with Mr. tifully worded and highly stySmit at the piano. Tonight he is lized.. The poetry is full of
appearing as guest performer in imagery and wisdom and yet in
works of Slee professor George this production the language did
Rochberg at the lecture in Capen. not lose as much in the transla
tion as it suffered in the interMr. Smit, of course, needs no pretation.
The action and moveintroduction, being one of the ment of the actors, for the most
most popular performers in Bufpart, was not only awkard but
falo concerts. He has achieved also very reminiscent of bad
many well-deserved successes this
vaudeville. Lines were punched
year in solo recitals, chamber and gags were devised that would
music, and as piano soloist with have reddened the faces of
the Buffalo Philharmonic, He is propriators of second rate burlesalready busy with plans for next que houses. Lines were all loo
year’s concerts. He will be apoften poorly read and lacked
pearing as guest conductor of variety and interpretation.
the Buffalo Philharmonic OrchesLaurence Bartlett must be
tra in one of his own works.
praised for his characterization

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ToBed

of

Harpagon, the miser. He
brought to the part a vitality
and exuberance
which
was
pleasantly amusing and usuallytasteful. It is all the more to his
credit that he came through several awkwardly fumbled scenes
smelling like the proverbial rose.
A minor flaw (and minor i( was)
were his flapping hands and waving arms, a source of constant
amazement and distraction to this
critic. John Lund, as the son,
turned in the next best performance despite being overwhelmed
by a ridiculously looking costume.
His mate, Mariane, was played
quite realistically by Gloria Nowacyzk, whose fifth act performance did not match that of her
third act. This may be the fault
of the playwright who, at this
point, comes up with some unbelieveably obtuse lines.
Susan Sturgeon played the
daughter, Elise, whose smile became as monotonous as her performance. She seemed to lack
expression and vitality, and her
scenes had no distinquishable
climaxes. Colin Bremner played
her mate, Valere. More wodk on
vocal interpretation and suppres-

sion of stock hand gestures may
have helped his performance.
Corinne Jaft'e, as Frosine, had the
best female part in the play. Had
she stopped playing to the audience long enough to react to the
other actors on stage, she might
have stolen the show.
The responsibility must lie with

le

9ordi.

%

versati a

pretation
question.

must be

change

Quartet-in-residence here, will
give its final concerts of the semester Mar, 25, 28, and 30 in the
Mary Seaton Room of Kleinhans

Music Hall. These concerts, which
conclude the Haydn-Brahams Festival, will all begin at 8:30 p.m.
Prices remain the same as for
previous concerts. Student tickets
are available free of charge if
picked up at Baird before the
night of the concert.
Walter Trampler, violinist, will

be guest artist for the first con-

cert, and Bernar Heifetz, cellist,
will be guest artist for the second. The last concert will feature the solo quartet. The mem
bers of the quartet are Joseph

into

Finally, it is necessary to ask:
what is the responsibility of university theater? Is it not to promote educational
and
artful
theater on the campus and in the
community as well as to train and
educate the actor? It is about

Roisman, first violin; Alexander
Schneider, second violin; Boris
Kroyt, viola; and Mischa Schneider, cello. They will be conducting a special String Institute
for high school performers during
the first week of April. Mr. Mis
cha Schneider will be_ giving a
solo recital on April 8 in Baird.

time that those responsible for
theater here stepped back ten
feet and looked at the picture;
it is not all that pretty, It is
hoped that this constructive criticism (it is meant as such) will
educate through enlightenment;
The Miser, as presented here recently, did little to promote the
aims of university theater as we
see them.

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the director, who should have
corrected most of the above flaws
before the play was allowed to
reach the boards. In addition to
the above the play was poorly
blocked (staged) and our sympathies must lie with those who
were forced to sit on the sides.
Research done before the blocking was undertaken would have
avoided this situation and made
the director constantly aware the
three-quarter perspective of the
theater. It is also the director’s
responsibility to prevent overplaying by the actors, and since
this characteristic was so widespread, it must be assumed to
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�PAGE TEN

Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

Officers Elected for IRC
Functions by New Constitution
WESLEY FOUNDATION

The Wesley Foundation will
start the ball rolling for the remaining half of the term at the
University
Methodist
Church
bowling lanes. The lanes will
open tomorrow evening, March
21. at 7:30. Pizza will be served,
and there will be a poster party
to top the evening off. Bring any
supplies that you may have, and
be prepared for a grand evening.
Fifty cents (50c) covers everything.
NEWMAN CLUB NEWS

Dr. Armand Di Francesco M.D.
of the Monsignor Carr Clinic will
speak to the Newman Club next
Wednesday, at 7:30 pm. in Norton Union. The topic will be
“Psychology and Education,” A
spaghetti dinner will be held at
Newman Hall this Sunday, March
22 at 5:30. 50c for members and
75c for non-members. An informal discussion with students
of the International Club will
follow.
Tuesday afternoon
Dr. Swift
will hold another discussion on

The Idea of an University at 4:00
in Norton 262. At 3:00 in Norton
262 there is a series on Com-

GAMMA

DELTA

parative Religions. This week is
on Buddhism.
Province Convention will be
held at Rensellar Polytechnic Institute on April 10, 11, 12 (RPI is
in Troy, New York). Sign up at

Our next meeting will be on
Wednesday, March 25th at 6:30
p.m. The topic: IS GOD LEAVING
THE CAMPUS? Also, there will
be plans made for the folk concert we are sponsoring in April.
Let’s all meet for dinner at 5:30
and go to 344 Norton at 6:30 p.m.

HILLEL NEWS

INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP

Newman Hall.

Sabbath Service and
Oneg Shabbat

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will speak on: “Passover Traditions.” An Oneg Shabbat will follow.

Inter Varsity will have Rev.
Peter Pasco as speaker, March 23
at 3 p.m. in Norton, room 248. His

topic will be “The Resurrection,
Myth or Miracle.” There will also
be a general business meeting,
Tuesday, March 24 in room 217.
Elections for next year’s officers
will be held at this time.

The Inter-Residence Council
held election of officers and has
begun to function under its new
constitution. Composed of representatives elected from their respective residence halls, the Inter-Residence Council was established to promote cooperation
and closer relations among resident students. Acting on behalf
of all residence hall students,
the Council will investigate and
recommend action on the problems of resident living such as

food, parking,'and hours. An Activities Council will be set up
under the Inter-Residence Council to establish social, cultural,
and athletic programs for the
benefit of all resident students.
The new officers are: John
Bauer, chairman; Margie Friedman, vice-chairman; Eileen Lloyd,
secretary; Brian Pratt, terasurer;
Bobbi Grobel, student senator;
Ann Hamilton, activities Council chairman.

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Student Zionist Organization
will hold a meeting Sunday, at
7:45 p.m. in Norton, Room 234.
This week’s speaker will be Dr.
El-Behiry, assistant
Mohamed
professor of political science
at Buffalo State Teacher’s College.
His topic will be ‘The Arab
Refugee and Israel,’ This subject
is cause for much concern
within the Middle East as well
as within the United Nations.
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Next week, SZO will sponsor a
movie, “Twice Promised Land,” a
documentary concerning Israel’s
struggle for independence from
1948 to the present. The narrator
of the film is Rod Serling, writer
and producer of “Twilight Zone,”
The film, shown on local television this week, includes live shots
of Israel-Arab fighting during
1948's War of Liberation. Admission is free and all students are
cordially invited. Watch bulletin
boards for day and time.
Israel celebrates her sixteenth
anniversary in April. SZO will
present a special program celebrating Israel’s Independence day.
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB

There will be a meeting of the
Psychology Club today in rooms
240-242 of Norton Union at 3:00
p.m. All students are invited to
attend and see a double feature:

“The Brain and Behavior,” and
“The Chemistry of Behavior.”
HAVE YOU GOT IT?
Can you carry a tune, play a
pipe, write a skit or deliver a
monologue? If you fit this description the world is awaiting
your appearance. Don't be shy!
Call us right away and let us
know what you can do. Join Student Participation Day—April 8.

Call TF 6-2342 or TR 3-5979 to
enlist.
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
CLUB
The Industrial Relations Club
will sponsor a tour of the Bethlehem Steel Plant Tuesday, March
31. Anyone interested in attending should leave his name in
Crosby 116 on or before Tuesday,
March 24. The tour will leave
Crosby 125 at 12:15 p.m. and will
return at about 4:00 t&gt;.m. Due to
company rules, no girls can be
admitted to the plant.

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�Friday,

March 20, 1964

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Research Center
Established Here

CAMPUS ALLIANCE
STATES PLATFORM
The Alliance Party is committed to the view of student government which emphasizes leadership as well
as representation of students. Our party was formed during a period when one party dominated student government, and since that time much has been done by our
members to make it more representative and more sensitive to student desires.
Although much has been done, the Senate has been
faltering in part of its responsibilities to provide decisive
leadership, and to carry on a vigorous program to expand its jurisdiction so that it can effectively deal with
the problems affecting the student body.
The Alliance Party pledges a more aggressive effort
to secure cooperation for campus problems. It supports a
major reorganization of Senate procedures to increase
effectiveness and efficiency. It will continue its policy
of Town Meetings and other grass roots efforts to gain
student interest.
The Alliance Party proposes these specific measures
to accomplish the goals stated above.
1. We oppose any vindicitiye suppression of thought
or expression on this campus by the publications board;
specifically, the rejection of a second means of mass
communication—For Two Centh Worth. Furthermore, we
support any type of reasonable publication expressing
student views.
2. We oppose any undo state interference in student affairs.
3. We will wholeheartedly support the continuance
of national fraternal organizations. We support the fraternal seating arrangement in the cafeteria and at athletic events.
4. We will attempt to charter public transportation
to lower student transportation costs when economically
feasible, including a means of transportation from campus to terminal.
5. We strongly advocate additional funds for student organizations under the auspices of the Student
Senate and the continued improvement in the efficiency
of the allocations of these funds.
6. We will set office hours for Senators so that they
can meet with students on a regular basis, and will publish Senate agendas in the Spectrum.
7. We support the creation of new campus study
areas for students.
8. We will appoint a presidential assistant to specialize in cooperation with the dormitory councils and to
deal with the problems of the resident students.
9. We will appoint a second presidential assistant
to deal with the problems of the commuting students
through such organizations as house plan.
10. We desire to increase representation of University College in the Senate; we support a reformed constitution.
1. We will sponsor a resolution calljng for more
control by students over the parking fines. We feel that
the present system is inequitable and poorly administered.
12. We will establish a more publicized book exchange service. Students will thus avoid the huge bookstore handling fee.
(Cont’d

from P.

(Cont'd

on P. 13:

2)

more Hospital's facility will complement the University activities
in this field."
The hyperbaric research and
treatment unit at the V.A. would

embrace the latest features de-

veloped by the Linde Division and
would be especially designed for
use in, the clinical research involving humans. This unit will
be large enough to contain the
personnel and equipment necessary to carry out large scale sur
gical procedures and treatment
of other medical problems.
Dr. Hermann Rahn, professor
and chairman of the Department
om Physiology, emphasized that
while there is every reason to believe that hyperbaric medicine
promises to contribute to the
treatment of many conditions, it
is a frontier area in which experimentation must be carefully con

ceived and controlled.

“Although pressurized chambers have been in use for some
time, there are hazards to personnel and patients which are not
usually associated with the general practice of medicine and
medical research. Because of the
unique nature of these potential
risks, it is imperative that a special set of requirements be established to govern the use of hyperbaric facilities.”
Committee Established
A special advisory committee
on hyperbaric medicine has been
established for this purpose. Under the chairmanship of Dr. Wil
liam Chardack, chief of surgery
at the V.A. Hospital, the seven
member committee, composed of
faculty members representing disciplines involved in the project,
will be responsible for the supervision of the program. Members
of the committee include Dr. Marvin Bloom, Dr. Edward Lanphier,
Dr. David Miller, Dr. John Stew-

art, Dr. Rahn, and Dr. Chardack.

Dr. Edward H. Lanphier, assistant professor of physiology,
who last year received international recognition for his work in
diving physiology, and a member

UNITED STUDENTS
PLATfOKU GOALS
The United Students Party does not operate for the
sake of its own existence. We believe that the goals of
the Student Senate and the university as a whole can be
achieved only through organization. It is to this end that
we have drawn up the list of planks which appears on
this page.
Last year the platforms of both parties were approximately the same, the differences in parts of them
being only grammatical. This reduced the elections to a
personality contest, with the exception that, since US
was the only party on campus until then, our opponents
cried, "Break the one-party system! Monopoly breeds
irresponsibility! etc." The use of these time honored
cliches helped give Campus Alliance a majority of the
seats on the present senate. Since then, this once-effective
student government has become a political battleground,
and many programs which should have received bipartisan support have been defeated.
The United Students Party deplores this lack of
direction and cooperation. We have drawn up a list of
planks which we feel must be acted upon by the senate,
not merely shuffled aside or ignored after the election.
We hope the students will fulfill our pledge to “take
the mock out of democracy” in student government.
1. We advocate that the senate seek out grants
from private companies for student research projects in
the individual schools, e.g. the building of a laser by
the engineering students. We also feel that the senate
should grant money for divisional conventions, such as
the nursing school convention that will be held this year.

2. We believe that the university should recognize
the hockey and ski teams as varsity sports will full intercollegiate status. We also support the growth of other
new sports such as soccer, lacross, and squash within
the university. We believe that the university should appeal to the state system for appropriations for these
sports as well as funds to be used in construction of a
new field house on campus.
3. We advocate that the student senate be granted
increased funds from the Faculty Student Association,
so that it can- set up a more comprehensive program of
extra-curricular activities.
4. We have discovered that, at cafeterias in the Buffalo area which are operated by Cease’s Incorporated,
(Cont’d on

P.

13)

of the (NAS-NRC) Committee on
Hyperbaric Oxygenation, has announced a post-graduate program
to be held from June 8-13, which

will bring together experts from
Europe and the United States.
Initial response to this program
indicates that the faculty and participants in the program will represent the major areas of hyperbaric research and treatment being carried on throughout the
world.

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�Phi Zeta Chi wishes to congratulate Alexis Pile on her election as president of their Spring
Pledge Class.

Alpha Phi Omega will have a
casual dress date party tomorrow
at Bosella's Restaurant at 8:30
p.m.

Phi

wishes

to

Delta

fraternity
congratulate there

Lambda

elected officers: Robert
Adler. President: Paul Flagg,
Vice-President and Senior I.F.C.
Representative; George Ehresnewly

man, Secretary; Jay Matulewski,

Robert Hammond,
Social Chairman: Richard Terry,
Sergeant-at-Arms; Stanley Kullmen, Chaplain; Peter Luke, Junior I.F.C. Repersentative; Douglas
Lyons. Historian.
Treasurer:

We are looking forward to another year of continued growth
and development under our new
officers.

Sigma Phi Epsilon expends its
congratulations to its new officers.
They are:

President, John Schermerhorn;
Controller, Dennis Brown; Historian, Edward Marek; Recording
Secretary, Alan Holman; Chaplain,, Alex Koslo; Corresponding
Secretary, Stehen Rambo.

It all started 2:00 p.m., March
6—indoctrination of the Juniors’
for the AFROTC Summer Training camp. The indoctrination continued through Sunda, March 8
without let-up, in accordance with
Air Force tradition. To bed by
9:00 p.m., but to be up at 4:50
a.m, followed by clean-up, eat-up,
work-up and in general up and at

How can indoctrination be complete without interrogation. It
was given by Captain Bell, formerly of the Air Science Staff and
Lt. Colonel Parsons to four subjects, Cadets Bard, Cream, Feldmann and Sandmann, captured in
combat. The whole idea being,
how to resist interrogation and
to prevent giving aid and informa-

bond.

Avenue, Kenmore.

The anniversary celebration,
April 3-12, is being planned sep
arately by graduates in the social
sciences, physical and biological

sciences, and humanities, repre-

senting the major areas of study
in the College, according to Mr.
Wells E. Knibloe, general almuni

chairman.

ROTC Training Session

tion the enemy.

But that was not enough for
the “work-up.” It was physical
training, and plenty of it. So
much so that everyone should be
inclined to exercise on his own
to avoid that tired feeling.
The three days were spent at
Niagara Falls AF iBase, under the
close supervision of the Seniors
and was the first taste of military

life for the Junior Class, who
after it was over felt they could
take anything.

Support
Our

Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a
social today at the Hotel Worth
with the Alpha Gamma Delta and
Chi Omega Sororities.

The Borthers of Alpha Phi Delta held their raffle (for either
a $50 savings bond or a U.B.
Class Ring) as scheduled. The
winner was Verna Henschel of
Niagara Falls; she accepted the

The Physical and Biological
Sciences Committee of the 50th
Anniversary observance of the
College of Arts and Sciences at
UB will meet tonight (Thursday,
12) at 8:30 p.m. in the home of
Mr. J. Stanley Nixon, 89 Somerton

them

Sigma Phi Epsilon also con
gratulates Tom Mecca on his elec
tion as Pledge Class President.

$50 savings

Committee Meets
To Discuss Plans

l^jeu/S Indoctrinate

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Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

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future for you.
Call Mr. Peter Stark, College Employment Coordinator, in New York City, Area Code
212,394-3663. Just call collect. Or see your College Placement Office.

MILFORD, CONN.

may

York Telephone
4 New
An
opportunity employer
equal

�Friday, March 20, 1964

SPECTRUM

United Students Platform Cont.
(Cont’d

from P. 11)

PAGE THIRTEEN

Michael Prosser
Campus Alliance Objectives Cent.
Moderates Panel (Cont’d from 11)
P,

prices are considerably lower than in the Norton Union
cafeterias, which that same company operates. Also, portions at these other places are larger, and the quality of
the food is generally better than that served in Norton.
We feel that this situation must not be allowed to continue, and we advocate all necessary steps by the senate
and the administration to gain equity for the students.
5. We believe that room and board contracts should
separated, so that resident students, either on or off
campus, may choose whether or not to eat in the dorms.
We support the Tower Council’s program for improving
dorm food. We also believe that junior girls should be
allowed to reside off campus.
be

6. We advocate the institution of dormitory open
houses on special occasions such as Winter and Spring
Weekends.

on Special Speech
Michael H. Prosser, lecturer in

speech at UB, will moderate a
panel on “Diplomatic Speech”
from 10:30 a.m, to 12 noon on
Mar. 14 at the New York State
Speech Association Convention
in Albany.

Recognizing

the

growing importance of speech in its relation
to democracy, panel members
will analyze diplomatic speaking
from several angles.

7. We support the national fraternities in their

Mr. Prossen will discuss “Com
munication Problems in the Unit
ed Nations.”

against freedom of association. We advocate the establishment of a greek newspaper on campus. We affirm
the right of the fraternities to reserve fables in the Norton cafeterias.

Nam Year! Chai, a native Kor
ean and an instructor of political science at the University of

struggle to maintain national affiliations, and we strongly believe that, in trying to deny the fraternities this
right, the State University is committing a grievous crime

8. We advocate the selling of beer in the Rathskeller on an experimental basis. This plan would include
strict controls to keep the privilege from being abused.
9. We believe that the administration should secure
public library cards for all resident students, which
would be given out at registration. We also advocate the
reinstitution of a smoking room in the libraries here on
campus.

10. We believe that the registration procedure
should be centralized and made more efficient. We also
believe that girls should be able to register for physical
education courses during regular registration. We feel
that, when courses are posted, the names of instructors
for each course should also be posted, along with the
schedule of final examinations.

i

11. We advocate a change in calendar which would
include a three day break between the last day of classes
and the first exams of the second semester, a later spring
vacation, a three day weekend midway between the beginning of school and Thanksgiving.
12. We believe that the University policy of compulsory ROTC for freshmen and sophomores should be
abolished in favor of a voluntary program, and that the
school should take steps to provide physical education
facilities for those who choose not to enroll in ROTC.
13. We support the establishment of a student-run
mrse evaluation which would benefit the faculty in
ieir determination of curricula.
14. We believe that the present parking system on
ampus is inadequate. The ten-ceht gates on each lot
lould be discontinued in favor of a system of permits
sued at the beginning of the semester for a nominal
ie. One pay-as-you-go lot would be retained, for the use
f those who drive to school infrequently. We also beeve that the city of Buffalo should give students the
ght to park on nearby streets without restrictions such
s time limits.
15. We advocate expansion of the Allenhurst bus
-vice to include Saturday nights between midnight and
o a.m., and Sunday until 10:30 p.m.
16. We support any efforts (such as the Ribicoff
x measure) by national, state, or local governments, to
low tax deductions for parents of college students.
17. We advocate that the Student Senate set up a
'ogram to benefit the World University Service. This
a program of aid to college students in underdeveloped
dions and deserves the support of our university.
18. We are opposed to the moving of UB football
ames from Rotary field to War Memorial Stadium, and
jpport a revised seating plan at games which would
lable students to obtain better than 30-yard line-andsyond seats they are allowed now.
19. We affirm the right of academic freedom and
he right of students to hear all sides of any matter, and
'Ppose any measures which restrict these rights in any
20. We favor expansion of the Student

Welfare

ommittee book exchange, and the establishment of a

tudent discount service in cooperation with local merhants.

!

J

22. We advocate a summer plan for dormitories
ased on the plan of several European Colleges. This
‘Vould entail opening the dorms as hotels for students
»nd other travelers during the summer months. This
eryice would be run by UB students and profits would
Je shared by the administration and Student Associa•on. This plan would provide summer jobs for students,
Expensive lodging for travelers, and if successful, could
substantially towards decreasing student accontribute
.
ivity fees.

1

~

Pennsylvania, will discuss “When
East Goes West: Person to Per-

son Diplomacy,” Special guest on
the panel, Martin G. Cramer,
special assistant in the Bureau
of Public Affairs, Department of
State, will discuss “Speech in
Diplomacy.”

13. We pledge speaker programs on national and
international affairs. We will bring a domestic political
series to the students.
14. We will strongly campaign for improved athletic facilities, especially a new fieldhouse.
15. We will attempt to establish student-faculty
committees in the following areas: curriculum and academic dishonesty.
16. We will thoroughly investigate the feasibility
of an open dormitory policy, that is, coeducational study
hours in the dormitories at a time convenient for the resident students.
17. We will establish a committee on Urban Affairs
to increase community awareness of the UB student.
18. We support the attempts of various teams, such
as the hockey team, to achieve varsity status.
19. We will investigate the possibility of more job
opportunities for students.
20. We pledge an effort to improve the transportation and communication of students living in Allenhurst.
21. We will attempt to have beer or cocktails served
in a gentlemanly fashion at University sponsored dances.
We hope this will overcome the past failure of these
dances and that it will serve as a step toward beer in
the Rathskeller,

���PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday, March 20,

SPECTRUM

SKETCH
(Cont’d

from P.

7)

Air Society
Attends Mid-East
Region Conclave

Varsity Cheerleading Squad
Tryouts Scheduled Today

On February 27 March 1, 1964
the Mid-east Regional Conclave
■of the Arnold Air Society was
held in the Pittsburgh Hilton
Hotel, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The Richard C. Browning Squadron from the State University of
New York at Buffalo was one of
18 squadrons represented at the
conclave. In addition to the
Arnold Air Society Conclave the
Conclave of Angel Flights from
these schools was held also.

scheduled
on Monday, March 23rd, and
Tuesday, March 24th, from 3:305:30 p.m. in Norton Union, Room

-

don't think he really wants war,
although he may talk himself into
one. Sukarno is using a very dan
gerous and hypocritical policy
which he probably feels is necessary to keep himself in the public
limelight as the defender of Indonesia by exaggerating the danger from the Dutch, or the British, or maybe, eventually, the
Americans.
B&amp;R: What do you think of De
Gaulle’s recognition of Red China
and its possible admission to the
U.N.?
Dr. Friend; I have been in favor of two Chinas since 1957, I
liked DeGaulle’s policy when it
first came out, because it looked
like it might lead to a two China
policy. However, DeGaulle has
been caught in a vise and has had
to recognize only Red China, and,
upon their insistence, to withdraw
recognition of Nationalist China.
I don’t think DeGaulle’s recognition of Red China will effect
world policy terribly, unless of
course the ex-French colonies
swing a pro Red China vote the
next time Red China's admission
comes up before the U.N.
The
ex-French colonies don’t necessarily follow the French lead,
however, I believe Nationalist
China should remain on the Security Council. If Red China
comes in, then perhaps a political
compromise and constitutional
formula could be worked out to
get India on the Council in place
of either China.
B&amp;R; Do you think the U.S.
should recognize Red China?
Dr. Friend; I don’t think the
U.S. should take steps to recognize Red China, at this time, because Red China does not want
two Chinas. Red China is not

willing to give anything in return
for recognition. If one is a diplomatic realist, one should get
something from Red China in return, such as a promise not to
attack Taiwan, or impair the integrity in any way.
B&amp;R: What went wrong in Cambodia?
Dr. Friend: The King of Cambodia is nervous about the “shadow over the Himalayas,” the Red
Chinese, This is so, possibly, because he feels the U.S. is not
pushing strongly enough its policy in iet Nam toward eventual
victory. Every country in Southeast Asia is a weak power and all
of them want security. Some see
the best way of obtaining it is
I

closer affiliation with Red

China,

The King of Cambodia is one man
who thinks he will be more secure if he is friendly with Red
China rather than with Red
China's enemy, the U.S.
B&amp;R; Why has SEATO apparently failed?
Dr. Friend: SEATO always relied basically on American power, 1 think it never amounted to
much because it was chiefly an
abstraction of Dulles’ mind in the
first place. He thought that multipowered pacts all over the world
would do something to contain
Communism. These pacts do
something, but what stood behind
them all the time was U.S. and
British power. SEATO continues
to have meetings and conferences
on how to contain Communist
subversion and on education; and
those things, in their modest way,
are useful.
B&amp;R; What do you think about
military coups occurring in Asia?
Dr. Friend: Since 1957 there
have been military take-overs in
Pakistan, Burma, Thailand and
Viet Nam. This is quite a number
of countries for military men to
replace civic authority. It hasn't
happened in the Philippines, and
is least likely to happen there,
because U.S. spent fifty years
there conveying its traditions, one
o fwhich is civilian superiority to
the military in government. I believe if Spain had stayed in the
Philippines there would be the
same military coups and juntas
there as are occurring all over
the world.
B&amp;R: Is there any chance for
world peace without a major conflict between East and West?
Dr. Friend: I think there can
be world peace on a basis similar
to that achieved in times past: a
sane balance of power. It is possible to achieve and maintain an
equilibrium among the great military powers. Some people think
we have an equilibrium now, having had peace for nineteen years
on a world basis.
B&amp;R; With your idea of a balance of power, can there be world
disarmament?
Dr. Friend: World disarmament
is useless unless a balance remains. At whatever level, you
have to have a relative equality
of armaments between potential
enemies. I’d like to see the total
level of armaments reduced for
everyone’s peace of mind, but
still maintaining a balance all the
way. Disarmament and balance of
power must go hand in hand.

Those who attended from Bufwere Lt. Col, Thomas Huddeleston, Professor of Air Science
and Arnold Air Society Advisor;
Charles Heubusch, present National Commander of Arnold Air
Society; Charles Wagner, delegate
from Buffalo and Commander of
the Richard C. Browning Squadron; A1 Purdy, alternate; John
Hollands, 2nd Lt. Danial Christman USAF, Ronald Christopher,
Ronald Later, and Francis Montemarano. The Commander of
Angel Flight Miss Lori Ferocij,
and her Executive Officer Miss
Mary Ann Lucchino also attended,
along with several other members of Angel Flight.

Varsity cheerleading tryouts
will be held beginning today,
March 20th, from 3:30-5:30 p.m.
in Norton Union, Room 231.

231.

Each prospective cheerleader
must attend two out of three
practices in practice outfit.

CLUB RECORDS CO.
P.O. Box 93 College Pork

Detroit 21, Michigan

Station

all

senior, and Joe Marsin, Director
id Sports Information and Promotion.
The new squad will appear as
the Varsity Alumni Football
game, Saturday, May 2nd.

What Do You Know About

America's "Underground'' FILMS?
See Jonas Mekas

“GUNS OF THE TREES”
The most personal and revealing film of the intellectual, beat and hip
fringe society of America today
CAHIERS DU CINEMA
—

Mon. and Tues., March 23 and 24 ONLY!

LAST THREE DAYS! MARCH 20, 2T, 22

“KNIFE IN THE WATER”

The purpose of this conclave

was to prepare resolutions to

ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE; "Rest Foreign Film"

be

presented at the National to be
held in Denver, Colorado in April,
and also to select new Area and
Wing Headquarters. The Richard
C. Browning Squadron was voted
Northern Wing Headquarters of
Area E-l. John Hollands was appointed Wing Commander.

At the Conclave Charles Wagner was selected for the award
of outstanding Squadron Com-

Fri., Sat., 7:30-9:30; Sun. 2-4-6-8
—

EXTRA! 11 p.m. Fri., Sat. ONLY!

—

"Golden Age of Comedy" With Laurel
and Hardy, Ben Turpin, Will Rogers
Starting Wed., Mar. 25
"A MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM"

mander of Area E-l.

with Richard Burton

RO

SOCIAL SEASON IS HERE
Globe Artists Agency has the perfor

The judges will be Lois Berry,
Varsity Captain, Kathy Stuber,

The judging of the 64-65 Var-

"ENTERTAINMENT"
entertainment

5:00 p.m.

falo

THE

The
fect

sity Cheerleading Squad will take
place in Norton Union, Room 231,
on Wednesday, March 25th, at

are also

Practices

wl&lt;

Write for FREE Catalog of CLUB
RECORD FORMS that save time and
work for Minutes, Dues, Membership
lists, Committee, Financial Reports;
or send $1.50 for a year's supply

1964

occasions.

Globe Artists Agency
1210 DELAWARE AVENUE
TL 3-4300

See our complete collection of
famous ARROW wash and wear
shirts in this season’s most popular
collar styles. You’ll like the easy
care of wash and wear.
RIVERSIDE MER’S SHOP

TONAWANDA and ONTARIO

■®

�</text>
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STATE
REGISTRATION
SCHEDULE

UNIVERSITY

OF

NEW

YORK AT BUFFALO

LISTON-CLAY

ran Mi ¥T Iff

|| W71

NO. 19

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1964

VOLUME 14

,Poet

Convocations Slates
Capacity Crowd Hears Minnis
Lecture on Fascist South
Last Friday, Jack Minnis spoke to a capacity crowd
in the Conference Theater as a guest of the Sociology
Club. Mr. Minnis said that the situation that presently
exists in Mississipp is that of a fascist state. The reasons
for this accusation were explained in his lecture. He defined fascism as a situation where economic interests have
a great deal of power over political processes. “Economic

interests” include such people as
bank presidents, influential cotton growers, and heads of major
industries. Mr. Minnis stated that
Mississippi fell under his definition of fascism
Mr. Minnis then gave examples
of some of the conditions that
exist in Mississippi. In this state
there is a complete absence of
federal authority. He has personally sen F.B.I. agents remain dormant while Negroes were harassed and prevented from registering. In affect all federal authority is locally influenced. Not
only is there an absence of federal authority but the federal government supports the racist
groups, indirectly, through federal subsidies, Minnis stated. As
examples of this Mr. Minnis spoke
of the director of Internal Revenue in Mississippi, deposits the
tax recipts in the two major
banks in Mississippi. This tax
money, money from ALL the people in Mississippi, is left in the
banks for periods up to one year.
The banks then lend the money
(with interest), some of which are
then used for anti-civil rights activities.
Mr. Minnis looked at justice in
Mississippi with a dubious eye.
People convicted under one system work in cotton field at part
of their sentence. The federal
government then grants cotton
subsidies to the state penitentiaries.

Tuesday night the Student Sen-

ate passed a resolution stating

the students’ position

to the Feinberg

Law

in. regard
and Dis-

claimer affidavit. In the resolu-

tion the senate endorsed the right
ol a faculty member to refuse
to sign the affidavit as required
by the Feinberg Law.
Reasons For Resolution Listed
The Senate based their action
in supporting the faculty on the
facts that 1) The Law and Disclaimer affivavit have “numerous

By

SYLVIA SPRING

The Convocation Committee of
the Student Senate is presenting
a series of speakers, unique not
only in the history of the Committee but also in the history
of science.
The main topic of the lectures,
“Is Einstein Obsolete?”, is not

as unlikely a question as it might
appear. Events are taking place
in our world and galaxy that
are completely baffling the top
men in astronomy, hole galaxies
are exploding for apparently no
explainable reasons.

The nature of the universe is

The lecturer spoke of these conditions in relation to desirable
counter-action. The type of action that is taking place now represents a revolution. Normally,
people effect changes through
their electoral processes. In the
South today, people must go into
the street to protest, thereby affecting change. This departure
from traditional methods foreshadows future action.
There is a war going on in the
South today, said Minnis. A day
when there is not a murder, or
someone has not been beaten up
by the police or arrested on suspicious charges is rare,” Minnis
stated, “and i considered a good
day.”
pear

Students

attending

ap-

1 to be impressed by the lec.

ture

Feinberg Resolution Passed
By TRUDY STERN

Speakers Series
To Concentrate On
Einstein's Theories

applied to Institutions of Higher
Learning and staff of such institutions and supports the right
ol legal due process of any faculty member to sign and his
right to retain his position.” The
body then authorized the establishment of a-committee to “com-

municate with the student gov-

ernments of other units of the

State University System” and
possibly co-ordinate a conference

with these governments to issue
a resolution indicating their position as stated in the resolution.
The resolution, which has been

changing so drastically that it
may well happen that Einstein’s
theory on relativity may become
Of
outmoded and
obsolete.
course, with the discovery that
whole galatic systems are capable of complete destruction, and
often are destroyed, raises one
very pertinent question concerning the stability of our galaxy.

It is easy to see that these
strange phenomenon are not only
of interest and concern to astronomers, but one which necessarily concerns everyone. It is
with this thought in mind that
the Convocations Committee organized this coming lecture
series. The program fulfills a
dual purpose by obtaining inT
formation of campus wide importance and revelance while at
the same time fulfilling its duty
in presenting a well rounded
program geared not only to the
literary minded but the scientific minded also. Dr. Lyle B.
Borst, Professor of Physics and
Astronomy assisted the Committee in suggesting and arranging
for the five foremost astronomers
in America to speak on our camp-

All of the following astronomers will present their lectures
in the Conference Theatre of
Norton Hall on Tuesdays at 3:00
p.m.
March 17: “The Extent of the
Universe” Dr. Thornton Page,
University.

,

March 24: “Continuous •Creation’

Dr. Thomas Gold, Cornell Uni
versity.

March 31: “The Radio Universe'
Dr. Alan Moffet, California Tech
nical Radio Astronoomy Uabora
tory.

implications and ramifications”
“a faculty member may
efuse to sign because of pef-

nd 2)
°nal

convictions

. .

3)

The

dismissal of such individuals will

■arrow the educational opportuniics of the student.
The Resolution

The body of the resolution
-tilted qhat the Senate “publically
opposes the Feinberg Law as

on the floor for two weeks, is the
result, of the special committee
that was established to investigate the Feinberg Law and was

also responsible for the “FeinFact Sheet” that was
distributed to the student body
two weeks ago.
The Feinberg Law has required
state employees to disclaim past
or present Communist member-

berg Law

ship.

1

to appear
John
student body on Friday, March 20, at 3 :00. He will appear in the conference theatre under the auspices of the
Convocations Committee of the Student Senate.
As poet, translator, editor, and lecturer, Ciardi has
developed a working knowledge of poetry. Readers of
th Saturday Review know him for his forthright critical
articles, for his popular column
"Manner of Speaking,” and editorials. “His presentation of poetry
often frees it from the foes of
misunderstanding which too often surround it,” one critic noted.
A former Assistant Professor at
Harvard, John Ciardi is the author of such works as Other
Skies, Live Another Day, and As
If, as well as translator of Dante’s
Inferno. He is listed in Who’s
Who, Celebrity Register, and
Twentieth Century American Authors. Prof. Ciardi is the recipient
of numerous awards such as the
Avery Hopwood Award, . 1939;
Blumenthal Prize, 1944; Harriet
Montroe Memorial Award, 1955;
Prix de Rome, 1956.
In asking Ciardi for his lecture
subjects, he responded: “All my
life has been a preparation. I do
not give speeches: I talk to the
eyes I see. I don’t recommend
that as a general system but it is
my way and it works

-April 7: “Universal Relativity’
Dr. Deiter Brill, Yale University
April 21: “Exploding Galaxies’
Dr. Allan Sandage, Mount Palo
mar Observatory.
These lectures will be geared
for any one interested in learning more about the fascinating
universe we live in. No specialized knowledge is necessary. All
students will have the opportunity of speaking informally with
these xperts at coffee hours following the lectures. Find out if
Einstein is really obsolete.

JOHN CIARDI

Dr. Kaiser Announces New
Exam Schedules for May

Dr. Arthur L. Kaiser announced
that final examinations for this
semester will be rescheduled to
begin Friday, May 15. The calendar had previously scheduled examinations to begin a day earlier. The official calendars for the
years 1964-65, 1965-66 have also
been released. The future calendars follow the policy which was
adopted two years ago in conjuncus.
tion with a committee of student
representatives. The following is
Since the "astronomical revothe calendar for this semester:
lution” is so resent, a program Last Day for Resigning from a
such as ours has never been arCourse without Penalty, Fri.,
ranged and thus will be subject
Mar. 6
to a lot of professional observa- Spring
Recess Begins at Close
tion and probably controversy.
of Classes, Sat,, Mar, 7
Prospective plans are being made Classes Resumed, Mon., Mar. 16
to mate a good record of the Warnings Due, Mon., Mar. 16
lectures for use in astronomy
classes of the future.

Wesleyan

SENATE MEETING

John Ciardi to Speak Mar. 20;
and Editor
Well Ciardi
Known Poet
before the
has been scheduled

Last Day for Making Up Grades

of Incomplete, Mon., Apr. 13
Moving-Up Days, Fri., May 1 and
Sat., May 2
School of Education Saturday
Classes Meet, Sat., May 2
Instruction Ends in the College of
Arts &amp; Sciences and in Millard
Fillmore College for those taking Comp. Exams., Fri., May 8
Comp. Exams, for Seniors
College of Arts &amp; Sciences, Tues.,
May 12 Mon., May 18
-

■

Instruction Ends for all others
at Close of Classes, Wed., May
13

School of Education Saturday
Classes Meet, Sat., May 16
Final Examinations, Fri., May 15
Sat., May 23
-

Commencement, Sun., May 31

Apfheker Case Appealed
Brought By William W, Egan
;

The case involving Communist
Herbert P. Aptheker and his at
tempt to talk at the State University of Buffalo has been taken
to the Court of Appeals, the
state’s highest court. It is expected it will be argued before sum-

mer.

The appeal was brought by Wil
liam W. Egan of Ballston Lake
who originally opposed Mr. Ap
theker’s appearance on the camp
us on October. 31, 1962.
The appeal poses a sensative
question: Whether, in the meantime, Aptheker can speak at the
State University. The Appellate
Division, Third Department, ruled unanimously Dec. 28 that he
could address .the students, a
ruling that reversed an earlier
injunction.

William J. Roberts Jr. of Al-

bany, counsel to Mr. Egan, said
that a new stay would be sought
if the students' scheduled an ad

dress by Aplheker.
Mr. Egan sought to prevent the
use of taxpayer-supported facilities by an acknowledged Com-

munist The university, contended
an issue of academic freedom,
the exploration of controversial

issues without Government interference, was involved, and the
Appellate Division uphold this

position,.

�PAGE TWO

Friday, February 28,

SPECTRUM

School of Medicine Offers
Two-Day Post-Grad Course
The School of Medicine is announcing a two-day post graduate
course in Recent Advances in
Chest Disease at Meyer Memorial
and Buffalo General Hospitals,

March 4 and 5.
This course for internists and
general physicians discusses current advances in pulmonary physiology and the use of pulmonary
function tests, X-rays and laboratory studies in the diagnosis of
chest disease.
Emphasis will be on recent
advances in the management of
tuberculosis, hon-tuberculous infections, lung cancer, and chronic
bronchitis and emphysema. Pulmonary granulomas and chest
pathology due to systemic diseases will also be presented.

Twenty-two specific topics will
be covered, eleven on Wednesday,
March 4, in the Main Conference
Room of Meyer Memorial, and
eleven on Thursday at the South
Building Lecture Hall of Buffalo
General.
Dr. John- P. Wyatt, director of
the department of pathology at
the St. Louis University School
of Medicine, will be the visiting
faculty member. Dr. Wyatt will
speak on the recent advances in
the understanding of the pathologic anatomy of chronic chest
disease at 10:00 a m., March 5.
At 11:30 am., he will be on a
panel discussing the management
of patients with pulmonary emphysema.

Bloodmobile Visit
Set for Thursday
In Harriman Aud.
A goal of 172 pints of blood

Registration Begins March 2
Registration for next semester
for all University College students (Except Those on Strict
Academic Probation) will begin
Monday, March 2. Students whose
last names begin with the letters
designated below will see their
advisers, plan their programs and
register for courses on the fol-

has been set for the March Bloodmobile visit here.
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will
be at the Harriman Auditorium,
lowing (Jays:
Thursday, AFROTC project diMarch 2 through March 6
rector Cadet Captain Harold Hartshorn announced this week.
M, J.
March 16 through March 20
All students and faculty members are asked to donate to this K, L.
most important cause. Persons
March 23 through March 27
donating A positive blood will
S.
make it possible for a 14 year
March 30 through April 3
old boy to under go open-heart C, D.
surgery on March 6th. About 20
April 6 through April 10
F,
pints of A positive whole blood
W, Z.
is needed for the operation.
April 13 through April 17
Pledge cards and minor release
forms can be obtained at the A, B.
April 20 through April 24
Arnold Air Society booth in Norton Hall, Feb. 26 to Mar. 4 from G, H.
11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
April 27 through May 1
P,
Q, E.
E, I,
May 4 through May 8
N, 0, T, U, V, X, Y.
The mixer committee
Students will make appointis sponsoring a dance.
meents with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
The Sadie Hawkins Mix114 one week in advance of the
er, to be held in the mulabove schedule times. At this
ti-purpose room, tomortime, the Receptionist will give
row night. All students

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Paper-Back Exchange Now
Housed in Browsing Li brary
Starting Monday, the PaperExchange sponsored by
the Literary Committee of Union
Board will have a permanent
home. In one corner of the
Browsing Library on the second
floor of Norton will be found a
collection of paperback books. Do
you own one you have finished
reading? Bring it in and give
other students the opportunity
to read your choice. In return,
Back

you may borrow one from the
collection. The following are the
rules to be followed;
1. Books can be exchanged every
day between the hours of
11:00 a.m. 2:00 p.m. (we hope
to extend these hours as the
demand increases)
2. Even exchanges are required
not only in number, but in

been purchased, but the exchange
is primarily for paperbacks.
The exchange consist mostly of
novels, many of which are classics, such as The Way of All
Flesh, Les Miserables and Crime
and Punishment More contemporary novels include: Cry for
Happy, The Greatest Story Ever
Told, and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.

TRY 'EM
•

MEAT BALL SANDWICH
55c
ITALIAN SAUSAGE SANDWICH.. 60c

•

PIZZA

•

-

-

quality. Don’t take advantage
of the exchange to get rid of
you
books
that
yourself
wouldn’t bother to pick up
again. No cloak-and-dragger
type stories will be accepted.
3. No books in badly-worn condition will be accepted.
4. Please return books for further exchange to give other
students the opportunity to

—

are invited to attend the
dance which is free.
Music will be provided
by Jim Battistoni and his
band.

1964

the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow in
the subsequent registration pro-

cedures. O.T. students and P.T.
students will make appointments
with Miss Greenman and Miss
Heap directly. Nursing students
are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day in September.
Students on Strict Academic
Probation Will Not Be Permitted
to Advance Register During the
Scheduled Publicized Times. If
the Quality Point Average of
such students improves to such
a degree that they become eligible to continue in school, they
will be informed in June, after
semester grades are in, concerning later registration dates. Students in this category, however,
who wish to see their advisers
are encouraged to do so. It would
be helpful if these students
could make an appointment during the alphabetically scheduled
time, but, if the problem is pressing, they can make an appointment at any time.

NEW CASUAL

and
all from

TF 2-9331

COLLEGE PIZZERIA
FREE DELIVERY!!

obtain desired books.

A few hard-cover books have

r

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*

j

j

/

Playmate

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wears

)

VI'S

j nothing but I
wi

i

»

CONTINENTALS
H

,

j

tj&amp;idmausl
Sfaed
)

i

BOULEVARD MALL
10% Discount

Students

-

Bring

to U.B.

Your

I.D.

|

"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, February 28, 1964

Dr. Demarest Speaks to IVCF
Topic: Is Morality Outmoded?

;

On Monday, at 3:15 p.m., in the
Multi-Purpose Room of Norton,
Pr. Demarest will speak on the
topic, “Is Morality Outmoded?”
The talk is sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship

and all are welcome to attend.

Dr. Demarest now holds the
ThM. degree from Princeton
Theological Seminary, and the
D O. degree from Tusculum College. He has also served the Fellowship of Christian Athletes as
National Progam Director. At
present, Dr. Demarest is pastor
of the Hamburg Presbyterian
Church in Hamburg, New York.
Dr. Demarest has this to. say
about his topic, “In recent weeks
various national magazines and
publications have brought to our
attention the vast confusion that
now exists in our understanding
of sexual morality. A real question is posed as to whether the
traditional Christian concept of
sex is relevant or outmoded.”

Cadet Ladies Club
The Cadet Ladies Club has departed from the “Business Knowledge” of the Air Force to the
social life of an active duty member. Mrs. Thomas L. Huddleston
uses of the basicblack dress and accessories for
any social occasion. Mrs. Natalie
Holy and Mrs. Wylma Parker
modeled
and
narrated each
presented the

change.

Newly learned social graces will
be tested at a dinner-dance at
the Niagara Falls Officers’ Club.
The; dinner dance will be the
final meeting of th school year.

Panhellenic Council's
will take place Monday, March 2, from 7:45 until
10:30, in the Panhellenic Office.

-

Moliere’s comedy, The Miser,
opens at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday,

DR. DEMAREST

Health Insurance

Now Required

Beginning in September 1964
all full-time undergraduate students will be required to carry
health insurance during the regular school year. Summer coverage will be optional, as in the
past.
You will be automatically enrolled in the University’s plan
at $11/semester. However, if you
have other health insurance, be
prepared to show written proof
at the Student Health Office
(9 a.m.-4 p.m. weekdays) within
10 days of your registration, and
if coverage is adequate, your account will be credited for the $11
charge.

Support

Advertisers

Alpha Gamma Delta has elected new officers: president, Nancy
Bugielski; 1st vice president, Susan Gugino; 2nd vice president,
Pat Larson; recording seretary,
DeKing;

Alpha Sigma Phi congratulates
Sandy Finkelstein on his fine
showing in the ACU Sectionals
last week. Finkelstein won the
first place trophy in the individual billiard competition, the
team trophy in bowling, and all

events
He will represent
the university in regional competition this year in these events.
Alpha Phi Delta has elected
ts new officers; Denis Scihta,

'resident; Dave Vastola, vice
'resident, Colin Christie, treas[rer; Norman Mingle, recording
e.eretary and Ken Bernstein, coresponding secretary.

1

1

Alpha Phi Omega will hold a
ate Party tomorrow at 8:30 p.m.
the Orchard Park Motel. Re'esentatives of U.B.’s Alpha Phi
■nega, Epsilon Sigma chapter,
avelled to Predonia State Teachrs College this
past Wednesday
welcome their new chapter.

The brothers of Gamma Phi
will hold a “slop”
arty at Brother Clair Anderson’s
°use Saturday at 9;00 p.m. The
Tethers' would also like to thank
beta Chi Sorority for the enayable social
last Friday night.

raternity

stage forms. Harriman Auditorium is admirably suited to
theatre-in-the-round production.
Its size is most appropriate and
the room acoustics are very
Tickets are available at the
Baird Hall box office and will
also be sold at the door before
each performance. Prices are
$1.00 for students, staff and faculty and $2.00 to the public. Reservations may be made by

SALE

treas-

Chi Omega were happy to cpntirtue their tradition of ushering
at mid year commencement. Also
congratulations to Diane Scholl,,
who was recently crowned queen
of the AFROTC Military Ball.

“The performance configuration,” Dr. Watson stated, “enable the student actor to work
in a much better actor-audience
relationship. It is important for
the students to experience and
work with the various acting

calling 831-3408.

corresponding

secretary, Joanne Scinta;
urer, Demaris Pask.

ART PRINTS and MATTED DRAWINGS

—

$

.90

Student Book Shop
3400

MAIN

STREET

BUFFALO,

NEW YORK

Mark Lane will speak tonight
at eight o’clock in the Mahogany

Room

of

the

Hotel

Buffalo

(changed from the Hotel Lafayette) under the auspices of
the Committee to hear Mark
Lane. Mr. Lane has been retained
by Mrs. Oswald to defend her
son, Lee Harvey Oswald. Lane is
charging no fee for his work.
Mr. Lane is basing part of his
defense on some copies of more
than twenty documents which
he obtained from the files of
Dallas District Attorney Wade,
These documents bring out sev-

of these was reported to have
got Into a car bearing a sticker
for a rival Presidential aspirant.
Third, there is a statement by a
woman eyewitness to the fatal of
Patrolman J. D. Tippit, She descrived the man who killed him
shortly after the president was
shot • as “short, stocky, with
bushy hair," contrasting with the
slim, medium-tall Oswald.
■

Mr. Lane has “discovered some
evidence that other persons very
different from Lee Harvey Oswald
in political philosophy may have
been involved.” Mr. Lane believes
that there was a plot that involved “shots fired at the President from more than one direction.” He said that four employees of the Dallas Morning
News described shots from an
overpass in front of the Kennedy
car
the Depository was behind
the car. The first police radio
alarm had asserted “all the shots
appear to have come from the
overpass.” (all quotes from the
New York Times, Feb. 18, p. 23)
■

Mr.

Lane

bring these
him and will
probably bring up other points
of serious interest in his speech
may

documents with

tonight.

formers.

good.”

Our

Mark Lane Will Speak
Tonight at Hotel Buffalo
In Defense of Lee Oswald

eral points, pertinent to Oswald’s
in Harriman Auditorium. Proinnocence. For example, when
duced by the Department of a man fires a rifle, the chemical
Drama and Speech, the play will
discharge from the gunpowder
feature an all student cast leaves a residue on his cheek.
Laurence
headed
Bartlett as One of the documents shows
miser. Others paraffin tests that “indicate rather
Harpagon, the
in this I7th century classic inplainly that Lee Harvey Oswald
clude Susan Sturgeon, Gloria did not fire a rifle on NovemNowacyzk, Corinne Jafte, Colin ber 22, 1963.” No ■ nitrates were
Bremner, John Lund, Barry Tanfound on Oswald’s face. Also
nenbaum and James Cronberg. among the documents are the
Four performances will be given. affidavits of a number of persons
who were in the Texas SchoolThe production, under the dibook Depository Building. They
rection of Thomas Watson, Lec- without naming - a
turer in Theatre, is being staged described
number of strangers who left
%
the
in
round. The play’s stagmoments before
ing in this form will bring all of the warehouse
the
first
shots
were fired. One
the audience close to the per-

technique presented by several

Flash:

Sandra

All students must have
their I.D. cards validated by March 6. Any person whose I.D. card does
not have the gold seal on
it will lose all the privileges which the card entitles them to. This includes the right to take
books out of the library.
The cards may be validated at the Audio-Visual Department in the
basement of Foster Hell.

Moliere The Miser
Student Production

CjreeL l^jewA
final bidding

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

....

TELEPHONE: 833-7000

Directly across the University Main St. entrance

Area Code 716

mw momr
M¥i£W

mwmmif
*s&lt;

�PAGE FOUR

Friday, February 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

THE

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

SPECTRUM

j

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

EDITOR
Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Editorial Advisor

ELECT

-

-

ARNOLD S MAZUR
MARTIN D. KRIEGEL

Business Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulation Mgr.
Financial Advisor

John Kowal
Marlin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Alan Newman
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessinger
Thomas Haenle, Jr.

General Staff Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Judy Green, Gary Falk,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Charles
Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford, Jane
Sommer Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham,
Lillian
Kalasfem, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng,
Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo, Terry Sweeney, Tom Kenjarski,
Hampton,
Peugof,
Nancy
Dave
Schultz, Ronnie
Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Kilpstejn, Saralee Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary
Ann Warfenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Carolyn Cooper, Barry Gufterman.

Photography Staff: Joel Havens,

Pamela Reid, Toby Leder.

BARBARA STERLING
kO

(

i

as second class matter February 9, 1961, at the Post
Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of postage provided for in
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951.
Entered

0

Subscription

PRES!

$3.00 per year, circulation 9000,

Represented ,for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 .Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION

UB FOLK SINGER

Barbara Sterling, a freshman
UB made her professional
debut as a folk singer last Saturday night at the Golden Boar
coffee house, located at Pearl
and West Tupper Streets.
The evening was highlighted by
Barbara’s singing “Autumn,” a
composition of her own, which
was highly received by the audiat

ence.

Tomorrow evening, Barbara
will again return to the Golden
Boar stage at 8:30 p.m.

Date of Filing—September 24, 1963
Title— The Spectrum
Frequency—Weekly

rjCetterS

Office of Publication—Norton Hall, State University of New
York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York

Location of Headquarters—Same
Publisher—State University of New York at Buffalo
Editor—Arnold S. Mazur, 310 Tower Hall, Buffalo, New
York 14214
Managing Editor—John
Buffalo, New York

P,

14215

Kowal, 320 Roslyn Avenue

Owner—State University of New York at Buffalo

Known bondholders—None
Average number

months

■

of copies issued during previous
9,000 per issue

12

I certify that the statements made by me above are
correct and complete
PATRICIA LAUNER

Business Manager

Editorial
MANUSCRIPTS AND NEW STUDENT REVIEW
Manuscripts is the campus literary magazine. The publication has recently been revived, sporting a new editorial staff and an internal enthusiasm which hasn’t been
seen for some time. The new editor, Vic Menza, was formerly a controversial Spectrum columnist, and promises
to produce a journal of poetry and short stories of the
highest quality possible. The persons who are working
with the editor have the skills and necessary editorial
competance which the magazine has always bled for.
All students who have the creative ability and talent
to contribute to the purely literary magazine should do
so; for without contributors the finest magazines would
be empty. We urge that these people submit their work

to Manuscripts.

Publications
TO THE EDITOR:

publication,
literary and/or artistic, is to
The basis of any

tastefully represent the creative
works of its contributors. Unfortunately however, there are
many publications on this campus which are not aware of the
worth of such contributions. The
replacment of art by commercial dilettantism is one of the
worst plagues inhibiting the
success of our publications.

Editors of such literary works
as the New Student Review and
The Buffalonian are obligated
to their readers to produce
material of high quality. However, it has been found in a
number of cases that they impose
pointless and obstinate will on
individual contributors, supposedly for the sake of increasing
sales. This limits sincere creative output.
For an editor, especially one
who has little contact with “art”
to uncompromisingly control its
production is an absurdity which
can lead to stifling creativity.
Toby Leder

the Editor

would you

call

it:

purge? an inquisition?

a

Well, I haven’t said anything,
so I’ll sum up with a conclusion.
“Man is by nature a political
animal, and whosoever disagree,
let him be anathema.”

This country needs people like
you because there’s nothing easier in this society than to feel
shame. Play on it. Make it a holy
cause. Let your banner be honor

and integrity ever onward.
Look for a sign from heaven
that your side is just. Let your
conscience be your guide. Sharge
into the foray astride a gleaming Harley, clad in white leathers,
holding your pen or pike aloft
swinging away at that windmill!
And when you stand before
the screaming mob of peers
gathered to pay tribute to you,
our Messiah, make sure your
hands are clean.
Good luck.
I sign this sincerely.

Carl A. Berg, Jr,

Feinberg Issue

Politics ?
TO THE EDITOR:

I’ve started this thing four
times. Every time I start it I
think of something different.
O.K. Politics is bad, evil, decadent, etc. And one voice “crying out in the wilderness” doesn’t
do any good. The “conspiracy of
silence" is very effective, don’t

The content of Manuscripts does not conflict with that
you agree?
of the New Student Review. NSR is the more frequent
Th feeling of power—you’ve
periodical which is devoted to contemporary thought, as
ridden a bike, you’re aware of
well as containing some fiction and poetry. New Student that feeling. Couple this with
Review will soon be on sale, and the student body should a state of amorality induced by
support it and become familiar with the publication. If today’s middle class and you’ve
got a condition in which our
the magazine’s essayists or editors print opinions which politics thrive.
are contrary to anyone’s, they should answer with their
You with me?
own contributions. We are sure that the editors of NSR
Why the hell do you use
O.K.
would accept interesting thoughts from all areas of the
air those cliches; it louses up
campus.
you
say.
what

Then again, no matter the quality of either of the two
publications, the magazines can only continue to exist if
the student body purchases the product. There should be
no reason why the Student Senate should have to subsidize the magazines; it only proves the failure of this
campus to promote and sustain its own work.

What

to

have to

Flowered phrases uttered by
honey-tongued orators have won
many an election. So too have
the tactics you use—and they
are tactics. “I have here the
names of a bunch of powerwrought ego-maniacs.” Who said
that’

TO THE EDITOR;

I have no intention here of
entering further into “Feinberg
debates.” The relevant positions
of the American Association of

University Professors and its
local chapter have clearly stated
often enough. However, in recent
weeks two letters broadly concerned with Feinberg matters
have appeared in Spectrum, each
of which warrants brief comment.

intended by Mr. Nagel, his remarks may be taken to imply
that the disclaimer certificate,
per se, is required by the Fein
berg Act. Such, of course, is
not the case. The disclaimer cer
tificate is an administrative procedure selected by the State University administration as its
means for complying with the
Feinberg Act’s mandate to secure
the University against the employment of “subversive” persons. Whatever may be the status
of the procedure, its desirability
as a procedure may be debated
as a question independent of its

legality or illegality. Moreover,
even “legalities” are rarely so
absolute as to be exempt from
question.
In any event, it should be recognized that no law requires
faculty to sign disclaimer eer
tificate. It is merely to do so if
the person wishes to ply his
trade at SUNY. Consequently, no
member of this faculty who has
refused to sign the disclaimer

certificate has acted in contra
vention of law. He simply has
refused, on principle, to endorse

an administrative procedure, at
peril to his livelihood, that he

finds distasteful and itself sub
versive of the fundamental prin
ciples of scholarly enterprise. We
may not agree with his actions,
but we should at least under
stand their nature and import.
Finally, Mr, Nagel forces upon
the university an analogy with
“business.” Such an analogy is
so patently strained by virtue
of the essential dissimilarity of
organizational objectives between
the two that I can attribute it
only to thoughtless naivete and
forebear from further remark
ing upon it.
Sincerely,
Raymond G. Hunt.

In the Feb, 14 issue Prof. Sealy
of Classics, speaking to the desirability or no of signing disclaimer certificates, asks, apparently by way of questioning

Chairman,

and Tenure
SUNYAB Chapter,

AAUP’s impartiality, what AAUP

did in the instance of Prof. Barghorn’s detention in the Soviet
Union, I suggest that Prof. Sealey
satisfy himself by consulting the
December 1963 issue of the AAUP Bulletin—an article entitled
“Association Letters in the Case
of Professor Frederick C. Barghom.”

In the Feb. 21 issue Edward
D. Nagel, in Part 4 of his letter,
places great stress upon the legality of the disclaimer certificate required of State University faculty. While possibly not

Committee"

on Academic Freedom
AAUP

More Feinberg
TO

THE EDITOR.

The more we hold certain co
ceptions to be dangerous, tl
more eager we should be
meet them in full and open d
bate. And demolish them? Pc
haps. But there is a more h
pprtant reason, a surer gain. N
&lt;Cont’d on P

�Friday, February 28, 1964

aCetteri

The Circus
Diogenes Publishes Campus Survey
Noted Athens University polltaker Diogenes today made public
the results of his search for an
honest man on the State University of New York at Buffalo
campus. Speaking to an assembly
in the Conference Theater, the
robed, lantern carrying philosopher, who many students took for
pledge on

an

as-

signment, said that “while the
situation here is not as bad as,
say, in Albany, it is not good

cither.”
He related that his first stop

was a Psychology 102 exam. “I
have never seen so many dishonest people in one place in all
my travels,” said Diogenes. “Crib
notes, the passing of answer pa-

pers

between

students,

then

to the

Editor

fell, and was “stabbed through
both navels.”
Next, Diogenes told of his interrogation of the people who
redeem used textbooks for cash
in the bookstore basement. “Phenomenal,” was his only comment.
Diogenes then reported on his
trip to the Faculty Club, “There
was a pile of pamphlets which
contained reproductions of the
state constitution; hanging on the
wall over them was a sign “To
know your enemy is to better
fight him.” I was told by the
janitor (who, by the way, carried
a Phi Beta Kappa key) that all
the faculty members were in
classes. I thought this strange,
for 1 distinctly heard breathing
coming
from under several

even my best idea is really mine,
or really good, until it takes
life and shape in contention
against alternatives. A good mind
alone, like a desk bound athlete
doing, isometrics can forestall
slackness by impersonating a confrontation; but in the long run
there is no substitute for the
free adversary who calls my
bluff, who raises the embarrassing question, who forces be back
to examine by supposed first
principles and better my own

relation to them.
Education is directed toward,
and works by, this free contention of ideas. It seeks an arena
set somewhat aside from the hubbub of daily events, precisely so
that the struggle of ideas may
be waged fairlyl, on equal ground
to a clear conclusion —or a deadlock. What it seeks it sometimes
finds, and calls by the name:
“University.”

Education was held to be essential to good government when
this nation was founded. Surely
it is still so regarded, and still
for the same reason: the free
and fearless discussion is the
very basis of our political system. “Academic freedom” in
such a system is not a professional privilege; it is a political

DIOGENES

and from

behind

the

among students, the hand-overthe-eye trick, block seating among
members of the same organization,” (he declined to mention if
they, like he, were Greek) “were
very much in evidence.”

couches

Next, Diogenes stated he
watched cars leaving the main
parking lot at 12 o’clock. “Breaking off of gates, tail gating under
the barriers, using slugs
all
these things were noted.” “But,”
the philosopher added, “these dishonest acts are so petty they don’t

behind me.”
The last stop on his search
was Goodyear Hall, There, Diogenes said, he was told by each
girl that she was there for an
education. There he said he was
told by each girl that academics
came first at all times. There he
said he was told by each girl
that social activities were of
minor importance. There he said
he was told by each girl that
she was preparing for a future
career which, with the benefit
of her college training, would
make her a more valuable asset
to her community and to her
society as a whole. There he said
he was “sickened.”

-

amount to anything.”

The Philosopher then related
how he stopped at the Student
Senate office. “However,” he said,
“when the people there found
out I was looking for an honest
man, they all stampeded around,
each declaring he represented
the end of my search. There were
so many people there that, in the
crush of bodies, my lamp was
snuffed out. Perhaps it’s just as
well.”

next told of his
in the university’s cafeterias. “Students put food in their
pockets, stole silverware, borrowed trays, and performed other
dishonest acts.” An act of poetic
justice did occur, the lecturer
noted, when a boy carrying a
full set of silverware and an
orange in his coat pocket tripped,
Diogenes

search

Diane Scholl, a sophomore, was
crowned queen of the 13th Annual AFROTC military ball at
Kleinhans Hall, last Saturday.
Miss Scholl was crowned at the
stroke of midnight by Pat
Hoffman, last year’s queen and
Lt. Colonel Thomas L. Huddleston, Professor of Air Science.

drapes; however, I said nothing.
As I was on my way out, the
janitor asked, “You’re a legislator, aren’t you?” I replied I was,
and he said “I thought so.” The
door was closed rather firmly

Student reaction to the survey
report was mixed. Number 23756
thought Diogenes was “boss,”
while number 39573 asked, “Who
does he think he is anyway?”
Walking with the philosopher

to the parking lot, this reporter
was told, “Actually, my trip here

wasn’t completely profitless.
While in your bookstore I bought
a flashlight. It should last longer
than a lamp.”

in
a member of
Chi Omega Sorority and Newman Club, and likes bowling,
tennis and portrait painting..

Miss Scholl

REFLECTIONS

(Continued from Page 4)

By BOB MILCH

a fraternity

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

is

majoring

mathematics. She is

“Her Majority” was elected by
the 1700 Cadets to represent the
575fh Corps for 1964

duty.
In a nation where all political
institutions, from Congress to the
local police court, are based on
a principle of clarification and
decision through free debate, it
is no wonder the Supreme Court
has continually and consistently
held the freedoms of speech and
association to be primary and
essential. Abridgement of these,
the freedoms guaranteed by the
First Amendment to the Con
stitution, has been allowed only
where it has seemed an unavoid-

By JEREMY TAYLOR

I was surprised and pleased to

see Ed Nagel’s letter (Response
to Taylor, Spectrum, February 21)
because it was the first intelli-

gent argument in favor of the
Feinberg Law and Certificate. My
disagreement with Mr. Nagel’s
position is profound, but granting
his major premisses and sources,
it was a clear and coherent statement. My argument is with the
principle that “education is just
good business” and that matters
of conscience can be “remote.”
However, the principle of dialogue which Mr. Nagel has promulgated in his letter is one
which is most important and I
would like to thank him for this
forthright statement. The editorial of the same issue presented
some rather depressing facts. If
the McNeil Mitchell bill passes,
public education on the college
level in this state will return to
the methods of the Inquisition.
One is reminded, however, that
this is an election year and all
legislators up for re-election, and
most particularly Gov. Rockefeller, are busy trying to clean
themselves from any taint of
liberalism. I can only hope that
the students of the State University on other campuses will
be as vocal in their protests as
we on this campus will be.
your stand on the
Feinberg issue may be, the creation of a state committee to decide whom students and teachers
can invite to address them is
such a blatant invasion of our
academic community that 1 find
it difficult to imagine that any
thoughtful person could condone
it. The introduction of such a
Whatever

bill only goes further to show
that my allegations asserting that
our legislatures are inhabited by
knaves and fools have a basis in
conspirational action against the fact. I urge the Student Senate
state. Even in the latter case, to draft a letter to the approprithe Court has insisted that the ate authorities expressing their
circumstances of the danger be opposition to this bill. I have
little hope that they will, at this
carefully determined and defined. They must be circumstances late date, realize their responsiin which irreparable harm could bilities; but one can only indicate
to them that the courts upheld
be done before the natural safeour rights to invite Aptheker. The
guards of discussion and confrontation, envisioned in the precedent is there if our preciFirst Amendment, would have ous senate can see fit to live up
to their own statement of several
time to come into play.
Time: time for discussion: the weeks ago in which they extended
the invitation to Aptheker and
essence of a university. If First
Amendments freedoms are not has had many glowing words to
operable in our universities, they say about the importance of “acaare no longer operable anywhere demic freedom.”
I would strongly suggest that
in our society. That they are
operable, and that our experience students attend the senate meetings and watch our senators in
as a nation proves them so, is
“action;” perhaps they might
one of our chief claims to respect
even do something if there were
and leadership in the world.
If one asked what latitude the enough people watching them.
I should think that even Shapiro,
Supreme Court has allowed to
Kobus, Lappin et al. would be
the States in abridging freedom
embarrassed into some semblance
of speech and association, the
of responsibility if their childish
extreme example many authormaneuverings were viewed by
ities would cite is the Alder case
interested students.
of a decade ago. By a six-to-three
It also occurs to me that the
decision, the Court implicitly acstudent body might take some
cepted the finding of New York’s
interest in the proposed new StuFeinberg Law that a lower school
classroom, in which a child of dent Association Constitution. As
yet I have heard only rumors
tender years receives instrucas to its content, but it seems
tions from just one home-room
teacher, is an area sufficiently reasonable to suppose that it
might be yet another attempt to
“sensitive” to conspirational action to justify the excluding from subvert the principles of student
responsibility within an academic
elementary and high school teachcommunity dedicated to educaing of members of certain politition rather than the production
cal groups.
of faceless degree holders. 1 hope
It was only after the Adler dethe text of the new constitution
cision that the State Legislature
extended the Feinberg Law to
college-level institutions. It was
only after the Adler decisipn
constitutionality of present prothat the Feinberg Law was im
cedures under the Feinberg
plemented by a procedure (the Law. More likely, it will remain
"Feinberg
certificate")
which
on its present dry ground of
creates fear of unspecified resmall points in equity, and never
prisal for many kinds of classtake the constitutional plunge.
room utterances which in themNevertheless, it was consideration
selves are innocuous before the
of political principles and con
law. To claim that all this later
stitutional rights which led me
development is sanctioned by the
to piy present situation.
Adler decision is to claim much
I declined to give a yes or no
more than the Courts might reaanswer to a question on a civil
sonably allow.
service form. As to the question
I would be pleased if my own
asked (which I trust the reportcase were to prove a test of the
ers of this journal to have quoted
consequence of necessary
measures to safeguard other basic
rights, or to forestall dangerous

able

will be made available to the
student body and that if indeed
it proves to be what I can only
presume it is the students will
make some effort to protect themselves.
The best way for interested students to take a hand in deciding
the quality of education available
to us here at SUNYAB is to elect
responsible and intelligent students to the student senate the
body which officially represents
student concerns. Find out what
each candidate plans to do about
those things with which you are
concerned, whether it’s something of statewide importance
like the Feinberg Law and the
Mitchell Bill, or of importance
to the campus like the composition and power of the publications board or the influence of
fraternities in campus affairs.
Find out where the candidates
stand, and then go to the senate
meetings to see that they stick
to it. If a candidate is elected
with a mandate from his constituents then he is in a much
better position to discharge his
duties on the senate. I personally
support the candidacy of Henry
Simon for senator from Arts and
Sciences. He is a man of great
intelpersonal integrity and
■

-

ligence.
I am personally very mistrustful of “party tickets.” Find out

where each candidate stands that way you can avoid handing
power over to a coterie of personal friends whose positions may
conflicting, nebulous, or simply
non-cxistant. In an election such
as that coming up every vote
makes a great difference, particularly if the situation prevails
of most students being just too
lazy to vote. If every student
weilds his vote responsibly then
the fraternity “voting blocks” will
have little or no power to distribute offices to their personal
friends and the student senate
will once more be the representative body of the students
here, in fact as well as in name,
and I for one think that’s pretty
important to good education.
I also call upon each candidate
to take a stand on the proposed
Mitchell bill, and I call on every
student not to support those
candidates who fail to do so, or
who support it. This Mitchell bill
is of such an order of importance and danger to good education, in principle as well as in
fact that it will be of pivotal importance in this election across
the state as well as on this
campus. If this bill passes no
one will be free to carry public
inquiry into any area that the
state legislature does not approve. Your own student convocations committee will be
merely a rubber stamp for the
desires of the state and that
doesn’t sound like democracy to
me, let alone like academic freedom. Don’t let administrative
hypocracy and student apathy rob
us of the right to a good education. If we lose after a good
fight that will be tragic, but if
we lose by default that would be
merely pathetic. We can win the
struggle for good education; we
can fight the Mitchell bill; we
can elect a respsonsible student
senate; if we lose we have no
one to blame but ourselves!
-

elsewhere in full), one comment

onlv:

When the late President Kennedy praised certain citizens for
opposing the existing government of a southern State by
means unlawful in that State, he
very possibly rendered himself
permanently ineligible on the
face of it for subsequent employment by the State of New York.
He could no longer have given
with certainty the answer the
State Civil'service requires.
George Starbuck

�PACE SIX

SPECTRUM

SPOTLIGHT ON CIVIL RIGHTS
By DANIEL RUSSELL

“You can’t legislate prejudice
out of existence.” You’ve heard
the old saw. It’s true, too. But
the legislation now on the senate
calendar isn’t aimed at prejudice
per se, but at overt manifestations of prejudice; the denial of
human rights.
The coM fact is that there is
no national legislation enforcing

the contention that the denial of
human rights because of color is
1957 and 1960 deal solely with
illegal. The Civil Rights Act of
voter registration.

Segregation
and discrimination in public facilities, schools, employment, and
housing run rampant.
The “Civil Rights Bill,” actually
many bills, is a multi pronged
attack. Title III deals with desegregation of state owned and
operated public facilities such as
beaches and golf links. It also
provides that the Attorney Gen-

eral

may

intervene

in

suits

brought for relief from denial
of equal protection of the laws
because of race.
Title IV would give the Attorney General authority to
initiate school desegregation
suits. Title V makes the Civil
Rights Commission a permanent
body.

Title VI forbids discrimination
in programs getting federal assistance and authorizes, but docs
not require, withdrawal of federal funds where such discrimination persists.
Title VII would create a commission on equal employment opportunity to abolish discrimination by both employers- and
unions.
Title III is considered the heart
of the measures, and its loss to
a senate filibuster (a possibility
would be a blow to Negro hopes.

This is the most far-reaching
civil rights bill ever put before

prohibitions—against subjective use of voter
qualification tests, against discrimination in public facilities,
aganst police brutality and denial
of first amendment rights, against
discrimination in federally assisted programs—and the powers
given to the Attorney General
to initiate, or intervene in, legal
proceedings to enforce these proCongress. Its

visions, all add up to an extension of federal authority unthinkable a few years ago.
But to say that the federal
government would be overstepping its authority is to raise what
Lincoln called a “pernicious
abstraction.” Millions of Americans are denied their basic rights
by the states and localities, so the
only alternative is federal action.
It is true that the federal government will be empowered to deny
individuals certain rights by this
legislation. It will have the power
to deny individuals their “right”
to rob another of his rights.
State r i g h t e r s stress their
“rights,” but not their obliga-

Leadership Conference For
New Union Board Officers
By BARBARA STRAUSS

The second annual Leadership
Conference, sponsored by Union
Board, will be held tomorrow
in Norton Union. Margaret Collard and Gerry Cantazaro, first
and second Vice-Presidents of
the Board, are responsible for
the various events of the Conference, and have issued the
following schedule of activities:

9-9:30 a.m.: All participants will
meet in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge for an informal coffee
hour.
9:30 a.m.; Dr. Sidney Parnes will
speak on the subject of “Creative Thinking.” Dr. Parnes will
illustrate his talk by taking a
problem from initiation to evaluation, demonstrating, in the
process, the way in which an
average student can become
more creative. A discussion
group will follow this lecture,
during which procedures which
have previously been discussed,
will bg, put into practical experiences.

1-2:00 p.m.: A luncheon in the
Tiffin Room.
bill passed the house
handily. The senate, with un- 2:00 p.m.: Dr. Richard Wilson
will speak on the changing role
limited debate rather than the
of the student in campus activilive minute rule on amendments,
ties. Discussion groups will folis where the fight is. Senator
low this lecture, and will be
Richard B. Russell, with his 18
lead by: Mr. William Siemerstalwart Dixiecrate filibustered,
ing, Dr. Wilson, Mr, Dallas
will try to talk the bill to the
Gerber, Mrs. Faith Moll.
ground They realize that they
cannot kill the bill altogether,
so emasculation of the bill is
their only hope. Unfortunately
the unilmited debate in the senate, and the difficulty of effecting
cloture, may mean that these
destroyers will succeed in domtions.

The

inating the majority.

Militello's

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students

3400 MAIN STREET

(Opposite UB)
TF 3-1600
Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till 9 P.M.

ORDERS DELIVERED TO

Allenhurst
Nightly at 10:30 in front of APARTMENT 472

3588 MAIN STREET
TF 2-1456

Friday, February 28,

The

purpose

of this confer-

ence, as was its goal last

year,

is the familiarization of 1964-65
Board officers and committee
chairmen with the intricacies,
activities and other officers of
the new board. The qualities of
leadership will be extensively discussed in hopes that others interested in becoming future officers of the board will attend
and participate in the seminars.

1964

Library Hours
Lockwood and Harriman Libraries: Sunday, March 8, 1-9 p.m,;
Monday, March 9 to Friday, March 13, 8:30 a,m.-9 p.m.; Saturday,
March 14, 9 a.m.-S p.m.; Sunday
March 15, 2 p.m.-llp.m.
Monday, March 9 to Friday,
March 13, Engineering 8:30 a.m '
5 p.m.; Chemistry, 8:30 a.m.-9
p.m.; Physics 8:30 a.m-5 pm.
Saturday, March 14, Engineer
ing, 9 a.m.-l p.m.; Chemistry 9
a.m.-l p.m. Physics, 9 a.m.-l p.m.
Health Sciences Library: Regular
Hours.

�Friday, February 28, 1964

Spectrum

dSoarcl

Civil Engineering Club
Student Chapter of the
American Society of Civil Engineers will hold a business meeting on Thursday, March 5 at
12:00 in Room 37 of the Darr
Engineering Building.
Parker
Refreshments will be served and
anyone interested is cordially

chologist in New York State and
has been practicing psychotherapy since 1950. She has done work

Psychology Club
Mrs. Constantine Yeracaris, the
only practicing Rogerian Therapist in Buffalo will be the speaker at this week’s meeting of the
Psychology Club. Mrs. Yeracaris,
a native of Detroit, is married to
Constantine Yeracaris, professor
of Sociology at SUNY and has

Friday.

The

invited to attend.

four children, qges 3-11.
She did undergraduate work
in economics at Roosevelt University and the University of
Chicago. She worked for her
Ph.D. in Psychology at the University of Chicago, and completed
everything except her dissertation. She was certified as a psy-

All groups and organizations of the Student
Association who wish to
award special honors
should contact Peter
Scholl, chairman of the
Honors and Awards
Committee, at the Student Senate office. Mr.
Scholl should also be contacted in the event that
additional evaluation
forms are needed by organizations already inactivities.

SIC 1$ the world’s finest

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•eed* to write first time Vaj
averylime.BICVDyamite”
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Ball Point is the hardest
™tal made by man. Get a BIC, now at
your campus store. BIC ‘‘Crystal” 194.
BIC pens available with blue, red, green,
and black ink. Made in U.S.A. *For replacement send pen to:
WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORP., MILFORD, CONN.

BiO)

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

with both children and adults
in single and group therapy.
She will speak briefly on clientcentered therapy and will answer questions. Anyone interested
may attend this meeting at 3:00
in Rooms 240-242 of Norton this
Photography Club

There will be a general meeting of the Photography Club today at 4:00. The room number
will be posted on the bulletin
board. New members must be
present.

Astronomy Club
The newly recognized Astronomy Club will hold a meeting,,
open to all students, Monday,
March 2, at 4 p.m. in Hochstetter,
room 111. Albert Kaupa, vicepresident, will speak on “Early
Stellar Evolution”.

WBFO Adds
To Programs
WBFO is expanding its broadcast schedule and beginning
March 1 will be on the air Sunday evenings from 4:00-9:30 p.tn.
The Sunday programs will include
an outstanding documentary
series on the Birmingham crisis
produced by WRVR in New York
City, New Sounds in Choral Music with Robert S. Beckwith, on
the music faculty and concerts
by the Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra.
Other new programs this month
include recordings made by the
Historical Society “People of Our
City and County” series with
authentic local ethnic music, and
Great Decisions -1964 which is
presented in cooperation with
the Buffalo Council on World Affairs.
listing
A free
all the programs, titles and featured musical selections is available at the Norton candy counter.

HILLEL NEWS
Purlm Debate Sunday
The Hillel Foundation will
sponsor a Sabbath Service this
evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel
House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will
conclude the current series of
sermon lessons on: “Medieval
Jewish Thought” with a talk on:
“Maimonides on Human Perfection.” An Oneg Shabbat will fol-

low.

The lighter side of Purim will
be emphasized by Hillel this Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m., when
a panel of faculty members will
participate in the Third Annual
Purim Debate. The subject which
the professors will discuss from
the point of view of their respective specialties will be: “The
Latke vs. The Hamantash.”
Passover Reservations
Passover will be observed from
Friday evening, March 27, until
Saturday evening, April 4. In
order to assist students with their
observance of their holiday Hillel is providqing a Sedar on March

27 as well as lunches on March
30 and April 1 and supper on
March 31. Arrangements for
Home Hospitality will also be
made for any student desiring
it. Reservations should be made
now at the Hillel House. The
final day for reservations is
Wednesday, March 18.
WESLEY FOUNDATION

Dr. Alfred J. Gross, newly appointed minister of University
Methodist Church, will preach
at the morning worship service
March 1.
The supper meeting this Sunday will be followed by a discussion on “The Christian Solution to the Nature of Man.”
GAMMA DELTA
The next business meeting will
be held Wednesday, at 6:30 p.m.
in room 344 Norton Union. The
topic discussion Good Gossip will
be led by Rev. H. G. Cattau.
On March 18th, there will be
a meeting to discuss plans for
our future activities of the semester.

�Sororities Support Charities;
Community Reaps Benefits

By LEON LEWIS
A consideration of the modern
Italian cinema usually revolves
around the names of Frederico
Fellini and Michaelangelo Antonioni; but there is also a good
deal of fine work being done by
several yo'unger men who are not
known as well known in this
country. Due to the normal lag
in distribution, we often don’t
often learn about these men until their reputation is secure in
Europe. Two of these men, Ernando Olmi and Dino Risk, are
represented at the moment by
films at the Circle Art and the
Kensington—Olmi’s “The Sound
of Trumpets,” playing at the
Circle Art and Risi’s “The Easy
Life,” at the Kensington. Both

of these pictures are unique in
conception and are curiously revealing commentaries on the nature of life in modern Italy.
Unless Fred Keller is forced to
close “The Sound of Trumpets"
(which, by the way, is a rather

ridiculous commercialization of
the title of Olmi’s movie—the
Italian is IL Posto, which probably ought to be translated as
"The Job," or “The Position."
For that matter, Risi’s “The Easy
Life” should be called “The Overtaking," or something like that,
as the origional Italian is IL
Sorpasso.) because of poor attendance, the movie will play un
til next Wednesday. What Olmi
has done is to take a remarkably
commonplace situation—a young
man

for his first

looking

job

—and make it consistently in
teresting and frequently totally
engrossing. The movie follows the
young man’s progress from the
moment he wakes up in a modest
home in the suburbs beyond Mi
Ian to his moment of “triumph,"
the beginning of his lifetime job
as a clerk in a huge, faceless
firm in the city itself. The ac
tion of the fi|m —the boy's contract with the beaurocracy of the
firm, his chance meeting and
quick friendship with a girl who
is also looking for a job, an office party on New Year’s Eve
and a quick look at the lives of

some of the other clerks in the
division in which he is to work—seems both unimportant and boring. However, due to Olmi’s superb camera work, directorial
sense, and imaginative understanding of the people involved,
the material seems astonishingly

rich.
The young man, Domineco, is
unique as an individual and at
the same time, universal in his
eagerness, innocence, and pathetic gratitude for the miserably
boring and static job he finally
and ironically gets. The perceptive picture which Olmi gives us
of the “new” Italy—modern, industrial and hopelessly drab and
stultifying
is a compassionate
—

damnation of the spiritual blight
which an urban complex like Mi
lan seems to engender. And in
spite of the woeful picture of
humanity in the office and at
party, Olmi seems to be suggesting, in the brief encounters Dominico has with the girl, that
life and youth will flourish anywhere.
II Sorpasso is something else
again. The film, too. deals with

the rather overdone problems of
spiritual malaise and alienation,
but its dynamic pace, macabre
humor, and tough-minded attitude toward its characters is exciting and almost totally compelling. All this would be a truly
virtuoso performance by Vitorio
Gassman who is rapidly becom
ing a performer of really enormous capabilities.
Gassman, who is on the screen
for the entire action of the picture, dominates the movie and
controls it completely. He is an

EUROPE

Don’t assume the first tour you
hear of is the best. Send name
for free booklet on an unrfegimented tour.
Europe Summer Tours
I55-C2 Se. luoia; Pasadena, Cal

lorthPariie
11
w 1428HIRUL AVE.-TF6-74II

Carmen’s Barber

•.

Proprietor;

my best •film!"

TF 4-9227

TJMY RKHARDSOH
Film Critics Award Wwn&amp;ra
—

1088 Kensington Ave.

aj-bert "SATURDAY

r

.StOrofrOMJQVtS'

§§

tf

NIGHT^NO

SUNDAY MORNING”]

"HUrtNtH

nr

»;3a

SAT. NITE AT 7:00-10:15

-

9:30

Student Discount

A

A

The movie depicts a wild weekend which Gassman spends with
a serious student, very nicely
played by Jean-Louis Trignant,
whom he exposes to his neer-dowell ways. The student is rather
timorous at first, but as the weekend wears on, he becomes more
and more involved in what he
is doing until, as the movie
hurtles on to its apocalyptic ending, he is the one who calls for
more speed and stronger wine.
This is heady stuff, but one has
the feling that Italy today,and
perhaps the entire Western world
as well-is plunging down the
same path that Gassman is skillfully steering his Alfa along.

—

BOSLEY CROWTHER,

N.Y.TIHEl

KNIFE IN THE WATER
DIRECTED IV ROMAN POLANSKI. A KANAWHA FILMS, LTD. PRESENTATION

3165

Boiley ot Amherst

This

month Alpha Gama is
raffling a $25 gift certificate at
the store of the winners choice.
The sisters are selling chances

and the winner will be drawn
in Norton Union, Thursday,

sonal and close to home because
they feel that there is as much
poverty and need in this country
as in others. Once a week, the
sisters donate two hours of their
time to tutor students at St.

PHI ZETA CHI COLLECTION
Phi Zeta Chi sorority is cur
rently collecting paperback books
for distribution in the old peoples
homes. Reading is one of the
main pleasures for these senior
citizens, so contributions are received with pleasure. Anyone
wishing to make contributions
should contact Doris Marx, presi-

Augustine’s Episcopal Home at
770 Humboldt Parkway. Students
range from second grade level to
high school.
During the two years that this
program has been sponsored, it
has been beneficial to the stu-

dent.

dents and their educational ad-

The committee

vancement.

After the

Basketball Game
STOP AT

George &amp;
Eddie’s
SHRIMP and STEAK HOUSE

needs YOUR talent. If
have any musical
ability obtain an application at either Baird ticket office or Norton candy
you

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
PHILANTHROPIC PROJECT
The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta annually raise money for
the National Association for
Crippled Children and Adults,

counter.

DRY CLEANING
8 lbs. (or $2.00

The

AT THE

SPECTRUM

One

now printed by

Parineri
&amp;

-3nc

’

Laundry

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6-4041

LETTERPRESS

■W

JEWELRY.

•

OFFSET

ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
BEST PICTURE

$

G-

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
IF 3-54 VS]

All Types of Ladies 1 Heels In
Stock for Replacement
or Re-sty I ing

Phone 876-2284

Diamonds-Watches

SERVICE

I

f.

ii/k%

Tom
Jones

run
I ARMS 1
Open 9 A.M. -9 P.M.

I

f
f
)

|

•

Starts Wed.
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION
BEST PICTURE

‘THE LILIES OF THE FIELD"
starring SIDNEY POITIER

Best Actor Nomination
With LILLA SKALA , Pest
Supporting Actress Nomination
MARGARET RUTHERFORD

‘MOUSE ON THE MOON’
Color
Last 5 Days

‘THE EASY LIFE'
STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET
for all programs may be
purchased upon presentation of

J.D. card.

—„

SHOW BAR

TT 6-9146

19 W. Utica St.

Monday , March 2

For

—

7 BIG NIGHTS
“THE MISTY”

I
f
(
|

June Christy

Albert Finney
Best Actor

Last

3 Nites

SONNY ROUINS

EASTMANCOLOR

f
,

BAILEY it KENSINGTON TEl. IF 3-8211:

Shoe Repairing

(at Delaware)

INCLUDING

Jewelry
Repairing

-

and Dyed

-Sm ill printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

9941

Dancing Saturday Night

Stop Service Center

Shoes and Purses Refinished

Buffalo, N. Y.
-

-

.

722 Sycamore St.,

896

in

charge of Student Participation Day for the
Spring Arts Festival

Peggy Madden is the chairman
of this project and Nancy Turkovick and Sheila Whitehead
were among the first to participate in the program. They hope
to contribute to the success of
the project.

A Good Place to go

-AND-

“AA DEVILISH DISSECTION OF MAN
THAT HAS HUMOR, SUSPENSE
AND A DASH OF EVIL!”

CIRCLE ART THEATRE

lives.

•

THE LONG DISTANCE
RUNNER I consider

Appointments

off Bailey Ave
5 min. from Campos)

with
which most people structure their

The sisters of Theta Chi have
supported an orphan in Korea for
the past two years. They wrote
to her every a week and provided
her with schooling and clothing.
This semester they have decided to do something more per-

LONELINESS OF

Carmen Cavorsi

(Just

trivial moral conventions

_

'"TOMJOMES'may be the
biggest grosser I've ever
made but
THE

Shop

Home of the

irresponsible playboy, addicted to
a life of hedonistic pleasure without pause for introspection, who
is able to charm nearly everyone he meets into giving him his
way. He is ideally suited to the
life he is living, but the fire that
burns within him tends to consume' anyone else who comes in
contact with his restless passions.
He is not purposefully harmful,
but he is a rogue and a rake
operating beyond the pale of the

Watch and

THE BEST SHOW YOU
WILL. EVER SEE!

Eves: 7:30

Friday, February 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

f

and his Quartet
and a

s ecial

Sunday
&gt;unc

moon

Concert
STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKETS
AvailabU il Both Theaters Upon
Presentation of Proper I.D. Card

i

4 7 P.M
-

•:

I

�Friday, February

28, 1964

SPECTRUM

NY State Committee on Arts
Backs W orId's Fair Exhibit

The Jazz Gallery
By RAYMOND
For the past ten years the
tenor saxophone has taken, the
most prominent part in the development of jazz. While the trumpet is the symbol of jazz the
saxophone is making the sounds.
This fact can be shown by the
position of two greats in the jazz
world, Sonny Rollins and John
Coltrane, who both play tenor
.-axophone.
Jazz in our era is searching for
something new and different that
the world has

never heard before.

The musicians are looking for
hew sounds.” Monk has intro-

duced a new sound with the
piano, but thank to Adolphe Sax
the jazz musicians can quite easily
create a new sound, many times
revolting and unintelligible, but
interestingly enough very characteristic of the personality of
a jazz musician. The saxophone is
a little over 100 years old and
consequently has not had time
to iron out the wrinkles in the

harmonics of the instrument. It
has a robust tone but can easily
be played with harsh honks and
squeaks. Discarded by the classical musician, the saxophone has
been picked up by the jazz musician.

With “Bird” and “Prez” leading the way the instrument has
paved the way in improvisation
and also in the field of avantgarde jazz that Sonny and Trane
revel in. I will not continue to
praise the work of Rollins and
Coltrane, but I would seriously
like you to fix your attention on
the work of a more popular but
less respected pop tenor saxophonist, Stan Getz. His music has
been many times pegged as a neocommercial sort of jazz, but it
takes a jazz buff to see that
Rollins and Coltrane have not
too much over Getz technically.
Getz, unfortunately is in that
position where the music that he
plays does not satisfy the desires
of the audience. He toyed with
the Brazilian rhythms of bossanova and the samba, brought in a
lot of bread, but in reality did
not make such a lasting impression on the jazz scene as Coltrane and Rollins. If the jazz
world shifted its interest to the
work of Getz there would be no
disappointment as to technique.

CRANFORD

Getz does beautiful well-phrased
The New York State Council
lines, leaving out the honks, etc,
on the Arts will sponsor art exbut he goes relatively unnoticed.
hibitions at the New York State
Getz is in a dilemna, he wouldn't
at the World’s -Pair, it
and couldn’t change his style, Pavilion
was announced by Seymour H.
but he can't make it. Now that Knox,
Council Chairman.
the hard .semi-abstract school of
Two successive shows are planmusic is ni.
ned for a specially designed,
To say a word, if you are inair-conditioned gallery in the
terested in seeing Sonny Rollins,
State Pavilion. The first, to be
he is at the Royal Arms this
called "The River: People and
weekend. Many of you missed Places," will be presented at the
Coltrane so take a peek and see 1964 session of the Fair. This will
what jazz is coming. Next week, be a condensed survey of New
Stan Kenton's June Christy will York
State painting from the
make it to town and belt out a 17th to the 19th Century.
wide-repertoire of jazz songs.
It will feature the Hudson
River, its tributaries and valleys,
which were not only the commercial life lines of the State,
but also the favorite background
for some of America’s earliest

Scholarship to UB
By Women's Club
The

Buffalo Federation of
Women's Club Scholarship has
been established here according
to Dr. William J. O’Connor, director of the University of Buffalo
Foundation, Inc.

The Scholarship, the third of
its kind given to the University
by the Women’s Club, will be
awarded to a woman student on
the basis of her academic record.
The recipient must be a graduate
of a public high school in Buffalo
or in the area of residence of a
member of the Club,
The scholarship presentation
was made to Dr. O’Connor by
Mrs. J. Paul Lafey, president;
Mrs. H. Gerhart Hoyer, treasurer;
and Mrs, C. Edwin Long, Jr.,
scholarship chairman.
The Women’s Club also gives
the Katherine Pratt Horton and
Sadie Raynor Altman Scholarships tot he University.

settlers of upstate New

from the famous Hudson River
School and outstanding folk paintings.
In 1965, a chronological continuation called “The City: People
and Places,” will include works
of the last 75 years, emphasizing
the growing influence of urbanization and industrialization.
The first exhibition will feature
such well known artists as Thomas Cole, George Inness, Eastman Johnson, Samuel F. B. Morse,
J. J. Audubon, Asher B, Durand
and John Kensett, often represented by their most distinguished
works. Museums, galleries and
other collections throughout the

TOWN IN FOOD FINEST

-

-

Donation $1.00

ROOMS ATTRACTIVE CLEAN

CONTINENTAL

75

hoc

LADIES STEAK

.£2.95

CHOICE)
ho,

.

CHOICE OF: Baked Potato with Spur Cream or Butter
&amp;
Butter
Chef’s Special Tossed Salad Asparagus or Broccoli - Roll
Tea or Coffee .
-

-

-

j Junior Year Program
i

J

i

Washington Square

College
New York University

New York 3, N. Y.

Junior

ear

\
Ne" York

J
|

COMPLETE LUAU DINNERS
START AT $2.50

NOW!

Try Our

LUNCHEON 11:30

4:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M.
KITCHEN OPEN TILL,2:30 A.M.

DINNER

HOURS

DINERS CLUB
AMERICAN EXPRESS

Room

-

Washington

Friday February 28 8:00 P.M.

T.V. and Parking Free Phones, Room

‘PottyttCtCOH
KING STEAK

Write for

INQUIRY
INTO THE OSWALD CASE

(MB. Changed from Hotel Lafayette)

From the Polynesian Islands to the MAUNA KAI

brochure JY-4

Committee to Hear MARK LANE

HOTEL BUFFALO Mahogany

THE OFFERS RESTAURANT OUR

-

college program.

tion of the New York State Commission on the World’s Fair, of
which Lieutenant Governor Malcolm Wilson is Chairman.

—

conducted an investigation of the Oswald Case in

WEEKEND SPECIAL

THE MAUNA KAI TAKES PLEASURE IN
INTRODUCING YOU TO A ROYAL TREAT

An unusual one-year

The New York State exhibit
at the Fair is under the jurisdic-

be part of the exterior architecture of the exhibit theaterama
a circular theatre that will show
a 360 degree motion picture on
the State of New York.

Mark Lane, former New York State Assemblyman,
has urged repeal of the Feinberg Law. He has

the at Stay To Love Will
Friends and Parents Your

Junior Year
in
New York

works.

York.

INN
(

logue.
Philip Johnson, architect, commissioned to design the Pavilion,
recently announced that ten large
contemporary works of art will

Dallas and elsewhere.

Globe Artists Agency

TL 3-4300

and organized the exhibition for
the Council and prepared a cata-

Following, will be a group of
romantic 19th Century landscapes

Sheridan Near AVENUE DELAWARE 3456

"ENTERTAINMENT"

DELAWARE AVENUE

artists

the exhibition.
Mrs. Katherine Kuh, Art Editor
of the Saturday Review, selected

Fifty canvases will be shown,
beginning with a group of rarely
-seen 18th Century patroon portraits that depict the early Dutch

Campus U.B. from Minutes 6

RATES

Johnson
has selected
Peter Agostini,
John
Chamberlain,
Robert
Indiana,
Ellsworth Kelly, Alexander Liberman, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Mallary. Robert RauschenJames Rosenquist' and
berg,
Andrew Warhol to create these
Mr,

state will lend prized paintings to

artists.

INVERTED AT ADVI fERTISER'S REQUEST

THE SOCIAL SEASON IS HERE
The Globe Artists Agency has the perfect entertainment for all occasions.

1110

PAGE NINE

Take Out

Service
For Reservations

Call NF 4-4404 or NF 4-4421

-

-

Students $.50

&amp;

Swan

�PAGE TEN

Friday, February 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

Bulls Swamp Albany; Edged by Boston U.
Six Cagers Reach Double Figures
The University of Buffalo’s basketball team regained its winning
touch when the Bulls overwhelm
ed Albany State, 91-52, at Clark
Gym Saturday night. Despite its
victory margin of 39 points, UB
has yet to receive an invitation
to the N.C.A.A. regional basketball tournament.
The triumph was Buffalo's thirteenth in eighteen games, while
the loss slowed the Peds to a 1011 record. The Bulls now have
but one home game remaining on
their schedule,. Le Moyne College,
February 28th.
Showing no ill effects from the
recent loss of guards Dan Bazzani
and Dick Hetzel, UB had its second highest scoring performance
of the current season. Taking up
the scoring gap left by Hetzel,
Jim Bevilacqua hit

ley, Norb Baschnagel and Harvey
Poe who chipped in with 10
apiece. Dick Crossett, the game’s
leading scorer, came through
with 20 points for Albany,
Hanley flashed evidence of returning to early season form as

Bulls’ attack.

By PAUL

Albany drew first blood when
Crossett hit on a hook, but Poe
sank 2 set shots, and Buffalo
never once relinquished the lead.

The Bulls led, 44-23, at halftime.
UB sent 39 of its 81 shots
through the hoop for a sizzling
48.1 per cent, while the Peds took
only 50 shots and hit on 18 of
them for an aggregate of 36 per

he snared 18 remounds and inter
cepted 4 passes in setting up the

Albany, 59-32,

Btills Lose Heartbreaker

UB outreboundcd

cent.

NUSSBAUM

The University of Buffalo’s basketball tournament visions were
dealt a crushing blow Tuesday
evening when Boston University
handed the Bulls a 56-54 loss in
the Terriers’ Sergent Gym. The
loss was UB’s sixth in nineteen
games, while the victory gave BU
a 15-6 record.
Even in defeat, the Bulls played
an outstanding defensive ballgame. They permitted the Terriers only 46 shots, and in addition UB held BU scoreless for
the game’s first five minutes.
However, Buffalo managed to hit
for two points during these opening minutes.
Hanley Paces Bulls
Gary Hanley, who led the Bulls
with 20 points, was the Bulls’
sparkplug both offensively and
defensively. The senior center
pulled down 17 rebounds and

on 7 of 8

shots and 3 fouls to pace Buffalo
with 17 points. Also impressive
in the encounter were Norwood
Goodwin and Donald Thompson
who had 11 points, and Gary Han-

blocked

four

of the Terriers'

shots in a vain cause. Smooth
Harvey Poe played another fine
game as he chipped in with 7
points and led the team in an
offense surge in the closing
minutes of the second half which
just fell short of its mark. Randy
Cross, a junior forward, paced
BU with 23 points, 18 of which
came in the first half.
Boston held a substantial 37-29
lead at halftime, but the Bulls
kicked their heels and came roaring back. Twice UB drew within
one point of BU but each time
they failed to recapture the lead
that the Terriers had held since
the seven minute mark of the
first half.
Buffalo outshot Boston 24 to 15,
but the Beantowners sank 26 of
their 34 foul shots and therein
lay the story of the game. UB hit
on only six of its free throws.
Thus one of the finest efforts of
the campaign was washed away
at the foul line.

������������������������������������������������

ALBANY

Listen To WBFO For Sports

Crossett
D. Zeh
0. Donavan

B. Zeh

Sheehan
Eppner
Doyle
Gruol
Hart

N

Totals

A

BUFFALO

Goodwin
Baschnagel
Hanley

c

Barto
Harvey
Bevilacqua
Smith

NORB BASCHNAGEL scores two as
makes vain attempt to prevent bucket.

Thompson
Thompson
Goldstein

RON SHEEHAN

o
r

c

Barth
Karaszewski
Totals
Halftime: Buffalo

39
44,

13 91
Albany

"UB SPORTS
HIGHLIGHTS"

In an

Albany's

effort to

please

the

many students that have written
in to WBFO-FM requesting more
frequent sports coverage, the
campus radio station has again
expanded its sports programming.
“UB SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS,”

Buffalo's "favorite” sports show
can now be heard every Monday
as well as Friday evenings. Fea
luring interesting interviews with
the top sports figures on campus,
the program also boasts the best
coverage of all UB sporting
events, both intercollegiate and
intermural.
Tune in tonight and every Friday at 6:15 p.m. with Wally
Blatter. And every Monday at
6:15 p.m. with Barry Warner.

i(f

W

p

First and Last Call For
Passover Reservations

m

W

Return this Reservation Blank with the Proper
Remittance to; Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.,

Jl)

BY MARCH 18.

M

Name:

Tele:

—

j||

Buffalo Address:
HILLEL Seder Friday, March 27, $2.00 per person.

75c

Lunch on Monday, March 30,

Supper on Tuesday, March 31,

$

Lunch on Wednesday, April 1,

Ji

For Home Hospitality, CALL

TF6-4540

for

1.25 per person.

arrangements.

OPEN ALL YEAR

McDonald's

•i»un

k

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Vi Mite North of SHERIDAN DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
(Adfocont Tho Boutevord Mall Plata)
Open Friday aad Saturday until 1:00
Operated by Iha JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

®\j

&amp;J)

75c per person

HILLEL HOUSE,

ihm drlvt-la with thm mrchta

(

per person.

The Nasco Bargain Center
964 Broadway

Corner of Fillmore

SUMMONS
The entire student body, male and female to come and see the
most fabulous selection of Summer Sportswear.

||{

djj

Nasco has bought out the entire 1964 Summer stock, of the
Beach, Virginia. For those men and
women who plan to go to a warmer climate or you people who
would like to buy the newest in ladies' and men’s resort wear
of ail types and descriptions, with savings up to50% and more,
in tennis shorts, walking shorts, Jamaicas, Bermudas, clamdiggers, surfers, white ducks, hop-sack and chihois, bathing
suits and bathing trunks, Bikini sets, blouses, short sleeve,
sport shirts and dress shirts, slacks and many other terrific
items too numerous to mention. Come to the Nasco Bargain
Center at 964 Broadway where you will see the most fabulous
stock of ladies' and men's sports wear of' bleeding madras,
linens, cottons, seersucker, dacron, etc. These are not odds
and ends, as a matter of fact, these are next summer’s, yes
1964 of complete sets in all sizes from smalls 28s to monster 50s. Come in and browse around where you will like what
you see. Truly amazing purchase. Don’t wait !
Esquire Shop of Virginia

MASCO BARGAIN CENTER
Open Every Day Til

5:30

Mon., Thurs.. Fri. until 9 o'clock

�Friday/ February 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

Swimmers Win 78-16
By TERRY CLARK

Last Saturday, the University
of Buffalo swimming team scored
an impressive victory over the
mermen of Geneseo State, defeating them 78 to 16 in the
Clark Gym pool before a large
crowd of UB supporters.
The UB mermen allowed Geneseo only one first place finish,
in the 200 yard breaststroke
event. UB swept the first and
second places in the remaining
events with the exception of the
200 yard individual medley and
the 200 yard backstroke in which
Geneseo managed second place
berths in both encounters.

200 yd. freestyle, 1. Carl Millerschoen (UB) 2. Mike Nelson
UB) 3. Jim Johnston (G),
2:01.7
50 yd. freestyle, 1. Mike Perkis
(UB) 2. Barry Butler (UB) 3.
Tom Sproul (G), 25,2
200 yd. ind. medley, 1. Decker
(UB) 2. StreiU G) 3. Carl Rabner (UB), 2:21.1
Fancy dive, 1. Jerry Chapman
(UB) 2. Mgrv Mitzel (UB) 3.
Bob Storms (G), 136.5 pts.
100 yd. butterfly, 1. Bill Smith
(UB) 2. Irv Puls (UB) 3. (G)
disq., 1:08.3
100 yd. freestyle, 1. Butler (UB)
2. Mike Nawrocki (UB) 3. Gary
Seelan (G), 56.4

PACE ELEVEN

Defeat Syracuse

Fencers

Pecenco were each 1 and 1,
while Herb Boedecker went 2 and
0 for a squad total of 7 wins and
2 losses.

The varsity fencers climbed up
another rung on that ladder to a
successful season last weekend,
by defeating the formidable
Orangemen of Syracuse 16-11.
This addition to the Bulls’ growing list of victories brings their
seasons record to 7 wins out of
11 matches, with four more to go
before the regional champion-

Dave Kirschgessner was responsible for three of the four
points
which
the
sabermen
managed to snatch from their
Orange counterparts. Mark Fox,
co-captain took the other point,
giving up one bout to Syracuse.
Kirschgessner., another sophomore, defeated all of his opponents. His record so far this
season has been that of a consistent winner, earning him a
niche as one of the strong men
of the squad. UB Sabermen
tallied 4 points against Syracuse’s
5.

ships.

This not-quite anticipated romp
by the UB Swordsmen over Syracuse was brought about largely
by the sophomore members of the
individual squads, who came
through with a terrific showing
at every opportunity.
The foil squad triumphed over
Syracuse and had an extra reason for exulting in both Co-captain Barry Canter’s and Joe Paul’s
victory over Harvey Schulman
Syracuse’s North Atlantic champion. Paul is one of the group
of sophomores previously mentioned.

Tonight at 8 p.m. the varsity
Bulls and the Baby Bulls take on
Riy here at Clark Gym. Saturday
at 1 p.m. the varsity will meet
Utica and the Frosh will confront
Ryerson Tech of Toronto, bath
at Clark Gym.

The outstanding epeeman who
led the way for the Bulls, was
Walt Ostrum, who downed all
three of his opponents. He is another of the sophomore fencing
crew. Dick Willert and Frank

The Baby Bulls are forging
ahead with a winning season, too,
having defeated the Syracuse
Frosh 14-11. This appears to have
been a close meet for the frosh,
deviating from their usual pat-

-

Jackson pins U. of Rochester man in 123 lb. class event.

Tickets
In response to many inquires,
University of Buffalo Ticket
Manager John R. Sharpe today
clarified the 1964 policy for season tickets to UB football games.
On a season ticket basis, prices
have been reduced fifty cents
per game. A season ticket for
all 7 home games will cost twenty-one dollars for 1964. Season
tickets between the 15-yard lines
and the goal will sell for fifteen
dollars. In 1963, with only 4 home
contests, tickets were priced at
fourteen and ten dollars.

Mr. Sharpe stated, “With 3
additional home games in 1964,
we did not feel it was fair to
our fans who have been so loyal
to almost double their season
ticket price. Therefore, we are
offering them seven games for
the price of six. Tickets for individual games will still cost
$3.50 for choice locations. A person who buys a season ticket
will save $3.50 over the price he
would pay for the same seat on
an individual game basis.
We receive no support for intercollegiate athletics from the
state, so if we are to continue
with our program we must increase our ticket sales. We hope
that the alumni, businessmen, and
football fans of this area will
show their faith in college football by supporting our efforts.
We need their help.”
The 1964 home schedule lists
games with Massachusetts, V.M.I.,
Holy Cross, Delaware, Richmond,
Colgate, and Villanova in that
order. It is by far the finest
schedule ever offered to this area
in collegiate football.
Ticket reservations may be
made by calling 831-2926, or writ
ing the Ticket Office, 104 Clark
Gym, at the University.

WESTERN NEW YORK COLLEGE’S
Honors
NEW YORK STATE COLLEGE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT
with the

UB DIVER TOM HURLEY

The UB team will face the
Niagara University mermen next
Wednesday evening (Mar. 4) at
8 p.m. (frosh, 7 p.m.) in Clark
Gym in the last of their regular
season meets. The mermen will
then complete their 1963-64
schedule by competing in the
Upper New York State Championships at Buffalo State on March
7 and 8.
The results of Saturday’s meet
are as follows:
400 yd. medley relay, 1. (UB)
Mark Grashaw, John Danahy,
Jim Decker, Roy Troppmann 2.
(G) Bill Streit, Jack Hausman,
Tom Kleeh, 4:07.8

(UB), 2:23.1

&amp;

ever assembled at

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1368 HERTEL

877-9229

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week

BIGGEST COLLEGE PARTY

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(UB) 2. Streit (G) 3. Milt Marks

Evenings and Saturday

Requirements; Able to Converse Intelligently
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SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

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Beer,
Hermy,

Beer

Hermy

Friday
February 28, 1964

9:00 2:00 a .m
Admission $2 .00
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benrts

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$5.00 min. Order

Phone TF 2-1775

�Friday, February 28, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

siPiefiaiffM 8s&gt;(dibvs
"RON RICA"

By LEON

LEWIS

&amp;

BILL SHERMAN

scholarship offerings from such
schools as Colorado, Iowa, Witch-

By BARRY GUTTERMAN

In his home in a Scardale suburb or in his austere training camp
in the Catskills where he works alone, one wonders what Floyd
Patterson
Patterson is thinking now. After watching the introspective
destroyed twice by the apparently indestructible Liston, one finds
it hard to rationalize the additional expenditure for a ticket to
another seeming mis match. But there is something irrational and
inexplicable about the lure of a prize fight for the heavyweight
championship of the world. As the pacifist inductee in the film
The Grand Illusion said while watching a military dress parade,
“there’s something about it that gets you.”

Quite a few other sports fans seemed to share this opinion because the Paramount theatre in downtown Buffalo was almost full
by the time the silly sports-shorts preceding the fight had ended.
Then in an air of moderate tension and quiet expectancy, the producers of the closed-circuit television presentation offered a short
film of the most recent Liston-Patterson fiasco in what must have
been an attempt to whet one’s appetite for the coming slaughter.
Perhaps they felt that Clay too would prove to be an unworthy
sacrificial lamb and decided to cover their tracks by offering several
minutes more of the champion in action in case his appearance in
the “live” presentation turned out to be brief.

ita, and Indiana.
Due to an unfortunate knee injury, Rica couldn’t play ball this
year, although he worked out
with the team all season. Ron
has looked great on the field,
eluding and passing by all of his
would-be tacklers. His brokenfield running is superb and has
to be seen to be believed and appreciated. Bill Bonner, an outstanding frosh fullback said to
me that “Rica has great moves,
is a really fine ballplayer, and
is anxiously awaiting next year’s
season.” Ron has shown his great

This year UB has been fortunately blessed with one of the top
junior college All-American halfbacks in the country, Ronald
Holly (or as he prefers to be
called by his friends, Ron Rica),
Ron hails from Kansas State Junior College where he was chosen
an All-District, All-Conference,
and All-American Junior College
halfback. Besides these honors,
Ron has won scores of other
athletic laurels. Ron lives in Kansas City, Kansas, where he reeeived in high school an almost
unheard of nine letters and the

Despite the fact that everyone knew what was coming, the film
clips were both frightening and fascinating. Patterson never seemed
to have a ghost of a chance against Liston and one could feel the
audience wince as that “poor, humble man,” as Cassius Clay called
him in one of those moments when he lets his native intelligence
and seriousness slip through, was pounded (in slow motion) to the
canvas by the unsubtle and often clumsy rushes of what appeared
to be a bludgeon. What struck one most of all, these nine months
later, was just as much Patterson's instinctive courage as Liston’s
awesome power; the stange faculty which drove him to rise and face
again the man whom he knew he could not beat. But this was not
alone the raw material from which a champion is carved. Hemingway
wrote that when you lose, all you have left is your honor; yet, honor
semed a meager dish after the heady wine of fame which Clay had
been drinking these past few months.

Clay, however, is made of sterner stuff. He was in the ring before
Liston, prancing about, the picture of confidence. Suddenly it was
another era. An older one, a throwback to the age of heroes. Then
Liston and Clay moved to the center of the ring to receive the
referee’s instructions. Standing face to face, they exchanged glances
which were worth the price of admission in itself.

The fight began. Clay, circling away from Liston’s left, landed
enough quick jabs to keep the champion off balance. Although Clay
held his hands low and backed away from punches instead of
slipping them, he was fast enough to get away with it. At the end
of the round, even those who were Liston fans felt a peculiar sense
of elation. In the course of the fight, something strange happened.
Even the most avid Liston fans seemed to secretly hope that Clay
would win the fight. And Clay did win. The technical reasons for his
victory have been discussed in detail by the members of the press.
But it really isn’t important how or why Clay won. What is important is that Clay did indeed win.
The triumph of the underdog. The triumph of youth over age; of
the dream, of innocence over the fact of guilt of illusion over reality;
romanticism over Realism. The archetypal Grail Knight had cleaned
the waste land. Clay’s triumph clearly fulfilled a psychic need in all
of us. Although it may sound absurd and Irreverent to suggest it,
Clay's triumph seemed to restore a hope in us which had been
destroyed by Kennedy’s assassination.
The world of athletics retrains one of the few areas of human
endeavor w;here the possibilities for heroism remain alive In the
sports world, a man may be judged by pre-established standards of
excellence. Given the nature of the society in which we live, it is
difficult to find a suitable hero in the political-social world where
there are no rules of action governing our conduct. But when Clay
cries “I am the greatest” we may now associate with hm and cry
in return “We are the greatest,”

1

;

Wheras Clay is a culture hero,, Liston is a rebel. His attitude, like
that of Bill Russell, is "I owe the public nothing.” He has no time
to cultivate scoial graces. He is bluntly honest in his relations with
others, and blunt honesty has fallen out of fashion. He is anti social.
His “image” became so bad that even negrophiles refused to defend
him. Liston's manner wis not acceptable to the society. Especially the
'
•
'
white society.

captainship of three teams.
In his sophomore year in college, Ron was the team’s leading
ground gainer, receiver, and
scorer. He has great speed, running the hundred yards in 9,9
which makes him one of the
fastest college backs in football,
Rica is 5’10” tall, weighs in at
183 pounds, and is as solid as
his record. Ron not only is a
strong offensive player, but he
also is a tough defensive opponent. He has brains along with
brawn and has proved himself
as a student as well as an athlete,
Ron selected UB out of nineteen

driving power by knocking the

almost invinciable Mr. Philbin to
the ground on one occasion.
When I asked Rica what he
thought of our team he said he
thinks we have an excellent line;
however, he also feels that we
could use some improvement in
the backfield and are in need of
a strong bench. Rica will be able
to help iron out these flaws, and
get the team running smoother
than it did last year. Mr. Ron
Rica may very well prove to be
the shot in the arm that the Bulls
need to win national acclaim next
year.

Intramurals
By TOM KENJARSKI

T

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t

h Scll d U Ie fo th e lntra'
f ff is as
r
h 11 playoffs
m ral
basketball
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March 3, 1964 at 8:30
Tuesday,
,

Registration for wrestling will be
on Monday, March 16, 1964 at
4:30 p.m. The final wrestling
meet win be on Friday ,
27. Practice sessions will be

Marc^

Sl
_

,

Winner of Mon. .8:45 league vs.
winner
tenons)

M

of

Mon,

9.45

inner of Wed. 9:4o league vs.
winner of Thurs. 9:45 league
/g0 3

If at 8.00
o nn p
Wednesday,
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(AEPi)
vs. Thursday

...

league.

,

in.

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winner

winner

Prater-

(Gamma PhD

Wednesday, at 9.00 p.m.
Winners from Monday
p ayoff
Thursday, at 8:30 p.m.

night s

Championship of the winners in
Wednesday night s playoff
games'

The

instructions for the. up-

coming

follows:

intramural sports/are

—

—

as
*—

By ARTHUR NOVICK
Nine state colleges will con
verge on the campus of State

University College at Brockport
tomorrow to contend for the
championship of the State Uni
versity of New York Athletic
conference. They are Brockport,

Buffalo,
Cortland,
Fredonia,
New Paltz, Oneonta, Plattsburgh,
and Oswego.
Brockport hosts the meet for
the first time, as facilities hero
were not adequate until the opening of the new $1,300,.000 health
and physical education building
last fall.
IronicaIiy; Brockport—a defending champions—may retain their
title without taking a single first
in any event, according to tournament director Jim Fulton.
Fulton feels the Golden Eagles
captured their title last year on
depth and balance, and probably
must be rated favorites to retain the title on that basis.
Outstanding individual
performers, however, may come
says
from elsewhere,
Fulton. He
sees Ron Magin, alumnus of
Rochester’s East Ridge high
school now a student at Oneonta,
as a solid threat to capture the
backstroke.
Tom DeYoung, Plattsburgh,
has been outstanding in the 200
yard freestyle, and two Cortland
swimmers—Walt Tanzi and Pat
Ferguson—specialize in the 50
yard free and individual medley.
Oneonta has another contender
for the 200-yard butterfly in Cliff
Bears, while Plattsburgh’s DeYoung could easily capture firsts
in the 100-yard freestyle and
and 500-yard freestyle.
Stan Hausman of Geneseo is
the threat in the 200-yard breaststroke, and UB’s Walt Sherer is
the diver favored to win the most
points.
Seconds and

RONALD HOLLY

1

The screen lit up with the ring in Miami Beach and suddenly
there was Joe Louis, still a class guy, sitting next to Steve Ellis, the
TV announcer. And after all his talk, one wondered what Clay was
thinking in the rush of memory of the challengers of the past who
froze in the dressing room before the prospect of facing Louis at
his murderous best. Facing Liston, scowl and all, was hardly a
less imposing talk.

Nine Colleges
Vie ioi Title

held from March 16 tQ March
26 between 4:30 and 6:00 p.m.
Participants need at least 5
supervised practice sessions in
order to be eligible.
}!egistration for fencing
S will take
place at 7 pm in the base .
ment of c!ark Gym on Tuesday,
March 17. Coach Schwartz is
conducting this tournament.
Each organization is limited to
, 5 representatives in the tour-

nament. However, independents
may compe te for individual
awards. Practice will begin on
March 24
volleyball information will be
avai iab i e at a later date.
For more information, check
the bulletin board in Clark Gym
or go to the intramural office.
also in Clark Gym;

thirds, however,
will decide this meet, and that
is where Brockport’s depth and
balance should see them through
to the second consecutive SUNY

championship.
Many of these same competitors
will meet again in the Upper
New York State meet in Buffalo

March 6-7. That tournament includes entrants from colleges not
in the State University system.

leers Take Two
won two

The UB Hockey Bulls
this week. On Sunday
night the Bulls took on Ithac;and scored a 5-1 victory. Dave
Laub got two goals while Bill
Savage, A1 Dever and Jerry
Doherty each got one from the
Ithaca goal tender. The Bulls
then faced Brockport State Mon
day night at the Ft, Erie Arena.
After Brockport took a 2-1 lead
early in the second period the
Bulls came back and swamped
Brockport 7-2. Again Dave Laub
had two goals with Crone,, Savage, Magner, Kenney and Clay
ton contributing one goal each.
games

WBFO and the Bulls

WBFO-FM, 88.7 meg. will
broadcast the last home basketball game of the season tomorrow
evening. Barry Warner will be
on at 8:20 with the pre-game
warm up. The play by play of the
game between the Bulls and Lc
Moyne will be done by Wall)
Blatter and Dick Fleisher. Game
time is 8:30 p.m. This will be the
final game to be heard over the
campus radio station this sea
son. Be sure to listen in to the
station run 'soley be Universit
of Buffalo students.

1

Cassius Clay: The Heroic Moment

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                    <text>STATE

’

rzz

MILCH A TAYLOR

UNIVERSITY

OF

NEW

YORK AT BUFFALO

I |§ipj]CXIIUM

VOLUME 14

BUFFALO NEW YORK,

HOOP

NO. IS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1964

Midyear Commencement Tomorrow
ACU Sectional Finals Set
Here for Today, Tomorrow
By NANCY LAURIEN

Mr. Joseph C. Paffie, Assistant
Director of Recreation activities
at UB announced that the Association of College Unions Re
gion II annual tournament will
be held in Norton Union today,
and tomorrow. Miss Maxine
Shilowitz is chairman of the ACU

tournament.

UB will host the convention of
21 schools from throughout New

York State and Southern Ontario,
Canada and direct the competition in the following activities:
men’s and women’s bowling, pocket billiards, men’s three-cushion
billiards, table tennis, and chess.
Participants have been selected
to represent their respective institutions through a series of elimination contests at their schools.
Five men and five women will
comprise a bowling team; two
representatives, a man and a
woman will compete in pocket
■billiards, while one man will
participate in three-cushion bil-

liards; table tennis representatives will be organized into
singles and doubles teams; and
a chess team will consist of two
individuals.
The five top men bowlers (from
five separate schools) will be sent
to Oakland, California to participate in international championship competition scheduled for
April 4, 5, and 6, 1964.
Similarly, the five most outstanding participants in the women’s events will attend an inter-

national tournament in Minnea-

polis April 11, 12, and 13, 1964.
Top-ranking billiards players will
met in sectional finals in a as
yet unspecified location to determine the sectional champions.
Friday, February 21, 1964
12:05 p.m.—Grand March into

lanes
speech(s)
12:15
12:20 p.m.—Introduction of participants and directors
12:40 p.m.—Star Spangled Ban
ner
Canadian National Anthem
12:45 p.m.—Disperse to various
&amp;

areas
1:00 p.m.—(A) Girls team bowl-

1:00 p.m.—(B) Chess continue
until finished
1:00 p.m,—(C) Table Tennis continue until
finished
con1:00 p.m.—(D) Billiards
tinue until
finished
3:30 p.m.—Men’s team bowling
5:45 p.m.—Men’s team bowling
8:00 p.m.—Girl’s doubles bowl-

Martin D. Kriegel was unanimously elected to the position of
Editor-inChief of the Spectrum
for the academic year 1965-65 by
the Publications Board, Monday.
Mr. Kriegel, Spectrum News
Editor during the past year, will
replace Arnold Mazur, who is
graduating this June. Mr. Kriegel was appointed to the position
of News Editor in September,
after serving as a staff reporter
covering political affairs and general news.
He achieved a Dean’s list standing for the past semester, and
will assume the Editorship next
year as an upper sophomore.

O

ing

10:15 p.m.—Men’s doubles bowl-

against group
hysteria, manufactured evidence,
and guilty alike

,

••■■zealous law enforcement of-

lals. in short, against those factors which militate for an automated, prejudiced, neatly pack■ed verdict of guilty. It is the
-acred right of every citizen acfused of committing a crime to
the presumtion of innocence." So
begins Mark Lane’s defense brief
for Oswald.

.

m
B

M
Wf

,

“

V,

\

AiySJSp

Mr. Lane will be speaking in
Buffalo at the Hotel Lafayette on
February 28th. He will probably
bring out several points that
have been ignored by the major
newspapers. For example, immediately after Marina Oswald,
Oswald’s wife, was questioned by
the Warren Commission, Earl
Warren stated that much of the
information she gave will never
be revealed in this generation
“for reasons of security.” Mr,
Lane will raise the important
question that is provoked: why
and whose security? Exactly who
is being protected and for what
reasons?

Mark Lane will both raise
these questions and attempt to
give some answers. This is a
vital issue in our time, and students who wish to gain some insight into it are invited to attend
his speech.

hans Music Hall. President Clifford C. Furnas will confer certificates and degrees upon members of the graduating class.
President W. Allen Wallis of the University of Rochester, will be the principal speaker at the exercises.
The 37th Chancellor's Medal
will also be awarded during the
program to a person “who personifies civic patriotism and vivifies publi$ service in the eyes of

the citizens of Buffalo.”

Subject to the completion of

all curriculum requirements, cer-

tificates and degrees will be conferred upon the following students and upon such others as
may meet the graduation requirements.:

of Associate in Arts-David GerAAichael John Alois, Myron EdAzif, Cheryl Jean Benelisha, Tony
Donald DeCillis, M. Frederick Duranko,
Karen Rita Gerhardt, William S. Karle,
Bonnie Lee Laszewski, Gary R. Livent, Jo
Ann McGrath, Barbara Renee Miller, G.
Russell Nykvist, Irwin Pastor, Lorraine Anneft
Pedalino, Donald Charles Roberts,
John E. Sadewater, Kenneth Roger Seglin,
Carol Ann Sekeres, Sharon Gail Sharf,
Margaret Ann Siepierski, Rylis Julius Sirmenis, Robert Shaun Stevenson, Casimir
John Szafranski, Eugene Kenneth Thomas,
David Frederick Winfield.
Degree
ald Alois,

ward

of Associate

ard David

MARTIN KRIEGEL
Last year, Mr. Kriegel was
President of the New York City
High School Press Association,
and Managing Editor of the Mar
tin Van Buren High School newspaper, bringing with him to UB
a total of five years experience
in the field of journalism.
The basis of his proposed editorial policy was stated in his
letter of application: “All editorial policy will be flexible enough so as to change with current interests, while remaining
firm in certain basic objectives
We will endeavor to maintain fairness in presenting all
sides in all matters.” Spectrum
coverage will be extended to
...

more comprehensively cover campus affairs, and will enter into
the field of national news in the
manner of summary and commentary.

'

mW
I
I k
I

The University will hold its annual Midyear Com-

encement at 10:30 a.m., Saturday, February 22, in Klein-

in Applied Science
Donald
A.
Anita BeiW. Blythe,

Joseph
Albrecht,
Alianello, Raymond S. Becker,
lin, Peter Parker Blum, Ann
Ann Louise Burns, Judith Mina

12:30 a.m.—Men’s doubles bowling
Saturday, February 22, 1964
9:00 a.m.—Men’s singles bowling (12)
11:00 a m.—Girl’s singles bowling
(8)
1:45 p.m.—Men’s singles bowling (6)
5:00 p.m —AWARDS BANQUET

Kleinhans Hall Site of Graduation

Degree
—Stephen

ing

a single
“In all liklihood there
community where reside twelve men or women, good and
true, who presume that Lee Harvey Oswald did not assasinate President Kennedy. No more savage comment
can be made in reference to the Anglo-Saxon system of
jurisprudence. At the very foundation of our judicial
operation lies a cornerstone which shelters the innocent

the assassination.

By ALAN NEWMAN

■

Mark Lane to Present Case;
Favors Oswald Fair Chance
American
does not exist

Mark Lane is a civil liberties
attorney and former New York
State Assemblyman. In 1959, he
helped organize the Reform Democrats in New York and was
elected to the Assembly in 1960.
He has taken stands against fallout shelters and against the
House Un-American Activities
Committee. He has sponsored
measures calling for recognition
of dope addiction as a sickness
father than a crime. He has
urged repeal of the Feinberg
Law
Mr. Lane disclaims any intention of saying Oswald was
■nnocent, but maintains, “There
is no evidence of any substance
that he (Oswald) killed the President.” (N. Y. Times, Feb. 12, 1964)
He was retained by Oswald’s
mother in order to bring Oswald’s
ease before the Warren Commission. This commission was formed

Kriegel Appointed
Spectrum Editor For
Fall 64 Semester

The Publications Board
is now accepting applications for the position of
Editor-in-Chief of the
Buffalonian. Interested
students should write a
letter of application to
the Publications Board
explaining their reason
for applying, the attitudes and ideas concerning the Buffalonian. a
list of their qualifications
and past experience, and
a statement of grade
point average certified
by the dean of their division. Letters of recommendation may also accompany the application.
Applications should be
submitted directly to the
Publications Board office, Norton 205, or mailbpx No. 50, by Friday,
Feb. 28.

Bush, Rich-

Caputi, Eugene Carl Colucci,
Joseph Arthur Denaro, Thomas Robert DerMatthew Paul Donovan,
Paul K.
monf,
Joseph Edward
Evans,
Fersch, Richard
Carlos Frederick, Elmer Herbert Gaftie,
Carl Anthony Graziadei, Robert Lief, Grytten, Aaron Elliot Heisler, Robert Gordon
Jeffords, Karen Hope Kramer, Joseph Arthur Kreuzer, Donald Michael Kuciewski,
Gertrude Lahann,
Joseph A. Mackenna,
James Donald McKee, Carol Janice Met-

W. ALLEN WALLIS
calf, Alfred Walter Nowak, John Robert
Pellegrino, Michael Jed Polay, Frederick
James Rogers, John Garfield Rombough,
Jr., Steven Charles Rubens, Karl Max Rubenstein, James Richard Rusin, Geraldine
Elaine Rybka, Howard Truman Saperston,
Jr., Gloria Jean Monica Smuda, Philip Russell Taravella, James Edward Taylor, Jr.,
Earl Tomkins, Robert William Werth, PatriMaria West, Bruce Nelson Waxier,
cia
Michael James Whelan, David Howard
Whiteman, John Charles Woodworth.

(Continued on Page

7)

Jack Minn is to Speak Here
Conference Theater Today
By TRUDY STERN

The Sociology Club is sponsoring a lecture to be given by Mr.
Jadk Minnis, noted political scientist, who will speak today at
4:00 in the Conference Theater on
the controversial topic, “Civil
Rights and Southern Fascists.”
Mr,

Minnis, an active partici-

pant in the southern civil rights
movement has devoted much energy to the Negroes struggle for
obtaining voting privileges. He
will discuss the conditions that
induce Negroes to register and
also what types of forces operate
to produce Negro indifference to
political participation, as well as
white non-participation. This topic will be illuminated by his reference to economic structure in
southern states. He will then
comment on the objectives of
the civil rights movement and
how these can be achieved, if at
all.

Mr. Minnis, in an attempt to
present the university audience
with a "hot” topic, feels "that
one’s perspectives on hotness
changes relative to what he experiences. For example, in the
Mississippi Delta, on any day
that no one has been shot at or
beat up by the police or arrested
on specious charges or burned out
of his home, one tends to think
of things as peaceful and quiet.
At the same time one may be
living under conditions of fear
and oppression similar to Nazi
Germany. We are fighting a war
down here and the iwalistics of it

are difficult to communicate. Indeed, they’re difficult to really
accept yourself. In fact I’m coming more and more to think that
American social scientists, or at
least the orthodox ones simply
don’t have the categories for dealing adequately with what this
country has become.”

Minnis, who makes his
in Atlanta, Georgia, was
formerly Research Director of
Southern Regional Council’s Vote
Education Project. He was discharged from that position in
December for having testified in
federal court, in the case of
U S. Joni Rabinowiti, that the
racial prejudice of southern
juries placed the defendent in the
case in serious jeopardy of a miscarriage of justice. He is presently doing research on Southern
politics and economics in association with the Student Non violent
Mr.
home

Coordinating Committee (SNCC).

A recent publication of Mr.
Minnis’, “Seeds of Doubt," which
appeared in the New Republic,
dealt with the assasination of
President Kennedy. This article,
which cast a doubt upon the popular press* explanation of the
crime has created a fervor that
was felt from Texas to Washing-

ton.

The students will have an opportunity to question Mr. Minnis
at a question and answer session after the lecture and an in-

formal coffee hour. All interested
students and faculty menders

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Dr. Leighbody Joins Faculty
As Professor of Education
Dr. Gerald B. Leighbody, Deputy Superintendent of Schools in
Buffalo, was appointed professor
of education at UB by the State
University Board of Trustees to-

Senate Announces
Rules Regulations
Coming Campaign
,

ucational publications, he is a
member of Phi Delta Kappa professional fraternity.
“We are delighted to have Dr.
Leighbody join the faculty of the
School of Education to give leadership to further developments

day.

in the program in vocational education and in graduate study

Serving the Buffalo School System for more than 30 years, Dr,
Leighbody has been in his present position since 1957. He was
Associate Superintendent of Instructional Services since 1954;
Assistant Superintendent, 1953-54;

and research for leadership per-

sonnel in this field,” commented

Dean Robert S. Fisk.

“As a former student and lecturer in this program, Dr. Leighbody has made a substantial contribution to it and to vocational

Professor of Industrial Education
and Supervisor of Industrial
Teacher Education, 1945-52; Supervisor of Vocational Education,
194043; and teacher of technical

education in Western New York
and in the State and nation. At
a time when the field of vocational education is receiving
great public attention and the
needs for leadership are outstanding, \Ve are pleased that SUNYAB
may call upon one of the country’s most able spokesmen and
students of the field to give it
leadership on this campus. The
appointment carries the enthusiastic endorsement of the faculty
and administration of the campus
and of leadership in vocational
education at the national level.”

subjects, 1928-40.

Dr. Leighbody has also served
as New York Assistant Commissioner of Vocational Education,
1952-53, and Chief of Training,
Man Power Commission, 1943-44.
He received the B.S., Ed.M., and
Ed.D. degrees from the University. The author of numerous ed-

Friday, February 21,

The Student Senate met for an
emergency meeting on Tuesday
of this week to discuss the rules
for the spring semester election
to be held on the 25 and 26 of
next month. Copies of the election rules are available in the
Senate office, Norton 205.
The petitions for the General
Elections of the Student Senate
will be available on February 21
from 11 a.m. in the Student Senate office. Elections chairman
Bob Pacholski announced that
the petitions will have to be
returned personally by prospective candidates at a meeting on
March 6 at 4 p.m. in Room 233.
In a committee report given to
the Senate, Mr. Pacholski gave
the following apportionment figures for divisional seats:
Arts and Sciences 1
5
Business Administration
2
Education
2
Medicine
2
;

Engineering

%

Law

.1

Dentistry
Nursing
Pharmacy

i

University College

Canisius Victors in Tourney

Foreign Trade Field Subject
Of Coler's Speech March 11
Students, interested in the field of foreign trade and
international commerce will have an unusual opportunity
to discuss current events and opportunities in the foreign
trade field when Mr. Carl S. Coler, Admissions Officer
for the American Institute For Foreign Trade, comes to
the campus on March 11.
Mr. Coler has been associated with personnel and
problems during his
service of 36 years .with Westinghouse Electric as Training Director. He also spent 14 years
in various assignments for the
State Department in Korea, Turkey, Mexico, Nepal, and Egypt
placement

The recent affiliation between
the American Management Association and the Institute has again
emphasized the influence and
prestige of this postgraduate
school. The American
ment Association, with a membership of over 32,000, has a special division devoted to international commerce and is probably
the most influential organization
in the country representing
United States business interests,
both domestic and abroad. The
very direct connection with unquestioned leaders of American
commerce who are members of
this organization is sure to lead
to even greater opportunities for
graduates of the Institute and
will certainly result in more concerns providing posts for graduates.

The Ninth Annual International Debate Tournament was held on campus last
Friday and Saturday. Thirty teams from five states and Canada competed in the TourThere is, today, an increasing
demand for young men and womnament which was the largest one ever held at the University.
en qualified to represent United
Each team participated in six rounds of debate on the national proposition; Reinterests abroad. In desolved: That the Federal Government should guarantee an opportunity for higher ed- States
mand are people with backucation to all qualified high school graduates. A total of 180 debates were held durgrounds as varied as Accounting,
ing the weekend.
Finance, Bacteriology, Chemistry,
Canisius Top
Winner
A unit of four debaters from
Canisius was awarded the first
place trophy at the banquet held
Saturday afternoon in the Multipurpose room of Norton. President Clifford C. Pumas welcomed
the debaters to the University
and assisted Linda Lcventhal,
tournament chairman, in presenting the awards. The winning Canisius team had a record of ten
wins and two losses. They appeared on the U. B. Kountablc
Saturday evening on ' television
station WBEN
The second place unit, with a

record of nine wins and three
losses was Mount Union College
from Alliance, Ohio. The third
place award was presented to a
second unit from Canisius College. Their record was also nine
wins and three losses. Two additional teams also compiled records of nine wins and three losses, but were eliminated on the
basis of total speaker points accumulated by the teams.
Team Awards
The best affirmative team
award was presented to a pair of
debaters from Colgate University.
Their record was four wins and
two losses. Colgate was the defending champion of the tourna-

Diamonds-Watches

JEWELRY.

Watch and

*■“

t

The SPECTRUM
|

er points.
Speaker Awards

Speaker awards were present

r~~

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

—+

1,400 graduates

ed to the top two affirmative and

negative speakers. The winners

were Craig Nelson of the University of Vermont, Rita Powalski of
Canisius College, Glenn Haase of
Mount Union College and Gary
Rice of Colgate University. Three
of these four awards were presented to first year debaters who
competed against many debaters
with three or four years of experience in intercollegiate forensics.

The Institute’s curriculum em-

trade.

Students interested in going
into the field of foreign commerce are urged to make an ap
pointment through Miss Mildred
H. Blake, Assistant Director,
Placement Services, for an interview with Mr. Coler on March 11.

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have

phasizes three major fields—lan
guage, area studies, and international commerce. The course is
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a day on language work and the
balance of a very full schedule divided between the area studies
and the technical side of foreign

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undefeated in the tournament.
The best negative team award
was presented to Mount Union,
again on the basis of total speak-

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The course of study at the Institute prepares the students for
international commerce and associated activities by providing specially trained personnel to sene
business and government
throughout the world and does
much toward helping international understanding. Up to the pres-

Mr. Coler’s visit will be of particular interest as many students
from University of Buffalo have
taken the intensive course of
study given on Thunderbird Campus. The record of some of these
graduates might be mentioned:
William V Conroy, Pillsbury
Overseas, New York;

|

SERVICE

*•

Animal Nutrition and Production,
Administration and Liberal Arts. Some
of the employers of our alumni
are First National City Bank,
Chase Manhattan Bank, and Sterling Products International.

Henry B. Ralicki, Molinos de
Puerto Tico, Puerto Rico;
Norman H. Baum, ’58, ■ Nat'l
Scientific Lab, Gabon;
Barbara M. Eyre, Inst, for Int'l
Education, New York

Engineering, Business

�

Jewelry
Repairing

G

Biology, Zoology, Plant Pathology,
Entomology, Agriculture,

ment,. having won the first place
trophy last year.
four negative teams, Canisius
A, Canisius B, Geneva College
and Mount Union College, were

1964

University
Delicatessen
3588 MAIN STREET
TF 2-1456

Orders,Delivered to Allenhurst nightly at 10:30
Front of Apartment 472

N.V

�Friday, February 21, 1964

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

Students March

on

Albany

March 1 Deadline
For Float Parade

Protest Feinberg Certificate
Eight UB students picketed the
State Capitol in Albany, Monday,
in protest of the compulsory
signing of the Feinberg certificate by State University teachers.

This year, on Spring
Weekend, the traditional
float parade will once
again wind its way up
Main Street to Library
Circle for final judging
and approval by the faculty and students. The
float parade, called by
Life Magazine the third
largest parade of its type
in the nation, promises to
be the best ever in the
history of the university.
The parade is open to

unjust and, we believe, unconstitutional law and relying upon
conscience and integrity they
have been placed in jeopardy.
This should not be so.

“The Feinberg Act, as amended in 1953, in an invasion of
the academic community and an
affront to the American democratic tradition. Although we seek
the repeal of the Feinberg Act,,
we realize that the immediate
prospect for such action is unlikely and politically unfeasible.
If you must operate under this
law, we ask that you exercise
all possible respect for those who
do not sign.

students, led by Henry J.
Simon, included Jeremy Taylor,
Francine Michael, Kathy KunigiKathy
Hagen, Richard
sky,
Knapp, Ron Alaimo, John Medwid. They marched quietly in
front of the State University
headquarters, 8 Thurlow Terrace,
and later went to Governor Rockefeller’s chambers and picketed
outside the Capitol on Washington Ave. for about 45 minutes.
The

They also left a petition, signed by 200 Buffalo students, protesting the Feinberg Law,, adopted in 1949, in the office of J,
Lawrence Murray, acting chief administrative officer of the State
University. A telegram was sent
to Mr. Murray informing him of
the plans of the group, and his
office noted that he was at a
meeting in the afternoon. The
petition was left with a State
University Public Relations man
in Mr. Murray’s office.

any

“If these men, who have placed
principle above personal considerations, are in any way affected
adversely (professionally and/or
financially), then our entire university system will be the worse.
In fact, we already have demonstrable examples of the negative
effects of the Feinberg Act on
our campus.
“For the good of the State University we ask that you live up
to its motto and “Let each become all he is capable of being.”

The students left at 8:00 a.m.
from Norton Union, and drove
to Albany. They presented the
petitions at 3:00 p.m. and picketed briefly across from Albany
State Teachers College, before
proceeding to the Governor’s
chambers and the Capitol, at 4:00
p.m. The group returned to Buffalo at 11:30 p.m.

“The mind of John F. Kennedy
knew such situations as these and
we shall use his eloquence for

defended their stand in the name
of “academic freedom and professional competence.”
The hope of the group is to
have the Feinberg Law removed
from the books. The following
is the statement that was left at
the Capital:

Budgets Due
April 15

sitions of residence advisors, both men and
women, are now being
accepted by John Okoniewski, Director of
Housing. All students
who are applying, or
who are interested in
applying for the positions should do so before Monday. The positions are open to single

“To the Administration of the
State University of New York:
“We have come, representing
students at the State University
of New York at Buffalo, to urge
fair, responsible, and ethical behavior on your part toward those
faculty members who do not
c ign
the Feinberg certificate.
These gentlemen, acting in the
finest tradition of the university,
should not be penalized or abused for their courageous stand.
By refusing to cooperate with an

undergraduates (juniors and seniors) and
graduate students.

&gt;»

Mr Ferencz

■»»

+»

�» �»

�»

senior faculty members concerning administrative policies. He
will continue as professor of
economics and industrial relations,

In accepting the resignation,
President Furnas said, “the University deeply appreciates the
contribution which Dr. Rottenberg has made, especially in the
areas of recruitment of outstanding scholars and concern for
academic excellence.”
Dr. Schindler returned to the
University a year ago after serving on the faculty in 1948-49. He
was a professor of accounting in
the Graduate School of Business
Administration at Washington
University from 1956-63, and was
previously on the faculties of the
University of Washington and
the University of Michigan.
He received the B.S. degree at
the University of Illinois, the
M.A. at the University of Washington, and M B A. and Ph D. at
the University of Michigan. He
was awarded the honorary Doctor of Economics at Yonsei University, Korea, in 1962. He is a
Certified Public Accountant in
the states of Washington and
Illinois.
He has been vice-president of
the American Accounting Association, director of publicity for
the National Association of Ac-

countants, publications

chairman
of the Institute of Internal Auditors, and meeting chairman for
the Midwest Economics Association, For his contributions to
the management training program of the Korea Productivity
Center, Dr. Schindler was ap-

DR. JAMES S. SCHINDLER
pointed honorary director. He is
also an honorary member of the
Korean Institute of Certified Public Accountants.

Among his numerous contributions to accounting textbooks
and periodicals are Fundamentals
of Accounting. 1959.

Lisfen
To

WBFO

Birthday

SALE

-f

February 22nd
9:00 A.M. 6:00 P.M.

Hair Styling

-

O'CONNELL
LUCAS

CHELF

Open Mon. Thru Fri. Nights

GIRLS WITH I.D. CARD
20% DISCOUNT TO
ON MON., TUBS. &amp; WEDS.

3240 Main Street

OPEN ALL YEAR
thm drlva-ln with thm mrehmm

McDonald's

Dr. James S. Schindler, chairman of the Financial
Accounting Department at UB, has been named acting
dean of the School of Business Administration, it was
announced Tuesday by President Clifford C. Furnas.
He replaces Dr. Simon Rottenberg, who was named
dean of the School September 1. Dr. Rottenberg has
resigned from the post due to differences of opinion with

Washington ’s

2903 Sheridan Drive of Eggert
Tel.: 835-8700-01—836-9827

ZS

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
*-

organiza-

In order to facilitate more efficient processing of the finanour purpose:
cial budgets for the 1964-1965
‘For at all the levels of our
school year, all organizations that
somenational life, each man is
receive
financial allotments from
times called upon to stand for
are requested
what he believes to be right the student senate
to submit their proposed budgets
against the pressures and opin15.
ions of friends, fellow workers, for the 64-65 year by April
Budgets not received by the
constituents, or the force of
subject
popular attitude. At such a time above deadline will be
to penalty unless an authorized
each individual must look withis given which will
in himself for the resources to explanation
be reviewed by the finance compursue his own course. But all
mittee.
the, rest of us can contribute to
Please pick up the budget forms
democracy
by
of
our
the vitality
the secretary in the senate
from
unreasoning
to
refusing
join in
office
at Norton (room 205) and
attacks upon those with whom
them in the treasurers
place
we disagree; and by respecting
mail box upon completion.
them for having the strength to
wage such a lonely struggle,’”
Awaited Every Year:
Applications for po-

Although about 900 UB faculty
members have signed the certificate, Mr. Simon noted that “about
half a dozen teachers jobs are in
jeopardy” because of their refusal to sign the certificate, and

OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK

campug

tion, club, or group who
wishes to enter. The catagories this year are $100,
$400 and $800 maximum.
For details on floats, entrance fees, rules, judging criteria, and application forms stop in to
room 323 Norton. A dead
line of March 1, 1964 has
been set for filing of application forms.

Dr. Schinder Named Acting
School of Business Ad. Dean

saiwaisms?*

,0A°

Open Friday aad Saturday aatil 1:00
Opanrtad by Hm JfRRY WOWHOOUT CORF.

etiroquoisiTc*

�THE

SPOTLIGHT

SPECTRUM

ON

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in AAay, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

-

EDITOR ELECT
John Kowal
-

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Editorial Advisor

Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Alan Newman
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

Business Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulation Mgr.
Financial Advisor

By
Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessinger
Thomas Haenle, Jr.

Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Judy Green, Gary Falk,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg, Charles
Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern, Jean
Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford, Jane
Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham, Lillian
Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orzulak, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin, Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng,
Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo, Terry Sweeney, Tom Kenjarski,
Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie
Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Kilpstein, Saralee Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary
Ann Wartenburg, David Bergen, Peter Rubin, Carolyn Cooper, Barry Gutterman.

Qa*

Staff:

Joel Havens,

Pamela Reid, Toby Leder.

as second class matter February 9, 1961, at the Post
Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acfor mailing at a special rate of postage provided for in
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951.
Entered

Office

at

cepfance

Subscription
PRESS

$3.00 per year, circulation

Represented for national advertising by
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York,

9000_
National
N. Y.

Advertising

Editorial
State Senator Macneil Mitchell (R., Manhattan), has
filed a bill within the Legislature which could create a
ten-man advisory council (at an initial cost of $75,000)
to set up a “distinguished visiting lectures program.”
The advisory council, working with the State Educaiton Department, is empowered to establish “criteria”
by which guest lecturers would appear before student
bodies of public colleges and universities.
In a statement of legislative intent, Senator Mitchell
based his measure upon the responsibility to “promote
the intellectual environment of colleges and universities
and the general welfare of the community at large.”
Indeed, we are all in favor of a higher quality and greater opportunities for education. But, is it not possible that
the enactment of this bill would be restrictive, and perhaps damaging to educational ends?
.

.

.

Our campus has a fine tradition of offering the student body lecturers and speakers series. Through the
past year has seen fewer programs, student government
(and, in particular, the Convocations Committee) has
gracious with its funds for expanding educational programs and has exhibited a responsibility toward stimulating thought and concern via the supplementary education they provide.
The Convocations Committee is composed of students, whereas the proposed advisory council is selected
by state political figures along with the Educational Commissioner. The student committee can best judge where
student interests lie, relative to the speakers that would
be invited and the subject matter of any program. The
advisory council, which under the proposed bill may set
the criteria of the programs as well as select the actual
lecturers, would not have such knowledge in all likelihood—and very well might not consider student interests.
It is a fine idea to channel the money involved toward promoting guest lecture series, but perhaps the
sum can be distributed to the individual state campuses
to use as they wish. The creation of a state advisory council gives rise to many questions as to the possible motives
behind the bill, such as the controlling of speakers who
might be listened to by student bodies and particular
organizations (via a black or white list). If such were
the case, we would consider the council and any policy
directed by it, an infringement upon academic freedom.
It is not difficult to forsee such a council prohibiting an
Aptheker to speak on campus, or even Pete Seeger if
he wished to discuss his music.

Th Spectrum has heard of no student cry necessitating an advisory council to be created; and any complaints on this campus concerning programs can be corrected within the present framework. We can only suppose that the passage of

CIVIL RIGHTS

ARNOLD S. MAZUR
MARTIN D KRIEGEL

General Staff: Vicki

Photography

Friday, February 21, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

this bill will be a limiting factor,
if only in principle; and that it is unwarranted.
The nature of the Legislature being such that this
bill may possibly pass during the inevitable midnight
sessions causes The Spectrum to call upon the Student
Senate to act immediately against Senator Mitchell’s
legislation. Senators should avail themselves of the nature
of the meausure, and be prepared to discuss it. We recommend that in the name of the student body, the Senate write Governor Rockefeller (who as of this writing
has not commented upon the bill), informing him of our
displeasure. As citizens, we suggest that the student body
write their state representatives. We must insure the
autonomy of our campus and our activities.

LEONARD GERSON

A boycott in New York City,
violence in Cleveland, and pro-

posed boycotts in Boston and
Chicago have demonstrated to the
v/orfd that the large urban centers in the northeastern United
States are confronted with an
acute segregation problem in public educational facilities. Bayard

Rustin, director of the New York
City boycott in which 464,000 students did not attend school, commented that the boycott was "fair
warning that the civil rights revolution has reached out of the
South and is now knocking at
our own doors.”

There is now the imminent
danger of the emergence of similar strife in Buffalo. Using the
United States Commission Report
On Segregation In Buffalo
Schools, one can see many of the
same problems that have aroused
so much anger and discontent
in New York City.

About one-third of the elemenin Buffalo
is Negro and Puerto Rican, and
88% of these children attend
schools with a 60% non-white
composition, while more than
half of these children attend
schools in the 90%-100% group.
In New York City 42% of the
public school children (25%
Negro, 17% Puerto Rican) and
165 of the 840 public schools are
in the 90%-100% group. “In fact,
Buffalo has practically the same
proportion of total schools with
a Negro and Puerto Rican enrollment in excess of 90% as New
York City has; but it has a much
smaller proportion of integrated
schools and a much higher proportion of schools 90% or more
Vwhite in enrollment.” (U.S. Civil
Rights Commission) concern has
also been shown for the educational inferiority of the defacto
segregated schools, the lack of
adequate diffusion of Negro teachers, and they want for Negro
history in the curriculum.

oCetterA

tary school population

In response to this situation,
Dr. Lydia Wright of the Board of
Education has advanced what the
Citizens Council on Human Rights
has described as a "comprehensive plan for intergration.” This
plan
provides
for ungraded
primary schools in the deprived
areas, which would be taught by
the most able teachers. She contended that children are most
easily integrated from the fourth
to sixth grades, and maintained
that intergration at this level is
mandatory. She proposed that all
soon to be constructed junior
high schools be erected on sites
that would promote integration.
Dr. Wright also asked for the
planning of separate academic
and vocational high schools. The
Board of Education has maintained its apparent do nothing
policy concerning segregation by
not acting on the proposal.

At the present time Buffalo
has still been spared the plight
that has afflicted other northern
cities, but this fact is no reason
for complacency. The local CORE
chapter has given the Buffalo
Board of Education until April
to

produce a satisfactory plan
for integration, and the NAACP
and the CCHR have made similar
ultimatums. If a suitable outline
for integration, and the NAACP
schools is not announced within
the next two months, Buffalo will
face a serious civil rights crisis.
Only responsible and decisive action by the Board of Education,
local civil rights groups, and the
Buffalo citizenry in general can
save this city from a storm of

protests and demonstrations. For
information come to the meeting
of the University of Buffalo Civil
Rights Committee on March 4,
at 5:00 p m. at Norton Hall.

Girl Falls

-

to

the Editor

Attention Falls Short

TO THE EDITOR:
Not too many things disgust
me enough to motivate me to
write a letter to the SPECTRUM,
but after witnessing a gross
example of neglect on the part
of the campus policemen and

medical help. Ten more minutes
passed. The girl was in pain; the
boys standing around in no coats
were freezing (the temperature
was nineteen degrees); no help
had come. After being called a
second

time, the health office

health office, I just can’t keep

sent a nurse and a stretcher to

The incident occurred on Tuesday at 10 p.m. A girl slipped on
the icy walk at the crossroads
in back of Hayes Hall. She must
have hurt her back, for she
couldn’t move and was in great
pain. Immediately, several university students went to her aid.
They could not move her, but
they took off their coats and
bundled the girl up so she
wouldn’t freeze. Meanwhile, the
health office was called. Ten
minutes later, a policeman drove
up with no doctor or nurse, and
no stretcher. He surveyed the
situation and went back for some

Why were the walks so icy?
Why wasn’t a stretcher sent out
immediately after the call was
received? Why didn’t the campus
policeman act faster? Why was
there such a dangerous breakdown in communications? All
these questions need answering.
Right now I have no inkling as
to what happened to the girl. I
only hope that the neglect on
the part of the campus police
and the health office does not
lead to any serious complications
for the injured girl.
Sincerely,
Madelon Klipstein

quiet.

the scene.

Response To Taylor
REPLY

(All quotes herein contained are
those of Jeremy Taylor, unless
otherwise noted.)
In reply to Jeremy Taylor’s
urgent plea in last week’s issue
of The Spectrum “to take a stand
on this state of affairs regarding
the Feinberg Act,” I would like
to here present the basis for my
support of the Feinberg Act.
With respect to Mr. Taylor’s deceptively convincing arguments
of its unconstitutionality and his
subsequent pleas for support from
this student body in reaction to
the restrictive implications of the
Feinberg Act upon their academic
freedom, I address to him the following remarks:
(1) The Feinberg Aact does not
violate “due process.” This decision was upheld by the United
States Supreme Court on March
3, 1952. It’s old news, Mr. Taylor.
The Court noted that membership in a listed organization
found to be Communistic and
known by the member to be
within the statute “is a legislative finding that the member by
his membership supports the
things the organization stands
for, namely, the overthrow of the
Government by unlawful means
. . . Disqualification follows therefore as a reasonable presumption
from such membership and support. Nor is there here a problem of procedural due process.”
(2) Mr. Taylor, you’ve stated
that the Feinberg Act "violates
that right of any man to a personal existence and attempts to
legislate morals and conscience.”
I disagree. His Tight to a per-

existence (freedoms of
and assembly) are not
violated. Strangely enough, the
United Startes Supreme Court
agrees with me. Same Court;
same decision; same old news,
Mr. Taylor: “His freedom of
choice between membership in
the organization and employment
in the school system might be
limited, but not his freedom of
speech or assembly, except in the
remote sense that limitation is
inherent in every choice.” Were
you referring to this “remote
sense,” Mr. Taylor? Speaking of
remoteness, the Feinberg Act’s
“attempt to legislate morals and
conscience” has that quality of
sonal

speech

being so remote so as not to
leave even a trace of its efforts
in the actual wording of the Act.
Now how did that happen, Mr.
Taylor?
(3) Contrary to what you feel,
Mr. Taylor, I believe that “Professional competence as a teach-

er” cannot and should nqt be
the “sole criterion” for employment, and th!e Feinberg Act rightfully makes it a “secondary consideration,” (in a remote sense).
Regarding the State as the employer, and the teacher as the
employee, perhaps we can better

understand the “soundness” of
the Feinberg Certificate. If I
were the employment, manager of
any significant business organization I would certainly consider
it of primary importance that
potential employees, however
competent, did not plan or
participate in a group which
planned the forceful overthrow
(Cont’d

on P.

6)

�Friday, February 21, 1964

By BOB MILCH

Said

■ What

the hell is all this fuss
about the Feinberg thing so important for? I mean, this is something that should be between
the faculty and the administration. And the way Taylor’s up
on his high horse . . .”
So Milch, there it is
the
—

column for next week. Satirize
Taylor. Call it Refractions, and
make it about a sewer cleaner
who won’t sign a loyalty oath,
and throw in lots of boldfaced
words and dependent clauses and

stuff.

H:

*

&gt;■:

That’s how it might have started. Then a session at the typewriter, and everybody has a good
laugh on Friday.

But this would have been too
cruel, too horrible a column ot
write. Not that the satire on
Jerry’s articles would have been
unfriendly or unjust. But this
would have been too dire an
indictment of the student body
for the student body to take.
I can see it. Ten o’clock dead
break in the Rathskeller. Twenty
million people eagerly devouring their coffee and Spectri.
Everybody would be gloating
over Taylor’s drawn and quartered corpse until one person with
a little bit on insight (in a crowd
of twenty million, the laws of
random sampling are pretty much
in favor of this happening) would
say “Hey, this is a satire on us!”
And then everybody would yell
him down and say they didn’t
believe it. And then this guy
would say “Yes it is. Oh, it is too
dire for me to take." And right

there he’d impale himself on a
wodden stirrer and die a horrible
death and his blood would be on
my hands.
Funny, huh? You bet. The thing
is, the guy with the stirrer in
him would be right, at least about
What the satire was on.
See, Reflections is a statement
of some opinions held by a horrible group of people who have
the audacity to realize the existence of a world outside Norton
Union. These people feel some
wierd kind of obligation to the
world they are going to live in
126 weekends from now). Funny,
aren’t they?
J f
No, we’re the ones \vho are
funny. Funny because while men
have died for freedom and integrity, we can’t understand the
“fuss” about the Feinberg Certificate. Funny, because we face
the challenges of Communism,
and couldn’t care less once Government 102 lecture is over. Funny because while two thousand
people die of hunger every day
in India, we can’t figure how
to get to Scarsdale next vacation.
Funny because while ours is a
hated nation in many parts of
the world, Joe broke up with
Betty at the Beta Chi beer blast
and what do you think of that.
Isn’t it terrible. Funny, that these
people should be the rule in an
“intellectual community,” and are
the exception.
Sure, let’s mock him, and maybe that’ll get him off our backs.
Maybe then he’ll stop trying to
make us think, even if it’s to
disagree with him. Maybe, though
I hope not.
Anyway, that’s how a column

sometimes isn’t written.

SKETCH
BY DAVID BERGEN and PETER RUBIN
+——■■—■■——&gt;■——&gt;■—■■—■■—■■—■■——■■—

This Uteek

our interview was with a member of the student
body. Stan Salomon, a junior in Arts and Sciences, holds the position
of I 1resident of the Tower House Council, the governing body for the
Tower Residence Hall.
B&amp;R; What is the consensus of
opinion concerning the quality of
the food in the residence halls?
Salomon: It is the general
opinion that the quality and quantity of the food served is not of
the highest caliber to satisfy the
students. We must realize that
the food service operates on a restricted budget. Presently our
committee on food service and

the resident advisors committee

on food service is doing two reports on the whys, whats and

wherefores of the present situa-

tion existing in the residence hall
Mr, Charles Schweiger
has just submitted a report with
several suggestions for improving
the residence hall food service.
A copy of this report has been
submitted to the Administration
system.

aim

id

under study.

B&amp;R: There have been reports
'f silverware and dishes being
tolen from the cafeteria. To
'hat extent is this going on?
Salomon: There is no doubt
hat there is a trend towards
hicvery in the cafeteria, not so
nuch by residence hall students
°r themselves, but for their
Iriends who live off 'campus.
I hese thefts are also carried out
hy off campus students themres. Very few students are
are that Cease has to pay for
len utensils' and that this
ney is lost from the food budThis thievery is going on to
h an extent that Coase must
dinue deducting money, from
lr budget, thus adversely aftinS the quality of the food.
what

deg

President Gives
Joseph Shister
Federal Position
Dr. Joseph Shister, Chairman
of the Department of Industrial
Relations, has been appointed by
President Lyndon Johnson to sit
on
a three man Emergency
Board in the wage ■ dispute involving the nation’s railroads.
The Board will make its recommendations to the President after
the completion of hearings in
-

Washington.

Dr. Roy Macridis, Chairman of
the Department of Political Science. and Dr. Bernard E. Brown,
Associate Professor of Political
Science, have been appointed research consultants in the Department of Politics at Yale University to work during the summer
on “Arms Control and Disarmament Concepts in the European
Political Environment." Dr. Macridis was also one of four foreign scholars to receive the honorary degree of “Docteur On
Droit” from the University of
Claremont Fcrrand in France
Dr. Olive P. Lester, Chairman
ot the Department of Psychology,
has been re-appointed by the Regents to the Nurse Advisory
Council of the State Educational
Department for a three-year
term.
Dr. Erwin Neter, Associate
Professor of Pediatrics, was ap
pointed by the American Board
ol Microbiology as a member of
the Certifying Committee on Public Health and Medical Laboratory Bacteriology. He was also
appointed a member of St. JudeHospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
Dr. Richard H. Cox, Associate
Professor of Political Science, has
been invited to serve as outside
examiner in political theory for
the Honors Course at the University of Rochester.

Choristers Sing
At High Schools
The first major tour of the
University choral organizations
will take place during Spring va
cation, when the UB Men’s Glee
Club and the Women's Chorale
will travel through central and
eastern New York State, bringing news of UB and her liberal
arts traditions to college and high

dence Council which sits in on the
Senate and has two votes. This
year there has been a movement
toward an entire revamping of
this organization because by 1970,
according to the SUNYAB masschool audiences.
terplan, there will be 8,000 stuThe
The choristers and their direct
plans
dents living on campus.
for the IRC is to make it the most or Professor Robert Beckwith
powerful faction in the Senate, hope that their repertory of Ira
with a constituency of 8,000 stu- ditional and modern choral music
dents.
will inform as well as entertain.
Perhaps it may even recruit from
B&amp;R: Who is responsible for
the high school audiences somethe beautiful ice skating rink lo- high calibre students for the fucated behind Tower:
ture. The officers of the two
Salomon: The money was allochoral organizations have them
and
Housing selves made all of the engagecated from Food
request
Tower
by the
after a
ments for the trip, which they
House Council. Presently we feel will prove to be an enjoyIt
have a maintenance problem.
able and educational venture.
was planned that students wishThe singers will leave UB Sating to use the rink would maintain it themselves. This plan has urday, March 7 and will comnot been successful. We are now plete their tour by March 12.
Performances will be given at
working with Housing to establish a better and permanent sysPenn Van Academy, State Unitem of maintenance for the rink. versity College at Oneonta Mid
dlctown High School, and New
B&amp;R: Last semester Tower held Rochelle High School. The musiits first Open House. Are there cal repertory, designed to exany plans for another one this hibit the abilities of the chorus
semester?
es, will include works by such
Salomon: After an enthusiastic
modern composers as David Dia
turnout of over 700 students, mond, Lukas Foss, and Randall
plans have been made to hold Thompson, by great classical masanother Open House. It is tentaters Bach, Handel, and Schutz.
tively scheduled , for Parents and by several Russian and East
occur
in ern European composers. There
Weekend which will
April.
will be'pieces for men's women’s
and mixed voices.
B&amp;R: There was a great deal
Also to be featured at the
of controversy stirred, up by the
policy that Tower used in decreebarbershop quartet consisting ol
ing that doors should remain
four members of the ‘'len s Glee
open during the Open House,
Club. This group ha. sung foi
creating
like atmos
thus

a zoo
le wandcrin

any

ba

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

After

watching the machina-

tions of our ignoble Student Sen-

ate and experiencing the incredible state of affairs in our state
capital, it occurs to me that there
are a great number of things the
matter with the democratic process in this country, this state,
and most particularly on this
campus. The only cause for this
situation which seems readily apparent is stupidity, but that’s
probably because the term “stupidity” is so general that is
covers a multitude of evils without naming any of them. I will
try to name these evils specifically. and to name the persons
who seem to exemplify them.
Practically every

student

on

this campus

feels comfortable
using terms like “academic free
dom," "democratic process," “Education;" but I have seen more
misuse of these ideas in the past
week than I thought possible.
I am not arguing that these terms
have only one definition, but I
have heard Mike Shapiro and
Mike Lappin use them in sent
ences where they have no de-

finition whatsoever And what’s
even worse, they seemed not even
to realize that they have little or
no meaning. I have heard teach
ers and administrators like Dean
Siggelkow use phrases like “academic responsibility” and “educative value” when they themselves were unwilling to assume
any of this responsibility and
value! It is reported at least,
that President Furnas has been
the champion of academic freedom on this campus, yet he has
not seen fit in his wisdom to utter
one public word, negative, positive, or just plain mediocre on
the Feinberg issue. We live in a
fog of half formed rumors and
faceless cliches.
Thu
American nation was
founded on an ideal of accessibility. The government was to be
accessible to the people; education was to be accessible to all
who sought it. The truth of fact
and the truth of idea were to be
accessible to everyone. But today
nothing is accessible. The belief
of pur nation’s founders that
there should be “no taxation
without representation” and that
“every man should be equal under the law” has vanished from
the reality of our world. Teachers

must go to court to protect their
civil rights, and ho one, not even
the legislators, can tell you ex
actly what the legislature has
done this year. Life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness have become , words, and the reality is
politics. Politics is a dirty word:
it has been soiled by politicians
like Walter Mahoney and Messrs
Murray,

Cohen, and Shapiro,

The American citizenry has
allowed the nation's politics to
fall into the hands of criminals

and egomaniacs. Noted politician
John Montana was named Citizen
of the Year here in 1954, and
even more recently he was named
by Velachi as a king of organized
crime. Mayor Curley of Boston
was elected to office while serving
a jail sentence because people
like you have allowed the machine of politics to get bigger
than the voters, Tweed, Tam
many, and DeSapiq ran the state.
United Students and Campus
Alliance run the Student Senate
in the Same fine tradition. You've
learned your history all too well,

Cohen and Shapiro; it's too bad
the students like Vic Menza and
John Stjny haven’t learned their
better

I do not believe that power cor
here all

nip

The

Veracaris accused that Knavecum-fool Tom Kobus of revealing
‘confidential” information). The
campus parties are busy trying
to fix the elections by revising the
election rules and stifling the
development of any other power
block like the proposed “third
party.” Democrats and Republicans are busy exchanging favors
in hopes of grabbing a nomination while Bobby Baker and
Adam Clayton Powell appear to
misuse millions of dollars each
year. Everything is whispered.
Mr. Murray has not got the
courtesy

to

answer

a telegram

but he is more than willing to
call deans and administrators to
find out “who” sent it; although
it was signed with a return
address.

All of this points to a central
in the understanding
each of us has of the nature
of democracy. People seem to
feel on the one hand that DEMOCRACY IS RIGHT (not the
best means to what is right, but
that itself can never be wrong.)
Rut on the other hand these
people seem to feel that people
(voters, students, those whose
individual power is negligible)
are not to be informed of or
trusted with the facts. Decisions
must be made behind closed
doors, candidates selected by
those already in power The polifailing

tics of our nation and our state
and our campus are not accessible to us We have allowed the
power of our minds and votes to
go to charlatans by default. We
have let the Student Senate become an inane playground for
self-seekers and egomaniacs. Our
parents have allowed the state

legislatures to become financial

grab-bags for criminals and
plutocrats. We all have allowed
the nation’s politics to be run
by men whose lack of integrity
and morals would be abhorrent
to the most libertine of traveling
salesmen Democracy is right.

The total responsibilty for the
maintenance of democracy may
be fragmented into frightfully
small bundles, but the total responsibility remains even larger
than it ever was. It is our responsibility.

1 do not expect or even desire
that everyone agree, either with
me or with each other; but I do
call on everyone to recognize
that there are things in this
world which merit our wholehearted attention. I call on everyone to recognize that there are
problems which should be dealt
with. There are some things about
which it is impossible to be
polite—and the destruction of
democracy, of our country, state,
and campus by a faceless feeling
of despair, a conspiracy of silence, apathy, and avoidance is
one of them. The political machine is too big; one vote means
too little; the problems are too
complex - these arc the attitudes
which emasculate America and

democracy a travesty.

The problem of local, state,
and national government must be
faced by each of us. separately.
We must not allow political machinery to do our thinking for
us. or place us in a position
where thought is impossible.
He,re on this campus we are
closer to the goal. Here every
vote does make a difference. The
students on this campus alone
could force the Feinberg Law off
the books if they desired to. We
can certainly clean up a corrupt
and children Student Senate, if
we want to We have allowed
ourselves to be fooled into think
Hat we are unimportant as
idividi
nows if

AAl

I

The Circus
Biography of a Column
a sophomore the other day.

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

rpetua

birch

anywhere
I

Jot

A

v

�PAGE SIX

oCetlerJ

lo

the (Cdilor (conf’Jj

from P. 4)
of my business. Futhermore, if I
had evidence of other organizations (Governments) being overthrown by the infiltration of a
certain group (Communist Party'
and sufficient reason to believe a
similar situation might develop
in my own organization, (“The
preamble of the Feinberg law
makes elaborate legislative findings that members of subversive
groups, particularly of the Communist Party and its affiliated
organizations, have been infiltrating into the public schools of
the State.”—School Life Vol. 34:
p. 133), I would consider it only
sound business sense to determine
which, If any, of my employees
had been, or presently is, a member of such a group, and thereupon determine whether or not
I deem his association with this
group sufficiently detrimental to
my business so as to warrant his
dismissal from my employ. (It
might be noted here, that affirmation of previous membership
in a Communist Party does not
mean automatic dismissal under
the Feinberg Act.)
In agreement with this position,
Mr. Justice Minton has stated
that teachers "have no right to
work for the State in the school
system on their terms . . . They
may work for the school system
upon the reasonable terms laid
down by the proper authorities
of New York. If they do not
choose to work on such terms,
they are at liberty to retain their
beliefs and association and go
elsewhere.” (By the way, Mr. Taylor, I have compiled a list o( at
least 25 other “clsewheres” a
“blacklisted teacher” might go if
he “has a difficult time putting
food on his table.”)
(4) Finally Mr. Taylor, the man
ner of your support of George
Starbuek, in which you stated
that “the legality of his appeal
may be in question but the
morality and courage of his stand
is beyond question,” and your
(Cont'd

repeated

Friday, February 21, 1964

SPECTRUM

insistence

in

your

column that “the Feinberg Act
and all that it implies” is “our

problem” has caused me to question the basis of your reasoning.
To wit: “What has “morality”
and “courage” to do with refusal
to sign a legal Certificate? If
teachers “take their profession
seriously enough to place their
livelihoods in jeopardy to protect
the quality of education we students can and should expect at a
university that is worthy of the
name," then why should they refuse to sign a Certificate which
denies their membership in an
organization which requires them
“to follow, advocate, and teach a
prescribed party line or group
dogma or doctrine without regard
to truth or free inquiry?” (Ibid,
p, 133 my own italics.) Since you
seem to think you advocate academic freedom, Mr. Taylor, then
I assume you would oppose repression of “truth or free inquiry.” It must follow then, Mr.
Taylor, that you are really not
opposed to the Feinberg Act, per
se, but rather, in fact, you are in
agreement with it; you are only
opposed to “all that it implies.”

Mr. Justice Frankfurter has al-

ready commented on this regard. . We
ing the Feinberg law:
are asked to adjudicate claims
against its constitutionality be-

fore
into
that
and

the scheme has been put

operation, before the limits
it imposes upon free inquiry

association,

the

scope

of

scrutiny that it sanctions, and the
procedural safeguards that will
be found to be implied for its

enforcement have been authoritawe should . .
base them (decisions) on the concreteness afforded by an actual,
present, defined eontroversey, appropriate for judicial judgement,
between adversaries immediately
affected by it.” In short, Mr. Taylor, it is not “our problem.” And
until “our teachers" are “fired,
for being teachers,” and not for
their stubborn refusal to sign a
legal Certificate, of sound, busi-

tively defined

...

ness sense: then, and only then,
Mr. Taylor, should we presume to
challenge the “implied” unconstitutionality of this law.
Edward D. Nagel

Rent Me

-

$5

per

Goals of Tower
Are Discussed
(Continued

Month

O
O
0)

e

s

5)

Salomon: In my opinion there
was not much controversy stirred
up except by a few students.
Most of us realize that since
this was the first Open House in
over five years, that students
would have to make certain concessions in order for the Administration to approve this idea. At
the Council meeting following
the Open House the response was
overwhelmingly in favor of the
Open House with many requests
for another one. The Council decided that they would like to see
an Open House occur on a regular basis with the present restrictions removed. It is our goal to
create an “Open" residence hall
which would allow female visits
regularly without any restrictions. The reception of our first
Open House by the administration was excellent and as a result we are hoping that this reaction will enable us to reach
our final goal,
B4R: What are the future goals
ol the Tower House Council?
Salomon: The main goal of the
Council is to provide a content
life for residence students! I can
remember in my freshman year
that Tower was a dormitory, just
offering a place to live. Today
it is a residence hall offering
more than just a room and a
place to study. Recent additions
to the study lounges such as
rugs, drapes, coffee tables, and
lamps have made a home-like atmosphere for the student. There
has been a cultural program set
up to enrich the student’s life.
We have sponsored many sporting and social events, purchased
subscriptions to magazines and
set up a snack bar in the basement. In the latter part of this
semester there will be movie entertainment, tobogganing parties,
a Night in Las Vegas and Norton
Game Night. These are some of
the highlights of our program. So
you can see that Tower is no
longer just a place to live, but a
way of life.

TJ

■b

from Page

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the home or for professional use. Portable-light
and portable-priced, it is a compact standard,
with all the basic features of full-size machines,
and meets the most rigid performance requirements of household, school. Studio or office. Let
us demonstrate how the Studio hi can help you.

"ON CAMPUS"

Mehdi Vakil, Ambassador
From Iran, Speaks Today
Mehdi Vakil, Iranian ambassathe United Nations, will
speak to the students today at
3:30 p.m. in the Multi-Purpose
Room of Norton Hall. The address is sponsored by the United
Nations Committee of the Student Senate.
Ambassador Vakil is secretarygeneral and professor of diplomatic history at Tehran Univer-

dor to

sity,

He joined the United Nations
Secretariat in 1950, and was Ad-

visor on Coordination to the Secretary General in 1951. He was
secretary of the Economic and
Social Council, 1952-1959, and of
the Third Committee of the General Assembly from 1953-1959.
He has been ambassador and
permanent representative of Iran
to the United Nations since 1959,
Ambassador Vakil is a Decorated Officer of the Legion of
Honor from France and Grand
Officer of the Order of the
Crown, Iran.

�Friday, February 21, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE SEVEN

Schussmeisters Plan Trip
For Learn to Ski Week—Spring
WILLI WELLMAN

water pollution

put a
the Stowe trip that
had been planned for the semester break. Thus with a sigh
many of us pushed off for skiing
as some of the local areas wishing all the while that we were
in Vermont riding the chairlift
on Mt, Mansfield instead of killing our arms on the rope-tow
at Allegany Park. All is not lost
sehussers, there has been a trip
planned for Spring recess. We
would like to have a trip to
Whiteface Mountain for a Learn
to Ski week. This is a package
deal offered by the resort: breakfast and dinner, room, all-day
lift tickets for Whiteface Mt., and
five 2-hour lessons. This is for
days and six nights. The cost
is only $56.50 for five days of
skiing at one of the best resorts
in New York State.
If interested please drop into
the office (Norton 320) as soon
as possible and sign up for the
trip. If there is no one at the
office, slip a note under the
door stating your interest in the
trip and where we may contact
you with more information. Do
this immediately so arrangements can be made if sufficient
numbers are interested. The
time for the trip is tentatively
set for March 8 through March
The

damper on

14,

The club is also sponsoring a
trip to Holiday Valley for their
Winter Carnival the last weekend

of this month. This would be
an overnight trip. Once again
an immediate response from the

members is necessary for the
trip to succeed. The club can
only plan events, it is up to the
members of the club to support
all these events if they wish to
see the club succeed in all its
ventures.

For those who like

a

party

c
EMBOSS! NGTAPE

m.

For all raised
letter
labeling machines
...abetter
sticking tape,
more colors
(14) in glossy,
matte and
glow finishes.
Also see Labelon's new “Durematic" labeling machinelighter, easier to operate—cuts zip tab for Instant backing removal, rounds corners
for more permanent adhesion.

keep an eye open for posters
concerning our Annual Swim
Party. This will be a blast. It was

The Arts and Crafts shop announces the beginning of a series
of Leather Workshops. Expert
instruction will be given by Mrs..
Huedy Gutekunst.

last year.

A reminder to old members
who may have forgotten and a
notice to the new members: it
is necessary to sign up for all
Thursday night trips on the Mon
day or Tuesday proceeding each
Thursday. This is done in Norton 225, If you wish to rent equipment, please state so when signing, it is only with your cooperation that the club can run efficiently and effectively.

Interested students will be afforded the opportunity to learn
a worthwhile craft and make
some fine leather goods. Instruction begins Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. in the Craft Shop. All persons are cordially invited to attend. Supplies may be purchased
through the Craft Shop.

-CAMPUS NOTICES
Applications for Chairmen and committee members for SPRING WEEKEND are now available
at the Norton Candy
Counter and at the Union
Board office, Room 215
Norton. The activities of
the committees include
publicity, busniess and
tickets, dance, , special
events, queens, special
reporter, and secretary.
Completed

applications

are due in Room 215 Nor-

ton by Wednesday.

A REMINDER: APPLICATIONS FOR
MAKE-UP EXAMINATIONS for the removal
of Incomplete Grades
will be accepted no later
than MARCH 2, 1964.
Make-up
Examinations
begin April 6, 1964.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 25 and 26,
a Greyhound Bus repre-

sentative will be at the
ticket booth between
10:30 and 2:30 taking
reservation at a special
student rate to NYC for
spring vacation. For information contact the
ticket booth on the above
dates.
CASTING NOTICE
The Music Department of the University
of Buffalo will be presenting on April 2, 3, 4,
and 5, 1964, Two Musical Dramas.
The Cradle Will Rock
by Marc Blitzstein
Trouble in Tahiti by
Leonard Bernstein
Auditions for a cast of
30 will be held at Baird
Hall on February 25, 26,
27, Tuesday through
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

at

—

PARKING STICKERS
Parking space, due to
limited facilities, can be
granted to only those students and faculty members who display a special sticker on their
vehicles. These stickers
can be obtained from the
Bursar’s Office in Hayes
Hall or the Security Office of the Maintenance
Department. All drivers
are asked to cooperate so
that parking space can
be limited to UB members.
ATTENTION!
Those interested in entering the Student Participation
Day Musicale
should pick up an application form from the
Norton Candy Counter
no later than Feb. 28.
Anyone with musical talent of any kind is invited
to try out for this program. The applications
should be submitted no
later than March 2 for
eligibility.

Beginning in September 1964 all full-time undergraduate students
will be required to carry
health insurance during
the regular school year.
Summer coverage will be
optional, as in the past.
You will be automatically enrolled in the University’s plan at $11 per
semester. However, if
you have other health insurance, be prepared to
show written proof at
the Student Health Office (9 a.m.-4 p.m. weekdays) within 10 days of
your registration, and if
coverage
is adequate,
your account will
be
credited for the $11
charge.

1*

Third SUNY Graduation Will Feature
Wallis, U of R President to Speak
(Continued from Page 1)
Degree of Bachelor of Fine Art* Leonard
Valerian Banaszak, Victor Michael Chiodo,
Daniel Walter Kayne, Garry Neill Kennedy,
Marcia Ann Meyer, Donna
Jean Stonecliflfe.
Degree of Bachelor of Art*-Joyce Veda
Abel, Andrea Rosenfiel Adema, Joseph P.
Joseph Matthew Alessi,
Aiello, Francis
George John Allgaier, Carol E. Angello,
Rodger W. Ball, Arthur Richard Barkoe,
Edward Peter- Barra, Paul Stephen Barth,
Arnold Robert Baum, Nola Pearl Bennett,
Stephen Berch, Lois Elaine Berry, James
Allen Best, Allan Frederick Bley, Charles
William Bohnsack, John Borycki, Rida Singer Bross, Bernard Pierre Brouder, Spencer
Samuel Bryant, Bonnie Sue Bursuck, John
Edward Callahan, Ronald B. Carey, Alan
Hugh Carmichael, Robert Joel Chait, Edwin
John Louis Cheplo, Daniel
Ernest Chellis
Pauleen Doris- Clark,
Michael Christ
Richard Frederick
Cohe
James Charles
da M
Collins, Jean Victoria Colozzi, Bi
Fran
Dankner, Mildred Stafford Decker
cis Carmen J. Diodafe, Jeanne Wilson D
Paolo, Douglas Chester Dodge, Maija Du
suits, David C. Dynarski, Michael Marstor
Eccleston, Lance Fogan, Joseph S. Forma
Kenneth Bryan Frer •nkcl, Herman Leo Fried,
Garth Eric Gifford, i, Earl Lloyd Goodman,
Elizabeth Greene, Richard Anthony Gryksa,
&gt;rhalogl&lt;
Michael Br
ge Basil Hadji
ly Hersey,
ing, Th
Michael H
Id Jay, Diai
an, Dav
Rog&lt;
Johnson,
Paul
Francis Kehc
Richard Martin Killian, Roger
Francis Kon
Richard Vance Krane, Carl
Lamprey,
JoB Kustcll, Charles Vincent
seph Edward Latt, Richard Allan Laub,
Nancy Carole Lawrence, Richard Theodore
Lohr, Douglas Daniel Long, Robert McClos
key
Mahoney,
Richard
Mark Malletto,
George Maringer, Harold D. Marshall, J.
Armand Martin, Joseph Dennis Maffeliano,
Jane Reid Meese, Philip George Met z, RoJeffrey A. Mishcon, Renee
berta Mills,
Monagle, Biagio J. Natoli,
Dambiermonf
William Delaney Norfhover, Robert Law
rence O'Connell, J. Eldon Owens, Robert
Stephen Pacholski, Russell Panzica, Richard
Adam Paul, Thomas William Petnllo, Joseph
Ralph Piccolino, Hugh Douglas'Pierce, John
Joseph Rivoli, Patricia Coveny Rizzo, Gary
Lee Rodney, Robert Joseph Sagan, Reed
Vaclav Sallak, Carole Jane Smolev, Brian
J, Snyder, Jack Atack Stone, Alan Robert
Strumpf, Michael Edward Tabaczyk, Eugene Nicholas Tulich, Judith Rose Vallone,
John Joseph Wmkleman, Jr., Peter Law
rence Wolf, Charles Lawrence Yager.
F

By

Arts and Craffs
Leather Workshop
Starts Wednesday

jzanne

Degree of Bachelor of Education- James
Joseph Burd, Thomas James Dixon, Jr.,
Irina Dobozin, Marilyn Jean McPherson,
Linda Jean Merry, Alfred Wallace Smith,
Jr.
Degree of Bachelor of Science (In the
School of Business Administration)—Richard
Paul Benzinger, Samuel M. Befor, Gerald
Thomas Bolender, Samuel George Boncaro,
Patrick Frank Borelli, Donald Arthur Brindie, Gary Paul Brown, John Dominic Christopher, James Arthur Davis, Stephen Jay
Dorfmamn, Donald Irving Dussing, Jr.,
Norman Savl Finkle,
Thomas Frank Fiorella, John Joseph Fitzgerald, Joseph James
Fitzgerald, Richard Thomas Fitzgerald, Douglas Donald Fraser, Joseph Charles Freitas,
Charles Thomas Fudold, Richard J6hn Galus,
Richard Irving Goetz, Jr., Carl Louis Hagan,
Robert Bruce Harper, Dorothy R. Holland,
Gordon Ronald HumeS, Isaac Lawrence Jalowsky, Robert Michael Johnson, Arthur
Kleiner, Christian Laube Kraatz, Thomas
Peter Kuczma, Keith Gardner Lauer, Gerald
Raymond LeVan, Thomas Carl Luescher, Roy
Cameron Maines, Miles Albert Miller, Ralph
Edwin Milsom, Stanley Niemczycki, Darnel
Wayne Nurick, Richard Roy Olin, David Lee
Peckham, Wallace
John Robert
Parker,
Thomas Peycha, Thomas Henry Piefraszek,
Michael A. Smith, Edward Robert Sorotsky, Ronald Joseph Stay, Frederick J. Steck,
Patricia Francis Sullivan, Patrick
Dennis
Suozzi, Allan Robert Terhorsf, Terrence Edward Timms, Donald Walter Topolski, Peter
Durk Van Duser, Douglas Zimmerman.
Degree of Bachelor of Science (in the
of Engineering)—Earle E Anderson,
James Paul Argana, Theodore Leroy Battle.
Robert Howard Bradt, John Charles Buell,
Gordon C. Carpenter, Donald Doody,
George Charles Erickson, Philip F. Frandma, Verney Jon Fncano, Ralph Millard
Joseph
John
Frisch,
Gambino, Thomas
Allan Gollnif/, Michael Irving Granaff,
Wesley Harold Gustafson, John Michael
Johnson, Robert Irwin Krull, Matthew S
Makowskt, Paul Joseph Mayo. Edward Z
Pieniazek, James Arthur Rogers, Gus H.
Roussi, William Roger Taylor, Donald John
Thomson.
School

*

Degree of Bachelor of Science (In the
of Nursing)-John Michael Smas,
Cassatt, Ruth Swachamer Chris
Ai
Nanc
use Cl jrthoyi, Joah T
Jean
Heist, Suzanne Haur
Mary
Jacobi, Elizabeft
A
Kelle

School
Mary

Jacobson

Frances

MILITARY BALL QUEEN CANDIDATES From left to right: Mary
Ann Lucchino, Senior in Arts and Sciences, Majoring in History;
Diane J. School, Sophomore in University College, Majoring in Math;
—

Mary Ann Wartenburg, Sophomore in University College, Majoring
in Speech Pathology; Sue M. Duffy, Sophomore in University College,
Majoring in Pol. Science.

me

Mae

Mogaven
Robertsoi

Adelaide E
.Ik.

B«

Degree of Bachelor of Scionco (In
of Pharmacy)—Timothy Francis

School

the
Col-

lins, William Thomas Erdman, Nancy Georgene Gumtow, Clayton Chapman Merlihan,
Cresenzo Antonio Schetfini, Ira Schneider.

Certificate of

Therapy)—Juanita

Proficiency (Occupational
Smith Wynn.

Degree of Bachelor
tional Therapy)—Linda
Mona Joan Sams.

of

Science (Occupa-

Madeleine

Reynolds,

Degree of Bachelor of Science (Physical
Therapy)-Bonnie Jean Kunes.
Degree of Master of Business Administration Paul Arthur Bacon, John Paul Edwards, Robert Clovis Fay, Carolyn Marjorie Hansen, Kenneth H, Hopkins, Neville
Hunsberger, Ralph Walter Lankton, Joseph
George Mancone, John Cornelius McMahon,
Bruno Rocco Miccioli, Richard Wilson More,
William J. Norwich, Richard James Serianni,
Donald Michael Stiglmeier, Ronald Dean
Sutton, Paul
Marx Wenderlich.
Degree of Master of Education Robert
Patrick Barczak, Gtrald Donald Berkman.
Mildred Honora Blake, David Thomas Borst,
Robert Hamilton Brado, William DeLancey
Bradt, Mary J. Buscaglia, Ulysses Busmahs,
Frederick A. Cheney, Ofha P. Cox, Jean
Mane Crowley, Dorothy K. Walfman Dillenoth. Janice- Grimmer Donlon, Marian Leslie
Dornhaffer, Herbert Stanley Eisensfein, Marlene Schmidt Eyres, Dennis Frey, Lois Cohen
Goodwin, Fern Alvin Goss, Sharon Leah
fried, Mane Carol Coding, Thomas Alvin
Gri-.non, Arthur John Hannah,
Catherine
Lillian Ha;selback, Josephine Colby Hipp,
Vincent J. Hohmann, Joan Kohl Holzman,
George Albert Johengen, Charles James
King, Katherine Penelope Kubala, Carmella
Scarpelli McGrath, James Lewis Monlgom
ery,
Jr., Thomas C. Moore, Jr., Michael
Munich, Lee Carroll Murphy, Margaret B
Nevm, William Edward Offowifz, Jr Rev
Joseph Ouellette, O.M.I ,
erehd Francis
John A. Radd, Richard Kenton Rasbach,
Reverend David L. Reddy, O.F.M., Russell
Arthur Reed, Dorothy Mane Repman, Elizabeth Ross
Roberts, Dorothy Catherine
Sager,
James V. Schober, David
John
Schrader, Robert Dale Schultz, John Leo
Sciera, Jack Getald Seskin, Doris Lmendoll
Shearei*, Minnie Evelyn
Shnver, Donald
Charles Sieber, Philip D. Smolinski, Raymond C Southard, Norman Laverne Symington, Peter
Uglesich, Marvin Henry Unger, Elizabeth Elsie Lingerer, John Walker,
Robert Joseph Warner, Solomon Werzberger, George Bernard Wildridge, Jr., Clara
Perlman Wishner, James Frederick Wohlhuefer, James Heyward Young, Jr., Harris Gerald Zavitz.
Degree

of

Doctor

of

James Bowman, Arnold
Wilson.

Richard Isaac
Degree

of Matter

of

Education-Herman
Hamlin

Lament,

Arlt-James

Ivan

Ausman, Bernice Pauline Baeumler, Lawrence George D. Bartlett, Richard William
Boehme, James P. Bonitati, Alexander Z.
Chaberski, John Joseph Donahue, Myra S
Goldstein, Mary Ellen Graves, Eileen Joyce
Gugino, Elizabeth Hewitt, Dorothy H. Hoy.
Sarah Larnan Hubler, John Hunter. Henry
W. Jann, Reverend Theophane John Matz,
O Carm.,
Thomas William Radcliffe, El
bridge Anthony Renning, Jr., Arlene Jane
Rycombel, William Edward Schofz, Steven
Lane Siegel, John Joseph Slivka, M. Estellie
Smith, David Neal Spencer, Ruth M. Walsh.
Degree of Matter of Science Rosemary
Walgafe Bruce. Richard
Joseph Cyrul.k,
Douglas Barrett Dahm, Thomas Dobmeitr,
Kathryn Baker Fleischman, Lester A. Gerhardf, Anthony Giangardella, Herbert Otto
Goller, William Richard Mastreifer, Herman
Josef Helgert, Carl Paul Hollstein,
Jr ,
Francis Michael lannopollo. Andrew E
Karanfmos, Harold Kluever. Lethe Charles
Kun, Betty Noe Lawton, Jerome William
McCarty, Paul Raymond Motyka, Howard
Lari Park* Jr Margaret R. Rubly, Shirley
Sanford Ruof, Wayne Scherich.
Bernice
Schneeberger. Edward Yoke $ipg,
Cecelia
Eva Slavik, Minnie Vincigderra,
Marshall
Wright
Woodard
Degree of Doctor of Philosophy-Herman
B.rch, Ronald Hermann Bohr, Nicholas John
Carnero, Frank J Oman, Gerald Fleischer,
Carl Eugene Hatch, Malcolm Eugene Hulfs

Jones'
Kim!

V.iay Kumar Jain. Ronald Gilbert
Norbert M.chael Kancxak. Kye Chil
Khan Amir Mohabbat, Edward S. Newsham
Frederick Che-Chmg Peng, Jack Leslie Roach,'
Dorothy Sail Rosenbaum, Robert Ian Scott
Robert Alan Spangler, Richard J Thompson.
Phoebus N. Tongas.

Degree of Bachelor of Sciooce (In the
hool of Nursmg)-Carol Alice Remer

Support
Our

Advertisers

,

�PAGE EIGHT

On Feb. 24. 25, the Navy Officer Information Team from the
Buffalo Navy Recruiting Station
will be at SONY at Buffalo in
Room 234 Norton Union for the
purpose of explaining to interested junior and senior students
the opportunity available as a
Commissioned Naval Officer.

This information team will have
the full particulars on Officer
Candidate School, Navy Nurse
Corps, Aviation Officer Candidate Program, (NAVIATOR) Avia
tion Observer, Aviation Ground,
Medical, Dental, Staff, Supply and
others. Qualifications differ for
the various programs and this
visit will afford the student the
opportunity to determine which
program they are best suited for.
Applications can be made for
the majority of Navy Officer Pro
grams before the students graduate from college. There are two
by applying
reasons for this
early the student can determine
if he is selected before he graduates to facilitate his post college
planning and also by making ap
plication early he can select the
Officer Candidate Class of his
choice and therefore cause no
undue delay in serving his rnili
—

obligation.

Smit, Students to Perform Lee-Makanowitzky Recital
Thursday in Recital at Baird Set for Baird Wednesday
By VICKI BUGELSK1
Leo Smit, pianist-composer and
Professor of Music here, will ap
pear in recital Thursday, with
each of his piano students in the
performance of two-hand or four
hand music, The program, which
is entirely twentieth century music, will take place in Baird Hall
at 8:30 p.m. Admission is free
and all students and faculty are

Four Hands. Dr, Dowell Multer

of the music faculty will perform
the Haieff Sonata for Tow Pianos
with Mr. Smit, George D’Anna of
the music faculty, and Robert
Nagel, a student of his, will
assist in' the Bartok.

1

Officers Sought
For Navy Future

tary

Friday, February 21, 1964

SPECTRUM

invited to attend.

Mr. Smit has shown himself to
be an artist of the first rank not
only in solo performances, but
also in chamber music and concertos with orchestra. He recently
appeared with the Buffalo Phil
harmonic Orchestra under Lukas
Foss, performing Tchiakovsky
and Stravinsky marvelously well.
Besides all these achievements,
Mr. Smit is a well known composer, and is also teaching com-

position.

concert is quite unusual
in the fact that it features stu
dent and teacher simultaneously.
The students who will be performing with Mr. Smit, and their
respective compositions, are Theresa Park, Stravinsky Pieces for
Piano, Four Hands; Donald l.af
This

Miss Park is a graduate student from Korea. She recently
appeared as assisting pianist with
her sister Clara Han, for the
latter's master’s recital. Mr. Lafforty is a senior in the music department, majoring in piano and
oboe. He recently gave his senior
recital in piano, and will give
his oboe recital in April. Mr.
Sinderbrand is a graduate student in piano and composition.
His cantata Time Present was recently performed at the student
composer’s concert. Dr. Multer
teaches piano and music education here at the university, and
has appeared several times in recitals.

The Student Judiciary is aware
that students have been buying
faculty parking stickers and keys
for the faculty parking lots from
strangers who approach them in
off campus establishments Stu
dents who have been found using
the faculty lots have been lined
S5.00 for parking in restricted
areas and $10.00 for towing. The
Student Judiciary has also im
posed additional penalties upon
students who have been-approhanded. One of the most frequently used penalties is (hat of
prohibiting a student from bringing his car on campus for the
remainder of the semester.

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Kmmanuel Sinderhrand,
the Barlok Sonata for Two Pianos
and Percussion; Victoria Huge!
ski, Poulenc Sonata for Piano,

Basketball Game

The Duo appeared
ly successful recitals
university last year.
day, their program

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he studied

8:30 p.m, in Baird Hall. Admission is free and all students and
faculty are cordially invited to
attend.
Both performers had achieved
successful careers as soloists before they joined at Paris in 1956
to form the Duo Lee-Makanowitzky. After touring Europe, the
artists were acclaimed as exceptional, a “Duo Phenomenon."
Their interpetations of the
piano-violin chamber music literature have received high praise,
for they perform as a duo, and
do not subordinate the piano. In
1959 they received the “Grand
Prix du Disque” for their recording of Bach sopatas,
Noel Lee was born in China of
American parents. He studied
at Harvard University and at the
New England Conservatory under
Walter Piston. After receiving

'pjmqBii

both institutions,
in Paris with Nadia
Boulanger. Today he is known
as an excellent soloist and expert
performer of chamber music
among the younger American
musicians.
Paul Makanowitzky, of Russian
descent, was born in Stockholm,
He studied with Ivan Galamian,
Jacques Thibaud, and Nadia Boulanger in Paris. After his debut
in Paris, he achieved fame as
an outstanding violinist both in
Europe and overseas as a soloist and chamber music perform
degrees from

Noel Lee and Paul Makanowit-

zky, piano and violin duo, will
appear in recital Wednesday, at

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�Friday, February 21, 1964

‘The Miser -Moliere Comedy
9

play, The Miser, to
be produced in Harriman Auditorium March 4th through 7th,
will be performed by an all student east. The acting company
is headed by Lawrence Bartlett,
a graduate student in English,
in the title role of Harpagon, the
Miser. Mr, Bartlett, a native of
Swansea, Wales, was seen last

Moliere’s

2S Dr.

Herdal in

the

Master

Builder.

The leading parts of Cleante
son and daughter to
the Miser, are being played by
John Lund and Susan Sturgeon.
Mr. Lund appeared in the bill

and Elise,

of one-act plays presented by the
Department of Drama and Speech
and by the Student Dramatic
Society in October. The roles of

Mariane and Valere, the other
romantic leads, are being performed by Gloria Nowacyzk and

Colin Brenner. Miss Nowacyzk
was last seen as Mrs. Martin in

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Ionesco’s The Bald Soprano, while
Mr. Brenner appeared as the impetuous Gregory Stephanovich
Smirnov in the S.D.S. production
of Chekhov’s The Bar.
Other parts are taken by Carl
Berg Jr., who will portray LaFleche, Cleante’s valet, Corinne
Jaffe as Frosine,, the matchmaker, Barry Tannenbaum, Harpagon’s cook and coachman, Jacques; Sam Abbalte, as Signor Anselm who resolves the tangled
threads of the plot. San Tacano,
a student in Millard Fillmore
College as Simon the Baker,
James Cronberg, will be seen as
a magistrate while his butterfingered clerk will be played by
Robert Swanick. Harpagon’s three
comic servants will be played by
Jane Groden, Steve Aberstein
and John Phillips.

lecturer in Drama and Speech
will be performed in the threequarter round style with the
audience seated on three sides
of the acting area.

"Colloguy" by Allen Sapp
To Be Played at Kleinhans

Richard Dufallo and the Buffalo
Conductor Lukas Foss and the
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Philharmonic Orchestra will give
the second of a three-part music
will present the next concert
at
series on American Musical
“This performance shape gives pair of the season Sunday
Theatre tonight in Kleinhans Muus a more immediate contact 2:30 p.m. and Tuesday at 8:30
sic Hall.
with the audience,” Dr. Watson p.m. in Kleinhans Music Hall.
pointed out. “Moliere’s comedy
New York City soprano Marorchestra,
Two members of the
is very basic and very funny. One concertmaster Laszlo Steinhardt
jorie Gordon, tenor John Priebe
of the best ways to communicate and principal cellist D dia Feldin and Met auditions winner Kerry
the humor is to bring it as close will join pianist Norma Bertolami McDevitt will join the voices of
to the spectator as possible. We in a solo performance of Beetthe Buffalo Schola Cantorum in
presenting the music of Jules
can do this extremely well in hoven’s Triple Concerto. Lukas
Harriman Auditorium."
Foss will direct the orchestra in Styne, Leonard Bernstein and
Rogers
Hammerstein.
Carnival OverWhen asked about the student Berlioz’ Roman
tone
cast, Dr. Watson had this to say: ture and Richard Strauss’ work
Special guest of the evening
“The number of students with poem “Till Eulenspiegel,” A
will be Lukas Foss, Conductor
particular interest to Buffalo
talent on this campus is quite of
is the presentation and Music Director of the Buffalo
music
lovers
large. Some are very skilled while
“Colloquy” a composition by Philharmonic, who will conduct
Leonard Bernstein’s “Symphonic
in others the talent and ability of
D. Sapp, Chairman of the
Allen
are undeveloped. I hope that this
Dances from West Side Story.”
State UniDepartment
Music
at
production of The Miser will see
versity of New York at Buffalo.
The three soloists will sing
the beginning of the developThe concert is somewhat of a selections from “South Pacific,
ment of all of it.”
“family affair” since pianist “The King and I” and “Candide”
Norma Bertolami is, in private
and Conductor Richard Dufallo
life, the wife of Allan Sapp. The
will lead the orchestra in excerpts
concert pair is the last to be
from “Gypsy”, “Slaughter on
and
February
the
presented in
Tenth Avenue” and “On The
season
March
present
will close
Town.”
24th with a presentation of “The
Dancing follows in the Mary
on the above days starting at 7 Passion According to St. John”
Seaton Room.
p.m. in Rockwell Hall Auditorium by Johann Sebastian Bach.
From past Kappa Kapers shows
have come the last four Miss
Buffalo winners, Charlie Mussen
and his “Queen City Stompers”,
Bill Maggio, the Peri-De Trio and
•
55c
BALL
many others.
Kappa Kapers will be held on
• ITALIAN
60c
Friday, March 13,, in Rockwell
and
Hall Huditorium at SUCB at 8
p.m. and admission will be free.
• PIZZA
all from
Contact Marge Nimec at TT 62320 or Darryl Hughto at TT 32051 for more information.
IFC
A dance will be held in the
multi-purpose room this afternoon at 3:30. The dance is being
sponsored by the Interfraternity
Council. Music will be provided
by Cowboy Bonner and his band.
A FEW OF THE
Future plans include holding of
other dances throughout the semester on alternate Fridays.
&amp;

The production, under the direction of D. Thomas Watson,

Spectrum Cdafi (float'd
CIVIL ENGINEERING CLUB
The Student Chapter of the
American Society of Civil Engineers will hold a meeting Thursday at 12:00 in Room 37 of the
Karr Parker Engineering Building. Mr, Wayne Campbell of the
New York Central Railroad will
be the guest speaker. Refreshments will be served and everyone interested is cordially invited
to attend.
Membership is not required but
may be obtained by payment of
$2.00 semester dues.
FINE ARTS
The Fine Arts Committee plans
to run an exhibit of students’
doodles, from February 28 thru
March 7. Doodles are urgently
needed. Size, shape, condition,
and subject are not restricted,
only your artistic imagination.
A box on the first floor of Norton Union in which the doodles
may be submitted. After the contest, all works will be displayed
in the Show Case on the first
floor of Norton Union.
The best entry will receive the
blue ribbon for excellence in an

applied art.

MATH CLUB
The Undergraduate Mathematics Club will hold its next meeting Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 335, Norton Union. Neal
Feisinger will speak on “Mathematical Recreation.” Everyone is
cordially invited. Refreshments
will be served.
MIXER COMMITTEE
Mixer Committee will hold the
annual Sadie Hawkins Mixer on
Leap Year Day,’ Saturday, from

8:00-12:00. Decorations will lend
a real Dogpatch atmosphere complete with checkered tablecloth,
candles melted into beer bottles,
and a keg of Kick-A-Poo Joy
Juice. Marryin’ Sam, on hand
with wedding rings and certificates, will “hitch” any willing
couples. Music will be provided
by Jim Battistoni’s Band.

TRY 'EM

MEAT

TF 2-9331

PRE LAW SOCIETY
The flim “The Making of a
Modern Lawyer” will be shown in
the conference theater Wednesday at 3:00. This film is a must
for every pre law student. It is
open to the public.
Variety Show Seeks Talent
Auditions will be held Monday
and Wednesday for the 10th Annual Kappa Kapers Show at. the
State University College at Buffalo. Groups or individuals with
prepared material will be heard

COLLEGE PIZZERIA
FREE DELIVERY!!

CHOICE BARGAINS

Washington's
Birthday

INQUIRY
INTO THE OSWALD CASE
Mark Lane, former New York State Assemblyman,
has urged repeal of the Feinberg Law. He has
conducted an investigation of the Oswald Case in
Dallas and elsewhere.
Hotel Lafayette Ellicotf Hall
Lafayette Square Washington &amp; Clinton
-

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Friday February 28-8:00 P.M.
Donation $1.00
INVERTED AT

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Students $.50

ADVERTISER'S REQUEST

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February 22nd
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$2 .50 to 3.50 Ties
will be
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$12.22
will be
$11.00 to 22 .00 Sweaters will be
$8.22
Ski Parkas will be
$3.22, $7.22, $10.22
Slax (Cotton)
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$13.22 and $22 .22
$25 to $65 Sport Coats will be
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�PAGE TEN

Natl Interfraternity Elections
Chicago businessman Bertram
Bennett was elected presi-

W,

dent of the National Interfrater-

nity Conference at its 55th annual meeting. Bennett is an alumnus and a trustee of Knox University, and a past president of
Beta Theta Pi fraternity. He is
a board chairman of Caspers Tin
Plate Co., Chicago,
Named to the newly-established office of president-elect was
J. Dwight Peterson, chairman of
Cities Investment Co., Indianapolis. Paterson is an alumnus of
Indiana University, and a past
president of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Owing to the increasing complexity of the affairs of the Conference, the office of presidentelect was created to permit the
future president to plan his program and committees well in advance of his assumption of office,
as well as planning the annual

meeting.

Herbert W. Krovitz, Wollaston,

Mass., was elected a vice presi

dent. A graduate of the University of Rhode Island, Krovitz is
public relations director of Alpha
Epsilon Pi fraternity.
Also elected a vice president
was Fred H. Turner, Dean of
Students of the University of

series on the American
will open Monday at 7:30
p.m.
in the Young Women’s
Christian Association, 190 Franklin St. Sponsored by the Adult
Clubs Committee, with Mrs, Herbert Holmes as chairman, the
talks will cover historical background, music and literature of
the American Negro, and the
Negro Community today. Discussion and a coffee hour will follow each weekly meeting.
A

Negro

Monday

on

origins

in Africa, beginning in America,
mixed breeding in the United
States and “passing” will be Mrs.
John R. Curry, Bennett High

School social studies teacher, and
Samuel L. Woodard, administrative intern under a Ford Foundation Grant, Lockport city schools.
Monday, the meaning of Negro
Negro composers and de-

music.

monstrations of music will be
covered by speakers to be announced. Mrs. Robert Lee, former
teacher of English, speech and
drama in East High School, will
discuss Negro literature, on Mar.
2 the Reverend Paul Smith, Industrial Relations Director, Urban League, will speak on the
Negro community today —class,

structure, problems, identity, religion

and education on March 9.

store.

Sigma Kappa Sorority has reorganized as a local and is now
Sigma Kappa Phi. It will cele-

brate

Founder’s Day

24.

Feb.

Alpha Gamma Delta will hold
its Dinner Dance at the Transit
Valley Country Club tomorrow
night.

Chi Omega is happy to an

NEWMAN CLUB

HILLEL

Purim Service Wednesday
In observance of Purim, Hillel
will hold a special service on
Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. in the
Hillel House. The reading of the

Megillah Esther will be proceeded by an interpretation of the
Purim account as related in this
Biblical book. The more social
aspect of the Purim celebration
will take place on Sunday, March
1, at 8 p.m. in the Hillel House.
It will feature the annual faculty
Purim debate.
U.J.F. Drive
Gary Evans and Dov Liberman, the co-chairmen of the 1964
U.J.F. Drive on the local college
campus, request that all workers return all solicited cards to
the Hillel House between 6 p.m.
and 10 p.m. this Thursday. Every
effort is to be made to complete
the drive prior to the Spring Recess.
GAMMA DELTA
Sunday is the Ski-Swim Party
at Kissing Bridge. The group will

leave Norton Union at 1:00 p.m.
and return about 8:00 p.m. Anyone interested who has not already signed up please call Carol
Wolff at TA 3-1737.
IVCF

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship holds regular weekly Bible
Study sessions in Room 217 of
Norton. These groups are meeting on Monday, 1-2; Wednesday,
4-5; and Thursday, 3-4, There
is also a weekly “Apolegetics”
discussion group meeting Mondays from 4-5 in Norton 262.

Wednesday, Feb. 26, Mr. Pros
ser of the Speech Department
will speak on “Newmanism” in

Norton 231 at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 28, Tobogganing
at Chestnut Ridge. Further details can be had at Newman Hall.
SCA

The Student Christian Associa
tion will hold its next meeting
on Wednesday, Feb. 26, at the
home of the Chaplain, 49 Heath
St. Supper will be served at 6:00.
Please call the chaplain’s office
at TF 4-4250 by Tuesday. The
program will begin at 7:30. Tom
Ernst will begin a two part series
on Peter Berger’s new book, An
Introduction to Sociology, A Humanistic Approach.
STUDENT ZIONINT
ORGANIZATION

Dr. Milton Plesur will speak
this Sunday, Feb. 23, at Student
Organization’s weekly
Zionist
meeting. The theme of his talk
will be ‘A Survey of U.S. Foreign
Policy in the Middle East’. This
will be a general review of U.S.
policy in this area for the last
two decades. Following his talk,
a discussion and coffee hour will
take place. All students are cor
dially invited to attend the meet
ing, beginning at 7:30 p.m. in
Norton Room 234. Plans for an
exchange meeting with Toronto
March 1 will be discussed.

nounce the installation of Barb
ara Van Order as President.

Awaited Every Year;

Theta Chi will hold a social
this Friday night with Gamma

Washington’s

Phi Fraternity.

Birthday

Sigma Delta Tau is looking for-

formal rush party
at the Old Post Road Inn, this
coming Sunday afternoon.
ward to the

Earning Money in Europe

JOBS
IN EUROPE

DRY CLEANING
8 lbs. for $200

SALE

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Laundry

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February 22nd

Shoe Repairing

9:00 A.M.

Shoes and Purses Refinished
and Dyed

-

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O'CONNELL
LUCAS
CHELF

All Types of Ladies' Heels In
Stock for Replacement
or Re-sty I ing

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6-4041

Every registered student
can get a job in Europe and
receive a travel grant.
Among thousands of jobs
available are resort, sales,
lifeguard and office work.

No experience is necessary
and wages range to $400
monthly. For a complete
prospectus, travel grant and
job application returned airmail, send $1 to Dept. F,
American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la

Liberte, Luxembourg City.

3240 Main Street

Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

Open 9 A.M. -9 P.M.

HENRY'S MENU
FOR HUNGRY STUDENTS

m

HKjs

1

Series on American Negro,
Topic: Historic Background

in

1964

!£elicj,ioud

CjreeL l^JewA

Illinois. Dr. Turner is a graduate
of the University of Illinois and
Alpha Phi Omega, in continua member of Sigma Alpha Eping their service to the campus,
silon fraternity.
will usher at Commencement exZeke L. Loflin was elected secercises tomorrow morning at
retary. Dr. Loflin is head of the
nine o’clock. It will be followed
of
mathematics department
a tobaggan party
Southwestern Louisiana Institute, that evening by
Park. The brotand a past president of Theta at Chestnut Ridge
hers would also like to extend
Xi fraternity.
their congratulations to our new
Elected treasurer was Louis L. president, Stan Zambron.
Roth, St. Louis insurance executive. He is a past president of
Alpha Sigma Phi congratulates
Sigma Nu fraternity.
its new officers, Joe Turri, president, Patrick Carney, vice-presiRoland D. Patzer, Dean of Student, Ross Radley, treasurer, Hardents at the University of Verry Strong, recording secretary,
mont, was elected educational advisor. He is a member of Alpha and Dennis GiaQuinto, corresponding secretary.
Tau Omega.
Elected to the NIC Executive
The brotherhood is proud to
Committee were:
announce that Alpha Sigma capLewis S. Armstrong, Seattle attured the first place trophy in
torney and past president of Delthe snow sculpter in the Winter
ta Chi;
Weekend competition with “A
Remedy for the Winter Thing.”
Paul K. Addams, New York
Also, Brother Bob Woodhall was
business consultant and past presvoted Winter Weekend Prince.
ident of Alpha Chi Rho;
Norman K. McLeod, Vice PresBeta Phi Sigma announces, a
ident of Ketchum, Inc., Pittsdance to be held with Lambda
burgh, a past president of Delta Kappa Sigma sorority on Feb. 29.
Tau Delta; and
Phi Epsilon Pi will hold a
W. Bernard Jones, Sumter, S.C., Beatle’ party tomorrow night at
management consultant, a past
the Phi Ep Hall on Kenmore Ave.
president of Pi Kappa Phi.
Special surprise guest appearances are

Speaking

Friday, February 21,

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�1964

Friday, February 21,

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

HOOP PREVIEW

Bulls Outclass Red Raiders, 94-77
utes remaining in an attempt to

PAUL NUSSBAUM

University of Buffalo’s
team, behind Dick
Hetzel’s 23 points, romped to a
94-77 triumph over major college
Colgate Saturday night at Clark
Gym. A local television audience
saw the Bulls streak to their fifth
consecutive victory to bring their
season’s record to 12-4. While
UB moved another notch closer to
the N.C.A.A. tournament, the loss
was Colgate’s thirteenth in nineteen games.

The

basketball

With

have his reserves gain key on
court experience. “The team stopped a real good offensive outfit, in
the Red Raiders, tonight” a smiling Serfustini commented after
the game. The coach also felt
that UB had regained confidence
in its offensive attack by virtue

Hetzel

and Norwood
Goodwin leading the way; Buffalo
jumped out to a quick 8-2 lead.
Gary Hanley mastered the boards
as UB shot its way to a 23-14
bulge at the ten minute mark.

Jack Karaszewski and Muntner

The Bulls continued their score
at will ways in the final half en
route to hitting on 41 of 91 shots
for a torrid 45.1 per cent from
Colgate connected
the field
equally well, 45.7 per cent, but
Don
Hanley and
Thompson helped Buffalo out rebound Colgate
60-50 by pulling down 11 and
10 respectively, thus permitting
the visitors only 70 shots.

COLGATE

Corbett
Muntner
Cruthers
TeOarr
Pommershein
Zamat
Druckenmiller
Siegel
Woodward
Hall
Totals

G F T

9

3
3
5
6
2
0

4
0
0

4 14
3 15
4 8
1 1
0 8
0 0
0 0

32 13 77

Baschnagel
Goodwin
Hanley
Poe

&lt;ays
as Goodwin (24) looks on.
-Courier-Express

Don’t forget to listen
in tonight at 6 ;15 to “UB
SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS.”
Barry Warner will be at
the mike ready to bring
you up to date on all the
happenings on the University sports screen.

Hetzel
Smith
Karaszewski
Barto
Bevilacqua
Thompson

By

GARY FALK

The UB basketball team, currently

sporting

an

impressive

record, is facing a rough week
ahead of them on the courts.
Tomorrow night the Bulls play

1 19 host to Albany State, who is look
0 6 ing to even this season’s slate
0 6 against the Bulls. Buffalo de-

BUFFALO

However the Big Red rallied
behind fine outside shooting by
Ed Muntner and Frank Pommershein to close the gap to 25-22.
The Bulls tightened their defense
and forged back to a commanding 36-24 lead.
were ejected after an exchange
of fisticuffs during a rebound
battle at the seventeen minute
mark. Muntner had pulled down
13 rebounds during his abbreviated performance. Meanwhile,
red hot Hetzel poured in 18
points in the first half to pace
UB to a comfortable 45-33 halftime margin.

The only notable flaw that the
Bulls exhibited was their frequently poor foul shooting. In a
tighter ballgame it might have
made a decisive difference. ■

G F

T

Albany earlier this year,
62-54, on the loser’s court. The
Beds will come storming into
Clark Gym with a pair of sharpshooting forwards, Dan Crossett
and Jerry O’Donovan, who hit for
20 and 16 points respectively in
the previous encounter. They will
be supported by guard Bob Zeh,
who last time scored 11 tallies
an played a line defensive ballgame.

feated

3
7

1 7
In the first outing, the two
1 15
2 2 6 clubs battled almost until the
2 2 6 finals buzzer, with the Bulls Secur
10 3 23 ing the win only after coming
1
1
6
4
4

0
0

2
2

1

9

to life in the last seven minutes,
and using a full court press for

0 12 the remaining three. UB trailed
1 9 at intermission, 26-25.

Tickets are being sold
in Clark Gym for the
March 7 away game
against Niagara. They
are being sold on a first

come first served basis,
and are $1.00 apiece.

Starring for the Bulls in that

game was senior Gary Hanley,
who pulled down 11 rebounds,
and Norwood Goodwin who tallied

20 points. It should be a close,
hard fought battle, with the Pcds
seeking to avenge their earlier
setback. Game time is 8:30 p.m.
The UB Frosh take on Canisius
at 6:15 p.m. in the J.V. encounter
Fans are reminded to get to
Clark Gym in plenty of time for
tomorrow night’s duel. There are
only two more home games left
this season, (the other is against
LeMoyne, Feb. 29) and a large
crowd is expected to be on hand.
BULLS

-

TERRIERS CLASH

On Tuesday, Feb. 25, the Bulls

travel to Boston to meet the
highly rated Terriers of Boston
University in a game that is
crucial to both clubs: Both the
Terriers and UB are struggling
for a post season N.C.A.A. bid.
A loss here for either team would
hurt their chances consideably,
and so both clubs will be going
all out for the victory. Boston
University holds key ' victories
over such highly touted teams
as Seton Hall, Connecticut, Har-

vard and Northeastern. The Terriers boast such stars as guard
Randy Cross, the team’s leading
scorer who is currently averaging
18 points a game, and forward
Sheridan James, who has averaged 12 thus far.

� ����������������������������������������������■A-

Listen To WBFO For Sports
������������������������������������������������

Slick ball handler Goodwin was
in the points
sweepstakes with 15, while guard
Bill Barto chipped in with 12. As
eleven UB cagers reached into
the scoring column, the Bulls collected a season’s high of 94
points. Before he fouled out,
Bruce Corbett came up with 19
points in pacing the Raider’s offense.
second to Hetzel

Coach Len Serfustini emptied
the Bulls bench with three min-

r

;

—i

DON’T BOTHER TO CARRY
AN EXTRA SUPPLY.
New Carefree* tampons promise so much
more protection—you can leave the extras
at home!

I
�

Playmate
wears

j nothing but
I
\

!

The principle of this superior protection* is simple, natural. Most old-style
tampons flatten, thin out, elongate
when moisture strikes.This shape
simply cannot covet the area of flow
properly. Thus embarrassing accidents occur.
But a Carefree tampon (firmly compressed so it needs no rigid applicator) expands into a natural, round
shape that conforms to your own
body's structure, responds to your
own body’s needs. It gives you more
comfort than any tampon or napkin

ever developed.
Actual use tests proved that the
new Carefree tampon absorbs, without leakage, 73% more than the

leading tampon—starts to absorb

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any

other.

Better protection—longer protection. That’s why you can leave that

GOLDMANS

extra supply at home.

SHOES
BOULEVARD MALL
Youril.D.

0 0P

�Friday, February 21, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

iiPUCTsaifM
SPORTS CIRCLE
By ALAN NEWMAN

Fencers Defeat Hobart and R.I.T.;
Meet Syracuse Orangemen Tomorrow
By BRYNA MILLMAN

With five games remaining on the Bulls basketball
After the demoralizing weekschedule there is an air of optimism spreading throughend of Feb. 7-8 during which the
out the entire campus. The cagers have won 10 of their varsity fencers lost three of the
four matches involved in the
last 12 games and it seems that only a complete colmeet with Case
lapse can ruin their chances for a bid to the post-season quadrangular
Tech, Fenn, Oberlin and Western
College Division Tournament of the National Collegiate Reserve,
they bounced back last
Athletic Association. The University of Buffalo has a weekend at full strength to debasketball team of which it can be proud of this year—- feat both Hobart and RIT. The
a team which will do well in the tournament, barring Frosh also were victorious in
injuries.

Saturday’s 17-point victory over major college Colgate
was by far the best team effort of the campaign. Dick
Hetzel turned in another superb performance as he paced
the Bulls with 23 points—18 of them coming in the first
half. Norward Goodwin, the sophomore sensation, tallied
15 to remain the squad’s high scorer. UB’s 41 field goals,
( a 45.1 '/&lt;
effort), and 60 rebounds combined with an
aggresive defense proved to be too much for the Red
Raiders to handle.
With Gary Hanley controlling the boards and Harvey
Poe ripening into an excellent defenseman the outlook
is good for the ensuing games. The most exhilirating fact
is that Dr. Serfustini can look to next year for an equally
fine season when a hoarde of fine sophomores and juniors
will be returning.
On March 26-28, 1964, at the time of the NCAA
Championships at Yale University, Bill Sanford will be
awarded a certificate for his service to swimming by the
College Swimming Coaches Association. The award will
be presented by John C. Hickman of the University of
Wisconsin, President of the College Swimming Coaches
Association.
Bill Sanford was born in Buffalo, New York, on St.
Patrick’s Day (March 17), 1920. He attended Amherst
Central High School where he was on the varsity swimming team for 4 years and was co-captain of the team in
his junior and senior years.
He graduated from the University of Buffalo in 1949
(B.Ed. with high honors) and received his M.Ed. in 1950.
He played tennis at UB and was undefeated in 2 years
of competition (He went through college in 2 Va years)
Bill had, before going to college, interrupted his education to serve in the U.S. Army for 4 &gt;/i years. He
served in the European Theatre of Operations during
World War II, where he won the Bronze Star while acting as a forward observer in the armored artillery spearhead of Gen. Patton’s Third Army. He entered service
as a private, attended O.C.S., and received a battlefield
promotion from General Eisenhower.
Mr. Sanford is now in his 15th year as swimming and
tennis coach at the University of Buffalo. His swimming
teams, going against top-flight competition, have won
50 and lost 114 matches; his tennis teams have won 164
and lost but 24. Neither team has any athletic scholar-

ships.

both meets, bringing their record
to four wins and only one loss.
The over-all record for the varsity this season is 6-4.
The Bulls travelled to Rochester last Friday where they de-

feated the Tech-men 17-10. The
foil squad was held to a close
5-4 distributed 2-1, 2-1 and 1-2
among Barry Canter, Bob Toth
and Joe Paul respectively.
The epee squad garnered 6
poits against Rochester’s 3. Dick
Willert and Walt Ostrum both
won two and were undefeated

-

,

officiatfng wdiich°waa
&lt;

&amp;

°

'

‘

two.

The saber squad also defeated
KIT 63. Mark Fox shut out two
opponents: Dave Kirschgessner
and Larry Zollinger each split
two bouts, and John George won
two and lost one.
At Hobart the Bulls yielded a
4-5 victory to the Hobart foilmen
in spite of a 3-0 shut out by Barry
point
Canter and additional
gained by Bob Toth.

Numerous shutouts marked
the squad record of the epee
Bulls: Dick Willert, Walt Ostrum
and Herb Boedecker all went
2 and 0, Frank Pecenco was 2
and 1. Squad total showed a
smashing eight points for Buffalo against Hobart’s one.
The sabermen not to be out
done also came through with a
score of 8-1. John George led the
squad with a tally of 3-0, Dick

Kirschgessner and Mark Fox both
won two and lost one, and Larry
Zollinger split 1-1. The team total
against Hobart was 20-7.

The baby Bulls came through
strong in both meets last weekend defeating BIT 19-6 and Hobart 16-9. In the former meet,
Pierre Chanteau downed 4 op
ponents: Mike
Howard, John
Houston and Leland Cory each
defeated three and lost none,
Bob Frey took 3 out of 4, Dick
Fitchette won one and lost three,
while Jim Mondello split 2 and 2.
Against Hobart the freshmen
compiled a score of 16-9. Three
and 0 shut outs going to Bob
Frey, Mike Howard and John
Houston. Pierre Chanteau took 3
out of 4 bouts, Jim Mondello 3
of 5, Dick Fitchette won 1, lost
3 and Leland Cory was 0 for 3.

This weekend the fencing Bulls
travel to Syracuse to meet the
Orangemen.

UB's Mark Fox (left) duels with R.l.T.'s Les Johnson in sabre match won by Fox, 5-3.
—Andrew Davidhazy

Bulls Upset 60-54

Intramurals
The following are the stand
ings in the two fraternity leagues:
Wednesday Night League
0
Alpha Epsilon Pi
5
3
1
Beta Sigma Rho
3
1
Alpha Phi Omega
2
Sigma Alpha Mu
2
Mu
Alpha Sigma
2
2
Theta Chi
0
3
Thursday Night League

Gamma Phi
L .■
Tau Kappa Epsilon

Alpha Phi Delta
Phi Kappa Psi

4
........

2

1
2
2

2
2
2
3
2
13

Phi Lambda Delta
Phi Epsilon Pi
The following are the standings
in the independent leagues:
Monday 8:45 League
3
Bearcats
Gross 7
3
3
Seven Good Guys

0
1
1

Monday 9:45 League
Lions (winners)
4

0

......

,

Wednesday 9:45 League
Gunners
4
4
Quickies
A1IE
a
Icemen
2
...._

,

By ALAN NEWMAN

Thursday 9:45 League
Zygotes (winners)
4

TOM KENJARSKI

A member of the American College Swimming Coaches’ Association for the past 13 years, Bill Sanford instituted the swimming officials’ chapter of “Certified Swimming Officials of New York State’’ in Western New York
and was twice president of the group, holding offices for
6 years. He is a past president and past secretary-treasurer of the New York State Swimming Officals, past
chairman of swimming for A.A.U. (Niagara District),
Chairman of Aquatics for the Eastern District of
A.H.P.K.R., and served as a member of the NCAA Diving
Rules C ommittee for 3 years, being Committee Secretary
the past 2 years.
Bill is a charter member of Phi Epsilon Kappa, and received the fraternity’s first scholarship key in New York
State. He is also a member of Phi Delta Kappa.
Active in his community, Mr. Sanford has served the
past 3 years as an Elder of the North Park Presbyterian
Church, a member of the P.T.A. at School No. 66 and
Bennett High School, and on civic improvement groups
in Buffalo’s North Park Area.
He has been married for 19 years to a University of
Buffalo graduate, the former Jean Nocholson. The couple
have 4 children; Ellen 14, Karen 11, Bill 8, and Doug 6.
They live at 406 Huntington Avenue, Buffalo.
Mr. Sanford is the author of a number of articles for
educational magazines on aquatics and pool design. He is
n sw mm nlf and divings

while Frank Peconco and Herb
Boedecker each won one and lost

0
1
i

2

0

The Monday 9:45 and Thursday 9:45 Leagues have been cancelled due tto the large number
of forfeits. The managers of the
Lions and the Zygotes are asked
to check in the intramural office
for playoff dates. Next week’s
intramural article will give information regarding March’s tour-

naments in fencing,
and volleyball.

Bulls

wrestling,

on

UB basketball tomorrow
night over WBFO-FM. Tune in
to 88.7 meg. at 8:15 p.m. for
the pre-game analysis with Wally
Blatter. Eight-thirty is game
time and Dick Fleisher and Barry
Warner will be relaying the exciting play by play direct from
Clark Gym.
It’s

Follow the Bulls over your
campus radio station, this Saturday and for the remainder of
the home season.

Ithaca College put a dent into
the Bulls post-season tourney
hopes with a 60-54 upset victory
before a capacity crowd at the
Ithaca High School gymnasium.
The win increased Ithaca’s record
to 13-2 as they remained one of
the East’s small college powers.

UB got off to an early 11-5
lead in the first half, lost it in
the ensuing two minutes, and
went to the dressing room a 29-25
halftime deficit. The second half
saw Ithaca in complete domina
tion of the backboards 3s their
zone defense completely harassed
the Bulls.
Tom Vogt was the home team's
high wth 14 points and Wayne
Lyk and Captain Bill Schutz
added nine and eight points re
spectively along with a generous

contribution in the all-important
rebound department.

Harvey Poe continued his con
sistent playing with 17 points to
be the game’s high scorer al
though his compatriots, Goodwin

their potentials.

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                    <text>STATE
NORTON

UNIVERSITY

OF

NEW

YORK AT BUFFALO

LA

|
VOLUME 14

SPECTRUM

The implications of the Feinberg Law were aired at a special
meeting of the Student Senate
Tuesday night in the Multipurpose Room. Members of the Buffalo Chapter of the American Association of University Professors

tba

NO. 16

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1964

Feinberg Certificate Is Discussed
By Faculty Panel At Student Senate
By DOUGLAS GELIA

„„

.

’

the required disclaimer with no
intent to revise their methods of
classroom instruction, some will
undoubtedly do so.
Professor Newhouse favored
signing the disclaimer on the
basis of the ‘degree of seriousness’ of the matter. Feeling that
the whole case has been thrown

l^ifyhts
By NANCY LAURIEN

Dr. Sidney Hook, head of the New York University philosophy department, spoke
to the student body Wednesday. His lecture, sponsored by the Convocations Committee,

was entitled, “Intelligence and Human Rights.” The philosophical question explored by
Dr. Hook was, “Can an absolute right, that is, a universal right which holds itself as
moral in every situation and protects the excercisor of such a right from its consequences, exist?”
Dr. Hook defined a human
right as “a claim made by an
individual which, upon reflection, we can conclude we have a

right or duty to acknowledge
and support.” Every right or

freedom, however, is thus beit restricts the rights or
freedoms of another, and thus
creates a moral problem. A conflict has been created, not between good and evil, but rather
between two “goods” or rights.
As an example, Dr. Hook gave
the first of the Constitutional
Amendments, that of freedom of
the individual to speak and the
press to advocate any policy in
print. If these rights are to be
upheld regardless of the issues,
individuals, environment of their
presentation or its manner, the
house said, “I do not feel that fourth amendment guaranteeing
the (Feinberg) Law is a serious a fair trial is likely to be vioenough impediment to call for lated; since jury members, no
martyrdom.” He referred to the matter how carefully they are
fact that failure to comply with selected, are likely to be biased
the disclaimer requirement could by the opinions expressed by the
mean dismissal.
press.
When asked what students
The resulting situation empcould do, Dr. Zimmerman suggested a student march on Albany hasizes the necessity for estain protest. Dr. Zimmerman him- blishing the most important or
self stated, “I volunteer to join vital right, and temporarily sacrificing the “lesser” or temporarily
a march on Albany." He also sugless significant one. Thus it is imgested picketing and written procause

in the discussion.
Dean Robert S. Fisk, School of
Education, Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, Philosophy Department, Dr.
Constaiitine A. Yeracaris, Sociology Department, Professor Wade

Newhouse, Law School, and Mr.
Paul Sporn of the English Department answered questions of
the Senate and the audience.
If was agreed by those present
that the law has possible serious
consequences on academic freedom. Dr, Zimmerman stated that
while most teachers may sign

Dr. M. Zimmerman, Chairlady S. Spring Seated

possible to claim the existence of
an absolute right, viewed ethically and morally. The question
then arises, “Can there be Constitutional righte and freedoms
which are guaranteed to all,
denied to none, and do not interfere with each other?” Dr. Hook
concludes that these rights and
freedoms cannot be absolute, but
function best because they are
strategic in the function of the
Strategic
democratic process.
rights allow the abridgment of
cetrain rights temporarily, to al-

low the continuation of the way
of . life established by those
democratic principles. This met-

Psychiatric Society, the American Medical Association, and the

Alachua Country Medical Society.

of political
science will sponsor a conference
on Comparative Politics and Area
Studies on Feb, 7 and 8 in room
The

department

of

Medicine, Dentistry, Nursing

and Pharmacy. Under Dr. Regan’s
dynamic leadership
I am confident that this great dream will
become a reality. It will not be
easy. It will require hard work
and dose
cooperation of the
various Schools of the University; the public and private hospitals, and the City, County and
Mate governments. I am certain
that this cooperation
will be
torthcoming in the fullest possible measure. The
entire crew
wholeheartedly welcomes you
aboard, Dr. Regan."
Dr. Regan graduated from the
Cornell University Medical Colege in 1949 and
served his inernship and residency at the
ew York Hospital-Cornell University Medical Center, He subsequently became assistant proessor of psychiatry at Cornell
‘

1

n

hjversity
le has

Medical College.
done extensive work
health education, as well as

ea| in g
with physiologipsychological treatments,
('

cal and
p

Fellow of the American

Association and the
Ja rlcPsychiatric
Association,

.

‘

'Plomat of the American
,° ard of Psychiatry and Neurn gy
o
* a member of the Florida
v

Mid-West and a representative
from the Rockefeller Foundation
in New York City.

The principle speakers and
their topics include: Dr. Roy C.
Macridis, chairman of the department of political science, “Comparative Politics and Area Studies,” 10 a.m., Feb. 7; Dr, Bernard

"We have here the possibility
developing the greatest Health
Sciences Center in the nation,
based on the University’s Schools
of

Applications for the
position of editor-inchief of the Spectrum are

DR. PETER F. REGAN
In addition, Dr. Regan serves
on advisory committees to the
U.S. Surgeon General, on the
Southern Regional Education
Board Commission on Mental Illness, as Chairman of the Florida
Interagency Committee on Mental Health, and on the Florida
Governor’s Advisory Committee
on Mental Health.
Commenting on his appointment, Dr. Regan said; “The

Health Sciences in the State University of New York at Buffalo
are on the threshold of dramatic
advances. The health center colleges —. medicine, dentistry,
have long
pharmacy, nursing
been uniquely favored, with firm
roots in both the scholarship of
the University and the realities
of community life.”
—

development

as well,

said the philosopher.
Absolutists argue that temporarily abridging or infringing
upon human rights a precedent is
set for further restrictions and
the eventual withholding of those
rights. “How do you know where
to stop?”, he queries. "Where
your intelligence and sense of
dedication to freedom tell you to
do so,” responds Sidney Hook—an attitude which is based upon
a fundamental belief in the reasonability

of

man,

Conference on Politics to Be Held
Brown, associate professor,
“The Implementation of a Graduate Program in Comparative Politics,” 3 p.m., Feb. 7; and Dr. John
C. Wahlke, professor, introductory remarks on the utilization of
area sites for continuing data collection and field work, 10 a m.,
Feb. 8.
E.

Dr. Peter F. Regan was appointed vice-president for
health affairs, Thursday, January 9, by the Board of 214 of Norton Hall.
Trustees.
Four discussions will be cenDr. Regan comes to Buffalo from the University of tered around the presentation of
Florida College of Medicine where he has been head of three papers by professors of the
the Department of Psychiatry since May 1958. The posi- political science department,
A general discussion period at
tion at the University of Buffalo has been vacant since the which will in turn be evaluated
resignation last January of Dr. John D. Stewart, professor and discussed by ten professors 2:30 p.m. on Feb. 8 will conclude
of surgery.
from universities in the East and the conference.

Clifford C. Furnas.

sonality

(Cont’d on P. 9)

Regan Named Vice-President
For Health Affairs at UB

“Dr. Regan’s coming to join the
University team is, indeed, good
news for us all,” said President

hod of approach allows room for
intellectual expansion and per-

now being accepted by
the Publications Board.
The deadline for applications is Friday, Feb. 14.
Interested students
should write a letter of
application to the publications board explaining their reason for applying, their attitudes &amp;
ideas concerning the
Spectrum, a list of their
qualifications and past
experience, and a statement of grade point average certified by the
dean of their division.
Letters of recommendation may also accompany
the application.

Program participants include:
Professor Douglas E. Ashford, department of political science, Cornell University; Professor L. Gray
Cowan, department of public law
and government, Columbia University; Professor Karl W.
Deutsch, department of political
science, Yale University; Profes-

sor Wesley R. Fishel, department
of political science, Michigan
State University; Dr. Charles M.
Hardin, associate director, The
Rockefeller Foundation; Professor Gerard J, Mangone, director,

International Organization Research Program, Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and
Public Affairs, Syracuse University; Professor Warren E. Miller,
executive director, Inter-University Consortium for Political Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Professor John D. Montgomery,
department of public administration, Littauer Center, Harvard
University; Professor Benjamin
Rivlin, department of political
science, Brooklyn College; Professor Kalman H, Silvert, department of political science, Dartmouth College; and Professor
Aristide Zolberg, department of
political science, The University
of Chicago.

Northern Star Ball Tomorrow
To Culminate Winter Week
The city of Buffalo will be
spectator this afternoon to the
motorcade carrying the Winter
Thing Prince and Princess candidates. The motorcade, starting
at 2:30 from Norton Union, will
proceed down Main Street, Kensington Avenue, Winspear Avenue, back to Main Street, stopping at Norton Union at 3:30.
A coffee hour will follow in the
Multi purpose Room where the
Candidates will be presented to
the student body. Dance music
will be provided by the Magnitones with Jimmy Horton singing' Free coffee will also be
served.

'fonight between 7:30 and 9:30
Folk Concert will take place in
the Multipurpose Room. It will
feature Hackett and Raven plus
local talent and will be taped for

WBEN Radio. The donation
50?.

is

Saturday afternoon

at 12:00,
4:00, the "Notorious
Landlady" starring Kim Novak
will be showing in the Conference Theater for 25f.
The "Northern Star Ball” will
be held at the Hotel Buffalo
from 9:00 P.M to 1:00 A M. Dress
is semi-formal and donation is
$3.50 per couple. Music will be
supplied by Jay Maran. The Winter Thing Prince and Princess
will be crowned at midnight by
President and Mrs. Furnas after
the presentation of the week’s
2:00 and

trophies.

A large trophy will be awarded
to the recognized student organi-

zation which displays the most
enthusiasm in its participation
in the Winter Thing.

���PACE TWO

Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

Professor Henri Roddier Appointed
Visiting Professor of French Here
Professor Henri Roddier has
been appointed Visiting Professor
of French on the Mrs. Joseph T.
Jones Foundation during the second semester, 1963-1964, according to the College of Arts and
Sciences.

Professor Roddier holds the fol-

lowing titles: Licencie es-lettres,
Paris, 1924; Licencie d’anglais,
Paris, 1928-1929; Agrege d’anglais, 1933; Docteur es-lettres,
Paris, 1948 (litterature comparee,

mention tres

Professor Roddier will give two
lectures in English on
“Boudelaire: The Rise of a Poet,”
on Feb. 18; and “The Singularity
and Successive Meanings of ‘Les
Fleurs du Mai’,” on March 3.
Both lectures will be presented in
the Conference Theatre of Nor-

An Introduction to the History
of Glass” is currently showing in
the second floor of Norton Union.
twenty-two panels, here
through the courtesy of the museum at the Corning Glass Center
at Corning, New York, reveal the
evolution of glass-making
throughout the world. Functional
and decorative developments in
glass from the ancient Egyptian
and Roman Empires through various modern nations are presented
by text and illustration. Many
pieces of glassware add interest
to the display. This exhibit, sponsored by the Union Board Fine
Arts Committee, will be here until February 17.
The committee will present the
POPULAR PHOTOGRAPH International Exhibit from February
10 through February 22 in the
lounge on Norton's second floor,
mately one hundred photograhpic
prints, both color and black-andwhite, representing examples of
contemporary photography from
all over the world. All prints are
selected from prize-winning photographs in the POPULAR PHOTOGRAPHY $25,000 International
Picture Contest, the biggest year-

He will also offer a course on
qu’une litterature?”
(in French) on Tuesdays at 4:30
p.m. in Crosby Hall, Room 125.
He will also teach a graduate

“Qu’est-ce

This

exhibit features approxily competition in the photographic world. The broad range of
subject matter includes dramatic
and human interest photographs
as well as landscapes and portraiture. Thousands of viewers in

honorable).

From 1925 to 1928 he was Professor of French at Cairo, Egypt;
from 1929 to 1932 Assistant in
French at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. He has been a
Lycee professor at Nevers (1933),
Beauvais (1934), and Paris (1937),
then a member of the teaching
staff in comparative literature at
the Sorbonne (1945-49). From
1949 to 1962 he served as Professor at the University of Lyon. In
1962 he was appointed to the

ton Hall at 8 p.m.

History of Glass Being
Shown in Norton Union

(the Sorbonne)

ter.

public

EXHIBIT ON SECOND FLOOR OF NORTON

staff of the University of Paris
with the title of
Maitre de Conferences de Littera

seminar on Rousseau this semes-

ture Comparee.

In addition to his earlier ap-

pointment as Jones Visiting Pro
fessor at the State University at
Buffalo (1950-51), he has lectured
at the University of London
(1956) and in Australia and New
Zealand (1960). In 1960 he was
named Chevalier de la Legion

d’honneur.

He has published extensively
in the fields of French and comparative literature, in particular
on the 18th and 19th centuries.
His best known works deal with
literary relations between France
and England in the 18th century
and with Rousseau, Prevost, Montesquieu, and Diderot.

America and abroad have found
the exhibit a moving experience
and representative of recent great
forward strides made by the photographic arts.

Watch

for

to Look

‘How

the

enlightening
at a Painting,”

coming in March.

The Student

Judi-

ciary would like to in-

form students of the
consequences of
breaking
a parking
gate in the University
parking lots. There is
a $25.00 fine plus a
$10.00 repair fee. In
most cases, there is
also an additional
$5.00 fine for evading
payment of parking
fee.

Grow with Us
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a part of one of America's fastest

growing corporations; a dynamic, well established company
which is a world leader in the exciting and expanding field
of graphic communications. More than 85% commercially
oriented, Xerox enjoys constantly increasing operating
revenues with which it can explore dramatic new applications
of electricity and light. For example:

□
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Total operating revenues for the first nine months of 1963
reached $116,100,443; up 56% from 1962.
Expenditures for research and engineering ($5 million in 1961;
$13.5 million budgeted for 1963) have kept pace in a program
of planned growth extending far into the future.

In five years, the number of Xerox employees has grown from
1500 to more than 6000, and it's constantly gaining
momentum. Such a growth pattern constantly creates
key job opportunities in many technical and non-technical
areas, for applicants with exceptional abilities.

Many facets of our growth include:

□ 157

new products marketed since 1950.

□ 47 new patents were issued in 1962 alone.
□ A new manufacturing and research complex situated on
1.000 acres of campus-like setting to which more than
800.000 square feet of modern facilities have been added
since 1956.
Among the exciting projects presently underway within
the broad discipline of graphic communications are:
□ Information storage and retrieval systems
□ Information transmission
□ New product concepts in the medium of electro-photographic
copying equipment

If you would like the satisfaction and challenge of working for
such a company . . . and have the potential and desire to
grow . . . there’s a place and a future for you at Xerox.
Opportunities exist in the following areas:

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and engineering
Manufacturing

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Contact your placement office to arrange an interview
with a Xerox representative who will be on your campus ...

February 12
Dept. 64
or, write: Xerox Corporation
Box 1540
Rochester 4, N. Y.
•

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XEROX

«n ©Qua/ opportunity employer

,

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College Relations

�Friday, February 7, 1964

Liquid Helium Theory Topic
Of Dr, Borsi's Lecture Tour
Dr. Lyle B. Borst, professor of
physics, will discuss “A Diatomic

of 'Liquid Helium” as a
Sigma Xi national lecturer, February 10 through March 9.
He will visit collegs and uniTheory

Senate Protests School's Postponement of Final Exams

versities in Washington, Oregon,
California, Nevada, and Hawaii.
Dr. Borst, educated at the University of Illinois and Chicago
(Ph.D. 1941), has specialized in
(Cent, on Page 9)

BUGELSKI

George Bochberg, the

new Slee
Professor of Music for the spring
semester here, will give his first
lecture Friday, February 14, at
C;30 P.M. in Capen Hall. Admission is free and all students and
faculty are invited to attend.
Guest artists for the recital portion of the program will be The
New Amsterdam Trio.
Dr. Rochberg will lecture on
' The New Image of Music.” The
Trio, whose members are Edith
Mocsanyi, piano; Allen Ohms,
violin; and Heinrich Joachim,
cello; will give the world premiere of the Rochberg Trio for
piano, violin, and cello (1963).
The violinist and cellist will then
perform the composer’s Duo Concertante
Dr.

with

The following letter was sent
to the Dean’s Council in reference
to the interruption of the intercession by the Student Senate,
a passed in their January 28
meeting.
“To: All those present at the
January 13, 1964 meeting of the
Dean’s Council. From: The Student Senate.

George Rochberg, Slee
Professor, to Give Lecture
By VICKI

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

The Student Senate acts as a
spokesman of the student body
many honors are the George of the university. We are conGershwin Award and a Fulbright sidered a representative organ,
grant. He was made a Guggen- and cannot, therefore, remain
heim Fellow. From 1948-54 he
in regard to what we conwas an instructor at the Curtis silent
Institute. Since 1959 he has been sider an unfortunate occurance.
Chairman of the Music departOn January 13, 1964, the Dean’s
ment of the University of PenCouncil postponed final examinansylvania.
Among his works are two symtions scheduled for that evening
phonies, Night Music and Time and the following day. School was
Span for orchestra (the latter was
recently performed by the Buffalo closed at 4 P.M. that day. This
action:
Philharmonic). He has also written a Chamber Symphony for
1. Drove many students from
nine instruments, two string
the dormitories, whereas many
Capriccio
a
for
two
quartets,
would have preferred to remain,
pianos, and numerous other chameven under the existing condiber works and compositions for
tions.
piano solo.

(1955),

Rochberg studied piano
George Szell and Leopold

at the
Curtis Institute of Music with
Scalero and Menotti. Among his
Mannes. He then studied

,

\\
■

llll
c

Satisfying human relationships
can make a big difference between success and failure in col-

lege. Whether it’s a roommate, a
professor, your family, or friends,
you want to get along well with
them. We are learning a lot about
this through our study of the
Christian Science textbook,
Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures by Mary Baker
Eddy. You can, too.
We invite you to come to our
meetings and to hear how we
are working out our problems
through applying the truths of

G)

(

Want to take a step now
that will guarantee you an executive position as
soon as you graduate? And an assured future
in the Age of Aerospace? Then join the Air
Force ROTC. You'll receive your Air Force commission with your college degree. And you’ll
be a leader in an organization that will give you
command responsibility right from the start.
For details, see the Professor of Air Science.

COLLEGE PIZZERIA
G
H

Christian Science.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
State University of New York at Buffalo
Meeting time: 7 o'clock Thurtdoys
Meeting ploce: Norton Noll, Music Rm.

Science and Health ie available at all
Chrietian Science Reading Rooms and at many
college booketoree. Paperback Edition (1.95.

MONDAY, FEB, 10th

TF2-9331-TF3-4I22

2. Made it impossible for

many

to accept intercession
employment, possible used to pay
the following semester’s tuition.
The student was forced to return
on January 22 for the examina-

students

tions.

3. Will make it impossible for
borderline students to know if
they may continue at the university until well after the beginning
of this semester, as the “keep or
drop" decision frequently takes
time.

4. Discriminates against some,
yet not all, students at the university. Many had a true intercession, that is one free from any
academic stress. Others did not.
5. Allowed many buildings to
remain open, some graduate examinations to be given, yet the
undergraduate student was not
considered.

Support Our Advertisers

�Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

THE

SPECTRUM

student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
ARNOLD S. MAZUR
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Heard Through
The Ivy

The official

Publication
weekly

-

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Editorial Advisor

.

John Kowal
Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Alan Newman
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

Business Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulation Mgr.

Financial Advisor

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessmger
Thomas Haenle, Jr.

Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Alan Newman,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Vic Menza, Rena Fi&gt;ch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg,
Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Launen, Trudy Stern,
Lotsof,
Charles
Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford.
Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham,
Marfurt, Sandra Olm,
Lillian Kalasteln, Marcia Ann Orsxulak, Helen Bykoff, Fran
Rizzo,
Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng, Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gern Goldberg, Ed
Terry Sweeney, Tom Kujarski. Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Klipsfem,
Saralee
Peugof, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie
Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary Ann Wartenburg

General Staff:

Photography Staff; Joel Havens, Pamela Reid

A
PRESS

Entered as

second

class matter February 9, 1961, at the Post
under the Act of March 3, 1879. Aca special rate of postage provided for in
October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951.

Buffalo, N, Y.,
ceptance for mailing at
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Represented for national advertising by National
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Advertising

Service,

University Autonomy
Though a university doesn’t
have the privilege of exterritoriality, it should be able to refuse
the invasion of police on its campus. But it is feared that police
power should be required to respect the judgement of the university authorities and to take
action carefully.
universities or colleges,
If
which are places of learning, are
exposed to the activities of the
police, we know, by our past experiences, how the freedom of
study is disturbed. It doesn’t
seem proper that the invasion on
campus by the police for the purpose of control should be permitted in the same way as ordinary citizens are permitted to

enter.

At present, academic activities
are apt to be tinged with politics,
but it is possible to draw a line
between research and politics. If

Editorials
“Feinberg” Activities and the Student Senate
The special meeting President Michael Cohen conducted last Tuesday was a fine example of the educating
value the Student Senate can have; and illuminated what
The Spectrum had previously spoken of as the potential
of student government as informer and stimulant of the
campus.

The controversial nature of the Feinberg Law was
adequately exposed by the faculty members who were
queried. We do not know how they were chosen, but the
faculty cross-section afforded the listener the opportunity
to hear the passionate, the moderate, and the disinterested voices of opinion-relative to the degree of opposition
to the Feinberg Law and its accompanying certificate. A
more accurate measure of the significance of the Feinberg
Law was surely a result of the program; especially in
comparison to the volatile and somewhat distorted picture
presented at the Liberal Religious Fellowship rally of
last week.
As represntative of the Student Association, and because the Senate itself was rather inept and unintelligible
in its earlier discussion of the issue, we commend President Cohen for his restraint, and as coordinator for
Tuesday’s program.

What the Senate will do next, if anything, cannot even
be guessed at. The faculty’s problem to decide whether
or not to comply with the law is no longer immediate,
and is a personal dilemma as well. Jeremy Taylor had
rightly stated that non-compliance was an act of conscience, and therefore from the start was not a matter which
the Senate could effectively influence.
Perhaps the role of the Senate as an objective developer of student opinion is best for this particular issue.
The special committee managed that rather well, especially after the fiasco of the last Senate meeting. The
Senate, as now composed, proved itself to be indifferent
and almost impervious to thoughtful discussion something far afield from what leadership ought to be,
-

Campus Shelters
A story on page 6 of today’s Spectrum describes a
program held on campus which attempted to utilize “our”
fallout shelters. Though the debate over fallout shelter
construction is not as loud as it once was, The Spectrum
feels it is still an important topic which should be discussed.
The basis of the shejjter program is to provide public
protection from nuclear fallout in the event of major
war. Surely, if protection could be secured all citizens
would welcome it. However, today, major war equals
holocaust. An index for survival has never been agreed
upon by the experts, and, frankly, The Spectrum feels
that one’s own imagination suffices to conclude that “it
isn’t worth it,” Perhaps too, man’s egocentricity does not
permit him to crawl into a hovel and relax with the comforting knowledge that those “outside’' are no longer
alive.
Only the avoidance of such a catastrophe as nuclear
war will content man; surely, not,the hope that one could
escape the consequences of the bomb. On. principle, then,

there is no out.
Then again, assuming that fallout shelters could provide protection (though logically, it cannot), is the shelter program on campus an adequate one? We cannot see
how the small holes in the ground can practically safeguard students, if numbers be our only concern, when
the university must utilize trailers as temporary classrooms for the ever growing campus population. Also, students have not been instructed in the “use” of fallout
shelters, they have no experience at all in even tracking
down the signs which point to the “re&amp;ue” areas, etc.
The whole notion is absurd, and the practice sessions recently engaged in strikes us as a bit innocuous.

student movements cross this line
and are connected with political
activities, it cannot be averted
that academic freedom and university autonomy would become
the targets of public attacks.
As we all know, political neutrality is essential in justice, and
we feel that it should also be the
basis for university autonomy.
The Seijoites,

HE£ Wtofl*'-

oCetterA

(Seijo University, Tokyo,
Japan)
Aptheker Case
It seems to us that the honorable justices have confused academic treedom with license. They
failed to realize that it is the
preaching of “abstract doctrine”
which, more than soap box orations, will influence maturing and

malleable minds.
Why, the students at the State

University displayed they weren’t
enough to handle such
a speaker on a purely intellectual

mature

level earlier in the year. Faced
with a Fascist lecturer, they carried on a name calling, sign-carrying outburst in an attempt to

yell him down.

There

is

another

disturbing

note, however, over the invita-

tion extended Aptheker by the
University’s Student Association.
If they had wanted the student
body to become better informed
of the doctrine of Communism
why didn't they invite an expert who, though qualified to
speak on the subject, was not a
Party member? You needn’t sleep
with a serpent to know about
his bite.

Could it be that publicity, and
not education, was a factor in the
Apthekcr invitation?

The Bona Venture
(St. Bonaventure U.)
Religion and Public Schools
David Lawrence has written,
. . . there are many citizens
.
who feel that
the recent
trend which would banish any
religious exercises in the public
schools can only, in the long run,
mean that opportunities will be
missed to teach public school
students the foundations of morality and good behavior.”
I fail to understand how the
daily recitation of the Lord’s
“.

.

.

Prayer or any scriptural passage
can “teach . . . the foundations
or morality and good behavior".
If religious activity is a key
to morality, then such activity
must be entered into with the
complete attention of the spirit.
Perhaps, then, the “trend which
would banish religious exercises , . .” is a healthy one. To
give children a tool without helping them to understand its use
is a waste of time. But clearly,
the schools cannot enter into the
subjective teaching of religion:
yet th? public bewails our .“godless” schools. This is one situation
where half a loaf will not do.
The Eagle
(American University)

ueiz.

tcmme-

to

tH£ mH

the Editor

Student Advisement
Upperclassmen have given a
lot of advise to Freshmen. It is
often confusing and contradictory, but there seems to be one
theme which they all reiterate:
criticism of the advisory staff.
According to some of these stu-

dents, and the Freshmen who
have been here at least one Semester, the advisors are misinformed etcetera, which leads to
inefficient programming.
The advisors will admit that
serious mistakes have been made
and they have evaluated them in
order to prevent future errors.
However, these relatively few errors do not account for all of
the grumbling and complaining
of dissatisfied students. Upon
analyzing the situation, one perceives that the fault lies with
the students rather than the advisors for their discontentment.
How many of us prepare for our
appointments so that we can fully
benefit from them? How many
of us use the full 45 minutes we
have in order to become acquainted with our advisors? How many
of us read the catalogue? How
many of us stop with any questions or problems we may have

about the future? How many of
us try and plan our schedule
for the next few years so that
we can make allowances for
things such as summer school?
How many of us, when we feel
that we have received dissatis-,
factory service, do anything about
it instead of complaining?
It’s time for a change. If we
students would make half an
effort to help ourselves we would
find that the advisors would be
only too glad and willing to aid
us. They don’t have the time or
the means to “beg” students to
visit them, though they have
tried to send post cards to students who seem to need extra
help. The advisors will see stu
dents at any time during the
year. The best times, however,
are the lull sessions, such as
two week before advance registra
tion, exam time, and vacations.
The last three weeks of this
February would be an ideal time
to see them. Let’s show our
selves, and them, that we can
be responsible students capable
of planning our futures.
A Freshman

“A Date With Show Biz”
In reference to Mr. Goddard’s
letter which appeared in this
column last week, I would first
like to express my appreciation
for Mr. Goddard’s congratulations
on the coverage of the campus
variety show, “A Date With Show
Biz, ’64” and my gratitude for
his critique of my review of the
same. A negative response is always more welcome than no reaction whatsoever, and offers the
challenge of presenting an hon-

est, unimpassioned answer.

It is the function of the critic

and appraise that
which he views as honestly as
possible, without bias; but allowing for the variation in perception which occurs among individuals. Too often, however, he is
seen, or sees himself, as the cutman, destined and determined
to defeat with his pen all that he
encounters. The latter was not
my intent. Rather, I attempted
to question the advisability of
to evaluate

production having
the aim to entertain on a situation (campus living) which has
little potential for amusement
since the audience was composed
of students who patronize entertainment in order to escape
centering

from

the

a

monotony

of

their

campus-oriented lives. I regret
that the majority of the examples
manifesting what I believe to
be a poor decision were drawn
from your act in particular, but
this was done only because your
performance exemplified to per
fection the provincial attitude
and scope of the entire produc-

tion. However, since you seemed

to have regarded what was meant

to be a general criticism of the
basis and format of the produc
tion as a whole to be a personal
affront, if I may, I shall attempt
a personal appraisal of specifics!

ly your presentation.
It was disappointing to find in
no portion of your repetoire a
single reference either to any
off-campus event, “local, nation
al or international”, or the tri
umvirate of joke sources, (when
handled well) politics, sex or re
ligion. Perhaps this was done in
the spirit of keeping the topics

covered clean, campus-centered,
(is there a contradiction here?)',
and non-controyersial; but it sue
ceeded most of the time in main
taining the same shallow depth
and degree of boredom. I do not
dispute the fact that situations
and a
which are well
(Cont’d on

P. 9&gt;

�Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

Kimball, Former Dean
Honored in Paraguay

The Circus
By BOB MILCH

If you want to know the truth,
I’m fed up with liberalism this
week. So, I’m going to turn to
conservatism and think that the
United Nations is a waste of time,
income taxes should be abolished,
and that anyone who won’t sign
the Finberg Certificate is a wolf
in a baccalaureate gown, or a licensed Humbert Humbert.
For anyone who might share
this week’s feeling, let me say
that I’ve found great solace in
reading conservative literature.
These stories have comforted me
through many a protest meeting,
and may help you. too.
Lord of the Flies, by William
Golding, is the story of a band
of brave children which breaks
with the excesses of suburbia to
form a man-in-nature society. Unfortunately, liberal society has always satisfied their excessive
wants in the past, and several of
them are unable to make the adjustment; Piggy, for example, can
neither hunt nor fish well, and
is dependent on the skills of the
others for his existence, thus illustrating reliance on the welfare

late at night. Their parents realize their foolish, untutored minds
and feelings will get them into
trouble, but Romeo and Juliet are
sure they love each other, despite
the fact that they lhave only four

scenes together.

Othello,

by

William

speare, is the story of

It turns out that

their parents were right in advising them to be more conservative, because at the end they die
due to a break down in communication between them.
The Three Little Pigs tells the
story of two pigs who build

flimsy, though stylish split-level
homes, and a third pig, who sticks
with the trusty old brick style.
The wolf of the Federal Housing
Authority condemns the modern
houses so a restaurant can be
built, but can find nothing wrong

with the brick house. The moral
is obvious.
Hamlet, by William Shakespeare, is the story of an overweight pacifist (“Oh that this too
too solid flesh would melt . .
Despite spirited urgings to action
and revengeful murder for his
father, Hamlet would rather devote his energies to his ban the
bomb group (“Poor Hamlet, he is
After seven murin Sane . .
ders and a poisoning, though, he
realizes how hopelessly outmoded his stance is, and finally gets
killed in a duel.
The Old Lady Who Lived in a
Shoe points out the terrible thing
that happen to people who try
to buck the Planned Parenthood
League. Economic sanctions are
invoked against her until she
doesn’t “know what to do”, and
she obviously winds up dying a
horrible death, leaving her children as wards of the welfare

state.

Shake-

a Negro

who tries to rise above the prejudices and restraints that have
been leveled against his people.
In rising to the rank of general,
he makes many friends who sunpport his cause ("this is the core
of the matter . . .”), though he
also makes many enemies, who
feel he is moving too fast. In the
end he is forced to realize that
while not reaching for the stars
might not get you anyplace, it
doesn’t get you killed, either. D
Romeo and Juliet, by William*
Shakespeare, is the story of two
children, both in their early
teens, who go against the cautionings of their parents because
they think they’re in love. These
kids feel it’s all right to date on
school nights, stay out to all
hours, fight in the streets, and
trespass on each others property

state.

I would advise anyone who is
tired of the rampant liberalism
on campus to try some of these
books and stories.
On second thought, there is
enough conservatism on campus
now. The best way to be a conservative is to go on doing just
prewhat you’ve been doing
cious little.
—

SKETCH
BY DAVID BERGEN and PETER RUBIN
This week we intreviewed Dr. Leonard Serfustini, Assistant, Professor of Education
School of Education and Head Coach of basketball and golf teams.

in

the

The first series of questions
concerned itself with the program of physical education, as
a major field of study as a pro-

fession.

B&amp;R: In our status conscious
society the physical education is
often regarded on a much lower
basis than that of a more academic profession. Do you feel
this is justified?
Dr. Serfustini; This is not true.
The physical education profession

is not looked down upon. The
education professsion
has made vital contributions to
the educational process. It has
been justified as having a place
in a University. The great publicity given to the late President
Kennedy and his physical fitness
programs, has given a great boost
to the physical education process
as performing a vital function.
To people who know the true of
physical education, the profession is not looked down upon.
BAR: Through the years the
American public has formed a
stereotype of the people in the
physical education profession as
being unable to converse with
anyone except by grunts. Are the
physical education teachers of today part of this stereotype?
Dr. Serfustini: We have stereotype for any group, be it nationality, religion, etc. When you
stereotype someone there is a
lack of understanding.
BAR: Is the curriculum in the
field of physical education as
easy as -some people are led to
physical

PACE FIVE

believe?
Dr. Serfustini: This is another
stereotype formed through a lack
of understanding. People believe
that the curriculum for a physical
education major is simple. I challenge anyone to enter the field
of physical education and see if
they can succeed. If an individual
goes through the course easily it
is because of his tremendous desire and enjoyment of his course.
Doctors and lawyers, if they have
the desire and dedication can
find their courses “relatively
easy.” The same is true of the
physical education major.
B&amp;R: Are the present facilities, meaning Clark Gym, adequate for the student body and
for the successful operation of
the Physical Education program?
Dr.
£erfustini: To conduct an
adequate program, the size of
our facilities and the number of
students who use them, make
our present facilities inadequate.
At present we are doing the
best job we can under extremely
trying situations.
B&amp;R; How has our athletic
program been affected since we
have become part of the State
University?
Dr. Serfustini: At the present
time there are no state funds
allocated for intercollegiate athletics. We have to be entirely
self supporting. The only way
we can get this support is
through the students, alumni,
gate receipts and guarantees. We
(Cont’d on P. 9)

While exercising a leadership
role in international medical
training, U.B. promoted goodwill
for the U.S. in the South American country of Paraguay.
The goodwill was dramatized
this week when Professor Dr.
Crispin Insauralde, Rector of the
National University of Asuncion,
announced that a new basic science building is being named for
the late Dr. Stockton Kimball of
Buffalo.

Dr. Kimball was dean of the
Medical School from!946 until
1958 and he was one of the originators of the government-financed Paraguay project run by
the Medical School since 1956.
Dr. Kimball’s name was chosen
for the building because his support and recommendations laid
the foundations for the continuing cooperation between the two
universities.

REFLECTIONS
By JEREMY TAYLOR

What is the Feinberg Certificate? Quite simply, it a sheet
of paper which says (1) I am not
a communist, (2) If , I ever was a
communist, I have told the head
of the State University about it,
and (3) that I have read the
Regents Rules on Subversive
Activities and recognize them as
part of the term of my employment. Not much to get excited
about? Let's turn to the “terms”
set forth in the Feinberg pamphlet. It says in the preamble that
it is the opinion of the legislature that there are some reds
passing out communist propaganda in schools to “tender young
minds,” It also says this propaganda is “frequently sufficiently
subtle to escape detection.” It
goes on to make it illegal to
"teach,” “publish,” “sell,” and
so on, subversive ideas and that
it is grounds for firing to belong
to subversive organizations.

In 1956, Dr. Kimball was asked to survey the needs of the
medical school at the University
School boards at any level are
of Asuncion, Emerging from his free to compile their own lists
survey and continuing- today is of such “subversive” organizaa contract between State Universtions. Some schools have adopted
ity at Bualo an dtthe U.S. Agency lists where organizations such as
for International Development the American Civil Liberties
(AID). The contract is aimed at Union and the Boy Scouts of
a total ungrading of medical eduAmerica appear, (after all, those
cation and practice in Paraguay. boys arc always sharing things,
Dr. Kimball’s directon had such and traveling around together
impact on the medical progrom and things like that). To be fair,
at Asuncion that the students it must be noted that only two
participating in it became known organizations appear on the NYS
Board of Regents list, but one
sa “Kimballatos.” State University at Buffalo is one of eleven can see the possibilities of a
medical schools across the na- situation such as this. There is,
in fact, a case of a teacher, one
tion participating in the AID ProReginald Case, being fired for
gram.
reading the New York Times
The announcement that the to his class; it was ruled “subbuilding would be named after versive propaganda.” This hapDean Kimball followed a trip pened in this very city, only
to the Paraguay project made in about two years ago.
mid-November by President ClifAnd now, teachers (and some
ford C. Furnas and his wife others) on this campus are being
Sparkle. Arrangements for tthe faced with the same inane witchhunting, These people are being
■trip were made by Dr. P. Paloucek, clinical assistant professor “asked” to sign the Feinberg
of gynecology who is this year’s certificate with the distinct “posproject representative from State sibility” of their being fired if
University at Buffalo. Each year they refuse. Since the New York
since the project began in 1956, Times may be considered “subversive propaganda," it is possia doctor from the Buffalo medicla school has been on the scene. ble that a teacher might not
Regents Rules as “part
A State University at Buffalo want theterms”
of the
of his contract,
representative from the School and
would not wish to sign on
of Nursing also works with the
those grounds. It is also possible
project. This year’s nursing reprocess,” that
presentative is Miss Nancy D. that since “due
part of the law which guarantees
Burr, consultant in nursing eduevery man that he be faced with
cation,
his accusers and that he shall be
considered innocent until proved
The two-story, brick and stucco building, critically needed if guilty, is ignored by the Feinberg
(failure to sign is potentially
Paraguayan doctors were to be Act,
for being fired, without
trained adequately, became a grounds
any proof of guilt being offered),,
reality as the result of recommendations by Drs. Bridge and that a man might not wish to
sign. It is also distinctly possible
Egan.
that a man might think that his
political convictions, personal life,
and private thoughts were of no
concern to the State of New York
and that his retaining a job as
a teacher should be a result of
competance as a teacher, and
not a result of his signing an
insulting piece of paper.
My personal opposition to the
Feinberg Act is a matter of record. My reasons are as follows:
(1) It is a violation of "due process,” as outlined above. (2) It
violates that right of any man
to a personal existence (the fifth
amendment) and attempts to leg-

islate morals and conscience. (3)
It makes professional competence
as a teacher a secondary consideration as to whether a man
will be allowed to live by teaching. (I feel that competence
should be the sole criterion). (4)
It violates the idea of a university
l)y legislating what may and may
not be “taught” and making the
university a tool of the state
rather than an institution dedicated to the search for what is
true in an atmosphere of free inquiry. (5) It insults the dignity,
function, and integrity of the educator and makes him a tool of

political expedience.
I am not denying the right of
any state to protect itself from
destruction, but I do deny its
right to do so at the expense of
the liberties, freedoms, and responsibilities it was created to
protect.

I am completely opposed to the
Feinberg Act on other grounds as
well. If the state can dismiss a
teacher for failing to sign this
particular certificate, then can it
not also dismiss him for not signing other affidavits? In the Feinberg Act are the not yet germinated seeds of fascism, and I for
one would hestiate to say that
“it can’t happen here.”
I am also extremely unhappy
about the way Albany introduced
the certificates on this campus. I
was appalled at the poverty of
intelligence, courage, and responsibility exhibited by our Student
Senate when faced with this issue.
In my opinion the equivacating

of the A.A.U.P. chapter was disheartening and the Pontius Pilate
attitude of our administration was
nothing short of perasitic,
Academic Freedom, that right
of an educational institution to

seek the truth wherever it will

and to recognize it whereever it
may appear, without any interference, pressure, or control from
any source outside the academic
community, is vital to a good ed-

ucation. The courts upheld this
principle in the Aptheker decision, but it is in jeopardy from
the Feinberg Act. Those educators who have thus far refused
to sign are in very real danger
also. Many of those who have
signed have done so as result of

fear for their wives and
children for a blacklisted teacher
has a difficult time putting food
on his table.
There was a meeting to discuss these facts, sponsored by
the Liberal Religious Fellowship,
and subsequently a number of
students marched with placards
lo protest this incredible situation. A petition has been drawn
up in hopes of influencing a
change in this sad state of affairs.
The petitions will be submitted
to President Furnas with a request to forward them to the
appropriate authorities in Albany.
A letter-writing campaign has
been instituted in which every
citizen is urged to join. If you
agree that this stituation should
not be allowed to continue, please
read and sign the petition which
is reproduced here and send it to
me care of the Spectrum. I, together with those others who
have already signed the petition,
urge your strong support.
genuine

W
he un Jj, r i9n d ,ud n,‘. of
Stale University of New York at
«:
!
support
the right
of all ,|*a chers,
administrators, and other personnel who refuseBuffalo
to sign the
Femberg
loyalty
Affidavit to due process. We
further affirm the right of teachers
administrators, and other personnel to refuse to sign
the Femberg "loyalty" Affidavit
and recognize that such a refusal is in the finest
tradition of academic freedom
aom #nd
and
professional integrity in a responsible university.
*

&lt;

J

*

*

**

BOYS VS. GIRLS
A brief interlude in the Boys
vs. Girls Student Leaders Basketball game, Sunday, leads to a
humorous predicament. The Boys
edged the Girls, 14-11. The
Faculty, however, trounced the
Boys, 20-12, immediately following.

Name

Student number

Name

Student

number

Name

Student

number

Name

Student

number

Name

Student

number

Name

Student

number

Name

Student number

�PAGE SIX

Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

Debate Society Host To
Tournament-Aid Education

Math Department
Establishes a New
Statistics Division

The Debating Society will host
the Tenth Annual International
Invitational Debate Tournament
on Friday and Saturday, the 14th
and 15th of February. Over
twenty five teams from five states
have already accepted and are
planning to compete.

A

Division of Mathematical
Statistics within the Department
of Mathematics has been established at SUNYAB.
During the

1963-64 academic

year, eleven graduate courses are

UB Initiates Fallout Shelter
Manager Training Program
By LAWRENCE D FRENKEL

Forty-four men and women
participated in a Civil Defense
Fallout Shelter Manager Train
ing Program at the university.
The people were
engineers,
nurses, secretaries, and janitors
among other professionals, who
had volunteered 14 hours of their
time to the trial program.
The first period in the shelter
was organizational. Several teams
were set up and captains of each
team were chosen. These included
a sanitation squad, a radar team
to monitor the hypothetical radioactivity inside the shelter and
from that they could calculate the
outside levels. There was a security detail to police the shelter
and a decontamination squad. A
communications team periodically

“bulletins from conelrad" describing the situation in
other parts of the United States,
received

the bomb’s intensity and location, and instructions to shelter

managers.
A supper of 20 survival crack

ers and 2 glasses of water was
served during the second period.
“Dinner” was followed by film
strips which explained how to
treat shock, burns, cuts, fractures,
and other general illnesses as
well as emergency birth proceedures. These film strips were proMrs.
fessionally narrated
by
Helen Harlem, a part time nurse
with the Student Health service.
The academic part of the course
was terminated by an examination covering radiation monitors,
radiation exposure levels, and
general
management.
shelter
After completion of the examination, a recreation period was
called and then a rest period.
The routine shelter monitoring
and security details, however,
were continued for the complete
14 hour period during which the
shelter was occupied.
The shelter management training program is headed by Mr.
Ernest A. Edwards and Mr. Eugene J. Muuray, both government
registered and licensed Shelter
Management Instrutcors.

being given, six the first semester
and five the second, leading to
the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees. Five
additional courses are planned
for the next academic year.

Campus Invited
There will be six rounds of
debate on' the national proposition: Resolved; That the Federal
Government should guarantee an
opportunity for higher education
to all qualified high school graduates. Students and faculty members are invited to observe the
debates. Friday evening the debates will begin at 4:30, 7:00,
and 8:30; Saturday the rounds
will be at 9:00, 10:30, and 1:00.
All debates will be held in Norton Union. A list of schools, debates and rooms will be available
in Norton 357 at the start of the

The present staff consists of
H. Clatworthy, Richard N. Schmidt, and Norman
Severno, professors, and Dr. Sri
Gopal Mohanty, associate profes-

Drs. Willard

sor.

A limited number of assistant-

ships are available to qualified
graduate students. Inquiries regarding entrance to the program
should be addressed to Dr. Clatworthy, head of the new Division.

Chairman need for 130 Debates
Chairmen are needed for each
of the 130 rounds of debate that
will take place during the tournament, The duties of the chairmen
are to welcome the two competing debate teams and to keep
time for them during the hour
long debate.
Anyone interested in helping
should contact Ruth Shapiro, Ext.
2462 or to leave their name in
Norton 357.

Support
Our

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Friday, February 7, 1964

Cjreelz
Toby Marcus and the other sisters of Sigma Delta Tau are working hard preparing for the new
rushees at their first informal
party on Monday, 7-9 p.m. in
room 329 Norton.

Congratulations to Nancy John
ston, the new president of Sigma
Kappa and other new officers

A coke-rush party will be
held in room 330, February 10
at 7 p.m. An informal party will
be held at Carol Straubinger’s
home later in the rush season.
also,

The brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon are holding a closed rush
date party with “Hermie” this
Saturday at the Hotel Worth, This
party is by invitation only.
Theta Chi Sorority is looking

ru
forward to meeting the rushees
Sunday afternoon at Convocation
Tea,

Gamma Phi Fraternity will
hold their annual rush party tomorrow night (Feb. 8) at the
Hotel Buffalo, Washington and
Swan Streets. Members, rushees,
and their dates will meet in the
Erie Room at 8:30 p.m.
RHO PI PHI
Rho Pi Phi will hold a Valentine’s Party at Howard Johnson’s
Motor Lodge on Genesee Street,
across of the airport tomorrow
night at 9. All pre-pharmacy and
pharmacy students are invited
free. It is dated with free food
and drinks. Music will be provided.

Endowment Received by UB

Womens Dental Scholarship
be.

An endowment fund to establish the Women’s Dental Guild
Scholarship has been created for
the School of Dentistry.
A check for $3,000 was presented to Dr. William J. O’Connor,
director of the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc., by Mrs.
John R. Pfalzgraf, president of
the Women’s Guild, and Mrs. Anthony S. Gugino, chairman of the
scholarship fund.
The money represents the savings accumulated during the ten
year period that the Guild has

been organized.

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

given
The scholarship will
each year to a member of the
sophomore, junior, or senior class
of the School of Dentistry who
has completed at least one full
year’s work at the School and is
in “good standing as to scholarship and conduct and considered
worthy of assistance.”
The Women’s Guild also gives
two scholarships to students in
the School of Dentistry. This
year’s recipients are Miss Joan
C,
Staker, senior, 38 Hartford
Road, Buffalo, and Barry F. Wood,
sophomore, Penn Yan, N. Y.

Pre-Law Society
Promotes Student

Legal Inclination
The

Pre-Law

,

Society

was

formed to promote an effective
program of introduction to the
functions and mechanics of law
school, and to perpetuate the
high standards of scholarship,
ethics, cooperation and fellowship necessary in preparation for
the legal profession. The PreLaw Society offers its members
free guidance in choosing law
-schools as well as choosing what
courses to

take to prepare

for

law school. Catalogs of every accredited Law school are also
available to members. 'Member
ship is open to all undergraduate
students who have maintained a
1.0 overall average.
T his year’s officers of the PreLaw Society are:
ald Axelrod, Vice-President—Pat
Launer, Treasurer—Alan Gerson,
and Secretary—Stuart Blatt. This
semester’s program includes several speakers, a film about the
legal profession, and a trip to
U.B. Law School.

The next meeting of the Pre-

Law Society will be held Tuesday at 7:30 in Norton. Mr. Don
aid Runyan, a lawyer and instructor at this University will
speak on Corporate Law, All students are invited to attend.

You have room for achievement
in data processing—at IBM
There are challenging assignments open in more than 190 IBM Sales
and Service Offices, coast to coast, with room for achievement in the
marketing of information systems and equipment. I
To qualify, you should have a bachelor’s or advanced degree in Engineering, the Sciences, Business Administration, Economics, or the Liberal Arts. I
You’ll find that your opportunities increase with each new system that
is designed to meet the growing needs of business, industry, government, research, education, or space. I

wide range of positions
Marketing; I The IBM Data Processing Representative is a consultant
to his customers. I He demonstrates how customers can achieve better business management and control through data processing. I
Systems Engineering; I IBM Data Processing Systems Engineers are
men and women who study customer requirements in depth, devise an
approach, define a preferred machine and operational solution, and
assist in implementing this solution. I

opportunities for advancement
IBM, an Equal Opportunity Employer, offers you extensive training in
the area of your special interest. I This training continues as you
advance along a planned career path leading to professional or managerial positions. I
We also have comprehensive company-paid benefits plans.training
programs to keep you abreast of developments in your field.. .and a
tuition-refund plan to give you financial assistance for graduate study. I

on-campus interviews
See your college placement director to determine when IBM Will interview on campus, and make an appointment to see our representative.
If the interview date is inconvenient for you, please write or call: I
John A. Fleming, Branch Manager, I IBM Corporation, 19th Street,
New City 14, Colorado, GR 7-2661.
IBM will interview Feb.

MOVE AHEAD WITH

18, 19

DATA PROCESSING

�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

The

JazzGallery
By RAYMOND CRAWFORD

week, the songstress
Gloria Lynne was at the Town
Casino. With her were her fine
trio of musicians. Gloria sang
most of her very popular songs
found on her album with many
times a new arrangement, but
still with her fine interpretation
and that unmatched Gloria Lynne
voice.
The management was very interested in seeing more college
students, but it seems that there
is still a lack of interest in the
field of jazz in his city. With the
convenience o(, 3 busei going 'to
artd from the dim,' there were not
enough students to fill one bus.
It seems that this is true all over
the country as seen by the enthusiastic opening of jazz niteries
and the very short existence of
the night clubs because of the
apathy for jazz and the high
prices it takes to bring in a good
show. This will possibly be the
last time that the Town Casino
will have any well known jazz
group on their stage! A gallant
try by management to bring better jazz to Buffalo.
As for Gloria she not only delighted the audience with her
For one

ROTC Cadets Visit Keesler;
New Orleans Mardi Gras Too
It was a long trip, but the old

voice but also with her stunning
wardrobe. A song that really
swung and later was repeated by
request was the popular, “Watermelon Man,” written by the
pianist Bobby Timmons, and
made famous by Mongo Santamaria. The songs from the album,
“Gloria Lynne at Basin Street
East” were well received as were
the ones from her latest album
"Gloria, Marly, and Striqgs.” The
Marty refers to the man who does
stringed arrangements for many
singers, including Ray Charles.
Her trio was comprised of
Hugh Lawson on piano, Walter
Perkins on drums, and Ike Issacs
on bass. Lawson and Perkins have
played with a number of bands,
Perkins doing work with the MJT
t 3. Ike Issacs gained fame as
the music behind Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross. He left with Ross
and since then has been gigging
with Gloria for whom he has
been business manager for a number of years.
To sum up, Gloria Lynne was
a gas. It is a shame that more
people did not get a chance to
see her.

Special UB Event Will Feature Both
Concert, University Bands Sunday,
Multipurpose Room-Admission Free

“Gooney Bird” made it to Kees-

ler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Miss.,
with 21 U.B. AFROTC Cadets 30
Jan. The C-47 was piloted by L/C
Thomas L. Huddleston, Professor
of Air Sciences, and Major Roy
H. Stewart with Mr. David Posner
(English Department) and Major
Phillip M. Ozenick as escorts. Cadets Richard W. Shine, James E.
Armstrong, Clark W. Squires, Edward G. Haug, Terrence J. Glavin, Philip R. Taravella, Joseph
A. Kinderman, Dale E. Bleecher,

Ronald W. Brooks, Richard L.
Klein, Michael J. Kayes, Michael
V. Wrobel, James R. Lumley, Robert A. Weber, Starr L. Powell,
Robert M. Armstrong, Gregory E.
Filipski, Neil E. Laundry, James
L. Mills, Jr., Ralph E. Goodrich,
and Gerard W. Bent all had turns
at seeing what goes on in the
cockpit of an Air Force plane on
the way to Keesler AFB and back

to U.B.

Air Force Schools do to assure
national security—the training of
Air Force officers for a particular job to the “expert level.” ,
New Orleans was the target for
the cadets and most were able to
take part in the Mardi Gras festives on Friday. ,
After two nights in the dep
south—at 70°—the Gooney Bird
returned Saturday, February 1.

Support

Our
Advertisers

[
y

Kesler, the group was escorted through the Communications, Electronic and Computer
Schools. They received first hand
information on the vital job the

Suite

in F of Gustav Holst. Both
ensembles will close with agroup

The Concert Band will appear
Klcinhans Music Hall with the
University Chorus in April for
the fiftieth anniversary of the
College of Arts and Sciences concert. Other scheduled events arc
a concert of woodwind, brass, and
percussion ensembles, and the annual outdoor concert in May.

.

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ALL SEATS RESERVED
•

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ENVELOPE.
SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER
TO BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL DENTONS, 32 COURT STREET, BUFFALO
2, NEW YORK.
I ickets on Sale at Norton Union
Feb. 6
DRESSED,

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are much more fun than
Ladles ww don’t/
tTinmc

■ROBERT
SPECIAL STUDENT PRICES
Present I.D. Card

Academy Award Contender

(B

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-

A special band concert feature
ins; both the Concert Band and
the University Band will be presented Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in the
Norton Multi-Purpose Room. Admission is free and all students
and faculty are invited to attend.
Frank J, Cipolla of the music
department will conduct. Mr. Cipolla explained that these two
bands are formed from the large
marching band, “the Pride of the
East", after the football season
is over.
“The Concert Band is the top
group and is limited to a finely
balanced ensemble of 70-7$ players. This group provides an opportunity for instrumental music
majors to gain experience in wind
music performance of a high caliber.
“The University Band is the
second concert unit but cannot be
classified as 'second class'. This
group consists primarily of students from the general University population for whom music
is an avocation.”
This is the first concert in
which both bands participate.
The University Band will perform
works of Leroy Jackson, Robert
Johnson, Percy Grainger, and
Charles Carter’s “State Fair
Suite”. The Concert Band will
perform works of Francois Gossec, William Schuman, the Second

Director Gordon M. Smith said
list of prizes totaling over
$2,000 is being assembled and
will be announced later. The
competition annually draws over
1,200 entries, of which about 10
a

•

North Park

Herald-Tribune

The 28th annual Western New
York Exhibition at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery—the area’s big.
gest local art show—will open
March 23 at the Gallery.
Artists who wish to enter works
in the exhibit must submit application blanks by Feb. 19. Actual
works may be submitted between
Feb. 10-24.

SUNDAYby Murray
Feb. 16th 8 PM

At

—

Albright-Knox Holds
Annual NY Exhibition

at only

$5.

at

STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKETS
both theaters upon presentation of proper I.D.card

�Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

Packed House Hears
Four Preps’ Concert
falo State.”
One of the highlights of the
show was a medly composed by
the Four Preps specifically for
the T.V. program, Hootenanny.
In it, they imitated the singing
style of various other singing
groups as the Kingston Trio, the
Limelighters, the New Christy
Minstrels and Peter, Paul and

By CAROL OLICKER

The “Winter Thing” got off to
a flying start at 8:30 Saturday
night in Clark Gym. There, a
packed house reacted warmly
to a performance given by the
Four Preps, who have recorded
such hits as Down by the Station
and Santa Catalina (Twenty-Six

PAGE NINE

Feinberg Certificate

Serfustini Sees
Basketball Goals
(Cont’d

from P.

(Cont’d
5)

can also get this support through

any groups interested in intercollegiate athletics.

BAR: Will the University of
always remain a small
college team in basketball?

Buffalo

Dr. Serfustini: To me, classification means nothing. We have
a team that is worthy of student
support no matter what the classification. The students should
show a loyalty to their school
and school teams. I might add
that in the last ten years the
progress we have made in our
schedule is an indication that we
are moving in the direction of
university division ranking.
B&amp;R: To what extent does U.B.

recruit in
schools?

Miles) incorporated a great deal
of low comedy (That’s sex and
slapstick) and many local jokes
into their largely musical act.
Local color was used generously as some of the punchlines indicate:

Mary. The latter group, termed
by the Four Preps “Peter, Paul
and Mounds objected to the part
of the song about them and so
it has never been broadcasted.

“I’m Dean Scudder and I luh
uh-uhv to twist!”

“Peter has a dark black beard,
And so does brother Paul. Poor
Mary doesn’t have a beard, She’s
just eight feet tall.”

However, UB students had the

unique privilege of hearing it:

“What’s a nice cockroach like
in the Tower parking

On the whole, the performance
was a resounding success, con-

B&amp;R: This concludes our questions, Dr. Serfustini. Would you
care to make a comment on some
of your goals for the future?

nuclear physics. He was a member of the original group at the
University of Chicago who worked on the uranium chain reaction
before the organization of the
Manhattan Project. He is an original member of the group which
founded Brookhaven National

************************************************

-Opportunities In AdvertisingANY STUDENT INTERESTED IN A
POSITION ON THE ADVERTISING STAFF
OF THE SPECTRUM IS INVITED TO A MEETING
AT 3:15 THIS AFTERNOON IN
ROOM 355 NORTON UNION.
EXPERIENCE IS NOT NECESSARY

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&amp;

Dr. Serfustini:

My main con-

cern is with the overall

program

of health, physical education, and
recreation. I would like Buffalo
to be the center of a strong undergraduate and graduate center
in this area. In regard to intercollegiate basketball I would en3)
(Cont’d from P.
vision Buffalo with the proper
facilities to be the center of baswas
Laboratories and
in charge of ketball in Western New York,
operadesign, construction and
able to hold Christmas and regional tournaments and high
tion of the reactor.
Since 1951 he has taught at the school finals.
University of Utah and New York
University. He joined the State
University at Buffalo Faculty in
September, 1962.

Borst Lecture

Prices

other

dent-athletes and this aid is
awarded on the basis of need and
scholastic average. This doesn’t
approach what the larger percentage of schools give.

sidered by most well worth the
two-dollar admission price.

“We’re collecting money for
CARE packages to send to Buf-

—

to

Dr. Serfustini; As far as recruiting goes, most schools give
what the NCAA allows in the
way of scholarships. They give
athletes room, board, tuition,
fees, books, and laundry U.B.
does have aid available to stu-

4 PREPS IN CONCERT

you doing
lot?”

relation

Evenings and Saturday

Requirements: Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instructions

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

from P. 1)

test as possible courses of student

action.
Dr. Zimmerman joined other
members of the panel in applauding the University Administration
for their stand on academic freedom. The proper blame does not
fall upon our university officials;
he stated,- but rather upon the
State. The University’s stand on
the Aptheker Case was cited as
proof of their sympathetic concern.

When asked what the AAUP
intended to do, Dr. Yeracaris,
President of the AAUP, implied
that there was more action being
taken than appeared on the surface. According to Yeracaris, an
AAUP member has been asked
to watch developments in Albany,
He refused to elaborate further
on this, stating that his questioner, Senate member Tom Kobus, had revealed information
given to him “in confidence.”
When asked whether the disclaimer requirement could be extended to student employees of
the University, Dean Fisk said
that only full-time employees are
presently affected. However, Professor Newhouse, when posed the
same question, felt that the law
could definitely be extended to
student-employees.

The committee felt that a test
case would be of benefit. The
right of the academic community
to determine the fitness of its
members was emphasized. The
Law was also felt to serve “no

useful purpose,” since real subversive would sign the disclaimer
in order to avoid being exposed.
The Yiddish Forum, which
is under the sponsorship of
the Bureau of Jewish Education and the Jewish Cen
ter, will conduct its annual
music concert on Sunday,
February 16 at 8:30 p.m. at

the Jewish Center. There
will be two featured artists,
Mr. Lazar Weiner and Mrs.
Rivka Mandelkern.

aCefleri

lo

the

(Cont’d from P.

tor

4)

source of small irritation can be
used very successfully as comedy
material. However, I do maintain
that those occurrences which
have evoked boredom or pain
initially produce the same result when used as basic material
for humor, (unless the pain is
someone else’s) and can be seen
as humorous only by the humorist or those not so closely allied
to the situation described, both
of whom can see it objectively.
This, then, is my reason for suggesting than audience not so
heavily laced with students would
find (and apparently did see)
greater humor in your jokes.

Thus the problem of the comedian is undoubtedly a complex
one. He must choose situations
and areas from which to draw his
satire which will not offend, bore,
disgust or antagonize, but will
be universally understandable
and, of course, FUNNY.
Sincerely,
Nancy Laurien

Book Exchange
Service Initiated
The Welfare Committee is initiating a book exchange service
for students who wish to buy

and/or sell used books. A card
filing system will be set up in
the Student Senate office in Norton to facilitate the program. Students wishing to sell books should
fill out a card listing title of the
book, author, selling price, name
and phone number Those wishing to buy used books may refer
10 this card catalog, remove the
card and contact individual selling the desired book.
This service is being done for
the benefit of the student body.
Its success depends on the number of students who participate
and receive the advantages of the
book exchange.

�Friday, February 7, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Rushing Provides Chance fo Meet
Other Men and Develop Friendships
During those three or four
weeks called the “Rush Period”,
the fraternities search for men
that they hope to add to their
brotherhoods. But how does a
man decide to rush and how does
he choose a fraternity?
Rushing presents a chance for
the student to meet other men
and develop lasting friendships.
Some men rush for the party
life and for the social contacts
which are emphasized during the
rush period, having no intention
of ever pledging any fraternity.
The “professional rushee” will
attend as many events as he is
able to. Their insincerity detracts
from the nature of these events
which are designed to present
an accurate and honest image of
fraternity activities to those men
who are truly interested in the
Greek life. Fortunately, the unmber of professional rushees is
small and they are recognized by
the fraternities. They then have
little chance of ever pledging any
fraternity.
The majority of the men who
rush are sincere and actually desire to join a fraternity, work
for it, and experience the privileges of the fraternity of their
choice. These men are always

welcome and are valued as potential brothers.
The choice of a fraternity is
solely up to the
values and his
termine which fraternity he
rushes. The choice is among
small or large groups, liberal or
conservative attitudes, social or
service fraternities: During rushing, a man can evaluate each fraternity to find which approaches
his own needs and desires. At
this time he learns about the
members, their activities, cost,
privileges, and the tradition of
fraternalism.
Once the man has decided that
he is willing to take the responsibility of joining a fraternity and
has accepted the idea of pledging, his rush activities become
more formal as he works to incorporate himself into the group.
Since his induction is based on
a vote of the brotherhood, the
rushee that shows a continuous
interest in the fraternity will
receive more consideration than
he who shows little more than
a casual and sporadic interest.
At the close of the rush period,
the rushee can only hope that
he has met the approval of the
brothers.

Angel Flight

The Angels are preparing their
drill team for the next exhibition which will take place in
Manhattan during March. At the
end of February the Angels are
attending an area convention in
Pittsburgh On this occasion the
girls will be the guests of Arnold
Air Society for a banquet and
dance. Rush for Spring ’64 will
be announced shortly.
Arnold Air Society

The, Arnold Air Society will
hold a coffee hour for all AF

ROTC cadets interested in learning more about AAS, 11 and 13
February at 8 p.m.
Bridge Club
The UB Bridge Club

will hold
its second Master Point night on
Tuesday, Feb. 11, All students
and faculty are invited to attend,
Also on Feb. 11, beginning and
intermediate instruction will be
gin. Feb, 18, the bridge club
will hold the A.C.U. Intercollegiate Par Hand Tournament. By
playing in this Par Hand Tournament you will be able to improve
your game by learning some ad
vanced plays sucb as Vienna
Coups, Trumplcss trump finesses
and others. Meetings arc held in
Room 327, Norton Union, at 7:30.
Industrial Relations Club
meeting of the In
INVERTED AT

Public Relations Chairman Robert Finkelstein has announced
that the chairman of the Blazer
Committee, Harvey J. Brenner,
has resigned. This Was disclosed
at a meeting of the Public Relations committee late last week.
The committee was set up
earlier during this semester to
initiate the sale of school blazers.
Mr, Finkelstein said, “The committee will continue to function,
and a new chairman will be appointed shortly. It is still the
hope of the Public Relations Committee that university blazers
will become a tradition at our
school. Harvey Brenner was helpful in starting the Blazer Committee, and this work will not be
discontinued.”
The Blazer Committee plans to
offer both men’s and women’s
blazers with embelems of the
university on the breast pocket.
A new chairman will be appointed shortly, and all who are interested in the chairmanship, or
committee membership, please
contact Mr. Finkelstein in the
Student Senate Office.

Wesley Foundation
A community forum discussing

“Academic Freedom” will be held

Sunday, Feb. 9, at 7:30 p.m. in
the University Methodist Church,
Bailey and Minnesota Avenue.
Participants will be Dr. Harriett
Montague, acting chairman Mathematics Dept.; Dr. Charles Ebert,
Chairman Geography Dept.; Dr.
Constantine Yeracares, Professor
in Philosophy, State University
College, and Miss Judy Howland,
editor “Record”, State University
College.
The forum is sponsored by area
churches and The Wesley Foun-

dation.
Inter-Varsity

The minds of men have long
been intrigued by the complex
insect
societies.
Inter-Varsity
Christian Fellowship presents the
Moody science film, “City of the
Bees.” It will be shown in the
Norton Conference Theater at
7:30 p.m., February 7.
Hillel
Delicatessen Supper Sunday
The Student
Committee on

Civil Rights at the State Univer
sity of New York at Buffalo will
join Hillel in a delicatessen sup
per on Sunday February 9, at
5:30 p.m. in the Hillel House, A
program has been planned by a
special committee made up of
representatives of both organ!
zations. It will consist of a discussion to be led by Dr. Marvin
Zimmerman, Dept, of Philosophy,
on: “The Role of the Student in
the Civil Rights Struggle.” This
meeting will mark the first in
a semester series of programs on
“Moral Dilemmas of Our Time.”
Reservations for the supper are
necessary.
South Sea Island Party
The Fifth Annual South Sea
Island Party will be held on
Saturday evening, Feb. 15 in the
social hall of Ahavas Achim Lu
bavitz Synagogue. An orchestra
has been engaged. Decorations
will carry out the theme of the
dance. Admission is free to all
members of Hijlel. There is a
charge for non-members.
*

(JSoarJ

Spectrum

The first

Brenner Resigns
Blazer Committee

dustrial Relations Club will be
held Tuesday in Norton Union;
Room 335 from 12:00 to 12:50.
This meeting will include the
spring agenda, election of two
officers and a discussion of the
1905 Industrial Relations Re
search Association convention in
Buffalo. If you are an IR major,
taking an IR course or just in
forested in the field, you are in
vited to join the Club, Dues of
$2.00 will be collected at the
meeting from new members
this amount includes your mem
bership in the IRRA.
Mathematics Club
The undergraduate Mathematics Club will hold its first meeting of the semester on Feb. 12
at 7:30 p.m. in room 335 Norton.
The speaker will be Richard Marinelli of the computer center, who
will speak on “Basic Concepts
of Computers." Refreshments
will be served. Everyone interested is invited to attend.
—

John Lauritzen wanted further knowledge

Pre-Law Society
first meeting of this semester will be held on Feb. 11,
at 7:30 p.m, in room 335 Norton,
Mr. Donald Runyan a lawyer in
Buffalo and a teacher at this
University will speak on the old
and the new corporate Jaw. All
students are invited to attend.
The

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He’s finding it at Western Electric
When the University of Nevada awarded John ing system.
iauritzen his B.S.E.E. in 1961, it was only the first
If you set the highest standards for yourself, both
big step in the learning program he envisions for educationally and professionally, we should talk.
himself. This led him to Western Electric. For WE Western Electric’s vast communications job as
agrees that ever-increasing knowledge is essenmanufacturing unit of the Bell System provides
tial to the development of its engineers—and is many opportunities for fast-moving careers for
helping John in furthering his education.
electrical, mechanical and industrial engineers,
John attended one of Western Electric’s three as well as for physical science, liberal arts and
Graduate Engineering Training Centers and gradubusiness majors. Get your copy of the Western
ated with honors. Now, through the Company-paid Electric Career Opportunities booklet from your
Tuition Refund Plan, John is working toward his Placement Officer. Or write.- Western Electric
Master's in Industrial Management at Brooklyn Company, Room 6405, 222 Broadway, New York
Polytechnic Institute. He is currently a planning 38, N. Y. And be sure to arrange for a personal
engineer developing test equipment for the Bell interview when the Bell System recruiting team
System's revolutionary electronic telephone switch- visits your campus.

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Principal manufacturing locations in 13 ritips Operating oontarr. in mmy ftf thaco camp ritips plu«; T6 nthprs throughout
the
Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. • Teletype Corp., Skokie, III., Little Rotk, Ark. • Gen. Hq., 195 Broadway, New
■■

U.S.
York

�</text>
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                    <text>ft

STATE
Faculty

Sf«t.m.nt»

UNIVERSITY

OF

BUFFALO

YORK AT

Tp n my mM

Orappl.n Com.

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11 w?
M

NEW

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BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1964

VOLUME

NO

J* lS~

Students Protest Loyalty" Certificate Signing
"

Sidney Hook fo Speak Here
By NANCY LAURIEN

On January 28, The Liberal Religous Fellowship sponsored a student
ing in the Conference Theatre. The purpose of the meeting was to enlist student support for the right of faculty members to refuse to sign the Feinberg Certificate.
This certificate, written into state law in 1949, requires all faculty members

philosopher and head of state educational facilities
or, if theyjiave been m
New
York
University philosophy department will party,
of the
versity of this fact.
explore the relationship of intelligence and human rights
The meeting was conducted by
Wednesday, Feb. 5 at 3 p.m. in the Multi-purpose Room Henry Simon, Jeremy Taylor, and
at the invitation of the Convocations Committee of the Joseph Sedita. It was initiated
Union Board. All students are encouraged to attend and and conducted by students. The
participate in the informal discussion and coffee hour absence of faculty members was
Dr. Sidney Hook, political

with Professor Hook at 4 p.m.
immediately following his talk.

A recipient of the Guggenheim
Fellowship in 1928, 1929, and
1953 for research into the German, the Soviet Union and Western European political philosophies, Dr. Hook has become a
recognized authority in his field
and noted for the stimulating
manner of presentation of his
knowledge. His influence has
been sensed not only within the
confines of the academic community in this country but has
spread to the Continent and

evoked attack and criticism in
the Soviet press, due to his belief that the ideals of democracy
are yet attainable despite the
shift in the composition and at
titudes of our society since its
establishment. This premise as
well as a searching look at current political philosophies, trends
and attitudes are expanded in his
“The Metaphysics of Pragmatism”; “From Hegel to Marx”;
"Reason, Social Myths and Democracy”: “The Hero in History: A Study in Limitation and

L

**'

comment were made from the
Mr. Taylor registered
concern for the Certificate’s impingement upon the professional
status of faculty members, Mr.
rostrum.

DR. SIDNEY HOOK
as well as many
others.
Dr. Hook is a native of New
York City, received his bachelor’s
degree at the College of the City
of New York, his master’s and
doctorate at Columbia University
through intensive study with John
Dewey and E. J. E. Woodbridge
and in 1927 joined the NYU faculty. In 1939 he became a full
professor at that institution. He
has also taught at the New School
for Social Research, Columbia,
and Harvard Universities.

Possibility”

Appellate Rules To
Let Aptheker Speak
The Appellate Division of Supreme Court in Albany
rued unanimously on Dec. 28 that Herbert Aptheker, a
member of the National Committee of the Communist
Party, may address the student body of our campus. The
five-member court’s decision reversed an earlier order
issued by Supreme Court Justice Russell G. Hunt, which
precluded Dr. Aptheker’s speech at UB, Oct. 31, 1962.
Last year, the Student Senate
a program entitled “A
Political Spectrum of a Contemporary World." The series of
lectures presented Oswald Mosley of Great Britain to speak to
the student body on fascism,
Russell Kirk to lecture on conservatism, Senator Eugene McCarthy to talk about liberalism,
and Norman Thomas to discuss
socialism. The purpose was to

explained by Mr. Sedita as a reluctance on the part of the
faculty to create the impression
that the student body had been
“duped” into supporting their refusal to sign the certificate. Moreover, Mr. Sedita pointed out, the
meeting was to register “student
concern,” and did not require
faculty representation.
The Feinberg Certificate was
read to the students, and several

Simon said the possible good effects of the Certificate would be
negated since any “truly subversive elements in the faculty
would not hesitate to sign in any

case.”
A question and answer period
showed student sentiment at the
meeting was in favor of the
faculty’s right not to sign the
document. One freshman girl
noted the absence of instruction
in the principles of Communism
during her college years, besides
supporting those teachers who
would not sign.
Students were asked to sign
petitions affirming the right of
faculty members who may refuse to sign the Feinberg Certi
ficate. The last date on which
a member could sign the certificate was January 30.
EARLIER ACTION BY THE

FACULTY
The membership of the State
University of New York at Buffalo
Chapter of the American Association of University Professors met
on January 24, 1964 to consider
its position in relation to the
Feinberg disclaimer certificate
required by the Board of Trustees
of the State University of New
York. It accepted in toti the re-

PROTEST MEETING IN CONFERENCE THEATER

port from its Committee on
Academic Freedom and Tenure.
In view of the fact that, in requiring the disclaimer, the State
University is acting in response
to statutory mandates, the Chapter did not recommend non-compliance by its members. It did,
however, adopt the following
resolutions:
RESOLUTION
Whereas: Determination of the
fitness of faculty persons to teach
is a responsibility of an educational institution and relevant
inquiry for purposes of such
determination is proper; however,
any criteria of fitness should be
formulated by the faculty and
determination of satisfaction of
these criteria should be undertaken within the academic community by the faculty.
Whereas: Inquiry into fitness to
teach should follow scrupulously
the tenets Of academic due process and, in general, no single
factor should be decisive.
Now, therefore, be it resolved
that this Chapter disapproves of
the external imposition of a disclaimer requirement as a condition for faculty membership on
the ground that it violates these
principles; and it objects more
broadly to the imposition of disclaimer requirements, believing
them to be inconsistent with fund
amenta! standards of academic
freedom and scholarly inquiry.
RESOLUTION
Whereas: The Chapter recognizes that some persons, for a

variety of reasons, may not comply with the disclaimer requirement.

Now, therefore, be it resolved
that the Chapter be vigilant in
the protection of the rights of
such persons as members of the
academic community and directs
its officers and appropriate committees to act in this regard.
RESOLUTION
Whereas: The Chapter opposes
on principle the disclaimer requirement and the procedures
that have led to its imposition.

Speaking, HENRY SIMON;
Seatad, JEREMY TAYLOR
Now, therefore, be it resolved
that the Chapter formally protests
against this requirement to the
Borad of Trustees of the State
University of New York and directs the Executive Committee of
this Chapter to pursue other avenues for the remedy of a basically unsatisfactory situation.

produced

have

a representative spokesman

of each ideology, including communism, present his fundamental
political beliefs.
Dr. Aptheker was unable to
speak because of the above mentioned injunction, secured by William Egan, at the time a Democratic candidate for Congress.
Egan had claimed that Aptheker’s appearance at UB would
cause him “irreparable damage.”
The lower court gave as its
grounds for preventing Aptheker's lecture that his proposed
appearance- was contrary to State
Policy (in that the State has
adopted legislation to curb Communist activities) and to the respondent’s statement of policy.
The Appellate Division’s historic reversal, written by Associate Justice Walter B. Reynolds,
stated that “we cannot sustain
the decision. There is no legislation directly covering the instant
situation,” Justice Reynolds then
mended the higher value of
academic freedom above Egan’s
contentions. He then cited precedent which holds that member-

UB Holds Winter Week

Freshman Class Council: The "Thing” Comes to Life
Tuesday, February 4th

Bv1 BARBARA STRAUSS

Attention

S.U.N.Y.A.B.!

The

“Thing” is coming! This year the
Freshman Class Council has expanded the Annual Winter Weekend into a “really big shoe!”
HERBERT APTHEKER
eight days long to be exact. “The
ship in the Communist Party does Winter Thing” will continue from
not automatically entail illegal tomorrow until Saturday, Febadvocation to overthrow the gov- ruary 8th.
The “Thing" committee is
ernment.
Essentially, the issue was one headed by Francine Zumpano and
of academic freedom, the right Joseph Tringali. Sub-committees
Bennett, Kathy
to inquiry without interference, are led by Bruce
Ron Kenand not so much whether or not Baxter, Mike Pecorella,
DeKramer, Natalie
students should or should not derian, Carol
Rosa Lynn Brothman, Paulisten to any particular lecturers. Gold,

—

Bohnen, Ellen Heller, and
The court stated; “Teachers and lette
Schindelheim.
students must always remain free Rob
to study and to evaluate, Saturday, February 1st
Four Preps Concert—Clark
to gain maturity and new underGym, 8:30, $2.00 per person
standing; otherwise our civilizaSunday, February 2nd
tion will stagnate and die.”
Two basketball games—male
President Fumas hailed the
vs. female
campus leaders
ruling of the Appellate Division
leaders; winners vs.
campus
himself
last month, declaring
faculty—Clark Gym, 4:00 p.m.,
“very pleased.” The University
25 t per person
defended the Senate’s program Monday,
February 3rd
from its inception, and Dr. FurMovie—“The Devil At 4
nas said after the Dec. 28 anO’clock” plus choice cartoons—
nouncement that “It's certainly
Conference Theatre in Norton,
Student
me
the
if
right
with
all
showings at 3:00, 6:00, 8:00,
Senate reinvites Dr. Aptheker to
...

speak.”

Movie—“The Last Hurrah” plus
two

cartoons—Conference

Theatre in Norton, showings at
3:00, 6:00, 8:00, 25c per person
Wednesday, February 5th
Movie—“The Mouse That
Roared”—Conference Theatre,
showings at 3:00, 6:00, 8:00, 25c
per person

TUP!

entation of Prince and Princess
candidates to the student body
—Dancing and coffee—Multipurpose Room in Norton, 3:305:00

Folk Concert—featuring Hac
kett and Raven—to be taped
for WREN radio—Multi-purpose Room, 7:30-9:30, 50c per
person
Saturday, February 8th
Ice-skating and exhibition by
U.B. Hockey Team—Lincoln
Park, 9:00 a.m.-12:00 Noon, 25&lt;
per person
Movie—“The Notorious Landlady"—Conference Theatre,
showings at 12:00, 2:00, 4:00,
25c per person
Snow Sculpture Judging, 1:002:00
People-sled

Thursday, February 6th

Races—Front of
3:00-4:00
If there is no, snow, there will
be a Treasure Hunt on campus
in place of Snow Sculpture and
People-sled Races, from 1:00-

Movie—"Love and the French
Woman"—Conference Theatre,
showings at 3:00, 6:00, 8:00, No
charge
Friday, February 7th
1
Prince and Princess Motorcade

"Northern Star Ball”, semiformal dance—Hotel Buffalo,
9:00-1:00, $3.50 per couple, music by Jay Maran, Crowning of
Prince and Princess. Present*

THE FOUR PREPS

Acheson,

4:00

�Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Sororities to Begin Rushing;
Freshmen Women Invited
All freshman and upper-class
university women with a 1.0 average will be interested in Spring
Rush. Rush will commence this
semester with registration in the
Panhellenic Office, room 342 Norton, between 3 and 5 p.m. on
February 3, 4, and 5. The Convocation Tea will be held on
February 9 at 2:00 in the Conference Theater, where Panhellenic delegates will give the
rushees an insight into sorority
life. Then the sisters of Alpha
Gamma Delta, Chi Omega, Phi
Sigma Sigma, Phi Zeta Chi, Sigma
Delta Tau, Sigma Kappa, and
Theta Chi will meet with the
rushees. Rush activities will continue on Monday, February 10,
with an evening coke party, followed by three weeks of informal
and formal parties. Final bidding
will be on March 4.
During the first semester of
the freshman year, university
women are adjusting to the newness of campus life, and thus
rushing freshman women is deferred to second semester. This
delay gives each freshman an
opportunity to become acquainted
with the many organizations on
campus, inculding sororities,
which have played an important
foie in American college life for
more than a hundred years. Rush
is the forma! orientation into
sorority life and also the period
during which sisters and rushees
are becoming better acquainted.

Sorority is far more than the
teas, parties, traditions, and
socials, although it is certainly a
part of them. Sorority is an experience, in which we learn to
share not only our happiness but
also our sadness. It offers university women an opportunity to
participate in group activities, to
contribute to our community, to
sponsor charitable projects, to
make many lifelong friendships,
and to be a creditable asset to
our campus.
Although sororities are social,
they have a far more important

side

—

that of academic achieve-

ment. All sororities stress the importance of high scholarship, and
thus they provide many stimulating intellectual programs, To
promote further scholarship, the
Panhellenic Council plans a
Scholarship Tea each year to
present awards to Greek women

for their academic excellence. At
that time a trophy is awarded
to the sorority with the highest
average, and a tray is presented
to the Greek senior with the
highest seven semester average.

Panhellenic also gives a scholar-

ship to an outstanding university
woman for her achievement.
Sorority women are responsible
for good grades, graciousness,
and a social awareness, for they
are ever striving to live up the
high ideals of their individual

sororities and
Association.

the Panhellenic

Talented Musicians
Sought: Auditions
To Be Held in Buffalo
Representatives of the New
England Conservatory of Music
will audition prospective students
in the Buffalo and Utica areas
during the month of February.

Auditions for the Boston-based
music college will be conducted
in all instruments and voice for
candidates for admission in the
fall of 1964.

Senate Meeting
By TRUDY STERN

The Student Senate passed a
resolution in an effort to enlighten the student body on the
problems surrounding the Feinberg mandate. The resolution
proposed by Michael Shapiro, directed the president of the Student Association, Michael Cohen,
to appoint a committee of seven
to fully and objectively present
a fact sheet to the student body
at an open forum to be held on
Tuesday, February 4. The committee consists of, Paul Tenser,
Richard Jaross, Tom Kobus, Robert Pacholsld, Michael Lappin,
Michael Shapiro and Fran Bilet-

The Conservatory auditioning
staff will be in Buffalo on Saturday, Feb. 8 and in Utica on
sky.
Saturday, Feb. 29. For further
Mr. Cohen said concerning the
information concerning audition“It appears that this
committee;
interview appointments, appliresolution is the only possible
cants should write: The Underaction for Senate to take if we
graduate Division, The New Engto act as responsible represland Conservatory, 290 Hunting- are
entatives of the student body.
ton Avenue, Boston, Massachu- It is our hope that students will
setts 02115.
take advantage of the objective
The New England Conservatory results of the committee and exoffers programs of study leading press any conviction that they
to the Bachelor of Music Degree may have to any member of the
Student Senate so that when a
in Applied Music, Music Education, and Composition. The Con- definate resolution is brought beservatory also offers the Master
of Music Degree, Undergraduate
Diploma, and Artist’s Diploma. A
member of the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, the Conservatory is
also a charter member of the National Association of Schools of

fessor David B. Stout, of the Dept,
of Anthropology and Linguistics,
and Mrs. Stout are sponsoring
the contest for the second year.
All students on the undergraduate level are eligible to compete
for the best collection of books
in a field he had developed an
interest. The aim of this contest
it to stimulate the students’ desires to create a personal library
and encourage book ownership
in quantity. It is hoped that students, through participating in
a contest such as this, will discover the pleasurable aspects of
reading and collecting books.
This is the second year that
this contest will be held on the
S.U.N.Y.A.B. campus. Last spring
a similar contest was held in
conjunction with Spring Arts
Festival, A prize of $100 was
awarded to Miss Ellen Carr and
a second prize was awarded to
Miss Lewis.
The Rules of the contest are
as follows:
1. All students must be undergraduates of any school in the

2. No applicant may enter less
than 15 books or more than 25.
He may not spend more than $40
on books purchased within the
last year. Books may be hard
or soft-covered,
3. The library must be specific,
collections centered in a subject
or collections of a single author
or group of authors, and related
to whatever topic the contestant
chooses,
4. The applicant must submit
with his collection of books a
short paper explaining why, when
and how the applicant became
interested in building his own
library, and how the books he

Mr Ferencz

Applications will be available
at the candy counter of Norton
Union and in the Browsing
Library today. For further information contact Bobbie Hoffman,
Ext. 2865.

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explore and expose their students
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has chosen relate to the library
as a Whole. Ten books must be
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to add to his library. In addition
five books from his collection
must be annotated.
5. The contest will be judged
in April by authorities in the
fields chosen and a first prize
of $100 will be awarded. There
will also be a second prize of

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Tel.: 835-8700-01 —836-9827

PART TIME WORK

RESOULTION TO REINVITE
APTHEKER PASSED
The Senate resolved to re-extend their invitation to Dr, Aptheker whose appearance will complete the “Political Spectrum of
the Contemporary World” series.
They also commended the administration and the Board of
Trustees of the State University
and the Appellate Division's
Third Department for their efforts in maintaining freedom of

Music.

Contest for Best Library
The House Committee of Union
Board is now offering a prize of
$100 to the student with the best
student library collection. Pro-

fore the Senate its opinion will
reflect that of the students.”

truly

10:00 9:00 MON., THURS. and FRI.
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(Adjacent The Boulevard Mall Plaza)
Open Friday and Saturday until 1:00
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�Friday, January 31, 1964

Debating Society

At Michigan State

Students Picket at Norton

The Debating Society, along
with representatives from twelve
other colleges and universities
attended the Michigan State llniversity Debate Tournament on
Jan. 25. Our debaters entered
both the divisions of debate.
The first division of debate was
conventional orthodox style. It
was open to both novice and varsity teams. Our novice team that
entered had a record of five
wins and three losses. The affirmative team of Raymond
Major and Hedda Beckman won
two of their four debates.
Debater Wins Plaque
Miss Beckman was presented a
speaker award for the outstanding debating she demonstrated.
The award was determined by
total points accumulated by
judges’ scores in the four round
debate. Plaques were given to the
top four speakers in the tournament. Miss Beckman averaged
over twenty points per round out
of a possible twenty-five points.
Diane Hayes performed an unusual fete. At the last minute
her partner was unable to attend
the tournament, so it was necessary for Miss Hayes to defend
both the first and second negative positions. She gave sixteen
speeches totaling two hours during her rounds of debate. Her
record was three wins and One
loss.
Two of our varsity debaters entered the second division of debate, which was switch-side competition. In the four successive
rounds of debate Carol Zeller
and Gerald Catanzaro alternated
from affirmative to negative positions. In two rounds of debate
they held the affirmative stand
and in two rounds of debate they
supported the negative. Their
record was two wins and two

losses.

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

R. Finkelstein Announces
Conclusion of Conferences
Public Relations Chairman Rob

ert Finkelstein has just concluded
a series of conferences which will
begin a permanent relationship
between the SUNYAB Student
Government and the student governments of various
foreign

schools. Mr. Finkelstein initiated
this program recently by meeting with Mr. William Carrione, a
student leader at the University
of Mexico.
A group of 25 independent students marched around the Norton
fountain Wednesday afternoon in
protest to the compulsory signing
of the Feinberg certificate.
Several of the students, including Henry Simon and Jeremy Taylor, had sought Student Senate
action Tuesday night. The Senate cooperated in protest only

by setting up an investigating
committee to report within a

week.
The deadline for the signing of
the certificate is today. This lead
the group to their quiet protest
march. At the end of the demonstration the following statement
was read:
The situation created by the introduction of the Feinberg certificate presents both legal and
moral aspects and one cannot
hold a responsible position on the
matter until both aspects are
comprehended.

This, however, is not a problem where application of law is
sufficient to determine justice.
Part of justice is. the freedom of
the individual; his integrity and
his conscience. These basic, essential freedoms are sobverted by
a moral obscenity like the Feinberg Act.
This legislation, producing what
is in effect a “loyalty oath,”

stein. His hope was that the two
student governments could be informed of the others activities,
and could derive mutual benefits.

Mr. Finkelstein has said, “This
is the beginning of a program
which I hope can be expanded.
We are in contact with many
American universities and now
wish to expand our scope. I believe that our student government is a fine one, and one with
many powers and strengths. However, we can gain valuable insight
and many examples from finding
out how other student governments operate.” He has pledged
to continue this program in the
future.

Mr, Carrione was in Buffalo for
vitiates intellectual integrity and
freedom and man is punishable a two week period during a vaca(according to the Regents Rules tion period, and it was at that
on Subversive Activities) by vir- time that he met with Mr. Finkeltue of past, present, or future
activity. The burden of proof is
INVERTED AT ADVERTISER'S REQUEST
on the accused, but if he cannot
in good conscience sign a “loyalty
Campus U.B. from Minutes 6
oath,” then he may be punished
for that reason also.
Sheridan Near AVENUE DELAWARE

The dignity and freedom of the
faculty, and the students they
teach, is diminished by quiet compliance. If the contents of the
“Regents Rules on Subversive
Activities" are to be “terms of
employment,” then academic freedom no longer exists. What has
been so proudly gained for academic freedom in the Appellate
Court’s decision on the Aptheker
Case will be lost because of this
cartficate.
No man can say honestly that
the University of Buffalo
(SUNYAB) still has that precious
tradition begun by Chancellor Capen. We may still give lip service to academic freedom, but the
full practice of it will be impossible.
It is urged, therefore, that
those persons who have so far
refused to sign will remain firm.
We support these persons and the
rights upon which they stand.

3456

RATES WEEKEND SPECIAL

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�THE

Weber, Johnston,

SPECTRUM

Good, Appointed

at Buffalo.
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York
14, N. Y. Published
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo
except for
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May,
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor

Photography Editor
Editorial

Advisor

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
John Kbwal

The appointment of Dr. Robert
Good as professor of chemical engineering, effective January, 1964, is being announced.
Other additions to the department
during the last year included
David L. Johnston in September.
1963 and Dr. Thomas W. Weber
in January, 1963.
Dr. Good has been senior staff
scientist in charge of surface
physics at General Dynamics in
San Diego since 1957. He was
assistant professor of physical
chemistry at the University of
Cincinnati, 1953-1956, and research chemist, for the Munsanto
Chemical Company, 1949-1953.

ARNOLD S. MAZUR

-

Business Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulat.om Mgr.
Financial Advisor

Martin Kriegel
Lawrence Frenkel
Rocky Versace
Russell Goldberg
William Siemenng

-

Staff: Joel Havens, Pamela

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Chem Engineering
J,

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Garcia Cooper
09 .®/
Thomas Maente, Jr.

“'YJ

Leventhal, Alan Newman,
General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lome Walladv, A. Linda
Bromberg,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Vic Menza, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie
Launen, Trudy Stern,
Nancy
Blecker,
Frankie,
Nancy
Larry
Jones,
Charles Lotsof, Pal
Ray
Cra wfo&lt;-d,
Brofhman,
Lynn
Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa
Cunningham,
Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine
Marfurt
Olm,
Sandra
Bykoff,
Helen
Fran
Orsxulak,
Lillian Kalastein, Marcia Ann
Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo,
Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng, Fred Rosenberg, Elaine
Wachner, Suzanne
Terry Sweeney, Tom Kujarski, Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda
Ostrander, Lonnie Klipsfem, Saralee
Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice
Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary Ann Wartenburg
Photography

Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Reid

the Post
Entered as second class matter February 9, 1961, at 1879.
AcBuffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3,
for mailing at a special rate of postage provided for in
1951.
9,
February
authorized
1103.
October
3,
1917,
Act
of
Section
Office at
ceptance

Dr. Good received the HA. degree from Amherst College in
1942, the M.S. degree from the
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising
PRESS*
University of California in 1943,
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
and the Ph.D. from the University
of Michigan in 1950. He is a member of the executive committee
of Colliod and Surface Chemistry
Division of the American Chemical Society and was chairman of
the San Diego Section of the
American Chemical Society in
U.
and
Hof*tra
B.
Controversial Program*:
1963. He is a member of Phi
Kappa, Phi Lambda Upsilon,
The Appellate Division’s reversal of a lower court’s Beta
and Sigma Xi.
from
speaking
Herbert
Aptheker
injunction barring Dr.
A candidate for the Ph.D. deto the student body about communism is in keeping with
from the University of Calithe fine tradition of civil liberties and, more specifically, free
fornia, Mr. Johnston is assistant
say
can
Spectrum
The
freedom.
There
is
little
academic
professor in chemical engineerexcept that we are duly pleased with the decision (which ing. A member of Phi Beta Kappa,
was favorably strong in upholding freedom of inquiry) he received the B.S.E. degree
To the Editor:
and anxiously await the completion of the ideologies from Princeton University.
series.
Weber
was
For myself and on behalf of
Assistant professor
Perhaps it will be possible for the Convocations Coma chemical engineer in the Ecothe staff and cast of “A Date
of
Division
of
nomics and Planning
mittee to arrange for use of last year’s tape recordings
with Show Biz 1964”, I sincerely
the four previous lectures for those students who were Esso Research and Engineering
to 1957. He thank The Spectrum for its exwho
from
1955
Company
and
the
others
University
the
not in attendance at
Chem. E. degree cellent coverage of the show.
may wish to listen again. It must be remembered that received the B.University
in 1953, Amidst seemingly endless setfrom Cornell
intended
which
was
part
talk
is
of
a
series
Aptheker’s
Dr.
the M.S. degree from Newark Colthought
political
modern
backs and roadblocks to the
familiarize
students
with
to
lege of Engineering in 1958, and
and not one which was intended to stir boiling contro- the PhD. degree from Cornell show’s progress, it was extremeversy. This may be a forthright means for keeping to University in 1963.
ly pleasant to note something
the original ideal of the program.
favorable for a change.
Dr. Weber is a member of Phi
Similarly, the National Students Association Steering Kappa Phi honor society and is an
However, I would like to comCommittee had planned last year to conduct all-day sem- American Cyanamid and Stand- ment
further on an article by
inars during which time students would examine the dif- ard Oil Foundation Fellow.
Nancy Laurien of your 13 Deferent ideologies more carefully. Such a program can
cember issue. I bear no grudge
always be an invaluable experience for those who paragainst Miss Laurien, but I do
for
what
arrangements
ticipate, and N.S.A. should make
disagree with her. I am not Jack
initial
would have been the concluding program of the
This is a reminder for
Paar; I do not intend to chew
lecture series.
out the press in any form. All
all
students
who
are
�
that I intend to do is voice my
applying for financial
Subscription

$3.00

per

circulation

year,

9000

Editorial

oCetterA

to

-

*

*

Our campus is not alone in having to surmont terrific
pressures from within the university community and from
without, when students decide to invite controversial
speakers to appear before the general body. Presently,
N.S.A. at Hofstra University in New York City is arranging for the appearance of George Lincoln Rockwell, the
self-proclaimed leader of the American Nazi Party. The
Spectrum has been asked to comment upon that situation,
by students of our own campus and by Don Rubin and
Robert Sandler, Editors-in-Chief of the Hofstra Chronicle.
We are of the belief that freedom of speech is an
unequivocal right which must never be compromised. As
our own experience with Dr. Aptheker’s appearance has
proven, academic freedom and free speech must be protected and, when encroached upon, remains its own
defense.
However, that is the only area in which the two in-r
vitations have common ground. As stated above, Dr.
Aptheker’s lecture is part of an educational series; one
which was sincerely conceived and executed. The Student Senate did not seek controversy; rather, exposition.
In the case of Hofstra’s N.S.A. though, The Spectrum
takes issue with the Rockwell invitation. True, any hmitation as to who can speak and who can listen to different
dialogues must be challenged. What we do not understand is the motivation of N.S.A. Undoubtedly, they defend academic freedom as we do, and also counter-charge
that they do not seek controversy for its own sake. But
what of the facts? Rockwell was invited to speak about,
of all things, “Freedom of Speech.” Is the point of the
lecture to enlighten students about our protected right,
or is it meant to prove that if this man can speak, anyone
can?
Certainly, no student leader at Hofstra condones
Rockwell’s dogma of hate and rascism. And, if that is
what makes him an alarming lecturer, perhaps he should
about
have been invited to speak of Naziism; but notpoint
of
freedom of speech, for that seems to stretch the
Therein lies the distinction
controversy considerably.
between Dr. Aptheker’s talk (and Mosley's) and Rockat the Hofstra
well’s. He should be allowed to lectureOur
reservation,
they
is
what
want.
that
campus, since
then, concerns the taste N.S.A. has exhibited.

assistance for the 6465 academic year. It
will be necessary to return these application
forms to the Office of
Financial Aid, at 233
Hayes Hall, on or before the deadline date,
March 1, 1964.

Commiftee Made
To Support Lodge
The Spectrum receives press releases from
interest
many and diverse organizations,
groups and charities. All of these cannot
be published. The following is one such
release. It is published here because certain
students may be interested in participating
in next year's election activities and might
otherwise have no means to contact the
proper persons involved. We will continue
to publish political releases which directly
relate to college students.

STUDENTS FOR LODGE
It has been announced that a
national STUDENTS FOR LODGE
Committee has been formed to
solicit signatures requesting Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge to
return from South Viet Nam and
seek the Republican Presidential
nomination. It is expected that
Ambassador Lodge, who has served in the U.S. Senate, as U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations, and as the Republican Vice
Presidential candidate in 1960,
may be receptive to a draft move-

ment.

Students interested in representing the Students for Lodge,
National Committee on this campus and organizing a campus committee should contact;
STUDENT FOR LODGE
Box 93

ichusetts

opinion.

Miss Laurien stated that it is
difficult to laugh at things so
closely related to us, and she
subsequently suggested that we
wait twenty years and then laugh
at them. I believe that she is
wrong. Were she correct, then
every comedian would be out of
work. I do not mean just the
“sit down satirists” like Shelly
Berman, Bob Newhart, and Mort
Sahl, but also the “one-liners”
such as Bob Hope, Henny Youngman, Red Skelton, and Jack Benny
and the countless others
to whom is entrusted the wonder—

the Editor
ful facility to make people laugh.
Their material comes from what
is going on right now, not something which happened twenty
years ago and now may be nothing more than a faint memory.
If Miss Laurien has ever seen a
comedian working (and believe
me, it is work), and heard the
audience laughing, I think she
may tend to agree with me that it
is only possible to laugh at our
current foibles.
I cannot place myself into the
minds of these professional comedians, but I can speak from my
own limited experience. I am
sure that Miss Laurien will agree
with me when ,1 was discussing
mashed potatoes, the infirmary,
beer on campus, and what not,
I was not attempting to form a
revolution to sweep clean our
campus of dread evils. I was
merely poking fun at some rather
petty situations which, when
viewed in a certain way, evoke
laughter. I was gratified to hear
this laughter from the people
who saw the show (at Harriman,
at the VA Hospital, and in Medina). These people laughed at
things which are a part of them
now; twenty years from now, they
more than likely will be forgotten and not funny at all.

Respectfully,

Lance Goddard

Macridis of Political Science
Receives Honorary Degree
Dr. Roy C. Macridis, chairman
of the department of political sciences, has received an honorary
Doctor in Law (Docteur en Droit)
degree from the University of
Claremont Ferrand in France.
Mr. Lester Slezak, American
Vice-Consul at Lyon, accepted the
honorary degree for Dr. Macridis
from the rector of the French
University. Dr, Macridis was one
of four foreign scholars to receive such an honor.
Dr. Macridis lectured at the
University of Claremont Ferrand
two years ago and was also active
with the Institute of American
Studies while he was in France.
He was named the first chairman of the department of political sciences when it was established at the University in September. He was professor of po-

litical science at Washington University in St. Louis from IS-* 8
until he accepted his present position. He received the Ph.D. degree from Harvard University.
He was Visiting Professor at
Harvard and Northtwestern University, a Fulbright Scholar" at the
University of Paris, and has also
held a Rockefeller Research Fellowship on three occasions.
Dr. Macridis is the author ot
The Study of Comparative
ernment (1955), co-author of I he
De Gaulle Republic
Quest for
Unity (1960), co-author of For
eign Policy in World Politics
(1962), Comparative Politic s.
Notes and Readings (1961) and oi
the two-volume work on Modern
Political Systems (1963). He contributes regularly to professions

Gov-

—

journals.

�Friday, January 31, 1964

The Circus
By BOB MILCH

As you know, there was a water
campus
several
shortage on
weeks ago which necessitated

closing the dormitories and evicting their denizens. I was on my
way into Tower to take a friend
to the station when two letters
lying in a pile of newspapers
caught my eye . There, between
a picture of the Pope with Archbishop Althenagoras and an ad
for “Move Over, Darling” were
the following documents:
“Albany 1, N. Y.
Senate Offices

Students,

S.U.N.Y.A.B.

Dear Friends,
Well, kids, it happened. The
state suprem court, which, as we
all know, is not the highest court
in the state, said that Mr. Apthekr can come to your campus
to talk to you. Believe me, kids,
this is a bad thing. Honest, it
really is. See, kids, it’s like this.
Once upon a time there was a
pretty bunny rabbit named Selma.
One day Selma was hippity hopping through the cabbage patch
when she met a boy rabbit named
Bruce. Now Selma was not a rabbit of the world, if you will, and
she didn’t know that Bruce was
really a dirty old reprobate who
had evil designs on her, if you
know what I mean. When he invited her into his hutch to listen
to some long hare music, she did
not see anything wrong with it;
she thought she knew the differnce between good and evil and
was mature enough to make her
own decisions.
“Well, kids, it is enough to say
that Selma barely escaped Bruce’s
trap with her little tail intact. But
more important, kids, there is a
very important moral which we
all can learn from this story. And
do you know what it is? That’s
right. Don’t listen to what everybody tells you, but take the advice of people who know.
Your friend,”
(obscure signature)
The second letter was obviously
a reply from one of the student
leaders, and was written in pencil

a torn-out piece of notebook
paper.

on

Senator:
The perspicacious temperance
which was so avidly advocated in
your correspondence has been received with the sacredotalalness
which it so richly deserved. You
and the solons of Albany would
do well to remember the words
of Socrates when you unmitigatingly contend that we don’t know
what’s going on.
To say that the education seekers and other students of today
are too immersed in naivite (or,
as Doppelmann says, Gemannsch-

An additional grant of $5,000
has been awarded to the industrial engineering department by
the American Society of Tool and
Manufacturing Engineers (ASTME) to support a research project on the design and development of a manufacturing system

BJF to Present
More Folk Music
In Current Trend
The Buffalo Jazz Festival loves
the folk music trend that apparently doesn’t seem to show signs
of fading. The reason for this
is obvious . . . the public’s appetite for fine musical entertainment is endless.
BJF has such solid hits under
its belt as the Limelighters, Peter,
Mary and the Kingston
Paul
Trio. Therefore, it comes as no
surprise when
Jerry Nathan,
president of BJF decided to stay
on the same diet.
&amp;

For the entre, MC-Joe Rico, is
open
presenting the incomparable
to tutoring by those whose intenSmother’s Brothers at Kleinhans
tion it is, in reality, to corrupt,
on Feb. 16; the main course will
brings to mind the point Apple be
America’s top trio
The
makes in his book, when he says, Kingston
Trio on March 20; and

aftslichkeitedness), are too

—

“The education seekers and other for
dessert, BJF will treat audistudents of today are too im- ences to the celebrated Joan Baez
mersed in naivite (or, as Doppel- on April 11.
mann says

.

.

. )”

It would be well, too, to remember what Frank Frank has replied
with to this charge: “The kids of
today are too smart for that.
They’re no dopes ...” Also, as
Wesley Howard says on the cover
to his “Complete Works of English Literature (Abridged)”, “Hah!
Them? Naah.”
So, Senator, you would do well
to remember all those things. I
find it difficult to put credence
in the fact that you have assumed the stance you have when
a close look at today’s college
student and even the lightest conversation with him would convince you completely of the otherwise thing. We welcome the decision of the highest court in the
state as support of our intellectual integrity; if we’re smart
enough for the court, we are
smart enough for Aptheker.
Sincerely,
Douglas Pen-Yann”

I read these letters on my way
up to my friend’s room. I knocked
on the door, and was told to come
in. “Oh, hi,” my friend said, “ffey
look what I’m takin’ home for my
kid brother. The one on the left’s
name’s Selma ...”

Industrial Engineering Dept
Receives Grant From AST ME
terns can be predicted with only
a tiny investment of time and
money compared with real systems.
This means that complete new
manufacturing systems could be

There’s more on the menu for
later in the Spring but this series
should set the pace for the calibre of stars to come.

Nursing Grant
SUNYAB is sharing in a $200,000 disbursement given by the
National Fund For Graduate
Nursing Education on Dec. 30,
1963.

As one of 32 colleges and universities in 21 states and the
District of Columbia with accredited graduate nursing programs,
the University received a grant
totaling more than $3,000.
The goal of the Fund is “to
encourage graduate programs,
through these and future grants,
to provide the necessary teachers,
supervisors, and other nurse leaders.”

Arts

&amp;

-

SKETCH
By DAVID BERGAN and PETER RUBIN

of the American way of life for
which Americans have fought and
died.”
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, Associate Professor of Philiosphy,
gave this reply to our questions:
“I think the Feinberg law is a
disgrace to academic freedom.
The certificate we are required to
sign is not the responsibility of
the University administration,
who are merely attempting to
carry out the application of the
law. They are not to be blamed
for this. But this is not to excuse
the State Legislature for continuing as part of our law this
repulsive restriction on the rights
of teachers in our state.
Those who are truly subversive
will not hesitate to sign. Those
who are not subversive should not
be forced to sign this certificate.
Therefore, this certificate serves
no satisfactory purpose at all.”
Our final interview was with
Dr. Edward J. Hovorka, Associate Professor of Psychology.
Dr. Hovorka’s views on the Feinberg Certificate follow:
“I personally regret that in a
state such as New York, as
wealthy as New York and having
the best informed citizens, people
still deem it necessary to find
artificial ways of defending themselves ten years after the Mc-

"The Feinberg Certificate"
I further certify that I am
not now a member of the Communist Party, and that if I have
.

.

ever been a member of the Communist Party I have communicated that fact to the President
of the State University of New

York.”
This, in essence, is what the
Feinberg disclaimer certificate, a
result of chapter 360 of the laws
of 1949, commonly referred to as
the Feinberg Law, entails. We
have solicited comments from
various members of the faculty
dealig with the decision made by
the American Association of University Professors, and with the
certificate itself.
In response to our questions,
Dr. Charles Ebert, Professor and
Chairman of the Department of
Geography, issued the following

It would appear from the above

statement:
“The signing of the Feinberg
Certificate is a lawful requirement of the State of New York,
Whether one has to sign the
disclaimer certificate or not is a
question of law and not one of
personal decision. If the law appears to be obnoxious or wrong
it should be changed or abolished
through democratic governmental
procedure.
In my opinion a law should be
meaningful and desirable. I am
afraid that the signing of the
Feinberg Certificate will not result
in keeping undesirable
political elements out of our
institution or any other. In addition, the signing of the certificate may produce harmful discord within the academic community and may give irresponsible persons potential inroads
enroaching on true, responsibly

members of the faculty, while
resenting the law itself, have
decided to comply with the directive to sign the certificate.

simply must persist at any institution of learning. The loss of
such freedom could mean the
first concrete step toward political
extremism leading toward the end

Carthy era.
Being a responsible citizen I
have to comply with the law.
But I hope that in the future
there will be people who will not
be forced to sign this certificate.
I believe the law Should definitely be repealed. Individuals
should feel insulted having to
sign this oath, when they have
already pledged themselves to
support the Constitution.”

statements and other inquiries we
have made, that the majority of

executed academic freedom that

Sciences Anniversary

By ELAINE BARRON

The College of Arts and Sciences celebrates its 50th Anniversary this April. Professor John
T. Horton, Chairman of the De
partment of History, reflected
back on his first days at the
University, when the College of
Arts and Sciences was beginning
to come into its own, under the

encouragement
of Chancellor
Samuel P. Capen.
Professor Horton said, “I began
tested and the most efficient as a freshman in the fall of
found on a controlled laboratory 1922. At that time, the College
simulator.
basis. Manufacturing presently of Arts and Sciences was housed
The money will be used to conhas no procedure which even on Niagara Square in Townsend
tinue exploration into a completecomes close to this. Systems testHall. Its first dean was Julian
ly theoretical manufacturing sysing need not be limited to manuPark. Miss Emma Deeters was the
tem, using mathematical probaof
men
facturing. Any complex
secretary. She later became
bility theories. The initial impeand devices, such as hospitals, registrar. The office of the Trea
tus for the grant came last spring
armies, restaurants or schools surer of the University was on
hen ASTME granted the depart- could come under scrutiny, and
the first floor of Townsend.
ment $1,900, and then added furmore efficient and effective operIn that fall the sound of the
ther support by awarding a $5,500 ations devised.
Athletic Club on Delaware Ave.
renewal grant last October.
made it difficult to
If the laboratory develops as being built
In commenting about the grant,
hear the lectures.
it
would
Smith,
Dr.
by
scheduled
Dr. Wayland P. Smith, chairman
Dr. Samuel P. Capen was inof the department of industrial be one of the first in the nation augurated that October. He was
distinct advantwould
be
a
and
to take
engineering, said: “We think it is
Frontier in really the first chancellor
particularly appropriate for the age to the Niagara
active part in the university.
terms of improving existing in- an
grant to come from one of the
The chancellors before him were
major manufacturers of computer dustrial systems and attracting honorary—active in their pronew
ones.
equipment since simulation studfession, law. Chancellor Capen’s
Working with Dr. Smith on the inauguration was attended by
ies of this type are highly deinC.
Shah,
pendent upon adequate computer project is Jasvantrai
Governor Nathan Miller of New
facilities.”
structor in industrial engineering, York, Sir Robert Falconer, ChanCharles
associates
The results of such research
and research
cellor of the University of Toronwill some day have great impact N. Kurucz, Buffalo, N. Y., and to, was also there. It was a gala
Philippines.
on industry, locally and nationTwo
Felipe K. Tan,
occasion. Dr. Capen’s inaugural
ally, according to
undergraduate research assistants address centered around the ColDr. Smith.
David
The research may eventually in industrial engineering,
lege of Arts and Sciences. He
*oad to support in excess of $100,- E. Maurer, senior, and David spent his first ten years as chanBufPOO for the construction of a comDomino, Junior, both from
cellor building up this division
plete
falo, N. Y., will assist with the of the University.
man-machine systems labofirst
ratory.! With such a laboratory project. This' will be the
That fall, we (A&amp;S) moved to
‘t is possible
time undergraduates in industrial the campus. The Erie County
comto
construct
plete
manufacturing systems engineering have been given the Poorhouse was still here. The
usmg only mathematics. The ef- opportunity to serve as research older part of Hochstetter Hall
"

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Sciences. I might add that in
addition to building up the College of A&amp;S, Chancellor Capen
brought all the school of the
university into one corporate university
a corporate feeling
among the division. He built up
a rather remarkable faculty. Some
of the best teachers I’ve ever had
counting my stay
in my life
1 had then. Philip
at Harvard
Becker Goetz was the first Chair
man of the Classics Department.
He was instrumental in bringing
Edward G. Shalreuth to the
Philip
campus. He succeeded
Goetz as Chairman. He was an
extremely learned and eloquent
teacher. Dr. Julian Park was
( hairman
of the Department of
History and Government. He was
succeeded in 1926 by Dr. Julius
W. Pratt, a most distinguished
American historian. George W.
Van Santvoord, stately and accomplished, became
the first
chairman of the English Department, He was succeeded by
Henry T. Perry. In the Depart
ment of English during the
twenties, there were a talented
group of younfe men • 'George
Brewer, Willard H, Bonner (who
is still here), Oscar A. Silverman
(who became Chairman after Dr.
Perry.)
Dr. Shadle w:as in charge of
the Department of Research. He
was very instrumental in pre
medical training.
I also recall a very vigorous
elderly man
Karl Sietmann •
who taught German. Sometime
around 1925 a professor from
Williams College, Theodore Hewitt, became Chairman of the
German Department. Men like
Hewitt, Pratt, and Perry were
well-gentlemen of the old schools.
That was quite a group of
—

—

—

■

partment a very learned young
Canadian, Wilfred B. Kerr, a
Dh.D. of Toronto, taught English
history. He was a rather metaphyscial salty character, very
able. He remained here until he
died a very sudden death in 1950.
Also a member of the History
•

Department was Dr. Raymond
Chambers, from Harvard. A notable man was Dr. Augustus Hunt

Shearer, who became director of

Grosvehor Library, Helen Reed
taught memorable courses in
Government and the British Empire.
One of the pleasant things in
those early days was that the
student body was small. Everyone knew everyone elsd. The relationship of students and faculty
was closer - there was an atmosphere of subdued excitement ■ we
were all parts of a new venture.
The honors system started early
in the 20's. Its first director was
Dr. Richard W. Boynton, who was
chairman of the Philosophy Department, He was a Unitarian,
witty, and engaging. The honors
students ha,d a common course,
an informal one, in which they

read various celebrated works—
Antigone of Sophocles, The Iliad
and The Odyssey of Homer, the
Nibelungenlied among others.
There was a definite feeling of
esprit de corps.

In those years as now, ah active
debating society was in existence.
Miss Ortha Wilner of the Classics
Department was coach. The Dramatic Society was active. There
was generally a lively pleasant
social life. The faculty was generally young and vigorous. They
responded with a good deal of
rest to Dr. Capen’s leadership.
As 1 look back, it seems like a
very idyllic intellectual atmos-

�Molony

—

Civil Liberties Award

Joseph P. Molony, New York
State Director of the United
Steelworkers of America, AFLCIO, was presented the 1963 “Niagara Frontier Civil Liberties
Award” by the American Civil
Liberties Union on Wednesday,
Jan. 8 at Crane Branch Public
Library in Buffalo, N. Y.

The veteran labor and civic
leader was cited by the ACLU’s
Niagara Frontier Branch for “his
articulate defense of individual
freedom and human rights” in
controversies involving academic
freedom at the State University
of Buffalo and the defense of
Negro citizens to demonstrate for
equal rights during the past year.

Mr. Molony addressed a public
meeting of the Branch following
the presentation by Mrs. K. William Shields of Snyder, chairman
of the civil liberties group. The
framed citation included excerpts
from the late President Kennedy’s
address to the national ACLU in
1962, in which he declared that
“America is a stronger nation
for your uncompromising efforts.”
Selection of Mr. Molony for the
award was based bn his public
statements calling for “complete
freedom of expression” at the

Satisfying human relationships
can make a big difference between success and failure in college. Whether it’s a roommate, a
professor, your family, or friends,
you want to get along well with
them. We are learning a lot about
this through our study of the

Christian Science textbook,
Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures by Mary Baker

Eddy. You can, too.
We invite you to come to our
meetings and to hear how we
are working out our problems
through applying the truths of
Christian Science.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
Side University of Now York at Buffalo
Mooting

Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

timo: 7 o'clock Thursdays
Norton Hall, Music Rm.

Moating ploco:

Science and Health it available at all
Christian Science Reading Rooms and at numg
college Uekslsree. Paperback EditiortttM.

State University campus, following a 1962 speaker ban which
was removed on Dee. 28 by unanimous action of the State Appel
late Court, and his defense of
civil rights demonstrations after
an area congressman (Rev. John
R. Pillion, R., Hamburg) had likened them to “Mau Mau” activity.
One of the earliest organizers
of the Steel Workers Organizing
Committee, Mr. Molony has been
an international executive board
member of the USW for more
than 20 years. He is a past chairman of the Port Authority and
has served on several municipal
and state boards and commissions. A Democratic committeeman and past Erie County executive committee member, he has
been a delegate to all Democratic
national conventions since 1948.
Chairman of the United Negro
College Fund in the Buffalo area
for three years, Mr. Molony is
also a member of the board or a

director of the

Buffalo

Urban

League, the Buffalo Council on
World Affairs and the Studio

Theater. He was named one of
the city’s “Outstanding Men” by
the Buffalo Evening News in 1949
and received the Brotherhood
Award of the National Conference of Christians and Jews in
1956.

Members of the awards committee include Prof. David R.
Kochery of the State University
Law School, chairman; Robert
North, Jr., deputy director of the
Buffalo and Erie County Public
Library; Atty. Richard Lipsitz and
Russell W. Gibbons, associate
editor of the Hamburg Sun.
Last year the Student Senate

was the recipient of the ACLU

Award. The Senate received the
honor because of its program “A
Political Spectrum of a Contemporary World” and its subsequent
defense of academic freedom.

House Plan Organization
Encourages New Members
By PAT PRUNELLA

All Freshmen are invited to
join the House Plan Organization.
House Plan groups are small
gatherings of men and women
meeting separately and/or together. Last semester several
groups merged to become co-ed.
The main function of House
Plan is social. It is one of the
most important ways for Freshmen to meet other Freshmen.
This program is especially helpful to commuters. Many mixers
are planned. Some of last semester’s activities included hayrides,
ping pong, bowling, dinners, coffee hours, pizza parties and intramurals.

There is no registration or en-

trance fee. Each group, indivi
dually decides Whether they pre
fer to pay dues or raise money

House Plans also provide an
opportunity for Freshmen to be
active in other areas. Individual
Houses are often callet} upon to
help the Freshmen Class Council,
Variety Show and other organizations in some special project,
All Freshmen are invited to attend the Freshmen Class Council
meetings and take an active part

in their functions.
If you are interested in an organization such as this, please
join us by picking up a registra
tion slip at the candy counter,
Hope to see you at the first organization meeting.

�Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE SEVEN

�IBSWaSWlM® Stf&amp;SS®
By LEON LEWIS

"Bogey"
Gangsters and law enforcement
officials chased each other to a
bloody climax across the screen

of countless movie houses in the
late 1930’s, and one of the most
brutal, calculating mobsters to
die again and again in one movie
after another was a handsome
thug played by a man named
Humphrey Bogart. Many Americans whose own lives seemed
small and unexciting were thrilled by the exploits of the dashing
and casually immoral men who
lived short lives of weatlh and
glory on the screen, but no one
seemed to capture the imagination in quite the same way as
Duke Mantee, the tough, cynical
and strangely honest fugitive of
The Petrified Forest (1936), Mantee, Bogart’s first starring role,
was a man unlike any of the
tough-guys who had flaunted their
defiance of society’s strictures before him.
As delineated by Bogart, he
was tough but strangely responsive to the desires of others. He
was cynical but not insensitive.
He was cruel but could also be
kind, and most of all, he had
around long
obviously been
enough to know what the score
really was. Many people felt that
something was wrong with life
in the U.S. but couldn’t think of
anything to do about it, although
they had a vague feeling that
something ought to be done. But
Duke Mantee was doing something, and even though he functioned outside the law, his
curious brand of courage and resourcefulness was action, at least,
of some kind, and in this scene,
was satisfying and compelling.
However, Bogart’s next roles
were even more appealing. As a
private detective he was able to

function within the limits of the
law which organized society had
established, but he was not restricted by them into behaving
in a routine manner. He could
combine his cunning, sophistication and rugged honesty with an
often shocking brutality that recalled nothing so much as a
jungle animal fighting for survival with only his ability to sustain him.
As Sam Spade in The Maltese
Falcon and as Philip Marlow in
The Big Sleep he was the archetype private eye, a type often
a
copied and never equaled
forerunner of the less successful
but still interesting James Bond
in Dr, No.
Finally, Bogart moved beyond
the role of the detective into
that of the rebel, the outsider
or even the outcast. In what is
perhaps his best picture and
surely one of the best films ever
made, Bogart as Rick, the nightclub owner in Casablanca, may
—

LAST 5 DAYS

jtoMnimtmiin

nance iNnen

Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

*

rsutiMMi

The Jazz Gallery
By RAYMOND CRAWFORD

have been the first existential
hero in the movies. In that movie,
he was a drifter and a vagabond,

Buffalo is proud to announce
its newest jazz room, the Jazz
City Lounge. The management
a man obviously pursued by a has been booking some of the
fascinating past, who was doing top names in the jazz world for
his best to survive with his inthe last three weeks. First to
tegrity and sense of self respect
was Miles Davis followed
come
a
violent
meaningless,
intact in
by Maynard Ferguson and his
which
world controlled by forces
band, then Count Basie and this
he was either not in sympathy week Dizzy Gillespie.
with or to which he was opposed
Dizzy Gillespie has been playIn Casablanca too, his life was ing trumpet for 37 years and has
deeply affected by an unusually played with every man prominent
attractive woman with whom a in the past. His bands have nursatisfactory relationship seemed tured some of the finest soloists
impossible. In order to cope with
in the business. Dizzy is truly
complex of situations, Bogart beone of the greatest influences
came the prototype of today’s
living today.
hippie or beatnik, but for him,
Dizzy had a quintet in the
it was an individual stance, not spacious Jazz City Lounge and
His
a practiced public posture.
the sort of things that one asactions and words in Casablanca sociates with one man was not
Not
and in To Have and Have
lost by the size of his group.
were a veritable definition of His reed man was the wonderful
how to be “cool”. Only, with BoJames Moody who played tenor
gart, in the movie and in life, it and alto sax and was just great
was real. Perhaps this is why the
with his beautiful solos. The
man was so effective. The films drummer was Rudy Collins who
he made seemed more to be fo- played with Herbie Mann before
cused on life itself than on a he came to Diz’s group, the bassmovie set.
ist was Chris White who was with
Nina Simone, and finally the
The reason for this brief analypianist was a fine young musician
sis is that the Circle Art is holdwho has been doing free-lance
ing a Bogart festival at the moment. On Wed. and Thurs., they work, Kenny Brook.
Dizzy, of course is most reshowed The Maltese Falcon and
for his latin work and
The Petrified Forest. Tonight and membered
he didn’t hesitate to play a good
tomorrow night, they will be presenting The Treasure of Sierra many bossa-nova, and samba
Madre and To Have and Have styled charts.
He never ceases to amaze neoNot. The Treasure of Sierra Madhis music with his
re won the academy award for phytes to
bell tips upJohn Huston in 1948 and is a unique horn whose
fine adventure story as well as ward. He says he uses this horn
a bitter comment on the effects because he can hear better when
register,
of wealth on a man’s character. he goes into the higher
which incidently is probably the
To Have and Have Not brings highest in jazz. His antics on
Bogey together with Lauren Bastage are really crowd pleasers.
call, and those of you who have Dizzy does this in contrast to
been thinking that Doris Day people like Monk and Coltrane
and Rock Hudson are a swinging who many times make a total
twosome, may find out something separation between the musicians
about the real thing in this and the crowd. Dizzy always lets
picture. In addition, it is based
you know he loves his fans. He
on a book by Ernest Hemingway
and has the benefit of a worldly,
racy script by William Faulkner
who was financing his next exYawknapatawpa
cursion
into
country by working in Hollywood
at the time.
From William Golding'i
On Sunday only, the incomShocking Best Selling Novel
parable Casablanca is playing
along with High Sierra, a worthwhile lesser effort. Without going
into dttail, let me say that Casablanca has just about everything
anyone could want from a movie.
The series is concluded Monday
and Tuesday with The Big Sleep
and Key Largo and I can think
of only reservation about recommending the entire festival. If
BAILEY it KENSINGTON •TEL. TF 3 8216
you see all or most of these
you
STUDENT
DISCOUNT TICKET
movies, I can’t imagine how
for all programs may be
can become anything less than
purchased upon presentation
totally dissatisfied with most of
of I.D. card.
the film fare available today.

LORD
of the FLIES

STARTS WED. FEB. 5

Academy Award Contender

manQtotwmfooie
Student Discount Tickets
Available at Both Theaters
Upon Presentation of Proper
I.D. Card

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UB to Get DuPont
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both|th»at&gt;r» upon presentation of proper I.D. card

introduces the'pieces and usually
takes two or three minutes to
kid with the boys in the band.
With a few rehearsed skits, Dizzy then goes into his music and
there is no one who can say that
he is making fun with his music.
He is a great enthusiast and practicioner of his music.
Dizzy has been all over the
world showing people how jazz
should be played. When you get
him alone, he is a serious, down
to earth man who wants everyone to dig what he’s saying. With
all of his antics on stage you can
see when he plays thoise ballads
that he is for real. A great trumpeter and a great man.
This week Gloria Lynne is at
the Jazz City Lounge. There is
not a person reading this paper
who cannot appreciate this songstress. She has been cutting some
great records and many of her
songs on the popular list. She
is not a person to miss. Go down
and see this jazz artist at the
spacious and well equipped jazz
room, the Jazz City Lounge.

SUNYAB is one of 52 universities receiving a Du Pont Company postgraduate teaching as
sistant award in chemistry. The
grants, totaling $132,000, provide
fellowship aid to regularly employed part-time teaching assist-

ants.

Each award provides $1,200 for
the year for the appointee, paymment of tuition and educational
fees, plus $500 to the department
of chemistry.

Town Casino lounge
68 1 Main St.
NOW PLAYING

GLORIA LYNNE
and TRIO
3 Shows Nightly
9:30

11:30

*

•

1:30

MATINEE SUNDAY

3:00

-

6:00 p.m.

NO MINIMUM

-

SPEND WHAT YOU LIKE

STUDENTS ATTENTION!
FREE BUS SERVICE TO
TOWN CASINO TONIGHT
Buses leave from Tower
Residence at 8:30 returning
buses from Town Casino at 12:00
Midnight.

[

Smothers Brothers
Feb. 16th *8 PM
SUNDAY
Presented
*

by Murray Roman and BJF

Kleinhans Music Hall
$2.50, $3.50, $4.50, $5.00
ALL SEATS RESERVED
•

■
■
■

FOR BEST CHOICE OF SEATS MAIL
ORDERS NOW WITH SELF ADSTAMPED ENVELOPE.
DRESSED,
SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER
TO BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL DENTONS, 32 COURT STREET. BUFFALO
2. NEW YORK.
Feb. 6
on Sale at Norton Union

�Friday, January 31, 1964

Judy Auerbacher Becomes
New Student Review Head
By JUDITH C. GREEN

Concurrent with the resignation of Thomas Berdine, editor
of “The New Student Review”,
a new policy of rotating the editorship each term has been initiated and Judith Auerbacher has
taken charge of the magazine.
Judith is a political science
major interested in a journalsim
career. Previously she had served
“The New Student Review” as
non-fiction editor, proofreader,
and dilligent worker since its

Drama Reading Set

of the campus but it is never possible to sell more than 500
copies.” Thus, a vicious circle
evolves due to a lack of funds to
support a magazine and without
a good magazine sales recede.
The magazine staff will try to
make better use of resources
available at the University. These
untapped resources include more
contact with professors who
write or wish to recommend students and guest professors.
“The New Student Review”
welcomes student contributions.
Judith Auerbach and her staff
wish to combat the “fear of being
creative.” The deadline for the
next issue is Feb. 7, 1964. For
those interested, the individual
editors will have their weekly
office hours posted at- the “New
Student Review” office, room
342, Norton.

The Department of Drama and
Speech announces final readings
for the first major production of
the Spring Semester. The readings for Moliere’s comedy, The
Miser, will be held at 4 p.m. today in Harriman Library Ballroom and are open to all students
interested in acting in the production.

The Moliere play will be directed and designed by Dr.
Thomas Watson. It will be produced in Harriman Ballroom,
March 4, 5, 6 and 7. Dr. Watson
is planning a production in threequarter round style; that is, the
audience will surround the playing area on three sides.

In addition to the 15 characters
in the play, there are positions
open for production stage manager and two assistant stage managers. Interested students may
contact Dr. Watson in Room 23N,
Harriman Basement, or call 8313744.

� ~cTmTt o morrVw Tir nriTiTlTim~
I
CLARK GYM
JUDY AUERBACHER
birth. Professional experience for
her new position has been acquired by working as a reporter for
weekly gossip
a “hometown
sheet” and in the advertising department. She is also the first
editor to be a voting member of
the Publications Committee.
Sophomore Harriet Heitlinger
and junior Robert Feldman will
serve as non-fiction editor and
business manager, respectively.
They will aid in keeping the magazine essentially the same in format fiction, non-fiction, and
poetry. Stronger organization and
more contact among the editors
will be established. Once again an
attempt will be made to publish three rather than two issues
this semester.
“The New Student Review”
faces two main problems
financial backing and the acquisition of creative material,” states
Miss Auerbacher. “Students want
a literary magazine to boost the
cultural and intellectual image
—

—

I

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THE FOUR PREPS
Capitol Recording Artists

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MANSION HOUSE
1439 Main St.

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from KB Radio)

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the Music of the

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Fri.

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To Start the New Semester
Off On the Right Foot

MtM

ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE

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Pierre Debs
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Viner Loafers
Keds
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All Available

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

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Herringbone, Tweeds, Solids,
Diagonals 8.00 to 15.00 off

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Reg. 37.50 Now 29.95

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Herringbone, Camels, Tweeds

TF6-4140

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(opposite University of Buffalo)

If^eiifyiouS
HILLEL NEWS
The B’nai BTith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofwill speak on, “Yehudah
mann
Halevi’s Idea of the Good Life.”
This will be the second in a
series of sermon-lessons on
Medieval Jewish Thought. All college students in Buffalo are invited to attend and to participate in the Oneg Shabbat following the Service.
U.J.F. Drive Starts

The annual United Jewish Fund
Drive is being conducted now on
the local college campuses. Gary
Evans and Don Lieberman are
the co-chairmen on the campus of
the State University of Buffalo
and Lois Lebowitz heads the drive
at State University College. Advisors to the student committee
are Mr. Joseph Bronstein, Assistant Director of the United Jewish

Federation;

Mr. and Mrs. Norman

Fertig, and Rabbi Justin Hofmann, Volunteers to assist with
solicitations are still urgently
needed. Students who wish to
lend their efforts to this most
worthwhile project should call
TF 6-4540 or come directly to
Hillel House at 40 Capen Blvd. for

further information and instruc-

tions.

*

*

Intar Varsity
Christian Fallowshlp
Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship will hold a fellowship meeting Friday, Jan. 31. Those wishing
to attend, meet in front of Tower
at 6:45 p.m.
GREEK NOTES
Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold
an open stag tonight, at the Club
Sheridan, Sheridan Drive near
Millersport Highway at 9:00. All

second semester freshmen are invited.

�Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PACE TEN

Three to Make Music
BY VICKI BUGELSKI

GILES RECITAL
Allen Giles of the music department faculty will present a
piano recital Friday, Feb. 7, at
8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall. Admission is free and all students and
faculty are invited to attend.
Mr, Giles has performed many
times in Music department concerts, both in solo recitals and
in chamber music programs. He
has appeared with the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra.

on
Last Semester a seminar final examination invoked this response
the part of psychology students who were subjected to what they
prepared by Dr. Stanley Segal.
considered to be an unfair exam
.

.

.

Engineering Club Dr. Edward Butler,
Proves Industrious Former Student,
Announcement was made this Big in Lakewood
week of the establishment of a
Student Industrial Engineering
Club by the American Institute
of Industrial Engineers, Inc.
(AUE),

Raymond C. Vinnenberg, president of the Niagara Frontier
Chapter of AHE, was on campus
to welcome the new chapter. Present at the meeting was Dr. Way-

land P. Smith, chairman of the
department of industrial engineers, and chapter officers, Richard J. Sullivan, president, Orchard Park; Dennis P. Wrona, vicepresident, Buffalo; and Stanley
W. Tomaszewski, treasurer, North
Tonawanad, Each officer is a senior in industrial engineering at
the University.
The new student chapter of
AHE is one of 50 in the United
States. The organization will give
students an opportunity to expand
their horizons in the field of industrial engineering.

Norton Needs
Newer Blood

By BARBARA STRAUSS

UNION BOARD NEEDS YOU!
On Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, February 10-12, the Union
Board will present its First Annual Joih-Up Jamboree.- Spon
sored Jointly by the Personnel
and Public Relations Committees,
the week is designed to educate,
inform and arouse interest in
the various worthwhile committees of Union Board. The week’s
major goal is the recruitment of
new members for the eight standing committees which control the
operations of Norton Union. All
committees are in need of new
people and all applications will
be warmly received. Freshmen
and sophomores are particularly
encouraged to participate.
According to general chairman
Allen Yasgur, a table will be set
up throughout the week on the
first floor of Norton, at which
all interested students may join
a committee. Union Board members will staff the table and will
answer any questions. An explanatory booklet entitled Your
Union Board will also be available.

On Wednesday, February 12,
at 3:20, a join up rally will be
held in the Multi-Purpose room.

Each Union Board committee will
have a booth at which students
mey both sign up for, and learn
about the committees. Skits and
contests will also be presented.
It is hoped that a large attendance will make this rally a suc-

cess.

Throughout the week of Feb-

10-12 the various committees will sponsor their own
events. Students are advised to
check bulletin boards and Spoctrum for details. After the drive,
committee applications will be
available in Room 218, Norton.

Dr. Edward S. Butler, a former
Buffalo resident and an alumnus
of SUNYAB, has been elected corresponding secretary of the Monmouth-Ocean Country Psychological Association, at Lakewood, New
Jersey.

The “Appassionato” Sonata of
Beethoven will be featured. The
remainder of the program will
be modern works. Mr. Giles will
perform the Webern Variations
for Piano op. 27, and the Bartok
suite op. 14. He will conclude
with six piano preludes of Claude
Debussy: “Voiles”, “Ce qu’a vule vent dOuest”, “Des pas sur laneige” from Book I; and “La
Puerta del vino”, “Feuilles mortes", and ‘Feux d’artifice” from
Book II. The preludes of Debussy are outstanding works in this
form. Mr. Giles has selected some
of the most interesting and unusual, to provide a most varied
presentation. The last one in particular in an outstanding composition, and a brilliant tour do

Dr. Butler, who received his
B.A. in 1952 and his Ph.D, in
1959, both from the State University at Buffalo, is director of force.
psychology of the Monmouth Medical Center’s Henry Poliak MemoLOST
rial Clinic. He was the youngest
man to be appointed to that post,
One pair of half glasses
when he accepted it in 1962.
at
(reading glasses)
From 1952-58, he worked
various Buffalo posts, including
shell frames.
Tortoise
the Veteran’s Administration Hospital, Children’s Court, and Bufcall: TR 5-7959
Please
falo State Hospital.

SCHNEIDER CONCERT

LAFFERTY RECITAL

Alexander Schneider, violinist
with the Budapest Quartet, the
Quartet-in-residence here will
present a concert of chamber
works for orchestra, tomorrow
night at 8:30 in Baird Hall. Admission is free and all students
and faculty are invited to attend.
The concert is entitled “An
Evening of Music with Alexander
Schneider”. Mr. Schneider will
conduct and also perform the
viola solo in the Hindemith
“Trauermusik”. This work will
be performed in the memory of
its composer, who died recently.
The remainer of the concert
will feature the works of Mozart.
Youthful violinist Robert Rozek,
a pupil of UB faculty member
Pamela Gearhart, will perform
the violin concerto in G major
K. 216.
Ronald Richards, of the music
department faculty, will perform
the oboe solo in the Divertimento
K. 251. The Sinfonia in A major,
K. 114 will complete the pro-

Donald Lafferty, pianist, will
present his senior recital Monday
evening at 8:30 in Baird Hall.
Admission is free and all students
and faculty are invited to attend
Mr. Lafferty is fulfilling requirements for the Bachelor of
Fine Arts degree in applied music, with a double major of piano
and oboe. The oboe recital will
be given in April.
In the University Honors Program, Mr. Lafferty has taught
piano in Buffalo for the past
three years, he is also on the
faculty of the Community Music
School of Buffalo, and is a member of the Chromatic Club. He
is first oboist with the Cheekto
waga Symphony Orchestra, under
UB faculty member Robert Mols.
He first studied piano with
East Aurora teacher Gedrge Reiver. For the past four years at
the university he studied with
Allen Giles.
The recital program will include the Beethoven Sonata op.
31, no. 2 in D minor, the Prokofiev Sonata no. 3, and the Debussy suite, “Pour le Piano".
Works of Chopin will conclude
the program.

gram.

The orchestra is composed of
university faculty, students, and
some members of the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra.

Attention Resident Students

Bocce Club

PIZZA^
Now Delivered To:

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for a Dash of Adventure
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—

Come To: 2900 Delaware Ave., Kenmore, N. V

�Friday, January 31, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

Bulls Nipped By Youngstown, 68-66
Buffalo basketball fans saw the
UB Cagers drop a 68-66 decision
to the Youngstown Penquins last
Saturday evening
Memorial
Auditorium. With the contest
deadlocked, 24-24 at the halftime,
Youngstown quickly forced to a
nine point advantage in the second half. A strong come-back on
the part of Buffalo tied the Penquins at the end of regulation
time, with sophomore Dick Hetzel
hitting on a long set shot with
only six seconds remaining.
The contest results remained
uncertain throughout the five
minute overtime period and was
finally clinched by the visitors
Bill Lenza. Using the underhand
technique of foul shooting, Lenza
converted six foul shots within
one hundred seconds of overtime
for his only points, but the crucial ones of the evening.
UB’s leading scorers Gary Hanley and Norwood Goodwin, both
fouled out late in the contest.
However, Hanley still lead rebounders with twenty receptions.
The Bulls finished with a 33%

at.

BASCHNAGEL (44) steals ball and goes in for shot.

shooting

GOODWIN PUTS IT UP AND

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�PAGE TWELVE

Spectrum Sports

�
|

Friday, January 31,

SPECTRUM

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SPORTS CIRCLE
By ROCKY VERSACE

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Pawloski Named Grid Captain; Wrestlers Defeat
Ryan, Philbin Receive VP Awards Alfred U. 25-5
By DAVID E. HAMPTON

Under the guidance of Coach
Ron La Rocque UB’s wrestling
squad is looking forward to the
upcoming season. Composed of
only two juniors and eight sophomores, the squad lacks experience in varsity competition. Regardless of this, Coach La Rocque
feels that “Although the squad
is young, they are all bright,

What Next For UB Sports?
The Buffalo Courier-Express recently printed an article by Bob Powell explaining the present financial condition of U.B. athletics. Powell stated that, “Intercollegiate athletics at the University of Buffalo will continue
to function without an established policy or financial
assistance from the State University of New York, the
agency governing U.B. and 29 other state-sponsored

hard-working

—

The article centered around an interview with J. Lawrence Murray, secretary of the State University, who also
became its chief administrative officer when Thomas H.
Hamilton resigned as president.

A five year plan was initiated in 1955 in order to
lift Buffalo football up to a plateau equal to that of
major college schools. The University policy stated at
that time was that, “A sound athletic program, including intercollegiate competition, is a desirable part of
university life.” This statement reflects what UB stands
education, progress, and a well rounded university
for
life. The transformation into a state school should have
no effect on this university’s philosophy, and let us hope
that it never does.

Gerry Pawloski, 5-11, 195 lb.
junior end from Lincoln Park,
Michigan, has been elected captain of the 1964 University of

Buffalo football team.

Pawloski, a
troit’s Holy
School who was
out for Buffalo

graduate of DeHigh
Redeemer
a defensive standthis past season,
caught 5 passes for 82 yards during the year and did most of
his team’s punting (24 for 744

yards) despite a nerve injury to
his shoulder. He was named to
the Eastern College Athletic Conference weekly all-star team for
his play against Holy Cross. Of
his 5 pass receptions, 2 were for

touchdowns.

The UB players selected Gerry
Philbin, senior tackle from PawHead football coach Dick Offenhamer, who has been tucket, Rhode Island, as their
at the helm throughout all the years of gridiron expan- Most Valuable Lineman for the
sion, believes that the key football’s survival lies in the season. Philbin, who received naformat of the student athletic fee. Says Offensamer, “To tional recognition for his play,
support intercollegiate sports at the State University of has been signed by the New York
Jets of the American Football
Buffalo, the most feasible way would be to add five to League
for 1964. He was their
ten dollars to the athletic fee.” As is always the case, No. 3 draft
choice, and also the
some economy minded people undoubtably would object No. 3 choice of the National
to such a proposal; however, these students should re- League Detroit Lions,
call that the tuition of two years ago, approximately

$1000, has been reduced to the smaller figure of $400.
Ten dollars extra per person seems more than reasonable
when weighed against what it would bring in return
When one considers that schools such as Syracuse and
Colgate charge athletic fees in the vicinity of $100, UB’s
present fee of $25 indeed seems small. In fact, this writer
believes that a general fee for Buffalo students of $50
to $75 is more realistic, since the money must support not
only football, but also basketball, swimming, fencing,
track, cross country, wrestling, and golf.
Although the problem underlying the athletic pro-

gram lies

in the lack of funds, something, not financial,
but spiritual, can be done by the student body to show
that it is concerned with the situation and not merely
apathetic to the entire affair. If students display more
support at intercollegiate contests, by both attendance
and enthusiasm, people will begin to notice the true attitude. If the poor man’s excuse for a gymnasium, Clark
Memorial Dungeon, is packed game after game in' a
manner so as to cause the local fire chief to consider it
a hazard, then perhaps the state will begin to realize
the need for a fieldhouse. If more students flock to Rotary Field for football games, thus creating a feeling of
school pride in everything, then the state might realize
that Buffalo is the school that could make Excelsior famous in the collegiate world of sports. These are the
most vital actions that UB students can take at the present time.

Returning

experience.
Last year’s wrestling squad
posted a 9-1 record and placed
high in the New York State College Wrestling Tournament.
Graduation dealt a heavy blow
to La Rocque, but this year’s
sophomores show promise.
Among them are: George Ehresmen (130 lb. class), Mike Petz (137
lb. class), John Heslenk (147 lb.
class), A1 Warden (157 lb. class),
Norm Keller (167 lb. class), Mike
Morrell and Mike Donohoe (177
lb, class), and Edgar Poles (191
lb. class). Poles is a guard on

Generally speaking, what this means is that the athletic program will now have to succeed on its own merits
that is, sink or swim on the basis of ticket sales. It
would truly be an unnecessary waste to have the progressive program strangled by an out-moded system with
too much red tape and not enough action.

Nevertheless, until the board of trustees decide to
call for a meeting, until they elect a new president, and
until he decides to act, Buffalo sports will at best remain
at a standstill. And when the president does act, who
is to say that he will do anything positive about the situation?

boys.”

from last year’s squad are Bob
Jackson at 123 pounds, and Bert
Ernst, heavyweight, both Juniors
with 9-1 records. These men are
great assets to the squad helping
their teammates who have less

colleges.”

Said Powell, “Murray agrees that a definite outline of
policy might be advantageous to all concerned, but said
such things must wait the appointment of a new president
by the board of trustees to succeed Dr. Thomas H. Hamilton, who resigned the $28,875 position a year ago. “And
we don’t have the slightest idea When an appointment
will be made,” he said.”

1964

Cornell Victorious
Both the varsity and the Baby
Bulls, handicapped by a month
out of practice, found themselves
unable to break the jinx which
has kept them winless against
Cornell since the rivalry began
15 years ago.
The varsity Bulls were soundly
beaten in all three weapons,
losing 3 6 in foil, 3-6 in epee and
sabre. The closing total was U.B.
8, Cornell 19. Ronnie Schwartz,
son of U.B. varsity mentor and a
member of the Cornell varsity
team shut out his three U.B.
opponents 5-1, 5-0 and 5-0. The
freshman team fared somewhat
better point-wise, yielding a 1422 victory to Cornell.
To date, the varsity has won
three of their four matches. The
Varsity Bulls downed the alumni
29-19, Hobart 22-5 and Utica College 16-11, while the Baby Bulls
defeated both the Hobart frosh
and the Jewish Center team 17-8.
The next activities of the
Fencing Bulls will be a series of
dual matches February 7-8. Feb;

the Bulls’ football team.
Beat Alfred At Clark Gym
January 18 saw the UB-Alfred

Jimmy Ryan, 165 lb. senior tailback from Danville, Pa., was wrestling squads encounter in
chosen the Most Valuable Back Clark Gym. Alfred was defeated
25-5. Several members of the UB
and also the Most Improved Player. Ryan, who worked out of the squad showed their competence,
outscoring their Alfred oppoquarterback post for two years
nents. George Ehrsman of the 130
with indifferent success, was
lb. class scored the only pin of
shifted to tailback for the 1963
the match. Other decision matchseason. He led the team in rushes were in UB’s favor.
ing (59 carries for 313 yards 5.4
Following is the complete 1964
average), pass receiving (11 for
varsity wrestling schedule:
126 yards), punt returns (5 fop
Jan. 11 (Sat), Western Ontario,
76 yards), and kickoff returns
home, varsity, 3 pm.
(7 for 257 yards). His most specJan. 18 (Sat.), Alfred, home,
tacular play was returning the varsity, 3:30 p.ra., frosh, 2 p.m.
opening kickoff for 95 yards and
Jan. 31 (Fri.), Ontario, home,
a touchdown against Villanova. varsity, 7:30
p.m.
-

o

The Buffalo players picked an
all-opponent team as follows:
Ends: Tom Harrison, Delaware,
and Jim Whalen, Boston College;
tackles: A1 Atkinson, Villanova,
and Ron Stepsis, Ohio U.; guards:
John Leone, Boston College, and
Bill Budness, Boston U,; center:
Jon Morris, Holy Cross; quarterback: Jack Concannon, Boston
College; half backs: Jim Marcellino, Holy Cross, and George
Byrd, Boston U.; full back: Bob
Horton, Boston U.

All students who are
interested in joining
the Spectrum staff are
welcome to come to
The Spectrum office,
room 355 Norton.
Sports writers, as well
as news and feature
writers, and general
staff members are
needed if the newspaper is to continue to
grow.

ruary 7 the Bulls will take on
both Fenn and Case at Case
Tech, and on February 8 they will
meet Western Reserve and Oberlin at Oberlin. The next match
for the Freshmen will be away
against Ryerson Tech.
Previous records indicate a
good chance for victory in all
four meets, providing the stamina
lasts through what undoubtedly
will be a grueling weekend for
the Bulls.

i

\

COACH RON LA ROCQUE

Fed. 5 (Wed.), Toronto, home,
varsity, 8 p.m.
Feb. 8 (Sat.), Oswego, away,
varsity, 3:30 p.m., frosh,2 p.m.
Feb. 14 (Fri.), Case, away, varsity, 7 p.m.
Feb. 19 (Wed.), Rochester,
borne, varsity, 8:30 p.m., frosh

7

p.m.

Feb. 22 (Sat.), Colgate, away,
varsity, 3:30 p.m., frosh, 2 p.m
Feb. 28 (Fri.), Ithaca, away,
varsity, 8 p.m,, frosh ,6:30 p.m.
Feb. 29 (Sat.), Cortland, away,
varsity, 3:30 p.m., frosh, 2 p.m.
Mar. 7 (Sat.), Rochester Tech.,
away, varsity, 3:30 p.m., frosh.
2 p.m.
New York State College Wrestling Tournament (date and place
to be announced).
4-1 Interstate Wrestling Tournament (Case Tech., Cleveland,
Ohio, Mar. 12. 13, 14).
N.C.A.A. Wrestling Championships (Cornell Univ., Ithaca, N. 1
Mar. 19, 20, 21).

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, December 13, 1963

BEVERLY
of

La, Belle Femme
Pr ... nts To

YOU... 'IlleCoeds of U.8.
The "Look of Elegance "
_{THATONLY A STYLIST CAN INSURE)

r-

With Her EUROPEAN Touch of Styling
AIM l11tnchich19MISSLAURIEanclOur Talelltecl

I

ARTIST FROM BRUNO OF TORONTO
-------MISS
DOREEN _____

7

20% DISCOUNT To All New Customers
SHAMPOOS and WAVES
(Fer• Llmlt9CITime Ot!IJ - T-.

_.

on

te Fri.)

La Belle Femme
1101 NiCKJCll"a
FansBlvd.
'•)
TF2-2195

(Acre11 From Giff-

••••••••••••••

CATHAY
·GARDENski

poverty

hi 11

~

512 Nia9ara FaNsBlvd.
l MINUTES DRIVE FROMua

•

expe

POLYNESIAN- CHINESE
AMERICAN FOOD
EXPERTLY PREPARED
TAKE OUT ORDERS
TF 7-3444

_rl, novice

2 T-bars,

•

trails

1 iunior

T-bar

Also Featuring

EXOTIC DRINKS
Luncheon
11:00 A.M. • 3:30 P .M.
REASONABLEPRICES

Dinner
4:00 P.M.• 9 P .M.
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

ellicotlville,
HOW

new

york

TO

GET TO POVERTV
HILL - When
approaching
from the north,
continue
on Route
219
14 miles from the crossroad
Route
39 (Springville).
turn right onto L i ndberg
Road.
Continue
for
approx ima tely 1 mile and turn left onto Poverty
Hill Road.
Whan
approaching
from the south
on Route
219,
continua
throug h the village
of Ellicottville,
at
the red blinker
(Route
219
and Ma in Streat)
continua
straight
through
to Ellicottville
Maples
Road . After 3/4 mile. turn right onto Poverty
HIii Road .

poverty

ski

h iII

YOU'LL
LIKE
THEBETTER
TASTE
OF THEBEER
BREWED

MEL·O•DRY

•

FAMOUS SINC~ 1842

roquo,s:
!f:~ Formal Opening
.........., .. a,_..._

l"C..~...._

a..tWt,.&amp;Y,.T'.....,fllL.~

•

.O..~-.

Sunday , December
\

.

22

�1

-

AN EDITORIAL:

SenatorMahoneyto AddressStudentBody
The State Senate majority leader, Walter J. Mahoney,
will speak to the student body and members of the fac­
ulty Tues., Dec. 17. His address is scheduled for 4:00 in
the multi-purpose room. Sponsored by the Political Science
Club, the speech is entitled "Ohan~
for the Presidentlial
Nomination."
Often mentioned as one of the most powerful men in
slate politics, Senator Mahoney, aside from being a gradu­
ate of our university, is no stranger to the U.B. campus
or student activities.
·

Sen~tor Mahoney was particularly
vociferous during
the hectic days of last fall when the Convocations Com-,
miU~e of the Student Senate attempted to supplement
the mtellectual growt:h of the student body by presenting
a series entitled "A Political Spectrum of a Contemporary
World.'' For the uninitiated,
the speakers who were to
of five contemporary ideolo­
SENATOllWALTIR J. MAHONEY a1;&gt;pear ~ere representatives
gies: fiac1sm, conservatism, liberalism, socialism , and com-

ITAU

11111VDIITY

MR. FORMAL

NEW YOBK AT BUITAI.O

NOVICE
DEBATERS
WIN

SPECTRUM

CANDIDATES
(See Page Six)

_J_1f
_________

__ VO_
_LUM
_ _E
_1_4_---'-'N'--"-b
_.

-:-_Fri
_ _day
_ _,_oec
_ _em
_ _be
_r _13_,_1_
96
_3__

Dr. Chuong,
Mme.Nhu's Father,
Speaks
on Crisisin Viet Nam
)

or

munism. The lecturers were paid from funds dr;1w11 from
the student activities fee; but Senato! MahonPy conkndrd
tl)at "Communists anp. Fasci sts, or those who promote nw1r
interests directly, have no inviolate rittht to rnrsuse a tax,
supported public platform to sprea d Uwir 111\holymessage s
of social and racial conflict ... " One would hope that
college students would understand
the speeches (all of
which were given except that of Herbert Apthek er, a Com­
munist) and be able to evaluate the ideologies by them­
selves. One would hope that! But, a Buffalo Evening News
story quoted the Senator, stating: ",the untutored minds'
of university students must be protected from 'people whose
basic premise is use of violence in any form.' "
The Spectrum is pleased that Senator Mahoney is com­
ing to the cam!)-!t s. Hopefully , man y students will attend
his lecture; and perhaps he will be gracious enough to
hold a question and answer period during which lime stu•
dents will have the opportunity to speak with the Senator . . .
(Conl.lnued Paae 20)

By MARTIN KRIEGEL

Dr. Tran Van Chu ong addressed an assembly of over 500
students on the "War in Viet Nam" in the Multi purpose
room of Norto n at 3:0 0 p.m. yes terday . Dr. Chuong is tbe
former ambassado r from South Viet Nam to the United
States.
Dr. Chuong's talk was one of both warning and waken•
ing. He outlined the plan of Communist aggression since the
sr•&lt;·&lt;md
World War, citing Viet Nam as a typical example.
"It may be said that they have
&lt;11st•ovored
a way ol conquering
11ilhuul risk. II 1s the great dream
or ltllling without being hit . . . theo
,11,,,,,,,of some invisible armor,"
h,• stnted referring to the Cornmu.
m~I m1·thod of indirect aggression
wld "war by proxy." In this way,
m t'il'il wars controlled from the
oul~1de,U1eCommunists exploit the
anhrrent weakness of the free world
and Western democracies to react
to nustype aggression. "The wars
art.-calculated to overrun, to des­
troy, a country, but never spectac­
ular enough to arouse the Western
powers to action."
ll r noted that the military al­
Uanres, such as the South East

TRAN VAN CHUONG

Asian Treaty Organization, ''are
rendered useless by subversive
wars," and lhal U1ese Wll.l'll, dis­
guised as civil wars, are the •·sec-

Mr.Formal
Chosen
Today
, AfterWeek
Of Much
Adivity

___________

__

...:.
PAG:..:E
..:.
.:..::.....:.
T.:.:
H:.::.R
.=E_
E.=,

Silver Ball
Tomorrow

Voting by the s1udon1 bod.v for
this year's Mr . Formal was S11111&lt;-d
yesterday and will continue until
this afternoon. The seven rnntlf·
dates havt- been working all W/'l'k
Tlw Norton B:allroom will be
on skits. posters . badges and m11l1
trlln~form!'d inlo II wlnt!'r Y.,mdPr
Ing personal appearances .
lund b) (I IOUl'hor J ark Frost's
Thl• candidate~ were prPs,,111,•&lt;I
10
th~ campus in n fashion ~how puint hru~h lo1· thl' l\l't•nlv-ninth
UJmuaJSllvi.!r Billi tt1111urrn~eve­
where they each mod!.'lt'd rour mil
ning ,
tits . Wednesday. A question :111&lt;1
Under I hr lr:i(lrri.h1p of Lois
answer period followed so th .\l Hw
student voters could get ~Iler 111'­ Rt't'Vl'S , th,• ~IIVt'r Hllll rommiltt,e
quainted with the candidalt•s. Vot• has workt-d 0111thr dl.'tuil~ or th&lt;'
ing yesterday and today will l'Ollllf evPning. rJw curmuilll'\' has pr.v­
vidcd for t'Ontinunus music- with
a.s 4.5c; of the l'Ontest.
two banrts - Don "Red'' Menw
The seven men were forrnully
Although th&lt;'
, nnd Rom1i&lt;' Sinn.
judged at a co'1e&lt;' hour last nl1t11r
t-ommltf('(! hns lion&lt;•
its b&lt;•st to fos­
Personal judgin~ of thP c•andidnles
ter 11 !urmal almospht•n• thi~ yt•tir
will c-ount as 30', of th&lt;' eontcst.
formal dres.s will be oplimllll .
The remnining 25", will 1-omcfrom
Prior 10 the danc-e, there will h&lt;'
judging of (!ampnign.1.
u re&lt;,eplion for fn&lt;'ulty in tlw J)or.
STEPHEN BASS or Alph.i Ph,
Delta was presented as the •'Man othy Ha/IS Lounge. Douglas l~&gt;d r
11illllo
in the Moon." Steve. a srn 01· In mole will provtdl' ba&lt;·kgrouud
Sociology. hoJ.X'Slo go on to med­ music.
ical school next year. Ill s lratC'r1Cont1nued on Pnce 6)

(ConUnuea on Page 15)

(Su Pc.ueFiveJ

Th!' luiz)tliizhtol lh,• l"VC'nlngwill
be the l'.lV\\1llnlZ of thr l!Wi:l Mr.
Fomml Dunn1: LI"• inlt'rmissron

at midnight, Su" Chl'l'I')', Mr. F'&lt;Jr­
mal cht11rmnn wlll prt-sent Mr
Fl&lt;rm,11with a trnphy nncl his bael,...
mi: ot'gamw1io11with a plaque .
1'lw i:,rt-ollp
Pr&lt;'Sl•nling the bt•st cam
pa11(llwill also rcce,v,• an il\,·ard.
Followtni: the dance wilt ~ thr
of p;mmk1•s.
Dawn 8rl'llk!a£t
bat-011, juice . swe,;,trolls and ,·o!fl!t•
Jnn (' Goldin. l'lla irmon ot tJ1~
brN1kfast, hos arrani:ed for t·ur­
fews to be extended one houi- to
allow the ~iris to attend.
Ml.'mbersol Uw Silvt•r Ball S!('('r•
Ing Conunittee indudc- Vicki Kant·
ba t, Lois Mcnte1&lt;, ;\larg e Wagner,
Par Jacuzzo, Carolyn Dus~mg and
t;corg'° Orlando.

DebateSocietyHostsTourney;
Seventeen
NoviceTeamsCompete

Bisonhead
Holds
Panel
onReligion
By DOUGLAS GELIA
" Uni ty in Religions" was the topic that brought together member s of lhe three major
l S. religious denominations at the Bisonhead meeting on Sunday , December 8. Rabbi
:0.1.,r\i
n Goldberg of Temple Beth Zion , Father Jo se ph Can tillion of the Department of So•
rnilogy at Canis ius College; and Reverend Sherman Beattie , the Executive Director of Col­
h'l:l'~ for the Ep iscopal Diocese of Buffalo, represented the .Jewish, Roman Cat holi c, and
Protestant faiths. The panel sought to stress th ti major similarities in these three sects.
f',,111•1morlC"ralor Dr

l~"'""'I' ask,,d for a short opening
· 11"'""'n1
fr om the panelist~. Rab­
L ,,,,lrthr,g bega n by pointing out
th
!here is not hing inhere ntly
' 1• •ll", 111

"

11, 11,11

11,1d ~h,w.
1

•thrr Cantillion staled that the
m o.n conllict of our tim e ls nnt
1,,.,wrt11the three religions but be­

r,, n the-ism and atheism. He also
r,n,n1o
,ct out a new edition of the
T'" ,,h which, he said, he would be
r,,·uauJ
to use. Father Canti!Uon also
ln•·ntlu
ned that a Protestant Bible
' 11011 in use in Roman Catholic
&lt;"rourt
hes throughout England.
ilc-verend Beattie echoed Dr
'' ,l&lt;lberg·s belief In diversity . add11' ' that the uniqueness or belief in
•·h faith complement s rath er than
'lll&gt;Osesbelie.ts in other faiths . Rev-

-- -------

--

Th,· ,1•1~,nd 11la1·•
• u1111'""

fr,,m

on l'ol11•~1· 111Allllllll'&lt;'
r.1ount t 1r111
0 11.1
0: '"'' lhll'd plan· unit WII~

111d Stilli· LIll\! r"'Y tnill';!('
al
l'i;11l~IH111!h
Othor Actlvltlo1
n' l'Ol'&lt;l nr Sl'\1'11 l\'IIIS anrl !In·•···
ll l'i)illilll: \\'ti~ the· Pnllll' 11hJ1•r•f111
loss&lt;'s Thi· 1,,..,1 ,w.::oli\o' i,,, 1111 ol tJat•"H'k-l"'n&lt;I hilt nth, r n,•uv1u,•~
with ,Ill unrt,,r, ,th•&lt;I 11•('uJ'tl l•ir Uw
tiv1• r..umlx u( dt'llill•• w:i• \lu1111t
frurn ttw Sl11t&lt;· t'n"nsily
&lt;',1ll1·~•·
Bl On11•ktJ&lt;1t'I
f!uth t,•,,rn,, hat! ;,

William

a difference ol opinion
,ng Ile pointed out lhat even
n smglP group this difl&lt;'r-­
''ll&lt; •· IJPrsists. His primary example
1' 1 th,1
1 o{ the differen r"~ or op[n­
•:n :,t th e Vatican Council. Dr
', 11.th,•r'( also listed bclit'I in a
••n:,11111
m God. prayer . U1e Holy Bi­
l,! hrhcJ In Irtunortalil y and re­
)• 10 11 of materialism
as main
l•J1t11~ of unity between Christian

Last Friday anti Sotun.la) the Debat111g Suciety Wtl&gt;
host to 17 team s from 15 schools. Th e visiting debaters were
partici pating in the Third Annu al (:reat Lake s No\'ice De
bale Tournament.
The Tournament W,ts won by a te,1m of four first year
debaters fr om Co rrl('ll IJn1\'i•rsity, Ithaca, NY. Th ey had a
record uf eight w,m, a 11d two l(1sses

,

,.

4.,

Un i!m Collt•J:•' Tlw lo ·•I 11(111,11111",,
team. w1lh " IH'&lt; .n l ()f t,v,· 11 n~
and no lo,si•s wa•. tlw S1111, l 111•
vcr~ily tdl1•gp al flnwk1,or1 In
•Hk••r ,., r
addition oul!it,rnd111~'., 111

Jll"l
'St'nl&lt;•d to rh,· h)Jl
ten debaters m thr toun111
11umt.
~.
1/1..
~
n wy reprr~enll'd :- 1111(• t 'n11,·r~11y
of N,•w York at Alh.-iny C:&lt;Jmell
Univ,•rslty Mount Vnwn t'ollt·~e
LINOA L~NTHA L
Panellstt, t. to r.: 1a11mer,INtt le, C..fttfl
lell, llftlllOeiAef'I
Rcx:h rstC'r lnshtutr o f T1·t•hnolocy
also
took
pla•·e A soc:iul " ,~ twtd
State•
UmVl.'rsily
Coll&lt;'l:l'
ut
llr
o1:k
erend Beattie urged that Chri~tian "That will put us out of a job" '
Fr1dn,ywe ninR in th,, L&gt;&lt;,rotl\) liM&amp;
C.-C1ll1•1(('
groups •get together ' in their m.tSS
· The audience roaretl their approval. port anct \V(•SIJJllnSlt•r
Loung,• for tho&gt;tlmtket'fM.'T:. nnd th&lt;·
ionary work. By competing for Dr. Goldberg went on tu say that
Partlcl~tlng School•
\~sitin11 1l1•but,•rs On smurdlly
souls. he says, the non-Christian be­ although he te&lt;&gt;lsthat umty mil)'
Other schools that attended, In ad ,
morruni: thrn• was o brw,kf~kt In
coml'S confused when confronted
never come about. we must lcnrn dltion to those menuoned pn·v ious­ the Multi purpose room. SliturdnS,
with a multitude of Christion
. tlbo
to fully tolerate diUerenC'es ·n be­ ly , Wt'rt&gt; Clarion State Colleg e in ultt•moon Uwrt• was a bw111ut•t
churches.
Clari on. Pt•nnsytvani.a; Denlll&lt;&gt;n
Uni• h&lt;•ld it, th(' Multi •purpcS,• roo,11ol
At this point in the discussion, lief.
Norton. At this ttme thC' trophlH
A question directed primarily to vcrsity in Cranv,Ue. Ohio; (;eneva
Rabbi
Goldberg sugges ted that
the Christian panelu;ts asked "Why College in &amp;•aver Falls. Pennsyl• and o~r aWllJ'ds were prt •~-n.l'd '
questions f.rom the floor be arrcpt­
vania: ltha l'a ColtC'!Cl' m Itha ca
to llw \\ 1ruwrs by Gensld C:1tW►
ed. The audience responded with a • ls there such competrllon to force
Olnstianlty in non - Ch r I st I an New York; Nmgarn University . mro, pn'1.tdMltor the Dtlblltlna S.l­
wide variety of queries. When ask­
lands?" Father Cantilllon took the Nlaga l"li Falls, New York; State de ty and Linda Leventhl!.L vlC\~
ed " Will there ever be unity be­
preiident of UI( ~bating Sod t-ty.
tw~
ChriStlan and Jewish faiths , ball at this point, empltasiJina Univc.rslty College at Geneseo:
State University Coll~ at Oswego ; ond tournament 'chainnan
Or. Goldbergretorted humorously,
t1f1t·.1l1s wcr,•

�PAGEFOUR

Fridey , December 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

"DateWithShowBiz'' Success;
Ad.SatirizesU.B.CampusLife
l y NANCY LAURIEN

"A Date W1th Show Biz " cannot be reviewed es a unit
since each act was a distinct entity with its own cast, mood
and theme.
Act one was light, giddy, and frothy, having the con­
stslency of chiffon and carrying about as much weight, ithus
the alleged spirit of the twenties and keeping the audience
amused, which, after all is the aim of all enterta inment.
The e.im of acl IWO. howev11r.
was to portray &lt;.'Ampus lite . which
It did well. but using this as a
basis for hwnor was a very ditfi•
cult undertaking , since it lg most
difficult to laugh at oun.elves . and
the pelt}' imtatlon~ which make
up each day. In ()rdcr lo do this,
tint the relative unimportance or
inaccessability of ~uch thin~s as
tasty potatoes for dinner. a friendly
inlirmary or beer on cam11u.~must
be realized and seen objectively.
Tius done. one 1s able 11 laugh
at the&gt; ridiculousness of the situ•
ations. We also can &amp;'e the shal­
lowness of the pallc•mof our livlnit
which is bein~ oo well descr i bed.
in which thl' subj1•1·1()f our i:rreat•
est c'Oncem is th r obJN't of our
attentions. Wf' are jollro by thi s
realization and bored, seeing others
at:I oul s1tuahon s in which we weri,
bored. so tht• annoyance or hoth
hits us wilh doublrd force. register•
mg disromforl rather than amUS1.'­
mcnt, for we a re yi-t too rlose
tQ th('61' P"llY lhln►:5 to lau~h al

llwm.

In lhl,i ll1thl, If "A 0111t• With

A MAGICALFEATURE

BisonheadPanel
Olrist's commandment to 'Go forth
and tench all nations'. lie also
stressed the desire 10 share with
others our own ·beliefs, much the
same as an American would want
to sell others on th1• idea of di&gt;m­
ocracy as a way of life.
Christianity in non-Chrstian lo.nds?"
Father Cantillion took UJ11ball at
this point, emphasizing Christ's
commandment to 'Go for th and
teac-h all nations'. He also stressed
the desire to share with others our
own beliefs. much the same as an
American would \Vant to sr ll others
on the idea o( democracy as a way
of life .
When asked if one le11ds a relig ­
ious life only out o! rear of t.11,f
afterlife . Reverend Beattie replil'd
that there is no dlsrontinuity ln
the two lifes. He likened our relig­
ious behavior to that of a &lt;'hild. say•
Ing that the child obeys his pare nts
out of love. even though he may
be spenJcedif he disobeys. Similar­
ly, we obey God's will out orltwe
not fear o1 punishment,
The closing question. phrased by
Pt-tel' SCbool,Bi.9ollheadPresident ,
asked whether a common Bible will
ever be used by all thl'l'e religicms.
Father Cantillloo felt that Catholics
and Protenents will both use the
ame New Testament, while Dr .
. Goldberg aleo felt that common
Old Tes1ame1Jttl would someday be
in 1111eby GOtll01.(iatiaaa and.Jcwi..

II is primarily a verbal reason.
ing test, !hough 11 docs draw upon
a wid&lt;- rang&lt;' of gt•nt•ral informa­
tion . Th11 Psychology Department
h~ndles lhe administration o{ this
lt'SI locally.
Group testing is done once or
tw1ct' each term and Individuals
may lake lhe l&lt;-sl singly. Appoint •
mt,&gt;nlsmuy be made with l hc Voe&amp;•
tional Counseling Center, Ext. 3344.

Universi ,ty Co I I e g e
st u dents
wh ose last
names begin with the
letters designated be­
low will see their ad­
visers on the following
days:
Dec. 16 to 20 - M , J
Students will moire
an appointment with
Hie receptionist in Dief­
endorf 114 at least one
week in advanc e of ,the
above scheduled rtimes.
Students who do not
make t he i r appoint­
me nts at the scheduled
times will have to see
their adv:isers during
examination in Janu ­
ary and then be requir­
ed ,to registe r in Clark
Gym on Registration
Day.

Education
Methods
Criticized
By LARRY FRANKEL
Dr , Paul Goodman, author and
teacher. addre ssed the student body
Friday, Dec. 6. The top ic o( his
lecture was ''Educat:on and School­
ing.' '

Lockweed al!II H•rrlfflllll Llw ary
Regular hours through Saturday,
Dec. 21, except closed on Sunday ,
Dec. 15, at 5 p.m. for annual
Christmas C.oocert.
Sunday, Dec. 22 • SaL,Jan. 4:
Monday-Friday
8:30 a.m. -9 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-!i p.m.
Saturday
Sunday
1:00 p.m.-9 p.m.
The Lockwood Memorial Library
will be Ol&gt;f:D from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sa turday, Dec. 14, and trom 2 to
5 p.m. , Sunday, Dec. 15.
Because of preparations for U1e
annual Christmas Concert to be
presented these evenings, the Main
Reading Room will be closed. Serv •
ice will be given from the Ground
Floor Readlng Room . Access to
the catalog and bookstacks will be
provided .
The other campus libraries will
maintain their normal schedule.
Chemllhy Llllrary
Monday-Friday
8:30 a.m .•9 p.m.
9:00 a.mAi p.m.
Saturday

Engh1eerl119 Llbnry
Shttw Biz" does pl,•¥ OUI I)( !OWTI,
Monday-Friday
8:30 a.m .-5 p.m.
before an audienl'e having a grcn1.
9:00 a .mAi p.m.
Saturday
er mean chronological age who c.-an
Physi cs Library
first. remember the twenties . and
Monday-Friday
8:30 a.m.,5 p .m.
second, has forgotton th(' ~mall Ir•
9:00a.m.11).m.
Saturday
ritations of college, and can regarrl
Sunday, Jan. 5. Regular hours re­
both with les.~ pel'liOnal scnsillvity
sumed.
and more nostalgia and humor. its
Hulth SciLlw•ry
troe dramatic value ~an be better
judgrd . It's easier lo laugh al one's Friday, Dec. 20 • Wed., Jan, l
Monday-Friday
9:00 a.m.•5 p.m .
loibles tw&lt;'nly years latl'r.
Saturday
9:00 a.m.-1 p.m.
closed
Sunday
Regular hours resumeThursday,

MiUer
Analogies
TestToday
GradSchoolApplicants
-Notice
Seniors who must take the Mil•
lcrs AM.logies Test Wi part or their
application to graduate school will
want to tak e advantage of a special
group administration of lhe MAT.
Jt Will be giV~/1 today al 3 p.m
In Room 201, Townsl'fld Hall .
Therl' is a reduced fee or $2.00
for this group testing, compared
with the $4.00 fee for Individual
testing ot a later lime Anyone
planning 10 coml' for the tesl should
call Ext. 3344 beforehand, or com&lt;'
carly lo the testing room. Some
time is neroed lo pay the fee.
cornplele record forms, etc. The
actual testing timt&gt; ls limited to
50 minules.
The Millers Analogi1•s Tt•st i~
used by many graduate schools to
hl'lp wiU1 th\• S&lt;'lection of sludrnts.

Campus
Libraries
ReleaseChristmas
Vacation
Schedule

Jan. 2.
All libraries w111close at 5 on
Dec. 24 and Dec. 31, and w111be
closed on Christmas
Year's day.

and

New

"SchooUng and school suecess
little to do with cduca­
llon ," said GOQdmanin his open­
Ing remarks. "tou don 't learn ally•
thing in college l:'xcept the ract
that YoU didn't learn aeything. "

have very

Progressively since 1900 school•
Ing has gained in status and im­
portance. "The reason we have all
this schooling is Parkinson's law.
Because of ,he child labo r laws
and the excess ol labor, sc hools
opened up as baby sitting institu•
tions." The national research push
also accounts for the Increased
need for education.
"Success in school measures only
type or intelligence . For the
majorit,y of youths the school situa•
tlon is l)robabl.y an uneducatlng
t.c hnlque, (or the average as well
as the brig ht . . . A young person
grows up and does someone else's
lessons. The youth of today la .,._
coml119 an an1werl119m•chlne ."

one

On the elementary school level
tbings are not adequate either. "The
current class size o( 38 in New
York City is detrimental to educa­
tion. It forces daydreaming and
apathy ."

Or. Goodman has served on the
school board of West Side Manhat·
tan and is well aware of the exist•
Ing prob lems. Presently, he is lead­
ing a seminar for the Institute for
Policy Studies in Washington .

Our

Greyhound
For
Holiday
Rates

"At all levels of schooling educa
tion must become mon! practlrol
In universities professionals should
be brought in as teachers. Toes,•
people can make the student se,,
th problems of our society. "
Some o1Dr. Goodman's books an
Growfn, Up AltHnl , The Society
I Live 11111 MIiie, Maklnt Do, and
11le Cemm11111ty
of Scholars.

Panelists Discuss
Business Morals
A symposium on morality in busi
ness w.is held Wednesday , Dec . I
from 8:00 - 10:00 p.m. in the Con
Icrence '!'healer of Norton Hall
Sponsored by the Department of
Mar keting, it was en titled "l\loral
Constraints on Business Bebavior."
Participants were M. Emanu ~I
International Repr e­
Tabachnick,
sentative, Unit ed Auto Worker s;
Mr. Jack Connell. president, C.onax
C.o.rporation; R everend James Car
roll, Central Presbyterian Church :
and Mr. Louis Geye r, vice-presi
dent. Moog Servocontrols.

TheSPECTRUM
now printed by

Special arrangements
for G r e y h o u n d bus
transportation at very
favorable rates during
the Christmas
recess
are being made &gt;avail­
a ,b l e to s t u d e n ,t s
i•h r o u glh th e Ticket
Booth in Norton Hall .
The arrangements will
only include transporta •
tion to New York City,
Albany and possibly
Syracuse.
Those students inter­
ested in securing bus
tickets to these areas
should indica.te and reg ­
ister their travel desti­
nations at the Ticket
10:30
Booth between
a.m. and 2:30 p.m., De­
cember 16th. and 17lh.
After an inventory of
r e q u e s t s has been
taken, tickets will go on
sale December 19th.

.A/,'Joll&amp; S,..;1ip,;,./;,.'J

LOOKI

1381 KENMORE A V ENU E
(e t Det•wue)

Th. Ben

'"ioiwand
Ski
Fa.rh
Equipmnit.

Phone 876-2284
LETTERPR ESS •

OFFSET

'WIUl4.,.r.. W'ur-

C•,

3111 NIRLEIRD,
il!lftwtll

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OP1MIVD,

TP 1-lllt

PART TIME WORK
LARGENATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs.a WNI&amp;&amp; lvenlncJs;

Saturday

Requlr.ments : Able to Conve rse I t.lllgentfy
NNt Appu rence
Ability to Follow lnstrvctlone

SALARY $45.00 A WEB&lt;
Can Mr. Craig 853-0837
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CLEANING
8 lbs. to•$2.00
nt•
One-Stop Service Cante,
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PlazaShoeRepair
UNIVERSITY PlA1A

Advertisers

city."

"It Is the duty of the publi c to
educate everyone at the public e11•
peuse-maey different approaches

FREEDELIVERY
!!
TQ CAMPUS DORMSONLY

i=

Support

besi des a unl!orm school-box ide.,
may be USed," said Goodman in
advocating solutions. "Not havin g
school at all might be the best
solution: organizing kids Into edu­
cationa l clubs , The city itself might
be used as a school: a teache r
guiding the children throughout 1hr

s_i
~=--

SUBMARINES &lt;MJ
::!»'
'HOAGY'°"'
HEAYEN'
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2MA'"
~Jf i:..
:r T

E

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9:45 P.M. and 10:45 P.M.
0.-.

TF "4041

Op.\ 9 A.Jlf. • 9 P..M.

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PIIOlte-836-4808
SUNDAY D&amp;I.IVllY -

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§
.
:

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�Friday, December 13, 1963

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Proposes MarilynStelonetti-US Party
Novice
Dehalers
AlBarparCollegeFurnas
Capture
3 Awaitls
andThirdPlace $$ For Engineers Victoriousin Senate Election
Sy LlfllDALEVENTHAL

Goldberg debated the negative side
The nnlce dlwllllen fllf lht of the national proposition . They
l)ebAtl119
Soci.ty •"9nded • .,...,... also won three out of their five
nament at Harpur C:el.... en Nw .
debates . They were virtorious in
23 and tflrw .,..kw awanlt.
debates against Harvard Universi­
TIit)'., .. placed tfllrd In the COffl­ty, United States Military Acade­
petitlon of twwnty ~1.
my a,t West Point, and Bates Col­
Those attending
were Diane
lege. Their other oppone nts were
Hayes, EUen Abelson, Carl Levine
Norwich University and the Uni­
versity of Massa chusetts.
1l!ld Martin Feinrider. The total
school record was four wins and
Novlcet INn for Chlca,o
two losses. Miss Hayes and Mr.
Four novice debaten; left this
U!vine had an undefeated record
morning to attend a tournament
o( three win. Miss Abelson and
at the University of Illinois at
) Ir . Feinrider had a record of one
Navy Pier. '!'hose attendi ng are
wtn and two losses.
Hedda Beckmru1, Diane Hayes,
Miss Hayes was awarded a cer­
Raymond Major nnd Car t Levine.
tifiPate ot merit tor excellent de­
They wfll participate in si.x rounds
bating. She ranked as the top
of debate on the national proposi­
qJWaker In all of her rounds of
tion; Resolved : That the Federal
d,,h:ite. Mr. Levine and Mr. Fein­
Governm!'nt should gUarantee an
opportunity lot· high er education
ruler were awarded cer1ificates of
:1,e rit for good debating.
to all quall!ied high school gradu­
Beat Harvard, West Point
ates.
and Rutgers
WIii debate during lnterseulon
A unlt of four varsity debaters
Both novi ce and varsity divisions
allendcd the Unlverstty of Vermont
will be active &lt;luring the Inter­
11,umame nt on Nov. 22 and 23. This
session following final exams in
1s one of the largest and best
January . They ,1111attend 11 toum­
known tournaments held each year.
t1ment al Michigan Stale Univers­
This year almost three hundred
ity on Jan. 18. The eight debaters
dcb11ters participated, l'epresenting
will travel in one station wa~n
more thM seventy of the finest
with Mr . Terry Ostermeier the Di­
,k•batlng colleges In the nation.
rector of Novice Debate. The [our
Our debaters rt&gt;turned with a rec­
novice drbaters will participate in
,,rd of six wins and four losses . The
four rounds of orthodox debate .
The four varsity debaters will par­
affirma tive team of Carol Zeller
ticipate in four rounds of switch­
and Gerald Catanzaro won three
side deba tr . Tn 5'11tch,slde debatl'
uul of thei r five debates. They won
thf.' four man unit is divided into
&lt;lerisions from New York Univer­
two man teams. Each two man
;tty, Rutgers University and the
team then proceeds to &lt;ll'batc both
University of Maine . The other
sides of the position . They defend
teams they met were University
both sides of lhe proposition, by
of Vem1ont and Emerson College.
taklni:: diUerent stands in alter­
Linda Leventhal
and Russell
nate rounds of debate .

TheTtlevlllN RObviou
sly, -

at T....- """hwy hu Ml akwanl INII •M41f It!
IMl1a T.V., ftlett In the 4111rti
fllf,._ nftht.

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas. · pres ident
of State University at Buffalo and
chairman of the National Defense
Science Board . recommended that
the New York State legislatun: ap­
propriate funds aimed 111 upgrad­
ing obsolescc:mt engineers .
The former assistant SC"Cretaryof
defense under EiS('nhoWl'r. spokeat
a panel on " Continuing Education :
A Stimulus for Engineering and
Science. "November seventh and
eighth , al Columbia University .
Dr . Furnas ,who is also ct1alr•
man 9f thr New York State's Ad­
visory Counril for the Advancement
or Industrial Rest'nrch and Develop.
meal. ret'Ommrndt'd that the legls­
lature sancHon a pilot projrt't
whi&lt;-h would linan &lt;'e SpN'i81 ron­
tinuing \'&lt;llwalion t·t1urscs tor engi­
neers a nd /;C1('nlu11s" 1n somr st-'­
lecH•d New York Slat&lt;• industrial
area within the n,,xt r11l1•m
h•r

1

1

TYPING

MRS. SOLOWAY
11N.D .....
~w:n,

-

WANT
A cAREER1N

JuneQftads
-

BANKING?

BANK
EXAMINER
AIDES

I

T'"" p.,_.. Thell, . un.,
LOW,a,c•s

The scat gave U.S. a 4-l margin
in the scats d,-cides in the Fall
now has only one more elected
representntivc on the Scnnlc than
Unitt'&lt;l Student; . The l'Ount being
14-13 with 2 lndt•J)l•ndcnts .

Ell•t·tions Chairn1/ln, Bob Pach­
olski , ln t'Omml'ntin~ on the ekc­
tlon stnlN:I "Thi' turnout of 299
year ,"
was much ht•lll'I' 1hn11 I r&gt;l&lt;
P&lt;'&lt;'led
Dr. Furnu s ,,m ph11si1l'd tha t lh•• ill re~pc,·t tc.1 tlw lilrl thnt 1hr day
cnginN•r who graduatt'&lt;l from ,·ol­ I)( ,,Jl'l'lion wns i;o badly 11l11rl'&lt;I
lci:c lron1 trn 10 forty y1•11rsui:o rlAht afl&lt;'r Thanks1,•wing t,,,·l'ss,"
li e tu!dr d , "T he 1tlt•o of mid-day
and has nol kepi up with his fil'ld
may not l'l'en undt'rs1and wh11It111• t'OUnls ,vork c•d c\UI very well bl'­
1wl'nl gradnnte~ arc tnlkmg nbout. &lt;'lt\Lse lh&lt;'Y afford u~ ;1 1·hnnt'" lo
stu ny th,, tn•mls of 111,
, ,,1,•l'llnn hut
Yet, many of lht..\;;t, own nn cngi•
nt•crmg mnm1gC'rs who mu.sl supr• nllf'r this ,•amp.lil','11 I r,•ahzr tht.\l, ,
more st,,ps must ti,, lltl&lt;t'n lv In•
vise young engme,•ri ni: s 1afls
Dr. Furna~ fl.'flls lhat "ti is un­ Sllrl' 111orr prh Ill')' [Ot (ll'Ol)I&lt;' llS
• hallo!~ I\ h,•11vuttng
rcalistk lo ~XJ)l'\'I lhc lndivi(!unl thry e,tsl th1•i1
rna,·him•~ lll 'I' nut u~1•il."
recipil'nts of this type or rt'-educu­
lion to t-ontrihult' finnndn lly " a nd
Mr I •arhol:;kt .ilsu p1't•s,•nt,&gt;d a
that joint lnduslry -govl' rrmwnt fin­
rt•porl tm th&lt;' prc~enl ,\lhwall on.i Sf't
ancing is thP best unswe r.
Re!,•rr in.; lo hi, sugges tion for a up under lh,• prrst•nl C'onstltuti on
New York Slate pilol project hr Thr r•'llOl't wa~ a r&lt;'sult o( a
•11l\)' th•• 1'1\lll•
snid . " Th P et&lt;&gt;nomil' pay-0U would month 's inv,,slii.11li&lt;
mlllc•"
not be immediat(• , but lf surh u
pro gram were effoc11vdy pur~urd.
Som" of lhl' v11lKl11mh
n~ r,,~ults
and then extended. the even tual 1\'t'rl' as loll,1ws:
dividends would be lrcnwndous"
1 At prl•s,•nt 11ntl,,r our Consll lu•
"'One should not h&lt;' &lt;lvcrly t·riti­ lion S&lt;'lUp. th&lt;'rf' ur,- error~ In n11r11
.
m l of our Empire Stal e but when
her of s!'ats :illotwd ll• Arts &amp; :'i&lt;•t·
he t'Ontem plat es the ' major rxpen­
c•n&lt;'&lt;'S
. Nursm g Sr hool, Etlucation
dlturcs and the impa,• l ot t.he ,·on­
and the Mrdkal T&lt;&gt;l'hnoloi:y pro
HnUing education t·enlcrs !or some
.:-rams. Dur lo ,i misintl'rprctatlon
of the µroft•ssions at such w,iver ­
of la.~I y.,;U''s rigums from thr Ad·
sities as Minnesota . Wisconsin .
missions Offit'I' thr~c- l"rmrs OI'·
the University of California at Los
l'Ul'rrd
Angeles and Mil'hlgan Slatr , he
cannot help but won&lt;ler If wr Nvw
2, A rl'vi1•1, of Jiu• very all,k' U·
Yorkers rlo nol hav&lt;' a bit of 1·11.t&lt;'h·lions sysw1n ,tsPlf shows an mmn­
ing-up 10 do."
sist, •nt allurallon or ~rats p,•r num ­
"The tinws call ror unprN~l-&lt;I• lwr of slUl'l&lt;.'01'
' whwh P;\USt'SOV&lt;'r
ent&lt;&gt;c
l rlim .•I a('t1on Wt• ha, ·c nol r,•prt'scnlaltnn lnr somt• divis ions in
loni;: to talk ilbolll ii Ill il'0II ii oul.
l'l'SP&lt;'d lo fl l hl'rS.
. Our na.
WP mLst hrAin tu 111c.1w
3 Tht•rt· Sf'l'ffiS lo be•an lnt'Onsls­
lion's secu rity - our futurt' IL~ an kru•y III thr franc·hl,ernrnt r,al!rrn
economkally
socially and motrr­
·
with tht&gt; most outstanding (al'\ IJ1.•
ially hcalthy stat" and nation - dt'­ lnii lliat sophs 111ov111g
tr, srnlor Ill
pl'nd upon our graspm~ thr signi­ vision 1·1111run hut nut vol&lt;' m th1'1r
ficant points oJ ,ill 11e know lod:t_y~ SC'nior 1,ltvisions
all wr 11~11know tomorrow . and
Mr. Pn l•holski nill&lt;'d, "Now that
bringin g this body or knowlt.'dgc to
mpi l'tcd this invcsliga­
bear on the problt'rm o( man kind. we haw C.'O
Everyon e has a slake in this. And. lfon, we hope lo move on lo mak~
hopefully , in this confere nee, a t this sus:gcs tions f.or corrrc ting thi s sit ­
time , we can go uhout taki ni: lhl' uation." hi' added. "We also hOJ)('
k the a ctual proc l'SS out and
first steps toward this fulfiUmen1." to che&lt;&gt;
Other keynote figur es al thl' c-on­ Inquire al other schools l'On&lt;·erning
fereol'e includf'd Malcolm Wilson. their procC'sses. so we can improve
Lt. Governor , and Keith S. McHugh . ours and make it smoother."
NYS Commissioner of Comml'rce.
The meeting was ~ponso~
by
the Advisory Council for lhl' Ad­
vancement of Industrial ReS&lt;'0J'ch
and development in New York
State , in 1..'00pe
ration with Columbia
University .

PanHelWitl Hold
InformalGet-T
ogethers
The Pan Hellenic Council will
hold two informal get-togethers for
the benellt of all int erested donn
and commuting Freshman
and
Transter students. Al this time,
al) questions concerning sorority
Ille rnay be raised and ' will be an­
swered by the delegates .
The llleeting for the commuting
studenl8 will be held In Norton
Union from 3:00 to 5:00 on Decem•
her 16, while the dorm student's
meeting will be in Goodyear from
7:~9:00 on December 17. Re­
freshme nts Will be served Md In­
formal attire Ill appropriate .

Marilyn Stefonetti of t·he United Students panty de•
featecl M,ark Edelstein of Campus Alliance in the December
2nd election to replace an open U.C. seat on the Senate .
Miss Stefonetti polled 158 votes to Mr. Edelstein's 141 votes
as 299 were cast all in all .
Mid-day counts found the candidates tied at 55.55 at
noon and Mr. Edelstein was ahead 103-83 at 3:00 when a
count was taken . However Miss Stefonettl came back in
a late hour resurgence to poll 75 of ,the 113 vote in the last
three hours of voting . This 75-38 margin gave her the ;m.
petu s to overcome the early lead that Mr . Edelstein had.

l

SALARY s5,5QQ
hn r,

~

• LIBERAL FRINGE BENEFITS WHILE YOU TRAIN
• PROMOTIONOPPORTUNITIESTO OVER$20 ,000
►

NO EXPERIENCENEEDED ◄

Just file your application by Jan. 6, 1964
to start your career July 1. 1964

THESAFE
WAY
to stay alert
withoutharmful
stimulants
NoDoz keepe you mentally
alert with the aame eafe re­
fresher foUDd in coffee and
tea . Yet NoDoz ia fa1ter ,
bandier, more reliable. Abeo­
lutt,ly not babi-t•fo
in ,

Next time IDODOtony ma.kee
you feel drowlly while driving,
working or lltudying, do ae
million&amp; do ... perk up with
lllfe, effective Nol&gt;os tablet.a.
AIIIC!lfrft•

'

--~

FOIi fUIIT!fER IN,OIIMATlOH flLL IN COUl'OH SCLOW AHO
MAIL TO

NEWYORISTATE
BANIINI
DEPARTMENT

-I

rHSOIUlllOfflC(, UIOCIMIICM
mm.

1: .....__
l'ft(Hl

1ft yon, .. '· ,.,

�Friday, December 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

iFine Arts Committee Film
'RaisinInTheSun';PotierStar

Mr.Formal
Candidates
(C,mtJnued

from Paae l)

mty brothers rhoosc- his rampaign
becaus&lt;' thf.'y ff.'11It would I,(' orig­
i.rial and rompatibl&lt;' with his &lt;'har­
acter .
Tht•ln Chi frntemity's randidate,
REED CHESWORTH, is a senior 'in
Busines.~ SJ')ecilil!21n1:In lnctustrial
Rrlat 10ns.Be&lt;:nw;e.IJ,i~.
~thers te~I
that &amp;'t'&lt;l posseasrs a)I the attrio­
utc~ n('(:essa_ry to qualify for M .
Formal , they choos,, the cnmpaiJm
of "Thi! Moclrl Mnn."
RONALD CHRTSTOPI-IER.Arnold
Air Society's &lt;'nndidnt e ls a senior

majoring in Psycholoro,. His many
aetivltles . such as skiing, Dying ,
sailing , and bowling , make Ron "A
Man of Many Moods."

Sigma Al(iha Mu's candidate.
RICHARD GOLDBAUM, is a senior
majoring in InduslTial Relations .
Through s1•hool politics. sports , and
a well-rounded social life , Rieb
knows "The Good ure."
TERRY KOEPSELL oJ Phi Kop­
pa Psi, i$ a senior in Political Sci­
ence.Tercy Is billed as "The Trav­
eling Man" because of his interest
m seeing new places and meeting
new people.

BRUCE SAHRBECK, Sigma Phi
Epsilon's candidate , is a junior maj­
ming In math. He plans to go to
Dental School alter graduation.
Bruce , ''The Seaside Sophisticate",
lives on the Atlantic coast where he
spends summers as a life guard.

Thursday, the Fine Arts' Film
COmmlttee will show A RAISIN
IN THE SUN in the Norton Union
Conference Theatre. The film will '
be presented at 12 noon, 3, 5: 30,
and 8 p.m. A RAISIN IN THE
Alpha Sigma Ph! hos chosen JO­ SUN was produced by David Suss­
SEPH TURRI as their candidate. kind and Philip Rose, and direct­
ed by Daniel Petrie. The cast con­
Joe is a junior , majoring in Psy­
chology , who also plans to go on to tains Sidney Poitier , Claudia Mc­
Dental Schol. His brothers chose Neil, and Ruby Dee.
"Pal Joey" as their lhen,e bPcause
Lorraine Hansberry wrote the
it fit with their candidate's name ,
his ea.,;y.going natur &lt;', and bis ser­ screenplay ror this moving drama
iousness in attaining the goals he adapted from her own Orama
winning
Critics
Circle
Award
bas set for himselJ .
Broadway . production.
The prin­
cipal playC'rs are from the original
cast . The story ifi one of humor ,
turmoil
and
pathos
revolving
around a Negro family, the Young­
ers, living in th.rec crowded SID1•
less rooms on Chicago's South Side.
The squalid routine of their lives
is sudden ly disrupted when Lena
Younger receives a $10,000 check
from the company that insUTcd he r
husband. The resulting dissention
over disposition of the money re-

-.

I

-

...

RONALDCHRISTOPHER

REED CHESWORTM

RICHARDGOLDIAUM

suJls In sinewy character study •
that comes closer than any previ ­
Ollll film t o define the Negro point
of view.
New York Herald Tribune said
of the film, "If you see no othe r
picture this year, this is the one
you ought to see. . . . Few films
put so much humor and such fierc e
drama together so sul'cessfully and
the acting is remarkable."
New York Times commented
"The performers are all fine, sen•
sitive actors who have the intuitio11
to convey what is going on in the
hearts ol its Negro character .
th roug h their hands, thei r feet,
their lips and mosUy their eyes.
What is more - and most impor ­
tant - they can make Miss Han.~­
berry's simple , telling words carry
lhe heart-piercing
eloquence of
poetry or the bloodletting slash of
knives."
Those who desire to see the film
WIIL HAVE TO OBTAIN TICK­
ETS whlch will be available fro m
Monday until this Thursday . No
cha rg e will be required.

Study Scholarships

Foreign

LBJSponsoredLegislation
The East-West Center graduate
scholarships - considered one of
the leadlng grants available in
Asian and Paci.fie area and Ian•
guage studies - are being offered
again to American students.

B. Johnson

Lyndon

President

sponsored legislation

JOSEPH ru•1t1

BRUCESAHRBECK

TERRY KOEPSIL

Applications for the 100 scholar­
ships otte red for 1964must be sub­
mitted a soson as possib le. Dead­
line is Jan. 1, 1964.
These expense-pa.Id scholarships,
each valued at about $8,500, in•
eludes round-trip travel costs and
a small personal allowance.

Schussmeislers
GelGood
Turn-Out
Another
Smash
YearIsForecast
Good ne ws ror all schussers and
ski bunnies. lh&lt;' word is " trat 'k.
down the fall line'" The snow is
here nnd everyone is ready to
hl!ad oul for thr slopes. thr Sl'hus­
smeisters included, The 'l'hur.,da y
nl,::ht trips to Glenwood Acres ha Vt'
bt!j::un tor the 1963-&amp;Iski sell1i0n.

December 16 at 7:00 p,m. for those
interested in going on the long trip
over Interse ssion. 13(' on the look­
out for posters announcing the
whereabouts or the mroting this
week .

Did you kno\i that Buffalo and
its suburbs have mere resident ski­
Tht&gt; buses leave campu s at 5:00 ers than nny other city in the coun­
p.m . from in front or Norton Hall
try? Did you know that Westem
and return around 1h00: this allows
New Yorlt is one of the fastest
us approximately thrc-e hours of
growing ski areas in the nation?
solid skiing utsl week then• we-re Do you ~aliw that you n!tend the
three buSt&gt;s. Ihis Wf.'Ckthere were
school who backs the lar gest ski
four. Memb&lt;'rs wi~hing to go oul
r lub b&lt;.&gt;longingto the U.S.E,/1,S.A.
on Thursd ay night should sign up
t Unitl'&lt;I Stat es Eastl• rn Amateur
in Norton 225 on Monday and TU&lt;'S· Ski Associa tion&gt;? Did you know
dt\Y prececding the Thursday lhc•y that some or Bullalo'.; dis&lt;' jo&lt;'keys
wish 10 make tlw tri p. It is ne1:!'s• are avid skiers? Did you know
sary to have your membership card
thut last year's ski team sponsor ed
on hand when you sign up. TI1ert' by the dub niadl' the news of one
are tickets issurd for ,•ac·h trip oul
or New York City 's larges t news­
to the area
papers? Bet you didn't'
Announcem rnrs about the &amp;huss­
~ heard
over WBFO. the 1·wnpus radio sta­
tion. on Monclays nt :&gt;;()() p.m and
uvc•r WGR Ski R,•port al 5·55 p,m
Ski R!'port will ~ interviewing one
of the dub's members m, the near
tutlire t-onrerning the club 's doings.
TI1ere will b(• a mN.'lmg Monday

meislers' activities may

Many thanks 10 !he person who
out of !hi' klndne.;s of his heart
and his grt&gt;al desirr to ski. did that
snow danrl' IL workc-d rather well.
Merry Christma~ follow sk!C'rs.
See you around th,• slopes l'Ome
January when we ar,, all bat•k in
Big B.
Ski-Ifoil'

COMPLETELUG
&lt;iAG~ end
LEATHE
R GOODS STORE

A'ITACHECASES,BRIEFCASES,
HANDBAGSand GlFTS
CompleteSelectionsof Name Brand Luggage
CotlMty Disceoumto Unh-emty Fae111tty
olkl Shdenb
3400 MAIM snaT
-.__..
ua,

TFJ.1600
Q,M
·,..., ,..,. _.... ,........,
... ,.M.

establishing
th e Center, a national educational
institution localed on lhe Univer­
sity of Hawaii campus and affili­
ated with other institutions in
Asia, the Pacific area and ffie
United States.

SURE!

American students will engage in
Asian or Pacitic Islands' studi es
offered by the University of Ha­
waii, long noted for these fields
Students will augment their studi es
during the most unique part of the
Cente r grant - a ,three to six­
months field study in an Asian or
Pacific area.
Grantees from the U.S. will join
students from 27 A1ian and Pacib l'
countries in cultural and social ac­
tivities, as welt as in regular class­
room studies.
Other Center institutes provid e
interchanges for technical parti ci­
pants and for advanced senior

scholars-in-residence.
Full information and applicati on
forms may be. obtained by writin g
Director of Selection, lnstitute tor
Student
Interchange,
East-\VPst
Center, c/o University of Haw~ii.
Honolulu, Hawaii (96822).

YOU CAN PICK UP YOUR
AIRLINETICKETSAT

TAYLORTRAYS. SBlVICE, INC.

STEVE IASS

3588 MAIN-Next to University Plaza
HOUSE FOR SALE
Wln41enntire •■lvil .

3 Nd l"Nftl, 1½ kltt ,, eeparale
illnlnt ,_
,
Call TF U342 .

a"ac""
..,....,

y

If ,_ .. ,. alrudy mNe yew .....,,,affotl with
Ille Alrti.., ,- fflll'Y,klc up ,tlcbt hire
•
Mft a tn, 19 ffle Statler er Ille Al r,o,t

y'

W• wtll fflllke yo ur l'eNrVlltioN hr yev and
funl llh Ille tic..._

o•

NO EXTRA CHARGE .•• THE FARE IS THE SAME

GORGE
TRAVB. BUREAU
819 Millerspor t Highway
GROVER CL EV ELAND PLAZA

837-4244

FOR WOMENONLY!
Are You Readyfor Clvistmas?
\~n
6,itJP&gt;T

ftlan • day at ltte TARTAN SHOP to do yo~•

/11/~

gilt and pert011
a l shopping

WANTED: Niagara Falls Driver
return three children from

(

Many Exciting Gifts and Beautiful Clothr•
To Make Your Holidays the Merrie $!

to

Buffalo S&lt;hool to Niagara Fall,
after 3:30 p.m., Monday-Friday.
Payment wlll be provided. Call

TR 5-4947.

Graduate Students
ROOM AVAILABLE

COME AND SEE I

5426 Main St.

NF 2-6060

Y,
Open
Day
10 11.m.
to 9 p.m
_________ Willlam, vllle, N._.....,,.,..,.,.
___ Everythm
Dec.
23rd _....,
,.,,,,,,.,.

ON ... RAIN CO ATS AND
OTHER W INTER COATS

with separate room tC1b&lt;' used
as a study lounge ,
Refrigerator and dehum idifier
furnished . Breakfast privileges
only; llnefls provided : ver)' rea ­
sonrtble rent.

Call MRS. GLUCK
TF 8-2486

3 139 BAILEY At Amherst
Open: Mon., Tues. , Wed,. Sat,-t:JO

Phone 833,9395

A.M. $: :IOP.M.
Thul"I., Frl .- t :,O • f :00 P .M.

�Friday, December 13, 1963

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTllUM

Pres. FurnasHolds Reception
In Honorol Promoted Faculty

College Newspapers
Remove Cigarette Ads

Wlll!Am C. Stra~s,'r Jr :1Ml~t.111f
d('nn and ass1stRnt proli'~sor l'11l•
lc1:1•of Art~ and &amp;u•nt•t•s: Addl1• II
IJ NAIHUflT Hlffl.lNNll
Lanti, dlt~'l.'IOr Program~ HI fllt lll't'
Cig~ette _co~panies _h,ave discontinued all advertising in college newspapers . The
Education · and Eduratlonal foun
cause of this action JS th e nsmg concern about the link between cigarett e smoking and can­
dat fons; Cror ~e E. Hollow11y
. dm&gt;t'
rer.
tor, 'Programs in E&lt;iucil,liona
l A(t .
. The. Grand Prix contest, the sample packs passed out in the cafeterias, and the fun
ministration; and Robert H R~~­
of disc~verm g t hat Br ~nd X really was worse - au have vanished since the cigarette indus­
herg, direc1or. Program.; an Edu
try dee1ded that smoking should be kept an adult custom.
catiornil Psyl.'hology, GutdRnl.'cand
Invitations h11vralso lx-t&gt;nl"Xtcnd­ Counsd ln~. ~'\•Al\11\IIM
. MN1~11c,••
The result has been that mllJIY
cd to members or thr ~an•~ C'oun• mf'nt and R esMr&lt;'h
student newspapers are having
ell and their wives, essi~tant ,•iC'e­
trouble making ends meet. Bills for
presidents and thrir wiv,•$, and
their ads ran as hlgh as 200million
Al,cJ. Chorlrs M f'o!(el proft•'l.~Or
ml'mbers or 1hr Prt&gt;sdl'nl's ortin• ot 1•11
dollars and this loss fs a hard one
111cngin()t'rini;:: Louis A Drl­
start.
to make up. Undoubtedly many col­
Co110. pt,ofrssor of law: Adolpf J
lrgc newspapers will have to dip
Ilomburgrr . prolessor of law; Lor­
GU!'SIS of hon,r inrludc: Ors. ntnr l\l . Cook, n~so&lt;'iffll' professor
into student fees or drastically cut
Robert Ari~~. a:&lt;SOt
111t,·prolrs.mr or of socml Wl'lfnre; Frnnk J . Hod~e~
down the size of their papers in
· o( ossodaft· professor of s0\.'1al wt•I•
pbysil's; Ira S. Coh1111prorc•:,so1
order to keep their costs in line.
psyclK&gt;logy; Frank A. D'At'l'OnC', rarp; Th,'()flon• .I Sirkmann a.s~oAccording to Larry Singer. Busi­
essoriatr prdcssor or musk: Char­ 1•1111r
dtr&lt;',•for of thr Unl\'('r~it&gt;·of
nrss Manager .of The S,.Ctrvm , the
les II. Ebert , profc,ssor nnd l'hair­ Ruftalo t"11umf1.1l!•m:
Wllli11111
J E,•.
newspaper has lost $600in cig-drette
fes..SQrof 1'11cnnstry; Shin Moser. Pfl'll &lt;h1•,·,·rm·of 11lu111ni
r,,111
11on~;
udvertlsing receipts compared to
man, Llt•partmrnt of G1'0graphy: 11ndL&lt;'OSmlll prolt'SS()!' 0 1 mu~!(',
last year. This money has bNtl
PNrr T. Lansbury, assoc1a1t, pr1&gt;­
milldeup by other accounts but at
associatt• 11rofossor of philosophy:
Also. llrs. lllmald R. Dl•1•k1•t1111the same time, with the rapid ex­
Jan ws D. O'Rnurkf'. :isslstnnt 1l1•an. sistnnl d('llll of the :\kdlt'III Sehool
pansion of The Spectrum addltionCollrgl' or i\r 1s and Sdcnc ,,s. and for St11ch•nrAffall'li; Mnr\'in L.
111revenue has had to be solicited.
associatt• 1m1tcssor of chC'nnstry: Bloom, asstX•mtt• d1•a11of lh1• Mrd•·
The issue of cigarette advertising
Myl(';; Slr1Un.'1SS(l&lt;'llllP 11\•an,Col• t'r\l Srhool for Post Gruduntr E(lu,
started before the reeent decision.
l~gl"of Arts and Sdl'n&lt;'1•sand a~so­ £'1.1.twn;I lul\&gt;ld Brooy pr&lt;&gt;flossorof
Main Evenh, the evening newspa­
c-11111•
llrl)f('S.&lt;;(lr
or dlt'ntl~lry; My\('S a11111omy;
Ru~•,..I i,; Jlay,,, ,,,..,,.,,
Jlt'r at CCNY and other college pa­
Sl/11111,1sscwm11,tl1•.1n,l'oll1•i.:1•&lt;ii sor or :111111,11111,
n.111,1 ·1 Knn1.0n
p,•rs had decided to stop using cig­
Arts 11n1!.St•11•n,•,·•·,rn,t Joh11 F. profPsMI' .,, (tt'llilltl'll'~;
Eu1:1•n('J
arette ads last year. Many notable
S111
rr a~son:111•111~11,,s;m·of hu,lo­ LiJ&gt;ps~•hut1 1m1lt•••or 111 nw1lu-1m·
m1thorities. including the science
A)i ,
·r 11,,,~t11r1•
11 Nrn•hl'&lt;'II ilS!;Ot'l/111'
editor of the New York Herald Tri• 1
prut,·,,or 111 111rlt1nni•; ,harks \"
buneand the New York City Health
Also llrs Si,uon rtot1&lt;•nl11•r1:
, dmn
l ':11mm,Jh :1,,U('lllh• 111\lr,,'&lt;.S(lrur
Ocpartment of.ficials praised their
of S&lt;"ht~&gt;I
of Bu,.tnrs., Allminis11·a­ phy'lolui.:). 1&lt;1'11li
,. \".tnl't' a,.;u.
i&gt;llorts.
t1on: Knslian S. l'aldu as.&lt;;()(•11111't'l;it,• Pl'lll"~,;i,r ol nwdtrtn&lt;'; Will
profossor or n1ark••tiru:; Nalh11n ar&lt;I B. ~:l11rlll a~'&lt;lwial,.pro{cs.s,if
An editorial In the City College
Bm·k. 11mr..s,or tlf pharma&lt;'ology: &lt;lf h1t11i11•1rnxi, l. t01r1• \' Mag=
IJllper explained that because cig1\lith cancer and because ads seemRoswell Park Memorial Institute . 000 of today's school children will Howard J. S1•h11rrrr 11roft'ssor of n~S&lt;Winf••prnl,·s,or ul suri;:,•ry.uro
1-J to indicate that smoking was
logy: amt \\'tl11umJ. O'C1mnor d1•
besides sponsoring a Stop Smoking develop lung ('nm·er in !hi' next 70 nu-didnul d11•111istry; All!-n Jt
1,rofrs.sor and 1h­ r&lt;'rfor. llniv••1·k1t&gt;
vi Buff:1l11rout\•
"h~altslul", "joyous" and "appet­
Clinic, which has a waiting list years lf thl' present trend oonhn­ Kuntz, assoc-11111•
reNor &lt;•1!-itud,•nl Tc-sling CL'nkr; dation
iiing",
they would discontinue right now of over 011e year. s also ues.
them. In the same issue were five experimenting with tobaccoless cig­
3. Il a marrit.&gt;d couple who are
arettes. Last year the Institut e re­ each one pack a day smokers would
pages devoted to the conclusion that
moved all cigarette mach1nes from deposit in the bank the money they
smoking is a factor in lung cancer.
Following the example of the cig­ the premises in accordance with ii$ spend on tobacco, by their 60th
arette industry the Air Force has
avowed desire to cure cant·er rath ­ birthday they would have acr umu­
stopped putting cigarettes in flight er than prom ote Its occurance.
latcd $17.8.54.09.
The stand taken by cigarette
4. In 1961, the cigarette industry
hmches, the Florida State Supreme
Court has ruled that cigarette com­ companies is st ill that the retation­ spent $171 million for advertising.
shlp behveen smoking 1ind lung approximnkly om•-h1dfmillion dol­
panies are libel for health defects
In Just II f11w wreks. 1·csPa.rchcrs nf l'hl i,:p~lh,n l'l ll'hi('h ,IISO Ill•
lars o day. America11smokers paid
due to smoking. and California issu­ cancer, is merely one of statistics.
P111•k M1•morioitn.stitutr
1°l11tl1'~
work ut th,• Vt•ll'ran's Hoi,
ed the following statement in a 56- and docs not yet constitute proof $45-50 in foderal and state tob.1c·ro at Ro~'W&lt;'II
111tal r,111Bailr•y Aw11u1: It ,~
page report ; The "evidence now that their product cnuses the dis­ taxes in 1960. a total of $2.125.000.· will hl'gin biulog1t•11tinwstigauon
with the rt&gt;c•c•ntlytl1•v1•lop('l!non­ throui:th pmJl'l'IS hk,• !his on~. th/II
indicates that cigarette smokl,ng ease . Until there is proof satis fac­ 000.
of the 1-nhr&lt;.&gt;
Uni
5. The 1961 deal rail' from tun~ toi.:a1·1•0dgarPlt&lt;•. Phi Epsilon Pi, the rrp111,1tio11
has such a profoundly har mful ef­ tory to them, they will accept no
hM h, ,•n 11rlivC'1n !111~wry im()Or• wr.11ty ~hnll bl• ,•nhunc·ro
&lt;•ancer is eight times higher than
chargeS'.
fect on health that it should be
/I! l'/1 llf N'kl':tl"l'II
the t'Orresponding rate ror 1931-33
. 1111\t
abandoned."
Facts and Figures
6. Annual lung l'MCPr death ratr-s
1. Last year Americans spent
Methods are now being studied
C:wry tl11y lot twu munth~ a
were ten tlm&lt;.&gt;sas high among
to promote an anti-smoking indus­ nearly $6,9000,000.000
foe cigarettes
regular smoker~ ,1s among th~&gt;sr i,'l'flt1Pn( fru1r,•• w,•111fo 1111'ln•ti·
try. Besides a great deal of litera• and con,c;umed199.2 packs per per­
lutrvol1111f,•1•1.,.
to l'Oll1•1•t.1lcy,
lure, Items such as "Ban-Smoke" son, a total of 528 billion &lt;-igarettes. who never smokrd. Amort!! two­ :1n!l 11ri,1wir.·th&lt;· lt•1111('~ tor r,qwr
Graduate Programs
chewing gum, "Nikoban" and "Ban­
2. Approximately 5.000 teen-agers pack a day smok11rs the rale was ime11t111io11.
Ur Cc•ori.:,• J,;. Moore•,
leading to
tron" are available at low prices. start smoking each day; by twelf­ more than twenty limes as ~igh.
of l{fJswrll Park Institute,
Statistics l'Oniirmrd by Rosw&lt;•ll dm••·H.1r
Ph11rmacists agree, however, that th grade, hall or the students are
sli,1t•d111a ll'l11•rto Phi Epsilon Pi,
M
aster
of Science
the answer ls still will power more habitual smokers. The American Memorial Park lnsti1ut!' and Aml'r- ''Wllho111your hl'lp, this pro1,,'l'lHll
than anything else.
Cancer Society predicts that 1,000,- 1can Cnnrer Society.
would huve uni 'i:01tr11 it~ 1•~c·clk&gt;nt Degree with •~clalb&amp;JIC&gt;n
In
bt•gi11n1111:
nor th,• 1111111•t11,
n(•t•r,.
.~111-y to ,.,,, 1·~ ,1 llll\lllA"h to ,~,m­
ptt-11011
.··
Sim·,, wr do m,1 Y"t know
· The General Grounds
1 ,Jc,hmtely whc•th,•r01• 1101 this """
Committee of the Stu
Ind
non,tohacco ,•t~arrllr will be non­
dent Senat e wishes t o
produ&lt;·m.:or ac('1•1Hnblrto
r e m i n d organizations ' l'llncrr
th,• srnok1•r, wr must romhJt'f i·i&lt;•
l'wu alumn gatherings have been the first step in establi$hing zone
running Mr. Formal
tensiw• laborlltory lt·s ls . IIOWPVl'r,
alumni clubs throughout Western
111•111
this month by the General
candidates that all out­
valuable&gt; tnfom111t1onwill h&lt;• n•
llumni Beard under the sponsor­ New York.
door advertising materi•
i'C'l\l~!lfron. u ,·ontpanson ol tht•
SEASONS BEGIN
A "Meet the Professor" luncheon
,111po( the University of Buffalo
FEBRUARYandSEPTE
MIER
al must be removed
ch1•m1calpro1w111f•, Rnrl hiological
was held Dec. 11 al noon in !he
t ..undalion.
from the campus by
' a(·tivity of nun-toba(·eu smoke with Course 1s d1•s1!mcdto prepare
Butralo Athletil' Club. The spc11kcr
~raduate phornmdsts for posi­
Iha! of tobat&lt;'O srnoke."
Tuesday, Dec. 17.
,In Alumni Family Night was was Dr. Katherine F. Thom . dirc&lt;:­
tions of r&lt;'sponsib1lityand leader­
Thi~
volunt•'&lt;'I'
w11rk
•~
onr
part
tor
cl
the
Spee&lt;:h
and
Hearing
Clin­
h&lt;'ld Thursday. Dec. Sat Eduardo's
ship 1n manag..,nrnt. rnurketing,
of tlw Community .S1•rv1r,·projrct
ic at the University. These lunch•
l&lt;Pstaurant, for alumni residing in
selling and l'\'s&lt;.&gt;arrh m pimr­
eon.~
are
be:ng
held
th1•
second
'""lat ZOnl.'S14. 15 and 16. Dr.
macl'u'\.wnl, rosm!ltie and relat­
Wednesday ol &lt;'Very month os a
P1,·h1trd A. Siggelkow, dean of stu­
ro l11dus1ril"~
In th&lt;· wh&lt;)lf'311.liru:
servict• lo Univefsi(y alumni uc
,1..111sdi,c-usscd "You and Your
W1d retailing of th&lt;' &lt;1n1i-:
rru~:
111 prepar.1llnn tor trnrhlnll of 1
'-unday Comic Page ."
cording to J. Willi\lm Everett di•
THE W6'RLD'SFAMOUS YMCA/NVtrES
pharrnat•y adnuni~trnllon; ontl
rector of alumni rt-latitms,
The Alumni Family Nights are
YOU ro ,rs HOL/OAy PROORAMS
In the adn111\i\tr,1hon of th1· hOtS
£veryfacility for yourcom­
Dltul 11lu1nn11cy
fort Inonebuildln&amp;-laundry,
Admfaawn for muiriculatcd
e1feterl1 and coff11 shop,
(/rlu1U4testudeni.. •t limited
barber, checkln
i service, TV
to those who posse,u 8 S
room, newsstand and tailor
In Phannac11 dear,1.,
Reason,blerllll$:
President and Mrs. Clif{ord C.
give a ret'eptlon Sun­
day, in honor ol full-time aca•
demlc and administr ative pcl"
sonnel who hnvl' bct-n promotl'd
with tl"nure this yea r. The receJ&gt;­
tion wlll be held from 3:00 until
5:00 p.m. in Goodyl•ar H111lon thl'
l'ampus.

F)Jrnas will

0

Phi EpsilonPi Aids Roswell Park
Non - Tobacco Cigaret te Developed

0

u,

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
HOSPI
TALPHARMACY
ADMINISTRATIO

Alumni Board Holds Programs:
''Family Night'' ''Meet the Professor"

RENT
A 21 INCHTV

s7e50PERMONTH
'-!:) OTHER EXPENSES-IMMEDIATE

REPAIRS FREE I

E-Z TV REN TAL

1 W. GENESEE

WELCOME

TO

Slngte- S2.75• $2.90
$4.40 • $4.70 double.

NEW WILLIAM
SLOAN£
YORKHOUSE
Y.M.C.A.
351 WHt:MIitSL (It Nl11i AH,)

PhoneTL6-8888

"" (OM
""'ll "·
,. , ..... ox,.,,
..,.u
oc• ftOl!I ,11111
Stt UOIII
ST.

Buffalo 2, N. Y.

ANNOUNCING

Wl'lt• ot Pilon• row
• a OLl..tTUf ol
llff'OltMA TlOII

e

AJ&gt;PUCATIOJI

ro.-N

B'KLYN. COLLEGE
of PHARMACY
..
Fou .....

~,AYETTE AYl..
l 'KLYN 1,, N.Y.
, ..

MAi.. MN1

�SPECTRUM

PAGEEIGHT

~

CHRISTM
CARDS

Christmas

if ··

SAIi.~0 ·,:

G_
IFTWRAP

\1

FORUB

. ·71'

.

Friday, December 13, 1963

'

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UNIVERSITYOF BUFFALO

---10 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
·* ·

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.-.

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STORES,
INC.

---

UNIVERSITY PLA2'

PHONE TF 3-7131

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Ci-lRiSTMASGfFT
DEAS
rr•la..!)J~ _..
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SWEATSHIRTS
·15COLORS
including the new UB Royal Blue and CRANBERRY
Junior Sizes ore availab le.

~ Ir
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·HEAVY WINTER

JACKETS
Leather sleeves fully lined.
A Real "HOT" buy
at

1964
':4 permanent

$ 2 1. 9 5

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N ITEES{Red)
SCARVES{'White- Blue)
NYLON SKI PARKA
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T-SHIRTS
{Men's and Jr. Sizes)
PLUSH STUFFED ANIMALS .

LONIAN
of yourcollegedays."
on

SALE

DECEMBER1
JANUARY
-31

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Price: $7.00
Deposit : $2 .00

�Fr iday, Dec.mber 13, 1963

PAGENINI!

SPECTRUM

AngelFHght
Holds

Showcase of One-Act Plays
Chekov, Saroyan, /ones~o

15thStudentReceives
Award

BakeSale-Wear
New
Investigating
Club
National
Uniforms Of Women's

The Student Dramatic Society will present a student
showcase of one-act plays Dec. 12, 13 and 14. The three
plays are The Beu by Anton Chekov, Hello Out There by
William Saroyan, and The Bald Soprano by Eugene Ionesco.
The show is completely a student production and shows
promise of bein~ hi~hly successful.

Angel Flight pledges hclda bake
sale Dec. 2. Money collected will
go towardll funds. supplies, and
1
new uniforms.

I

In conjunct.on \Vlth the Student
Dramatic Soclcty, The Drama De­
parlment will present Mr . David
Shabcr, lecturer and off-Broadway
producer, who will be speaking on
friday attemoo n al 4:00 p.m. in
Baird Hall. As an added attraction,
Mr. Shabcr will be in attelldance
at the Frdiay night performance
alter which he will present a cri­
tique of these productions . The
uudience is invited to remain and
listen to this critique. According
10 the Society's Preside nt , Dick
Rolh. "The Student Dramatic S6c1.-ty reels that this will bc a uni­
que theatrical experience for the
audience, as well as those involved
T1ie Bald Soprano - directed by
m th!' producti on. It i6 an opporSusan Gilman . Francine Zumpano .
1unl1Yto hear an expert express
Charles Mayo, Jim Cronborg. Glo­
his views on the produt'lion we ria Nowaizyk , Bob Swani&lt;'k anri
have all witnessed and to t.'Ompare Corrlne Jafic .
his opinions to ours."
This is the lirst production pro­
duced solely by the Student Drama11
c socie ty. Their last venture was
the pa rtial sporuorship of the pro­
duction of one-act plays and scenes
from "West Side Story", held
carlirr this year The function ol
tht• c:roup is to promote lheatre­
intrrest, on the student level, hrre
on &lt;•ampus. Recenlly the group has
brenaccepted as a chapter in Alpha
l's• Omega, a national honorary
dramatic fraternity.
For next semester the group has
planned a production ol student­
written one.acts . a drama festival
!or area colleges and a Cleld trip
to Toronto to view professional thea­
lcr Along with these plans , 11s
well as numerous social activities .
the Student Dram11tic Society has
berome an extremely active organi­
,.ation.
Anyone intere sted in participating
In our activities is invited to join
thr Society. They need only to
s1optn al Room 312in Norton Hall.
This year's omcers a1-e: presi­
drnt. Richard Roth; vice-president.
Jane Groden; recordi ng secretary.
Corrinne Jaffe; corresponding sec­
relary, Terry Davis: business man­
ager. Bruce Glaser ; treasurer , Jan­
ice Green.
Tickets for the Student Show•
case will be available all day to­
d;ly in the lobby o! Norton Union.
The casts for the Showcase are:
The IMr - directed by Jane
Groden, Conine Jaffe , Colin Brem •
ner. and Bonnie Wax.
Hello Out There - directed by
Gary Burke , John Lund , Beverly
Kirchner. Francine Zumpano, and
Charles Mayo.

The present members are wear­
Ing new national uniforms which
are to be wom eve!)' Tuesday aft.
emoon nl Norton Union, drill prac­
tk;,, and special occasions. The
Angels have been compeli~ in
full dress uniform for future pa, rade events. A tentntive event is
planned for the ('Onling week for
De&lt;~ember wing Cf.'remonl~, where
the girls wlll m11rch in exhibition.

Angel Flight honor~&gt;d detach ­
ment oflicer wivl's al a dinner
held Sund~ in lhP Clmrles Room.
I Thl' girls modeled their new unifon·ns and presented the wives with
a warm s11eech of welcome and
future night aeth~ties.
I

The Woman's lnvl'stigatlng Club. falo Foundation ," Mrs . Davenport
n 75-year-old BuCfalo organization. said. "thus assuring that a worth­
is this fall assisting its 15th slU· while woman student will bP helped
dent since 1915 al the university . by lhe Cluh in lhe ruturc, although
Miss Marje Ubner, a senior In the Unlvl'rslly i~ now within the
the College of Arts and Sciences at St11tr Univenlity Sy~trm ."The UB

lhe UnivPrsity , Is the stholarshlp
recipient for thP fourth straight
year. Miss Ubncr , a i:radualc of
Lafayette High St·hool in Junl' 1960.
lives with hrr mother at 53 Ard·
more Place , She was sixth in her
~radunting rlnss 111 Lalayette .
Over the years the Cluh has con­
tributed more than $4,000 to wor­
thy women students al the Uni­
vl'rsity.
Tlus year marks II milestone in
the devrlopment of lhe Woman's
Inv&lt;•stiwiting Club
Scholarship
F'u11d ac(·ording to Scholarshit&gt;
chairm11n Mrs. Ormus W. OIIVl'll•
!)Ori.

'"!'his fall, lhe Club hns contrib­
uled $500 to 1hr University ol Bui-

Foundation is thr agency which
rPCl'ives and admlnistrrs
private
i:lfts whkh !II\' donalcd solely for
u~o at Stair UniverRity al Buf­
falo.

Th&lt;- Woman's Investigating Club
has n long history or scr 11l'eto the
t'Ommunity. In 19ffi is r.ooperatl'd
with 24 11lhcr clubs in founding the
Buf111lo Federation of Women's
Club. The Investigating Club also
cootrlbules through the Buffalo
Federation to that organimllon·s
S&lt;'holarshi1&gt; fund in th!' Uniwrsity
c,r BuffaltJ Foundation .
It was Intimately involvrd \Vilh
th(• salr or L1bl'rty Bond~ dunnii:
World War 1. and joined th e right
forthc abolillon or child labor and
l'&lt;JU!II rights for wonwn

Why Hathaway'snew Club shirts feel
more comfortableand look a good bit tidier
than any ordinary, mass-producedshirt
the shirt
above. Then skim the facts be­
low. They e11plain exactly what
makes a I-lnthaway Club shit t
feel better and lo1Jkbetter than
an ordin ary shirr.

5, Even the buttons are a far try from the usu;al.
They refuse to sp linter, peel, or turn yello,1 .

1. The eollar feels soft a round your neck- and
never has to be tugged :it to loo k straig h t.
That's because eagle-eyed sca mstressn
turn
each collar by hand . If the points are off even

do zen different fabrics , All look more lustrou s
than run-of-the-mill
shirtings, and we ar co n­
siderably longer ,

SEANYS Debate
On Dec. 18 at 7: 15 in the Multi­
PurposeRoom, SEANYS will spon­
sor a debate between representa­
llvrs from the National Education
As,;ociation and tbe American Fed­
rralio n of Teachers.
The topic of discussion will be
1hr advisibiUty of teacher-&lt;irgani­
wd Unions. Both the NEA and AFT
hlive recognized a need for ettec11\'r teacher organization and in
rrsponse have exrecised growing
sirength in determining higher sal­
aries, improved school conditions
and general school policies
Should teachers organize? U so,
•ltould their organization warren(
strikes, sanctions and boycotts
Wllhin our public schools? These
ar,, a few of the questions which
",11 receive the altention of the
r,,r,r,•scntativ es from both organ ­
,~•lions.

Support
Our
Advertisers

RUN YOUR eye over

0 1i.e-1ixteentli of an inch, out it goes.
2. The body is tapered frorn ch est to tail s for
s rnoorh fit. No uncomfortable wrinkling .

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The y stay anchored to your shirt,
actually
they have th ru holes -which
mor e secure catch than four .
Hathaw :1y tailors

Club shirts

because

make a

in close to a

And thi: co lor~ are just the tick&lt;'! for adding
dash ro your somber Fall suits .
Even if you're a white- shirt addict, take a
look at sume o f Hathawa y's new stripes a-nd
checks
rnd
solid
shades . They give
you a better chance
to express yourself­
yet they are well
within
the s:ifety
ZMl'
o f good taste.
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splen­
for you

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L'umc on 111

for a Dash of Adventure -in YourWardrobe
Come To: 2900 Delaware Ave., Kenmore, N. Y.

�Smit Performs Schoenberg,
HaydnSonata and Beethoven
ly VICKI IUGI LSKI
Leo Smit. pianist and composer.
gave his st'COlldpair of recilals
last weekend with a special per­
fol'llWICe for stud ents on Satur­
day night.
Mr. Smit performed the Schoen•
berg Klavleftncll op. 33 In mem•
ory •or the la te John · F'. ,Kennedy.
He then ,played the Haydn Sonata
111E•flat and concluded with thr
Beethoven Dl1Mlll V1riatfo111
.
As in hls flrst red taln this se­
mE-ster, Mr. Smlt dlsplayrd virtuo­
slic IE'cimiqUe nnd rom plete con­
trol or the keyboard. One of his
outs tanding features is his remar k·
able control and range of dynam­
ics. His deep senst&gt; of thP inlPr­
pretatlon and mraning or thP mu­
sic, whcthl'r a ~ingl&lt;' notr or n
brilliant virtuostic: pas:;agC', ls Ill•
ways apparenl lo his lisicncrs .

Plano Player W1nted
Must Be Able to Play
"Sing Along" Music

Call: HOLIDAYINN
l!llcettvllle nn
Mlt, IAfflSTA

,-art Tiffie lapenance4

Mr . Smit projects the elltfrwmu­

sk. not mere ly the "showy" pas­
sages, a (ea ture commo n to many
pcr fom 1en;. He is a first-rate ar•
lis t in the true meaning of I.be
word.
Herbert Kellman, musicologist
and music history teacher · here,
showed slides or Beethpven ma nu•
scripts and explained some or the
aspects of the Olabclli Varia tions.
His com ments added greatly to
the appreciation of Mr. Smits' sen•
sitive and artistic pcrformfillce.
Studen ts are reminded that Mr.
Smit will be giving a joint recita l
with violinist Eudlce Shapiro on
Jan . 24, th!' first day or the new
term , al 8:30 in Ba1rd Hall. Ad­
mission is Ire&lt;' tor students, $1 for
roculty and ~tall, and $2 for lhe
general publk , Those who missed
his last recitals should certainly
lnke advnntai:c of this opportuni­
ty.
The Music Department is spon.
sori ng the New York Pro Musica.
rlirectcd by Noah Greenberg, on
Jan. 22 at the Kleinhans Mary
&amp;-11ton Room.

Waltre... tAI .........

THE

RAMS

TheWeavirs
Will
Returnto Buffalo
For Jan.Concert
America's best-known folk sing­
ing gro up, The Weavers are re­
turning to Buffalo. Origina lly en­
gaged ror an appearmce with the
Buffalo P lulharn1onir orchestra for
a regular ly scheduled Friday nlghl
Pops concert . their per for rna nce
wns haqflly c•ancellt-J ntter lhe
lrugic events or November 22nd.
They will appear wilh Phllhar•
monic orchestra unde r the direc­
tion of Richard Du fal lo on Friday
Jan . 10th in Kleinhans Music Hall.
Tickets to thc re-scheduled conCt.1t
will be available niter Christmas.
Holders ol tickrts to the original
appcarancP may use the Nov: 22
tickets for the ret ur n engagemen t.
For the past fifteen years. th~
Weuvers have been acclaimed and
recognized as the foremost folk­
singing group in lhe country. The
"granddaddy" of t~·•s
numt&gt;r·
ous folk singing group~. it was The
Weavers who first brought folk
music- to the largest audience this
music form has ever enjoyed.
They have appeared ot major con1·rrt halls throughout the country
as well as Canada, Eul'Ope and
Israel. They havl' been identi1ied
with and responsibll' lor somc&gt; 1 ►C
the top folk songs which thry first
rf't•ordl'd tmd in mnny instnnces
they have r&lt;'-wrllte11 these samr
songs, turnin g them Into hits.

HORN
~
.M
.
PETER PAUL allll MARY
APPEAR AT KLEINHANS,
SUNDAY, DECEMBER22nd
The Bulfalo Jan Festival is proutl
to announce that the Peter, Paul
und Mary Trio will nppt'lll' al Kll-•n•
hlins Music Hall . Sunday. ON·rnt •
bc'r 22nd at 8 p.m .
Soml' people question 1f lh,•rc&gt; is
an hones t WR)' to Sin~ lolk IIIUSil'
to our rosmopolllan sodl.'ty . Pdt•1·.
Paul and Mary muy huvl' lo1t11tl"
wny. From tht• Olul• Ani:l'I tu Th•·
Hungry ''l". peoplP find rrnl raJl­
port with a lall, silky blonde who
bclit•vt's in looking as t:O&lt;x.l slw
sounds. and two young m,•n whO
know how to wear Brooks Brothrrs
suits with thl'.'ir bt&gt;nrds m,d i,iitars .
Ir their amwartlJlt•c Is unusual , so
is theirp crforman&lt;'C. "11ir L&lt;•mon
Tree ", "Fiv&lt;' Hundr!'d MIii's", or
"The Hnmm(•r Son~" sonwhow
sound both 1/01
1ulur und lll'111!1•mw
without se1m1ln1: lo l'(lllll)t'o1111sr
rlther. Whnt tht•y ha vl' ;whi1•vt'fl is
a rare ortis lk ••mpnlhy thut rt•sulls
!rum tht'ir knowin1-: 1lw111~t•lvt•s
,
knowing thrir musk. 11ml rl'lms1111(
Ute natural qunlitlr s of both. unin­
hibitro by l(immkks. Thc•y have
leamt'&lt;I th!' Sl'&lt;'ret ol smging so
closely together , ims.•ing onc an ­
otehr in nma.2ini: rhang1•s, that thfy
build towC'rirut harmonic&gt; fasc·ad;;,s
filling lhe auditory s~•drum .
·
Tiekels arc now on sa le nt Norton .

,,s

i

CIRCLE ART?
Tenl19lllrv De&lt;. 21
VlffORIO GASSMAN111

LOVEand LARCENY
EXTRAI &amp;..19hw Tenlte
and Sat,, Dec. 14

" THE CAT PEOPLE"

CINDERELLA
...... hit We4., J an. I
LOUIS (tt.. ....,_,) MALLl'I

ZAZIE

CIRCLE ART
THIIATl a
1365 BAILEY NN , A1t1hent

ly 'BAH .ARA STRAUSS

Downbeat Magazine.
Al is cur •
rently studyin}!: at UB, as is the
Quartet's bassist Joel di Bart olo.
Tony Carere, who has play ed
baritone sax with Mayna rd F ergu­
son, now plays alto sax and Oute
i n the group. The Quartet' s drum­
mer is Al Tchetcai.

Today from '34, •the Music Com­
mittee wiU present a jazz concert
feat uring the Al Francis-Tony Ca­
rere Quartet. in the Conference
The-uter. The group will play com­
positions ol Vibrist Al F rancis, who
has studied at the Boston Unlver •
sity Sdioo l ~or Fine Arts.
As a vlbrist. he was Instrumen­
tal in I.be recent success of Don
Ellis . and Is, In fact, fea tu red on
Elli' New ldut album, which was
awarded "five star" review in

As those who freque nt Pee Wee's
on Saturday a nd Sunday nig hts will
testily. the Al-Francis-Tony Carere
Qua rtet is a smoo th and lively
gro up with an excellent and varied
repertoi re .

~~,tOOOR ICE SIC4Tlttc;'
~

~

~

ONE FREE ADMISSIONWITH
ONE PAID ADMISSIONTO
UNIVERSITYOF BUFFALO STUDENTSONLY
TIiie Ofhr E11plretfelt . 1, 1"4

LEISURE
LANDU.S.A.
Camp Road, Hamburg , N.Y.
THRUWAYEXIT 57

at

THE GALLERY

Buffalo, N.Y.

COFFEEHOUSE

•

Friday 111111
SaturdayNight
SundayA"91'11Mf1

SOPHISTICATED

31 STANLEY

ENTERTAINMENT

Nl119ar1F11ll1,CIN1da
Membership$1.N

GOODFOOD-FOLK srNGERS

Open Tues .-Sat. 8:00p.m .
Sundays - 2-8 p.m.

JAZZ 11ndCOMEDY

FIRST BUFFALOSHOWING
• DANIELi.[ OARRIEuX.. ALAIN rfl )N • ffRNANDE L •
M[L FERRER ■ lLAlJD£ DAUPl-11N
■ l 11,\hl f..., AZNAVOU
R
■ MICHf l lNf Plff SU ■ F'HANLOISf /,HNO\JI ■ JEAN
CLAUDlHtMLY■ MAOfLEINI i&lt;OelN'-l'f\ ■ MIUitl SIMON
■ LOUIS

DI I l Jl\!t ~

■ DAN~

SAVAl

■

LINO Vt NJ LH/\

GL OHC,
t ') Wit '·,()N ■ Ol'!fCffO~YJUlil
HlltMVll
R■

■

''\'~\!'l:'.;'Z~,';\':'°"
■

'

,

'

Prt .. ni.d by Albert Gro11manand Buffalo Jau Festival

j

SUN., DEC. 22nd, KleinhansMusic Hall
$2.50, $3.50, $4.50, $5.00
Mail orders with sell-addressed. stamped envelope. Send check
or money order to BulCalo Jazz Festival, C/O Dentons, 32 Court
St. Buffalo 3, N.Y.

OnSaleNOWat NORTONUNION

,---~~~--h~•-•o••----

~

J HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

NOW PLAYING

Ac1de1t1JAwanl Winner

- ------'1111
·~--'

"WEST SIDE STORY"
Tech"lcelor
Natalie WNd -

.

°"'le Chllllrl1

OUR HOLIDAY
ATTRACTION
Star ts Fri ., Dec. 20
MAltGAltETRUTHERFORD

•

WATCH FOR OUR
HOLIDAY ATTRACTION
"WHO'S BEEN
SLEEPING IN MY BED"

Celer

Tech11
lctltr

Season 's Greetings

Sea son's Greetings

BuffaloPhilharmonic
Orchestra
"POPS" CONCERT&amp; OANCE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10 at 8:30 p.m.
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
AMIRICA'S B~ST-LOVlO ,OLK SINGERS

THE WEAVERS
S~

All tick ... , $1 ,7S

: Wntn,,

Saoh101 80111&lt;

:':!~!.:•~~
• •9:T,t•~~~n~
ou,,h , u

::..:"~~. •:~-:. 0~_,.!;~

I
~

~

I

.

.

DEAN MARTIN

"THE MOUSE ON
THE MOON"

wlttl SIMONE SIMONE
(ll :• 9t.M. Ollly)

letlnalftl T111,r
., Dec, 2'
IOLSHOI IALL ET CO.
In P""eflev 'a

Jazz Quartet to Play Works
Of Vibrist Al FrancisToday

FOLKSINGERS

743 BROADWA
Y
at Sherman

WH~!'~ UP

Friday, December 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

'MITIN

c..,. ■l.

"The Stor e of Perso na l Service"
wishe s t o all of its loy al cust ome rs a
ve ry Merry Ch ristma s a nd a joyou s
New Yea r.
Than k you for ma king 1963 our big­
ge st an d best ye a r. W e sincere ly hope
to se rve you again in 1964.

Riverside
Men's Shop
783 Tonawanda cor. Ontario
Shop Daily 9-9

TR S-8400

�...............................
-........
Friday, December 13, 1963

LocalStringTrio
Presents
Concert
Baird-W~dnesday

TheRev
.iewing
Stand

The Buffalo Stri~ 'I'rlo loral
t'hamlx,r Aroup, will give a &lt;.'On•
t·ert Wednesday evening at S:30
In Baird Hall. Admission is free
Carol Lynley does a pretty &lt;.'Ompe­ und all studPnts and ffll'Ully are
tent job as a eomroienne. , but most invited to attl'nd.
ol the movie is like some seenilng•
Rivka Mandelkcm, violinist, is
ly scarlet woman who lw·es you
a meJ11hPr ol lhe Buffalo Phllhar­
up to her room and thconslams the
monk Orcht&gt;slra, and IS !\ pl'Ollll•
door in your face,
nent local perrormer and teacher ,
Ast·hcr Temkin, violu;t, also ,n
For the eternally young at heart
mC'mbt•r of th,• orchestra, is on th&lt;
and in mind, the Paramount has
Troy Donahue, Stepharue Powers.
rarulty herP, Dodia Feldin is the
Ty Hardin and Connie Stevens in prinC'ipal cPllist of the orehestra.
addiUon to lots of other swinging ,
The trio will !)C'rfurm the ScllU•
attractive young people In a gamhol
berl Trio in One Movem• ftt, th-.,
at Palm Springs. This is supposed
Donnany1 Serenade, op. 10. and the
to be that one weekend of the year
Moiart Diver1imento m E Oat, K.
when all or the staid secretaries
563.
from the t'Old city throw off their
inhibitions and other things, and
the movie oUers such special treats
as Troy Donahue actually singing
a song! The pictur e is in Techni •
color - and is called Palm Spring•

By LEONLEWIS

~

......................................
~

According to some or our most
rminent and influential critics of
the dramatic arts (see recent is•
sues of Time, The htvnlay Review.
Look, Playbo-,), the most imagina•
tive, creative and interestlng work
being done in the arts these days
appears ln the motion pictures.
tlowever. these critics would be in
dire straits iJ they attempted to sub­
stantiate this thesis by gleaning
examp les from the film fare cur­
rent in Bu!falo. In crde r to provide
"°me sort of guide - albeit an ir­
reverent one lo be sure - to these
pt'Ople who can look forward to
; pending Christmas in Buffalo. I
would like to olfer the following
rommen ts on some or the more ap­
pealing movies playing new and
during the neX1 few weeks in thiS
dty. CWhen I say "more appeal­
ing," I mean those movies which
wmeone might actually thin~ about
before attending, rather than those
which one might stumble into to
,lVO)d being soaked in a Dash
storm.)
Two of the movies playing now
have already been discussed. As I
said in the last issue. the Circle
Art's current reature Love and Lar­
ceny is a very funny and ingenious

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

.

WISHl'D
SAID

TNAT
J:d
~·-£J
t;

WNktnd.
Even the normally serious North
Park, which has given us such
weighty el.forts as The ConjugalBed
and The L-Shaped Room ha,s pro­
vided Its audience with a.humorous
movie , as has that other champion
of the serious foreign cinema. the
Kensington. The Nocth Park. has
one ol those episodic things, an CX•
tension of the Seven Capital Sin•

~,,,::.

·'

"They say l ife has liut two
blessings, the art uf love and
the love of art,"-C harl es E.
Seel, Greater
Atl11ntic City
(N. J.•) Reporter ,

"When you i,re ynun11you
do a lot of wishful thinking.
Whell you are old you do a
lot of thoughtful

wishing,"­

Relph Nicho lson, Br1mdhh1e
(Ala.)

Banner.

"Never brag. If you deserve
praise, you don't need it. If
you don't deserve i't, nobody
will believe you anywuy,"­

Robert G. Campbell, Lititz
Record•Express.

(Pa.)

"Don't

resent

growing

old.
the
l, y nn ff. Car p e n ­
lN. Y.) Obsen 1er.

A gre11.t mnny are denied
-privilege,"ter, Dundee

- "A smile

u&lt;ld:- something
li1kes yn11 111
when a stranger
face value.'' - R. .J. ))ahl,
Chewelah (Wa~h. ) l11Ch•p~11(lcnt.

Music Department To Hold
AuditionsForRossiniOpera
ly

JOi; LANG

Open auCIJtioni; for "The Bar~•r
of :St&gt;ville" by Ross1ru will be held
Monduy t hrough W1.'&lt;lnesday, DC\:,
16-ll!, at 7:30 p,m .• in BaJrd Hall,
The opera wlU ht! i,resentcd (or
six Pl'l'{ormancrs, ,l"(•bruary 20
through 2:i. 1964, undl'r thl' uus­
p1ccs of the Music Department .
Ma~stro \'111ono Giarratanu. 01rcctor ot the Opern Theatre, will
l'Ondu&lt;:'t;Henry A. \\'it-kt-, Jr., also
or the Music smU, will stagl• the
Opt.•i-u; and Boris Bar-dnovic "ill
dc•s1gn the: scent:'ry and &lt;'OStuml's

11wnti.tor nudnloo~ shoutJ ht• 11111&lt;1•·
by e.1llin1: 1111•Umvrorsity MURH' Ol••
partment at 8.11-~111.
Thrrt' are Sl'VPrt m:1JOJ'~))('~ In
lfos~ml's "Barbrr"
two ::.mr.ino,.
two ll'n11r~. two bas,;ex, .,n,t th,•
oorttQni: tltr rot&lt;' or F1~.1ro A
mall• ch,&gt;l'\l~ IS 11)~0 rrqulrrc l

0111•1;1h•II~
th,• nuntl'r•
nu~ rompli&lt;'ntions nt1••mJ.,11tt,&gt; th,•
ultlm1U1• mArring,• or lto~1n.1 nnd
Conni i\lm1w1\·11 C,1m1wr1t1on l11r
Ro~ina's h&gt;0nd n:•1w,shl't11C"/'nthr
C'ounl and Ur . s.,rtolo. Th,• Count
iillws himst•lf with f'l,:pro , ,m ~r-11
.
Mondny , Dre , IG, 1\lill be dt:"­ whJI,, h.lrhN 1ond i::rm•ral h:mrly•
votcd espee1al)y 111lh0$l 1 U.B . slU• mun in th(• wuyw &lt;&gt;f Inv,, 1111(\{~
dents who wash to audition , U,B , Tllmu~h ~•1gnm·~ rftnrt~. 011rtolo
students w,11lw give11 profl'l'l'11ti11l Is l1n111lyloilt-d, anti thr ,•1u1ntn
•1•nln~. Appoint
lrl'atmrnt on thnt 1•1
!All~ on II hnpp1 f'ncilntr
llnrny , lhl'

('f)O\JC

llw (l(olighlful stnr~

t&gt;f

Stern-Schneider To Perform
Together At Kleinh an's Hall
~•01
• 1tH l!l~t f'tl11&lt;'1•1·t
ht•fort• the•
111Ill\' ,Yl'lll', '!'ht' UuUalo Phlt­
h1u·m11111c•
Or&lt;•ht•Slr'll WIii prt'Sl'lll
wol'ld fllrnt'&lt;i vuiliniNt lssaar S11•m
m t'Qm·t•rt with Al&lt;'xa11d&lt;'rSchnri­
ctr,-. v1olisl wuh lhl' Budapes:
String Quurirl ror un "AII-No111rl"
program. Sunday , Dre . 15th nrvl
Tuesday , ON•. 17th in Kleinhans
Music llnll. Lukas Foss will t'On­
dul·t tht• orchestra .

Nltl

11h~ only Am&lt;'rlcnn trained artist
among the world's handluJ of truly
great viollnisls, Isaac · Stem is al•
ways warmly received in Buffalo
as, indeed, he is throughout the
world. As reknowncd for his sin•
C&lt;'re and relaxed way of ml'etinf?
people in all walks of lift' as he i.s
for his tremt•ndous ropertotre and
faultless tl'Chniquc, he has proved
to be an idl'rd nmbnssador both
of American culture and ol Am&lt;'r·
ica·s way or lift:' during his lre11uenttours o( EuroJX'. Asia. lsrMI,
South Arnerk11 and Australia

pt•l'lutw(•~ t•i 1kscribt• h1~ C'cllltfl
•
hullon Ill till' muslC'lll S&lt;'l'llt' both
loc::11)y.,11,rtnt&lt;'rnationally , A mt•m
lwt or ""' fumed Bud11f&gt;l'Nt
Strinu
Q1111rtc•t,now rr~idrnt al SUNY ot
l!uffnJo, Mr S1•hm•ull'r hus b&lt;-&lt;'nn
guld111g light in orgnnizing nml
•·11ntrlbuflng to mush• fl'shvnh
t h1'(llll(ht\Ut North Amt'ric11 and
Europe, Among mnny of tht•!•l' ft•~·
livals was the orgami:1tlon of lhl'
annunl C!lsals Fl-sllval h1 Fl'l.U'll't'
and Puerto Rico

The

Recreation Com­

mittee is having a Free
Game

Nile

toniQht

,

from 8-11 p .m, in the•
Norton U n ion Cami!
Area.
ll'11nis

Billiards,
table
and bowltng will

be free, A folk-singing
~roup 'will be m the
Rarhskeller
j oyment.

All"xunder Sdml'ider is so well
knuwn to Bu{falo audiences th;ll
loclll critics halll' mn out of su-

for yo ur en­

VittoriaGuaman and DorianGrey, Stars of Loveand Larceny
'l:omedy, and the Granada's

otter­

TN Wheelff.Oealers, Is harm­
less if not inspiring comedy of a
rather bland but tasteful sort. Per­
ing,

haps because this is supposedly a
fPstive time of year, a larg e per­
,,~ntage of the efatures pla,Ying now
are also comedies.
The Cinema and the Amherst
ha e James Stewart as a frantic
lather chasing his wayward daugh­
" r (Sandra Dee - even sillier than
11
sual1 through Paris in the movie
version of the hit B'way play,
Take Her, She'• Mine. 11 you don't
11
11nd seeing the American male
,·ancatured as a bumbling, shout•
in~ lout completely
incapable or
r·oping with even the simplest de­
•·1s1on and unsophisUcated to the
IJOl
nt of near idiocy , then this mo1 '" micy amuse you, Bosley Crow­
llu•r, one ol the strongest forces
le,, good. honest , down-to-earth
,t,1llness operating in the field or
nwt e " criticism" round this pie•
fire qui\e funny. which ought to
-111.rn nearly anyone away from it.
On Lhe other hand , the Century has
Under the Yum-Yum Tree, anoth er
:nc•matic rec reation or a suc crss­
ruJB'way play, and even Mr , Crow•
thr r found this one oUensive .
L1k,· so many American pictur es
'n,•sp days , 01is offers the aud1enc1•
continuing series of doubJ.,..n•
Ntndrea,ll'Crs. winks . unkept prom •
·s,•s and most or the other appara•
' '' nf thos!' ulm s which pretena to
1
,1·1eked but whk h never C\' Cn
•r,11•C'lose lo the real thin f Ja ,•k
"mino n not surpti sini;:ly, 1s good
,·n III th is g11t1Pr•l••vc&gt;lafftur anti

idea, called Th• Devil and the Ten
ComrMndffl4lflh
. Most of the shorts
in this compilation are fiighty , trit e
and unoriginal. The Britlsh movie
at the Kensington, A Pair of Brleh
is also filgbty, trite and unoriginal ,
but II bas the benefit of an hilarious
perlonnance by that expert al'lot
James Robertson Justice .
Finally, we have a rollicking . fun.
loving, brawling, hoisterous west•
cm in the John Ford style called
McLlntockand starring John Wayne
and Maur een O'Hara, Only, untor•
tunale)y , it doesn't have John Ford,
Instead, it is directed in an ernbar­
rasingly incompetent fashion by
Vlctor McLaughlin 's son , Andrrw,
who is a woefully inept novice, and
more's the pity. John Waynr- does
his best and there are lots or lights
and plenty of 1.'0lorand good West·
em a tmo sphere . but in this Wcstc•m
re-make or the delightful Quiet
Man, the direction is so poor that
what should be an exc-iting and c•n­
joyable frolic through the mythical
West is tumecl into an incompetent ,
inchorent and often plalnly horing
hodge-podge.
Asidr from alt or this mirth thl•r e
is also four hour ,&lt; of gloom for thP
next three weeks / " Hurry . . last
wee ks" I at the Center ralll'd Cleo­
p,11tr,a, and two hours or inerPdiblc
sentiment at the Colvin and othe r
local theatr es by Walt Disney r dll•
l'&lt;I Th• lncNldlble Joumey. And 1r
none of this swts your taste . tht&gt;re's
alway s the film that " a ll or Buf­
falo is whlspenn g a bout "Sin In
the Suburbs, at U,e P nlal' c, plus
other inter esting intell1•f'tual s (lmtJ•
lat mn on the sta gP

1································:
••

: U,d

~

~

!• SUBMARINE~
••
•

••

i
!•
••

•
:MIKE'S
Giant
Submarine
:
••
••
:

595 MAIN ST.

I

C--

e

t:00 . 4:00 A.

•!.

~

OPEN7 DAYSA WEEK

•

•

BUFFALO

:

2862DELAWARE
AVE.:

ef Ma.IllaftdChippewaSt.

KENMORE

•.....
'~~
.]

[ -.■
-

_ ,;;;,.._

e

9:00 · 2:00 A. M.

:

New York's Only Truo

••

Sandwich

•

Sien♦

Submarine

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i••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-

�,AGE TWELVE

PopsConcert
To Be Presented; BairdHostsMaster'sRecital
A Family
Nightat Kleinhans ClaraHanPerforms Brahms

The Jazz
Gallery
a,

The second haU of the program
The Buffalo Philharmonic Or·
cheslra under the direction of will feature the Buffalo Schola

It.AYMONDCllAWFOtlD

Rlohard Dutallo will present a very Cantorum, singing "ongs of
Ouistmas" especially arranged by
spedal Christmas Pops . program
for the ·entire family in Kleinhans Roger Wagner and recorded by the
lamed Roger Wagner Chorale on
Music Hall tonight.
The light-hearted program wiU capitol Records under the tiUe "It
illchJde a Fairy Tale fantasy made Came trpon a Midnight Cleat"
of years been featuring what m011l up of music by Stravinsky, 1chai· Among the selections will be such
carols as "Good King Wencesla.s"
New Yorkers would call "lalin."
kovsk;y and Ravel performed by
ThlJsmusk is a blend of jazz, ~ the orcheatra and narrated by five "Llttle Drummer Boy" '" We Wish
You A Merry Christmas" "Jingle
cuban rb,ythm.s and harmonies, and
Bells" and "We Three Kings."
lOCAIchildren.
the re-dlS('Overed South American
blends.
Latin is nothing new to jazz, but
previously It had nolhlng to add
lo the idiom. The late Chano Pozo
wws the (trst man to really begin
to combine the two Idioms of latin
and jazz . H&lt;'is the father o! latin
jazz and is known as the greatest
conj!a and bongos playrr in his­
tory. One can llkon him tq Char•
lie Parker in lnfiuenc&lt;'. Pozo real­
ly became ln!lurntial when he took
up with Dizzy G!llespie and the
two fashioned u newsort of music.
A song made famous by Gillespie,
written by Cha.no. was Montera.
Div;y, of rourse. ha~ continued lo
revel in the rxciting music and
his latest album, "Dlzzy on the
Rlvll'la" is an example.
The music I henrd at the Mon­
huttan Center wru; more latiu than
Jai:t. II was not romml'rcialized
11kt' lhl' nonscnsr Xavier CUgnt
plays.
A normal band coMists of n
brass and reed section. piano. bas.~.
and, most important , the- pcrcus­
slon section lnl'luding congo drum
and Simbnles. It is primarily the
bm1t thllt !ll'ts Jahn music off from
other types o! musir. This beat
lw.s fostered the nl'ation of tht•
n1ambo. merenguc , and lh&lt;' new
danc-e crazes: the pachanga, cha­
ranga, danion. and bolt'ro.
Johnny Pacheco's band , Charli(•
Palmieri, Tito Rodriguez Md lhl'
most popular band that of Tito
Puente !who has been a.round for
DI.Iring the Thanlalglving holiday
J bid the plea.sure tD witness a
ll(lrnewhat
different scene than
what a nonnal jazz fan would en­
joy, The Manhattan Center ls a
huge building on 34th St. and 8th
Ave. which has for the last couple

many yearsl

are really

Clara Han, pianist., will give a
recital for her Master'$ degree in

music Monday evening at 8:30 in
Baird Hall . Admwlon is free and
al l students and faculty are invit•
ed to attend.
Mrs. Han was bom in Seoul, Kor­
ea, and ls a graduateof ~ Na•
tional University with a Bachelor
of Music degtet. She has appear­
ed with the Seoul Philharmonic
Orchestra. In 1961, she came to
America. Presently she is studying
with Leo Smit, 'Ind is a!J!Oon the

faculty of the Community Music
School of BtJ!f.alo.
She will be assisted by her sis­
ter, Theresa Park, in piano duets
of Weber, Miss Park is also a grad­
uate of Seoul National Universi1Y
and studies here with Mr. Smit in
preparallon for her Master 's de­
gree.

Mrs. Han will perform solo pi­
ano works of Scarlatti. Brahms .
Bartok . and Beethoven Sonata op.
Sia and the Ravel Sonatine.

making

ii bis. Since the beat hns become
so important in this music the per­
cussionists are wt•ll known Mango
Santamaria. Am1ando Pl'raZZll and
Tito Puent(' arl' probably the best
in their field .
Jazz and latin both lfll'k some­
thing and together they form a
more romplete music. Jazz has
progressed as far as harmony goes
but thanks to Brubeck we can see
that it lacks variation in rb.yt.hm.
Latin on the other hand has not
developed muslcally but does have
the quallty just mentioned. The
two should "make music together, "
Cal Tjader has shown that the afro­
cuban rhythms and jazz can both
be regulated to form what seems
to be progress In mu.'lical develop.
ment. The mO!lt important thing
is the ba.lancing of the two In one's
music. U you accent the rhythmic
part of the piece. then you lean
toward sensationa.lism B.Ddneglect
the music. lben on the other hand
If you should emphasize the jazz
ln one'a composition then you have
returned again to a musk that
1acka variatlon ln rbythrng .
These two media of communi­
cation, superficially 110 ditteffllt ,
are becoming more and more alike,
u jazz musicians who dig the best,
become accustomed to playing It.
Just take note oJ the new albums
00ming out and who la playing
them. Stan Gets, Cannonbe.llAd­
deil)', Dllzy, Miles, Oll&lt;!O Ham­
ilton, Quincy Jones, Art Blakey
and a host ot others. To AY the
leut , whether boaa-nova, afro.
cuban, or afro the "big beat" is
I.be thing.

Anyone interested in
the editorship of the

New Sladen.t ReTl•w
should file an apptica­
t.ion in the Student Sen­
ate Office, Room 215,
Norton Union ,

Friday, December 13~1963

SPECTRUM

Our world-recognized trademark -"the P&amp;WAeagle"
-has been Identif ied with progress in flight propul ­
sion for almost four decades, spanning the evolution
of power from yesterday's reciprocating engines to
today's rockets. Tomorrow will find that same Pratt &amp;
Whitney Aircraft eagle carrying men and equipment
to the moon and to even more distant reaches of
outer space.
Engineering achievement of this magnitude is directly
traceable to our conviction that basic and applied
research is essential to healthy progress. Today's
engineers at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft accept no limit­
ing criteria. They are moving ahead in many direc­
tions to advance our programs in energy conversion
for every environment.
Our progress on curtent programs is-oxciting, for it
anticipates the challenges of tomorrow. We are work­
ing, for example, in such areas as advanced gas
turbines ... rocket engines ... fuel cells ... nuclear
power-all opening up new avenues of exploration in
every field of aerospace, marine and fndustrlal power
application .

The breadth of Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft programs
requires virtually every technical talent , • , requires
ambitious young engineers and scientists who can
contribute to our advances of the state of the art,
Your degree? It can be a B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. in:
MECHANICAL• AERONAUTICAL• ELECTRICAL• CHEM•
ICAL end NUCLEAR ENGIN£ERING • PHYSICS • CHEM­
ISTRY • METALLURGY• CERAMICS • MATHEMATICS
• ENGINEERINGSCIENCEor APPLIED MECHANICS.

Career boundaries with us can be further extended
through a corporation-financed Graduate Education
Program. For further info rmation regarding oppor­
tunities at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, consult your
college placement officer-or-write
to Mr. WIiiiam L.
Stoner, Engineering Department, Pratt ..&amp; Whitney
Aircraft, East Hartford 8, Connecticut.

SPECIAUSTSIN POWER•• , POWERFORPROPULSION-POWER
FORAUXJL.WtY
iiiuiS. CUARIHr UTIUZATIONSINCLUDE:
AIRCRAFT,MISSILES,SPACE:VEHICLU, MARtNEAND IN­
OUSTRIALAPN.ICATIONS.

r

Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft
CONNr.C'11C:IIT
OPERATIONS
£ASTHARTFORD,
CONNECTICUT
FL.OlttDA
OPHATIONS wtST PALMBEACH,f'\.ORIDA

Ill E,palo,,.,t.olly ....,_

�Friday, Decembe r 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGETHIRTEEN

·Student
Senate
·Summary
STUDENT SENATE
IN PROSPECT AND RETROSPECT
I shall 11.tlempt to give an overall perspective ot the
student Senate without going Into specUlcs about llllY one
area of concern . As can be seen by a caref\11 ll!lalysts of
the committee report presented to the students, the com­
mittees have for the most part fUUilled their specified
ubJecllves. I am pleased to say that In the several years
that I have been Involved In Senate activities the com­
mittees have never been so well staJfed and so active.
If this be the case then where has the extreme crltlclsm
that has been lodged against the Senate be Jounded?
This question, alter careflll reflection, opens an Issue ot
extreme linporta11ce. If the Committees are active and
successful with a . Senate that Is bogged down with trivial
afiatrs, as criticizers so aptly put it, then what purpose
shoUld the Senate as a legislative body be following? It Is
my opinion that the potential of the Senate Iles not In the
discuss ion of the Freshman Amendment Cor some three
hours , although t( Is an Issue of merit, but as a forum for
debate on contemporary issues of concern to students as
student, r.ltlzens, members of a world community. We as,
univers ity students, must as the educated leaders of the
ruture be prepared to criticize or commend condltlons as
they exist. Responsible analysis can take place only after
topics have been discussed lo !Ull with all aspects being'
heard,
How would this objective more substantially etfect the
Student BOdy than the present situation? At the completion
of debate on a particular Issue a resolution would be con­
structed which represented the opinion of lbe majority of
the Student Senators. ThJs would have a multiple ot ad­
vantageous effects, PrtmarUy It would express the opinion
of students to the individual who are In the position to
make use oC the reccommendatlons they receive. And thus
stm;lent opinion has the potent\al ot being effectlve. There
is no doubt in ni.y mind that the student body would take a
greater Interest In the Senate lf they realized that the
Senate can and would be employing It's power to speak for
lhe students. I would further hope that if students agreed
with a resolution as passed they would support the stand
ol the Senate, Ir they disagreed with It, It would be their
perogatlve to come and express themselves or to run for
a senate seat so their voice could be heard In the form of
a vote.
The proposal Is not to absolve the senate of lts tasks as
the guardlall of student wel!are and as middleman between
the students and the administration. Emphasis must be
placed where Importance and the greatest effective potential
lies.
Michael Cohen

ACADEMICAFFAIRS COMMITTEE
The basic goals o! the committee were resolved to In­
clude any area that may be of academic coucetn. The
committee's functions were viewed tn the broadest possible
terms. The membership tell this was the on!y wa;y the
student body could be adequately represented ln Its academic
concerns. Th.e nrst task was the estabUshment of the
Student Tutor Society ou our campus. All material was
collected and sent O\lt to those Departments that were
listed In the FacuJty Directory . Once a decent number oc
responses are turned In, we will be able to get this or­
ganlz:atlon on its feet as a going concern. At the present
time, we have received no commwilcatlon from most ol the
major departments, and as a result, we ate following up
our flrst inqutry.
Another project the committee set ltsel! to was the es­
tablishment of the Academic Convention. This was an Idea
tor a series of pllllel discussions on Current topics. The
basic goal of the program was "to get the viewpoints of our
faculty on current topics, and, at the same ti me, provide
an opportunt ty (or greater Interaction between the student
and faculty, At the present time, the Individuals In charge
or this program have been having some diftlcultles in
getting it established. We hope to have the conventions
!uncttonlng very soon.
Toe committee tsalsowork.lngontheproblemof
Academic
llishonesty on our campus. We are doing this at the request
o! the Senate acting on the recommendations made by this
rommlttee to the Senate. we plan to Issue a program that
we hope wm reach the broadest area of the campus
without causing any embarrassment to the Onlverslty. At
:he present moment, invest.lgallons are still being carried on.
Up to this point , the committee has bee~ reestablishing
ltse1t on the campus. Now that this has become a reality,
the committee hopes to be able to be of invaluable assls3nce to the Senate, the Academic commun ity, and the student
&lt;xly,
Gerald Catanzaro
0 MMUN1CATIONSCOMMITTEE STAFF
Ch.11.trman~Micl\ael Shapiro; Secretary Linda Levanthal;
l reasurer: Steve Becker; Layout Editor : Gary Welner;
Research Editor: Joel Oltrow, Steve · F algenbaum; Senate
lleporter: Bev. Gold; Fee.lure Editor: Fran Gartner and
Andy Weber; Stat! : Al Falk, Peter Vandl, Alan Broun­
ste1n, Tom Kobus, Arnold NatlUlnson, Judy Shapiro !l.lld
4.rtbur W'!_ndt'ow
_
_ __

MtNUTES OF MEETINGS
September 10, 1963
Blecllon of Tre&amp;surer - Specllll Senate meeting will be
next week, for lhe election of Treasure r only. Nominations
were as follows : Bob FlnlrersteJn (U.S.) and Al Horowitz,
(Alliance),
The Senate approved the sale of Civil Rights• equaJJty
buttons for a $1.00 donation with the proceeds given to
Civll llJghts Orga.nl.z.a
tlons.
President Cohen 8JUJOuncedthat there ts r. new Secre­
tary for the Senate ortke - Mrs. l'anle, Haro.

BeJlllte,
Mr. Horowtu (Alllance) also movrd lhat the :wna.,e
approve the International Club Budget ot $1510, the Studl'nt
Speeeb QJ\(J Jleat\llf society Budger of $305, lhl' Buffalo
Rltle Club's budget ot $l0SO, and the 0100 ClUI&gt;Dudget or
$25G0. All these 111ot1onswerll passe&lt;.I.
Miss BUetzky (U.S.) then movecf that the senAtr uco«nlz:1'
the Sociology Club. The motion wa.s Pll!Sed.
The December Election Rules were th11n proposed t,y
Mr. Catanz.aro (U.S.) tu be lhe e)utct same ones used In
October except no sllngers or posters allowed on trllt!S
or lUIP pasts. o,. ~rs
to he allowed on csimpus. All
rlllldldates must attend II meeting ln November. Norto11trail
Includes the steps also, This motion was p11.ss~'ll.

September 17, 1963
The purpose of this Sl)t'dal meeting fs to elllcl thl'
treasurer. After a fruitless attempt to secure Ille position November 19, 1903
Mr . Finkelstein (U.S.) lost to Mr. Horowitz (Alliance .)
Mr. Feldmll!I ( u.s .) moved to riironsldnr lhe freshm1111
Amendmeot. Aftc.,r dlscusslo11, tile 11,ouon was passed,
September 24, 1963
The Senate then proceeded to reconsider the., f'reshm11J1
Mr.
Shapiro, (Alliance) a.n(I Mr. Flukelstetn,
Amendment. After de~te the Rmendmenl wis vot!'d upon
( O. s. ) moved to amend the electlun of Senate replacements.
aJld passed by 2/3 ot those present at the rn11Nl11g
, and
To be amended as follows: "In the cAse of the permanent not 2/3 of the entire Senate.
absence of any divisional student Senator, a replacement slulll
The Rllle Club WtlS appropriated $48G, Md th(&gt; S1ud11nt
be elected by a majOrlly vote of the CUll day-time students Ju&lt;llclary received $15,t both ou motions from Mt. noro­
of the division deficient In representation, voting In a wftz:, Cl\alrman orthe Flnnnce Committee,
speciaJ election. Two special elections wlll be held, one
The Senate passed tl\e followlng resolutions on National
on the fJrsl Monday ln October, In the event of any Senators Fraternal Organizations proposed t,y Mr.Sh1111lro(Alllllncc.,).
resigning prior to that date, and one In the first Monday I. F, c. Resolutlon;
In December, In the event of any senators resigning between
Mr. Sh.~rlo presented the I, F. c. resoluU011:i~ tollo ws1
the October election and the December ~ate.
Wl1ereas national fraternllltls un . the State l ln\vutslty
The length, type and amount to be spent In regards to th1S ot New Yor~ at Buffalo campus and au otht&gt;r 1U1.tto11All)'
special campaign will be restricted for beyond the spring 1ffll1:1tec1social organizations 11renot discriminatory hy
general slecUon campaign. The exact e~tent of this campaign race , cotor or creed or other w·Uflclo.1 crltul'l11 In nastun• •
will be recommended by the Elections Com111ltteeof the 1111d
practice,
And whereas, nat tonal org1111
lzatlons have h+ll•nau asset
student Senate to the fllU Student Senate, and the extent
will be approved by a majority vote !Iftho!Se voting In the to tile academic extra -and-co-curricular 11ctlvltlt-s on cam•
Senate at the time of the discussion.
pus,
The amendment will be publicized and voted upon at the
ne It reso lved that the student Assoclat1011uf tht&lt;Stat11
next meeting.
University of New York at Bu!falo cncuuro,rc the Ooard ol
Mr. Finke lstein ( U. S.) anll Mr. Lappin (Alllt111ce) Tr ustees of state University ot New York 3t Buf!alo
moved for an ameudment lo e&amp;tablish lower courts , to be reconsider their posltloo coocetnlng tho de-a.tfllhdlo u of
as follows:
national organizations on c11mpus.
Be It f\Jrther resolver! that it Is our l&gt;ellel that IJUCh
"The Student Judiciary shall oe empowereu to establish
lower courts at Its own discretion. The judges of these organ lzallons should uol lie discouraged bul l'llther t1n­
courts shall have the same qualttlcattons as the judges couraged to grow with the University.''
of the Student Judlctary, and they shall be choi,en by a
subcommittee colTIJ,)Oliedor the st udent JudlcllU'y A.ndthe December 3, 1063
Deanof Students , s ubject to the approval of 11.simple majority
Mr. Shaprlo (Alliance) moved to 11e11d
11 1iu111lut1• tu the
II skating
of Student Senators present at a regulu.r meeting of the maintenance department to erect sind m111n1111n
Student Senate. The purpose, procedure and structure of rink.
Pnssed 11 $842 llm.lget tor the General l'.urjjlng Program
said courts shall be determined by a majority vote ot the
' Convention,
Judges oCthe Student Judiciary. Theterrn of the lower courts whl('h lncl11ctestheir expenses tor the F!'br1111r)
A request to, 11 R(&gt;(lut1-101
was passetl hy tilt• Senate for
shall end with the term of the establishing court."
The amendment wUI be publicized and voted upon at !he the late Prei,ll.ltml, John F lh:gerald Kenn~uy.
next meeting.
Mr. Horowitz (A!Uance) moved to approve the Dison­
head r equest of $71.25. A vote was liken n.ndthe n1son­ ST\lDENT SENATE IN PHOSPEC'flVE
head was approved.
The phrase ts often lino.rd on thi, Studor1t s,,naJc "lhu
Mr. Hoftlnan (All.lance) moved to Investigate the•condition
'
concerning lhe representation or the Pharmacy students In res110nslblltly oc senators." This phras~ 16 rn!Buil ln mJU1)
rontexts ranging rrom his "reswnsllllltty••
to vote tor
their Student Council.
Mr. Shaprlo (AUJance) movet1 that the Sen11te shoulll various programs has, lo his "rosponslMllty" 10 attuntl a
distribute the Senate mltiutes to llie student body, this turtle tact'. , •et we oevN really look Into the N!t1lrne1111l.nc
of lhls responsibility, hut de/Inc It ln terms ol lt11mllny
motion was temporarlly postponed.
The nomination for the Chairman of the Etectlons Com­ super fir ial ..nt Iles.
Wet,ster de/Ines responslbl.llly as "moral 11.ccountllblllty".
mittee were Thomas Kobus and R~rt
Parholskl. Mr.
Pacholski was elected.
This deflnlt Ion presupposes that for A snnator to be respen­
The Nomination for Chalrm1rn of the Spring Arts com­ slble Ile must bas e his deci sion on some mural cocJo.
mittee was Betsy Nordstra111, she wa.s elected unanlmously. Ideally, during a period of campaigning, the candidate Iii
trying to convince voters that they possess similar moral
c0&lt;les, at least In the programs which h(l supp0rts as be\ne
October 81 1963
Miss Joan Wilkens suggested passl1t1t or lower court ma,1lfestatlons of thli. moral code. Theio pro11nuna mulit
then be shown to have a basis co11slste11lly with !ht'
amendments - Passed.
Mr. Finkelstein (U, S,) and Mr. Sbaplro (Alliance) spoke voters moral code, The former 111tnv&amp;lld without lhe latter.
for an amendment concerning elections lor Ute replacement An e.xample of this would be two 80118.torswho vote for thu
of.senators. This amendment was passed.
appearance of Herbert Aptheker, one tor rea sons ot spec­
Mr. Horowlti. (Al11ance) then moved th:lt the Senate ta cularlty and the other senator tor reason&amp; of academi c;
approve the Anthropology Club budget or $930. Th.ls motion Inquiry. Such clear cut distinctions, tiowever ar e not alway11
evtdent Isl an election. Again ta.kls1g lnto account IUl ldoal
was passed.
Miss Zeller (Alliance) moved that the Senate approve the case, the voter will vote ror !hilt person whoi.e 1noraJ
budget of the Student Dramatic Sodety. This was passed. code most conforms with his own. Thes11peopl1: expect thllt
their representatlvtt he required lo clll'ry out thos e thlug•
October 22, 1963
Mr. Horowitz (Alliance) moved to accept the revised which he did prumlsu and that when II sltU11tlon does arise
Englneerlng Student Council's Budget or $820. This mutlon when tltt! senator does not have Hmt• to f111dout Ihe reelln,
ot his constlhtency, he must ael aceorllilll totht• moral coCIP
was passed.
Mr. Catanzaro ( U.
moved ttui.t the Senate 3.CcllPlthe that be has s hown to bis voturs. To &lt;10atJ1crw1so ts lo
Shapiro-Lappin resolution on Academi c Dishonesty with the prostltute hlli Intellect to the CJU.Sll ot hlPoCUll).
I reoJconirellect to extend the 1h1tlnltlon or thr rnpon­
establishment of a procedure for dealtna with offenses this
slbillty of II studl'nt leodur, to thllt of a umtt or, That II
motlon was passed.
Mr. Horowitz (Alliance) moved the accept11.11ceof the "his duty JS lo unit e his consct!llU'II With thll MPlnHons ut
Finance Committee's recommendation or $1200 lor Ullt hl9 const1tu1e~." The common ctonot.ntna.tor ill the addition
ot th1&gt;lwu, a moral coda.
Budget of the Photograph Club, which was passed.
Mr. Horowitz: (All la.nee) also ai;ked the acceptanre of the
proposed budget for the Scbussmelster's Club a.t $1610.
This measure was also approved as well 11.6the Debate
0::ONS'l' ITUTIONAL REVISIONS COMMITTF.F.
society's Budget o1 $4985,
Miss 8Uetitlcy (U. S.l moved that the se nate grant
ln that the comm1ttt1C' WIii en­
ti IS t hl! ll~P lt'l, /:l'(I u,•11
recognltlou to the Hockey Club. This motion wu pa.s5ed,
&lt;'t!llllllli' l'ach ol \ht' l011rll«tlon • oft ht Studont A•M&gt;l
· latlon
80 tha~ th°&gt;Constltutloo can b(I ~ lll&gt;llllllc&amp;lly II Ml ffllDrd and
Novembers. 19113
Mr. Horowitz (Alllaoce ) moved that tile Senate approve r e-'llll-d. 1'hPr11ror,, the Studeni JudklJLry, Unloo Uoard.,
tbe Flnance committee'1S r ecommendatlon ur $500 to Lile J&gt;ubllc at1011, Do~l!ld
tbe...
Jil.udtnLatt
r.,rea.~
upoe
)latchl.o&amp; .BBJJdtor fbe nosto11trip, ~wa.s-passed
by thv -t ht!&gt;t:'Omnm~ .
'
CONro OH ,., ,;,r ,.

s.,

�..
SPICTR\JM
ShlilNM Sene'9 Summary (Cont'd from , ...

/

Friday, December13, 1963

13)

1'he committee bu asked each 0ba1rmt.110faSenate Com­

mittee u, evtlutte

bis comm ittee particularly wit h reference
to membership, tunctlons and performance. The Con­
lltttuUooalRevh11on11Commlttee ts also In tbe proceH of
correlliPOndlnlf with other co1te1es In order to examine the
Cooatltutloos Of their Studeot Associations so that needed ln­
Slfht might be derived In thl11pertinent area,
The commtttee desires to reor1a11h:e those parts of the
Constitution which have proven lnel11t'lent or deleter1011s
to th(&gt; pr()fler l\lnr.tlnnlng or student acttvltlei;. lu order to
facilitate the runcltoolng of the committee, the rollowln&amp;
sul&gt;rommlttees have been es tabllshell!
l. Sobeom,n tttee on purpose 11ndwwers:
2. Subcommlltt&gt;e on otrtcers and membrrshlp;
3. Subcommittee on Commlltee-Coordlnatlon;
4. Sul\cou1mlttee on rtnances.
rt ls lhP lervent goal nf th~ Constitutional Revisions
Committee to pre&amp;ent Its r1it·ommendat1nns In a flnaU:ted
form t,efore the Mar,:h elerUon. TIie ro,nmlttee Is ardently
Opp()S~ to ilJIY ltat&gt;ha:i:1:udarnmendlug of tht' present Coo•
irtltutlon In accordance with the 11oovepolicy.
Tlw r.ommlllee wilt iealousJy welrome s11ggest1onsfro m
stucfonts ind faculty. Severa l met•tings wtll be oJ)en to those
who wish to exprPss their views on the topics which are 1n­
r 111
11e&lt;1
01\ the agenda for Ihat t!J')tltl/k session.
Thomas G. Kobui;
Howard Gonoree

GENERAL GROl/NDSCOMMITTEE
One or the mnst Important problems to rar.e this com­

mttloe 111ma11yyears has arisen this semester. The rapid
gTowth of our University has created a situation where we
can no longer provt(le enough parking spaces ror all the
people wishing lo dl'fve to lhe oamp us. For the first time,
the lots hnve been conttn11011slyoverrrowded, Although It ts
the opt111onof this commlUee that we should altelTIJ)Ito
solvt' tbis problem by providing more parking areas and
thus bMetlt all stu&lt;lents, we find that the University Is
simply too small to uoutlnue tudo this. Therefore, a resolu­
tion recommending restrictions on parking wlll he forth­
&lt;'0mlng from this commit tee during the sccoo&lt;I semeshir, to
tit- presented to tl1e proper University authorities.
'file General Gounds Comm itte e has perrormed numerou s
other t\mcttoos tlurlug the semester , such as advising
both the 11dmlntslratlon nnd the maintenance department
rnncernln« st11dAntproh1 ♦,n1s relative to the physi ca l faCll·
Illes or the.&gt;University, antl pres,.'ntlng to the student lxxly
lnform11tlon released to us through these sou r&lt;·es, For ex3mple, th(&gt;111alntena11C'e
deparlmeul pres1111te&lt;J
to us the pro­
blem tht!Y have In ket&gt;plngthe campus nelll and clean due to
the amount or advPrttstng left ru-oundby campus groups after
sponsored a !unction. The result was a r egula•
they 1\3.V-.&gt;
tlon recommanded by this committee that all campus
groups aclvertlslng outdoors ou th&lt;:!campus be required to
remove their material, Including portables, 511chas sllngers.
Sho111&lt;1
any student have a prolllem conce rning parking
or the gTounds tn gener111,they may be addressed to Peter
.SClloll, Chalrm9,11 orGeneral Ciounds Committee, Room 205
Norton. We wlll tk• v,u·y happy to h~ndle such mallers.
Peter SchOII

In Which $602.00 was collected a.nd then sent South,
ror the purchase o! fO()(ls,
This Committee recently c:trew up a statement,
whlc~ passed at the U.S.N.S.A. Alµlual Convention,
which supports the University of Buffalo In Jts quest
ror the continuance of National Fraternities
and
sororities.
At present this committee fsdelvlng Into the prob ­
lem or Federal Aid to Higher Ed\lcallon. There are
many questions Ile be answered. At present we are
doing resear r h In the following area: (1) Should the
sobools lhat praNJce segregallon In the South receive
supplemented federal runds? (2) What about the
Churr.h-state issue? (3) Why Is so much money al­
located by the Fedetal Gover11mentfor research in the
natural sciences with so UltlP money designated
tor studies In the humanltl es? (,i) What are the
economics of this probl em ?
We are also supp lementing this progTum with guest
speakers deliberating the pros an 11 cons or the present
stand or the Federal Government. Some of lhe speakers
asked to come to the University to speak are: Admiral
Hum11.11
Rlchover, Harold Taylor an~ Dr. Peter Moorhead,
Gary Lighter

The Stu&lt;tent Welfare Committee of the Student $,enate ts
at present divided Into five sta.ndlng committees:
1. food and housing; 2. health and satetyi 3 bookstore/
library/athletics;
4, committee on alcohol; 5, student dis­
count service,
The Food-committee has checked with the foreign studenti;
regarding the cultural and religious sultat&gt;Ulty of the food.
We have planned a meeting with food servlce to disc uss
specltlc complaints of students - especially those found tn
the Senate questlonnalre.
The Housing-committee ls wbrklng on the complaints trom
the questionnaire.
The Bookstore-committee is In the process ot setting up a
book exchange using a card file system.
T'ie Library-committee

had heating In library adjusted.

The committee Is Investigating the possibility of opening
the class r ooms ill Harriman basement for students to study
at night - we are awaJtlng the decision of Administration,
The Athletics-committee ls In the processord rawl.ngup a
seating plan to be use(! at future football games to eliminate
.frlcllon between vario us st udent gro ups .

The Alcohol-committee has collected Information from
other schools re: problems of getting alcohol and the pro­
blems of controlling It on camp us, We are worktng wltl) a
The committee has been very aware o! the Image of the cooperative Administration on the best method of obtaining
wilverslty In general, lhe Student Senate and the St-udent It and are In the process of drawing up a resolution for th e
Association In particular. The main fllnctlons of this com­ Senate to consider.
mUte~, in general terms are the boost log of the Image ot
We have repeatedly requested Maintatnence to adjust
b'tu&lt;lent government, ho·sth1g camp us guests 1111daiding
n.rea high schools in their coUeg~ orientation program. the clocks. We are In the process of evaluating the 63Tbl:S committee w11s1·esponslble tor lhe Student Senate 64 calendar to allow a l&gt;rell.kbetween the last day of classe s
POrtlon or the Student Association diSplay ill the Haas and exams, We published, through the Stu(lent Senate, a
Lounge during Student Association Week. It bas also set questlonmdre lo evaluate student opinion on certain Issue s
up a ten minute Senate News Portion, which ls broadcast as of this date we do not have the rtnal results.
Pat Simpson
weekly over WBFO-FM. In addition, the Committee has set
up a subcommittee to aid the Admissions and Records Of­
ace In the orlentat 1011of area high sc hool seniors, hoping
to malel'i culat e at our lni;tltutlon.
The rnmmlttee has als o facUlated the reporting of Senate STUDENT ACTTV11'rESCOMMITTEE
acttvlt1es by the SPECTRUM. by setting up a sy5tem for
The Co1nmHtee this year has brought before the Student
commlltl!e chairman to l11formthe newspaper of thelr pro­
Senate
the Constitutions or The Hockey Cluh, the Pollttc9.l
gress In their acti vities.
Science Club and The sociology Club, and ls presently
A subcommittee has been set up, mw known11sthe Blazer
worklng wllh four more gr oups who have applied for
Commit tee, to begin sale of University bluers, These wUl
recognition,
be offered lo university sophomores ln the tuture, and it
Although working Wltb new organizations Is one flloctlon
Is hoped that a tradition wtll be esta.llllshed.
The Public Relations Comm ittee sponsored a Turtle of the Studenl Activities Commltlee, It also seeksto acl as a
ra1;e du1•Ing Nov. wl\lch netted $44.45 for Muscular Dys­ llason bet ween existing organlzatlons and the Student Senate.
trophy. The winning turtle, O,C. Fl11.sh, or Theta Chi The Committee has spent many hours c:llscusslng tbe mean s
Fraternity, represents the un1verstty ill the Washington, ot f\1111llingthis function and Is planning to take a survey of
present activities. By sponsoring in!ormal talks wJth student
D.C. lnlerriatlonal finals.
Tht!se are the activities which the committee concerned leaders, members or lhe Committee hope to get a general
Itself with during the first semester orthls year. The gene r al ptcture of the attitudes of students toward various campus
altns wlll be maintained during the second semester, and It problems. An area of special inter es t to the Committee
hoped and expected that the specUlc activities will be as Is that of Student-Faculty relatlons outside of the class­
room.
v11l11abteand beneficial.
STUDENT PUBLIC RELATIONS COMMITTEE

Pll8LICITY COMM11'TEE
The Publlclty Committee ot the Student Senate has Ileen
very 11c:tlvethi s semester, Specifically the accomplishmeuts
or the commltt~ )Jave t&gt;een:
I) A reprei;enlatlve of the commi ttee served on the Studen t
Association Week Committee.
2) A Jatge 011010thand numerous Po1&gt;tersfor a membership
campaign "pushing" Student Senate Commi tt ees.
3) Several posters announcing the October 25 elections,
Including three which were displayed In area hospitals to
nottty medical students that absentee ballots were available
to ll1em.
4) Posters advertising tile ·rurtle Race sponsored by the
Puhlle Relattoos Committee , a large poster was made lo be
plll.ctid over the bl\rrell at the race for the collection or
mone)' to he sent to the Muscular Dystrophy Assoctatlon,
and a wh111er's ci:rtlflcate was provided.
5) Limited publici ty announcing the Student Senate Ques­
tionnaire an,J "Deposit here•• signs to assist ln Its co l•
leollon.
G) Post!.'rs to !)(I used to publicize Student Senate meet­
trigsto be held In the Multl-11urpose Room.
Remembering th11t this Is a committee thst has not been
tunctlonlng In recenl years l&gt;ecause of lack of Interest, or
personnel, or Jobs to do, this year"s committee feels It
has made some progress. We hope lo see our work Improve
In Quality 1111&lt;.1
In Qua11tlt.yllS th e year passes. It Is hoped
by Mxt year thllt the Student sena te Publicity Committee
wlll be a clearing house tor the production and ordering
Of all tile publkll&gt;· of the various Student Senate Committees,
Lois A. Reeves

WE'LFARE COMM1T1'EE REPORT

Robert Ftnkelstetn

C IVIL RIGHTS COMMITTEE

The Committee, 1n beglnnlng this program. met wtt11Dr,
Hollander, of the PSychology Department, to discuss lhe
survey and aISo to cons ider the attitudes which motivat e
students on this campus. Plans for bl- monthly talks wllh
leaders of various campus activities are being worked
on with the hope that they maybegtnnext semester.

Eorly In the semester a protest demonstration was
Frll.11Bllelzky
staged at Norton. The purpose or the demonstration was to
protest the overt exlstance ot suc:h an Immoral atmos•
ptiere that would encourage or permit any attack upon
the guaranteed freedom or any American citizen. The Civil
Rights Commltlee not only mourn the dea th or six childr en CONVOCATIONS COMMITTEE
who died In the bombing oh Sunday sehool class in a church
The Convocations Commit tee thus far has had two rtnr
In Blrmlngham, Alabama but felt that a cry of protest
sho uld rise from the people of the United States and the speakers, both from the field of Mus ic. The first was Mr.
Lukus Foss, conductor or tbe Buffalo Pllilharmoolc, Hi~
world,
speech •was oo "The Symphony In the 2oth Century!'
On Oct. 31, Ralph Rosenfeld, :,,atlona.l Secretary of
The serond speaker was Mr, A ll en Sapp, c:tlrector nf
C.O .R.E., spoke Oil lhe origin and methods C.O,R, E had
used In the Detr oit area. He also brought with him a.n Music at U.B. Ills topic was also of general Interest to n11
album that C.O.R.E. Is sponsoring "A Jazz Salute to music, art or drama lovers. lie spoke on "The Cull urn I
Freedom." The ulbums sell for $5,00. A number of top­ Boon 1&gt;1BuHalo".
rate jaz.1 musicians have contrib uted one number from
Mr. Goodman Is one of the most outstanding 1ltera r1·
their repertory to help the Civil Rights Movement. some
of the artists are Chris CoMors, Stan Kenton, Miles figures today. His main concern Is ror the growth of 3 0,1
Davis, Sarah Vaughn and many others . This record Is on the sta te of Hurnunlty. His dynamic and fol'cetu l personalit y
sale In the University Bookstore across from the Univers ity. was felt by all on Friday, December 6 al 3:00 p.m. In the
Mull1pur p0se room .
This coming s,mester the committee has pllll\lled a film
Our final speaker was the famous and publicized Honor
se r ies dell.ling with segregation and lntergratlon and the
able Tran Van Chuong, ancJ father of Madamtl Nu,
problems or both. A number of speakers will be Interspersed
to discuss these problems befor e lhe student body. The
Next semester's
p lans are a bit hazy. We are at111
os1
committee ls also planning an "Open Semester on the positive of having Mr. Sidney Hook noted philosopher fr orn
Negro In American Literature" we have contracted a number Columb~a., University speaking on Feb. 5, 1964. An~·
of 5J)eakers and also a few Negro writers wbo might be ·Mr. Hook we are hoping to have a series on "'rhe Role l 11
NA1'1ONALSTUDENT ASSOCfATION
Interested ln commenting on this subject. Melv in Kelly, the Celebrity In Current Issues".
a Negro writer has been col'lttacled am! has expressed a
We have ll5ked Paul Newman, Marlon Brando, Burt Lau•
The State Unlverslt) of New York at Buffalo, N.S.A. desi r e to speatc on his recent movie, "A OIUerent Orum­
caster and steve Allen, all noted entertainers and t on
bu concerned lt1:1elf In the p11.styear with tho following mer.0
cerned In contemporary
Issues to speak In Jate FPh.
toplc11:

L11stApril the N.S,A, Steering Committee con­
cerned ltsetr with the problem In t~ South, where
thert- were Negroes who were unemployed, due to
d111er1mtnatory practices, and had no means tor
purcllulng food. As a ruult the U.S.N.S,A. asked
WI eommlliue to help In any possible way. We re­
lpOlldadby 1n1at!nr+"Food for Freedom .. ctmpairn

The Civil Rlgbts Committee has planned a busy a.nd
Interesting prOKTam for the coming semester, some of the
proJtcts are still too premature to &lt;liscuss at this pollll,
but will be publicized later . Again I would lik e to encoura.ge
all those who feel they can be of help to participate on the
comm ittee to he lp sate-gu~~bts
of all Americans,
- - -- -- ;
·
J-esn-t;;'Tn.ylor Jr,

and early March.
Then tr money and time permit we are asking a Jro111
of well known physicists to . come to u.a. anti speak In •
series called "The Origins and Nature of tne Univer se ·••
We are trying to make our program r each all of tne st u•
clents.
Sytvlll Sprint

�Friday, D,ecember 13, 1963

/e/;giOw
GAMMADELTA
Tonight the Ouistmas Pop Concert and Dance presented by the
Butfalo Philharmonic Orchestra at
Kleinhans Music Hall sponsored by
the Alpha Delta Chapter of Garoma Delta, will be held. All tickl'IS must be turned in to Phyllis
Swill by tonight.
Tomorrow the group will have
their Christma.1 Party at the home
of Susan Olson, 210 Cindy Drive,
from 9 p.m. to 2 a .m. For Curther information call Carol Wolff
at TA 3-1737.
Wednesday the regular business
meeting will begin at 6: 30 after
supper at 5:30. The topic will be
Christmas and its traditions. The
group will go to the Advent service
at a nearby church.

HILLEL NEWS
Sabbath S.,..,lce and Onet

Sh■ b!Nit

The B'nal B'rith Hillel Foonda.­
tion will hold a Sabbath Service
this evening at 7:45 in the Hillel
House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will
sl)l.'ak on "A Conflict of Cultures."
An Oneg Shabbat wilJ follow.

Hanukkah Supper Sunday
In celebration of Hanukkah, Hil·
lei will sponsor its annual Lalke
Supper on Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in
lhe Hillel House. Hanukkah deco­
rations are being arranged by
Morton Zelman, Hillel social chair­
man. Hope Jolley is in charge o{
the program for the evening. Dan­
iel Cantor and Joe Roetter will
provide musical
entertainment.
There will also be folk singing and

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

:Ju/in'F
dancing and old-fashioned Hanuk•
kah games.
Candle llghtlng services will precede the supper.
Hanukkah candies will also be lit at the Hillel
House on Monday and Tuesday at
4: 30 p.m.

Mid-Winter Social
The Fourth Annual Mid-Winter
Socia) will be held on Sunday, Dec.
29, at 8 p.m. in the Hillen House.
Light refreshments will be served
and recorded music for dancing
will be provided.

First-class tra vel

NEWMAN CLUB
Sunday, Newman will hold Its
annual Christmas Party at the
Club. It will begin al 7:30 p.m.
with Christmas caroling at e.nd
around the Club and at Meyer
Memorial Hospital.
There will be no meeting Wed­
nesday.
The Executive Committee wishes
everyone a very Merry Christmas
and a Happy New Year and also
success in final examinations.

with pay

STUDENT CHRISTIANASS'N

You were expect ini: nmyl:M.&gt;
romnnro ... i:lnmour?
Th('n forget 11houl tht• Pe.ice rorps. Glnmnrous ii 's nol.
You're going I&lt;&gt;he right i11there with monotony,
illiteracy nnd ,rn nrmy of bloodtlursl y m01,&lt;1uil0&lt;.'S.
llelµing pPOplewho hnvl' ,1Rk_t'.d
for hcl11. You're going to
work 16 hours ;1 d,1y and •omNiml"I ,;&lt;&gt;meof the people
won't even know "hnt vnu'ru doing !her" in thu first
pine~. And you will seco"nr frncl ion uf I he results you'd
hoped for. Out il'8 wnrtl, it wlwn II kid in Nigerin
undenatnnds wht1I nn alphnhel i, and s11medny will be
nhle to ust• 11.Whc:n n fnrrner in lrnlin K&lt;'ISchickens with
l'Qme monl on 1hem for n d111nµL•.Ur when C'11lombit1n
vilingers lenrn lo wMk Mgcl lwr for I he first tirnt• and
1hi~ l\t'W •11irit uf unity builds :1 hen IIh et-nter. Thi'
Peare Corp~ works in 48 counlri("I not rh011Hln~tlw
worlc-1drnmntic ,tlly, but not hmvlnu it the sr,rnL•,,.,t lwr
lt"H 1t1uuhto ~••1int n t hl' Peace C'oq.- . But Wl''II Ill'
glrul 10 rhl-rk ynu nut. ,Just writt' to· The Pt:111•~ ,or11s,
W.i.s!n11~&lt;1011,
U.C.. 2or.2r,.

S.C.A. will hold Its annual Christ­
mas dinner on Thursday at 6 p.m.
at the University Presbyterian
Church.
The COil! will be $1.00.
The program will including sing­
ing with Mac Mahoney.
Saturday, Dec. 21, the S.C.A. will
meet at Chaplain Buerk's home at
2:30 p.m. The a!temoon will be
spent in a discussion of William
Stringfellow's book, A PRIVATE
AND PUBLIC FAITH . Following
supper, the group will attend the
Circle Art Theater.

DR. CHUONGSPEAKS
(Continued from Paie I)
ret ot their success." "The attacks
conslst of sabotage, assassination
and terrorism - supported by Red
China and Russia, major world
powers."
He traced the history of the conquest of the China mainland and
North Viet Nam after World war
Two by Stalin and Mao Tse Tung,
noting the following basic formula:
(1) No attack in a strong country:
(2) Attack only on a small, defenseless country; (3) No spectacular attnck on a major city, so as not
to arouse the west; (4) Frontier
attacks on small villages. In countries, such as in South East Asia,
where the population In relatively
defenseless, terrorism is highly e1•
fccUve.
Dr. Chuong noted the need o{ a
diflerent type of foreign aid, atype
nraid designed to help the attack­
ed country resist Communist · ag­
grrs~ion. "The present policy ot
lorrign aid, designed to counter

Luxuriou s living

Exotic foods

'ti

PEACECORPS

overt , direct aggression and to lmprove the status of mankitld, i.
suicidal." The only threat fo the
free world Is that" ot indirect aggression. ''As in Asia, and now in
South America, the Communists
take over by using their forelgn
aid for indirect aggression."
"The direct answer to aggression
by proxy Is resistance by proxy ,"
he said in a plea {or defense
against the piecemeal takeover by
the Communists. "Two types ot
foreign aid are needed, the first
to improve the lot of humanity, as
the United States is giving , the
second to resist Communist aggres.
sion by wars for liberation ....
I
do not suggest an overt war: I
do not suggest that we invade
North Viet Nam, but that we let
the Communists know that protoo­
tion will be guaranteed."
The talk was arranged under the
auspices ol the Convocations Com•
mittee of the Student Senate.

31.ioo

MAIN 5T.
eFLo.11\

TF3-1ooo

ARIBoOKS
~,ri,

~°""-~
/\t•D
T&gt;ilN IO':,

foit
6 1rT
C,I\IIN &lt;&gt;
191.3

~

Christmas
Callsfor Something
Special

childrenLS»
books
byolc:At new ~vthors
♦

+

+

♦•

I

♦

0

♦

o

I

SKIRA • MVSl:UM
OF MOl)El!,N
A~T­
'fll-\J&gt;.100 N - l!&gt;t\OREwooO - Al',11..AMS ­
t-\A~VA llO - NEW Yo~\1- (Jfl~Pl-\1C ­
VNE&lt;:,co - PE"NGVIIV • ?~AEC;,E~ .

Chris+mas !R[ECO\R\DS

~!ID
·=

L--,

I

~

Cards

t;&amp;

,-me Muse.um

J.nd. lV'Y\er.a.rti~ts
se.(e,cti on.5

OvAL
nY ?APERBACK$
1'c.tio":'
- non-t\c-\ion - pae-rr~
Sc.1enee-\wmor- l"t&gt;i&gt;St'-

~r.d.e.r';:Jon,Gv-\tt1m,
Mll he ,. \&lt;..rav&lt;:,':&gt;,
Se~

De~n~, So..1:,e.l&lt;,,

...

tolsto)' I Ct,h"d ·,
Yo\te~ (Jreel'luw~~•

Gov-ej, -A,,gl ~ n&amp;..,
&lt;;,i""olzUn ~erer ,
"".'fm'='c-'W'l1,Udrj .
l:lro.ve.~. ~ hahvi ,

N'wt o11
vending machines have been InstalledIn the buernenl snack bar of Tower
dorrtl_i_l!__
ri,_ CMJl....and.wl.chu..
fruit..jul cu, uft andhot .d.dn~Jnd~•lrl••

'"'f"~

sold ■1 well as cold hot dog• and hamburger1w\lch canlie

•'•dltd within • rnlnut. In self-service ovens.

f&amp;.lll'Is

CALENDAR':&gt;- UNIC.~
MU &amp;!:I.IM
Of" MOOEfl. t-/
,.,._.
0 MP,,,~'( oT~E(t~
.A-li~e.~

1

A9."T'

f&gt;IC'\\.&amp;&lt;.

�'J-(andsomewat_Jsto make men merrB on Christmas
Give him handsome clothing to put upon his back
and see the merriment invade his heart and spread
upon his face. Also see the improvement in his appearance.
3-Piece Suit ...•...........•
Tweed Sport Coot .........••
Sport Vest .....•...•......•
Blazer ...................
Button Down Oxford Shirt .....
Ties .•......•...........
Wool Slax ...............
Sport Shirts ..............

from

. from

$65.00
35.00

from

10.00

from

35.00
5.00
2.50
14.95
5.00

•.. from
from
,from,
from

CampusCnrurr
Opposite The University
Daily 10 - 6

Mon., Thurs., Fri.

TF 2-3221

10 • 9

�Friday, Decamber 13, 1963

SPICTIUM

The Speetrum

SECl'ION D

Featur•

Fascination of Light Related ToyCollection
f O Christmas Season Story
:e:~u:,~
~~':
This

The Christmas season is here ,
one of llghtness and merriment,
peace and goodwill. It is no~
stran ge that light represents ' so
many qualities associated with this
season of the year. It is human
nnture to believe that everything
associated with light, the sun, day­
light, is good and has a quality of
knowingness, while those things
which are associated with darlmess
are considered evil and sltange.
This fascination with light has
appea red throughout history. The
lr~ends of Greece tell us that
1)101:enes went about with a llght
his hand, jooking for an honest
"lil ll. It was a light , n pillar of
or,• lh11t iruided the Israell1es
·,,ugh tbe desl'rt lo !he Promised
!Id. Countless number of prim­
' \'(' I ribes worshiped thr sun a.s
, «ourL'I? of food. wisdom. Irr
, and pro tection.
-· ,1g11Hit·,u1I, llwn, that li~m

is emphasized so much in Decem­
ber the darkest month of the year.
lt is almost as if humanity were
creating a substitute for the sun.
The Christ-child Is hailed as the
Light of the world. His advent was
heralded by a brilliant star in the
East. We decorate our Christmas
trees with gaily colored bulbs. We
place candles throughout the bouse
to signal the good cheer of the
season. Our carols ring out in the
night the promise of peace on
ea rth good will to men.
Once again, Jesus returns with
with His message ol love. 11 re­
mains for us to acce pt this mes­
sage or cast it aside. By a~cepting
the message, we must dedicate
ourselves to making a better world ,
Wt' mus t strive. day by day. to
bring abou t an end to , sufft&gt;rlni::,
lgnonmce 1md intolerance. One
wiv to al'11leve thcs&lt;&gt; enfl~ is hv
il\'mg th,• Clm~tmas me~,:n~1. 'l:
Ut Bt•iiin ...
"

, k111dll
ng ul n Iii.;" •n rtu HIii­
lo •~ril:l!t' h,•r,l"it'd tl't' "'
,II'! r,t th~ hul!d,,) , I f'l~J1111Th1s 1,•smat wit I be ·• ,,.I ,r,11,. 1•i~ht da\~

I •hi on,· , nd!t

,,. II mnrK
•~1•rvanc,' of lhL· rinal 1~}

"-II I

I

,11~n ~
.... lh,t

J\:iU ,, tt, ,.
h1

nrnnv ttnu ~ 1n u,,

,I

I Pt'

n

•II

i

1

1•111

11a:-:.,

,

h 1'111t11t • .a&amp;:I

l ,' ,j 1.:ll.1,rt t)f

\h

'1,1t'!(H1,

,,... l':'i("''

S(.l,{~'

't•' lt t&gt;\&gt;' ,!l 'l
, UntJt r ~y••1,1r, f'lU

I'
..

1,

,•

'kctt.dc.1!) $vr-i1J h, ' '"~' J .. ,,, 11111;the Land of ..,rad
without
fnliJor dif!lrully. Th&lt;' rl'lanons h..'­
""•'1•11 the piioplc of Pah:~tine and
h 1r Syrian masters were peace­
ful and cordial. But all of this
changed when Antiochus IV acceded
lo the Syrian throne. Antiochus
sought to strengthen his multipeo­
plrd kingdom by imposing nn arti­
ficial cultural and reUglous unity
upon the nations of his empire. He
wa.qdetermined to tighten his con­
trol over his subjtcts by Introduc­
l
ing a sing le way cf Ille , a sy3tem
in which all people were to think
and act alike. The Imposition ot
be, worth dying for. So basic are
HPltenism, the life pattern of the
they to meaningful lll(_i
ng. that with­
Greeks, he believed to be well
out them life itself beeomes a mat ­
suitd to the realization of his goal.
ter of doubUul worlll. Mat1athlas
And so he began to su ppr ess the
and
his sens could have easily pur­
rrliglon of his Jewish subjects and
to sub:tl tute Greek ways for Jewi sh chased for themselves a life ol rela­
values. Jew·sh relig!:,us observnnc­
tive ease and comfort. They could
r~ were outlawed and th e worship
have submitted to the dema nds of
of Gree k idol5 was int?OLuced nor Antiochus and fcr.;aken their an·
infrequently at the pcint of ~ Sy­ cient traditions and beliefs. By
ni n sword. J ewish antagonism be­ ceasing to practise the pre cepts of
gan lo mount. In the l:t•!~ town ol their religion and to teac h the prin ­
Modin near Jerusalem. in the year
ciples of their heritage , the y would
168 B.C.E., the tensions that had
have been able to live out their
been building up over the years
'lives without struggle an&lt;l s~lf-sac•
Oared into an open revolt. Under
rifi ce. They decided . however.
l~e leadership of Mattathias and his
course . They refused to deny their
live se ns. the best known of whom
agalns\ following this expedient
was Judah Maccabee. the Jews
basic cc nvictlon s. The price de­
fought back. At llrst. a s mall band
manded for a life ot physica l saf e­
of warriors hnrrassed th e Syrian
ty seemed much too high to them .
forces by guerrilla attacks. which
They were unwilling lo purchase
utilized to great advantage the ele­ such a life in rxchang e (or their
rnenls of surpise and maneuverabll • souls.
tty. Later on. as the tiny guerrilla
The celebratio n of Olllnukah, the
b.1nd i:rew into a siiable army . it
kindling of the lights . the bumming
bewin to engage the Syrian forces
; open battles. By t he yea r 165 of the familiar melodies . thr rt'Ci- '
tation of the pra yers of thank~ and
· CE .. Jerusalem had been recap­
&lt;url'd and the 11rmies of Ant10chus praise - (·an be of more than sen­
timental significance. It can bec&lt;lme
•Iii~ been pushed back sulllcienlly
" IH!rmit lhe rededication of thf' a sour ce ot sp iritu al streng1h for
temple. which the Syrians had de- us as individuals and as members
1'11'&lt;!
hy 1hr r rrcllnn of Grt&gt;f&gt;kldnt~. nl 1 dt•mtl('rati&lt;'• ~orirtv

1l11•r

• rth.

lltVI

i:m,d

• 11! tt,wnttl

II

t,, l(:lt.
t w

m1•r1"

,111nie

1

F11rn;i&lt;

• lup-h ,,..,1111,I th

w,

~ .. ;&lt;'Uh ()()(

,tppruaclws, It&gt;! us ll,alht r
,, , l-1.,,Ii II I •t u~ 1,Mrtlc1patl' 111 th1.

lit• S,•,1s,l11

ff('~II-

ti'!)'

l1

or

'1.

11w h .. J,,,..: , 11 c 1, rf' ,tl1t lwritag(
:ind n us ,,•rrnct
J \\ill. And 11 - l' 1t 11
, will olso
p·1r tr'lrn1c&gt; n J"•r!. th&lt;' grt&gt;::i.tr.st\tihu,,• to • lLr \,,IL l'r•
1 Ii lt&lt;l1C'atl'ohb i1fr 10 Ull' spirit Q( th, iioUda\'I

11\l

I 1111

&amp;~ this

~ro11nri
11:, ,l Sl'n~t of
Joy nm! hup1 inL•ss 1)(

Partyin Goodyear

tiu11 tllrn

1h1• , l'Jl!l•rntJ•rn.
'rh,

The Yule Season approaches in the wake of national
mourning. It is with sadness iin our heaiits that we prepare
for the Holiday Season, a season which down thr ough the
a&amp;es perpetually generates good feelin g and produces good
w~ll amon g men. There is, however, also reason to rejoice
this year For, from ,the darkened and chilled November
skies that still cast their shadows. our country has emerged
■ stronger -than eve r as a symool of brotherhood and unit ed
stren gth. unfaltcnn:• no matter huw gre at or tragic the
■ crisis.
■ J .
As we _ulsu:tpp,roach the half-way point of uur ncadc&gt;nt•
1c year, tl11s t~ a ttmP as well to all ow 1lu1·selves to kavl'
( •
bc·ltind :h,, stingmg t'rustrations. the d1sappo in1mcnts, and
!'lW H•P m,,untlu;.. pressures; tn c·ontetH uursc-ln's with .. u1
;n•htP\'t'!tlfl
~i vnd I• , 1•kmdlr• nur &lt;&gt;(fort:;to pr&lt;'pan• lnr l
1utnr1• 11h1,•h dmlv become,; inc reasingl y challen~ ing, Yl"l
ll"''ardint
and tuHilling
for those who .1r,
t rt1ru len~,•~

I

111lcjoyfully ~·,mtempl atni::: th,•
lllf' llOl'llh 11n1! hunm1i&gt;1•. II&lt;• [ ••
tfldl1 ..~x,sh- 0t'l'
o V' n
,1111.i
r nwiodit•s .1~ \\t· n;1H ,!cm,.•
1 rJal 18 I\Orlh t1i;tmnr.: n.n&lt;l II nN ,,
1

,

And su,

·,lj I e uddl!ti

•hi 11

PRESIDENT

Any student wllo has been vexed
by the "dead'' cars in the Tower
parking lot will fmally have an op­
portunity to dispell their a~va­
tlon -by helping to smash the car
to smithercnes. (for a small fee.
whlch will be adaed to the Christ­
mas Charity .\
The Charity-Toy Drive is being
sponsored by the Freshman Class
Couricll. Proceeds will go lo Child­
r&lt;'n s Aid Society and S.P .C.C.: FOs­
tt'r Home Department.

1t ~ h1• • 1, r
1,1&lt;'1''I\
ll
11

\Jfl t u•f\ 'iU1°t • ..

FROMTHE

Dec:.18.
Car lmalhl119 Party

.;Ja
gnificance f Chanukah
ht D y Festival Explained
' ·IJ:-i1' .,

Sporta

A Christmas
Message

placed

in Norton to collect donatio.ns of
toys , dolls . child,,ellll book$ , and
any ther small gifts suitable for
giving to underprivileged children.
The Christmas Charity Drive will
be climaxed by a "Car Smuhlng
Party" in front of Norton on Wed­
nesday,

•

..Chri tmnc

I ti ••

na· n,,,l

vnl:-

.oncert Scheduled

l"Xtl\lltl,,s \I ,1 1,1., la•,• l, 1
.:,v OE LANG
• .,, '' ,n,I ,1: :oI· ni. n ru,...day,
Ot't' 17, n.,rr,•~hnll'nl~ 1,ill bt• ~Cr.I· 1 Tlw .\nnu111 r'lu1~tmus &lt;.:onr&lt;•t1
since it has hecomc sUC'h a tradi­
r d.
tional and popul ar t&gt;Vt&gt;
nt on the
All ~·ommut lng 1vomen who at­
U.S. Campus, will be prcsrnted
tend will be asked lo vc1tc !or the
three evenings - Frirlay , Saturday.
loung&lt;' which is best decorated In
and Sunday, Dec. 13th - 15th. The
the following categ ories : original­
Friday evening performance will
ity; most attrac tive; best O\'er-all
be open to students and will be
!Joor and the hospitality of the
performed in the Multi-Purpose
girls on the Ooor.
Room of Norton Hall. The Saturday
The girls of Goodyear are extend ­ and SIIJ)day evening performances
ing a special invitation to all wo­ will be given in Lockwood Memor­
ial Library, as previously announc­
men day student s to come and
ed. Tickets are still available in
judge our lounges and see our
Norton and Baird Box Offices tor
"homes".
the Friday
performance
only.
Though admi11Sion is free, ~
who wish to a ttend must obtain
A special John F.
tickets.

:n,

Kennedy Me m or i a I
Fund was established
by the Public Relations
Committee of the Stu­
dent Senate to collect
funds to assist in the
establishment. of a re­
qufom for the late pres­
pre~ident.
The committee, under
the chairma nship Qf
Robert Finkelstein , en­
dorsed the Senate ,oro­
posal for the requiem .
All students. faculty
and or)!anizations have
been asked to . contribu ­
te to the fund in "re­
spect for the late mar­
tyred president. "
Money can be con­
tributed through t h e
Student Senate Office
or in a special collection
box which will be at the
Norton Candy Counter
ea~y next week Checks
shouJd~be .madl! payable
to the Student Senate.

1

" The probl em ol developing a
Christmas program is to find some­
thing dllterenl without losing the
traditional flavor of the season,"
says Robert Beckwitli. assis tant
professor of music and director ot
choral music here nt U.B. But Mr.
Beckwith found ample opportuni ­
ty to gather materials !hat are
"dltferent" while traveling through
Eastem Europe as a n exchange
scholar from January to SeptelTI•
her, 1963. There are a considerab le
number of Christmas sell!CUOl\llIn
the collection or more than 1,000
volumes of music and microfilmed
choral pie&lt;'tlS which he se nt back
to U.B. Mr. Beckwith spent Jan ­
uary to June as an exchange
scholar at Moscow Conser.1atory
and the summer touring Eastern
Europe , Including PQlatKI and
Cze, hoslovakla .
As ii rl'Slllt, this Y!.'l,l
r 's Chri~t­
mas Concert 11111 he centered
around Eastern Euro(l('an Chnsl
mas music, some of whkh ha~
never been heard In the UhltNI
Stall'S. The Con~-ert will feature
the University Men's Glee Club,
' Wnrn~ ·~ ~It'
, ~ R~-&lt;.• ~

1t11t 1 i 1
l

f'tJ

I

ttt'l"S.

One highlight

of the

pmRrt11t1

1sa beautlhll Russ ian church plN"r
tor thr Fl'a~t ot the Nativity by
Grechaninov, which wlll be sung
in llle original Old Riwiun .
While in Poland, Mr. Beckwith
was a gues t of lhe Institute ol
Mus«olO!O' at Warsaw University
where Important work is being
done to discover the ancient Lra•
ditions of Polish music . "The Poles
have made lmpoJttant contributions
to European musi c &lt;;town through
the centuries," he says . At tht•
Concert, 17th Century motl!l by
Mikolaj Zielenskl will be perform ­
ed, which the composer wrote tor
the Feast of the Nativity . It fea .
lures two antiphonal choruses with
the acco mpaniment of string and
brass choirs . The motet will ht'
sung In Polish ,
In Ciechoslovak la . Mr B&lt;'&lt;'kwlth
bought II volum e of old Oiristmas
pastorals
by pr N lasslcaJ 18th
Century fomposens. These will be
per form ed by the chorus and the
stri ng ense mble .
'
The performance of "'The An­
gels an d lhe Shepherds ," a Christ·
mas scell&lt;' !or Women's voices by
the eminent Hunl!llrlan, Zoltan Ko­
da ly, wl II he n result of Mr . B«k­
wl~h's meet ing with that composer
while he wu in Budapest .
To give the progrsm a famlllar
and tradit1ona 1 na vor the famous
"Caro l of the Bells" from the Uk­
rain e wltl be 5Ung. In addition,
Ihe Uknunc will be represe nted by
a folk-choral se tting with fiddlr
1wcompanlml'n t )l"'illcn by the 00th
Century l'Oml)O~ t•r ~nrtinu Anoth­
,,r tmdillorn 11 piN'i.' 11ill be tl,c,
stlrrln11 " llnlll'(UJah C'hol"U$" li'Qo,
ll11n&lt;M'K" Ml'Miflh."
.\11 IM.
'r(orm unct'I bt-a;m 1u ~::wi
l'lm

�~AGI E1GHTl5EH

SPECTRUM

Friday, December 13, 1963

~

THE

SPECTRUM

tho oflltltl tll,dt,\1 .. __
of 11w5111&lt;1Unlwnlty of Ntw Yq,ic et lluf11lo.
...... llcellon ~ 11 H•II~ Uftl~nlty ea,,,p.,, ....flllo I~, N. Y. Publlohtd
.....,Iv ,,_ .,,. llnl ww1, of __
.,... to !ho lnl
In Ml,y, ucop l fo,
.,..,_., lJIMlt&gt;olvlno,
foot...

o,,,,.....,. .....,

_,~

Allalr•

w"'

.....

ar HAlllllT HIITLINGll

lOITOtUlt-CHIP - .uNOlll I . MAZUt
Adwn111ng

.
'"' h..­
l•u,e,nc.e
Sfnige,
lltvld Irwin
Me,clt Coope,

""4,

l1yout Edito,
Copy (dl10,

=·~~-

lol, Htul"ll••

Cl,cvltllol" ~r.

ltt1tn

1"""'-t

S.nto,d

Hwnlo, Jr.

0.-ol
J1oll Vldtl lugol,kl, lorn♦ Wtll♦Ch, A. lu1clt ltwn•l\tl, Attn Now..,.",
Allon Scl,o~,.., Mlkt 5ult1'nt~ Vic M.tn10, Rent floch, lorbtlt Sl•tvH, Ronnie S,o,abo,g,
Ch.rJt-t lor,.t, Pit Jone•.N1ltMY lf.c:t•,, Larry frt~'-,
Nancy \MJrlt", Trudy Stern,
J,an Un&lt;.11ft1, C.t.vdJ1 teow•I, 5u••n lick,,, ROH lynn 8,01hm1nl by C,1w ford,
Jtne Sommer, •obeft MIICh
Jer..-ny ttylot
K•rM Chh:ko, Chrl1t M Cun"ingharn,
1
lill,en Ktlaattl", Me,c,1 AM OrHvltk, H,f,nlv\off, Fren M1tfurt, Sandri Olin,
S...,. lonyeu, Jo...,h l_,
Fred Ro,,nbug, Eltlnt &amp;,,rro,,, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rluo ,
,.,.,., --·
,_
Kv111,kl, Dr;a
Don to,lle, litld• W,,,,.,_, Suitnne
,_..,,
, •• .,.., $d,ulrt, ltonn•• w,i-.
,lloc, Os,,tncie,, Lonn•• Kl•Pll♦•n. s.,••
•~t,,n,
DollOJlt Gtl+•, ,,,,.rv """ W•o~IK.l,o

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hr l1eff: Joel H•n11,, Ptn,olt R11d

,,,. .....

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"

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Svbtc,1,:,hoft

$3.00 per ytott, r,1cul•t1on 9000.

hQtHtnred for ,~,,oni1I 11dYertmn,y by Nth ,..nAI Acl,,e,1"1"9
S.,,vlt•, IM,, 420 Mtdr,on Ave., Ntw Vot~, N Y

Editorials
lntegrotion Progresses
The astute observer will often look beyond headline
stories, best--selling books, and political speeches in an at­
•tempt to discover the real changes and underground rum­
blings which affect our society. A recent phenomenon
which The Spectrum would like to discuss briefly is that
which we might term inter-racial advertising.
Quite apart from the necessary legislative enactments.
legal su.its, and implementiation of already eidsting civil
rights statutes, it has always been felt that in order to
ttally affect change and create an egalitarian society, in­
tegration must be brought into the home. An important
step has been taken, as anyone can see if they simply per­
use the latest issues of E■qulre and Playboy magazines, for
example, or even some of the larger ads appearing in The
New York Times.
One such ad pictures three men modelling overcoats;
one of the men being a Negro. There is no indication that
the garments presented are for anyone other than "the well
dressed virile American male."
Whether the notion for such an ad (or others like it)
origina ted with the manufacturer, retailer, or advertising
agency does not matter. All are involved, however, and
it is to their credit that this minor, but highly significant,
step has been taken. Jf we can, we should suppor.t the prod­
ucts end stores which have taken the initiative to present
color in order that we may someday not see it at all.

•

•

Ut Us Help
Instead of adding to the many platitudes we are an­
nually saturated with , this Christmas The Spectrum wishes
to endorse an activity - a Christmas colleolion.
Southeastern Kentucky is a soft coal minmg region
where labor history was made in the 1930's. For a lime, un­
der union leadership, the miners had a decent living stand­
ard. However, in the wake of a series of severe union set­
backs, working conditions have deteriorated; especially,
wages which, for the fortunate few who are employed, are
$3-5 per day. (Unemployment in Letcher County is above
70 percent) .
Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr. , under-secretary of the
Interior, ju.st last month requested Congress to _appropriate
$45 million for emergency winter relief in Kentucky. The
tneasure has been rejected.
But the above is not to say .that the miners are seek­
ing charity. On the contrary, they are waging a form;da­
ble battle against the mine operators and allied politicians
who have ~rted
to anti-labor methods of a past age.
and the apathy of the United Mine Workers Union.
The National Students Association is organizing a col­
lection of food, clothing, and money - and a caravan of
students which would transport that material to Kentucky
during the Christmas holidays, spend a week with the
miners, and join m a conference on -automation and un­
employment.
Students who are interested, and all should be (unless
our own comfort dulls our compassion) can contact the
N.S.A steering committee to contribute whatever they wish
Remember' this is supposed tu be the special season for
such activities.

-- -- -

~¥

....:_

-------~

Belote the Finance Committee of
the Student Senate are budget re­
quests trom five campus organtza.
tlons totaling $8,625. The Irony Is
that these groups all want thla
money for the same thing - speak-

1

enr
Lflst yea, because ol th\• oft­
cited Polluca.l Spectrum and liter­
ary series. ll ts trul' 1hu1 oor camp­
WI estabUshed quilt• a reputation
In tht&gt; area o! intellectua l dlversl•
(Jcatlon Whether thls Is a cause
for activities that range Jrom the
Psychology Club to the Speech and
HearlnA Association to rtquest large
sums or money for these saml' pur­
however, dcse:-ves more
poses,
careful attention.
To date the lnlematl onal Oub
has re&lt;-elved$400 for speakers and
)llll('heons and the Spe('(.'/1and Hear­
ing Association wt!$ glvm $190.The
AnthropologyClub ha.~ beengronted
$700.the Student Zlonllit Organlia­
tion got $325and the C.onvocatlons
Commltlc.-c $7.000of the $9,200that
they fl'Qllested. They are staggering
figures especially In light of I.he
fact that the Finance Committee
has only $10.000 left to supply
groups that have asked tor $30,000,

TIii.' largc budget of the Convo­

cation., Comrnlttee. which last year
spent upwards of S."lOO
on each of
the Political Spectrum Speakers, Is
justified by the fact that each
event drew capacity crowds. Many
students were reached.

,

J!efter:J
lo Ile Llitor
Comments on the Meaning of Love
the reuon wily social actlvidcs
cripple our ability to low genulnel,y
Jeremy Taylor, In the opening
is that they, by their preoccupa­
two para&amp;raphs ol his Nov. 8
Uon with non-permanent types ol
column, adds Insight to the old say.
love , cheapen the va1ue of real love.
Ing, "Bette r lo have loved and Jost Love cannot be equated with "pubfic
display s of affection." but rather ,
than never to bave loved at all ...
Jove is a private inteN:Ommunlon
In a real sense a temporary male­
of two penons. It's the same prin­
female ln!ntuatlon teaches "how not
ciple at work which lowers the
to love" people; the value of such
price of a commodity when the
a tragedy Is that it makes the
'' lover " aware of wily he has loved market is llooded with it.
I cannot agree to all ol Jeremy 's
and more important, malces h1m
To the Editor :

It Is doubtful that students are
going to flock In the same manner
to a speake r sponso red by the
Speech and Hearing Ass'n or the
Anlhropoly Club. On the other hand
beca~ ot the shol'l.aJ!e of funds
the Nunrlng School Council is haV•
obllervation.s., but I sympathize with
log lo create ways to ral5e the l600 cognizant of the attitudes, behaviors
the state or emotiOl:lal despair
dollars thnt the Student Senate re­ and trait&amp; of the " beloved " which
which may have prompted surh
have disillusioned . his rosy view.
fused to grant them for a State­
a IOU.I-revealing appra.lsal. In the
The lover goes away, in the lyrics
wide Nursing Conte~
to which
17 scboots have been Invited. The ol Lemon Tree, "a sadder man but words of the poet,
wiser," becausebe knows ln what
Council had to fight on the Senate
way these various attitudes, etc of
Cnn man in carnal beauty
floor for $302 for the program. Al
llnd plll'l' tnttht
the same time $700 was given tor the "object or his affection'' ntfect
him, favorably or unfavorably, In
la man not bllnded
an Anthropoly Club speaker pro,
his "pre-wed school" aearch tor a
by the eye■ of youth!"
gram .
Ute-partner.
Sincert].y,
Riwell Goldberg, o member or
I would sugest to Jeremy that
DAVID L som.IBER
the Finance Committee pointed out
that "t he committee endeavors to
augment
support speakers that
the purposes or the groups for the
(T ise loUowlng la a I.Uer t,o.., a Gt.......
dlldelLI lo a U.a.
edification ot the student bocly as
laculty --•
Oil Ille dee.lb of PKotdelLI
Ke......Sy ,)
a whole. " All speaker programs .
with the exception ol Bi1IOllhead, To the Editor :
He was ahead of his time and I
are o-pcn to the whole University
can only compare him perhaps
This is a tragedy beyond words,
and money is BIWII.YSallotted for for you, for me , a hwnan and poli­
with your Abraham Lincoln who
adequate publicity.
Ucal trageczy, for our countries, bad to die for the same rea!',OII
Be cause I believe (although thett
for the ~ world, and all peace­
Publicity will do little good when
no one portlcularl)' cares . The so­ loving people throughout the world. Is no news about the cause of hi.!
death) that it wu a segregallon isl
The deatl1 of Mr . Kennedy Is
lution lies instead in a re-vampinc
who committed this unbellcv nble
of the total speaker program on beyond my small comprehens ion;
campus. It seems odd Ulat the Con­ we are shakened and unable to aSSWISlnatioo.
speak proper words , but In my
We love this man, more thO.n
vocations Committee la having n
mind so many thoughts are spin• our official speal&lt;ers can eJ1plam
hard time finding any speakers
ning that J must sit down and
we the common people or German )
with a $7000 budget when the Ao•
write lo m,y American friends .
because he was a straight, hones!
thropology Club can find U1em with
man, someone we trusted and we
onl,Y $700. What would make sensl'
You will remember his trip to
hoped that he would malce a big
Is to havt&gt; the Convocations Com­ Germaey, the overwhelmlng recep­
mittee be a centra t clearing house tion in our cities. I have seen him approach townrds peace all owr
for all speakers sponsored by slu­
the world.
in Frankfurt - a young man. a
dent groups on this campus.
brilUant nnd sympathetic speaker
My heart b with you Am~nr,m
I
who
won
the hearts of all our peo­ people. I'm not ashamed to (ldnut
The CommJtwe rould then re­
ple. Wt have great feelings for
that I am crylni. I hav e s&lt;'l'II
quest a budget that would cover all
this great man who has done so
l'Mt\Y people the last lour ho\11"­
these speakersand allol It to the
much to k~p our precious lrtt­
clandcstinely sweeping away trar&lt;
variou., organiza tions u II sees tit .
dom. But how mui:h it must m('an
fl'om their eyes and not Jook1":•
Tht' advanlages would be a lack
for you. It is too early to appre­
nt ont&gt; another.
of possible dupliralion and a more
ciate his importance and meaning;
We have not on\y to mourn I~(
ro-ordinatt'd program .
al the end everybody must find out
widow, his children , and you. ,ir
by
himself
how
much
this
man
Our pas! rerord In this lleld is
have to moum about our """''
a ftne one and certainly no ont­ meant to him .
He'11 a loss for everybody .
would s~est
its discontinuation.
The.re is no penalty on this earth
We bow our heads In honor vi
It does Aeem a UtUe ridiculous, for such n rrlme; It is unbe lieva ble John F. KelDI~
great m.111
however , for every group to work
that surh a thing could happrn In here In Germaey,
and, I think
on Its own. OM body, through
your clvillzed counlJ'y .
throughout the world With ..or
whll'h ttie.e groupscould seek ad•
deepest regret~ In ~~)f
vi I I
We all 1,,-av
e our s,ympatl\Y to
Vll'C', ~y
and CO-OrdlnatiOll,
t.his man ; Wf all rejoiced ¥.ilh hllll
GPrman people
woud be a far better ¥.!I)' to work
when we hcam a boul hi~ virtones
Your frl('nd,
In tht futur..,.
____
against ,e&amp;l'el[atfon
the south.
PE"l'E~

_____
__ ______
~----,---- - ___.

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Campa•

..

wm

A German's Sympathies

Jn

�PAGENIN&amp;TUN

SPECTRUM

The Circus
Br IOa MILCH

IndianProf.Cites
Afro~Asian
Power
InUnited Nations
ly lllONNII llll OMH ~O

'lbe lighta of Washington wink
in jhe distance, while on the hill•
side the November wind tup at

did - the what and the where and
the how But they forget why."
"No, Mr. President. They remem­
the eternal flame. 11iey have all ber wey, too."
"Do they, John! Do they re­
gone now. Where mourning lead­
ers have: stood with 1-ds bowed, member why I said 'With malice
where a mourning tamib' has stood toward none'? Do they remember
with re90lute iaces almost belyll'lg why I said 'from these honottd
grief, where a mouming nation dead we take increased devotion'?
reels it has burled a part of it­ Do they remember, John? Then
why are you here?"
~el!. now only trodden grass bears
"They won't forget this time.
witness to what has passed tht&gt;re.
If you try to feel more than the
Mr. Presldellt. Nol this time."
"Martyrdom la quick and cheap,
chill o! the night, if you try to
smell more than the lingering John. 'Ibey remember the deed,
but the reason why fades so S0011
' scent of wilting (lowers, if you try
trom memory. The hate comes back
to hear more than the dead leaves
and feeds on its own stuff and
blowing. if you try to see more
grows until men will plot and men
thall the fresh turned earth, there
will curse and men will maim and
11~11 be two men there. One will
J1avel· ughing blue eyes and a boy­ men wlll k!U again. So soon."
''This time they'll remember.
ish face and hair that won't stay
In place. The other. with arms too You'll see, this time."
"John, the honored dead do die
, with a
long even for his tall bodY
bearded face furrowed by care­
in vain"
"Not lhl11 time, Mr. President.
worn lines and set with brooding
~yes, will stand next to him. To­ They'll remember what I lived for
gether, they will stare at the ruck• and why J died. This time they'll
remember."
..ring name.
"Will they, John? "
"John !'(
If you try to feel more than the
"Yes. Mr. President?"
chill of the night. If you lcy to
"I wish you didn't have to come
so soon. You missed many things. smell more thM the lingering
scent of wilting Dowers, It you try
:md there was a great deal yet
to hear more than the dead leaves
lo do."
'
"Yes Mr. President. But I did blowing, i1 you tcy to see more
than the fresh turned earth there
much.''
"They forget. thou11:h,John."
will be two men there.
But you can' t feel mort!', can't
"They.haven't forgotten you, Mr.
smeU more, can't hear more, can·t
President. what you ,did."
"Ye! they have, John , Oh. they see more. How. then, can you re­
l'l'ml'mber what J said or what I member?

Applications BeingAccepted
For Overseas College Work
Application periods for three Ml·
year sluczy programs ln Paris ,
Vienna, and F.reiburg, West Ger­
many, for U. S, undergraduates
ure being accepted three months
earlier than

usual.

The Institute of European Stu­
dies announced in Olicago that
that students have until June 5,
1004,to submit formal applications
ror the 1964-65programs. The ap­
plication period was openedearlier
because enrollments for the spnng
1004programs in Vienna and Frei ­
burg are filling up rapidly, Jnsti.
lule officials said .
The Paris Honors program al·
lows qualified liberal arts srudent~
opportunities to study in their maj­
or fields at the University of Paris
nnd other Paris schools. Six weeks
of intensive language training be­
fore classes open help to prepare
sludents for courses, which are
taught only in French , Enrollment
1slimited to B-average juniors and
a few outstanding sophomores.
The Paris program ls under the
direction of a professor of tbe
lnstitut d'Etudes Politiques, a part
ot lhe University o1 Paris.
The InsUtute's "European Year"

program at the University of Vien•
ne oUers a choice between German
- and English-taught courses In his•
tory, political science, literature ,
philosophy, PSYchology, economics,
tine arts and other field~. plus in­
tensive German language instruc•
lion and opportunities to take reg­
ular German-taught courses in the
Univenlity. Applicants need not
have had German, but mll!lt be
juniors or sophomores with at least
C•plus averages.
"Das Deutsche Jahr" at the 500yeaNJld Univl'rsity of Frelburg, in
Germany's Black Forest, is con·
ducted (or juniors in political sci•
ence, history, literature , phlloso­
pl\y, educational theory and P!!Y·
chology. It offers complete Integra­
tion into a European University,
together with about one hour of
tutoring for every hour or class.
\II courses, of course, are conduct•
ed in German . Applicants musl
have a B average.
Each program includes two
fleld trips in western Europe with
Institute lecturers . A folder des·
criblng the programs is available
from the Institute of European
Studies, 35 E, Wacker Drive. Chi•
cago. m

Famous
TreeHere

REFLECTIO
By JEREMYTAYLOR

····· ·····················

··•··········· ··· ·········· ···· ··

be-come
question, of bl.lanc-eand
potffltlal. We tpmd 100 mlK'II ffi­
"Nothing decisive can take place
tra)' on what wt think and r~
In the General Assembly llf the
our fN'linp to words bttam.- wr
United Nations without the concur­
oanno«
them; wt- canoe
rence of the Afro-Asian group."
mc-uure them, but Wf tllll ,_...
Thls group has a "large vote and
culty In showing ernotloo; WO~ 111• them.
reprel!ClltSa very big minority.''
Mr. Devavrat Pathak of Indian, are cheap and money ...._ , talk.
Kn&lt;&gt;wlt'd&amp;e
ts a ~OIi
ot mee•
visiting Le&lt;.'1.urer and Reae11rch These past weeks have called upon
urtmrnt : undc-ntandlnl[ la a qu­
Scholar at UB, expre.sed lhes(' us to express so much-Kennedy
Ideals while explalning his research was no saint, he may not even tlon of recopltlon. Many of 1111did
but not reco~c- Kennedy until hl' wu
project on "Asian and African Re­ have been a great presldc.'111.
gionalism with special reference to nll our grief Is rNI , We fllld thllt dead. U we do not ~ze
our minds alone are not enough ~Ives W'llll\\'\\ a.rt ~d. the world
the United Nations."
.
Although there is a probl~m o( to express our deepest truths, In has been be~
If we do not N'(OtlJIIJe othfn
unity within the nations or lhls illve as well as In grid .
until they are de11d,w, have been
group. It is "often the balancing
The implications of ell our lives betrayed .
ractol' in deliberations at the U.N."
there is a betrayal In llltering
As a result of the countries being are too profound to utter . There
predomlMnUy uncommitteed. they ere only a tew of you students the past-grief Is mffJ\lt\&amp;INS
IC
who
ore
now
reading
this
t,('11\t'nce
serve as "a moderating lnlluence.
we mourn the mon wllQ 11$.t~n
They are responsible for many for whom I have only respect. Yet ,alntl'd by tht Amc-rlcan prtaa
compromise !Olutions and oft('n )Ve share a t-cenmon genesis 1111d l'llther than the: mlln who wax ~hot
work as a bridge between EaSI and rour /at11, as well as mine, &lt;'Ulml­ m Dalla.a.
nntes In a lonely death. I cdnnot
West."
feel theS&lt;'is a god, yet I recognize
Sludenl$ are rioting In Paris for
However, "'the countries d~n•t al­ ln ritual, a truth before whkh awe
ways vote together; they vole D&lt;'­ is lhe only appropriate ehlolion; u better educatton. I am f&amp;llln,r
In love. You have dJ;unk )'OUr
cordtng to their own ldeas. Earh
the empty boots reversed ln Blo&lt;'k
ttee and wondered wl\y thrrt'
with Jnrk 's Rlirrups nr1' os old as c&lt;&gt;
country ls chiefiy conce~
wns no Spectrum last week. Utt
Its own &lt;WVelopme11t
and lmprov&lt;'­
.
goes on wllhollt the &lt;l('4d 1111d
Wt'
menl of its economic life." Inola lllnJlllllJ!:I'
There.• is a realm or real ox­ discover once again thllf lnten.,!ty
i! the leader and perhaps thl' big•
gest countcy ol the Afro-Asian pl'rience In th!$ world whtrh Is out­ cannot be malntalnro ln nll)"IJ\ln1r
but the present.
group. Its role consists of "exl'rt• side or nwasurem&lt;'nl. 'l'hl' rorees
ing influence on the group and tok­ whl&lt;'h were fOl'u~,-din the rccog­
Al this Instant. ~th ot us has
n!zabll' instunl wlk!n OIJr Prei;!dent
ing the lead. not de.finitely fixing
was killed were as real as the cunfint'CIthr world within the apo.ct'
the policies."
or OUJ'own 1kull. Ench Ohl' Of u,
The Afro-Asian group " I~ for th1• bullel that killed him. All too often hi gullt,y or · ·"'"'"' · But thl' ll'Orld
we
do
not
recognize
the
real.
only
main objectives or thr U.N. llht'
of thl' 1'1'111.8llhoUll'h ultlmlltl'IY
policies and major issues of world the actual.
troreebl e 10 the physlc:llllly of
The worlrl has broken fallh with thlng5, binds us lnexll'l&lt;'llbly to
politics), rt favors equality. remov­
al ol racial discrimination, fret.'­ all or us al one time or anothrr­
11ach othl.'r. We cannot mrn•urt
dom from ~ loniuition. economic the relationships which n•sull and the~ tle11,but when we l'\.'ClO,::llbl'
aid tor underprivileged countries in wluch we participate ure a n!·
thrm w ar mad whol I\J(llin.
and the peacelul solution of dis­ sun, ulllmatcly, of our refusal to
Kl'Mdy 'i death did not ~ ut
putes." Neither of the big powers t'On.•lder the reAI, We did JlOt pull onything new. We knewthat thl.'N'
the
trigger
which
loosl'II
the
nssas•
can ignore this group as Its support
8N.' vast ):lOrlion~ol Amcricun 110•
lb required for the worklng or the sin's built•!, and anyone who tries
clcty which Bl'\' 111
01tvoted by
lo
lt&gt;ll
us
thal
we
did
is
either
Jn.
Assemb\y.
- but in a vecy fhln.i;s other then lovf'-but ti clld
The group operates In the U:N. $11lt'('re or u Cool
thllt
fOn'&lt;!many of U5 10 ~ze
by utilizing "behlnd-lhl'-door diplo­ profound sen.,;e our &lt;'Uilli.lbilityis Kennedy wtU a real part of our
macy, per3uasion of the p&lt;&gt;wt•~ recoi:niz11blein direct proportion to lives. Let his death servi' to pbare
involved and tbe suggl'Stionor ways whatever part we OUl'S(?lvrshave us In a world where we 1\1\' ttally
and means of compromise." Mr. played in lhe world's belfl\YBIof Interconnected, In )lvlnR ns well
Pathak ' feels that '"the out-look tor our faith,
ate czylng.
the continuance ol this group i11
• • •
A
public
sl)('akcr
once
Sll.l(
I
thnt
good for the lim~ being,"
A teac:her onthis ~'tul\pua once
there
aN•
tour
conditioni1
or
llm&lt;'
·
Mr. Pathak also ~poke about his
The pn$1, lbc pN'll4'nt, thr future. churarll•rtzNI hlnllt-lf !Ill e "quiet
native counlcy. India. Hr does not
pl'OJ)ll).'llndlNItor n 11mer 110Clt'1)'
.' '
feel that castes present any insup­ und lhe " ml1iht 'a' ~ns ," F'rivo­
1'111.'
w&lt;:fotywhkh m u r d , r t d
portable problem. "The rn, le slruc• lou~ ns thl~ may ~~in II Indicates
ture has be(_'Qml'morc and ruOr(' that we llye In 11 ,..,.,, dynamic John 1-·. Ktnn('(\)', ~ H ~'11.ld .
nnd whl&lt;'h will prol)Ably mlJl'ller
modified in re('enl years. II'~ ,, rclationshlv wllh IJWrrnlm or "f)()­
social Lmdillon, but there is a murt• ll'ntlal" At All)' mom&lt;'nt In our Juck Ruby 111not rntll'l'l)' 50nr.
lives. Ev~ry dl'Cl~lon w~ m&amp;kt•
~ch of WI partakes ln lhlat in ,
modem view-point today."
sanity-hu t Nlth of ui b n« 1,'Ullty
This lndian professor is not snus­ grounded on an Infinity or un
fied with tM economk jl;l'OWlhof rt'lllizl.'d possibility, We spend so or thosi' mul'(ll'nJ, We ar-t 1M1tYof
his country; he feels thal It should much or our time drrlning wlult w,• other murden . Murder 11 th&lt;' wUi,
be raster. However. "something is nl'(' 111 nny moment whHt&gt;fallb1g f\11taking of human life. I 1ubmlt
better than nothing." Jn order lo to reullxe that I.his i.s lntel'l'Stln1: 11\nl 10 de-stroy MY part o! u hu,
promote growth. "the Indian Pi-'0- only in relation to what we might mnn life Is mul"d(ll- &amp;l~('ey
dlU'we murder filch oth&lt;'r, qulttly ,
ple themselves must work very btc-. ,
. but
hard ," ln addition. "lhe country
anti with 11 l't'rtllln polltt•n&lt;'1111
fl one n'l.'Og
ni~es love only alter
&lt;'iJrh oclwr by rt'Cusinlf
needs foreign aid in more quanlily.·· ii has happened. then lls R&lt;'nera­ we 11lU1'1lt'r
111
. tion bocomrs entirely a mailer of to r,,r11lzrwt hllve the JIC)l
tmllal 10
Overpopulation presents an orn.
cle to tndian growth. "Th&lt;' go\•cr1. lll&lt;'OllonalChancc,
'
but il Wt' rot.'Oll· lovl', thr nblllty to ht hofll'!rt, 1hr
ment is try:ng its best lo lmpllc/lh• nl1.r when WI' ml-el that. "J rouM PoSslblllty within us to rwoenlzt­
family planning." Another curb to
lov1• yOu." theil pain and barroom ('l\Ch Olher.
t'l'Onomic growth is the gr1•atf)OV&lt;'I"
tY of lhe country. ''The whole his•
tory of India explruns this povrrty;
It was caused by exploitation by
hrc ';:n C'O.!nl~ics.nmong o t h ~ r
lh!nS)I,"
Mr. Patha!&lt;will be teachlnA her~
for the remainder of the scrnest~r.
Marjorie C (;ol'('nflo, n IOpho­
The acho1&amp;nhlp la gjVl!ll e.ch
ffe instructs the Cultures or Asiamore In the Millard Fillmore Col­ yeu b&gt;"~ Soclny to a 11/0mall
11~h!stocy. culture, regions and Jl(.'Oo lege evening division wwi awarded n.ccountlng rn-,ot h'I MIiiard Fiil­
ple. His wlte and Y&lt;:flll!lCr
son Ill'&gt; a $25 textbook scholR.t'lhlp by the mo~ Coll~ . ~· Sodrcyal., IIU-1•
companied him to the U.S. Mr. American Society ol Women Ac­ t&amp;lna • $150 t'~
loan tund
Pathak also has II daughter whO countants. Buffalo Chapter 23. The tor wo1n11n
11«oUntin(c rnajOrt at
ls a p,ychc logy 11111Jor
al &amp;rodu
~hOlarshap was presented throu{Cb the Unlvcndty .
University, and a son whOIs muJor­ Mrs. Norma Hall$, executlvt tN'•
Mia Gomi4o Is a bookkCt'l)t'f'
lng In electrical engineering at Ku, retacy ot Clnancial aid at th&lt;' Uni, with Schum,m, HO'Wdtr.
Jami Unlvcl'$lty.
vcrslty.
and Martin, at:tonw-ys
, bl £Ima.
When Woodrow WIIIOll declared
w.r, M old IChool-mate of his
cut off his trigger finger with an
axe and aent It to him in the mail .
That was a gesture worthy of
the aot, America has great dUtJ·

...

. ..

.. .

. ..

Women
Accountants
Award

Scholarship
to MissGorenflo

The Albright-Knox Ari Gallery drew thousand of visitors to the
this Ouistmas season will Gallery, including many school and
~xhlblt one of the most unusual church groups.
and valuable trees ever seen in
Included in the t.'O
llecUon are
Western New York, Dec. 8 . Jan . s. about 70 figures, representing the
The 16 ft. high tree, shown here Holy Family, the· three Magi, aboUt
a YPar ago. will be decorated with 40 angels and other figures.
l~lh Century figurines produced by
Director Gordon M. Smith said
famous Neapolitan artists.
the second exhibit of lhe tree was
The figures are owned by Mrs.
arranged because of the tremen::t
'
Howell Howard of New York City,
dous Interest and response gt' llf' I'.;,
&gt;1hois loaning them to the Gallecy ated a year ago.
w
~nd who will take pensonal charg e
"We feel there are many pel'90l\S
":.
of decorating the art;ificiaJ tree In who wereunable to i,ee the tree
"'
th,, Gallery.
lallt Otrlstmlll, '' Mr. Smith said,
•
The collection of figures odom• "and ,naey ochers who saw it but
lhg the sper11n •lc tree lasl yeat-would.Jlk:e.e....111.00
...aeeaee
...:!11.t
.Ja111pip:1WJ1
~•-·-====--14l.....:
.igain

:-·········
······· ········ ·············· ··· ··· ··· ········ ·~
•

"'1Jn,.,

m•
\IT

SharlinGave Unique Ledure

r 0
,.

",.
f.
,.

O
,..•
I t~

I •

--

--..L.

A historian ol ki'-™-'«'!Ind tt"Ch·
oology dellvtred • unlCJIM!
ll'CIW'fl
at U.B.'1 E~rinr
SdlOOtDec. S.
SI~ 195.l. 1M ~4't
. Or , Jill'
old I. ~rlln , vt,tttna- NIOC!ett
profof Id~
and technolocY
and thtlt lmpllcal&gt;ont In the al1alrs
-" ol
::...;
nwn=
· '11wtopic of ~ wu

'"l'hl- 19th Cfnt\lry Plck&amp;TwNIOl

Klrwtlc Thaory ot c... .••
toDt . E. Artiw,~
.
bant. dean of tbt Scbool ot Erwi­
oeerlnr. thi. l«tlitt 'WILi Ulf fllll
It\ a .aid that will expion, die W..
toricsl ~ ol 11.ieoce...
lfflir!Oklr,
th(!

~

�, PAGETW£NTY
:_ _______________

_:S:.:P:....=.li..:::C:....T:....::R..:U:.:M:::.:....
____________

MAHONEY
Students
WorkAs Volunteers

~·Student CheatingCited As
Result 01 Grade Pressure
... NAalUIT HIITLINOH
The feeling among many educa.
tors tod&amp;,y ls that. with the lncreas•
lng pressure to go to college and
to get good marks, students tum
rnott and more to cheating as a
me.ns of taking pres.,;ure off them­
aelves.

The e,ctent of cheating on this
campus can probablY never eff&lt;!&lt;'­
bvely be determined . In a recent
,tucly done on this campus, how•
tver. between 75 and ~ per ('ent or
three &lt;!lasses did cheat when they
were presnted with an objective
opportunity . Also there are lnstanc­
e1 or notepassing during exams. or
students taking tests for others and
of hoorUes and Lina.ls getting out
before the actual dnte of the exam .
It Is well-known. too. thnl teachers
ottl'n give the same or 5lmllar
tei.1s year after year and tha.t many
or th('se can be easily unearthed.
Dishonesty, acrording to re&lt;'l'nl
mai:axine arti&lt;'ll'$. is particularly
prevelent in large universities. Thr
vast slw ol the ch1s.-;csmeans thar
tea&lt;'hers cannot get to know stu­
dents individually . It is alllO very
hard to proctor effec tively in largt'
ch:1~es.
Those who r~•ognbe the extent
to which cheating has spread do not
nc:cessarily blame the student. Gra­
hom Cole, Dean or Freshmen at
Willaims College, staled the pro­
blrm succimtly when he said that
.. • . • It is the final mark re&lt;'elved
in the course , not what one has
learned. that is l'&lt;'ally important."
Overall solution.~ to the problem
of academic dishonesly apl&gt;('ar to
be threefold. ()fl{' u.sed by maey
S&lt;'h0t)lsis the inttinlion or un hon­
ors system. Here the emphasis is
taken off grades; exams are tak en
individually and then returnC'd to
the instructor Bnd a sludrnt who
&lt;'heats risks pc•rsonal rejection .
Other institutions have a very
riitid and &lt;'Areful system or proc•­
tors but stude nts thcnlSelVl"s admit
lhl\f !hilt thr morr $('(.'Urlty then •
1~ the more l11~m1ous they mn IH••

(Continued

make on this subject. He feels that
studen~ ha\le quite valid ratiooal1.tatlons about cheating because of
the tremendous pressure on good
marks. When they realize that olh­
ers are cheating and that the de­
viation is becoming universal tsey
decid e that It ls allrlght to cheat

too.
One rationale that ~tudents use
Is that with the system of curved

morksm a student feels he cannot
avoid cheating ir he wishes to rom­
pete with his dishonest friends . A
second rationale is the way in
which the student chooses to de­
fine the purposes or academic life.
Mnny see h.il:'her education as a
type of ritual that makes a stu­
dent adl'C{Uale in the eyes of the
workl. These are tbe students who
put little or no valu,:, on gaining
KNOWLEDGE BUT f Pel thnt at
the same timr they must acquire
good grades. Thl' 11ction.s ol this
person do not matter as long as
they do not hurt his reputation or
his chances ror the luture.
"The hesl socinl mntrots·'. sug­
gests .Mr. Kennedy. "art• not those
thnt came from the rop structure
down but what the students cre at e
themselves."
He f&lt;'Cls it is not
strictly th(' problem of the uni­
versity or the administration lo ac:t
as a police force. The problem or
academic dishonesty shoul d lie with
a student association .
Mr. Kennedy gl)('ll on to say lhat
"a n honor system with t&lt;'Clh, mean­
ing ont' that is rl,:?ldly enforced.
l'OUld be provided by lhc students.
it il &lt;.'Oulddemonstrate to the ad­
minJstration ifs clfoclivcncs.~ in re­
ducing cheating
and creating a
mol'&lt;' scholarly atmo.qpherl'.

Kennedy Interviewed

from

Pac•3f

No mailer what the Senator says
in his lecture, no matter the ans­
w,:,rs he may give to any ques­
The Spectrum
tioning liftener;
l~&gt;uld almost guarantee that the
audience will be cpPn•mindeJ; a
quality the Sena tor has llOI exhibit­
ed al all limes .

.

To be op&lt;m-mindl'&lt;l is to think
freely in an opl'n gocicty. Recep ­
livity, hcwevcr, is dt'pendent upon
what is :·a!:I. The two mnrepts nrc
diffl•n•nt; thr Scnatcr, appaN&gt;ntly,
doc~ not think so. Thal is, ('lithin
Constituliom1I limits ns dl'lincd by
the Suprrme Ccurn frl'CJorn or
Sfl&lt;•cehls frrt'dcm - a right; and
to spcnk or "license" in that con­
lll'('lion srcms a bit murky .
Chlldrl'n and students tin thr
true- sc-nse of that word I are con­
sid&lt;'r11bly slm1lar in on,• respect :
both hnVI, nr. unfailing inqufsllive
nnture, 111,;J neither are satisfi&lt;'d
ivilhout an answer . So, let us talk
o1bc:11ttlw S.L.i\., clhks codrs ,
~late t•11fo1·t1•mN1tor civil righls.
and 111u11y
otlwr things - ,:,i;;pecial..1111,·frl'C.lom.
..
1~•. 11,·1111

Le, u1 -attend . . . let u1 limn
, let us enluate.

Applications for fin•
sncial aid, for the 196465 Academic Year, will
be a v a i I a b l e after
Nov. 18, 1963, at the
Office of Financial Aid,
233 Hayes Hall. Dead•
line for return ing appli·
hations: March 1, 1964.

WithStaffof State.Hospital
ly

PAT JONH

Forty U8 students working at
the Buffalo State J-l~ltal In a vol­
unteer program have effected "a
tremendous irnpact on the patients."
according to Mr. Cushman.dlrector
ol the volunteer services at the
hospital . "The personnel of the hos•
pital are so institutionalized that
the patients appreciate the person­
al service and (riendly hand the
students represent." Ml'. Cushman
continued.
Reverend John Buerk . Protestant
Chaplain for the university. original­
ly set up the program with the
hospital a~ministratlon. Now the
participating students are indepen­
dent of any supervision.
The program war; Initiated with
an orientation program presented
at two sessions in October by the
hospital which stated its regulations
and rules of conduct. The schedule
hns set up hvo weekly plans. tu­
toring and recreation, to provide
opportunities for the development
of person-to-person contacts. This
primary goal is proposed to give
the patients a personal link with
people outside the hospital , a factor
which sometimes enables the pa­
tients to return to their normal
lives sooner.
The tutoring program involves
patients. 16-20. who are expected
to rcmaln In the hospital only a
short while. The subject matter
varies from simple reading and
arll.hmetit to college level discus­
sions of literature and drama. Of­
ten the academic matter provides
11 starting point from whlch more
personal friendly · discussions de­
velop according to the Interests of
the patient.

The receatton program is open
to all hospital patients. At the hos­
pital's social center, the students
join the patients in playing cards,
games, singing, dancing and con­
versation. The students' efforts help
to occupy the time for many of the
patients and provide a change in
the routine .

Several students have notieed a
Jack of facilities and activities . This
lack is especially apparent in the
social center which ls inadequate
and in decrepit condition. Although
it represents an important factor
in the patients recovery it ls not
included under the state's financial
support.
Most students feel the program
ill a rewarding experience. In many
instances the volunteer work sup.
plements the students studies, such
as nursing and psychology ,
Schedule changes or the students
may force the program to re-ad­
just its present schedule. Any stu­
dents interested in participating in
the program can contact Rever end
John Buerk at either TF 4-4250or

TF 6-5806.

NEWCHEVELLE!
BYCHEVROLET
TIM kind ef p-t • Vl-,-u'd Hpeet
"'""ent
et Ctwvr'• ..... t fll,.._.y
...,._men.
Ceme en deWnand drive It.

t'Omc.
Bnl{IIUld prost•snts a third solu­
tion. lndiv1dual l••ad11.&gt;rswork with
111)('dfirstudents in prC'p1mng for
1111edam whil'h anoth.-r tl'at'h&lt;'r ud­
minish•fll. Tl•sls nr,• for thP most
part oomprt&gt;h&lt;msiv&lt;•w thnt 11 is
impos.sibh• lo t'hf'!l(. ThP rmphMis
l~ for the atudr nt to show wh11t hr
cnn do. not to trap h,m.

F_r_
lda....:y::..:.,
_Dec
_ em
_ be_r_13_
,_1_96
_3_

'TIMkind ef c.mtwt w-u'd
••PNt In a lar1• Interior.

-c- .,, dewn

and stl In It.

Mr . Mllrk Kennedy . l..ectu1w in
hl'II
llOmr intrrc3tJng comments
tu

tl11• So&lt;.'iology Department .

Winter
Weekend
Scheduled
ForCampus

7- 8
February
ly

TRUDY STERN

Friday and 5aturday. Feb. 1 and
8, the campus will be the scene of
the biggest Winter Weekend ever
held. The weekend IVIUbe highlight­
ed by a seriell of events induding
a concert by II famous singing
group on Fndny night ·and many
excitl.nR activities on 5aturday still
In the preparatory
stage . Tlw
plAM for SaturdAy include spo rts
tu'ttvities. and ice skati ng ('Qmpe­
tltion , and a ski exhi bition by U1e
SclummeillterS . Campus organiza­
llons, fratemltl es and sororities
will compete ln o snow ~l'\llptuN'
C'Olltest.'

The weekend w\11 be ronr ludNI
with a dancii at the Hotel BuUllto
wbt&gt;re a Prll\('(" nnd Princess wm

be l)l'elleftled. Chairmen or the
event, IQ)QOIOn.-d
by tlll' Fn.'lhman

ea.

and~----·
Oluncll, att Joseph Tringali

The kind •• "'"" 1tylln1- IMlde •ncl eut­
that makn It the ,..,,, lfflllftnt surprlM.
Cdewn and ttlre at It.

'

Ntw Cliti~llt Malibu Sport C1111
pt

Now-Chevy
spirit
ina newkind
ofcar!
We built this one to do 'more than just stand around
way it muffles noise and cushions buf1Jps.
looking beautifu L Held its weight down in the 3,000.
And the fine hand of Body by Fisher craftsmen shows
pound r.ioge. Then built four lusty engines-two sixes up beneath this one's suave good looks, too.
and two V8's- with output all the way up to 220 horses*!
Sound good? There's more. Like the fact that Chevelle
And if that makes you think this is one frisky car,
comes in three series with eleven models-co nvertibles,
you've got the right idea.
sport coupes, sedans, wagons, even Super Sport models
You've al.so got a roomy car here. Yet its 115-inch with front bucket seats. Like the fact that (and see iJ
wheelbase keeps it highly maneuverable in
,
this isn't one of the nicest surprises of all) the
traffic and very ea.$yto park .
new Chevelle comes at an easy-to-t.ake price!
With its Full Coil suspension, it's got a ridt&gt;
Like to hear more? The listenin~'s won~e:ful
that reminds you of the Jet-smooth kind the
1 ■111
at yourChevrol etdealer's-andsost hednvmg.

...-•••Jm

lifli'{ff•

.,,._tlt.ds tf can at

'Or,_,

4f

.,tro ..,,

your Cflmoltt Shnroolt-CHtvllOLET,
CNEVEUE,
CHM D, CORVlll
I CORVmt

�Friday, December 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

FourUBBridge
Club

People and Politics

Teams
TakeFirst

Placeat Rochester

ly RUSHLL PANZICA

.

Friday. on the twenty-second of
November . at two o'clock, I was
shocked Into a stupor as my aunt's
frenzied message came over the
telephone. Increuulous. l hung up
and turned on the televis ion 5'!t.
which I practically never watch.
J sat four hours. sickened by trag•
edy, terrlfled by my own human·
ness, and In awe ot three hour
cross-country filgnts and on-the-spot

lnstantaneoua newt1Castin.J had not
smoked one cigarette although I
usually average three an hour.
At six o'clock I went out for a
walk, knowing we had a n.ew Pres­
ident. My thouhts shifted back and
rorth: from how the next ggod-fath­
er of the nation would be !denllzed.
to the r o!itlca! issues that would
lnevitab!y be affected by the sud­
den chane--over. After turning off
an empty block, I came upon a
group of young ladies in tears and
suddenly. piercjng through , their
sobs came "'J'hey oughta lynch the
Red bastard". From this and pre­
vious experiences, it dawned on me
that in tact, a man Is guilty until
proven innocent.
When I got home, the neighbors
expressed their condolenCt!II. F1ags
seldom seen on holidays were a t
half-mast and when the processes
of government should have bee n the

On Nov. ~. 1963 the Univenrity
of Bu!!alo Bridge Club sent four
major concern. I beheld a grue­
four-man teams to the first aMual
some reincarnation. ""' , x mach­ University of Rochester · bridge
tournament. The team 'consisting
'"" · The old newsreels. fireside
chats, masses, services, court house
of Ed ~rge,
~uck
Lamprey,
Bob LlpStti, and Dick Fleischman
scenes, and requiems were to last
llnished first overall with a score
until the solemn rituals of Monday.
Over the weekend and Monday. of 33 out of a possible 48 points.
there was a lull in the entertain­
Each member of the winning team
ment business. Numerous public
received a small trophy. This first
and priva te en terpri ses dosed shop. place finish also earned our school
following the pr ecedent of the New
a large trophy, which will be kept
York Stock Exchange. However. in
at U.B. until thl' next tournament
times o! great sorrow and joy. peo.
in 1964. II will be displayed In the
trophy case near the recreation
pie need a drink. The bars remain­
desk.
ed open. Large groups gat hered lo
console each other and deplore the
The other teams from U.B. in
"patho logical" activities of various
order of finlsh were: Mel Rosen­
minority groups. They gulped under
blat, Sheila Dowd, Warren Jacoby,
screens which progressively lnten • and Jon Edelman; Allan Mellis,
slfied the transubstantiation.
Dave Hetzel, Ted Poritz, nnd Jon
All America and much or the , Adel; Sheila Shein, Dottie Gamby,
Dick Mestler, and Hugh Peters .
world were able to participate vic­
Master points were awarded at
ariously In the formalized sorrow
the tournament. The Mellis l1&gt;am
of a widow 'with two children. There
finished in a lie for first place of
wlll be those who say she contro ll­
their section in the evening sec­
ed her emotions with dignity. But
tion. Other schools which pnrticl­
public admiration for automatons
has a long history In Anglo-Saxon pated were U. of Rochester, U. of
Toronto, Colgate, Cornell, and Fre­
culture. When suffering is made
donia.
public. impro priety is a cardinal
sin. The vultures behind radio and
television found a new gimmlc to
SPRING RUSH
mesmerize their prey . It will be
Sorority
rush for all
a long time before they give up
freshman and u p p e r
the Ghol!t.

FacultyWomen'sClub Holds
DinnerFor ForeignStudents
The Faculty Women's Club spon­
sored the first In a series of three
dinners for foreign students, the
"pot-luck" get-together Is being e1r
sponsored by the Univer :Jty·~ O:­
lice [or Foreign Student Affairs.
lnvitations were issued to 60 stu­
dents and 60 members of the Uni•
versity faculty and their wives.

Other groups of fac\lllY and stu­
dents will attend similar functions
on Jan. 23 and 29.
In charge of arrangements are
Mrs. Wayland P. Smith, Chairman;
Mrs. Warren Thomas. Mrs. John
Irving , Mrs. Th:,111nsl3olland and
Mr. Larry Smith , Foreign Student
Advisor.

PAGE TWENTYONE

THE SPECTRUM Stall is bappy to
extend to tbe entire university com­
munity, and all who advertise in
tb.e newspaper, seaaon's greetiJJga
and tile very best wishes 101 a hap­
py new yea,.

class women will be
Feb. 3-5 in Mrs. Moll's
otrice, 316 Norton. Any
woman is eligible to
rush if she has a 1.0 ov­
erall average or a 1.0
the preceding semester.
Spring rush will com­
mence with the convo­
cation tea on Feb. 9, fol­
lowed by a coke party,
and informal parties the
rest of the month . 'Dhe
final bidding will take
place March 4.

SeeDesert
Staronlyat these
Author
ized Artcarved
Jewelers

''H EADS UP
FOR MOHAIR

..

I I ''

IMPORTEDITALIAN SWEATERS
White , Pink, Blue, Yellow and Lime
Sizes 34 - 40

12.98
Jr . Shop, 2nd Floor
Designedfor you,forever.
This is the look college women adore ... styling as timeless
as love itself, yet with a knowing contemporary flair that
makes it very much "today ."
It's the kind of look we've designed into Desert Star ...
newest of the famous Artcarved engagement rings . Like
all Art.carved rings, it's styled to stay beautiful. .. guar­
anteed in writing for permanent value. See new Desert
Star now at any Artcarved jeweler listed here. lt'a
designed for row.
·•••-

�SPEC Tl UM

,AG I TWENTYTWO

Donations
ToSetUp

S&lt;holarship
flmd
UBF-ounclatior,,
Inc.

Zuni Art Gallery

The Zuni Gallery, 587 Potomac prizes and purchases awards in­
cluding those ot the Westminster
Ave., wtµ present a print show of
ApproximattlY $400,000In girts
the color woodcuts of Carol Sum­ Foundation, the Boston Museum
wm be received by the Unlvenlty
meni and the Orawing:s and prints
of Fine Arts, and the Brooks Mem•
orlal Gallery. Hls work, ealled
or Buffalo Foundatlon , Inc. In cal·
of Michael Mazur . Concurrently,
endar 196.l. John M. Galvin , new a group of drawings by well­ , "powertul and haunting" by Ga bor
Peterdi, Is in the collections ol
chairman of the Foundation's Tnl.'1- known local artists will be shown
the ChicagoArt Insti tute, the Fogg
tees. announced t~y .
as well as a superb collection of Museum in Cambridge, the Philo.•
delphia Museum, the Yale Art
18th and 19th Century original
More than $385,000has alread)t
Gallery, the Uhited States Infor­
drawings
and
ca
ricatures
.
been received from alumni, corp­
mation Agency , and maey others .
orations . friends and bt&gt;qul'sl.~ with
Carol Summers, born in 1925.
Local artists repre$en(ed in the
final returns from the U. B. Alum­
was graduated from Bard College
show will include Adele Cohen,
ni 1.o)'lllty Drive still to be t.-om• in 1!61. In 1~ and again in 1961
Wes Olrnsted, Ben Perrone , Robert
plcted by lhe end or lhe year. he
Squeri, Martha Vlsser't' Hoott, Ro­
he was awaNred the Louis Com­
said.
land Wise, and Richard Ziemann.
fort Tiffany Fellowship. In 1$9 he
Mr . Galvin. chief executive om­
cer of the Marine Trust Company,
emphasi~
that the moni&lt;'s lo lhr
Founwilicn are being used to good
advantage for "extras for txt-el­
lencc." He dlt'd. 11se1&lt;ampfos. mon­
ey wanted for facu lty and studenl
studies and for development ol new
curriculum in 17 dcpartmrnts . more&gt;
than 100 scholarsh,p..,, alumni S(&gt;r­
viN'S includfng ccntinuing edurn­
tional prugrams for 1h1&gt; prof ession­
al schocls. and spoll!iOrship of (•am
pu..,-community cultural scrie~.

Commenting en the flllure of lhc
U, B. f'oundat)on and its Sl'TVkes
to the Niagara Fronti£Or. Mr. Gal­
vin ,,;aid. "JC U. B., Slate University
at BuUalo, is lo continue&gt; ils roh•
of ll'allPrshlp in higher ('duration.
the V. B. P'oundaticn will n(!l!d lei
rais e at lrast $1.5 million annually.
U. B. along with othPr institutions
on the N1agaro F'ronlier is mo~,
vitaJ lo the futur e of our t-ommuni­
ty 11,,; a leading pert. m11nurac1ur­
inl:and culturo1 centrr . "

Mr. Galvin. one of lhl' original
tru.~t~ ot lhe Fouod11tion. rcplac·rs
Mr. Lewis G. Harriman . the first
chairman. who has retired. He was
elected ehairma n at a nw&lt;'ling or
the Trustees this week ,

was awarded the Fellowship of the
Guggenheim Foundation. The Ital•
ian Government award&lt;'li him its
travelling grant in 1955 during
whkh period he spent much tim e
in that country, His work has ap­
peared in avery major print ex•
hibltion in the last ten years and
i~ ihclud!'d in the c:olleetions of
The Museum of Modem Art, The
Metropolitan and Whitney Mus­
••ums, The&gt; Nalional Gallery in
Wnshlnl(ton , The Member's Gallery
or th(' Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
anll other publi&lt;' and university
mu~ums too numerous to mention.
He has taught at the Prall Graphic
Art Centc•r. thr Brooklyn MuS&lt;.'llm
Ari School, and is now on the
lnc-ulty at Hunter Collcgr ,

The 18th and 19th Century draw­
ings an dprin~. including some
by Edward Bume-jones and Fran•
cis Wheatley , are from an impor­
tant private collection. A very rare
segment irom a 3rd Century
Egyptian Coptic tapestry will also
be shown_
This show hns been arranged for
the purpose of giving area resi­
dents the opJ)()rtunity o( viewing
inexpem.ive prints for Holiday giv­
ing.

Friday,

o.c.mw13,

1963

Peace Corps: Largest Spring
Trai.ning Program in History
The Peace
Corps &amp;nnoWlced
The spring training programs
wilt prepare Volunteem lor service
pla.ns t~
l or the largest spring
in Somalia. MalaY&amp;la.Nigeria .
training program inthe agency's
Ec uador , Nepal, Thai land, India
history.
Jamaica,
Togq, Colombia, Pan '.
Volunteers scheduled for assign­ ama, Iran, Bolivia, Brazil, Ctille,
ment,.~ in 18 nlltions will enter
Venezuela, Tanganyi ka and the
Domi nican Repu blic.
training at U. S. colleges and uni­
versities in February-March, said
Teachers' will be needed at all
levels - elernentacy,
secondary
Co1'J)s Dl'rector Sargent
Peace
and university - and in all sub.
Shriver. An estimated 1,500 pro­
ject!I, with particular emphasis on
spective Volwiteers will participate
English, science and mathemati cs,
in the training programs.
Some physical education and voca­
In past years, only about 400 tional teachers will also be re­
Volunteers have entered mid-year
quired.
training programs, Shriver sal d
Other Volunteers will be enrolled
While the peak in-put period will
in a.gricultura.l extension, commu­
continue to- be the summer months,
nity development, construction, en­
he said this year's large sp ring
gineering and geology programs.
group will fill urgent requests from
Peace Corps Volwiteers se1ve for
countries in Africa , Asia and Lalin
two yea.rs, including training. They
America .
Many of the spring group wiU be get a modest living allowance de­
signed to Jet them live at a level
mid-year graduates of U. S. col•
equal to that of the people with
Jege.s and universities who will till
whom they work - plus a $7,
teaching assignments,
most of
monthly readjustment
allowan ce,
which require college degrees. But
pa.id at the end of their servic e.
about one-third of the spring
CUrrently, 7,164 Volwiteers are at
trainees will not be required to
have degrees.
work in 4G countries.

•

•

Michael Mazur, born in 193.'i, is
of Amherst Collt•g(•, He
rccdvcd his B.F.A. and M.F.A.
from Yalr, Rnd studil'd at the
Aendemia di Bell[ Artl in Florcn&lt;'r .
lie has ta ught 111 Ynle aod is now
on the facully of the Rhode lsland
Sehool or Design in Providenc-e,
11 gradual&lt;'

R.I.
He was awarded the Louis Com•
fort Tiffany gr11nl In 1962. Mr.
Mazur ii; thl' rc!clpicnl of many

Tom Huck sought scientific excitement

54th AnnualMeetingHeldBy
lnterfraternity Conference
Amrrirnn College fraterniti1•s un.
&lt;krw~nt their nnnua.l self examina­
tion and sea rch for morie &lt;.&gt;
Uective
w1lys to attain 1heir goals when the
54th aimual meeting of th l' National
lnterCratemil.y ConCeren('C l'ORven­
ed In New York, Dec. 5, at
thr Hole l AmeMcona.
Almo.&lt;il 1000 p:irticlpants

l)tlend­

ed the 3-&lt;lay meeting, ronsisting or
graduate delegates Crom 60 mcm­
bt•r fraternities representing 3500
chapters in 365 Insti tut ions, 400 re­
present atives of undl'1-graduate in­
tertratentl ty councils. tog e t h e l'
with college denns and student ad­
visors u11d prominent cdurntors,
busin&lt;'ss and professional leaders
active 111 fratc-mily administration .
As u co~ultalivl' and roordinating
boQY ol all general men's !ratemity
s~tems or An1ertcn.nonJ Cam\dlan
colleges nnd universities, the Na­
tlona.l lnterfruternity
Conference
has tx&gt;en holding annunl met.'!ings
.
~ince its founding in 1909
The theme ol the conference was
based upon the Ideals of college
r~terrutles in terms of their public
Image, lhclr dedication to princi­
ples, how to adjust to the trends
In hlghcr education , their accomo •
datlon to the econornlrs or good
buslnl'SS
management, their lead ­
ership capadty and how it can be
~~loped, and how to maintain the
high est standards in scholarship
and conduct of their lntcmal af .

fairs.
Justice Tom C Clark o( thc U.S.
Sljpreme Coor! and former U.S.
Attomey-Genez:,al in the Truman
Adm1mstralion dellvc•rt.-d the key,
nolf' address at tJ:w 11rtnd pnl bnn­
qua.-t on De&lt;' G. J111tlct Cl11rk, n

gradual t• ol the Un!v('rsity of T~•x•
as. is vie,• presiclrnl of Orlin 'l'au
Della rra1ernily.
Dr. Irving L. Oillinrd, professor
or journalism at Prinrcton Univer•
sity llrtd l't'Lirl-d l-ditor of the SL
Louis Post -Dispulch, addre:-srd the
cl)&lt;'nfnJ:' session or the conrere n('e,
Dr. Dllliard , a graduate or the
University ol Illinois and currently
a member of its board of trustees.
is a past prl'siden t of Alpha Kappa
I.Jlmbda as wrll as Sigma Della
Lhl, the prot,:,ssionaf journalism
fratem1ty.
ThP CQndudin~ session ol thr
t'()nfl'1t'nct• was addressed by Or.
St•lh R . Brook8, minister of thl'
Universalist
Natlc:ial Memorial
Lhurl'h of Washington, O.C. who
is prcsidenl or Beta Theta Pi Ira•
tcrn,ty .
Qmrurrl•nt mN•lings were held
hy the National Conleren,·l' oC Un•
dergraduate
l ntcrfatem.ity Coun­
cil~. the i,~raternlty Secretaries
ASSO&lt;'lnlion,and 1he Collrgc Fra1ernlty EJitors AsSOC'iation.Awards
wcre given tor outstanding schol11n:hip achlev1&gt;ments to undergrad­
uates COWIC'ilsas well as individ­
ual fraternity chapters. Oulsland ·
Ing undergraduate councils were
also rccognhed tor their accom•
plishments during the past year
and crtectivene~
in service 10
t'Ommunity, campus, l0t'al !rate1'­
mty chapters, and their lde-,ils.
Robert W. Kelly oC New York ,
past presidenl or Sigma Phi Epsi­
lon Is president ol the Nationa l In·
lerfrnternity ConfPrence. Bertram
W BrMett or Chicago , member or
Bt&gt;ta Th&lt;'tll Pt and vice pre sident
11!1hr t'Onferent•1•, 1s R't'nC'ralchalr ­
man or the aMu al meetin g.

He's finding it at Western Electric
Ohio University conferred a B.S.E.E. degree on
C. T. Huck in 1956. Tom knew of Western Elec•
tric's his tory of manuracturing development. He
realized, too, that our personnel development program was expanding to meet to mo rrow's demands.
After graduation, Tom immedia tely began to
work on the development of electronic switching
systems. Then, In 1958, Tom went to the Bell Telephone Laboratories on a temporary assignment to
help in the advancement of our national military
capabilltles. At their Whippany, New Jersey, labs,
Tom worked with the Westem Electric development team on computer circuitry lor the Nike Zeus
guidance system . Tom then moved on to a new
11SSignmentat WE's Columbus, Ohio, Works. There,
Tom ,s working on the development of testing circuitry for the memo;y phase of electronic s witchInt ;ystems.

This constant challenge of the totally new,
combined with advanced training and education
opportunities, make a Western Electric career
enjoyable, stimulating and fruittul . Thousands ol
young men will realize this in the n,xt few years .
•How about 'tf!!:!7
If responsibility and the challenge of the future
appeal to you. and you have the qualifications we
seek, talk with us. Opportunities for fast -moving
careers exist now for eledrlcal, mechanical and
industrial engineers, and also for physical science,
liberal arts and business majors . For more detailed
inlormatron , get your copy of the Western Electri c
Career Opportuniti es booklet from your Placement
Officer. Or write: Western Electric Company, Room
6405, 222 Broadway, New York 38, N. Y. And be
su re to arrange for a personal interview when the
Bell System recruiting team visits your campus.

W~sf~rn Eltcfric ,.,,.,NuFA~ruR,NG
ANosv,.,.~..,
••

vN1roFTHE

sEu

s YsTEM@

IOU,U O,fil&lt;UlfUHPf"' f""P'l0¥0

Pr1M•Pfl m1nur, otu1,n11or1 1,on, in 13 cit••• . Oi,e rat1n11ctnt,rs In m•nt of th est ume ci ties plus 36 oth ers th ro uahout lhe U $
rc11C.01a1,J&gt;1,nce1on.
N,J, • leltlYOC Cor • Skok,o, Ill. L1t1teRock,Ark.•Gen, HG,, 195 8roadwu New Yo/$'

Ena,,..,.,,.
R....

_

1

�Friday, December 13, 1963

PAGE TWENTY THREE

SP.ECTRUM
~

TheUI Student-His
Problems

UB'sEveningDivision,MFC
MarksFortiethAnniversary
The ,academic year 1963-64 marks the 40th Anniversary
of Millard Fillmore College, ,the evening division of itlhe
University of Buffalo. For forty years it has served "men
and Women who have academic or professional interests
which can be advanced by college level study and who
desire to attend classes during late afternoon and evening
hours."
Millard Fillmore College was named in 1927 in honor

of the '13th President of the' Un ited States and the first

Chancellor of .the University of Buffalo. In 1923, Chancel­
lor Samuel P. Capen estab lished the foundation upon which
the adult movement in higher education could take hold
and grow in the Buffalo area.
The college's first Dean, Profes­
sor Clarence S. Marsh. Is probably
hcsl remembered for his literary
t'Ontribution . Adult EducaHen h1 •
Community, n book whlch establish­
ed a pre'Jedent. Dean Lewis A.
and Dean John A.
Froman (1&amp;38-48)
Beane (1948-52)augme nted, enlarg­
ed and created a more divetslfl ed
drr iculum.

More than 5,000 m,•n and women
( un­
&lt;lrrgradualc and graduate)
and
15,000 are enrolled in non-credit
rourses. Of the total number . more
than 900 are also enrolled in the
dAy division of U.B. Most of those
t•nrolled &lt;'Onslst of part-time stu­
dents.
A typical student, whose _age
ranges from 20 to 60. takrs courses
Hveragl ng 5 hours a semester. Two
tune blocks are ~cheduled per eve­
ning.
~l. ~~.C. studen ts are offe red many
rourscs leading to degrees. The
8u(•helor 's degree is awarded by
thP College of Arts and SclenC'CS,
:md The S('hools of Business Ad­
tninistration and Engineering. The

The brothers ol AlphaPhi OIMfli
fraternity will hold a mixer toda,y
with Phi Kappa Rh• sororil,y frorn
Buffalo State , at Bosella 's rei;tau ­
rant at 8 p.m .

Phi Eptllett Pl, after a victory
over Sltm• Phi EpallOII
ln thf U.B ,
,College Bowl is eagerly looking for­
ward to its latest t·hallengers. the
U .S. Band.

The Brorhrrs notr that Sunday's
meeting will be tht• elet•tlon of offi­
~rs. Good luck to nII ranrlidates .
Attention Goodyear: the Phl Epll­
lon Santa will Ill' visiting wltil you
thi s Friday ...
wutch ror him ,
The Phi Kappa P1l Fra1rrnity
will hold a i:ongratulatory oinner
Sunday !or the newly l'11&gt;&lt;'1&lt;'d
olli•
cers. The new olfkt'N; arc: Presi­
dent-Marty Groet: Vkt • PrrsidC'nt.
Jami•s Karwa. Thls party WIii be
held at tlw honw of Rodger Cam­
panogla .

Dr. Robert f. Bemer , presen t
Dean of M.F.C. feels that not
Pnough education is lh&lt;' road block
to success. According lo Dr . Bern­
er. some people at certai n tlp,es
in their lile find the necessity of
further education particular ly on a
t•ollcge leve l. The night -school pro­
eram. he feels, is Ideal for the
housewife who would now like to
rumpJete her education. This edu­
cational situation greatly benefits
the young man , several years out of
high school: who has finally decid­
\'O upon a vocation. The banker,
insurance and business man finds
that In M.F.C .. he can add know­
k&gt;dgc to his yea 1-s of experience.
Dr. Bemer further explain ed that
M.F.C. exists also as a testing
ground for various schoo l, which
later may be establishL&gt;d in the Uni­
versity day division.

are enrolled in credit ~urses

WhatDoWeOfferHiinHere

Congratulations
10
the n1•wly
elected officers of Sigma Delta Tau:
President. Linda Lt•ssncr : 1st Vkt'
President . Mar~o Husln : 2nd Viet'
Pre~id(•nl. Linda Wat•hncr ; Re&lt;·.
Secrelary , Sus.u1 Mindell: Corrcs.
Secretary. Toby Man •us : Treai urer .
Susan Browrist&lt;'in; Pan Hell&lt;'nic
Reprcscntntive , Mer I e Ganteh('r.
Best wishes and t'Ongratulations to
sisters Sandra Strome, Linda Rose ,
and Nan cy ZuekrrmAn on lhc&gt;ll'
recent cngagemrnls.

School of Business Adminis t ration
awards a Masters' Degree. while
the Graduate Sch~ offor,. a Master
of Arts and Science I engineering I
and a Doctorate in Philosophy.
Non-&lt;:redit courses are a lso a part
of the clrriculum. Such courses or
informal lectures help lo up-dnte
and add to the experie ncr of cer•
lain groups h;i the community, su,•h
as realtors .

j

Ir RICHAltO M, RYCKMAN
Counselor: "Well

Some intelligent lndiVlduals may .
upon strolling through our magnlr­
icently spacious downstairs ca(r•
tffla each morning , thlnk that non,
sen.~lcal problems as love and sex
and Its philosophical ramifications
and implications ll'adlng Inevitably
to a bedroom conclusion , and next
week's important social artlvities
like a party for the food oul!Jr
which operates the cafeteria In a
display of gratitude !or its higlt
quality food and ils modest prlres .
At what other ecnctusion t.'Ould 11
mtional Individual arrive , exrrpt
that American youth Is hopelessly
dt'ca de11t? If thi.1 isn't th(' case,
11hy aren't
th&lt;'Y in the libr11ry
studying hard ro pass their l'xams
and g&lt;"tl!nJ? J!ood grades so that
lhe Sl•lmol outhorill!'s will know
that lh!'y arr good boys and ,girls?
We know ·what happens wh,m 11
Slllcll'nl obtain$ II f(•W low. final
g md&lt;'s in dilf&lt;'r&lt;'nt cuur.ws. Hr isn 't
rxaclly carril'd about the campus
on his fellow students' shouldf'rs.
Of l'OUI'!;&lt;'not! Hr Is rightfully lab­
t'lcd II st,u•kcr of sorts and usually
rt'fl'nl"d to hla counS&lt;.'lor to th('C'k
his IQ, 1whicvcml'nt. and aptltud&lt;'
tt'SI scorc,s, By the!!(' simpl&lt;' tests
his pc,rsonolit) is lnid bllre anlt a
i;tilulfon to hiK p1'0hlrm found. M,my
uf thest' adviwN; pra,·tirt ' an amaz­
ingly rffcdlv&lt;' kind of non-dir('C'tiW
t•ounsc•lini: t1•chniqut' in whit1h th&lt;'Y
sit arul answ, ,r quc•sliom, with
qUPStions. ~·or exa mple :

!;tudrnt: "I don't r&lt;'ally know
what I'm int&lt;'r&lt;'stro in. Can you
give mr any advit •I'?"
Counst'lor: "You don't know rral­
ty what you're intercstro in?"
Student: "No ."

what do _1,,11,
think you wsnt to do ?"
Student. " I dcn't know . that '11
why f'm here ."
Counselor : "Yt•s. you tlon' t ktlO\\
so that's why you made the loni:
trip over here to my offit•e."
Student tunjustly lrritatl'd I: " C'nn
you aive ml' any suggestions? rm
debpcratc! Anything ar all? Like a
major in horli&lt;'ul1ure or somt•·
thins:?' '
Co u n s e I or I profoundly &gt;· " II
you've Always liked plants and
nowers why don 't you try horfl
culture as II muior? We hav&lt;' a flirt'
l?l'l,'l'nhoui;r hl'r!I I'm ~ure you'd
t'njOy it."
Sludrnl: "T hank s."

Not surpri singly this te«hniql)&lt;'
works en •r) tlmt· and Is es1x~·111l•
ly r rri'!'tlve with students In (hi'
17-11 age hnu ·kt•I who arc• 1•ert111n
or who tht'~· Ill'(' 11nct 11h11t llwy
w11nt In Ilk .
As far as th&lt;' rathskellt-r Situu
1ion i;:Ol'"
· what c11n rht'Se studt•nts
ll'm'Tlsitting in II t•ufrtrrla oil morn­
ini:? Don't th&lt;'&amp;' nail' &lt;' souls n•allw
that tht'ir llnw would llt' helter
Sp{'nt llstenlni: to tnterestmf,'( das~
h•cturt•3 wh1•rt• matcr·ial is oltC'n
rlolt'd O!ll in maf'hin, -..llke htShlon~
SIiting around o cnl&lt;!lrr1a llll &lt;'TRd·
ini: with othrr ijturlt•nt~ about hf&lt;'·i.
probl&lt;'m~ is foolish. Whttt l'OUldone
IMl
SSihly IC'llrn lhrrt•
t'Xrept 10
\'Omm11nicah'? It 's not al all sur­
prising lhal lhrsr lnlormt&gt;d pt&gt;opll'
who wnlk rhrou~h 1hr rathskellc-r
11n•unimpr rsst•d , Tht 'Y l)l•r1•t•11tivr
ly st•lt~·t only tll!' nll'Mlni::lul part s
of th,• s1udL•nts· L'Onv~rsations, Lt) .
1h1•l(Pm•1·al buu a nd 1,1va
luate and
j udi;:r them on lhi s basis. Who c·11.n
diSJli:rcr with lnlorm «'d pt'Oplt&gt;•

KLEINHANS
~port &amp;~op ~nh Q!ullror
&amp;t,uµ

Millard Fillmore College's past
forty years are displayed in pl1•­
turcs , notes , and memories In
Hayes Hall . By educating thoi;e peo­
ple rn the evening who Ill'&lt;' unable
to atll•nd day-time C'ourses . Millard•
Fillmorc CQll&lt;'ill' feels thnl Ir i~
grea tly bcncfitling the 1•mnrnurlity
whit'h ii serves.

Boece Club

AllWoolSportCoats

s299s

•

/I !'Olorful t'Oll('&lt;.•llon for t·nsual livln~
1d&lt;'al for on Campus or rtbout town . Rld1
all wool fa brks in tnlll, natu.ral shouldt 1r
~lylln~. Oistlnchve new patterns including
ehc&lt;'ks and pl11lds. Deep, muled ~hadl'i\ .

NOWDELIVERING
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Goodyear Hall .......
.
Schoe11kopf
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Cooke&amp; MacDonaldHalls. .. ...
TowerHall ........
. . -••

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10:15
10:45
11:00
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ORDERSACCEPTEDUP TO30 MIN. BEFORE
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Delivery Charge-25c Per Order

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s159s
The pleaUess style pre ferred by most men
Rich .wol'llted wool nonnel~ a. well as long
wearing all wool rcverse twists . Trim and
tapered In Cambridge , ollvt•, chlm~1I nnd
brown .

DonaldRicllardNatural
Shoulder SUITS. . . . . . . . . S59.50

�Friday, December 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTYFOUR

TUTANKHAMEN-Christiane
Desroches Noblecourt
$15.00
VANISHED CIVILIZATION S
Edited by Edward Bacon $28.50
Special In troductory Price $23.50

FOUR PROPHETS­
Translated by J.B. Phillips $3.95
THE GROUP
Mary McCarthy

$5.95

A LIFE IN PHOTOGRAPHY
Edward Steichen
$19.50
SWEET MUSIC
Helga Sandblll'g
$7.95

CONFESSIONS OF AN
ADVERTISING MAN
. David Ogilvy
$4.95

.

'

THE P()()H PERPLEX
FrederickC. Crews

$2.95

GOREN'S BRIDGE
COMPLETE
Charles H. Goren
$5.95
BRIDGE &amp; GIN GAMBITRY
$6.00
Stein &amp; Lakefield
THE KAPLAN-SHEINWOLD
SYSTEM OF WINNING
BRIDGE - Edgar Kaplan and
Alfred Sheinwold
$4.95

THE RAND McNALLY
COSMOPOLITAN
WORLD ATLAS
$14.95
BARTLETT'S FAMILIAR
QUOTATIONS
John Bartlett
$10.00

THE COLUMBIA
ENCYCL OPEDIA

ART OF THE WORLD
each $6.95

$49.50

WEBSTER'S
BIOGRAPHICAL
$8.50
WEBSTER'S
GEOGRAPHICAL
$8.Sn
WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY
OF SYNONYMS
$6.00

�I

Friday, December 13, 1963

PAGE TWENTY FIVE

SPECTRUM

I

GRANDMOT HER'S
HOUSE HOLD HINTS
Helen Lyon Adamson
HELOISE 1S KIT CHE N
HINT - Heloise

$9.95

A LARGE COLLECT ION OF
UNUSUAL AND EXCITING
DOMESTIC and IMPORTED
GIFT ITEMS
Complete Selection of
HUMME L FIGUR INES
WOOD CARVINGS
STUFFED ANIMALS
JEWELRY
GLASSWARE, ETC.

Co~EgE

ltADio
PANASONIC "The sound heard
round the world" guaranteed for
one year' from date of purchase.
Complete
with
batteries,
carry ing case
and personal
earphone.
priced from
$15.95

C19lh9S
~

LAROUSSE
GAST RONOMIQUE
By Prosper Mont.agne,
Edited by Charlotte Turgeon
and Nina Fround
$20.00
Deluxe $25.00
Leat her bound $35.00
, THE PEP PER IDGE FARM
COOKBOOK.
Margaret Rudkin
$12.50
Before Nov.18 $ 9.95
Deluxe Edit ion $14.50
Before Nov. 18 $11.95

BCOKS~Of
eJu\reN i@S
oH'ALLAgeS
COMPLETE COLLECTIONS
OF:
DR. SUSS BOOKS
GOLDEN BOOKS
FIND ING OUT BOOKS
NUGGET BOOKS
PEANUTS BOOKS
LITTLE LIBRARY BOOKS
,JOAN WALSH ANGL UND
BOOKS
GIANT RAINBOW BOOKS

.

+-+•j.~

l

:

I

11

1 ·:

DECEMBER SPECIAL
MEN'S SPORT COATS
All Wool, Herringbon e, Plaids,
Neat Checks, Muted colors.
Sizes: 38-46Regs. &amp; Longs.
Regular Price:
~28.00- $35.00
D~ernber
Special Price:
$23.95- $29.95

(~
,,......
,.l1 I \

OLIVETTI-UNDERWOOD
TYPEWR ITERS. 10~ or your
,• old typewr iter as down payment,
or rent for $5.00 a month, $12.00
for three months with full optio n
to buy. FREE with your new
Olivetti - Underwood, a carrying
case,cleaning kit, eraser kit, dust
cover, carbon and paper bolder,,
fuU y~r guarantee, a y~ s
supply of ribbons and a d1c­
tiona,·y.

F~sgif'~

WraApPr"Ng
PLUS FREE MAILING
OF ALL BOOK PURCHASES

TH[
FOR OUTER WEAR
Genuine HAGUE SUEDE
by Marshall ~y . · ·
Knit collar with button over tab•
Sizes: 34-46
Colors: Red, Camel, Blue, S15.95
JAEGER SWEATERS
.
The classic British sweater kmt
in pure Shetland Wool.
all sizes.
$12.95- $22.95

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

NEW STORE HOURS :
MON. - FRI.
8:30- 8: 30
' SATURDAY
10:00-2:00

�SPEC T RUM

PAGE TWENTY SIX

S,,eclrurn

(Continued)

JFKIs Moumecl

By Stude nt

To the F.dltor
:
In J anuary t9Q) the 11W1tle ol
the Pr-esldency of the U n t t e d

thlnp that wi U be set down in
history. But we shall reme mber
him In another way, a way that
transgresses mere books.
States paaed from one generation
We shall remember his Jove, love
lo the next. from Dwight D. Ellen­
of America, of the peop le, of his
~ to John F. Kennedy. Ken­
ned&gt;'held a special place In our office, or lite. We shall remember
hearts beca111ehe typified 1111,the hill smile , the smile that spoke
YoUIIIC adullll ot America . He
before his lip, did . He was tJie
people 's P r e I J d e n t and eac h
bl'Ollght fire to our Y011J11C
nation
and gave us the !n«ntive for pro­ Thanksgi ving table felt the loss as
a:,eu. Alt)Jo\Jgh he was young, he If a membe r of the family had
wu a hard adVenary to deal with . died and left an empty place .
Maey of the worl d's leaders, )Ike
We are mourning this great man
and well we should, but we mus t
Kruschev. disliked or disagreed
with Kennedy, but they rcspecte&lt;J not let his ideas and ideals go to
him.
the grave with him . He died for
them, a martyr for hl5 country ,
How WIU hlstorians In years lo
and we must make his mt•mory
come record the short "Kennedy
YfllTS"! ln terms or legislatlve
llvt' on tlll the end of time.
action Kennedy had little success.
Fellow students, keep t h e s e
The congress condemned every bill lhlngs in mind during this season
and he thankful that we were
he proposed . He will be romem•
fortUMle enough to know and
berd for !hf' Peace Corps, thl'
Cuban Crisis, and the Spal't&gt; Race . love such a man .
A MOURNING SOPHOMORE
These, nmoni: others,
Ari' the•

Frid •y, Decemt..r 13, 1963

Call&amp;ard

ITUDINT DRAMAT
IC IOCIITY
There will be a m eeting of the
Studen t Dramatic Society on Tues­
day at 3:00 in room 337.
HOUSIPLAN

11le house plans are sponsoring a
semi-lormal dance, The Snowflake
Swirl, on Ja n. 25, from 9:00 to
1:00 in the Multipurpose room In
Norton. The Jim Ba ttistoni Band
will provide the music. tickets al'('
$2.00 a coup le.
PSYCHOLOGYCLU■
This attemoon at 4:00 In room
2:W Norton the Psychology i.:lub
will meet to elect officers for the
coming yrar . All students are in­
vited to attend.
MATH■MATICS CLU■

The Undergraduate Mathematics
Club holds its next mee t ing Wed.
nesday, at 7:30 p.m. in room 335,
Norton Union. Dr . Bruc l' Chilton
of the Mathemollcs Department
wlll ta lk on "The Fourth Dttnen•
sion ." He wlll also show a short
film . £veryone is Jnvlted. Re.
.rreshm~'111S
will be served.

MUSIC COMMITTI!

Debate Tourname nt Is a Success
po1·1ant and writ-known activities
on ,·ampus, The visitinl? teams
l should Ilk«' to take lhis oppor•
were j?rcally apprecinllvr of the
tunlty
to l'xpress my slncrrc
servlci- thl' limekcepers rendered,
tll&amp;nks and opprrdal\on
to all
and so arc we of th!• Debating
11146ewho helped to makl' our d1•• SO&lt;'irty. Without their help it would
bllte tournament lost wrckl'n(I 11
have bt'&lt;•n imfl()66iblc to run a
complete surcess.
toumaml'nt .
n\lrty U.B. studrnts acled as
I espel'lally wa nt to thank our
thnekcepers tor thl' five rounds
faculty a dvisors, Dr. Emest C.
or deblitc , II wt1s grati(yini: to Thompson Jr., and Mr . Terry ()s..
note that theSI' students gaw or
tcrm&lt;'ier, as w1'll as Mrs. Janrt C.
th&lt;'lr time and errort for this par •
Potll"r 1111 honorary member. for
ticular nctivily .
all of their !lUidance and a.~istonc e.
Sincerely,
Indeed , if this partiri()lllion &lt;•nn
be u$ed as an indkator, drbating
/1. LTND/1 LEVENTHAi,
is beroming oil(' of thr most irn•
Tournamen t Chairm11n
To the Editor:

Controversial Coffee Hour
To the Editor:

"sensa lforu1I" and attenuon.getlinl?
Hrticlr for which hr had come. the
t-eporlt•r took e11t • f , ... text var•
ious ~marks m,1de both by Dr.
Ebert iind Dr. Katkln. He l'(IIVC
the crronrous Impression thal Dr.
rommlttcd by the t uffal• Eve11!119 Ebert !'Ondoncd "sex relationships
amoni: youni:. 1mmarried people"
In a
artidr or Dec.
4th, entlringl,y l•ntltlt'd "Thi• Mor• and rht'ati n~ on rxams - II donr
als bsul' is PIii to Sll'('p", n hin~NI C'fticil'ntlyt Dr. Katkin was "l'red·
ltrd" with rhc observation tha t
repurt&lt;•r expound1-d his sl:intr d
t'OIIC'Jl(' SIUdt"nt
s W!'I'&lt;' • apat hetic.
views of 11 Sludrnt ,fnrulty ('f)frrl'
This letter has been writll'n tu
mnke all studl'nts, And racutty, or
U.B. aware or. to put H in Or
Ebert's words , "a gross distor•
tton" which Jms lwcn intrnllonally

N•••·

N•••

nr.

hoor. sponsonvJ by 1hr Puhll,•
lnttons Con11nith•t• or Union Bo;ml.
1'ht&gt; t.!port1•1 •, who hull obviously
made the trip 10 u.n 111 hoprs or
getting lhc r1•11J
lowdown on ron,,g,,
~l'X and chrt1llni;:, w11s app11r!'ntly
disappointed to dis1·ovt•r that llw
di!l&lt;'usstoh, wh1rh was l1·11d hy Or
Ebert and Dr Kalkin, C'volvcdvn
a hil?h levt•I or sinr,•rP sturtC'nl 1•()11cem 11s lo th&lt;' 1mportnnrr ol sr.
k'&lt;'lin~ and dl•fimni: a 1'0rlt• or
mot:ility . ln ordt•r to ub111intht•

1t ix unbt'licvcable that thl' N•w•
rt•portrr could havr bt&gt;en so I'll·
,.:rossC'd in his rabric-&gt;1tionthnl h•'
fallrd lo nohl'1' th,• enthusinsl It·
partit•ipation of ov1•r 100 s1111t
t•nls
ln 1hr 1•0UC'I'hour dix,·ussion! Ct'r•
lainly UB d()('S not invitl' surh
publicity. whkh i~ a dirl'('I insull
nol o,,ty to 111\'11vo profl'ssors in­
volvt'&lt;I. hut als o to th,• image of
our 11mvrrs1ty!
8arb11ra Strau~s
Publlr Reh.11ion~Comrnlttr,•

AMLE
C Notes Summ
er Employme
nt
Opportunities Available Abroad
For tnOst Alllrrleall C'Oll
l'l:l' SIU·
dents , summer t, n time or l'ither
gainful employment or uninterrupt•
;.'Clleisure . But for the approxima tl'­
ly 250 st udent s who will J)llrticlpat r
In Michigan Sta te University's AM·
I.EC program , the summer or 1964
will be a time of languagi- stuay
and travel In Europe .
AMLEC , the American Language
and Educaf;ion Center , coopera tes
Witt) a non,proflt Swiss foundation
to ott er college students 811 lnex•
pemlve opportunlt,y to nudy Span­
lsh. Gennan. t 're.ncll and llallan .
whtlf Immersed In the culture and

ti-

languagl!Iare spoken .

dally U!e or the countries In which
During the stunmer of 1963, 243
11\ldenta
, repreRntl.ng 64 American
coll~
and wllvenl tles. partlcJpa.
ted In thla MSU procram. They

IJM'IIIIIJC"1'etklatwb'Jng
language
and Nltu~ . lUld t)M,I . travelled Cor

lhr ee mol't'

WN'ks

belol't' n•tum­

ing home.
F. J. Mortimore , AMI.EC din&gt;c•
lor . rt'ports that. "Amerknn uni•
vel'llity s tudents are per hap s the
best jlOOC!willamba Jsadors this
country can send abroad.
"European students with whom
n~ Am ericans attended classe s and
social functions were nearly unan­
imous In thl'ir praii;e of our stu•
dents."
Commenting on the educational
benefitsfor Ameriean students at•
tending the program , Mortim ore
observed that , " th e st uden ll l'l'turn•
ing with me from Europe were a
l!ffilt deal more sophistica ted than
the students whom 1 had taken to
Europe only nine weeks earlier."
Further
Information regarding
this MSU summer language pro­
gram can be obtained by writing
AMLEC.Michigan tate University .
F.ast Lansing , MIC'hlga:o.

The
music
lounge
Jazz

following is the schedule of
to be played tn the mu.sic
for the week of Dec. 16-20.
10.ll:30, Popular 11:30-1:00,
Classicnl 1-2:30. Folk 2:30-4, Semi.
clnssical 4-5: 00.

ua . MIN'I .....
CLUa AND
WOMIN'I CHORAL■
Thlll'llday evening, begirmlng at
7:30 p .m ., members of the U.B .
Men '11 Glee Club and Women 's
Olo ral e will meet In Harrimall
Audito rium to embark on a Olrist·
mas caroling excu.rslon. Carol
books will be distri buted at that
time. One of the Ql8ln stops on
the si ngers' agenda will be at the
Ca mpus Dormitories, where dorm
stud ents will be cordially invited
to join in thl' festi vilil's. Univer­
sity Pl828. and othe r local pub lic
ga.thering-pl aces will be covered.

SOCIALW■LP'ARI CLU■
Social Welfare Club will

The

meet Thursday, at 4:30 in room
242 Norton. , Mr. Norman Fertig
wlll speak on "Ca reers in Menta l
Health." This apoearance of Mr.
Fertig, M.A.. Superviso r of the
VocationaJ Service
Department,
Jewish Family Servi ce, was ar­
ranged through the Speaker's Bu­
reau of th e Mental Health Asso­
ciation of E rie County. All stu•
dent5 Interested in careers in me n•
ta! health fields are Invited to
attend.

'64 Directory
Lists
Summer
Openinvs
InUSEmployment
A dlrecffiry listing 35.000 summer
jobs throughou t the United Sta tes
for college st udents ls now avail­
ab le. Studl'nt.s can begi n their sum•
me r plans during the Christmas
-Hollds.y vacation.
The 1964 "S ummer E mptoymen l
Directory" gives the names and
addresses
of 1,600 organizations
which want to em ploy oollege stu­
dents. It a lso gives positions OJ&gt;fll
,
salaries. and suggestions on 'bow
to apply.
The many types ol jobs are
found at sum mer cam ps. resorts ,
various. departments or the gov•
em ment , business lUld industry. Na­
tional parks, ranc hes. and summer
theatres listed also need college

students.
Students wi11hing summer work
apply directly to tbe employers ,
who are included in the directory
at their own request.
Ask for "Summl'r Employment
Directory"
at the bookstore or
send $3.00 (special college student
price) to National Directory Ser­
vice , Dept. C. Box 32065, Clncio.
natl, Ohio 45232.

A. M. &amp; A's

HCHATION COMMITTEE

ELECTRICSHAVER
CLINIC

The Big Game Night. which was
l)Olilponed from Friday, Nov. 22.
will be held todny in the Norton
Union Game area , Students may
bowl, play pool, and table tennis
at no rost.

UNIVERSITYBRANCH
ONLY
SATURDAY
, DEC. 14th
10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

MIXER COMMITTEE
The Mixer Committee wlll hold a
Christmas Party Tuesday , from
6:30-? in the Haas Lounge. Siu•
dents wiU go caroling around the
c-ampUs and then return to the
lounge for hot elder and cookies.
Santa and his elves will also be
on hand with gilts for all those
nttending. Eileen Flynn is chair­
man of thr event.

SCHOOLOF PHARMAC
Y
The &amp;-hool ol Pharmacy 's an•
nual Christmas Dance will be held
tonight ut the Charter Howe on
Transit R0&lt;1d. Th~. dance Will be­
gin at 9:00 p.m. with Jay Moran' s
Bnnd supplying U1e musk . En ­
lQrtainment will includ e a visit by
San la Claus (Ron Communcl nnc'I
hi~ EU !Gregory Chudl.ikl who will
prl'sent "gifts" to U1e fa~ulty . Also.
a sati rkal skit by Albert Werthei ·
mer will be featured . 4\11 Prt'­
pharm&amp;l'Y students are urgrd to
attend lhl' d&amp;nce to mr&lt;'t the rac•
ulty. t'or lickets or further infor­
mation, ro11tact th!' Pharmary or.

We will adjust, oil and
replace part, if needed
on any NORELCO,

R EMING T ON ,
SCHICK
, SUNBEAM
,
RONSONSHAVER.
WE REPAIR LADIES SHAVER$ TOO.
Set Our New Model Shaver, on Di1pl1y 1t A. M. &amp;rJt.'1,

Low, Low Price
E,1/m1te1 011 Compltt• Overhau!J

fit•,•.

Any scholar will appreciate
this new Decton oxford
ahirt ... the latest graduate
to the world of wash-and•
wear by ARROW.A blend of
65% Dacron• polyesterand
85% ootton ..• it outlaste
all cotton shirts. From
that famousbutton-down
eollar to the bacl( button and
back pleat, it's Un,ivenity
Fashion at its best
Tapered to trim you down,
"S.nforiud -Plus'' labeledto
ensure a lasting fit, Decton
oxford corneain white,
colors and British stripes.

Short sleeve.aas illustrated
only$5,95

�Frld•y, O.C.mber 13, 1963

UB's1stWholeYearIn State
University
System
Evaluated
During the first lull year as a
member of the State University of
'New York, the University at Bui•
falo wrestled with knotty adminis­
trative and procedW111problems.
moved toward ironing out unavoid-·
nble difficulties resulting from the
merger. and began plans for a vaST
eXpamion program over the next 1
several years.

and part-time !ltudenls were admit:
ted, in September 1963 enrollment
wu again up by 12.6% to 17,888.
The 1963enrollment represents an
88&lt;;1,increase i!) the student body
during the decade beginning ~
54.
Enrollment projections fol' 1970
call for 14.500 tull-time undergrad­
uates, 790 part-time undergraduates
and 1:480 In the professional
schools. The evening division will
probably enroll 7.500. Thl' grand
total projected is 28.790 - 19.500
full•tlme.

A cou,nsellng firm under the aus•
pices ol the State University Con­
struction Fund began surveying the
present resources of the University
and drawing projections on overall
future needs. This study has not
Supported research continued to
been completed. When It is, hope­
fully early in 1964, II will be hand­ mushroom during 1963. June totals
included 400 rese arch nnd training
ed lo architects who will begin tran·
slating the needs into building pl'Qgrams in more than 40 depart­
ments of the University. A total of
plans.
$6,522,000was received from out­
There were four significant con­ side organizations from June 62 to
(·rete developments in the physical June 63. an jncrcase of 20% over
2 academic year.
plant du'ing 1963, The Board of the 1961-6
Trustees of State University invited
Tile
largest
grant ev1&gt;r received
1he Erie County Board of Super­
visors to build a new county hospit• by the University, mol'e than $3 mil·
al adjacent to the UB Medical lion, ent&lt;'red its first phase with !he
school. No firm decisions have-been opening of an l'ight-bed clinical cen­
made as to the exact location. but ter al Children's Hospital for lnten•
nearby Grover Cleveland Park is sive study and treat ment of child•
ren with l'OmpJicated medical. sur­
one distinet possibility.
gical and psychiatric problems. The
A new 500-studentbrick dormitory School of Pharmacy commanded
moved steadily toward completion more research money than any oth•
with occupancy scheduled in the er pharmacy school in the L'OUntry
spring. The increased capacity will during the year.
do little more than to ease the pres­
Faculty numbers also rose to
t•nt 1,1rain which Includes rental. (lf
oU-campus units for 600 trcshman meet rising enrollments. The full­
time day faculty increased to 551
men at the Allenhurst apartments.
In September. In the professional
A new Sl.5 million wing added schools the number rose to 217.
10Acheson Hall of ChemistrY repre­ Total faculty increase from June to
sents a doubling of research and September. including part - time,
leaching facilities in that field. It rose from 1,938 to 2,25.5.
1w1sdedicated In November.
Several new ac:ademic depart­
To relieve jammoo classrooms. ments and majol' appointments
twenty 45-foottrailers were ordered were announCt&gt;dduring the year.
and have been placed south oi These include Dr. Simon Rottenberg
Goodyear Hall along Balley Ave­ as dean of' !he SchOQlof Business
nue. The trailers are connected in Administration, Dr. RQy C. Macrld­
pairs and will be opened as 10 new is. ns chairman of the new Depart­
classroom buildings in January. or­ ment of Politlcal-'icience. ProfeSSOl'
licials are predicting !hat 25 new Albert S. Cook, chairman of the
dassroom trailers will be ne&lt;'essary English Departme nt, and Dr. Charl­
es H. Ebert, chairman o{ the new
during the coming year.
Department of Geography. Other
The temporary classrooms arc
~ymbolic of the efforts being made major appointments includl'd Dr.
to juggle the physical facilities to A. Westly Rowland, assls 1ant to the
'lt'COm
modate burgeoning enroll- president for University Allalrs.
111rnts.Although use of facilities and Dr. William J . O'Connor. direc­
was stretched lo the assumed limit tor of the University or Bufialo
F01111daUon,
Inc.
111 Srptember 1962 when 15,884 full

Dr. Claude LangloisIsolates
Chemicalsin Bodies of Bees
For most people the sting of nn
lnSCC'tis painful but hannless. Bui
13prople in the U.S. last year died
from in.sect stings. and other deathf
may have been triggered by the IJI­
"" beasts and recorded as ht'8rt
failure.
Although the number of deaths
an undccorded number of
pmple also sustain severe reactions
from insect stings, ranging from
Juves to extended shock, according
In Dr. Claude Langlois. research as•
,od111e in bacteriology and immu­
nology.
1s small.

lie and two other reserachers at
l'B , have succeeded tor the first
',m., in isolating certn :n chemicnls
in 1he bodies and venom o( hees,
wasps and yellow-jackets which
,·ause these reacllons .
nr . Langlois' co-workl'r3 are Or.
~1dnt'Y Shulman, associate proks •
'"r or immunocheml5try and bio­
J&gt;h~·s
1cs and Dr. Carl E. Arbesman
1~s!stant clltdcal professor of bll&lt;'·
1•·no1ogy and Immunology and as·
,0&lt;·u11eprofessor or medidne .

PAGE TWENTYSEVEN

SPECTRUM

stream which causes a reb&lt;'tlon
when It rne£ts with the protein from
lht• insect.

~

,1'ablt WBFOAnnouncesSchedule
......,.,

ly RALPH N. GROAT

·ao

Dec. 1'1

5:00 ON CAMPUS with Jerry

Segal
It happened =ntly
In • modem
6:00 NEWS with Jim Cl'Ol'lllerg
countrY in this modem world that
an lngcnlollll group of sdentisle
6:15 TO BE ANNOUNCED
developed a substance which seem•
ti:30 EVENING MUSICALE
ed lo have all the properties ol
7:00 AMERICA ON STAGE- "Ri p
a long-awaited cure to what ia
Von Winkle." Joseph Jetler­
surely one of the most terrible
,on version (1865), Jefferson's
dl&amp;eases which man ls victim to,
p0rtrayal of Rip In his own
Unfortunately, certain modlfimtlon.~
vc,rsion of th~ play l'Cmains a
were necessary before the new drug
clu.s.~icof American octlng as
could be.-considered safe. al!d the
well as an influence upon
sci4'ntists were reluctant to experi•
lnt('r naturalistic p I a y I n g
numt wlih human beings becal1S(1
~tyles. Thr pla,y's unprere­
the effec-ts of !he cure in experi•
dentl'd success testilie~ also
mental form wen, even more ter­
to the Amerkan 's persi&amp;tcnt
rible than those or the disease.
a!lcctlon ror folk matCl'ials
And unfortunately too, therl' seem­
druwn from his own Mtive
ed to be no animal similarly ar­
locales.
fectcd by the disease whlrh the
7:30 CONCERT UAL!..- Dvorak·
scientist thlght use for experimental
Symphol\Y No 4. Bruno Wal­
purposC's. And so. lt l;'-'l!med !hat
lt•r rOllducting the Columbia
mankind would nevl'r be nhl(' to
symphony Orchestra,
benefit from this somewhot im•
!l::10CAMPUS CONCERT - U. B.
perfect Invention.
Cllllrus Christmas Con&lt;'&lt;'rl
But then, perh.1ps by acridt•nt.
It was dlSL'OVert.'ll
that a common 10:00 MUSICAL SHOWCASE" t I h
Terry Lee
insect was sus&lt;.'Cptibleto the dis­
ease In much the same manner 11:00NEWS
In whl&lt;'h mnn sutfl'rro. Arxl for­ \ 1:00 RAmO with Munt&lt;•Otum
tunately. It becamt• appaN&gt;nt too
that the new cure would surely 12:00 SIGN OFF
work on the !nc;cct. although many Tuel4ay, ~ . '7 :
would die hi ago11,Y
as the impel'
5:00 ON CAM.PUS,vllh AUun K;u,
feet form of the rurc aflected even
6:00
NEWS
thl'Tl'
poorly develo()&lt;.&gt;dnervous
6: 15 OVER TIIE BACK 1-·1::NCE
syi;lem. And all this was proclaim·
ed triumphantly to the populace
tl:30 EVENIN(: MUSICALE
by the various media of rommunl•
7:00 HOIJJ YOUR BREATH
cation and there wns rcjoicin.i: In
"Communlti!'~ and Control
the expe&lt;-tation of thr perfeded
II" - More on t'Ommunity
fom1 of the cure.
l't&gt;nll'O
I lht• cltiwn's parti&lt;'i•
But it wns not to b&lt;'. The thoullhl
p;1tlon and ~:m•r local. re~­
of many millions of in.&lt;reelsdyinJ}
lu1wI Mid national probll'ms
in indescribable agony aroused the
In olr ;iollutlon &lt;-ontl'(ll
sensibilities of some gentle ml'm•
7::10CONCERT HALL - S1b&lt;'l111~
hers of the citizenry, and in their
Viuhn con,•crlo. Ja~chu lll•i•
indignation. they were moved to
f,,t, . violinist with the Chi­
protest this Inhuman treatment of
t'n~o Symphony Orc~eslrn
God's creaures. For surely. they
11:30COLLEGE QUIZ
said, "he makrlh all things hoth
0:00 AMERICAN lllSTORY with
great and small," and it would be
Mr. Wilson
unjust and inhumane to subjl'&lt;'t
10:00 COMEDY. INC. !What W&lt;'
even the most Insignificant of the
Do Is Our Busin&lt;•s.~l- Cnrl
creatul'l's in the order of creation
1tnd Bob COlll'~nmn
to such terrible pain and suUcring.
11:00 NEWS
The men o( the sCil'ntlflc com• 11 05 WOIWS ANLI MUSIC 111th
munlty protested as did many olher
Phil Skill
interested parties. hut thl' orgMi• 12:00SIGN Off
:r.a.ionto protC&lt;'I the rights of all
creatures wassuccl.'ssful in arouis­ WIIIM.Y , Dec. 11:
5:00 ON CAMPUS with twb f':QII•
log public opinion so that lurthcr
t&gt;SOllln
experimentation was curteUed. And
5:50 STlJOENT SENATB NEWS
so. the new cure was never perfect•
with J()(· Paul
ed and mankind is still) victim or
6:00 NEWS wllh DavC' ~hrlll&lt;'I'
the disease. But soml'times, l.n the
6: 15 GETTING TO KNOW·youmost desperate. i;ome doctor will
Ooris Mar!Cinh•rvicwt&lt;fOrl'lltl'
11resctibe the cure in its expcri•
sludcnts
mental rorm, and ott 1m 1hm. the
6:30 EVENING MUSJ('ALE
patient will never recover and be
7:00 CAR:l'()ONIS-I'S ART - llnr­
thankful. And orten !hen too, the
vey Kunmon . 11rlglnntor uf
patient wlU suffer and die in ago11,Y
MM c.m1ct.
be&lt;,\U$e the cure Is not yet safe.

C()NCE81' HAU. - MAhlC"l"
~"ymphony No 3 1..t"UMnl
Bemst~in cond~
lhl• N1-w
York Phlllumnonk

9:00 NEWS
9: 10 FACUl~TY VIEWPOINT
"Unity of Rcll1,,-lons
" - fl1\h­
bl Cioldbtr11. Rl&gt;Y ()i\nlt'llon.
Rev. Bel\tUI'tt('Ol"tll'dat Bis·
onl1e11dmN'Un1t
10:00 SWING SJIIFT wilh J!Ay Ca,
ruu.M

11:00 NEW!;
ll :00 NIGHT t'LIGtIT
Bttvorka
12:00 SIGN o.-F

11.•llhP11tl'

Thul'llllay, Dtc , If :

5:00 ON CAMPUS with Ronntr
Ackrr
6:00 NEWS with rnt Irwin
6· l2 CHANOtNG FACE OF' t:UR-

OPE

6::lOEVENING ~IIJSICALE
WWISPECIAL OF THE WJ-:1':K
7:30 CONCERT HALL - Prokofiev: Concerto No. 4. Rudol!,/11
Serkin, pianist with the Phtl•
11drlphiaOrchC"~tre- Eurzt&gt;nl."
Ormnndy ronductin,:
11:311
WBFO SPECIAL - Dr. Ralph
Kaufman S&lt;•t'&lt;lndProgram ol
P5ychtn1cy l....'Cturt-Serit"i
10:&lt;Xl1''01.KMUSIC with 1'"1'1'&lt;1
Hric,
kt•II
11,00 N~:ws

11:05 JAZZ C:ALLF;RVv.lth R~
Cr1.1w(0ffl
12, 00 SttiN OFF

Friday, o.c. 21:
S· OOON CAMPUS v.~th Tt•rry H~
VO

ti. 00 Nf:WS with 811rr V&lt;»:&lt;•I
Ii• t!, s I' O R T S lJIGJlt.lCHTS W:1ll) Blllttl'r
()::,.0 E\'ENING MUSJCAJ..E
7:00 WASHING'l'Cl"IRt-:PORT.S
'1· 15 UNITED NATIONS REPOR1"
7.:«&gt;C'ONCERT HAU. - Ralph
V(11tl\llllWllllumll' Mas..• in C
M In or: Bt•nJt1111tn
Brlnen·
C,•rt•mony of C'nrol~ Chems·
t&lt;•r
·11of C"1u1t('rburyC'atb&lt;-dt&amp;I
TIit· Ht'lllll!&lt;"ltn('t'Sln1:1•ri.(I( .
rcctl-d by Dr Stlln&lt;'YCamp•
bt•II
9 IXlN.t;WS
lU: (llJSOUNO or HR O A l&gt; WAY

AND IIOLI,YWOOD- HMt
£d A , 1 f Molton plt'tur,•
'&lt;(t\lll{l•ll'll('k ot Aod1:•
•r¥ l\mt
llnmnwrslt 'ih'~ "T)lt' Kini: &amp;
I" with Drhornh K,•rr and
Yul ijrynnrr .
ti .IX&gt;NEWS
11:lr. MELANGt: wllh Did&lt; Bo}
Dove Ronan. 1100Hnnk T,·n
enbllum
12:00SJGN on·

By grinding insect bodies and re­
ducing them to fluid, then scpara t­
i 1g the various proteins by 11 pro­
cess called chromatographic fra(),
Uonalion. lhe researchers were nhle
to produre 12 !raclions , each con•
tainlng one or several proteins.
By testing each traction on highly
allcrgk p.itienlS. !hey were able to
ascertain which groups o{ proteins
from the insects caused a ri&gt;action.
The next step. according to Dr.
Langtcis. is to explorl' further the
fractions whirh l'l.mtaln the allC'rgy•
t'ausing proteins. By gathering data
on the exact chemical and plJysical
nature of thr proteirui. they can
be purified. diluted and used in
minule quantltlt-s to Immunize pa­
tienls against in!lct't s1ings.
In the past . after a person was
~tung and a violent reaction reslUt·
ed. temporary immunization was
accomplishoo by injecting extracts
rrom !he whole body of !he insec-t
into 1he patient.

LOCATION:

BUF
fALO
TfXTBOOK
STORES,

They have succeeded in isolutmg
•·•main groups of proteins in both
Th&lt;' advantages of Immunizing
lhP venom and the body or the in­
patients with just lhe dllutt-d purl­
.,., 1vhich cause a violent re11C'- tied protPin would be lhc avolc.llance
1&lt;1
1 m &lt;"t&gt;tia
in people.
of possible toxic reactions o~ oth('r
nnd the pos;s1b1lll)'of
Th~ ln\'&lt;'Slilt&amp;lorstht'&lt;&gt;rizethat 1hr s1d1.••clfl&gt;cls,
r,•·•'&lt;Onfor a violent reaction in injecting smalkr amountR of th&lt;'
,m,, and not in others Is 1hat rer·
1.11n j)e(lple have a unique pro1em
~:t~a:~ :: us~~~l:~m~ ~/ ~:~· _ ___. .....
pht'1l0mt•M '•
n !heir cell strul'l ures and blood tain hasir hio)OJ,'1("9.l

361 0 M~IN Sf
BUffAIO 76. N V
ff
l
1111

~ltU

COtJf 1 to

(;

C.
ated VicoMaticcopier
0--:
1=
"=•o:!p
:e:r===:::::::::::::
•~~=~-----•-:--- - -

�S S $ Allocations Claimed lneffitient
Bureaucracy Red-Tape Impossible
Suggested Plan: Lump-Sum Budget

GreystilRuthven
; lord of Gowry,Interviewed
BritishEducation
.SystemSuperiorto Ours
Iv LORNA WALLACH

Ir LAWIINCI DIAN

,1 ■NICIL

1be piecemeel &amp;llocntlon ot
fundll to our unlvendly, With Its
111,pporttve ~em
or chec.b and
controls is fnlstratlng, Inefficient,
and unnecessary on this level of
the state bureaucracy. It doesn't
serve ltB purpose or "getting more
tor l:be money", because, though
economizing is admirable, It Is
often not worth the expense of uca,
demlc excellence. Tbis is too high
a price to pa,y tor economy. Con•
venience and speed of delivery
must enter into cost consideration;
con:sideratlons that are best made
on the scene, by thos&lt;&gt; involvro
with the utl&amp;ation of the commod ­
ity. The following example will 11·
lus trote the above.
For any major pkce of equip­
ment that an instructor of research
follow wishes to produce, a pre­
liminary report mlll!t be submi t•
ted to the Divi.1ion of Standards
and Purcllase of the Office or Gen­
eral Services of the State of New
York, Included with the l't'(JUest,
a justification or the need for this
equipment must be submitted to
the bu&lt;lget office. U the request is
approved, tllC' rrqulsitioner must.
det ermin e It the equipment is
available
from a number of
80\lrces : C-entr ul Stores in Albany,
Department of Correction, or ln­
dutri es for I.be Blind. U it is not
avai lable trom these sourc es, it
must be obtained from sources con•
tra&lt;.'ted by the state to supply the
Item In question, eve n if the con­
tractor charges higher prices than
lhoae charged tor an equivalent
Item on the open market; even if
he tal&lt;es longer to d eliver his l)rod­
uct; and even if bis produc t Is not
quite a.s well stilted for the job as
another unit from another sup­
plier.
However, fJ no rontracted source
is available , 11 minimum o1 live
blds must publicly be sou~ht. The
item mo,y still not be purch;ust.-d,
The bid~ and related nod tape mus t
be re-submitted to the Division of
Standards so U\Ut Albany can de­
termine il U1e bidding has bee n
managed property . tr the Division
of Standards approves the pur ­
chase trom one ot the bidders, not
necetl$11rlly the- lowrst , then the
Department ol Audit and Control
has an opportunity to pass ap­
proval or disapproval on the pro­
~'&lt;l purchase. At Ibis point the
rnut1lated requi6ition is returnM
tUll,y approved (maybe) and l.'el\d
for final 11ction . This involVl.'S the
actual requesting and receiving or
the item trom the chosen sup­
plier, who up until Ibis time , dld
not know that thr order was to be
forthcoming,
The procedW't' outlined abov e is
simplffied a great deal. It merely
indicates the intri cacies of pur•
chase, but It does indicate the dls­
advanwte ol the present system.

Friday, December' 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY etGfiT

It m111tbe noted that•IIQfTlelnstruc •
tors and rc~arcbers must .reQlli•
sit:ion items many times during a
year or even during a month. It
is often impossible to plan six or
eight months in advance so that
tbe time consuming process will
not delay the person Involved. In
fact the material for one instru­
mental analysis course was ord•
cred eight months in advance, yet
because the supplier or the equip­
ment did not hav e l!ufflclcnt noti•
tioaUon, he had to ask tor a delay
of another six month.~ in order lo
secure and deliver the equipment.
Needless to say, the course could
not be taught ettectivc],y Without
the instruments.
As ln all t'Mlns o! thi&amp; size, there
are frequent breakdowns ii one of•
!kc is unable or unwilling lo ap­
prove the request , Or, the final
produc t that is delivered ·to the
requ isltloner may not be just what
was wanted although it seemed
like the ''hest buy" to those tar
away from .the scene. There is
also a greut aeal of paper work
Involved with this shuttling back
and forth. Not only is ii time con­
suming but. because someone must
be on hand to do the shuUling, it
Ls not always as economical as
might be thought.
One high oUlclaJ In the admin·
lstratlon commen ted: "Other state
universities, such as Indiana and
Michigan, have come lo the con•
clusion that there is only one way
lo have a great university and
that is through purchasing auton­
omy." This autonomy is brought
about if the state legislat ur e bud­
gets money each fiscal year so
that the university co.n spend as
it sees fit without s ubmitting each
expense to audll o.nd control Many
of the laws prese ntly governing the
operation ol the State University
existed belore there was such a
thing.
How does the overall problem ef•
feel us as stude nts? One professor
summed ii up this way: "In orde r
to have a great univerity, exce llent
foculty must be attracted. It ls
Impossible to dr-.tw good instructors
if they can't get supplies, teach­
ing aids, and t'Quipment In a rea•
sonable period o! lime. Pro fessors
are at tracted by the promise of
being able to earry out their re­
search eUectively."
The benelit that this institution
has derived Lrom the merger with
the State University must not be
forgot1cn, however. Albany on sev•
e ral occasions has cut red tape to
provide quick delivery of needed
equipment. The merger has a lso
mad e possible higher faculty sal­
aries. more elaborate equipment
(even iJ there is l'OfJS!derable de­
lay in receiving this equipment),
and a large scale increase in
physical plant size.

"As American studen\~ we are

aware ol Inadequacies in our edu­
cational system."
Mt. Greystil
Ruthvew . Lord of Gowry , a visiting
f::nglish Professor from England
commented recently on the compar­
ison between his edu&lt;'alional sys­
tem and ours.
Mr. Ruthven's

first Impr ession

was that the entering freshman
Jacks a background in grammar

and is not able to exp ress himselr
on paper. ln England grammar
study is complt&gt;ted by age twelve.
when Americans areJust beginning
to ll'am fundamentals. Mr. Ruthven
feels early teaching Is an advan­
tage bccaust&gt; it enables the child
to better ass imilate the information.
Also, !or this reason foreign lang­
uages eri i sta rted by nge eight.
English educators belit!ve that child
ls better able to understand his own
language If hr ls able to contras t
ii with another .
Mr. Ruthven believes that there
is a definite differen ce between the
American and English culture s and
languag es. Problems arise for the
American language". The profes­
sor suggests that the student
"should write as he thinks or
speaks."
The rate o! impro veme11tin fresh­
man English classes is proof to Mr.
Ruthven that our system of lower
education is a t fault. Students bere

enter college with less background pendant)y. Attendance ls not com­
than do English s tudent s. The col­ pulsory at the lectures .
lege fr eshman In England Is com•
One test is given by the univer ­
parable to our t-oHege junior .
sity at the end of three years. If
Student s in England are reading
the student passes he receives his
by age five and by age t1tteenare
B.A. A master's degree Is a for mal­
on an equal level with our high
ity tor which a student pays thirty
school seniors . Al this point they
doll an; for four years.
take a battery of tests and some go
on to study intensl'ly in a specific
field. These student., are retested
11( eighteen .
UB students often object to the
necessity of majoring in a special­
ized field. They wish to take a
basic liberal arts course without a
major. Although Mr. Ruthven is
not too familllr with our system he
believes that English students are
amply prepared to choose a major
field by the time they are fifteen.
It has not been until recently
that the English began emphasizing
higher educa tion. For this reason
is it not up to our leve l. There 11re
only a few high],y rated colleges
and universities in England, the
most wekk known being Oxford and
Cambridge.

Mr . Ruthven. a graduate ol Ox­
ford. explained their sygtem. The
university is composed of many col•
leges and a student applies to the
college of his major field. Each stu­
dent Is assigned a tutor who Is
available for guidance but he car­
ries out most of his studies inde-

'

Block , No vy, Brown
Burgundy , Comel, Orey ,
Bottle Green , White

COLOGNE WATER&amp;

AFTER SHAVE
LOTION
lmpo, tod, St. John• •

Boy Rum,

"

Barnaby ' •
Bl tten , Ca awell ·
~- Mouoy Jock•y
/

• Club,

•

Psychologists Test Freshmen

WillHe/p StudentsPlanMajor
ly

ELAINE IA.HON

A " semanti c differential" study
Is t.'lln-ently In progress at the Stu•
dent TestJng Center. Under the
leadership of Dr. Allen H. Kuntx,
paycholo"lst . this project Involves
prrlecting and interpetlng a 20mlnute test given last M-r to In•
comtng tteshmen .
It the project and tes t la success­
f\11, the lnlerpeta tlon of 9COffll will
enable the student to see in which
the Cl are aa or study he ts belt
tttted for . " What I'm attemprins
to do ii to diacover non- eognltlve
dlmfflllona which will facilitate
dlolft of pt'Ogrllm and enhance the
Ukdlbood ol 8t\kknt II\K'Ct!lll at the
uniwnl~ ," commC'nted Or. KWllx.
The test conmtaot 12 adJectlves
In ~ I.rel.I ; fAmlly, unlvenlt)'
and wll. For exa.rnplt
, the lltudcnt
would be sl•&amp;1 two ~Yft

or

c1llti and U,,.t. and. a '1U1P i.

tween them of the numbers 1 to
7. They would pick one of the nwn•
bers to describe what degrees of
the adjective would tit the cate­
~ey. such as family.
The psychologists hope to find
a correlation In the answers of
people lo the same field. It mu.it
be emphaaized that the lest Is only
in the n!tlearch stage . The rese6teh­
CB
wl.11 have some preliminary
flndinp prior to the next summer
plRMlng conference .
The test, It ~Ul
, will alto
determine a relation to aca4ernl c
IUCCCSI. What all the resulta will
be hued on Is a congNmCe in
ICOl"ell of Jlt'Ol)leIn different ftelda.
When perfected. the Im will be
A timHavcr
to the student b)'
rt&amp;dlly ahowlngblm a valid e9tlnla·
tlon ~ ht, flltut'e IChotutl c wc­
-'11d 6bwww for hill ct­

Jleld,

Made with nippy, taste-tmnpting cheddar
d1eese, especially prepared for McDonald's.
Grilled with juicy pure beef hamburger,
ground fresh daily. Served in seconds, ..
piping hot and delicious on a toasted bun.
McDonnlcl's... for cleanliness, convenience
and value,

.. .... . ...

, ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,.,.

..

T,adltlonol RegJmentol
Cluba , FoulaNl 1,
Pol ■ l•y, Wool ICnh ■•
StrlpH,

D'CIIIIILL
LUC.U

leDonaldi

1141.. 11It.

1385 NIAGARA FALLSBLVD.
K MIi .._.. Ill SHDIDAMDIM • MAfLI lOAD
lA4
11 k:sl MIii ..._,
0,-.....,_,.......,_.lrtl
1111 ft■

~.,

.. JIUY IIOWMlOUT CDII.

Tf •• ,.,

0,.., fe, ti,• Holldat•

�Friday, December 13, 1963

i

~.

IO!Slll&amp;$
5 21!12

PAGE TWENTYNINE

SPECTRUM

a

Spectrum

S~rts

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IQlllllliRPHIIIJliilllllilllll
ml1D1
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l&amp;IM!Niiir-■mm

Sport1 Cirele
By ROCkYVERSACE
Basketball is here again and once more the East is
prepared to display its strength in this sport. Leading the
pack of Eastern cage-squads (and many UB students will
be glad to hear this) will be New York University.
NYU appears to have no weakness and possesses all
the attributes needed to be a winner. Barry Kramer re­
turns and is expected to live up to his All-American status .
As a junior , the 6-4 athlete from Schenectady's Linton High
School was second in the nation in scoring, being edged out
by Seton Hall's Nick Werkman. Backing up Kramer is
another potential All-American, 6-7 Happy Hairston . One
thing that may bring tears to the eyes of coach Lou Rossini
is that NYU's agile backcourt playmaker , Neil O'Neil, has
been declared scholastically iineligible. However, the pain
of O'Neil's loss will be somewhat eased with the return of
Tom Boose, a guard not quite of O'Neil's caliber, but a
better scorer. Stan McKenzie, who broke every NYU frosh
scoring record last year,' will add even more scoring punch
to the power-pac ked lineup .
The Wildcats of Villanova, a team that Buff.a.lohad the
pleasure of meeting at Memorial Auditorium, are the next
best in the East. Since Wally Jones and George Leftwich
are back to full strength a£ter a season of knee troubles,
the two will combine to give Villanova one of the finest
backcourts in the country. Jim Washington, Who stands 6-7, ·
worked at the center post in previous years but is now at
forward. Al Salle, 6-8, owns the center position and Richje
Moore is the other forward. As a freshman, Moore averaged
25points a game and will give additionial zest to the potent
Villanova offense.
Providence, with John Thompson returning ·to manage
the backboards is a formidable conte'nder for Eastern hon­
ors even though it lost the nifty guard duo Ray Flynn and
IJ TOM KENJAHKI
UB were Dave Crone. who 8COred
Vinnie Ernst to graduation. Sophomore sensation Bill Blair
a "hat trick"' (3 goals), Al Dever ,
Hockey, a sport wltich has been
will pick up the slack with his shooting ~nd ball handling.
who scored a goal and had 4 as•
Temple University had a 15-7 year last stason in wha,t enjoyed by millions of ~pie in sists
, Jerry Doherty, who ll('Oreda
tile pa~t years, Is beginning to find
was supposed to be a rebuilding period and has all but one its way into the University of Buf­ ®Ill, Jerry Clayton . who had 2
player back from that team. Sophomores Jim Williams , falo. However , this beginning has assists, end Mike Whelan and Tom
6-8, and Ken Morgan , 6-7, add even mor e depth lo the been long in commg . For the first Schwartz, who each contribu ted an
Owl's squad.
assist.
time this year , !hr Student Senate
Willie Somerset once again leads a powerful Duque sne recognized the Hockey Oub , but
The team is roached by Karl
five to nati onal recognition . Sidelined for several games in on the condition that it would not Bulland , head resident ot Tower
help it financially , The Sport$ De­ Halt. A varsity ltockey player at
1962 with a leg injury, Somerset is now completely healthy
partment has not recognl%ed hoc k­
RPI for 3 years . Bolland has help­
in his bid for All~American honors .
Prospects are bright at Holy Cross where last year 's ey: neverthel ess, It has !liven 80me ed the leam a great deal . Thi' kers
freshman team posted a 20-2 record . Richie Murph y and aid to the team. The hockey team . hope to be playing al the Buffalo
auditorium !or some of ils homr
efore, is on independent organ ­
,John Wendeken team up to give the Crusader 's their best ther
ization see king to become re&lt;.'O
g­
ga mes. Other home games will bc:­
backcourt since the days of Bob Cousy.
played al F o11 Ene . The team
nized in this ro llege as a sport.
Fordham's late season victory over NYU testifies to the Tltis is the g()al of the members needs the support of thr cnt ln•
Ram's prowess. Fordam was 18-8 i n 1962-63 and lost Bill from UB and alw o( the other mem­ student body in order to kecp th!'
Sheridan and Bob Melvin , but Len Zandy , Leon Krasinski, hers of team~ In other rollt'.'gcsin interest In tills great sport alivt&gt;
and Tony Crisculo, all up from .the 'frosh team equalize the the F'inger Lakes CotleJtiale Hock­ at UB. T1mi;-s and places for eac:-h
ey League.
home game will b4• po,,kd .
loss.
Th e UB team plays undpr NCAA
The n•malnder or this year's
Syracuse lost the professional team that added baske t­
rules . Each member ol the tram
sr hl'&lt;lule i~ as follows:
ball inter est to the sport minded city, but if the Syracusans
must carry 5 semester hoUri; to
December
l!'&gt;-UB vs. ltham
wait yatie ntly just one more year they will see fin e basket ­ play
on the te,,m. Each player
11\ome), Det.'filllbcr 18-UB vs.
ball in the name of Syracuse Univ ersity. High school All­ pa_ys$1.00 a wc1.'k lo help tin.,ncr
American Dave Bin g alon g with 6-8 Chuck Richard s form the ream's pract1res at Fort Eri !'.
the nucl eus of a young talented team. Several mem bers of This $1.00 a week pays lo,• Ice
YOUR I D CARD
the tall freshman team will play important roles in fu turP time on lhP practke rink. Prnc•
•
years.
WORTH
tire sta rts late, usually at 11:30

Rockey
SquadThumps
Rochester

because of ro nllkls or sch&lt;'dule
and availability of a rink lo play
on. Tra nspo rtntlnn to and lrom
pmctlce a lso ha.~ its problclllll.
With all these obstacles, there is
quite a bit of interest shown by
1he members of the Hockey Club.
A good indication ol tltis 1'0nlinued
interest is in th(' tact thRI a good
portion of the l'lub is compo~
ol i;ophomorl'S and freshmen. Another J)()mt of intt•resl lies in 1hr
fact that although only IR mem hers are allowed to sull up for
comf'.)f'Ulion by NCM rules, all 18
r:et Into the game . Everyone who
&lt;'Omf's to practicr gel~ a chrlnce
to play. This idea hold~ the interf'Sf or all lnvolvl'd and dot'S not
hurl thP tine quality of play. Thf'
officl'rs of the Hockey Clu~ nre
Larry Polon. prt'S1dent; Rl!'hard
Gordon. treasurer : and Wolly
Greenspoon, secretary.
The_ h0&lt;kl'Y tenm 1111$alr,•udy
1
fal'l'll the University of R0t·hri;t, r
and detcntcd ttwm by a S('On, ot

A IO-game sclledule, with two
nt'W tenms plu s an Ivy Leagu e op­
flOnent, are on tile University of
ButraJo 1964footbaU slate, wns re­
l~asw otfldlllly by UB Atllietic Ol­ at Rotary F ield. Among those YIS•
,ting Buffalo will Ix• ll oly Cross,
rr1•1or James E. " J im" Peelle.
Colgate . Villanova, and Virginia
The two teams to be met for
MIiita ry Institute, tht' latter makthr first time are Massachusett s
l: which has just completed an ing n retum after a thN'l'-year
hiatu s.
ui,ht'aten season 1 and Richmond
The l'Omplctr ~,·hP.iulr follows·
l 'niverslty. The Ivy League team
1
Sept. 19 - Boston University ' Cornell, The Big Red will be
away.
''''"'li ng the Bulls for the first time
S(&gt;pt. :.!6_ Cornell - away.
,,nee 1932 wllen the men from
Oct. 3 - Massachu~!'IIS - home .
1-'ar Above Cayuga's
Waters· ·
Ort. 10 _ Marshall
uway
\humPi.'&lt;l UB by a score of 72-0.
'Ort. 17 - Virgini11 Military
. he Bulls have come R Jong way
11
Inst. .... home .
'' &lt;'1' 1hcn a nd no such result is
·•!lll('IP,lled this fall . Tile last time
Oct. 24 _ Holy ems.~
_ ht'Jmc.
18
Oct. 31 - Delawnre - homt'
laced Ivy League opposition
Nov . 7 _ Rirhmond u ....home
\\u~ In 1958when Buffal o took tile
nwasurr or both Harvnrd and Co­
horn!'
Nov . 14 _Colgate_
hunh1n
Nov . 2t _ Villanova .... home .
8 ·
.
rootbau -1m1.rwtn7fflV,:, .. trome«m ti11g

u. ....

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1964GridSchedule
see
an Pxcellenl opfJOrtun ity lo
lopnotch rollcgia te footba ll as no less
than seve n i:iames WIii I)(' played

Brockport State (home. January
26-UB vs. R.t .T. (home. January
29-UB vs. R.I .T. (away). Febru ­
ary 9-UB Yll, U. of Rocheater
14-UB
vs.
(home) . February
Ithaca (away). February 15--0B
\IS, Syracuse (away). February J8
- UB YS. Brockport Stat e (home) .
23-UB YI/. SyracUSt'
February
(!tome) . February 29-UB vs. H~
h:lrt (ltomel. March t.

J!::
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�PAGETHIRTY

SPECTRU"'

Friday, Decemberl3, 1963

Cagers Are ·1-1Alter .Three Games
a, ALAN NftMAN
The Uniwr'llty of Buttalo Bulll
opened their basketball seuon wHh
two iiuccealve victories r,ver Buf.
falo State Teacher 's College and
Muskingum. In their lhlrd encount­
er, with Syracuse University,
hel,gbt proved to be a ddlnlte prc&gt;­
blem and the Bulls succumbed, 91.

69.
11 .....

Sc-.

In the traditionalopener against
ButtaJoState, Nov. 31, UB took

1111lartfl , ........
ef •
Stm error and thtkl a lay-up.
our poise for about five minutes
in each half, and that ruined us. "
It was
a rough game as evidenc­
ed by a total of 67 free throws.
Syracuse made 33 of 41, and UB
made 17 of 26.
The Syracuse fros h defeated the
Baby Bulls, 65-54, in the prelimln­
ary contest. Dick Kulle led UB
with 14 points.

...,..,.

Dklr Hehel, all •'-

• tlrtYn la t.r

an early lead and held ii through ­
out the contest. The Bulls' l't"Scrve
strength was the deciding (actor
in a game which saw 11 UB cagers
combine (or 58 points. Dick Erner
wu the high scorer for Buffalo
State, netting 16 of his team's 40
points .

Han'-y Peen

Sc--.

The Bulls made it two in a row
by defeating Muskingum, 8(M;7,
Dec. 2, in the Clark Gymnasium.
Gary Hanley, last yl'ar's Most Val-

uabl e Player, pal'ed the scorers
with 14 1,X&gt;ints.Hanl ey scored 10
of 12 UB points in a 2½ minute
span in the second hall.
Sophomore sensation
Norwood
Goodwin, held out or the starting
lineup, hit on some sensational long
jump-shots when he got into the
game and had 13 points .
The rebounding edge went to the
Ohioans 62-50but they were out­
classed by a shorter, yet stronger
squad in UB. The Muskingum
C'OIICh
, Bob Burkholder
added,

FAST
SERVICE

"B uffalo's a good team. Lots of
strength, lots of stamina. They
overpowered us."
In the preliminary game the UB
freshmen defeated the Fredonia
frosh , TI-51, behind 18 points by
Dick Kelle .
Or•nte Trfumph
Dave Bing, a former high school
All-America, and Oiuck Richards,
a 6-foot-8-inch pivot man, together
helped Syracuse hand the Bulls
their first defeat in three games in
the 1963-64 basketball season.

Richards finished with 29 points
(He lead bofu
teams in the two departments).
Bing scored 27, and moved the
Orangemen with the fast break.
Norwood Goodwin, held the Syra.
cuse F1ash to only five points in
the first half, but could not contain
the 6-3 guard in , the final 20 min­
utes .
"We made too many mistakes,''
said Coach Serfustini, "and you
can't make mistakes against a
good club like Syracuse . We lost

and 20 rebounds;

HOTPIZZA

TrophyPoints
The trophy points have been tab­
ulated as of the swimming meet .

Alpha Epsilon Pi
Beta Sigma Rho

156
15.'i

Sigma Alpha Mu
154½
Sigma Phi Epsilon
15.1
Phi Epsilon Pi
147
Gamma Phi
136
Alpha Phi Sigma
125
The handball
matches
have
reached the quarter finals. Final
matches probably will be com·
pleted by Oiristmas vacation.

GOOD
EATIIG

COLLEGE
PIZZERIA
.
~-- -.;----=-=~.:::

IT'S NEW!.. NOW ENJOY

----~

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SPAGHETTI

~~~\---

with That Old Italian Flavor.

"' 2--, 331
Hourt-:

SPAGHETTI

th
wi

• $AUSAGE or
•.MEATBALL

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Mon., Thurs. 6 • Mid.
Fri ., Sat. 6 • 1 A.M.
Sun.5 • 12Mid.

PEPSI• TEEM-15c

I
j
.,..----"!!!~~~-------------------·---..··--··~ ........

We Ext:end To Yoµ Our Sincerest Wi,shesFor A······~
Merry Christmas and A Happy and Sureessful New Year

�Friday, December 13, 1963

PAGE THIRTYONE

SPECTRUM

OldTimers
Defeated Philbin
leapsManyHonors,
InAnnual
SquadBattle Signs
WithNewYork
Jets
1, 111-ntA MILLMAN

Both varsity and frelhman fenc­
ers have started ott their seasons
in the winning tradition that for
so long baa been a part o! the
fencing Bulls' record .

On Nov. 21, Cooch Sid Schwartz
assembled an array of 1.Oldtim­
ers" whose collective record not
only challenged the skill of the
varsity, but provided a goal toward
which to aspire.
The vanity
proved equal to the challenge and
soundly beat the Oldtimers by a
final score of 29-19, suffering a
7-9 defeat on(y at the hand.~ ot
the Oldtimer's epee squad.

Barry Canter, Joe Paul and Bob
Toth representing the Bulls in foll
won by a score of 10-6. Canter
went w1&lt;hfeated, ag-.unst four op­
pQnents. The Bulls met recent
outstanding UB alumni Ethan In­
trater, former co.captain; and Joe
Fcrsch, who twice placed In the
Nort h Atlantic top three.
Even with the strength of for­
mer All-American, North Allantic
champ and former co-captain of
Bob Peterson. the Oldlimer epee
squad managed to down the varsity
by only two points. UB was rep­
resented In epee by Dick Wlllert,
Frank Pecenco, and Walt Ostrum,
who competed In epee for the first
time at this match.
Last Saturday both the freshmen
and the varsity tried their luck
against Hobart, and beat them
soundly. the varsity by a score of
22--5and the freshmen by a score
of 17-8.
For most of the freshmen this
was their first time in competi­
lion (a few had had previous fenc­
ing experience in high school).
The Baby Bulls fenced a total of
25 bouts; 14 of the 17 wins were
obtained by individual freshmen
defeating all of their opponents.
Mondello and Tringali each down­
ed three Oumteau, Frey Hous-

1, DAVID I. HAMPTON
Gerry Philbin, U.B.'s All Ameri­
can tackle, bas just completed his
college career at U.B. and Is look-·
ing forward to a professional ca­
reer just as exciting. Upon 'com­
pletion of the CUITellt seasoo.
Phil­
bin bas become recognized as one
of the outstanding tackles in the
entire country. Philbin has receiv­
ed recognition trom the United
Press Inc. and Associated Press
Inc., Time Magazine and several
, professional football teams.

"The Athlete of the Year" by the
Buffalo Athletic Club.

Although his lootball days are
over for U.B. he hat accepted and
Is looking forward lo the Senior
Bowl to be played In Mobile, Ala.
on Jan. 4, 1964..Also there is a
posslbility aeveral other post sea•
son offers may come his way be­
fore the current season is over.

Professional football has beck•
in the torm or the
American Football League. New
York Jets and the National Foot­
During the regular season he won ball League, Detroit Lions. Both
a lackle spot on five ECAC All- clubs drafted Philbin in the third
I East Teams for his outstanding rolllld in their resl)('Ctive leagues
(their number three draft choices).
performances , This led to a first
tackle spot on the final ECAC Saturday, Dec. 7. Philbin signed
All-East Team which includes all with the New York Jets in Buffalo.
major colleges In the East. Also New York's coach, Weeb Ewbank
Philbin received honorable men­ t&gt;xpects Philbin will be tried al
tions on both U.P.1. and A.P.I. All either offensive guard, defensive
end or defensive lineback.
American Teams . He was picked as
a tackle on the All American Squad
"I have great hop('s that Philbin
of Time Magazine and elected as wiU make the team next season,"
said Ewbank, after Philbin signed.
While at the University of Buf­
ton and Howard defeated two each.
The saber squad again coming falo. Philbin attained several
"firsts" In football. He is the first
through a.s a source of strenglh
deleated Hobart 9-0. Dave Kirsch­ player from UB drafted by any
gessner, co-captain Mark Fox and professional football team in either
John George each trounced Three National, American, or Canadian
football leagues. He is the first
opponents. For IGrschgessner and
George, both sophomores, this was placed on the ECAC AD-East
their first inter-varsity saber com­ (first) team. He is the first ever
mentioned tor AU American Hon­
petition.
ors at U.B. by major Press con­
The epee squad turned Jn a 7-2 cerns. He is the first to be Invited
victory over Hobart. Dick Willert to a major post-season Bowl Game .
and Frank Pecenco were both un­ Because of these "first," he Is the
defeated, eUmlnating 3 and 2 op­ first football player lo give U.B. a
ponents respectively. Herb Bodeck­ professional feeling.
er and Walt Ostrum each split
Upon learning of Gerry Philbin's
the1r bouts 1-1.
selection as the Buffalo Athletic
Barry Canter, co-captain, led his Club's "Athlete of the Year'', staff
squad to a 6-3 win over the Hobart and management of the Tower
follmen by defeating lllree oppc&gt;, Cafeteria sponsored a dinner In his
nents. Bob Toth took two out of honor. The entire varsity football
three bouts, and ioe Paul finished team and coaching staff were on
one of two.
hand to support the affair. Head

oned Philbin

AII-Al'IMl'ican
0.-,,
In hl1 htller.

Phllltln Mllwn a -,.ch

football coach,Dick Otferhammer,
lead the honoring committee ln de­
dication the evening to him, Num­
erous newspaper reporters were on
hand lo cover the aftalr.

at

r-

tf""

i,1-

A large cake In the shape of a
(ootball field slenlfylng Phllbln's
stardom was cut by Philbin, Coach
Offerhammer and c»captain Larry
Gergley.

Your Pe rents end Friends

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�PAGE THIRTY TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, December 13, 1963

.f11t10111drutiJIJ1 bJdJf,0111

BUFFALO
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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE
DEBATE
TOURNEY SET
(See Page Three)

VOLUME 14

MEW YORK JKT BUFFALO

HOLIDAY
LIBRARY
HOURS

SPECTRUM
Convocations Slated
Parker

(See Page Ten)

No. 13

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1963

New Testament Is Subject
Seminar
Of Pierson

The New Testament will be the subject of a two day
seminar today and tomorrow in the conference theatre.
The Reverend Dr. Pierson Parker, Professor of New
Testament Literature and Interpretation, General Theological
Seminary, will give three talks under the general title “Inherit the Promise.” Divided into three sessions, the talks will
run as follows; Part I, 8;00 10:00 p.m., today; Part II, 3:00
5:00 p.m., and Part III, 7:30 9:30
tom'’
-

-

'

-

Having served on the faculty at
the Seminary since 1949, Dr. Parker has been a Congregational minister. instructor at the Pacific
School of Religion, instructor and
professor at the University of the
South, and lecturer at St. Augustine’s College, Canterbury.
Dr. Parker studied at the University of California and received
the Th. D. degree at the Pacific
School of Religion.
He is the author of The Gospel
Before Mark and Inherit the Promise and a contributor to The Church
and Organized Movements, Christianity and
the contemporary
Scene, and The Interpreter's Bible.
Dr. Parker’s original attempt is
to interpret the thinking of the generation that witnessed the revelation. Six keys to contemporary
thought are said to be the following
the Covenant, the Law, the New
Age, truth by contraries, the physical versus the spiritual, and the
Man.

There will be a reception to honor the three clerics in the faculty
lounge at 6:30. As with the lecture
the reception is by invitation only.
Rabbi Martin Goldberg and Reverend Joseph Cantillon have already
accepted invitations to speak. The

third invitation has been extended

to Bishop Lauristan Scaife, but he
has not replied.

Rabbi Martin Goldberg, who earned his B.A. at Syracuse University,

M.A., at the University of Cincinnati
Ph. D. at the University of
Pittsburg, has been at Temple Beth
Zion since 1957. While in Buffalo he
and his

serving as Chaplin for Buffalo
oeral H ospital, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute and the Buffalo

Police

Department, Dr. Goldberg
also is on the Advisory Committee
°f the Economic Development
Board of Erie County and is a
member of the Buffalo Rotary Club.

The Reverend Joseph F. Cantil'n S.J., is completing his tenth
far on the faculty of Canisus ColRe, where he is a member of the
department of Sociology, Bom in
Buffalo, he did his undergraduate
work at Boston College. Fath Ganglion holds graduate degress
from
Boston College,-Columbia Universi,y and Woodstock College, where
Be was ordained to the priesthood
w 1937. Presently he is serving on
the National Advisory Board for
| amily Life, National Catholic Welfare Conference. In the past he
t'Aice has been President of the Buffalo Council on World Affairs, he
"as also one of the co-founders of

.

Paul Goodman, former psychology professor, poet, novelist, social critic, and noted author will be on campus Dec.
5 and 6, in conjunction with the Distinguished Visitors Program and the Senate’s Convocations Committee,
The program for Mr. Goodman’s visit includes luncheons
and small group discussions with diffenert organizations on
campus. On Thursday, Dec. 5, he will meet with the Frosh
Council, graduate students. Bisonhead. and Cap and Gown, among
others.

ho

vIHP

Reverend Dr. Pierson Parker
The end result is the belief that
Christ docs inherit the promise that

was made of old by God to man—that the results of biblical study
have not upset but have strengthened and deepened faith.
Open to the public, the lectures
are sponsored by the Canterbury
Association, student E p i s c o p al
Church group on campus.

the DE PORRES, a Catholic inter-

racial group. Presently he is director of the Buffalo Urban League
and a member of the Executive
Board of the Diocesan Family Life
Bureau.

Dr. Puffer's Talk
The last Bisonhead program featured a discussion of the Republic
of Mongolia with world traveler
Vice Pres. Claude Puffer. The
group was very much interested in
the Mongolian way of life and
misconceptions of America.

Mr. Goodman is a prolific writer.
works are
tilled .Making Do, The Society I
Live in Is Mine, The Community
of Scholars, The Lordly Hudson,
Fiopiun Kssa\s and Gmwing I p
Absurd. He,
vine , i\ •
In )/
ly critical of American society and
education, have appeared in periodicals such as Commentary and
The New Republic. Goodman is a
graduate of the City College of
New York and received his Ph.D
in humanities from the University
of Chicago.
He has taught at Chicago, N.Y.
U., and Black Mountain College,
He is also a member of (he New
York and Cleveland institutes for
Gestalt Therapy and is presently
with the Institute for Polity Studies
in Washington, D.C. He will soon
be Knapp Professor at the University of Wisconsin.

An engaging iconoclast, Goodman has concerned himself with
many significant social problems
mid with education in America today, At an NSA conference last
year, he addressed himself to the
differences involved with the university being either an educational
or an academic community. That
is, should a gniversity exist merely for intellectual pursuits, or
should it supply elements which

Frosh Amendment Passed
The Freshman amendment teethe
constitution received a marginal
two thirds vote Tuesday as the Student Senate approved the measure.
The amendment to seat the vice
president of the Freshman Class
Council, Clint Devcaux. as a voting
member of the Senate was defeated

two weeks ago. After passing a motion for reconsideration, the vote of
20 in favor, 9 against and one abstention was sufficient to amend
the constitution.

Michael Cohen’s decision to make
the necessary senatorial vote two
thirds of those present is now being
reviewed by the Student Judiciary.
It is felt that the vote is in violation of the constitution, and a vote
of two thirds of the total membership is needed to pass an amendment.

The two and a half hour debate
over the amendment which was
sponsored by Robert Finkelstein.
Russel G o 1 d b e r g, and Norene
Hersch, required two revotes before
the matter was finally settled.
issue.

National Affiliations
Michael Shapiro presented a motion on the floor dealing with fraternity and sorority national affiliations:
“Whereas National Fraternities
on the State University of New York
at Buffalo campus and all other

nationally affiliated social organizations are not discriminatory by
race color, or creed or other artificial criteria in nature and practice.
And whereas, national organizations have been an asset to the aca-

demica and extra-and-co-curricular
activities on campus,
Be it resolved that the Student
Association of The State University
of New York at Buffalo encourages
the Board of Trustees of the State
University of New York to reconsider their position, concerning the
deaffiliation of organizations on
campus.
Be it further resolved, that is is
our belief that such organizations
should not be discouraged but rather encouraged to grow with the university.”

The measure was passed unanimously by the Senate.
Allocations
Under the, advisement ot At Horowitz, chairman of the Finance Committee, the Labor and Industrial Relations Club received $455. The Cap
and Gown was allocated $251.50.
and a budget of $890 was approved
for the Zionists Club, j
Large Meeting
The session was held in the multipurpose room and approximately 65
students sat in the gallery and
watched the proceedings.

A late announcement by the Convocations Committee stated that

Charles Olson. U.'B.'s poet-in-rcsidence, will speak to the entire student body on Tuesday. Dec. 10, in
the conference theatre at 3:00.

Mountain College. However, Olson
is more renowned as an author and
poet. His major work is concerned
with the creative Consciousness of
Herman Melville and is entitled Call
Me Ishmael. Other published works
are collections of poetry such as

SflHHp

Haas

Poet-in-Residence
To Address Students

The past summer, Mr. Olson was
a visiting professor at Vancouver.
He. has also been Rector at Black

ad-

the multi purpose room. Following
that, ho will he available for questions and answers, and general
discussion at an informal recop-

Unity of Religions' Program
ToBe Presented by B isonhead
"Unity in Religion”, a panel discussion to be given on Dec. 8 at
7:30, will feature three locally
prominant religious leaders. The
clerics who will be representing the
majpr faiths, Catholicism, Judasim,
and Protestantism, will discuss the
similarities in the three faiths. The
program is being sponsored by Bisonhead, the senior men's honorary
society. It will be open to Cap and
Gown, Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Lamda Delta, and other invited guests.

Social Critic to Speak Dec 5

t

The Maximus Poems, y and x and
The Distances. Olson is a leader of
that type of poetry termed avante-

jH

garde.

PAUL GOODMAN, Iconoclast
can effectively coordinate the classroom with the individual's experiences. He finds that the present
structure does neither very well,
Students live in a chronic condition of chronic emergency and are
bored in the position of seeking
a license.
Goodman’s opinion is that the
student must take over the university, and society as well, as
his own. This would replace the
students’ childhood identity with
an experience of society as a meaningful organ. John Galbraith remarked that "Paul Goodman is
a man deeply dissatisfied with
things as thcyarc."
His strong convictions arc stated inthe preface to Growing Up
Absurd: "I assume that the young
young really heed a more worthwhile world in order to grow up
at all
if 10,000 people in all
walks of life will stand up and
taik out, we shall get back our

Speaking about the Niagara frontier, Mr. Olson stated that "it is
one corner of a triangle which is
possibly the most interesting in
consisting of Toronto.
America
Rochester-Buffalo, and the back
country,” Olson, considering remaining in our English Dept., has
described it as "going.”
—

IF

I

I

H

I

/

...

country.”

CHARLES OLSON, Port

Novice, Varsity Debaters
To Attend Tournaments
The novice division of the Do
bating Society tied for second place
with Middlebury College at the
Niagara University tournament
this past week-end. The winner ol
the novice division was Colgate
University. The members of our
team were: Hedda Beckman, Ruth

Shapiro, Raymond Major and Martin Feinrider. The negative team
of Miss Shapiro and Mr. Feinrider had a win-loss record of 1-3.
The affirmative team of Miss Beck
man and Mr. Major were, unde
feated in the tournament with a
total of four wins. Miss Beckman

had

speaker points

totaling

75.

This was only three points away
from the best speaker award with
a total of 78 points. This was the
first intercollegiate debate experience any of the debaters had. In
light of this fact, the novices art
looking forward to a very successful

year

Four of our debaters also en
tered in the varsity division o)
the

tournament at

Niagara. Debaf

ing affirmatively were

Linda Le

venthal and Gerald Catanzaro, and
debating negatively were Betsy

Nordstrom and Andre Namenek.
The affirmative team had a two
win two loss record. The negative
team won one debate and lost
three.
Tills week-end both the novice
and varsity divisions are attend-

ing tournaments. The novices along
with Mrs, Potter are attending a
tournament at Harpur College in

Binghamton. Those who will be
leaving this evening are: Diane
Hayes, Carl Levine, &lt; Ellen Abelson and Raymond Major.

The varsity unit left yesterday
evening lor the University of Vermont which is always one of the
largest tournaments in the counLast year 280 debaters participated. Miss Carol Zeller and Mr.
Gerald Catanzaro will be debating the pro, and Miss Linda Leventhal and Mr. Russell Goldberg will
be debating the con on the national
debate topic, Resolved: That the
Federal Government should guarantee an opportunity for higher education to all qualified high school
graduates.

�PAGE TWO

TIMEKEEPER
Timekeepers needed
to participate in the
Third Annual Great
Lakes Novice Debate
Tournament to be held
on campus Friday evening and Saturday morning Dec. 6 and 7. More
than twenty schools
from New York
State, New England,
Pennsylvania, the MidWest and Washington,
D. C. are expected to
attend.
NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY
Sign up by leaving
your name and telephone number in Norton 357 by Tuesday,
November 26th.

Faculty Grants
Fourteen faculty members were
awarded grants in-aid for research
during the three month period,
August
November 1, by the
Committee on the Allocation of
Research Funds. Dean Henry M.
Woodburn, Graduate School of
Arts and Sciences, is chairman
of the committee.
}

Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

-

Grants went to the following:
Dr. John P. Ashton, Associate Pro-

fessor of Philosophy: Dr. Selig Adler, Professor of American History; Dr. Calvin D. Ritchie, Assistant Professor of Chemistry;
Dr. Reinhard C. Kuhn, Professor
of Modern Languages; Dr. Milton
Plesur, Assistant Professor of History; Richard A. Siegal, Assistnat
Professor of Economics; Dr. Theodore N. Sarachman, Assistant Professor of Physics; Dr. Rollo Handy, Chairman of Philosophy De-

partment; Dr. Claude M. Hillinger,
Assistant Professor of Economics;
Monte W. Holland, Lecturer of
Physics; Robert I.
Assistant Professor of PhysicsfiDr. Herbert G. Gutman, Associate Professor of History; Dr, Jack D. Klingman, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry; and Dr. Leo A. Loubere, Associate Professor of History.The grants

r

came,

from the

(Uni-

versity's internal research-support
fund designed primarily to furnish
support in areas which arc not
well supported by government
agencies
or
foundations. The
grants can assist in the early
of
stages
research which are necessary for the construction of an
attractive proposal, and can pro-

vide emergency funds while the
researcher is awaiting the activation of a contract.

Student Judiciary Convenes
Reviews Disciplinary Cases
Thursday. Nov, 7. the Student
Judiciary had its first official
meeting of the year. "The Student
Judiciary", according to a statement of disciplinary procedure is
sued by the Dean of Students' Office, "is normally concerned with
cases involving student behavior as
it affects other students, and with
action reflecting discredit on the
entire student body.”
This group, founded in 1958, consists of five members, two appointed by the Dean of Students, one appointed by the President of the University, and two appointed by the
Executive Committee of the Student
Senate upon ratification by the Sen-

SKIERS!
;

says

ale body. In addition, there are two
faculty advisors; Dean Thomas
Schillo, Assistant Dean of (he
School of Business, and Dr. Ilayne
W. Reese, of the Psychology Department.
The student members who are appointed in April, serve from the
following September to the end ol
the school year. Present membership includes Alan Falk, Terrence
Gerace, Paul Sehulman, Frank Alessi and Joan Wilkins, Chief Jus-

"Two Heads Are
Better Than One"

/neADj

HEAD SKIES
98.50 &amp; up

tice,

To be appointed to the Judiciay
a student must be an upperclassman. Junior or Senior, a full-time
student with an overall grade-poinlaverage of 1,0.

COMPLETE SKI
PACKAGE

69 95

Publications Board Statement
On Oct. 31, the Student Publications Board issued
a policy statement which prohibited all unauthorized
newsletters from publishing until a further statement
had been made.
On Nov. 6, it was a decision of the Publications
Board that all unrecognized publications must fill out
an application for registration to be acted upon by the
board before they are allowed to publish.
The applications may be picked up at the Student
Senate office, Room 205 Norton, and should be returned, there as soon as possible.

Dekdebruns Has
All The Great Names
In Ski Equipment

5 GREAT LOCATIONS
Southgate Plata
mittlin Plan
Traantawa Plata Elaiwtal t Farail
Elliotttville

THE BILL SYSTEM
represented by

Long Lines
New York Telephone
Western Electric Company
will interview on campus

NOV.18-19
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

h eao

/

'Prospects for Democracy”
Dr. Charles Griffin to Speak
By DAVE BERGEN
Dr. Charles C, Griffin, professor
of history at Vassar College and
a Latin American expert, will
speak on "The Prospects for Democracy in Latin America” today
at 4:00 in the conference theater
His talk is , being sponsored by
the Committee dn Latin American
Studies.

Dr. Griffin has written three
books on Latin America and has
spent two years in Argentina and
five years Uruguay. He has also
studied in Spain and served as
visiting professor at the University
of Chile. In 1954 ho lectured at
universities and other cultural centers in Peru under the auspices
of the Department of State.

Happy Turkey Day—
The Spectrum Staff

�SPECTRUM

Friday, November 22, 1943

PAGE THREE

Ebert, Katkin Will
Sapp Traces Cultural Debate Society to Hold Third Discuss
Morality
'
Annual
Week
Tourney
Next
Progress In Buffalo
existence for many years but it's
collection was usually in circulation
and not stationary until the new
wing was added to the building in
1962. Then suddenly, people were

ing.

the least.
Mr. Sapp began his speech by
(racing the different eras df culture in Buffalo up to the present.
He spoke authoritatively on such
arts as drama, opera, ballet, and
painting as well as his own field

The tournament will include five
rounds of debate on the national
debate topic, Resolved: That the

Federal Government should guarantee an opportunity for higher

education

of music.
In the musical field, Buffalonians
have always had an interest but before the 1930's it was reserved for
only the culturally elite in the form
of private imported chamber music,
or individual guest soloists. Mr.
Steinburg was the first philharmonic conductor in Buffalo and it was
he who first began the great build
up of the orchestra that would gradually become the distinguished one
it is today. After Mr. Steinburg's
resignation, Josef Krips, another renowned and accomplished conductor
from Europe took over. It was under Mr. Krips, that the Philharmonic received the honor of being
rated among the top ten orchestras
in the United States. In 1962 Mr.
Krips left Buffalo to conduct elsewhere for in his words "Ten years
are enough”. Thus Buffalo had a
top rate orchestra left in its hands
and a quick decision had to be
made.
The choice of a new conductor
was that of Mr. Lukas Foss who
is from a much different school
from Mr. Krips. He has the reverence for the old classics of music

and yet the enthusiasm and belief
in the new. He is starting a new
and exciting trend in Buffalo; that
of mixing the old and the new in
order to present a broader vista
of music to his, audience. So far
he has been a great success and
is highly acclaimed to be one of
the leading conductors in the country.

Mr. Sapp then went on to explain
the great progress that has been in

)ne lecture each week, on Tuesday from 4:00 to 5:20 p.m., will
be open to the public. The open

lecture is part of
French 447R, which

the course
will meet on

Thursdays. The title is “Qu’est-ce-

all

qualified high

At the banquet on Saturday,
awards to the three top ranking

teams, to the best affirmative and
best negative team and a mileage
trophy for the team that has travel-

ed the greatest distance, will be
presented. President Furnas and
Student Senate President Michael
Cohen have been invited to attend.
Teams that have accepted so far
are Niagara University, Ithaca Col-

able to see the fine collection Buffalo owned in a very tastefully designed building. Last year for example it was said that the Gallery
had more visitors that year than
they had had collectively in the
previous five years. The collection

fessors.

MORE KINDS OF CHEVR
EVER BEFORE!
JET-SMOOTHLUXURY CHEVROLET
15 models. Four series. One
brand-new series—the Irhpala
Super Sports. More luxury,
too. Even the Biscaynes are
now fully carpeted. There’s
seven different engines’ worth
of power—140 hp to 425 hp
(optional at extra cost). It's
a matter of knowing if you’d
like your luxury on the gentle
side or on the other side.

is constantly growing partially due
to the kind interest of Semore Knox
and because of the new interest on
the part of the Buffalonians, Albright Knox (as it is called) has
been noted as the best modern arl
gallery outside of New York City.
In drama, Mr. Sapp went on. the
Picture has been much the same.
Buffalo has been moving from being
previously a “try out town" to a
theatre town in its own right. The
Studio Theatre is one of the oldest
theatres of its kind in the country.
Just a couple of years ago when
things began to look somewhat grim
concerning its future, the theatre
(Continued

on Page

Model shown: Impaln Sport Coupe

TOTALLY NEW CHEVELLE! 11
models. Three series. An
entirely new line of cars sized
a foot, shorter than the big
cars, so you get the handling
ease of smaller cars. But don’t
sell it short! Chevelle gives
you generous passenger and
luggage room. Engine choice:
120 to extra-cost 220 hp.

81

Dr. Henri Roddier Returns to U.B.
As Jones Professor Next Semester
A prolessor from the Sorbonne in
Paris will return here lor the second time as the Jones professor bl
French. Dr. Henri Roddier, professor of comparative literature,
will teach two courses at UB during the spring semester. He was also Jones professor during 1950-'51.

to

school graduates.

!

By SYLVIA SPRING
Thursday, Nov. 14, the Convocations Committee sponsored a
lecture given by Allen Sapp op
The Cultural Room in Buffalo”.
The speech was excellent but the
attendance was embarassing.to hay
Last

By BARBARA STRAUSS
lege, Colgate University, Clarion
Dr. Charles Ebert, head of the
College (Pennsylvania) Westminis- j
ter College (Pennsylvania). Univer- ; Geography Department, and Dr.
sity of Detroit, and Howard Univer- I Katkin of the Psychology Departsity. (Washington, D. C.) Other ment will speak at the third in
schools that have expressed an in- 1 a series of “Fireside
Chats" Cofterest in attending are Albany j
fee Hours given by the Public ReState, Marquette University (Wislations Committee of Union Board.
consin). Memphis State University,
Mount Union College, Norwich UniDr. Ebert and Dr. Katkin will
versity (Connecticut), Syracuse University, University of Maryland and meet with Interested students to
discuss "Morality on the Campus"
Wayne State University (Michigan)
and Wilburforce University (Ohio). on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 3-J p.m. in
the Haas Lounge.
Each debate that will be held will )
need a timekeeper to act as hostess
In previous "Fireside Chats"
for the visiting teams. Those who
held on Oct. 22 and Nov. 12. inare interested in helping to introduce our school to the guests should structors such as Mrs, Rhodes and
leave their name and phone numMr. Eastman and Miss Heap have
ber in Room 357, Norton or contact discussed "Higher Education foy,
Linda Leventhal, 831-2776.
Women,” "College With No Exams
and other such varied topics. The
All debating will be held in NorPublic Relations Committee is in
ton Union. Anyone who wishes to hopes that students wil again fake
observe any of the rounds will be advantage of
this excellent opporable to find them listed before they tunity to meet and discuss curare to begin in Norton 357.
rent topics with stimulating pro-

The University of Buffalo Debating Society is holding its Third Annual Great Lakes Novice Debate
Tournament, Dec. 6 and 7. All
students are invited to observe the
rounds in which more than twenty
visiting schools will be participat-

GwmiX

Model shown: Malibu Sport Coupe

The other
course to be taught by Professor
Roddier is French 518; "Lc sens etla port’ee d'une forme litteraire:
Lei Reveries de Rousseau." It will
meet Wednesdays from 4:00
6:00
qu'une

litte’rature?”

NEW CHEVY D Six models. Two
series—Nova and Chevy II
100. Both now offer an extracost 195-hp V8 or a 155-hp
six, to give you more Chevy
II power than ever before.
Match this added power with
Chevy II thrift, and you can
see why Chevy II will be
harder than ever to keep up
with this year.

—

p.m.
Dr. Roddier has given lectures
in London, Austrialia and New
Zealand, He was a professor at the
University of Lyon from 1049-1962.
A Jones professor is invited to
the University each year under a
1932 bequest to the University left
by the late Mrs. Joseph T. Jones.

Model shown: Nora 2-Door Sedan

NEW HOURS
8:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.

/IT Jim
T

L
COftVAIR

MONDAY FRIDAY
SATURDAY 10 2 P.M.

Model shown: Monza Club Coupe

-

—

"7

JRyjcsiivr' 5

-.(

"ON CAMPUS”

NEW CORVAIR Seven models in
four series. Two Greenbriers.
A new standard 95-hp engine
(nearly 19',' livelier). An
extra-cost 110-hpengine on all
Corvairsand a 150-hpTurbocharged engine in the Monza
Spyder. Styling? Never been
cleaner. Interior? Never been
brighter. Fun to drive? Never
been more so.

—

7

I

NEW CORVETTE Two modelsthe Sport Coupe with a new
one-piece rear window plus
improved interior ventilation,
and the dashing Sting Ray
Convertible. Both boast
smoother rides, improved
sound insulation. Both go
with four big V8's, including
a new extra-cost 375-hp
engine with Fuel Injection.
Model tthou'n: Sport Coupe

Ask about a SMILE-MILE Ride and the Chevrolet
long Book at your Chevrolet dealer’s

�GUEST

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus,
except for
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May,
exatn periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

-

John Kowal

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor

Martin Kriegel
Harriet Heiflinger
Lawrence Frenkel
Rocky Versace
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

Editorial Advisor

ARNOLD S. MAZUR

Business Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulatioin Mgr.
Office Manager

Financial Advisor

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessinger
Karen Sanford
Thomas Haenle, Jr.

Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Levenfhal, Alan Newman,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sultanik, Vic Menza, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg,
Charles Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern,
Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray Crawford,
Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham,
Marfurt, Sandra Olin,
Lillian Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orsxulak, Helen Bykoff, Fran
Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng, Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo,
Terry Sweeney, Tom Kujarski, Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Peugot, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Klipstein, Saralee
Rubenstein, Douglas Gelia, Mary Ann Warfenburg

General

Staff:

Vicki

Photography Staff:

Joel Havens,

Pamela Reid

February 9, 1961, at the Post
Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acfor mailing at a special rale of postage provided for in
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951

Entered as second class matter

Oao

Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Office

at

ceptahce

Subscription

$3.00 per year,

circulation 9000

Represented for national advertising by National Advertising
Service, Inc,, 420 Madison Avc., New York, N, Y.

Editorials
�

�

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

EDITORIAL
The following Is a guest editorial
submitted to The Spectrum by Robert A. Ryan, Jr.. Editor of the
Xavier News, Xavier University.

Quite aside from the moral issues
involved in the “skin magazines,"
it has always struck us a little

strange that anyone with a moderate claim to maturity could ever
bother himself with such pulp. If
a person would not think of harborthoughts about his
ing salacious
girl, it seems he should not harbor
them against a paid and disinterested model, sufficiently characterless
to allow herself to pander her body
in a boudior only slightly less distasteful for being a photograph only.
But rational argumentation seems
to got nowhere with people to whom
love has come to mean nothing
more than physical union, to whom
the sext act is only a way to achieve pleasure, to whom the loved
one is only a means to that end,
a tool, an instrument, however
much he may prate about “being
in love” or “what should stand in
the way of love?”

And it is a sad symptom of the
neo-paganism of today, that many
pay sixty cents to have their minds
tickled with graphic demonstra-

�

tions of Arabian harems. The por-

National Fraternalism
The past week the Student Senate passed a resolution
defense
of national fraternal organizations at our univerin
The
need
for such a statement is due to a State University.
sity ruling (October 8, 1953) which forbid social organizations
to have affiliation with any organization above the local level.
Early last December, President Furnas was notified that
U.S.’s fraternities and sororities would have to disaffiliate
with their national organizations by June, 1967.
The Senate resolution called lor a reconsideration of
the State University policy by the Board of Trustees and encouragement of fraternal growth.
The Spectrum understands the State’s ruling to be an
arbitrary denial of the right to associate freely. No matter
what the contractural relationship between student and university, there are certain rights which all individuals must
enjoy; including that to join and participate in any and all
organizations.
Last year’s Senate also requested the Board of Trustees
to reconsider the disaffiliation policy. NSA and the Senate
stated that the State would be justified in its attempt to eliminate national fraternal organizations, if discrimination is
practiced, “for discrimination in education is incompatible
with human equality.” Hpwever, such proof has not been
offered.
The fraternal system is certainly not above reproach.
Though discriminatory clauses have been deleted from national charters in the past decade, there is little doubt that
fraternities and sororities are clannish. That is, though a
“Jewish fraternity” does not necessarily limit its membership to Jews, the result is very much the same as when discriminatory clauses were in effect. Similarly with non-Jewish
and Negro groups. It is ironic that these groups actively
attempt to recruit “different” persons and usually fail.
Thus, in effect you have a social system which for the
most part is bound to traditional selections of inductees
without event covert discrimination being practiced. National
—

disaffiliation will in no way change the situation outlined
above.
Social organizations which are based upon a, formal
structure are contrary to the ideals of a fluid society. This is
inherantly disturbing to the liberal “spirit.” And, of course,
the presence of fraternal orders at a university may be questioned as to its purpose, usefulness, etc. But such judgements
are best left to individual conscience.
Spectrum’s support of national fraternal affiliation is
the Greek system. Such merits

not based upon the merits of

as there are, are few. If fraternalism is to die, though, it
should do so by its own hand. Under no conditions, should
the right to
freely be withdrawn . . . and be tolerated.

nographers have achieved such a
perverse perfection in their “art”
that is somehow seems more sophisticated to gape at glossies of
models undressing than to go awhich at least is a
wenching
straightforward and time-honored
variety of sin.
Yet Casanova and Don Juan were
robust and wholesome, in their way.
Capable of sin, they were capable

oCetterd to the Editor

—

of repentance. But the poor wretch
who relies on the second-hand, twodimentional delights of the pornographcr is not even a good sinner.
Modern man has lost a sense of
sin, they say—perhaps. Perhaps this
we have lost; perhaps also a sense
of our own worth. We who in past
times could seduce bar-maids and,
in rich imaginings, conjure up what
ever could never pass through the
mails, we sit and stare at what a

professional debauchee imagines
will tickle our erotic palate.
Has “Man” become a word ,dictionary-asterisked as obsolete? Has
"Christian?" And, to cap the sum
of petty degeneracy the pornographers have piled up, as "Love,” has
“Love” conie to mean nothing more
than a Louis Quatorzc bed and a
slightly out-of-focus divorcee giving
six hundred thousand subscribers a
come-hither look?

Editorial Hailed
Kudos to you! I couldn’t agree
more heartily with your last editorThe decision to maintain or relinquish one’s virginity is indeed a
and the Unimost personal one
versity has little or no right to impose standards of this sort on its
students. Those who will, do, and
—

only to replace it with a more insidious disease
strap-hanger's
squint. People read, and they do not
learn. Millons of books are read,
millions of papers; Dryden gathers
cobwebs, and Dosteovetszki is con—

densed.

Americans seem so bent on joining bookclubs, dogearing Butterfield
I or The Autobiography of Grace B.
Metalious, so very insistent on reading amiable nothings and re-viewing the life of a fictive high-schooler or gold-hearted whore, that they

have lost the whole point of reading.
Reading is to enter into another’s
heart, another's soul. It is to participate in the microcosm the author
has created. It is to see the world
through his eyes.
What good does it do, then, to
stand and gawk at the boob-shocking bed-bouncings of someone who.
outside of a novel, would be in
Longivew; what good to be lulled
into a self-satisfied sleep by the
mouthings of a Norman Vincent
Peale, Alfred E. Segal, Stewart Alsop (well-chosen name)? None, no
good, save the man who appears
to have, sub-consciously chosen to
be a little less than a man.

Manor is immaterial.
It’s good to know that somebody
has the presence of mind and the
courage to editorialize on this controversial subject.
Yours truly,
Carol dicker

Educational Irony
On Thursday evening I was stimulated and entertained by a line
mind and speaker, Professor G. N,
Parkinson. His analysis of the crisis in American education was per-

ceptive and challenging. The audience was receptive to his comments, and the question period
showed that it was actively mulching his ideas.
It was unfortunate that this suc-

cesslul example of the intellectual

community confronting vital problems was abruptly halted in the

Though most people who will read
this editorial have progressed beyond signing their names with an

X—we wonder. Too often, it seems,
nations banish functional illiteracy

those who won’t, don’t. Whether

they do In Tower or in University

middle of the speaker’s sentence by
the moderator regretting that the
time had run out. Despite the audience’s noticeable disapproval, wo
were methodically "adjourned
without provision that those with
time could pursue the discussion. I
suspect that in such a case the audience woud not have dwindled
much, and the speaker would have
felt more comfortable. Perhaps it
was fitting that the evening ended
in an example of what was being
criticized!

Marcie

McCreary

Stunt Nite Publicity
Lend me an ear, I come here not
to bury the Spectrum but to praise
it for the excellent coverage of
stunt night. The publicity that the
school newspaper gave to one of
the traditionally largest student efforts was completely overwhelming and well can serve as an example of how well the newspaper
works in conjunction with various
activities on this campus.

The item on page 14 of the Spectrum on Oct 18 was the type of
coverage that any organization
would appreciate if they were trying to pull off a surprise event, a
type of sneak play our football team
would appreciate as their purpose
is to keep the other team unaware
of their next play. The paper almost blundered when it gave a
column on the first page of the
Spectrum but if you notice the date
it was the four page special on
Tuesday, Nov. 12, an issue many
students never even saw. So needless to say the Spectrum was consistent to the end.

Now that I have praised SpecT not utter a few words
of criticism for after all We are not
■all perfect. Stunt night was not suptrum, can

posed to be kept as a surprise but
rather we requested publicity for
many weeks. It is a shame that
you must waste film and flash
bulbs on pictures covering stunt
night then refuse to place them in
your paper. It gets slightly monotonous to hear that there was not
enough room for coverage, it appears that this might suggest some
inadequacies.in the planning of the
paper.

I dislike it when a reporter comes
to me with a twenty minute deadline for an article (Nov. 12) and
because of the time limit can not
even speak to the publicity chair
man or take advantage of any of
the pictures that the stunt night
committee took. But it adds to my
annoyance when an article is submitted days in advance and then is
again cut out for lack of space. !
must look at it realistically though
for on Nov. 15 the very day of
stunt night not a word appeared in
the paper but you managed to have
room for a three column first page
article on a speaker who was not
coming until Dec. 12,
Flo Gerber.
Chairman for

Backstage

Stunt Nite

�Scfuissmeisters

The Circus

Close Registration
For Present Term

By BOB MILCH
Henry wasn’t really a nebbish.
but then he wasn't cool either. He
dressed like other people, spoke
like them, and both his legs reached the ground. Still, Henry was one
of those unfortunate people for
whom nothing in this world goes
right.

This year, for instance, he was
accidentally registered in a girl's

gym class instead of ROTC; twice
he fell into the fountain, once when
there was Water in it; he had his
car towed away from the MacDonald parking lot while he was still
in the driver's seat; he wasn't admitted to any football games because he didn’t look like the picture
on his ID card. Things like this

always happening to him.
One Friday in particular nothing
went right for Heny. His stomach
rumbled all through English class,
his girl ran off with a traveling
oboe player, and his name was
misspelled in the Spectrum. Depressed, humiliated, and helplessly
angry, Henry took the elevator
marked “Employees Only" to the
third floor of Norton. He walked into the empty Graduate Students
lounge, opened the window, and
climbed out onto the ledge overlooking the fountain and the court.
He sat there, his feet dangling over
the edge.
It was twelve o’clock, and there
were hundreds of students walking
by underneath, but no one noticed
Henry perched on the ledge. He
waggled his legs, trying to get
someone to look up, but no one
looked. Slowly the frustration built
inside him. He dropped a pencil

were

onto the walk; it hit eraser end
first, and no one heard or saw it.
Nobody looked up.
More frustrated and angry than

ever, Henry finally raised his anguished voice against the mass of
indifference and complacency passing below.
,“Hey, look up here, you guys.
Look at me. Look up here."
No one looked.
Henry tried again, “Look up, look
up, damn it! Won’t you please look
up at me?”
He didn't even get a glance.
There is only so much any man
can take even Henry. He had been
humiliated too much, ignored too
long, and he would not permit it to
go on any longer. He would make
them notice something other than
themselves. Resolutely he got to
his feet, took one last breath, and
jumped to the courtyard below.
Unfortunately, Henry missed the
cement section of the courtyard and
landed in the mud in front of it
where workmen had been planting
evergreens. He was still alive, and
not even bleeding noticeably.
Yet, Henry’s effort wasn't completely wasted. He splattered mud
on one girl when he landed
she
noticed that. And people noticed
that there was some sort of commotion going on when they heard
—

the siren of the ambulance that
came to pick him up.
I'm happy to report that Henry
is now almost completely recovered from his injuries. The thing is,
he now walks with a slight limp,
and he’s very self conscious about
it. So if you pass him somewhere
on campus, pretend you don’t notice.

People and Politics
By RUSSELL PANZICA
It was said long ago, in an age
good citizen is indispensable to the
good state. But today, with all the

wonders of science, it is hard to
find men who are happy, secure,

and

optimistic.

Governments are made up of men
who, regardless of political sentiment or personal conviction, speak
in an equivocal language which is
a divine plan to the apathetic and
heartless metaphysics to the frustrated. Their decisions, especially
on the national level, are based.
lor the most part, on information
gained by

natural scientists, sociol-

ogists, economists, political scientists, news agencies, corporation
executives, high ranking military
personal, governmental committees,
and by permanent civil servicemen.

The collective and individual efforts
of these specialists produce an enormous amount of information,
much of which is both incomprehensible and obsolete by the time
it is classified and deliberated upon. That which is night to the politician is at most twilight to specialists in either other fields or, very
often, in related areas.
In keeping with a Mediaeval dogwa, that a whole must be the sum
of its parts, governmental figureheads, in addressing the public, attempt to be all things to all people. Objectives
and decisions are
passed off as though they are the
logical consequences of Constitu-

idity of morai decisions is dependent on the truth. The information
digested by a few, whose ethics
are, by and large, determined by
their private interests, is made public, piecemeal and garbled or as
excrement. The wishes and aspirations of the public are woven into
the means of the few and are manipulated toward the ends of the few.

These selfish ends often escape the
intuition of an artist or the scrutiny of the scholar; but. if either is
tuned in, and by sonde Stroke of
fate is able to reach people, he
usually becomes subject to scandel or censorship.
The good citizen should bear the
responsibility for maintaining and/
or developing the good state. Information, objectively processed in its
pure form, should be made public
immediately. I doubt whether the
public would readily exploit themselves if they were better informed.
Therefoe, I propose the establishment, in technologically advanced
societies, of new political parties,
headed by unbiased, a-moral computers, that would indifferently re-

lay compendiums of information to
their espective compatriots and defer moral decisions to the majoriassuming that intelligent voties
ting would take less time than the
spurious calculations of a few representatives and would not be as
perilous as the impetuosity of a
—

dictator.

tionalism or

of a public philosophy.
Changes in policy and governmental action are fed back to the public as supernatural phenomena that
occur in a framework of universal

Principles rather than in simple
matter of fact statements.
The good state will be one where
specialized information canbe intelligently and rapidly assimilated
PPd, when necessary, compounded
or comparatively analyzed. TTie val-

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 22, 1963

Applications for financial aid, for the 196465 Academic Year, will
be available after
Nov. 18, 1963, at the
Office of Financial Aid,
233 Hayes Hall. Deadline for returning applihations: March 1, 1964.

Membership in the Schussmeisters Ski Club is now closed for
this semester. Those students who
petitioned to join are to check the
office door for information concerning when they are to pay their
dues. This last payment date,
which will probably be this Friday, is the last day for payment
of dues. There will be no more
extensions.

There are still openings for those
who want lessons. The price is
six lessons for $6.00 for the first
100 that sign up. after that they
will go for the regular price ol
six lessons for $9.00. If you plan
on renting equipment for Thursday night skiing with the club, be
sure that you have filled out a
pink card and that it is in the
files in the office. This card will
facilitate the renting of equipment
in that the rental shop at the
slopes will have your size equipment ready for you when you arrive at the area, instead of your
having to' wait half the night for
them to find the proper equipment.
As there will not be another
general meeting before the' Thursday night trips begin, check the
office door and the Spectrum for

any information about the club
and its activities. There is a bulletin board in the office for those
who wish to buy or sell ski equip-

ment and those who want riders
for skiing over the weekend. Drop
into the office at least once a
week to keep well informed on
our activities.
Indians in the Southwest have

their rain dance, does anyone know
a skiier who knows a snow dance?

Placement Offers
Job Opportunities
Nov. 25—BETHLEHEM

STEEL
CO.
Seeking CE, EE, IE. ME, Ch. E..
ES, Chemistry, Physics, and Accounting majors.

Dec. 3—ARTHUR YOUNG

&amp;

CO.

Seeking Accounting majors

December —PEAT. MARWICK,
MITCHELL Si CO.
Seeking Accounting majors.

Dec, 3—ERNST

&amp;

ERNST

Seeking Accounting majors.
Dec. 4—U.S. ARMY CORPS OF
ENGINEERS
S.eking CE candidates.
Dec. 4—INTERNATIONAL PAPER
CO.

Seeking CE, IE, .ME, Ch.E.
majors.
Dec. 4-FACTORY MUTUAL
ENGINEERING DIV.
Seeking CE, EE, ME, Ch.E., ES,
and Chemistry majors.
Dec. 4—RETAIL CREDIT
COMPANY

Liberal Arts and Business Administration majors.
Seeking

Dec. 5-UNION CARBIDE CORP.
CARBON PRODUCTS DIV.
(National Carbon Co.)

Seeking CE, EE, IE, and ME
majors.
&amp;
Dec. 5-FIRESTONE TIRE
RUBBER CO.
Seeking IE, ME, and Chemistry
’ majors
Dec

ICOCK

MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Seeking Liberal Arts, and Business Administration majors.
Dec. 5—NATIONAL LABOR
RELATIONS BOARD
Seeking Economics and Labor &amp;
Industrial Relations majors.
Dec. 5-UNION CARBIDE CORP.
Seeking Ph. D. Chemists.
Dec.

6-CARBORUNDUM

COMPANY
Seeking Liberal Arts, Bus. Adm.,
Accounting, ,EE, CE, ME, IE,
Ch.E. candidates.
Dec. 6—AVON PRODUCTS
Seeking Ph.D. Chemists.

r BHFIE( TIOXS1
By JEREMY TAYLOR
M

•

This week after a very happy and
productive trip to Boston, I am led
to say somothinff iTbout the kind of
people I would like to spend my
undergraduate days with. First of
all there arc all the negative
things we all feel: they shouldn’t
be boring, nasty, dishonest, or
stupid (or at least not any more
But
so than we are ourselves).
what about the positive qualities?

Where do we seek ourselves in
other people; is it merely agreement we arc after? I don't think
so. If we live only among people
who do not disturb us in any way
or cause us to change and alter our
view of ourselves and the world,
then we shall be exactly the same
people upon leaving this not too inspiring institution as we were when
we entered. All too often stagnant
water seeks its own level, and we
see whole classes of high school
sophomores collecting college diplomas merely because they have
never dealt with anyone who disagreed with them. College education is not meant merely to disseminate information; information is
either correct or incorrect; in college. information becomes valuable
only as it relates to the formation
of a view, (or secondarily as professional training). Therefore in
this rat race, the rats who are
worth chasing arc the ones who
know something, and who have defensible attitudes toward what they
know.

But what use are those rats who
are so quiet that we never know
whether they know anything or not;
let alone whether they have come
to any interesting positions regarding what they know. Thus, the second chasabel quality becomes a
willingness to ask and take questions seriously. This in turn would
imply that if these rats are afraid
(of themselves, of other people, of
"being hurt*, et al) this fear does
not immobilize them, and if they
are sure of themselves, that at least
they are neither smug, nor superior
to the point where they think communication with common breed of
racing rats Is beneath them.

All too often we use friends merely to enforce our sense of security
in the knowledge of our superiority;
this means running in packs, but
the whole pack is then forced to
run at the speed of the slowest rat.
It’s funny how many of these rats
wear blazers and beanies, which is
to say profoundly uncomplimentary

Dept, to Sponsor

Student Recital
Monday in Norton
Two all-student recitals will be
sponsored by the Music Dept, this
year, featuring students of applied
music. These programs are replacing the weekly recitals held previously. Students appearing on
these recitals have been asked to
prform at the invitation of the
music faculty,

.

The first recital will take place
next Monday at 1 p.m. in the Con-

ference Theater. Admission is free
and all students and faculty are invited to attend.
The following performers will appear: contralto Joan Albern- clarinetist Alois Hafner, and pianists
Donald Lafferty, Harriet Arms, Joan Eiordan, Theresa Park, Clara
Han, and Daniel Kayne. Works of
Chopin, Debussy, Ravel, Khatachaturian, Kennen, Bentzon, Verdi,
and David Diamond will be featur-

ed. Mr. Lafferty and Mrs. Han
will both be giving solo recitals
in the near future.

things about reasons for and aca-

demic function of fraternities, bohemian cliques, and "friendships”
based solely on the lack of something to argue about.
But is it enough just to have ideas
and not be smug? Oftentimes, the
rats who are going someplace in
particular are those who run the
fastest and often get the farthest.
In this race it is not enough just
to want to be a sociologist (or a
doctor, lawyer, industrial millionaire); the thing to do is to want to
know about society. Chase the rats
that really want something, even
if they don't know what it is. Chase
the rats who have big enough opinions of their own potential that they
won't be satisfied next week with a
set of mediocre grades and a dethey'll keep running and so
gree
will you.
—

As you have probably realized,
this is somewhat frivolous, but

don't be

misled

—

the

following

questionnaire is no more foolish
than most that we are asked in
all seriousness to fill out:
(1

1 Do

you have any major areas

of disagreement with your friends?
(2) If so. do you ever discuss
them?
(31 Do you know many people
who do not know each other?
(41 Have you recently altered
your intended career, or even given

it serious thought?
(5) Do you read things which are
different from that which your
friends do, if you read at all (outside

classes)?

(6) Are you at all worried

about

any situation which might affect
any more than 50 people?
(7) Do you know anything more
about “why you are the way you
are” than you did a week ago?
If you are in a position of answering some or all of these questions with a "no" then maybe you
don't belong in a college situation;
cither (1) because you know all the
answers already and are wasting
your time, or (2) because you are
in no position to find the answers
because you haven't even formed
the questions and again, are wasting your time. In either case, a big
pari of what college is all about is
discovering that there are many

roads not all of which lead to
Rome, and that in the human rat
race, running with

rats who are no

different from yourself will probably mean that you are all going
to end up in approximately the
same place.

Reports Filed
By Committees
Public Relations Committee
A box has been set up in the
Senate Office for reports of the
subcommittee chairmen. These reports should be submitted every
two weeks.

WBFO is sponsoring a 10 minute
news summary every two weeks
about the Senate in which a different senator will speak each time.
The moderator is Joe Pauli.
Civil Right'. Committee
Th" committee is also planning
a drive to collect books for a
library for the Negroes o! Grcc-&gt;wood, Mississippi who arc denied
the use of the public library In
Greenwood. This drive will be i .
conjunction with a nation wide
drive instituted by Robert Moses
oi Tougalou College of Mississippi.
The committee will set up droppoints in Norton Union and in the
dormitories to collect any text
books or any books that any would
care to give. Paperback as well
as hard covers are acceptable regardless of the condition.
,

�Ik

SPECTRUM

St,*..*'-'

--*v*

~/

'

*

By

This will be the last issue of the
Spectrum until the week of December 13th. Consequently, I would
like to comment briefly on several
of the more interesting pictures
which will be playing in Buffalo
during the next few weeks.
The Black Fox
The current feature at the Circle
Art is the powerful documentary,

The Black Fox. This film depicts
the rise of Adolph Hitler until his
death at the end of World War II
by drawing a parallel between his
life and Goethe's version of the
medieval legend of the "Black
Fox.” ft is skillfully pul together
from a combination of newsreels,
propaganda shots, stills and paintings by George Grosz and Dore,
and it is superbly narrated by ..Marlene Dietricht. The entire film, from

its low-keyed and calm opening to
its horrifying climax, the Gotterdammerung of the Third Reich, is
very well done and gives one a
most frightening picture of the bestial nature of man in action.
Love and Larceny

Fortunately, the next feature at
the Circle Art is a comedy and a
damned good one. After The Black
Fox, I would imagine that Ihe theatre would need a change of pace
and this fine Italian film provides
it. Don't be pul off by the silly
title. This is one of Ihe funniest
and cleverest comedies lhat I have
seen in recent years.

Alter spending

goodness-knows

how many years laboring thanklessly in the purgatory of countless

love-and-gore technicolor epics, Vitorio Gassman finally gels a chance
to do some acting and in Love and
Larceny, he demonstrates a comic
flair which seemed to be lurking
just bcnelh the surface in his good
supporting role in Big Deal on Madonna Street. He is still ns handsome and dashing as ever, but in-

-

The Reviewing Stand
LEWIS
stead of posturing foolishly as a
(i. c., Barrabas), he
acts eon brio, a suave, inventive
hut very human confidence man.
The movie is fast-paced as a comedy should be, and replete with both
visual arid cerebral gags that
ought to convulse everyone 1 who
sees this picture.

Friday, November 22, 1963

"Don't Say Clothes—Say Tartan Shop"

VILLAGER'

it

U

The Wheeler-Dealers

good taste.

COME AND SEE

their work.
The plot, with all of the typical
turns and twists and “surprises,"
centers around Wall Street and the
uses of Big Money, and there* is
plenty of color, glamour, toothless
satire and joie de vie, plus Ihe
usual stock of characters

—

Texas

millionaire oilmen, crusty New Enlandcrs. Wall Street tycoons and
sharpies and Ihe hard-working career girl. I am always amazed and
delighted by the manner in which
these young, pretty, struggling career-girls seem to decorate their

posh apartments and their wardrobes, But no matter, no one expects you to really believe or take
seriously what is happening on Ihe
screen. This movie is made for
those people who are always saying: "I don't like foreign films.
All they show is the dirt I live
in myself. I don't want to have to
think at the movies. I just go to be
entertained. To have fun , . . to
escape . . . tff dream of a life of
glamour, money, love, happiness . .
—

’

Preii, ~3nc.

'mill
golt
y
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
&amp;

(at Delaware)

!

Phone 876-2284

NF 2-6060

5426 Main St.

Open Friday Evening

Witliamsville, N. Y.

PROSPECTOR PETE NITE
Tuesday, Nov. 26th

—

(

now printed by

Means quality shirts in imaginative prints, styled simply and
distinctly, always ■ symbolic of

Roman slave

After Walt Disney's successful revival of Fantasia (still oxciting fare
23 years after it was released)
moves on, the Granada will present a harmless and mildly pleasant Hollywood comedy called The
Wheeler-Dealers. This is in the
Doris Day genre,
Rock Hudson
only this lime around, the participants arc James Gamer (handsome, virile, masculine, sometimes
slightly unscrupulous) and Lee Remick (pretly, dctermined occasionally slightly sexy in a cheerful sort
of way), both of whom do a competent job and seem to be enjoying

The SPECTRUM

i

PAGE SIX

STEAK SANDWICH
w/Cheese &amp; Mushrooms Reg. 65c

...

6 for 2.50

EGG RANCHERO SANDWICHES
Reg. 55c

.

FREE

45
mF

45‘

FAST DELIVERY
CALL TF 6-9140

Prospector Pete

-

—

3864 N. BAILEY near Main St.

and adventure!"

AFROTC Cadet Ladies Club
To Discuss Role of AF Wife
Have you planned your future?
That was the subject for deep Consideration by (he AFROTC Cadet
Ladies Glut) on Nov. 1 when Mrs.
Thomas L. Huddleston, wife of the
Professor of Air Science, and wives
of the AFROTC Instructors hosted
sixteen club members. An informal
discussion was held on the role
of the Air Force wife.
Few young women, while still
in college, can forsee precisely one
to two years in advance what their
husbands salary and its five year
growth will be. The ladies will find
out that answer on Dec. t. They

will also get answers to possible
future job assignments; movement
of household furniture and dependents; medical and dental care; AirForce housing; social responsibilities; and. the overall opportunities
in the Air Force at subsequent
meetings.

The ladies pointed out the time

tested quote. "Behind every successful man is a well informed
wife." That is the purpose of the
club: For the girls to be well informed on Air Force life as they

become part of it when their husbands are called to active

duly.

"THE CASE OF MUKKINESE BATTLE—HOI

o |
W

•

NORTH PARK CINEMA
6-7411
[28HERTEL

TF

c

f/\

THE ARROW DECTON oxford with the
Jabber Snap collar is only
one of the many shirts of
OPEN
this famous brand name
9 to 9
DAILY
in our collection...see
TR 5-8400
them soon at

RIVERSIDE
SHOP
MEN'S
783
TONAWANDA ST. at ONTARIO

�iy.

iber 22, 1963

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

VarietyShowPlanned
A Date With Show Biz’, ’64, the Variety Show to be presented by the Mixer Committee
of UnionBoard the 6th 7th, and 8th of December in Harriman Auditorium at
p.m. has
returned this semester as a result of the enthusiatic support given by the student body to last
Spring’s production. The format, however, has been changed to include a plot which permeates and enlivens the show, unifies it and creates a more smoothly-flowing performance
than a strictly “amateur-hour” manner of presentation permits. The need for a master of
ceremonies is eliminated since the plot carries the theme, Moments to Remember, which
traces campus antics from the twenties to the present, through two acts without explanation.
The success of this year’s pro-

duction is dependent upon three
factors: the interest and quality of
performance displayed by the cast,
the ability of the production staff
to organize and stimulate good performances, and, the final test
the audience’s response to the finrhed product.
The cast and staff evidently have
the talent and experience to do their
part, with Terry Page as executive producer; Tim Horton, musical director; Barbara Shapiro and
Sue Sturgeon, assistant directors;
Esther Ginsberg, technical director; Florence Jacobi, choreographer; and Jim Adelson, assistant production coordinator. TTw degree of
acceptance by the students is the
only undetermined factor, and this
—

will have a more far-reaching influence than creating a few comments among students within the
bounds of this campus.
If the performance here is a success, the cast may travel to Medina at the end of this semester, and

THE BULL-ETTES COSTUMED FOR VARIETY SHOW DANCE NUMBER
present “A Date With Show Biz”.
Acceptance may enable Union
Board to place the show on a traveling schedule next semester. In

this reporters opinion 50 cents is

a paltry price to pay for an evening
of pure enjoyment and while making UB better known as a university with dramatic and musical

prowess.

Sidney

poltier

fwk

riman Auditorium.

Phi Ep easily took the 1st place
trophy with an ingenious presentation of “A History of Man,” tracing him from prehistoric times to
the future, and illustrating their
lesson with a huge book. AE Pisatirized the Castro government
with “The Beard,” a routine involving a Cuban firing squad and
American prisoners. “How to Succeed With a Girl Without Really
Trying,” was Sig Ep's way of
showing that a girl prefers a man

■*

RALPH MISMS

performance ran
smoothly after a 30-minute delay
created by a “miscalculation” of
tickets which forced about 50 people to stand throughout the entire
show. M. C.’s Erwin Atkins and
Alan Birnbaum combined the acts
into a well-running show with their
enjoyable repeitoire, which included a magic act and satire on “The
Millionaire.” Folksingers Hackett
and Raven high-lighted the second

ofthd f

second

STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET
for all programs may be
purchased upon presentation
of I.O. card.

WIN

cal selections.

A Trip to New York
By Helping to Fight

MUSCULAR
DYSTROPHY

NOW
PLAYING

Fri.

Sun. Night from 9:00
To The Music Of Tho

STARTS WED.

*

CONCERT
Bonnie Dobson
with
Hackett &amp; Raven
Charles Castelli

FOOD and DRINKS
at POPULAR PRICES

85^

FISH FRY
Fri. and Sat.
Includes Tartar Sauce,
French Fries, Cole Slaw,
Rolls and Butler

Bowl-O-Drome
LOUNGE

313 Kensington
TF 3-4700

—

Monte Donn
Sherry Van Singers

sfe
5aNDRa

Nov. 30—8:30 P.M.
COLOR BY

DeIuxe
ClNiEM*ScOP£

srvonrr Dncoutrr tickets
Available af*«eth Thaatan Open
Pmaatattaa el Prepat U&gt;. Card

Boland
Memorial Theater
MARTIN RO., LACKAWANNA
1 Mile From Thruway Exit 55
Admission $2.25, Phone TA 4-2217
For Reservations

•
#
•
•

There is fun in the gross and mad performing...Barbara
Windsor plays with all the perkiness and eccentricity
of a bouncy English sparrow!''
—

Baity Crowthtr,

N. Y. Tte—-

“THE PICTURE IS
MAGNIFICENT!

The rich

humanity of the film. Its characters

w truly drawn, Its action so naturally

developed, make 'Sparrows Can't Sing'
a remarkably vital film!”
—Archtr Wiflittn, N

Y

Post

■Barbara Windsor, a pudgy, plump-faced
miniature sexpot from her fantastically
coitfed blonde upsweep to her

SHERRY VAN SINGERS

DAVE STOCK TRIO
WALT AND WARTY
THE ONE AND THE MANY
JACK AND ED
THE VILLAGERS

Bill Tanner and
The Tempest Bells

NOW

—

“A WILD AND WACKY FROLIC!

GROVESNOR SINGERS

JACK DONAHUE
SPECIAL FEATURE

by WWO

COCOK

CENTURYTHEATRE

Starring

#

D"«ct#d

..S-.NH,

at Fillmore

e MADELINE DAVIS
#

Carol Lynley DeaoJones

Edie Adams • Imogene Coca
Paul Lynde Robertlansing

2163 Bailey cor. Genesee

#

8)

From 10:00 P.M.
No Cover—No Minimum

Bailey Theatre
•

on Page

P.M.

8:30

StHrrinti MKHLK OIJKHON
I.Al'HKNCK OlilWKR
DAVID MVKX
GKIUI.DINK l lT/.«iKIIAI,D

(Continued

Sat. Night

Monday, Nov. 25th

-follctiwis'c

the sound exactly as
written, creating a "rest" before
the next keys are struck. This effect was especially apparent in the
Scarlatti.
Saturday's program of works of
the French baroque, featuring compositions of Chambonnieres, Couperin and Rameau, was performed at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, This
auditorium, which is far more elegant than the Baird, has less brill-

The Ember Tones

HOOTENNANY
SAMUEL

vice of silence most effectively, by

releasing

Room
&amp;

Attend Buffalo's Biggest

(iOLDWYNS

anmy possible effects of the harpsichord, and especially through contrasting tempi of different movements. Sometimes he uses the de-

Dine and Dance

««•*«

M tHS

half of the show with several musi-

iations.
Mr. Kirkpatrick achieves vitality
and contrast through the use of the

JE DONS

“athlete.”

The

Fugue, and the Goldberg Variations. Mr. Kirkpatrick adheres to a

This technique, however, could never be interpreted to be dry. pedantic, or dull although the harpsicboidist is a world-famous musicologist,
having written an exhaustive and
detailed biography of Scarlatti, and
edited many of his works. Also he
hds edited some of the works of
Bach, including the Goldberg Var-

Teekwood

WttTW KBBnWW-TBLffJ-aae
r-isr

with money to “a brain” or an

he had performed three entirely different programs, in addition to another series of recitals given a few
days before in New York.
In Friday’s all-Bach program Mr.
Kirkpatrick performed the Italian
Concerto, Chromatic Fantasy and

strict interpretation of the music.

In The Luxurious

ISHOMKRIN

Phi Epsilon Pi won first pirze,
Alpha Epsilon Pi took second place
and Sigma Phi Epsilon was voted
third at the annual Stunt Night
competition, Friday night in Har-

By VICKI BUGELSKI
Ralph Kirkpatrick, considered the
world's leading harpsichordist brilliantly proved himself a master of
his instrument at his three recitals,
Nov. 8, 9 and 10. These recitals,
sponsored by the Music department as the major part of the Harpsichord Festival, were dedicated to
the university’s new instrument
built by Eric Herz.
From the opening measures of
the Bach Italian Concerto which
was the first composition of the
recital, one could sense that a true
master was performing. His playing is refined to the utmost degree,
along with impeccable technique
and depth of interpretation. Mr.
Kirkpatrick gave all his recitals
completely from memory, a feat

in itself when it is considered that

Phi Epsilon Pi Places First
In Annual Stunt Night Show
By BARBARA STRAUSS

Kirkpatrick Proves Master
Harpsichordist in 3 Recitals

.

Frii

claltery spike heeled pumps
Is utterly delectable as
a complete creature
of the flesh!"
—om

i Tnbunt

Sim, JAMES BOOTH

BARBARA WINDSOR
S, JOAN LITUEWOOO

and SfEPMIM LEWS
tj

,oaa .'\imoo

■ in British e«m«dy

DONATION-SI .M

Tickets Available at All
CAVAGES Record Stores
At Door

Plut

Acohmy Award Wlnnorl
“TRIBUTE TO DYLAN THOMAS"
With Richard Burton

CIRCLE ART
1I4S BAILEY at AMHERST
Evo*. 7:3M:je., Sun. Mat.

�Sapp Lecture
(Continued

frdm

Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Page

3)

was Riven new impetus by the hirinR of a new director. Mr. Neal
DuBrock. Suddenly the theatre has
sprunR into a new light and is attratiriR people like Claudia McNeil.
Other theatre Rroups have been
sprinRinp up and Buffalo is hoped
to soon become a permanent home
for professional actors.
Mr. Sapp Rave many reasons for
this new "Boom" in Buffalo but the
main one was the large part that
the University was playing in Cultural affairs. Our music department
has Rrown and worked with the city
music propram so that a lot of top
performers are anxious to visit
Buffalo. There are not many schools
that can boast of havinR such a
promenant department as the Budcpest SlrinR Quartet, David Diamond. and I.eo Smit.
Likewise the drama department
has also made great advances and
so have the Art and English Departments.
Mr. Sapp pointed out that it is
a rare phenomenon when the city
and the University can work closely
and successfully together, When
they can and when they do eel
along the result is a "Boom" situation.
When Mr. Sapp was asked alxiul
the public response to these wonderful "happenings" he slated that it
was good hut somewhat upselling
since Ihe same group of people
seemed lo frequent all Ihe cultural
affairs. He is grateful lo (his group
for their interest and support, hut
he is concerned with gelling more
of Ihe younger people participating,
Mr. Sapp seemed somewhat baffled concerning Ihe solution lo Ibis
problem. Sylvia Spring, Chairman
of Ihe Convocations committee
slated somewhat, angrily "The UB
student seems (o he an expert in
complaining about Ihe lack of "culture’’ in Buffalo but when asked to
attend a lecture on the topic, they,
merely laugh and say "Whal culture?". II seems lo me that these
people who pretend lo be inleresled
in cultural opportunities. Knock
Buffalo’s activities or lack of activities (in their opinions) to rationalize Iher general apathy. Inward
anything off campus as well as on
their lack of knowledge on cultural
activities can only lie due to an
absense of interest since they need
only look on the nearest bulletin
to see what is offered. No the student that complains and doesn’t act
is not Ihe interested student. Try
asking one of the "Rat Celler”
gang What they think of Buffalo and
note their informative answer. The
stress.must not be pul on Ihe complainer hut on Ihe silent student. If
there is hope anywhere, it must he
there."

Christmas Concert Set
"The problem of developing a
Christmas program is to find something different without losing the
traditional flavor of the season,"
said Mr. Beckwith, professor of mu-

sic and director of choral music.
Mr. Beckwith found ample opportunity to gather materials that
are "different” while traveling
through Eastern Europe as an exchange scholar from January to
September, 1963. There are a considerable number of Christmas
selections in the collection of more
than 1,000 volumes of music and
microfilmed choral pieces which
he sent back to UB. Mr. Beckwith spent January to June as an
exchange scholar at Moscow Conservatory and the summer tour-

ing Eastern Europe including Po-

land and Czechoslovakia,
The result will be the Annual
Christmas Concert at UB’s I/ickwood Library on Dec. 14 and
la which has never been heard in

antiphonal choruses with the accompaniment of string and brass
choirs. The motet will be sung in

Polish.
In Czechoslovakia,
Mr. Beck/
with bought a volume of old Christ!
mas pastorials by pre-classicaf
18th century composers. These will

be performed by the chorus and
the string ensemble.
The performance of "The Angels
and the Shepards," a Christmas
scene for Women's voices by the
eminent Hungarian, Zoltan Kodaly,

will result from Mr. Beckwith's
meeting with that composer while
in Budapest.
To give the program a familiar
and traditional flavor the famous
"Carol of the Bells” from the
Ukraine, will be sung. In addition,
the Ukraine will be represented
by a folk-choral setting with fiddle accompaniment written by the
20th century composer Martinu.

the United States. The Concert will
falure the Men's Glee Club, Womens Chorale, the Brass Ensamble, and a string ensemble com-

posed of students and faculty members.
One highlight of the program
is a beautiful Russian church piece
for the Feast of the Nativity by
Grechaninov, which will be sung
in the original Old Russian.
While in Poland, Mr. Beckwith
was a guest of I he Institute of
Musicology at Warsaw University
where important work is being
done lo discover the ancient traditions of Polish music,
1
“The Poles have made important contributions lo European mu-

sir down

through

the centuries,”

Mr. Beckwith said. At Ihe Concert, a 17th century motet by
Mikolaj Zielenski will be performed
which lie wrote about Ihe feast
of the nativity. It features two

Scarletti's Works Presented
(Continued

sound was hardly noticeable in the
front of the auditorium, however.
Mr. Kirkpatrick's virtuoslic technique was readily apparent in several of the descriptive pieces; rapid passages and complicated ornamentation were performed with the
utmost surety and ease.
Sunday's performance of an allScarlatti program concluded Mr.
Kirkpatrick's recitals, Scarlatti's
works, called “sonatas", were originally entitled "exercises", and are
not sonatas in the true sense of
the word. Kach one utilizes some
technical complication, such as arpeggios; trills, rapid scale passages,
and constantly develops this feature
throughout the composition. These,
as all the previous works, were performed with an extremely refined

from

Page

7)

of the music school calendar, and
indeed the entire Buffalo music
calendar. We can only hope for
more of the same, now that the
music department has such a fine
instrument. One feature which
should be improved, 1 however, is
the concert hall. A larger auditorium is necessary, and preferably
one that is a bit more colorful.
This will be possible when the new
music building is constructed, as
part of the future Fine Arts Center that is expected to be built in
the future.

quality and with absolute perfection of technique.
These recitals are without doubt
one of the most outstanding features

Anyone interested is
applying for the position of editor or business manager of Manuscripts, please contact
Karen Miller, 831-2674.

The Four Preps will
be appearing in concert
tomorrow night at 8:30
in Clark Gymnasium.
The Concert Committee
of Union Board is spon
soring the event.

Cproquo/Siu

International Brawartaa. Infc.OatraK, Mkfk, tuffato, H.Y.. Tampa, Fla., Findlay. 0., Covington, Ky.

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�Friday, November 22, 1963

m

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
3610 MAIN ST.

me

Phone: TF 3-7131

(near bailey)

Always In Stock

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If you don't know what
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�$e(ifyiou6
CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION
Every Wednesday from 7:30 p.m.
to 10:00 p.m. students and faculty
members are welcome to an open
house at Chaplain and Mrs. Beattie's home, 1179 Elmwood Aye. On
campus, meanwhile, a variety of
discussion groups are going strong
in room 266 Norton Union. On
Tuesday from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and
Fridays from 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. Fr.
Bollman's Basic Theology group is
discussing Mark's understanding of
Jesus Christ and will soon consider how man has been redeemed.
Chaplain Beattie’s discussion group
on I Corinthians (Wednesday from
2:00-3:00 p.irf.) has been considering the miraculous events which accompanied Paul’s preaching ministry. On Thursdays from 2:00 to
3:00 p.m. the provocative book
HONEST TO GOD meets an equally provocative rebuttal in FOR
CHRIST’S SAKE. All of these sessions are open to everyone,
GAMMA DELTA
The next meeting will be Dec. 4
at 6:30. We will meet lor dinner
at 5:30 as usual. All unsold tickets
must be returned at this meeting.
In place of a topic discussion we
will attend an Advent Service after
the meeting at one of our nearby
churches.
On Dec. 1, we will meet at 2 p.m.
to hold a Bowling Party social at
Norton Lanes. Then we will go to
a pancake house for dinner and to
the Christmas Candlelight Vesper
Service at Kleinhans Music Hall at

7:30 p.m.
The Alpha Delta Chapter of Gamma Delta is sponsoring the Christmas Pop Concert and Dance at
Kleinhans Music Hall on Dec. 13
at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale
at Norton Ticket Booth for $1.75
a person. The Concert consists of
sacred,
and secular
seasonal,
music; dancing follows in the Mary

Seaton Room. Anyone interested in
being a patron contact Phyllis

TA 3-7540 before Nov. 25 for
tickets. Patron tickets are $6, admit 2 persons, and have their name
printed in the program.
NEWMAN CLUB
Tomorrow, at the Hotel Buffalo,
Newman will hold a date dance
from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Tickets are $3.00 per couple and are
available at the club.
The next meeting, Dec. 4, will
be a business meeting in Room 231
Norton, at 7:30 p.m.
Just a reminder: the Christmas
Card Sale is now in progress. The
cards, which cost $1.25 a box, may
Swift

be picked up at any day at the

Club.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
At the next Student Christian Association progam to be held Dec. 5,
7:30 p.m.. Professor Mark Kennedy of the Sociology Department
will read his poem "The Death of
Agape". The meeting will be at
the home of Chaplain Burke, 49
Heath St.
WESLEY FOUNDATION

Saturday, Nov. 23 the Wesley
Foundation will have a Splash
Party at the University Pool, 2:00
to 4:00 p.m. Following the swim
members will meet at Goodyear to
go to dinner, “dutch treat".
The Annual Thanksgiving Dinner
of the Wesley Foundation will be
held this Sunday evening, Nov. 24,
at 5:00 p.m. in the University
Methodist Church, Bailey and Minnesota, Preceding the dinner, Holy
Communion will be administered in
silence. Following dinner there will
be a discussion of the film "The
Savage Eye” and a presentation of
a drama "Study in Color”.

GORGE
TRAVEL BUREAU
819 Millersport Highway
GROVER CLEVELAND PLAZA

837-4244

Scholarship Fund
In Honor of Late
Marion Tallman
A $25,000 scholarship fund is the
first bequest to be left to the University of Buffalo Foundation, it
was announced today by Dr. William J. O’Connor, Foundation director.

The William Frances and Marion
Tallman Scholarship Fund was provided in the will of their daughter,
Marion L. Tallman. Miss Tallman
taught English for 32 years in

Niagara Falls, 30 at Gaskill Jr.
High School and for 2 years at
LaSalle Senior High. She received
a B.A. from LIB in 1925 and an
M.A. in 1936. She died January 4,

1963.

According to the executor of her
will, William H. Earl, Lockport
attorney. Miss Tallman was very
close to her pupils, and made several trips to Europe with student groups.

THANKSGIVING

The Bridge Club is sending sixteen representatives to the Rochester Invitational Bridge Tournament on Nov. 23. The sixteen members of the dub will compete in a
team of four against other college
teams.

VACATION
and Hamman Libraries
Wednesday, Nov. 27
—9 a.m. 9 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 28
—Closed.
Friday, Nov. 29 ,
9 a.m. 5 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 30—
9 a.m. 5 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 1
—2 p.m. 11 p.m.
Chemistry, Engineering, Health Sciences,
and Physics Libraries
will observe the same
hours Wednesday to
Friday. They will close
at 1 p.m. on Saturday
and will not be open
Sunday.

Lockwood

•

The Bridge Club meets every
Tuesday evening at 7:30, in Norton,
room 327. Each week there is a
duplicate game, for fractional mas
ter points, and instruction for beginners. All students and members
of the faculty are invited to learn
or play this fascinating game. Some
of the Club’s upcoming events include: a monthly master point
night, a student-faculty bridge game
and the A.C.U. tournament in Feb-

—

-

:

-

—

-

ruary.

Last week the first master
night was held. The winners
N-S, Ed George and Chuck
prey; E-W, Bob Lipsitz and

point
were
LamDick

Fleischman.

House Of Four Seasons
hairfashions

PITTSBURGH
PLATE GLASS COMPANY

By Henri Del Prince

Chemical Division

INTERVIEW DATE;
Tuesday, December 10
Opporluni ties available in six

plants; Barberton, Ohio, New Mar-

W. Va., Lake Charles, La.,
Christi, Texas. Bartlett,
Calif., and Beauharnois, Quebec,
tinsville,

SUMMER, WINTER, SPRING and FALL
WE AIR TO PLEASE SO GIVE US A CALL

839 0222
-

Open Evenings For Your Convenience

Corpus

Canada.
Producers of heavy industrial chemicals: Soda Ash, Chlorine, Caustic
Soda, Anhydrous Ammonia, Titanium Tetrachloride, Barium, and
other chlorinated products.

Research, analytical, plant problems, supervision, design, maintenance, plant layout, and standard

KLEIN HANS

procedure opportunities open for
men in these categories:
BS, MS, PhD Chemists; BS, MS
Chemical Engineers; BS, MS, Elec-

trical and Mechanical Engineers;
BS Industrial Engineer and Civil
Engineers.

i1

“Today,

WHY

Goodman
matters”

did Van Heusen

put a “back loop” on its “417”
Collection of Ivy-style shirts?

—George Steiner,

Some students say it keeps a shirt wrinkle-free
when you hang it with this helpful device, while
others remark that it's a decorative item much
like an English "butler". But to those who really
know—it's the prime symbol of the authentic
college shirt.

Commentary

MAKING
DO

$4.95

LIBRARY HOURS
DURING

■

WANTED: Niagara Falls Driver
to return three children from
Buffalo School to Niagara Falls
after 3:30 p.nv, Monday-Friday.
Payment will be provided. Call
TR 5-4M7.

Paul Goodman’s new novel is
one of the sensations of the
season. As Harold Rosenberg
wrote in Partisan Review,
“his affinities are with philosophers and poets, particularly the seekers of the absolute and of intoxication: Rilke,
Kafka, Cocteau, Mallarme.”

Masters Play

The scholarships will be awarded to deserving students at the
discretion of the University Financial Aid Committee.

m

At your

Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

See the wide range of dress and sport shirts in the
Van Heusen "417" Collection at your local retailer.
They are shown in traditional striped and solid color
fabrics in both the Button-Down and Snap-Tab
collar styles. All are cut with the new V-Taper to
fit slimmer and trimmer. $5.00
Dacron and Cotton $5.95

T

g!7)J

VAN MEUSEM*

college bookstore

MACMILLAN
M Fifth

Ave-N.Y.lOOi:

V-Taper—for the lean, trim look.

gray,

�Friday, November 22, 1963

Spectrum

Business Ad. Plans Meeting

justment

with

Fixed

Exchange

Rates;” and Dr. Walter S. Salant,
senior staff member Brookings Institution, "The Outlook for the
United States Balance of Pay-

ments.” .
Dr. Caves has been at Harvard
;ince 1962, having previously taught
it' the University of California,
1957-62. He is a member of the
U,S. Government Budget Bureau
Review Committee for Balance
of Payments Statistics and a consultant on international monetary
iblems, U.S. Council of Economics Advisor. He received the A.B.
degree from Oberlin College and
the M,A. and Ph.D degrees from
Harvard. Of the numerous volumes
he has written, Air Transport and
Its Regulators. An Industry Study
11962) is the most recent.
Dr. Kindleburger has been at
M.I.T. since 1948, except in 196061 when he was on leave researching and lecturing in Oxford and
Paris. He was research economist
with the Federal Reserve Bank,

1936-1939, Bank for International

■Settlements, 1939-40, and Board of

UC REGISTRATION
University College
students whose last
names begin with the
letters designated below
will see their advisers
on the following days:
Dec. 2 to 6—K L
Dec. 9 to 13—F, W, Z
Dec. 16 to 20—M, J
Students will make
an appointment with the
receptionist in Diefendorf 114 at least one
week in advance of the
above scheduled times.
Students who do not
make their appointments at the scheduled
time will have to see
their advisers during examination time in January and then be required to register in
Clark Gym on Registration Day.

Govemors of the Federal Reserve
System, 1940-42, He served with
the Department o' State as Chief,
Division of German and Austrian
Economic Affairs, 1945-47, and adviser, European Recovery Program, 1947-48. He received the A.B.
degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and the A.M. and Ph.D

degrees from Columbia University.
The author of seven volumes, Dr.
Kindleburger’s forthcoming' book
in entitled Economic Growth in
France and Britian, 1850-1950.
A specialist in international. economics, Dr. Kenen has been at

Columbia since 1957. He attended
Harvard and the London School
of Economics and received the
B.A., M.A., and Ph.D degrees from
Columbia. He is the author of
British Monetary Policy and the
Balance of Payments, awarded the
David A. Wells first Prize at Harvard in 1958, find Giant Among
Nations. In 1962-63, Dr. Kenen held
a Ford Foundation Research Fellowssip for work on international
capital movements.
Dr. Salanf has been a staff member of the Brookings Institution
since 1954, except in 1960 when he
was on leave serving as a Consultant to the Rockefeller Foundation’s Social Science's Program.
He is a member of the Universitios-National Bureau Committee on
Economic Research Executive Committee, the Advisory Council of
the Yale Center for the Quantitive
Study of Economic Structure and
Growth, and the panel of consultants to the Secretary of the Treasury. He is a graduate of Harvard
College and took graduate studies
at Cambridge University and Harvard College and took graduate
studies at Cambridge University

$oarcl

Mixer Committee

GROSSMAN'

"
-

Recreation Committee
Recreation Committee is
holding a Free Game Nite on Friday, Nov. 22, from 8-11:00 p.m. in
the Norton Union Game Area. The

This afternoon Dr. C.A. Ycracarif, counseling psychologist engaged
in private practice, will be guest
speaker. Her topic, "Rogerian Therapy Today,” will be followed by a
refreshment period. The meeting
starts at 3:00 p.m. in room 234 Norton. All interested students are invited.

The

committee has offered free billiards, table tennis, and bowling to
all those attending. There will also
be a folksinging group performing
in the Rathskeller for your enjoy-

ment.
Photography Club
There will be a general meeting
of the Photography Club today at
4:00 in room 262. Following the
meeting. Mr. Hulbert will give ,a
lecture on color processing, accompanied by a scries of slides showing
correct and incorrect results. All interested students are invited to attend, The room number will be
posted.

PAGE ELEVEN

Psychology Club

The Mixer Committee \vill sponsor a dance following the Four
Preps Concert Saturday, Nov. 23,
from 10:00-1:00 a.m. The dance will
be held in the Multi-purpose room,
Jim Battistoni and his band will
play and refreshments will be provided.

Mathematics Club
The Undergraduate Mathematics

Club will entertain local high school
mathematics teachers and students.
Wednesday evening, Dec. 4, 7:00
p.m., Acheson Hall, room 5. Yvonne
Echenoz will speak on "Continued
Fractions," and James Woeppel's
topic will be “Fibonacci Numbers.”
Anyone interested is welcome. Refreshments will be served.

�

I Kiel bans

Music Committee Schedule for

$2.50-$3.50-$4.50-$5
All Seats Reserved

Music Room, Nov. 25-29.
,

A Conference on the International Payments System will be sponsored by the School of Business
Administration on Dec. 6 from 9:30
am. to 5f30 p.m. in Room 216
of Harriman Library.
The four featured speakers and
topics include Dr. Richard E.
Caves,
professor of economics,
Harvard University, “Plans for International Monetary Reform;”
Dr, Charles P. Kindleberger, prolessor of economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “The
Integration of World Short-term
and Long-term Capital Markets;"
Dr. Peter B. Kenen, associate professor of economics, Columbia University, “Balance of Payments Ad-

v

SPECTRUM

10-11:30-Classical
11:30-1:00—Foil
1-2:30—Semi-Classical
2:30-4:00—Jazz

4-5:00—Popular

Mail orders NOW with selfaddressed. stamped envelope. Send check or money
order to BUFFALO JAZZ
Denton's
32
FESTIVAL.
Court St.. Buffalo 3. N Y

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WALL HANGINGS!
artistic designs in brilliant colors, skillfully
hand screened on heavy natural linen. Walnut trim and
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�

�PAGE TWELVE

UN Committee to Hold Model
Security Council in February
United Nations Committee is
planning to execute the annual modThq

el Security Council on February 21
'

Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

and 22. Various Northeastern col-

leges will be represented at the
Council Sessions.
The primary purpose of the model
security council program is to utilize the Student's ardent knowledge
concerning current international affairs, to increase the student’s insight of the unique conduct of the
United Nations, and to dramatize

interest in the United Nations.
A member of the United States
delegation to the United Nations
will speak on one of the above
dates. The committee has initiated

Committee on Revisions Reports

the other date.

Report of the ConiHtutional
Revisions Committee
November If, 1943
The Constitutional Revisions Committee of the Student Association is
pleased to announce that Dr. Merton William Ertell, Assistant Vice-

tablished: Convocations, Resolu
Uons, Rules, Housing, Registration,

to the committee.

a great deal of correspondence with
various world leaders, and the committee believes that a prominent
leader in government will speak on
In order to facilitate the functioning of the committee, the following subcommittees have been es-

Publicity.

The committee also hopes to present a Pressure Points series on
curcnt topics which are pertinent
to the United Nations.
The International File on U.N.
proceedings, which ahe committee
has established, has been expanded
and brought up to date.

President for Educational Affairs,
and Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow,
Dean of Students, have consented
to function in an advisory capacity

Both advisors
worked upon the student faculty
committee which drafted the present Constitution of the Student Association; consequently, their experience will be invaluable to the

committee.
It is the expressed desire that
the committee will encompass each

of the four sections of the Student
Association so that the Constitution
can be systematically examined
and revised. Therefore, the Student
Judiciary, Union Board, Publica-

3. Subcommittee on CommitteeCoordination
4. Subcommittee on finances
The very nature of the committee demands that all proceedings
of the committee and its subcommittees are to be held in the utmost confidence so that inaccurate
impressions of the work do not interfere with its completion: consequently, the actual revisions that
might be made will be presented
to the proper authorities all at this
time so that the process might be
completed as efficiently and quickly as possible.
It is the fervent goal of the Constitutional Revisions Committee to
present its recommendations in a
finalized form before the March
election. The committee is ardently
opposed to any haphazard amending of the present Constitution in
accordance with the above policy.

The committee will zealously welcome suggestions from students and
faculty. Several meetings will be
open to those who wish to express
their views on the topics which are
included on the agenda for that
specific session.

Tran Van Chuong,
former South Vietnamese ambassador to the
United States will speak
Dec. 12 in the Multipurpose room under the
auspices of the Convocations Committee. Dr.
Chuong, Mme. Ngo Dinh
Nhu’s father, resigned
his diplomatic post in
Washington.

tions Board and the Student Senate

are represented upon this committee.
The committee has asked each
chairman of a Senate Committee to
evaluate his committee particularly
with reference to membership, functions and performance. The committee realizes (hat this is not an
easy assignment; therefore, we encourage chairman to reply as soon
as possible because we have only
received two responses at this date.
The Constitutional Revisions Committee is also in the process ol
corresponding with other colleges in
order to examine the Constitutions
ol their Student Associations so
that needed insight might be derived in this pertinent area.
The committee desires to reorganize those parts of the Constitution which have proven inefficient
or deleterious to the proper functioning of student activities. In order to facilitate the functioning of
the committee, the following sub-

committees have been established:
1. Subcommittee on purpose and

powers

2. Subcommittee on officers and
membership
The history club held a mooting Tuesday evening at which time the new
political science department was honored. Formerly part ol the history
department, the political science unit became independant without any
internal strife.

1217 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Phone: 837-4772

Amherst, N. Y. 14226

CATHAY GARDEN
512 Niagara Falls Blvd.
1 MINUTES DRIVE FROM UB
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3240 Main Street

Buffalo, N.Y.

�Friday, November 22, 1963'

Ends Instruction

By RAYMOND CRAWFORD

My congratulations to the Royal

Dave Lambert, Jon Hendricks,
and Yolande Bavan comprise one
of the most unique groups in jazz.

In case any of you are wondering,
it was formerly the Lambert, Hendricks and Ross Trio. This group
traveled to Europe and in London
Annie Ross became sick and a
young Ceylonese girl begged Jon

Hendricks to let her replace Ross.
The three went back to the States
and it was in a performance that
Lambert and Hendricks first heard
the girl sing. She was an immediate
success. Annie has since gone on
her own.

Unfortunately the group sang
nothing new. The songs they did are
to be found in their albums. Nevertheless, they still were very good.
They displayed the speed in lyrics
that have made them famous as
well as Bavans high voice which
gives the group their inimitable
identity.

Possibly the most important
thing about this group is their lyrics, most of which is written by
Jon Hendricks. They are really
masterpieces. He takes the songs of
jazz pieces and writes the lyrics
that are the same as the music.
They have done this to such pieces
as "Moanin” and “Cornin’ Home”.
Of course they have written their
own pieces, always in the jazz idi-

Greek News

Operation Turnout

The Jazz Gallery
Arms fortheir effort in bringing to
Buffalo some of the most popular
and talented bands in Jazz. Once
again the night spot has featured
the Lambert, Hendricks and Bavan
Trio.

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

om. When it comes to some of the
improvised solos that musicians
have done, the group has even put
that to words also. It is really a
joy to see this group put a song
together, with witty lines, and finally have their voices sound like
instruments. Lambert sounds on
the order of a trombone, Hendricks
a sax, and Bavan a trumpet.

The 575th AFROTC division culminated its outdoor instruction program on Nov. 16 with Operation Turnout. This display was held
at the UB-Colgate football game to
demonstrate the enthusiasm of the
cadets.
The cadets assembled at the football practice field at one p.m. and

Congratulations to Corinne Dionne
and Carolyn Osborne of Sigma Kappa on having been invited to the
first President's Dinner in honor of
their academic averages on Nov. 21.
A SIGMA KAPPA Pledge Shoeshine will be held -today in the Conference Theater room entrance, Donation or 25 cents for the shine.

THETA CHI Sorority celebrated
their 42nd anniversary on this campus Thursday with Founder’s Day
festivities. Tonight THETA CHI
will have a social with TAD KAPPA EPSILON.
The pledges of ALPHA PHI OME
GA will hold a party for the brothers at The Red Sleigh, Nov. 23, at

Many of you are missing some
great bands this year. This week
Oscar Peterson will be at the Royal Arms, a beautiful jazz room. So
go down this weekend, and dig his
fast hands.

8:00 p.m.

GAMMA PHI will hold a party at
Clair Anderson’s house following

PUBLICITY
Publicity Committee
of Union Board is open
for membership to all
students of U.B. If you
are interested in art
work and publicity you
are welcome to come to
307 Norton on any Wednesday afternoon from
3 to 5 p.m.
Any organization
wishing to use the publicity room of Norton
may fill out the request
forms in the reservations office. This should
be done at least two
days in advance of the
time the room is needed.

ROTC's OPERATION TURNOUT
proceeded to march onto the playing field where an honor guad
raised Old Glory. A few minutes
later, the stands wore a mass of

blue.
Cadet enthusiasm rose to the oc-

casion as the Bulls trounced Colgate. Squadron 71 stated the opinions of the entire division as they
marched onto the field carrying a
sign: "Colgate to play in bowl",
followed by a group of cadets
carrying a lavatory bowl. Later a
“Happy Tooth”, protected by his
"visible shield", happened along,

only to be vanquished by Squadron
72’s “Mr. Toofh-Decady". The show
ended with Mr, Tooth-Decay playing taps for Happy Tooth-and Colgate.

POPS’ CONCERT and DANCE

PHI EPSILON PI after a sucres
ful encounter with PHI LAMDA
TAD on the UB College Bowl are

th?ir newest chalArnold Air Society,
The brothers would like to thank
Dean Siggelkow for speaking at
their Founder’s Day Dinner this
eagerly awaiting
lengers.

past

Sunday. PHI

EPSILON

Two

all-time greats in the Rock

n‘ Roll field.

Bobby Comstock and

his Counts and Bernie and the
Cavaliers will he featured at Washinlon Hall Friday, Nov. 22 at Phi
Lambda Delta’s The Last Blast.
The two groups, favorites of many
college parlies in the northeast have
performed with Chubby Checker.
Lloyd Price, Little Richard and
U.S. Bonds on a tour throughout
the U.S.
Bobby Comstock is also wellknown at the summer resort area

Ql
VVUlitellO A

of Oceanside and the Apollo theatre in New York.
Phi Lambda Delta Fraternity,
who presented Bobby and the
Counts at last year's Open party
at- Washington Hall expects that
this year's party. "The Last Blast"
will draw an even larger crowd.
Jim Gleeson, co-chairman of the
stated that advanced sale
tickets at a reduced rate will be
available a he Norton ticket booth
event,

until

Wednesday.

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

,

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students

3400 MAIN STREET

Richard Dufallo, Conducting

(Opposite UB)

TF3-I600

Open Monday, Thursday and
Friday svsninq HU 9 P.M.

featuring
AMERICA'S BEST-LOVED FOLK SINGERS

Positions with Potential

THE WEAVERS

Friday, November 22

—

ENGINEERS CHEMISTS PHYSICISTS
•

•

8:30 P. M.

Ceramic Chemical Civil
Electrical Industrial Mechanical
Metallurgical
•

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
i

(Please Send Stamped Sell-Addressed Envelope With Mail Orders)

CUBAN HURRICANE RELIEF

BOOTS
The Best Style
For Campus

U.S. Eskiloos
and

Alaskans
By Kickevino
■Remember

your ID Card worth

'0% discount at

.

.

.

(jc\dmaus
Sfacd
Boulevard Mall

participated in the successful lunchroom integration
movement in the South. As resident of southeastern
U.S. visited Cuba many times before and after the
rtvolution, and as recently as this year.
National Chairman, Fair Play for Cuba Committee

V. T.
Lee

Will Give An

Eyewitness Report On Cuba

Documented by Slides—Saturday, November 23, 8 P.M.
Hotel Richford Regency Room—210 Delaware Avenue

No Admission. Sponsor: Committee for a Meeting for Cuban Hurricane
Relief—Collection For
...

CUBAN HURRICANE RELIEF

r il/r ON

jtK V C

RAIN COATS AND
OTHER WINTER COATS

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•

•

All Tickets: $1.75
Philharmonic Box Office (Penna St. Entrance)
Denton, Cottier &amp; Daniels, 32 Court St.

•

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graduates in the fields listed above.
Our products include graphite anodes, electrodes,
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We serve such key industries as aerospace, aluminum. automotive, chemical, mining, motion pictures,
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Interesting, rewarding'careers are offered in research, process and product development, production
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A representative will be on campus:
DECEMBER 5t|h

UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION
CARBON

PRODUCTS DIVISION

Phone 833-9395

Open: Mon., Toes., Wed., aat. —0:30 A.M. 5:30 P.M.
Thors., Fri.—0:30 f:00 P.M.
-

-

PI

would like to thank all those who
supported their first place skit.

Last Blast Tonight-Washington Hall
Featured By Phi Lambda Delta

.

BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

the Four Preps Concert this Saturday night. On Nov. 29 an Alumni
Party will be held at the Old Post
Road Inn at 8:30.
The fall pledge class of PHI KAP
PA ,PS( fraternity will „]ipld their
pledge party on Saturday. Nov. 23.
The party will he held at the Rose
Gardens located on Wherle I h ive
just beyond Transit Road

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

�PAGE FOURTEEN

&amp;

Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

BULLS BLANK RED RAIDERS 23-0 Q*
NOTES
The victory was Buffalo'! fifth
against three losses and a tie culminating a successful season which
saw US's top lineman and eocaptaln Gerry Philbin nominated
to the ECAC All-East squad fivetimes.
Second-string center Jim Duprey
was a standout on defense; Duprey
had three interceptions for 114

Twelve Seniors Ended College Careers Against Colgate
The University of Buffalo concluded the 1963 football season by
crushing the Red Raiders of Colgate 23-0 before 10,943 Rotary Field
spectators on a cold, windy Satur-

day afternoon.

n

Tail varsity seniors made their
valedictory appearance, while injured fullbacks Jim Burd and John

n

yards,

Jim Ryan led the UB rushers
with 54 yards in ten carries.
Stofa passed for 114 yards completing 6 of 13.
Colgate’s quarterback Jim Ba
rudin had his finest day in the
air; he completed 15 of 28 passes
for 178 yards but allowed five
interceptions due to powerful ‘blitzing’ of Gergley, McNally and Philbin.

Cimba watched from the sidelines.
End Larry Gergley, quarterback
John "Iceman" Stofa, and wingback Gerry Ratkewicz concluded
their college careers by scoring
touchdowns in US's second straight
white-washing of Colgate.

Stofa took the Bulls to the visitors 33 yard line on four plays
a pass to Ratkewicz, a draw play
to fullback Tom Butler and two
keeper plays around right end.
With second down and seven Ratkewicz shook up the defense on
a reverse and ran off tackle for
the remaining yardage and the
score. Co-captain Gerry Philbin and
guard Jim McNally cleared the

—

field of tacklers fob the untouched

wingback. On the next play, Ratkewicz added insult to injury as
he split the uprights and the Bulls
were off to a 7-0 load.
Co-Captain Larry Gergley once
again showed his mastery over the
Red Raiders. His end zone catch
in the 1962 blizzard battle proved
to be the only score in an otherwise even contest.
Besides being a gem on defense
blocked a Colgate punt in the
first half), Gergley accounted for
UB's second touchdown early in
the second period of play with a
fingertip catch of Stofa’s peg. The

(he

Buffalo Evening News Photo
John Cimba, Armand Martin, Larry Gergley, Jim Wick, Dan Note, Gerry Phllbln,
Jim Burd. Front row, left to right
Jim Ryan, Gerry Ratkewicz, John Slofa, Ken Kogut, Tom Butler.
Back row, left to right

—

—

MILE LONG

play covered 51 yards; the last
35 were legged out on the ground
by the co-captain who helped by
Gerry Pawolski's key block on the
Colgate 32.

SUBMARINES

Stofa fought his way into pay
dirt for the two point conversion
and the score stood at halftime,
15-0.

from

Stofa. Butler, Ratkewicz and seatback Jim Ryan combined their
talents in the 62 yard drive for
the Bulls last touchdown in the
third quarter. After Butler interCopied on his own 40, Ryan took
a pass from Stofa to the Colgate

41 where the Bulls moved the
pigskin in the ensuing eight plays
to (he onedoot line. Long John bulled his way into the end zone and
Edward added the last two points
of the day on a pitch from the
quarterback.

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�Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIFTEEN

Philbin Accepts Senior Bowl Offer
King Kong"

Receives Fifth All-East Honors leers Face Unusual Problems
By NANCY LAURIEN

ALLAN SCHOLOM

By

The UB hockey Bulls held their
first scrimmage last Thursday, November 14, with Brockport State
Teachers College at the Fort Erie
Arena. There were fifteen specta-

University of Buffalo’s co-captain and star tackle, Gerry Philbin, has been named to the AllEast team for the fifth time this
year. This is an outstanding achievement in that it is the most times
that anyone has been named to
the squad this season. Philbin was
picked again for his outstanding
ay in last week’s 23-0 victory
er Colgate at Rotary Field.

tors, including those supporting our
opponents and the custodian of Ihe

building. Why? Primarily, the student body isn't aware of the existence of the hockey Bulls, or Ihe
conditions under which they are
forced to play? ,
The fifty-six members of the club
pay dues of $1 per week to defray
the cost of renting the Fort Erie
arena twice a week for practices,
a rate of $15 an hour. Practice usually takes place near midnight, to
enable as many players as possible

In spite of the fact that it was
the Bull's season finale and Philbin’s last game for UB, it is unlikely that it will be his last football game. The 6’ 2", 230 lb. senior
has been scouted by numerous professional teams from all three
leagues and has been observed
for the East-West Shrine game in
San Francisco next month and the
All-American game here in Buffalo
next June. So far this year Philbin has been contacted by three
National and American Football
League teams, as well as one
Canadian team.

&lt;-

-*•

—

aid

of Jim

.

Peale,

sticks,

behind them.

MONDAY FRIDAY
SATURDAY 10 2 P.M.
—

—

&gt;'

"He is the fastest, most mobile,
and most aggressive lineman I
have seen this year.”
Paul Bixler, Scout for Cleveland Browns.

GERRY PHILBIN li the first nationally recognized football player that
the University has ever produced. In Gerry, students should see not merely a great athlete, but also a symbol of Buffalo itself
its progress.
—

—

"He is the best college football
player I have seen so far this
season.”
Bill Austin, Ass’t coach
(or Green Bay Packers.
—

• • is very quick, strong and
agile; excellent pursuit; he is an
“•

excellent pro prospect; outstanding on~defense.”
Jim Gallagher,
Director of Player Personnel,

winning players will receive $800

and the losers

will receive $600 for

participating in this game. Joe Mar-

cin. The UB athletic information
director, has said that Gerry Philbin has a good chance of playing in
either the East-West, or Blue-Grey
game later in the school year.

UNIVERSITY

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Our

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Philadelphia Eagles.
.

.

as good a

lineman

as

we’ve faced all year.”
Jim
Miller, Head Coach of Boston Col—

"I like him. He’s a good one,”
—

Jim Lee Howell, New York

Giants.

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The comments speak for themselves: "Gerry Phllbin, of the University of Buffalo, is hereby nominated for Everybody's All-American."

Philbin has accepted an invitation for the Senior Bowl game
being played in Mobile, Alabama
on January 4th. The game will be
coached by George Wilson, coach
of the Detroit Lions, and will be
televised on NBC television. The
Gerry

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pucks

and jerseys have been ordered. Despite their difficulties, the Bulls have
a competent coach in Karl Balland
enthusiasm, skill, and one victory

8:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.

coach, Dick Oppenhas said of Philbin’s

—

funds for the club aside from the
aforementioned dues is the sale of
raffle tickets
2 for a quarter
but most arc bought by the Bulls
themselves. Throughout, the seven
practices which have taken place
this year, the members have supplied thei rown padding and makeshift uniforms, although, with Ihe

NEW HOURS

UB head

hamer,
chances in the pros: “Gerry is
all football player. If he gets a
chance with the pros he will make
it, one position or another.” Here
are some comments about Philbin,
made by various sports writers,
professional scouts, and opposing
coaches

to participate without causing them
to miss afternoon and evening classes. Scrimmages cost $3(1 each, while
the fee for games at the Fort Erie
rink is $25. The only source of

.

�Friday, November 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

Spectrum Sports

■

—

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llllilllllllllilllllillllllllli

iiiiiiii

«■■■

in

Waif 'Til Next Year

Sports Circle
By ROCKY VERSACE

Gridders End Successful Season;
Lungs Are Needed At State Revenge
Although Buffalo did not equal the 1962 record of six
wins and three losses, the 1963 season can still be considered a complete success. The Bulls beat three major college teams Boston University, Villanova, and Ohio, and
tied another —Holy Cross. Such a feat has never before
taken place at Buffalo. Another item that ail students and
alumni should be proud of is the fact the UB finished
among the top twenty teams in the nation in the category
of defense against scoring. Three opponents failed to
score; four teams managed to push across one touchdown;
two teams earned two touchdowns; and only one squad,
Delaware, managed to score more than two times.
—

outclassed in any contest, which is an
Buffalo
accomplishment in itself when one considers the fact that
1963 marks only the second year for UB in major college
competition. One opposed to this statement would say thata
the Bulls’ 34-6 shellacking at the hands of Delaware is
two
prime example of being outclassed. However, the
Delaware
the
alert
with
equal,
teams were statistically
Hens capitalizing on the many breaks they received.
team
In the past, whenever Buffalo beat a major college Bulls
the win was considered an upset, indicating that the
did the
played “over their heads.” But nowhere this season
it
won.
But
lost
or
the
team
either
work “upset” appear
Vilfalo did not upset Colage, Boston University, Ohio, and
lanova; it met these teams on the same plane, fought them
toe to toe, and emerged victorious.
Reviews and previews of Buffalo football games, as
well as a season preview, appeared in many New York
City papers. Football News (an excellent newspaper except
Buffor one column written by Mr. Gar Yarbro) included
falo in its lists of weekly major college predictions and
even billed the Delaware game as one of the top ten in the
was not

—

country.

Professional scouts were seen often at Buffalo contests,
primarily to study John Stofa and Gerry Philbin. Philbin
was named to the All-East team on five occasions and in
doing so drew the acclaim of coaches, players, and scouts.
Having completed its second campaign as a major team in
such a successful manner, the University of Buffalo can now

proudly say, “We have arrived.”

The finish of the football season represents to the players the climax of three months of work; but as far as the
basketball players are concerned, the labor has just begun.
The cagers will make their debut Nov. 30 at Memorial
Auditorium against the Orangemen of Buffalo State. This
game will indeed be the proper way to start a campaign
for two reasons. First of all, it will give the Bulls a chance
to avenge the humiliating upset (and it was truly an upset)
tagged on them last year by the aroused Staters. Secondly,
there is no better way to start a season than by winning
the opener, and this Buffalo will surely do.
Buffalo students are urged to attend this contest, as
well as the remaining games. Although State probably will
not have much of what cap be termed a basketball team,
they will have their usual gallery of screamers proclaiming the supremacy of Buffalo State basketball (last year,
when completely annihilated by the University of Detroit,
one of the nation’s top basketball schools, the State paper
had the nerve to print the headline, “Detroit Upsets State. )
While UB is nonchalantly destroying the Buffalo State basketball squad, many faithful lungs will be needed to drown
out the State screamers. Come to the game and savor the
sweetness of revenge.
Adam tells of how his team is
Bufalo State basketball coach
opener
preparing for the
MacAdam
be
the
will
Howard
Bulls November 30.
the
a^unsl
tonight’s
guest
on
"UB
special
SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS" program
Remember, you’ll hear the best
coverage of UB sports news every
to be heard over WBFO-FM at
6:15 p.m. Listen to the discussion Friday (with Wally Blatter on
WBFO, your campus radio staon the basketbafl squad of UB’s
crogs town rivals, as Ooach Mac-—don.

Frosh Lose Final Game
By TOM KENJARSKI
The Freshman football team completed its season last Friday by
bowing to the. Syracuse U. frosh by
a score of 50-0. The season’s recor( j j s .
ttd

or
*

£™ y.

m

0

Navy

-m

a™,

“

UR 0
Manlius 21
UR 9
Ithaca
0
Syracuse 50
so
UB 0
UK
Syracuse
These results give the Baby Bulls
a 2 win and 4 loss season.
Commenting on the season as a
whole, head coach, Dewey Wade,
stated, “I think that any losing season is disappointing; but in so far
as some of the football played is
concerned, we showed some out-

standing ability. This ability is future ability because our boys are
constantly improving.
Evaluating
the freshman season. I believe that
we can’t go solely by the win and
loss column, but should consider
how many athletes will be competing later in their college careers.
To be a good played and to do the

school any good, you have to do
well enough in school to stick
around. In these last respects, we
have had a winning season,

Noting some of the outstanding
players, Wade commented. “I feel
we have had a lot of good talent
in this year’s freshman lineup.
There’s Tom Pomp, an excellent
end wh0 is constan,ly im P rovinS '
He has Rood felloW lmemen ln Jlm
Dunn Tony Micele, Roger Galinas,
and Mjke Fjckef Dick Dunbar has
donp an outstanding job as linebacker. As far as good backs, there
js jj m Robie, Jerry Wastek, nick
Capuana, Bill Bonner, and John

Hoechst. Although Bonner and
Hoechst have been on the injured
list most of the season, I expect
them to come on in the future.”
Coach Wade also mentioned the
outstanding lineman of the year was

Dunbar. Voted as the outstanding
back was Barksdale. These athletes
were voted on by the coaching

staff. They share this distinction
with such stars as Gerry Philbin,
Gefry Ratkewicz, and Dick Condino.

Bull of the Week Leo Ratamess,
Was An Important Man On Line
Pennsylvania made its contribu-

tior to the University

o(

Buffalo

football team by producing a spirited athlete by the name of Leo
Ratamess. Leo's hometown. Berwick, may be small, but it provided an immense 6 foot 2, 251
pound plug for the Bulls’ dyke.
Playing at tackle, Leo achieved
pigskin fame as a three year varsity starter for Berwick High
School. Leo was named honorable
mention on the Big 33 and honorable mention all state. In addition
to his gridiron fame, Leo gained

1

recognition in wrestling by reigning as district heavyweight champion.
Brawn isn't the only attribute
possessed by the physical education
major. Ratamess won the American History award in high school,
reflecting his interest in the history of the United States. Leo’s
civic responsibilities appear as he
participated as an active member

of the Key Club at Berwick High,
"The football fame of Berwick
High didn’t show much potential
during his freshman season. But
with 100r/ effort and a rigorous
summer

r

training

program,

the

stuff it takes to make a UB Bull
was produced. Every game he
plays with a full effort to win. He

&gt;s an important part of the core
of the Bulls’ line and we’ll be
glad to have him back next year,"
remarked Coach Ryan.

“The biggest thrill of my life
was beating Ohio University,” said
Ratamess. “It provided the drive
to make us feel we could lick any
team in the country.” Coach Ryan
supplemented this statement by
saying, “he did a good job against
Ohio University.”
Leo has indicated a desire to
play professional football; however,
since he is a physical education
major, he also has an interest in
coaching.

Valentic Appointed
Assistant Coach*
By ROCKY VERSACE
Ron LaRocque, head wrestling
coach, has announced that he has

appointed former wrestling great
Jack Valentic to the position of
assistant coach. A 1963 graduate
of

UB, Valentic starred in both
football and wrestling. During his

wrestling career, Valentic experienced defeat in only one match,
and as a senior, reigned as the
4-1 Tournament 167 pound champion.
LaRooquo also announced that
the first official wrestling meeting
will be held Monday, Dec. 2 at
3:30 in the varsity locker room.
The freshman team’s first meeting will ]be Wednesday, Dec. 4 at
the same place and time.
Commenting on the possibility of
equaling last season’s record of
nine wins and one defeat, coach
LaRocque said, “Last year’s record will be difficult to match,
but we will be giving the university nothing but our best in trying to equal it.” Returning in the
123 pound class will be Bob Jackson, who sported a 9-1 record last
year. Bert Ernst returns to the
heavyweight division with a 1963
record of 8-1. Edgar Poles, who
also did a line job for coach Offenhamer’s gridders, will be pushing Ernst for the heavyweight
starting post. Poles, a sophomore,
was undefeated as a freshman.
George Ehresman (130 pounds),
John Hesslink (147 pounds), and
Norm Keller, all sophomores, will
see much action as varsity members.

Intramurals
By ED RIZZO
The swimming meet was held on
Monday. Nov. 18. The team results are:
Beta Sigma Rho

49, Phi Kappa
Psi 44, Alpha Epsilon Pi 41, Sigma
Alpha Mu 29, Sigma Phi Epsilon
28. Tau Kappa Epsilon 14, Alpha
Sigma Phi 10, and Gamma Phi 6.
The individual winners for each
race

were;

Thior,
75 yd. medlay relay
Beta Sig
Lambrix, Simon
50 yd. freestyle—Doherty
Phi
Kappa Psi.
50 yd. breastroke —Bauer Inde—

-

-

-

pendent.
Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Dive—Weis
75 yd. individual medlay—AinSigma Alpha Mu.
binder
100 yd. freestyle—Hillburn Al-

-

n

-

pha Epsilon Pi.
50 yd. breastroke—Faigenbaum
Sigma Alpha

■

Mu.

100 yd. relay—Alpha Epsilon Pi:
Weis, Hillbum, Colton, Gilinski
The intramural department
would like to thank Mr. Sanford
lor running the swimming time
trials and the meet.
The campus champions in fooh
ball are the Zygotes. They defeated Alpha Sigma Phi, 14-ii.

All independent basketball
leagues are filled. All fraternities
must have their list in by Nov 25.
The following lists of teams compose the independent basketball
leagues.
Monday. 8:45: Syracuse Bombers, 7 Good Guys, Tigers 11, Alienhurst Bearcats, Jive Five, Gross ",
Hapless Hoopsters.
Monday, 9:45: Rattlers, Ravens,

*

Rams,

Tower.

Bears,

Lions,

Panthers,

Wednesday, 9:45: The Irish, k*

Men,

Gunners,

Quickies,

A®

Jaguars, George Barks.

LEO RATAMBSS

Thursday, 9:45: Cows, Zygotes,
Phantoms, Tigers, Eagles, Bisons,
—

Buffalo'* Oiairt Tackb

Lobes;

i

——

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE
PROVOCATIVE
(See Page Seven)

Eliav to Discuss Minorities
Campus Guest for the Week
Mr. Arie Eliav will visit our
campus Monday and Tuesday.

meeting and discussion is
scheduled with the faculty of the
Sociology Department. The Political
Science Club has invited Mr. Eliav
eon

During his two day stay in Buf-

to speak on: "Isreal

—

Where East

Meets West.” The Hillel Foundation will tender a reception to Mr.
Eliav on Monday at 7:30 p.m. in

the Hillel House.
Mr. Eliav came to Israel from

Russia as a youngster. He was
educated at the Herzliya Gymnasium in Tel Aviv and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
After a distinguished service with
the British Army during World War
II he fought with the Israeli Army

MR. ARIE ELIAV

during the War of Independence.
Mr. Eliav has held a number ol
government positions including that
of First Secretary of the Embassy
of Israel in Moscow. About a year
ago he served as leader of (he
Development Project in an earthquake area in northern Iran on
behalf of the Israel Government.
His studies in England under an
F.A.O. grant prepared him for the
direction of major settlement projects in Israel.
Mr. Eliav is now touring American campuses on the invitation of
the B’nai B'rith Hillel Foundations
and the United Jewish Appeal.
Students and faculty are invited
to avail themselves to the various
opportunities to listen to Mr. Eliav

and to speak with him informally
during the reception at Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd. across from Baird
Music Hall,

Publications Board Releases
New Registration Rules
The Student Publications Board
has instituted a new registration
procedure as a result of an official
resolution passed by the Board on
Nov. 6. According to Miss Karen
Miller, chairman of the Board,
"So many new newsletters and
publications have sprung up this
year because of the growing number of student organizations and a
general need of groups to better

their communications facilities,
that the Board felt it necessary to

start a registration procedure”.
All organizations and staffs must
pick up an application to register
their newsletters as soon as possible at the Student Senate Office,
Room 205 Norton, and return it

that “all such organizations should

realize that the Board is not in
any way condeming their newsletters, but it is merely trying to
keep an accurate record of their
existence and scope”.
Several meetings this year have
been spent on discussion of amendments to the constitution. These
amendments were passed by last
year’s Board at their final meeting. but it was felt that the new
members should act on them too

there when the proper information
has been filled out. The Publications Board will then review these
applications and inform the organization if their request for registration has been granted. Until
such a time, no unrecognized newsletters may be published.
One Board member, Mrs. Peter
Scholl, said about the procedure

TURTLE RACE RESULTS
$44.45 was collected lor the Muscular Distrophy Foundation at the
International Turtle Race preliminaries Monday.
D.C. Flash, the entry ofthe Theta
Chi Fraternity, placed first in the
preliminaries and will be sent to
Washington, D.C. this winter.

The

event was sponsored by the
Public Relations Committee of the

Student Senate, under the chair-

manship of Robert Finkelstein. Mr.

Finkelstein

stated, “We consider the

project a complete

success for two
first, because of the
money raised for MD; second, because it served to upgrade the university image, in particular, that
°f the Student Senate.”

reasons:

PREVIEW
(See Page

since they would go into affect
this year.
During the next semester, the
Board will announce the opening
of the positions of editor and business manager for the major campus publications in order that any
interested students may apply for
the 64-65 school year. MANUSCRIPTS, the campus poetry magazine, does not as yet have an editor or business manager for this
year. Anyone who woud like to
consider either of these positions
should contact Karen Miller at
831-2674,

Eleven)

No. 12

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 1963

VOLUME 14

Minorities Fare in the Soviet
Union.” Before a class in Ethnic
and Race Relations,,Jje will speak
on: "The Soviet Union and Its
Jews.” Several Sociology classes
will meet jointly to hear him discuss: “New Patterns of Social and
Economic Life in Isreal.” A lunch-

COLGATE

SPECTRUM

ART

falo, Mr. Eliav will fulfill a number
of commitments. Among these will
be a lecture in the International
Relations course on: “How National

MEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Tran Van Chuong to Speak
Visits UB in USA Tour
Former South Vietnamese Ambassador to the United
States, the Hon. Tran Van Chuong, who resigned his diplomatic post in Washington after eight years and publicly
broke with his daughter, Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu in protest
again the policies of the Diem regime, will speak here on
Dec. 12 in Multipurpose Room under the auspices of Convocations Committee
Dr. Chuong’s speech here is part
of a coast-to-coast tour he has
undertaken to try to explain to the
American people his opposition to
the Diem regime, which he feels
is losing the war in South Vietnam
to the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas.
Long one of the most respected
members of President Diem's regime, Dr. Chuong resigned his em
bassy post in Washington on August 22nd. following the intensification of his government's harsh
policy against the Buddists.
In a cable sent August 22nd to
President Diem, he states; "This
difficult war will be won only by
the reconciliation and sincere union
in liberty of all anti-Communist
Vietnamese forces and by the utilization of all available talents and
not by copying totalitarian regimes."
Born June 2, 1898 at Phy Ly in

Finance Committee
Adopts Policies For
Function Allotments

HON. TRAN VAN CHUONG,
Mme. Nhu's Father

what is now North Vietnam. Ambassador family and has spent most
of his life in Saigon

In 1922. he took his doctorate
in the faculty of law at the University of Paris. For many years
he was the senior Vietnamese lawyer. first Saigon and then in Hanoi,

now the capital of North Vietnam.
He was president of the Grand
Council for Economic and Financial
Interests in Indochina in 1940, and
in 1945 was made Minister ol
Foreign Affaris. Later he served as
judge in the Frcnch-Vietnamese
court, which approximates the U S.
Supreme Court.
In 1954 he was made Ministoi
of State in the then new nationalist
government of Ngo Dinh Diem, and
was appointed Ambassador to the
United States a year later. His wife,
the daughter of another leading
South Vietnamese family, who was
educated at the French Lycee in
Hanoi, served as her country's official observer at the United Nations from 1958. She resigned het
position at the UN at the same
time that her husband gave up his
embassy post.
Dr. and Mrs. Chuong still make
their home in the Washington area
near Chevy Chase. Md.

Elimination Tourneys to Begin
For ACU Competition Feb.
—

The following policies have been
adopted by the Senate Finance
Committee,

Refreshments
Only if the serving of refreshments is necessary to the functioning of the organization will
money be appropriated for that
use.
Under no crcumstances will dinners of students within an organization be paid for with student as-

sociation funds.
Money may be alloted for coffee
hours only if it is a matter of hospitality to campus visitors such'as
guest speakers.
Convention Travel
Only if attendance at the convention is necessary for carrying out
the purpose of the organization as
stated in the constitution, will money be allocated.
Convention delegates arc required to bring back to the organization reports, written or verbal
about the convention and the know-

■

ledge gained there.
The number of delegates allowed
to attend depends on the volume
of material presented at the convention and the value of the convention to the group.

By LONNIE KLIPSTEIN and
MAXINE SCHILOWITZ

Elimination tournaments in pocket billiards, bowling, three eushion
billiards, bridge, table tennis, pin-

ocle and chess will be in progress
the next six weeks. The
winner of each tournament will
represent the University of Buffalo at the Association of College
Union (ACU) Tournament in February. The elimination tournaments, sponsored by the Recreation Committee of the Union Board
are open to all fulltime, day students with a 1.0 average.
during

There will be two bowling tournOne will be made up of
a team of five men. and the other
a team of five women. The table
tennis tournaments will be divided
into men and women doubles, and
men and women singles. A separate pool tournament will be held
for women along with the men’s
tournament. The winners will receive trophies at a special banquet to be held in their honor.

aments.

The ehairman for the elimina-

tiontournaments and the ACU tournament is Maxine Schilowitz. Coordinating chairman is Chuck Martin; Sub-chairmen for the tournaments have been chosen as foil
lows; Alvin Epstein, pool: Howard Stein, billiards; Jim C. King,
table tennis; Bob Rosetyn, bowling: and Chuck Martin, pinocle.
Bridge and chess are to be run
within the club framework. Anyone interested in entering a tournament of working on a sub-committee should leave his name with
Joe I’affec at the recreation area
or in room 215 at Norton, and wait
to be contacted.
The University of Buffalo will be
host to the ACU tournament the

weekend pf

George Washington's

birthday/The ReeVeation Committee

is planning to expand the
Union's activities for that weekend
in older to provide added entertainment and sufficient social activity for the participants of the

tournaments.

National Dues
Dues will be advocated in every
instance where it is felt that it
benefits the organization as a
whole.

i

In every instance, several criteria were used in determining the
overall worth of the organization as
far as appropriations were recom-

mended.

How organized was the group?
The extent and soundness of
the activities planned by the group.
c) What, if anything did the organization add to the campus as
a whole.
d» Number of members in the
a)

b)

organization.

If there are any questions, please
direct them to Allen Horowitz, senate treasurer and finance committee chairman in the senate office

at Norton Union.

AL KASTCM, M M- Cfcri—

'

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Seminars Planned:
Emmons to Speak
Today in Parker

Ulysses' Recording Praised
Hughes of UB, Collaborator
"

;

Two pre-doctoral candidates in the Department of
English have collaborated on the production of two unique
record albums for Folkway Records. Mr. Zack R. Bowen,
assistant professor of English at State University College at
Fredonia and Mr. Alan Hughes, lecturer in English at State
University at Buffalo, recently completed albums entitled
“Calypso” and “Lotus Eaters” which are each chapters from

■

James Joyce's famed novel, "Ulysses."
The recordings were subsidized
by the Research Foundation
of
State University of New York which
awarded Professor Bowen a series
of grants in aid and summer research fellowships to complete the

I«|B|

.’¥s3TN

•')

■

■
f-

projects. The novel “Ulysses" is
generally regarded us one of the
most difficult lxx)ks to interpert
which was ever written in the English language because the author
uses the stream of consciousness
technique. What first appears to
be an erratic and disjointed hodgepodge of thought fragments can be
unraveled as partially the thoughts
of Leopold Bloom, the leading
character, and partially the third
person narration. One aid the record offers the reader is to clearly

yi
JPy

t

/'fa v
'

1

arfB.,'j
mH"
. \

iC

4
■ .■M’

rj:

■&gt;,

i

separate these identities.
A second clarifying factor in the
records is based upon some past
research which revealed that many
of
the previously unexplained
thought .fragments in the mind of
the hero were actually snatches
of songs or operas. Mr. Bowen has
added to the oral reading of Ihe
text, helping to clarify the authors
intention by referring to Ihe musical score from which Joyce took
his written material; The principal
parts in the works are read by
Mr. Hughes who portrays both
Bloom and J. Tyler Dunn, the nar-

-

"tf

'

”€\

■

&gt;-

MAP OF DUBLIN,
Scene of Ulysses

Theatre Arts magazine called the
".

.

.

an absorbing and un-

usual type of music,” and termed
Mr. Hughes’ interpolation of Leo-

pold Bloom “magnificent.” It was

placed, by the James Joyce Society. on permanent exhibit at the
Joyce Martello Tower Museum in
Dublin and is being used by Japanese scholars in a translation of
"Ulysses" into Japanese.
The chorus heard in Ihe recording

rator.

The firsl album in the series was
the "Lestrygonains" chapter, which
has achieved a considerable degree
of critical and scholarly acclaim.

consisted of members of the Fredonia College Festival Chorus under
Ihe direction of Richard Paige.

Mr. Ferencz
—

20'

(

Open Mon. Thru Fri. Nights

DISCOUNT TO U.B. GIRLS WITH I D, CARD
ON MON., TUES. &amp; WEDS.

ntvflMon*

a

1

It’s
Invisible,
man!

1

Styling

2903 Sheridan Drive or Eggert
let.: 835-8700*01
836-9827
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK

Paul Emmons, technical director
of the hydro-skimmer program at
Bell, will speak at today's session,
Mr, Emmons has the "overall responsibility for the technical aspects of the design, manufacture
and test program of SKMR-1.
T, Desmond Earl, chief of ground
effects machine technology at Bell,

g

ii

album

Building.

will speak at next Friday's seminar. Before coming to Bell Mr. Earl
was with DeHavilland Aircraft
Company in England for ten years;
five years on structural design and
five years as an aerodynamicist
specializing in aircraft performance and economics.

I

&gt;

Two seminars on Ground Effects
Machines will be co-sponsored by
the Bell Aerosystems Company and
the School of Engineering today
and next Friday at 5:00 p.m. in
Room 104, Parker Engineering

I

.

W -v&gt; A.’-'t

'

Friday, November 15, 1963

J

t

It’s incredible, incomparable, infallible! Code 10 for men, the new
kind of hairdressing from Colgate-Palmolive, The new invisible way
to groom a man’s hair all day. Non-greasy Code 10 disappears in your
hair, gives it the clean, manly look that inflames women, infuriates
inferior men. Be in.

.1 jP*
(reshen

!&lt;"%,

your

xt
-

i

shirt
supply

J

i

From

$5.00

This is the

moment to freshen up your shirt
while
we feature a special price
drawer.
on our best sellers. All collar styles, French
. .

or barrel cuff treatments.

Campus Corner
Opposite The University
Daily It i
-

-

Mon., Thurs., Fri.-1«

TF 2-3221
-

»

COLLEGE PIZZERIA "GOOD EATING
PIZZA IS OUR BUSINESS—NOT OUR SIDELINE

PIZZA

DELIVERY
tf 2-9331

�Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

4 Visiting Asian Professors
To Lecture at UB This Year
By RONNIE BROMBERG

The University of Buffalo is headquarters for a program initiated
to bring distinguished Asian professors to lecture at American universities. Dr. B.H. Glenn, director
of the “Visiting Asian Professors
Project,” has planned to have four
lecturers at UB this year.
Dr. Karunaratne, the first lecturer, has already visited the University, He is a professor of Buddist civilization from Ceylon. Pre;ently at UB is Mr. Pathak from
ndia,
political
aprofessor of
cicnce. Mr. Wu from China and
dr. Chu from Korea, professors
if government and literature reipeetiyely, will come to this school

text semester.

Each of these noteworthy men
ill lecture in a graduate course—urvey of Asian Clutures
which
wets Thursdays at 4:20. They will
Iso lecture in other courses or
arty clubs or groups upon ■ in-

i

—

itatjon.

\

Jr. Karunaratnc, senior lecturer
the University of Ceylon, reived his doctorate at the Uni'■rsity of London, He has written
lany publications such as "The
oint-Four Program," "Concepts ol

reedom and Responsibility in Budhism" and “Buddhism and SocialMr. Pathak is a Visiting Lecturer
and Research Scholar. He studied

history, politics and international

relations at the Universities of Bombay and Chicago, respectively. At
present/ he is a Reader at the
School of Social Science, Gujarat
University, India. Mr. Pathak’s

writings include three textbooks
plus a booklet on human rights.
He plans to lecture on "Hindu Political Thought and Institutions” and
is doing a research project on
"Asian and African Regionalism”
with special reference to the United

President's Dinner
To Recognize Honor
Students Thursday

Mr. Wu, legislator, lawyer and
professor, has studied law at National Peking University, the University of Paris, and Columbia University and has been a professor
of various subjects Concerned with
law and government since 1932.
He has written four principal (rublications, such as "The Chinese
Governmental System” and “Principles of Chinese Constitutional Law.”
Mr. Chu, who is "one of Korea’s

New

of 2,8 average or higher from a
possible 3.0 during the second semester of, the 62-63 academic year
will be honored at this month's affair.

is Professor of Literature at Kyung-

Communist League.
Six other universities. Farleigh
Dickinson, Bradley, Rhode Island,
Eastern Illinois and Missouri are
also part of this program of bringing Asian professors to American
universities. It is supported by the
U.S. Department of State, Division
of Cultural Affairs, the Fulbright
Program and the Asia Foundation.
Dr. Glenn, director of this program. feels that, "for the first
time American universities are getting an opportunity to have professors from Asian universities to
lecture to the students about their
cultures.”

for academic
come in the form

recognition

achievement will
of a dinner with President Clifford
C. Furnas acting as host.
The first President's Dinner for
undergraduate honor students will
be held Thursday, in Norton Hall.
It is scheduled to become a semiannual affair.
Students who attained an average

best-known and regarded writers.”

hee University, and ho has studied
at Shanghai and Stanford Universities. He has also written many
novels and short stories. One ol
his works, "My Mother and the
’oomer,
was made into a motion picture in 1961, which received
the IX Asian Film Festival Award
as best motion picture of the year.
During World War II, Mr. Chu
was imprisoned by the Japanese
occupation and later became an
active participant in the exiled
Korean government. At present,
this man is an International Officer of the Asian People’s Anti-

PAGE THREE

Students invited to the dinner
are: Sally A. Finch, Robert M,
Hardies, Suzan

Kardaman, Aphrodite Kastas, Joseph J. Lang, Ronald Leatherbarrow, Douglas A,
MacLeod, Hope B. McDonnell, Arthur L. Nisbct, Carolyn M. Osborne, Joan E. Patrie, James M.
Riley, Linda J. Rosenblum, Ralph
T. Schudcr, Paul S, Schulmari. Dianne E. Spindler, Robert W. Sterling, James J. Woeppel, Stephen J.
Dorfman, Douglas L. Marcussen,
Burton Notarius, Joseph V. Parlato, Jr., Esther Brummer, Corinne E. Dionne, Sandra Slrome,
George W. Neuner, Robert L. Potter, Prabodh L. Shah, Deirdre G.
Doran. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Kaiser,
Muriel A. Pinches, Hope L. Jolley.
Arlinc L. Engel,

Roberta

Varsity, Novice Debaters
Participate in Tournaments
Both the novice and the varsity
divisions participated in intercollegiate tournaments last week-end.
A novice team attended the Greater Cleveland Forensic Association
Tournament at Baldwin Wallace
College, Two varsity units attended the second annual Rufus King
Debate Tournament at Queens

College.

The

Baldwin Wallace

Tourna-

ment was the first intercollegiate
experience for most of the debaters
who attended. They were: Carol

Marcus. Robert

Gismondi, Neal

Felsinger, and Richard Nemiroff.

Mr.
bate

Terry Ostermeier,

novice de-

coach, accompanied the
group. The debaters won decisions

from Oberlin College and John Carroll University. Other teams they
met included University of Pittsburgh and Western Reserve University.

Eight varsity debaters attended
the Queens College Tournament.
Fhe two affirmative teams wore
Linda Leventhal and Robert Wiliams, and Harriet Heitlinger and
Russo! I Goldberg. The negative

were Carol Zeller and Gerald Catanzaro, and Betsy Nordstrom and Andre Namenck. Mr.
Michael Prosser of the Drama and
Speech Dept, coached the group
in New York City. The affirmative
teams

team of Miss Heitlinger and Mr.
Goldberg and, the negative team
of Miss Zeller and Mr. Catanzaro
each had a record of three wins
and one loss. Although trophies
were awarded only for the first
three units, our unit with a record
of six wins and two losses would
have tied for sixth place out of
forty-six schools in the tournament.
Our debaters won decisions from
many of the top teams of the
tournament. They include: United
States Military Academy at West
Point. Fordham University. University of Scranton, Colby College.
United, States Merchant Marino
Academy at Kings Point, Brooklyn
College and Mt. Saint Vincent Col-

The debaters also met three
of the top four teams of the tournament
Seton Hall. University of
Providence, and Leihgh Universitylege.

—

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week

S. Elngel,

Bennett M. Epstein, Sheila E, Felber, James Gapinski, Joy G. Granite, Alan Holman. Dale C. Klein-

&amp;

Evenings and Saturday

Requirements: Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instruction*

man, Ralph H. Larson, Martin M.
Malawer, Milton D. Marks, Jr.,
Mary K. McDonald, Clifford R.
Miller. Ruth R. Munk, Adrienne B.
Pincus, Thomas E. Platek, Ross
Runfola, William R. Slater, Richard H. Thier, Dona R. Thurston.
Mary B. Trich and Carol Wilmers.

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

i

Nations.
Mr. Pathak is also taking part in
radio program on \VBFO. “Faulty Viewpoint."

w

hot toput

ttords
in pour

These new Olivetti-Underwood typewriters are really a great buy, and what a wonderful Christmas
gift. You can rent them for $5.00 a month or $12.00 for three months with a full option to buy, plus

of your student discount. You can also buy them with 10% or your old
typewriter as down payment. Best of all, look at all the extras, you get; a carrying case, cleaning
kit, eraser kit, dust cover, carbon and paper holder, full year guarantee, a year's supply of ribbons
and a dictionary all FREE with the purchase of your new Olivetti-Underwood. P.S. Olivettiyou can take advantage

Underwood typewriters

are

University Bookstore
LETTEHA 22

able

typewriter.

available with International keyboards. See them now at the
.

.

The Olivetti-Underwood

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On

Uani/ms.

lightweight port

**

MISS DIANE SCHOLL
A Sophomore at the State
University of New York at Buffalo and the Olivetti-Underwood
...

�The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14, N. Y. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving,

Christmas, and

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
John Kowal

-

Managing Editor
News Editor
Feature Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Editorial Advisor

Martin Kriegel
Harriet Heitlinger
Lawrence Frenkel
Rocky Versace
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

Easter.

Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulation Mgr.
Office Manager
Financial Advisor

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessinger
Karen Sanford
Thomas Haenle, Jr.

Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Levenfhal, Alan Newman,
Allan Scholom, Mike Sulfanik, Vic Menza, Rena Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie BromtfFrg,
Lotsof, Pat Jones, Nancy Blecker, Larry Frankie, Nancy Laurien, Trudy Stern,
Jean Lancaster, Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa Lynn Brofhman, Ray Crawford,
Jane Sommer, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor, Karen Chicko, Christine Cunningham,
Lillian Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orsxulak, Helen Bykoff, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Olin,
Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng, Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron, Gerri Goldberg, Ed Rizzo,
Terry Sweeney, Tom Kujarski, Dave Hampton, Don Castle, Linda Wachner, Suzanne
Peugot. Nancy Schultz, Ronnie Wilson, Alice Ostrander, Lonnie Klipstein, Saralee
RiJbensfein, Douglas Gelia, Mary Ann Warfenburg

General Staff: Vicki

Charles

Photography Staff; Joel Havens, Pamela Reid

second class matter February 9, 1961, at the Post
Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Acfor mailing at a special rale of postage provided for in
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 9, 1951.
Entered as

Office

at

cepfance

Subscription

'JmSBOaHk
PfltS&amp;

$3.00 per year,

Affairs
By LAWRENCE D.

ARNOLD S. MAZUR
Business Manager

circulation

9000.

Represented for national advertising by National Advertising
Service; Inc.,' 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Editorials
University and Virginity
—Two Institutions
There is presently a conflict at Harvard which is receiving national press coverage and causing considerable comment. Briefly, the controversy arose over an article in the
Harvard Crimson which reported that the Dean of students
was considering diminishing the number of hours co-eds
may visit men’s dormitory rooms. (Girls may visit the
boys’ rooms 35 hours weekly and, at Radcliffe, boys can do
the same 25 hours weekly), A few weeks later, John Monro, Dean of Harvard College, explained the rationale behind
the possible cutback, stating: “We have been badly shaken
up recently by some severe violations of our rules of decent standards of behavior . . . Trouble has arisen because
what once was considered a pleasant privelege has now,
for a growing number , . . come to be considered a license
to use college rooms for wild parties or for sexual intercourse.”
The Spectrum does not intend to pontificate on morality, which is essentially of a private nature. And, of course,
the Harvard problem has been blown out of all proportion,
with studies citing various percentages concerning virginity at Radcliffe and the local Hearst press headlining “Harvard Bares Wild Parlies."
However, there is something in the controversy which
relates to our own campus. This is because Tower did have
an open-house the past month and, the campus may someday initiate a regular visiting program within the dormitory
corridors.

The Nov. 3 open-house, for one thing, could just as well
never have happened. The atmosphere was carnival-like
and most visitors were simple snoopers gaping at the “other half” of the campus as if the rooms were cages, One
rule did not allow a resident to be in his room, even alone,
unless his door was open. To call that restrictive is a gross
understatement. More criticisms could be lodged, but it is
unnecessary to do so.
The point is that Tower’s open-house was not at all
what it should have been. To have another, along with the
"party” kit of cider and dance band, would make the bonetossed-to-residence students absurd.
If the parietal regulations ever do change, and a regular visiting program is initiated, the University should relinquish any responsibility to maintain a virginal institution (as if such a responsibility is valid at all). It is impossible to impose a standard of morality or enforce one; for
then there is no longer a moral consideration. Besides,
the notion that restrictive regulations can prevent sexual
acts is but a delusion in the day of automobiles, motels, etc.

If there is to be any mixing of the sexes in the future,
in the residence halls, let it be free. Let doors be open and
doors be closed; no matter who or how many persons are
in any room. Hours may be regulated to allow for floor
privacy, and study, for the University is certainly not a
resort hotel. But let us not be trapped by tenuous moral
standards which can only he cnmherawif&gt;^and-d«**^w«^

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Campus
FRENKEL

Last week, impartial and effective student government on this
campus Suffered a setback. This
setback is revealed when one studies the roster of those students
selected to fill the eight seats on
the lower court of the Student
Judiciary. The students selected
already hold positions of consid'
erable responsibility.
For example, Howard Gondree,
a student who has been very active
in Senate affairs for the last two
years, and presently holds an important post on the Publications
Board was selected. Robert Pacholski, Chairman of the strategic
Senate Elections Committee, was
also named to the lower court.

Others with important legislative posts include: Gary Lighter,
NSA Coordinator. Tom Kobus, a
loader of the Campus Alliance
Party, and co-chairman of the
Construction Revisions Committee,
and Susan Cherry, secretary of the
Student Activities Committee. For
effective student government it is
necessary to refrain from centralizing power in the hands of a few.

The merits of those students elevated to the Judiciary are not be-

ing questioned.

But- it would be better if the
lessons of our own national government with its system of checks

and balances were followed. For
impartial government it is necessary to keep the legislative and
judicial areas separate.
What has been done this year
cannot be undone. However, possibly by studying the present selection system, such an error can
be avoided in the future. Joan Wilkins, Chief Justice of the Student
Judiciary, and the three other Justices were voted the right and privilege of selecting eight students
to make up a lower court. Approximately fifteen applications were
received from juniors and seniors
for the positions. Each of these
students were interviewed by Joan and one or two other Judiciary
members. Then, at last week's
meeting of the Senate, the eight
students nominated by the Judiciary won quick approval.
Superficially this mode of selection seems quite fair. It has, however, several important weaknesses. Though the Judiciary members
stated to the candidates that there
were no special requirements, they
then proceeded to seek students
with certain ambiguous capabilities
that would make them fit for the
job. All of this was done in one
ten minute interview.
Two suggestions might correct
Ihi' prevailing situation. First, why
not select the eight members of
the lower court in the same manner that the four other justices
arc selected. This has resulted in
competent Justices in the past, this
year’s included. Justices should represent the whole student body and
not one small select group that
happens to be in power. Secondlythe selection of independents who
hold no direct legislative or Senate committee posts should be encouraged. If it is feared that
this type of student will prove
incapable, then appoint them for
a probationary period of one
month; after which time, their appointments can be confirmed or
denied for just cause.

UC Placement
University College students whose
last names begin with letters designated below will see their advisers on the following days.
Nov. 18 to 26
A&amp;B
Dec. 2 to 6
K &amp;L
Dec. 9 to 13
F, W, Z.
Dec. 16, to 20
M. J
Students will make an appointment with the receptionist in Deifendorf 114 at least one week in

advance of the above scheduled

times. Students who do not make

their appointments at the scheduled
time will have to see their advisers during examination time in
January and then be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day. ’

GUEST EDITORIAL
The

following is a guest editorial submitted to THE SPECTRUM by
Ted Landphair, Editor of the Ohio University newspaper.

In essence, our "campus leaders” are little more than studenl
representatives with high-sounding
titles. No more than a fourth o(
the student population even knows
the names of the presidents of Student Cabinet, Interfratemity Council and Panhellenic Council, let
alone understand or care to under
stand the workings of these organ-

By TED LANDPHAIR
The word "apathy” may not
creep into many conversations at
Buffalo, but it is engrained early
in the Ohio University student's vocabulary. One campus organization or the other is forever blaming lack of spirit or poor attendance on apathy. When the fans
don’t cheer, when the students
don’t vote, when convocations are
poorly attended, Demon Apathy is
blamed. The governing student or-

ganization (Student Cabinet) has
become so distraught over the
subject that is has created an
official body- an Apathy Committee, to study the problem.
Certainly Buffalo, like Ohio a
state institution, is also attended
by its share of "collegiate” antiintellectuals who just cannot see
sacrificing a date night to hear
a stimulating speaker. Certainly
Buffalo fans are as dormant as
Bobcat rooters when the Bulls
play substandard ball or meet an
inferior team.
Fet the reasons behind the reasons for apathy may not be the
same at Buffalo, At Ohio, student
government is virtually powerless,
in that any major decision it
makes is subject to University approval. Some of the significant issues which student government has
tackled in recent years include: attempting to get students unlimited
milk in cafeterias, rewriting the
Student Cabinet constitution, holding a leadershp isymposium, raising funds to send our Homecoming
Queen to the Sun Bowl, and revising sorority rush. What student
government HAS done is save the
University thousands of dollars it
would otherwise be forced to spend
planning special events and big

weekends.

izations.

t

Apathy seems to be an incurable
campus malignancy. Enough people have

tried shock treatments

to the editor, speeches
editorials, posters) and failed to
dispel the lethargy. Even gradual
therapy has failed. Several leader
ship position incumbents work and
work hard yet to accomplish noth
ing. Prestige is the only reward of
(letters

office.

What is most unsettling is thal
the situation looks worse for the

future. As the University becomes
more and more restrictive in its
admissions policy, the intelligence
level of its students is bound to
rise. More intelligent students will
be even less likely to waste their
time with students government
Fewer and fewer will even attend
football games, let alone work up
to' a frenzy oVer a first and ten
(do it again). We on the POST
don't get very upset over the apathetic state of the University. We
are consoled to think that the pro
blem is he same at very instilu
tion. We are, in short, convince
that apathy is a fact of universitj
life. College is the place for individual thinking and decisions. If
a student does not feel like cheer
ing, voting, or attending, that is
his right. It is up to the group
seeking cheers, votes or attendanc e
to earn student support.
We wouldn't have it any 'other
way.
!

SPECTRUM

THE

OaO

Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

ACU Convention in Syracuse
Attended by Board Members
By NANCY LAURIEN
The opportunity to air grievences, analyze problems and exchange ideas involved in the operation of student activities and centers was given to the delegates
present at he regional convention
of
the Association of College
Unions which met in Syracuse the
second and third of this month.
The representative group from UB
(Union Board President Rachael
Stefonetti, and Union Board commitee chairmen Brent Steele, Jo-

anne Osypiewski,—Maxine Schilowitz,

Mike Cohen,

Jerry

Catan-

zaro, George Orlando and La
Sievenpiperl found that studen
apathy in regard to campus affair
and activities is not a problen
unique to this campus, but rathe
one of major importance at man;
other colleges and universities h

this region. The views' and solu
tions discovered at the conferenci
this problem will bo revealed am
discussed at an open coffee' hou
sponsored by the Union Board h
the near future. The time and |o
cation of the event will be publish
ed in the next -issue-et-the-Spec

trum.

‘

�By BOB MILCH

football in front o’ Tower Dorm
for

the benefit

o’ the girls

the

other day, an’ on this one play
ah made the mistake o’ tryin' to
catch the ball with mah nose. So
ah had to go to the clinic to get
the blood stopped an’ mah teeth
replaced.
The first place ah went was to
the Health Science buildin’, ‘cause
ah figured that with a name like
that, that must be where they do
first aid. But it weren’t, so ah went
to the candy counter at Norton an’
waited in line an' bled on the floor
till mah turn came an’ then the
feller told me where to go.
So ah went down to the health
services place. There were a lady
sittin’ behind the desk eatin’ a
thicken leg, an’ there were a sign
in front o' her what said everybody were out to lunch an’ wouldn’t
be back'’till one. Unfortunately, it
were only five to one, so ah waited
in front o’ the desk while she finished. Then, when the bells were

winished ringin’ at one, she looked
at me an’ smiled “Can we help
you?” (At this point ah wasn’t sure
either.),

"Yes, ma’am. As soon as you
wipe your fingers, maybe you ail’d
be so kind as to do somethin’
bout mah face?”
"Certainly. Just hold this under
your tongue.”
So ah sat there with this thermometer under mah tongue. While
ah was sittin’ there, she took out
a chart an’ said.
"While we’re waiting, let me
get some information about you.
What’s your name?”

“Ongle Splork," ah said as best

ah could.
"That’s an unusual name, Mr.
Splork. Are you an American?”
“Un huh.”
"Really? O well, let me get your

medical history. Have you ever
had any of the following diseases:
measels, mumps, nephritis, a cold'
or jungle rot?"
Ah shook mah head yes.
"Well, that's too bad. Now, Mr.
Splork, if you’ll just give me the
following information: your blood
type, your draft card number, your
social security, your birth certificate, the name of your nearest
living relative, and your area code,
we can get you into a waiting
room.”
Well, ah don’t know how she expected me to say any more, what
with the dumb thermometer still
in mah mouth, so ah took it out an'
handed it to her an’ started lookin'
through mah wallet. But before ah

could tell her anythin' she said,
"Why, Mr, Splork! Your temperature is 99.4. Here, you lie down
right here while I call the stretcher
bearers to get you overto the infirmary. You’re a very sick boy!”
So when we got to the infirmary
they give me a towel to wipe the
blood off’n mah face, long as it
had stopped by itself already, an’
liad ah should got the holes in mah
teeth fixed, an’ put me to bed.
One o’ the fellers ah'd been playin’
football with stopped by later in
the night to give me back mah
teeth, which he had in a jar. But
ah ain’t allowed no visitors, so he
said he’d save ’em for me an’ give
’em to me when ah get out in two
weeks.
Your lovin’ son,
Jethro

Youth Organizes Movement
For Goldwater as President
The Spectrum receives press releases from many and diverse organizations, interest groups and charities. All of these cannot possibly be
published. The following is one such release. It is published here because certain students may be interested in participating In next year’s
election activities and might otherwise have no means to contact the proper
persons involved. We will continue to publish political releases which
directly relate to college students.

James Harff,

a student at

North
western University in Evanston
Illinois, has been named National
Chairman of Youth for Goldwater.
an organization of college and high
school students who will campaign
for Goldwater for President.
Mr. Peter O'Donnell. Jr., chairman of the National Draft Goldivater Committee, made the announcement, and said the Youth foi
Goldwater movement will be coor-

dinated with the Draft Goldwatci
Committee throughout the nation.
Harff is immediate past chairman
of the College Service Committee o)
the Young Republican National
Federation. His home is Sheboygan. Wisconsin, where he has been
active on behalf of local Republi-

an candidates. He is majoring in
"irnalism and political science a&gt;
Northwestern, now in his final semester.
Harff will be assisted by Carol
Dawson Bauman, executive secreOry of Youth
for Goldwater,
i Donnell said. Mrs. Bauman Wat

executive

secretary

of

College

Youth for Nixon-Lodge in the 1960
campaign. She was national cochairman of the college Young Re

publicans from 1959-1961. A graduate of Dunbarton College in Washington, D. C., her home is in Easton. Maryland.
Harff said that Youth for Gold
water is already at work setting up
state organizations and campus
clubs, with a goal of a Ybuth foi
Goldwater dub in every college and
high school in all 50 states and the

District of Columbia.
“A great percentage of the grass
roots support for Goldwater for
President comes from college and
high school students,” said Harff.
“I believe they can be mobilized to
give Goldwater an enthusiastic,

youthful campaign organization to
secure the Republican nomination
for Goldwater and to work for his
election m November, 1964.”
Students who wish to contact the

Youth For Goldwater movement,
should address their correspondence to P.O. Box 1964, Washington.
D. C.

McCoach Bequest
A bequest of $45,210.13 from the
estate of William Harris McCoach
has been received by State Uni-

versity of New York at Buffalo’
Dr. Claude E. Puffer, Vice-President for Business Affairs, announced today.
The gift, designated as the "Dr.
William H. McCoach Fund,” will
be used to assist senior class students in the School of Pharmacy
as provided for in Dr. McCoach’s
will. A similar bequest was made
to the University of Texas for the
education of medical students.
Dr. McCoach, who was born in
1883 and died in November 1949,
was a native Buffalonian and an
alumnus of the former University
of Buffalo. He completed his degree requirements in th University’s School of Pharmacy in 1802
and received his Bachelor of Pharmacy degree in 1904 when he attained his twenty-first birthday.
He went on to receive the Doctor
of Osteopathy degree from the
American School of Osteopathy,
Kirksville, Missouri, in 1907 and
the M.D. from the Chicago College
of Medicine and Surgery in 1912.
A member of Phi Chi medical fraternity, and the Knights of Pythias,
he practiced briefly in Florida, but
spent the greater part of his career in San Antonio, Texas, From
1938 until the lime of his death,
he made annual summer visits to
relatives in Buffalo. His sister- Mrs,
Harry Holman, resides at 186 W.
Chippewa in Buffalo.

Foss Concert
Sunday, The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction
of Lukas Foss will present the
world premiere of a significant
work by noted American composer, David Diamond, present Slee
Professor at UB. The work, "This
Sacred Ground," was commissioned by The Buffalo Evening News
to commemorate the centennial of
Abraham Lincoln's famed "Gettysburg AddressA Tuesday concert
will be performed, exactly 100
years to the day after Lincoln delivered his moving eulogy on the
battlefield at Gettysburg
Nov. 19, 1863.
"This Sacred Ground," composed for solo voice, chorus, and orchestra will be performed by bari
tone George Hoffman, The Buffalo
Schola Cantorum, and The St.
Paul’s Cathedral Boy Choir.
To set the mood and as a prelude to the Diamond premiere performance, the Cornell will open

with two works by Beethoven: his
moving Symphony No. 3, "The E-

roica" and the

stirring "Welling-

ton's Victory." The military tone
of the program will' be further enhanced by Benjamin Brittens
"Ballad of Heroes" first performed in the war-torn Britain of 1939.
Tenor soloist for this work will
be Andre Montal.
Among many distinguished members of the premiere audience will
be composer David Diamond himand representatives from
self,
New York's major newspapers.

NOV. 18-19—NEW YORK
TELEPHONE COMPANY
Seeking EE. ME. IE, Math, Physics, Engineering Science. CE,
stration, Accounting and Econom-

ic majors.
NOV. 18-19-WESTERN

ELECTRIC COMPANY
Socking EE, ME, IE, Math, Business Administration and Liberal
Arts majors.

NOV.

18-19—AMERICAN

PHONE

■| 8 yce Curry plays the role of Sister Bessie Rite, and Francis Walsh is
°ude Lester in the Heather Production of "Tobacco Road," to be presented
at the Richford Hotel, beginning Wednesday.

By VICTOR MENZA
into a vicious animal when (ate
does you a bad turn. Your innocent vanity is fired hotter than
that of the depraved when you
learn that the skiing trip on which
you intended, to be so beautiful was
cancelled. How quickly you sour
when someone sees things about
you. If you're so blithe, why arc
you wincing now instead of laughing? For all of the white, white

Why don't you just go home directly after school or take a walk
to some hidden comer of the campus and mine profundities? Why
do you insist on condescending to
the Rathskellar at every available
moment in order to broadcast your
indomitable intensity? You walk
in wearing all the signals of noxious achievements, rangin from a
head bowed by the weight of some
existential dilemma to immune
eyes fixed on some alleged spot
on the wall. Some days you sit
down at my table and tell me that
you're about to “penetrate the
abyss between knowledge and
love" or that "LSD may be the
answer". But you have no right
to talk of answers because you
haven't admitted
tions.

the real

crammed into your pink
there still remains something dishonest about you. Forgive
me; I relent, I should have learned by this time that you have no
teeth

mouth,

memory, but only the nostalgic future. Your myopia is unworthy of

blame.

And you, child of another ago.
with your library book on the Italian Renaissance. And you who said
just a moment ago “there will be
time to wonder”. And you, the

ques-

But you ramble on about the redeeming powers of mysticism when
the closest you come to anything
mystic is eating lunch with a
graduate student from India, No.
I take it all back. It's not you.
You're doing the best you can; you

ox's brother, who likes his first
three cups of coffee black. And,
you, who enslaved yourself to good
for mand a three-piece smile. Or
you with the sensitive eyes and
the hair pulled back in a bun. And
me.

may know somethin! others don't
Maybe someone or something happened to you to make you question
beyond faces and first things. No,
it's not you because you've been
cursed.

.

I've been here for three hours
and I’ve seen you all. My cigarettes have begun to taste like gun
metal, my nose is loo dry to
breathe through, and the grape
drink no longer sOolhes anything.
If it doesn't happen in another

Or is it you with the blond
hair and blue eyes? When you walk
into the Rathskellar you're always

fifteen minutes. I'll have to wail

until Monday. I used to he able
to say "I'm lonely ”, "your'e lonely”. Somewhere grown over with
coy ornaments and pretenses I
forgot how. I forgot that there isn't
world and time enough.

either on your way or just returninf. Your Neanderthal happiness ‘is
so transient- so fragile. Have I told
you an injustice by likening you
to a primate? I’ve seen you recoil

People and Politics
By RUSSELL

I have heard il said that if our
ambitious Governor does not get

the presidential nomination, offtrack betting will be legalized.
How unfair this would he to Papal
bingo, private card games, Navada commutors, and to laissezfaire economics. The government's
share of the proceeds would make
belting on the ponies financial suicide, old institutions such as the
floating crap game would subject
to income tax evasion, and odds,
after taxes, would force gamblers
to take courses in mathematics
at their own expense.

England has legalized gambling.
The guilt associated with games

of chance has been lessened and
an outlet for those burdened with
loo much spare time has been
provided. But the sport of kings,
along with all the others- has lost
exclusiveness.
its privacy and
Since practically everyone gambles, men of good breeding and

PANZICA

high estate are now making their
wagers next to commoners. Hence,
legalized gaming is far more

than

creeping

socialism.

The thrills of exchanging money
and haggling have been stifled by
checks, charge accounts. I.O.U.'s,
and fixed prices, which are, in
most cases, taken care of unconsciously. There will be more raffles, football pools, and lotteries
available at obsolete post offices,
theatres, and churches to feed the
instinct.

Gambling will become such a respectable norm that, except for a

few old timers, the younger generations will indulge their whole
pay checks and then some, knowing that they are paying for their
food, housing, education, medical
care, and automobiles. Evening
will wear an ubiquitous neon of
lucky numbers and sleep will
abound with jack pot dreams.

Placement Service Announces Opportunitiesfor Grads
Liberal Arts, Business Admini-

%

Opinion and Conviction

To Aid Pharmacy

1

The Circus
Dear Ma’n Pa,
A bunch o’ us fellers was playin

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 15, 1963

&amp;

TELE
TELEGRAPH CO.

Seeking Engineering, Math, Physics, Business Administration and
Liberal Arts majors.

nov.
&amp;

is— Arthur andersen

COMPANY

Seeking Accounting majors

NOV. 20—TOUCHE. ROSS,

BAILEY

&amp;

SMART

Seeking Accounting majors.

NOV. 20—VITRO LABORATORIES
Seeking Math. Physics, EE and
ME majors.
NOV. 20—BENDIX ECLIPSE-

PIONEER DIVISION
Seeking EE and ME majors.
NOV. 20—THE TRANE COMPANY
Seeking CE, IE, ME. and CH E.

majors.

NOV. 21—CORNING GLASS
WORKS

Seeking MB:, EE, CH E . ES.
Physics and Chemistry majors.
NOV. 21—CHICAGO PNEUMATIC
TOOL CO.
Seeking

ME,

IE,

EE and CE

majors

NOV. 21-MOORE PRODUCTS a).
OF PHILADELPHIA
Seeking EE, IE. ME and CHE.
majors

NOV. 21—YWCA
Seeking Women Liberal Arts
majors

NOV. 22-HOOKER CHEMICAL
CORPORATION
Seeking EE, ME and CH E majors. Also Chemistry candidates
;
at all degree levels.

�Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Newman Club Sponsors
Welfare Family in City
By DOUGLAS GELIA

‘Charity', which usually means ‘open your pocketbook
and give’, has been given a new connotation by UB’S Newman
Club organization. As pafrt of the Catholic Action Program,
which seeks layman participation in religious tasks, the Newman Club has ‘adopted - an area Negro family.
Through guidance from priests at Saint Nicholas’ Roman
Catholic Church here in Buffalo, this welfare supported family, consisting of a conscientious mother and eight children
ranging from age three months to eleven years, has been
taken in the Newman Club fold, i

The family, which cannot be
named because their welfare status might be upset by the assistance Newman Club is rendering
it, is in frequent contact with student members of Newman Club.
Miss Connie Carter, Religious
Vice President, and Miss Mary Ann
Fowler, her assistant, are direct-

1 j

the project. Food, clothing,
toys .and most important, personal
attention is cheerfully given to the
ing

-

family.

An important project recently
facing Miss Carter and Miss Fowler has been the seieetion ot godparents for the Christening of (wo
of the children.

1

I-argely responsible for initialing
this adoption was the mother o(
this family, desiring to keep I tie
family together and having no other. means to manage it, who came
to Saint Nicholas’ for help. She
herself was a member of the Eastern Star religion.
The children though are. Catholic,
six of them attending Saint Nicholas’ School. In addition to seeking
family unity, the mother is receiving instructions on the Catholic
. . . so I can heller underfaith,
stand and love my children.”
“

Members of Newman Club assist

fit this point by babysitting tor the
mother while she attends inslruc-

MARY ANN FOWLER (left)
CONNIE CARTER (right)
lion classes a Saint Nicholas’. In
the past, she hd found it impossible to leave her borne for fear of
having her children taken away
from her by welfare authorities.
Her deep concern for her children is further seen in her desire
for their continued education.
Newman Chit) is planning to have
one or two of the children attend
their First Annual Fall Communion
Breakfast this Sunday in the MultiPurpose Room at Norton Union.
The breakfast, to be held after the
10:BO a.m. Mass, will enable Catholics and non-Catholics to meet part
of the family and talk with the

children.

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�Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

1/^eiiaioiiA
Gamma Delta
The next business meeting will
be held on Nov. 20. in 344 Norton.
We will meet for dinner at 5:30
and a topic discussion will be held

at 6:30. The topic: “Christian ReThe Docligions in America
troine.” All Concert patron tickets
must be turned in at this meeing.
Those planning on going to the
picnic at Letchworth with Syracase (Zeta Pi) and Gcneseo (Zeta
Epsilon) groups, meet at Norton at
11:00 a.m. Sunday. For further
information call Carol Mugel, TR
—

7-0497. ,
Tickets for the Christmas Concert at Kleinhans will be on sale
in Norton on Fridays from, 11:00
a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Hillel News
Friday Evening Service and

Oneg Shabhat
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Founda
ion Will hold Sabbath Services this
■vening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel
louse. Dr. Justin Hofmann will
;peak on: “The Vitality of Jewish

tradition.-” An Oneg Shabbat will

ollow.
One-Day Institute
The third annual One-Day Instite will he held on Sunday. Delegates from Frcdonia, Rochester,

Syracuse and Alfred University will
attend. The State University College and the Erie County Technical Insitute Hillel groups will also
he represented.

The Institute program will

gel

PAGE SEVEN

Rivers-Seitz Success
Card Sale is now in progress. The
cards may be picked up any day
at the Club from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m.

Wesley Foundation
"The Savage Eye," a full length
film which has been shown "off
Broadway,” will be viewed Sunday
evening, Nov. 17, at the 5:00 p.m.
supper meeting of the Wesley Foundation in the University Methodist
Church. "The Savage Eye" deals
with the struggle for personal
identity and worth and is an hour
of looking into a mirror.

Friday, (Today)
Bowling party
University Methodist Church
—

at

7:30 p.m. Price: $.50 includes bowling, dancing and re-

Lanes,

freshments.

Saturday. Nov. 23

—

Splash party

and dinner. There will be a swim-

ming party in the University pool.
2:00 to 4:00 p.m. At. 5:00 p.m. the
group will meet at Goodyear to go
for dinner, dutch treat, at an outof-the-way, less-to-pay restaurant,
where T-bone steaks are $1.00.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
The next meeting of IVCF will
be on Thursday, November 21, in
Norton 334 from 4-5 p.m. Dr. Ad
rian Kanaar will speak on the topic,

"The Personal Persuit of God.”
IVCF has two weekly discussion
groups. One meets Mondays, from
3-4 p.m. in Norton 246. TTie other
is on Fridays from 12-1 p.m. in
Norton 217. Anyone who is interested is welcome.

Mr. William Seitz, Associate Director in charge of exhibitions of painting and sculp-

ture at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and Mr. Larry Rivers, one of the most talked-

about American painters, were guests of the Art Department last Wednesday in an open
session on “Today’s Provocative Art”. Mr. Philip Elliott, Chairman of the department presided over what proved to be an informative and enjoyable, as well as humorous, discussion
for over 500 people consisting of students, faculty, and the general public.
Mr. Seitz is a native Buffalonian
and a graduate of the Albright Art
School and the University of Buffalo. He received his B.F.A. here,
(assisting Professor John Sewali,
then in charge of art history) and
went on to Princeton, where he

received his PhD. Mr. Seitz discussed figurative painting, Neo-

"Africa

In the question period which followed, Mr. Seitz was asked. “What
makes a painter change his way of
painting?” To this he replied,
“Some artists change because they

humanism and the currently controversial “pop-art". He then introduced Mr. Larry Rivers, "Mr.
Rivers is an artist who has always
been with or ahead of developments or movements in art, yet,
does not fit into any of these cate
gories. He has tried fo compete
with the masters, has come close
to abstract, is not realistic, his
pictures resemble a callage, he
smashes hings and puts them together again, he is an artist who
has lived through pressures of what
is presently going on and somehow still manages to he himself.”
Mr. Rivers showed slides of some
of his controversial paintings and
sculpture and pointed out his
changes in style. He explained thal
heads and hands intrigued him.
which is why he often painted several of these on a page eliminating the rest of the body. Other
subjects included a French $20 bill.
Camel cigarettes and a map ol

feel that their method is not good
any more. Some suddenly beeme
interested in things they have not
paid any attenion to before and
others switch just because the

magazines do!"

LET'S FACE FACTS,

underway with registration of delegaes at 11; 00 a.ra. A Uox and Bagel
Brunch will follow at noon. The

guest lecturer of the Institute will
he Rabbi Abraham Karp, Temple
Beth-El Rochester. Rabbi Karp will
speak on "The Jewish Conceptions
nf Heaven and Hell.” His talk will
he followed by a group discussion.
Vocational Film Series
The B'nai B’rith Jewish Family
Service Group Guidance Program
will present another in its monthly
film series on professions Thursday at 8:00 p.m. in the Hillel House
The profession of Social Work will
be explained.
Newman Club
Wednesday there will be a general meeting in the Multi-Purpose
Room at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Elliot will
speak on “Modern Art and its Interpefations.”

A Communion Breakfast will be
held Sunday. Mass will be at 10:30
a m. in the Canctilieian Center. A
breakfast will follow at 11:30 a.m
in the Multi-Purpose Room. Msgr.
Dempsey will speak on “Newmanism and the Ecumenical Council."
Tickets are available at the Club;
the price is $.50 for members and
S100 for non-members.
Newman Club will hold a date
dance Nov. 23. at the Hotel Buffalo
from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. The
cost is 3:00 per couple.
Just a reminder: The Christmas

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�Use of Libraries
More effective use of university
libraries is the theme of a report
now being written on the Syracuse
University campus and soou'to'-bu
V
released.
J
The study, written by Miss Lue11a V. Snyder, educational consultant. is part of "Project I” of the

By LEON LEWIS
The Lillies of Hie Field
I went to see the current feature at the Kensington, The Lilies
of the Field, with some apprehension. The plight of five impoverished German nuns trying to build a
chapel in the New Mexican desert
didn't strike me as very promising movie material. Even the opportunity of seeing the very competent Sidney Potier as a young
man. on the road, who stops to help
them, didn't seem like much consolation. However, instead of a
sentimental, maudlin sermon on the
goodness of God and Man, the
movie turned out to be an intelligent and witty story of the way
in which a man very much of the
world and the world of religion
may be brought into closer harmony to the mutual benefit of both.
The picture's strength lies in
three places. First, it is unpretentious and appealingly modest
even when it is dealing with surefire dramatic; material. Secondly,
it is witty and imaginative in conception so that the audience is constantly surprised by ingenious
twists and turns in whaf appear
to be obvious situations. And finally. it is supercharged with an electric performance by Sidney Potieri
(which won him First Prize for
Acting in the Berlin Festival in
that illuminates the action
whenever Mr. Potier is on the
1963)

,

screen.
As the picture opens, we see Mr.
Potier drive up to the convent to
replenish the water which has
evaporated from his radiator. The
nuns ask him to replaster their
roof and he agrees. He is a traveling man. living where he parks
his car and working with his hands
to put money in his pocket. The
mother superior (well-played by
Lilia Skala. a European actress
who has been in movies for about
30 years) sees in him the man
she has prayed for to build their
chapel. At first, Potier doesn’t take
her seriously, but her stubborn determination and faith begins to gel
to him and out of his own stubborn pride, he accepts her challenge and begins to build the chapel. Then through a series of
cleverly, constructed incidents with
the local townspeople (Mexican
,and American) we can see Pbtier's
slowly changing.

When the chapel has boon nearly
completed, it has turned into a
work of pride for Potier. He is
reluctant to have anyone help him
with it, but he becomes caught up
in the enthusiasm of the community, and finishes the job and drives
off into the night as the picture
ends. He has not become any more
conventionally "religious,” but one
would imagine that he has been fulfilled personally by the experience.
Similarly, the convent has not been
changed (except physically! either.
The mother superior is still just as
severe and uncomprising with her
young charges, but there is a sense
of light and joy about the place
which did not exist before Potier
passed through, and perhaps the
Mother Superior has learned something more of the World of Man
to add to her impress knowledge of
the World of God.
The conflict between two strongwilled individuals representing diametrically opposed points of view
is not resolved, of course, but during the course of the movie, the
possibilities of agreement and contention are explored
in a fashion
both frustrating and enlightening
to both parties. A movie like this
might have easily become dull or
trite. It is not either dull or trite
at any lime. What's more, it is so
wonderfully human and honest that
I would imagine that even a worldly or sophisticated person might
find it amusing and engrossing.
Were I not afraid of damning it
with loo much praise; or were I
writing for something like the Saturday Evening Post, I would suggest that is is a charming movie
with something in it for the whole
family. Because I am writing this
for a paper with relatively sophisticated (even cynical) circulation,
I think it sufficient to say that although my taste usually runs to
movies by Fellini, Bergman, Rich-

Inter-University Cooperation Program in Teacher Education which
was financed in 1961 with a $1,844,000 grant from the Ford Founda-

tion.
The project is being handled by
the schools of education in the
four participating schools
Syracuse University, Cornell University, University of Rochester and
the State University at Buffalo.
Students in teacher education from
each school are participating in the
plan; instead of formal courses, the
students will have tutorial and
honors work, special studies and
do independent study. Other projects are also currently underway
in the cooperative program.
Miss Snyder's report is a twomonth study to emphasize the need
for adequate research skills in
teacher education. The report is
expected to have implications for
re-evaluation of techer education
as a whole.
The study will point out the
great range of incoming college
student abilities to use a library
ranging from complete inadequacy
lo fair proficiency, tn gathering
material for the report, Miss Snyder has visited the libraries and
staffs of the participating unversilies, and she is completing the
work on the Syracuse campus
wlv'e she is a former faculty
member.
Included in the recommendations
for programs to improve the effectiveness of libraries is the suggestion that a general introductory film be created on how to
use the library for research.
Other efforts could be made, she
will report, on programmed learning systems for various aspects
of library use, such as sample
card drawers for reference sy.s
-

tom learning.

A former assistant professor in
the School of Education at Syracuse. Miss Snyder held a dual role
as assistant director of the audiovisual center.

ardson and Truffaut, I found this
movie quite enjoyable too.

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attitude

Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Wj
ji ill

/AJP
17
[

\\

A Coer. /Am W«e

V,

J

;

''

Bs*

Starting Wed., Nov. 13 I

"SPARROWS CAN T SING"
"A Wild and Wacky Frolic"
N.Y. Time*

CIRCLE ART
3165 Bailey at Amherst

Every Monday Nite

�Glee Club Concert Saturday
To Feature The UB Blues

The Jazz Gallery
By RAYMOND CRAWFORD
(and friend)
wrote,
Terry Southern once
"You’re too hip. baby.” It’s too
much of a hassle to be into things.
One must be ever so careful not
lo blow his cool. Of not coming
on too strongly.

The jazz afficionado has turned
existential hipness into a science.
Thou shall believe in Coltrane,
Mank, and Mingus. Thou shalt not
set up Brubeck. Mannc and Previn.
The ten commandments re-applied
to the angst age.

The new trial by torture is to
see if one can make the scene
at the Five Spot in the East Village. You must sit absolutely still
with a hlf-smiling “in” expression
on your face, “digging the scene.”
The absurdity of it all is that

Greek Notes
Alpha Phi Omega fraternity will
have a date party this Saturday
at 8:00 p.m. at Bosclla's restau-

Phi Epsilon Kappa will hold a
“Bermuda Party” on Saturday, The
party will be held at Kencik’s Restaurant, 80 Padrewski Drive, beginning at 8:30 p.m.
Sigma Kappa would like to congratulate Marilyn Stefonetti, pledge
class president and all the pledge
class officers.
The pledge class of Sigma Kappa will hold a shoeshine in Norton
Union on Friday, Nov. 22. ft will
be their money making project.

Sigma Kappa celebrated Big and

ittle Sister night at their apartlent on Flower St. and Founders’
ay was held and recognized on
ov. 11 in the Norton Cafeteria,
17, the
Sunday, Nov.
1963
ledge Class of Theta Chi Fraterny will sponsor a Hot Pizza Sale

By JOE LANG
A special feature will be presented Saturday evening at the
joint UB-Colgatc post game Glee
Club Concert. “The UB Blues,”
a barbershop quartet formed last
year by four members of the University Men’s Glee Club, have
been chosen to present a number
of songs from their repertoire.
The group plans to perform such

Monk. Coltrane, Mingus ef. al., and
scene in general, ARE hip.
That is to say, the sounds best
communicate a consciousness to get
people to listen to this kind of
criticism. Note, for example, the
language used in this column that
you are in the process of reading.
X had to communicate through socalled "hip" language. Unless one
seems "into things." no one will
the

‘

November 23rd
at 8:30 in

$

Michael Cohen, president of the
Student Association announced that

THE UB BLUES, a Barbershop Quartet

the Student Association has pledged $2,500.00 through the Campus
Barrel to the United Fund in their
drive last week. This pledge by
the students allowed the University
to reach its goal in collecting
pledges amounting to $22,067.10,

The Campus Barrel campaign will
be held in the Spring to fulfill the
pledge. The cooperation of the students at that time will be appreciated to once again fulfill the pledge.

traditional college favorites as
"Mighty Like a Roke,” "Coney Island Baby," “When Uncle Joe
Plays a Rag on His Old Banjo,"
and “The Halls of Ivy.” Their performance. together with the offerings of both the UB and Colgate
Glee Clubs, promise a rich, diver-

sified musical program.
“The UB Blues” have become a
campus hit since their debut last
year in a University talent show.
The group of UB vocalists consists
of: Paul Whitcomb, a mathematics major who sings second bass;
John Slattery, an english major,

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"ON CAMPUS"

Robert S. Beckwith. Assistant
Professor of Music and Director
of Choral Music, will lecture in the
Norton Conference Theatre. Wednesday at 8; 30, on "Soviet Music:
A First Hand Report".
The talk will include tape recording from the Leningrad Conservatory in Russia where Professor Beckwith spent much of
his time while visiting Russia as
the first United States exchange
scholar in recent years.

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major. Henry Wicke, Jr., a faculty member of the music department, is technical director.
The concert, which will be followed by a dance in Norton, marks
the opening of the second year of

have a friend who wears baggy
pants, attends business school, goes
with a chick with teased hair, and
refuses to smoke. He is one of the

]

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director is Don-

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Beckwith Speaks

The

Wiliiamsville, N. Y.

*■*'

Gary Churchill, anthropology, first

tenor. The musical

Digging jazz can be a cop-out.
Art shouldn’t be used lo escape, I

call TF 6-9895.

—

the quartet’s second tenpr; Ronald
Capuano, accounting, baritone; and

listen.

jr
resident students. Freshly
aked cheese and pepperoni pizza
ill be sold at $1.00. For free de-

very

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 15, 1963

and

Can TF 2-0800

the Varsity Music Series sponsord bey the UB choral organizations.
The post-game glee club concert
is an affair which at many Ivy
League schools arouses as much
excitement and enthusiasm in the
student body as the football game
itself. UB can feel fortunate that
it is being introduced to such a
tradition this year.
Tickets for the function are still
available at box offices in Norton
Union and Baird Hall and from
members of both the UB Men's
Glee Club and Women's Chorale.
Admission is $.75 for students, and
$1.50 for the general public.

CLARK GYM
PRICE
$2.00 Per Ticket

GREAT TALENT
A Spectacular
Show
DON’T MISS IT!
COLUMBIA
RECORDING ARTISTS

�Spectrum

SoarJ

Bridge Club

SEANYS

The Bridge Club will hold a meeting this Tuesday at 7:,30 in Norton,
room 327. There will be a duplicate game for fractional master
points, as well as instruction for
beginners. Everybody from beginner to expert is invited to attend.
The winners of last week’s duplicate game were: N-S, Warren Baker and Shicla Dowd; E-W. Mel

On Thursday, SEANYS is sponsoring an informal meeting open to
all those interested in the teaching
profession. The program will feature a panel composed of faculty
members from the School of Education who will entertain questions
and discussion regarding the teacher education program. The meeting will take place at 7:15 p.m. in
the Multi-Purpose Room and refreshments will be served. You are
cordially invited to attend.
Student Health Office
Mrs. Armbruster of (he Student
Health Office announced this week
mat the last Flu Clinic will take
place Thursday from 3:30-5:30 p.m.
in the Health Office (in the basement of Michael Hall). Second flu
injections and boosters will be, administered at the time.
Social Welfare Club
The Soeal Welfare Club will meet
Thursday. Nov. 21. in 330 Norton
at 4:30 p.m. Miss Shirley Plumb,
rase supervisor of the V.A. Hospital
in-patient social service, will be the
speaker. All students interested in
social work or related fields are
invited lb attend.

'

Rosenblat and Chuck Braver
The Bridge Club is sending four

four-man teams to the Rochester
Invitational Bridge Tournament on
Nov. 23. The members of the
,1’B teams arc: I Chuck Lamprey,
Bob Lipsitz, EB-* GcoKgc:' rack'
Fleischman, Allan Mellis, Dave Het-

zei. Mcl Rosenblat. Warren Jacoby.
Shicla Dowd, John Edelman. Sheila
Shein, Dottle Oaniby, Dick Mcsl-

ler. Ted Poritz. Jerry lushweilz.
and Hug Peters.
Christie House
Christie House will have a joint
Meeting oh Tuesday, tit 1.00 par

Poe House
This week Foe House will have
Mr. Carbonara, an eminent philosophy teacher us a guest speaker.
The meeting will be held Monday
in room 242 at 10:00 a.m. Ail are
invited.
Publicity Committtee
Publicity Committee of Union
Board is open for membership to
all students of U.B, All are welcome to room 307 Norton on any
Wednesday afternoon from 3 .to D
p.m.
Recreation Committee
The next meeting is scheduled
for Wednesday, in room 215 Norton.
New members are welcome.
There will be a Pigskin Parly
Saturday from 3:30 to 5:31), There
will be a band and refreshments.
Applications may he obtained for
the bridge, (able tennis, pool and
bowling-tournaments. These are the
elimination tournaments for the
A.C.U, Tournaments,

Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

The Campus Alliance
Party is sponsoring a
second town council
meeting, Wednesday,' in
the conference theatre.
The purpose of the
meeting ds for students
to discuss the purposes
of student government
and problems w h i c h
face the campus. Suggestions as to the solutions of these problems
will be discussed by the
Senators who attend.

■

WANTED!

Timekeepers to par-

ticipate in the Third
Annual Great Lakes
Novice Debate Tournament to be held on campus Friday and Saturday December 6th and
7th. Twenty schools
from the mid-west, New
England and Washington are expected to attend. No experience
necessary. Please leave
your name and phone
number in Norton 332
by Tuesday, November
26th.

ARE YOU AN
ENVELOPE
LICKER?
A stamp sticker? A letter
writer? Most of us aren't. That’s
why the telephone was invented
A Long Distance call home is so
much quicker than writing.
Pleasanter, too . . . because
you're "home" for a little while.
Try It, tonight. Rates are lower,
remember, every evening after
6 00 and all day Sunday. Extra
low for many calls within New
York State alter 9:00 p.m.
*

New York Telephone

THE

rproquois
International

Mweftea. infc, Oatrtet Mdk, tuftete, K.V,

i

.

Tampa, Fla.. Findlay, 0., Covington,

Ky.

�Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

Twelve Seniors Will End College Coreers Agoi st Colgate
tain Eric Orke, Joe Laputka, and
John Breiten, all tackles. The
coach describes his team as having “an antique offense- and heartfailure defense." The defense, a

By ALLAN SCHOLOM
Twelve seniors will make the
final appearance of their college

careers tomorrow when the University of Buffalo Bulls meet the
Colgate Red Raiders at Rotary
Field. Those donning the Royal
Blue and White for the last time
are: cp-captains, Gerry Philbin
and Larry Gergley, John Stofa,
Jim Ryan, Tom Butler, Dan .Mole,
Jerry Ratkewicz, Bill Sitler- and
Ken Kogut. Jim Burd and John
Cimba will be present, but on the
sidelines due to injuries incurred
earlier in the season.
Colgate returns to the scene of
one its most frustrating games of
Rotary Field, where the
1962
Bulls beat the Red Raiders 6-0 in
a snowstorm. Colgate Coach Hal
Lahar is out to avenge last year’s
defeat, which was the first UB
victory over Colgate since 1894.
Colgate had beaten the Bulls seven
times, until head-coach Dick Offenhamer, a Colgate alumnus directed his charges to hard-fought
victory.
Colgate has encountered the injury jinx, as have (he Bulls. After winning (wo and tying one of
the first three games, the Red
Raiders lost top end and pass
receiver, Chris Lomas. This, coupled with an earlier injury to Jim
Heilman, crippled the Red Raiders
attack, and as a result, they were
shutout in two consecutive games.
However, Coach Lahar, with his
team at full strength, hopes to have
his offense in high gear against
the Bulls tomorrow.
Colgate features a pair of inlerchangeable lines headed by Cap-

6-1-4 arrangement, employs only
one linebacker. Norm Platt, a 5’ 8"
165 pound senior, has been doing
an outstanding job in this key
position. The offense is strictly
a ball-control type: a tight T.
with nothing fancy or tricky. Quarterback Gerry Barudin's passing to
Lomas, and the running of Heilman

fullback Don Court, and halfback
Woltman highlight the Red
Raider attack. Woltman, who also
does place-kicking, booted the
first Colgate field goal in twenty
years against Cornell in 1962. The
rest of the Red Raider's starting
eleven includes end Ed Jones, and
interior linemen, Bob Neagly, Mike
Hefferman. and Bob J'aten. Colgate’s record to date is three wins,
three losses, and a tie.
On the other side of the fence
for the first time this year the
Lee

Bulls came out of a game with
no serious injuries. Coach Offenheimer has been stressing offense
in this week's practice sessions,
trying to develop a more productive attack The Bulls have scored only one touchdown in their
last two games and the coach
hopes to correct this situation with
a wide-open game.
Those making this week's "honor role" for their play against Boston College are: defense
Philbin, .68; Poles, .67; Gcringer, .70;
.70;
Edward.
Ratkewicz, .70; and
offense
Nichols, .69; McNally,
.65; Condino, .63; Ratkewicz, .63.
Gerry Philbin was named to the
All-East Team for the fourth time
this year. This represents the most
times that any tackle has made the
team this year. That Philbin was

—

named in a losing effort against
Boston College is all the more
credit to him. BC coach Jim Millas good a
er said he is
lineman as we’ve faced all year."
"

The following policy has hocn cs
tahlishrd by Canisius College for
University of Buffalo students wishing to attend Buffalo games in
Memorial Auditorium.
,UB students will pay $1.00 per
ticket and will purchase them

at (he ticket office in Clark Gymnasium. The tickets are for both

games of the doubleheader pmgram. All such tickets must be
purchased by 2 p.m. the day of
the game. After that time, all unsold tickets and money must be returned to Canisius College. Buffal will receive exactly the same
seats as St; Bontfventure for the
contests. These include 52fi brown
seats along one side of the eotfrl,
end and corner blues, and center
greys. The great percentage of student tickets will be regular $3.00
seals, which UB will sell for $100.
Tickets will be on strictly first
come
first serve basis. Tickets
—

for the first Auditorium contest,
against Buffalo State on November
30, will go on sale Tuesday morning, November 19 at 9 o'clock.

—

—

Admission to Clark Gymnasium

GERRY PHILBIN, voted Buffalo's
outstanding lineman for his play
against &gt;&lt;Boston College, made the
All-East Team for the fourth time.

•games and the contest with. Vil
lianova in the Auditorium will oner
again he by I.D. cards, with nc
additional money or tickets'needed,

Buffalo s
D°N
outstanding back m the Boston Cole ®e 9 ame&gt;
.

hlllllllllirilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllll’:

FREE DELIVERY ■ I
TO CAMPUS DORMS ONLY

i

=

SUBMARINES
From

i

'HOAGY
HEAVEN'
Across From Granada Theatre

3201 MAIN

0

-

Deliveries Nightly

"

0

**

At

9:45 P.M. and 10:45 P.M.
Orders Accepted Up To 15 Minutes Before
Delivery Time

Phone
P.S.

-

HOT

—

836-4808

MEATBALL OR ITALIAN SAUSAGE TOO!

~lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~

The UNIVERSITY
SERVICE CENTER
(Basement

of Town Hall)

announces its

Pre-Holiday Special
(Effective

Until

XMAS)

1 Skirt, (plain), 1 Pants, 1 Sweater or
1 Sport Shirt

CLEANED
WITH EVERY DRY CLEANING ORDER
OF $1.50 OR MORE!
For

cleaner that's handy.
And work that is dandy;
The Tower's the place.
To please your taste !
a

THOSE CLEAN WHITE ADLERS
Now you’re getting the swing of it. All you have to do
your Adlers. Suddenly you find yourself doing just as you
beaming unquestioning approval. You’ll like it. Girls
the Adler SC shrink controlled wool sock. In white

is he "clean white sock” in
please, and the whole world
love it. And all because of
and a covey of 'colors. SI.

�PAGE TWELVE

Friday, November 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

iiiiininniiiniiiiiiiiiiwiiiiii
■

�

Spectrum Sports

■

a

fiiniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiii

liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM

Concunnon Stars For B.C. Eagles;
Yarbro Should Stick To Barbering!
all expec-

Last Saturday, Jack Concannon lived up to
Eagles of Boston College to a 15-0
victory over the University of Buffalo Bulls. Concannon’s
splendid play reinforced the fact that he is the best quarterback the football team has ever faced, overshadowing
such standouts as Gary Wood of Cornell, Pat McCarthy
of Hoty Cross, and Dan Keating of Colgate.
Flashy Jack heaved the pigskin for 169 yards and
scrambled for another 65 on the ground. The tall Bostonian forgot that the elements were not in favor of a passing
game (the rain-soaked field was better suited for the grazing of water buffalo) and after the opening kickoff completed five of five passes, the last one being a 14 yard toss
for the first tally. Mixing his running and passing plays
well, Concannon highlighted Boston’s second period scoring march.
Although penalties and interceptions once again quieted
the Buffalo offense, there was one bright spot in this department, in the person of Don Gilbert. The high school
All-American from Bennett quarterbacked the Bulls in
their only sustained drive of the afternoon, a 64 yard effort
that ended on the Boston College 25 yard line. Gilbert
added to the offense what was truly needed—a varied and
more wide open attack. Using an excellent combination
of running plays and passes, Gilbert put some punch into
the punchless Buffalo offense. He was voted Buffalo’s outstanding back, whiWGerry Philbin, as expected, was voted
the outstanding lineman.
tations as he led the

*

By TERRY SWEENEY
The University of Buffalo cross
country team finished the season
by trouncing R.l.T. 32-23. Tony Fer
rante of R.l.T. ran the slippery,
rain splattered 4 mile Rochester
course in 23 min. 19 sec. to take
first place. Ferrante was followed
by Bill Suedmeyer (23.48) and Ed
Lontrato (23.52) both of U.B. Wieffenbach, Hoffman and Hansel
finished in the fiftth, sixth and
seventh spots respectively for U.B.
The R.l.T. win rounded out the
season for U.B., leaving them with
a 5 win, 6 loss record.
The U.B. frosh team was defeated by the R.l.T. frosh 25-32. Gersey of R.l.T. won the meet with a
time of 14.33.9. Dick Genau of U.B.
was close behind crossing the wire
in 14.52. The fourth and fifth spots

were taken by Buffalo’s Williams

and Bailev.

Last Saturday Buffalo State played host to the New York State

cross country at Delaware park.

Roberts Wesleyan College won the
team followed by Alfred and Buf-

falo State. U.B. was disqualified for
running 8 men. The rules permit
each team to enter no more than
seven.

Bill Lalley of Cortland won the
individual title, running the 4.7 mile
course in 23.06. Tim Bums of Buffalo State, finished second with a
time of 23.28, edging U.B’s Stu Katz
by 3 seconds.
The freshman title went to Alfred
with Buffalo State second and Lemoyne third. Bill Ripple of Lemoyne circled the 2.9 mile course
in 14.25 followed in order by Bill
Foresberg of Alfred, Denny Fries
of Cortland and Dick Genau of
U.B.

Buffalo will play host to other schools in the February
tournament of the Association of College Unions. The tour-

nament will consist of table tennis, billiards, pool, bridge,

chess, and bowling. Each of the 30 schools that are expected to. attend will enter teams in competition for trophies in the various events. Any student of UB may represent the school if he qualifies to do so. Eliminations have
already begun in some of the events; howere, they will
continue all semester. Joe Paffie is in charge of the tournament entries for Buffalo and has the necessary entry
forms. His office is next to the bowling alleys. Girls are
urged to enter the tournament, because last year Buffalo
was short on .female entries.

By ED RIZZO

Points

received

from

football

have given Alpha Epsilon Pi the
lead for the Pahlowitz Trophy with

124 points. Sigma Alpha Mu is in
second with 123%. Sig Ep has 123
121 points.

points. Beta Sig has

Phi Ep has 119 points.

The swimming meet will be held
Monday November 18, at 6:00.
The handball tournament began
this week on Monday.
In the intramural football playoffs on Monday the Zygotes de-

feated the Corner Court Crushers,
32-0. Alpha Sig won the fraternity
championship by defeating Beta
Sig 28-0. Alpha Sig played the
winners of Zygote-Tower game

Wednesday for the campus
championship.

last

The final results of the intramur-

al football league have been tabulated. They are:

Monday Independent (Final)
W L T
Zygotes
7 0 1
7 1 0
Mooners

5 3 0
5 3 0
4 3 1

Rams
Allenhurst Stars
Upper Tower
Dembo’s

.

3 4 1
2 5 1

A Raiders
Lower Tower

1 7 0

..

0 8 0

Challengers
•

•

•

Wednesday Independent (Final)
W L T
7 10
Tower
6 2 0
Hemingway House
6 2 0
Irving House
5 3 0
James House

*

Speaking of Gerry Philbin, this writer would like to
mention some reactions of sportswriters to Philbin’s publicity. The Delaware sports editor remarked about the pen
he received that had written on it, “Watch Gerry Philbin
Buffalo’s All-American tackle.” His reference to Philbin
was not as “King Kong” but as “Bugs Bunny” Philbin. He
said he would use the pen to write Buffalo’s obituary. However, the Delaware writer’s negative attitude should be
paid little heed, for to call an athlete of Gerry Philbin's
caliber “Bugs Bunny” is merely to admit one’s complete
ignorance of the game of football and of the qualities of
a great football player. I wonder if Delaware tackle Paul
Chesmore has recuperated from the trouncing he received
at the hands of Bugsy?
Gar Yarbro. sporlswriter of the Football News, writes,
“I got a free ball point pen from the University of Buffalo.
On the side of it was written—‘Watch Gerry Philbin Buffalo’s All-American tackle.’ He may be a good player but
who ever heard of an All-American from Buffalo? In fact
up until last year I never even heard of Buffalo. But despite the free pen I can’t vote for Gerry Philbin because
I am voting for all Southern players.”
This is beyond a doubt the most juvenile bit of reasoning I have ever heard. The name of Yarbro’s column is
From The Barbershop, and from the looks of his writing it
is suggested that he return to his former trade. A barber
is not expected to be intelligent. Yarbro explains the entire
matter in another paragraph. He writes, "What is a fink?
Among my many fan letters last week several people referred to me as a “fink” and I didn’t know whether to feel
flattered or insulted, I asked the editor what a fink was
and he said that it was a stupid hillbilly barber from Tennessee who didn't know how to pick football winners. Is
this true?” This writer does not know if this is true, but
the word “fink” has a certain ring about it that makes it
appear suited to a person such as Mr. Yarbro. Do not worry
Gerry, most of the good sportswriters make sure they have
looked up an athlete’s record and seen his movies before
they vote or do not vote him All-American.

For Palowitz Trophy

Poe House .
Scott House
Ailenhurst Chargers

......

Kipling House

Lewis House
»

»

3 5 0
2 6 0
1 7 0
0 8 0
0 8 0

�

Friday Independent (Corner Court'
Champ*)
W LT
6 0 1
Comer Court Crushers
3 0 3
Crispins
440’s
4 2 1
4 2 1
Panthers
Mud Cats
3 4 0
3 4 0
Flying Frosh
0 7 0
Tigers
0 7 0
Browns
—

STU KATZ.

Peterson to Lead Fencers
In Annual "Oldtimers" Meet
By BRYNA MILLMAN

Coach Sid

Schwartz puts his varsity members to the test next Fri-

day evening when he pits them
against an array of “oldtimers”
whose collective

record, studded
with championships and titles, has
not before been equalled in the
history of the alumni meet. The
outcome of last year’s meet was
a 21-16 victory for the varsity.
There are eleven fencers with
“alumni" status returning for this
event. Many have been regional
or national champions in a particular weapon, as well as having been
professional instructors. For this
reason Coach Schwartz is scramblan alumnus will
ing the field
not necessarily compete in the
weapon in which he has previously distinguished himself. The com—

position of the squads is being withheld until the last possible moment.
Of the, eleven returning "oldtimers”, six are actual UB Alumni
and three are former co-captains.
Among them is Bob Peterson, who
was co-capt, of the ’58-’59 team.
Bob was a standout in epee competition during the North Atlantic
championships by retaining first
place for three consecutive
and making the All-American team
for the years 1957-58. Also returning is Bob Welch, co-capt. of the
’59-’60 team. Aldo Sand (Santorri)
captain of the ’54 team, and

Fersch
who held first and
second places in the North Atlantic
Foil competition for 1962 and 1963
respectively. The other UB alumni
are Kevin Gorman who was with
the team in 1956-58, and A1 Jenson
(UB ’63)

Joe

(Jedrzejewski) 1954-55.
One of the five members of the
“oldtimer” team is Barry Benisch,
a former fencer from Brooklyn College, who now attends UB Medical
School. Also attending will be Mike
Mearian, a name familiar to local

fans of WBEN and WBEN-TV. Mike

conducts "Fun to Learn” and “Pop-

eye’s Playhouse”, and acquired his
skill in fencing at Cornell.
It was

erroneously reported in

the Spectrum that Mark Fox is
sole captain of the '63-’64 team.
Both he and Barry Canter will be
co-captains. Also, the Freshman
Fencer of the Year award for 196263 went to Dave Kirschgessner. and
not Gerry Aronoff.
Listen to UB Sports Highlights"

for the most accurate report on all
sporting events on campus. The fifteen minute program is devoted
entirely to UB news whether it be
football or fencing, basketball or
wrestling. Tonight, along with a
rundown on the sports scene, Wally
Blatter will have an interview with

UB’s freshmen football coach, Dew-

ey Wade. Be sure to listen in at
6:15 over WBFO-FM, 88,7 meg.

Tuesday Fraternity (Final)

W L T
6 0 0
4 2 0
3 1 2
3 2 1
A. I. I. E
2 3 1
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Theta Chi
1 5 0
0 6 0
Kappa Psi
Thursday Fraternity (Beta Sig
Champs)
W L T
Beta Sigma Rho ..
6 0 0
4 1 0
Alphaepsilon Pi ...
3 2 1
Tau Kappa Epsilon
1 3 0
Phi Epsilon Pi
1 4 0
Lamba
Tau
Pi
1 4 0
Phi Kappa Psi
1 3 1
Gamma Phi

Alpha Sigma Phi
Alpha Phi Omega
Sigma Alpha Mu

Frosh Win-9-0
The UB freshman football

squad

defeated Ithaca last Friday
by a score of 9-0. Buffalo’s scores
came in the third quarter. Dan
Sella ran back a punt for 75 yards
and John Schleifer followed with
the extra point. Later, Jim Dunn
tackled an Ithaca punter in his
endzone after a bad snap iron
his center sailed over his heap
Dewey Wade, head coach,
tioned other outstanding pla
in the game. These included
er Galinas, Dick Dunbar, Jim
bie, Tom Popp, Nick Capuana
Jerry Wastak. Wade also mentioned the fact that the freshme
have lost Bill Bohner, an outstanding fullback, for the rest of tn
season because of a knee injury

1

By ROCKY VERSACE

A E IF Leads Greeks

r

I

■

Sports Circle

Harriers Climax Season By
Outclassing R.l.T. 32-23

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STUDENTSENATE
QUESTION.AIRE
(Set Page Three)

VOLUME 14

a-ran mnvaun

Fujil, were Included. Both works
were scored for voice, and e'ight
and nine instruments respectively.
Miss Fujii sang with much expres­
~ion. dynamic variety, good phras•
ing, and integration with the en•
semble,
Ravel's Introduction and Allegl'Q
for harp.
flute , clarinet.
and
str ings , features Marjorie Hartzell .
harpist of the Buffalo Philharmonic
and instructor al our University.
Mrs. Har12ell displayed complete
eontrol and flexability with her In•
strumen t , giving the sweeping pas·
sages and glissandi c;lynamk con·
t rast. The other performers, all ol
whom had just performed in the
Stravi nsky , continued in the same
manner of dexterity . facility and
depth of inlel"fX'lation.
The second half of the program
was all-Vivaldi. Faculty member
Nelson Dayton was soloist In (he
Bassoon Concerto. The bassoon is
1n!requently heard as a solo in­
strume nt , and Mr. Dayton really
surp rised the audience with his re­
ma rkable facility of technique and
ease in performance of the most
tliUicult passages.

BOSTON COLLEGE
REVIEW

No. 11

BUFFALO NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1963

The Harpsichor d Festival, in d~dication of the univer •
sity's new instrument buil t by Eric Herz of Concord , Mass.,
opened last Wednesday night with a spectacular program
conducted by Alexande r Schneider of th e Bud apest Quartet
Mr. Schneider, a brillant performer and super b musician,
performed the solo violin par ts, played with the orchestra,
and conduoted. The orchestra was composed of UB~ulty,
Buffalo Philharmonic members, and selected stude nts.

Troia Poesies de la Lyrlque Ja­
ponais, featur1ng soprano Tacko

,oa al' anrnao

SPECTRUM

Fine HarpsichordFestival
Highlighted by Schneider

• AJI those who had solo parts
performed
excellently.
Pamela
Gearhart of the Music department
fnculty performed as soloist with
Mr. Schneider in the Handel. with
rich tone and perf,:ct ensemble.
David Fuller , UB's harpsichordist,
was soloist in the Bach concerto
in F minor. Mr . Fuller was in
complete control of the keyboard.
and played very expressively,
To provide variety on the pro­
gram and as a departure from the
Baroque (rather
unusual in a
"Harpsichord'' Fe~tival\ . the Stra­
vinsky Chansons Plals.intea and

or ...

Stunt Nite Variety
Show At Harriman
By BARBARA STRAUSS

Business Election Set
Bob Pacholski, Ch air man of the Elections Committt•r.
announced that th e Business Administration Student ('ou11cil election will be held this Thursday between 10 a.m, and
3 p.m. in Crosby Hall. Ballots will be cast outside the Officl'
of the Business School. The election will determine the offi­
cers, who will direct the administration of the, Business
School this year . Lois Menter, Elections Committee Sec-retan,
is serving as Chafrman of this election.
·

Hackett and Raven . popular arra
folksingers. will appear as an added
attraction Friday , Nov. 15th at
Stunt Night. This annual studertl
variety show 11ill be held at 7:00
Mr. Pacholski also announced
and 9:30 p.m. in the Harriman
th e fact that the De&lt;.-embl•r elec­
Auditorium. Tickets were put on tion for open divisional seats 0,1
sale yesterday at $1.00 each.
the Senate wlll be held on Qe.
ccmbcr 2. 1963 from 9 a.m. to
From all indic-ations. this year's
Stunt Night performan&lt;.'es will be 6 p,m. in the Table Room of Nor­
ton Hall. As of now, th&lt;'re i\; but
more profl&gt;ssional than in past
years , bet·ause of the c&gt;xcrllcnl as­
one seat open for the, election sistance given the groups by th&lt;! the Uruvt'rsity C())l(,gc seat that
l ry-out judges : Mr. Gharlcs Cas­ Mr. Russ ell Goldberg resigned
from . The samc Plt'clion rull's use&lt;I
telli . Mr. Wilham Siemering. Mr.
in the OC'lober elN'lions will be
Jam es Mohr and Mr. Mike Pros­
applied with a f&lt;?wminor changes.
ser. Thesc are the nine organiza•
tlons which will pa1·tiC'ipatl': Alpha The rll'ction petition.~ will b&lt;.•ava il·
Epsilon Pi , Alpha Gamma Delta , able for this elPt'lion on Novembc,
Chi Omega Nl'wman Club, Phi
15 in lhl! senate Ofht•,• - Room
Epsilon Pi. Sigma OC'lta TJ.u. Sig­ 205 of Norton Hall.
lT\a Alpha Mu. and Sigmu Phi Ep•
Aside• of lh1•sP 1wo rkl'110ns . lhr
silon. Eat'h b'TOUPwill pr!'Senl an
romm,tter
i~ also lnvc~llgatini;
original 6 minUlt' skit, Whl('h WIii &amp;•natl' divl~illnal rt'l)l'C~cntation al·
include singing, dandng and ad•
lo&lt;"allons;1nd th t' inN1uil1rs. if any,
Ing. ThesP skits will bt• jud,:i,•d on
that arc prrsent i11 this system.
originality , C'horeogrnp~. music-. Mr. f'1td1ol~kl ,·nmmrnwd
', th~
scenery, L'OSlunws.ap))l'aranct•. and
1•omm1tt1•1'Is im'1'slii:u11ni:tht•s,• al•
lltOIElltTPACHOLSK
I
auditnt'&lt;' appeal. This yc•ar . judgl'S
)oc11t1&lt;111s
SO that II ('l&lt;ll mak, II
Elections C0MMll'ttt ChalrmatJ
will award lsl. 2nd and ~rd pMz!'s r~[l(11'1to lh•• Srnat1• m nrxt 1'11rs­
with no special divisions, Trophll's
ALEXANDElt SCHNEIDElt
day's mc•l'iing nnd from this ,.,..
wi.11be awarded at a dam·r lo be
rt'SPl'l'tlv1• d1\'ls1on&lt; t1ml 1·011111111
port tlw Coru;lltuh()nal Rrv1sions
'!'he orchestra performed n sin· held in the Union Sal urday night.
h•r pt•rst,ml&lt;'l " tic• ,·Dntml1&lt;'lllhnl
can draw suggrslions for l'hanges
fonla and two concerti lo complete
Stunt Night M.C.'s 11.l'f Alnn
"thr intl'tvie\\s with lhC' Oe&amp;n, ot
In the allocation~ system in rrvisin~
the program . As in the first half , Biernbaum and lrwln Atkins. two
the di(forent dlvi~1ons will brnn:
the Conshlution:· Thc t•ommitlec
lhey showed great depth of in• seniors In the School of Busincss
into focus the fer•hngs of tll&lt;'w
report will ,·ovrr all the divisions
terpetation , a large dynamic range.
Administration. Chairmrn of the of the University and Mr. Pal'holski
admini~ trat ors an!I thrir idu,~
and perfect ensemble. They t-on- show are Joy Charkin, geneml
said "they will h&lt;• bllscd on a t-om­ what 1hr problem~ in S!'nat,· r,•
veyed the feeling that each per•
chairman: Ronnie Ac-ker, businei,s binatlon of statistkul fa cts and in• presentation .irr• in lht•ir rt'S l&gt;I'&lt;'•
former was really trying to ex- and tickets , Marilyn Burstein, pub­
lt'rvirws bt'lwrcn th&lt;' Deans of th,• tiw tlivisio11."
tra ct the utmost 11-omhimseU and
llcity ; Flo Gerber, hat'k,slagc ur­
his instrument. Mr, Schneiiler is rangements; Mickey Bunis. awards
to be commended for the excellent
aod judges; Barry Hornst rin. r,l'o· Wl?WMdkkkkM4@4?k4PiW4&amp;W4@4?idkJ-1k2Wf
preparation of the pcrfonners.
grams and ushrrs; and Ronnie
l'r,11,·s.,·01 . J/1011Sof'f'. (hom111111 c•f lit. J/i,s1, /1,·
This concert, one of the most
Hoffman . lighting. Miss- Ann Hicks
;•1111111011.
,,,,// .1(','11/, Thw.,d,11·. 111 •l,//11, i11 N,1,,111_q /
unusual eve r performed in Baird,
and Shelly St'h\\imm cr arP ail\ ,,11,,11. / Ii, //,011,· of //11· /c•rl11r,· 1,· ··/I,, ( 11//111,r/
J/,,,,111
was extremely well prepared. Each
visors,
composition offered an unusual proThe committc•&lt;' urges students HI
111/111//11/11
·· /'1,,f \t1f'f' r,«'1.i'd /, ,JI, llf.1 /1 I 1111d
.\I I
gram. featuring infrequently heard
purcha se tsl pcrtormunr&lt;.&gt; tkk,•ts
11/
//
&lt;Ir,
·,nd.
instrum ents and music, and a large
in order to avoltl tht• usual srt'On&lt;i
number of performers and 50loi~ts. performan('l! mob. II will aiMl hem·­
I It.-f•ru;.:1
•11111
,.~li,·111g .1{'1•11.wr,ti 1,•1111/y/,\' //1,· l/1,.~;,
all of whom evidently workNI ex- lit the s lud('nl body to c•nlt'r and
teremly hard, The pcrlormance
leave the show us &lt;Jukkly as pos/ l1•{'r1r/ll/&lt;'1// """
//1(' ( ,,11,,,,
..,,,,,,,,., ( t•ll/////1/,·,· 11f 1/,,
showed that is was well worlh
sible 10 alleviatt' the l'XJX'Clc'd lraf ,\/11r/,·11/
.~1·•111/1', rl , oJllllfti/1,·,·
., /11r/1
1111/1,t/,·., j..11•'&lt;1
the effort.
fir problem bc:'lW&lt;'t'nJ)('rforman&lt;•r~.

rn,

/i•c/11/'1' ,1'/'1•1,-.11•/1 /'lllllfll-

1

Concert Committee Programs "Four Preps"

-/ll/4?2k44&amp;kkkkW&amp;44WWdW4WMM&amp;MZ2Wk4t&amp;lM42

The Four Preps, nat ionally acclaimed singing quartet, will appear in Clark Gym ~n
Saturday night , November 23 at 8:30 p.m. Ron Hoffman, chairman of the Concert Commit­
tee, has announced that the sale of tickets will begin Monclay, November 11. at the Norton
ticket booth.
The Four Preps originated at a talent show al Hollywood High Scho~I in 1955.
Th irty-five girls and not a single boy were scheduled to appear that night. Late m the show
four young men stepped into the spotlight to fill the void.

Industrial
Engineering
Dept.
Awarded $6,500 Grant

"We were terrible." recal led Glen
Larson, spokesman for the Preps.
"Bu t we were th e only boys in
sc hool the fucuity could persuade
to be on the show; so we were a
smash. From then on we were in
demand !or every Cree entertain­
ment.''
ln 1!{)7, when the Preps began
r&lt;'cording for Capitol , t~
were
the youngest vocal group ' on a
major record label. Contrary to
what seems to be the musical law
of Nature for teen vocal groups ,
1heir caree r didn't end with one
big hit.
Their tirst record,
"Dreamy
Eyes." was success in 1.957. !Jut
their million-selling "26 Miles"
made them national celebrities in
1958. Soon to follow was "Big Man"
which almost overlook "26 Miles"
arid helped snag The Preps' recog•
n,tlon as ··Most Promising Vocal
Group·· of 1958 in the Cash Box
Magazine poll.
There have been other hi ls "Do wn by the Station". "Big Sur­
prise". ''Lazy Summer Night'".

THE

,oua ,u,s

IN CONCEIT

"Got a Girl", and "Cindt•rell11" srllrr. it was app;1rrnt that Thi•
(which they sang m the motion Preps had smoothly malm'ulated
picture "Gidget" J proving that The to college and adult audienc1&gt;s.
The Concert Commlttei, !eels that
Preps are as popular as ever with
, this type of entertainmen t 1s he
the jukebox crowd.
kind most enjoyed by the student
By mid-summer of 19til when
body and strongly urges its sup­
their smash album . TM Four PNpt
en Campos, becam~a national best - port ,

Thr n•sults or ~U!'h Jl"M',1rC'11
"111
Thr• mdustrlul rn1,'lm•·rin~ ,kimrt­
somt' day hau• grmt 1mpiu•t on
mr·nt has bem grnntL'Cim•arly 20',
or tht• total funds prov,dl'd m &amp;. 1ndus1r) 1,wully nnd natJurmlly Ht'•
&lt;"urdmi:to Or Smlth.
nt 'W i,:runl program of lh &lt;',\m,•rll"an
SOl'll'IY of Tool and i\tunu!al'tUrtll&gt;:
With SllC'h II laboratory ii 18 poS•
Enginet:rs IASTMEl.
Slbll' IP ('OIISIrut·t l'OOll)lt•tl' mnnu
~yslt'tllS U$Jn$( nnly mllth('
Or .Vayittnrl I' Smith, thamn,111 (.11·t11r111i;
o o, : drp;;rtmrnt' announl'ed that m1111rs The r•l!r111vrm•ss of th••
th,~&gt;rt•a,·al S) sh•ms rnn 11\• p11••
the SodNy has nward,·d the J,,
partmrnt $1.r,w from n Iota! of 1)11·1,-d\\Ith Olli) a ll•~ 1nv&lt;'Slnwnt
uf timP and monl'y c1.1111parl'tl111th
$40.000 which was d1slribukd
arnoni: t 1 ('Ullt•w•sfor r,•s,•11n•hpro­ rC'al systems.
jects
This Ol('MS thnt t·omplt'h• l\('11'
manufacturlnt:: ~yst,•m~ rould 'llt•
1'h1• mon 'Y will br us,•(! liy Or
Smith. Mr. Jusvantrr11 C. Shnh In­ tested and lh1· mo~t t•lfu"ll'nl tuun&lt;l
structor in indusrnnl cni;m•:,•1·1111; on a t·untroll,'11 \.atxu,1tu1&gt; '"""
hn, no
and !\Ir Charles N. J.:uru,·, I'&lt;'• Man11tnrlllth1i; fll ''"'tlll\
procc·durt' whtc-h t'l'1'TT c-omr~ rt,,w
seari:h nssod!lll'
The thrl'I' fl'•
sea r ch&lt;'rs will 1·onllnue tu explo1·1• tu this ~) strm, t,·~•1111.; n,·,s I ""'
t, • lim111·rl 111111111111(1..-1111111,:,\n&gt;
a rompl,•tcly throreh,·al manular­
,11r11ptr:1.
111nwn am1 d1•1..-,·s ,11d1
turing systC'm using matht•malll'UI
1
~
tt 1\t.wr-.•nt, w
probabillly theories. Th,' uullnl 1n­ as hn~1.nt..1lsunu11_
M'l11'IOI~
\'()Uh.I,,,nw ll&gt;lth-r M I ulln)
pC'tUsror th(' grant mm" last ~pnnj!
whC'n tASTMEl 1-;rantt.J lht· d1• and mor,· ,•tl1t'h'nt :i1Jd 1'1(1~·1,v,
.,.,.,.,ry
partmcnt $1,900 to suppol1 an init1,1I upt•rullt•n• d,•viwd tr th1• ·,,1
~,•hf'&lt;IUl.-d h&gt; I 11
study for "thr dl'sii:n and d,,velop­ ,11•\'l'lops .h
ml'flt of a manuftH'tunn~ systC'm~ -:m11h It \\ 1)Ultl lit· OIW"' lh• ru ,,
,n lht• nuuon ,111&lt;1
\\ nuld ,. 11 ''"
slmulolor:· The $6.500renewal 1na)
tin~·, .,dvant.,,w
tu
•'"1~:arn
even lu ally lead to support In e"
cess of $100.000 for thr &lt;'&lt;lnstruc­ Front11•r m fl'rms ol '"''""' 111~
tion of II t·omplt•lt• mnn-rMdun,.•
t')(Jstmi.: 1nd11strml "'"'""
;,1111 ,1l
tr111•t1111,
n,'" on,•,.
Jystems laboratul')'
,

u,..

�-----

Tuesday, November 12, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

THE

SPECTRUM

11,o ofl',dol otvdent "_"'..,.,
of "'• St••• Un&gt;vonlty of New Yo•• et Buffalo.
Publicotlqn Olllc9 •• Norto,, Holl, Unlv,,.lty c.m.&gt;uo,
llv"•lo 14, N, Y, ,~bll ,he&lt;I
w..i.ty ,,_
tho ~,., WN~ of Stf&gt;tOffit. to ,.,.
wNk in M.oy, ••-•
fot
HAffl $Mrfod1. lMnlugfvfn,;, Ch, 11tmu , •nd Utt•, .

Teaching
Fellowships
Made
Available
ByState

Heard Through the Ivy ...

It••

The Stale University has announc­
ed a new competition for the Re­
gents College Teaching Fellowships.
IOtJOl,l,t.CNIU - AIINOlD S. MAZU•
During the 1964-65acad~mic year,
Pet levr,e,
John Kowal
Mon.9 lng fdhor
__ Ltv..enc• SinQtr
350 awards will be avallable to
MA,tin Ktl,otl
New. Ed,to,
O.Vid !twin
hafvr• EdifOt
New York State s1uden1s to partl·
M1rci1
Coot,e,
,Htvf•
Editor
L.ot1 H•ul1111t,
cipate in the Fellowship Program.
St,o.-11 Edita,
Rocky Y•n•c•
K,,,nS,nfo,d
1110011 Goldberg
Consisting or 250 fellowships for
~.:t:~~vl~;tor
lhom1, H••nle, J,.
W1tltt!'T' S,em•dnG
beginning graduate study. and 100
o.n.t1I
Steff: VtOI 9u,;t1tdif, lorn• W•lf•ch , A. Lindt le"en1h1I, Af•n Newmtn,
fellowships tor advanced graduate
Allti" 5-ffiolom, Mi~• Suhenlk, Vic Mentt, Rent FiKh, 8.o,1&gt;1,,1Suauu, Ronnie Bron,be,9,
sludy . these awards have been es­
(h1det lohof, Pat Jont\, Ntncy 81t'&lt;ket, b,ry F&lt;•n\.l~, Nancy hut!~n, Trvdy Stern,
Jun l1f'tit1Uet_ Ct.udr• 1Cow1t, Suttn llch,. ao,a Lynn 8,othmen, Rty Ctt'lit'fo,d,
tablislwd for the purpose ot as­
J,,...
Somm-,, Rob&lt;e,t Mllt.h, Jttemv T,ylot~ K11•n Chieko, Christine Cunn ;ooha m,
sisting caP11hle students eithe r to
lHlltn Kel1u•it1, Mt,c•• A"n O,uul•k, Helen Bvkoff, fr•n M.,fvr t, Sand,, 01,n,
St•tM S.nytu, Joa.oh leng, f.,ed Ro1•nbe,g 1 El•lne &amp;a,ron, Cem Goldberg, Ed Riuo,
initiate or to C'Ontin
ue graduate
ft,,v Swffney~ lom tcui1ukt, 0.v• Hampron, Don Cattle, l lnd• W1chner 1 SuHnnt
study in preparation for &lt;-'Ollege
:•o:uv~u8!ha,R~/:
A~~'':.,";,,t~~g
Outtndtt,
lonn1• Kl1pt.1ei1"1s,,atee
1
teaching careers.
Addilional information may be ob­
, .........
W' Stafh Joet Htvent, Ptmtlt ltt•d
tained by writing to the Regents
En,e,e-d o to&lt;.ofld d•u maue, ftbrvuy 91 1961, If th• Pot,t
Ex;imlnntion and Scholarship Cen­
Oflko ., Buff•lo, N Y ,
the A&lt;I ol Moich 3, 1879 A&lt;·
1
ter In the State Educalion De­
1~1,11
':IO'c,:~~•3:•\9\
;~ :.,t,h:~~•;:ef:~;:i~M19,
f~9s\" parlment.
Questions concerning the
Sub1c,lpt,on $3,00 pe, ytttrr, t!rt1,1liU1on 9000.
nature of lhe program may be
addressed lo Robert Frederick,
fok.di~~lllv~N!l,!;'"?o~:
AdYtrtl1lng
Jr .. Sup&lt;•rvisor in Higher Educa­
20
tion. Thr Stale E&lt;lucatron Depart­
ment. Albany .
All applications must be submit­
It'd by December I, 190 .

~::::~:e~':!l:l

•:=~~,,.

1

und,.

s::~::·11'g~,
SttNi::~,~~~•e:

some event, we take away space
from some other Item, that may
be much more newsworthy.

. . • Yellow Jacket
(American lntematlonat Colle,e)

•••

~•:;~n•1

Editorials

Spectrum's Bask Needs
A concerted effort on the part of the Spectrum slafL
bas made this issue possible . It is the first time the uni­
vers1,ty has been afforded a semi-weekly newspaper. But
th1s issue 1s only a trial-balloon.
To make The Spectrum a semi-weekly institution on
campus not only requires more work on the part of our
staff, but something from the student body en masse.
The Spectrum needs to increase its staff and all slu­
den,ts who have time to offer are asked to join. There will
be a general meeting this Friday at 4:00 to recruit re­
porters, copy readers, re-write and layout personnel. ,typists
and headline writers. Experience 1s not necessary; only
hearl
For those who are unable to Join the staff, we ask
that you suppont Spectrum advertisers . These businesses,
obviously, are essential for our production. We want more
adverti sing, and more student s to patronize them.

Professor C. Northcote
Parkinson will be the
second speaker of the
Fenton Lecture Series,
Thursday . The lectur e,
"The Crisis in Amer­
ican Education", will be
held in the Butler Audi­
torium of Capen Hall,
beginning at 8:30 p.m.
Professor Parkinson is a
well known historian ,
educator , and humorist.

Publlclty Hounds
What ts the biggest problem . . .?
Surprizingl.y
enough.
"publicity
hounds." People who do not be­
lieve that a college newspaper
exists but to be a bulletin board.
In a sense these publicity hounds
have a case since the majority
or the students read the Campus
to llnd out what is happening on
campus. But there is a limit to
the number of times it is feasible
to repeat something without losing
interest
entirely. Therefore
we
should like lo distinguish between
"news and publicity."
It is not our obligation to make
a success of a given event. It is
the obligation ot the chairman of
that event to make ll a success.
By giving advance publicity to

• • •
Camllrldge Maryland
One of the most fundamcnlal de­
mands made by Negros, particular­
ly those in the South, has been
for the right to vote. Negros have
demonstrated and, in all probabili­
ty. will continue to demonstrate
against voting restrictions. Yet in
Cambridge, Maryland, two weeks
ago , Negroes had an opportunity
to vote for integration but many,
remarkably , stayed away from the
poUs.

U anyone is to blame. Mrs. Gloria
Richardson, leader of the Cam­
bridge Non-violent Action Commit­
tee, is hereby nomillated. She de•
manded that the City Council adopt
a pubUc-accomodations ordinance.
The Council hesita ted and acted.
instead, for a Charter amendment
requiring a vote. Not willing to ac­
cept a compromise, Mrs. Richard­
son called for a boycott at th e
polls. Her reasoning : it would be
wrong to submit "the constitutional
rights of our people to the whims
or a popular majority." Her state­
ment may very well be true, but
it Is also true that the Negro's
rights, no longer overdue , will not
be realized in their entirely over­
night.

. . • The Villanovan

JAtK
IINKIETTEReverybody's
~,1w,·w.....,,·t1-

/NPER~ON
P,ttf/1/f

There is a Student Senate qucstionaire un the opposite
page . In an attempt to access student opinion and needs, the
Welfare Committee is looking for direcl10n from the whole
campus community.
A people get the government they deserve. If we
student s do net cooperate with our communal govern­
ment , we do not have the ri,qhl to berate the Senators for
"not doing anything." Fill out the qu estionaire and writt'
your student lt"aders ... then dec1dt:&gt;whether or pot stu­
dent gove rnment is worthwhile

.C1111nectlcut
Dally Campus

Joo Rico and BJf Prnent

Senate Questionaire

r

WhNt Salt
We should sell wheat to the Com­
munist bloc as we should to aey
other coµntry. We should not at­
tach any ~!rings , We should main­
policy for,
tain a world-first
whether we realize it or not. we
play an extremely large part in
world aftnirs and can no longer
think in America-first terms.
The o~ning or trade between
the U.S. and U.S.S.R, is a definite
and positive step in the direction
or decreasing the hostilities. es­
pecially with a nuclear lest ban
treaty already locked in the sate.

AFOlK

\ FOTIVAl
/ ..!'!

,,,..,,.,

1
• &gt;

TUE
BIG
J
~ 3Ji);OlI EDDIE
Ill BAXTE/li
BAI/ADEE/I!
NAUN
MAtKINNON
•

singing
the
praises
of

'WHITE
LEVI'S!'

1111111110
I I I Ill I 111111111111111
I I 11111111111111111111
1111111111111
11111
111111111111111111~

FREEDELIVERY!!

§

E

i

TO CAMPUS DORMSONLy

SUBMARIF~mES
(Mi~~••
~- 3201
'HOAGY
HEAVEN'
MAIN • Across From Granada Theatre

I§

2

=
-:

Delive~:se ~ightly
At

Orden AcceptM Up To 1SMinute, lefo.-.
Detlvwy

Phone-

E

i

§=

2 §=I

9:45 P.M. and 10:45 P.M.

§
§

§

E

Time

836-4808

-E
§
§

=

Kleinhans-Sun.,
$Uf,

$2.SI, $3.50 -

Nov.

i7

7:31 P.M.

For beat choice of Nat■ 1end
cheek or money order wUh ,elf•
addreued
,tamped
envelope to
Buffalo 1au l'e1tlval, c/o Don 1on'1, 32 Cou rt St., Buffalo 3, N .Y,

GOT THE

WEEK-ENDBLUES?
BOWL• 0 - DROME
HAS THE ANSWER
(Look For It In Friday 's
I HIie of The $peclrv m)

P.S. - HOT MEATBALL OR ITALIAN SAUSAGE TOOi
:;111111111111111111111111111111111111
Ill 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
~

'Bowl• o . Drome
Lounge

e
•

TRY 'EM

313 Kensington
TF 3-4700
At Flll,nore
~tutknl.s Must Sh(\\\' Pmlll or A,::,,

MEAT BALL SANDWICH .... . .. 55c
ITALIAN SAUSAGESANDWtCH. .60c

1F 2-9331

Now-enjoy the trim good looks of
your favorite pants style, tai lored In
rugged, Sanforized twill in the popular off-white
and desert tones. LEVI'S Slim fits look like •
million bucks,

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

COLLEGE PIZZERIA
FREE DELIVERY!!

ll Vl'SSUM
FITS
THE

and

ALL FROM

~◄\

TFl-54

.

"ON CAMPUS"

�PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, November 12, 1963

STUDENTSENATEQUESTIONAIRE
The followingquestlonalre11an 1tt.mpt on lfte part of your StudentSenate to determine
tho Interest'orIfie 1tvd111t
body.
PloaM fill out Ifie following and retvm It to Ifie Sonate Office, Norton room 205, or In
the campus rosldence halls, before Tuelday.
Class St-atus:

Eating Facilllil'S .
Indi cate ea!l ng fncilil;&gt;"
Goodyear
Tower
Norlon

Present lypc re~idenche;
OH campus not at omc
Campus
OU campus at home

F.

s.
Jr .
G.S.

t

1

Food:
~n

Quanlit ativ eiy adequate (in genera l)
Qualitatively Adequate (in general)
Religiously Suitable

The Fine Arts Committee is presently sponsoring a one
man ex~bilt in the second floor lounge. The exhibit will
run until Nov. 25. It consists of watercolors, charcoals , and
pastels created by Leon Kostushko.
Mr. Kostushko was born in Austria-Hungary and · is
a graduate of the School of Architecture and the Royal
Academy of Art. He has worked with various art forms
and· in such wide-ranging mediums as cartooning , archi­
tecture, landscapes, sculpture, portraits, and still-lifes .
Following the Second World War , Mr. Kostushko came
to the United States. Presently, he is artistic illustrator
for the Amherst laboratories of Syl~an ia Electronics Sys­
tems. A member of the Buffalo Society of Artists, Kos­
tushko has participated in numerous art exhibitions.

Faculty Viewpoint on WBFO
Tomorrow evening WBFO. the
University radio station, begins a
new faculty • studenl discussion
series called Faculty Viewpoint.
Theformat of the program features
!acuity members responding to
puestions from his area of speciali­
zation from a student panel. Others
In lhe audience may also submit
qll('stions.
Mr. Devarant N. Pathak . the
1isiling Asian Professor from India ,
111IIbe the guest on the program
a19:10 p.m. tomorrow , originating
llv~ /rom the Dorothy M. Haas
lounge. Mr . Pathak , a political
i'&lt;'lenUst. studied at the University
of Bombay and Chicago and is
author of several textbooks in
i;c.-ial studies. He is currently in-

terested in Asian and African re•
glonalism as related to the Untied
Nations.
WBFO Invites all members of
the university community to al ­
t end the broadcast and hear the
!acuity viewpoint on current Issues
from !acuity specialists.

Comments:
RESIDENCE STUDENT ONLY
Housing:
Physical accommodation (location of housingl
Number of rooma1es
Room equipment
Comments:

Adequale
Adequate
Adequatc

Have you ever be1m10the inhrmcry for treatment?
II yes, complete lhe following:
Physical accomodation
Commcnls :
A1litudes tow11rd:
Bookstore:
Availability of books
Book prices
Book orderln~
Librnry
Availability of books
Book holdings

lnadc-quale
Overcrowded
lnlldequate

1

Yes

No I
No t
No (

Adequate
AdPQUflle

AdcqualcAdcquale
Adequate

I

I

ln adt'&lt;JUale
I nadequate
tnadequa1c

l

I

i\dequnle
Arlrquntc

I

t
(
1

1
1

1

1

l nadcqual&lt;'
lnnd equate

Sports
Tickets dislrlbuti on

Adequate

t

In adequatt•

1

Comnicnls:
Parking:
Do you own a

car:

yrs I l
No ( l
Indi cate in lhe columns below tht• numix•r ,,1linws per 11eek you do
lh1• following.
•
1. lhr num ber of limes you drive lo U.S.
2. lht • number or times you rid e !NOT DRI VE! to U.B.
3. the number of time s you use the parking lots
4. lhe number or limes your driv er us1.&gt;s
the lots
5. the number or limes you use public trnnsport ation
6. lhc number oc tim e you ride a bike

nol Ill all
once a week
twice a week
three times a week
four times a week
five time a week
more lhan fiv e

2.

1.
(

lndkate your Division:

u.c.

Schedule for Music
Lounge.
10:00 - 11:30-Jazz
11:30 • 1:00-Popular
1:00 - 2:30-Classical
2:30 - 4:00-Folk
4 · 5- Semi Classical

No
No

Arts &amp; Sciences
Business Adminislralion
Education
Engineering
Nursin g
Pharmacy
Social Work

(

)

I

:1.
(

)

(

4.
)

5.
I

I

6.

( r

St•Ml&lt;':
Do you feel your Scrmtor 1sadN1u11
1cly re1&gt;rt'Sl'ntlngyou?
Yes ( )
No t ,
Comments:
Doyou approve of bel'r bcln1,:servt'CIin Nc&gt;rlun?
Yl's I l
No ( I
tr yes, Why?
If no, Why?
Tre there any areas you would likC' to see your Sen.Ill' l'Oncen1rat&lt;• on?
Commrnts?

Hints for Christmas Gilts

fashion
now

BUFFALO
TEXTBO
OKSTOR
ES, INC.

andover-the-sl,oe

agents tor

WE BCOR

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high fidelity tape recorder

361 0 MAI N ST .
BUFFALO 26, N. Y.
TF 3-7131
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compact offers portability , simple operation
and Webcor quality at a very modest price.
Mokes wonderful sounding ful l fidelitv dual ~
track recordings in two speeds ... JJ/4 and
7 ,'i ips. Plays 3", 5" and 7" reels. Has highly
sensitive hand -held microphone . Powerful am·
Pl,f1er and wide range Permanent Magnet
speaker reproduces outstanding sound . Fea·
l ures Webcor's new single push-lever simplified control . External speaker jack . Record
safety lock prevents accidental erasure . Roomy
built -in storage holds cord, reels and micro·
Phone. Rugged case weighs only 14 lbs.
'
Ebony, EP•2400.

s799s
Tall,slim, br ight•patenl -finbhl ••• the
fashion in snow and rain boots todoy.
And SLEEKER
S have still mor•- you
wear SL E EK E R S right over your
lntakar,. loafe rs and casual flats! So
much fun ••• and no extra shoes to
bothtr COl'T)'lngl Choose beautiful
knee-high SL IE KER S In gleaming
Block, Cranberry, or Wh lt11. Come In,
phone, or mall you, orde r today .

"SCOTCH''
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Sln11 S (U) M (61-71)
l (8·9) Xt (9\ lot)

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�\.

C

PAGE FOUR

Tuesday, November 12, 196~

SPECTRUM

, ,111m1111J11~,CCT11i'rln1oo:1111:.111St1111m1:111t:111C11
1~
1•11,11111;rnl'l111:1c1RmlttllllllJ:lllllllfflii

Spectrum

0

Sports

O

*

Concannon,
BCDown
Bulls,15-0
By ALAN NEWMAN
A combination of penalti es, inter­
Cl:'ptions,and most of all Ja c k Con•
cannon , helped Boston College reg­
ister ils filth victory or the year
1
Saturday as they deleattod the Bulls
15-0before 13,650Chestnut Hill fans.
Neither rain nor wind •nor mud
could slop the eCfccUvenrss of the
Eagle quarterback ris he passed
lor the first touchdown anJ ran for
the next 8 points . The first half
was all C.Oncannon: he arcounlt'tl
for all but 11 or th&lt;' loluJ BC yard•
age. But in !he final 30 mlnul&lt;'s
UB's dcfcnscs tighlcn('d und the
homr team did 1101 St'On'.
Boston rollrd to its first touch­
down on the opening k11'koU. On
eight plays Conr;innlln hil rive• of
fiw fmm thc alr; llll' Inst 1wr1al
1v:1sa H-yard1•r to Mc-t)owan rul•
mmaling thr 70 y:ml y:ml c.frivc.
Marty DIMer.,.1 split lht· uprights
and the Eagles led 7-0.

When the Bulls Wl're stalled on
BC's 38 Edwards punted into the
end zone for the touchbark. It
took eight plays for Boston lo
reach the goal line, lhe key play
being a 51 yard pass to All•Amcri·
cu candidatl' Jirn Whall'n. On the
next play, with the ball on lhe UB
11, Concannon rolled out lo his left
and sped into lhe end zone un•
touched. The Eagle signal-caller
ran around his right end this time
for the two-point conversion. In
the 80 yard drive Concannon was
dircelly responsible for every gain.
The sc1'0nd half was perhaps
niorr cvt'nly matched than the
firsl-a)lhough U1e Bulls could not
Sl'0re Ihcmsclvcs they SUCCC&lt;'dcd
in coulaining lh&lt;.' tiring ConC'Unnon
largely due lo 1hr cHorls of co-

captains Larry Gcrgley and Gerry
Philbin.
When BC drove to the UB 3 In
the third quarter, Gergley nailed
the Eagle field general on two
quarterback
sneaks and pushed
him back lo the 16 on an attempt­
ed pass play which sustained the
scoring threat.
Philbin saw considerable action
in the middle linebacke r spot, his
purpose being to red-dog Concan­
non. Concannon, 9.8 sprinter, was
able lo elude the co-cap tain and go
for big yardage around the ends.
II was when Philbin returned to
his regular position of tackle that
he played his superior game, and
in doing so was named Bufialo's
lop lineman in the pressbox poll.

LARRYGIIIOLIY, C.-C.,taltt atlll11111

~f%7S
~~Il007
~

1894(

.......•.

Student
BookShop
3400 /Mt-I $TmT

You, hke many nf us, may be
rearhing out in an e ffort t o iclen­
tify yourself properly,
lo learn
who you are and whNe you are
going. We believe WP have found
the answers to these questions in
the Ch ristian Scienre textbook,
Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures by Mary Baker
Eddy. You can finci lhem, too.
We inv it e you lo
meetings and to
are working out
through applytng
Christian Srienrt' .

come to our
hear how we
our problems
the truths of

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATIO
N
SlateUlllnnltyof NtwYolt,t lllffllt
Mutiflt
Mtttl•1

I IM•:

t«w

YOlllC• , , • TREPHONE,833-7000 Area Code 716

LOCATION:

BUF
FALU
TEXTBOOK
STORES
,
3610

MAIN

ST.

BUFFALO 26, N. Y.

TF

3-7131

AREA

CODE

716

7 o'cloek ThY~ay1

,reco : Hortoa Holl, Mv•lc •• ·

u•

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u ... ,w,,
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n,,.,,.. •""

loooblora.Po,,.,..ck B4itt.,,,

o1 --••
ti.IS.

Coin-operated
Vico-Mati
c copier.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE
Pres. Fomas'
Recommendation

OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

BOSTON COLLEGE

SPECTRUM

(See Page Three)

PREVIEW
(See Page

F.lerciO

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1963

VOLUME 14

No. 10

Senate Defeats Fresh Amendment
Professor Parkinson Speaks
In Fenton Series Thursday

Professor C. Northcote Parkinson will be the second
speaker of the Fenton Lecture Series, Thursday. One can
expect a truly outstanding orator, for Professor Parkinson
has a deep reservoir of devilish humor, wit, and intelligence.
This hasbe en displayed numerous times, especially in his
hilarious but prudent analyses of the “laws” governing business operations in corporations and in small units; such as
our families. This has made him

a celebrity in England as well as
in the United States..
Several books of this "best-selling" author are indeed well-renowned. In In-Laws and Outlaws,
Professor Parkinson explores corporate climbing through such
methods as marrying the boss's
daughter, while "Parkinson's Law"
explains how work expands so as
to meet the time and personnel
available for its completion. In addilion, The Law and The Profits
discovers how expenses rise to meet
and even surpass one's income.
The professor has described these
impressive findings in many lectures, as well as such related items
as the cocktail party method of
personnel selection, how to manage
and mis-arrange your personal finances, and how he discovered his
now-famous laws.
One might come to the conclusion that Professor Parkinson is
merely a humorist. To the contrary, he is noted also as a distinguished historian and educator.
Hr has lectured on the problems
of taxation in England, and Scandinavia, and has taught history for
many years on both sides of the
Atlantic, including at Indiana University, Harvard Graduate School
of Business Administration, the
Royal Navy College, Dartmouth,
and the University of Liverpool in
England. For many years he held
Raffles Chair of History at
the University of Malaya in Singapore.

lh'

*5

kri
PROFESSOR PARKINSON

In addition to the best selling
volumes, he is the author of many
highly-respected editions on historical and political subjects, including The Evolution of Political
Thought. He has written numerous
scholarly articles for such publications such as "Harper's”, “The

Reporter", “The New York Times
Magazine”, “The London Economist”, “The National Review",
"The Encyclopedia Britannica”,
and “Punch". Furthermore, he has
made many appearances on radio
and television.
His lecture will begin at 8:30
p.m, in Butler Auditorium. Professor Parkinson’s subject will be
“The Crisis in American Education”, If you wish to gain an astute
insight into this complex problem,
schedule your time so that you may

attend this extremely worthwhile
address.

P

r - Charles J. Beyer, Professor of modern languages,
. 1 be decorated by the French government in a ceremony
‘ oda y at 8 P-m. in the Norton Conference Theater.
Mr. Edouard Morot-Sir, cultural counsellor in the French
Embassy will bestow the Academic Palms on Dr. Beyer, and
men will deliver an address, entitled “French Wit and
American Humor.”
Dr. Beyer, who was born in BenHd. France in 1912, holds three

degrees
,* ,r

from

the University

of

isbPSQL. He .taught in Dijon and
Strasbourg for five years and came

t0 lhi s country in 1941 to teach at
University. He joined the
faculty in 1942 as visiting associate
Professor on the Mrs. Joseph T.
Jones Foundation. In Feb. 1945. he
"as named associate professor and
a, mg chairman of
the Department
of Romance Languages. From 1947
until 1952 he was chairman of the
department.
I)r - Beyer
has presented papers
■i’
several congresses, in particular,
:' 1,ose of the Modern Language As■'('iation of America, and has contributed numerous articles to
American and French publications
~among them, the Romanic Re|' iew ' P-M.L.A., Revue des Sciences
"umaines and Revue de PhilosoP"' e‘ His studies are devoted primarily tp the philosophy of the 17th
18th centuries, particularly,
Descartes and Montesquieu.
The Order of the Academic
alms was created by Napoleon,
n March 17, 1808. "It was
connived to recompose teachers, arbsts or writers for their services
ln *he domain of education and
ar,s
according to a statement

Brown

t

jmfi

°

"

Honorary Degree
President Clifford C. Furnas, will
receive an honorary degree from
the National University of Asuncion, Paraguay, during an

eightday visit to the South American
nation beginning Nov. 10. Dr. Furnas is one of the first Americans
to receive an honorary degree from
a Paraguay university. Dr. Crispin Insaurralde, rector of the University of Asuncion, will award
the degree to Dr. Furnas Friday.

15.

Nov.

Beyer Receives French Palms
...

Furnas to Receive

OR.

BEYER, to be decorated

from the French Embassy. “The
insignia consists of an oval shaped
qrown, formed by two branches,
a palm and a laurel, crossing each
other at the base and the top. It
is suspended from a purple ribbon.
"The Academic Palms are awarded not only to Frenchmen, but also
to foreigners and to French nationals residing outside France, for
services they have rendered to the

propagation of French culture."

During his visit, Dr. FUrhas -will
present an illumniated scroll on
. in recognition
behalf of UB
of their joint efforts in the cause
of humanity and in the training of
youth, especially in those areas
"

concerned with the alleviation of
suffering and the maintenance of
health."
Dr. Furnas will bo honored by a
dinner given by Ambassador William P. Snow in the U.S. Embassy,
Monday. He and the Ambassador
will speak at the dedication of the
Basic Sciences Building at the university Thursday morning.
Furnas . will visit
Dr,

hos-

colleges, and health institutes, and meet with college officials, medical students, public

pitals,

health officials, and members of
the U.S. Agency for International

Development (AID) staff.
Dr. Frank P. Paloucek. an assistant professor of gynecology at
UB serving an 18-monlh tour of
duty at the University of Asuncion,
be
will
Dr. Furnas’ host.
Dr. Paloucek is Working under a
training program set up six years
ago by UB in cooperation with
the University of Asuncion for
Paraguay's medical

students.
Aside from the formal schedule
dinners,
of receptions,
tours and
wi 1 i
meetings.
Dr. Furnas

opportunity to see
have
an
one of the world’s great falls, Iguagu

Falls.

The Amendment giving the Freshman Class Council
a voting seat on the Senate was defeated on the Senate
floor Tuesday evening, by a vote of 16 for; 9 against; and
1 abstention; a tw-thirds majority was required. The
amenment was opposed to on grounds that it would not
solve the problem the freshmen are posed with. Instead
of passing this amendment it was felt that a more successful answer would be to revamp
‘
the entire structure of the pre
sent Student Senate Constitution.
Michael Shapiro said, "The freshmen arc
represented, but
this is not the perfect answer.
This amendment is a continuation
of the patchwork of the present constitution. We need a new constitution.”
The Senate formed a Constitutional Revision Committee at the
suggestion of Mr. Shapiro and
elected Tom Kobus and Howard
Gondree co-chairmen.

General Grounds Committee
Peter Scholl, Chairman of the
General Grounds Committee announced that the University is building a parking lot next to Baird
Hall which will be free until surfaced next year. He also announced
that complaints have been registered against severl groups who have

been advertising outdoors. The
maintenance department requests

that any group advertising an event
on campus will be required to remove all material within 48 hours
after the event or 72 hours if the
event falls oh a weekend. This will
include slingers. Any violations
will be reported to the Committee
and action will be taken.

Civil Rights Committee's Sales
The Civil Rights Committee is
sponsoring the sale of “A Jazz
Salute to ( Frpedom". a two record
album which will be available in

Dr. William J. LeVeque, Professor of Mathematics, University of
Michigan, will speak on “Topics
in the Theory of Numbers.” Sponsored by the math department, the
lectures are scheduled for Nov. 11
at 4:00 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf and
at 8:00 p.m. in 70 Acheson Hall.
Dr. LeVeque's talks are part of
a series entitled Colloquia in Analysis, Applied Mathematics and Algebra, The purpose- of -the GoHoquia
series is to introduce distinguished
mathematicians to the University
and the community and to provide
information about the latest reX(5garhb'»tEendS- in mathematics.
Dr. LeVeque has been at the
University of Michigan since 1949,
having previously taught at the
University of Colorado, Cornell and
Harvard. He was a Fuibright Research Scholar at Manchester University, 1951-52. and was an Al-'
fred P. Sloan Research Fellow in
London and Gottingen. 1957-59.

Anyone interested in
joining the staff of the
Spectrum should attend
the general staff meeting this afternoon at
4:00 p.m. in the Spectrum office, 355 Norton
Union. No experience
is necessary in the field
of journalism.

sidiary of Columbia, and a dollar
will go. to the Committee. Many
top name artists have contributed
their services to create his album.
The donations will be given to
the Congress On Racial Equality.
Jean Traylor, Chairman of the
committee, put forth a plea for
used books. In Greenwood, Miss.,
Negros are barred from all public
libraries. Schools all over the nation are asked to give any kind
of book, in any condition, for this
cause.
Convocations Chairman

Resigns

Sylvia Spring was. elected Chairman of the Convocations Committee by the Senate: She is replacing

former Chairman Paul Schulman.
Mr. Schulman had resigned his position, among other things, it placed
to great strain on his academic
work.
Academic Affairs Committee
The Academic

Affairs Commit-

tee, chaired by Gerry Cahtenzaro,

announced an Academic Convention to lake place Monday- Nov-.

25, at 3:15 in the Multi-Purpose
Room. The topic will be “The
Significance of the Test Ban
Treaty". Guest speakers will be
Dr. t'riend. Dr. Cutman, Dr. Cux
and Dr. Powell.

Japanese Prints on Exhibit
Recent Japanese Prints, an ex-

hibition

LeVeque to Speak

the Bookstore. The album will sell
for five dollars, four of which will
go to the record company, a sub-

surveying contemporaiy
Japanese printmaking was begun
in Room 231, Norton Union, on
Nov. 4 and will continue through
Nov. 24.
Twenty-two contemporary Japanese artists arc represented in this
exhibition by prints created since
the Second World War. As a group

of Western men and the influence
of their art and ideas upon Japanese culture. The molding of these
artistic heritages assimilates several stylistic traditions, Oriental,
as well as, Occidental—calligraphy,

surrealism,
expressionism,
stractism, and primitivism.
Printmaking

—

primarily

abthe

woodcut—has been one of Japan's
most important art forms in terms

WSSKKtM

v*~&gt; W

SAMPLE OF NORTON EXHIBITION

thy manifest a dramatic new aspect of Japanese artistic expression.
The direction and development of
printmaking in Japan today springs
from the ihcreasing fusion between
the artistic values of East and

West—a phenomenon- periodically
evident during the past century,
recently accelerated by the influx

of popularity and technique. Among
the prints shown here, more than
halt are woodcuts. They are by

Kitaoka, Kosaka, Munakata, Salto
and Watanabe. the lithographs of
Sugai and Kanemilsu. the mezzotints of Hamaguchi, and the relief
prints of Kobashi are representative

of

trends.

stylistic

and

technical

�Leo Smit, Pianist-Composer
To Give Recitals at Baird

Li Col. Huddleston
Designates Cadets
As Distinguished'

Leo'Smit, pianist-composer and professor of music, will
give his first recitals next Friday and Saturday, Nov. 15
and 16, at 8:30 in Baird Hall. Friday’s performance is for
students only; they will be admitted free of charge by the
presentation of their ID card at the door. No tickets are
necessary. The program will Jje repeated Saturday for faculty, staff, and the general public; tickets may be purchased

Lt Colonel Thomas L. Huddleston,
Professor of Air Science, designated
a number of sti 3nts as Distinguished Cadets of- the Air Force
ROTC Program. Those so named
are Jon N. Swift of Plattsburg;
David R. Hammond of Buffalo;
Robert H. Haight of Ogdensburg;
and Charles J. Husbush of Buffalo. The awards signify the students' Scholastic, 5 , .military, and

at the box office: faculty $1. general admission $2. Students who wish
to attend Saturday night will be
required to purchase tickets.
The program will consist of the
Stravinsky Serenade en la (1925),

Capping

version of the work,
which was orchestrated by French
composer Maurice Ravel. However,
it was originally written for piano

department.

the

award

7:30-9:30

ceremony

presentation, “The Communist
Party, USA". Mr. Gray came as
Mr. J. Edgar Hoover’s personal
representative from the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. Washington, D.C. About 1,800 AFROTC
Cadets and faculty members of the
University heard him speak on the
perils of Communism and controls
the Government has over the communist party in the United States.
A special Agent with the FBI since
1930, Mr. Gray now serves in a
supervisory capacity in Washington.

LEO SMIT

solo

Pictures at an Exhibition, explaining the paintings which inspired the
work. Mr. Rothlein will show slides
of the Hartman pictures to illustrate
his talk.
Mr, Smil, composer and pianist,
was Sloe Professor of Music here
last fall, and gave many recitals
in addition to his lectures. Those
who attended will remember his
superb virtuosity, extreme refinement. and depth of interpolation.
He joined the music department
faculty this semester, and plans
several,more recitals; the next pair
Will be in December. In January
he will appear with violinist Eudice. Shapiro. He will give the Buffalo premiere of the Stravinsky
Capriccio and the Tchaikowsky Concert Fantasy with the Buffalo Philharmonic under Lukas Foss in
March. Presently he is teaching
piano and composition in the music

Tuesday, Nov. 19 from

p.m. in the Craft Shop. Admission:
$.50. All those who are interested
in learning how tb make greeting
cards and
use
the aforesaid
methods are cordially invited to

was Special Agent Arbor W. Gray's

orchestral

Jerome Rothloin of the Art department will give a short talk on

By TAMIE SULLIVAN
The Norton Union Craft Shop has
scheduled two continuous “workshops” which will be conducted by
Nancy Belfer. Assistant Professor
of Art at Buffalo State.

versity.

and

Mussorgsky’s
lengthy, powerful, and demanding
Pictures at an Exhibition. Students
may be more familiar with the
post.

Norton Craft Shop Program:
Mrs: Belf er, of State, to Speak

leadership achievements at our uni-

the Schubert Sonata in B flat, opus
(1828),

Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The Student Judiciary is seeking applications from students interested in being secretary to the Student Judiciary or the newly
formed Student Parking Courts,

Students

He attended the University of
Utah from 1940 to 1942; served in
the United Stales Navy and in
the Marine Corps from 1942 to
194(1; and received the LL.B degree

should fill

out application forms in
room 205 Norton beginning today. All applications

should

be

com-

Wednesday.

,

Mrs. Belfer, in her lecture and
demonstration, will show students

how ta make and design greeting
cards by using silk screen, lino-

block, and other processes.

The “workshops” will be held on

attend.
Remember also to visit your
Craft Shop, and take advantage of
its many facilities. It is open regularly to students, faculty, and
staff.

(MECEK

from Duke University, Durham,
North Carolina, in 1950. He is a
member of the North Carolina Bar
Association.

pleted and returned by

HD
IVlllitetlO A

NORTON CRAFT SHOP

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students

3400 MAIN STREET

TF3-1600

Open Monday, Thursday and
Friday svsnlng HJI 9 P.M.

(Opposite UB)

1217 Niagara Fall* Blvd.

Phone:

837-4772

Amherjf, N. Y. U;

CATHAY GARDEN
New Jaeger define
a British classic

512 Niagara Falls Blvd.
]

-

MINUTES DRIVE FROM UB

Jaeger take the classic British sweater. They knit It In
traditional material—soft, brushed, pure Shetland wool.
But the details are quietly 1963.Look at the set of the
sleeves. The long, lean waist. Light and warm, the
Shetland sweater comes In 14 colours, all sizes.

POLYNESIAN—CHINESE
AMERICAN FOOD
EXPERTLY PREPARED

TAKE OUT ORDERS
IF 7-3444
Alto Featuring

EXOTIC DRINKS
Luncheon
11:00 A.M.-3:30 P.M.
REASONABLE PRICES

Dinner
4:00 P.M. 9 P.M,
-

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

“ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, November 8, 1963

Furnas Recommends Funds
To Modernize Engineering

Tutors Lend Community Service

President C. C. Furnas yesterday recommended that the
New York State legislature appropriate funds aimed at upgrading obsolescent engineers.
The former assistant secretary of defense under Eisenhower, spoke at a panel on “Continuing Education: A Stimulous for Enginering and Science,” which continues through
today at Columbia University.
Dr. Furnas, who is also chairman of the New York State’s Advisory Council for Advancement of
Industrial Research and Development. recommended that the legislature sanction a pilot project which
would finance special continuing
i.location courses for engineers and
enlists "in some selected New
York Stale industrial area within
the next calendar year,"
Furnas emphasized that the
engineer who graduated from colfrom ten to forty years ago
and has not kept up with his field,
the

|M||

mm|

WW\

falo.

•

ed direct action. We have not long

Tutors Gain Results
The tutors often must backtrack

\
«

\

,,

i

who

di\ idends would be tremendous
"One should not be overly critical
of our Empire State but when he
contemplates the major expenditures and the impact of the continuing education centers for some
of the professions as such universities as Minnesota, Wisconsin,
University of California at Los
Angeles and Michigan State, he
cannot help but wonder if we New
Yorkers do not have a bit of catching-up to do."
"The times call for unprecedent-

Parkway. This center is financed
by the Episcopal Church of Buf-

Vv

en-

and then extended, the eventual

4)
’

j

By CLAUDIA KOWAL
"The public eye seems to condemn college students as goodtime
seekers and money wasters. What
a shame they don't give equal publicity to the serious young adults
like the ones I know," comments
Captain Dale Hallock; director of
the new student tutoring plan.
The young adults Captain Hal-

lock is referring to are thirty students from U.B. and Buffalo State
Teachers College. Each week they
tutor sixty children who are having difficulty in school at St. Augustine's Center on Humboldt

w'

Dr..

supervise, young engineering staffs.
Dr. Furnas feels that “it is unrealistic to expect the individual recipients of this type of re-education to contribute financially,” and
that joint industry-government financing is the best answer,
Refering to his suggestion for a
New York State pilot project, he
said, "The economic pay-off would
not be immediate but if such a
program were effectively pursued,

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

»

!|

II

SK Bali
PRESIDENT FURNAS

to talk about it, to iron it out. We
must begin to move. Our nation’s
our future as an econosecuriy
mically, socially and materially
healthy state and nation
depend
upon our grasping the significant
points of all we know today, all
we will know tomorrow, and bringing this body of knowledge to bear
on the problems of mankind. Everyone has a stake in this. And, hopefully, in this conference, at this
time, we can go about taking the

in order to iron out scholastic
problems. Although they help their
students complete homework- their
greatest effect upon the children is
through growth of personal relationships. Often they can achieve
successes that have not been seen
before. Grades do not always show
a drastic improvement though the
tutoring often results in a new

the children and a
willingness to cooperate with authoritarian figures.

eagerness in

The students who volunteer for
this job have a good time. According to Tom Ellis, one of the student tutors: "There are many disappointments and setbacks but
through this experience we gain a
knowledge of the lives of these
children and the community which
they come from."
Adults seeking a high school diploma from night school also may
use the tutoring service. One twenty-nine year old retarded man has
been remarkably hlped in the techniques of spelling and writing.
Program To Expand
There is always a need for more

tutors. Interested students need not
be from the school of education
and, although the Episcopal Church
finances this free sendee, college
tutors are of many religious denominations. If you would like to
participate in this project contact
Captain Hallack, TX 6-4984,

there is a need for teachers in Algebra, Latin. Geometry, French,
and modern American History as
well as the sciences.

"So often these kids don't have
a suitable, quiet place to study,"
adds Capt, Hallock. "They receive
no individual help, classrooms are
over crowded and teachers are under paid.’’ His hope is to stop many
drop-outs and to encourage the
students to develop their capabilities as much as possible.

Applications for committee membership for
Silver Ball are available at the candy counter. They must be returned by Nov. 11 in
room 2i5, Norton.

Capt, Hallock hopes that eventually there will be enough volunteers so that more schools can be
offered this sendee.
Presently

—

—

first steps toward this fulfillment.”
Oher keynote figures at the conference include Malcolm Wilson,
Lt.

Governor, and Keith S. McNYS Commissioner of Commerce.
The meeting was sponsored by
the Advisory Council for the Advancement of Industrial Research
and Development in New York
State, in cooperation with Columbia
Hugh,

University.

THEY SING HONEST FOLK SONGS.

IN A WILD,
DRIVING,
SPIRITED,
EXCITING,
AND SOMETIMES QUIET
NEW WAY.

(JOURNEYMEN
NEW

DIRECTIONS

IN

FOLK MUSIC

(GvuioC )
•

i

c o

•

o

«

-

Just listen to their Capitol album, “New Directions in Folk Music.’’
You’ll hear the rocking, driving way the Journeymen sing “Someday Baby”
a low down blues out of Chicago. The fun they have with “Stackolee” the wild
song about a legendary terror of New Orleans. Their quiet and moving version
of “All the Pretty Little Horses” one of the most beautiful lullabies ever written,
Their spirited ragtime rendition of “San Francisco Bay”
Then you’ll know what’s new in folk songs. And what’s best, r
~

\l

Look for—ask for -the Journeymen in concert on your campus

ICO

.

�THE

Campus

SPECTRUM

the Stale University Of New
Th. official student'newspaper ofUniversity
Campus, Buffalo U.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, September
to the last week in
weekly from the first week of
Easter.
Christmas,
and
period*,
Thanksgiving,
exam

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
ARNOLD
John Kowal Business
-

Managing Editor
New* Editor
Feature Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Editorial Advisor

Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Martin Kriegel
Harriet Heitlinger
Lawrence Frenkel
Rocky Versace
Russell Goldberg
William Siemering

Y rk at
N- Y May, except ffor

„

Manager
Advertising Mgr
Layout Editor
Copy Editor
Circulafioin Mgr.
Office Manager
Financial Advisor

Pat Launer
Laurence Singer
David Irwin
Marcia Cooper
Lois Hessinger
Karen Sanford
Thomas Haenle, Jf.

Alan Newman,
Stiff Vicki Bugelski, lorn. Wallech, A. Lind. Leventhel
Fisch, Barbara Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg,
Allan Schotom, Mike Sullanik, Vic Menza, Rena
Laur,en
Trudy Stem,
ency
Frank
N
e„
Larry
Pat Jones, Nancy Blacker
Charles
Lynn Brothman, Ray Crawford,
Jean Lancaster Claudia Kowal, Susan Licker, Rosa
Christine Cunningham,
Karen
Chicko,
Jeremy
Taylor,
Milch,
Sommer,'
Robert
Jane
Bykoff, Fran Marfurt, Sandra Ol.n,
Lillian Kalastein, Marcia Ann Orsxulak, Helen
Gern Goldberg, Ed Rizzo,
Steve Banyasz, Joseph Leng, Fred Rosenberg, Elaine Barron,
Hampton, Don Castle, Linda
Terry Sweeney, Henry Pounds, Tom Kuiarski, Dave
Wilson, Alice Ostrander.
Wachner, Suzanne Peugol, Nancy Schultz, Ronnie

Lotsof,

Pamela Reid

Post
Entered as second class matter February 9 1 1*3,af 1879 AcOffice at Buffalo. N. V., under the Act of Marchprovided
for in
ceptance for mailing at a special rate of postage
February 9, 1951.
Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917, authorized
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation 9000.

Represented for national advertising by National
Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Advertising

Editorials
An Afterthought; Frosh Amendment
In defeating the amendment to give the freshman class

representative on the Senate floor, the Senate exposed
the ineffectiveness of their Constitution to represent the
student body adequately. If not that, at least our student
government has learned that everyone cannot be pleased.
The freshman class is represented on the Senate floor
six
by
University College Senators; all of whom are sophomores. This difficulty could be offset by having at least
one U.C. seat uncontested in the spring elections to await
the arrival of the freshman class the following fall.
a

The crucial point (which was not well-taken during
the Senate debate) was to decide whether or not the sophomore representatives could properly represent the whole
U.C. division. That is a very subjective matter; for, do any
Senators vote in accordance with class or divisional interests and, are there any to begin with? Certain U.C.
Senators voted against the amendment because, as they
said, the freshman class did not even want the amendment
to pass. Alan Chasky, for one, understood that his recent
U.C. election pointed to the above action, since he was
against its passage during the campaign. Though we doubt
that this election took the form of a “mandate” of that type,
his point was clear.
The democratic process provides for the assertion
of majority opinion. Had enough freshmen been interested
in the amendment’s passage, more would have voted . . .
and they would not have voted for someone who objected
to the amendment.
It should also be noted that the Freshman Class Council can be seated on the Senate under the present arrangement. Their representative would not have a vote, but the
Council’s influence could be significant. It would be to
their advantage to take such a position; for on the not too
virile Senate, a non-voting seat is not especially emasculated.

A Man Without A Country
A wry remark in reference fo the coup in South Viet
Nam has become a clever joke; that is, that the military
revolt was go well executed that the CIA could not possibly have been directing the action. We many never know
just what role the CIA did play, but the' comment does
the coup was adminispoint to a more somber thought
tered by the Vietnamese and, presumably, for the Vietnamese.
Sometime in the future, President Diem may well be
honored by his people as the man who forged a nation
under chaotic circumstances. It is generally believed that
South Viet Nam would not be, were it not for his leadership after French colonial rule ended and while Communist
encroachments were taking place. News of the coup brought
joy to the streets and pagodas of Saigon—proving
the American reporters correct when in their earlier dispatches they wrote of the House of Ngo’s isolated rule.
President Diem was obviously not a leader of his people
the day he died.
—

By HARRIETT

HRITLINORR

S. MAZUR

O.n.r.1

Photography Staff; Joel Havens,

Affairs

°

The Student Activities Committee
is in the midst of a very interesting, but none-the-less trite, study.
It is the committee's job to foster,
expand and originate new organizations on campus; in other words,
to be aware of the needs and feelings of the students that this is
virtually an impossibility.
To think and act for 12,000 people, the job of this committee of
10, is the core of many of the
problems that face the Student Association as a whole. For each
member to sound out the interests
of, say, a thousand students, to
compile, reject and coordinate new
activities and organizations is a
worthy goal but not a practical

assignment.
The principle on which a solution should be founded is to find
a cross-section of students to wdrk
on committees of this nature. This

is the foundation of the Senate itself, with Senators from the various schools and divisions of the
university and from the major coordinating groups.
On the activities committee, however, can be found a very representative group. Three committeemen are Student Senators, three
arc Seniors, three are Juniors,
three are Sophomores, and there
are some freshmen on a Subcommittee.
At least three members live in
the dorms and the group represents
a variety of major fields of study.
One of the basic premises of the
system of representative government is that those who are being

represented must make their opi-

nions heard. Here is where the
breakdown of government is found,
and our campus is definitely not
an exception. Students constantly
cotnplain about not being able to
start an organization, or wonder
if a special group exists; in essence, tear apart the work of the
Activities Committee.
The same old ridiculous situation persists. On the second floor
of Norton Union nine people sit
down and groan for hours on end
about the scope of their job and
how to begin and what to leave for
next year, until it is that next year
and hey can discuss anew. In the
basement also sit ten people who
desire to form a campus branch

of the Road Vultures but who also
groan for hours because they know
that it would never be approved
and they think that no one cares
anyway.
To my mind the fault lies with
the basement branch and not with
the second follr segment. Persis-

tant students should realize that the
axiom, "Where here's a will there's
a way” is true, even at UB.
In order for the Activities Committee, or any similar committee,
to function, it must have some point
of departure, even for a very trite
study. It's only up two flights of

stairs.

U. C. Registration
University College students whose
last names begin with the letters
designated below will sec their advisers on the following days:

11 to 15
Nov. 18 to 26
Dec. 2 to 6
Nov.

Dec.

9 to 13

Dec. 16 to 20

D
B
L
F, Z, W

C

A
K

M

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

J

Students will make an appointment with the receptionist in Dietendorf 1X4 at least one week in
advance of the above scheduled
times. Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled times will have to see their
advisers during examination time
in January and then be required
to register in Clark Gym on Regist ration Day.

$UGG££TIMS vOU

TAKE

IN

iffe

cjCetterS to the

-

fiPKYEKLBCIUKK*

clditor

Fraternity Apologizes
TO THE EDITOR:
The Fellows of Beta Sigma Rho

Fraternity would like to extend
their apology to the Fraternity
System and the Brothers of Phi
Epsilon Fraternity for their misconduct at the Boston University
football_.game. The Fellows of Beta
Sigma Rho Fraternity would like
it known that they do not condone

any destructive action on the part
of one fraternity against another.
if there is a dispute
between two groups, we sincerely
hope that it can be resolved in
the same manner as this one was
—over the conference table.

Sincerely,
THE FELLOWS OF

BETA SIGMA RHO

New Student Review Awaited
TO THE EDITOR:
Tone, as all good English majors
know, is "the way the writer takes

himself." If Loma Wallach’s article
on "The New Student Review” is
any indication of the tone of this
new magazine, the “way it takes
itself,” I’m all for it. The history
of the “New Student Review”
sounds like the story of my life,
and that, as Shaw once pointed
out when asked to do his autobiography, is only the story of
everybody’s life. That is, the "New
Student Review" has made mis-

takes. It honestly lists them, evaluates them, (without any masochistic dwelling on guilt about them)
and goes on to new accomplishments. How about that? I am looking forward to reading this representation' of what may be the
“new” student’s viewpoint. As all
the signs ask, I’m really interested
in knowing, what is the “new student” on a college campus, 1963,
really like? Perhaps the magazine
can give us some insights.
Sincerely,
Grace B. Martin

Election Rules Unfair
TO THE EDITOR;
In the recent campus-wide election only one independent candidate
ran for a seat on the Student Senate. As this independent candidate,
I would like to review some of
the election rules and show how
they hampered the outcome of the
election.
Financial regulations limited each
candidate to spend no more than
fifteen dollars on their own campaign. It seems reasonable, as was
seen in the campaign, that the endorsed party candidates did not
have to spend this money to get
their names known on campus because they could depend on their
card-carrying members to vote
along party lines.
However, the independent candidate was expected to familiarize
himself with the voters within one
week on a ridiculously low fifteen
dollar budget.
General campus rules stated that
no slingers or posters were allowed
on all painted surfaces of buildings,
interior or exterior. This rule was
definitely a fine one, but the interpretation and the decisions of the
election commitee was not so fine.
The independent candidate had
three signs on the railings of Norton Hall. By interpreting “exterior"
sides to include the railings of Norton, which are continuingly being
used for advertising, the election
committee demanded~that the inde-

pendent candidate remove his other 150 posters from campus before
9 a.m. Oct. 25, the day of elections.
However, when posters of two of
the other candidates were found on
the exterior supports of Tower, no
penalty was imposed and the violations were disregarded because of
tire “impartial” interpretations and

decisions of the election committee.
I wish to make some suggestions
to the Student Senate in regard to
coming elections.
First, I believe that a very serious examination of the election
rules should be made. The rules
should coincide with Norton rules.
Tower Rules, etc., so that there is
no conflict or need for interpretation other than that stated in the
rules. The rules should be sufficient for use in either a Fall or
Spring Election. The rules used for
the recent election were rules proposed for that election only.
Second, I propose that the Senate
make an attempt to put independent, liberal-minded persons on the
election committee who can and
will propose and interpret "fair
and impartial" rules.
Third, perhaps as one commentator said,. "Let’s try protecting the
many (in reference to the student
body) instead of the few (in reference to political parties): it might
accomplish some remarkable
thipgs.

MAURY

ZEPLOWITZ

�Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

UB Receives
Speech Grant

The Circus
By BOB MILCH
Dear Ma 'n Pa,
Last weekend were the Panhellenic Ball, an’ mah frien’ Bemie
got me a date for it. Her name
were Bernice, an’ she, were pertier than a pig in a poke. She had
her hair all blown up in one o’
them beehives, so’s it looked like
she exhaled through the top o’ her
heard, an’ she wore this perty

black eyeshadow with lipstick to
match. Then she wore this pair
o’ black stockin’s what made her
legs look like she hadn't had any
blood in there for 'bout a week.
An’ when ah tell you she coulda
opened dams with them long sexy
fingernails, well . , .

So we was in the car together
on the way to the pre-ball bocktail
party when she asked me whar ah
was from. So ah told her ah was
from Sioux City, an' she said, “Oi
doon’t beLIEVE it.” From thar,

everythin' went down hill.

When we got to the cocktail party, she introduced me with all o’
her good ole sorority sisters. They
all had boufant hair an’ black eyes
an’ black legs too. so's ah almost
lost track o' which one Bemice
was—fact is, ah woulda, ’cept Bernice had a wart on her nose an'
none o’ the others did.
Anyways, everyone she introduced me with asked if ah had had

a drink yet.
So ah figgered ah'd be sociable
an’ ah had a drink with everyone
ah met, cause if ah didn't have a
drink in mah hand, an’ they didn’t
have a drink in their hand, nobody
could talk an’ we’d just stare at
each other—this way we could sip
while we stared.
She introduced me with one girl
who asked if'n ah had any hobbies,
an' ah said ah collect string, an’
then she told me how she’d been
savin’ match covers ever since she
was three an’ that now she had
734,7383 o’ ’em an’ how she never

went nowhere where she didn't
pick up at least one an’ that that
were a fascinatin' hobby especially for anyone who travels a lot
like she has ever since she were

-little with her mothr an’ father
over the country like to Roches-

1 all

ter.

She introduced me to a nice guy
who were pinned to one o' the sisters, an' he asked me how ah liked
school, an’ ah said ah couldn't
complain. He said that were lucky
’cause he had this one course
where the guy automatically failed
thirty ought three o’ the students
an' how he had this other one
where the guy never showed up
'cept to give exams, an’ how he
just got notice from Hayes Hall
that an error was made in his
registration which they just found
an’ how he really ain't registered
after all an’ he don’t know he’s
goin’ to tell his ma n pa an' don’t
know what to do so that’s why he
were goin’ to get kazoobered tonight an' ah don’t know how lucky
ah am, sob.
She introduced me to the girl

they took from Borneo so’s no one

could say their sorority were prejudiced.

Well, after all that meetin' an'
drinkin', ah don’t remember too
much o’ the ball itself 'cept two
things. One girl couldn’t get her
date to go; he just kept sayin’,
"Wha, we got all the booze we
wanted—so’s who wansh to dance,

anyway?”
An’ then later on in the evenin’,
when no one were smilin’ anymore
’cause all the hooch had worn off,
ah met the girl from Borneo again.
She couldn't get a date, so she
were takin’ tickets at the door. She
smiled a really perty smile what
all her heart were behind an’ said.
“It’s a lovely party, isn’t it?”
Your lovin’ son,

Jethro

TO THE WOMEN IN MY LIFE

vestigated by psychologists at State
University at Buffalo under a four-

Like any other healthy American
male in pre-Wed school I am looking for a wife. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, I

year. $112,387 grant from the National Institutes of Health.

and

Dr,

Norman N, Markel, assist-

ant professor

acting as Co-investigators.
The researchers will record the
kinds of changes that take place
in the vocalizations of very young
infants before speech develops.
They will investigate the relationship between these vocalizations
and later performance of the sub-

jects as measured by language and
intelligence tests.
According to Dr.

Ringwall. 25
male and 25 female infants will
be selected, and technicians will record sounds made by the child beginning at the age of one month.
Recordings will he made in the
home, in order to retain the advantages of a familiar environment. Investigators will make a
series of recordings at pre determined intervals for 18 months. At
the age of two and again at three

the children Will be given vocabulary and language examinations.

The recordings of each of the children will then be analyzed using
recent innovations in linguistic
analysis. Determinations will be
made as to whether or not there
were any predictors of intellectual
performance or of language acquisition in the pre-language vocalizations.

R. Soemadi Saemodiwirjo, in charge of education, training, and cultural service for the

province of Central Java; Moeljono Dwidjoloekits, head of the reigonal inspectorate for
kindergartens and elementary schools in Central Java; Samuel N. Turangan, in charge of

the Department of Basic Education and Culture, South and Southeast Sulawesi; and Issac

0. Nanuliatta, chief of the Department of Basic Education and Culture for the Moluccas Area Ambon, Accompanying the group and
acting as their coordinator is Patrick F. Toole, formerly Special Assitant to the Superintendent of
Schools in Niagara Falls, now on
leave to complete his doctoral
studies

the Dutch, the

viewpoints. "We
re both democratic” they commented. “We have just about the

ame

political

ideas

and stand-

Love ceases to be a participation and becomes a transaction.
We offer what we are willing and
if it is sufficient, the object of our
affection accepts. This is not what
happened between us; emotional
convenience was certainly not the
watch word in those days;

And yet now I wonder. I wonder if “communication" and the

"attitude of growth" are not Just
more subtle forms of the same
crippling disease, I wonder if that
which drives us toward each other
is not just a wish to move away
from those things in the world
which we do not like. Which is
worse, not to love someone because
he is loud and stupid, or not to love
someone because he is full of a
potential to hurl and destroy? Or
maybe not to love someone because he bores you?

If one considers for a moment
that the nature of love is primar-

ily non-sexual (he. an imperative to
participate in the existence of another person) one realizes that the
drives of the sexual abberant are
not hard to understand. It is much

so basically different. It is a crippling desire to love and be safe—we all have it.
America has it. Love will not upset your stomach
you will not
be alone (and two can make twice
as much money, security, and
whoopee as one). But love is the
most dangerous and destructive
thing going; I learned from you
that you can not love and be safe.
—

Nor can one love and be selfless. The great Christian dream
of “pure” love which denies any
concern with the self has perhaps
done more to destroy any real understanding of the “how to” of
love than any other one misconception.

All we are or can be is US as
separate individuals. To love is the
ultimate assertion of the self. To
be real, love must spring from
that which is uniquely ourselves.
To be ourselves, we must love.
I am reminded of a conversation
I once overheard between a close
friend of mine and a person who
was maintaining that "position is
a bore."
"Have you ever loved anyone?
my friend asked

"Certainly!" (this was not a good
but it was that kind of

answer,

party)

"Then politics can't be a bore,"

he answered.

Thus are my deformities made
manifest. This is what I have become once infected with the crippling disease of life. I have loved
with words
I have fried to love
with all that is me. It is more
—

important to love than to bo safe.
My primary concern is not to insulate myself against the world
through a relationship which is certain, which pays off in proportion
to how much you put in to if, like
a gum ball machine. I want to
make a home, but not a home to

shut the doors and windows and
be sale with my wife and family;
I want a home to live in.
Yours,

most sincerely.

Jeremy

Debaters Attend Tournament
At Queens Baldwin Wallace
debated the affirmative side and

Japanese and presently the Indonesian Republic,

ndonesian political

...

A team of four debaters returned
from St. John Fisher College in
Rochester. This was the first varsity tournament attended this year.
Linda Leventhal and Linda Sapir

of service under three successive

The four Indonesians find a great
orrelation between American and

This is really a "thank you" letter to all you girls, because in each
of you I found what I was looking
for, and through you I learned how
to love
for a while. And yet,
I also learned that a great part
of "growing up" is merely a process of learning how not to love vast
numbers of people. It can be reasonably supposed that any given
person has the potential of loving
any other given person. School,
dates, clubs, vacations, parties, affairs, etc. then beconie like a slow
disease that cripples our ability to
love anyone and marriage then becomes a default situation where we
must seek those whose of deformities match our own.

easier to understand that which
is like yourself than that which is

,

The four are all veteran educators with from 20 to 32 years

sibly Canada.

find."

of psycholinguistics,

grant.Th ey will study here until June, 1964. Members of the group are:

ommented the four Indonesians.
The program of the' four educa
i°rs includes' exteneded trips to
schools in the Buffalo area, along
with trips to Florida, Chicago. Boston, Colorado. California and pos-

still cling to the belief that marriage is a good thing. I also hope
hope that there is some truth in
the aphorism, "seek and ye shall

Principal investigator will be Dr.
Egan A. Ringwall, associate professor and director of psychology

Four Indonesian educators, responsible for more than three million students in their

the tremendous effort of Indonesian
educators .to revise the Dutch system of education, still in effect
even after Indonesia's liberation
i tom Dutch rule in 1945. "The
Dutch educational system is weekly inadequate to the new naion's needs, let alone its goals.

By JEREMY TAYLOR

tellectual performance will be. in-

country, are enrolled at UB as full-time students under a Ford Foundation travel study

Their quest for advanced educational techniques was prompted by

REFLECTIONS i

The relationship between the prespeech sounds of a young infant
and his later language and in-

Indonesians Study Here

political programs:

PAGE FIVE

Left to right: ISSAC O. NANULAITTA, SOEMAOI SOEMODIWIRJO,
DEAN ROBERT FISK (School of Education), SAMUEL TURANJAN,

DWIDJOEOKITO.

Alvin Epstein and Andre Namenek
were on the negative. Our debaters
met first and second place teams
of the tournament, Colgate and
the University of Vermont. The
squad won debates against the University of Rochester, St. Bonaventure University and Le Moyne College.
Regus King

points. Most of our people are very

much alligncd with the free World,”
Significant to the group is the attitude of American school children.
“The children are truly free to ask

Unfortunately, in our
country there is still an icy barrier
between the teacher and student,”
This relationship they hope to
change and impede.
questions.

The overall development of Indonesia is still being retarded by
the political, economic and social
shake-up following independence in
1945. Previous to this, the Dutch
controlled education beyond elementary school, in addition to controiling the nation’s economy.

In 1945. the Indonesians ordered
the Dutch out and gave the others
an ultimatum: Indonesian citizenship or expulsion. Many took the
latter, and the Indonesians were
left without a middle class, which
they are now trying to create
through education. Success is indicated by the fact that the literacy
rate went from 10'i in 1945 to
80 % today.
For educational endeavors. Indonesia receives foreign aid from
America. Russia. Sweden. Columbia, Ceylon, the Ford Foundation.
UNESCO and UNICEF, This has

helped build fifteen colleges and
twenty-two universities.

Debate

Eight varsity debaters left yesterday to attend the Third Annual
Regus King Debate Tournament at
Queens College. The two affirmative teams are Harriet Heillingcr
and Russel! Goldberg and Linda

Leventhal and Robert Williams.
Betsy Nordstom and Andre Namenek are one negative team, and
Carol Zeller and Gerald Calanzaro
are the other. Mr. Michael Prosser of the Drama and Speech .De-

partment accompanied the group.
Novice Debate

Mr. Terry Oslermeier, novice debate coach, left today with a unit
of novice debaters for the Baldwin

Wallace Tournament in Berea,
Ohio. Those attending are Carol
Marcus, Robert Gismondi, Neal
Felsinger, and Richard Nemiroff.
This will be the first intercollegiate
debate experience for most of these
novice debaters. They will participate in four rounds of debate on
the national topic, Resolved: That
the Federal Government should
guarantee an opportunity for highet education to all qualified high
school graduates.
The next meeting of the Debat
ing. Society will be Tuesday,
at 7 p.m. in Norton 332. Four
varsity debaters will put on a demonstration debate. Everyone is invited to attend.

Moore to Lecture
Then* will hr a
iiinuir given
Nov. 13. I\v the Department of
Biology.

Dr. Blake Moore Department of
Neuropsyehiatry. Washington Uni
Verkily School of Medic* ne will
speak on "Fractionation ' of Brain

Proteins."
The seminar will mceD in 134
Health Sciences at 3:30 p.m. foi
coff«*c. followed hv the lecture a

�People and Politics
By RUSSELL PANZICA
I have been appalled at the uniformity, incongruity, and unimaginative design of buildings and
houses throughout our country, The
same aesthetic trauma can be observed in omnipresent telephone
wires and electricity cables which,
in this age of technology, should
have been laid underground twenty years ago. With the exception
of a few large cities, they have
been moved from streets to backyards.

In both cities and suburbs,
houses arc lined up with one another on square or rectangular
blocks. Shopping centers, business
districts, and plazas have followed
the same pattern. The only flaws
in this monotony arc drive-in movies, railroad tracks, and parks.
One need go no further than Buffalo to find an excellent example
of architectural incongruity. The

stately mansions of Delaware Avenue, many of which have been fortunately maintained by religious

and charitable organizations, have
begun to disappear, willy-nilly. In
their place have come modern office buildings and apartment

houses that clash with the old.
Why these buildings pop up next to
lovely old estates rather than in
areas of slum clearance is a question whose solution lies in the
labyrinth of economic rationalization.
The new houses and buildings
that I have seen, by and large, are

loss attractive than their predeces-

sors. Office buildings tire hardly
from Federal Reserve Banks, and I see the same
kind of apartment houses going
up in New York State that I have
seen in Miami Florida. When the
contemporary architect has such
master as Wright, Cropus, and Le
Corbusier to draw from, it is unforgiveable that their products
have not approximated the elegance of the Klcinhans Music Hall.
distinguishable

"Don't Say Clothes—Say Tartan Shop"

Forecast-Cold and Windy

The minutes of all
Student Senate Meetings are available in the
Senate office, 205 Norton. Any interested student may obtain a copy

Attractive accessories to keep
your head, hands and feet warm
and cozy when the winds howl
on the campus.
COME AND SEE
NF 2-6060
!

5426 Main St.

Open Friday Evening

Williamsvllle, N. Y.

iMiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii::

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

partners
£?

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’

FREE DELIVERY!!
TO CAMPUS DORMS ONLY

=

SUBMARINES

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From

'HOAGY HEAVEN'

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Deliveries Nightly
“At
9:45 P.M. and 10:45 P.M.

Phone 876-2284
LETTERPRESS

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Delaware)

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Orders Accepted Up To 15 Minutes Before
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Phone

PRE-REGISTRATION FOR ARTS AND
SCIENCES STUDENTS
All juniors and seniors in the College of Arts and
Sciences who plan to return for the spring semester
MUST pre-register. Registration materials will be isrsued on Nov. 13, 14 and 15 between 9 a.m, and 4 p.m.
in front of the Bursar’s Office in Hayes Hall.
Any student who fails to pick up his registration
materials on these three days must wait to register
in

Friday, November 8, 1963

S P E C T RUM

PAGE SIX

P.S.

-

—

836-4808

HOT MEATBALL OR

ITALIAN SAUSAGE

TOO)

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John LaCost wanted a part in scientific progress

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He has it at Western Electric
John LaCost received his B.S.E.E. from the University of Illinois in 1962, One of the factors which
influenced him to join Western Electric was the
quick manner in which new engineers become
operational.
During the short time John has been with us, he
has worked in several areas which are vital to the
nation's communications complex. And with his
future development in mind, John attended one of
our Graduate Engineer Training Centers where he
studied the front-line Electronic Switching System.
He is currently working as a systems equipment
engineer on such projects as cross bar switching
and line link pulsing.
John’s future at Western Electric looks promising indeed. He knows he will be working with revolutionary and advanced engineering concepts like
electronic switching, thin film circuitry, computer-

We stern Electric MANUFACTURING

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for advanced study through the Company-paid
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personal standards and the qualifications we are
looking for, we should talk. Opportunities for fastmoving careers exist now, not only for electrical,
mechanical and industrial engineers, but also for
physical science, liberal arts and business majors.
For more detailed information, get your copy of
the Western Electric Career Opportunities booklet
from your Placement Officer. Or write: Western
Electric Company, Room 6405, 222 Broadway,
New York 38, N. Y. And be sure to arrange for a
personal interview when the Bell System recruiting
team visits your campus.
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�Friday, November 8, 1963

UB Has Complete Poetry Section
The poetry room of Lockwood library houses the most complete collection of verse,
and works pertaining to poetry in the world. The works of every known poet can be found
along with a variety of supplementary data.
The collection may be broken down into four categories. There are over 10,000 printed
books, first editions of every English writing poet whose work has been published in the
twentieth century. Also included are later editions, anthologies, biographies of poets and
material about them, critical studies of individuals and movements, and books on poetic

By VICKI BUGELSKI

The Harpsichord Festival

spon-

sored by the music department will
continue today through Monday. All
events lake place in Baird Hall
unless otherwise specified.
Today at 4 p.m., Eric Herz. the
chords and their construction. Ad-

mission is free and all students and
faculty are invited to attend. Mr.
Herz will answer questions on the
construction of harpsichords.
World-famous harpsic h o r d i s t

lished

Manuscripts and typescripts are

Ralph Kirkpatrick will perfom in
an all-Bach program tonight at 8:30.
(Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue,
Italian Concerto, and Goldberg Variations). Tickets are necessary for
this perfomance and also for Sunday's recital.
Saturday evening at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, Mr. Kirkpatrick

one of the interesting

facets of the
collection. There are many thousand sots of worksheets of various
poets. Different stages of the poet's
progress are represented in these.
While a few are merely copies of
I he poem as it was printed, most
show some of the later corrections
and give a complete history of the

grees.
Mr. Abbott contacted more poets,
but decided that personal interviews with them were necessary
to explain exactly what the library
wanted, but there were no funds

Harpsichord Festival Begins
With Lecture by Herz Today

builder of the university's harpsichord. will give a lecture on harpsi-

theory, philosophy, and technique.
Nearly a thousand files of magazines are also housed in the Library. These represent a complete
listing of literary journals and
periodicals in which poetry is pub-

poem’s evolution.
Besides these categories there arc
over 3,000 letters, many of which
are from poets to the library explaining various details of the creative poets. Also, there are letters
in series, some between poets,
from a poet to a friend, and from
a poet to specialists.
Abbott Builds a Dream
In 1936, Charles D. Abbott, a
librarian in the new Lockwood
Library, decided it would be worthwhile to start a collection of modern poetry. He began by ordering
books and writing to poets requesting their original manuscripts.
Manuscripts and worksheets were
harder to collect. Mr. Abbott started by sending fifty letters to English and American poets explaining the project and asking for their
contributions. Seventeen poets sent
back genuine worksheets and all
but three assisted in varying de-

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

LOCKWOOD POETRY COLLECTION

available for such an extensive
plan.
In 19,37, Chancellor Capen visited
the library and was shown the
fifty to sixty files that had been
accumulated. He was both astonished and pleased with the work.
Through his efforts the Carnegie
Corporation contributed money for
Abbott and his wife to spend three
months in England with poets and
obtaining manuscripts.
The mission to England was helped by a skit published in Punch
which depicted the Buffalo library
tilled with indecipherable and chaotic worksheets. Although humorous,
it prompted many poets to help
Abbott in his undertaking.
Collection Gradually Builds
Another grant from the Carne-

gie Corporation in 1939 made it
possible for Lockwood to acquire
more books and magazines and for
Abbott to have more interviews in
an effort to collect original worksheets, Mary Barnard, a contemporary poet, was made curator
of the poetry collection.
In 1941, Abbott’s visit to Louis

will give a program of F r e n c h
works, featuring compositions of
Couperin and Rameau Admission
is free, but concert-goers are reminded of the limited sealing capacity in the Gallery auditorium

Sunday. Mr. Kirkpatrick will con-

clude his formal recitals with an
all-Scarlatti program at Baird, Monday at 4 p.m. he will lecture on
harpsichord music and give a short
recital. Admission is free for this,
as well as for Mr. Herz's lecture.
Monday evening the festival will
conclude with a recital by violist
Walter Trampler. a soloist with the
Budapest Quartet, and harpsichordist David Fuller of the music department faculty. Mr. Trampler is
paving a solo recital at the Art
Gallery on Sunday afternoon at 4:30
though this is not included in the
Harpsichord Festival.

GET TOGETHER FOR A PERKINS
Untermeyer led to the inclusion of
material with biographical data.

"FAMILY STYLE"
PANCAKE

Collection Is World Renowned

Chancellor Capen stated that the
collection ", . . in a wider sense
does not belong to the University."
According to David Posner, present
curator of the collection. "Scholars
come from all over the world, for
this is the largest and most inclusive poetry collection is at present.”

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�Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Baird
at
Opera
Season
UB
The Reviewing Stand
By GERALD MAURI

By LEON LEWIS
The Connection
Due to an accident of scheduling, this review is really appearing
precisely one week too late. The
deadline for last week's issue of
The Spectrum fell just one day

before Shirley Clarke’s cinematic
version of The Connection opened
at the Circle Art Theatre. When
this article appears, the Circle Art
will be showing its next feature
the modem French version of Voltaire’s Candide with Jean-Pierre
Nevertheless, I would like
to comment on The Connection because I think that it is one of the
more successful movies that I’ve
seen recently. Perhaps if The
Spectrum becomes a bi-weekly
someday, movie reviews will coincide more exactly with the open-

Casscl,

ing

of the movie under disuission.

Shirley Clarke is an independent
American film maker. What this
rather nebulous designation means
is that she has never allied herself with the production facilities
of any Hollywood movie company.
Consequently, she has confined her
efforts to shorts of various lengths
until now. These shorts have all
been exciting efforts' and have
demonstrated a very professional
approach to her craft as well as
an imaginative and creative one.
Jack Gelbcr’s play. Th« Connection, opened to uniformly poor reviews in the Living Theatre in
New- York city in 1959, Mr. Atkinson, for instance, the august drama critic of the New York Times,
called it "a farrago of violence
and dirt." After six months of enthusiastic SRO audiences, the play
had obviously become a word-ofthe month success, and the critics
began to re-evaluate their original
comments. However, it is too easy
a thing to laugh at Mr. Atkinson

and the other members of the critical fraternity. The play is a radical departure from nearly anything
that anyone in New York was accustomed to seeing and offered a
unique view of a sub-strata of society which most of us arc relatively unfamiliar with—the world
of the Junkie.
Mr. Gelber's play purports to
show us the pad of a group of
heroin addicts waiting for someone called" Cowboy," their connection, to supply tern with narcotic they crave and need. After Cowboy arrives, we see them "turn
on,” and one of the addicts, Leach,
who owns the apartment, nearly
dies of an overdose. Nothing has
happened otherwise. The charac-

haven’t learned anything
about thmselves or life and their
lives are unchanged. There is no
dramatic progress. The only reason we are permitted to see this
whole process is the fact that a
character called "J. J. Burden”
has convinced the junkies to let
him actually record on film the
entire evening’s actions in return
ters

for the money they need to procure

the hroin. What maks all of this
so desperately engrossing and vital
is the nearly complete dissolution
of the fine line which divides appearance from reality. The phenomenal success of the play

stemmed from the immediacy of
the action and the Pirandellesque

feeling that what was taking place
on the stage was very possibly
more real than what was going on
in the audience.
One would have imagined that
the fragile artifice between the actual and the imagined which Mr.
Gelber had so skillfully constructed would collapse when the play
was transformed from the stage to
a firm but to the great credit of
Mrs. Clarke, it hasn’t at all. There
are certain losses, of course. The
spontaneity of the jazz musicians,
an stage in the play but just a
good soundtrack (in spite of the
pictures of them playingl in the
movie, it lost to some extent. But,
losses of this sort are balanced by
Mrs. Clarke's superb direction and
camera work, What we are supposed to be watching, a note tells
us in the beginning, is the movie
that J. J. Burden made, but we
can actually see him in front of
the camera too, a good deal of
the time. And, while the sense of
scope of a theatre-in-the-round is
lost, the fact that the camera can
focus on a character from a distance of a fott or so leads to some
gut racking closcups which preserve the intimacy of the production.
In addition, the acting, by most
of the members of the New York
production, is often shattering in
its intensity. Warren Finnerty and
Carl Lee are especially good and
the Freddie Redd quartet provides
a fine background as well as some

realistic "cool" performances. One
can't really compare a play and
movie adaptation and say that one
is belter than the other. Such a
comparison is senseless and not
very enlightening. Suffice it to say
that the movie was faithful to the

The University opera season
opened last Saturday with a pair
of comic operas which provided a
solid first part in the 'lyric' year.
Pergolesi's Serva Padrona and
Cimarosa’s L'lmpresario in angustie were heard for the first in Buffalo. and an appreciative audience
indicated that they were anxious
to hear more of this kind of music.
Serva is a college workshop staple. It enables three performers to
work closely, is not difficult to
stage, and requires only a small

role of Vespone. Lawrence Bearce,
who handled the part as adequately as possible, was used as a puppet instead of theeommedia dell'
arte figure from which the char-

had assured him immortality even
before. Serva was performed extensively throughout the eighteenth
cntury and has never been out of

fusion. However, he
singers to their own

orchestra. Furthermore, it remains
fresh and vibrant in spite of its
230 years, Perolesi died three years
after its first performance, but it

the reprtory,
William Wagner, a most versa-

tile baritone, shared the singing
lead with Loretta Smistek. They
were always in command of the
music and handled the coloratura
passages with ease. We wish that
the opera, however, could have
been played more broadly. Henry
Wicke, the stage director, seemed
to have borrowed his staging more
from oratorio than from opera.

GOT THE
WEEK-END BLUES?

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SAT.

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SUN. 1 6
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Lounge
313 KENSINGTON
At Fillmore

staging, especially with the mimed

acter is 1 derived.
The baroque stage, one of designer Boris Baronovic's most ingenious sets, was compact, but
left plenty of area behind the proscenium and on the apron for this
action. In L'lmpresario Mr. Wicke
neatly handled the ensembles to
give the necessary sense of con-

abandoned the
resources during the lengthy orchestral introductions.
The difficulties in Serva were not
confinde solely to the staging. Vittoria Giarrantana had a few tense
Joe Rico and BJF Present

JACK
tjimrwi

TF 3-4700

H

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Kleinhans—Sun., Nov. 17
$2.N, $2.50, $3.50

-

7:30 P.M.

of seats send
money order with selfstamped envelope
addressed
to
Buffalo Jazz Festival, c/o Denton's. 32 Court St., Buffalo 3, N.Y.
choice

wmjB6werofc«^$-«j6

Sidney

poltier
«

OFLOUE
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ft H.

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MPttSOfl

Y A FOLK
IFKTIVAI
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3rd BIG WEEK
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QbrofTYt'Hoohmnntj ' C/xiw

For best
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(Students Must Show
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done,
not
be
requires imaginative

can

with Serva; it

ft

Vi PRICE
Aim Draft Bwr Available
Friday f P.M. to 2 A.M.
Sunday t A.M. to 12 Midnite
Sin; Along or Dance With
DON LOSEL AT THE ORGAN
Dance to the Music
of a Swingin’ Trio
THE CUFF LINKS
SATURDAY 10 ?

spirit of the play and compelling
in its own right.

There will be a used
book sale, Nov. 11-16,
at 410 Main St. The
sale is being sponsored
by the American Association of University
Women. The proceeds
of the sale will go to
the Association’s Fellowship Fund. All students are invited to
browse, as well as bring
books which they no
longer need or want.

Too often 1 the singers were posed
front and center and asked to radiate action from the voice alone.

NOMM /V

fjk

iffli

RALPH NELSONS

jmn/Mtw

MAURICE mm
_

"Dtfinitaly not for

Lilflo

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STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKETS

ATiilabl* *1 Both Th.«ler« Upon
Propor I.D. C«rd

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for all programs may be
purchased upon presentation
of I.D. card.

moments trying to keep the orchestra playing in unison. After
the intermission, though it was as
if they were playing on a different
night. Maestro Giarratana led a
vigorous performance of (.'Impresario which was always balanced
and flawless. Orchestra and singers
turned in a sparkling, unified per-

formance.
Again, William Wagner sang the
male lead. In his singing and acting he projected the character of
the Impresario beset by not one
but three prima donnas. He has
fine command of the buffa style
although some of the writing for
his part lies too low for comfort
and he had difficulty with the
lower range. For the rest of his
(Continued

on

Page

9&gt;

�Friday, November 6, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINE
HOME AWAY FROM HOME
WANTED

The Jazz Gallery

Graduate Student to Share
Attractive Apartment
Easily Accessible to

By RAYMOND CRAWFORD

This week the Bon-Ton Tavern
featured the "fastest drummer in
the world,” The Rufus Jones Quintet, with Rufus Jones the drummer,
the great pianist, Horace Parian,
"Gentleman Jim” Corbett the bassist, Joe Farrell the tenor sax man
and featuring the renowned trum-

peter Tommy Turentine, made the
evening one of the most exciting
,I’ve had.
Rufus Jones began his career on
the Florida A &amp; M campus. Rufus
played drums well enough to be
on scholarship on the school's

famous marching band. From there
went to the band of Lionel
Hampton who saw him there when
Hampton came to the campus in

he

concert. Jones gigged with him for
a while and later got his B.A.
After a number of other small
groups, Rufus got a job in the band
of Maynard Ferguson.
Rufus Jones left the Maynard
Ferguson band because he could
not develop his potentialities enough

UB Opera Review
A Diversified Cast
(Continued

from

Page 8)

music, he used his resonant baritone voice intelligently and always

musically.

Ruth Mohn sang Fiordispina, the
leading soprano role. From the
moment she started her first aria,
"Senti-

sent!", she showed herself

to be the star of the evening.' It
was a fine piece of legato singing
and subtle phrasing.
Taeko Fujii and Marlene Badger
as Medina and Doralda also turned
in shining performances. Miss Fujii
gave great variety to her singing,
in her aria and in ensemble. Miss
Badger was heard only in ensemble singing. It is a pity that her
aria could not be retained in this
performance because she owns a
lush contrralto voice and is probably a very fine soloist.
As Gelindo, the composer, was

Lawrence Bearce. He has had
small parts in University musical
presentations in the past two years’
and has has continued to grow in
performance. His Gelindo was vocally polished and his acting ability enables him to make an impression in comprimario parts. He
must perfect his Italian diction,
though. It would be interesting to
see what he could do as the sergeant in Rossini’s Barbitre di Seviglia. In fact, the casting department should bear all these singers
in mind for the spring opera season. Mr. Wagner would surely do
well as Figaro, and all three of
the prima donnas from L’lmpre$ario would be charming Rosinas.

with Ferguson. He has formed a
group which really could do some
thing in jazz. Parian has played
with every group that has made
a name in jazz and Turentine has
his own group that is really saying
something. Corbett and Farrell
though not as well known are great
musicians. As for Jones, all I can
say is that it is humanly impossible to be any faster on the drums.
When he takes off on a “ride” he
looks like a high speed machine.
The audience was just amazed at
the speed of the man. You had
to be there to see the performance.
As for the music, I'm sorry to
say that is was not as good as
Jones. Maybe the music was centered around Jones' solos too much.
I think that if Jones would tone
down on the amount of solos he
takes and concentrates on his music he could really do something.
But remember that it has only
been four months and this cat is
also out to make some bread. He
knows that the public wants to
see those hands. Possibly later on
in his career he will also take out
the traces of a marching beat in

his solos, too.
Jones is a great drummer and
will do much better than his buddy Menza who flew the coop awhile
ago. If Jones would try to do something on the order of “Art Blakey
and the Jazz Messengers" I'm sure

he will be remembered both artistically and financially, of which the

latter he is concentrating on now.
Many of you are missing some
of the finer sounds of jazz coming

to Buffalo. At the Royal Arms,
there is Shirley Scott, the wonderful jazz organist and next week
at the Bon-Ton, the alto saxist Eddie “Exodus” Harris. Try to get
down to these places and see
“what’s happenin’” in this city

Gamma Delta
Tickets for the Christmas Pop
Concert at Kleinhans Dec. 13, are
now on sale until Thanksgiving.
Patron tickets are $6.00 and entitle the couple to have their names
printed in the program. Regular
tickets are $1.75 each.

Anyone interested please contact
Gamma Delta Representative:
Carol Wolff. TA 3-1737; Kaia Joks,
TA 5-6460; Diane Mangus, TF 58151; Phyllis Surft, TA 3-7540, or
a

any of the members.
Also watch the Bulletin Board for
special days of sale on campus.
Hillel News

Sabbath Service and Oneg Shabbat

The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: "The Oleinu
Prayer.” This will be part of a current series of sermons on; “Understanding Our Prayer Book.” An
Oneg Shabbat Will follow.

Delicatessen Supper Sunday
The next Hillel Delicatessen Supper is scheduled for Sunday Nov.
10 at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Dr. Martin Goldberg, Temple Beth
Zion, will give a talk on: "Jewish
Conceptions of the Bible." This will
be the second in a scries of programs on the general theme of
_

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November 23rd
at 8:30 in

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A Spectacular

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DON'T MISS IT!
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RECORDING ARTISTS
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now available and may be obtained at the Hillel House. Students
from colleges in the Western New
York area are eligible to attend.
The program for the day will feature an out-of-town speaker, a tour
of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
and a social evening.
Iner-Varsity Christian Fellowship
IVCF is sponsoring a penel discussion on the topic, "What God
Means to Me." The panel will be
composed of faculty members from
various departments. The meeting
will ba held Thursday, from 4-5
P-m. in Norton, room 334.
Wesley Foundation
Dr Zimm /rman professor of
philosophy at U.B, will speak and
discuss the current Civil Rights
Bill and issues relating to the Civil
Rights Movement, Sunday at the
5:00 p.m. Supper Meeting of the
Wesley Foundation. Meetings are
held in University Methodist Church
at Bailey and Minnesota Aves.
Transportation from Goodyear and
comer Allenhurst and Oxford at
4:45 p.m.

The

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YOU CAN PICK UP YOUR
AIRLINE TICKETS AT

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Evenings and Saturday

&amp;

and Learn” discussion hour will be held on Thursday, November 14 at 3:00 p.m. in
the Hillel House, The discussion
topic will be: "Inter-marriage
Pro and Con.” Mrs, Norman Fertig
is the coordinator o£ the series.
One-Day Institute
The third annual One-Day Institute will be held on Sunday,
Nov. 17, Registration forms are

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�PAGE TEN

Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

Greek News

Spectrum Cdaii idourd

At the meeting of Chi Omega
Sorority this coming Monday, Miss

Bridge Club
Tuesday the Bridge Club will hold
a Master Point Night. The first
place pairs will' receive a full
master point. The meeting will be
held in Norton, room 327 at 7:30.
Refreshments wiB fie served. All
faculty members and students are
invited to attend.
The winners of last week’s duplicate game were: N-S, Allen Mellis,

Sociology Club
There will be a meeting Monday
at 7:00 p.m. in Room 329 of Norton
Union. After a brief business meeting, Mr. Mark Kennedy will speak
on "The Function of the Sociology
Club.” Mr, William Harrell will
then speak on “The Interrelationship of Sociology and the Other

Sue Steg.

present “Israel Culture Night” Sunday, at 7:00 p.m. in Norton, room
329. This week's program will include a slice of Israeli life, including a performance of the Habonim
singers and dancers, whose Israel
folk songs and dances show the
intermixture of Eastern and Western cultures.
Mr. Ernest Freudenheim will also
address the group, speaking about
Israel’s place in the eyes of Americans. Mr, Freudenheim, president
of the Buffalo Zionist Council, was
one of the instrumental Americans
whoso many efforts helped create
the, state of Israel, in 1948.
Following Mr. Freudenheim and
the Habbnim singers and dancers,
a special assortment of Israeli food
will be offered for sampling. The
Israeli delicacies will add to the

Richard Bredhoff; E-W, Dick Doth,
The Bridge Club is sending four

four-man teams to the Rochester

Invitational Bridge Tournament on
Nov. 23. The list of participants

will be in next week's SPECTRUM.
Hemingway House
Tree House in conjunction with
Hemingway House will hold a car
wash Saturday. Nov. 8, beginning
at 9:00 on Colvin Avenue and Sheridan. A main Hous Plan calendar
in on the third floor bulletin board,
Norton. Any House Plan wishing to
place their schedule of events on
it, are invited to do so.
IEEE
The IEEE presents Dr. William
J. Walbesser speaking on "Information Theory,” Wednesday, at 7:30
p.m,, in room 104 of the Karr Parker Engineering Building.
Occupational Therapy Club
There will be an Occupational
Therapy Club meeting today, from
3:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Norton, room
334.
Photography Club
There will be a general business
meeting of the Photography Club
today at 4:00 in Room 262.
Physical Therapy Club
Attention: Those interested in
joining the Physical Therapy Club
must have their dues paid by Friday. Contact Edwina Schreiner at
extension 2786 in MacDonald Hall.

Social Sciences.”
Student Zionist Organization

Student Zionist Organization will

Jeanette Scudder, Dean of Women,
will lead a discussion on the problems presented in Betty Freidan’s
best seller. The Feminine Mystique.

Theta Chi Sorority congratulates

the officers of the new pledge class.
Marilyn Zaccarine was elected

president at Monday’s meeting.
Alpha Epsilon PI Fraternity cele-

brated its 5fltb Annual Founder’s
Day in Norton Hall yesterday. Coming soon, will be our annual open
party at Fazio’s Capitol Theatre.
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity will
hold a stag Friday at the Park
Lane for brothers. Ted Eno is getting maried Nov. 24.

TKE will hold a Roman Toga
Parly at Bosel’s, beginning at 9:00.

WORK IN EUROPE

Grand Duchy of Luxembourg Nov. 6
Summer jobs are available for
students desiring to spend a summer in Europe but who could
otherwise not afford to do so.

are.

Among available jobs
office
and sales work, tutoring, lifeguard and high paying (to $400
a month) resort and factory work.
The American Student Information Service also awards
$200 travel grants to students.

theme of the evening and demonstrate one of the several unique Interested students may obtain
features of Israeli life. SZO welthe asis 24 page prospectus listcomes all interested students to ing all jobs, and a travel
grant
(his meeting. For further informaand job application by writing
tion, call TR 7-7354 or TR 6-3559.
to Dept. N, ASIS, 22 Ave. de
Undergraduate Mathematics Club.
The Undergraduate Mathematics la Liberte, Luxembourg City,
Club holds it next meeting 7:30 Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
p.m. Wednesday in Norton Union, Send $ 1 for the prospectus and
room 335. Neal Felsinger will speak airmail postage. The first 8000
on Cortfinued Fractions. Everyone
inquiries receive a $1 credit tois urged to attend. Refreshments
wards
the book, ’’Earn, Learn
will be served.
&amp;

Travel in Europe.”

College and Professional Books
Of All Publishers
MEDICAL
ENGINEERING
New

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NURSING DENTAL
SCIENTIFIC TECHNICAL
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Used College Texts Bought Sold
Large Selection of Quality Paper Backs From Over 75 Publishers
Phone Orders Charge Accts. Mail Orders
Art Supplies Engineering Equipment
&amp;

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legiate

ws
'S

4

R S hi ARTHRITIS

MARCH OF DIMES!
"

\

�Friday, November 8, 1963

Zolak Leads Hens to 34-6 Win Over UB;
Przykuta Injuries Ankle-Out for Campaign
By ALAN

NEWMAN

A fired-up Delaware squad, lead

lo Ron Bianco pass adding the last

Buffalo's fumble late in the first

by quarterback Chuck Zolak. handed the Bulls their worst loss of
the 1963 campaign- The one-sided
34-6 victory added to the Hens'
hopes of playing in a post-season

half set up Delaware’s second
score. After four plays, including
a 22 yard pass to Bianco, the Hens

bowl game.

33 and

thing right. When the defenses
tightened on the ground. Zolak took
to the air and completed 7 of 19
in stiff winds (three for touchdowns). Buffalo was penalized 116
yards, lost the ball three times on
fumbles and once on an interception, averaged 25 yards on 7 punts,

passed 13 yards to Gerry Pawloski
with 50 seconds remaining in the
half for UB's lone score.
As the teams changed goal lines
at the start of the second half, so
did the complexion of the game.
Three touchdows and a safety ensued as Delaware broke through

It was- just one of those afternoons where UB couldn't do any-

and was hurt several times when
passes were dropped on key plays.
But the Bulls lost more than the

game going down to defeat. Denny
Przykuta, UB's last fullback and
most effective runner this year,
suffered a fractured right ankle in
the final period of play. Przykuta
joins fullbacks Jim Burd and John
Cimba on the growing disabled
list.
Delaware tallied first late in the
initial quarter. The Blue Hens went
74 yards on ten plays with a Zolak

led 12-0.

The Bulls look over on their own

marched .the remaining
yardage for the touchdown, Don
Gilbert

directed

the attack

and

the Bulls' pass defense.

The Hens made it 18-6 on a 33
yard pass to end Tom Harrison.
Then On a fourth down situation
on Buffalo's 16, the home team
lined up for a field goal. The holder, Joe Slohojan. took the pass

the season at the halfback post,
was switched to end, and, as of
this week, was returned to helfback. However, Frank is accustomed ‘to such switches, becausfe while
establishing his athletic reputation

finished up the scoring by tackling
Don Gilbert behind the goal line
for a safety.
A record crowd turned out 10.500
strong for the game to watch a
much publicised UB tackle. It was
Gerry Philbin providing perhaps
the only bright spot of the day
for the Bulls, smashing through
Delaware's star tackle Paul Chesmore on several occasions to dump
Zolak behind the line of scrimmage.
The Bulls stand at 4-2-1. and meet
their toughest foe. Boston College,
on Saturday.

■Ip,

from center and sped around the
right side of his line into the end
zone, Zolak flipped the ball to Harrison for the two-point conversion.
Delaware added its last

touch-

down on a 41 yard Zolak to Don

Powell aerial. Guard Don James

Frank ViseSli Is All-Around Athlete
Corning, New York has made its
contribution to the Buffalo football
team by producing a spirited athlete by the name of Frank Viselli.
The 6’ 1”, 181 pound Viselli started

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

forward to a career in this field.
Among Viselli's other interests
besides football are naturally all
sports and electronics. While in
high school Frank participated in
track, running such events as the
mile, V2 mile, 44 mile, and the
220. Basketball, (he played 2 years
for Coming Free Academy), also
receives some time from Viselli.
Rounding out an athletic personality, Frank spends many summer hours skin-diving in the local

lakes.
Frank Viselli resides on campus
at the third floor of Tower Dormitory, and is quite interested in
dormitory

BC Preview
By ROCKY VERSACE
mark in 1962. He tied Terry Baker
for the nation’s touchdown tossing
title with 15; was fifth in total offense with 1745 yards, and was;
llth in passing with 97 completions
in 181 attempts for 1452 yards with

The University of Buffalo Varsity football team is once again on
the road, this time at Chestnut
Hill, Massachusetts, for a contest
against Boston College. The Bulls
will fly to Boston this evening and
spend the night in a motel outside
of Boston.

According to a report

only six interceptions.

The backfield is three deep with
Bobby Shann and Pete Shaugnesey
at the’ halfback slots.' Dick Crcmin

from a

Boston newspaper, if the Boston
College Eagles played an all Northeast card they would not lose a
game. Although this statement is
not testable, it is a common fact

at guards, while Emil Kleiner and

This year Jim Miller’s Eagles
hold wins over Wichia 122-1(1 1, Vanderbilt (19-61; Villanova (34-01, and

center.

and Prank DePelice will operate

John Frechette will handle tackle
chores. Joe Lukis will start at the
end position opposite to Whalen and
Bart Connolly will anchor the line

that he Eagles are a power.

In answer to those who have
chuckled at the Boston CollegeBuffalo match, Coach Offenhamer
has this to say: “We have the ut
most respect for the prowess of
Jim Miller's Eagles. We've played

Detroit (20-12). Boston College's losses to Syracuse (32-12), Air Force
(34-7)
still leaves them one
of the top ranking teams in the
Northeast.
The powerful Jack Concannon.
signal caller, and Jim Whalen,
Concannon's favorite end, will provide stiff competition for UB. Concannon, a 6-3 200-pound, three sport
star, overcame a serious hack injury to lead the Eagles to an 8-2

some great games in Boston . . .
and have never lost. We have every
intention of playing to continue that
fine tradition

INJURED FULLBACK
DENNIS PRZYKUTA

Anyone interested in
writing sports for the
Spectrum is urged to
sign his name at the
sports desk in the Spectrum office, 395 Norton.
Writers with previous
experience are prefer-

red;

however, this is

not a requirement.

COLLEGE PIZZERIA
FAMOUS FOR THEIR
DELICIOUS PIZZA AND QUICK SERVICE

Now Brings To You

ITALIAN SAUSAGE SANDWICH—60c
and

MEAT BALL SANDWICH—5Sc
NOW ENJOY NOT ONLY OUR PIZZA
BUT ALSO OUR OTHER ITALIAN SPECIALITIES

FREE DELIVERY!

afairs.

COLLEGE PIZZERIA
TF 2-9331

5HERIDAW Stt
at Coming Free Academy, he starred at both the positions of quarterback and fullback.

Says coach Ryan, “He was a
great highschool athlete at quarterback and fullback. Nobody loves
to play as much as he does.” A

■s

sophomore in physical education,
enthusiastically looking

Frank is

YOUR I. D. CARD
WORTH

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At

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(Between Millertport and

Sweet Home Rd.)

Can TF 2 0800
-

�Friday, November 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I

KWliillllllllililiniliBliliil

Spectrum Sports
if! : «uni {■■■■■mIhbi

mmmmmMmwmmmm

Sports Circle
By ROCKY VERSACE

Bulls Stop Delaware Grouad
Game, But Is Stuag la Air
1

It was just one of those days when nothing could go
right. A combination of fumbles, penalties, and simply bad
luck brewed to give the lopsided results. As far as Delaware was concerned they could do no wrong. Although
held to 70 yards on the ground (Delaware entered the
game with a 308 yard average) and a completion of only 7
of 21 passes, the Blue Hens made three of the passes count
for scores and a fourth set up another tally.
Not only did the Bulls accept the crushing defeat, but
they were dealt a loss which is evdn more serious the loss
of sophomore fullback Dennis Pryzkuta, who is probably
the team’s best and most consistent runner. Pryzkuta now
joins the fullback sideline team along with the earlier injured Jim Byrd and John Cimba.
If there was any statistical difference between the two
teams it was in the category of penalties. Once again the
Bulls broke the century mark in infractions by rolling up
116 yards to Delaware’s 15. The excellently coached Delaware squad used each of fhese penalties, Buffalo fumbles,
and poor Buffalo punts to their advantage in the rout. Another difference observed was the wide open offense of the
Hens. Quarterback Mike Zolak did not hesitate to pass on
first down in his own territory. His other daring and versatile offensive calls continually kept the Buffalo team off
—

i

iiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Buffalo Golfers Finish Successful
Senson; Are Two Yenrs Undefeated
By TOM KENJARSKI
The University of Buffalo golf
team completed its season with a
14&gt;/2 to Z'k victory over McMaster University at the Audubon
Golf Course. This victory climaxed
a successful season for the golf
team which was undefeated in 9
dual meets. While extending its two
year victory skein to 21, the golf
team placed first at the Brook-Lea
Country
Club Invitationals at
Rochester, first at the E.C.A.C.
qualifying tournament at Cornell
University, and fourth in the E.C.
A.C. finals held at Bethpage Park
Long Island.
The individual results for the
year include:
Golfer
Won Lost Tied
0
7
2
Curt Siegel
0
7
2
Steve Watts
6
0
Fred Berman
1
2
5
0
Brownie Kopra
6
Kearons Whalen
1 1
6
Ed Nusblatt
12
3
10
Gary Eidlin
0
0
2
Gary Weiss
Three UB golfers also won honors in non-dual competition. Curt

in

Siegel

won

Country Club Invitationals, while his teammate, Fred

Berman, took third low medalist
honors in the same tournament. In
the E.C.A.C. qualifying tournament, Steve Watts took medalist
honors.
Head coach, Dr. Leonard Serfustini- cited Curt Siegel as the outstanding golfer of the team. Curt,
who was low medalist in the McMaster University match with a
67, averaged 72 strokes throughout the season.
Analyzing the year, Dr Serfustini commented, "The golf team
deserves a great deal of credit for
represnting the University of Buffalo in such fine fashion. Of the
first eight golfers, we only have
one graduating senior, Fred Berman. With a great deal of practice hours during the winter and
the spring, we hope that we will
be selected to represent UB in the
N.C.A.A. finals that will be held
some time in June. Considering
our young squad, I feel that this

would be valuable experience for
future years.”

pn

By TERRY

SWEENEY

Tuesday, Oct. 29, the spectators
present at Grover Cleveland park
who braved the cold, windy 42 degree weather, witnessed the most
thrilling cross country race of the
season. They saw the Bulls hand
Cortland a 26-29 defeat with both
Lalley of Cortland and Katz of U.B.
shattering the course record which
had previously been set by Tim
Bums of Buffalo State. Lalley finished just ahead of Katz to win
the meet with a time of 20:49.9.
Katz's time was 21:0. The previously existing record was 21:25,4.
Following Katz in the third position was Cordero of Cortland at
22; 38. Then three bulls in a row
crossed the finish line in the fourth,
fifth, and sixth positions—Bill Suedmeyer at 23:19, Cam Weiffenbach
at 23:31, and Ed Lontrato at 23:43

respectively. Hoffman finished
ninth to wrap up Buffalo's fourth
win of the season.
The Buffalo frosh were defeated
by the Cortland bpsh 24-31. Courtland’s Fries won the meet with a
time of 14:57.5. U.B.'s Dick Genau
crossed the finish line at 15:18 to
take the second spot.
Tomorrow at 10:30 a.m.. the

Frosh Lose To Manlius
The University of Buffalo freshman football was once again whitewashed as the Manlius gridders
turned in a 21-0 performance. The
loss was Buffalo's third in four
games and the second consecutive shutout defeat.
Manlius ended a 60 yard second
period march when Dick Leonardis
bulled across the goal line from
the one. Manlius’ next tally came
on a third period six yard aerial
from Mike Harna to Leonardis.
Later in the period, the Buffalo
center sailed the over over his
man's head while in punt formation. The alert Manlius tackle Jim
Murphy pounced on it in the Buffalo endzone for the final Manlius
score.

will compete in the New
York State cross country meet at
Delaware Park. Some of the best
teams in the State will be represented and the outstanding individual runners will be chosen to
compete in the national cross counBulls

try meet &gt; at Michigan State. Tomorrow should see a thrilling meet
pitting 3 of the best runners in the
state against each oth&lt; r—camely

Katz of U.B., Lalley' of Cortland,
and Bums of Buffalo State.

the

coaches

of

UB’s

Although there is room for more,
coaches are agreeable and
greatly impressed with the present
material they have. Coach Sanford
noted his squad is practicing exceptionally hard for the Nov. 30,
Upstate New York Relay meeting
and will be ready for the first
dual meet with Cortland Dec. 7.
Also the individual timing is beginning to show great improvement
as the members stroke out some
of the rust accumulated in them.
both

outstanding performers; most not-

able were Charley Zetterberg, Walter Hamilton, and Robert Brown.
Their respective events are, Hamilton, middle distance and individual
medley; Brown, breaststroke; and

One thing that should make the Bulls quickly forget
the Delaware game is the fact that tomorrow they will have
to face the Eagles of Boston College. A major objective
will be to stop Jack Concannon, one of the nation’s finest
passers; but this will be quite a chore. Since practically
every touchdown scored against Buffalo this year was sent
airmail, the defensive backfield corps should have their
work cut out for them.

Harriers Defeat
Cortland 29-26

Both

swimming squads (Sanford—Varsity, Bedell—Frosh) are looking for
more swimmers. Also both agree
the Frosh team is in the greater
need since Coach Bedell must start
each year on a rebuilding job. Although Coach Sanford contends
UB’s present squad is by far the
best he has ever coached while at
UB, shortcomings can be found
in various events. The most noted
of these can be found in the diving and butterfly events. Therefore, the coaches are calling to all
interested, that it isn’t too late to
try out for either squad.

On the freshman scene Coach
Bedell is hunting for new recruits
also. Coach Bedell noted a lew

balance.

Things'looked rather gloomy Sunday for the Bills in
the second quarter of the Denver game. Down by a score
of 14-7 and with Jack Kemp hurt, the Bills had to face two
dismal quarters with the, inexperienced Daryle LaMonica
at the helm. But much to everyone’s surprise LaMonica
came through in winning style passing for 211 yards and
two touchdowns. Under LaMonica's direction, the Buffalo
Bills swept to a team offense record of 459 yards.

*

Positions Are Still
Open-Swim Team

medalist honors at the

Brook-Lea

mm

Zetterberg, middle distance. Backing these members is the nucleus
of last year's freshman swimming
squad. Still in all both coaches
are accepting new recruits and are
looking forward to trying them out.
Anyone interested can go to Clark
Gym and ask for either Coach Sanford or Bedell.

BUFFALO'S UNDEFEATED GOLFERS

Intramurals

"Serf" Names Cagers
Dr. Lcn Serfustini, head coach
of basketball at the University of
Buffalo, has pared his squad down
to the 16 men he will carry through-

out the season.
A breakdown of personnel reveals that Serf will have 3 seniors,

5 juniors, and 8 sophomores.
Although the large number of
sophomores majr at first glance indicate that UB is undergoing a rebuilding year, such is not the case.
The sophomores are the cream of
last year's freshmen team which
won 20 out of 22 games, defeating

By ED RIZZO
The Zygotes are the winners of
the Monday football league. Their

record is 7-0-1. The Mooners came

in second place, 7-1.
The playoff for the House Plan
Wednesday league was on Nov. 5th.
Hemingway House challenged Tower. Both teams have compiled a
5-1 record.
The Friday league has been won
by the Corner Court Crushers. 6-1.
The fraternity Tuesday football
-

by

Alpha

Si

3:00—Alpha vs. Beta Sig.
4:00—Zygotes vs. Comer Court

Crushers.

Tuesday, Nov. 12th;
3:00—The winner of the Houseplan league will face the winner
of the Monday Independent League
playoff. The campus championship
will be held on Nov. 13th at 3:00.
The fraternity champion will face
the independent champions.
Singles matches will
Handball
be held on Monday and Tuesday
and 5:00
—

along the way St. Bonaventure,
Canisius, Niagara. Colgate, and
others. The talent of the sophomores has made it incumbent upon
Dr. Serfustini to carry several
more players on his squad than is
customary.

The complete roster follows:
William Barth, So., 188 lbs,. 6' 6”;
William Barto, So., 175 lbs, 5’ 11”;
•Norb Baschnagel, Jr., 200 lbs.
6’ 3”; *Dan Bazzani, Jr., 185 lbs.
6’ 2Vi”; Jim Bevilacqua, So., 195
lbs., 6’ 1”; ’Bill Bilowus, Sr., 210
lbs., 6’ 4"; Paul Goldstein. So.. 168
lbs., 5' 11”; Norward Goodwin,
50., 175 lbs., 6’ 1”; ’Gary Hanley,
Sr,, 200 lbs., 6’ 4”; Dick Harvey,
Sr., 195 lbs., 6’; Richard Hetzel,
50., 185 lbs., 6’; ‘John Karaszewski. Jr., 190 lbs., 6' 3”; ‘Roy Manno, Jr., 165 lbs., 5’ 9"; Harvey Poe,
50., 164 lbs., 6’ 1”; Richard Smith,
50., 195 lbs., 6’ 4”; ‘Donald Thompson, Jr,, 185 lbs., 6' 3".
Returning letterman.
•

—

MOONER, defensive-man (tops Ram

League contest.

Phi with a record of 6-0. Beta Sigma Rho after their 6-0 victory over
Alpha Epsilon Pi on a week ago
yesterday has won the Thursday
league. Their final record is 6-0.
Last Thursday TKE whipped Phi
Ep 35-0; Gamma Phi shut out Pi
Lambda Tau 26-0.
The campus playoff will begin
Monday, Nov. 11th.

halfback in Monday Independent
Doubles will be held on Thursday
4:00 and 5:00 p.m. The tournament
will start on Sonday, Nov. 11th.
The Intramura;
Swimming
Swimming meet will be held on
Monday, Nov. 18, at 6:00 p.m.
Time trials will be held on Mon
day evening Nov. 4th and Monday
evening Nov. Uth starting at 7:00
—

p.m.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>SUPPORT
SPECTRUM
ADVERTISERS

DELAWARE

SPE(;THIJM

VOLUME14

PREVIEW

BUFFALONEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER1, 1963

No. 9

Tower Open House This Sunday
Amendment
Panhellenic
BallTonightToFrosh
Be Voted Upon

HonorsNew Initiates
By ANN FlffSIMMONS
The Panhellenic Council presents
the Annual Panhelllnic Ball this
~venlng from 9 to 1 in the Ter­
race Room of the Statler Hilton.
The orchestra
ot Mr. Eddie
Diem will provide a variety of
moods for the sorority women.
Centerpieces will grace each table
with emphasis for the guests'
tables using floral arrangements.

Upon entering, each girl "~ll pre­
sent her &lt;?SCOrtwith a bouton.iere.
The Ball is being held in honor
of the new lnltlates of each soro­
rity. These girls received their In­
vitation to join a sorority last Fri­
day . This is t he first time that
the new members will be presened
the Campus Greek Society. The
occasion will call for semi-formal

attire.

By Senate Tues.
ly TRUDY STERN
Tuesday, t he much debated
Freshman Class Council amend­
men t to the Student Association
Constitution will be voted upon at
the Senate meeting. If passed, thls
amendment will i.nitiate a major
change (or the freshman class.

The amendm~t would give the
!teshmen one voting seat on the
Sena te, a privilege they now do
not have.

Dormitory
.to BeOpenFrom3-6
Open House will be held by Tower Dormitory Sunday.
The decision was made by the Tower House Council and the
residents of Tower.
The idea for the Open House, origina11ysuggested by
President Stan Salomon, was approped by the Council, the
students, and the Office of Food and Housing, Richard Platt
and Jack Stekloff, co-chairman of the Open House Commil­
tec attended to the technical as~tr.
ot the at/air.
Th" Open House will give all
University students and raculty
ml'mbt•rs · an opportunity lo see the
residC'nl'~ hall's newly furnished
lounges nnd lhl' freshly painted
living facilities of th e students.

reason why thP stUdents ' Uvtn11
quartvrs should not be open to
friends and guests in the future ."
The Open house will run from
3: 00 to 6: 00 p.m . on all floors A
dance in the snack bar area of thr
main floor between 4:30 and 6:00

UB College Bowl on WBFO;
NewmanClub's3rd Triumph
WBFO, the radio station of the
SUNYAB. recently instituted a new
eompt'titlve event on the UB camp.
us ror campus ori;anizations in the
rorn1 of a quiz program.
'The school station (88.7 M~g. on
fir FM hand! has been presenting
a weekly half-hour radio program
similar to the popular Sunday even­
mg television program G. E. Col­
le~• Bowl, called UB COLLEGE
•
QUIZ.

College Bowl A "Live" PNtvN
The show, broadcl\st "live" each
Tuesday evenlng at 8:30 from ttie
Norton Union Conferenl-e Theater
in front of a studlo audience, brings
together two campus organizations
cnch week in a "battle ot wits."
The team with the bigbes t number

peting against a team from Alpha
Gamma Delta Sorority. 'The New­
man Club successfully gained vic­
tory on the first show, be defeating
Alpha Phi Delta Fraternity 265 - 60.
Last week they defeated Sigma
Alpha Mu 275 - 150, a.nd this past
Tuesday evening won over Alpha
Kappa Psi Lratemity by a score
of 285 -120.
Questions used on the show are of
a "general knowledge" nature , and
include such categories as science,
math, histozy, and English Jl n d
'The job of moderator
llterature.
tor UB College Qulz ill in the
capable hands of Fred Brickel, a
sophomore in Drama and Speech.
Azlf l1 Pi.ated
Responsible !or lhc enUte quiz

Those opposing the amendment
lnsls t that the frosh be given a
year lo orient themselves with th&lt;.'
school's government and get on
a firm ground academically. They
compare a seat on the Senate to
the deferred pledging system ol
[ratCl'nitles on this campus .

Frosh Are Responsible
Supporters ,of the amendment
argue that the freshmen are not
the "wide - eyed. confused IHUe
people that some ol the mature
Top: KARL BALLARD
, JACK STEKLOFF
, TONY ZAPPONE. Front:
and knowledgable uppcr-clossmeri
STAN SALOMON,RICK PLATT.
seem to believe . They say thot "The
ll'E'shmen have every right to re­
1&lt;'1rl Untlnrtl, hMd resident or p.n, . wlll dhr11\x the t",•ent. Ki•nnY
ceive at least some direct repre­
'l'owt•r. slated: "The opt'n house
Land und th1• Chuncl'llors will l)('l' •
sentation." Robert Finklestein, one has b?C'n initiah'd and programmed
rorm at th~ dan&lt;'e. Refreshment&amp;
of the th.rec sponsors of the amend­
by thr studl'nts . . . and their et,
will be servl'd.
ment stated, " I feel that it ls an
forts to providt• a better living sltu­
Tlw rcsid&lt;'nls of Tower wcrt• 01•rr­
irreconcileable Injustice that there
ltion should be realized. If this
arc six University College scats,
progrnm Is succt'ssful there Is no wh&lt;!lmin11:JyIn fnvor of thr l'VCnt.
all of which are held by sopho­
mores. There is no adequate way
lo give freshmen the seats which
they deserve. The amendment is
a step in the right direction and one
which is long over due. I h&lt;)pe
that some day the freshmen will
have more than one seat." Also
sponsoring the amendment are for­
the decision by remarklnJ,":: "The
The Student Senate Elections
mer Senator Russell Goldberg, and
Commillce aruiounced the following rommlttC&lt;' felt that Mr . Zcplo"1ti's
Noreen Hirsh.
v1oh1t1ons wN·e too sevel'e, even
result s of the fall elcelion held
kt'Cfl111gIn mind the fact thnt we
on Oct. 25:
Unlquenets of F .c.c.
hnvt• opcratl'cl with a Ubeml out•
Daniel Silber, President ol th1• Arts and Scienceii: Al Epstein
look, to ovt•rlook them, We !ell
Freshman Class Council says, "The
(U.S.J 98 votes: Mike Schwartz
we had no alternative but to Im•
F.C.C. is unique in that il ls the
CC.A.! 53 votes.
pose the dlsqunUticaUon ol ballot~.
only organization directly respon­
whil'h literally disqualified his can­
sible (or the overall planning ol
Business Administration : 1111Berg.
one complete class. The Council
or, W .S.l 41 voles; Neale Good­ didary. " He further stated : "This
decision wa.~ made by the com­
represents a sounding board for
man CC.A.) 24 votes .
mittee before ballots were C'0\11'1ted
Freshman grievances. In asking
Mcdic.1I School: Bob Schnitzler and this shows that the committee
for a single vote on the Senate
will not tolerate any nagmnt of­
(U.S. 1 7 votes; Bob Schnitzler
we are showing the desire ot thl'
fense aga111st the rules - either In
IC.A.I 0 votes.
entire class, which has been strang­
this type of election or in the largi•r
ly alienated from the ruling body
\Jnivcrsit y College: Alan Chuk r
Spr ing Election "
We are well aware of the presence
re .A.I 252 votes; J ~an Traylor
of our University College Senators.
The commillee rul1-d on a total
(U.!i. J 228 votes ; Maury Zcplo­
We are asking for this voti&gt; ns an
ol 10 violations and ruled ,to take
wll1. ( Ind. J 99.5 votes•
organization handling the problems
action on only two. Mr . Pacholski
• Mr Zeplowitz polled 199 votes
and providing planning for thf'
accounted for this by explalnina ,
largest class ·at UB."
but a pennlly imposed to a vio­
"All of the violations lodged out ­
lation voidl'&lt;l 50% of his ballots .
side of those raised by the commit ­
The debate on this nmerdment
'!'he 101al number ,,1 votes in Unl­ tee were either motlvated by J)OS•
should prove to be very inlerest ­
vcrsity Colll'gc was 667, 151 in Arts
s1ble political adv1111tages to bi•
Jrig. The acceptcncc or rejection
and Srnmces, 65 in the School of
~ined , supported by almost no
ol this amendment could have a
Business, and 7 in Medical School,
proof, or were based on minute
very direct bearing on every fresh• The Elections Committee expressed
technicalities In the statement or
nian.
pleasure in the high totals for each
lh&lt;' Miles, having no l'Onslderation
division, au of which approximated
for the a ctual spll'it or purpoise or
the Spring Election of 196.1totals .
the rulc.ll."

Election ResultsAnnounced:
Four Winners Take Seats

NEWMANCLUB WINNERS
oJ points at the end of each show,
gets a chance to come back the
following week to lace a new team
of challengers. At the end of each
semester, the t eam with the longest
nm on the program. wins the
sehool championship and the UB
College Ql\lz trophy.

Newman Club Trh,1mph
Current UB College Quiz champ.
Ions are the three - time winn1ng
team from the Newman Club. They
will return to the show this Tuesday
evooing when they will be com•

program is the show's producer,
Ed Azll, who is also the stulio n's
Op~rations Manager. Commenting
on the show. he said that "th!'
show so far bas been very suc­
cessful and we have received many
favorable comments: however , we
would like more support from the
student body , who are more lhan
welcome lo attend the broadcast.
Perhaps as a result of the show .
the school might be able to get
together a team to appear on the
G. E. College Bown!

/J.B.StudentFightingForHisLile
StudentsRequestedTo DonateBlood
Anthony Spinelli, a student who WM forced lo tal&lt;e a
tut year because of
leave of ab«ence from the umveraily
11 irerious heart condi tion, is under,OinA heart surgery
at St.
Barnaby Hospital in New York City, this week.
who i:s willinA to defray the considerable
.Any dudent
expense:, of this operation by ,tipulalinA
Iha/ his blood be
cr8'Jited to Anthony's account with the Red Cross will be
doin4 a service to a fellow student and to the university.
Dnners !thould contact any branoh of the Red Cro:ss. All blood
ty pe:, are accep tabl e.
Anthony

is liAhtin4 for his lile. He needs your help ,

Why Not?

Anyone interested in
joining the staff of tbe

Sj&gt;ectrumshould attend
the genewetaff meet­
ing tbis afternoon at
4:00 p.m. in tbe Spec•
trum office, 355 Norton
Union. No experience
is necessaryin the field
of journaUam.

The only unfortunate results of
the election were caused by a vio­
lation in the campaign or Maury
Zcptowil1.. Mr . Zeplowitz was ac1:used of violating the rules by
ha ndlni: out stingers and campaign
mtlll'rial within the Union, and al!l&lt;l
by having one ol his supporters i:am ­
palgn "1thln the voting area. The
Committee demnnded a 50% in·
validation of Mr. Zeplo,.1tz's bal­
lots, which amounted to his diR­
qunllOra tion.
Bob Pnc'1olskl, Elections O&gt;m­
Olalrman, comml'llted on

mltttt

Corutldering the fact tbn t Mr
Schnitzler , unopposed and ro-cn­
dorsed , 1von exclusively on UI&lt;'
ballots he received In Row A, th,·
Vnited Students Party wns victori
ous ln 3 elections , Campus AlliM("{'
in 1 of th{&gt; nlt'('K for u~•n div,~ionnl
Wilts .

Mr. Ml~hat'l Culwn, Studl'nt
A.'15()(:iatlon Prt&gt;~ld('nl , ('Offitrw,m'Cl
altt•r the elect ion th11t tw " wllll
very pleas&lt;.'11by the.• lan.,'t' tum,-OUt
In tight of the llrnll~l ('!11n1~1•t¢11IN:
1111011-'t'd
In the c-lC'Ctlon
Nlc,i "

I

�.7
SPECTRUM
---------------------------

PAGE TWO
I

UB Turtle PreliminariesSet
For Norton Nov. 11 at 3:30
lly RONNIE IIROMIIERG

.'

SleeLecture
to Ho.Id
Concertof Rogers

I

Schussmeisters to Present

Ski FashionShow Monday

By J~SEPH LANG

Monday, at 7: 30 p.m., in the mill- tipurpose Room of Norton, a fas­
hion show will be held during the
meeting of the Schussmeislers Ski
Club. Members of the club will
modr•I ouUUs supplied by the Ski
Rack in Williamsville . Come and
scr what wlli he worn on the
slo pl•S this season,
Harp and Piano ," with Marjorie
Monday is also the last day that
llnr1zf'II harp and Squirt• Haskin ,
dues may be paid. Dues arc $6.00
piano; Brrnard Roger's "Si nroni,
!or the yrur. Th e club office. Nor­
!'!tit for Strings ." th~ first perform•
ton 320. will br open today and
anc~ or th,, vnsion lo he presented;
Monday ror thos e who wish to join
and Wr•rnC'r J&lt;,st&lt;'n's "ConcC'rlo
hut havi; not Yf'l paid their dues.
Sal·m." for s rring s and piano , with
I David Diamond conducting the Mrmb\'rship in the club is deter­
mined by pald dues. l1 you can•
strtng ort•h,.~tra and Squirl' Haskin .
not mak&lt;.' ii lo the oflicc, Leigh
pi11nist.
Coltrr . the IJ'casurcr. will he at
!ht• lllC'!'ling to co llect last minulr
Hudi Steph,•n was born in Worms .
"dona lions."
G••rmflny . in 1887 a nd wus kill&lt;'d
Al the las t m1•etlng you heard
durlnu lhl' Ba111t•al Tarnopol on
what ,,,,, did last year. At thi s
Sr pt. 29. 1915. lfo was considerf'd
n1cc-llng ,YOU will hear and discuss
on&lt;' oJ thr mos! st•nsillvl' , orlginaJ
c'Ompo.~&lt;'rs o! his g!'nera lion . His • what wr will be doing this year,
Originally WI' had planned to tak e
work is wholly unknwn in th!' Uni•
on ~ long !Tip but dut' , to costs and
!I'd Stairs.
nllwr un c)(peC'l cd o('curauccs. plans
h;~~C'hcen altcre.d to tri ps of three
Bl'rnard Rogt•rs has ror many
01 our days . Tlus wa.y more mem­
yf'nrs ht•f'n lhr• most distini::uished
h~rs will be able to go. Th~ first
l!•ac•her of Composition at thr Eastmnn S!'11ool or Musir in RO&lt;'hester. lr1p will be over Intersession .to
Wrmrr Jl)sl, •n's "Cotwerto Sacro,'' • Stowe , Ve:monl. The se~nd tr ip will
pr•rrorm ed in th~ lalC' .20•8 and be to Wluleface Mountain on about
the srco~d week .~!. Feh._ ~fore
l'!lrly ':!O's, by Koussevlfisky and
.':;tokowski. hns bee n unnecessarily
•~~ battery of hourlies begins. De­
n.-gll'ct ~d. This P&lt;'rfornmnce will f1mle dates wlll be ~nno unced at
th ~ meeting alo~g w11h more debt• dt'flic•nt~d in his nll'mo
ry.
tai ls about the trips, such as costs ,

Attention all turt les! You must be registered by 5 p.m ., ,L
Nov.•8, in order to run in the SUNY AB preliminaries of the
Tht • Slee Lecture Series topic for
International Twitle Race. AJI the money donated on your I 1'hursdny will he "Four Facets of
behalf will be contri buted to Muscular Dystrophy.
Musical ParUcipation-Second
FaThe preliminaries of this race may be entered by any t'N: Tht- lnt crprrtativ c, Performer".
person or group . They will be held Monday, November 11, Musir 10 l,r P;"r.~rml'? will include:
at 3:30 p.m. in the Multipurpose Room of Norton Union. For Rudi Skphan.s Musit: ror Strings,

l

thos1• f)('l)PII' who ha ve douhtmg
1ur1ll!x. mnk l' sur&lt;' your entry is
111 !&lt;'!1st six months old, no mor!'
thal si:\ 1nt·hc~ ioni:: and has n&lt;1
mor!' thnn n six tm·h shrll. If
your turUl' wins. he will hllv(• &amp;
dmm·t• to !-'Oto Wushington D. C..
this Ot'&lt;'l'ml~1·, and run in fhl'
lntf'rnatmnal
Finals . Coll,•1;1•s a ll
owt the l~)llnlry ll'ill be• SPndlng
lu•tlt•s for thrs grral r•wnt in thC'
hnp1• or bnni;:mi: glory tn thl•ir
nanws . t ~•our yl'llrs ago, UH won
rrno11 n hy hnvini: ()TI(' of 1111'hlp
11•11turtl1•s in lht• nallon. I

Thl' ln!l·rnatinnal Turllt' J&gt;:11·eal­
son has a s,•rious purp1)~1•. how­
rvrr Rolwrt Vinkl'lstt•in , Ch1Llrman
There was some debat e in lht'
or tlw St udc•nl !ir•nal(• l'ubl II' Ht·· Stuclrnt
St'.'nalt• nboul whPthl'r par ­
lallons Commlltl'e, puf s it this w~y:
tinpating- in SU&lt;'h a ra,•r would
"Tht• lurtl e racr is somrthing holh
IJ!'nc•ridal and humorous. II w11t I0W&lt;'r its slnndards. but !ht• Publi &lt;•
n,•lalion s Commitl&lt;'r' (whil'h voll'CI
raise· mont'y ror a goo&lt;l ~ausc-,in
for this rat''t' unanimousJy J rP&lt;'is
addition 111 int&lt;•r't'sling sludC'nts.
thal "Jhr Sludent Sennte ls not
h,•lghtt•ning lht'ir rnml)l•tillvt'.' spirit
r!ippin.f! lo a lnw lrv!'i hy Sf)On•
and bolstt·rlng the n:1mr or this
soring this t'Vrnt. JI is humorous.
univt'rsity." !Ir r...,,1s lhnt "a i,tunt
yt't ,1 good way or raising money
likl' !his shouldn't ht• ronsidC'rl'.'Cl
for a worlhy r1tus1•. Mus1•ular Dys,
obj&lt;'t•tionablc " nnd hopes lhal
trophy ."
many Jl('0plr will ,·ont r ibute to
- - - ---------------AD
Musc-ular Dystrophy. Mont•y ror ,-.------this caUSl' is insurt'd . howevPr , by
th e flvt' dollar ,•n\ranr&lt;' rl'I• nPC'd&lt;'&lt;i
to run in the finals in Washington .
This monry will ll&lt;' donnled to
M.D.

I

· YIIIJIIIMINT"-----------------------

GIVE
THEUNITEDwAY

Hamburger -Bulletin

HUMIILE
ATTITUDE
U of I DRIVERS-­

LOOK OUT
Hung ry U of 8 Drivers

were warned today to han•
die their cars with extreme
caution while on th eir way
lo Henry's.
"Y ou could have a bad
accident-Li ke turni ng in
at one of our competi­
oops, I mean one of our
Im itators placea," uu­
tloned Henry, " and nobody
wa nts tlla t lo hap pen­
leut ol all me t
The average U of 8
driw r Is competen t, and
hat quick re!Mxea Henry

uld , but sometimesIs

Nslly distr acted , especial­
ly by 901'9NUI blonde■•

" P1y no •tttnt lonto llfl""
9"\11 blonde, , lellowa,"
warned Henry, "Remem•
ber, yov ire hunvr,111

HENRY
'S
Hambu
rgers
NaUonal!,Y famous

Sheridan Drive
Corner N.F. Blvd.

Friday , November 1, 1963

WEDiDirl!l
weFrNJ&amp;ffED

ltiE-8',ffal9tlia

what to expect. wha t not to do.
what you can do , and most lm­
porlo.nl , information on trail and
slope conditions. Members will note
that there is priority ra,Ungs to
help determine who will go on the
trips; this 1·ating is based on the
participation
or each member in
lhC' activities of tl1e club.
The usual club business will be
discussed. We have received de­
finit e prices ror the Thursday night
trips from the local areas; thes e
wit! be announced a1 the meeting
along witl1 rental costs and lessons .
Th!'re may Possibly be a movi e
shown somel.ime during the meet •
Ing to case the tension .
Come lo the meeti ng Monda~·
night and sec how you can be
h autiful or handsome (as the casr
may be) on the slopes and aroun d
thr Cire this winter .
In l'ase you've wondered , ther r
wer e 156 members in the club on
Friday,
OC'I. 25. at 1:30 p . m.
I'm sure the re ar e al leas t twentv
more by now. so g!'t on the baii
don't be last to pay your dues .
0

ANGIE'S PIZZAHOUSE
Free Delivery WltflMinimum
Purc!Mo-5,i.,S to C.mpu1
•nd Allenhurst
7H Nlapra Falls Blvd.
TFMHI

-

�PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 1, 1963

•

UB Placement Service Lists
UB,Co_lgate Join 1n Concert Potential
Jobs lor Graduates
ly JOE LANG

The Colgate University Men's Glee Club has been chosen to open this year's Varsity
Music Series; the second season of inter collegiate musical activity sponsored by the U.B.
choral organizations . The Colgate men will perform in a joint concert with the U.B. Men's
Glee Club following the Buffalo-Colgate football on Saturday evening, Nov. 16.
This year's program, which will consist of folk songs, college songs, and contempor­
ary musi for male voices, will be held in Harriman Auditorium beginning at 8 p.m. After
the concert, there will be a dance in Norton in honor of the visiting singers.
The Nov. 16 post-gam(' conc('rt
will introduce to the UB campus
a typr o{ event that has become
a traditional part of loolhall week­
end festivilit•s 111 many Ivy League
sl' hools . wlwre musiral &lt;'mnpctition
lieh, •ecn lop-ratrd singing gro ups
tlrawi: a~ mul'l1 lnterci&lt;t and en­
thus iasm as tlw gridimn contest.
The liuffalo Git-,• Club is planning
a 1'Plu1·11visit lo llw l'olgHh' ,·amp­
,sa t Humillon NY . lat ,•r this sea­
~nn as purt or ils spring touring
~ch~&gt;d
ulr Nrxt fall llw t'l\tt• is hop­
•nq to sclwdult• ~,,vc&gt;rllifool hall 1•on­
,•rrt s similar lo the• No,·1•mhc1· 16th
,•1·,•nt on tilt' '-'"'' of ,•ach m11j11r
home game.
From theit lnt•,•plion In 184:1 Cnl­
voral
organizallons
have
~hangt-d radkally lrom !he days of
"Glee and Mnndolln" dubs. Tht•
modern Glee Club has ro nlinucd to
present programs
of ,•ontrasting
modern 11nd u·adllional naturr. es•
Jwda lly pl&lt;•as111g to fort.'i)?ll and
,\ rneril:an audiC'nc,,s.

.:at"

In Europt•. uudie nn•s in Amslo&gt;r•
,tam. Bonn. Vif'nna Vcnlcf' Zuril'h.
Gt•neva and Paris rccciv, •d the Col•
ga le• Cluh ,,1th ns much enthush1sm
as audic&gt;nces In the muJn r Ameriran
d tics have during the-· annual con­
•·l'rl tOlll'S . Dur ing !Ill' COUl'Sl' or
somP 6,000 milrs or nnnua l ll'avcl.
m addition
to appcariln&lt;'&lt;'S In
Toronto . Boston , New York . Wa~h­
ington. CicvC'land, Indianapolis. Pit ­
tsburgh . R(l(•hester , Bu Halo and St.
Louis. the Club ;il~o hlls :-Ung with
most or the eastern women's col•
legc&gt;s. ln addition . in order 10 prt'­
~rnt sev eral gl~ c lubs in h~th
compel.itivc and t'Ombinl'd se tlln~ .
the• Club has pa rlid patt-d in Sl'vera l
lri-u niversity ct&gt;neerls in the past
few years.
The aim Q( the Colgate Giel' Club
s t!l present the best possible mu -

Secklnl? C'E. EE. ME. C1I E ES.
Chemistry nnd Phrsirs majors

No,•, 4- Ealtman Kodak. ScckinJt
Chemistry, Physics. EE, TE, ME,
CH.E .. and ES majors.

Nov. 7- Atlantlc lteflnlnt
Ce.
&amp;-ekinl! Liberal Ans nnd Bu~iness
Administration candidates

Nov. 4- Prlce WaterhouM Cem•
pany. &amp;&gt;eking Math, Liberal Ans.
Accounting, Economics and Gen­
eral Business majors .

Nov. 7- Speer Carbon Company.
Scckinl-( EE , IE. ME . CH E. Chrm ­
islry and Physics m111oi:-s.

U.

S.

Nov. 4- U. S. Dlpar1ment ef
Seeking Economics ,
Commerce .
Business Administration majors.
Nov. 5- North American Avia­
tion. Seekin,z CE, EE. rE. 1',1:E,
CH.E ., ES. Chemistry, Math und
Physics mnjors. Chcmisrc;,. Math
nnd Physirs majors at MS and
PH .D, levels only .
Nov . 6- Nlagara Muhlne &amp; Tool
Wor"-. Seeki ng ME majors .
Nov. f,- 8endh1 Corp.- Sclntllta
Division. Seeking EE and ME
mujors.

COLGATEUNIVERSITYMEN'S GLEE CLUI
Sil'. "We• sing what wr bt•liew to
he amonl-( th,• fitwst works m th,•
litt•raturt' for 11wn's d10n1s, IWll\'1•
our rrpc•rloin· indud,•s sonw worll s
whi&lt;Jh arc beyond 1111'
s,·orit' of tlw
traditional gleC' duh . Qni, nsp;•,•t
ol this approath lndud&lt;'s the• com•
mis.~ionin~ ol cont,•1t11)&lt;ll'ary ,·om•
posers to "l'ill • works ro1·men 's
thorus as &lt;'lWmplilied hy the• Uni•
1•ersity Church ('Ommis.~ions pro­
gram, In line with our ulms wr
wish to give the nwmbcrs of lhc
Gll'1' Cluh and our audil'nccs 11
valuable. educational musical ex­
perience and al lhc same tin'lc
spread lhr&gt; word o{ Colgate nncl l(s
liberal arts \ratiiti on ihroug~ our
music." Mr. Edward Murray is the
present director or the roti:at,·
group , and Prof. Robert Bl'l'kwith
Is the UB t'onduc tor.
Tickets for the joint UB-Col(:alf'
&lt;'Onccrt are availnblc• al hox of­
fices in No,1on Union und Baird
Hall , as 'wl'II as from mcmb,•1·s
of thP UB Mrn 's Glee Club and
lhc Women 's Chorale. Sludc•nt tk­
kels are S.75. and ,1dmisslon f&lt;lr
the general publk 1s $1.50.

Debate Society Sends Team
To Michigan State Tourney
Six novice debat ers attended a
.zroup actio n tournament last week•
rnd at Michigan State University.
Thr team was th e only novice
tea m en tered in the competition.
n,•spite this dlsadvonlogc.
they
finished in lilth plac.'t'. Only a !rw
1••111
ts kept the team lrom being
,,mo ng the four finalists .
'rhose attending werf' Diane Hay­
, Ellen Abelson , Raymond Major
\!al'ti n Feinrider Robert Gismondi
•nd Carl Levlnr Mr . Terry Qsl!'r·
mri!'r director of novice debate.
al'rom panied thi&gt; group.
This group adion tournament is
th, first of its type that the D&lt;'­
hating Socie ty has a tt !'nded. The
•lmp~til.ion in group action is bt&gt;­
IIH•,•n teams or groups of shtdPnts
•alh!'r than indlvidu11ls. ()ur !Pam
"' si,c worke&lt;l togethC'r a~ uni·
!l'OUp, The nuun purpose of group
1•·t1ern Is to evahmle
discussion In
li•rms of its end product.
E,Wh group dilihrratl'd 011 llll 11S·
'l~nt-d discussion problrm and then
"rnte a rommitlee
rt•port. com­
l&gt;&lt;rnb!C'lo a term paJX'r, Our ,zroup
1111rkrd tin the topic, "\Vha t should
I, clone to prol'1de adequate lacili•
t 1t•~ resourses . and p&lt;•rsonnel for
'flPle Qualified to recf'ive a11 op-

lnhlrmatlon

Nov. 1 .tgoncy .

porlunlly for a higher education ."
Committee Reports
All committee reports were dc•­
tailed !'('ports that r('0 ec•lrd and
su mmariz ed the group's prolJlem ­
solving deliberations . The reports
induded the definition and analysis
of the problem as well as ded­
sio ns about criteria nnd solutiens .
Each J.ll'O
UP had to dcleml its re­
port orally bcfon· a ~n rl of judJ'.lCS
who then drtcrrninl'd thl' mC'ril or
thl' written report nnd its oral d&lt;'­
fense . After two rounds of lntero­
gatlon the judqes detPrmmcd the
winners or lhC' 1ournament on basis
o/ hoth the wrillC'n and oral pre­
senta t ions.
Var,lty In Roc:herter
A varsity tea m will l&lt;'ave for
Roc·hPstrr this afternoon In partid ­
patc in lhe St. John Fishrr ColleJ?r
Tournamrnl. Linda Sapir and I.In­
da Leventhal will drbale on the
affirmativ e. and Alvin Epstein and
Andre Namenrk will defrncl the
ncgati\'e The dt•bukrs will partici •
pa te in !Jvc rounds of intl'rcollegl­
at&lt;' debate on the nalionlll .topir .
"Resolved. That the F't'deral Gm•­
C'rnment should guarantee an op­
portunity for high&lt;'r PduraUon lo
nil qualified high ~rhool graduatPS "

Nov. 6- U. S. Treasury-ln19rnal
Revenue. Seeking Math . Business
Arlministrnlion
and
A,·co unting
nmjor s.
Nov. fi and 7- Llnde Company,

Nov . 7- Socony Mobil Oil Com.
pany, Inc:. Serkinl! PH D Chrm
isl ry , mojors.
Nov. S- Atllld Chemical Corpor­
ation. S('ekinl( Chrm1slry c,mdi
datrs at a ll del(rC&lt;' 11'\'PI~ Also
CE . EE nncl M'E mnj ors
Nov R-Chlc:opH Manufacturing
Company. Sc(,kmg l,jb rrnl Art ~
Mrountlnl(.
Chemistry , ME ar.d
CH E. majors .
No\', S- 1.C.t. (New Yorlc). Inc.
Firl'kinl-( British students al Jll)St­
graduate
!I've! nnly . :-.1
r,jors i1.
Chrmislry
CHE ., Physir,
nnci
Mathrnm tirs.
No\' , R- U. S. Depar1ment of
Labor. Scekln~ Math. Arr ountin~
Eronomit•~ and L.ahor &amp; lnd ustri~t
Rel1ulons majors ,

it's
invisible,
man!
It's incredible, incomparable, infallible! Code IO for mt'n, the new
kind of hairdressing from Colgate-Palmolive. Th(&gt;new invisible way
to grooma man's hair all day. Non-greasyCode 10 disappears in your
hair, gives it the clean, manly look that innnmes wotnPII, infuriates
inferior men. Be in.
Get the non-greasy
hairdressing,Code10.
It's invisible, man!

~lrcQ~]
I

-

•·
•

::.ti#.

�SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

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ly RUSSELi, GOLOIERG

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l •ur•n&lt;-• Slno• r

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f-;~h ,r• Ed,1cr
f-fl•h,,t Edi tor
Sc)o,u

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS

Campa,

SPECTRUM

THE

fr(day, November 1, 1963

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lo11 Htu 1nvt •

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Ktrto S.nford
t&gt;io,0111~
H11
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11ho toor• c,hy Ecfoo,

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ffP IAf\Cfll fot ff1111
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Sfft,nn l 10.1 , Aci ni Oct4b., 3 , 1917, 11
o thorl:od feb rue11rv
91 1951.

U 00

jub , cuµ llun

Servi,,

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V~•'• cl,tv l~11
0,1 9000.

by N~flonat Adv t fl lalno
hu ., 410 MAdl1on Av,,,, Now Ynrll., N, Y

Renf\11,tfll'
lft d

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n,1 IQl'l1jl AdVt rt1,lno

Notes Tied on a String
A student must be a responsible individual. And, as
I'. S. Eliot has stated: ''It is only by unremitting effort
that we can persist in being individuals in a Society, instead
of merely numbers of a disciplined crowd. Yet we remain
members of a crowd even when we succeed in ,becoming
individuals.'' The listless wiill drift. J,t is by being that
:&gt;ne becomes something more.

•

•

TO paraphrase Eccle,laste 1,
'rHUS SAmJ KOHELETH, "This
two (party system) is travisty and
a producing of useless contention.
What profit hath a student govern•
menl of all its rneetingi; wherein it
meeteth on Tuesday nights, I! Its
time be spent in petty conflict of
personality and not in productive
legislolion? What doth it profit a
student if his vote be cast in an
election that is based on personal
magnetism and .fraternal blocs ;
Thus do the representatives and
the represented waste their efforts
and make a mockery of dernocrallc

goven1ment.''
Whcpever a nation (or similarly
with a university campus) lacks
an efieellve party system, sustained
political inte~t wanes and legis­
lative eUecttveness becomes dlt­
lkult . Thus a ~ conOJct can
be a good thing in that lt losters
personal involvement in govern­
ment. (The recent newsletters are
one small example o! this.) When,
however, this conOlct is based on
individuals rather th.an on iss ues
there is a serious problem,
Our nation and campus share this
unfortunate

condition.

The choice

between Kennedy and Nixon in '60
was just such a Tweedle-dee-dee •
Tweedle-de-dwn decision. The par­
ty's platfonns were so similar as
to be Indistinguishable to foreign
correspondents covering the U.S.
elecllons. The only events that
raised the campaign above com­
plete medlocrity was Kennedy's
Catholic faith and Nixon's five­
o'clock shadow. On our campus the
situation is even worse.

Student Praise ol Dr. Stout
To the Editor:
Dr. Stout, professor of Anthro­
pology, fs an inspirational example
of the true educator. His dedica­
tion to both his profession and his
students, bas made him a great
man in his field. He has implanted
1n his students a desire to find out
about people, and a great interest
In personality. This inspiration may
be the beginnings of our pwn po­
tential future greatness, even it

O ften, contepts which were never intended to be
associated become so and falsification is produced: re•
sponsibility and privelege; democratic process and license;
When the Campus Alliance emer­
individual opportunity aud exploitation.
Perhaps the
ged last year as the tlrst year
pshchology of human frailtty will develop yet unknown around party ,(as opposed to the
political blocs, tor elections only,
reasons why the insecure and spinless among us (a bit of that had domlnated tor many years)
which we all posses) unite the above pairs. What should it was a step in the direction o!
political growth, Ull!ortunatly both
be engaged is trnst and duty.
the Campus Alliance and the United

•

•

•

Whereas individuals should be seli-orien 1ted, groups
objectives should be based upon a cooperative effort - not
for its own sake but in regard to abilities and the degree
of personal involvement . MoNll freedom requires dec!sion­
malting; and I.he courage •lo act accordingly.

•

♦

•

Students, a political bloc which has
now evolved into a party , are Iden­
tical in their basic politi cal philoso­
phies. Despite the sca thing news­
letters and vicuprative
senate ,
speeches, what we have is two
ltberal parties that seek to enhnnce
the position of the student Senate
as an Instrument of student ex­
pression and education. This Simi•
lari ty has led to the discussion of
Issues on the personal rather than
policy level. What emerges is de­
bates Ill! "The Turtle Question" of
Oct, 22 wherein the habits and
possible ancestry of the chairman
was as great a concern as th e
governing regulations.

In our seli-&lt;:onscious age , a short.sighted logioal con­
sistancy has defined a new dogma - that method is all
and goal is nothing , In truth, the act defines its own end
A possible solution to thk prol&gt;­
and the latter must have a mean ing of itself . The free lem would be the allignment of
man will know his objectives . . , and will be just so free Individuals of similar outlook into
"conservative" and "liberal" par­
as he will make himself by his own commitments.
ties. While this is unlikely at the

•

•

•

The colle ge is not really set apart from the main drag
of life. Nor should the student be so alienated . A proper
educati on is not limited within a single dimension. Once
begun , the process of learhing should breed itself . It should
inspire excit.ment about ideas , stimulate a con9bant re­
exam inatfo,n of values , and realize individual development.
It is in the integration of our ideals and actions, of our
different interests , and of our contradictory ambitions that
we become human beings .

•

•

There is a false indi vidualism w}uch is founded on ithe
refusal to accept th e yoke of commitment to any ideal
bigger than th e self. Instea d of attemptin g to perfect one's
sell, the individual seeks to comfort his coarseness . The
clignity of man is a whole. And what dimini she s one
t.b.re&amp;fte
ns all other .

national level. on campus it is our

best hope to extricate ourselves
from pettiness and back-biting and
~ effective student repreiseota­
tlon. A posibllity would be to llmlt
the number ot votes eech llt\ldent
could cast in a general eled:lon to
a number fewer than the number
of positions availlble.
This would curtail the power of
large parties , They must maintain
a moderate liberal posilloo to gain
maximum campus-wide support,
and thus enable organizations ol
moderate slZe to elect representa­
tives that could express groups'
individual opinlous. More definitive
positions would be obtained , since
the candidate will be appealing to
a group of students with a specific

this greatness Is only the smallest
iota o! helping or widerstanding
humanity.

We are certain that there are a
!ew on this campus who are as
great an educator as Dr. Stout,
but unfortunatelythey seem to be
In a minority. Perhaps with more
teachers like Dr. Stout, our educa­
tional system would not be
sided as it is.
Jettry Rubin

llll

one­

Dirty Bulletin Boards
To the Editor:
The University administration has
thoughtfully provided b u 11e t in
boards in most buildings where stu­
dents, or student groups, can
advertise such social affairs as
dances, parties, etc. In view of
this tact, is there any ceason why
the sponsors of such events feel
it necessary to literally plaster the
campus with their blurbs?
Not only do these filers obscure

legitimat e notices on bulletin boards
reserved for academic purposes,
but their presence on entrance
doors, stairwells, corridor walls,
blackboards, and furniture detracts
from the atmosphere of the Uni­
versity which is (or should be)
prirnarlly academic outside of the

dormitory area.
Yours for more responsible stu­
dents and more sightly buildings.
Walter DannhaUller

Poor Attendance May Cloae Concert
To the Editor:
Th&lt;' com:ert committee was es­
tablishro a year and a hall ago for
lhe purpose of presenting Top
Name Groups to the UB students.
S I u d e n t interest and demand
prompted the fowiding of t.hls com­
mittee. ·
The attPndance at the last con­
cert was terrible. Reflecting on this
s'hiatio n, we on the concert com•
mittee are beginning to feel that
there is no longer any interest or
demand for these concerts. How•
ever, we don 't want to jump to any
conclusions, so we a.re foing to pre­
sent one more ~ncert this semes•
ter. U the attendant.-e is satisfac­
tory, then, maybe, we will continue
the program next semester; if the

1

attendance

is poo~then

good-bye

concerts.

On November 23 the committee
will present the Fow· Preps. This
i~ an excellent group, We !eel that
poor attendance at this concert will
definitely denote lack or interest. on

the po.rt of the students.
We realize that we cannot please
every student. however we have
tried to do our best with what lit•
tie we have. We have tried to make
the UB campus exciting and inter•
e:1ting by bringing various TOP
NAME GROUPS to il
We do not feel that there is any •
thing lacking in the concert com •
mi t lee , but we do !eel there Is

oomething lacking in the UB stu­
dent. We hope you prove this last
sl11tement wrong. The decision is
uptoyou!

!'
The C.OncertCommittee

Attendance at Candidate Meet Not Good

To the Editor:
Last wee k l witnessed one of the
most distressing exhibitions of the
student attitude of "l don't give
polltlcal outlook.
a damn about anything ," that I
have seen in my tour years at
The end of the matter, some the University .
With everyone complaining about
having been said; respect dem&lt;&gt;­
cratic principles and promote usetul the lack of initiative on the part
activities by evolving effective stu­ ot the Student Senate to c:ootactthe
students,. tbe Election C.Omtnitteeof
dent parties - this ii$ the WUY to
which I am Chal'.rmanscheduled
student government.

a meeting open to all students at
which they could speak to their

candidates for respective Student
Senate offices in the upcoming elec­
tion. I, along with other members
ot the Senate, were hoping that
tllis would be an opportunity that
the students would take o meet
the people that would be represent•
ing them.
Three hundred stingers

weredis·

(Con tin ued on P•I' ~ 1)

�)
Friday, November 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIVE

~········· ·· ··········· ·· ···· ··· ···· ······ ····· ····· ·····~

Beahan-New
UB
Psychiatri~t
Is
•
By JEREMYTAYLOR.
Available
Now ··· ·· ······ ········ ···· ······ •4••····· ··········

REFLECTIO

The Circus
By 808 MILCH
"Four anl."J'lalsresembling horses
were sighted swimming in the Ni­
agara River just ott . . . Grand
Island yesterday. When approached
by a Conservation Department
boat, they submerged and were
not sighted again .''

•• •

Art and I anchored out in mid­
stream, cast, and decided that even
if we didn't catch any fish, it'd be
worth It just to )axe around in the
boat all day. We'd been out there
tweny minutes or so when we first
heard it-a scraping soundunder
the hull.

"Probably just a log." Art said.
But the scraping continued, and
then we saw that the boat had be­
gun to rise out of the water and
into the air-a
most unnatural
position lor a boat. Art took a look
over the side, and then turned to
me, his face all green looking.
"You sick? "

down his trowel and Wlpwg his
sweaty muzzle. "See we're over­
crowded lh1Ryear, and we've got
to have more room. That's why
we're building thl,s.-.lt's the silo
tor the new girl's stable."
"But why should you be over,
crowded? I mean, ycu knew how
muc h space you had available , and
what facilities there were to serve
your students at the University of
In (Did you say that was its name ?
We don't play in football, do we?)?

ly HARRIETHETHINGER
The University Health Service
is pleased to announce the&gt;appoint­
ment of a psychiatrist to its stall.
uiurence T. Beahan, M.D., a grad­
uate of the University of BuHalo

"Look, mister . I only work here .
Tl's the higher-ups that make those
decisions."

•

"You mean there are begger
jackasses than you?" Art put in.
"Oh sure. There's one that's ten
hands high. They're lhe ones who
decide those things ."

"Where do the students sleep,
then , If you haven 't got enough

LAUlll!NC I T, IIAHAH, M,D.

room?''

l\k'&lt;lkal St•hool, WU hil'l'&lt;i on a
part-time basis eUet·live July 8,
1963.

"O h, lhey sleep lwo and th['('('
in 11 stall, and we've got oil-cam­
pus barns for soml! of them, They
have to trot the seven or eight fur.
Studenls who 11rc in riced ol
longs to campus most or the time,
assistance
reach Dr_ Beah/lO by
By now we were two feet out hough here is a wagon that &lt;'&lt;&gt;mes
to campus fo1• them if the cree k n•ferral from rounselors, faculty,
or the water and still rising. I
don't rise ."
stall members and others . In addi­
looked over the side, and there
was 11j11clsnss under the boat. He
"What about studyirg space in tion. he is available for consullalion
was laying b1icks. A whole pile
tu lh1•l'OUnselingund medical setv•
thr libraries?" Art asked.
of bricks right under the boat.
"We don't worry abou! that. I kes where mo~I probl('m5 ~re first
-Now you'd think that with 1111 man, of course there Isn't enough se&lt;'n. This will mark the ri~t nmc
room. But half of them don't du that this s1•rvit&lt;! r~ 111·f.'senfon
the bricks and ctnderhlocks I've
anythi ng in the libraries but bray
seen laid in the buildings around
1·1m1pus. In thr past ii was nt'CC'•
~ampus. that one more pile&gt; or mating c-alls anywizy."
SSIII)' for the ~tUdl'nl lo I ruvt•I to
bricks wouldn't bother nlt'. But
~ And parklng SI)act'S~ ..
on&lt;' 11
f the l0t•al hu~1,1talsor l'ltn11•~
.
here_was some crazy jacknss fran.
tlcally piling IJrick on brick, not
"Well, only those jackasses with
&lt;•aring if they matc hed up or were
certified brands can pnrk their
111 line or anything, just so long
wagons on campus. We ticket all
us they · stuck togethe r. mto a pile
lhe illt&gt;gal parkers. It's no hoir off
.;bout ten fret by ten, rlmt s1urk our tails if fh1•rr 1snI enough
up out of the wnter and didn't
room."
seem lo be 00.11111g.
'Is therc .-nour,h 1·ot,111 for .. 11
ril'lci "''~ ttv· s1,::ht
11i,11cJl••~111,1
llf them lo l'll1'!"
Ry now Art \Ins suJf1c•1pnlly
rom
,,
r
tit,• f,r,.r m, IJ&lt;•r J'.,r,111,•:111dR•
,•1,:h1
'I
suppose
so.
\Jnles~
,t's
fl('" ,1 10 latfUlly handlt! th,, 11111111•r
or 1welvl' or fi\'e, But the ft•·•!•. \'I&lt;"" or thv Vrt11T&lt;' l&gt;l'l.11'111n11lt
'1!1'), ,V()Uwith lhe ca~. Wh,lt c).1.:,«! 11,hen theJ do get it lln1 ~J •lw 1 n", ,·,11•, &lt;Jn 1,,., 1.\. th1'
thinkyotJ'm'loin''&gt;''
wurl,• and MothPr -; 0111s ;11,d~,uit
:1011
1• p1' S1°nt,•,Ills ltr~I 111uh11•&lt;1
"( ;()ltn. work, gotta W()rk," tht'
Ilk+• llml ,\nd 1/ they &lt;l1•1&gt;'llike•
,11,,111111•
10 th,, ~•·11i1i11v nl C'••I
i.:uiu1Mpedcons11uctol' mumbled itl thlll l!'I 't'lll l'lll hll'~W '
Stvru Vol H1Hlcll,•st,m1111dll!l'
" I don't kn&lt;iw. It sl'l'rns tu .,,.
11t•rfl'&lt;.·tBrookh r,esc. 'G11t1a e'I
Pilnd. Gotta gr~w. Gott,\ build. GQI• th.it with adequate pl11ri111ni;:
,II
·1ilw 1 &lt;lllu,•r, ul th,• l),•1,«'hlllMt
l;i "e.~pand."
lhi~ c-ould hav" bwn u1·1111hlnnd AJ,u pn''-l'UI \\«'l'i' lhll H'h'n1h•'r" nf
Vllll wouldn.l need all Ihrs,• slUII
J\111:d flit!hl ,11 1h1• ,\mole) /1\r•
''\\'rll now holl'I it, big ears
g-r,p measttl'\.&gt;s
."
Art said. "While you're huilding.
Hw11Ipr()
"Look, buddy. Like J "llld, I only S.K'id)' Thr· U111v1•r~1ly
we're getting air.;ick. Now, ju$t
work here All I know 1s lh'll now v1d1•,lth&lt;•mitn·hing tnllstt·, a• C':,(lc,t
who are you building this thinit we've got to build' cau.s1• tlll'n•·~ LI O,J Churl,•~ Jli•ub1t~l'i1
, 1hr
for?''
no morl• room at Th\' ln." /\ml
,\1lj11tant for 1b1• l',,r,iclr•, 1111lh1•
with that, he sub111erf(rdand w1•
" l"or the Unh crsity of Tn. Wcfvr
111lll't'h,
hC'ver saw him again .
gol our main r:;impus down on the
We sat III l-dou't-belie1c&gt;-1tstl&lt;•n,•1· Thi• par,,cJ,, '"'' 1•.1rl'1t'&lt;I,,ut tu
river bottom."
for a minute. Thr•n Ar, 1um1-d tc, !l1sr1l,iyllti• prultt'!t'llc'Y11! tll!' l 1~iops
"Well what's the problem, that
me and said, "Man. 1'111 ~la&lt;! I
lll&gt;tl h1is IJL'&lt;'l1
a,·hu•,·c•(I tn ,1 lnl'rt'
~,,u·ve got to build like this?"
don't go there."
of dnlltn,::. '!'hi' 1Jf'£?an
"We're trying to get our heads
"In the meantime, ho11 11re 111· f1v,· 11·1·1•k•
wi•h .m mll 'tltlU('II OI( llllio /llr f 1ir1·1•
_abo_v_e=w:::a:::te:::r:::,':::'=-h_e_S8J_d_,--=-p_utt_in..::g'----=going
to get the boat oft llus silo?''
rllSt'JJ1lm~. C'arrwcl out h) wsw
man :tung .tncl bas11• 111&lt;1v1
•nwnts,
1lus led to a detrnilo• rcsp,:rl few
authority Enhanced hy oh1.•uit
•1ll'f'
to command, th&lt;?c,1dets devt•lop,-d
" ~·on!1denc:ein their eommandmg
of!ice1 as wl'II as cont1dcnce in
their Ccllow cadets

"There's a jackass under the
boat. And he's laying bricks. A
whole pile of bricks right under
the boat."

Parade &amp; Review
Held by UBROTC

0

The literature sub-committee of
the Fine Arts Committee is again
sponsoring a paper back book ex­
change. This exchange will take
pl.1,, , every Thursda,y afternoon
thn-1ghout the semes ter in room
220 Norton. from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
T, ,rough .this exchaDge. students
will be provided with a constantly
•·h,nglng, free selection of books.
Students have only to return old
J&gt;ap••rbB('.ksand trade lhem for

The ,,..,p"muon of md1,1,nmls rc-­
sult,..-Jt,"m this /\FROTC progn1m
Thi, indn 1Jual as .i uiuqull rnu1y
,wus 1utt•i:ra1t'Cl111to the- group lo
form :1 umliwd body ol cnd,1L,_
This uml, through hiwcl'kl)' pl"dC
·
lie!.', progr&lt;'ss~'&lt;lto do.'limtel'OOnlin•
iiation 1mpmvemcnl. Thcs1' Wtits,
from the lhvht , to the squadron ,
others . These books may be kept to lhr group, 10 !hewing a.nd cul•
permanently or again exchanged 1 minatmg in the detachment. .1.JI
The l'ommittee has many in­
l'Xemph!Jed the coordinallon of the
teresting novels available as well iiggregate .
as paperbacks of scientific and his- 1
As lour billowing wlule contrails
tom:al interest . Plans are also be- 1
mg made to buy an additional ol an Ai.r Force jet circled over•
supply, including rl!'&lt;'ent best-sel­ head, ll 'seemed only met&gt;t Iha!
1h detachment arrlve al the PIMl;l·
lers.
cle ot drilling agrandizernent-thal
Books which are m poor
of haVlng an C')ual amount of lclt
dltion. or which are used in classes
j :md rlr,'.hl 'l'E'l
wlll generally not be accepted.

conI

I was very sorry these past two
weeks to be so silent. but . a heavy
date with a high tension wire artd
11 hospital b:!d oceupled most of
my wak:ng moments. Thls slight
l'i'Sp!lc did 11Uord me a C'hancc to
rca prn,se my method of approach
to the questions 1 have concerned
myself with in this column. This
together with a protracted dialogue
w!th some of the P&lt;-'&lt;&gt;Ple
with whom
I am closest has led me, not to
ulll'r my rnnvictions , but to state
them a little more- openly. As many
of you must have realized . my
" fued" with Mr . Milch (how's your
brother Dave. by the way! Please
give him my fondest regards next
lime you see himf was retilly just
an excuse to say thinl{s that 1
might not hav«' gotten around to
saying quill' so soon. It occurs to
me that if these 1hinf,ls ar t' as
imprta nto as I bcltevr them to be,
th1•n to dr••ss lhi•m up in a phony
1-,11
11 dOl'S us both an U'\.}USl\ce,

In line with lh is !although the
t-onn&lt;'&lt;'lio
n may nol immediately
ar,pe11
r obvious, l heard whnl wns
to mt• a v1•ry tmglc- ior perhaps it
Mt~ 11\Pl'
Ply pfllhl'lit' I ilc•m of 111!\\'S
,)n th•· Canadian Broad1·t1slingCom·
puny natlonai newsrast today Th,•
b1·•111(1,•11sl
"r wns t11lkm~ Obt)Utthr
Grim World of the Wonderful
Brothers t kud111,sto wh•it•vn eoin­
Nl thaH I, Rnd hr• snld lhut 1turin~
lh&lt;• 111,1 Cuhrin l'l'ISlS K,•nn(•(ly
11;:rPrd to rvmov,. U.R. mi~s,lc•s
· from Turkt•Y m tr:ollt• f111·the• w 111•11
•:ol 111cni~slll's lrnn, ( '11h11 lk
~11lrlthl/\ on a national m ws, h1•1k•
up 111•11lsn said sn1m•lh lt1): tu Ill&lt;'
,,tr,•,·t lhlll rll·IVS&lt;If thi, ntlt•rna

.

········· ··

may not speak, each, or write at

this Uniformity .

r

would h/\te to

see that noted Liberal, Walter Ma.

honey, decide whom I may read
and listen to! But more impor­
tantly, I would hate to see this
national policy of sec:recf, silence,
and subversion become ht,, rule in
our personal Uves, as students and
as human beings . I have often been
damaged by rumors which I can
not trace to thelr source. I am SUN!
you have too. Every day I see the
people arou nd me trentlng each
other with such eate ful secrecy
and tact that they destroy their
ability to know each oher In any
meaningful way.
WIK'n I went to school in Bo!!ton
l had lhe privilege of particlpntlng
in an e~rim,'Ttl!ll "rellgi,,tt~•· ser­
vice in \Yhkh eight men and worn•
en between the af,les of 17 and 28
shul themsclvt's up in a room for
a protracted time, the sole pull)06e
being to be as honest with ea£h
othc•r as they possibly i-outd. It
took many hours before the- fears
and hoslilllles wcl't' l.'lll awuy and
the 1'0mpltment11ry hl\U truth~
werC' nbal'ldon('(I. At th,• 1•1td &lt;'Ifth,•
ses.~ion. howevl'r, oil thrs,• Jl('Oplr,
nont• of whom W&lt;'rt' ,,~yd1idy de•
ranged, werem a position to Ix-gin
lo know ench otlu•r, to und,•rstai1d
not only lhl'ir 0,1 n kclin1--s ,tnd
motivations , but th,, lt•t•lmgs and
motivations of lhl' otti,,,. ~••v
,,,1 It
was hard and ~haltc11ni;:. hul h
was worth It .

I also hacl till' prlvil('i;:1'. J11~tlu~t
yrar 111 (Jarlil'ipntin~ In II diS&lt;'~
NIM uf alhl'iMn an,! tho• pluhw11hy
n! r,•lu~lnn •p1&gt;nsm'C'&lt;lhy th,· t.11)...
1•r1,I R1•lii.:i1111,
~'c'llm,ship nn our
t'nmpw;
II 11':t&lt; an UJlcn'MIUI);
1,,,0,il 1l):{r't·••t111'ntwas m VPr hroatl
mt•1•(in):Wllh lllllll)' /!tl&lt;~It••oph• In
t ; ,~,
lty an) of th,· ll s !Jl'IW(ll'k~ ' a111•11d:1111·&lt;·
On,· mun fl;tr1k11l11rty
,111111111
lt'J.:t' 1&lt;t11mt,.()Uf in IIIY mc•m•&gt;r} an In
1cn1111
1:h 11 ''"" ,•om1111,n
11r1 rn·\,~ \~othttt'lnC" 1.·1r
l• ,•~- JH'llll jn
dllm ,::r:idu,,t;• ~1t1t.lL•11
1 "''"'"' •·•Jm•
Fu1'np,• and ,11, dou ht , ' l1-it1WhPnt1
m,111\Iltr 1,;,,,:1t,hwaM "&lt;&gt;I~,,,ulfllr&lt;
11, 1111•
,11'1~111•
, .,r,,'&lt;l .,. att"mp tro
tho• ,,1111 111 1•)(r1l111n
I l,·,1\ • \'1)11 to 1·,111s11l,•r
h1•, pus1t.un linh.&gt;rtu
, ll und p1illtwal a-:i11
11(1C':i11on
.... tlf
l\;lh'ly 110 011\' l•~&gt;k 111111
\'1°1)' '''I'!•
tlu, ,tal'll.111.:pu•,··· or 1n(11rt11,11lon nu~ly ur1hl \II 11l·,1"'' ,111&lt;111wov&lt;'(l
111•
J WOll(hl111
1, Ill 1'()11( I I'll lll)'J&lt;••il With
It,~ h,111d~nnd ,un&lt;I, 'But 111•must
lh · 1111~111,m
1111,1"11
' IIH' and
101•,,t'll&lt;'h llth&lt;'r "
1··1111\\'
&lt;'&lt;)lllltll 111,llttlK lfr&gt;\\ ••,Ill 11n1
'
111:i~• ,1 111,•,1111111'1111
,., aluuttun ol
Ito· ,·unl&lt;i 11&lt;11
tl'II ll, HOW but I
,Hl\ 1 utn ~n1 ~lhr1t111u ll Wti a,·,, nu(
m••ii;-nit.,•It ,L~ ;1 lrulh, toq lmpor­
1r1 th,· 1~.-,1•
,scun ur tlu f11ct1
t11nt to '"
m•rely ob\/lo11a
, I ran
rn rud how t•11n tlllP ••vr•n h,· :,h
nc,t tl'II """n myM•II "lum W&lt;' mu~t
Mtr,•clc&gt;Ion,•'s own tnlr·,:nl) 11 0111• 1111-;•
•~ll'h othrr " I only ~!IUW lhal
,lr),•s not km111 tlu f;ic•t, 11( 1111,•'11 1f we• Hl'l' to lw 11,tl&gt;(l)'
,11111
lil'IXIUt'•
ow n '&lt;ilu.111ou..,,
""'· 1r \Ii' ,IN' lo hclVI' ,11•,1d,,m1.:
rrr,•dom or 1•111II
n,::hli1. or ,-co\V1\ ,•un :,II twcouu• 1·,ut'c1 &gt;.4•d
111111111
· l'{furil11y, i( we• r1rC'10 avl)ld
"'"'"' this uncl otht'r 1u1•&lt;
't'~ ,1rin
w11r .111ddc.••tllll'ltutJ, fC'ar ,Lnd /\fl•
(111'11\llltun
,,, ,:n•;lt i1111••1·.1.htll I
~'lll~h WE MUST t.OVF. EAC'H
sulmut 111111
in llw 11111•i,1&lt;·11~1n
111 D'l'IIEH
,1111·l,1·.-s th,·st' isMtL•~
;1rp nc1111•
tht•
t,•, , lrrtfl&lt;lrtarit. J ,1m w1lhn,: to &lt;II)
I ,1bo lwlt1•1·i-!hilt this ('/Ill n{'Vi'r
Ill print lhat lh••n• i\rl' in 111, IIJ)ill•
t,1k1•pl1w1• in ,1 •llu11tion l•mtroUcd
Ulll. 1••upl1
• un Ihis Vl'rv ,, 1111p11.,tn
hy atc,..cy . P~rl\ll1•• w,, cunnot
SIUJ&gt; bl'ing aim lei 01 &lt;'Vl'II )1161 11_n.
k••~ 1~"1tl! 1ns \1ho w11ul•i hkc• lo
st·,· th,• S1at1• l.A'~"lalu1~• tmn• ab
noy1•dund borNl: but wr must not
,11lut1•:cu1hur,1y ,,~ tri wl11,111~ or
hid1•, tor then we ure alone.
0

1

"'&gt;

1

Buffalo
Wagner

Philharmonic
in
. Berg, Schubert

'l'ht · flu 11111., Philhamumir will
prf'so•nt lh&lt;• "'urks or Wai;rlt'r, Bt•r~
and Sd1uh1•rt for thr1r sl'C&gt;Hl&lt;.I
1.-on
1·t'rt J)l111
· ol th(' season on S1md11y,
'1/11,
·. 3 and Tuesday Nov 5. Gut&gt;sl
Ani~t tor both JJt?rformann•s will
he Phyllis Curtin , world frunous
Op('l"ll star of three l'Onllncnlll who
rocketed to overnight lame a few
shm1 y,mrs ngo With her petform­
Mce o( "Salome" with the Nrw
York City Opera , Her sizzling in·
terpretation of the lead role left
both audience and &lt;'rill&lt;'BRJ&lt;lllpe
Since then , soprano CUrtin has
added 44 other rotes to her reper­
toire and has been lnstrumenlt\l in
tnlroduclng "IIUIY contemporary
works to the world o! opera, two
of 11hk 'Susw11
1S1h"1111d"\ \'uthcr,,

1111:
IIPlghls" Wl'l'f' wnlh:n l"CPressb
for ht&gt;r talern Smr or L.1.Scala.
Thi' Vwnna Stnlc• Opera uhd our
11,\/ll )ielropolttun ns well as the
:-IBC 'l'elepllOllt' Hour, NBC Opera
and Carnegie llnll, Mlll.s CUrtl.n's
filSt JXIC.'i.od t'I\N.'er takes her 00
fltlrsonl'.lJ appeurances thl'Oll&amp;b&lt;&gt;U
t
North Aml!rtro, South Amenca and
Euivpe . 1''or ™'r nppenranc.-e,with
th(' BuUalo Philhannonir, Pnyllls
CUrtm wm perform the works ot
V ll'fl/1e!lt l'.'C)m
poser Al ban Berg

and

Rtrhard Wawit'r
The Buffalo Phllharmomc undtt
tht' dln:(•lton ol 1..u.k.asFoa will
Pl'l'8t'lll &amp;h ubt'rt 's Wl'll•loVffl ''\JD,,
flrushed Symphuf\Y" to round Ollt
the ront.'f!n Ti,•kfu ~ aval.labw­
ul IN! PhllhArnx,ok' ~ OUI~ or
h)' •'tlllll~ 1T ~U

�November
SPECTRUM
________________________________
..,;..._______
___Friday,------

PAGE SIX

,

UB History TracedFrom 1909-1950:ChancellorCapen'sSupportDuring War
• By JOANIE LANCASTER
ChMrrllor Norton aeqµired onC'
hundrt'd and six ncres [rom tht•
'" 'mt) tor tht• l'mvi-rs11y of Buf­
fa!,, m 1009 wlth the stipulation
thar ll I~• 11~ed!or ,~lurntlonal pur­
posr•s The t\nwrwttn Mrdkal As.,;o..
&lt;' iBltOII had pl'O("IAimt'd
In 1hr spring
of 1913 th:it o~ yt'nr or libt•rial
arts ·rdUt'llllOn Wll5 OP("('S.&lt;;aTYti.,.
t,m• rt•C('l\'tng any JIJ!f'l'l(lli'll'd med­
kal 1-rluration. Thi· ont' yrur of
"prl'-nwdial " work was christ,.nr'&lt;l
1hr Coll,'l::C'or Aris and Sr,enres.
Approx.,mllll'IY lhN'L'-(IUUrters of
th,• lanJ.1\y lor this new mstllullon

C.olh•i::•'or AHs and Sl'ienecs mov­
Nl In lhr· campus this samr year
""d thr [irsl hullding to bt, ron•
st rUdl"d and ot,'upicd was named
F'osfr• Hall Both thP Low Srhool
and Majlrnl School remained.
In the years to come the medical
school mnvt'd to thl' nrw rampus.
F,arly in 1923 the Evening Sessilln
was ,·r,,ntrrl. with dassrooms in
fhr downtown 'J'owns&lt;'nd Hall /or
adults. This was 1hr hrginning or
Millurd F'illmorr College.
In 1!134Norton llnll , now Har ri­
man Libr11ry. was rirst occupic-d.
Mr. Parke was mad&lt;' Director.

In April or lM!i the military lei!
and 1hr "Back-to-Norton" commit·
tee was formed. ln S&lt;-ptember the
"Mop and Buckel" brigade clean­
ed the C'ntire buildin,::. The staU
increased from one lo eight sec•
reforil's . one to f&lt;'n professional
stat( mPmbl•rs. and from one lo
fourteen janltors.

BUILDINGHONORSCHANCELLORCAPEN

Mis~ !fans . now the' Director of
lhf' npw NrJrton Hnll. was made
fwu dollur~ for rad, hour of l••t11·h
• SNTt'l/lrY , The Sllldc •nts held othrr
ini: 11111111,Ut
•r wh111 ttw sulJJl,1•101• j~s such ns st ud!'nl chcckrrs, a~
~1,r of llw dnss . A majority ol tht• sisfanls and countrr rtr rks. A group
fo':ld\l'I'&gt;, IIISIru,·h•d in liiJ:h sc-hool~ ol slurlc•nt~ known ns the' "Mirl­
durin~ Jhr mm·mn,:;J)('rioclnnd ,tur- ni~hl Mns.,;ag,•rs" sl11rtcd al mid111g ,1,,.llflPrnuon t11ui:ht on fhC'
l'Olh•g,• t,,vt•I
"'"

r1•,·r1111,•rlfrom th,·

,,.,.,.,Is.

~~toc•hlt•adwr

wns

high

paid

t\lthoui:h 1hr llni"rrsily
wns plan­
ning lo m1w1•to th&lt;' rampus in lrn
y,,;1rs 11 still nN'CINl ll'mporary
ho11si11~
for tht• C'ollri.&lt;'o f Arts and
St'l,·m·,•s In January l!l15 th,• W0&lt;
tn&lt;'n's F:du&lt;·ntioual nnd lndui.lriol
llnl&lt;ln WhOSP buildini:: was {'('lit rut­
ty 101•a1NI
nl Oelawnr,· and Niagara
~quar,• vol•-d lo dishan 11ndlo do­
n111,,th,, building to th,• Univrrslfy,
on 111,,rendition lhnl 11·1thinu y&lt;'ar
ltu llnivt•rsity should rab,1•$100.000
t;,w111"1
th,• ,•ndowme111ol a ru1ure
,·nth•~••· In 1916 thr SIUdl'nts who
had a~~um!.'d lhry would gr11duat&lt;'
no loni;,•r had that g\lorantrr• hr ­
c111os,•01!' Univl'rt.ily had not raisi"d
1hr $100.000. llowevcr . latrr that
y,•11r a grnerou~ gi ft or $250.000
lr,,m 1hr family of 1hr latr St'Y•
mfJur ll . l&lt;nox was givPn In fhr
end()wment rund. Thr Women's Un·
111n
bulletin~was rrrhr1s1rni"d Town­
S!'nd Jlnll in tlw mrmory of lhP
fn11nd,
,r &lt;lf th£' l'nion .

nlJ:hf ruld r•lr•anrd the bulldln~ each
rve nini:.
Chanr••llor CaJ)C'nopenrd the of­
tier of tht&gt; Dran of Women and
Miss Lillian M. McDonald was
namNl Deon. Miss M1•Donald was
interested in promolinR hygiene
and theN'fort- startl.'d the Women's
Rccrealillnal Association and the
Fl'l)shman Women Lecture Series
which art" pnr t ot the University
to this doy.
During 1941 Roosevelt declared
war against the Axis powers. Nor­
ton Hill! WIIS ust&gt;d as an army
barracks where 250 young college
men remninC'd until the end of the
war In 1945
. The tamJliar sound
or laughter and ga!r.ty cbuld no
longer be heard from the "sarred"
halls ol Norton. But. womrn stu­
dents kepi f he rest of the campllS
alivr 11m
l activP.

Aller twenty-eight years of faith­
ful servicc to the Univt'rsi\y , Mr.
Capt•n rclirrd . His interest in the
mC'dical fl&lt;'ld has greatly improwd
Medical School.
the Univrr.;ity's
Later lhe Medical and Dental build•
ing wa~ ('rel'l&lt;'d and ruuncd in his
honor.

1, 1963
--

Fraternally
Yours:GreekNews
The Brothers of Alpha Delta Phi
will hold their annual Roman Toga
P arty this Sa\llJ'dayat the home of
BroUter Caccamise.
Phi Kapp• Pli is having a
Halloween party
Saturday,
at
Rardolf Hall, ll012 Walden Ave.
Casual dress will be appropriate
for those planning to attend.
The pk'llge class of Tau Kappa
Epsilon is holding a Bermuda and

sweatshirt party on Saturday start­
ing at 8:30 p,m. at the Signet

Lounge, 454 Pearl St.

Alpha Sigma Phi will hold a cos­
tume party Saturday.
Sigma Kappa would like to t.hank
Pat Silfur {or her work on the first
prize poster for Homecoming week•
end. A cocktail party will be held
at the home of Marlene Vowinkel
this evening before the Panhellenic

B1111.
TMta Chi sorority will hold a
cocktail party this evening before
the Panhellenic Ball in the home ol
Lynn Parker in Orchard Park.

Announcing...
the opening ol

.

MR.FERENCZ
HAIR STYLING
2903 Sheridan Drive at Eggert
Tel.: 835-8700-01 -836-9827

I

OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK
Open Mon . Thru Fri. Nights

20% DISCOUNTTO U.B. GIRLS WITH I.D. CARD
ON MON., TUES. &amp;WEDS.

Dr.EwellServesat UN-Asia
Pr. lla.vnmnrl Ewt•JI, \'it'C'•Prrs, .
rll'llf lor lk~ra ,·t·h. has licC'11hw11cd
by lh&lt;' Uni I c••I
Nation1&lt; lo Sl'rvt•
a:&lt; on!' o( thr
rhairnwn nt th,·
fort lwomlni:

Unit­

Naflons' c'Qn­
fl'rt'nt'l'
on "Dr";:'
vclop111rnl of 1111.'
\.
F&lt;'rlifizc-r Imlustry
~
in Asin aml thr
F'ar East ·' Thi•
,-onfc&gt;1't•n,·r
will Ii&lt;•
Dr. R. EWELL hrld m Bornbny,
lndl11, Noll'mb1'r tS tu De,·rnwlwr
rd

1»1.J,New MC'xico. and otht•rs from
the SoviC'I Union. J 11p!ln• India.
Taiwan nnd the Phllip11inc•s. Dr.
l::wc•llwill b1•t•hnirmun of the ses­
~ion on milwd and compll'.'Xfcrlil •

everybody's
singing
the
praises
of

1z&lt;'rs.

Dr. Ew,•ll will SJ!l'lld livl' days
at UnltC'd Nations hendq1mrtcrs in
New York and five days ill thr
El'onomk Comm1~sionfor Asia and
!lit• Far Ea.st in Bru1gkok enrout&lt;'
n!ercn,•t•
lo Bombay. After thC' &lt;'O
Is 01•C'r, Or. Ewell pla ns 10 go to
~. l~~ - It 11ill br th,• bil(rst and NPW Dl'lhi for a WL'&lt;'k lo t"Onfcr
mrn;ilmtlllrfnnl l"Ohft•lt'll~C OJI for1il­ with Jndlitn i:ovc I'Tlm&lt;'lll olficfr1ls
i1c1· l'\l'r h&lt;'ld in Asia, Among lhr on r,mihwr produt·tton problrms,
d1airnwn or rhe rnr•t•tin~ lhrrr \1111 roll01wd by ~omC'1·i~ils10s!'ientifi,•
hr 0111• othrr Arnrrit•nn, Mr . E. \\' ,
l'('S('ill'Ch
instilUI C'S In BudaJ)l'Sf.
Dou~lo,~ " priv;otr 1·011sullantin Prngu,, und Pn1is &lt;'lll'OUII! buck tu
dwm ,m l rni;:in,•rr mg from Cnrls· BuUa lu.

'WHITE
LEVI'S!'

Th&lt;' War ra mr . a nd thr m!'rnbrrs
ol lhP Univprsily Counril forgot th&lt;'

n,•,.•sslfy or ufilizinR the sit,• on
111111n
Strr,•1 a.,; an NhlC'afio nal lnstl·
tution Nothim:: was dnnr ,iurinR
1919 and finally the SU()l•rvisors
1wrl' l"'lifion&lt;'&lt;
I to i;ranl 11 del11yof
om• ypar On Jun r 11. 1920 i;round
wns broken for Fnstrr Ito11 lhus
nlt'C'lini:lh l' rl'(JUll'l'Oll'nls .
Char lt•s P. Norton dl!'d that yf.'nr
leavrni: his 1&gt;
ntirr fortune to lhe
University for thr rrrrtio n of our
first stud&lt;'nt re nter whi!'h is now
Ham man Library . Also during that
Yl'llr th,• University "'tlS RCt'rC'&lt;IJtcd
by lh&lt;' !lliddl&lt;' Statt•s Assol'ialion
or Collri;r" and Schools.

ln 1921 thr counry sold lhP ft'llt
of thr PNJl&lt;'r1)' M acres. of I\Jaln
Strt'C'I trontagt' for SM,(XX). Undrr
th~ lrad en&lt;hip of Walter P . Cookt•,
Chalrm nn nf the Counril, •lh!' first
endo1rn11•ntram palgn was stru1l"d
Th !'Y lftmr'&lt;I lo Buffalonians "ho
wen· hllrrlly conscious of 1hr Uni­
ver.ll) and 24 000 persons 'tllb­
scr:t,,.,1 to th,• 11roJC'rtl\lorr than
ftvr mlllinn dollars was raL&lt;;t.'&lt;I
in
ten da, ~ f,1r thr mslitulion which
for o r·'llJr~, ,,f 74 v!'ars had been
able to ,,.., umt~,,. l~o;stha n a rnll­
llon dollars ",11th r,r ass~R . 13(,.
cause or thl~ man's work CookC'
Hall was namr'&lt;lin his honor
Samuel P l'afl('n hecamC' th•·
sevmlh ('hllncellor :n 1!1'22and n~
nalnMl ~ otnc•r• until 1!Jl0 Th&lt;'

Boece Club

~
NOWDELIVERING
TOCAMPUSDORMSONLY
SUNDAY- THURSDAY

SCHEDULE
Goodyear Hall ....

, ...

Schoellkopf&amp; Michael Hans
Cooke &amp; MacDonaldHalls .
Tower Hall ... .. ........
.

10:15
10:45
11:00
11:30

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SCHEDULE
D DELIVERYTIME
Delivery Charg..._25c Per Order

TF 3-1344

LlVl'SSuM
FITS
Now-e njoy the trim good looks of
your favorit e pants style, tailored In
rugged, Sanforized twill in the popular off-white
and desert tones. LEVI'S Slim Fits look like •
million bucks,

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
"ON CAMPUS"

�SPECTRUM

Friday, November 1, l963

WBFOAnnounces
Week's
Schedule
•

People and Politi.cs

Friday, Nov. 1, 1"3

By RUSSELLPANZICA

5:00-0 n Campus with Carl Berg
6:00-News with Burr Vogel
6:12- New York State Educational
News
6:15-Sports
Highlights , W a I 1y
Blatter
6: 30-Evening Musicale
7:00-U nited Nations Report
7:15- Washington Reports
7:30-Co ncert Hall
9:00-News ,
9:10-Amerk-an History with Mr.
Wilson
10:00-SO und of Broadway
and
Hollywood, Host, Ed Azit. Origin­
al Broadway cust recording of
"My Fair Lady"-Julie
Andrews
and Rex Hauison
11:00-Headll nes and Sign Off

Monday, Nov. 2, '963
5:00- On Campus with Jerry Segal
fi:llO- News with Jim Cronberg
6: l2-New York State Educational
News
ll:1..&gt;-Meet
.
the Faculty
6:30-Eve ning Musicale
7.00-America On Stage "Fashion"
by Anna Cora Mowatt 08451 In the 1840's the Aml'rican middle
class pushl •d its way toward the
once-!oi•bidden precincl of the
drawing-room. Tfie methods of
the would-be fashionable were
ready-made malerial for comedy:
speclfil'al!y, material for one of
the brightest of all American
stage rorneclies of manners.
7::lO-Concert Hall - All Beethoven
11mgram featuring the First Sym­
phony, Fifth Piano Concerto and
The Lf&gt;onore Overture No. 3.
9:00-News
9: l~American
History with Mr .
Wilson
10:00-Musical Showcase with Ter ­
ry Lee
11:00- R eadlines and Sign Off

A ;new battle hus come Imo lx'ing ,
in the traditional war between organized labor anti the government.
'1'1mmster president James R. HofIn. the most potent union omcial
in the Unltl'd States , has been accus •d _of u~lng pi/~sion funds and
harassing Ins associates, Thost'. opJ)llsed lo powerful and &lt;:entral1zcd
tu1ions no longer use goon _squads
but ha ~e found mol'c c-Uechve de!cuses in the cour ts.
Thc tactics of Attorney General
ftohetl F. Kcnn~y and tl_ic FBI
hav(' been earned out \\11th the
fury or a personal vendetta. Teamster orri&lt;:ials daim that they have
had briefras1•~ stolen from their
hotel rooms. that IV\retap record•
ings haw been played back lo
witnc-sses. and that a conversation
b~tw,•en a Tp11mster emplOY&lt;'•'and
a senator was 111onitored and the
ir1fo1·matlon divulgt'&lt;I.
It is not Hof.fa, labor unions in
gen1•ral. or privat e enterprise lhat
can be properly evaluatl'd here;
but thr methods that ar1' bein~
ust•d in thr courtfi arP not in surh
oprn !"ontradktion and subject to

Tuesday, N)v;-f."'1'63
5:00-O n Campus with Allan Kay
6:00-News with Ed Nagel
6·12,New York State Educational

News
fi• !~-Over

the Back Fence
li:30-Evening
Musicale
7:00-Hold Your Breath "To Lose
Friends but lnf)ucm·c Peop le"­
A private citizrn or limited means
hut limitless energy rclulcs the
story of her long lii:iht against
pollution In one of our major
l'ities.
i':,10-Concert Hall - Shostokovitch~
~~•mphony No. 5. Leonard Bem­
strin and Uie N. Y. Philharmonic
X.:lO- C.Ollcge Quiz
q:00- Nalionalism In The Mid 20th
C1•11tury- The World Wide Em­
andpation ol the Underdeveloped
Countries, Dr . Gunnar Myrdal.
10·00 J;o1.zGall(•ry with Ray Craw ,
rord
11 00-Hcad linC's and Sign Orr
tCo nUnued on Pa11e 13,

YOUR I. D. CARD
WORTH

10%
With

Any Purchase

At

GDld111a1t
~
S4ou
BoulevardMall
FOR THE CAMPUSLOOK

Keds
• Hush Puppies
• Trios e Debs
• Flqrsheims
e

• Bates
e

Dancing Supplies

sl,i nllng or information It is
nntur&lt;' of legal lnvesllgation
pl'Osrrution. in the broad con•
ol C'O
nslitutional lbiertit&gt;s. that
looms ,1s a serious threat to a
buslncs..~-labor balance or pow1•r.
Art~r four years of M&lt;Clellan
Committee hearlnw; . Edward Ben·
nett Willinrns. ll ofla 's att orney ,
made• the following staternc-nt : "The
victims WPI"&lt;' a&lt;'&lt;'Ured orten hy
rumor and h,•rcsay. If they a.dmittc-d the• accusatioll they rncc-d
mnvidion. Jr th!'y denied it. they
fac«&gt;d pel'jnry. And if they stood
sil "nl thc•v ra,·c-d ,·ontempt "
·
·
It is rurio\ls that soon tlftl'r the
llous ,, Lln-i\1rn•rican i\ctiviti&lt;s Com•
mltte1• flnishrd hnntin,z fornwr Corn•
n11111is1s
and liberals . tht• Congrcs­
sional eommttt1--e, although more
subtle in its approiwh , should te11r
into , unpopular union officia ls, One
gt'ls th&lt;' impn•R.sion that both the
gov1•rnmcnt and thC' t'Ourts luwe
hN'Ollll' no k•ss hard on u111onsthan
thcv wPre earliPr in lh&lt;' l'C'ntury.
Maybe 1wrrything but prlvatt• r n­
tcrpirsr ls un-Amrrkan .
the
the
and
tex1

PAGESEVEN

ofetle~lo Ike Gditor
(ConUnu~d

tributed in Norton, Goodyear, other
dorms , and In Allenhurst throu gh
a 1-esldent advisor . Announcements
were made over the P.A. In Nor­
ton Hall. The res ult : th e candidates
a ll were there , there was a Spec•
a Spectrum
lrum photographer,
repo rt er and six other students.
I reel that thls turn out Is living
prool o,tthe fact that somewhere,

fr om

paee

t)

someone is failing the st udent s a nd
I hope the dramatiC' situation whkh
OCC'urred here will he proof thltl
investigation and remedies must 1)(­
ofle"rred to corrert th is situation
of student a pathy .
Sob Pacholski
Chairman
Elections C.Ommittl'I'

Homecoming Publicity
To the Editor :
On beha lf or th&lt;' 1963 Homerom­
ing Steering Committee I would
like to thank the Spectrum for Its
exrt'IIPnt !'overa ge of ,lit the evrn ts
lrndins: up to and inrluded In ttw
1wek&lt;'nd itself. Special thanks, of
ruursr goes to Barb Strauss who
was tlw nssign('d reporll'r ,

i\d1,quatc publicity 1s on,· ol th,·
mo1&lt;I important thln1:ts k•ad1n1:?to
Ihr su&lt;'&lt;'C'S.~
of nny rwnt and lhis
is ,·ertainly what you i,we u~ and
thank~ to this publicity our \\C'C:k•
end was a SUl'l'«'S$
Thank -you agaln,
Bcvrrly Alrxund&lt;'r

GIVE
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c/AEGER

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18 Hrs. a Week &amp; Eveningsand Saturday
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Requirements:

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Ability to Follow ln1tructiOM

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Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

"Don't Say Clothes-Say

Shop"

Tartan

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l;if/eJ)W"The Young Naturals" adore
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NORTHBUFFALO'S NEWESTANDMOSTWELCOMED

''SUBMARINE''
Phil&amp; Dick's

"HOAGY
HEAVEN"
3201
MAIN

Mon .• Thurs .--4:00 P.M. · I :00 A.M.
Fri. - 4:00 P.M. • 4:00 A.M.
Sat . - 2:00 P.M. • 4:00 A.M.
Sun. - 2 P.M. - Midnigh t
,

t

♦

t

'

,

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
"ON CAMPUS"

Across from Gr11o~da Theatre
♦

Jaeger take t he cla aatc Briti sh sweater . They knit tt ln
traditional materlaJ - sort. braahed, pure Sh etl and wool . ,
But the detaUa are quietly 1963 .Look at the set ot the
eleeve11.The l ong, lean waist. Ltrht &amp;nd warm, tbe
Shet laµd 1weater co mea 1n H coloun, all 111ea.

I

I

t 'I •

•

�PAGE EIGHT
-----------

Art Dept. to Hold 2 Sessions
On Today's ProvocativeArt
ly GRACE MUSZOCKI

'Mr. Philip

I

Elliott, ~arman
of the Art Department, has
announc~d that .!~ere will be two open sessions on "Today's
Provocative Art m ear ly Nov. in the multi-purpo se room of
Norton . All interested Univers ity faculty and students and
the . general public, are urged to atte nd . The meeting; will
b~ mfo~al and'. 'up -to-the-minute '', and promise to be both
stunulating and informative.
On Wednesda.y, at 3·00 p. m.
Larry Rivers. certainly one of the
most talked-about Ameri&lt;'an prunt­
c,rs and William Seitz. Associate
Dir~t'lr in rhnrge or exhibitions
of paintvig and St·ulpturt al New
York's Mus('um or Modr•rn Art. will
con&lt;lurt a dialogue and "111 ans­
wer both pr1•part'd and spontaneous
questions. Rivers will show slides
of r~nt work f.'Xecutcdin Europe
and not yet C'Xhlbited. This work
was pul'&lt;'hasro in Europe and is
p1•esi&gt;ntly out or rircul1111on. Besides
lx•ini: e lop-rnnklng painter. he is
well known a~ a ja1.z saxol)honist.

Certificates Given
LI Col. Thomas L . lluddlrston,
Protes.wr of Air &amp;ic•n,·e, pN'!;,,nt­
&lt;'&lt;I&lt;'l'rtifirall's of ;ippointrnent to
107 rnd&lt;•ts or th e advan(•('d ('()rps
of Air F'orl"I.'R.O.T.C. today. Thl's('
t'&lt;'a11(1,•nt""arc• &lt;'Vidt&gt;m'&lt;'of &lt;•nd&lt;'I

within tht• A .F.­
R.O.T C. Cadet 575th division. With
lh&lt;' nppointml'nt goes thr rc&gt;sponsi­
billty, llu~t nml f1drlity or II rom­
miss!onNI cadet oflic-&lt;'r, The UB
&lt;livlsion now hns n total N1d&lt;'Imrm ­
~cshlp or 1800
Cot. lluddll!Ston (-Otnm('nled thnl
the Parndl' and Rcvirw Exercises
held ll\.~1 W&lt;'l'k Wl'n&gt; among thl'
finest held at the Univ&lt;'rsity lo
date .

Tickets Ava1ilablefor Comic Operas
In Baird Auditorium November 2-5
ly JOSEPH LANG
Tickets may still be obtained Jor
the two eomic operas lt&gt; be present­
ed in Baird Auditorium Nov. 2
through 5. "La Serva l?'adrona" by
Pcrgolesl and "L'lm ,presario in
Angustie" by Chnarosa, will feature
In their casts WIiliam Wagner,
Larry Bcar1•e. Marle1ne Badger .
Tacko Fujii. Clifford Chaprnan and
Ruth Mohn. Famous masterpieces
In both music and h·umor, thl!!le
operas will delight audiences today
just as ,veil as they did in the
Eil!'hlcenth Century. T'hey are un­
der Lhe din'Ction of Henry Wicke
Jr .. stage manager. Imd Vittorio
Giarrntnnn. conductor. The orches•

tra will consist of both student and

union musicians. Tickets for SIU·
dents are ~,
If they p-resenl their
10 cards at Baird Box Office the
evening before the performance
they wish lo attend. Faculty and
staff tickets are Sl.00 and the gen­
eral public may purchase tickets
al $2.00.

GIVE

TheSPECTRUM
now printed b'f

Parfn.erJ' P,.e6J 1 .Jn.c.

.A/,'J"u&amp; S,..11/.
p,inUn'I
1381 KENMOREAVENUE

(at Del•w•r• l

Phone 876-2284
LETTERPRESS e OFFSET

UNITEDwAY

THE

ATTENTIONSTUDENTS

The

JAl!K

IINK/JTTTEN
Fou·r Preps
/NPfR~ON
Are Coming!
!l;,,/MllfoMN""Y"r/-

Modem Museum
William Seltz has orj'.:aniicd a
numhl'r of outstnnding and rontro­
verstat exhibihons at the Modl'rn
Mus..•um. notably one on "th&lt;' Art
o1 AsS&lt;'mblagl'". sho"~ng works
ranionii from tht" Dada period dt'.
Coffer wilt be srrved artcrward ,
throu~h t•xaml)h•s oJ the• mon • or
less smular work of th" tat" lffiO's. Atl!'nllon is aJt11in cullrcl to thr
Mr. Srav as &lt;'lost'ly in tou,•h with VC'ry prl'srnt nature of th1• sub­
&lt;·on1,,mpor:1ryartists and tht•ir cu,~ J•'&lt;'IS - thrs... :,r&lt;' not "Art Hls·
tQr.v 1.A•durl's."
r,•nt at111ud1
•~.
On Wt'&lt;ln&lt;'s,luy Nov I~. La\&lt;­
r,•n&lt;'i"Alloway Curator or thC'Gug.
~&lt;·nh1·1111
Mus,•0111
an N1•wYork. wall
~Jl('nk s;,•nr rall) ' 1&gt;nhis ,,x~ riPnl'rS
with a group of arlisls SU&lt;'h ns
Jasl}l•r J ohns. Rohrrt Rausrhrn ·
bu,i: and thl' Vl'ry controvrri.·fol
"Pop-Arllsl" Andy Warhol, Mr Al-

-

Joe Rico a,,d BJF Present

loway pr esented these and other
artists In an exhibition at the Gug­
gt'nh!!im in 19ti2, bringing into lo­
cus SUl'h manifostations as have
ht•,•n l'allrd lhr New Rralism. the
Polklor&lt;' or the Banal , Melphyslc!al
Disgust. 1hr Slice or Cakt• School,

vrJic•l'r

Friday, November 1, 1963

SPECTRUIM
- ---------------------------------------

GOT THE
SUNDAYBLUES
?
Student Cocktail Hour
1· 6 P. M. Sund1y1
IVIRY OTHERDRINK
lit PIUCI

Also Draft INr Av1ll1llle
Sing Alon_gor Dance With
DON LOSELat the Organ

IW!fl~

AF~~lK

November 23rd

i

l//lBIGJ

313 KENSINGTON
At ,111_..

T.F3-4700
(Studenlll MIU! Show
Proof of Age)

HELD OVERSth IIG WEEK

&gt;~OE
J'EDDIE
ll!&amp;IXTE/li

PRICE
$2.00 PerTicket

GREATTAl.EN~

A · Specta cu lar
BAIIJJDEIR!
Show

IIAUN
MAt~WNONDON"TMISS IT !
Kleinhans -Sun.,

COLUMBIA
ARTISTS
RECORDING

Nov. 17

$2.50, $3.58-7 :30 P.M.
For beat cholc• of Nata aend
check or money orde1: w lJh &amp;elf•
addreued
a.tamped envelope
to
Buffalo J a1 1 Featlval 1, c/o Den•
ton '•· 32: Cou,t St., Buffalo S, N .Y.

NorthPark Cinema
1428 HHTEl AVE,

Dally at

Sunday

7:11 · t :21
Incl. Sat.

2: 30 • 4:st

7:tl • t :lt

Specl1I StudentDiswunt
Mon. Tllru Th11r,.
.
PresentI. D. Card

"ANWsteJllta
■IYles •••

The

wlrtHsitf
••.

em111rdil1rf.
'

Hideavvay

-The S111u,d11y
Rtvlew.

"1\1fll ,ower
of

1006 E. Dellavan

Margn1'et RulhN·!ot'r1 :tn!I
Robert Moi'l&lt;'} '

presents

STARTSWED.

The
RAVEINS
EVlfY

Ill ■d lllfHlltiJr

territory
forAlller
lea
slleer

statu~

lounge

Serving the Niagara Frontier
For Over 25 Years

f,-i,,.1

LAST5 DAYS

Bowl-O-Drome

HEATLEY MOTORS
1169 Main St.
Dial 882-4770

at 8:30 in

\ FBTIVAlCLARK
GYM
I , '°';

Recenlly Ted Wis.~ wl\S appoint­
ed to our sales stnCI. He would
like to invite his many rriends
and assodates to comr in nnd
see him. ll we don't have the
car you are looking for. W&lt;' can
obtain ii. either new or used.
Try us.

II llovie
lledlaa
. ..
ertrldut1y

strwi-,act!''
-lvc!,t

A Much Pr1 1Nd Comedy

"LILIES OF
THE FIELD "
•r•-

Starring Sidney Polt■ r ·
• ·-·-••••---•

1"7D£JIT

DISCO'IJJff TICIU:TS
81 i.otll tll•ai•,. - ....,.
alloe of ,..oper 1.D. ~d

••.U.W.

P .......

r Wi11Sltn1
N. Y,

P.ost

"lllleof1Myear's
10lestf"
-Dwight M11cDon11/d,
Erquire

"More
,ewertul
lllaatileorlpat
Sb(e YffliOI!"

Wed., Fri.cm1d
Sat.

------

-Nrwswtt lc

ELIKONIIKOFF
and
HISYANKEESIX
On
FANTASIA-NOW PLAYING AT THE GRANADA

Thurs.t~ite

ANEW
KIND OF
LOVE

-----HOOTEN
1
ANY
Every

Sun.Nite
Auditions For
Folk Sing,1u·,
EveryMonday Nite

l"- wildut comedy that e\/ar

The

-~-tm"
..,.ra♦-ct

the me11 from the
lloy1 ••• but not from the 9lrlal

• • - • • •• • • .; • •. • -- •

~ ..O
:"::....
~
.. ..... ua. ....

..

•

Connect1011
New Pl.tylnt At TIie

CIRCLE ART
J1'5 hlley at Amherst

�Friday, November 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

1

PAGE NINE

Dr. BrubakerGets FulbrightH
•h d
k
Grantto Lecturein Columbia arps1c
or. Festival
NextWee

In addition to his teaching duHes,
Dr. Brubaker will be gatheri ng re­
seal'ch at the National Archives,
No.tional Library. and the Academy
for n book on modern Columbia.
The volume will conccmu·ate on the
political and social movenients In
lhe lale 19th and 201h ccnturles
with emphasis on tho 201h century
social revolution in Columbia.

DR. GEORGEA. BRUBAKER

No str-..U1gcrin Columbia. Dr. lecturer at the University of Arizonu
Brubaker gathered researd1 for his during the summer of l!Xi91111d
on
di,;serta!lon in Bogota during 1956- the faculty of Texas A. and M.
57 under n Buenos Aires Convention College, 1955- 56.
Fellowship support(.'() by II U. S.
lie served in thl! U. S. Army,
Government Grant. His disscrta­
Administrative NCO, 1!153- 5~. anc!
llon tiUe was Santa Fe de Bogota : was Assistant Administrative Assis•
A Study of Municipal Development
tanl to Senator Carl lluyden , United
in Elght"nth • Century Spanish
Stutes Senate. 19:il• 52.
Americ a,

SURE!

Dr. Brubakt•1· rccl'ived thr B A.
,u1d M.1\. dt'grees from lh~ Univrr•
sily of Arizonu in 1951 anc! 1952
:ind the Ph.D. dcgrrl? from th,•
l:nivcrsity of Texas m 1960.
Hl' i~ a mL•lllbC'ro( lhc AmC'l'k!ln
Historical Association, Phi Kuprm
Phi, Phi Alpha Theta, and Pi Sigma
Alpha,

YOU CAN PICKUP YOUR
AIRLINETICKETSAT

TAYLOR
TRAVEL
SERVICE,
INC.
3588 MAIN-Next to University Plaza

J,,"
~

N~TRA

""""•"°"

U -,.., have already made yovr
with
the Alrtl... , yeu may pick up yeur tt.cket MN
and UH

The music departme nl is spon­

soring n Harpsichord Festival Nov.
6-lt , consisting of five concerts and
two lectures. This is the first time
lhe new harpsichord will be per­
for:~1;.'CJ
on in concert.

Taeko Fujii , soprano. also on the
music faculty and appt,aring in the
oprra. will be heard in works of
Stravinsky . Miss Fujii rccrntly
i:ave n r,•dlnl et Baird wilh h,•r
two s1strrs. llurpisl Majorie Hart•
Zl'll of lhl' BuH11l0Philharmonil'.',
And also on the- musit: faculty , will
b • soloist in Rowl 's lntro&lt;lu,·tion
and Alll'Am, Nt•!son Dayton, bllS·
,;oonisl 111 Vivaldi's Bassoon Con­
t•t•rlo.

Ccnecrt-goc•rs are remmded that
the timtl roncrrt of thr . 8Cl'thovcn
Cydc is tonlµht, the two operas
tomorrow lhrour:h 'l'ul'sday . Md
David Diamond's Sk'C lccture-re­
C'italon Thursd~ .

Dr. Brubaker p!,rns to leave in
May at the end of the 1963- 64
amdt•mic year and return In Sep­
t,,mber 1965.

Dr. Brubaker jolnl.'c!the Univer­
sity !acuity in 1961, having p1'l.'vi011slyserved with the U.S. Jnlor­
rnalion Agency u~ Dlre&lt;.'lor of the
U.S, • Chilean Cultural lnslitute and
l"l~illng professor al Lhc UmvC'I'·
sidad del Norte in Antofagasin,
Chile, 1959- 61. He was a· visiting

verslty, joined the music faculty
this fall. He is teaching advancl'll
music history coursc-s. the Intro­
duction to Music courst'. and 11111
teach har psichord.

ly VICKIBUGELSKI

Dr. George A. Brubake r, assistant professor or history
has been awarded a Fu lbr ight grant for lecturing in Bo­
gota, Columbia tor 1964-65.
American history and culture will be the subject of
Dr. Brubaker's lectures_ i_!lSpanish at the University of the
Andes and the Columbia n Academy of History dur ing ithe
year.

a trip ti fM Statler or fM Alrpe,t

OR
We wUI maic. your 1'1NrVatf0111fer yov and

c:;~~=-~-~E

FARE IS THE SAME

SENIORS
If You Want
An interesting, fast moving, challeng­
ing and responsible job de aling with peopl e
in a leaders ,hip capacity , and

All llarpskhorcl F&lt;'stival ronf'l'rts
anc! lectures takC' place at Baird
Hall with the C'XC'l'PIIOn
or Satur­
day 's &lt;'Oll('!'rts,which will be hl•id
at lhe Albri1:ht•l&lt;11oxArt Gallrry.
All ronc·c•l'ISbegin al ll:30; thr two
ll•C'turesarc at 'I p .m. 'l'ht• ,·011,·crts
or Nov. ti. 8. and 10 ha\'e an nd­
m:ss:on rhnrge, but are frl'c&gt; !or
stutlrnl!i. The L'oncC'rL~or No1· 9
and ll ate frcc- o! charg C' to nil
111r lt-l'lurt•s art' also flw .

Our representative
would like to talk
with you when he visits your campu s on
Nov . 7. Inter view arrangem e nts may be
mad e through you c olle ge plac eme nt offi ce .

1010 James Street
Syrac uM, New Yo.-lc

.:

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
•

:

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~

T

ailJAlla'J

¥1,

'cf

rM~

•

i• SUBMARINE~

i•

:

:

•: STUDENTS,
•
:
•: SATISFYYOUR STUDY HUNGER •:
•
i
•
e
e
•

•

•

PAINS WITH THE ORIGINAL

•
GIANT
SUBMARINESi
•

Mike', Giant Submarine Sandwich of America are made of a speci al
blend of Swiu Amarlcan cheese , crisp lettuc e, juicy Hlected tomatoH with
the special spanish onions, a good variety of wholesome meats . Mike's own
seasoning and unsaturated ul1d dressing and a fre.h ever y dey Mike's
1pecl1I roll . WOW WHAT A TREAT I

STOP IN AT ANY ONE OF

:. ~a fk&gt;@~

LOCAnONS

~

:

i
e
•

THE ATLANTIC
REFININGCO. INC

Students anc! fa.rutty should takt•
adv1111tagrof lh&lt;' m11ny,·ont'l•rl~ ol
Fric!ay nft&lt;'rnoon, Erk H('rz will this Fcshval. and tht- npportu111t11·s
on harpsll'lior&lt;ls and 10 INrn mor,· 11hout th,• ha1·psl•
,::1,·1•11 !t•,Jt\11'('
1h,,ir ronslrurt\on l\lr. llrr, is thr
f'll(}rd IIS t'Olll&gt;ll·u,·lllm 111111
l1l11Sll'
bu,ldl'I' of llw UnlVl'rs11y'shnrp st•
Al
111,•(ll'L's&lt;•nt11mr.
thrrr
•~ n
dt0rd . Sludrnls wall be• ,1hlr IO C'X·
um1n,,· llw lmrpskhord ru,d nsk great rt•1·ival of inlc·r&lt;'sl in 1•ariy
qm•sllons. Tlmt t!Vt'nlll){.world-rt•· n1usu· nnd llw instrum,•nts f,,l'
nownf'd hnrpsk hord1st Ralph Kirk• which th!' mus1t• was 11nttrn. ~Jr.
l(irkpalril-k 15 Olli' of till' kt•) flJ.?·
pnlrit'k WIii J'.:11'1' ;in all•Bat:h rt'·
ures in this rrvtl'al. hn11ni::don,•
t'11al Mr. J(irky,a1rkk wlll prrform
much rl.'s&lt;•ar•·hin Baroqu,, mu,h·
lh,, Jt.tiinn Cmi,·Prlo thr Chromotir
1111
7inQ a111I
Fanla~y nnd Fu~t·. anti the• rnmous and also mud, c•on,•1
p!'rlorming
lit•
hlls
mnny
1t·1'&lt;ml
c;oldhrn.: Varmllons.
h1Qs of Ril&lt;'h and uliw1 BnroqU••
Salu1'day al tlw Gnllrry Mr. masll'l'S. nnd has c'&lt;lllf'&lt;Iman, nf
Bai•h's and ~kurlnlti's ,·111111k)~1i111n,
1,,rkp11lrit'kwill Pl'('S('llla proJlram
of F'rl'nt'h ,whool wurks of thl' Rar·
for k,•ybonrd.

Wt'&lt;lncsday. a string ord1"stm
conduded by AlcxnndPr Srh1wulrr
of the Bud1111rs1Qunrh'I. 11111pr•'·
s·•nl works o( llnndrl and Vivaldi.
()avid Fu!IPr will be harpsil'hord
wloisl for Bach's t•ont·t•rlo in F
minor. Mr. Fullrr a !iPt'l'ialisl In
801-oqul' music from llarvnrtl Lim•

:
An industrious, aggr e ssive , pe rsudsi ve ,
we ll-organiz e d person i"ter e stde in market ­
ing. - - -

Monday aftrrnoc&gt;n, Mr l,1rkp:1
trkk will lt'l' ture on harpslrM1d
musk and Jl'ive a short rrl'ilnl. In
the t'vrmn){ \'iohsl \\ 'altrr Tr,111\·
plt'r with harpsirhordisl IJ,w,c! ful•
!e r will perform. l\lr Trnmp!t-r "
oftrn 8 J;UL'SI soloist with 1hr Rud.,.
pest Quarh'l. JI,, JWrf&lt;llm,'&lt;I !wr,'
Inst sprln&gt;! at lh1' ;\Jo1ur1·Sch1h,.rl
r,•~•ival and will appt•11r"~'''" 11,•-..1
s,:,mestcr. This Is lht• final ronn•rt
of tht' f,,stivai.

Harpsichord Lecture

Soloist , David Fuller

.

oqu!' l)l'rtod. lraturiniz t·omposit11111~
ol Cou()('rin and Rameau Sundlly
at Ilaird , Mr. Kirkpalrtrk will ~w•·
an ail-Scarlatti r1'1'1tal.

, REMEMBER
THE NAME MIKE
'S -

1:00 •4:00 A. M.

OPEN7 DAYSA WEEK '

•

•

•

:

!.
:

s~ ..~~L~.~T.
2862DELAWARE
AVE.!
BUffALO

•
i•

THAT'S RIGHT!!

•

I
I
I

•··-,

.. •• _

1

KENMORE

I

9:00 • 2:00 A. M.

•

New York', Only True

:
••
•

Sien♦ Submarine

Sand-.ich

•

•

-

�Friday, Novem!Mr 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

,r,

CANTHIURY
~Ion
groups are being con­
tinued al t.he times posted on the
bulletin boards.
Chaplnln Beattle will continue his
discussions on I CorlntlllH1 and
0., ,
H-.t"'
Fr BoUllllln will present the dls­
C'USSionon Hebrew backgroundsfor
Christlamty today and will continue
1t next \I C&lt;-kwith a discussion o(
the idea.,; ol Mess!
Runk , and
the Kingdom of
Gimm
All lhoSI' l(Oing
meet at Norton lo ge nl 1:00 p.m.
Saturday, w1• \ II leave by 1:30.
so be punctual We wfll be back
by 5:00 pm Sunday. ThOS!' who
have not paid. bring S650 for food
and lodging
There will h(, n huslness meeting
Wl.'dn~ay.
We will l&gt;!'gin our tfc­
kN sale for lhl' Christmas Conrcrt
given al Kleinhan's Decemb. r 13.
The topic for diS('Ussion Will be
"Christmn Rrll~rions In Amrnra."
Remf'mhcr Thi' Buffalonlnn pil'•
ture \\ill bf' taken todny nt 8: 15
p.m.

Flah
SuMlay
The next Hillel Supper wlU be
a Fish Fry to be held Sunday
evening at 5:30 p.m. in the HlUel
House . Dr. Joseph Fradin, dC'part•
ment of En glish, will speak on:
"Some Current Jewish Novelists ."
This will be the concluding lecture
In n series of fou r on: "The Jews
111the Arts. " Reservations for the
supper may be made nt the Hillel
House.
Llvo and Loam

Mrs Norman Fertig, coordinator
of the "Live and Learn" discussion
series, announces that another dis­
eussion hour will be held on Thurs ­
day ot 3:00 p.m. The sessio n will
oc•chaired by Daniel Cantor who
"ill present a J)llpcr on: " M&lt;'nlnl
Hralth."
Ono. Day lnstltvte
The third annunl One-Day lnstl ­
tu11• will be hdd on Sunday Nov.
17 Rcg1stnit1on forms nre now
nvailnblC' and muy be obtainrd ot
the llill&lt;'l House. Students from
l'OIIC'J:CS
in the Westem New York
nl'l'/1 are cliglblr to attend.
The
progmm for the duy will feature
an out-of-town spc11kcr, a tour of
the Albright Knox Art Gallery, nnd
HILLEL NEtiS
Sai.b.lth Sorvlco and 0"'9 Shai.b.lt a Sl&gt;l'lnl evcrung.
Spoclal Eloctlon Tuosday
The B'nal B'ri th !Ullel Founda­
A sJl('dul cle!•lion will be h1•ld
tion will hold a Sahbath Service
this evming al 7:45 p .m. in lhe on TIH•sday at 7::lO p.m. in lht•
llillC'l llousr for th1• olfice of Vive­
llilfel Houi1e Dr Justin Hofmann
Pres1d&lt;'nl All m&lt;'mbers of Hillel
\I tit SJ)('ak on
"The Kaddish."
ar,• rhgible to vote
This \\ill ht· th!' fourth In n series
INTER• VARSITY
of sermons cfwotro to the it&lt;'nernf
themr or, "Un ders tanding Ou r
CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP
IVCF' is having a supper meeting
Prayers " An Oneg Shabbat will
lollow.
this evl'nlng nt 10 Brentwood Drive
Social Saturday Nltht
North Tonawand.1. Cars will be
A Saturday Night Social is sched­
lenvini: Tower Dorm at 5: 15. Any•
uled for 8:30 p.m. in thr Hillel 0111• who ls inlcrl.'sh'&lt;I is welcome .
}'or further inlormntio n call 831llouse. All rollege student s in the
Buffalo nrrn are in\rited to 111lend. 3168 or TR 7-0860.
tConllnu~ on P~ge 121

Student Bar Votes

UC Registration Schedule

Elect 2 Positions;
DA Gives Lecture

endorl U4 at least one week In
University College s t u d en t s
advan ce of the above scheduled
whose last names begin with the
times.
letters designated below will see
The new freshman advisors are:
their advisors on the following
Miss Dorothy Wynae , Miss Con­
days:
stance Bommer, Mrs . Lorrie E .
s
Nov. 4-8
Rabin, Miss Marie Mahoney , und
Nov. ll •l!i
C&amp;D
Mr . Wilbur Applebaum .
A I, B
Nov. 18-26
Students who do nol make their
K &amp; L
De&lt;-. 2-6
appointments
at the scheduled
Dec. 9-13
I,',
z
times will have to see their ad•
M &amp; J
Dee . 16-20
visors during examlnntlon lim e In
January and then be required to
Students will make an appoint•
register in Clark Gym on Registra­
mc nt with thl' rcccptiorust in Diel- tion Day.

Officers of this year's Student
Bar Assoclation are Lc\\is Caccieto,
President; Joe Terrizzl, Vlce-Pres­
ident, Bill Borja, Treasurer , and
Sean Hill. Secretary .
Although formal eledlons are held
annually in December, the positions
of Vicc-Presldelll- and Treasurer
were open In September.
Lance
Billingsley and Peter lllnrtin were
appointed by Pn:sldent Caccieto
to fill the seats of the Association
that have been vacatoo.

w.

There are twelve melT'bers on the
Student Bar Associatio n; four from
each class. The group puts out the
Law School Yea r book, a newspaper,
ulloca tcs money, plans social events
und presents a program of speak­
ers. At n recent CoUccHour, Louis
Lefkowitl, Attorney Gen~ra l or New
York Slate, spoke about opportuni­
ties nnd scrvke for public atto rneys.
George Blair, District Attorney
of Erie County was heard Tuesday
in a dC'bnlr with Herald Fahringer ,
n Buffalo lawyer , on Wil'('-Tapping.
These spl'akers are a part of the
Dean llymnn Lecture Series.
The Unlvl.'rs.ity of Buffalo Law
S&lt;'hool was establis hed in 1887. The
aim ol the Law School is to educate
men nnd women for thr private
practicr ot lnw and for legal ad­
minisl rnlive positions In public ser­
vice. lnstru ctlon cen ters around a
thl"l'e-yrar program with particular
emphasis in New York and Federal
Law of both 'a statutory and judlcnl
nature.

CANYOUUSE
&amp; OUTLINES
REVIEWS
We Carry Up to 8 Lines

On All Subiects

VISIT OUR
LUNCHEONETTE
" Quality Food S.rved at
Popular Prices "

BUFFALO
. TEXTBOOK
I
'' ST01lES

3610 MAIN ST~

NC.

Tf 3-7131

(CORNEROF BAILEYAVE.)

SHIRTS.. . I
SHIRTS... I
SHIRTS... I

FOR A \V ARDROBEREFRESHER

Button Downs' lkrnluda. :111d ConvC'rtible Collors-ln
a Hugh As.'IOrlment of Brighi New Prinls III Sllt'S 7 · 15.

3.98 to 5.98

SALESTILL ON
s299 SweatshirtsNowspa
spsto s2soAni11als
Now60&lt;

JUNIOR SHOl!tSECOND FLOOR

�i

--------------

Furnas
at Columbia:Senate:

Convocations Upset;
Paul Schulman Resigns Post

Festival to Be· Held at U B
In Honor of .Japanese Week
ly CHARLES LOTSOF
Next week's obse1-va11C1?
of Jap­
mese Week promises a brtllianl
p1-odudion. Seven of the commit­
n' s of the Union Board have been
,·oordinated under the direction or
Peggy Collard, the Board's First
\'1ce President , to bring to th&lt;&gt;
l,!niversity II large number o{· in•
,,,,-esting exhibil!i, l~tures, diijCIJS·
~101~5and movies relating IO the
Japanese and their &lt;'Ulture. The
Board was especially fortunate in
vlJlaining exhibits from both the
,\lbright-Knox Art Gallery and New
York Museum of Modern Art. Ap­
pearing below is a listing of the
locntions of the principal displays,
followed by a program of the main
•vents.
Dl1pl11y1
University Bookstore - A large
&lt;c•
lection of recreational reading
.·onccrning .lapanese customs, as
well as Japanese art prints and
novelties.
Browsing Llbrnry - An extensive
collection ol Oriental books.
Room 231 Norton - R•c•nt Jap­
anese Prints: A C&lt;&gt;llection
in gnllery
~lylc including work.s or :15J11pane.se
,11•
1ists. (Bort'Owed lrom the New
York Museum oC Modern Al'tl.
A11Lounge 12nd Floor. Nortonl­
Exhiblt of the art of school c·hildren
o( Kanazaua, Japan, sister city to
OuUalo.
Display cases 12ndFlool', Nortont
-J apanese Instruments (t"Ourtesy
ol 0 1·. Chyette of the music depart­
ment) ; Ceremonial J apunese dolls
h'Ourtesy of Mrs . Sumic Ricker-

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 1, 1963

sont; Japanese Objects d'Art 11:our•
tesy of BuUalo Museum ot Sclcncel.
Tiffin Room Display Case - food
Utensils and bowls from Jar&gt;an
E•ents
Monday at three o'dOl'k in the
Ddrvthy Haas Lounge - A lecture
and discussion entitled "The Chang­
Ing J apanese , Womllll" lo be con­
ducted by Mrs . Chnrles Booth, a
nutive or Japan .
Tuesday al 110011, ro be l'epcall'&lt;l
at one o'clock and at two o'clock,
In the Theater-Conference Room Two color films: "Yoshi Noyama"
(Classical Japanese Dancel and t
"The CrcaUve Ari of J apan,"
Tue!iday at three o'clock in the
Haas Lounge - An informal dis­
cussion of Japanese culture by Dr.
Irwin Johnson of the Anthmpoloizy I
Depa,tmenl. Fortune cookies and
tea will be served.
Tuesdl\Y at 8: 30 p.m. in the
Multipur'l)Os
e Room - A demon­
st ratlon of Judo.
Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hnll - The Baird Music Hall Harpsichol'Cl Festival, featuring Jap anese songs by Strnvinsky.
Thursday al noon, lht'l'C. six,
eight and tt•n o'clock. - The hour
and three-quart ers long film "Hiro­
shima Mona111ou1·Admission
."
tic­
kets are ncc:cssary. They may br
obtainl'd without charge at th&lt;'
Ucket booth in Norton Hnll.
During the t&gt;nllr&lt;' week the mu$k
room will re..1u1&gt;t&gt;
Jar&gt;anesc music,
whill' 1ht' TiHln Room, R.ithskeller
and l'afetcria will rcaturc a dirtcrcnl
J11p,1n~, • dish every day.

I
I

Dr Chl!ord C. l-'umas will he
rnw or ;i dist1n~1sh,-d grnup or
spt''\l-.t'I', ul a pa11t'I un 'Co11tinu
ing
1s· rur t;nguw­
Edut·11twn:A St1111uh
vm Xprmg for th,• , h1111111,111,1111•
of
,,,·,111.:
Hll(t S,·wrn•,,." a! ('11l11mhin In tlw m1&lt;1r1m " "'''' h&lt;'l\11'1·1&lt; Sl'n
till' mt•t•tlni::,s.-v,•1·111
,•11•111s
ol 1111 1hr i,11111111111·•
• S\lhJ,••·1 tu S1'11.1t,·
Ll11il
,•r~11r, Nm ,·mh,•r 7. s
flOrtam·c•hrl\'t' &lt;X't'
11rr1'11111Ihi• ""' '" upprm ol
Dr Furnas ,, ,11 sf"'"k .ii J/1:00 ol Sturlrnt Gov,,rnnwnt.
Finance Co'"'"'""
;i.111. Ntl\t'llllw,· 7 on " R,•111•\\,tl
of
Paul Sc,hulm!lll. Ch11irn111n
1)! llw
Th&lt;' folio\\ ing hudg,•t, ha,,. l•••·n
tlitms Comniirh•t• l't'Si~111'&lt;Irc-pi(!\\l'd by lhl· ~·,nan,•,· l'l\111 ♦ 1111
Ow l'rull'ssinrml Man in II DrnHmil' ConvOC'l
If~' and 1i.1s.st-d h) 1hc• S,•nah'I Th,·
&amp;x·il•ly," 01 ht'I' k,·) note ~11rakrrs hi~ Pl~qi(ionMonduy. HI• slat('(! lhal
'' 1n·lmury amom: 111:v r,,,.!&lt;4.m,1 l,1r Bisonh1•a&lt;I-S71
:!, :-1ud,•n1 I )1 ,11nu
indud,, J,rn h S. l\lrllu~h. NYS
rt•sign111l
on 1 Is n,y inubillty IO matn• Ill ' Sol'i,•ty- $.i:,.m, Anlhrnpol11
1:y
Commisslnn,,r ol &lt;.'fJlllllll'l'W, anrl lain lht• iu•alfemk s1an&lt;lanls wh1t·h Club--S.'l:l0.00; Photugmphy Clult
l\lalrolm \\'i!s1111
, Lt. Go\'l'rnor
I huw sC'I for my,wll In llw past $1200.00; S&lt;'11
u, sm1•1s1,.rs-S15101w1,
. , . &amp;,for&lt;&gt; I ,•un l'OnlinUt' wilh l),.ha tr&gt; SQC'il't)• -Sl!b!i,00, ~.n~tn•••·•
Dr. Fur11as w,11also pn•sidc at any 11Ht,io1' rt•Sl)()IISibilitir~
SUl'h as in ~ StudNlt ('utmdl-$X ~~l.lN
I
11 luncht~m nwl'lmg 1111 No, ,•mlx&gt;r!I
Co11vo,:a
lions Comn1ill!'1'Chairman
Any question~ {l(' I lUlllln,: llt llu•
I must rrm,-&lt;ly this prnbl,1 m ."
bu1lg,•ts $hOulrlIx· din' cl\•11 10 .\11,•n
Mt·. Schulman pn •st&gt;
nlly holds a Horowiti S:tud,,nr S!"nah·'frr•:tsu11•r,
Trabant, of Engillffring,
paying assi~tanship III the p~y,·hol, in lht' S.matt• Otlicc.
Also Attends
, ~ · de&gt;pn11num1
and Is a n11•mlll·r
,vltllc llolatlens
Dr. E . J\11hur 'l'r:.ibm11
, !Jenn of or tht' Studt'nt Judidary.
Th,, rummiUt'f' ,·ott•d unani1111•11'
the Sd101,1( ol Engint'erini;. ls n
In rl'fer&lt;'nt·c lo statements nboul ly to sponsor th,• 1u1
·IIC' rnn fur
mcmtx,r or lhC'progrnnt ,vmm,ttl'&lt;' "thl' poor 1•xt&lt;&gt;rnal
or Mus,•ulnr Distroph~ Thr• C'H'nt I\ tit
f)l'rforma111•1•"
lhe 1'0mntillt'l', h~ statt'&lt;I "Thr t'OIII•
ht• hr ld Nmrml)(•r II ~-30 in th,,
1,hid1 planned lhc meeting.
millet' and I worked hard s,,ndlnil Multl-Purposr Hoom
1'hl· m&lt;'C'tin,g
is wonsor't'd by lht' out m1111
r•r&lt;&gt;u~Jcttl'rs and JJl'&lt;'Pllt·
A sulwommitr,•e " 'ns Or1l8t111rtllo
Artv,~01
·~ Counl'il for lhc J\rtvmwt•· irlil 1111
• let'lur!' s,•rit•s for lhC' y,•ar. handle hlo1.er S(lft•~. Tht•r,• wlll h,•
...
Wt' haw hat! frw ~u,·,·c•s.si&gt;s
junior l,l11wrs oft.,rrd at S:!a "'
1111•111of tmtuslrllll lle&gt;scardl and
•s so lnr ,~ th,, lt'SS, In hlur and l'amrl wilh !ht•
l&gt;P,•rlop111cntin N,•w York Slalt&gt;, Thr lar k of l1•l'111r1
rt•sult ot nunwrm1~ r,•lusals ol our st•hool l'mhh·m Th" snlrs will I~•
m l'OOjwralion"ilh C•)lu111hrn
Uni­ invitations."
work1•dIn t'OOpcratlon with thr l,1nk
versil)'.
Mt·. &amp;·hulman r,•,·on1rn,•11d1
'(! Sil- SlOl'I' .

I

ti

Pardonme if I soundas if the
executivepositionI've landed
deals with the wholefuture of
the world.

It does.
Certamly, there·s no organi zation today conduc t •
ing more vital business th an the bus,ness of the
United State.s ,A,r rorce And very few organ,za­
t,ons that give a college graduate grea ter oppor•
tun ,ties for respons,b,hly and growth.
As an A,r force offtcer, you'll be a leader on the
Arrnspc1ce Team-w,th good pay a 30 day pa,d
vJcat,on e.'.lch year. educat,onal opportun,ttes.
How Cdn you gel star tE'd' For many, the best way
,s through Atr Force ROTC But ,I you missed out
on Af'ROTC,or ,f there ' s no urnt on your c Jmpus.
you can s till apply for Air Force Officer Training
Schoof This t hree month course leads to a com•
m1ss1on as a second lieu tenant ,n the United
States Alf rorce .
For more ,nform.1hon about Air force OTS. see
your locc1IA,r Forc.e repre~entat,ve.

U.S. Air Force

�PAGE TWELVE

*

SPECTRUM

*

Speclrum

ALCOTTAND JAMES HOUSE
Today, a piWl party will be held
at 'lhe home of one or the members
or James Hou.~e and posters will
he mnde for a proposed Hayride
for Alcott and Jam es House.

BRIDGE CLUB

ned for Nov . 7. All members are
asked to attend the sl'heduled

m&lt;'Cting.
INDUSTRIA
L RELATIONS CLUB
The International Relations Club
1vlll present three speakers at a
luncheon on Tuesda,y in support of
a recent tour 111the Chevrolet Ton­
a,vanda Plant . The discussion at
the luncheon will revolve around
the nature of assembly line work.
All students who are interested are
invited to attend .

The Bridge Club will hold a meet­
ing Tuesday at 7:30 in Norton
Room 327. There will he a dupli­
cate game for iractional master
points as well as beginning in­
st ruction. Everybody from begin ­
m•r to expert Is Invited . Winners o!
lnstwl'ek's game were E-W Sheila
Shem and Dottie Gamby ; N-S Wil­
ham Walker and J erry Morrow.
The Bridge Club i$ sending four
four-man teams to the Rochestl'r
Bridge Tournament
lnvitational
Nov. 23. There will be a master
point night this month. The exac t
date \\~ll be announced.

Irving House and George EUiot
House will co-sponsor a Record
Mixer on Monday at 3:30-6: 00 in
the Multi-Purpose Room. 15 cents
per person or 25 cents a couple.
''All proceeds wlll be donated to
the United Fund."

DRAMATICSOCIETY

MOVIES

IRVING HOUSE AND
GEORGE ELLIOTTHOUSE

Thl'Tl' will he nn important med­
ing of the Stu dC'nt Dr-.imatic So­
L'tety in Room 329 on Tuesday.
PJay6 for the next student show­
casl' will he selt'&lt;:ted, their direc­
tors chosC"
n, and ca.sting notices
announC'cd. All members and thost'
who would hkc to b&lt;'c-orne mem­
lx'rs are urged to attend.

"lliros!uma Mon Amour '' will be
i;hown Thursday in the Conference
Theater of Norton in conjun cti on
,vith Jap anese Week. There will
be showings at 12. 3, 6, 8 and 10
p.m. ID c•ards must be presented
at the ticket booth by students and
non-studl'nts attending or worklng
at the University, in order to ob­
HALLOWEEN DANCE TONIGHT tain tickets. There is no charge
Cor tick ets . When requcsUn g Iick­
A Halloween Dane!' will b&lt;' hl'ld
ets ple11se specify the showing
•m the Tower Dining ArC'a tonight
which ycu would like to attend .
from S. 30 p.m to I ·()I) a,m. The
MUSICCOMMITTEE
rl/\nc·e is sponsorro by the resi­
dr-11c-,•hnlts . En!l•rtalnmen t will be
Th&lt;' fol10111ngscbcdule of musi­
pr1widl'd by K{'nny l.aniz und the
cal St'l t•c•Iions has been csta'lblis
hed
Ch,1nr1•llnrs. Rl'frc·shments will bC' by the Music Committee for the
"&lt;'l'\'&lt;'d. TI1C'hnlli: extend an invi­
1,;uslc lounge in Norton for Nov.
tation to f'vrryont' to atte nd .
4 - l! (with modifications for the

HEMINGWAYHOUSE
lleminf,:\, :i)' Hou~,• will hold "
izrnrra l m!'etl ng Tul'sday in 330
Norl\111. A (.'Zif WIISh is ix'ing plan -

ploying or Jupanese recordsl: '
10 - 11:30 n. m.-Popular 1·ecords
J 1.3(1-LOO p,m.-C lit:-sical rerord­
ings
1-2:30 p.m. 7 Folk music

2:30-4 p .m ,-Se mi-&lt;:lassical music
• 4-5 p.m.-.Jan music

1

1

(Continued

OT
The Occupational Therapy

from

Page 10)

The next meeting of the g,roup
will be Thursday from 4 - 5 p.m .,
in Norton Room 333. Rev. Falter
Watson wlU be speaking on the
topic , "How Real is God?"

Club
will present the mo1~e. "Their Lit­
tle World" at 3:30 in the Confer­
ence Theatre. Everyone is invited .

PEGS

NEWMAN CLUB

The PEGS will hold an all girls
car wash Saturday at the Mobil
statio n on Kenmore and Colvin ,
from 1-4 p .m .

There will be a business meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m . In the
Conference Theater.
The Christmas card Sale is t'Om­
ing. Volunteers are needed to act
as ~aptalns. Anyone interested in
helping leave your name at the
Club or call TF 4-3504.
Choir practice is held every Tues­
day at 6:30 p.m. in Room 333,
Norton . Volunteers are needed to

PHOTOGRAPHY
CLUB
There will be a general business
of the Photography Oub
in room 262, at 4 o'clock ,
New members are welcome.

meeting
today

SOCIAL WELFARE COMMITTEE
The

Social

Welfare

work on the newspaper . Anyone
interested leave your name at the
Club.
The Club has been victorious in
1he recent meets o! the UB Colleite
Bowi. It beat ABO. 265• 65, in
th e first week, and Sigma Alpha
Mu, 275• 150, last week.
Jusi a reminder: Mass is held
daily at 12:00 noon at th e Ou b,
which is open everyday from 8:ro
a.m. to 5 p.m.

WESLEY FOUNDATION
The first ln a series of program s
sponsored by the Wesley Founda ­
tion will be held Sunday at 410
Minnesota Ave. The film "Chosen
People'' will be shown. Dinner will
be served , beginning a t 5: 30 p.nl

Club will

meet on Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in
Foster 104. The movies concern­
ing social work will be shown "The Angry Boy" and "Summer

CATHAY
GARDEN

Decision."
Anyone interested
in
social work or related fields is
invited to attend.
Spring Arts Festival Committee
wlU meet Tuesday at 11:00 a.m. in
Norton 240.

HOMEAWAYFROMHOME
WANTED
Gr•duate Student to Sliare
Attractive Apartment
Ea~ily i11·cessih
lt• lo
Mnin St. Rus Lint•
Hertle • Parker Section
RooM and Boanl Reasonable
MRS. ESTHERHUDSON
Call Evenlng-TF U46 2

~

512 NiagaraFallsllvd.
U MINUTESDRIVE FROMUB

•

PERSONNEL COMMITTEE
The Personnel Committee's ap­
plic11tions ror Sliver Ball are due
by Nov. l. All those interested
may pick up applications on post­
&lt;'l'S in Norton. and "It th&lt;' Candy
Counter. Return applicatlons to the
candy counter or room 215 by
Nov. 1.

AngelFlight-Women'sROTC
The Girls BehindArnold Air
Thi• ,\ngrl fliJ::hl nl th,• ROTC
cl,•tilrhnwnt ,,, !111,t '1111·1rsity hl'lrl
11, first r,11·•11al111111111
,ou 1111 'rul',­
,1·~, O•·l " Dunm: this 11a•
..tin;:
11\i\ 111•\\
t•st asp1r:111lstn th,· ~"111p
WN,·
wdc,mwd mtu 1hr select
n~arntation
1'111•,\11&lt;!"1fhi:ht i~ an hOtl\!T,H'Y
l;t J'\ i( I'
ut~rmt1"tt.,.,n of d&lt;'dic•n1r1d
\\•mwn thnt purpnsr· to fu11her th,'
1d, ,I, of tlu• l' S /1.1r Furce by
1111gm&lt;&gt;nti11~
thr 1nt1•rcstof thr cul­
lt·~e ,tudrnt in lh1 Air l''orcc• ROTC'
pm,?wm
It ,~ spoi1son'CIby the

Friday , November 1, 1963

1

POLYNESIAN-CHINESE
AMERICANFOOD
EXPERTLYPREPARED

Also

•

Featuring

EXOTICDRINKS
Luncheon

Dinner

4:00 P.M.• 9 P.M.

11:00 A,M. • 3:30 P.M.
REASONABLE PRICES

PLENTY OF FREE PARICING

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

mt•mlwr~ ; furtht'r , llwy sc1•w re
fn•shnwnl~ ;1111.l
jp111in llw 1·um·1•r­
s; 1I1011 al 111:my othrr ,\mold Air
SOC'l!'t,v l'\'CIII:-.
Tht&gt;y ;dso hrlp plan
.,ml wnn,or llw Air furn• M1tifiu,Y
fl,,ll

The .\ngcl !"liµht is nn t•ver grow­
orgunmllio n hm mg
ei!!hly
wilh the N11lional
11s of ~'t•bntary 196'.l.As it inc•reasl's
111 s11c·, ,u ,hall it also incrca~c
111 its :1hllhics to func•tion and fur­
lh&lt;'r f)l'OrllOt!' Af'ROTC interests.
ht :111l'ffort to recogniie out•
in~

1111.!hts
atrifotrrl

.,,,I

l
,\mold ,\tr ~1rty
and i~ part of
, 11att1111o1I
1grL·1ca1t
1~,s•1t'lfllionthat
lu, ck, dop«t tnlCJ a prodigious
i:ruup
U) 11s 1m,ny um.I diverse
J11'0J1
•1'ls 11 h,,, ;:,,1111"1,,•ry r'df)tdl)
111 1or1•,t1p ,tnd mflu&lt;'nrr
fill'
',\ni;ds
,llll\'l'ly
~UppoJ1
lhl' ,H'ROTC 1w11~1
.. m on c·amr,u.s.
fh, ;tl't11·1t1c-s u( Lhi., 01ght cover
.t "ult' .ll'l\u Th,
Angt!ls" act as
h11,1&lt;.,_s,•,
at tc•a, "''•·nd,-d
b} ,~s11111i.:
nhht:u·y and &lt;'I\ 1han d1gnltanl's,
,llht ""11i11d 1ou1-s 1,ruund thC' l",.Ull·
I'll" m 111•,11·
-b_v air haM&gt;~ for in­
t,•1·,·,h'II , 1~11ors. Tiwy Blso hl'IJJ
\rn,•lll A11
· Sot·tl'I)' ruch th,dr new
1

•

1&gt;lamllng groups and individuals,
national 11wnrtls hav,• been eslab­
Jt,hC'd. Thllli, the Angcl Flight.
through its muny at·tivilics, aids
the program progress of the Ar11old Air Sot.'ll'IY and serves as a
sym!Jol ul upprcriation for the im•
11or1nnceand dignity of Air ForC'l'
lift' .
All Angel Flight meetings are 011
ru,•sduy 1111·()) in Norton Umon.
Till' room number 1s posted in• the
Arnold Air Society oUice in Norton.
Ally tnl(•rcsteu girls, are in\lltcd to
uttend. and M:rutmize any meeting.

Doesa manreallytake unfairadvantage
of women
whenheusesMennenSkinBracer?
Alldepends

on why he uses it .
Most men simply think Menth ol-Iced Skin Bracer is the be st
after-shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns ,
Because it helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes . Because it
help• prevent b lemishes ,
So who can blam e them if Bracer'• crisp, long-lasting aroma
jua t happ•ns to affect women so remarkably'?
Of course, aome men may use Mennen Skin Brace r because
of thie effect.
,::;,
'.,.. ' Howlht •ll igentl
~

•

�WBFO Schedule
(ConUnued

Iron,

Pnge 71

Wedne9day, Nov. 6, ltu
man
;,:50-Student Senate Ni-ws
ii:00-News with Dave Schriber
;;.12- New York Slate Educational
News
1;:l~etting
To Know You-Doris
Marx . interviews foreign student
Tuge Karazincir from Instanbul,
Turkey
,,: :JO-Evening Musicale
i 00-Carloonists Art-Hank Ketch •
am. manager of "Dennis the
Menace."
i 30-Concert Hall - Mendelssohn:
Violi n Conce!'to in E Major with
N i n o Francescalti,
violinist.
George Szell and the Columbia
Symphony Orchestra,
9:00- News
9:10-American History with Mr.
Wilson
10:00-Swlng Shift with Ray Ca­

l'llana
11:00-Headlines and Sign OU

Thursday, Nov. 7, 1961
with

Br u cc

Anderson
fi-110-News with Pat lrwin
6:12-New York S1ate Educational
News
6:15-Changing Face of Europe
f; 30-E venlng Musicale
7:00-Special or the Week
7:30-Co ncert Hall - Stravinslly:
Petrouslw. Stravinslly
t'Onducts
the Columbia Symphony Orchestra
'
8:30-Speci al-Lukas
Foss, a talk
recorded earlier on campus
10:00-Folk
Music with Fred
BrikeU
11:00- Hea~es
and Sign OU

Friday, .. ov. I, lffl
5:00--0n Campus with Carl Berg
!i:00-Ne ws with BuIT Vogel
6:12-Ne w York State Educational
News
n:15-Spo rts Highlights
6:30- Evenlng Musicale
7:00-Uniled Nations Report
7'.15-Washlngton Reports
7:30--Concert Hall-Debussy Eludes
(complete&gt; played by Olarles
Rosen

9:00- News
9:10-American

History

with

l

INew

I

Student Review's Forthcoming Issue 1 Educational Units
Srmu, .,1111
Has Photography , Prose, Poetry and Art
t•:du,·at11111

,\fl :;tud1•nts µ1;111111111:
tc• 1•111·11II
thl' Jumnr
(;1•111h1,11o
•
l'l\l(t•kslo1111I t •,,u, In
3n :1:r1 Cl t:?'!,uut l~l­
I l•:tt111•:1h1\0
li:!'! • lt•adm~ In •·•·l'ltfw. ,11011 r..r
1,•11c·h111i:(.
lllUSI .. 1&lt;-.11· 1(1,, rn11,,11m
jlrtw1•dllft' .
in

;; OO-On Campus with Bob Gotes-

5:00--0 n Campus

PAGETHIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 1, 1963

Mr.

Wilson
10: 00-Sound of Broadway · and
Hollywood, Host Ed Atif. Motion
Picture soundtrack of Rodgers
and Hammerstein's "Oklahoma''
Gordon MacRae and Shirley Jone~
1l: 00-Headline.s and Sign OU

By LORNA WALLAat
The New Student Review started
publi cation last October. The idea
of such a camp us publication. how­
ever, goes back murh further than
lha1, The founders of the New
Student Review prev iously publish ­
ed two unsuccessful magazines, the
Alternative and the "R". The
Review evolved !rom these pub•
lications.
The Alternative included articles
nul'lear disarmament.
on Cuba,
atheism, as well as poetry and
short storil.'s. The magazine &lt;:eased
publka1ion due to pressure from
the administration.
Some oC the
people on the magazine felt the
objection was due to the &lt;:onu-over­
sial subjects dealt with, and the
language used in the magaz.ine.
They also felt a publication of
this type was important to stimulate
the interests or the student body.
Consequently, there were rallies
and dinner meetings among the
members of the slatJ. An ''Honest
John'' pamphlet was distributed
deriding campus politicians and
fraternities.
As a result, a new magazine
emerged. Called (be ''R", it upheld
the policies previously established
by the Alternative. The "R" raised
more controversial Issues. Two
Issues of the publication came out ,
mimeographed
because campus
facilities could not be used.
At the begiMlng of the fall sem­
ester '62 the first issue of the New
Student Review came out. It took
a long time for the constitution
to be approved. The Publications
Board delayed recognition because
of a vague, ambiguous, poorly writ­
ten &lt;.'O
nstitution and failure on the
part of the staff members of the
magazine to appear at board meet­
ings. Another factor was the tear
that this publication would inlringe
upon · the territory or an already
established campus literary publi­
catio n, Manuscripts
.
The sta11 of the magai:ine felt
that members of the Publications
Board were attempting to censure
materia l and oppose the presence
of such a controversial magazine
on campus. The Publications Board,
they felt. wanted an exclusively
camp us publlcation, which the N­
Student Review was not.

Under Gordon Mc.-Cormlck the

New Student Review was a libt•ral
p1•riodlcal, although it accepted
artides covering the whole ~pan
or political ideologies.
Last January when GordQll Mc­
Cormick krt the campus tht posi­
tion o! editor was assumed by Tom
Berdine. The New Student Review
then became primarily a campus
publication With little political em­
phasis. The shift wru. towards Iii•
eraturi-.
Mr. Silberman, fa,·ulty ad\•iso1
to lhe New Student R•vl•w last
year. ft&gt;lt, "given the obst11.rlcsor
the Cirst year, the,.l!!!_bllcatlon was
succe~ful. It had consistcn-. good
quality comparing Cavombly with
other C'ampus 1111blicationsor this
type which had prrvious cxprrience.
It provides somt'Uiing m•ccssary on
fhe university platform ror students
to express themsrlvcs on vitn l
issues and to expand academic and
artistic expression of students."
tncluded in I he (orthroming issue
is n section or photography, n prose
imt1ge by Daniel Zimmerman, a
one-act play by Michael Castro,
revil'w of Or. Ralph Maud's new

book on Dylan Thomas. poetry. nnd
art work.
Plans lor an urt porlfoll,, and
creative cover are underway for
Ihe rorthroming isu!'s. Students al'('
encouraged to submil any work
done in pen and ink. wutcr-color.
or ch.'lr&lt;'OIIIwhich can bl' repm­
c]u('ed by a pholo-o(fst't pl'Ot·css.
Art stall mcmll&lt;'rs are net'drd to
st'l!"ct material and to illustrat1•
poems nnd stones. Anyor1c• inter­
t.!5t~'&lt;I should contact Fran Michel
R~l-l~,SGor lc•avc• matf.'rlal nt 80)(
,JO Norton Union or the New Student
Review Office, Room 302, Norton.
Students suhmilti ng work in any
arra should follow thl' same pro­
ceduw. The dradline for the ne)(t
issue Is Nov. 15.

Applications
for the
1964 Freshman Orienta­
tion Committee can be
picked up starting
this
Friday, either at the
cand.ay cou11tcr or in
Room 205 Norton.

Barh studp1l1 shu11l&lt;I apJ)I\ n
nvoru ~'O'l Fo,1,•1• llall h~ Nm ,·m
h,•r i,. Onl) ~•11d,•nt~\I 1th a , nnm
l,11!1I' avt·rai::" ,11 !l t.lt .tlk)\ ,. 101•
••IIJ.'(ih
ll' to :&lt;PJIIY i\~ _.~,11
.,, th,·
1'&lt;11111'1•
11• Sl'I nr 1tppllr1,11on ll\r1ll1'
"'" ''' h,·,·11 1\•h1rnt'tt an 1111&lt;-r111'11'
\\'ill lw s&lt;'h1•dulrd.

011 S.111111111}
1)1•1•,•lllhf'I
' 7 ,1 h.,t
l " t'Y of (!'SIS \\Ill h,· 11tlnum~t••1·,·d
lo ~uphmnort's . Jl.)mor, ~,·runr,,,ind
..:rarlu11t
•• slud,•uts "h" a,, , 101,•n·,1
cd 111 pr(•p;lr111'~ 1il \t•rl&lt;'h In d,,
1 1 111111•y
nn,t ht)lh ~&lt;'hoot~.
Ot•n•ion~ ,·,1n,·,•rn111~npplli-11t1tms
\\lll ht• llllltlt· pr111r lo ad\l«'llll·nt
for tlw fifth St'ITIPMl'I' 11nd I\ 1ll h t•
Mailahlr in l'mvl'rsll~ C'oll&lt;'l:1· rl)r
1
snphnmorr~. All Olht•rs 11111
r1·1·1'h"I'
nnl1&lt;'&lt;
' of :11•
1!11nlnk,·n ,1n 1h,•1r ap­
pl!,•at:on by l,•tlrr. qur~uons ('llll
t· •rnini: avr1lkut10l'l fur lhC' tc,ti.
P)II) I~• l!ln•l'ltsl h'I lht• appro11ritl,/•
l 1niwrslty l'ollt'~&lt;' arl\'1~or or tht&gt;
Ofli('C' or T,•iu:hcr F:dut·11tiu11202
,
foster Hall ,

Meet Gerald Bourland

______
_______

,.._

__.--::;;

G5HE.RIDAW
SKISHOf

r

Computer Systems Associate at WE

3S21 SHERIDAN DRIVE

Gerald Bourland, B.S., Central Missouri State
College, '61, picked Western Electric because It
ottered many interesting and challenging oppor ­
tunities in his favorite fields-automation and data
processing. Gerald's work here consists of writing,
testing and documenting computer programs each one a different and exacting assignment.
Also of great interest to Gerald when he Joined
Western were the Company's numerous manage ­
ment courses and paid Tuition Refund Plan He
knows, too, that we'll need to fill thousands of su•
pervisory positions witpin the next few years. And
he's getting the solid experience needed to qualify.
Righi now, Gerald is working on a verification
sub-system for maintaining production control. It
consists of seven distinct computer programs that

TF 2-0IOO

Western
.,.

•

f

l.t. . •• ::.·.
.
•. ,•

•

•

lQU,61,. o,l'01t,UfHf'T

El~ctr/cM
u•, t.O•U

ANUFAcrvR,Na

operate as one routine which performs the !u nc­
tion of tying together and verifying forecasted with
actual customer orders .
If YoU, like Gerald Bourland , set the highest
standards for yourself, enjoy a challenge, and have
the qua11flcat1ons we're looking for - let's talk 1
Opportunities for fast-moving careers exist now for
liberal arts, physical science and business ma1ors,
as well ,as for electrical, mechanical and industrtal
engineers . f'or more detailed Information, get your
copy of the Western Electric Career Opportun ities
booklet from your Place.men! Officer. Or write
Western Electri c Company, Room 6405, 222
Broadway, New York 38, N. Y And be sure to
arrange for a personal interview when the Bell Sys
tern recruiting team v1s1tsyour camPUs.
ANO svPPLY uN,r oF rHE aE , .. s,,s,Ev

~

'e'

Prtncjpal m1nuf1ctunn1 tocat1cn, tn 13 c1tie-,• Ooe,-ttn1 cente rs 1nrn1ny of thH4 um• c1hH plu1 36 otP\«r, tnrouahovt th• U S
,E'.ll
ain••~"• ~ue,,ch Cente,. Princtton, N, J • Telell'e&gt;eCorp.,Slloltle,111.,
l&gt;ltl• Roe~. A,k. • Gan 1'4Q
.. t9~ Sro.o• lv, He,, Yo,_

�PAGE FOURTEEN

SPECTRUM

0

Friday, November 1, 1963

Delaware Previ ·ew

0

BullsMeetUndefeated
Delaware;
BlueHensSeekTenthStraightWin

1S~hedule Change

I\ ehangl" In the Universitv of
Buflulo 191
i3-64 varsity busk1:1ball
sr hl•dulr was unnountl.'d today by
UH Athlt-11,· Directur Jam es E.
l'c.•tillc~.
.
Cal holit· Unil'C'rslty, from Wash•
in1-:lun, D.C. will play UB on Janu111·.v 11th at Memorial Auditorium ,
Huflal o Thr gumr will bC'part of
11 Canisius
Collt'gc doul)lrhPadPr
pro~ram .
( 'u thnlit· U. rrplaces Buc-km•II on
th&lt;· Buffalo sc-he&lt;lult!.
The dash bclwrc-n the Bulls ancl
the Carclmals will he th ri r first
mei-llnl(.
Th e Buffalo sd 1t:'dule now com-

qunnerhnck Dave Zolak, a 6-foot
193-Jl(mnder from Donora, Pcnnsyl1·,mia. Thi' lkn s' siwiak11llcr has
amassed 513 yards rushing and
pnssln, a l1gurc )n rgcly due lo his
l'Xl'l'lknt 1'0mplct Ion avcrngr. - 26
of 42 n!tt•m1Jts, or 61.9%. This
mdlld&lt;'s six touchdown and six of
Rix conversio n ucrials.

By ALAN NEWMAN
The UB Bulls travrl south to­
morroY. lo mt&gt;el the po11wlul Dela­
" arr Blue liens a lter n wrck of
11,11C'ti11ty.Delawarr &lt;5-0&gt;, rated
firs t in the nation nmong the smnJI
,·ullrgcs,
will be 1rying for IL~
11•nlh strnight vktory.

This will ht' the rubb&lt;•r mn.11-h
Miki• Brown, the University of
1&gt;r1wccn the two 11•11111~:
tlir ~cries
Odr1wn1~'•s outstanding hnlfba ck , is
~land s e1 en at on!' 1,111 ap 1rcr.
,·urrntly enjoyi ng his best seaso n.
f,r1M ~CUSOM g:11111·s:m IJB nvcr­
m111ca 1% dcft-c1t (111what has In five games, he has gained 546

pit•!"', shows a total ol 22 games :
S N Clerk Gymnasium
on th,
l'IIITIPUS , 5 II! ~.1emorlnl Auditorhun
and 9 on th~ l'O:ld.
Th r season's opener !or the Bull,
i~ on Nov. 301h agains t Butra k,
Stal • at i\lt:mu,•ial Aud!torium.

• Anyone interested in
writing sports for the
Spectrum can do so by
signing their name and
phone number on a list
at the Spectrum office
sport desk. Experienced
writers are preferred;
however, this is not a
necessary requirement.

Poise 'n Ivy

CAPTAIN PAUL CttESMORE

Inc.

1116ElmwoodAve., One Block from State University College

GRAND
OPENING
'AnInvitation
lo University Co-eds
ToViewOurNewCollection
of
Women's
Sportswear

BILL HOPKINS

Shlp'n S hol'C!
Adler Socks
MJ1C11hor
e Ola..~slcs

more. BiUed as Philbin's equal by
the Blue Hen's publkity depart •
mcnl , Captain Chesmore may be M
obstntlc lo the strong running at­
tack of the Bulls.

9.1 SPRINTER · HALFBACKMIKE BROWN was Oelawar!''s

leading

gro und gainl'r in 1961 and 1962.
tume&lt;I out to be typical fashion),
S&lt;'O
ring two \QUl'hdowns in 1hr final
p{'r!od ror n 20 • l!l vktory OVl'r the
19b'2 Larnb&lt;'rt Cup tt•am. Both drives
were dircctt:'d by Jolm S!ofn - 1hr
last ta lly coming on a 2-ynrd smash
through lhc line by' Long J ohn
with 36 se&lt;•onds rcmu ining ,

ya rds in TJ carries r01· a 7.5 aver­
agC', while s&lt;•orlnl( nine toµchdowns
,md thre e two-point convl.'rslons for
60 points. He is presently ratt-d as
top nmning bac k in the Middle
Atlantic Confl.'rcnce. Brown, along
with juni or halfba ck Bill llopk:ins,
s hou ld prol'e lo be a nem esis to
the IJB defensiv e squad .

Titis Yt"ar tht' Blut' lien s hold

whL~over Lehigh l:!O-Ol,G,•llysburg

UB will be gulng into the game
a~ a one touchdown underdog. Badly
batter1.'CI,
.
alt hough victorious over
Boston two weeks ago, a Buffalo
win wiU hinge upon the ability o(
Stoia lo ovcrt'Omc his Injured shouJ.
rler. With Cimba out or action th&lt;'
same will hi' a true test of UB
resc-rve )lOWt?r.

PeNODAJ

Ca.rol Rodg ers

Sporlswfl8J'
Ka yse r Lingeri e
Berkshire Hose

Jan e Oolby
Century Sportswea.-r

Browsers Invited
1.:,jj...__ __

1

Coffee and ?

Me
_ e_t_ Su
_ry
~_ Q
...:....
__

_

___

_ w_HI be· served•

Poise 'n Ivy
Phooe: 186-001 1

Inc,

1086 Elmwood Ave.

End Tom Harri son who has bt"en
mrryl nl( the? brunt of thl.' pass rc--­
t·eil'i ng load, has ten receptions
for 305 ya rrls (md fnur TDs

lli4·181, Lata yt&gt;lh.' &lt;61-0l, Ohio Uni­
Vt&gt;rslty (!..'9,
121. and Conm'cticut
&lt;:!6-Hl for a phl'l10menul avt•mgl'
nr 42 poin ts per gnml' .

C.tlllng lhl• defcnsil'C sil?llals (or
Coa&lt;·h Dave Nl'lson's Wi11gl'&lt;l-T Dl'l.1wa1'&lt;' will he 191i2All-MAC and
attack will 1&gt;,,dlre&lt;!ll'd by senior
Littlc--AIII-America takl e, Paul Ches-

SixGameStatistics
PASSING
John Stora
Don Gilbert
P. Gcnngcr
Team Total:

22 of 5-1 fi int.
8
20 0
I
3 2
31 77 ll

375 yds.
108
I~
196

~'TDs

lTD

:•t ·.~ : ...'~-·
!• .

3TDs

RECEIVING
L:,rry CC?rgl,•)
D,mms Pr'lykuta
IJl'nms Prt)·kula
Jim Rvan
Bob Edward

I lor :?4 yds.
l.
0
I
I

Tnm ButlP1'
DH'k Condino
l;,,rn Pawloski
Davl: Nkhols
&lt;;,•rry LaFountain
T,•am Total.

i9

Ii

~)

:, for 11:! vd;;.
7
!i9 •

4:,
:!
I

ti5

12
t!lli

:n

RUSHING
John Stoia

,Jun Burd

.J:m R),lll

IJon t;llh..rt
John Ci111ha
Bob Ed"°aNt

,.() 231;~-~ :,~l~ITD
11, 57
19 ITD
::~ '!!.' 1~ ~!ti lTll
::o110 II :l9 111&gt;
:,o1:•1 I IS'J

'

..,

Bl'FFALO Tl \\I
flrsl dmrns
'.1:ol.,of rushes
Net y!Ls. rush111~
Passes attPmplt ·d
P-.;sses &lt;'Ompt,,,,,t
Interception., It~
Net yds. passm~
Total plays
TOTAL OFFSE:-.;sf:
Peru-Jlll.'S
Yards Jl(.'nalize-:1
fumbk•,;

7h \

f17

Tc•.1111
Total ''!l'l 1,19~ 1:.'ti 1,1Ki791'0~
Torn 81111n ~!'t ll►1 l•l
00 JTl)s
:_)~ 7
llt&lt;.k t'ondino Ii
:!1
~' Ut•r111g1•r J
0
I -t
(, Hatk1•11·1t•1.3
0
12
12
l), Prlyln1l;i
.13 l:?S :? l~~i

tt-i guuw-..1

S9
'!9:'

1:ooi
77
31
12
•I~

:iii!!
1.;~,:1
:vi

:m

11 tlo..st 51

...

. . ..
. ..

'

..•.

:

buttons clown

••

.•'

the news

with Giveaway,
horizontal

stretch

•

and

• I

nylon•
cotton

Lhal takes lo action
while
tapered

iL keeps its
good looks.

OPP&lt;lNENTS.

Galey,LorJ

j~

~30
ti78
127
57
I&lt;

7li0
;1;,7
I 1:~
26

lSO
16 list !:!I

1107\1RllAl1\IAY,Nl·11')ORK

18,N Y.

A D1v1S1onor 11~irt1nfl16ulnduslncs
•~ -HC MSTAi'ND

STRtTCH

NYLON

~

L

�Friday, November 1, 1963

SPECTRU

_ M_________

_ ___

_

PAGE FIFTEEN

HOOPSTERSSTART INTRASQUAD DRILLS
ly ALLANSCHOLOM
Aller three weeks of preliminary
drills and t ryoilts, the University
of Buffalo Vursily bosketball team
has bei!n reduced lo its numerical
playing size. Head c:oach Leonard
Serfuslini plans to c1trry 16 players
this year, Bil increase of live over
Jasl season. "! 'his Is mainly due to
thr outstanding performances turn­
ed in thus far by many sophomores
up from Inst year's [reshman tenm.
Those making lhe V a rs I t y
indude:
Sophomores: Goodwin.
1311r1h.
Bardo. Bevalaqu,1, Goldstein.
llctzel, Poe and Smith; Junio rs:
Basdumgel. Bur.zuni, Kerachelski,
Manno ond Thomp~on: Seniurs:
Billowis, Hanley nnd Harvey.
Coach $(,rfustini is pnrticularly
pleased with the work or 6'6" Bill
Billowis. who he says is looking
m1wh sl ronger nnd faster than
••1·t•rbefore. Also. F'rosh high scorer
Norn-ood Goodwin is ready to go
full speed after a pre-sca$On groin
mjury hud sidelined him for the
,rwning weeks of practice.
Conch Se1·fuslinl expl11ined his
rMsons for carrying such a large
,c1uad saying, "The sophomores
have shown a lot or potential and
huve a iohg bi1sketbnll caree r in
!l'ont of them."
' St'l1edule for this wreks praclice
,cssio11s, a rc a series of intrasqu ad
:111dfreshm an scrimmages, during
which lhe coach will be able to
cvlllunte individual players under
,imulaled plnying conditions.
1''reshman team coach Edward
Muto will carry 15 players on this
ymr 's squad, about the same num­
ber as last year. Thus far, Coach
Mu!o has been impressed by the

play or Dt•nnis O'Cunnor, Bol, Mur
111th,• l-'1ush pla) ,•1i:h1t•,·11
:.;,111u••
Un. Rl'in Valdo,· und Kt•n Bryucr.;. i•lc•n•n on th,• 111:11!1111I~1•11•11
The latter two ure the "Bi,:" men humr.
of 1hr s11m1clal ti'2". Thr Cnal'h
Th,• \'i111&gt;1!) "·h,·dul, """ 1•.,111
rC'ulitt'S that "this )'Plir's !cam p!rt&lt;'. 101ats '!! ,:.urn•~. 1·11:ht.,/
11hirh \\lll l1t•ph1)1•d,,r C'l.11kC)m
is a wry i.hort one." bu1 add,,
"wr'II make up ror our lurk oC 1111slu111
, fl\, , .,1 ;\ll'1111•no1I
,\111111111
sizl' with dt•ft•nsl' and spt·,•d."
111111,
amt nin,· "" !h,• rn ut lh,·
Tlw Jo
'n•shml' n srht•1h1lt• nrwns . r1\'P da1t•, 111,\J,•11111r1.,1
\1ot,1.,r111rn
n,i:ht ,t.,1,1oi,
01·1·,,111b1.•r11g;Jinsl
~
J&lt;'n•donlu ,11 inl'IU!lt•rour ,&lt;;,1111l'do1,1
Chtrk G) n11msiu11t. Also on tlw h1•ath•r,,.r,•;1t11n111:
l II in 1111,•1:,1111,
sl111,,Im· Dct'l'nlbPr ur&lt;• l\ilr,•d, Si
1111!
C:1111,lusill lh,, ,,1111
r ,111&lt;1
'""'
Syr11c·us,•.;on(l Cnrnrll l'hur,1!11) n11(hl,t,,1111!,
Ii, nl,•1 ,11111
1.10111111•11111r1•,
- ;11) il\WI). 1\l hmm-. !hr Bah)
rtw F11•sh111.111
r, ·,111 I 111•llull,
Nm1:a111, ill ;\ll'mor1.,1 11111
nrwn th,• "'""111 I ,111\bl11,1&lt;1
Uull, 1111'1'1
'\mhhu-ium on Thursdny, DI'&lt;' 12
111111.tl
II\ .. 1 Bolf.11◄ 1 s1.,1, t111 ,.,,
·1, 1mr1 of a onuhlt• hM1h•1 111111 :o.,1 ;11,•111111
i,d .\wh1uri11 , ,,,.,., ..11,
11l11d1\\Ill lllt'C'l \'ilia
,11111:
1111•
s,•Jw,
111 'l ,1111
''') 111,h!
lht• \'ar~il)
lltl\',I
in th,• r,•11!ur,,t•t1n11,st 01t•1'·
louhll'·lll'Udl'l'S
,

.,I

--------=====

DRYCLEANING
FORWARDOONTHOMPSONpr!'pares lo shoot a~ Niagara pll1y1•rdl'l&lt;'ncl~
in last years t'Ontest

I

8 lbs. fo~$2.00
AT THE

One-Stop Service Center

COLLEGE
PIZZERIA
p

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Laundry - ,'hoe Repalrln1
Shoe, and Pu,..., Reflnl1hed
and Dyed
All Types of Ladle1' HNII 111
Stock for Replacement
or RHtyllllf

PlazaShoeRepair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
TF 6-4041

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Open 9 A.M! · 9 P.M.

MONDAY,NOV. 4th
SERVICE
G . fmdl,()plide,,

PlAZA

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IDrniltttnnal
&amp;port 3Juduts

One in n ciernciC'an &lt;'X&lt;'il•
mg idea takt•s uv~r lhc
imagination or the w~ll­
dresscd man with tmdtti,m•
,11, taste. i.e.. !he ~ladras
Sport J 1cke1 1hr Briti~h
SIriped drt•~s shirt,
0 ' C on n e I J. Lu~as and
Chell, who introdm•cd both,
puts the- selfsanw tm,nd ol
good imagination inro II~
1·ast rel.'c-nt mno1·alion-1h,
Rirh Camel Tom• Sport
Coat.
l'hl' fabric: A rui:i;nl
Scottish Herrrn,:bonl'.

YOU'LLLIKE
THEBETTER
TASTE
OFTHEBEER
BREWED
MEi•O·DRY

,\lade with 11ipp~
, t.t~lt'·ll'lllpliul,( d 1l·ddar
dtl't'W, e~pcC'iall~·J&gt;rl'p,,rcd for ~kDonalcl's,
&lt;:rillt&gt;d with jtm·y p1m.· bed hamburger ,

griu111d fresh daih . Served in st•conds ...
pipi11g hot and dc&gt;lietouson a llmsted bun,
\ld)onalcrs ... fnr dt•:rnlim•s~. CUll\'('llil'll{'e

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fh• dr1'1e-tn wllh fhe arch••

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I
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CHELF

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3240 MainSt.
TF6-4140

1385 NIAGARA FAL S BLVD.
½ MU. Ho,ti, ol SHIRIDAN DRIVEot MAPLEROAD
(AIIIKNt TIie lo.levenl Mell 1'1eao
)
0,.11 FrWey ell4 Setv,4ey v11tll I :00
Opeme4 .,_ ttie JEltltY IIOWNROUT COO .

�PAGESIXTHN

Friday, November 1, 1963

SPICTRUM

I I

Spectrum

*

Sports

*

11 ii II·· II

Gannon
UpsetsBuffaloHarriers; ln.tramurals
Lontrato
Errs-Costs
HimFirstPlaceI
1'

Sports Cirele
By ROCKY VERSACE

I~=~ i;~dr!~~ngrr:~e;:;~~~:i:~
S,gma Phi. In the Tuesday League ,
compiled an Impressive wideleated
ly TERltY SWEENEY
all the other top positions. Mac­
I record of 6-0. They were scored
Mas ter College won the meet.
upon in only on~ game. Alpha Ph i
II was a hot 83 degrees at Gannon
The UB freshmen were well rep­
Omega, second plac!' , has a 4-2
Coll!'gi--weathcr Which enl'Ollrages
rl'SCnted, with Dick Gfflllu finishing
rX"Ord Th~ result of the g.1mP be­
fourth. only five set"Onds behind
no distance nmner. But that was
tween SAM and A II E. wlll de
the old coune record. Ripple o!
only tne first bit of bad luck which
terminc whether SAM will limsh
Lemoyne s:1111teredthe record and
plngued the lavored Bulls Bll they
:n s~cond place.
won the freshman meet.
were upset 15• 40. The Bulls,
Ther e is a tie between Beta Si11
NOTES
ll'aveling without their lop runner
and Alpha Epsilon Pi for top honors
With the presence of cooler
Stu Katz, arrived at G1111nonlate
in the Thursday lengue. They are
and had no time to warm up. How­ weather we should see many better
both l'ndeknted.
The winner or
ever as the tellJTlli set out on the
th eir game, which was yesterday
runnfng times. The Bulls have
trlclcy ◄.4 mile Gannoncourse, UB's
w:11play Alpha Sig for the trater ­
been hampered by warm weather
Ed Lontrato sped far ahead of the
nlly championship.
most
or
the
season.
held. The course Is situnted in
The Mooners of !he Monday
After the poor showing at Gan­
such a way lhat it must be nm
l•1ague arc &amp;-0. In second plac e
twice to comp lete lhe full 4.4 miles.
non, which was particularly due
nr:? the Zygotes with a ~ l . Both
Lontrato , far ahead of everyone, to the cramped traveling conditions,
teams will play on Monday, Nov
4th a t 4:15.
Towe r
handed
Hem~
House its first defeat last week
20-0.Ht&gt;mmlngway House remain:;
In first pince with a S-1 record
If Tower defeats James House then
lhere wlll be a play-oU for firsl
place In Wednesday's league .
The Comer Court Crushers re­
maln In first plaee in !he Frida&gt;
lf'llgue. 4-0-1. The second plat', ·
IC?am is Crlspins. 2-0-3; and the 4
lortys are In third with a 3-1-1

Bulls
, HensClashIsthe AcidTest
;
UBOffenseLacks
Surprise
Element
As the 1963 football season approaches its final stage,
many of the nation's teams wilJ be encountering ''acid
test '' ccontests. And things are not much different at the
campuses of Buffalo and Delaware. To the University of
Buffalo, IJelaware represents what possibly could be the
-no!lt powerful team on the menu. Delaware has received
inuch national acclaim while romping through its schedule
in a very impres!l1ve manner
Averoging in the vicinity of
40 points ~ game, the Blue Hens have left their mark in
the small and major college ranks.
Uut if there is any team Delaware would like most to
comf)li&gt;tely demoli!;h it is Buffalo. First of all, last year
the Bulls handecl Delaware one of its few losses, an excit ­
ing com&lt;.' fr()m behind affair . Secondly, a decisive win over
t.he University of Buffal11 would practically insure for the
H1:ns the position of the nation's number one small college
team .

Tomorr ow'i; ila me is also of tremendous importance to
Buffalo. A wm over a team such as Delaware could cause
somt• ut the men picking Eastern ratings to pay closer al­
lt·ntwn ti, the Bulls, while• a loss would end all hopes for
national rl'cognilion in 106:3.
As mentioned. for Buffalo, the Delaware game will
pruve to be the "acid tesf'. But if the Bulls have any inten­
tions of meetin g this test successfully, things will have to
change offensively, A more varied and lively offense will
b-.·needed. If one cou ld view -the Buffalo football games
from the press box he could witness many of the occupants
successfully calhng Buffalo's offensive plays before they
occur. Fullback through the line, halfback ar ound the end,
pass, and punt Sl'em tt&gt; be the favorite calls, in that order.
The formerly successful surprise play, the deep reverse, is
no longer .a surp rise. but old news. In fact, Buffalo's radio
nnnouncer Bill Mazzer correctly called the rever se while
broadcasting the Boston game. It seems that Buffalo uses
the same plays under the same circumstances merely be­
cause they once worked , But as everyone knows, a surprise
1:; only a surprise once.

If sideline observers and newsmen are contin ually suc­
cessful in calling Buffalo's offensive plays, it seems that
opposing teams should at least be able lo equal this. These
teams have the benefit of movies and countless information
from scouting reports. So when Tom Butler gets sent in
t)II third down with long yardaf:e the opponents
are looking
for the long pass. And when Jim Ryan is sent in under the
same conditions, the defenses are set for either the deep
r1•verse or the flat pass, The abilities of these iathletes are
, ,1ual 1zcd by the lack of uniqueness nnd consequently 1.he
1 ntirc offen sive effort becomes more difficult
to take effect.
A quick snap and pitchout to the tailback going around
,•nd would wreck a team that WM set for a straight line
plungl' . A halfbark Jaunt with a pre-planned lateral could
pick up many extr:i yards. Since Bob Edwards played some
high school ball at the quarterback position and since Jim
Ryan played his entire Junior year at quarterback, the half­
back pass could be quite effective in loos ening up the de­
fenses. But these plays and others like them do not exist,
at least they have never been attempted by the Bulls .
This writer does not profess to be an expert at the
st rategy of offensive football, nor is he attempting to de­
grade or ridicule any member or person affiliated with the
University of Buffalo football team. He is merely slating
the e,•er so obvtQus facts. Delaware will be waiting for the
fullback over the middle, halfback around tht end, and the
pass, as have other teams . A more varied and lively of­
fense on the oart of Buffal o could add much more zest and
effectiveness "to Buffalo's game.

BuffaloHockeyTearnto Hold Raffle
To raJR' money for lhe team .
tilt- hockey bulls ~ holding a ruJ
0l' The ti~ pnze will be dmner
nnd entertainment for two at the
·rown Casino; ~"Ond JJrlil' wtll Ix•
tl''O quarts of CUtty Sllrk; third
J1riu is two tickets to tht&lt;Totollln
Maple- lA.&gt;u1hock"Y 1t111nl'; 1111d
fourth 11rl~ I~ 11 ltook of paases

to the Put Put miniature goll
&lt;'OUrse Tickets will be on ale at
2 (or S ~ or 10 for $1.00.
Tht' tC'am has rt'('('ntly l"el',!lved
sd 100I rl'&lt;'Ognilion and L'l"l'&lt;llt to­
ward IO'nl as a course . The hN'key
,quad Is atlJI in r1ffd ol members
AeyoN' lntt'rested In joimn11 i~ uri­
l'&lt;i to ao eo.

r 'C'Ord.
The handball entriC's are due by
1'hursday . November 7. There will
b~ both a singles and doubles
toumam ent. The singles and doublr
matches are on Monday and Tues
day at 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. Doubles
w:U be on Thursday a t 4 and 5
ri.m. The tournamen t will start on
Monday , November 11, 1963.
All basketball entrll.'S are du,·
CltOSS COUNTRYTEAM - Fl'ont, L to R: Lontrato , Hesel, Kal2, Ste."TI. by Monday November 25th. PIA )
wU ~in
the week after '!banks
Back L to R: Anderson (manager), McGowan (manager), Suedmeyer,
g:vlng vocation . The fraternity
Muel 1
or, Hoffman, Coach •·1sher.
INlgue will be on Wednesday an&lt;I
Thursday and the Independent ~
stopped after clrcUng lhe course an attempt Is being made to provide
wiU play on Monday evenings. All
one&lt;', thinking the race wns over.
buses tot all away meets.
leagues are limited to seven team s
As a result Lontrato broke his
and will be !illed on first com,·
Saturday, Nov. 9, the UB harriers
stride and finished ninth with a
time of 28.S. Anderson or Gannon will nin in the annual New Yor k first serve basis.
placed 11rst with a time of 26.39.3. State meet at Delaware Park. 'Jbe
first ten runners to finish wlU have
Oun WeiUenbach, Ray Mueller,
a chance lo compete in the national
Bill Suedmeyer and Bob Holtman
cross - country meet a t Michlgan
rlnlshed sixth, seventh, elgth, and
Slate. Stu Katz should be a shoe-in
tenth respectively for UB.
lo make the trip.
8y DAVID E. HAMPTON
Saturday, Delaware Park was the
The Bulls travel lo Rochester
sight or the Canlsl\15 Invllotional.
The University of Bullalo's swim ·
next TuesdllY to compete against
The Bulls finlshcd eighth of the
ming squad Is looking forward lo
R.I.T. This will be senior Cam
twen ty-five teams represented, and
the upcoming season be&lt;-auseit
W&lt;'IUenbach's last coUege dual
Stu Katz placed ninth . Lally of
wiU be one of the toughest sched ·
mee t. Weifenboch, who has been
Cortll.llld, and Burns of Buffalo State
ules ever. Although UB can expe,: l
a key figure this season ts the only
were the only AmeriCflll ruMers
keen coml)&lt;'tition ii has depth an,!
ahead or Katz as Canadians took
l'\lMer not returning next year.
experience in great abundance. M
cording to Coach Sanford , ''this is
the best team I have evl'r coach l&lt;l
In the fifteen yea.rs while at IJB"
The fact th1.1t the BuUs have lost
only three seniors, along with th•·
promising prospect of sophomoJ'I·,
has lead Coach Sanford to th1,
I~ TOM KENJARSKI
opumlstic viewpoin t. All positi ons
UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
are filled at least two men deep
The Universlty of Bu.Ualo goU
Points
The team is lead by Senlor Car►
CUrt Siegel
team reconled Its ninth consecu­
3
lain Jim Decker, R tht'l.'e ('\Cn 1
Brownil' Kopra
uve dual._victoey or the year against
3
man . He competes in the 200 y.u 1
the St. Bonaventure golf team by a Fred Berman
1~
Individual medley , 200 yard ba~~
Kearons
Whalen
score of 14 to 4 last Frida,y at the
3
stroke, and is also a member o!
Ed Nusblatt
Audubon GoU Course . It was the
3
the 400 yard free style rela,y squa d
Cary Eidlin
twentieth consecutive dual victory
½ Eight sophomores up from las'
over a two year span Ior the UB
Y&lt;'at's !rosh squad have made lh•
team .
14
team. An example of this group i~
Mark Grashaw, a backstroke mnn
ST. BONAVENTURE
Today, the UB goU team will be
v.·ho has broken all exlsUng re­
tryb,e tor ill! aecond straight un­
Points
cords in the event as II freshman
defeated season In a row when it
0
Conch Sanford also expecls ovi
plays Its last mnlch or the year Brian Kelly
Paul Fitzgerald
0
standing pcrformB.ll&lt;"eslrom Mill•'
agains t MrMaster at the Audubon
Dick Bums
l¼ Schoem, Ray Troppman , Irvin,·
Gi)tl Course . Head roach, Dr.
Jim Breslin
0
Puls. and Mike Pirkers .
Leonard Serfustml
commented,
Craig 'Ross
0
The seuon opens November •
"McMaster has already beaten St.
Belak
Ted
2½ at Buffalo Slate where the Orang•
Bonavimture and Niagara so the
men will be hosting the Upp,
Nov. 1• match should prove to be
4
New York State Relnys . U 8 . will
a real test . II shouldbe a really
b~ compeUng against eleven oth•
close match."
~ low medalist In ll1e match
schools for the tllle 111edual co
was CUrt Siegel. who lied his own
lndlvldual results or tut week 's
p.'11tion gels under way [)ecemt•
match Include :
l'&lt;IUtse record with a 65.
7 as U-B. !Ilk~ on Cort land S1nt,

Mermen Prep For

Heavy Schedule

GolfSquad's
WinOverBonaventure
Extends
TwoYearSkeinto Twenty

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE
LEON LEWIS
ON
STU KATZ

yobk

at

buvtjuo
U.B. B.U.

SPECTRUM

(See Page Thirteen)

VOLUME 14

•

REVIEW
(See Page Fourteen)

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 1963

No. 8

Student Senate Elections Today
By BARBARA STRAUSS

Senate Holds Meeting
Russ Goldberg Resigns in Protest;
Campus Political Parties Disturbing'
Russell Goldberg, Senator from University College and
Senate Parliamentarian, resigned his position Tuesday evening at the meeting of the Senate.
Mr. Goldberg stated he felt that “this was the only
way to protest the state of affairs on campus and the senate,”
referring to the two-party system. His resignation was accepted, being effective as of the end of the meeting
of the resignation
senate hard.
Mike
Shapiro, Campus Alliance leader,
stated “Something is very wrong
with the Senate. Mr. Goldberg is
valuable to the senate and the
University as a whole.” Gerald
The

struck

news

the

tion and election as vii
of the committee. Both will organize and oversee the orientation program for the coming fall. Brent
Steele headed the committee this
year.

Freshman Amendment

4

A

An amendment to the Senate Constitution giving the freshman class
representation on the senate was
introduced at the meeting by Robert Finkelstein, Noreen Hirsh, and
Mr. Goldberg. In the past, the
class was without representation
in the senate. The proposal was
introduced to rectify this situation.
Voting on the amendment will take
place at the next meeting, in two

Robert Pacholski, of the Elections Committee, has announced the following candidates
as being eligible to run for senator in the Student Senate elections to take place today:
University College; Jean Traylor Jr., supported by United Students, Alan Chasky
from Campus Alliance, and Maury Zeplowitz, an Independent. Candidates from Arts &amp;
Sciences: Michael Schwartz, supported by Campus Alliance, and Alvin Epstein, supported bv
United Students, Medical School: Robert Schnitzler has the bi-partisan support of both
Campus Alliance and United Students. Business Administration: William Berger, with United
Student support, and Neale
Goodman, represented by Campus

led with his year of student government activities, have given him an
understanding of organization. He
believes that the Student Senate
should pattern itself after "the old
fashioned town meeting, where
people can voice their opinions directly to those representing them."

mWMT

weeks.

Catanzaro, United Students leader,
remarked "It grieves me deeply
that the two parties can’t work together constructively. I hope that

through Mr. Goldberg’s resignation
the organization will wake up
for the senate is more important
than any individual body on campus."
Berger Orientation Chairman
Bill Berger, member of the Welfare Committee, was elected chairman of the Orientation Committee.
Mr. Goldberg accepted the nomina—

der the chairmanship of Jean Traylor, is working cooperatively with
the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People in
a protest demonstration against
General Motors, where there is alleged job discrimination. During
the protest busses will be available
"in front of Tower at 6 p.m. to take
the protesting students to the demonstration. In view of the recent
actions of the Civil Rights Committee, Mr. Traylor stated that he
thought that the committee should
be given a permanent status. The
committee was organized two years
ago.

Lindsay Talks on Nationalism
In 1st Fenton Lecture of Year

was appropriated.

This also occurs

in appropriation for U.N.

funds.
Britain and France show this same
tentativeness when it comes to
support Atlantic institutions.
Yet nations are also interdependent, and he acknowledged that
"when France sneezes, Europe
catches cold.” This was illustrated
in January of this year when General De Gaulle unexpectedly refused to admit Great Britain into
the Common Market. He quoted
Paul Spock of Belgium who refers
to January 14, 1963 as the "Black

Monday of European and American policy," dooming the relations
of Great Britain and the European
Community. The Common Market,
which De Gaulle jeopardized, had
started European unification. Western unity ought to be the chief
concern of the United States.
Western Unity Essential
Why is it essential for unity of
the West to be our number one
concern? Mr. Lindsay argued that

JEAN TRAYLOR
Alan Chasky was extremely act-

ive in high school government. He
was social chairman of his freshman class, vice president of his
sophomore and junior class, and
president of his senior class. He
was also parliamentarian of his
high school student association. Although he limited his activities in
his freshman year in order to establish a firm scholastic foundation,
Mr. Chasky was a member of the
National Student Association, publicity and activities committee of
I.F.C., and a member of the Campus Alliance public relations committee. He is also on the Spring
Arts Committee. He believes that
the "Senate should be an instrument of the students and that its
essence should not be diluted by

—

(Continued

on

Page 2)

1961 graduate

a

MAURY ZEPLOWITZ
This leaves the other
4900 students unrepresented due to
the party line voting that has been
displayed in this year’s Senate. As
an INDEPENDENT candidate I am
responsible to the entire University
College student body, not to either
political parly. The decision is
yours:
Independent, unbias representation, or a continuance of
'party line voting’."
Michael Schwartz, Arts and Sciences candidate, was active in numerous high school activities. He
was a member of the All-state
choir, a class represehtative, and
reporter for his school paper. As
a college student, he is a member
of the Spring Arts Committee and
the Campus Alliance’s banquet comorganization.

mittee chairman. Mr. Schwartz
elaborates: "Although my activities
have been limited, they have been
varied and well-concentrated. I believe in completing a job to the
utmost of my abilities rather than

i

,lBh ¥

ALAN CHASKY

Maury Zeplowiti, a graduate of

Amherst Central High School, is
a sophomore in University College.
At Amherst, he was both secretary
and temporary treasurer of The
Young Democrats of Amherst political group. He was also a member
of his high school’s Honor Society.
At UB he is a past Vice Chairman
of the United Students Party and
a member of Alpha Epsilon Pi.
"There are 5100 students in University College. Of these approximately
200 are actively represented because they are either members of
the United Student Party, the Campus Alliance Party, or a Greek

o(

N.Y.U. Heights,

At the Heights, he was Editor-inChief of the Pre-Medical and PreDental journal a member of the
Glee Club, and an active participant in the Student Governing Board
At UB he is a member of Phi
jedicai Praterratemity of which
Chi Medical
he is chapter editor. "Being a junior in the school of medicine,"
states Mr. Schnitzlcr, "I have seen
three years of progress (?) in the
school and its government I don't
believe that one person can change
things, but a start is needed; I
hope I can supply that start."
William Berger has entered the
campaign for senatorship Irom
the Business School with a long
list of qualifications to support his
candidacy, Mr. Berger has pre-

i.

WILLIAM BERGER

viously represented University College as a senator. Last year he
also served as chairman of the
Welfare Committee, and was most
responsible for changing the calen-

dar, extending Christmas Vacation
and Intersession. During the summer, Mr, Berger was a delegate
to the National Student Association Convention at Indiana University. as a representative from the
Student Senate. This year he is
serving his second year as a memb t of the financial committee and
is involved in plans to establish
a Student Discount Service on
campus.

personal prejudice.”

the rise of neutralism is caused
by the belief that Communism
might rise. If uncommitted nations
could see a powerful and united
West, they would be more confident in the free world and thereby
turn to the west. “Americans must
remember that financial foreign
aid is just one aspect of foreign
policy,” he asserted. Unity is a
greater aspect in winning over this
“Two-thirds
uncommitted area
of the globe in population and in
poverty.”
Western unity would also help us
to take advantage of the Sino-Soviet
split. If we stand together now
while they are disunited we can
only gain. And yet there is “no
feeling of real partnership.”
New NATO
Mr. Lindsay then proposed a
solution, an Atlantic Parliament,

!

"The Atlantic Alliance has been
coming apart at the seams," stated
Representative John Lindsay (R.,
N.Y.) at this year’s first Fenton
Lecture on Oct. 17 in Capen Hall's
Butler Auditorium.
Nationalism is becoming more
rampant now, unfortunately. And
it is, according to Lindsay, the
dominant force throughout the
world. He observes the virulent
forms of nationalism as reflected
in Congress: "American isolationist pressures are growing on the
floors of the Senate and the House.”
An example is the "unwise, unnecessary, and dangerous” across
the board slash of the foreign aid
bill. Less than half of what the
Administration thought essential

j

By GERRI GOLDBERG

dent Discount Service.
Robert Schnitiler, the only candidate from Medical School, if, a

ing in the Navy, he held the post
of 3rd class Petty-officer, a position
of leadership which he feels, coup-

Civil Rights Protest
The Civil Rights Committee, un-

RUSSELL GOLDBERG

the Senate Newsletter and the Stu-

Alliance.
Jean Traylor has had experience
in the Senate as chairman of the
Civil Rights Committee. When serv-

joining every available committee."
Al Epstein has had experience
in administration mainly derived
from his executive position in the
Young Democrats Club of UB. He
is an active member of the Debate
Society and is a varsity debater.
Mr. Epstein is familiar with the
operations of a legislative body
such as the Student Senate and has
experience in political affairs. Some
of the policies which he feels the
Student Senate should accept are

MMjii
M0f
ALVIN EPSTEIN

NEALE GOODMAN
Naale Goodman's college activities include the office of Treasurer

of

the

Business

Administration

Council in 19G1, I.F.C. Activities
council member, a news and special events writer for WBFO, member of the treasurers committee ot
Norton Union, a member of the
communications committee of Ur
Student Senate and Assistant recorder of his fraternity. Beta Sigma Rho. Mr. Goodman believes ;n
"creating a closer contact and in(Continued on Page 2)

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Visiting Prof. From Ceylon
Eager To Talk To Students
By STEVE BANYASZ
W. S.

Kanmaratne, visiting
professor from Ceylon was interviewed this week. Dr. Kanmaratne,
a professor of Buddhist culture at
the University of Ceylon, is in the
United States for the first time.
Dr,

Our university is the first of four
Dr. Karunaranc will visit. During
his stay at Buffalo Dr. Kanmaratne will appear on the University of

Buffalo

Round

Table

Television

Program as an expert on South

East Asian Affairs.

He received his BA in Sanscrit
and Poli at the University of Ceylon. These are dead languages of
the Eastern culture comparable to
our Latin and Greek. Dr. Karunaratne attended the University of
Ix)ndon

MFC to Hold Hootenanny for Funds

Dr. Kanmaratne believes religion
should be a means of unifying people rather than creating discord as
it has in the past. He pointed out
that all major religions have something in common specifically "love
thy neighbor.” He believes that we
should utilize this to bring together
the various people of the world.
He believes there should be less
dogma and more social consciousness. Religion should not be a separate entity, but a vital part of
the social fabric.

American Foreign Policy

Dr. Kanmaratne has a wife and
three children in Ceylon. His wife
will join him shortly in the U.S.

where both he and his wife,

a former pupil of his, received their

doctorates. Dr. Kanmaratne, who
studied on a scholarship, lectured
at Cambridge and Oxford Universities as well as nearly all Far Eastern and European countries.
CEYLON: A Growing Democracy
Ceylon is a large island of 12
million inhabitants, off the coast
of India, The tropical island s most
important products are natural rubber, coffee and tobacco.
The young nation is in the process of building up a light industry
and trying to increase its rice output which is a staple in the Ceylonese diet.

Ceylon has a parliamentary democracy and is one of the most stable countries in that turbulent part
of the world. Of the 150 representatives only four are communist. Dr.
Karunaratnc. who is very active in
public life, was the vice president
of a socialist party called the Peo-

Friday, October 25, 1963

In ordei to raise funds for additional scholarships fdr students oi
Millard Fillmore College, the evening school division of New York
State University at Buffalo,
the
Millard Fillmore College Student
Association is sponsoring a Hootenanny, Nov. 2, 1963 at the Roycrolt
Inn in East Aurora, donation $2.00;
free refreshments will be served.
The feature attraction of the
Hootenanny is a group from Canada

lack of cultural communication.
The Americans have failed to create a realistic picture of themselves. There should be a greater
export of realistic American films,
designed to familiarize the people
with our way of life.
Furthermore, the U.S. should extend more technical aid with emphasis on training of the technician,
engineer and scientist who are sorely needed.
He added that the U.S. should be
more discriminating in her choice
of proteges. By supporting dictators and tyrants America is becoming synonomous with corruption and
political and social injustice.
The major problem is that the
U.S. is eoncentarting on the military front without exploiting other
possibilities.

He states: "War against
communism cannot be won in a purely
military sense. It must be won in
an economic, political and cultural
sense."

Dr. Karunaratnc states that the
American students are the hardest
working and internationally oriented students in the world. He is
looking forward to meeting and
talking with many students.

Tickets maybe purchased at the
door, in the ticket booth, in Norton
Lobby or by writing New York
State University at Buffalo, Millard
Fillmore College Student Ass n, Box
H., Norton Hall. Buffalo 14, New
York.

By LINDA LEVENTHAL
Dr. Charles R. Fall, professor
in the School of Education, will be
the first guest in the lecture series
sponsored by the Debating Society.
The series, to be continued through
out the year, will be centered

Senate Holds Election Today
(Continued

Dr Kanmaratne found a number
of things in our foregin policy that
need correction.
One of the greatest faults is our

known as the "Quarrymen", and
Bleich, There
will be other groups, who will be
named at a later date.

a Buffalo girl, Diana

Fall to Speak
On Education

terraction between faculty and students of the School of Business.”
As a part of the candidates campaign programs, a discussion was
held on October 23rd at which the
representatives from Arts &amp; Scienc-

es, and University College met with
students to discuss vital issues. Between 6 and 9:00 p.m. on Wednesday, an "Election Central" was
sot up with facilities available for
congregation of the candidates and

Jheir

from

Page

A

B
C

—

—

—

1)

United Students
Campus Alliance
Independent

The committee will employ an
election clerk-judge system whereby the clerks will be free to be
concerned only with the actual voting process while the judge on duty
will take. care of the maintenance

of order within the election area.

supporters.

The official fall election of senators is being held today from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. The election will
be held in Room 17, the table
tennis room in Norton, lor university College, Arts &amp; Sciences and
Business Administration candidates.
There will also be a booth at
the Medical School and an absentee
ballot system will be set up there
for juniors and seniors that are
off campus.
The allignment of the ballots have
been patterned after the listing employed by the Erie County Elections Commission. It is as follows:

Mr. Murray Klamkin,
member of the faculty
of the department of
engineering, will speak
on “Problem Solving”
at the next meeting of
the Undergraduate Mathematics Club, Wednesday, at 7:00 p.m. in
Room 355, Norton Union. This promises to be
a very interesting talk;
all are urged to attend.
Refreshments will be
served.

ple's United Front, but resigned
when the parly became communist

DR. CHARLES R. FALL
around the national debate topic,
Resolved: That the federal government should guarantee an opportunity for higher education to all
qualified high school graduates. The
first program will be presented
on Monday, at 6:45 p.m. in Norton
246. All students are invited to

attend.
Dr. Fall will speak on “The
Waste of Human Resources
The
need to provide a college education to all qualified students.” A
question and answer period will
—

follow.

Dr. Fall is well informed on the
and problems in
the field of education. He has been
a consultant for the New York
State Department of Education. Dr.
Fall has recently helped write a
chapter in the forthcoming book
"Urban Characteristics on the Niagara Frontier.”
current trends

controlled.

In the last few years Ceylon has
seen a great resurgence of nationalism and in 1956 English was replaced by Sinhalese as its official
language.
This enabled the poorer and nonEnglish speaking children to go to
school. Dr. Karunaratne somewhat
proudly explained that his country
has a free public school system, of
which he himself is a graduate.

BUDDHISM:
"Religion of Contemplation"
Dr.

Karunaratne,

a

//

&gt;

f 9IlllteUO A

COMPLETE LUGGAGE and
LEATHER GOODS STORE

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students
3400 MAIN STREET
TF3-1600
OpM Monday, TBuredoy and
lOwodU UB)
Friday avaninq rifl 9 P.M.

Buddhist,

described Buddhist philosophy and
beliefs Ihusly: The three main precepts are as follows:

Detachment, love and

wisdom.

Through deep and objective contemplation the Buddhist seeks to
change and shape the world. This
detachment does not mean separation from the rest of the world,
but rather a sort of a moral seclusion that enables him to reach
the objectivity needed for effective
and meaningful improvements.
In a Buddhist parable, man is
likened to a beautiful Lotus-flower,
which grows in a muddV pond.
Just as the Lotus blooms in its
dubious surroundings, man should
be strong enough to remain above
the corrupting and evil influences of

THE Bi

the world. For the Buddhist, so-

ciety is a testing ground and serving others is the road to self im-

provement.

Buddhism is not a pessimistic
religion, but it emphasizes social
problems, just as a doctor emphasizes disease to cure it. Buddhism
is not dogmatic and encourages

observation and verification. There
are three struggles in life: Man’s
conquest of nature, other men, and
himself.
It is the latter that Buddhist concentrates on. This greatest victory
is to overcome his own failings and
his salvation is wisdom.

C9roquoisr*%m
International Sfewtetea,

Oatitet. IUl, Buftata. N.V.. Tampa, Ha., Findlay, 0., Covinfton, Ky,

�PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 25,1963

Discount Service
COST OF LIVING TOO HIGH?

1. Do you feel a Student Discount
Service is needed for UB students?
2. Would you be

willing to

pay

,

By CLAUDIA KOWAL
Adding cheer and beauty to our

football games and" other athletic

events are seven majorettes. Led
by pretty Nancy Schultz, a senior,
the majorettes are Linda Thuman,
a senior, Carolyn Bussing and Bonnie McHenry, juniors, and three
freshmen: Amy Meyers, Sue Porter

and Arlene Adanowski.
The enthusiastic Majorettes practiced with the band two days before the actual opening sessions of
class and made their debut at
the pre-game Pep Rally. They now
practice on Mondays and Wednesdays from 4:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

on Baird Field.
All of the girls have had quite
a bit of varied experience as high
school, majorette captains and some
of them engage in gymnastics during the week to keep fit. There is
no academic credit for the Majorettes. They all feel the satisfaction
that comes with a demonstration
of school spirit is ample reward.
The majorettes make up their
own routines. Miss Schultz announced that Pom-Pom Flag Batons and
Fire Batons as well as Electric
Batons will be featured this year.
Blue and white will again reign
as the uniform colors. The doubleknit wool outfits, which the girls

a
moderate change. The previously
used, white fur trim will be replaced by a white braid trim.
There are no restrictions as to
eligibility for the squad and all
candidates are welcome. This
year's two juniors, Carolyn Dussing and Bonnie McHenry prove
that it is never too late to join.
Mr. Frank J. Cippolla is the
supervisor of the majorettes as
well as the Marching Band. Since
Mr. Cipolla first came to the University three years ago, the band
and all related groups have demonstrated remarkable improvement.
Nancy Schultz adds, “I sincerely
believe that we’ve improved in
style, talent and over-all performance along with the band. If we
have, which we are hoping, we
owe it all to the guidance of Mr.
Cipolla. He* really a remarkable
leader. It's quite an experience to
make

themselves,

will

take

work with him.”
Now the Majorettes are looking
forward to the weekend of November 9, when they accompany the
Band to Boston College. There the
large Boston College Stadium will
provide a stage for the "Pride of
the East Marching Band" and our
majorettes.

Nov. 11-Nov.

4. Are there any specific stores
you feel might be willing to participate in the SDS program, and if
so, what are they?

These questionnaires may be returned at candy counter or in the
Student Senate office, room 205
Norton.

Pediatrics
A postgraduate course in pediatrics, sponsored by the School of
Medicine will be held in Kinch
Auditorium at Children's Hospital,
Oct. 23-24.

Current information on the' clinical, therapeutic and physiological
aspects of selected pediatric problems will be provided by the twoday course. A session on pediatric
orthopedics will be included.
Dr. Mitchell I. Rubin, professor
of pediatrics, will preside at the
program.

Evenings and Saturday

Requirements: Able to Converse Intelligently
Neat Appearance
Ability to Follow Instructions

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

the power to investigate certain
insist upon official explanations and have the power to
disagree with foreign decisions."
This informal gathering would be
a healthy thing, with new powers
to correlate European unions. Members would come from the United
States and European nations. “Secretary of State Rusk is solidly behind it although he prefers not to
make it public,” said Lindsay, and

matters,

L

Dec. 16-Dec. 20—M, J

benefit of the students and student
support is needed to effectively
carry out the program.

PERKINS SATURDAY AFTERNOON SPECIAL I
QO*&gt;
Salami and 3 Scrambled Eggs—
WWW
4 Perkins Tender Griddle Cakes
Hot New York Corned Beet Sandwich
Kosher Dills and Potato Chips
ALL THE COFFEE YOU CAN DRINK
—Road Construction SpecialYou Wish
Si 40 Ham, Eggs, Cakes, Home Fries and All the Coffee
**“' arPri£e

80c

$.140

PERKINS PANCAKE HOUSE
1009 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

Just 123Vi Ft. North of Sheridan
Open 7:00 A.M. Every Day-Open All Nite Saturday

GIVE

Nov. 18-Nov. 20—A, B
Dec. 2-Dec. 6—K,

Dec. 9-Dcc. 13—K, W,

Again, the committee would like
to stress the fact that the discount
program is being initiated for he

advance of the above scheduled
times.

15—C, D

this one?

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN

CONGRESSMAN JOHN LINDSAY

will see
following

Students will make an appoint
ment with the Receptionist in Dietendort 114 at least one week in

Oet. 28-Nov. 1-G, II
Nov. TNov. 8—S

Lindsay-On Current Affairs

&amp;

students

with the

days:

to this service?

The faculty will include: Dr.
Thomas Aceto, Jr,, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics; Dr, Peter A.
Casagranre, Assistant Clinical Pro(Continued from Page 1)
"the Ford Foundation is prepared fessor of Surgery; Dr. Victor L.
“There is a concensus that NATO
to make a substantial grant for
in some respects has outlived its
Cohen, Assistant Clinical Professor
the project.” If effected it will
usefulness and only an entirely
of Pediatrics; Dr. Charlotte Ferfor
quest
integration,
continue
the
new organization could help curb
nitemationalization and interdepen- encz, Assistant Professor of Pedithe present disunity.” Lindsay addence.
atrics; Dr. Amo R. Hohn, Fellow
mits that "of course this body
wouldn’t be able to solve all the
Congressman Lindsay has fought in Cardiology; Dr. A. Wilmot Japroblems besetting the Western
hard lor the rights of the individcobsen, Clinical Professor of Pedicommunity; but they may help
uai to have better education, betatrics;
Dr. Donald Kerr Grant, Asgreatly in reducing the dreadful
ter housing and better health. He
sistant
Clinical Professor of Pedion
distrust
both sides of the Athas several bills which are now
lantic." He is presently a deleunder active Congressional consid- atrics; Dr. Erwin Neter, Associate
gate to the NATO Parliamentary
eration. His bill to provide hospi- Professor of Bacteriology; Dr. DavConference and used this group as
talization and home care for all id H. Weintraub, Assistant Clinical
an example for the new organizapersons over 65, financed on a payProfessor of Pediatrics; Dr. Sumtion. The delegates "would not
as-you-go basis has been called by
ner 'J. Yaffe, Associate Professor
speak for their country, but strictly
alike
Republicans and Democrats
for themselves. They would have
the best medical care program of- of Pediatrics.
fered in the 87th Congress.

18 Hrs. a Week

The University College
whose last names begin
letters designated below
their advisers on the

a small fee, say 25 cenra or 50
cents per year in order to belong

3. If a certain store gave a discount, would you be willing to
change from your present store to

UB Majorettes Made Debut
At Rally Perform At Games

University College Registration Agenda

Z

theIINITEDwav

�PAGE FOUR

Friday, October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

THE SPECTRUM
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York
at Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hail. University Campus, Buffrom the last week of September to the
falo 14, N. Y. Published weekly exam
periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas
last week in May, except for
arid Easter.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
ARNOLD 8. MAZUR
News Editor
Martin Kriegel
Business Manager
Pat Launer
Advertising Mgr. Lawrence Singer
Feature Editor . Harriet Heitlinger
..
David Irwin
Layout Editor
Frenkel
Lawrence
Feature Editor
Copy
Editor
Marcia Cooper
Sports Editor
Rocky Versace
.
Lois Hessmger
Circulation Mgr.
Office Manager
Karen Sanford
Haenle, Jr.
Advisor.
Thomas
Siemerlng
Edit. Advisor
Fin.
William
General Stall: Vicki Bugelski. Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Ron
Kaminski, Vic Menza, Anne Miinte, Martin Kriegel. Rena Fisch, Barbara
Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg. Charles Lotsof, Pat Jones, Sue Mead. Nancy
Blecker. Larry Frankie. Lonnie Klipstein, Charles Cummings, Shelll
Davis. Alan Newman. Barbara Chapman, Joanie Lancaster. Claudia
Kowal, Trudy Stern. Rosemary Morone Lawrence Frenkel, Susan Licker,
Ronnie Wilson. Alice Ostrander, Don Leary, Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray
Crawford, Jane Sommer. Lon Levy, Robert Milch, Jeremy Taylor. Karen
Chicko. Mike Sultanik, Christine Cunningham. Mary Ellen Yeostros,
Lillian Kalastein. Marcia Ann Orszulak, Fran Marfurt, Helen Bikoff, Betty
Cassidy, Mary Ann Wartenburg, All an Melmed, Allan Scholom.
Photography Staff: Russell Goldberg, Joel Havens. Pamela Reid. Robert
Feldman, Bob Gottesman and Jo LaColIa.
Entered as second class matter February 9. 1961, at
the Post Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March
3. 1879. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of post,-y
age provided for in Section 1103. Act of October 3, 1917,
authorized February 9. 1951.
circulation 9000.
Subscription $3.00 per year,
press
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Campus

Affairs
By HARRIETT

HEITLINGER

—

THE NUCLEAR TEST BAN TREATY has been hailed by
Albert Schweitzer as “one of the greatest events, perhaps the
greatest, in the history of the world.” Possibly it is. In all
likelihood, however, it is just what it has been termed
a first step toward peace, and not even that.
...

In any analysis of the world scene or developments it is
necessary to consider the time period which is used as a basis
for one’s perspective. It would be difficult to find, in any
era, one event which can be said to overshadow all that was
or that which followed. If one views the treaty in the limited
time period of one year it demonstrates a definite step
towards more amicable East West relations following the
gusty Cuban crisis. Then again, we have passed through other
periods of quiet, as references to the “spirit of Geneva,” or
“Camp David” will attest.
-

The broad trend in international affairs is probably
toward mutual cooperation on the part of moderate Communists and nationalists. And though we have engaged in
battles, we are not really at war. In such a light, the treaty
is not at all a first step towards peace, but something else.
What we lack is security and the treaty has possibly crystalized the notion that security does not rest on weaponry.

IF COOPERATION CAN BE EXTENDED to other areas
of concern, and sustained, then we will have found national
security for ourselves and others. Such a hope has been
made more real by the President’s decision to sell wheat to
the Soviets.
It is terribly naive on our part to think that the Soviets
would starve without our wheat( or that Chiang will return
to China if the People’s Republic is not recognized—just
another example where cooperation may fail but no cooperation will fail without doubt). As an economic move it will
bolster our economy; more significantly, correct the balance
of payments problem and reduce our wheat storage cost.
As a political attempt, increased cooperation in the economic
realm shpuld be tried because its consequences may eventually outsrip all material benefits. This could very well be
the first real ste^p
� � �

Today's Election
It is not enough merely to vote in today’s elections. One
should know what the situation is all about. Essentially, the
candidates offered by both parties are fine fellows. In meeting with the Alliance and U.S. candidates for the Arts and
Sciences, University College, and Business School seats, one
can only be impressed with their aspirations.
Of them all, there is one candidate who is qualified
above the others. He is William Berger. Mr. Berger was a
Senator last year, Chairman of the Student Welfare Committee, is now director of the student discount service program,
and has just been voted Orientation Committee Chairman
(unanimously by the present Senate).
His interest in student government is sincere and he has
proven himself an able person. No doubt, his past experience
and attendance at the National Students Association Congress
and an earlier NSA conference has helped him become a
legitimate student leader. He deserves the support of the
!
Business School.

—

doing grand and wonderful things,
pondering momentous decisions,
phrasing documents that will last
forever, initiating what can only

be called vital reforms
whiTe
in actuality they are merely playing the game of student government, where the pondering, the
phrasing, and the initiating are of
no more consequence than a move,
and possibly a bad one, in chess.
In the past a meeting of the
—

Student Senate, composed of the
elected representatives of the various divisions of the university,
has been a sedate affair. Lately
however, the institution of "dynamic democracy”, the phrase
Campus Alliance used for the initiation of the two party system,
has triggered a new type of game
on the Senate floor. The onlooker
watches with amazement as secret messages are scrawled on
white paper and passed from Michael Shapiro, Campus Alliance,
to Gerry Catenzaro, United Student, around the comer to Lois
Reeves, Campus Alliance, to Bob
Finkelstein, United Student. The
observer is mystified. The game
is on, the first moves are made
and curiosity is aroused.
It is beyond the understanding
of this writer how any student
cannot help but be drawn to the
meetings of the Senate. Whether
the writ is more lhan just a game
is one of those questions which has
noset answers and many opinions.
To those who call it a farce, President Michael Cohen will rattle off
a list of recent achievements which
are actually very impressive. One
of the most notable is, the formation of the lower court \&gt;f the Student Judiciary, a student]run board
that will take on muclr of the responsibility for Student Traffic violations. The court was initiated
at the suggestion of the administration; proving, states Mr. Cohen,
that this group is behind the students, and putting power in the
hands of students. A game? No.
There are certain areas in which
the student cannot expect to tread,
but there are so many others
where he can, that the government
he has to represent him does have
endless and very necessary tasks
to grapple with.
From the gallery, the average
student watches. On this campus
the word “apathy" is shouted, dissected, and worked over, until is
becomes a rationalization by the
student leaders who cannot understand the lack of support by the
student body. The game does go
on though, and true to character it
continues to draw and attract many
outsiders. But it should draw many
more. The Senate meetings are
interesting and exciting for the
student because everything that its
actions, while they may not be
momentous, do have a direct and
a very real bearing on him.
The comment of a friend, who
is a regular gallery watcher, is
typical. “I just can’t stay away",
she said and this is so true. The
next meeting is November 3. Why
not come, sit in the gallery, and
judge for yourself? You may decide the student government is
merely a game. But if you pass
judgment on it without discovering the flavor first hand, the loss
is by default.

There will be a general staff meeting for all
reporters of the Spectrum staff today at 4:00.
All those interested in
joining Spectrum are
also invited to attend.
A coffee hour will
be held Monday for the
entire staff.

Editor

cjCetterS to the

Freshmen Feel Used
To the Editor;
n„„„
Unce
again the Stuuent Senate is
.
.
.
a period of unrest. As
entering
.
.
.
f
part of this upheaval the student
is beine used and maniouBoth political parties, who
promise independent voting on important issues have made a pohtical football out of the freshman
.

.

.

,

„

..

,

Ldv

Sited.

’

.

..

.

c(ass

Several weeks ago the Fresh
asked that an amendment;*
bc passed by the Student Senate
allowing {herd one vote in the
Student Senate. The reply was
filled with political implications,
Knowing that a special election

for ar; open seat in the Student
Senate would be held, some influential members of the Student
.
,
Senate informed the Freshman
Councl1 that b y votlnf? for 1116 nght
"“tc
lhey
ght have their
ar?, cn m n pa®?
‘
.
.
fore
special
the Freshman class must decide
whether to be blackmailed by the
political parties on this campus
or whether to support an independent candidate who will truly represent them as well as the full
5100 students in University College.
If you are a Freshman, what will
„

...

,

„

..

„

,

,

,

....

..

„

,

.,

...

™

,

*'

f

.

.

1

Test Ban and Wheat

Every second Tuesday the Student Senate meets. Many will tell
you that they are under a grave
illusion
that they think they are

.

...

.

.,

,

,

.,

you do?

Maury Zeplowitz

All Vote On Party Line
To the Editor:
As a member of the student body,
I feel that I must speak out against

the unfair and distasteful political
situation on campus. Before last
year, only one political party existed on campus. Last year the
United Student Party was successfully challenged by the Student Alli-

ance, which is now known as the
Campus Alliance. The Student Alliance, in its campaign, expressed

the need for "two party government” to represent all the students.
At present, the situation has taken
a 180 degree turn and the Campus
Alliance has shown its true colors,
as the United Student Party has

done previously.

Every vote in

the Student Senate this year has
been distinctly along party lines
with one intent in mind: “...to
form a ‘BLOC to protect the interests of the minority, the party
members, rather than to represent
the majority, the student body.”
It seems clear that there is only
one way to end this intolerable situation and that is to support independent candidates who pledge to
represent all 16,000 students on this
campus. Until this situation is
rectified, we will remain second to
other universities in student government.
Joe Epstein

Newsletter Not Logical
To the Editor:

Spectrum’s enthusiasm

over

a

Senate Newsletter is both admirable

and laudable. However, it would
be most advisable to temper such
exuberance with logic and reason.
There is no fact more obvious, or
true, than the one stating that I
have in the past been an ardent
supporter of the Newsletter. As
I’m sure ybu remember I ran in
a very difficult contest for the position of Communications Chairman,
for at that time I felt there was
a most urgent need for a Senate
Newsletter. There are, at this time,

at least two reasons why I feel
the Senate cannot, nor must not
publish a Newsletter in the manner
in which it had been first intended.
Reason number one is the most
obvious to all close to Senate activities. The Senate’s budget this
year Is being taxed in far greater
dimensions than ever before, yet
we are receiving no extra funds.

This year almost all campus organ-

izations have requested more funds
than last and in addition a number
of new organizations have submitted requests for the first time. This
increased demand on the Senate’s
budget has been one of the major
factors as to why I feel no Newsletter can be published. So reason
number one is not very subjective
nor personal, but rather quite reawe cannot publish a
sonable
monthly Newsletter, with widespread coverage, because the Senate does not have the money.
While the first reason is obvious
only to those close to Senate activities, the second should be obvious to all. If the Spectrum,
“The official student newspaper of
the State University of New York
at Buffalo”, was to do its job of
REPORTING the news, there would
be no need for a Newsletter. Let
me remind you that the Spectrum
is supported by Student funds and
—

(Continued

on Page

9)

�By VICTOR MENZA
vVith toe lateness of autumn the
a return to school has
vanished for at least a season. New

faces melt and mtx with the old.
.New snares have been ironed out
and the old ones announce their
winter's stay. A glance in the mirror reveals the same old nose and
a hike around campus leaves you
as fatigued as last year. What used
to be “hollow” is now "empty”.
But you reply that “this year it’s
worse” and I say to you "you’re
a year older". And after all this
a friend of yours takes a leave of
absence and asks the Bursar to refund bis money.
Somehow your new found diligence has left you with the same
amount of undone work and once
again you are aware of losing
ground. This year, however, you
suspect a design behind it all. You
ask “Shouldn’t I be on top of my
work, is it planned otherwise?”
So you go home and work a little
longer, but you go to school the
next year only to learn that you
still have no time to think your
own thoughts.
After a while it occurs to you
that possibly the fellow who sits
next to you in Philosophy knows
what it’s all about. You walk out of
class with him and both of you decide not to go to the Student Union
but prefer to find an empty classroom in Hayes Hall. You ask him

how he did on the last test and he
asks you. You answer cunningly
and then you take the chance and
start to talk about your problem.

You become

more intense when

his expression assures you that he
knows what you are talking about:

"I thing a great deal of it is due
to the lack of spirited competition.
I remember in high school . . .”
"It’s not so much that as the
gap between your parents’ motives

and your own. Poverty supplied my
father with all the ambition it
took to complete school. The fact
that I have not experienced poverty, I mean the true pragmatic
need, has left me without the avarice necessary for education. . .”
“Sometimes I feel it’s because
there's nothing about your friends
that makes want to go on. There’s
nothing that makes you want to go
on. But you do, you continue, almost like an animal ...”
The bells ring four o’clock and
the sun is just about down. You
and he make some contrived ges-

tures about seeing each other tomorrow and you go home. You
don’t even study that night or the
next because you feel like talking
to your friends. Then you talk to
your parents and maybe they see
some worth to what you’re saying.
You think melancholy thoughts of
your friend who left school; and
one morning you find yourself in
line at the Bursar’s office.

Dr. Graham Receives Grant
For Ovary Cancer Research
The first medical testing technidesigned specifically to detect ovarian cancers is entering its
final stages under the direction of
a researcher at our university.
Dr. John B, Graham, Chief of
Gynecology at Roswell Park Memorial Institute, and Associate Professor of Gynecology at the University Medical School, has received a $27,000 grant from the American Cancer Society for completion
ques

of the study,
"If the test proves to be as effective as preliminary results indicate," Dr. Graham says, “it may
well lead to a substantial reduction in the death rate from ovarian

cancer.”
He explained that about 12 women per 100,000 are afflicted with
ovarian cancer each year and the
death rate is highest of all pelvic
cancers and one of the highest
among cancers generally. One of
the reasons for the high mortality
rate from this type of cancer, in
addition to its failure to reveal
any symptoms to the victim until
its very late stages, has been the
lack of a test capable of detecting it in the early stages.
Basically, Dr. Graham’s test consists of a microscopic examination

of peritoneal fluid. Suspicious cells
in the fluid can be detected by
cytology experts. His wife. Dr.
Ruth Graham, Supervisor of Cy-

tology at the University is in charge
of the cytological aspects of the
study.After more than two years of
work, the researchers were ready
for a prelininary test sampling of
500 women. The series detected
three ovarian cancer victims who
had no symptoms. This work was
supported by the U.S. Public Health
Service.
With tus latest grant, Dr. Graham
will test about 3,000 women at Roswell Park, Meyer Memorial Hospital and General Hospital. Dr.
John D. Bartels, Clinical Instructor
of Obstetrics will assist with the
tests at General and Dr. Robert
Carpenter will assist at Meyer.
To insure at least the minimum
number of volunteers for the test,
the researchers turned to the local
women's
clubs.
However, Dr.
Graham emphasized that any woman may be a voluteen by phoning Roswell Park for an appointment.
In about a year test results are
expected to be completed. If proven effective, the test may very
well become a standard diagnostic
technique, cutting the mortality rate
from ovarian cancer in half.
Dr. Graham cited the example
of the dramatic drop in deaths
from cancer of the cervix over the
past 20 years, due to improved
cytological detection techniques.

School of Business Ad To Sponsor
Conference On Economy of Canada
The School of Business Administration at the State University
of New York at Buffalo will sponsor a conference on Aspects of the
Economy of Canada to be held in
the Conference Theater of Norton
Union, Wednesday, October 30.
The four speakers at the Conference will be:
9:30 a.m.
Professor Scott Gordon, department of economics,
Carleton University, Ottawa, "Recent Canadian Monetary and Fiscal
—

Policy: A Critique.”

Professor Harry C.
10:30 a.m,
Eastman, department of political
economy. University of Toronto,
“An Examination of Canadian For—

eign Exchange Experience.”
2:30 p.m.— Professor Albert Breton, department of economics, University of Montreal, “The Economics of French Canadian Nation-

alism.”
3:30 p.m.

—

Professor Harry G.

Johnson, department of economics,
University of Chicago, and editor,

Journal of Political Economy, Economic Nationalism in Canada.

Acheson Addition
Will Be Dedicated

The Circus
By BOB MILCH

A two million dollar addition to
Acheson Hall, the chemistry building at State University at Buffalo,
wil be dedicated with a symposium
on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 1 2.
Representatives from 12 colleges
and universities will deliver papers
at the meeting entitled "Chemical

Dear Ma 'n Pa,

Ah don't know quite how to tell
you this, but ah don't like everybody up here. It all started when
we was sittin’ round the fuhst
couple o’ days an' talkin’ 'bout

-

Research in Liberal Arts Colleges
and Universities.”
Keynote speaker will be Dr. Louis
P. Hammett, Professor Emeritus
Department of Chemistry, Columbia University. He will address the
group on "College Chemistry
The
Present Opportunity,” at a dinner
in the Faculty Club on Nov. 1
—

at 6:30 p.m.

Dr. Hammett is one of the nation’s outstanding authorities on the
chemistry of acids, chemical processes in solutions and possible
chemical effects of the arrangement of atoms in the molecule.
The new wing will enable the
University to double the number
of graduate students in chemistry
in five to eight years. In addition
to boosting floor space by 75%, the
wing includes a lecture theater
seating 250, together with undergraduate lab and classroom facilities. Over one-half the new area
will be used for post-graduate research according to Dr. Gordon
M. Harris, chairman of the chemistry department.

Dr. Bartholemew
To Lecture Here

this Air Force ROTC business. See,

up here every mother’s son has
got to take it for two years. Anyway, these fellers was sittin' an’
talkin’ ’bout how they was goin’
to get out o’ takin’ it. One feller
got his doctor to write a letter
sayin’ how he was allergic to
wool, an’ one guy has a letter
what says he’s allergic to blue.
One guy has a letter from his doctor what says how takin' orders
is very bad for his emotional
makeuu, an’ one guy’s supposed
to have a jungle disease what
flares up whenever he marches.
One guy had a letter sayin’ how
he couldn’t go up in a airplane,
but he had to take ROTC anyway,
’cause we never get anywhere near
an airplane.
Let me tell you, ah got ill when
ah heard how these fellers was
spoutin’. Ah mean, yuh gotta be

patriotic an' all. ’Cides, if there
was ever a war, what could the
country do without the ROTC? Let
them slackers try an' answer that
one!
But the

most ironical thing is
how these fellers is just cheatin’
themselves out o' a good time. Ah
mean, marchin’ is fun. An’ if
you’re a good marcher, they let
you carry a little flag on a pole
what boosts everybody's morale
an’ swells their chests with pride.
An' you learn how to give orders
an’ be a leader o' rugged fightin’
men; like today it was mah turn
to give the marchin’ orders, like
“Start marchin’
two
three”
an’ "Turn 'round —'two three” an’
“Right flank
chachacha.” Only
—

Sigma Xi, honorary science research organization at State University of New York at Buffalo,

will present the first Albert, R:
Shadle Memorial Lecture, Wednesday, Oct. 29, at 8:00 p.m. in Acheson, Room 70. Speaker will be
Dr. George A. Bartholomew, Professor of Zoology, University of
California at Los Angeles. His topic
will be “Adaptation of Desert Mammals.” The lecture series is named
in honor of the former head of
the Biology Department who died
last year.

—

you can't say ’em so plain like
that; you gotta slur over ’em so
everybody thinks you got experience, like "Hehuh” means attention; least ways, it docs when ah
say it.
Not only that, but it fills me
lull o' pride to put on that smart
blue suit. Ah mean, ah haven’t
enjoyed earin’ anythin’ so much
since ah got mah first pair o’ long
pants. You should see me in that
uniforn. with mah little wings over

mah heart, an' mah smart tapered
culls, an’ mah jacket with lour
buttons just like a regular suit.
It’s like Sunday go to meetin'
clothes, only more patriotic; whenever ah’m in that suit ah just leels
like goin' out an' buyin’ Liberty
-

-

-

Bonds.

Today was a special day. We
got the whole wing together tor a
group march on the playin' field
'hind Diefendorf.
Ah wish you
could o’ seen us
five hundred
blue uniforms standin’ on that
dusty field. We was made up into
—

twenty groups, an' each two groups

made a squad, an' each two squads
made a platoon, an’ each two platoons made a company, an' the
whole thing made a lot of dust rise.
In front of each group was the
group leader, an’ in front of each
platoon was the platoon leader, an'
in front o’ them was the cadet officers, an' in front o’ them was
the brass. So we saluted our officers, an' saluted our partners,
an’ saluted our corners, an' saluted

the flag, an’ saluted the mainmast,
an’ saluted the poopdeck. Then
the platoon officer asked if’n we
weren't all fumbling idiots, an' we
all answered at the same time nice
an’ loud, NO SIR I We answer that
way to boost morale an' fightin’
spirit.

Your lovin’

son,

Jethro

—

Furnas Attends Computer Meet
Predicts New Interstate Links
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, President of State University
York at Buffalo, today predicted that eventually
there would be a vast computer network, linking private
:'nd public colleges and universities throughout the State.
Dr. Furnas mode the prediction in connection with a
omputer conference held Oct. 21-22, to which the presidents and deans of all colleges in the State has been invited.

of New

■

Opinion and Conviction
newness of

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 25,1963

“fn addition to the advantages of
having a fast-flowing interchange of
scholarly research information
throughout the state,” Dr. Fumas
said, "a computer network eventually can save millions by avoiding
duplication of complex equipment.”

According to Dr, E. Arthur Trabant, Dean of Engineering School,
the network could be formed by
three or four key computer centers,
in areas of population and educational concentration. Tied to these
centers would be input output devices stationed at institutions

diets, "the benefits could defy cal-

culation.”

“Hopefully, the October computer
conference at State University at
Buffalo will be the first step toward
such a plan,” he said.

1h€ Old ierne/c,

-

throughout the State.

One corporation has a computer
on the market which could handle
such a network load. Undoubtedly
other manufacturers will be hard
on its heels.
HOW. DOES

IT FEEL TO BE

QUEEN OF HOMECOMING
WEEKEND?
It w

said

11 wonderful and exdt
Carolyn

Cooper,

wh&lt;

was accorded this honor at the Pop
Rally last Friday night. After a
whirl through the duties of the
weekend, including a helicopter
ride, an appearance at the Glen
Casino, and the Alumni Dinner,
our Queen was truly a shining and
smiling example of the feeling of
all UB at their Annual Homecom.
ing.

According to Rudolph Meyer,
Manager of the State University
at Buffalo Computing Center, the
University is scheduled to install
an IBM 7044 computer in March
hat takes our presboiit 1G0 hours, will
take the VO-11 about 15 minutes,"
Mr. Meyer says. "And the 7044 is
not. the fastest machine on the
market. So technology is no drawback when we think of a state-wide

computer network."
“If New York can be the first
State in the Union with an educa*
tional and research tool of this
magnitude,” President Furnas pre-

siikwii

"A great many people are
already working a 4-day week;
it takes them 5 or 6 days to
do it.”

ski
“Marriage enables a man to
find out what kind of a husband his wife preferred.”

�Friday, October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

UC Advisors Help Freshmen, Sophomores
By ELAINE BARRON
A familiar campus institution is
University College, established in

1958. It is the branch of the school
encompassing all freshman and

sophomore departments. It helps
the University give its students a
more well-rounded education, no

matter

what their field.

The most important department

of the University College is its
advisory staff. Headed by Mrs.
the staff

Sonia Robinson, director
consists of 20 advisors, including
Mr. William Fritton, Senior Advisor. Seven new advisors were recently added. They can provide an
important link for freshmen and
sophomores to all branches of the

University.

At his freshman planning conference, each student is assigned
a specific advisor. Every effort is
made to keep the same advisor
for the student throughout his four
semesters in University College. At
the planning conference, the advisor helps the student plan his
curriculum. Advice is given on the
basis of the scores of the English Ability Test, Mathematics Test,
and the Quantativc Thinking Test.
The advisor also gets a general
idea of interests by talking to the
person. He can also refer the incoming student to various services
such as the Student Counseling
Center, if he is undecided in his
major. “In a sense,” commented
William Fritton.

Senior Advisor.
"University College is like a general praeticioner in medicine. Wc
know where to refer these people
if they need more specific help
than we can give them."
Mr. Fritton cleared up some problems which pose questions in the

gested, though, are sound ones.
Chemistry is a requirement for all
science majors and medical and
dental school candidates. If a: student is undecided about going into
science, chemistry is a subject that
will help him make up his mind
The decision should be made as
soon as possible to facilitate the
completion of requirements in the

student’s chosen field.

Another common misnomer centers around the terms pre-mcd and
pre-dent. There are really no such
departmenls. A student in this category is merely completing the four
science requirements tor these
graduate schools. He still must
have a major.
University College advisors arc
also very important when it comes
to a change of program. They can
aid the student in planning his
schedule and also in certain instances allow him to remain in
University College for a fifth semester in order to complete re-

quirements which he is lacking be
cause of a change of program.
According to Mr, Fritton, the
basic broblem encountered by advisors is that students come with
a misunderstanding of the university’s purpose and they often have
an overromanticized view of a
particular career.
Dr: Milton J, Plesur, Assistant
Dean of University College, sees
three basic faults in scholastically
deficient students, which often account for their difficulties. He commented, (It They have not made

minds of many students, For instance, very often, an incoming
freshman with oven a vague interest in a career in science, medicine or dentistry is given chemistry
instead of an easier science. He
blames his advisor for having sugchemislry. The reason it was sug-

American

Newspaper

Alliance.

Tapes of the panel discussion will
be available in the near future,
and the Debating Society is making
arrangements to have them broad-

cast fed

On

WBFO.

use

the facilities University College of-

them to aid them in their

college career.”

American universities

leges are, at

RUSSELL. PANZICA
and

col-

most, superficially

self-sufficient. The effect of locating book stores, cafeterias, theatres, and especially dormatories in
the same area as the class room
buildings has kept a vast majority
of students intellectually and spiritually cloistered.’
facilities
living
Student
are
characterized by the dormatory
boom, a financial boon to taxpayers

of American life is the sadest aspect of campus confinement. True,
the student is in a good position
to share ideas and regenerate his
intellect, but he has little chance
to observe or participate in the
actual working out of these ideas
and to feel their human consequences.

New schools should be planted
smack in the middle of our largest
cities and students should be encouraged to eat with a cross-section of their countrymen, get involved in the cultural and political

and students. What it has amounted
to is that students are stuffed into
the compartments of garish hotels.
They are given bland food and
are forced into routine eating habits

affairs of the external community,
and most important of all, to live

mittees extend adolescence.
Furthermore, many colleges and
universities are located in small
“college towns” and on the putskirts of large cities while, on
the whole this is predominantly an
urban society. The student’s estrangement from the mainstream

own houses or apartments. This
undoubtedly would cause a marked increase in drop-outs; but social
and academic problems would at
least be in a broader perspective.
It is hardly moral to subordinate
the integrity and verity of a student's life to systems bent on the
mass production of specialists.

which seldom correspond to their
appetites. Curfews and social com-

in real-life neighborhoods

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ARTISTS AND CONDUCTORS OF WORLD RENOWN

MONITOR

Those participating from UB were
Olga Stukowski, Linda Leventhal,
Andre Namenck, and Gerald Catanzaro. Also, Mrs. Janet C. Potter,
president of the New York Slate
Debate Coaches Association, and
Mr. Terry Ostcrmeicr, director, of
novice debate attended the conference.

A panel of experts on the topic
addressed the debaters and Coaches
on Saturday. The panel included
Dr. Robert S. Fisk, Dean of our
School of Education. Other panel
members were Dr. R. Orin Cornett,
Acting Director of the Division of
Higher Education of the United
States Office of Education; Dr.
Philip H, Des Marais, Deputy assistant secretary for legislation in the
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare; and Dr. Benjamin
Fine, education editor lor the North

pay off later. Students should

By

BRILLIANT WORKS OF YOUR FAVORITE COMPOSERS

leges and Universities that attended
the meeting.

demonstrations and
practice debates on the national
topic; Resolved: That the federal
government should guarantee an
opportunity for higher education to
all qualified high school graduates.
Our school engaged in practice debates with Le Moyne College, Colgate University, State University
of New York at Albany and

—

fers

People and Politics

WESTMINSTER

The annual fall meeting of the
New York State Debate Coaches
Association was held Oct. 18th and
19th at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York, The Staate University of New York at Buffalo
was among the twenty-seven col-

During the week-end there were

adjustment between
high school immaturity and college
responsibility. They don’t figure out
how much study time they need.
(2) They are in. the wrong program for reasons such as pressure
from home, idealized prestiges
images. About 10C of the freshman class changes programs,
(31 They play around too much.
They take on too many extra-curricular activities. They don’t go
by the sot rule
two hours of
study outside of class for every
hour in class.
He added, “College tends not to
be the idealized time of pigskin and
parades. What is fun now does not
magic

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demands madedri you for original
for fresh ideas that
thinking,
will lift your work above the
commonplace. Through the study
of this book, Science and Health
with Key to the Scriptures by
Mary Baker Eddy, we are learning how to turn to God for the
intelligent ideas we need. You
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We invite you to come to our
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are working out our problems
through applying the truths of

Christian Science

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
Slit* Univortify of Now York of Buffalo
Meeting

time: 7 o'clock

Meeting ploce:

Thursdgyi

Norton Hall,

Music

Rm.

Science and Health t« available at all
Christian Science Reading Rooms and at many

college bookstores. Paperback Edition $1.96.

"ON CAMPUS"

—

in their

�Friday, October 25,1963

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

UB History Traced From 1846 to 1909: Cease's Food Service Wins
Contract for University Food
Medical School Grom to University
By SANDRA OLIN

By JOAN LANCASTER

Around 1840 local physicians began thinking of organizing a university with not only a medical
school but with the most complete
and diversified theoretical powers
of any in the land.
The dream of these men finally
became a reality in 1846 when a
charter was granted to the University by the State of New York.
President Millard Fillmore became
the first Chancellor,
For forty years the Medical
School alone, represented the University. In 1849 there was erected
for its use, at Main and Virginia,
the first building in Buffalo devoted for higher education, and
here the school remained until 1893.
Two committees were appointed to
study the* creation of departments
of law and of liberal arts in 1862,
but it was decided that the time
was not propitious for the expansion of the University. Mr. Fillmore never saw the results of his
ideas because he died in 1874.
Orasmus H. Marshall was elected Chancellor and served until his
death in 1886. At this time Eben
Carleton Sprague was
elected
Chancellor and during his eleven
years in office the word “university” began to take on real significance. The School of Pharmacy was organized in 1886 and
was housed within the medical
building. The Buffalo Law School
became a part of the University
in 1891 and the next year the Dental School was added. The Law
School was housed on West Eagle
Street where it is located presently, but in a new building. The
Dental School was located on Goodrich Street.
In 1895 came the Teachers College, which turned out to be the
proving ground tor men and women
who later were called to positions
of national importance. Four permanent professorships in
the

Rollino and Sheftei
To Appear Tonight
In Baird at Baird
By VICKI BUGELSKI
Joseph Rollino and Paul Sheftei
duo-pianists, will appear tonight in
a program at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hall. Student tickets are available
at the box office, prior to the
performance time.

Teachers College were: psychology, education, philosophy, and
science. Because of the lack of
funds in 1898 the existence of th
Teachers College was discontinued
but not forgotten.
Mr. Sprague was succeeded as
Chancellor by Mr, Putmen in 1895
who served until falling strength
forced his resignation in 1902. Wilson Shannon Bissel was appointed
Chancellor but he died six months
later. George Gorham served as
from
Vice-Chancellor
1903-1905
when Charles Phelps Norton became ViceChancellor until 1909.
Just a week after he was elected
Vice-Chancellor, Phelps started a
campaign to get the support of the
citizens of Buffalo. The sum of
1600 dollars was contributed by a
few people for the expenses of the
campaign. An endowed chair in
English Literature was established
through the generosity of a former
Buffaionian and offered to F, Hyatt
Smith, but the supplier of Mr.
Smith’s salary suffered a financial loss which necessitated the
abandonment of the project.
Mr. Norton
ing this time
location of a
lege. There

had other ideas durwhich concerned the
campus for the colwere two possibili-

ties. His first thought was a site
adjacent to the Historical Building and the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery. The Council was asked
to raise a million dollars and to
locate the future college upon the
ten or fifteen acres which would
link the arts and sciences to history and the fine arts. Many people thought that the block or two
around the medical and dental
buildings would do, but Mr. Norton became convinced that even
his ideas were too shortsighted.
He reported to the Council the
probability of moving to the site
of the county almshouse and hos-

pital.

"You cari please some of the
people some of the time but not
all of the people all of the time."
Eating, which occupies well over
1,000 hours per year of one's time,
is by far the most difficult area
in which to please people. Mr. MahIon Bennett, Director of Food
Service at UB, feels this is especially true when one concern must
feeds so many people with so many

People smiled at the idea

of taking over 106 acres. The
county decided to sell for the low

prire of 54,000 dollars because the

land would be used for educational
purposes and the University signed
a contract.
The Board of Supervisors
deeded t h e property to the
University in 1909, with the proviso that in ten years it would revert to the county if not used for
educational purposes. Upon this
celebrated achievements Mr. Norton was elected Chancellor. The
purpose of this campus which is
the present location and the fact
that Mr. Norton was made Chancellor marked a great turning
point in the history of the University of Buffalo.

varied tastes.

meat-loaf may appear twice.

~

Mrs. Haymes explained further
that one year students may relish
Cease's Food Service, under competitive bidding, was contracted as a certain meal while another year
the best of three available bids. students may not cae for it at all.
Mr. Bennett explained that the Goodyear, where freshmen dorm
students seat, serves as the testing
Food Service operates on a management fee which is profit. He kitchen tor Tower cafeteria where
explained further that students get these same students will eat next
their meals 18%
22% cheaper year. The Food Service realizes
than cost and anything saved on that the UB cafeteria cooking does
not always taste 'ike mother's
food costs goes back to the student
in terms of, for instance, a steak homemade cuisine, but they feel
intsead of a casserole dinner, Mr. that a student should at least try
Bennett pointed out that the board a certain dish before criticizing it.
cost at UB has remained he same To prevent students from wasting
for approximately the last three foods which they may not care for.
Mrs. Haymes believes it is beneyears even though the general cost
of living has steadily risen. Cease's ficial to have small samples of
Food Service, according to Mr. food for taste testing before a stuBennett, takes pride in saying that dent chooses what he or she would
it employs as many students as like to eat.
possible in its food service, and
She also feels that there is a
as proof of this, pays over $850
certain psychological aspect inweekly for student labor.
volved in refusing to eat certain
foods. When one person or group
There also is a question raised
concerning the reason tot- upping of persons says the meal is poor,
the rest of the group will judge
certain food costs when the Student Union moved from the old the meal even before they see it.
Just like our families, the food servto the New Norton building. Mr.
Bennett explained that the raise in ice at UB must provide the highest grade meals at the most ecofood prices, if any, exists because
of a raise in the cost of food and
nomical price which they feel are
enjoyed by the most people.
labor.
-

“Some people don’t need an
introduction. They need a
conclusion.”
Blazers, with an emblem signifying the University and year of
graduation, will soon be
offered. It is hoped that
this will become a tradition and yearly blazer
sales will occur. To facilitate this service, a

BLAZER COMMITTEE

is now being formed.
There are positions
available for members,
and the post of chairman. All who are interested contact Robert
Fingelstein, Public Relations Chairman, in the
Senate Office, Norton
205.

We can get it
for you ff&amp;i
wholesotef—

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Both pianists have an extremely
refined, delicate touch on the keyboard. With very relaxed hand
movement, their technique is extremely well controlled, facile and
virtuostic. Their dynamics are well
controlled, phrasing clear and precise, attacks clean and sharp, but
never abrupt. As a duo, their ensemble is flawless.

©

Last Monday, the Brahms’ Variations on a- Theme of Schumann,
op. 23, and the Schubert Fantasie,
op. 103, both four-hand works performed on one piano, were played
with very smooth phrasing and good
control of the harmony, “En Blanc
et Noir,” suite for two pianos

by Debussy, was performed in a
convincing impressionistic
manner, with a swirling, rippling
effect. The high point of the concert, however, was the Stravinsky
'Concerto for two solo pianos,” a
virtuoso work, performed in an exciting manner, with sharp cntrasts,
remarkably clean phrasing, and
impeccable technique.
Tonight the duo will perform the
works of Debussy, Schubert, Chopin, Diamond and Sapp. Mr. Diamond is Slee professor of music
this semester at UB. Prof. Sapp
is chairman of the music department.

On speaking with Mrs. Velma
Haymes, Food Service Manager of
Goodyear Hall, it was learned that
the cafeterias (Tower and Goodyear) run on a planned menu
schedule. Within a twenty-eight
day cycle, a certain meal may be
run according to its popularity. For
instance, roast beef, which is generally well-liked, may appear three
time in twenty-eight days, whereas

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�PAGE EIGHT

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 25, 1963

Committee Holds Model Security Council
Alumni Visit UB for Homecoming
By HARRIET HEITLINGER
sibility of representing only the
Some for the First Time in 20 Years
CCUN meets annually to elect
their own
rethey
During the Homecoming week
festivities, many alumni visited our
campus for the first time in ten
or twenty years. Your Spectrum
reporter interviewed a group of
these alumni to gleen their reactions to a much changed, yet mem-

can be attributed to the fine work
and interest of the people of Buffalo and the leadership of President Furnas.” Dr. Small is principal of Clarence Central School.

orable environment.

1954, He commented, “I think the
new county hospital will mean an
in
improvement
E. Dunlop—'54 the medical school
because it will bring the medical
faculty physically closer to the
University.”

Ray Johnson, Class of '33, stated,
"The campus has really mush-

roomed. "It is
hard to believe
that there were

Johnson—''JJ
Mr. Johnson took his B.A. in Business Administration and is now Office Manager of Boland and Cornelius Steam Ship Co. He has two
daughters, one of which is a Junior
at this University.
Walter Willoughby, Class of ’41,
earned a B.S. in both Industrial
Engineering and
Business, and is
presently an In-

surance salesman

in Buffalo.
Mr.
W. Win«iflhbv,'«lWilloughby commented, "The growth of this university has been fabulous, beyond
our wildest dreams. When we got
Clark gym we thought we had
reached the ultimate. But, look at
this campus now."
Dr, Eugene Small, Class of ’53,
earned his B.A. in education in 1941
and his Ph.D. in

1953. He believes,

(

j

"The
(he

of the

Student Senate. A Model
Security Council, similar to the program last year, is being planned
by the Committee with invitations
to schools throughout the state.

Dr. Edward A. Dunlop, Jr. earned his B.A. in 1947 and his M.D. in

growth ol
University is

almost unbelievable. The new (a- E. Small—'51
cilities: the dorms, the student
union, the new classroom buildings

Douglas Fay, Class of ’40, earned

idenl of the Manufacurers
and

1

4 .

They must also speak in defense
of these views. An introductory
speech of about eight
minutes for
each resolution introduced will accompany the reading of the resolu-

’’*7mm

Traders
Trust
Ah I
'41
company. Mr. Fay D. Fay
also teaches in Millard Fillmore
College, He believes, "I don’t see
how the University can help but
become great all along the line.”
Dr. Richard Hall, Class of '22,
earned his B.A. in Biology at this
a4BW university,
h is
■
tjflH M. S. at Wiscon.
Jy&gt;
sin, and his Ph D.
.
at Duke. He re—

Security Council procedure will
be adhered to as tar as possible.
There will be every effort made
to use procedural techniques and
at the same time meet the educational objective of the meeting,

■
■

issues

presented.

The Model Security Council is
one facet of the program of the
Collegiate Council for the United
Nations (CCUN). This is a national

—

pital being built on the University
campus. Our med school certainly
can utilize a teaching hospital."

Michael Lappin, Pad Chairman
of UN Committee

that being to examine closely the

Mi

turned to Buffalo
R. Hall
'22 to teach five
years before his retirement and is
now living in Buffalo and giving
active support to his fraternity. He
stated, “I’m really impressed with
the university. I’m very much in
favor ol the idea of a county hosVjBK*

student organization organized to
give college students an understanding of their stake in the United
Nations and to stimulate them to

Interest in the work of the United
will be stimulated by the
Model Security Council held on

Nations

campus. UB will send one delegation. Each of the delegations, the
other ten of which will be from
other schools, will have the respon-

do something to help it succeed.

Total membership includes more
than 300 campuses.

Greek Notices
Gamma Phi will hold a bowling
party Saturday night at the
Amherst Lanes, 9 p.m.

,

The Theta Chi social fraternity
opened its doors to guests, alumni,
parents, and all interested students for Homecoming weekend.
The guests included President
Siggelkow, and
Furnas, Dean

selves by more stringent rules than
those governing others on and offcampus University Residence
Halls, For example, all pictures
and adornments that decorate the

Homecoming Queen Carolyn
Cooper.
All those present were given
tours through the newly rebuilt
house directly across the campus
on Niagara Falls Blvd. and were
allowed to investigate the facili-

the basement.

Presently there are six men
lodged in the house but plans for
next year stipulate that the number
be doubled. The men govern them-

“When

a young

man thinks

of his mother he wants to get
married and when he thinks
of his sister he wants to stay
single.”

*

dists in South Viet-Nam, Portugese
supression of the people of Angola
and the peaceful use of outer space.
All of these will be discussed on
the floor of the Security Council
some time this year.

President Kennedy has staged that
the “United Nations is our only
alternative to war.” To this end
Michael Lappin, last year’s chairman of the United Nations Committee, adds that the function of
his committee on campus “is to
familiarize our future leaders with
the organization and give them a
proper prospective, "Through the
Model Security CojHlcil, into its
activities.”

Thruway Plaza

Boulevard Mall

€&gt;port 6&gt;hop Xnfc (Eallnje B&gt;bup

•

Phi Kappa Psi is holding its annual “Roaring Twenties’’ party on
Saturday, at the Club Helene, 2074
Seneca Abbott Rd.
•

•

.

Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a
social tonight with the Alpha Gamma Delta and Theta Chi
sororities.
The brothers of Sig Ep would like
to congratulate the recently
elected
pledge officers and their president,
Conn Chown.
•

•

*

The

brothers and pledges of
Alpha Phi Omega will have a Halloween Party this weekend at the
Ski Deck on Tonawanda St. The
time is 8; the dress—costumes.

ties from the attic executive offices

to the basement recreation room.
At the end of the tours, discussion
was encouraged as to the role of
the fraternity house in a university fraternity system'
Parents were impressed with the
cleanliness and easy upkeep of the
furnishings, much of which was
purchased by the Theti Chi Mother’s Club, as well. The deans and
faculty commented on the room
set aside as a library and study
area and the alumni enjoyed the
pine panelled recreation room in

•

Possible topics of discussion this
year are the sepression of Bud-

KLEIN HANS
Downtown Buffalo

Theta Chi Holds Open House
Faculty Families are Guests

problems
ternational
discussed
must be from the point of view
of the represented country.

Assembly and send delegations to
the model UN’s of other colleges.
An International Fill has been
set up in the Student Senate office
to facilitate information on the program. It includes the only known
public records of the 15, 16, and
17th UN sessions in Buffalo.

tion.

"

views of the country that
represent. All approaches to the in-

The United Nations committee
also plans to invite prominent
speakers in each of these fields
to speak in a special Convocations
program. They also plan to cosponsor, with other colleges in the
area, a local High School General

tize interest in the United Nations.
Eleven delegations, each representing one country on the Security
Council, will prepare a three minute presentation of views on each
of the resolutions they wish to offer.

his B.S. in Business Administra-

ently a Vice-Pres-

national officers and

gional chairmen and to formulate
recommendations on UN questions.
The group helps to organize, provide program suggestions and
speakers, and send discussions
guides and materials to groups such
as the United Nations Committee
on this campus.

The primary purpose of a Model
Security Council is to utilize student knowledge about current international affairs and to drama-

*

only five buildings
when I attended
the
University." R.

H

Tom Kobus and Ron Christopher
are the newly elected co-chairmen
of the United Nations Committee

•

•

•

Phi Epsilon Pi will hold an
invitational party this Saturday. The
brothers will also be working at
the Roswell Park Cancer
Institute
during the coming weeks.
«

Presidont and Mrs. Furnas With
President of Theta Chi
house must be fraternity approved.
Also the six men rotate in doing
house cleaning chores as well as

fining fraternity members
break the house rules.

who

"The way .college costs are

soon be as expensive
surance

"Spoon

as in-

PIZZA IS OUR BUSINESSNO! OUR SIDELINE

&amp;

The House Rockers," and

afternoon.

•

•

Thrta Chi Sorority will hold a
party tonight at Warner’s Steak
House with Sigma Phi Epsilon and
Alpha Gamma Delta from 9-12
p.m. Tomorrow night, there
win
be a dated costume party in honor
of the new pledges at Midge Rainforth from 9-1. The initiation of
pledges wiU be held on Monday at

7

COLLEGE PIZZERIA

*

"Spruce &amp; The Hiliters.” There
will
be a preview at Norton Hall this
•

skyrocketing,'education will

•

PI Lambda Tau presents a
"Twist
Blast" today at Washington Hall
from 8:30 p.m. till ?. Featured
will
be: “Chic &amp; The Diplomats,”

p.m.

GOOD EATING"

PIZZA

FREE DELIVERY
IF 2-9331

�SPECTRUM

Friday, October 25,1963

to the (Editor
(Continued

if it does a conscious job of reporting the news there would be no
need for the Senate to spend additional funds for the Newsletter.

Although coverage in the Spectrum
is deficient in many respects it
has been giving adequate coverage
to Senate activities. So the second
reason is obvious. If the Spectrum
continues to do its job as “The
official student newspaper" in relation to the Senate there is no
logical reason why the Newsletter

from Fade

4)

need be printed.

Oct. 8,
1963, I staled in the Communication
Committee’s report that it might
be more advisable for the Senate
to publish a Newsletter once a
semester, as a summary of Senate
activities, as opposed to a monthly
report. So let me thank you for
reminding me of my report of four
days previous.
Sincerely,
Michael L. Shapiro

At the Senate

meeting of

Stimulating Teachers Hailed
To the Editor
It is very often, especially here
at UB, that thestudent feels as if
he is merely a very small clog
in the tremendous wheel of mass
education. The lectures of four

hundred seem unavoidable but the
smaller classes, the recitations,
English courses and laboratories,
should be a place were the student
and the teacher can come into more
personal contact. However, more
times than not, the professor seems
to regard his teaching role as a
necessary drudgery that can terminate when the fifty minutes is
over.

When the student finds a faculty
member who is in the highest
sense of the word a teacher, one
who thoroughly loves his subject
and his chance to share it, he can
only feel awed. While there are

probably more than a few on this
campus they seem to be hidden by
the vast number of the other kind.
Dr, Ebert, chairman of the Geography Department is one, Mr. Gold,
in the English Department is another.

Both of these men take the time
to talk with, console, and try to
understand their students, Mr.

Gold has visited one of his sick
students in the campus infirmary.
Dr. Ebert is notorious for his practical jokes. To the student who
does feel that in reality no one
on the faculty really gives two
cents about his problems, professors such as these give the courage
to leam and work harder. It is
too bad that there aren't a few
more.

Sincerely,

Harriet Heitlinger

Registration For Preliminary
Tourneys Opened by Union Board
By NANCY LAURIEN

The Recreation Committee of the
Union Board is in the process of
registering participants for preliminary ti

its in table tennis,

chess, pinocle, bridge, billiards,
and men and women's bowling in
preparation for the regional tourneys to be held in February 1964
by the Association of College Unions. Bridge, pinocle, bowling and
billiards prelims will commence
first week of November, table tenms competition will take place later
this month, while chess elimination
matches have been scheduled for
the weekly meetings of the Chess
Club and will continue through to
the week of February the 15th.
A four-man chess team has al-

ready distinguished itself this semester by placing second in competition with five other schools at a

local invitational match held at
Syracuse University Oct. 12 and 14.
Paul Nowak, Richard D'Angelo.
Robert Clawson and Gary Bolat
represented UB well and demon-

strated the enthusiasm and skill
in chess to be found on our campus,
although the layman may not be
aware of it.
Those interested in participating
in any of the tournaments may
contact Howard Stein at TF 2-0912,
Maxine Schilowitz at 833-6673, Joe
Paffee in the recreation area of
Norton or may leave their names
and telephone numbers in the Union
Board office on the second floor
of Norton.

Civil Rights Picket At Tinney Cadillac
About 20 UB students took part
a picket line in front of Tinney
Cadillac last Thursday. They were
protesting discrimination practices
of this company.
ln

Buses left from the front of
lower. The picketting, held in
injunction with the NAACP, was
held against the hiring of workers
at the Chevy River Road Plant and

for discrimination practises used in
the advancement program for both
skilled and unskilled workers.
Joe Traylor, Chairman of the
Civil Rights Committee, stated that
“We hope to encourage students
to take active part in protesting
abuses of the civil rights of any
group or any person in the community,"

PAGE NINE

J3oard

Spectrum

KIPLING HOUSE

ALCOTT AND JAMES
Alcott and James House will have
a car wash tomorrow 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. at Moe’s Shell Station, corner Sheridan and Parkhurst.

Music "Committee
The following schedule of musical selections has been established
by the Music Committee of the
Union Board for the music lounge

in Norton through

Oct,

28:

10 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Classical
recordings
11:30 a.m.-l p.m., Folk music
1 p.m.-2:30 p.m., Scmiclassical
records
2:30 p.m.-4 p.m.. Jazz
4 p.m.-5 p.m., Popular records
AUDIO VISUAL
The Audio-Visual Center will be
taking identification card pictures
for this semester Tuesday, Wednes-

day and Thursday,

ONLY,

Students who haven't as yet had
their ID pictures taken are urged
to do so, and those who have may
pick up their completed cards in
the basement of Foster.
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB
Dr. James Drasgow, counseling
psychologist from the Veterans Administration Hospital, will speak on
"Reflections and Regrets" today
at 4 p.m. in Norton 234. All students are invited to attend.

QST
The "Amateur Radio Club" will

hold an organizational meeting on
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. in the third
floor lounge of Norton, All are invited.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

terested students. For further information call TR 7-7354.
BRIDGE CLUB
The Bridge Club

will hold a meet-

ing Tuesday at 7:30, Norlon 327.

There will be a duplicate game for

fractional master points, as well
as beginning instruction. Everybody from beginners to experts is
invited to attend.
The bridge club is sending three
four-man teams to (he University
of Rochester Invitational Bridge
Tournament on Nov. 23. There will
be a master point game next
month. The exact date will be announced in the Spectrum.

MIXER COMMITTEE

Today, the Mixer Committee is
sponsoring Folk Singing in the
Ralhskellar from 3-5 p.m. Everyone is welcome to attend.
ASTRONOMY CLUB
The Astronomy Club
meeting on Monday at

will hold a
4 p.m. in

Hochstetter III.

PHI ETA SIGMA
and ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA
Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Lambda Della will hold a reception on
Sunday for all prospective members, 2-4 p.m. in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge.
HEMINGWAY HOUSE

There will be a general meeting
o(

Student Zionist Organization will
hold its semi-weekly meeting Sunday at 7:30 p.m. sharp.
This week the program will be
"An Arab view of the middle-East
and Israel." This highly controversial subjject promises an exciting meeting:
Free coffee hour and discussion
will follow. SZO welcomes all in-

the Photography Club today at

four o’clock. Final plans for the
trip to Toronto will be discussed.
New members are welcome. The
room will be posted.

Hemingway House will hold a
meeting in 33C Norton on Tuesday
al 1 p.m. Wednesday. Iljc members
o' Hemingway House and Alcolt
House will hold a Halloween party
in Norton I-ounge. 4-6 p.m.

Kipling House will hold a 56-50
raffle. Tickets may be purchased
from any

member of the house

plan, at the front entrance of Norton. Proceeds of the raffle will

be divided between the winner and
the house for use in student functions.

There will be a meeting of Kipling House or Tuesday in 246 Norton.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY CLUB
The Ocrroational Therapy Club
will meet oday from 3;30 to 4:30
in room 24* Norton. The discussion
will invoK hospital affiliations.

MC Position
Is Available
Stunt Nile is to be held on Nov.
15. in Harriman Auditorium. Two
performances arc scheduled: 7:U0
and 9:30 p.m.

The members of the Stunt Nile
committee are as follows: Joy

Charkin, general chairman; Barry
Hornstein, program and ushers:
Ronni Acker, business manager
Marilyn Bumslein,
and tickets;
publicity chairman, and Flo Gerber, off-stage physical arranger.

The position of Master of Ceremonies is still open to consideration.
All interested persons are requested
to contact Joy Charkin at 831-2854.
Try-outs have been postponed
from Oct. 23, to facilitate the presentation of skits by entire group
casts. They have been rescheduled
for Oct. 29, in the multi-purpose
room. Individual groups will be

notified of their times.

Scripts typed in triplicate are to
be handed in to Miss Hicks in
room 225, Norton Hall. They are
due by Oct. 28 at 4:00 pin.

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o

�Friday. October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Opens
"King and Scores aT’Great Philharmonic
63-64 Season At
Success at Studio Theatre Kleinhans Center
By SYLVIA SPRING

Tl* greatly successful Broadway
musical of Rogers and Hammerstein, "The King and I” opened
triumphantly on the stage of the
Studio

Theatre

last

Wednesday

evening. It was both surprising and

delightful to watch what most people expected to be a weak and
amateur attempt to copy the original, turn into a fairly well polished
and smoothly running performance.
(There were a few opening night
bloopers' but that may be expected

and

excused).

The most common

thing to do

when first sizing up a musical
like "The King and I" is to compare it to the memorable movie
or Broadway productions. But this
comparison is made difficult due
to the somewhat original interpetation director Neil Du Brock gives
it. One cannot judge the Studio's

rendition of the musical with the
same criteria as he can with the
movie or play.
Talent Restrictions

Mr. Du Brock certainly was not
in the same position as the movie

or Broadawy directors were. Obviously he did not have the great
variety of talent or freedom from
monetary or special restriction that
his predecessors had. He had to
work within somewhat confining
bounds and yet the result did not
give the effect of limitation but of
the freedom he found within those

bounds.
The greatest problem was that
of choosing the leads for the musical. Both the King and Anna had
to be extremely good actors as well
as singers. The choice of these
leads involved a certain sacrifice
since apparently such
'singeractors' were not plentiful in Buffalo. It seems that Mr. Du Brock
felt it would be better to emphasize a polished and expert acting
performance rather than a polishvocalist who couldn't carry the plot
of the story convincingly. Thus he
picked as his lead the accomplished of Betty Lutes and Regniald

Miles.
Frail Voice

Betty's role requires a great deal
of acting ability whcih she has
no trouble in producing. But it is
also a necessity for her to sing
quite a few solos. This part of
her role gives her most trouble.
Although Miss Lutes has a pleasant singing voice, it is certainly
not strong enough or of the right
quality to completely carry off her
difficult task. Therefore there are
parts, especially at the beginning
of the play, where her voice seems
to dwindle before the song is finished. As the play progresses. Miss
’

Lutes' voice becomes better due

to either the building up of pace
and confidence on her part or the
appearance of songs better suited
to her type of voice. ('Getting to
Know You’ or 'Shall I Tell You
What I Think of You?') In any
case her lack of vocal versatility
is certainly compensated by her

inexhaustable
Mr, Miles

vitality.

is also confronted by

the same problem. His acting
ability is undisputed in the Buffalo
area but his role as a vocalist
is somewhat new and dubious. He
was not in quite the same pre.
dicament as Miss Lute however,
since the songs he sings do not

require a very versatile voice but
rather a pleasant and strong one
which Mr. Miles undoubtedly possesses, He also only has two solos
compared to Anna's seven. Thus

his acting is the center of attention
and his interpetation of the King
of Siam is not only excellently
performed but also possesses a
unique quality (certainly not like
Yul Bryimer) that can only be referred to as ‘Milesish.’ Reggie becomes the King and even at an
unfortunate moment in his “Song
of the King" when he forgot one
of the verses, Reggie retained his
kingly composure and paced majestically until the end of the refrain where he began again.
Solid Support
The supporting cast can not be
overlooked at all since they were
an indispensible part to the whole
production. 01 the many dancers,
singers and actors, three parts are
especially outstanding and worthy
ol (recogpition.
The-'nrst of these was Lady
Thiang, the King’s first wife, played superbly by Marlene Badger.
Her role required both theatrical
and vocal artistry, both ol which
she accomplished easily. Alter Miss
Badger's extermely sensitive and
moving song “Something Wonderthe audience applauded so long
that she had to wait before she
could continue. Her grace and
charm were extended into her acting as well to create a well-rounded
and delightful role.
The sub-plot in the story is one
ol a secret love between Lun Tha
and Tuptin, played by John Millen and Taeko Fujii respectively.
Here again vocal accomplishment
is combined with dramatic artistry
to create a heart-rending note in
Mr. Millen are professional singers
and it is hard to forget their touching duets "We Kiss in The Shadows” and “I Have Dreamed.”
Their strongest point is certainly
their singing but their roles require this so that one does not
feel any lack of dramatic talent.
the
Tuptin’s presentation of
“Small House of Uncle Thomas”
was one of the highlights of the
performance. It is presented in the
form of an Oriental ballet, brilliantly choreographed by Paul
Hangauer. an accomplished Broadway dancer himself. The dancing
is precisely and smoothly performed and the whole dance is a sheer
delight to watch.
The success of "The King and I”
is also due to the expert craftsmanship put info the construction
of the scenery and costumes. Their
splendor added to give an overall
finished effect to the play.
At the last count, the cast of
“The King and I” numbered eighty
three, ranging from five year old
children to Harem Dancers, to
Buddah. to mention a few. The
relatively small stage in the Studio
virtually creaked when everyone
came out for the curtain call. One
cannot help but be impressed by
the miracles of Mr. Du Brock and
his assistants were able to create
from such a mob.
“The King and I” is well worth
seeing and if you have a dime
in your pocket. I would suggest
that you put it in the nearest phone
and call the Studio Theatre. The
play ends on Saturday evening, so
you had better hurry.

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. under Lukas Foss, will
open its 1963-64 season tomorrow
night at 8:30 p.m. in Kleinhans
Music Hall. Student series tickets
are available at the box office in
Baird Hail lor $12 for the fourteen concerts. Individual tickets
may be obtained at the Kleinhans
box office.
The program will feature La
Sacra da PHntampa of Stravinsky,
to be performed for the first time
at these concerts. Tha Unaniwarad
QaaaHaa of American composer
Charles Ives and Braham's Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 68,
will complete the program.

Mr. Foss, the new conductor, is
equally at home conducting, teaching. composing, and performing,
Indeed. In all the major aspects
of music. He gave a speech on
campus a short time ago. His Tims
Cycle received the Music Critics’s
award in 1962. He has appeared
as conductor of many major orchestras of the U.S. West Coast,
and also of the Leningrad and Berlin Philharmonic Orchestras. He is
the music director and conductor
of the Ojai Festival in California.
Season will be
fourteen concerts, most of which
are on Sunday afternoons for the
student series. Mr. Foss will be
soloist in a Bach concherto in December. An all-Mozart program
with Isaac Stem and Alexander
Schneider is scheduled. David Diamond’s composition commemorating Lincoln’s Gettysburg address,
This Sacred Ground, will receive
its premiere. Leo Smit, pianist, will
appear in March. The season will
close with Bach’s Paseien Accord*
Ing to St. John.

Room 327 in Norton
Hall is now open to all
students as a study
area. It’s operating
hours are the same as
those of the building,
Monday thru Sunday,
with the exception of
Tuesday evenings when
it will close at 6:00 p.m.

The Jazz Gallery
■y RAYMOND CRAWFORD

Once again Joe Rico and radio
station WUFO sponsored a successful jazz concert at beautiful
Kleinhans Music Hall, Sunday night.
This time it was Joe Williams
with the Junior Mance Trio and
to make the evening complete
Moms Mabley, the great woman
comedienne, kept the place rolling
with her interracial and sometimes
naughty little stories.
The show began with the introduction to the Junior Mance Trio.
The trio, composed of Bob Cranshaw on bass and Mickey Roker on
drums was an immediate success
after they played a tune by Ray
Bryant called "Cuban Chant.” The
audience loved it. They did three
more tunes, two swingers and the
last one a blues waltz which was
their best effort of the night. Mance
displayed great technique, with a
fine solo and Roker, with his brushwork set the perfect mood for the
piece. Cranshaw picked his notes
well with fine taste and rhythm.
These are three reasons why this
trio is so well liked in jazz. Their
new realease is a thing called
“Happy Times” that they made
with Joe Williams. Real nice cut.
Joe Williams walked on stage
with the air of confidence that only
a man of his stature and experience
could have. The great voice bleated
out the first selection and "'en
switched to the blues. This ia the
mood I love to hear him in for

no other reason than the fact he
is the best there is. Joe started
with the Count Basie Band nine
years ago and it was there that
he made his name. Alter six years
he went on his own and now is
constantly appearing on the road.

Joe did three selections from his
new album "Jump for Joy.” He
sang April in Paris and from there
on I knew that he was at his best:
If any of you are interested in
some of his sides, two of his better
albums are "A Man Ain’t Suppose
To Cry” and this new one "Jump
for Joy.”

GOT THE
SUNDAY BLUES?
Student Cocktail Hour
1 6 P. M. Sunday*
■

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*/a PRICE
Also Draft Baer Available
Sing ..long or Dance With
DON LOSEL at the Organ

Bowl-O-Drome
Lounge

Joe Rico and BJF Present

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�Friday, October 25,1963

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Rochester Civic Assn.To Hold Folk Program
An interesting folk music program will be presented in Roches-

ter at the Civic Music Association
this Saturday. It has been designed to combine four diverse
styles of folk music;'and to emphasize tradition and integrity.

HOOTENANNY AT THE EAST-

Music Department To Feature
Comic Operas at Baird Soon
lover, Perizonia, the unfalented
By JOSEPH LANG
singers express their utter disgust.
On the University Music Department’s schedule tor November are The situation gets so bad that the
included two operas, which will be impresario walks out. However, in
performed in Baird Auditorium the end funds are obtained to perfrom Saturday, Nov. 2 through form the composer’s opera the
impresario comes back, and the
Tuesday, Nov. 5. "La Serva Padrona.” or "The Maid Mistress" by opera is put on in a happy spirit.
Wagner Is "Impresario
Pergolest and “L’ Impresario in
“L' Impresario in Augustie" will
Augustie” by Cimarosa, first perfeature William Wagner in the lead
formed in 1733 and 1786 respectively, belong to the school of Italian role of the impresario, Taeko Fujii
opera called "opera buffa.” They and Marlene Badger as the two
prima donnas, Ruth
are classic masterpieces which are self-made
loved for the humor of their Mohn as Fiordispina, with Clifford
dramatic
situations
and their Chapman as her lover, and Larry
Bearce as the composer. It will be
music
performed in Italian.
Maid Marries Master
The plot of “La Scrva Padrona"
The performances are free to
concerns a maidservant who wishes students, if they present their ID
to marry her master and thus obcards and pick up their tickets
tain the position of mistress of the on the evening prior to the perhouse. In order to lure her master formance. Tickets for faculty meminto marriage, she has a mute bers are $1 and for the general
manservant pretend to be her lover, public $2.
a tempestous. angry Bulgarian
soldier. A happy ending is effected

when the master of the house becomes jealous of this lusty lover
and decides to marry the maidservant. This opera will be presented in English, and its cast
will feature William Wagner as
master of the house, Loretta Smistek as the maidservant, and Larry
Bearce as the impersonated Bulgarian lover.

”L’ impresario in Augustie" deals
with the theatrical problems ot an
impresario who is trying to produce an opera but is constantly
besieged by two would-be prima
donnas. He is also beset by a composer who is determined to have
his own work produced. The two
singers, who happen to be very
imtalented, are more than confident of themselves. When the impresario’s librettist, grand prima
donna Fiordispina (‘prickly flower’)
enters into the picture with her

;

I

WBFO presents its
weekly “live” broadcast of UB COLLEGE
QUIZ on Tuesday at
8:30 p.m. in the Norton
Union Conference Theater. Campus organizations compete each
week in a battle of wits
in trying to win the
school championship
and the UB College Quiz
trophy. This Tuesday
evening, see the current
champions, The Newman Club,

MAN will feature the New Lost
City Ramblers with Mike Seeger,
Canadian folksinger Donnie Dobson, Jim Kweskin and the Jug
Band, and spirituals and jazz
singer Rev. Gary Davis.
The NEW

LOST

CITY- RAM-

country instruments; gut-bucket,
washboard and kazoo. More conventionally, the other two members of the five-man band play a
guitar and banjo. Following the
Jug Band s successful appearance
at the Queen's College Folk Festival they were booked at the
Greenwich Village nightclub, The
Bitter End.

Davis combines the

Tickets for HOOTENANNY AT
REVEREND GARY DAVIS is a
blind folksinger who has long been THE EASTMAN are available at
recognized as a unique performer the Eastman Theatre Box Office.
in the distinctive area of Ameri- Ticket price's; $1.75. $2.00, $2.50,
can Folk music known as street
$3.00.
singing.

BLERS have recreated what is
described as "the rough, ragged
music of the mountain string bands
of the late 1920's and '30's, An
accomplished and thoroughly pro
fessional group, these three young
men bring old tradition onto the
modern folk music stage in a
manner described by Downbeat as
alive, vigorous and wholly convincing.

nnouncmg
the opening of
...

MR. FERENCZ

BONNIE DOBSON, a '•H-year-old
*

Canadian, began her career sin s
ing at camps in Quebec and Ottawa, Since her professional debut
in 1960 she has made three records and numerous personal appearances in the United Slates and
Canada. She sings both FrenchCanadian airs and traditional Anglo-American songs. Robert Shelton, New York Times critic, said
the enthusiastic response from her
audiences is merited by her distinct, true-pitched singing in a
firm, sweet soprano and by her
ingratiating honesty and warmth

Hair

styling

2903 Sheridan Drive at Eggert
Tel.: 835-8700-01

—

836-9827

OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK
Open Mon. Thru Fri. Nights

on stage.

20% DISCOUNT TO U.B. GIRLS WITH I D. CARD
ON MON , TUBS. &amp; WEDS,

JIM KWESKIN's JUG BAND,
the newest phenomenon in the folk

music scene, is composed of the

compete

against new challengers, Alpha Kappa Psi.
Anyone not able to attend the broadcast, may
listen in on radio (FM88.7 Meg.)

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flavor of

spirituals and pazz in a blend described by one observer as "Holy
Blues." Known tor his versatility
on the guitar. Davis has long performed on the streets of Harlem
and for small folksinging gatherings in New York City.

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�WBFO Announces Schedule

$e(iyiou6
HILLEU
Sabbath Sarvlta and Onag Shabbat
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will hold a Sabbath Service
this evening at 7:45 p.m. in the
Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann
will devote his sermon to: "The
Torah Reading.”
This will be the third in the
series of presentations on: "Understanding jDur Prayer Book." An
Oneg Shabbat Will follow.
Lax and Bagal Brunch Sunday
The next event in the Sunday
lecture programs will be a scries
of talks on the general theme of:
"Theological Land Marks of Ju-

daism.” The lecture series will be
initiated on Sunday at 11 a.m. following a Lox and Bagel Brunch
in the Hillel House. The opening
talk will be given by Dr. Justin
Hofmann on "Jewish Conceptions
of God."
"Live and team"
The next ‘‘Live and Learn” dis-

cussion hour will be held on Thursday at 3 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Mrs. Norman Fertig coordinates
this program.
Hillel at State Elects

Monday, Oct. 21

members 50c.
Friday, Nov. 1, is All Saints Day,
a holy day of obligation and First
Friday of the month; Mass will
be said at 12:00 noon at Cantatician
Center.
Just a reminder: Father's discussion classes meet every Tuesday
and Thursday at 9 and 10 a.m. in
Room 330, Norton.
GAMMA DELTA
Sunday there will be a Billiards
party in Norton. Dinner at the
Milky Way in Williamsville will

follow. For those who desire it, the
will be concluded by a
Reformation Sendee at Kleinhans.
evening

INTER VARSITY
-

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
IVCF will hold a dinner meeting

next Friday, Nov. 1 at the home
of Jack Adcock, 10 Brentwood Dr..
North Tonawanda. Cars will leave

from the Tower at 5:15. Anyone

who is interested should call TR 72365.

5:00—On Campus with Jerry Segal
6:00—News with Jim Cronberg
6:15—Meet The Faculty—Interview
with Prof. Sapp, Music Dept.
7:00—America on Stage—"Pochontas” by John Brougham (1850).
The public laughter of the theater Is often highly significant, for
as it swells up from the audience
responsive to the comedy on
stage, this laughter may echo
attitudes peculiar to a whole
people at any date in their history. In the 1850’s American audiences were roaring their delight
at this burlesque.
7:30—Concert Hall—Mahler: Eine
Kleine Nachtmusik, Masonic Funeral Music and Overtures. Bruno
Walter and the Columbia Symphony Orchestra.
9:00—News
9:00—American Histrory with Mr.
Wilson
10:00—Musical Showcase with Terry

Africa, G. Mermen Williams,
Assistant Secretary of State for
African Affairs

9:30—To Be Announced
10:00—Evening Showcase with Ray
Crawford and Jazz
11:00—Headlines and Sign Off
Wednesday, Oct. M
5:00—On Campus with Bob Gottesman

6:00—News with Dave Schrieber
6:15—Getting To Know You—Interviews with foreign students
6:30—Evening Musicale

Jim Ivey,
7:00—Cartoonists Art
recipient of a Reid Fellowship
compares American and European editorial cartooning.
—

Bartok: Con7:30—Concert Hall
certo fir Orchestra. Reiner and
the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
—

9:00—News
9:10—American History with Mr.
Wilson

10:00—Evening Showcase with Ray
Caruana
11:00—Headlines and Sign Off

PAT'S
justgreat for

Lee

11:00—Headlines and Sign Off

CHARCOALED

Tuesday, Oct. 2*
5:00—On Campus with Allan Kay
6:00—News with Ed Nagel
6:15—Over the Back Fence
6:30—Evening Musncale
“The
7:00—Hold Your Breath
More
Price of Pollution II”
economic issues are raised: effeels on agriculture, community
stability, population trends, etc.

HOTS

—

Hillel at State University College
recently held its annual election of
officers. Fred Solomon was elected
President for 1964-64. Others serving with him are: Doris Gallop,
Secretary; Lois Lebowitz, Treasurer; and Sharon Rosen, Historian.
Charles Tuly was appointed Publicity Chairman. Ofra Holz and
Laura Silverman are the co-chairmen of the membership committee.
Marilyn van der Wyk heads the

Turtle entries for the
proposed Nov. 11 Student Senate Turtle Race
are now being accepted
by the Senate secretary
in 205 Norton. All proceeds from the race will
go to charity. Information is available in the
Senate office.

(with all the trimmin's)

—

YOU and Other U. B. Students

7:30—Concert Hall
Beethoven:
Symphony No. 7 in A Major.
Herbert vhn Karajan and the
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra.
—

Have Made Us Famous
SHERIDAN DRIVE at PARKER BLVD.

8:30—College Quiz

9:00—Nationalism in the Mid 20th
Century
The New Nations of
—

food committee.

NEWMAN CLUB

‘

A Halloween Masquerade will be
held tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Newman Club. There will be games,
tun. and surprises for all. Mem-'
bers will be admitted free, non-

FOR

Friday, October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

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Stretches the shoestring further with 4- and

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GORVAIR—For fun-loving people. More fun than
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�Friday, October 25,1963

PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Portrait of a Champion

FLU CLINIC
PLACE: Student Health
MichOffice
ael Hall.
DATES: Thursday and
—

By LEON LEWIS
It

is

'

late afternoon and it

is

windy. The sun is low in the sky
and the trees cast long shadows
across the fairways. A small group
of men with clipboards and stopwatches stand next to a limed line
somewhere on a golf course and
watch a lone runner, sometimes as
much as 500 yards in front of his
opposition, run easily across the
finish line. There are no cheering
crowds; there are no pretty grils
with flashing smiles for the victor.
There aren't even any teammates
to clap him on the back and congratulate him since they are all
still out somewhere running on the
course themselves. There is, perhaps, the deep satisfaction of
knowing that he has done a good

mental attitude plays in a meet
Stu feels it is vitally important. He
is looking forward to the State
Championship this year when he
will have another crack at Bums,
and if he finishes in the top 10

diet with a bottle of Metrecal every
so often, and is always taking vifamins."
The time Stu spends running has
not hurt his academic record at

job in a very exacting discipline,

and this is the measure of athletic
glory for Stu Katz, Buffalo’s champ-

STU KATZ, CHAMPION DISTANCE RUNNER

ion distance runner.

Katz, a junior psych major in a
pre-law program is from Batavia,

N Y. He has been running since
he was a sophomore in high school
when he was 15. His performances
in those days gave no indication of
his present excellence. “I ran a
4:56 mile in high school," Stu says,
"but I weighed only 86 lbs. then
and I was terribly immature and
weak.” As a runner with no real
natural talent except for a strong
love for running itself, Stu has always had to train exceptionally
hard to reach any levels of athletic

success. But he has been willing
to do this.

Career Turning Point

"The turning point in my career
as a runner came this last summer,” Stu feels. “I met Attila Matray, a Hungarian refugee who is
working now for Dupont as a chemical engineer. He is 28 and is the
first man I’ve met who has really
dedicated his life to running. I
trained with him throughout the
summer and on the weekends, we
still run for 16 or 18 miles through
Delaware park." The ardous training schedule which Stu follows has
accounted, he thinks, for his record
this year. “I don’t want to compete unless I know that I'm ready
to give the best that I have in any
race."

there (“I’m sure I will,” Stu said
with justifiable confidence), he
will travel to East Lansing, Michigan, to run in the NCAA meet
against the best college runners
in the country.
Inspiring Sportsman
In spite of Stu's fine running, the
UB cross-country team has not had
an outstanding season thus far.
However, in the team’s first try, a
double win against Canistus and
Niagara last week, Stu purposely
stayed off the pace in the early
parts of the race to encourage his
teammates. One of his fellow runners, Pete Stem, says, “Stu is a
great guy and a helluva runner,
I know it sounds kind of corny,
but it really is an inspiration to
run with him.” Stu's friends are
often amused by his devotion to
what they consider to be a
“strange" sport. Their attitude is
summed up by Jim Roemer who
says, “I can’t see how he can possibly run so well on dorm food. I
understand he supplements his

So far his season, Stu has broken the course record in 4 of the 6
meets he has entered. He has lost
twice, but in both of these races,
both he and the first man established new records, and he was
only a few seconds behind in each
case. Against Tim Burns, the Western NY College champion from
Buffalo State, Stu made a strategic
error which, he believes, cost him
the

—

—

—

said,
in surpassing the performance of
your former self,' and to do this,
you've got to work awfully hard,
especially if you don't have much
natural ability . . , and most of
us don't!”
Stu hopes to keep running after
he gets out of school. He feels
that our country's attitude toward
amateur athletics is not realistic
and that it ought to be easier to
continue running once you're out
of college. "The running clubs
here don't give that sense of cohesiveness and spirit that you often
feel in school." And yet, for all
of the difficulties involved—watching his teammates run into automobiles in a blizzard; getting lost
at a meet in Syracuse where the
coach there changes the course
every two years; running in a road
race where the runner next to him
barked like a log at people who
stopped to laugh at them; the lack
of student support which he has
grown used to
Stu says that
there has been nothing quite like
those moments when his body
caught the rhythm of his pace and
he was able to feel the joy and
the loneliness of the long distance
runner.

n

-

iM

The SPECTRUM
now printed by

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UB STUDENTS ARE FEASTING ON MILE LONG

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Phone 836-4808
THURS.
12 NOON TO 12 MIDNIGHT
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Friday,

First injection and
2nd injection.
3:30 p.m. 5:00
TIME:
p.m.
PRICE: $1.25 (Includes
two injections)
We urge all students
to participate in this
program in order to
eliminate loss of class
time.
Students with an allergy to eggs should
NOT be immunized.
Parental consent must
be presented at time of
clinic for all individuals
under 21 years of age.

—

"FOR THE
CLASSIC LOOK"

race. “I don’t have the pure

320)

is

219 OkeH Street

leg-speed to outrun

a man like
in the last few hundred
yards, and so I have to try to
build up a lead going into the final
straightaway. I began to pull away
from Burns at the three mile mark,
but I thought he might be tiring
and I relaxed and slowed the pace.
He was able to stay close enough
to outkick me at the finish.”
This race was an indication of
the large part which the runner's

he has a 2,6 cumulative averall
age so far. It has given him some
rather singular attitudes towards
sports in general. "I love the
traveling and the chance to meet
people,” Stu says, “but I feel that
our schedule of 15 meets in 2
months is too much. Coach Fischer
has been trying to turn some of
our dual meets into quadrangular
ones. I find it difficult to get myself up mentally and physically
so often during the season." One
of the reasons for this is Stu's
fierce sense of competition. "1
can’t agree with the attitude expressed by so many British runners
Bannister and Chris Chatawhich says that
way especially
you ought to keep it all within the
bounds of a gentleman’s excursion. I guess I run to prove myself in a way, Robert Frost once

'The essence of athletics

—

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�Friday, October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

£'UB Wh ips Boston U 22-13^
Philbin, Butler Shine in Homecoming Day Contest
Five Bulls on Injured List: Cimba Out for Season,

Rob Edward, junior understudy to
Butler. Besides paining

31' yards

in 7 carries Edward intercepted a

pass in UB territory and proceeded on a 50-yard run consummating
on the Boston 25 yard line in the
closing ,seconds of the .game.
Phil Caito, Boston quarterback,
set the pace early and engineered
a B3-yard march to the end zone
with speedy fullback Bob Horton
bulling through the UB line for
the initial tally. Caito split the upBuffalo bounced back into the
game late in the first half. Jim
Ryan started the scoring drive with

Eastern College Athletic Conference
All-East team for the third time
in five weeks.
Philbin was selected for his
sparkling performance in UB's 22-13
triumph over Boston University Saturday. All three Buffalo touchdowns
were scored over Philbin’s position,
on defense, Gerry blocked the Terrier’s conversion attempt from

placement and made key tackles
throughout the game which aided
in halting Boston's ground attack.
The three nominations make Philbin an excellent choice to play in
the annual East-West Shrine game
which is broadcasted on national
television at the end of the season.
UB’S Tom Butler received honorable mention at the halfback slot
for his play in the game while
defensive end. Garry La Fountain,

was nominated for sophomore-ofthe-week honors for the second time
this year.
Also selected for the All East
squad was Bob Horton, BU's fullback. This came as a surprise to
many as it was evident that halfback Butch Byrd was the Terriers
Standout on offense, although Horton scored both their touchdowns.
Others on the All-East team were:
Milt Morin, Massachusetts, and Ed
Unruh, Army, ends; A1 Atkinson,
Villanovu, tackle Fred Marlin,
fJavy, and Tony Hoeflinger, Rutgers, guards; Brad Stephens, Harvard, center; Gary Wood, Cornell,
quarterback; Billy Hunter, Syracuse, and Paul Martha, Pittsburgh,
halfbacks.
-

Butler takes the handoff from Stofa and barrels info the end zone for the
first of his two touchdowns.
HU line and blocked Cailo's second
conversion attempt.
The big break for the Bulls cant' 1
on a fourth down punting situation
with Boston in possession of the
hall. The Terrier center sent tht,-

1

By ALAN NEWMAN
The same Stofa-to-Butler combination that thwarted the Terriers
last season did it again Saturday
as the Bulls beat Boston 22-13 before a record Homecoming Day
crowd of 11.466 at Rotary Field.
The Terriers compiled an early
lead and held onto it for the most
part of the game but eventually
tired and succumbed. The wellbalanced two-unit platoon system (if
Buffalo proved just too much for
BU to cope with.
It was perhaps, one* of Butler's
greatest days on the .gridiron since
he donned the Royal Blue and
While uniform. All in all. the liftpound senior tailback scored the
Bulls' first two touchdows. returned a kickoff 20 yards, -caught one
Slofa pass for a conversion and
another for 30 yards, ran a pass
interception back 39 yards and recovered a Terrier fumble.
Also a standout in the game was

Gerry Philbin, the Bulls’ standout
has been named to the

tackle,

football down,

to

punier

Roger

Duarte op the ground. Buffalo'
tackle Doiu Pieslrak streaked
through the line and pounced on

In nine plays UB siowly moved
the ball to the one-yard line where
Tom Butler crashed over the goal
line. Then Stefa threaded the need-

including Gerry Pawolski (sprained
right'shoulder), Jim Pusatori (hamsiring raiisHe in right leg). Arin.ind Martin. (sprained right knee)
and John Stefa. Slofa played the
entire second half with his sprained
right shoulder heavily bandaged.
John Cimba suffered a damaging
sprain to his righl knee and had
.to be carried off the field. Cimba
ion for
the’ remainder of the season. Buffalo will how be playing without
its two leading ground gainers of
last year, fullbacks Cimba and
Burd.

the two points and Buffalo led, for
the first lime in the afternoon, 14-

"He'll get
ADVERTISER
my vote for All-America. He's a
great football player."
GENE HASS, COACH OF GETTYSBURG (Score: UB 34, Gettysburg 01
"Philbin in the best lineman we play against. He has been
on our All Opponent team every
—

—

-

year.”
STEVE SINKO, COACH OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY (Score: UB 22,
Boston 13)
"They beat us in the
line. We broke down at the tackles." Buffalo ran all key plays over
Philbin. including two for touchdowns on 4th down situations.
—

ADVERT!

Ik -JudZ~~
Pnykuta carries the ball near goal for important yardage. This play set
up Butler's second touchdown.

an eight-yard run hurdling over the
heads of his would-be tacklers. It
took another 15 plays to go the
remaining 48 yards before Butler
was able to power his way over
the goal line for the score. Gilbert's
try for two points on a sweep
around right end fell just short and
the Bulls trailed by a point.
BU wasted no time getting into
the scoring column again in the
second half. With the pigskin on
his own 49 Ciato dropped hack and
fired the ball to Horton who made
a sensational catch at the 20. elud-

ing safety man John Cimba before sprinting into the end zone

for the touchdown. All-East tackle
Gerry Philbin dashed through the

SURE!

That was all the margin the Bulls
needed in the game but later they
added some points for insurance.
The "Iceman" directed a 57-yard
touchdown drive with sophomore

halfback Denny Przykuta receiving
credit for the six points and Butler adding the final two on a pass
from Long John.
NOTES
The Bulls have an open date
lomomsv and play Ihcir next game
November 2 against the Blue Hens
of Delaware at Delaware Stadium.
The Blue Hens were the 19G2 Lambert Cup winners and Middle At-

lantic Conference champions,

UB payed quite a toll in beating
Boston. Five Bulls were injured

YOU CAN PICK UP YOUR
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3588 MAIN—Next to University Plaza
It yew have already made your retervaHon with
the Airlines, you may pick up your ticket here
and save a trip to the Statler or the Airport
OR

We will make your reservations ter you and
furnish the tickets.

NO EXTRA CHARGE

THE PARE IS THE SAME

ALEX BELL, COACH OF VILLANOVA (Score: UB 14, Villanova 7)
—"We haven't seen a lineman like
Philbin in a long, long, time.”
EDDIE ANDERSON. COACH OF
HOLY CROSS (Score: UB 6, Holy
Cross 6)
"UB has tremendously
talented personnel. Stofa is a fine
quarterback and Philbin a great
tackle.”
CLIFF SPEEGLE, ASST COACH
OF TORONTO ARGONUTS (Canadian Pro League) "Philbin has no
weakness. He could start at defensive end or tackle for me to—

morrow.

TOM FEARS, SCOUT FOR
GREEN BAY PACKERS (NFL)
“I like that Philbin. He has a lot
of agility and he's big and strong."
Green Bay has scouted Philbin on
several occosions, the last two seasons and he's on their preferred
draft list.
BILL HESS. COACH OF OHIO
UNIVERSITY (Score: UB 7, Ohio
0)
“Philbin was the difference.
Offensively and defensively he
made the key plays.”
HAMPTON POOL. SCOUT FOR
LOS ANGELES RAMS (NFL)'
"Philbin is really quick and loves
to hit. Even in drill he goes all-out
-

—

ERNIE SALVATORE,FOOTBALL
WRITER FOR HUNTINGTON (W.
Va.)

Support
the
Bulls

“Y PHILBIN
GERR

Mm -frluu.

-

on every maneuver.”
■ JERRY SMITH, ASS'T COACH
OF BUFFALO BILLS (AFU
“He's high on our draft list. Philbin
has no big weakness. He can run,
hit, and loves the game.”
-

�Friday, October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

Varsity Golf Squad Places Fourth At "Serf' Is Pleased
ECAC Tournament; Colgate Is First With Progress

Navy Ptebes Thump Freshmen 30-0
By ROCKY VERSACE
The University of Buffalo freshmen team's journey to Annapolis
proved to be quite unsuccessful, as
the Naval Academy Plebes soundly
trounced them 30-0. The win enabled the young midshipmen to
maintain a clean slate of three victories and no losses.
Buffalo had several scoring opportunities but was unable to penetrate the goal line. Said freshmen

line. Halfback Dan Sella and linemen Fred Dunbar and Tony Micelli
were also named by Wade as standouts for the frosh Bulls. Two starters were missing from the UB
lineup
Quarterback Jim Robie
and center Bruce MacKellor.
Buffalo’s record now stands at
one win and two losses. The Baby
Bulls will next meet Manlius on
—

coach Dewey Wade, "We just couldn't get the ball across.” The Baby
Bulls ground out approximately 200
yards by land but failed at getting
the all important short yardage
Name

Robie, James
Blair, John
Murphy, Wallace
Wastak, Gerald
Hoechst,

John

Capuana, Nicholas

Goff, Michael
Barksdale, James
Sella, David
Potskowski, Wm.
Bonner, Wesley
Balchuweit, Terry
MacKellor, Bruce
Schleifer, John
Diez, Douglas
Dunbar, Richard
Botula, Charles
Finochio, James
Markfield, Allan
Galanti, Ralph

Nov. 2, at Manlius,
The team roster is as follows:

173
175

Hometown
Williamsville, N.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Brandon, Fla,

6-0
519
18 6-1
17 5-11
17 5-10

205
173
165
165

Buffalo, N. Y,
Utica, N. Y.
E. Detroit, Mich,
Syracuse, N. Y.

20

5-6

18
18

6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1

215

Age Ht
17 6-3

18
22
18

5-10
5-6
6-0

20
17

17
18
18

5-11

17 5-11
17 66
17 5-10
17 5-10
17 5-11
18

6-0

Keast, Thomas

18
17

18
17
18

6-0
6-3

Frickes, Michael
Massaro, John
Dunn, James
Popp, Thomas
Alekson, Michael
Miceli, Anthony

18
17

6-0
6-0
6-3

Wilber,

Gerald

Hurley, Thomas
Galinis, Roger
Sprogue, Fred
McKnight, Michael

18
17
20

5-11
6-2

6-4
6-1
6-0

Wt
190

178

180

152

179
208
210
200

203
200
200

Y.

Duryea, Pa.

McKees Rocks, Pa.
Port Henry, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Owego, N, Y.

Kenmore, N, Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.

Ransomville, N.
Dearborn, Mich.

Y.

Riverhead, N. Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
New York, N. Y,
Lackawanna, N. Y.
190 Lackawanna Trail, Pa.
210 Taylor, Mich.
250 Orchard Park, N. Y.
220 E. Palestine, Ohio
225 Batavia, N. Y.
225 Grand Island, N. Y.
205 Howard, Pa.
210 Fulton, N. Y.
190 Cranston, R. I.
202
195

195

BOSTON U
Time

"On a comparative basis, this
year's squad reported in better
condition than any previous year,”
asserted
UB
head
basketball

5:05

coach, Dr. Leonard Serfusfku. The
coach is very pleased witHMhe
progress of the team thus far, after
/
the first week of practice.
However the cagers' high hopes
for the coming season suffered
great setback with the decision of
last year’s captain and high scorer,
Dave Baldwin, not to play due to
personal and scholastic pressure.
"His loss is a great one", declares
Dr. Serfustini, "but I'm sure that
men like Norbert Baschnagel, Jack
Karazewski, Don Thompson, and
Norwood Goodwin will take up the
slack
if any."
Also missing from last week's
practice sessions was last year's
leading freshman scorer, Norwood
Goodwin. The 6'0” junior, who led
the Frosh with 21 points per game
last season, pulled a groin muscle
prior to the opening workout. The
coach hopes he will be able to
start practicing soon at full speed,
so that he will be ready for the
season opener,

Thus far, the squad has been
reduced to 18, including three seniors, six juniors, and nine sophomores, Coach Serfustini has decided to carry 15 men this year as
opposed to 11 last year. This is
due mainly to the wealth of sophomore talent on the team. “I feel
right now that of the 18 presently
remaining, all are capable of playing college basketball and I hope
those who are dropped will gain
a year of outside experience someplace else and come back next
year.”

7 0 6 0
0 6 8 8

BUFFALO

By ALLAN SCHOLOM

—

within the ten yardlines,
Jim Barksdale led the Buffalo
backs in rushing, including a 60
yard burst to the Navy one yard-

STATISTICS

14:24

RIJ

Play
FIRST PERIOD
Horton 1-foot run
Caito kick
SECOND PERIOD
Butler 3 run
Run failed .

THIRD PERIOD
Horton 51 pass from Caito
Kick blocked
10:25 Butler 1 run
Gergley pass from Stofa .
FOURTH PERIOD
11:45 Przykuta 1-foot run .
Butler pass from Stofa .
Attendance: 11,466
2:20

TEAM STATISTICS
Boston
10
110
133

First Downs .
Rushing Yards
Passing Yards
Passes
Passes Intercepted by
Punts
Fumbles Lost
Yards Penalized

Buffalo

14
195
39

7-16

3-7

2-34.5

5-27.8

At this point, the coach says that
"it is still too early to tell who
will be carrying the load of play
because of the extremely keen
competition going on for starting
positions." By next week Dr. Serfustini hopes to have the team
down to its numerical playing size,
at which time they can begin their
rigorous training schedule for the
coming season.

Perry, N. Y.

82
185 Aquinas, ,N. Y.
84
18 62
210 Batavia, N. Y.
85 Shepelew, Gene
185 Buffalo, N. Y.
17 60
Dewey S. Wade
Univ. of Houston '59
Freshman Head Football Coach
—

—

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UB

,

By-ALLAN SCHOLOM
Colgate's total in the tournament
was 3U (76-76-78-81) tor the fourAnnual Eastern Collegiate Athletic man team, each of whom played
Association Golf Tournament at a fuU 18 holes. The Bulls finished
with 323 total, which included a
Bethpage State Park course, Farmingdale Long Island, last Saturday pair of 79's by Curt Siegel and
afternoon. Head coach,
Dr. Brownie Kopra, and 82 by Fred
Leonard Serfustini commented, “I Berman, and an 83 by Steve Watts.
thought the team played well, for The order of the finish was Colin a tournament such as this you gate, 311; Navy, 314; Connecticut,
have to put together your best 318; UB 323; Army, 325; Massascores to win.” This was evidenced chusetts, 327; St. John's, 333; Leby the winning Colgate team, whom high, 337. The low medalist in
the Bulls had previously beaten the tournament was Tom Romano
by 13 strokes in the qualifying of Army, who broke the course
round at Cornell in which 18 schools record of 69 by shooting an outstanding four under par-68.
had competed.
The University of Buffalo Golf
team placed fourth in the fourth

PAGE FIFTEEN

"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, October 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

Spectrum Sports

�
m
|

ffiilllillillillllllilliiiiililllil

�
3=5

iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiii

Intramurals
Fencers to Duel
UB Old Timers" Sig Ep Leads

Sports Circle

By BRYN A MILLMAN

VERSACE

The clash of

UB Was Forgotten In Eastern Polls
It seems that the University of Buffalo is being overlooked as far as the Lambert Trophy standings for eastern
football is concerned. While the Bulls tackle eastern powers
that are truly established, the fine and cultured gridiron
the
gentlemen from football’s “right side of the tracks”
Ivy Leaguers, clash weekly (or is is weakly-) in their
rough and tumble contests. But four of the Ivy League’s
loveliest groups appeared in the top ten this week. The most
amazing part of it all is the fact that Princeton and Dartmouth are rated fifth and sixth respectively in front of the
next two squads of Penn State and Boston College. This
writer would like to see results of a Penn State—Dartmouth
football game. It is a good thig the ratings are not constructed in this manner.
The standings are: 1. Pittsburgh; 2. Syracuse; 3. Navy;
4. Army; 5. Princeton; 6 Dartmouth; 7, Penn State; 8. Boston
College; 9. Harvard; 10. Columbia and Massachusetts (tie).
In case you are interested, the creaters of the above
listings are as followes: Alex Bell, Villanova coach; Paul Dietzel, Army; Buff Dinelli, Columbia; Will Grinsley, Associated
Press; Larry Klein, Newsweek; Arthur Sampson, Boston Herald; Jimmy McDowall, Trenton Times; and Jimmy Dolan,
CBS.
What the University of Buffalo needs is national recognition and one way to attain this is to be chosen among the
top ten teafs in the East. However, the way the polls are
evolving, the only way the Bulls will get recognition will be
for Athletic Director Peele to decelerate the football program
in an attempt to enter a team in the Ivy League.
Roger Kochman’s knee injury seems to be the “straw
that broke the camel’s back” as far as the future of the Buffalo Bills’ is concerned. Major injuries to athletes of the
Cookie Gilchrist, Wray Carlton, anr Roger Kodhman caliber
spell disaster to any team.
If anyone thinks that the coming Delaware game is
going to be a pushover, he should forget it. The Blue Hens
have rolled over four straight opponents by big scores. Their
closest game was last Saturday when they downed Ohii University 29-14. Prior to that the Delaware team averaged 50
points a game. Although a small college team, they undoubtedly could raise havoc in the camps of such Eastern powers
as Princeton, Dartmouth, Columbia, Harvard and the like.
Many students have been wondering about the procedure needed to acquire a ticket to the Boston College-Buffalo
game. All one merely has to do to purchase a ticket is to go
to the athletic ticket office and ask for a fine young man by
the name of Jack Sharpe. For only $3.50 the young gentleman will allow you to join the ranks of the many faithful
undergraduates in the pilgrimage to the holy land of Boston.
—

Harriers Explode for Three Wins
Over Canisius, Niagara, Lemoyne
By TERRY SWEENEY

TheU.B. cross-country team has
come to life after a sluggish season start. The Buffalo harriers last
week trounced Canisius, Niagara,
and Lemoyne, bringing their record to 3 wins and 5 lisses.

In the tri-meet with Niagara and
Canisius, the Bulls, led by Katz,
Lontrato, Weiffenbach, and Suedmeyer, downed Niagara by a score
of 16-47 and Canisius by a score
of 21-40. Stu Katz finished first
against both teams with a time of
22.43, followed by Lontrato (23.47),
Weiffenbach (23.54), Suedmeyer
(23.59), and Stern (24.53). Canisius's Rich Mallizzo finished second ini the meet with a time of
23.15. Phil Bacher led Niagara
with a time of 24.35.
The Buffalo frosh also defeated
the frosh from Canisius and Niagara. The Baby Bulls edged Cani-

weapons can be

heard twice weekly as the varsity
fencers prepare to take on “The
Grand Old Men" of recent fencing
history in the traditional opener at
Clark Gym on November 21st.
The varsity team which this year
is composed of a rather odd-lot of
sophomores, juniors and seniors

with mixed experience has been
practicing since the beginning of
September under the direction of
Coach Sid Schwartz, saber coach
Jules Goldstein and Captain Mark
Fox.

Leading the foil squad this season is veteran fencer Barry Canter, the only returning varsity letterman in this weapon. Canter receives especially strong support
however from the remainder of
the squad, all up from the ranks
of last year’s freshman team.
Gerry Aronoff, former frosh cocaptain went undefeated all last
year, ending the season with a
dazzling 23-0 record and the Freshman Fencer of the Year award.
Also fencing foil will be two other
newcomers, Bob Tothand oJe Paul,
an energetic foilman who finished
19-8 last year.

By ED RIZZO
Sig Ep is first in the standings
for the Louis Pahlowitz Trophy.
The results of golf, tennis, and
cross-country have been compiled
and Sig Ep has 92 points. The first
five teams are very close in standings, with seven points separating the fifth place team from the
first place team. The standings are:
Sig Ep
92
Tlpha Epsilon Pi 90
Sigma Alpha Mu
90
Phi Ep
89
Beta Sigma Rho
85
Last week the finals in tennis
were held. In the singles match,
Dave Solomon from Beta Sigma

Rho defeated Steve Nussbaum also
from Beta Sig, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2, In
doubles, the team of Folley-Syrek,
dental school, defeated SiegelWeber, SAM. The team cham-

Fraternities
the Mooners and Zygotes are still
the only two unbeaten teams in the
5-0-0, Zygots
Mooners
league.
5-0-1. Last week's results:
Zygotes 20, Allenhurst Stars 0
Mooners 20, Upper Tower 0

In the House-Plan League on
Wednesday: Hemingway House 24—
Poe House 0. Tower had a forfeit
win over Lewis House. Hemingway
House is unbeaten with a 5-0 record and Tower is second 3-1-0.
The Flying Frosh lost their first
game of the season last Friday,
Panthers 14—Flying Frosh 0. The
Corner Court Crushers have a 3-0-1
record and Crispins is second place
wi h a 2-0-2 record. The results of
last Friday Corner Court Crushers
6—Browns 0, Crispins 6—Tigers 0.
Alpha Sigma Phi is the only undefeated team in the Tuesday lootball league. Their record is 5-0.

Perhaps the most varied assortment of fencers is to be found on
the epee squad. Two returning varsity members, Herb Bodecker and
Frank Pecenco, will be joined by
Dick Willert, who though not without previous experience is returning to the team after an absence
of two years. Walt Ostrum, a
sophomore, moves up to a berth
on the epee squad for the first time
this season.

The sabre squad which is a perennial trouble spot according to
Coach Schwartz is led this year by
Captain Mark Fox, the only returning letterman in sabre, and
third place winner in last year’s
North Atlantic Championship. Fox
will be backed up by Dave Kirschgessner who completed his freshman season in foil with a 23-14
record, Larry Zollinger and John
George who both fenced an incomplete schedule year. Art Orlick
who was also expected to join the
sabre squad is out with a slight
injury, but is expected to return
in time to start the official intercollegiate season, which for the
Bulls begins on December 7th with
a match against Hobart here.

Friday'* Action In Allonhunt League

week they defeated their
nearest rival A.I.T.E., 24-6. Sigma
Alpha Mu won over APO, 14-12.
In Thursday league, Beta Sig
and Alpha Epsilon Pi are still battling for first place in the Thursday league. Beta Sig is 4-0-1, Alpha Epsilon Pi 3-0. TKE is in
third place with 2-1-1 record. Last
week’s results were Beta Sigma
Phi 26—TKE 6, Phi Psi 12-Gamma Phi 0, Phi Epsilon Pi 20-

pionship for tennis was won by
Sigma Alpha Mu with 48 points,
Beta Sigma Rho had 46 points,
Alpha Epsilon Pi, 32 points, Phi
Ep 30, Sig Ep 29 points.
This past Monday, Daniel Stanek, an independent broke the record for the 2.2 cross-country course
at Grover Cleveland. The record
time was 12 minutes 27.3 seconds.
In cross-country, the team championship was won by Phi Epsilon
Pi—57 pts., Sig Ep—77, Alpha Epsilon—143, TKE—188, Alpha Sigma
Phi—206. A1 Nevin from Phi Ep
came in 2nd place, Ron Riber came
in third, M. Klebenaurer from Alpha Epsilon Pi was fourth, and B.
Barnes from Beta Sigma Rho was

Last

Pi Lambda Tau 6.
Next week AEPi will risk their
first place standing when they go
against TKE.
Fraternity bowling started yesterday at 6:00 in Norton Bowling
Aliys. Entries will also be taken
at Joe Palfie’s office next week.

5th.

sius 26-29, and beat Niagara 2039. Genau placed first against both
teams with a time of 15.29,

In the Monday fraternity league.

How rita Bull'* Foe* Fared

Ice Team Workouts

Saturday, the Grover Cleveland
Course was again the site of another Buffalo cross-country victory
—this time the loser being Lemoyne. The Bulls edged Lemoyne
by a score of 25-32, and again the
first runner across the finish line
was Buffalo’s Stu Katz at 22.04.2.
Second came Lemoyne’s Bob Herzog at 22,35, immediately followed
by a trio of Bulls
Suedmeyer
(23.32), Weiffenbach (23.38), and

Buffalo 22, Boston University 13
Dartmouth 13, Holy Cross 8
Princeton 42, Colgate 0

The U.B. Hockey Bulls will practice next Tuesday 6:30-7:30 at Ft.
Erie. All members and newcomers are urged to come out for this
practice. As of this writing 38
men have come out for the team.
U.B. Hockey Bulls schedule:
Dec.

Villanova

7—

Lontrato

Dec. 10—Brockport
Dec. 15—Ithaca

(23.54).

The Baby Bulls were nosed out
by Lemoyne's frosh 2530. Genau

Jan. 26—HIT

Jan. 29—RIT

and Williams were the first two
runners to finish for U.B., following Ripple and LaWare of Lemoyne.

Saturday, Katz and company will
compete in the Canisius invitational.

U.B. HarHar naan finish llnain
trl-maat with Niagara and Canlsiui

Feb. 9U. of Rochester
Feb. 14—Ithaca
Feb. 15—Syracuse
Feb. 18—Brockport
Feb. 25—Syracuse
Feb. 29—Hobart
Mar. 1—Hobart

This Week:

Away

This Week

Home
Home

Home
Away

Home
Away
Away

Home
Home
Home

Home

Washing-

Gettysburg 28, Albright 12
Delaware 29, Ohio University 13

—

U. of Rochester

14, George

ton 13

I

By ROCKY

iiiiii iiiiiiiii

Gettysburg vs; Muhlenburg
Ohio University vs. Miami (0)
Holy Cross vs. Quantlco Marines
Villanova vs. Xavier
Marshall vs. Louisville
Boston University vs. Massachusetts
Delaware vs. Connecticut
Boston College vs. Air Force

Colgate vs. Yale

�</text>
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�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

AV Broivnrout

FISHETERIA
MALL

IN the

BOULEVARD

All Plates Include French Fries, Cole Slaw, Tartar
Cranberry Sauce Salt Knife and Fork
;

•

Fish Sandwich

94m\J

Fresh Shrimp Cocktail

Chicken Fillet Sandwich
Deep Fried

"

.69

Shrimp Sandwich
Chopped Fresh Shrimp, Not Ground Up Seafood

.

Fried Shrimp Plate
10 Shrimp With Very little Breading

1,35
1*45

-

.

1 Whole Maine Lobster or I Whole Lobster Tail

#

CQ

*89

Scallops

1 1C

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10 Fresh Fried

Golden Fried Chicken IOC
/4-4b.—Va Chicken
I J
Buy It By the Plate or By the Pound
3

mm

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Haddock Dinner

_

Fresh Lobster Plate

94*}

Whole Fish—Not Ground

AQ

5 Jumbo Shrimp and Sauce

Fresh, Special Breaded, Select

,

Our Specialties-

Shrimp Rolls

Oysters

or

J

HOME AAADE FRENCH FRIES
«

•

-

NOT FROZEN

■■rs'f-

Over 50 Years of Combined
Experience in the Food Business

Quality is our
only product
Operated By a
1217 NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD, AMHERST, NEW YORK 14226

JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

MOST ITEMS COOKED TO ORDER IN 3 MINUTES

�or

STATE

MESSAGE FROM
PRESIDENT
FURNAS

MEW YORK AT BUFFALO

BOSTON
UNIVERSITY
PREVIEW

SPECTRUM
Debaters Honor Queen Proclaimed
Mrs. Janet Potter
(See Page Six)

(See Page Eighteen)

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1963

VOLUME- 14

By LINDA LEVENTHAL

Mrs. Janet C. Potter, past advisor of the Debating Society, was presented with a plaque in recognition of her
fifteen years of service to the society. In addition, Mrs.
Potter was made an honorary member of the Debating
Society. She is the first person in the society’s history
to receive this distinction.

The honors were presented by
Gerald Catanzaro, President of the
Debating Society, at a meeting held
last Tuesday evening. In the words
of Mr. Catanzaro, “We are recognizing Mrs. Potter for her outstanding contribution to debate activity
on this campus. It is she who is
responsible for building debate into
the fine activity it is at our university. She has added to the stat-

||^

At Pep Rally Tonight
Three of these girls were chosen
Wednesday to be Queen and runner-up of Homecoming Weekend.
No one, including the finalists,
anows the resluts of the closed
judging: the winner will be announced and crowned as the climax of a gigantic pep rally at
rotary field tonight.

is this warmth which will always

remain, long
lost

After

the trophies have

their luster and

the scores

have been forgotten. Debate under
your tutelage has been a rare and
wonderful experience."

Miss Dorothy Haas and Dean
Richard Siggelkow offered their
praise and congratulations to Mrs.
Potter in recognition of her outstanding service to the Debating
Society. It was the untiring effort
of Mrs. Potter that made the Debating Society one of the finest
activities on campus, and only
through her efforts and interest

\

li

MISS DUAS

MRS. JANET POTTER

throughout the East. Michael Cohen
on behalf of the Student Association, expressed his gratitude to
Mrs. Potter for the fine job she
has done for the Debating Society
and the University as a whole.
Similar words of appreciation and
admiration were expressed by

(Continued

on

Page 9)

Senate Considers Possibility
Of Student Discount Service
By ALLAN MELMED
A subcommittee ol the Student
Senate is investigating the possibilities of setting up a Student
Discount Service. The purpose of
a Student Discount Service would
be to reduce the costs of living
of college students by offering them
discounts at neighborhood stores.
The more stores which participate
in such a program, the more effective it will be in aiding the stu-

dent.
History

The Student Discount Service was
bom as the Purchase Card System
almost at the very inception of
USNSA back in 1947. The Purchase
Card System was thought of as a
means of reducing the students’
cost of living. Agreements were
negotiated with merchants to enable college students at member
schools to get discounts at participating stores. For this privilege
students paid one dollar for a PCS
card. One of the first publications
on the subject has this comment,
"NSA does not look upon the PSC
as the best solution to the problem
It is offered rather as an
immediate and practical method to
reducing the overall 'student cost
of education’.”
Our Student Government
The Student Senate feels that this
problem is within its scope of responsibility. Because of this they
are doing all they can to try and
...

organize such a program. The committee set up to investigate the possibilities of such a program are
Tying to contact as many dif-

ferent merchants as possible. They
are also trying to contact stores
in many diversified areas. Participation in the program could range

from shoe and clothing stores to
record shops and restaurants. In
order for the Senate to convert
their plans Into a working program,
student support is necessary.
Possible System Used
After the merchants have been
contacted, the SDS cards must be
sold or given to the students. These
cards are available at cost to any
member schools. They may be sold
for any sum up to one dollar, or
they may be distributed free. In
deciding what the charge should be,
the Senate incurs an obligation to
effectively publicize the program
and to distribute the list of participating merchants. The SDS card
is designed to provide room for
a list of SDS stores on the back.
In this way both card and list will
be readily available to the stu-

MISS COOPER

Karen Hartwick, 19 a sophomore
also enjoys athletic activities such
as swimming and tennis. She is a
Spanish major and belongs to the

Spanish club.

MISS BAUM

w
MISS HARTWICK

Faye Ellen Lane, 18. is also a
sophomore, active in swimming and
tennis. Her high school activities

included future teachers and future
nurses club, both of which should
aid her plans for a career in nursRuth Rast, a 17 year-old sophomore, was an active participant in
her high school student government, athletic association and cheer
leading squad. She has continued
her dramatic interests from high
school to college, and will use
these speaking abilities in her future career as a speech therapist.
Diana Scholl, a 19 year-old sophomore, is a member of the Newman
Club board of directors, house plan

and yearbook staff. She is chairman of Publicity committee, and
plans to use her major
math
either in industry or in teaching.

—

I?
MISS LANE

MISS RAST

ing.

—

Dolores Anne Simula, 17. is a
freshman and is thus far undecided
as to her major. Her major interest, however, lies in art, as is
obvious by her high school activities; she was vice president of art
club, art editor of the school paper,
and active on the yearbook. At UB
she is a member of House Plan
Committee and Newman Club.
Bonnie Stain, 19 year-old sophomore plans to teach either physical
education or elementary school. In
high school she was vice president
of her senior class and she won
the athletic award. At UB she has
been active in competitive swim-

/&gt;
MISS SCHOLL

0
MISS SIWULA

ming.

Corel June Ova*. 20 is the only
senior of the ten finalists. She is
a transfer student from Elmira
College for Women, at which she
majored in Political Science. At
UB she has changed her major
to elementary education, and is

dents. The program should be sell-

supporting so that it can stand on
its own merits and not become
an issue of student government
finances.
The Student Senate is going to
distribute a questionnaire regard-

ing the discount plan. Questions
regarding the types of stores students would like to have participating in the plan and space for
suggestions concerning the plan will
be provided in the questionaire.
Any persons interested in working
on this committee' should go to
room 205 Norton Hall and leave
his name with the secretary.

which is English, Wendy, a sophomore, plans to become a librarian.

yn is certain of her future career;
she wants to teach high school
science.

many past members who attended
this meeting to honor Mrs. Potter.

Sheldon Evans and Anthony Lorusso recalled the many memorable
experiences they shared with Mrs.
Potter in the years they worked
together. Leslie Foschio and Kenneth Cross also spoke words of
praise about Mrs. Potter, her contributions to the Debating Society,
and her interest in the University
and its body.

Wendy Baum, 19. has carried her
interest in music from high school
to college where she is active in
both chorus and dancing. Her high
school experience in journalism will
undoubtedly be of aid in her major

Carolyn Cooper's major interests
center around athletics. She is a
member of twirling club, modern
dancing club, and is an active
swimmer and ice skater. Although
only a 17 year-old freshman Carol-

has the Debating Society achieved
and maintained a fine reputation

ure of our institution through her
tireless efforts on behalf of debate.
She has done much to make this
university a better institution.”
The feelings of all those who
have worked with Mrs. Potter in
the past was ably expressed in
a letter Mr. Catazaro read, from
Richard Fey, a past president of
the Debating Society. Mr. Fey
wrote,"We have always felt the
warmth of your friendship and it

No. 7

planning to go on

to graduate

school. Carol was last year's chairman of the tranfer student Orientation luncheon, and is also a member of judicial board and house
council at her dormitory.

MISS ZACCARINE

Marilynn Zaccarine, 18 is a Sophomore whose major is in the field
of Business Administration,

MISS STEIN

�PAGE FOUR

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 18, 1963

Dr. Maud's Book Concerns
Difficulty in Reading Poetry
Ralph N. Maud, Assistant Prolessor of English, is the author
of a book just published by
the University of Pittsburgh Press,
Entrances Into Dylan Thomas'
Poetry. This work, which has
also been published by the Scorpion

Press

in England,

is

con-

cerned with the precise nature of

the difficulty experienced by readers in coming to grips with Thomas' radically original poetic idiom.

Old Locks Being Exhibited

Dr. Maud has based his critical
examination of Thomas’ poetry in
part on four manuscript notebooks
of the poet which constitute a portion of the Poetry Collection of
Lockwood Library. At present he
is preparing these notebooks for
future publication.

By Fine Arts Committee
The Fine Arts Committee invites
all University students to view the
Yale Lock Collection, "Style and

Security," which is being displayed
on the second floor corridor ol
Norton Union. There are locks of
ancient civilizations, prison locks
from 12th century to present, and
locks from different countries on
display. The exhibit will run to
Nov. 15, and is sponsored by the

American Federation ol Arts.
The Yale Lock Collection dates
back to 1868, and has been displayed over several decades in
many exhibitions in the major European cultural centers. It include?
several contributions from the famous collection assembled in 1883
by Andreas Dillinger, eminent
Viennese locksmith and lock historian, It also has a large assortof

ancient

sition was that ol early American
tools and locks. These range from
wooden locking devices made by
early American colonists to complex 19th century rim locks, one
of which fires a percussion cap to
warn the occupants of the house
and frighten the intruders. Another
feature of this collection that will
interest young modems is the
"Door Ornamentation of the Future," created by outstanding contemporary artists.
The key represents a historic
symbol between unlocking the
world of today with the progress of

tomorrow. Through its Hardware
Styling program, Yale and Towne
hopes to contribute to the strong

revival of aesthetic individualism
in the design of home and work

environments.

Roman

keys
maintained by Nathaniel Meyer
Rothschild, and valuable antique
locks previously owned by Franz
Josef I., Austro-Hungarian emment

peror.

A recent Yale and Towne acqui-

Editor Expects to Have Largest
Circulation in Buffalonian History
"This year we expect to have
the largest yearbook circulation in
the history of the Buffalonian" says
Dave Van Sice. Editor-in-Chief ol

the 1964 yearbook.
David goes on to say “that the
1964 yearbook staff is going to
great lengths and expense to have
the maximum amounts of students,
clubs organizations, and greeks represented in this year's book.
The number ol Senior pictures
taken for the yearbook has been
over-whelming. They have far exceeded any ol the pervious years.
If you have not had your senior
picture, you may do so on October

23 and 24. Appointments can be
made at the ticket office in Norton Union.
There has also been a great rush
for purchasing yearbooks in advance. The main reason being full
payment is not required at the
present time. A subscription may
be purchased with a $2.00 deposit;
the balance being paid on receipt
of the yearbook in the spring. The
yearbook will be out the first week
in May.
After February 1st the '64 yearbook will cost the student $7.50.
Now you may purchase a book lor
$7.00 at the ticket office any time.

PAT'S
justgreat for

CHARCOALED

HOTS
(with

all the trimmin's)

YOU and Other U. B. Students

DR. RALPH N. MAUD
Assistant Professor of English
Besides being the author of many
critical articles, Dr. Maud has edited, with Aneirin Talfan Davies of
the British Broadcasting Co. in
Wales, The Colour of Saying, an
anthology composed of verse by
other poets which Dylan Thomas
had selected for public readings.
The volume will be published No-

The

Hideaway
1006 E. Delavcm

presents

The
RAVENS
Every

Wed., Fri. and Sat.

ELI KONIKOFF
and
HIS YANKEE SIX
On

Thurs. Nite
HOOTENANY
Every

Sun. Nite

Have Made Us Famous

Auditions For
Folk Singers

SHERIDAN DRIVE at PARKER BLYD.

Every Monday Nite

vember 9, 1963, by J. M. Dent
Sons, Ltd., of London, in commemoration of the tenth anniversary of
Thomas' death.
Dr, Maud, who received his
Ph.D. from Harvard University,
has taught at the University of
Buffalo since 1958. He was a Dexter Traveling Fellow at Harvard
for the summer of 1958 and received a Grant-in-Aid from the
American Council of Learned Societies in 1961.
&amp;

The "On Campus”

show of WBFO-FM is

offering an opportunity
for all students organizations to publicize
their events, projects,
and meetings. This program is presented, five
days a week from 5-6
p.m. and features campus news. All interested student leaders
should contact Judy
Button, Probram Director, at 831-3405 or in the
radio station studios in
Baird Tuesday, or Wednesday from 3-4 p.m.

�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

Greek Notes
1

The State University approved plans for the inclusion
of a new Erie County General Hospital as an integal part
of a proposed health and sciences center on the State Uawersity of Buffalo campus this week.
In formal action the University Board of Trustees,
headed by former JLt, Gov. Frank C. Moore, invited Erie
County to plan its replacement of Meyer Memorial Hospital as part of the proposed UB
a center will be a combination of
general hospital, as necessary
classroom, laboratory with at least
700 beds, as well as necessary

The trustees said such

a facility
would provide close physical, aca-

demic and administrative relation
to the faculty and personnel of
the university’s four health schools
medicine, dental, nursing and

—

pharmacy.
Such a combination of hospital
and school has long been advocated
by Erie County Executive Rath,
President Clifford C. Furnas and
various medical groups. The trustees’ approval was viewed as clearing the way for actual work to

would be eligible for one-third reimbursement of the cost of hospital construction and under the Accelerated Public Works program
could probably obtain up to half

present a skit at the Homecoming
game. There will be a beer party
after the game.

Under federal law, Erie County

The consideration of site would
be worked into the campus redevel-

continue.

700-Bed Hospital
The trustees said their firm intention was to “foster and perpetuate the fine relationship’’ which
has existed with Buffalo General
Hospital, Children’s Hospital and
Veterans Administration Hospital
over the years.
It is far too early, the University said, to forecast the exact location or type of facilty that will
be built. But it is presumed such

Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity are
holding a stag in the faculty club
of Harriman Library tonight to be
followed by a dinner dance tomorrow. They will begin at 8:30 and
6:30 respectively.
Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a
cocktail party at Brother Eliason's
apartment at 8:00 p.m. preceding
the Homecoming Dance.

Long Relationship

three months.
In taking the action, the trustees
observed that Erie Couny’s Meyer
Hospital and the University, when
it was a private institution, had a
long-standing relationship which
the State University is anxious to

Alpha Sigma Phi will hold a
cocktail party Saturday night at
Helen Neville. Gamma Phi will
hold a cocktail party at Craig Lyons
and Bob Fischer's apartment prior
to the Homecoming Dance.

classrooms, laboratories and other
facilities to teach the skills of the
various professions.
Financing of the hospital portion would be up to Erie County,
a university spokesman said, and
it is understood the county is prepared to undertake this.
Accelerated Schedule

start.

opment plan now being prepared
by Perkins &amp; Wills, Chicago, architects to the State University
Construction Fund. These plans are
scheduled for delivery in about

Alpha Phi Delta will hold their
Homecoming Cocktail Party at the
Hotel Lennox, tomorrow night.

TKE

will hold a cocktail party
before Homecoming.

Phi Epsilon Pi pledge class will

the cost.

Grant to Study DN A-Pituitary Content

Awarded Dr. S. Fand-VA Hospital
Dr,

Sally B. Fand. assistant re-

search professor of medicine and
clinical investigator at the Veterans
Administration Hospital in Buffalo,

get

construction of

each of its

buildings started about a year and
three months after initial planning. If details of the UB center
could be worked out early next
year, construction could be as little as two years away.
Hospital Situation Viewed
As to location, the possibility has
been raised of using a portion of
the Grover Cleveland golf course
along Bailey Ave., and this cannot
be discounted as the university
must expand its physical plant. The
state sees an increase in enrollment at the Buffalo School from
10,000 now to about 17,000 in 1970.

For the studies of hormone measurement, the stain used in the
periodic acid-Schiff method which
colors those molecules comprised
of protein and sugar, the so-called
glycoprotein hormones. The microdensitometer enables Dr. Fand to

has been awarded two grants for
the study of deoxyribonucleic acid
iDNA)

and hormorc content in the

human pituitary gland. She has
been awarded a $25,000 grant from
the National Institute of Arthritis
and Metabolic Diseases of the National Institutes of Health, and a
$6,635 grant from the United Health

Foundation of Western New York

a United Fund agency, to pursue
these studies.
DNA is the substance which
governs the operation of a cell and
carries the genetic code responsible
for each cell's future; the pituitary

hormores

regulate

growth

and

maturation during development and
many other important body functions in the adult.

The university portion of such a
center would be planned,, built and
financed by the State University
Construction Fund, after approval
by the trustees.
The Construction Fund is aiming,
under its accelerated schedule to

DNA art" colored in proportion to
the amount of DNA in the nucleus;
in turn, the amount of coloration
can he measured from the amount
of light absorbed by the

By SAMUEL GOLDSTEIN

measure

The treasurer of the Student
Senate has not as yet received the
budgets from the organizations listed below. If they are not received
by the October 31 deadline, they
will not be subject to review by
the finance committee for this fiscal yqar.
Social Welfare Club. Ski Team.
New Student Review', Madrigal
Reading Society. Law School Student Council, Campus Sane, and
Student Publications Board.

accuracy.

An understanding of the changes
which take place in the amount
of DNA when the pituitary becomes
abnormal may lead to new understanding of some diseases and perhaps. to new insights in therapy.
For example, it has been established that removal of the pituitary
sometimes palliates cancers of the
breast or prostate. Dr. Fand feels
that the study of DNA in the pituitary while such cancers are still
active hiay shed new light on the

pituitary's

role in

their develop-

ment

and may point the way to
methods for specifically inhibiting
the pituitary cell or cells that en-

New Machine

Finance Committee

the specific light absorp-

tion with much

To facilitate both the hormone
and the DNA research. Dr, Fand
uses
an
elaborate electronic
machine called an Integrating
Microdensitometer. It is one of
about a dozen in the world and
when acquired by the Veterans Administration for Dr. Fand. it was
the first of its kind to enter the
U.S. Made in England, there are
now about five in this country.
Measurement of the amount of

DNA in pituitary cell nuclei is accomplished .by staining the cell in

the Feulgen procedure: by tins
means certain substances in the

courage the cancerous growths.

Dr, Fand is a member of the
research staff at the Buffalo VA
Hospital which is under the direction of Dr. Joseph T. Aquilina. Associate Chief of Staff for Research

and of the University's Department
of Medicine whose chairman is Dr.
Evan Calkins. Assisting Dr. Fand
in these studies is Mr. Richard H.
Holland whose experience as a
radar technician in the Air Force
well equips him for maintaining

the electronically complex microdensitometer.

UNIVERSITY DELICATESSEN
AND RESTAURANT

ADVERT!!

Across From U.B.

DoNeiT

"New York Style At Your Fingertips"
SANDWICHES
Swiss
Cheese
Swiss Cheese
American Cheese
Cream Cheese
Muenster Cheese
Cottage Cheese
Grilled Cheese
Cream Cheese
and Jelly
Tunafish
Imported

Norwegian

.45
.35
.30
.30
.35
.30
.35
.35
.45
.55

Sardines
Imported Skinless

Boneless
Sardines
Egg Salad
Sturgeon
Peanut Butter
Jellv

EACH BITE A DELIGHT
Caviar
1.50
Smoked Salmon
with Cream
Cheese (Lox)
.70
Nova Scotia
Salmon with
('ream Cheese
.95
White Fish
.70
Tomato Herring
.50
Coney Island
Hot Dog
..’10
Boiled Ham
.45
Virginia Ham
.55
Roast Beef
.70

.75
1.50

Turkey

.65

Chicken Salad

.55

.35

.50
.45
.45
.35
.35
.50
.50

Hamburger

Genoa Salami
Hard Salami
Ham and Swiss
Cheese
Ham and American
Cheese
Western
Cheeseburger
Shrimp Salad
Salami and Egg

Hot Corned Beef .75
KOSHER
Hot Pastrami
.70
Tongue
.80

.40

.90
.60

&amp; Tomato
Bologna
Salami
Liverwurst

KOSHER

&amp;

.45

Fried Fish

Turkey all
white meat
Chopped Liver
Bacon, Lettuce

.55
.50
.50
.45
.65
.55

SUGGESTIONS FOR LOW CALORIES
Generous Scoop Cottage Cheese, delicious Peach Half,
On Lettuce Leaf, Crispy Crackers
DIET PLATE: Fresh Mixed Fruit, generous scoop of
Cottage Cheese on Lettuce Leaf, with
Crispy Crackers
Chicken Salad, Sliced Tomato on Lettuce
Tunafish, Sliced Tomato, Coleslaw on Lettuce
TAKE OUT DINNERS

.80

1.00
.65

.......

Fish
tf 2

-

—

,45*

$.89

Chicken

—

$1.10

WE DELIVER
(2$t Drthrary Charga)

Open 8:00 A.M. 12 PM. Daily
•

Till 2:00 P.M. Fri. and

HIS IS ONLY A SMALL SAMPLE OF OUR MEN

|l

County General Hospital
To Be New Part of UB

center,

PAGE FIVE

Sat

�PACE SIX

Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

THE SPECTRUM
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York
at Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo 14. N. Y. Published weekly from the last week of September to the
last week in May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas
and Easter.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
ARNOLD S. MAZUR
—

News Editor
Martin Kriegel
Feature Editor . Harriet Heitlinger
Feature Editor . Lawrence Frenkel
Sports Editor
Rocky Versace
. Karen
Office Manager
Sanford
Edit. Advisor. William Siemering

Business

Manager
Pat Launer
Advertising Mgr.. Lawrence Singer
Layout Editor
David Irwin
Copy Editor
Marcia Cooper
Circulation Mgr. . . Lois Hessinger
Fin. Advisor. Thomas Hacnle, Jr.
....

General Staff: Vicki Bugelski, Lorna Wallach, A. Linda Leventhal, Ron
Kaminski. Vic Menza. Anne Miinte, Martin Kriegel, Rena Fisch, Barbara
Strauss, Ronnie Bromberg. Charles Lotsof, Pat Jones, Sue Mead, Nancy
Blecker. Larrv Frankie. Lonnie Klipstein. Charles Cummings, Shelll
Davis, Alan Newman, Barbara Chapman, Joanle Lancaster, Claudia
Kowal. Trudy Stern, Rosemary Morone Lawrence Frenkel, Susan Licker,
Ronnie Wilson. Alice Ostrander. Don Leary. Rosa Lynn Brothman, Ray
Crawford, Jane Sommer. Lon Levy. Robert Milch. Jeremy Taylor, Karen
Chicko. Mike Sultanik, Christine Cunningham, Mary Ellen Yeostros,
Lillian Kalastein. Marcia Ann Orszulak, Fran Marfurt, Helen Bikoff, Betty
Cassidy. Mary Ann Wartenburg. Allan Melmed, Allan Scholom.
Photography Staff: Russell Goldberg, Joel Havens. Pamela Reid. Robert
Feldman, Bob Gottesman and Jo LaCoIIa.
Entered as second class matter February 9. 1961, at
the Post Office at Buffalo. N. Y., under the Act of March
3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of post1103. Act of October 3. 1917.
n/AYo age P rov&gt;ded for in Section
authorized February 9, 1951.
Subscription $3.00 per year,
circulation 9000.
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y.

{IUUk

Editorials
Student Review and You

This is the season of hairbreadth
finishes when Saturday afternoons
unfold like Alfred Hitchcock scripts
for followers of the UB Bulls.

Thus, those entrusted with decision-making in the field of Homecoming themes have not gone too
far afield with the rather theatrical

"Broadway Billboard." Win or lose,
you may be sure that the weekend's football activity will be as
colorful as anything the New York
stage has to offer.
Our theme has general significance beyond the weekend, too, for
the curtain will soon go up on University developments of almost epic
proportions. Already, the broad outline of the story has been conceived: a major university center
of the first rank will be developed
here to accomodate between 15 and
20,000 full-time students
5,000 of
whom will be In the graduate and
professional category; faculty and
—

acadcmic/research programs of the
highest caliber will grow according-

ly.
Plans

for

the

“settings''

are

New Student Review is scheduled to be published next
week. It will be the first issue of the semester for the one
year old magazine devoted to the essay, short story, and poetry. Last year’s attempt to provide a forum for creative
thought was successful only insofar as four issues were printed and distributed. The magazine’s shortcomings were obvious to the editors as well as the student body.
Many of the old difficulties continue to pain this year’s
staff. Though the magazine is the only periodical expression
of literary thought on campus, there is a serious shortage of
•material being submitted for print, This is not due to a low
incidence of creativity on our campus but, rather, the modest
President Clifford C. Furnas
copy folder seems to represent an unwillingness on the part
.Underway. Planners assigned by
of able students to aid the publication.
Slate University are right now
Another immediate failure is lodged in the sales record translating over all goals into actual
footage needs which will,
of last year’s magazine. New Student Review was adequately square
in turn, be pieced into a buildingpublicized, and not responsible for the fact that less than 400 by-building master plan projected
copies of each issue were sold. It may be that students did to cost approximately $90 million.
The cast is assembling: Over
not value NSR’s content but surely the first edition should
2..TOO freshmen have swelled underhave drawn more attention and curiosity.
graduate enrollment to almost 9,000
this year and
But why speak of last year? The Spectrum feels that al students (fullgraduate/professionand part-time) curthere is more than even chance that the past perfoitnance will rently number nearly 4,000. Quality
faculty from all over the nation
be repeated. That is, students will not contribute and the stuincreased the full-time teachdent body should be held responsible for the dismal showing. have
ing staff to more that S00 and
The quality of the magazine can only reflect the material this growth is just beginning. Be it
submitted; and the more material, the more selective can the emphasized. however, that the 1
pattern is pointed toward
editors be. Lastly, the prominence of New Student Review growth
increase in quality as well as quanis dependant upon the circulation given it; therefore, the tity. It is not just numbers that
count. Outstanding excellence and
student body must buy and read the forthcoming issue.
your University is the
stature
of

�

�

�

Student Discount Service
A questionnaire will be distributed to the student body
next week regarding a discount service for the campus.
If
instituted properly, it will enable students to obtain a standard discount at various local businesses.
The student body will be asked to state at which type
stores he would desire the special discount and whether or
not such a service is favorable. This ambitious
prograin requires the full cooperation of the student body, without
which it cannot be effective.
The basic research and the program as outlined has
been
provided by the National Students
Association. The exact
U.B. proposal has been competently offered by Bill Berger,
formerly Welfare Committee Chairman and now directing a
special sub-committee to institute the discount plan.
It has been shown that those merchants who cooperate
in the service increase their volume of business, and
profits
The students obviously also benefit from
the discounts
though they may initially be required to pay a fee
(possibly
$1) for use of the discount card. The Spectrum
supports the
program and wishes it success.

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Message From
President Furnas

ultimate goal of us all.
You. as alumni of today and
tomorrow, may be likened to an
ever-growing audience whose interest and support make the production possible, and whose everyday lives will be directly benefilled and enriched by the contributions of an increasingly vigorous

university.

With this in mind. I wish each

of you an enjoyable Homecoming
and invite you to return often to
be a part of our pageant of progress.

C. C. Furnas
President

liV-iCi'-lAii

itaiii.

GUEST EDITORIAL
The following is a guesf editorial submitted to the Spectrum
of The Daily (Mini, University of Illinois.

The society we are coming of
in is not a very fine one; we
all realize this in one degree or
onother. Although the hopes after
World War II were shabby enough
compared to the dreams of 1919,
we have not realized them. Our
economy, and through it our society, has settled uneasily into a
material wealth based on the hardsell. And the hard-sell itself tells
as much about the product and the
society as it does about the market.
As a total nation, we can be
communicated to effectively only
through the twins Psychology and
Gimmick.
We have no style or joy in our
lives that has not been purchased
and placed there. As a people,
we have been forced from childhood into lip-service to brotherhood and freedom, but the syllables
age

of Birmingham and Mississippi
come also to our lips. Our national
policy centers around a jealous
guarding of our counter-revolution
as if it were, indeed, still the
keeper of the spirit of our real
democratic revolution of two centuries ago.
The tragedy of our society, however, comes not in its spiritual
poverty, but in our lack of means
to change it. Our political system,
by its own admission, seeks the
safety of the dead-center.
Our

politicians speak grandly of liberty

and freedom, but they legislate in
a fantasy-world where filibusters
guarantee freedom of speech; price
support "protect” the open marketplace. and citizens are guaranteed
the “right” to PAY for medical

care, not to receive it.

There is, in America, the ideal

of democratic brotherhood (which,

remember, is quite another thing
from racial brotherhood). Is there
really a reason, aside from moribund "traditions,” why the rural
voter should be twice as well represented in Congress than the urban
voter? Why 200,000 citizens marching on Washington have no visible
effect on Congress, but the activities of hundreds of lobbyists obviously DO have a great influence? 1
Why the nation continues to tolerate
situations like that in Wilcox County. Alabama—where the population
is 78 per cent Negro but not a
SINGLE Negro has EVER been
allowed to register to vole?
There is. also, the ideal of an
open marketplace of ideas (trite
though that phrase is supposed to
be, these days). Can we possibly
have such a marketplace wiiile
postal inspectors in Washington and
New York are allowed to make
"executive decisions" on who has

by Roger

Ebert, Editor

the "right" to use the mails?. While
some newspapers actually SELL
their editorial space and reputation
to public relations firms who place
"canned editorials” for such clients
as Franco and Salazar? While Congress decides, again this year, that
although the American elections
are theoretically free and open, the
doctrine of “equal time” on radio
and television applies only to Republicans and Democrates? While
state legislators retain the incredible audacity to vote on whether
students in universities “should”
hear controversial speakers?
There are other rights as well.
The fourth amendment, for example, guarantees you freedom from
unreasonable search and seizure
(unless Bobby Kennedy’s wiretap

law gets through). The fifth amendment says you cannot be asked

to incriminate yourself (except,
apparently, by the House Committee on Un American Activities).
The sixth says you can have a
speedy public trail (unless you have
anything to do with integration and
are arrested in many areas of the
South). The
eighth amendment
-

guarantees freedom from cruel and
unusual punishments (yet you can

be flogged in Delaware, beaten in
Georgia and left in solitary confinement for

"indefinite periods"

in nearly a third of the states).
The tenth amendment is, perhaps,
the most abused. It reserves other
freedoms to the states “or to the
people." Yet in the very states
where this amendment should be
the most shining guarantee of liberty
the southern states
it is
used as an excuse by the states
—

—

to deny freedoms to many of their
people.
This, in outline, is the sort of
society we enter. It is our task
to change it
for the children of
the next several generations. And
we CAN do this. Today’s institutions, like today's leaders, are not
permanent. The future is NOT
history, despite the gloom of the
sociologists. Our world can really
BE our world, if we are not tricked
into seeing a better future as hope—

less.
I would guess that, to a great
degree, our society is aimless and
corrupt and without a dream
BECAUSE the freedoms which once
made it so great have been allowed
todecay and fall into misuse.

And I would say that the most
.direct, worthwhile goal our generation can take in shaping future
society is this one:
To defend and to extend, in public
and in private, the freedoms which
we hold necessary if democracy is

to live;

'

i

�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

State Establishes
Faculty-Student
Association at UB

The Circus
By BOB MILCH
Dear Ma 'n Pa,

Last Friday ma frien’ Don Berk
an' me was settin’ by- the cesspool
behind Norton listenin’ to a couple
o' fellers stagin' an' playin’ folksongs. Now it ain't so much that
these guys cain’t sing or play, but
the stuff they do sing an’ play

ain’t suited for college kids. Ah
mean they stag 'bout lust an' coal
mines an’ sex an’ murders an’
love an' dishonety an’ sin
all
stuff what college kids don’t know
nothin’ about. So Don an’ me figured we’d get in on the new "communicate with the student body
kick” that the newspaper’s been
hollerin’ ’bout an' write some college-type folksongs. Hope y’all like

of

The rock on the line
may be right and I may

be
wrong,
But the ergs are sitting where the
newtons belong.

—

Chorus

Let me see, double x and z
The acceleration's equal to
minus 3.
—

a

’em.

for Biology students
Nematoda
(tune: Scotch and Soda)
Nematoda, where is your eye?
Baby just one more try.
Oh me, oh my, you’ve got no eye.
Dry marina, wiggle your fin,
Help me to spell the other word

for skin
Oh me,

or

my, you smelly guy.

This shark does not deceive me,
I know that he’s still living.
And when it feels the probe I use,
A finger I’ll be giving.

Nematoda, here is an eye,

Baby, I took this eye
Oh me, oh my, from a fruity fly

that’s got another,
So give him something baby, go on
and give him a tooth.

lor Physics students
The Rock on the Line
(tune: the Rock Island Line)
Well, I got ergs,
I got Newtons,
I got little bitty dynes

chorus;

Well, the tension on the line is from
a mighty big load,
Well, the tension on the line is the
force to find,

Oh good Lord, the friction's ten,
Guess that means I’ll have to do it
again.
Chorus
for Chemistry students
ONA
(tune:

MTA)

me tell you the story of a
chemical parley
Held in Acheson Hall one day,
The biggest discussion that was on
the docket
Was to find out 'bout DNA,

Let

chorus;

Oh it’s in every egg and it's in each
sperm,

In each virus and in each germ,
And if it ever mutates, you could
be anything, fellow,
From an arachnid to a worm.
So

if we could only find out its
configuration,
Think of what we could do some
day,
There’d be no more professors,
there'd be no administration,
Just twist a helix the other way.
Chorus
Well, them’s what we wrote, ma
n’ pa. An' if’n the kids like ’em,
we might even get asked to sing
by the cesspool.
Your lovin’ son,
Jethro

Goodyear Extension Set
For September Opening
By MICHAEL J. PICKER

The new women’s residence hall which will be attached
to Goodyear Hall will not be opened for residency until
Sept., 1964. Construction will probably be completed in
late February or early March. The completion date cannot
be announced with any certainty due to the fact that it is
dependent upon Buffalo weather conditions.
Even though the residence hall

is slated for completion early next
semester, there are a number of
reasons why students will be unable to use the dorm this academic
year. It will undoubtedly be impossible to, furnish the dormitory
so as to make living conditions

satisfactory during the spring semester. Staff arrangements would
be difficult to organize so as to
provide adequate services. Also,
'bough students living at the Alienhurst apartments would be able to
move on campus the apartments
are still contracted by the university and can be used until June.

Campus Affairs
By

By ELAINE BARRON

Well, the tension on the line is from
a mighty big load
And if you want to find it
You gotta find it from the mass
You gotta find it from the motion

I

PAGE SEVEN

One proposal concerning arangements for next year considers using the new dormitory, Goodyear
Hall, and possibly two of the smaller dormitories exclusively for women students. The remaining resi-

dence halls and Allenhurst will continue to hous» male students. It
is expected -that the university will
then be able to house 2500 students.

Future' plans for expanding oncampus residence have not been
decided upon.

LONI LEVY

The Faculty-Student Association

is an organization, established because UB is now a slate university. All university funds that are
not for tuition go into this organization.
The state requires this association to buy the school bookstore

and the vending machine operation.
The cost was $422,000. Half of this
has already-been paid; the balance
will be paid over a thirty-year

period.

Profits derived from these two
investments go right into the Association’s treasury and are to be
used for student improvement. Last
year the profit was $37,000. Bookstore prices will not be lowered in
the near futuer because of the
"financial instability" of the Association. Another result of this
"instability" is that no money is
now being put out for campus
improvements.
The State of New York establishes a Faculty-Student Association at
every state university. "The committee,” stated Michael Cohen.

President of the Student Senate,
“is the means whereby the state
eliminates the internal problems of
the institution."
The nine members of the committee are: Chancellor Fumas; Dr.
Claude Puffer, Vice-Chancellor; Dr.
Lester- G. Anderson, Vice-Chancellor; Dr. Richard Siggelkow, Dean
of Students; Professor Travis; Mr.
Michael Cbhen;
and
Balkin;
Michael Lappin. Vice-President of
the Student Senate.

Debate Society
Plans Lectures
Plans were discussed concerning
a proposed lecture series and cooperation with the National SStudent Association at the meeting of
the Debating Society, last Tuesday.
Richard Nemiroff, chairman of
the program committee, announced
that a series of lectures is being
planned for the near future. The
general theme for the series will
be the national intercollegiate debate topic for the year:

Resolved: That the Federal Government should guarantee the opportunity for higher education to
all qualified high school graduates.
All lectures will be open to the
entire student body. Details of the
lecture series

will be announced

at a future date.
The National Student Association
of the University is exploring the
area of federal aid to higher education as their first project of the
year.

The Debating Society has volunteered to help N. S. A. in their
undertaking. The Debating Society
is planning to prepare briefs to be
presented to N. S. A., to work in
cooperation with N. S. A. in trying
to find common problems and common solutions to these problems,
and to make all debating source
materials in the area of federal aid
to higher education available to
the N. S. A. Committee.
Committee chairmen were appointed for the forthcoming Great
Lakes Novice Debate Tournament
on Dec. 6th and 7th, 1963. Twenty
colleges and universities from New
England, New York State and the
Mid-west are expected to attend.
There are still openings on many
eorrlraittees or anyone interested in
assisting. Time-keepers are needed
for the five rounds of debate. There
will be two rounds on Friday evening. and three rounds on Saturday
morning. No previous debate experience is needed.
All time-keepers will be guests of
the Debating Society at a social
on Friday evening, that is given
in honor of the visiting schools.
Anyone interested in taking part
in the tournament is urged to contact either Linda Leventhal or Gerald Catanzaro, or to leave his name,
address and phone number in room

332 of Norton Hall.

The past week, the United Students Party made available to students the first issue 61 a newsletter whibh "is an effort to inform the students on developments

activities gains nothing but disgust
from the administration and the
student body. Mr. Cohen cites the
Campus Alliance Town Meeting ol
Sept. 16 as "a fruitless attempt by
one political party to conduct a pro-

in the Student Senate and to present our views on these items."
Since the United Students Party
levelled most of the criticism
against the Communications Committee's decision to cancel plans
for the publication of a Senate
newsletter because of the excessive expense to the student body,
it is well that they (the U.S.P.)
have "put their money where their
mouths are."

gram. rightfully belonging under
the auspices of the Senate, without
the consultation or inclusion of Jhc
other party." Mr. Cohen's sincerity
manifest in the above statement
shows that he is truly unaware ol
the fact that the United Students

The major contributors to the
U.S.P. Newsletter are; Michael
Cohen (President of the Student Association), Bob Finkelstein (Senaand Peter Ostrow (Chairman
of the U.S.P.).
tor)

Mr. Cohen, who has demonstrated time and time again on the
Senate floor an unbiased view as
Chairman, bares his teeth in an
article entitled “The Place and
Strength of a Campus Political
Party." He claims that a political
parly that duplicates the Senate's

Party, in publishing its own newsletter, is guilty of what the President of the Senate has deemed
"an impressive and potentially effective activity . . . undermined
by the insistancc of one political
party to force its name into the
limelight."
If the United Students Parly had
approached the Campus Alliance
Party with the idea of a joint newsletter, the resulting publication
could have been almost as effective
as the proposed Senate newsletter
while eliminating the vast expense
which the latter publication would
entail. So. Messers. Cohen and Ostrow, you have defeated your own
purpose by unintentionally redirecting the inquisitive toward your own
party in an attempt to chastize the
opposition.

Dr. Parnes Receives Grant
To Head Research Program
The first stage of a five year
program in research on creativity
has been launched with the receipt
of a $46 000 two-year grant.

Dr. Sidney J. Fames, director

creative education will be

o(

the

principal investigator. Twenty-two

Ph.D.'s from twelve different colleges and universities will be avail-

able as consultants on the project
as well as Alex F, Osborn, chairman of the board of the Creative
Education Foundation, nationally-

famous advertising executive, and

author on creativity.

Approved by the ITS. Office

of

Education, the grant is among the
first federal monies at the University to directly support research
on creativity.
Basic Assumptions
The research will be based upon
two assumptions. First, creative
behavior can be developed through

deliberate principles and procedures. This is an assumption which
has motivated fourteen years of
teaching and research at the University.

The second assumption, based
upon the first, holds that since creativity can be deliberately developed
through teaching, it can be pro-

grammed using incremental learning techniques which have proved
extremely effective in conventional
subjects. Incremental learning is a
method of proceeding with a subject in tiny, easy-to-digest, with immediate correction of wrong answers and reinforcement in the
form of approval for the correct
ones.
A problem arises in attempting
to use procedure for the teaching
of creativity, according to Dr.
Fames, because there is no one

right answer in the creative thinking process. Dr. Fames will seek
a method of immediately reinforcing any slight tendency on the
part of the student toward both
unique and effectiveness in his solutions. These two criteria held essential to a creative idea.
He points out that the procedure
of offering encouragement for
unique ideas is a reversal of what
most people have encountered in
society. Too often, any solution that
leaves the beaten track of yesterday's warmed-over thinking, is
looked upon with suspicion.
Students as Subjects
To prove his theory, the youthful professor, a national leader in
promoting the concepts of creative
education, will draw from a sampling of 250-300 university students.
The students will be divided into
three groups with incremental programming. A second group will
take Dr, Parties' conventional creative problem-solving course with-

out the incremental technique, and
a third group will act as a control group by taking neither. All
subjects will take a battery of tests
designed to measure creative productivity before the course begins
and after the programmed part ol
the course is completed.
When the results arc in. Dr
Parnes will compare the test
scores of the group taught incrementally with the scores of the
group taught in the conventional
way. The third group act as a
base line for differentiating between improvement due to the two
different instructional techniques
and the slight improvement which
comes from being exposed to the
test twice.

Dean Entertains Commuters
undergraduate students
who are living off-campus in private rooms and apartments were
entertained this week by the Dean
of Women's residence at 3 Allenhurst Road by Dean Jeannette
Scudder and Mrs, Dorothy K. Simon. Assistant to the Dean of Women, who is responsible for granting permissions to live off-campus.
Students were invited Monday,
Women

Tuesday or Wednesday afternooas
from 4:00 to 5;30 p.m., to become
acquainted with each other artd to
discuss their experiences in offcampus living. Since the University
had no residence hall space this
year for transfer students, the
groups entertained included all
transfer women admitted this fall
who are not living at home. Members of the Student Activities staff
■

assisted with the hospitality.

�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

Crafts Shop Opens at the Union;
Lessons by Pro Experts Offered
By SYLVIA SPRING

A lot o( students will be pleased
to know that the Arts and Crafts

in the basement of Norton is
now open. After your long and patient waif we arc happy to inform
all students, staff and faculty that
our facilities are now available and
at your disposal.
Shop

The Craft Shop is one of the
many services offered by Norton
Union for the pleasure of all. It
has complete facilities lor all kinds
of ceramic work (pottery and sculptering) plus the expert aid of Mrs.
Lahr, director of the shop and an

DRY CLEANING
8 lbs. for $2.00
AT THE

much as he wishes in between lessons as well as with the experts'

aid.
The shop
as follows:

One-Stop Service Center
jShoe Repairing
Laundry
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and Dyed
All Types of Ladies' Heels In
Stock for Replacement
or Re-styling
—

will be open weekly

Monday
Closed
11 a.m,-4 p m.
Tuesday
Wednesday 11 a.m.-lO p.m.
Thursday
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
1 p;ra.-5 p.m.
Friday
Saturday
9 a.m.-l p.m.
We hope that you will take advantage of this great opportunity
to learn new crafts and perfect old
ones. I’ll see you in the Shop.

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

TF 6-4041
Open 9 A.M1 9 P.M.

NEW ARTS AND CRAFTS ROOM

-

accomplished potter, plus two other ceramic experts. The shop also
has an excellent wood working
area where anyone may work on
his or her own particular project.
There is a third room filled with
work tables which lends itself easily
to many kinds of creative graphic
art such as silk-screening, painting,
sketching and any other possibilities.

Besides these regular

opportuni-

ties, the Craft Shop Committee (a
special committee on the Union
Board) hopes to have four or five

specialized workshops.

The first one will be a Christmas
workshop where the student will be
able to make such items as original silk screen cards, ceramic
Christmas tree decorations plus any
other unique ideas he wishes to
work on. After Christmas we arc
planning to have week workshops
in succh areas as leathercraft. silver casting, woodworking, textile
weaving and printing and metal
enameling. Each workshop will be
lead by a professional craftsman in
the specialized field. The instructor will probably give one lesson
a week for five weeks and the student may work on his project as

Our world-recognized trademark—"the P&amp;WA eagle”
—has been identified with progress in flight propulsion for almost four decades, spanning the evolution
of power from yesterday’s reciprocating engines to
today’s rockets. Tomorrow will find that same Pratt &amp;
Whitney Aircraft eagle carrying men and equipment
to the moon and to even more distant reaches of
outer space.

The breadth of Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft programs
requires virtually every technical talent. . . requires
ambitious young engineers and scientists who can
contribute to our advances of the State of the art.
Your degree? It can be a B.S., M.S, or Ph.D. in:
MECHANICAL
AERONAUTICAL ELECTRICAL
CHEMICAL and NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
PHYSICS
CHEMISTRY
METALLURGY
CERAMICS
MATHEMATICS
•

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Engineering achievement of this magnitude is directly
traceable to our conviction that basic and applied
research is essential to healthy progress. Tod, ay's
engineers at Pratt Whitney Aircraft accept no limiting criteria. They are moving ahead in many directions to advance our programs in energy conversion
&amp;

for every environment.
Our progress on current programs is exciting, for it
anticipates the challenges of tomorrow. We are working, for example, in such areas as advanced gas
turbines ... rocket engines ... fuel cells ... nuclear
power—all opening up new avenues of exploration in
every field of aerospace, marine and industrial power

application.

e

•

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•

ENGINEERING SCIENCE or APPLIED MECHANICS.

Career boundaries With us can be further extended

through a corporation-financed Graduate Education
Program. For further information regarding opporWhitney Aircraft, consult your
tunities at Pratt
college placement officer—or—write to Mr. William L.
Whitney
Stoner, Engineering Department, Pratt
Aircraft, East Hartford 8, Connecticut.
&amp;

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FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE
AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

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CONNECTICUT OPERATIONS EAST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
FLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA

DIVISION OF

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An Equal Opportunity Employer

CORP.

�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

People and Politics
By RUSSELL PANZICA

In the past ten years, ihe refinement of automation .has been
striking. In many new plants, raw
materials become finished products without having been touched

human hands. Still, in spite of
vanishing jobs and the lack of
specialized skills needed for occupational shifts, the gospel of

by

hard work remains.
It is inevitable that

the eight
hour working day will shrink, yet
paradoxically, there are a number
of workers who crave overtime
and second jobs. Their duty to
themselves and their compatriots
has never approximated their duty
to an indifferent employer. Liesure time, for great numbers of
them, resembles the sterile euphoria of a dope addict.
Not so long ago, the twelve hour
work day whs the norm. Men
worked harder, had less buying
power, but were overjoyed to look
ignortorward to the Sabbath .
ence was bliss. Then came breakthroughs in mass communications,
technological inovations, and time
payments. The working force, hav.

.

ing included the fairer sex, made
more and wanted more. All the
gadgets and trinkets that were
once looked upon as luxuries, like
the moon, were within reach. They
worked eight hours, slept eight
hours, and bought eight hours.
The system provided no healthy
alternatives for the new time they
had at their disposal. Consequently, a pack of clever rogues evolved
and spooned out their snake oils.
Magical advertisements, phontasy
in the living room, and the divination of consumer goods stifled
what integrity labor might have
achieved through increased educational opportunity.
Layoffs, lack of jobs, family responsibilities, and civil rights are
no longer problems to be under-

PAGE NINE

Baird to Feature
Master Builder
A faculty-student cast will be
featured in the Department of

Drama and Speech production of

The Master Builder, November 2124 at our University. Performances
will be in Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m.

Written by Henrik Ibsen, the
play is under the direction of Mrs.

Julia Pardee, instructor of drama

and speech.

Ludger Buck, graduate assistant
in modern languages and Laurence
Bartlett, teaching fellow In English will join a student cast to recreate Ibsen's investigation into
the fial days of the life of Halvard

Solness.
Thomas Watson, lecturer in
drama and speech is technical director.
Ibsen’s An Ennmy of Hto Pooplo
will be produced by the Department during the second semester.

An emergency loan fund for graduate students was set up at the State
University of New York at Buffalo this week.
The fund was started by a $2900 gift from the Graduate Student Association to the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc. It is possible for any
graduate student carrying a minimum of eight semester hours to borrow
up to $150 for a three month period through the loan fund.
Application for a loan may be made at the Financial Aid Office in 233
Hayes Hall at the University.

stood and solved. The backwash
of the technological revolution
have, for the most part, aquiesced
into the system. They have become
highly proficient at signing welfare checks, collecting unemployment, applying for ADC (Federal
Aid to Dependent Children), and
twiddling their thumbs in the
crowded waiting rooms of county

run hospitals.

Mrs. Potter Receives Plaque
From Debating Society
(Continued

tram Page

3)

Mrs. Potter received her B.A. at

Wellsley College and her M.A. at
University. She also did
advoance graduate work at the
University of London and the London School of Dramatic Arts. At
Boston

the latter, Mrs. Potter worked
under such noted men as Sir James

Barrie and George Bernard Shaw.
She returned to the United States
and was offered a position at the
Elmwood Franklin School in Buffalo. Mrs. Potter served as headmistress of the school for several
years.

Coaches Association, and is presently serving the association as its
president. She demonstrated her
extraordinary skills at public speaking last year at the New York
State Mock Legislative Assembly
when she was awarded first place
in the coaches impromptu speaking
contest.

Parker Sums Up Praise

William Andrew Parker,
former novice coach at the University of Buffalo, summed up the
many aspects of Mrs. Potter's service to the Debating Society. "As
teacher, coach, advisor, counselor,
mother, guide, chauffer, and nurse
to the many students past and present who have been active in debate at the University of Buffalo.
Mrs. Potter merits the recognition
symbolized by this honorary mem-

Mr.

Join* Faculty Under Capon
Mrs. Potter joined the faculty of
the University in 1946, at the personal invitation of former Chancellor Capen. Her years here have
lieen active ones. In addition to
her responsibilities as an assistant
bership.
professor in the department of
Drama and Speech, Mrs. Potter is
The Debating Society of the State
presently secretary of the Faculty University of New York at Buffalo
Senate, she was advisor and head
is proud to honor such a discoach of the Debating Society for
tinguished lady who has done so
fifteen years, and she is presently much for the University, the Dean advisor to the Student Senate.
bating Society, and most important
The 1962 Buffalonian was dedicated of all, for each individual who has
to her.
had the honor and privilege of
Mrs. Potter is a past vice-presiworking with her.
dent of the New York State Debate

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�PAGE TEN

Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

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�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

FREE DRAWING
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�For Expansion of Facilities

By LEON LEWIS

By HARRIET HEITLINGER
According to Mr. William B.

Jr. Associate Director Libraries at the present time the
greatest need is for more room.
There is no space in the libraries
for new books.
Lockwood Library was built 25
years ago for a school of 1500 students. Since that time the emphasis has changed from undergraduate work to expanding graduate
programs. There is a need to develop new collections and support
new research.
Additional space is needed to
house new books, ■ for more extensive catalogues and for additional
staff. The present library system
included Lockwood (Humanities,
and Behavioral Sciences), Harriman (reserve collection and Art
and Music), Health Sciences Library (Medical, Dental, Nursing,
Ernst,

many ways are there, I
to say that a movie is
the latest work
a masterpiece?
by Frederico Fellini, one of the
cinema's most gifted and inventive
craftsmen, is a masterpiece. I am
tempted to say no more about it
other than to suggest that it is
quite definitely worth your time
and money if you are at all interested in serious motion pictures.
*'/&gt; is an intensively personal vision of a movie director about Fellini's age (superbly played by MarHow

wonder,

—

Fellini's alter

ego apparently) who has become

intellectually bankrupt. Surrounded
by all of the trappings of success,
he has become perplexed about the

value scheme which has carried
him this far and his doubts and

introspection have rendered him
practically inoperative. In a more
concrete fashion, he is unable to
carry the work on his present
movie any further. His attempts to
discover some meaning in his life
are reinforced by his attempts to
decide upon the next scene for his
movie, and his picture (as well
as Fellini's) involves an investigation of both his thoughts and at-

titudes towards his associates in
the present as well as a series of
reflections and fantasies about the
life he has lived up to this point.
In other words, what Fellini has
done is to give us an objective

look at the workings of his own
mind at the moment. Even the title
is completely personal
Fellini
has made 6 features, 1 documentary and 3 shorts; thus, 8Vi. What
makes the movie so good, though,
is not the confessional nature of
the material nor the very personal
vision which it conveys of life (certainly Cocteau, Antonioni and John
Ford have equally personal conthe
consumate
ceptions), but
mastery which Fellini has with a
—

camera, with the actors and actresses he works with, and with
the structural possibilities of the
motion picture.
Not unlike many other modem
directors and writers, Fellini is
quite concerned with effect that
time as an abstract entity has on
the life of a man. In a very interesting manner. Fellini seems to
be working with the idea that all
time in the life of a person may
be seen in each moment of awareness of an immediate and momentary event in the person’s life. Consequently, as in I-a Dolce Vita, we

All Freshmen who
are interested in working on a committee for
Winter Weekend are
urged to attend a meet-

Libraries Need More Room

The Reviewing Stand

cello Mastroianni

Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

have a particular emphasis on the
vivid moments in time in a person's life at the expense of traditional cinematic coherence. And in
addition, there is a constant interplay of scenes in time past, the
present, and in the nebulous regions of. 'Fellini's fantasy world as
he projects the thoughts and desires of the present on another
sense of reality which shifts and

changes constantly.
The great thing about IVi, and
about Fellini’s work in general, is
that he is able to'project a sense
of complexity with lucidity. There
is nothing easy about the distortion of normal chronology in 1%,
but Fellini makes clear to the viewer nearly all the time in just which
realm he is operating.

The other aspects of the movie
(those other than composition and
structure, that is) are all done with
Fellini's professional devotion to his
craft. The acting is nearly totally
convincing, the camera work very
imaginative and original and in
spite of the seriousness of the subject matter, the tone often wry
and humorous (especially in the
marvelous harem scene
a cinematic fulfillment of everyman’t

GOT THE
SUNDAY BLUES ?
Student Cocktail Hour
1 6 P. M. Sundays
-

Vi

Wiihdream.

me

The entire system houses 428,000
volumes, of which 31,000 were purchased last year alone. The aim
of the library staff is 50,000 volumes a year.
Lockwood also
houses the most extensive collection of original poetry manuscripts
in the country, a collection of
James Joyce's manuscripts and the
first four Shakespeare Folios,
which were part of Mr. Lockwood’s
collection.

HELD

OVER

-

Mr. Ernst, in stressing the lack

of space problem, hopes plans will
be included lor a new library in
the future. For the present suggestions are welcome from anyone

1428 HERTEL AVE.
6-7411 DAILY 7:00-8:20
SAT.-SUN. 2:30-4:30-7:10-9:30
TF

for new books.

R. M. S. says

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Sing Along or Dance With
DON LOSEL at the Organ

was
and

without giving up something more
of himself than he has shown us
here. If this picture does reflect
the state, of Fellini’s mind now and
if it doesn't act as an adequate
purgative for him, I don’t see how
he will ever be able to make a

tion may be obtained
by contacting Joe Trdngali or Francine Zumpano, chairmen of the
weekend.

Also Draft Boor Available

that

valid scrutiny of the agonies of the
creative artist. Van Gogh had to
cut off his ear and I wonder if
Fellini will be able to get away

244. Further informa-

Pharmacy and Biology), the Chemistry, Engineering Physics, Business and the Law Library.

EVERY OTHER DRIHK

—

The only real problem for
was in the conclusion. I felt
the relatively happy resolution
misplaced after such a close

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at 5:45 in Norton, Room

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�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

All-Student Presentation Becomes Reality Rollino-Sheffel Piano Team
To Appear in Two Recitals
By STEVEN PARSER

On Thursday and Friday nights
of last week, the University witnessed on of the first Dramatic Happenings of the year. The occasion
was the first presentation of an
all student production sponsored by
the Drama Department. The idea
of having dramatic performances
directed and acted by the students,
of the students, and for the students
is not a new one. But at long last
the idea has ceased being only a
wish and became a reality due to
the efforts of a few concerned

people.

It has long been a complaint of
many students interested in acting
on campus, that there has been too
much competition with people who
have no connection with the University at all. Students are certainly welcome to try out for any
play produced on campus, but it
becomes a bit discouraging when
one has to compete with some experienced actor or actress who has
just had a smashing success in one
of the Buffalo Theatres. After a
few, usually unsuccessful tryouts,
the averagely interested and averagly talented student losses incentive. Thus a lot of valuable student
interest and spirit is lost.
This year the Drama Department
witnessed change in attitude as
well as staff. It was brought to
the attention of the heads of the
department that there was a real
need for an all student drama
organization. One such group had
been formed last year but its force
was barely felt due to a lack of
faculty supervision. This year however, an effort was made by the
complete department to get the
students interested and involved in
their own drama organization. Credit should be especially given to
Mrs. Julia Pardee and Mr. Tomas

Watson who undertook the large
task of orgaizing the students
through their Drama Workshop,

The result of this work was the
presentation of three one act plays

plus scenes from West Side Story
in Baird Hall last Thursday and
Friday nights. These plays and
Musical were prepared in the short
period of two weeks and with this
fact in mind they proved to be,
as a whole, admirable presentations

of student talent.
The first play on the agenda was
"This Property is Condemned" by
Tennessee Williams and directed by

John Lund. The two young characters in the play were acted sensitively by Tony Castellani and Jim
Croneberg. Tony portrays a young
thirteen year old girl who lives
alone in an old deserted boarding
house with only the memories of
her sister and her railroad men
beus to keep her company. Tony
had the largest part and talks
incessantly while Jim plays the
rather stupid, insensitive and awkward adolescent. The overall effect
is one of pathos.
The second one act play was
"Impromtu" by Tad Mosell and
co-directed by Gail Edwin and

Linda Letta. It is the story oi
lour actors, played by Francine
Zumpana, Evelyn Damashek, J.
P. Smith, and Carl Berg, who are
shoved onto a stage in front of an
audience and told they can not
leave until they have improvised
a play. The results are shocking,
revealing, and pathetic and the ending is certainly a surprise to the
audience. This play is well written
but the performance lacked the
vitality that it so badly needed to
make it, interesting. Instead of
showing the personalities of the individual characters as it is ment
to do, it tended to drag out and
become tedious.

s

-&lt;

?

The last one act play was Strindberg's "The Stronger," directed by
Ethel Delin, and performed by
Susan Sturgeon and Sylvia Spring.
The play is highly emotional. Sylvia, plays a young unmarried actress who does not ntter a word
throughout the play but whose only
reactions are shown in her facial
expressions. Sylvia’s very silence
prods Susan onto reach an hysterical peak when she realizes that
her one time friend has been having
an affair with her husband. The
problem that remains with the
audience at the end of the play
is the question of who is the
stronger person. This play's impact is seldom missed and although
both parts were extremely difficult
to portray, they were enacted well
by both Sylvia and Susan.
The last presentation was a series
of scenes taken from West Side
Story. Uttle can be said concerning its merit since one will inevitably compare it to the movie
or play. Its success or failure can
only be judged on the grounds of
the limited amount of time that

Gary Burke, its director, had to

prepare the whole show. Knowing
that the cast had only about five

rehearsals before the performance,
it can be appreciated as a noble
effort on the part of Mr. Burke and
his cast to tackle an extremely
difficult musical. Maria was played
by Pamela Dadcy and she sang
"Tonight” and "A Place for Us"

-

program

will feature Brahms's
Variations on a thorns of Schumann, op. 23; The Stravinsky Con-

carta par Duo Pianafatti Sail, Dehussy's suite, En Blanc at Naif, and
the Schubert Fantasia op. 103.
At the Friday recital, the duo will
perform Debussy's Six Epigraphas,
Antiques, the Chopin Rondo op. 73;
Divertissement a la Honqroisa of
Schubert. Four Dialogues for Tara
Pianos, by Allen Sapp, chairman
of the music department, and Concerto for Taro Solo Pianos by David
Diamond, current Slee professor of

will also be featured.
Students should take advantage of
this opportunity to hear a duo-piano
team; many of the works to be
played are Infrequently performed
music,

in Buffalo.

The Jazz Gallery
By RAYMOND CRAWFORD

This week should provide Buffalo jazz buffs with plenty of
sounds to keep everything “cool
and groovy.” Four great names in
jazz will be at the Pine Grill, BonTon Tavern and Klcinhans Music
Hall.
Over at the Pine Grill, you’ll be
able to catch the jazz organist,

Jimmy McGriff and his combo.
delves deep into the
roots of jazz and comes up with the
This man

kind of music which is sometimes
called "funky,’’ that “finger-poppin',” soulful music

well mixed

with the blues and typical of the

jazz of the South.

expertly. Tony was played by
Steve Schneider but his role was
weak, despite his ear splitting bellows. The dancers were of varied
talents ranging from the quite nimble in the front rows to the clumsy
in the back ground. But again it
must be remembered that the effect
was admirable if not always per-

At the Bon-Ton, a young refreshing group will be finishing up a
two week stand at the famous tavern. It’s the Modem Jazz disciples from Chicago who seem to
really have something to say. It
would be a pleasure to see these
guys get together and really find

fect.

the groove.

A scene you can’t miss is the
great showo, once again sponsored

Joe Rico and radio station
LUFO, at Kleinhans Music Hail.
The gifted pianist Junior Mance
and his trio will be the instrumental feature and the revered
ex-Basie singer, Joe Williams, will
provide the vocal talent. Junior
Mance has a swinging group, but
when you go to see the concert
remember that you will be listening to the greatest male jazz singer in a couple of decades. The
wonderful control of a beautiful
voice and expert phrasing are qualities that make Joe the best
If there isn’t enough listen to my
show “The Jazz Gallery” on our
school radio station, WBFO, 88.7
megacycles on the FM dial. You
will be digging the sounds of Miles,
Diz, Monk, Sonny and Trane. The
show is on every Tuesday 10-11
p.m. Be sure to tune in.
by

MSB&amp;&amp;

Mikes
*

By VICKI BUGEL.SKI
Joseph Rollino and Paul Sheltel,
internationally known duo piano
team, will appear in two recitals at
Baird Hall, Oct. 21 and 25.
Sudents may obtain free tickets
for both performances with the
presentation of their ID card at
the Baird Hall box office prior to
the night of the performance. General admission is $2; faculty and
staff $1 per concert. Both performances begin at 8:30 p.m.
The group has just returned from
performing in Rome. Monday's

Mike

BRANCHES:

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Wa extend our welcome to all Alumni and wish Coach
Offenhamer and the rest of the U.B. team the best of luck in
their Homecoming Game against Boston University. We com-

pliment all the families for their wise choice in sending their

sons and daughters to the great University of Buffalo. With
its enormous, evergrowing facilities and with an administration

such as the one here at U.B. their knowledge will be greatly
enriched.

�Student Parking Court Set Up
To Judge Violations Appeals

Stunt Nite Try-outs
Wednesday Nights
The Union Board Committee for
Stunt Nite has started making ar-

rangements

for this year’s per-

formance.

The purpose of Stunt

Nite,

in accordance with

former

presentations, is to allow the many
student organizations on campus
to display their various creative

abilities in song, dance, and drama.
Group try-outs are scheduled for
Wednesday,

pm.,

7-11

at which

com-

time a panel Of judges and

mittee members will decide which
groups are to perform on Nov. 15.
The position of Master of Ceremonies is still open to committee
consideration.

All interested

per-

sons are encouraged to attend the
next committee meeing, which is

to be held in the Union Board of
fice on October 28 at 3 p.m,

The final day for applying for the qualifying exam to teach in
Buffalo is today. All
must

applications

be

postmarked no later
than this evening.
»

»

8, 1963

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

•

Dr. Eugene Maleska,
Assistant Superintendent of Schools for New
York City will discuss
“The Teacher in Our
Urban Schools.” H i s
lecture will be given
today at 3:30 in the
Conference Theatre. A
question and answer
period will follow.

By JOAN

equivalent, according to the respec-

WILKINS

Judiciary is currently setting up a Student Parking Court to judge appeals of parking violations which were previously handled by the Bursar’s OfThe Student

fice. Because of the number of
cases that will be involved, the
Judiciary feels a special court will
be needed. The court will be composed of four members with a chief
justice from the Student Judiciary.
The chief justiceship will rotate
among members of the Judiciary.

The amendment passed at last
Tuesday’s Senate meeting gives the
Judiciary the power to establish
such lower courts. According to
the amendment, "the term of the
lower courts shall end with the
term of the establishing court."
Judges of the lower court must
meet the same qualifications as
the members of the Student Judiciary. These requirements are as
follows:

1. “All judges shall be full-time
students of at least junior standing during their term of office, as
determined by the deans of their
divisions.”
2. “All judges shall have
achieved a 1.0 overall average and
a 1.0 average in the semester previous to appointment, or their

tive deans of the divisions in which
are enrolled.”
3. No student member of the Student Senate shall sit on the court.
Students who meet these requirements and are interested in serving on the new court may obtain
application forms from Miss Paula
Haro in the Student Association Office, room 205 Norton Union.
they

Sf
_■

University College
students whose last
names begin with the
letters designated below will see their advisors on the following
days:
Oct. 21—Oct. 25 P, Q, R
Oct. 28—Nov. 1 G, H
S
Nov. 4—Nov. 8
Nov. 11—Nov. 15 C, D
Nov. 18—Nov. 26 A, B
Dec. 2—Dec. 6 K, L
Dec. 9—Dec. 13 F, W, Z
Dec. 16—Dec. 20 M, J
Students will make
an appointment with
the Receptionist in
Diefendorf 114 at least
one week in advance of
t h e above scheduled
times.

,

?

.

■

j.

j||

al^i

WHO put the "roll”
in Van Heusen’s
Button-Down Collar?
designer has bowed to plaudits from the
college man for producing the exacting patterns
which create such a softly flattering collar roll.
While our cloth specialist proudly claims that
Van Heusen’s traditional shirt fabrics are
an essential for such
the finest, most supple
ingenious draping!
However, upon reflection, it is our experienced
stitchers who, almost fanatically, tailor that
graceful roll into each individual collar that deserve
the most credit of all.
Come, see the Van Heusen "417" Collection of
dress and sport shirts at your local retailer. They are
featured in a choice array of stripes and solids
all cut in the new V-Taper trim, slim look. If you
happen not to be a Button-Down fan, then snap
to with our Snap-Tab! $5.00
a
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Our

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Open 7:00 A.M. Every Day—Open All Nite Saturday

�SPECTRUM

Friday, October 18, 1963

PAGE FIFTEEN

Canterbury Club
Discussion groups will continue
next week as the schedule posted.

Chaplain Beattie will continue the
discussion of I CORINTHIANS on
Wednesdays from 2-3, Norton 234
and.J&gt;n Thursdays he will continue
■he'discussion of HONEST TO GOD.
Fr. Bollman will continue the
discussion of Basic Theology. This
week he will be discussing the
nature of Religious experience, and
this coming week the topic will be
the Hebrew Origins of Chrisianity.
The session will be held Tuesday

with discussion at 4:30 and the
presentation at five and a repeat
on Friday with discussion at 2:30
and the paper at three. This will
be in Norton 266. This is open to
all.

Cheyette, Music Department, will
speak on: “Jews in Music." This
will be the second in a series of
lectures on: "Jews in the Arts."

“Live and Learn
The next meeting in the "Live
and Learn" discussion hour series
will be held on Thursday at 3:00
p.m. in the Hillel House. A subject
of interest will be taken up. Mrs.
Norman Fertig is the moderator
of the series.

Faculty Fellowship To Meet
The Hillel House Faculty Fellowship, a group of college faculty
members from the Buffalo College
and their wives, will meet on Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in
the

Hillel House. Professors Abel Fink

and Noel
Gamma Delta
Wednesday, we will again meet
for supper at 5:30, our business
meeting at ,6:30 in Room 344, and
our topic discussion at 7:30. This
is “Civil Rights.”
The group is invited to Syracuse
I his Sunday as guests of the Zeta

Pi Chapter, We will meet at 10:30
a.m. in Norton. Call Carol Walff
TA 3-1737 if interested.
The money for our Retreat must
bo paid by Oct. 23 if you are interested in going. There are a few
openings on the list so please contact- Phyllis Swift TA 3-7540 by
Wednesday.
HILLEL NEWS
Sabbath Service and Oneg Shabbat

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation
will sponsor a Sabbath Service this
evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel
House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will
give the second sermon in a series

on: "Understanding Our Prayers."

His subject
neh Esrei."

follow.

will be, “The ShemoAn Oneg Shabbat will

Delicatessen Supper Sunday
A Delicatessen Supper will be
held on Sunday at 5:30 p. m.
in the Hillel House. Dr. Irving

Simmons are

the co-

chairmen of this event. The program will consist of a discussion
of Hannah Arendt's Eichmann In
Jerusalem. Dr. Fred Veit and Rr,
Billy Fink will serve as discussants.
Dr. Martin Fried will be the moderator. A social hour will follow.
Newman Club

This week’s meeting will be held
in the Multipurpose Room at 7:30
p.m.
Dr. Hyman Levin of the
Erie County Mental Health Association will speak on “Religion and
Mental Health.”
Anyone interestedin attending the
Educational Weekend at Utica College Oct. 24 26 call John Wagner
\
at NT 3-5848.
-

Father's discussion classes are
Tuesday and Thursday
held
at 9:00i and 10:00 a.m, in Room
334, Norton. Every Monday at 3:00
p.m. in Room 244, Norton, discussions areuield on the Modem Encyclical. \
Just a reminder that Newman
Club is open every day from 8:00
a.m. to 5 p.m. Mass is at 12:00
noon daily.

WBFO Announces Schedule
Monday, Oct. 21
5:00—On Campus with Jerry Segal
6:00—News with Jim Cronberg
6:15— Meet the Faculty—Interview
with Dr. White, Anthropology
Dept.

6:30—Evening Musicale
7:00—America on State "Metamora" by Robert M. Bird (1856). A
great
lamous vehicle lor the
American actor, Edwin Forest,
"Metamora" otters an almost
perfect example of the “noble
savage” in drama, and its great
impularity demonstrates the public's tendency to sentimentalize
the fiction while exploiting the
original.

7:30—Concert

Hall—Debussy: La
Mer, Trois Nocturens. Carol
Maria Guilini and Philharmonic

Orchestra.
9:00—News
910—American
Wilson

with Terry
Lee
00 Headlines and Sign Off
Tuesday, Oct. 22
5:00—On Campus with A1 Knoblach
6:00—News with Ed Nagel
615—Over the Back Fence
6:30 Evening
1:00—Hold Your Breath “The Price
°f Pollution"
Dirty air has
greater
economic implications
than many people suspect. It
costs money to control; uncontrolled it causes extensive economic damage. The effect on our

11:

—

resources
10—Concert Hall

is discussed.

Dvorak: 16
t’avonic Dances. Antal Dorati
and the Minneapolis Symphony

Orchestra.

—

is director, William A. Patterson,
University of Kentucky. He will
discuss the role of racial nationalism as a heritage of colonialism.
10:00—Evening Showcase with Ray
Crawford and Jazz
Headlines and Sign Off
Wednesday, Oct. 2)
5:00—On Campus with Bob Gottesman

6:00—News with Dave Schrieber
6:15—Getting To Know You—Interview with foreign student, John
Pavlidis, Greece
6:30—Evening Musicale
7:00—Cartoonists Art—Irwin Hazen
and Gus Edson who produced
“Dondi”
7:30—Concert Hall—Mahler: Symphony No. 1 in D "The Titan 1
Bruno Walter and Columbia Sym’.

History with Mr.

10:00—Musical Showcase

atural

South African Racial
Century
Nationalism—Amry Vanderboach

—

•0— UB College' Quiz

phony

9:00-News
9:10—American History with Mr.
Wilson
10:00—Evening Showcase with Ray
Caruana
11:00—Headlines and Sign Off
Thursday, Oct. 24
5:00—On Campus with Bruce Anderson
6:00—News with Pat Irwin
6:15—Changing Face of Europe
6:30—Evening Musicale
7:00—Special of the Week
7:30—Concert Hall —Ravel; Sche-

herazade; Berlios: Cleopatra with
Jennie Tourel. Bernstein and the

N.Y. Philharmonic

8:30—Special— Netherlands Quintet
10:00—Evening Showcase with Fred
Brikell and Folkmus
11:00—Headlines and S

“The Nature of Information Science" is the subject of an engineering seminar featuring Dr. Arthur Porter, head of industrial engineering, University of Toronto, at
5:00 p.m., Wednesday, in 146 Diefendorf Hall.
The seminar is sponsored by the
School of Engineering at the University and the Niagara Frontier
Chapter, American Institute of In-

r&lt;3/
s/
Cgf

Tor"-

'

Distinguished

r—
\

-

Seminar Features
Dr. Arthur Porter
d

&amp;

Service

dustrial Engineers.
The talk will survey briefly the
development of information science, its fundamental character

and future role.
Dr. Porter received the B.Sc.,
M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in physics from the University of Manchester, England. He served as a
scientific officer, Admiralty, London during World War II and has
subsequently been a member of
several advisory boards, including
the Weapons Research Board,
United Kingdom.
An interest in computers, servomechanism theory, and operations
research are reflected in the strong
industrial engineering program
which is being developed under
Dr. Porter's direction at the University of Toronto.

Any faculty member
experienced i n skiing
and desiring to work
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the coming season
please contact Brian
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TR 5-8015.

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-

�PAGE SIXTEEN

SPECTRUM

Transfer Gripe Session Held
By Public Relations Group
By BARBARA STRAUSS

The Public Relations Committee,
the leadership of Jean
Schoembs, has accomplished, and
is planning many activities to promote better and stronger relations
between all factions of the campus
community in the past year.
As their first major program of
the fall semester, this committee
held a Transfer Student Gripe Session Wednesday at which the
under

prevalent

complaints of transfer students were aired and dis-

cussed. Through this and other
such sessions, the committee hopes
to integrate new students to campus life.
Tuesday, the committee is holding the first in a series of three
"Rally 'Round the Profs" Student-

Spectrum

The Public Relations

group is

busily involved in future plans.
They will design a Union Board
Brochure representing all committees and their activities second semester. The committee is available to all Union Board organizations for publicity work. They send
announcements to radio stations
and newspapers advertising events
of all

committees.

APO and Special Events Committee
Hold Pep Rally Tonight at Rotary

The newly elected officers of the
’Accounting Society of the State University of New York at Buffalo for
the 1963-64 year are: President, Joseph V. Parlato; vice-president,
Harvey Davis; secretary, Brenda
Smith; treasurer, Ronald Zackem.

Hemingway House
House will hold
election of officers in room 330 at
1:00 Tuesday.
Hcmmingway

Occupational Therapy Club
The Occupational Therapy Club
will meet today at 3:30 in room 330
Norton. A movie will be shown.

Political Science Club
There will be a meeting of this

Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity in
conjunction with the Special Events
Committee will sponsor a pep rally

After the game, there will be an
alumni meeting in the New Faculty

for the UB Bulls. The UB Marching Band will be there along with
the UB cheerleaders. Come see
the Fire Dragons, torchlight parade, the Ugly Man Skits, the
Homecoming Queen Candidates and
the giant Bon Fire. The parade
will start from Goodyear at 8:00
p.m. and proceed to the Gym to
pick up the UB Bulls and then
march on to Rotary Field for the
pep rally activities.

Club.

newly organized club on Monday
at 5 p.m. in room 337 Norton.
At 4 p.m. the Political Science
Department will present Dr. Glen
Snyder of the University of California at Berkley. This meeting
will be open to the student body.

The evening will begin with a
faculty reception in the Gay Nineties Lounge of the Glen Casino.
Following will be a dance for all
students in the Glen Casino, from
9 p.m, to 1 a.m.

The first meeting of the Pre-Law
Society will be held Tuesday, in
room 223 Norton, at 7:30 p.m. All
interested students are invited to

The schedule of events for homecoming will be as follows:
Tonight: There will be the initial
meeting of the alumni at 8 p.m.
in the New Faculty Club in Harriman Library told Norton).
Saturday: There will be a gathering of alumni and students in
the Rathskeller about noon. After
lunch, at 1:30, the Bulls will face
Boston University on Rotary Field.

Pre Law Society

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structure and preparation for law
school,
A question and answer
period will take place, and refreshments

Drama Society

There will be a meeting of the
Dramatic Society on Tuesday, in
room 334, Norton ,Hall, at 4:00.

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attend.

Accounting Society
Faculty Coffee hours, to be given
in the Haas Lounge. The three
faculty members who will meet
with interested students in lively
discussion are: Mrs. Rhodes of the
philosophy department, Mr, Benay,
a French instructor, and Dr. Johnson of the anthropology department. The coffee hours will begin
at 3:00 and all are invited to attend.

Friday, October 18, 1963

will be served.

Sociology Club
The first meeting of the current
year is to be held today at 4:00

p.m.

in room 233 Norton. All
members and interested students
(regardless of major) are urged
to attend as nomination of officers
will take place.

Bridge Club
The Bridge Club will be holding
meetings Tuesday nights, 7:30.
Norton 327. There will be opportunities to learn and play bridge.
All students interested are invited
to attend.

�Friday, October 18, 1963

UB Cagers to Hold

MacKeilars Shine
On the Gridiron

Pre-Season Workouts
By ALLAN

SCHOLOM

"We have a strqpg nucleus of
experienced lettermen 'returning
from last year’s championship
learn,” optimistically declared Dr.
Leonard Serfustini, UB head basketball coach. During his evaluation of this year’s squad, the coach
also pointed out the 16-5 record
compiled by the 1962-63 Bulls, on
their way to the National Collegiate
Association regionals at

Athletic

Akron, Ohio. Despite the two losses
incurred there at the hands of
South Carolina State and Youngstown, the cagers gained valuable

tournament experience, which colud
make a big difference this year.
Heading the list of returning
veterans is team captain Dave
Baldwin, and the most valuable
player Gary Hanley. Baldwin was
the Bulls' high scorer averaging
14.3 points per game and Hanley
broke a school record by pulling
down 287 rebounds in addition to
tallying 13.7 points per game. Both
are six-foot three-inch seniors and
play the two forward positions.
Others coming back include Dick

senior
6.1 pts per
game), Norbert Baschnagel (6’ 2"
junior
7.0 pts.), Dan Bazzani
(6’ 1” junior
5.5 pts.), Roy
Manno (5’ 8” junior
5.3 pts.),
Jack Karaszewski (6’ 3” junior
Harvey (6'

—

—

—

—

—

5.0 pts.), Don Thompson (6’ junior),
Tom Gill (6’ 3” junior), and Gary
Bannerman (6’ 6" junior.
It would seem that according to
their relative heights, this years'
cagers appear to be on the short
side, comparatively speaking of
course. However, Dr. Serfustini has
an ace in the hole in Bill Bilowus,
a six-foot five-inch senior, returning after a term of ineligibility.
While in action Bilowus was the
second leading UB rebounder last
year. The coach said ‘ ‘that a lot
depends on him”, indicating that
he could be a big factor in the
Bulls' championship drive this season.
Coach Serfustini is also high on
the frosh moving up to the varsity.
Leading the pack is six-foot Norwood Goodwin, who poured in
21 points per game for the frosh
last year, and Bill Barth a 6' 7”
giant. The coach predicts a great
deal of "competition between everyone for starting positions.” He also
added "that it would be impossible
to say who would be the first five

PAGE SEVENTEEN

SPECTRUM

By DAVID E. HAMPTON

on November 30” when the Bulls
open the season against traditional
rival Buffalo State.
This season's schedule will be
highlighted by four Saturday night
doubleheaders featuring UB and
Canisius at Memorial Auditorium.
This program is being sponsored
jointly by UB and Canisius after
an eight year absence of college
doubleheaders in Buffalo. If it
works out more and more games
will be scheduled at the auditorium
which will greatly benefit UB basketball both financially and prestige-wise. However, as Dr. Serfustini put it, “We need 100 per cent
support from the student body in
order to make this a success." The
four UB games of the doubleheaders are against State as perviously
mentioned, Bucknell on January 11,
Youngstown on January 25, and
Gannon on February 8. Also included on what is probably UB's
toughest schedule ever is Syracuse,
Villanova, Cornell, Colgate, Boston
University, and Niagara.

Overall, Coach Serfustini feels
that the schedule, the individual

competition lor starting positions,
and the Saturday night doublehcaders are factors which will cause his
team to improve over last year's.
However, he prophesizes that "as
far as won-lost record and the
NCAA tournment goes, only time
will tell.”

The town of Kenmore has been
known as a center lor producing
a number of talented young athletes. In recent years the town
gave UB a pair of giants of outstanding ability as football players.
These two young men are the MacKellar brothers, Bruce and Russell.
Individually, Russell, the oldest
and largest, is a sophomore on the
varsity squad as a guard. His
weight is 215 and he stands 6 feet.
Bruce, a freshman, carries 210
pounds in a 6 foot frame. Although
not twins, as most brother combinations go, there is a great deal
of similarity as shown in their
physical features. Respected highly by team members, each takes
pride in giving his best in the
game and coaches on both teams
agree that that is quite a bit.

Scholastically,

both

maintain

averages in the B range. Russell
is a history major, while Bruce
is a physical education major who

enjoys the program immensely.

Both are great assets to their
respective teams and when Bruce
moves up next year to the varsity,
the opposition will experience
“double trouble, MacKellar style,"

*

BRUCE AND RUSSELL MacKELLAR

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�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE

Dvaion
By ALAN

NEWMAN
The Terriers of Boston University
will meet the UB Bulls at Rotary
Field tomorrow fresh from their
overwhelming 18-6 upset over Holy
Cross. This will mark the fourth
engagement of the two teams with
Buffalo holding a 2-1 edge in previous contests. Last year’s game
was a real thriller; the Bulls
pulled the game out of the fire in
the final 35 seconds on a Stofa-toButler pass.
Boston’s record stands at 1-2-1
after four games, but the Terriers
will be hard to beat. They dropped
their first two games to worthy
opponents in Army and West Virginia and then went on to tie unbeaten Colgate and stop Holy Cross.
Boston's lineplay in its first four
games has been outstanding. Head
Coach Steve Sinko is overly proud
of his two linebackers. Captain Bill
Lesinski and Billy Budness, and
firmly states that they will be the
best in Eastern collegiate football
this season. Says Sinko, "good
linebackers are hard to come by
lucky to

and we're particularly

have two of the best with us for the
third consecutive year. There isn't
another pair in the East that can
touch them."
Lesinski has power, speed and
aggressiveness as his main attributes. The 6 ft.-206 lb. guard made
the All New England team last
year and was named to the AllState team as an end at Hartford
High School.
"Billy Budd,” as he is called
by his teammates, has what the
pro scouts search for
size,
strength and ability. Going into
the Terriers' final game last season
BU was first in the nation in pass
defense and Budness was an integral part of the defensive machine, In Boston's first two contests this year Budness was mentioned as “lineman of the game"
by the sports scribes although his
team was outscored 64 0.
Together, Budness and Lesinski
have combined lor over 60% of
the Boston tackles and definitely
rate as the pair to watch on defense.
At offense there has been an
-

—

-

irrvyww

/fir)

m—?

obvious lag. Junior halfback John
Mulvaney is unavailable tor the
season following a ruptured spleen
incurred during the opening con-

Tackle, Gerry Philbin and tailback, Jim Ryan were both nominated for All-East positions on the
test with Army. The loss of BU’s basis of their performances in the
Marshall contest. However, neither
"Sophomore of the Year" has proved to be a definite handicap to player was listed on the first unit.
Coach Sinko’s ground game.

Two seniors, Joe DiPietro and

George Byrd, will be the starting
halfbacks. Both are hard runners
but have been inconsistent so far
this season. If DiPietro can live
up to his sophomore promise (6.3

average in 47 carries) he could
pose quite a problem to the Buffalo

tackles tomorrow.

After a fairly unsuccessful halfseason as BU’s “Lonesome End”
last year Bob Horton wondered
whether he would be better suited
for another position. During a pregame workout Coach Sinko noticed
that Horton was a powerful runner, besides being the fastest man
on the squad, and switched him to
the fullback slot. In his first game
in the backfield, against a crack
Army team, Horton piled up 62
yards in 13 carries. At Boston
University Field he turned in a
performance which netted him a
berth on the 1962 Buffalo all-opponents team. He finished the year
with a 4,8 rushing average and
despite his inexperience at fullback
Horton could be a hard man to

Buffalo Record to Date: 3-1-I
Buffalo 5-Game Statistics
9,097
Attendance:
Buffalo 34
Gettysburg 0
oh.0 u.
n.ooo
12,000
Holy Cross 6
6
12,500
Villanova
14
7
10,326
8
Marshall
10

The ticket office has
announced that no student will be admitted to
tomorrow’s football
game or any other succeeding athletic function without an I.D.
card. Claim checks will
not be recognized.

Support
the
Bulls

54,923
PASSING
19 of 47 5 int.
336 yds. 2 TDs
20 0
108
1 TD
8
13
3 2
1
457
3 TDs
28
70 7
RECEIVING
1 for 24 yds Tom Butler
4 for 82
Larry Gergley
Dick Condino
6
68
Gerry Patkewicz 1
0
Dennis Przykuta 1
45
1
2
Gerry Pawloski
Jim Ryan
5
Dave Nichols
71
3
65
Bob Edward
89
4
12
Gerry LaFountain 1
Team Total
28
457
RUSHING
Tom Butler
John Stofa
43 217 12 205 1TD
29 88 11 77 1TD
Jim Burd
Dick Condino
57 8 49 1TD
6 28 7 21
Jim Ryan
Fred Geringer
0,4-4
31 188 9 179 1TD
1
Gerry Ratkewicz
Don Gilbert
2
29 137 41 96 1TD
5
0 5
Dennis Przykuta
John Cimba
12 52
2 50 1TD
42 158 0 158
Team Total
Bob Edward
229 973 101 872 6TDs
18 43 7 36
John Stofa
Don Gilbert
F. Geringer
Team Total:

stop.

The UB Bulls will be out to
avenge their unexpected loss to
Marshall University. "Iceman"
Stofa had an off-day last Saturday
as he did not complete a pass.
John will have special emphasis
on his passing game tomorrow;
Messrs. Ryan, Gergley and Butler
will be out to improve the Buffalo
aerial offensive.

All hands will be ready on detackle, Gerry
Philbin, handling the bulk of the
tackling chores. Also out to halt
the Terrier’s ground attack will be
Dan Nole, Gerald La Fountain, and
Armand Martin.
fense with All-East

TYPING
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MRS. THILL
M University Ave.
TF MW»

__

before or after the ball game
MCDONALD'S
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Tempting Cheeseburger .
Triple-Thick Shakes
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long Distance rales are lower, remember, every evening after 6 00
and all day Sunday. Extra low for
many calls within New York State
after 9:00 p m.

Haw York Telephone

Make your first stop at McDonald’s.
Whether you have a party of two, four,
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seconds each. You’11 be pleased and surprised to find out just how good a 15c
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Operated by the JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

�Bulls Upset By
Marshall 10-8

in the passing department.
But even more signficant than
the failure of the passing game was
the breakdown in the pass defense.
Marshall was able to rip the Bull’s
secondary for 193 yards. The big
play being a 73-yard pass-run from
Howard Miller to speedy halfback
Jack Mahone. Several UB players
had shots at the speedsters but
none were able to contain him as
he romped into the end zone un-

Baby Bulls Downed
By Colgate Frosh
By ED RIZZO
Last

Friday, theUB Freshman
Bulls played the Colgate Frosh
Raiders on Rotary field. The Raiders took advantage of an offside
penalty and on the ensuing series
of plays scored the decisive touch-

ed the two- point conversion.
With about six minutes remaining UB again got control of the

ball

and

started what appeared

another touchdown drive. But on
a line buck, fullback John Cimba
(UB’s most effective runner
18
caries for 91 yards) fumbled and
the ball bounced into the end zone.
Tackle Leo Ratamuss gave pursuit but one of Marshall's speedy
backs was able to beat him to
it. It was an automatic touchback
and the Big Green took over on
their 20. Buffalo held for three
plays but on the punt, time ran
out signaling UB's first defeat this
—

year.

down.

After an impressivewin over the
Army Plebes two weeks ago, the
Bulls, who were playing without
the injured quarterback Jim Robie
and also two starting linemen, went
for their second win. It was Colgate's first game of the season.
The first score came in the second period when Colgate’s Joe Radman went over from the one yard
line. The point after was kicked
by Bob Hoffman. At the end of
the first half the score was 7 0.
In the third quarter, the bulls
came bouncing back. On a series
RADMAN (i»)
-JP»
of 13 plays, UB went 69 yeards; SPEEDY COLGATE HALF BACK JIM
big yardage. Buffalo's NICK CAPUANA (22) closes in for the tackle

j

By DON CASTLE
After returning home from
three successful road trips, the
University of Buffalo Bulls staged
their most unimpressive' showing
of the year before a partisan home
crowd of over 10,000.
It was the failure of the Bulls
to come up with their usually good
passing game that enabled Marshall to edge out a 10-8 upset victory. It is not very often that the
Stofa-Gilbert combination goes 0-11

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 18, 1963

-

Statistics-wise the Bulls had the
17 first downs to Marshall's
edge
seven. In rushing UB overwhelmed
Marshall 224 yards to 17. But it
was Marshall’s 193 yards passing
to Buffalo's 0 that proved to be
the most important factor.
—

Wes

Bonner, freshman fullback,
drove the final eight yards for
the touchdown. Bonner ran for the
conversion, making the score 8 7.
In the third quarter, Colgate fumbled on a second down and ten
situation, and an alert Bull pounced
on it. However, an offside penalty
at this time nullified the fumble
and gave the ball back to Colgate.
After this penalty, the Colgate
freshmen began to move the ball.
A 76-yard drive in eight plays
scored. Ray Ilg drove into the
end zone from the two for Colgate
and Steven ran for a two point
conversion. At the completion of
three quarters the score was Colgate 15, UB 3.
In the last minutes of the game,
Colgate pulled further ahead when
they capitalized on a drive from
their own 14, Radman scored his
second touchdown when he went
over from the one loot line. He
also ran for the two point conversion making the score 23 8.
Wally Murphy, a 5-6, 175 pound
quarterback returned the kickoff
from his own 15 to the Colgate 14
with only 55 seconds left. Murphy
then passed to Tony Miceli for
twelve yards, putting the Bulls on
the two yard line with seconds
running out. After two plays, Murphy plunged over for the TD. The
JIM RYAN (22) and JOE HOLLY (52) scramble for Ifie pigskin in the conversion was not good and the
game ended in favor of Colgate,
end zone, as Leo Ratamess looks on. The effort was in vain because Marshall recovered the ball for a touchback.
23 14.

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come via this air route.
All Marshall's scoring was done
in the first half. In the 1st quarter
Marshall drove deep into UB territory, but the defense stiffened,
forcing the Big Green to settle for
a 20-yard field goal. Late in the
second quarter with UB deep in
its own territory, the Bulls failed
to make a first down and had to
punt. With just 2 minutes remaining -Marshall on its first play from
scrimmage went for the big play
and ended up with a 73-yard touchdown pass.
The second hall saw the Bulls
controlling the pigskin much more

Dick's

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than did Marshall. With the second
the Bulls marched thru
the Marshall defense, mainly on
the strong running of Tom Butler,
to the two yard line where fullback Denny Pryzkuta cracked over.
Gilbert rolled to his right and scor-

team in,

The SPECTRUM
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UNIVERSITY SHOP
53

�Friday, October 18, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWENTY

Spectrum Sports
Sports Circle
By ROCKY VERSACE

It was a fine day for football—clear skies, a slight
breeze, a good crowd, and a supposedly underdog opponent.
But Buffalo w as beaten and the “curse of the Bulls” icmained
intact; It seems that in the past, whenever the' varsity returned home from a successful road trip, they found difficulty winning, even against teams of lower caliber. Everyone
knows that man for man UB had the superior team Saturday
against Marshall. The Bulls had more depth (Marshall played
only 22 men and several of these saw only slight action), more
speed, and were physically larger, but, nevertheless, they
were beaten.
In the middle-ages whenever a person tried to account
for something that was unexplainable, he “passed the buck”
and blamed it on the supernatural. Similarly, this Writer
wishes to explain Buffalo’s 10-8 loss to Marshall in terms of
the “Curse of The Bulls.” However in this case the Curse
differs from any run of the mill curse. The Curse of The
Bulls rests on and is deduced basically from several very
observable and non-mysterious entities.
The first ingredient is overconfidence. This is attained
simply by playing several games of good football, getting a
few breaks, winning, and then decelerating, expecting victories to follow in successive order. Perhaps this ould have been
done eight years ago when the schedule was not as hefty,
but in the major college ranks this is an irreparable action.
The second ingredient of the Curse is individuality. Earlier in the year a local newspaper referred to this as “senioritess.” But in creating the Curse this can be extended to junioritess and sophomoritess as well. To overcome this, all individualitity must be replaced by team unity. The glory days
of high school, when the individual player was the king-pin,
are over and should be forgotten. A 100 percent effort is
needed in every minute of every suarter of every game, and
by very player in order to consistently win major college
football games.
No better example of this can be offered than the tremendous and courageous effort put forth by the 22 battered,
weary, but victorious men from Marshall. This team played
every second of the contest with one thing in mind—victory.
Marshall’s lack of depth definitely was shown in the last
quarter as Buffalo poured through their defenses for long
gains. But when it was over, the Big Green had themselves
a triumph to be proud of.
The third and last element needed to create the curse
is the ability to do more damage to yourself than the opposing team could ever inflict. Buffalo’s lack of a field goal kicker or even an extra point kicker has been felt. This season
there have been numerous occasions when Buffalo found itself deep in enemy territory with a fourth down situation. A
sure three points at these times would have indeed been
pleasant items. In fact, there were opportunities in the Marshall game at which the three point goal could have proved
its worth.
Unnecessary penalties have nullified many important
gains for the 1963 Bulls, In line with the third requirement
for the development of the Curse of the Bulls, these penalties
(especially against Ohio, Holy Cross, and Villnova) have
helped the Bulls beat themselves. At least the penalties have
been the force of greatest resistance.
Now that th Curse has been completely analyzed, vhat
can be learned from it all? The answer to this question is
quite simple. The Bulls are a better team than their record
shows. The loss to Marshall should have been a victory; the
tie at Holy Cross should have been a victory; and the Vilanova
win should have been by at least one more touchdown (the
Bulls drew 159 yards in penalties). And how can this be deduced from what has been previously said? This is also easily
answered. As stated, the varsity has been played against itself. The combination of talent and luck has been needed in
the last seconds to win two games and tie another this season,
while earlier starts with 100 percent efforts would have
clinched the games sooner. The Marshall contest tfas merely
an instance in which the team pulled together too late.
The remainder of the schedule appears to be more challenging now than it did one week ago, especially in view of
the way future opponents have been handling themselves
(see How the Bulls’ Foes Fared).
In reality, however, it is no
more burdensome than before. The University of Buffalo
has got the equipment needed to field a great team—size,
Speed, coaching, etc. And with teams like Boston University,
Boston College, Delaware, and Colgate rolling up victories on
their way to Buffalo, it is now a good time to start putting
this equipment to its best use—100 percent.
While on the topic—are you superstitious? Buffalo won
f° ur °ut of five games this year. And naturally,
r?-thee fifth
"I®® in
was Marshall. Makes you wonder doesn’t it?

r

,,

Intramurals

Colgate, Alfred

Three Vie For Tennis Title

Trim UB Runners

By ED RIZZO
Last Tuesday, the tennis finals in
both singles and doubles were held.
The three finalists in singles are:
Oberstein—Alpha Epsilon Pi; Neussbaum—Beta Sigma Rho; Solomon
—Beta Sigma Rho.
The doubles match is between

Syrek and Folley—Dent School and
Seigel and Weber—Sigma Alpha
Mu. In next week's issue, the team
totals and an over all fraternity
team championship of Tennis will

be announced.

Monday, the cross country
meet will be held at Grover
-

Hemingway House 6—Irving House
0. The results in Friday's league
are; Flying Frosh 14—Browns 0;
440's 0—Crispins 0; Panthers 40;
Tigers 0.
The top three teams in the league
are: Flying Froth 3-0; 440’s, 2-0-1;
'

Comer Court Crushers 2-0-1,
Last week, Alpha Sigma Phi
scored another shutout victory by
beating Alpha Phi Omega, 18-0. In
four games this season, they have
not been scored upon. A.I.I.E, also
unbeaten, Won over Sig Ep 28-10.
This past Tuesday Alpha Sigma
Phi risked first place when they

By TERRY SWEENEY
Wednesday, the UB harriers
fell to defeat at the hands of
a very strong Colgate squad. Stu
Katz, running in fine form dashed
home ahead of the field in 21.35.5.
Colgate however finished in the
next seven places and romped to
a 20 -43 victory.

The Buffalo frosh ran into the
same tough going against the Colgate yearlings. Although Dick
Genau finished second on the 2.1

mile Grover Cleveland course, the
Red Raiders delt the Baby Bulls
a 19-43 trouncing. Genau’s time
was 15,30.

Saturday at Alfred University, the

Bulls were again badly beaten by
a score of 15 49. Sevene of Alfred
ran the hilly 4.35 mile course in
22.48.5. He was immediately fol-

lowed by five of his teammates.
Suedmeyer of UB finished seventh
with a time of 24.10.
The Alfred University frosh downed the Baby Bulls 18 43 to make
the day complete for Alfred.
-

Tomorrow morningat 10:30, UB
Varsity and Frosh will play host
to LeMoyne College of Syracuse
at the Grover Cleveland course and
Tuesday, the Bulls will travel to
Gannon College in Erie.

Intramural Football Action in the Tuesday Afternoon League
Cleveland -Park stalling at 4:00.
The starting and finishing point is
across the Med
Dent school.
The Mooners and the Zygotes are
the only two unbeaten teams in
the Monday Allenhurst league. The
Mooners have four wins and no
losses, while the Zygotes are 4-0-1.
In Monday's game, the Zygotes
once again rolled over their oponcnl—the score was Zygotes 76—
A' Raiders 0. This was the most
points scored by an intrammural
team at UB. Other results were:
Mooners 35—Demo's 0; Rams 12—
-

’

Allenhurst Stars 8; Upper Towner
8—Challengers 6.
Hemingway House remains unbeaten in Wednesday’s league.

hr

life
CURT SIEGEL

WBFO Sports News
Polls prove if!
"UB SPORTS
HIGHLIGHTS" is quickly becoming
the most popular sports program
on campus,
Why don't you ‘join the crowd’

and listen in this evening at 6:15
over WBFO-FM 88.7. A text book
of facts, a bit of humor and a
minute or two of Opinion make
the program an injoyable worthwhile fifteen minutes.
Keep up to date with the sports
happenings of UB and other colleges around the nation. Whether
it be football, basketball, golf,
swimming or track, you'll hear it
all Friday evenings when Wally
Blatter brings you ‘‘UB SPORTS
HIGHLIGHTS" over WBFO, your
campus radio station.

played

A.I.I.E.

Beta Sigma Rho, Alpha Epsilon
Pi, and Tke remain undefeated in
Thursday's league. Last week’s results: Beta Sigma Rho
14—Pi
Lambda Tau 12; Alpha Epsilon Pi
16—Phi Epsilon Pi 0; TKE 14Phi Kappa Psi 0, The big game in
Thursday's league was between
Beta Sig and TKE, both undefeated.

All fraternity games will start at
3:00 and 4:00 Tuesday and Thursday. The intrammural schedule on
Thursday will be altered because
of the ROTC review. Any team
involved should check at the intrammural office.

Buffalo Golfers
Gain ECAC Bid
By DAVID HAMPTON
Golfing fans! It’s off to Farmingdale, Long Island and a crack at
the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Tournament Championship. This opportunity is due
to UB’s first place finish this past
Saturday in the upstate regional
qualifying rounds. UB will meet
runner-up Colgate and six other colleges in the finals of the ECAC
Championship.
These eight teams were formed
from four regional tournaments
that included all the colleges affiliated with the ECAC. Each school's
golf squad consisted of four men

instead of the usual six and this

presented a stiff task for D. Serfastini who had to eliminate two
members of the regular squad.
UB’s victory was highlighted by
Steve Watt’s tie for low medal
honors with Colgate's Stan McKibbon at 79 all. Outplayed and outclassed, Colgate and Syracuse finished 23 and 26 strokes respectively

behind UB’s total of 325. Previous
to this tournament UB had run a
String of 16 straight victories over

a span of two seasons.
The big four for UB Saturday
were: Curt Sigel 81, Steve Watts
79, Fred Berman 83, Brownie Kopra
82. 325 total.

Seating Problem
The problem of student seating
at home football games has been
referred to Mr. Michael Cohen,
President of the Student Association.
The Athletic Department understands that the Student Committee
on Student Welfare is interested in
this problem as well as ourselves:
therefore, the Athletic Department

is hopeful that the Student Welfare
Committee can come up with a
recommendation for student seating at home football games which
would be considered fair and just
for all. Until the problem is resolved, we are asking for the understanding and cooperation of all
organizations. No roping off of

special sections by any organization
will be permitted for the Saturday
game with Boston University. We
strongly recommend that those
groups that wish to sit together
make every effort to do so by
getting to the stadium early, and
for those organizational groups that
do come late, we ask that they
occupy the upper row of seats in

the student section.
Sections 14, 16, and 18 are reserved for students.

Halftime Show
1. Homecomming Queen lands by
Hughes Helicopter, donated by Jack
Stevens Buick, Inc.; as soon as
field is cleared.
2, President Furnas welcomes
alumni and fans.
3. Dr. James J. Ailinger, President of the General Alumni Board
welcomes alumni.

A. President Furnas presents traditional roses to Queen.
S. UB’s Pride-ol-the-East Marching Band joins high school marching bands from Western New York

and Pa. for 10-minute show.
The committee of UB’s 38th Annual Alumni Homecomming Weekend extend sincere appreciation to
the Eastern College Athletic Conference and officials of both teams
iorpermitting extension of the halftime interval to twenty minutes.

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a'l&amp;R

REFLECTIONS
v-.
THE CIRCUS

Lucas Foss of Philharmonic
ExplainsModern Symphony
By JOSEPH LANG

Lukas Foss, th e brilliant , dynami c piani9t and composer
who has come to Buffalo as Conductor of the Buffalo Phil·
har monic Orchest ra, announ ced his pians for the future of
t.he Orchestra and explained his refreshing musical views to
an audience of students and faculty on Wednesday afternoon.
The top ic of the address was "The Symphon y in the 20th Cen­
tury," and from an interesting discussion of the recent trend
toward what Mr . Foss tenne(! a
"wedding between the composer
and the performer ," a very en­
thusiastic question-answer period
emerged, which dealt with llUUly
views on various aspects of con­
temporary music.

'l1le event was co-sponsored by
the Convocations Committee of the
Student Senate and the Music De­

partment

LUCAS FOSS
luff1le PhllhlrmenlcConductor
Mr. Foss' principal point was th!lt
contemporan' music , like modem
art and literature. has an esoteric
quali ty about it, wbich. though often
hard upon the audience , ls a de-

finite advantage , "Mu.sic by the
many for the many is a thing of
the past,'' says Mr. .Foss. the con­
temporary serious musi c composed
today is Ior "peop le in the same
boat." Thus , there is potentially a
much closer ' and deeper con 1mwll•
cation between music-lovers , and
music 1$ written primarily to please
a mass o{ concert-goers , but to
reach the minds and deepest emo­
tions of those in the audienc e- for­
tunate enough to commwllcate.
Though Mr. Foss feels that there
ls a great need or an adventurous
spirit in the pr esentation of con­
tem porary music to his audiences.
he does not sligh t the classics. He
used the analogy of a museum.
The modem symp hony, for in­
stance , has "become a museum. "
but "we need museums." Mr. Foss
thinks that much older music , such
as that ol the · Renaissance . must
be performed, always with a care­
fulness on the part of the perform­
ers not to fall into trite habits.
There was great confidence in
Mr. Foss' speech. H'e feel~ assured
that people will accept and enjoy
the ' 'new look" he plans to give
the Buttalo Phllharmonlc's
per­
formances. He explained that he
does not feel ih con!llct with the
public and that his aim is to pre­
sent modem music played "with
the awe we usually give to the
classics." as well as the classics.
which will also be presented ln an
Invigorating , lively .fashion.

Accreditation Received By
The School of Engineering
11 JOAN FARBER

The civil engineering sequence , under the chairmanshi p
of Dr. Robert L. Ketter , has been accredi ted by the Engine~r­
ing Council for Prefessional Development. President Furnas
was notified by letter of the action by the Engineering Coun­
cil.
The cooperative group represent s the 12 major technical
societies and engineering education societies in the nation .

The approval will remove a size­
able hurdl e from university gnldu­
ates in their efforts to obtain em•
ployment with some major indu&amp;­
lries, practice their profession out­
side New York State and go on
for advanced study at other edu•
~ational !Mtitutions .
f'Vnlll

Dr . Fumas infonn,ed Dean Tra ·
bruit . brought here in 1960 to mo­
dernize and strengthen the engine­
ering . school: "Fo r the first time,
lhe Niagara Frontier has In its
midst a center of engineering In­
struction and re.search rea,gnil.ed
n the same category es ~ in
the Boston and Southern Qll.11omla
ai ea.s, the cradles of development
in the fast-growing space and elec­
,mnlcs industries."
"Our school ls taking its place
\11th the e~rlng
schools of ex•
rt&gt;Uence in the U.S .. " said Dean
l rnbaht.
''The degree is now recognized
as legal tender, you might say. in
.,11the universiti es in the country ."
DIYIIMII It S,.Clfled

l'he university becomes the 168th
of higher education ac-

11•~1.ituti
oo

MARSHALL
PREVIEW

No. 6

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1963

VOLUME 14

..... Fl"lfflDf',

aT IIVffUO

SPE -CTRUM

(SH Poge 1'i1.&gt;t)

l

01' IR'W YOD

IOIERT L KEnlR
credited by ECPD. The school ot
engineering wu twice turned down
by ECPD for accredidation about
ten years ago. ECPD specifically
accredited the Division of Civil En­
gineering, under Dr . Ketter . one
of the six divisions within the school
or e,igineering. The other five are
(Coat .

OD

Pa,e

I)

J.Lindsay
Speaks
Thursday
John Lindsay, . Unite d States Representative of the 17th Congressional District of New
York City, will speak on "The Future of theA tlan,tic Alliance' ' on Thursday , Oct. 17 at 8:30
p.m. The lecture, sponsored by Fenton Lectures md by Millard College, is at Butler Audi­
torium in Capen Hall .
Repres entative Lindsay, a Republican, is now serving his third tenn in Congre ss. ' His
Distri ct includet. th e United Nations, four major universities, th e theatre distri ct, the busi•
ness and garment distri cts, the residential areas of the East Side. and parts of the West
Side and Greenwich Village. In
Congress be serves on the House
Judiciary Committee and three of
Its Subcommittees:
The Subcom­
mittees on revision of law~. trade­
marks, patents and copyrights Cot
which he is the ranking Minority
Membe r); state taxation on inter •
slate commerce; and submerged
lands .
Congressman Lindsay has fought
hard for the rights · ot the individ­
ilal to have better education , bet•
ter housing anq better health. He
has several bills which are now
under active Congressional consid•
eration. His bill to provide hospi•
talization and home care for aJ1
persons over 65, financed on a pay­
Wl·YOU•gobasis has been called by
Republicans and Democrats alike
the best medical care program of•
fer ed In the 87th Congress. The
New York Times called the Lindsay Ovll Rights bW the best of
1963. Others Include the Llndsa.y
bill !or tax relief to the handicap­
ped; against governmen t withhold­
Ing of taxes on interes t and div!·
dends and against imposition ol
crippling laxes on United States
enterprises abroad, the Lindsay blU
to create a Presldelt's Advisocy
Council on Education to prepare
a long term education program,
and the l.J.ndsay bill to provide long
term,
low-interest
construction
loans with sa!eguards to guarantee
true middle-income housing and
legis lation to prevent evacuation
of family units by speculative build-

- -------Amendment
Passed
SenateMeetingIs
Re&lt;essed-2Weeks
Two Constitutional amendments
regarding the establishment of tow­
er courts of the Student Judiciary
and the establishme nt of a policy
regarding the election of senators
to fill vacanciesoccurlng during the
academic year were passed by the
Student Senate, Tuesday .
Previous to the passage of the
first amendment, the Office of the
Bursar had been resporsible for
both distributing and Judging the
appeals of parking violatiol'III. The
establishment of the lower court.
under the directloo of the Student
Judiciary , will now place the res­
ponmbility of hearing appeals tor
these violations on the tower court.
Under the second amendment ,
any vacandes in the Senate rep,
resentatlon will be filled by a vote
of the student body at large In the I
division where the vacancy exists.
The proceedure in the past was to
elect new senators by a vote of the
Senate .
Also , at the meeting, Communlca •
tlons Committee Chainnan Michael
Shapiro announced that be, and
his committee, had decidedthat no
Student Senate Newsletter w a s
needed, as had been propoled at
the previous meeting of 'the Senate .
He noted "that the Senate receives
adequate caver-age In the $pee•
tnun. " Robert Finkelstein. Publi c
Relations Committee Oiairman.
staled that "an offlcie.t record of
t h e Senate meetlnp should be
available to all students," and'that
a newsletter is necessary. The
commi ttee will report IIJI tlnal d&amp;­
cision next meeting.

tatives honored Congressman Lind·
say by selecting him to be one ol
the nine House Members to serve
as a delegate to the NATO Parlia ­
menlarians
Conference held 1n
Paris . In 1962 he was reappointed
because ol his outstanding record
and was elected by the delegates o1
fifteen nations as Executive Sec­
retary of the Political Comnuttee
of the Conference .
Before Lindsay went to Congress,
he was admitted to the New York
Stete Bar, United States Supreme
Court, and District of Columbia
Bar . Lindsey was Executive AJt,,.
sistant to the Attorney General of
the United Sta&lt;eS, Herbert Brown­
ell. His duties inc luded setVing as
liaison between the Department or
CONGIU!SSMANJOHN LINDSAY Jw;ti ce and the White House, and
participating In the dratting Ol
P1-esldent Eisenhower's av11 Rights
and lmm lgrutio n legislation .
ers and lair reloca&lt;ion for families
and small business.
The Fenlon Lectures were cre&amp;t•
oo ln order to bring prominent
The Undsay dra fted and apon•
tipeakers to Buffalo - tor the oom­
sored bills which are now law in­
mwuty and for the Univc."Slty stu•
clude the Undsa,y Amendment to
dents . Three other speakers are
the Foreign Aid blll to strengthen
scheduled for this year. C. North,
Janguage ebilitle~ ol overs eas per·
cote Parkinso n ("The CriBls m
soonel, The Lindsay Amendment
American Education ") will appear
to the United Nations Bond bill to
November 14, 1963
, Stewart Alsop
prc.ss the State Department to put
, "What's Beyond Today's Head­
the United Nations on a self-financ­
lines") on March 17, and Gerald
ing basis, and the Lind.say Conflict
Wendt ("Wor ld of the Future" . on
of Interest blll to set standards tor April 23. All lectures will be 'held
oondu&lt;:t of governme nt emp loyees .
at 8:30 in BuUer Auditorium , Cal)l!ll
Hall .
In 1961 the House of Represen,

Homecoming Approaches ;
Queen Candidates Chosen
ly IAltlARA ITltAUSS
On Wednesday, Oct. 9, the ten
queen finalists for Homecoming
Weekend were selec ted by a panel
of alumni 'at an open collee hour .
The ten chosen out of 25 candidates
on the basis of appearan&lt;.-e, per­
sonality, and poise.

After an hour of inlorma.l conver­
sation, each girl was interviewed
personally; questions s u c h aa
"Which wall your favorite team
in the World Series?" and " What
is your coUege major?" were
thrown at them by the panel. The
ten girls who survived thls scree n­
ing are : Wendy Baum , 19. a liOPh•
omore trom Williamsville, ma.jor­
ing In English; Carolyn Cooper 17,
a freshman from Lpng lsla.nd, ma­
joring In science ; Karen Hartwlck
19, 11 sophomore from penfteld, ma•
joring in Spanlsh ; Faye-Ellen Lane
18, a freshman In nurstng trom
Syracuse; Ruth Ra.st 17, a sopho­
more from BuUalo whose major
is English; Diane Scbclll 19, a
Buffalo sophomore m~~ in
math: Dolores Siwula 17, a Buffalo
freshman, undeci&lt;!edas to her me•
jor; Bonnie Stein 19, ';' New Yor k
1Wphomore,majoring in Education :
Carol June Daus ~. n senlor In
Education f.rom Witlkins Glen; llnd

Mari\YM Zaccarlne 18, a 8l.lttlu.o
sophoma.re whose major
sophomore whoee major

1s Blm•
is Busi-

The finalists will be PffR!lltd to
the student bodYat the poet-pJDe
f&gt;iiskln Party Saturda)', Oct. 12.
Selection of the queen and b e r
court will take place Oct. t6.
and the winner wlJI be ~
and crowned at the pep ni.U.Y
Oct .
18.. Saturd!cy altemoon. durinl
Hal.I-lime cwemooles at the UB •
Boston pme, the queen wlU be
flown onto !ht! field &amp;bolud • .beli­
l.'Oplcr

�SPECTRUM
Friday,October H, 1963
TWO
-------------------------------------------------------------------1
Engineering 3NI NoviceDebate Annual UglyMan Contest Is Slated ForThis l
ToBe
Tournament
Accreditation HeldIn December HomecomingWeekend By Alpha Phi Omega i
,AG■

I

(Continued

The DebatiJ18Society of the State
University or New York at Buffalo
will hold its Third Annual Great
Lakes Novice Debate Tournament
on De&lt;-ember6th and 7th.

from Pa1e ll

rh,:,mical.electrical, mechanical, In­
dustrial and lnttr-dfscipllnary stud•
1es.
O,.au ~bani
$&amp;Id the olhl'r five
t1Ms1ons will be submitted to the
~'Oundl (or accrMlatlon "within tht:
Ill'"' thrl'e yl'al'1!"
Olfflcultltt Involved
Ont· of thr &lt;.'llUSC'S for di:lay l8
lb(' requ1rrnwn1 tha.t 110 division
"nn lw ronsidcrl."111n1!1
It awards
11s first diplomas. &amp;•wra l nt'wly
organized st&gt;({U&lt;'nt:esin lhP sthool.
such as chemicul ,mglneerlnt:. have
not gmduated their first l'las., as
yet,

CIVIi,•111.~nr..rtng
mt•lud1•sthr de­
~ii;n of 11tructun•N. sut'h as buil/lmgs
and l&gt;ridgt•s; the drsii;n and con­
strut•llon or hJjlhwnys ,wntrr ~up.
ply syslt'm~. dnm~ for powi-r 11ncl
i:r
ronsf'rvotion. and hydraul k JX,w
lnstallations
The ECPD ncrred1tattcm wns
based on an appraisal or tht•
school'~ lacllllws, t'.Xllnlij,nrnt U•
braries .
Many Enrolled
In appn&gt;vlng the &lt;'ivilenwneering
S('(JUcnce. the Councll also gave
its approval to each of thcst' "sup­
port racililles:• Sln&lt;·ethey are rom•
rnon to nil six divlsio11s or the
school. thl'ir approval makes more
lik('ly r.CPD acreptanc&lt;&gt; ul !ht•
othrr five d1vlsions in rlw rlf'ar
Mur1: Also appmvrd at this 11ml'
WRh I Iii&gt; pre-ellj,&gt;int'l'ringSl'{jlll'IK'e
for /r,•~hm,•n nnd sophomores In
Univl•r11ityCullt•~c. About 575 are
rnroll('(I ot rh,• f)rPsent lime.
()(•an 'l'm~ml said lhP Rl'Credl1111100will 111ak1•
11 rns1cr for thl'

sd1001IO Ohfn111 lr&gt;p-night faculty
and lwlr, tt lm•r1'1
1S&lt;'its grants for

..... .------.,

.. .,.

ly ID I YSTR1'NOW
SKI

The 14th annual Ugly Man Con•
lest, sponsored qy Alpha Phi Omega
Miss Linda Leventhal, vice presi­ Fraternity, will take place October
dent of the Debating Socil'ly, ls 14-19. The hours of the contest will
general chairman or the tourna­ be from 10 to 3, Monday through
mrnt . Committees and additional Friday, 8-10 p.m. Friday at the
APep Rally, at the Homecoming
chairmen wlll be chosen at the
game, Saturday, Oct, 19, and end·
next society meeting, Tuesday, at ing 5:00 p.m. at the Pigskin Party .
6:00 p.m. in Norton 335.
Any organization may sponsor
Genetti! letters have been sent
one male candidate for the honor
to over 300 schools in the United
of being the Ugllelt ~n on C.m­
Slates and Canada in!orming them
PUI , Each candidate will be as•
of thr Debating Society's aC'tivities signed a ballot jar with his picture,
name, and ol"ganlzationname on It.
for the year. Within the nt&gt;xt rew
Judging will be by general vote. All
weeks SC'venty-flveInvitations will
students may pick up their official
be sent lo those schools indicatihg
baUot at the nearest bank, tor In
1m inter~st in our novice tourna•
this contest money talks. 'The can­
m('nl. It is hoped that twenty to
dldate with the most money in his
jar at the end of the contest will
lwcnly•f!ve schools will attend. Last
be UMOC.
year's tournament was attended 'by
seventeen schools from New York,
Iii.tel C.mp,1l9nl111
Allowtd
Pennsylvania and Ohio.
Alpha Phi Omega President, Dick
All debates will be on the na•
Galus, has announced that all the
tional intercollegiate debate topic;
proceeds from the contest will be
Resolved: Tha l the federal gol'ern•
donated to the United Fund. He
ment should guarantee tlil' oppor•
also stated that illegal campaign
tunlty for higher education to all
procedures will be tolerated and
qualified high school graduntcs.
the ballot jars may be stutfed, but
There will be two rounds of debate
that fraternities must refral.o troin
on the Friday evening of the
employing pickpockets this year.
tournament and three on Satur11dy.
In addition, a social is planned for
''Last year almost $400 was do­
Friday evening and a banquet at
nate&lt;! to the United Fund. Steve
the conctusio11of the debates on Grundstein of Sigma Alpha Mu
Saturday. The wlnnl'rs of the was the winner with almost SI40.
various divisions wfll be persented Bemle Kllenman ol Phi Epsilon
trophies 11tthe banquet.
Pi was second with $16, The goal

,..Jtwnt1on lrom llll' i\lomlc Enl'rcy
C'omn11ssIon .1rnl 1111' National
A,•,•red1t111ion
St'1rnc1• 1"ounl111t1on
also t·an lit• t'XIJ\.'Ct1-d
to brlni:t re­
f)r&lt;•st•ntativcsof morp induslrirs to
llw l'Umpus to in11•rvft,w_c:raduates
N(.'\v pollcles instituted:
of non-acC'rr&lt;litedsrhools. hi' &lt;'X•
1. Meeting of September 25 pl1.11ni'&lt;i
. Such i:roduatt's 11lsomust
tnke SIX'{'ial t•xams H they wish Wednesday - dlscuss policy.:
to obtrun prO{l,i.slu1111l
t•n1,'lne1•rmg We have decided that money will
not be allocated to organizations
li1•1•nsi•s
In othc-r sll\tc•s. The ECPO
for:
&amp;\.'rredilatlon runs until 1967.
a) refreshments
CommendatlOfl
Received
b) expenses for conventions
'!'he ECPD, m aC'credlling thr
unless the committee feelSthat they
11ng
in1't•ring set1ucnccat the Univer­
are necessities tor the /unctions
sl!y, had this to say : "1'ht&gt;adminis­
and general weltare of the organ­
tration Is lo h,• rommended tor the
ization as a whole.
lncn'ru1&lt;'in support whkh hns been
Money will be paid for member·
provided during lhr past several
ship In national associations only
years in s1rcnWbrn1n1rtile school
of l'ngint'Cring ns a wholi.'. The
school is rect'tVUlgrxl.'ellent leader­

~

HOMICOMING
HAUTY
AND HUT

Senate Finance Committee
U the committee !eels that this
membershlp is mandatory, and that
this fee be wed for membership
of the organization as a whole and
not for the individual members.
2. Meeting of Monday, Septem•
ber 30:
Anthropology Club budget - received and approved at $1,000.
3. Meeting of Monday October 7:
Student Dramatic Society $130
Engineering Student Councll $770
above budgets receh•ed and ap­
proved by finance committee.

VOTE

FOR
UGLY

'

MAN

for this year's contest Is $500. U will recelve a pennanent UMOC
all students support' this worth• pltlque. 1be Homecoming Special
wliile contest I know we can make Events Committee will present a
it,'' said Mr. Galus,
trophy to the poster contest win•
Although the Homecoming Queen ner, and a trophy to the organi­
will be crowned at the Pep Rally,
zation having the best UMOC skit
the Ugly Man and all other Home­ at the Pep Rally, Alpha Phi Omega
coming contest winners will be an­ will present a trophy for the best
nounced at the Homecoming Dance. Pep Rally Fire Dragon. AU awards
The Ugly Man will receive the will be on display at the UMOC
UMOC key and his organization booth.

FREE
GIFT
for
malestudents
at
el:ampus Corner

I

~hlp."

University College Begins

Thr lt&gt;llcrfrom Ralph E. l',1org,1n.
ECPDPrcsidt•nf. also ohscrved that
"the esprit dt corps of the faculty
IIJ)(lcars lo b" h1jlh and the 11\l'Ully
Is most apprl'&lt;'fllti\lt&gt; of the su11port
wtii&lt;'h thl' administration iN prov1d­
mi: ror the cnJ:Olll'Cnngprogram ." J
Thr drtnlll'&lt;l npprnisaJ or the di•
all University College students
(both Freshmen and Sophomores)
,'l.qJ"n ol t·ivil t•111,'lnt•t&gt;r111g
inl'lurtro
Uw following co111mcnts:
will begin Monday, Oct. 14. Stu··'Qle d1'p;1rtnwnt is r('c:t'iving dents whose last names begin with
lt.!adcrship Tht! fiu'Ulty whkh has
the letters designated below will
built up OVC'r thr 111stfivl' yt&gt;ars see ~Ir advisers , pl811their proindudt•s a numhc-r Ol l)('l"90ris with
grams and register tor oourses on
Roodl'ducational and e:&gt;.perienc«I the following days :
backgrounds.
Oct. 14 through Oct. 18 - E, I,
N, 0. T, U, V, X, Y.
"Thr recent establishment or a
new division of inter-disciplinary
Oct. 21 through Oct. 25-P , Q, R.
studil'l! and research in the school
Oct. 28 through Nov. 1- G, H.
Nov. 4 through Nov. 8 - S.
of engineering has ~suited In im­
proving i;upporting courses for the
Nov. ll through Nov. 15 - C, D.
department ol civil t•nglnecrlngand
Nov. 18 through Nov. 26 - A, B.
Its curriculrn.
Dec. 2 through Dec. 6 - K, L.
"The administration is to be com­
Dec. 9 through Dec. 13-F, W, Z.
mended (or the satistactory man­
Dec. 16 through Dec. :w&gt;- M, j _
ner in which th('$(' and related
Students will make an appointchanges have been brought about.
ment with the University College
The curriculm 1n civil engineering Receptiorust 1n Diefendorf 114 at
Is well ba1allcecland appears to
lea.st one week In advance of the
adequately meet all F.CPO criteria .
"'Ille wide use of a computer 1
Cfflter throughout the department
Dhmnd1-W1tdilN
is to be COmlllended ."

~!~M
,~!~~!!~a~~~~~~!

I

JEWELRY

ANOIE'I 'IZZA HOUIE

,,... Dtfl"'YWlttrMlfllmvm
,..rc!l.~N

hi C.mpu,
aM1All9nhlmt
1'MNl... ,a Palla lfw ,

Tf M1'1

Watch-i
Jewel.v

it.~

'

«;,.=
llAll

TFW..15

P .T. students will make appoint•
ment.s with Miss Creeru:nan and
Miss Heap directly.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
times will have to see their advisers during examination time in
January and then be required to
register In Clark Gym on Regis!ration Day,

Th• ino,t proctlcol ou ortment of fine, natlonolly-adv1r­
ti1ed produd, - courtHy of "'"• fo111oua
monufacturen.

DRY
CLEANING
8 lbs. fot$2.00
AT THI

On.Stop S.rvlce Center

......................
'-"-Y-,,.. ........

.....,..

... D,-1
AIITy,-tl&amp;.a,11,t'
........
lhclr fw •.,&amp;11111,_.

PlazaShoeRepair
UNIVERSITY
PLAZA
TF 6-4C)41
Open 9 A.M.· 9 P.#.

PREPPAC is ours uclusively-through
mentJ with the monufocturers .

speciol orronge •

Nothing to buy- juJt come in ond sign up for your FREE

PREPPAC

Avoiloble only while the supply losts-so

PAC

••

get your PREP

on Tues., Oct. 15th.

~amptts Cnruer
°"""9 1'1lt Ulli.,..-alty
batty 9 • 6
TF NJ:11
MM., Y11urs., Frl.-t • f

I
l

�PAGI TH•■I ,

SPE..C T RUM

Friday, Octeher 11, 1963

ResidenceHall Eledions Are Cap&amp;GownFroshDiscussion
Completed- New Ollicers
With the re sident ball elections
over, the donnqtory activitie~ are
starting. The dormatory councils.
containing judicial boards, ~ the
resident halls' governing boards.
Election results in Goodyear are :
Soutb president, Francine Lutzky;
vice-president, Linda McIntyre;
secretary, SUsan Roupp; treasurer,.
Nancy McGulnies. East president ,
Beverly Steveni;; vice-prellident.
Natlle- Gold; secretary, Rose Be­
lone; treasurer. Terry Stanger.
Miss Roberta Lindo has joined
the Goodyear staff as head advisor.
Miss Mackin, formerly an assistant
to Miss Harui, is now director of
Michael Hall.
Language tables are again to
be set up in Goodyear cafeteria
every Wednesday at 5:30. Faculty
members will presi de at the tables
where German, French and Spanish
will be spoken.
The cateteria is planning a Jack
o' Lantern contest for residences
of East and South Goodyear and
Allenhurst. First and second prizes
of donuts .and apples -will be award­
ed. The Halloween festivities will
include a party on Tuesday , Oct.
29 in the cateterla . There will be
Tricks or Treats and displays of
the Jack o' Lantems.
Results of the dorm council elec­
tions in Michael Hall are: Presi,
dent, Karon Kalley; vice-president,
Barbara Gru;er: secretary, Carol
Andel'!!O
n ; treasurer, Gall Novelle.
In C.ook, McDonald, and Schoell­
kopf Hall, events are being or­
ganized by dorm committees.
C.ooke Is p1annlng dinner activities
with Tower, and MacDonald hopes
to have a dorm dinner.
Results of the dormatory elec­
tions are: C.ookepresident, Martha
F\ynn; vice-president. EUen Winer:
secretary, Bonnie Leve, treasurer,
Joan Codner.
MacDonald president. Susan Wal­
lace; vice-president. Pot Williamee;
secretary, Carol Corwin; treasurer.
Ann Fitzslmmons.
Schoellkopf president. Sharon
Bickler; vice-president, Lillian Ka•

lasteln;

secretary,

Helen l-evln:

treasurer, Joyce Fenmore.
An organized party, the Bocce,
ran in the Tower elections. The

new COWlcilmembers, Bocce can­
didates, are: president, Stan Solo­
mon; vice prellident, Ear l Miller:
treasurer, Noel Martlock.
Plans tor an Open House, open
to women, and a hootenany are
being

proposed. During Halloween

a costume party will be held In

the cafeteria. The Tower is tllso
a movement to support the Bulls.
Last week they organized a pro­
cession to the airport with police
escort to greet the victorious Bulls.

In addition to the new bead resi ­
dent Mr. Deegan, a former UB
student. there are several new resi­
dent advisors Jn Tower: William
Sherman, Richard Goldberg. Jam.es
Titus, James Mullane.
Jim Getchoins is the head resi­
dent In Allenhurst, and there are
many new resident.advisors: Mar­
tin Belscher, Robert Fecitt. Thomas
Gravin, Robert Bolla, Myron Dem­
bo, Jo'hn Sande, William Deegan,
Clark Squires, Bruce Sabnrbeck .
Leonard Argentine, James Fincher.
Jerome Delaney, John Kniperk.
Thoml\5 Getskn, Dennls Weissman.
Allen Horowitz, James Mazza. Wil­
liam Gale, Alvin Love. Clark
Maloney.
William Deegan, a resident ad­
visor, has arranged for Miss Buf­
!alo to speak on etiquette next
Thursday evening to the residents
ot bis dorm.
Allenhurst elected only two of­
ficials to their dorm council: Presi­
dent. Daniel Ga.sparrlne and secre­
tary Paul Scbwiergerling.

The NEW

UB's Fl'ellhman Fol'\llll, ooordln­ of the UB faculty will spenk at
ated by Mrs. Dorothy K. Simon,Aa­ the four lectures.
The lectures will be suppltmenled
slstant to the Dean of Women, and
designated to help lreshmen W&lt;&gt;­ by discussion groups, held tooweek
men make the most of their first following each series of lectures.
year at college, he.Id a panel dl&amp;­ There are sixteen discussion lead­
cussion by members of the Cap ers - people on the administrative
and Gown Honor Society, Oct. 7- staU. bead resident advisors, deans ,
directors, outstanding alwnnae, and
10.
The discussion, entlUed "Fresh­ faculty wives - ~ho are assisted
men experiences from tile senior by sophomore sponsors. These
viewpoint,'' considered problems sophomore girls are "very import­
such as: "how different oollege is ant as people who have just gone
f from high school, how many out­ through all this (the freshman
side activities one showd partlcl· year) ," staled Mrs. Slmon, co­
pate In, how to achieve good marks· ordinator of Freshman Forum.
and what goals and values one
should have." Nine members o1the
Cap and Gown Honor Society Sally Freeman , Barbara Hyler,
K&amp;.n!nMiller, Rachel Stefoneltl and
Joan Wllklns, president - partici­
pated In the pane) di&amp;cusslo
ns.
.
Next on the l'061er of the Fresh­
man Forum is a series of four
lectures on "A mature meaning
of sex relationsblps. '' As a result
of the importance oJ this topic, any
womanstudent of UB will be per­
mitted to .attend one of the lectures.
to be held Oct. 21-24. The speak­
ers will include Dr. Shepard Gold•
berg, Psychologist, of the Psychia••
bic Clinic, Buffalo; Dr. Joseph
Wagner, Family Ufe Consultant, of
the Board of Education, Niagara
Falls; Dr. David A. Nichols, As­
o•tnt A. PUMMEii
A one . hour lecture entitled:
sistant Clinical Professor of Qt,.
stetrlcs and Gynecology, and Dr. 'Christian Science: A Friend of
John H. Warfel, Assistant Profes­ the Student', eXploring rellglon as
sor of Anatomy, on Oct. 21, at an ultimate scien&lt;'e will be given
2 p.m., Oct. 22, at 11 a.m. Oct. on Oct. 14 by Gelth A. Plimmer or
23, at 2 p.m., and Oct. 24,_ at The Oui$llan Sd1mce Board or
U a.m. , respectively.
U'&lt;'IUrt&gt;ship.
The last group of lectures in the
The lecture begins at 7:00 in tht&gt;
Corwn series will be on the topic Conference Theatt'r. It's hcini: spon­
or ''Your college years - a time sored by Christi;in Sd~•ncc Org«ni•
of cultural enrichment." Members alion, SUNYAB.

Students' Friend

SALESMEN,VANTED-BIC-MONEY OPPORTUNITY
S. lllnt Pratwnlty and Sorerity $peftwwMr, J-i ry and Party F•v Wri.. lo:
WHOL
ESALEFRATERNITYand SOROR
ITYSUPPLYCO,
• •• 112Unlvertlty Statlwl
SyracUM11, New York

~

eng&amp;saed

In ca.mpua,polltics. President , Dan­
iel Silber baa decided to invite a
member of both United StucSent.
and CampusAllianceto speak at a
Oiuoc:11
meeting In the near tuture,

Every -year youth!Ispend in blgb
school can be worthan average of
$17,500to ench of them. A full four
Years can be worth $'/0,W&gt;
. That
is bollVmuch extra they will ee.m
Ort an average over their working
lives by going to ecf1oo1..
accorc11Q1
lo the Dlamberol Commerce
of the
United state.

• SportCoats
• BLAZERS

• SUITS

Take
Advantag
Of AllThe

PRICE
Offers At

Pie&amp; Save
• PANTS

Dress and Wat h 8rWHr
Natlonell y Adver t ised
Brandt

• SHIRTS

ly TR.UDY STERN

?Dembenihave

Natf ral Shoulder

Christian Science

SALAD
FroshCounc
il
PicksCommitteesBOWL
At a Freshman Class Council
meeting Tu.sday night a major
topic of discussion wasthe cre8tion
of sub-oomrolttees and cbaJnnen
lfor the Winter Weekend Comrolt­
teeti.
O:ia.lrmenFrancine Zumpano and
Joe Trlgali said that the highlight
of the weekend will be a formal
dance to be held at the Statler
Hotel's Golden Ball Room. The
tlate ls February 7 and 8.
All members of the Freshman
class will be Invited to join this
project. They wil need students
with interests In every direction !mm publicity to finance to acti•
vities such as snow sculpture and
skiing. Members of F.C.C. will
chair the sub-oommittees.
Other activities planned tor the
year Include a hootenanny and par­
ticipation in Campus Carnival.
As a result of Amendment to
the Student Senate Oloatttutionpre­
sented by the freshmen, councl1

SAVE
ON

Dreu and Sport
Manhattan, Cre ighton,
Etc.

"UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT"'

•Men'sSNEAKERS
and Women 's
Spaulding, P.F., K.«11

Meet Your Friends
During Thet
Study Break!

Pie

YOU'LL
LIKE

THEBWER TAS
TE
OF THEBEER
BREWED
Mf l ·O·DRY

&amp;

~VE

OPEN24 HRS.A DAY

'

FAMOUS SINCE 184 2

3139
BAILEY
!~!'L~
DELAWARErlr_o_q~t!_!.~
To Serve You

At Your Convenience

At A'lllhent

PARK
PLAZA

one: 833-

r ...._ , ,-.
ti•
A.M.. ..

,,.,..,,

l'rt. ti•

..........

s:• ,.._

.. ,,.

, ....

�THE SPECTRUM
•

n,,:, .,,nc1,il 11tudtnl nt-w11&gt;a11tr &lt;&gt;CIlle Sl•t• Ur11vor1!ty 111Now York
•t 8uttalo
Publlo,uon OltlN! •I Norton Halt \11\IYtl'lllY Clmpua.t Buf•
ralo u. N v. Publl11ird weekly from the JU1 wnk of September o the
1u1
1n May, ~xcep\ tor exam pc,riOdlh Th.lnkl11v1nc,Chrlstmnr
and t:IJltr
liOITOR·I.N·CHJEr - All"OLI&gt; II, MA:Z.UB
New1 t:dllor
• :M~rlln Krlecel 13ut1nus ManAR&lt;T , , . Pat 'Launer
Advtr\ltln11 M~r •• Lawrence Singer
Feature Editor Hnrrtel Helt11n1u
Laynu1 l:dltur . , • ... David Irwin
Featu"" Edllor , , UwN•ntt Frenkel
Copy Editor . . . , , Marcia Cooper
sport1 Editor , . . . . Rocky Vcruce
Circulation M11r, ·, Lois Heasln,rer
Oltttt Mananr
. K1ren ~nford
f'iq
Advlsur, Thoma. Haenle, Jr .
gcjll
Advlaor, WIIU•m Sltmctl.na

,..,.,11;

O•D•ral Ila.Ill Vicki Bugellk}, Lomo WlllAch, A , Linda Leventhal, Ron
ltnl'l\lnsl&lt;I Vic Menu, Anne Mllnte, M4rtln Kriegel, Rena Fisch, Barbara
t!Lrau.. Ronnie Orom~r-s . Chute. i,ot,iot, Pnt Jones, Sue Mead, Nancy
Ul~kcr. t.arrY Fr~nllle. Lonnie Kll~cln,
Charles cumm1nc•.
Shelli
uw11
Al•'I Newman, 13orbaro Chapman, JOAnl, l.ancuter,
Claudia
Kowal, Trudy Stem, Rot,m1ry Morone, Lawrence Frenkel'- Siaan . Licker,
Ronni• Wll5on, Alice Ostrander. l)on_ ueary, ROJIIILynn t&gt;rothmank Ray
&lt;,;rawtord Jane SQmm,r, LOn Levy, ROiier\ Milch, Jeremy Taylor, aren
(;l\lcko
Mike Sultan!k
Chrl~llne Cunningham,
Mary Ellen Yeostros,
Lttltan 't&lt;•IUtelJI, Marcia Ann Ornulak.,Ftun Murfurt, Helen Bll&lt;off, Belly
c.:e~ldy, Mary Ann Wnrtenburg, AUan Melomeo, Alan SCholom.
l'IIOIOVf'a.- r &amp;IIIJ: RttsUII CO!dbtrt, Joel Havens, PamelA ~Id. RObert
Fctdrn.11, BOil Coltuman
and Jo ucoua .
,
Entered as second cllu matter February 9, 1961
, at
~ ~
tile P()jJI Orf!~ at Butlalo, N. Y., under the Act ot March
~~&lt;:
a. 1878. Accept.nee tor malling at a 5pe~lal rate of pOI\.
\
are provided for In Sec\lon H03. Act of October 3, 1017,
'ff~
• outhorlzoed February 9, 1951,
•"
• ~
Subscrlpllon
13,00 per year,
circulation
tlOOO
.
"" ••
Represented for nAtional advertlsln r by National Advcr11,1n11Service, Inc ., •ooMadison Ave., New York, N. V.

12~

Editorials

Friday, October 11, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

FromThe1
Gallery

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS

~-----~
ly LONILIVY

one of. the mah1115sues Ulat will
appear before lhe1 Student Senate
!s a petition to be presented by
the Freshman CIWISCouncil asking
(or votingpnvjleg,es on the Senate
Ooor. The Constitiutlon of the Stu­
dent Associationprovides that any
organi1.ationha~g a membership
which is over ten percent of all
day-time students is eligible lo.r a
voting member on the Student Sen­
ate; however, It 1111sostipulates a
requirement of n previous semester
average or 1.0 01: the eqUlvalent
(in the case of trans fer srudents)
which would rule i&gt;ut the eligibility
of a freshman Senator. Obviously
a ruling from the ~!ludent Judiciary
on the interpretation of the word
"eqUlvalent" wouJ,d be In order.
A second altemnlUveof the Fresh­
man Cllll!SCoundll would be the
proposition of an amendment to
the constitution, Sllcll legislation
would req\lire the 1sponsorshlp of at
least one senator. The officers of
the F.C.C. have atl:ended Executive
Commlttee meetini:s of both United
Students and Campus Alliance par­
Ucs in an attempt to persuade Sen·
1llorso[ the legitimacy of tlle1rpro­
posal and to extract bi-partisan
support. The ine,Pitable seems to
have happend; lhe1F.C.C. is slowly
losing sight of l~s ultimate goal
which has been !rapidly contused
ln a hea\l'}' log M party politics
and promises. The not-so-naive
freshmen seem ti&gt; have adapted
themselves very nicely to the polit­
ical alrn06phere on this campus and
sponsible" way to voice one's con­
To Ole Edito1·:
tna,y be playing b&gt;lh ends against
victions is to ''list" them, I should
Alas!
We
have
passed
through
the middle. It ls 'Very unfortunate
ask Mr. Taylor to coMder the vol•
that the freshmen have to contend the ages of the essential and the ume ot literature that he would
with this unhealth.)1situation. Why existential man a11dhave come now wipe from b'story as "lrresponsl
,
cM't their proposal be considered to the dawn of the age ot the dig,. ble". The ancient Greeks had their
solely ror its me1tits rather than ilal man". As part of the colossal Archllochus; the Romans their Ell­
be based upon the con.~equencesIt ciAmpalgnto dehumanl2e humanity nius, Horace, Juvenal and Martial,
may have on either ot the politicil.l and reduce it to a simple math~
Surely Mr. Taylor would not ob­
parties!
matical formula, Mr. Taylor wish­ ject to sullying the Spectrum with
When asked to mal&lt;en statement, es to strike the final blow in in­
a style ot writing which has claimed
Mike Shapiro, Chairmanof Campus sisting that journallsm and litera­ such men as Erasmus,l&gt;ascal, Vol,
Alliance, exclaim~d, and I quote: ture (the inevitable l'OI\S(/(Jllenoesl laire, and, yes, George Bernard
"Loni , I never noti,cedthat you had
must now adopt that hallowed sci· Shaw!
blue eyes betore." This is just one enlific method and "list" (l I!)
l sl~erely bope that Mr. Milch,
example ot that t)1pically coopera• those things whjcll ;you believe in in ignoring the "challenge" ot Mr.
tive and sttaighUorward Senate suific!ently to defend honestly. Taylor, Will continue to express his
leader.
Mr. Taylor further insists that the
Jerry Catanzaro, former Chair­ aulhor ot the debated "Circus" is conv:fctionsln the manner he c..'Ol'l·
slders most effective whether or
man of the United Students party
hiding behind "a satiric s~le which not this style ls reducable to 8
responded: "I oonestly feel that holds you responsible for nothing."
numerical listing.
the Lreshmen class should have
Before he would reduce all wril •
Sincerely,
tepresentatlon ttu,&gt;Ugh a seat on
Miss Mahoney
the Senate. J have several rese1va• ing to the most common denomln•
ator in stating that lhe onJ,y "reUniversity College
lions about this allthough1re8bmen
have prevlousJy 'Worked ror the
Senate and have done good jobs
Nigerian LibraTY
. r don't see any l'eason why
this should devefoip Into a party
houses on the Merchants of Light
To the editor:
issue." Thank you tor your sfocere
I want to introdUl'e myself to School campus. Merchants o! Ugbl
answet·, Mr. Catrunzaro.
you. You might be finishing your School is one of the leading High
Later, Mr. Shapiro became more sophomore year at UB when I left Schools in the Ea.stem Nigeria, and
lucid and stated: "As a senator, I your country in Jul.)' 1961. My it is a boarding school. The dor­
feel it ls in the best inte1-estof my name is Samson 0. Obi a student mitories are divided into 4 with
oonstituents. namely the Greek
at UB, 1$9 to 1961where and when four important city names in NI·
males on this campus, to maintain I obtained the M. Ed. degree. I geria - Lagos, Enugo, Kaduna,
the status quo. nus Is my feeling was the fellow that carried away
and Port-Hartoourt. Only last year
because It is imperative that the
I overheard the Principal sayilllJ
the 15,000 tree gitt boo.ks from
frosh have the opportwuty to orient U.S.A.: the library that will be of. that these names could be bought
themselves to college life.
ficially opened ln November this
by croupsof people or individuals
at certain amount. These are ol
year and which will bear the name
of the greatest women ever lived. two categories: (1) One thousand
The special election
She was an American although she pow!ds (1,000) abol!t $3,000 could
to fill four vacant Sen­
is dead but her name still lives. only buy the name and (2) about
ate seats will be held on
The UB and Akron, N, Y. Chamber
5,000 or $15,000 could build the
Oct. 25. Anyone . with a
o{ Commerce will be invited In No­ House and answer the name, I tben
suggested to Mr. Flaster that It
vember for the otticlal opening.
1.0 overall average and
In the yelJJ' 1962, I discussed a will take every UB student Jess
1.0 previous semester
lot ln writing with Mr. Howard than $1 to secureeither of the two
average fa eligible to
Flaster, the then Editor in Chle1 andstamp the name UB here. And
run for·the :Senate seat
that when the time comes, I shall
ot the Spectrum about the possi•
from the following divi­
bllity of stamping the name of our send my own contribution through
sions: Univ,~sity Col­
1
,Alma Mater, the University ot But• my ftiend in Akron, N. Y.
lege, AJ,ts antd Sciences,
'Best WI.shesfrom
ralo in Nigeria, by the way of lbe
Business
Administra•
S. 0. Obi
UB student body bU¥lngon of the

Communications
Committee
Inadequate
In requesting that the Student Senate withdraw Its
mandate to the Communications Committee and not pub­
lish a newsletter. Michael Shapiro has dune a disservice
to the Campus Allianc e Party (which he founded and
heads), the Student Senate, and the student body.
The history of the Communications Committee is a
sorry one . A united Student Senate last year was unfor­
tunate tu have Howard Gondree (Campus Alliance Party)
chair the committee and the absence of any newsletter
was the Senate's most obv ious failure. Mr. Shapiro has
not only allowed the notion of a Senate newsletter to
flounder, but wishes to kill it.
In the .arena of personal politics. few student leaders
would argue that Mr. Shapiro is naive, ineffecti-:re, 01•
easily dissuaded . He has proven himself to be a tireless
worker on behalf of hlmself and the Alliance party.
However, in his role as Chairman of th e CommuRica­
lions Committee Mr. Shapiro has been something less than
energetic . Though personally and through his party he has
pledged to publish a Senate Newsletter his efforts have
been less than ambitious .
'J'o publish such a sheel of news and feature stol'ies
devoted to the many Student Senate activities requires a
task force of many who are capable and willing to work
for student government. Vice President Michael Lappin
h.as said that never ,before have committees "been more
fully staffed." And yet Mr. Shapiro, for one reason or
another, has been unable to recruit more than ten mem­
bers (his sister and fraternity brothers included) . As a
colYlmiHee, these ten persons have not as yet even met once.
Mr. Shapiro compliments the varied and increased cov­
erage given student government in The Spectrum. He has
cited this as one reason why a newsletter is unimpol'tant.
Increased Student Association coverage in The Spectrum.
h owever, does not preclude the necessity of a newsletter.
for there remains a great need to increase contact and in­
volvement betwee1) the Senate and 'the student body.
Then again , Mr. Shapiro argues that the newsletter
would be too &lt;.
'Ostly to the Senate . He concluded this on
the basis of printing it seven times each year . Whether i1t.
wuuld be effective or wo11Lhwhile seven times ,a year is a
legitimate question . But since a Senate newsletter has not
been tried no conclusion as to its effectiveness is valid,
based on cost, work involved, or whatever.
The Spectrum is satisfied that the Senate will consider
printing a newsletter even though Mr . Shapiro objects .
Possibly, such -a means of communication should be at ­
tempted only once a semester , if the co9t is indeed too high.
(Then the $2200 newsletter would cost only $600.) The
Senate might also consider appointing a new chairman to
·the not-so-glam orous position (as compared to "big party
chief") .

of:eHer6
lo Ile {:Jifor
In Support of Milch

Self-Government
in Dormitories?
The Spectrum congratulates the newly elected office. ;
of the residence ha Us. The challenge before them, and th:
residence administration, is possibly the most difficult.
The dorm~tories have long been frustrated by attempts
to orgcinize effective self-government and program activi­
ties which might convert cublc:alllYin9 to communal. This
oan only be done through the cooperativ~ effort of all res i­
dence students . But first, there must be vigorous student
leaders to push, pull , and carry .
Hopefully, the students wh o have been e~ted. by of­
fering free pizza, through personal popularity, or due to
other reason s. will be willing and able 1.o change the me&lt;lio­
cre situation .

tion, a n d M e d i c a I
School
Students who are in·
terested are urged to
pick up thelir petitions
m room 2015, Norton,
beginning Oct. 11. All
necessary
i~formation
concerning the election
rules and reglll~tions
will be availitble-at that
time.

Bothered Bowlers
To the Editor:
It was very recently , brought to

our attention that the Women's Re­
creational Associati011and some ot
its penionnel are sadly !llcking.
Our group, OOllllist!ng of five
girls, wished to engage in the week•
ty WRA bowling leagues. Due to
the tact that we arrived five min­
utes late, we were lntormed tbal

we could NOT bowl In the first
round o! the touma.metttdue to
the lack of alleys, bUt tbal we def·
inately would be rotated In. We
were then allowed to leave. When
we retumed the followl.n&amp;
week, as
we were told 10 do, we were in­
formed by tbe emai•••utllnl
~rtdw,
wbO, It seemed
,
(ContlllUed on Pu• ll)

�Friday, Octobtr 4, 1969

SPECTRUM

The Ci~~
By 808

j Committee
Works

On TwoPtojeds

M;L~v

PAGE FIVE

[I[EFLECTIO

nu~Aeademic Affairs eo,nmttt~
is currently working on 1wq proj­
ects. They are the establishment.
or Sigma Tau Sigma, the Student
Tutod Society, and an Academic
Convocation program. The Student
Tudor Society has as Its purposes:

By JEREMYTAYLOR

Since J issued a challenge in this
c-olurnn last week and contractl'd
Dear Jeremy,
6. 1 believe that by now the cam­
to Usl honestlYthose tings in which
pus J)Ollceare tired of standing at
l helleve, I nm In a position of
I 119ticedthat the salutation of the parking Jot gates to make sure
having to put my money.where my
your letter last week ended with a every car has a sticker.
mouth is; so ... THIS I BELIEVE
comma,and I'd always been taught
TODAY:
7. I believe that love is both an
that thls was the sign of a friendly
(ll Logic is Mt a law of the uni·
letter. However, as I sit here with
Jmmedlute and timeless thing.
1. to provide instruction free ol
your column burning a hole in
8. I believe that big words should
charge to those s1udents who verse: It ~ merely a human eUort
to codlty chaos. (Thus these follow•
my desk, I can't help but feel lhal be eschewed. This especially ap­
desire to improve their scholas­ iltg statements, although they 11re
you misled me.
pUes to newspaper columns,
Uc standing,
au Interrelated, do not necessarll)i
As for your letter, Jeremy, my
9. I believe that the hardest thlng
follow in logical order.)
first thought was to pass it oU as
anyone can learn to do Is to live
2. to stimulate umong the stu•
(2) The question ol whether or
"an emotional barf" (see R.n.c­ with himself.
dent body an increased interest not there Is a Sentient Omniscience
fflM , Sept. 20). for J could find
In the teaching profession, and at work In the wliverse is ba5ed on
10. I believe that national frater­
little logic and less &lt;.'OOtinuity
in
false premises. {I.e. the only intel·
ll. 'Ibis is especially true ol YOlll nities will be allowed to . stay on
3. to contribute to th~ l!Cholar- leetually respectable position ts
"suggestion" thaU put down a list campus.
ship and intelle&lt;.'tualatmosphere agnosticism and the only emotion­
01 the thing I believe in Just be­
10a. I believe that II nalional fra .
ally respectable position is athe­
cause you feel l milked a couple OI ternities are not allowed to stay on
ot our university.
ism).
your sacred cows last week and campus 1966-67will see one heUuva
131 The Imperative that drivee
are going to write a llst of your !IOCial season.
1 AU Juniors who have a l.5 overall n1anto seek GodIs part and ~I
own this week,
average llllda 2.0 In lhe!r major of the human condition. It is the
11. l believe everyone should cul- I
You see, Jer emy, ordinarily I tivate a sense ol humor which will will be eligible to join. We !eel Witt to Meaning.
dislike the idea o! others knowing allow him to laugh at hlmsell.
this is n welcome and much nee(!.
W Scien&lt;'edeals with the actual.
what I think or why I think it:
(5) Art deals with the rNI ,
12. I believe the t'OWllry should
ed addition to campus activities.
this is partly because I'm afraid be divided into four eqUal parts,
(6) Politics deals wit11 making
of boring them, and partly hecause one for the socialists, one lor the
The idea for the Academic Con­ the real and the actual congruent.
I'm alrald Uiat they'll bore me.
(7 ► There are no such things as
capitalists, one for the anarchists,
But because you asked me so and one for people who don' t want vocation sprang from a progl'am
Human Rights (i.e. there is no
nicely, Jeremy, and because Uus to belong to any group but who held during Freshman Orientation. 11atural law o! human rights : human
is the first honeststo.goodnesschal­ would like to reserve the right to This program, which will he d~
rJghls are the results ot intcUigc-nt
lenge I've ever had (I'd hate to t·ornplain about the affairs of state, voted to current issues, hns as its nnd tiun1all ~oclal interchange).
turn It down - I might never get any state.
(8) All men are not equal, but
main goals:
another), these are the thing which
they have a common genisls and t•
13. I believe everyman's rights,
I , after vast and varied experiences
1. Student interaction With end common end and should be allowr&lt;t
when provided by law, are sacred,
in Ille, I have come to believe:
to exercise their uniquenesses with,
understanding of faculty , 1111(1
and that it is the responsibility of
in a structllJ'e o! 1-ellglous.economic
1. 1 believe in the Golden Rule. everyman to see that no man's
and pollllcal !reedom. (This could
2. An increased academic aware­ best be achieved through socialized
2. I believe in God. That is, I rights are violated.
ness on the part o[ the- student world federalism.)
believe 1nGod on Monday, Wednes,
14. I believe that i! you took " I
days, and Fridays. On Tuesdays,
body to the current problems
(9! Love is a potefttl
al in all hu­
don't
llellne
it"
out
o(
the
lan­
Thursdays and Saturdays I have
mnn relationshll) and turned into
of the day.
three
out
of
four
people
guage,
comparative anatomy.
an actuality at any given instant.
would be mutes.
(10) The great hang up of most
The
Committee
is
looking
Ior­
3. 1 believe in moderation in ev•
15. I believe the saddest thing In
erything except loving manklnd.
ward to a very successM year by people is thal they wan( to be loved
the world is an wianswet'ed cry
rather than to love.
carrying on as many programs In
(11) The purpose of education
4. I believe graduate laboratory for help.
16.
I
believe
that
one
day
we'U
the academic area as ran feasibly should not be to rnold an individual
assistants are basically nice guys
both
look
back
on
UJ.ls
whole
busi­
to be t'Omfortable in a predecided
who got sadistic and power hungry
be handled.
sot ot circwnstances, but rather to
somedme during (heir widergradu• ness and laugh.
Yolll lovin' friend
give on,• a i;ense ot what the
ate days.
Dr. Constantine Yeracarls has
Bob
"cause-eC!ect" situation entails, and
consented
to
be
one
of
the
advison;
5. I believe In the immortallty of
P.S. Honest, Jeremy. Ah knew
to give II sense that paradox is a
the soul, I.boughI'm deathl)' afraid they wasn't lawidry bags. Ah was to the committee. He is a member
"reasonable" way to tlllk about the
o! being wrong about ii.
truth . (Spreading inlormaUon and
1 ol the Sociology Department.
Just spof!in' yuh.
job training are secondary to these
ends.)
(121 There are only t,IIOways to
1nlu.sc meaning into the hwnan
4'0ndltlon: creativity and love. ( h•
By VICTORIABUGELSKI
my belter moods l think this 111st
The Music Departmenl has acquired a new roncert harpsichord, built for this univer­ mny be a distihction without a d1f•
fcrence; and In m&lt;&gt;redepressl'&lt;l
sity by Eric Hertz of Boston. Mr . Hertz estimated ,that ,the total building time of the instru­ stnle:i
I'm not so sure about crea•
ment was nearly one year,
tfvlty.l

I
I

Music Dept. Gets New ConcertHarpsichord

The music department is now offering harpsichord lessons under the applied music
a harpsichordist and Baroque music spe­
C?U~ses.The lessons w~ be ~ven by David .F !-1-ller,
cialist from Harvard Uruvers1ty.Mr. Fuller Joined the music department faculty this faU.

A Harpsichord Festival will be
sponsored by the Music Depart•
ment during the first week of No­
vember. Mr. Fuller will appear in
an all-Bach concert, wit.'i string
orchestra conducted by Alexander
Schneider of the Budapest Quartet.
Ralph Kirkpatrick, Internationally
knoWII harpsichordist, will give IWi.l
solo recitals at Baird Hall, one
program of Scatlatti and French
school wortcs,the other ot modem
oompositions. He will al.so perform
at the Albright-Knox Gallery, and
will give a lecture!or studfflt.s and
faculty at Baird.
The baqisicbord is nine reet long
(as long as a ccncert grand piano ),
hastwo keyboanbor manWLla,and
has six pedals. Each key bu four
str!np; peda.la control the number
of str1nga Whichwill sound.By the
UB't NEW ...ARPSICHORD
use of the dl1lermt pedal, and
stops, l'Dlley W1USlia1
and varied
­
courae, there a.re l)l'dals, which da Lanowski, a Polish ,barpslchonl
eftecbl CIIII be obtained.
contrw the number ot .strings ist. an interest tn the Baroqu e 11)­
The barpslchord WU Olle of tbe
IOUDding
. The 90W'ldcan be inten­ m-uments and music was revived,
forerunners o.rthe modem piano.
ailled by lncres.sing the number of Many modern coriu,oeera wrote
It was used tnainly during the Bar­
compositions for her, among them
strinp or by dea-euing them.
oque period, roughly from 161»-lT.iO.
Manuel De Falla (The Harpsichord
II ls intereet!ni to note that llffille Concerto). Today there ls a great
The main difference between the
the instrument enjoyed great pop, revival of interest Ill the music and
barpsicbonl and the piano (or other
ularity during the Baroque era, It
Corenumen o.rthe piano, such as
..-a.aalmost completely forgo(ten instrumen~ of former times, due
the clavichord) is the tact that the
after the advfftt of the piano , be­ to the ettom of Mme La.ndowska.
twi,sichord atrinp are plucked.
-cauae the piano oouJd be plo,ved Mr. Kirkpatrick, and others, who
and I.be piano Blrinp are struck.
Becausethe minp are plucked, boch IOJtand loud (Hence tbe name have done acholarly reasearch and
.rtud,Y of the music. This may ex­
Plamtorte.)
only one dynamlc range ls possi­
plain the fap o# about 175 years
ble on the balpdcbord, unleu o.r
MamlYdue to Ille eUort.sol Wan- In Mr. Klrt.cpatrlcl&lt;'s programs .

113)The IWO things f!Ver/ mAn
6hOUl(.
I wtrlve to do are to achltvt
.,....._..
and to le11
m to love lthe

only trur rMtut11)').
(14) No man (or group of men)
con pc,s.siblyjusti(y the taking ot

human Utt.
(lSI War Is assinine.
(16) Boredomts more destructive!
thw1 pain.
(17! "Mean1ngles11" IJ ~ WIUl8
wo rd to apply to the hwnan condl·
t!on- "highly unsatisfactory" would,
verhllps, be better.
(18) N1tleNlltffl 18 a, dangerou,
and outdllted aa the llkk ,.....,
lt nwi ls to be worthy of u.,pifa.
ttons we must re-aasess our \o)'lll,
tfos and realize that the human
community Is an actuality and not
a philosophical COMtnlct,
09) The sense of property is a
cultural value rather thwt part of
"human nature."
(~OJTM truth about Who.IIs real
as well as tile tf\llh about what ls
actua.l Is in 11 constant state ol
developement. All men must be
I.ree of dogn1n wluch Ill lnOeidble.
(21) A 1111\11leams only through
dtalogu,• with th.1t whlch Is distinct
from hlinsd! lothc-rn,•s.~,
, Thl•rcfore
men should J1tr1w to know one
,mother.
(2'J) Classical "~rtainty"
about
,u1ythlng is impossible !or the rea­
~onable m11n- but n1e~must mo.ke
decisions on the grounds o! what
they honl&gt;stly believe to be tru~.
Only thus mll.Y a man be truzy
re11ponslblefor his actions, tor 1/
he beUcves that Cl'rtainty Is a rea­
sonable possibility, then his actions
are made inevitable; and he may
relinquish his senseof responsibility
10 his zeal.
(23) Men are essentially free.
Even ii u man d~id115to do nothing
it i~ stlll bis own decision, uJU,
mateI,y.
/24) Death Is important oreyIn
direct proportion lo love in any
given situation.
(25) The basic premises Corthese
stntements are:
(1) that lt may be reasonably
held that Uvfng Is better tJian
being dead and that,
(2! Jgno1·ing !or tht- moment the
question o[ the v.Udlty of ITl)'S·
ticnl experience, mystic ex•
pcricnoo is es.sentlnlly incom­
municablt-.
Nl•l(t W~k : Tht' IIWTlllllR11.tRace
- Whleh ft'lt8 M Worth O1&amp;.slng!

Gratwick Institutes Program
Of lnspecti&lt;?nAt Allenhurst
Illy LAWRENCE FRENKEL

ttoger Gratwick, Dean ol
Men, h.is instituted a program ol
surpnse inspections or oH-canwus
housing. Three times a week OeM
Cratwick or Dean Siggclkow visit
a random sampling of apartments
and give lh ,:,m a basement lo at­
tic Inspection. At the conclusion
of the inspection, they are rated
from A to F and the resident
advisor ls notified o{ the rating.
Amon!( the hazards lbal students
were penalized for duriflg last
Tuesday 's inspedion were: Too
much garbage In the kitchen, a
"borrowed" supermarket shopplflK
curt in the garage , trash l,Ying
around tn the b88ement. dusty and
dlrty floors and stall's, usiog the
h1undry shull• as an aahtr9&gt;', un­
made beds and d1r1Y
bathrooms.
The above oonstltute fire , salet.Y
and health ha7.ards. The student&amp;
are completely responsible tor
keeping their two bedroom apart­
ments clean. Of course. when the
Freshmen arive they are· bewilder­
ed and contused by the tremendous
adjustments they have to make.
r.Jan.y of them have never been on
lbeir own before and besides ad·
,, 11

jusli ug to a nl'w academir en
vlronmrnt they must also sct Uf&gt;
housck,~•pmg. This tnkes Umt&gt;; In
!act. one group or Ntudt'nts that
this reporter t11lkedlo took three
weeks to dttidc what d.-u.ning
uten.~lls lo hey , O\ll O( thrl r OWll
money. Meanwhlle the apnrtmrnt
than chian.
remained 11'.'SS

CleMUness, lloWcver, is not the
only problem that the freshmen
must deal with . The apartments
At\' rented CromAllenhurst Gardens
Inc , whlr h i6 responsible for tbe
ot lhe apartments.
malntr111U1Ce
Even though mom ot the aput ,
meni. had bttn vacated all sum­
mer , the students movo.'11
mto apart•
ments with unpglnted walls, fM
leaks, broken light switches, Md
stai rwa.y banruaters that W\'re pull·
IIJ&amp;out o( ~ WIIU
,
All of these tlunl,:s had bffn re­
portt&lt;l to thl' t'Orport..tion lut
June by Mt. Lovl', 1binp are In
such a state that the men In OOI!
apartment atfi.xed • s.liD to th(&lt;lr
window !'ffding : "Fix Our W\o-­
dows Now." Ooe can uncStntwid
their Impatience with our cold

nlahta.

�Fridty , Odober 11, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

.. ,.,

PEOPLE

Opinionand ·Conviction

and

By VICTORMENZA

POLITICS
l y RUSSI LL PANZICA

England is undergoing a period
of blatant soclal criticism, the na­
ture or which Is projected both on
stage and screen and in the every,
tlay llves or its protagonists , the
acton . In the words of Clive
Barnes, an English writer on the
arts, "The new wave of na.turallstlc
players OJ'\! anti-heroes - on stage
and oU. Many of them have turned
down Hollyv.·ood contracts on the
grounds thal they prefer fret'&lt;lom".

'!'he angry y01111gdramatist has
d1splay(.'(j uncompromising inten•
slly, remlnlseent ol the pamphlets
of Milton and the satire ol Swl!t,
with no less than Shavian cralts­
manslup.
John Osborne's play
"Look Back in Anger," which was
later made into a movie, prescnt(.'(j
U,e onginal "angry young man".
He might indeed have gotten no
lurtber lho.n rebeWon for its own
1111kc,but his righteous indignation
contained a message for English·
men, and later, Americans, of all
c~.
His targets were outdat(.'(j
mores as well as social and eco­
nomic lnJusUce!, tha t tor the most
part, have universal dimensions .
Osbome's image took on another
hue in the pel'!iOn ol Tom Court~
nay, the star Jn the movie "The
Loneliness 01 the Long Distance
Rwmer" . The tale involves a
young man whose mother .support,
a dandy and buys an expensive
television set soon alter the death
of her husband (a lactory worker),
Better educatl!d yet less secure
than his lather, he beoomes dis.il­
ll.lBioned with, and disassociated
lrom, a general pattern or adult
responsibilities.
Courtenay and his peers, includ­
ing Albert Finney ot "Saturday
Night and Sunday Morning'' and
Rlehard Hanis ol "This Sporting
Ute, came Crom families ol bum­
ble means and had to tight their
w~ to prominence . In spite of
theu- stardom, they continue to
work in minor , far less remunera ­
tive productions. They have pre­
ferred to remain u.naUected in their
personal lives and devoted to their
profession rather than becoming
idea.lizt'd Cassanovas.
Here in America, condemnation
ot cultural infections hns taken
varying forms such as the essays
of Jaml&gt;s Baldwin , the novels or
Henry Miller, and the sociology ol
Vance Packard. However, play­
write5 have a long way to go ii
~ey _are to be as tlme\y as Eugene
~ Neill and Arthur Miller were .
'The theatre or the absurd" has
Its merits, but other approaches
must be either adopted or devel­
oped. The seriousness of the situ ­
ation was evidenced last 'Sea.son
when an annual award tor the best
Broadway production was wltlyield
Might not our actors and drama­
tists benefit from the noble pre­
ce&lt;lent emblished In Eoglandf

7

Sexual equality is inconslstant
with female beauty that resides on
a self-made pedestal. A number
of people have urged me to ta ke
up where I left oU in my last
column and deliver the punch they
felt was too gracious ly sulled. So
It's back to ti1e pond for some
further reOcctions .
The American woman, especially

as she mingles on a college campus,
is a not so dellgh lful 11malgam of
ideal and real beauty. Considered ,
from the stan dpoint or literature,
beauty in the Jema.te has eithe r
been conceived of as ethereal and
unattainable, such as by Danie, or
as physical and proximal, such as
by Zola. I think these alterna te
conceptions represent the essence
olthc tradiUonal breakdown between
types of beau ty : the spiritual and
(he sensual.
The eUect ol spiritual beauty in
the woman is ao&lt;.-ountedfor by the
feeling ol distance from the woman.
The subject 1n his mental or phy ­
sical remoteness from the woman
can Idealize her aspect to the Point
of perfectio n. At the same time,
however, his sense of distnnc.oefrom
the object precipitates her inacceti•
slbillty. Hence the subject dissoci•
ated warmth and the promise of
M.lillment from her and replaces
these with sublimit y and aee.
On the other hand we have the
notion of sensual female beauty;
created, converselY by the percep,
lion of her as near , living, and at­
tainable . She is human; lhe ideal
beaut .y Is Inhuman.
The American female l.s an enlg•
ma . Through the exhausting efforts
or so many anonymous su1fragettes,
the woman now finds herseU shoul•
der to shoulder with the man .
Through the vote, education, and
occupational opportunity, she has
been emancipa ted, tolera t(.'(j, and
selt-tiufficient. But most significant•
lY, she is mentally and physically
among the male in that she works ,
learns, and competes with bim. The
bulk of this is stale news; but what
.may not be so stale is that in her
extenuating equality with the male
she should providentially be a sen­
sual beauty. She cannot avoid the
multiple exposure of her human­
ness, her imperfection; and her
b e a u t y according to definition
should be the real accessible beau ty
mentioned before. The fact of the

matter

rsthat

her bea ty does not
the wanntb f intimacy ,
the promJse of fulfill ent that might
be expected. No, the consummate
effect of fll!r beauty is antiinvigor­
atlon and dl.stance. Therein lies the
paradox of our female ,
express

This ls not to

Sil,)'

that her beauty

is one and the same with the bea uty
of a Beatrice. The only similarity
between a contemporary beauty and
a Beatrice ls that thro ugh the
quality of di.stance, both str!J&lt;e one
as belng passive; that is, alter
perceiving their bea uty one would
not expect them to assert them•
se lves toward a love object.
The diUeren-0e between them lies
in the manner in which the effect
of distance i.s achiev ed. Where
Beatrice's beau ty Is distant through
the Idealizing of a Dan te, the mo­
de m female's is dlstnnt through a
sinking Into hersell .
Finally one may be led to ques•
tlon why the modem female who
frequents the male Idiom Pf?l'SUes
the sell-ron talned bea uty of lvn .
cissus. I cannot believe that this
ls an unconscious effort to speci­
ously re tain the mystery of Ideal
bea uty, It occurs to me that p05Si­
bty she has become a little over­
a w(.'(j a t her success; a little too
Impressed with her capabilities.
Hence we have the fema le who
combs her hair In the calet.eria ,
We have the conspicuous grooming
of the pass ive bea uty.
Between 1954 and 1962, total en­
rollment in the nation 's schools and
collegcs rose 35 per cent. Between
now nnd 1970 the increase will be
17 per cent, hall as much.

KLEINHANS
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TheSPECTRUM

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�SPECTR\JM

Friday, October 11, 1963

0

PAGISEVEN

Al' Brownrout

IN THE

BOULEVARD
MALL

5 MINUTES
FROM CAMPUS

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MOSTITEMSCOOKED
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IN 3 MINUTES

�SPECTRUM

PAGI EIGHT

Folk Music Club Schedules
Concert For BairdTuesday
The Tri.II
One of the few Uungs that the
moviegoers In ButlaJo m!\Y t,;,
1hanldul lor is the Cil'('Je Art Tbe­

lllrl' , UhdC'rthe able management
ot Fl'NI Keller.the Circle Art has
pruvidt'&lt;la fine display of the best
Ill 1•1
,mH•mporary cinema as well

a d!SNrnlng ~lection or some
Q( Ow masterpiCc'es of the past.
IJ11l1)rlunatcly
, this ex&lt;'ellent fare
h,1~ bt,cn served in a most unap­
petJxmg 1'0nlit1n&lt;'r
. However, Mr.
Keller has tllkNI a decl$lvc step
tow:1rds r1-n1cd.ym~ this situation
by ,.,,fO&lt;'ntlMlus base of operations
fNm II~ hoprll'S.•:ly dingy and un­
""llfVrUiblc 5rtlln,t on Connecti­
c•ut Avt• IQ lhc relatively posh,
1rl'ul quarters ol wh11t
C'lr11n
nnd 1'h&lt;'1
,,·;is fonnrrly the Vnrs1ty Cinema
011 Tl.uley Ave.
'J'hr lnaljglll'a] c,eremomes at the
rn•w home of the Cil'('Je Art gcn­
&gt;!ratt-d11 good deal of cxcitcmtnl.
Mt Kt•ller lalked of his plans for
the ruturl' 111tdmcnlioncd some of
the movies h~ has programmed for
the next few Wl'Cks. nnd then, in
a c.'tlriously pamdox1cal fashion,
the S&lt;'l'l"('O lit U() with the Ur.1tpre­
sentallon or the New Circle Art,
a film which, 1 regret to report. I
found dl~mally W1Sahsfnctory.
1 Mt Iha.I Orson Welles' version
of The Trlal frulcd in many areas
to l.'aplure the essent't' of the story
th11t K..tka wrote, but on the other
h:ind, tins is not fair criticism In
its&lt;.'lf
. /\ movie must be judged on
11$ wun't:1111or failure as an inde­
J)l'ndl'nt t•r111ty-uot as an adapta­
llon ol II work lhnt was originally
c1.1nn•i1·&lt;.'&lt;l
t1.1rnnuthcr mediwn as
1$ U1c co.se wllh mW1ylilms. How·
ever. since I I.houghthat I.hemovie
was primarily WtSUCCCSS(ul
in l'On•
veymg many asJX'(:ts of Kafka's
story whlch Welles evidently tried
to reproduce, it is reasonable, I
think, to discuss the movie In
terms of u KaJkal'sque crcalion.
Welles's dlrection d&lt;&gt;t'svery little
to clarify any of the major issues
ul U1estory . His basic conception
or the C'oU.nt
ry in wluch Joseph
Klivcs-a IMd of sterile, ultm mod•
em orchitt&gt;chture, ll!cless, empty
~I.reels and foccless ciphers for cit­
llcns nnd workers-is sustained cC•
foctively throUgboul the movie.
Similarly, the cont.l'ast between the
f11.0&lt;:tionle88
modcmlty ol the apart­
ment in wlllcll Joseph lOives and
the fln-4Nlecle Chaosand disorgan­
ization oC the beaurocratic, imper­
eonal law • enforcement agency
which tries him, is a pertinent up­
dating of Kalka 's ratbel• borrlfy•
Ing picture ol modem society a.n&lt;l
Its total neglect of the Individual.
11~

Once Welles has establl.sbed thls
Iramework, his grasp or the pro!&gt;
!cm seems to waver and his sense
of the story ls Jost amidst a series
o! stunning but irrelevant visual
lmages, overl), clever attempts to
fool and surprise the. audience, and

some completely ridiculous charac­
ter delineations.
----

•

1 will consider these difficultiea
one at a time, First, although shots
like that or the abandoned Gare
D'Orsay m Parl.!1filled with cowlf.
less rows of typists representing
the clerks in 1&lt;5$office arc enough
lo cnvoke gasps ol delight and ad­

llllrotion, they are often picturiaJ
ronc-('lt~ having little lo do with
thC' theme of the picture. In addi­
tion, they seem to bear a stron~
rei;emblance to 6imilurly awesome
t•amcra. work In about five or six
ul Welles' other pictures; (Mr,
Arkedin, A Tovch of Evil, The Mag.
nlflctnt Amberton1, . The Third
Mlln, etc,),.
of Mr.
~&lt;-ondly, the 11ppearancc
Welles ft-om under an embroidered
blankrl, blowing smoke and mum•
bUng us a nightmarish conception
ol a lawyer, is typical ot the pad• I
ding whlch expanded Kafka's taut
aml chilling tale inlo an aimless
n11•1u1&lt;lcrlng
through the lnventlve
mind or an egotistical director. n1e
cwnls seem to totlow so quickly
upon each other in Kafka's work
llmt K is caugltt up in a web of
incvitnbllity that ls both trustras­
tini; and Wuriating in it~ com,
plcidty and obseturity. Wells' at•
tempts to give the story some
dcrpcr psychologic basis fiounder
m a 1'0Ucct1onol irrational ecccn­
trk1lfos or character c:onccpt on
thut often cause the viewe r 's inter·
c~t to waver.
/\nd Uurdly, ln what Is perhaps
the hi:!Sl palaf'&lt;1blcpart ol the pie·
luJ'c, Tony Perkins l'Omplelely mis•
(ll11y11Joseph K. This is supposed
to I)(' an "ordlru!ry" man-a vic­
tim ol some obscenely devious and
nl'arly incompreheuslble modlina­
tions or tbe power structure. In,
slc:id, In a frenetic perfonnance
that I found raUtCI' balillng( Welles
conct.&gt;ption,I think, more than
Perkins' J, Perkins plays Joseph K
ns u.n exlstcnhnl hero wilhout any
of Ute 1,'00lyironic attitudes which
Qne can npp1·cclate in other con1:cption:;of Ute modern existential
protagonist.
lfflO OVU-

'SeK/$ no/ a
fo,blddenword/'

ot

under the banner

either folk

music, or the more popula.r term,
"hootenanny." In a recent Issue
ot SING OUT!. the magazine of
tile trade, these packages have been
given their just critical due; and
the merits of the single-artist con­
cert, such us those given by Joan
Baez, Pete Seeger, and Bob Dylan,
have been hernlded for thelr uni­
formity ol purpose. It ls much
easier to deliver an artistic ap­
proach to nny branch of musical
endeavor when there is no com­
mercial purpose to sidetrack the
effort, With this aim in mind, the
Folk Music Club o[ the University
has scht'dult&gt;da concert to be given
at Baird Hall on Tues. Irom 8 • 10
p.m. The program will include
only the vocaJ eUorts of John Boy­
lan, UB student and local tol.ksing•
er, who will be instrumentaJl.y
assisted by the G~venor Singers.

j

Upcoming Events

John !\as appeared just about
The Brothers of Al.... "'' p.lta
every where In the BuUalo area Fraternity are looking forward to
as either a folksinger or as an their soctal with Theta Ou Sorority
actor. He was recently producer this evening at the Roe-Mar Bowl•
of a "package" Hootenanny, al the Ing Alleys.
Glen Casino, whleh he says had
• •
a disillusionary el1ect on him. "I
The brothers of Alpha 5'gma Phi
watched while all artistic endeavor wish to congratulate the new fall
was involuntarily swept away In pled ge class upon their pledge in,
U1erace or the commercial needs itlatlon. A successful party was
of the show". John also feels that held at the "Flying E ranch" last
the future of any folk music worth Sablrday night ,
its effort will be In intirpate coffee­
• •
houses, such as the recently opened Tbe brothers of Itta Phi Eptllon
Bohemian Consulate on Pearl St., are holding a Victory Blast Friday,
on the concert stage, and of course, Oct. ll at Washington Hall at 9:00.
on recoJ.'d. John's,first record will
• • •
be available at the University Book· Chi Omega ts having a social
store, on or About the first of No- "1th Alpha Phi Delta tonight.
vembcr. Jack Wooster, current
•
preSident of the Folk Music Club,
fee!s that besides benefiting the
Thetl Chi sororlt,y is having a
club, this concert will be of great sociaf wlU1Alpha Phi Delta tonigtit.
• • •
interest to all devotees of the folk,
idiom. Tickets, on sale at the door TI&lt;E will hold a date Pajama
will be $.75 for adults, $.50 tor j Party Saturday, at Johnny's Nite
students and faculty.
Owl beginning at 9:00.

•

•

• •

JANET

VAN

SHEUEY

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Theparkasensalionthat
startedon the ski slopes.
Functional
drawstringhood
andbottom,deepKangaroo
zip pocketandelasticized
cuffsaddsparkto this
parkaof pureChathamwool

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

~

"'

.

STUDENTDISCOUNTTICKETS
Avallaltltat lotfl Thttttrt UPoffP.-.-tatlOII ., ,,..,...

IN

MARTHA

LEIGH
·JOHNSON·
WINTERS·
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Al&gt;VIITIIIM.IN1---"I

~
~d !

ly TARA MAGUIRE
With lhe increase In the popu•
larity of folk music in this country,
we have been generally bombarded
with hurriedly put together "pack•
ages'' of folk e9tertainment, most
of them not worthy to be considered

Greeks Announce

t.D. cant

�Frfclay, ~r

SPECTRUM

11, 1963

"A Raisin In The Sun"-Studio
Captivafes Buflalo Audient:es
ly SILVIA SPRING

Raisin in the Sun" Is e.
miracle play, not in the Medieval
sense. but In its power to delight.
shock and captivate the.a.udle.nces.
Unfortunately, lt ls a rare pheno­
menon for Buffalo theatre 'to pro­
duce a play that will draw a full
house every nigh( and win great
acclnlm. UsuaUy,there are only two
or three such popular plays a year.
yet the producers. directors and
ac1ors will not be discouraged and
bravely fight an inrreasingly dJf.
licull battle. Such rugged deter­
mination in the Studio Theatre,
combined with a highly sensative
and realishc play by Lorraine
Hansberry. make "A Raisin in the
Sun" probably this year's most suc­
cessful play.
"A

The reasons for this play's un­
precedented success are numerous.
Each small but necessary piece fits
into a complex whole to create an
overwhelmingly powf'rful picture of
the hopes, fears, motivations and
problems of a negro family in re­
latively modem times (porst World
War II). Its strength is heightened
still more by the Immediacy of
Civil Rights struggles today but
this factor alone by no means
makes the play. The problems in
the pl!\Yare not only those created
by outside interference but concern
the struggle for underi;tanding
among the three generations of the
Younger family.
The play begins with the at­
tempts of Ruth and Walter Lee
Younger (played superbly by June
Duell and Robert Costley) to as­
sert themselves in a crumbling
marriage. rt then moves to the
Carniliar search for a seemingly
lost identity and purpose of :8e­
neatha Younger, then in rollege
, (sensitively portrayed by EdYthe
Davis). Finally it focuses on the
endless efforts of a loving unselfish
mother Lena Younger, (magnifi•
rently enacted by Claudia McNeil).
to keep the family united so that
they can adequately &lt;.'Opewith the
bigger problems that are ever pre-­
Mnt.
'Raisin' is a play of supersensi­
tive realism conceming the plight
&lt;lf the Youuger family In their
heart• rendering search for identity.
in a world that seemshopelessly
:igainst their very existance. But
more symbolically, the play ts a
~tory moves from the confines of
lhe shabby flat in which the famil,y
seems hopelessly trapped. The
wnl!s seem to have claustropboeblc
eUects on their personalities. It is
only their united cUort to tear
themselves away from the dark,
infectious confines to a home of
their own that finally reunites these
lost people.
The play ends rather optomlsti­
rally (a rare occurrance today)

ly RAYMONDCRAWFORD

home and life for the new.
.. 1

1,1,

L'

CoffeeHourHeld
For ROTC Cadets
The Ole1U13ul
t Drill Socitty ln­
R.O.T.C. cadel! to attt'lld
n l'Offee hour Tu~
In 242 ln
Norton. All interestl'd l'adcts &amp;N'
urged to attend.
vltl!!i all

Last Friday, Don "Red" Menza
brought his quintet to the con­
ference theater in Norton Union and
iut on a very successful show for
the students here.
-t
I was not surpriwd to sec that
Menza. had no com(X'titionfrom 'the
"rock and roll' 1Jand at•ross the
hall in the mulli-purpost• room.
Giv&lt;'na chance to choose behveen
good and bad music !hat Friday
the students tilled the theater with
many standing in the n•ur of th1•
auditoriuhl.
Don has a unique quintN r:om•
posro of Iwo tenor $11J(&lt;'S t:nm\lX'l,
bass Rhd drums. He says that two
saxr~ give him a loud l'Ound with
a minimum ol personnel while he
believes that a piano is too ron·

trumpeter. Larry Covelli. the other
The Ch&lt;&gt;nnnuJt
Drdl Soc1rty Drill
reed man, Tom Azarello, the bassi­
st, and Clarence Beckton, the drum­ Team has J'C'presenlr.dthr U11iwr­
mer. joined him to form( in my s1ty of Rulfillo at the Ch1&gt;rryBlos•
opinlon. a good group. I do ha.Vt' sorn f,,slivnl m Wash.ini,1on
. D.C..
my rcse1vatlo11sabout the grou11
Cannon
Manhattt'n
Corrwll
and
ever making it to the top.
Noto and MenT.acarrv all thr many nthr·r drill rnrvts across thl'
talent in the group. Cov~III. I tw­ nation. l'tw orgnnimhon $11ivrs for
licvc. Is lost- for words musically ch,.. 1•,•frnin1:
and instillinr. or rio­
and the same Is tnw tor the ba.ss• tenrwI lratlr&lt;'5htp. to 111oh1·ntr111
ist. TI1edrumm,:,r also w11s ladoni:
in auy sort of extraordin1try talent t,•resl11I eac!l.'ts IO\\al\l ~• l'llft'l'l
In till' U.S.A F . und to ,-onqtltllt&lt;'
and wos ra1he1· slow.
Menza play('(J Cor an hour domg !ratt'l'n11I lw1cl1•t11hl11
und i;ocml
two dt'.'rcnttunr~. On!' was a thing a,'tiv1tks
calll&gt;d ·'Spanish Boots," which
sound('(]like Horaee Silvr•r's "Senor
t
Th.- rolh1wln1:md••ts \H'l'I' &lt;:'h'C
Blues," and h1t('l' was a romposi• (-d lo c•x,•,•ut!v&lt;•
p()sllun~ Cl)nmmnd
tion that Miles Pavis had done t'.'I'
. M11jor (' D S. P:llru•k M Qllllll\
which f&lt;.&gt;aturPd
hnr solos hy Noto C'Xl'&lt;'UIIW orrtcrr Capt. C LlS. t.11r
and Mi&gt;nza
.
fining .''
ry Coblr. trnlnmµ rom1m111d1•11~,
Don has played with Stan Kent­
Menza was n wrlmm" sli:ht on Lt , c.o.s. Kal'I \\' , 1(1 lktuff au
on and lalPly the band of Maynard l'arnpus Friday. and It was u izood mlnistrnl\vr 0Ui1·.- 1st Lt &lt;:n ~
Forguson. HP left Ferguson b«'ause change from that dis.:u~tm~ ''bii; David Hnmmond .ind op,•rahon~
he h"d no chance to play u~ing his lx&gt;at" noise that hns hi.•c•nh&lt;'ard 0Ukc1·, 1st LI. C'.D.S. Rut~1·11'111
full capabilities. Sammy Noto. lh!' lately on campus.
r!.'y.

The supporting cast is, however.
t&gt;qUai!y&lt;.'Ompctantand give the
play the acclaim that it deserves.
"A Raisin in the Sun" is a pla_y
of many units working harmonious­
ly to create u memorable impres­
sion. Every participant in the play
deserves special praise for pro­
during this masterpiece.

Any student wishing
to be&lt;:omea member of
LheSpring Arts Festival
Committee may fi ll out
an application blank in
the Student Senate Of­
fice, Norton. Comrnittee
members will help plan
a week's program of
cultural events present­
ed during the spring
semester. Last year, the
Festival brought such
talent as Isaac Stern,
t he Budapest String
Quartet, Elli Kassner,
and the Carlos de la
Camara Ballet Espagnol
to the campus.
I n t e rested students
who have ideas about
what talen t they wish
to see brought to out
campus and who are
willing 4o help organize
these events are asked
to apply. Applications
should include: name,
class schedule, and pre­
vious experience.

PAT'S

T. R. Thomsen, 8.S.M.E., Universityof Nebraska, and process control techniques to reduce m.:inu­
'58, came to Western Electric for several reasons.
Important to him was the fact that our Youngengi­
neers play vital roles right from the start, worliing
on e~citing engineering projects in communica­
tions including: electronic switching, thin film cir­
cuitry, microwavesystems and optical masers.
Western Electric's wide variety of challenging
assignments appealed to Tom, as did the idea of
advanced study through full-time graduate engi­
neering training, numerous management courses
and a company-paidTuition Refund Plan.
Tom knows, too, that we'll need thousands of
experienced engineers for supervisory positions
within the next few years. And he's getting the
solid experience necessary to Qualify. Right now.
Torn is developing new and improved inspection

CHARCOALED

HOTS
(with all the tri mmin' s)

YOU and Ot her U. B. St udents
Ha ve Made U, Fa mous

SHERIDAN DRIVEat PARK
ER BLVD.

Tom Thomsen wanted challenging work

He found it at Western Electric

just great for
'

From The Gallery

with the final desertion of the old

Miss McNeil plays the leading
role as the head and uniting force
of the family. She seems to have
an almost prophetic wisdom and
philosophy which makes even her
rebellious children respond. One ol
Miss McNeil's great moments Is
the serious philollOphyshe gives •
her defiant daughter, Beneatha.
This great woman (In stature as
well as talent) sits majestically In
her armchair and tells us and her
daughter that the time to love one's
brother is not only when he has
accomplished some great feat, but
especially when he is confused and
need.~ family support in order to
find himself. The words, "When
should we love someone?" seldom
fall to have their impact on the
audience. But Lena Y'oune:erdoes
nor lack humor, in fa&lt;!t, she-gives
a seemingly tragic situation tbe
comic rellef that keeps the play
from becomlng hopeless. Miss Mc­
Neil's performance has mellowed
through repetition rather than be­
coming stagnant.

ftAGI NINE

j

facturlng costs of telephone switching equipment.
Tom is sure that Western Electric ls the right ola.:e
for him. What about you?
If you set the highest standards fc-• Jursell,
enjoy a challenge, and have the 0P:..ifi,a11ons
we're looking for- we want to talk to you1 Ooror­
tunities for fast-moving careers exist now for rle, trical, mechanical and industrial engineers. and
also for physic-alscience. liberal arts and bus,m•~,
majors. For more detailed Inform.ition, !;Ct vrur
copy of the Western Electric Career Onrortun,,..,~
booklet lrom your Placement OfflcE&gt;rOr ....,tt•
Western ElectricCompany,Room6405.? :' 6• .J
way, New York 38, N Y And be suri• t,~ 1rr ,.,.
for a personal interview v.hen lh.., Bell ::i) t• 11
recruiting teJm visits your campus.

Princ,p.11rn,,,uf~ J i,a•a;;11,•11.&lt;1 ,11 11 t t f' • OC',,,, ".:
~• , • "• c.•It
r
(n"11u1,, r,~ Rtsdrch
Cent~, .. f r,riuth.:1 t,- J , l th h .. , Co,.. ::.,.1.:,," i n , t ..r.. : " • \'i ,

�SPECTtlUM

PAGETEN

Friday, October 11, 1963

J. J.. Calahan Calls Federal Shirley :StoutAccepts Cap And Gown Post
Careers Meeting A Success
College Public Attalrs and Ml&gt;r
In English for the Modem Greats
Program.

IJ JOAN C. Ut!LKINS

Mrs.

The Federal Careers Meeting
held in Norton Hall Tuesday was
termed a "definite succ-ess" by Mr.
J. J. C8.lahan of I.he Civil Service
Commission , which organized the
meeting an cooperation with the
Univer.;lcy Placement Service. In­
terested students were given op­
portunitie s to speak to men who
are in the vrry b&lt;-st positions to
explain what careers 1nthe Feder-al
government arc like. Mr. Calahan
noted that no less U1an 2¼ million
peoph.' are presently employed by
the fed1&gt;rc1Igovernment. and that
the number is steadily increasing .
AIU10ugh ther&lt;' are extremely few
positions nvallable 1nthe Civil Sciv­
ivc Commission itself , each of the
representatives of those groups II
broughi to the career meeting not­
ed that thel.r are large openings
for work in their respective de­
partments .

Shirley

Sl&lt;&gt;i~t, currently

sis· of progrnms ls available ' from
the Social Security Administration .
The chlef administration officer

Assistant to the Vice-President for
Research, has acceptud the position
es advisor to the Qap 'and Gown

of the U.S. Mission to the U.N.,
Mr. Z. P. Geancrui, explained that
there are many openings (or those
Involved in political science. his­
tory, and economics in the Foreign
Service . He added that the Foreign
Service Examinations will be given
next March 7.' and interested stu•
d1•nts should write the Board of
Examiners tor Foreign Service ,
Dept. of Slate. Washington, 25. D.C.
for further information.
rn conclusion, the meeting and
the exhibits, were most interesting
and profitable to those Interested,
or becoming interc5tcd , In careers
with the federal government.

Class of 1964.
ln addition to working with Miss
Jeannette Scudder, Dean of Women
and Associate Dean of Students,
and Miss Dorothy Haas, Director
.if Norton Union, each class ot
Cap' and Gown has the opportunity
to work closely with u third advisor
~elected by the group.
A native of Arizona and a gradu•
ate of the University ol Call!omia
al Berkeley, Mrs. St,out has been
at the University of Bullalo since
1960. She is the wile of Professor
'J( Anthropology,_ Da•irid B. Stout.
Mrs . Stout completl!d her gradu•

From 1944 to 1JH6,Mrs. Stout was
Regional Specialist for the Office of
War Inlormadon, working out of
Washingtonand San Francisco . In
1946,she became Head of the Eng­
lish Secretariat tor the Chinese
National Relief and Rehabilitation
Administration In Shanghai, Oilna .
Mrs. Stout was also Program Di­
rector of the U. S. Educational
Foundation in Otlna (the first Ful •

bright program}.

MRS, SHIRLEYSTOUT
ate work at Yenching University,
Peking, China. While at the Uni•
versity, she was secretary of the

As advisor to Cap and Gown,
Mrs. Stout will be working closely
with the officers of this year's
ciass. They are president , Joan
Wilkins; Secretary, Mary Romano;
Treasurer, Sally Freeman, and
Historian, Barbara Higler.

LUCAS CHELF

The Armed Forces audit service,
for example, has a conlinuingly
large number of positions ava il•
oble to qualified acc.'Ountlnggradu•
ates . while the Internal Revenue
Service 1s most lnlercsted in re­
cruiting busirn;i;s nnd accowi tl.ng
majors both. TI11.•
I.R.S. representa­
tive will make two more visits to
this school this year .

3240MCINISt.

Grllfiss Air Force &amp;lse. Rome,
New York, with over 7000 civilians
in its employ. is searching to fill
engineering and scicntilk openings.
Grilflss, in charge of the Air Force
world-wide ground electronics sys­
tem. also has openins:s tor physlc­
lstst and biologists.
Chemists. inspectors. and bac•
leriologlsts are needed by the Food
and Drug Admlnistmtion , while
engineers, metalurgists and physic•
ists have opportunitll's in {'Onh:ac;t
administration · with the Atomic
Energy Commission.

SAVE 3¢ 0

_,- -LE
lSfiIRT!

... t

INISHOW:E CH

A variety of careers in interview•
Ing. Judging claims, and in analy-

✓

VER interested in moderr promotional techniques, exterior garment mer­
chandising-wise. we at Bagle have devoted particular attention of late to
the commercial practices of om colleagues in the tunafish, soup and soap lines.
It seems that these three diverse industries have all discovered that by
olTeringyou a free discount coupon good for three cents off the purchase price
Well,
of their product, they can lure you down to the neighborhood store.
we have been considering ·various ways to market (we believe that's the word
they use) our Inishowen Cheviot Brooketowne. The first two adjectives describe
a heavy herringbone oxford designed by our shirting gourmet who describes this
fabric ns meaty. Brooketowne is our tapered body button-down with the sloppy
So, tunafish on the
bulge we used to call flare before everyone else did too.
mind, we decided to dip into that great fund of American advertising knowhow.
Friends! as soon as you've written us to learn the name of your nearest
Eagle dealer (not all Eagle shirls_have the Eagle label in them, recall), and we
answer you, and you need a shirt, run! don't walk and claim your Eagle l. C.
shirt at three cents off! At once!

E

H1mbur9er-Bulletin

~

......

u,e,11

HUMBLI!·
ATTITUDE
BUY DIAMONDS,
STUDENTSTOLD
By cagey handling of
thtlr lunch m-y , U of B
ltudanta can become In•
dependently wealthy by
tho tlm. they graduate,
Henry, famtd finance ex­

port, Hid today.
"We 1119911sta student
buy diamonds with tti.
m-y
"' .. ..,.. by Htlng
at Hanry'•·" Hid Henry .
"TIit average U of B
football player , for In­
stance, can Ht 43 ham ­
bu,vera a day, a Hvlng1
llf $2.15," Nld Henry . At
lttl1 rate , 1M can buy a
-.carat
diamond In two
ltf"neSterl. ''

+

+

+

+

-

r

f' e I I e w • who carry
around a -.brat
di►
rnanil ring fllld girt• aro
IOffl9what frllndli.r
than
lltt.r., Henry poln~ M.
"We have never liaOIIable
ta flguro why tltt, 11,"
,
Ktnry adlMd, p1f11i.xa1lly

HENRY'S
Hamburgers
-·

Nationally Fam&lt;llll

Sheridan· Drive
Corner N.F. Blvd.

STORE

COU PON

SAVE 3¢ ON YOUR VERY NEXT
EAGLE INISHOWEN CHEVIOT SHIRT!
(Pri,ccbeforediscount, about $7.50)

Il
-

M-. DEAi.Eil: For )'OW' c:o«n'WC°'"
In obc..lnl.. p,ompl occunl&amp; paymtnl for thla coupoa, omd It lo 'EoJ)&lt; Sblnmthn, Hm,nal&gt;o&lt;&gt;&lt;
01.rotd lABhOwcn Cbnioc Btooktt.O'fllftl Pl'OfllPI A«wtt• Paymcnl Dcpanmcnt. Qua.kct10'Wft;~1\J.)'lnn[1
(Ann, Miu Affln"bacb),
. Cub •al1&gt;0: 1/100 ol ooo ""'L EallloSblnm&gt;l&lt;An.
00:e, ,old •lwrc prohiblled. .....,ic...S. o, lpor«I . 0.11one (I) &lt;OUpoa,,., ...,,..,.

£ 1.. l £AOLE.SHIRTMAKtRS,

QUAKERTO WN, 1'1:NSSYLV AJollA

�11, 1963

Friday, ~r

,AGE ELEVIN

SPECTRUM
----------------------------------------------

PhiEtaSigmaSets
UpTutorial
Service
tCOnlln ued trom

Pajje t)

1'0uld not care less, that due to

IRRESPONSIIILITY on OUR
parts (which was very certainl,y
1101 the case), we could not contin•
ue bowling.
Unless we all are misinformed
.tbout the function of the WRA as
a non-partisan organization servine

ALL GIRLS WHOWISH TO PAlt•
TICIPATEIN I NT RAMU RA L
SPORTS, we certainly hopesome
action would be taken before this
organization completely defeats lts
purpose by the inept, blundering,
inadequate leadership it has ' been
shown to have in its bowlingleague.
Sincerely yours,
Ver-y Frustrated Bowlers

On Student Association
To the editor:
It is all too simple for the spec­

The Unlon Boan! has an equally
fine record of achievement.It is
tacular events on the Senate tloor unfortunate that Mr. Milch cited
two programs with less than aver­
to obsc ure the true value ot the
age attendance. l feel that all or
Student Association effort. In the
words ol Michael Cohm, student the students who have spent so
much time in such a diligent effort
body president, "student senate ac­
tivities cannot always be spectaCU• to materialize these accomplish·
tar. It takes careful planning be­ ments shOl,lld be greeted With a
fore an,y worthwhile program can friendly press, and that the totally
be presented.'' I agree, and I know unconstructlve approach of Mr.
Milch Is especially disappointing.
that the student body will agree
that this year's association ls more
Thank you for allowing rne to
activethan ever.
present this often forgotten part of
The best way to demonstrate this
the story.
point is to provide a fair ovetvlew
Sincerely yours,
or student association activities
Howard Gondree
since the beginning of the school
year. The Student Judiciary, tor
EDITOR'SNOTE: Mr. Milch did
example, Is setting up -a lower not criticize student gove.mroentin
court to handle cases related to
his column of Oct. 4. The point
the traffic problem. The Publlca•
of the satire, for tholJe who can
lions Board .la reorganizing ltsell
read 8Dd understand what they
to become more constructive in na­ read. was the nulaances of party
lllre. The senate committees, ac­
pofitics in what shoUld be a united
cording to Vice President Michael effort on the part of all students
l..lppin, have never been more - student activities. That aside,
!ully staffed, with a conservative many committees and many com­
estimateof llO students as mem­ mittee members do not necessarily
bers."
insure adequate results. Certainly
It seems a bit premature to speak
Already these committees have
of cornmltteetiwith a "fine record
a commendable record, and the
ol achievement."
rear bas barely begun. The Civil
Rights Committee has held a highly
successfuldemonstration. The Aca•
drmic AttaJrs Committee alreadJI
is fully statfed (lt was inopem,
live last year). The Wellare Com­
mittee is so large that it has ti.ve
subcommittees, all working a full
More than one hundred lhoosand
schedule. The Foreign Student Af.
Americans are wearing a tag called
fnirs C.ommitteeis revitalized not
Medic-Alert, designed to wam of
having been In existance for' two
a hidden medical condition from
years. The Public Relations Com.
which the wearer suffers., In case
mittee Is working on a UB day
of accident the band acts as a
at the world's fair. The Student
signal to w-.trndoctors and others
Association Week was presented by
of hidden conditions which the pa.
a new special committee. The Elec­
tienl connot describe himself, Forty
tion Committee, formed only a
million Americans have some con­
couple of weeks ago, has already
dition for which a Medic•Alert band
lorm!!d a new set of procedures for
should be worn.
lhe special Senate elections.

DINTAL 0,,ICIRI : Left to Right : Jerry Pogorzelsld, Jack Pierce,
Richard Sobel, Robert Chicl&lt;i. Kenneth Luke.

SchoolOf Dentistry Holds
Election Fc~rFrosh Class
In the first elections of 1h1
1 year, Brooklyn College of Pharmacy,
the freshman class of the School and a resident of Brooklyn, N.Y.
of Dentistry elected 0Uice1:s this
Vice-president Pogorzelski, at•
week.
tended UB in his undergraduate
This Executive Board.cowdsts o! years, majorlng In Biology. He is
Robert Chick, President, Jerry a resident of Dunkirk, N.Y .
Mr. Sobel, the Student Associa­
Pogorzelsld, Vice-president, Rich;
Del­ tion Delegate, has the responsibil­
ard Sobel, Student Associati&lt;m
egate, Ken Luke, Treasure,r, and ity ol representing the freshman
class or the Dental School In the
Jack Pierce, Secretary.
Student Asooclatlon and Senate of
The major p~
of the IE:xecu­ the University, The tenure o.f Mr.
Sobel's office ls two years, fasting
tive Board is to promote faculty•
student relaUo.ns. In addition, the until 1965, whereas the other of•
board is responsible for the organ• Cicesare of only one year's dura­
ization of the annual dlnner~ce tion. He is a graduate of Queens
and the annual field day t1or the College of the City Unlversicy of
Dental School This year the board N£&gt;wYork, majoring in biochemis­
is trying to develop an hono1rs sys­ try, and a 1•esfdentof New York
tem ln relation lo student cc1nduct. City.
Mr. Luke, Treasurer of !he class
Mr. Chick, the newly elected majored in history at UB In
President, slated that "this year's undergraduate years. Mr. Luke is
officers will try to expand the a resident of Syracuse.
fields ot Interest of the executive
Secretary of the class, Mr.
board into such areas as the {pre.
Pierce, nttended t.'ollege al Provi­
vious)y mentioned) honors sy1.tem." dence, R.I., and resides in Mystic ,
Mr. Chick is a graduate uf the
Connecticut.

Medic-Alert
Tags

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(PIMM Orde r by Number)

1. Virginia Ham , Turkey , Swiss Cheese, Tomato, and Onions
Russian Dressing .... • .•. , . , . , , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.35
2. Corned Beef:, P1Str1ml, Swiss, Cole Slaw, Ru15ian Dressing .......
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UNIVIERSITY
DELICATESSEN
AINDRESTAURANT
A MEAL IN ITSELF •••

This surge of activities·bas bar&amp;
ly begun. More committees are
stul in the planning stage tor the
Prog
rams they will present this
)N r . Three o! these are the U.N.
C~nunittee , the Spring Arts fes­
tival committee, and the N.S.A.

Phi Eta Sigm1 Is an
honorary fraternity dt•·
signed lo encounige and
r e w a r d s ch o I astic
achievefllent a m o n g
f res h m en men. All
freshmen men earning
a 2.5 average &lt;lul'ing
their first semester or
their entire frosh year
are eligible for mem­
bership. Students re­
cently qualifying wil1be
notified promptly.
The chapter's tutorial
service was discussed al
lhe Oct. 3 meeting. 1'he
system, designed lo aid
students in 100 or 200
courses is offered free
o~ charge by Phi Ela
Sigma members. Appli­
cants may apply at the
Spectrum office or may
c~ll TF ~-1802. Aplica­
bons will necessarily
be screened lo conform
with available time and
subject experience.

1GUARANTEED
BLUES
CHASER
A call home, LongDistance. Is
a real picker-upper. for you.
Foryourfolks, loo. Apl)onecall
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It tells themyoucare.Rates are
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Crispy Crackers ....... . ... . . ...........
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Creamy Cottage Cheese and Heavy Sour Cream ..... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75
Tunafish, Sliced Tomato, Coleslaw on Lettuce . . . . . . . . . . • . .... ... . .65
Cold Plate, Ham ,and Swiss Cheese, Liver Sausage,
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-THIS

a..,..,

TIii 2:00 P.M. Fri . 1nd Sat.

IS ONLY A SMALL SAMPLE OF OUR MENU-

�SPECTRUM

PAGETWELVE

Friday, October 11, 1963

ANNOUNCEMENT
1

Folk-singing groups Md Indivi­
duals intcreted In penonnlng In
the Music Committee . Concert are
Invited to send a representative to
the organization meeting for the
event being held Monday at 3:00
p.m. in 264 Norton .

The Student Zionist Organization
will present a movie. "The Wilder•
ness of Zin" SUnday. A coffee hour
and dl!lcus!lion will follow.
Also at thiJ meeting, annual elec•
tions will be held. Members/ilp In
the club i8 open to all full•time
day studenlll, For further informa•
tion, call TR 7-7354or TR ~-

Matti Clult
The UNDERGRADUATE MATH
CLUB will meet Wednesday In
Room ~.
Norton Un.Ion at 7:30
p.m.
James Woeppel will speak on
"Fibonacci
Numbers."
Refresh­
ments will be served. All are wel­
come.

The Academic Af­
fairs Committee of bhe
Student Senate is in
need of miembers to
work on its subcommit­
te~s. The committee will
be workang in various
areas of academic con­
cern to the student
body as a 'whole. Any­
one interest1ed in join­
ing ,the committee
should come ·to 205
Norton any .time be­
tween 11:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. and fill out
a committee application
blank.

Oriefttatlell

Tr•n•fw Stvdent CommlttN
There will be a card party

on
Wednesday, Oct. 23, in the card
room of Norton Union from 7 • 9
p.m. All transfer students are in­
vited. You may sign up at the
Reservation Office. Refreshments
provided: Prizes awarded: Cards
requesled!

IStatus
,

Cencerh
Tickels lor the Beethoven Cycle
are available at the Baird Hall
Box Office free of charge with the
presentation of their ID card . The
Budapest Quartet will be perform­
mg In the Norton Multi-Purpose
Room Oci, H, 16, 18, 28, 30, and
Nov. 1. All coucerts begin at II: 30
p.m. All 17 string quarfets of Bee­
thoven will be perrormed.

The Activities Committee of the

HouM Pl•n
' Student Senate forms a liaison be­
The Hemingway House Plan will I lween student acitivities and the
hold a meeting Tuesday at 1 P,.m. I Senate. Its conCE!nl rs wilh the

in 246 Norton.

p,.. · l•w Sociaty
The society will hold Its first
meeting today ln 329 Norton at 7:30
p.m. All students who are inter­
ested are invited lo attend . Re­
freshments will be served .

Chess Team Places
nic UB chess t«•am tied for
lle~'Ond place in the Syracusc-Lc­
Moync Invitational C'hess Tourna­
ment held in Syracuse , O&lt;•tobcr 5
and 6. Members induded Richard
D'Angelo , Bob Clawson . Paul No­
wak and Gury Boldt. Winning the
tournanwnl was the Cornell "A"
team; UB tied w1'\h the Cornell "B"
team.

Di:scussed

Chess is beC'Oming increasingly
popular on campus and participa­
tion at chess club meetings each
Tuesday a l 7:30 p.m. in the card
room of Norton Union is growing .
Coml)('tativc matches to deter­
mine which persons ~hall repre­
Sf'nl lhe University of Buffalo at
the Association oJ College Unions
Tournamen lo be held In February
will be ronducted at the weekly
chess club mcl!tings.

lorrnatlon of new organizations as
well as existing ones.
The Committee is now in the
process of reviewing the Constitu­
tions ol the Sociology Club. Hockey
Club and the Spelunkers.
Discussion has also centered
around the possibility and subse­
quent means of taking a broad
oomprehensive outlook at campus
organizations as a whole, Such a
program would, it is hoped, sllm­
ulate present activ Ities on campus.
The aim of the 1program in the
mind of the Committee is to de­
termine the status , of present or­
ganizntions. as well! as future needs
in the field of student activltles,
and to determine the attitude of the
Student Body towairds acllvities.
The Committee is planning to
meet with Mr. Richard Wilson.
Dean Siggelkow and Dr . Hollander
of the Psychology !Department con­
cerning the program.

GMl,u Delta
This Sunday ,' there will be a
Picnic at Alleghany State Park at
the "Woltt Den." C.001.act Carol
Wolff TA 3-1737for lntormatiOIJ.
Nov. 2-3 there will be a retreat
at Camp Lakeland . Coptact Kala
,Joks TR ~ tor inlonnation.

.........
.......
1be B'nai B'rlth Hillel Foundation

A business meeting will be held
Wednesdayat 7:00 p.m. Room231,
Norton.
Discu.s&amp;onson the "Modem En­
cyclical" are held every Monday
in Room 244, Norton. Father's
disculsionclasses meet every Tues­
day and Thursday at 9:00 and 10:00
a.m. in Room 330, Norton.
Just a reminder: October devo­
tions are held daily alter Mass at
Newman Hall.
The Graduate Newman Guild will
hold a meeting al Newman Club
at 8:00 p.m. Dr. Richard BugelsJd
will give a critique on Freud. All
graduate
students a n d faculty
members are invited to attend.

will spon,or a Sabbath Service this
7:45 p.m. In the Hillel
House. A series of sennons on:
"Understanding our Prayers" will
be initiated with an explanation of:
"The Shema.'' An Oneg Shabbat
will follow.
H•y RI. Plafllled
The next event on the Hillel soci•
al calendar Is a Hay Ride planed
tor Saturday.
evening at

Choir•nd "Live •nd LNnt"
A meeting of the students Inter­
ested in participating In a Hillel
choir will be meld Sunday at 4:00
p.m. in the Hillel House. Cantor
David Lebovic will be on hand to
organize the choir and begin the

SCA

rehearsals.
The first meeting ln this year's
"Live and Learn" discussion hours
will be held on Thursday at 3: 00
p.m. in the Hillel House. Mrs.
Norman Fertig will again coordin­
ate this program. The subject se,
lectel for the first discussion will
be: ''Dating - The Battle of the
Sexes."
M

call 831-3168.

........ a.

HIiiei News
s-tce &amp; 0.,

FIim Serles

lntw ·Varsity QrllflN F........,
.
An annual tall weekend will be
held at Camp La Toumeau Oct.
18 - 20. 1be topic will be ''Ouistian
Leadership and Its Specitlc Appli.
cat.ion to the College Campua."
Anyone who is interested &amp;bould

Pr9flulen,

The B'nal B'rlth Jewish Family
Service Groiip Guidance Program
will present the first in a monthly
film series on profession on ThlU'S•
day at 8: p.m. in the Hillel House.
The subjecl for consideration will
be: "Teaching as a Career.'' Mr.
Sherwood Deutch, a teacher in the
Tonawanda Junior High School will
be on hand to an.,wer questions.

The Student Christian Association
meeting on Thursday, will Involve
attending the movie, Electr•, at the
Circle Arl Theatre. The cost ot
admission will be $1.00. The group
will meet at the University Presby•
terian Church at 7:00 p.m. Follow•
ing the movie, the group will meet
at the lounge in the church to
discuss the film.
The Student Chrlsllan Movement
of New York State . Fall Conference
will be held Oct. 25 • 27, at Thom­
field, Cazenovia, New York. The
theme, "The Shape of Man In the
New Testament" will be presented
by Dr. Helmut Koester ot Harvard
Divinity School. Anyone interested
In attending or desiring 11.irtherln­
fonnation contact Chaplln Burek ,

TF 4-250.

THEREIS STILL TIME
TO REGISTERFOR

"BIGBROTHER"
Jusf ComeIn •.•
No Purchase
Required

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OYER50" TAU

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P.M.

�Friday, October
_ l ...::1,_
1963
_ _ _____

_,_ ________

S_P_E
__
C T_R_UM
_ ________________

Nemerou To Read

WBFOAnnounces Schedule
...... ay, Oct. 14

•

5:oo---On Campus with Jel'l'Y Segal
6:00-News with Jim Cronb(rg
6:lS-Meet the Faculty-lnterview
with Mr. Castelli, Education
6:30-Evening Musicale
7:00-America on Stage-'"lbe Uon
of the West" by Jani.es Kirke
Paulding (1830). This play (long
given up for lost , but in 1954
discovered and published) en­
joyed great contemporary popu•
Jarit,y, chiefly because of its lead­
ing charac ter , Colonel Memrod
Wildfire, said to be based on the
real Davy Crockett. Its contrast
between the Westerner and the
Easterner signalizes an enduring
theme in American life and lit•
erature.
7:ll--Olncert
Hall - Brethoven:
Symphony No. 3 in E Flat Major,
Op 55, "Eroica".
Herbe rt von
KaraJanand the Berlin Philhar·

monlc Orchestra
9:00-News
9:10-Arn erican History with Mr.
John Wilson
10:00-EvMJng Showcase with
Tel'l'Y Banazwski
11:00-Headlines and Sign Off

Tlltlday, Oct. 15
5:00-0n Campus with Al Knobloch
6:00-News with Ed Nagel
6:15--0ver the Back Fence
6: 30-EVENING MUSICALE
6: 30-Evenlng Musicale
7:00-Hold Your Breath "Contami­
nants and Cancer" , This rela­
tionship has long been suspected
and implied through research evi­
dence. It is probed here from
several points of view ,
7:»--0oncert
Hall - Hindemith:
Symphony Serenade !or Orches­
tra and Concerto !or Hom and
Orchestra. Hindemith and the
Phllhannonla
8:30-11. B. COLLEGE QUIZ-This
week will be the Newman Oub
vs, Alpha Gamma Delta
9:00-Nationallsm in the Mid m
CentUI)' - The Problem of Na•
tional Minorities In the USSR Alfred G. Meyer, Profes&amp;Ol' of
PoUtlcaJ Science, Michigan State
University, has served as a re­
search director on Russian al·
fairs at Harvard and Columbia.
He will discuss the theory and
practice of Communism as It re­
lates to the problem of national
within the Soviet
minorities
Union.

At 4 In BairdHall

........
y,Oct."
5:00-0n Campus with Bob
Gottes­

ing.
7:30---0oncerl Hall-Mahler:
Sya,,
phony No. 1 in D "The Titan."
Bnino Walter and the Columbia
Symphoizy Orcbestl'
9:00-News
9:10-Amerlcan
History with Mr.
John Wilson
10:00-Evening Showcase with Ray

Caruana

11:00-Headlines and Sign OU
11ivl'lday, Oct. 17
5:00-0n campus with Broce An·
derson
6:00-News with Pat Irwin
6:15--Changlng Face of Europe
6:30-Evening Musicale
7:00-Special of the Weck
7:30--0mcert Hall-Dvorak:
Symphony No. 2. Monleux and the
Lon Symphony Orchestra
8:30-Special - Slee Lecture - Re­
cital: David Diamond and Paul
Gaver
10:00-Evening Showcase With Fred
Brtkell and Folk Music
ll: 00-Headlines and Sign OU

Frlllay, Oct. 11
5:00-0n Campus with Carl Berg
6:00-News with Burr Vogel
6:1!&gt;-U.B. Sports Scene with Wally
Blatter
6:30-Evening Musicale
7:00-Edith Piaf-French Singer
77:ffi-Washlngto n Reports
7:30-Concert Hall-1..wt: Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2; Mazeppa;
Les Preludes; Rokoczy March.
~e&lt;ller and the Boston Pops
9:00-News
9: 10-Amerlcan History with Mr.
John Wilson
10:00-Sound of Broadws.y and Hol­
lywood. Host, Ed A.tit. Original
Broadway
cast recording of
"Music Man" with Robert Pres·
ton
11:00-Sign Off

,,_ _______________

COMPLETELUGGAGEand
LEATHERGOODS STORE

Poems Thursday ·

10:00-Evenlng Showcase with Ray
Crawford and Jarz
11:00- Headllnes and Sign Of1

man
6:00-News with Dave Schrieber
~:15--0ettlng to Know You - In•
terview with. foreign students Harish Malllk, New Delhi . Indio
6:30-Evening Musicale
7:00-Cartoonists Art - David M.
White. Boston University Jour­
nallmi Department tells of his
search Into comics and cartoon­

PAG_E_T_H_ll_tT_E_E
__

I

The Friends of the Lockwood
Memorial Library invite the SIU•
clents and faculty of the Wliversity
to attend the poetry recital prt&gt;­
grams planned for this fall. The
poets ~cheduled to appear are Robert Bly, Howard Nemerov, and

Adrlenne Rich.

A'ITACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES.

HANDBAGSand GIFTS
CompleteSelections of. Name Brand Luggage
Cou,tesy Discountsto Un1Hnlty Foculty·oltd Stuchnts
3400 MAIN STREET
'(~

UI)

TFJ-1600
0,.. Mllllllry, T1HmH, •_,
F.U., .......
ttl 9 P.M.

A new lnnovau/n In the year's
presentation is the use•of the Baird
Recllal Hall instead of the Exhibi­
tion Room of Lockwood Library as
formerly .

Howard Nemerou, American poet,
novellat, and critic will read from
his poetry Thursday, Oct. 17, in
the Baird Recital Room at 4:00
p.m. Mr. Nemerou Is the author
of five books of poetry, n. 1111411'

and tt. i..w , Gulde te tflt Rulnt,
TIie Salt Garden, Mlmlrl Ind Wht­
dows, and SelecteclPNlfta, !usmost
recent collection. He is well-known
as a novelist, having writ1en three

Hear Ye This-Back The BULLS
Wear Blue and White to the Game
Show the Team You're BehindThem
By Wearing Your School Colors

novel~. TIii Melodramatics, F-4·
erig• or Ifie Power of LAvo,and

Tho HomocomlngGarno.
In additio11 to his poems and nov­
els, he haS had published A Com­
modity of Dr-Nm,, a t.-ollretionor
short stories, two plays , and sev­
eral essays.
John Crone Ransom is his ap­
praisal of The Salt Ga,.n said,
"Mr. Nemerou's work is distin­
guished by his expert control ol
the tools of the poet's trade, strik­
ing a remlll'kable balance between
the freedom of Imagination and the
res traints imposed by formal verse

structure."
At present , Mr. Nemerou is a

member of the faculty of Benning­
ton College.
Adrienne Rich, the last poet of
the series, is to read her poelcy
on campus Nov. 8, 1963, at 4.
This wiU take place In Ule Baird
Recital Hall.
She is the author of several fine
books of poetry, 1'1leDfafflOfllt
Cut­
ters And Otflor PMIM, Snaplhob
of a O.ug....,..111-i..w, and A
ChallfOof Wtrid.
She Is a wife nnd a mother whose
work appears frequently
the
New Yortw .

ADVRflSIMIHI' ______________

in

___

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'1

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-

�Friday, October 11, 1963

SPECTRUM

,AGI FOURTEEN

Undefeated
BullsOppose
Marshal
ly DON CASTLI!

and roll out pass which they use
90% of the time.
At the receiving end la J im Cure,
for the first time In three weeks
and will face Marshall University. a 6' l" and 184 poUnd ·junior, con­
sidered to be the best ottenslve
The Marshall team Is deiJCrl
bed end in Big Green Football history.
He Is also considered one of the
In the scouting report as a young,
dedicated, ,bustling team that never top receivers in the country. As
gives up. Thls is supported by the a ~phomore last year, he caught
46 passes, three for touchdowns.
fact that they beat Toledo last
week 19-18with a last minute touch­ Th.e other end is Bob Pauett,
down. Incidentally, Villanova had a another junior at 6' and 193 also
tough time in beating Toledo 18-14. considered to be an excellent re­
ceiver.
Leading the Big Green is 110pbo­ Th.e pivot man in the line ls
more quarterback Howard Lee Mil• Thomas Goad, a 6' ll' , 197 pound
ler. Miller is small at 5' 11'' and ,ophomore. Marshall is heavy at
163 pounds but is described as the tackles where It counts. Th.ey
being very quick and an excellent have four tackles over 230 pounds
passer. This makes him very ef­ and the like!)' starters wtil be Ev­
fective master of Marshall'a sprint erett Vance at 230 and Mlke Hecks
The undefeated Bulls return home

r

Veteran Guards: BIii Winter (left) and Dick Turner (right)
....
cool?

also at 230. Both are seniors and
two year letter Winners. Rounding
out the line are the guards Bill
Winter, 6', ~. and Dick Turner ,
5' ll" , 216. The line bas overall
good size and bas excellent speed .
In the backlield along with quart­

erback Miller are bal.fbaclts Zeke
Meyers, 5.' U ", 177 l11ldJack Ma•
hane. 5' 11", 190 pounds. The full.
back ls Al Rinehart , a 5' ll", 180
pound senior. Mahane and Rine­
hart last year had rushing averages
of 4.8 and 4.S yards per carry
respectively. The backfield is not
considered big, bu.t they are fast,
hard runnen typical of the Uni­
versity of Delaware backs.
Thus far in league play they have
beaten Toledo l&amp;-18and tied always
tough Miami of Ohio 14-14.

,

I

I

StudentBookShop

Dr.Serfustini's
Vars~ty
GolfSquad
Extends
TwoYearWinStreakTo16
Dr. Leonard Sertu.stinl
's Bulls

ly ROCKYVERSACE
The Univenity of Butlalo Goll
squad extended its widefeated skein
to lour this season and 16 over the
past two years. The latest victim
was St. Bonaventure University,
the 1963 Little 'Three Champion
(Canislusnnd Niagara are the other
members of this league). UB ace
Curt Siegel lost his first match of
the year - by tour strokes, 76 to
72. His opponent, Brian Kelly, as­
tounded all spectators by aceing
the 13th hole - a 158 yard hole in

one.
The results were:

UI

o.iso successfully defended thelr

championshipstatus In the Brooklea
Country-Oub Invitational at Roch­
ester, New York. Ten colleges and
Unlversltles from Western New
York were represented al the tour­
nament.

Tomorrow. the golf team wiU
journey to Cornell University !or
the qualifying round of the E.C.A.C.
tournament. Canlslus College will
attempt Monday to upset the vic­
tory minded Bulls. The meet will
St ION1ventue
take place at 1:00 p.m. at Audubon
1. Brian Kelly
72, 2~ points Golf Course. On Tuesday, Buffalo
2. Dick Bums
79, 0 points State Teachers will face the UB
3. Paul Fitzgerald 83, 1 point
golfers at Sheridan Course with the
'18,l ½ points same goal in mind. •Next week's
4. Tony Bonner
77, 2 !'Olnls competitionwill be climaxed Thurs­
5. Craig Ross
6. Ted Belak
82, 0 points day when Niagara Unlvenity and
Totals: UB-11; St. Bonaventure-7
Buffalo meet at Hyde Park.

BabyBulls
Follow
Varsity's
Example;
SpotWestPointPhebes
14andWin
The University of Buttalo fresh.
football team deleated the

IJl4ll

TELEPHONE:

Curt Siegel earned the low med•
allst trophy by s h o o ti n g a
respectable 75. Another tournament
trophy was copped by Fred Ber­
man. His 77 was good enough for
a third place. Steve Watts' 79 and
Kearons Whalen's 84 brought the
team total to 315.

1. Curt Siegel
76, ½ point
2. Steve Watts
76, 3 points
3. Fred 'Berman
82, 2 points
4. Ed Nusblatt
78, 1¾ points
5. Kcarons Whalen 80, 1 point
6. Brownie Kopra 18, 3 points

ly ALLAN5CHOLOM

3400 MAIN STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK

yard sweep and the equalizer on
a 25-yard pass from Roble. n
was Roble's two point rollout after
the initial tally that enabled the
Baby Bulls to tie, 14-14,at the half.

favol'l!d Army Plebes last Friday
altemoon at Michie Stadium by
Anny scored its touchdoWllBon
a 2G-14 score. After the Plebes
scored two first period touchdowns, passes by quarterback Bob Rettig
lhe Baby Bulls made a great come­ to Tom Schwartz tor lMlyards and
back With twoT.D.'s in the second, Bob Rivers for 35 yards.
and .one
ench in the third and fourth
The deadlock was broken midway
quarten.
through the third stanza when the
Quarterback Jim Robie, halfback powerful Bonner broke through the
1'of\YCapuana, and fullback Bill middle of the Anny line and sped
Bonner spearheaded the UB attack 56 yards to paydirt. Roble put in
that overhauled the West Pointers.
the clincher on a four yard rollout
It was the 1econd win in the three
to the 1lnal trame after a ~ yard
game serie11 dating back to 1960,
pass to Capuanabad aet the stage.
when the UB fro6h edged out the
The frosh will try to duplicate !alt
Plebes~week's Impressive performance
Capuana scored both second per­
against Colgate today (2:00 p.m.)
iod T.D.'s, one coming oo a eight
at Rotary Field. •

TF 3-7000

Area Code 716

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�•

SPECTRUM

Friday, October 11, 1963

PAGI FJnEEN

BULlS
WINONLAST
MINUTE
TDPASS
I

AerielByStofa Provides
Margin Gerry's~
!Pawlowski
AndPhilbin
In14-6VidoryOverVillanova
By ALLAN SCHOLOM
The upset minded University of
Buffalo Bulls did it again las t week
against a previously undefeated Vil•
Uanova team, this time by a 14-7
score. Three weeks ago the Bulls
were underdogs to a power ful Uni­
versity or Ohio team . and emerged
victorious in a 6-0 defensive battle.
The following week Holy Cro5s was
the favorite but U.S. came tlll'ougb
with a tie. Thus . the Bulls gained
two victories and a tie over the
only three teams that had beaten
them Inst year.
The game started

out with a

bang as UB halfback Jimmy Ryan

a 165 lb. speedstc-r, shocked Ute
12500 rooters by returning the
o~ning kick-ot'f 95 yds. for a touch­
down. The conversion attempt {rul­
ed, but UB had an early 6-0 lead.
The score remained the same un­
til late in the scond quartet when
a Villanova TD 1;1nd, point after
put the Wildcats out ahead 7-6. The
touchdown was set up by an Inter­
ference call on the UB 24 yard
line, after lhe Wildcat's drive ap­
peared stopped.
On the next play sophomore
quarterback Don Koshlop entered
the game and promptly threw his
first varsity pass ror a TD to end
Jack Kellcber. Fullback Mike Mar­
gen followed with the conversion.

That was all the scoring until
13:26 ol the final period when
quarterback John Stofa completed
a PfSS on fourth and 22 to half­
back Tom Butler nt the ViUianova
four yard line where he ran in
with 1: 34 remaining. On lhe plaj,.
Wildcat defensive hallback Jim
Boyle reached for the a pparent in­
terception but the ball slid through
his fingertips into Butler· s waiting
hands. The two-polnt conversion
was made as Stora tossed a quickie
to end Dave Nichols and UB had
a 14-7 edge with sligh0y less than
one minute to play. The game end­
ed with Stoia carressing the bail
as the Bulls took over on dows.

Katz Places
At Lemoyne Run
By TERRY SWEENEY
Saturday, Stu Kalz, again break­
ing a course record, placed second
in the Lemoyne Invitational. So lar
this year. Katz has run !aster than
the course record in every meet.
Previous to the Lemoyne contest
only two peoplf' bad run U1ecours e
in less than 21 minutes. Katz's
!lme was 20 minutes 8 seconds, well
under this mark. The UB team as
a whole did a very good job, scor­
ing sixth out of a field of lourtC'en
teams. Robert s Weslyen College
won the meet.
The Buffalo Frosh team placl'&lt;l
third in U1e freshman division with
Dick Genau finishing fifth in th e
field.
To date, the Bulls record stands
,11 0 and 3. DeJpite the superb,
record breaking running of Katz,
US has been deafeated by Brock­
P0rt, Syracuse and Buffalo State.
Syracuse downed the Bulls b_ya
score o! 20-35
. Katz won the meet
with a time of 21:5.5.7; however,
the Orange took th.e next five pla&lt;.-es
and Utemeet.
BUUalo State, led by Tim Burns.
defea ted the Bulls by the same
score. Katz finished sec:md to
Bums, both of them bettering the
1; rover Cleveland course record.
Wednesday, th e Bulls tackled
Colgate at the Grover Cleveland
L"t&gt;UfSe. Tomorrow they will travel
1
0 Allred, a cross country power,
"11&lt;IWednesday will again be on
their home course in a tri-nwel
and Canisius .
·•8ninst Nia~

Named
1ro ECAC
All-EastTearn

The ga m e was marked throug h­
by penalty after penalty. l n · total
th e Bulls accumulated 159 yards
worth. while the Wildcats lost only
51 yards.

By ROCKY VERSACE

Publicatio n dead line or th~ Spec­
trum resulted in omii;sion o! the
se lection ol Gerry P awlowski to
the ECAA All-East team. In the
The Bulls were saved by live
interception : four in the set'Ond HolY Cross contest Gerry was rat ed
including two inside the 15-yard by the newspapermen as 1:he out­
line by Fred Gerhingcr and ont&gt; stan ding lineman on the field. Paw•
lowski did al l of the kidjng for
in the end zone by Bruce Hart.
These steals nipped many budding 01c Bulls. including one boot of
Villanova rallies. However. both of- 54 yards. His de fensive pla,y and a
lenses were relatively ine!Ceclual
timely interception of a C'ru.sader
throughout a game highlighted by , pass late in the game were in­
strumental in preserving thie dea doutstanding delen~ive play .
lock. The five foot eleven 1inch 1$
The big play of 01e game oc- pound junior from Lincoln Park,
curred when the UB fourth quarter
Michigan compensates for lack ol
touchdown drive appeared to be size by hustle, agressiveneiSs, an d
stopped. On a fourth and 16 on great ability.
the UB 25 yard-line , quarterback
Buffalo's All-~merican candidate
Stora dropped back to pass, looked . Gerry Philbin was named to the
and fired complete to scatback
All-East squa d tor the seoond time
Ryan who ran the ball to the Villanova 35. TheTD march covered
880 yards in 13 plays, plus 20 yards
lost in penalties.

l

If any stars were to be named.
Stora and Ryan would have to be
the ones. Ryan rushed !or 40 yards
in 9 c;arries. caugh t two passes
for 44 yards. ran 27 yards on one
punt retum, and raced 95 yards
on a kickoff return !or a TD. in
playing one of the great games
of his career.
Stora, who Coach OUenhamer
later called an All-American. rus)l­
ed for 42 yards in 14 carries and
completed 8 of 18 passes for 134
yards, while piling up 176 yards
total offense for the day. Needless
to say Gerry Philbin played another
great game, being named to th e
ECAC All-East team !or the second
time this year.

Coach OUenhamer was overjoy.
ed with the victory tha t "it was a
great thrill ," There is an old say­
ing about a victor feeling no pain .
Indeed there was no pain in lhe
UB dreSSing room last Saturady
afternoon.

The ticket office has
announced t hat no stu ­
dent will be admit ted to
t om o r row's fooj;ball
game or any other ·suc­
ceedin g ath let ic f1unc­
tion withou t an I.D.
card. Clailn checks will
not be recognized.
l.D . cards are needed
tod ay for admitta nce
to the fres hmen foot.ball
game.
The Baby Bulls, ·fr esh
fro m their 26-14 vi~tory
over Arm y, will face the
Red Raiders of Colgate
on Rotary field . G,un e
time is :it 2:00 . This will
be the only chance this
year to see the fros h
gridde rs at home . The
1963 schedule incl~1des
five games on the r6ad.

GERRY PHILIIN

GERRY PALOWSKI
this year. He did such a fine job
in controlling Villanova tackle Al
Atkinson (Atkinson ttlso made the
All-East earlier in the yea r ) tha t
UB roaches were able to concen­
trate their linemen at the other
spots that were more vulnerable
to the wildca t attack. Gerry's ear­
lier assignme nt to thi s team was
tor his outs tanding pla_y ag-.iinsl
Ohio University.

Other
athletes
ac-t•ompanyini:
Philbin in this w~k·~ honors 11re
such stars as Roger SUluhach al
Navy, Dick Cremin ol Boston Col­
lege, and Jack Stauch of Columbia .
Buffalo quartf'rback, John Stof,i,
rt&gt;ccivcd honorable mention to the
All-East squad. while end Gerry
La Fo untain received
honorab le
mention for sophomore of the week
honors.

Support
the BULLS
.:... and enjoy a delicious

GRIDIRON
·BRUNCii
EVERYSATURDAYAT

Perkins

PANCAKE

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Just 1231/i Ft. North of Sheridan
Open 7:00 A.M. Every Day~
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�Friday; October 11, 1963

SPECTjltUM

,AOI SIXTHN

! lfillllilfll,.llilll lillfll 111a:1
llfilllllllllllllll»lilllllmill il~~l lrllll•lllll-11

Spectru mt Sports

*

.

.

Sports C•irele
By ROCKYVERSACE

ill Jf ll!:!'!!!1111!,.,I

Intramur
ai!s

UB Cagers Quest

Mooners
RemainUndefeated

For Holiday Tour

Buff
aloWins
Despite
Costly
Penalties

The UB Bulls thought they were
in a tournament - the Chrilrtmas
Invitational at San Luis Obispo,
CaliComia, along with Bowling
Green, Fresno State, and California
Polytechnic - until a letter anived
bringing the unhappy newsthat the

RyanandStof
a Highligh
Offense
Once egain the U,B gridders supplied hometown foes
with plenty of thrills ,as they beat the Wildcats of Villa­
nova by a score of 14-7. Neither the Villanova athletes, nor
penalties (Buffalo had 159 vards in penalties), nor 1the clock
could stop the Bulls in their victorious effort. The win
definitely proved that the team possesses all of the ingre­
dients needed to win - good players, excellent coaching,
tremendous desire, and a dash of the Irish luck. The la.tter
must be included because any team that gives up 159 yards
in penalties, including two lengthy interference calls, and
wins, must be spor ting a few horseshoes.
During the last three games, the defense has shown
rock ribbed strength, while the offense has been incon­
sistent. 'However, if individual offensive stars are to be
named, this writer would ·have to cast his ballot for quar­
terback John Stofa and halfback Jim Ryan. This pair has
accounted for a large proportion of UB's rushing and passin~
yardage. Key plays by this senior duo at crucial moments
are becoming common occurrences.
Be it "Long John" or "Ice Man" , ,take your pick, the
lanky Stofa has earned himself a permanent spot in the
minds of all those who know him or know of him . Pure
courage and desire, plus a calm constitution are his attri­
butes and ,football is his game.

CRISPIN QUARTIUtlACK gains ground as Comer Court Crusher defender
closes in tor the taclde In Allenhurst League contest.

By ED ~tlZZO

was SAM, 6-0: Alpha Phi Omega
remained undefeated by humbling

The cross-&lt;:e&gt;
untcy• meet will be

Sig Ep, 20-14; A.I.I.E., also unde­
feated, won over Theta Chi. 6-0.

held on Oct. 21st. beginning al
4:00 p. m. at Gr,over Cleveland
Park. The course la approximntely
2 miles long. All ,~tries must be
in by Thursday, in the Clark Gym
office, Eacli 1eam is allowed an
unllmlted number ~If entries.
The Monday Allunhurst football
league ts beaded ~Y the Mooners,
the only undefeated 1anduntied team
In the league. ln 54~
place are
the Zygotes with :a 3-0-1 record.
Both the Zygotes and the Rams
(2·2) won by forfeilt. Other results

The standing are:

WLT
Alpha Sigma Phi
Alpha Phi Omega
A. I. I. E.
Sigma Alpha Mu

2 0 O
2 0 0
1 1 1

SigEp

021

Kappa Psi
Theta Chi

O 2 0
O 3 0

The standings
league are:

of the Thursi)ay

Allenhurst Stars 8, Upper Tower 0

W LT
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Beta.Sigma Rho
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Pi Lamba Tau
Phi Epsilon Pl
Gamma Phi
Phi Kappa Psi

Dwnbos 12, Cllalle11igers0

The leaders of ·the Wednesday
house plan league w:e: Hemingway
House, l-0; and Ir.,,lng House, 2-0.
Both James House 11ndTower have
a 2-1 record.
ln the Friday lea.gue, the Flying
Frosh squeaked by the Tigers by
the score of 2-0. n1e 4-Forty'a are
Ued for the league lead with the
Flying Frosh.

JIM ltYAN

John 's list of merits dating from high school is too
lengthy to list for such an al:'ticle as this . His football
career has had so many highlights that it is exceedingly
difficult to single out one event as being his greatest.
Stof,a wasted no time in assuming chores as Buffalo 's
number one quarterback. John came off the bench in the
first game of his sophomore year and stepped into the mun ­
ber one spot. The following week he engineered the 24-12
upset of Boston University. Always playing his best under
desperate circumstances, John never seemed 4o falter. Last
year. against Boston he heaved the winning touchdown
with 35 seconds left in the contest. This feat was sur­
passed against Delaware when John plunged for the go­
ahead goa l with only 34 seconds remaining .
Jim Ryan's father celebrated his birthday Saturday and
receJVed a fine performance as a present from his son.
Jim !iii candles for everyone concerned, and quickly ,' as
he rambled 95 yards for a touchd own on the opening kick­
off. Jim 's rushin g, punt and kickoff returns , an d pass re­
ceiving yardage amounted to th e amazing figure of 215
yards. Ryan continually came thro ugh with outstanding
efforts when needed.
Few people at the start of the season could visualiz e
Jimmy as being s uch an important player in ,the Bull of­
fense macfnne. Since his sophomore year, Ryan has played
.every backlield position except fullb ack. As a junior, he
was moved to quarterba ck, a position at which be had
absolutely no experience .
But Jim is now back wh ere he belongs - at tailbac k,
4Uld Jim 1s finally able to displtt): his true talents . Being
of smaller dimensions than most Buffalo backs, Ryan had
to work especially hard for -recognition.

2 0 0
2 0 0
1 0 1

1 1 0

o

1 o
O 2 0

O 2 0

Last weeks results were:AEPi 14.
Gamma Phi 0; Beta Sigma Rho 14,
Phi

El&gt;Silon
Pi O. Pi Lamba Tau

'nle1-els a two.way rolled over Phi Kappa Psi, »-0.

This past week Beta Sig tried to
keep in the undefeated ranks when
they went against Pi Larnba Tau.
Because of the 1:00 p.m. Tues­
day deadline for news articles, tbla
column will naturally be one·week
behind in league standings and in
game coverage.

tie tor third plac,e between the
Crisplns and the Comer C o u r t
Crushers. Last week:'s results were :
4-Forty's 12, Panthers 8
Crlpins 6, e»mer O0\lrt Crushers 6
Alph Sig

3 0 0

The battle o! undefeated learns
look place this past Tuesday be­
tween Alpha Sig and APO.

are:

JOHN no,A

Anybody need a good college
team tor a holiday ba.sketball
tournament?
U so, the place to call Is the
University of Buttalo.

continu,edto shut out

their opponents in tlbe Tuesday fra.
temlty league. Lairt week's victim

Work is actually a poor word to use in describing this
situation because Jim Ryan never considers football to be
work. It is somi~thing very important to him, something he
loves. And whEm a person is this devoted to a sport, any
effort expended is really another form of pleasure .
John Stofa and Jim Ryan are athletes both on the
field and off. Elut what makes the two -gridders a pair to
be proud of is that they are gentlemen. All students should
be rightfully proud of these athletes.

•

•

•

For the pa1st few days, many disappointed Yankee
lovers have bet:m producin g sundries of excuses for their
humbled team. But t)leir loss can be summarized by two
points . First, the Dodgers obviously have a superior pitch ­
ing staff. Secon1d, the Dodgers have had pressure on them
all year from other National League teams while the
Yankees encountered no serio us opposition. Any of the first
four or five National League teams could win t he pennant
at any given t:ime. A team emergin g number one from
this loop, especially after a year in whi ch the race was
very close, has to be a sharp , alert unit

•

•

•

Congratulations to the Buffalo Bills on the fine 12-0
sh utout over Oakland. Tbe win was long overdue . The way
Eastern Division team s are losing, Buffalo could still have
a chance for th-e title, or at least ·a high finish .

toomament had been canceJled.
It seems that the tournament
sponsors, Berry Broadalsters, Inc.,
of San Luis Obispo, neglected to
allow sufficient for Cal Poly' s ad·
ministration to clear the necessary
arrangements, and the "touma •
ment" resolved ltselt lo a case of
having players and basketballs but
no place to play.
All of which leaves the Bulls,
who for the past six months had
been anticipating a holiday trip to
Calltomia, all dressed up with ~
where to go.
James E. "Jim" Peelle. UB atb•
letic Director, said that the can•
cellatlon was a terrific letdown ft&gt;r
Coach Len Surfustini and bis staff
and the squad member.I, but want•
ed to make it clearly understood
that UB acted in good faith and
is not responsible for the situation
which he termed "unfortunate" .
Peelle recognizes the fact that
is rather late to be booking teams
for holiday basketball tournaments
but said his door is open to any
leglllmate otter.

WBFOSportNews
Where does he come from? How
does he choolie where he's going?
What are bis interests! Listen In
tonight at 6: 15, over WBFO, FM88.7, to ''UB Sports Highlights" .
when Wally Blatter sits down with
John Stofa and Don Gilbert and
brings out 'behind the scene' qUes­
tion&amp;regarding (.'Ollegequarterback

in action.
Just about every type q11estion
you have ever asked about school•
boy quarterbacks will be brought
up and answered by the two stars
from the University of Buttalo foot•
ball team.
Preceeding the interview will be
a preview on the Marshall Univer­
sity Big Green , the Mid-American
Conference powerhouse that will in•
vade Rotary Field tomorrow.
Be sure to listen in tonight and
every Friday to "UB Sports High·
Ughts" over WBFO, your campus ,

radio station.

Hockey Meeting
The UB Hockey team will hold
an Organiz.atiooalMeeting in Room
248 Norfon Tuesday . All interest ed
pleyers from last year and oew•
comen a: : urged to attend this
meeting.
Last year, the team's first sea­

son,

remarkable progress

was

made, including a 3-2 victory over
the Finger Lakes ConferenceCham·
pions, Brockport State e»Uege
Coach Karl Ballard hopes for a
banner year for UB's newest tearn

Official practice for
the freshmen and var·
sity bas ketball teams
will begin Tuesday. Var·
sity practice is at 3:30
p.m:, while the frosh
begm at 7:00 p .m.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STUDENTSENATE
COMMITTEE
Pog1 Sftfli)

or ...

l'Ollll AT

(

avnuo

VILLANOVA
PREVIEW

SPECTRUM

REPORTS
(Stt

mnn:IUlft'

' ll'Aft

•

VOLUME 14

(S, , P09t Fi/ tH'II,

BUFFALO NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1963
7

J

No. 5

Student Senate PresentsTwo JacobHyman
, Law
Homecoming
Committee
School
Dean
,
Resigns
ConstitutionalAmendments
Am endment /_
POWER TO ESTABUSB LOWER COURTS
Co-6ponsored by Robert P. Finkelstein and Michael Lappin
"The Stude nt J udiciary shall be empowered to esta blish
lower courts at its own discre tion. The judges of these courts
shall have the same qualifications as the judges of the Stu­
dent Judiciary and th ey shall be chosen by a committee com­
posed of the Student Judiciary and the Dean of Students,
subject to the approval of a simple majority of Student Sena­
tors presen t at a regular meeting of the Stude nt Senate. The
purpose , procedure, and structure of s;lid courts shall be de­
termined by a major ity vote of the judges of the · Student
~iciary.
'J'he term of the lower courts s hall end with the
term of the establishing court."
Amendment prepared by J ustices Frank Alessi, Terence Gere
ace, Allen Falk, P aul Schulman and Joan Wilkins.

Amendmen t II
NEW PROCEDUREFOR REPLACINGSENATORS

Co-sponsored by Michael L. Shapiro and Roberit P. Finkel•
stein
"In the case of the permanent absence of any divisional
Studen t Senator, a replacement shall be ei.~cted by a major ­
ity vote of t he full day-time stude nts of the divisional deficie­
nt in representationhvoting in the special election. Two spec­
ial elections will be eld, one on the first Monday in October,
in the event of any sena tors resigning prio r to that date, and
one on the first 'Monday in December , in the event of any
senators res igning between the October election and the De­
cember date.
"The length, type and amount to be spent in regards
l&lt;, this special campaign will be restricted far beyund the
spring general election campaign. The exact ~tent of this
campaign will be recommended bf ,the Elections Committee
of the Studen t Sena te to the ful St udent Senate, and the
extent will be appi&lt;ovedby a majority vote of those voting
in the Senate at the time of the discusion. "

*

*

*

The Senate will vote on these amendments October 8. All
students are invited to this meeting. Let yo,urselves be heard!

Freshman Class Completes
Election Of New Officers
BJ TRUDY STERH
Tile Freshman Clasa Council eloo.
ted their otflcers at a special meet·
ing TueBday night
The new president of tbe fresh­

man class ls I&gt;an1alSilber. Mr.
Silber ls a gnuluate of Music and
Art High School In Manbatten, New
York, where be eanied an Impress­
iv e record as a lee.der In student
government. He was tbe president
of bis section al .Music and Art for
live and a half terms. He aleo
served as Olainnan of The Man­
hatten Cound1 fur two yeaIIJ. The
Manhatten Council la a body of

studeo'repffllelltlng

all tbe student
government.a ol tbe -city's h i g h
scbob.

As p~t
of tbe Freshman
Class Council Mr. Silber will bead
anmeelinp of the 00Wldl and be
In charge of all suJ&gt;.conunltteesof
the council.
Elected as the Vice-president of
the council was Clinton E. Deveaux
!rom Queens, N. Y. Mr. Deveaux
graduated from Andrew Jacboa

Jacob 0. Hyman, Dean of the
University of Buffalo Law School
resil:l,ledhis position. H&lt;&gt;W"1er,
he
will continue to serve as dean witil

Final preparations for this ex­
citing and event-tilled weekend ol
October 17-19th,have been released
by the HomecomingCommittee Wl•
der the chairmanship of Carolyn
Dussing. The following Is the cal·

In his letter ot resignation, Dean
Hyman asked the University ad­
ministration to accept his resigna­
tloo !IOme time between now and
June 30, 1964. He stated thathe
Wished to devote more time to
thinking and writing about the law.
The letter of resignation, address..
ed to President Clifford C. Furnas,
mentioned that "I want to express
again my appreciation tor lbe sup,
port which )'OU have given to the
Law School in your years as Olan,

I

Th11
,.. ay: Football movies ot
past u.a games, sponsored bythe
Rc.:reation Committee, will be
shown from 3:00.S:15at the COJ\­

ference Theater.
Fr i d a y , Oct. 18: At 1:00
endar of activities preceedlng and contest
l)Ollters,displayed In and
including the actual Homecoming around Norton Union, will be
weekend, whose theme this yee.r judged. At 8:00 the act u n l
Is "Broadway Billboard";
weekend will kick ot1 with a spir­
Today: A general meeting for ited pep ra1J¥,
particiJ)Bled1n by
au queen applicants will be held students and alumni alike. At this
In the Conference Theater at 4;00. l11llY,
beginning at the Donn area

I

cellor, both In Its struggle to do
the best with limited relOUrCel and
nowin its reorientation toward 11ew
goals."

Dean Hyman bas been Dean of
tile Law SchoQI tor more than ten
years since bls appointmentin 1953.

President Furnas commented up,
on accepting the reslgnatfon: "Dean
Hyman's interests In scholarlYplll'­
suits have directed him to this de­
cision after several months of con•
COMMlff H-5NtN
slderation and discussion. We at ' HOM■COMINO
Duul119,J, Goldl11,I, Ai.,c11
11dtr
, N.
the University are greatly Indebted
M. Vowl11
1(tl.
to h1mfor his years of service de­
A representative from the Ferrel
voted to the development of the
School and are greatly appl'Edative SChool ol charm will discuss the
type oC clothes and atutude exof his willingness to remain until
I peeled of all queen candidates dlll'­
a successor can be found.
ing lhe week-lonk campaign.
W • d n • • cl• y: The preliminary
judging of queen applicants will
take place in the Multi-purpose
roomat 3:30. Alumni of SUNYAB
will judge this event, after which
coffee will be seNed, At this time,
ten finalists for queen will be se­
lected,
SetutdaJ: The U.B. vs. Marshall
football game at Rotary Field will
be followed by the presentation or
the ten queen finalists at a Plg.
skin Party in the Ratskellar ,
Mollday: Applications ror the
poster contest are due. nus con,
test, which will also center around
the Homecomingtheme, "Broadway
Billboard," is open to any campus
organization of tull-time day stu­
dents. A general meeting will In­
struct all poster cootestants on the
rules and requirements necessary

DEANJACOB HYMAN

Why Not?
Anyone interested in
joining the staff of the
Spectrum should attend
the general staff meet­
ing this afternoon at
4:00 p.m. in the Spec•
trum office, 355 Norton
Union. No experience
~ necessary in the field
of journalism.
Applications are also
now being accepted to
fill the position of As­
sistant Business Mana•
ger. Interested persons
should oontaot Pat Lau­
ner, 355 Norton, in ,the
Business Office.

FROSH.CLASS
COUNCIL
OPFICIERS

ly BARIAIA STRAUSS

Students who have grad uated from the University of
Buffalo will return as alumni ,to the State Unh·ersity of New
York at Buffalo for Homecoming, 1963.

a successor can be appointed.

Higb School. His past services in­

clude tbe Vice-presidencyof Queens
Regional N,C,C.J., Vice-president
Queens • Borough Student Council,
Vice-president Junior Board ol Di­
reclol'll, OlildService .Leegue,and
Treasurer ot bi.a ~gb school.
As tbe Freshman Class Council's
plans stand today, Mr. Deveaux, a.a
vice-president, will represent the
frellhman class OD the Student Sen­
ate, II and when that Is made poai­
ble and carry out the duties of tbe
President In emergencies.
1be treasurer of the COUDcllis
Steven Becker, a graduate of Buf ­
falo Bennett High Sc.bootHla duties
will include tonnulattna the c.oun­
c11a budget.
Rena Fisch was elected as Secre­
tary. She Is a Bennett High School
graduate. At Bennett Mias Fisch
served a.a secretary ofthe Student
Council and The Inter-High School
Student Council. She waa also the
secretary ol her graduating cJaas
and a member ot lhe National
Hoaar Society. .
(Olllt. 0a Pare3)

PreparesGalaWeekend

Effedive June1964

left te rftht
: frNh ClllllrfflH C.
Jofmtton; rMr; A, Yu,ur , S. Pllldl,

tutd purading to Rotary Field, the
quee11 will be crowned and the
p011tercontest 1'1Mer wtU be an­
nounced. Candidates tor "Ugly
Man" contest is sponsot'l'dby APO
Service fraternity.
S. tvrd11
y, Oct. 19: The U.B. Bulls
will play ho$ts to Boston Univer­
sity, and lo all tbeir loyal allUMI
and students at 1:00: An ex­
travagant hall-time program 1'ill be
cllma.red by the appearance or the
Homecoming queen, fiown onto the
field aboard a helicopter. She will
rec:.~ve a bouquet of floweJ:s and a
kiss from · President Furnas. The
weekend will swing to a perft-ct
ending with ihe Homecomingdance
al Glen Ca.sino,saturday night from
9-1:00 a.m. Jim Battistoni and his
orcheslra will provide the music.
and cost is $3.50 per couple. Al
the dance, tropbles will be present­
ed to the queen, the poster winner,
and to the winner o1 the "UgJ.y
Man" contest.
An enonnou.s amount of effort
has gone into lnsurlhg the smooth­
running success or Homecoming
Weekend1963, 8.'l is evident by the
maey activities scheduled. Attend

for an eligible poster. The queen
finalists may be seen on ''Meet the
Millers" al 1:00 on ch. 4.
WodftNdilJ: The Homecoming
queen and her court l¥fil be dlolen
ns n\811)' ot these events as
at a cl06ed Jud&amp;:lng.
ate able.

)'Oil

Unive rsity Colleg e Students
Begin Reg istra tion Oct. 14
Registration (or next $emest'er UC Receptlonl,t In Dletendorl J14
ror all Unlvendty College Students at least one week io advanceof ihe
(both Freshmen and Sophomore11
)
above scheduled limes. Al IJils
b e g I o registratlOo October 14 time, the ~ Will give the
wbose last names begin with studeJlt reglmadon mrdl and "
the letters designated below will
11stof iOstnlcticaato lolJow I.a th,

see

their advilers, plao their pro,
grams and reei,tter for COW'leS OD

the to1.1ow1nr
da.Ya
:
Oct. 14 through Oct. 18 N, 0, T, U, V, X, Y.

E, I,

Oct. 21 through Oct. l!S-P, Q, R.
Oct. 28 through Nov. 1-G , H.
Nov, 4 through Nov. &amp;-6
.
Nov. 11 through Nov. 15-C. D.
Nov, 18 through Nov. 2S-A, B.
Dec. 2 through Dec. S-K, L.
.Dec. 9 throulh Dec. JJ-F, W, Z.
Dec. 16 througb ~- 20-M. J ,

subsequent

registratloa ~

O.T. ltudenta and P.T. studeota
will maJfe appointments with M!'9I
Greenman and Mias Heap dlrecily ,
Students will bn.neall tbeir res1.stratlonmaterial with them wbm
they
lo tbeir advbera at the

,.rt

-tgnrd
times for Uleir pn,cram
plAMlng conteraice . At thia liml-,
the atudent, with tbe advleer'I ap,.
proval, will select bia COW'9el for

the COll\lnc
semester . 'nils meet•
Ing CBD &amp;l8o be Uled to evalua~

the .nadent'I ~ to datt
AU Unive.rsll)' Co,l.legeStudtftta and dl8c\lll o(ba pe:rtiDml im,.
Will make an appointment with the demlc matten.

�PAGE TWO

Friday, Odober 4, 1963

Travis Adds Six New Members
To Drama an~ Speech Dept. F~culty
Professor Stanley 0 . Travis, heaa
ol the Depanment ol Drama and
Sl)C('Chat the Stale University of
New York at Butlalo, has added
SIX new members lo the depart­
mental faculty. Or. Ernest C.
Thompson, Jr., has been 11ppomted
as;1stant pro fessor. Mr. Thomas
Watson and Mr. Michael H. Pros­
ser have joined Ute stall with the
rank or lecturer . New instructors
are Mr. Terry H. Ostermeier, Mr.
Thomas Ben.son and Mr . Donald
Wlldy, Professor Travis announces
that with the faculty increase, his
department will expand the under­
~rJduatc program and develop a
new graduate program In Orama
and Speech,
Dr. Thompson has bc,!n named
t.'OOrdmator of public address and
director of curriculum d~velop­
ment. Rece1v1Ilghis B.A Cromtfie
State Umvcrslly of Iowa 11nd his
M.A. from lbe Stnle Univel'sity of
Washington, Dt·. Thompson com­
pleted Jus Pb .D at the Univcrs11y
, While work­
of Minnesota in l!Ni&lt;l
ing on his Ph.D., he served as an
UlStructor at the Univensity of Min­
nesota and later at Purdue Univer­
sity. He taught a Boston Univer­
sity from 1960to 1962and headed
the Department of Speeeh at Par­
sons College during the last aca­
demic year. Among his publica­
llons are articles In the Southern
SpNChJOIIMUII
, T.ocl•y
•• Speochand
t h e Aasoc:i
• llon of Socond•ry
School Prlnclp11l1Journal, His spe­
cial interests include experimental
studies · In speeeh. Dr. and Mrs.
Thompson have one daug hter,
Alexis Cassandra.
Mr. Walson received bis B.A.,
M.A., and M.F.A. degrees from
Western Reserve University in

Cleveland. The Watsons have two
children, Use and Susan. He is a
veteran of the Unlted States Army .
Yrom l!M to l!bl he was the de­
signer and technical director of
the Kalamazoo Civic Players. From
1$5 to 1960, he was an instructor
in drama and speech al the Uni­
versity of Delaware. Later at the
Connt&gt;clicut College School of
Dance, Mr , Walson served as its
technical director and stage man­
ager. In February, 1960, his . art!•
cle "Three Theatres of Arch Lau­
terer" appeared in the Journal of
the AIA \American Institute or Ar•
chitectsl.
Mr Prosser received his B.A. and I
M.A. from Ball State College • in
Muncie, Indiana . He is complet•
ing his Ph.D. dissertation at the
University or Illinois. From 1960I
to 1963, he taught Latin and speech
al the Urbana Junior High School,
Urbana. Illinois. Because of his
classical backgrolllld, he will de­
velop courses in classical rhetori­
cal and speech theory both at the
undergraduate and at the gradu­
ate level. During the summer of 1
1962, as a recipient oC a U1tiver­
sity or Illinois grant, he studied and
l'Ollccted materials on Stevenson's
Unlled Nations s~
at the
United Stales Missioli, the United
Nations, and at the Sta te Depart­
ment, Mr . and Mrs. Prosser have
a dau ghter, Michelle Ann.
Mr. Ben.son, a graduate teac hing
assistan t, and late r an acting in­
structor al Cornell University, is 1
completing his Ph .D. dissertatio n ,
at Cornell. He received his A.B. j
(rom Hamilton College In l~. and
his M.A. from Corne ll in 1961. In
nddiUon to his me m bership in the 1
!Contd. on page 4)

Yaffe Appointed

at Children's Hospital

A director has been appointed to at the Harvard Medical ·School from
administrate the largest s i n g I e 1956.
grnnt ever awardt'&lt;I to the State
He holds A.B. and M.A. degrees
University of New York ;it Buf!alo.
from Harvard and lhe M.D. from
Dr . Eumner J . YaUe , has ~n
the University of Vermont School
named program director or the 11ew of Medicine , where he graduated
Children·s Resenrch Center at Chil­
in 1954.
dren 's Hospital , 11 was annotmced
His fellowshipS and honors in­
clude: Ul50-52, research fellow in
today by Dr. Mitchell l. Rubin ,
pharmacology , University or Ver­
head of the Department or Pedia­
trics at thC' University.
mont College o{ Medicine; 1956-57,
The nPw cenlC'r was made possi­
hlc by a seven-year, $2.3 million

Fulbright Scholar , England; 1957.
Fellow. Massachusetts Heart Ass'n:
1958.Fellow. American Heart Ass'n;
1960, Advanced Research Fellow.
American Heart Ass'n: and 1962,
Lede rle Medical Faculty Award re­
cipie nt,
He is a member of 10 profession­
al Societit's and the author of co­
author or more than 20 articles in
professional journals.

OPEN EVERYNIGHT TILL 9:30

DR. EUMNER YAFFE
grant Crom the NatJonaJ lnstilules
11fHealth , awarded to the Universi­
ty in June 1962.
lt provides (or an eight-bed unit
and r&lt;'lated equipmen t and labo ra­
tories for the multi - disciplinary
study ot ch ildren's diseases.
Dr . Yaffe was an assistant pro­
fessor of pediatrics at Stanford
University from 1960 and was pro­
moted to associat&lt;' professor this
year , short ly before he accepte d
the Buffalo post.
Prjor lo his Stanlord teaching
post , he was a tC'aching fellow and
later a research fellow in pediatrics

EVERYBODY 'S TALKING

ABOUT

BOB DYLAN

" I can feel it , but Dylan can say it. He's phenomenal." - Joan Baez
"T he most important folk singer today."- Peter, Paul and Mary

it 's th e rag e for guys 'n ga ls!

SLI CKEROO
ru bb e r iz ed r ain yday
k nee - le n gth parka

CL 1779 /C S a ~79•

" Dylan perf o rms w,th zest and
w,11
"- Saturday

,i':~,~:ew
rHISI

5.50
• guarantee d water proof 'n windp roof !
• Goodyear rubber. backing throughout I
• underarm ventilating eyel ets f~.r comfo rt I

The "Slic)ceroo" has created a storm of approv­
al! Everybody wants one because it is so prac­
tical, so versatile, so dowriright inexpensive!
It's a natural at the footba ll stadium, or cam­
pus. when camping or out shoppi ng! You'll
love the extra pr otecti on of the drawstring
hood, the snap·clos ing sleeves, 3 big pockets .
Olive green, red , yellow.

Cl 1986/CS 8786•

lndudei the hit "Blowln ' In the

.__,
Wind"

G•l' s Slrn:

Jr. Petite J to 1J

Junior 5 to 15

ON COLUMBIA RECORDS~

MJ._s

•to11

Guy's Sl11H: Young Man's U to 42

----------

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HERTEL, AMHERST, BOULEVARD MALL
WALDEN, SENECA , TRANSITOWN, LOCKPORT

�PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Friday, Octc?btr4, 1963

Civi,I Rights Rally Is Focus of Much Comment
ly LARRY FRANKEL
A crowd ol over 500 gathered on
the lawn lacing Norton terrace lasl
Friday to view the Civil Rlgt,t~
Rally. The audience demonstrated
a "c w1osily to see just'wbat it was
all about."

Negroes are fighting tor natural
rights . • . social custom doesn't
enter into the picture."
Three UB students, Monte Dunn,
Jack Wooster, and Ed Guld, expres­
sed the Importance of singing to
lbe civil rigbl-5
movementby play-

"The practices ol Binningham,"
going -on here in
Buffalo to a lesser degree, specific­
ally in the housing and employment
prai;tices ot this town."
Lee said, "are

"Every- - black or
11
,..,._.w.
teday'1 altvatlen.
white -

fw

John Traylor, chairman o1 the
Civil Rights Committee, Initiated
the speeches with a brief descrip­
tion or the significance ol the dem•
onstrntion. "We protest the Bir•
mingham bombing with a sense of
moral indignation at the affront
wbich the action presents upon the
basic constitutional principles ot
these United States, as well as with
sympathy for those who are most
directly Involved in the effect of the

Ornum ·Receives

lenge us ... an American purpose.
Silence I~ a given t-onsent to all
the things th.al plague us."
A moment of meditation In me­
morary or the deceased children
was then observed, followed by
more Civil Rights songs
When asked about the eUectlvness
of the rally, J ohn Traylor said,
"You can't say how eUective , It
was . . . However, I am very
pleased with the attendance and
enthusiasm shown at the demon­
stration ,"
Public opinion was varied. One
Negro, Floyd Bennett, voiced his
feelings, "This demonstration will
make people reflect upon the situ­
ation and realize what is needed.
I am a living part ol Ibis fight tor
treedom!"

Electric Award
A Buf/aJo senior majoring in
eloctrical cmgmeering at the State
University ol New York at Burtalo
received the Westrm El t'&lt;:tric Fund
Scholarship Wednesday, October 2,
at U:00 a.m .
The award was presented
lo
James H. Van Omum, 615 Goodyear
Avenue, by three f('presentatives .of
the Western Ek....tric Company in­
cluding Mr. Oo1mld Allen. assistant
supcrtntendenl ol college relaoons.
New York City; Mr . DoMld W
Thomas, Buffalo plant manager ;
and Mr. Leon P. Hauck , Buffalo
engineering departm ent clllel . Dcrin
E . Arthur Trabant, School ot En •
i;tineeting at the Unlverslty , wa.,;At
the presentation ,

crime."

I "This demonstration," Mike Co- '
I hen further stated, "is in the name
!

of all students.

!

to

be htant."

FCC ElectionResults

CIVIL RIGHTS RALLY

We have • rt,iit

{Contd. from page ll

EltMr you're for segregation or
againat It, . . . If yov're aplnat
it then lhow youraelf . . . Don't be
The first speaker, Father Boll•
man, psychology profe550r a n d Mlchlel R...
the Boat Athen, fooi.d by platltvd... Every- mud
,nd lleWfn In T1lt Wind. The audi­ do •• much •• he can to recrNhl
assistant rector of Saint Phillps
the lmave that our country Is tti.
Episcopal Church, spoke in place
ence was slow to join in at the
of Father Curry who was unable
start, but as the songs picked up belt .. , Withoutevery American••
participation, WE CANNOTOVER•
10 attend. ' 'The bombing,'' be said,
momentum , so did audience parti­
COME.''
"must be looked upon with objec•
cipation.
livity: OUtof every suffering comes
Reverend Turnipseed concluded
a greater good . . . but there is
Mr. Donald Lee, a member o1 the event. ·•onthat Sabbath when
no human sin which can be trans• the NAACPor Buffalo, and. Rever­ lour Negro girls met their death,
end Spencer Turnipseed, an Alaba­ the whole country was in the posi­
formed in to goodness."
ing a selection o! songs typifying
the Freedom Marchers: most prom•
.
lnent being We Shall Oven-

ma minister,
speak.

"The person or persons who threw
that bomb, lmew that there were
people in the church, and must be
respo nsible for that act . . . This
ls a i;ymbol of the guilt o! the
South which will meet every South­
day,"
erner face to face every
emphasized Father Bollman. "The

were the next to

Mr. Lee quoted a portion or a
song from Sollfh Pacific, "You've
got to be taught to hate and !ear.
You've got to be taught from year
to year. It's got to be drummed in
your dear little ear. You've got to
be t-arefully taught . • . "

tion of having committed a crime
, . . U there is a disease in Ala­
bama, il is not a localized disease.
Birmingham is a symbo l of ab­
sen tee ownership,"
"The time has oome in the world,
when one man sufiers, we all suHer
. . . At last there is emerging on
the horizon a cause that will cbal-

The new secretary wlll be n:&gt;$·
ponsible {or the minut es of all meet­
ings and any rorrospondcnc-e of the
Freshmnn Class Council.

t:tected as .Memberto the Exocu­
tive Board was Rosa Lynn Broth •
1mm. It will be Miss Bt-othmnn's
job to ad as a sounding board Cor
the entire Cou11Cilwithin the Execu ­
tive Board or the Council. She Is
a.l6o a Bennett High School gradu­
ate. She was the secretary of The
National Honor Society, a member
of The English Honor
Society.
French Honor Society, The Student
Cow1cil and The Junior Cow1cil on
World Affairs. Miss Brothman also
ncted ns Associate Editor or the
school newspaper and the yearhook.

their pooitions . They h lll'C already
started a pro gram 1h11twill bcne!it
. The Pee·
and inte~s1 their cla.'\S
trum extends Its hardi est ~'Oogratu•
lations to these people .

WORTHLESS. .. PRICELESS

When lhc t,;l'Cllt pamll'r P a Ut
Gauguin died ninny of his p1unllng11
were sold for ll'SS than a dollar
Some were not C\'Cn Cl.lnsJdcri'd
worth selling and were duml)('d inrn
the sea in what the October Read•
t' r's Digest S!lys is known as the
million-dollar mistuke. Toduy n
tyyical Gauguin t'Ommands a pr ier
or many thousands o! dollars: ont•
As you can see, the oflicers o(
pulntinc brought th1-eehundren six
the Freshman
Council are all • ty-nine thousand dollars al a 1959
more than weU qualified to Cullill auction.

aass

THERE IS STILL TIME
TO REGISTERFOR

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�SPECT'LUM

PAGEFOUR

REFLEClrIONS

THE SPECTRUM

ly JIHMY TAYLOll

student 11cw,paper ot lht State t1hlve~lly ot New York
at Butr•lo . PublloaUon omce at Norton JJaU. UnlverwttyCampu.r, Bur­
ra10 u , N. \' P\lbll11\ed weekly frOm ll\e laurt week Qt Seplember to \be
cxffpt lot elWII perlOCIJ, Th&amp;nkl,1VIAI, Chrlltmu
and !:&amp;Mr
EDl1'0Jl,.JN-CKIEF
- AJUfOLD s, MAZVl'l
Ntw, Edtlt\r , , . , ~rtln
Kriegel
B1.111lnessMan~tr
,
Pat La1111er

:J'I\, Mtkt•l

lUlwetllInMay
,

~::~~ 13/,igf
, ~!.':!~~•~[!~

spori. l&gt;.ct11or , , , Rocky Versace
Ott lcc Man-,o r
. Karen santon l
11"41~ A4vi,, or. Wllll•m Slem•rtn11

t:;~!~rJl101:'~'
"~':''
A~':id
1~f!
Copy Editor
,
Marcia Cooper
5

1

Friday, October4, 1963

c1rcu1a uon M1r . . . Lou Healn1er
Fin . Advisor, ThomAa Haenle , Jr.

Oener&amp;I lll•tl• VICIIJ B111elskt, Lorn~ Wa)lnch, A . Linda Leventhal, Ron
K.\Jnln•k~ Vi c Men,n , Anne Mitnle, Martin Kdeyel, Rena Fisch, Barbara

Note: MYcolumn this week ()Oll­
sists of two open letters. They
are printed together because I !eel
that they are tnteg1'ally tela led ,

1
TO: Mr. Bob Mllch., author
of "The Orcus"
Dear

Mt. Milch,

J not1ce in your &lt;:Olumnot !&amp;st
week Iha! through ;Your 8.MO)'ing
''persona[' you hav'e ta ken aev•
era.I pot sh&lt;&gt;taat a J~t many ol
the Ulings 1n wblch I believe and,
indeed, at me. I •realize that J

1
0:t::•~~:~~1: Nifh~rr,
t1~~~":r,
t~fi"~~r:;t:t:.•
•~~~{esih?J:f!ln~
thA
u,w11 AJ•n tewman,
Barbar11 Chapman,
Joanie .Lancaster, Claudia

Kowa1, 'l'NOy Stem, ttO&amp;&lt;,mary Morone Lawrence Fl-enkel Susan Licker,
RnM1c w111nn. Allee Ollranacr, Don Leary, Ron Lynn Brolhman, Ray

t.:raw1 o n1, JAne Sommer, i..nn l,.cvy, Robert Mil ch. Jeremy Taylo_r, K~n
Mlk(' Sultantk, Ci\rlJllne C1mnlnghom, M.ary Ellen •co•tl'OI,
1.11unn Ko1n1t&lt;11n,Muc1 a Ann Ornulak, Fra11 Marturt, Helen Blkotl, ~tty
t.:A•J&amp;tny, Mar,v A11n w ~rtcnbur1, Allan Melome4 Al4n ~holom .

Chlrko,

f{fJ~.i':
.P\fJ'~~u!':n
"!~la&lt;:.~ld~~''lat':.'l \a~•v

~

".ft\!•

•ru,

Pnmt'II

Reid. R&lt;&gt;Mrt

Enter&lt;!d •• lltc.ond ch,.u mallet February 9, 1961, at
he Potl Ortlct at BuUalo , N . Y., und e r the Act ot M~rch
. 1879, Acc eptance tor 1i1allln11 at a • ~clal rate of post.
10 provided tot 111Se ction 1103. Act ot October !I, 1917,
au 111or11.c11
Febru a ry 9, 1951.
Subsc,rlpUon '3 ,00 ~ , yea,,
clrcula tlQn 0000.
Repre sented tor 11at1onotodvcrtl,Jnr by National Advert111n11 Service , lnc, ◄211 Mo&lt;ll5on Ave ., Now York, N . Y.

Editorials
Amendments Considered
The Student Senate will soon vote on two proposed
amendments to the Students AssociationConstitution. The
first amendment under consideration provides for the es•
l.ablishmentof lowercourts relative to the Student Judiciary,
and the second amendment involves a new procedure for
replacing Senators who,for a variety of reasons, may be per•
manently absent from the Student Senate.
The Judiciary is .the least publicizedbranch of the Stu•
dent Association.Acting in closedsession, for the most part,
the Judiciary has the power to subject students to social pro­
bation, fine i:;tudents,withdraw recognition of a student or•
ganitation, remove students from active participation in stu­
dent activities, and recommend that students be suspended
or expelled to the Committeeon Student Behavior.
Students of this Universityshould appreciate the work•
ings of the Judiciary, for before this peer group the student
ts given ample opportunity to present his case. Based upon
the principleof due process, actions of the Student Judiciary
have been consistentlya credit to the Student Association.
The Student Senate should vote favorablyfor the expan•
sion ot the Judiciary. Though Jt would be well that fewer
cases would be brought before the body, invaniablythere is
much worJ&lt;to be done. Such increased responsibilitiesas ad•
ministering ~he disposition of traffic violations on campus
almostmake the expansiona necessity.
The second amendment lo be considered recommends
that two special elections be held to £ill vacant divisional
seats oo the Senate. Previous to this amendment, new Sena­
tors had been elected by the Senate itself. Though the elec­
toral process will be more cumbersome, it insures that the
student voicewill be heard and precludes politicalhassles on
the Senate floor by the two parties. The Spectrum also ap•
Pl'Ovesof lb.is amendment and hopes thal the Senate will
ratify it.

·civil Rights and Students
Last Friday's civil rights rally was an orderly demon­
stration with which The Spectrum fully sympathizes with
and wholeheartedlyapproves of. Because not all students
gathered at the same Ume,it is difficult to assess just how
many persons did attend. One thing is clear, however, and
that 1&amp; lb.at the battle Corequal rigbts and opportunities must
be fougb.lfor by everyone.
Years ago the reality of equal citizenship was but the
war-&lt;:ry
of e&lt;1
ucated Negroes and morally rebellious whites.
The U.B. demonstration, as well as others throughout the
nation,proves that the Negro cause is truly an American
rcwolutioo.
Thou&amp;hthe student body may be criticl.iedfor lacking
enlb11slaarnand a sense of urgency toward the problem, The
Spec,trµm believesthat tho mere presence Of so many stu­
deota faanindlc:atlontbat au ls not as it once wu.

t.'Ollldn
't prove 1h11 accusation In
oourt, but U you are going to hide
behind a facade of legalism as well
as behind a satiric stJ1lewhichbolds
you responsible tor ~10thlng - then
it will be imJ)Ol!ISlblE!
to have any
meaningful dialogue whatsoever.
You make a lew 1~ points; I
hllve no great respect tor "bar stool
liberals" mysell; hoiwever, I feel
that YOllrposition ls essentially In­
defensible. You let fly al those
who write "angry ]letters 10 the
editor and tlo nothing, yet that ts
exactly what you are doing your.
sell, except that you cannot even
be held responsible !or your own
angry letters, since :you hide .)'Our
attacks In carica tuNis, 1 tor one
would call any action for which one
cannot be held responsible an 1,..
~Me
action,

So , . , I chal...
np 1111t"-

YOII•Mt, MIich,

liehlnd the ,...
tectf111 of y011r rilllluulew Jllth,.,
te

tht

0.eted

lnMCtnt (w 11 i..

mertlyn U~ot, ldlttt) andface
tht luw you ~f
flaw ratMd,
I chat...,_ you 101 Ust In your
next column those things which
you belle'Vein suflkientl,y to defend
honestly. I will list those things
In which l havecomEtto believe £n
rny next column; I 1i:ha.Uengeyou
to plat-e yours along side and de­
bate lbem in a spirit of honest In,
twclla"fl (one of the things In
which J happen to bE!lieve!)
Sincere ly ,
Jer'l!my Taylor

P.S. It Isn't a laundleybag - it's
just a bag I carry laundry tn ,
&amp;0melimes.

a

T~ : 'fhe organlzen. ot and partlci•
pants in the Civil Rlg:hts Rally

Dear Sirs:
I watched, with great interest,
the idea of the civil Jights rally of
grow trom a con­
la.st Friday,
cern to a reality. !However, the
final product was hardl,YIndicative
or lhe Importance ol the Issue and
the depth ol feeling li:1volved.Most
ol the participants appeared to be
more interes ted in seeing their
fri~,
proving that ''some of their
best ftlends were Negroes" and sit•
ting in the sun and singing. The
speakers seemed to be more In­
terested in plugging their own re­
ligious point ot view,, 1n not say.
Ing anything controversial
(note
that everyone came out strongly in
favor ol God, The American Way,
and the right of evl~r)'Olleto be
tree, sooner or later, provided that
our social and politiolll institutions
were not damaged , altered or even
questioned) than in s1&gt;eakingabout
the horror of the Binnlngham
bombings and the r:!lllcld society
which spawned them.. They were
trying to convince II handful of
that " Civil
already-convincedpt'l(&gt;l?le
Right, Are a Good Thing".
Cfvll Rl9fdt It I d... a- •
tfllt c.ti.,. Cafflpull :No one needs
to be OOl'lvillced.
WhaI needs to be
done now Is to ret your hands
dirty, to -9repare whiite neigbbol'­
boodl to accept the Negro house
owner, to wwii to abcltlishdis&lt;:rimi-'
natory bl.ring in the town (economic
hoycotta- bow many Negroes does
C.... employ in a oapacl~ .other
than III llilhwasher or busboy!),
to examine the voting: recorda and
atatemeata of political candidates
and elect tboee who will work to
presei-ve freedom and extend equal•
ity. But nillleii like the one last
Friday we don't need..

S1noerel.Y
..

Jel'em,y Taylor

ofettel'6
lo Ile Llitor
To

Ult!

E&lt;Jitor:

We are , working tor these pro­

As chairman•of the Convocations
Committee of the Student Senate,
J felt that your attack on mY com•
mlttee was unwarranted in view
of your obvious lack ot knowledge
ot my committee's functioning.
It Is the responsibility of my
oorrunitlee to present a program ot
excellent speakers on topics both
timely and intellectual to the stu­
dent body. With this goal In mind
we bave been working hard to get
a fine program arranged . However,
this takes much time if it is to
be done properly, As of now we
have written to numerous indivl·
duals of high callber, but we can
&lt;Jonothing l\lrther until these peo­
ple respond . When the answers
come I am sure the wait will have
been wo.rthwhile. Furthermore, we

are

currently

arranging

several

~ries concerning topici; of cur­
rent interest and utilizing Ille maey
fine men available on our campus.
The first of these series will be
ready shortly ,
Your criticism of our proposed
non-serialized guest lectures was
very Wlfounded
. Instead of numer­
ous series, we have scheduled
single lectures at which the speak•
er may talk on a topic of bis
choice. We feel that this procedure
will not limit the .speaker and will
make

tor a

more lntormative and

convocation. Of course
we also plan some series, but these
are secondary In our current in­
terests.
inleresting

grams and wish to see their actual•
1%.ationas quickly as possible. All
I ask Is that ns a responsible 1ft.
dividual you detennine the work•
lngs, problems and current status

of a group before you criticize It.
To editorialize Is your right and
privilege - but please do it 1ft.
formatively,
Sincerely,
Paul Schulman
Etll..,_ Nol91
The editorial uf Sept. Z7 acknoW·
ledged the fact that the Convoca•
tions Committee has had, unfor·
lunately, a mo~1 difficult time in
contracting guest lecturers, The
Spectrwn sympathizes with the
committee. However, once again.
fact ls tact; afl(I it is already 0c,
tober and not one speaker has been
announced, Unless this year's com·
mlttee has had unique difficulties,
as compared to previous ones, Toe
Spectrum would simply advise . . ,
work harder! Nothing succeeds like
success,

the

cllche'

goes,

and

apologetic rationalizations canno1
overshadow
what Is.
Dear Editor :
1 am a freshman who is an aV1d
reader of the Spectrwn. I write
this letter to congratulate Bob
Milch on his tine column. 1 look
forwardeach week to hearingBob'II
satirical views in "The Circus"
column.
I hope that this column is go!JI~
to become a weekly entity in our
school newspaper.
Respect1uJ.ly'
Noreeoo Lerman

Dramaand Speech Adds New Facul,ty

&lt;C.ont.From Page 2)
Speech Association of America, Mr. and the Wllllamsville Schools.111
Benaon is a merrtber of the Na- March, Mr. Wlldy will direct n,tional Collegiate Pla,Yers. He will
sen'a "Enemy of the People."
develop the area ot history ot
Mr. Ostermeier , Who has be&lt;'l1
American and British public ad- appointed director or novice de~le,
dress. If.rs Benson ls speclalwng
Is completing Illa Ph.D. at Mlchiga/1
tn child ~lopment
and tamJ.1y State University . He is the auuior
relations
of "'lbe Student's Concept of th8
.
First · Course in Speech ," in !ht
Mr. Wildy, also a veteran ol the Mey, 1961, issue ot T1lil
United States Army, received bis
s,.cll
,....,
Gr011P
B.S. trom Buffalo State Teachers
lutfltl11, Mr. Ostenneier received
COilege 1n 1959. f&gt;resently, he la his B.S. at Wl.sooosinState Colleit
completing bis M.A. from S)'nlcwle at Oshkosh and bis M.A..trom ?,!al"
Univen.ity . During the Jut three
quette University. From JB. 1.9Gl
,
summersbe has been an lnstNnor be was a Graduate Teechib8 A$
at the University at Buff:alo. He sistant at ·Mai,iuette, and 111
1er•
bu served as a speech oorrec:tion- trom U6Hll63 pt Mlcblga.n SWtt
1lt In the Loclq&gt;ott City Schools Univemty ,

.,.-ua,.

U...

�SPECTRUM

Friday, October.., 1963

Mrs. Roth Atte ,nds

Peopleand Politics
., a~u

PAGE FIVI!

The Circus

RelationsMeeting

PANZICA

By BOBMILCH
Ir JOANI• LA~EI

With an estimated 720 million
people, China, revolui:fona.ry In
spirit but culturally fragmented in
character, has become much more
1han a nightmare to"tfalthusiBJ\S,
Alienated from the United states,
which perennially keeps It out of
tl1e United Nations and continues
to support Its ronner dictator on
Formosa. it has become Jncreasing•
•
ly race conscious .
The Ollnese mernoey focuses ever
more sharply on the exploitation
by one Western and westernized
nation after another, e.g., Britain,
France, ' Russia, and Japan, In re,.
ga~d to Russia, it is evident that
geographical
considerations
are
not far removed from the essen­
tial reasonstor the ideological rift.
One need not go back any further
than the Manchu empire to realize
that Vladivostok, southeastern Si·
beria, and Outer Mongolia, now
parts of Russia, were once Chin­
ese territory. Little else than dreary
speculation can come out of these
matte!'l'.

Peking has attributed the present
serious plight of their economy to
Russla's failure to keep agreements.
As relations deteriorate between
these two nations, China is resort­
ing to anti,whlte racist agitation
Jn an attempt to strengthen Its
position In former colonJal territor•
les. Furthennore, the Chinese no
longer adhere to political consider­
ations in regard to foreign trade.
They have not only been dealing
with Canada but have made recent
purchases from conservative Jap,
anese concems.

The hierarchy of the revolution•
a.ry govemment are, for the most
part, in their sixties and seventies.
lf these patriarchs of the People's
Republic are to remain politically
effective , they must actualize the
promises of new prosperity Inherent
in the "Five-Year
Program."
What might not be apparent to the
average Ounaman is that while
real progress Is being made in
many areas, China's agricultural
limitations keep food production
from being commeMUrate with
population growth.

Fine Arts Committee Offers
, A Japanese Film Thursday
ly LONNIE KLIPSTEIN

The MagnificentSeven, a Japan•
ese film with English subtitles, will
Ile shown on Thursday. It will be
presented by the Fine Arts Com·
mittee of Union Board in the Con•
ferl' nce Theatre at Norton Union
at 12 p.m., 3 p.m ,. 5:30 p.m. and
S p.m .
Capacity crowds are expected to
view the picture. Jorume Osypiew•
ski, chairman of tbe Fine Art.!!
Committee, commented, "We real•
ize that the Conference Theatre
,•an seat a few people. That is why
we are adding a 12 p.m. showing
to all tl1e movies. We ask our
a11diencrs to line up to be seated
&lt;u that there will be no confusion,
We will allow no standing, and
lhc picture will not he shown unless
ew•ryone is seated.''

To supplement the award. win,
nlng film, Hll"Olhlma,
Mon Amour,
which is being shown on Thursday ,
November 7, at 12 p.m .. 3 p.m ., G
p.m., and 8 p.m .• a Japanese Week
is being planned. During the week
of Novembt&gt;r 4. there will be a
rented exhibit of Japanese prints
in room 231 of Norton Union. The
othe1· committees of Union Board
en• arranging other events for that
week, all on a Japanese lhemc .

The Institute is co-sponsored by
the lnter-Faith Committee of Cler1:.Y,representing the Roman Catho­
lic. Jewish, Orthodox and Protestant
n·ltgjons, and Millard Fillmore Col­
ll•ge, evening division of the Unlver­
\"lty ll will begin October 7, and
rnc.-eron eight Monday afternoons
from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m , witil Novem­
b(,1• ~-

Protnim

\

'Chi.!speakers , topics and ~tes
,., ,, Or . Elwin Powell, associate
11
rufessor, "The Urban Scene: Prob­
lt·m8 and Promi&amp;Es," October 7;
Or. Constantine A Yeracarls, pro­
r,~r. "Demography and Ecology,"
O.,t. 14: Dr. Pierre L. van den
&amp;,,rgbe, associate professor, "Social
OJ'ganization: Ethnic Groups," Oc­
luber 21; Dr. John Sirjama.ki, pro-

Dear Ma 'n Pa,

Counseling Servl&lt;:e, is attending Qie
National Advisory Commit~ee for
College and University Relations i~
Erie, Pennsylvania, this weekend .
The meeting is being spot1S1ored
by
the American Red Cross Ml~. Roth
is ,being ~ccompanied by Margaret
Kollard , UB student and a member
of the Union Board.
The purpose of the meeting is to
explore ways through whllch the
Red Cross and other community
agencies might provide the oppor- t
tunity tor university stud&lt;ents to
have personal practical ex~ierience
in humanitarian service . Tim Amer­
ican Red Cross would like the
university stude nts to participate in
volwttary community service pro­
grams. They will discuss the con­
cepts ol social responslbiU,ty and
relationship to lhe commw:1ity be­
yond lhe campus.

Ah was settln' in the Rathkellah
the othah day when ah heard two
lel1el'$ at the next table tall&lt;in'
'bout how they should start a move­
ment to do 'WR¥ with the student
guv 'mlnt. Well, ah can't tell yuh
the shivers what went up an' down
mah ~kbone when ah heard that ,
Why, the anarchy an' dlsorgan!Ul­
tion an' student apathy what'd
happen it there weren't no student
senate an' wha not-ah just can't
tell yuh!

n, the fuhst place. othah places
have student guv'mlnts . Canlslus
an' Buffalo State an' D'Youvflle
an' Bennett all have 'em. So now
that we're a State School, ah think
it's only dignified what we should
have one too.
Second, look al the prettyin' up
they do on campus ' round March
when they tack them electio n pos.

ters to anythin' what dqn't move.
All them perty rolors an' witty
sayin's 'bout why they should be
elected make one just leel warm
The NatlonillAdvisoryCoi,nmlrtN an' good inside.
for Colle,- and Unlvtf'llty R,,latlo!i,
Then loo, the !Student guv'mint
here does a lot what the students
don' k11ow hey're responsible for
doin'-likeWinter Weekend Jw;I year
an ' the Hampton Concert this year.
'Course, it weren't their fault peo,
ple wcrl' as scaree as cavities In
a hen's mouth at these things. The
plannin' were gOOd-it's just that
old boOgeyman student apathy what
cl'ept outa the cellar aguln.

,.~

.....
....,..,.....

preparationor technicallcno,• hew,

By ELAINE BARRON
Two nt!wcomers lo tile Norton
admtni6tration stafi are Mr. Oal·
las Garber and Mrs. Faith Moli.
As Assistanl Co-Ordinalor of Stu­
dent Activities, Mr. Cnrber's )Ob
ls to advise the !louse Plan , hi·
terfratemit,y
Councll, fres hman
Class Council, and the Orien lutJOn
Committee. "l hope to accom1Jlish
a superior fulfillment o{ the job
description ," exp lained Mr. Garber

1

•

I

them we got the roods paved.
But the most Important thins:,
ma · 11 pa, is how the spirit o' un•
i\y an' cooperation l,n the stuOent
guv'mint Just permeates the stu,
dent body , an ' how their all getlln'
lOgt&gt;ther on everythln' just cuts
down on so much duplication an'
waste . Like last year, when the­
party platforms was so dltterent
that you lmowro It w11S II real el~
lion 'bout Issues, 11n' not a "per­
sonallly C011test."
Or this year, when they had to
elect a new treasurer-rt
were
done with no muss or fuss, an' no
one tried lo snea k ill a cal'ldldllte.
an' noe one got petfy 'bout who
wns votin' or anythin'-they
wos
very adult an business•like 'bout
the whole atfair. An' o· course.
when 11 comes time to vote on
son1ethln', most o' the fellers from
one side vo1e together , an· most
o· the fellers on !he othah 5lde vote
together-just
so's lh&lt;'re shouldn't
be no wasled effort or thinktrt',
No sturlcnt in1v'mint? Why, lhol'd
be like nn Campus Patrol, or no

Drop 'n Add Duy, or 110 football
pep rullil-s. The whole stud ent
guv'mi11t? sometimes ah get sick
Just tlllnl&lt;l11''bout it.
Your lovin' son,
Je!thro

Increased ByTwo Members

llo coll191 st11Nnt1 ttilnlc t h t Y j Belore joining lhe Norton staff .
Mr. Garber was a tenth grade
llhoultl•~ptet froma colltfl tduc•
biology t.ea cher in Baltimore, Md.
tlont
In 1961, he played with UJe Balli­
Mrs. Roth hopes to seek practical
more Colts. He re&lt;.'t!ivt'Cidegrees
ways lo Involve studen ts here in in science and education at Mariet­
comm unity activities. She ils also
ta College in southeastern Ohio.
Cessor. "The Family, The Church.
interested in how many st udcnts
Future educational plans tor Mr.
The School and The Factory," Oc­ would be interested in helping lhe
Garber lnrlude the l'Ompletion of
tober 28: Mr. Jack L. Roach. lec­
voluntary t-ommunity services .
bis master's program in st udent
turer, The Class and Power Sys­
personnel services. "Eventually, l
tems," November 4; Dr. John A.
Be f o re joining the stall at
would like to become i,:nployed as
Crittenden,
assistant
professor,
SUNYAB three years ago, Mrs.
Dean or Students at u small t'OI•
"T he Political Organization of the · Roth worked with several a~:encies
lege." added Mr. Garber .
City," November ll;
Dr. Elwin
here in Buffalo. She completed her
Powell, a.ssoclate professor, "Social
Commenting on his new position ,
first year oC graduate work at
Pathologies: Anomie," November
Mr. Garber explamL'&lt;I,"I am very
Columbia Universily's School of
happy in this posilton and accep t
18; and Dr. Sidney M. Willhelm, Social Work. After finishln,g her
ass istant professor, '' Urban Plan•
the challenges of this job with
second year nl work at the Univer­
enthusiasm and vigor . I am honor­
ning: Toward the Re-creation ot sity of Bul!alo's School of Social
ed and proud to Ile a member ol
an Urban Culture," November 25. Work, she received her MA degree
the Norton Hall .staU."
in &amp;JO.
Ail the faculty members are from
• •
the department of sociology, except
'In my job, the slanl Is IOWlll'd
Dr. Crittenden from the department
N()o('harge tickets will ~,e is
women's activities ." So comment•
of political science.
sued for the movie '·Toe Mag,
ed Mrs. Faith Moll, the other new
nllicent Seven" to be shown on
Dr. Yeracaris is director of the
Assistant Coordinator or Norton
Union.
Thursday , at 12, 3, 5: 30, 8. 'They
Institute, assisted by Dr. Powell.
The co-ordinator is Jesse Nash,
will also be issued for all subllur job is lo help gUide, expand
and enri&lt;'h the educational and
advanced graduate student In soclsequent movies sponsored by
socia.l experiences of students In
ology at the University .
the Fine Arts Committee . 'Mley
extra cu.nirular activities .
will be available at the tJ.cket
More specillcally, she acts as
booth in Norton Hall beginning
'111eInstitute' designed tor memadvisor to the lntem1Jtlonul Club,
bers of the clergy, will be Umited
Monday. No one will be alSophomore Sponsors, and PM- Hel­
to 30 participants, selected from ap,
lowed in lhe conlerence theate r
lenic Council. She also does work
Qlications submitted by represent.awithout a ticket.
under lite directloii of the Dl'an of
lives of the Inter-Faith Committee.
,._ __________
--'
Women.

I

Nor only that. t&gt;l!t look how
they're doin' the thlnp they prom­
ised to do in their platforms las t
year : the tood'.s better , an' we got
beer in the unioo , an' caus'-' o·

Norton Administration Staff

A special showing ot the popu)11r
movie , La Dole• Vita, has b4..&gt;cn
tentativ e!y scheduled (or April 30
and 31. The tum is 10 Ile shown
in a l~er
auditorium t.han tile
MRS. IERNIC£ ROTt.l
Conference
Theatre , preferably
Diefendorf Hall.
main qllfftlon,. WINitrewuri;eacan
college ott.r through com"'unltr
In addition to the regul11rly sche&lt;I•
uled 1llms, two ten minute 'shorts' , .. gencl•• to help mNt Mids, and at
tometl,.,- mp, educational NM­
Tt,e Lovesof Franiltan and Rag., •
fits for their partlclp1nttt How
muffin, will be shown on October
can communltr aven,1.. n1Metl11t
I
24, and December 5. respectively.
,ommunltr ~•
on I p,.m,ry
functlo11N of re.-Ul'M v11lue te
eolletfft What,b41yondprofeuknal ,

Faculty Members To Serve
I
On Clergy Institute Seminar
Eight , faculty members 1rom the
State University of New York at
Bu!falo have been named to serve
us lhe s taff !or an " lrultitute-Sem ­
mar in the Social Sciences t o r
Clergy" it was announced this week.

Mrs. Beatrice Roth , supervisor of
the social workers In the Student

"t foel lhat out-of-&lt;.'tnssroom 1•x•
periencc can llll m1•nnln~tul in sha1&gt;­
ing the 1·h11ra.1·te1•
or a student, tn
giving hill\ responsihllity , leader­
ship, poise and character. whll.'h
a r e t&gt;ssential ii\ build.Ing a W&lt;"II
•
rounrl~, mature and thinking In·
div11luul, my Ideal of a college Pl'"'
son. I lhJnk activltres hrtp to pro.
duce .such an 111dl
vidual .' '
Mrs. Moll n!ceived her B.A. ut
SUNYJ\13In Ill.story and Gov1•rn·
ment, and also her M.A. in Anth1-0-

poiogy. She is curre ntly_semi• Rt'·
tivc in various historlcii.1 and Drch­
aeological socie ties.

ln Mrs. Moll', estimation. th'-'
s tudel!I body has changed in rt~
L'Cntyea.J'S.SIW ('OIWIUdcd,"J hope
thllt , now, ns the Univ()rslty ha.$
g.ivwn so, ~tudents will take ad ­
va11tage o( all the opportwtlhes iutd
new l11
cilities oUered them ."

DO YOU PLAN

TO TEACH?

St u d en t Education
Association (SEANYS}
membership
m~terials
are available
in Foster
202. All interested stu­
dents are welcome to
join SEANYS.
The purpose of the
Association is to allow
its members to become
better acquainted with
teac hing,
advantages,

its problems,
and profes­

sional advancement.

�Friday, October 4, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Student Senate's Committee
Stamp
Drive
Planned
Its Reorganization I

U.S. Party Begins

To touow last 'lllurso.a,y s ~ivu
Th, United Studcnl.5 party moved · Rights demonstration on the steps
toward n lull scale party roorgani· r ot Norton Uruon, The Civil rturhts
mtion last Monday , with the ele&lt;' Direct Action O&gt;rnmittee Is plannin1,1
tJon or a new top officer. Peter
a Green Stamp Campaign on 0c­
Ostrow, chaitTMn. The election tober 31. Students from Buttalo will
be "trick or treating" on Hallo­
was hailed by po.rty members
as a major step u, preparing for ween for trading stamps which will
the y&lt;'ar's activities .
be donated to the local Student
Non.violent Coordinating Committee
Former chairman Gerry Catan­ (SNCC). Mark Kempner, chairman
zaro resigned hls post at the meet­ of .the Direct Action committee,
ing because he felt he "wasn't able said 11)8.1the stamps will be u.sed
by SNCC for needed typewriters
to devote enough time to the job."
He will continue serving the PIU'tY and other office equipment and
as t&gt;xecutive adivser. Mr. Catan• possibJ.y a car, ii the fund raising
zaro ex pressed the hope that the is successful.
rw•wofficers would lead United Stu­
The a.id of church organizations
dents back to the position or lead­
in the Bullalo area ls being re­
c,rshlp in campus politics.
quested In order to "mobilize the
Mr, Ostrow, a sophomore, was youth of the church" and to get
the public ready to donate tradin g
rirst Introduced to studen t political
nctivl1y as a reporter and columnist stamps on Halloween, Sidney Su•
garman, one of the t'Ommittee
lor 1hr Spectrum. Through research
as an unbiast'&lt;I observer on behalf members, said, "'fhis campaign
ot hfs column . he gained valuable will serve by its enjoyable nature
knowlt&gt;dg11about the workings or to enlist the help of students who
the Student Senate and lhe two otherwise would not be interested
in tund-ralsing for an important
political parties , and this promp1ed
gro up like SNCC."
him to resign his position with the
SpecU'Ufl\ and join U1e US party,
wht•1~ he was el&lt;'Ctcd chairma n by
nuanlmous vote. Bob Finkelstein,
in nominating Mr. Ostrow, said.
"Now he will have the opportunity
to bnn11 into reality the ldeu.q
wbich he has alr~ady express&lt;'din
print."

I

.-

The Civil Rights Committee is
also selllng tickets to the "Full
Freedom Now!" rally to be held
ln Kleinhans Music Hall, Thursday,
October 24 at 8:00 p.m. Mr. Roy
Wilkins , Executive Secretary ol
the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP), will speak at this rally
which is sponsored by the Western
Region New York State Conterenoe
of Branches of the N.A.A.C.P.
There will be a dollar admission
price.
The rest ol the separate commit·
tees, the Programming committee,
headed by Carol Cwiklinski, and
the Publicity committee, headed
by Julie Kulberg. lire trying to
get studenl.6 interested in working
!or the local Civil Rights organ}•
zations, such as the Student Non­
violent Coordinating Committee and
the Citizens Council on Human Re­
lations, which is a group of pri•
vale citizens "worklng toward a
better community." The committee
is alliO planning a series of lectures
where they hope civil rights lead ­
ers, such ru; Roy Wilkins and
Jamill&gt;' Baldwin, will talk.

To Assist Foreign Students

IJ LILLIAN ICALASTEIN
Th e International Student A1fail'lJ
Committee of the Student Senate
held its first meeting on Thursday ,
September 26th. This group is work­
ing on the problems of the 200-300
foreign students on campus.
Michael Cohn, President of the
Student Sen.ateand member of the
Committee, would like to see its
lunctions broadened. A' program of
orientation sucb as the brother-sis­
ter type used at the Unive1'Sity of

I

Minne,sota was one suggestion. An­
other was to encourage more for •
eign student · participation, aJoo lo
deal n1ore extensively with the 81
fairs ot the international student5

and lo promote travel and study
abroad.
'The committee memben are Mi·
chael Cohen, Dave · Welscnfreund ,
J immy Jiminez, .Loni Levy, Clark
Squires and Lillian Kalastein. Ad
vtsor to the group Is Larry Smith ,
Dean of Foreign Student Attain.

Boldstripe...
the HORSE'S
MANE
blazerbyhimalaya

Applications
I Membership
HouseCommitte-Union
Board

US Expand, ActMtin
United Students , which had pre-

111ouslyconfined all its activities to
the March rlerlion campaJ1,,ns, will
now expand its s,·ope, becoming an
"all•YNtr" party. as is Campus Al·
llanec. However , the party will
keep its lr'dditlonal poU,~y of indc1)1.'ndent thought among its mrm­
ben,. United Students," said Mike I
Cohm . president of the Student
Senate , "does not believe In lnOu­
cncing its senators to vote along
party lines. 'nils is nor our p.1rty's
idea of democracy ."

On campus or just
about anywhere,
you'll cut a dashing

Ir NANCY LAURIEN
Tile House Committee is a twen- as one of major importance, refer
it to the Student Judiciary Body.
ty-member division of Union Board
which represents the undergraduate
Membership on the House Com•
student body in matters L'On&lt;.'E'rn·
mittee is based upon applications
ing the operation o( Norton Union.
(or the same either through com­
Its functions include drawing up
and entorcing the General Ho115e mittee Chairman Jim Jo'incher
832-5251). co-chairman
Rules of Norton Union l which tphone:
Barbara HoCfman (831-2865), or by
~ovem the care and use ot the
romplelion of an application Iorm
union), annual evaluation ol stu­
which is available in the Union
dent organi~tion nt&gt;ed6 and activi•
Bollrd offices, room 215, Norton.
making subseguent room as­

figure In this
all-wool zippered
cardigan with its
bold, wide stripes.
Choice of five
vividly contrasting

color combinations,
Sizes: small,

I lies.

Only thl"Cf.'in every one hundcd
Americans belong lO a political or­
ganization or club . This figure
1s actually ll'SS tlum the member­
ship or the Communist Party in
Russia .

-------

medium, large,

extra larg~.

signments according lo those needs,

and sponsoring events designed to
encourage student interest In Nor­
ton specifically. In the fall of 1962,
a sul&gt;&lt;.'Ommi
ttee on Standards (of
behavior) was i:stablished to re•
view oflenses, suggest an appro­
priate form of disciplinary action,
or. if the in.traction is regarded

-----------------------

A serious Doctor shortage threat­
ens
the
country. n present
trends t'Ontinue I there will be only
eighty-five Docton, for ever one
hundred thousand people by 1975.
This contrasts with 1~ per one
hundred thousand population twenty
years ago.

ADVERTISEMINI'
--------------

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
----------------,

�Friday, October 4, 1963

StudentSenateReportsAt'Masterbuilders'
Baird In Nov.

11 ALLANMEI.MED
NSA
NSA Steering Committee chair­
man Gary Lighter has announced
that the commlttee will branch out
into two new areas due to a lack
of major issues tcf · explore. Mr.
Lighter plans to meet with But•
falo City Comptroller, Georg e
O'Connell and to discuss with him
some or the internal problems ot
local government. If these prove
successful Mr. Lighter will try and
meet •with Mayor Kowal.
secondly, Mr. Lighter would like
to initiate a program which could
help to integrate
the toreign student
on the UB campus.
Mr . Lighter has
spoken twice with
SUNYAB foreign
student advi s o r,
Mr. L. N. Smith,
Gary Llthhr and Mr. Smith
NSA Chrmn. brought
f or t h

ma n y

pressing

problems facing the foreign stu•
dent .
The Student Senate ls discussing
whether or not to publish a Student
Senate Newsletter. This Newsletter
would be published solely to inform
· the stude nt body
on proceedings in
I the Senate. It is
the opinion of the

',

,

Conununlcatl o n s
Committee and its
ChairmanMichael
Shapiro, that this

•

MldlNI .. ..,,.. expenditure is too
C.munlutftn.l costly a n d also
needless.
The
Newsletter would cost the student
body $300 per Issue. Mr. Shapiro

PAGESEVEN

SPECT,RUM

believes that continued coverage by
the Spectum of Senate meetings
ly SHEL.LI DAVIS
would be sultlcient.
As tor future business the com­ I Try-outs were held last Monday
mittee plans to keep tl1e interested and Tuesday for Ibsen's "The Mas•
student informed on Senate pro­ terbullders'' to be presented in
ceedings by distributing materials November by the Drama Society.
to the students about the proposed Also in production are three student ­
directed, student run one act plays:
amendmen ts to the constitution.
In the future the Communications "Improm ptu," "The Stranger," and
Committee hopes tor a greater dis­ ''This Property is C.Ondemned," as
tribution of Senate minutes to the well as scenes from "West Side
.
Student body and tor greater inte­ Story,"
gration o! Senators with the Stu,
The Department of Oram a and
dent body.
Speech also is presenllng faculty
Public Relations Commltlff
Public relations Committee chair ­ members and alumni In readings
lrom "Ulysses". Further plans in­
man Robert Finkelstein informs us
that this year his committee has clude "Enemy ot the People" by
10 membe rs. Their Ibsen and "Portait of a Young
Man'' by James Joyce. Three op-­
first meeting was
eras will be performed in connec­
held Sept. 30. Mr. tion with the Music Department ,
Finkelstein h a s
Plans are also ooing made for a
met with Dean
musical comedy. All perrom1ances
Sigglekow a n d will be held in Baird Hall . There
they have dlscuss•
is no admission eharge.
ed who will be
The Orama Workshop m e e t s
R. Flnblnln a~o.ilable f~r co~­
every Thursday from 3 • 5; 00 p.m.
P. R. Cflalnnannuttee adVJSOrthis in Harriman Library , The purpose
year.
of the Workshop is lo discuss cur­
The committee contemplates two rent topics in the theatre and dra ·
main projects. The first deals with
ma. There are also oppot'lunlties
a SUNYAB day at next year's
for anyone interested in acting or
World's Fair and the second with lechnical directing . Contact Mt .
a publication of a SPnate "Who's Watson, faculty advisor, Room 23N,
Who.''
Harriman Library.
The late Elenor Roosevelt insi~1cd
on using public transportation most
ol her IUe, and wouJd occasionally
even hitch a ride with a stranger
who offerC'd her a lift. An article
in lhe October Reader 's Digest re­
ports that 5he was also lhe fit·~l
·'tirst lady" to hold press confer­
ences in the White House.

DeadlinesFor Homecoming
Applications,
PostersandTickets
provide the- music , and liquor wilt
be available . The tlcketij 11rc $3 50
The "Broadway BUlboards' ' pos­ per t'Ouple.
ter applications for Homl!('01ning
All que&lt;&gt;nenndida lM: th.-it h;ivr
Weekend must be returned to the ,mbmitted oppllcathlns must ,11tr11&lt;I
Norton candy counter bY Oct. 14. 11 g,merol m,-eting in lhl' Contrr
The posters will be Judi:ted at 1 Pn!'e Thralcr iii 4 p m , 110 Fr1tl,1y
p.m. on Oct. 18, and the w1nn1n,:: Oct I ThP Sl•mi-hnalists wlll Ix•
poster will bt• announl&gt;t'&lt;Ilhal &lt;'V&lt;'­ rhl).~!'nDn O!'I. 9 In lh1• Mulll PIii
nlng al tlw UB-Boston P&lt;'P rall y.
J)()St • N orn nt 3:30 p.m., an,I \\I ll
Ill' pr&lt;'scnlrd at 1hr VB-Boston P"I'
T 1· &lt;:k r t s for the 'Hom!'&lt;'omini; rally on Orl lit · 1\pplira hons for
Dane&lt;' will be&gt;on sale al lhr Norton lh1• Qu,~·n of I hlmt•,.•omln,::l\'1•t•k••ml
t ieket booth on Wednesday , Jtm arr still availablt• al th,• c,u111}
Baltistoni and h.is Ort.'llestra will rowltl'I' in Nurton.

IY ALAN HOFFMAN

First Frosh Basket­
ball will be held on
~ednesd ·ay a1 4:00 pm
m Clar~ Gym. This will
be an; organizational
meeting ,

UNIVERSITY
DELICATESSEN
ANDRESTAURANT
"New YorkSty~ At Your Fingertips"
UNIVERSITY1RIPl£ D£C~ERS
A MEAL IN ITSELF .••
I.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

(Pluse Order by Number )

Virginia Ham, Turkey, Swlas Cheeae , Tomato , and Onion,
Rus1ian Dressing ..... , . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.35
Corned Beef, Pastrami, Swiss, Cole Slaw, Russian Dressing . . . . . . . 1.50
Turkey, Tongue, Swiu Cheese , Cole Slaw, Ruuian Dressing . . . . . 1.45
Imported Sardines, Nova Scotia Salmon , Cr,eam Cheese,
Tomato &amp; Onions ................
, ......
..... . . . . ... .. 1.50
Chopped Liver, Corned Beef, Tomato and Bermuda Onion . . . . . . . 1.35
Chicken Salad, Sliced Tomato , Lettuce Club .... .. . ..... .. . .... . . .75
Sliced Turkey , Tomato, Lettuce Club, Potato Chips ..... . . .. . . .. .. .80

WHO'S
GOTTHEACTION,
PARDHER?
You'l l play it cool and t?,h) in thi~ ur,-rlatrd 11· 1· ~
version o f t he good old dunq. rer 1 Taitorrrt nl !h~
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�Friday, Octal.-~

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

H63

Departm
ent ListsOctoberActivities
1

A Studfflt Showcaseof Olne-&amp;cters Kamp , Lewis Kaufman, Barbara Shiela Schein, Janice Green, Joan
and a tacu1ty reading of James
Vevirit, Gloria Nowaceyk, W'IMie Alpern, Fran Fiac:hbein, Catherine
Joyce are the Departm ent's oUer­ , Watson, Jan Vullo, Dorothy Frank­ McHugb , Larry Abrams and Hilda
ings tor the month of Octolllel',Both lin, Ewa Prashalowicz, and Beverly Olaoll.
performances will be 11.ivenIn Bernd. Tbe scenes will be stage-­
Following the evenings ol scenes
Baird Auditorium and will be a
managed by Hersh Volat .
and one-acters, the Department will
prelude to Departmental produc•
TM, P,.,.ty
I• c:o..mnMwill present Donald Wildy. Instruct.or
tions plaMed tor later thia year .
.in Speech and Drama , and Daniel
be directed by John Lund. The Clifford of the Goodman School of
On Thursday and Friday • the Stu­
cast includes Toni Castellani and the Drama , Chicago , in a perform­
dent Showcase productllon wiU James Kronberg, The Williams' ance reading of stories from Dvt.,
featur e a student cast w'lder stu• ·one-act will be stage-managed by lifters of James Joyce and the
three opening sectioM nf his cele­
dent direction In scenes from The Sydney Hiegard.
W• Side Stwy, and U,iree one­
TIie 5mnterIs directed by Ethel
acters , Tenesee Williamill ''TIii■
Delln. The C8llt includes Susan
August
Sturgeon and' Sylv:la Spring. The
and Tad
Strindberg's TIii .,..,._,
Strindberg piece will be stage­
Mosel's lmpr'tllllltll.
rpanaged by SUsan Gilman.
The Welt Side Stol'y sequence
Tad Mosel's lmprompht will be
Is under the direction of Gary

,,..,.,., •• c,,.fflMII
.

BUDAPESTST1ltNGQUARTET

Budapest Quartet Ends
Union Three-Concert Series :~~~t~u!~rs~~~:~
1

.

Ip VICTOalA IUGELIKI
Budapest Stl'U\g Quartet,
Quartet-In-Residence bere, conclud­
ed Its three-«&gt;ncert festival o!
Haydn, Bartok and SchumaM last
ThUBdt.iyin the Norton Mllltl·Pur­
pose Room.
The Quartets perfom1ed were the
Haydn op. 74 no. 3 (The Riden!);
the BartOkno. 6, and the Schumann
op. 41 no. 3. The Pill.YC1'9
displayed
their usual perfect integration, wide
dynamic ~.
smooth phrubig.
and impeccable tecbnlquc . lntonn·
I.looWilli excellent, eventhoulb
I.he
musle1ans were perfomllng with
great hardships In an overheated
room (a break In tbe water main
that afternoon prevented tl)e nir-&lt;:Oo•
ditloner crom working) . A Budapest
performance seems to be always
&gt;QYllami
c. animated, and lull of life.
The per{ormers were seated on
n plallorm In the center or the
room, lending a more Informal, coo­
eert •in-the-round atmosphere . It re­
mains a moot point wl)ether con­
t't' l1•goers prefer the ditferent ar­
rangement, but al'OUSUca1l,y
there
should be no complaints. The per­
formers could be heard anywhere
in the hall perfectly, with no echl&gt;­
The

lllg eUects.

Tile members ol the quart et. Jo­
s,.,ph Roisman, first violin; Alex­
u nder Schneider, $Ct.
-Ond violin;
Bons Kroyt , viola; a nd Ml!;eha
Schnd de1·, cello, are all Oil the
music de()llrtm ent raculty. They
arc ~-onsidcred the world's leading
str ing quartet. Students who missed
these concert s will h11
vc si..'Ye
ral
more opporturutics llus year to
hear the Budapest.
The annual performance ol the
8(.oclhovcnCycle Will take place on
Oct. 11, 16, 18, 28, 30, and Nov. 1.
The Budapest has been performing
the oomplete Beelhovffi string quar­
tets ll7 in number) annually sinl-e
1956. Until this year, nu six con­
certs were given in one weell . nus
year, with the coocerts lnrther
apart , it should be ellSler (or con•
(:('rt-goers to attend more of lheln.
These conceru.
will begin at 8:30
p.m. in Norton multi-puJ)Olieroom

1

also. 'ncl&lt;ets for faculty and staH
are $1 per concert or $S for the
series; general admlssion tickets
are $2 per concert or $10 for the
series. Students may re&lt;.'eivetickets
ror uny or all or the concerts tree
or charge by the presentation oJ
their 1D card at the Baird Hall box
oUicc prior to the night or the per­
rormunce.
Additional chamber music series
are being scheduled tor next se,nes.
ter.

.

Chairmen Named
For Homecoming
Committees and their chairmen
have been named tor the annual
Homecoming Weekend at Stale Uni•
verslty of New York nt BuUalo,
October 18 and 19.
Highlighls of the weekend whose
theme Is " Broadway Billboard ,"
will be a football gam e with Bos­
ton University and a Hom~&gt;-omlng
c.
Dance at lhe Statler Hilton.
General l'hairmen, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael F. Guercio; Friday night
football stag. Dr. Salvatore A.
Amloo and Dr. ~rank J . Nappo;
hall-time activities, Mr. Donald B.
Hofrnar; Alumni Tnuk, Mr . Robert
B. Kager; Homecoming Dance,
Mr. and Mrs. Luke Owens; re­
servationsand tickets, Dr. andMrs.
Lee A . Kane; Dance contest. Mrs.
Lois Randa ccio, telephone commit­
tee, Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Hen•
de1'8011
; danct! publicity, Mrs. Alex­
ander ? . Aversano and Mfl , Jo­
seph J . Mogavero.

actors includes Steve Schnelder,
Pam Dadey, Jim Kronberg , Jlm
Kramer Beverly Kirschrn!r Floyd
' .
'
Bennett, Frank Wlodarciak. Art

e

brated novel ut,- . The Jay ce
readings will be under the technical
direction of Thomas Watson, Pro­
fessor of Speech and Drama . The
readings will be given on October
12 and 13.
All perfonnances begin at 8:30.
There is no admission charge .

directed by Gail Edwin and Linda
Letta. The cast Involves Francine
Zumpano , Evelyn
Damascheck ,
Carl Berg , John Smith.

un•••·1•uot•' ,w110
•1■-c1

iEiif'

Stage crews !or all productions
include Karen Lett, Terry Davis.

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SPECTRUM

I'

PAGI NINI

Careers Meet'ing

TheReviewing
Stand Set For Tuesiclay

The University Placemerit SeJV­
lce is sponsoring a Federal Career
'\.EON LEWIS
Confereiice in Room 231 of Norton
~-~,...~..,.~~
............
.. ...,. .. ~~~~~•.. • Union from 10 a.m. to 4 l?,m, on
TNt.,.,...._ L.,.
room. Madlin's delight in the October 8, 1963. A number of Fed­
We, In the United,States, o1te11 power ot his huge bo&lt;ty and his eral Agencies will show exhibits
tend to think of ourselves as the relish for physical violence (an out­ and discuss the variety ol career
leading sports-1.:,vingpeople In the let, apparentl.}',tor h1I seething and opportunities in the gove:mment,
Westernworld, This line of thought uncontrollable emotional tonnentl with all interested studelll.!;.
is Incorrect - the British alwa,Yll is depicted In a series of Incidents
It is estimated that there will be
have held claim to the honor and on and ott the field which oom­
still do. American attempts to prise the first bait of the tilm. more than 2,300 positions ntpcl year
in the states of New York and New
motion pictures deallng with the Unfortunately, the remainder ol the
Jersey alone. Starting salaries for
world of sport have nearly always
film la the more Important part
college graduates range lrorn $4,565
ended either as diverting but ·trite
and Is not done nearly aa well.
to $6,650. Each year some gra&lt;fu­
juvenile fare ('The Babe Ruth
ates are accepted for Mansigement
The picture open., with a play
Story', 'Pride of the Yankees') or
.from scrimmage which knockll Internships which otter exoeptional
a, muddled and confllsed attempts
to oombine the athletic field with Madlin out and makes immediate opportunity tor cballenguig and re­
some sort of comment on the social den.W work mandat~ry. The story sponsiblework and advanced place­
ment on the salaey schedule.
of his career to this point is told
realm ('Saturday's Hero').
in flash-back fonn as his mind
OUr only pictures dealing with
The agencies partlcipa~t in the
sport wblch have been moderate­ wanders under sedaUon at the
Federal Camers Day will include
ly successful were those which dentist's office. When Machin
the U. S. Civil Service C:OlJlmis.
dealt with the sordid and often leavee the dentist, the story coo­ sion, the Armed Forces Audit
tintles
In
the
present
theme
and
degrading nature of boxing. And,
Agency, the Atomic Energy C:Om­
even In such moderately effective we are abJe to follow Mach.In's mLsslon,the Food and Drug Admin­
second
qUest
this
time
an
un­
eltorts as "The Oiampion"or "Re­
istration, Griffiss Air Fore,~ Base,
quiem for a Heavyweight," Midge successtul seardl for a desperate
the Department of Health, Educa­
and
chaotic
love
which
he
bas
tast­
Kelly and Mountain Rivera were
tion and Welfare, the Depurtment
ed
briefly
and
then
seemlngly
lost
not typical young men caught up
of State, the Intenlltl Revenue Serv­
in a harsh and demanding sport; forever.
ice, and the Veterans Adn:llnlstra­
The primary difffoulty here Is
but strangely unique individuals
tlon.
that the two stories are not ade­
unusually effected by the 6CUD1 and
is
an
quately
integrated.
Machin
All students are Invited to visit
J backwash of a racket-rid d@ enter•
intelligent if inarticulate man. His the exhibits and are enoouriaged to
prise.
The British on the other band, success on lhe ball field and in ask questions regarding career op­
JV1ce,
portunities in the Federal 1se.
because they have llO qualms about eociety Is clearly not enough to
confronting the uglier aspects ot satisfy blm. Therefore,hls involve­
lile In their movtes, and perhaps ment with his widowed but still­
11JOreImportant, because they are pretty landlaey (also played very
well by Rachael Roberta - au or
Any n • w I y ...ciog,
able to see that their athletic be~
es are men no different from other the participants are quite gOod) Is
nizecl organization on
members of IJOciety - except tor not surprfsillg. The l)l'ObJemi1 the
campus tlla.t Intends to
a cert.e.ln physical prowess have manner In whlch she reacts to
receive funds from the
hlm.
His
groping
and
blundering
been able to make a nwnber of
student senate must
very compelling pictures revolving with her Just do not seem reaJ
submit their budget on
around some aspect of the world alter the way In which he bas gain.
.or before October 31.
o! sport. "The Loneliness ot the her confidence and that of her two
Allen Horov,itz,
Long Distance Runner," although children during his rise to fame.
it certainly bad other things to say Haris does a good job of expressing
Treasurer
as well, was strongly critical of Machln's sufterlng, but the unsuc­
Student Senate Office
the oommon British feeling that cessful love seems contrived.
205 Nort.onHall
life is nothing more than one big
The psychological motivation be­
game, in which one must "play hind the actions of the landlady
ball" with the authorities to suc­ are not satisfactory and her event­
ceed.
ual demise, acoompanied by some
"This Sporting Life" goes fur. obvious and heavy-banded symbol­
( lher. It is the story of Arthur ism, was not oonvinci.ng at all.
Machlo (superbly played by the The hopelessness of Macbin's .fu.
gifted Richard Hanis), an ordinary lure at the picture's conclusion pro­
factory worker who has risen to vides a poignant downbeat end·
Hambu,,,...-aulle
tln
the heights of public acclalm due ing, but one that I Ielt was con­
to his skill at rugby. He is pam­ trived.,
pered by buainessmen, tempted by
Somehow,the t&gt;icturefails to pro­
their wives and idolized by the ject, as David Storey's book does
Young men ot the town. His rise (1960), the feel.log ol inevltablllity
· in the violent world of rugby {the and despair which a lack ot com­
British equivalent of football) is munication between people can en­
conveyedwith a raw power seldom geDder. Nevertheless, because ot
seen In the movies. The audience the excellent photography and di­
GOOD
HUMIL I! I
is literally carried down onto the rection In the early parts , and be­
Ml.AT
ATTITUDE
field by the use of especially
cause ot the tine performances by
skilltu) camera work, and dragged
the principal actors (especially
through the mud, slime, blood and Harris), I would recommend"Tbls
sweat of the field and the locker Sporting Life"'

ay

I

__,....
I I

Counselors Now Prepa ring
Next Y ear's Freshman Class
While oollege freshmen are busy
adjusting to·campus life this month,
admissions counselors at State Uni1•ersity of New York at Buffalo
,'1'e already preparing next year 's
dass for academic life.
Beginning this week and continu­
ing until January, four counselors
will travel to some 400 bigh schools
isiting 5,000 students ln New York
'tale and portions of Pennsylvania .
The Director of Admissions Coun­
·l'!tng, John Walker, supervisesthe
"'&gt;adtrips of counselors Walter N.
•·unz. Robert A. Friedman . Fred, •·rick J . Kogut and George Brady .
.a.st year three counselors travel­
,.,, lo 351 high schools, contact­
u,~ more than 4,000 students.
To acquaint high school students
v.ilh higher education using the
Univen,ity as a specific example,
the counselors participated in 32
hi~ SCbool career days as well
:is. PT. A. and guidance programs
in 1~ 1963
. •41.500catalogues and
Vh•w
books about the University
11,•,•rr
al'lO distributed .

From January , until the follow­
Ing September's class Is chosen .

counselors conduct interviews and
proce8S applications submitted to
the University. Mr. Walker Illus­
trated the increase In the number
o! applications received in the last
six years by comparing the 195758 statistics ~th 196U3. The num•
ber of student interviews at the
University increased from 1037 to
2342; letters received from students
increased from ll ,000 to 25,000, and
telephone inquiries increased from
2700 lo 10,000.
The Director urged that ear ly
application to the University would
benefit the high school senior and
emphasized his request by point•
ing out thatof 12,000 applications
filed tor admission to the Uni­

versity in 1962~. only 2,:alO wen?
accepted.
A special gropp of student tour
guides was selected last Septem­
ber to welcome . visitors to the

campus.

fashionable
rainwear
thatpasses
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coat. In fact, it's in a class by itself!

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werew1rwcltodayto hlfll­
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cautionwhile on tflelrWl'Y

to Henry' ..

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�PAGETEN

SPECTRUM

Careers Meeting

Counselors Now Preparing

Set For Tuesday

Next Year,s Freshman Class
0.·1 I - Th&lt;" Annuul D&lt;-nlal
,\l umni 1\1&lt;.-Nmg
or Slate University
,11 l\,·1\ \-,&gt;rk ut Bu/falo 1s scllf'd­
ulrd for Oclober 7•J0
Monda~·,, rt'frl'~h&lt;'r course scs•
s1011~ 11111
h,• held at thl• Uruversity
fknlal S&lt;'hool In Capen llaU, with
a lhJ&lt;•,,.day meeting lollowmg m
Ille Slatlt•t lhltun.
At·1·ordmg lo
Ur Alvin A May, president of thl'
Oental Ahunni Assocmtion , 600 den­
I 1NIS art· t•\pe&lt;:tcd to attend.
Al

th,· Monday session tobk

du,11·~ will tl\! tll'ld by three sen-

tlental students from 8;30 to
15 a 111 • Jo,,n Staker, " Exloll a­
llve Oral Cytoloi;y;" Lawrmcc
Hum,it-k, "A Conc&lt;'pl of Occlusal
t:;q11I1ibrnt1ons;"and David R. Je­
rumt•, " A Survey o! lllgh St)('cd
I,;qu1pme111
· From 9:15 lo 12:00
noon Clinil'al Pat hologic Confer•
1•nce; Drs. Grorgc W. Greene, Jr ..
Alan J . Drinnan n.nd Mirdla F
Nr1clcrs
1oi

~

1''ollu w1n~ a lunchron m Norton
Urnon. Dr Irving L. Epstein will
lectul'l' on · Facts ml,d Falla~y o!
Endodonlirs" from 2: 00 to 4: 15 p,m;

Tiw 'l'u t•,:,day session m the Slal­
ler Hilton inc ludes:
9:30 a .m.- 1'' 1lm, " Use of Chrome
Steel Crowns m Dentistry ror Chil­
dren ."
10.CKta.m.-" lntra Oral Radio­
i,'Taph1c 'fl't'l\nique-Simplibcd
and
Impro ved,'' Dr. William J . Up&lt;fo­
gravc.

12:00 noon-Luncheon and nomi­
nation of llffi cers for 1964.
1:30 p.m.-"Pain
Control In Den­
tal Practice," Ors. William Green•
field, Stanley R. Cpiro and Mlllon
Jaffe.

October 4 - Olarles Olson, visit•
ing lecturer in the Department of
English for the first semester o!
the 1963-M academic year at the
State Universi ty of New York at
Buffalo, will read seh.,ctions from
his poetry, today at 4:00 in Baird
Hall.

4:00 p.m. - Projection of blms
taken al mo1ning session.
Wednesday, October 9, 9:30 a.m.,
According to Albert s. Cook,
''Immediate Denture Lecture nnd chairman of the English Depart­
Slid&lt;'s," Dr. George A. Buckley.
ment, Mr. Olson has come to be
12:00 noon-Stag alwnni lunch• regarded as a major Amerir:an
L'On and ladles luncht'On. Ladies
poet by many leading lllerary
luncheon s11eake1·,Miss Agnes Mul­ figures.
larkey. "Talkini; Thl'ough Your
Heart ."
His long poem, ''TM Kl"lflah·
2 30 p.m. - "Com plete Denture
•n," has had a lasting inlluence
Construction,"
Dr. George A. on the development - of verse in
Buckley .
America during the past fifteen
8:00-100a.m.-S upper Dance and
years and his book, ''Call "Me tllt­
Clnss Reunions . Music by Art Ku­ MHI/ ' has be(~me a classic of
bera iu1d orchestra, Class of 1913 American literary criticism, Mr.
will be guests or Dental Assocln­ Cook indicated.
bon.
Thursday,

October 10:
9:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m. - "Practical

Asfl(.oets of Periodontology,''
Jens Wael'haug.

Dr.

Only lhree in every one hunded
11 political or-

Amcm:ans belong to

or club. This figure
Is actually lciss than the membership or the Communist Party in
Russ1a.

gamznllun

Friday, October4, 1963

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week &amp; Eveningsand Saturday
Requirements : Able to Conv_erse lntellis,.ntly
· Neat Appearance

Ability to Follow lnstructioM

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig ~53-0837

---------'

Mr. Olson was born December
27, 1910. at Wol'cester, Massachu­
setts. He was. as he says, ''lln­
cducatcd" at Clark, Harv1ud and
al Black MoLmtain College, where
he was an instructor and rector
from 1~1-56. In addition to poetl'}I
in book Corm his work has appeared in "Harper's Bazaar," "TIie
Atlantic" "Partisan R• v I • w,"

I "Ev•l'llreen Review"

and "H•rp-

..-'i.' '

The first meeting for
all freshmen basketball
('and1dates will be Wed.
October 9, 1963 at 4 :00

room no. 322 in Clark
r.vm. All men interest­
ed are urged to att end.

•

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�Friday, October 4, 1963

. SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

Slee Recitals Set to Begin

Dav:,~.~~::mond
M:~
~:d::
=BIGMOTHER

David Diamond, the Slee Protessor of Music Gomposition. will
deliver a lecture on "The Creative
Facet of Musical ·Participation:
The Composed". This first Slee
Lecture Recital on Thursday, in
Multi purpose room of Norton Hall
features barit,one l&gt;aul Gavert performing songs by Mr. Diamond.
The Slee Fund was left to the
' UB music department by the late
• Buffalo music lovers, Frederick
and Alice Slee, and provides for
a visiting professor of composition
each semester , a lecture-recital
series with guest artists. and a
chamber music series. The first
l'Omposer to be named Slee Protessor was Aaron Copland. Carlos
Olavez, Alexi Haiett, and Leon

ducive to work than the frantic

U.S.A."
In the Slee Lecture Rec ital series

I
I

entitled "Th e Four Facets or
Musical Participation•· ; David Dia- I
mond will consider the creative,
the composer; the Interpretive, the
performer;
the evaluative, the
critic and the receptive, the publie, thus covering · all the aspects
of music. Mr. Diamond has personal views on all these subjects.
He believes. for example. that
"young American composers no
longer need go abroad to study.
for the first rank European com- I
posers are now too old, and the
present generation in barely adequte and unable to attain th€ stalure of the past generation." Never­
theless, he feels that instrumental­
ists and musicologists can. still gain
much from study abroad. Mr. Dia­
mond feels that "a keen critical
sense is most valuable and neces,
sary to weed out the superficial
and tbeatrical techniques of the
avant-garde music,"
Mr. Diamond's music is being j
heard all over the world. His
"Rounds for Strings" is being
en on jour in Europe and Russia
by the Robert Jotfrey Ballet Com­
pany. Next season. Eugene Or·
mandy and the Phlladelphia Or­
chestra will premiere "Elegies"
written by Mr. Diamond in me­
mory or--his friends William Faulk­
ner and E. E. Cummings, The
Philadelphia Orchestra under Or­
mandy was the first to perform
DAVIDDIAMOND
his Seventh Symphony. Leonard
Bernstein and the New York Phil­
MUIICIIICompotltlon
harmonic gave the premiere per­
Kirchner have all held this posi­ tormance of his Eighth Symphony.
tion, but David Di;unond, who Mr. Diamond is curenUy working
spent the spring semester ol 1961 on a Ninth Symphony. to be dedi­
as Slee Professor, is the only com­ cated to the memory of the con­
poser to receive the honor a second ductor Dmitri Mitropoµlos.
time .
The premiere of his Sixth Quar­
Mr. Diamond was born in Ro­ tet will be heard at the third Slee
chester in 1915 and received his
(Contd. on page 12)
early training at the Eastman
3chool of Music , studying violin
and composition with Bernard Ro­
gers. Mr. Roger's work will be
heard at the second Slee Lecture.
Mr. Diamond moved to New York
to study with Roger Sessions. He
was accepted as a scholarship stu­
dent by Nadia .Boulanger in Paris.
He continued studying there as a
Guggenheim Fellow until the war
when be was appointed Fulbright _
Professor at the University
Rome. Mr. Diarnond continued to
reside in Italy, finding "Florence ,

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�Monday. a variety of ~oo
groups wi.ll be offered by the Can­
terbury As&amp;ociatioo in Room 266
of Norton Unioo. Tueadays from
4:~:00
p.m. a series 011 Basic
Theology will be presentoo by the
Rev. Robert Bollman. After a half
hoUr preliminary discussion the
hoUr presenlatlon will cover such
liWIB as the nature of religious
e:,cperiel'IC(?,Sacrameotal ~logy
Md Est'hatology. The sessions will
be repeated Fridays from 2:304:00 p.m.
Wednesdays from 2:00 lo 3:00
p.m., the Rev. R. Shennan Bea t­
tie,' Episcopal Chaplain to the Um•
versity will lead a Bible siudy
seies whicti will fOCWIon St. Paul 's
f i r st Jetter to the Corinthians.
ThUJ'llda.)'s Crom 2:00 to 3:00 p.m.
ttK- t'Olltroversial book "Honest to
God" by the Bishop of Woolwich,
England will spark an exploration
of current thought about the ancient
Otristian
convictions. Otapla.in
Bea ttie includes the prov0&lt;:ative ff
linUal or Honest to God whieh is
aptly titled "For Ouist's Sake'·
to ensure a lively discussion.
All or these discussion groups
are open to aey and all interested
stude nts and faculty members.
119hr-V.al"llty
Chrbtta11F.ilnr9'!1p
IVCF 1s having a Cellowship sup­
per Sunday from l,6 p.m. at ~l
N. BaUey Ave. We will be meeting
In Cront or Tower · Donn at 2: 45.
Evl'ryone 1swekome. Pie~ phone
i•ither 831..3168or TR 7--0860,
Thursday , IVCF" 1s s'ponsorin,z a
f'aculty-S tudrn t T&lt;'B, It will bt• h1•ld
I n Norton 248 from 4-6 p,m.
IVCF has two discussion i:roups
on Monday at 3 p.m. m Room
246 Norton and on Fridav at 12
noon in ]loom 217.

Friday, October4, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELY£

nwst•~n • Ol)l' n

to anyorw who is int&lt;•restl.'d

David Diamond
(Contd. trom p;:1gell)
l.&lt;'CIIU'&lt;' Redial.
and mUStl' by
David Dinmond wilt tlf' heard lWICI'

in Buffalo this month In addition
lo Paul Gave rt's performance ot
Mr Diamond's songs at th~ SIN'
l...cture ll&lt;'&lt;~tal, the Bu(lnlo Phil·
ham10mt· with Lukas
will pre­
nllen- !us setting of lhe Cettysburi:
Addr(•ss. "Tlus S.wred Ground"
Mr Diamond hopes, ''as the tom•
poser ol this work that the stu •
dent body Mil bt• pn&gt;sent at the
l'Om:Prt in full Corce. since at the
,...ndof the work. the audience will
,oln with a combined chorus of
cluldren and adults in smiling the
final lill('S of the Getzysburg Ad·
dress .,.

,.._...c._

Mn. Janet C. Potter , advisor to

All Newman members are invited
to a picnic Sunday at 2 p.m . in

Ellicott Creek Park.

Just

follow

the Debating Society for over fif.
teen yea.rs, has res1,gned her polli­

tion. However, Mrs. Pottel' still

plans to talce part in 110medebating
activities both on and off campus.
Or. Ernest C. Thompson, Jr., as­
sistant professor In the Department
In Saint Joseph 's Auditorium at
of Drama and Speech is the new
7:3&gt; p.m . A dance will follow.
advisor to the Debating Society .
October devotionsare hc:ld every
Or . Thompson received his B.A . at
day after Mass in Newman Hall.
Massesare held every Sunday at the State University ot Iowa, his
9, 10:3&gt;, and 12 noon and 5 p.m . M.A. at Washington State Univer­
sity and his Ph.D. at he Univer­
in the Cantaliciall Center.
Father 's discussion classes are sity of Minnesota . He has served
on the 1aculty of Purdue Univer­
held every Tuesday and Thursday
al 9 and 10 a.m. 1n Norton Room sity, Parsons College, University
of Minnesota and Boston Univel'­
33.5.
slty . Al Boston University Dr.
Hlllet News
1bompson was director of the
Sabbath Service and
school's debate program. Dr.
Oneg Shabbot
1bompson did intercollegiate de­
The- B 'Ml B'ri th Hill el Founds•
bating at Iowa , and he is a mem­
tion will sponsor a Sabbath Serv ice
ber ot Delta Sigma Rho honorary
this evening at 7: 45 p.m. in the
Hillel House. Dr . Justin Hofmann forensic fraternity .
Mr .. Terry H. Ostenneler replaces
will speak on: "Sukkot h Symbols."
Mr. William A. Baker as director
Th(' Oneg Shabbat rollowini: th e
service will carry out the Sukkoth of novice debate . Mr. Baker lclt
the university this year to join the
Iheme.
faculty of Ithaca College. Mr. Os·
Lox allll lqel ln1t1ChSunday
termeier, al.so a member of the
Hillel will hold a Lox and Bagel
Drama and Speech Department, is
Brunch Swxlay at 11 a.m. ImmC'di•
a grad uate of Wisconsin State Col­
ately aftl'r the conclusion of thr
lege at Oshkosh. He received his
Brunch the group will leave (or an
outinl( for th&lt;' l'('mainder ot I.he M.A . from Marquette University
and is completing his Ph .D. from
day. Reservations for this social
evc•nt must he made at H i I I e I Michigan State University .
Prior to joining the university Mr.
Hous.•.
Ostermeier was a teaching.assistant
Gamma Delta
Thl' nl'xl meeling or G a m m 11 at Marquette Universiy and Michi­
gan State. He debated intercollegi ­
Delta will bf&gt; held Wednesdl\Y Ill
6:30 in Norton 344. preeedcd by ately for four years at Oshkosh, and
al.so has served as a debate ooacb
suppc-r at 5:30 in thr rafe tC'rla.
tor the past four years. He is a
Sund1iy, October 13 the group
member ot Pi Kappa Delta honorary
will go to Alleithany for the day.
Wr will leave UB at 10:30 a. m. forensic and Kappa Delta Pl hon­
orary education fraternltles.
Mr .
&gt;md n•lurn about 10 p.m. Bring
Ostenneler is also a member ot the
your own lun&lt;'h; supper will be
provided . Contact Carol worn Speech Association of America and
TA 3-1737 (or lran~portation .
' the American Forensic Association.
Also. remcmlx!r The Rcll'Pal on
Novl'mbcr 2 a n d 3. Payment
or Sli.50 for food and shel1C'r 11111st
11" p:ud hy Wr,dn&lt;'Sdi\Y
. Oclohcr
2.1. We are allowed 200 prople , so
ii w1ll hi- on a " first l'Omc. lirst
s..•,·vro" basis. Call Raia Joks at
1'R 5-6460for furthrr 1nrormation.
the signs.

This week's meeting will be the
lnitlatlon Meeting. 11 will be held

n&gt;SS

Senate Agendc,

Thompson
andOstermeier
Are
NewFaculty
In DebateSociety

Tbe Student Senate will bold Its
sixth meeting In l'OOm335 at 7:00
p.m. In Norton Union. Tbe agenda

:
The Debating Society Is looking Is as fol.ldwa
foiward to a very succeatu1 year
'of Amendment to
with Dr . 'lbompllOO and Mr. Oster­ courts to the Student Judiciary .
meier. 1be next oovlce debate _.
sion is Wednesday at 3:00 p.m. in
C1llllll1.-.:iln of Amendment to
Crosby ll9. This session can be •the Constitution providing for emer­
taken for one credit per semes­ , gency elections for the student
Senate .
ter . There are atill a few openings
in the class, and anyone interested 1
Ei.ctt.n of chairman tor the Uni•
is urged to be present . A meeting
of the Debating Society will be beld ted Natioil!ICommittee .
Tuesday, October 15 at 6:00 p.m.
PrwlhotlM of the budget ot the
in Norton 33.5. All students are Anthropology Club.
invited to attend.
11111.i.ct..., of new Amendmeit
to the Constitution providil'lg tor
repreeentaUon on the Student Sen­
The minutes of all
ate b' the fr,elbman claal .

c,1111•1...:t.

Student Senate Meet­
ings are available in the

&amp;mate office, 205 Nor­

''FOR THE
CLASSIC LOOK"

i.on. fwy interested stu­
dent may obtain a copy

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All dependson whyhe uses it.
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'

�PAGI THIRTIIN

SPECTRUM

Ftfd•y, October 4, 1963

Spec/rumCaff BoarJ

WBFOAnnounces Schedule StudentViews
OnCivil.Rights
IUMt,
WIFO PROGRAMSCHEDULE

has written numerous books and
a.rtlcles on il.s many tacts . He will
consider French nationalism un­
der deGaulle and western unity.
10:00-Evening Showcase
11:00-Headlines and Sign Oft

Several hundred students attend­
All programing ll1arts at 5 p.rn.
ed the demonstration called 1.ast
Friday, Sept. 77, to protest the
MMl&amp;ay. Oct. 7
bombings ol the chu1'1'h fn Birm­
5:oo--On Campus
ingham, Ala. Your Spectrum re­
porter interviewed six students, who
W..._.y , Od, f
6:00-News
were listening to the speeches and
5:oo--On Caropus
6:15-Meel The Faculty-Interview
jo i.ning in the singing, to determlne
with Dean Scudder, Dean 01 Wo­ 6;00-News
their reactions lo the demon.~tration
men.
and to the civil rights issue on the
whole.
6:15-Gettiii'g To Know You-Inter­
6:30-Evenlng Musicale
views with foreign student&amp;-Mo­ Mary M c G r a t II
rolta Scott, Panama .
(Fres hman): "On
7:00-America On Stage "And.re"
the whole
the
by William Dunlap U'l97J. The
6.30-Evenlng Musicale
speeches were well
heroes of its people. George Wash­
lng1onstands as the clearest sym. 7:00-Cartoonists' Art-Roy Crane. rl!(.-eivPd and were&gt;
very good. T h e ,
bol of the early American repub­
whose offspring are "Bw: Saw•
whole movement
lic. Orators and poets and artists
yer'' and "Rosooe Sweeney."
should effect us in
and musicians found their themes
in his character. William Dunlap 7: 30---0locert Hall-Stravinsky : Le the North as well
Rossingnol. Stravinsky and the as in the South be,
was the first to place Washington
Olonis and Orchestra of t h e cause
eventually
on the stage.
Opera Society of Washington, D.C. the movement will
7:30-0mcert Hall - Ravel: Piano
move· N o r t h . I
9;00-News
Concerto In G Major , and Plano
have rolorl'd friends and my broth•
Concerto In D Major tor the left
9:10-Amerlcan History with Mr. er Is In the NAACP. We shouldn't
hand , with Samson Francios, Pi•
need a l'ivil lights mo\Jement. Our
Wilson
ano. Andre' a vetens and the
rights should be accepted without
question.''
Paris O&gt;mervatoire Orchestra.
10:00-Evening Snowcase
Terry D • v I 1
11:00- HeadUnes and Sign OU
9:00-News
(Freshman) " l 'am ,
a Humanist by re­
9:!~American
History with Mr.
nllflUY, Od, lt
liglon. I've never
WJJ.son
parti clpatro in this
5:00--0n Campus
10:00-Evening Showcase
type of dl'monstra­
6:00-News
tion berorc but I
U:00-Headlines and Sign Ott
ha ve marched In
6:1!&gt;-0langlng Fa ce of Europe
picket lines. I sui&gt;
T••Y • Oct. I
po&amp;.&gt; that
what­
6.30-Evenlng Musicale
ever eClect this
5:00-0n campus
7:00-Special of 11i.eWeek
dem ongt ration
6:00-News
could have would
7:JO--Omcert Hall-Bach: Contato be through its coverage by the
6:15---0verThe Back Fence , Edito:r­
No. 76. Fritz Werner conducts. press. In this demonstration we
lal oomment from canada
8: JO-Special-August Martin, MUSIC were told that you should assert
yollrS('lf; in a picket line yo u do
6.30-Evenlng Musicale
School Faculty piano recital
Just that."
10:00- Evening Showcase
7:00-Hold Your Br eath- "Air and
Dave Harp &lt;Jun­
ll :00-Headllnes and Sign Oft
Health " The day-to-day inslduous
ior&gt;: "I just want­
e ffect of dirty air are discussed.
ed to hear what
Friday, Oct, 11
The daily exposure to polluted
the speakers had
5:00-0n
Campus
air can be even more serious than
to say, I wouJd
6:00-News
the acute episodesdetailed in the
support the civil
6:15-UB Sp0rts Scene
previous program .
rights movem11nt
6.30-Evening
Musicale
7:30 Concert Hall - Brahms: Sym­
on a personal level
7:30 Concert Hall-Richard Strauss:
but I wouldn 't get
phony No. 2 in D. Bernstein and
Also Sprach, Zarathustia. Lonn up and ~'tart mak•
I.be New York Philharmonic.
Maszel and the Philharmonla
I ing speeches te ll•
8:30-To Be Announced
9;00-News
, ing others how lo
9:00-Nationalism In The Mid 20th 9:l~Alnerican
History with Mr. feel, However, J
Century - French Nationalism in
Wilson
think this demonstration expo6('S
10:00-Sound of Broadway
and
Europe and Western Solidarity the students to pcoph.' who are in- 1
Hollywood. Host, Ed Azif. The volved in the Civil Rights Move- l
Hans Kohn, Visiting Professor ot
Original Broadway cast recot'lling ment and thus enables them to
International Relations, Univer­
of "Gypsy" with Ethel Merman make up their minds."
sity ot Denver, a leading authority
on nationalism in this COWlU'll,11:00-Headlines and Sign OU
Wllllam Young
(Sophomorol
:
''tbe students at
There is still a number of positions available for students
this University arr
interested in working at WBFO. N9 expenienee necessary .
very apath e t i c .
Come down to the studios on the second floor of Baird Hall
Maybe hl&gt;causew"
leel detached trom
any evening between 5:00 and 11:00. Engineers , bypists, an­
the problem. W1•
nouncers etc. all are welcome.
think that ii C'X•
!Bis only in the
South but that is
J not so.
I have
found no discrimi ­
nation against me pcn;onally , but
that doesn' t mean that it isn't
present."
Mr. R.iteft Ro,­

Hw• c-111ittN
organization desiring a desk
and fillng cabinet in the Student
Any

Activities room should file an ap­
plication with House Committee in
Room 215 Norton belore Friday.

Psychology Clull
All students interested in Psycho­
logy are invited to attend the Ol'glln·
izational meeting ofthe Psychology
Club, today at 4:00 in Townsend

204.
Music Ctmmittwe
The Music Committee is having
a concert by Red MenzaIn the Con­
ference Theater to d a y. 3 • 4:00.
Monday the contmlttee ls sponsor­
ing a rotree hour in Norton, Room
234 at 3:00.

I

Pre• Law S.Clety
There will be a meeting of all
past oUicers and committee chair­
ml'II ot lhe Pre• L.BwSociety Tues-

day, at 4:00 in Room 339 Norton .
All those Interested in working on

conuniltees or being CO!'IIJllittee
chlllrmen thl~ yf'nr are welcome

to uttcnd.

Phet.trapfly Clull
There will be a meeting of thl'
Photography Club Monday at 4:00
p.m. The roorn number will be
posted latrr on the Master C\l('n•
dar . New members are welcome.

ArMU Air Seclety
National Headquar­
ters of the SoC'iety is l()('Qted in
Buffalo. New York. Members or
the AFROTC at the Uni\Jersity rom.
pose part or the National sta1f. Thcy
inl'lude Mr . Charles Heubusch.
Brlgadeer General AAS, the Mtion­
al l'Omma nder; Mr. ,Tnm"5 Rile )',
Colonel AAS, the na tional executive
officer: and Mr. Oiarles Wagner,
Major AAS, commander or the Um­
versity's
Richard C. Browning
This year thr

Squadron.

JacksonTo SpeakAt Chapel
During the month 01 October ,
AVClllUC Ch a p e 1 • 4775
Berkshire Ave. Ill S.SUUolk will
Pl'&lt;.'sent Dr. Ed~r Basi l Ja cksOn
as guest spcalwr eac h Sunday
Berkshire

A REMINDER
A p p 1 i c at i o n For
Make-up Examinations
for the removal of in•
complete grades will be
accepted no later than
October 14, 1963. Make­
up Exami.nations begin
November 18 1963.

morning at 11. Dr. Jackson . a ,•hlld
psychiatrist . stud!{'() el lhl• l-fl'n·
nlnger Clinic fn TOIJ('kn, Kruwis .
He is preS('ntly mt'dira l dlrC&lt;"tor
of the Psycblotrlc Clink ol Buttalo .
faculty ml?llll)('r 111th~ department
of psy&lt;'haiU'Y ut thl- State Unh·er­
sity at Buffalo M\'Cllcal School, and
pfO(CSSOrol pastoral psy&lt;'hologyIll
Robert s Wi&gt;sll'yan Collrggi&gt;.

FOR SALE

Used Folk-Classic Gvlt1r
(H•rmony)

REASONABLY
PRICED
Call TF 8•1614

I

GreekNotes,Events

RushingTo Begin AdivitiesPlanned
Sororities will again begin their
cam pal«n seeking all upper class
and transfer women. It begins with

registration on Oct. 7 and 8 In
room 342 Norton between 3 and 5
p.m. Thi&amp; ls rnandatoey!
Formal rush Is scheduled to open
with a convocation program on
Sunday, Oct. 13 with representa­
tives present from each sorority
an cam'pus.Commoll lr.tterests, in­
tellectual levels , social tastes, and
persona) habits all will play a part
in the rushing program.
Part of
the present Panhellenic Creed
which direct. all 110rority women
explains their standing as promot­
ing
"good &amp;cholarsbips, good
oooperatioa
health, wholehearted
with our college's ideals for student
lite, the maintenance of line 110CW
Standarda, and serv!Qg, to the best

of our abWty. our college commu-­
nity".

ers, Assistant Pro­
fessor of English,
spent 4 ½ ,nonlhs
in a Mississippi

Sllfl'a Kappa supported the White
Cane Drive for blind people spon­
sored by the I.Jons Club this past
weekend, along with Alpha Phi Del­
ta. Initiation ot ll pledges was held
Sunday, Sept. 29 in the sorority
apartment followed by a dinner at
the Red Lobster Restaurant.

jail as a fret'dom

the
'

rider: "It can be

romlortlng
individual toto subscribe to 1o ft y
principles,
buI
such a stance

I
less those high principles are trans­

Alplia EplllM Pl will bold a
dl'e!IISparty Saturday night at the
Maaonic Temple. Next week, a
masquerade "Bowery Party " will
take place tor the brothers and
their

•

means nothing un-

lated into action. I should like t!J
hav c every student on thi~ campus
be stimulated by- the liberal atm•i•

dates.

sphere ot the University to th(•
point of cooperating active ly in the
present Civil Rights movement in
this country.

AJplia PtalSltma will hold a beer
party this Satunla.Y
night. A cock·
tall party will be held at "Helen

Nevell's" on homecoming WN&gt;kend,
ANGIE'S PIUA HOUSI

TKE will bold a social today with
Pi Kappa Rho from Buffalo State

at John 's Night Owl.
Saturday there will be bootenan.Y
hayride and a shimmy party with
muaic afterwardl at Boleila
' s.

j

Free o.llvery WlttlMl11l111•m
Purc........U.'5 te Cam,vs
allll AIINhul'lt

7M Nlaeara fell•
T,H1'1

atw.

YDU'll l/KE
THEBITTERTASTE
OFTH£8££R
BREWEO
MEl·O·DRY

I

FAMOUS SINCE 1842

rl!__O:!f.~o_
~fl!

�Friday, October 4, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEl!N

BULLSAND. CRUSADERSBATTLETO 6-6 TIE
Hew ... ,. , .. ,.,...,
BUFFALO 6
HOLY CROSS 6
Boston College 22
Wichita 16
Colgate 21
Cornell 17
Delaware 30
Lehigh 0
Gettysburg 18
J uniata 14
Boston U. O
ly ALAN NEWMAN
Buttalo kicked o.tf aod halfback West Virginia 34
Toledo 14
Earl Kirmse r received the pig &amp;kin Villanova 18
When the dust i;ettJed and the at the goal line and ran ten yards
Ohio lT. 13
Dayton 6
final gun had sounded at Fitto n before he was smothered by five Marshall 14
Miami (Ohio) 14
Fiel d Saturday the University of US players. All Holy eroa,i needed
Thi• Week
SuHalo and Holy Cross fowid them• was three minutes and t6u.rpass BUFFALO vs. VILLANOVA
selves deadlocked in the scoring
completions to tie the ball game. Holy Cross vs. Syracuse
column, !Mi.
Ohio U. vs Kent State .
The last pugwas good tor :n Gettysburg vs Delaware
The Bulls we.re first to tut pay.
dirt, and then saw the Crw;aders' yards as John Wheaton t&lt;&gt;Medto Marshall vs. Toledo
Jim Marcellino who caught the Boston U. vs. Colgate
passing attack erase their 6-0 lead
ball on the 10-yard line and sped Boston College vs. Detroit
in three minutes. Both tallies came
witouched into the end zone.
late in the fourth perlod.
In what was perhaps the most
During the first hall of play both
squads engaged in a futile ground Important play of the game, Mar­
game with Holy Cross playing the cellino's older brother, Bill, tried
part of the aggressor. The Bulls for the extra point from placeme nt
held the ball a mere (our times in with 3:50 showing on the clock. The
ball nicked the outside o1 the left
the halt. The first three times the
goal post in the missing effort.
UB running attack was stifled and
SRYICI
!alled to make a first down. The
G. Friscll.&lt;&gt;,llcio,,
strong Butfa\o defense, however,
Time ended the affair with the
held out when the chips were down Bulls in possession of tllj! football
and au scoring attempts by the on their own one yard- line.
PA. 5415
invaders were checked.

UBStatistics
ForFirstThreeGamesConvrrsion Attempts Fail
euFFALo
~ttys burg
Ohio Unlv.
Holy Cross

34
7
6

0
0
6

47
Jl of
6 of

John Stofa
Don Gilbert
F, Geringer

I of
18 of

Team total :
Jim Ryan

Bob Edward
Tom Butler
Djck Condino
Gerry Pawloski
Dave Nichols
Gerry La.Fountain
John Stofa
Jim Burd
Jim Ryan
Don Gilbert

John Cirnba
Bob Edward
Tom Butler
Dick Condino
Fred Geringer
GerrY Ratkewicz

.

ATTl:NDANCE:
9,097
11,000
12,000

6
32,097
PASSING
22
2 int .
2 TDs
202 yds
12
0
103 yds
3
2
13
37
4
2 TDs
318
RECEIVING
3 for 27 yds
4 for 89
I TD
1 for 39
3 for 40
1 TD
2 for 45
3 for 65
1 for 12
17for317
2 TDs
RUSHING
102 1 TD
14
103
1
16
57
8
49 1 TD
11
88
82 1 TD
6
22
111
1 TD
24
87
16
49
0
49
16
41
7
34
18
51
0
51 1 TD

4

26

1
1

0
2

0
-4

26

2

2

-4

INTERCEPTIONS&amp; RETURNS
J for O yds.
Kogut
1 for 2 yds.
Edward
Pawloski
1 for 0 yds.
Oatmeyer
1 for O yds.
PUNTING
Pawloski
10 for 387 yds. 38.7 avg.
Edward
1 for 42 yds. 42.0 avg.
PUNT RETURNS
Butler
2 tor 0 yds.
Gilbert
2 f or 0 yd5.
Geringer 3 for 22 yds.
Burd
1 for 3 yds.
KICKOFFRETURNS
Edward
5 for 50 yds.
Cimba
for 17 yds.
SCORING
Stofa
TD rush
10 points
2 PATR
Burd
TD rush
1 PATK
7
Gilbert
TD rush
6
RYan
TD r ush
6
Edward
TD reception
6
Butler
l TD rush
6
Pawloski
1 TD reception
6
BUFFALO- TEAM STATISTICS
(3 games)
Fi.rst downs

Passes completed
Interceptions by
Net yards passing
Total plays

318
162

TOTAL OFFENSE

Penalties
Yards penalized

125
519
37
18
5

837

Midway in the third quarter the
US field generals, Slota and Gllbert,
discovered a few cracks in the
Crusaders ' pass defense. Tailback
Bob Edward and end Gerry Pawol­
ski combined tor a total of 74 yards
oo three Sto!a passes.

Sophomore fullback Danny Pryz­
ktla climaxed the drive with a 26yard through the mi ddle of the
home team's one yard line. Two
plays and a penalty later Gilbert
plowed throug the Crw;ader line
for the score.

COLLEGE
PIZZERIA

Gerry Ratewitz attempted the
conversion and missed with a line
drlve Iciclejust under the cross bar.

FREEDELIVERY

1F 2-9331
"Pia:zala Our Buslnesa- Not Our Sideline"

48
386
67
31

4
358

Rock's Picks

197

Arkansas over TCU
Not.re Dame over Purdue
Qcmson over South Carolina State
PeM State over Rice
Northwestern ove.r Illinois
Navy over Michigan
Southern Calltornia
over Michigan State
Boston College over Detroit
Syracuse over Holy Cross
Yale over Brown
Boston University over Colgate
Pit tsburgh over California
Washington over Iowa

744

13

8

74

7 (lost 3)

8 (lost 7J

j ust great lor

CHARCOALED

"Support

HOTS
(with all th, trimmin'1)

the

YOU end Other U. B. Students

Have Mede U1 Famous
I

I Should Have
Boughta LARGE
Instead of a
Small

Late in the fourth period, with
the Holy Cross line thinned to de­
fend against the pass, Don Gilbert
led a 46-yard march to the end zone
for the Bull's score.

130

PAT'S
I

GEE!

--------A

163

Fumbles

01Y PlAlA

DYEIITISl:MINT________

_

Opponents

48

Number of rustles
Net yards rushing
Passes attempted

After Last Period Scores

SHERIDANDRIVEat PARKERII.YD.

Bulls''

6r/e
~ii&gt;~DidV.otr?

�Friday, October 4, 1963

PAGE FIFTEEN

SPECTRUM

Villanova )~review

Atkinson, Thomas Will Lead Villanova

Buffalo
WillNeedAnExtraEffort
:
ToDefeatthe Powerful
Wildcats

ly

to contend with Saturday a r e
tackle Al Atkinson and rullback

Offenbamet, bas devoted
tb Is
week's practice session to correc•
After a somewhat disappointing
tini the errors made durim? the
6-0tie against Holy Cross last )'&lt;eek, 8oly Cross game and "Im proving
the University of Bu11alo Bulls will our overall executions." The BUlls
invade the htlr ot the Villanova
will enter tomorrow
'• contest all
Wildcats tomorrow afternoon. VIiia­
' nova, tresh from two str..iight vic­
tories over Toledo and West Olestc r, will be a fired up team when
they take the field against the
Bulls.
The Bulls have their work cut
out for them as they face a Villa•
, nova squad consisting of many ~
1ummg veterans.
In 1962,Villanova t-ompiled a 7-3
\\ti n-lost record on their wa:y to the
Liberty Bowl. After a bitter de­
iunsive battle, lhe Wildcats finally
succwnbed, 6-0 to an Oregan State
t&lt;'am led by All-American quarter ­
Mck and He!sman tropl\y \Ylllrler,
Icn-y~e
r.
Captain Jim Thomas, a rugged
:, ft.-ll inch, 210 fullback spearheads
R fired up team,
'lbomos will
carry the rushing load while quar­
terbacks, Bill Sherlock and Dave
Connell (who also does the kicking)
will assumethe passing duties. The
ALL- EAST TACKLE-AL
primary targets figure to be ends,
Jack Clifford and John McDonnell.
Halfbacks, Dick Semyak and Jack
Boyle double both as pass-catchers
and rushers.
Vlllanova's interior line will be
paced by their All-American candi­
date, Al Atkinson, and 6 ft.-2 Inch,
240lb., Tom Smith (a former men ­
ber of the UB freshman team) at
the tackles. Center, Olappy Moore,
!llld guards, Mike Stefatino and
Jncjl McDonald round out the Wud­
,-ad offensive wlit.
The man to watch on defense ls
h;ilfback, Bob Donn, an outstanding
passand rush defender. The speed­
ster Will also be Villanova's pri­
mary threat on kickoU and pwit
rrt ums, leading the Wildcats in
both departments last year.
Vlllanova's oUensehas been very
~poratic as exemplified by the fact
that all their touchdowns in the
Toledo game were sco1-edin the
thlrd quarter. Head Coach, Alex
8'&gt;11,who up to that point had been
CQn
centrating on defense, hopesto
lu,ve the Wildcats erratic offense
slnilghtened out !or tomorrow's
game.
Meanwhile, Head Coach, Dick

!

his new position because ol losses
at luUbuck tl\rough gnidUaUon ,\ 1
a' U" and 210 pounds, he ,~ ,'llns1dcred to be 011(' or the lll:'SI fullba ,•k~
tn the Ji:ast. In \'illuno,a , 18 11
triumph ovt'r Toll&gt;&lt;lo 1....~ w r ,, I,
Thumus srored the \111111111
1: lnu('h
hud hn •n du\\11 ,
d0\\71 a!lcr Vi1111nov.1
l l-0 ror most o{ lhC' grun,•.
Both of llll'SC' pln~l!l'S \\'Ill "''•
,·uns1dcrabll' nrtton 11~1111st 1h.­

Jim Thomas.

Atkinson , a junior {rom Upper
Darby, Penru;ylvania has already
shownhis credentials by making the
first ECAC All-East Team for his
play in Vlllanova·s opening 21 • 9
triumph over Westchester State.

whole and hardY.They too will be
a fired up team, seeking to make
up for Inst week's mediocre show•
ing. Coach Offenhamer dEr.lares
that "We will be a better Moti&gt;i.ll
team against Villanova this wee~

By ALLANSCHOLOM

Thomas, who mn at hal!buck ror
the IMl two yt•nrs, always dtd ,ll'll
air.iinst UB und wus sw1tcht'&lt;l 10

DON CASTLE

Two top stars the Bulls w:ill have

Runnmg al fullb,.-i
ck for the Wild·
cats is senior Captain Jim ThomtL~
who hails Lrom Yonkers New York .

Bulls.

FOR U. 8. STUDENTSONLY

SAVEUPTO $52.80THISWEEKEND
In the New S(i)UIRESHOP Livery Room

I

SUIT
••raUy

Model•

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R~.

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Shtlland1 ,
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ln9bone
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$40.00
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Reg.

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ATKINSON

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$ 8.95

wllh

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fabric

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35

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$1~6~0(] Tt!J&gt;Ollont
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OFFER GOODONLY FRI., OCT. 4, SAT., OCT S •nd MON., OCT. 7
YOU MUST BRING THESE COUPON$ WITH YOU
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$9.95 ~
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~In

St.

Attenfion: Students,Facultyand Staflf

The

University
Service
Cente~r
(Basement of Tower Hall)

announcesits

NEW MANAGEMENT'S

••••
GATIB

0

ti behoovet meo or leerninC
lo

in,pect

the propr ietor'•

woollen '"eetert of fi1hor­
m1n1 "nve. For heedw•Y in

dooo io&amp; thi■ tweeter crtlt■•
men hove ~e&amp;u,.d • boat line
uf 1ppropri1te cbartcter.

$13.95

Campus

Cnrurr

0....,.. T1leUnfvtll"llty
Dilly t · 6
TF- 2-1221
M-., 1'Jiul'I.,Frt.-t · t

OCTOBER
DryCleaning
Special
Ladies'

Men's

Skirts,Slacksand

Pants,Shirtsor

Sweaten (Plain)

Sweaters

49c

49c

3 for $1.25

3 for $1.25

each

each

Try Our Service, and We Know•.•
That You'll a. Pleased, From Head to Toe I

The collaron a Creightonshirt
looks like any other!
hcept for thewoy It rolls. That's where Crelghron Shirlmokers
aeporatas the men from the boys. Cre ighton-design ed collars
ore cut and tollored for that proper !lore, ond lhe button Is
placed correctly to keep It there. The back or every Cre ighlo n
Shirt feotures o neatly tailored box-pleat with d islin cl iv e
hang,up loop. Sleeves ore set-In with single needle construe•
tlon ... oll Important detalb lhQt

soy... tailored

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

by Cre lg hron.

�,,..,,

s,1cTRUM

,AOI IIXTHN

i£lli!!

i

·Spectrum

*I

IIJJR

1111112

I I

i

Sports

*I .

I !I

lntramurals

MaKin
Named
A$
Successor
All Leagues Are Underway Everett's
Bill Everett, Director of Sports

Sports Cirele

In the House-Plan league oo Wed­
IJ ID 11.UO
ne.sa.y,there Ill a three way tie
Last week at AudllbollGolf coune.
Si&amp;Ep dominated bOtJIteem and for ftnt place. Hemln(way, 1rvlng
Individual player lllonon In t h e and Scot houaes are all Wldeteated.
Intramural eolt tournament. Tbe
Alpha Sigma Phi rolled to tMlr
unof:ftcial raulll are:
aecolMIatralgbt shutout In the n­
Team winner,Sigma Phi Epeilon;
da,Y fratemlty league. The vtdlm
2nd place, Alpha Sigma Phi; 3rd was Sig Ep: 22-0.
place Sigma Alpha Mu; 4th place ,
Sigma Alpha Mu had a lorfeit
Alpha Epsilon Pi, and 5th place,
win over Kappa PIii.
Beta !DsmaRho.
Alpha Phi Omega, 22 - Theta
lnd1vldual low round score wu
Oil, 8. Alpha Sig, APO and A,I.J.E .
by Bardkowsld ol Sig Ep with
ate UtlllefRated.
a ICOre of '19.
Tw:lday'a 1ootball league la DOW
All the football leagues are DOW
fully underway. The ~ta
are:
in &amp;ell.on, Last Frtda,Y WU the
TICE, H - Pl Lam~ Tau, O;
beglnnl.Dgof the Frida)' AllellbUl"llt
Beta Sigma Rho, 26- Gamma Phi,
leegue. The reaulta are:
O; Alpha Epsilon Pl, 12 - Phi
Flying Frosh, 32 - Mudcate, 0;
4-Forty's, 12- Tigers, 6; Crisptna, Kappa PIii, o.
&lt;:bmpetitionin tile tennla tourna­
32 - Bl'OWllll,0, and Comer Court
ment bu reached lbe eeml-fluaJa.
Cruahen, 14 - Panthers, 0.
The MOQl!er'aot Monday's league 'lbe Intramural Croa-CoonlJ'y meet
are leading the pack with a perfect
will be held on Monda)', October
record of 3--0-0
, lo the Monday
21. There will be more lntormatlon
league , the zYiotes completety dom­ concerning the entry regu1aHoos
inated the Raml -GU.
next week.

By ROCKYVERSACE

J:ansDisplayDhappol11lme11t
at The
lifts TumbleDaeperInto LastPlace
Anyone who was lucky enough (or unlucky enough) to
be present al Memorial Stadium Sat~ay evening was able
to witness the Buffalo Bills in their fourth frantic attempt
at securing their niche in the AFL ceUer. The Joyal but dis­
gusted Buffalo fans displayed their disapproval ol the entire
fiasco by showering the endt.one area with beer cans and
bottles as the final seconds of the game drew near.
The beer-can party was actually small in caliber com­
pared to the fracas that occured last year when the Bills lost
their fifth contest in five attempts. However, it must be re­
membered that Satl1%'day's
Joss was only the third in fo.ur
tries (the professionals managed to tie the Kansas City
Chiefs). If the Bills are beaten t.omorrowby the red-hot Oak·
land Raiders, and the possibility looms very high, Buffalo
fans will once again be given the opportunity to surpass or
at least equal their previous can:flinging record.
Early in the game the Bills gave the partisan crowd of
32,340 something to cheer about by gaining a ten point mar­
gin,.But the Bills"were not to be denied. They meanl to show
their people that they could lose any game in any manner,
no matter what the lead be.
The unsteady Buffalo secondary proved to be no match
for the Houston air game. Oiler combinations of George
Blanda to Charley Hennigan, or Willard Dewveall, or Bob
McLeod(it is truly a shame that the waterboy was not given
a chance) were indeed fine examples of what a good passing
attack can do to a weak defense. Blanda connected often
with his receivers for long gains as the Bill defenders gave
the appearance of high.school-freshmen trying out for the
varsity, One frustrated Bill, Willy West, did his best to in­
sure Hennigan of another all-league nomination. West was
constantly outmaneuvered in his attempts to cover the
sticky•finiered Oiler.
Despite the weaknesses of the Bulf-alodefense, the of•
fensive crew played good enough football to win the game.
Cookie Gilchrist and Roger Kochman gained well on the
ground, while Jack Kemp and his receivers ate up yardage
through the air. substitute quarterback Daryle Lamonica
did a fairly adequate job, but all gains went for naught as
the defense consistently yielded ground.
No exceptionally great lineup changes were Indicated
by bead coach l.A&gt;uSaban after the Houston defeat. Fortner
Bill, Billy Atkins, released by the New York J~ts.could belp
very much injlugging a hole in the defense secondary. U
Saban can fin a back field combination that will halt the
barrage of pa55 completions, the Bills .will be a much stur­
dier club capable of finishing in the upper division. If not­
when at the stadium, watch out for flymg beer-cans.

Buttalo. Prior •tioJoining Erie Tedi,
Marcin was Pari-Mutuel Examiner
for the State Tax Co.mmlalon.
A native of Ballilnore, Md., Mal'
cln majored In Joumalllln at Notre
De.me after gia(luatlon from Bul•
falo's St. Joeepb's Oolleglate Insd·

tute.
fflll ..

111..,._

.,..._

,,..

...._,

•w

fwinacome tllto the pme.

Year ,...,._

I

\.__~

pair MJuld sureb' coav1nce
one'-. that he waa -me double.
Roa and Tom Ridolfi are members
of the Unlvenlly ol .BuUa&amp;o
i&gt;ot.ball

squad and,

size,
I well.

.._
,.,_
Out Sei&amp;el
S
Steve Watta
21Ai
Kearoa Whalea 2
Ed N\llblatt
3
Fred Berman
s
Guy Weisa
3

they

comlderlDi
their

amall
handle their PQlltiona

Ron and Tom botb we.iCb
165U..
and atand 5' 9" tall. However,thla
3
ia the extent ot their llimllarldea.
Soph.
•
Roa· p.la,ys q\l81'terblck while Tom
Sr.
$
bandlec the ftllbadr poaltloll tor
Jr .
6
the Bulla. Tbe brim ~ their
TOTAL
~ bllh ldlOOl bltbaD at Saint
Raphael Aeadelny ID Pawtucla!t,
DIA
f
th
st
d
t
Rhode IllaDd. AltbaQp known at
1e ,,_;turesor .
e u en
ue
tor tbelr bldla1I allWtlea,they
LO. cards will be taken
were uo accomplllhed buebaU
10 and
p1&amp;yen 1n blab a:1m.
ThundayJ...
Friday, vet . 11 ~
Attestincto1betralhletlcadlieve9:00 a.m. to 4:S0 p.m. lD
mmta 1a tbe fa.et tbd they botb
With wcti excellentahooting, UB
FOlster Hall basement
were J)ft!9mtedthe "SdlDolboy Athextft!Ckod,llll victory to 14 ~r two
Ausio-Visual Center.
lete ot the Year" award laat year
-ol COmpd.itloo. 'lbe 1lnal
outcome or Saturday's dual meet
All students m u a t
tor the eatire atate oaJUlodeJsl&amp;nd.
wu, UB 16~. Sta.le11Ai
.
have I.D. cards. No stu•
1bla wu the tint time that the
dent., will be admltced
, award bad been pcwuted to two
UB tacldea Canlalua'ul1aweek.
I
to home football games
bo)is at the aame lime 111dIt aeeo11
The acoria, ap.insl State WU U
tba.t It lhleld be •wudwithout
an LD.__card ·_ __, •ppropriate
.__
_____
fd to tbme two ''idllatlml" ~
~
:
Uvtng up to his expectatlom, for
the aecond week In &amp;U«9llon Out
~ Jed the UB &amp;Olfers
to a vet)'
imprcssfve victory at the Audubon
00W"llt' over Buffalo State. ln hll
lint -.or,
of compet!tlcn, Sletel
ha.1 a.lreact, l!S1a.bUahed
h1mlleUu
a veey -aklllllill, amateur &amp;OIJ_er.
Lut week the record at the Audu­
bon t'OW'lle fell before Siegel u he
,ec a new rttOrd, one UDder I.be
previous l'eCO!dof 66.

Soph.

1

Jr .
Jr.

2

.. loft a,._

..

■

IMM­

Ridolfi
TwinsAreU.B.
Athletes
andScholars

• • •

I)' DAVID II. HAM~

J

Marcin, who la a graduate of
Notre Dame University and a World
War II veteran of the U. S. Marine
Corpe, has been at Erle Tech llnce
1!67. He Ill a member of the Public
Relatiom . Aasoclatlon of Western
New York, the New York Stale
Aseoclation of Junior Colleges, and
the Notre Dame Alumni Cub ol

HIMrNOWAY HOU91 QUAITIIRIACK .,,.,.._

I

9ct.

j

Tom , a biology major, and Ron,
a h I a t o r y major, are ~
mores. Both are ccellent students
- makirc them well-nuncled Indi­
viduals. Tbe RldoUl bnlthen SlioY
~ on the same teama ol
various sporta even though they are
often mlstaten for aldl otber by
~

and ll)eCt&amp;IOl'IallR.

l

Information at the Unlvenlty of
Butllalolor the put three 1'81'1, bas
been promoted to Director of Alum·
Di re1at10111.Tbe new aulpment ,
et.fectJve October l, hu been an­
llOUIICedby the University ot Buf.
falo Foundation, Inc.
Everett, who resldel at 112Sara .
nae Avenue, ta a UlliO,raduate o1
UB's School ol Businela .Admlnl&amp;
tratlon and a put-president o1 the
Business AdminlstraUon
Alumni As,.
aociatlcm. From 1952-'55be aerved
as Aaslstant Dlrectoi- of Alunvu
Relations, Almtant Director of l)e.
veloped aecretary and Sparta Pub­
lldat for UB.
Mr. Everett la an active member
of the College Sporta Information
Directors of America and bu been
aecretary ot the Eastern Oollege
Sports Infonnatlon Directors.
He succeeds Theodore J. Slek­
mann who baa been promoted to
Aaoclate Director of the Uulverlllty
of Buffalo Foundatton. Everett will
he responsible for estabUlblng!orcy
a1wnni clubs acrou the nationand
abroad. . . as well as broadening
alumni services tor the University,
Joeepb N, Marcin, Director of
Public Relations at Erle County
Technical Institute, ls the new DI,
rector ot. Sports Informationand
Promotion at State Unlversll)' of

BuUaJo.

Scanning the scores of future Ul3 opponents (see How
the Bulls' Foes Fared) provides some interesting sidelights.
The most stirring of the results is Boston College's 22-16
IJ TOMKINJAISKI
defeat of Wichita. Other scores of major games throughout
Dwil1g the hard-hitting action of
the land are: Adrian 28, Alma, O; Shepherd 12, Shlppenburg
7; Clarion State 24, Grove Citf O; and Lebennon Valley 13, a football pme, a player mlgbt
Wilkes 6. Also, in the East, Slippery Rock tripped up Edin· feel that·be were experienclJlg "bat•
tie-fatigue" U be
the RldoUl
boro 14-0.

Sophomore Siegel Paces
Golf Victory Over State

0dNer 4, 1961

WBFO-FM, the cam·
pusradio statioswill be­
gin a weekly program
"U. B. Sports
High­
lights" this evening at
6:15.
The series, broadcast
by Wally Blatter, will

feature interviews with
prominent sports fig•
ures and previews of
the Bulls' Game of the
Week. Be sure to listen
in today and ev~ Fri•
day from 6:15 .to 6:30 on
WB.FO-FM
88.7 me.

�</text>
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                    <text>fl.U IN.JECTIONS
IN MICHAELHAL.L
Oct. 3, 4th
3:30 to 5:00

IT&amp;n

1JIIIIVDllft' 01' IU'W l'Oml AT

■vnuo

HOLYCROSS
PREVIEW

SPECTRUM

(See Page F'ourteen)

BUFFALONEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER27, 1963

VOLUME 14

No. 4

Civil Rights Demonstration Today
Committee ChairmenElected Speakers and Songs Protest Discrimination
.
At Tuesday's Senate Session
By ALLANKHOLOM
,ind MARTIN KRIEGl!L
Robert Pacholski was elected
Chairman of the Elections Com­
mittee Tuesday nlght at the Student
Senate Meeting. Mr. Pacholski, an
independent, defeated Thomas Ko­
bus, Campus Alliance, by a vote of
17-8, with several abstentions .

Mr. Pacholski, a graduate student
in the School or Arts and Sdences,
commented after the election that
"his faith in democratic action hall
been felt ored," re ferring to the

presence of the political parties on
the floor of the Senate.
In addition, Betsy Nordstrom was
unanimously elected as Chairman
of the Spring Arts Festival Com­
mittee.
Miss Nordstrom was a member
of the Fine Arts Committee and
several other Union Board com­
mittees last year.

Fin.nu

'

J

Commltfff

Membersor the Committeeare:
Jerry Catanzaro, Russell Goldberg.
Bill Berger, and Helen BJkoU. Mr .
Tho mas Haenle is the faculty ad­
visor.

l!ltcfflu C:-111'"- CulnNlt

fr om the Congress or Rac-lnl Equut-·
Hy and the Very Re\'C't'Cllrl Krn­
nelh S, Curry will address lh&lt;'
rn lly. A third SJlC'/lker, fr()m thr
Nation.ii Asso1•iatlon for lh1· Arl­
vMccm,ml ol Colored Pcopll', will
also speak.
According lo Mr. Trnylor, thP
purpose or 1hl' rally i&amp; "lo pr o.
les t lhc ovl'rt cxlsta nc e nr surh
un immorul atmosphere ll1a1 would

Th ursday, Oct. 31, ls th~ deadline
for submitting all budgets . "Any
recognized group not having its
budget submitted by Oct. 31 will
not have its budget revued by the
committee.'' torleiUng the possibil•
ity of passage by the Senate .
Am ong the lnovatlons in Commit•
tee policy are the following: 1) All
cemmltfN1 must subm it approxi­
m ate budgets, so the allocation ol
tunds can be more precisely de- •
termlned: 2) All requests for allo­
cations mus t be accompanied by a
detailed statement giving the exact
nature of the use to which the funds
will beput; 3) A record will be
kept giving requests and expendi•
tures o( all recognized orgaru.za,
tions, so as to tncllita te quick pro­
cessing o! applications for funds
ui the future.

IOI PACHOUICY

A protl'st will be held nt noon
this a ltcrnoo n on bt'lntlC oC• the
rivll right s movcm1l'nt. " Wt' pt-o­
test the Blrmlnghnm bombing with
a sl' n~&lt;' of morn l indiwmtion at
the aUront which this action pre­
sents upoh the bnsic l'Onslilulionll
prlnclpals or these Unltc-d Statc-~.
as wl'II a~ with sympathy for
tho~e who are nlos t directly In­
volved In the ell ecl or the crl me."

According to Allen Horowitz ,
Treasurer and Chairman or the
Finance Committee. all o! last
year 's accounts have been closed.

'

right~ mov&lt;'ml'nt hns been distri ­
buted during the pllSI week ln Nor­
ton Union by the Progr!'!'sive
Labor Movt•mrnt. Th e &lt;'lr ru lar
sta ted that "these demands can
be won, hut only by llllL•sivc, unit·
ed. dire ct action."
The Civil Rights
Commincc
plans. in thi' near future , "to es­
tablish aHili.1tions and working re­
lnlionships 1111h local communlty
gl'Oup~ working In the area of civil
rights ...
To name a few, the
NAACP, CORE, 1md lhe nt-wly
fornH"d Citizens Counc, I on Humon
Rela!lons. "

CIVILRIGHTSORGANIZINGPARTY
TIil' 11bo1
·t• s1:111•menl i~ 1hr
theme or the ma..'ISprotest demon­
stration lo be held nt Noa lnn Union.
The rally will inclurll' spe.,krrs
r1·om the 1:ommuni!y nnd songs of
U1c civil rights movement . Stud1mls
will be as ked to sign lellers en·
courairi ng 01l'lr Congre ssmen to
support the civil rights legi sla tion
now before Congn.•ss.
John Traylor. ClvU Rights COm·

r nrourngc&gt; 01• J)l'rmil nny nlluck
upon lhl' gun 1·anlcro fl·t•••clo111or
any Amcri, •11ncitl1.en." C\1r, T111Y­
lor was N!for ring lo thl' hombing
of ll Sundny s1•hool rlnss in a Neg.
ro ,:hurt·h in Birmingham , Ala­
bama, two W&lt;'t'ks 8J:O which rcsull•
cd 111 thr death of s ix child ren .
A dl'C'Ulur rlcmunding "irnmcdl ­
ntr nnd crrecUve" slc-ps to be
taken in th&lt;' cau~c of the c ivil

JOHNTIIAYLIII
Ch•lrmanef Chrll
Rights Commlttw

mittce Chairman , is resrJOnsible £01· .-- -----------------------hie orga nization ol !he rally, which
is under the au~pitcs of thl' Civil
Rights Committ ee.
Olis Cowart, a rcp1·csentatil'e

­

Man Can Breathe Liquids
Researcher Kylstra Reports
By ALAN NEWMAN

Dr. Johannes Kylstra, famed physiolgist, is spending a
year of research work at the University of Buffalo Medical
School.
Dr. Kylstra, will be atWmpting to develop a method for
human beings to survive for extended periods of time under
wales, without the use of special breathing apparatus.

{

•

J

I

-IIIG:
House Plans Elect Freshman Clas.s Council
By TRUDY STERN
The first meeting ot the Fresh­
man Class Cowicil, Tuesday night ,
was characterized by spirited, en0 1geUc debat2 on the pru1 of every­
one present. The newly elected
rrprcs entatives of the Freshman
Class have already started planning
lhe format for what appears to be ·
d year
or radical change in th e
,lan ding of the Freshman in rela•
11011
to the entire student body.
Mr, Dallas Garber, advisor to
the Council , explained the objectives
..r the organ ization . The first tune­
lion of the grQUp will be to oUer
11111flc
a11on to the freshman class.
It 1s the only organizational unit
t•I Ihe freshman and represents a
smmding board for all freshman
'"lllrov ersey. The Freshman Class
Council "' charged with planning
h~ Ol'erall activilles ol the class .

Thr Council consists or fourteen
lreshmen , elected by their confer­
ence group of abo ut one hundred
students each. This Is a new system
of Freshman government which will
offer a good opportunity !or al l
freshm en to voice their oppinion to
the gove1ning body.
Mr . Garber i ntroduced Paul Rich­
ie, the president of last year's
Council. Mr. Riehle o!1ered advise
to the new rep resentatives and told
them ol the activities o/ last year' s
group. These included a booth at
Campus Carnival. a "Campus Ca­
lamity" dance , and Winter Week­
end, the major eUort of last year's
Council. Mr . Richie also listro the
duties of the officers of the Council
and suggested means of bettering
it.
The main topic of discu ssion at
the meeting concerned freshman

representation on the Student Sen­
ate. All the representatives arc
familiar with the tact that thl•
freshman class does not have a
voting member on the Senate; a
problem which all consider unjust.
Steven Becker. the chairman of
the commi ttee lor a represntation
petition to the Senate, oClered ad­
vice as to the basis for gaining a
vote. Mr. Becker said, "In the
l'Onstitution &lt;of the Student Senate)
ii is provided that any organization
may voice their opinion but this
docs no! consti tute vole on the
matrer under discussion . The lresh­
man class has about 2,300 sludenls
and should have some say in the
policy of Student Association ... . As
an organization of men and women
havin g well over ten percent of
the day studen ts we are eligible for
(T um

to Pase 3)

In his work at th e University of
Leiden, Holland , Dr. Kylstra de­
vised a system which kept rnke and
dogs alive ror several hours while
com pletely submerged in specia lly­
treated wate.
The "water", In ac tuality, was a
sail solution, similar in content to
the saline solutions used in hospi­
tal s, into which oxygen had been
forced under pressure . The animals
"breathed" this solution without th e
use of outside respiratory aids.
While working on his main U1eme
of "fluid brcnllung" Dr. KyLstra
made a remarkable discovery which
he hopes will prevent deaths from
drowning in swimming pools.
Ills eKperlments in Holland show­
ed that no matter how much ox-ygen .
was contain ed in the water the
animals ·breathed. they died unless
the water contained a certain
amoun t of snit.
"U one would fill swimming pools
with a solution or nine groms salt
to one Iller of waler. it would make
the chances or resuscitation much
~ca ter, " he conUTienlcd.
An experiment nlong these lJnes
is bein!l l'ar rled out in Aarhus,
Denmark , where the public pools
are filled with such a snUne solu­
tion.
Dr. Kylstra refused to devulge
the fo1·m of his research al UB.

DR, JOMAMIIKYLST
RA
Pltyli.t .. lJt lnvolM Ill
Underwetwlt-n: h
However. ht• remarked that ~ In
lended to USC the ''deco mp ros.sion
chamber" loaned to I.he U111versll}'
by the Navy .
The same chamber was usro
early tb1.syear to cure a coostruc lion worker su!ferlng from the
"bends", a oondit.looa.used when
air,
men working In compreued
rille rapi~ to the · eertb'• surface .

�SPECTRUM

PAGE T WO

Friday, s.ptember 27, 1963

-.

Ebert Heads New Geography Department
llr

C'h1irlMi 11. V

F:1&gt;1•11,hlls

''"-'''" n:111wd
1'lu11rmonol tht• m•wly­
formrd l)!•p11rtnll'nt of GrographY
,11Stutt• Unlvl'rslty or Ne" York at
RufffllO,
Gt'OS:I'aphy, previouhl&gt; combined
\\llh 1he geology department, has
b.-&lt;-n made a separate dcparlment
In till' College of Arts and Scienees.
t&gt;r. Ebert , a dynamir and youth•
lul professor of ft{'Ol(l'llphy, joined
th~• Unlv,:,1•slty staH as an lni1truc1or nftcr t'Ompl~ling his M.A. us
lht• University of North Carolina
,n l!ri4. He considt'l'S grography
1hr "link b&lt;•tween the purely social
sdcnces and the purely natural
sc1enc-es."
,~ chairnmn of lhC' new d/.'part •
mc•nt at the University , he plans
to train studenl~ ln the geographi­
cal disdplmes of lore iw, area anl\·
Ly$iS. rl'j1iOnol nnd urbnn planning,
t'OnSPrvation, dimatology and rar­
tography. In addition IO teaching,
plannfng nnd t&lt;'Sl'art'h, srwtenls
will he prepared for johs wilh thl'
State Departmenl,
Central tnlcl­
llg,mceAt:cncy. thr Dep,1rtment or
th,, lntl'rior nnd in th,, 11/'ld of
Conservation.

Ill' expect~ to attract suppOrted
rcseard1 especially in ror&lt;'ign nren
analysis, . whl&lt;'h would take re­
searchers
and grnduate students
overseas for study.
Local 1·esea«·h projects, some ;ii•
roady underway, indudP water re ­
sourcl.'s and flood control. indus•
trial ant.I urban planning. weather
and sotl studies.
Dr. Ebert traced lhe growth of
i;co0graphy as a discipline, indicat­
ing !hat IJeCorcWorld War II struck
the U.S IYJIS unprepared as far 85
rntell igc•nce information was con•
l'&lt;'rned. Knowledge of roreign re­
cions as well as ol detailed fn[Or•
mntlon on U.S. iicogrophy was
"next to iero."
He noted that n 1958s u r v (&gt; y
showed that among 96S8gto0graph•
ers in the U.S .. 56% were IMChing ,
19% were research and 14% were
m managrmcnt.
Dr . Ebert. who wo~ boni m Ger•
many to U.S. parents, 1lllC'nd"'1
rour yr.irs or preliminary school•
irrg ant.I mnc y&lt;'ars of arlvanc-t'd
S&lt;"hOOlingIll llamhurg 111\d Switzrr­
land .
11,,~l'rVl'd rour Y"""' with 1h1'
U.S. /\rmy 11nd in lffill h,• rntrrc'&lt;l

House Committee to Weigh ,

the University of North Carolina,
where he received his Ph.D. in

1957.
At the Un1Ven1lty, he has been
granted research funds to study a
devastaUng firestorm lhnl deve lop,
ed a(ter one of the heaviest a ir
raids rtown against the port cily
of Hamburg, Germany in World
War II on July 27, 1943.
He is a consultant to Dr. Robert
R. Long, professor o( fluid me­
chanics, John Hopkins University,
who is a mrmbcr ol the president 's
Civll Oefonse Panel. He is a con­
t rlbutlng writer in the field o! i;eo­
granhy !or the New Shmdard En•
cyclopedln, rontributing a total or
14 articles sinc-c 1956,Including two
extensive articles on /\ustralia and
Asin.
Over the past summer he conduc­
ted research on df'Sert soil rPcla.­
malion and irrigation pOtentials of
lhC' QuatH area in eastern Saudi
/\rabin under a grant from the
National Scienct' Foundation . Be­
fore returning to t lw U.S. he visited
lhe exf'avalion sites at Ml'mphls,
Ei;ypl. AHcrwards, he gave a pa­
per on his 1962 11restorm research
at the Hamburg Meterologicul In•
stilutc ,

Corps Divides Into

2

Wings

Due to Large Enrollment
CADETS
Tuesday we saw the f I rs t
AFROTC drill ol the new school
yt&gt;ar with Baird and Ros.~ fields
pummelled by over 3200 leet-aU
left , But the actions or 1067 fresh•
men and 565 sop homores led ob­
se!'Vers to believe that many of
the left reet will soon be- traded
for a matc hing rig ht. The 79 juni ol'S
and 33 seniors consider themselves
eapab le of carrying out this trans­
formatio n.
Because of the large cadet en ­
rollme nt, the corps was enlarged

to an Air Divis ion with two Wings
this past summe r. This Is the tirst
time in the histocy of UB that the
corps has been give n the top ROTC
organ izationa l designatio n. Cadet
Ll. Col. J on Swift is the corps
command er and Cadet Maj .' Rich•
-amShin e and Davi d Hammond are
the two wing comman de rs.
The Pro fesso r ol Air Scie nce, LI.
Col. Huddlesto n. was most gratifi ed
to see the large number of cadets
learnin g th e IUndamentals of drill
and leadership in a spirit of perse­
vemnce and devotion to du ty.

Revise General House Rules
Hou~e Committee is a Union
th!" vlolntion ts vlJ•wN1as II major
Board Committee
consisting
of ollcnse.
/\lso, Housr Committee handl1•s
twenty
members
representinl,!
I ht• all()('lltion of studt•nt orgnnir.a
Freshman, Sophomore, ,Junior and
lion rooms in lhc Union by evalUUI·
Si-nior Divisions, plus thc Chair­
lng the needs nnd operations 01
man, Vice-Chairman and f{ecordlnq
roch organization, This is done on a
Secretory.
Meelln~
Wl'N' h1•td yearly basis.
regularly every Monday during the
The Commitlt'C' him also spon­
school academic yrar.
wred variou~ cvt•nts such as tht•
Norton Unlon f'lcnn-up campuig11,
The major project undertaken by
House Committee was the c:nr&lt;'ful the Bt'Owsini::Llbrury t-onlest and
other at·tivit1es of interest to slu•
evaluation And revision as dt'Cml'd
dl'nts such as Name-the-Room con,
ncceSSl/.ry, of the General House
lt'Sl, N1&gt;rton•Nuts11m·t• DIIYli 11nd
RnlC's or Norton Hnll which 1wre
on1:ln111ly esta blished by tht• Com·
others .
mittel!. These arr thl' rulPS i;ovem­
The inlert'RI an('! t•nlhusinsn,
ing the trea tment, c•are and u~c• of shown by tt,1•vasl nmjorily ol th&lt;·
Norton
r11cililk-s and propr11y .
members of House Commillcc '"
,•vidt'l)t'Cd by their Bl'l'Ol1lPlish•
Their PUrl)O.«' In this l't'S()C&lt;'
t is to
enforce the rules or Norton reR1mt, menls and rum·tions this yt•nr. ha.,
be-en e,wellrnl, Their ucreplnnl'(' nl
ini: th1• dcfaclnit or propt•rl y.
tt•St)Onslhlli!y dur111g- llw dHfil'ult
garnblini:.
vandnlism.
c•rc 'l'lll'
S11111(111
rds Commitll'&lt;' "hld1 wns 11',UISilron lllldt•ri;onc by 1hr m II'
Studenl Union this yenr, lestif , s
t'lltt1bllshcd this year durlni: th,• fall
lo this .
or 1962. is n i;ub-rommil!cP or 1h,
Th&lt;' Houst• CommittN• is now
House ConunittC&lt;', and h111\/fl,,~,111
dent oflense~ by reviewini: lh1• 1111 /HT«'pting anplka11ons for mrmber ­
.Khip, All inlereslt•d slu&lt;lt•nts should
ture of the otrcnsc or inrradlo11.
and hy l'C('(mu
'nl'nding lhe type or l'&lt;1nt,u·t ritlK•r Jim finch&lt;'r , 832·
disciplinary action whlrh should tx, 5251 or Barbara 1-lo(f{nnn,ext. 2865
undertaken , or refers the casr 10 TheN' ure nJso applkations avail­
the Studl'nt .Judil•inry Body wht•n able in 215 Norton .

D. Men.za 's Quintet to Give
Con.cert 1n Norton Oct. 4
By BARBARA STRAUSS

corded with Stan Kenton. while
Covelli hos been assoc iated with
"Where 1s thr muslt· 1'00111
7"
Woody Hermon . Tht&gt; i;:mup, which
"Can anyone use tins room? " " llow
promises a varied sc:&gt;lt&gt;l'11on
ol mun•
c;;n we gel musk whieh we like on
bcrs , cun be hl'ard in lhe Confer•
mmpus?"
The Musi(' Conunllll't.'. l'n&lt;·e 'l'hcater from 3 • 4: 00 on Fn ­
1orllficd ,.,,h many new members
day , Cktober 4th.
;ind ideas , is prepared ru answer
The Music- Commilll'l' is alsu
these and other questions with Ow
making plans to,· iH Informal dis•
.-vents which it has ptaMed [or the
~ussion and coffee :1our to which
near future , Friday, October 41h. all students interc,1,'&lt;l in specilic
tne committee is sponsonni::: the
musical groups are lnvftcd to air
Don "Red" Mc:&gt;nzaQuintel, of 8111 their views, and request favorite
Mother1 Came. This group, featur­
groups and records.The l'Ontmittw
'ing Sam Noto'on trumpet . has Red Is responsible !or keeping !he musk
Mt•n:w and Larry Covelli on sax.
room, located on the second floor o(
Ton, Azarello on bast' . and Clarence
Norton , equipped with popular'.
Bet-kton on drums, They have been
classical, and jazz records for SIU•
K&gt;en previously at Kleinhans, The
dent use. Th e room contains several
Royal Arms and Canlsius College .
sound-proof rooms in which music­
Jt.s members have varied and Lnter• lovers may listen lo lhe available
e$IUJg backgrounds . Red Mema has
albums .
•pl!U'ed with I.hi! Stan Kenton and
Long-range plans include a guitar­
Mli,yna.rd Ferguson orchest l"J . He
lst l'Oncert trom Toronto, severul
has also written and arranged many jazz and folk-singing groups, aJ\d
l~
that were NK'Orded with the
perhaps a Negro spiritual group.
Ferguson orchestra, nnd he ma..vbe
The t-omml tlee also hopes to l'O·
ht!ard soloing on eever-..1 Ferguson
ordinate choral clubs from other
=rds.
Sam Noto and Lar1-y Co­ sc hools wilh tho~e of UB to promott•
,ell l nre no! strangers to lh~ pro­
it1t•reused musical awareness nnc1
lC!IIS:l
ona.l ;,au world . Noto hits r~
appreci11uon.

THOSE CLEAN WHITE A DLERS
Now you're catching on. Just be "clean white sock" ia Adlers. Suddenly every.,oe sees
you as the man who always knows the right thing to do, even if he decides not to do it.
So now's the time to grab a motor scooter and a gir l, not necessarily in that order. Bur
nrst,grab the AdlerSCshrinkcontrolled wool sock. I a white and a coveyof colo~s. S1.00

�SPECTRUM

Friday, September 27, 1963

President Furnas to Address
Bisonhead . Meeting, Thurs.
Dr. Clifford C. Furn~ President of the State University
of New York at Buffalo, will address Bisonhead, the senior
men's honorary, at a dinner and discussion Thursday.
The dinner closed to members, Bisonhead advisor Dr.
Richard A. Sigglekow, Dean of Students, and Dr. Furnas,
itheir guest, will pe held in the Charles Roomin Norton Union at 6:30 p.m.
·
Union at 6:30 .p.m. Dr. Furnas'
address and the subsequent dis•
cuss ion will follow at 7: 30 in the
Facu lty Lounge, 232 Norton.
Dr. Futnas will speak on ''The
Test Ban Treaty: Implications for
the Future.''
This will be the first of a series
of seven discussions sponsored by
Bisonhead to be held duri ng the
coming arademic year. All dlscuS"
sions will be on topics of current
inte1·est and of pubUc concern.
Blsonhead hopes to have integm.
tionist and NAACP leader Roy Wil­
kins address its next meeting in
the middle of October on topics
concerning the present movement
for civil rights in various areas
aro und the country.
Pros(ll'&lt;!tive speakers for the com­
in~ months are: Dr. John T. Hor­
ton, Professor ol History and Chalr­
man of the History Department;
Or. Claude E. Pulfer, Vice-Chan­
cellor Ior Business AUalrs and Pl'o­
fc:&gt;ssorof Economics; and Dr. Selig
Adler, Samuel P. Capen Professo1•
of American H1story.

PIITal SCHOLL
■,......,

P111lll111t

US Philosophy Presented
At Special Meet, Tuesday
By TRUDY STERN
The United Students Party pre­
sented its bas ic philosophy to mem­
hcrs or the F reshman Class Coun­
cil at a special meeting On Tues­
day.
Mike Cohen, the president of the
Student Senate, and Bob Finkel­
stein, a senator, both US mem ­
bers, told the freshmen thot the
State University ol New York at
Buffalo is presently governed by
a two party system. The parties
are the United Students and the
Campus Allinnce.
The freshmen were also informed
that the United Students stand ror
the benefit of the Student Senate

'

(Continued Iron, Page 11

a voling member on the student
Sl•nate."
The Freshman Class Council is
now in the pr(l(;Cc:&gt;SS
of drawing up
a petitlon to the Senate. The mem•
lx•rs feel that the Senate will recog­
nise the fact that Creshmcn deserve
1•e1&gt;1·cscntaUon
on this, the govem­
ini: organ of the student body, and
will cooperate.
Later in the year the Council will
organize commi ttees to carry out
dlvcrsifkd adivi1ies. ~11,·has dances
Md projects. AU freshmen will be
invited to join these rommi ttees.
/\II meetings of the Council wiU
ht• i&gt;pen to members of the tresh­
m,u1 rlass; Tuesday a t six o'l'lock.
Thi• ~'Ouncil mem~rs are pre11arro to work hard and lead theil'
dass in a banner year. They are:
Nntatw Gold. Rena Fisch, Ellen
IIC'Uer, Janice Ulfner, Rosa Lytlli
Drothnm n, Fran&lt;'lne Zumpano, Car 0
&lt;11De Kl'Dmer, Richnrd Lawrence,
Clinton Dl'veawc, Joseph Tringali,
~tc•vcn Becker, Dania l Silber. How­
ard Schissel and Charles Geary.

Dr. Milton Plesur, As•
i-istant Dean of Univer­
sity College announces
that Scores of Soph­
omore Comprehensive
Exams taken in April,
1963, will be available
in University College
Reception Area, Diefen­
dorf 114. anytime Octo­
ber 7th and therafter.

CAESARAND

NAPOLEON
COULDN'TDO...
Callhome!Halflhe fun or doing
somethinggreatis tellingpeople
about,t. Momsand dadsget a
kick out of hearing what's up
. even when it's nothingim­
portant.You'lltfke hearingtherr
•01ces,loo.WhyoOIcalltonight?
LongDistance
ratesarelower,re•
member,
everyevemng
alter6:00
andall daySunday.Extratowtor
manycallswithrnNewYockState

alter9.00 p.m.

-'.!,
.NewYorkTelephone

Plesur Appears as Speaker
The Freshman

Womcm's Forum,

nt•1'C'S!lllry-und/lrsl,mcl1111:
the new rn~1rom11en1, m,·r,•as1111:
t"amprehcns1on of one·,, own &lt;'IMI
with small discussion b'TOUJ)s, is
acterist lcs, and promoting rd.itmn
being presented to the university's
slups among studf'l\ts th 1'0ugh l':tr1•
youngest women students.
fully st'lected group acllvltlrs. Sht•
explained to her audi,•ntc:&gt; 1h,1t till'
This program, under the direc­
student mus1 nc11ust his ohJrr11w~
tion of Mrs. Dorothy K. Simon, as.
so that thl.'y urc In h,u-rni&gt;ny with
sistant to the Dean ol Women. aims
thO!,e of the L"mversily - the t:.111•1
to give the freshman "omen a11 t'XIMS to impart kno11l&lt;'&lt;l_i:,,,
,1ntl
opportunity to lco.rn more 11bou1 1hr student must earnestly d1•~ir1•tu
themselves and their new cm·il'On• $;"d!J1 it; no proft'SSOl' ,1·11! for~•••
1lnyon,· 10 learn, but SU('('l'Sli &lt;It·•
ment.
'l'hc theme for this year's seric:&gt;s pends largc:&gt;(y Ul)lln Ow stud,•n1·,
1•eceptivencss to tM asslmlloth&gt;n
is "l\laki ng the:&gt; Mosr o( Your
of kitiwlt'dge.
1-·rc.,hman Year." During thti rourse
of the lectures, 20 distinguished
On Tuesday. Sl'ptembe r l\\ent)•
mcmll&lt;'rs of the faC'ulcyand r1dmin• fourth, Or. MIiton Plewr, Ass1st,111\
is!ration will speak. Scve ntel!n
Dt?an or UniVl'l'Slty Colle~e. l'OUMll•
women. among whom are mem­
,'Cl the freshmen that they mui,I
bl'rs of the administrative slarI.
abandon the trudllionat Amerll'an
oulsl,.mding alumnae of the Uni·
notion that ~olleg&lt;' years arc .:urr­
wrsity, 11ndwives of faculty mem­
lrcc, and remarkt&gt;&lt;l that instead
bt'rs, will rond ucl the di~cussion
they ate the most I rying periods
groups, ably assisted by the Sopho­ of our lire. lie urged the frt•shmNl
more Sponsors.
lo reappraise themselves and thl'II
This week the Forum has been motives for attrndlng nn 111stllution
fortunate in havi ng ex&lt;!t'llem lee• or higher lcarmng.
turrrs . each presenting his partit'U·
"Succ•u does not come through
lar VJewpoinrs on the topic, "A
knowledge of subject matter per
Rc;,listiC' Blueprint for Acad,•mk
se, but r.ather through the ability
Success."
On Monday, Sept. 23. Mrs. Rich­ to .adjust lo • new life."
ard Stickney, forme rly Dean ot
Dr. Pll'sur nlso set forth ., .ltlJi(l,•.
S1u1fonts at Ede County Tec·hnlcnl
linr fol' studies and remlndf.'d tht•
lnsHtule, now a member of the
stud&lt;'nls thnt thc:&gt;yshould use tht·
Univ&lt;"rsity stuff, l'Ompared a suc­
l'ds ful academic ca reer to a counsctin~ services or thC' Vniver•
smooth voyage. She pointed out thut
slty 10 help them over thl' roui.:h
three ri rm and well•d&lt;'finecl objeC'• spots fn the road of colleg.- Ilk ,
ti\ cs art.•

a series o! five lectures altcmat1.'&lt;l

TIB BIii!

■II ■ORITI
IN A SCINTILLATIN
G
PROGRAMOF
RAGTIMEREVISITED

Hamburger-Bulletin

~d.·
HAMIUl•t ■ t

_...,11/M
..
IGOOD1
HUMBLE

DOWHAT

Freshman Women 's Forum ;

Freshman
Countil

and lhul Jllll'lY loyal ties are &lt;.'On­
stdercrl st&gt;eondary in th e eyes of
the US members ol the Sena te.
Topks of further discussion in­
dudl'd the:&gt;problems faced by the:&gt;
Freshman Class in respect to their
Jack oI representation
on the
Senate an d the election of Senato1·s.

~

PAGE THREE

§&gt;

ATTITUDE

Mfj~~~;~

BUY DIAMONDS
,
STUDENTSTOLD
By cagey hudllng of
their lunch money, U of a.
student, can become In•
by
dependently -•lthy
!fie ti~
they graduat e,
Henry, famed finance H•
pert, Hid tod ay.
"We 1ugges1 a 1tud1nt
buy diamond• with the
money ht ,...,.. by eating
at Hanry', ," .. id Henry .
"TIit average U of B
footkll pla yer, for in•
stance , can eat 43 ham ­
burgers a day, a savings
of $2.U,'' said Henry. At
this rate , ha can buy a
one-carat diamond in two
semesters ."
F a 11o w s who carry
around a one-lcarat dlol­
mond ring flnd glr l1 are
,omewhat friendlier than
before, Henry pointed out.
"We hen never been able
lo llgure why this is,"

LN 14066 8N '6066

ll&amp;Tl■B

AS EXCIT
ING AND CAREFREE
AS THEPEOPLE
OF ITSUNFORGETTABLE
ERA!

Henry added, perplendty.

HENRY'S

~,,,,,,~=--

Hamburgers

~

..!.

t

~ EPIC

~

"¾v✓JI\\.~

A FULL CIRCLE OF MUSIC ANO SOUND

�Friday, S.ptemw 21, 1963

SPEC T RUM

PAGE FOUR

REFLECTIONS

T HE SPECTRUM

I Y JEREMYTAYLOR

'l'ne &lt;)!ltt'tAI 41udl!nl l).ew•puper ul Ute Stott UnJvtrtllY ot New York
at l.h11u10 Pu1.111cat1011Oltl~e ~I Nortnn
1f11II, Un1vers}ty Campus! But­
rain 14,
~- Pi.thll•hlO(I we•kly lrtlm the lu•l w~ck 01 sco1cmt1er o \he
In MO)', e1&lt;c~p1 rnr ,·'l~rrt ~rrtrtd~ , 'l'hnnkSMtvlng , Chr ,1111a•
10,1 wtt~

wt week I learned two Im­
portant thlngs. First, that It Is
much
more dJUlcult to be positive
•n&lt;J.~i,,
about big things than to be nep ­
SO ITOR · lH •C H.JEJ' - AlllfOLO S. MAZQll
tive about little ones, and second
N•w • 1".111\0r
Mnrlln Krt•~el
Buvtness M•n•~••r
, P ot Lavncr
that It one cJIO()SeSto say 81\Y·
f";,«t11rt E(flfnr
Hnrrlet llt'lllln~ er
l\dverll~Ullt M"r I ..1wre11ce SlnHer
Fculur• £dllur
L,,wrcncc Ftcn~rJ
L•.vn1,t Eoll ur
David I rwin
thlng lnteUlgible in print one had
Jl..c~"Vrr,nrr
Cul)y tdJwr
MMCln Coope r
SJ)Orta FAIi&lt;&gt;,
better hand In typewritten copy.
Orrtcr \13Ml!N
K~rt'n Snnlurd
C-ttl'IIIAtl(,n Milt .
1,111
S HesslnH• r
Edit. A&lt;lvl•l&gt;r Wllll •m l:IWmNlnl?
l'ln l\t1v1sur, 1'hornas tt. ,cn le, Jr ,
particular).)' U your hand writing
Is as unfortunate M mine.
G•n•r•t
llhU : llte k t Uu.tl•kl.
Lu11111Wul11,1
•h , A LJndn Leventhal,
Run
Kn1111n~k1. Vic '1.,111. 1\0111• Mllnt,,. M~rtln l( r t~R••I, Rena f'l bCh, Barbara
So this week I'm complaining
~tr~u111.11
, Uunn, .. Brnmtu r,c, t:h,1r h K l.ohuf
Pot Jooc~ . S,uc Mt·ud. Nancy
Ultfkct.
Larry t 'tAtlkh· . l.,(lnn,~ Kllp,tcln. C.horlci; CummlM•. Shelll
abOul ' 'littl e" lh\np ,
l) O-\r'I(. Al i1n Nt!w111•Jn. tlntbl\rn
Chnrw,,,1n.
Jc-),1"1
c Lnnt"\1ster, Claudln
Yoo tiave all beard about the
K ow ul . 'l 'rudy Stl"rn . rt mam,; •f)' MorOnt• l.uwr,(!nc•t• .F'r~nkel, Sosan Licker,
new speed reading techniques
ftot111•t \\' ila•m. All&lt;•c OH1,1111l&lt;r, l)un l.t·•ry, Ho,n 1,ynn Brv\h111an. Jlnv
t:r•wtnrd . J1onc 511,.1111,
t. Lu11 1.&lt;•vv, Rl&gt;l&gt;etl Mll( •h . J e1~111v't'nvlnc. K,1r cn
whluh are being adopted and taught
Cturko , M lkr Sultanlk:
by our more " progressive" in­
Ptto logr.phy
8Wt : H11~...c•l1 (;uldllf"t ~ Jtml IJa vtm", Pam~t.1 Rt 1Cl lt u hcrt
stitutions ol leamlng . You k:nOw,
PtlJ(honn . Bob Ctoth .•&gt;r.mim.. Altun Schohnn.
the courses that allowed senntor
9
11
0
Mansfleld to read C• II of the WIid
• \~~{t::~~~"lct
lt\1 1 ri7.~irffi,/,~~
~~"R7
,1,
::,:;:"~
·~·
'or1
~~rctl~
1tt7II Af'N 'J,t,1nc't' tor 1T1,
101ng .;l ,; if)l'&lt;'IUI r11tc ot post •
in three and a half minutes. Well,
,ll(t' pruvut~d for in S11c•t1nn, 1 rn:t A&lt;1l or O L'lobcr :11 l!U7 ,
this along with teaching machines
11utOor,n•d F't•hr,rnry :,, IU51,
and advanced placement and IBM
~
~l &amp;ll;....~1 lf)Oun
S3,00 f,Wt y('.1r
,•11cul/Hum 86')0,
(')(ams
appear to be the watch•
words of tomorrow's education, and
R1111r••entM
tor n. ,11nn,,1 ,,dvNll •lng tit. Nu11on~l /Id
v,•,-t1,-1n~ St.•r\'14'e , ' "' '· • ..20 M,\t'Jh•OH Av~, N CW V f)fk, N V
l for one, lhlnk It stl11
lc1.
I ask you, whet is the fate ot
the importance of llteratu.re U one
can read the complete works ot
Bertold Brecht In three quarte rs
ol an 1tour? Sure the wol'da ~
n•gistered, the plot is understood
- but what about the things these
works are SAYING?How much of
the real meaning ol the constitu11011ls con,p,.hetlded ii one reads
th e whole thing including the BIU
The c()mplexionof Uaepresent Stude!&gt;tSenate is quite of Rights In a mlnllle and a hall?
unlike that of last year. Under former President Richard Erb, What ,s going to happen to J')Oelcy,
the Senate appeare&lt;lto be a forum not very 1rnuch different to 1hc novel by 19!14(and [ t·hoose
from numerous family circles. However, though the atmos­ that date advie;edlyl ii the only
phere of the meetings was familiar and Senate policy was thing On&lt;!rel\11stor is plot and in•
generally planne&lt;lby a small clique, the record was outstand­ formation? True, the state of the
live drama and mutio11 pklu1'es
ing.
111ig
ht impro, c. bccallile you can't
The Senate programs produce&lt;! by the Qmvocations speed them up - that Is ii you
Commitee were unbelieva~ly impressive. There is no way happen to believe a~ I do tha1
measure the value of the political ideology program, the there is SOlf'ething in the Human
pressure point series, the contemporary literature lectures. Struggle tha1 stnves for beauty and
9, Beauty and meaning are
and the rest; though to be sure, the programs served the meanl11
not things that can be assimilated
purpose of exciting the intellect and expanding educational In a minute and a half!
opportunities on tohe campus.
However, one musr admit thal
This year, the Senate is a highly political body. Both the speed N?ading is a response to a
ne«l. The vast amount or
United Students Party and the Campus Alliance Party do not genuine
material on all manner or
hesitate to divide the Senate on almost every point of infor­ ptinted
is proliferating to Ute point
mation. Wherever and whenever the two groups find it op• topics
where someUllng must be done
portune to soore "status points," as if student government obout it if we are not all to tall
JS a contest, each party enters the race.
behind the times to the degree
The election of a treasurer to replace Henry Simon that we may never catch up. But
you ever heard of the ab­
might adequately exemplify this groping Senate. In this case, have
stra ct? How many of you huve
two rulings by President COhen were effectivelychallenged by ever read tv1e? The abslt'QC( Is
the Campus Alliance: one, allowing temporary treasurer Bill a digest ot the&gt; important and
Berger to vote in the absence of a permanent treasurer; and significant points of a written ~u­
the second ruling, which was to allow past-treasurer Henry ment. It is l.'Xtremcly useful ir,
Simon to cast a ballot. Noodless to say, Mr. Berger and Mr. field~ whe1-elnform• tlon is I he sol"
oolnl of the pt•o~e. Ahstrarts are
Simon are both members of the U.S.,Party
available in all subj~'Cts from Poli·
But to point merely to political maneuverings is not lo tical sciencl' 10 IIU.'l'tll')I Cdtkism
preclude effedive student government. Though the parties but unlll now, they have been, sole­
may hassle as to committee chairmen, there is no reason why, the proper:y or ' 'specialists " . I am
once appointed, these students cannot do the proper job. The suggesl Ing lhal the altematlv e to
Alliance in fact, was created last year to provide better stu• spt&gt;ed reading takos ■v■rythln9. at
dent governmrnl through the competiton of two political par­ :i gulp as though it were a bad
meal. is the use of abst racts b~
ties. (Stregntll via unity. though a cliche, had been obviously 1hr
s1vdenl 10 improv&lt;.&gt;the bt'&lt;'adth
overlooked).
and Important'!' or his reading In
The truth or such an assertion, though, will have to be a reas where slyle :rnd connotatio11
proven. That. lo dale. the ConvocationsCommittee has been are nol nf Plimary concern. I am
unable lo present a program to the student body, if only in also suggesting Iha! th!' library
some effort to inform ~lU·
outline roi-m.ts sorrowful. Such a failure may be due to a make
dents about the 11a111re
and avail­
variety of reasons, but that is beside the point. Very little is 1 ability or nbslro&lt;'ts, !11 display
being done or programmed by the other committees, but the maybe. that ap;icars to the limit
Spectntm poin:s to the Convocatiooo Committee in particu• of the lmagination !ll of{lt'lol 11·
bra11ans).
Jar. because ils shortcomings are the most obvious.
This ma.v serm like n minot
We might acknowledge the fact that the Convocations JX)lnt.
but ii OC(.'Ul'S to m l • thol
Committee has bl'en working to bring to UB, James Baldwin I the leac hin g or speed reading
,111dPaul G&lt;&gt;odman
. Both Mr. Baldwin, a novelist and Negro techniques 10 g1-amm£1r school sill•
leader and Mr• Goodma11.
a poet psychologist and educat~T. dents (us is a l ready being done
:ire perwhalilies which the University would be fortunate In Pittsburgh schools\ ma)' spell
to host. However, even if confirmations for their appearances the end of all written literature­
were to be made. the committee's work would not be con­ a sorry eventuality!
society has alreaey taken
sidered particularly successful. for such guest-6hot lectures looOurmany
steps dow11u,e freshly
do not constitute progr•mming .
paved, Improved highway to phil•
For example. if Mr. Goodman accepts the invitation to lstinism - but when we begin to
appear at UB, why not increase the scope of the program lamper with a chfld's ab ility to
and invite other leading educators such as Harold Taylor ,.d , thinking that the mere
ot words read is a sub­
and James Conant, iind present a series, Or on a smaller qu•ntlty
for ahe qu1llty ol under•
scale, utilizing c~mpu$ sociologists and psychologists to dis• sitlule
standing. then I am afraid it may
cus contemp0rary pt'Oblems which relate to the individual be too late to tum back.
in our society.
/\ very wisl! lrlend of mine once
1:he Sp~ctrum docs not wish to whip the Senate for took lhe speed reading course at
and quit hlldway through
what 1t considers to be a slow and disappointing start . It Is Columbia,
!he l'OWm&gt; becaUSl' he was alr&lt;\id
certainly hoped that th.e Senate and its many committees hP might nol be at&gt;le to stop read•
will be move&lt;!to act
, . an&lt;l prove themselves equal to mg TOO !asl. Habit is a wonderful
pre-polltkaJ student govC'rnment.
thing departme nt.

6

;,,

1

Editorials

to

1•

Heard Throughthe Ivy .. .
T1- Civi l Rlehtf Dlt.mmai
The Image of the Negi'Orace as
an unambiti ous and lackadai!ilcal
onu which a distorted . Southern
"history'' has ingrained in many ~
Americans was shattered into two
hundred lllOusand pieces lasl Aug,

28.
On that day , the Negro proclaim•
ed his demand for e(Jual opportwli•
ties and civll rights in the largest
demonstration ever witnessed in the
Capital.
Now is the time for all white
people to join in this moral strug­
gle. The stranglehold of the South­
ern Congrossional coalition must be
broken. The indignities to human
uatul'e tllat tJle Negro has endured
must be ended. And to those who
a 1•guc for the Negro to wait a little
tonger, we reply: He has been
wailing for lOO yea1'S . He canJtQt
nnd will nol wail anolhe1' JOOyeal's.
TIie blind obstinacy of a Gover­
nor W.allace and the wmeful be­
havior of a Philadelphia suburb
toward a Negro farnlly will cease.
For, it Is orily In this way that the
conscient-e of a changing America
will be allowed to rest
The
Fordhan, Ram
Granted , a considerable portion
o ( the Negi'O population in Ameri­
ca has not had \h e initiative or the
dignity to try to erase the still­
common image oC the lazy. law­
breaking colo1-edman. But a high
percentage or t11
e white population
In America has not had the initia•
tlve or the charity to give the
Negro who wants to el'ase this
image a chance to do so.
There is. therefore a lot of faults
to be round wilh members of l&gt;Olh
races before we begin to examine
the burning issue of the recent
drive toward Integration of all pub­
lic facilities . . • Xnler University
ShHl■ nt

Faculty Relation,

In our Seijo Univ. there are lots
of good points that are not found
In other universities or colleges.
One ol them is the atmosphere of
freedom . All the stude nts become
people ol frank personality under
such a condition. But recently it
set?ms as if some students are not
benefiting from this "atmosphere
of freedom" as ii would be desired..
We think one or the reasons for
this can be found in the gulf be­
tween students and profs. Conse­
Qllently, the stu&lt;knts and profs. do

not seem to have a correct under •
standing of the present conditions
of the University. It Is true that
some people in the university are
thinking about tltls problem in earn­
est Bui the majority contentedly
say "we are free to enjoy our Univ.
life, as we please, because of its
un reset\led atmosphere. " .•.
TM
S. IJolm , (Tokyo, J.,..n)
Draft Exemption
Last week the Pres ident o( U1r
United Slates. one of the ;mostdem•
ocratically elected leaders ol onr
of the most p1-ogressi.11
e states 111
lhe world, added turther to the pro­
cess of dlscriminaUon by effective­
ly adding married men from 19 to
26 to the huge group ot those ex•
empt on grounds of patemlty, civil
usetulness to the state, physical all~
mental defection, and other grounds.
What used to be the duty or nil
able-bodied men, the dut:y to defend
themselves. has become the ch()rc,
the task or a select group, a group
recruited from the general populn
tion on the basis or ar bitrary quail
tications.
It ls the duty of those in our
society who are being victimized
to either change the law or reruse
to rouow it. No government has 1hr
right to make seivants out of somr
to keep the rest free and sale . It
the law cannot be changed, it 1"
the duty of each of those who al'!'
to be dictated to and lose tb1•1r
birth rights as American cil12ens '"
refuse to the utmost of their abilll)
to participate or cooperate in .a 11i
way with the laws and regulatJOl:i
of the selected Service . . • Th•
Dally On11.. (Syracuse Unlvel'lltv,
fnit■ mltl■•

Fratemlties are not meeting tl11•1r
real potenUal on this campus. s 1,1
dents complain about the lack ,iJ
activity at the university but until
there are signlticant moves l(•r
ward onty empty talk will prevall
The · '' leadership commupily" ' 11
fraternities should be a vital ,.1,,
meot in correcting lhe sitoa11,,n
Wh en pinmates, cltee:rleaders, 1n'1•
pendents and campus leaders l'O ntt
around to recognl.zlng and opr11
!~
complaining about the slow pace 01
tratemitles, time has come for 11 1
period ol awakening and rero l011
lion of potentlal • • 111■ D■I•••"
Review (Unlv■ rt.lty of O.llwaN )

�The Circus
By BOB MILCH
ly IOI MILCH
Dear Ma 'n Pa,
Well, ah made a new .trlcnd the
othuh day. His name Is Stro ntium
W. Funny, huh ? Ah though It was
tunny when ah tuhst heart It. bvt
ole Strlntl um (he lets me call him
by his fuhst name) don't ge t much
ol a bnng oua it. That's 'ca use he
takes everythln· so serious all the
Ume.
See. him an' his tdcnds got a
purpose In We , or so they says.
They sra ned a club here called
Groaning Ranting Urchins, Malcon­
tents and Bombastic Llliputians
Everywhere. Well, that's too hard
to say all in one breath, so they
abbrevia te it as GRUMBLE.
Stronti um invited me to one o·
their meetin 's, an' cause ah didn 't
have anythln' on ror midnight that
mght, ah went along. It was held
in the basement o· Hayes Hall , an'
there ain't no spookier place any•
where ;it midnight. Anyway. at
twelve on the nose. the Supreme
Grumb ler come in a' called the
mee tin' to order. He 's a short lit•
lie teller wearing combat boots an·
a army jacl&lt;et, an' he's got a little
t,eard an' carries bis books in a
l11undry bag; fact is, evecybody
tlown there but me had a heard
nn· a army jacket an' a laundry
bag.
Anyway, he says, "Cats. there
are several bugging problems which
must be dell wlth thls pro" An' as
soon as he says this, everybody
Stal.'ls in to grumble. "Does Groan­
er First Class Xeonphon Q "have
I.he agenda? The fir.It thin g we've
got lo decide, brothers, is. what
are we going to do about CUba?"

An then the rest ,tarts In lo moan•
in' an' groanln'. "And what abou t
Berlin?" he goes on, an' the nlllm •
bUn' gets louder. " Whal are we
going to do about Birmingham?"
an' It gels louder. '" And what about
unemployment an d the Bomb and
Red Oilna?" an•lhe rest snort an'
whee:ie and gurgle . "What's to be
done with NATO and fwlout. l ask
you! Are we jU!it going to be
pushed around in Lalin America
S.I\Ymore ? What's to be done aboul
the value of the dollar?" An' then
two or three o' the others starts
rollln' 'round on the OOQI' and ye ll.
In' "Slop! Stop! I can't take ROY·
more." But he goes on an' Sllys,
"What about bombshellers and im·
morality and the l)ad shake Lhe in­
dilul5 al'e getting? What about the
elections and the March on Wash­
ington and {air housing and inse&lt;'­
ticldes on food and eommunlsm ant!
lhe Berlin Wllll and the war in
V!etruim?"
Well, by Oien eve ryhody but me
was rollin' on the noor !Ill' bllng•
in' on the pipes an' stuU an' mum•
bll.n' an' gt1.1mblin', Then this Su­
preme Grumbler gets back up an·
says. "Cats, our path is clear and
the net'&lt;led aclion will be taken .
Novice Manoontent Phlneus D, you
will wri te an ar\gly letter to the
l'&lt;iltor explaining just what we 11.!t'l
must be done , Until next Ume,
then, the conclave's ove r,"
Yuh know , ma' 'n pa, il's like
ole Strontium says. In lhis modrm
day 'h age, yuh need things like
that there meet!n' to dari{y the
issues for yuh.
Your lovtn· son.
Jethro

Opinionand Conviction
By VICTORMENZA

Notes taken upon watching the
Ball and Chain: While situated
somewhere in the midst of thl'
dnnce orgy held wt Friday In
U1e Multi-Purpose Room. I could
not help overhearing the sad com·
ment made by some bespectacled
boy, " l wish l didn't like the music
or this dancing. I can 't seem to re­
sist . . . " It was at thls point that
his voice faded out into the on1·u.1
hing musi c. I suppose that a
t•mnment such as that Is worthy
fol' its sheer honesty and humility ,
hut beyond tha t it reeks of frustr.i •
lion. Thus I was led to the follow­
ing tho ughts.
I have followed the progress ol
Rock and Roll since it was born
•.mder that name by Bo Diddley.
Smee that lime my Interest has
fluctuated between an avid worship
11!the early Elvis Presley and a
mild disda in for the likes ol Frnn­
kie Avlllon. There are those or you
who may feel that it Is impossible
to speak learnedly on the causes,
t&gt;lfecl'.!I
, and values of Rock and
Roll, but 1 find that II is, on the
rontrary, a subject which had !den·
tiliabte causes and can be ap­
Ptoached quite reasonably . Let me
say that this is not a defense of
Rock and Roll If for oo other rea•
!\On than it needs no defending , The
i~nor and insinuatio n of Rock and
Roll has always been and always
11111be ln 30me w~
sexual and
emotional. Whether this immediate♦
h Predis'pci6es you to this kind of
mu~ic is you own problem .
l!:lvi, Presley enjoyed the unique
•li~hnction ot being the first white
'li-i;:m singer. While music similar
~ Mynery Tr«ln and HurtbrNk
at.I had been sung by Negroes in
•nit llround Tennessee for a good
muo!J('r ol years for obvtous rea•

PAGE FrVE

SPECTRUM

Frldav, S.,,tembe r 27, 19o3

sons it enjoyed only a mono-racial
success. Typical lines such as
"Come on baby let me thrill your
soul / Come on baby let's Rock
and Roll" removed any doubts
about the Implications of the music .
rt was only In 1$5 , when Elvis
Presley appeared with hts Negro
song styling that Rock and Roll
aualned the scale of popularity that
It mai ntains today.
Like exollc musk or all ages.
Rock and Roll found expression
in danl'e . For a period of about
five years, the sexual and emotion•
al drives which were stim ulated
and encouraged by the Rock and
Roll syndrome were upenled by a
WUK-eform resembling the Jitter
Bug. The dance was primarily
based on rapid movement or the
entire body and devoid of heavy
sexual overto nes. The partners
held hands and made bodily con­
tact for a greater part ol the dance.
But the society became louder,
possibly to drown out the ap pre­
hensions about such an overtly
sensual display.
With the advent of Chubby Clleck,
er and the Twist crune the separa­
tion o r dance partners and the iso­
lating of movement to the lower
half of the body. The confi nem ent
of bodily movement inevitably re­
duced and destroyed the emot.ionnl
ouUe l of the dance and the Joss of
contact relegated the sensual ele­
m.ent to mere visual stimulation.
Thus we have reached the ultimate
metamorphosb
with the Ball and
Oialn. It ls a series of lower body
contortions resembling the bumps
and grinds . For the mal e it entails
all the pl easure of a burlesque
show-that Jett to you. For the le­
male it represents the pleasure ol
looking at one'simage In a pond­
oote the fnclal expressions .

'Grad Association

Leo Smit, Pianist - Composer

PrQgram Planning

Comes to UB as Professor

At tlle recent klck'-otf mee tings
or the Grnduate Studenl Auoc la ­
tlon (GSAI plans werl' laid for a
number ol programs ol immediate
importance to lhe graduate stu­
dent body. The GSA hns just this
month com pleted Its first year as
the orficlal legislutlve and execu•
Uve body for graduate stu~ent wel•
fare and activities.
The first important step or thlR
semester 's agenda has been the
establishment of an EMERGENCY
LOAN FUND for gra dunte st udents.
whereby graduate students muy ob­
tain short-term, Interest-Ir~
loans
to alleviate a number of non-aca ­
demic llnandal d!Uicultles. Detu.its
on eligihiilty and the loan progmm
in general are ava ilable nt thr Fi­
nancial Aid ollh·l' in Hayes Uall
Continuing its policy or the pn!;I
year, the GSA will also provldt•
free coffee in the GraduatL&gt; Stu•
dent Lounge, Room 356 Norton
Unlo11, each Friday afternoon Cron,
2 1m 5 p,m. lo addition, ln-e l'C)Hee
will be provided for any Informal
meeting of a graduate group 111
pre-arra nged times in the louni:&lt;•.
Forms available from department •
al chairmen are necessary to UI'
rtu,ge tor this !utter benefit .

ly VICTORIAllJGEUKI
Leo Smlt. p1a.nlst and CMl~l.&gt;l' ,
h.tls joined the University fal!l.llty
this tall as professor of music . Mr.
Smit is leac hing piano and compo.
slt ion and wfll give a series of re­
citals.
His first recitals wUI be Nov . 15
and 16. and Dec. T and 8, the first
or each pair lor students only and
fret' of ch.tlrgr: the second (or the
i;enera l public, tickets $2. He will
appear in r(-Cill.tl with violinist Eu­
dke Sh/\plro in Jnnuary . David
Diamond , visiting Slee pro fessor ol
music, wttt C()n(1urt Mr. Smlt'11C..
prlcclo tor Strl119OrchHt'• al u
Slee ro1wc•rt this tall.
Mr. Smit's tea ching sc hedule In­
dudes mulnly piano students. nJO(jt
of whnn1 are triking their lesson.q
with anoth1&gt;r~tuc!ent so as to rorm
a rluss or two, Mr, Smit feels Uu1t
lhls plan Is a good way to bcromc
1wquinted with more literature , as
well as the performance o! four •
hand and two-11iano reperto ire, Mr.
Smi! want8 lo enrourage studen1s
to do mu~·ll l'~J)loring of music on
their own, to s tudy Rnd look

f!ledlClfl ol Executive Council
The i:oveming board ol the CSA
consists or an Executive Council
o! 20 members Crom the various
graduate departments.
Noni I n a •
uons for positions On the Execu•
live Council have been solicited
from Departmental Chairmen und
01her sou.rces. The Nomlnaung
Committee is currenUy evaluating
lhe qualiflcations or the candidates,
and a mail election for the posi­
tions open will be held in early
October. By the terms of the GSA
Constitutio n, members of the Exec­
utive Council are eligible for a 2·
year term ol oUice .

Hou1lng, t111111r.nce
Stucllu
To Continue
A ootable ac hievement of last
year's program was the establish­
ment of a group health u,surance
bene fit for Graduate Stude nts and
thei r families at substan tially re­
duced rates . EUort.s in the gene rnl
area of reduced insurance premi•
urns l'Ontinue, with a current ma•
jor Investigation into auto liability
and l'Olllsion insurance benefits.
The well-received detailed unuly•
sis of graduate housing needs pre­
pared by the GSA last year has
encouraged a number of off-cam·
pus interests to t'Onsider the ho\ls•
ing problem. The Executive Coun•
cil is maintaining rontacl with
these groups and providing rl'
quested lnJormallon necessary to
a speedy solution to the serious
housing shortage for Graduate stu,
dents and t heir families ,

Cheer Tryouts On
MQn . - Girls' Gym
Training for potential freshmen
will start Monday,
cheerleaders
at 3 p.m. in the Girls' Gym ,
All freshman girls who are Inter­
ested In becoming members of the
Frosh Cheering Squad are urged to
participa te in the practice sessions.
Attendance at two of the three
sessions Is necessary for girls lo
qualify to audition.

On Thursday , October 3rd audl ·
lions will be held . Elghl cheer­
leaders and four alternates will be
chosen by the athletic department
al that time. 1hoee chosen wlfi
cheer at freshmen games and will
appear with the Varsity Squad,
October n , 01 the Homecoming
Game .

thl'ou gh ~·omplere works or ('()m •
l)OS&lt;.'rs,lo "see whal is on 1hr
other side of the page.''
The number and level ol the slU·
dents pleases Mr. Smit very mu ch;
he feels that there Is much good
Intent In the music school. He
thinks that this music school is
i;alnlng much l&lt;\me and will be na­
tiona lly known ii\ lhe near future ,
The schOol Is presently attended
by students from all over lhc•
world.
Mr. Smll is planning some 11tru c•
tur al cha nges In the musi&lt;: sc hed ­
ule !or next i.em~ter.
He will
tc.ach a l'Ourse In twenlieth cen•
tw-y mwuc for piano and also for
ensemble . This course will be
meant for a larg er class. He also
wants to extend the honors pro­
gram to Includ e a class ror pian-

ists. Instrume ntalists, and student
t'Oml&gt;()Se
rs; to gtt t.bc "specilllst~
together ro os io arhteve a clOSff
of earh
qthen
unc!erstandlng
prohlerns ond !Mas." The 11lanl:rt,
can ~plaln (and r.ompiain) to tlll!
&lt;'Omposers and wtn.unental!sts.
a nd vice ve[1!!1.
Mt, Smit soo,i mnny l!)Odr.mmu •
slclana as a cen\aur divi ded into
man nnd horse: there Ill too much
Individua l specu l1%
allon. A good
muirician needs 541rne knowledge ot
nll the aspecta of music. Many
~pedalize
mu ch 100 soon. The
dass is an attempt 10 unite mus! •
{,ir,n,1so that lhe best results TT1ll)'
I)(' achieved. Mr . Smit cites such
"mlnent examples as Bach and Mo♦
111r1, nuL~U•r composers whO Wc?N'
also masters of the keyboard, con.
du ctors, and had knowledge o( nil
the lmp0rtant
nspects of their

fld&lt;I,
SOm(' of thr youniier professi on11ls, acl-orchni; to Mr . Smit, &amp;I'll
1,•nding towiu"&lt;b i;reo.ter versatll•
tty, He points out that piBJ)IRt
Gle M Gould alSQ ~mp0ses,
lec­
tures. and runs niustc fcstivalq.
"All pinnlsts 11hould try to com,
pose , says Mr . Smit, und "aU COl'n·
1,osers ~hould piny the piano," Stra­
vinsky said th.It ''lini;ers ate good
in.~pirers",
In Viem~. Mr. Smit
ob~•rvec.l thul the pianos used ey
Bt-clhoven
Wtd SCbllbert were
''Wdl• wom"
As for co ndu ctini;,
Mr . Smit reels lhnt n compo!k!r
should bave C!IIOUJthtraining to
l'Onduct his ow~ works ,
/\t U,e age o! nine, Leo Smit re­
&lt;'cived a sd:olarshlp to the CUrlls
Institute o( Music in Philadelphia .
HIS rormal career as a pianist be­
gan when ho Wllll pianist for the
American Ballet Compaey at lhe
age of filteen. In 1939, he made hlll
debut at Camegte R all. For sev•
&lt;'ral years following he roncerllzed,
11ppcuril1g with such orchestras as
the NBC and Cl3S Sympho nies and
the New Yori( Phlthnrrnonic , H&lt;'
served ·on th e faculty ol Sarah
Lawrent'e College from l!H7♦49. He
received the Fulbdgh t Award tor
piano and the Guggenheim FeUow•
ship tor &lt;.'O
mpositlon in 1950.
Mr. Smit premiered
A I ex e I
Haiefr's Plano Concerto with tile
C B S Sy mphony w l t h Leopold
Stokowski conducting . Mr . HaleU
was Sire professor of compos!Uo n
.
here in the spring of 1002
Leonard Bernstein oon&lt;luctt'&lt;IMr
Sm it' s Caprl«lo fw Strl111Orcht..
tra with th e New York PhilhaJI.
monk this pas! season.
Berore
1."'n1ing 10 this University, Mr. Smit
tu uglll (.'Oml)O!,ilionat the Univer­
sity or Cllifomla. He was Slee pro­
lessor ot mu.sic for the fall se­
meslel' ol last year, and gave sev­
era l recnars In addition lo lh&lt;-'lec­
tures.

Procedure for New Campus
Organizations
ly CLAUDIAKOWAL
According (o Frances BllitzskY,
chairman of the Student Activities
Committee of lhe Student Senst" ,
the procedure for organlzing a new
campus organiuition is relatlvel.)I
simple. Last year the committee
approved twelve new club$; tbls
semester they are already review•
ing rour new OOl'l$tltutions.
An:, UB students may appty lor
reroenitiOll of any VOOPthat WWI·
es to use the University 's name
and facilities. These organlzotlOI\II
are also entitled to financlal aid .
Interested parties ahould pick up
two appllcalions and two Student
Association ronns trom Room :m
Norton. Criteria tor approval de­
pends upon the following:
1. Membership must be open 10
all mterested ~me
students ol

Called Easy
tll&lt;' Unlvt!nllty ot New York al Bu!·

hi.lo.

2. The ~ and goals ol the
organilatioo shall be COMtituted to
be cultural and beneficial to cam­
pus ll!e .
3. lt is necessuy tor the organ­
witlon to have II t.m1ISUrer if the
group wishes to request tinanclal
aid from the Student Stnl.ltc.
4. Each organlautlon &amp;hall llllve
a f.aculty advaor .
S, Each Ol'(plll1tatico shtlll hOtd
at least one monthly meeting with
a presiding officer present.
6. U the committee feels the con­
,1 itution under present condil ions
Is Inadequate \n light or its pur•
the commltttt ~ e-~rrdse
its righl In demal¥lina ,vvisson.
7. In case an orpnba1lon tJot,.n·t
comply to the above requlrc m&lt;'nl'I.
the commirtet can use thei r tit,;.
c reUon 111&lt;k-:allngwith tlx• nmtkr
poGeS

�SPECTRUM

PA~E SIX

Friday, September 27, 1,963

Campaign on Valid Parking

LAST
CAL

Permits to Begin October 7
8y HARRIET HEITLI NGER

\\

II, Calhoun, University Bur­

i;ar. ht1s announced thal beginning
()(•1otx-r 7, !here will be an inlen•
st\'t.' ~·ampa1gn to limil the cars

using campus par~;ng lots 10 only
!hose wilh current permits prop­
&lt;'rly displayed.
Students who n&lt;'cd !l('rmits may
oblnin lhem Monday through Fri ­
day from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
at lhe Bursar's 01!ice, 230 Hayes
Hall, or during the week o[ Sep­
tembe r 30th throu gh October 4th
Crom 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. nt lhe M.ll­
lard Fillmore College OUice, 178
Hayes Hall. F aculty and Stall per­
mits are available Monday through
Friday , 9:00 a.rn. to 4:30 p.m. al
the PersoM el Office, 278 Hayes
Hall.

ONCE-IN-A
LIFE-TIME
OFFER

At lhe present the Univers1:y
has about 17½ acres of parkin .:
Jots rompa red to about 13\2 a('rcia
lor buildings. This yenr's budgcr
requ est ror additional spaN' wa~
nol approved. An overflow area
has be'cn established between Main
and Bailey however the school has
not , nor can ii, guarantee every­
one a parking place. Lack of a
pa rking place does not excuse
parking on the roadways, In non­
design ated ar&lt;&gt;as or Improperly in
the lots.
·

Natural Shoulder

• SportCoats
• BLAZERS
• SUITS

Starting on October 7 all en­
trances to the Campus will have
posted atte ndants who will admit
only those vehicles with valid p('r­
mits. These musl Ix' pmperly dis­
played on the hifl front window ol
each car.

made to sell at

29so
to &amp;gs
REDUCEDTO

$150
$391

Placement Service Materials
Made Available to Students
The placement Service under the
direction of Dr. James Latkiotes,
has prepared kits containing in­
lormalion regarding services avail­
a blc to University srniors and grad­
unle stude nts who are looking for
rull-Ume cmplyment. Also available
1n the Placement Office Is inforrna­
lioil about the National Security
Agency Professional Quallilcation
Test which will be given on ca mpus
October 26th. The kits and other
materials may be picked up be­
lween 9 and 5 in the Placement
Office which is located In the base­
ment of Schoellkopf Hall .

A second se1vice available

TO

to

students concerned about their fu­
ture , is interviews with Armed For ­
ces recruiting personnel. Officers
representing

the U.S. Navy ond

the U.S. Marine Corps . will

~

on

campus Octo~r 2nd and 3rd. Ma­
rine Captain G. W. Ryhany ch, will
discuss the undergraduate summer
programs available to Crcshmen,
sophomores, and juniors as well as
the ten week Officer Candidate
Course leading to a commission
in the Marine Corps that is avail ­
able to senior.

•HORtZONTAll
Y SPEAKING
... ·
HAYE YOU CHECKEDOUR
YBmCALS?"

Tapered 51riped DressShirts
High Fidelity Stripi ngs- ln Cotton
Button Downs and Snap -Tab Collars
Sizes 14 to 16 1h Neck and 32 to 35 Sleeves

4.50

to

PRICE
• PANTS

Dress and Wash &amp; Wea r
Nationally Advertised
Brands

• SHIRTS

Dre ss and Sport
Manh attan , Cre ighton ,
Etc.

•Men'sSNEAKER
and Women 's
Spaulding , P.F., Keds

6.50

YOU'll ll KE
THEBETTER
TASTE
OFTHEBEER
BREWED
MEL-O
·DRY

MENS SHOP UNIVERSITY P LAZA

At Amherst

Phone: 833-9395
Open: Mon., Tues ., Wecl., sar .
f: JO A.M. to 5:lO P.M.
Thvra. ,. Fri. 9:lO to· f :N P.M.

�Friday, September 27, 1963
:_______________

S_P_E_C
_ T_R_U
_ M________________

WBFOAnnounces Schedule
Of Progral)'lming
ThisWeek
...

NOTICE OF
MAKE-UP
EXAMINATIONS
A p p l i c a t i o n s for
make-up examinations
for the removill of IN•
COMPLETE GRADES
must be filed in the Of­
fice of Admissions and
Record s 201 Hayes Hall

a possible source of a new wave
or nationalism and division in
Europe. 10:00, Evening Showcase.
11:00 Headlines and Sign oH.

y. Sept . •

5:00 Greetings from President
5:10. On Campus; 6:00.
News; 6:15. Meet the Fa .culty W......_y, Oct. 2
Interview wilh Prof. Beckwith.
5:00, On Campus; 6:00 News;
Music Dept.; 6:30. Evening Musi• 6:15. Getttng to Know You - In.
cale, music for the dinner hour . terviews with foreign students 7:00. America On Stage - "The
Bobby Maronlan, Cairo. Egypt,
Conu-ast" by Royall Tyler (1787).
U.A.R. 6:30, Evening Musk-ale;
This was the first native American
7:00, Cartoonists ' Art - Cltester
comedy. Tiiough its form derives
Gould, creator of "Dick Tracy".
itrom English comedy. its senti­ 7:30. Concert Hall - Schuman n :
ments, particularly lhos(, expressed Symphony No. 2 in C Major ,
by our theater's Urst comie Yan­ George Szell with Oeveland Or­
kee, 'Johnathan, exactly convey thl' chestra. 9:00, News; 9: 10. Amer!•
confidence of the Post-Revolution cnn History with Mr. Wilson. 10:00,
years. 7:30, Concert Hall - S1- Evening Showcase: 11:00 Headlines
b&lt;-lius: Symphony No. 2 in O Major
and Sign OU.
Op. 43, Herbert von Karaj1111
, Phil•
harmonic Orchestra ; 9:00 News ; Thursday, Oct. 3
9:10 American History with Mr.
5:00 On Campus; 6:00, News:
Wilson; 10:00 Evening Showc:isc 6: 15, Ownging Face ol Europe;
varied musical features by stu­ 6:30 Evening Musicale. 7: 00, Spect•
dents: 11:00 Headlines and sign•
ril of the Week; 7:30, Concert Hall
off.
-Symp hony with Noclurn and Cap.
ricdo for Oboe and String Quartet.
Tunuy , Oct. 1
Orehestra. 8: 30, Special - The
5:00, On Campus; 6:00, News ; Fujii Sisters in a concert recorded
6:15, Over the Back Fence - Edi·
Oorati with Minneapolis S)•mphony
torial comment from Canada: 6:30, ea rlier on campus. 10:00 Evening
Eveni ng Musicale; 7:00, Hold Your Showcase; 11:00. Headlines and
Breath - "Tragedy" Four acute
Sign oU.
air pollution incidents which evi­
Friday, Oct. 4
dence suggests were directly re­
5:00. On Campu~: 6:00 News:
sponsible for hundred s of deaths
are recounted, 7:30, Concert Hall 6: 15 U.S . Sports Scene; 6: 30, Evl'n­
- Beethoven: Sonata in O Major. ing Musicale . 7:00 Special - To Be
Op. 10. No. 3. Rachmnninotf: Ten
Announ&lt;'ed. 7:30, Cont•ert Hall Preludes. Pianist Sviatoslav Rich·
Wngner: Brunnhilde's Immolation
ter. 8:30, To Be Announced. 9:00. $t'ene and We~e11donckSonw, \1~th
Nationalism in the Mld 20th Cen­ Eileen Farrell. Leomu'd Bern stein
lumy - German reunification and a11d the New York Philharmonic .
European Unily - William J. Bos• 9:00. News; 9:10. Am l•rit·:111IU~tory
senbrook, co-au.tbor of a ~enerul
witl1 Mr. John Wilson. 10:()(), Sound
work on western civilization and of Broadway 11nd Hollywood, llost,
has recently published "The Ger•
Ed Azi! . Till' original Broadway
c-ast rc•t-ordlng or •·1,-11111
La I &gt;ou,·1•"
man Mind. · He will introduce the
series and 9/IY p.1rti&lt;.'lllar atten­
with £1iwbcrh
Sc11I and Kt•Hh
tion to German dismemberment as
Michell . 11:00 .Nrws and Si~t ()ff

Furnas:

P
_A
_G
_E
_ S_E_
V_
E_
N

KLEINHANS
Tilnns1y Plue

lavl..,•nl Mall

no later than OCTOBER

14, 1963. Make-up Ex­

aminations begin No­
vember 18, 1963.

'UBCollegeQuiz'
Will BeginOct. 8

Y1ur H11111t,u1mnFor

Authtfltlc Unlwanlty StylH

WBFO, the U8 radio sllllion. IS
planning to do a weekly halt-hour
radio program called "UB College
Quiz", modeled ofter the G.E. Col•
lege Bowl.

DONALD
RICHARD

SUITS

The Urst program. planned !01
Tuesday , October 8. wlll be broad•
cast live from the Conferencr
Theater of Norton Union in rronl
of a studio audiencl'. ~'oilowinA
broadcasts will also he live, pre-•
senlc-d each Tut•sday cvt'ning al

s59so
Authentic 10 lhe la~1 dernll . our
Donald Rii'hord 1Uj1llral shouldt•r
suits pass every t,•st in l'lussl,•
stylt-, Worstt'fls In f)l.lllcrns ol
s h a r k ~ k Ins, hl•rrin,:bon~s and
m u I e d plaids. Colll!t:c Shop,

8:30 p.m.
The format for the "UB Collr;::1•
Quiz" program will ronstst of t"o
teams competing cac•h Wl'e~ wlth
1hr puqlOSl' of obtmning Ihr high1•st
numbrr of point..~ during thr pro­

Downtown. Also ThrU\111y Pln111
and Boult•vnrd M11ll

gram. The winning leam will n•­
rurn 1hr following week. Ead1 t1•11n1
will be rc•prt•s('ntm~ ll '1ilfl'r1
'nl
t'ampus org1mliatfon.

Natural Shoulder
Sport Coats . . . . . . $29 .95
Sport Shop--All l Storas

one leam wllh flu• 10111,:1•.st
run on the pro~m m 1111,,r 1•ad1
s1•m,,srer will win lhr ~t·hool 1•h11111
pionship . A trophy will he ; w;ml
t'il to this organization.
Thl'

Slim Pleatleu All Wool
Slacks .....
, ......
Natural Shoulder

The qur,;linns u~c,J wlll bt• 111a111ly a "gencmtl knowl,•dl(&lt;'" I) p,•
No p1·rp;1rnlion ,~ m•1·1•ssat) for

Topcoats . . . . . . . . . $69.95
College Shop--Downtow11

•·Onlc~f:inls.

RADIO
Last Years' Models
Fully Guaranteed
We Will (ii needed) Provide Batteries Free
TRANSISTORS,TABLE MODELS and CLOCK RADIO
Qty.
4
7
1
1
1

G . E. CLOCK RADIO ························
PANASONIC CLOCK RADIO AM - FM .........
PANASONIC TABLE MODEL RADIO ......

....

PANASONIC No. T-70-8 TRANSISTOR-2 Bands

Reg. Price

SALE PRICE

16.95

10.19

29.95

19.97

39.95

21.50

59 .95

28.95

PANASONIC No. T-50-6

TRANSISTOR

........

29.95

2

PANASONIC No. T-13-6

TRANSISTOR .........

24.95

1
4
5
1
1

PANASONIC No. T-41-8

TRANSISTOR-2 Bands

49 .95

PANASONIC No. T-53-6

TRANSISTOR ........

17.95

16.95
14.95
29.95
11.95

24.95

14.95

49 .95

28.95

39.98

19.95
69.95

2

TRANSISTOR . ....

PANASONIC No·. T-7-7

PANASONIC No. T~92--7 ·Jewel Alarm
PANASONIC No. T-59-9
PANASONIC PORTAi~

'

...

.........

TRANSISTOR ........
TAPE RECORDERS .. ..

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

$15 .95

Sport Shop--AII l Sto,as

89.95

�O 'ConnorAccepts ScholarshipAwarcl From
Carhart Photo, Inc. for Pharmacy Students
'l\vo sludcnls of pha.rmac•y at
SUNYAB 1\,;.•eived scholarship
&lt;'11,'Cks
awartll'&lt;I by Cnrhm1 Photo,
lne . upsl,lll' New York's tar~Pst
photolinishin~ comJ)llllY,with plants
In Bulfnlo, Rochester and Syra1•use. Carh1111,many of whosc rc•
tail outlets ate drugstores. 1nsli•
luted a scholarship program for
pharmaeculwul students lust year .
This fall 's scholarships went lo
Cheslt'r Hejnt1, 21 and William Oko­
niewski. 20. both fourth-year ~c-n1ors at the S&lt;-hoo
t of Phaf/11lacy.
1'he scholarsh ips ar!' for half' ol
1hc $400 yearly tuition. The wln­
nin~ students were selected by lhe
f:ll'uhy's Sd1olarship Aid Commit•
tee on he basis ol need and aca­
demic ac hievem ent.
Dr. William J . O'Connor. Dir~c­
tor ot the University of BuUalo
Foundation, Inc.. accepted the

Okoniewski. 91 Laura Street.
Cheektowaga, - who received the
programs or Stale University at
Carhtt rt scholarship for the first
time, has mainlainM a 1.854 aver•
age out of a possible 3.0 while a
(ull-Llme pharmacy employee. He
is treasurer of the BuUalo Unlver•
sity chapter of Kappa Phi , a pha.r•
maceutical student fraternity.
In prcsen1Ing th,~ checks, at a
luncheon hosted by Dr. Daniel H.
Murray, Dean of the School of
Pharmacy , Mr. Carhart said: " It
gives me particuhu· pleasure to be
of se1vku Lo these two fine young
men, who J am corllldent will be a
credit to their cho~en profession in
the years ahead."

SIGMA KAPPA SHOESHINE PARTY

PAT'S

=-=
_=
------,

-=.i=-;,,..

just great for

CHARCOALED
HOTS

Sele c tion of ei~ht
tour guides for the
1963-64 academi c year
has been announced by
the Office of Admis­
s ions Co u n s e l i ng at
St a le Univers ity of
New York at Buffalo.
The students will be
a v a i I ab l e to conduct
tours of th e University
on Mondays at 10:00
a.m. and 3:00 p .m. and
Tuesdays through Fri­
days al 11:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m.

TRADITIONALNAVY
BLUE BLAZER '........

check on beh.1lf of the University,
trom Orrin K. Carhart, the com­
pany 's exe1·u1ivevice-president and
sec·rrtary. The Foundation is thr
agenry which receives and admln•
1s1ers pnvute gilts to enrich the
Bu.Uulo.
flcjna , who lives at 805 Bailey
Avonuc, Bullalo , with his widowed
11111\hcr,
was awarded the Carhart
i;d1olarship ror the second time .
The Scholarship AJd Commillce de·
scribed him as an "outstan ding stu•
dPnl" last year when it sclcclt&gt;d
him as one ol the recipients or
th1• initia l Carhart scholarship. He
is n mcm~r or the student bran ch
of the American Pharmaceutical
Association.

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�S P E C T R UM

Friday, September 27, 1963

UB-BU Game To

Highlite Activities
HOMECOMING

Newman Club
Tonight, ' the Newman· Club wfll
sponsor a dance in the Multipur­
pose Room at 8: 30 p.m. The In•
terludes will play; admission is 75c.
Mass Is said dally for students
at noon in the Newman Club which
is directly across the street from
campus. Sunday Masses are held
in the Cantalician Center at 9: 00.
10:30, 12:00, 8.1\dat 5:00 p.rn.
Father's discussion classes are
being held every Tuesday and
Thursday at 9 and 10 a.m. for•~
interested.

Student Christia n Auoc lation
The next meeting of the Student
Christian Association will be held
on Thursday , at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of the Protestant chaplain,
J ohn Buerk. 49 Heath Stree t.
(Heath Street is oil Main just be ·
low the Campus Corner clothing
store.) Or. Ronald Peterson of the
Biology Department will lead a
discussion on recent development s
in the area of evolution at this
meeting.
The lounge in the Universlt y
Presbyterian Church on Main St.,
across from Hayes Hall, is open
daily for study, The chaplain's of­
fice is located next to the lounge.
A study group will begin on Tues•
day, on the book A Private and
Public Faith by WilUam Stdngello.
The study group will meet weekly
from 3:00 until 4:00 p.m. in the
lounge of the University Presby ­
terian Church through the month
of Octobe r . The study group will
be led by Mr. Robert Lester.
pastor of the Brighton Community
Church . Anyone interested is wel•
come.

Gamma Delta
All LuU1e1·nnstudents interested
in attending the Alleghany Picnic
on October 13 please contact Carol
WolfC, TA 3-1737. Tentative plans

are that cars will lcnve UB :11
All alumni are invited to return lo
1:30 nnd meet in West Seneca al
2 p.m . to leave !or AlleghanY. Sup­ their alma mater for the fihli
per will be provided and we will Homecom ing Weekend of UB us
be back in Buffalo by 10 p.m. Ir.
the State University. The U B •
case of change in plans those whu
Boston University football game
have signed up will be, notl!ied.
This year·s lirst weekend out ing
will highlight this weekend of Oc•­
will be held November 2 and ~. tober 18• 19.
The price Is $6.50 which inc•ludps
"Broa dwa y Billboard " Is t h c
transportation, lodging, and meals .
Departure lime is Satu rday thr
theme that will run through out the
2nd at l: 30 from Norton union . weekend's a,·tivities.
We will return at 5 p.m. Sunday .
Interested students please contact
Features of the weekend includl'
Kaia Joks. TR 5-6460beforo Octo• a Queen Contest , Ugly Man Contest.
ber IOIh as we must make rcsc1·•
Poster Contest, The UB • Bos1011
valions early.
football game, a pep rally, Pigskin
HIiiei News
Parly, and a dance al the Glen
Yom Klppur Services
Casino
.
Because ot the observances ol
Yom Kippur, the t·cgular Sahbath
All Fraternities, Sororities. and
Service will not IX' hl'ld at lhc
other organiza tions of fulltime c!ny
Hillel House this eve ning. Instead,
Kol Nldr ei Services will be hl'ld studC"nts may enter the "Broadway
in the J ewish Wnr Veterans Post.
BIiiboards" ppste1· t'Ontest by filling
Services will also IX' c.'Onducted out an application ulank. The np­
throughout the day of Saturday , /1. plicutiorts are available al the Nor­
"Break-the-Fast"
Supper will be
ton ca ndy coU11ter.
served al the conclusion of the
Yorn Kippur Service. The High
The Queen Contest is open to all
Holiday Se1'Vices arc tionducted an­
coeds this year, and will not be
by
Hillel
for
out-of-town
rol­
nually
judged by the student.,,. Judges \1111
lege students. Hillel is indebted to pick ten semi-finalists and choo.~c
the Jewish War Veterans Post for
the Queen. The 1963 Homecomin g
making their racilitirs available to Queen wtU be nnnounred at the
the students.
football game during hall-tim e, and
will be present at the Pig Skin
Delicatessen Supper Sunday
Party following the game. Que&lt;'n
Hillel wlll sponsor another or i ts
series of Delicatessen Suppers on applications are still available ln
Sunday, September 29 at 5:30 p.m.
Goodyear, Tower, and Norton.
in Hillel House. Mr. Ruben Res­
The first off.&lt;:ampus Homecomin g
nik, Executive Director or the
Bureau of J ewlsh Education, will Weekend Dance will be held at the
Glen Casino on October 19th from
speak on: "May 14, 1948." This
9-1 p.m. Jim Battistoni and his
will be the 1hird a nd final lecture
orchestra will provide the music .
on the general theme of ''Turning
The cost of the dance is $3.50 p.,r
Points in Jewish History." Reser­
vations for the supper ar&lt;' necC'S· couple and liquor and bar will Ix•
available for purchase al the da..,cc.
Silty.

PAGE NINE

UB Students Can Participate
In Proiect at State Hospital
A project is being deve loped
wherein Umversity students may
work at !he State Hospiial here in
Bullalo. The project will invol~c
work with young regressive \)a•
tients on a person 10 person b;1sis.
Most tnC'nt11.lpttt!ents have shown
slgnlftrant progress when they have
hccn permitted
to commll nicat e
with another h11111nn
being in a re­
lalionship or concern mid tru st.
The Director of thC' Stair Hospital
secs considerable posslbi11tws in 11
progrnm of lhis snri.

If you arc, mtercsl cd, pll'asr suh
mil your dass sChl"&lt;lulcalnn~ with
your school addrl'ss and t,•li•phon,•
number to thl' Protestant dmplam .
J ohn Buerk . Th&lt;' chaphun·s otru•,·
is lo&lt;'tttcd in the Unll•/'1-,;lty P1·~s­
bytcrinn Churt·h on the eorn&lt;'r or
Niagara Falls Blvd , and Mrun
Strc,:,t. Plcast • feel free to ,•alt him
if you hnvr an~ qur~Hons. Phmw
n · 4, 12.iOor n• 5.:;.qoo Th,• Pl'OJ
l'l'I 11ill begin 111th :tn lll'll'IIIIIIIClll
program starting 111)outtlw nuddk
ol October.

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�PAGE TEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, ~tember

27, 1963

The JazzGa~1£ry

TheReviewing
Stand

1

By RAYMONDCRAWFORD

.,_
By LEON LEWIS
Two line jazz groups were In
town las t week. Kenny Burrell was

HuANft
The rmergeoce or a " new Inter ­
national Cinema ," as Time magn•
zine glibly calls ii In a rarher super­
ficial arOcle by their n.'l(\llar cr11lc,
Brad Darrnch. 15'-plemlx&gt;r 201 has
taken two to= In GrPat Brilam .
The m~I slgni!lcanl one , of cour se.
is the slum and 1-,'l.lllerschool or
realism powerfully pl'(.-sentro by dl­
J"e('lors 11kt' Toey Richardson tThe
L-11ef tfle L.... Dld.anc•
Run~r , A T.all• of H-y , L,,ok
lack In A...., , etc.&gt;. The Other
form Is the series of satires of
rontempornry life in Bnlam pro­
duced by the Boulung brothers and
usually making more or less cUec•
live use of the talents of thl• ubiqui­
tous Peter Sellers . The latest in
lhls catch • all series Is called
HNYelll ANft and 11 is Lypical
of IJlOIStof lht' recent Bnti sh efforts
in this field .
Satire, tradlllonnlly, denves its
effectiveness from a clever juxta ­
position of the stupidl1y. cupi dity
and wickedness of Ille Immediate
tal"gl'I with 11 norm of some sort
which 1s suppost&gt;d 10 represent a
proper mode ol IK'hav1or. However,
the noturl.' ol our socl!'ly lhl•SCdays
Sl.'&lt;'ms
to make it rathe r dlfhcuJI for
a dm'&lt;·lor or nu1hor to ftnd anybody
UI M}lhlni: whfC'h might Sl'rYI.' as
" model for prop(•r or rorn."CI
t'Onduct. In a munncr 110mewhat
akin to lhal oC the so. callt&gt;d
··thealre of the absurd." the saftr­
,. ts ol the t'Olllt&gt;mporary Bnllsh
cmemn h.1V&lt;'struck out at practic­
ally evrrythmg in their rearh . 11s­
sum111g, perhaps , lhat lht• audl&lt;'nl'C'
will ltnd amidst all this s lnshlng
an 1mphn 1 SUl!iitl'!&lt;llun
of whot ought
10 be thl&gt; t-orre,.-t manner or tx,.
hav1or fnr mnn in mudcm British

SO&lt;'iC'ty.
In son w ol their rurlit•sl movit's.
notably I'm All Right J.ack, this
tl'Chmque st,emed quite t!ffccUve
11 penn11tcd the Boullin.1r.5to sug­
gest that there were !nulls m the
postures of both sides in Ute dlsputl'
- thl• Unnm and llw Munugl'ment .
In their lates t pktures. it has donc

-- ---- - August Martin To
Give Piano Recital
lly JOSEPH LANG
'The University Music O(&gt;partment
wilt pres ent plnnist and lnstru&lt;'lor

In Music, August Mnrhn , In n rc-­
e1tal on t' rld ay, Oct. 4, nt 8.30 p.m.,
m Baird llall Auditorium. Mr. Mar­
lin will perform works of Moz.art.
J . S. Beeb , Beethoven . Chopin.
Hmdemlth, MRteo Albent~ nnd An­
tonio Soler.
A nnlive BuUnloninn, Mr. Martin
received lus BM and MM dt•grees
from Syracuse University , where he
studloo org-.in \\1th ANhur Poister
and piano with Grorge Mulfmgar.
He also stud,ro pinno nt thl' Aca­
dt•my or Music tn London. England.
and with Bela Boszormcnyi- Nagy
at Indiana U111verslty. For several
years he served as organist of
lhe First Church of Chnst, Sci(!Jllist
in Bu!ialo and has been dean of the
Bu1falo Chapter of the Amrrican
Guild ol Organists, as well ns Vice­
~idcnt
ol the Chromatic Club.
Admission to Mr . Marun·s rectal
is tree nnd open to the pubhc.

nothing mo~ lhan give the impres­
sion of a rln e with no sight - a
weapon which can be deadly II
a imed , bul which scores few hits
as ii 1s swept about and fired at
random. The traditional postures ol
the clergy , the shonslghtedness of
the populnce al larg e, the misguided
nltemp ts of Lhe rich to do good
the hcarlless pecuniary prcoc:-cupa­
t1on of the large corporation and
l'vcn the uselessness of tradiuonal
Chnstian attlludes las cxempUlled
by Peter Sellers as a totally lnno­
rl'nt young minister) are l!Ome of
th&lt;' primary targets here . Some of
them are hit glancing blows but
none ol them are shattered.
On the other hand. despite the
over-nil lack or co hesion , there are
quite ·a few humorous momen ts
5'-ller's allempts to reform a family
of mrorrlgl ble trnmps and trouble­
makers by moving them from the
vacant lot they 'v e been squntting
on Into the churc h itself leads to
a number or amusing situa ti ons
t partlculnrly onr in which the fam­
ily tramp!! oCf in pocession from
the lot to the tune ol "Exodus"'),
as docs the confusio n involved in
Sl'ller 's appomtment lo the vlcuragc
ol Orbis1on Paiva Instead or the
mn n inlendcd for thal i-ilion. Jan
Carmichael
The Boullm~•s get in
a fl'W good licks ul a lurg, , laxnltve
ro nct.'rn whkh provides the rrono­
mil' base for the to\\'n too, but aside
from these OCl'nsioMI comic res•
plies, lhc picture IS muddll'&lt;l and
ron lused and too slow paCt'd,
rinally. whC'reM a really ellcctive
r nding mighl have pulled thl.' pie­
I urr togthcr to m11ke one cspt•rlo lly
JKltl':Mllt C'Ommrnl on rchg1on or
s&lt;l!'iety
, the nh~urd conclusion , aside
from a momentary l'huckll'. Calls
ralhl't' 11111inspltc or the clcvn lcd
tJO~ition in whkh it leaves Mr Scl­
h•11,.

ru. the Bon-Ton and the Terry Gibbs
Quanl't at the Royal Arms .
Kenny Burrell ls a young mUSI·
clan. born in Detroit , who has al­
ways wanted lo play the gu!Lar.
ACler a long and d1sclplined trnln­
lng period Kenny Burrell turned
professional at the age of 18. Uke
most ol our jazz musicians todny.
he played with a numbe r ol
rhythm and blut', bands before
concentrating on the jazz guitar .
Now a fter 20 years of playing pro­
fessionally, Kenny ha! played wtlh
almosl every name musician in
jazz . Wes Montgom ery and Kell1')'
Burrell are considered two of the
finest gultarislS in jazz .
Many people outside ol New York
have neve r seen Kell1')'. This was
Ills firs t time on the road and as
he says "the last lime ." Kenny
1s a familiar sight at the Five Spot
m New York , playing alongside of
Monk .
Burrell Is traveling for the ne,ct
5 weeks with three other musl­
don s. His planl.st, Will DaVL~
!Sonny Stilt's e,c-planisll and Mar­
Un Riviera , who pl't'Viously played
with the big band of Quincy Jones .
SoMy Brown was the percussion •
isl
Su rr cll's music was not up
to pnr His drummer had no life ,

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7U ElmWNII Ave. TT l-4lll

himself on vibes, a woman on
piano, another unknown on drums
nnd the only lnspirntlon of the
night. a bassist from the Detroit
Institute of Music, who had his
fJrst Job wit h the wondertu.l Randy
Weston . Why he left lhal kind of
music to come to play on the B1llge
with Terry Gibbs I don't know.
Gibbs' music Is stagnant but he
did lhe best he could that nignt.
Burrell ls a grea t guitarist and ls
s urging forward - he had a bad
night.

8 lbs. fot$2.00

WANTED- Linotype o~r ­
.alor, part-tim•. TR ►2214.

1-lS SjlNl!t

bassist didn't have any
lyricism when his solos came . The
pianist Wll3 good. Burrell suppos­
edly ls tremendous but only a few
llmCll dld the audlen,·e seem to
come lo Ille when he played . TilOSe
times allowed me to see Kel\l\)'
".get awll,)'" pla_ytng one of thost&gt;
" soul " tunes .
Terry Gibbs was a WBSle of val­
uable time . He put on a grea t show
for t he drinking cus tomers but did
nothing for the jazz buffs. Terry
had a big three-ring circus with

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�Frid;1¥,September 27, 1963

-----

-

----SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

OVER 50" TALL

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�Friday, September 27, 1963

SPECTRUM

' PAGE TWELVE

Exclusivelyat

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¥

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It's established! Ph.D., the Philosophy of Dress in the vested suit now
being worn by so many successfully diressed men. Naturalness of cut
gives the traditional look in our collecti,onof many acceptably unusual

$75.00

end outstandingfabrics for Fall.

BY

RIVERSIDEMl:N'S SHOP
"The Store ol Pers:onal Service''
783 TONAWANDASTRE:ET
COR. ONTARIO
Open Daily 9 • 9

)p;~p
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�PAGE THIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday , September 27, 1963

Need for Awareness of Safety Stressed
If LAftlNCI

PHNKIL
0

Schussmei·sters to Discuss
Agenda for SkiingSeason
AHention all potential Schussmeis­
ters! Are you waiting for the .first
snowfall with bated breath? Have
you thought about the ski fashions
this year? Have you taken out your
skis and wondered which wax you
will be needing? Join the Universi­
try of Buffalo Schus.smeisters and
find out.
We will be having our first meet ·
in-g ol lhe year, Monday, in the
Mu!Upurpose Room at 7:30 p.m.
All the .answers to the above ques­
tions will be given and more be­
sides . You will be introduced to
largest club on campus. The agen·
da for Ulis year's skiing season
will be revealed and dlscu.o;sed.
The clu b takes approximately 10
skiing l:rips to one of the local
ski areas on Thursday nights dur­
ing the school year . nus year one
longer trip is also planned , such as
a wee kend to one or the (amous
skiing resorts or the East. Last
year we went to Stowe, Vermont
for two da,ys of exhilarating skiing
and to Whiteface Mountain over
Washington 's birthday. It is a so­
cial and educational experience (ew
of us could 11eldomenjoy otherwise.
Instructions on pro per skiing
techni ques are often given at the
meetings, as well as lessons at re­
duced rates tor club members at
the local ski area. Many members
0

-------

-------

own their own equipment , but for
nominal rees equipment may be
rented lrom area shops for the
evening or from Norton fo1· a sem­
eslel' or a ye.11·. More details on
rentals will be given a! the meet­
lng.
The Schussmeisters RN= a grega1~
ious and friendly group. We plnn
on having several socials with
neighboring collegia te ski clubs in
the Bui!alo area, such as Buffalo
Slate, and also with other ski or­
ganizatio ns. To have a good year
socially and on the slopes we will
need active members instead of
the usual letha rgic and apathetic
students that join only for the so­
cial events.
Skiing sbould begin some time
aro und the end of November, aJ.
though It wiU depend upon how the
weathers occurs . Last year, there
were tow trips on Thursday t•ve­
nings preceding Christmas vaca­
tion. If the re are any questions ,
the Schuss meisten; have an office
in Norton (320) any day ol the
week between 9 and 3, there should
be someone there who will be able
to answer your questions or direct
you to someone who will .

Clayton Goetler, 11 custodian In
Acheson Hall , discovered a fire
shortly before7 : 30 Monday morning,
Sepl. 16. He immedia tely reported
It to the city lire department and
to campus officials. Then, donning
a gas mask , he tried to extingulsh
the blaze .
Within minutes Mr . Murray , duel
of the campus police , and Mr. Ed­
wards , Dlreclor of the University
safety program, were also battling
the blaze. When the City of Buffalo
firemen arrived 22 minutes later ,
the ti re was out.
The cau.~e ot the blaze was tmced
to the tht'rntoslat of the refrigerat or
in a physical inorganic rescach lab .
A spark lrom the the rm ostat had
ignited the vapors or alcohol and
ether thnt were stored in the re­
frigerator.
This accident highlights the need
for an eff~live way to make every
student and faculty member aware
of the safety program on this cam­
pus. In the case of this accidenl
for example, there were rules and
regulations concerning the storage
of volallle and lnllamnlllble mate.r­
ials in our explosi.on prool refriger­
ators.

nus commi ttee ts compoaedor
representatives trom all areas:
Faculty
Representative,
Mrs.
Gladys A. Michalik; Phy?.. Ed. Rep­
resentative. Or . t..eonard T. Serfus­
tinl ; Student Represent11Uve, Mr .
ThomasF, Haenle ; Adm. A Clerical

n~

Un111&lt;'t"Sity
is a mt&gt;111l)l'r
or
the College CampU$ Safety /\$$0('1ation and the National Salety COi.in­
eli One aim ol the central safl'ty
t'Ommittee ls lo l'ncourni:e the re­
porting of all at'cldt•nts so that
repetition can be avoi ded .

CENTRALSAFETY COMMITTEE
Slaff Rl'prescn111livr. Mrs. Jeant'lll'
M. Martin; Physical Plant Repr e­
sentative, Mr. EuJ(enl' J . Murray ;
Publil' Hl'alth R~earrh lnst. Rep,
1-c.•sentativt&gt;
, Mr. Joseph Oom11gala,
and Law !khool Rcprescntahve , Mr .
·
Waslt&gt; J . Nowhousc.

Otlwr ac1•1dcnts that should be
reported so that poor ronditions can
be reduced include · auto accidents
on cam pus 1-oadways, slips ftqm
falls in icy weather , acl'idents; in
dorms , and , in fact, any Md cv&lt;'ry
dong~rous ill&lt;.'O
n venien cc.

Bidding to Begin
For Frat Rushees

The informa l rushing activities
of the fraternities were compklC
this past week, and bidding will
take place next Monday and Tur s­
day in Room 346 In Norton Hall
for a fee of one dollar.
Alpha Sigm• Phi held three wt•tl
attended rush parties, during the
past two weeks. A social with The­
ta Chi sorority initiated their ru.'ih
program last Thursday. Suc&lt;.-essive
ev41ts were a " Hermie Party " at
the ' 'Flying E Ranch" last Friday
and a stag rush party at the 300
For that matter, come up and
Club Wednesda y, 24. Rushing · adi­
talk even if you don't have any
vities will be ended with a cock­
questions . It can be awfully lone­ tail party planned for next week.
Alph• Kapp• Psi will hold a
some up there waiting for the first
cocktail party this Saturday night
snow to fall.
at 8:00 p.m . at Marc's Place, 63
Macatnley in South Buffalo.
The brothers or Alpha Phi Delta
sponsored an inform a l rush part y,
Friday, September 20, at the Hall­
mark Manor . There will be a date:&gt;
party, Saturday, September 28, at
the Hallmark Manor by invita tion
only .
T•u Kllpp11Epsilon will hold a
(asual date party wilt1 a band at
the bulletin boards for the l&lt;&gt;elltion Bosela 's starting at 9: 00. TKE held
of the meeting. All are welcome . several events during their rush
Social Welf•,. Club
program: a dale party on Septem­
All students Interes ted in Social ber 1, a stag party on September
Work and related fields are invited
18, nnd another party on September
to attend the first meeting of the
20 at the Glen Casino.
Social Welfare Club, October 1 at
The Jack Kelly Ail Stars meet
4 p.m. in 334 Norton. Those inter­
the Tau Kappa Epsilon softball
team this Sunday, 2:00 p.111. at
ested who cannot attend or have
Houghton Park ofi Clinton Aw.
questions should call Joan Patrie,
Phi Epsilon Pl held a dance In
831-2885.
Norton Union, on September 6th,
Angel Fllght
to welcome the new Freshmen and
Angel Flight, the honory organi ­
to give prospective pledges an op­
zation of college women, spo nsored
portunity to bt'come acquainted
by Arnold Air Society, is starting
with members ot the fraternity.
its Fall Rush Program with a tea
·•A Night in Heil" was the theme
on October 1 at 7 p.m. in room
tor the September 14 party at the
233 Norton. All girls are invited . new Phi Ep hnll on Kenmore Ave.
The tea will be informal in order
Thi- party was in honor o{ 1he
to give those interested a chance
newly initiated rnemhers and In­
to learn a11&lt;&gt;utthe organization.
terested rushees. A beer stag was
Math Club
held at the hall the following Tues•
The Undergraduate Mathematics
day.
Club will hold Its fin;t meeting
The brothers are holding a party
October 1 in Norton234 at 7:30 p.m . this Saturday night at 9: 00 at their
David Oldising, member, will new hall located on 902 Kenmore
give a talk on "Some Basic Con­ Ave. This victory celebration, In
cepts of Statistics." All interested
costume, is called 'A Night in Hell'
are welcome lo attend. Refresh­
and ls in honor o{ the twenty-one
ments will be served.
members who tonight will be in­
M11drig•IReading Society
itiated into the fraternity .
The Madrigal Reader,; hold their
The brothers or Slgm• Phi Ep­
organizational get-together in Room
sllan Fraternity are opening the
312 of Norton on Friday, Sept. 27 Fall rush with a combined Rush
and Celebration Party this Satur­
at 4:00.
Readers, writers. listeners, plan­ day night. The Buffalo Sig Eps
were the recipients of the Outstand­
ners, plotters and fol.ks Interested
generally in letters are welcome to ing Chapter Award RI the 28th
meet the people, formulate policy, Notional bi-annual conc lav e held at
plan ahead. No refreshments. All Mackinac Island, Michigan from
August 30 to September 2.
business.

------------1

Spectrum
Call/JoarJ
F,. llhman WonMn
'• F•shlon Show
Freshman women are invited to
a "Fashio n Jubil ee" on September
t1 in Norton Conference Theater
from 7: 4.5to 10: 00 p.m.

PsycholoVY Club
Psychology majors will have an
opportunity to revive and reorgan­
ize a Psychology Club within the
next fl!w weeks. With more than
100 seniors In lhe department, any
Juniors and persons interested in
Psyc hology, an active program of
1ctivities is possible . Lectures ,
niovies, undergTaduatc forums , field
!tips, speakers and social activities
,nay be arranged. The first meet •
1ng date will be published in The
Spectrum and posted in Townsend
Hall,

Dr•m• and Speech
The Department of Drama and
~t&gt;eeehannounces tryouts for their
production of "The Master-Builder"
by Ibsen.
'
All interested students meet in
rnoms 7N and SN Harriman Library
Risc ment on either Monday or
ruesday . The production will be
~ I\ en November 13-16.

Occupational Ther•py Club
The Occupational Therapy Club
11 II elect of.fi&lt;:1!rs
on September 27
11 198 Cooke Hall.
,\ general meeting or the club
•1 •II be held on October 2 from 12:00
'hl 1:00 p.m. The purpose \\ill
lo meet any new officers and to
n lhe year's activities . Watch

Speed Stick, the deodorant for men! Rea11yhelps
stop odo:r;.One neat dry stroke lasts all day , goes
on so wide it protects almost 3 times the area of
a narrow roll-on tl'ack. No drip, never tacky! ,=
Fa.et! Neat! Man-size! Mennen Speed Stick! ~

All it talces is one clean strolce daily!

�S PECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday , September 27, 1963

Roly Cross Preview
HolyCrossCrusader~
Prepfor OpeningGame
By A~

NEWMAN

All fralPmilics, sm oritics, and
ollu•r 011-:
·11111i1t1011.~
ol fulltime d11y
stud1·nts mny t:nler th1• "Broadway
[l11lboanls ' postl'r ,-onl&lt;'stby fillini:
out an :lf)µhrallon blank Thi• ,lf)­
111lhc Nor •
phmtion~ "rt• 11v111lnbl1•
Ion randy rounler.
Thr Qu,,·nConic&lt;;! is open IO
all rocJs this year, and will not
br Judi:l'&lt;l hy 1hr sluclrnts. Judgl~
will pick lt•n semi-finalists nnd
chooseth•• Qul'Cn.The 1963 Homl'­
romin1; QUl'\'n will bt• /\IUlOlln,·1-d
nt lhe Coolbull game during hnlf­
tlrnl', and \\ill be pr,•s,•nt nl 1hr
P1v,1un ,~1rty following lhe gnnw
QUl't'Tlapph,·ahons IU'l' still avnal­
abll' m Goodycnr, Tow&lt;'r, and Nor­
ton.
The- !il"-1 011-campus Homerom •
ill$: Weckrnd Dance "ill be held
al the Gkn ('3,;ino on October 19th
from 9-1.

6
I

LJ

Phone 856-8351

CRUSADERCENTER
, JON MORRIS

Mom•

Jon Morris, senior cenler for the
Holy Cross Crusaders has been
elected captain for the year 1963'nie taJI llneman (6' 3" and 225
pounds&gt; is an insirlng two way
player and Ls destined lo go down
aa one or · Holy Cross' alltime
greats, and there have been many.
A giant on offense, he Is also on&lt;!
ot the top linebackers In the East.
Last season, Jon was picked by
newsmen as the Crusaders' top
lineman in nine out of ten games.
Morris has lmpressed protesslonal
1couts from both American leagues
and Canadlllll leagues . Majoring ln
English, Jon has thoughts of follow­
Ing bis dad, John, New York Times
Washington Bureau chief, lnto the
field of Journalism. Naturally, n
pro grid career is also in sight.

.,

L

0\ El&lt; :!:! l&gt;WFEHE:'\T

beforeoraftertheballgame

~"'fYLES

McDONALD
'S
AMAZINGMENU

Tailored By

Pure Beef Hamburger .... ,..... 15c
Tempting Cheeseb urger ........ 19c
Triple -Thick Shakes ... ........... 20c
Golden French Fries ............. l 2c
Thirst-Quenching Coke ........ 10c
Delightful Root Beer ........... 10c
Steoming Hot Coffee ............ 10c
Full-Flavor Orange Drink ...... 10c
Refreshing Cold Drink .......... 12c

EAGLE
SHIRTMAKER
S

~6.50

O'Connell
STUDENTS
Lucas
EXTRAWORK
Chelf
$3.33 Hourly
Car Necessary
Arrange Hours to
Fit Your Schl'dul e

Jen

on!' ol the lmc~t college renters in
the nation, Morris wus chosen ns
lht• lop Uncnw.n In nine or Holy
Cro,._,·ten games la.st 8ellli0n.

A fired uµ Bullnlo eleven, lrcsh
Imm its 1mpM$!.1ve Oluo vlC'tory,
WIii travel to Worchl-ster, Mussa
Jun Gravel, o speedy Junior, is
t•husetts tomorrow to cngagt' thr
lat •l'II w1lh the awesome task ol
!Illini; 'fom Hcnncsst&gt;y's shoes. Gro­
Crusaders of lloly Cross - n team
vel 1s hcst remembered [or his
11luch hal&gt; Ill'\ er lost lo UB.
sp;i rkllng 90 y.ml lockoU retu rn
This will b&lt;•the scuson opener lor
111:a
msl Penn Stoic last !nil. He has
llw Crusmlt•rs. who whlppt'&lt;l 1hr
II &lt;'nwndous dt.'sirl' a11d Is u soliu
Hulls llHi lu~I year whHe on their
dl·ll'ns1ve plnyl'r.
11ny to a 6-4 record
CJ.,11•llolborn r&lt;!lurns 111lullback
The Holy Cross sqund has bt~•n
1u sutmll•mcnt the Crusudcrs' run­
t'011SldcmhlywcakN1C&lt;Jhy the- loss
iun~ allack. Sophomore Ken Klux•
uf Pat llkC.1r1hy, lal&gt;I year•~ \II
lend u hund ,cl that position.
~:.lSt quartl'rb.1,·k In add1110n , n 11111
\~llh UB \t'lcrans Gerry Philbin
l'o:wh Dr ~;cl,he Andtr:;,in smv l11~
t•nllfl' olft-n,1v1·l~1cklll'ld l(rllllualt'. und Linn Noli• exerting pressure on
111&lt;.'ludmi:llankcr\i.1l'k Al S11y&lt;l&lt;'1 1111'Crusader l&gt;ackli, lht• oppooiOon
I 11Ulk1'&lt;1
fourth Ill lhl' Mli&lt;.&gt;n IR ~, '''lll·t'lvd to tukc lo the UII' Tom
U111h•r.Ron Muhcu ,llld Pat Muncy
"
\!Jtil1, hal11J11rkT,un "t he 131ur
I ll'IUlesscy ,Uld rull~ll'k Hank CUI· will handle lhc p,1ss rccc1vmg
chort•s for Iloly Cross.
tlng.
The Bulls will N 1ll11htlyh..ndl­
Thl' ab.,1•nt't'of McCarthy wtll b&lt;•
fl'll hard unlt•si, l'llh1•r J oe Pnlu-,1s• capped by the loH of starting fvll•
llv or John Whcnlon c:rn pr0&lt;IUt'l' bilck Jim Burd for tho remainder
as the Crwmdrr·s llcld ,wncrnl. of the wuon . Burd fractured hie
frun Cou~hlln, :I JUOIOI' who 11,LS ankle In the first hall of th• Ohio
game and had to be taken off the
inJurl'd last ycnr, rn,1y be of som1
hrh1 al thHI IKISIIIOII, also. Al­ field.
though Coui:hhn 1s smnll in stulurr
Under the dirtoetion or John Stora,
1;,-10,md um, ht• 1&gt;ru1l'dto tw a
Ul3 WIii be trying lor their sixth
!Jcry ond d&lt;'llkall'd quarterback as
slruii;hl shutout victory - n mnrk
11 freshman.
Captam Jon MorrL~.wall ht•nd llll' t'lll'Olnpassing two seasons. In view
lu;t of l7 lt'lcmwn r!'lummg to lhL, or llw1r los.scs, Holy Cross is t'On­
year's SQ\lild. Ratt'&lt;I by many .os ~•dt•rt'll the w1dcrdog m tomon-ow·s
1111mr,but Coul'h OIJcnhammcr rx ­
l'l'l'll&gt; nu easy v1rtory 1'he ron1es1
should prove lo be n ru,:i;l'&lt;l slam•
HOMECOMING
All aJumni nrc invited to return
lxmi,: umJ.ir.
10 their ::ilmn maier for this tlrsl
JlomN'Ommg Wl'Ckl•nd or UB as
,1 S111tel'mvt•r&lt;ily. Till.' UB-Boston
llnt,·c-rs1ty lootbnll gamt• will high­
lli:ht 1h1s W('C'kendol Oclollcr 1819
" Bro.idwny Billbonrd"
ls the
thl.'me that will nm throughout the
ll'l'f.'kend's uctlvllics.
Features of lhc wl'Ckend include
n Queen Conlrsl. Ugly Man Con­
test, Posh•r Contest, th(' VB-Boston
j
football i:arnr, a P&lt;'Prally, Pigskin
Pnrty , and n dance al the Glen
C'.1.MrlO.

MorrisIs Chosen
Crusader
Captain

3240 MainSt.
TF6-4140

Make your first stop at McDonald's.
Whet.her you have a r,arty of two, four,
or twenty, we can serve you in a few
seconds each. You'll be pleased and sur­
prised to find out jllSt how good a 15c
Hamburger can be. McDon ald's Ham­
burgers are made of 100% pure beef
government inspected and ground fresh
daily. They're served piping hot and cle­
licioll8 on a t.oasted bun. Come in today
... you'll get fast, cheerful, courteous
service ..• plenty of parking ... no car
hops ... no tipping ... the tastiest food
in t.own at extra thrifty prices.
Iha drlH•ln •lib Iha art:hee

:ia,·$
MeDonaldi
1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Y1 MU.

Mortlt of SHIRIDAM DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
(Adjocetlt The Bol,levard Moll Ploaal
Open Fri4oy Olld Sohmloy 11ntil 1 :00
Oporotocl by tfie JERRY BROWMROUT CORP.

�SPECTRUM

Frid ay, Sept ember 27, 1963

PAGE FIFTEEN

Bobcats
AreKittensNow!UB7
UBDefense
Prevails

- o.u.0
NEED PHOTOS ?
REASONAB!.r. PRICES

ly ALLANSCHOLOM

Cati or Write

"lt

was the greatest defensive
stand I've ever seen," ecstatically
declared VB head coach Dick Of­
fenhamer, while commenting on
last Saturday afternoon's victory
over "a big, strong, and tough"
Ohio University team. Amidst the
of eleven thousand partisan
Cans,on a sunny, shirtsleeve afte r­
noon In Athens , Ohio, the Bulls
continually thwarted au potential
Bobcat scoring drives.

Russell Goldb erg
876-3396, Box 30 Norton
STUDIO THEAT ER
"A RAISIN IN THE SUN"
with Claudia McNeil

roars

Lafayette ;1t Hoyt
TT 6-6850
CRICKET TICKET SERVICE
(Ltctnltd Broker )

The "rockem - sockem" pace o!
the game was set right from the
opening k!ckoU when UB center,
Joe Holly, recovered a Bobcat fum ­
ble, All totalled, the Bulls l'CCO\'('f'i'\I
four 0.U. fumbles am! in tercepted
two passes while losing the ball
only twice.
Later on in the first period, after
lbe ball. changed hands several
tlmes, guard Jim Pusiteri pounced
on an Ohio U. fumble at the Bobcat
49 yard line, From there the Bulls
matched goalward with quarterback
John Stofa climaxing the drive by
running over from the nine yard
line early In the se&lt;.'Ond quarter.
Fullback J im Burd kicked the first
VB extra point of the season from
the 17 yard line after a five yard
penalty.
The touchdown play was a special
quarterback sneak which Stora ran
five times during the a1ternoon for
64 yards. It was especially designed
!or the 0. U. contest.
The first haU ended with the Bulls
clinging to a shaky 7--0lead. On
the statistics side, UB had a slight
edge. OveraU, the Bulls outplayed
the Bobcats in the first hall, but
the se&lt;.'Ondproved to be an entirely
diffet-ent game.
The Bobcats took the opening
kickoff and proceeded to drive
down to the UB H yard- line where
the rugged Bull defense rose to
the occasion and stop11t-'&lt;.I
0 . U.'s
rugged ground attack.
At this point the Bulls ' attack
stalled, and thus were !orced to
play a defensive game. The strate­
gic move was Gerry Pawloski's
quick kick o( 59 yards which rolled
dead on the O.U. four yard tine.
With their backs to the wall, the
Bobcats drove to the UB 3 yard­
line. The attack was spearheaded
by the fine running of halfback
Jimmy Albert and Dave Robinson .
On this series Robinson ran 35
yards and was headed for paydirt
unl11 defensive back Don Gilbert
saved a touchdown by catching him
from behind.
The U B interior defense then
..dug in", jarring the ball loose
from the same Mr. Robinson on
his way goalward. John Stofa poun•
c-ed on the pigskin in the endzone
to st ifle another O.U. rally.
Arter exchanging possession, the
Bulls quick-kicked again, but this
lime a long run-back brought the
ball to the UB 43 yard-line. Wes
Danyo replaced Larry Bainter at
qua rterba ck, and the Bobcats went
to the air. Several plays later Danyo
fired coplete to Glen Hill at the
uve yard-line. As Hill started to
run, he was hit hard by John Stofa.
rumbling the ball, with VB's Dick
Condino recovering.
Again the Buffalo attack sputter•
ed after picking up a first down
Jndwere forced to punt. The Bob­
cats took over at their own 37
Yard-line with less than two minutes
10 play . Two successive intercep­
t mus by UB were nullified due to
11
1terterence penalties, with the ball
"llding up on the Bulls 22 yard-line.
A pass completion to end Ron
fo wlkes at the 12 yard-line gave
' U. a fit-st down. On the next
-•liy, fullback John Cimba inter•
'filed a pass in the endzooe and
•~rted to run lt out. He was hit
&gt;,4rd at the six yard • line and

835 · 2828
THEATER TICKETS
ANYWHERE
No Strvlct Charge
Few Local ThNttr1

• 13th BIG WEEK •
. OH

~-'-"..,...-

eKCvslUR
MON
MaeUl
lltYWIIOERS

~w:
~-·
-·
~f.!Jll
.

ALL-EAST
fumbled . O.U. recovered 11ndag-ain
the pressure was on the bulls.
With 1.3seconds lo play, the Bob•
c•al quartei-oock laded back and
fired Into the far romer of the
UB endione. Gerry Pawloski made
a game-siwing interception, and the
clock ran out before another play
could be run.
Note s

Sportscaster B!U Mazur called ii
"one or the great victories in the
history o( the Univel'sity or Bur.
falo."
UB Athletic Direclor Jim Peelle
said that "lhls is a grc11l victory
for us: Ii sets us up for the- tou~h
ones against Holy Cl'Oss und Villa•
nova.''
Jack Sharp c&gt;xdaimC'd .. II wn~
defense that won it - just plarn
guts! When we had to n111ke the•
big play, we made it.''
Publicity Oirt'C'IOI' Bill Evcn•II
emphatically add~~I that .. tlus was
no upset . The boys wcnl oul lo
win, and they won ii."
Coach Offenhamer said "It's ha1-cl
to single out Individuals in a gl'cnl
team effort like- this one. Bvcl'yonc
had to, and did play just grca1. · ·
Howevl'r if one man is to be
single out, it would hnvc to be co­
captain Gerry Philbin. who Jed the
derenslve charge a. I I afternoon
against the Bobcats. It shuuld b&lt;:
added that Philbin injured his h111
on the opening play or the game
but stayed in, playing what wa~
probably the grea test game of his
career.
Other standouts include:
Gerry Pawlo ski. in kicking and de­
fense; John Stora, oUenSI' and de­
fense, and J ohn Clmba nnd Dick
Condino in defense . But again, as
Coach Offcnhamer put it, ..Every
man was a hero today."
On the other side of the coin, the
Bulls lost fullba ck Jim Burd for
the season. He su!tcred a broken
ankle on a lreak accident while
making a tackle. "We're losing
one of the best fullbacks in the
East," decla1•ed the Head Coach.
Fortunately,
though, no other
Bulls 'Were seriously injured, aside
from the usual bumps and bruises, in such a rugged head - to - head
battle. All hands will be ready for
Saturday 's big one against a power­
rut Holy Cross Eleven.
"AND SO IT CAME TO PASS,
THAT THE KINDLY BULL FROI\I
BUFFALO DID BITE OFF TilE
TAJL OF omo·s SAVAGE BOB­
CAT.'' - Dick Johnston, 8vffafo

Evenl119New1.

TACKLE, GERRY PHILBIN
T &lt;d•

PHILBIN NAMED TO ALL EAST
The llrsl WC'C'klyAll East team
for the Eastern Collegiate Alhlrt II'
Conference included UB star lackle
and co-captain, Gl'l'l'Y Philbin .
The Pawturkl'I R. I. nativ&lt;' was
11J1medon tfw ~lreni;lh of hi~ out­
~tandlng play against Oluo llnivei-­
sily lost Saturday

, :1 ,

llH

I

~A

STUDCNT

Avalleblo

pre,eruatlon

tea • .,

at Kfl'thttfOfll
Tl J-111 ♦

1n ◄

t ,H

DISCOU N T TICKCT8
a1 Both TheaJeu Upo n

of Prosx, r 1.0. Card

......

WIOII

"" ""'"

lESllE

REWARD

chology office with your name

T:OO

u11•1.1i i , , u ,10,

LOST
, in lhe U,B. Book S1oi•t•on
W&lt;'d., Sept. 18. Blnt'k Nolcb/Jok
with wrlllcn liilt• ··chnwal ln1t·r•
virwin1C. Blnek Nntl'lxiok "'lh
wrillcn tltl e "T heo,w s ,,r Mm­
~u••cment", Port lolil'l-typr pl;1~1"'
zipper folder wilh the lillr "Cr&lt;'­
alivr Problem Solvin~ lnsl i­
lute ."
My name, Howard Rose, is on
both note books. Please leave
these In the Department of Psy­

•

CAROi

..Simply
glorious.
"

"Sex 1s not

-N .'f. Po11

IIFAVENS
ABOVE!
PETER

a forbidden word!"

SELLER
S

$TAl ~IMG

STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET
for a ll pr ogra ms may be
purcha .. d upon pre.sentation
of 1.0 . card.

a nd phone number or ca ll me
at NF H4 37.

1

8i

LINI'S

Tuesday

STARTS Oct. 1st

First Bu ffalo Showing

I

NORTH PARK
1428 HERTEL AVE.

' .
1,••ilft•

I

JIIQ,. ,if"/lt+IIN,ll,!

$CHINES

3176 Milin St.

TF 3-1300

vw,, tlli.

...

ll(.\Rfk'illf A'tl \ l V t ,\/,)F,H
:~:\.!,;~ \'

G RANADA

ff ~'a l

I

,

l

«• a~, - - .•

STARTS
WED. OCT. 2

�SPECTRUM

PAGESIXTEEN

Spectrum

*

Sports
I

Ii

A Man Rebuilt

Sports Cirele
By ROCKYVERSACE

Buffalo's opening 1962 football game against Boston
University was indeed a colossal way to begin a season. As
thousands of fans in Boston found themselves standing for
the last two minutes of the exciting and heated contest , so
did the many petrified radio listeners at home. But Buffalo
came through and all was well-tempora rily at least!
Several weeks later, a team from Oelaware visited our
campus and once again the local patronage viewed the spec­
t:icle as "lee-man'' Stofa neatly "put the game on ice" in the
closing seconds. Again Buffalo compatriots sighed, wiped
their brows, and experienced the security of victory.
With a year's rest, blood presures and heart rates back
to normal, the loyal Buffalo fans got out their crystal sets
and transistors to tune in the Ohio game. And this time they
encountered a final two minutes of play more thrilling,
breathtaking, blood-pressure building, and coronary inducing
than ever before.

The ''New " Armand Martin
By TOM l(ENJARSKI
Did you ever see a "BeJore" and
"Alter" advertisement ln a maga­
zine? 'rhe usual lorm !or such
arllc:les indudes two pictures, one
shoWing a skinny, unhappy lncli­
vldual as "Before" 1111d the other
showing 11 muscular, happy-go­
lucy man 11s"Aller" who is about
lo kick 8ome sand into somebo&lt;ly's
face . An analogous case can be
found on the University ol Buf­
falo's foothall team In one tnckle ,
n11mcly- Armand Martin. How­
ever, Martin ls not kkk1ng sand
on anyone's lace. Instead, he is
holdlng his own against bigger
rootbil.U players much better IMn
he did last year .
Murtin, who played tackle last
y~•11
r at a meager 184 lbs. was
pt,ll)al&gt;ly the "smallest
tvlles;e
tadil&lt;• In Ille universe ." Now. juMI
one yen,, later . the same 11\l\nsup­
port~ 215 lbs. on his muscular 6'1''

frame . Mttrtln cam e back to fall
praclice weighing 230 lbs.-a full 46
lbs . more than when he had left .
A healthy training table and a
vigorous program of welght •llltiug
gave Armand the weight he need­
ed to be an asset to this year's
football learn. Realizing lhat this
year's compe,ition would be such
that our team would have to hold
its own against bigger teams, Mar­
lln decided to get bigger so Ula!
he could be more help lo the
Bulls . He faithfully lifted weight,:;
every other day of the week re­
gardless ol whether the "other
day" feU on weekends. Simply
wanting to 1..-omeback to play foot­
ball this fall was the only other
reason Martin could of!er for his
errorts.
The 21 year old tackle will grad­
uutes this year. Armand hails from
Detroit, Michigan and is mnjoring
in Sociology and English.

No one will field any complaints about Saturday's game.
Buffalo won and the method ol victory is insignificant. But
th~ writer has one minor request on behalf of the student
botly to each and every player as well as the coaches. That
is, lrom now on, please score many touchdowns early in the
game. This will save much wear and tear on fingernails, pen­
cils, tongues, lips, and the like, as well as doing much to
cwnbat the increasing rate of heart attacks and suicides
among lhe undergraduates. Nevertheless, this win rates as
one of the greatest in Buffalo'shi:itory-a fine display of
defense prowess.

*

*

*

The world of professional baseball is Q.ne that offers
much in the way of permanent recognition for the athletes
that possess unfailing abilities. Throughout the yeacs, the
Bob Fellers, Babe Ruths, and Lou Gehrigs have pitched the
memorable no-hitters, hlt the long homeruns, and won the
import.anl games in ways unheard of by the average player.
!-'Ortheir superhuman feal.s, for their inspirational competi­
tive spirits, these men and others like them have r ightfully
won their spot fo Cooperstown's Baseball Hall of Fame.
It is agreed that baseball is the United States' nation:il
sport , and any supcnor athlete in this field should be
honored by being named to the Hall of Fame. But what
about football? Should there not be established a similar
shrine for the grid-iron supermen who have thrilled the multi­
tudes throughout the years? Are the memories of these men
going to wa11tiwith lime, or will there be a centra l home
,omewhere 1n these stales for Ulcir recognition?
Having been bounced around for 43 years from meeting
lo meeting, this idea has finnlly been converted from the
abstract to the concrete. On September 7, 1963, in Canton,
Ohio. Senator Frnnk J . Lnusche dedicatP.d the Football Hall
of Fame. National Football League Commissioner, Pete Roz•
ell. w:is r,resent to accept the modern structure for his
league.. Tl~e circular building, topped by a football shaped
dome, 1s indeed a stru,·turc for tootball enthusiasts to be
proud of.
'
An10ngthe 17 charter members inducted were Don Hut •
end, (;reen Bay Packers, 1935-45,Red Grange, halfback,
Chicago Bears, 1925-37; Dutch Clark, quarterback, Detroit
Lions and Portsmouth Spartons, 193l-38;Sa mmy Baugh,
quarterback, Washington Kedskms, 1937-52; George Halas
("Papa Bear"), founder and coach of Chicago Bears and Mel
Hein , center, Ne\\ York Giants, 1931-45.
50n,

Among the deceased inductees were Pete (Fats) Henry,
t~ckle lot several teams from 1927-36: Tim Mara,New York
t,1an.tsJounder, 1925-59. Joe Carr, Natlonal Foo:ball League
Prf'S(dent, 1921-39; Bert Bell, National Football League Com­
mu;s1oner, 1946-59: and Jim Thorpe, halfback with Canton
C'lcveland,Toledo, Hock Island, and New York, 1915-26.
'
.,
tu the words vf Commissioner Rozell, The Hall of Fame
t
tbt' dn•am and dt•d1ca~ionof many men over the past half
n·ntury."

ARMAND MARTIN-

"AFTER"

*
lntramur
Ir ED RIZZO

Intramural
football competition
has begun and the batUe for first
plare honors is underway .
After two weeks of competition,
there ls n three way tie for fU'!I(
place In the Monday Allenhurst
leag ue. 'rhe leaders are:
Mooners
Upper ToWl'r
Zygotes

W L

T

2

1

0
0

0
1

1

0

1

The results of the tint games in
the Wednesday Housepla.n leab'\le

are:
Pole House 6, Kipling House O
.Hemingwl\)' House 8, James
House 6
Irving House 8, Tower 6
Allenhurst won by forleit over the
Le~,s Rouse
The results in Tuesday's !rater­
nity league are:
Alpha Sigma Phi 34, Theta Oli 0
Sigma Alpha Mu 8, Sigma Phi
Epsilon O
AUE 22, Kappa Psi 0
Most of the Thursday traternity
!ootball competition was cancelled
bl..:ausc or the reUgious holiday .
One scheduled game was played,
which was between TICE and Gam­
ma Phi. The conte:.t ended up In
a tie-TKE 8, Gamma Phi 8.
Competition in tennis singles has
reached the quarter-finals. There
will be a further 1-eport as the tou-r­
nament draws to a finish. Doubles
matches will begin today at 3: 15.
The intramural golf tournament
will be at the Audubon Golf Course.
Listings of pairings and starting
times are posted on the office bu!·
letln board In Clark Gym. There
are to be no changes made by any
team alter 12:00 p.m. Tbe first
lee-off tn the tournament will be
at 1:00 p.m.

Buffalo T rackmen

HowUBFoesFared Syracuse
's JimNanceIs Bow to Brockport
A,·,ny JI), Boston U 0: Bucknell
AllAmerica
Candidate By TERRY SWEENEY
HI, (;r11y~h111'1(
7; Syriwuse 32, Bos•
Collt•J.:cl1; V1llanovu
21, West
Clws1c1·9: Mu1-el1ead19, l\far11h1tll
8
1011

NEXT WEEK

Buffalo ve, M.inllall
IM11w11revs. Lehigh
Bu~IUII

u

vs

\Vl,'Sl

Vil'Qinia

\11l111n&lt;&gt;vn
vs. Tol('&lt;lo
Culi.:;itl' vs. Comell
(,1•1tysbu1·1,:
vs. Juniata
Uoston Col. vs. Wichita

Ol11vlJ \IS, Dayton

l{J\l&gt;NOR, P1,. - Jln1 N11.m.:c. Neither rain, nor cold, nor J&lt;at1.,
nol' Suedmeyer could stop lhe
hard -hilting lllllback who could put
Eagles of Brockport State Friday
Syrncuse back on top in the East
afternoon as they scored a J.3..25
this ye11r, ww; ranked by \be Amer­
victory over UB.
ican Jo
'oo tball Coaches Ass'n as a
It was UB's first cross country
top qualifier for 1963 All-Amcncan
meet ol the seaso n and despite
honors .
the tact that individual Bulls finish•
Nance, a 220-pound junior form
Indiana, Pn., who led Syracuse ball eel in the first and second positions,
the team 's lack of depth prevailed
carriers with 417 yards last season,
as Brockport took the third, fourth .
was included ln a roster o( 59 All­
fifth. sixth, and seventh spots. Stu
J\mcric,111 hopefuls picked by the
Katz, UB's top runner , put in a
association. 1'he list was announced
superb performance, placing first.
in U1e current issue (Sept. 21) of
a full 43.3 seconds of Bill Sued­
T V Guide magazine by Woody
meyer, also of UB who finished
Hayes, association president and
second. Third was BUJ Mezzycchi
Uluo Statr head coach.
of Brockport. Katz ran the soggy,
Coach Ben SchwartezwaJder , who
rain splattered 4,2 mile Grover
11.ida 5.5 record ln 1962, is banking
Cleveland c.-ourse in 2 minutes , 5.1
011 Nance and Junior back Wally
seconds . Suedmeyer·s time wa•
Muhle for a potent one-two back•
:ll.49. and Ma.zzycchi finished t1&gt;n
field punch tilis year. As a school­ seconds later, clocked et 22.59
boy, 'Nance was rated one ol the
The UB frosh team looked ver)
.finest backs in the Keystone State . impressive as they were nosed oul
The coaches association will study
by the Brockport frosh 28-27, UB's
Euslman Kodak slow-motion films
Dick Genau did a tine job, finish·
ur the 1963 games and then choose
ing in the first position on the 2.,~
the Nth annual All-American team.
mile course with a time of 15.28.8
The sell'&lt;:lions will be announced in
The meet scheduled for last Mon
the November 30 issue of TV Guide.
da,y with Canlsius was cancelh.'d
and will be played Wednesday, Ot·
D1•, Leonard Surfustinl's
gol! tober 16 111 4 p.m , Niagara is als,
scheduled to run against UB on
sqund extended It' s undekaled
1ha1 dat e: 1herefore a tn-tea111
skt•in lo 1h1rtcen by whipping the
meet wiU be necessitated.
EuJ"'S or Nlui;,u·a by a score ut
Tuday at 4 p.m. Syracuse Univl'f
H'.: h) :: 1 2. Curl Siegel SCI an
siry challenges Buffalo at the (;r, 1
Audobon l'OUl'Se l'~COJ'd by shoot­
ing a 65. one under the f)l't'\ i11us ver Cleveland &lt;•ourse. and Momla
ut the same tune and place, cr,1'
record of 66. The Bulls ar,• srht~
duled for u match tomono\\ I tK) 101111m 'a ls. Bullillo Stnte will m•~·
the Bull~
at lhl' Audobon course.

•••••••••••
•

"Support
the
Bulls''

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                    <text>ITAH IJIIIVDll'ff
GREEK PARTIES
·TONIGHT
(See

~

,

PaaiJFour)

VOLUME 14

I

01' NEW 'YO-

AT BUl'l'HO
OHIO

SPECTRUM

PREVIEW
I Ser Page P1frun I

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1963

No. 3

One ·vote Margin
Senate ElectsTreasurer E~.y

f Theodore . J. Siekmann App~inted
I

Horowitz Set to Administef Funds
By MARTIN KRIEGEL

Associate Director of UB Foundation
Two major administratio n cha ng­

es, designed to sll'engthen its pt'O­
grnm. were annuonccd
by the
Uni\!Pl'Sity of Buffalo Foundation
Inc.

r

Mr. Theodore J. Sicl,mllli. Direc­
tor, of Alumni Relations at SUNY­
AB sinre l!k55,has bee n appoi nted

cy's beques t . and deter red giv ing
prog rams. Replacing Mr. Siekma nn
as Director or !he Of/ice of Alum ni
Affairs will be Mr, Jr, William
Everett, now Dirl'ctor of Sports In­
formation at the University.
The nrw oppointmcmts arc e:­
tectivc October 1. acco rchng to
Mr. Ll'wis Har1imann, Chairman o!
the Board of Trustees
of the
Foundation. and are the first s teps
to1v&lt;1rdnew concentr'.ilions o[ 11cti•
vities in both 0elds.
Mr . Siekmann prior to joining
the niversity was Alumni Secre•
tary and Director ot Placement at
Saint Lmvrence University in Can•
ton, New York, from 1947. Befor e
that he taught science ror 17 years
in Kenmore Senior High Srhool.
Mr. Si&lt;'kmann received his B.S, de•
grec- from Saint Lawrence and his
Maste1· of Education degree from
the f6rmer University of Buffalo.
He is a member of Phi Sigma
Kap!)&amp;, Phi Delta Kap(&gt;I\ and the
Amcritan Alumni Council.

MR, THEODORE J. SIEKMANN
Auoclate Director, UB Foundation
Associate Director or the U. B.
Foundation, Inc. with the primary
responsibility or directing the agen•

Mr. I:;vcrett has bt'f'n A~s1sta nt
Di1·ector ol Alumni Affait·s for the
pai;t ninP months in addifiun to
his sports information post which
he has held since 1960. He sctved
iiit)Assis tant Director of Alumni

Constitutional law requires that,
in a case such III this, the new

MR, WILLIAM EVERIETT
Director of Office of Alumni, Affairs
Relation s :ind DirN'tor of Spor ts
Puhliclty nl the Univs,rsity from
1952-195:i.ln the lmcrlm pc-riod h"
was 11ssodatcd 1,·11h lntern111ion11l
Business Machines Corp. of Buf­
falo, t\ 1950 l(l'fldUllh.' nf Ihe Uni•
verslty. lw is a pasl prcs i dent of
the• Uniwrsily's Business Ad111
i111
stratin11 ,,lum ni, and a member of
lion bi­
the College Sp&lt;Jl'lsJn!or11111
re.;tor ~ of America.

NSA Professie&gt;nal

Trailers Used As Classrooms
Qualification 1r
est
To House Student Overflow Set Next Month
By LAWRENCEFRENKEL
The first of ten temporary mobile
l'lass rooms should be making its
appear ance on this campus in the
next few weeks. These mobile class­
rooms, constructed from two 10' by
10' trailer units. will be stripped of
lh!'ir wheels , set on concr ete pilings,
"nd fastened together.
The fact that lh&lt;.&gt;universjty has
lmd to reso1'1 lo temporary class•
rooms underlines he urgency with
which the master plan for our
•:ampus is being anticipated,
This
plan ls dcsignl'CI to hitrmoni ze all
the urchitec ture and landscaping of
:he campus, as at is now and as il
11111be in the years to t'Ome.

The pla n dictates whc1-e new
buildings will be constructed and
roughly how they will look. It is
being drawn up by the nrchitcctual
firm that designed the &lt;.'O
l\lrov e rsia l
Air For ce Acad~my Chapel: Skid­
more. Owens, a nd Merril.
Unti l a co mp uter building is pro­
vided, lhe i,:1'0w1dfloor of Goodyear
H.ill 1s being remodeled to pro\idc
for the expa nsion of the Comput er
Cente r.
In addil ion, Harr iman Library
has undergone rapid renovation
In
the short space ol two months t9
classrooms,
two seminar
rooms,
and 28 !acuity officl'rs hove been
construct ed.

CampusAlliance
PartyHeldFirst

Political
Conclave
in UB's History
By ALAN HOFFMAN
The Campus Alliance Party held
.1~ and the school's ilrst student
·oliticat conclave on Monday at
· JO in the multi -purpose room .
The meeting started with a stnte ­
,n~nt of purpose by the party
••nder.
Slides o/ the re cent freedom
,n,trch in Washington were shown
n the meeting, On a nwnber of
11,eslides, the Party Chairman was
•hown holding a sign with the in•
A 11i a n c e
•· ription, ..Campus
rctrty , U. of Buffalo ", The small
,t1dience of interested
students
'' lS told of:the imp rcssil' e silen,-e
,11uorderliness that the demont·ators kept.

True repre se ntation of the co n­
sll tuen cy can only be accomplished
by meetings o( this type where
studen ts ca n el&lt;pre.ss thelr views
and tell the senators U1n1 they
elected or their problems,
The Campus Alliance senators
were disappointed at the small
nwnber of students that atten ded
the meeting , even though this was
the !il'St attem pt of a polittcal
party on campus to reach its con­
stituency.
The parking problem.
liquor on ca mpu s. traltic Ones,
sc hool sp irit, -;lippery sidewalks,
check cashiJof! hnd the limited
space
for th,e 'fl,ui~day
rught
mo~ies in the ConiercnCI! theater,
w.-re all topics or dlscus;.ion .

Allen Horowit1. was c I e c t e d
Treas urer of thl' Studen( Sena te at
an emerge ncy meeting or the Sen­
ate T uesday night. Mr. Horowitz
defeated Robert Fink!'lslcin by the
narrow margin of one vote , 17-16.
The emcrgeney session was call•
ed !or the sole purpos e or electing
11 new treasurer
to [ill the o[{ice
vamted by the 1-esignation of Henry
Simon last week. Bill Be1·ger hnd
been appointro temporary treasure r
[or lh1' interim period by Pn•sidenl
Mkha eJ CohC'n, und ..,. powers given
him l1y a spcdal rrso lulion of lhc­
-'COUll'.

Aµpllcntio ns ore now a•vailablQ
for N11t1onal Security Agt'IIC'YSPro­
fi,ssional Qualifi&lt;'t1lion Tt•st. which
is 'o be ad mmi sterrd on •campus
Octoll(:r 26.

ROBERT FINKLESTEIN
1,iro. lfC Vkr·Pl'l•sidcnt a nd Cam
pUS Allh;ne c leader, challenged 1h,•
vnlidlty of the- first ballot, stntln~
llmt Mr . Bcri:er, tlw acting tn•as•
urcr, lwing nn appoi ntct&gt;. did no1
huve the righ t to l'0te. His uppc11t
was upheld by the Se nate
\\'ith
Mr, B!'rJt&lt;'r not \'Oltng Ill the 5Cl'Ond
ballot. ·i\,fr Horowitz was l'll•t•t,·d
Provlous to the election. both
candidates had roquestod that the .
e lection "not be a party llne cc.111•

tHt ,"

ALLEN HOROWIT
Z
Student Association Trea surer
treasurer be elect ed from the floor
of the Senate by a majority vote
of the Sen,1tor1.
Al thE' end of the flrsl ballot of
the &lt;'it&gt;ctiQn, voting was tied 17-17,
ullcr whlch President Cohen diret··
led a se1.'0nd ballot ~Uchaei Sha•

Unus ual mid challengmg mreers
to l'Olil'J,l' graduates Ill 1111 l&lt;?\'l'IS
front the lmc•t•alaun•uh• In th•• dOi"·
lorute nr&lt;' ufftorcd by thr :-1a1iona i
By JOAN FARBER
St•curil.v Agency . Tl11•wid!.' \·arirly
ol NSA duties and 1111'd111111.:1nµ I.11s1 ~ond;,y mghl Biso11hcad.
needs for projects rPq1111·c•
·•tll'~ial
the Sl'lll0r nwn's honorary socicly
tsts who arc not only \\'ell t rn llll'd
met In Norton.
hut who uiso possess a h!1gh de•
Thi• first rncrting (or this year
i,:rec t&gt;f flexibility and in1:enu1ly.
covt'n'CI :i wide range or bus111ess
The Profcsslonul Qw11i/ic•;i11&lt;m
Tcst
hus been espec•ially c'Onslrut•tcd to
111·11\
ilil'll u;1d pla ns /or the com1ni::
,,,mest~r. Electio n of oftkrr5 took
provide data to supplerrll'n I olhf't
place nnd thC' L'Xf'CUllve posi11on,
available in!or11m11
on, such as cn l
filled: Pt•lcr St•hull, a&lt;·ling Chall'·
iegc rel-ords,
recommendations,
rwm was dt•cl&lt;.'tl l'rrsidc•nl of th1•
Hnd interviews .
sq,·1cty, Rot._,,., Pu,·holski bc•caml'
College graduates with maJors
V1ee P1rsidf'nl, Tf'rry Cl~rat·c wns
from many lihcral arts /irids l':tn
11.tlllC'dSe1Tetnl'y of lhr group. 1tnd
be utiliwd hy NSA. Any LI. S
n,,lwrt f'ollc•r w,1.s l'le,:tl'd Treas­
citizen and holder of or cand idntn
urer
!or 11t least 11 b,,..ht'lor's dr~: ree b~
De-an Hid1ard S1gglekow sot in
June. 196-1is chg1ble lo 1,ll&lt;C'ttw on 11w nwcfing and 'most ·or thl'
Pro/essionn ! Quahlicalion
Tc'.~I.
discuss11111cunrt&gt;rned the program­
I::nginecr111g, 1nalhcmn t1c·s, ,u1cl
ming Bisonhcud wishes to produ1·e
physics app licants nl-cd not t1.1k"
The u~1ml forma t !or this t.."l'Oup's
the PQT, hut should eun lm•t Ult'
pl'0l(rum rnnsi~ts ur a dlnn ..r with
Pla,·,·ml'nt Dir,•ctor for un appoull•
faculty memlle1'S and dlsllngu1sht'&lt;i
mcnt 11•1tha vis11ing NSA rcprc-­
pei&lt;sons, after wtudt the group in ·
sentalivl'. !Jccause of thi, class 1!ied
du1i;es u1 informal
discussion
nature or NSA 0~ 1·atio11s, all ap·
abuul a variety or topil's .
phcants Cur employmen t are sub•
, Bisonhead 1s ronsi derin g a pro­
jl •l'l 10 a thorough bal'kgruund in­
gram which would dis cuss the slm·
,·cstigation .
lloriti~s or the th1't'&lt;' major Wl's·
Intere.stc-d stude nts should l'Orn•
tern religions: dist·ussio n of sueh
plt•le the application containro in
11 1up1c would or l'oursc
mvoh r
th,, Professiqna l Qualifkation Test
ll'liJ.:lous ll'aders a;; gu&lt;'S!S Olbcr
1e1i,i1•s.ran~mi: Crom political dis•
Buliclln of lnlormation , wluch 1&gt;
uvwlo!Jlt• rn,m tht• Pb.:cm,•nt 01- ,·uS11ion thr.iugh lh,, "human con­
roctor.
ctitir• · art• plu1m,1l a11d "111 ilS·

Mr Horowu z, a se111or in llll'
Collc&gt;
g&lt;.' of Arts nnd Scie nres in :i
pr,~mroiral program, ha s been on
the Dean's List ror the Inst four
s(!mesters.
This semester hC' 1s
light pro­
cu rrying u "relatively
gram". permittin~ h,111 to devote
t mw 10 his cJ&lt;r cutive position .
Tuking a lc.wr of abse nce [or 1h,•
U)t,1-62academic yenr, Mr . Horo­
wi11, t r;1vclcd f!Xlt•ns1vcly, S{ll!ndint:
six 1110111
hs in Israel
11·ork-study rogram.

on a spc&lt;'1al

Bisonhead Elect Off icers
surL'&lt;ily g1vr 81S&lt;111hradm,,mbt•1"
and lht&gt;ir invited gul'Sls an oppur•
tumty tu enjoy good conversat11in
"nd cxchMge ideas .

Applicat10ns for this
ye a r ' s Homecoming
Queen will be out today .
F'or the first time, this
contest will be open to
all undergraduate WO·
men.
Previously only fresh­
men women were eligi­
ble as Queen candidates .
The first meeting for ap­
plicants will be held
next Friday at 4:00
in lhe Conference Thea­
tre . Mrs. Ferrel of the
Ferrel School of Charm
and Janet Shelly, last
y e a r 's
Homecoming
Queen will speak.
The queen will be
crowned during the Bos­
ton University game,
October . 19 m Rotary
Field. This event Wi ll
mark the beginning of
the first big week-end
on campus.

�Friday,September20, 1963

PAGE TWO

1&lt;'

Dr. Plesur Casts New Light SUNYAB to Host Statewide Conference
October 21-22 on Computing Center
On American Foreign Policy
By JOHN KOWAL

Dr. Millon Plesur, assistant dean of University, College
and a member uf the history department, has cast new light
011' the nature of American foreign policy in the 1870's and

rnao·s.

The Chapter 1sen,itlcd " Rumblings Beneath the Surface:
Amrrica·s Outward Thrust." in the book, The Gilded Age: A
Reappraisal, L'llllL•d by I I. Waytte ;'.lurgan (Syracuse U. Press).
In his t•h11pt1•r ll1 Plrsw JJOtnl~

The presidents. deans. and dc1mnn111ntheads of all public and
privule universities in New York
State ::u·c being asked to congre•
g11tc In one phlt'e, probahly for
the lirst lime in the State's his•
lory,
lnvilaliuns
hm r Ileen c•xlcndt'Cl
by the StttlC' University of New
Yori&lt; ISUNYJ m Buffulo to 11 1'011·
on lhc Buflalo t:arnpus.
lh·tohcr 21-2'1, cntitlc-d "The t,;~.

out thul pr('\l&lt;TUJJJlion \\llh 1hr
wcslward pu;h pr,•duJ,~j a \ IW&gt;­
mu.~ overst•,,s 111·0).!1rn11
tutlmrn1g
the Ct, II Wat·. Fo1,•1gn 1·mwl'rns

for!'ltCl'

111btishmentor u University c,,m­
pulmg Ccntrr."
SOIUl· lN admtnislrutivl' oll1cinl,
and romputrr t·cntcr dirc,·tors lrom
lt''l l'IJllcgcs lllld lllliVProilil'S arf'
slal&lt;.'d tu spcalc 011 v11rious11spct•1,

Wt'I'\' rrart101Ls n sp1•r1fit· crisc~.
rathl'r thnu p,11I ,r an 01 pr,;111 lu1~
eign policy plan 011 tlw ~urhtn·,
!hi' rest of lh1• \\ ,. 111wrrnt~I It•
rount for hltle 1n 1\n,•rJl'an lhuu1:t11
1 \'I'll·
as the country q•lchr ,,,,lJ 1h1
tenmul of indrpP111J••m•,
'l'h,· &lt;liph ►
mutJc scrvil'l' ,,us dt·l 11twtictw..
11,·oslly luxury, n humbu.:, a ~11:1111
;md a rl'lu· of ml'1ht•v11l
a11,t11011,11
dunl tr11111111•1y
, :iml ., mn, , lo,

panelists. Mr. Broder, Mr. Lamb,
Mr. Meyer ; l:45, "EqUipment: Re­
quirements and SelecUon," panel
moderator, Dr. Frank A. Engl'I,
Jt•,, director,
comptitor
center.
llarvnrd University, panelisls, Mr.
Rit'hnrd Lesser, direC'tor, romputl'l
c-cnler, Cornell University,
Mr
K,mm•th M. Krn,c:, dirr&lt;·tor, rom­
pu1,,r renter, Columbia University ·
:1:15, "fndlltntlon,"
Mr . ll c-nriquc~
NI&lt;), di11m•rMll'akc•r. Dr. Clifford
C- rurnm,. prt:'Sidl'nt.SUNY at flu(
Orto))or

lo ht• thl'

Howt'Vl'I', 11 I~ r•&gt;ss,hlC' tu u· ,·I
bt·nt.'alh th, pt11c1cl
surface of 1 ,11

1,1.s1 m n

\\hh"

\\'Ill

~rm•~

111

l'l\l)l•lrt• ('011\lllll!'I fl0h 111U:1ls
;111ul'Ol11•gcslhmui,:h0111 llu· ~litll '
&lt;:1101
rl1n,1t 1011 o( ult lht• C'Ol1ft'I'·
,•,\,·, •~ is hr·111gdtrt•llt'&lt;I by tht.•Cum­
flllf l!t~ s,·1tnces Co11su1t
111
g und Co•
onl111at111,:
t'ommilli•t• uppomfr•d IJy
SlJNY tlli•111he&gt;1
s ,11·cDr. 1''tnl'1'1111111
,
U1· K Arthlll' 'l'n,b11nt, clc•un 01
the• UB l•:ni;mc,•1·1111:
Sd100 I und Mr
V1tu t ll,m·iques. l'll•rtronll' d;1tu 11m­
!'&lt;$stni.: nmsull,Ull, NL•WYork Slat,•
ill 11111\,'l'Sllll'S

DR , MILTON PLESUR
M111,, 'l\1"m,
Witli:om l&gt;mn llow•
l'lls, Ulld lknry J,lll11'S IUl!ll'd to

1':m·o1ll'tor tlwnll's, ,md J11111&lt;•s
rlr­
vdupt·d us few bdor&lt;• 1h1• form
known us llw it1tcrnut1omcl 11uvct.
ltrrlt•ctmi: lhis hll'rary trl.'11dwas
th,:, lnt-rC'ast'&lt;.I
travel in Europ,:, by
1ravt•li11i;,suphislk-atrs.
The Flood Tide
Of t mmlgratlon

"fC'dCral

i

l"Jll1PfdlC'n•

•11d)

rra r11mtJhn~ ,,r storms which I,
ll'r had profound m1par1 on th
shaping ol nn DVl'N1II111111on,il
poli
l'Y In rcluhon to fo1•c1gnaf1111rs
.
In marked l'Onlmst lo IIWhosh lt•
ty shown lo thr thplomatw s1•rvkc,
t.hr conwcss1onal kadt•1,; wf' 1•c in
creu~lngly sympathct1c toward L'OII•
s11lI1rnppropriations. Thi· consular
branch pcrformL&gt;():i pracl11•alfu111·•
hon and pollllcians bl•&lt;·aml' ,•111•r
more scnsilive tel Its pint·,, m llw
gt'Owth of Amerkan bu~iness and
an our cver-inC'rcu~mg export tradl'.
'!'lit• transition from an nurarlan to
an industrial economy w:is llounn
lo cUl'&lt;:t lhC' c·om·cpl of our global
roll' and niter tlw mn1nlond wns
l'l\('ll-d
Wtlh lion&lt;ls or st,•c•l. t'On•
luwntal ex1&gt;1111s1011
gave• \\ay lo the
Sl'&lt;llldivl' thought of O\'el'St.'IISl'O\•

9 a.rn..

10:00, "Other

• enoughleftfora termpaper

'

D1vi~iun of lht• Budgcl

Th,• wo,·king C:omnullcC'for Co11
l1•i'&lt;'t1&lt;"1•
I is i\!1• Rudolf 1\1&lt;•y1•1,
11111nag1•r,
UH 1,11npulcret•nll'r, Mr
Sol 111\"k'I', nt.in:igcr, l'OlllJlllh'I'
n•nll'I' , SUNY al Stonybrook. and

Mt· Ht•'( LamlJ, &lt;litt'l'lOl', 1·0mpu1!•1
1111' flood-tide ul imml1,"l'ahon l'enlN, SUNY Collc•gl' of Fo1·1•sl,)
In Syml'US(',
lron1 l::umr1c was ho1111d
lo lend n
All Jll('('I mgs ('l,('t:'pl lllC' 0l'toh1•1·
u.-1v sh11p&lt;' to our fon•11:n 1•ont•ep­
l1t'ms.Business. repulcd It&gt; be 11ro- 21 dinnt.'r will ht• ln l lit1•1'm11111
p,re,
i\udilQl'llllll, the dinnl'I' \\'Ill h1• ii,
To lhc snmll 1'0lrri&lt;&gt; uf int1·1l1•t·· 1mmigrnllon, wus in fact mther
the Facully Cluh.
hostih• to unskilled fordg11rrs who
tuals who rt•voltt'li ai:niru.t the com•
i:amt· durms; slut•k tln1l's, thus ag
'!'ht• lll'Ol,tl':1m: Ot'tObf'r 21. 9 a .m..
11111&lt;:~ncy
ol thl" Glldl-d Agl'.',grtJWlh
:
l~•yond our hordrrs was rt•g1n·rllod grnvuting cxislmg problem~. 'J'lw w1•konw ad&lt;b-,•sfi, Dr. rh1t-r1111111
!I Ill, l,t'.IfllllC•alldt'l'SS, "l111po1•tu11l't'
JS something 11b~uh1h•l.v11('1'1.'SSMY t'r) nr:11insl immigration WtL~fur
lllr1· hrii,:hlcncd as the forl'is;n-born ol Computorn for Uruversity Rf'­
to rt'Cte$h the wrll-sprini:i; uf Amer­
wan nallonallsm , Such men as 1hr cumt• to he closely liok~I \111lh m­ M' lll'&lt;'h am.I Eclut'ntio11," Dr. 'fra!I :lll "1•:du,·at,on and RcHw . Josiah Strong 11t•r1· w1i11111 ncascd radicalism und labo1· un- hant
s1•,uTh
H1•gulallon and Apphca Uiut in tht• hands of Anglo-Saxons rl'SI,
111in,' ' Dr. ' l'homns Kt•r·nun, dirc•chlr
tuy U1c destiny of mankind. HI'
Specific Ge3gr1phlcal Interes t,
('Un1f1llkr· ('l'lllL'l', Univt•rsity o! Ho
pr1'&lt;11,•tN1
that the U S. would lw­
bllC'l'eSI Ill l'Ullmg II canal through
romc the center or llus twnPf1t·1,•nt the fslhmus, at-qu11·mi;lfawaii and d1rst,•r; 111I~, ''Adnnnblrallvc- :cnrl
lnltli'n1:1t1p11 f{plri1•val· R1·qun'&lt;'
111Uuenl'c
and would &lt;'xpanu its
I he s;c•ner.il Amcr1cnn drram ot
llll'SS!ngs mlo l..llln America, "lh&lt;'
esttiblishing a baS(I in Centrat tl\('111~illlll Applirnl1011.&lt;.'' l)r C:.1I
\ 'Ill t' ( ;,,lli,•h. 1h1l'&lt;'ltlr, 1'\lnlflllh'I
islands or the Sl',lS," Africa, and
Ah1('fll'11, found inl'l~USllig
mlt•r
of TOl'Olllu,
"h&lt;'YOnd,''
t'Sl
0! all grogmplnt'lli
arC',u,, ,·,•111,•r, llnt\!'rsity
tt
"01•ganllalron and Stnfhnjl.
1\lthou,.;i till' pnrrn11·y llllSSU\11 (1[ i\nw1 It'll jlu1d Ille ll'IISI allcnllon to
R,•,,u11·&lt;'111rnts.''
thr Ira\ dmi:: ,·vungl'h~ls was n•
the Uni:nl and Afl'll'il
Whllt• lht• S1ru1·1111·1•untl
llr . lla\id l'ril'&lt;,
hg,ouJ, prop;1gatm11
, lh1•1ril\'lh"illt•S
Far Eust wns not dPstim•&lt;I to 111111w )lill11'1 1111l{l1'r.1tm.
d1rr•1·t"1 ur J&gt;rrsorull'I.
SUN\'
"11rnn1passl'&lt;l a 1·,11•11'!
_\ of otht·r

•,.anda coup
le of labreports

Just aboutthe lime youfigure your Wordmastershould
bl'.' runn,ng oul orink, unscrew lhe cap. The new see­
lhru 1pfi(t says rn no uncerlam terms thal you've got
enough 111ktell lo go oil wr,t,ng for qu,le a wh,te You
sMuldn't
bf• surprised. For even lhough Wordmaster

i,l,m and slreamh11ed,11has a much larger ,nk capac­
rly thJn ordirrary dollar pens. And lh,1! makes it 1ust
;ihoul lhe rnosl 111expens1ve
dollar pen around.
By the way .. you c.in oel a h,1n(lgc,me mr1lrh1ng
p,&lt;&gt;1mlto qO along wdh your Wordmasler And that's
1&lt;

onlv &lt;1dollar, too.

\

:w,

A11wncan

hmcthn,•s unlit l&gt;L•\\,•~

MJss1on111ws~"•1-v,'&lt;las 1m1- :,,tt•an11•d1010 lllamlu Bny and n•:tl
lll'i.'rs. furmstung vitluahll• i11run11.i
­ ,'tln,·crn w11h Afr1cai111fla1r,. ,·,1111,·
tll&gt;n to lxllh gn\l't,1111,·111 :ind husr ­
1•1L'II
latl'r, 111lt•n•s1was slowI)
"'"'" n11•11,llllt•l)•lo•IIIIJ.; ,11111f"'llll·
11111un1111g
- c~p1'i.·1allvof · 111 l't,1l:tnt.mJ: for·a,rr an•,1s 1111.t1•11l1u1•,·s 11om1t·striJ)l•.
It w.rs in flu• 111·op.1):.il1,m
uf rnl11•
l!n llu• has,s or th,· •·'1dc•m·,•, 111
nw,-,.,, howr11•1, tit.ii th,• 111isslllll· lt•H•st Ill lon•1g11polH'Y dul'IIIJ.,:th1•
'll'lf'S
espt~·iulls shu111• l'lll' ~,1h•,
110,1 HC'ronstru,·11011
wriud 1111~ q\11
muns sampll' ('ilSl' ufl, ·n r,,11
..,\"I 1•,n·nl r,11h1·rlhan drad, ftmt'1'1t•a's
lh1·1r (l&lt;lrl11l&gt;lealL11s. C'lu1st1111111v l'OJln.'rn \\'Ilh an OVt. l'SC'US t•(.'()lltJlllll'
lntf"(Kfol't'(! 1\1'1\'
l'lllll'l'()llllllS
.;,
dt•stmy g1t1du;illy quickened and
\H'illlh m und,n, •lup,'&lt;I ;m•:os, for
1h, m•11·1•rbusmess cntangl,•menls
U11 Anwnt';111
I 'rull•sl:1111 , 1 h 1 ,
J11nm:l1uncd a broader oultook
(ll'ld.•

1

I.JU--!tu Ill.al

,r

:u1 hon1·!-.I 1uat1 1s

1

,oJ s 1101Jlt•st
\\Ork, 1h~11th,

l

n,mJ was

i.10

honor

11tl'r •

10 &lt;'Ol1'11H'r n•

ever-Broadening
Literary lior11on~
I u1lln 1 l• t,
1t
1''1 ,1n
flu,. H1 ,,,
:,
1,
1L•~uh: &amp;t,

n,r,

;;tt ~"'

:1)1'

11

,.,nun.,.,_,h.Jr

,u11n1.:.t11 .,11111&lt;&gt;n;
:Sul'lt 111th1•r:.
us

TJwtt• was a ~J"lWmg awarcnL•.ss on

th, J)Hrl of

tnlCl'CSle&lt;l

groups or

I/ti's&lt;• nc•,H-r honions
Alfrcd T
l\lahr1n summ~d up 1h1 111°\\c•rfc-d­
m·
toward fo~,•I;.'TI r1·,1bl1'lll•

I ,m lr,111kl),u, 11np,'r1a1t,1

11

,h,·~••n,,·
th.11 T l1t•lw,·,, 11ml 110

11.,:"'"

sh,,utd ht.'nl'&lt;'fllrt h niai11
ul 1sol11llu11

tam lht• poht·&gt;

Wanted : Spectrum Staff Members

The ideal student refrigerator fOf'
late snacks, cold drinks and all•
around refrigeration. It also oper­
ates on a cigarette tighter of a car

or boat as it runs on either 12 volb
01' 110 \/Oils.

NO WIRING OVERLOAD .. Uses
only 44 watts, Jess than an electnc
trghl bulb
NO RUN DOWN BATTCRIES
less wattag e 11,an N•k1ri
•i~t's
It •~ compact ~nc. ponau
a•
.,

Uses

easily

auto

trom

t&gt;e carried

w..,ent. 15

14',

13' ,4 ...

Width -

11Nn~

lur. news, Jeaturc and sport, wri~ers, people in copy and
layout ar1_1
also nt•cded From typists an&lt;i office workers
to readers and writers you are all wanted. Slop up at the
Spectrum office, 355 Norton and inquire about an opportun­
ity to serve on the Spectrum Newspaper work is fun and can
JJrvvtth.. ao experience unequal to that of any other activity.

1

lbs. s,1e Lengtn-

1
12,.~.

Height -

The capacity ,s surprisingly large u
it will hold siic quarts of milk, 15
cans of sQda or all the food Illus •

trated,

lf. you have had any newspaper experience the Spectrum
w.int.-,you Even Jf you haven't any experience and arc
w1lhng to learn the Spectrum wants you. There are openings

Fund­

Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice­
president Cor research, SUNY at
Bullalo; U:00, open forum, panel
nmdcrntor, Or. Fincrmnn, panel•
ists, all pre\ 1ous speakers; 12:15.
dosing remarks.
dL5cussion oJ
ful urt.• conl&lt;&gt;rencc~.Dr. Finerman;
12:30, adjournment.

I

,·,•nil'r ti SIJN\' :ol Stonyhmol&lt; 1111d
di:111111:inul Ill&lt;' ct.mfrrrncc. this
"

22.

SUNY;

when
most
dollar
pens
are
out
of Ink• theScripto
Wordmaster~reflll
has

,k&lt;·ordtnJ: hi Dr . Aaron ~'lrwr­
man rlh•,·101
· ul the computuw

g.,llll'l'llll(

ler,

ing,"

n,10.

of Sl'tllllt,; Ufl a Univ1•rs11yl'OlllJ)Ull'I'
ct·nll 1t·

snobs.

Funding,"
Dr. DonAld Laird,
director of the c.-ompullngsdences
p1-ogralll. National Science Founda­
tion; 9:30, "~'llnding - Initial Ac•
qu1sltion - StatP.," Mr . Charles
Foster, v1ce,prcs1dt&gt;ntand control­

Nationally advertised

at $64 9

U.S . PRICE $49.95

See Alan Chasky
Hall, Room S 13
Or C~II 831-3396

Tow er

�Friday, Sept~ber 20, 1963

SPECT~UM

Hampton Encounters Apathetic Crowcl

Since lhat time he has maintain­
ed international popularity despite
the racl that the era of "swing"
a nd the big bands is gone. Last
yea r he and his musicians toured
Japan and the Mid-East, where the
,,·c-leome extended to him emph.1sizcd again the strength of his Col­
l!lwing abroad.
Whnt lies behind his continued
support by, the publk, when his
gl'eatc~t following at his peak 20
yea rs ago is U1e middle-aged of
today. Lionel Hampton has cap­
tw·t'd the Interest o! lhe cur'I'!'nt
~&lt;'neration IJy staying youthful in
his own tas!rs , and not adhering
lo the style or music that made
him well-known two decades ago.
Uy being O.WaJ'&lt;'of the II-ends in
music, u.~ing his personal vcl'sa•
Iility and nbilily to blend a variety
of nmsi&lt;:al modes. thus 1:realing
new soumt~, he has devl'!Oped music
1o Ot every mood and taste.

Program for Orientation
Of Transfers Is Success

NCY LAURIEN.

Lio
pton drew upon twentyrour y
blind mastery to stir
lhc enthusiasm o! an apathetic
erowd in Clark Gym Friday night.
but only after an exhausting hour
o.nd a half di&lt;i stoney expressions
give way to a filcker or interest.
"Hamp's" repeloire encompassed
everything from the smolh and
tender "l Left My Heart ln San
Francisco" lo a tub-thumping ren­
dition of "When the Sai11ls Go
Marching In'', yet nothing envoked
n noteworthy reaction from the
audience.
Mr. Hampton's familiarity with
music stems from a firm basis in
mu.;ic theory as well as a quarter
or a century of practical experi•
encc. He received his undergradu•
ale training at the University ol
Cali!omia and his PhD in Music
at Alle11 University nt Columbia,
South Carolina. From 1936 to 1940
be played with Benny Goodman,
and, having achieved reco~ition
as an outstanding musidw1 in his
own right. Mr. Hampton establish•
ed his firs! band in September of
1940,

PAGE THREE

By MAXINE SCHILOWITZ
jl•ar,
,, ~1wci:il or.c n!alio~
program was ct.-wlo1lt'rl !or !he
ll'Hnsf.-r students or UB. The in•
ili11I Jll'O)!l 'am ha~ lwl'll sur,·,,ssl11I.
II is Yt'I ll1 j1nlJ:(l'css
.
,\nne Ja(·kson. rhnrrnwn of th&lt;'
11•,,11,fr•r· studclll ,·nnimi:i,;,• h:,d
lh•s ~ltlt(•n1cnl to 111
:1:11•ahou! thr
pro~rmn: "Th&lt;' c·omn,iller has dt~
t•id,•d thnl lrnn~lt'I' ~IUrlt'nt~ hnvt
nut had a~ many ('mnplh'nt!~•
problems as in p11s1years." Miss
.T:wk.q
on. &gt;1 rorml.'r Ir:m~ll'r st 11•
dPnl hr1-srlf, c•ontint11'd, "\Vr be•·
l irve that this has bt•t•ndue•, somt'­
what, to the spc-t•ial rmphasis
givt'n them through the orienlll •
tion program ."
Thi~

LIONELHAMPTON
a good jam session.
It is evident, too that he doesn't
like to be upslngcd, which ot times
derealC'd the spontaneity of the
g1-oup's ph1ying. His clowniug and
sense or humor smoothed over any
petty rivnlrics, however, and en­
livened the concert considerably,

for, althoug h it was hot wider the
lights, the crowd was rold and un­
t'Ommunicative.
Where were the out-of-town stu­
dents who c1·y out £01·cull~1red Fri ­
day night? I heard one cc,mmenl:
"This concert has put my lalth
back in Buffalo," but only one.

SPOON'S BACK!

Transfer Stud,nl Office Hours
WIii Be as Follows.
Ylond11y,9 n.m.- 11 ,, m, I p.111
- 3:4.'i p.m.
1\wsday, 9 a.m.-11 ·1.m; I 1un
- 3:45 p.m .
Wt'dnesdlly, 9 am - 11 ., m ;
I p.m. - 3, 1:; p.m
Thursday, 9 11.m - 11 a m
Friday, c•losecl.
The om,,,, in Norton 2:~1 \\111
dos(' •m Frl\Ji,y, ~ptcmh,'r '7 ,\II
tr ;msfo1· slurlPnls In, 111~ pn1hl1•11
1,.
iilt&lt;'I' !his dalo! should fl'J Xlrl h&gt;
lh1• Stndrnt Couns,•lrni: (.'c•nl,•t ,n

Ila, r·rm:m Lihn1ry.
,\ pnrty iq also !wing pl:rnn,•d ,
s1wdli1·ally dt•signed !or tht• Irans·
!U' sludl'n!s.

SHETLAND BUHL is the jacket that captures the
robust Tyrolean outdoor spirit with the chained,
collarless look, suede elbow patches, heather
trim . Shetland waol laminated to warm foam,
'nylon lined. $25.95

at

The TOWERS
948 Hertel Ave .
-

Dance to His Music Every Night
Sunday's Beginning at 3:30 P.M. THE ONE AND ONLY

HERMIEand HIS BAND
Will Delight You With His Songs and Music
Followed By Spoon and His Band
COME EARLY - BE SURE YOU GET IN

He was the first to introduce the
use of the vlbraphone in jazz , and
in doing so he opened new possi­
bilities of plwasing and t'Xp1·essio11.
Altliough he can't resist bi,i:, bold,
b1-oad. brassy finales, every note,
every phrase has purity and con­
lt'Ol, resulting in dynamic quality
music which is easy to enjoy whe­
ther or not one's forte is jazz. He
is deC!nitl'ly the spark and driving
forc-e underlying the band's qualily
unity and enthusiasm, although his
eon!rol sonwfimes a pp ea rs 100
iil•rc-c•In permit !he easy freedom
11non.i:tht• music-ions to encourage

COLLEGE
PIZZERIA
Would Liketo thank all the
U.B. Students who re­
spond to their ½ price
night. Thanks goes out to
those students who were
patient enough to respond
to the special the follow­
ing night.
FREE DELIVERY
TF 2-9331
"PIZZA IS OUR BUSINESS

NOT OUR SIDELINE"
I

YOU'LL
LIKE
THEBE1TER
TASTE
,
OFTHEB£ER1
BREWE
D
MEL·O·D
RY

1/, i
FAMOUS SINCE 184 2

r}roquois
:!f:1 1
tftltfNft,,..

..........

ll'IL.

°""'"-....

ewfllllli.fll.Y. Toffl'IIO-.
n.,, Pfiwltt,0., Co¥ir,1t•lln,Ky.

io'L
a Dasho~CDc,e~fuie
IN YOURWARDROBE
Come to

�SPECtRUM

PAGE FOUR

Fraternities and Sororities
Hold Parties This Evening
Al,._ Sigma PIii wtll hold 11
" Hcnnle Party"
1onigh1 at 1he
V.F.W. Posl. Rushecs desiring 10
at ~
should ~ntet•I nny brothrr
of Alpha SigTlla Phi or go to room
913 in Tower Hall.
Tau Kapp• Epsllon will hold a
dalP rush party lonighl al lhe Glen
Cl\sino starting al 9:00 p.m. Dress
.' fs CMual. Any rushees seeklnit
lrnnsportnUon call TF 54614.
111e sisters or Sigma Kapp• will
hold a joint soc10J with Gnmma
Phi this ll\len!ng. A song and pad•
die nigh! will be held in lhe apnrl•
111cnt Sunday, at which tlmt

Friday, Sept.mber 20, 1963

Future Teachers
Get Invitation
The student Educat ion Assoclf\·
lion or New York State 'Is lhe pro­
fe,;.'!lonal organization for college
and university stude nts preparing
lo be teal'het'S. All studen ts fn­
tercsted in educat ion and planning
to ll'llch are invited to alteml
llll'l'lings.

pl&lt;'c.lg&lt;'s
will sing lhe sorority songs
Md present gilts to the big sisters .
Sigma Delta Tau plans to hove
a social with TKE Fraternity,
Thursday . Entertninment
will be
Hermlc the SpermJe.
Theta Chi sorotity will hold a
dinner dance on Saturday, ~ptem­
bcr 21, at the Prime Rib in hono1·
of llewly initialed sister/;,
Phi Kapp.a Psi is having an open
r:ush parly tonight al lhe Cold
Springs V.f.W. Post, 16lli Mai11
Street. Starting time is al I!: 30
p.m. Beer 110d l'Cfroshments wfll
bl' served.

The major purpose or SEANYS 1s
of professio nal•
isrn accomp lished by stalcwidt• and
reg iona l workshops, conventio(IS,
conferences, spea kers, panels and
other programs geared to the in•
tercst and needs of the individual
1he development

Meeting of I.F.C.Considers
Disaffiliation
,1
PledgeCouncil

letit'hns-to-be.

Al a nweling lasl Mondn,y lh&lt;'
lnler(mtemily Council agnin dlrect­
C'd ils allenlion to the t'Olllrovt•r~y
caused by lhe decision or lhl.' stnlc
Inst spring lhnl nnllonnl sol'inl
fraternities on campus must dls­
afllllate hy 1967. The method or
disbandins: has not Y&lt;'l been sct ­
tloo, but a dcc 1s1on as experted
during lhr next month .
Although the frater nities will lose
thl'il' ruitlonal nlfillntion, the pre~1dent of the 1,f ,C,. Dnvid Smit h,
fel1 this &lt;"hunge would not sci ,oils•
ly nUcct their activities. This
fall's pledge class will be ininted
into nationals: howevl'r, an:ordiog
to Dr. Rk hard A. Slg/!elkow, 01,an
or Stude nts. subsequent classes will
no longer rect'ivc nutlonal stand 111g.

1'hr0Ul(h SEANYS the sludenl i~
inl roduc1-d to the scn •lces, policie~
and pro,c:mm of 1hr New York
St:ltl' Tt'arher 's J\ssol'iallon and th&lt;·
Natfonul
Educ11fion Association

Tht• trn11sformoli1J11p1·cdpilall•d
by the ;;ti,te 1tl'tion i~ opposNJ hy
the 11lumnl or th&lt;' rra1rrnllu• 1 who

desire to have thr ruling mversl'd
through rourr aclion or nt•w lc-gisla­
lion, Mnny of lh&lt;' fl'11tc111itic~ar,·
giving fln11ncial nss1s1antt• lo lhis
projN•t
Othrr topics broughl up nl the
1.F.C. meeting Wl'rl' lhc Pl'OJ)OS('(J
formation of inte1'frnlernily pledg1•
council to coordi m1t&lt;' plcd,:e ndivi­
ties nmong the fl'ntci11itit'S und p1'0posals for rrvision ol lhc C()nstitu­
tlon. P lans for the Greek we&lt;.'k&lt;'nd
to h(• held in thr srwing wrt·,,
sta led.

lntr1Tollegia1t• ('OOpcration provide s
Iha• opportunity for lh&lt;' l'Xchange

of

Prospt'ctiv(•

ideas .

lea chers.

through membership and port!cip,1-

Year's Playbill A·nnounced
Attention: Actors , Readers
The Dram a Societ y and the Mad­
riga l Reading Society will hold their
fil'St get- together roUee ho ur lor
the year Tues day at 4: 00 in Room
242, Norton.
Sponsoring members
of t h e
11ndmembers orboth Societies from
lormer years will welcom e, at thi s
Urne, nil shl dents in terested in
wo1·klng In any capacity wit h bot h
produci ng orga nizations. New stu­
dents intendi ng to incl ude shop,
crew or cast wor k in th eir extra•
curricular time-ta ble ought make
special note or this fil'!it get-acquain­
ted affair , Studenls who have had
dramatic experie nce elsewhere or
::U't.' anxious to have some here
should make It 11 point to show
laces, me«?tfriends nnd get to lmow
!ac·ulty members in charge ol p1'0duction areas ,

The Department plans n busy an&lt;l
productivl' year.
Major attention
will be divided belween important
works of Hendrik Ibsen and James

J oyce. Mrs. J ulia Pardee: who
!\as pl'9duced many im portant and
exci tin g produ ctio ns with Society
members IU!d com muni ty ac tors in
lhe past, plans a perf orman ce of
I bsen's Tha Master Bullder sched­
uled lor November . Mr . Donald
Wlldy, new lnstruc tor in 1hr Drama
an d Speech De pa rtme nt has Ib sen 's
An Enemy of the People in mind
for per formance in Morc h. Mr .
Thomas Watso n, in charge of De­
partm ent productio n in general is
plan n!ng eith er Exlr.a of J ames
Joyce or poss ibly a produ ction of
the dram atization of J oyce's ce le­
bra ted novel, A Piortralt af the
Artist H • Young Man. A pro gram
ol Joyce readings with stor ies from
DubllMra an d selections of Uly1111
will be given by the Departme nt ir
October.

It promises to be a busy and an
im 1&gt;0rtant year for Society produc•
tion. Workers in all areas, shop,
c-rl'w and cast, ore needed and
WC'lcoml'd. Mark the date and make
ii II point to come and meet the
people.

tion, muy keep abrea~i o[ current
Irl'nds and issues in education .
Sta11ing Tuesday, September 24,
Representative will ad­
dress the junior and senior pro,
(essio nal unites. Membershi p will
be n&lt;:cepled after class . Member­
ship blnnks arc nlways ava ilable
in Fosler 201.

11 SEANYS

WANTED Proofreaders,
writers, typists. Apply Room
355B, Norton Hall.

All RushMs Interested in THETACHI Fraternity Rush
Hamburger-Bulletin

C'~NRYi
H.t.•U U lOllS

Party are invited to visit the THETA CHI Fraternity
House (Located at 2 Niagara Falls Blvd., Between 3:00
and 5:00 P.M.- Friday, September 20 .

...............................
......

....
__.,..

- - /1/IM
·•
IGOODITHUMBLE
~

ATTITUDE

SPORTCOATS

Herringbones • Blue, Brown,
Grey, Camel , Putty &amp; Clay

Hl!NR Y'S'SEEKING

ICBM CONTACT
Wallllnglon, D.C.- Dlp.
lomallc cir cl" are u xxx
over a Seattle burger bar,
on'a plan to end the Cold
War oveml9htl
Henry, well-lcnownpub­
lic b.nefactor (he practl•
cally give, away his ham­
burgers, for only 1Sc) h,11
asked the Pentagon to
.award him ,1 $S7,... ,IOO
ICBMcontract.
"Thal'1 for Inter Conlin•
entat Burger Ml11lon," ex•
pl.alned Henry, "For only
57 mllllon bucks we wtll
ltnd JOOmllllon hambuf'9"
ers acrou the Iron Cur,.
t•le for every man,
wom.an .and chlld In Ru.,.
Il a."

Science affirms • Htn­
ry's Hamburger maku
tfMteai. r happy and con­
tellled lmmedl1191y
. Wltfl
• mllllon ltappy, cont9nt.
ed ltun l1n1, no more Cold
War, Henry polnlt ovt.

HENRY
'S
Hambur
gers

SUITS
Sha rkskins Cheviot Tweeds,
Gabe rd.ines, Herringbones

SHIRTS
Exclusively

by Eagle

Shirtmakers

• Blue ,

Maize, White, Stripe s

•

TOPCOATS
Cheviot

Tweeds

a;:·-~RAINCOATS
~SLACK'

St.Andrews
the look of lux ury in 100% "Orlon"
Robert Bruce takes "Orlon•" acrylic •
gives it t he luxury look and feel of alpaca
without the luxury price! Tailored in a me,
dium weight you'll wear comfortably all year
'round, it's boldly striped for a fresh, new,
extra-flatteringlook. Completely washable, of
course. 5 color combinations.S, M,L,XL $00
0
l&gt;Ml'•~t't ''""'"'"""

S

o·coKNELL

LUCAS
CHEL
F
3240Main Street
n i versi ty of Buffalo)

(opposi le

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

I«

i l4 -i,/;.

f,kr

�PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 20, 1963

Student Association News

*

Union Board Comin~
Tdce Part In
INsy Weekend Of CampusActivities
By BARB STRAUSS

The Buns· decided victory last
Saturday was made even more ex­
citing by the Recreation Commit­
tee's Pigskin Party following the
grune. Hundreds o! enthusiastic
students jammed the Ratskellar for
refreshments
and enterta inment.
Although thls Pigskin Pa r ty was the
largest ever held nt UB, students
were generaUy orderly and there
were few Instances of confusion.
Unlortun ately, this was 11ol the
case at the movie shown by the
Fine Arts Committee last Thursday.
"1\vo Women", the first in a series
of films lo be given in th e next tew
months, . attracted such enormous
crowds that the committee added
a 10:00 p.m. showing to the origin ­
ally schedu led 3:00, 6:00, and 8:00
p.m , features. This extra showing
allowed those who had pr evious ly
been turned away an opportunity
to sec this powerful movie.
Not only were students unappre­
ciative of these effort s by the Fine

'Sister City'
Exhibits Art
A colieclion of paihlings by young­
sters in Buffalo ·s "sister city " ,
Kanazawa, Japan, is on special
exhibit In the education department
of the Albright-Knx Art Gallery.
Included are 35 works by tht
Japanese children, l"dllging in age
from 6 to 15. The pain tings were
sent to Buffalo in response to an
exhi bit sent to Kanazawa about six
months ago by the Gallery.
The pain tings by Butta .lo children,
also currently on exhibit at th e
Gallery, were exhibited in schools
in the Kanazawa area.
The exhibit will remain on dlsplay
at th e Albright -Knox for an extend­
ed period. It wiU th en be circ ulated
to sc hools in Buffalo and Western

the groatre ..od for participationIn

pollllcal evonls end to bring forth
some of tho latonl iuues of tho
day."
Miss Jeanette Seuddcr. Dean of

By ELAINE BARRON

Several Union Board committees were involved in a busy
weekend of campus act ivities. Friday night, the Concert Com­
mittee sponsored a musical even ing with Lionel Hampton .
.Afte r the concert, students were invited to a dance given by
t he Mixer Commit-tee in the multi-purpose room. The com­
mittee is also planning similar dances to accompany future
concerts.
Arts Committee but also displayed
the behavior ol children al an after­
noon cartoon matinee. By 8:00 p.m.,
several hundred students had c-on­
gregatcd outside the Conference
'Theater and were using force in
Ol'der to gain a better place in line,
In one instance, a boy was literally
tl11'0wn Crom U1e front to the re ar
of the line. OnceInside the theater,
many viewers used foul language ,
talking loudly throughou t lhc entir e
film.
Many more excellent films arc
scheduled by this group. Sept. 26,
"A Midsummer Nlght ·s Dream" ;
Oct. 10, ''The Magnificent Seven" ;
Oct, 24, "Lucky Jim "; Nov. 7.
"Hlroshlma, Mon Amor"; Nov. 21,
"The Quiet One": Dec. 5, "A Sum•
mer to Remember", Dec. 19, "A
Raisin in the Sun·•; Feb. 6. "Love
and the Frenchwoman .. ; Feb. 20.
"From Here to Eternity"; Mor. 5,
"Member ol the Wedding"; Mnr. 19,
"T he Devil's Wanlon";
Apr. 2,
"Four Hundred Blows", and Apr.
16, "Kanai". Every effort will be
made to accommoda te all who want
to see this fine selection.
These committees, and the others
on Union Boatd and Student Senate
are busily invol\'cd in plans for
futui •e exhibits, dances, lectures,
movies. and similar functions. Ap­
plications for committee member­
ship are available in Norton , rooms

20.'inod 215.

New York.

A lartion of student llOVemment
with great potential power is the
Narional Student Association.
General alms a nd purposes, as de­
dared In the National Constitution
include the main tena nce of academ­
ic h·eedom, Improvement or student
go\'crnment and support of equa I
right (or all people, in educatio n and
the L'Ornmunity. Their policy is dc-­
tcrmined by meetings o! the Nation ­
al Student Congress.
The branch of this orgrmiznlion
at the Univers ity of BuI/alo serve,
more specifically as a steering
rommiltee for lhc Student Sl'notc .

*

numerous phases of stUdt·nl 1:CIIo' l 11
mcnt Wld student Lill.'. Its an nu;,I
Nallonnl Congress , attrndcd by ,111
den\ lcadl'l·s of "II nffihntro ,·nn,,
puses is 11 vigorous :ind ~llmulal •
lnit 1•1·enl. It 1,,g 1sla1t·s polklt'S o'IS
~uidcl1111•sbul which un• nol h1ml•
mg - and 1111
s 1s imJJ(lrll1nl - m,
rl~ ;,f(lll,1lt•d t•u111pll~t•s Tot• Stu ·

large at tM University of Buffalo,

NationalStudentAssn.
ExpandsActivities

Women, Ulld udvisor

10 the NSA,
commenft-'d, "Thi• Student As.qodn•
tiot1 o{ $UNY AB i~ alflliatcd with
the Natiorml Student Association
The USNSA ls II va luab le resource­
for ca rl'fuliy ))l'CPillX'cl material on

,m

,11°111 gOVf'l'llnlf'nl

est;i hlishl's
1im11rnm."

l'il(h

t•illlll)US

own poll&lt;'irs and

11s

BUFFALO

Las! year. under the leadership
of Chairma n Arnold Mazu1\ lhl•
NSA held 11 ·'.l!'ood for Freedom"
l'amp aign . They raised $600 lor
the Negroes o! Leflore County. Mis•
sissippi. They also made a stale•
ment on nation a l Cratemnl organi•
ia tions .

EVENING
NEWS
ON SALE DAILY AT

This yeiir . under the lc1tdership
Chalrman Gary Light er, thr
NSA plans to expand it a&lt;·li\'itics.
Thcy will take stands on cum-nl
political Issues , and publicize them .
City and local government \\111wnr•
rant more atte ntion. George O'Con.
nell, city comp troller. is sc heduled
to speak at the nc.~t t'OmmillN'
meeting .
of

Tower Bookstore,
Norton Candy Counter

"We (the NSAl are going to invite
Dr. Harold Taylor and Admiral
Hyman Rickover to disc uss th&lt;'
University of Buffalo 's ~tructure ,..
informed Gary Lighter. chairm1111
.
"l must say that this is still in the
very tentatiV'e stages, lho11gh." he
added.
In clerlfyinv the ■ lms of the NSA

and

Goodyear Bookstore

Chairmen Lighter explelned, "Wt'
hope to lnculcete to lfudents

a,

COMPLETEDINNERS PREPAREDIN THE
EXCLUSIVECHICKENDELIGHT METHOD

School officials who would like lo
exhib it the paintings, which depict
modem Japan through the eyes of
childre n, should contact Miss Char­
lotte B. J ohnson, curator of educa­
tion , at th e Gallery.

Fm DELIVERY
ToDormitories
on Campus
AND, ALLENHURST
APART.MINTS

For That Change of Pace Treat

"FOR THE
CLASSIC LOOK"

CHICl(EN
A CoMplo to Hot

'n

CMcken

Oinn e , co"t,,, ing of
Chi ck ..

Spoc,ol

Del ight

Gro•ft Chicken
~•

• SPORT COATS
• SWEATERS
• FURNISHINGS
• TAYLOR-MADE
SHOES

THE
STAGG
SHOP
5424 Main St.
Wllllam1vlllt

Mon. • Thurs . • Fri. TIii t

f'OUI $e,:"Y
i 'lg

,,e11ch f,iM

Ot

,01otoe1

llr of11
' 1 foncy Cronbe,ry
$o11i1tt M.,lift

S 1 39

r '

FISH

A Co mpt11e Mot Stu1mp
Dinner con1u1,,,g ol

A Co,..ple t• Hot F,,~
Oinn e , co,.,i,ling ot
2 P,.cu ol ,,.,,._ f ,,.d

I Ju,,,bo Culf Shm"p
C , ne,0111 S. ,,; ,ng of
fren cl-i f,1,d Potolo,1
Tof'lgy Cod, to,1 Sown
Mwfr ,n

lnd1v

P~g

c.1.

"4oddoc'- -

I

of M,n h

o.,,. ,0\11S,,v,ng

,,.,,,~

JUST OPEN AND EAT
R 18 S

•

SHRIMP

Jodor

lnd 1'f Pkg

S·l. 49

$

01

&amp;o,,1-Q A,b,

Slaw

'I• Chi, "-•"

SHRIMP SNACK

O.l;ght S~CJol
G,o w11 Ck1d1tl'I
ft•t1ch f,i ed , ototo e,
X,oft•, Tot19y Crol'lberry
Sowc• Mu~"

5 Jwmbo Gulf Sh.n m,:a

,9 9

Q9

f,-•,i ch F,,.d Poto!OH
long)' Coclt.to,I Sowu
MwWifl
ll'ld,v Pkg ot M1ntt

FISH

!-a.,r•
~o~:r

f ,• nth f11• d Pototo•,

8or 1 -Qu• Saut•

Sowce

~ct

Mwffin

M•n! t

RIii

SNACK

ll'ld,,.. Pk g

of

Min h

'

lo, -1 Q l ,b,
G•n • rou', S. t'fi l'lg of
f,end, ,, le d Pototou
lo, 8 Ou• So\llC:
• - ~"fr."

("'lfl'_,_.,

Order Chicken Delight's

Ual.. nlty of

hckel O'Chicken

Price
2 .97
3.96 .
.. .

,s

2 .. ............ 11)............ S.9'

JI

:,,.p

M.
I

\.,_!Ot',.._.

9~

11i11.,.,r,oo,.
., &lt;'"'d •too t •o ..

~"

no

(t-,,..,,,. A..&lt;ho._,,., o~d 01 -, . ,
1

tJ0

~o•to•
' Bl

1 70
' "'• Wo,11,
1

)0

Moa. • P,f. ........ 4 P.M. . 11 P.M.·
Sat.. .................4 P.M. - 12 A.M.
s....., HolW.,. 12 P.M. • 11 P.M.

l■ffelo)

Pie,;es
Serves
12............(4) ............
16 ......... ...(5) ........ ....
20 ............ 17 ) ............

011,.,.,

anC,

I VO

• oo

'lu,.. u

90

"°""'

3268 MAIN STREET
I.....,..

, ,..,,

90

H ,:• Pt r:iD tl~
I 90

0"'d

C"'•• , ,
O

Sl.35.

Cole Slaw E&gt;!tra WhC"reNot Included

TF 4-6688

1

~.~.,,,1f"'♦ •p
'u, ..f,

1

.t,"'l'"'o• '"

H

I ))

SNACK

·• ~CH''O"

or,o

I ))

co,u11t 1t1g of

85

,.., ,. .,, .

SI &amp;Cl

C " f'tlf

~,-

\ct,;

A Complet e Hot RI b Snock
1

0"0

(• ,.,., .. D"d
I J!
+

$195

l 15

1 P+t ct f ,uh fr ,•d
Hoddod 1 C•t• Slow
fr•nth f ,, .d Po iota ••
Tona, Souc• - M1.1ffit1

UKIO

51 10

G,n,,01,11 S.r1i11noof

of

('l"'C,

CHICKEN SNACK

DELIGHT

tA!SH

con1i1tlng oL

fr+rd Polotoe,

M u lf1n -

P IZZA

A Compl •t•
Hot Rib O,.,,,, ,

....
..~;r............
::=i

;~~~
•

32 ............ 1111..... .... ..... 7.~
36 ............ 112)..............

' ·"

40 ............ UJ) .............. 9.IO
Piuila • ,..,.._ • ■-r I Qw

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Hootenanny at Glen Casino Sept . 2~&gt;
Features Best Available Area Tale,n.t
And UB Student John Boylan as MC
A fact unknown lo the majority oI students in the area is
the existence in the city of Buffalo of a large and aotve colony
of performers in the folk idiom and devotees to the art of folk
music. Until recently, these performers were active primarily
in the coffee houses. such as The Limelight Galleries, The
Greens leeve s, La Critique, and the forthcoming Bohemian
Embassy. However, a week from this Sunday, John Boylan,
together with Harry Altman of the Glen Casino, have amalga.
mated the best talent available in the area into a hootenany
to be prcscnterl at the Casino. Mr. Boylan, a regular perfor•
mer at the LIMELIGHT,and a UB s,udent, will serve both
as MC and entertainer.
At prrscnt,

1hr performers

in

this loll&lt;show will include the fol­
lowing arlisls:
Hackett &amp; Raven - This group
i~ the&gt;oldest group of folk artists
ln lhe dly, having .been together
s,nc·c JOCJI!
. Thl'y arc in residence
al Uw Limelight, und arc currently
the stars of their own radio pro­

gram. "Don't s111glove songs ... "
on \\'BEN radio cv&lt;'ry Thur sday
9:05, us well as featured
weekly
11r11sts on
WCR•TV 's

c,•('nlnr:at

"Sluvarcc".
John Boylan - John is II UB slu•
dent. n1ajormi;: IJJ Fr ench. who has
bt.'l•n ac·li~t- in Uruvcrs,ty

group consis ts of three young mcro

,ind n young lady, and havr lx.-t•n

CRICKl!T TICKET SIRVICI

(Llcett-, BNll.er)

835 · 2828
THEATER TICKETS

ANYWHERI

No Sanke CIMl,ve

For Lecal TI1Ntw1

lHllt

CARI
"Sex is not
a forbidden word!"

12th BIG WEEK

Davis

JOHN BOYLAN
!

·~~
.Peter Seller' 1

" HEAVENS ABC&gt;VE"

I hcal reHe has

Any changes in your
1063-64 local address
should be jnserted on
lite directory card in
lhe Director's Office,
225 Norton by Monday,
~cµlcmber 23rd. Your
Your cooperatin is re­
quested.

and at tht• Bell, Cook, anit Candle,
m Ridgeway, Ontario. He wns also
MC al the Glen'sl1rsl hoolt'mmny
and has an album coming ou1 on
the (n'lit of November.
Madeline Davis - Thi~ young
lady, possessed of a fine vowe and
lhun adt'CfUUIC'guitar,

Miss

ft·cc bu 1.(•L ll'Om the dorms IC!uvm
r:
nl 8 p . 111, uhnrp.

as wl'II as Ill folk lllUSIC.
aµpcuretl rcc-cn!ly nt the Limelight

more

with

und Mr. Bt(!Wn in the Glen's (ir,it
hootenanny.
You arc l'Ord inlly 111v1IC'dto ,11tcnd this sampli ng of folk um~tc
in the Buffalo arcu. Tickrt~ will
be $1.50 at the door, rc-lrcshmcrits
will Ix- uvailablc and llwrc will IA·

Registration for next
semester's classes will
begin early next month.
University College ad•
visers are willing and
available until the mid•
dle of October to help
freshmen and sopho•
mores work out their
academic problems such
as change of program
or major, dropping
curses, adjustment to
college life, study prob­
k,ms, probation and any
other topics you would
U.keto discuss.
Appointments may be
made at any time, 8:30
to 5:00 Monday through
Friday, with the Recep­
tionist in Diefendorf
114.

lhc most successful m•w gl'OU() of
folk J){'rformcrs sine·&lt;' tlwir c!Pbut
111the! Slal]('r ll!lton in June.'. They
aI&gt;1&gt;rnrcd along

Friday, September 20, 1963

hus

been thrilling Hstl'ncrs for a good
many years , most rcccnlly al La
Critique.
Doug Brown - 11 tall, h11ndsomc

Tunday
STARTS Oct.
15

"A Brilliant Comedy "
N.Y. News
Mon. · Fri.-7:0S, t :20
Silt. &amp; Su"·· 2:31, 4:51. jr:lS, t:4D
STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET
for all programs m11y be

purchaMd upot1pre1entation
of 1.0 . card.

First Buffalo Showing

NORTH PARK

Student Olac-r Tickets
Avallable at Both Theaters
Upon PntMntationof P~r
1.D. Cant

1428 HERTELAVE.

performer who hails from Toronto.
Doug hns l&gt;ec.•nonr of the main­
stays of thl• Bell, Book, and Candle
lhroughout lht• SUIIIJJl('r.

The Grosvenor Singers -

This

LAUNDERETTE
Tf 3-0060
3230 MainSt.
Cor. Merrmac
ONE STOP LAUNDRY&amp;
ORY CLEANING

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

Student Rate,:

WED. EVENING,
'OCTOBER2nd, 8:30 P.M.
Tickets: $2.50, $3.50, $4,50

SHIRTS-20c
KAHKI PANTS
FINISHED--40c

0ft S.le: (Beg. Sept. 23) at
Denton, Cottlor &amp; Daniels,
32 Covrt St.

GLEN CASINO
Presents

"ONE-OF-A-KIND

...

she is fresh a.:nd sophisticated, subtle and straightforward , comp lex
and direct. Ab1:&gt;veall, a consummate performer, mixing improvisational
flair with an e;ffortless control ·of her songs and ~er audience." That's
how Variety d1escribed "the electi·ic climate of excitement" that Barbra
creates. She ig:nites the spark whenever she performs- Basin Street East
in New York, the Riviera in Las Vegas, or on records. That unique
quality made ' The Barbra Streisand Album an immediate smash hit.
The voltage iu even higher on The Second Barbra Streisand Album.

COLLEGE
DANCING
NO

COVER
MINIMUM

CHARGE

Starting lhis Fri. Night-Sept. 20
8:30.?

3 Bands
ELI KONIKOFF
;JACK LON~
WILD TWIST BAND

Cuual Dress

"H oops" . . ... . . 25c
Bottted Beer .... 40c
Pitcher of Beer .. $1.00

..,

~9~

BARBRA

[!'.!T'IH,
~ s.m,. SiJNM&gt;dAlbum STREISAND

ON
COLUMBIA
RECORDS

..

�~

Friday,September20, 1963'

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

-- - ----------------------------------------------------

The Jazz
Gallery.

TheRev~ewing
Stand
By LEON LEWIS

aside from ,1 magnitic!'nl momenl
when Jack Lemmon a1'iscs drl11ping
It is rather a pity thul Irma from the Seine fully elotht-d 11~
L• Douce did not turn oul lo b&lt;: a llrirlsh gcmlc-man In a hilmfou~
the comedy thnt the t-ombint--d purody of Bo:iccelli's Venus, art­
•talents of Billy
WIider. Shirley also obvious and l)redictablc and
Mnl'l.ain e a nd Jack Lemon wt•r11 lack Wilder's nolcd gill for lhc•
capable ol producing. lnstead, (01
new and dat •inJ.: .~ho! whirh rein ­
one reason or nnother. i1 is an to1·el's lhe l,ry moml'nls in lhc at··
occasionaJJy pleasant an d fn-qurnl - tion.
ly obvious se ries of all -100-predk­
table gags, leers. and in-jol&lt;es. 'the
In shol't. the µkllu•t• is a&lt;lmi1·­
fault is hardly Mister Lemmon's.
ubly clii$igm.'(l lor lh e yokel whu
His nearly llmJllcss acting ability
is willing to luu!:h at any nwnh111,
shows throu gh the Jnme lim.&gt;s h&lt;: of ur rdc1cnn : lo sc,x, um! whu
is l'equired to deliver. His t'On· ilt·lually belil'VCS 1ha l l'nri3 nl~hl­
slant talent for underl)laying an lifc bears some rrst•mblancc to llw
over-writt en par1 enables him t~ 1antusy-cill'nh·;1I almosvhrrr
ell'·
get 'laughs in situations which rate
picred in the film. Th,· only th,n;.:
yawns at best.
is there is just a bout c•nou~h 01
the yokel in most 1,r us tu mak,•
Shirley MacLain e is not the cu l­ lhe picture amusing in spllc• o,
prit either. From her wicked a nd our belte t· judg eml'nt. I 1·1•1·talnl)
saucy grin (the only semb lance of found a good deal of t hl' movie•
sauciness in a picture intrlgueingl), l'njoyabl e myseu, but on the othrr
described as "1vmghty'' In the ad• hand, had Wilder done this thing
vertisemenlll) to her stylish!y green
as he could hav e, the pktu .rt'
undel'clolhes
(the latest fashion tot
might actually have tx.-en the
the 111ccesstu!
Parisian poule, no wickedly daring, witty comedy lhnt
doubt) , she seems to be every
the ads clai m it to be.
man's dream of the "good-hearted
• •
prostitute";
that mythical creature
Shert T1lc1s; Some oi you nmy
who Inhabits the realms of fiction
bt.• planning to go to the movies
but la sadly so rarely found on
this weekend. In an attempt to be
the streets of our dUes . Th e open­ oi some assistance , I of1er the
Ing scenes In which she responds
following shor t l-omments on some
different!y to each client's standard
oi the more likely possibilities in
question, "How did a nice girl like
our city's limited movie ,repertobie ;
is vintage MacLainE!.
The T11rillof II All - What I
No, our stars are not lo blame said about Doris Day last w~k
at all. I'm afraid that the fault
s till goes. However. I understand
lies with one our most inventive she's married in this one, whkh
and daring dlrectors, Billy Wilder. seenlS to ruin the bnsic premis e
and with his constan t collarborator
behind all of her escapades.
on the scenario, I. A. L. Diamond.
Winter Light - Nol Bergman's
To be successful In treating a sub­
best. apparenUy , tl hallen' t seen
ject such as this one tinnocent it ypl), but prof essio nally done 11s
. cop meet$ worldly but decent hook•
usual by Bergma n's comflf'lcnt
er - result, marriage , a light touch s tock compa ny in a typically
and a sense of extreme delicacy
,::lomi1ysetti ng relevant to man· ~
ls reqUired. As we have seen in plif?hl in the world lodny . Perhapt.
the past , Some Like tr Hot, The I\ review next wee !&lt;.
Apartment) , Wilder certainly pos­
The Caretakers - P(•ylon Plae•·
sessesthis touch. However, while
fo a mental !nstltulion.
it was still evident in One, Two,
Cleopatra - Too much soid al­
Three , thel'e seemed to be too
rencly. I' ll discu~s it if they'll kt
great a reliance on obvious situa­
nu: in for nothing.
tions and simp le sight gags in that
o , nov,1n's Reef - John Wayne
picture. In Irma, the touch seems
plnying John Wayne in his usual
to have deserted Mr Wilder almost
intmicablc fashion.
entirely.
La Nolte - The Circil• Ari's rc­
The situations arc sn rnm!liar
vivnl ol the Sc&lt;'Ond film In /\n­
that U1e audience is a lmost gtmran­
. If you lik~
leed to respond with !he lallf.(hler tonioni's fine 11•iolrgy
ot recognition, if not that 01 de­ nouvelle vague lt;ilinno. you'll I0\'1:­
lighted surpr ise. The sight-gag-s, lhis one.
lrm;i L• Douce

•

you. , . "

Debate Society Meet Has

Variety of Classics Offered
For Philharmonic Concerts

pianist • nd composer, new en the
University faculty, wlll a,,..,
By RAYMOND CRAWFORD
with the orchestra in Mar&lt;h.
Stmh'nls nmy 111111·nhtam .sf'r11•,
.\ "''" wo, k hy Diw1cl DiumomJ,
lid«•t, al ~µcd;, I stutl,•nt ntl!'s Cm
Sh'e pri&gt;lt&gt;s,;01!Ills ~&lt;'ntl'l;lt'r, will
the ltllll'lt'c'n Phi lhar 111oni
11t'Unt'l' f' I&gt;
Num•y Wilson and Ran1Sey Lewis
ht• f)l't'Sl'llll'li 10 No, 1•mh('l. World
appeared together in Kleinhnn's Ull(i ltw ,1, 1•un1·,•1•1~ 111,•,~clllrd h., fat11uus- viohnisl ls.•i•l' Stem IIIll
lht• t.;,1Hul
,1 Clmmh••r ~lusit• Sn­
Music Hall in a J)t'rformance
:ilso 11pp,•11r Slucl,·nls orr rrm1n&lt;I·
dC'ly. 'l'hesr IH'kPls, whic h l'ILSI$! ~
spo11.,01-c
d by JOt' Rico und WUFO
1•d lhlll thr StM•t•ialstudt.'nl 1'1111'
am( SI f,11
I had u chance 10 llllk lo 1he!;C tu,· Ill&lt;' Ph:ll1 ll'l'hllli!',
tor llll' Philharn1onk SL'ri!'s up
(Jm• 1,1
·lisls du rin g Inte rmission in tlw ,·h,imhN n111sk, 11n• 111·111lahl1 11la•~,only lo sruson. an(I 1101 ,,,
al 1hr Bairtl I I.ill !lo, (Jffw1•
lh t-11'dressing rooms.
incli1i&lt;hmI twk,•ts.
R:unscy u-wis. at only 2ti, has
'I'll!' l'h1lhi11n111nl,·l ll"k,'1~ ill'(' I••&gt;
Tlw BufC11lnChnmht,r Mush· S,,.
been 1,layini; 111ru10In1· lwo dt•t·· '\u11r!,1) S \•1•11,~ i,uh ,nlJ l)h.' 1 nn
11clc•s a ncl lr1ys daim
to ,1 C:111'\'£'1' \'Pt·i:: ill'( ' HII :-;uml.1\ Hlfl'l'llUOlh
dt•I)
11rrsrnt~ mm·1•r1s on ~"
.,,
t~\.-•nin~ cl11ru1~ ltw year .
lh,tl any pianist would C'l1Vy. Rll lll·
-.:·
::o fl IH \\ 1111 u,i 1 \1 t'JHHU\ or T111°'-\du,,·
·:11 11
.m.. ulso 1tt J.:ldnhun.s.
s,·~• IJL•nd~a trio or musil'ians who 11n~• Fn,h
•·~•·111rn.:rnd (11~ S,H111· .,,
l111liv1rtuulst11dt•nl tickl'ts muy bt.•
ha 1,. heen playing togelher sfn1·1
• di 1) ,•n~nirn.:t ill l'h·mh1111s Mu~r1·
uhl&gt;tirn•d for a n , nl tlw ro nt·crt~
hi1.:h school. Eldce Jon es 1s th~• II.d i. 'l'ht• l11t!lalo l'hllh .. 1·111u111,•
11111
1·ap,11tlr bassist and Rt-cl Holt. llw
h:tl'f' Lukus J-'c&gt;&lt;
, ,1., ,•oncluc1m 10, ,,1 SJ l'llf'h , 01· ihe s,•1'it's ol "~
muy lll' purt'tmsed ror $4. This
rinun,ner .
1111
• (11-sl Ii 1:11•IIns ,I r:11·
s,•1i&lt;'s will ft•atur~ th~ BudaJ)l'!il
The trio laughro Rlld tnllM1 HS
Many new and varied proorams
Qmut◄ 't, the Juliun Brc,1111
Con.-.ort,
1hl'y
SIVllng through
"G t·l'L'II·
are being planned. The llrst con•
th1• Qua1·tl'lto ttnlluno, the Mnrls lct •l'l's." Then J ones swit&lt;·hc•dlo,
cert wlll fu ture Stravinsky's
1,nrn Tr io. IIIL' f ine Arts Qwtrtt!t,
cr llo a nd stoll' tht• spotlight us he
Rile of Spring . Later in the sea•
and 1hr Clarion Wind Quintrl.
pla,wd II Iuni! wl'illen by him callt'!t
son , Mr. Fon will perlerm a
·rtws,• l~mc•crts l ake pince in th&lt;'
"Cvllo Talk ." You can believt• that
8,1ch toncerto himself . Leo Smit,
;\lary Seaton Room.
he made that cello talk! Although
Osmr Pelliford has bt.-en [&gt;lay ing
jau: cello for a number of ycan;,
many fun~ had their first chnm •p
to hea r him play In a Jive per­
forman ce. Jones showed am111.ing
techniCi.11pl'oliclency on the instru ­
ment and got a few laughs when
he played the cello as If it wen.·
a guitar . Rt'd Holl had II c•honc1•
to show on the drums and did not
misuse the opportunity.
Alter that the show Wll8 all Ram•
sey Lewis. He can play 1mythln g
and everyt hing on the piuno with
•....
~
.t....
illlmatched brillianc e. Many pro­
&amp;
pie were complete ly awed by his
last finger work an d everyone was
~... ,
delighted with his soulful n,usic.
··.~ ''f
A misfortu ne was turned into ~
hlrssing In disguise. Olat unji , th1:
grca tcsl exponent or Afrtcun
l'hythms, was dclayt-d along with
a 11
-oupe or drummers . singers and
d,mcers. Thus Nancy Wilson h.id
un extcndt-d pcrCol'manrl'. Nunry .
the star ol lhe show. probab ly has,
along with Ella Fitzgerald, on._.ol
the most beautiful voices in jazz.
But she is a lso IJH.' most rn.&gt;autHu
l
woman J've seen in quite a while-.
Wearing ll tighl , gold-colort'd gown,
Nu.ncy had the audicnc~ dl'lightt'&lt;l
w1lh her "tongue in cht•ck" ~clet•·
!Ions. Shi' switc:hPs lo lht• blue:;
and 11 was hl.'l'C'th111Nam·y showed
why Cannonhall Adderly und
G&lt;&gt;ot
'!(e Shearin .~ have continually
supported her Sh,• lms u ,,, yst1&lt;I
t·kal voit·t• and c-0111hinpslh1s 11ilh
!!X!)l!l'I 1iming in 011h·r (II g, •1 lht'
nwssage ttt•ro,s.
Nancy Wil,on ha~ llw vn11:1•,u,d
By VICTORIA BUGELSKt

1

0

1

1

1

CANOE
,,..
.-:,t·.

th(' lllt' Olll()ill'ilhk • bP,jlJIY 111 111:i
k,
her th&lt;' lup f&lt;,nial&lt;• Ja, .1 , ..,·,dis t
Sl\c' wa lked oH 111
!' .,t, 1~1• I,•;" 111
..; "

Jum-pack,-d uuriwll('I' 111r t•sl.w\

Coffee t-:four, Mock Debate

a

mdn's after shave.after bath co'ogne
inadc.bottled,sealed in Frcince.. i5. $850 s1.1,
1l

TYPING
The tirst re~'ll.lHlmeeting ol tht'
Debate Society WIIS h eld last Tues­
day evening. It was well attended
by both old a.id new members.
The special program for the mf•
lee hour was a mock debate. The
topic, wluch was suggested by a
member oI the audience, was, Re•
solved: That the House Un-Ameri­
can Activities Committee Should
Jnvestigate Santa Cluus. Russell
Goldberg and Hurriel Heitlinger
debated a.Clirma hvely and Fran­
cine Michel and Thomas Bt•rdlne
were the negative learn.
Attending the meeting were Dr .
fhomson, Mr. Prosser , Mr . Bcn8on, and Ml'. Oslermeier, new far­
ult;y members of the Drama and
Speech Deparunent .
A brief resume of last year 's

successes wus given !or the bene­
fit ot the new members. This ln•
eluded winning seven trophies, five
certifica tes and more than ten .
other distinctions. MJchael Shapiro
brought an additional
honor by
runrung for speaker of the Mock
Legislative Assembly sponsored
by the New York State Debate

Coache~ i\ssodali lln.
Tlw 1wx1 meeting ur the Dchall•
~n,•ipty will be Mond11y, Sept 30.
at 6:00 p.m . in Norton Union,
Everyone ls wclrome to attend .

MRS. THILL

80 Un ive rsity Ave.
TF 2-2039

AN-CilE'S
PIZZA HOUSE
FreeDeliveryto Campusand Allenh11rst
With
MinimumPurchaseof -$3. 95
Try Ou r:

SPAGHETTI
RAVILOI

4,{

Term Paper , Thesis , Olstrlallon

FOR BUFFALO'SBESTPIZZA IT'S

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783 TONAWANDAST. at ONTARIO

�Friday, Sep1ember 20, 1963

SPEC1RIJM

PAGE EIGHT

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS

THE SPECTRUM
1·11• &lt;111101,
,1 11uucn1 flt" JP•'PI" ul 1110 S1&lt;1l• Un1vn1l \y ul New Yl&gt;fk
o\ 6Ufl l l&lt;l Pvhh ~MIClll ()ltic e a t Nt,rton Hill, Unlvtnl\V C31l\l&gt;U•I Buf•
tMo u N V Publuhcd wrel&lt;lv trom 1hc ht•I week or S..ptc,nbor
o the

lot

wet~ ln

and

t:,o.to.r.

~v.

GXC~tl\

tor

C)l,Jln pera&lt;&gt;ds,

EDITOR •ll'l ·C HJEF -

Thanksdvln~.

ChrlKlrtlUS

ARNOLD S. MAZllll

Bu••n•"' ManaMer
P~t Launer
John K owAI
A&lt;lverU,tng MRr Lnwr en ue S1nJ11Cr
NtW$ Editor
M•rv L,uu W1ls00
LllYDUI
Editor
.
.
.
Onvld
lrwtn
ur H ~rt1e1 Jlt JUt.nJ11cr Coj,y 1':dl\Or .
Fealur• Ec111
M•rcJtt Cooper
Spor \s Edl\nr
llockv Vt..-ace
C1rc1&lt;1111011
M,ir • t.ois Hcssan~••
O!ftce MAn~xer
K~r•il SonlMd
r1n Adv1Snr, '!'homo• Hacnlc. Jr
Ed i\ A0-'•101
Wllllnan S1emorlt1~
Gon•raJ Slo.11, Vlrk.l Bu,i•l•k! 1 Lornu WR\14Ch. A L inda Leventhal, R&lt;in
Kaminski, v,c Menu , Anne Mllnlc , M,1rt1n ~rleacl, R,•na F,,c h, Barbara
str•u••
Ronnie Broinbcrf, Chari•• L&lt;lhut/ t' ~l June.. Sue Mood , Nanc Y
UltC~tt , !Arry
F'r•nkl o, Lono1t
Kl lJ)•k r,, Cl,~rles Cu,nin mRs, Shel 11
O1wll Al an Newman , lJ~rbara Chnl),nan,
Jn;,n•~ Lunca•Ler, Cl~udla
Kuw,ta, Trudy Slern, R01t'm.1ry Moron~ t..awrcnct· Frenkc-l. Susan Ltcker.
Ronn11•W1Jsan, Allo 0,1 r;onder, Don LeA1,Y. Ro,11 Lynn Bruth ma n, Ray
Crawford,
J 3ne Snmmor , Lon Levy, Rl)b1ll Mil c h . J~r•my Taylor .
alan•••nK £duo,

Phot09raphy
&amp;latl : Ru 119•U Goldberg , JtH/1 tl14 VCIU
Foldmao. Bob Gott~sman

Ent er~d .is 1ccond cla"" m.,u~r Pcbru,11Y 0. 1!161, at
\Ile Poo-t Olflce ot BulliolO, N, Y., unacr the Ac\ of Murch
J, 1879, Accep tance lnr n••llinN Dt o .,pccla l rote oC post •
•R• provided for In S~ctlun 1103. Act of Ottobcr J, Wl7,
author4•d
Pebruory !), l!l~t .

q &lt;,

~

~
••

P u,uClll R~i&lt;l, Roher\

J300

Sub•crlpUon

Ropro•enll'!l

vr,1Js1 n,r Sen•trtt.

per

to r na tional

year,

rlrrulaUnn

advcr\lSIR8

7500,

by NatlM•l Ad·

ln c ., 420 Madl ~on Av e .. Ne:w Y()rk, N. Y.

o..ar

Edllor :
Being a new grnduute

studenl

here, 1 stopped a stud1mt on cam­
pus and asked him where Norton
llt.t.11was located . He ,(lirected me
!Q a low ivy-coveredbuilding which
I knew must be the student union
llcc:11.
use oI the noise . 1Dn walkln,g
into a huge well-lit room, I mor­
vclr.dat th e seeming ln1lellcctualily
uf the school; arter nU, how mal l)'
lit1,1t1ent
unions In this cc,untry ha VI)
such a well-stocked reserve Ji.
brury? Of course , ll w.as so noisy
thut I won&lt;lei-ed how an;y one 1.-ould
or even wnnt to read In there; lt
appea red, now that I think about
ii, U1a1 no one reu.lly did. Everyone
knows that libraries ar, e for stu dy ­
U'tg.

Editorials
Birmingham Crime
MORE THAN A NATIONAL DISGRACE
News from the city of Birmingham, Alabama once again
exploded onto the front pages of evety newspaper . And
though The Spectrum does not cover such articles, we feel
that there as sutficient cause 1-0 make proper mention of such
a heinou s crime as occurred.
The facts can be told briefly, though the implications
and consequenc es we all must la ce will und oubtedly consume
miles of linotype. Last Sunday, a Negro church, in a city
which is $Upposed to be part ol the United States, was
bombed; four gir ls were killed and many others were inju red.
We shall not here list further statistica l damage .

At this point in the civil r ight strugg le , we cannot sym­
pathize so mu ch with the Negro cause, or offe r condolence
lo the parent s of the dead childre n. It is well past that time .
That we are outraged at this act of best iality, however , is not
to be doubted . Jt is almost unbelievable that the very same
people who throw bombs (there have been twen ty-one bomb­
ing$ in -the past eight years in Birm ingham alone ), wllo de­
mand the subj ugation of a race which is as thoroughly "Amer•
1can" as them.selves (as if it would make a differen ce), and
who indirectly force poverty and illiteracy to be preval ent in
our society can atte nd Chur ch serv ice and quote verse from
the Bible.

It is rather obvious that there are many inequa liti es in our
society. However , it is pecessary that we should make an all­
out eliort to sec ure, at the very least , governments which can
maintain ord er, if our na: ion is to be s pared civil strife .

*

*
As an aft erU1ought, The Spectrum recommends

that it
may be wise for a committee of Congress, such as that inv es­
ti gating un-American activitie s, be emp loyed to question not
only persons with leftis t leani ngs and students who trav el
to Cuba but also, members of White Citizens Councils, the
American Nazi Pa1'1y, the KKK, and those Southern politi ­
cians who refuse to acknowledge equal rights and op port un­
that demonstrations are Com•
ities to aucitizens-claiming
munist inspiredand caused by "outside agitators ."

*

*

*

Exemptions
THE DRAFT AND YeU

Pr eside nt Kennedy ' s executive order exemptin g married
men from the draft is an especially heartening one. Previously
only young fathers had been exempt, and with this new order
s imilar hardships have been acknowledged by the chief execu­
tive for those of us who are not fathers yet, but merely hu s­
bands .

The Spectrum would al.so reco mmend that this liberal ­
ization of th e draft la" be extended lo other persons; nam ely,
those men who give two years of service to the country in
the Peace Corp$.

On wnlking out of the building , I
notked a little sign that read,
" Harriman Library ," Now I am
1·1•allycon(uscd . J hav~• found two
x1uik 111l U1Uoris and no reseMlc Ii•
hri11•y
Since r ely yours,
Arthur nesmkoft

REFLECTIONS

We fffl WI!con do nothing ot
any consequence.
Whlll h11s hnppr nt'&lt;I t n religion?
What has hupp&lt;mcd to education?
The answer is simp le -- We ht\\'c
hnpJ)('nl'd to the . world.
F rl•ud dcst1-oycd the "pu ,·c 1110llvr" War Wld "1•cUgio1f' destro y­
t&lt;dCod. We hav &lt;"dcslt'oycd Ion ·
Whal is lefl but n scmse ol nm­
own unlmporla nce ? \Ve arc lcll.
The on ly (act l'l.'mai1ning to be
lut·nd is Plll't or our own nhllily
to d,:, somclhing . Even I! a mun
decide s to do nothin g ii is slill
Ills decis ion and his deci sion a lon&lt;:.
II the world is highly unsa1islac­
to11" il remains onlY to decide that
it is worth changing . If 11'&lt;' a1·1•
alone we need onh lo decide what
people are worth loving.
So there ii is - a course de­
scr iption for Rathskeller 1()1 - ar,
emotional barf - a whine of dis­
s,itisfaction - a hM&lt;ilf guide w
lonely living . You don't believe \1
do yo? But thars not the point.
really. The pomt is Iha.I our lives

are important.
"To defy power which
everlmpotwnl, Nelttier •lo change,
fat,... ner ,..,..nt , Thin ls to be
IINuttfutlyand fna, TM, Is alOfl•
llfe, Joy, emlper and 11
lctory"
Thel'e

Is, Indeed,

r

nothini:

new

j ,I

By PETER OSTROW
,,

1·

11 ,·

1

11, '111 •

Last Monduy 1h11 campus Alli­
ance Party held a " Town Coun­
cil" mecling m the multi' -uppose
1'00m. It was a n open a!lalr, os­
h•nsably designed to :icquai nt the
st udents with the senators from
C.A.P . , btlt more hasically intend ·
cd ,to d1•,1w freshmen into the
pa 1ty.

As fa r as lhcse g011ls were con1•1•rned,the meeting was a colossal
flop, since total au cndance was
only {orty -five and more than half
or those present were already
Pllrty members . This poor show­
mg was the result of one of t he
worst publicily campaigns in the
history of advcrlislng.
Although
1lw meeting
had been planned
wceks in advance, the first notice
appeared 0111Y three days before It
wns held, an d was but a tiny article
in last week's Spectrvm. This was
followed by a few signs, placed
at'llwtd th e campus, which were
just unpretentious enough to be
ignored by a majority of those who
bother to read the bulletin boards
at all.
This is a genuine shame, for. had
I he meetin g been successful, ii
wciuld have played a valuable part
(party politics nntwilhs tanding ), in
this yea r' s campai gn to arouse ln­
tt'rest ln st udent gove rnment.
Tl
afforded an excellent chance tor
s tud t•nts to meet and talk with
th ei r representatives,
to discuss
their desires and complaints with
lh&lt;lSc in a position lo do somelhlng
about them. The senators, alter
ta lldng with their constituents,
would be able 'to vote more confi•
dcmtly al Sena te meetings. Mike
L3ppin, Vice President oJ the Se~
ate, summed up his party's feel­
ings on the matter , saying, "A stu­
dent leader has the responsi bllity
to unite his conscience with the
aspir ations of the students ."

And where was United Students
duriJig all this? They cer­
talnl.y were not represented at the
Party

-111• meeting .

under the sun!

I

From The Galkrg

8y JEREMYTA,'I.OR
WMts hop(l('ning? I mean whut's
,.._•a
lly hap1x•nina;'/Ch1ld1ren arc be'·
1d ln
111
1; n11m.lt'r(
tlw streets nt
i\l nhwm, - 1hr rntrI ·t, 1inn1ent in•
dustry is s11f1&lt;•1·ina;
from nervous
~dliwphnmiil - lh/1 f'll(li'alion COUlll
III Buffalo hOLSdouh lNJ In t he post
four month !, - the wN thcr Core­
" - the SW·
cast ,;.1ys "~1luhl'11111~
dclt· fhh' nmo ng •~•lie•~:&lt;·
students
h,L~ doublt~l nv&lt;:r tht• past t1y,,
yNlrs - tht• ~11vc
rnmrn l is rlddlrrl
with int'ffir icnt•i~s.
Th 1•s1•,11·1• eVl'ry-duy ,~:.liri os and WC al '('rl't to ncl"mcd or &lt;lc­
prl'SSt'(I. PC'J'hap, the i::rt•11t1•st
l)Ul'l
~ep,'\raling us from "lhc- adul 1
world" is lhis simplc reu lily - \VI"
have grown up whh 1111l,his - wllh
lhc p111'1o[ lhl' bomb
To lhis ~ludcnl i:cnt'rnllon the
world is a common ~•h1&lt;·(
', Clul•
rlrcn slirrtc their scnSl' of won&lt;kr
ht•c:i1uscwondct' nmk ei; om• vul­
n&lt;'rnblc. Wonderment ts ahv11y~ lh1·
first to a:o. BUI it ,ioe, n' t l'nd
lhcrl' . m our 11111.,mpls
le&gt; find sonw
,·oh111'(1m•c
In a wurld ruled by th1•
"protestnnt crh1c" nnd a "SIIE'rll
Gud." IV&lt;' loosl' not only the sc1·urHy ol a bclil.'vable 1-eligion but
Hlso lhe integrity of ouir own lccl ­
lni.;.,. Our liwi. arc
no longer
mc.1nioi.:lul.

I I

No indeed. They were
up in room 335 having a party
meeting (closed) of their own. And
why -0ot? C.A.P., in their eUort to
become known as the only "party ,
tor all the s tudents", never consld-

,

111
m,

er ed inviting

them to join in a

united effort to put the "studen t "
back in stu dent government. U.S.
was left to fend for itself, to come

up with its own political counte~
allac k or be denounced as Ille Pl11'!Y
of
irresponsible
representation.
What I.hey wi ll do remains to be
seen.

Party politics is all right in its
place , but one party should not
try to eleva te itself above the other
as the only one concerned withth e
students' welfare . The meeting was
a _great idea , but would have bad
eve n more impact had it been car•
tied ou t by lhe entire Senate as
a who le, something on the order
of an open Senate meeting in the
multi-purJ,&gt;Ose room. niat way
there would have been a bigger
budget for publicity, and more
spectators might have been at ­
tra cted,
Of ro urse, if United Stud ents did
not want to join in this effort , then
C.A.P . should receive credit for
their unilateral attempt to bring
abo ut a closer Senate-s tudent re­
lationship. This, however was not
the case. Most members of U.S.
that I interview ed felt that lh e
mee.tlng was a good idea, and
would have liked to join in it. Now
they will probably come up wllh
"their own type of get-acquainted
t wl th the) party, and the campaig11
will be und erway long before el ec·
lions. This could become ridicu ­
lous in its proportions. Parties take
note: earl)' rushing may be in
fashion , but don 't bother - you
can't serve beer in Norton anyway .

All students interest·
ed in law and wishing
to join th e Pr&amp;-Law So­
ciety are asked to ad­
dress a post car d to the
Pre -Law Society, Box 18,
Norton Union.
All old members are
likewise requested to do

so.
Please print nam e,
address, and telephone
number on your card.

�SPEC

Fr ld1y, September 20, 1963

Opinion~nd Conviction
By VICTOi, MENZA

PAGE NINI!

TR UM

Prof. Beckwith Returns From Soviet Union
New Graduate Music Program Planned
By JOSEPH LANG

ll can astutely be ob~ervcd thnt
ours is the bingo religion. Though
churches of a ll denomina1ions show
ln cl'eased attendance, ii mtcy be
wise to question why or how this
is happening . Th&lt;' Wi)Jleo{ religious
solidarity in Western culture has
evoked cries of ala.I'm, cynical
smiles, and mllch knotting of
brows , l suggest that these reac•
lions muy not be wholly warranted;
that is to say U111t there may
exist concern for pt'Oblems o( I'(&gt;•
ligiollS dissolution which have al·
ready been, or are in the process
of being remedied. The1·e is some­
thing aJool that i~ assuming at
least a parl o1 Uie former l'Ule
of religion. That something is psy­
chology.
Whether man was coml'f!lled to
feel guilty Wld Inadequate or he
innately worshipped a superior b&lt;'­
ing, the munnel' m which man
Ilocked lo religion is similar to
the wa:y he is moved toward p~y­
chology . We have only to took
around us to witness the count­
less hordes of Cresnm en that
fanatically enroll in psychology
classes. I will admit that this is
largely due lo the attr active mysti•
que that has grown around pshy­
chology; but nonetheless the elt~
menls ol that mystique were fas­
hioned by men and t.bey continue
to appeal to an "unenligh tened''
nu.jorily. One can see that the
popular movement toward psy­
chology hi.ls been aided by feeling:;;

cupilod o position of pMmary sflll,
us II t'3iSl.'(Ionly its own qul•slions
by and In itseU. Is this not th,
level al which used 01• nhuscd psy­
thology is maintained ?

I cannot help nolicin ~ ,·crlain
obvious similarities bctwl•en psy•
chiatrists and prie3ts or 1he vni-iou~
rollgio~ , The snrne lt'&lt;llings of tlW('
nnd tlmldlty which priests haw
been known to i:-enera tc can l)c·
detected ln those who are · m the
presence or a psychintrist. 'l'hl'
priest nppc:ared to be elevated I)~
wisdom nnd pe1-specucity in tht:
same way in which a psychiall'lsl
armears to have some mysterious
i:1·u,11OVl!1'human matters. Whrrc
a penltnnt might admit his guill
ID a prit'1t, u wealthy indivl(lual
confides In tho psychiatrist. Both
the priest oC relig ion and the psy­
d1i11tmt ascrlbe to and uphol&lt;l c1
slalldard of nol'malcy which Is di'
lermJnecl by lhe tenants o( their
respective disciplines.

I do no1 think ii is ovrrreaching
lo say that psycbolog,Y :mcl it~
agents will soon, if !hey a,·c not
doing so nlready, devclo11 a hier­
archy that is i;ymptomatic of an
organized religion. SUch biller lenrt­
ing ns that between the linguislk
psychologists and the unolytic psy.
chiat r i.sts seems to indicate lhnt
there exists in Individual schoo(b
or p;;ychology II d -i:ire 10 prev ail.
Ont't' a s:ngle ~chool attains sov­
reignly rwhkb is not difficult to
conceive off , we could expect lh&lt;'
possibility of condemnatio n of ad•
ve1-sc groups us her~li &lt;.'S.We nught
also find that this incumbent group
would employ such practice s as
literary censorship to preserve Its
of guilt and inadequacy as well us dogma . U this latlcr pivposilion
appears rathe r flimsy, consider lhe
social pressures and mass media
indoctrination - force£ which l.'&lt;!r• !tlct that many books have al­
ready been denounc.-ed tor lacking
talnly contributed 10 the growth
sound psychology ,
of religion. Who can uvoid the psy•
chological expose' in the Sunday
You may be tempted to i;ay that
su pplement! Who doesn't have Ills
:Lil of this is ext remely speculato1y
own neuroses or psychoses?
and very tenuous al that. In con·
The child ot loday is entreated
clusion Jet me remind you or thlll
with psychological termi nology in curious
fact that communuil•s
the same WI\Ythat he used to hear
words of religion. Psychology, as i 1 which have a low level ol religious
participation &lt;.'Onsislently have a
may be used or abused by the
high level of psyehialrl c rarticiJ}tl •
lriyman, demands no more primacy
status than Itself. Religion, 100, oc.~ tion.

U.B.'s Official representative to the Sovietf Union Pro•
~csi;or Hobert ~- Bec,kwit~found. the Russians eager tJ help
,llld generally rnltl1:esledm American culture during his five•
month stay in ~emngr~d las~ spring.
Mr. Beck_wilh _has Just returned to U.B. this fall as direc­
tor of the Umvers1tychoral organizations and Assislant Pro­
fessor or_.rv~usi
c. O~h~_e&gt;..-periences
in _the U.S.S.R. in general,
he says, l ommumca,1onwas far easter than I had expected
probably because musicians speak the same language and
have the same problems everywhere."
Oul'ing lhe sN·tind seml'ster ol
the 19112-63
S('ason. Mr. Beckwith
was the first U.S. E."lchunge Schol,
nr at the Leningrad Sta te Conscrv,
atory.
As a participant in the
unnual
exchange
ol advanct'd
s1'11olurs, with a good command or
the Russian language. he was able
lo observe the musical nnd d.·uly
life of the u.s.s.R. at a much
do~er l'angc and for a longer pe­
riod or time than the avel'age
i\mcl'lcan tourist is usually nJ.
lowed .
His musical lite In Leningrad
Mr, Beckwith describes thus: "I
found the Conservatory a busy ond
lrlc-ndly place. The morale and
ttmlllty of instruction were both
quite high. Leningrad has 11lw11ys
1,tided Itself on being the must t·ul•
turoo city in Russia, Md when I
,ms not pursuing my sp&lt;.-eial hl •
lcre•sl of choral music, there 11'l!l'C!
1Mnty of olher good concerts, bal·
lets. operas, and plays to attend."
With respect to his specialty, he
exp lnins,

"Leningrad 11 • good plact
from which to obMrvt and study
the whole plcturt of choral
m11,lc In Hit Soviet Union today.

5ome of the best R11nl1nchorus­
I heard c•me fnun YlriOvt

••

colleges

1nd

unlvenltl" rn lht

city ltMlf , I vbl ted m1ny ot
them during l'thtarsar, and was

•lways 11try w11rmlywelcomed.
Tii. poHlltlllty of •n Oll(hange ef

f11rther
,"
This ycnr lhr Umvcnu.y Mrn 11
I.ill'&lt;' Club and the Wo1111:n'sChu­
rnk. under Mr. lk-t·kwHh's dln• ,··
ttn11. liavc raised their ~tM(ll\rrl~
.,1111('Wanded their scor,,, or ill'O\•
11yto include several ron, l'M~ with
fh1• {lulf(1ln Phllhnrmonw Or!'l1cs
Ira. Th.ls more• 1ntcns1vt• wurk 1s
1ntl'nli1-d to 11rt•1&gt;uretht'"' choral
u1·.L!itnlw.tions for po.ss1bleove~
!Olll'S, as well as {or a n1or1- IOI•
J&gt;()rflllll role in the stni,, {Ind N'•
~•onal musical scene. /1'$. ;i rrsull
of Mr. Bl'Ck\\1th's rfforrn In the
U,S.S.R. lJB now ht1s at·e1u1rt-d a
11111(1'.
v11tu11blcl'Ultt-cll()n ot !IL'ilres
llnd hook~. Whkh l'.111$t'J'\C 1111tht•
nue•ll'us or a plannrd gr1,tl11n1cpro1:mm In Russ inn Music
/\Her his stay In Russm. Mr
Beek\\1th spent the swnn1cr lravt-1ing in .Eastern Europe . llr vtRltl'&lt;l
Budapest as a guest of the Com
flOSi'Nl' Union, and Warsaw at the
lnvffullon of the Musicological ln•
University.
stilulc
ot Warsaw
"Thanks to the l'Ol'J)O
J'ation of Hun­
garian, Polish. 11ml Czech col•
lcni;ucs, t was ublr to get nt least
u glimpse of many aspects ol
musical life in I hese \hrt'e Com
munlst countries. see n against fill'
backgrow1d o! condltforu. In Russia
Hself. Mr. Beckwith brought home
much intcresti,ig aud littlo known
music, :.oml' of which UB audi•
cnccs will be hearing in the near
future .

Cupid
's RoleIn Art
Analyzedby Critics

The Circus

ly PE&lt;NNYSPILLER

A noted 1111critic, Erwin Panof ­
slcy, devoted much time to the study
or the lconographical metamorpho­
sis ol the cupid figure In art. Like
lhe figure of Justice, iMOCent Cupid
was often portra .yed as blind or
blindfolded and seldom beyond the
age of two .
ln Sir Joshua Reynolds' painting,
Cupid as lhe Link Boy, at the Al•
bright• Knoz GaUery, Cupid ls now
a young boy rather than on infant .
He still retains the innocence of
1&gt;1-eviollSrenditions yet, instead ol
bei ng blind to light it is Cupid him­
scU who has lhe duty or lighting
By RON KAMINSK
I
the lamps which illuminate the
st reels. He glances backwards, over
his shoulder. P&lt;'rhaps. he is looking
tu S&lt;'C the e!Ject of his work.
violence ls growing. As a new elt't'·
The American Negro Is fighting
The Reynold~' Cupid is u poor
lion year approaches politlcal op­
boy and his wings arc hardly visa­
ha1'd to gain the civil rights owl.'d
portunists could seize, in subtle
bte 11!:llinslhis dark clothing . NL'llr
lo him as un Amerknn citizen.
wny~. upon the unspoken tears 11nn his elbow one can sec u hole in
U is a battle to ove1&lt;Come whnc prejudices or mo.ny white voters.
his l'Oat. ts this merely a hole 1n
The Democrats are alrrady dls ·
Presiden t Kennedy has staled as
the clolh or ls if a dry wound?
regarding the Dce!)&lt;'SI South Ill ln any case, it seems to cause the
lhe brutal statistics lacing twenty­
their Presidential rc-ek-clion sl rnt ·
boy no pain. But one still wonders
one million dark-skinnl'd Ameri•
if the traditional bearer or the a,._
cans. The Negl'O has only a 50% egy. With a vastly superior white
voter strength in the northern and
t'hance or finishing high school us
row could be so inlliclcd himself .
western
regions
or
th&lt;'
t'OUlll
ry,
th~
his white cl~mntcs
with twke
In the background Reynolds has
question remains as to whether In•
!he ct,WJce or unemptoym!'nl. Iu
J)llinted the dusk : the time usually
lclltgcnf
polllkal
ll'11dcrship
will
re­
his seven year shorter life spn n
assigned to both Cupid and lamp­
sist the perhaps easy - victory
he has only a one In sev&lt;'n chuncc
lighters. But In the morning lhe
temptation
or
racism
In
politico
.
ol earning ten thousand dullars a
lamps will be' extinguished 1111dthe
The
Negro
does
not
intend
to
~-car a.nd his overall income will
streets will be Iii by the more real
tx• one-halt that ol hJs fellow while slow the momentum or his drive , light, that of the Sun himsel(. who.
having =n what obsluclcs it has
,·ounterpart.
according to mythology wa:. a fur
already ovet·come . Without resting
Although nwny whites profess
greater god than the young Cupid.
until his rights are com1,&gt;letelyvin­
&lt;ympnthy for the Negro, muny
The painting docs not tell us ol
dicated
he
must
risk
violence
and
worry about school lntcgrallon.
Can
CU111d's daytime activities.
while
voter
resentment.
1·rnde unions have practiced dis­
Cupid perform his duties in a light
Unless
we
gainsay
the
Negro·s
•·ri111lnation and have made it dll­
which is not artificial and which
rights, the main danger may be,
l11·
ul1 lor JIUIJ\Yor the nine-hundred
he has not kindled or are his powers
that subtle prejudi ce and fear m:.y
rhousand unemployed Negros to
limited to the evening houn only'!
become politi cally expressed.
It
lind jobs. Fear and prej·udice even
tr such were the case one wondeni
perhaps will be II primary political
n the North has creat~ situations
why Reynolds did not choose tv
question as to how courageous and )
wh~re Congressmen fin there an•
paint the figure or the Sun chariot
1ntelligent political leadership will
White constituents representing any
crossing ~ slcy. Reynolds '• latent
n,•w civil rights meo.sure designt'CI behave In finding a peaceful and
certainty cannot be Unutecl hy his
purposeful solution to Amenca ,
'" hl'lp the Negro
1•hom• or suhject mutter
ru~mosl
lntenial
11robl1•111
.
A llu.nger ol whllr r&lt;'llt'Uon und

People and Politics

PltOF. ROBERT S, BECKWITH

vlallt llttwefn the ir chO fU SH Ind
ours was • sultJect which fNo
quontly lrOM In dlsc11ulon, Thi,
ls 1n hlH well worth e11
plorln11

By B08 MILCH

Dear Ma ·n Pl.l,
Wl'll. yuh just cain'l imagine hOw
hup1&gt;Yah am. Remembet uh ww;
lcllin ' yuh belore how bad me an
muh l'OOmmate was geltin' on to,
gelher? Well, he got sick an' they
took him to lhe lrulrmary with 11
bad case of the mumbles 11n' the
quivt'.'1-s, an' they're givln' mr·
another one to try oul.
Ah just gotta tell you 'bout muh
old roonunate, Bruce, who Willi
town on a place called Lung Gis­
land (ah ain't sure that's how yu11
spell ll, but that's how lhey sa.y
ilJ; !ucl is, lhc:rc arc more kids
from lhal neck o' the woods tllall
there 11re mes on a mule's behind .
Anyway, ah thought BruL't! an ·
me 'd g('I along line 'cause mah
hound 's name 1s Brure, an · ah like
mah houncl. But we didn't .
Fuhsl thing what went wrong is
tw wUJlft'li two o· mah c1r-1
dmwer!&lt; lo' s0111eo' lus sweaters
'c·uuSl' he h;id so lllilllY they
1-oulcln'I1111lit in his drawers. Now
lhc:;c wusn·t Just any ru0-0-'the •
wooll'n,fl\ill sweuters, mind yull.
These WIIS hand -knit, pre-slretched.
sanrorlzed. madt• • in • occu111ed•
QUl .'&lt;;
'118 SWC!l.h!f!l whnt glow ,n the·
dol'k. Why, they hung halt Wily H,
hi!&lt; kn~'t•s an' hud u V-i.'ollur wlwt
wen! lu his navel , Ah tOI' h1111.
friendly like, they would'nl take up
so much room il'n he'd tighten up
the spoces 'tween !he stitches an'
and got a lint remover to take aU
the luu. oll 'n thf'lll. That wus when
W&lt;' had Ulll' lin;I light.
/lt1c1• 1w wn,; back on SO\'iehle·
krms. 11h asked him ll'n nil t.hv
fellers 011 Lung Gil!land ,war thc11
pants so tighl with lhl'm flttle SIii~
in the leg an· onty l'Omln ' down
10 1hc calf. When he 11Uld they

did, ah' IOI' him that mah aunt
Bess wenrs pedal pushers like llult
an' that 's when we had our second
light.
We had our third Oght when ah
thought one o· his big-striped shirts
was u dust mi:, but that ain 't
wol'lh l{oin' Into Th&lt;' Coul'lh ni:111
w1• h11n rom1• whe•n 11h nsk~ him,
11lc1•Ukt•, 111l11tl
yuh, il'n uh t'OUld
• o' his sh0t·~. \•rot~
l1•y on u 1&gt;.111
uh alway.; wondered whn1 nn l'lt
kit like: anyway, he wounldn ' t let
me 11,y ·e01 on.
ln lhc mcanwlule, ul' Bl'lll'C
wttkcs up thJs mornin' iifl' (JJ11I~
hi' Jlln'I got uny hair dn•s~in· . Su
he st1111S1·wuLin' 'rou.nd :in' yellin
nn g1.1spin' fill' 11')')11'hi squeeze
some out or a tub&lt;• wtml weren 't
about to Ix.• squt~•tl'tl unymon.• Ah ,
t-OUldn't understand What all llw
fuss was about, ·m use he had
enough tonk left on his ht'ad (mm
th e day before to grease a wagon.
But ah f1ggcrL'&lt;l ah wouldn't sturt
lil\Ylhln'' llll' so ah just ollC'red to
h•ncl l11111some o· mah bear 011,
wlm·h is t'\ll'I-Y bit tlS good WI
lh&lt;• stuJr he USi!lll' .,nywu,y. Well.
·d
. nt the
111•juijt sat down ·n ~hl.l'&lt;
l'l'liln' illld t'Ommclll '\.'&lt;I lo mum­
blin' likc&gt; Aunt Sa1m1111hy done
durln ' ht•r bout with swum11 fove1
Ah ca lled the inlirma cy, nn· lh1')1
Sl'nt somrone over hel'c who mov1'&lt;1
him luh the clink . where tht•y took
hi !! ll'lnP&lt;'l'lllUt-e l\n' gov,· him
'so mrthln' 10 help hlm ~k't'!),
'l'hllt was this momln ' Ah JU81
KOi ,, l~lll Crom lhl' folks In FOOd
11n Housin '. They say m,lh m•w
l'OOllllllalt•'s name is Cary. an · llwl
lu• wUl)ts lo know l!'n i,h '-'Of Ill\)'
~ x,m Splll'e in my drnl\l'N
Your Lovin Sun.
Jethro

�SPECT

PAGE TEN

Friday , Septemb.r 20, 1963

IRUM

Drama-~ipeech
.Announce
NewFacult
Expansic&gt;n of Undergrad
Professor Stanley D, Travis, Head
11! the Department of Drama and
Speech, has added six new mem•
bers to Jhe departmen1t's faculty.
Al the assistant profE:ssor level ,
Dr. Ernest C. Thompson Jr. has
joined the staff. Mr. Thomas S.
Watson and· Mr. Michael H. Prosser
have been appointed lacturer.

MARCHINGBAND (luring half-lime show al VB-Gettysburg

game Saturday.

Formations Show Precision
In First Band Performance
By tO M KENJARSKI

Each faUterm begins with numerous problems for Frank
J . Cipolla. director of the University of Buffalo Marching
Band. .\1r Cipolla must organize and begin plans for the
marching band's fall season. This includes presenting half­
time shows for each home football game in addition to one
away game which he must make plans for this year will be
for the Boston College game on November 9th.
School of Music nml the Vienna
Academy of Music in Vienna, Aus­
tria , He later work!'d at the Uni­
versity of Missouri. JI was rhere
that he did quite a bit of work
with Missouri's marching band
which had the distinction or Ill·
rending the Orange Bowl on Jan•
unry l, 1961. Upon st&gt;t?ingthe chal­
lenges and o p p o r t u n i tit•s or a
marching band at the University of

New 111structors are Mr . Terry
H. Ostermeier, Mr. n1omas Ben­
son and Mr. Donald Wildy. Pro­
lessor Travis aMounced that with
the additions in faculty, his depart­
ment will plan extenstv(i expansion
of l11e undergraduate curriculum in
drama and speech, and w!U develop
u new graduate c·urricu.lum.
Dr. Thompson has bieen named
Coordinator or Public Address and
Director of Curriculum Develop­
ment. He received his M.A. at the
State University or Wm;hinglon in
10Ci5
and his Ph.D . f1'0m lhl' Univer­
~ity of Minneso(a in l9Ei0.
Whlle ('Omplcling his Ph.D. he
servrd as an tnsl ruc!Qr ,11th&lt;' Uni­
Y or Minnesota amJ later al
vcl'&gt;.iil
Purdue University. I le taught at
Boston University from 1960to 1962,
and was Head of the Speech De­
part mental Parsons Colllcge during
the last school year. flls special
interest include experimental stud­
ies In speech.
Mr. Prosser received his M.A.
from Ball State College in Muncie,

Curriculum Planned

Indiana, In 1$9. He is currentlY
completi ng his Ph.D. from the Uni­
versity ol Illinois. From 1960 to
the present, he has taught Latin
and speech at the Urbana Junior
High School, Urbana, Illinois. Be­
cause of his classical background,
he will develop courses in classicul
rhetorical and speech theory both
at lhe undergraduate and at the
graduate level.

During the summer of 1962, Mr.
Prouer was the recipient of •
Ulllverslty of Illinois grant which
allowed him to study and collect
materials on the speeches of Adlai
E. Stevenson at the United States
Mission, the United Nation• and
at the State Department In connec•
tion with his Ph.D. dissertation.
Mr. Benson, a graduate teachi ng
assistant, and later an acting in­
structo r at Cornell University , is
completing his Ph.D. dissertation at
Cornell. He received his A.B. from
Hamilton College In 1958, and his
M.A. from Cornell in 1961.In addi­
tion to his membership in the
Speec h Association or America, Mr .
Benson is a member of the National
Collegiate Players. He will develop
the area o! History or American
and British Public Address. Mrs.
Benson is specializing in Child De­
velopment Rnd Family Relations.

Techni4al Director , of the Kalama­
zoo Civic Players . From 1$5-1960,
he served as an Instructor in Dra­
ma and Speech at the University
of Delaware . Mr. Watson was an
lnstructor, the Technical Director
and Stage Manager or the Connec­
ticut College of Dance. In February,
1963.his article "Three Theatres of
Arch Lauterer" appeared in the
Joun,al of the AIA (American In­
stitute of Architects).
Mr. Donald Wildy, also a veteran
of the Unlted Stales Army, received
his B.S. from Buffalo State Teach­
ers College in 1959. Presently, he
is completlng his M.A. from Syra­
cuse University.

During the last three summers
Mr. Wlldy has been an Instructor
at the University of Buffalo. He
has served as a speech cornctlor.­
lst In the LockportCity Schaols and
the Wllllamsvllle Schools. In March
Mr. W 11d y wlll direct Ibsen's
"Enemy of tie People."
Mr. Terry Oslermeier, who has
been appointed Director of Novice
Debate. is completing his Ph .D. al
Michigan State University. He is
the author of "The Student's Con­
cept or thP. First Course in Speech."
in the May, 1961, Issue of The Un­

dergraduate Speech Interest Group
Bulletin.

Mr, Ostermeier received his B.S.
at Wisconsin State College at Osh­
Mr. Thomas Watson received his
kosh and his M.A. from Marquette
B.A., M.A., and M.F .A. degrees
he was
University. From 1969-1961,
from Western Reserve University
a Graduate Teaching Assistant at
In Cleveland. He is a veteran o!
the United States Army. From 1.950 Marquette and later, from 1961-1963
at Michigan State University .
to 1954, he was the Designer and

Orum major, await t111 1tart of
of tho MII-IJme show,
,

\\l11d1 111rlud,·~some
,ind mm• nlilJurH h•s,
Yt'll" al a fll'I'·

th,~

,,,,,11011

1·1111&lt;"1
"Ba nd

, I Im~• da)·s I IJ,, ban Ii

•,st mlly lo ~rl lls hus1c
, .n,, Tlus y,,,u· th1;
·,·nally rllllil'ult ~ince
iall In prr~enl n haJJ­
t ~"'
I " on S,•111,•1111Jcr
Mlh for
tht • , '' 1111n
• i:.,m, l'rrviu u.sly
1t11 ,. 11· ror pr:u·twl• wi\s;; lonJ::£'t
l••"t1J , lht• hr~t honw )!,lm,• c,mw
11111•1 l I

\\ •t.

' ':f'ztSllll

1l\
1t1 Inn,• tnr prnt•t1&lt;
\11 l' I• 1 l11111l1·tllh, hrsl 1.:·11111'
I, 11111 , mauun to n form:H1011
, "hlt'h mntai ns "" rm~
I r•
t1&gt;1011
1 , td un i:. Howrvcr, llw
llt'XI
,II( , 1&gt;1\ fl,•1nlwr I~ 1'111 h,•
~ t'OOlhu , 11,n 1m•1·is1ondnll' nnd
"lormnt· 111l~T•,.• shm, h.1S1i1 &lt;.&gt;n
lhe mus 1, .,r Hu11..r, ,lllli ll 11rJ1mcr­
stein. l\11 C1polln , 1tt-d lhr '""
drum m,1Jurs, l lon Conover and
Richar d Ju111•s,the h~ud maJorette,
Miss N11m·yShultl as well as the
other band members for their ex·
cellen t work.
Since Mr . Cipolla dO!'S his job
so well. II is a surpmiJ1 11 luct to
note that his school bac kground is
not in the field of mar ching band
music . He attended the East1T1an
1

FRANK J. CIPOLLA

Oirect~r of UB Marching Band
Buffah&gt;, hr accepted lhr
or Du-Pttor or Bands here

position

Wlwn th,• foolball se11son ends,
li1l' ha11d dividt•s into lwo l'Oncert
&gt;:rDU(l.\i.
Mr. Cipolla noll'd that the
b.'llid. .vh1ch i:ets most o! its repu­
tnlion marching during the football
sl'ason, really spends most or its
time 11stwo concert groups from
NovPmber to June. HI' f!'lt th:,l the
rmso11 !or lhl' mar&lt;:hmg blind i;et•
tmg ,ts reputation was due to th!'
tacl that it performs befo~ hou•
sands, whereas the concert groups
do not usually gel an opportwiity
to per form before such larg e audi ­
ences. Mr. Cipolla hopes that th e
l'On~rt tour planned for this spring
wiU bring the band a reputation
of musical sut't'eSS for the entire
yea r .

MENNEN SPRAY DEODORANT . Best deodorant a man can use. For
two good man's reasons.
1. Meninen·Spray gets through to the skin where a man perspires .
2. Meninen Spray is cont:entrated . Deliver~ three times the anti­
perspirant power of any other leading men's deodorant.
Mennen Spray Deodorant , , . in the handy squeeze bottle. Try it. ~

�Friday, September 20, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGEELEVEN

STO RES ·I N C.
3610 MAIN ST.
OPEN 9 A. M. -

• NEW-USED
TEXTS
~ • PAPER
BACKS

• Paper
Supplies

Phone:TF3-7131

(NEAR BAILEY)

9 P. M.

UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO
CAMPUS
X~?'!"~~-:i--

[ll.,_3610

• SWEATSHIRTS PARKFRE!\
• ST
ATIONERY

UNIVERSITYMANOR
MOTELPARKINGLOT

-~

MAIN ST.

UNIVERS1TY
PLAZA

RE UIRED ·
TEXTBOOKS
UBSWEATSHIRTS
- 13COLOR
(NEW AND USED)

UBJACKETS... BEER·MUGS - PENNANTS .
ASH·TRAYS- STATIO.NERY- BRIEFCASES
_JR. SIZESWEATSHIRTS- T-SHIRTS
STUFFED
ANIMALS - PENS - PAPERBACKS
\

�SPECTRUM

PAGETWELVE

t

Friday, S.ptemi-r 20, 1963

ReadingSocietyReorganized

p.m . Tlw spcak,•r will Ix• Rrv
Pnv1d BrM'SC'. Rc•v. Breese was
JI.IILulhc•ran students "ho nrc.&gt; rormcrly as~ociatc.-d with ''Youth
tnll'rcslt'd m at1endlni: Gamma
ror Christ" un&lt;l is prc•scnlly tlw
Delta Sol'lnl Sunday, will meet In Pre' ;idl'nl or Christian Destmy, Inc·,
Norton Umon at 2 p.m . ror a day
li e ha.~ 1ruvl'INI C'Xtensivcly and
ol hol'SC'hac:k rlrling al $1.50 per
hus sfiOlwn m rorly dirforcnt
hour .
l'OUnlrlcs , l...L~t yl'ar he was an
\\'l'&lt;ln&lt;'sclny
, Gamma Dl'lla will
obst•rvt•r at tilt• Communist Youth
tnrel lor dlMer nt ;i::10 p,m. in
fl!stival In HtNnki , ~' inland.
the carcterm , lhe:onhold a huslncss
HIilei
llillrl w,11 s11onson• a S!thlmth
m('('ling in Norton 344 at 6:30 p.m.,
lollow,&gt;dhy a SOt·wlhour. Thi' torm· S.•rvi&lt;•e• lhts ('Vl'lllOJ.:al 7:4S (l,nl ,
ror discussion will be "The Uni­ in lhc Hillrl lluus, •, A panel dis•
or the Nu­
, e,-slty - u Sol'ml o, lntellc•t•lual !'\ISSion "J11t1U'('S..&lt;tons
lto1u1I H1ll,•I lns111u1c" \\'ill he prc-­
ln;.titullon7"
srn1,~J l,y lht· thrt•e BuHalo Hillel
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
tll'l••:.:a11•s
, Hal'hara Zirlin, SUsan
IVCF is sponsoring th&lt;' movie "For
TtnlC' anti Ell 'ITUty" In lw shown runt, Linda Cwn . An On!.'J.:Shub­
lmt will fullu11
111 lhe Norton Collf('l'l'lll'I' Tlwalcr
. E\'eryunc I.~ Delicatessen Supper
tonight al i ;l() p.111
Tiu- ri1s1 etPlk;,1t•sSt•
11 sup()('I' ol
wrkonw
th,• 1\l'w v""' 111)1IK· hl'lll Sunday,
Till' 111'\I mc&gt;f'llllg 11111Ix• lll'kl
Thur,;duy , tn Norton 1:14 :,1 4:(XJ ill ~,::JU i,,m, In 1hr llillC'I lloUSl',

Gamma Delta

Mr. Donald Wildy, Instructor in Drama and Speech,
announces the reformation and reorganization of the Mad­
rigal Reading Society for a year of varied activities and events.

Rahh1 Morton ,I. Sumnwr, prinr1The Society was originally rormed
p11I or Kadlmuh School, will gi,c·
lo afford opportunity ror those stu•
the second tec•ture in the current
dcnls whose interest In Literature
~nic•s , "Turning Points in Jewish
Jed them to working wilh it under
Ilisto&gt;·y."
performance circ um stances, Read ..
An invitatiCJn is e•x1cndcd lo nil
ings, or important and valuable
the Hillel slUOt'nls at Sh1tr Univer­
sity College und th&lt;•11 lri!.'nds le, works were given by thl' Society
open to sfudC'nts of the University
ullcnll a Coke and Chip Purly Sun­
untl ,community aucllences.
day al 7;00 p,m. Ill th,• College
Union,
i\lr. Wildy plans a program of
S111d1•nlsmay now rr-;.tistcr (or
A
cxpa ndcd activity this year.
S t u d y Groups in Elementary
series or rcudings devoted to con•
lfloh1~•w, Yiddish, Jewish 1-Jlslory, tcmpornry poc'ls, one 10 the short
and Biblt' whh-h an• sdwllult'Cl lo
m1'l'I Sunduy and Monday alter•
noons beginning- lhc wtek or Oct.
G. There• ltl'C' plans al~o lor a rl'•
lii;:1ous \\'Ot·kshop and a ehoir 101
whil•h lntc•1·cs1cd Sluclcnts should
n•g1s1e•r
. Th&lt;· "Livi' and Learn" dis1·uss1on hours held on Thursday
..itlt'rm,on~. ,~ill resume atler lhl•
Sukkot h holidays .

BICi
MOTHER
SAYS

SAV&amp;!

WELCOMEBACK
STUDENTS!

Special
Purchase
ofCampus
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made to sell at

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novel and a series devoted to wor ks
of camp us wri ters are Items for
Society consider.ttion.
The Society hopes to be an outlet
!or stude nts ot literary Interpreta­
tion and have ideas ror putting the
wrlllen word into live performance.
II hopes also to Interest the many
wrilcr'S on campus who would enjoy
hearing their works read aloud to
uudiC'nces in pcrrormances under
student direction.

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Limit 2

APEARING

WITH THE PRESENTATIONOF THIS AD

EVERY NIGHT EXCEPT TUESDAY

TheDON'RED'
MENZA
QUINTET
9:00 P. M.• 1:00 A. M.

111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
m11111111

3139BAILEY
At
Amherst

Phone

833-9395

Open: Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat.-9:30 A.M.-5:30P.M.- Thurs., Fri.-9:30.9:00
f

...

P.M.

3199 MAIN . ST.
1 BlockSouthof U.B.
836 - 9490

�Friday, S.,,tember 10, 1963

PAGETHIRTEEN
BUDAPESTSTRINGQUARTET

SPECTRUM

National Student Congress ,SistersParticipate Budapest Quartet to Give
Holds Meeting at Indiana In Recital at Baird Three Concerts Next Week
By JOSIEPHLANG

ly LORNAWALLACH

The National Student Congress held its 16th annuaJ con­
gress tllis past summer at the University of Indiana. The 3
delegates representing UB were, Mike Cohen, President of
the Student Senate, Bill Burger, and Bob Finklestein, a mem­
ber of our National Student Asfociatioosteering committee.
The alms of the Nat1onal Student
Association· are: to maintain aca­
demic lreedom, to stimulate and
improve student govem menl, to
better educational standards and to
improve stude nt welfare . The Con­
gress itself detemllnes plans or
action for the coming year. Na­
tional officers are elected at the
time ,
Many changes took place at t.h1s
year's congress. Most Importan t
was the abolishment of the over­
worked National Executive Com•
mlttee In favor ot the Congress
Steering Committee which is the
functiona l part of the Congress and
the National Supervisory Board.
Abolishment or the NEC wns due
in part lo criticism by memben
and non-members claiming that th1..
NEC was too powerful arid that a
small number or people had too
muc•h control or the association.
Lcgislallo.n at the congress w11s
carried out on 3 levels. Five com­
mittees : student lt()Vernment con­
cerns in the educational process,
studentGovernment involvement in
society, student ~vemment and
student freedoms, student govern·
men\ participation in the Universliy
Community and inlerrlational al·
fairs set up sub commmlttees for
preliminary discussion. From the
sub committees bills went to the
committees themse lves and, if ac­
cepted, went to the plenary floor
where they were priorixed.
An el(llmple or the legislature
lhat came out o( the congress was
a special resolution on the Wash•
ington March, backing the goals
or lhe March and sending a three
man committee to partlctpate. An­
other special resolution condemned
the police b111tality in the civil
rights demonstrations at Americus,
Georgia.
or special irlteresl to UB student
is the (IOlicy to support ncndemlc
fl'cedom. Sttecille Instance~ of vlo­
lutlon ot I\Cll(lem1cfrt'edom were
cited,one ol which was the Apt.hek•
er case, stiU in our state courts.
In general, the NSA is a liber al
group. This year it has taken spe­
cific stands for civil rights. The
civil rights conference studied the
backgroun d of the problem. They
found that the problem of housing.
education and job opportunities
wer•e so intertwined that 011e could
not be solved without the other,
The conference felt lhls is n prob­
lem , that pervades our entire coun,
11·y taking in the many impovcr·
ished whlres also.
The trend of the conference. how­
ever. was towards academic rather
than poUUealinterests . On the aca­
demic side, the NSA Is offering
gmduate assistance and text books
to Prince Edward County, laciUtat-

Mike Ceflell
, 1111 •urtar, -

Flnktestetn- UB Delegate• hi N•·
tlOflal SIi/dent COtlgl'llss.
Ing the opc•nlng of publk schools

as opposed tu segregated priv:ite
schools. J\ eo-oµ is being esrnb­
lished to buy books on a nntionnl
level and consequently to bring
them to the students 111 u lowC'r

price.
James Merl•dith, Surg~nl Sh.Iver.
Senator Schwengal of lowu u11d
Fulton Ll!IVis nrspok" nl lh&lt;' NS,\,
Also present were n1cmb(l1'!lot SIU•
(lent nssociations trnn, fm'Clgn
countries.
Two and onr· hull days ol the
t'Ongresswerl' devoll'd to semlnt1rs
tvnccrning
sludent-facutty l'Cla­
tluns. Herr It was reHlizecl lhnt
slUdcnts mus1 act responsible nnd
lmow nII facets or II prohl!!m be•
rm·e going tb the adminis tration .
Tlw problems of South~111t'&lt;luca•
tton Wl'I'&lt;'ulso discus~l'd
Al the prcsid t'nt's eoor,•1•ence.
wl1ic-h Mike Cohen attended. the
belie( lhnt st,1dent ,::overnnwnl
should complement the t'&lt;lucalion
r,1wrs !&gt; wns soliditi!'d. Mike ft•lt
thl•se conlel'enccs wc1·e very fruit•
Cul; he learned mu\'11 abuul slu•
dent govemmenl whkh lw feds
wlll be very hclpfUt to him in rar­
cying our his duties as President
ol the Student Senate .
When askl'd of his impl'e,sion o!
the NAC, Bob Finlmlstcln s;1id, "it
provided a great opportunity lot·
lhe American student to aid in Ihe
formulation of p01icy tor the NS/\.
It ofJered a lesson in parliamen­
tary procedure second to none,
which helped the delegates mup
p01icies and programs for the com­
ing year. The congress is not only
valuable, but necessary to keep
the voice or our na tion's students
active and recognized. The e,cperi­
ence was a priceless one."

Blind Orientation Program
Effective in -Buffalo Area
The Blind Orientation Program,
under the k-&gt;1dershlpoCDr. Dorothy
Adema, has become an eUccttve
and helpM service to blind slu,
dents from this campus and other
campuses in the 81'1?n,
Blind students, a lon.it with their
directors, from D'Youville Cam­
sius, Rosary Hill. and Erie County
Technit'al Jn.~tltule were invited to
attend an orienlation program held
hei;e this month. Miss Judith Nab­
low. a UB in-aduare and Mr. Louis
Cadero, a gr:idua1e or the Uni,·er­
sity ol Rochester addr CSL-'!.! !he
group. T\1,•~ 001h emphasized rho
ml'uns ol uslni: a university's fal'•h•

lies for blind students.
A. member u! !he Unlvcrsily
Plac:cment Bu1e1111
, Mi~~ Connie
Koplcr, S(IOke on obtaining and
and paying for Braille Readers , on&lt;'
of the greatest problems tor blind
students.
The need for a belier l'lldl'I'
standing betw~'l.•n lhe do,m1m,·1,
Blind Rehabilitation Center :i.nJ
campus facilities led Mr P.onnld ,
Johnson , a vocational ~ id!lll&lt;'•'
counselor for the blind. to rtiscu;.-;
with campus officials th•• possibih
ty of II Campus Coordinalor for
tlw Blind. Dr. Adema w ts n.lmi:•l
to this posilion last spnn1;

By VICTORIA BUGELSKI
Sopl'(lno Tneko Fujii ,\~It sharo
n recllal In Baird Hall, on Sept­
The Budapest String Quartet. Quartet-m-Re!ilclence
here
at the University, will present three concerts next week in
ember 21st. with her two sisters.
Masako F\rjil, violinist, and Michl, in Norton Multi-Purpose Room,featuring a quartet of Haydn.
ko f'njli, ccllisl. The wcll•known Bartok; and Schumann at each concert
The conc.-rt~ will be Sept. 24. 25
&amp;'Ca pianist , Squire Ha.skh1. ,,111
nnd 26 and bei;in al 8:30 p.m . Gen­ the Quark! was 1mm,-d Quurtet·ln
11ssilit
in the concert whlch. lH.'~ldcs
er:11 admission is $2; !11t•u1t
y nncl Rl•8idem·c.' Thl•Y will now pres(!rtl
works or Bnch, Mo1,art, Brahms,
Ntnlf $1. Stud&lt;'nl6may obt11h1tll'k•
1111&lt;ll111111,11
$rrtrx Of ,·Mmhl'r mll~lc
nnd Mend1•lssohn, will renhn·&lt;' &lt;'On­ ct~ h'C!&lt;'of tl11u•gefor ru1y 01· ull \1\ 11&lt;!,lltin
n 10 the- Hc.'C'tbovenCy ¢ )('
ur thr t~11ct&gt;rlllby the prcsent11- 1111 0«111hcr this yrnrl, rc-nturlng
\e111por,uy Jupanese pi~c£•s. Y.
lio11or their m rn rd ot the Bnird
guest soloisls In workll for
1111111~
lrino·s 'Music for Violin Md Piano·
Jfoll Rox Orrice prior to tti. night imlo insrrum~•nt imd strinir.s.
,Ind Y. Nukada's 'Six Children
of the performance. Thb procl'­
'fhl ' Budapc~l has lll.~•11
11\lt'nlll.•
Songs· will be presented for the
rlll•I' will 1·onlinut• ror all musk/\1
li1111nlly
acclaiml'&lt;I Cur its "beaut! •
first time in R\1!"'10 nnd the U.S. ,,v,•111,1
~pons,wrd hy the Music De· ful tom•. rll'rflot·t integra(lon. tm­
Miss 'taeko ~'ujil wns hum In p:11·1mr11t.
lll'lTabll• t:•~lf', l'(lrt'fUI phrasinJ.
Tokyo Wlll'l'l' she l'Cl'(IIWCI
IHUl'hIll
The mcmlll'l'li ol till' Bt1(l11pcst {'fl:11·,1&lt;'!!.'•' xtylc. and depth or ln­
" Alexander S(-hll('ider
mm&lt;• to &lt;.,)unrll'Iare ,Jose(1hl{o1smnn, fh-i.l lP1'()1'('1t111on
lttr musicnl erl11c11llon,
, onlv one or the qunrtrt to
the U.S. ILS:t Fulllrii:hl r~-.:d1:U1{;{'violin: Ale,mnder Sc•hnc-idrr, s1-t'- IN 111,
; nnd p,•1·rorn1;llonr In puhl!c. und this
Seltolal' In 1\f,\ll, 111111t'OOlllk•le&lt;I 1.1111!violin; Boris Kl'l'l yt, v1ol11
h~ d1~•sonl)' orcasionally Jo~ph
The
Misl'hn Schneidrr , t'CIIO.
gmduale work in vOrl·c in Roston
Rnl~m.m ,~ veh&lt;'menlly OllllllW
Schneiders arc brothers . All lhe
She has su11i;1h1•rOh' of "M11!111me 1lll'lnbers ol the quartet with lite solo 1mblk pcrformanrr
"You
6Ullerfly" In lhl• U.S., ll11wall, :md
nll':111 I should walk 0111 lhC'rC'
rx,·e111ionol Mr. Roi,mum teach
Is In ~rl.'111
1k111nndwith
,lupun 1111(!
11
•,t11ou1my colleagites uncl piny
tn the Music Department . Mr .
otutorio gl'UUps 11nd symphony J\l1•xand1•rSd meider COllchcs stu­
ttandlng up? Never !"
01•chcstr,ts. Sh(• w.is uw,u·tku 111,, d1·rtl~In d1am\&gt;rr music .
J&gt;,•l'haps one or the st-.:rt't, of
Ot•rl&lt;shil'&lt;:MU~)l' c,,11k1· SdtOllll'·
ihr Budapest'~ success 1s their pol•
Tiu• members of the onglnnl
ship, /\sJl&lt;lnMusir ~·rsttvnl S!'l1ola1•
Rwlaf)l'SI QtUll'tt&gt;I.rounded In 19'21 ky ot personal non•lntervontion,
ship, and 111 19(11 sht• wvn ll1l'
01t1m• rhnmb&lt;'r music groups haw
h) violinist Emil Hauser, were all
Met1v1&gt;0lih1nO,Nrn N1•w 1•:11~l11nlJ
fulled liecausc the pl11ycrs"sawtoo
I l11n::111'1nns
. Nom• of the present
Auditions, In M,u·,·h, l!HiJ, Miss i;mur, 1wrc nwmbers ol lhe orii.,i­ m11d1of each olh('r." The Budn­
1-'ujii gaw II l'CC'illllIn t'.Ulll('gi"
J&gt;esl members ,nr rog~lhcr as Ill•
nnl ouurlt'I The prcsenl members
Recital Hall.
- whl&lt;'hmeans onlY
111•11s (IOSSibl&lt;'
lll'
l
'
•1II
Ru~•iM-born
naturalized
1
Miss Masul&lt;o Fujh l'l l'Ch l'&lt;I hc,1
Cor r·chears,tls nnd &lt;'Oncerts Thty
1'hl'Y nre ron~l!lered
i\1111•1-k:111~
Bachelor's dt'grce In 1110~11
· n~ ii
(lo nnt 1r11vcltop;1•th1•r- it by t'&lt;&gt;­
j,'ulbrighl Exchanl;l' ~ludt•nt Ill 130s- h.v 011111y,hi' worlil's top string
tnrl(l1•n&lt;'&lt;'two of them huppc:11to
1011Unlve1·slty and hl'I' Mu~t,•r's 'lUIII ((' I.
, lhl'Y &lt;lo nol
11pi•st Quartet hc-,::1111
ver• tw on tht• s:irnc 11h1m:
'l'h1•B11!1
fror-1 thc• Manhuttan School or
h1•1•4•
:cl the U11ivc111ity
In sit rogether. 'l'hl;'y never rehe11rs1•
Music. Sim·c J!Xi7she hns s1ucticd torn1111,::
19:lfi
, mudt• JX&gt;S$ib
le l)y the Slee al 4•ad1 other's homes.
wilh R1cpl11wlRronstcln, ,md was
Tlw Budapest is !he highest-paid
, Th\•,Y WO\lldpresent
re s&lt;.:holn1•1;htp
sturlcnt at 'fu ngi,•• Musi(' J,'u11d
l1•h' rwlc of Beethoven sM1111quar1e1 in the world. and is
1111•,·u11111
wood. Mn.al :o l"ujii llf)!)('lll'('(Ius
,, "h1•~t-scllini::" qu:irll'l , huvln1,t
;;uloisl with lhc Japon Phllh111·111onk ~,,,1111:(Jlllll'IC'ISnnnuully, which
&gt;11Wi&lt;IVl'I' two million l'l.."&lt;.'01'48
llwv
wlll
rontlnut•
lo
t.lu
.
1111962.
Or&lt;.:
hcst rft m 1956 anrl lms f)layi'&lt;l

,m 1·,1&lt;liound TV in llw U.S.. M
w1•ll us Ill thr: GardMt Mus&lt;'l.1n1
in Boslon. J1111-on111111,nn!l Car­

Fine Arts Committee Offers
Outstanding Series of Films

Sht• I.; :, n)l'm
IJcl' nf 1hr i\mc•ri1:~
111S)'111J:
h01\&gt;·
Orchestra unc.l(•t·lA'VjlOlclSIOICOIVSIII
.
Mich1k;1 ~·uJll, )'OUn~l'Stnwmlw1
or Lill' rnmll)', 1•nnw to lltl' \ I.S
rmdy pla mtl•d llm~• ,h,1 1\'R I\Od "
This yc1u· tlw J.'i rtl' l\rt A Corn,
rmm Tokyu 10 join hl•t· ~lq11•1s i11
worknu: 1111
11111ny
mor,· On,• ot th1·
ul
Ulllllll
Board
1$
(}1'('1(('111
nutl(•t•
1!);]0.She lmrl IJ,·,•1111 !lnnllst in
111(\jnrc\·,·nts this y1•:u· will tuk1
llll'
lh1·
most
out~lnndln1:
Sl'l'll'S
111
the "l\ll Japan c.-.110Conw~1·• 111
111111~•the• Wl'!.'I
&lt; of l\tll' &lt;'IHl)&lt;'l 1
1!)~!) A sd1ol11n;hl11
studl'rll OI 1h1· lltnl'h'' CVl'I'lo Ix.•oHercd I.Ill lhi~ whim 1111'l,' ln~ Arts ComnultN will
Manhattan S1'hoolof Mu~I&lt;' in N1•11 1.'Ullll&gt;Ul\,
~JlOll\01'11 "Jll(l llll&lt;'~I'\\n•k." Sh\.111
York. she also 1'e&lt;'Civ1'&lt;1
u sdmlar
'l'hc•l'lllnlllilli'&lt;' •;t;uled sd1,'&lt;luling hims on Japiu11•$P 11r1 rm ,;-xhlhll
ship lo artt'nrt fht• "Maslt•r ('hiss
1111•
rumsln~,sprh1~ oo lh,•y woiilll u! Jnpnnese prlnt R ,,ncl a l&lt;•&lt;:turt
for Celli~!" in l11di•mt1Uniwl'sily,
h,• .i : 1m1.'llur Iht· vl'l'y hest sell.'&lt;'
­ on llalku POl•ll'Ywill hll(lllJl(hlth"
Michiko 1'11jii•~ a m&lt;'mh&lt;'rol tht• liv11,1'h1•y lll&lt;'h1rt1•lllm~ sul'h as : W!.'Oi&lt;
,
Springfield S)'niphony Ord1cstr·.c In "llimshim t1, Mon J\mo11r" . tThurs ­
'l'h1' plans for !Ju~ yl•ar ulso 1n
Massachuselt~.
t1uy. Novc111lll•I·71, "A Rnlsln in dud e J Sl!l'\es •&gt;Ilt•t'IIII,,, Oil IIIC'rll
The 1•cdtul 011lh•· ~l~I 1~Ill M:3(1 lhl' S i:11" (Thurs'rl11
y DN'l'mlx.•r 11)1 1111·,•Last y~ar thi~ 111
•.,~ram 1)1'\lV·
p.m. in 8ult'f1 AuclllOl'IUltl.i\dmiS• " l.O\'I' nnd Thl• Frcnc:hwom11n", NI v1•ry populur. Wllh ll'l'IUl''k on
s,on is Cree nnd 01x•n10 lh1•puhll1. !'rlmr•stl:1:·, f'l'l11·u111y
6!, nnd '" t.;1 ,uc:h topics as C1111111,.
thc• ~·rcnrh
Doke Vit11", l'l'h11r~d11y,April 301. pwl, :ind ''Tlw ·rropl1• or ·Cimcer ".
,\ h1·ochun• or lhl• mm schcdu l&lt;' is
Mrns ,lo Ann Osypwwsk1. th11tr,
;tvailablt• In 1hr Oindy Stm'C'. All man or the Fine Arr, ror 1mtlt1"­
modes wfli b1• shown JI twl'lw sta1cs that new mc-mtK'l'S1,re wel•
All lhc sub-1-o•nrn•ll&lt;=
Thv Stat&lt;· University or New o'dod&lt; 111 lhc Conlcrence Tlwnte1 romc
rpl nrw ,
woullt be hnppy 10 111•,
"" \\CII LIS lhl' times !isled In the
Yo, k al 13uffnlo l'&lt;':tt'h
c(l 1111hll·
interested people. New l'&lt;&gt;mmlltl'CS
time l1igt1In lolal cnrollntClll lhis brochure.
Tht• Fi11r Mt~ Committee is 11lso al'C no"' jbcing
rornll'd 0111es
full with lti,295 sludcnls, as it en­
te1'C&lt;Iits scconc.l year as par! of µlimning n ~l'rl&lt;'s of lerlurr&lt; 10 ol o~n l'lll~•1111i:s"'ill he posh'(!
&lt;'Oim'lde with lh1• lilms ll&lt;'ln~ Ill lhe l111lonRonr&lt;I Ol!ll'!.'S, room
the Stulc Unlvcrsily system.
21S Norton.
1'his yMr's 10!111rcprl'scn!t~l :111 shuwn
'!.1m1111ll
. .,, 1hr ~·in,·
Thi• LIIC'rnry SulH..
l'!.' ot
rn !ht• IWO )'..11,·•
11.9% increase ov&lt;'r Sept.. 1962.
II hu,
'l'uition 111this lu1·gest of lhl' s11,1e­ lhl· fine .\rls Committee , hcnded /\ rt ~ Comrnlltl'(''S l'XISl(•nc:c
hv .1:,n\' R11rlt11is cont!numg 1!~ J)l'tl\'l'Ci 10IK•00(' ,,rI h,• must lll'l l\'I
supportcd gmdu;llc l'l'nl1•rs h~
P!lfx'Ih,H'k Exdi.mgt:'. S1t1dl'nts111:t} .111(1po1r n1 i:n111p, 1111 ,·.,n,pus "'
d1·oppcd from $900 in l~iO. whrn it trad1• their l»(perburk hool" lor u ~t11ndln1tl'Onlmlll!..- ot lht• Union
wu~ 11 J)l'l\'llll' univrrslly . lo ~k ) as o·lwr,. holh Ill'\\ nnrt l!SC'd i\l ,IUY R(1M,I if h,,Jp, '" ,na kc• Nortn,1
part of Slllft• Univ,•r~l1)'.
l11klk, \\('I'(' donlltl~I lo lht• F.x• fl111lthl' ren1t'1 or llmwrs11y lite.
A bl'c~k1town ol ,•nrollnl!'nl r,..
lhP ~1&gt;in111!'folloWllhrp
C'han~P lly L1x-kw(l(l(I M,·1110/l,11 111'0111Ull•
\'t'als 3,190 graduat e slut.lc•ul~1111- Librnl'\. The room \\'herx- th1• Ex
a mon~ lh1t\1•rA1ty ,111clr
n1,, nllll
l'luding thosc in I hr (;1•111!111111•
rulturul ,
rievPlop :1 broad 11tlt'111l.
chrm~~ •~ 10 b&lt;-sci up "ill b,· ,,n
School, th&lt;' School or E(lurnlion, nounced in the neAr rurur,·
educa11,mal and r,·,·rt•attooal pro,
the School or Bu~incs~ ArtmlntstraThe Art SutH:ommiltee ha~ ul
grnm.
11011
1111!1
lh1•J&gt;l'Ofcssionalsrhl10ls uf
i,aw. Mt'&lt;lkint•, Dentistry nntl So·
,·hi W&lt;'1r
111
·••t. R,()97 onderg ractuate
&lt;11,ys1mtcn1s anrt ~.908evening un­
ctt•rgrnduate sludcnts.
The S!'hools or Mcdidnc , D1.&gt;nliS•
1ry ~nrl l..a1,, h11ve nil increased
, tudC'nls by nearl y l0'/1- wi1h nn
AND LEATHE R GOODS STORE
,•hange in physr,·HI plant si11•
Olhl'l' large increases W"l'l' r,•.
Welcome's you back to -5chool with a
vealed in rhe College of Aris An1I
complete line of luggage , attack c~ue$,
S&lt;'irnr1•s,30% 11\'l'r Inst yrnr , 11n1I
lbc St'hool of Bu~inL•s
s i\dm1n1~11·u
brief cases, hondbags, gifts end other
IIUII.\lfl •13%
leather goods.
,\ho11
I 2JOII Irt•&lt;hnwn W&lt;'1,, 1ri ·
mlllrct, ~elc1•1,,dtrom ~om1· 11,IMXJ
3400
MAIN STREET (OppotfN UI )
TF 3-1600
appllratlorn
ul'IUy and ,,...., l-'n1
TIii t P.J,l
0,. Meftllay, T11
n~itle Ucl'ltnl llall.

Peak Enrollment

Militello's-;;7..
;~~:

I

I-

I

I

�PAGE FOURTEEN

------

SPECTRUM

------·---

------

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---------------

Herd Tramples Gettysburg

Friday, September 20, 1963

Bullets

Gettysburg
-UBGridStatistics Stofa, Gilbert Pilot Team to 34-0 Win
At the close of the llrSt quarter
lhe na tur e of the game reversed.
The UB s·uus opened the 19(&gt;3 Thr Bulls took possession of the
sl'11SOnhy swampi ng un outc l11ss1
•d
ball on their own 20-yard line and
Gt•ttysburg squad, 3'1-0, Sa turday,
launc hed an clght-y11rd touchdown
IJl•(orl' a partisan crowd of 9,09'1 dnvc climaxed by three -successive
,,t llowry Field.
running plays by sel'Ond-string hall •
back Tom Butler .
ACteJ' the Bullets dominated the
Just three minutes had elapsed
s,·urt'le ;s first period with a solid
hefo 1•e UB cor.!ro llcd the pig-skin
,ir rial assull , lhc Bulls hounccd
again. With the ball on his own
b:ick pr,u•tically cl inching lhc &lt;'Qll·
lest as they t'Ompllcd a 20-0 lead
:l:l. pilot John Stoia required only
Ill lhc half. C,•t1ysb111•gllCVl'I' JIO
S~'&lt;I two pass plays to hit paydirt. Long
un~ s,•r1m1s thn•,,1 to the stronge r.
John fired a 4,0-yard pass to Buller .
Then the qu arte rback rolled out to
\t1&lt;·1·1ll1•r,
and classier Bu!falo team.
the right llnd gunned a touchdown
pass inti;, lhe wailing arms of Gerry
Paw olski, alone In the end zone.
Stoll.1 tallied the two-point l'Onver•
sio n on a fancy end run and the
Bu lls, led 14-0.
Sy ALAN NEWMAN

FINAL TEAM FOOTBALL STATISTICS
Buffalo v s , Gettysburg

9-14-63
Buff

Flnt Downs Ru,hlng

13

First Downs Paulng
First Downs by Ptnaltlos
TOTAL FIRST DOWNS
Number Attempts Rushing .

10

Getty .

2

'

2
12

24
44

21
56
82
26

23t

Yar:d1 Gained Rushing
Yard, Lost Ru1hlng

21

- • NET YARDS GAINED RUSHING
Number Passe, Attempted

211
17

Number Raues Completed
· Number Pa11es Had Intercepted
NET YARDS GAINED PASSING

12

17

2
214

192

Number Plays Rulhlng and Passing
TOTAL QFFENSE YARDAGE
Number Opponents Paue, lnterctpted
NET YARDS INTERCEPTIONS RETURNED
Number Time, Punted
Number Punlt1 Had Blocked
PUNTING AVERAGE, YARDS
Number Punlts Returned . . .
NET YARDS PUNTS RETURNED
Number Kickoff, Returned . . . . .

61
432
2

.,

33
2

,1

166

2
2
0
37.5

2
2S
6
0
3S.7

6

1

UB kicked o!f to Gellysburg with
seven minut es remaining in the
half. Once again the mighty Buf­
falo de fense proved too powerful
imd the Bullets were forced to punt.
Don Gilbert handled the quarter­
backing chores and piloted the
se&lt;•ond team on a 61 yard march
lo the goal line - the final play
being a niCty 19-yard toss to tai lback
Bob Edward .

2l
I

'

NET YARDS KICKOFFS RETURNED
Number Time, Penallud
TOTAL YARDS PENALIZED
Number Tlmes Fumbled
..
NUMBER OWN FUMBLES LOST

22

M
4

Attendanc-9

Weather-Excellent

6

5

34

51
3

,097

l

FINAL INDIVIDUAL FOOTBALL STATISTICS
Long John Stofa lofts this one
RUSHING
Player
STOFA
BURD
RYAN
GILBERT
CIMBA
BUTLER
CONDINO

Buffalo
Att , Gain Lou
30
0
40
4
51
5
41
2
5
7
26
0
4
23
0
2
11
0

''

'

Net
30
32
46
39
26
23
11

Getty1burg
Att. Gain
Pt.ayer
t
PRESOGNA 4
4
9
TAYl:Or.

into the walling arms ol Junior end
Lou
0

2

Net

'

Plapr
Att. Compl. lntc. Yds.
STOFA
6
110
0
GILBERT
6
4
0
91
GERINGER l
2
13

'

Pilwolski.

The completlon

w:is good for a Bulfal-o touchdown.

~,oru,

BuUalo picked up Its final tall y of
the al1ernoon In the fourth period
on a 24-yard oU tackle run by Jim
Ryan . Stofa ran for the last two
points .
The performance o! the UB defen ­
sive line erased any doubrs of its
eUectlveness. Gettysburg was stop­
ped cold on the ground as eviden.
ced by its -26 yard rushing for the
game. N'everthe less , the pass de­
fense has room for improvem ent.

~

SERVICE

Alftwd 6. fritdl.Oplid,,,

UNIYERmY
PIJlA
PA. 5415

TheSPECTRU
now printed by

Partner'sPressInc:.
Abgott &amp; Smith
Printing
1381 Kenmore Avenue
(at Delaware)

Phone876-2284
LETTERPRESS•
....

7

CLASS-MA
TE Scl(oolJe:zu
cl1y

1kW.IJtue1t-age~!

PASSING
Buffalo

Gerry

The third period found Bullet
quarterback, Vance Johnston, tak•
ing to the air in a desperate at­
tempt lo avoid a shuloul defeat.
J\ltcr three successful pass plays
lht• brief s ur ge was halted al lhe
Bufrnlo !our yard line when guard
Jltn MrN11lly pounced on a Gettys­
burg fumble . This time It look the
home eleven ten plays to go the
96 • yard distance (or the score .
Jim Ryan, and Jim Burd
highlighted the drive. The quarter 11111'!,ran for 16 yu rds a nd then

on the very next play pitched out lo
Ryan for a 32-yard gain. Five plays
later Burd carried twice from the
12-yard line adding six points to
the UB score.

Getty1burg
Player
Att. Compl.
JOHNSTON 1S 7
14 7
WARD
13 2
TAYLOR
WOLF GANG 1

lntc .
1
1
0
0

Yd$.
104
60
23
12

Customized
with your
schoolnameandcolor

eadqunrt~'t'S

GETTYSBURG HALFBACK , Phil Parsons, braces himself as
sophomore Bull, Dick Vittonini, brings hi.m down with a fly•
ing tackle.
_

for CLA~.S-MATE

Jewelry

1,

OFFSET

�Friday, September 20, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIFTEEN

OHIO PRlEVIEW

t

'

BullsS1eekto Beat Bobcats,
Aveng~e Last Year's Defeat
By JIM SUNSERI

In his So11homorr
Y&lt;'lll' hr was &lt;'hc&gt;S
L'll as All Mul­
Amerkan: and. in Oh10's ont'-po111I
loss to West Texas Slat&lt;' 1n lhc Sun
Bowl, ht' was chusen "outstanding
linrmrm ."
ol fmsi1 •1• cenlrr

Wilh lht:' loathsome m 1m1ory ol
Ihclr most humiliating dt~feat of
19fi2 burned into lhl'ir milids, thr
Bu lls have been feverish ly prrpnr­
in g lh1•111s1•il·
rs for th&lt;'ir appm,wh­
ing t·onlas t with the Ohio Unrver sity
Bolll'als.
11 was this l e,1111lhal
handed Ul3's g1idt'rs that unlor~,,1.
l abt1• loss In
"co medy
&lt;'l'f1&gt;l"l&lt;"

e

Jim Albert, twice a letter -winner
and co-captain , wlll be the main
backfield strength . Last year he
was third high scorer fo r his team
carrying aatim es for 375 yards a 4,3 average .
J,11•k llilL' ttnrl Ron Curlis, hnlh
ll&lt;ll\'('I' rlllllll'IS n•lurn to th&lt;• l&lt;'al11
Ihis .V&lt;'.11'Wllh llllPl'l'SI V(' 1,1 anti

or

b&lt;'fm•,, a re&lt;-ord &lt;•rowd ot m•arly
1t.000.
This ym , , howt'l'&lt;'l'. lhc- c·m·nm

DON " SKIP" HOOVLER , Ohio center, will be up for All Amer­

ca honors this year. Coach Bill Hess has tabbed Don as lht&gt;
hest Bobcat lineman he has ever coached,

Golf
er's Season
StartsTuesday
"We'll have to go some 10 im­
prove on last year's per forma nce:·
commented Dr . Leon;ud Ser fuslini.
coach of the Universi ly of Buffalo
go lf lea rn, while reviewin g lhis
seaso n's prospects . A perfect reco rd
or 10 w!ns-0 loses in dual competi•
lion, plus Cirst plac·c in the Brook
Lea lnvllalion a l Tournam ent a l
R&lt;l&lt;'hcst
er , fully a lll'Sl lo lhe out•
standin g sul·ccss or last year's
·

HSSL'l'IS

lhnt

'llll'fl'

,•111nJ

T ,,. V&lt;'ar,. sd1t•dul " 1 tCJUl!h
r-onsi~un:;:,ol nine du.11 m,tll'hl'
,1 'hl'L'&lt;' toum:omc-tll~ tu pla~ 111111
1 n T•l·rrod
ri,, w•·1·:1~. Th,•
n,, I c:onlr, 1 1
r It 11 1,11•~d ~
L ·1g,uns1 P\i.1~,,r:1 .11 ·,u,1uhun
•t,,• t1&gt;nm'shome cournc Other dual
""'P&lt;'I 1lion pils UB acainst Buflaln
,1.,t(' Canis1us . St BonuventUrt'.

n,1

M cMasler

Th&lt;' "hii:

ones",

,·ou~e. nn• the E.C.A C Qualify ­
Round and F'mals.
lluwl'ver, Dr . Serfuslrm

tni!_

AlhiN1L'

Association

~•n;impionships
Wholl' looking for•
,q d to thc-coming full season . "we
h ,v,· our hCJpes sel on scndmg th,•
l!rsl golf team ever to rcpresenl the
' nivrrsity of Bullalo 1n the NCAA
uuJs'' _

In lh1• rushmg d&lt;•p;tl'lllh'lll •'\fM'f f
hn.-•-rrn,·k!'rs Joh11 t1111b.J ,111tl[),•11
t11s Pn.ykula "111 h, pry1n,: 1111
"Cuts" hnl' ru, \\'L'tlk ,pol,
D&lt;'f!:'nsiwty, lht• Bull.~ 11ill ,•w•rl
sufht'l(•lll l)l'('SSUI'\'1111lht• Ohio hn,•

wilh surh lorn,idahlr

SpeeClysopnomore , ..,,.n "'" wlll
operate tomorrow at the right half•
bacl&lt; slot.

tacks.
On lh,• who!(• lhts i:anl&lt;' sh011lcl
provt:' H, ht' 11 r&lt;':illy g rral con­
lrsl - krrn
hru1srng, nnd light

Under the quarterbacking
of
"Long J.ohn" Stofa the team is
expected to confront Ohio's some-

81)lh 11'.:tms hn,,P surr,,,,,,1
losSt•s
and holh hnvP mndi• ,·onsrtlNilhh•
i;111ns. This 1s th&lt;' oprniun ormnny
ainung lhl'm , Bill En •1·,·t. Puhl ic•
RL•lations Man for lhP Bulls 1,ltu
slnl&lt;'d, "Thi' ,-o-c11pt111ns
ft'l'I 1h,1!
this year's gamr will h1• mtwh m,m•
rvr n - ,•11lwl' way •·

FOR SALE

2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS

1962 Chevy 11 Convertible , blue
wit'1 whit e top , buck seats , power
st eering and brakes , au tom ati c,
like new . Must Sell .

AVAILABLE
Newly Decorated

~'Viii'

lil S (~1m1).ll'('d

10 Ohio's

1~1

lht• Hulls inll'11d lo try lo t'Qmlonr
11,..11· lornw1 dl'ft •at .

Tele phone TF 3-8180
After 12 P.M,

NT 4-3434

,

l'Ulln&lt;'r, and µossessin.l( fir11·IC'ad­
&lt;'l'Shin potr•nl111I. ht• is llw most
likdy r:t ndid:rfc.
Thr cxprril'nr&lt;'d v1•1&lt;•r1111•,
of the
offensiv&lt;• unit will ()(JS(' 11 grm l
1hrrnt, ll l'ruli11g this hsr is tlw
fornudah lt• Skiri lloO\ lt•r, fi-~' 2'.l~IIJ,

PART TIME WORK
LARGE NATIONAL CONCERN
18 Hrs. a Week &amp; Eveningsand Satvrdc1y
Requirement s: Abl e to Converse Intelligently
Ne a t Appearance
Ability to Follow ln1truction1

SALARY $45.00 A WEEK
Call Mr. Craig 853-0837

... •l

PAT'S
j ust great for

CHARC OAL ED

UNDERWEAR
,
SOCKS &amp; PAJAMAS

3

FORTHE,PRl:E OF
) 1,~

HOTS
(with all the trimmin 's)

YOU and Othe r U. B. Students
Have Made Us Fa mous
SHERIDAN DRIVE at PARKERBLVD
..

\l'lf' r ;1ns as

lhl' ulht•r t'1H•aptmn C&lt;•r:ilu Ph rlhm
und Jim l\kNally ll'ading the al

Attint&lt;•r·,

Rohinso11:ind \\.'t&gt;s nnnt:o
Bainlt'r sc,•rns Ill h;1vr• IIH• i;rr;il­
('SI alt ributes , seleclc-d by his
t!oat'hrng stai r as 1hr "nrn.s1 m1provt&gt;d" playrr, a good pu~~&lt;'r and

has hi gh

h••P&lt;.?~
for lhc- 1e;1m tu t•ompelt:' in
·, f11rbiggP I' and morr rmportanl
, 11,
rnamcnl nrxl :,prrr1g Th,• Natiorr
Cullc-gialc•

n11me~ :1rc LH•'Y

SlofH's at&gt;rml ntt:u·k 11111
l~• 1·11111
plimentC'd by sud1 r,•1·1•1,,,, ·" , nd
, .1111
I
and CCH'Rptnln l..;ll'Jy I ;c1 i.:1&lt;,
1.11l
bnl'k Tom l:lllllt·r

Da\'&lt;'

he k('('ll

ll'lll

c'Olll!lelilion lo make llw s tarli ng
J1&lt;1silio
ns. Among 1hesc•art•: Fr ed
Ht•r ,inn .i semm· with vari;ily e.~­
' ,,·m•,.: Kmron J \\ halen III. a
11 , •• who won second place in
Ih,• l .B Sprinis Tournament:
and
"i•homor&lt;' Curl !;;iegcl. lhL' low am11,•ur qunlifier
m llw Canadian
ip n a first ypar mnn wrfh g1·,•~1
1

Tlwir·

'

Also included amonii: lht• many
honors achiev ed . is a set-ond place
finish in the Enst!'rn Collegiale Ath­
leti c Conlercnt'e Qualifying Round
nt Cornell Univrrs ily. This enabled
lh&lt;' team lo !l:0 lo the E.C.A.C .
rinals. at Belhpage Park , Yarmin!;·
dalr, Long Isl and , and finish six1h
in competition with lht• top l enm~
in the East
Gone Crom last year's t·hampirm­
shlp team are star ters, Onvc Frost.
John Peckham and Tony l\lignm10
However, returning lettrrmc n. Gar~
Weiss and $1cve Watts, both Juniors.
and Tom Oembik. a senior. ,::i\'P
pron11seo( another banner year .
C'o:wh S,,rfustini
op11mislically

t II /l\'l'l''11!l'S, l't'Sflf'l'livcly
C'rnwh l kss I~ rl'lyin Jt hPavily c)n
S(J{'Pli and n,i:ihly lrom "now po­
lrnlial" lo nmk&lt;' up for 1hr loss rn
,.,(J{'ri,.nrrd lrltC'rmen .
11rtlll ni11g Wilh 19 lcth•rml'll I his

Offensiv!'ly , Ill.', h' llm if1 rastrr
nnrl h1L~ a ~ood hi1dcf11•!&lt;I
filh~I wilh
r-~~prrit•nt•t•d Hh'n al \'Vt'rY -~1-,01 r-x·
cc pt 1hr qm11·1!•1
'h,t&lt;'k. Thrs 1probl1•111
or;1 n111ch-11
rr &lt;l1-d(il'ld ~~111•1;ol
lllH~
IX' ~olvl'd in onr of thrr, • way~.

By ALLAN SCHOLOM

squad.

sta11r&lt;'s 11re quite diCfcrrn1I. Ohio
ha6 snlfc•red srrious lossc-s du,· l11
lhC' i;1'Ud1m1ionor 1li le1t,·rnw11. ln­
dttdini; bolh \l'IC'ntl1 qur1r1&lt;•rbac•ks
Bob Bahhllt and Rog,•r Mrrh Dt•
rcnsivcly, thr "Cnl.~" l&lt;1,sIhC1lh
('or nl'r men. holh r nds. nnrl lwn
stn rlm g la('kl t'S
Despite these los~es , Co,~ch Bill
Hess asserts that, '' If we ca n come
up with a capable quarterb ;ick and
solve our defense problelms, we
could again be a contender for con•
ference honors."
Ht•ss may bt' s:11lsfi ,•d 111 hrs
wanIs.

whait- inexperienced defense with
more · than enough head aches .

' jl'I

h,t

"

,,

14'

v ,., lw,

1 ,,.

y

f Rf'

�SPECTRUM

PAGESIXTEEN

Frid•y , September 20, 1963

Spectrum

*

Sports

Sl)orts
lntra1nural

Sports Cirele

Frats,lnde~itndentsVie ForTop Honors

By ROCKY VERSACE

By ED RIZZO

D

BullsMust Forget Last

Jntcrmural sports has arrived on

Year's Ohio Exhibition!
"There are but few hours in life more agreea ble than the
hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea"
{from the Portrait of a Lady, by Henry James ). This line from

James could be slightly rearrangl.id for sports fans so as to
rt&gt;ad, "There are but few hours in life more agreeable than
the hours spent observing victory at UB."

Last Saturday afternoon, approximately 9097 spectators
did sµr11d several hours al Rotary field watching tl1c Bulls
soundly lhra~h the Bullets of Gettysburg. But even as the
dust ol butt le began to settle and as the last fan departed
from llw ,tands. talk of the forthcoming contest could be

lw.ud .

Studt&gt;nts and players alike recall the hum11iation suf­
ft•rl'CIla~t fall by Buffalo at the hands of the Ohio University
Bobcats The Bulls must have thought they were &lt;.'O
ntesting
the Comm11n1tyChest tootball team the way they proceeded
to give a\Hy thell' most pm:ed Item, the football. On at least
ten occasions OB lost the privilege of operating as an offsen­
sive team c1ther through the misfortune of fumbles or in-ter­
ceptions Even the most bewildered stude nt of football could
deduct that without possession of the pigskin, a team has no
offense; and with no offense, a team can not score; and if a
team can not score. it consequently does not win-as simple
as that.

lhe UB camp us lor the fall se mes ter
or 1963. Independenl ~Lnd dorm
trams will con.~lllute part or the

ll't

uily

Thrl'r

,ll't '

i:&gt; f1-n:ernllii,P

,•01111&gt;rlini.:for 10µ honors

yc-:11
•'$

I i1s1

l'&lt;'S\IIIS Wl'l'l''

J\l1,1t:1l•:11silon 1'1

·I04

lMa

403

Sii::m;t Hho

Sigma l'hi Epsilon

1:
:19fi

S1i;ma Alpha Mu

:187',li

l\lphn Sigma Plu

:157

Gamma Phi

291

Phi Kappa Psi

193
95

Chi
J\lphn Phi Della

Thela

Pl Lamba Titu
Alpha Kappa Psi
Beta Phi Sigma

s:n~
70
57
37
31

Las1 yenr's champions of the in­
dividu.tl tntmmurnl /alt sporlswere
liolh fraternity and indep&lt;md~nl rep­
rcsenlHlivcs. The winnt'rs were:
Trnnls, Beta Sigma Rho: Goll,
l\kd-Denl School; Cross• Country,
Sigmn Phi Epsilon; ;ind in football.
F'1•nt!'rni1y,Alpha Phi Omega, and
lnd,;,pendeul!i, Ravens.

' wns the beginnin g
This J)IISt week
of ('OmJlt'1ition in both touch football
und lt'nni~. If any organization is
not sure or their playin g dates or
or anything else that iii pcl1incnt,
11teyshould check as soon as possi­
lile with Mr. Muto, Dire&lt;:tor of
Men's tnrramurnls.
The fraternity
roon,ull leagues
d1vidl&gt;tlinlo lll'O d11ys-Tuesd11y

lll'C'

,111&lt;1
Th111-sday.

'\'ursday:
Sigma Alphn fllu. Pi Lamba Tau.
Alphu Phi Omega,
S1glllll Phi Epsilon,
Kappa Psi,
and Alpha Sigma Phi.
Thursday:

'l'h&lt;'11l Chi,

Nevertheless, last year's annihilation is over and done
with-a trJng of the past, a bad dream that should be for­
gotten . It is rightfully agreed that many mistakes took place
against Ohio. undoubtedly last season's worst effort; however,
out of all !his can be salvaged the fact that Buffalo's varsity
gridders took as much a part m causing the defeat as did the
Ohio team .

*

Tlw starting

*

The met will begin from the rear
oJ the dub house and tl:c '.eamswill
run in a figure Pigh1 a~und U1e
t'OUrlm. This year 1,~11:x, the first
llme ln UB's history th't•.' the cross­
ulil!ie the
roads on campus !or !heir home
t•oursc. The growth of lite campus,
marked by the many construction
shes, has necessitated U1emovin i.:
o! the t•oursc to Grovt-1 Cleveland
park. The change will be a very
perti nen t one and. !IS c'OIIChEmery
Fisher points out, "the boys will
have to ndapt to the new runnin g

t:·ountry teum wlU not

conditions or the grass course."

Coach !&lt;'!sher is pladng high hopes
in last year's stalwarls, lead by
Junior Stu I&lt;11tzand senior captain
Diek Sullivan. Brockport Slate, n
rcnm thnt uses freshmen in the
varsity lineup , surprised opposition
las1 yea1· with seveml !reshmen
runnt-rs doing very well and the
Eagles are expected lo be s11,ong
ug-.rin thls 11cm;on. They wlU l'Uliy
behind lhP hard running or Dick
White, one o! the ~tote·s top har­

riers.
Monday, at .J p.m., UB will be
pll!rd against Cuni~ius at Grover
Clevel11rtd pa1·k.

in lh!! main gym.
Golf entries will be accepted no
late1· than Tuesdny, September 24th.
The actual towMmenl will be play ­

will start ar fullback l·or Ohio

ed at Audal,on Col! Course on F'ri•
d,1y. Scplember 2ith. Each group
will be limited to six entrecs and
lhe team \\ill be considered to be
Ihe four making the lowest scores.
lntramurals is an important part
of ,'Ollege oct1vit1es. ln ord 1.'r to
riu1 an e((icienl program. ample
Jl/t1'licipalio11 from the studenl body

University.

IS ll&lt;'t'lled ,

sr~ong, rangy senior, Ron Curtis,

STU KATZ

RiflersSearch

*

ForMarksmen
The SUNY Rifle Team has starte&lt;t
prnctice lo select the new varsity

and freshman team. The varsity
climaxed a winning .season last yea r
by winning the Sectional Shoot. Any
studenl, male or female, who de­
sires to try out for the
Team
may contact any of lhe following:

0

*

start off Its 1963 season r.llllinstthe
Brockport Stale Eagles '!I Grover
Cleveland golf c.'O
ursa

limes nre promptly

Bulfalu's so calletl professional version of football, the
Bills. ar~•,ince again experiencing their early season problems.
All ~hfhu111escan be dircc:ted to poor blocking and pass pro­
tection 011 Ille part of the off~nsive line and equally poor play
by the d, fLns1vc unit. If this type of football continues the
8111,1 ill 1011many sportswriters who picked them for first
plac.e. ,\lt!;mwhile, as the Buffalo Bills once again scramble
to find themselves, it is quite advisable the Jack Kemp take
out another insura nce policy.

rune

*

'!'he first pre-game press luncheon known as "Football's
Eleventh Hour.'' was held last Saturday, 11:30 a.m. in Norton
233. ~ewspapermen were able to discuss the day's game with
opposing coaches. This is a great step in receiving major col­
lege coverage for our major college team.

By TERRY SWEENEY
Today at 4 o'clock, the University
ol Buttalo cross-co untry team will

al :1:15 and 4:15. nnd a schedule is
posk'CI on the oUke bulletin board

Onu: agarn. Ohio Uuiversily will field an excellent fool1.Jallteam and once agarn, the word "Ohio" will be spoken in
awe. Deft.:at of the &amp;beats would certainly serve as the sweet
revengl• needed to obhlera te the memory of last year's mis­
takes. Al Buffalu ·There are but few hours in life more
agreeable . . ''

*

OpenNewSeason

Phi Epsilon Pi. Alpha Epsilon
Pi.
Tau Kappa Epsilon,
Bela
s,gma Rho.
Phi Kappa Psi,
1\.1.TE., and Gammu l'hi.

Had Rl1ffalo been able to maintain possession of the
football 1.1.:rhaps three or four limes out of the many times it
was lost, at least two Ohio touchdowns would never had hap1wned. This also would have given the Bulls an opportunity
!11~core once more.
In this light. the 35 po111ldifference between the two
teams lluu, not appear as multitudinous as it actuallyis. No
l'l't'thl 1.s1111:n
t tu be taken from Ohio however. They had a
fi1w l1•a11 ,ind a great season climaxed by a Sun Bowl invita•
lion. One ..bu must admit that the so called ''breaks' ' are one
of the fi1w points of football that provide the qualities of
excitement and uncertainty.

350
320

Alpha Phi Omega

,1u11pcllllon In the intramural pro­
gram. Also, in somf.' spor ls there is
u Rl•p,u-atefrat c,rnily league. Every
y1·111· lhc fmlcrnily whiclli has ac·

&lt;·umutah'd the hii::hcsl number of
. points in 11
hc intra,
p1u·111·ip;11ion
llllJl/li SJ&gt;Ol'IS IS awarded the Ul\V·
rt·nt,• Pahlow117l\1i,111onwl
Trophy,
domLll'd IJy /\lpha r;p~ilo1nPi Fr1t•

Tau Kappa Epsilon
Phl Epsilon Pi

Cross
Country
To

BOBCAT COACH, Bill Hess, is flanked by left halfback Jim
Albert (26) and left en.d Dave Hutler (81 ), co-captains of the
Ohio team.

President Ren Jennelti TA &amp;re97
Vice; Pres . Ed Haug TF 9-1311
Treasurer John Peragallo

TF 6-5104
Sc..:relary Ellie M11ul TF 3-5033
Coach George Slyer
831-2943
(Clark Gym l

�</text>
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                    <text>IT&amp;n
FACULTY
PROMOTIONS

VJIIVDSITI'

01' NEW YOBK A'I' avnuo

SPECT'RUM

(See Page Three)

Spectrum Is Refurbished
Rowland Named
With Start of Fall Semester Furnas's Assis·tant
.A growing campus .and a more campus life
Dr. A. Westl ey Rowla1nd, a~­
efficient method for printing the
newspape r underlie' the plans to
expand the news and feature cov•
erage of The Spectrum.

ARNOLDMAZUR
Editor-In-Chief
Lalf Friday , a sl11.0alllenum•
btr of Freshmen attended a gen­
era l mooting of the Spectnrm
staff. Tho numllor of shldents ,
and the 1pparent quality of Jour­
nallstlc lklll some of them IX•
hlllltld, should prove to be a
••lau■lllo 11Mf to the news­
paper and thl University.
Spectrum plans call for sta!C re­
porters to ~'Over individual areas of

weekly.
Reporllll'S
have been assigned to various de­
partments ol the University, the
Stud ent Senate, Union Boa rd, the
t'Ommillces and organizations in
which students participate, etc.
From these area assignments. the
reporters should be able to pro­
duce news coverage in depth; Cot
they should be able to understand
the activities ol each department
and student group through wide­
angte lenses .
In ord er that the liveliness or
The Spe&lt;;trum might tncrease,
cr!Ucal columns of individual opin­
ion have been introduced to the
newspaper.
Besides the Renee·
lions column which was ~gun last
year and which will continue
to be written by Jeremy Taylor.
a s t u d e n t who has travel­
led throug hout the country, other
t'Olumns have been added.
The new columns wlll Include
a polltlcal analysts above lll t
campus level by law stu•nt
Ron Kamlnald, campus polltlcal
prob ing• by Peter Oatrow, point·
od satire by Bob MIich, notes

from tho unde1111round
and abo'41t
water by Vic Menu , ind ,._
views of moviH, concerts, etc.
by persons attuned to tho am.
Another iMovation, to appear
shortly in The Spectrum, will con,
lain editorial opinion from campus
editors throughout the country. No
doubt. such n feature s ho u I d
awaken members of our own cam­
pus to the ideas which are being
expll!SSed at other co 11e g es
throughout the country.

socia te professor and University
e.litor in the d~riar!rne:i. o,r infor­
m:;f'Jn services a·t M .chiga~ Stalc
Unlversit). has b eer. name&lt;I as­
sistant to the P·res;den t nnti RS·

8y MARTINKRIEGEL
Simon.

Stude nt

( Su Paor Four)

Senate

reslg,ied bis position

Tuesdey, at the opening meeting
of the Senate,
Mr. Simon, reading his resign&amp;•
tion letter on the floor of the Sen-

!ice-holding, he stated that his "last
semester was poor enough" to war­
rant his Withdrawal.
Tho new, of tho resignation came
as a 1urprl1e to the main body of

the Senate.
Parliamentary lnw requires that
a new treasurer be elected f:rom
the Senate floor by a majprlty
vote. President
Michael Cohen
made an attempt to have a new
treasurer elected immediately, on
grounds that the fiscal budget must
be submitted very shortly. Michael
Lappin, Vice-president of the sen­
ate and member of the Campus
Alliance Party, objected saying
that he felt "as if I have been
railroaded . . . and this news &lt;of
the resignation l had been known
in advance by a sleet tew."
Mlchlll Sh•plro, I FC Vlc--,res l•
dent and Alllanco l11dor, motioned
tfwitthe electlon bl postponeduntil
an emorvency meeting could lie

hold r:ext Tuesday, Nomination,
,~, 1M vac•tod office wen Hien

DR. A. WESTLEY ROWI.ANI)
sociate professor or educ.itton .it
U.B., effective July 1. 196;3.
An:iou~cement of the uppoinl·
men! was made last April by Or.
Cl:fford C. Furnas. Pres.dtml. Dr.
Furnas said that Dr. llt11wland
would be respons:ble for univl'r
sity relations and public i,nfar:iia­
tion, alumni relations an,d iusii­
tu\lonal support. The LatlEir a,rea
encompasses the private giving

1T11rntu Page 2)

held. Bob Flnkelsteln (U.li,) and
Al Horowln (C.A.) were non~ln1ted,
pending ol1ctlon next Tue:1day •t
7:00 p.m.
In the interim period. Bill Ber ­
ger WQ!i appointed t e m p o r II r y
chairman of the Finance Commit·
tee by Pres. Cohen. Mr. Berger
has worked on the F1nanc!' Com•
mltlee for the pa.st two Y&lt;~ars.
Senato Report•
A constit utional r e v i s i o n i s
planned for this year, so that the
present constitution, now several
years old, be brought up to dale .
In II new constitu tion, a 1number
.,, new student activities could be
added to replace some older or­
ganizations whicli nre no longer
needed.
The Civil Right Comrnill ee will
be selling "Equality" pins and but­
tons to help raise revenue for the
civil rights movement. ThE: Com­
mittee, under the Chaimtanshlp of
John Trailer, has also scheduled
the play "Purlie Victorious" to ap­
pear on campua.

...-

:-::-

HINRY SIMC&gt;tll
nte. staled that the Deans ot the
College of Arts and Sciences had
requested that he withdraw from
office, Cor academic reasons. Al­
though Mr . Simon. a member ol
he United Students Party. met the
•'Onstltutional requirementll tor ot•

No. 2

STUDENT

ASSOCIATIO
MESSAGE
By MICHAELCOHEN

Henry Simon, Tre,asurer , Resigns From1
Senate Position at Opening Meeting
Henry

PREVIEW

BUFFALO, NEW YORK FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1963

VOLUME 14

Treasurer.

GETTYSBURG

STUDENT SENATE MEETING

I recently returned from the 16th National Student Con­
gress of the National Student Association at Indiana Univer·
sity where a.bout 1200 students from all corners of the world
assemb led to discuss contemporary social, polit ica l, ecnomic
and educatinal issues.
Of great concern to all delegates especially th ose from
college s and universities within the United Stales. was the
definit ion of the proper and most effective role of Student
Govt:rmnent both within and outside the University. Although
opi n:on was highly diversified due to the variation in size and
structure of institulon, a common d enomination was found
All student leaders agree that they orginizations should in
i.ome way complimen t the educational process. As stated in
N .S.A.'s Basic Policy Declaration on the Role of Student Gov­
ernment. "the quality of Student Government is dependent
upon the effectiveness of its participation in the goals of the
institution." The declaration goes on to divide I.he ro le int o
three genernl areas:-Sludent
Communi ty , Academic Quality
:rnd Total Relationships, all of which are or direct concern to
tht' acadomic achievement of st udents within the univer sity
community.
The student Senate of this university has esta blished a
finP '!'adition of activity within these areas. It appea rs obvious
that fo a large university such as ours, comm unication between
the Student Senate and the Student Body's not completely
adequate. For this reason, I would like to take this opportuni•
ty lo briefly summarize the Senate's major efforts in the re­
cent past and some of the activities I, as president , would
hope lo see activated this year.
As staled in the declaration, "The Student Gover nment
should be a servant of the Student Community in meeting its
basic human needs. It is imperative that students have opti­
murr. living and study conditions in order that full devotion
may be extended to developing intellectually and socially. In
accordance with this, thE: Welfare and General Grounds Com­
mittees have been established to deal with this area. Ach ieve­
mcn:s. such as a more agrileable academic calenda r which
was accepted bv the Administration upon recommendation of
the Welfare Coounit tee, stands as a monument of succ&lt;'SS.
A utopian situation hardly exists at the present time. The ris•
ing cost of text books. insufficient and expensive parking fa­
ciJities and discontent with the presen t catering service are
among the prob lems which require investigation and action
in the coming year.
Also stated, " The Student Government should continually
foster the quality of academic atmosphere." This is perhaps
:he segment in whi ch the gl'E:nlest exce llence has been at­
tained. Coovoca'.ion series such as a Political Spehtrum and a
Damm Good Sample of Amerit::m I iteratu1e ,1re unprec edent•
ed, and, in my op inion, unmatched on any college campus for
a given year. James Baldwin has already accepted an invita1
tion to speak this fall.
The Civil Rights Committee investigates and presents pro­
grams concerning the deprivation o fcivil liberties. Their stat•
ed purpose is to inform the Student Body on the issues in•
volved in such discrimination. An Emancipa-t.ion Proclama•
tion Week brought lo campus experts from all over the
country to discuss the development of civil right s since the
Declaration. The reactivated Academic Committee will con­
sider such matters as course and faculty evaluation, recom•
mendation of graduating honor students concerning depart •
ment curricula and a tape library of courses for students who
are unable to take the cour se. AU of this will, eventually add
to the acadomic stature of the University.
Student Govermnent must concern itself with relation•
ships ranging from fellow stude nts to I.he world as a whole.
As mentined previously, rommunications within a large uni­
versity is cntinually problematic. To combat the problem
a Student Senate Newsletter will be published under the aus­
pices of the Communications Committee . The Public Rela­
tions Committee bas the responsibility of relating our en­
dP;ivors in all areas to the alumni. administration , community,
sta 1e and nation. The NSA Committee acts as a research
gr oup so that the Senate can act responsibly when passing
tT litn lo .Pace ~l

�SPECTRVM

PAGE TWO

Friday, September 13, 1963

Dr. Rowland Appointed
rConllnucd uom Paa• II

pro11rams which provide support
ov~r and above st.le funds
through th&lt;' Universily of Bulfalo
Foundation, Inc.
Dr. Rowl1nd will fill tht pott

'8.A. degree from Western Michl•
gan University, the M.A. from the
Unlverstty of Michigan and the
Doctor of Education degree at

Michigan Slate.
Active in the American College
P•ubli&lt;!Relations Association, he is
~rmtrly htld bv L.o Mulltr
a representative of the Associa•
who 11 now director of educe
Uon's . Board or Trustees, was
tlonol program s for the Ameri•
Ch.
irman of its •Public Relation,
u n Colitge Pubtit R♦latlon,
Counc:I ln 1962·ll3 and was Con,
Auociallow, (ACPRA).
!erence ,nirector and General Pro•
Prcs;dcnt Furnu ~aid thn, the
gram Chairman of the AOPRA
Unlversity Is "fortunate to secuTe
Nati:,nal Conference in July J.962.
the services of an individual wilh
Ht i1 •lso a charter mtmbtr
a wicle background of experil'llce
In t.hc Gdvancement and su-pport and first vice,pra1ld1nt of th•
Public Relation, Association of
activities or one or the nation';
Michigan, a mtmb♦r of Sigma
ol major st&amp;te universities. "It is
D,lta Chi (journ1ll1m), Pl Gam•
expected," he said, "that I.he giv­
ma Mu l~ al tcitnct ) and
mg programs will be revlta•iized
Tiu
K•P!I• Alpha (speech)
within the University's new public
framework and ·that alumni al\&lt;I honorary societies. chairman of
the Public Rcbtlons Commltlff
community relations and inlorr1a­
of tht Amerlc•n Association of
tion progams will be extended
Colleges for THcher Edv cation
1nd editor of its national publl•
and refined with the new role
ution, 'Publi c Relation, ldtu .'
of the institution. Each of these
Dr. Rowland was charter presi­
activities ls import~nt to the Jong•
range mstilutiooal goal of becom· dent of the East Lansing, Michi­
mg one of the finest centl'rs ol gan, Lions Club (1954-55),and Is
higher le.irning in the nnlion," Dr. a past deputy governor and zone
chnlrman of the •Lions lnternaL1on•
Furnas said.
al. He is now an lnteroctional
Dr. Rowland has been at 'Michl· Counsellor in the Inlernahonal As­
gan State since July 1, ~953when sociation of Uons Clubs and holds
he joined the M.S.U. staff as edl• LhcInternational Extension Award
tllr of Ille news ~ervice. Re be• and merit award from the organi•
came exeootive news editor in zation,
March, 1956, and ,also served as
He :.; a member of the •Board
centennial director from August to
of Directors or the United Com­
December, 1955.
munity Chest of lngh-: m County,
In hi• p r, .. nt position u Uni•
tMichigan, and was Sor two years
11enity editor, h• is responsible
genernl chairman or the •M.15
.U.
for foe coordination ' of all cal!'p·
Commu:iily Chest campaign. He is
u, publlcatlons and serves H
a melllbcr, elder and chairman
ao.vtivt
officer of the faculty
or the board of trustees of the
publication, committ•• ·
F :rsl Prcsbyteriaa Church in Lall•
From 19'2 to 1953,IDr. Rowland sing, 3 member of the General
was head of the department ol Cou:icil of the Synod of Michigan
speech and dlrcclor or publicity aod a member or lhe '8oard or
ot Alma College, Michig~n. where Directors of the Lansing Council
he was also a member o( the ol Churches, serving a•s chalrman
i,ruldent' s advisory commillec of its public relaliol'IIScommittee.
~od serve'()on an interim commit•
The author of several journal
tee of three who administered the articles in the fields of public re •
college for n period. Pr:or lo com­ lnllons, education and speech, Dr.
Ing lo Alma he was an .nslroclor nowhnd is married atd llas thrcl'
at Comstock, and Muskegon, cl1ildren, a daughter, age 16. a
Michigan, h.igh schools.
son, age 8, and a son age 19, who
,", 47-year•old native of KalamJ• i, .1 sophomore nt the University
zoo, Dr. Rowland received tht of Michigan.

in just
one year
the trend
is clear...
NUCLEARREACTOR

A coffee hour for prospective
members was held last night as the
first activity or the year for the
lkbate Society. Guest lecturers,
Intramural and u11en:oll
eglate de­
bates, open and panel discussions
on vital topics of the day, as well
as novice nnd varsity debate tour•
naments ore among the campus
nctivltles to be undertaken this
year. In addition, plans are being
made to attend tournaments In
New York State, New England, the
Midwest and the South. ·
Tht DIINl9 S.Ci.ty h11 11 It•
PllflleM the ....,.....
tf 1w1,...
,.... e11the wlttl luws 9' wr
uy .,.,... 1h """'._"·
ttie """
varalty "'"m11111ty
•1111ti. ,..,,_
munltyIt 111,....It -kl tt 111,­
,.rt 11111.,..._
lflllt.aven M
the l~a,, .....
,..tlentl •1111
fflttt IV&lt;II•••""'"'It hllfllw
_..
ht lflltlll 111 IIIINf'lltlMlnt an4 1,,...cl1Hail 9' ,,..,.,
IKllnlqutt tf CtfflmttlllcatlMI•
lta membtt.. tlltlb IM .._..

doy students. The society has II no,
vice division of debaters who are
1111rllclpatlng
in their tirst year ol
inlcrcollcgiate forensics, as well as
11 varsity division for those that
have had more than one year of

The Western New York Nuclear
Research Center bas r::ed a re•
quest with the Atomic Energy
Commission lo increase its power
from one to one· and one-half
megawatts (million watts).
1Dr. Ralph F. Lumb, direc:or of
the Center, called the applic; tion
"fairly routine" and ind:(:ated lllat
the increase wa,s an interim step

in the ultimate Increase lo over
2 million waits when the reactor
is ·converted to a pulse rea(:tor
later this year .
"On the basis of our experJ·
eoce al our present power output
we ere now able lo handle the
inereased power, which will en•
able us to complete the same job
50% faster than in the past," Dr.
Lumb said.

School of Nursing Sponsors

The

The School of Nursing at the
State University of New York 111
BuUato is sponsoring a Conierence
on Pl:'emnlurity: Jts Scope and Sig­
ni!icance, September 19 In Norton
Hall Conlercnce Theatre.
Mrs, Anne W. Sengbusch, Dean
of the School of Nursing. Willopen
the program which will stress fac•
tors influencing the incidence of
premature birth, its cause and pre­
vention.
TIie morning Protnim Include•
tlle followf11gfaculty men'INrt from
State U11lvtf'llltyof New Yark et
Buffalo and their toplc11 Miu
Anne Marie Vacca, asslatant ~

clllllul

,,..,.,..,.
of ,edlatrfca,
"Treml• and R... rdl In !tie Medi•
cal M1111
.. mant of Nit Prtm1tvrw
Infant."

Following lunch, a 2 p.m. panel
on "Conlinulty of Care" will be
moderated by Miss Vacca will,
three participants:

Kathryn

Invited.

'

the .

af cllnlcal nunl119, ''TIit
Sc,pe •f Prematurity;" Dr. Clydt
L. R1111MII,professor and chal,­
man tf tll1tttrlc1 and 9ynacel09y,
''Ollat.trlcal lmpllcatltnJ In the
Mt11atima11tof Pl'9fflllvrlty ;" and
Dr. David H. Wtlntraull, aulata11t

H•mburger -Bulletln

.

engineenng
-science

line rule

----·

rooool

experience.
Am-one interested in joining or
learning more about the Debate
Society is invited to the next meet•
Ing, to be held Tuesday , September
17 at 7:00 p.m. In Norton 333.
I .,.

WILSON
WITH THI

~

- Pfus OLATUNJIand HfsDrumsof Passion
WUh Full Trous,. of 15 D• ncers ind Mu1lcl1n1
Featuring The Exciting African "HIGHLIFE"
Danc11, Melodi" •nd Rhythms
KLEINHANSMUSIC HALL: Sit., Sept. 14th, 8:30 P.M.
----ALL HATS HSHVID
---..
Malit Fi.... : $SM • SUI • ~lc•y:
s,.51 • 1.Jt
Tax Included
TIO(•TI ON SALi AT . , .
O.hln, Ctftler &amp; Da111el1
.. ...,.. StlN
n Ctwt 1m1et
...,._, Ave.
AIHll'lly,ltKINI ... , JU lrwway, 1151

J.,..,._

IIJd U.IOX OFIUU OPENS 7:N P. M. IL!IL!)t!!IMl1111iiUtl
~~

HUMBLE

ATTITUDE

U tf I DRIVERS-­

LOOKOUT
Huntry U of 8 Drivers
today to han-

Wll"I WlfflN

111tllelr urs wltll elrtrema
CIIINOII
whit• OIi tllelr way
H•ry'•.

"You could have a 11H
accld•t--Llke tvml119 Ill
at ant tf 111, com~
aeps, I mt111 ant of our
lmltaters plactt,"
cau­
tltllld Hallry, "Ind nollody
Wlllfl
tut te haPPM­
MUf ef all IMI
T1Nt,_..,.
U 9' I
driver 11 Clfflpetant, and
•u
nillues Henry
Mid i W Nfflltl,IMI 11
MIiiy dlltretlld, HpKlal-

•·k

RAMSEY
LEWIS
TRIO

.-ii

Mis.,

J . Cel'llto, assistant prolessor of
nursing; Miss Rosemary E. Dessel,
instructor ot nursing. Students In
maternal and child health and pro­
fessional nurses in obstetrics, pub­
lic health and pediatrics from lhe
Western New York area have been

feuor

NANCY

de­

bate topic tor the year ls, "Re10lved: That the Federnl Govern•
rnent ahould guaran i~ an oppor•
twlily tor high education to all
qualified high school graduates."
The Debate Society, led by pres1cknt Gerald Catanzaro, la open
to uU tull lime, undergraduate,

□

Conference on Prematurity

I I L , JOE RICOand IUF,ALO JAZZFESTIVALpn ... t I I r I

.....national lnten.-oUegiatc

)

Increase Output 1½ Times

Debate Society Holds Coffee Hour
ly LINDALEVENTHAL

C

Nuclear Center Requests

ly "' ..,....,

.........

"Pay M att911tl111
te ter'"
l'OUI

wa,-

The trend to DEc1:LoK is easy
to see, . . easy to understand.
This newest concept in slide
rule design and operation has
won enthusiastic approval
among slide rule users.
Good reasons why: greater
computing capacity, greater
logic, greater consistency,
greater everythingimportant
to efficient slide rule opera•
tion.
NEW!Nowthere's a DEc1-loN
5" for your pocket - a con•
venient auxiliaryto the DECI·
loN 10" tor tour desk. •....

IIIMlle1, fellowa,"

Henry, "ll­

w, ,_,

are hu...-ylll

HENRY'S
Hamburgers
NatlOll8llyFamous

Sheridan Drive
Corner N.F. Blvd.

AT YOUR
COLLEGESTORE

Ill

KEUFfEL &amp; ESSER CO.

Hoboken,N,J.

�PAGE THREE

SPiCTRUM

Frld•y , Septemt..r 13, 1963

,,

JOHNKOWAL'$
Life Span of Cells Studied Dr.HayesAnno1.1nces
Under New Medical Grant FacultyPromotions

Folk Idiom

What de ter mines the llfe span
of cells, and how do these mechan­
isms affect the life span of the
whole organism? What cel111lar
components besides the nucleic
acids, DNA and RNA, regulate
genetic Inheritance?
To investiga te these and similar
questions, a grant trom the Nation•
al Institute of General Medical
Sciences, Natio11al Institutes ol
General Medical Sciences, Nation•
al Institutes of Health, has been
awarded to the State Unlverslty
of ew York at Buffalo. The grant
og $222.371for the first year of a
prospective five-year study was
announced today by Dr. Luther L.
Terry, Surgean General of the Pub•
Ii&lt;' Health Service.

Dr. Jemu

F. Danlelll, Chairman
of the Department of Blochemlcal
Ph1rmacolo9y, School of Pharma­
cy, wlll head the new program,
which wlll u1 ml111th• "life" of
the cell at the molecular level, Dr.
Eric A, Barnard, A11oclate Pro­
fe•aor of Blochemlcal Pharmacol•
ogy, will Mrve as provram co-di•
rector.
Progress in cell btology, says
Dr. Danielli , requires that adequate
ntten1ion be paid to both the the­
oretical and experimental aspects.
He aud his associates have out•
lined a broad program of research
lo shed light on such theoretical
problems as why amoebae, which
are normally immortal in the sense
that they will continue to grow
and divide as long as adequate

food 1s provided, can be trans•
formed by approp riate treatment
into mortal organisms with a de­
fined life-span. This study may of­
fer some clues to the mechanisms
whereby lite spans are defined in
highe r organisms .
Dr. DanJelli and his group ex­
pect their proposed research will
yield practical applications. An in•
vesUgatlon into possible systems
tor the replication of cell parts
and the large, or macro. mo lecules,
whilch are the basic l'OI\Slituents
of cells and of proteins generally,
may ultimately facilitate produc•
tion of chemical compounds for in•
dustry . Exploration into commttni•
cation mechanisms within a ceU
may eventually enable scientists to
control the actions of s~ific genes
and obtain at low temperatures
could improve blood banks and
make the idea of a tissue bank
more ,fea.slble.

Born in England , Dr , DanieUi
holds two Ph.D. degi-ees: one from
London University in physical
chemistry (1933), . and the other
from Cambridge University in phy.
siology (1942). He also holds a
D,Sc. degree from London Univer­
sity (1938). Before coming to the
Sta te University of New York at
Buttalo in 1962, Dr. Danlelli was
Professor and ChuirmM of the De­
,parlmenl of Zoology. l(ing·s Col•
lege, London, Cor 12 years. He hns
done research in the biological sci•
ences for over 30 years and has
published 4 books and more than
80 arUcle3.

Dr. Riepe of Post College
Joins UB Philosophy Dept .
Dr. Dale Rlepe, newly-appointed
professor of philosophy at State
University of New York at Butfalo,
read a paper, "The Influence of
lndian Thought on American Phi·
losophy Since the G:ivil War," on
Tuesday at the xm Inteniatlonal
Congress of P hilosophy at Mexico
Qty,

Before coming to Buffalo, Dr.

Thirty faculty . promotions were
announced today by State Univer­
sity of New York a t Bulfalo !nclud•
ing an associate deanship and live
professorships .

Last Thursday a pac~
house
heard Mac Mahoney give a gener­
ous aampUngor hJa talent. AA w.-

The promotions, effective with
the beginning of the 1003,-64 aca•
demlc year, include those for a ll
division ol the University exce pt
lhe School ot Medicine.
'l'he advanceme nts include :
Associate Dean: Mr. Myles Sia,
tin, College of Arts and Sciences.
F\JU Professors: Dr. Charles H.
Ebert , geography; Dr. Ira S. Co,
hen, psychology; Mr . Charles M,
Fogel, civil enir!neerlng; Mr. Louil!
A, OelCotto, lnw: Dr. Nathan Back,
pharmacology .
Asscoiate Professors:

Dr. Robert

G. Ams , physics; Dr. Shla Moser,
philosophy; Dr. Peter T. Lansbury,
chemistry: Dr. Sri .G. Mohanty ,
mathematics: Dr. John F'. Storr,
biology; Dr. Frank D' Accone, mus•
le; Mrs. Loraine M. Cook and Mr.
Frank J. Hodges, social welfare:
Dr. George C. Lee, plvil engineer­

ing,
Aul, tant Profeuors; Mr, H•~ Y
Breverman, art; Dr. JamH H.
Geer, psychole19y
: Dr. Vittorio T.
Glarratana and Dr. Dowell B. Mui•
ter, mualc ; Dr. Arthur N• wtarden,
phlloaophy; Dr, ~ • IPII A. AOCJlrl
• nd Dr. Aaron Aoun , En9llall1
Dr. Thoma• J. Romans and Dr.
Khan A. Mohabbat, ecenomlu ;
Dr. Paull,,. F. Hunter, education.

uictures : Mr. Boris I. Baran­
ovic, music, drama and speech;
Dr. Pedro Barreda. modem lan­
guages; Mr. Roy Hendrickson an d
Mr. Josep h Reardon, art; Mrs.
Bonnie K. Pomerantz, drama and
speech.

MAC MAHONEY

ual Mnc entertained In his own
line fashion. His, audilmce com­
posed

mostly

of freshman

and

trans fer stud@nts,were Introduced
to folk n-iumc. As Mac put it , "Nol
the folk mustc or the commcrt111I
trios, but the music created by
people, times and events .' '
During his concert Mae covered
ev~ form or folk music from the
plight of
immagrant (When
F irst r
c To This Country! ,
r (Joe Hill), runnawu,y
l11bor
How The Drink;lng Gourd).
the working songs fSong or M:y
ij andsl, and laments tor the dead
(When I'm Dead and Buriedl
Among other songs Mac sang were ·
Beans, Bacon and Gravy. Green•
land Fish eries, The Cat Came Back,
Paddy Work'ln On the Railroad
and The Bennington Rifles.
}'or those of you who enJQyed
Mac. and I am sure that many ol
you did . he runs th,&gt; Creenslccve~.
a &lt;'Orlec house at 791 Elmwood
Avenue . 11you ewr go there don't
expe ct any beatniks or weirdos ,
you'll not find them there. Instead
you will find a clean qu.lel atmo­
sphere that many other establish•
ments don't oUer. At times the
Greensleeves features guest sin•
l(l'l'V and poolry readlng"J.,

Acheson Expansion Promotes
Prog ress in Chemistry Depar t ment
,A two-million dollar addi t lon to
l.'\cheson Hall, the chemlstry build­
ing at U.B. will enable the Un l­
verslly to double the number ol
graduate stu dents in chemistry ,n
S-8 years. There are presently G-0
graduate sllJdent; in the depirt ­
ment.
The new wing, near completion,
rep r esents a 75 per cent increase
in {loor space, Including a lecture
thea tre seating 250 and under •
graduate lab and cla•ssroom facil :•
ties.However, over one-hall of thr•
new ,ar ea will ,be used for post•
gr adu ate researc h accor ding to

Rlepe was chairman of the Philoso­
phy deparlment at C. W. Post Col­
lege at Long Island University .
He is currently condur.tIng re­
search on the innuence of Indian
thought on American phtlosophy on
a Penrose Gr-.int from the Ameri­
ca n Philosophical Society in Phila•
delphia, The Society was founded
In 1740 by Benjamin Franklin and
other colonial worthies ol his day.

Or. Gordon M. ,ltarrls , chalmun
of the chemistry drpilrlmenl.
ln addition to the wing Itself.
over $350,000.s being spent for
movable equipment including a
nuclear magnetic resononce spec­
trometer, electron para-magnetic
m:s~
resonance
spectrometer,
spectrometer,
optlc11I rotory dis•
persion
appara t us, and x-ray
eq uipment, in additicm to standard
types of optical spect r ophotomet•
ers and equipment for chrom9to•
graphy ,
Also, tirovisions are bemg made
for vastly enlarged machine shop,
glass blow:ng facilities, and a
pent-house bigh pressure JabOra•
tory.

CRICKET TICKRTSERVICE
(l.lctnNHIBroker)

835 · 2828
THEATER TICl(eT $

ANYWHERE
Mo Service Cha,,.
For Local ThNten

-N OW SHOWIN
G­
Ingmar Bergm1n 's

BUFFALO

"WfNTB LIGHT"
Th011
9hfvl, Prwecatf 11
1 and
0..,l y Mevl"I

EVENING
NEWS

Mon,, trrv Frf.- 7:4', t :JS
Saturday and S.,nda y
2:15, 4:N , 6:N , 7:$5, t: 55
STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKITS

,or

All Pretram, May ..
PurdlaMd UIMNI, ,.._t alion
Of I. D. CANI

ON SALEDAILY AT

Tower Bookstore,
Norton Candy Count er
and

Goody ear Bookstore

~
..

Theatre of Distinction

EXTINDSA CORDIALWELCOME
TO THE STUDENTSAND FACULTY
of th•
STATEUNIVERSITYOF NEW YORKAT BUFFALO

'--------------- -------- -

Shadent 1&gt;.i.
cowu Tlckeb
Soil&gt; TlaH ·
11n Upoo p,...,..a.lloo
..............

l.l&gt;. Catd.

�PAGE ,ouR

______

Friday, September 13, 1963

____.___
' s p ECT Ru M

BUYT.HE STUDIO - 44

OWN THE LETTERA
·L- 22

-

THE
·UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTO
. WELCOME.THE CLASS OF '67
AND ALL RETURNINGSTUDENTS
SEE US FIRST FOR ALL YOUR CAMPUS NEEDS ·
0

-C

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m

STUDENTS-. RENTME

::&gt;
t­

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C

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CONTRACT

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BOOKSTORE

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WHOCOUNT-WERENT
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TRY THE LETTERA- 22
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INVEST
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- 44
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'

�Frid,y, September 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIVE

Academic Convention, Student Talks
Highli'ght· Orientation Week Activities
HILLEL
Hillel wlll spoMOr a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 In the
Hillel House. Dr . Ju.stin Hobnann
will speak on, "Ros h-Hashonoh in
Jewish Tradition ." An Oneg Sbab­
bat Will follow.
The first of a series of Satutdny
Nlte social functions wlU be held
this Saturday 11Veningat 9: 00. Re­
corded mus ic and refreshments
wlll be featured . The Slichoth
Service will be held at the conclu­
sion ol the social .
HiUel will sponsor a Lox and
Bagel Bruucli Sunday at 1, In the
HiUel House. The Brunch will in­
itiate a series of program on the
general theme of, "Turning Points
In Jewish History ." Dr. Selig Ad·
ler will give U1e first talk in the
series on "Septembe r 16 16.54.2" .
Reservation for the Brunch are

ly ELAINE IARRON
Orientation Week Activities were
held for freshmen and transfer stu•
dents, Wed., Sept 4 and Thurs .,
Sept. 5.
Following a luncheon , transfer
students and freshmen attended a
Convocation held at Rotary Fie ld .
Previous Convocations had been
held in Clark Gymnasium . Another
new precedent, was the omission
of the singing of the Alma Mater,
which now is played by the band.
A highlight of Orientation week
was the Academic Convention
Wednesday evening. Members of
the faculty representing every de­
partment except Pharmacy gav,
ta llcs on the current res earch of
their department. Following this,
the atudents were given an oppor­
tunfty to hear a· faculty panel dis­
cuss such topics as "Commo n Mar ­
ket," "Ovil Rights ," and ''Roll
Confilct- Men and Women."
" I think it was the most inter­
estlllg part of Orientation Week.''
commented Brent Steele, Cerieral

necessary.

FRESHMANDANCE
the Arts'" featuring lhree slmullan·
eous events took place . Charles
Rosen, noted pianist, performed in
Butler Auditorium of Cnpen Hall,
while Mac Mahoney , folk singer.
sang in the multi-purpose room.
In addition, a play was presented
entitled "The Sleep of Prisoners,"
by Christopher Fry.
Throughout Orlontallwi WNk,
H attempt wa■ made tv create
a positive attitude about trssh­
man lloaltlo■• They nre worn
only Wl4ne141ay and T11ur■day.

_,d

It WU hoped they
help
tho trslltmon to Identity,thtm­
Mlvos a• a group wlt"-ut •u►
joctlng them to rldlcuJo. Tllo
ftndlng ol llally llull and ■opho­
moro court wa■ abiOII"'-.
For transter students , some BC•
tivltJes dilfered from those of the
freshmen. Chairman AMe Jackson
headed the directing committee. A
sepamte luncheon wns held Wed­
nesday and was well atte llded.
Thursday a panel discussion took
place with r epresen tatives from

Invitations have been malled to
all the . Jewish freshmen at State
to attend a Delica tessen Suppe r
Sunday evening at 5:30, in the Col­
lege Union, The Supper is open to
the Upper Classme n as well. Doris
Gallop, President of Hillel at State,
will wecome the students and an­
nounce some of the plans for the
semes ter .
The Jewish High Holid/lyll Sea­
son will begin Wednesday evening,
September 18, with the observance
of Rosh-Ha.~honoh. Hillel will spon­
sor religious services In the Jew.
!sh Wur Veterans Post , 57G T!lun•

ton Place . Services are acllrouled
to begin at 7:00 Wednesday and
Thursday evening and at 10: 00
thu.rsday and Friday
momlni: .
There will also be Yom Kippur
Services Friday evening, Septl'mber
77 and Saturday, September 28
The Hlgh Holiday Servi~
are (Or
out-of-town students only.
Chlr■tfan FolloWltllp
The openlng meeting ot lntrr ,
Varsity Chrlstiw1 Fellowship will
be a picnic supper at Akron Falb
Park Saturday, September 14. CA~
will be leaving from Towner Dor­
mitory at 2:30. EVeryone is ~el•
come to come. For (Urther infor­
or Tl' 4,~ .
mation cull 831-3168

Gamma Delta
All Lutheran students ere lnvitrd
to attend the Alpha Delta Owpter
of Gamma Delta roke party Wed•
nesday, September 18. from 3: 00.
5:00 p.m. in rooms 246 and 248
Norton Union.
The fin1t business meeting Is
scheduled for the same day . Din,
ner is at 5:30 p.m. in the caleterla .
The meeting itseJf begins at 6: 30
p.m. in room 329 followed by a
social hour . The topic for diselJS•
sion Is: " Problems of the rolJeg('
student and how God can help ynu
solve the m."
For the first social ot the tall
semester Su.ndttY, September 15,
we will play miniature golf. Thoere
interested should meet at Norton
at 2:00 p.m . Transponatlon will bt
provided.

UB Students Participated
InAugust Civil RightsMarch
By NANCV L. BLECKER

anyone,

"II

On Wednc:sdliy, August 28, 1003 cause It was

wus
i;o

SUCCl'S$(ul

t,c..

well done and

carefully planned ."
the Washingto n march occurred,
an eveot Of major s1gnl!Jcance. At
Mike Sh• plro ,rated, " It Wit
something phOMmeNtl Every
least seven U.B. students a ttended
the Civil Rights March.
one In the March or wt,o MW It
gained • larve respect for ,,-_
Mike Shapiro and Allen Falk
IRENT STIELE
Negro - that they were aflle to
represented one ot the campus' po­
carry out I highly lntelloctually
litical parties - the Campus Al­
Chairman. " It was also very well
motivated Incl orderly March.''
liance Party. The U.B. students
allended," he add~.
Ho did ,..I, however, that thoM
didn't all march together, how­
who lltould have had their mind,
ever. Francint? Michel was with
Thursday, tfte freshmen heard
changed,wore obvlou■I)' •bson't."
the Long Island Coordinating Com­
from tfte Dun of Men, Mr. Rog­
PANEL OF UPPERCLASSMEN
All felt the support of the celcb­
mittee , while Sylvia Adams, Law­
er Gratwlclc, and
O..n of
rile8 WWI benellclal. Mike 1111&lt;1
rence Glasgow, and Jerern,y Taylor,
Wem.n, Miu Junettt Scudder.
Allen told us an interestin g stocy
various schoolS entitled '"Cross
An office for tn1ns,.r ltvdent■
marched independt]y. The reasons
That aner-,
studentpanel di•
abou t Burt Lancaster . Wben he
Over the Bridge," it clarified what
cu11lon1 '9/low.d, giving fresh.
wlll open nut week In room 220 {or their participation however,
was expected of the transfer stu­
Norton, tv handle •ny prolllems
was rather similar. Students who was amving at the March , a re­
men an oppo,tvnlty to meet u~
porte r cam e IIP to hlm and 115ked,
were Interviewed e&gt;1pressed senti­
tho)' ml9ht encountw.
ptr&lt;luamen a"ndto hear abo11t dent and helped him get adjusted
'"Do you feel this will hurt )'Our
ments such as the !oUowlng:
to his new university.
~t
orp1dutlona, honers pro­
Commenting on Orientation Week
.-e?'' He answered, "Yeah,
box otti&lt;
"I knew It was a big event, a
grams , tfte Grwu, refl9lou1 o,._
In general, Oiairman Brent Steele
"This is the first time transfer
but I don't give a damn!"
major change in pressure activity
pnlzatlona and any otfler a-,.ct
students have been treated llS setr
said,
"Thire
was
so
much
co-&lt;&gt;p­
Two lmportant tacts that every,
and policy 1111dit was so access­
of llvdent 11,In which thay _,..
eration o everyone's part that
arate but equal sl\ldents," com­
ible." ''The March was going to one observrd were that partlclpa•
ll'lfeNatff, Immediately following
things we smoothly . I would like
mented Allen Yasgur, co-chairman
lion in the March was ethnically
be an orderly demonstration of sup­
tf,11,a mh1orand dl1cuulo n hour
of Transfer Students Committee.
to thank personally the chairmen
divided between people of all age s.
port tor the Civil Rights Bill whlch
took place. r,-.,. WH al■o a
"We felt that they need an orien­
and co-chairme n of all the com­
Tti.y •vl"ttecl,
too, that t"- com­
I support. " "T just thought it was
StuHnt Organl.utlon Dl1play IR
tation just IL'l much as the Cresh• mittees and Dr. Segal, Dr. Adema
mon l'O•■on for mard1h19wa■ tho
something to participate in because
tfte Dorafh)' M. Hau Lounge.
and Mrs. Zack, the sec ret ary. for
man. but not altogether Uke the
llollof In tho riptnou of tho dom­
ii was so historical.'' "I support
Thursday evening a "Festival o!
..freshman orie ntation."
helping to make this possible."
onrtrallon, IIOt Justllocau.. It WH
the Civil Rights' Movement - l
a demonstration.
believe the depravation of the rights
of one person are the depravations
The majority, also, agrees lhnt
or the rights of au people . I really
similar marches on a smaller scale
On Monday. at 3:30 p.m.
believe this."
throughout the nation would not
the Campu.s Alliance Party
All seemed lmprwJMCIS)'lvla
.
be eUcctive . '"It was a grea t stlm·
tConuoued from P111teu
wiU hold it~ first party coun­
Adams remarked, "Ev,rybody
ulant for the Civil Rights mo ve­
cil meeting In tht? multi•pur•
resolu tions in the name of the Student Body in any area of
wa■ 11 ontllu•lastlcl
I believe
ment. Movements like this won't
pose room ot Norton-Unlon.
ft Influenced t"law1nako"
change ideas of people, for exam­
student concern whether it be on the local national or inter­
Party
members,
students
greally. It WH highly omotlon•I
ple. in Jackson, Mississippi. lt was
national level.
wllh some complaints or sug­
and ■omethlnv llke that gets to
eUecUve only because It was na­
Thus. it can be seen, that the Student Senate is fulfilling
gestions pertaini ng to campus
the peoplt more tfl1n petty poll­
tionwide.''
One of the students
its role as defined by the only national union of students
me, and those interested in
tlc1."
quoted Martin Luther King, who
the
workings
of
campus
within the United States. Limited cognizance on the part of
Francine Mlchel agreed that "It
said, "The vn lue of the marches
politics. are urged to attend
the student body however, seve1-ely threatens any attempt
shows that America Just doesn't sit
ts probably Umlted. The next step
thia first Campus Alliance
back; if the people of Amerlc.a is on the! economic (leld ,"
to compliment the goals of the institution. I would therefore
meeting.
think something's right they act on
TIit)' heartily atrood tMt halt
urge all students to read tb e SPECTRUMclosely, to take ad­
ii.'' She was lmpresse(I by the
Audio - Visua I Coordln11tor,
things boon left .. fhoy ..,.. ...
vantage of the circulation. of the Student Senate Newsletter
speakers: Walter Reuther. Martin
William Gou announces t1w1
fore tti. Ma~lt , tflo prollloffl
and to constantly sllrvey tihe bulletin boards on campus for
all Bull's football games,
Luther King and A. Philip Ran ­
would not Ila~ ....tt4 lt■o" Ol/t.
announcement of forthcoming events.
starting
with Gettysburg,
dolph.
Sylvia ltat9d, "Notroo• aro M,­
A representative gov-ernment requires a two way ex­
will be telecast on a special
Allen Falk was impressed by th&lt;'
preued m- than ottiw ml-t.
haU hour program on Chan·
various groups which participated.
chao,ge. The Senate can oly serve ,vou, the student body
tits ," and Pra11elneaddell tfuit
oel
:?,
W.G.R.
Toe
games
l!iO
Con­
He
stated
that
at
least
we are aware of yovr problems and desires. Any student IS
thl■ l1 llocauoo ''ttloy Ull 't ...
will
be
prc:;ented in condens•
gressmen ~re
present. Leaders
their Identity."
:illowed to express his opinion rfurin~ Senate meetings. The
ell form featuring high-lights
of the Man.·h met with the Presi ­
Ideas on how Nt'groes could ~
Student Ser.ate Offo:e. Room 205, is alway$open and Se-n/ltors
ol the action. The progTam
dent, Vice-President, Senate and
vince people ot the n~ and right
found they are amdo•JSto hear vour complaint or su1?1?e
stions.
be
set'n
at
twelve
noon
can
House maj()rity and minorlty lead­
ness of the moveme111 vaJied .frol11
I'd like to tha11kthe editorial st;aff of the SPECTRUMfor
every SundAy one week fol­
ers. ' He didn't feel it 1nnu1&gt;nced "Imagine yoursoives being lre6tl'd
lowing the playing of the
allowing me this sp?ce, it is certainly a commendable example
many ' votes which were already
ns Negroes" to "more pickets o.nd
game.
of effort,,; to impr"'Ve coonmunications. I wish you all good
against the omlnoUJ1 Civil Right/I
little dernon.strati&lt;lfr.s" and •·more
Bill,
but
he
didn't
feel
It
alienate,,!
lucls.tr, the roming year.
interplay betwe.m g,roups". ,

t"-

President Cohe,n's Message

!f

�Fr iday, SlptemNr

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

•• •• •• •• • .,.. •• ...... •• •• •• o• •~

Nancy Wilson To -~

~I!

TheReviewing
Stand Be at Jazz Festival
By LEON LEWIS

~~....................................!
Toe qunlllY of the motion pic­
tures mude or planned In Holly­
wood ~ declined ralher steadily
dur,n11 the last two decades. The
city which may be chnuvinisUcally
bJt mlhf't accurately described w;
the movie cnpltnl of the world un­
til World War U nowseems to
only four or five pictures
pr 1&lt;.&lt;Uce
per yenr which an lnteJUgent
rnovie-i:lll!r mny enjoy without be­
lng either bored or disgusted, po~­
stbl.Y both.
Whereas lhe range of movies
produ ced in Hollywood once ran
the gamut from inven.Jve and wit­
ty c&lt;mll&gt;dies to sUperlal!ve thrlllers
llngoo with a sophisticated and sar­
dont&lt;' outlook on llfe . the movie
mogul s seem to have com «' to the
ro nclusion pf late that the "grear
American public " wants gignntlr
tpectacul•rs, merely fot th e sake
of lhe spectacle, nnd un endless
succession ol c:omedletdealin g with
the coy preservation of the virgin­
ity of Ootis Duy. However , there
ls sUil one type of picture which
J-loll,ywooddocs well nearly a ll the
tim e and the !ifm "The Great
Escape" Is an exciting a nd worth·
while example of this genre.
"The Great Escape" Is based on
n book by Pnul Brickhlll (l!r,OJ
whi ch drscribes the actuol s tory
of an attempted escape of more
than 250 men from a maximum
security prison camp in Germany
run by the Luttwalle-&lt;:0ntainlng
nearly all of the mo.t proficient
escape artis ts In the British Air
Force . As one ol the Briti sh ol•
f1C1?1'$remark s enrl y In the pic­
ture, "!here Is madnes~ in this
method" o( the Germane,. and the
British seize upon this "ma dness"
lo plM an csropP or su&lt;'h magni ­
tude that a large number or men
In the. German army would be
lied up for months tryin~ to track
down the esca!K'e; . The meliculou$
planning of these men a nd the
rvenlwtl Olght of those who nrl'
sut:cessf ul In brrnking out forms
the basis or 1hr plctur1•.

Th• movie, however, I, more
th.n a dull ,uccenlon of plans
•nd ttratitgems c..rrle:t out by
the• men H Boetey Crowther
trl'OMsouly suggests In his ~
view In the N.Y. Times . In order
to onh1nc• Its appeal for Amerl •
can •udlences , tl!e cast 11 an
An,l~m•rlcan
one, though most
of the putlclpilnt, are membera
ol tht Brltbh Commonweal th .
The Americans , HIits (Stove Mc•
Q""nl , • bit of 11n oddball and
Handley {Game, G•rii.r ), an 1f,.
f~bl1 confidence man referred to
'" " Tha Scroc nc,er," supply an
ln♦-resHng contrnst to the re­
l•Hvely efficient and sober ap­
prouh ol the British to the prob-

lem, •nd It Is the 11arlation1 with•
ln the charac♦-rs ol the• men
•nd within lh• ,.,son.illtlo,
o/

the British 01flc1ratftat 9l11t1the
picture Its spice and 9ut1,
'rht- (!Vcnl$ leadng up to lhc nighl
of the escape are presented wll,hn
~killtul ,,lten mllon between high
humor and mom~nts of very be­
lieveab lc fens ion nnd agony l1S the
1nl'n react to the increasing SUS·
pcnre of the situatio n In uniquely
in:iividuaJ tashio113. Once they have
escaped, the beautiful countrysice
lhrough whic h they lead lhelr pm-­
suers enhances the drama by con­
trusting lhe placid European SCI·
ting, vt•ry rem !nisce nt o{ the joys
cl home nnd pence. witb the im­
mediate possibilities ol capture nnd
Us resulting terrors which we know
to be ever-pre sent,
For AnMrlcan 1udlencH, S♦-v•
McQUNn wlll probably be con­
tlder9d the picture'• st&lt;1r
. In ;:i
put lnvol,lng phy;lcal prownns
(some 1uperb motorcycle riding
obYlou1ly written In to acco,no­
da♦-

ljlOrt)

McQueen
'• 1k11t In that
11 wall 11 1ttlng com•

fl'lwneit, McQ""n

exudes • great

dt•I of olf-beat dlarm . Hownr ,
the focus I• really on the calf as
a whole, rather tft.n any one
man , and •llhough tht picture
hos all of the "type1" we come
to I X!"Ct fro:,i a mllltary movio,
e;ich of tho ch.r ac lers I$ bellove­
ablo as o penon on:I most of the
parts ~re qulle credibly clevaloi&gt;­
ed by a sarl1s of actors largaly
'Jnlamlliar to most AnMrlcans,
In spite of this, it is Ric ha rd
AttcnbJrough (playin g Roger B:ir :­
lctt, lhc "Big X " or lead C!r cl lh c
&lt;'nlire operation) who ties the pic­
ture togcttierwith a low-keyed.hut
highly intense performance which
give~ ., riu!l't conviction nnd n sense
of verisimilitude to th e story ,
This is a war story in th e best
sense-tha t ls, It combines an art­
ist.le outlook and a sophisticated
approach with an explo,ive inri ­
denl to provide a contlnuou.~ly en­
tertaining und Incisive study ol
men in ~ situatio n of high ten~1nn.

The Buffalo Jazz Festival Is
proud to announce that the coun­
try's most sensational singing tal­
ent, Nancy Wilson, will appear at
Kleinhans Music Hall Saturday ,
September 14.

Quoting Nick Biro of Billboard,
"All In .all, Nancy Is a straight
singer. She belts a little, talks a
Utile, is cute al times alld at times
very sophisticated. She has lots of
variety and rhythm . . . but moat­
ly, she jll8t stands there and sings.
And he does it very well."

The Jazz Gallery
By RAYMOND CRAWFORD
,,,,ir, I

1 illl.1 IIII UI l~[ijl
111.LJ!
1 1l;ill
II , IAllll,ii
I:•

1q,1 ,I •i Ii 111J!'II I :

John Coltrane appeared at th e
Royal Arm.'&gt; September Slh and 1
had the ple!l.!lllre of in terviewing
him and hia quartet . Considered by
many as the top saxophonist in
Jan today, ''Trane was really cook
Jn". He was playing a piece called
" I Want to Talk About You". El•

l1tlcallr • jaa:◄riented ...,..
ttro.,, Nancy IMlle the t..,
mo11e1wllft curH19rlltlc grace
and unfailing goe4 tHte lhroup
Broadway ■how IOll9• and .,,.c­
lal mat•rl•I , .. •ddlnt the per­
son.11 nu•ncH Hd compelllllf
J•u beat where har ewn unique
t•lent 1 dldale . It 11 ne IU~
prll8 1he's lhe hottett tlnglnt
talent • round.
Appearing wilh Nancy wlll be
the fabuous Ramse y Lewis Trio,
Md for a bonus the Buttalo Jazz
FesllvaJ is trying som ething new
, . . they are presenting Olatuanji
JOHN COLTRANI
and his Drums of Passion with a
company of Dancers. Musicians
vin Jones was whalin' on the drums
and Singers. Olatuarrj i Is the fore­
while Jimmy Garl"ison kept up n
most e.xponent of authentic African furious pace on bass . I recognlr.ed
folklore In the world today . He
the chord:ll sty le of Ml-Coy Tyner
and his troupe are a show that
on piano .
shouldn't be missed,
Bern In Hamlet, Nortfl Caro-

llna, John tt•r1M pllJlnt p,...
hulon•lly at the •te of 1' on
atte NX ltut latwr swltchN "
httlor. He 11 well remom...,_ lty
j-,:1 f.n1 H • member of Mllel
Dnl1' greup and l•lw Thol011lt1111
M011k'1Qulntwt, Ahr forming his
OWII group, he Npn h pl•Y pr.no NX wl"' • c:flfflltln.1tlen
of
... ,.....,,.
atylo anti hi• famous
...._,.
•f Selmd".
I asked John about his connection
Withthe avant-garde music of Or­
nette Coleman, Charlie Mingus, and
Monk . "Never mind the technical
aspects ol my music . Just keep
in mind that It's just their way
of expressing themselves with their
horns."
I listened to another set by the
group. 'Trane was blowing the
blues. Here he displayed the sort
of ideas that have made him
tam ous. An endless number ol
notes and sounds came from his
horn. He had perfect control ol
his horn . Garrison was featu,red
In the next composition with a 1f&gt;.
minute solo. I asked Garrison about
the solo and he said, "It's time
for the bass to emerge as a solo
Instrum ent and not just a part
o! tbe rhythm section."
" How is a piece written," I ask­
ed Tyner and Jones. Tyner said
that 'Trane gives them a format
and after that all their work is
imp rovised . This requires great
talent and an amazlng amount of
"togethe rness ". Improvisation has
been brought to great heights in
American jau .

Tickets are on sale now at Den­

ton's, Sample Hertle, Audrey's
Record Stores and Brundo·s Music

A0VCRTlliCP

lN 118QUIIH

In Niagara Falls.

LOST
A Sigma Phi Ep$11onfr•ternity
pin. If found contact Edwud

Marke.

TF 3-3347-Reward

AND LEATHER GOODS STORE

Weleom·1'9s you back to ~hool with a
complete line of luggage, attacre cases,
brief cases, handbaks, gifts ond oiiher
leather goods .
3400 MAIN STREET (Opposite UB)
TF 3-1600
OpenMonday, Thunday and Friday E11onlngTIii 9 P.M.

,..............................................

I
I

I•

.,I

U.S.INDUSTRIES
NEEDS PART TIME HELP
$50.00 WEEKLY SALARY
PLEASANTSALESWORK - NO CANVASING
MUST HAVE CAR - MALE or FEMALE-18 and OVER
Cell For Appointment, :

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Mid ..TownOffice
MON.· TUES.· WED .· FRI. -

NF4-4121
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Bttween 10 A,M . . 12 Noon- 2 . 4 P.M.
6 to 9 P. M.

MON. · TUES. There

lllfll
iffill:a11a•111a;i1iiI llbtll~IU)llll~JWililll!]lllllu,!llllllr.111
II ilillll[Jil'.:

Militello's·--;;:;i~;--

0

13, 1963

BURNT IVORY@
SHOE S
by Taylor

---::--

of Maine

The magnificent Burnt Ivory leather is
hand-burnished to a deep-toned glow that
grows richer and mellower with age.
Th~ detailing and hand-shaping are the
work of talented Down-East shoemakers.
They are slices for individualist s.
Drop in ... let us fit you perfectly.

$19.95

RIVERSIDE
MEN'S SHOP

J~i~
,. . '-~i•

Ar• Openings For Two Campua Man19er1

783 TONAWANDA ST. at ONTARIO

�PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 13, 1963

SAVE!
Special Purchase
of Campus Fashions

CHARLESROSEN

For Charles Rosen Concert
By VICTORIA BUGELSKI
Charles Rosen, pianis t , perfor m•
ed last Thursday In Butler m,1di­
torium, Capen Hall as part of the
Norton Convocation Commi ttee pro­
gram.
Mr . Rosen performed the Bartok
Improv isations on Hungarian Folk
Songs, op. 20, the Beethov en sonata
op. no, tmages,· Book 2 of Claude
DebUSSy, and Schumann's Carni­
val, op. 9.

Mr. Ro•n• • technique Is· iuch
that he can m1k1 the playing. ot
1M moat dlfflcult compositionson
his progrem -m relatively •t•
fortleu. The B1rfokwas perform­
ell with much vlt1llty, power,
lh'ong accents, and good dyna­
mic,. TIie planlllf accented the
dluonances most eff9ctlvely,
He per formed the Beetho ven m
a rather romantic manner, with
contro lled use of rubato. His sus­
tained pedal techni que in Capen
Hall is ques tiona ble. The final re­
sult may be most effeetlve else­
where, but bei:e the chords sounded
blurred.
The high point of the concert

was the performance of Images,
book 2. The first two pieces of the
set, Cloches· 'a travers les feuilles,
and Et la lune descent sur le
temple qui fut, not among the most
popular ol Debassy's works, were
played with the utmost control and
delicacy.

NaturalShoulder

e SPORTCOATS
e BLAZERS
eSUITS

Th• lalt piece, Poluen, d'or,
of the compo•n most IIIC•
ceufvl and popular pieces, 11 11
type of musical whirlwind. Mr.
Rosen performed this work with
delicacy, .grilce, .and .complete
cont rol, his rapid but never
heavy, finger mollon creating a
awlrllng effect.

Fine Selection of
Rich Wool Fabrics
As Well As The
Preferred Colors
and Patterns

Mr. Rosen is perhaps most in­
terested in French literature; he
holds a Ph. D. from Princeton Unl­
versity in this field,
The Schumann Carnival was
played in a spirited manner, al•
though the speed of a few of the
individual pieees seem ed a bil
rap id. There were no technical
probll!Il'IS here, and dynamics

made to sell at

2950 ·to 6950

and

phras ing were excellent. The pian ­
ist ottered a Chopin nocturne as
an encore.

Chamber Music Quintet to
Appear at Baird Hall
JOSEPH LANG
September 17, at 8:30 p.m. In
Baird Hall Auditorium, the Univer­
sity Music Departme nt will pre­
sent the Ardito Wind Quintet in
a chamber music recital.
The Quintet consists of five mem ­
bers ot the Netherlands National
Youth Orchestra which is part ot
the association "Youth and Music ".
•''fo•1th and Music" h the Nether­
lands seetlon of the Intern ational
Federatio n "Jeunesse Musica le" .
Th~ugh the first intention of
the Quintet was to play only for

private pleasure, Its meml:ers
soon foundthetnselvH giving con•
arts In verlova parta of Hollan:!

and on board the student ship
Waterman.
The members of the Qu:ntet arc
Rob Van Ach!. :la:c: 3o b v: ;~er,
ob:&gt;e; Trix Kcessc!er, clnr:r.et;
Henk De Wit, bassoon; and Fri::;
Bezembinder, horn. They will ;:er­
fo1·m '•Six D:mcer!es du XVIc
sleele" (arr. by Desormicre ); "'Di•
vertimento in B flat" by I. Pleyel
and J. Haydn; "Three Sketches"
by H.C. van Pragg; and tbc "Quin­
te t in B fiat", op. 56.1 by F.
Dami.
During the Quintet 's four wecl:
in the U.S. it will perform at Yak
Unl verslty, Rutgers University, nr.d
in New York Philadelphia and
Washington.

ffi\

PR·IsCE

~~:

8

p A N. T

Dress and Wash &amp; Wear
Nationally Advertised Brands

5 H I RT s Dress
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Manhattan, Cr.ighton , Etc.
• SNEAKERSMen's and Women's
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· •-~:.,,:'-!,: ...... •

ALSO

Fine Arts Exhibit On

SaveMoneyOn SchoolSupplies

Display in Norton Union
The art exhibit now on display
in both lounges on the main Ooor

of Norton Hall inlliates the actlv •
!ties of the fine arts committee
this year. The exhibition Will last
until September 23, a program of
three weeks duration.
The purpose of the Fine Arts
Committee according to Sarah
Ament, chairman of the art sub­
committee, is "to promote the ap­
preciation of art and to acquaint
students with the art world and
what"s available in th e commqn­
ity." Miss Ament chose the paint­
ings for this display.
Eleven paintings by noted local

artists are on loan from the Al·
bright-Knox Art Gallery of Buftalo .
The paintings are worth sevcrnl
thousand dollars, each being val­
ued in the $500.0Q
range. The cost
to the Unlversity for renting the
paintings is sixty dollars.
PIWIS for the future include an
October exhibit · about locks and
keys by the American Foundation
of Arts. entiUed "Style and Se­
curity." Early in November sev­
eral Japanese prints from New
York's Museum ol Modem Art
will be exhibited. Durin$ Febru­
ary, Com.Ing Glass Works will
have its wares on display.

3139BAILEY
At
Amherst

Open: Mon., Tues., Sat.- 9:30 A.M. · 5;30 P.M.- Thurs., Frl.-9:30.
Wednesday-9:30 A.M. - 12:00 Noon

Phone

833-9395
9:00 P.M.

�THE SPECTRU!l

REFLECTIONS LITT
1L.f MAN ON CAMPUS

1 h~ ot11c1•I 1t11dtot newsP31)N nf th• St ole Uruvemty of Now .York at
tlllfUIO PuUIIC.1\lvn
omcc II Nnrton lfJII, Unlvcnll)' o,n,p..a, 8ut(~lo 14, ~ .Y
l'IIOiUll&lt;-d w..,k.f 1,om tlh· l•s• w~k al Sc1&gt;t&lt;t1lMr 10 the lut wcok In May ,
tlCfRl)I l&lt;&gt;t •xam rwr,n&lt;J,.ThAnk-.1v1n1, ChriJltmH •11\1
~

Ea,~,

r:,u11&gt;r•lft•Clu•I -A&lt;11old

~~~:~~t~'t?r
l'cutUNI Elutor

I , Naa\16

Bu.,tnrn :lo1nn,cer •

• l'ilt r..auncr

5t~f~
'M•'r!~~fi:,~ t:;:~r~t~,:~
. .,,~wf::'J1~

llli t ~et HcUJm,er
Cn1&gt;y 1",&lt;lllnr , , , . , , . , Mate la Cooper
Spo, 1, Editor
qock)' ve,. .. c.,
Clrr111NllOn Mgr . .. . LOIi Hu.Inger
Olttct lll&amp;n11er
K•rc,n Sanford
Fh'I A&lt;lvl,or , ThomH }{00111&lt;!.
Jr
EdllOtlll Ad.vl,ot WIJUam Sltmorln"
O•n • nJ aiatl: V1ok1 B1,11tl1kt, LOrnt WallGCh. A LJndn Lcv•nthol , Ron
K•m1n1kl, Vtc Menu , Anne Mllntc, M6'tlll Krlt,Cl , Rt!\A Fla,•h, Barbara
:llrauw, llonnle BrOmbc~f, ChArlC• LollOt. POI Jonos, Sur Mt.Id . N■ 11cy
t11~1ter, 1.Atry PnnklC. Lonnln Kllpftcln. Chotl"5 C1,rnmln15 Sh•III Davis,
AI An Newnl4tl, 8•rb• t• Cl'l•pman, Jt&gt;t nl• . ... ,r,~I••· Claudia Kow•1. Tn,d;,
!&gt;lct;i, Rotcmnry Moront. l,4wrcncc """k~I.
sv■nn Licker, Ronni• Wtb.)n,
!J~~M~lflftdtr,
Olll1 '1...-11')1. Rou 1,fnll Brnlhmon, Ray Cr11wtord, Jane
0

PAotog••Pb'f
!lalh
0er1, J&lt;&gt;41Illavrn1,

'
O

Friday, Septema.r 13, 1963

SPEC T RUM

PAGE EIGHT

Qt)td-

l,nnt S-:,o . nnll~rt Mlleh , Jeremy Taylflr . Ru.ucll
Pam ol~ n~1d , Roll&lt;!r\ l' cldmnn . Bob Gotturnan .

E1\te~d u ,econd clan matter Fobr,1110, 9, 1961, at
tnc POjil Otrl~e at Bulf~Jn, N Y , under lhe Ari or March
3. 1819 Accc11tanr e rnr 1n•l1lnf at • 1peclal role of pOst•
•et pr&lt;&gt;vldNI fnr 1n :;reunn I Ol. Ari or Oclnbc:- 3, 1011.
IUlhorlUd P'tbruary ~. 1051
Subscrlpllon

'3 ,CJO
ptr

clrcul11tlone:,oo
,

yea,.

Rtprctenltd
tor Mllonal Mvcrt111n1 l)y Nntlon•I Ad ·
vcr11s1niService, Inc ,. 4211Mn(llson Ave ., New Yorlc. N. Y.

Editorials

Ir JEREMY TAYLOR
You should have bl!cn In Wash
lngton!
You l'eall.v should. although II
makes coming back to the St.ate
UniCormity or New York et BufCl.llo
seem even more like siitlcl11ginto
u rnuddy bnck-wate1•, But lhc
"M::rrh on Washing:on !or Jobs
and E'l'eedom'' didn't seem like'
cilher . rt was Important.
A mnn from Oklahoma broue,ht
his son lo U1l' March es a l)lrtMIIY
present l)eclluse he "wan ted hlm to
see the Llncoln Memorial when It
meant somelhlllg."

I wrut there with a large dcle•
gatlon fl'om a 1vntimmt-wide slu •
dent orcnnization . Student Relig­
ious Liberals . 1 saw a delegaUon
repreSl.!Jltillgthe "University of
BuUalo Sludent Allln.nce.'' but the
student carrying the banner WCllt
to Nol'thl.'aslem ,
EvCJ')ll)od,ywas Jhe.l'(', even Burt
Lancastc-r .

To Be a Student

But in a crowd of nearly a quar•

~o.t_verylong ago it was somewhat of an honor an&lt;lre­ ter of a million, no 011,1!p!!rson
stood oul very murh . As a matter
spons1b1htylo be a college student. If a young mnn was parti­ of
fllc;l nothing was ab le to stand
cularly studious, frivolous. and if he was afforded the luxury
OUI to the fo&lt;.'eof lhe ' "'"' · 11WllS
of s lugher education, usttally by being a membar of a rather so moving, so solem11, so big, that
wealthy family, he spent his post-adolescentyears in ivy cov• it is only alter some solilnry re­ TO THE EDITOR:
ered b111ldings
,
ncclion thal Olll' can bc-izln to
,Many students do not rea iize
think not only oliOut the slgnlfil:ance the aullmi~y and resl)Onsibil!ty of
For mosl, the ool_legeexperience was a meaningful wedge of
the March, but nbout lh~ di• our Student Sena le. Thi; is the
fnto the world of business, l:iw,and a host of other activities. rectlon It IOOk,
u 1!ver~.ty's only democraticall.y
With it came associations with persons, the value of which
elecled body which ls l'epresenl•
Orlglnnlly
the
Mm-ch
IYtlS
to
be
canno_t be measured, And when one became a graduate, there
.1llvc oCall students att1mJing our
was Mlle doub, I.hat he understood lhe world in which he made up ol dis-cnlranchlsed 11nd institution, 'Chis is ool merely a
unemployed S o u t h e r n negroes,
lived.
hand p:cked G'rou·p of rul ers, bo.
murchini; ln rags to drarnatixe I.he
-&gt; your unit, speaking for you,
Today, scholarship and grants-in-aidprograms have made sltuatioo in the South. 'l'hr Com· and is the only official graup
mlllee
for
tl\e
March
on
Washing­
it p~ssible for any person wi,thability, be it academic or pro­
wbich ozn act as it does.
ress1onalsport, to register at colleges throughout the country, ton for Jobs and Freedom sent ap.
t woul ·, hcpe that all stuc!,nt s
vurlou.s
civil
rlghts
peals
to
the
attend classes, and shake hands with U1euniversity President groups to raise money to brini; would ♦•k• an active inter est in
lht Stnate, and follow its 1c:flvl,
four years later.
these people to Washington. The
There y•t r.ains • limited amount of prestige for
the accomp lished undergrad uate, and rlghtly so, though
often he is a diffe rent sort of fellow than his pre dec• •·
IOr•.

It is frightening, but not at all surprising, to discover
that some college students do nol even know the names of
the President's cabinet members. Books are resold to the
~!Ol"f: in such beautiful condition that, except for the
mora_li,ty involved, they may easily be sold again for new. The
condition of the lounge furniture Jn Norton will sure dis•
prove any argument that the student body is espedaHy fasti­
dlou_s
,
For most, p~ss:iblegrades are not very dilficult to obtain,
and the crammed heads graduate. H&lt;&gt;wever
the fNling that
students possess, their sensitivity, so to speak is highly
q_ues~ionable.
The values with which they enter theUniver­
sity 1svery often made more grotesque by their own blind
actions and inactions. To hear of students' concerns, come
the week-end,and the stories of how one person demoralizes
ano:her, can easily cause one, literally, to vomit.
. Why students are not receptive to the greater, and
shrJnklng, world about us, why there is a lack of respect and
The Spectrum
ooncern for other individuals, is the problc.P.n
poses The answer may very well be that tor the most part
no one is being taught to care.
I

*

*

I

*

Congratulations
. It 1~ the opinion of The Spectrum that the Freshman
Onenlaho~ Program was a success. The new ideas which
were put m_toe!fec: such as the panel discussions of upper•
classm_enwith small groups of frehmen, the faculty di.scus­
s10n_s tn the Conference Theatre, and the special program
dev,sed far transfer slurents, were an improvement over the
p.ist vears and should be continued in the future,
It may be noted that members of thlt · staff who
fo llowed the proceedings found them interes~ing, and
not at 111 boring . This, from person who have more
than on~ listened to introduc lory ,peeches and words
to tb!t w, ...

groups responded, but not with
money. They responded wlU1 a
great and growing enlhu.sinsm for
a much larger demonstration-and
the March on Washington w~ all
witnessed was born.

ties. The So11~t• Offha, located
in Norton , 205, 1, onen for all

those Interested i n their 1tudont
govarnmant.
Senate mee:.ings are held on
alternate T~sdays at 7:30 in U1e
evening. The room in which meet­
ings n•re held is posted .Im Lile
Senate office. These meetlng s are
o;)Z'! lo the student body. •In f~t,
it Is the policy of 1President
Michael Cohen lo aJlow interested
students lo speak and air their
v-:ews on the Sen al~ floor . Hopillg
to find a packed gallery, 1 thank
you for your attention.

Rober,t:Finktls!ein,
ChaiNllllfl

Gtudent Public

Everybody came, even the sou­
venir hawkers.
With thnt, 11 cynical wonderment
overcame me. Was the the March
to support a deep change ln the
Americu.nway ot lite, political and
e&lt;.'Onomic,as well as social, or was
it to support the 9l'Nt Amerlun
middle olass? Wes it to support
the right of every man to be equal
be.fore the Jaw, or was It support
of the right or any negro to look
os much like Cary Grunt as any
caucaslen?

This is the first or a series of
what l hope will be thought-pro­
vok.ing columns conoornlng the stu­
dent govemme /lt at U.B. They will
deal primarily with \oplcs of con­
troversy and those subjects which,
if the student body were aware
of lbe~n. would become controver­
s_v. In the commg weeks, such
The speeches were moving and
topics as the Student Senate, its
spoke abom "sweeping change"
functions, agencies and actions, and
and "a new era of American dem• the activities of the two political
ocracy" but there were so 11\111\Y parUe1 011 c:impus will be di;c'.16hawkers that the Master of Cere­ sed; along with -..candid interviewi;
and small-xal e surveys.
monies felt compelled lo make an
announcement to the assembled
No one can expect a colwnn
multitude concerning the "otticlal"
of this sort to be devoid of opinion,
b:.itton and the "official" program.
and the analysis and commentary
1 had the feeling, watching the
presented here will be liberally sea­
people entlJli their boxed lunches s:&gt;ned with my personal views.
and soaking thclr hot feet In the Since It is entirely unCa.ir to pui,­
rell~tlng pools in front of the Lin• llsh only one point of view on a
coin Memorial, that many of them
topic, I welcome any and all cor•
were there to support the right ol
rection, criticism, and /or scnthing
denunciation of the ol)irJons ap­
the gru t Amencan bNr INllly-to
pe:lri11g tiere along with construc­
get just a l!ttle tatt er by ea ting
m.&gt;1-eheartily Crom the grHt An,. tive comments and idens tor sub­
ject matter. Any point made n,gain­
orlcan malting pol .
st a sland taken in thls column
And yet the March was just a
will be acknowledged.
l.Jcginning. The people who are
Tllellaaniclu will mt lit writ•
going to decide just what direction
ten fw tfM p11rposeof 1l1ndtr,
the March Is going to take are the
mud-lllnglng, or ",enotorlal lm­
students and youngsters who are
pugnlty;" Iller wlll try lnlfMd
working for CORE and SNCC, for
to bring tho political actMtles on
NSM and the NAACP, I'd like to
campus Into clorar focus t,efort
think thnt the students at the St.ate
tfM •r•• of tfM stvdent body
. To
University of New York at But•
qlo')lt C, Wright MIii,, "I / (wlll)
falo might nave something to say
havt trite! to bl ob}tcllvo. I do
about it too.

new party, the Student Alliance,
revived the two-party system wider
the slogan of " Dynamic Demo­
cracy," and in its first year won
a majority of the Senate seals ,
The $ti.dent Alliance has since
become the Campus Alliance Party,
having discoveredthat Student Al·
Ha.nee Is also the nam e of a neo­
Naii German youth group.
This mny be all well n:nd good,
but what can and should a two­
party system mean in student gov•
emment.
Firstly, It can mean that tha

di,,.rt11ce of opinion In tho s.n­
ai. can now bo drawn up along
party lines. Fine, you aay, o.,
mocratlcJi American?

v:~
r:u
~~:V:i!:'to!=
o

ner exactly opposite to healthy pro­
cedure . Pnrtles should Tevolve (and
evo lve) along diUerences of opinion
not visa versa. This situation has
nol presented Itself yet , since the
two parties are agreed on mOllt
Issues. Indeed, the way the Senate
the parties
Is orgnnixed t~.
exist solely for purposes of eJe()­
tion, and therefore, these elections
are conducted somewhat on the
basis or pei-,onalities, not ideas.
This ts not, says Gerald Catan •
zaro, chalrmrut of US, a healthy
s:tuation , J agree with him. It Is
up to the students and parties lo
wx:ide what medicine, JI any, Is
to be taken (or this Illness . r re­
commend a stro ng ~ ol "anlla ­
pathy'' (not antipatll)I) toward the
Sttldent Senate, distributed orally
and aur:.uly among the student

. Though mu.ch credit should be given the various com•
m1ttees and chairmen whose U!orough work accomplished a
not clalm to bo detached.
Jtre~t deal, special trihute must also be paid Brent Steele
So what'a It to be. Iha grnt Am­
U11UIlast year, there was only
Chamnan of. the Orienlatioo Committee, and Dr. Stanley J'. •rlun v•wn(available in two col• one J)W1y represented In the Sen­
on;l OJ' e..,,..,.,.new world,
Segal, Coordinatortor the program
ate. the United' Students. Thert !I body.
T

Relations

Committee

�Friday, September 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINE

Dr. Macridis to Head New People and
UB Political Science Dept.
Politics
ly Fred Applt

A more comprehensive study
program is provided in the lield o1
political science by the estabUsh•
ment of a new department, under
the direction of Dr. Roy C. Mac·
ridis formerly 61 Washington Uni­
versity. In the past, political sci­
ence was part of the Department
ot History on cam\lus·Last year a
decltion was made to separate the
two, Now political science is ron­
si&lt;kred an enllr:cly new prog ram.
lJnder the new organaatlon, the
Department of History Is separate
with Dr. JohnT, Horton as its con­
tinuing chairman .
Tb.ree additional appointments to
the department's taculty were also
announced~ Pruidenl CU.UordC. ,
Furnas . They are : as full Profes­
sor, Dr. John Wahlke. or Vander­
bilt University, and as associate
Professors , Bernard E. Brown of
Van&lt;k!rbiltand Richard Cox of the
University ot Qillfomla. ' Berkley.
AcffNfnt '- Dr. Mlltotl C. Al•
ltrecht, DH II of tfle c,11... If
Arts and Science, Stale Untvo,,.
tfty at 811ffal6, tfla actlofts art

,.,.

of an

ffaf'■II

,i.n te iloval­
., favr
m11jo
r grffllat. cant.r ilofb1od
In ltll !Ncftf' plan llf Stale Uni­
vanity , wtillt contllllllntand U•
pandlnt,,..,_.
11ttVlovtfyIf •
t.n4.
The expanded political science
curriculum includes new courses
and Ute expansion of the graduate
as well as the w1dergraduate pro­
grams . Courses,such as the Intro­
duction to Modem Government,
taught by Professor Brown, pre­
sent as many political processes
tor ,tudy as possible. More detall
In the history, scope, methods, the­
ories and comparisons of govern­
ments are new being studied. The
reorganization of the curriculum
also helps widergraduates to dl'Vel­
op care!lilly planned programs for
the various degress.
The new system, according to
Dr, Macridls, "is more intellecu­
aUy attractive e.11(1more dilllcull "
to keep in line "with ttie new qu~­
ity of students" on campus this
year. Old students in the political
scien~ division have the same re­
quirements as before, and there­
tore may use previous courses
taken towards their degree, Never­
theless beginning students must Col
•
tow the requirements set up by
the new deparlment .
Dr. Macridis received his Ph.D.
at Harvard Universlt:Y, where he
taught until 1948. He also served
as Visiting Pro lessor at Harvard
and was at Northwestern Univer•
sity before going to St. Louis . A
Fulbright scholar at the Univ&lt;!rsity
ol Paris in 1958-59.he has also held
n Rockefeller Research Fellow­
ship on three occasions. He ls the
author of The Stu&lt;ty ol Compara­
tive Government. co-author ot 'fhe
De Gaulle Republic--Ques1 For
Unity, co-author a.nrl co-&lt;'dilot or
Foreign Policy Jn World Politics,
Comparative
Politics: Notes and
Readings and of the forthcoming
two-volume work on Modem Poli­
tical Systems. He contrlbu(es reg­
ularly to professional journals.
Pn,fe,_ W.11hlka
roatlved hb
Ph,b. at Harvardand ltH taught
at Harvard,AmhorstColle99 and
Candtrbllt. Ha 1, tho ulllor of
ep IM lnetltutftn •• -

Loyalty In ,1 DemocrAtlc Sh1te
aftdTIie Ciuses of the A*tfC1111
~•volutlOft, co-editor and co..iu­
tflor of Latl•latlva Beha,vlor
.
Professor Bl'own is a ipeclalist
in comparntive government nnd
has collaborated with Or. Marer!•
dis on two books, In addition to
being the author of American Cun­
servallves and New Dlrecttons in
Comparative Politics. He has held
Professorships at the University
of Paris , the Univt\l"SllY
of Sa"on,
and the University of New belbl .
Professor Cox hus ~ 11 Ful•
blight Scholar In Fta.nl.'t' and a
Rockefeller Foundtltkia FtUow at
Oxford Ulllversity, Where 11,egntl\.
ere4 matmals for Locke on W1.1r
and ,Peace .

By RON l&lt;AMINSKI

What better wny is there to earn
the enmity of nil l)Olitlca
l groups
and to elq)()Sc one's seU to criti­
cism and b.1rbed letters than to be
e political t-olumlilst?
With high hOpes, 811/1a h1tle
which mny soon feel like a pin
cushion, 1 Intend to write about
poUtiC!i on the national and Inter,
national levels. Issues In this col•
umn are largely wichosen as yet.
At present only ITIYpurpose can be
lltllted: to pre,ent an unbiasedand
CADETRECEIVESAWARD
original look at contemporary po­
lltlCIIIproblcll'Ul'and,the i,eople llf •
teeted by them.
,...
,._ mmilillN "
Tbe demands of writing a pollli·
tfla 0.!Mln"'"t
Ire In addht.n
cal
column are exhaatmg. without
to lf11 axllhlng at•ff, -"kh ln­
even considering the one greatest
clulltt or ,
H, si.rn.o...
problem facing writer and reader
Karel H11llc:ka(on Joint .,,.int.
jointly: that ls, polltlcal analy91s
,nent with tfla OepartlNllt of
requires a care tul t'Valuatlon of
Hlmuy) , Dr. tt.rry W. RoyMld1,
both sidea of an,y lswe a.s well as
0,. Jahn C La• anctDr. John
ColonelJnmes A. Brantner, Com. ,Tuly 28 • August U. 1963. I«&gt; ca,
an examination ot the forces and
C. Crlttanctan
.
personnlities involved. Also, equal mnnder, 82()th Combat Support dets competed for the top award
Dr. Macridis and hls statf hope
C&amp;det SwlJt Is e member
or
to revi.se and expand both under­ attention mu.st be gill'ell to the Group, Platl3burgh Air Fo~
AFROTC Detachment 575 at VB,
hlstotlcal
lellSOns
and Mur e cor.­ ·Ba.~c.New York Is presenti11
g
lhe
graduate and graduate programs.
oJ which L.t. Colonel Thomu L.
s
Because the Department It new. sequences which lllurnl1111tethe
AFROTC Comma.ndMt's Award Huddleston 1s Professor of Air
aco.re
.
It
Is
this
contempora,y
lhe chairman foresees development
writer 's Intention to meet these ob­ (STtn to Cudct Jon N. Swift of 58 Science.
ol lnnovatl- wblrh will introduce
Mr. Swift, 8 senior , holds the
ligations. It b the ttader's duu, LYl'lde Street, Paltsburgh, New
undergraduate students to poUtical
York.
. runk of Cadet U . Colonel and ls
not to consider or to believe ln
science as a discipline and will 111• this writer 's paUtlcal comments
'l'he Summer Training Unit wu:s commander or the 575th AFROTC
80 acquaint them with the mu,Jor
Cadet Air Division for the Fall S.­
alone, solely becaU!e they contain oonductl.'d at Plattsburgh Air f'ora
political systems of the world. One
Base, New totk during 11w period mc.-ster 196.'l-&amp;I
u-,,..
the force ol blaclc newsprint,
such program will be lntematlonal
Now
that
the
Freedom
March
studies-it blending ot currlculums
now know as "comparative poU­ on Wushinglon has cllmaxt.'d a
tlcs," "intematiOMI politics," and summer of Negro demonstn1tlons
and demands it is perhaps neces­
specific ''area studies."
"Together these approaches meet sary to appraise lhe new dvl l
the intellectual demwids of the dis­ rights "revolution''. Next week,
cipline and equip student.I tor un­ this colwnn will be devoted to an ,
evaluation ot the ~and
' a
derstanding of and partlclpatlon in
By VICTORMENZA
warning of the possible dangers.
the modem world-an obligation
or politicalscienceto all students,
whatever their Ultimate proles•
slon," Dr. Macridls says.
By VIClOR MENZA
solved the problems ol the "Over•
To ilovalop 9rad1N1t1 ltlHMl'ltl
H procluctlvaKholars, tuchor1 ,
11'1the northern fields of Buffalo crowded clnssroQm" and tinarld.&amp;I
ancl publfc Mrvanhl, Dr. Macri­
IIM the henvily manned Fort SUJ'I• deficit, the mulU-color room, the
dis call• for thaM 1Vpplement1
ynb. Founded in the yeor 191&gt;'2, mullt-purpo!leroom, and other S~'tttto the theory, literature and ,...
Sunyub plunged tnto 11 rampatgn
lered lounges enabll.'d students lo
_,.,.,
1lc111
1 of polltlcal 1clonc1;
Applicat:ons ar e now be:ng ac­ that was at once senseless and perfect their conrepts ol lethargy.
flold work at hon.- ancl abroad;
Thl' building provided Its denliens
ceptedfet the 1964 Federal Serv• aud&lt;lcious, ludicrous and lltanic.
knowledge a nd mattery of ro­
ice EJtranc~ Ex4min · lion, the The school ~ ~ince made a name with o continual supply of Sllll•
turdl toala
related dl,cl •
U, S, Civil Service Commisston
for ilseU that denies comparison pense. This was achieved by givplhlH , llftlll fweig11 lan,va,ot to
has annal}~ced. This examina tion, cven with the likes or Pyrrhus. Mnd Ing the mnintenan,-e cn:w the l'lght
facllltato nuoarch arising -outof
open to college seniors anJ gradu­ Klug Ludwig of Bavntla, and the to clll%&lt;'allY area Ill the union nt
significant polltlcal and govom­
ates regardle3s cf maj~r ~ u~y. Black Hole of Ctllcutta
!heir own discreUon. Student, nlM&gt;
montal problem,; and ti .aund
as well as to persons wtio have
When million doll11r pl11n~wrrc
tereived the benefits of a thm•ch
baM In ,.oJltlcal tf!oory; and ex•
had equivalent experience, ;ilfrrr. laid !or U1e&lt;'On
strucllon of n rul, lttt1119 Pl"Ollr•m administered by
change pl'09ram1 with fllrelgn
the qpportunily lo begin a rareer
tural mecca, thl' eager eyes ol the the r!lfoter1a servlre.
h1stltutlen1.
in lhll Federal Service In one ol student body turned upward in s1flioM who con1ldered tho ,_
"All these o.clivlUes." he says. 60 OCCUJ)'.itionsl
fields. These PO·
Jfrvctla11of tfla Stwant Unlot1 •
''must be coordinated so as to s:!ions are located in various lent pro,.yer, Minutes later their
prayers were answered by the upfear wtilch reacti.d tf!o Ovhlr
produce a balanced culTlculum Federal agencies both in Washing.
llmlta ,of courage mutt now ylafd
and a spirit which will survey and tan, D.C. and U1roughout the parltion of Baird Hall. Upon en•
terlng the building for the first
to an •ct of further dJll'lnt , wo
Unitort States.
assess critically the present state
lime, tl1ey found that the masterall ramom!Mr the mlpty Goo6Ocpc::j iog on the gud',lt calions buildl.'l7lhad done away with surh
ol political sci&lt;•nce and develop
year Hall, o llulfdln, ■f mo..,....
fresh and imaginative solutions to of the candidates s1:1rtingsala ries
tou1 afmpllclty. We con ,tlll wltoutmoded item.sas l).'linl,color, and
our most pressing problems.''
for persons appointed from 111,s haclc stage area and had replaced
neu the tremondou, 1ffkt tfl.tt
The political science program examination wi.11 be .. ,690 and
these wilh gray porous brkk, spec,
lh ,ublcle-stylod-•
ti•w tied
will be develo;ied as much as pos. $5,7!15a yc : r . .A wrl.ten test is kled &lt;'emrnt floors , and plu'~h black
on tho compoundln,., atlllfttltt'
:;ible by next September. A c'll1•e­ regu:rc 1 ~xcept !or those candia- windows.
ldtntlty problems, T1lou11valll119
11ll'S who have attained a suMici•
!ully selected honors division mi\)'
of Goodyear H•II brovtlit wttti It
8ul th■ :ab1urdlty that WH
begin for mll,jors in the depart­ cnlly high scor,: on the Graduate
Baird becaml the atrocity th.11t
a tvmult of crltlcal Helollft wtlldl
ment. A political club m11y also Hccord Examination Aptitude
Is Norton. In the f•II af 1N2
''" l'9t to Ila oxhautr.d . IN
materialize, along with spec:al pro­ 'test.
stud■ nt, and faculty allkl ..,..
•"vi• shape m•rlc&lt;llf• dtoret of
grams se: up for guest speal&lt;ers.
Applicants who f:le by Septem­
affro nled by the presenc ■ of N■w
1hnpi. mlndactneu which, ,t tf1e
However the department stresses ber 19, l9G3 will be scheduled !or
Norton Hall. Spoculallon ramtlmt , -.nr • 1rut .,. .. ,..,NI
the need for students to help the the first written test on OctobN
paged by the preNnca of onIn the •"°'9 to conaumo ap41co
.
new progl'um of pol!urnl sC'lcnce 12, 1963. Six additional tests ha\·e
l~1&gt;!iarswhich had a~lt.ctad In
It ls here that we must p&amp;.118(!for
be a success,
been scheduled. The closing dat e
front of the m aulve three and
u moment in order to nppreclale
is April lC, 1963.
ane hair mllllon dollar strvcture.
the magnitude of Sunynb's bravel')' .
M.!nagemeot Inlerships w,th
"What la It?" they Hkod. Some
O1ietnlght be led to conclude that
s~url!ng sal.ries of $5,705 and
nn 11dmJnilitraUonwhich was sllrl
S7,0.0 _ year will also be IlUed contonded that It was t11, long
All , students who plan to
awalttid llos~ftol, wfillo o!hera • .,.
hearing the entllusiastk reviling '0 1
from this examination. An addi·
apply for cnt ranee lo a den•
aurtd UI lh•t It WH a br•11ch Goodyear Hall would ~ reluctnnt
tiooal wrillen test is required. AP·
:ai school l,IU!:l tskc lhC den
to repeat themselves. Bui thl, ts
of the Feffral ,-,,.rvo. He matplicants Ior these positions mu~t
tal upUtu&lt;le test eith1!1' in
tllf' •hat I• w.&gt;t, •II ._,..... tll■t
not so. Contrncton. architects, and
1ile by J aonuuy 16, 196,t.
O~tc:,bcr ls.:'.I ur J.:.1::.._
al') •
rfoty of ffl'lldur•I ma.._
financiers have once ega1D
l!J6.I. Api)lications for thls
Details co:icering the require­ 1M nIIIC'lrporatad
In tht lkllktJ119 taken to Illustrate 1tie wise old
le3t mny be obtainc&lt;l from
ments, further lllformation abou~ rfaft
afftct «I
addact to Its -aH
proverb, u man doesn't learn from
our dental school, er thl! o:­
the positions to be filled, and In,
amblqulty.
experience. Yes, In 1964the tnlghty
!iC&lt;'ot the De J.11 of S11:&lt;lents,
strocllons 011 bow to apply are
201 l'.:irriman L!b.ary. Appll­
given In Civil Service .Anoounce• Needless to say, a.II speculation Gooeyear will be lncestllollSly wed
with Its identical twin , Tht rM.n
catlons !or the October test
ment No. ll1. The announcement proved to be Innocuous; it was the
bulldinp will Jo!ntogether to torm
must be received by the di·
may be obli;.!nedfrom many post Student Union. Neved berore had
vision of Educational M~o­
offices' thrOugbout the counlry. decorntlvl• and 11dministmllve gen- a brave new geometric $hape bued.
Ollce again, on the riglit ~e.
surements of the Ame11can
crllege pJa,cement 1lffkes, Civil ius been l'Omblned In such an el•
ll Is customary to c:loee• reDental Assoclat.'lon before
Sen-ice Regional Offices, or from fecllve ~ . While facWties such
View ol th.is type by oUcrtn11011111
Scp,embet 20, l!l6J.
the U.S. ,Civil Service Commission, n$ the PQOlroonttho Rat ~Uur, the
bowling alleys, and lhll bookiltoniantlclpatlons 11bautthe I\Jt~ . , • •
Washlllgton, D,C, 20U5.

Col. Branter Presents Swift
With Commandant's Award

"*rt

Opinionand Conviction

Federal Exam
To Be Given

"°"'

ri.,.._

uooer-

�SPECTRUM

PAGETEN

,.

Friday, September 13, 1963

STORES INC.
3610 MAIN ST.

Phone:
TF3-7131

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Friday, September 13, 1963

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

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�Friday, September 13, 1963

Three New Profs.

Join Physics Dept .

1

FOLICNIKS'BOUT THE FOUNTAIN

Or. Pnul Dlc;lng and Or. Francis
D. Parker hiwc been appointed to
the tacully of U1e College of Arts
und Sciences nt U.B.. 'The :;ippoint•
ments are effective September 1.
Dr. Dl~g.
vislllng lecturer at
the University of Colorado for 1962·
63, wW be associate professor of
philosophy; Dr. Parker, professor
of mathemnllcs at the Unlve1'Sltyof
Alaaka since 1.957,will be visltlng
proles.,or of mathcnmlks.
Havhl9 Ml'WII H lnltrudor

_, ........
~__, .,
U•l--1lty
H

The Cireus
By BOB MILCH
\.
DMr Ma and Pa
Well, you remember bow you
was tellln' me that when ab got tuh
achool ah should join 80me clubs
an sllill so's ah wouldn't become
a onetl~ intellectual? Well, thar
ah was standln' outside Hayts HaU
peelln' on a chestnu t wherl this tel•
ler come up luh me and says
"Psst!" So ah looks back at him
an sa,ys "Psst! to you loo, neigh­
bor," An then this glazy look
comes over his tnce an he leans
close an says, "Want to join a
movement, friend?" So ah looks
him straight In the eye (ao's he'd
know ah was a1-re1
an says,
"Sure, neighbor. What you want
moved?" ''Dldendor( Hall," he
says ,
Well now, ah've loolcedat good
old Diefendorf an' ah've been In It
too, an ' while It looka a might
flimsy, ah knowed right oU or the
bat Uw two of u. we.ren't a going
to mlve ii alone. So ah asked him,
"Why do you want Diefendorf Hall
moved, neighbor?"
"Moved?" he lhouta at me, an'
&amp;Ila time a stompin' his foot like
be's eota cramp. " Moved? 1 want
It demolished
. Tom down. Ripped
up" (Ah didn't know In what dl­
~ he was a headln'-down or
up-bat as got his main point.)
"1bere can be no hall way tor us!
Jt's all or noting! No compromise!"
Well, ah thought he'd stomp
right through hi&amp;pointed shol!s,ah

did, but he calmed down enough
·so's a h could ask him, "Wb,y d')'Uh

want

to

tear

down Diefendorf

Hall?"

The colOl' atarted a comln' back
up his neck an' his eyes bulged
lll&lt;e someooe wa.1 a trompln' on
his toe, an he said, "To ma.ke a
parking lot"
"Yuh nftd one?" ah asked. An'
ther, ah realized ah never sbould'a,
cause he ,tarted stompin' with hill
foot agln an' his ears started llap­
;&gt;in',
"Need one·rOo you know there
are 8,000 cars registered lo alu•
dents and only 3,000 parking places
on campus. Do yoo know that alter
8 o'clock you couldn't get a park­
ing space on campus If your father
was the gatekeeper? Do you know
what It's Uke to walk through a
mowstonn from Wlnspear and
Main for Sociology 101? Oh no,
you couldn't. you Just couldn't."
Well, then -this here leller tails
down on the ground an' com•
mences to rollin' around an sob­
bin' 110'sah thought he'd bust a
gasket. Ma 'n Pa, ah hope )"Oil
won't be mad or nothin', but ah
Just felt so danged sorry for this
Lella that ah told him ah'd join his
movement tuh get more parkln'
spaces on campus. Course, ah
don't need 'em-ah just leave Jen­
nie at the Saddle an ' Bridle Club.

~

Lawrence University, associate pro•
fcssor and professor nt Clarkson
College, and con.~ultant at Strom­
berg Carlson Company. He receiv•
ed Ute A.B. at Middlebury College,
lhc M.A. at Boston University, and
lhe Ph. D. at Cose Institute of
Technology.
Or, Parker Is a member of the
American Mnthcmatlcal Society,
Mathematkal As.JOCinllonof Am,m•
ru, American Associa tion !or the
Advancement of Sclencu, Arneric•un
As1ocialion ol Unlvt!rslty Pro:es­
sorJ, and New York A1.-at
'.cmy o!
SdeDce. He was elected to Sigmi.
XI and Pl Mu Epsilon honorary

...

tJ IIUnola. ltS2-ll and
. at ltie U~erslty
at
1flN2. Dr. ..., .... ..

IOdelie,,

Qlap,
fleW of .,.Glallllatt.11 ,. 9thlu
Ml seci.f phllosop!1y.
In S•
lie Is 11uthor ol RNcltty, Five Typos of O.Cl11-I and
Tllafr s.dal Condlllou, publlshl!I.I
In l!Xi2,ILlld is prezently world11g
on lta:idlnp In the Mtltlodolegy of
,.. Sodal Sdetlces. Pnwious to
receiving the M.A. and Ph. 0 Crom
the Unlver.;lty of Chicago, De. Die­
sing attended Concordia Teuchcrs
CoJJeee, llllnols.
Dr. Parker's professiona l experi•
cnce include. serving il!l Instructor
111 Cranbrook School, Stanton Mili1111')' Academy,
:md Montclair
Academy. He w111 rei;earch as•
soclnle nt Mas&lt;;nchusc:t, Imtituto
of Technology, in ;lruclor at Cuse
Institute of Technology, pal't-lime
lloeturer at Wc-.;tcm Rese1ve Uni•
versity, assistant professor nt !;t.

ldein.tification Cards Ready
In Basemen.t of Foster Hall
Students who have applied for
I.D . Cards and have claim checks
numbered
below 15670 should
cla1m their canls In the basement
of Foster Hall.
An exception 1.ppUes to students
who on applying failed lo give
their local addresses. 'Ibey should
report their addresses immediately.
Arly student who has not applied
for a card should apply any time
next week from Tuesday to Friday.
An addiUonlll two weeks is re-

TF 3-7000

BUFFALO 14, N.l,

)400 MAIN nREET

&lt;f
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JlltflN

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Our Famous

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SHAGGYSWEATER
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•CAEDMO N

• SPo~f.N

Black- Olive- Blue
THE

3262 MainStreet,Opposite1heUniversity
I•

TF2-3221

11-.a.Ts

The Classic School Bq~, insofar as we hove been able to
determine, originated ot Harvard more than fifty years
ago.

Now

The Campus Corner

for processing card!! of
those who submitted Incomplete
applications or submitted late.
Cards already applied for but
nUIIlbered higher than 15670will be
ready sometime next week.
Students are reminded tbat
they nr~ required to produce
their I .D. Cru-don demand of any
university official. In addition, J.D.
Cards are needed to borrow books
from university libraries, cash
checks in Uw bookstore and obtain
student discounts trom theaters.
quired

6tubtnt }Sook6bop

BACK
TOSCHOOL

RIG.
$21.95

Dr. Stanley Mrozowski, chairman
of the Department · of Physics lo­
cated in Hochestetter Hall, ls oo
leave for a year in Japan where
he will teach and make guest lec­
tures In China.
Acting chairman during Dr . Mfo­
zowsl's leave ts Or. W. Bennette.
Dr. Bennette obtained his Ph.D. at
the University of Cambridge and
has previously Instructed at Rice
University in Texas and the IlJi.
nois Institute ot Technology.
Prof . Hottman, instructor ol en­
gineering, ls also on leave to do
research and write a book. Three
associate prof-n
have
joined the physics department : Dr~
R. Gayley, Dr . M. Holland, Uld
Dr. T. Sarachman.

C/a,,ic

Other colleges odopted the "Harvard BookBag," as it
was then called, ond private and public schools in New
England followed wit until it become practicall y stan­
dard equipment with college and university studenh In

the £cnt.

SCHOOL BAG Now, the vogue for this trodltional New England grMn
cloth bookboghas spread from the East - throughout the
coontry - to the W•t.

Opposite the Main _-ntrance · to UB

�Friday, September 13, 1963

S P E C T R U M.

----=----=------------------------

------------

-- -------------

PAGE THIRTEEN

-- -

¥ · Student Associiation News
By BARBARASTRAUSS
Cornell University has said of
its Student Association: "!ndivl du­
al lile assumes slgni(icance and
importance throu gh vital relations
with other human beings; vital re­
. latiODS founded upon mutual interests, intellectual ideas, and com­
mon pursuits-the impact of strong
perso nalities upon one another .
Commenting on this statement,
Miss Rachael Stelonetl1, President
of the Norton Union Board has said:
"Thele vital rel■tlOM can be
fevnd ti.re In our Union. The ,...

latlonlhlp1 between commlttM
men,Jien, chairmen, •~
dents In general ■re ext
ly
HMntlal In Unlveralty Ute. Thu■
vital relatlonlhlps are tuc:hlnt

Our Union 11 • center of activ­
ity; It 11 a place to which all
types of peopi. may come to mix
wilh others; it 11 a place where
one may mNt olher1 with slm•
liar lntere5ts, and It 11 a place
wlMre Ideas are bom, where
otlMn are le.."Tl
pered, and wh■re
still others oro abandoned for
MW .

Our union is a haven for person­
alities which mny act and react
upon one another, producing in
each person a healthy tolerance
for the ideas o! others, an under•
standing, a refinement , and a spirit
of co-operati on.'.'

students to senate commllltees and
serving as a t-onsultant to com­
mittees; Student Activitl,es, Fin­
ance, Elections, supcrvl!,es elec­
tlons of Student Association offi­
cers; National Studen t Associa­
tion Stcer'ing, Student Public Rela•
tions, Student Academic Affairs,
Student Welfare, and the General
Grounds. Special Committees in•
elude Civil Rights, Comvocation,
Peace Corps and Comm uni cation,

participation
In Student
and Union Board.

Senate

Thera wlll M • MCret■ry In
room 215, Nonon, frem 11:11
untll 5:llt every day. Appllc■•
tlons for committee memberlhlp
may be obtained , flli.d out a nd
left with the 1■ crotary.
"Keeping all this in mind," con-

eludes Miss Stefonettl, " I hope yoo
will take an active interest In your
union !his semeste r. You will be
learning when you least realize It.
The path of a student leader ts
not an easy one by any means. but
those things for which we strive
Rre the things by which we profit
most ."

Does this 11st of con11mlttN1
Ov■r'-fMlwerlng? It Is Indeed
long, but Nch of ti..1■ group,
has Ileen created to MrYe • spe­
cific purpffe In Unlvemlty llfe,
and all .of tlMm repre1Mtnt you,
the students of U.8. The Student
AIIOClallon 11 your voice, In Unl­
venlty affairs. Througlh these

seem

The students of U.B., in order to
provide ' outlets for the intelligent
and creative energy which they ex­
hibit , have organized the Student
Assication.
What lire th e stated purposes of
this University's Student Associa­
tion? Take n from the Preamble to
the Constitu tion, the general goals
of this organization are provision
for proper management of student
atfalrs, the execution of the re­
sponsibilities and right of a dem­
ocratic society, and provision for
a broader intellectual and cultural
development of students
These ~ the purpos es, but un­
fortunately,
most freshmen-and
ll!any upper-classmen know- very
little of the functions and organiza­
tions of Union Board and Student
Senate.
TIM sp■c:lflc purpo- of Un­

'

MIKI! LAPPIN

us how lio live and work with
other human · beings. All eur aca­
demic training 11 of no avail If
have never INrned to co­
.,.,-ate and just plaln get alo119
with otllen , We are 1Nrnl119 to
develop and brl119 forth tai.ntl
In ottien while we too are proflt -

1119
.
Th■M

relatlonslllp1 found In
ll■Md on mutual
lntef'eltl In all fields from Intel
l■ctual to toclal. New commlttM1

our Union are

are being added all tlM time as
the Int.rests and number of stu­
dents at ovr Unlvenlty up■ndL

Ion Board ■re tlM establllhment
of Norton as tlM center Univer­
sity community lit■, promotion
of atlHl.nt spirit and t■llowslllp,
crNtlon of broad social, cultural,
educational and recreational pro­
grams, and training of lflHl.nts
In i.adenhlp and tocl•I responal­
lilllty. In order to achieve these
~:,ala,■ II members of tlMstudent
body are ellglbi. to Join, and
Uf'91l
d to participate In the eight
sto1ndl119commlttNI of Union
Board:
Finance, House, Mixer, Music,
Public Relations, Recreation, Fine
Arts, Publiclty Committee.
The · standing coqmtlllees of the
Student Senate are al.so open to
all students who qualify academ­
ically and through previous l;larti­
cipation. They are: Personnel, to
encourage broader participation in
student activities by a ppointing

RACHAELSTEFONIETTI
numerous group, you rnay pro
tolf or pr1l1■ ti.. oper·atlon of
your sch11ol
, and you m,ay wen
create tlM rulH by whllch your
school Is run.
Yet, all Student Association com•
mittees are in great nee&lt;ilot addi·
tional members. This year is wit­
nessing the largest enro :nment of
enthusiastic freshmen andl transfer
students in the history of this Uni­
versity. There is no reason why
the Student Association cainnot con•
tinue to powerfully rep11esent the
University community, if this en­
thu.slasm is channeled in to active

(CJ\A.K
£ h\E

~y~ ..S\\O~]S
You}')

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f

•

NAVY JAMAICASHORTS...
In Cotton TWill With Two Side Pocke-ts
and a Self Belt-Sizes 7-15

3.98
(WHICH MEANS THAT)

I PROSPECTOR
PETE
]
Says

LETTHEMEAT STEAK(Nolfti119Less !)
Top quality steak, friend onions, Italian bread, topped with tangy sauce-­
still only 45c. -We intend to be first MAN at UB.

---

SO SWING WITH US DAD I ---

BaileyAve. (Just 'Northof Main,

111=
6-914Q

Jr. SllopUnivenityPlaza2nd Floor

�~riday, September 13, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGEFOURTEEN

Albert Cook, Poet -Dramatist SFO to
Heads English· Department FirSt of

-Dept. of Modern Languages
Gains Nine New Members

Present
Forums

By GARY EVANS
~cnily o : M1·n!rh, 1c~'l c7. nm! r
Mr . ' Albert s. Cook. u literary
i'ulbr!glit Prore :sor of i\meri car,
scholar . poet and dramatist, hns
Litcro!ur c- ;. t the Univc,-sily o;
been named chaimmn et the deVienna, 1960Gl.
partm~nt or English . He replne1!S
Dr. ~ar
A. Silverman , who will
retain his prolei;sorship In the depnrtment, but will devote the ma­
Jorlly o! his time to hls poslUon
·as -director or libraries.
. Mr . Cook, who holds lbe A.8.
and M.A. from Harvard, nnd wai; a
member or the Society or FeUows
ut Harvard Crom 1948-51, Is the
author of a number Qf critica l
works Including, The Darlc Voyage
and 11141
Golden Mean, I19491, a
s tudy or the comic trudlt1on Crom
Homer to Joyce; The ~an lng ol
Fiction, (1960); and two transla­
tions,Oedlpua Rex, t 1~7) and The
Odyasey, recently completed.
In acldltion he ls the editor of
the Odelpul RH ea.. Book to be
published in the spring, and a book
of poems, ProgP'tulon1 •nd Other
Poems, wltll an introduction by
Richard EberhrU't.
ALHRT S, COOK
He has writll'n several dramas
including, "Double Exposure" pro­
He was an asslstnnt professor of
duced by the Cl!!vcland Playhouse
In 19511and , ''Night Guard", pro­ English al the University of CaU­
duced on WCCI/ Cleveland and Comia, l!X&gt;J-56,associate prolcssol'
scheduled for production on WIBA, of Eni::lish and compa.rntlve litera­
ture, WeJtcm Reserve University,
New York.
Mr . Cook was a Fulbright Fel• 1957-61,and professor o! Compara­
tive Literatures at Western Rc~erve
low at thl' University or Paris,
l!r&gt;2{&gt;3
, Fulbright Research ProCes­ from 1961 until he uccrptcd the
BuUalo post.
llOt of Com))etutlve Llteralure, Uni·

Stud1mt Zionist Organization of
UB (SZOl will present the first in
a series of student forums on
Sunday, at 7:30 p.m. in Norton 234.
Thi.~ week's toplc will be, "How
today's students feel toward Is,­
rael?" A panel of four UB stu­
dents will present both po!:itive and
negative attitudes today prevalent
on the American campus. These
students, having recenUy been to
Isreal, will compare and contrast
their owrr experiences with today's
tre nd ol Zionism on campus. A
discussion period and coUeehour
will follow the foru m .
SZO becnme a recognized uni­
versity group last April. The pur­
pose or the organization is mnlnly ,
educatio nal, stressing the slgnJfi.
cance or Israel today, Its culture,
prob lems, history, and promise.
Future programs wllllnclude diplo­
mats, guest speakers, 1111dinform­
al student discussions. As a clos­
ing program las t year Isreal Dem­
bltz, consul general ot Isreal to
Toronto, addressed the organiza •
tion on the anniversary of Isreal
independence.

Twenly faculty member&amp; trom anthropology arid linguistics; Dr.
Stanislaw Mrozow,;ki. chainnan of
U.S. will be on leaves of absence
the depnrtment of physics: Donald
tor :196U4
.
Taldag leave will be Mrs. Cor­ Nichol~, assoriate professor ol art:
Or. Leo A. Loubcrc, ai;~ociate pro­
nelia H. Allen, professor or social
fe~s?r of history: Dr. Gordon R.
welfare; J)r. Arthur H. Buller, act­
SilbPr. chairman. of modem lnngu.
Ing dean or business administra•
tlon; J05eph Laufer, professor o( ages; Loulse F. Iloatmnn, assocln!e
professor of social wel.la.re; Dr.
law: Dr. Philip G. Miles, associate
Albert G. Fudell, IIS~OCiOt(' pro­
professor of biology; Dr. James F.
Mohn, associate professor or the le,sor of m:\lhcr:1ntics; 01•. Howard
W, Po ~I. profe~sor of chemistry;
School of bacteriology and immun­
Dr. Bc-njnmin H. Lyndon, dean ol
ology; Thomas J. Schlllo, asslstnat
dean of the School of Business Ad­ the School or Socinl Welfare; J.
Benjamin Townsend. nssociale pro­
ministration; Carlton R. Meyers,
fci.,or of English; L. Maxwell
associate , pro fessor of education:
Lockie, chuirman of therapeutics;
Dr. Jacob A. Marinskl, professor
nnd Dr. Jo~eph C. Houman, pro­
of chemistry; Dr. Henry Ll'e Smith
Jr.. chairman of the department of le:;sor o( physics.

The

All students who plan tc
apply for Regents Scholar­
ships /or medicine and den­
tistry must tal&lt;e the test
October 14. Appllcntions for
this test m ust be filed by
October 2. These applications
are available 111 medical
school, de11tal school and the
Dean of Students.

20 Faculty Members On
Leave for Academic Year

ger or the University of Illinois
ly RONNIE BROMBERG
and Dr. Philip Veit from Marquette
Nine additional Instructors have
University. They will be aided by
ex-panded the University of BuiCalo's
Department of Modern Languages two gradua te assis tants, one of
whom is _from Germany.
and l.Jterature this semester. Dr.
Dr. Wllme. Newberry has also
Leon l.Jvingstone, acUng chainnan
joi ned the Modem Languages De­
or the departmen t, also plWlS some
partment. , She is on associa te pro­
revisions in the program.
fessor of Spanish from the Unive:r­
Dr. J11cques Benat of Algiers
slly of Oregon. Dr. Martin Noel,
joined the faculty as on associate
a visiting pro fesso r of Latin-Amer­
professor of F rench; he is from
ican literature from the University
Wayne State Univers ity. Dr. Rein•
of Buenos Aires, was Assistant Sec·
herd Cuhin, another addition to the
relary of Sta te ln Argentina last
languages department, was a pro­
year.
fessor of French at the University
of Kansas. Jean Parlier Is the vis­
Dr. Julio Rodriguez Pu ertolas
lUng lecturer of F"ench. Four gra d­ will arrive shortly at UB. He wu
ua te assistants from th e United
a lect urer al the University ot Not­
Stales and one from France will
tingham and received his doctorate
also aid the Frenc li faculty.
from the University of Madrid . Dr.
The two new associate professors
Juan ,Zamora is another new in­
or Gennan are Dr. Michael Metz• structor ot Spanlabat t.bil ldlool.

Spectrum
Staff

Extends

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Our Sideline

�New Dean Heads Faculty
Of Business Administration
from 1960,1963.•Dr. Butler .,receiv­
ed bis B.A. degree from IMan•
cbester college in 1944, the ,M.A.
degree from the Univers ity of
Minnesota in 1946, and tbe •Ph. D.
degree from the University of Wis•
consin ia '1951.
[n a&lt;ldition to the appointment
He is the autho r ol '\Labor
o{ Dr. Simon •Rotlenburg as dean ,
Eeonomics and' Institutions,"
a
the following appoin tm ents have
been made , all but one e.Uective textbook for intro due:.ory courses
September 1, 1963. Three of the in labor ,problems, publ;shed in
19&amp;1. Dr, Butler is a member of
appointees are •Ph.'D. candidates
the American Economic Associa­
at the University of Chicago. They
tion, Industrial
Relations 'Re•
a.re:
search Assoclstion , ,~me r:can As·
John E. Drotning, effective
scciation o! University Professors
J1nu1ry 1, 1964. A graduate of
an:l the American Civil Libert ies
the University of Rochester,
Union.
Drotning was a topographical
·Dr. Rot enberg, who joined the
eomputor and surveyor with the
UciYersily in September 1932, h "s
U.S. Army from 1954-56
.
had an extensive career in both
Claude Hilllnger ls now working education a'nd government.
on a new concept nt Chicago cal•
•Before coming to U.B. he was
fod econometrics. ill dea ls with
construction economic models in professor of economics at Roose•
veil University, From 1956-61 he
which financial assets are viewed
was an associate ,professor of
as devices for reducing the van­
economics at the University ct
a.nces of consution strea ms .
Ch:oeago. He directed the ,Econo,
Tboina'S •W.· Bolland, workin g
wi. h the use and ap pUcation of mies Research Center at the
Catholic Uoiversi1y · o! Chile from
quantitative techniques in the solu­
tion of business problems. lffe lb 1956 to -958. In other overseas
currently working with a model of work he was director of the Lab or
Rel.:.lions lnsti.ute at the Univer•
a sysrem involving interaction be­ sity
of Puerto Rico .from '1950·52
tween distribution and invento ry an:.I director of the Social Science
costs.
Research Cenler at the University
Other new fa,cuJty members in• of Puerto Rico from 1947-49.
cluae: Philip 1Jt. McDonald, can­
I,n government work he was fS;
ditJate for the degree of Doctor
sociate labor economis t with the
of Business Administration at the
Harvard Graduate School of Bu&amp;1• War Product ion •Board in 1943 11nd
ness Administration in June 1963; assistant ecor.nmic analyst in the
Douglas M. Egan, caodldate for U.S. Oflice of Education from
tbe Pb. 'D. at the University of 1941.J943.
California, Berkley; •Willia,m P.
He has conducted nunlerous
Gellerm ano, Ph.D. candidate ai
resear, h projects, among fhem
UCLA; Harvey 5. Hendrickson,
1 grant-financed study on the
Ph. ID. ca 11dk!ate at the Univer ·
English sieve tt1da II well H
sity of Minnesota ; and Peter
res e a re h OB te chnologicel
Kares, •Ph. D. candidate at Pur•
chan91t in Latin America, labor
due University.
market and econo mic 9rowth In
Dr . Rottenbur g, ,professor of in•
Mexico, and industri al conflict
dus~rial relations at the Univer­
in the British West lndl1n I••
land of Grenda , AnlOllg the
sity since September •1962, will
become !Dean, eHective September
organiaetions In which he hold s
membership are the American
1~3.
Economic
Association,
Indus­
Dr. Arthur D. Butler, acting

Eight new appointments have
been made and a new dea-n h as
been named in the School of ·BUS1•
oess Administration at the State
University of New York at Bw•
falo.

dean of the School since Sept,
1, 1960 will be on sabb•tiu l for
the academic year 1963-64. He
will be studying 1nd co ndu cti ng
research In the wage ,tructure
of the European Common Mer•
ket Dr. Butler', offl;e will ba
In lrv ... ts, Belgium.
Joining the faculty in 1949 as
lecture .r, he was promoted to pro­
fessor of economics In 1961. He
served as Acting Dea·n of the
School of Business !Administration

IC you· re a !)&lt;'rson inclined
to put things down on paper,
like poetry, ~h()rt storie~.
grap hic art, or any num~1·
of the other for'!!, of ex•
..,,·e,;,ion, the "New Student
Rev'ew'' neech you.
The "Reviow", a variety
m:igazine star ted last year,
i;; o~ganizing Cor the comir.g
yea~. ar.d virtuaU.v au r.o­
sit!orn are open . If yo11think
that you just might be a
"new student". stop up to
Room 302 in Norton Union or·
{':Ul ext. ~(Ask !or Fran1ie)

This

seme3te r, several
new
courses .u-e being ot!ered In the
Modern Languages Department on
lhe advanced and graduate level.
Dr Li,·ingstone said that he "will
·m:bue I.he audio-lingual approach
111 basic undergra duate language
courses " This will be the second

Year tor the F'rench and Gennan
Ph.D. program at the university
and he "hopes' to initiate n Ph.D.
pmgram in Spanish."

PAGEFIFTIIN

SPECTRUM

Friday, September 13, 1963

Lafkiotes Named
Placement Head
ROSMARY
MORONE
Or. C. .Tames La!ldotes, a !Orm•
er l'C3ident of Flint, Michigan. Is
the new director or placement serv­
kes al SUNYAB. This position was
formerly held by Dr. Anthony F.
u&gt;renzetti, who left to become di·
rector o[ guidance services in the
Lancaster Central School System.
Or. Lafkiotes has a good back·
gtound for this job. He wns a re­
search assistant at Michigan State
University !or one year, and city
director o! guidance servkes in
Niles, Michignn, high school prin~i­
pal in Portersville, Michigan, and
teachc1· in Morrice, Michigan for
two years each. He has been as,
slstnnl school superintendent in
Flint since September. 1961.

BOOKSTORE
CROWDSINVADE NORTON

Mar1ne
•

Officer Training

Program to Be Discussed

Dr. Lafklotes received his BA
from University of Michigan in
MaTine Captain G, W. Ryhany­
1$1, his M,A. from Columbia Uru•
versity in 1952, and his doctor'&lt;1te ch, Officer Selection OU!cer wd
1n euucation !rum Michigan Stat e vis:t the campus on October 2-3
be :ween the hours oC 10:00 a.m.
Unlvel'sity in 1961.
and 2:00 p.m ., to ciiscuss the
The placement bureau perfomlll M3rine O[t:cer Train ing Programs
vital &amp;ervlces tor UB students su,'h tv niloble to college students. a'!ld
as gcne1'81 placement, whieh a,;. interview those students interest­
sists men and women in finding ed.
full-time employment in business.
Captain •Ryhanych points out
Industry, and government, also cdu­ that au Marine tn;ning in the
cutional plac.,ement which helps stu­ undergraduate programs {,Plato-,n
dents In finding desirable po.iiliore. Leaders Class) 1s dcoe during I.he
in every field of educo.Uon. 'fhe
summer with no interference dur·
bureau also assiJts students In !ind• ing the school year. Other fea•
Ing part-lime and summer employ• lures include starting monthly poy
ment. To accomplish these ends.
up to $6~3.00,selection of training
It otlen; assistance in lnlerviewuig ei:her as o 1Mc rinc Pilot or Mar:.ne
techniques. special seminars. an&lt;l Groitnd Ot!icer; a'lld assurao-ce oi
lettCl'·Writing.
a commission with immediate as ..

signmcnt to active duty upon
graduollou . The Platoon Leaden,
Class Ground Program is avaU •
able only to freshmen wlllle tho
Platooon Leaders CIJss Aviation
is available to freshmen, sopho­
mores, and ;unlors .
Captain Ryhanych al.so states
that [or the college senior the
Marine Corps a commission UPOII
successlu l completion of ten week
Officer Ca'lldiclate Course. Again,
the option of selecting ground or
aviation training is ,provided.
For further inform:ition see
Ca,ptaln Ryhanych when be visits
the campus, or write OI!icer Sf-.
lect'.on Olficer, Rooms 1222·1224,
Shlmes Building , Syracuse, New
York.

...

----

:ft ft~

KLEINHANS
THJtUWAYPLAZA

DOWNTOWNBUFFALO

90ULl!VARD MALL

Sport Shop and College Shop

trial
Relations
Research
As•
soclatlon, American Association
of University Professors,
and
th~ Royal Economic Society. He
h 3S written many articles for
various l)Ublications based on

his research.

,Dr. Rotte~berg recei ved lht&gt; Ph.
D. from H:nvard University in
1950 and the MA . ,n 4918. H~
completed u1dergratluate studie;,
a'. George Washington University
ing 1939.
Dr . Joseph A. Bergantz, Profcs·
sor and Head of the Department of
Chemical Engineering, was a mem­
ber of n group or nine pro[c-~s:irs
of chemical engineering, chemis­
tl'y and finance who visiled the Re·
search Laboratories and Offices of
the ll crcules PJwdcr Com~y.
Inc. ln Wilmington, Delaware. Aug­
ust 20 and 21.

All students who wish to
contribute to move m e n I s
which are in the forefront
of the bu:lle for t'q\18) rights
a-::1opportunities may make
such a contribution today
nod Monday In the S11J,dent
Senate office, from 1: 30 to
3:30.
Michael Shapiro will be sel,
ling equallly buttona lo all
:hose persons who wish to
co:itribute S1 to the civil
r.ghts cause.
Mr. Shapiro is doing this
under the ausi,ice,; of the
Studenl Senate and John Tra·
ler, Chalnnar1 of U.B.'s dvu
rights committee .

Headquarter,

for Authenti c

University Styles

NC'ltu
ral Shc~lderSport Coats

l

University men are outspoken in their praise
cf our Donald Richard sport coats. Th ey have
lhe .radiliona l, natural shoul der styling lbat
i, highly preferred, in correct pattern s and
~hades. Second Floor, Downtown. AlsoThr uway Pla za and Boulevard MaJl.
'
Pleatless Slacks In Flannel
ancf Reverse T;wlat. .....

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Natural Shoulder ,iuers,
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Donald RI.chard Natural
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t;.i :u ral Shoulder Zip Co1h .
Bulto n Down Collar Shirts
In New Strl.,.. .. ,
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, .. , • . . $_S.9S

�PAGE SIXTEEN

UBIntramural
Activities
Begin

Pro-Football
Predictions

Ir JIM SERESINI
At a large university such as
this It ls nearly impossible for all
prospective ath.letes to engage In
mtercdUe¢nte sports. In conslder­
etion of these students pos.,;esslng
athletic inclinations and abilities,
an extensive list ol intramural ac•
tivlties has been compiled by
Coat'h Muto, Director or Men's In•
tramurols.
Organiicd on a seasonal basis.
the sports lll'C groul)&lt;.'das follows:
Fall Season: TO\Jc
h Football, Ten•
nis, Goll, Cro.,;s Country.
Winter Seaso n: Swimming, Hand ,
ball, Basketball, Squllllh, Wrestling,
Volleyball, Fencing.
Spring Season; Softball, Track ,
Coach Muto points out that rra.
temltles, dormtories, and o t he r
organizations ma.y be represented
by an intramural team for a mini•
mnJ fee of two dollars,
Awards are prese nted at the
close of the Intramural season to
the lea!lli,g teams and individuals.
The sports for this Naton are
now being organliecl. All ,~,..
elted In touch football 1hould
wbmlt their namet lmmecll­

• toly. Tho fraternity IN9ue1 wlll
c o m p e t e on Tuosdar• •nd
Thursdays at 3:IS • nd 4:u,

whlle the r,malnlng lndo.-,clent
and rolldent league will be en­
gaging on Mondays and Widnes,
dors at the same times. Sept.
1' marks tho bot lnnlng of the
first week of competition.
Tennis competition will consist
of single eliminations in both
singles and doubles piny. The or­
ganiiation or this sport is Um·
iled to eight ·•singles" Rnd four
"doubles" tcnms Competition will
llkcwi~e commen,·e in the week ol
th&lt;.-s1xte.?nlh. Singles competitions
be hPld on Tuesdays and
Thursdays
at 3:15 and
4:15:
doubles on Friday at thP same time.

wm

An eighteen-hole modal play

tournament to be held on tho

ROCK'S PICKS

NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGUE
~AST
1. New York Glanls-Thc old

WEST
1. Green Bay Packe.-.-Grecn Bay will triump h again, however
mJt as easily.
2. Detroit Lion5-The acqui:;iaon of Ollie Matson from the Rams
could pos;ibly ful!lll the need !or a speedy back and could possl•
bly result in a tiUe.
3. Chicago llear s-The Be:ir3 could take U1e league title , but still
suc;n at least a year nwuy.
4. Ballhnore Colts-The Colts nre sdll senrching fer a topflight
fullback.
5. l\llnn e.;o:a Vlldnggs-This lcum will surpri;e lllllJlY who l!llder•
rn'.c It.
6. Lo$ An5o)ft1;Ram,-.. Bx-Giunts Harland Svure, head cooch, and
Roo,evelt Gr'er, ni:immolh tm;klc, give the Rlnts a new outlook.
':'hey could do better.
7. San Francisco Forty Nlne ,- With too many things locking, the
cellar s1:ems inevitable.
twont y•M venth of this month wlll

mark the opening of 9011 Intra­
mu ra ls. The deadline for regla­
lratlon In tl,ls • ctlvlty la Tues­
day, Septembor 24. Pairings and
starting times wlll be posted on
the twenty-sixth.

The Cross Country event will
conNist of the l½-mile jog nround

the Grover Cleveland golf course.

..,_,....
ATTITUD■

U of I DIUVIUi.S­
LOOK OUT
Hv111ry U of I Driven

WlfflN l'N1y t9 hli.­

-

• their care wllfi •J!INffle

.....,.,,
.. °"tflolr ••r
c111t11111
whllo

"Yov couhl have•

~

accl40llt--Llke tvr11J111
Ill
at of our Cot'II,.,._
-, 1, I meanof lmlt1tere places.'' CAI""
tlono4HOll,Y, "anllMilMy
Wl llb
that te hap,-.... of all mol

TIie aver.,. U ~ I
dnYW la compete nt, alMI
llaJ 11vlck ren.usHenry
111d, but llffletfmta 11
ea,lly "latrctN , -,.cla l­
ly ~ ..,..._.,,

M...._

"Pay M •"9ldiOllt9 ""'

fMV•

1111.,.. ,

r.tlows,"

Wlr-ned Hoftry, .. . ._.
loor, rou are •llftfl'YIII

HENRY
'S
Hamburgers
Nationally Famous

Sheridan Drive
Cornw N.F. Blvd.

l

U one is interested in partlci­
puUng in intrnmurals this year,
contact Coach Muto in room 213
at Clark Gymnasium. The orlgi•
nu! deadline for registration in the
fall season's even.ts was Thurs·
day, however, in view ol the fact
that this publication is not on cam•
pus until Friday, names may be
submitted today.

AMERICANFOOTBALLLEAGUE
EAST
l. Buffalo 8111s--One loss isn't a , season. The Bill's are the best
all around team In the AFL and will win the title it they stay
healthy.
2. Heuaton oti.r.- E very champ has to be dethroned and from
the way George Blanda bas been throwing the football into the
opposition's hands, this could be the year.
1. Boateft Patriot- This team could mak e things rough for all
concerned provi ding Babe Pari W lasts the sea.son.
4, l\low Yoo, J•~- i.ew nu.me, coach, owner, and sta dium still
spell last place.

WEST
1. ~,..n 0 109,1 Cha,.,.,.._ All ot last year's cri pples are back and
each shoutd add much to bring the Chargers back to the heights
attained during J ack Kemp's days.
2. K•n111 City Chlef.-. The Cbiels will really have to work lhL
year to win another di vision title.
l . Denver Bronco- A host of fine dra(t choices could help the

Broncos this year . .
4. Oakland Raldor-The Raiders should improve on their 1962
ca mpaign but not enough to escape the cellar.

1962 Football Statistics
When the 1963football Bulls take
the field tomorrow attemoon sev­
eral of last season's statisica l lead·
ers will be Included in the group.
Jl111Surd's 246 years from scrim•
mage in 63 attempts was good tor
a respectable 3.90 yards per carry.
John Clmba was second with 244
yards In 63 tries for a 3.87 average.
Speedy halfback Bob Edward car­
ried 49 times for 231 yards, while
Tom Butler Jugged the pigskin 28
times for 114 yards.
In the category of pass receivi.ng,
Buller caught eight passes for 173
yards and three touchdowns, Larry
Gergley caught seven for 130 yards
and two touchdowns, Dave Nichols

hauled in seven for 114 yards, and
Gerry Ralkewicz caught six for 106
yards.
John Slota took scoring honors
with 40 points, Tom Butler was next
with 20 points, Jim Burd with 19,
John Clmba with 14, Don Gilbert
with 12, Larry Gergley with 12, and
several others made the score­
board for eight or less points.
Bob Edward held the number one
position in punt returns by run•
back five for 61 yards. Buller, Clm•
ba, and Stora were next in this
classification with records of tour
retums for 32 yards, four of 17
yards, and two for 40 yards respec·
lively.

Today's
most
interesting
students
read
TheNew
York
Times

H1mburger-Bulleti"

rooo;i HUMILE

p:-o, should come through again pro­

vic!inr; Y. A. TIiiie's anc:ent arm Ill.Sis the season.
~. 0 Jlb~ C, wb , y5-Bet:er ,c:en;;e ad&lt;led to the o:.ilstanclingoffense
cuctlrl me.in o, Utlr.
:i. Cle1elanJ Brown:.---Newcoaching a ttitude concerning quarter­
wil1 b"X&gt;;;morale, b:.it many un:mswered q1Je:itionsleave
b:, -:~n-,
doubt as to u ht-eher (lnish.
4. Washington Re J , kin!l-Pat Richter should help to take some ot
the heat oU of rec:elvcr Bobby Mitchell.
5. SI. Louis Cardlnal5-This club could tinlsh higher ii the quarter­
backing improves.
6. Plttsbu~gh St .. le.-.-Succcss will depend on the job,1 done by
two Individuals-Ed Brown and John Henry Johnson.
7. Phlladolphl1 Caagle5-Lo ss ot llnl?backers John Nocera and Chuck
Bednarik will hurl the defense.

HENRY'S

~

Friday, September 13, 1~

SPECTRUM

I

Why don't you? You'll find it a
rew11rding daily :idtlition to your
college days and stut!ieR. It keeps
you on top of today',; exciting
events ... helps you in a variety
of courses ... give,; you vital back­
ground fot· discu ssions in and out
of the clas sroom.
Why not sign up for a subscrip­
tion today'! You'll like the conven­
ience of campus delivery of The
New York Time s ... to read and
enjoy before classes begin and at
your leisu re throughout the day.
Your New York Times campus
repre sen tative will be glad to
serve you with a copy early every
morning &lt;1tSJJUial collegerates.

DonaldGuastaferro
17

SouthLane

Orchard P.trk, N.Y.

�Frid•y, September 13, 1963

SPECT

R UM

PAGESEVENTEEN

beforeor after the ballgame
Make your first stop at McDonald's. Whether

.

McOONALD'SAMAZINGMENU.
Pure BeefHamburger

ha ve a pan·y of two, four, or twenty, we can serve

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Tem·pting Cheeseburger
. . .. . .. . . .. .. . . .. .
Triple-Thick Shakes ..... . ..... . .........
.
Golden Frend1 Fries . .... -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Thirst-Quenching Coke ....................
Delightful Root Beer ........
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Steaming Hot Coffee ... . . ................
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r-u II- Flavor O range Drm
Refreshing Cold Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

19c
20c
12c
I Oc
I Oc
I Oc
Io c
12c

yo u in a fe w seconds eac h. You 'II be pleased and
surprise d to find out just how good a I Sc Hamburger
can be. McDonald's Hamburgers are made of t00%
pure beef, government

inspect e d and ground fresh

daily. They're ser ve d piping ·hot and delicious on a
toas ted bu n. Come in today ... pou'II get fast, cheerful, courteous service ...

no tipping ...

food in town at extra thrifty prices.

lh• drlw••ln .,,,, ,,,. arch••

I

1385 NIAGARA FALLSBLVD.
•

you

Y2 MUe I North of SHERIDAN DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
&lt;Adjacent The Boulevard Mall Plaza)
Open Friday aacl Saturdayuntil 1 :00
Operated by the JERRY BROWMROUTCORP.
'

.

the tastiest

�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHTEEN

Friday,September 13, 1963

First tea m honors were also won by Dennis Pryi,kut a,
sophomore fullback. The young line-buster ·has ,the 'size,
speed, power and ability to become a fut ure great.

Senior scatback Jim Ryan earned a
position on the first team throug h his hard
work and determinatio n. As a freshman ,

the Penn sylvania gri dder led the team in
scoring.

BOCCE
CLUB
For Quick
Take-Out Service ,.J
4174 N. BaileyAvenue
Call TF3-1344
Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sun.-4

- 12 Midnight

Friday and Saturday-4 - 1 P.M.

..
&amp;IB85I
,

'

WELCOME

YOU'LL
LIKE
THEBETTER
TASTE
Of THEBEER
BREWED

Welcome to the Class of '67 and to all our new
friends on the Campus.
To all our frie nds who are with us again Welcome Back.

MEL·O·D
RY

It is our aim to bring you fine en tertainment
through a discrimina ting choice of motion pictures.

FAMOUS SINCE 1842

•

•'"-~--~~~f'!'Jlf..

It is our inte nt and purpose to make your visit

to us a pleasant and enjoyable one .
All our programs are available to all students
at a special discount rate. This red uc,ed admission
may oe ob.ame~ upon presentation 'of proper I.D.
We shall be looking forward to serving you.
The Management

.

�Frid1y, S.pNmber 13, 1963

PAGE NINETEEN

SPECTRUM

· ettysbur11

Previe

. UB Bullsto Face Gettysburg
· tn Season Opener, Saturday
By ALAN NEWMAN
After three weeks . of pre-season
drills, the University of BuUalo
Bulls will kickoff the football sea •
son against the Gettysburg Bullets
tomor row afternoon at RotlU')'
Field.

~

'

TIiis wlll be the opening con­
t11t for the Injury pl•tv" lul•
lets, who will be trying t9 nenge
the 4W whipping wtllch wa1
,u,,.,_ at the hand• of UI Iott
MHon . Gettysburg coach, Gene
HaH, hat been faced with Nvtral
probloms and has 'already Ileen
forced to mlliko polltlon chan,n.
Phil Pal'IOIII,IHt INr'I leading
groulld galnor (or the lullet1,
camo up with a tpralnod ankle
during eno of the practice N►
,Iona and wlll p,_.bly Mt action In tho......,.
r.mornw
.
The Bullets atta ck will be spear•
headed by Vance Johnst on, who as
quarterbac k in the finale of the
1962 seaso n agains t Tem ple turned
in a tremendous perf orman ce. With
tbe temporary loa of Parlonl,

C o a c h Offenhamor 11 right•
fully cautious In his predlctflftl,
Tho Gettylllul'1 tNm 11 bewn
fer Ill strong lhowlnp In ....,
openon H ovldencod by Its
hanl fought 1.. 1ng effort to luf..
falo two 1Nton1 age (IJ.7) ,

Haas will move e.lther Barry Cru­
ber or Harry Buzzcrd Into the
right half slot. Ken Snyder will
start at his left hall position.
Due to grade prob lems Hnas has
also lost two of his most promising
linemen, Bob Nelson, a rugged
200-pound guard, and Ray Flick, a
225 pound cente r ,~ Because ot
these losses and the sma ll number
ot candidates, 37, Haas has made
several position changes.

The UB team has been weakened
slightly by the loss of twelve letter­
men including punter John Michno
and high-rated tackle Kevin Brink­
worth. Outstandi ng prospects from
last year's freshman team will
su pply the depth the team needs .
Roger Casciani, a 195-pound end
has been moved to guard. Sopho­ The Bulls are strong in the back­
field at every position, with Long
more Ron Zazworsky was switched
trom fullback to center. Irv Stro­ John Stora handling the quarter•
backing chores.
hecke r will be alternating between
his o~ tackle slot and the guard
Also sparking the Butta lo oUense
post.
th is year will be halfbacks Tom
Butler and Jo hn Cimba and end
Mary Snyder a nd Bob F urney, a
pair of lettermen from the 1961 Latry Gergley, team co-captain.
'The other co-captai n, Ger ry "King
squad who did not play last year,
ha ve held their own at t he work­ Kang" Philbin, has a ll the att rib­
utes of a great footba ll player;
outs and should gai n starting
size, speed, tllld desire. Ham pered
berths . Snyder Is a form er end,
while Fume is a dura ble 212· by Injuries last seaso n , Phi lbin
may very well be the key to the
pound center.
Bulls s uccess this year.
Alttleuth tN lull, are tile fav•
Last seaso n, ln thelt· freshman
season as a major team, the Bulls
crunc through with an impressive
&amp;3 record Coach Offenhamme r
being quietly optimistic has hopes
of Improving upon tha t per form•

..........
--.._,..

VANCI JOHNSTON

ance.

Frosh
Football
To

Playing one of the Onest games
of his caree r in the final engage­
ment of the 1962 season against
Temple. Vance J ohnston has gain­
ed the starting quarte rback assign­
ment against BuUalo In the sea•
son's ope ner Septembe~ 14.
Johnson, who is primari ly a punt•
er; fired 12J)ll8!leS agairuJt Tem ple,
and completed seven for 187 yards
and tossed two TD bombs . The
Biglerville, Pa. native Is only 5' 9",
but handles himself well. He calls
a good mixt ure of plays and knows
how to run with the ball when he
gets into trouble. Johnston is a
senior.

Dl•-■ •W..._

JEWELRY--'-"COlftffl
J•••!rY
11_,.;,,,,9
OPTICAL
w.tc1i _,

SIRYICI

i.w..4•.,ww.o.-i-

UM'ttlfTY
PWA
PA. 5415

FaceHardSeason

PHILPARSONS

Anyone wondering about the fu.
ture quality of UB footba ll might
ta ke a look at the Frosh team and
the schedule it plays. Five of the
six games to be played will be on
th e road against such powers as
Syracuse, Anny, Navy, and Col•
gale.
The 1962 frosh with ·a simila .r
sch edule fared well, ea rn ing a re­
specta ble record.
Las t Saturday, In a scrimmage
against Stoia, Cimb/1, Cergle.y, and
company, the 1963 Frosh made a
good showing. Coach Dewey Wade
felt his team dld well afte r so few
practices. "Nick Capuana was out•
standing," exclaimed Wade, "and
Dick Dunbar and Bruce MacKel­
la.r did well on defen,e."

LAUNDERETTE
TFl-0060

Main St.
TheSPECTRUM3230
Cor. Merrm1c
now printed

by

'Partner'sPresstnc.
Abgott &amp; Smitft
Printing
1381 Kenmore Avenue
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284
LETTEtlPRESS• OFFSET

..

~

ONE STOP LAUNDRY &amp;
DRY CLEANING

Student Rates:
SHIRTS-20c
KAHKI PANTS
RNISH£D--40c

The schedule for Frosh football
this season ls:
Army-October 4-AWBY
Colgate-Oc tober ll-Homc
Navy-October .19-Away
Manllll!r--November 2-Away
Ithaca - November 8-Away
Syracuse--November 1!&gt;-Away

''Support

the
For the lirst time sin~ 1933,Get1Y~burg Colleg will open a new
~~m()aign with elected co-capt~.

The two elected IQ lead the W63
Bullets are junio r end Mark Sny•
de1• and senior halfback Phil Par ­
'!lms. Parsons was named to the

r1rst team AU-Middle Atlantic Con-

ference, univf:!rsity division last
season alter he led the confer­
ence ln rushing. Snyder did not
play last season due to a knee in;
jury, but seems ready for the job
cut out for this season . Snyder is
a fine pass receiver and excellent
defensive end.

Buff
alo's OrlvTrulv
NewYorkStyleRestaurant

Steinhart's
3498 SHEltDAN DRIVE
(Ju st 8 Minutes From UB)

W ITH A LONG TRADITION OF

Bulls''

FINE KOSHER CATERING
I
I Open 7 A.M. to 1 A.M. D1ily ind Till 3 A.M.
on Saturdly
•••••••••• •• •••••••••• •••••••••

�Frfd1y,September 13, 1963

SPECYRUM

Spectrum

*

Sports

Hard Hitting, Hustle Prove to Be Factor

Sports Cirele

8y DON CAITLI!

By ROCKY VERSACE

The fall season has once again arrived, and to cer tain
individuals this may symbolize different things. A novice
freshman may visualize it as the first step of many in pursuit
of a lofty career , &lt;&gt;
r , depending on the person, may see things
on a more social level. A biology professor may marvel at
the splendor of falling leaves as they distribute themselves
throughout the university whHe a campus lawnkeeper sees
on ly additional work in gat hering the foliage. Varied as these
attitu des may be, the ou tlook oi one man on the UB scene,
head football coach Dick Offennamer, never seems to stray .
When "Uttie '' received his present position, he was also
ottered tht: tremenuous cno1•c 01 moialJlg the Bull grid team
uno wnat L'OUJu OI! terme&lt;J a gOOdmaJo,· college squad . Hut
one p1'&lt;&gt;ulem11nmect1atelyconu ·omed tne former (.;01gatehal f•
batK. ·rn:n JS, betore Ul:i could become a good major college
team Jl had to deve lp into a good small college team. 'rh1s
plateau was atta ined m the fall of 1958 as Butfalo rolled to
an 8-1 season , and in doi.ng so acquired the Lambert Cup,
symt,ol of the East's number one small college team.

U1st Salurday, In preparation tor
Its season opener , the UB Bulls
went through their final lull-sc:ale
S&lt;:rhnmage. Both the oUensive and
defensive play, acl'Ording to head
coach O(!enhamer, showed Jm.
provement over what had been dis­
played in previous scrimmages. A
ltey factor in the improvl'd hard
hitting and over all huslle is the
tact that no position is reall y ac •
counled for .
Sever-di gridd..-rs excdled in ltw
two hour eta.sh bul the fullbn ck~
displayed the besl performances as
sophomore Dennis Pryzkula and
seniors John Cimt&gt;a and Jim Burd
all ran well , Pry.ikuta showed

breakaway speed that won him a
starting position.

luNI 11114
ClmlMI _,.
•-•
In t"9 der.tlslYe llackffeW mak•
Int _,al
lnterc:eptMlla,
et
whlcll lurd ra11 !lack 25 yHrl
for • touchdow11.Bolh alN madt
opo11field Jaclllot.

-•I

Qunrte1·backs were also in the
llml'light Saturda,y as Don Gilbert,
J ohn Sto ia, and l't!serves Fred OU•
r-.mko, Fred Geringer and Ron Ri•
dol!i all passed and moved their
offensive teams well. Gilbert ac ­
counted tor a score on a 45-yard
scrcen-p.iss.play to Jimmy Ryan.
The longest
pass of the day ,
was a Ron Ridolfi lo Frank ViselU
&lt;.-omblnation good for 64 ya rds. The
longest run was a 45 yeard jaunt
by Dick Vittorini ,

At this point Buffalo 's schedule began to improv•
and Offie's hHdaches develped proportionally . He wa•
forced to m.. , lar9er and more established football
powers with hi1 small college materi al. Short on depth
and often out,manned , Offenhamer frequently found th•
road upward • bumpy one , but he still managed to make
the opo1ition know th•y had faced a tough 59irit.d tHm .

With each season the gridders improved, but so did the
schedule. Entering the major college ranks in 1962 for the
fir~ time, the Bulls made it a winning season by emerging
victorious six limes in nine attempts.
The assignment of major c-01lege status marked the sec•
ond plateau in Offie's upward journe y. And this season, as
in nearly every preceeding one, loom again the questions,
"Can Buffalo do it? Can Offenhamer do it? Can Buffalo reach
the third pla teau and become a good major college team? Ma•
terial -wise, the 1963 Bulls are undoubtedly the best in the
school's histor7, but so is the old equa lizer, the schedu le .
Whether or not the University of Buffalo attains the
third plateau this season, or next , or the year after that , is
really a trivia l matter . The important fact is that under the
indefatigable leadership of Dick Offenhamer the Bulls will
eventua lly make it. Yes, Dick Offenhamer has taken Bu{falo
lrom the Courtlan d State-Western Reserve level up to where
this school ean compete equally with the Eastern major pow­
ers , and all in a few shor t years. Win, lose, or draw, this writ­
er believes that Coach Offenhamer will' play every game
down to the wire in the fashion of a true sportsman .

AthleticProgram
NeedsSpectato

The merger ot the University of
Buta lo with the State University 01
New York has altered lllllllY of the
traditions, practices, and, particu ­
larly, the mearu; of support of the
private Institution . However, "un •
der the State University system ,
the Unlvel'!!ity ot Buffalo Athleti c
Department has been designate(
as a strictly sell-supporting oper a• •
lion, with no state funds or ai d
possi ble. " This s tatement from llol1
official press release of the Qth .
lctic department c learly indicate s
the problem it faces in order to
support an athletic program oJ 3
national, major-college caliber .
''The amount of budget previous ­
ly underwritten by the private Uni­
versity of Buflalo can best be mad ~
up thfOllgh an add iti onal hom e
game attendance of 4,000", not iD­
cludlng the I.D. card admissiion ol
full-time U.B. students. The Bull 's
1962 home attendance averag ed
9,619 in generally foul weathe r , en·
abling th11 program to operat e
smoothly on a sound financial
basis. ln fact, U.B.'s "1962 home '
attend.a nee rahked third among the
ten teams on the sc hedule. Ohio
U. ranked No. 1 with ll,355 per
game, and Holy Cross wtl.'l second •
with 10,973." However, additiona l
support for an exciting, enjoyable .
and, hopefully, sucreistul football
seaso n ls necessary tor continuin g
success of the program.

Bulls
Rank
20th
Buflalo's 1962 Bulls oot•
rushed opponentJ;, 1711 to
1000 In net yards. Buffalo
finished second, nationally. in
punt-return defense by allow­
Ing only 1.1 yards per op­
ponent's punt ret urn. Buffalo
was listed 20th nationally In
rushing
defense.
allowing
foes 2.9-1 yards per nish.

DON GILBERT

Cross- Country Team to Encounter

Overcrowding Impedes Expansion

Heavy Season Schedule This Fall

Of Intercollegiate, Intramural Sport s

the loss of severa l of
yt•ar's veterans. lhe Slate Uni­
versity's cross-co untry leam , coach­
l&gt;dhy Emery Fis her. will encounte r
an excl'ssively heavy sched ule with
a. solid nucleus ol experienced dis•
lance runners .
Stuan Kutz. la.st year's MVP,
Dick Sulltvnn, capl!u n of the squad.
veterans Cant Wcil!cnbach and Ed
Lontmto, and newcomers Ra,y Muel•
fer and P.ene Hensel wiU head the
aggrt&gt;gale ,tlong with last year's
MVP freshman. BUI Suedmeyer. II
1s hoJlt.'(I th.ii Su&lt;'tlmeyer. Mueller
.1nd u,,n.,,,•I, .. 11 1111
Ill lhc gups le.It
b}' Ouw ;,.1r1&gt;lll'lWll\ und Chester
Cooley. who i,;rad1mtl'd 11,stsprlnf'.
Bob lloffma.n ,md p,,1cr Stem will
ruund 001 thr squad.
The le•m1 will mei:1 such eastern
._,,Uege pow&lt;'~ at Syracuse, Col­
i:.ite. Cortland. :mcJ 1tw Universlty
ol Toron to as w,·11as ~cveral stro ng
small colleges 111 lhc area. The
harriers will also ,·ompt•te against
such outstanding i.thleles a.$ Bruce
Kidd, BUI Crothers, Tim Bun,.~. Md
others
The 11ehedule· ~·r1. ~•,,t. :.:o.
Despite

ta11

Brockport (.home); Sept. 23, Canl·
si1111thom e); Sept . 77. Syra cuse
thomel ; Sept. 30, Buffalo Stat e
thom el; Oct. 5, LeMoyne Invita­
tional ; Oct. 9, Colr,r.ite thome\: Oct.
12. Alfred ; Oct. 16, Niagar a; Oct.

19. LeMoyne (ho01el; Oct. 22, Gan•
non; Oct. 26, Canlsius Invitational;
Oct. 29, Cort land \homel; Nov. 5,
R .I.T.; Nov. 9, N.Y.S. Oiampion•
ships .
Any freshmen lnte~ted
in cross-­
country, but who have not signed
up, are urged to slgn&lt;up at Clark
Gymnasium 3:00 p.iri., Monday
through Friday .
The freshman rootballteam
ha s
b e e n handicapped
throughout the years by the
fact that accurate records
and statistics of the gamc 9
have never been compiled .
U 8f1Y student would like to
WISWll4! the position of $tatls •
ticlan for the frosh gridders
be may do so by conlacting
coach Dewey Wade at tht:
atheletic ottice or by phon­
him a t extensi on 2937. Any \
person acc epting this position
wlU be a ble to accompany
the tea m to such schools as
Syracuse, West Point , An •
1111poli
s, and Manll us.

COACK IIIHY

,i$H11t

" I think the new group of fresh­
men will generally see a won,ening
ol conditions here at the Univer­
sity," stated J im Pee lle when
asked by the Spectrum , "What
changes In U.B. sports will the
present f~hmen
observe In the
11ext, four years ! " The athletic di·
rec tor here a t SUNYAB felt that
-our pres ent status in football will
continue ; but he also made the
point that , due to ove~rowdlng of
the school's already a ntiquated ra­
ci llties, both int erco llegiat e and
intramural sports . will suUer .
In addition , the chances for ex•
vanslon In the intercollegiate pro,
gram will g row ve ry dim . Mr .
Peelle further pointed oot that use
of the Clark gymnasium faciliti es
by other groups in recent yea rs ha.s
~ alread y seri ously
added to th.$
cro wded t.'O
ndi tions ,

I• Ille warda, "If all4 .,..;;

a

pe,tt.11 ., the n mllllff ftlla r11
allocahld hr hlhll119 cen•
atructt.11I• uMd for • eth•
letlc facility auch as • Re!Aou•
or fflllMalum , the IIIIWCallef
latt program will h11p-. "
Mr . Peelle seemed to feel t!IAI
new and more adequate facilillc•
allOWing for the rapid improv emcol
ol such relatively new sports ·"
hockey and indoor track, would
greatly enhance such firml&gt;' es­
ta blished sports 8ll basketball, and
could easily lead to the lnc\usivn
of sports not now listed In the 1.).11·
versity 's athletic program .

AJi tor th e prospects o! such "' w
fa cilities, according to the dil·r,•
tor , they are as yet wicert aln, bvt,
out of sheer necessi ty , we shOuld
see new devel opm ents in thiS at\'•
"Un til then ," he slated turthir
"It seems that we will ha ve to '"'
our bes t with a ,P"Or situation. ·

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>E
X
T
B
A

E

x.
A
STATE UNIVERSITY 01' NEW YORK AT BUl'l'ALO
CONCERT

FOOTBALL

NEWS

ROUNDUP

(See Page Three)

SPECTBUM
BUFFALO, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY ,

VOLUME 14

PTEMBER 4, 1963

NewFroshOrientation
Program
This year's

freshman orientation

will be somewhat

diUerenl Crom

what it has been in the past. The
program will center itself around
the intellectual aspects of college
life.
An academic convention will be
held in which there will be a series
of concurrent meetings of fresh­
man groups and !aculty members.
During these meetings the faculty
members will present to the in­
coming students an idea of the
scholarly work in which they are
involved. Students will choose, ac­
cording to t h e i r own interests,
which program to attend in view­
ing the scientist. literary critic,
medical researcher, and others, at
work.
The program outlined above is
being considered as a stimulant

to arouse the freshman class to
the k.lnds of meaningful and excit­
ing frontiers of the various disci­
plines they may enter.
The decision of the orientation
commillee

stems from the belie!

that entering students are prepared
lo come to grips with the academic
environment of the university, and
that though social events do have
importance, an orientation program
which overemphasizes that aspect
ill prepares the student for lhe
more significant educational oppor­
tunities.
The Orientation Committee also
plans to increase the program for
transfer students. Thursday , Sep­
tember 5 from 2:00-3:00 p.m., a
panel discussion entitled "Cross
Over The Bridge" will be present­
ed in the Conference Theat re . Fa-

( See Page F'our )

culty members, representative of
several academic areas, will dis­
cuss with each other and with slu­
dent_s their lhoughts and i d e a s
which can enable transfer students
to 1make the acljustment to thei1·
new academic environment.

All freshmen are in­
vited to attend a tea and
coffee hour to be held
Wednesday, September
12, in the multipurpose
room in Norton Union
at 7:30 p.m. This will be
a wonderful opportunil)~
to meet and talk with
students from around
the world.

No. I

THE

PRESIDENT'S
MESSAGE
. One of the real joys of a university President is the oppor­
t umly to welcome each new entering class to the univers ity.

There ~vasnever a time in the history of civilization when so
much importance was placed on trained intelligence. The
very con!inu_anceof our way of life may well depend on you
and others like you who have recognized the value of a col­
lege ed11cation.
Have you asked yourself lhe serious question , "Why
have I come to the University?'' There are many answers
lo this question . But as each of you sort out your own answer
l hope that you have said to yourself, "I have come to this
Un~versity so that I might be able to develop my capacities lo
their fullest extent, that it is my hope here to become all that
I am capable of being."
. It. i~ a clich~ to say that each of you will get out of your
~n.1vers1ty_
experience what you put into it. But cliche or not,
it 1s a trmsm t~at has been de~ons!rated by many previous
college generations. No one will spoon-feed you here . How
you ~pply you~self, how many hours you study, what you
I do with your time, how successful you will be will be dele1mined by you.
'

ArisFestival
ToBePresented
· ForNewStudents
140.Mr. Rosen is an accomplished
concert pianist. Alfred Franken­
stein wrote in a recent issue of
High Fidelity Magazine that Charles
Rosen "Is the United States' an•
swer to Glenn Gould. Rosen·s per­
formances are superb." His ron •
certs and recordings have been a~­
clalmed by all who enjoy and ap•
predate fine music.

The Orientation Committee will
present an evening called "The
Festival of Arts." Thursday eve­
ning, September 5, at 7:00 p.m.
Four programs will be presented
simultaneously, and interested stu­
dents may receive a ticket to the
program of their choice Wednesday
and Thursday at the Norton ticket
booth.

Theother

option for students who
wish to attend the "f'estival or
ru,ts," is the movie production,
"Ballad of a Soldier," to be seen
in the Norton Hall conference thea ·
Ire. A Russian film which has won
awards at the San Fran&lt;'1sco and
Cannes Film Festivals. "Ballad of
a Soldier" is one of the finest Euro·
pean films or recl.'nl ycnrs.

In Baird Hall Auditorium, under
the direction of Jim Mohr, a play
in verse by Chpstopher Fry en­
titled "A Sleep or Prisoners ," will
be presented. The production is be­
ing sponsored by Norton Hall and
Summer Session at SUNYAB.
Folk singer Robert Mahoney will
entertain in the N o r t o n multi­
purpose room tor all those who pre­
fer ballads and songs. Mr. Mahoney
is well-known throughout the Buf­
falo area as an engaging entertain­
er.

MACMAH
ONEY
A piano recital will be given by

Charles Rosen in Capen

Hfl,

room

The Orientation CommiHee t•n­
couragcs aU freshmen to aurnd on,·
of the above r1rograms IJl'III!: ul·
!ered.

.
Where will rou find the University? You will find it
11:1
many_places-1_n the classroom. in the laboratory, in the
library m _talks wit~ r?ur professors, in new friendships, in
exlra-cumcular act1v1t1es.But wherever and in what com­
bination you find this University , you have before you four
important and glorious years.
Ben Ames once said:
"Life is the acceptance of responsibilities or their
eva~i~n; it is the business of meeting obliga'tions, or
av?1dmg them; to every man the choice is continually
being o_tfered, and by the manner of his choosing, you
may fau-Jy measure him."
. It ~ill_be l~e task of those of you who are entering the
umvers1t;: ~n this era to make many more crucial decisions
m unfam1har areas than past generations.
•
This ... your challenge. This is your opportunity .
.

All of us wish you well in this enterprise. It

,1 Ill

be our

JOYto share these challenges and opportunities ,11th you. It

1sour hope that we may get to know you personally
C. C. Furnas , President

�7

S P EC T RUM

PAGE

Wednesday September 4, 1963

TW~0
~ ------------~---=---------7:----------------''--

THE SPECTRUM

ISPECIAL
TRANSFER

, llt &lt;&gt;!IICJAI
•tuuent ncw,paper or the State Unlvcr,Uy ur New Yori&lt; ut
llullAli&gt; P11bllrnt111n0111cc ~t Norton Hall, Unlvcn,ltytc:atmhpf•111Bullako
/~·:1~
o • • wee
,
l'Utllltllr4
wHkl&gt;• 11'(),n the loot wec,k of September
u.-~ 1,1 hH ,.,m per!OO• ThankBg1v1n1,Chnstmas ond Eoster
Edlt■N~hltf -

Nrwr. Editor
tdllorlill
Advisor
Firn,nc·lnl Advisor

ARNOLD S. MAZUR
.JOHN KOWAL
MARY LOU WIT.SON
, Wit.LIAM SIEMERING
.THOMAS HAENLE, JR.

"-11\tr~ os se,·oud ch"• fodter February 0, 1961,at
cue Post 0111«, nt Bul!olo, N '(., under the Act o( Morch
3, 1879. Acooptance ror molllna at a special rate of post•
provided for In Section I 103, Acl of October 3, 1917,
•\&lt;thoriied February 9, 1951.

•K•

Sub•crlptlon

f!l 00 per year, clroulotlon

6500,

for natlohal odvertlstne by Net!onal Ad·
1·•~rs1ne Servtc«, Inc ., 420 Madl!lon Ave., New York, N. Y.
Rcpresente(I

Editorials
WELCOME
This issue of the Spectrum is especially designed for
the freshmen of U.B It is our official weJcc,me to the class
of '67 and with It we offer our best wishes for a succes~ful
college career.
"Success" at college is a term which may be defin~d
differently by persons who view college education from dif­
ferent standpomts. Vague references may be made to the
library the various groups and organizations, the classroom,
away-f;om-home opportunities, etc., in ~iscussing the '_'pro•
per ro:id'' to "success." It may sound like fatherly dn bble
to the frosh, and may very well be.
Perhaps such advice should concentrate upon the goals
of a university education a nd not so much upon th~ means
for attainment. The freshman should be concerned with what
he is here for rather than bow he is going to get it.
And on this note, it may be wise to discuss the values
of an incoming freshman, though no true generalization can
be made. Freshmen enter a university as high school gradu­
ates, boys and girls, and hopef~Ily complete their studies as
men and women. Such maturity does not come about by
merely reading the required tex~s. Nor does a student become
a man by playing with the girls.
The advice The Spectrum offers is that the freshman, in
order that he may undergo the metamorphosis of becoming
a student, and finally a man, exp erience. That is, he should
become involved with and feel all that he is capable of. For
without any such internal digestion, the freshman will simply
memol'ize facts, read words, dance and be frivolous, and gain
nothing more than spent time.
--------------1

OPEN INVITATION

-"-1----

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS

STUDENT
PROGRAM
Each ot U1e past years bas seen
a signilicant rise in the enro llment
at our University ol transfer stu­
dents. This year the re are almost
400 such persons.
Previously , \rans !er stu dents were
oriented towards U.B. ll!e along
with the int-oming freshmen. How­
ever, this past year n group of
t,nner tra nsfer stude nts hea ded by
Ann J ackson and advisor Dr. Doro­
thy Adema planned a two-day pro­
gram spec i fically designed to cope
with the problems of trans rer stu-.
dents and aid In their integra tion
into our university t-ommunlty.
This program opens today with
a welcoming conference arranged
by CO-&lt;.'hairmen Allen Yasgu r and
Peggy Madden. Materials regarding
orientation and U.B. will be distri­
buted to the trans rer students at
this lime. The Norton recreation
area wftl also be opened for their
use.
A luncheon will IJe given the
translcr students , at which Deans
Richard Siggleko w, Jeannlllte Sc ud­
der. and Roger Gratwick will at­
tend, along with Dorothy Hans, Direclor o[ Nor lon Union. Assistant
Dean Jo hn Walker and Robert
Walker will be the ho11ored guests
at the luncheon.

1--------------------------­

A convocation program will he
hclrl at 2 p.m. !or the trans fer stu­
dents and Creshmen, at which Dr.
G. Lt&gt;slet· Anderson will speak.

Amon'1( the other activities plan­
nect will be a "gl'ipe session" on
the tcrracl• ol Norton Union, al
which time l'e!reshments wiU be
served . 1\1.soplanned. for Thursday,
Sl!pt. 5, will be a panel discussion
prep1,red by D on .n a Izzo. The
them;_, o' the discussion w!U b,::,
' 'cross 00ter the bridge.'' Informal
discussion will follow the panel's
program In whkh faculty members
WUIJ)afl\cipale.

tNFORMATION
FOR
PRIVATE
DINING
i Norton Hall takes pleasure in an­
uouncing the nvallabilily of prlnte
dinin g l'ooms fol' your convenience.
N◊ room charges are made to st\1deK laculty, or stall organizations
reserving these rooms. A nominal
rental lee ts assessed outside or­
ganizations and reservations
for
tiles!'.' gro ups s h o u I d tie made
through Miss Ethel Sclimidt at 831-

NORTON
UNION
ISFAVORITE
FORVARIETY
OFACTIVITIES
Norton Hall is the l'Dmmunlty
center for all members of the
university family - students, (acui­
ty, administ rative personnel. alum­
ni, and guests.
The union provides for the se1v­
ires , conveniences, and amenities
members ot the university family
need in their dally lite on the cam­
pus and for gl'tling 10 know and
w1dcrstundone another through in•
formal association outside the class•
l'OOhl,

The union has become one of
the most highly complex and spe­
cialized kinds ot building. 11 houses
dining halls. tnlormatlon counter
where candy and cigaretles are
sold, a ticket booth, lounge. meet­
ing rooms, conference theatre, stu­
dent organization
(acillties, the
music room , a browsing library,
a craft shop, recreution area, ball­
room. l.,ookslorc. and a master

The Spectrum staff. invites all rnterested freshmen tu
join in the ~ublication of the University's newspaper.
The myriad of activities involved in the publication of
The Spectrum affords the student opportunities which t·a11not easily b&lt;'ennumerated. Staff members cover news and 2207.
feature stur1es, apply their photographic skills, intervfow
A listing ol the rooms which will
guest lecturers, entertainers, and members of the university be made available and the room
communit&gt;.review theatre and movie productions on campus capacities may be obtained from
and in the metropolitan area, and gain experience which the Norlon reservations ollice.
might otherwise not be gotten.
Thi' rooms
are available tor
The publication of a newspaper is a challenge to one's lunch('()n meetings during the hours
o! 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Mon­
creativity, knowledge,and capabilities. The rewards are great. day
through Friday. Arrangements
can be made for all size groups.
These areas are available year
around. includlng the s u m m e r
months.

STUDENT
PANEL
DISCUSSION
TOBEHELD
FORFRESHMEN

The rooms may be rl'.'scrvcd for
lurll'hcons, or a Bpt'&lt;!lal cafl-teria
line lo provide "t hrough the line"
luncheons is open lor large groups.
AfflOlli; tho many and d\VOl'~1• 11~•· dal opoortunlly to s pea k wllh
DOROTHYHAAS
ReSC'rvations (or lhese rooms may
t,vitll!!l b&lt;!h11:pn.&gt;scntc,,dby tht' Ori,
Norton Plrector
'be made by conta cti ng the Reser­
those lhnt haw come before lhl'm.
entatlon Comnu11ee wl.11 be stU•
Top,c-s whkh may possihly IH' vattons OUicc, 831-3541 Crom 8:30
dent -to--sturtent pa n e l discussions.
a.rn. t\l 5:00 p.m., Monday through
cakndar ot ull events ol inter&lt;'sl
d1scuss&lt;.-dwill depend upon th,;
·rhese Wtll lake 11lace Thu1odt1)', 11anehsts nnd the 1·oursl' ol tht• dts•
Fridll.Y, or by applying personally
10 college sludents.
September ::.. bciWl'(&gt;n 2.00 11,111 ,·ussion. These mily include dlst·us­
In room No. 115, Norton Hall.
I The union uses sud, facilities lo
and 3:00 p. m
k;ons of lhc ud1 ant ages and disad ­
The Tiffin Room, a service res - , t·un·y on a wide ranging educa•
Upperclass111i!n llilve been l11v111~l vantages or the lecture hall vs, Uw taurant located on the second (Joor
tional and social pl'Ogr-am supple­
1
10 refiect Upt,TI the l!Xpeclallons,
sm11II dassroom, the problr111s of
is open 10 the public. and features
menting and enco u1-aging formal
or lhc ",:;ftNl sludt•nt," th!'.' extent to an all ractive and varied luncheon instruction in the dassroom. Dur•
successes, and disnppointmentb
their colleee years. Su~h u pro~r:1111 wlnrh student~ should partlt•i'patt• menu . Table reservations may be
ing the year there will be concf:'rlS.
should prove to b.&gt; lnterestin~ to 111oq,:ururations and ••Mra•&lt;·urrll'U• made by calling 3600 on Mondny
lectures covering a wide range of
lhe newly anivl'll ft'('shmen. tor
lbr IIC'll\'11/('S,flll'Uity-blUll1·ntrd a
thl'Ough Priday during the rcstau­
to11it·s .art displays, lorc-ign films
they mny gl1!n i.rus1i;htinto thl' 11ro­ lions, itnd a host or oth1'rs.
mnl's ope1·ating hours, belwee11 Md many other programs.
blems they will Url&lt;Jouhledly ell,
'J1w\'Ordination o( tlus 1'\'c'llt h:t.~ U:30 a.m and 2·00 11.m and 5:30
Nut•ton Hall Is Ull('II Mo n d a y
l'Olmter Rdn!llhlllenl~ will (olJ&lt;,w b&lt;'&lt;•nundrr the rlir,·qion ul Thoma~
p.m . to 7:00 v m Th.- 1'1Hin Room
throuiih Thursday from 7:00 a.m .
thc- J,1Uncldiscussions, during Whl('h KollCJ~ It •hould 1u,1w 111lw 111tc11·
•
W 11::10 p.m., F1·iday and Sutur ­
is also ot)l'n on Sunday tro1111~:00
.
lime 1111!fl'('$h.men will lw.1·1•il Sp&lt;.'· ITlllll\ ,. to 1111
a.m. lo fi;(Xl p.m.
du)· fro]1 7:00 a.m. to 1:00 a .m.

and Sundays from noon to 12:00
a.m.
Dining tadUlies are located dn
all floors of the union, the ground
floor housing the rathskeller, the
fir~t floor, two cafe terias and a
large banquet hall; the second
floor , meeli ng and dining rooms
tor group luncheons or dinners and
The T iffin Room, a service restau­
rant. A vending lounge is located
on the third floor. Food is avail­
able during all hours of operation
In one or several of these areas.
Students may !ind it convenient
to have their evening meal in the
Tiffin Room, which is ope n from
5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Rooms may be
reserved through the reservations
office, room U5 !or meetings of
student organizations, private gath•
erings, coUee and dinners.
The bookstore is divided into two
ureas, ground floor and first floor.
Textbooks and requil'ed .readings
may be found in the ground noor
al'ea, and commercia1 products are
located o.n the first floor. Opera t­
ing hours are Crom 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. weekdays and 10:00 a,m. lo
2:00 p.m. Saturdays. An arr sup­
ply store is located in Foster Hall
operating from 9:30 a.m. to 4-: 30
p.m. weekdays and 6:30 p.m.to
. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday evening only.
Bowling lanes, pocket billiards,
table tennis, chess, and other recre­
ations can be found on the ground
floor o! Norton Hall.
Students may take advantage of
such facilities as bowling leagues
and toumaments that are conduct­
ed during lite year.
Norlon Hall is a member of the
Association of College Unions and
paMiCiJ)ates annually in intercol­
legiate toumaments:
men's bowl­
ing, women's bowling, pocket bil­
liards, thl'ee-cushion billiards, tahle
1onnis and chess. Campus touma•
ments are conducted during the
rail semester to determine teams to
represent the University. All full
time students carrying a 1.0 aver­
age are eligible.
A shop is available with basic
tools lor most crafts Including a
Poit(•r's wheel and klln on the
g, ouml !loor opposile lhe textbook
n,::,part111cntof the bookstore. The
('l'lll't!I-'!!Mp is under the direction
or Mrs. Irene Lahr. Individual lis­
i('ning booths ar e il\'al lnble in the
sl'cond floor music room, and Uiere
,s a Jarj!e sup ply ot l'ecords rongt1'urn

to Page 3)

�SPECTRUM

Wednesday, September 4, 1963

PAGE THREE

MEN
STUDENT
AS
·SOC.WEEK
PLANSALLENHURST
TOCREATE
ACTIVE
INTEREST USEBUSSERVICE
By DONALD STILES

The Student Association ls spon­
soring Student Association Week,
September 5-10. This being the

first time such a presentation Is
being made, It shnll bl-gin during
and extend into
Orientation W~
the beginning of the first week of
classes . The program benefits both
the incoming freshmen and the up­
perclassmen.
Intended ..to enlight~
students
about the Student Association and
its varied activities, the display
will be in the Dorothy M. Haas
Lounge. The display has been pre­
pared by a special committee con­
sisting of members from the four
divisions of the Association: Stu­
dent Senate, Union Board, Publi ­
cations Board, and Student Judi­

More than 900 (reshmen will be
housed by the University this com­
ing .year. As in the past, lhe Allen­
hurst apartments will be used to
accomodate lres.hmen men and
Goodyear Hall will h o u s e the
women .
The Allenhurst apartments, parl
of a garden apartment development
located ap proxlmatel,y one mile
from &lt;'8fflpus, provide clean, etfi­
clel\t housing tor the students who
live there . Each apartment Is an
Individual living unit containing a
living room and dining area, both
of which are used for study, and
a kitchen for those who enjoy a
midnight snuck.

ciary.

PRES. MICHAEL COHEN

Each division will be represented,
des cribing its membership, purpos­
es, and activities.
Hopefully, Student Associa tion
Week will allow the studen ts at
SUNYAB to become more familiar
with this most essential of student
organi7,ations a n d, consequently,
develop a more active interest in
the activities which take place on
the campus.

Almost 550 men will be living at
Allenhurst this year, not all of th em
freshmen . E a e h apartment will
house five students and ii used
e.Wcientl,y, each st udent will be
afforded am ple privacy.
Students will be tran s110rted to
campus by bus service. The buses
wlll be availabl e Monday through
Friday between 7:00 a.m. and niid­
n1ght, six hours of the day on Sat­
urday, and three hours on Sunday,

ELECTIONS
FORFRESHMEN
COUNCIL
TOBEHELD
ATCONFERENCE
HOURS
All fres hmen will be attending
the conference hours which will
be held spe&lt;'itically for themselves
on Monday and Tuesday, Septem­
ber 9, 10, 16, and 17.
The freshmen will be divided into
groups consisting ot 100 students or
more. There will be 14 such sec­
tions.
It will be during these conference
hours that freshmen will proceed
to e le c t representatives
lo the
Freshmen Class Council. There will
be 14 representatives on the coun­
cil, each representing his pa11lcu­
lar s~tion.
Elleryone interested ln l'I.IMlng
for Class Council will be .asked to
remain after the first conference,
in order to obtain the rules and
petition involved in the electio n.
The petitfon will have to be signed
by a certain number or percentage
of students in the student•~ section
and will be submitted to Mr. Wll-

The bus service is .possibly the
most vital service given the Allen­
hurst residents, tor it meets the
needs of those attending classes,
eating in the r~idence halls, and
those who wish to study in the
library or use the facilities of Nor­
ton Union.

son's office in No,·ton Union by the
end ot the week.
Durin g the second conference
hour, Sept , 16, 17 those students
who wish to run lor Council will
be asked to deliver a two minute
speech. Alter the speeches are de­
livered, the individual sectio ns will
vote for the representative of their
choice.
The Freshmen Class Council will
later vote for the , officers of the
freshman clall5. The duties of the
council will range from plannin g
the events w hi c h comprise the
freshman's year and provide lead­
ershi p for their class .
House plan units will eventually
evolve lrom the various sections
which will meet. All freshmen are
invl(ed to participate in all the
activities, and may note that mem­
bership in the House P lan Associa­
tion does not preclude even tual
membership in a Iraternity
or
sorority,

~upe,vision of the All ·nh u r s 1
apartments will be directed by
Clark Maloney, Assistant Supervis­
or of Housing . Mr. Moloney will
be assisted by Alvin Love, heaJ
resident, and William •}ale ;m,l
James Gelchoni.s, assistant hea I
resident.
Goodyear Hall, housing women.
will accomodate approximately 400
freshmen and 100 upper classwon ,­
en, Providing excellent accomodi.­
tions, the Goodyear· residents will
expe rience none of the diUicul~es
ot campus housing that their lrfsh­
.
.
men counter-parts \\111

f- -------------

­

Whether or not you
have ever worked on a
newspaper before, there
are opportunities for
•,such work available on
the Spectrum staff.
There are openings in
both editorial and busi­
ness positions, as well
as circulation, copywrit­
ing, proofreading, and
reporting.
For all those interest­
ed, the Spectrum office
is located in Norton
Union, room 355, and
the telephone number
is 831-2210.You are wel­
Ct.•meto join the staff.

VARIOUS
POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
STUDENTS
NEEDED
ATWBFO
''This is WBFO, the State Uni­
versity of New York's educational
radio station at 88.7 on your FM
radio."
This is a station identification as
tar as the FCC is l'On&lt;.-erned
, but
is hardly a sufficient introduction
for new students.
Since the invention of radio, far ­
sighted educators at leading uru•
versities with a keen sense of social
responsibility, have felt radio W!IS
an inexpensive and effective medi ­
um of communication by which a
large audience t-ould receive the
benefits o( a university. With the
recent explosion of knowledge this
need is greater Uurn ever before.
Air pollution, nationalism in the
mid-twentieth century, problems o(
delinquency, talks about Shake­
speare by British scholars , opera.
and a recent recording of the nine
Beethoven symphonies are all pro­
grams planned tor the c o m i n g
Year on WBFO. The se ar e exam ­
ples of program s dealin g with cur­
rent atCairs as well as the finest
cultural program s .

To achieve this goal, W 8 F 0
draws on the resources of our own
campus, those of other universi­
ties through the National Associa­
tion o[ Educational Broadcasters
tape nework, and the British Broad­
casting Corporation .
It naturally takes many students
to assist with al l the many tasks
necessary to a smooth running, pro­
fessional sounding, radio station. If
you are a good student (it does
take time) and have a related In­
terest such as classical music, en­
gineering, history or current a!lairs,
speech or writing, you would be
most welcome to participate. Since
the station is on the air between
5:00 p.m . and 11:00 p.m , you
should be able to donate some time
during that period. No experience
is necessary for an orientation period will be held. reyou are interest­
ed. fill out an application in room '
232 Norton or come to 1he Baird
Hall studios Wednesday, September
11, at 7:00 p.m . for a general meet­
ing ,
If you can't work at the s ta tion,
we hope you'll hs tml

THE TARRJERS

FIRST
CONCERT
SCHEDULED
JAZZANDFOLK
MUSIC
SLATED
Lionel Hampton, formerly of the
Benny Goodman Bond, and the
Tarricrs, a popular folk smgmg
group, will appear in concert Fri­
day, September 13 at 8:30 p.m , at
Rotary Field. under the 1111spices
of the Concert CommittlX' or Ih(&gt;
Union Board.
Advertised as one of th~ tcm fivl'
players of vibraphones in the t'Oun•
try. Lionel Hampton will present n
broad progrmll of classics in the
Cleld of jazz.
Brought ba1•kfor orientation week

by popular s111dent dunmn&lt;l artt•1·
their appcaran('e here lust !nil. Th1'
Tarriers are a group of lour mi-n
who per form a wide rai1gt• ot mu~tc•
lrom popular ballads to folk soni:~.
They hav e appcared on th•• ADC
TV program Hootenanny and l:u11
year toured the Unitl'd S!ah·s wllh
Bobby Darin.
Tickets will go on sale Monda,y,
September 9 al the tirket hooth l11
U1e lobby ol Norton Union al tht•
price of $1.5(). Ge ntlemen are askt~1
to wear spon jackets and lies.

CONVOCATION
ATROTARY
FIELD
OPENS
ORIENTATION
PROGRAM
Chairman Brent Steele will wcl,
come au incoming lreshmen and
transfer students al a Convocailon
at Rotary Field. today at 2 p.m.
The orienlalion program has been
planned to accllmnte the incoming
sluden ts to life at U.B. and to
Impress upon thl'm the importance
of an Intellectual university aim~
sphere. Though a dance and other
entertaining programs have been
scheduled, · the orientation program
has given major emphasis to the
more sober aspects oC the Univer­
sity.
All the events and p r o g r a m s
which have been scheduled will be
made available to all (reshmcn and
transfer s tud ents who wear "dinks" ·
and identification tags. The events

inducle u piano re1·1tal, foreign film.
folk singing entertainment. a drumu
in Baird Auditorium, discussion tl C•
tivit1es, and an art exhibition .
The Orlentnlion Comml!tt'I' 1s
hopeful that the pro~ram will he
a rneaningful event to all tho~r who
altend .
Master of ,·cn'ntonies fot• tlw
Convocation will ht• D.._.anRirh ,11-i.l
Sigglekow. The program. 1he fir•!
orientation program ever to b&lt;&gt;ho•hl
at Rotary J,'1cld, wlll prcsc•nl llw
Rev. Paul N. Carnes to dehver lh&lt;'
invocation and bent!cJiclic&gt;n
, and ad
dresses by Michael Cohl'n . 1'1·1••1dent of the Student Ass oda.li on.
and Dr. G LestC'r Anderson Mu~h·
will he J)rCS!!ntedby th e U.8 . R11110
under th!' dit"C&lt;·tionof Frank (' 1po lli1

HAWAIAN
DANCE
TONIGHT
NORTON
TOBEDECORATED
A freshman dance . lhe "Hawaian
Hi-Ya ." is scheduled to be held
' 1oday, September 4, in U1e multi­
purpo se room of Nor1011Union.
To aid the Oril'nlallon Committee ,
a lmost 150 lncully members ru,d
administrativ e personnel l'Ct'l'ived
invitati ons to this welcoming dance
for freshmen nnd transler students .
Th e Orient ation Committee has
made an c•ltorl 10 insure a tun­
tilled da111·e lor everyone . While

I

l'l'freshrnents will he s,•rvc~i on lhl'
Te rmc·e ol Norton musk wtll be
provided by the .)a ll PTl'lll'htrs ,
Pineapplt:&gt;s endrd c-d hy i&lt;'IS will
dn'Orate the faculty tabl ,•s. l!l)On
entran&lt;:e lo the dunc·e. ,•adt ~tu
dent will be presentro with a lc•i.
in true Hawaiian frt&lt;hinrt. In •li~­
c·us.~mg the dance , Ma rlt'm• \'o" 111kt'I. SO&lt;.'lal dll'\'clor for 11ri1•11!allun
actav1taes, spo~e o[ th,• 11!u1n• ,ts
" thl! lype of so&lt;'lal atm uspht•rt• t o,
I~ found on i-ampus ."

NORTON
UNION
1Conunu od rrom Pagt 2J

I

I
'"'

ing rmm class l~al to modem jav.
aml folk m usic'
Movie,;. rc crea ,ionril p a rt I C's ,
d.ant·c:&gt;
s a nd many o:her s pecial a ctl­
Vltte s ,trt• h,•ld lhroughout lhe YP!IT ,
Notice• of su r h 1•1ent s may be found
posted 1111 bullNln bonrds , A foot­
ball game scw111Ihour follows euch

,•r
homc:&gt;gum£' in 1hi- rarhsk ,•11
During exun11nullon p,•rnid$ ,\ ,,r•
lun Hall prol'tdt •• , ttocly lll'l''" 111rn1C'd m var, ou.~ roum, Ih1"1111,:
ho11t
the buildin g._ Dur m.; 1lw norm.ti
year student s ar e ,•11,
·our :1.;,'&lt;.III&gt;
utilize thr third fJ,,..,r low1i:.,• •.11
1
the not'th s 1d,• o l th1· bu1lel111
~ r,,r
studym i;

�Wednesday, September 4, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

11

Sports

Spectrum

*

*
Ill I

11

U.B.BullsExpect
Excellent
Year
ToBellerSolid'62Perlorman

THE 1963 UB BULLS - 1st row (1 tor) Den•
nis Burden, Joe !Iolly, Jim Duprey, Gerry
La Fountain. Fran Viselli, Ed Turek, Russ
MacKellar, Skip Adams Ken Shakan, Brian
Kent, Tom Ruiolfi, Fred Geringer, John
Basta, Ron Ridolii, Vince Greco, John Sav­
age.

2nd row - Leo Ratamess, Bill Sitler, Mike
Lucidi, Ken Kogut, Jimmy Ryan, John Cim­
ba, Armand Martin, Co-captains Gerry Phil­
bin and Larry Gergley, Dan Nole, John
Stora, Jim Burd, Tom Butler, Dave Nichols,
Bob Edward, Don Gilbert Jim McNally.
3rd row - Jim Ratel, Craig Helebrook, Jim

Pusateri, Dave Lewis, Bruce Harl, Dom Pie•
strak, Gerry Pawloski, Ron Holly, Tom Oat•
meyer, John Hutchko, Nick kCastiglia, Joe
Garafola, Dennis Przykuta Dick Vittorini, E.
Greenard Poles, Fred Duranko, Cliff Pood­
ry, Jim McNamara, Bill Taylor.
Rear row - Mike Zeif, Mgr.; Jim Wolfe,
Asst. Freshman Coach; Dewty Wade, Fresh­
man Coach; Charlie Reeves, Line Coach;
Buddy Ryan, Line Coach; Dick Oppenham­
er Head Coach; Ron LaRocque, Backfield
Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; John
Sciera, Trainer;, Craig Hort, Asst. Trainer;
Asst. Managers, Mikt Jasek
Mike L,­
siecki.

and

In order that the freshmen class
might better understru1d this sea­
son's football schedule, and put it
into per'Spec1ive, las( year's record
migh( be discussed. Dick Ollen­
hamcr's BuUulo Bulls could well
be dnssiffo(l us the "surprise"
tl'a m of th e East last year. The
Bulls lirst season as a major team
and Stale U. representative result­
ed in a 6-3 record . . . much to the
amazcml'nl of most pre-season pro­
phets .
1'he success of last year may be
attributed to many things. Possi­
bly the mosl outstanding reason
was the strong UB ground attack.
The Bulls out-rushed the opposi•
lion by a margin of 1711 yards to
1060. This contributed greatly to
the Bull's victories, winning five of
the last six games.
Said Co a c h OUenhamer, "Our
I

record is the result of a unllied
e ffort by the entire squad and
&lt;•oaching sla!f through about every
kind of obstacle you ca n imagine.
We had a tough, hard-working
squad. They took their llckings and
after each one they came back."
And obstacles the Bulls did have.
As one sportswriter observed . "On ly
12 of the 22 members of the first
1wo units, Including three of the
eight backs, were able to play all
the games." 1962 set a record for
disabled Bulls ... and much credit
should be given to trainer Jolm
Sciera for his invaluable services.
II will be no surprise to UB fans
thls year it. with a healthy squad ,
the Bulls improve upon last year's
record. The coaching stall and
players are dedicated and hard •
working. And the f a n s will be
watchi11g.

II

I

STATEU.-BUFFALO
1963 FOOTBALLSCHEDULE
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
• Nov.
= Nov.

14-Gettysburg College . . . . . .
21-0hio University . .... . ...
28- Holy Cross .. : . . . . . . . . . .
S- Villianova Unil(ersity . . . . .
12-Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
19-• Boston University ......
2- University of Delaware . . .
9- Boston College . . . . . . . . . .
16-Colgate . , ... , , ... , .....

1:30

2:00
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:30

Home
Away
Away
Away
Home
Home
Away
Away
Home

=
~

f:
-

i"

~
-a

~

• .Home com ing
t&gt;I

i

![

I

I

Sports
Slated;
Freshman
Fencing
Starts
TuesdayMany
toJoin
TenMenNeeded
ForFirstTeam froshAsked
Candidall•s !or 1hr t:B Freshmnn
FmNn1: tram nr&lt;' in\'ikd to atll'nd
thr fu'St prncta·r session, Tuesday
rvr11ini;, Scp1t'mbl'r 10. 1l will be
h('l(l in Clark Gymnasium. b"gin•
mng a1 (i: 30 p.m.

fundamentals of fl'ndng. but if a n
ambitious freshman tries out for
1he squad and is picked, he may be
able to join the varsity t ea m .
Coarh Tony Buzzelli. in discussing
the freshmen team, said Lhnt no
l'XJ)Crienl'e is n-x-e..sary . . . "only
n 1\illingness to learn a new and
i1\l1•rcsting spo11."

All lh&lt;' n1&gt;&lt;
·r,~nry t'&lt;tuipmcnl will
b&lt;•supplied lo thust• intcrcstPd in
Jomi11i: 1hr squud. cxcl'Jll sneak­
ers and ~Wt'at shirts. The squad
will prat:lJ t•r rrguln1·1) on Tuesday
and Thursd11y o'\'l'llini::s at 6:30.

A l'Omplete schedule ag;Jnst such
st•hools as Com!'II, Syracuse, Roch•
rstl'r , Hobart. and Toronto is pres•
rntly being arranged. Matches, both
Tl•n frl'shmrn \\Ill r1·rntually be home 1111daway, will be held be­
11wkrd fo1 llt1· Imm. It 11111take
ginning in December and ending
1
.,lmost t110 111u1111ts
h• lr11m 1he
m Marc~ .

I

The University of Buffalo offers
te n inten -ollegiat
.
c sports ranging
{rom football to golf. The sports
progrnm of the University is de•
silned to inter est a wide va riety
of' intert'Ollegia1e, intrumura l, or
cl8S$room sports enthusias(s.

Anyone interested in participat­
ing in the University sports pro­
gram is asked either to contact
the coach for the sport or to drop
in at the offke of James E. Pee le,
director of ath letics, and leave your
name, the sport In which you are
interested and your telephone num­
ber. Mr. Peele's office is located
on the second floor of Clark Gym.
Anyone interested in a manage r 's
position for intramural ot· intcr ­
rollegiate teams is r'('(Jlleslcd to do
the same .

"Support
the
Bulls''
QUARTERBACK JOHN STOFA

..

CO-CAPTAINS GERGLEY ANO PHILBIN

BullsSchedule
"Birds
andBees"
Fullpractices
whenclassesbegin
Dick Offcmhamer's 57 UB Bulls ,
appear to be the nation's leading
conte nders for "First-College-Team ­
on-lhe-Field" honors a g n l n this
year.
The Bulls, launching thrir srcond
season as an NCAA major club
nnd their 56th collegiate campaign ,
r·esumed the "Birds &amp; Bees" st·hc­
dule .. , taking the field at 6: 15
a.m. Saturday, Augus t 24. Then
the Bees (2nd hair of squadl drill ·
ed at 9:00 a .m . At 3:-10 p.m. the
entire squad reported for a two•
hour session . This dally schedule

I

1\111be maintalned un!il s c ho o l
opens on September 5, or until pro­
grl'ss warrants a change.
The 57 candidates , includi ng 16
lrtterrncn, reported to the BuUalo
rnmpus on Thursday, August 22
for a 6:00 p.m. dinner. Friday
mornmg was devoted to physical
1•,an11nat1ons and l'quipment issue.
Pr ess and TV photo time was
, r h!'dulcd !or l :30 to 2: 30 p.m .
on ~' riday . . . followed with
lilt' r,rst "full -go" session nt 3:00.
Th cr&lt;' were no workouts on Sun­
day .

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                    <text>STATE 171UVERSITY 01' NEW ,roRK Al' aonuo
'

Annu al Var sit y •
Alumni Cla sh
April
( ij(•~

/IIIUI'

No Clo11ct1

SPECT ..R-UM

27
J :/ I

Moving • Up Da y
Friday, Apfll 26

BUFFALO
, N. Y., FRIDAY
, AF'RIL 19, 1963

VOLUME13

Honors Banquet Schedules Infection Strikes
Charles Noble to be Guest Dorm Student :s;
By BARBA RA CO HN
Doo.o Chnrles Noble, Dean of
Hendrlclal Chapel at Syracuse Uni­
versity, will be the guoot sl)ell.ker
at ,[be fourth uonual Honors and
Aw&amp;rdl! Banquet. The bnnquet will
be held Tuesday, April SO, ln the
Norum mult1-pul'J)()Beroom.
Dea.n Noble hlll! been chaplain at
Syriwuse Unl~rsltysloce
1945. One
of bis outstanding cooceros at the
University Js the regular meetl.llg
discussion f,'TOUP called Co.ntempo.
ra.ry Conscience. These series at­
tract a great number or undergrad.
uates to hear gue!lt spea.kera, nnd
dlsouss t-0ples ranglog from religion
to the ntomlc nge.
Deao Noble also lectures acro8&amp;
the cou,ntry Jn conoe&lt;1tlonWith his
octlvlty In tbe YMCA. He le dlrec.
tor or -the New Y-ork State YMCA,
a nd Is chalnnan
of the na.ttonal
advlBOry commlt,tee on camping tor
the YMCA. Denn Noble was the
first president ot the Natlooal As·
,iocfat l.on of Chaplains.
Before 1946 he served ae
minister of a large church In
downtown Syrac use, and p, evl­
oue to t hat, he h eld various
pa,l• hes In the sta t e. He. re.
ceived hla B.A, f ro m Wil lia ma
Coll e ge ano' hla Bache lor of
Divi nit y fr om t he Union Theo- .
log lcal Se m inary In New York
City.
A limited 11umbel' of lnvitaUons
have been lseued to students who
will b6 honored at the banquet,
and to some of the many ,faculty
member• who have concerned them·
se lves with stud611t actlvltlea. Any
"tuden.t faculty members, paNlnts
nud friends may attend the ban­
que t; the a06t ot the 4ln-ner wlll

No. 25

Big Spring Weekend
Concert Will be Held

Traced to Fow·I

be $2,50. nod reservations mo.y be
made at the Norton ticket office.
Bl' LAWRENCE FRENKEL
The highlight In the 'l)res1111tatloo
Activities and of Spring Weekend will be well under­
or awards will be the announce.
Dr. Moser, Direvtor -0! t.he Erle way this week. Continuing from the student- faculty bas­
n11mt or the winner or the T. R. CoW1ly Health Departme,nt , an. ketball game Wednesday night through St unt Night Slltur­
McConnell Award to the •entor
day, the weekend promises to be an cxrit ing and fun-filled
who, In the judgme,nt ot the ad• n,&gt;unced Wednesday that the cau:.e
one for all.
ministration, baa contr1b utod most of th e food poisonlng u,at h11d
April 24 at 7:00 pm . Cl11rk Gym
t0 the UnlveM!lty COIDJDUDII.)'.Cal) infected st udents Bt the Uolver.
Will Ill! the Clllltcr of acljvlly f111·
and Gown, the senior women's
sity had been traced to a ..nip.
h®or society, and Blsoobend. the
bask etba II g11111c
..
m&lt;&gt;nt ot turkey. He add•~ that l ll'U llflUsu,11
senior men'e llonor society, will tap
Arab rivals faculty vs. etudent&amp;-­
new membera. For the llret time, tho shlpmont had been iJ1npoUJ1d.
Health
,officials wilJ displ11y their athll•tlc prowc,s
lhe two freshmen honor IIOC1ettes, ed and Public
to t1·11coe the ,m the co urt , and will be promptly
Alpha Lambda Delta (women 'e) a.nd Wore all,tfnpllng
Phi JDta Sigma (men's) wt.II pre. shipment to Its BOUTCt'.
foll&lt;&gt;well by an \'Ven gl'eater
sent their new membera a t the
The food poisoning Wll&lt;! d,escrib~(I "oddity." A women's teurn, con,.
banquet.
The moat

po•cd ot mcmbN"a from I.hesororl.
lie" nod "8Bldi-nce hnll&amp; on camuus,
ll'ifl ho~t U!e WKBW •·Yoyo•."'

by Dr. Hoffman. Director or I.he
Univer~lly health su1,yice, as a
miW lntest lnnl inl'tttlon ch11racter.
lzed by dla.1·rhen. abdontlna \ pains,
vomiting, and fever. Seve ,-al •tu.
dents were sent to Meye11 Mem .
01•ifl.l Hospital to t1ld the "HealU1
Departmen1s In the dlagnc,sls and
npproximaW!y 60 rr101"ewer•e ll'(lllt.
ed a.t the clinic.

group of
nwards wlll be l)NlSeoted by Mi­
chael Co~en, president of the Stu­
dent Associatl~n, to students who
In extra.
be.ve been outstanding
curricular activities.
Each etudent
receiving one of these e.wa.rda baa
been l'ecomme,oded for hls servlce
In one or more actlv!t1011 and boa
been evaluated by the comm ittee.
Quantity, In the for m of an
elaborate llet of ac t lvltl ee , was
not as elgnlflcant In mer iti ng
an award a, w aa ou t■tandlng
quality In con t ribution to t he
University. St u den t Aa■OQl1tlon
Awaro• Inclu de Certlft catee of
Mer it , Sliver Keye and Gold
exteulve

ctu,·k Gym wil) oJ,10 be th,• ~;u•
of at'tivlty April 2/i when folk­
Alogiug gro up Peter, Paul nnd
Mory app1!8.rs on campu~ The cun.
Nl't will be held from s.10 pn, .
a.nd.Melo 1R being spon6oro&lt;l jolnt, ;­

by thl' Union Board And Sprin,:

Uowever, ofrlcluls thl'011L&lt;:.eU1at W~l'kend t"Ollllllit t ee.
for ev,•ry sludent that t·ep(&gt;l'lcd
Frfda)I lilght, April 26th, the
the llllll'llb, t WO more did.II't The
Sp r ing Weekend DAnce wlll
students that might hav·c be4ln
PETER, PAUL , MARY
be held In the Golden Ball­
Infected arc being lntel"\•lciwcd so
room of the Statler -HIiton
p1,,1,1,-,
._ t,lwr,, wlll b&lt;I rnmpalgning
that the ex-tent of t ho l1n!ectlon
can ~ determined and so that IL Hotel, Joey Giambra and t,11
lor Q1Jren t.hroughout t}iu woel&lt;
Orchut,a
will
supply
the
can be determiMd If lhe lnfecllon
Keys.
M1111ch1y
Ill 3 pm. th~ Qu,1"1I('/lndl.
"Mr. Faculty"
of a Queen.
Other awards wtll Include the i;p1-ead trom students who t'lte t,he
llatc9 will prcacmt a. taahion llllow
highlighted
by the orownlng
Panhellen1c CouncU Scbo!D.l'tlbfp , the turkey to thoSe that didn't.
mu1lc, ond the dance wllf be
in the m11Jtl.pW'}lOHeroom. Candi·
nursing award. the debatL11gawaTd1,
O!!icla.ls or l,h.e campus t"&lt;lo•J wfll also be prNented ~t the
•lat,·• o n.' Bonnit&gt; Lwi7,fWllki, 'l'l\et,0.
the Chi Omega social science award
~!fair .
and the Ca p and ~W'D fr811lunaD ~ervlce were unavailable ~,w,·11111.
l ·n,: Muri L&lt;.&gt;uThomJ)ffl)n, Sigma.
ment but health authoritl•~s ~tale
ring.
:5lunt Night will lie held S111u1•. 1,a1,1pa; lllld Nancy
ZuCkl'l'll\1111,
that
tJJe
ln!ecUou"
Ol'j!l"llHIM
lllS
David Byclna w1,U emcee al the
(lay night 3nd will c" ns ist of tw o "il:rnu O(•lta Tau . A QIICl&lt;liOII U,1111
were
nnt
irucll
lhat
I
he;y
could
ba.nquet. Alpbn Phi Omegn service
pe,·!ormn.nces - ooe nt 7 p,m, and
traterolty members wUI eerve as have been discovered by thn~e one ,u ll:30 p.m. Fiv,· minut e ~kil !I, 1111.-vf'r sea11ion wlll tc&gt;llo"'.Vc&gt;tloa
who prepareld the food.
ughe1"8 tor the dinner.
,10111: nnel 11an~
routines,
and "'Ill 1,,, cond ucwld 011 &gt;,to,ult1y l\l\U
dmmatic nctH l'eprcsentlng var. 1•u~sdny .

BuffaloWelcomes1400 CollegeStudents

iullN aspects ot ~amp us

!U'e 1U1d

KC'l lF..l&gt;ULE OF .£Vto
:N1'!'1
nrtlv\ty will be prAllented. The
v111·io\lijoi·g'anlzal!nns Which Will AJU-il 22
Monday
PRl'titiJ)ate a1-e; Alpha Epsilon Pi,
a:OO Quern &amp;'118hionShow
AlphlL
Gamma
Della
,
Alpha
Vhi
activities planned tor Mt~Y 3 1,(1
All ,111yvoting
the "Little Cenernl'' luncheon , Al Oelto., Beta Slll"JllnRho. Chi Om~gll,
Tlicl.ldl.lY
the IWlcheon, the queen Of the Ne1"'Ulnn Club, Pbl Epsilon Pl, Phi /\)&gt;l'il W
r.an\bdn Delta, Phi Slgrun, S11&lt;0111
mllitary ball •·Ill be cho54m from Ku 1,pn, ond Sigma Phi Epl!llon
All clay voling
representatives
of I.he 1B arel\S
A11111
2◄ - We&lt;lncll()ay
or the AAS. Following tho lunch.
111 udtlltloo tha
faculty
will
7 ; 00 BMkrtban • - Faculty v~.
con, The Ronnrable John A. Lang, hi g hlight ~h.. O'V('ning by IWl•Ktlf\l
Jr., Deputy SecretJlry of the Mr in.I! a skit IJ()JIQ\'tning Lhc fuc11!1y•~ fltlldl'llts ; Wnm,m ve. J03 Yoyo B
vi,c,w or itself and f(lcully life in
!&lt;'ore&lt;&gt;will spea k
A.))l"il ;.ir,
a...nN'lll Bcmal'd A Seh,•icv,,,._ l{••n,•rnl, wm1oni Bnker , of thr
~-ooPeter. Pnw, MCI
Commander
of th e Air
Force ,ll',t1H•1 :rnd ~pee.ch depnrtn1cnt Will
Cunc..,r t
Systems Command. wUI dcllve,· di1•t•1•I. Jud gi ng will lake pin e,,
tilt&gt; awards banqu et 11n M1!1.y3 at llt'l••r ,•,,rh routin•·. Hflll ti•ofllllu•
ro,· nr~\. s,-oond, nm l 1)1jrll plne,· ,IJ)rtt 26- f'rldlly
7 :30 p,m. General Schriuver
1ui
(l;(l(l Spring
W0cl&lt;Wld Olll)Cl'i
command~r of the AF 13:~ll!sllc wilt bo pr es11otuo at II mlk o 1n

For Arnold Air Society National ConclaV'e
Dlr*t01' Of M:Dltarr Pel'IIOnnel at
Air
Force Headquarters,
wJll
address at
make the keynote
opening ceremonies on May 2 at
9 a.m. General Clark, a. graduate
of west Point , was second 1n com..
Annual Conclave, to be held May mand of the flMlt American fightVl at Ute Statler
Hilton Ratel er group In the European theater.
in downtown Buffalo.
He ts a winner of the Legion of
The Arnold Air S010lety ls a Merit, the Air Medal, and the
student
orgll.l\lzat1on
affiliated Purple Hea1•t.
with Uu, Alr Force .Association.
An hon o1·e.ry, proteSl!lona l , service
organization
ot selected cadets,
the Society hos capprox1mately
160 squadrons located at colleges
univcrsllles
across
tbe
an d
co unt.ry. Its mi 11Sion Is to provide
,,xtn,.cul'l'iculnr
1ralnlng tn leader.
~hip and
management
nnd
to
&gt;1.e
qua,nt the publllc with the A ir
Force.
The AAS Conclave as the 8 0 _
prcme
legislative body ot Ute
RV

T.AW Rli:N&lt;,E

0,

FRJl:N KJl!l

Al'nold Air Society cadets and
angels wlll piny hoat to an estimated 1400 students
and 100 professOM! from 167 oollegel!I and
unlvereltiea at tile Society's 15th

Society, plans policy 0 t Arn&lt;&gt;ld
Alt• Society for the coming year .
Pa 1•t of I.heir buslnesa la deciding
wher11 Ute conclave ls to be held
,lurin g the following year.
The
1·011cta ve~ bid for during the mucl.
1ng by lntorel!ted
AAS squadr ons
who wish Lo have the conclave 1n
1hell' i&lt;rea the following year, and
lhc wi nner is decided by ,n vote ot
lht• attendlng delegat es. The r1ght
to host the lfit.h Annual Conclave
was won by our squadron dUrlng
the 14.lh Annual ConclaYe at Los
Angeles In 1962, Business meet•
ings 111"the Society, Ang el Flight,
11nd Profe&amp;SOl'S of Air Science wUI
Ill! h11ld throughout
the four day
msslon.
Angel Fllgbt Is the organ.
1,a tl on &lt;compo6ed of OOOOlf
"ho II.ave auutaood with the
-\A S to further th e l.nwn.'J!I•
,if tho Air FON 'P, Th~re aro
ul01ost 80 tught s at oollegee
&gt;Utd unlvNWltlcs aCr OS!i the
Cl(llJn
t,y.
\fllJnr
r.,,n.,ruJ Albert
Clurk,

Missie Division dire cted t he rl.'lt• I ht• mulU-puq)()m,
Iona high priori ty developl'llent of
,the
int erc on tin enta l
halll stic
mlssill'. Pr csN1tly h~ 1$ responsible
:tll rdscarrh,
dcvelc,p n11mt,
prn,•u,~•mcnt nnd productl1on re..
gull·,,d In plu&lt;ct• a comp let ,~ no "' ·
apau~ sys t em In operatio n al use.
'l'hi11 makes him ,one of the mosl
Important
m11n in the Air Force.
cc-n~i-nl Schnevcr has hcen uwarded II hono rar y Doctor of Aero ,
nautical Science Degree frc,m the
Uniwrsit y of Michigan, 11 honor.
nry Doctorate of En gineering from
Br ooklyn
Polytechulc
ti,,sUtute
and II honorn,y oort111· o ( Laws
from
Loyola Uni\·t•r•itty
M 1,,.s

-,•c•4111d

l'cont1\

art,• , fh•·

p,·,·t'iu·1,wn1·I'
i 110 Stlu1 t Night

lo ,,,h l!I uw lo tlc,,ij1 ,..,.,.,11, tol•

,c1g- J•lllw

r,,,

t11u·ing t.hc

wcdn11,1

j

11:tn :--1110
1 Nigh!

'Meal for Freedom ' Drive
Slated for Tuesday Dinner

T h,• Nallur111I s1v,k11I
Absnc·. 11nw st 11ch
·nt&gt;&lt; \\'He• ln tur111t&lt;l of
.1\1,on ,,1,,,,,.11,.: c·«111111tt1
, ,, 11:1• th• • 1&gt;r o1,ra111 \1y 1lorm prMldent,
'''""'''I lls 111&gt;u1~
101 th,• lc,11(1.11111.iSue Gu:ir h1u At tllnt ,tm ••, Hll
,·,ulll'flil(n tu lwlp llw Nt•i:-r,.,•, st utl cnt~
11l,,d,c1·d" '"1hNl l for
t•r 1.••Jltll'•: l'rn1nly, \l ls.stsslppl
trc,'&lt;101n'
\, ,rnl,·u m 'l'h,• Sp~~tr um ur
Tentatlv,•
plA"" fur
rntxh,g
GENERAL SCHRIEVER
J,1..,t \Vt t•k, h,•,·1u1 .f! of U1e vott.•1·. money, a1iiJf' tron1 th~,, conc~m­
n•,::1s1m1l"11 cil'IV" ,m tht !)llrt uf il\1: ,tuuHnt..~-ln- rc11ld c:mc&lt;-,lnrlu\11'
Angt•h:i-,
Master
of ceremonies at th~
1111\ ~lu ll, nt N,,n VIO!l•Jll ("11(1r,11 p1u.:1n.1: B t·vl1~,·t11)11 buwl ill U\I)
l'IDJ\h •r or ( 'nn •1t•HnU•1-1.nt
awards banqu et and chnirman of
nul!n~ 1 'um1,,1t1,,,. n,uoo f.l&lt;'l'l&lt;OIIM ,,..-uayluung/' Mt! a lf&lt;() huvlng 11
th.- 1&gt;11nq1l!'t will llo Hrt,c.
Th e conclav e is AAS Oolun()l H,•r.
w, ,, " ' "'"'''"1 1n1111 111,•,·11n111n~1. on,· dll) 1und nil.Itta~ ,,ompa.!1,'11
O('11"11.LIll o\\ 11rd T. l\far·lrn y.
be 1·t Feldman. Col. William , C,
lty
l'0l,,,i, 111n11~·"' Whom
t.-•neral :\lo •keif rt'&lt;'rh ·cd f1I~
urt· In Nn1 too U111un Th,• m,m~,y whtc.h
Lindle y, AFROTC
Comma.ndnnt,
law dr,rr, ,,, from 1.0,•olJ\ U11 , N••i.:1,.,,~ w1thr,11t ·,I -ibh• 11ppo1·t WIii b•· ,,.lfo ►q,-.1 , ,llllnK Wllll II
will preseuL nw urds 10 the pro.
111 ,·unJcuw v11 ,.ir11 u111,,,. un. &lt;111
,._1, nmd•• pny11hl l' by (•r a~i­
h ,•r~ll)
111 ('hi&lt; &gt;III"J\,fl,•r
russor,; or Air Science from e1.1ch
Frn,u R1•t-vit1• !llr UI.: n11•al11pied­
graduation h 0 ~""'"" fur fh •1• f "'' ..,,,.,, 1h11,11),'lluu1 th, ~ullllll\
aren who ontr1 but e mosl I" lhe
1 \111 ,,11
t , lJ:Hnt1 •.,tlun,-.
~•·ti bv t!m1r.1t~
,ry 1tU&lt;.l('tnt,t wUl
_1.,ur" ,.1111 tho• 11,i,., \r111., \Ir
J,:mwth uml attainmen t o( AAS
: '.~ \ 1i,I d,' '11,,,, t I J'fH,ta,,,n t 11 h,, 1,.,rn·nnh-,t to '1'1m M
, l\t\tl nr.
l'orJ&gt;'&lt; clurlng \\ W JI 11nd ll'M
un&lt; &gt; ot tJ1t• •~irllt• KI j,,t 1,tn11"
n1&lt;I th,·"
l""l'i•
\II 1lill'llllt111yI '&lt;.cl1,..,.,1 /\ttnlt~ \'k c•.prt'lllll~nl ot
/lfajo1· Ucnt'rD I J ohn Munt .
. ,u,t, 11• u1 , . 1, •111c·
t,•tl t11 pit ,Ii;,
"-SA.
11•l Jliloh, , RC'C'll.ll NI ti&gt; 11,•1
Uv1•
i:-omrr y, Air Foroo Hrod y
,1111~t1ur h1g lht 1 J&lt;orcau \\' 11r
1 u11.; ll •h1
1'11••dny
du\nt.•r.
C!n.ry Llg'htt·r 1 •\Cl,W tor trt'l'Re•,nw, PNlllldent Of the Air
)1J1rkt•y mnlntalns Ws coml&gt;nt­
Sl1t11l"111!1 hu1&gt;l!I n,,t1f1 • UI•• dtnh,i; ,Jo,in"' rnordlnt1tor for NRA stuteo
1&gt;oroo .\ 6socla tlnn, will make
rmdy I ~\'lug statu• In the 11'-86
ic,,,ru 11111
n 1 11r~ w111i 1·h•·l I; tht·11 tJut
n,oJW·rntlun
tri,1n the Ct?a,,;e
th" lun cheon nddl"Cll8 Qt 1 p.m.
..;ahrrJ&lt;·t. Grm •nit ,'1ark ey I~ u
,·ntJ chn•
11,tu
U'11 d1mn~
rnoni
f-~ou~1 !"'1,,1r\"11 I
L.fl1t ll'\t' t1.Unt1nt.ac
•
J•O UP M'holazsblps for
a,caJ .
\\ l111111r
nf tJ,,, Lc•glo11of l\f,11rft ,
•••f ut• • ~ .HU pru h1dny
trnttun
ha-~ bl''-'/1 t·,i.~\.lJont, lltuJ
urnle l•tcelle nc,11and 8twemJ
01,tln 1,'lll,h,,(I
f 'l,"lRK &lt;lr'OM.
olhur t~wurds wlU also be
'l'l111• f11r, .:twlt-ut "'''"""
1111, \\o• m,, ltopv'tul !hn.t fhij f)Vt'ro.ll
Soldkrs MNln .1, AJr M,;,11\111ntl
1,,•,-u '11h111t1n 11, !n \ 'u u l&lt;(• 111111 •tud,,nt heh!)' WIii b&lt;· l•qu11ily ...n
a" u r/1~11ut th e lunhieoo.
.
a 1nt·t•l111i.:w.t.:~tu ht f.lorlnt,; whkh
•l,u .uJ 1ln,t • •'- lWhil\\·,
,,
C)nu M 1h1· hlg'hllght.; cl! t)lc I 1111•l'11rpl• · 11,•r1r t.

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SP E CT

PAGE TWO

Freshman Orientation Plans
Underway for Next Yea r
Thll freshmen

orientation
pro­
v-am for September, 1908 is be­
ing organized and planned at the
present time. The program iB un­
der the rltrectton of Stanley J. Se­
gal, faculty coordinator for orienta­
tion, B'reot Steele, chairman of the
Orient.at.ion Committee, and Paul
Shulman, co-chairman.
The orientation

program will em .

phu~a the academic and intellec­
tua l environment of the campua. An
"academic convention" type pro­
gr11m is slated in which there will
be a series of concurrent meetings
of freshmen gro ups and faculty
memben duri ng which the faculty
~II present to the
representatives
in-ooming 11tudenta an idea of the
11eholar ly work they are engaged
in. Students will choose, according
to their personal inte r ests, which
program to attend in viewing the
acientiat, literary cr itic, medical re­
searcher, and others, at work.
The program outlined above Is
being considered a stimulant
to
arouse the freshmen class to the
kinds of meaningful and exciting
frontiers of the various disciplines
they may enter. The decision of
t he orientation
committee stems
from the belief tbut entering stu­
dents are prepared to come to grips
with the ncademic environment of

Furnas to Speak At
Commencemen 1t
Presllleni
C)jJ1for•d C. li'umas
addrefis members
oJ'. tlle
graduuti ng cla!IS ol comme ncwn .
clnt exerc lses to be held S~inday,
June 2. at 3 pm. in front of Lock.
wood Mem oria l Lib1'8.rY.
wlll

the university,
and that though
socia l events do have importunce,
nn orie ntation program which over­
emphMizea that aspect ill prepares
the student !or the more aignificant
educational opportunities.

Frldoy, April 19, 1963

Office Person'n~J Workshop
SChe d uIe d at u· BA pn.127
Seeretarln l and cle ri cal sUllfs or nlly College : Data Processing, Wil .
j Liam Ill. Beh.uk, do.ta processing COI1·
Third Annual School Ortlc e Person- . sultunt. N.Y.S. EdU()Bti on DeJ.llU'l­
n el Workshop nt the State Unl- 1ml.'nt ; Civil Service Donald N eff.
verslly at Buffalo 's Norton U,nlon, director Erle
Cou~ty T'el'SODDt&gt;l
Sat urday . AJ1rll 27.
Departm ent.
Over 400 partlcipants
are expected al the day . Jong se,islon. enFollowlr1g a lunc heon, pro.
titled "lm1:1rovtng Yo 11r Skills" and
orama w ill be h&amp;ld from 1-2
s110nsored by I.he Western N ew
p.m. for secreta r ies t o chief
York School study Council .
sch ool office.re In r oom 233 and
&gt;Keynote speaker nt tbe opening
f ot all ot her 1choo l off ice r pe ,...
9 n.m. session in the Conferenc e
aonnel In Confere nce T heat re.
The:i 1tre will be Mfl!s Elai ne DeSmAIJ lnte rest g roups wlll lie held
cloelng. tncl ud­
Ylne. elected secretary or the year from 2 pJlll. u.ntU
f&lt;&gt;r the city of Buffalo and New , ing; secretaries to the cbW &amp;ehoo l
York State In 1961.
1 udrnlnlstrator,
room l20F and 1200
Ml11 De.vino 11 u a ls t a n t IFo,;ter Hall; and In Norton Ha ll .
t r easu re r of t he Abst rac t T itl e
secondary school sooretarfes rootlll
Olvla lon of t he T itl e Gua ra n.
231A nnd 231B: elementary- achool
tee Com pany , 110 Far nklln st.
secretaries, toom 329. S30, 333 ui. d
She Is pas t presi dent of the
334 : adult edu cation secret.arlee .
Buffalo Chapt er, Nat ional Sec.
1·0QJJ1 220; 11ttendance an d healtb
re.ta r ,,., Aasocl at lon an d fa cur.
eecrntarles. reglel:Tars, room 262 ;
rently chairman of t he A11ocll!IWitcbbOllrd opernton;, room 264 :
at lon•, publlc speaki ng wor klibrary and audio-visual sooretar166.
ahop.
room 266; guida nc e secretarleE..
Group f!ell&amp;lonswill be held from room 233 and 284 ; busi ness oUl.ce
1 0-12 with the ,ouowing speakers : per&amp;0nnel. room 336, 337 a,nd 3-H.
Buslne!MI letters, Mrs. H elen SigCoordlna.tor ot ·the Workllhop I~
ner, Director or Sooretarla. l Stud- Dr. R. Ollv&amp;r Glb80n , aesoci a te H ·
!es. Sta.to University at Bu ffalo: eeullve secretary of the Westen!
Buelnees Elbgllab, Dr. Elu.nlce MU- N6W York School study, aaalated
ler , _prolea110r or busln61!8 and sec- by Wlll!am J , Attea, research a,;.
ret.arlal scle nte , Cornl.ng Commu-, al!tta.nt.
111ea high ijCboolK wlll meet M tbe

Fojlowlng
lh e exeroi ,ae~1 the
The Orient.ation Committee also grad uat es and their families will
plans to increase the orientation
be the guests of President
and
p.rogram tor those stu dent.a who Mm. Furna.a at a Junche!on In
transfer ftom another school. There Norton . Member 8 or the facu lty
is a definite need for incre ase d and thei r fomilies nre also in,vit ed.
coverage of this group, and the
Rehearsal
for Commenc1~ment
committee plans to ac)&lt;nowle dge it
in its program. Dr. Dorothy Adem 11 will tak e place S11turda.y, J\mEI 1,
of the Student Counselling Center at 10 am . in fronl of Loclcwood
will be responsible for this aspeet Library. If thEI weather La un­
fo.vore.ble the rehearsal will take
of the orientation p!'ogram.
of_
pluce in Butter Auditorium
As outlined by Chairman Brent Capen Hall .
Steele, the orientation pr ogram for
freshmen
will include: convoca­
After
th e rehe111'f.lOI, s ,imlors
tions, registration, campus event8, will be indu cted inl o lh8- alumni
and student education via publicity association . A picnic will 1Eo
llow
materials in regards ~o this uni­ the indu ction al which the grad­
versity. Mr. Steele is very much uates wiU be the guesL, &lt;;,f the
interested in expanding t he orienta• previous alumni .
tion progrnm and wishes that any
pres~ntly enrolled stud ents who
wish to work on uny of the ape- .-----------cialize d orientation program comTb.ere wtll be no undeqn-admittoes please notify him. Comuate cl&gt;1Sses b&amp;ld J\,()ril 26 nnd
mittee
chairmanships
are al80
27 du e to Moving Up Day ex.
available and interested applica nts
erciees.
are requested to ' sign their name •-------------­
and telephone number at the Student Sen ate office or the Norton
randy cou nt er before next Friday .
From the 1011
--Coroelle Sting Ray Sport Coupt and Conl!llr
lible, Cur111.1ir
J\1011wSpydtr Clttb
Coupr and Coo,vtrliblc, Cheov ll Nol/a 400 SS Sport Coupe a11dConvertible,ChevroletImpala

SS Sport Cou:pt and Convertible.Super Sport and Spyder equipmrnt optional al extra cosl.

Student Senate Meets Tues.
To Vote on Comm . Chairmen
A\'r
Athough all committees
'!'ho lulll ,·ogula r mel't111~ 11[ thr
t!l6S.61
Student Senate wtll llt• importa nt for th e Sentite to iunr.

hdd

thi~ Tn esduy ev~nin ~.

Th e me&lt;&gt;Ung wlll be ur,· 11t1•il
t&lt;, Lhe nom ina ting und cl~cUn!; of
cnm•nitlc•e cho.lrm cn and me111l11·1·s
I.(, Jhc Judi cia ry Board and llW
Publl ca.tl on s B oard. Thu s far, tht&gt;
Senate hn.s only cho~cn the lhalr.
man or lho Personnel Conuw.1 Lee'.
Anthony Ca mpagna, and mombc1·8
of
Uw
Exec utiv e Co m l•ull,,e.
Rober t ~'i nkeb1teln. Fran Bil el~ky
und Ru&amp;!!ell Goldberg ,

11,m ~ffecUvely, .:ommitt, •p~ ;ire
11so:1llyonly as active ~ntl s1.1rrcs.,.
ful ns the commHtee
rhninnor
mnkc U1~m.

Al!!!, lo be ,·conaltlered 11l 1h,
S"-•na.lo ntcuting, will b e n cli~Clh,.
sio n t•f th &lt;a NSA •·menl for fre,•.
tlom"
project
and
.,
report
~ummni ·izing th e Elasl Coll.~I NSA
Regh111nl Confer ence whit,,
be hrld

ll'll~ weekenn

Will

~-• Ru• A"er.,

Unlverij\ Ly.

Chem . Department Appoints
Ralph Wilkins As Professor
'l'ht• :lt&gt;IXlh
Jlllll.mt ()( Hulpb

(;

the l ' nll'el'~llr ol IA,)11
WUK " t)0~t-doNornl
Al Iba State llrfrverstl)' o! New ,.,,.(, 1r1•ll 11•1low•1t th •· l'nivorsit)'
Vo,·~ al 1l11f1':1Jo
\VOR IUTUl)ltll\•p(l t.o. ,,t ~fllltli.•rn f'111tto,11t11. 1%2.:,~,
11.11'. 1•1T1-.
•t1w• 1!&lt;·111\•mber
l
During the summer of 1~56.
l:illw ,• Pntobrr I. !lr. Wilkins has
D r, Wllklrls
held a Vocation
\,0011 , vi~l1l11~ ,,rM,•~•c)r "l the
Consultan cy in the Chemistry
Mnx 1·111nl'kl11a11t
ule fhr l'hyslkaJ.
Dlvlsi( n of the Atomi c En e,•gy
Resoaroh Establishment
nt
t~dte 1'11,•11111•
nt Gotleng&lt;,n. Wl)BI
G&lt;lm inny. J&gt;11i'ini;-August. l91i2. ho
Harwell and I" the following
IOl:)rYc1l ns a s11e,·lnl ,.,1111merle•··
summer a Summer Research
1urer :oud r••--11r•·h corrnultant nt
Fellowship at NorU 1westc rn
the t'niv••rsay·~ l)o11nr tm ent ol
Universit y. Evanston .
Ch1&gt;Jlll•l1•y
111• wn• ~ 1c~r 11ol1
Sluce Dr. \\'llk l11• ha s ltePH nt j
s1w11kt•r lit n "YU11X1~h11n
~n "T h,/
Slt\'tflel(J l'nl\ •t•r$il)'. h~ ha~ di.
11st, or ls&lt;&gt;topes In lhr Stu dy M
Inorganic lleactl ou Mechnnlsms" nl I &lt;•t'l~il :, proi;mm ,,1 l11tlependo11l
t.be AwerJc:,n t'hern.icw Socloty n.,;,•;11·1'1, r11:0l11h·"" ro.or dion.lioo
NtLtlonal Mt•etinii ul Atluntk Cit,·. 1·0 m1•1111nd~
;1111
1 utuwd nl an und er.
N .I.. ~,, ,iemlHir 10_14
~11wdllu; or 111,, f11&lt;:lorsJnn uendng
1
1he rutPS ur r1·:11•1!11nsor ruet&amp;l
Or, Wllkl"• has been leotur ­
l'nmp lex ,·omponntl~. Tbis work ba s
er n"d eenlor leot urer I" lnor.
111~•11 de~rr lb&lt;ld 111 vurioua tnterna.
gan lc chemlatry at Sheffield
11111
11
111 l'oufe rl\llci!s on ro .ordlna.
Unlver11lty. England , since 1963.
tl&lt;&gt;tiChemh,try Bl .\nuterda.m, Lon •
w here he wa s largely respon .
,Ion .ind net r olt. aod l)ubUahed in
atblc for the organizat ion of
11111111•ro&gt;1i.
1111
b lkntluus
an d YO!.
the Inorganic • e ct Io"
of
n mt.~a
th e dep i,rt111ent. He waa aaso c:la~d with the Akers Re.
·!'1•11 •t11111•11t•hnvr •ln dh•d f()f'
aearch L.nboratorlu of lmperl~I
tf11 l'h.fl
,lrgre.• un,lilr Dr. Wit.
111J, 11111
Chemical Indust ries Ltd. at Th e
~ 111 &lt;111"''·,·1~1
1 h,• 1,ua a,•t!!()
Fry the , Welwyn Herta. 1949-52.
••~ ••,l&lt;•tn11ll•XUIDllll'rfor 1•1mdl
dates
f11r th•· l'h I) d1•g,.-,, n.t Oxford.
Arter 1itte11&lt;Jln1:tJ,., 1•n1v~1ally I r.•••·•I ◄, \l.,udu•,ler
aud runlJerrn.
,,! SoutbDJnJ)\
&lt;lll llh"l] t'ulver~lly
1,,. \\'tlkl11• h11Mpuhliahed ,,rttclee
,~,ll N•i•J, l!lfl.tn. ho , ~c·,1,,•d 111
,
l~itt1&lt;n111ll'I Sc (Spi,&lt;'lnl I , t, '"'"'"
•·1111, ,-,·11l11~iwn
nmJor suh Jects:
Dovrr~ \Vflh ll~on fn,rn 11,. 1.nl I 111 1•r•·1•1u-.,111,nn,I l'&lt;&gt;rU1N!yna­
h'!• , ,r t1&lt;01110rlcploitnum
.,m•llY or IAnllt,n 1, 17 . ,.1111n,, 111,,. ,1111l
•
.•,.,1 11111111,1Jun1
,·.,m 1•l&lt;&gt;
xt&gt;11aud (2\
Ph.TJ '1o.1t;1·•-.• frtlnt
tJin l nh 1"rilf~t J IJp,1
ut tt'.H'lh}1) ot trn~on
~ l,t111dou, l~M: nnd 1111•n f'.. · (fo. I &gt;1i•
•\,i) ('111111'"'"'"
W il ki ns llil l)TO(l/-8!\0l' OC tho ml stry

i\'l'l'(• t'rOJII

don.

1!1111
. Il l•

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44

1

fourwithout.. .

fourwith...

ALLTO GO!
Chevy's
got four ,rntirely
dilYerent ~incis nf hu&lt;:ket-seat
roupes nnd convertib les to get
your kpring on the roiaci right
now - the Super Sports! With
a choi1•1•of extra-cost options
lik e e ll'ct ric tac ho mete r s,
4 -s peed - ~hift~ anrl high­
pPrfo rman ce Pf\Kit1es. I hey·re
»' all out for sport as you want
t11i:o!
f/iN;t. the Jel,smootln ln1pala
S111lt'r !:-port with yom choice
111 , ditf(•r~nt engin 1Ps th~l range Ufl lo
4~;, hp :iml includ e th&lt;' pnp1Jlar Turhn , Fir,.
IU9 • with 340 hp for smooth. resp,m~h e
dm·1111: in (';1y tra ffi•~.
•
Thim tb~rc••~ the Cbevy II Nova 4.00Super

Spo rt . Specia l instrument
c lust er, front bucket seats .
full wh eel discs. t hr ee-speed
shift or floor-mounted Power­
glide automatic•
and othe r
spo rty features.
Two more cures for spring
fever-the
Corvai r Mo nza
Spyrler with full instr um enta•
t ion and at urbo-superchargeri
six air-cooled rear engi ne. And
if you wtrnl I u pull our the
stops.the l 'on·ette Sung Ray,
w1nncr or the ''Cur Ufe" 1!)63 Award for
F:ng111eering Exct.&gt;1ll"11ee.
If t hl' promis1• nf sprmg ha, h~t•n gell ,nir
1,, )Mu. w,• ,·an prac11c:1ll} l(Uarnnte~ no.e
o( these WlJl,too!
'llttlll•NJlrllt
,Ura:('9~4

NOW SEE WHAT'S NEW ~T YOUR CHEVROLE
T DEALER'S

�r
Friday, April 19, 1963

PAGETHREI

SP £CTR UM

Violinist'Isaac Stern Said

AETTTo Challenge .
Russian System One of Best US Mail Delivery
l'hf ope11log or lhe first nnuunl
S1&gt;rl11g Arts FesUval was high.
hghted by au ln!ormal meeting
ll,!tween rsa.a.c Soorn, •renowned
vlollnillt. o.nd stu denle or the uni.

dim view of tbe l)O!!Sibillty of
tcderel ~overnment sub.qidy of tbe
nrts.
"It's a l!Mle spooiol1B u, talk
obout it now," Mr . Stem lltlid.
1"'.l!"Bity.
Fed eru l s111mort might be a real.
Mr, Stern c111Jed4merlcan etud• ity in 6ve or 10 years, he eslltn11t·
1&lt;nts " a powerful rorcO'' in UJe ed.
country's 1.1resent "mlltu1·al erplosHe c,~lled American mualca l
,,u."
Coiieg911 1tnd univers!tle•
culture an "amalgam" of Europro vide a core of conoert tours by
pean
Inheri ta nces
included
famous musicia ns who settled
•·buying
more muJ1IC In dollar
gumhere "all typical,
te rm tban noy other single u11it
chewi ng, crew-cut America na,"
111the U.S.," the vloilnlsi said..
ho said, ll1tl ng fellow violin•
Comparing
America n a nd
llt J ascha Heif et z, t he late
RuHlan . music educ ation, Mr.
cond uctor
Ar t uro
Toscanini
Stern said, "The ata nd ar ds
a nd ce llist Gregor Platlgoraky ,
th~t the American teacher In
Asked what he thought of til e
primary grades shoul d know
He
Buffalo Philham1on1c
Or~heRll'n,
•• ec low It's cri m inal."
Russian
system
1ho vlollnlst sold, •·it ts an excelca lled the
••one of t he bes t anywhere In
l&amp;nt orc bestrn and l'm not being
tho world."
pu!He now , It hus grown Into n
Mr. Stem, who toured Ru ssia llrst--0la!!B group."
iD 1956 and 1960, said Soviet nrtQueried about the co nductor .
11ft p088esa ~n elite social status eoloist relationship,
the violin.
11111"their
musical prowess and Isl said, "The h1gge1· Ute conductor,
t.altmt are fuse-cl for politlcal mot lhu eu~ler II ts to work with
\V86." Russians. Ile said, "want t.o him ."
Mi·. Steru wanted to know why
rejoin lbe bumnn race ," and Pr e.
mler Nikita Khrushchev "Is a very Buffalo studen ta don•t pah'Oni1w
11
opuln.r figure , destro ui o{ peace co ncortis even though they're tree
but on hiR term~.
He w1.II get 011 ta111pus.
Students 11111dtlJe
.,,hut he •can, but short of wa.r." rensons are Jntiness, apathy nnd
1'be 42-year-old vlollniet, a con- a 11roference for heer over Bee l­
"&lt;lrf soloist
tor 28 yo11rs,took a hoven .

------

- ---------·-

Today, the brothers anti pledges
of Alpha Epsilon Pi have chslleng­
od tho United States P,ostal Service
to a mail delivery contest. At 7:00
this mo1·ning, the ffr!lt of 40 fr ...
ternity men mounted th~ AE bicycl~ and l)l'Weeded east on Rotlte
5 to William and Smith College
for women, Geneva, New York
The purpose of the race 18 to
prove thiit there is a more efficient
postal service than that o£ tlle 1
United States.
Duplicate letters
have been sent to a women'! 50 •
aorit)' invitin g the members to a
fraternity party next fall. One Jettci· was sent special delivery via
u, i::. ~fail, nnd the other via AE T
mnil.
Both factions are supremely con­
rldcnt ot victory. The Greelai are
out to prove three things: ( 1) They
n1·e faster, (2) more effir,ient, and
(3) less expensive than the U. S.
i\fail.

Member■

¾ Slgma

A lpha Mu cont rib ute fund,
to Canoer Fund

SigmaAlpha Mu Will Hold
Community Service Proiect

f)Ul'(.'hU.'!Cd &lt;from ruiy
Sa.mmy
1&gt;J
edge Sigma Alphll Mu hn.aAleo
has recently underlakon two char. been CO~iODC"
to bll'lld A
iWbld projects. The Sammy Pledge float for the Oanoe,\' Fund Pa.r.
Class spont Easter Sunday a t t:hc ndc and final details are now being
The lJB fo'acnlty nod AdmlnJall".t 8u((a)o zoo where lhey collected wo,·ked out.
tion ehnlicnge th ~ slu dent body
$167.66 for thl! Cancer
Fund .
on \hp l,asketball CO\lrt, 'l'w() 66P·
Am ong thll done.tors were Mayor
nrnte gnmea, one bel-n
the fac­
u lty nnd fratomllios and the sec­ Chesler Kowal and the curator
ond be!twoon the r11c11lt.yand so ­ of tht&gt; zoo,
----·· ......
rorities, are schedule d for Wed ·
In an tLltempl l\&gt; help vartou.;
11esdny evening, April ~4 in the .:haritie~. the frat ern ity 1s aJw
for
~ym. Gnme time 18 7 : 00 p.m. holding a ro.tfic, the profits oc
A T THE
u,nd therP will hi' no ,1dmlssio11 Which will go to t.b.c Heart Fund.
On e-Stop Servic:e Center
Tickets
for the rafOe may bl.'I
laundry
- Sho. Repalrl119
I&gt;r. Ser tu RUnl wlil uoacb the
sevente.-11-mnn fnculty team . Mr.
Shoes and Purse, Reflnlahecl
Unnn~znk, Hobert Nngel, Ll.nda
Muto wlll coach the male l\!l-8Ulra
and dylKI
Rosenbluru, Oary Cohen and Tim•
nnd Robel't Pacbolekl lhe temalee.
01hy Su Illvan nre to bo perCormed,
All types of Lodlts' Hffl• In
Bntty Winkler, pianist, will assist.
Stock for Replacement
The oonoert. is being plo.nned h,Y
Oollege mM now being con.
or R... tyllng
Mr. Cohen, who will be leav:f.nk slde1·ed for summer work with
Sigma Alpha Mu. in furthering
ii~ [,olky of comm1.mity service,

Student To Play
Faculty This Week

DRY
CLEANIN

--·-

---.

8lbs.

Baird To Continue Recitals
Through the End of the Year

Sy VICTO R IA SUGE LSKI
Tho mw,lc de1X1rtment is apo,n.
aur lng 110veN1I lectures, reclt;al e,
and concerts tor tbe remainder of
tbe aeme11ter. Admission Is tree un •
looe ap11ellled. All progmms take
subsiderary
of large national
1&gt;1.&amp;ee
in Baird Ha.II at 8: 30 \I.Ill., for Jl'raJJoe 1u June to spend a yea,
81tC8pt for Slee LeQtures and Duda• nl F'ontai,neblt!aU studying
witiL co rporation . Can earn ~2000 •
P"»t conoorta .
Nadia Bo111t1,nger. Mr. B11011szak $3000. Car neces.&gt;mry. Schoia1.
ships being nwarded
V1rgi1 Thom&amp;AA will give his plans to g1ve ·a recital of cla53lcal
Call NF 4-4015 between 4 • 6
r.hlrd a,nd lasl Slee Lecture Wed- ~nittar May 10. He will J&gt;Otform
p,m.
nelldAy. Thie progNlm wlll take worlte of tile early lutenlete, Bacll,
11l&amp;ce In Capen
He.II. Donald Boceherlnl. VtlJa..Loboe and Alben· '-::===::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!J
Oramm, bnritone w-111 be guest Ii. Also May 10 at 6:30 pm. wUI ~
.1rtlat..
be a Lttue Sym:pbony concert , fen .
Th o Mozart.Sc huber t Festlvturing the UB or ob.estra. und er Dr .
al w ltl co nc lud e Apri l 29, so,
Robert Mola.
And May 2, S, In Capen. St u•
Margaret
Stambach,
v-ocallst,
dlftta an rem ind ed tha t t ick.
will oo heard In recital May 7, und
ota may be obtai ned free of
Clnudla Hoca, young piani st, who
char ge If picke d up In advance
ls a p11111ior Allen Giles will give
et t he Baird Hall Box Office.
a rncltal May 8. Mias Hoen, a sevFac utt y admlsalon Is $1.00;
enth-gra der, rece.ntly Rl)])eBred on
general adml11l0n $2,00.
TV with the New York PbllltnrMay G, a Student Composer's monic In n Youui: People' s ConOoncert will be given by rompos. cert conducted by Lonnard Bern •
Liou students. Works of Leouurd I ,;tein .

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OKSTO
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CAMPUS"

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Friday, April

SPECTRUM

PAGEf'.OUR

19,1963

REFLECTIONS

GJitoria'6

nv

nru.

l'IIUJRMAN

'fJ1e purpose of a ue',VSpaper is to furnish news, t.o Simultat)cously, Sprl ntl' Is both
interpret the news and discuss cm·t·ent isi111es,to publi­ beauttt,11 and cruel , AlLboul(h lt
civ.ennd review cultural events, to muke availahle necessary is the seaso n of thd regenel'&amp;tlon
information, and to supply entertaining reading matter, De­ oC 1111lure,Ufe and death, creation
pending uPon the nature of the news story or feature , an and destruction, are but opl)Qalte
article in a new11paper should either inform, educate, or sides of the same coin .
11timulate thought . A good neWlll'llJler perform11 all these
Our droomll nrc often born in
functions .
Our University is not. only a school. Becauso of its 'lhe Sprlng. But Spring lmpoae.s
phys j&lt;'AI ~•omplexion und the 11atw·eof the st udent body, certain ilemrmds upon ou~ dreams
it itc also a community, nnd, as such, must adequately sus­ m1rs~1ve~. Spt'lng r o r c e s Ull
tJ.tin itself. 'J'o do so require11a11instrument of communica­ to lll'C Ol•r rtr11a.n1sIn retrospl-ot;
tion, one whkh wtll satisfactorily reflect the activ.tties and t o•'Cet&lt;II• to see that we u.r~ fall.
nttitude11 ()f the student body, the faculty, and the adminis­ Ing, 01• lhnt We hnve fulled
tration.
Thr Idea Is far (rom or.
Obviously, Buffalo is o city whose newspapers sup­
iglntil . To Eliot, April AOOm0d
ply ample coverage of loco!, national, and internotlonol
'' Ute oruc l4"t montll,' ' Yeatli ,
'"U'
.
news, in addition to commentary and features. To 1ame,
felt "t•uught In th11t 11e1111ual
then, o college newspaper is but tho ouertlon of a stucf•
,,
C ""'&gt;
,.,,t~le ." 'l'l""ru aN m om 1mlc-,,.
ent'a ego to edit, publish , and ta receive the accompany ­
ing honor and status. The staff of o college newspaper
1,1,·• ha Aptil Uinn any ott,,.r
might bo chided for olso having p,etentions, be It those
moJ11J1
, It Is ss 11Sp rb,g , lllcll
of o reporter or fledgeling editor.
•1p1m•h•J:' ml~tor... projrcwd
If I.his we11e tnle, I would never have conaldered ac­
u, Into our ultlmut&lt;) Ktlth'; n111I
~-($
copting the w:1it.ion t.o whkh r have been appointed. A w11 wUN; forced to 111.-urU,e
!~11111
~ llll'hL ln tit•• dru'kne!!8
rollege newspaper· shou ld, of course. present campuii news
Of our glll-&amp;I.
to its readera. The student body Rupports the newspaper
via the student activi1ies l'ee every fuJl-time student pay s i Evon lovu c1umnt heJp, Love Is
nnd by readi.ng the nLwspaper. Th erefore, those activities loncllnes~. With a catcih In ou_r
in which you thr st udent s participate, he tt a dil1cussion th1~&gt;atn, W(• recall personal rne11,_
concerning disannament, a fraternal social event, or a bowl­ oriel! morl! v[vluly In lhc Spring,
ing tourn1m1ent, must be publirliecl; for it is your news_ On&lt;.' can rememb&lt;fr tha t night of
va1~r and not.the editor's personal tabloid .
the open-alt concert. 'l'he two of
UNHAPPY HERE
The e~Utor is responsible for the content of the news­ u!I, listening to I he music ot 1,trov­ To th" Edl!.t;r:
pnper: respo1111ible
fo the 11tutlent borly lmd to the univer­ insky, surprclll!cd an urge to
There ]Jave hoen notteenble crJtt. 'l'o Ulr lildl\Qr:
Wllh the ller•u.dalfon of the 1&gt;elty
sif.y. However, he ii; nlso re~ponsible t.ohimself. He must grasp the lnaffable ,
clsms mnd~ or the university PO·
exercise a candid judgement in regard t.owha.t is printed
Perhaps It was lhu chirp of the lice. ln 601De Instances (&lt;I.be ln· patois of 1)ed11ntry, dilettBJ1.tlsm,
so11blatry and Talmud Ism, one would
and, editorially, commit himself to his beliefs.
0l&lt;iada thal held us back. Endless troducllon of Yidous dogs on cam •
like to say sometblng.
numbe1·s, endless cycles of dying
The activities of the other segments of the cam­
pus, e. g.) I.he crlli~l9lll was j1tsU­
One finds one a.pproaoblng
cicann;
!uJfllle&lt;t but
destroyed,
pus community must also not be overlooked. An active
the gratl of education flnn.lly and ,
Ocstt'Oyoo att&lt;-r the moment ot fla.ble. But oue must now remurk
faculty is always publishing articles, ht the throes ot
~11 time leaves o.nly a s!Jort trek.
grcat.e.st intensity . She am! l on those fhougbUess students tile tMurtrllted voice , which b,ie
writing books, ond odd,essing various groups on ond
b&amp;l'e who dls11Jay gulck bostllitee dwe-lt in this body slnee the shal.
could
endure
grief:
but
only
the
off compue. Their warlt and attitudes, 01 well as those
slronge11t can race ba1111luese. One agah,sl
ony campus policeman. low shadow or Ha.yes Tower drat
of the odministrotlon, ehould be given coverage in the
,'an ,·rmcmber the aecislon to Sopblsllce.ted ,itudentl! do not s,mothsred,
one must at 19ll.llt
campus new1poper; for they too are members of the
~C'ttl&lt;' for htll' private concert,
treat
a campus pollcema.n badly scream out. In a word, one baa
uni\'el'lity community,
alone on the RTI\SS, after the
not boon hllPPY vnth ,tlll e Univer­
because ot 111-troatmenr 1n tile
The quality of coverage of news stories and those of t-1·owd bad departed .
sity. In a word , on&amp; Is dt!J{lleaaed.
pa.st
t,y
110tne
non-uni'l'ersl
ty
oltlcer.
feature articles is dependant upon sevei·al factors. FirRtly,
tu a word, one ls "l,ame tully dis.
There Is 11lways tltill dis.
Surely these worldngwe.n deserve gusted.
our university does not have a school of journalism and
parity
betweon our tntentioD.N
the refore many of the \\'l'iters for the newspaper are not
as much respect os we students
11.nd Wlvl.t we may aotulltly
Ona can totally t,.,"llore lhe obvl.
really engaging in a work-study program by reporting for
Might ous mlltlllana~ent
llC'&lt;l'•111
pJM1. Existentialists
Cl&amp;ll must accord each other.
of th l11 Uni,
Spectrum. However , thi s should not ,limit the c1uality of
not the greater wealth or energy V&amp;rsfty. similarly the lack ot J'IBll­
~ dl.ttparl~
"atieunl." In,.
news stories to any great degree; fol' the perce ptiveness
nlng,
the
Inferior
te11ob
lng staff,
dood It t.. a))tirud. for Sisys hwi
displayed by 60lll8 thoughtless :l.n·
an(! intuition of an intelligent st udent can easily bridge
to eternalJy Htrur(le witb ~
dlvldual be better directed
to. end even the Id.Joey of the student
the gap caused by a lack of technical journalistic akill. boulder . There may be a limit­
body. However, one cannot Ignore
wards tho pursuit or aelf-enllgbt. the ap11a.lll.tlgabsence of dir ection .
The size of the staff le also a limiting factor on a news­
ed , •totory, a pcll"IIOPAI salva­
erunent!
Ind eed, lhen, one mlgbt
paper like ~urs " Neverthele ss, I am confident that future
tion, ln the a.ctlon Itself . but ,
Regrettably , thla ln ■tltulon I•
even conceive ot tll'8 da.y arriving
not an anomaly . Our nation
ln t11e Svrtng, It becomes more
editions of CSpectrumwill satisfy the demand s of more than
wben these e11n1ef.nd\vid ual s, ba.v­
(Uffl1,mlt to be thankful DWl'O­
le dotted with dead mind, In
minimal news and feature coverage.
lng lea.road !\OW lO think, wlll di·
all the higher academic plac.. ,
ly tor the tn vtolate dream. It
root their t,l1ougt1t11t&lt;&gt; I.ho real
Aside from the campus coverage t.o wh ich the news­
Dead mlnda beget dead mind._
IDAf not be eno11n to &amp;Wltt\lu
oroblemB or our world' ~ oopressed
PlLPl)t 1!\committed . there are other areas into whicl1 a news­
And all tote dead mlnd1 wlll
~11m11of 1111
,
3lld
~tnrving
,
paper must delve. Many times in the life of a student, dur­
have facea .', . faceleaa faces ...
ing orientation periods, at commencements, in public d&amp;­ But why rationalize? We are
•hd they wlll zomblcally ■tare
Joe F' A, Olodti.to ,
bates the "student" ls referred to as the l)Otentia l leader, only the sum lot.al of our ruusloM ,
down from the higher placee.
pbyechology
student
country's
most
pt'ecfous
nal,ural
resource.and
other
such
our
Words 11re the TT&gt;lrrors of our
and CIL'lllllUS worker.
One hes the answer and will
trite label s. No matte1·, being a stude11t,by definition, ~me dl1JContent. The hunt for metap­
i,:tve It to humanity , It Is ll0tl18·
must have an inquiring mind and Rn urge to act according hors may be fuUle, if as Heisen ­
lblug very , very old . Tt b11,11
tb\llg to do w!lh direction.
lt ha.a
to his convicti()n!I. St udent attitudes, by necessity, must be berg and quantum physics drawn To U,e Editor:
aired. 1'he interpret.Ation of events , not mere ly those of to •ts logilllll oonoluslon would
1 agree with Mr. F H. Thomas hue eomet11!ng to do with God or
a local nature criticism of whatever form it may take, assert, total communlcnUon ls, at Ulat cheating hurts the student; Beauty or Good or Trntb ,
But one cannot wait for this
should be ren~ted through the college newspaper; for it is b~sl. &lt;loubtJul. But as Stephen 'however the mo.jonty or the
taoutty that I have come In con­ answer to be accepled, tor there
the meaning'ful and widely read organ for communicating t'Tonr wrote:
tact with . especially in the larger ls work to do. One will tall:e the
Thcr~ waa a man wit~
student opini on.
classes, has had a tendency to dlplom11 and snicker bitterly "T
In effect, there is no ,wenue on which the stude nt
11 to11g11J/'of wood
tooled you almost as much as you
turn 1.heir back s on cheating,
shou ld not walk. His campui'I activities are important, and,
fooled m~"
ll'hc,
cua11~d
to
,ini,,
'!'here
will always be those
as part of a most vital force in his n~tion and world, ~e
And yon.rs from now &lt;me wfll
mtdent.s who will cheat under lit.and on a lonely hill on tbs
is signific:mt.. The colleg-o newspap~r 1s but a t.ool of his
A "d 111trntl, It u•a~
any clrcumst.o.nces, and those who other Bide or d11y clutching tbal
dynamics . I t Bhoulrl he used effectively.
1,,,,,,.,.,,11,1,·
.
will have Chelr own personal unlaoonlc diploma anl.l wuJ,Ung tor
Arnold Maiur

·if/ ' '

+;_~~

=~

llut ihc1·r 111aaonr wh11

THE SPECTRUM

/i.N1rd

Thr di7, - olavv~f' of
/11llu11

fl/

WOMl

1l11d knew wit.at Uc
II' iih tcl fo irinq.
N•\ff

,. .. .JAMl!:11 BAK!'!R

.. . CBAlU,l!l!! BT\l&gt;IK
BUIIOe.., MIT, ..... LARRY IIINOl':R
1'1n, A4 ... TROMAB RAl!lNLII , JO..
Lot.roui 2'lltor ...... OAVTD mwTN

I

ICnterfd Ill HCOlld
Cl&amp;.oll roo.ttet P'ebru 1r7 ,. 1111, 11
the I•u•l l)fllc• .., Dutralo. N. T ., 1111d
... t h • Act or l\fo.rCb
!. tll•
Acr ~ptanr e fnr m1llln11 ~• • 1poel1l rote ot POOi•
""I• p,ovltl"'1 r,,r In 1:,c 11cn 1101. \~I or 0.-t&lt;&gt;h~ r I 1111,

o.•UhMIH~

Jl'rl)l'IJAl'J'

&lt;'11• ... ,, ... ,, ..

111011.

And with thc.t tho ,ingw
rm,trnl

llldl tor .. MART LOU Wll,l!ON

•IK)ri.. Editor
Coi&gt;J rldllOt'

~

t . lt&amp;t
•·,#'r.

f l ( 11 Pr

r\rcu la.Uon ...,

, UM~;,.
• ~...
~,"i_u,'f&gt;.,,
'i•"~lf
:~.•~~.,bi-=•~~&amp;J
"A~•

wa,

honor system no matter how ten.
lent t.llEI proctors may be. When
a test is held In a Jeoturtl course
wiUl two proctors in a u1a.ss of
three hwidred student.s, you're
boWld to get your cheaters and
your despeirate students
t.ak!ng
advantage of the opportunit tcs
avaltablo ,

tha.t luevltable

poison mushroom

and wondel'lng about ell that one

hnd tllrgot:ten.
Gn0t1tlcally yoiira,
Salva.tore Abbate ,
'63½

To the Editor:

l would Uke to bring your no­
a.nd
A.ti honor sysl-0m ln this 9ChoOI l!ce the misrepresentation
MS to rrt.art \,r\t.h a · very strict twisting of the !acts regarding
attack against cheati.ng on the "In&lt;lian Physics Student tlnds US
is ns He .,x,pected " which appeared
part
of the fo.cutty. There
tendency here for JD!Uly uf'tcnses in The Spect.rum dated April 12.
to be overlooked or dealt wtth page 5. columns 4-5 . The sentences
under
quota tl ons ar e
J!ghUy by some members of th e Wrllten
facul ty. It a ~tringent policy lo· wrlatn lv not mine l did not even
ward cheating wu adopted with see the· manuscript. Mr . Frenkel
U1ts Incoming freshman
cla~. wrolo a~ he underslnnd , but wh)
I cannot be
perhaps this school oouJd develop under quotatio~•
8.1\ honor system. Our crowded held responsible tor the views t'O&lt;·
conditio11e and IBM ~ts
help to prei&lt;~cd therein. Snmt! of them
IQ my
rost.:r clwattng - but honor must 31'0 ohVlt&gt;UYly n,11trn1\
tlMil be ~11cournged by the !:).C'JI'" · thlnk,111:
,l\J 1,•s P

1...vin11

(&lt;'ontlnucd nn r►"1•~· R1

�I

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H ISTORY

°""v.,

-Amoncu

The revo ulll o n began in the
Spring of 1953, when Doubleday
Anchor Book\ published its first
twelve titles . It seems strange now
to remember how many ~kcptical "in ­
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into its se~ond decade , Anchor contin­
ues to publi sh at the same high level.
THE EASTERN ORTiiODOX
C HURCH: II~ Thoug ht and Ll(e
i&gt;y Em .,t Ben t : tronsl/lttd by Rl c/wrd and
C lt1ro Wi111to 11. A succinct nccoun1 or

Eas1em Or1hodo~y•s liturgy and s~cra­
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his1ory. An Anchor Origmal,
9St
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S 1.45
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�Fridoy, April 19, 1963

PAGE flVI

SPECTRU"'

Final Tournaments Will be Attended
By The Debate Society-Mock Senate
By KA THL EEN SHEA
porated was entirely on:llnl2ed by
Yf!sterday
LWO novi ce debnte students of New York SUlte unl­
versUles who are Interested Jn de.
ce,amB departed for their Ona! tour­
t he Leglala.tlve As•embly I•
t-ate,
D'MTl&amp;llt ot tbe season at NOT'W'lck
n yearly !u.nctlon or the N.Y.S. De.
College lo Vermont. Those parti cl­
p.atlng are: Ko.ren Morris, Ruaeell bate Coaches' Assoclotlon , It, too,
will be entirely student-run.
Goldberg, Francine' Michel, Tom
Berdine.
Richard
Dnrrner, Linda
At the f-all meeting o! the n.s.qo.
1.,wenlhal, Richard Nemerotr and clatlon, Carol Zeller, Mike Shapiro
netsy Nordstrom. They will return and Gel'&amp;Id Ca.t.e.nzaro were cb011en
Sunday evenlog aL 6 p.m.
as delegates. Barbara GleGota, Ll.n·

.\ wam w!II also attend a varsity da. l, even.thal and Harrl0t
Heltllnat New y--0,k Unlve r. ger WIii attend ru, alterna.tes .

1oumament

sit)' on April 26 and 27. They will
he Barbara Glegota, Khu l\fonkle.
wlcz, MIS, i\fon-is and Mr. Gol d lu•rg. Estbe.r Kling, tnatrnctor
In
d.r3J.1.1a~nd speech, will iw-company
t he111.

Varloos

areas

or N.Y.S.

Mr.faculty Competitiontobe Held Adler,
Baker, Ebert, Miles , and Plesur Compete
. TueSdny, and Wedn"-sday·, stu.
dents w111be ab le lo vol\&gt; fol' the
"Mr. Faculty•• of tl'le C11Lmpus.
Voling i~ from 9 am • 4 pm In the
conrerenre
theutre
or Norton
Union . Sue Cherry fij chairm an or
the conl~.

IJB ~tart in 19M and le 1UJ®Ciate
profesMr of Geology &amp;nd Geog­
raphy. Be Is married and baa one
daughter.

7

Dr. Ebert

The candidates for Mr. Faculty
ADLER.
WlLLIAM
BAKER.
CHARLES
E!B ER T

MD.,ES, and

MILTON

PLESUR,

law were
aubmitted for con11ideratlort The
debn.te coaches selected
three
areas: stale aid to ed11e1,tlon. dJ.
\•orce la.ws, aud c111nsorsbl1&gt;. Et1cb
oC the delegates htu1 done rtlseurch
011 exlallng lnws and corresponding

Dr.

Philip MIies l,i an
avid
o.nd tennh, fan and la
parUcjpatlng
on I.be Faculty
Ba.sketbell Team In tho Spring
Weekend Student.Facu lt y Ba.ek.et­
bnll Ga.me ot April 24.
basketball

On the s,une weekend, she polltl­
,•al acleucl' lll'-l)ors, wllo have been law~ In other st.Illes. They w-111pro­
J)o~eam~ndrn~ts
a!ld bill~ in their
w'Orklng with the Debnte Society
◄ Ince "8rly
ln the Orst se1oester. l'MPl!Cli\' l' ll0ld R,
will alleud ,\Tock Senate lnuorpo­
Because of the early terml.
ra.ted In AlblUl,)', N. Y. The follow.
nation of the spring semester,
these are the fina l events to
:n,:; ane dele;:llles from the UnJver.
be attended by members of the
&lt;IIY· Mnr~la Krltlliy, Harold Pa1l11all. Katllleen
Yawadzkl, ,Tanl~e
Debate Society. Both novice
1:oekevek. ~!aria
Sy olnoki
an,I
and varsity divis ions have been
very active this year . The
'rhomns Johnf&lt;lor1. Jn.uet Potier,
dirootor of th~ varsll)' deba to ~o­
novice division has sent teams
cl,.l y, will a,•t n, a :iUJlCrvlsor.
to some 15 Intercollegiate t our­

Bom n New Haven. Connecticut,
he served ln the Us Army . Dr.
,ctini:- ls n favorite pastime f'1f MilNI went to Yale and received
Willlam Bakdr, He has appeared
his BA degree there . He received
ht NUCh plays as "Sabrina Fair'' , his MA and PlhD degrees a t In ­
PreacnUy,
bit
"l,ltll,, Mury Sunshine", and "Our dio.no Univ~lty.
Town•· nL the . Amherst PlayeTa. hold~ the title of llS80ulnle prot.
He nppearcd
,n "Harvey"
with t!se&lt;&gt;rl&gt;f bioJogy.
Jo,•y Brown In 1959. Pre11enlly, ho
is c11rector or the Faculty Stw11
in Utl' Spr:ing Weekelnd
Stunt.
Niirht .
OR. EBERT

Anot,ber group o! delcgutwi w1ll
sent ~o Albuny 011 tho, wi,i,kend
1•f Moy ~-4 tor the Legislative As­
,wmbly, Wl11le Mock Sen ate l.ncorho,

They

placed second

Reps Urge Science Research Center

,,r

Nt!xl yuar, he wilt take a sob-.
b11tfcat Jeave of absence &amp;nd wtJI
~rudy in J apan. He is the aut.hol"
of ,cve1111 ~cWntlfic articles
on

survival." Acluot grade points nrc
lnalg-11Ulca.n1a.od ~ludenl.s urt often
Each year there are approx:!- un1~wart" or the rt"sults of lhPlr
mately sixty ~duu.tee
or LbP UB mnny 1m1des.
By JUDY HABER
and ESTHER GINSBERG

medical school. All or these m~
have PIil In 1111infinite
number or ho11rs to receive thP
rnillnl~. M.D. after their fl(UTICB.
Yet hOI, muolt does thP 8lUd1ml
body l!Jl()W nbout the people and
eV0111.i1 which

ronll)r\~!'

,

B&lt;u·n m c1evoland, he received
hi• 8:\t clegrne at Bnl&lt;.lwln-Wnllac~
C'oll&lt;'gc. stuui«l at Ohio Stute
In two tournaments and won
DR , ADLER
,1nd S. Dakota State, and re ce ived
first place at the Canlslus.
A gmduato
of the Univcrulty
his ~f A cleg-ree al Bowling Green
Rosary Hill Tournament .
of Buffalo, Dr. Selig Adle,r re.
State. Ho joined the UB start in
celved his BA degree at our Ulnlver. I ~tit&gt; as nn in~ti-uctor in Ort1h\ll
The debnters have Ylsiled '\'(W.
stly, He conllnucd his edU(:ation
1110111.
New H:llllt&gt;ablre, Ohio, ~1icb. at I.he UnivQrsity of ntinoi/1 and
li;an, Kentu&lt;.,ky. lllinols and mn11y n·ceiv11d hi~ MA and PhD d~,grces
othe,· slu.too. Those who h~ ve p11V. t.hl'I'&lt;'. Ht· Joined the Ul3 stu.tf in
tlcl11Med ext&lt;.\llslvety In lntercol­ l 94 J and presently
holds
the
legla ,le debate will TOOelve oerll­
position or Sa.mue~.
apen Pro.
flcates of merit. achievement,
or (es~or of Amerlc n HL~torir.
dlsUnclion, at a dinner t.o be givtJn
by the Debate Socie ty. Janel Pot..
Dr. Adler ls an a unu1i of' Beta
ter, director or vun,tly llelnl.t e, 111111 Sigma Rho Fralecllity.
Hll Is IL
WIiiiam A. Baker, director o( nov­ member of the American H!lstor­
iCA deh11te will present the ti.wnrd$. icat
Assoolation and Phi
Beta
Knppa. Presem.ly he Is oha ,irman
the Education
Policy Com.
naments,

The delegation from U.B. will
prese nt a bill urgi ng th e state
leglalature to locate the pro.
posed •cie"ce rese&lt;1rch center
~ere at U.B. The fu nds for suoh
a ce nt er have already
been
gra nted so -the group will be
combi ning lta efforta with th oee
of Preal o'ent Furnas and the
Chamber
of Commerce
In a
worth wh ile endeavor.

llOd WOOl!III

G&amp;M­
Profellllio na)

Geographical
Soclety,
Sigma.
Gnnlma Upsilon Metalurg'lcaJ
and
Ceramic
Sooiety, and tllei US
Niwa! Tnslltut.e. H e enjoys trave l­
ing and has been In all parts of
the wr,rld, Re Is lntere11tcd Ill
googmphlcal tield work, especiall y
In Europe and Russia, and enjo ys
photogTQphy,

are SFJLIO
PHlLIP

la a member ot

mtl-~J'heta Upsilon

Dr . Millon Ple ~ur '" a nnllve
BulfuJo anti rereived his BS
tlegrc(• nt Buffalo Stato!, hlff MA
dcgr,'r at UB, o.nd his PhD at the
UnrVL"rsoty of Rochcstor, Ho join.
••d our ~lal'f in 1952 and prosonLly
l.s llllSiHtant dean of Univeri,lty
t'n tlcg,, a11d tl.lllli,t.ant pl'Qrc.!18orof
History a.nil EducaUun .

majortfy &lt;if people 1alked
tile
ta.culty ullttud~ WO~
"hel11ful nnd loterestoo."
hut 40%
l'OJ1JmP11ted on Iha lack nr guld •
lllh'e.
I l!IWPV P,f, one dete.nder 811ld
·'He1J1Is arnllnt.1'- ir I• is sought."
ThA

lO

of

felt

lh(• thlY ~

A vurl,;ty or answers w&lt;irP glvon
when th e ,;tudenta wor~ W!k.tlll why
H e is an utunm, of AIJ)ha Sigma
th.-r hull speclfil'aliy choseu en
Dr. Plt-trur is an nlunmi o! Sigma
Phi Fratem,Ly and a member or
I u :iu .rnonymous poll or Cre;;h. ~ledlt-nl School. f'l11au&lt;•ful r~•asons,
Mu
F'rat ernlty,
He I• a
Phi !(afJJlll D~lla Deballng Soc. Alphn
nmn and s&lt;•11hom1m.&gt;rned1&lt;'nl •tu• as " result of lowt&gt;rerl stm~ 1ulldy, l'h1 Mu Alphu Slnfonlu Men•~ member or Alpha Ep silon Lambda
•lt&gt;nls 90•, stated they were un,l m· 11una. rnnk,'(). lll~bPSl with Ml%
Mu~I•• Snc«'lY, and YYS Ooba ti&gt; Ewnlug School Society, Th~ Nat..
~rent new 11rese-ure due lo I he lm• Th•• h[~h qualiLy of ,11~1ru,•t]o11Ulld
1onal Council tor Sodut Studle!I,
t 'oar ho.,.• A ~.suci~ lirn1
me11s+o quantity ot worh. rx1,ccled tht ... •·utl\'tlnioat urbn.,n l0&lt;·allon w..:re
,u11J The Ameri can
Historkal
,11·th&lt;-111.In mnny cases, ~ludy Cimo f'itmt by ti6'"r
Ur· Charles E~·t
st udied in Association Ho was also made an
,l1&gt;11l11
Pd and sleer, lime wrui cut hr
Germany and Sw itzerland. He wns h&lt;111um1, mcmb~r of the Bl,;t,n.
When questioned on the at•
l,:~lf A~ one freHbman phrased it,
born
ur Anrerlcun parents
in li,•Jlcl i,t UB.
tltude toward female medical
,·~• retire from the humnn ract'
MR. BAKER
H 111nl)uri:-. Germany and is a nat­
students, 76% stated they felt
r..,. four years."
Hi~ h&lt;&gt;hbhm includt~ arl, mu~ic,
mitl(•e or t.he FacuJly Senate, and ural born citizen of Ute US. lie
on a
women were accepted
is th e aulhm· of two books,
•l"' "t r,,ur ~-cars 111 the l!S Army 11n1l!lrumatlcs. He enjoys w1·lt111,1r
The future
doctors follow
comp letly equal basis with men.
1,uluf11111i~t Jn,pul-.• and
lf'rom Charle~ received h is PhD degree u111I hn~ 111111
i&gt;t•v~al nrtkle~
pu.
an lntenalve science program
16% sa1d females were accept­
co nsisting of such interrelated
,\r,.mt lo :-uhur'nia ,
in '.'forth Carolina He joined the I bl;shed.
ed by the faculty but not b)I
courses as histtology, biochem ­
-the male students, while 5%
is try, and blophyics,
all of
felt that the direct opposite
which have been rece"tly com­
was true . 5% belleveQ' female
bined into one comprehensive
students
were on the whole
cell courae. Lat~ subjects ln­
out of place and unwelcome .
clcde anatomy , neuroanatomy,
"The emotio"al strain la too
psychiatry,
pathology bacterl •
great for most girls," ■ a id one
ology and clinical
diagnosis .
By LORNA wA Li.ACH
it on t" her fellow countrymen
When asked her opinion or theboy .
l.ong lab sessions serve to ac•
thrnu;:h tenrhinir.
i\ 111crican people, MIii Acevedo
Bei:ause the pr&lt;.11,-rn111
la •&lt;&gt;hh:hquaint the students with the
To ,1,11t1111wth• ~eriP• of ln~r 1
,
,
.
.
Hid ~enagera have moro freedom
1) sclenllfi&lt;-, the boys ad vl,.-d ll&lt;► views with dlude nts from fo.reign
methods of research, Th e large
~urSIIII(
Paragu!1y 1~ a fimly here in regards to dating and NI·
11.'ntlnl
u1ed
student.,.
u,
a
void
01·ct
volume of work demands that
cou ntrie s The Spec trum h11s 11,~kNI rfl'W l)('CU()!lt ron _,.and 1s growing
ed ft dat Ia ti ons with th e oppoa It e sex. Sb •
1·oncentrntlon 111 the sci&lt;·nc,· dur•
the students keep up-to . date.
•
11 i:ireal r11te. ,,.,ss Acev o n s j
-~ t I h
th
th
Hihl11
•\rcvedo
n
graduute
student
h
d
h
seem.,.. to ee, owever,
at
el'e
1111: m1dern1tduate
da ys. 'ryplr.al
It ar to compare t e •Y■tem In ian't much difference in mannerism,
Tt,e, ••cramming" aeaalons com ­
·
•
.
fJUOtat~•11s w»rP, "Get II hr&lt;&gt;ad lib· from f'ill'UJ!uuy, her vr~ws of Anr· I'lltHl."IIU)
mon to undergraduate
year s
w1~• Lhat ot t.h~ US nnd drees of men and wotneJ1 in
flral :u l~ b•1&lt;ki:rnund
110\\ l.,uto1 rri1•11n 111·,,nl~and education.
ean no longer be relied Upon.
hi•ruu~i• ours ,s 8 much older eati,b- our country. Men and women ahare
thl'r•• ,w,n't hp time." "A 1111
y~t.
.
11,;hment.Rhe considers our 1choo!s tht- same occupations She waa
11
~••V~tul
bors
ifelio,•ed
thl\.l don •· 1mmnud!"I .111 1mp,&gt;rMllt ;.i.nJ
~liss .\1· .. vcdo 1s riresently ~t.uJy. tu he bette,· equipped hut !eels
l k d
h
•
b
.
. I
,
.
• 10c ·e t o aeo we ave women 11.1,fllf(•h of rhe 1&gt;r,,~•ure was psy.-ho- r,•si1twled 11111.-~ ln 11\e 1·1mu1111ulty •nl! ~lc•l11•nl and Surgical
Nursing
l':.ra;:~or alsu rn. developing good &lt;lrlveni and police women.
'&lt;&gt;i'klll"
Tllr PVerpres..-nt threat' 11» should l&gt;" " well rm111d~•I1rnr at l'. H. She st l/died six yeH111for ,•,lucahonal te\'hnlques.
,r .beln,: on,, c)[ the "r11tllni;- 20'i,'
11111lll"f••ll
I Olli' sld,•d •rlem.
" l.11..t,,,1
.. r·'s degree rn P11ra1~ay
\li.◄, .\c&lt;'rndo ,·,.usid,,r..,t!
c II
~he c&lt;:&gt;nslden peopl,· h,•rc ltllltl'r
.,,du1••:d 1?reo1 oervtlll9
1e11~lon. ll•t ..
11 ,,rcl,·r 1,, qualify
for the In stitute f,., hl'r further studies rn nul'!lln11: rnh&lt;tk Even though she haiJ oi1ad1•
1
'.11l111g &lt;IOP rnaJor roursl• enUtili;, •
Schoo l o! ,in-, uur school has providt'd t..,wh- fll&gt;1tlYfrl11nd~ here, ,h,, f~I• we
••J•Pa~l01g Lh~ enllr,e y&lt;'ar and this
.\, one pro~i,&lt;,t•lll'« • Ii.fl. ~c&gt;her•II·111. Andres Barbero
i11 Asundr\n. . There sho ! r1icul ussist.ance und funds w Or. "!)lit on i. front" an1i rh,n'l conve y
,d only U !e.culty discretion allow&amp;. etoted, "~It.hough tbe, rurrit-11111111\ "''""'
1•,u1tmry l-0 ex))OCl:tllous, conoJlC· ts dema.ndllll, we lll'9 mo•·•• iha11 ,1 ,,d,~cl nursing for three yeul'll and lforh~ro's School of Nursin1t whcr, • our tru~ ~motions.
One ~omplaint exprellllt&lt;d b,y Miu
1,i1011 amon g the st ud ents ts "at r1•rnpN1~atc'&lt;I with tllo """" l••fl~•· t· now a qualified nurse. She bas) sh,, had previ.,usly been atudy!nr, I
A~cv0do is on tho eubJtct o! tho
' mlo.lmuru" One hoy polnt&lt;HI tlllt, that n llfollm~ ot servi.,
1 ' hu ,·,111ti11uedher Btudles to incrc11sc, She was al8o 11wardcd a W.
h,•r knowledge in nursing and pau Kvllogg fellowship to study h~rl', we11th'-'!rh~re. It ls tou rc•ltl!
• (' 1'"-&gt;1)eruti011 b
l.l _mu~t ror 0111'. mnnity ' \dll t)l• nur reWUt "f'.
J.t Cil!l~II

Halt •

Tb"/

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Foreign Student Interview: Miss Acevdo ,
Nursing Student from Paraguay at U B

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K.,

�Friday, April 19, 1963

SPECTRUM

S,eclrumCaff /JoarJ

/AllianceOispenses
IMembershipCards

LETTERS
, ContlmM.I rr.1111 page I 1

Today. from 11 a.m. to 3 p .'111.

}ll'ohably improve !Qr nldng Negro~ ~ ln l.A'tlorc
Count,Y. Mlssl!llllppl nnd anolJier
Ms lh Oh1b
g-rudnnk group11 whan raque~trd
Ille
iuuallon
nnd
l!AVe m"' from artlcle ddinlng
,,,., !'n1ll- 1·graduale Math club ln advance.
the tund raising
wlll hold It.A final meeting of th e
The n&lt;1'&lt;tmeeting or the EXPCU· rurther cmbarraAment b)' nollnl? cnmpal~
appenns In this edition.
cmcatcr Wc-(lnesday al 7:30 pm in Uve CouncU of the As,,ociallon I&gt; 1he following cor rectiom1 .
In answer
to the que.stlon11
Norton 2ml. The orriC&lt;',rs..elect Jor l llCl&gt;edulcd for MondRy Rl 7:30 p.m.
Thr.lllk you very muctl.
which app"nr above, I might refer
the coming year wt ll preside at in IM 1&lt;&gt;1snge.
the writ,,r to the Cnnstltullon of
Conuany y,ou1·s,
1hr student
ASbQClatlon which
\l'tls meeting. They are Jam el\
Praka.~h Trlvedt
&lt;leclAre~ thli National
Studenta
W~ppel, Prdll .: Donald Bucbw&amp;ld ,
AAlJ.l'
V1'Ce-Pre11
.: Karen
Gochenour,
All ch11pt.ers of the Amerlca.n
Assl)Clntlon
Steering
Committee
Sec'y. and Yvonne Echlnnz Treall AssoclaUon or Unlvrrslty Prr,fes . Edito r' ~ nll f,c
11 standing committee of lhe Stu..
Rl"freshmcnlll will ba scrv~ nlte; sors in thq Niagara F rontier ar e
The Spectrum rPgTet.B any mi s­ dent Senate. the editorial !Ocl. 5)
th&lt;' meellllg
having thch• annual Spr1ng joint
uf rl'llrlng
edJt.or Joan
Flory,
meeting at D'Youvllle College, 320 W1&lt;kr11t.andtng or embarrassment
Porter Avenue, Buft8lo l, !'.ew which may have been e11used by whi ch definei; NSA. UI Current
Soc laJ W1·tr 1U&gt;eClub
There wlll be a meeti n g o! t.hf' York, thle Thursday a.t 7:00 p,m. the Interview bolween Mr. Trivedi Magulne which reatufes an NSA
Kupplemcnl, and to a host ot
Soollll Wellure club Monday at ◄ Dinner will be $4 ,ljO pet' per son and Mr . Frenkel
materlAI and various othe r lite1'11.
p m. In Nol'lon room 330 El ection Dr . Thomas E. Connolly, pas t pn11tu.re concerning the organization,
on "A ca­ To the Edltcr;
or offlceni w111 be tht maln topic . ident of AAUP wt ll 11pea1&lt;
"Why Is It 1NSAI
concerned
demic Fr~om''.
All f aculty are
Gary Ligh.ter, on behalf of the
Sid C lub
)nvlted to participate . Di nn er res. N.S. A , Commltt.ee, has asl~ed re91. \11th Issues such as thi s one?"
UB Skl Club will present their ervaUona shoul d be made wi th dence 1tudent.s 'to gtve 1up !heir PoSRlblY, becauso there arc people
rll'llt Annual Sw'1m Parly a l the Mrs. M. Miller (Ext. 2217) by Mon­ Tuesday evening men! In order to In 011~ country who are conce rned
about the rights oC others and nre
Kiaalng Bridge Sk\ Area In Col. day ,
help 110me 22.000 Negroes
In
willing to give ot them~clves ln
d«I . The May 6 event will run
Lenort County, Mlsslsslp ,pi.
def enRe of th~• · beliefs .
from 1:00 -p.m. until 7 An a&lt;Jmla.
Mode m languag es
Tn innklng your doolai1m, It IH Mr 1..lghtcr le n member or NSA
lllon charge nt $2,60 ro r non -mem .
Tbe Department of Modern L1rn­
bers wtll Include 11Wlrnmlng, food, guage11 and Llt.erature announcei; asked that each of you ,consider, and hn 1 been sup1;r\'l!!lng this
progrom
Asked If he
o.nd dancing . Trnru,po1·tallon leav . a public lectuze (In English)
on and preferably become acqWllnted parlkular
coope ra lion from
1n, Norton Sunday al 1 :00 p.m. la "Bertolt Brecht'• Epic Theater" with, the answere to the · follow. has received
othe r pNsons, Mr . Lighter spoke
Included In the price or the llrket ll Thurnday, May 2 Ill 4:30 p.m. In ini; quutlnns:
htghly or our
11dmlnlslrallon's
April 22 nl Crosby 12~. The lecture will hP
whlr.h will bo on 81114!o
t , What 111 tbu National Stu. effort&gt;, ror th1• prognm,
and
\JI~Ticket office. Tickets for mem . given by Dr. Jack M. Stein, Pr o.
dents Association.
who are ass1iol8nce given
him by other
bcra a~ $2 .00 .
re!!llOr of German Harvard Uni­
1111 nfflceni,
what
are its students,
Including members of
versity.
pun111ses; why 111It concerned NSA .
Study
St.arllng Monde,y , AprJl 22 1n
l~sues
such
as
fhls
one?
with
Two ColloquJum~, In German on
Fu1•111ermore, Mr . Lighter was
2. Why has Mr Lighter had no informed Of lht: situation In Le.
'lorton Union licket booth for the ··verhBltnla zwischen Gedlcht und
11\'allable all day as a student Musik Im deut.achen Fled,'' will b,•
h1•lp from other
Hudcnt.s. florc County
via the, ntttional
,,eprcially those involved tn malllnltll nf NSA . Concerning news.
1&lt;tlld)' area.
conducted
by Dr Stein. 'l'hl'H '
nnd pRper covernge, I do not reel
N S, A. In orgnnlzlng
colloqu.tums are OLJ4.1l to atudentA
Omdu nw Stu@nt 11
plnnnlng thlR appeal•
Spcctrnm need be emb.'ltTaRc•I.
'J'ickelll are now on 11111e
o.t thr und faculty and othe rs with HpC•
ti. Wl1ro Informed Mr. Lighter And
notionally,
the
lnc1uc"U
Norlon Vnlo11 lkkeL hooUt for the ,·1a1 Interest In lhe t-0pic. The first
ur lhts probll'm an Mi.,~ISMIJ)jll which hRVe led lo the prelicn• pr o.
Gradualc SI udenta' ovening at the colloquium WIii be held on Thllr,1and
what
were
thelr
sour
ce~
dny, May 2 fr0Tl1 7 :00 to 8; 15 p,m
gram, the voter 1·,•glsh ·att un -irt\'I' ,
Rendezvous Room or tho Statler
&lt;&gt;flnCormntlon? Th e sltunllon llll' lllTl'SlS of intcrgrallm1 ll'BJ.
Hlllou, li'rld1Ly, Aprll 26. The pi,o­ Crosby H8ll 118. 'l'ho s~'1:0lld wlll
ha• hull llllle or no 111·op1•1~rs 111111 the rl'fllSRI 10 11rrcst
grum wlll consist of o unique per be hdld on Fmlay , May 3 rro,11
n,,wspaper covc1-a,:t._
ronlt'tll. 1n Dick Gregot·},
hnw
rnrmanco by Gypsy Rose Lee, fol. I :30 to :-i:4:i p m .. Crosby Hall Ir
Who 1s lhe food tor 111111w,·
1 rei:ch'l.11 ottenl.ibn from ull u11•u;,.
lowed by dancing a!Wr the ,how
l•nU&lt; Mu~1c• Clu b
11,•ing s~nl t•1 nml how I~ t1 01 eommu ntcatlon.
Ticket.a are on salu lo Grad1111l1'
b,•ng dl~trlblltcd?
Thcl' c will be ri rnCteling of th~
Th 1•1·rIs much lhnl can be NIIIO
Students for only $1.110 per por •
Folk MUSIC Club On Tuesday , at
One mc!II out of a ye-or do, .. not tor the "t ood tor freed om" p1c,.
110n, with the rcrnalnlng amount
3 p.m . 1n room 335 Norton. All llt'em tu bP a ,·cry )arge lasue !!mm a9 well "~ NSA
such
~ be subaldlz.ed by tht' Omduat.•
~l't' invll~
and brlnll' your lnstni. Howev.-1 . any r1t1zcn engaging 1n nctivtlll.'s shoulll be appla111l&lt;d
A6!10&lt;:1Btton
ments.
!l nmpalgn
5\JCh as thlR ha~ 8
It la lt) he noted tho.I Urn Cmd.
responll.lbllity to thorough!}' under ­
!iprin g W1~c•nd
stand s uch question~ as ha vp bceh
wale Student Lounge on t.h0 thml
Friday o.tternoon, April 26, the JJOllNIhere before,, giving h11 all.
floor of Nor ton Union la now open
for use during all hours that th l' Sprlnk Weekend Com mittee will out ,u1,r101t,
Union is open. The toungel Is mea111 show the movie, "Love ln the Aft •
Elizaht-!h Wlll~on
IA provide a pl ace tor relo..x11,tio11ornoon" In Diefend orf 147. The co. •:itlt,or ', !"ow:
nnd meeting of graduate stud en l~ stars or this pt,cture are Gar) '
ti ,~ nutura) lhnt when an In.
of aU dlBclpllnes. Study tables with OooJ)&lt;'r, Audrey Hepburn and Mau . dh'ldllBI l~ requested tc p !edge II
c(&gt;lllfortRblo chairs ond privat.r rice Chevalie r. Showllme Is 1:00 c-onlnb111,vn tu a eauee, quextlonij
lo.vorn tory faclllUcs url' now !lvnll. p.m.. and admlSlllon Is free. Fol• ns 111 the, no.tore and pllljpoae of
abl~. In thll tulurc . free toff~I' towing thti movie, an ln.rormal the pl'ugmm should be answrred.
wm be serv ed during e.xam wctil&lt; LWl.l!lpally WIii bl' held from a.ri The April 12 edition of The Spec.
and 1&lt;,1 apcdnl meetings ot "mall p.m. on Norton Terrace
tnun cleacrib,,d th e NSA program

I

You

W&lt;&gt;llhl

i11 No1·ton 220, I.he Alliance will
btl distr lbutlng memberehip cards
lo all lull-lime day s ludenl8 . Men.be1ahip entitles th e individual to
run in the party primaries for the
Student Senate a.nd also to att.eno
all party meo.tlngs and tunclio:ns .
As of Saturday,
on)Y lhoae at.u.
dents holding memberships card s
will be considered members
of
th~ Allience.

Concert Will Close
Spring Arts Week
Tho Slee Choral Ooncert will
be g1vcn tomorrow at 8:30 p .m
in the multi.purpose room or N or.
ton, closing the Spring Arla Fe11t,
Iva( week. The Men's Club and
tho Women 's Chorale under thf
direction Of Andrew H eath, W,o,
sololsl.8 'I'o.eko F ujii,
Mar l ene
Badger,
Lawrence Bearce
anc
Wllllam Wagner, "111perform Ure
Beethoven Mase In C. All fou.r
soloists appeared in the recent
production, "The Mother of US
All", opera by Virgil Thorrn!on
and Gertrude! Stein,

0111cr works to be ln&lt;:Jmled are
"FugiteR
and Cn.ntilena11" Ml1
"Oa ncf' in Praise'', both by Mr
Thoms on

r"

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..

,,

.. BEER
ISJ
A
UsrABEER,.
•
uNLE
ss IT'S
C-

,Jroquois
lntern a Oonat a,...

, ....

Inc:. lkl"•loj N Y.

Important
Notice!!
SENIORS

PLACEYOUR ORDERSFOR
CAP&amp;GOWNS

ReproductionsOf Abstract
PaintingsExhibitedin Norton

AND GRADUATION

I

Tcclrnology an,1 11rl huvc btocn
hl1•nded in rcprodurtions of twt-lvo
11l••lrnr1 puintings which ore curr1•ntly &lt;111,•,chibit in ll11• &lt;'or•,dor~
hHt',
The print.&amp;, which were commie•
11oned to Sl'rve a9 cove rs for the
m111tazint " lnt.ernati on al Scie nce
nnd Technology" aro int.erpreta ­
tious of scientific principles and
tech niqu es. They have been termed
1,y critke aa an experiment in the
relationship between two kinda o1
,·reoth•ity - that of th" urtisl and
thnt ur the ~cienti11t and engineer. ,
'l'h ey will be on exhibit ror suver .
al week 1. Titles and ortistA are.
"Information Retrieval'' by Wang
liui-~tinii, "Near-Surface Vehicles"
by Edmond Casarella, "E lectricit y
1-'rom neut '' by Ray Ridahock, "TIil'
New Optira" by Bann e:i Be.-l&lt;mann,
Engineenng
With \ti crobe11" hy
!ltetGerald Sch,•ck, "Hirh-Energy
11 Forming" by Jamee M. Grahnm.

I

".Soli,IK Uurl~r l're 11s11
rc " by Jnnlc~
llr~inin. ''Tools for Chemical Annly~i•" hy Ray Schulli, "Places for
Research" Ly Alida Walsh Kipke,
"The f;11r1h's Crust" by Scutt Hyd1•.
''Lenrning Ma~hin~s·• by Edmond
rusar&lt;"llu, am! ".Magnetic Mater­
ia\s" bl St.Roley Row&lt;&gt;,Jr.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

===

NOW - At Our Pen Counter

We print everything trom v ;:::!ling coro ,v o newspaper ,

8UiFALO
STANDARD
PRINTING
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1

133S E. DELAVAH AVE. -

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SERVICE · QUALIT
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of Th.e Spectrum

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"ON CAMPUS"

�SP E CTRUM

Friday, April 19, 1963

PAGESEVEN

WBFO Announces Schedule Visiting Prc&gt;f.
~:06
6:16 Over the Back Fence
6:30 Relax wHh HI-Fl
i:00 Netherlands
9ololsl.6--&lt;tea9 :00
turlng the Dnnzt (lun'l'tet
7 · 30 Panora.ma. of t.he Lively Arts
Fran ce : l nt !rvlew with plan•
lat Jean Casndeaus, Ja pan:
A rep0rl on the current cl:ne­
mu 11rodut-"llon scene, Ita ly :
Review of the two produ&lt;l- 10 : 00
rlona or Alban Be-rg's "Woz- 10:10
tock'' don,. In Florence and
Vt1nire.

MO ND AY

S 06 SU RV IV AL -"Problem,;

or

Lectures H•~re

PRI M IT IVE M US IC -Introdu('tlc',n to tile st udy of ethnomu!&lt;lcol()gy.
F IR ST

Professo r M.H.L. Pryce, British
physidst of the H.H. Wills Phy.
!lies Laboratory ar the Un1iv~rl!ily
ot Bristol, Bristol, Engla!nd, Will
de]lver three let:tures at U1e State
University of New York at Buf­
falo t rom April 29 • May J,
P rofessor Pryce will serw a~
Visiting lecture r at the U11,i
vereity
under tho au.spices Of the, Amer.
lean Association Of P hysi~I Teach­
ers and the American tnstltute
ot Physics.
On Monday, April :m he will
Jooture at 4 p .m, in room 111
Hochstetter
Hail, 11n " P honon
Momentum." That evening a t 8
p,m. In the Facu lty C lub ~ will
talk on "Magnetism. and Colour.'•
"Spin
Lattice Relaxatio n," wilt
be hli&lt; topic Tuesday, A.pri[ 30
11-t,1 pm . in 111 HochRtette r .

PE RFO R M A N CE OF

F R E NC H

lnghelbrecbt
le Tllleul,

MUS IC 0 . E.
: L o Chen e et
rhe French
Na­

tional Ortbestra a:nd soloisui
uoder th•• direction
ot tbe
t"OrnJ&gt;O.'!er ,

Newe

George n, Shaw'M Don Juon
In Rell'' with the First Drnmo
Qui;rtet, Cedrk Hordwlcke,
t'bar]l'S
BoYer,
Charles
Lau,~liton n.nd A1m&amp;a Moore•
ht'ad

Df.\1°elo11Lng
Countries Which
AfTeel the Survival or the
UnJted States"
TH URSDAY
•1:00 lnternttlionnl
(' on&lt;wrr Hnll
6: 15 BBC Repor t

!O· lll 1-'olk Mu~I• •

, l.l:00 MuKIC: rrum St11dlu " ('"
TUESD A Y
ti: 16 European

Review

IJ:30 Relax With Iii-Fl
7: 00 Wa~blngton
llepvrlR

G:30 Relax wllb HI-Fl
, : Oil WBF'O NP.WR RPg(']AJ.
Re1iort$
from
I 11., U.N
Clnh Model SPl' lll'lty Council

mooting
~ :OIi New
i:15 Small Wol'ld - 1,:111.aholh ~: 05 &lt;'ogito-.JRrry J,lebowitz
Drlbbeo
~: 00 &lt;'onct&gt;rt HJtli- Salnt-SaenR
i 30 Let·~ J.e11r.n (;01,unn, follow. 10 :·011 Ni,w ~
lowing Mln lmum Standarc ' 10:10 Wei¼kly Re1&gt;0rt rro111 the U.·

Cam..l'tf_j(}reek
·r/ ole&amp;
The h1'Cltber;i or Alph a PIil Om~ a
wll1 hold a ml&gt;:er with Lo.mbd a rnit
Iota rrom 0C'l'f at t bP Club Bar
Satnrdny night and a mixer with
Slgmn Sigma &amp;0ror1ty tr9111 Butta lo
Stale o,u Tue&amp;doy evening at no.
~t!ltt'~. TII~ tralers w-lll usher for
the Hnnor~ Oonqnet 'T'ue•day eve·
ning, April ao.

bold a

ti'!\

ln honor or oil 110rorlt,­

pledges Sunda y M Flowe r S tree t.
T hr •lstero w ll J)llrtlctpn.te i n the

Olymp tca, Sunday. aponllOrlld by~
(:amrna Phi.
The •brother11 or Slama Ph i Ep• I•
Ion wl.ll bo ld a aQC
1al wtlh nu nia.
tonlghl rrom 9-1 nt &lt;Ille Nor thl&amp;ll4
n11Hl A dated p&amp;rty will b&amp; held

Beta Ph r Sigma wlll hold thlllr rr()!n 9-1 tomorrow eTen lo~ 1t the
d&lt;&gt;Rln!( 11R'nirMi\Y I at thP Execu­ Tra nslt 1,.1nc~. Mu sic tor bOth
tive Hotel. Plans nre being modn 1)11.rtles wlll b,· 11rovldPd t&gt;y tbo;
ror a one-week. get-toge ther durlni: Prophe,ts,

tho summer vacati on.
A rlllit:IOU~ broatcrMt WIii be bal d
In ooordlnatioo 'll'kh l.F.C.'a Help by the. br111Jten1Sunday morni ng lo
Week, tho brothers ()! Ph i Epa ll on
the prt vr~II\ dln!ntr r oom or Oood­
P l held an nlfllir nt Cblldren'a Ros•
year . Tha n.w R.obart A. JQ11
ea
11ltnl.
will be tl1e SJXl(lkl'r. A coc kt11U
The slijtors or Sigma De lta T au ,,arty will be hol d by t.he broth en,
will bold their closing altlll r ot U\o bQ!orc the SprJng Weekend d1111ce,
season Mny 5 at the Erle Uowus 'l'h11 &lt;'111,iingn lralr will b11 hol d on
Oou.ntry &lt;'lub.
Mai· 22 ut 'l'ronsit Vnllev &lt;"01111tr'l'
Tbe pledges ot Sigma Kap pa will ('lub .

-~obhlet&lt;-!

Ger man VocabulQ ry

N -'l'hlll
week's happenings
in ,, .. psulP ijUmmary from
{ : Ofi Mn stenwol'ks rrom !•'ro rwe
the Krentest ho(ll' for world
~ ;35 fo1eroational
BOok neview
11&amp;a
c e. 1'be United Na.tlQJls
ood I.Jilerary Report
iO : ::o \111stc from
Studio "C" ­
•► ;00 Oont·ert Hall - Brahm~·
Sym .
Host Paul Qulnlnn
phony No. 2 In D Major, Op.
73; tbo first recording from FR ID AY
Ph11hormon1r
Holl &gt;II l,ii11•­ t\: 16 lnti&gt;rn111lonnt Reporl
ohl Center
1;::l(I Rl'lax wllh BL.Fl
10:l)O News
·
7 : 00 Al the P residen t's Req uest
10: 10 T H E ST O RY BE H IND T HE
- Thi&gt; nrot 11ro11ra111
, "An
bauklug jij
T H EAT R E-How
Overall View··
obtained; how the eninlpres­
7 . 30 Let·~ Learn Germon rretoPat)
eot producrr Rha.pes the 11lay. 7: ~5 WushL11gton lteports
S: 00 Sound of flroAdw-ay and
WED NESDAY
Hollywood
B:16 Germany Too·ay
9:00 Concert Hall --&lt;i\lozart
6;30 Relax wltb HI-Fl
~: 00 WBF O NEW S SPEC IAL : A lll:00 News
leoture d iscussion by A.met·10:10 "Pea(•e Corps Plus One"
Part fMlr
lea's grealiMlt vlolln18t Isaac
$Lorn
r""orded during the 10: ~6 Mo1ele Town US.A. wlt.h
Dave Jay, SPEOJAL J11zz
SUNY Spring Arts Feellval
promotional program .
S:00 News

Feminine Footwear

~:00 News

UNIVERSITYPUZ.A

Tempt!st Winners... Lap 3 !
Garr L ll wlt

If u nurn smokes one pack a day
for s everal years and then quits,
after ,mo year, his chances of es­
t•aping cancel' are fifty percent bet­
ter.

Dr. Moore spoke in the confer­
ence theater of Norton last Wed­
nesday at 8:30 p.m. His talk wa s
s ponsored hy the I\!ilia rd Fillmore
College Student Association.

Distussing th e cuntroversey over
the efficu,•y of lilt~ rs , he stated that
they du reduce the number of tars,
but accordi11g tu Dr . Moore , the
best wuy to filter your smoke is
to use a water pipe.

II

~a
fl R
0, 8. M&gt;t~ltcll •
L ,, M&lt;c!l1••

-~•flt.,.
...,.....~,
i,.i:i, 11, rr.1,,,., 1 tt

VIIPll'IIUO
U. (S111!1

I

s1.,,

L1f1jelt1

Coll,1e

Justl•e. ewro,

St, Bon.,enturoU.

,. D. '*l"IU , Il

l

u. OfNewMll&lt;CCI

'II,

Uw,rj R. W1111I
Cltr.lmtnCollr•tt

Morrh S, 1,,.,
u.or0t0rr11

I

, . S, Holder,Jr,

$I

M1r,'1

U.

Did you win in Lap 4?
IMPORTANT! Ii j'llfJ rtl)tti '"'Int Jllflo 20,. llll•llft IJUIP1
cta,m ,our P11"1t.1 fnm41fll~f l llM,tr.o. f.,orw,.tt,tih·
,n accoroanr,. ¥tlfft """ , , •·') or, Ilk ,,..,,
,.,.\r• 1.J! ;in,,r
license pl1He G1rf1, t ~ou m~y chooo U'l&lt;Jlll,} d ., /1,r,,
bet\

utg

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,

:

~(•t'

ilt

HolfddJ ,n f utop,

lo•

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All claim{ 1orT•tn If anti O&gt;ntofatlon f&gt;rilt' • .
mus! b6 ;,nt •ii ff ,uorod ma,!, po,1ma,i..d
&amp;y April'27, l~&amp;l 'a &lt;iroc•l•od by rh•' iU&lt;l&amp;tt
,,'
no laltr th•n AprlJ2 9, 19&amp;3.

.

.

I 0328872 6. A81847111.&amp;191819 16.Al1203
2. 85520837. C17538012. A07860317.A337471
452 18.C46789
3
3. 86311558. A13U8J13. 0215
59 19.8911494
4. 01481389. C70W2 14. A6091
3177 20.8482160
5. CS9115510. A90979115. C61
CO N S OLA nO N P RIZ E NUM8E~S

l ' B faeult r member F re d Rr t1s1&gt;
I
;.lll i;rve a ro111•ert. ~ID)' J 2 ElinInc
Tb e weekly srudont recital ~ glv• I\USIIA Ck, ;()J)rl\11 0. will ~I n II re­
Pn by applied music studen ts will ci tal \la y 17

If you hold J: 1..'&gt;"t? .1t•1J'' r&gt;,,111numbe r /OU w,,, 1 4
spttd P,.1rt abtt1 Ht Fi SlM01) -s~1 rne WiilfZ b'i' f(l.,1\
V1c10, Or ,o J ,... , , \ 1 i Ni~ \ ll'mpe&amp;f• (Stl' 0t 1 (,..11
1:;l,11mm8 ru 1H J f"' M-,,u,tt •JI )'01~, ti, Pf"lJt p1.,1,. MHt ol
s~rvl' ,.,a,m,n~ 1.i"e:. ii iten •biJ~tt I

asa103
1 s.msm 131335411
ts. mm, 23.1mm
'1t
1.1141s
s1 9.cuuoJ 11 comas19.m1m 24.C44'1

1

~-A49165110, msm IS.C7S710320.AOS7t5525. 1107'1•

.

Play

I~M

I

$2

r ertorm ers th !, Tu ~~duy wlll lie
pla.nls LB Gnry Coheo and Victoria

Tho&gt; rolp of f'n 1pk iP wlll be 1,la )'-1
Bugelakl,
cla rlnetl i.-ia
CtiarlSJs ,-d by Tana Tolson . Edythe I nn i,
Wall.hall and ~ lul~ HoJ'ner . oboist wm play Bero.Ice, and Pan t A t k in s I
will play John Henry Ot b,,r, a p
Donald Larte r ty.
11e uMog i.o tbo cast ar e J obn l ,1,u ,i
Ke n Sl&lt;'ll'OI. C&amp;rol Ru din, illl d , ., , ,.,
Ba ird Conc~rta
The Buttalo Sympl1one Lte under el a Jlndey
1

I

!

1 1381031 U139584 ll cmm 16. l211594 21.t40Uot
? mo1107. cmos,12.omm 11.amm 22
.1mm

eo11t1nu
e every

The d ,,p arl.nw nl of dram a and
~1.oe1,h wtll 11r,,,,1.•
n1 " The Mtmiber
of t be Weddin g" Thu rs da y-S und ay ,
\l ny 2~ al ~·3 11!&gt;Ill l u llo.Jrd H a ll
Adrn ls• lon f&lt;&gt;r st 11d..-nl 9, fa cult y,
and sra rr •• fl : ~Pnera l adml ~srm,

Aftcil K.Hm t
Polll•ndStilt

~

•

fl

ReclL11a

~ri.m a will begin l\ t 1 J). Ol . All ta ­
t'llity a.nd student s n re Invited to
s tt e od

n. "'''

·:

w. T. Oll&gt;tr

ll mU W, fdf

D. J. Ta• 1IIYld
Worett tet Poll(Sl1ffl

Weekly Student Recitals to
Continue THISemester Ends

t•1ke pll\Ce Lo the reh r ursal hnll ot
Huh·d : th e other tw o program s
•·lit be in Ih a audltoriuru . All JlfO­

J l ~111.rf.Ir

'.¥•..,~

there were 3R,000
Dr . Mo ore als o remat·ked that
,lc aths from lung cancer.
Next
year lung rancer is predi cterl t o people wh,1 quit smoking generally
11ass auto accidents and ris e l o gai II fr om Iive to fifteen pounds.
He advised thos e who find that
11,000.
they can't give it up completely
"Smoking is rww common in th e t o s witch t o cigan or pipes. These
xwontb grad e," h~ commented and have little or no effect on thl• lungs
wont on to say, "that parent's ex­ an d there is only a poss ibility o(
ampl e is the strongest sinJ:!'le J.ac­ minor damal!' e to the in s ide of the
t nr in teen -uge smokin g. "
mouth.

Tu esdl\y until tbe
;md or th e ll8Ill&lt;N1ter
: Apr . 23 and
:10, a nd Mny 7, Thi s T11PSday'11 will

81"• 0, Groff
PonnStat•

Lmu College

H,U. Rounl•s.
Kanmsrate

year

Student

Erh 1t

In a lifeti100, the average per ­
son spends $,i,000 on cigarettes.

Did you know that out of sixteen
lung cancer patients only fout· can
be helped, and on ly one can be
saved? So said D1·. George Moore,
director of Roswell Park Memorial
Institute, one of the three hospitals
in the U. S. which is devoted to­
tally to cancer research.

Last

JO• Y.

u. ot S,o frao.

Few Lung Cancer Patients
Can be Helped Says Moore
by Peter Ostrow

SHERIDANPLAZA

tM,
' "•

~''-.-r1,

t11•

GJWIDPRIX

!,O

Get with tli,ewinners. •.
far ahead In smoldn11
satisfactionI

�ttAGE EIGHT

, SPECTRUM

Friday, Apr il 19, 1963

et mo
your
e
BOOH~S
Here are the books you've been
waiting for - at BIG, BIG, SAVINGS

Up to 75o/o1off
Many New Books Right frc)m our shelves
in
PSYCHOLOGY

ART &amp; ARCHITECTURE
CRAFTS &amp; HOBBIES
GOV'T &amp; POLITICAL SCIENCE

MEDICIN E
NATURE
POETRY
REFERENC E
WORLD A FF,AIRS

TRAVEL
BUSINESS

ECONOMICS
HISTORY

LITERATURE
MUSIC
PHILOSOPHY

Plus a Great Sele◄:t ion of
Recent FICTION BEtstsellers
at the same BIG, BIG,. SAVINGS

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M-1789 . Poblo Casals ploys D-,orok.: CELLO CON·
CERTO. The world's greatest cellist bri lliant ly per~
fo,ms. Pub . at $4 .98.
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S- 1790 . Pablo Casals p loys 0-,orok: CELLO CON­
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CERTO. Stereo. Pub. ot $5. 98:
M- 104 9. Boch. EASTER ORATORIO. Outstanding
example of Bach's rollglous feeling, this orotorio
combines a Quartet of voices with orgqn and or·
chestro.
Pro Muslco Chamber Orch. of Vienna,
Grossmann conducting. Pub . at $4. 98.
On ly $I. 98
M-1781. Mozart : MUSIC FOR TWO PIANOS ICom.
p letel. Three lmoginotlvo, engaging works: Concerto
for Two Pianos, Sonata, ond Fugue. Alfred Brendel
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&amp; Wolter Klein. Pub. at $4.98
5·1782.
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M-1968.
MAHALIA!. Mohollo Jackson gives her
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Spirituals. Inc. Move On Up o Little Higher, Didn't
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KRIPS' COMPLETE BEETHOVEN SYMPHONIES
The famous Beethoven Festival Recordings mode by
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technlcol skill, on 8 magnificen t 12" Long Ploys
Hondsorne 2-color soft- cove r book present s o Pictorial
History of the Composer's Life ond Times, extensive
notes on the symphonies. over 30 illustrations . Pock•

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M-1740.
Mooourol. Pub. at $39.50 . Only $14.95
S,1 4 71. Stereo. Pub. ot $4 8 .00 .
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M-1809.
FERRANTE
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tJRAHMS VARIATION. Great duo piano team ploy
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M-1844 . Tcha ikovsky: SY MPHdNY
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M- 1 13. Collector's Item: ALICE'S 1~DVENTURES
IN WONDERLAND. Reod and sung by the inimitable
Cyril Richard, original music score by Alec Wilder ,
ployed bY the New York Woodwind Quartet - the
Lewis Carro ll closs,c complete on four 12" LP
rl'Cords in deluxe full-color ;llustroted gift box, plus
o facsimile volume of the rare 1865 first edition
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M-871.
!RISH DRINKING SONGS. You'll wont to
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Mush, Mush; 14 more au thentic hoole~• songs.
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M-1 914
Boch ST MATTHEW PASSION, Mogn,·
hcent complete recording of greot work for chorus,
orchcstro ond soloists featuring Fischer·Dieskou ,
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M-960
RICHARD STRAUSS· Till Eulenspiegel's

Merry Pronke, Don Juon, Dance of the Seven Veils.
Sensuous, swash-buckling, lilting music by th e master
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M- 1222 . GREAT BRITISH BALLADS. Deluxe al·
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M-1266,
Beethoven : EMPEROR CONCERTO. G41·
omor Novoes p loys this beloved piano concerto with
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M-1295
Highlights from PIRATES OF PENZANCE
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M·l508.
WORLD'S GREATEST CLASSICAL MUSIC,
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Vol. I. Value $4 9 50
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CLOTBl[NG
VALUE
89
228
95
42
46

125
20

41
43

Girl's sport shirts
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Men'• ties
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Men's sweaters
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Summe-r weight sportcoats
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SALE PRICE

65

1.98-2.98
69c-2 / 1.19
2.98

59
30
35
29

11.95
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36

12.95
1.79 &amp; 2.29

49
23

Pm. Swim trunks
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Mun's short slee ve sport shirts
Wltite dress shirts
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!iize 10- 12- 14- 16
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s:izes 10-16
1

3 .95 -5.95
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24.95
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1.49

2 .98
2.98-3.98
1.00

1.79
1.77 -2.29
2 .77
39c

1.00
1.59

2.97

1.59

2.75

1.59

�Friday, April 19, 1963

PAGENINE

SPECTRUM

£or
oneyor .. iversity
.

~~

0

SVPPLJIES
VALUE SALE PRICE

VALUE SALE PRICE
10
19
5
5
23
11

44
6
44

14
34
22
6
3
30
21

Pkgs. Blue Silk Tone Envelopes (30 in)
.25
.09
Boxes Stationery &amp; Boll Pen
1.00
.49
Boxes (100 in) Informal Enclosure Notes
2.00
.69
Boxes (10 in) Invitation Notes
.so
.OS
Boxes University printed Notes (20 in)
1.20
.3S
Faber Costell Pencil Sharpeners
1.50
.69
Fine Line..Drohing Pen ( 1) &amp; Points (12
1.00
.39
.98
Self measuring divider
2.00
Box sets (3 in each set) Asst.Sheaffer block leads
.19 ea. box 3/ .25
.so
Blue square type pencil cups
1.25
1.25
.49
Note paper holders
.29
.75
Rubbermaid 3 x 5 memo sheet holders
.OS
.79
Exec. paste pens
Brown-6 hole loose-leaf notebooks
1.25
.49
6 ¼ X 3¼
.29
Grey-6 hole loiose-leaf noteboioks
.98
.25 -.29
.10
Plasti c adjustable bookcovers
.09
.20
Monthly Trav el Expense Record

Gll''IS
ASSORTED .JEWEi.RY
SAI.E PRICED

Sets (4 books each)
Weekly tax expense record
32 Cnlendors - Month ot o Glance
Desk pod size-- Jon . to Dec, '63
35 8 V2 X 11 refilloble--Jon. to Jan .
22 Baiok Rocks (make your own)
6 Dusk size piod--Jon . to Dec. '63
8 DEtsk blott er pads
2 De,sk blotter piods
ln•,est one nickel for an emblem
for your co,
5 doz. Scripto Cartridg e Pens
6 Fis.her Desk Sets
4 Est·erbrook Desk Sets
8 Eslterbrook Desk Sets
1 Porker Desk Set
5 doz. Autopioint Mech. Pencils
fine &amp; regular
2 Used Typewriters (os isl
27

.10

4/ .30

1.49
1.00
.79

.75
.60

.so

2.50
1.25

.30
.98
.59

1.00
3.00
3.95
3.45
10.00

.OS
.59
1.98
2.25
1.98
3.98

1.25

.69
$29. &amp; $S9.

�PAGETEN

SPECTRUM

Frldoy, April 19, 1963

~

Student~Senate Accomplishments of Past
Year Reviewed ; Alliance History Traced
R\' LONI LflVV
H fs only fitting and proper that
Th~ Spect rum dedicele a page of
It s tinnl Issue to a review of the
,•ndenvors aod accompllsh men ts of
the 1962-1963 St ud en t senate and
tht' Ideals and 1&gt;spiratlons of the
members of the 1963 _1964 Sena.le ,
To facilitate lhc e~curacy o( this
11rlkk, the Incoming oCflce~s, sev.
N·nl &lt;'ommilll•e chairmen onr\ the
r1111·1ylea1lers, were tntervlowed
Ats,, sevMnl 111r1ulrleswere mad&lt;'
into lh" formatll'ln of lht• new
..pposition 11urty, &lt;'ampu6 Alhanc,,,,
nurlng U1~ first wePk 111
1,•1111,tnary, l\llcluwl gh.o.Jilro 1111
d
An, ,11 E , Falk ,.pok e f-0 Dean
~1,t,c,•ll&lt;ow or th e genera l in t~rt'.~t on mm11us In e~tablls~iug n ~f•c•oin
l polltlcu.l p11rly . '1111
• h~ t• 11rga11l,,1•1'8U1en
,..,11cll1&lt;-1
l ,•11rl1111J;
,:-roup~ not
:offlllah'it \\Ith th o Unltoo Sl11ctr,111~l ',irt~. -.:r1111
p, th at prt-Vl111L
~ly lu1d 1111tJ»lrUclpakd
1wtlw ly In lit, • Stutlrnl A ~~o&lt;'.\uU,,n.
"Umted Students was ,.. closed
110.rty al th e lime of the forma.
11011or oa.m)lu11A11111.11,
•1•" sald Mt·.
·•hnplrn .
TIH• f1rat pa11y aucus , com.
pnsed of o u e repreaent nUve from
i,aoh ur the s11pporting groups, de lcrmi1wtl t he h1&lt;.
~ic pnllcie &gt;1of Ute
1artv and clcct1.'&lt;I the followln '-'
1
,
"
c•rflcers by a unanimous v,,tc: M i.
chae l Shapiro , chalrmn11; Allen E .
f'alk, parly whlp, J im Tilus and
F'm.nk Ale!ISi, pla.Uorm co-ch 11ir
nu:!n:

and

Ron

l{ubby

se crelary

o&amp;JIQCI mei:ely a mouthpiece
fol' a tool of the admi nistra tion. Th e
lho ,adminis tration and jl.lllt an ·cause celcbrc' of the y~r was the

easy Uoket to graduate or pro.
!csslona1 school. The president. a
I Kee hlm, has a definite and Te•
31&gt;onslble posillon, w'hloh if na1·.
rled out In the proper pel"l!pectlw ,
can aid both the administration
1111d th e '!tude nt body.
"It Is my feeOing that the stu.
denl~ on t hus campus B.re not
"'ware of 1 I the many academic
and lntellcotunl opportu nitie s that
are preRcnt within thd University
8nd 2 &gt; the &lt;lt'.'!lreof the RdmlniRl
ration IQ hear the voice o! the
~tudent. i&gt;l1dyin malt.ei"S that cnncem their ge ne1·a1 welfare.

Senate'!&lt; program on Polltlcal I deologies . Many members of both
the fllcu tty and administration
wl're oppo~ed to the Rchool's invl.
lation,; to Si r OIIWald Mosely nnd
lo Dr. Herbert Aptheker. If the
Senate were me1·elv a figure head,
th e administration
co u \ d ha,·e
alleviated 11IJrif its apprehensions
by cancelling the prt!llent.nUons
"May r strass that this pro.
gram wa_q not propo9$ld t.., test tho! A reminder th~t Anniversary
nd
!ldmlnl~lrallon, but rath~r cnac~ed wooke
begins .next Friday. This
will celebrate tbP 2&amp;Lh nnnlvPrsary
,
in 1n,e purs ui t of academic In- r,f New,Jllon Clubs a( \1B and S!Ale
qult'Y, lhus U1e motives were suf. 're,wher~• College and wlll lncltu le
flcidnL to eam the ,·e;ipect aud a Communion Brcnllrnst o.nd Dinner
bocking Of the adminlslrallon. By Dance .
setllng up these high Ideals and
The next N ewman meeting will
fncu!li11g our prog,·ams In th en•! ha held ln 1he_..,=-rono11 ,·nnfer ent•••
d1rccllon~. the Senat e ha;, ,:,arn •.&lt;I lh&lt;&gt;atrP \Vedneaday o.t 7::U) P.m.
lls&lt;•lf II respected and influenti a l
Hillel
Voit•~ on rampus,. This voic e
11111!;11wlll soon sor II i.r,IIIJnlh
111
11 l o bo abused by 11ny proprmen: s Si;rvlc" this evening al 7: 45 1,.m .
,,r n, sh acls which would serve I h1 thr R_lllel House . nr . •111sU11Hot.
10 glv ~ the Senatt• 11 more ·spec. I ruann wtll speuk (111
; "floes .fudaI Ism f-lnve Oog11111M!''t\l\ Oneg Sboh l•-•·11lar• air .
, th e Sonut.o bat wlll follow ,
" lu !&lt;umrm,th111
mu ~t uot l11t lls,•U be dom.1HIilei wlll hold a.nolher of Ifs
1111i-r11by 11w admini,tratiou
n_ellcate ..sen Su11pers Sunday eveand t'.a.culty of thC' Unl"ersity ,
mug at fi_:30 P-111 · Thi' guest will he
hul. at th,• sn mt- time, must
Yl&lt;'lor Emach, Ute Reglorml S!'Cren11t. compt f."11•
ly 111,•oNJe Itse lf
tary of the -State Commission !or
Humu.n ~lghts. Mr. Ein11ch'd lOJJlt
fr11111 llw "4.'forllC•s. Rath er the
MICHAEL COHE N
will be : 'Elquallly of Ormorllinity I
s,,ua le "'1onld oo n•ld••r t'1...,r
Every
''As a rtp~t11tntallv ti o lhc•
Man's Job"
•- '
""
Htucl.,nt hody on t h•• Focult-y .
·
Judi:nwnl. &lt;1 and th e r.itl onal P
St utlcu f AsAAc.iation, it IK my
bcpllnd thrso Judgm 1mt s so
Intention l-0 make tho admiJ; .
tlm1 WP may, In 11irn, rein .
forcc• nn d impl ement Pach Q!ltl~tratlon well awnl'a of any
~t,ulrnc t.U~ntent,
In 1ur-o,
er 's J&gt;OU(
~ios. "
11141 ~tudcint.H must 00 nw,t i•
The financ e committee ot U1e
,""l •&gt;tth o flUlt u,a t tbi ,y
Si udent Senate, under the cha lr1~11
in 11111
manJ1hlp of the elcoWd treasurer,
t.
11,., fur frQrn '1elp1C!l&gt;I
has the power to allocate fund~
tt't~ ooncer nlng their Unh •Pr.
to those recognized actiVilles anc:I
Nily. A,i one exa mpl o or th e
orgA.nlzations requesting finan cial
tulfillmont of student &lt;IP~lre~
1 ,,1tc the- n.wl!Jloaof Utc !!Cho oi
aid, Represenlatlvc,s of the organ.
l'.alendl\r lor ttie academlcyflllr
lza.Uons meet With the finance
1968-1964 which wss mad ~
oommltlec and !leek to effecl 11.
c11mp1-on11sea11ceptable. to both .
1,o.,i hte ti.rough the e ffort~ of
ttu\ Student Welfare Commll .
Henry J, Simon, trcai;urer o{
Wt',
the '63-'64 Senate, made the following reply concerning accusa"Lel us nol forgot ou r main lions mnde by organizations which
purpose In atte nding thi • Univc:r. fcl l that they had been denied fl.
~lty: th at of receiving th e 1110st nanclal aid beca use Qf prejudices
cffecU ,•e educatio n. My concep- of lh e Clnancinl commit~:
llon of Student Government ln ­
" I should like to make it quite
c-Judes the CuncUon ot intt'llectunl.
t'lenr thnt every budg et submitted
ly stimula ting the stude nt body . will be eva luat ed in comple!l.e fair.
C'oncomita.nl with tllis is the pres- n~s and with the same methods
entnUon of lcctul"Cll by leading used ln determining all budget~ .
c,mtemporary figures In all area ~
I hat are of interest to a colleg e
''lt is my intention as trQaSurer
~tudent. AwRreness vf thd con- lo follow lhe basic polici es or Mr ,
t,,mpoml'y world, it.I!problems and Cohen , last year's t rea surer . This
progi-css Is indeed noceS11a1'y fnr means , in esRence, that funds Will
" mu~t effe ctive education.
be prnvided only fot· activities cs­
"This, In brief, I~ my conccp1icn si'ntjal lo th e fun ctioning or any
llf th e Presidency,
the Stud enl i,rganiznt!on ,
"It iN my hope thal rvc ry
Sena te and I.he manner In whlc.h
1,·,&gt;rtl1whll e campus 11-0tivlty
th ey both con best servo th,• ~ltt·
w ill rl'Ct•lve enoug,h mon ey to
&lt;ll' lll 1-i
ody.' '
malnlaln
its pUJ1[10S(
'IS anti
l\llchtlel Lappin wa s ~ub sequ enl .
fun ction s. 1'he finan ce 00111ly ap prna cht'&lt;i with IM que stion :
mU t.,~·.wH h 11\is In mind , wi ll
"fa th e Senat e it.self Just a fl g,n •c
11n1
lrt1, or to provid e t h es e
hcnd '/" To qu ut c th e m•wly-el ecte&lt;i
I 1111
&lt;1&lt; in an "qultahtc, ma n.
11
vlce-pr c~ident of lh e Senat e:

bl

!

treasurer .
'l'he Ex.ocutlve Committee draft 1'&lt;1 u prclllnina1 ·y platrnrm
whicll
Wll&gt;l JIUbaequt•ntly m&lt;1dlfled and approved a t a Sl'cono party cauc us.
The candi da tes for oWoo, chosen
by the E x.eculllve Committee, were
Interviewed, approvQd at a cauc u s
Rn&lt;l the race was on. The campalgn, run by th e chairrna.n ,ind
parly whip, waa financed by do naUons f"rom interested and sup.
porting factio ns.
. A st.atemant fr om Michael Shu t&gt;lr&lt;! reads as foll ows:
"I am very proud th1tt I had
lilly pllrl in the formation and
development o! th e Campua Allia nce Party. we oc the Alliance
feel that in ,irder roi· uie Student
A&amp;K&gt;c
lation to grow In proportion
1&lt;1 the University,
active pollt.lcal
groups must be vrganlzed .
'"l'hcro ill a great dlfi&lt;&gt;rcnc,·
111,t\\l'lf'll n group or lnd epo,ul t'ntii and " ..tat. , of party candld»1.e8, lh !l d.1Jf1in11ice bl-Ing,
primarily, tlll' ulJIJlty t-0 get
lbiu p d one on~ 111oflloo, 'J:bf,
primar y use of a political Plll" •
ty lJi ,.., an organ nf com.mun! .
rolio n •bl.l~VtWn tb e Kluclt•nt
llod.y Md lt !i Nt'&lt;)ted N'l)rt•J&lt;C
nll•lln"'. Jt IK td1rough uu , Par ly ( 'c11111
,1it a 11d th t• E ,., ~uliv"
C'u11111
1lttl"-' thnt 111'
• 11
tud cn1
l,s ""'" to voloe h L&lt; opinions
Mid &lt;lll!lln,~ cottoornln g on.
(',j&amp;ffiPII•
I ~ ~ u Ii s, (Ill()
It 1~
"In th e JW.~I y&lt;Jar, l can hones t ­
tdirou,:b the uni on of ttw
ly sRy U\a l w e J1a v,· lruly not bct•n
,•h-&lt;•led i,1•,wtorK ll111t lh1• 11roh
l, ,n, L• solVl&gt;d,
" Ju th lb nUHllll 'r ,

progrq,&lt;&lt;

through.

,,t,.~
t1.t'
tblc, ,c

11artlcip11-

U o n ,''

Tiu ~ ycur ,.,._wa gr eiu vic tory
( 111 lh l' trnil l&gt;d Student s Party;
two of U1cir candldatl' S w ere ~1,•rt.
•·d t,, the m os t powerful off ices
1n Se n11ll' , that of the presid ent
and th e treasu1·er . Mic_hacl Cohen,
the now presid ent of lhe Stud ent
A!..4ul'.iat1on, had this to eay abou t
his office;
"The po.,IUon I\S Prt' S{dent ,&gt;!
th e St udent Senate has often ber n

Newman Club
Since Lent Is over, there will be
no more fi p.n1. Muas .it Newman
Hall. M11&lt;1swill he said daily at
12 noon.
·
Hegultu' Th oology dlsc11sslon
i:ro u1&gt;s wlll be h eld nt 9 nnd 10 a.m.
each Tuesday and Tb\!rsday
Th e
topic tor Tu es day h Moral Theo!o1,,ya nd Thursday, Marria ge.
st udenta is held
J\1&amp;118ror do rm
at th e Cantallcla n Cant er each Sunduy ut l0 : ,1o a.m., noon all d 5 11,m.

The tlnnl 11tt}eting in the 1962-G~
sel'le&gt;&lt; or Vocational Guidance Pro .
grams will be held at th e HIiiel
H ouMe Thursd ay. April 25 at 8 11.m
The sul&gt;Ject will be Medi cal Tech .
nology, und II ntm will b6 shown .
A medic al technologist WU\ be In
11-tte
ndan t'e to an~wer all question s
All Hill el members nre ask ed t,;,
11arllclpate in the ElectlM ot Oll i.
cers Sund ay, the nomination
ol
comwil members Thursday, Apr ll
Ui And elPCtlon or ro 1111rllmember
l';t~ndRY, April 2S.
Wesley Foundation
There ore nnl y three weeks more
thal Wesley ~'o1111datlon wlll !Jc
meetlng. Suudny, ot n p.m .. ther •
will be O s u1&gt;1mr meeting with th ,·
JHAS&lt;'nlatlon n.nd di scussion or Edwurrl Albee's PIIIY, ''Tht&gt; Saua1Jox .'
Tran&gt;&lt;porlnlion will lenve fro m
Ille front nr Tower an d Coody~,
3
d
10
at Ju : o n.m .
oMPll llnlv ersi t)
45
MN!tocllal C hni •ell. At •I:
p.ru
lrans110rt11tioo will lenYe t he son11
,H•P 10 nlt~nd Wesley ,
111
REGISTRATION
UC STUDENTS
,r yvur luflt ,nume hl'gin~ wllh :
JC, P . Z, You 'lhoul1I Hee your advls ~r
lhP week or A1&gt;rll 22-2G, If you
lrnv~ not done so, make an a,, .
pointment ln Die~ndor! No. 111.
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t.:te

�Fridoy, April 19, 1963

PAGEELEVIN

SPECTRUM

UnitedStudents, AlliancePreview'63-'64
1C.;n1inued trom page IOI

Th,· NSA Stee r ing ()o rmnlt~
an Ofti,ctlv e job
wo r k.lug In conjun ction with
t~w ClvU Rights comroltlt&gt;t&gt; In
I ho fight to Ins ur e a,1 Ink­
grate d 1111
d cqm, t ,ioou,ty,
are unaware of the existence and
One of th~ tentatively scheduled
functions of these va.rlOU!$ com. projects for NSA is an objective
drive p1'Qgram concerning
mlttees a.nd thE!ir current
the House
for membership.
Un-American Activities Commit.
001\fJ\llTT Kll WORJl
tee. The qu~tion which will be
One of the least publicized yet posed t!ur the program's concern
most powerful committees Js the II!: '' I i; the social stigma of having
National S tu d en t s Association an inn&lt;Xlent lndiVldual's life ruined
Steering
Oomrnittec
which !unc­ by thi,i probing committee suffl­
tloned under the chairmanship of u!ent reason fol' its abrogation, or
Arnold Mazur du1·lng the year of ls HUAC a neceS8&amp;ry evil In orue r
'62-'63. To briefly explain what lo lru,w·e our democracy?"
NSA hopes to present a ddbate
Lhis committee is u.nd does, the
following Is from Mr. Mazur• s on campus between Jo.mes Rooae­
velt (Callf .) and Francis P. W111.
final report to the Senate:
-chalrma11 of HUAC.
Mr .
"NSA lij the binding bau fer ter,
the coordination ol student acl\vt. }toosevelt brought a blll lo the
ties and opinions In this country , House floor asking fo1· the abro­
On the national level NSA ls the gation of this standing committee
legl11lator and adrnlnlh1.rn.t.or e&gt;fstu. on the gt·ounds that It is a viola.
dent concerns,
be it as tl\el de­ lion or tile First Amendment to
lender of academic freedom, due the Consl!luUon.
process
for tndl'Y'lduals In dire
Tb.II pre&amp;mt "Food For
.social or academic strnights, or a11 1''reedom" driv e • hOuld be sue •
oo~tdul. Jt ls il plan to sen d
cryslallzl ng agwt of the stude.nti;'
fo&lt;Hl t () needy Southern Ne­
voices in regards 'to national pol.
cy or lntematJona l develo pments.
groes deprl\'tjd of goverwuent
"A.ny NSA St.eerlng comm.It .
food ijurp 1U8e8 by local wtil te
l&lt;!e mu st u.ct as tile Joclll
oltlclals trying t o prevent tlle
ilg t&gt;nt of tbie nRtlonal ottlcr.
Ne gr oes from registering
to
The com mittee Is duty hound
vote. It wlll lndi catq tho irn­
l10rta1100 of NSA ln the Mm­
lo disseminate tho lnfom1alfon
Jlltg community, nna perform a
11'hioh Is or primary concern
to the geueral organization
meaningful
11Crvltoe.
~n d must needs conduct 11•
tlary Lighter, a student slated
ow n loca l progJ'Rtru1 to gnill
fol' the position of NSA coordina­
the, full , uppo rt of the studont
tor for '63.'6'l fe&lt;:llS Uiat this is
IH;dy and ro cff ootlve ly ed u­
Lhe top committee oC the Student
.,;,w the e;umpus us rugurw, Sennte and the guiding body of all
tht• ,&lt;tudcnt as"O&lt;!Jatlon's ,w.
olhel' cummlttecs. "NSA and Civ­
livltles."
il Rights ard the only t.wo com­
Jn this cupac1 Ly, the committee mitlt•"'s which can meet the larg­
participated in an Academic Free­ &lt;JI' Issues ur the day, though the
dom .Project whic.h led lo a thur­ Civil Rights commitWe is limil c&lt;l
ough mvestigaUon Into the ma11y in that .ii has dee.It solely w1U1
enforclld on Negr,, problems. NSA works on
rules and regulallona
t.hie campus. Scvcml llron.s of ~t.u­ ti nnliona.l bn a ia, giving it more
thun any
llent rights which wcrCI e.xamlne,I 8upport and strenglh
:1rll: ca~es Involving freedom 11! o\.her committee,"
Ther e is, however, ttnother comaut1011 by students,
partlculai·ly
those which attempt to proV'ldh a 1111~te1ewhich seeks to face probforum to,· discussion and freedom 1.,ms on 11 wider scale than those
o f speech, the uniform poli cy r,,1·or the campus. Th~rt! ho.s been
alJ State University schools co11- conside rable ink spilled •"•01·
Ihe
1·erni11g untlonnl rmternilles, and propo~iOon that we, a s citizens o!
the rights of students tc, gov,:rn 0111·n11Uon, should t1·y to cultivate
a hrond e r and deeper unde1·slan&lt;J,
themselves.
Th o libel'lllily of the Conslltu­ ing of contc,mpur&amp;ll'Y, 1ntornnl1011taons which gov,:l'JI I csidents' be­ al problem8.
The Sl•JU\ll••spo u~orl'd Unlt .
havio1· ond publicnliuns whkh rc­
,•d Nation, l'rugrum pro jt!&lt;'lt•&amp;I
ccivo.&gt; campus !undi; 11nd operate
lts,•IJ in I his 1liruc•tlon In "
undtir the auspices or the, Student
ra th er un](1ue way. Th1: mod el
Publication;; Board were alM In.
jg-ate&lt;l. Student
participation
VP.SI
SPtmrlty (Jouncil ga.vo til e stu­
d,•ut~ thr (hllll op110rtunlty of
und student action Independent or
llear ln g \'Urlou s lutoru.atlonal
any coe rcion upon ~tndent rights
as free cltizt•ns W\'re considered,
too.
011Elof Lhe most tmportant and
cllfflcult jobs of the vice.presltle.'ll
of the Senate is that ot acting ~
co-o rdinator
ur all the Senaite
commltlees.
Too many students

t,.., haM dontj

·tr

Preregistration

nr lilll'l'Ul''ij Office Ill »11yea}fall.
C'OOl' ERi\TlO N SFJEll~ :u
This wUJ, l)e a Jast .chanw1eto
Micha~! Shapiro,
chairman
of
the Campus Allianu e Party, slated: compl~le prc&gt;. 1-egistraUon for the
''The Alliance, only a fewnlottthll roll s~nw~wr , Any Junor or senior
ago a drenm, is today a renllly . in l.h1• t'ollt•i:1• ur Arts aud SciI am ~un• lhat

student• who
good ~ludunt
l{overnmcnt nre dRted tu see two
m•Uve pl'llllicnl flSll'ttes on Ih18
~11111p11it. But, 1wo pnrlicil arc not,

1•111·1•&gt;1who

r,til to pick up hi&gt;&lt;
this
••~gisl l'llllc,11 mnt,•riaJs on
"f11st-ch,,nc,1 ooy" 011.1.&gt;1~
wa.it to
.-,,m pkl~
r,•1,-tstratiun In Clark

all

11re 111Wn?sted in

hy themi;elws,
inherently
l!ll•IIJ;
llicrt.' rt.mHt b•· 11101
•,· lo lhcm Ui:111

•

MICHAEL

LAPPIN

II

asked b.vthis repo1·ter or his poll
c.i&lt;'~in the race or the creali.on Of

an opposition party:
"Throughout this coming Sen­
alt term , the United Stu,dent.s'
P111'ly members will hold tha phll­
llS&lt;Jphy of 11•,irklng for the most
1•011Rt1·uctive
form cl! stud~nt gov.
ernrncnt possible. Since th&lt;1N I• IW
real dlffe1·ence between our t)h\l­
C&lt;&gt;rmand thal of th&lt;! Camp\1$ Al.
!lance, I feel that both p11rti.-.s
should ne able to work to1erotht'I
in prom,,ting con&gt;&lt;ll·uctivc student
g"ovenunl'nl,
I' a r t )'
''U nihill Stulll'nt,
nwmb,,r,. urc not going tu h,·
t◄&gt;ltl l11J\\ to ""'" 911 tlw Si.•11-

ut••

11,i,ir , r,,r h hi my ft•t•lllnl(
tl11,t 1111·1111
rt1 1•• c•~l~t to ,•ll,,.·1
1111,rnb,·r, to 1111' S1.'111itf' •o

jn s ..11Ll'lnber

,...:.=========
All k,·y8

jUMl being tWll Of)po,ing facllon,.
"Th r Allllllll '•• f\J'lll'l•Unllcd th,•
1lnrt1in,• or 1l1fllHl\'l'8III' acth•lty t'.M
cts purpo•c•, ll111 lhl• 1111q,&lt;1111•
•~
now b~lni: ,·x1mntl•·J w,- "' Lil&lt;'
Alil,1111•1• ltuw u, 11111•HJ v111 ul11
111tttrg&lt;l!LI!&lt;th, l 1't'1l11t'lln11of 11pathy
on our ,·a111pt1Mhy 11w11•asingI he·
1ntcrcsl Ill 1mhtlt11l ,H•tlVlty \\'c
have nmu,• g,eut lt&lt;'U&lt;Jway in lllls
dj l'~tllun, for the Smrn te has been

111 l1tl\Vlh1J&lt;
loc'l&lt;t'I'•
bowlh11t llmds nm•t IJt•
rcturn~•d tu Mr PnJ'tlr' oft!&lt;'&lt;'
by .Muy 1.
llny ltcys kopt J)l\~l lh•~ ,lat,•
WIil ll(1 chor~ed at tho l'lll•· "'
~•.,11111•1
clny until May 10 llllu
1111 R11,·s111·'11orn,,,.. \VIII b,
111111(\\-d all(I
th•· 1vt1(1t1,111nl
sr,flll ,nu,1 b1· T•tllll h• (&lt;'1'\'
i:n11f d-,
1111
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I n111•&lt;•1'IJll'I 11'1'

111 Ill,·

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'============

receiving
npplkalions
for com.
lllill~u 11\tllllbt'r~hlps from indl·.·ld11111
~ 1·e11r1•N,•nti111;
ncony JP'OUJ1s

whit•h w,•1·,, ll'ft ,,111t1f S~1111toac.
llv1u~s p!'i111·tu Allio.nee':. cx\sl­
lllll;ij,

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frd

thnt

there,

I• I~

,•lrtually un f11111&gt;1•dnmount o/
,tu1h•11t111111 t~\11111us who 1.ro
IIWlllfloo. to ,,l\tllclpale In ~t111l1•nt iW)tiVltlC'tl. It 111 thrOUKh
"" ,wth·1, two 1111rly•Y•t..-111
1h11t t ht•) wlU lu.vt• 1'l" Ol)l)l)r
tu nlly lu ntillZt, Uwtr 11Wllltl1•aliunN tu 1wl11 thl'lr unlv1•r-

!hut tlll'y 11my u .... t holr lu(ll
,1&lt;111111
j11dg,ne11t, in {'Ollltlb ­
UtlllK lo i:uucl, •&lt;1111111
•tll~l1•111
.,:-o,t1rnn1t~o1. 'rlw,t• Vt~ o i• I••
Jun ••• a t•ommituwot to ltw
11l11tr,,rm th,-.v ,,..tp••d d~"" •
tmt thu.t i~ wtwr11 tlw frnl'(W

~BEER
ISJ
:·
A
UsrABEER,-·
uNLEss
IT'S

clroquois

3rd HITCH-SHOCK WEEK

-0it
"]';I~,
r-;1:;·n;;i1
·it
me11le!sa•p.m.

FOR SALE
I 962 LOTUS ELJH;
'!'F o.0 184

&amp;
I~

of Te11n Pap.:,cs
correction;, madt: in
Spelling and Punctuat•un
Specl11I attenUon paid
·
to furemul
Call

Exp1,rt Typing

~t h"~ Sancy

,,r Clw p11rt.~,rnll~ ,

,It)' und 1h..-11,
.. 1lvt~.
In 110 wny
the policy Of t.l!.(, Mllnnce
\\Ill tht• l' 1uty hit•rnN.'Jty ot.
was to be summed up In a tew
tt•mpt lo lrt01wn&lt;'&lt;' ""' volt • nf
words, th~SI' W'OUld lx': 'T'r()gN',,.
nny S.·nato r ; It I~ hlM ,Iuty lo
Chairman
Mlchuel Lnppln revote 1181111wlll .. ~ snfllclmt
through
p111·tic1pat loo'. for II ts
i,orts: ''Next ydar, I hopo that
lnw1&lt;tiguttc1n Jnt.o the IN~U•• only through active stude nt par­
tlciratlon that the Unive rsity ard
more people will atlend thi,s anw,d ar gume ntati on upun it.
nual event, for I am sure that
"lL is doubtful that any 11111·th~ St.'llllte CUil grow togetJ\et.'
•Thi' h11pc for the rut ure sennt~
I.he informa.t;on
gained will be purty con O.'!Sllme that the total
lf II is po11sible, succ~s~ of this Senall• re$tll on Its lil'II ill thtf porUdpatlon Md CO­
mosl valuablt
the Senate will try to broa(lcaijt &gt;&lt;houldt!.1'11,
just as It Is vc•'y doubt­ OVl'"'' 1cm nf all factions on cam­
lh e progmm on local television or Cul that any rnilures will reflei:-t pnu•. It is through co-operation
on 1u1d off u, .. Senat~ floor thAt
rud\o ~o that more people will on one party over another,
' 'The success or failure of the both 1lllrtl&lt;'~ may unite to dt,troy
have an opportunlty to {oll&lt;lW in
the dlscusslona. The com1mittee '6H.'6~ Senate tsests with tho,,e the, 1·om111on .. nemy apathy"
will continue Its policy of Inviting peutllc seated on il. lt Is their duly
local college groups to partlcilpate to choose the committee c.hnlrmen ,
dt'terminc
the policies and vote
in the model CounOll,"
Both the of{lcera of the Sennte an the issues be!otse the body. IC
Junior,; cmd ~enioril In Lh" COi­
and several committee heads have Lhcy do thll&lt; v.1th a eonscleinttous iege or Al'ls a11d Sdenccs who
expressed their intentions fo•r lhe · 11.ndrcspi,nslble attitude there can
hnve not picked up thdr registrat ­
coming year, but who.t or lb,e [XI· bu no result but succeiss. If U1ey
ion 111alc1•ial~ on tbe day&gt;&lt; ,ipe.
iltlcal parties backing
them,?
are negligent in thelr dulie11 to eifi,•tl and ,vho t&lt;til\ wieh to pre.
Gel'ry Catanzaro,
chairman
or the campus, they will b~ nothing l'Cl(&lt;lll er Olll) pkk llp thllil' rogja.
the United State's Party , 1,;.sued but a fallUI'&lt;' lt is nil up to the t I llt i,ln 11,ateri11ls on Monday bc­
the following sl11tement w h en Sdnalorg.''
lwc,·n !I a.m. t•nd 2 pm. 1n froot

pr oblqms 1•11d"'"°tuUon, Jl&gt;r
oJI0M'!dol' co untt fo11and exp,~rl1•nclng th e ()potatlo n s or the
United Na tions.

$2.SO - $3 ,$0 • $4.50 - $$.00

All Seats llesorved
Moll
orders
now
with solt-oddrcncd
stamped envelope, send check or money
order to Buffola Jou
fcstivol, Denton~,
32 Court Street, Buffalo 3, N. Y, Ticlceh
Street,
on sa le at Deftton's, 32 Cnrt
Sample Shop, He rtl e &amp; Walden Ave .

Pa.rm·""""

Aoheson Hnll
11111-SO
l4

St11dcnt mscount
Tic ket
for ull progTnms mar 1w purchn,.,,l
upon presentation of l[J CaTdJt

1,
I.

ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER

NORTH
PARK

JOE RICOAND . JI!
THE BUFFALOJAZZ FESTI
VAL PRESENTS

GEORGE

•tt•-Hrlttt••·············

tt NEV.:.~];~£!0N
!I
SHEARING a;.~.~:·

14'28 HERTELAVE.

JO!l[PHtl.DINt­

St111ts Wed. A111
•.• M

SEXTET

!"SUNDAYS and CYBELE"
i

O
\

1, I
.1'-11
uf

J•titdrtts

featoriaa Nat Adderley aod Yu.selLateef

NANCY WILSON

1Jfo, t/,

\,,,.,,,,,
Thi' Fr,·no/1 Film

rxvortis"
1Vi118tl'l1,
N.1. 1'11ar.

CA'1f&lt;X
IECORDINGSTAR

j •KLEINHANS
MUSICHALL,San.,April 28.8;30P,M,'~

l
'

\
'

$2,50-$3.50-$4.50-$5 .00-8,30 P.M.-AII Seoll R■,orvod
FOR BESTCHOICIOF SEATSMAILSEl.f.ADORESSHI,
STAMPEDENJ/122.FUTIVAL,
VELOPE
WITHCHECK
Cl MONEYORDER
TO BUFFALO
DENTON
'S, S2 COURTST,, IUffALO 3, N. Y,

(s.:.:
·~-,~.;.t~

_.

~»fr · ·1

· .....
:$il

h?

*

,..,-.;•'!&gt;:,. - -,;~

_

~

TICKETS ON SALE AT LJENTO~S.
32 COU RT S1'., SA.\f PLE JI ERTEL, WA LDES

••

~--:...~~=
Mastroianni • yOl'l

ADDERLEY

« Academy Award Winner
: Best Foreign Film of Yeor

t

_,.,o

,IULIANUCANNONB£LL"

A\'

t:.

EMBA.SSY
P1CTURES

.....
.

ON SAME PROGllAM

Italian
Sfyle
er~

~-.

,,mtn&amp;

P:JERFINCH

No
lelt:R1~iili
J

�:.;PA:::,G::,E::...:.TW~E:.:L;.:.V.::.E
__________________

S_P_E_C_T_
R
_U_M __________

_ ____

_:.;F
r:..:.:i
d=:oy,April 19, 1963

OBVARSITY
-ALUMNI
CLASH
APRIL
27
ATHL ETIC

BANQUET

UBNetmen
Score
8-1

Ove
r EC1'1
Valentic WinsDomGrossiAward; Triumph
Varsi~y,FroshAthletes Honored
S&lt;iaring to a (•lean swee11 ln the
~ini:les eve nt s, the UB tennla
tea.m scored an 8-1 triumph over
P.JCTl's netmen TuOBday on UB'11
courts. This was the first ·11natch
of the season for bot.h teame,. An­
dy l&lt;'eldman and Art white both
scored 6-0, 6·0 shutouts.
Thia sec.
ond a nd third doubles tearnn aleo
triumphed.

By JIM BAKER

Ja ck Valent.le waa named win•
ner or lhe nom Or088I A -rd
as
UIJ'K Oul.J&lt;ll\n
d lng Senior Athlete
tor l!M.2-63 laat e..-eoingat I.he 561.h
nnnunl athletic awarde banquet in
Norton Unio n. Thie award, which
was pre•onled hy Phi Kappa Psi
Fratern ity, wa a I.be highlight of
a program in whlcll nil members
t•f thl' llulltt' ten varsity and ten
freshman
teams wore honored .
Valentlo starred fM UB ln foot•
hall (as a rullbo.ck) and wrestling
(Ile won I.he 4-f Tourney iu Uit&gt;
165 lb. class).
G118!!t s11eaker for th e oven lng
11·aK Van Beuren W. DoVries. Oen•
eral Manag er or WGH. Radio nnd
WGR-TV, nnd Vice-President
or
Transcontinental
Television
In­
corporated.
HI' wa.s Introduced
by Master or Cer emo nies Charley
Young, Sports Editor or t.ho Bllf•
fnlo Evening News.
.
Tb&lt;' following ls a list of awards
that wore r,rl&gt;eenled Inst evPnini,;:
FOOTBALL

Outslandlng Vnreity Dack Jim Burd , Tom Butl er (t ie)
Oulstnndlng Varsity Lineman Kevin Brlnkwor th
ll1o8t Impr oved V8.N!l!Y Player
Paul Gagliardi, John Michno
(tie)
OuletrmdinA ~•reshman 88.(•k Dick Vittorini
O11tet11n
dln i: Fret1hmo11 l,ineman J im Duprey
6ASKETBA L L

Dr. Jomes Alllngo1· Award ror
Outstanding Playor
Gary Hanley
Honorary Ca ptain Dave Baldwin
Out9t.andln g l!'reshman Pl&amp;yer Norwood Goodwin
GOLF

seven members received
nwnrd e on the baaia ot the
'team's firet unbeaten e&amp;&amp;s0n
(12·0) In un history, qualtrylng
them for the 0nats or the ECA O
tournament.
They ure:
Dave Frost, Gary Wela, Steve
A summary of Buttalo's slng lee
Watts,
Tony
Mignano , John
111nners follows:
Peckham, Tom Dembik, a nd
Fred Berman.
1. Jim ~'a.turns - 6-0, G.1
FE NCING
2, Audy Fe ldman - 8-0, 6·0
~. Ed Toylor - 6.0, 6-1
~•encer.or.the-Year
4, .Bob Barrett - 6-3, 6-0
BIii Wilkens on
5. H1tgh McLean - 6-0, 6-4
SWIMMING
IJ. Art Wblti• - 6-0, 6·0
l,arry Zanger lr• Award to I.be
Outstanding Swimmer The doubles equadvo! Bob ]Bron•
Vince Heckel
cnto nn&lt;l nob Braun was vi&lt;:torl­
l lonornry Co.plnln OUR, 7-5. ti·l: Ule Steve Nua11bmu:n.
Vince Heckel
Andy Weber duo also wou, 8-4, 6-1,
WRES TLING
The Mnrk Schnell- Tony Pe,gnla
co,mbo suffered the day's setback,
C'harlt!s K. Bnssoll Award to
r,.2. fi.4.
ObtRUJndlng Wrestler Jack Valenllc
C'hnrlPs I{. Bn~soLl Award to
Teum lllgh•Polnt Man Bob Jackaon
Golf conch Len Serfu~tini an.
~loot lm11ro,·ed Wr 68ller
TACKLE
GEORGE DELANEY
class of 1960
nounccs I.hat al l those wh o are
Kevin Brlnkworth
intcrestQ(! In participating
in the
Gone lllllcr Awnrd to Outstand •
3l'd Am1unl UB Intruschool ,Golt
log Freshman Wrestler •Tournament are to contact hirn to
G. E. Poles
learn the playing dates. As yet,
CROSS-COUNTRY
the Cina! dales are not set be­
cause this will depECnd upon the
OutsLUnding nunuer
Stu Katz
weatlter and other factors. Th e
John
BV DON CAS TLE
Daniels. P auJ Gagliardi ,
been
ten to.tively
Outstanding Freshman ltun.ner --' 1.&lt;&gt;urney hns
Due to the schedule of this John Michno, Jim Wolfe, Dick
slated for the Elie Downs Cou111try
BIil Suedemeye,year's
Senior
Comprohe.nsives, Hort , Bob Baker, and Jack Val.
Club and Will consist of 36 h.o)()S
entfe,
PLAQUE FOR SENIOR ATHLETE
the
fourth
annua
l
Varslty.Alwnnl
or mQ(lal compe t iblon. Aw,ards
WITH TOP ACADEM IC
From the 1961 team will collie
WIii be given to the first, second, go.me will be held one we ek eorller
Saturday, April 27.
Bob Ranus, Wllllam Selont, Bob
AVERAGE and thil'd tlnlflhcrs.
This year's alumni will not be Miller, Leroy Riley, ' John Hart .
Warren Prunella
(varsity wresUer) (2.127)
under official coaching from a man, WIIIIMJl Root , and Roy Som•
the 1980 ng.
As &amp;priug •p0rl.8 · aro now In pro­
member of Ult: var~lty stuff, In. mer, Representing
gress, the ll\\"nrds in baseba ll,'
stead they will be coached by an gregate will be Charley Keats ,
teonlll :ind tr;ick will be .made at
staff. Sam
Sanders Phil Bamford, J oel Shifflet, · Gordie
all.alumni
the eeaaon 'e conclusion,"
wilt bd the head mentor with Phil Bukaty, Joe Oliverio, and Steve
Bamford and Joe Shifflet coadJ. So.lasny. From the 10:;o tenm •
Ing the line while Gordie Bukaty George Delany, JQhn Dempsey,
and Roy Sommer will h ea d the Stan Kowal ski, Roy Pa olini. Fred
ba.cldleld. Practice for I.he nllllllnl Kogut, Willie Eva.rui, Bob Mu scar.
will
,has started this week and will ella , and WIiiiam Brogan
the Lambert
continue all next week. The old play, Representing
veterans wlU be eager to a vongo Cup winners wilt be Dave Br ogan
last yenl''S los s to the varsity by and Louis Reale ,
a 28-0 score.
As in the past, the varsity
Thirty.six alumni have already -alumni c lash has been an early
nollfied
the
varsity
coach ing season
preview of ne11&lt;t year's
start of their desirel t.o play. Re. team under actual game condl­
of
presenUng last sea.sou's varsity lions. The alumni wmposed
will be Jim Bowden, Dick Dick. top players from past teams wiJl
man, Bill O'Neil, Chuc k Winzer, prove to be ab le testing mo.terll!l
Kevin
Brlnkworth,
Ed
Harris, for Coach Offenhamer's
men.
All

GOLF

36Grads
Return
forAnnual
Game
Which
Climaxes
Spring
Practice

No, I won't klH your boo,boo! !

Who said I don't look llke
quart e rback?

~

V-arslty candidate

tackles- plg,kin toter dur ing grid dr ill•

�NOTEBOOKS
INDEX

PADS

CARDS

ART

AND COMPOSITION

PAPERS

LOOSE

BOOKS

LEAF

FILLERS

1

LINE

ENVELOPES

AND WRITING

TABLETS

OTTENHEIMER

TITLE
S IN VES
T POCKETLIBRARY
:
Bibl e Dlct,onory

PUBUSHERS,INC

Crossword Puule Otctlonuy

EnglneetS Handbook
Faml llar Quotations
Expense Records
French-English and
En&amp;llsh, French Dict ionary
Germ•n•English and
English -German D1c,lon 1ry

YES
TPOCKET
DICTIONARIES
ANO
REFERENCE
BOOKS

COPIES OF ORIGINALS,PAINTED BY MODERNARTISTSAND
OLD MASTERS
. THEY'LL MAKE ANY ROOMBTIGHT AND
ATTRACTIVE, READY FOR FRAMING.

lhte, e1t and Mortg1ge T■ btes
U•llan•Engllsh and
English-llallan Dict ionary
Latln, En1llsh Dictionary
Log ind Tri&amp; Tables - s,, Plot•
Music Diction ary
Poll sh•Engllsh ond
English, Poll• h Dlctlon,ry

ONLY

FOREIGNTRAVEL POSTERS·EDUC.,.
TIONAL CHARTS

Proverbs and Eplarama
Ready Reckoner

ONLV O EACH

Rhymln&amp; Dictionary
Russlan•Engll•h and
Engli sh-Russian Olction1,y

Spanish-EnglishInd
Engllsh ,Spanlsh Oictlonory
Swtdish •Engllsh and
Enstlsh,Swedlsh Dictionary
Woge Tab les
Webster's Dictionary
Webster's Speller &amp; Word Guide
Webst er's Synonym,, Antonyms

EACH
SCHAUM'S--------

McGRAW-HILL
BOOK
CO.
0 S FO

ind Homonym$

PRO·ss10 l PEOP
E
UATE
ST DENTS

including -------

OUTLINE
SERIES Theoryand SolvedProblems

CO
LLEG
E PHYS
ICS

··

includin9

··

$2.50

• •0o•Ooo,o,,OO,O,o

including 480 SOLVED PROBLEMS

Edited by CAREL W. van der MERWE, Ph.D.,
P,af•uor ol Ph,-11u, Ne• Yo,,U,untMr

By MURRAY R, SPIEGEL, Ph.D.,

COLLEGE
. $1.95
CHEMISTRY...............

ADVANCED
CALCULUS
..............
$3.75

P1oleuor of Moth ., hnuelo,,

Polyte4:I, '"' '

Including 925 SOLVED PROBLEMS

Includ i ng 325 SOLVED PROBLEMS
Edi ted by CHARLES0 . BECKMANN , Ph.D.,
P,al •ntH
01em l1tr1, Colum&amp;,o Uniu,,,1,

By MURRAY R. SPIEGEt. Ph.D ,

aod JEROME L. ROSENBERG, Ph.D.,

DESCR
IPTIVE
GEOMETRY
..........$2.50

P1ofH101 of

Ch..,.,,,,,,,, Uni...u,1,.o, P,mb wr9h

FirstYr. COLLEGE
MATHEMATICS
$3.25
incl uding 1850 SOLVED PROBLEMS
By FRANK AYRES,Jr., Ph.D.,
rroleuor of Morhe mo11u. O,d -,,uo,. Collet •

COLLEGE
ALGEBRA
.....,............. $2.50
incl uding 1940 SOLVED PROBLEMS
By MURRAY R. SPIEGEL, Ph.D.,
Prolu1or of Mor/ii., • • riueloer Pol1rech . ln11

TRIGONOMETRY
..........................
$1.95
Incl ud ing 680 SOLVED PROBLEMS
By FRANK AYRES, Jr., Ph,D,
P1olu10, o/ Mo1lien1ahci, 01ddn1on Co/leg l

STATISTICS
................................
, $3.50
lnclu d ln9 875 SOLVED PROBLEMS
Pol'flech

,,..1,

ANALYTIC
GEOMETRY
................$1.75
lndu dlng 3 4 5 SOLVED PROBLEMS
By JOSEPH H, t(INDLE, Ph.D..
P,ofeuo,

P, ol,uo,

al Molh • ,hruu latr Pol11ech

tnll

Including 175 SOLVED PROBLEMS
By MINOR C. HAWK , H.. d of
E"g,nur,n9

Gropliics Otpl ,Co ,n• gu! Intl ol reel!

ENGINEER
INGMECHANICS
.... .. $3.25

ENGINEERING
ACCOUNTING
ARCITECTURE
MANAGEMENT
CHEMISTRYPHYSICS
SOENCE
·
ELECTRONICS

Incl uding 460 SOLVED PROBLEMS

By W,

Thuehsndhook
, ,,e snsccamu/,tion
ol knowleda
e in diguf lo,111
, bg
1t1fhot
ifiu in fhue lie/d
i ._

c,,~:~.~~~-.
~!;:;.~
,.~;~~!~·
...

Coll,,,

and E. W. NELSON, B.S. In M.E., M. Adm. !..
f ,,91n••''"' SuperuJo, , Wtd r rn El,c,,,c Co

STRENGTH
OFMATERIALS
.. $3.25
including 430 SOLVED PR08LEMS
By WILLIAM A. NASH , Ph.D.,

P,ol,uo, of r,,, M,chnn 1('1. Un11'Ullfi' ol 'iar,do
FLUIDMECHANIC
S
and HYDRAULICS
.............. $3.50

@@@~~@@

i ncluding 475 SOLVED PROBLEMS

By MURRAY R.SPIEGEL, Ph.D..

P,of e110, ol Morh,, Je+'!uela.r

ANDBOO
SO :

VEC
TOR ANALYSIS
,,....................
$3.25

625 SOLVED PROBLEMS

o,

@@@@@@@

o f Molltemohu , V111u1J,l7 al C,nc,n1101•

CALCUWS
..............
....................
$2.50
Including · 974 SOLVED PROBLEMS

By RANALD V GILES, BS., M.S. In C.E ,
p, 0 1 of (,v,/ f1t !f1nHrn19, 0,,11,t ln1! al h eh

MACHINE
OESIGN
................. $3.50
By HALI HOLOWENKO , LAUGHLIN ,

P,&lt;il,uo n ol M,cho n,co/ Ent , flu,dv• Un••tfl 111

ELEMENTARY
ALGEBRA

$1.95

inc luding 2700 SOLVED PROBLEMS

By FRAN!( AYRES Jr ., Ph.D.,
1

By &amp;ARNETTA:I
CH, Ph 0 .,

DIFFERENTIAL
EQUATIONS
....... $2.95

TESTITEMS
INEDUCATION
...... $2.50

lncludlng S60 SOLVED PROBLEMS
8y FRANICAYRES,Jr,, Ph.D.,

ByC J ~OUIY

,,o leu0r of Mal#lleMol1u 1 Oict,,uon Coll• s•

Proleuor ol Mo,he~o,,u . O,dr,,uon Coll•!J•

,,oou,,, feel, H 5

'i ncluding J 100 TEST ITEMS

p,0 , 4111

0,1

Ph,0.,
1 al

MATRICE
S ........................ .... $3.25
indudlng

McGRAW-HILLPAPER
BACKSSPRING '63

including 320 SOLVEO PROBLEMS

340 SOLVED PROB,LEMI

by FR~~.:'.~ R-~S
_.;;~·.! ~,~;· o,, , ,,.." , ... . ,.

L £ WALTON , Ph D

fd 11co"O"'

Un1'41U1h

ol .,.,.,,.,

Social Scie nces and Psychology

Highlights
Business
McGurre , ~usiness and Society

Science Mathematics, and
,
'.
Engineering

C hamb erlam The Wost In a World wi thou t
War

Gnnker and Sp,egel, Men under St,oss
Kluckhohn M1rro, for Man
Solye The Stress of L,tc
Tape,, Gom,lloon vs L19hllool

.

Condon and Mo,se , Quan tum Meth,1n1cs Personal, Hobby , and Professional
Paultng and Goudsm,t, The Structure ot Guides
Line Spectra
H enderson, Emergency Med1c,, I Guide

Fiction

Economics

Ster n, In Any Cas..,

Hansen, Economic Issues of the 1960s
Smith, Federal Ta , Refor m

�SPECTRUM

PAGETWEt VE

-

TES
TED
, PR
OV
ENWAY
... ATYO
URLEI
SURE
TOLEARN

~s{~

Friday, April 19, 1963

Fo11nd!
_
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A P ROTESTANT RESPONSE TO CRITI·
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by Eric L. McKitrick, Columbia Univers ity,
Morch 196:J., S·59 (orig,), 192 pp., paper•
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A RETURN TO FIRST PRINCIPLES, Hugh

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�Friday, April 19, 1963

SPEC TR UM

PAGETHIRTEEN

J

Ex-Sports
Editor
BidsFarewell
Football
SquadPrepsforAlumn:i'

Buffalo backfield

men working

to get their

moves

dow n to prec l1ion

Thu University of Buffalo BuUs
m.'ln~-oat qun.rter baok follow.
&amp;8 a sophomore at Detroit . 'l'h e
Ing a knee ope.ration , an d
t1rc in the,lr second week of Spring
216 pounder ha 8 been o. sllck.(&gt;ul
wlth the strength John Oimlm
o.t guo.rd In ,iprlng drills.
practice and It may turn out to
ha~ shown he can glvo ltte
be the best ddll they've ever had.
So far It has bt•en a reward Ing
squad at fullback ,
Good weather has enabled Coach
spring. No serious Injures hlive
O!fcnhamer and his aides to get
Clmba. was a halfback
Last occurred and if progress keep$ up
in tho first six sessions without season and finished second In at the pr~sent rate, the Bulls w1Jt
any 1nterrupUon • the first timo rushing, Gilbert missed much of have spent a most profitable tl\ree
this ha., happened in the last nine the sellS()n due to the knee injury weeks.
years.
and was never at peak e.trlclency.
Quartetbrick John Stofa Is back
In commenting on the squad !l'om a European trip !ls counsel.
Coach Offerhamer noted that the or for a boy's group nnd reported
progress of the entire squad has
t.hiH week . "Long J ohn" and Gil­
been gratifying.
bert will guide the first two unite
"Speclftcw.ty, a nucleus of
In the annual
Alumni.Varsity
freahman
cwtdlcla~
has
game. Some freshman students
shown f ine pote ntial, and If
lnclud,, Brinn Kent, ll 240 pound
they oontlnu e to improve w ill
Saturday, April 27
tackle, Craig Helenbrook, a 210
adequately
fl ll some of the
guard, .roe Holly, a center who
8pots vacat.ed by p-aduating
Rotary Field
weighs 215, Bill Tnylor, 111101.her
Heniol'8."OHie 11,ddedthat the
tackle who goes 220, and halfback
2 P.M.
staff l~ exceptionally p leased
Ed Turek. Transf er Tom Sommer
~vlth Don Gilbert's pertor.
has shown why be was n starter

Varsity•
Alumni
Clash

. The~ say that just about the only sad occasion a~o­
ciate d with one's senior year in college comes t.oward the
en~ of the year, when he realizes that those activities he
enJoyed_ so much for so long are approaching an ab ru pt
conclus1on. 1 guess I never realized the full significance
o~ that statement until last week, when I bid farewell to the
eight h-grad e boys and girlt1 I harl b~n student-teaching at
Amherst_ Junior High. I had enjoyed the good fortune to
be t.eachmg two classes of the fineet youngsters an instruc­
tor could ever wan~. Whe!1 the time came for me f;o aay
goodbye to these kids, believe me - the word s did not
come easy.
Now the time has come for me to close out ano ther
phase of my college life - without a doubt th e part I have
enjoyed the most. In the two years that I have he1d the
post of Sports editor here, it has been my pleasure f;o make
~umerous acquaintances and witness a tremendous growth
m the field of intercollegiate ath letics at this university,
Moreover, th e players, coaches, and fans whom I have met
have truly impres sed me by the fine way that they repre­
sent their school both in the sports circle and out of it as
well.
As I look back upon my earlier days here at UB, I can
recall when the football team was engaging suc h foes as
I{obart, Alfred, Western Reserve, and Cortland State (No,
not Tokyo Tech). When this caliber of competition is com­
pared with present opponents sucl1 as Boston College, Bos­
ton U., Holy Cr oss, Villanova, and Ohio U., it is easy to
see the tremendous sttides that have been taken in such
a short period of time.
This week's sports headlines speak for themse lves in
demonstrating how prominently our basketball program is
moving forward. Similar growth is evident throughout
our at hletic program that c.irrently consists of ten varsity
and fr eshman spor ts on an intercollegiate basis, but figures
to expand in the near future to include hockey and skiing.
As of this issue, Rocky Versace is the new Sports
edit.or, and I am confident that time will prove him f;o be an
excellent one. One thing is certain - with that incompar­
able team of Everett and Sharpe steadi ly booming forth
with that multitude of sports propaganda, mediocrity doesn't
stand a chan ce.
To my co-work ers on the Spectrum staff, and to all
the students and faculty members I have met here - so
Jong and best wishes to you all.
J I M BAK E R

the fourth dimension: TIME
.. . still a mysterious
conceptto science.Timeis onlyan idea,
an abstraction
. ,.an area of shadow,speculationand surprise
HAPPYDEC. "W"!

Undera newworldcalendarnowunde1studyby the
UnitedNations, eachyearwouldbe exactlylhe same. (Wenowhave14dif­
ferent ~inds of year.l Sincethe newcalendaJwouldhave only 364 days,
holiday.
the hnal daywouldbe Oec. " W" or "Wo1ldsday,"an 1nternat1onal

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WAIT
ASECOND? Nothingmucn
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ot'sd,tterenl. Insidetheatom.for

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"it.» llfON tti\fCHCOM~A-.~
lOf(OH

Precisely where Arrow has
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tapered, University lines, ..
with tracJ1t1onalback pleat
and a third button on the
back of th!' rollar.
Whit!! or c0/ors,

s5

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Wherev.ryou go you took heller in

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Electricwalch. for girls whoseek
the same sense ol eleganceInd
ucellence, there 1s a beauUlut
selee11on of LadyHamiltons They
slart as low as S35 and make

outsl3nd,ni gi lt suggestions.

\

�SPECTRUM

PAGEFOURTEEN

Friday, Apr il 19, 1963

Cagers To Play In Aud Doubleheaders
UB Track Team
Opens Tomorrc~w

·

·'
I
Sophomore hurdler Chuck McKlrdy llmbera up during prac­
tice.
Graduation of Dave Rosentha l ha1 put much of the
team'• hurdling duties in thla boy's hands .

NewProgram
Opens
November
30;
West
Coast
Tourney
Also
Scheduled

un trn.ck tea.n1 opeos 11.8 eight
It has been learned by the Spec­ when the U. B.-Buffalo State rival­
meet schedule tomorrow, meeting trum that the rapidly-spreading
t'Y game that hns packed W.N.Y.
RPI al Rotary Field. The Bulls,
due to an accelerated ac~,demic rumors concerning the basketball small college gyms recently trans­
year, hnve only twenty one days Bulls' 1963-64 schedule are indeed fers to the big hall. Thia contest.
Jor the eigM contests olimu:ed by true. The Bulls will participate in will open the 1963-64 Aud cage
the New York State champiomships at least three Memorial Auditorium
an
0 tate, while Cnnislns engagei
at Rochester, May 11.
do11blebeaders with Canisius ColCoach Emery Fi sher's charges lege nex:t season. They are also as yet UJtnamed opponent in the
second game.
are ahead of last season in their
Buffalo will participate
in at
training at this time due to two slate d to compote in 11 major col•
lege
Christmas
tourney
in
Cali­
factors. They were able tc, par­
least
two
more
such
double-header
ticipate in four indoor meets this fornia.
The move from crampod , out.­ programs, One will pit the Bulls
winter and a fine early sprin,g has
niia inst the Bucknell Bisons and
enabled them to ru n outaide much dated Clark Memorial GymnasilUD the other against a rapidly -ris ing
sooner. ln assessing the cindormen, to the attractive Saturday night 01111110
11 II1'8, UB will also play vu.
Fisher finds the greatest ati:ength doubleheader card in the Aud re­ Janova und Niagara in the Au-d.
presents
a
decided
step
forward
for
in the relay, 440, polevault, mile
but this w!ll be a week11lght slngll'
U. B. basketball. The first such ronu,sL
and discus.
30,
program
is
slated
for
Nov.
Cuptain Vern Huff leads 11 group
The news thar UB will compele
of four men, all of whom ca,n run adequate taclllties requiring the
in n major tourney on the West
the 440 in 60 .flnt or less. Patti, transportation
of hurdles, pole.
HufT, Reiber, und Stephcnsc,n are vnult an!l high jump standards. Const is equally stunning. The la­
test w'ord is that It will be a four­
l'X{lC'N0
d to l!iVe UB 11.s Oneal &lt;!\t•. to lhe new locati on.
team teurnament with California
one mile relay team. Thel'e are
State Polytechnic College as the
four pole vaulters who c11t1soar
host team. The Bulls hosted this
ovc-r 12 feet with Don Lee holding
team in Clark Gym in the 1959-60
the present Univer11ity recortl of
season and were edged by the Cali­
13 feel, 6 inches.
fornians by a point.
Small in stature but big in heart,
Stu l&lt;atz is the premiere di1slance
lt is also rumored that powerful
stsr and is expected t.o be under
Bowling Green may enter this
4:20 for the mile. He was tt,e 11tar
tourney, If so, it could send All­
of last fall's crosR-country squad.
gual'd nandidate Bowie
UNIVER
SITY
PlAZA American
Dave Stephenson is nlso a fine dis­
(Butch) Komives against the U.B.
PA. 5415
tance runner.
team,
Don Dansereau is thro\Ving the
Jiscus about 170 feet and is also
a high jumper and shotputter. Dave
Cionok and Royce Collister at·e ade­
quate sprinters and Chuck Dor­
mnnn and Al Condon get the job
done In tho broad.jump, Ron Rei .
ber is also an excellent broad-.jump­
er and is the district champion in
the hop-step-and-jump,
a new
event this sea110n.
Weakest spots are the hurdles,
(acron from OroAada Theatre )
shot, high jump, and javelin. Coach
Fisher has boya in all those ,events
who will undoubtably
,~nther
e!'lme poinf~.
Highlight of the home scllledule
is the annual University of Elutfalo
lnvitation11l to be held next !Satur­
day.
A !.'light difference In t.he
l.'Chedulo Involves th e l1t.ll1 An.
nunt Unive rsity of Buffalo In­
vlt.-ilional Tr ac k Mec 1 April 27.
Normnlly this event ls he,ld at
Rotary Field ll~ the high ll~rht of
JOZZ
tht• U.fl . truck season.
HowPver. due to the AJumnl
roothnll game. conspicuously Rhed.
ula,1 ror th&lt;' same date. the meet
i1·ill ll~ lwlfl this y~at· ill All High
Slad1um h~hlnd Bonnett
High
School. This fil•Id offers ve.ry In-

Varsity
Baseball
NineIsVictorious
InFirstGame,
10-0,0ver
l ErieTech

Pitching may prove to be another
wllh a resound- of the team's .strong as sets. Back
m.1: 10 0 win ov,•r lill'ie C'ollnly .from last year's unit are Jim Xra•
'1'1•1'11
wczyk and Ed Winnecki who form
Jim Kr:,"-c.1.vk and Dav e Bald- 11tough starti ng duo. In addition
" ·111 1•unthlne&lt;l , heir
pitching to bis pitehing itbilitiea, co-captain
tnlcnts ror th&lt;! shutout. l&lt;raw . Iu-awczyk led the Bullll in hitting
CZ)'k, who worked tho first six in 1962 with a .683 average. Mike
Inning'~. allowed lhrce hll s, while Wholnn, Bob Kobansk:, and Bill
Bt\ldwln went the lt\&gt;il three and Zelman are alao available along
g11,·e up one hit.
with Larry Gergley.
ICrawrzyk al ~o led the hltlerij
Dick Hort is working behind the
by driving in two l'Uns, sophomo1·e plat-e for the Bulls and ia backed
shurt .. tor St.eve Wasula collttted
up by Dick Mandel. The infield,
Lwo hl1~ 'for lh c Weste rn New hurt by graduation, bas two of the
1
York
lmcrcol)cgiat c &lt;'onfri•1 .ncc four positions filled by sophomores.
('llumplt&gt;ns .
At the corners are Dale Del.Bello
'l'omt'rrow al ona p,m,, th,• UB at first and Bob Plezia at third,
bnaot&gt;aU Bulls face Buffal o St,11e both returning lettermen. Plezia,
in a home double header. The the other co-captai n, hit .426 for
Teacbers will ho trying to avenge the Bulls in 1962. At second is
twin looaos auffored laat year at sophomore Earl Tompkins and at
shortstop either Steve Wasula or
the h ands of tbe Bulle ,
Joel Permison, both sophomorea.
- Ne,c(wookU B will play games
Th e outfield is set with three 1·e­
at homo with Cnnh1lu.t1,Monduy 1md
Colgate , Friday, with both contests lu1•ni11glettermen. GeJTY Monte­
beginning at 3:30 p,m. Away games marano, Dun Kraft and Cr11ig Lyon
will be with R. 1 T Tuesday and piny left, center and right field
respectively.
with Canisius ni,in Saturday.
n,e 1962 Bulls won 14, lost 6
and were the Weste~n New York
lnwreoll eglat.e Bllllebu !l Conference
Chnmpions. Coaches Peele and Ko­
sobucki have only 6 ai-niors b11ck
from that toom. In cluded on the
roster ure 10 sophomores of whom
5 are i11fielders. Better depth is
a strong point this SC1111on,
'lite Vflrsllr bas eball BullJ, or)ell.

,•ti th,·

11163s=n

BigMother's
3199

TF 6-9490

ANNOUNCES

DICK
FADALE
DUO

foremost

CORNED
BEEF

These are but a few of
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Appearing

Fri. and Sat. Nites
Vallett Trio

Garry

BUFFALOTEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.

(forme rly Teck Univ. Branch)
36 10 Main Street

DRAFT BEER
SCHMIOTS • 25c

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University
TuckerQuickCo:py
Delicatessen
174 PEARLST.
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~

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(AdJocet1t Tl,e Boulnoul Moll Plu,)
0,.,. Fndoy and Soti,rdoy 11ntil 1 :00
O,.rolld tty tt,, JERRY llOWMROUT CORP.

lla.l

BUDWEISER• 25c

MICHELOB- 30c

SANDWICHES

For Short Run Prlntill.g
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SUNDAY AFTERNOONS
S:00 - 8 :00 P.M.

QUICK, DRY'

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Main Street

·~-----------------

J un ior

Senior

55
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�SPECTRUM

Friday , April 19, 1963

FinalGri1l
·trofilesofYearAre
Students
Should
GiveMoreSupportV I
J.
B
d
d
J.
w·
k
e erons.~ 1m or OD 1m IC
sPoRTs c1RcLE .

.

--~:- ·

By Rocky Versace I

I have recently been informed that I have been chosen
to step into Jim. Baker's position as next year's Sports
Editor. Anyone who knows Jim or is familiar with his
journalistic talent and the excellent job he has done will
sure ly admit that Jim's will be hard shoes to fill. Main­
taining the qua lity and fullness of sports news that has
been, pro min ent this year will indeed be a goal to strive for.
It has been quite difficult not to notice the advances
that have been made in Buffalo's intercolleg;iate \;arsity and
freshmen sports du ring the past three years. The football
squad ha s developed into what could next season be one of
the t.op in the East.
Playing Boston College, Villanova,
and Ohi o University is certainly a big jump from the
Western Reserve and Baldwin-Wklllace schedule of 1960
(Does anyone remember the Cortland State Teacher's game
of 1958?) The fine record accumulated by Dr. Serfustini's
youthful cagers plus that of the talent-laden freshmen
imply an Eastern power in this field also. The swi mming
team is gaining momentum as is ct·oss country and track.
Although represented mainly by sophomores, the golfers
CENTER
JIM WICK
~lammed and putted their way to an undefeated season.
FULLBACK JIM BURD
The tennis, baseball and fencing teams all can be referred
,min . ,llm' i; size. e&gt;tccllont s pcl'&lt;I,
th~ Bulls Mt' fPl ying 1111Burd
Hl' ROCK\' VERSAOE
to as being annual powers, the ]attei· squad being Jed this
RIHI hardnos&lt;' Lnckllngenable him
l o tlo hlx usual gr,•at job In
Plgakln stars cbos~11 to be the l,11&lt;1
tea r by All-American Bill Wilkenson.
Lu stand out 111 the uerell81vo
1111,vlnl(
1h1
•
'"II.
\\
'It
h
his
Although the quality of sports hos improved each
(Mrt Prnf!les uf the year arc tw o
li11ell1tckt•r •l&lt;1t. In UB'~ tlnak
1(111111
~i,a• (200 JIOUnds ). ~11t•NI,
season, student attendanc e at the various contests ,
Jim's • Btuxl und Wick.
:ii:ninsl
C'oll,:"ut,•, Wirk
injured
and
4!\.l)lol°'h't.•
1mwt
'
f
,
,Jhu
hos failed to accompolly the strides mode by the teams .
Burd, ~ nullvc or North •ron.
his kHe~: how~v,, r 11t
cnty ,&gt;f work
llt1rll wl ll tl,dlnlh• ly .:rind ont
Three somewhat illogical but persistent excuses always
awandn lrunsfc•r·ed f1•om Nt•bri~skn
1111 1111• kn,••· uy hoth Wh'k and
see m to be emitted by o non-atten der when asked to
a l:tt'lll
,hur,• or 1111(1:llo',
explain why he or she keeps away,
Uni vers1 Ly 1.w,, yen ,•,; ago lo join
.Johu
St'H'lll
Jll'oll\i~ d l 1111,t .Jim
First, some say that the quality of, for instance, foot­ the Bulls . Hnm pcn'&lt;I lasL se,oson
wlll IJt· h11rk tu his usua l l{ood
s,·huhrlt•d In b,· li(n11lu11It••I m•x\
J
till
, I I
ball, is not very good. In answer to this, one need refer to b
I
y in J111·t••·. ,m s
m11na,;,•1 u J,,n11n1•.•, "111··• , ,·111 t1•11,•l1pl1v.•·1~11l1»1111 ,p111,, &lt;1)11\1
lllllollg
the Lvull1'&gt;' lcatlillg
., ., ..,
a•·
UB's 6-3 record against top competition to dispute the finll,)1
\ru l( •II•" Ill&gt; .,, ,,,1 ••lfur l 01
excuse. Very few teams, Including Notre Dame and Ala­ l'lJRhers. To ovel'C0lllt' !ht' tnjlll'lt•S 1•flun1ltu11 amt WO\ k for Ju~
bama, could offer two games played last season that were Jim tlflerl Wl'il'(h(,, 1l prn, :ti,·,· ll&amp;:18ll-r'~ ,lq;1 ,•,· In 11111111,,1,t,
th"
more exciting and well played than Buffalo's efforts against whi~h c\lenl llllllY 1111·n,&lt;1 ln\o a
1,.,,,, 1:Ill)' mut t:l'I tyMburg,
,'1111 w,,·k . , ,,111,,. ,muilnd&gt;llt'k,• 1,
Boston University and Delaware, games that we1·e decided hobby.- sny, ("unch Ryun, " H •' i,
11111,,r lllltrll llt;
him to their nu
.
onc ..huudrl'&lt;l
Jll'\! ..t'Clll&lt;.~r
aml
,~ 1:-- a bu~lnrs~ mlrnh1l-.tralton I\H\JOI'
not until the fading sec~nds of the last period.
Wllljng tu pay th( 1 pru•tt 1t1 1-1' a whn plan~ 10 1fo 1n·t'Ron1wl w,wh. upi, .. 111•11t 1..iu,1 \Vilh Lhl' "ru,1 .
Second, some students (and this is definitely the word win.1w1·tt
allt•1
coHcgt· \ ..:.111&lt;..1
6.:! nnd 212 ua11,iu ut, , 11tt :t' llH•k Hurl, W i(k
to use) cannot seem to tear themselves away from the
Sine~• th• · rull tmrl , 1,u,l•l◄ 11 1
111111111I$.Wil'lt
wa., an AJI.SeeUon \\'Ill Jltt\l.' H~:,llflH' H g-t•'Hl-• t' vol't\ou
books long enough to support their Alma-Mater.
Thi s
;,. lln lrup ort,rnt lu·.~ In tl'lc
If r11111&gt;uck
u11,t wrcs1J e1 111\\'llll'••II ..r llw ,iut lt·s ht· "hnr••~ hi.I -,•n
writer hopes he will not be quoted as being anti-study, for
...uc•(lt."',"',of 1,111whtl:' -1 11Uc•n~w•
U1$:'h ~, t'lt&gt;,1I111\\•:111,·n. l 'PUJ1..;v1,.
.."n wllh Hort .
education obvious ly is the sole purpose of the University:
however, one cnn certainly arrange hi s st udy schedule in
such way as to include one or two hour s a week at a varsity
contest. Not only is this an aid to the teams, but it alM
provide s one with a well deser vecl break, a chanc e to clear
the mind.
~lnec this is the lust is~u•e of of t 'ond• ~,·h,vn 1tz, \\ lto wn~ '" ht 1h1• success ot this Initial effort for
an AwRrds Dinner tlolll)nds u11011
Third, many students, especially cammutors, have
Lbe "Spectrum" for the seusort the in 1'11nrge of th• ,,vertl.
yo11r su pport. Attend the banquet
weekend jabs that keep them from attending sports func­
intr-.nnural picture will not be n\.,le
' f h,· inLrurnural trark 11\i•r
•t will
tions. Often it is the case that o person needs the job
lo be completed. The l,awre11,,., l,e heh! un Thur sday, .May 2, nt 1111c.lshow yo11r oppre cl11tion tor II
~11011 job well do11
e by Mr, Ed :Muto,
to remain in school. Not much can be said to dispute
Polhowili awort! for ovcrnil st und­ Rntury Fi~ld. ~;ntries must h~
inl rannu-n l Director, and his stair.
this. However, many others accept a job when it is nat
inb'S
is
atill
up
for
grabs
with
wme
in
no
Inter
than
April
:JO.
turn,•d
truly needed, mere ly to add to the amount of spending
4 fl•uternities ,lcfinitely in the run- No pr;wlii:t• Slla,sions al"e Ul t..'cssnry.
monE'Yearned the previous summer or as a means of
ning. However,
following Ute vu!
Th,·
lntru nnual
.11,li'nt
passing spore time, These people do not seem to real­
1,.. 11111
' \EERIS
leyball chn111pfonshi1&gt;
play,•d nn
ize that many years of work is inevitable ofter gradua­
m
"
b
8
s·
.,
•.
\\,.,,
.
..
.
111 1nltl,1t ,• ll lll'W traol.ili,m
, ues ay etween
eta • ,g anu Sig
tion. The four years spent in college should be looked
•·
th C top $)101. lS
. now helCll 1IY I in tilt· f,,r111 of u11
\ Whnl~ IJmncr
back upon with memories of thrilling football games ,
e.p,
,
uNLE
ss
either Beta Si1t m· AF~Pi. Jl,,~
.ult&gt;1lo 1.,. lwld 111 l's"rtor, ll111t111
(111
_screaming fans, and brassy bands, not of gos station
w~re not availnhl~ at the ti111
,, .,1 Th111·~rla.1•, ~1"~ !1, f!ICi:J,1111:
·oup.m.
pumps and grocery store counters.
As can be seen , this writer is in fa l'Or of filling Rotary prin t i111t,su only Lim~ will toll , . \ f,111.-uu rgt• di1111t•r&lt;'Q!I ue 1,er•veol
\'Qt•
Field to capac it y eve ry game ne&gt;..t fall. lt must be remem­
llowever, we may siithl a sound ,,L a ,~o~l ut" ~!!.~0 pc-r Jlt&lt;f.1'1011.
bered that sinel' UB is a state inslitution, money for ath­ inJicalur in Lhc res11lts c,f this im• tl0t• Iul rnrnnt·al Dn1111•tmcntiM1,ilJ.
letic scholat'ship.~ now depends mni11ly on ticket 11ales. purtanl race. The 1011thn•e ,·,1nlP111l­ ini: ln IIIIY half lh(• cost o! Utt! lnt•m•t•on•ID••w•,,.•.lnc, eu«••o.t '4Y.
Syrac 1tile Unive rsity, a fine footba ll school with top suppo rt, ers are entered in the ~!onclny Mofl. cli111rn
1·, 1f v,u~h ol'"nnizHtion will .======::;.;;-::.=-::-::-::-::
--==:::;::.;
makes it mandato ry for .111J're11hmen to be at every home I.nil league. Therefol'e, thl' winner pay $J.:l/j fur ,,,...1, member who
footba ll game donned with Leanies. It would be an ex­ of I.his competition coul&lt;l easily b~­ plan~ tu llllcnd. Th,• payment for
iuro. \~ nkh ,,a,·h ltt'rson who will l,e present
celleni idea fo h:ive a tradition such as this initiated at VB. rome the overnll ,·ham1,
Now Open

I

1

1

Four FrQ~ternities
Vie For Title

I

1

r:

A

JusrAeEER
..

in

rJrouois

1hat lcn~ue!

f111111 ,,u,·h i::r·oup is nt•edcd by Frihaij li,•t••1,·a11- day. \lay 3, in urtl~r to eover (he
eelle,J thi~ sJll'ini.: ,lue lo lilt' Hll1e5~J ,, .. ~t I)( th~ h:mqu~t. [{tomembt•r.

SPRING
SPORTS
SCHEDULES

Thl• r~1lt'in1:makh

Unlv•r•lty
of Buffalo Tennis
Schedule 1963
~lH'II

~~ [if11&gt;.

;;1.n1e
-- lloml'

~i llobarl· Awuy
~-I Co)i:ate--Away
~7 Syl'llCUBe--lfome
~~• l3tlo. Stute,,-Away
30 N iagara- Home
\ Tar

t r'.wtlnnd-Home
·\ c'nnislus-HomP
lj l' . or Rocbesler - AWlll

' l'anlslus - Awny
0 Nl3gara - Awny
U~lverslty of Buffa lo Track
Schedule 1963
Varsity
\ ltrll

~o l!PI - Home
~ t (',irllnnd-Away
n l11vllatlonnt - llollw
.:•, \in~aru
l ,,.
l ltro1·kj1(1M-HOmP
.! ll hMI! :,tale-1101111•
~ t '11h;a l e
'\wny
I • Y Stal e r,r,.,,,
I!

"hester
Froah

\'"ti
.;11 ltl'J

- limn~

Al

I

,tny

s f'oli,;aLe - Away
1963 BASEBALL
SCHED ULE
Varsity - 17 Game•
\111 ii
~II Brio . SJJ,Le-lloml\
t2 Cnnisiu s- llome
e~ !HT - Away
way
~li Cnl~te--A
~7 l'anislu• - AWlly

:co:-;ll,gnro-

Howe

New Location
COMPLETELUGGAGEand
LEATHERGOODS STORE

A'ITACHECASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGSand GIFTS
CompleteSelections,of Name BrandLuggage

l Coruell - llowe
3 Genc.,eo--Away
I !'. (&gt;! Rocb1•etcr-Home
il ntT - llome
I SI Bonnve.ntur!.'-A,rny
!I :-.ingarn
- Away
11 tt.hacu - Homl"
UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO

1963 Freshman
Date Opponent
.\pdl

Baseball Schedul e
Place
Tlrne

TUL•~. 23-

i!orh.

ol

Th11r'1 .:.!
~- J:n K Hit.,
~il''
:!7 Hh O ~ll~t•
TUI'~. :rn ltro d., ~t
ll'I 1·
F't i :: t • ut J:01 h.
Tu ,,. ~- llr} . &amp; !:itrn.
J'hur&lt;. !I-Uri,,
St.1lt&gt;

1:-l!,t11- 111 T

(opposite

11 I

Courtesy Disc:ountsto University Faculty and Studenh

\Illy

1

3272 Main Street

.1wi,;
.Awa y

Hom• .. "''
I\ \lri l)

.. J fl11

iI

3400 MAIN STREET

TFl -1600

(OppGJiteUBI

Open Mondo1, Th~rodoy 01111
Fridoy evcnl"I till 9 P.M.

1.£0NJlllDO'S

GROTTO IN THE REAR
V,sit our newly remodeled
Famous Ameri ca n
From A Tosty Sandwich
TAKE

....__
------------

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�PAGE SIXTEEN

SPECTRUM

Friday, April 19, 1963

A Little of This and A Little of That • • • •

Arnie Mazur and Pat Launer are the new editor and bu•l­
manager of The Spectrum.
A• a part of Spectrum tradition
,they put out th la, the 1 ■-t l11ue of the paper.

Wlll•rd Prior Jr., • Peace Corpe volunteer from New York
State aNI off one of hi• Venezuelan frlenda at a aummer
camp near Caracaa.
He la one of 66 volunteer■ working In
the Latin American country. With Mr. Prior la Robert Vena.
tar, another volunteer from Iowa,

An education major work• with children at the Unlveralt y•,
nursery school. Student• apend I certain amount of time per
week at the school a■ part of their education progr am.

A atudent at the art department take,
to contemplate her work,

time out

These Greek column,, originally part of the old federal re­
aerva bank at Main and Swa n have occupied the aame place
for four year•. Orlglnal plans had them alated for uae as the
backdrop for a Greek - theater.
A lack of funds Is holding
up further plana.

,Thia Bulgarian Dance Group waa one of the many that per •
formed at the Int ernational Club'• Fiesta held March 30. A
dance In the mujtf.purpoae room followed the program.

A choru, line of prety coed, waa part of the ,tudent talent
produotlon, "A Date With Show Biz'• wnlch w11 preHnted
laat month.

Thia picture of Ache&amp;on Hall In the snow will coon be obso•
lete, An addition to the building will soon be ready for occu
pancy giving the hall a wider frontage .

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
Spring Preview
For Football
Season

Student From
India Comments
On America

SPECTRUM

(See Page 11)

(See Page 5)

BUFFALO, N. Y., FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1963

VOLUME 13

No. 24

Spring Arts Week Opens
Sophomores: Note Change
In Comp Exam Schedule

A, L.
1:00-5:30 pm.
G
146 Dlefendorf
D
244 Health Sciences
F
110 Foster
1:00-5:30 p.m.
April 25
follows;
140 Capen
B
April 19
1:00-5:30 p.m.
M, N
5 Acheson
140 Capen
I, H. R
Z
244 Health Sciences
P,V
147 Diefendort
Students in the College
NOTE
146 Diefendorf
C
of Arts and Sciences who did
0 &amp; 4-yr.
344 Health Sciences
not previously take the Sophonursing students
more Comprehensive ExaminaApril 20
9:00-1:30 p.m.
tions will be required to take
E, J. SA-SL
5 Acheson
them in accordance with the
SM-SZ, W, T
147 Diefendorf
schedule above.
K, Q, U, Y
148 Diefendorf

CORRECTION! Regarding Sophomore Comprehensive Examination, the scheduling of P’s and
Ws in last week’s Spectrum was
incorrect. Correct schedule is as

140 Capen
April 23

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Bonnie, Nancy, Mari Lou
Vying for Queen s Crown
BY

PATRICIA

MUSIAL

BY LAURA

—

—

Three co-eds will vie for the
title of Spring Weekend Queen this
month. The candidates and their
sponsors are: Bonnie Laszewski,
Theta Chi, Mari Lou Thompson,
Sigma Kappa; and Nancy Zuckerman, Sigma Delta Tau.
Official campaigning will begin
at 5 p.m. today and will continue

Spanish Ballet, Violinist Stern,
Poetry Reading, Are Highlights

nas

and last year’s queen
Slubber will award the

Kathy

crown.

The candidates have selected
their themes and have based them
upon the color scheme of yellow.
Bonnie Laszewski, a sophomore in
Arts and Sciences majoring in sociology, has chosen “Bonnie —Queen
of the Emerald City” as her theme.
She hails from Endicott, New York
where she was chosen “Queen of
the Sororities” in the Tri-City area

while in high school.
Bonnie, who hopes to go into personnel counseling upon
graduation, was president of
her pledge class and also an
active member of various dormitory committees. Her Inter-

ests include swimming, writmg, and sculpturing.

Mari Lou Thompson, also a
sophomore in Arts and Sciences, is
a history major. She is a native
of Buffalo and intends to pursue
a teaching career here. Her main

The first annual Spring Arts Festival will begin Monday, and will continue until Saturday, April 20. The basic purpose of this week, sponsored by the Student Senate and the Union
Board, is to stimulate the campus to a greater interest in the fine arts, and to enlighten
the community to the talents and activities of the University.
Various art exhibits will be open
to all during the entire week. The
faculty-student art exhibit will be
displayed in rooms 242-248 Norton,
from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. This event
will give both faculty members and
students a chance to have their
works viewed by an interested pub-

pest String

lic. Three students will be awarded
prizes of $25, $15, $10 by'a panel
of judges from the art school.

Butler Auditorium. The MozartSchubert Festival will continue,

place in Norton’s browsing library.
Here, the first prize will be awarded and all entries will be available
for anyone who wishes to look them
over.
The second concert of the Buda-

Quartet will be given
Wednesday evening at 8:30 p.m. in

be

with the well-known cellist Bernard
Heifitz as guest performer. This
performance will be available to
the general public, courtesy of the

munity participation and will

music department.

The local artists exhibit will
displayed in the lounge
areas of Norton. This program will obtain direct comalso allow known artists, such

Martha Visser't Hooft and
Charity Roberts, to show their
works on campus. For those
who are interested in the craft
field, the second floor lounge
area will feature some of the
best craft projects done by students.
as

These three exhibits will be held
concurrently throughout the whole

week, and other activities have
been planned for each day. The
first of these events will be an
informal lecture-discussion with
Isaac Stern, open to students, faculty and administration at 1:30

MYRNA and CARLOS

day will be John L. Fuller, visiting lecturer of English, who
will read from his recent
poems at 4 p.m. in the Ezhibi-

The opera "Lohengrin” will
be shown in the cinema version Thursday at 3 and 8 p.m.
In ttie Norton conference
room. At 8;S0 p.m., Ell Kasaner will present a lecture-recital in Butler Auditorium. Mr.
Krassner is one of the finest
classical guitarists of his time.
He has studied in Vienna under
Sergovia, and is presently a
professor of guitar at the University of Toronto.

The exciting Carlos de la Camara
Ballet Espagnol will be presented

Monday afternoon, in the Dorothy
Haas Lounge. The noted violinist
hopes to meet and talk with as
many students as possible.

BONNIE

LASZEWSKI

throughout the week. Formal presentation of the candidates will
be made at a fashion show April
22 at 3 p.m. in the multi-purpose
room; a question and answer session will follow. Voting will take
place in the Law School from 10

a.m..,to 12 noon, April 26.
Winners will be announced
at the Spring Weekend Dance,
April 26. Selection of the
queen will be based upon student voting 30% individual
judging 50%, and campaign
judging 30%, President Fur-

The Budapest String Quartet will
perform the music of Mozart and
Schubert, Monday evening at 8:30
p.m. in the Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall. The guest soloist, Myron
Bloom, is a famous French horn
player and has given recitals
throughout

the world.

Student Participation Day will
• •*-,
| v
take place Tuesday, at 8:00 p.m.,
in (Hardman) Auditorium. The
students will present a talent recital, exploring many of the fields
of the performing arts. The show
will include numbers varying from
classical music to jazz, from modern dance to dramatic readings.
The performance will last approxiNANCY ZUCKERMAN
two hours, and offers all
mately
interest is music, but she has been students the chance to either disactive in student committees on play their own talents or appreccampus; she was secretary of iate the talents of others.
homecoming committee and viceAnother highlight of this
president of the Freshman Steering
Committee. Her campaign theme
is “Mirror of Melodies, a Reflection of Perfection."
Nancy Zuckerman is a junior
from Albany majoring in sociology.
Her activities included modeling
and hospital volunteer work during
All Juniors and seniors in the
her high school years. Recently College of Arts and Sciences who
she was on the Military Ball com- plan to return to the College next
pre-register,
must
mittee and has worked in the Pan- September
Hellenic Fashion Show. She spends assistant dean John C. Lane anat
St. Ri- nounced today.
her spare time working
ta's Home for mentally retarded
Students may pick up their
work
as a
children and plans to
social case worker during the Bum- registration materials Monday,
Wednesday, be
Tuesday, and
Symphony of Spring.”
and 4 p.m. in front
Skits by the candidates will be tween 9 a.m.
held the next week from 11 a.m. of the bursar’s office in Hayes
to 1 p.m. in the conference theatre. Hall.

ISAAC STERN

in a program of Spanish Flamenco dance Friday, at 8:30 p.m.
in Harriman Auditorium. This
unique group strives to blend drama, theatre and dance into a perJ&gt; f
poet
formance that reflects the Spanish
soul. Students will be admitted
Wednesday, at 3 p.m., the judg- free to this performance, but any
ing of the library contest will take other person who wishes to attend
must pay $1.60 and will be pot
in a reserved seating section. Ticktion Room of Lockwood LibMr. Fuller is presently
writing a book on John Gay,
18th century playwright and

rary.

.

Upper Class Pre-Registers
Monday
Wednesday
-

MARI LOU THOMPSON

ets for Student Participation Day,
the Budapest Concerts and the ballet are free for students, but they
must be picked up at the ticket
Any student who falls to secure booth in Norton.
The final event of the festival
his registration materials on those
three days must wait to register is the Slee Composers’ Chorale
Concert. It will be held in NorSept. 5.
ton’s multi-purpose room Saturday,
Students who are not certain 8:30 p.m. The music will be prowhether they will be able to re vided by the combined
voices at
turn to the College In Septombei the U. B. Women’s Chorale and
should pre-register anyway, since the Men’s Glee Club, with Andrew
it will be easier to pre-registe Heath conducting many
of the
and afterwards cancel their regis- works of our Slee composers.
This
tration than to try to register concluding program, as are
all the
late.

others, free to students.

�f AGE TWO

Friday, April 12, 196i&gt;3

SPECTRUM

Dr. Frank D'Accone Wins Music Award; Dispute Over Fixed Date for
Receives Fulbright Grant to Study in Rome Easter Began Centuries Ago
By

VICTORIA

BUGELSKI

Dr. Frank A. D’Acoone of the music department is
the recent recipient of two coveted honors, the Prix de
Rome and a Fulbright grant. Dr. D’Accone will spend
next year in Rome and Florence working on the origins and

development
of the sixteenthcentury madrigal.
The Prix de Rome for composers was the Academic des
beauty arts of Paris is 1803
and included a four-year stay
in Rome.
Applicants had to
compete in a severe examination and also compose a cantata. Among the recipitients
have been Berlioz, Bizet, Debussy. Ravel tried but failed.
The Prix de Rome from the
American Academy was established in 1894, first for artists
and architects, then for composers.
This is the first year the
prize has been awarded to a musicologist. Dr. D’Accone
commented
that "now music historians will
have a place in the Academy.”
The prize was based on Dr. D’Accone s work on Renaissance music.
Seymour Drumlevitch of the
art
department won the Prix de Rome
several years ago for painting.
At the University, Dr. D’Accone
has been teaching music
history
courses for music majors, and a
popular course for
non-concentrators, Introduction to Music, U3114, a course, which, in Dr. D’Aocone’s own terms, is
"exacting
but rewarding.”
He believes that “the serious
study of music should be brought
to non-musicians as well as musi.
cians, but In terms which they can
understand.’ He sees music as
“one of the prime manifestations
of the culture of each nation and
each period” and tries to present
the history of music to students
in these terms.
Bom in Somerville, Massachusetts, Dr. D’Accone began his musical studies at the age of
twelve
with piano lessons. At sixteen he

1

To the
earliest
Christians,
John Knowles Paine was the first
Easter
was
not Christmas
the all important holiday. Relaflively little notice was taken of
the anniversary of Christ's birth;
fellowship was established In his
the gospels are concernVirgil Thomson, current as far a s
honor
Slee professor, and Walter Piston ed, Jesus commanded men to
remember not His birth but His
both held it.
death. Therefore Easter is considWhile at Harvard, Dr. D’Accone ered the most ancient and most
was a graduate teaching fellow in important festival of the Christian
musk, assistant to Allen D. Sapp, year.
now the UB music department
One of the great disputes
chairman.
throughout history has been the
setting of a fixed date for Easter,
Dr. D'Accone came here in Sep- Early Christians celebrated Easter
1M0,
tember
and has continued
his research on Renaissance mus- at the same time as the Jewish
Passover feast,
since Christ’s
ic. He has published several ardeath fell upon the day of the
ticles in music journals, and is
feast of the Passover
the fourediting the first volume of a projected series called “Music of the teenth day of the month of Nisan
Renaissance.”
These (first month of the Jewish reli-

-

professor of music in an. American
university.
He taught at Harvard
during the Civil War, and the

-

-

-

-

Florentine

volumes will be published by the gious calendar, corresponding tc
American Institute of Musicology. March Aprjl).
The Jewish calendar consisted
12 lunar months, or 354 days, with
periodically an extra month inDR. FRANK D’ACCONE
serted to bring it in line with the
Representatives fom the Rea,d. solar calendar. So the date of the
became a
Jazz pianist and continued playing jazz in Boston all er’s Digest Special Products Corp. new Christian festival like that
Music Division will be on campus of the Passover, shifted from year
through college.
Monday to discus s summer job op- to year in relation to the Julian
He attended Boston Univer.
portunities in sales. There are calendar, then used by the Rosity and received his Bachelor
opportunities in many locations mans, which was calculated acof Music degrees there in 1952,
selling stereo and record combine, cording to the solar year. Cor
followed by his Master of
Music in 1953. Both degrees
tions. Interested students may dis- sequently Easter has remained t
cuss job opportunities with re- moveable date, falling anywhen
were taken in the field of
presentatives Monday at 3:00 p.m.
music theory.
For his masin room 330 Norton.
ter’s thesis, Dr. D’Accone
wrote on the music of Ravel.
After attending Boston University, Dr. D’Accone went to Harvard to begin work on his Ph.D.,
in the field of Renaissance music
At Harvard, he studied with Walter Piston, Randaii Thompson, and
Archibald T. Davison,
He interrupted his studies to become
the John Knowles Paine Traveling
Fellow in Music from Harvard
and spent 1957-59 in Europe doing
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
research in Florentine and Roman
libraries for his dissertations.
International Breweries. Inc., Buffalo, N.Y.
-

Placement

between March 22 and April 25
This year we will celebrate Easter
Sunday, which is the first Sunday after the full moon following
the vernal equinox.
What is the vernal equinox ?
Known also as "the first ppin'
of Aries,” it is the point at which
the center of the sun moves across the celesial equator fron
south to north. This occurs abou;
March 21 and marks the beginning
of spring in the northern hemi.
sphere. On this date, in all parts
of the world, night and day art
equal in length.
Easter has not always been cele
brated on Sunday. Early in th,
history of the church, a disputt
arose between the Jewish and th.
Gentile Christians. The Jewlsf
Christians maintained that Easte:
should be observed, like Pesacl
(Hebrew word for Passover), th'
regardless of th&lt;
14 of Nisan
day of the week upon which r
fell. On the other hand, Christian ■
of Gentile descent insisted tha'
the holy day be observed Sunday
since .it was on that day of the
week that the resurrection had
occured.
In the year 325, the Empero
Constantine convened the Nlcaear
Counfcil, where the decision wa
made that Easter should be ob
(Continued on Page 9)
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�Fridoy, April 12, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Admission Limited
Says Dr. Kaiser
A

little more than 60 c /, of next

year’s freshman class will have to
live within Commuting distance,
despite the increase in applica-

tions from all over the state.

Dr. Arthur L. Kaiser, director
of admissions, said that next
September there will be room for
only 900 freshmen in university
housing. The rest of the 2300
freshmen to be accepted will have
to live within commuting distance
of the university.
“All undergraduate women and
all freshmen men who do not
come from this area or live with
close relatives in this area must
and
live in university housing
that housing space is limited.”
Dr. Kaiser explains.
“By January 1964 we hope to
have another dormitory com. It
pleted .
may mean 150 to
200 more freshmen from out of
town. More than half our freshmen will still be from the Buffalo
—

DR. RAYMOND EWELL. VICE PRESIDENT FOR RESEARCH

Dr. Raymond Ewell Returns;
Indian Ministry Consultant

By ELAINE BARRON
Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice president for research, has just returned from a five week visit to India
He served as a Ford Foundation
consultant to the Indian Ministrj
of Steel and Heavy Industries
and helped increase the development of new fertilizer factories.
'Their [the Indian people] only
hope for growing more food is
more fertilizer. I hope to help them
toward this goal by increasing
the number of fertilizer plants,"
commented Dr. Ewell.
India’s population increase at
the rate of 10 million a year,,
/current pop. 450 million), but
the country has only six fertilizer
producing plants and needs four
times as many,” he added.
This was Dr. Ewell’s third
trip to India In seven years.
I go to India
“Everytime
things
look a little better
than the last time. India, the
second largest counry in the
world has lots of problems
which are exciting and challenging to work on,” he noted.
According to Dr. Ewell, an
obstacle that slows and snarls
India’s fertilizer production i 3 red
tape. Government officials as Dr.
Ewell noticed, spend three years
in financing, obtaining government
licensing, sted selection, and plant
design. Three additional years are
spent in construction and launching operations. "The officials,
though are the most rational,
logical people,” contrasted Dr.
Ewell, “yet they’re saddled with
enormous red tape a good deal
inherited from the British. I'm
getting kind of used to it.”
While in India. Dr. Ewell also
gave to the government birth
control information from the Planned Parenthood center of Buffalo,
advised on engineering for Brila
Institute* of Science and Technology, and iproposed development
for government research laboratories.
The Russian influence, in
Dr. Ewell’s estimation, is
felt most strongly In ttie field
of technology. “The Russians
tljere are strictly technical

building power plants
and steel mills,” he observed.
Although the Communist party
is the second leading party in
India, the Parliament is only 89',
Communist. "The Communists for
the most part are all home grown,”
explained Dr. Ewell. “Most of
them are from densely populated
and economically depressed areas.”
"Democracy l s pretty well established in India, even more
than Japan,’’ assured Dr. Ewell,
although the Russians have been
very generous, sometimes more
than we have. India has, however, a very favorable attitude
towards the United States,
With the advent of democracy,
comes the exit of the caste system. “The caste is disappearing
rapidly in the cities of India, but
it is still quite strong in the
villages.
There are four
main
castes, but as many as 20,000
subcastes,” commented Dr, Ewell.
“The caste system will completely
disappear when our Negro problem disappears in about twenty
years,” he concluded.
/''I

people

-

Review Utilizes
New Methods
The last issue of the New Student Review, the campus magazine, will come out of the middle of
next week. A new printing process
was used on this issue and it will
include a color cover, art, am'

In Leflore County, Mississippi,
ment South. The N.S.A. Comarea officials administering the
mittee of the Student Senate,
federal government’s surplus food
through Cease Food Service (of
program have cut 22,000 people off
UB’s dormitories and cafetethe commodity roles in retaliation
rias), has arranged to tend
against attempts by the Student
food to Leflore County.
Non-Violent Coordinating Commit*
The N.S.A. plans calls for all
Negro voters.
tee to
Since many of those removed students to give up dinner, Tuesday evening. This is the only day
from the roles are without visible
set aside, so any contributions
means of support, this means that
must be made Tuesday. There will
a large majority of Negroes will
also be bowls in Norton for combe without food.
muting students
who wish to
To date, a number of schools
contribute. Hopefully, every stuad hoc organizations have
to the Negro plight
through local campaigns to
raise food and money for shipand

responded

3199 Main Street
(across

ANNOUNCES

poetry.

DICK FADALE DUO

There will be an organizational
meeting early in May to determine

DRY CLEANING
8 lbs.

$2.00

from Granada Theatre)

TF 6-9490

icles of nonfiction include: “On
the Nature of Man,” “Spectrum:
Policy and Purpose Reviewed,”
and “Optimistic Estimate.” There
will also be cartoons, reviews, and

-

dent donate more than one meal so
that the Leflore Negro community
will be able to thwart Ihe arbitrary
Southern policy.

Big Mother’s

photography.
Featured are three pieces oi
fiction, entitled "Bronky," “Impostors,” and “Cheap Sale.” Art-

the editor and business manager
for next year as well as to formu
late plans for the future. All those
positions
interested
these
in
India in actuality,/ has much should contact Tom Berdine (831greater natural resources^-In Dr. 3288) or call the NSR office (831Ewell’s opinion, education is the 2319).
biggest single factor to which
Japan's better economy can bo
attributed.
"The
educational
system in India is comparable to
that of the United States' 100
years ago. It is in the "little red
for
schoolhouse” stage. It will change
THE
AT
very slowly" he explained.
In looking at India as a whole. One-Stop Service Center
Dr. Ewell made this comment, "I
Shoe Repairing
Laundry
noticed progress amidst problems.
Shoes and Purses Refinished
The essence of India is that every-

foremost jazz musician
appearing

SUNDAY AFTERNOONS
5:00- 8:00 P.M.
No Cover No Minimum
-

-

"S,

thing changes slowly.”

All

REGISTRATION
FOR UC STUDENTS
If your last name begins with:
M, J
You should see your adviser
the week of April 15-19. If you
have not done so, make an appointment in Diefendorf No. 114.
—

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types of Ladies’ Heels in
Stock for Replacement

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Plaza
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celling cara to a newspaper.

u

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This Tuesday is Selected
NSA Begins Food Campaign;
Dorm Students Cooperate

HOT CORNED BEEF
HOT PASTRAMI
HOT ROAST BEEF
AMERICAN CHEESE
SWISS CHEESE

HAM
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EGG SALAD
TUNA FISH SALAD
BOLOGNA
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TURKEY
CHOPPED LIVER
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PEANUT BUTTER and JELLY
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�Fridoy, A|

SPECTRUM

P ’AGE FOUR

YAF Chapter
Lacks Interest

ditoriais

*

By RICHARD

The End of The Road;
Year's Program Reviewed

It 12,

1963

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
ISTUDV A6S&gt;6HMEHtSfOB F1HM.:

AUGUST

chapter of the YAF,
Americans for Freedom,
is on the decline and seems destined to disappear from our campus. Bocause of a lack of sufficient interest by the officers
and members in stimulating conservative Views, the organization
inefficiency
has succumbed to
and dormancy.
UB’s

Young

It is with mixed feelings that we write this, our last
editorial. Last year at this time we were making plans
for The Spectrum of this year, and now we find that “this
year” has come and gone too soon. In retrospect we see
we have completed most of our objectives, but there were
The Y oung Americans for Freeso many other things we wanted to do and didn’t have dom is a national conservative
to
time
do.
youth movement whose objective
to replace the present apathy
To date we have put out twenty-four issues of The is
of American youth with an inSpectrum. For the first time in its history the paper has
terest in political thought and an
gone to twenty pages (the Christmas issue). There were introduction
to conserVatist views.
two glossy specials, the 16 page Homecoming issue and It’s principles are incorporated in
the Christmas one, and eighteen issues of the paper were the Sharon Statement adopted by
twelve pages or more.
the YAF in 1960.
Relative to internal organizations we are in better
The document states that
shape than ever before. With the exception of a few
the government should maintain a type of society such
seniors, juniors and sophomores. The Spectrum staff
that one person can not walk
consists (85%) of freshmen. Recruited during the sumon
another the atmosphere
mer planning conferences and in September, these stushould he as free as possible.
dents have been an essential part of The Spectrum orThe government should not
ganization. Never let anyone expound on the deficienbeyond this function.
venture
cies of a freshman in our presence.
Obviously, the YAF has adoptThe email, responsible core working on The Spectrum ed the same apathetic attitude it
are hardworking and dependable. For the most part they is trying to overcome. The local
have given freely of their time and talent, and for this chapter is completely detached
we are grateful.
from ■ University activities. The
year was uneventful and the
past
sounding
trite,
to
adeIt is always difficult, without
future looks bleak.
quately thank your co-workers. All we can say is that we
Last fall, the YAP presented
deeply appreciate all their efforts. Thanks are also due
featuring a Mr. Cole,
to several friends and associates among the student body awholecture
was running for controller
and administration whose confidence in our ability we have
of Lockport on the conservative
tried to warrant.
ticket. The YAF took no officFinancially, The Spectrum is in an excellent position. ial position on the election. ReWe have remained well within our budget, and increased cently, however, it participated
advertising made special issues and bigger papers possible. in the Model UN.
As for the future, no lectures,
This year as editor has proved an exciting and chalor demonstrations are schedfilms,
a
enemies,
but
lenging one. We have probably made few
uled, What is the reason for this
iwe believe we have made more friends. Our principal ob- lack of activity? DUane Homokay,
jective has been to provide an improved, more compre- (charter member of the YAF
hensive Spectrum. Judging from comments from stud- attributes the lack of interest to
ents, faculty, members of the administration and from “simple laziness.’’ The conservaour journalistic critic, Associated Collegiate Press, we be- tive feeling is present but what
lieve we have accomplished our objective. Perhaps you is mussing is the initiative on the
the readers have not always felt that we have given you part of the members to carry on
a successful program of events.
what you want in your paper. Herein lies the dilemma.
Mr. Homokay ironically boasts
for
line
solely
every
editor
is
responsible
As the
"I am a charter member and yet
the
thot appears in this publication, should we give you
I'm one of the few who has never
student what you want, or what we believe you should
held office.”
hove? It's a difficult decision and we have tried to strike
It seems that presidents
However, at the moment of
a balance between both.
change hands so often that
decision only one idea eon prevail and at that time we
it is hard to tell who holds
have made the choice which seemed most right to us.
sway at one time. The Board
If
opposite
yours.
been
the
of
choice
has
Perhaps this
of Student Activities In Norbetried
to
see
the
rationale
it has we hope you have
ton lists William Cas s as
hind our approach, and have tried to understand it.
president while Mr. Homokay
We wish next year’s editor, Arnie Mazur, and business refers to Patrick Irwin as the
manager, Pat Launer, success. We know they will conpresent administrator.
tinue in our efforts to produce an exceptional publication.
The total number of members
In conclusion we recall the long hours, the burden of is doubtful. A membership drive
and
we
ask
unending
decisions,
responsibility, and the
last year resulted in 35 names.
ourselves, was it worth it? Would we do it all again, The Thirty-five people have yet to
answer, unhesitatingly, is YES!
appear at a meeting. Apparently,
T

�

,

"•

y

Jprlk

State University of New York at
Norton Hall. University Campus Buffalo 14
the first week of September to the last week
period.. Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter.

newspaper of the
at

s" spT

now, the YAF’s affilthe University
is
questionable Dr. Nicholas Kish’s
obligation as faculty advisor end.
ed at the beginning of the year.
An organization can not be officially recognized unless it has a

iation

student
PublicationOffice
Published weekly from

Buffalo

Mr. Homokay is confident that
the YAF will become more active
next year with the advent of the
The
campaigns.
presidential
organization will serve to "spark
conservative forces" to vigorously
participate in the primaries.

Right

THE SPECTRUM
Th* official

there arc few "young Americans"
interested in conservative "freedom.”

witjh

JOAN R. FLORV
Edltor-ln-Chlef
faculty advisor.
ARN1E MAZUR
Editor-Elect
Feature Editor,7RENCB FRENKEL
Kvdttnr MARY LOU WILSON
Upon discussing this problem.
jJmES BAKFR nrcul. Mgr.
KAREN SAWORD
BB!V ROSBNOW
Office Mgr.
Copy' Editor
CHARLES STOWE
Dr. Kish stated that "My tenure
BRAJYDT
Advertising Mgr.
•
SINGER
Mgr
LARRY
Business
WM. SIEMERING as faculty advisor for YAF exEditorial Ad
Fin Ad ..THOMAS HARNkBJR,
DAVID IRWIN
Layout Editor
pired Jan. 1, 1963, I have no re.
Elm, Pat Mustek collection of a YAF representative
GENERAL STAFF: Victoria Bugelskl, Elaine Barron, Joey
Fran
Marlurt. approaching me requesting a resApple.
Rocky
Versace,
Charles Llppman,
Fred
Lawrence Frenkel, Peter O: tsrow, Loma Wallach, Laura Zlmmeman, Jane umption of my service
as faculty
McHugh.
Sommer, Marcia Cooper, Lillian Williams, Amle Mazur, Cathy
advisor. It is not my position to
Colleen Long, Marcia Ofszulok, Camille LoBrocco, Donald Irwin, Alan HoffJoasph,
Lola
man, Barbara Gold water, Helen Chapell, Pat Lawner, Sue
go looking for officers of present
Heealnger, Mike Sultanlk, Ron Kamlnakl, John Knipler, Kathy Shea. AdHause and Pot Muslal. YAF administration to ask why
rienne Leventhal, Lonl Levy, Richard August. Randy
PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Joel Havens, Russell Goldberg and Dick Fo*er.
I have not been approached.”
—

—

B-Suor

..

-

PRESS

,

•

A
\

Entered ns second class matter February 9. 1961. at
•he Post Office at Buffalo, N. Y.. under the Act of March
l. 187M. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of post
ane provided for In, Section 1101. Act of October I. Ill"
authorized February I. 1961.
Subscription 13.00 per year, circulation UM
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service. Ine., 431 Madison Ave., New York. N. T

The YAF is dormant not only
in an attempt to .motivate con
servatiye forces but also "to the

extent of having desire to continue
a s an officially recognized group,"

Why Cheat?

Mr. Falk Answered
To the Editor

To the Editor

I should like to discuss
ment made last week in
umn by Mr. Alien E. Falk
ing my refusal to permit

a statethis colconcernhim to
represent the convocations committed of the Student Senate. The
tion period.
statement, of course, is true; but
deserves greater amplification than
But why is It that the student
Mr. Falk accorded It.
not
-realize
when
he
that
does,
It is not concurrent with comcheats, he cheats no one but himmittee policy that member be adWhy
does
he
not
think
about
self.
mitted upo n immediate notice or
the four years of his short life that certain
persons be accorded
he is giving, and the thousands special privileges in determining
of dollars of his or other people’s the program of the committee.
money, in order to obtain an edu- The reasons for this policy are
obvious. If every group or individcation? No one but himself can
ual having a particular interes*
possibly suffer any damage when was allowed to impose that interhe cheats, because he is only est on the convocations commitcheating himself of a portion of tee, our well-planned and carefully
structured program would dissolve.
the education for which he is payEvery speaker presented by the
ing so dearly. He Is not getting
convocations committee serves a
full value for his money, or time. definite function or purpose carefully determined by the entire comCheating In coursework means mittee. W© have never felt that a
that the student does not obtain potential speaker’s availability or
all the necessary Information or desire to make a speech was subknowledge. Then when he has to stantial reason for an invitation
Nor has it been our policy to perUse the knowledge in a later mit any single member (of the
course, or on a job, he does not committee) to make decisions aihave it and must now try to car- ecting the whole group.
ry on two jobs
that of learning
What the Messrs. Falk and
Shapiro did was to request ofwhat he should have learned preficial sanction for a program
viously, and trying to apply what
that was essentially undeflnec
he does not know to the job at
and “exploratory” in nature.
hand. The usual result? ObviousTheir good intentions, however,
ly, as a minimum, a poorer job
were not sufficient to let them
carry the responsibility and
than he should have been capable
prestige of the convocations
of doing: as a maximum, loss of
committee.
position he has been trying to
hold, or failure of the course.
It should be noted that this
committee, like any other Senate
The student should realize that activity, welcomed the support and
the diploma does not, and can not Interest of the University con:
thi;
hold any job for the individual. It munlty. And in order to gain
support and respect, the Conimi'
is only a certification by a school
tee must maintain its integrity
or university that lie has success and sense of purpose.
If Senator Keating had, in the
fully completed a course of study.
the
If he has obtained the diploma by judgment of the committee,
cheating, the diploma is a false ability to engender an educational
or cultural experience consonan’
certification that will haunt th with our goals, we would surely
student the rest of his life
have welcomed the aid of any
h
will ever be, conscious that he is agency that could have secured
However, Mr. Fa
living a lie. By diligent study he appearance.
and Mr. Shapiro gave such sho
can overcome the handicap of the notice that
the committee nev
lack of knowledge, but he can had the chance to consider th€
.ever overcome the feeling of gull' suggestion. I did not feel that I h:
the arbitrary power to appoi
aboto his dip
The season is rapidly approaching when there is a peak in the
indoor sports of cheating which
culminates in the final examina-

—

upon their sue
Professor of

Very t
Henry.

J. Sun

I

�

The last issue otf The Spectrum for this year will
appear next Friday. All reporters are reminded that the
copy deadline is Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. Please check the
office for assignments.
staff Monday
There will be a meeting of the entiremeeting
is imThis
offices.
Spectrum
The
at 3 p.m. in
perative for all staff members. The new editor will conduct the meeting. Anyone wishing copy included in the
last issue of the paper is reminded of the deadline.

Letters: Cheating, Policy
For Speakers Discussed

•onvocations committe

�SPECTRUM

Fridoy, April 12, 1963

*3onic C^oiumn

PAGE FIVE

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE MAZUR

BY ANNE MIINTE

grown up
with the cold war as a fixture of
international life. As we know it,
it is a socio-economic battle between monolithic Russia and ourselves. The post-war shift amongst
nations ended the temporary alliswing. For example . *. .
ance to destroy fascism and the
cycle of international riAlpha Gamma Delta’s pledges dressed in bunny costumes last modern
valries began.
Saturday for the annual Bunny Hop. Proceeds went to the Easter
At any rate, it seems as if the
Seal campaign.
deadlock is now taking
east-west
Alpha Phi Delta fraternity will hold its annual closing affair at a turn away from alignment with
the Moulin Rouge, April 20. Colin Christe, president of the pledge the two great powers. Because
there is no immediate danger of
class, is Congratulated by brothers and pledges.
all-out war, though the world is
Gamma Phi’s annual Greek Olympiad will be held April 21 at not without threats of such, there
2:00 in Rotary Field. Men’s and women’s divisions will be awarded seems to be a trend for the other
nations, the middle sized powers
trophies along with an overall award to the organization accumu- as well as the smaller, to combine
named
Gamlating the highest number of points. Micky Shelden was
their resources and influence into
ma Phi Sweetheart at the annual Sweetheart Dance.
minor power blocks.
Our

generation has

season when a young pledge's fancy
turns to thoughts of Initiation! While pledging continues, however,
the semester is dominated by work, work, work. Closing affairs,
Stunt Night, IFC Help Week, and individual projects are now in full
Spring is

here, and 'tis the

Bill Jusko is congratulated on his election to Regent of Kappa Psi
fraternity, Jim Graham is president of the pledge Class. Last week
the senior brothers in Pharmacy School participated in a trip to
Lilly Labs,

Phi Sigma Sigma’s pledge class i s preparing its philanthropy
project for the Spring semester. This year’s project is a service project for Veteran's Hospital.
Phi Zeta Chi sorority announces its 5th annual Spring dinnerdance, April 20, at the Peter Stuyvesant Hotel, A cocktail party will
precede the danlce at the home of Judy Kohn.
The Sig Kaps wish to announce their queen candidate for Spring
Weekend, Marilou, Mirror of Melodies. The sisters will participate in

Indian Physics Student Finds
US Almost As He Expected

Within the big alliances, the
actions of France and China
may be interpreted thus. Both
countries view the Russian-U.S.
battle as a stalemate and would
like to make the most of the
deadlock. Therefore, China
seeks to become the major
force in Asia and control that
area of the world, and France
wishes to lead an insurgent
Europe back to the forefront
of world politics.

By LAWRENCE FRENKEL
The Spectrum is featuring interviews with students from foreign
lands so that their views and problems can be made known to the
American college student.
This
week’s interview is with Prakash

The other areas of the world, for

Gamma Phi’s Greek Olympiad.

instance, Latin America, either be-

year.

ing, as the rise in the number of
coups, strikes and protests in

cause of the cold war or in spite
Sigma Phi Epsilon held its annual Founder’s Day Dinner at the of it, are receiving attention as a
spoke.
Milton
Plesur
chunk of territory with a highly
Swiss Chalet last Wednesday, Dr.
explosive quality. The system of
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will participate in Help Week with the landed aristocracy and profess
an individual project. Bob Keller has been 'chosen to represent UB
sional military controlling the stagchapter in competition for the position of top national Teke of the nation of a continent Is slowly endLatin countries indicate.

Wilbur Closes Convocation;
Reads From Own Works
By FRED M. APPLE
Richard Wilbur, winder of the
Pulitzer Prize for poetry, spoke in
Norton Union. Wednesday. The
noted poet recited pieces from hlg
various books, and gave his feelings about the different aspects of
life that have been included in his
:&gt;oetry.

Eventually, once the various
countries in the large areas of
Latin America, tribal Africa,
the Near East and North Africa
attain stable governments which
are truly
representative
of
their aeoples they, too, will
join forces amongst tnemselves
and present a major block and
common cause to the world
conference tables.

ages that come with emotional
experiences. He often uses
such literary devices as personifications and similes. The
poet, who recently visited Russia, feels that modern temporary poetry is influential, especially on the writers of today.
Mr. Wilbur feels that
poets should read only what
appeals to them, thus avoiding
any unnecessary change in the
work.

Some of his selections Included:
Museum Piece, ”■ “Parable,” “A
'1 lance from the Bridge,” "Altitudes” (a two-part poem describing
Emily Dickens’ father’s house),
Good poetry, according to the
‘Junk,” (about things that are
made cheaply, without pride; main- poet, who has also won the Naly for money), “The Undead,” and tional Book Award, should not be
vague or merely vivid descriptions,
The Smoking Oar.”
but must be “ideas that are set
distinguished
writer
has
reThe
down with sweat.” Natural rhythm,
cently finished his translation of
or certain meters usually come
he
Tartuffe” Moliere’s which
aloing with the development of a
the
hopes will be performed at
poem but a poem should not be
also
Phoenix Theater Mr. Wilbur
worked around specific rhythms or
read selections from another of patterns.
Moliere's plays, often translates
The poet, who attended Amherst
the works «C various authors tor
he feels this teaches a writer in- and Harvard and is now a professtrumental knowledge, and keeps
sor of English at Wesleyan Unihim busy as well, when he has no versity, ended the convocation seother work to do.
ries, with a coffee hour taking
place in the Dorothy M. Haas
WilRichard
poetry,
his
In
Lounge.
bur tries to capture visual im-

UB Bands to Give Concerts
Beginning April 21 at Baird
for

spend his time in spiritual contemplation.”
What do you do for recreation?
“I enjoy the solitude of the AmeriTrivedi, a graduate physics student can countryside and the education
one gets as he travels in the
from Allahabad, India.
Before you left India what did United States. But my main form
you expect the United States to of recreation is participating in individual sports. I run seven miles
be like?
“I found pretty much what I ex- every night. 1 also played hockey,
cricket, and soccer for the high
pected and what I was lead to believe by the Americans that I met school that I attended in India.”
Do you watch television?
“I
and knew in India. But it is an
exciting experience when one fi- watch only one program and that
think
that
the
I
wrestling.
he
has
is
nally sees the country that
heard so much about.”
wrestlers put on a very entertainWhat is the greatest difference ing show.”
Would you compare the educabetween the people of the United
States and the people of India? tional organization in India with
“In general, the people of India that in the United States? "Firstly,
are more spiritualistic while Amer- about two million students annualicans are more materialistic. But ly complete the tenth year of
the most shocking difference is the school in India. At the end
this
amount of freedom that American tenth year, all of these students
pass
graduate
disobehave
to
an
exam
to
Dates,
youth are given.
dience to parents, and so on are from our primary school. The next
unheard of in India. I think that step is two years of intermediate
there should be a compromise be- school and then the university. The
first two years of university study
tween the two extremes.”
Have you found it easy to make are devoted to three subjects,
“The chemistry, physics, and math. At
friends in this country?
American people are very friendly, this point, the Bachelor’s degree is
but because I am so different, I awarded.
“The remaining two years of
find it very hard to become well
enough acquainted with my fellow University are devoted to a study
students to become very friendly of your major field and at the end
of the fourth year of university the
with them.
“First of all, I am a vegetarian. student usually is awarded his
Our noticable
Therefore I can’t be easily invited master’s degree.
to someone’s house for dinner. I emphasis on practical work is excan not even go out with friends plained by the fact that India needs
for a cup of coffee because I don’t practical development in order to
drink stimulants. I only drink milk reach the technological level of a
and fruit juices. I eat only once progressive country.”
Do you think that lied China’s
a day and then I eat vegetables
prepared in a way that is different border clash with India has influenced India’s non alignment polithan you use.
“A second difference is that I am cy. "India believes in non-aligna Hindu and my religion forbids ment because it serves to further
me to do many things that you the cause of world peace. But
accept as normal action. I can not American influence is increasing
apeak or eat on Sundays and I can’t rapidly in India since the border
eat after 8 o’clock in the evening. dispute.”

server gets the feeling that such
movements are inevitable; and
even wonders why it has taken
such a long time for this type of
larger consciousness to develop
fully.

In all, in the near future the U.Sand Russia should be faced with
the power of the “third forces"
throughout the world. We have
gnawed at Russia for a number of
years now, and it seems as it the
deadlock can only become more
amicable. With other nuclear powefs in. the world, will the Soviets
and the U.S. be able to coexist
with them.

British Physicist
Will Speak Here
Pofessor M.H.L. Pryce, British
physicist will be on campus to
address students later this month.

29
will
and
will
-

RAPE

THE LAW AND YOU
by Ronald Kaminski

One area of the law in which
every layman pretends to have
some knowledge is the serious
the carnal
th.
Professor Pryce is from Bristol, felony of rape. Rape is
Frank J. Cipolla of the music Catel, composed in 1792
by actual
England where he is affiliated knowledge of a female,
department announced that th Band of the National Guai
Fran- with the H. H Wills' Physics or 'constructive force, against ‘her
UB bands under his, direction, will Paris, the Milhaud
rapei,
"Psalm for Band
Laboratory, University of Bristol. will or consent (statutory
give a series of three concerts caise”,
Suite of OK
The felony of rape is divided,
this spring. Admission is free fo Persichetti. Bennefs
Morton Gould s
in many states, into degrees,
all programs, and faculty am' American Dances’,
deperyjing upon the circumstan“Folk Suite Overture . The prostudents are invited to attend.
ces, ahd the respective ages of
gram will close with two marches,
The first concert, to be presen
the Italian “Inglessina” march of
the parties the oft
d Sunday. April 21 at 8:30 p.n
Delle Cese, and John Philip Sousa’s
upon I he showing of previous ac
Hands across the Sea”.
n Baird, will be given by tl
•f the fer
'oncert Band, the select, compel
tak&gt;
will
second
concert
ve group composed mainly (
Rape is not the same a:
Sunday
April 28, at 8:30
iusic majors. All the music I
because' in seductibi
p m. in
Baird, and will
irformed at this concert
:n originally for band. Vir
Jwind. brass, and j:
mly if he ha:
umison, current Slee profes
cl fi:
The third
ill be guest conductor for
ancert will be given on
ni work. “A Solemn Music
be c
on the lawn near Bair
husband against hi
1
p.m.
by
3:30
the
ay
5
at
her works to be perl
msent is given at mar
rsity Band.
i over

"Suite'

&lt;&gt;

o.

k

.

'

*

Also, my religion teaches that a
concern about worldly things is
wrong and that one should rather

o£

A case in point is the growth of
pan-Arablsm amongst the Islamic
peoples. Under the ambitious leadership of President Nasser the ob-

He will be here from April
May 1. Monday evening he
speak at the Faculty Club
Tuesday and Wednesday he
speak with students.

Ukranian Club set up this display of gayly decorated eggs
The Club demonstrated the
on the first floor of the Union.
ancient art at special classes Tuesday. The Club has formulated plans for next year’s program.

II

riage. but it can be committed if
a husband forces his wife to have
sexual intercourse with another

male.

Rape
may Be committed
upon a woman who is insane,
idiotic, drugged, intoxicated,
or asleep. However. It generally
cannot be committed
upon a woman of ttie age of
consent even if the consent
was obtained by fraud or

surprise.
Generally, the female’s previous

.ipchastity Is no defense, expect
n a few states, but it Is admisshie i n determining what credibility will be given to her complaint,
Many states, including
New York, require independent
collaboration of her story besides
female’s own testimony. In
ittacking
the female’s credit)inued on page 9

(hr

�the newest word from Paris and
are interpreted In a variety
of ways, from the draped bloused
crown or "French souffle,” arrangable at will or whim, to the neat
straw pillbox framed by a delicate
organza pouf.
Other recent heady developments
are the Spanish sailor, jaunty in
rough straw, and a Swiss, "hairbraid”—-a looped curlicue of
shiny straw with almost the fineness of human hair.
Derby-type hats have a new
look this year, and there is
prediction for the continued
popularity for two styles made
faodish by Mrs. Kennedy: the
Breton and the pillbox. Floral
hats, perennial Easter favorites, bloom freshly as wigs or
as profile pillboxes.
Mint green, cltrusy oranges and
•yellows look especially fresh now,
although
hardy perennials like
beige, nary, pink and blue are going strong. A new vivid pink,
known as romance pink carries
over from fall. Turbans have a
“this spring” look in silk printed
with soft, muted patterns.
For women who like doing things
on a small scale, the ' hatlet” continues its popularity. An inexpensive classic Is the whimsy veil;
newer looks
Include a "double
ring” and a deml-plllbox.
Are there any other "tips from
the top” that may assure a better
hat buy tor Easter and spring?
Don't neglect the do's” ano
“don’ts” for your particular
shape face. If you are roundfaced, seek balancing height
and width to give the Illusion
uptllted
of slenderness an
hat or a sloe pillbox is good.
An over-long face can be
they

Dr. Robert S. Fisk, dean ol
the School of Education has been
shortened” by low-level hats;
selected to spend four weeks i
a picture hat is excellent for
Israel under the auspices of tin
Association of Colleges for Teach
A triangular face needs a hat er Education and the U.S. State
to widen the brow; straight-across Department.
brims, up-curving liretous, toques
Dean Fisk left last week with
or turbans draped low and wide. two
college
presidents, three
Deep-on-the-brow hats look lovely deans, and the director of the
on heart-shaped faces. If you have project, Dr. Harry N. Rivlin dean
a square jaw, seek a hat with of teacher education, City Univerheight and a gently Irregular outsity of New York,
line, softly draped trimming or a
While in Israel, Dean Fisk
bouffant crown,. Avoid toques or
will lecture on “Preparation
too-frilly
toppings
which
sailors or
for Public School Administrawill make your face look stern by
tion,'’ "School of Educational
contrast.
and “Graduate and
Finance,”
Here’s something that will startle
Professional Education.” The
many men; fashion experts believe
Dean is a member of the Unmost women are too conservative
iversity Campus Committee
in their choice of hats. They tend
on Internatlonial Education.
to select styles that have worked
The over-all aim of the project
for them In the past, not realizing
is to become acquainted with
how many different shapes and
training
institutions,,
colors they look good In. "Oh, I teacher
programs,
can't wear that
Pm a timid study teacher education
soul!” Is a comment heard Is mil- and leam as much as possible
about the culture and education
linery departments around the nasystem of Israel.
tion.
Among the highlights of the
trip will be meetings with officals
of the ministry of education and
culture, participation in Passover,
and a tour of Galilee.
—

National Agencies
Award Fellowships

Fellowships for advanced studies
have been awarded to eight students by two national agencies.
The award recipients are:
National

Science

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and

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that any choral group appeared
here. Within six weeks, the singer s
performed In Washington, D.C
and thus had appearances in the
capitals of two nations In a shor:
time.

Best Picture of the Year

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“David &amp; lisa”
AN UNFORGETTABLE
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are

In 1961, the chorus performed
at the Canadian House of Parliament, the first time in history

*

MAIN STRUT
ITRIITAMBlU'HH

t]u | y

Tickets

KENSINGTON

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IF 3-8216

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will appear at Kleinhans
Music Hall. Beginning at 8
P.M., The RCA Victor recording stars will present in
concert many of the songs
that brought them to national fame.

The chorus has a repertoire c:
music ranging from the 16th
through 20th centuries, including
sacred, secular, serious, and popular music. Much Cont corpora:
music is performed.

HELD OVER 4th WEEK j
J "Best American Film J
?
of 1962"

W

Student Discount Ticket
for all programs may be purchased
upon presentation of ID Cards

Friday, April 19, the
nationally known folk-singing group. The Limeliters,

critic for the New York Time
called the performance a "Chora
achievement of a high order.”

�

—ROD TAYLOR-JESSICATANDY
SUZANNE PLESHETTE w—,'TIPPI' HEDREM
RECOMMENDED YOU SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING ! I
NO ONE SEATED DURING THE LAST 20 MINUTES I
(See daily newspaper for time schedule)

On

NEW

*

t

Limclitcrs
To Appear
Friday, April 19

The Laurentian Singers of St
Lawrence University, under the
direction of J. Richard Gilbei
will give a concert Tuesday, Apr;'
23, at 8:30 p.m, in the Norto
multi-purpose room. Admission is
free and all students and faculty
ae invited to attend.
Organized in March, 1946, by
Dr. J. Kenneth Munson, head o
the music department at S
Lawrence, the 50-voice chorus ha
been directed by Professor Gilber
since 1955. The singers have toured
the eastern United States an
Canada, and have performed on
national radio broadcasts. Afte’
a concert in New York City'
Town Hall, Allen Hughes music

Including

—

jy

Buffalo, N Y

Laurentian Singers to Hold
Norton Concert on April 23

Winner of 7 Academy Awards

PA. 5415

National Institutes of Health
Thomas P. Jehrio, and Ronald
E. MacLeay, both in chemistry.
NFS
summer fellowships
!
Joseph F. Bieron, chemistry, Mr.
and
Eric
Stusnick,
MacLeay

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Alfred G. Frisch,Optician

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HITCHCOCKS

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co-operative fellowship grants
Dennis Mulvey, chemistry; John

K.

il 12, 1963

-i*j Fri., April 19

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$5.00

All Seats Reserved
self-addressed
Mail orders now with
stamped envelope, send check or money
order to Buffalo Jazz Festival, Dentons,
32 Court Street, Buffalo 3, N. Y. Tickets
on sale at Denton's, 32 Court Street,
Sample Shop, Hertlc &amp; Walden Avc.

OF

ARABIA

ACADEMY AWARD WINNER

ALEC GUINNESS ANTHONY OL
JACK HAWKINS JOSE FERRER
ANTHONY OUAYLE • CLAUDE RAINS
OMAR SHARIF *ALI* PETER O'TOOLE
,

Which hat styles will be particularly vouge-lsh for Easter and
spring this year? Puff shapes are

A

Fisk to Spend Four
Weeks in Israel

'In Your Easter Bonnet
With All the Frills Upon It"

-

Fridgy,

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

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iril 12, 1963

SPJ CTKUM

Interstate Tourney Climax
Of Debate Tour in Ohio
Four novice debaters climaxed a
three-day tour of Ohio schools by
attending the Alleman Interstate

Novice Debate Tournament
Louisville, Kentucky.

in

The tournament, which is unofficially regarded by most mid-west
debate coaches as the national
novice debate finals, was co-sponsored by Bellarmine College and
the Kentucky Hotel, which provid,ed accommodations for the debaters as well as $150 worth of
trophies. The attending team consisted of Linda Leventhal, Bob
Williams, Russell Goldberg, and
Karen Miller.
The tournament is unique as
it is an all community effort. As
expressed by County Judge Marlowe W. Cook, the speaker at the
awards banquet and a former
Buffalonian; the tournament involves Louisville’s “civic pride".
His address to the debaters, from
some 32 schools across the country,
urged them to go home and inspire similar public support for
the tournaments their respective
schools sponor each year.
As evidence of active support by the community were
the facilities provided for the
debaters. All rounds of intercollegiate debate were held In
the Kentucky Hotel and In the
Louisville Convention
Hall.
The debate coaches, Including
William A. Baker, director of
novice debate, each receiveo’
gold keys to

the

Dr. Karl Duetsch
To Finish Series

tournament. This would coin-

By KATHLEEN SHEA

city.

The debaters themselves received
an Honorary Masters Certificate
in the Steamboat Flotilla of the
city. The flotilla mentioned consits of one boat. It is the city’s
pride, “The Belle of Kentucky.”
Next year, the dance which always accompanies the tournament,
may be held on the steamboat. In
addition, negotiations are being
made to move the tournament back
to the last weekend in April, the
weekend before Derby Day. It this
comes about, the first race will be
named in honor of the tournament:
“The Alleman Debate Handicap”.
As West Point is the official
varsity finals, so Bellarmine
College is negotiating to become the official novice final

PAGE SEVEN

cide with the wishes of many
mid-west debate coaches who
bring their best teams to debate their “terminal" rounds.
This means that after the Bellarmine tournament, the debaters will begin participating
in varsity debate.
The caliber of the school present
can be seen from the results of
the first three of the six rounds
of debate. Of 32 affirmative teams,
S were unbeaten including our
affirmative team Miss Leventhal
and Mr. Williams. Thus, the teams
were of “tie caliber". Also, 17
negative
teams went into the
fourth round with a record of 2
win and 1 loss, including Miss
Miller and Mr. Goldberg. Facing
such stiff competition, including
3 of the 4 finalists, our novice
team tied for 14th place with a
record of six wins and six losses.

Dr. Karl W. Duetsch, professor
of political science at Yale UniHillel
versity, will conclude the Graduate
Hillel Foundation will sponsor
Management lecture series at 8 a Sabbath Service this evening
p.m. April 23 in 134 Health evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel
House. Dr. Justin Hoffman will
Sciences here.
speak on:
"Passover Symbols"’
"Communication Theory and the An Oneg Shabbat will follow.
Nature of Government” will be
In order to provide students
the topic of the lecture given under with a warm Passover meai
the auspices of the School of BusiHillel will provide a roast beef
ness Administration.
dinner Sunday at 4:00 p.m. in th.
Hillel House. Reservations
for
faculty
on
the
at
Yale
Serving
must be made ahead of time. This
since 1958, Dr. Deutsch wa s pro- in addition to the two Passover
fessor of history and political lunches and the Seder which
science at Massachusetts Institute Hillel arranged in observance of
of Technology, 1942
48. He was the holiday.
visiting professor at- Princeton,
1953-54; University of Chicago,
Wesley Foundation
1954; Yale, 1957-58; Heidelberg
University Methodist Church
University 1960; Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, 1960161; will hold two services Easter
Sunday, 9;00 and 10:45 a.m.
and Nuffield
College,
Oxford,
An officers meeting will be held
1962. He was lecturer at the Air
this Wednesday in room 217,
War College. 1957-58, and professor of international politics, Norton. The Wesley Foundation
Fletcher School of Law and Diplo- will not meet this Sunday even-

macy,

ing.

1956-60,

Intcr-Varslty
"Korea” will be the subject of a
presentation by Duane Homokay
Thursday, The program will have
a missionary emphasis and will
be held in Norton, room 330 at
4 p.m. Mr. Homokay spent a number of years with the armed forces
in Korea. He is presently a student
here at the University.
The weekly student led discussion groups continue to meet in
Norton Monday at 4 p.m., Tuesday
at 12 p.m. (both in room 266 and
Friday at 3 p.m. in room 217.
-

Student Christian Association
The Student Christian Association is sponsoring Good Friday
Worship services for faculty and
students at the University Presbyterian church
opposite Hayes
Hall. The services will be from
3-3:30 p.m. Chaplain Jphn Burek
will officiate.

Besides this most important exHe was a staff member of the
perience in facing the country’s UN Conference on International
top teams, the four novice deOrganization, San Francisco, 1015,
baters did a little “proselytizing’’ and was chief of the research Secamong midwestern high schools tions OSS arid Departments of
and colleges. They visited MidState, 1944-46.
park and Grandview High Schools,
giving demonstration debates and
activities here who himself is a
the students,

HAPPY
EASTER

They also visited Wilbur Force
University, a Negro college, at the
suggestion
Wesley
of
Harris,

assistant coordinator oif student
activities here who himself is a
graduate of the small college. Of
a total of 400 students, 10% attended the 00 minute debate and
the hour and a halt question period, in spite of the fact that anactivity
other ail-campus
was
scheduled the same day.
The
students have determined to set
up their own debate society and
have challenged UB for next year.

QUICK, DRY

XEROX COPIES
BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.
(formerly Teck Univ. Branch)
3610 Main Street

The last big event oi the seasen £or the Varsity Division o£
the debate society will by the
Legislative Assembly in May. Last
October Carol Zeller, Gerald Catanzzaro and Michael Shapiro were
selected as delegates to the student assembly. Some 20 colleges
and universities introduce "bills”
and “amendments" in the three
selected areas: education, divorce
laws, and censorship.

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1.15
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8. Cheese, Pepperoni &amp;
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1.30
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�Fridoy, April 12, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Spectrum

Soard

ministration office for $3.50,
Recital
Student Recital
Allen Giles, pianist, and Alta
The weekly student recital
Mayer, cellist, both of the music
given by applied music students
department faculty, will give a
will take place Tuesday at 1 p.m,
sonata recital Thursday as part
of Baird. All
of the Spring Arts Festival, The in the auditorium
students and faculty are invited
program will begin at 1 p.m, in
Performers ,wjll be
room 101 Baird. All students and to attend.
are invited to attend. soprano Susan Szajko saxophonist
faculty
John Lis, and pianist Marianne
Accounting Club
Hutchinson,, Gerald* Marmillo,
The accounting club banquet and Gerald Steams.
will be held Wednesday, at the
Photography Club
Clinton-Ave Hotel, 4238 Genesee.
There will be a meeting of the
Guest speaker will be Burt Wright, photo club this afternoon at 4 pm
GPA
Peat
Marwick, in room 262. Contest committees
from
Mitchell. Cocktails will be at 6:30 will give their reports. The conand dinner at 7:30. Tickets can test is slated for May 3. Check
be obtained at the Business Ad- the dark room for rules.
Faculty

Creative Problem Solving
Institute Slated June 24-26

About 400 participants from
across the United States and
several nations are expected at
the Ninth Annual Creative Problem Solving Institute June 24-26.

The Institute i a underwritten by
the Creative Education Foundation
of Buffalo and directed by Dr.
Sidney J. Parnes,
director of
creative education at the University. It'k aim is to foster a crea
live approach to solving problems,

basically through deferring judgement while searching for alternatives and through setting up
proper
the
atmosphere
and
thought processes for the creation
of ideas. Alex F. Osborn of Buf-

Student Art Tour
To Be Scheduled

Charles Phelps Taft Asserts
US Trade Can Be Improved

Jerome Rothlein, instructor in
the department of art, is organizing a student tour for Europe.
The tour group, entitled "Adventure in Art” will leave NeW York

The competitive world-trade po.
•■ition of American companies can
be improved by holding, the line
on unit costs and by aiming ex.
ports toward a specific nation’s

the world.”
Noting: that “protectionist sentiment is very widespread in America,” he said foreign imports are

June 16.

needs.

1—'“They needle our people to
produce and develop more effectively . . .
2—‘‘They often provide something the consumer can’t get any-

The program will take 42 days
and the estimated cost is $1225.
This tour of the major centers
of European art is designed to
give college students a first-hand
knowledge of painting, sculpture
and architectural masterpieces of
the Western world. Tour members
will have the opportunity to see

great works in the original, many
in their incomparable natural settings.

The tour will take advantage of
theater perballet, opera and
formances in the evenings. Traveling by motorcoach will bring stuthe audience. They are Dr. J. P. dents close to people and places.
leisure
Guilford, professor of psychology The schedule allows ample
for sightseeing, shopping and
University of Southern California
fun on your own.
and Director of* the Studies of
Aptitudes of High Level Personnel
At the conclusion-bf"ther 42-day
and Dr. E. Paul Torrance, director tour, students may: 1) jet back
2) take the optional
of the Bureau of Educational from Paris;
extension to London; or, 3) remain
Research at the University of in Europe on individual arrangeMinnesota.
ments, or on your own. We shall
Following the three-day basic be glad to work out any plan that
course will be a two-day instruc- suits you.
tor development program tor
The grohp’s size is limited
participants who have completed early application is advisable.
the basic course and wish to begin
Interested persons are asked to
as instructors of creative educa- contact Mr.
Rothlein, faculty post
tion.
office box 44, Crosby Hall.

So Charles Phelps asserted in
the final Fenton Lecture for 1962-63
last Thursday evening.
“We've got to study more effeclively the needs of the country to
which we are selling goods," Mr.
Taft told 75 persons in Butler
Auditorium. “We’ve never done this
as effectively as we should . . ,
This you must do, to succeed in
foreign trade.”
The former mayor of Cincinnati
and son of the late President William Howard Taft said; “If we can
try to keep our unit costs down,
we can compete with any country
. .
What is Important is not wage
costs' but the total cost of producing an item, the unit cost.’’
He ciled figures released by
the National Industrial Conference Board, indicating that the
unit cost in the European Common Market were 3% to 4%
under ours; Britain, 14% under; Canada, 10%, higher; and
Japan, 9% higher.
Answering the question posed by
his lecture’s title—“Can American
Companies Compete With Foreign
Wages Abroad —or Even at Home?”
he cited America’s $21 billion in
exports in 1962.
“We are exporting twice as many
manufactured goods as we Import,"
he said. “It is quite evident we
can compete. We are competing. .,
We are competent enough to compete effectively with anyone around

beneficial because:

where else . .
The general counsel for the
Committee for a National Trade
Policy, an organization of private businessmen favoring a
liberal trade policy, Mr. Taft
commented: “These companies
complaining loudest about not
being able to compete against
imports have found it possible
when they had to."
He said the Trade Expansion
Act, instead of raising the tariffs
against foreign imports, ‘‘in the
long run seeks to promote adjustmest to the import competition.”
Regarding the Common Market’s expansion and charges of
lagging U.S. growth, he said:
“All I can say is the European
countries are slowing down

now, too.

f

“They started at a ’'lower base.
You can’t use percentages In this
kind of comparison . . . Any fair
analysis will prove we are doing
all right and will continue to
do so."
He said negotiations with the
Common Market, which will be led
by Christian Herter early next
year, “are very important because
at the end of 1965 Gen. DeGaulle
loses his veto in the Common Market on tariff agreements."

falo, founder of the Creative
Education Foundation, is a national leader in the field.
One highlight of the Institute
will be a tele-panel discussion by
a group of national leaders in the
field of creative education at the
closing session, June 26. Two of
the six discussants will join in
the panel by telephone, with loudspeakers making them audible to

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�SPECTRUM

Friday, April 12, 1963

WBFO Announces Week's Schedule

History of Easter

11:00—Music from Studio “C”

MONDAY

6:15—Over the Back Fence
6:30—Relax with Hi-Fi, featuring
the music of Jonah Jones from
his albums “Jumpin With A
Shuffle” and “Swinging At The
Cinema”
7:00—WBFO NEWS SPECIAL
presents the first of the convocation committee’s series “A Damn
Sampling of Current
Good
American Literary Figures” to
be aired this week, beatnik poet
Gregory Corso lecturing and
reading from his work.
7:45—WBFO INTERVIEWS—Mr.
John Sullivan, formerly with the
U.S. Diplomatic Service in Vietnam and Japan, and now with
the U.S. Peace Corps.
—

(Continued from page 2)

WEDNESDAY
6:15—Germany Today
6:30—Relax with Hi-Fi
7:00—WBFO NEWS SPECIAL
The third in the series of American Literary Figures, dramatist
—

Edward Albee.
8:00—News
8:05—The Cincinnati
Orchestra

PAGE NINE

Symphony

10:00—News
10:10—Wednesday Evening
at
WBFO with Bill Coleman presents Part II of “I Can Hear It
Now” narrated by Edward R.
Murrow, the living history of the
20th Century

THURSDAY
6:15—BBC Report
8:00—News
6:30—Relax with Hi-Fi
8:06—Discovery and Decision
“Integrating the U.S. Into the 7:00—WBFO NEWS SPECIAL
The last of the series of Current
World"
American Literary Figures, poet
9:00—International Concert Hall
Richard Wilbur
10:00—News
10:10—Folk Music
8:00—-News
11:00—Music from Studio “C”
8:05—Cogito—Jerry Leibowitz
9:00—Concert Hall
TUESDAY
10:00—News
5:15—European Review
10:10—Weekly Report from the
6:30—Relax with Hi-Fi, selections
U.N.
from “Linger Awhile” and 10:30—Music
from Studio “C”
“Strange Enchantment” by Vic
FRIDAY
Damone
7:00—WBFO NEWS SPECIAL
6:15—News Ethics
the second in the series of Cur- 6:30—Relax with Hi-Fi
rent American Literary Figures 7:00—Debriefing
C. Van Hollen,
political officer, Pakistan
novelist, Norman Mailer.
8:35—International Book Review 7:30—Let’s Learn German
and Literary Report
7:45—Washington Reports
9:00—Concert Hall
8:00—Sound of Broadway and
10:00—News
Hollywood
10:10—Special “Cities Without 9:00—Concert Hall
Newspapers”
10:00—News
—

—

—

—

—

served by all on the same Sunday
But the problem was still not
solved because of differences ir
the systems of chronology followed in various places. Moreover,
the Gregorian correction of the
calendar in 1582 introduced still
futher discrepancies.
Throughout Western Christendom the corrected calendar i s nov
universally accepted, and Easter
is solemnized on the first Sundayafter the full moon following the
vernal equinox. However, in the
East the calendar has not been
brought into accord with
th.
Gregorian reform, and the day
for Easter still seldom coincide
with the Western date!
The name “Easter” was proposed by the 8th century historian
Bede, who is said to have derived
it from Eostra, a Germanic goddess of dawn or spring. I n many
languages, the Greco-Latin title
taken from Pesach is retained.
Is the resurrection, in itself ar
historical fact? Attempts havi
been made in the past, and an
being made today, to explain away
the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Events of the first Easter arc
sometimes treated as if they were
a mixture of myth and legend.
Dr. Oswald Hoffmann, noted
theologian whose weekly addresses
on “The Lutheran Hour”
an
heard by more than ten million
people around the world, recently

told his listeners: "No one denies
today that Jesus Christ lived and
died. No one denies that something
happened at His tomb on the third
morning after- the events attending His (crucifixion. Don’t let any-

one tell you that there are various

points of view regarding what
actually did happen. There arc
only two. Either you dismiss the

whole account as a colossal attempt to deceive the world, or
you accept it as history the factual record of what actually occurred."
‘ You can have
complete con.
fidence that the story is really
true," Dr. Hoffmann explains. "No
event in history has been so
clearly substantiated as this one.
The great historian, Thucydides,
separated fact from fiction by
seeking out eyewitnesses in his account of the struggle between Athens and Sparta in the Peloponnesian War. Though it is really a
secondary source, based upon the
witness of others, the history of
Thucydides is today regarded as
the first great model of objective

tel;'.'
Students wait to ffet tickets
for concert.

Peter, Paul, Mary
Tickets Sold Out

Thi s w “s the scene as hundreds
reporting.
of students in lines which started
In the case of our Lord's reat the ticket booth on the first
surrection, the story was written floor of the Union and
spirilled up
by the eyewitnesses
themselves.
This is primary source material the stairs to the second floor
of the highest credibility, written landing. Students were waiting
by men who had never had any to get tickets for the Peter, Paul
idea before that first Easter mornand Mary concert to too held April
ing of spending their whole lives
25 in the gym.
telling a story like this one.”

Basketball Games:Students
Versus Faculty, "Yoyos"
Wednesday, April 24 at 7:00
pm in the gym, the UB faculty
and administration will compete
in a basketball game against the
campus fraternities and male
resident halls. An added attraction will be a second baskeball
game, when the campus sororities
and women’s residence halls will
oppose the WKBW “yoyos”.
Faculty coach is Dr. Len Serfustinl and student coach is Ed
Muto.

The student team will be com.
posed of one member of each frat-

ernity and male residence hall.
Each sorority and women’s residence hall will be represented on
the basketball court by one member of the group. Robert Pacholskl will coach the female team.
The basketball game Is the
first event on the Spring Week,
end calendar. Sue Cherry is chairman of this event.

Guess who offered me an executive
position with a leading organization,
whereTI'll get good pay, further my
education, and enjoy world travel?

Law and You
(Continued from page 5)

ility, evidence is admissible to
show absence of bodily harm, torn
clothing, screams, and failure to
promptly report the alleged rape,
The
female must reasonably
resist and passive, feigned or
perfunctory resistance will be

International Breweries. Inc., Buffalo.

considered

consent.

Subsequent

marriage is generally a

defense

to rape and there can be no rape
of a girl under the age of consent
who is married,
Next week; Problems and reform
in the law of rape.

N.Y

PIZZA
CORNED BEEF
PASTRAMI
These are but a few of
of the specialties at the

University
Delicatessen
3588 Main

$1.

TF 3-1456

My uncle.
We’re doing
it again
APRIL 19thl

In this case, nepotism’s a pretty good idea
And the best way to get it is through Air Force
ROIC— because the Air Force prefers to commission its officers directly upon graduation.
But if you couldn't fit AFROTC into your
chedule, you can still apply for Air Force
Officer Training School
)TS

offers

college
jme

“on campus’"

men and women-an oppor
great responsibility. When

you complete the three-month course, you’ll
be commissioned a second lieutenant, and become a part of a vital aspect of our defense
effort. As an Air Force officer, you'll be a

leader on the

Aerospace Team

We welcome your application (or OTS now
but the same may not be true nex
r. So if
;t full
ithin 210 days of grad
ion from the Profe

U. S. Air Force

�Fridoy, April

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

12, 1963

Track Team Continues Workouts In
Preparation For Rensselaer Meet
Bobby Hoffman to carry the

load.

will see Doug
Collingwood, John Knipler, and
Chuck McKirdy lumbering over
the barriers. Dan Dansereau, last
years most valuable man on the
squad, leads the field in the weight
events. He holds the school record
in the discuss and is also very
skilled in the shot. He will be
ing.
joined by Werner Hug, Mike
To insure peak performance in Eagan, and Mike Fine.
the opener the squad has scheduled
The pole vault will also
a practice meet with the Univerto have great strength,
prove
the
sity of Rochester for either
as record holder Don Lee leads
coming Monday or Tuesday, dea field of fine vaulters. Bill
pending on the more favorable
Labuda and Art Anderson
arrangements. This will indicate
event’s
follow Joe in this
the strength of the team and, also,
Dansereau
and
scoring.
the people to watch in each event.
McKirdy will carry till- weight
At present, coach Emery
in the high jump, while Belthe
Fisher will count on
ber, AI Condon, and Chuck
following
to win points in
Bormann should prove best
their respective events. Three
in the broad jump.
sophomores will be counted
heavily upon in the 100 yard
Past
evidence indicates the
Tom
dash,
Cionek, Pete
strongest events will be the disStems, and Jerry Chapman.
cuss with Dansereau, the pole vault
The eligibility of Boyce Colwith Lee, the quarter with Huff
lister is still in doubt. Cionok
and Reiber, and the mile with
and
Ron
Vem Huff,
Beibcr
Katz. Also, watch that mile relay
are tops In the 220.
team!
The quarter mile will feature
Huff, Reiber, and Phil Patti, who,
All ,in all, the season could prove
along with Dave Stephenson make quite successful for Coach Fisher’s
up possibly the best mile relay athletes. With a few breaks ir
team in UB’s history. The distance the right direction this team has
events will count on Stu Katz, the potential to become one of the
Ed Lontrato, Dick Sullivan, and best in UB’s history.
The hurdle

races

VB Rifle Teom Climaxes Season
With 1st Place Stint in Sectionals
The UB Rifle Team climaxed
its '62 ‘63 season this past weekend with a first place win in the
sectionals
intercollegiate rifle
held at Williamsvllle High School.
In a field of 21 teams the UB No.
1 team composed of John Bacon,
Ren Jennetti, A1 Strash, and John
Peragallo scored a 1116 to beat
its nearest competitor by one
point. Credit must be given tc
John Peragallo for having challenged one of his target Scores
to gain two extra points to win
the match.
Other schools competing were
Cornell, Youngstown, Canisius,
Niagara, and Alfred to name a
few. Bacon led the team with a
283 out of a possible 300 points.
Jennettl scored a 282, Strash a
278, and Peragallo a 274.
-

UB also entered two other
teams which included EUie
Maul, Kathy Anderson, Doug
Schleifer Loyd Clark, Dan
Ed Hang, Ron
Blazejewskl, and George Bogner. This marked the second
match this year in which the

Patterson,

girls participated.

jr'\
V,

:

The UB track team Is continuing its vigorous practice sessions
in preparation for the opening
meet of the season against RPI
on April 20. Last Year UB lost
to RPI in Troy by a very slim
margin, indicating the similar
strengths of the two teams. The
same type of competition is once
more expected in thi3 year's meet-

;

Tuesday, as Bulls open 1963 sea
Dan Kraft and Gerry Montemarano will appear in Buffalo’s outfield
Game time is 3:30 at Clark Field.
son against ECTI.

Baseball Bulls List 9 Lettermen;
Season Opens Tuesday Vs. ECTI
Nine lettermen head a group
of twenty five athletes vying for
positions on the 1963 Buffalo
squad. Coach Jim Peele’s charges
have gotten a break from the
weatherman so far this season
and have been outside for a week
The Bulls open at home against
Erie County Technical Institute
on April 16 and will need all the
help they can get from the weather as they are slated to play IT
games in 25 days. UB went on a
new academic schedule this year
and classes end very early.

Pitching and the outfield an
the strong points of this year’s
nine. Last season the Bulls pitching staff ranked seventh in the
country in the small college division with a gaudy overall 2.21
earned run average. They are all
back, headed by All-Conference
selections Jim Krawczyk and
Wianecki
Larry
Gergley. Ed
who can also play the outfield

and was the team’s most valuable
player,
is also back and Dave
Baldwin has returned from the
service to give UB four sure
starters. All four are good men
with the bat as well.

Four lettermen are vying
for starting outfield berths.
John Stofa can play left field
or shortstop and hit over
.400 last year. Dan Kraft will
play center and is a real long
ball threat. He and Craig
Lyons were second team allconference picks. Lyons was
the team’s best hitter the latter half of 1962. Gerry Montemarano can play either outfield or second and may windup in the infield.
First and third base are wellstocked with All-Conference Bob
Plezia at the hot| comer, and
second team conference choice
Sophs
Dale DelBello at first.
Joel Permison and Earl Tompkins

are slated for shortstop anc
second respectively, but if they
can’t do the job Stofa and Mon
temarano may move to the infield
All the receivers graduated, but
Dick Hort is doing a fine job ana
will be backed up by Dick Mandel
The Bulls are 42 and 12 ovei
the last three years and will bi
shooting for their fifth stralghi
Westen New York Intercollegiate
baseball conference championship
Games with Cornell, Colgate
and Ithaca highlight the schedule
The coaching staff is optimistic
with their major problem being
the schedule. Any postponement?
would result in additional doubleheaders and put a severe stain on
the pitching staff. The Bulls may
not have enough depth to play
many double bills Stofa and Gergley are also football stars and
their availability during spring
gridiron drills will be somewhat
curtailed.

PARIS...
for study’s sake
The Paris Honors Program. A
ten-month academic program for
superior juniors and a few ex
ceptional sophomores. Includes
full liberal arts curriculum under
French professors, opportunities
for study in the University of
Paris, intensive French, resi
dence with Parisian families or
in student homes, field skidy,

ocean passages. Cost: $2,475.
Intermediate French and at least
B average required.

A $100 A WEEK SUMMER EDITORIAL JOB
AT A NEW YORK PUBLISHING HOUSE

Other

programs in Vienna and
in Freiburg, West Germany. For
more information on all programs, write (giving name of your
college and year in school) to:

The Institute
of European Studies

Universal Library paperbacks

BOOK REVIEW CONTEST
for college students

Admissions Office
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OF ‘PRICES AND PERFORMANCES

Evenings At 8:15 (Sun. 7:30)
2.25 &amp; 1.75
S n. thru Thun
2 50 &amp; 2.00
Sat., Hoi.
Matinees At 2:00
Wednesday
1.75 &amp; 1.25
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MoHmm Dally thru April 21

TECHNICOLOR’
m

ini

OFFICIAL ENTRY RULES:
1. Prepare an original “Book Review" of no more
than 500 words covering any one of the following
Universal Library books;
THE GOOD SOCIETY (Waiter Lippmann)
MEASURE OF MAN (Joseph Wood Krutch)
PURITAN OLIGARCHY (Thomas Wertenbaker)
SHOCK OF RECOGNITION, Vol. I (Edmund Wilson)
SHOCK OF RECOGNITION, Vol. II (Edmund Wilson)
IRISH FOLK STORIES AND FAIRY TALES
(William Butler Yeats)
THE UPROOTED (Oscar Handlin)
JOHN ADAMS ANDTHE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
(Catherine Bowen)

THE STORY OF MY LIFE (Clarence Darrow)
THE SHORTER NOVELS OF HERMAN MELVILLE
FOUR SELECTED NOVELS OF HENRY JAMES
THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY (Harold Laski)
U.S. GRANT /\ND THE AMERICAN MILITARY
TRADITION (Bruce Catton)
THE HORSE'S MOUTH (Joyce Cary)
HERSELF SURPRISED (Joyce Cary)
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT: ON ARCHITECTURE
(Ed. by Frederick Gutheirh)
ROOSEVELT AND HOPKINS (Robert Sherwood)
GO TELL IT ON THE MOUNTAIN (James Baldwin)
PUBLISHERS ON PUBLISHING
(Ed. by Gerald Gros
ONE (David Karp)
EXCEPT THE LORD (Joyce

Car
ilhelrn
COMPULSION AND DOUBT (
THE BULL OF MINOS (Leonard C
EDITORS ON EDITING (Ed. by Gerald Gro:

List on your entry your full name, class, college,
college address, plus home address. Also list name
of college bookstore. Send your entry to; Book
Review Contest P.O. Box 55 A, Mt. Vernon 10. N.Y.

2. All undergraduates of accredited colleges or universities in the United States are eligible to enter,
except employees and their families of; Grosset &amp;
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by the Reuben H.
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Appropriateness Clarity Freshness
No entries will be returned and all entries become
the property of Grosset &amp; Dunlap.
Duplicate prizes will be awarded in case of ties.
4. Contest runs from March 15 to May 1st. 1963.
Entry must 1be postmarked no later than midnight.
May 1st.

3. Judging will be handled
•

•

5. Contest subject to Federal, State and local laws,
All prize winners will be notified by mail.
FIRST PRIZE
9-week summer job as an assistant editor of
Universal Library in New York, July 1 through
August 31. 1963.
Salary $100 per week PLUS free transportation
to New York and return, and free use of dormitory
facilities on Columbia University campus.
25 SECOND PRIZES
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25 THIRD PRIZES
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UB BOOKSTORE "On Campus"

�Fridoy, April 12, 1963

SPORTS CIRCLE

Twins Are Picked for AL Pennant
By Jim Baker
While the National League seems ready to enjoy another multirace, the American circuit
usually dominated by the
New York Yankees —could well be ready to feature a similar type of
scramble. But before any rash predictions are made, let’s investigate
the strengths and weaknesses of the ten clubs that comprise the
junior circuit.
team pennant

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

—

Gridders Open Spring Session
Head Coach Dick Offenhamei
and his staff start spring drills
with a solid nucleus of 21 returning lettermen and some outstanding prospects from what was generally considered the best freshman team in recent years. It is
the freshmen who will draw the
most attention from the coaches.
Offie, entering his ninth campaign, puts it this way: "There
will be great concentration on
the placement of freshmen who
we believe will help immediately
as sophomores.” As in every spring
session, fundamentals and techniques will also be stressed. This
is the first opportunity the frosh
will have to work with the vasity as one unit, so the fundamentals phase of the workouts is most

The Baltimore Orioles figure to own a top-flight mound corps,
as they did last season, Steve Barber, Milt Papjpas, Chilck Estrada,
and Comeback.of-the-Year man Robin Roberts provide the Birds with
excellent front-line hurling. At the plate, however, it is a different
story. The club's hitting in 1962 was eighth in the loop and was the
major reason for a seventh place finish. Jim Gentile clubbed 33 homers
and drove in 87 runs last year, but this represented a sharp decline
from 1961, when he clouted 46 round-trippers and batted in 141 runs.
important.
Brooks Robinson (.303) is the other leading hitter on the team. The
The Bulls graduated eight
Birds traded heavily during the winter months and ex-Chlsox Luis
of their top fourteen linemen
Aparicio and A1 Smith should add considerable speed and some batbut still have a nucleus of
ting power. Other new Orioles include southpaw Pete Burnside, inveterans at most positions.
fielder Bob Johnson, and catcher Dick Brown, The team lost bullpen
Thinnest point here is in the
ace Hoyt Wilhelm and shortstop Ron Hansen, however, also by the
middle, center, where much
trade route. Manager Billy Hitchcock is relying on ex-San Francisco
depends on Jim Wick’s rerelief specialist Stu Miller to fill Wilhelm’s Shoes. Thus, Baltimore
covery from a serious knee
this
big
field
a
club
but
the
is:
season,
will
vastly revamped
question
injury. Freshmen will
furmany
personnel
changes
elevating
the
succeed
the
Orioles’
will
In
nish the depth, but they are
position.
inexperienced. There’s good
depth in the backfield at evBoston lost AL batting king Pete Runnels, but Carl Yastrzemski
ery position, with Long John
and Lou Clinton batted close to .300 in 1962 and could make up for
Stofa beading the quarterRunnels’ departure. First sacker Dick Stuart should add considerable
back corps.
punch to the Bosox lineup, especially with that short left field wall in
The coaching staff believes both
Fenway Park. But the pitching, which was ninth in the league last
season, is still weak beyond the efforts of Bill Monbouquette (15-13) the offense and defense were
and Gene Conley (15-14). Besides Stuart, other Boston additions in- good last season, and plan to
clude Roman Mejias, who batted .286 with the Colts, a potential start- “pursue the offense” further this
spring. The Wing-T with long
er in Jack Laraabe, and rookie outfielder Pat Jemlgan. The most publicized newoomer, of course, is skipper John Pesky. The fate of the and short side variations was newRed Sox centers around the success of Stuart at first and Mejias in ly installed just a year ago.
Men to Watch
the outfield, as well as the apparently thin pitching staff.

Pitching i s the strong point in Chicago’s roster, as the Pale Hose
now have Hoyt Wilhelm to back up starters Ray Herbert, Joe Horlen
and Juan Pizarro. But is it strong enough? Floyd Robinson (.312) and
Joe Cunningham (.295) spark the team’s plate forces, which manager
A1 Lopez describes as “pretty good.” Yet, there remains a problem at
third base and a conspicuous absentee of a reliable cleanup hitter. The
infield has been rebuilt and two ex-Orioles will be starting ait third
and short. Pete Ward will attempt to fill the bill at the hot corner,
while Ron Hansen replaces Aparicio at the shortstop position. Other
new fanes are outfielder Dave Nicholson, shortstop A1 Weis, and
quite a few rookies. Lopez is counting on Hansen’s long-ball .power
and Wilhelm’s fireman capabilities to make up for the departure o'
Aparicio and A1 Smith. Yet, can Ward take over successfully at third ?
And who will supply that big home run bat that the Ohisox need?
Cleveland has pitcher Dick Donovan (20-10) back again, along
with Jim Perry and Pete Ramos, but the staff lacks depth. A far
more crippling shortage, however, as the Indians’ lack of hitting. They
were last in the league in this department in 1962. No regular on the
learn hit above A1 Luplow’s .277 mark. The Tribe also finished eighth
in both pitching and fielding New manager Birdie Tebbett's will depend highly upon rookies like third baseman Max Alvis, shortstop
Tony Martinez, and outfielders Vic Davalillo and Walt Bond. ExTebbetts has
figer hurler Ron Nischwiitz could help considerably.
a major rebuilding task on his hands and rookies will have to come
through in almost every department.
The Detroit Tigers boast plenty of Pop-notch pitching, with the
AL's ERA champ Hank Aguirre (2.21 and 16 wins) leading the staff.
Then there are relief ace Terry Fox (1.71 ERA), Jim Bunning (19
wins and 184 strikeouts), Don Mossi, and Paid Foytack. The Tigers
also own what is perhaps the league’s strongest outfield, with Rocky
Colavito (37 HR’s), Billy Bruton, and A1 Kaline. Still, the team’s
hitting sagged to ninth in the AL last season. Its fielding was also
ninth. Batting averages dropped considerably and if the Bengals are
to become pennant contenders in 1963, they must sharpen their eyes
at the plate. New acquisitions include third salcker Bubba Phillips,
catcher Gus Triandos,, and pitcher Bob Anderson. Others who could
help are rookie infielders Don Wert and Bill Freehan and pitcher
Howie Koplltz, just back from the Army. The Tigers’ fate rests on
the comeback attempts of Frank Lary (who slumped from 23 victories in 1961 to only 2 last year), Norm Cash, Jake Wood, and A1
Kaline, who was injured much of the 1962 season.
Kansas City’s strong point is its hitting prowess, which was sec
:(i oni'yHo that of the Yankees in 1962. Norm Siebem, Manny Jiminez,
und Jerry Ijlinipe all batted over ,300. The A’s infield looks solid,
with Siebern, Lumpe, Dick Howser, and Ed Charles. The outfield,
though, is unsettled to say the least. KC’s 1962 pitching corps was
lust in the league and is still extremely weak. John Wyatt (10-71 appears to be the top man on the staff, with the possible exception of
If Ed Rakow
I'ave Wickersham, who showed much promise lastcanyear.
fulfill the club’s
( an come through and ex-Angel Ted Bowsfield
desperate need for a southpaw, new skipper Ed Lopat might have
tound some key answers to his mound problems. Yet, the outfield situation remains a puzzle.
That same young Los Angeles club that surprised everybody in
962 is back again. Outstanding LA stalwarts include. Lee Thomas
26 HR’s, ,290), Leon Wagner (37 HR’s). All-Star second baseman
iilly Moran, catcher Bob Rodgers, and pitcher Dean Chance (14-10)
danager-of.the-Year Bill Rigney and Executive-of-the-Year Fred
laney also return. The Angels must fill two glaring weaknesses of
ast year's club: (1) the team did not have one .300 hitter and (2)
't finished last in fielding. New additions.are ex-Yankee pitching star
Bob Turley and Charley Dees, who hit .348 in the Texas League, Infielder Jim Fregosi should bolster the Angels at the plate. The
9ig question is: were the Angels (particularly the rookies) really
a good as they showed last year?
»

(Continued

on page 12)

6’ 3”
190
Sr.
All-East and AllAmerica material, Stofa came off
the bench as a sophomore and has
been the No. 1 quarterback ever
since. Last season he led the Bulls
from a 20-6 pit in the fourth quarter to a 27-23 win over Boston
John Stofa

—

—

—

Definitely

University.

He surpassed even these heroics
against Delaware when he passed
UB the length of the field twice
in the last 8 minutes for a 20-19
victory. Long John was personally
responsible for 22 of the 28 poind
in a 28-0 rout of Bucknell. He led
the team in scoring with 40 points,
was fifth in rushing with 191
yards, and passed for 793 more
for a total offense marie of 984

yards.
In two years his personal offense is

1,883

yards and this by

just over half of eaci
game on offense In the two pla
toon system. In 1962 he figured
in 50.3% of all UB scoring. /
product of Johnstown Catholic
High School, Stofa is rated with
the best quarterbacks in University history and outstanding in
playing

the East, which last year had
more great quarterbacks than any
area in the country.
Tom Butler
6’ 1”
190
Sr.
An All-Western New York player in high school, Tom has continued his fine play in college.
Playing in the wingback spot in
Coach Dick Offenhamer's Wing-T
offense, Butler has the rugged Job
of leading the blocking for the
ball carrier and did a tremendous
Job last season.
Late in the season injuries decimated the fullback slot, so Ton.
shifted to that position and wound,
up with the second best per carry
average on the team, over 4 yards
a crack. He led the pass receivers
with 8 catches for 173 yards and
3 touchdowns. His fine speed was
instrumental in shaking him loose
for long gainers. Tom’s end scone
grab won the Boston U. garni
with 35 seconds to play and hi
went 59 yards with another pass
against Holy Cross for e TP.
"Butts’ 1 ranked second on I he
squad in punt returns and third
in pass interceptions. He hit hard
and often on defense and is a key
man in 1963 plans.
195
Sr.
6’0”
John Clraba
The man who can do Just about
everything is perhaps the best description of this Canadian star,
John was Injured port of last sea.
son and missed some games, but
—

—

—

—

—

—

just look at the record: second, the game and with Colgate threat(by only 2 yards) in rushing with ening near the finish, hurdled twi

an ayerage of just under 4 yards
a carry; third in pass receiving
with 7 for 112 yards; first in pass
interceptions with 4, third in punt
returns; fourth in kick-off returns; and fourth in scoring.
Impressive credentials for a
player who missed part of the season. Cimba is a tremendously pow.
erful athlete with great leg dtive
and desire. In spite of his offensive prowess, there are many
who say John’s real forte is defense. He is rated the hardest
hitting tackier among all the
backs and his interceptions speak
for themselves. A great competi
tor, he, along with Butler, gives

blockers to nail the would-b
passer for a huge loss and end thi
threat.
As great an effort as this was,
Gergley is credited with the playof-the-year and the spark that
meant victory in the Delaware
game. The Bulls were trailing 19-6
late in the game when Larry took
a short pass from John Stofa.
He bulled 52 yards to the Blue
Hen two yard line and en route
shook off no less than six tackles.
The Bulls scored on the next play
and went on to Win. It was an unbelievable play and the coaches
shake theiir heads In amazemen'
when they re-run the films.

Backfield star Tom Oatmeyer (42) romps for 33-yard touchdown in last season’s 44-0 holocaust over Gettysburg’s misfiring Bullets. Oatmeyer was named Alt-East sophomore back
of the week for his spectacular performance Is this game.
school and has good speed and
great power. He caught seven
passes for 130 yards and 2 TDs
in 196? Improving all the time,
he is one of the best in the Bias!
and in UB history.
6’ 1"
200
Jr
Dave Nichols
The second reason that the UB
coaching staff feels they have the
best pair of starting ends in the
East if not the nation. Dave was
tied for second in pass receiving
with 7 receptions for 114 yards,
but it is his defense that makes
him a stick-out on the field.
Nominated for several Sophomore-of-the-Week awards, Nichols spent a good portion of each
game in the opposing backfield
He was particularly adept at putting the rush on both passers and
punters. His size and speed make
him hard to bring down a s evidenced by his average gain of over
16 yards per reception.
Dave was credited with the clicus catch of the year against
Temple when he went up between
The most improved player or two defenders and took the ball
the squad and a Co-Captain this away for a 2 point conversion
season. Another candidate for All. and the eventual margin of vicEast, Larry was selected to thai tory. Still growing he weighs
eleven one week last year for hi' only 175 pounds as a freshman,
sensational play against Colgate Nichols is big, tough, and mobile
He caught a TD pass in a drivlike his partner, Gergiey.
ing blizzard for the only score of
Gergley was a fullback in high

UB two halfbacks on a par with
any in the East.
225
Gerry Philbin
6’ 2”
Sr.
Buffalo's outstanding nominee
for national honors. Rated by hi
coaches and many others as the
best sophomore in the East two
years ago, Gerry was hamperi
by an ankle and then a should
injury last season. Despite this he
made the All-East team once and
was given honorable mention several other times. He’ll be fifteen
pounds heavier this year and eve
more effective.
Opponents stayed away from his
spot last season while much of
the Bulls inside running had Philbin clearing the way. At Tolmar
High School Gerry was All-State
as a senior. Elected by his mates
as a Co-Captain this season, Philbin will be an early choice in the
professional draft of both leagues
A number 1 candidate for AllEast and All-America.
6’ 1”
215
Larry Gcrgley
Sr.
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

0/1/1, /L DU
A
rVIilitello
,

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store

leather goods

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students

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(Opposite UB)

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Open Monday, Thursday and

Friday avaning till 9 P.M.

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TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
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6 91153

�Friday, April 12, 1963

S P E C T R U M

P. AGE TWELVE

American League Preview
(Continued

from page

11)

Minnesota exhibited considerable power last season, afc the team
finished second in runs scored. The Twins’ plate forces are led by Harmon Killebrew, the AL home run champ (48) and RBI king (126).
Other potent Twins include Bob Allison (29 homers), All-Star receiver Earl Battey, All-Star third baseman Rich Rollins, and first
sadker Vic Power. The team’s hurling is strong, too, led by Camilo
Pascual (20-11) and Jim Kaat (18-14). Minnesota, therefore, boasts
a well-balanced roster. On the debit side are the low averages of Killebrew and Allison in 1962. Then, too, only one of the four top starters
is right-handed. Bolstering the club are Jim Lemon, who was out all
last year with injuries, and rookie reliever Jerry Arrigo. A key question concerning this team’s future is whether the young players will
improve with age. The Twin management is banking on this belief.
The world champl°n New York Yankees are loaded in all phases
of the game once again, but injuries could hamper the Bomber cause.
MVP Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, and Whitey Ford are all experiencing difficulty staying healthy. In fact, it has become so serious
that the New York lineup for the first part of the season is
in extreme doubt. On paper, however, the Yanks look great. Rookieof-the-Year Tom Tresh will start in the outfield, the solid Yankee infield will consist of Bobby Richardson, Tony Kubek, and Cletis Boyer,
with Joe Pepitone being the lone question mark there. The pitching
staff is not as deep as in previous years, however. Behind Ralph Terry
(23-12) and Whitey Ford (17-8) there is no bullpen ace like Luis
Arroyo used to be. If Ford’s arm is hampered seriously, the Yankees
are in trouble. Stan Williams, a fireball artist acquired from the
Dodgers, could solve much of the NY problem on the hill. Question
marks center around Pepitone’s ability to replace Skowron at first.
Ford’s arm, Tresh’s ability to repeat his outstanding rookie season,
and Maris’ bat.
The Washington Senators are saddled with large weaknesses in
all departments, which is pointed up by their seventh place finish in
all statistical areas last season. The Senators' batting strength is
paced and dominated by Chuck Hinton, who hit .310 and clouted 17
home runs In 1962. Minnie Miinoso could be a considerable help here
if he has fully recovered from his 1962 injuries. Some promise on the
hill is provided by Tom Cheney, Claude Osteen, and Dave Stenhouse.
The Senators do have a fast club, as is revealed by their pacesetting mark of 99 stolen bases. Their key trouble is that they don’t
get on the bases often enough to utilize that speed. The Nats have been
very active in the trade market and have placed many new faces on
their 1963 roster. They include infielder Marv Breeding, outfielder
Barry Shetrone, pitcher Art Quirk (all ex-Orioles), and first baseman
Reggie Alvarez. Two rookies who should make the team are pitcher
Carl Bouldin and keystone guardian Ron Stillwell. Despite these
additions the Senators still are not potent by any means.

Grid Profiles Feature Backfield
Cimba, Gerry Ratkewicz
Men John
VERSACE

BY ROCKY
Grid profiles for this issue, John
Cimba and Gerry Ratkewicz, are
two sturdy veterans from Buffalo’s two previous campaigns.
Both players have several things
in common are juniors, businessadministration majors, and exceptionally fine pigskin tollers. Obviously, the success of the coming
campaign will hinge greatly on
this pair.
Cimba names Grimly, Ontario
as his homestead. An All.Ontario
halfback, John also led his high
school in track, basketball, and
of course, hockey. Excellent size
(195 pounds, at present, and probably above 200 in the fall), speed,
good pass catching ability and a
tremendous love of contact add
up to what can be termed a “heck
of a back". Having proved hi
worth at tailback, Cimba will be
tested this spring at fullback, a
position he should also excel at.
consistent performer,
A
John cites his best efforts of
the ‘62 campaign as the Boston game for defense and the
Delaware game for offense.
Offered a Canadian professional contract out of high
school, the lad from north
chose to attend college first.
is Gerry
Detroit, Michigan

Ratkewicz’s

stamping
former
Gerry
Ag did Cimba,
earned All-league honors for hit

grounds.

high school alma mater and
Journeyed to the Queen City tr.
play for Coach Offenhamer. Not
exceptionally big for college foot-

ball. 180 pounds, Gerry utilizes
this matter. A better than average runner, Ratkewicz possesses

-

outstanding blocking ability.

TAILBACK JOHN CIMBA

These two factors plus a pair
of hands that seldom drop a pass,
set up Gerry as a tailormadc
wingback. Because of the importance the wingback slot entails in
mobilizing a team’s offense, UE
football fans should feel relieved
to know that the duties are in
the hands of the able Ratkewicz.
Offensive backfield coach Ron
LaRocque
says that "both arr
good all around ball players and
are fine boys to work with.” Obaccomplishments
serving
past
leads one only to the conclusion
that John Cimba and Gerry Ratkewiscz will be great assets to
the ‘63 grid sqttad.

*1

Baker’s Folly II

1962 Finish.
1. New York

I. Minnesota

2. Minnesota

2. New York

S. I.os Angeles

8. Baltimore

4. Detroit

4. Detroit

5. Chicago

5. Lo s Angeles

6. Cleveland

6. Chicago

7. Baltimore

7. Boston

8. Boston

8. Kansas City

9. Kansas City

9. Cleveland

10. Washington

•m

The Limeliters will appear at Kleinhans
WINGBACK GERRY RATKEWICZ

10. Washington

Highly Rated
Grid Prospects
Rated on their freshman performances, the following appeal
to be the most likely to step into
a high ranking spot on the var
sity:
Ends;

Jerry LaFountain and
Helenbrook (slated for a
guard slot); Tackles; Brian Kent
and Bill Taylor; Guards; Edgar
Poles and Rich Ross; Center; Jim
Duprey; Quarterbacks: Fred Gehringer and Roy Ferguson; Halfbacks: Ed Turek, Dick Vlttorini,
and Mike Regan; Fullback: Bob
Adams.
Craig

The
Buffalo
he held
annual

annual University of
athletic banquet will

Thursday evening. The

program honors both
varsity and freshmen athletes.

ET
a'bEER'Sju STABEER-

UNLESS IT'S

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International Breweries, Inc., Buffalo, N.Y.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>S'l'A'l'E UNIVERSITY 01' NEW YORK AT 801'1'1110
Sports Editor

Albee Commenh
On The Theotre
Of The Absurd

SPECTJRUM

Previews Hatio11ol

League Race
(See Pag-e l!)

(See Page 7)

BUFFALO
, H. Y., FRIDAY
, APRILS,, 1963

VOLUME13

Salisbury Reviews
Communist Conflict

Mazur ls-Spectrum Editor ,
Business Manager Named
Arnold
Mazur
and
Patrici a
Launer were appointed
editor-In
chief and business manager
re ­
spectively of the Speolru'm at the
meeting
of Publication
Board
Monday . The appointments
were
ma de on the basis of recommend.
atlons received by the Board from
JN Ln Flory, pr esent
edJtor, and
Lawrence Singer, current busines s
manager.

Student
A!!SOclaUon com mittee
nnd wae a sennlor fr&lt;&gt;m the Col.
Je.ge of Art~ and ScienceH. He le
a junior m11jorln1t In history ,

Is curi·cntly
Patricia
Launer
the assista nt business manager,
1md Is a freshman 'history major.
She Is also a member or the Union
Board public relations commi ttee ,
and is pledging Sigma Delta Tau .
In accordance with Spectrum
Mr. Mazur has written
the tradition the new editor wiil put
column Reflection s this year, 18 out the last Issue of the paper
chalnnan or the campus Noti onal April 19.

Sophomore Comprehensive Exam
Set for Late April ; No Make - Ups
The Sov homor e Comprehen ~ive
E xami11aLion, required by the fa.
cu lty of University College , will be
l!'iven this year April 19, 20, 23,
and 25 - in accordance with the
schedule below. Students will be
exc used from class sessions that
co nflict with the examination for
which t hey are sc heduled. The pur­
pose of the examination is to test
t he extent of students' knowledge
and understanding
in the general
areas of the Humanit ies , the Social
Sci ence s, and the Natural Sc iences.

All sophomores and those who
became juniors recently and who
have not previously been tested, as
well a ~ all pre-professional
st u­
dents, whether or not they intend
to obtain a degree, must take the
examination.
4)
(Se e Sl)('clrum Asks-Page
The three dollar fee for the ex­
amination will be automatically de­
ducted by the Bursa r from yo ur
laboratory and breakage fee, so
you will hove no inconvenience on
that score.
The examination will require up
to 4 'At hour d, Sinc4; everyone must
~tart at the ~ame time, a few peo­
ple com ina- lut e can delny the en-

tir~t::::t~·

will repor t for th e

bcl~1::tion

following

the

ex-

schedule

p,m,
April 19-1:00-5:30
140 Capen ...
_ I, B, R
14'7 Diefendorf
P, V, W
14G Diefendorf
..
C
24-1 Heal t h-Scienc es
0 &amp; 4-yr. nur si ng stude n ts
April 20- 0:00 a.m.-1:30 p,m,
5 Acheson
E, J, SA-SL
147 Dief endorf
S M-SZ, W, T
1'18 Dief end orf
K, Q, U, Y
140 Capen
A, L, P
Ardl 23- 1:00-5:30 p,m,
146 Diefen dorf
G
2-14 Health-Sciences
D
110 Foster
F
April 25- l:00-5:SO p.m.
140 Capen
B
6 Acheson
M, N
244 Heal th-Sc iences ·Z
Th ora will be no mak e-up • and
no one will be exc used except for
garious illn ess certified by II physician. Chang es in time may be permittcd but only by cont.acting the
Student Testing Oi!lce in Hardman
l, ibrar y or by calling 831-3'70'7,
NO'l'E:Pen cils can not be supp lied
11ndyou should bring 3 or 4 ahorpened No. 2 rencils and an era ser .

Ho. 23

By

JEROME

HAJDUK

Even though Russia and Red China are now engaged
in a conflict for power, America should not take the r ole
of a spectator outside the ring in the hope that one of these
two great powers will eJim inate the other.

This was the conclusi on or Ha.r­
risnn Sollsh ury wheu he disc ussed
"1'he Emerging
C~fll ot In tho
Co111mu11ist World -· Rnesla v~
China. '' Mr. Salisbury commente d
t ht,t e\'en the role or sJ)ooto.tor ls
nol safe in a ring where pu oleor
1, ei1pon11are being thrown around.
It wu "ot until 1959, Mr. Sal­
isbury stated, that he gained
some evidence th at a conflict
waa developing betwei&gt;n Mo•
RICHARD WILBUR
cow and Peking . WhM he vl•­
lted RuHia In that year, ho
received an lnvltati o" to tou•
Outer Mo"golla,
tie snw vast numbers of C htn0118
workmen butldin g rr ojects Rueb ~s
tlnms , op,1rtments and brldge a, Slnco
th&lt;' Czurl~l rei:lm e, Outer Mongol111
7
hnd be&lt;&gt;,na Ru sslRn t,rotectorale,
and now th ere were thoua11nd• or
Richard WIibur, noted poet who
Chine se workmen In the IIJ'ea.
wru&lt; de layed fr om spea king her e
•rite Mo111:&lt;&gt;linnsrlalmed th at a,n 1
11,~t week, will appear in the NM. th!!; wss almply aM IMD;llCP tr&lt;&gt;m
ton co nferen ce thealre
We,dno&gt;s• Chino., But Mr. Snll!lhury declared
thllt 11,. was ''eomewhnt eurprl Red
d
3 oo
ay. at : a.m .
at thla c.~lltbi1 or 11hilantltro1Yy"and
't hP W,lnner nf the Pullt.zler utter an lnve~tiga tlon. round tltat
Prize for poetry and th a Nat . there wn~ n spt&gt;Cial clnu• e In the
1/\nnl Book Aword, Richard W"ilbur ngrt'('ment stali ng that otter the
from
Amhen1t
and proJecta were 11n1shed, tlw f'hlnese
grad uated
co ntlnued his studies al Ha,,v ard worlte, ·a co uld remain tn Mongo llo
or !hilt far
Wh&lt;.'
r e he s ub ijequcntty
bec11me und become cltlien•

Poet Wilbu1r
IT
s kHere
0 pea

w e dnes da'\Jf

I

HARR ISON SALISBURY

There ls a great dlffe,en ce hr
the positions of Ru.. l• and Red
China, Ruula, on the one hand ,
la a middle.aged etate, Th e
Sov iet U nlon le second In the
world lnd uatrlalfy and militarily.
Be■ ldee thia , the
standard of
living has bee" s~adily rtalng.
Every Ruaalan k"ows that •
nuclear war could ruin ail thHe
3chle vementa and for thl1 rea­
son- ,Chairman
Khru1hchev
been trying to keep peau with
the Weet .
Chl na '8 CAlf(&gt; ,. II a,a..rent one
Oltlfl()l!l.
assista nt professor or English . H&lt;'
,\1r. Sall11hury comme nted that we £or ·Ahl! ts new to lndu1Jtl"y, It 111
h11.sserved on the (a,, ult y o f W ei- 111'11
/IOW In the openh llt phl). 80 o[ n co untry W1tb nothtnlf to promise
lt•sly College and lij prese ntl y pro. o ratal And biller co nfli ct between lta JlllOple n.nd oll Its probl t1m6
lesor of 0ngll11h n Weitleyn.m l 'n the two powers. H8 did cautloo, ahaHd or ll. 'l'helr OlllY Wl!Bl)OII la
l1owever, that there "wil l be no to rally their people with the col t
l\'ersitY ,
lotiam. warning them or
N•sJ 1&gt;en,
·e betwt •Pn the. 1.wo coun. of 1111tr
Hl8 works Include "Thln~rs of
t hreol or wnt• from obrond . IC there
Thi~
World".
"The
Beautiful tries , nor wlll there br n quick war
werr no tenalon In tbe world , Mr .
hPIWf'f\11!hem.''
li e ,utded thnt during lbe past S11llebury decl!&lt;rcO, the CMn,u,e
Changes ", "Cere niouy" , "Advtre
rour yenl'I!, th ere have been three Wl&gt;utdhove tu Invent some in or der­
In o Prophet."
nltemt&gt;lij to ,,ch te, · e aetllowenl. to 11res8"e th ei r cause.
\tr . So lishury rt&gt;mntke d that
None hove workN1. Mr. Salhlbury
make tarrJ.
f!ald. What IH Involved Is not b~­ ''l}rPat sta tes whkh
tween Rn HRIO onO Chinn ll&lt;! two torlnl d11lms on euch other make
('ummunlst
1·011ntrle~. but rather, bnd allies, bud friends ond good
as two great p0wers shurin g one .-nrmle ~. This IMthe dynamics thi\l
rootlne,nl "" " gr&lt;'ut fronti er of lie~ t,~hl,nd Ute confltrt blllwtlt'.11
Peklnlt'. end Moscow."
tb.e world.

h••

Folksingers Peter , Paul, and Mary Give
Concert; Tickets to Go on Sale Monday

New Student Senate Holds Meeting;
Three Named to Exec. Committee
At the Orst meeting of the new hnu •~ ,·om mlll eP or Union Boa.rd
Senn le TueHday ntgl1t several a1&gt;-1a nti " tnPntber or fllgm11 Phi Flpel1&gt;olntn1ents werP 1unde un d com ., lt, 11 rrnternlty
Mr. Sch ulman waa
mlt ter• clrnlrmen

wer e appo in ted .
Fran Bllet eky, Robert Finkle•
stein and Russell Goldberg we,e
appoi nt ed to the execu t ive com·
m,tlee. Th&amp; off icers of the new
S en~te, Mlohael Cohen, Michael
Lappin , Carol Zeller and H&amp;nry
Simon are also members of the
com mlttee.
Th• • Orleat:ilic,n
chlllrmen for
1wxt Y"llr 'H 1,rogrum fo r rrPRhm en
nrP Or·Pul Stt&gt;Pie 1111d Paul S(,hul.
111
n11. Mr St,•elp I~ rhair mnn of the

11,,. tr R rn ndldote ror vl e&amp;-proat.
~••nt In the recont elPcttoo~ and
•~ •1 "_'Nuber Of Alpha li)pallon P t.
1•nd ...11. a ine.mber ot tho Freab ·
n11ut l'ltPerlog C'.orumllt ee,
A nlbony Campagnla wrul eleot lld
I ..r,atrnum of the person.nol oommlt­
""'
Tiu• Sena.le aloo ll'lt up B'n
l 11,.,rr111tlo11o
l Relations FIie l.n con .
I Jum •tlon With the UN . lt will con.
, tntn the ml.nute• of lhl' General
I .\ ~sc·mblr 's meeting,.

I

Egg Hunt Slated for Sunday
Children Invited to Attend
Pri er, !'1111
1 un, t llo ry, 11 Cotk­
i ln g"lni: ~rou11. will np1wmr 011 ••am.
llllS Thursclnr e,·enin,:, A prli 25 us
part or the Sprtni; \\" Pekou a pro .
::ram. The concert )ij b&lt;'lng jointly
• IIOUOrPtl hv the con.-.-rt l't)m1111tteu
,r t nlon °IJl)ar&lt;l ,LIHI the Sprln!I'
\Yr,nkt"'ud l·OtnU1it11!e

The program

will

be held In

Clark Gym from 8-10 p.m. Tick­
ets go on sale Monday al 10 :30

in the No rto" ticket booth , Ad­
ml1tlon S2 per poraon .

A Faculty
Children's
Eu~ter
Egg Hunt will be held Sunday. on
Ba.lrd Fie ld. The hunt wtJI begin
PETER , PAUL and MARY
11l 2 :00 p .m and a rec1&gt;pLl
on for
Th,• i:ro u11, co11111
os&lt;•d or Mary Al Or1-..sm11n, ms11ui:,•r ol Od~tt'I, ri.c111ty ;ind 1•hlldn•&lt;1wlll luun••dfot.
All in 'fmv,•l'N , l' uui ~ton kc y u11d 11ut them IO)(~rlw r HS ., trio. 1rh~) r ty follow In the n111ltl. purro,,•
P~ter rurrn,,r ur1• nclt£&gt;dtor auch hn \ , . .ippeurl'd nt thP Ulu" .\1u;1~1 lCltlM. Approxlmllll'IY 200 ch1t,t.
11
i40 Ul{K ns "The Lonwn T't'ee".
1-'tvP
wilt ,,t,,•n•I
fltuJ tlw bun~ry
1. ·u1 wdl
a~ U1e ,en nml llwi r parents
llundr rd !llil "•" , nod "The ll arun 1er
1he •·V,•Jlt. whit'h Is b1,rng- ~pHnsor
:S:•·w1mrt
F~•lk
F',•st;val
Tilt•)
IJU\P
~0111;". rl•(f'r
Yi'll'l'O\\'
~la lt)cl .. ,VP
i I by
thr rct•rctttlnn t·u11rn1llh•~
eart?cl 1l11 thP Today Sho,,
arE• n ,,ns111op&lt;11lf&lt;1n i:rn1111.It would nl~n u111&gt;
n1 th&lt;' l'nlnn Rnur&lt;l.
1,e d l•bonMt fnr ue lo irnl rn\e lhP 01111P!II. !;:RSI
Sf•v,·rnl bro1ht•r~ oi Alt)h.t Ph l
foi~Hln~lni: styl,, nf any 11111·11.-utur 'rJlt' S?r11ui, n 1' ◄ ffU ◄ f, u \\.'.,rn,•J Om1-1c:u "ill
hury tht
+•~git l\n d
that,· i:-ro111,
. Bur u11r urhnn bot&gt;k­ r,-rords nnd on•· ,,r 11,,,1r.dhunis n,nrlc t&gt;ff the riPI() Cor , ht• evN1t
.:-round ,.,( an a~~f\1."
· l'Pll•r, ruut •ml ,11,.,y, wh\cl1 Judy
rrnger, chairman
of the
lnll'M'il Ill folk mush' lrd all uu ·l11dP8 lwn of P•lUl ~tookoJ)'':; ~wu ,., •'Ill 110lf'li lhi . Yl!llr'• hunt wtll
ht• market! by R ~realer ~~e,•
t hr~ w l1&gt; (l reenwl&lt;·lt Villnit" wherp :-vn~i.:

,
I
I

o! tnrorma)lty than that ot preced.
lug- years.
Indl caUvc
of th1'
,Mngl'
are the pink And yello w
in"l tat lnn.11uaeu this year and tht•
phy,1c1ll stJtup of th t! recertlon
The chlJ!lrcn wUl be divided tu
10 3 11ge goups, a pr ize golni; lo

the chUdren who rt.i1tla
th,· most eggs. A sp ~-clat p!U8
Wtll be a·wo.rded t,, lh l' child Wh(')
r,n&lt;.J, the "golden eg g ·.
et&gt;ch or

J,,.sl~
Bartolotta . 1h1~ YMt"ll
l":a•ter bunny " ;t i p1sesent the
1\Wnrd,. In l'IIS&lt;' or rai n the hunt
Will Ulk c 11ln1•1 itl th ,, htlNl'nt~nt
ut Nortnn.
V

•

�PAGEFOUR

.

Fridoy,April S, 1963

SPECTRUM

olthr6

.Greeks,Alliance, SJ)ectrum·Policy
look at ourselves obJeotlvely. Mis s
Shock Needed T
Another Attuk 7
r,ound upon thla world 1111
I aee It. 1n alienating s tudents . Arid lot
IJl'&lt;l.lMlt
Milnt e hn~ found the
'?\, tbt- Editor:
First, let's establlalt what is what purpose? Could it be 'to im• 'T'o the e&lt;lltor:
prospective
and hu
graciously
1 was Vlll')' plett.Be(I lo rend your right, what is wrong, what is good, plant the policy that Mias Flory
ear5,
Halh
not
a
Gr-eek
eyes,
tmil'th 1 11nblS1!1ed"editonal In a and what is bad in this haven tor sees for U. B.- That Wonderf\11 tiitelleet ! Are we, the Oreilk men consented to give us a IOC)k at
ourselves as otheri; see us.
t'OW which nllllckcd the Student lit&lt;!rary mBBterpieces , It is obvious World.
nnd women , so complacent I'S not
Speaking tor Ulo Greeks who
In closing, let me state thut this t.n see our own faults. ls it really
Alllonce. The AllJanca bewrn«) that the Gtteks are wrong an(! can
more popular after eae!h edlt&lt;&gt;r!BsJ,do very little good, and that the letter was not written to Etmbar­ nece.'!Sllry to have II member of are wlllf,ng to correct our taull!;
r f'\'gTet tllat l must nQw stoop tu two party syB'4!m is goo d but Op• rasa &lt;1r harass the editor of The The Spoolrum staff to shock us and listen to wort.h.whil~ eriUc.
-a11swerone M your vicious at- p1&gt;sition to the United StateR is Spectrum or its stofl', but rather out of our narcissist. attitudes? i~m, I thank Miss Mltnte an d
wish her conti nued success
IAch: h111
. l\~vlng been directly bad , lt is wrong to address Unl­ t.o offer to those in power a line Apparently,
the answer to the
A sorority womnn
reaponAlhln for nrrangfng Senato r ver!lty students on a high level, of constructi ve criticism. I 1realize Just question Is a resoun~ng yes.
Keatlng',s IIJ)cech, I feel that .'IOml' dlscuelng wlth them basic prob­ that there will be some co1nment Miss Mtlnte is lo be 0&lt;1ngratulated
YAWF Complaint
tema lying at the foundations nf to this Jetter , at thjs time llet me on her forthright and oouragt'&lt;&gt;U!\
fnets 111u~tflrst be clarified.
To The Editor;
Flri!t, I checked with Sen11tor our sy~tem, here, of course, I am offer lhe just one- Amen .
B.J'ticle. Her crltfc:lsms were vnltd
I would like to comment on
t(1ll,ltlng before his appearance u.rtll rcforring to the Sen. Keating talk .
Michael Shapi'~o
and the rnedtum tor her complnl.nts
the coverage of the ilcmonstration
he assured me thnt hl11 IIJ)eech
?f there i~ one place where one
was certai nly the m&lt;l&amp;l loglclll oppostng
Senator ReaUn_g's re.
would ~ nelthor
Pllrtisan
nor should be nbla to witbcirnw and
Senator Keating
one ; a newspaper Is the only place cent war-like policy.
ronll'Oversl11l. I nm very glad that spe(lk
l&lt;lwlistlcly
It certainly To the Editor :
11, which all the Greeks can be
The headline does nol corres.
the Sl'\!Ultor ctluse II toulo with should be n university campus. It
During the a.ttemoon ot Mar ch ..-ont.acted . l beli eve l am correct
the artic le.
8Ucb lill hn(&gt;Ort.,mL l nehlht Into is good. to bring to campus, in 2!&gt;1.h, Senator Keating BPll•ke ln In assuming' that her motives was pond wirh the text
the tuturc . tt the 11peech hnd been Mbs Flory's opinion, as seen by the Norton eU-purpo.,e ro c1m on to reach the grass.roots level of Burned in the text Ill the fac t
lhst
"Youth Against
War an d
~ the eagle-eyed editor nf myse lf, nll the charges and counter the topic or "{leforms
lln the &lt;lur Greek system, the individual Fas cism" was the sole sponso r &lt;lf
Th o Spectrum wonlll ha.ve boon ~ that are in every daily Congress".
member of e11cil tr a lemity ,
the picket line. However . you r
quick to acouNe the Alllancc of ne-w•11nver, on every radio 11nd
After the speech of tho Se1111Ltor, fl is we and we alo ne, who Cll.ll headline not only tmpllee , bu1
television news re11ort, this would a guei.tlon, "Whal would y·ou do tnttke ou~ system
"gl'IUldstA111Ung.''
worthwhile . clearly llt&amp;tes that two group ~
'11le ,emi.t.or ga vc u. report on be interesting, Informative, nnd in case of nuclear war?" was rather then 1~ conglomeration or
legisll\Uon '11/hkh ts sorely needed good news fnr The Spectrum. Why esked . The qu estion was unr •eta~ed part.lea, beer and self-segregati on. sponsored the demonstraUon. Thi r
certalJily i s second-rate new s pape ,
to reform eonress
and Which 19 dJd' Sen, Keating epenk on "Mod­ to tlie tOpl.c and out of ccmte,ct. Panhellenic councils were In no
in tht&lt; forefront ot dll!CU!lllion In ..r lting the Machinery of Co11• The readineSS with whJc ,h the way criticized In the Ionic Column. technique .
lll\OWlcdgl\.l&gt;Japolitical and gove.n. gress"?
Could It have been that Sena.tor and his "applauding''
(Continued on Pu~e 6)
We, M Greeks, find ll hard to
montaJ clralca. His ta.I~ WIUI ln- h, feels when speaking directly olld1ence " Mtfltated" the q\l!!stlon •
tormatlv e and umely , and fsr to tht lea(lers of the nation he er with a "particular"
organh;•
should do hie utmost to make them aUon, embarrasses those
from R "trite piece ot proee,"
o! ns
Aft.er the speech r met with the awiu-P of the problems most affect. who patfenUy awaited his !orth ­
Senator, OP,an Slggelkow,
n.ncl ing the tuture.
ro rnlng "schola rly" answer ,.
President ll'u111
aa, andall three exSecondly, let's look into the
Instead, the Senafot cb1)8e n
and gratitude
pre!lll~(l SI\U11racU011
methotls of nchievin11: these Mhle too-familh1r pafill: h e avoided tl\J&amp;
tor the 111.111.
The speech wa.s ar- and worthy goals. For the Greek 11bjertlve question by R.tt a.rtlstlr
ro.ng1&lt;uthrough the Alll11J1coonly System obviously hss indicated by ulspluy of emotlona.1 sophistry.
b Ecaus e H11nrySimon refuBCd be. inartion, a quicker death. Under SenRt•&gt;r KeaUng "deftned" "war.
t,,rel11111d to nllow Mike Shapiro previous editors, there was a pol• mongN'S" advJsed "~tandlng !lrm"
ancl myself to ll&lt;'gotlate for nny icy of p11hl!shinl-t the outstanding and used oth er worn-out, war­
lllle&amp;kars under Ille auspices o! nchievemcnts ns well as the short­ lntpllcatlng term s for pre!14!rvlng
Lh,, c,,nvocalloll!I rom mlttee
or comin gs of the Greek System. 1 ,mr Democracy .
refer specifically to "Socia l Swirl"
t ho ol&lt;I Senate ,
Should the Sena tor's metl:lod be
We lmd lnfomied blm that w e by Bill Theodore . Not once this w.Udl,y appl,'audt!d &lt;by a c'rit..lcal
would be In WAahtngton on tier- year has there been ony pictures a.nd sophisticated audience I'
80nu.l bu1lnesa 11.nd were auxtoua or 11rticles of the philanthropic ac­
Adolf w. GuclJ~5kl
'nus week tJi,- ~lk'Clnun asks Dr . Milton Plesur, a.sel!!tant
to orm.ngc speok&lt;1rs !or th e tivitit1Ao{ the Greek System.
dean oC UnlverKlty C(IUege: llflat are sophiomore compft.hen­
IIC'hool. We were Juoky to mak~
Jnatend we find inane nrose, with
Compli ments Mias Mllnto
"'""$and what wUI &amp;tndenfts pin from toking tb«u.
use atl'llll,gements
for
Senator n&lt;1 positive 8 uggestior,s, So ll()w Dt•ar Editor :
April 19, 20, 2S, ·and 25, over 1,800 sophomores 1n University
K~atlng's
vllllt, and laid th e we 881! that the 800 Greeks on
As an &amp;Qllve member tit Zctu. Colll!ge will tnke the "sophomore comprehensive
llXnminatlon."
gtOu)idwork tot• li0118ll&gt;l e ruture rampus rnn h11ve no support from Beta Tau Fraternity at the Unlv .
appearance by Chief Justice War . "th~lr" voice , Crucifixion is the ri·sity of Colorado for my ' first
The purpose ot I.he e,u;mlna.tl!,n is to teal t.he extent Qf the s tu .
l'CJ'I , J . Edgar Hoqver , a.nd Allor - second
method ot bringing
an two years Of college, I wan part llent's knowledge and understMding In tlhe u.rea.s of t11e humanltle ~,
n11y•OeneraJ Kennedy.
utopia to U. B. The Spectrum un- of a Greek system which was de­ the social sciences , and the natural sclences. These are the area. ,
Such petty attaeks a.a yours ore dtlr the guiding hand of Miss Flory t este d by the school oUICilllS tul covered In the University College cpmmon curriculum, Included In
beneath you .r responaibUlties Bl; hns atU!mpted to crucify the AI­ well as the campus dally new!!­ varying ilegree 8 in all freshman and sophomore academic program s.
Edlt.oT and do nothtng to help tba lillMe at every turn, since
lte pa,per. This system was constantly The testa In tbese 11re11a.ee.ch ta.11.1.ngseventy minutes, do not call tor
•.!forts which ull tbe stu dent.II
orig1n11l tormntlon. I do not deny r•ecclvlng unfav orable edl'torlals specialized information 8&lt;l much as for general ideas and compreh­
mnklng t.o bnprove thls Unlver . your ed.itorinl righttl to take u Rnd wa.~ rapidly going downhill , en,Jl.on.
stand on uny is«ue you see fit. ~•he Lnter. Fraternity
lllty ,
11,11dPan.
They emphasize the .abJ,IItles and wider!lland1ng which are bas k
But 11ather, r urge you to declare b11lleuk, C'ouncil were rorc ed lo
Allen E. FaJk
to the Individual 's genes•aJ effectiveness tn society, Thua , the question s
yourself, dc,fi_neyour goa ls and be taki , m)tlce.
Editor '• Noto:
The above iwo organbart.lons are Intended to test the awdent's grnsp ot b1111tcconcepts nnd his
snrii or your means.
We have nevor contended that
Tn the March 1 cditor1t1Iyou 8tnrt­ l'.:MIUII In a llighly l11te(ltgent ability to apply them to a variety of types fYf materials whJOh IU'f
In reeogni~on ot the dltterenc e~
Wfl Al'tl "111101111.tod";
w e certntruy etl non-rommititiVAly find iinded wn.y t&lt;, the outspoken cr!ticlerns presented tor his tnterpretation.
could not tultut our responsll:&gt;111, torc11Btl
ng disaster if the Alliance ot thelr sy8lem and a series of a.ruong Institutions and atudeqt's with r egard to course preparati on.
t!ea as \.'(lltor If w o did not have was victorious, (At thi.s time Jet tucutty.led
symposiums
re,sulted the examination have been a!Jned bttyond the details Of specifi c counw s
to reach those goals of education Whh!h are share d
tUl optnl&lt;&gt;n on mattet'S, Secondly me w11ni everyone for you, Miss In o.n effort lO ctee.rly e)(amlne In nn attempt
h ow ct11111,11yonelUIIIUIJlC what the Fl ory, to take shelter, doom is the Creek system and to go about genera lly by ooltege.s otft- rtng liberal arts instruction ,
1
"engte-eyed" et!lt.or (we consld..r nround the next bend, for the Al­ i·e!ormlng it wisely. The 1fotails
Th e examlnaU ons may be administered
at any colleg e le vel
Uil~ an ort ..handed
compliment)
linn ce wes very successful. in ob- may be omitted. My point I.~ aim . Since 1956, they have •been given to student/I In th College ot At1.t
WOU}d say It I.ho Senator
h"1t 1.Aininira majority on the floor of rly that U1e Orei!ks reaUUd th11I
and Sciences at this University, and ' when, in 1969, University Colleg ,
Ch011enanother topic.
those who were criticising might was es tablished, It was agreed thl!-l all sophomorea be required tc,
the Senate.)
Thirdl y, whnt h.as been the re­ be right and that .help bet.Jlrr be 'lalte exam in atio ns s inre liberal art s lnslru ct.lon ls provided In all
Alllanco Again
su lt of "The Wonderful World of sought before It became to&lt;&gt; l&amp;te. programs As more data Js collected, It will be possible to comp ar•
To the E&lt;lltor;
J o11n Flory?"
In one word, di ­
You have a Greek colwnn In MOp
homore classe s ancl thus better as908S out curricular offerings
For the put 1emeater you h•ve vision. Yon have succeeded in split ­ yonr newspaper which ltllclf Is
The oophomore comprehr naive is t.he l&lt;D.ffleexe.minatlon many s tud ent$
llffO llt to slowly alienate a great ting and.dividing the student body a privilege. A few studen ts t•Xlst
wlll tak e In their senior year 01' In graduate wo rk ,
num ber of students. 1! The Spec­ agaln et The Spectmm, Intelligent on ~pus
who desire to help
tnun is to be t..bevoice of the stu­ people, wlll not allow themselves the Greek syatem and who ar e
However, ll should be stressed• that State University ot N ew
dents It hae failed. If The Spec­ to be pushed, coerced, or tormented uelng tbe col umn . dest.gue,d for York a t Buffalo sophomor es are being compared with sophom ore.
trum 11 to be the guiding voice Into toUowlng any policy contrary th e Greeks to read, to do so. These of their age and edueatlonal background in other unlvt-rsltles. Tto
from above, as it eeeme to be to thei r beliefs. The Spectrllm, stu dents are or hav e been Greeks dttte, State University of N ew York at Buttalo Art s e.nd Sclen r•
•ttempting
to be, here too It has "The official voice o! the students," them11elves and th ey badly desll'e ,students, for which rompariao ns are ava ilabl e, rank substantlall)
indeed fallen abort. Let me ex• has heen tremendously successful to aee the system preserved . While above nutlonnl average .
oditorallzlng might be unlq1ue to
The l!Xamlnatlons, then, ~rve as a. meaaure ot the degr ee o:
the Greek column, It has a pur.
pose. A sel1~xnrnlnallon by th e comprehension and th e !Jrearllh or education in the first t,vo year·
Greeks hos been tri ed with mu ch of colleg e work. As such. t hey help to eval uate the wnrk In Unlv ersll~
nd to pro, ·ldc t.hl' be $is for further advisement ot st udent
'!UC&lt;:esson a.nother campus , with College 11
r1u• s l r&lt;mger oppOi!llton u,,~n ls in I.heir senior division bot.h for thE!ir specialized program s and for
fllNld at U'B by the administrat ­ Increased depth or knowledge in attas outside their ticlds of ooncer ..
traUon 1n whl ch they have weaker S-Oores.A low acore tn a test are a
ion .
Ate the Grew on t.hls campus would Indicate thM 1he st udent oould profit by in cluding certn ir
Insecure thst th ey m ust go u.s courses in this aren In )tis upper .d lvlstt•n program 11ncl hence fllJ
far ii.s to use th e word ''• lE1.11
der" gnps In lmowledge m\tl tM.1lnlng.
If nll c,,mmon 1·urr11·11tumr,•qu1rcm~nts have bct•n mN, Uie tttu
l:t th~lr B('Cuaatlons? Why 111\0UJd
011lniur1 bt subject
lO II public rle11t unct h1H 11tl\'JH"' ntJt\' 1,r mnv uot exerc'lse this option. 'T'ht' e&gt;Cl\11'
n.po\ogy•··: Why
ahouldn' I• th e lnntitllls ,•nn c011c,·1vabh· ,11~1&gt;1Ls.•1st5tudents in pkklng ft mn.jor f
alrea&lt;I)' dor\l' .., "f pet·h"t&gt;" in changi,tg R 1111\.,jor).
Ori&lt;eks exnmlne themse lves? Are h\• 1111.11
t,, t.hl's,· us.-s nt t,he ;;ophomorc kVl'I, nthm· IIJ"l''·1•.
tn a,111111(11\
thi,lr pkdge cla"8e11 nowt.n~r
ovr.r
, ..s11lts a1·11 11••.•
ll 1nrlt11J1, ltu1\lt11tio1i:i
h•t-0 Nort&lt;&gt;n's hall!&gt;. Obv·l11u~
ly U&amp;l'Bfor whl&lt;•h 111•••·x11.mh111tln11
e,·hhtattt,11
,·11n1,·11l
n
•trnho•,.
an,I ,.,,,,,nrch in\'&lt;;,lvini;: r1tt1r:illon ,
not
T w1111hl ltke to 1:0 on N!OOr(l groWUt.
Serious rntYPr!ltry t tutJ,,,. Wltl. t ,lllt ~ui 4 upJH t ·l'lll.lr tlu,i vu"
11~ 1'&lt;&gt;rnptl
numllng
Miss MUnte
1111
,.nnnu. ,on ~11,l Jo,n with n• tn tilt •·•K•l•l'r,
11
OIi he.· l'Oll~
to print wh:11.tshe poses behtod 11,1
11I&lt;&gt;ffurt
fecla wmhelp th e system ot wMcl, ~dn&lt;mtJv11
WlHtll te!lt (111tu t,.,..,,n,. • \'Wlllblr IJtt' :--trnlrnt 'l't,.Ult/: 1 't •&lt;i"
141\l' ,~ t\ PA'l't
wltJ provld1• an tnti-rpr, tafir,n uf th,· ,r flt••~ b~ S~pt,.mb1 r, HIil~ 1'1•'
Very lnily YOUC'II.
wntl'°h The ~pt,'&lt;1tt"U111 !01· tll&lt;' ,1nt&lt;-.
AlJC'll \" A.111:\lt'

,,!

THE

SPECTRUM
ASKS

°"

THE SPECTRUM

"°

�S P E CTRU M

Fridoy, April S, 1963

BY /L',NE '.\ll[NTE
t;ounctl'" Scholarship Tea wa.• hl!ld laa l S11111l11V,
\\llh
Beverly Ston e, n~slstant deon of women at Purdue Unl\'1•r&gt;dlY, a
~est Sl)eaker MIH Slone "poke on the role of I.he eductlte(I wumnn
lll :i()(!lOty to,.111:, and the tmportanc"
or knowing anrl u~lng propN
,1 ,qurtt ,•
Panhclleruc

AJ 11Ju, Qa1111na Ot•ltn Sorority won thA' 111'
1\olnr Mhlll lxml
for blgt,e .. t -.ororl ly a,•prnge. EIJcn Sobwaru,
mfllnht •r of Phi
81,rma Slgn1n Ror11rlty, wa• named th e 'K'nlor wlth Lh(• hlKhl'• I
enmulaU,·e ,weragr for w H •n ..emr•ters among Or'N.'k \\01111·0 .
MJK.• Se hwn r lz, tw s luul h er na m ,.. ,mgrnVt •d o n llw U llln n
M,woonald Smo lu.r&amp;hlp Tiny.

PAGE FrVI

Heath to Give
Choral Show
B&gt; \I CTOrtl.\ IJlt, gl.sl\ 1
Ancil'eW Jfoalh, who Joino,d tlw
musk
doparlm~ul
r1w11lt
y ih,­
!~mestt&gt;r at the invitation of ch1111·.
man Allen Sapp. has 1..,,.,, n1n1e1!
1·011,hot·f
or and pianiRt in r~•id1•111·e
at thl' U niwr,ity.
,\fr. n ~alh i~ the ne-. ~nnci,,1·tm·

of th1• Women's Chorale and Mrn'1
ulre Club, and b 11.l~o
teaching con
ducting. He Is preparing n cltoml
progrum for A'11ril 20, l.o be ht•l11

ln RddJtton to t.hese hono,s, 65 Ort&gt;ek women reoel\•cd cam all ons
Dean's List averages lo.st semester. A new plaque was
prese nt.ed by the Panhellenlc Co un &lt;:ll on Which tho name or the win ­
ner ur the $100 PanheUenlc Sctiolarshlp Will be engraved. Thi" schol11r.
,hip wUI be pres&lt;'nted al tbe Jl onors Banq uet

in th" multi.purpose room of No r
ton nt !l:30 p.m., featuring works
of Virgil Thom son, current Sier
Jlrofessor, RimRky.Kor~akov, an,!
the Rerthoven (' Major Masp.

Among the ititests at the Tea were Dean J c11.nettc Scuddc1·, Doro.
t.111JI . 1188'1, a.nd Nancy Sturdtva.nt. advisors or Panbellentc, nnd Mrs.
F11maa. Other m!lmbers or the faculty and housing 11dminlstratlon
wl're al!!&lt;, In attendance.

A world-touri n g conce rt .,.
lial , MT. Heath oh lnined hi•
bachelor's dt-gree frorn R11r­
'l'ard and hia m&amp;$ter'1 drlln('
f rom Yale. After st ud1ini in
Franre with Nadia Boulan ger
an d with planlet Robert Can-

tor ~lalnlng

Tea !H held In order to emphas.tze t.llu lrupartancu
omong Creek women. No rene Horsch, Pan .
hellenlc Scholarship chalrmRn, Is to be commended ror hf'l' t&gt;Xoellent
J&lt;ib of or1,'tlnlzlng nnd plannlng the event.
The Scholarship

,t actldeml c achlPvement

AJp,110. 01u m1u1 Ot•lta wa 11 proud t() rec eive the Scholar;ihl):l Bowl
Lile Scholarship Teo.. Thi s Friday they are looking rorward ~• s
.,.,ciAl •with Sig Ep and Theta Chi.

a

The me n or Alt&gt;lla Ph i Omegn ot·e having 11 bu;,y weekend ~pon.
a BWh&gt;.rd Tournament !or the Tonawand:a Boys' Club Satur­
hiy morning. and IUl.'llst.lng In the annual Norton East er Egg hunt
tor the children or the fa.cully Sunday a!temoon
,J,Jl'IDg

Garv Brown WM el ..clcd president of Betu Phi ~lg111a for lhe
•.;a.·&amp;1 ye,\r he wuM aloo ell'&lt;ctedsenritor for the School nr Pharmacy
Phi IAlllbda Ot,lta Fraternity
Help Week u nd Is took.Ing forward

IM llClively llUpporLUJg the
to 11.8success.

Reflections

I.II' c.

congratulates
Ronnle A cker on h~t· ek-atnn
Phi Slrmu '!I~
president of the Spnng pledge class.

By ARNIE ~fAZ(JR

to

Th e slllte r,; or Tht&gt;ta Chi 90rorJ ty aro happy lo aMnunoe lhi1l st~
er Lorrie Mazza lul11been elecled pr"sldent o! the Pant1olle.nJc Cou n•
&lt;ii and pledge Lynn Mlskcll hR.S been ~lrcted president of lhe pltalge

He sat thtr1•, o mist of smoke, ,, hut meaning No Rltlt !
rising from the cigurette in hi~ nicaniui:
Caaalus
Clny 1
limp band. 1-le loukcd through the mrnnlni: Spnnlsh fl urlcm?

class.

Stx,-nu Phl tl p ~Uon congratul.ates
De.onJ.s Kelso, nl!Wly el ected
r&gt;resldent or the brotherho&lt;&gt;d Mike Thomp80n has been electcct prcsl•
lent of lhe pledge class.
A mel!tmg for au rcpresf!Jlta.Uvcs r4 Greek organtza.lions
sub
milt ing ne-.v.s to U\o Ionic Column will be hola Monday , April 8, 111
J:0 0 p.m The meeltng will bo In room 338 N orton.

Novice Debaters Tour Ohio,
Trip Culminates in Kentucky

• • •

ANDREW

H EA T H

det1u1,he made his prof l'8Sitni,l
debut a,'Ja p ianla t and con4oc,
tor in Vienna. His Anoerit111
debut took place in Jordan
HaU, Bollton.

window in his ~mall stuff)' room
~nd saw the heavy rain sl"ahing
down al the windahfc),I~ or the
puaing
car,. He looked through
the winilow und saw the twirling
twinkling neon sign of tho mntel
across
the street.
He looked
through the window and saw the
downpouring
of the sweat above
loHIIII!lhe hole he lint snw , Lost it.

What
What

Tu frel the pain o( too m1Kh
lonelincu. f ,ove. To fr11l the pain
of lou much love. Lonelinc11 ,
To ri~e ubove the roncrete he
""lk,~I, wi th oul havint to it.and.
To rni•" his heod, without havina
to lilt his nork.
JI ,, tur1wd nbout, nnd walked
the ~ourty11rd to tht room.
A plrture of Audrey Hepburn hunJ

t, om

The roviewer of hio Town Hall
debut in New York stated that he
And lhrn, with a st11rt, he moved un II w11ll. The lig ht from t.he
bad "Patablished hlmsel! aa one of
out into thl' rourtyart!. Re looked l11mp pi~rced. (The hm1p shlldt wu
the major young pi ani sts now be­
on ita •i de on the floor) , The bot­
fore the public ," The reviewer al, upward. And to the sides. And tle of a!ter•~havc lotion waa onLeventhal attended the month ,
A team or novlllo debaters left
so commented: "Perhaps his out­ walked n alnnted ourvo,
1•apped. A dog's l&lt;'ash w11a tied
" ~ a.m. Wedne&amp;daJ' to malt&amp; a
ly meeting of the Weat ern
!landing trait was that ther ~ was
ll was !IOrt, walking the strert tc, n Joor-knob.
IA&gt;ll1' Of ObJo schools, giving
exhl ·
New York Colleglale Novice
~carcely a moment through out the late Rt night after a rain. Fresh
l&gt;ILl
on d ohalee. They will retum
afternoon when he failed to give smell; po!IPn. Cool boecze. Drippy
What meaninr ,1,it• • cigarette
Debate
Conf erence
Tuesday
Sunday e veo.lng alter 6 J).'111. The
plea.or e to the audience. Thia In Too!tops. He Ntopped ut u corner have?
evening at Niagara Unlverelty ,
•enm conaiM.8 ot: Karen MIiier,
itself is 11 rare &amp;'t.!t. Hardly leas an,I stared.
Mr. Nagel I• vice president of
Stared st nothing.
ltUBSell Goldberg, LJ.nda .L(&gt;vanthal
''And when you can no lon1rer
~trikin1r was his unfailing lt'Ue of !'ll,1rNI Al everything.
the organization.
JDd Bob WUIJamB,
dwell in the solitude of your htut
He pro,•ed himself a
~tylP ...
A special renture •&gt;I tho 111eetln1'.
The /trst e11llb1Uo,n de bate look
sensitive und probing musician."
To him, life Is II eon1tan 1 twist­ ,v11ulow in your lips, and aound
,vae tho seo1&gt;1lou of "KPlll tenru"
1,la.ce Wodnesday at 1 p.m. ln MMIng tension. Move onl And with 1~11 ,iiv1•r3i11n 1111d o. pa~tlmo. And
1•.vk High School, Cleveland, Ohio. debnt,;s. ThlR le oot a tournamoot
ot your Llllking, thinking
\fr . Heath made a year'8
ever)' dN!Km rul!lll td, • new dream, In 11111,·I,
l'he y will ateo visit G rand view event but 0011 used mainly for
1, hnlf murdered . . , 1hr ■ilanca
tour
lhe Orient und er the
Mov&lt;' onl
giving
t.he
dobalOra
exverlence
In
llclgb I;, 111gb School l,n Columbul!.
of ,ol11n1•11MB
reveals to th&lt;'ir eyea
spo1U1on1hipof the U.S. State
rhe re w-111also be aeve~al r oun ds work.Ing with d!lferent 1mrlue1·s "u
Whnt
me11ning diM11rmaone11l?their nuked ae lves 111111they would
De11Mlment
Cu ltun1f
Ex ­
a
team
be.sis.
The
oamoa
ol
all
the
,t tnter-••ollcgtate dobale a~ Ohio
Whal mp11n1111(
dvll rights, equ11I ~ijCIIJJ&lt;' • • • W hen the colou r la
change Program. Il e deacri~
and negative s11enk~r•
"L\U Unh-Or&amp;llY and ex.bJbltlon at amrmative
the tour as one or hi s "m0111 opportunity! What meoning Luo~! furj?ulh'n and th" 'l'OR8Cl le no
are
put
inlo
eporate
lints
l'bte)·
magnificent opcriences"
be·
Cubu? Vittnam ! Berlin? Jackson ! mon•" (K. Gibron)
Wilberforce Unl ven1lty. Tbe Cltl­
011 a
cau~e It i:n, •e him IJ1e u11J&gt;Or•
:1,lnatllQll of the t.our will bo six theu drsw their partners
chance
bu.ala.
No
one
debates
with
for and
lunity of "playing
,,und;, or lnter..cotleginu.• tourna.
"'orking with so many dift'u.
JIOOl dobnle al Bellormlne
Coll ege 11 &amp;peaker trom his OWll .chool lllld
BEAUTYSALON
lh•' pan-ners 11re allo wed only boll! en t cullo rH."
n LouJsville, Kl\ot.uclr)'.
an hour t.o orga,ni•e a11&lt;1 ndo 111
Ed Nagle, Harr iot Ho itil nger
Mr. Beath g11ve over two hun­
their Ct1S88
Francine M iehe!, and Linda
dred concerts In the Orient., ill•
rinding radio, tel1•vis1on, llnd pul,­
by Ronald Komlntlcl
lic recital, and concerts, bo:h ns
pianist and conductor, but h~ de~­
ktni: of !lmpl~ tN,tJt to dete r.
The matm'lnl In this arUclr
,·,·ibcd the "mo~t thrilJlng ex­ for the benc!ll of thB distaff read• "'""' 11,,, ,u-n5itlvtty.
pnienc,·" o! the tour as a command
erd who have occaJllon to l)Qtrnntz, •
Tllr major1t7 nr lk.,,uty treat
11crformance for King Bhumibn! of
lwnds Of lhe victorious dclegnt!on ~ Thailand In Banikok, where he beauty salons The degTl'e nf Rkill ment mJury ca•c11 rv.n.ilt fl'Om
of n
&lt;I.lex Gabriel, llelld o f Ihe Trn.n~- "C'I'\': rlrsl plnre, Bob Pa chows kl. pe rformed with the Roy11\ Thal rl'(lulred or o. beouty so.Ion or,,,r lht' negligent admlnlstratton
wavl.'. The operator
'-',ulroad Coomnlttco !or 1 Uw United t;S.
second place,
Dave AnnlH Symphony for the king who i, a Ator I~ lhAl .u &lt;'Xcrclsed. hy n prrn1Anent
,,.,uoo,mbly ,killed penoon Ul '' " 11,u,t employ
!!Orne protccUve
. at ,on.a was the guest speaker r:ua.,la; thlNI place. HOl'I Hall&lt;'r clarinet i~t.
,levts(' un~mcalh
,11111•
busont•""·
the hair waving
,r lhe model UN Sccurjty Council. Gn,nt BrlW\n, fourth pince, Barry
\Ir Ottbrlc l spoke on lhe topic . M&lt;•lnMloln,
Phllllpine
I sland..,
1'hl• first Amerirnn 10 11lu)' 1111,i By patr1&gt;nl1.lng a beauty ~alon, noschlne lo prevent bumtng.
H h
Mot·al Impocl
or the United firth place Amie Franko Chana roJHluct Ill the somu time ut a 1·011-t f11•rustom~n llA•urn&lt;-• no rl~k u •
~,11 &lt;&gt;IUI"
•
'
- r :"511180 the 4"uty to be In
ccrt 111J11p1n. he Jll'rfomie,t a Mo­ tll1· ,,peralor m,pliooly a•imrvs hi,
10"' 11 t,·nrlan&lt;'O whUe the beat.
'
p:111,,n
,
111
operating
hi~
bus!n~3'0.
'1r Ct1brlel believe s the l1N I~
BUFFALON IA N
tart ro111·1•dol\ llh the lJ,u;ke l'hll
11111marhlnory 11 AdJuatK, and lie
, "&lt;'ornmunlly of collective wl~·
rumluctrnJ: frnm th~ thMI h,, Jk&gt;. ,,,,.s suf(I.-J,,nt sklll
A11youe lntorosted fn a11rlylnr, hermonil•,
llnw,,\',.r an """rotor Is not llnbll' nrn~l wam f.)tllrorui ogulnst ualnS'
lum and lhut oountrics
Rhoult1
plnnn.
tor the Jl&lt;)s1Uo1111
of ~dllor.Jo.
tm
1t'&lt;'l;kn1, r~u•"'I by eq uip- hulr cl),,•~ for " fll!rlod ot lime
t kt frnr,
tl
\\"hAlt\'cr
I'
muu1 ..
,·hl"f und l,111tn~--sm:in.,~er of
lie ;, n JingUISl, ll' ••akini: Ft,·nd, . ,r,, nt """'' 111 th,· 11,,auty t rejl. •tier Iha wa'tQ o~raUou. Stmple
.::gtul 1 , thl'lr foreign flullC),
lh(' llulrnln11h111 fur lhl' Dl•M
1;('nnan, and Italian in addili~n tu 1,, .. ut bu tn,· , If pre\'lou, ucr1 1•••• to ""l"rf!llnc potenU&amp;J tn•
He .,,,nttn ued with th e problem
,11·n,IPmic yl'Ar .,ri•roah,•d to aend
En1{1iiih,ancl is morned lo l ,iw
~"". ttqulrtd
In Nrw York
,,r R•~J 1•1i1r1u.snyhw hi' con~ld1•rs 11,,,llcation., ,., Thomut HOl'h~I &lt;1,apmnn. a ~hokrsprntinn l\l'lrr,,&lt; t1u111" 11111111,,,·,•r ro••ull1•d r11,111:ury
l.1!1•
11d1 1·,p1. f•l11 ♦ •nl
nno\·,· tor th,· l'!' to hindl·r
Nortou malllu,, K 1111
1,1.,, 11J.u1
11" 111•r,, t4 Jqmrunen1
'hi ou' . , 1,l111Ls,bh
~lo
'1•brlcl
ntt~l f'rido)
,\ I',,'"" 111I)' 1'&lt;'1·0,·.. , 1rom n,
.iJJi. tir,.t J·L1hl1~ 11•111
.11.11 •. • ;u
Jr llnblr for lnJu~
t o patrona
h'1l lhAI ll wnnl&lt;l 'h•• 11t1pt,...;,,.-.1hll• 'rhP iqtpli1 Hfu 11 hrn 1ld 11u-huh·
llutTnlo will lw n n·ritnl 11111,,, i r, ,,,,., , •u&lt;t•I l" 1... 0,11\ tr.•ll
lnJun· r,•x11it1111:
I" h, n ~urh lrtJur11.', occur In dep.
All&gt;r1,!ht Knox ,\1t CJ11ll,•rr tu. , .., 111 m•I 1'10
•r n..,, I hlna
ft )
;1tteu·k
Lodhl dn-,;,", l'XJlf'I 1••t1rf' "'rtu-urrl&lt;•ulai
11111rrll.,, under the ·11011sor.,h11• 11( (1,1111 n,.. '"""' &gt;&amp;tl,11 ,r h.\h ,,,
ll'tnll'nt
.tl 0N'
~Ut)'
ahops,
t 1•• \\ •1• u1 tht• I ~ H&lt; \\·rvc•r
,u·llviliP".
..J•tr,hnJ ,tt1l~mt•:it
111
h ·1y--111
wh~rr tJi,, t1Jh"l",llcu
,._h• ,... th, 1 OW1tt'n
have CAUJICd
th~ l'R onedical ~chool. Thi:! n· ,.,,.Lni
lld n, r iltH•
huw u., 1 111ld
ut (J:PA for ~~"' ~.. mt! 1,,r ,uul
..i,
•
.i
t,.
not
·optm
to
1bc,
J&gt;Ublk
JIO\\
,
0
'"·''"
r n, 111,1 IIA,·., kn ..wn th
tt.,• p,tmn.t to bttltv• lhAl Ui,7
pos,ubh•
u, ,•r,dl Th,
1,,11·n11•nr
"r It PA
t'VN, Mr, HPMh l~ pJannln( ln 1hr p11tron hn&lt;1 n 11~•·1111,,r,,•11~11, '' •·n· lllllU UMI C&gt;Wlll!R ot the
Al.\•ard.8 ro,· th,• L,·~•
i.tclt'!l"llLlons 11111
81 b,• "iuH••I h&gt; your tncul!,
re&lt;:eive,l Saturdn\
&lt;-v,•ning
~Jn..ur.
oth,•r rt•cllal shorlly. to IN• tel~"" lvlty lo hlllr dy...,, Many 'lt81&lt;.'A b••:rnty Ahop.
•t the lnt rm 11,onnl ~·.. ~uval . Thr 1,_ ____________
~ h...-,, un campus
Nc&gt;t1 Wtoelr
:~
ln&lt;'h1tttnr Nvw York. require t.hc

or

THE LAW AND YOU

Gabriel Spoke at Model UN,

1,11

Best Delegations Awa rded

I
j

I

1

r,.,

11

,,,,r

�Students Make Favorable
Impression on Visiting Prof
By EI-AINE

PARRON

Dr. Prakash Narain Masaldart, visiting Asian p1·ofessor
from India, is currently on campus.
In his fleld of political science, Dr. Masaldan rece ived
his M.A. and Ph.D. at Lucknow University in Uttar PrQdash,
India and hs;i 1,revtously traveled
l.o other unlvereUle s ln th11 United
States.
Untveralty atudents have made
a favorable lmpresalon on the
lndlan profeuor:
''I nnd a gen. I
ei-at attitude
of hefpfulneu,
courtesy and polltene ... " he
Various lOplCft t1bout which tJ1~
proreti110r wished lo speak Include
tndlan politics, rorelp relaUoue,
and econo1nie development, When
88ked to eta horat e on his view~ ror
American 1ttudonui, !Jr. ~I a~a ld' u n
said, "Tlw main view would be tbut
elnce lndepl'ndence. the 11eople ancl
government have been faced with
rnone)' lf)roblems nnd money dl!Ter.
enct•R. trnt 1V11h tho gre11teat e1u·.
oestne.. s J)OSslble t11ey i, re trying
l,o 90\ve the541 problems 8" quickly
ae posslhle within tl1e d!lmooralie
tmmework . . . I will ~la:ln
our
polit'!es and problems and bow we
e:re trying to oolve them."
Ind!&amp; ba.s created much contro.
versy over lwr pOAltIon of non.
e.li~111uenl on foreign 1~•llcy, Dr.
AlAi,aJdnn t•h1rlfl ed Indla 'R ~lan d by
exJ)ltlinlng some or t11e re1uone tor
·•Nnn.,ilia:nment

EXCLUSIVE

He we"t o" to oay that

Even if we were on this Ust,
auch n list Ill a violation of our
r ight to freedom of beUet. It h
o·
Jlolhtng but an ,nslnunent
in imldation . It 'may be U\8.t a
desire rot· peace has become a
subversive Idea.
In view of the In.ck of BllY fac t,
upon whlcil to base Ws charge
we demand a retraction.

Robert Willia.m Ste1·llng
Repreaen alive ot Youth
Agutnet War llnd Fascism
Editor's Note: We apologize 10 1
the headl!lne ,

BUFFALO

A special pen ls used to design 1
the egg. With the pen one write s
11 design In the hot wax QJ1 tbe eg-g;

North
Park
1428 Hertt.&gt;J

SHOWING

Elmwood
1!:lmwoodot Utico

~oii&lt;ficiD
.

Thefirst
3· Act
Motion
Picture
Ever
Presented!

$2.SO · $3.SO · $4.SO • $S .00
All Seats Reserved
now with
aelf-oddrened
stomped envelope, .and check or mOMJ
order lo Buffolo Jon Festival, DentoM,
Moil

lndlA

The charges that the YAWF 1.,
on the attorney
general's
list
i&lt;hould not be made Without con­
firmation. This llst has not bee n
rc:vlsedl rccen Uy enough for Otis
young organization to be lnoludeG .

AT 80TH THEATRES
-

I

DR. MASALDAN

tClr more

felt it could best help attal11
the peaceful conditions in the
world required ror her econom .
le developmer,t by following

(('o ntlnuetl Crom Pn.ge 4)

the part under lhe wax remains
further design is written and the
undlyed. On&lt;ie the egg ls dyed a
proceSll trepeated. One proceeds
trom lighter to darker stages un..
UI at the end lhe wax Js •removed
and lhe egg varulsbed for luster.

The Ukranlan . Club will, teach
interested
persons how to
decorate Easter eggs Tuei1day in
the Nor on nrts and cra.ftls shop.
A tllsplay of eggs already decor­
ated by the club can be !(1Und in
front of tbe Dorothy M. Ha.as
lounge on bhe first floor of lhe
Un ion.
111]

ln

lndln was considered 11 necellsl~)'
rlll1sons tban one ,'' he
,,om 1110111ed

LETTERS

Ukranian Club to Demonstrate 'Art
Of Decorating Easter Eggs Tuesday

Materials will be supplied by
the cra.fts shop and lnatrnctors
The decorating !s a lraHltlonnl will be on hand to answer ques­
Ukranian art form pm.ell ced by tions.
the Ukranlan people s.tnce :1U1cienl
times. Orglnally Easter egg:s were
GERARD
connected with the pagan · rituals :
of the rebirth of spring. M'any of
Jo lost week's issue of the
1
the designs \lljed symbolize pagan
1mper Carl nerard's name was
philo90phy and the forc es l)f nat- j Jert out or the Rtory about the
ure.
\ National Honor Society for the
Den&gt;tal School. .\Jr. Gerard was
Wlt.11 the adveot &lt;lf Cbriiililldllty
also Inducted into Omicron Kap ­
the traditional
ritual and trap.
110 FJpsllon, th e honor socie ty,
pings were adapted , by tho peopl~ r· We r egret lhe omlRslon,
to fit their n"t,w found faith but ._ ____________
_.
were not discnrded, New m~hs
&gt;Jrose about the origins ,of the ,
rutoms; nrw meanings wE,re at.
tribuled lo old symbols.

commented.

non.ulli;-nment.

Friday, April 5, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

orders

..,,~-7.!l-

STARRING

Sophia

-

Loren

32 Court Street, Buffalo 3, N,Y,

Anita

Ekberg

-

Romy

Schneider

Special DiRcmmt Prices for S-11.den/,11

such a policy.
"Tbe

h~ltef

U111t l)y

joining

11

bloc , a counti-y like ln1lla. which
hadn't yet acquired mlilt.'lry or
economi c 1/0Wer would only have
to take ft back seat In the council
wM
vlswed es something
tb.it
would compromise her newly 8&lt;··
quired l.udependence,' ' he added.
Erpla1nlnr bow n.cceptance ot
ro~lgn 111d COM'Olatea with lbls
p0Ucy, he .noted, "Alt.hough I.be
,o..-er11mentOf llldla atm beUevea
that non.a,Ugnmerrt u a g0al ill
tlle beBl l)Oi~Y. In 'Pl'Mtlc e t!lla
tl\ailld bas *n modllle4 very sub.
&amp;tantially .

"Tia• fMll Ulat Ind!&amp; l8 request­
Ing and gratefully rooeiYlllJ IDill­
tary aid !ram the United Sta~
pd Oreat Brlllll,n (to Oetend thern•
selves agalJ1&amp;t Commuolst Cblaa) Is
a ,erlous neg-attoJJ to the t)Ollltlon
of inoll-A.ltgnment. The realltlaa of
International pollUca may 1U11,lte
ue
modlt)' our foreign policy. Bul ,
non.allgnme.ot, 11 we could main .
t&amp;ln it, wou ld be tbe proper poet.

tlon"
The quest ion waa poaed

H

to

the altlance Indi a would choo.e,
If It we,.., to choose Involve-.
ment. "Certainly the we,tern
pact." Dr . Ma■aldan emphatic ­
ally replied. "We cou ldn 't allgn

ouraelve, with anything
but
democratic alllea. We could
never think of allgnlng our.
selves with RuH fa. "
(Conllaued

ou Pai:e ~,

Dl•IIIOfld•
•W,tt11es

JEWELR
.Y

Watch ""cl

Jewelry

R•p.;rln9
I

You'll smoke with a fresh enthusiasm
when you discover

the cool '"ai r-softened " taste

of Salem

• menthol fresh • rich·tobacco taste • modern filter. too

�P.Atl SIVIM

SPICTIUM

Fricloy, April 5, 196J

Edward Albee Discusses Modern TheatE~r, High School Juniors Attend
It Should Sometimes Sicken or Disturb Welcome Day Tomorrow
way" reepon1lblllty. It haa be.
seo on Broa dway, The rea l H•
f3enn divisions or the Uolvor11ty tu, and Or. Art.bur L. KA!Mr, 41,.
tate man It on top. H• owns
come the conscience
of the
the theater and ha• complete
American theater, due to a1udJ. will have 0lll\ll houses tomorrow, rector of admJaalona and ,l"900!"(H,
cont rol of the play, Hie main
once apathy.
Studen t will tben bav&amp; a choice
lu CODDeoUonwith Weloome Day
Jntoreata are having a play
The playwright 11180 belleve ,a that
tor nearly 1000 hlgb Jcbool JuDlore of any three conf&amp;J'eoc• about
UlllD3' thlnga can be done t1~ Imthat wlll aell, "run forever,"
and their paren ts.
prove the theater In the United
programs at the UnlYeralt:,-. JDach
and please lady theater.goers.
Ne:r:t 1D Power Ill the -woman who Statee. Crttl(lll · eh«k!d try t•~ tmBeginning at 1 J).m. the dlvlalona conference Will tan twenty min•
A critic must will Jiave di8]llaye, exhibits and u.tes and seHloDII will be offered
Is the theater pllJ'tY execut!lff. She prove 11ubl~
la Interested
In such thin.gs &amp;.8 be 'lpNr,fudlced, ps.rtla .l and .,irilllng
what at.ar&amp; are w the play. The to go out on a Jtmb." We !lhollld d8lllonatrat1oD11, and ta.cultr mem- In art.8 and 11Clences, bne!Jl1M ~
"lrt&amp;ra'' nre next Ill line. UDllke nleo a.now our theater to bi,come hers will be ne.ilable to answer mlnlat.rallon, education ent,neer.
"actors" lhe1 are mainly Interested tem'l)Ora.ry. (Other cities are bllild­ questions . The divlslpos are: the Ing, pharmacy, nunlng, law, med·
In preserving
publlc rela.UoDll, Ing up theaters copYlng thoee ot art. department, third floor Foster !clue, dept lstrr, medical ltobool­
mouey, themeelvea 1n general, and New York City, which are ._ow in Hall: School ot Education, Jl'oeter ogy, occuptu.lonal therapy, and
bad aha.pe.) Governmenl subeldlea Hal): School ot Engineering, Karr
Parker
Engineering
Dullc!Jng; pbyelcal therapy.
coul d pnt OD better plays,
However, t'be audience m111atde. School of Nursing, Health Sciences
Campua Loura nod a socJ61 boll.I'
mand good theater If the a\tuallon Building; medical tecb,nology, room
w!Jl
close out U1e morning aeealon.
le to Improve. Thie does not mea.n 0-7 Capen Hall; occupational ther·
deluelooe, but theater that "once apy, room 10 l, Hell.lb Sciences Programs and Clllll\)US m,8.l)e will
In a while sickens, dlsturb11 and Building; and physical therapy, 264 be avnllable at Lhv Norton U'nlan
rec~ptlon C'OUnter.
mak88 you a.wal'e.'' Mr. AlbSE, feels Wine.peal' Avenue.
that laek ot e11ppcrt Bhowe 1Mk ot
There wltl also be two l~­
sup))Ortlng a tree society, He en.
turea des igned to give the
coura.ges audien ces to yell an~I wallt
vlaltlng students and the ;,ub•
out ot ba4 plays, write lett,ire to
lie a Usto of typl~J college
crtL!ea' and not take ever:tthlng
teaching methods . At 1 p.m,,
that is said al face value ,
Dr. Charles H , Ebert, aaaoolate
During t.he cotree hour tlmt fol.
profe19or of 9eology and geog.
lowed, Mr. Albee, wbo was diij.
raphy , will ;,resent an "Intro­
mis sed trom college hLBsecoo,d year
duction to Modern Geographic
EDWARD ALBEE
for ''maJorlng In ext.ra.c uul cular
Thought".
l th
I.Imes activities," answered ve.rlous quea.
M
8
1
P ny.
any
tlons about tbe theater. He bE1lleve~ " NtllV JntcrpreLo.tions tn Amer·
w I10 wro e
&amp; star will rewrite 8 play to secure thnt every p lay he writes la a new ionn History"
wlll II&lt;' presente,I
"waves or love" from lhe foot. e;(perlence, and t.hnl a good l)llly­ b)' Dr , M Uton Plesur, ussisl11nt
lights.
wright writes for blmsell. Mir. AJ. deon of Unverslty CoJJei;e, nt 2
'l'he director or producers also bee 11taled thal the title or "Vlr. 11.m, Bo~h talk• wW be lu thll
rewrite plays, When a producer gi.ula Woolt" meu.nt "who's alraid oonft.rence thenlre ot Norlon,
gets O hol d of a "prO]&gt;erty'' be of llvl,ng llfe with false lllus ,loos ?"
thinks 11bout the wants of the real "He 1,)elleves that the taJked-11
,b&lt;&gt;Ul 1'he morning sesRI0Jlij, Ollbll 011fy
estale owner, who worriea aboul "vulgarity" in bis play Is nat u1ral to to high school Juniors and their
th e wants Of lady tbeater pnrtlea. the characters, aud that cens-orsblp 1inrents, will reuture. opening ud.
The pla}'Wl'lgbt I&amp; th e JaSl one on by an Informed and ltberal 1&gt;ubllc dres•~ by Dr. Lester Anderson.
th8 Broadway hierarchy. He ls en. Is the only valtd censorsh ip.
\'ire.president
tor •'&lt;lucaUono.l u£ •
couraged to l'ewrlte, compromise
♦
words are used in a manner dlt- nod follow the various ta.di!.
Mr. Albee bel loves that all
ferent from the rest of the tbeater,
th is "big business" brings about
causing us to ask auestlons."
bad theater.
"Off. Broadway"
Unlike n "roallBUc'" piny which
has grown and pro■ pered be.
shows "11 sllce or life," t.he Absurd
Illuy makes the viewer wo nd er ex.
cause of the lack of "on-Broad•
aclly what has happened lo the
theater. Ooo must tnke a. oold, alort
attitude tn order to compreh.8lld
the "wound inflicted by th e drama,"
According to Mr. Albee, tho
"ab1u r dlty of the theater" re­
fer1 to tho h lerarchy who de,.
tormlnes 'what we are going to
SHERIDANPLAZA
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
IJy FRED APP LE
Edward Albee, speakJD&amp; to a
lll the Norton
packed audience
mult1-purp088 room last Fr14a:r,
gave hla vtewa ou the present-day
theater. Ho Illa.tea that the Un
theater ta the ouly Qlle ot the per.
forming arts to malllt&amp;ln !ta In,.
tegrlty, eontlnuJng a tra.dttton ot
over l!,000 ye&amp;rll.
Albee •believes that. the theater le
a m1rrOr ot a ,nation's cultural
health, elnce \l)]ayWrlghte have "a
force tor thtnca that are right,"
()I' a "national
co11sclence.'' In the
UDlted States, plnyWTighte are en.
cournged to falsify, paolh e.nd congrntulnte
their audiences about
exJstlng values that are "j11.11l
line."
Tbey are being used as servants
bY •·a sl)olled public."
Mr. Albee believes It 11 time
for a re-examination of values
In our changing world. Writers
In Fra nce (like Beckett and
Genet) have understood
the
need far thla re-examination of
reality and h,-ve Incorporated
It In The Theater of tho Absurd.
The uaturnllstlc theater had been
tllnnlug downhlll because H became seLf.Jlmiltng and destructive,
since [he characters were brought
down to "life -sl~e.'' The Theater of
the Absurd shows man tryi ng to
make sense tor htmselt in a world
which no longer makes sense. Man
is a stranger in a "universe that
Jocks light ", glvLng him a feeling
of aibsurdlty.
The Theater of t'he Absurd is
based on •the assumption that tbe
1benter can reveal lite, and, according to the p laywright Is "based
where
on a tamlllnr spectacle

;::====:;:;;;==================
W e're doing

-~o Jbhlet&lt;-t
FeminiJrieFootwear

i't

aga

APRIL

in

l.9 th

)IMMe

" o n cam

pus ,-i

HOUSE FOR SALE
J6 UHIVlllSITY CIRCLI

Single, oll brick., master bedroom, 2
e,ctro bedrooms, front and boc.k iun
rooms. To ctos.oon estoto. Saturdays
10 c .m. end 2 p.m. or
TF2-3065 evenings, Mr. u&gt;hner.

be'-11

call

lntern•Uon■ I

a,ewerin , Inc., 8utt alo, N.Y.

LEONARDO'S
Re6 lauranl
GROTTO IH THE REAR •
UNIVERSITYPLAZA
Visit our newly remodeled dining rooms to enjoy our
Fomous American and Ital ian Foods
From A Tasty Sandwich to A Full Course Meal

__

TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
SANDWICHES AND BOT PLATES

---~

............ ,_....,.., ......
.........
SPECIALTIES - RAVIOLI - SPAGHETTI- PIZZA

Don't Miss T his Rare
Concert Appeara nce

proudly announces
A NEW ADDITION
TO ITS
PROUD FAMILY OF DELECTABLES
■:IIR-B•O

FOLKSINGER

J'OAN

B A EZ

Tues. Eve., April 23.
Eastman Theatre
ROCHESTER
, N.Y.
Ti ckets : Orch : $2 -60, 3.00, 3.50
Mezz : $3.5 0 ; Loge: $3 .011
Ba lcony : $1.'76. 2.26, 2,60
Ord ers and check s to : Civic Musfo Associat ion
60 Gibbs St., .Rocheste r 4

RIB DINNER

A generous serving of the finest loin ribs prepared in a ,pecial Chfdten Delight aplcl9
seasoning . All dinners i~dudes fr1nch fried potatou, Bar•&amp;-Q rouca and muffin. ,rim
only $1.95 . Rib snacks •for thoM In-between taste tr:eott at $1.35

A note to remember

Oigrfamous
Chicken
Dinner
is now priced at only

$1.39
ONLYTHE PRICEHAS CHANGED,
STlll THE SAME QUALITY AND QUANTITY .

rREE DEIJ[VERY

IT 4-6688

�Friday,April S, 196J

IPICTRUM

PAGEIIGHT

ACU Bowlers Scheduled
Free Passes For Students
Sunday an d Monday at 7:30 p.m.
the llnallsls In lhe Allsoclatlon ot
College Unions
Men's Bowling
Tournament will be represent~
their reapect1ve regions at the Jn.
ternauonal
Obamplonahtps of tile
American Bowling Coogreae Tour •
nam&amp;n1 1betng beld in Buffalo at
the Connecttcur Street Armory.
The se collegiate bowlers, trom
11.llparts ot tht&gt; United States, are
the victorious representatives
of
the eleven regional tournaments
held by Ute ACl'. Elach region Is
teJ)l'Cleented b y the ftve blgherrt
11,ll.eventa ecort:'re rrom live differ.
ent achools.
Roglon 11, which comp r lsu
N- York State and Sout hern
Ontario, will be rep re aont ed by
Mike E v1n1, N.Y.U.; Graha m
Greeley, Siena; Al Brown, Al.
fr ed Te ch ; Jim OeCerbo, Cort·
land, and Rober t S e e ma n,
Ut ica. Bob Braun, University
of Buffalo ho been added to
th e ro1ter t o provi de an ev en

Queens Select

"It could be the most terrlfylna motion plolure
I haw evermadel• -All'UD Bm%BOOCX

Spring Theme
Themes tor the Spring Week•
end Queen Clllldldntes havo been
announced by the committee ot
the Unio n Board,
Bonnie LB.l!ZeWskl hM ,choeen
''Bonnie.Queen
ot the Emera.Id
City;• a.s her tltle, whlle Mart Lou
Thompson Will be represen'led as
''Marl Lou, A Mirror of Melodies-.
A Renectlon of Perfection ''', and
Nancy Zuckerman as "Nanc:y - A
Symphony Of Spring."
Skil;s, posten and other events
will be Integral
parts oil the
camp aigns ot the three candi da tes.

numbe r, (541) , for th• doublH
an d •ln gle a event■.
A program has been prep&amp;l'&amp;d
ror th06e bowlers which lnC1lu4ee;
n practice seeslon at the ll!ort.on
Lanes towoTraw at 10 p.m.; &amp;
motor tril) to Niagara Falla and
vicinity Sunday, followed by a din.
ner at Norton after whleh the
group will ass8'1llble for the ir ABC
debut at the Armory,
The attendance of local college
students at t.bla, the World Cham.
pton@hlps or collegiate bowling,
~uld ,be a greu.t encouragement
.................
u ...............,..
to these bowlere and do much to
NEW
ijpur them on to greater achieve.
ruent .• Joseph Pattie, Norton recre.
u1fo11director, will give fl'ee passes
to all sl udents wbo wlll attend the
HELDOVER! 3RD WEE;K.
ABC Suoday ulght.
" Best A:mericon Film
If you would like to watch the
of 1962"
heel amntuur collegiate bowlers In
-TlmeMogazl ne
the naU&lt;m lu action, get your tr ee
ticket and be at the ABC Touma.
ment a• the ConnecUcut Street
Arm'Ol'Y Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
AN UNFORGETT
ABLE

I

I

~ Tm,oR
·JESSlr.ATAND'(.PLESHETTE..=.,1Jfff'HfDR
,SlJZANNE
We suggest you see it only from the beginning
No one seated during last 20 minutes

1£NSINGT(IN

laller.,;tJ:rt""

(See dail11ttewspaper for time schedule)
Student Discount Ticket
for all programs may be purchased
upon presentation of ID Cards

"Dav1·d
&amp; L1·sa'
"

BigMother's

MOTION PICTURE

Asian Professor

Acocfeffly A.word Noffllllotii­

(Continued from page 6)
Amerlca'8 Influence on India ls America's wealth , I doubt it the
felt more keenly in the field of American peol)le care only for that.
higher educaUon, 110Cordlng to Dr. People here always have ldeu M1d
Masalde.n "lo tbe lite or the com- 11rlnclples and that la part ot wealth.
mon people (82'l:. rural), " he Inter. 1 certalnlT think you have ot her
Jected "lbe 'ltte&amp;t.lon ot American values than materialism."
tntluence does not even 11rlse." He
felt thiit the A01erlcao lnflul.'nce
Comparing the Amerlcu.n and Ju.
10 clearly visible In Japan was the dian s-tudent , Or. Ma&amp;aldan com­
grent 11mo®t ot lndu s1rlallia tlon, mented, "The Amerioon student Is
ru QPf&gt;Oeed•lo lndla's predowlnaut.. tree from mQDlal distractions like
Jy agrloullurnl eoclety.
worries and anx!'lltles over money,
Some Asian professors expressed foot!, lodgfog, and books, which an
the vtew tl1at the l l nlted States la lndlu.11sludent hos. BecnUBe of this,
~trcmely
materialistic . On this, the Ameri~au stu dent has more sin·
Dr. Mualdan commented, ''I think cere devoLion to hla studll!l!,
everyone would like to have the
The next vtslt:i.ng proteeaor will
wealth that America has . All these be Dr. Toschlo Ueda, Protesaor of
countri es are trying Lo tnutnta I History, Tokyo Unlvol'!llty, Japan.

HST SCREENPLAY
HST DIRECTION
1:~ ........~--~--~-----

3199

TUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILA
.I

upon presentation
D. Card

of

Main Street

(across from Granada Theatre)

TF 6-9490
ANNOUNCES

DICK
FADALE
DUO
foremost jazz

lnt 11
rn1tfon • I BNIW...-fea,Inc... 8u ffll ~,; N.Y.

musician

appearing

SUNDAY AFTERNOONS
5:00 .. 8:00 P.M.
No Cover - No Minimum

•
BEER

DRAFT
SCHMID'.l'S- 15c

BUDWEISER
- 15c:

Michelob • 25c

•
SANDWICHES
Junior

HOT CORNED BEEF
HOT PASTRAMI
HOT ROAST BEff
AMERICAN CHEES
E
SWISS CHEBI!
HAM

not too strong ...
not too light...
Smokeall 7 filter brands and you'll agree:
some taste too strong ••• others taste too
light. But Vkeroy tastes ttle way ,OU'd
like • fillet clguette to tastet

C 1183, Brown•

Wllllam1onTobacco Corporation

Viceroys got-the
taste that's right!

HAM COMBINATION
EGG SALAD
TUNA FISH SALAD
BOlOGNA
SALAMI
TURKEY
CHOPPEDLIVER
SMOKEDTONGUE
CREAMCHE5SEand JELLY
PEANUTBUTIERand JRLY
KNOCKWURST
UVERWURST

55
55

Senior

40

75
75
70
45

40

45

55
55

65

40

45

40
40

45

50

60

65
70
55

75
80

50

40
40

55
55

75

50

65

45
45
65
65

�Frida y, April S, 1963

PAGE NIN!

SPECTRUM

Spec/rum
Callr/Joa,

Judge W . H. Hastie to Give Sapp, Brent GiV'e
Talk on Individual freedom Recital Thursday

William Brenl, cellist wltJh th e
Ion , toony, al 1. Contest commllte1i
Psychology Cl1,b
Judge W!llhtm H. Hn,~Ue, U.S. 1011 lm1tllute
Bu(fslo Philharmonic, and N'orma
in 1946, Vlr,;fnla
be
There wdll be n meeting of the rt&lt;porta and tutute eni nte '1"111
C'ourt of Apveals ror the Third St,tte College
Sapp,
pianist,
will Psychology Club this atternoon at dlijCUH~ed.
ln 1947, Lincoln Be rlolarnl
Clrouit,
Philadelphia,
wl!l speak University In 11150
present
a
rccttaJ
of
chn.mber
Ohio
Wesleyan
1
3 p.m. in room 2(),!, Townsond. The
at 8 11.m. Tuesday ln Room 134 l,n 1951 , Knoxville
College in music Thursday 11.t8:30 p.m. in speaker will be Dr. Oeer, who wtll
'rhe we1akly rer.ltAI given by the
Baird
Hall.
Admission
Is
free,,
and
Health Sciences n• part or th l¼ rn~2, ltut,;er University
In 1963,
d!scu~s "Paycothern11y nnd Learn. students of applied muRir w111 take
all
students
and
faculty
nre
invtt­
Gruduate
i\·lanagement
Program Amher~t rollege in 1960, Temple
Ing Th811ry.'' All majors lllld ptoll­ pince Tueedny al 1 p.m. In the
lecture series lfllOnjj()red by tlie li nlver•lty
in 1961. nnd lhe Uni. l!d to attend ,.
pectlva mnJors nr&amp; invlted to nt. Baird ret'l .tnl hnll. All etudent.s and
Schoo! or BuHhie83 Adml,11!strat1011. versify or Pennsylvania in 1961.
faculty flre lnviled to atten d. Per.
tend.
Br.
Brent
bcgnn
his
stuclt,e.11
on
"Oowngrudlng
lndlv1dual Freedom
ff!! I~ II.sled In Who's Who In
rornu.•1e will he Lawrence Be-arc e.
Engineering Open House
I.he
cello
at
the
age
of
sbtteen.
ln Contemporury
Soolety'' ls the Amerl&lt;'u, 19ti2-6:J. and In Who's
double
In ••onJunctlon with the Univer­ tenor ; Nkholn;, Molt"ee,
His
profe!ll!ionnl
career
begun
aij
subject or t11e Judge'fl talk ,
\\'ho ln ('olored A mi,rfcn . ·
h1lSS' l~Jllllld Lat1eorty, Md Glenn
a
member
of
the
U.S.
Navy ~ilrlng sity'• Welcome Doy, tomorrow art­
Ju((g~
Hustle
ls
n F"llow,
Havin g served in his 1&gt;re11eutJlO­
Arnoo11 at 1: 00 Jl. lll. the HI Udl'nt s of So~ll. r,lnnlets.
Quartet.
He has studied witJ11 Eva
altlon since 1!H9, Judg e Ha stie wns J\nterfunn Academy or Arla and Heinitz , Thaddeus
Monte Carlo Night
Ma,rklcw'ic1m{, the E ngineerin g ttrhool w-ut bold
or Phi Beta
previously Goven1or of the Vlrgl,n SC'lenccs. u member
'l'o ull'hl. the mulll-purl)Olle niom
tht&gt;lr [ourteeulh
Annun) @ngtuoor­
l\ikolni
Groud~n,
and Orlando
Islands, 1!146-4nmember; CarlblJean K1111))U11110 Omegn Psi Phi trn­ Cole.
lng QJM!ll House In the Karr Pork!'r or Nnr1011 will ll\1\1•on tbl' alJl)Otlr­
llll\'P nnd atmosphere or u gam blin g
Commfs~iM,
1947-60: clvtllan aide l"r11t1 leA,
Engineering Dnilalng.
to t)10 Secretary nr Wnr, llH0-42:
Br . Brent's rhamber must(: stu­
1'h,i Open llnuse, &gt;&lt;pousored by ,·nslnn. Thi' mixor committee. und er
delln, Howard
tlnlversily
School
dies have been With William Kroll, llw ~J11glnealrg
Sluden1
Council Ille c•l111lrmnnshl1&gt; of Carolyn Qt.
HOMECOMING
or Lnw. 19a9-46; Judge or the Dls­
Daniel Oullcl, Samuel Mayel;, Al­ wlll fl'Mure lnd\Vitl11al proJecta by born , ls i+11on~orlng 11n ovenl ntf ln
llomecomtng
nppflcatlon~ are
trlct Court or the Virgin Islands.
fred Krips, and Emanuel 21ctlin. the stndents In ndrt1tlon lo 1le~rrl1&gt;­ M•mtt' f'orh•, whlob will be open to
llOW oul. They mny be tiloked Ul)
19:17-39: RSslstnnt sollcltor
U. $.
HL has received many llol\olnr­ ll(\11a or tlu , l'arious fields or eoi,/J. nil wllh free adtnl ~Rlon nud T&amp;..
Depa11menl or Interior,
rnsa.:17: 111Nortou, Tower s,nd Goodyear . sh,ps l\nd prizes, such as lhe Mtlrltl,:-_ 'rhe .-xhlhlts 1vill lllclud l' t1·P1!ltme11ts
lt ,iel«y f,U&lt;'&lt;
1.. hl\llll. renturlng
Appllcullons wlll be due on Mon­
member of faculty, Howard U.nl­
Solly
A. Klssman
AwBrd, two Liu•
testing ot a Jet engine. a blood
day, April 15 In Room 225 Nor­
rellnwships lo Tanglewood . schol. tluwmeter , iho ,irt o[ brewing co[. Jimmy Hurlon. will 1&gt;lay :LIi eve­
veraily School of Low, 1030-37.
ton, l,nlervlew ij for people Inter­
m·~hlps lo the
Aspen fi'pst\val r,,e nnd ,, des1•rl1&gt;llou or the new ning tr,1111S: 80 lcl l2 : ~0. 01Ulle8
He nweived the A.U. fron1 Am­
ested In Commlttee
Chalrman­
and lo I.he Pierre Monteux Sichool hh;h -speed wind lunn&lt;'l plnnned for Sll&lt;'h n~ bl1t(·kjnck and roulette, WIii
il.erst 1111d the !..L.B. and S .J.lJ.
•hlps ,viii be held on Tuesday,
hf\ 11rovlded, nod wlnn@rs wut ra.
for
Condurtor's
0l'cheNtra
an.t 1111•l'lllll))U~ next ')'P(lr,
rrom Harvard l ' niveralty.
Judgr
,·elvi, 1•urnlvu1 11rlt•"' - ij1ulfed ant.
full
tuili9n ijCholorshlp 111 the
llasllc• recel ve,l the honorary Doc · April 16 nncl Wednesday, April 17
Math Club
rrom a to 5 p,m. Ln Norton 215 . New School llf MUHlt
mnl s. beer mugs 01111nlonn &lt;llOCkll.
•.
Th, l'lldPrgru1lunle ~lnlh ('lub will
tor or Ln wa d1&gt;gree from Hflm1,-

r~ao

Schussmeisters
Ski Every
Week ; Hold Social Affairs

p .11\, in
Before joining tb e Buffalo
or­ llH'l:ll \V~d11CtUluy al
c•hes tru. Mr. B1·cnl played
with room 2:13 Norton. Mr. Rollert llll('k

the New .Tersry ,rnd Qu,•hr1 t Sy. will dl • ••u•H "('o,weusus Rankings.' '
l(,,freKh ments
"ill h~ si•ryed ffll­
mphonlt's.
l(\\\ h1g- th~ ntt 1 Plin1-t

'fhu1·.....
Ja.y's

fH'U~ 1't 11l\

,\'ill

l11dlllh

wvrks nf Bach, Beethoven , Cor·
ski's, clll. sml Prol&lt;ofldf.
!Joots an~ 11olea were nvnllwble for
011c dollar anti filly C'ents.
1111s
dueau'.t fall ghoi-t or being n ran.
too;tlc dl!nl.
In 11ddJtlon , there
are 11n.1·tlt•s,outlngs and two big
lrlps
t o places
Jtace
weekend
The membershf.l&gt; fee lb six dol. Wnltefa r.e ,rnd Stowe.
Not len~l
lnrs u yeor, [JRyahle i n the tlrst
in lm1101·t1t11oe
, by any means. Is
RIX weeks (lf Pvery
~chool year. tbe op1,ortunity
to co,ntrlb ute to.
·ro mainlnin tltl s merubershlp one uncl lenrn about U1e proper func­
hn~ to uttend o.L lea.st lwo-.thJrd$
Utlnlng of an active. muny faceted
or ull maudutory meeUn,:s_
stuclent organization.
Every week (\I\ nn assigned day,
r.uat week, the Schussmelaters
the Sebussmelslel'1!
board n bus held
the coming:
elaot1ons
for
and travel to a pren r ra.oged slrl year. At bhat time William Coss
Jnt•rr,1t1on al 8,.werfea, In c., 8un110, N.Y.
n rcn . TbJs 1&gt;wrt year they &amp;ldlecl was c hoseo presld1¥1t.

S&lt;·hussm.,lsters,
an 01·gnni•,
zatlon which provides for n lteultby
rLcllvity
and
soolnl
lire
bum
11round :l ,·01111\11lh Interest - ski.
l,ng, hnve Just com11leted another
yn1r or activity,
'l'he

:H Gle1Mvood Acree,

wbere

1

Photography Club
'l'hPl'U will bP fl IIIL'Pllni: 01 I ho
l'l111toi;mphy &lt;'luh In room 202 Nor

Aliotta~ clo,mge
((or nor Hortol and Vlrgll)

PRESENTS

TheTrio
BHt Pen·,., At ttl :U .lltO

od

rl.J
=t•=eR=.•=l•=c•
=
o.s=·t=ia=l=.
=;..;;=========­

DRY
CLEANIN
8 lbs. tor $2.00
AT TflE

One-St o p Service Center
laundry
- Shoe Repairing
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and dyed
All types of ladles' Heels in
Stock for Replocement
or R-tyllng

PlazoShoeRepair
UNIVERSITYPLA.ZA •
TJl6-4041
Open 9 A. M. • 9 P. M.

Miu Tool Clostetlanl

SELL US YOUR
Top Prices Will Be ]Paid lor Them
Whether Used on Thi!; Campas or Nol

-·-

-'·

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STOREi
INC.
3610 MAIN STREET

Tl' 3-7131

�S P EC T R U M
Friday, April 5, 1963
------------------------------ ------------::--------------WBFO Announces This Week's Schedule Ski Club Holds Annual SwimParty;

PAGETEM

Q;M :\lt1slcrwork~
from France
hroodt'aSI• thl' com ,s ~;; tntrr1111lion111 Book Review
pt&lt;.&gt;1epcrform11n«-e. or "Mother of
Hr•vio•w nnd Literary Report.
Us All" d!rl'&lt;'t from Ralrd Muolc ~:no - ronrert
111111_ Brnhm•
lfall.
\\rltten
by Mr. Virgil t0 · ·0 - NPwe
Thomp.~nn, vlsltlni,: Prote~~or.
·
MONDAY
JO: 10~.Tazr. Idiom wHh FJrnie
Curlis
t·lr.--Over
the Back Thnce
R:M-Relax
wllh HI-Fl
11:00-Mu•lc
from Rtudlo "C"
7: 00-Netherlltndft
Soloists
WEDNESDAY
7 ~0-Panm-ama
of the Liv ely
Today
6:16-Germnn)'
Arta
6:ao Relax with HI-Fl
7:00-WBFO
NEWS •r...,,eture by
8:00 - NeW11
~:Ofi- O18('()•ery and Oe&lt;lfelon,
the H&lt;&gt;norable CharlOII Pbel11s
"Fabulous
Fln ecos" Fosler
Tuft, rormPr Mayor ot Olncln llntley, N. Y, Times
nart
9:00-Inter,natlonal
Cotwl'rl Hall H:00-News
S: 05- The Ct11cl1\Mtl Symphony
J0:00-New&amp;
Orcheatrs
10:10 F'olk Musi c wrth John
10:00-Newa
Boylan
10: 10-Wedncadny
Flvenfn g M
ll:0(1-.11'1uolc trom Studio ''0"
WBFO
TUESDAY
THURS OAV
6: 15-Flu ropean Review
7(i: ]i, - IIBC . Report
R: 30-Rela .x with Tlt-Fi
li:JO- Relax with Hl·Fl
7: 01\-Wnsh l ngton Reports
7· 15-Smrtll
World 0111,abolb 7:00 - WBFO NEWS SPECIA L
•1►ro~enlR Jenn Paris, gueet lec­
llr111hen
turer for the department
of
7:30-l.el's
Ular,n Gernu1n
mod1.&gt;rn l11ng1111g1&gt;•,"The New
7: 46-Ne wti Ellhlcs
Frnnrh
Poalry"
'
R·0O- N8WB
SUN DAV

S:30-WBFO

Transportation Provided , Open to All

R:00-Now~
9:00-0oncert
!loll
111:00-News
10:30-Mu•ir
rrom Studio
FRIDAY
~; 11; -News Ethic•
tl::l0 - Relnx with lll•FI

7: 00-Dcbriellng
7 :ao Let's Learn

May 5. the first annual s"'1m
pnrly or the Ski Club will be held
at the Indoor swimming pool at
Klasing Brldge Ski Arco, Route
240, Colden, N.Y. This is the
closing affair. The donation for
non-member" Is two dollars Bnd
ftlty cents and for memb e r s two
~ollars,

.'&lt;"'"

German

The Schussmelslel's
are work­
mi:- on a scrapbook which will
include all the club and ski team
activities. There will be another
Transportation
lo OJ!d from .J.m Farnsw orth Ski movie, an
the aren wilJ be p rovided. Susses h:tercollcgia te ski meet and other
leave t.he front or Nort on 11l 1 :00 e~citlng activities.
o'cl~k Included will be beer. food,

7; 45-Wt1shfn1,,-ton Reports

8:00-News

or Broadway

s:O~-So und
Hollywood

!l:00--Conr-ert

!l,lld

Hall

I0:0O-,News

10:10-"Peace
10:30-Muslc

and mu•ic for dancing, This ln­
vitatiun is open to nll Interested.
't'ickelN Will be available at the
tkkel
booth or in the ski clu b
orfice in Norton.

Coprs Plue One''
Town U.S.A.

1~l85 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Yi Mile Mord, of SHIRIDAN DRIVEot MAPLEROAD
(AcljacentThe Boulnord Moll Plaza)
0p.n FridOJ011dSoturdoJ until 1 :00
Operated by tho JERRYBROWMROUT
CORP.

H Iiiei
"Ill SJ)ODSOI' ll Sabbath
Si•rvl&lt;'!l this evenlmg at 7: 45 p.m. tn
theAHlllel flou•11. Dr. Ju slLn not­
mann will ~poak on: "PMsover
TmrJltlon•." All Oneg $h11bbat will
follr.w.

Hillel

Thp n.nnl lentr&gt;n HOrvlce will be
held tonight at thP As hury-Delo­
w111·&lt;' Jllethodllfl Churc h ; Or. lla.r­
old flo~ley will he lbP &amp;VOBker.
'l'rnn~J)Orl.11IIon will be p1•ovidetl by
WeKley Fon nd~tion nl 6

,,.w.

·rho Ar&gt;rll llilltll Social WIii bP
Two ~Pl'l ' il'eM wlll 1/11 held Sunday
held Saturdoy rrom R: 30 to 12 p,m. 111 Univ~rsl\y Methodist CltUrch Ill
In Nortqn. A b1rnd will provide
fl IUlfl 10: ·\6 ll,OI
m11Ric for dnnelng, and llitht re.
, Admle­ NPwnu1n Cot1, 1tmtlo n
trc~hmenlH will he 11&lt;1rved
~lon I~ 1i0c, anC! dr&lt;'RR iR casua l.
Chuck Peszynski, a ijLUdent at

~:\•ery"no Is Invited ,

Tho nert Hillel Brunch will be
held Sunday nl ll :30 n.m. at Hillel
House. Dr. Nathan Back , Associate
Professor
of Phurmacol&lt;&gt;IO', wlll
&amp;J101l
lr on: "A First Hand Rep&lt;&gt;rt
no J owlsh r,lfe Ln Ru~sln .'' Reser­

"alion s are necessary,
'l'he HIilei l'a•eover Seder will
be held Mondny in the Socll1l Hall
or Temple Beth David Ner lsruel.
ra~sover lunches will bt- served In
i'hl' Hillel House Tbu,·sday a.nd
Friday from 11 a.m. to I p.m.
Thurs(Jay, a.t 7 p.m., I.be revised
Hfllt'IIcons tltuUon wlll be dta cuseed.
All member ~ are urged to attend.
Weatey Foundation
There will I&gt;(&gt; n. locture Sunduy
1•\•enlng at tlnlvorslty
Methodist
t"hureb l.lJ the W•'llley Loung..,, Or.
Justin llotmnnn, r11bbi and chap­
lain or Hlll ol. will speak on "M11r­
rh11:c 11nd O!vorc~, a.nd Religious
Practices,'' Rev. Hugh Tueller, ohap­
laln to Protestant
!llu donla nt
Huff'alo State , will dlSCUll8 Neo.
Orthodoxy , a to11fc den flog with
rurrent trends In religious thoui;ht.

D,· lllilh&gt;rd

Child&amp;,

ll

LhP Unlv••r~ily of Buffalo and a
member of the UB Newman Club,
was elected chairman Of the Elm­

p1re Stale Province or the Nal­
lnnr,J Newman Club Fl'dcmtlon
He was formerly

Exlern.'.11 Af ­

r11
lrt! Vice Chairman and Chair­
mnn or the Board or Directors
fo1· Newman Chm. 110 s tudenll!
fl'Om New York State and 150
from lhe area r(llleges attended
the F:mpire State Province Con­
Vt ,,ti on
making this
a rooord
brcnktng j\'alherlng. The UB New11,an Club wa8 one or the flv&lt;'
,•luM or 1hr slate c11nsldered for
lhl' be~l club nwr1rd. Rochester
f'ol ,vt cchnica I Jn~tllull' WllS chos­
t•n for thta honor .

~

~
@

~~

mmEsRoTHERsiouR
- THE FABULOUS
lqROSS·CDi'JNTIJYCQNC~RT.
, FOLK
sINGING

BROTHER
FOUR

medical

--~ ON COLUMBIA
RECORDS~

and a member ot the
Marriage R.oundtable, will speak on
physfcfnn

"The

Phy6!ologk11t A.,pPCI.I&lt; or ~"

lnt,,.natfonal Br.--.rtu

1

tn c., 9uffato. N.V.

end l\1:irriage.''
CL 1946/CS 8746 •

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LEATHERGOODS STORE

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FOUR
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--=--=--

CL 1803/ CS 8603'

CL 1697;cs 8497 •

•Stereo

�,,

'
Friday, April S, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGEELEVIN

GridProfilesThreeand Four: Cindermen
Roommates
John
Stofa
andTom
Butler
By ROCKY VERSACE

It Is often said that good things

Prep for RP I Meet~

A well deserved honor has been
best.owed upon Stofa by Parade
Magazin e. He has been chose n,
along with several of the nation's
top athletes such as All-American
State,
fullback from Michigan
George Saimes and towering seven
foot cager from Oregon State, Mel
Counts, to ' spend two weeks in
Europe. Consequently, John will
miss most of the spring football
session, but will participate in the
alumni game. ,

l'&lt;&gt;mein pa irs, a phrase which typi­
Buffalo's touchdown duo, quar­
terbac k John St.ofa and halfback
Tom Butler. The two junior grid­
d&amp;ra, who have been roommates
since they were freshmen, last year
accounted for three "long bomb"
type scores in the first two gsmes
and connected for many long plays
throug hout the season.
Butler
snared a Stofa t.oss in the closing
seconds of the opening game
When g radua te d, Stofa plane
against Boston to give the Bulls
to give coac hing a try. Say11
a thrill-packed victory.
John, "I wou ld like to play
Stora, often referred to 1U1"Long
prof esai onal ball if given the
1
Jo hn" and the "Ice M:an,' hails
chance," and from his l'eeord
from
Johnst.own,
Pennsylvania
a lone, it appears that John will
where he was top gun in football,
be given the chance.
baseb all, and basketball,
all of
which he has also excelled in at
Tom Butle r, Stofa'a favorite tarU. B. A rangy 6-3 and 195 pounds, get, is a native of Tonawanda. With
John specializes i n passing, but good size ( 195 pounds), and ex­
ceJJent speed, Butler eluded enemy
defensive men time after time to
get clear fo r the "bomb"! One of
the reasons Buffalo's running game
Co-capt ain Vern Huff (c ent er) leads UB track team In spirited drlll•, aa Aprll 20 open~r agaln,t
moved so well last season was
RPI at Rotary Field draws closer. ·
Tom's tremendo\18 blocking. Mow­
ing down tacklers while on offense
By JOHN KNIP LER
shape for o. tough seusrm. Due p1'&lt;&gt;vlngor the t~blllty of the parl·
an d stopping runners cold :from hi s
accellc111t,.ed ncademic ltlpan1. ThlK Is pat1icularly true
Member,, Of the UB u·ack .:quud to the
defensive comer slot, "Butts" has
of track, wheru the top spot in
lhe
past
progrnm
,
lhe
track schedule nlso
have
been
prncUcing
for
time and again proved hie fine
""c·h "vent may change dally, ac.
two we&lt;'ks In preparation for their bl'ginN earlier then
11s111111uul cording
football know bow.
ol
to lhe performance
first meet on April 20 ag-alnst Include,; 111any 111eels In " few t.•ftc.1h runner.
·rheretore,
wuny positions aro
RPI at Rolary Field, Fo1-LunJ1.tely, days _ 8 uncounlt•t'S Cl'lllllOICd
in­
the track was available for u ~e on to a purlod or 3 w1•ek8. One~ the ~lill nvaUable for either varsity
I.he eat·llest date In hi story, ~larch scuson bugins there wlll be lllllc 111 i'reahmcn runner;; who are ln.
27.
ll hua been paet CURlom tln•"1avtiil11bl" for practice or rust. ll n1~t&lt;'&lt;l in this keen comJ)etlton.
Vern Huff and Dnve Hcgh jumpers. sbot.putter,i, and
to dt!lay u.qe vt the cinder ovul Cu-caplalns
until the 2nd or 3rd week In April, Slephcm10n have paced the squatl l,ur\llcr;. nr·c .-pcclnlly netldccl,
clue to prevalllng
wet Ill ' ~11fl in workout s~Hi,11111~. Howcvur, H u•thnugh ull ,,ther evenl11 could
strengthened
by a greater
cond iti ons Of the track.
Is still too early lo be able lo h"
Coach Emery Fisher has 1:aken pn,uict who will b" uutstw1,ting n11111bero[ parUoip11nu1. Suttlclent
advantage
or this early dalLe to in each event. Any torn, of athlcli~ 1,me remains to develop the proper
begin whipping his charges Into r:::&gt;mpetltlon requires n repeated eondlt ion for compeUllo n.
QUARTERBACK JOHN STOFA
HPR

is equally elTective. with h1• fak­
ing and running. Analogo\18 to a
magician , the Ice Man's duing
play calllnir has pulled several
close games "out of the hat" for
the Blue and Whi te.

-

i Groups
ViieforPalowitz
Award;

..

WINGBACK TOM BUTLER

SigEpLeadsWith286½Points

Butler is ambivalent on whether
to -go to work in the buaineBII after
gr11duat lon or to go on to law
As the Intramural season dlraws
school. However, these plane could to a close the Palowitz Award for
be disrupted te mporarily, for Tom the winner of the race for th1e top
is also pro material.
overall standing is still up for
grabs.
Five fraternities
remain
within twelve points of one an­
other with only three sporto re­
maining.
Rece nt reeult,
have orily
serve d to tighten the race. Big
C:p copped the cha mpions hip in
th e ,;quash competition, rou~,w1:d by AEPi. 'fhe inclividim•I
champ ionship matcli proved to
be a carbon copy of la.et year's
These are but a few of
matc h, aa Andy Feldma n of
AEPi defeated Fox Ferrell of
of tM specialties at the
Sig Ep for th e top apot.
This year's wrestling toumnment
proved to be the most succe1ss!ul
ever, considering the numbe 1r of
entrants and quality of the compe ­
tion. Each match was hard fo~1ght,
with the winner well desw-vin~; his

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anddad all you're d01ng
(01 not
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lower everyevenong
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,nd all daySundJyblra lowIUI
ma11ycalls
v,rllttllf'.leHYori,Stale
Jlter 9 00 pm.

• NewYorkTelephone

victor-y. Jim Ryan, the supervisor
of the workout sessions and coor.
dinator or the touTnament deserves
much praise for the fine effort he
put forth ,
Beta Sig increased its overall
point total by captur ing the team
championship with 94 point s. Sig
Ep was next w,itb 72 points, fol­
lowed by AEPi (62). SAM (38),
und Alpha Sig (37). Enroute to
its title, Beta Sig produced three
inclividuul champions: Melnick won
lh&lt;• 130-11ound class title, Merrill ,
the 137, and Lambrix, the 157pound championship.
Other wi nners were: 123Evallll, Sig Ep; 147-C riepln,
indcµen dent; 167-PettJt, Sig
Ep; 177-, Gray son, Ph i Ep:
191- Pryzylyblisk, A,lpha Sig,
and heav yweight Gerson,
AEPi.
The overall standings, including

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HOUSE Y,M.C.A.
356 Wut 34th St. (nr Ninth Ave)

'-!!!1

NewYor1c,
H. 1. Phont: oxford5-5133
(One Btoi;:~from PennSt•Uon)

0 0 F I

the wresLling tonrnument, of the
top five fraternities is 1111!ollowa :
Sig Ep, 268\,lr; AEPi, 267: Beta
Sii,r, 267, SAM, 258; and TKE 266.
As I~ evident hy the present stand.
in~~. the cup cou ld belong to any .
ono of these !raternltlea, depend ­
ing on the results or the flnnl three
sports.
All entrl~s for the softball
league must he handed in at the
i11tromurnl office no later tha n to­
day, Play will begin next week, If
weather conditions are right. No ­
tices for fencing entries will be
placed in l he gym soon for the
tournament under the direction or
Coach Schwnrt.z.
A meeting of all &amp;ports managers
will be held this afternoon at S :80
in room 322 of Clark Gym. Dis ­
cussion will center about
the
n wurtls night, the softball league,
and th e overall point ata nding a.

�PAGE
TWELVE _________
:.=:!!:...:..:!.;~,!:_

..:..,_
___

SPORTSCIRCLE

_

,-

NLRace
ToBeTight
Again

S PE C T ~~-R U Ml
___;::..:_.::_;::....,:_

By go~h. If Bill Veeck can confidently step forth, Jlllff out his
&lt;'hrsl, push in his belly, and pick lhe Met..q for last JllMe, so can I.
With this brave beginning U need courage - Walt Alston me.de a llal'
ou t of me Ill.lit year\ so beglnR our gaze Into the major league crystal
hflll for 1963. This week's review will be confined to th e forl!toom!ng
Nattomll League •race, while next week's column wlll review the ten
1·lub ~ in the Junior circuit.
The Chicago CubH could wcll be an improved team this year, as
they have finally seen the error of their ways and sett le(l for only one
manager (they prefer to call him the head coach), Bob Kennedy (no
relation, !11.l
r prislngly enough, to you know Who) . But the Bruins have
still not oleaned house on eccentricity-as
111evidenced by the presence
or 11.tllletlc &lt;llreotor Colonel Rob ert V. Whitlow. Rah Rah Rah, sis
boom b!Ah humbug ,
Atlrl ou~ly, though, Chi cago has Improv ed Its pit chi ng corpR
1101t111
wh 11t with the acquWtlon ol Larry .Jackson (16-ll) and
n;lb.wer Llnd,Y McDaniel from St. Louts. The third 1161M)alot
has 1-11 l'lol•tered by ~ addition flt Stev e Boroe, wblle old
rt•lbl.ble Emie B11nk8 will be back at Ui,e inltlal sacl&lt;. OUier
Cob ata hvarls inc lude .NL "Rookie of th e Vea1"'Ken Hu.bbs at
IIOOO
ncl, outfl,.ld f'r BIiiy WIii iam~ &lt;.298), a nd infi elder Ron
Sa nto ( 11 l10mt.,rs).
On the debit side. however, ls an undistinguished pitching stact
C!IC11plteI.he new hurlers) nnd I.he l oss Of top hitter Georg e Altman.
l..arge question marks a.re two rookie ou e)llers (Billy Ott and DBJ\11,Y Murphy) and the fate of the club's mnnerous winte r deals.
Cln oln nat1•~ R ~'Clijappear to be as st ong 5 ever n.nd are definite
g staff. Bob Purkey (a
pennant contende rs again with a solid pl
23-game winner) heads the list and Is followed ,by Joey .Jay, Jim
O'Toole, nn/1 firemen Jim Brosnan and BUI Henry. There Is consider­
able 11upport at the p111te,too, with the like~ ()f Frank Robinson (.34 2).
Vada PinBOn, and Gordy Coll'lllnn.
'l'llo Reds' main problem last season was Lhe bU:lel&lt;Idefense, as
t hey we1'C tied for last in double plays, This factor and the need for
(or more baltJng power to match that of the GiantA! and Dodgers
must be overcome. New faces include first baseme.n Harry Bright,
Uld solve
J)llcber J4m Owens, and rntcher J e.sse Gonder (wht, CI.\
Clnc l's prob lems behl.nd the piste).
Hou"ton bo1L1t
t11 a su bf'!tan tia l mound ~faff with Dick
l"arrell, Rub Rru ce , KPn .Jobn Mon, and Don &amp;'lcMah1m ; th &lt;&gt;
l'lub'H d1•ron!k1alM1a p11C11rss table , l'ot, a lack of battlo g power
(pa rtirubl.r b' lh e long oall variety ) l:fr,1t1pe.1'8 th o Colt,1,'
&lt;'tlU 'II', No one on tlhi- clu b mnnaged to hit ,800 In 1962. Vete ran
AL batting uhamp r ote Run.nels could brlghwn the p tc turo,
howrv er. New Jto UMton pll\YOl'IJ Includ e outfle ld111'8Manu el
Motu , Carroll Rl'J'liy , Ellls Burton , a.nd qui ~ a f ew rooki es.
'l'he l ,A. DodgorR, as usual , n1·e titans t nol tJhe New York klnd,
11leMe) on paper, with players !Ute Tommy Davis (.346), Don Drys­
clale (25, 91, nnd Maury Wills (a record 104 11tolen bases}. Th ey are
.101id In 1111nrea~ (pitching, power, defenRe, and speed) and have depth
ln boot, e&gt;&lt;cAr,t on •the mounrl .
Ever;yc,ne •s AUii trylng Lo figure out how they llt.erally "blew' '
the 1062 pennant . Many dla111onclexperts attMbute It lo n lack of team
l:IJ)lrit. lr this ~ true. lt appears t.o be the club' s only serious $llo11..
com!ng - 11.ndIt could result In a managerial switch 11'smooth sailing
ctoesn't come enrly, Bill "Moose" Sl{owron, rookie hurler" Jack Smith
and Dick Scott, 11s well as Infielders !{en McMullen and Nate Oliver
llre all new faces on the Los Angeles roster.
Mllwtrnkc t1 t 1ss lht• i,anu; old ~tu ndb y5: Warro n S111i'1n
(11n 18-g am " w1nnt,r bu t &gt;U ycaTs old ) an d Lew Burd ette 1111
dto lllli; Rank Aaron l¼ntlEd )bthew11 at t he plat &lt;i, But out­
r.ldi, of th e,w vPIPra n~ nn&lt;l tlw ilu p reijMh't&gt;hurliJJ A' nf Bob
1' lt ll11 ( l li-9 ), th l' l ra m n&lt;'••d• plt el\lng an d batting pun ch In
to,,
, 1•t1HMd to book up t~u uglog vctcfflllll,
Thi' Braves IORt Joe Ad cock and acquired flycha&amp;?r Don ,Dilla rd
u nd reliever Frank Funk in a trade with Cleveland. Yet. first base­
man Norm Larker Md left'y .Jim Constab le (16-4.) at Toronto) could
bol~ler the Tribe more omphaticlllly , FJery Bobby Bragon. the club' s
new pilot, must ga 1nb le on his young players to come through nr Mil&lt;ContJnued on Page J;J)

Buflalo
leersTopBrockport
Stole

I

------

-

Friday,
April 5, 1963
-

Kr:awc~yk,Plezia Captain Bulls
---....;

By Jim Baker

C1111ler Dt1n Oorney ·s 3-goul
"hat.trick''
aupplled oU tbe scor Ing power ru, UB defeated Drook J)()rL State 3-1 la.et Satur day night
Rt Fl . Et'l e. The T~nglefl ar e U10
winners Of th e F'logt&gt;r Lllke Hookey
C:&lt;\l
tfere nre for Ibis sooso n.
(:MIII' Ken She r ry turn ed In a
Nlllt-adld performance In th e nets
fur th e 1\ttlls. Ken Is n former
lluffalo M lJNY J,eogue All.Suµ-.
A&gt;lllels (TI&gt;m Je rry Doherty
nnd j
,John Clm brl aleo aided the rause
,,1 co11,
•h Karl Dnllnnd'a ,,row.
This wa.. Ull's las t gume for
1111
.. 11ouMn. Th e tcnro wns atll rt ••d In Novomt&gt;er and saw lls way
tlll'Ougb Jn¥Y
dltr ic ulli ee; l11te
&lt;H:30 p,m.l pracll&lt;'e&amp; Lit Ft. Erle,
vny1ni: for Its own Ice tltne, &amp;nd
Jll"O\lldlnr. Its ()Wn ,,qut11men1 Fut­
'""' 1•!1111
~ call ro, m!lmbershlp
l,n
lh&lt;' ~'mg1:r J,,'\.kes Con f Prence
(pen din g gra oti.og or 11 budftCl by
1he Stud ent SPnatc. l

-----

Rogular 1&gt;layers ror UB are :
I&lt;e.nSherry, H0'\1'1&amp;Sapeton
r.en ler · Irwin Pastor, Dau Gorney, Hichle Daffner
J,l'fl \\'Ing: Jerry Doherty, Ray
Moly k ~, .loh.n Vnr-y , John O'Marn
Right \\'ing : ,Ji m Mogan, Deu nis i\111\nl,Ca rl Wnrn eke, Bnrry

Goal:

I&lt;lelr ,

Drfensa .l11h,11tteakes , nnn Leo.
Clmbn,
Rlr.k
hnrdl.
John
8hlerl, llkk ullllb. Mike Wh et1111. Lurry l'olon

Senior hurler
.Tim Krawc1.yk
an d third b!l.sema.n Bob Plezia
hav e been chose n on.ca.plai n~ or
defending
chnmplon
lh~enr'
8
b~J
Bu lls. This was announced
after a team vote o n Monday .
The Bulls finished
first In the
WNY Confe r ence laRl seaso n,
The team ha a been worki ng ou t
daily at Clark Field in prepar­
ation for April 16 opener here
against
ECTI.
Following'
this
contest the Bulls will play 16
games in 24 days. 1n an lntra­
~auad pa.me Monday
the OB
varsity turned back the B..squad
by a 6.2 count.
Gerry Montemarano st.an-ed for
the varsity with
a homer
am!
triple, Dlck Mandel) of the B.
team tumed In a top..:fllght per.
formance wl!h a triple, double,
and single in four tri ps to the
plate. On the mound Dave Ba ld­
win sto le the shO\V by turning in
a four-inning stint ot no-hit ball.

'jl

Afteryou'remarriedawhile,theysay, you beginto lookalike.Whywait?

All you married guys gather roun d. (The
rest of you just sltand there and learn '
somethlng.) Get a new Univer sity Fashion
Sport Shirt by Arirow-with a match ing
Lady Arr ow shirt for your wife. Muted
prints in a wide r:ange of colors.
Button-down collar. Back collar button.
Back pleat. 100% long-staple cotton.
"Sanforized" labeled. Short steeves.
Devilishly clever way to tell the campus,
"This doll's mine."

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Whereveryou go you llookbetterIn

-ARRlJW.--

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..

(CONTINUED

,

waultee wlll continue

PAGETHlllTHH

S.PECTRUM

Friday, April 5, 1963

FROM PAGE 12)

its downward

University ln Cambric.Igo, MBA~­
achmctts
\\1lere coach Schwo.tU
bas pledged ''Improve our te&amp;JTI
s10J1&lt;Ung". In his own w&lt;&gt;~ "It
I~ nice Lo have an AJI..Amertcan:·

trend of recent years.

I don't care 11the Blsons tlo have a working agreement with them,
the New York Mets will fin1sh last. The only record this team stands
a .:ihance of breaking Is I.he 120-lost. mark it set 18.!lt iseason. Whlle
u,e tong.ball profklcncy
of Frank Thoma.s and the hurUng of A.I
Jnckson and Roger Craig provide some strength, the teo.m Is woeflllly
weak in power and pttching and desperatel,y needs a oompeLent key­
~tone combine.' Ion. Catcher Nonn Sherry. Infielder Larry Bumgi'\t,
out fielders Duke Snider and Dick Smith (all acquired from LA).
And pi t chers Tracy Stallard and Wayne Hawldns should bolster the
6qund somewhat.
·
'flw PlliUl~s uf Phlladdphiu uppeur W be oo their Wl\Y UV
tl_,t NL ladder , uut , a hwk uf pit chin g depth behind Art llla.­
haffey ( 19- 14) Is sti ll an un ~olved probh •m. They boast plenty
or p •1wt•r. with tour play ers who hit at least 20 c1rcult cloutB
1111962. They 11.N' Don l)l)meler, (29), John Calliso n (23), Roy
Siever,, (2 1), 1&gt;11d Tony OonwleH (20).

The Lean\ also own,i a soUd outfield and a sound leader In MAna­
ger.ot-the-Yeu.r Gene Mauch. Don Hoak has blle11acquired from Pitts.
burg'h and shOuld lighten the Phil's defense at the hot corne r , whlle
(up from Buf: also adding a real "holler guy," Rookie Jobin ,Hennsteln
falo) could provide even rrmre Jong-ball prowe!l!I.
Pllti;burgh's l'lratt"i. have be&lt;:ome i,ne of the fastest clubs in the
league through trade~ and the arrival ol several rookies. Outf'le lder
Ted Savege, ~hortstop Julio Gotay, and third baseman Bob Balley
311 fall into this category. other slreng'lhs include a ,first-rate out.
field, All-Sla1· k1:.y,ilone sacker BiJI Maze!oskl, and good overall team
lJalsnce.
The main weakness ls 11 sho r tage of "qualily" mound performers.
~fore reliable starters are needed to support Bob Friend (18- 1'1.) and
Al McBean (1::i-10). New acqui11itlon11Don Sohwall and Don Co.rdweJI
~nulc.lhelp here. The Buos have a new catcher In Jim Pagliaronl and
a revamped infield that has been built arotJDd Maz eroskJ. A key
quesllon la whether rookie Bailey, Donn Clendenon, and Dick Scho­
field can Rucceed 011in.eleld regulars.

NL c.iuun11 San Jo
' rnnclsco has Jack Sanford, Billy O'Dell, a.nd ,Juan
Marichal (who combined for 61 victorle11 last. season) back again to
l!ead a solid front.line pitch'Lng staff. At the plate the likes of Willle
Mnys. Orlando Ceperl11. Felipe Alou, und Harvey Kuenn provide t.he
Glo.nts with hitting to bum. Unlike the Dodgers, SF Is noted for Its
intense will to win. Which was p01•haps the key factor In the team 's
1962 succellll. This is certainly a tribute to skipper Alvin Oark's lead­
ership abllltiel!.
moJor ooet1l ao­
11000nd b88e on
defenso . Th., retun1 of Joo Amalfitano oould solve tbl'I prob ­
lem, bowever. ~e bulJpon situation could Ile improved by til e
twqulsltlon of Jal'k Fishl'r and BIiiy lloort rrom Ba.Jtlmot-e.
,:ut,er .,out d s l"o ~"l't&gt;ly the OIDnts wlth onot her ,'l\luabte
st:11.mr.
pelLI'

Tht• Giants' Wl•akt1e11."'-'•(but not really
In tb1&gt;depth of tft elr plt.ohlng and at

St. Loui s owns an excellent. combination of yout.h and age which
provides the club with a well-balanced roster. Many observers belleve
that the Carda posseSII sufficient hltt!ng anc! pitching talent to go all
the way this ~!IJ'. '11he plate forces are led by agelCllll Stan Mu slal
&lt;.330), Bill White (.324}, and George Alliman (.318) . Yet, the club
ijtlll needs a blg 20.game winner 11.fidstronger support from IJle bull­
pen.
The additions of Dick Groat at short and George Alt.man in the
nut.field bolster the team on defense and offense respectively . Rook1e
Ron Taylor could help the Re&lt;ft&gt;lrds on the mound, but t.hl.a big ques­
tion still remains: can Em.le Broglio, Bob Gibson, and Ray Washburn
develop lnto the consistent winners that St. Louis need s to finish
fil'lll?
196~ Flnlllh:
Suk ur'11 Folly:
1. San .Franel800
I. Lu~ Angelus
:?. Los Angeles
2. St. Lou.llo
S. Cloolnnatl
3, San Francl800
i. Pitt.burgh
-&amp;. Clnotnnatl
~- Milwaukee.
5. l"ltlladelpl:ja.
6. St. Lou.Ill
6, Plttsb1trgh
7. Phllade lphia
7. Chicago
8. Ho11Ston
II. Houston
9. Chicago
9, Mllwaukoo
10. New York
10. New York
While the first four positions sho uld be closely contested, the
Phlls end Pirates
won' t be too far baok. Chicago. H ouston, end
M1lwa.ultee should fonn a thlnl mo.jar d.ivislon. The Mets are In n
class by themselves.

Itt a field of 27

teat1U1, UB

Hours:

...

""What are th•
be•L style shh-ts for a fellow
who i• 11'9",on the sUm side,
and wcara dark rimmed
gla••es?"

rank­

,

PEPSI• TUM

15c

Bulton -,lown ancJ fall~, If
you're w.. a,t n r D&amp;&amp;'llral
shoulder d othlnl" __ and we
assum,. yo u aN!. Tl)py'II loolr
KC)od thr ou,rh dark rlmtne4

BLAZER
STRIPES

ur "")' othPr Kl_,

• • •

"A group or 11sgot on the
11ubje&lt;lt of bow• on hats.
Nono ol
could fl~'urP the
, reaeon, Did the hattere dO•
clde t!IJa!"
lo the day• or tht "lll'u~­
J&lt;,.i,..,,s, fightin g mt•n •t u~

ATYOUR
SERVICE

us

Tennis,M,ODel.• or loaf­

(oppo1lte

&amp; Poppero"I
&amp; Attchovlet
&amp;. Mudu oof'I

St&gt;Mnr&lt;I to br
nl f' 11 tout

I OU..-e

o, twe t t )
,
1 . ChNM , Ptppe,o"i
&amp;
Anchovle,
I . Chns.t. Pepperoni •
M.,tllroomt
9 . Ch-,
,_,,
011••
JO, Cfrll•... , ,.,_..rot1I,

,.,_.,

....

Smoll

IJ ••

l 1. Chu,cr,
Pt ppetGf'lf !
Andri,vte1 1
M111ftt00M•

l.1'

l ,11

1.• ,

I.JO

I

I.JO

1.10

1.30

''°
110
•• ':~r•

I .JO

AndiO¥fff

eo

1 J . CheeH,

1 s.

1,

on..

Atl

""

I •S

I.ts

I 45

10

I0

I.ts

1 ♦O

i.,o

&amp;

P~•t-0111,
Mu1h,..m1

ctt.... , ,.,~,. ..,,
Af'lchovl••,

le,9e

P•,,.ront,

Ptppcn
Anchovln,

,

»wordH pla)', l 'uu ,:11~~-••dIt.
Tlw moM rn , •.-r,,llln of thl"
&lt;'U,t,1m ls lht • bow.

. ..

UB )

Pepptot1tf'll ,
I,

AndlO'W'l~t

1• .' ChffM,

of

'

/

CLOTHES-ING NOTES­
N , ar ly 200 1nllllon .1wtatet.,
ln vv.rillUSstyli&gt;6llnd dr slgns
are turned out II y,'llr , • •
and gues• wh&lt;'re you'll find
the cream o( this erl.'p!
KJ!JEPS Your. SAH\T !N
-Tl: ck the tails Inside yQur
boxer ~horte and ynur shirt
won't l&gt;louse out iso ~aslly ,

• • •

loNJt

Cheot4,

a

,rood 11111,
,._. to
kN'p thi~ orim -

GOOD
EATING

'·'·"" I 2.
1.65
OUvtt

1.1'
I IS

~JI
1•

th&lt;'lr
ladlP•'
plm1w,i rak l•h l3• /'
In tlu•lr hah.

3262 MAIN STREET

6 . Chet&amp;« &amp; P•PP•" (hot

Mon. • Thur s.
6 - Midnight
Fri . • Sat.
4 • 1 A.M.
Sunaay
4 - 11 P.M.

why ran't tabrl~s be devel•
ol)(ld that never need pr,_
ing Bildl11J1tfor yean17" 8Jl.

Cllampua&lt;!Inrner

1. Ch~aR
2. Choffe
l . Chene

mlasllOI

to wl°'-tan(I 300
degreea heat,

$5.00

Ctte•w
S. Ch.e·t•

•

ala tor

witlun rc:ison.

$1.50
1.0

create mot,.

CP

ing, or boating or getting
the garden green I •• For
all these activities, stripes
QrC in seasonin a ihitt well

12•·

......I~f;

w . s. BSktl,

MEt~U
◄.

~

:\lay!&gt;(&gt; Wt&gt;'II have ~
travnll Actually',
th1• "mlrnr t.-" fJl&gt;.-111
are A"Ot1111,:"" rto~" to th 1'!141
fea-­
turt'"• On1,• r1'fflen1bor, fal&gt;­
rh •s must ht\\ "P poro•lty ua
dra(&gt;I' ,•a•lly or )'Oll'II ~ All
11nhn1&gt;11Y
Wl'llN'r,

In a mountain setting ou,lRlde
of Colorado Springs, fencers from
all over Ole ooun try competed
with the following results: Cnl­
umbla University,
first
place;
Navr, second; A1r Force Aoad.

SM•ll

MALECALL"

fO T HIO(lll

ed 12th, winning 28 bouts and
lo~lng 36. Jerry Mar shak ancl Joe
Fersch, who comprl~ed
the r e­
mainder ot the team, repre5imted
t.h Bulls in 8aber and foll. 'Each
!tnlahed 18th 1n their respecUve
weapon compe tition .

$1 .00
1,1$

CAMPUS

"I got a 1ckk..t ot the
1,tter predloUDg clo th•

Wilkcn;;on, who wa~ only one
br,ut shy of having mOl!t. wir1s in
ep.,e, was reluctant to dtscus1s his
achievement. He admilled (&gt;eing
very happy about II" und felt
that he "couldn't
lose with ,io
many frlenps, here llild at home
behind me." Wilkenson, who Is 11
sontor, concluded this season with
a record or 30 wins and 4 lo,sses,
Which he brought up to 60 8Jld 8
including
reg.Iona.I a.nd nl\lional
toumaments.

COLLEGE PIZZl:RIA
Fm DELIVERY
IF 2-9331

II

emy - ho st, 3ra, Individual honor~
went to Lustig of Columbia In
A lanky, Intense looking epe~
foil, Szentivant of Wayne Stele
ren&lt;1er who~e mode11Ly all but
in 8Sbcr, and Cl"Um of Navy lu
cunceals his l remendous tale~,t on
il,ter • collegiate fencing for t.hl~
the 111
tip, lived up to the h opeH
epce.
and expectations of bu: h his cc,u.ch.
Lu;;t wee11·~toumnm~nt end~ the
e~ and teammates
last wec lcend ,
wlrnn he. downed 17 of his 21 op. yenr. Next year's national champ.
ponenls
represllnl.lng
the
v~ry ionsh.ip will Ile held at Harvard
btllt the coll~gia.te nation hn s lo
offer, for n berth on the All-Am.
erlcan first learn.
by 8ryn11, MIUmllll

HOT
PIZZA

FASTSERVICE

i

BIii Wllken,1on work, out with Coach Sid Schwart2
( Buffalo Ew11l11g Neius Photo/

UB All.America"

1~=22\020

Mu11flf..-.Mt,

WAY

What's the dope on mbc­
ln,r pattf'rUll f What ,•eloNI
fo ,torether, 'l' ou'II f1o4

(fi...,6and

many othl!f 11rao•

II&lt;_.! tlf'J laJ)~l'OlN'l'
•
•&gt;&lt;:.l'k-lt nn ) •nr ~opy at
the SQ17Dtr. ~not&gt; r,
St\yder,
Ju a t ? 11111
11• 11nrth f&gt;f l' a mpoe

�SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

Friday, April 1, 1963

BullsScheduleO·hi10State,Purdue
UBRECRUITS
STAR
LINEMAN

Buffalo
Coach
Resigns
InDisgu\
Accepts
TopPosition
AtTokyo
Tech
In a startling and unprecedent•
ed turn or events yesterday otb­
lellc director "Ora nge" Peel 411.
nounced t.bat the football Bulls
Will tace two new oppone,nts In
the fall ot 1964. They are th e
Ohio State Buckeye,, and the Pur­
due Boilermakere.
"Orange'e" only immediate com•
me11t was: "I nm proud and d&amp;­
Ughted that we will be playing my
alms. mater."

Right after thle ehoolting an..
nouncement had IJeeo made, bead
11Tld coach Richard
Olrenmkle
handed in bia reetgnnlioo. "U we
cannot schedule better tea.ma than
tbe&amp;e:• he said, "then what's the
use of going ont I quit. '' Otfen.
sick le then related that he ,,ru
accept tbe head c011c:bing poeltlon
at Tokyo Tf.'C'b. elrectlve llnmedl,
atelY. /
.,. .... :-es____

''Flret

I cr\lnch

'em , then

I

munch

'em" boast s

Sameon. The atllr lineman at Podunk H lgh School an.
nounced yeaterday that he wlll enroll at UB In
September.
commenta:

Defena lve llne coach Buddy
"Thia le MY type of player -

Bryan
he's a

real ape I''
Basketball
mentor
Ben
added exoltedly:
"He's also a standout
ball,
Samson really Intimidate&amp;
you
boards - fouls an awful lot th ough."

.-.::,,,.,,.-.

Sla~·euetfnl
In b111ket·
under the

(Courfer•E%117'BSSPh.ot0$)

NewUBColiseum
ToBeDedicat~ed
n

Knees) BAT7rLER:
Qy SN IDE L Y WHIPLASH
thrown
out of Six cOll.llOOUtiVO TOM (Crny
baa been Heveral moot.he gnmcR for refusing to take off hl f! Crazy Knees !ICOre-•m08L at Job,n­

UB varsity aw lmm lng mentor Swim Stanford admtttad to 111the
ny' s. l"flme came to this tad early
world th at he haa been coachin g here all thne yeare unde r
In his college career agat11et the
f alee pretenaae. " I can't swim a atroke ," Stanford cortf-d
.
Syracuse freshmen, wben )Je threw
the ln!tmt · block, setting a Syta.
(11180 halfback
looae on a 6li ya.rd
touchdown ecanwer.
DINO GILBERTI:
Dino, 11 ]13uttato
boy. aa.t out la st seaaon because
he lransferred Crom Bologwl Un1Several stn ndouts on la.at ye&amp;T'B v-eretty where be also excelled at
Wrelltltng fans, that night has big belly unW he aublnlts . He
varsity who will be slu gging It out soccer. An able scntlbaclt, Dino
doesn't stand a chance.'"
on the grl&lt;U~o this spring are: consist(VIUY fools the defetkl!e •bY finally
Arrived. This evening ­
l\8 a refer ee and literally
PHIL (P ing. Pono) BEANIE. Beanle dreuloi;
When told Of 10ller'11 unmer clful
precisely
at
the
bewitching
hour
hos been anchor man (or UB at "wa lking 11wny with IL"
pJi.nR, Nature
Boy responded
of 8 o'clock - Nature Boy Buddy
GERRY
RATKAWITELE8
ER
O8.
his left taakle slot tor I.be past
·•Wal t'll be gets a whiff or my
Bryan
will
KOWITZ:
Gerry
IA
UB's
()fn
der­
climb
tnt-0
the
ring
to
Lwo eeasons As top man on the
ermplt. Be11ldee, Killer won't even
th&amp;t
Villainous get the chance to use bis hold .
"Cbl,nese Chickens'', Pbll hM caught ella story peraonltled. Thi• at.end• do battle with
beast
ot
the
east,
Killer
Kau110r­
fast
lad
was
cut
tour
cooeocut-lve
the attention of every l)Ollce f()("(le
Just after tbe re feree TIJJTWelghed
in the Eaat. Th e way , be lets trllL­ years from his .high &amp;chool team urki .
gets throug'.b Qving bis puhll m•
flt
on
bec11use
bis
name
wouldn
't
tlc tbro11gb &lt;hieMle has reaulted lo
Pre-bout publiclty has tonight's
!nary
Instructions,
ah'll
forc e
Scouted
on
eiancl
l
ot
the
prognun
,
match built up to fever pitch, as Killer to shake bands wilh me
many job offers-as a policeman.
LANCE GURGLES: Lance's cour. fllAY, Ratlcn - - decided to accept both gra.pplers
vow a no.holds- ' Then ah'U just squeeze him tn
age and aggreseiveneBB earns him an exnml)le ot l'ortltude (tba.t Is In barred tussle to the bitter end . dea-Ui. They don't call me Bud dy
mu ch 11ralae. Saye bis girl, "~ace's reference to Gerry's never-11ay.dle Klller, In bl8 customarily cocky for nothtn'._Just feel those bulgtn '
aultude .)
t.'OU rnge and Ag{l'.yss1veneB11ooro.11
fashion, has predicted a quick and btcel)!!, man. Ow. not ao bard! !'.
Ko ac. UJtdlgnlfied finish to Nature Boy's
At any rate, Nature Boy had
him much pral ll'I! '. Lanoo's fllJlt DON (KP) PEABRAIN!
QllfCk NIVIO'II'.
In local mat circles. better not show up .In hi s usual
moves make him a coDJ1tant threat. quired this connotation ~y knock­ popularity
Ing a foe out cold with onl,y ono "I'll k:tll hunt BDYI the lnfam. barefoot outfit tonight, as Kill er
ll'irat or all, t.be Spectrum aalutos JOHN ( L ong John) SOFA: Sora
sweel)lng foreorm - Lbe dl1'fleulty co.a Ko&amp;. "Wall'U he gets a load baa perfected a new mllJleuver e.-.
head val'ltlty mentor
(whatever enrned his nickname by ,wearing
being that he was plaYiDl!r eott- of my unstoppable
"I ell}! It th•·
annplt hold! pecbllly for him.
that meane) "'l)oc" Ottanabam. Doc his Long Johns lo 82 consec utive
1&gt;1111
at the tbne .
When the bell rtnga r cha .rge out &amp;tomp,'' Koz chi.rps. "I may decid ~
I~ fnmoue Cor his fancy version g11mea, rrom grammar 11CboolunUI
1'he alumni game proml11ee to ot my comer, grab a tlstful of to use Uils approach lf I can't
Of the belly eerll'B Wthlcb some Ute present without ever a hlot of
be one or 1.be be~t In UB'e history. halr and pull him to the mat . get ahold of h1a "curly" locks
people say he picked up dunug s11splclon [rom bis coe.cbea. John
Outstanding varsity stars ot. today
one ot hie Jaunts to the Palace claim ~. "'lt Rhore gets cold out pitted against outst.andfng ,,aralt,y Here 's where l apply the hold . Then comes the armpit hold and
lt' a a well-known fact that Brylln • well, you know the reet."
thor,"
Theater.
stars or long ago alway&amp; 1resulta ls scn.eltlve In the area of the arm.
Once a.gain, match - tim e I,
In
plenty
of
thrills,
excitement.
and
Coach l311Jy J oe (Tex) Rayon "BACK" SIM BA: Back is a &amp;peedy
pits, so I 'll merely start tfckllng
SIBted for 8 tonight. The pre linl·
oonslllutoa the bead t.ral.ner ot
and llnament. An advance eiale of him there Uke crazy . u thlB dOOlln't !nary bout between Black J ark
Ou a na ham• 8 ramoua "CbineH nnd hard ruul'llng heJffllack trom 76.000 tlclrets hos been anoou.nced
work (but it will) , I'll just get Dul l and Gloria gets unde rway
Ch ickoo a'• line or defenalve 811e. ncroYa the border - North Tona • by p11
1bllclty director Bill Ever­ up and jump up and down on his at 7 :30. One fall and he's finish ed
otalleta. As an All-South guard wnnda . Orten &lt;tbe coacb&lt;le are beard ahari,, eo be sure to gel Ro the
tor Rebel UnlTerstty, Tex waemumbllng. "Go 'Ba~lt• 81)ba, back!" Coliseum on J.{me.

since the mellow lones of era.ahIng bolmelil, 1wooeh1Dgforearuut,
guaht,ng blood, ood cruuoblng bones
have echoed through the field ol
U,B.'s new 80,000 capa.ctty B.S.
Too )fomorlal Collseum. That Is,
tooiball time ts here on~ more.
This lt&gt;&amp;r tnllrks the fln&lt;t alumni
ganK&gt;to bP played nt the B.8. Too
M4nllor!AlOoll.eeum.
'l'be 11layere will glve tbeir beRt
ell:orta 11piru,t th e old Bull at.are
because oc tbe game'e etgnlftca.nce.
Dedication ooremonte11 at ha.lftfme
wlt.b Mrs. B. S. Too Will be In
order. It muHt be remembered that
the tote Mr. Too courageously loet
bll lite Wlllile boldlng bis breath
(a,, Instructed)
'll'hlle authorities
wndered over building a decent
tootbaJl sladlwn.
Sln&lt;:e movies of our gTid favor­
ite&amp; mullt. bo Blipp ing Into the Un•
con11clous by 11o,w-, tbla wrtor in ­
tends to retreeh memories by a

ten gallon hnt.
t leud frosh coach Hewey Dewey
has been 11aslgned tbe task Of mold­
Ing a grou 1&gt; Of over-weight nod
trlghtened alumni Into a well or•
ganlzed football squad. When ask­
ed to camme nt on thla, Dewoyenld,,
"Are Yoll kidding fella!''

Kill~~
si~;;~;id
'ci~i~s
~ Bold
ForMatch
Tonight
WithNature
Boy

Interview With ''Orange'' Peel
By B. D. IZE

about brings us up to date. Now
what was it yo u wanted to ask
A beatnik 1'8porter from New me ?"
York City made the mistake of hia
ttz2zzt.zzziz"
life the other day. He unwittingly
caught athletic foehrer "Orange"
"Goel!
damn It.. th&amp;T"e'II be no
Peel in a tallc&amp;tive mood in bill o!­
fire - at1d th.la (a.a all experienced sleeping in my office. Wake up!"
reportel'll know) is a fate worse
"Cool It m11n. Now aupl)Olle l aak
than death.
Well, the dialogue the questions and you give with
went 10rnetbing like thia:
the comebacks. Do we connec t ?"
"hey there, cat, what's new at
"Goeh d .•. "
thla here DniTenlty?"
"Now not 10 faat there, young
''Great! Now what's green on
man , we haven 't talked about Pur - thi 6 scene, dad ?"
"Actually, there has been a de­
due yet,.''
velopmen t here that we in the ath ­
"P urdue!
Man, l don't figun 1 letic department have been pushing
how ••• "
tor many yeara, We are ftnally
"'Yon mean I've never told you going to iret our tleldhouee. You
about 1n.Ydays al old P, U.? Well, know that new dormitory
tha t's
J111tyou tit back and let me start auppoa ed to be goinr up! That's
from the bea'i.Dninr
. (Two hours no dorm - It'■ our new fieldhouae.
pue)
, .. A.lid that ls how t be­ It 'll eee.t 8,UOO un d wlll
be
c.ame.an AU-A tnerican. Now afte• t&gt;m1
ippl'd for basketball,swimming,
&amp;,'Ta.duu
Jo11, J
• • (Two IX!Onl wrestli nir, fencing, and hockey hours pa11) , , And that J11tt ,-!Lb an Indoor µoa.elLclrclinr lh~

whole playing area."
"What about the ROTC will they be hou sed?"

where
·

"Who needs 'em? I told them
where they could go yesterday, but
you wouldn 't be able to print it."
"Bow much will this new atruc ture coat, Orange?"
"That's the nice part about it
ell - it won't cost a cent. It's be­
Ing donated by the state: tax-free."
"You're puttin' me on, dad."
"Yes, and now I'm puttlm' you
out. You have my permission to
take a shower before you 'leave ."

"Ugh!"
This, dear readers, ia th,e only
time that "Oran ge" Peel has ever
ejected a liatener from one of his
famed orations.
But then •rain,
another report.er - a rookie at
that - wu waiting eagerly to see
the Boilermaker beauty u Oijlrbeat
friend with~red out Pte doo,·.

Heck, playln'

football

for

Offenaiclde

11 eny .

Just a load of laughs!

No rulM

-

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>EXTRA

EXTRA

STATE K1DERGARTEN

EXTRA

ft

NEW YORK AT BAFZXESVILLE

SPEXTROM
VOLUME 104

BAFFLESVILLE, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1963

219 Vacation Days
Slated For 63-64

Spectrum To
Be Abolished
The Publications Board at its

meeting last week voted to abolish The Spectrum. In its latest action the board labeled the weekly
paper as being “left wing” and “un-

By WISHET WERE

The board also recommended that a new publication be
set up that "follows administration
policy a litte closer”.
The board went on to cite some
of the "many abuses that the student publication committed”. These
included incorrect dates on the advisement, poor pictures of faculty
members, and Incorrect reporting
of such important issues as the
new fountain, bowling alleys and
the alumni tug-of-war, A further
source of criticism resulted from
the misspelling of some of the

stable”.

faculty’s names.
Aippcationa for editor of the new
publication should be turned in
now. 'Hie following should be included with each application: three
recent pictures, family history,
listing of hobbies and interests,
results of physical examination,
quality point average, brand of

deodorant, results of psychological
examination, and year and model
of car driven.

Accidental Attack
Disrupts Classes

Triumph entrance parade of

Benedict Air

Society at

Los Angeles In May, 1962

National Convention To Be
Held In Buffalo May 41 -43
By Field Marshall
Benedict Air Society, a national
honorary ABRNTC organization, is
having their annual convention
in Buffalo this year. This year’s
convention will be held May 41-43
at an as-of-now unnanounced place.
The above picture shows BAS opening day ceremonial parade in Los
Angeles last year.
Among the varied activities
scheduled this year are: Saber
swallowing, parties, trips over Niagara Falls in barrels, parties, a
military ball, parties, a mock Cuban invasion, parties, demonstration of wooden sword making, parties, and many recreational events
to relieve the pressure of constant
mental work.

At exactly 6:35 am this morna crack Air Force Flight
Team, composed of six generals
and a private, pressed the gold
plated, security locked booby
trapped Panic button In a carefully arranged drill by accident.
Immediately all our forces were
alerted to an enemy attack of the
first order, bombers and fighters
screamed into the air, and one of
our fastest, most modern ICBM’s
left its silo at Cape Cavernal.
With this flourish of history
making activity Buffalo took its
place among such well known
areas as the Nevada Salt Flats,
Several lectures will be givEmlwetok, Johnston Island, and
en during the three day conthe modern
Bikini Atol. For
vention. Some of the more imICBM headed directly for Buffalo
portant topics to be covered
with the impact area located in the
include: How to Avoid the
middle of the University Campus.
Draft, How to Throw SuccessThe results of the blast were
ful Convention Parties, How to
catastrophic. The campus was
Meet a General’s Daughter,
reduced to a mass of rubble. AcheThe Art of Drinking, Shoeshinson Hall looked as though it were
prothe
midst
of
renovation
in
a
ject. The engineering building was
bare
reduced to
cement block
walls. The tower looked a a a bomb
bad hit it. And a huge era ten was
formed Goodyear.
Tli initial radiation also had
startling effects on the campus
vegitation. All
the flowers
the
destroyed, and
landscaping was completely ruined by
trenches and) mud hole 3 strategically placed around the campus
to look as if someone had planted
a sewer pipe,
i Finally, the roads were heavily
damaged by the shock waves from
the blast. They looked like they
hadn’t been paved in years. Some
of the ruts were large enough to
swollow a small VW to say nothing of careless pedestrians or
police dogs. To sum this view of
the University after its participation in this accidental Nuclear
test: it looked like the before pictures in a clean-up, paint-up, fix.
up campaign.
At hi3 press show hastely, called for 9:00 am. this morning, the
President had this to say, “Ask
GROUND ZERO
not what you can do to your
move
forward with great
country
must
country, but what your
can do to you.” He added, “We viga’ to eliminate such needless
ing

No. 99

in—Good or Bad?, How to Use
Bribes for Promotion, and Second Front Jobe in the Service.
The members of the BAS chapter
at UB have been working very
hard for several days planning the
Convention and only one small detail was overlooked: where to hold
the blasted convention. At this
writing plans for renting No-Tell
Motel, Badyear Dormitory, AlLanehurst Apartment 6785432-B,
the Boulevard

Mill,

Mlnlt

Car

Wash, Big Brothers, and the Buffalo Private Zoo are under frantic
consideration.
Another minute detail has popped up recently. BAS made a concerted effort to obtain female dates
for so many cadets expected to
attend the convention dance. The
results were rather disappointing
until yesterday when 1436% applications from Scagsville U. were
received. Now BAS needs escorts
for another 1433% girls.
Best of luck for a successful
convention fellows!!!!!
drains on our economy as educational institutions that rival Harvard and Caroline’s kindergarten.
"Con’tnuing,
he
added, “The
SPECTRUM did not see fit to
support my brother In his Senatorial race so I cancelled my

subscription.
I realize that I will be accused
of news mangeling but I am
President, and if anybody complains I will ask Bobby to send
troops in to restore order.” Con-

the President declared,
“I will continue to support MacNamera no matter what his armed
do to maintain
forces must
efficiency and their combat readi.
ness in the face of the overwhelming communist threat so close to
our borders, even if it is just what
I told him to do. Next pro-adminis.
tration reporter please.”
cluding,

The administration announced
today that the fountain In front
of the Union will be used as a
wading pool for the students.
The new law goes into effect as
soon as warm weather arrives.
In addition the terrace around
the pool will be equipped for
sunbathing.

The new calendar for the coming plenty of time to drive there and
academic year was announced to- back, as well as allow some time
day. The new calendar states that for fun and frolic on the sand.
school will open for the fall semesBecause there have been some
ter Oct. 14, thereby giving stu- many complaints about seniors bedents free time to enjoy the warm ing burdened with both comps and
weather of Indian Summer,
finals, the administration haa deThanksgiving recess will begin cided to absolve seniors from both
Nov. 22 so that students who comps and finals. Seniors can conusually cut a day or two before re- sider it a graduation present.
cess can do so without missing
Instruction will end the last day
classes. The same is true for of April and exams for all students
Christmas vacation which is slated (except seniors) will begin the
for Dec. 13-Jan. 11. The adminis- second week in May. The last (jay
tration sees no reason to hold of exams will be May 18. This way
classes if students are only going students can have a long, long,
to cut the last few days previous summer vacation.
to recess.
Since no one enjoys coming to
To allow enough time for
summer school, students who sign
both students and faculty to
up for courses during summer sesrecover from the New Year’s
sion will receive credit for the
parties, semester exams will
course even though they fail to atcommence Jan. 12. There will
tend class. All that is required for
be a two week respite after
a grade of A is that you attend
exams so that students can reclass once, attend twice for a B,
cuperate, and second semester
and three times for a C.
As a special bonus to the sportwill open Jan. 31.
Spring vacation will last from ing enthusiast there will be no
March 6-21. This will give those classes the first day of both the
who intend journeying to Florida hunting and trout seasons.

Military Coup Shocks Campus;
Martial Law, Curfew Begin
By I’M A. SPY
Nuclear Reactor; big hole in the
ground!
In ojie swift action yesterday,
Chemlatry Building: occupied by
the 1TB ROTC overthrew the rebel troops. Chemists are being
“decadent, bourgeois, bumbling, forced at gunpoint
to make glue
and incompetent" administration for the Lepage Guns.
and thedr lackeys in the student
Engineering Building; also con.
government.
trolled by the insurgents.
The
A statement, Issued from the IBM computer was being used to
the
further
plan
new regime’s headquarters in
strategy (like who
Ratceilar, outlined the insurgent’s will win the World Series and algeneral policy:
"Whatever you so, how to cut taxes, raise spendwant we have and will promise to ing, and balance the budget at
you if you shut up and
Join the same time).
Eccchhi!”
us. If you oppose us
Hochstetter: only the obsemThe leaders of the revolt re- tory has been occupied (mostly
fuse to identify themselves, but by Allendream recruits.) The teleaccording to highly placed persons, scope has now been focused on
who usually know the reliable Goodyear.
Hayes, Crosby, and Foster: hays
rumors, the original plotters were
a small group) known as the all been leveled to provide a clear
They were suc- view of Goodyear.
Magic Monkeys.
Lockwood: rumors describe a
cessful In enlisting the support of
Blare’s Back-Bands by promising huge pile of books being placed la
them A’s in Air Science for their the main lobby preparatory to a
book burning rally.
cooperation.
Harrlman; was blown up to re.
In order to increase their
move all evidence of the faculty
probability of success the Inor those leftist persons who come
surgent created a disturbance
to college to learn.
in the Allendream area. This
The Small Dorms; were peaceconsisted of burning the “terfully occupied by revolutionary
mite infested hovels” to the
forces when the rebels announced
ground and street fighting unthat dorms would now become cotil the area police arrived.
educational living areas devoted
Then they used a Lepage Glue
to the finer things of life.
Gun to immobilize the police
units thus giving the campus
Tower: frenzied activity in the
area near the elevators indicating
forces an unopposed path to
that the elevators are being movvictory.
Their next maneuver was one ed to Norton to provide decent
im- service.
of extraordinary brilliance
mobilizing
ever-dangerous
Goodyear; still In royalist hands,
the
campus armed forces. According but rumors of revolt inside the
to the supreme commander of the dorm as the girls tear down the
rebels, a secret weapon was em- barricades set up by the RJL’s
ployed
arsenic flavored dog bis- and the administration puppets.
Norton: calm as nsnal with moat
cuits, which completely demoralthe “puppet forces of deca- activity going on In the Ratcellar.
dence.”
Rebel sources are reported to ha
The following are the reports trying to And a way ,to use all
pieced together from fellow POW’s the wax.glasses swept up by the
of the situation at various points slave gangs.
on campus:
The latest news from the InClark Gynj: total loss, burned terrogation room i s
"Don’t hit
to the ground, swimming pool me. I'm only a student, I know
nothing!,
Ailed with sand.
—

,

—

—

—

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                    <text>STATE VJIIVEIISITY 01' NEW YC.RK AT BVFrAJ.O
Bas ~ball Bulls
Prep For
Rugged Schedul e
(See Page 11)

SPECTJRUM
BUFFALO, N. Y., FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1963

VOLUME 13

Salisbury, Pulitzer Prize
Winner , Speaks Wednesday
' A New. RUSS la. ,
Aut hor Of
By LONI LE VY
Harrison So.llsbury. t'eClplent of
tho 1955 Pulitzer Prize/ for inter.
national reporting, will speak on
ca.mpus Wednesday ~der the aucom.
3plc-e'I; of the convocations
mlttce of the Student Senate.
Mr . Sa lisbury wlll nppenr
In th e JQllltt..purp o!l(l room at
S :00 a.nd will

discuss

''The

Emergi ng Oonm ct In the Com.
mnnlst World
Russia VM.
China.''

a non.fiction
na1T1i.tlve of the
socio.economic
condltloJUl, and
the reconstruction
of the Soviet
Union.
pt.ed
In 1949 , Sal t!Rlury 8,(lOO
the p081tlon of foreign oorres­
pond t•nt In J\l08()()W for .th e
N-,w York Tim es. He was one
of th e onl y re portars
who
mo.Jntalned n ptirsonal re J11,tloMhlt&gt; nith c.b$iliman Khrn -

!lhohev. During his stay , he
trnve lr d &lt;;derudvc ly through .
out RU!!Sla and Siberia and
lrnr 11ed th e languagi, flu en Oy.

There will be ample Ume allot.
ed for a question and answer
period. For those who would like
In lOM, he wrote a series of
lo talk further with Mr. SallSb\ll'Y,
1nticle8 entitled "Russia Review­
a. coffee hour has been provided
ec.·•which appeared In the Times,
in room 234- at the termlnatlon
of
These urtlcles were later lncorpo..
his lecture.
rated Into his second book, Am.
Mr Sa.UsbUl'Y began hi~ Cal'eel' t•rl&lt;~\ 11 In Ru sslu.
1S 11 reporter
for the Minneapolis
In 1961, he oompleted l\lost.-ow
Journ11I in 1928, upon hie grad.
Journal. an aocount of post-Stalin
uatfon from the UnJversil;y of
Russia, sequelled shortly there .
Minnesota. Within a few year!! .
.
after by A 1',,•w RWIMlu
he joined the staff of United Pres s
International
all a reporter and
HI~ latest book and also hiij
waa l!UbsequenUy appointee! fol'- firRt work of fiction , 'rtllO North
elgn .news editor Jn 1944.
t•rn Palmyra Affa ir , ls a narrative

H'ls first

book.

Rus•la

on th1i or the people of Leningrad
It Is lhlllr lov(j of their city.

Wf\Y was publillbed In 1946;

and

Sena tor KN tlng
Comments On Cuba
tSee Pago 61

No. 22

Model UNCouncil Council Modifies Calendar
Opens Here T~olay Intermission ..One FullWeek
Stevenson Wires

By LILLIAN W1LLIAMl9
The nrst model U.N. Seturlty
rouucll beld al the Unlver!!lty wlll
begin !!esslons al 3 p.m. tod.ay In
Butler Auditorium, Ca.pen Hall. The
R&amp;eond sessl.oo ot I.he counoll will
b6 held rrom 7: 30 to 10 p.rn,. this
evening, and tile program w:111re.
suOle tomorrow at 10 a.m .
The sessions will be devoted Lo
resolutlon11 proposed by tbe ,dJlferent delegations. ranging from the
J)Pacerut uses of outer space to
the queallon ot diVlded Berl'ln. At
the last Re&amp;slon. II crillq11e '111111
be
vresenled by a ·student tna,lorlng
In history and government.
The Idea for the model 1wuncil originated from a vl1lt: t o
the RuHlan Embassy by P,llke

I

Dr. A. L. Kaiser, director·ot Admissions an d Records
announ~d the new calendar for the coming academic year:
At its regular meeting th is month the Deans' Council
of the University voted to modify the 1963-64 academic
calendar.
The new calendar provides for
a tull week break between the end

of e:ramJnllllons tor the 11rst eem.
e11ter and 86COlld semester regls.
trnllon.
The Council took this aotlon on
the recommendation of the oaleu.
dnr committee wblch had been pe.
tilloned by the student welfare
colllllllttee or the Student Sena t e
to review the prevlouely ndopted
C'alanaar.
Steps hn\·e nleo been lnelltuted
by tbe Ottlce ot Admissions and
RecoTd&amp; to provide tor a more et.
tlclent handling of chnngea In pro­
gram ,beginning with the tall eeJllf'Bler. As students comp lete their
U.N. TELEGRAM
"Plense give the delegates my
advance registration tor next tall
cordial greetings.
The Un,lted over tho next several weeks the
DR . KA ISER
Nations needs their uuderet111nd­ AdmlMslons and Records Office wlll
lng and support. However eoc1U1. elalllP n number on the 11ludenlll dlvl.slonol otncea beginning IJ'rldAT,
Sept. 7.
schedule card.
pernting and Jmpertect Ha pro­
All stu de nta In senio r dlvl1lo1111
This &lt;'Brd will be a.n admlsaloo
coodlng8 may be. they remnln
essent111,Ito the elfort on wblcm t I c k e t to th&amp; gymnasium tor abould eecure their advleor'e • '•·
change ot registration
Sept. 11 1111tureon the change of program
our wbole future depends lb'l
In accordance with a nu.mooring tonn prior to Sept. 11. Unlven,lty
elfOl't to ffnd among t11enations
sobedule which will be published College ndvlsors will be available
u common ground on which
In The Spectrum lllld J)Osted OD 111 the gymna.slum Sept.. 11 e.u4
thoije who love treedom ma1
dwell In peace now. In Its pe­ nll bullelln boards ea.rly In Sept­ sign rorma on that day. Under.
riod of crisis and trial, e'very etnhPr 'l'he change or l)rogr11,m i:ruduate day cluHs will be can­
tormtt will be available In the celled.
voice raised In eupp0rl of the
U.N. 11dds to our srrength and
OFFICIAL CALENDAR - 1963.64
to our confidence In tbe out­
(E~cluslve of the School• of Modlclne, Dentlatry, Law a nd
come . Bost wishes tor a auc­
MIiiard Flllmcwe College)
cesi,tul aesslon."
1&amp;63 Summer 8eNIOn
,\&lt;llnl E. Steveu!!On

r Six Week Session .................... ._ ........ .June 10-July 19
Lapin, president of the Asaem"\..
ll She Woolc Seeslon -···· ...... ., ....•......July 1-Auguat $
bly. Accord ing to Mr. Lappin , )
Ill Rix V\'e('k Seaeloo ... .......... .......... July l!2-Auguat 80
the primary purpose of the
19" -64
program Is to utllli:e s tu dlent
First 6em"te r
k11owled9e of curre nt Interna ­
The annual Pa.nhellenlc Scholar . en who have maintained
den,, •,.
tional affairs and to dramatize
Orleotallon l&gt;nys
.... .......W . .Sept. 4-Th. Sept . Ii
,hip Tea will take place In the Uat averages tor two consecutlv,
Interest In the United Natlc,n1.
Registration Da,Y ............................_ .....- .................... ,.........._ •••._Th. Se:i,L I
Dorothy Haas Lounge. Sunday. &gt;;61nosters. · Recognition ls also giv .
TJ1e Sena.le plauR to create an InMruC.'tlon b11glns ,...... .. ....... ..,_. . ........... ........ ................. F. tiept. 6
between 3 and 5 p.m, The speake1 · en to the outstanding senior gir l 1nternnt1011alflle and to secure , U.N .
Cbaoge ot progra.111day ......................... . .... , . .. ···--····•"-•"'· ·W. Sopt, 11
who has attained U1e highest av .
wUI be Beverly Stone, a8lllstan1 c1age for l!even semesters, 'l'h ~ doctrines to fncllltate lhe purpose l..U•l day for resigning from n course without penalty ... ..~..F. Oct. 18
of
the
council.
dean Of women at Purdue Unlver . eorority with the high.ult uveragl •
W11rnln,:a due .... ... .. . -· ....... .... ... .. ...... ... .... .... ..... F. Oct. 26
Orou1&gt;s representing tbe v&gt;Lrlous Lae1 nay for making up i:-radee or Incomplete ...................... llf. NOT. n
slty. MISII Stone work!! close) .\ Is presented with the PanheUenic
a.re:
l
Jnlou
Bonrd
litecre­
countries
TlrnnkBl(IVID!l'n~ t ess begin~ at CI06e of C1Dll888........ ....... Tu . Nov. l!8
with the sororttiea on camp11s 111 scholarship bowl.
nllon committee - United su,tee: Classea resum ed
. .
..•..• ... M. Dec. I
Purdue .
Hill
College
Fr.ane1•:
Rosary
rn11tr11Nton ends ,,t ..t,1ee Cit clas ses a11d winter receaa begins
'i'hc Panhellenio Co~cll will al
D'Youville
College
Veoezuela
,
F. Pee. 20
The Panhe llen lc CounoU spo11. su present to an out.standing worn .
3ors the tea each year to emphn . nn. Greek or indepen&lt;kmt, a hun . Sigma Alpha. Mu - Norwa~· and S!'l1ool n( r.:duc·allo ,1 Sut11rd11yclft)!see tneot .... .R. l)(&gt;o. 21 and S. Jnn. 4
~lze the scholarship of the Un i. dred dollar scholarship, This award the&gt; T'bllipplne lslnnd ; Phi .Elpstlon Se111
81!ter t•XamlnntloM....
. ......, ...................M. Jan. 6--Tu . J&amp;11. H
verslty's Greek women. Pink car . ,,. based on service , need, an cl Pl - Ghana: and the Young Amor­
Second
s~meater
lr:1118 tor Fl'elMiom - NaU0111u.Ust
nations are presented to the wom . Ncholarshlp.
lh &gt;,: M ra tlon Day ... ..
..... .. ........ ........Tb . Jan . U
Chtna .
tnstru c·tlons Begins
...
F. J11n. !t
rn1aoi;e of program day
................................Th. Jan, 10
~Jl!.I.YPar eomm euee111
en t
.............. .................
s. Fob. !I
l•1Ht noy for resigning Crom a couree wlth'llll penalty ...........F. ]\far. S
Sl)r ing R ect&gt;a8 begins at r loso or clasBea ....... .......................$. Mar. 7
c·lnesc~ resurn r•d
.. ..... .... . ... .... • .....- ................. .M. Mar. U
. . .......... ·••·•- ··· .... .....................M. Mar. 16
sors l\tr. Eisenhower
and Mr . pdaon.
when such dlstln r tlon~ Wnrnln gs due
By JOEY E L M
Lust day for making up grade s ot Jncomplet.e .......................... •...M. Apr, U
Truman .
shou\d be mad e.
Moving. Up Daya ... .....
.. .... . ...•.. ... _ .F. May 1 and S. May I
"Giv en the for ce of a hangover
Commenting on another subject
most people do not g et drunk Mr. Maller
Jumpin g t o anoth er field. Mr . Sch11&lt;&gt;Int Edu cullon Saturda)' cll\llees moot . ........................ . S. MIi¥ I
llllid he disliked
!nsl ru l'liun end• In thv Colle,ge of Arte &amp; Sciences nnd
every night," said Norman Mall­ American
architecture,
stating Mnilcr st a t ed that "n t.errnr of
111MIilard FIiimore Collegu tor Lho&amp;tltaking COUii). uaws . F . M&amp;T 8
e1·, author of The Nal,ed and the that today all buildings took alik e. tlealh has developed in Anwrl cu
Dead at a Senatrl convocations R e add ed that It Is Impossibl e t oflay. nnd medi cine ha s beco me r•ornp, i,xnm• ror Scnlor s--&lt;.·ot1e~P of Arte nnd Scl enre s
Tu . Mnr 1a. M . M11y13
program W edn es day.
· nnt Ion .''
le dis tinguish a hospital from a Lh" hig h chur ch In 0111
..- ...... W. May lS
I;. m uy be, he added that dh1eas e Jnijtrurt lons end s !or all oth ers at closn ot rllll!eOII
Too stat.ement wus mndo In
ot·curs because of phys ic l.m.­ School ot Edu ca tion Saturd ny clllBaes meet . ... ..... ............. 8. Ma1 IS
reference to an art-lclc:; ho
, Tb . M..Y H .F. May U
ba.lanca . "Why do ba cteria a~;gre. Ft11al enmlnn llon~
wrote concerning "n program
gate In th e h ea rt? " h e que rled . Commenc emen t ..... ... . .. ................................... ... Sunday , May Sl
for llhe nation". Mr. Malh rr
advocatt.~ a bill mnklng legal
Tho novelist tb co turned to
tho salo of narcoti cs becnul!I'
the stlbject ot death. H e s■itd
ho feels prop le 8hould be
ttwre wos au advant11p f'or
allowed t-0 destroy thcm RelvPs.
tho.e a&lt;tvo&lt;-atlng tho beUlef
he would a lso 11,bnllMbau ,•en.
The sounds of M~dlt&lt;Jrrsnc-1111 i,. 01 , In rhe conference t.hc:ntc:r of
dc:-atb Is the end f or everyotK' ,
sorsblp, for lie belleve11 lha.t
g ult11rs. mys t erl., us da nces fr om No~t&lt;&gt;H,Md tho dance Will. com
1lll&lt;l
thel samo for overyotto.
oonsorshlp "lmp rl110n11 guilt".
th ~ Eas t , an d s ing ing t a lci, rrom
'11 t t'I advantage
I&amp; "llvtng f or
" "' nee about two hours later . AcL
th e Rhlna r egion. w ill be pr ~s,•nted
t~dJly" a,, oppo i;ed the med .
Th ese views . nlon g with his beni l!&lt;.•
lon to tho double prognt.11\ 1,
Ill
the
Intern
a
tion
al
C'
l
ub·
s
1
11inu
ol
B
l&lt;•mporu
ry
,wll
view
of
llvlng
that
capital
punishment
lief
n
50.
Ticke t.a n1A)' he obtalnod Ill
ie11
t
11,
t
vt1111
rrow
tla
ncc
fes
tiv
al.
~
M.l~tenw
on
eortla
and
i•n
should b e abolish ed, we r e mad e
llw N &lt;1rton Uckot booth , or fr om
nig ht.
,,t.,rno.l Ille In hen\ ·en. nr hell.
by th e author duriJJg th o lll60
The progrum will 111•dl\' Jtl,·d ln 111,vlnt omational Club otfh :er
PO!ltic ~l convention s when h e wa s
'l'hl' m uJU.purpoao room w11Jbl
The logi c behind n per son tal~lng II• t wo parts Th,· flr~t wllt oon.
~sked t o outlin e a progra m fo r t he
Jlh)••ical chance s with hlH Ult-, .lf!st ot onllv•• :rji1n&gt;!H 1111d du m •p~ &lt;h·n, m t,..t. Wllh tabl es i&lt;rr,i.ngl!IJ
n.,uo n .
~xploinell Mr. Maller, Is thnl the 1wrlo rmed by n•p r&lt;'f'ent etl ve~ of 111 I )' fll(III ca bnrot 8 t y] a WlUl
p,.r,on might be lieve hi~ sou.I ls t h~ r egion lnvolve.l. and a ,,•rni c.,wll, ·" (U h l f huC'k11rl.'dt.abledoUut
The speaker
ca lled Preslde nl
1lyl11g and
that tak~
tlw.,,., tormnl ds.nr·,, In th,, mu1ti.purpoM1• l&gt;urln.~ l11h •rml.o l,1n . l' N Cll WID
John K ennedy a hero. defin mi.
ehnnLes jg the only way tn ,ce-,p routtt will l nfl~tit u tt• UH· t.4• 1C'l.."lntlt" ,,\, .,11ll•d to u ,e bes t p.u-Uei.­
''•ro,.,,someone "larger than llr•
h!• NOUI alive. "LIie IR gel tm.: 11~,,t or tJw f 1t( nrotu :\%1)!a· \\'.lt l'•"ll ur the nior k. S11&lt;·11rltyr·oun
"ho i:h·es direction to ,t lilft") "
1{ 1 tlu r. went on \P cw,trast
higgc1· and blan der Uk,• u hy·hm l II&lt;• 1rrovldt:d by th,, l ,,1,•.1.111i. 'll ........ ,.. .. to b,.• ht.I d CArlh•r In
l'.-~i;I
l'h1• prug rl\l u Will 114.'i;inIll /, lh •• •lay.
tl1•nt Kennedy wJU1 hta prooece ..
lc,mato ." 'h e conclu&lt;l&lt;XI.
N ORMAN MAILER

Panhellenic Council To Hold Tea
To Honor Scholarship Of Greeks

A Capacity Crowd Hears Mailer Discuss
'The Establishment', The Human Condition

International Club Holds Fiesta
Features Nat ive Music and Dances

1

1

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, Morch 29, 1963

Bends Victim Treated at University
BY LAWRENCE FBENKEl,
A Cew weoks ago an runbulMOC
cru-rted
John
Mc C e II n
to
this Unlvemlty at speerui 1n ex.
cot 100 miles per hour, Mr.
McOean, a Toronto oonstrucUon

ment of Sherman Hall. Thl.s tank
and lls supporting eqnlpment was
given lo the University by the
Navy !or research projecLq, many
of which are supported by the
omce ot Na.val Research. The

slx yea.rs old. But lt was not until
he had completed his post. doc.
toraJ work that Dr . Lanphier was
tt'nally able to persue this long
cherished interest. Joining the
NavY, he was lllllllgned to the
Deep sea Diving school and then
to the Submarine Officers School.
Followtng hill graduation, Dr.
Lanphler was transterred to the
Experimental Dlvlng Unit as re..
search physlolog1sl,
While sllll In the Na.vy, Dr.
Lanphier took part ln the nuclear
teating carried out at lhe Em.
iwetok Proving Ground In the
.MJU'sha.l! Islands. He also was
part Of the team that t&amp;llJl'ht the
c-rlglnal seven astronauts diving
and aqua apparatus techniques.

DR, EDWARD

every 50 feet one proceeds below
the sUrface, the eUects of the
nJtrogen In the air that one 1,.
breathing Is equal to tha.t ot
drinking one Martini.
Nitrogen is also th e evll In the
bends. Wben people breath ga.~
under high' pressure It ls mor f
soluable In the blood. And c:on.
sequenUy when one returns to the
surface and breat.hi, g113 under
normal pressure again, the nltro .
gen has a tenden cy to come out or
solution and forms bubbles In such
oul ol the way places as the
elbows, knees, and brain, causing
extreme pain and sometimes fa tal
cnmpllcatlons .
In his rare spare time, Dr. Lan.
phler Is one of the few pactlcln g

H, LANPHIER

worker, had been work.Ing on 8 chamber ls designed to contain
tunnelpro Jecl for which the tabor. air under pressuroa to 3000 pounds
ers bivat21 iUf under pre8811ro.per squat(\ inch or 200 times nor.
Upon returning to the surtace he ma.I air pressure.
WM sUcken wilh an attack of
Tho man most respoDJllole
th e bead.ti,
for th e high pressure reoom.
841ven.&amp;.!uWe attempt!! wer e
pn.'tllllon cham.bcr Ill ODO ot
made at tb6 ecene to relieve Mr .
th;o foremost authorlttes on
M&lt;:Gean
'e l)&amp;ln , but they wer e of
th o physlologkla.l eUeot!I of
oo avall . B e was then rushed to
hJgb prCSNUNl
, Dr . E dw!U'd n.
a Toronto H ospital where an alert
Lanphier . Dr. Lanphier
at.
lnta'n rem6Ulbored the high p re •
t.e-nded Carlton College, th e
lltJl'e recomprellSlon chamber here
lJ nlvor,ilty of Wllloonsln, IUIO
and notlfled Butfalo ot the cas e.
Dartmouth College Wider the
Ai 111111
poll,t , aa emergw,oy
Navy V-U program,
plM&gt; to tNai such nccldenbl
woo, btto et tcot. Thi, 8herlU'H
Dr. Lanphier credit s his life.
deplU'tment WU notilled, ph y.
long Interest ln diving and sub.
IIIMllll
•t lioe Vel.ct'llD8 Hos­
marine worl, to a Saturday Eve.
pital
weft( aJerted
1111dthe
ning Post article U111thl:i father
ohamber wu prepared for Mr,
read to him when he was only
lfoOean and Edwar4 e. Lan ­
pNor , Mll\l!i.lwt ptO.fofWIOrof
plly~ologJ", "tio oould care
for Hr , MeOeaD wlWn tile
dlamhell.
'l.'hirty.elg'llt hours after he en­
teN¥t the c:hunber , Mr. McGean
st opped &lt;111t
without pain and fre e
of the -cripplin g eCfect.s of the
banda,
The b ig'h prC1!8Ure chamber
wbl&lt;:h waa uaed In Mr , M.cGean's
th e!'IIIIY is e,n lllatrwnent clu.ater.
ed ond Inch thick aluminum walled
te•..tO' t.ank located In the bllSC.

BairdRecital
'Ib o weekly atudent recital

problem being persued Is the et.
feet ot using oxygen under ln­
creased pressure 88 theraphy for
heart attacks. Surgeons from the
•Veterans Administration Hospltnl
aro encouraged by the results
they have obtalned when they
lndu_ced heart attacks In anes­
lheUzed dogs.
Humnn volunteers are used
In sevorol of the experiments,
1,ut Dr . Lllnpiller l.ru&lt;ista that
no pet110n undetgo 11ny oxpcr.
lmont that h o hlmsolf bli.l!in't
alread y aurvlvocl. Ono of these
experiment s involves thl3 of.
feet of in creased pressure on
the case with which one ls
able to broatb. Tho AJr Force
IN \Dterest ed in Its appllcatlon
to space environm ent .

gtv.

en \I.)' applied mus ic students wlll
take pla.,c(j Tu etJd:a.yat 1 p.m. ii
th e rehearsa l room of Baird Hall,
All student.! and faculty are In.
VII.Cd to attend ,

Performers will be Charl e&amp; Wnl
clari.nellst; Carolca Coye,
NUprt\nO;
Santord Shiro, trump ~
ter; Elnine Gardner and William
Cox, organists .
thllll,

The chamber In which Mr. McGean and Dr, La r,phler epent 38 hou,..,

Dr. Lanphier Jro't the Navy in
1959 which, coinoldenUy, was the
lime that his Chief hosplt&amp;I Corp3man, Richard
A. Morin was
schrduled to reUre. Soon there..
after, Dr. Lanphier joilled the
University staff and Mr. Morin
became hls as sistant.
In his capacity as aslllstant pro.
fl·ssor of physiology, Dr. Lanphier
l:, Involved with several projects
dealing with the effects of high
pre~sure on resplnl.tion and gas
metabolism. For example, one

Ono problem that Dr. Lanphle.1• motor cycle enthusiasts. Dr. Lan .
has done a. grea.t deal of work on, phlcr mixes huslllesa and plea.sure
ls that of "rapture of the depths" when he goes to medical conven.
er nitrogen narcosis. Be has form. lions In Eu rope he travels by
ulated a now law to predict the motorcycle. He has mo torcycled
effects of this conditlan. Basically through E\ll'ope twice and he often
Martlnl'a La.w states that for rides to school on one of his two
physicians who admit to being cycles when the weather ls nice ,

THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB

REMEMBER

presents

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Show
Biz"
Dates: Fri. and Sat. March 29 , 30
at 8:00 P. M.
Tickets on Sale in
TICKET OFFICE
, NORTON UNION

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A Blend of Sex, Songs and Satir es

TOMORROW

$1.00 per Couple

8 P. M.
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BEEF

PASTBAMI

•

Stan and The Ravens
and
Big Mack
(from Johnny's E}

FEATURING

Internati onal Songs •nd Dances In the Conferenu

TONIGHT

Thes. are buta few of
of tha ,~ ialties at the

from 8-10 and Semi Formal Dancing from

at

Multi-Purpose

WASHINGTON HALL

University
Delicatessen

......

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"2-14"

2 A. M.

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Donation $2

10-.2 in the

Room. Tickets at Norton Ticket Booth. Free

Refreshments.

FREE
BEER
8:30 ·?
( Ba eea leaving Tower at 8:3 0}

Theater

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Admission

,

$1.50

r

�Friday, Morch 29 , 1963

PAGETHREE

SPECTRUM

Senator Keating' s Visit Results in Pickets;
Two Groups Sponsor City Demonstrations
BY STEVE BARRIS

This week's visit by Senator
Kenneth B. Keating to Buffalo
set off a flurry of protest on the
part or the olt;y's political left .
Members of "Youth Against War
and Fascism'' pamphleteered and
protest.ed the •-war.mongering"
tactics of the R-OChester Senator.
The group capped off its three
day picketing with a demonstration
in front of a building on Delaware
Avenue. The group, as character.
lzed ~y spokesman Mary Ann
Weisma:nn, ts "P'.l'lmr..rlly an anti.
war'' organization.
"Al! for "Youth Against War
and J'lla.soimn," we · believe that
nny wa r policy stronger than that

They pointed out, however, that
although they 11ymp11thlzed with
Lhe demonstrators
they were In
110 way
connected with "Youth
Against
Wai• and
Fascism.''
"Youth'' also disclaimed any a.sso.
~iation with the Labor Party.
The Progressive Labor P4rty
advocates a progression tow
the goals of peace, jobs, and eq.
u/1.llty through Manslst.Leninlst
Socialism, Mort Sheer, regional
1e;i.cterof the year;old group feels
that such objectife as ''a fair
shake tor the workillg- man•• and
'·equality for the Negron can be
attained only wltttl.n the frame.
work of the Marxi9t.Lenlnist doc.
tines.

Chemistry Departmen t Gets Grant
ha~c!:!::m$~~\o~
t :::~;~:
the National SClence Foundation
for the purchase Of scientific
equipment for undergraduate in·
structlon.

11on that Ubernl nlfoml ,ean
alle\llatc the lnequlttes preaent
In Olli' fKl&lt;'lety. "Refonn m~•ve.
ment. aro good In that tJ~ey
&gt;Mirve to l.nfonn and arouse
ttie people. But tltere acc,,m_
pUshmen1s a.re te no11sat oost,"

ot the Kennedy

Administration.
which has violated Cuban sover.
elgnty numerous
times, would
surely mean \var."
''Youth Agnlnst War and
J?asclsm",

wh ich claims

ro bo

u

a loosely organb..ed group
listed With Att.or:ney Oener&amp; l

Robert Kennedy's office as n
subv~slve organization.
Also participating in the dein.
onstratlon
we1,e representatives
of the Progressive Labor Party.

are

former

...

__ ,.___ ana

t

Peace Corps Representat;ve
Here Tuesday , Wednesday

~.

.\

:!t

~~

V ISIT

"'The only way to guard against
misuse or government power le
to make It impossible for any
group to benefit from. tho owner.
ship of the means of production,"
he added. Chairman, Mr. Scheer,
notes that many of the groups
1nentb~rs

th

ern eory an .. more, .,~..
•
thl d f th lytlcal techniques to unoorgradu I
I
0
0
8
ates.
pprox ma e Y wo. r
be olalmJI.
funds will be used for equipment
The equip-Aent tor tnatrurnent.al
The group puts out a publlca.. for the Instrumental an a I y s Is
tion. The/ Marxlst.Lenlntst c;iuart­ course whloo is taugnt In th e, nna)ysis will be looated In tht&gt;
erly w11lch it hopea..,will serve as senior year; I.he remalndQr · will addition to Ille A.ebeaon H&amp;U of
a forum for socialist! lde:ais.
go Into the teaching ot analytical chemistry wh'lcb ts now under con.
In perusing tho current :l11Sues
structlon.
or the Quarterly and speaking chemlst.ry In the Junior year .
with
Mr. Scheer,
the reporter
was stuck by the constant crop.
ping.up of the term ''lmpciiaJ.
lat" a.a applied exclusively t,o the
western nations. Questioned as to
whether the nations of the 1;ov1et
Bloc, With regard to lnstance11 such
Two Npreeentativca
of the 1Jates of the Umwn,ity ot Buffalo
as the contllct In Vietnam, ;might
not be more accurately t1mned Peace Corpa will be on campus 7 men and 6 w~
Including one
"impe .rlaliaUc" than the countries Tuesday and Wednesday to Inter. married couple, are,eervlng In tile
of the west, Mr. Scheer e.,cplillned; view Interested 11tudents In room Phlltlpplnes, Ntgeria . Pakltltan.
''this situation must be viewed In
Vcnezuel~ Ja.makla !illd British
terms of a class struggle. The 262, Norton.
confllot In Viet Nam 111an effort
Honduras .
on the part of the West t.c, con.
More than 5000 Pet1ce Co11&gt;1
1'11rt.her lnfOnnatlon lij avail.
Unue the subjugation of thii Viet volunteers are now serving In l50
Ne.mese.
countries, and it Is expected that 11ble In her offiee, 201 Harriman
In ext.ending aid to U1esepeople. 4000 more volunteers will be as- Library, and In the Student Seno.te
Red China Is attempting t:o aid signed to posts by the end ot 1962. office. 2o:) Norton. Geo1,ge Hort­
them in their struggle for self.
Dean JcnMette
Scudder, Un. man, chairman ot the student
determlnalloll • and is therefore
the anti-Imperialist force ln be lve1·slt.y liaison with the Peace senat._. pence corp!! c,m\mitt4'e,
Corps, staled Lhal twelve grad- may a.loo bo contacted there dally.
contllct.

t

A

~

PICKE T ERS PROTES T K EATING

O'~::~n:,~ia~\~::;.
:;
chemlatry, who ill director ot the
grant, the tunde will enable the
University to provide a more mod.

QOmmunista

\Vho have, become disillusioned
with the Communlat Party Of the
U.S. which they feel, hM "lost its
wlll to revolution.''
Mr. Sheer rejects the no.

9

J

.

t

'"'&lt; ~~~~

..c

&lt;

..
t'

l&gt;..

"'

~

Benenson Named Associate
Professor In Engineering
Dr. DaVld M. Benenson ha.s e1n California Cooperative Wind
been appointed associate professor Tunnel, 1950-113.
of the division of lnterdisclpllnary
studies and research In engineer.
lng and Is assuming his duties
~
lrnmedlately.
r•
••
Serving as research with West.
~
ir.ghouse Research Laboratories
smco 1957, Dr. Benen 9on bas also
been a pnrt.tlJne instructor In
physics at Carnegie Institute of
Technology since 1948.
lie receiv«I the S.B. degree
fr om the Massachusetts Insltute
of Technology and the M.S. and
Ph.D. degree from the Cautornia
Institute of Technology where. he
lntern•tlonal Brewe,iH , Inc .• Buffal o, N.Y
waa project engineer for the South"

MissedA. F. R. O.T.C.?

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cour se for
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Training
th ose w ho r eali ze t he·y want t o become
Air Force offi cer s, but don' t have enoug h
school tim e left to enroll ,n AFROTC.
We prefer our office rs lo start their tr aimng
as fr eshmen. so we can comm1s!.1on lh~m
dir ectl y upon graduat ion . But ri ght now we re
accepting app l1cat1ons for another hnr way
to become an Air Force ofltcer - OTS We
can't guaranter that thi s progr am will r;,,11

be open a year or so from now
As an Air Force ofl 1cer. you' ll be a leader on
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mnrr• 111f0 m 1a l 1l111on OTS frnm lhe P,ofr s5or
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U.S. Air Force

�PAGE FOUR

*

Friday, Morch 19 , 196 3

SPECTRUM

*

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

*

Monday afternoon we took our pad and pencil and dutifully went down to the
multipurpose !Oom to cover the speech by Senator Keating on an undisclosed ton ic.
The topic turned out to be a trite piece of prose on the need for reforms in
Congre1111.We believe that most of the students who attended came expecting the Sena­
t-0r to . so11!1d off on the Administration' s Cuban policy. He has done this at every op­
portunity ln the past. llowever, for one reaMn or other he chose a stand ing speech
from bis file a11d delivered thnt instead .
Looking back on the progrom we feel we must ask just why the Senator was
a,ked to speak here in the first ploce. Certainly he didn't tell ua anything we didn't
know before nor did he shed ony new light on any facet of legislotlve procedure.
The only re'ference we could di1cern in his presentation wos a subtle reference to
Dtmocrotic Representotive .Adom Clayton Powell Jr,
Powe ll is known I\S the brazen trav eller at public expense, and has billed the
gover~ment. for b is numerous trips to his home in Puerto Rico . He has put bis wife
on his payr oll at a salary of $13,000 (as a secretary), and has increa sed the spend ­
Ing of the Education and Labo r Comm ittee, of which he is chai rma n. When Sena­
tx&gt;rKeating made refercne~ to the "double stan(ia rd" and ''conflict of interes t " on the
part of some Congressme n, he could have been easi ly referring to the infamous New
York repre11e11tative.
We regret to report thot we got little, if anything, out of the Senotor'1 speech,
ond we venture to soy thot the foct that we ore of the Se11o~r's opposition party
hos nothing ta with this opini9n .
On u closing note, let us r emark 011 the manner s or t he U,B student. T hose
who have studied at any grade level should have learned by now that courte sy
shou ld prevail over restlessness
or di ssat isfaction.
Those who attended Senator
Keati11g's speech Monday may ha ve seen some stu dents walk out while the spea ker
was still lecturing. Regardl ess of YoUr opinion of the man or his topic, may we sug­
gest that in the future you r efrain from coming, or if you do come try to remember
your manners.

Readers Question Spectrum Columns
To Mlaa Mllnte
'l'o t.be lildl¼r:
J think Miss Mllnto le mlslntonno d
&amp;Delrefuse~ (a dmirably In spite or
the reslstan ()(\) to be anything but
misinformed . Row can she spea',c
ot "wiiatevar goo4 se nse mjgllt be,
•t.lvaged from our Oreek system,"
wben the ;if'tlcl~ 8be 11rlnted th1~
weell wu only u crtUolsm of the
d\'IVel th81. h11a P.l)l)Ml'84 ju her
column bt•fore.
I queatlon how a ny one per .
, on o• n expect to alng1e. 1111nd
.
•oe" the tl11y bit of
edly ",ar11
''good ,onee' ' that «r&gt;d
•ta In the
Her meth od
"Greek ,y,tem,"
of doing thl1, one must realize,
la by very oon,truc tl voly bla,t .
1ng the "ayatom,"
In the fall I HJ,&gt;Okelo The $Jlll&lt;l.
trum edltol' about Ille colUIIIJI, and
ln ~rtl cula r ul&gt;out tta poor Tepre.
eent.atlon or aororlty acUY!Uos. Al
that thDI! It 61)1)eared that tht•
~new" lonl ~ Column, wltb lte
broadened 11COP8, might pr('ll(lnt
moTe of a renHsUo picture or lbe
01"8811sand •remove some or the
over.weighted em'l)ba.ata ou soc ial
actlvJUes . ~He~ Mlinte'e "bin.et" nt.
taclted tJI~ very IM\llle thtnga th at
the eoror1llllll di sliked.
I, u motJt,ot.her Gree ll:e, oxpeet.ed

alphabetical order, jua l •• they

came in.

Ml~a Mllnte, she Indicated thal
"'"' had plans for a new format
but wns not sure how receptlve
Lhe fraternal g1·oups would be to
them. If one read her co lumn wlU\
lhis In mind, one mlght believe
1.lmt llhe nied the satire and he~
follow.up a-11an effect to almo~t
conplr\~ly shield the change ,&gt;f
fc r m11t nMounc~ment ,

R.4-0ootlon.

To

1.110 Edit.or,

t,
ot th,

r11tlwr a gemrhw ettrrtmllmcnt
I.I\« procedura l 118.feguards

0110 Cllll't componeate tor Jour.
rules 11nd regulations govern.In!-'
A ponl was good enoug h for Nar. th e Student Assooiatlo n prompte&lt;l
onll&amp;llc 11kill by lashing oat at
does
Mniur
have
to
ciss11s,
why
the Greek system nnd Its lack
our action. The fact that n.ppellat,
1111e•r11e Spectrum?
'fhe pape r ch11nnels are open to at uden t
Tb ere
Are
or "i;-ood ~en8&lt;3"
.
bailly needs lnWJUgent analysis 01gani7.atto ns
mnDY avenues of communication.
presuppose
th ey
und comment on those affairs out. a,-c tn he used in approprlat.~
Mias ?.Ulnte, Wby don 't you try
sltle the narrow border of th~ at•licms ot a student commJtte•
IAlklng dlreclly
to I.he people
campus but instead we l\re sub ­ by another studeJlt organizatlor ,
you'rt&gt; trying to Balvage."
Jeoted to conglomeratlo;as, cllcl\es , Is no an aUront to the dlgnll~
Mlolcl Lovine ,
ll~r planT . .
''new11 of, and 1)118Udo-prof:mltit'!I,qunsl.hJp a.ncl
of the committee or an impll ~
POKt Presldeol.
Ml by the fmternltlCR. 11 Ir not by the barest aketches of thought; in
cha llenge to their Integrity, but
Pnnhellelllo Cou.ncll
lhe frafomlttes, Who then shall ijum a rather poor substitute tor
1•1
1Lher It ill a method provldt'd
!'lloo!ie th1s news ... Anne Mlinte, St'MOUS, ooherent crlllclsnl, It 1·
In tM COnJltltullon to assure th lll
Mllnt o'" Fo lly
of coul"!C. She then states that lime we trans cend mere self.ln­
ht all cases the rlghtP of every.
To The Editor,
"lhll &gt;•eslllt will undoubtedly be dulg'f!Jlt bowling, whether It hr
ooe Aholl be scrupulous ly protect .
With regard to the letter which bcLter than what now exists." Of
"crying ou t In the desert"
, ~II.
Appea red In the last Issue of Th e MUl'&gt;I@, how could It be otherwise
hllhbllng ln the sandboit,
Spectrum , concerning the position
wi!Jl Anne Milnte herself picking
Bob Oa\18
Second~y: tlhe
Student
1341
of the Ionic Column, 1 feel It ts the news• Not sa.Ustted with
Association reels that the w,.
lndeed necE'.ssary to spare the stu. being editor or the colum n. she Edlror's Jllote:
1lenl body of the trouble of read ­ has set herself up as h er own
It Mr . Gnus hns read Mr. Ma. rorlunale publicity of I.his incid ent
Ing such "literary pearls." Th e
zur'tt column faithfully he wil l see hna rasulted in trail by TUJTJOt
critic.
~olumn ts what Miss Mlin te makei;
t.hn.t "lntclllgc.nt analyals . . • on nnd conviction by hearsay o.nd
it. No more, no less.
In defe1•ence to Miss M1111te those affairs outside . . . the cam. precludes a fair and Imparti al
It would behoove Miss llfiln t.e she Is stUI the edi tor of the col. !)UH" have been diSCUS!led In pre. aceeplance of our righ ts urufor
t.
to reRtrlct her indulgence In self umn . However, the column exlsts v1ous colUmll.8, May we suggest th e Student As.'!OclaUon CoD11ti
utlon by the Student body at larg e
evaluaUon to the privacy of h er for Uw benefit or the renders, you rend more carefully ,
Vl'e are not or course detract.ll,g
llome rather than the typewriter. l.nc.luding those wntten about. It
trom the high caliber of tmparU nl,
01 Mr , Mflch'a satire, there la little \~ not a sounding boaJ"d Cor p,,r.
Ll•W So11ool Anf!IVl'r~
tty With which tne Student Ju~
to say beyond the fact that it sons.I whims. It seell\11I.hat ocoas.
i&lt;'lary hna hereLotor conduct rll
To th e Editor.
w1111enjoyable 11.11d
that this writer lonally tbla Is forgotten.
lo tile hcarlnge.
Thia letter le nn attempt
was dismayed to rind It soiled by
In the past, the Ionic Column place In perspective all well as to
the ldcaUstlc comme nt s which un .
ti Is, however, felt that a dro~
hns served as a news RcrvJce Cor clear any mlsunderalandlng whi ch
t-0 900 •bile oolu.mn ah&amp;l)8 11» aft.er fortunately
followed.
rra temal groups and ror those have unfortuna t ely resulted t rom glng out of tho affair would no
ber article . But 1t didn't. M\111
Anonymo us
1.nlerested In Greek activities, As the Student Association ElecUons Inure to the benefit of the Un,
Mllnle contlDued to print tbe IIIUlle
such, any eontemp lated cha ng e b.Ei!dat. tile School of Low Mat•ch lversity in general . We bnVf
"atutt," &amp;!though our acUvltlea reJ.F..C. • Ionl o &lt;'clumn
~teadfustly malnt.a.ined that thert
of format shou ld be presented 5, 1963.
ma.lned of the 8&amp;1118 quallt-y. Just To the Editors:
Is no evidence to back up chargi,f
l'eoently one ■ororlty turned In
The Greek system ou this camp. l o representatives of these group s
First: The actions of the Stu. of a mo11lserlo uij nature. We sUII
an article with a blt more than us hRs again been subjP-Ct to flag. b&lt;"fore being decldod upon . I l Is
atlack by hoped that Miss Mllnte will soon dent Bar Aasoclation were pred­ adhere to thla position but rec­
Just "we enjoyed"
and "thank rant and unwarranted
you," It was cut eomewtlere along Mias Ann Mllnte, or the I onic l\vnU herself of this responslbillty. icated oolely upon a bona fole ognize thll unrcaslblllty of furtJw,
annlysls of Its light.a under the prote&lt;1t since lo conUn ue would
lbe edltorla.l behvcby;
"communt-1 Column.
As for Mr. MJ!ch'~ saUre, It
JttUe In c.larit'yil1r
e&amp;tlon.e" have not been effective
It Ill understandable
that Miss waH quite humorous Indeed How. Student Association ConsUtutlo ,1. accomplish
enou gh for ue to ftnd out wtly. Mllnte ha.a called attcntJon to the ever, ll Is unJortunaLe that , with Our conduct throughout has been our position or jW1lifying OW' a,•t
f'erbapa Its content waa not In lnck of proper communication his knowledge or this campus's of l11ehighest caliber with reirpellt Ions and at the same time would
to lhc elections held and our dls­ prolong the uncertainty and II
IICl'eement with the present scope between herself and the fraternal
r,11tv1111ttes nnd with the large sapprovnl of the actions ot th e atnhillty or Senate tun ctlons.
ot the lonlo Column: It might have groups as being "ultimately" 11.t amount
of knowledge he undoubt. election commi tte e. Neither per­
'l)Olle4 !net Friday's "blML"
tnllll. But lhe reason for this lack
(Continued on P~e 7)
udly acquired while a Greek at sonnJ nor cnprlcous moliv~s but
What'• IMklng In tho Ionic- Col. or communication ts more Ulumtn.
Corne ll, he hllB not presented ~
but tbe 11tlng. She approached this writer, 11ell t.o the IFC to }lelp us In Olli'
umn - uot tho Oreell 111111.em
column-lJI c1'81lti"1ty. Wby clldu't both tills past December and Jan.
supposed quandrtes. We shall be
fbe do an article on Pan.bellenla uary, that she was "800u'' to qul le receptive to any conatn1ct­
Council nu,1 II• 11eUv1tles, or the call a meeting with the IFC . Pan. lve nitlclsm he may bear.
1'h,. official -,, u(lent newei1nper or lhtl St, ue O.nt~eralty of N•w York ••
lnt erfmt.ernll&gt;' Counci l ? We botb hellenlc Council and lhelr respect.
BufhJn . Publlcallon Onlc• at Norton Hall, Ua lversto· C.mpua, Buft&amp;lo 1•·
only too bal)pf to Ive groups, The purpose of th!JI
woultl ha," 1&gt;111111
In add(tlon, the IFC feels that N 1' Publlohed wuldY rrom th• nrat week or S•Ptember to Ille ll\lt ,..,.a
orovlde b~r with tho tntonnaUon. meeting WIUI to discuss the proper the sath'lcal on fraternal names, 111'1Nli, UNPt ror ~xam periods, Thankllg lv lng , Chrlo~m .. ond EUlU
Edltor,ln-Chlef - JOAN R. Fl.ORV
to t~t hi,r Hit In 011our m0&amp;t.1nce. format of the Ionic ColuffiJI. How . along wlh the many direct am.
1(
Edltor .. MARY LOU WU.SON
F,atu,~
FAll!or . . . STlllVE B.AJUl.
f'anhrll~uk
m~l!tlng~ are ,OJwnya ever, no noUce or 8'1Cb mooting biguou s groups Is completely out New1
eoori.l!ldltor ...... JAMES BAKER C'lr&lt;UI. Mgr, .. .. KAREN 8A.Nl'li~
Copy
&amp;dltor
,
....
CHARLBS
BTO&gt;llil
omc
e
Mg,.........
BEV
ROBE~
-OJH!n'" lltAf•lt wome&gt;n, 1U1 l.'F.C was ever sent and no meeting of place in a periodical Intended
8111111•.aMrr .. . ... LARRY' srNGl!IR
Advertlolng Ml!T, ..... F,D BRA ·-i·
:u-e o~t'&lt;I to thc m"n.
wall ever he.I&lt;!..
solely for the propagation Of new s. l"ln. Acl, .. TROMAS RAENLJU._!fl, EdllOrlal Ad.
. WM SJl!JMr:R, '
Why didn't •he do an artl~lt
Monday, Miu MUnto was invited
The IFC considers this detam. Lnl'oUt 0Jltor . . .DAVIO mw1:0.
on the problem• Involved In
to appMr before the PanheUenk :&gt;lion constituting slander. Ther ,•.
OE~'TIJR.A.L
STAFF: Vlclorla BUOfN!'kl,
Elnlne Bnrron, Joey Elm, Pat Mitt
the adml"latratlon of the Soard
Council lo del ene!lt c just what fo re, It public apologie s aro not. Clln:lf'I
Llppma.,,.
Pred
Aopl~, Rocky
Y&lt;'r,1u..•e, Frn.n
.., a r ru' ,
of Educ1tlon'• dtcl1lon to go
she desired tor her column. AJ_ extende d forthwith. cha rges will Lnwronre fi"tonlceJ, Peter Utohrow. Lorn.n \\1al111ch, I.,a1irn. Zlmml'lm.an,
Sommer, Mn.r
·cllL Coo1&gt;&lt;r, LIUln.n Wllllllll\1!, Arnio Ma•ur, C!Lth)• Meru"~,r•
looal, an&lt;! our mo,thodt
of
lhnugh she rendily eelceptod the t,,, &lt;lr11wnup and presented to the CoUi!en Lank, Mu.r&lt;'la. Orszu.la.k, Camlllo Lt'JBrr.&lt;'&lt;'n1 nnnahJ 1rw1n, Alon .n° ~
1nvllallon, ehe did not appear ancl r.pproprle.tc committees: the stu. man, 8at'b&amp;U"9 noh.lwatf"r, , liclt'n Chapr-U, 1'1\t La.wu~r. ~Ht! Josaph, ' ~\
ha"dllng tht problemT Why
l'l•••ln~~r, Mike Snllnno&gt;, - non I&lt;.a.mluakl,J~hn Rnlp!~r. Kathy Sh..,, · '
dl&lt;ln'I ,he write nbout the table
s&lt;-nt no note slothig h1•r change th nt judlrhuy /against Mr. MIich rlt.inne L,u,•t:inlh.ul nn1I J..on\ Le,-, ·.
ST H•~r,• .ln~, Hn\·on~. nul'ls• tl Uohll\UrlC" •nt1 lHc:k ,.,,,
eltuatlon, or the grow ing Greek
01 plnn11. Thc~e two cvcnL• l\lonc 1111
tl1or or the satire l ,ind the PHOTOflRAPll\'
10.galnst
Ttellno of being dl"rlmtn•t•d
indicate
11n ln\·,•stt1u1Uoo ts I uhlk11twn commltke
, 1t rt 11t
11 ~~
•~O~H.t L~1a,-. 1UJHt&lt;0r l'ol•M.lflr)
¥ UM ~
nece.."Sary to l1l!Sllllfl J 1N h,,y• Mb, \1111 Mlinte for nllow1ng tl10
•v•lnlt? The,e lt't many thing,
l h 1'1 •t 1 ,ni,·e 1u nunah,, ':'/ Y; un(t, r the .\rt or\\• •
,. 1, ·,~ \('4.•epu,nce tor nJJ'ltllrur., " tl!Pf'f'lAl n,I
t ,, :
MIH
Mllntt oould have done
:\!Unto "run&amp;" tier .:tth111m nnd arthlt- ,., ;.q;pear in her cnlumn
"'""' pr M'l 1fet'I tor In ~e.,~tl1111 1?03 \t't of llN,,iur, ,
nn edltc&gt;t •hll I• umfrr dubious clrcumstanccs.J
•• editor of he r colum n, al,,,w 1·i-,11o111.11fbh•
1hthorttf'll
ti f'l•t u11.rv I . l 'il&amp;t
:,.;,~, 11 l()ltou U (I0 Pftt
f'H.r iitrcula,
&gt;1"1 Utl
U1ou9h I rnlli~
tlut It 1, .. ,..
!luring
th&lt;' t11ll&lt;a 1111•11110,w
Slnceroly yours.
11
HN•f~t11nten tor nu ., • ,,,, ,n u,m• hr :--1-lt()hl•
te, to a rr.o.11go the ,~rtl clu In
.11buv,,, h~1w,•1•n tJ1c wrlt~r 11na Dnv•• S1111th, FrllJ\k I\.Jc,s•I, l .F.C.
, ,.,t1,.1r·1· e:t•rvk• , 1ue.. •• '\1,,, ,,.,., AY._., ~ • w Tntl(

I

THE SPECTRUM

t

/Ii'~

1

�SPECTRUM

Friday, Morch 29 , 1963

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE MAZUR

BY A~'NE

Dear nephew,
I received n letter from your
mother last week In which s1,~
asked that I adv Is,, yc1u to
straighten
out. Appa rently' you
are running around with the boys
and girls t.oo much, and my dear
sis ter Is fear!\11 that you may not
be a~ceptcd to 11 college. Wors e
yet, I.hat you mny nol eve11 w11nt
to go.

l\fn:NTE

Last week's ,article received quite a bit o{ a.tle-nUo11, to aay the
\'ery least , E~erpts Crom o. letter wrltten to me by Allen Horowitz,

are presented here. They
member ot Sigma Alpha Mu Fratemlty,
-reflect the general conlent of ¢ritlclsm directed at this column dur­
tng the past week:
"I believe that by changing the !ormat of the column, and by
not letting the fraternities and iiororltles freely expreaa themsetveu,
you will be destroying an Integral and most informative pa11t of our
paper . . . Thougb biased the report s m~ be. they . . , share
the news of a coming party, gossip about new officers, tunny situa­
tions happening to one of their members, or 1mylhlng that may be of
human lntel'ffll to the students. To remove this from the paper would
se rve only to eliminate another part of the paper's duties and weaken
our Greek system that much more In Its fight for survival."
Perhaps Mr. HoroWitz Is correct in his assumption that Gr~clts
want their column to continue Its formw- course. However, the column
wa.e created to publicize all Greek news, a task It has not been ac­
com.Pllllhlng during the laat few years. As was sta.tcd last week, this
Is not !Jle fault of the creeks. but U1e fault of the Ionic Column. So
long as fraternities Md sororities are engagmg In affa irs other than
pa r ties, it Is only right that such affairs receive publication. The
Greeks deserve an apology, not tor last week's article , bu t for all the
articles that preceded it,.
This point has been stressed so much that nothing more need b e
sa.ld. There Is another point that does need stressing, During the
week, I was approached by more than one Greek with thcl following
question: "Why don't you stick with the Greeks? We're having
enough trouble ai; I~ Is .. . you're a Greek yourself, Md you don'L
even stay with us.''
There is often a very big difference between my opinion and
those opinions printed in my ootumn., A Greek column ts not a per­
it is a s~rvice
sonal sounding board for the writer's viewpoint ...
rendered to the fraternities. This week will be the ta.st that the pro­
noun "I" wlll appear under the heading of Ionic Column, and It ls only
used here lo dispense with ill feelings oreated In the po.st..
Sin ce many studeints feel this is my own private bntll e, I will
sta te my personal opinion and offe t• Utem something to criliCIZe or
oondone. Whatever has been printed before has mer-ely been a para ­
phra.slng of opinions received by the wriler in conversation or In
writing. My parHono.l opinion Is llimply thill: The Greek system at. UB
can be far more lnCluenl:ial than it now ls . Specifically, its tnfiuonce
could be stronger In student gove1nment, student publications, com­
munity affairs, and general achoo! spirit.
It Is tru e t.lJat such events o.s Sp,iag Week end , Mr. Fonna.l con­
tests, Ugly Man contests, Wint er Weekend, Campus Barrel, and
other worthwhile activitie s Cc)uld not exl.st without Greek support
and would not be so sueOOlSSfUI
without that support I! they did exist.
Yet !or some reason , the1Se activities are not given enough credit
by those wh o do not parUcipa tc. The Oreeks themselve s do not stress
them In their own column.
Why are the Greeks 110 often at oddtl wlU1 independent students?
011r systt,m was not Intended lo be an exclusive segment of campus
life that never lleals wtth othet' aspect!! of that Ufe. It was Intended
IO 'be a working unit created. lo better the entire campus. I do not
belleve our system hus tailed at this task, 11s the preceding examples
prove.
Rather, I believ e we are overly scnsltlve to crl ticlSm that might
bo justlfled. There is no room for feelings of persecution among in­
telligent individuals. Cr ltlcillm should be considered, judged as ob .
jectlvely as possible, Md then rejected or approved. Such feeling s of
peoiec utlon do exist in our system and have led to ma.ny of the
misunderstandings In our dealings with the student body.
Perhaps the bulk Of criticism received in the paat ha s been un­
founded. lf so, I suggest we prove just how unfounded it ls through
the one student publicati on reacl by all students, both Greek Md l.n­
depende nts. I assure you, I am very de.finlt.dy "st~klng with the
Gree ks" . By improvlng the column, some of the c riticism will be
alleviated. By improving our relations with the rest or the cwnp\l5,
we Improve the entire Greek 11yatem.
The I onl4 Column is controlled by all tho se who submit news Lo n.
l! the majority of these Ol'eeks are In favor of 1·evertlng ba ck to the
old format, we wm go back to the o1d fol'Tnat. If ther e are other
suggestio ns, we Will gladly consider them. I merely 1JUggesl we make
the roost of what has been allotted us.

So what $1\oUldI 5t&lt;)' 7 Should I
hand you I.he combat! stuif and
te ll you that In my gette~·aUon
only the fortunate were oble to
cont111ue with their educal Ion,
That's not quite true, for .l ~If
also from the suburbanite j lttir,.,
You don't need a college eauct1
lion "to get ahead," do you? You
already belong to a country elult
-an d you can never join the New
Yol'k Athletic Club, though y ol•r
liberal city politicians belong .

SENATOR

KEATING

Senator Keating Speaks To
UB Students On Reforms

of governme nt reform." H■ ,.._
tbreat ln Cobo la t-0 the
f erred to the "o umberaom♦,
lllA hemisphere, not dl­
atonablt"
outmoded and unJ"e
But everyone, or nearly ever y. re.oUy to the United States ,'' So
la wma king proceN r a l~t lv• to
In
one, Is going to conegll , Thoi,e 111. snl d Senntor Kenneth Keat!~
appropr iation,, u ytno th■ l "w•
between years o'\'e rough;
11.!lcr au addrees hote Mond.aY atlornoon.
high school Md before you g~I The progrum Wt\.8 sl)Oo~ored l)y 1h11 can't ho bb le a long wi th th •
marr ied. Wbat elae can you du ht: Alllance nnll the I.F.C .
ruleg of anot her oe11
t ury."
l)ecome an ivy.Jeaguer? It's nlc,.,
Rnni\101•Keatlug m11de Lhe re .
I 11 11IH0sntd tll.e toll owing wete
Now, your mother says yuu """1\ou CtLba.rtnrtng ttte nurauon In uood of reform: · the seniority
have many friends that dlut r111"
you from your studies. Could h, ll"rJe1,J. rhc toplo or his leqlurQ sysllHII. tbe 8\!leotlon of Commltt.o&amp;
cblnory ot t'hu.lrmu 11, 11\P •O&lt;'tlooo.ld0Dllnftl11·e
but you like your friends nnll wn11"Moaernlztng tbe M11
Cout11111log relative to tu ('cmgre~a. tho veto p0wer ot tho
want lo be popular. No? Why 1101 Cougr~ij."
compromise? You can go tt• ,,,t Gnhn, 1he nooubtlc uo Senntor sui d 11vvso rules cnmmllloe, thu ll,h1lcge and joi n a fraternity. Wo" ! the i:re,,IO•t dOnj(et from Cuh11wns rruul.'hlso111t'l1tof certAln segments
Think ot It , not seventeen frlcmls, tl,t&gt; "e.1qwrt of terroris m 11nd ellliof c;11r l)Opul11.1lou,an d the outbll t seventy brothel'S.
ve,•slou to olher Latin Amerlano uwd~a election lawa. In ooucluslon
And don't let those college, CHI eountrlo s.'' lie clle1l J\lelllco as one be udded lb;ct ("ong,-eas "baa failed
alogues fool you . You Jrnow thu s,• or tl1e Jive countries In Latlu 111kce11lng It~ owo house In ortlM.''
glossy pictures of studdntil study America wbl~b slill recogoliea the
During tho Q.Ue!ltlOUpt!rlOd a
ing In the library? Don't boiUevc Cnstro government
represeutnttve ot Lh&amp; b'TOUP, "Youth
il . Yon can plolt any unlve1•-lty.
Ile Bllld he l1.11~
been bearleued AKfllnal Wj\r rind Faar.hnn," (tb e
especially tho~e which a.re tvn
Sir ()1!wa.ld
stdered up-and..comlng, and yo11 hy the Costa TUcu contm,enre. nnd group hiul picketed
ln Oc_lc,berot
are bound to find a luxury puol ro1lorts ot the 011.S con!orences, Moale1'1111.1))/00rllllCO
room; sorry, a billia r ds lou11g,• Which hlld been In t!Ul)l)OrLor last yeur), uked the Senfllor to
And you can nse It too, IJ' yuc Amerklnu r,ollcy toward Cuba. Tbe conunent on the Cuban problem
are patient enough to waJ,t Co, Senator believes !.hot Lallo Amer­ nod hie teollogs abou\ action t11ere,
r
a n open to.blc. And thJ&gt;.t. '"clua,. f&lt;•n. wnole to nol with the United Th&lt;&gt; gpokean11u1 asked the S&lt;ln&amp;to
sport for whole!!Ome fun 7" Don ' St11tes, Im\ 1h01 !he goveromenUI wile.re be would be In the e,u,11ot
even ask. Every school simt')I.' ar e unal\to to do tllle on their own n nuclear war .
must have at least a dozen bowl bocuufl&amp; or the aire1.1gth ot I.he Tho&gt; Senator
replied that be
Oolllllluolst.s in tile count!')'. Dut,
Ing alleys.
h11 nald, It we lalllote acUon, the1 would conatder hie vtett he re a s11e­
ceae I! be could convince I.ho young
I bet you ' .re, wondering -~br,u. wlll •'st nnd wflb us."
roon who a~ke4 to ttueetlo n w 11111the girls; I mean, oblcks. 'T'll&gt;1
nCCtllnte blmealt from tbe group
tn hie lecture he st re11ed the
should be the worst of your pror,
he Ml&lt;I be l'O})Nl88Uled,
He weut
need for reform In Congr eH,
lems. Just imagine all thos e gh I
on to advocat e n tlrm l)()llcy ln
away from home and dying 1 , 1:alltng t he loglslallv o brarloh
1
CubfL
"one of the neglected are11•
\"Car your pin. I know ~u
wouldn't want it any other way.
"The

,...,tor

Now think ot this a.nd ~,ee ,
(PRAYERDECISION)
college just Isn't the ptaCA
! fo,
you? Wouldn't tt be nice I.!) ti ·u,
el? I ruean, like see the cow11t·v
Well, you go to an out--of.,t,c);,.
college, live It up real good, 110.t
by Ronald Kamlntkl
i! you'Ni lucky and flunk ou't Y"''
gow•mmant11 from pftlJICrl
bl11g
simply transfer to another .,rh11
A g,·enl amount or eonCused
by lnw 1,11ylurm ur ofll clAI
. • In Mother eeellon oir ll,
n•actton aa raMulted f1'0m the
p,nyt'r.
ocmnu-y. Thnt swings. no?
recent New York State Regents'
The Suprc111e Court held tha.t,
prayer dcclslon o! the United
So listen. rion'L aggl'avate youi· States Supreme Court. In Engel lit regard to the religious gu11ran.­
mothe r. Do some work bet.ween Vs. Vllale, I.he Supr&lt;-me Court tccs or the Flt'Sl Amendment, "lte
basketball games, and you'lll feel held that New York's classroom fll'~I IIJld mo~t Immediate purpose
proud when someday IUI advisor prayer rlluat violated the con. re~tc!I on the belief that a union
comm ents about your J&gt;Otc,ntlal. btltuttona1 guarantees of the First (&gt;f gow!'ruoent and rel.Igloo tend.a
Remember, aJ)ply tn an up-and - A me,idcM, which serves to seJI. to destroy government and to de­
0&lt;1mlng school ( other11 are rai•c lll'Utc Church and Slate. Perhap8 gl'nde rcllgl&lt;iu . . , It Ls nelthur
a11yweyJ, preferably with a nic, R brief cxplnnaUon of the under­ sMrlllg,o us nor anurellg!l;&gt;u1&lt; to
cllmale, and enjoy llfo. Your high lying hllllOry wilt exploln the say that each separate ~vern­
~chool gnides a.re but an lnvest- rr,u,on behind tile Supreme Court'i&lt; mcnl In the country ahould ,tay
,,ut of lhe hu slness of wrltlt1g or
111e11ttn college year~ whtct1 you dt•clslon.
simply won't want to miss.
'l'hc first
Amendment
com ~WlCliOnlng oWcia l pru.yerll Md
mand5 that •·congt&lt;ss sllflll make leuve that purely rellglou~ tuuc
And besides, as a college "'" no taw respecting an establlsll lion to lhe 1/~'0J)ICt.hc.-mB~I
VI/IIMd
dent , the draft board .
to thOkOUte people ChOOf!C
to took
mcnt Of rellglOJl" This TJl'OVl~lo11
nlsQ applies to the Stnle vlo the tor rel!glo\18 gulda11ce,"
'T'h,• rnct thnt New York'- Stntc
Hl.h Amendment. The Court lrt
c-\assiCylng I.he Rogerrl•' prayer prnycr program WIIB l1on.t1cnomin.
1u: n religious activity, concluded allonnl nod votuntm;• cMnot treo
U10.1 "the State of N~w York ha s il from tJ1~Un1it.atlon~ or I.liell't."'t
In th!' WOl'\lll ot
adopted a practice wholly !neon. An,cndment,
Jamee Madl('On, tbl• :wU!or ot tl'le
sh1ent wtt.h the "Eslabllshmcnl
sut'J)l15$0d last yca1 ·s freshmon, Clause."
F'trst Amendment, "who dou not
Mr McClain hope.~ t.o ta;ke a
It was the &gt;1ecypructie{l orcstab. ,Pe thl&lt;t the same ""thcrtlt)' wlllcl\
maJnr role In bringing et.at! and tishing govur,ll'llenlruty composed mn c~tabltllh l'hrl-ltlanlty. In l'll
faculty mcmllers tnto the halls prayers thn t wa.~ one• ot the rN.,_ •·lklon nr 11IIutlwr Rdli:-ton11,mny
ln an attempt to cr~at1• o b11lance ~•ins whkh fore~"!! m&gt;&lt;uy rnrly ~;tabl.lllh Wltlt th,i ,,uuo to~ IU\Y
between lhe academic, the ntt1ll•tlt'. American colonists ln lcl\VII li:ng p1&lt;rt1culor M,·d ,,t C'hrl~tllm,._ In
and lho BOclal
l:rt11l in lll'RrC'h of n•llitlOIW Cree. ~:&lt;ctuuton ,,f ,,u oth~r 11ccta!"
•
'il"tt
W, ~•k
&amp;'tlUUl'lun 1.lulltll t,
In till~ way lly t,rnadcnin1~ I.ht• 1h,m.Wh"n our CoMtlt utlon
~ronr nr th~ res1clen&lt;'&lt;'halli~ !IP
,..,., ,1,,(1, ttrn A1111•rt
o1ln l'A&gt;lon
'T'hn l'wrN,IIOn Ah•I• Ill tho
1
hopcM to Nl1m11ln1,.n tn.i,· pride
l•t, 11lrc•1«lyr,•11.117•'11
th" dlu1
111t1••111•Hf 1\f S-otltlU
wUI 1tv••
In the Unlvontty 11t nu(fal,,. 111• i:n • ut ll union 11( q\llr\ II 111111
J ·,l111·,·,1r,,,.
c,,r hu,vhh~ ,1.1,
'lt11tc•
11,1,
"·
.,.,
••
th
~
,.t
,...t
r~celveil his bnchd,:,r&lt; uwl mrn•lrr~
.., , ,t
·r11,,"'..... w1u b~
\i n,·utlt0t 1 11l ~u.~ cnl\t'h'fl
~ 1
dcgreeo nt th&lt;· Sta•.,· u, ,v,1·,11:,
"I"'""
!t•1• 11
pr.•vt•nl
tJu,
1-'t
'
llt•r:•I
11r
"'''
"'
Collcg,, O.L Albuny.

THE LAW AND YOU

Alp ha Oam announ ces that Gloria Grossn was chosen TKE Play­
mate. Lynn Douglas Is president ot the Spring pledge ctass .
Karen Gochenour, member of Ohl Omogn, wlll be Initiated into
Pi Mu Epsilon, math honorazy soc lety . Lois Reeves bas been na.med
UB'a out.standing nur se. Wendy Baum ls pres ident of the new pledge
class .
Kappa Psi fraternity congrntulatos Bob Ba1·to on hi5 election to
presiden t of the student branch ot u,e American Pharma.ceutlcat As­
ioclatton.
Sigma Kappa sorority announces that Rachael Stefonettl has b~CJI
•lccted President of Uni on Board. Dede Rupp ts pledge class president,
John Greene has been elected preaident of PW Lambda Delli\.
Paul Fl agg has been elected president f1! the pledge class.

Former Resident Advisor , Donald McClain
Appointed Assistant Director of UB Housing
grant, Including Ille cultivation ot
an atmosp here conduc ive to effectDQllald T. McClain has been ive group Jiving, By w,::,rklng
appointed to the newly created closely wtth the supervisors, bead
o( l'Psldents, and tho Inter-Residence
post of a.salstant director
hou~ing here. Mr. 111cClain ca.ml' Council, Mr . McClain wlll attempt
here three years ago a.a a resident to cstu.bliBh the dormitories as
rulvlsor, and since then has held a "living" center for the students
1.h~ (JC"~ltlons nf nsslstnnt · hcnd rnth~r limn just a pta~,· merely
rnai&lt;lonl, &lt;10,l s111Hirvtsnro[ 01e1i'e tn 1,lltc,1 to sleep.
h"Uslng.
'!'his wit\ necPa.."8.ri1y lnclmlr
\ft M1'('lt1ln'8 lllllil'l! will lncturl~
1ho lnte~ rnllon nf th" Allonhur•
,f&gt;onlSlblllty Cor lhc cl!recllon M 1mtt.&gt;1
·,·11J1the on..clUl\pus facilities•
~t I rl
Ill', .,.r ti ll!tJ)Cl'tq
ut '\nllng timl the freshmen In Allen.
' r,·~.,!~,, 1 h,,ll i,t1Lff 11.1v.J
rrn- h11rsr l,ul scmc,;t.er schola.stically
By CHARLES

LIPPMAN

l

,n,~

1

�SPECTRUM

PAGESIX

Honorable Charles Phelps
Taft past mayor of Cincinnati
To talk in Butler Auditorium
'tlil.' I l•mornble
Tait.,

Posts Schedule

Nash Says, 'Candy Is Dandy ,
But Liquor Is Quicker ' !

\pell I !RM, i,;1~1•1
rk Typewriter
Ogden Nash, author of the famous American aphorism
lllvlslon reekJag Lllwml Arts and "va ndy is dandy, but lilJUor is quicker," read from his
the State Department.
Rua. Ad male cnn&lt;lldnt es; U.S. wo r ks at Norton last 'fhursday
evening.
A11n lou,i time member ot Clt-1 Public Hooll.b SPrvkc ROOking Llb­
Mr. Nash, who views himself as a "perpetual emb1·y­
Cnuncll, and moyor ot Cincinnati, H:tl Arll and Economli!a candl­
onic sophomore," expressed the view that humor in the
h• la leader o1 ClnclnnaU•• tamoue datee
writt.en word seems to be "drying up" just wl1en we
I lty Charter
Committee. Fortune
Avril 2 - General Milla seeking need It moat. The picture, how.,
magazine ra.t11d him a.&amp; on&amp; ot
th11 nine best mayon, an d Ille olty ,\ r~ountlnl( and Bu&amp;. Ad. candl­ over, le not 01 bleak a.JI ll eecma, Ir
OR the best Jtll'erned
In Ole United dales: Union Co.rblde Conaumer contended tire noted humorist. For
Produrt1 Company aook1111JCbem­
StateY.
''wc- are surrounded on all aides,•'
lst.ry &amp;nd Bue. Ad. cendhlates.
A ~aduate
ot Yale UnlnrellY,
he notes, "b7 unlrrtenUonal bttmor
Mr Taft 11 11. lending tu and trial
Apr11 ;J-Ulaw.KJJoi s84!llng Bus. In the WTitten word."
IRwyer ; a labOr conauJlant
and
Ad., Mnrketlug, And Acuounl!njl'
He le a boar d
h11u1lng upert.
One bas only to consult tho cur.
member and Vice PrOBldent of tbe cnndldatPR,

Chnrlt"a Phelos

to, mer mayor of Clnc1nnatl,

will 8pMk at 8:30 pm Thursday
lo n1111r, AndltMlum, Capen Rall,
to ,•onclude lbe 1'en!o11 Lec:turPa
for I 082-83.
''1'11n Antertcnn C'ompnol11a Com.
pell\ wltb FOrPIRn Wa,:01 .AbrOlldT
Or ►~~n At Home" will be Mr .
Tatl't topic In the 11erle1 co-epo111&gt;red by Mlllnrd FIiimore CoUege.
Dr. 11nd Mrs. Cll ll'ord Furnne will
preHnt a dinner for Mr. Ta.ft, In
the tenth noor dining room of
Qoodyesr
Hall,
prPCedlng
tile Clnclnoall YMCA, and wu form ­
aoeech.
Prly tr~urer
and Investment of.
The aon of the twenty.ecventh
llcer ot tbe Chlldreo'e Home , Wld ­
Preald en t of th e Un ited Statt,1
f!W'■ BDd Old JMen'a Hom.e, and
ha, been prealden t of the F'ed­ Colored 1ndus trt111 school.
~ • I Couno tt of Chu rch.. of
C'urreolly ho 11 Chairman of the
Chrlet of Am,rlea a nd of the
Board of Tru1tee1 of the Tait
School, an d a tru1too ot the T,ren,.
Committee
fo r a Natlonal
T r ade Polley, director of War.
1leth Century Food and the Car.
time Ec;onomlc Affair• and of
neglo Jnet11utloo or Waablngton,
the Office of Tran,port
and
1111well alf Senior Warden or Obrlet
Comm11nlcatfon1 In the State
E11l1copal Church In ClnclnnaU,
Oepartmcnt. Hewn al10 chair.
nnd Chairman or tho l"nformallon
man of the Advlaory Commltt ..
r&gt;epartment or the World Counctl
On Voluntary Foreign Aid In
of Churches.

Western New York School
BoardInstitute To Begin
"&lt;'rM~lnJ II CJ011~tl'lll'l1ve,CllmM"
rnr 'l'Nlchln11·• wUI bo th o the!ll"
oC th1&lt; fourth W~slern NI'" York
Nc-.bool Board Institute or the aca.
thimlc )'f'.,r on camp1u1.
Ov~~ 300 arhool bol&lt;rd tnemlM,rs
Crom throul(IH&gt;UI an elght-&lt;'ounty
nrM are !IXJ&gt;OCtod
nt the l11ij(ltuto ,
wbkb lk s1&gt;011t10red
by the Weatern
J.ew )'oTII School Study Council
The lnatftute, according to
Dr. George E. Holloway, e,iecu.
tlve secretary , la e■■entlally
tl'te follow .up of a November
lnalltute of ''Staff Grlevancea;
Pollclu and Procedure•."
Tb• two Institutes are roo,idored
parti cularly a11proprlat.e b7 r,chool
board membore
b&lt;....
·auac. under
m11olcl1)1lllow, every eohool dli&lt;trict
Pm11loylug oue hundrPd or more
JMlreon nel OIUIII Hie a. (.'OJIYot RTlev■ nee l)ff&gt;CP1l11rea
for thnt dletrlot by
Nuveruhcr I, IUG3 with 1ht• State
L&gt;t.-i,urtorellLot Education .
The 1m,,mnl Jnijtitute wlll exulore
e.ltrulnallon ot i,:rleva.uces through
Ille creellon of proper morale and

Placement Oiffice

Friday, March 29, 1963

Joh Rllt1Bf8clloo.
The apeakera will be Wendell
H. P ierce,
euperlntendent
of
10hool1, Cincinnati, Ohio and
Dale H. Cutl er, manager of empfoyee and community relation,
In the aemleonductor product•
department of General Electric
Company, Syracuae,
Mr Plorc" bt',:an hie career aa a
high Nobool teacher and counaolor
al the Iowa rmbllr 81'hoola In 193:!.
In 1030 be l&gt;N'amo a couns&lt;'lor In
high sr hool nnd emp luyment ~ur ,,uu In Cln1•lnnall whpre he was
prumntl'd as 11~MIAtanl&amp;UJl\'rluleu.
dent In 1953 um! auJl(lrlntondent
In 1969.
Mr. Cutler hos bt•eu n memberor
the achool boord of Liverpool, N. Y.
foT the Jlll~l 1lve years. lie worked
for JO )'881'8 with Gl'neral Electric
In PlllA0t&gt;ld. Mnea., before '"-Inf
trnnarl'rred to Syracuse.
The lns11tuto will be cha.lrell t,y
PT. R. Oliver Glblloo, nesocl11tfi ex.
ecullve eecrot1u7 or WNYSSC a.ad
c:1&gt;0
rdlna1ed by J . Lynn DeForest,

April • - Owens-llllnola aeeklnr rent magazine, TV and even I.be
Accou.nUng, Bo s. Ad., lE a_nd :\IE pbonebooll: 111order to savor I.be
Wt&gt;alth ot anooneclone bnmor that
can dldAtNI
April 6- Zuricb Jnauro.nce Com. 11urrouoda UR In our dnUy lives,
Mir. Nash. A glance at a
Ad cnndl dat.ee
recent copy of Newsweek waga.
alne, for lnetance, will dl1cl011e
the Invention of a llne of aero11ol
gourmet food , wblcb has recently
pany 100.klng Liberal Arla, and BUI, cllllme

UB Dental So,ciety
To Install Seniiors

been plnced on the market. Orann7
GOOfleFoods, Inc., It develope , h&amp;&amp;
11olved tbe uolvenml problem or
OGDEN NASH
enterta lntng a 1ourmet at dinner
UUnbd&amp; Lambda 0hapU1r nt 0ml .
rron Kappa Upsilon, t.l}e
, national with the Introd uction of their aer- whoHe cheeks are cove red with
Honor Dental Society hore Will In. nl!Ol camembort and brle cheeees. poJnt baM an advantage ,rlth me
stall six outstanding
seniors at a
over onl' wh011e ain 't."
But it la In the con1clou1ly
banquet In Ole Saturn C1ub, May
humoroua written word that
23.
thle for n. erly eerlous poet ex­
ce l,. Wltnen,
f or e,cample,
Membership
keys ane1 oertlfl.
Nnh •• undying llt'le ■ on the
c.ate. wlll be pre11011ted by Dr.
subject
of the perfect mar ­
James A. EngllBh, de1111 of lh c
riage, which he feela 1hould
Dc·nlal School.
be Incompatible, that la to uy
Tholl&lt;! le, be Installed Include:
It thould Include a hu1b1nd
Robert ,J, Oenco. Joanno C. Haw .
with a large Income and 1
rylczak, Robert M. Hobo.lea, Rich
wife that la "pattlble."
ard B. Myers, Lionel C. NeUan11,
Alao oo the au bJect ot love and
end John D. Nyslrom,
murrltl.ge, the l)()l't expressed Ihle
The society was organized na.
uonnlly tn 1914 and the loco! view on feminine wiles anti mlllo
lnt•r,i 1tlon11 Brew•rtn 1,., , Buff 1to, N,V
chapter was founded hor,e In 1937 1mecoptlbllt.y
tbereto:
"A glrl

lfhtnver JOII 1• y,111l!)oll betttt IR

--ARR(Jl l{-

JOBS
INEUROPE
OrlUld Duchy or Lux , Jllar , 29, 1908
Tht' A.mertcan Student InCormaUon
Servlc1&gt;, ,,eJcbrallng tu, 8th A.nni­
venary,
will award
TRAVEL
GRANTS to fll'lll 1500 appllcl\llle,
ASlS
ts
lhe only
authorized
organization
off11rlnJ approved
,rummer job~ In Europ~ . on n tarire
""II.le. to U.S. studenta.
S,000 J)sying summer Jobs (some
orrerlng ~100 monthly! arc avau.
able, Job s Include working In Swiss
reeorts. on lllorwcglan rarma, in
German factorlee, at conKtructio n
~lt.e~ in Spain, and at ~ummer
camps lD France,
Send $1 for a 20.page r,-ogpec.
tu.e, complete selectlon ot Euro11ean joba, Job AppllCllllon, hnnd ling and airrnaU
reply
Write,
na.rn.lng your acllool, lo: Depl T.,
ASlS. 22 Ave. de la Llberte,
L1.umnbourg City, G. D. of Luxem .
bourg . Tho first
8000 Inquiries
l'eCelve a $1 coupon tov.'lll'da the
purcha.s o ol lho newly
atuden t
and
travel book, Earn , Leam
Travt&gt;l In Europe ,

.. .

....

...

Once Agai n

Junior
Year
.
m
New
York
A11 11n11suo/ one-yeor
college progrom

I
,
:

:

,

.... ,, ..
1,

(~1/f('

Jl.2

•

•
:
: l••I• YW Procr1111
, w..
:
C.lltft

,r,,,,.s,.,,.

l

NewYtB uornran,
, ~ewYorkl, H Y,

Howto be colorful-w ithout overdoing it

:
:

.
...,.
The Famou s TCE

EUROPEANSTUDENTTOURS
_
(Some tour• Include an exc:1tln1visit to Israel)
The fabulous.toni-estabh1hedrouri th,11Include

,oan, unique ltalures live uvtral ddys w,lh a
lr,nch family- special oppo1tun1heslo make
f11ends abroad. ~pet11I culto!il e, ents. evemne
entrrta,nment.mttl stlldentsfromall O'fr thel'lorld
r,,.,,1byDeluu l,lotor Coach

A sport shirt by Arrow in a
rich, muted prir1t-that's the
quiet way to be colorful.
That 's Arrow's new Univer
sity Fashion Sport Shirt. The
buttons are in the best pos,
tron to give the collar a soft,
subtle roll- ne~•erbillowing,
never flat. Back collar but
Ion and pleat. Tapered alone

lean Un1vers1ty lines. One
pocket. 100% long-staple
la•
cot ton . "Sanforized"
beled. A range of interesting
colors.
Longsfeeves

SS
$4
Short sleeves

Wher
eYe
r you co you look better in

--;JJ.!J-:(J
II~-

s~i:e~•
• 53 Daysin Europe$705• INctt~ivc
lranut11n11c h1nsporl1trori Addt11ona1
Travel Arr1nge,....n1s Made For Independent
Croups On Request At Rur.onable Priers

TRAVEL
' CULTURAL
UCHANGE,
INC Dept C
e.GIfll!,11
A~• •_ H Y 17, N Y • OX) 4129

---~-"

L____________________

.

�F,i doy , Mo rch 29, 1963

PAGESEVEN

S P EC T RUM

Opera By Thomson And
Stein To Open At Baird
By

V ICTORIA

BUGELSKI

'l'he llother ot Us All, no oper11
bY VITgll Thomson and Gertrude
Stetn, wUI be given by the music
department
'l'hul"l!dnY, Saturday
and Su n day, All performances wm
take place In Baird Hall at 8:30

p.m.
The opera, a short work or two
11Cte, ts being presented
In con.
nectlon wllh Mr. Thomson's
Slee
prateasorshLp
here . F'lmt
pro.
duced In 1M7, It ls the story of
Susan B. Antho.uy a.n d the strug.
Henry
gle tor woman suttrage.
Wicke of tl:le d rama. and speech
department,
who ls stage. dtrootor,
described the opera as "cute, wit.
W, and so.llrlc, but wllb a serious
theme.''
A type of hlatorlcal pa9ea nt,
the opera Is a rather ana­
chronlatlo, with Its m ixing of
characters fl'Om di fferent his.
torlcal periods; LIiiian Ruaae ll
appears along with John Qu in.
cy Ad ama.

wo1.1Un!N!d from l'~e

tt ,. lo t&gt;tthoped ho"'evc-, that
the unpopularity
ot our
T11esd11y ut S p,m. in Norton, room when
329. Re(reshm.-nt• will follow
po..~lti(m plU!"Cs, our true motives
who Joine d th e mueio departrnent)
The Photo 0lub will meel. at 4
wUI emc1-gc . not os they eeem
Graduate Moth Club
fiiculty lna t fall us opera COIICh p.m. today- In Norton 262. J'udges
Prof~ssor Wllllllm M. BooJhby of to bt' at t.hl.8 point; but rather,
1
111
0nd11
th
ctor,
:
r.rid 1•
e music
• have boeu obUllned, and th!• con. \Vll!hlngton University,
St. Louts 110 ru, attempt to utlllz;/ t:be pro­
Covernm.c:nt
,·ector.
'l'he sets have been de- teat categories will be furthElr dis. wlll a peak 'l'ui,sday at 4: 30 11.m. In I ccd ure ~ ot Student
alg11ed by Robert El. Rogers and cussed. Please have sunset l~hotoe Diefendorf, room 204. Coffee will be ; to solve 1Jlsputes between stuOent
si,rvec1 nrter the lecture.
de..
1 organtzntto ne, This epl~
co 9tumes c0-o rd1nnted by Borla In mtnd, ns they 11re lm[1(&gt;rla~t. ·
Variety Show
\ monsh'l)les I.hat If tu ideals or
Any prosl)eetlve memfbers a11e cor'l'h" l'nloo Board ml:ter cotnmll- rcpreaentntlvc
student
Qbvern..
dlaUy iJ1V'ftej) to n.tlend the meet- t.e;&gt; will preRent n. campus vo.rtety I ment a.re to have vtnbut(y It must
lng . Contac, • Don Bur kb ar d t at •how •nnJl--o~ uinn n. Anthony.
"" "A 0llte With Show I &lt;'Ontaln both 0. quallfled majority
l:llz" nt R:00 tonight and tomorrow t o lead and n tt,iponmble minorn1ghl In Harriman Auditorium. The! It)' to boaly wt properly assert
I adtng roles wlll be portrayed ex1enalo n 3565 In Tower.
by \VHllnm Wagner
as Dnlliel
Fo lk Mualc Club
tickets tor this "nrled blend or I thosd rlghla which deem~ Impin ged
Webster, Gloria Masea aa GertThere will be a general ru.eetlng "eex. songs end entire" are nttyl upon,
JuNt grievances pcl'Sued tJlrough
ceuts each.
t be
ru d e S ., Cllrr or d Ch apmu at Vt r. ror :ill members 11nd pr0111•ective
ln 11ddltlon to a oborue Uue, • 11pproprlate cbanne:18I\Nl o
en.
!I'll T., Ll\wrence
Bearoo a.I. Jo, members Tuesday at 3:oo.IJ1 Nor.
courag'ed rnther
s~t
ed.
tberej
wUl
be
tolk
•lngen,
"
Aut
hority
Is
never
to
be
UloUJhl
Tneko FuJII 118 An.gel More, and ton aa9.All are, welcome and bring
bm•oorshop
quartet,
dance
rouUOAll,
free
trom
legltlml\te
dlilll.cnge.
Jacrnrnllne Hansen wi Anna Hope. 'your Instruments.
a Jn~i sextet, vocalists and muy Challenge 18 the matrix of oon.
There will bt&lt; a ~• piece orcbeeotber acts. Tile b11elc 11url)()!le or tlnult
In an
roprcaen ta uve
trn.
Eallter Eg9 Colo r ing
thle 11bow Is not only to provide
Y
t
Y
'
h
,l((,Vernmen
,
Thursday from 2 to 4:30 1&gt;.m. In
Admisston !or faculty nnd staff'
nn 1&gt;ntert11lnlnJI(~"enlng tor t o
Finan
we would like 'to nm.kc
fact ot our h lgtl reprd
la U ; g®eml admission is $1.60. the Craft Sbop, Norton bnsement, uudieu~e. hut 11lso, because oC the public
Students may obtain tickets fr11e Cbrystyoo Inlubu wilt demonstrato
~nrge ~ils ur the Ntudent body, to Cot· Richard Erb, presloon t of Ull'
it chorge by presenUng their ID the uulque and faeclnnling Llkra tn. rntrodnce uull promote some or th e :,tu!lent A11Soc1allon and al so the
cards at the Baird Hall ,&lt;
box ot. I
siudent~ on ('lltnJ/UB .
•lectlon 11 oommlttee' At no bm~
r lk ur l Or Flaa'-""'' E 1,,g c O lo r IO g • tnlt'1J1t•dFine
Arta Committee
'
•
nee prior to the night or the nn
At lhls time, the craft sh~•IJ wlll
U!6 )'011 mla~ yeslel'day's oxolth111; In our arguments !nbefore Ule Jud.
performance.
,
,
iclary or fn seel! g rl"llteas dl,1
b;o OJ18u to everyone who is Inter- dotni:s ht Nor1011 3~ I·. II a not too we no.lve ly imp ly tllat
~ - Erb
este d In wutcl11ng 1.U1'1/or trying late, ho1v1.,ver, IO vnrt1cli,ate lo ths or the COmmitt.ee Mtcd in any
th.elr bnnd nt H. All materials wlll ~•ine Art1! &lt;'ommlll~e~ free Pock~!- n111m1er other
thnn h&lt;&gt;norable.
be avaltuble, tlll'nlshed by tho shop. book li1xdn,llJII' ,
William A. Carm.uum
1
011
All &gt;' 1tu,·•• " do Is bring In
Lou!$ M. Cnccll\lo
Arts '1nd Cratta Committee memone 01 yt1ul' h,Juk~ in good t11ste
Clm t'd M. UmtU
bars wlll assist at this wor~:shop.
nnd 1·1111dlth&gt;11.
uud en·hnnge it for
oue
or
1111r
11Plt•c1
Ion
or
b~st
ijt'll"rs,
Anthropology Club
~
talk wUI be "Fever
o! Unel&lt;.
Mondl\Y, rroressor George El. ~lur. d11S•h•11, or 1•nt1tl'mpornry work r.
pJaiMd Origin,"
;
NEW
(look from tbe deportment
or llU- ~turl 110w.1111•1~•
nr~ only ij)::/: weekt1
Solley ol K,...i....,.
tc•lt In whwh to 1mrlld1111te.
TF l .. 21 6
of
Among his positions Dr . Beeson throf)ology nt th&amp; Uutverslly
'!'here wOI he t111nt1111r
1n,•ali11i:
Plttsburgh,
wilt speult lu Nortou 'l'bursd"y rrom 1 10 ~ p.m. In 334
ha~ been a resident at th.e' Hosp! .
HELD
OVER
! 2ND WEEK.
233.
l\or&lt;on
la l o! the Rockefeller Instit-ut e,
"Bes t ~mer1&lt;.on Film
Tile lecture wlll lie ul ~::11, 1,.1n
.
assistant
In medicine at Harvard
und bis toplr wlll he "J\1t1rr111
1ro
of 1962"
Tu'f'l~~Ulilt
University and chairman of th~ ond the !~amity in L\frtcn,"

Ola.rrataDJl,

MatlRlro

Photography

Club

than

te

I

°

MedicalAlumniTo Sponsor
Annual SpringClinicalDay
More than 4!!0 dootors from
Western New York are rcgtsterod
lo attend the Twenty.Sixth
An­
nual Spring OUnlcal Day spon.
Mred by the Medical Alurnnt As .
soeia tlon of UB ,

4)

........
KENSINCTO

f

To be held In the Hotel StaUe.r
Hilton Saturday,
the highlight of
the progrnm will be th e S tockton dfpartment
Kimball lecture by Dr. Paul B,
Beeson, professor of medicine, Yale University.

r-'1,.

of medicine at, Emory

Speech Clinic
The student s1,eech 11ml b 1eu rlng
eoclely will present Dr. lrwl1B Glns­
Unlv tjrslty . Scheduled at 2:15 p,m.
The day's program Includes u burg, speaklng on "Medlcul and
tn the Terrace Rooin, Dr. Beeson'M business meeting at. 10 a.rn., DI', Surg1ra1 Aspects ot Hearing J.,o,,•"
Glenn H. Leak, presiding; 10:30
a.m., "Merger, Merit and Medi ­
Rl;GIBTRAT ION
Will the student who witness ­ cine," Dr. Douglas M. Surgenoi-.
FOR UC STU DENTS
ed a collision at Niagara Fulls
It your Inst na.roe b,eglua
dean Of the School of Medicin e;
Blvd. and .Deca~ur Blvd. Ma.rob
of lhl • wltb:
ll :45 a.m., ''Physiology
1 plcnse call Mr. Fergus at TF
O, A, Fl Diving
Women or Korea ," Dr.
3-029~.
You shoul d see your advisor
Hermann
Rahn, chairman of the
the week of April t.6. rr you
tlepal't.mont of physiology.
and
nave uot done so- mal\e an ap­
lun cheon at 1 p.m. Cla/lS reunions
l)Olnt.ment to Diefendorf
No.
lH.
will be held In the evening,

NOMINATED
FOR

3

1

~,.

,. sEER
IS
w
•
A
JUsrAsfER
..•
}
uNLEss
IT'S

rJroquois

..Da
vid&amp; Lisa
:
1

AN UNFORGETTABLt
MOTION PICTURE
Acode 1nJ Aword H_I ....._

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STUDENT OISCOUMT$ AVAI L.AIU

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The Gu ido Chorus

JOSEPI◄

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"THE
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J.'..aturing

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~NE

The UB Wind Quintet Premii,r P~r!ol'll1ance
of o !llew Work by Allen Supp

SUNDAY, MARCH 31
l&lt;LEINHAN'S MUSIC HALL (Mary Seaton Room)
Ti cket,

Anita Ekberg

Romy
Sd,neider

'1TCOULD
BllltEMJST
TtRRlfYIHB
IOTIOM
PICllJI(I 11M
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Student Tickets S11.50

8:30 P.M.
Student

Sophia Loren

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No one con 5ee "The Birds" until ti's over!
r •• , c/r,i/11)IU/Jll'I'# /lir tilM

Th~;;~ay,
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'iiNEi
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,clmlwl, I

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with
self-oddl9Uod
stomped envelope, 1oftd check « mon-,
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3;._ Court Strdet , Buffalo 3, N.Y.

4
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Student o tscount Tickets
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141 MAIPt ITIIIT

1L.l••eo•

lost

o Doy~

"FREUD"

---·I

�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Fridoy, Morch 29, 1963

Debate Society Will Sponsor Observatory Ready for Use
Individual Event Tournament Featuring 1~5-inchTelescope
I
Invitations Out to 70 Schools
By LAURA ZIMMERMll,N

8)' KATHLEEN

SHEA

The apeaker In the orlg lnal
Some 70 New York State col.
oratory event ls to have cho1en
hla own 1ubject prior to the
IOfl\'6 and unlve111ltlea hav e T8event. The purpoae of h la 8.10
cofVed Invitations to the Firs t
Annu!\.I tndh1dua l liJventa Tourna.­
mln11te pr eaentatron I• to atlm.
mont to be held her e April 20
ulate h it au dience. Howe\/er,
under tho d irection of the Debate
he may not apeak on a contro.
Society. Linda
Leventblll,
Tloe
ver alal topic. Quot atio ns from
presl d~nt of p1,0aoolety, bl cb&amp;l.r­
outside aour cea should not be
man of tbo event.
longer than 150 words.
The s11q11klngtourna.meot l e also
The flnul event I$ tfl be impromp­
open ,t o nu students here at the tu speaking, for which participants
U nlvel'!llt)' . Ai!Pllciattone muat be will be &amp;ODt a prepnred list or
flied Ill room 3!2 Norton or In 113 p0selble loplce In advance. At the
Crosby t,y Thu rsday. Coe.chlng as­ tournnml'nt, each contestant will
alstanc o will be anllable
trom draw some or these topfce five
o( · drama
and minutes before epealdng.
Ibo dipo.rtnuint
A novice debate team attende d
•~~.
U .It Is dfl8IN!d/
The toumament wTiT
con1llt
a tou rnament at .Flint Community
8' four type• of ,peaking
Ju nior College last W61lkend. The
e11enu: oral lntltf'l)retatlon, e,c.
affirmative team of Francine Mi­
temporaneou1 ,peaking , orig .
chael und Tom :Berd ine had a rec­
11'18
I oratory, and Impromptu
ord of three wine and one loH .
apeaklng. Two prellmlnary and
They were award ed a cerUOcate of
Ofte Jn•I round wlll be hold ,
e:rcellence for their performance.
fOf' which • 12.00 registratio n
T he negati ve team of Rich­
fee 1, belng charoed .
ard Nemlrotr and Betsy Nord.
Cn the ftrst eTont, ora l 11lteratrom attended the ir flrat ln­
1&gt;retfltlon, each entrant ,rill dl'Mr
tercoflegl ate deb ate . They aro
In their flrat semeste r of nov.
three ftvo-mlnute pua11gee trom
IJ'rlc or narrathe
p0&amp;tr;r. From
Ice debate.
th- . throe eelecttone, he wm Since the eyslmn of "power pair .
c'II0011etho one be wlehea to pre. ing'' waa not uned In lbls meet,
se nt . He wi ll then have an hour they met ROme ot the Midwest's
to Pl'OIIIINI before reading for the etro ngest learns , thus. gaining good
Judges . The Judgee will be the experie nce. Three ou L of the Jlve
debate ooaohes; epeooh lruJtntclore l.l!nms they debl\ted w ere awarded
will 4&gt;e eu pplled by the varlouu J&gt;rl~es.
~
1'he vsrslly divi sion of the De­
ror th&amp; eirtemp0raneoue speech, bale Society Is sending a team to
the entrant will have five minutes Le Moyne University for I\ tourna­
to c hoose bJe topic and lU1 addl­ ment being held there today and
Uona\ h our for &lt;11renaratton of hie tomo r row. Tho team le: Gernld
epeooll, which le lo be 6S$enUally Catanuro, enrol Zeller. Karon Mfl .
l)onlUMIVO In nature.
!er and Russell Ooldherg.
~

...

Speech and _Hearing Clinic.~
Scheduled July 9 - 26
Dr. I), Ke-nneth Wlleon, aBSoclate , testing and rehabilitation
l)roce­
proc\'ll!l!O'ror BJ1800'b p&amp;t.holo!P' and duree to th e a.lotenUon or praotlclng
a. member or the Speech and Hear• cllnlclans. Emphasis will be placed
tng Cllnl c b&amp;re, wmdJ'l'oot a three- oo coordlnatt.ng the llndtngit ot re­
week works'bop for apeooh and cent research with cll'nlcal praeUee .
hoartng clin lcLslul Uill! summer .
Include d wlll be dlagnoetlc proTo b6 .held frolll 1uly 9-'.!6, the cedurec, and Temedlal procedures
Worbho11 Ill ftMncod by a train- cove re d bY lecturers, fllms and
lntr i:ran.t tr-om the Neurologica l gro up dlscuealone.
and Senaory Oleaa;ie Service ProTuition-tree acbolarahl
pa are
gram o&lt;the U.S. Health, Eduoatlon avallable for speech and hea:ring
an d Welf are.
clinicians. Three semeater hours of
The primary objective, accor ding graduat e credit can be earned ror
to Or. Wlleon. "111 be to bring re• application lo state and oallonal
cent treads In lll)OeOh and hearln.g certi fication .

Unknown to many University
st udent.,, there 1188 beneath the 12.
fO!&gt;tdome or Hochstetter Hall a
new observatory available t'or uee

r:

,.,.

•

REQUIREDTEXTS

rJroquoi

•

REFERENCEBOOKS

lnle,notlonal

e, ........ , •••.• Buflolo , N.'!',

Grandparents
Aunts

Nieces
Guardians

In-laws
And all others

•

•

•
•
•

He baa been a.ttWatcd with
ot Brook
Polytc~hnic Institute
lyn since 1954 where he has been
a profe•sor of electrical enginee r.
Ing 8Ild chairman ot tho depart ­
ment.

COLLEGIATESTUFFEDANIMALS
COLLEGERJNGS - JEWELRY
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New and Used

•

Nephews

25°

tcm Design." Dr . Truxai is an
renow11
engineer ot tntematiooal

Studen
1I Center
for

•• EERIS
~
AB
JUsrABEE,•'
uNLEss
IT'S

Uncles

AT

The tiUe of his talk Ill "Optlmi .
zaUon Theory and Control Sys .

Physics proteseor Dr. R.ofaert 0.
Arns helped to design the c&gt;bserv­
ntory, oonstru~te d six filghll!1 above
Hochstetter at a cost or IJ40,000.
Other equipment includes ell: eelea.
tle l globes and a spectroeoopo on
the telescope to show the color&amp;
nod lights ot tbe stars.

Cousins

STILLONLY

Dr. John G, Truxal, vice.presi ­
dent of educati onal development
at the Polytechnic Institute
ol
Brooklyn, will lecture Wedneeday ,
at 5 p.m. In room 1'7 Dief endorf ,

Although
8ulfalo 'e enow ,
clouds a nd dual from the steel
mlll• often hamper obaerva1tlon,
some participant.a have ,eo n
Mare, and the atar1 Sllrlue,
8oot es and Orlon, Plana are
being made t o en able tho atu­
dent to photograph wha lt he
aeea by attaching a Pcl11rold
ca me ra with reflec t ing mirror
to the telescope.

.-REFRESHMENT,..PURVEYORS
AGAINOFFERSFOR
THE SATISFACTION
OF
Small Chil dren

Dr. Borst, before Joining the Uni.

verstt:r of Bnttalo faculty last Sep.
tember, dl atlngulshng himself a., a
sclentltlt In the field ot nuclenr
pbyele&amp;.

He wa&amp; a research associate of
to all those enrolled In tbe ,aatronomy course.
tbe late En r ico Fermi , who headed
the first nuclear renclor team at
The maJor teatute ot lhle obeerv. lhe University of Chicago .
atory ts a 16-ln,ch refiectln.g tele.
.
He was also a senior physicist
scope, which all st udent&amp; In the at the Clint.on laboratory,
01lk
program will he tought to operate. Ridge, Tennessee rrom.1943-46, an d
The pul'))Oae ot the progr·am ls ser ved 11s chairman ot reactor
to inslruct and create enthusiasm science engineering at Brookhaven
tn the stu dent lby giving him a NnUonal Laboratory
In Suffolk
County from 1945-51.
sense of parUclpatlon.
Ro has authored many 1&gt;ublloa­
''S tudents will be able to get a
t1ons on nuc l ear reactor des ign and
good took at tb88e things l,nst&amp;ad developm.ent, nuclear pby5lcs and
ot just seal ng plotur5s In a book," the ln!n,...red spectroscope.
aays physics professor Dr .. Lyle-------------------------­
Borst, who believes tbnt an ac t ual
view or the heavens wtll have a
great ettect upon the dee1lre to
learn.

FAT'S
Ladies
Gentlemen

Engineer Speaks
On Control Design

CENTER

BOOKSOF All PUBLISHERS

•

•
•

MEDICAL
DENTAL
NURSING
SCIENTIFIC
TECHNICAL

ENGINEERING

EQUIPMENT

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SPECT

Friday, Moreh 29, 1963

R UM

PAGENINE

C. Osborn Resi91ns
, ~ Biology Hea◄d
llllllr -Vorslt'y Cl1rl8tlan Fellow hip
Prof , ~on
M, Osborn has re..
lllllcl
AprU 4, Rev. Lloyd Ellis ;vUI
~
ot the bic,logy
sponsor a · Sabbath
Sj?rv\ce this evening al 7 :4fi Jn speak on the subject ''Man Can department cifective at the end
l be
the Hlllel House . Dr. Justln Hof. Know God." The meeting
o( the academic yeo.r ln May,
maJin wm!lpeak on: "ls Judalsn, helrl In Room SSO. Norton
ot
4
p.rn.
Still Relevant?" An Oneg Shabbat
Ohn.ncellor Clifford C. Fu1mas
The spring weekend for urea
will follow.
announced lho.t Dr. 011bom In as.
Inter-Varsity
will be held April
lnvttations have been extruuled
5.7 at Lake Cllnandlagua.
The sumlng lhe chalrmanahlp (&gt;f a
10 all Jewish faculty members topic will be "Christ: God Md/or committee on lnternatlona1 ooluca.
Hillel

here,

sJ.gne,.:I
.ch*man

wm

at

Erle

County Technloa
Man." T~ cost of the entire week ­
Institute, 8J1d at Stale Unlverslty end will be $7.50 and traJlBport.
College to attend a JlO(llal tomor. 11Uon wLU be provided tor Interest­
row at 8:30 p.m. at the Hlllel
ed people. Further detaUs and
House.
re~ervatlons may be ·obtained from
A dellcalessen supper Will be Cr,rolyn D!Pasquale, TN-2228 .
served Sunday a 5:30 p,m. tn the
Hillel House and a Model Sede1
O.R.O.
will be held Sunday evening a I
NEjxt Wednesday the final talk
5 :SO p.m. by the Hillel at State in the CRO sponsored series on
In the College Union.
"The Meaning and Purpose of
All rese.rvatlons !or the varlou R Man" will, be given at 4.:00 In the
Passover funoUons sponsored by conference theatre. The !JJ)EGker
Hillel must be made by Monday will be Dr. John W. KJot.z, pro.
fessor of biology and ch~n
nt Hillel .
of the dlvlsU:m of natural sciences

Wesley Foundn.tlon
The second In a series of pro.
gram and study groups will be
held Sunday evening, Dr. Phlllp
Tonenie Will ~peak on "Marriage
snd Dlv~rce and Rellg!ous Prae.
llces'', Rev. Hugh Tucker will dis.
CU88 "C urrent Trends 1n Religious
Thought", and Dr. Loren Belknap
Will present the topic, "Sex and
Marriage."

at Concordia Senior College, Fort
Wayne, Indiana,
Dr. Klotz, who will represent
GAMMA DELTA,
the Lutheran
student group, Is also a graduate
or Concordia Collegiate Inatl tute ,
Bronxville, and of Conoordla Sem.
!nary, St. Louis.

NeWJDaDOlub
The Illmplre State Newman Club

tlon to report on opporlunltl!ts of
the unive\·sity to participate
In
foreign prog1:ams.
Dr. Osborn curue to the OB
biology depattmenl In 1952 1trorn
Syracuse University, He unore
than doubled the biology ,start
at UB, lnaug'Urated a research
program ahd equipped the blo,Jogy
section of the Health Scte,ncea
occupied two years ago .

ue·ReactorTo Be Modified;
PeakPowerWill Double

A letter or Intent bas been 11lgoecJComml)ialon ~ O/U't
"1t 11.tSP!lllllT
for the building of I\ new puJae- (Special Powor Plzperlmen t R.eM:tor
type reactor enabling more diver- Teets) ProJeot, t.be lnb8Nlnl ea.tety
sifted 1na11strlal, medical ancl apace nnd i.elt.lmittlog peak pmrerout»at
nnclear reaearob on campua. The ol tht&gt; oew.tyl)(l r.we h&amp;e 111·0·..a
d
r~actor will be built by AMJ' Atom- auvertor to all other t1J)M. StruUIIce, a division or Amerloan Ma. I rnnt AAVIW(B Lo rept'()(l~!Nllln,g
coetl
chine u.nd Foundry Company, and
the Wea1em New York Nuclear
Research Center, a aub111dlary of
St.ate University at Butralo. lt was
uunoum:ed here Jointly by Stanley
ID. C. Hillman, AMF vice presi dent
nnd Adv1inced Products Group Ex­
ecutive, and Dr. C. c. Furnaa , prea.
!dent of the University.

A new chah'man o! the bto,logy
dE-part.ment was not lm.medl11tely
na.med, Other members of the

committee on in\.ernatlonuJ cdiuco.•
tlon a1·e Dean, Henry M. W'oodSC.hool,
bum of th e Graduate
Dean Robert S. Fisk of lhe Sc:hool
ot Education, Prof. Edw11rd1 M.
Bridge of the Medical School, l?rof,

Through a unique concept 11nd
desig n de veloped by A MF, t he
converte d research center r._
actor wlll be capable of pro.
vfdlng peak power pulse of
more than four mtlllon kllowatt, for a period of ,evoral
milllaeconda. In addition to lta
pulsating capability, t he now
reactor, ualng uranium dioxide
fuel , wlll have more than twice
the ateady st ate power output
of tho present reactor.

---------------

eased with J&gt;OWl'r reactor tool UI
exlRUng faellltlf'l!.

Comment1nr; on tho new react.or,
Furna.a said. "'!'be developioeot
ot fl ))lllaed N&gt;nctor at the Oat.,..
Dr .

Rlly's Wt111lern New Yorll Naelear
ReseaTcb Center will eoha!IC8ooo.
~ldernbly ltR use f o l ne1111ID the
Northant1tern 1Tn1LedState,, .~

A re.lent st udy ronduolQd by th e
New York St.ate Atomic llnern
Authorlt.y determined th&amp;&amp; U..re
wns I\ !lubnto.ntlo.l need ,tor a J)lllNd
reactor tn thlM area." Or. Jl'la
rnu

"A pul&amp;od reactor a
useful tn productu
short •llvt'il jsotope• for uiedlca t e.ll4
bneic 11!1yelcero@Mrcb, Lil ntud)'l.llg
lhe transient eJ'fect.11
ot radlaUon on
~~ntlnued.
partlcuinrty

~lectr nntc and ebnllar eonlpment u

'fbe AMF' rMctor design Is bosed
Gordon Silber, chairman ot the 0 11 the umolum dioxide tuel Wchdtpartmcnt or modern Jang,,aage. 11ology developed over the J)Qllt ten
nnd Mrs. Shirley D. Stout. BEISist. year$ 1n this country and Canada.
ant to the vice chancellor fo ·r re..Ju recent tests t.'Ouducted ou lbe
search.
fuel by I.he u. s. Atomic Energy

Tra.nsportatlon
will be provided Convention wlll begin this eve..---nlng with a social in Norton.
o.t 6:30 tonight to attend the Fri..
Father Richard Butler, O.P .,
do.y nlghl Lenten service a As.
bury.Delaware Methodillt Church. Pb, D., national chaplain ot the
National NewmnJ\ Aposto!o.te w111
delive1• the keynote address at the
Enlpirc State Province Conven.
Uon tonight at 10!30, In the con.
ference theater of Norton. He wtll

o.lso will be rA.'lllzed wllb tblll b1)e

or rore be&lt;'nU81.'It ran ~ reproc.

well us blologfool 6PIIClmllDtt, aJld
In evnlun.tlng damo.ge caufted by
nuclear weawns. lt also will be
11eef11lIn devolopl:og com'l)Oueo
i.
nnd materials for tbe nation'■ nu..
clear rocket J)N)lll'am."

----------

------------­

Dr. D. Drucker
SpeaksHere

speak to the statewide gathering
of Newman Club mEJ11bers on
"New Perspectlvee In Newmo.n.''
Dr. Daniel C. D1'1loker, ohalr­
During Lent, two M118Beear e
maln of the Physical Sciences said each weekday at noon l\lld
CcuncU at Brown University, will 5:00 p,m.
deliver a. speech entitled "A Uni.
There will be a general meeting
fled Approach to Structures
of in the conference theater ot Nor .
One, Two, and Three DlmeJUJlons" ton Union Wednesday at 7:SO p.m.
tonight.
The apeech will begin at 8 p .m.
h, Dletendort Hall, Room 14.6. Dr .
Drucker, In his talk, will analyz e
Jramed pl&amp;t.ea, shells, steel, alu.
mlnum, elastle plasUcs, and con.
crete.
Recelvlng !us Ph.D. in engi­
neering from ·Brown Univerijlty In
Providence, Rhode Island,
Dr.
Drucker Is a registered profession_
al engineer and waa chairman of
the Division ot Engineering at
Brown

from 19113to 19119.

JUST OFF THE PRESS!
Webster
's Seventh
NewCollegiate
Dictionary
Thisbrand-new
..-~

' . Me(riamWebster is
thefirstcompletely
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college
deskdictionary
in tenyears!
10,000
Newest of the famous Merrlam• vivid deflnltlo11.1helpful usa"9eumplei, - word
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new word• et ymologls - limplifledJ?lO­
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THE

. UNIVERSITY
BOOKS
TORE

.

.

,·, -.

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'

" What responsibilities will you start with at W. E.?"
Excitingones. With plenty of room for lour pro­
fessional development. Western Electric's busi­
ness dependson newid,eas.And newengineers
take responsible, immiidiate part in projects
that implement the entire art of telephony includ[ng electronic teluphone offices, compu­
ter •controlled production techniques and
microwavetransmission,. On many of these ex­
citing advances in communications, Western's
• engineers workclosely mth engineers from our
Telephone Laborato­
research team:mate, e,,11
ries. For Western Electnc to maintain the Bell
System's ultra-high quality standards. extraor
dinary manufac tur ing, process and testing

techniques are required. Opportunities for fast.
moving careers edst nowfor eleetrical, m~
cha nical and industrial engineers, and also for
physical science, liberal ilrts and busin~s
majors.
Fo, more cfet-ailedinformation, get your copy of
the Western Electric career opportunities book•
let lrom your Placement Officer. Or write Col
legc Relations Coordinator. Western Electric
Company, Room 6306. 222 Broadway New
York38. New York. Ancfbe sure to arran~e for
., pc·rsonal Interview when the Bell Sys l!'m , e­
uu 1,nll t!'Jrr" comes to 1,s,t your rampus lhts
Y•·

• UL11111i;,out Sf'lllN

w~sfqr11 Electric
J10,

"ON CAMPUS"

yeiJt

'I

"

t I'

uJ1,1'\

~•

•t.,

~

&gt;11 l!l:;.

t

�Friday, March 29, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

GridProfileNo.2: LorryGergley;
Bullolo's
Hord·hittin:g Receiver
By ROCKY VERSACE

TRACKSTER8

Leading the footba ll squad next
season along wllb King-Kong Philben will be co-ca1&gt;taln Larr:- Ger.
gley. Larry, a 20-Year-old junior
and physical education major from
Kenmore, pn.ck11 a powerful 218
pounds Into his 6-1¾ frame.
Next to football, Larry's secon
love Is baseball. A 'Pitcher w1th n
blnzl
tnst ball and a deceptive
curv:g Oergley last summer put
plenty of time lnito the Triple A.BA
and Obooktowoga Classic leacues.
About this time ot the year be also
tlq)fl the IJ.lOO.
tOI' Jlm Peelle'a varslty line.
Since Larry had many outstandIng games to bis credit this past
tall It ts bard to point out bis best

DAVE STEPHENSON AND VERN
HUFF SET THE PACE

Unlver1lty of Buffalo Track
Schedule - 19e3
Var1lty
April
!~RPI-Rome
14--Cortland-A-wuy
27-In'ritatlonnl-Home
29--Nlagara
May
1-B1'0Ckp0rt-Home

performance.
However, Gergley's
long run ,which set 11-p a touch.
down against Delaware and his
aggressive and hard-noae maneu­
vers against Colgate must he his
most prodncUve.
In the lotter gnme, Oergley, leap.
tr
block!
b kt
th
ogg 00 , a
ng ac O smo er
Colgate s quarterbMk Dan ~eating
as well ns the Red Raiders hopes
-or"fctory. Comm en ting on the
coming campaign Larry says, "We
sho uld have a line team. With our
ma,terlal and " excellent coac hes,
we II be tough.
An all.league ful Iba cl( at
Kenmore We■ t High School,
Larr y Gergley played his fro1h
year here at that ■tot. Head
mentor Dick Otfenhamer the

8-CO!gale--A wo,y

FOR

_

.

.

MAIN STREET- CLARENCE,N. Y.

PHOTOSERVICE

TF3-7131
01'

:,.
i
:,.

and his ROCKIN .JACKS
(formerly from Johnnie's E)

TF 4-0652

DRY
CLEANING

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Appearing
every

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l'cr Sbort Rnn Pr1ntlq

j

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HotelJim"Cowboy"
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AT THE

I

Wed.,

One-Stop Service Center
laundry • Shbe Repairing
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and

,

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...................................
.,........

? ? ? ?

Call Dick Foser,
UB student, for
top quality and
fast service at
reasonable prices

3610 Main Street

I
i

I
FreeStudent
DeskBloHer
fortheAsking- WhileTheyLastI

Port,olfl
Gl'OllpPlchoNI
Ad,1rtllln1

(formerly Teck Univ. Branch)

arch••

¼ Mil■ Morth of SHERIDAN DRIVEot MAPLE ROAD
(Adjocent The Boulnord Moll Plozo)
()p■ n Fridcry
ond Saturday u11til1:00
OpeNIIH .., th■ JERRYBROWNROUTCORP.

CofflpUI Actt.ltlw

o.•"'°"Blvd.

,,..

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

Publlclty

24S

.,,,.

.MeDonaldS
site&amp; .

not that blgl"

Need a Photographer

NOW AT THE

When graduated, the Kenmore
lad hopee to teach pbysicnl educa.
lion and coach. This should be
seoo11d nature to Oergley, because
ot his love tor sp0rl.l! and his
genuine leadership. One thing aa.
sured, 1111 can count on Gergley
next season, as In 'lbe J&gt;Mt. for a
grade "A" job 1md 100 J)llll'Cent
elfort.

May

"Get back on the fteld Philbin . they're

BUffALO TEXTBOOtC
STORES, INC.

fenae.''

8-lthac&amp; State-Home
8--Colgate--Away
11-N. Y. State Mee~
Rochester
Fro1h
April
20-RPJ-Home

lh• drlH•ln

QUICK, DRY

following year found himself
In need of another top flight
end and called upon Gergley
for the job. Says Offenhamer,
''Larry had much natural abll­
lty to play at any po ■itlon. He
proved to be a fine paea re.
celver, al10 excellent on da­

dyed

All types of ladlH' HHl1 In
Stock for lleplocement
or R-,Yllng

:

Fri.
and Sat .
Nights

1
,::

9 p . m. until ?

i

1:,.
i,.

Microfilm prleee call;

ShoeRepair
TuckerQuickCopy Plaza
UNMRSITY PLAZA•
174 PEARLST.

nu214

:

TP 6-4041
Open 9 A. M. • 9 P. M.

'---------

----------------------,,------

...... .......................... ~·······$································••

---·•

H'*

�Friday, Morch 29 , 1963

PAGEELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Baseball Bulls FaceRuggedSlate
SPRING
IS HERE

BY JIM BA.KER
11lt.'8 at second.
play 17 games ln 25
As John Stora will be unavaU.
days." This comment by assist­ able for much • If not all - of
ant varsity baseball mentor Len the baseball campaign; Stofa has
Kosobucki serves as an indlcnllon been selected to tour Europe this
Of just how intensive the upcoming ~prlng , Joel Pennl6on
will prob•
UB baseball campaign \\111 be, The ably bG the starting shortstop,
Rob P le21la will fill ~ e blll
schedule is decidedly a more cramp.
en schedule t.han that of previous at third , whlle Dick La ub, Da 11
Kn ,f t, l\lld Oml g Lyon ar c the
seasons because of the revised
leadin g can didate s f or the
academic calendar that haa boon
Invoked this year,
Ih ree outf ield positi ons. Lau b
Is a t ran sfer stu dent f rom St,
The Bulla appear to have the
LaWl'e noe. Oth ers wllo fl gut'(.'I
manpower wlth which to succesS­
as strong cont enders to r fl y.
fuUy meet the aggressive slate,
c-h asln g ber ths Include : Brain
however, as 30 diamond candid­
k owlb:.
ates are currently trying to make
Oamp'oell and Al P e11
tha team. Nine of these players
A brief compariso n of th1II UB
ore lettermen from las t season's nine with last year's champion?
WNY Conference champions.
With Krawczyk, Gergley , Wlan.
Tllese Include pitc her s Jim
et'k l, and Baldwin f iring for the
Kra wczyk , La rry Gerg ley, and
Bulls, the pitching staff Is the
Ed Wlaneckl; f irst sacker ,
st rongest In years at UB, Behind
Dalo Del Bello; f!lhor tsto p,
the plate, however, It Is a different
story. The loss of Jim Sampognaro
Jo hn Stora; third ooseman,
could hurt the Buffalo cause.
Bo'b P ier.la: and outflel den
As a result, the ptessure Is on
Da n K raft , Crai g Lyo n, and
Hort, Montemarano and company
Ger ry Montema ran o (also a
to fill the gap. The Infield appears
catc her~.
''We'll

1963 BASEBALL SCHEDULE
Var alt)I - 17 Game•

AprU
16-ECTI-Home
17-EOTI-A wuy
20-Brlo. State-Homo
Z2-Caulalue-Home
23-RlT-Away
2~olg1lte--Awny
27-Caulslua-Awny
30-Nlagara-Home
Mny
1- Cornell - Home
3---0eueseo--Away
4- U. ot Rocheeter- H'ome
G-RIT-Home
7-St. Bonaventu r e-A wa:,
9-NiapraAway
·
11-rtbaciv---Hom e
Fro1h - II G■mN
April
,
23- U. of Rochester-AW'aT
21&gt;-Bryant-A'Wlly
30-Brockport-Away
May
3-U. of Rooheeter-Hom&amp;
7-Bryant-Homo

·t11Ho'5
AfRAiD

oF
EDWARD

ALBEE?"
SEN IOR MOUN D STAR JI M KRAW CZYK

The team has been practicing
for die last two weeks tn Clark
Gymnasium and Coaches Peelle
and Kosobucld have already put
together a depth chart which, Is
always subject to nlleratlon.
As of now, It appears that sen.
tor grid co.captain Dick Hort and
Montemarano will be battling ror
the starting slot behind the plate.
Del Bello ls set at the lnltlal aa
while Earl Tompkins and Ed
,Peskowltz are the top two candld-

strong, barring any unforeseen
Injury, while
outfield Is potent
at the
la
and defensively.
Ge
Ing, the Bulls are
a
and can show more
1962 team.
de
game ls slated for
A
hen ECTI moots the
lark Fie ld. HJghllghts
edule are the April 2fl
lgate the May 1 en.
Cornell at home, w1d
ame of the season ally powertuJ I tha m

_A./iolta ~ of:oung-e
(Cornor Hertel ond Virgil)

PRESENTS

STUDENT

TheTrio

BOOKSHOP

BUI Ponn, Al Rlnuto

o nd Min

Bulla' leftl lelder Dick Laub awing• m lgh t ly du ring pre.season
practice.
The t ra nsfer fr om St. Lawre nce mlese d on thl1
effort, but coac hes Peelle a nd ,Koaob uckl look for a 1olld
perf or mance fr om the sout hpaw swin ger.

34 00 Ma in Street

Toni CortoUanl

TF 3 -7000

Frid11y &amp; Saturday Mite at 10:00

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�SPECTRUM

PAGETWELVE

Friday, Morch 29 , 1963

Wildcats
PlacH
Two
OnUBFoeiream

SPORTSCIRCLE

·WhyAbolish
Boxing?
By Jim Baker
With the recent ring disaster of ex-feat herweight
champ Dirvey Moore, those tumultuous cries of "kill box­
ing" are again heard throughout the land. A staunch
example of this is California Governor Edmund Brown's
vow to introduce a bill int,o his state's legislature that
would outlaw tlte sport in ' his state. Similar proposals
11re being funnu lated for debate in Congress.
Now t he k ey question amidst this cont roversy seems
to be: is it inhumane t,o allow such a sport t,o exist that
has aa its fundamenta l goal the physical beating df. an
adversaryT Governor Brown and many others claim that
it is. They argue, therefore, that the sport should be abol­
ished. Yet, consider for a moment other walks of life that
could be deemed "inhumane" or at least death-defying and
are recognized as respectable occupations.
How about a circus performer whose talent lies in
high-wire feats? Isn't he risking his life every time he
performs at such heights ? How about the stock car driver
or thooe who participate in any fo r m of auto ra cing com­
peti tion T Certainly they risk their lives every time they
step on th e gas pedal and soar to their accustomed speeds.
Thus. if we ore to coll boxing inhumane and abol­
ish it mer-efy because th e possibility of death exists as

a rault of o severe beating, why not eliminate these
oftler walks of life because of their dangerous tenetsl
WIiy single out boxing as the whipping boy and the
t.'get ef thia form of orgument.

Surely it must be emphasized that to these individ­
ual.s who engage in the pugilistic sport this is their way
of earning an h onest living. And who is Governor Brown
or others like him t,o deprive them of it? Each boxer at
one time made his decision to enter the fighting game with
n. full realizati on of what was ahead of him. He knew
then that it was possible for him to be killed from a
physical beating, but he entered the sport , anyway .
Now do we the public have the right to say he made
a wrong decision and deny him the right to make his liv­
ing as he sees fit? I say that we do not. For the average
fighter boxing providea a golden opportunicy to earn an
income that _he would otherwise never accrue.
Tru e, the dangers are great, but as long as a fighter
realizes them and believes he can successfully par ticipate
in the sport, then let's give him a chance to prove his
abilit;y. Give him the chance to support himself in a way
that he considers best and allow him that freedom of
choice which we all claim as a basic and wonderfu l founda­
tion of our country.

The Villanova WUdo11
,t.~ plac e,
two men on the All-Oppo :nent tea m
se lected by UB Wednesday. Fabu
lous Wally Jones and center Jin ·
the hono1•c,
Wll8hl.ngton w ere
WUdoat:11.

Jones had a great shooting nigh1
aR he hit seven atralgh1 , shot s iJ

uia flrat halt and then proceede r'
t o break the game Wide ,open with
his dett passtng and ballhandling
ln the seco nd twenty minu te
Washington completely 1lominatell
both backboard!!, block :ed many
shots and scored w~
Villa.novu
needed It moet.
AJso honored were: .Joe Mad.
drey of Niagara. who IICOred 2,
GA RV HANLEY
points oga.lnBt the Bulla, rebou nc'
ed magniflcenuy, and was the
dl!ference in the PUrp:te Eagles
victory; Dave Bleau ()f Cortland,
v:ho scored 32 points ai:id almo~t
pulled hie team througll to vie.
tory In Clar k Gym; and Erni e
The OB ,bnskeLbnll team Tues.
Ja ckl!on of South Carolina State . day honored two players wbo led
Ja ckson wo.s rated I.he besl the Bulls to a 16-7 se11son reeord
guard the Bulls saw all season as and nn appearance In tbe NCAA
h~ scored 23 poln I.II ancl was al I college division toornament. Gary
over the floor as State e~lm!nated H1rnley waH selected as the most
the Bulls from the NCA./1. CollegQ val uable player by bis t eam -ma tes
an d Dave Baldwin Willi elected
Division Tournament.
honorary captain .
Hanley, 11 6'8" Junior forward,
Jed the team in rebounds, averng.
Ing ovGT 12 a game and wa.a second In scoring wtth 806 points,
just over 13 In a contest.
Hie tremendoua play over
the season reaulted In hi• aelect lon to the AII-Eaat College
Division team at tho end of

DAVE

BullCagers
SelectHanley
asMVP
DaveBaldwin
IsHonorary
Captain

University of Buffalo Tehnla
Schedule -

the year. H la beat alngle effort
was a 31 point output agalnat
Alfred In a game that alao
■aw him anare 25 rebound• ,
ty ing the UB rec:ord.
Another 6'3" junior, Baldwin ,
led the tea,n In HCOrlng with 330
poln~. slightly over 14 a gam e
and was seeond In rebounding. ll e
wus aelecte d lo one weekly AU.
Ea s t team end received honorable
mention on se ver al others. Dave
scored 85 points aga!Mt ltha(l u
for Ute beHLindMdua l scoring ef.
Cort or any UR player tbls ps st
senson.
Both Hanley and Baldwin wn,
be ,bnclc nexl season and are lllllJor
1·easou~ for opllmJam for tbe oom­
Jng yenr.

1963

April

1B-ECTI - Hom e
17-ECTI-Away
22- Btlo. Stale-Home

23-Hohart-Away
24-CO lgo t&amp;--.A.wsy
27-SymcuBe-Home

STAR

VILLANOVA
WALLY

GUARD

J ONES

29-Brlo. State-Away
30-Nlngara-Homo
May
1-Co rlland - Home
3-Canlelua- Hom e
6-U. of Rochester-Away
R-Canlalus--A.way
9-Nlagar-A

way

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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              </elementText>
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                    <text>STATE VNIVDIITY

01' NEW YC.RK AT BOITIU.O

An Ode ft0m U. 8.

Why Th• Gl'Mt
Fallu,. Rar. In

To Cassi11, Clay

Nat11,al Science?
(see. Pagt. 81

(800 Page 121

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1963

VOLUME 13

No. 21

Senate Holds Last Meeting;
Reviews Committee Reports

American Literary Figures
To Speak at Convocations

Thll i,tudent welfare oom1nlttee
ounounr.ed lhat the new &lt;:11lendar
Rld1nrd Erb 11re8lded nver thn Whi('h tnnludcs n tow changes from
&lt;,,~t meellpg &lt;&gt;f the rnst-6~Stu. the one ta•t appro1•ed, will go Into
,lent Senale
Tuesday
rught
11t P.fTed. Exnms will st.nrl Jau. 6.
which the new senuU&gt;T'~ met with there will he a 10.day intersesRl011
1ho old, Committee chah·men pre- uml nnmberM wut "" gtvun out
·•ented progre11s rep0rts on their deslgnnt lnl? t•f'rtaln hours for change
ri&gt;speell ve rommlttees
for the year. or 111
,01,..,.11
111 dRy.

Nnr111nn Mallnr, novelist 1111d
wnrd Albee, 11loyw1·lgllt w111 be. on
ra111pu~next wN•k oR 1111rtor Ute
t•onvocntton ~ouuultt~e·s program ,
"lln111n nood Sn111pll11i::or Current
J\n11,rfr,111 LtlPr:try Fii::ureR."

Ed-1
:,/ul(,•11 MHI the

By FRED APPLE

The personnel
comwlttce
sent
le tters to freshmen containing stu4ent act1, ·lty cords tor thoMe 1nter.
~~te d In st11deot govnnment.
Tbe
1tuden t notlvilieft committee
on.
nounced It baa recognized
t welve
ne,w orgnnlio.UonR. as wPll UH settor
ttng u.p a draft ~rerequlsltes
f'utul'O orgnnlzotiOM.
Plnns llrw~
1lso heen mlldA
i.l h1(•11rporate
mor., l-OmmltteeH to look. over new
~,mstJ.tutlorui.
The

N.S.A. stetcrlng commit.
tees r~v lewed Its year•• actlv.
.
al)d report ed ,ta academic free dom project.
Th e committ ee
announce(I that both the ad 1111n11trat1on and th e fr a ternltle•
hava agreed to comply with
the order forbidding any •oclal
organizatio n• with artlllclal cri .
terla aa well as organi za tions
with national afflllatlons
from
campue, which will be In effect
In J une 1967,

I&gt;

ln the rurure there will be n
cllnm·P for more students to present
OR. LILLIAN GILBRETH
their ldt&gt;n~ and t'Qml•lo.lnUl about
the food service, Eventually
the
('Hrupus "'Ill handle lta own food
~( rvlt-~. h11t fond will stUI bo con.
triu·ted oul, at leaHt for the next
few yenrs. ,\lore work b(UI ali;o been
Wednesday,
Dr. Lllll11n M, Gildoue t,y thi, com mlttee k&gt;r th e p0s.
~lhlllty ,1r hovtn~ 11lrohol 011 cam. hreth will nm&gt;~••' on comf'lua for
th-ree:duy program lncludlni; lee.
The convocations
commit~
'ture and dlecunslon i,eseions Ba a

Lillian M. Gilbre,th
To Appear Hen~

,,ua.

·

1
•

announced
that
It still haa
hope, for Or. Aptheker appear Ing on campus, enabling lhtll
University to maintain lta rlghta.
The commi tte e fl&gt;lt proud of

rn&lt;"t•t or lhe

Dfatl111,-,1lsh1&gt;dVlsll(tr

Hnrb aru

Const

Dood, Door ~
Md

Adwrttiw-.

nll'nt• for My ""II will speak

at

Nnrt(llt \\'edncad"y
ntternoo n &amp;t
:: 11.111.
~Ir )111ller is ,i d(wote, and perIHWM th" founder, or the "phlloe~
11hr ot hl11.'' He "belleve(e)
Lh&amp;t
t11e hlgheRt rundlon
or n Writer
(Isl to see life as others do not
Pee It" In order to bring aboo~ ln
l he reader 1u1 ~nl11rgeu1enl ln hta

Mr. Mailer will speak Wednea.
day Al 3 p.m, In the conference
theater, and Edward Albee at
the .-nme time Friday , aleo In
the conference theater.

,\1r, Alhee, 'lh O wus born 1n Wash.
tngton, grew 1111In M1111bnWtn nnd
Lnrehm ont, N. Y. Re wnA gradu.
uted fro1u C"ltonte and wns di s.
mlaH1&gt;dfrom Trinity College atter
" hair tor cutting
cla••e• and rnJJtng to Rlttmd l!hl1pel.

a Year and

11rognom.

He pkked

up bis

knowledge

or

Dr. Uilbret11, 1&gt;resldeo t of' GU- rooming houses, almHur to lbe one
breUt, roe., Coneultlng Eu~ n eul'8 or descrll,e4 In "The Zoo Slory," f rom
th e Hterary program which~~ Mon tcll\ir, New Jersey Is lnternn.
hie work ai, ,. W&amp;stern Union me&amp;­
Uonally kDOIVll lo tlle Oeld of lllllheludes th e appearance
of
rd
t11lem1.1nt,and aa an educator and ~cuger lwtorn writing that piny.
wa
Albee ourr ently known for
l'lvlc lea d er. Working with her buehis success on Broadway.
When the beat-play awards
J,a11d, she developed te&lt;'hnlqu,es 1n
1'he 1'.N. ~ommlt t el.' announced
are presented next eprlng, "Vlr.
t,he model Security Council pro. I lhf' r!Pltl or 1notion study, noel ber
EOWARO ALBEE
glnla WooJr• may be a s1rong
i,rum whlc•h will tnke 1&gt;l11ceal t.h'3 work In applying engloeerio11t to
contender.
HI • two Off Broad.
experleu~e nod n deepening In hla
l"Od of th0 month .
'111,. h11111,1nH1eshas woo widn 11.Cway playa, "The American
VPrl 1l\JltiOIJ,
rl11l111
. Arter her hu&amp;band dle~I. Dr.
Dream''
and "The Death of
, t;IJ1&gt;1·1,th w~nt on to continue, !be
1
lllr . Muller h11s recent!&gt;• branched
Buale
Smith,''
were named
work he ha,1 begun nnd to oocome,
beat playa or the 1960.61 aea ■ on
out into th11 fteld11 o( eocla.l and
I 011,, nr thr nallon's outstundlng
by the Foreign Press Aasocl ­
polillcal com mentary . Several
' women engineerR. HH story I~ told
atlon.
months ago ha becltme a m.oulbly
In
the
book
Cheaper
by
the
Dozen,
Stunt
Night
w\11
be
held
Satur.
The theme tor this year's Sprtn1
Mr. Albee llke• to go wherever
Weekend I.~ "Suddenly It 's Sl)rlni: ." dlly night featuring
e.n e11Lry by which wae lntl.'r made Int~ o movie. hiH plnys are showing. 'l'wo sum. coJunmlsl or social commentary ill
The Uunno wi11 lMt- c0-rrled out h1 111cmbe1·s of lh~ faculty as well u
mers ago }le vloftt'&lt;I Lutln Amerlcll "!&lt;~squire " enlllled "'r he B.lg Btta"
Born In Oakl•nd,
C.tl1forr,I••
posleT'S ol light hlue with darker
entriu• from fratemltlcs
11nd ~oror.
Dr, GIibreth atten ded the Ulnlwith the Now York Reperlory Com.
Mi·. lllaller 18 perh11J)8 beat tmown
~lUA lettering teaturlng
a cartoon
ltlP~
11er1lty of Callfornl1 and re.
.;·:sa,:~:~n:!n:a;:~~
In f)OIIUool clrcle.i for hie deb(lt.f
, ha111ctPr, nnd yallow nnd white
oelved her Ph.D . In phllo•ophy
QUEt-:N f'ANOmATES
,:nl~les.
8ue11011 Afr 08 tor O series or lee- with rh:ht-wlnger Wflllam F . Buck­
fr om Brown Unlver1Jty. Her
other degree• Include M a ■ ter· of
lures fll th~ llnlverRtiy or nucnoe l(•y, Jr . '!'he debflters took the tonn
Ke11neU1 GroBsmuu wHs sel&amp;cted
L'hnlrmnn Bob PncholSkl of the
ts genen,I cha1rnuin nnd l!! ~uper. quceru; committee
Engineering, Un iversity of M lch­
announced
lhe
of a dialogue between Ute ''right"
AJre,i
11slog the many actJYitlf'R whl&lt;:h names of the three queen c&amp;ndld­
tgan; Doctor of Engineering,
Normun MaiJPr , aulhor or Th~ and ''left'' In Amcrlc:111 poltUcs.
will be held this year . Hoch~ll~ ~e• for Spring' Weekend. They ure 1 Rutger• Unlver ■ ity and Steven
:Schwimmer, nesistuo~ co.onllnator,
Dpnnii,
La~zcwsk!,
Theta
Chi; 1 lnatltute of Te chnology: Oootor
r:, Msietiug the commit1ee.
of Science , Runell
Sage C:ol­
Mary Lou Thompson. Sign11l f&lt;R.p.
N1111cy Zuckerman;
Sigma I lege, Smith College and Brown
One of the hlghlight.s
of lhe pa;
Unlverelty; and Doctor of La-ws,
Weekend Wll! br a n ew al'llv\ty, n Delta 'l'nu.
University of Callfornl~
and
U.R. S&lt;&gt;nator K,,nnetb B. Ke&lt;tt1ng , C11l11, alnro Inst J\U,l\u~t ltDd ha.
Temple University.
will sdd,~•K tit,, &amp;ludents Mondn,v. hom1~1rdcd l,orh tire Pentagon and
111lftH, (the and lrPr Intl! hUtibttlJU nl ~-;m Jl.lll. iu rh,. runf&amp;rertco th,,. '
Stole n1111urlmrnt with report.I
1 ~elved the Grwtl ,\£mini rro1111th~
Iller llf i'illrlUll l'uloo. Ilil! visit II\ Ill otld• with Off!('lal Rt.itoments .
Amo~lcun Sodety
or ~l echmnlrul
~:111,lneers, In 1(118, she "'llij n ~II.let! htnni. ~pom,o r~d bi• t.h~ AIJl11nce
1f,ir111erly Student
Alllnnr&lt;•J un() j \\"h&lt;&gt;n Ui011e bnv" l&gt;oen conceded
"Woman o! LIie Year" by the Am&lt;'r
11~ "hnalcn lly ,·orroct"
artor preltm1,·,111 Women's A•soclntl&lt;&gt;tt, urJd lu lnL111·rrn1ernlty Gouu,•11.

Suddenly It's Spring ' Is the Theme
For Spring Weekend in Late• April

~::tst:rb:::~•

I

Sen. Keating, Administration Critic
Will Appear Before Student Body

I

u,.,

I

rnrn the

1ll1ary deulol, l{entlltK has emerged

&lt; htl

a• n 111·1tne newa111nk,n
1 Wnehlnj(tOn Reano

ilw wtarun ie!llsloror hlUI bt!ct,
Nallorml fn•1lt11tr of So.
SclenreH nwnrded her the Oold h('t&gt;dling the J&lt;,•nned) admlnletrn.
~lt•dol
lion on tb,• flusalau build-up In

on tbe

Dr , rn1111·(•th IH tlw /lr~t 11101111111
to rett,lve lht&gt; " 'as hlngton Award
, nclmlnistered
hv IIIP Western Sn.
r.l,•ly or F:ni:ln,:,,,.R s,, .. '" a 11161lll,cr or Phi Bot11 I\UIJJlu nnd th11

I

; :1111hor or spverul

t o,•h0Jt1HI bookH.

Seniors Awarded Woodrow
Wilson Graduate Grants

FtvH Benlors have been awarded
Al S 11m. Thursdal', Hr (:illitr,•llt
Cnllfomln ill Berk~ley or at M&amp;11for •11"11uaPlti&gt;n Jnnlltnle or Techuolwlll IP~tnrn on thu s11hJ1w1 "Th,• \\ 'oodn1w WIis on Fellowships
NIUdy
r•:ducntlon or \\ '11111
e 11" iii the Nor ·. thP flrRt yeur or graduate
&lt;on rnulti-puq,o~e
ro,m1. Ht11de11ta l~ad lJt~ to college teachJn,i 1iosl.
'flt~ award~ cover tuition
will huve Utt' ot•l"H'tUJtity (o RPOU~ !lm ra.
\1 r llychin, ts n member or PhJ
with her imruedlately followinii her nnd Ce,ie In 11ddhlo11 to n $1500 llNn Ka1,pa. and WOBCbl\lnoan ot
lecture In the Dor(lllt y M illoos ,,u ,iend ond dPJien llon, ·y rulownnl'es.
thP 1962-a convocnlloo cot11JDlltee.
,1 ndent.fn.c,tlty
bn8kclb all
g11me,
Th~ otriclnl C!Lntpaigning will loungo and again Frldn~ nt 2 11.111
'" be hoped that the faculty will, lwi::-in nt r, p.rn. April 13 and th&lt;' ht tho same plm·i,
pnrtlclpn te actively in this y.-iu•'b ,.Jtil~ will be hdrt ill th e confer­
enp nnd Oowo, Nenlor \o\~01ueo'h
weekend and a campaign for th~ cnce the';llre, the week of Apr,!
honor socJety.' Is co-ordlnntlns: ar.
most popular faculty member will l :; fr•om lla.m. to 1 p.m
April 22, th e queen candldat.e~ rangeruents ror the two dtsc1111elon
nlso be conducted.
Me~elons under the rhn!rmRnahl11 or
FOLK GROUP TO SINO
wllt formally pre,;~nll•d In a fllsh. Corolyn Ooyl&lt;'.
ThursdAy, April 25, will feature
ion show nt 3 p,m. tn lhe multl­
Thursdny, nl 10 u.rn. she wllt
llo wa• acth·e In doru1ltory !IC·
•h" BJl[IOO.raor" or tho well.known
pur•pose room. A qucstlon.MSWer
!11111.
• Siegel ha~ beeo a 1tnl11llt
Atudoots. tlviti1•s Al the t'nlveralty
until ,1 stutl1•ot of tbree aema ■ te,e
lnlk RinR'!nJ.tgroui• Peter, Paul aud pt·M&lt;id will follow VotiJlg In l..slw mrPt with ~oglucerlni:
Mary, '!'be event ts spnui&lt;nred by Sc·hool \\~11 b" tl'1m 10 a.m. to 12 Tlluae Jnten••te&lt;I are aske~ to ,~rn this yenr when ho drl'Jded to com. und ha,. wrttteu ~try
for Cllllll)UI
tart Prof. F'red erlc k 'l'h11111as 111 mute fr om hlK home tn East Aur. 111fl1tulues. A phllosorih.Y m-.Jor,
lhe concert commtLtee
noon April 26.
the
B11~lueerln1t
School
FridBy night the H11r111~
'l\'e,1kend
Judging
Wlll Ulkl' pl,u·, April
&lt;WJ
lo ltuve more llme fur Atudy, Rl,,, lot&lt;'od • to d o her l!TlldUlt.
HA wtll •lody Aruerlcuur clvlllia. wnrl. li t t~•• llnlnr,111
or Call.
:;antt• "111 be held Ju tb~ Golden 2 ,,. Unltk&lt;' l'""t yt&gt;ttrll, the queen
nllroom or the St.utler.lltllnn
Ho. ,,-111 bP trnwnetl
by President
!IOU Ill llrown or the l'nln&gt;rRlly
fornlt, hl IJt1rk~l111. I.be Unt-r11r,1t1
"' The dsnt·e will he dlmned
by l''umt1s
nntl lasl y;,,,,·~ q,wen
I"r \tlrlt1c11n 01 C'hh-11110
BOWLING
or t'••nn,vlvllttlu,
l~n.tl,,y Rtubb,,r· at, lhe Sptir1is
The recrcatl,,n
a1·r11 In IJ•c
'~ •. •·rownlni., or ,t Que;,n.
ltast'lnent of Norton will ,•hAt'A"t'
\Ir
~:ri, I• 1m••ld~1,t or th,·
\Ir Trouet
ha• !won on the
\ rnshlou show preseuted h)' the \\'Pekend Or\l1«' Apnl 26.
bis four
~11111,.,11A•••wlHll&gt;111 HIid J• ,tud •1••·,tt 11• 1 th rouirhout
' '11111
rclatus will take 11lace A prll 22
n•dur,-d ratra f,.,. b&lt;&gt;1,·i111i: tr,,r
18
1 ·t JI m In tlH~ m11lU-pun)O~e room
This year's qu1:1.·n.will l&gt;P Sl!l(.'(·t
the n~xt two \\'eeks 1111 :, trlHI
1•111 1111111,1~•'• of Nurrnn
Y•or un,t
&amp; mPmber
of Pbl
1
,11,1A~ril ll~-!lJ w,llni; Ct&gt;ru quet&gt;u ,.,Jon U1P following basl~; •tuct,•nl
lm~is. The rat,·, will I&gt;&lt;·:i go.11,,•. J
11•·" 1--tlJ'PI\, A llletory m&amp;Jor, ho
ft,r
$l,
.
fl~
11
Iii
,1.,
1triuluate
wM~
In
will
,10
hlA
IJT■
dllatl\
wort
at
,,,,t,,➔ 1,u1( wlll b&gt;!' h~lti 10 rront of j voting
30' ; indlVlduaJ
jurtging
..,·011nr,,1,,. ,it 1b,1 1·n1ve11111y or l'r111,,n111u11111~4',..lty
,. c•o11
tN·1•urt" fltPat,,r iu N'orton
~10' . L'a1npruJ,.."'11jucl~tti,:, 20'$-

The committee for Spr ing Weekend; seated L to R.: Nancy
Johnson, Marlene Vowlnke l, Lois Menter.
Standing: Robert
MIich, Sally Freeman, Marilyn Shanzer, Kenneth Groaeman,
Sue Cherry, Francine Michel, and Bob Pachowekl,
Lenny
K leln was abaent for t'1e picture.

I

I

I

l

,________________

I

�, SPECT RU M

PAGE TWO

WBFO Announ~es W eek's Schedule Group Will Hold
r,londay
·00 ·rn Jt,, A1111&lt;1unced
Dinner Tonight
110N11w11
d: II\ Ov1&gt;r 1l1e !:lack FPO&lt;''&gt;
~
~

Friday, March 22, 1963

Seven Noted Profess&lt;3
rs

Will Meet on Thurs.-Fri.

,· 10 '!'ho
C'lnclr,nutl
Rynir,h,my 1 'l'h11 Oml11ron ot New York &lt;:b,111Relax wltb H1-Fi
0rcl11 1"1m re11111r111v\l11111r1 11•r ot Phi nolu Ka111m I1ertt wlll
Nl'th&lt;srlamd Solo1als
N•·ws
, 1 l1•bru1t• . It~ twenty.fifth
,nnlver.
PIIOOflUllll of th" 1,lnly Ar•!• 1111111
A rc,nrerenc" on "The Beha.v-1 At 9 a.m . Friday, the progra• n
10: 1(1 A We&lt;lneado) :-:1~h· 111
•nrv wlfh II dlnn~r loulght In tho
News
lurl'll Selenccs In the Study of tha will begin with an 8.ddt•ess, or,
l•'111•11lly
Club.
H: 06 Dls1·overy alld Doo1s111u
T hursday
an\! Econonuc
l'ld l!&lt;'ta
J&lt;a11oa Is 1111 tn 1er- Bualncsa Community and Bus1J'esH "The Entrepreneur
"Ex11lorlnit the lluma.n llrnln"
11111loti.llhontlrMY fraternity
which Behavior." sponsor
c d r,y th, , Change'' by Dr. T h omas C. Coch
9:tl!• ('00(•nrl llull-(lershwln
II.JUI &amp;:,ltt 1111(' HEll&gt;Cu'I
,,. ~~11ts ~tudents wl10 atui!JJ very School of Bu,.iness Aclmlnllll1•11tlon, r·an, p rofessor of history a.t tJ\,,
Copc•lllJld
ti 30 !St!h'&lt;'ilone
11.)(I\ s, holnalic
sc•bievement.
10:0\I NPw~
7 oo 'ro ht 1 AillHHllll'l'tl
of Pennsylvania.
Dr
'l'h 111•1inr1ment of ooono1ntcs and will fea.t'llre addres~es b,v ~l'V"n University
10: lU F'&lt;llk MIia.ie with John Uo)l,10 s oo N&lt;•ws
prorcsaors. Thm·«:111~
· rthiel Desola Poot, pr&lt;lresaor ol
I' nh-erstly
l"ollei:e will join the outslanding
11; l)O Mu~l&lt;' f'rln:n St1ttllo "C"
~: Ofi (•01:ltn with I i••rn· l,,, th .,w 1' rrnt,•r111ty in ~ponRDrlng an 11fter..
Rntl Friday , in lhl.' ronrrr~nce thco.- political scie-nce &amp;l the
Cente1
Tuesday
!1:1111('Oll&lt;'l•H flail
dh1ner address by nr. ll'l'ILz 11ach- l 1•e of No1·ton.
for Internallona l Studies, Maas11•
O:16 l'luro11enn Hevh•w
10·110 Nl•Wh
1111,. Jll'ofessor or economics
al
8;30 Relax wllh 111-F'I
10; JO \,\ Pl'kly RPJIIJl'f 11'1 ►111 11,,. 1
of Tech~ology
Dr. Daniel Boorstin, prorci,~ ►J chu~elts Institute
~ l'rint•l•tnn \lnfveratly and !)resident
10•~1, Music tro111 1'111111111
' f' "
7:00 Waehtni;ton ltP!)Orts
al the Unlve1·slty of wlll follow and spaak on "Th~
w1fh 11( the National
Cha.pter o! lbe ot history
7:Hi Smoll Wo~ltl
l•)timbelh
1'11111Quinlan
llmerlc•n 11 AMoclatlon
of Unlver. ChiC11go, will open the ccmf'l1'e11:·l Ht•a.d or Company:
Cont&gt;ep tlon.s
Drlbbeo
, lty Professors. His RubJuc•t will be at 10 a .m. Thursday wit h the top. ot' Ro le nnd Identity."
F riday
7: 30 Let'~ 1,t•nrn &lt;lrrrnnu
"'!'he Economics of (';duco.Uon.''
7:46 Newe mthlt•~
M'ln ns un
The F1iday afternoon sc~ion al
,:.Ii, H11i11,wllh lli ,r'i
lie ,~ th" uulhor or t,wenly books ic, "The Business
8:00 News
That ufl• 2 o'c lock will feat\lJ'EO Dr . Ab ra.
In 1h11lleld or ecouomiCB h1cludlng Amcrlcan Institution."
7 Oil l'ltlbrle-Clni:
8:05 Maetorwol'k~ rrom l&lt;'r:mc·~
7:80 Lel'tt f..-CU1'Jt riitrtU:'11 (t'HPl 1UI) Tht Political Econom y of Monop. ernoon at 2. Dr. Danie l Katz, p1·0. 11111nZeleznik, professo r or orgw .
R,35 Jntermllloual
nook Review
i: la Waijhlngton
lt.-11,1r,~ ro U!.e oly which has had two J!Tlntln~s fl.'ssor of pi,ycholo y at the Univcr. zutlonal behavio r at the Gradua te
&amp;.Dd UterArY lleport
People
nn~ The Economi c s of Selle rs' slty of M ichigan,
sp ,w,I&lt; r,n School of BusJneM Admlnlstra ~:00 Concert Hnll
~ nu Sound
or Broa(lw11y ao,I Compet•tion
which has h11d three. "The Motiv a tional B
or Or• lion, Harvard Univers ity, speak.
10:00 News
lie was o.l&amp;o economic co ,osultnnt i:nmz;itlona l Behavior.'
!lollywootl
a
Dr. Ing 011 Managerial
Behavior and
10: 10 J111.1, Idiom
Wil)J lhl' T'ostwa,· OIVlf'IOn or file Jacoh Ma.rschak, pt·o!cssor o cco. l1•t.erpe1·sonal Competen~"
11:00 Conct'rt tr nil
Dr,
11:00 Music trom Studio "("' with 10:00 Now..
I )l&lt;Jllll'l:mCnt of Labor In 104l!-43 ond nomlca an d business ndminla t ra• J\lelvln ·rumin, profe11sor of socio!.
Obuclt Peezyoskl
10: Hl AMC&lt;J "Peace
CMI)!! PlUI ('hlltf of Ille DMRlon of n escarrh tlo n at the Un lvel'l!lty of California
ogy and anthropology
at Prince•
Wed nu day
"nd Statistics
tu the omce
or a t Lo s Ang eles, wil l speak on " De- ton University w ill spaak on "Busl .
On11"
8: 15 Oennany Today
All~u Property t'nRlodlnn Crom 1943 &lt;ilslon Bc.baV'lor and M11n11.gemcnl ness os a Social Sys t em'' to con.
I0·:15 Mu•lc 1'0l,!IJI• 11,S.A.
6:RO Relu with fU-Fi
to l!llC.
Scitmcc."
elude the confe r ence.
ii:110 son sounds or JaH

6:30
7:00
7•30
R:00

BOOK and RE(:ORD SALE
ALL NEW. ALL EXCEPTIONALVALUE.
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"POP JAZZ. 97 perfOJ'n\Root'/.&lt;
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Charlie
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Basie,
E llin gton,
Stan Getz, Miles Pa.vis, John Colt•
rane Lambert,
Hendricks
&amp; Ross,
an d a hoQt ot other all.tlme greats.
2 delwce seta, Mch CQntalning five
12", Long.Playing,
H i.Fl rerord~ in
handsome gltt box.
"POP" JAZZ &amp;t A . $20.00 Value.
ll•Teeord Set
Comp~ete Only 6 .0:'J
"POP " JAZ Z Set 8. $20.00 VJtlue.
5...record 8e(I. Complete
Only 6,91\
HOMESP UN AMERI OA. Ed, by
Wallace
Brockway
ond Bart
K.
Winer. Hugh 831 page collection of
writing&amp;, hRppy, Homber, gay, serious,
roug h, l!Ubtle, and othc1Wise ~ .. rle•
signed to capt.ur~ lhe N1Se11tlAI qu11Uly
of the free United St.ates.
Pub, at '10.00
OnJy 3.95
MV ART , MY LIFE . By Diogo Rivera .
Dlus. An autob\ogrnphy or lhe color.
tu.I a.nd ('()nt.rover111a1 Mex~
1u1lst
who rt'/Volut.lonlzed modem
mural
painting.
Pu b, at $6.()0
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CATS , OATS, OATS. By John R.
Gilbert, Over 300 Illus .. 38 1n color .

Complete book

on

cal!&lt; covcru1g

t"Yery aapect from an&lt;:lent times lo
the fantasy and folklore, fads and
fanctes, fACU.1 and figures • full of
lnformo.tlon Md
wonderful
photo.
grnplu!,

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1'-'1!:
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In 17 C'Ountric~: hot.els , rt'slaurants,

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ttinerarles,
clothes, money , ~t&lt;'.
Pub. al $5.115
Only 1.!lR
f' Ol\1l' LICTE WORK S OF S HAK1'~­
Sl'IU ,n E. All the plays, complete
and unnbridged;
all Ihe Monnrts and
1,oems, Over 1,000 pages. clear, dark
t~&lt;pe,clolh bouncl with !('('lid11t,unp lng .
Puh. at $6.25
Only 2.49
PlC'TORIAL AN ATOll1\' OF TUE
II UM AN
FIO URK
By
f't·eclerlc
Taubos. The
world
renowned art
teal'her demonstrates
all aspects of
the human body that hove plelorln.l
VRlue for the contemporary
arlistR,
Hundreds of large , clesl' rlrnwings .
Orig, Pub, at $3.75
Only l.98
THE LIVING l'A ST OF /\.1\fJi:RfCA.
By Comdlus Vandcrblll J r . Pictorial
I re~ury
of our '11sloric houses 1tnd
Several
hunrlred
photoM
villages.
c.wcrlng :l50 years of Ame1iclltl hlF­
tory In every part errlh•• n!lllon.
Orig', Pub. at $~95
Only 2.08
&lt;'IIESS FROM MOR P HY TO BOT.
\:I NNUC. By Imre Konig , How th&lt;'
masters have developed the famous
openings and ldelt.S or play; 111ustmle&lt;I
wJLh over 100 fully a.nnott1lPIJ game~.
0l'i/l' . Pub . al $4.00
Only t JIil
T HE H UND RED TALES. TrMslalo.'&lt;1
by Rossell H. Robbins . TIius. by Alex.
nnd&lt;'r Dobkin . The 1mmortal colic'&lt;'·
lion of t/\les from French lilt•rnture
kn own
as Las C'&lt;'nl Nonvelles
rivalling the Doc:un eron In its spirit.
ed sa.llres and acrounts ()f lov&lt;' pur,·
anti prorane.
O1•ig, Pub, at $6.00
Only 2.!•8

M-1301. lln ,.hmK: SYMPHONY NV. 8. Stoktl\\'•
~kl condurts
t.hc Houston Smyph , In this
glorious romantic wo1·k.
f•ul), Ill $1 .98
Only 1.0~
1\t . U21J. Tehii!k ov11ky: Sl'MP ll ONV NO. t
I Wlnt4'D' Dream,,). Historic recording of lhe
little.known
melodlou~ m1U1lPrwork, Swarow.
sky cond. VteMa PhilhlU'lTlonl~ Symph , ._
Pub llt $4.98
Only 1.98

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BUFFALO'26,.:N. Y..

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Creut Choral work Complete, given a brilliant
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by outl!to.ndlng e r ll&amp;ts
incl. FiSh()l'.Dlenkau, Helmut Krebs, Berlin
BoYH Choll' nnrl Chonis and Ore h . of &amp;rlln
Rndio cond. by Fritz Lehmann, Ubretto . (

S- 13111, Ur&amp;bml4 : S l' MJ&gt;tf ON'\ . N O, I. Sl~reo .

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Onl y 1,111,
~f -1893. MAX 8,0A C:H ON TU),; OID OAOO
~('ENE. Rhythmic vitality
!!Wings aa Max
Sll'lla
By
Roach plAYll 6 standa rds. Incl.
StatUgbt, Swmpln' At The So.voy.
r!'COrd set,
Pub. al $4.98
Only l .!ll•
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Only 7.92
111. 1986, SONGS ot· WORK AN O F1ll'JEDOI\I.
M .10116. Rr ul.mlll: l' I A.~O 1'(&gt;/ll(JE.ltTO NO. 2.
Cyo1·gy Sandor perform,. with melody, tonut
Songs of the fn nneN!, mine!'!!, weo.vers, etc.
Joe Gln1.cr singn Dork a~ A Dungeon.. Plan .
('()!Or and technical 11klll, One ut th." irreat
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Gr-,at romantic piec e With !lowing
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nw lod y t1nd maJ1cstic ham, onics. Swa1'0wsky
Pub. ut $4.98
Only u·
rnnd. Vie11110Philhaimoni(• Symph .
M- 1922 . Be r liox.: REQUJEM. lmpn,ss1ve work
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for full ~rchestra,
Chorale, soloists and ·I
M- 1:108.
S ll&gt;Pllu &gt;&lt;: VIOLCN ( 10NCE ll TO.
bras.q bonus, ln an electrifying performan.:e by
Splva.kovHky plays the only violin concerto
F'i•itz Mn.hler, the flartford • Symph. and th ,·
th" great Slbeliu:a ever ,·ompo1-1.&gt;&lt;i
. Hannikenen
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t '&lt;lllll. London S)'llll'h ,
P ub. at $7.96
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Pub. Ill i3.98
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i\1.19111. Rr1•hm ,;. VIOLIN OONCE RTO. Th ,'
S . 1S66. S lb{'Uus: VIOI.I'N CONCERTO. Ste1·e&lt;1.
~real David Oislrllkh plays this richly hnr .
Pub. al $5,98
Only 1.98
tttvnlc work wlUt virtuoso
l&gt;rill!M&lt;-e · Orl'h
M- 1982, RaL'lunaato oU: P RELUDES, \' ol. I , •·onrl, by Kondr11..',hln.
Serene, caprfc l0\J1B, melodic preludC!I play by
Pub. Ill $4.98.
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nll'lodic· or Wag11cr' 6 great operas. August
che!&lt;tra and Sll.nrome Is piano soloist ln tlle SC'
8C'lder, Rita Streich. other soloists, chor't.ls and
h~1tullful pcrforman .-e~ &lt;&gt;f melO&lt;lk Amrrt ,·nt
orch. or Munich State ~•ru
,·oM. by Rob&lt;'l'l
nllllilerworka .
Hegd• , Complete Ubretto. &lt;\ rt'&lt;'.ord set.
Pub . at $4.98
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Only i,92
M-1989. Rt.IND 801":-.1 TERR\ ' AND u r~
M- 1941. BLUE IUDOE BAN .JO. Banjo picker
MOUT H HA.RP. Authenll~ Negro folk mus11
Obrny Ramsey ploy,1 and sing:&lt; H mountain
Ii &gt;&lt;ong, including The
Fox Chruie, Joh!'
g('ffls including Cripple
Ctwk.
Shortentn·
Henry,
Moanin ' imd .\foun11n· ou1t11r ~•·
Oread, Wildwo od Flower. f'tf'
,·ompanlme nt ~ l)y Alt'&lt;' i;:1..,w,.rr
!'Hh nt $4.98
Only 1,911 Pub al $(98
01111· I (I•

Tllla la ~aal a Iman lelec:llon ol Many TIii••• and Records We Bave In Stoc k

�Friday,Morch 22, 1963

SPEC

PAGETHRII

TR UM

14 Students,
(
D.
J.
YNeverith
Finish
Hike
l

By ELAINE BARRON
The hll&lt;e waa pr ompted by Pree. lo Wlllk 60 miles In 20 hnur 1•. The r•k••• th~ hlk o. Artw 19 m!los, bis
ploted 20 m llea , u ld, " Don't
reeent
e n thus. aludenll! wnnled to ~,,,. Ir 1ho&gt;· ~rou11 oto111&gt;~dnt a punc11ki- house
Tues d~, March l ll, a gro u p o r ld ent Kennedy's
do It ." He added, " I would
g3 elu den la an d three
WKBW !aam over an old executive o rd er could measu re up tn thi s re ut 111111
actually t ry It again , but I
111 1•elPl1r11t~. oud . he pa1&lt;sed out.
In ad dition chnlle111s"d Ila, di al' Becun•e or this, h~ went Into l h~
wot1d n't a dv lu It for anyone
Jockeys or radio station WKII\\' , ho~11l111ltht next ny
r o c•hl'Ckwh o'a not in • h ape, I h ad to
Due t o t he disc jock eys' ,con­
1111. " Yon ho, ,
to renlly bl' !11 qui t beca us e of a p ain In th•
mo t ln g air t imes, the hllkers
~ho p,• ror thl~ h lkt&gt;. I wnuld~'t
arch of my foot . I don 't th l11k
WC1'e d ivide d Int o thre e groups,
l'l'l'illllllll'll(l
It 1(1 Just nnyo,w. " hi'
t h e h ike ah ou ld be don e In
with on e d l1c Jockey per group,
t•unHnen led . " I did it In ~ll'l'Pl
at reet 1hou . lt 'a a lot llke a
Tho firs t group, hea ded b)'
prize figh t ; It requires prtpar 8hOl'S. 'l'ht• only Mh•t ~lfN•la ,I
J ack Kelly, left at 12:00 n oo n,
hnd we1·n lwn hlf•tr,r11 1111d 111
•Pfl y
atlon."
the seco nd group at 6 :00 p.m.
eore ll'l':6.
1 'rhe PB hiking team lH trying
with Dan ny Neverlth an d t he
Jack Kelly , who l'OlllfllOl!'d :H lo lwrume 11ct•redlted 011 campue
t hi rd group at midnight 1Nlth
mile ~, mnde 1hlK &lt;·m11ml•111 "I "" 11 Physical ~'ltno11s· Club " If we
Freddy Klestlne.
1'he route 11
·ns ent.!rely 1Yllhln
the city or Buffalo. Ea ~h group
was 11ccom1urnicd by 1•ollce patro l
C&amp;l'Bto lnaure sn.tety or U1e h Ikors
during the lnt e l11)11rs. Also wllh
each group was a hus, ,;,osily a~•
cosslblC&gt; lo I.he hiker s who WHlllOd
to d1·ov out. All three
1;ro111
1s
crosa ed each others' 1mU1s.
40
Ollll Slnnek,
Ot)lled Stulos'
kilometer
walking chumpl on rro111
Hamburg , stnrled
out al 2 :00
Dan St a nek r an 50 mll e■ In eeven hour s.
11.m. with Dick Sull11•uu 11nd 1m11~cd
sent
out
In
1908
by
Preal
d
eut
Ted.
disc jockeys eel out on a 50 mile
group one In au hour aU1I 12
bike, wll!ch 14 students
and o ne dy .Rnosevell
that requJred
all minutes. He completed thP 511 mile
rt!6C jO&lt;'key auccessCully comp leted. Marine Cor11a Offlcers to be able hike In eeveu hours , 66 minutes
an d 40 aeconda. This beat tho
world record
or nine bour·s, 29
mln u tee and 54 aecond8. Tho hike
took the others from 15 to 17
hours.
Cha ir man of thia project •waa
Bruc e Ro sen , who was assl11ted
The
In ternational
Clu b Will be decorated, with ta bles arranged
Stu den ts atar t 50 m ile h ike In hi gh eplrlta .
by Do n Alessi , He was p leoe d
present ltfl annual dance festi val In typical cabaret slyle with ca.n­
with th o result s.
''Moa t of
i llluk 1lin hike 1•rw11t•1Iu IOI 11! 11,, he 1·m11,, !l!'n N!lled, wo will
March 30.
th e k ids dr oppe d o ut becau,e
Pxtitt' nwnr In 1lw l'ily , I f1•1•I li~t. , lry 10 furth e r thu In te rests of the
oftt'iaiallly 'Oalled ~les and checkered tab leclothes.
The festival,
IN n 1•w 1Je1·aus&lt;' I tlld It. hul 1'11 "1111!1•111
bod y In othe r ph71lcal
t heir f ee t sta rt ed to h urt or
In termlsslon,
prizes will
"Flest,a," will be In two parts, During
becau ee of dampneaa ," he ex never do It llgnlu ." He co1wuned lltne••
1,rogn1111~," co mmented
the flrsf consist of native songs be awarded to the best participants
p la ined . "T he wea t her was
with l/1111NeYPrlth In HIIYlll&gt;; th11l lll'IH·• ltUJllUL.o'
end dances performed
by native of the mock Securl ty Council ses.
just te rrib le a pea s,,up
110 o n~ ahoul&lt;I nllumvt
the hike
\\ ' h e 11 uHked If tho oh1b ,rould
people followed by a semiformal
slon Lo be held earlier In the day,
fog," he ad ded,
111,lllS,&lt; hfl iA Ill &gt;;llt)d, phyRi&lt;-nl t'\'l'r lllll•lll!ll ll 50 milo bike acatn.
room
dance In the multf.purpose
ot
the
General
chall'men
l)f th&lt;' disc Jocke&gt;s. r&gt;a1111yN1•,
, 1111dllhm
ho rt'11lled, "W,e'II JUJ1t wa.!t aod
of Norton Hall, with music by the "Fiesta"
are Norlta
Scott
and
Freddy Kleatlnc, who com .
,,,, 11bou t that."
l!l'ith wn• lbe only one lo comCoJlegie.vis.
llllchael Nicolau. The Master of
The p rogram will be gin in th e Ceremonies
will be Roupen Mar­
Conference Theater , I\L 8 : 00 P .M. onlo.n.
With the dance to •s~ rt approx­
ima tely two hours lf\ter. Admission
Is $1.50, ,which Includes bolh parts
of the program and Cree refresh­
ments served at t11e &lt;1ance. Tickets
Tho birds o"' 00111
lngl
may bo obtained at the Norton
Tlokot booth or from any Inter.
natio nal Clu b officer,
Th e multi-purpose
room will

..,

I

International Club Sponsors
Dance Festival March 30

I

........

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�,AGli FOUk

,Friday, Mor&lt;~ 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

Ccfitoria/o *

*

To lht: iol1Ut1,r·,
F1,r ye1u·&amp; the problem ot tlle
students 1r\enllty on q1mpu~ hos
In tb~ Lettet·l4 to the Editor
sect.ion reader11 will find hwn known to bnt,h i;tudcnts anti
t
f
th 1
S h
fa.culty. It gros sly effects the
a commt.'!1 ~Ary rom
e ,aw 'c onl about the recent stud- moralo of the schwl , tn 1111sln•
It 111:~h ntt~ck ou the present elections com- sian&lt;&gt;I!s.u.N ,Y.A .H in both ever')'­
t'n.t etect1ona.
Richat,1
l~1•lJ, pl'esldent
the t,iy Mtivlty and sports ~tu! \'Ulm1ttee an&lt;l !~ l!llrlicular
Stu clenl A~ocrnt1on.
lural events. Mlllly ~oluUon~ have
Since we were present that infamous Wednesday
been off ered by many p~otll~ but
n11nr nr the s e have ora~ed the
night when oil the ox.citement occurred we feel we con
l' l'Obl111n , so I. now l 1•ttl'le$, litJt
comm,11t on some of the oc:cusotions lodged by the Low
11wu1L1ng edit &lt;,r lul Cl'lllel ~rn. to~~
School. The most striking cha rge mode In the letter
111,v "hra 111s1orn," 111101h,1 hut ot
is thot concerning Richard Erb's "usurping of power"
11&lt;,:;slblt- sol\ations.
In complete disre gard of the con1titutfon,
'l'h,, wor,1 ' s pecwe11l111' Rccrn· 1t.
'l'h e l,uw Schou ) n ' JWe:&lt;1entulives claim f hat Mr . Erb
t
t)
h rl t th s 1
ing tQ Webster's i~ an "unusuD.1
w e n o\er
u;
I'll
O
e
tur Put
Judit'iur:v.
tht' 011}~, ,!lsJ,h\y " , rme which exclto~ tlHt
re u l aribtrator
In the ,·axe of :i contested
eled ion . Tt a lso .~r,•·w 1t,,i· 11n 11 11111
,kc~ uie &lt;1oer
~ugge11ts that. he sht iuld have t·alled an emergency meet- Hln111:11111t!'rum the rest, ln uir
If woul d t\\&lt;•nll, •s ,ma thl,·tlus the tlug pole
11\g &lt;tf the Senl\t.e , 1'hl11was t1ext to imJ)Ossihlt'.
take at le1.t:.t two day!! lo notify :tntl ar l'ange a ctinvenient
Ritter wa,a tilO ~\'c nt that ci~piuri•u
The letter goes on and states
nrnn'8 mind~. in thu mttes unrl sh,
t.fme ror :111 the senator11.
th at Mr. Erb, "unilaterally
invalidated"
the Law Sc hool lie~ u pcnn?ful ct&gt;untl'y seems to
untrue.
'!'he Lllw Schoo l votes
vote11. 'rhls ls completely
tul,e the prize fol' hclnt unususl.
by the elect.ion ,•ommittee
Wednesdny
Wha.t 1 nm trying to polnl out
we r e disqualified
night; they alone h11d th is p owe r .
br U1c abvv1• \•~11m11lesI• that
When · colnt)lications
at t h e Law School were made th! ,. unlve1•s1cy ... lhle collection
known
l!hairman
Norene
H erse h, she and the "' people llnd tvy.coverecl halls
I • lo e lection
•
of lmowledgo, rfllglous rluhs anll
e ect 1on co mmi ttee informed president Erb. H e t)1en ca lled tl'llt, •rnttit.' s Lndu:tge In l\ spe c.
the Student
Judi ciary, whkh
was meeting that night and tn.,·nlni&gt;of some sort whi ch wlll
told them nf the difficulty . 'T'he Judiciary
stat.ed that oot,htncrefl.'l(' th e st udents lntereat
the e lectlonll romm itf ee must make n decision, and once nn11at the same lime bring- attent•
action wus taken that they in turn r.ould judge it, o r he ar Ion to the 9ehool. I reter to fi!t.Y­
any co mpl aints.
111\lehik es ,rnd Winter and Spring
, whl&lt;1h have lwoughi
At this point the e lections co mmi ttee inva lid ate d the W\'&lt;:ken&lt;IR
t..nwSchoo l votes and ca lled for a r evote the re. Mr. Erb •1iientlh11 tu the st'hool via t.hat
called Mr . Cacciato,
explained
the problem
and told h1·n1 H11
event. but mo:t"co~l,
,.lo iu1 ~v(int on
enor OllUllS .,
onvld N . Campbell
'l'b eo tollowl\•1: ti. 1he dl'l'IMI&lt;.:
· ur 1he StudAlll ,111&lt;1.lclury
relnllve w
that t h e e le ctions committee
had ca lled fo r a re vote . 'fh e
Studet1t B11r }ll't'!!lident refwwd to agree to this , His r eassoi&gt;h _ u.c, the rou1rnvt1rs~ lletwel!n th" R111dentllnr ,,s.o..iauon und th e Seolll••
..10011.:,us,•omuutlt•P II w1,s relei,sed llib "eek
otls are in the letter .
A1 o point of Information the Senate C:Oft di1c:un
To tit•• i,;,111,,r
·
ThA Stu dent .lud lc!ary 111,.,.ee
d to rnke J11rledlrtion 1.&gt;11the abov~
'!'lie controver sy exllltlng because 11,15e 1111\l~r
1h~ Jl y. L.;twH M th.. ~l11do11tA~s,win1lnn 11nr1II. 8J'tlcle 11,
and vote on infraction, of the constitution rules. But
or Lhe disq11111lOctttlonot t·he Law ser.1ton 2 A. 1
thl1 I• when they meet In regular seuion . Another olSchool vOtek Ctlst du ring the Sen
At1111• c·UTi
lllll••l'lu~ r~~1inw11y 1&gt;1
·..x,n 1HJ i,y 11\e prt&gt;silleat ot th,
.temotlve is to hove the executive committee toke
11lc elections t,i an nllempl to IJ. Stnd&amp;11lRt&gt;nate, the d111ln11B11or rhu Senn.tc elet•llotle l 1111J1mittee,a1111
emergency action ond aettlo the matter in committee.
hnnlnute the und emocrntlc 111111rJ)atof)t91ll'ntnlfvf'R or the Stlttlent flnr AHsot' lnt!on. 111\' Stu dent Judltltal')'
Since Michael Cohn, US candidate for president; Mi1.10 11 ut powers hy ltlchnrd Erb .
dceld,,tJ th:l! 1111' 111·1 of :tw ,,h•Nion ••111111111ttl'
e 1111111
111ry1ng the vot l'&gt;
choel Lappin, Alliance condidote for vice-president; ond
Mr . 1•:~b acted wl~hont any cou- of the 1,11,wSr.boo! wus ••011&amp;tlt111
lonat ro,• 1th&amp; following reasons:
BIii Carnohan, 1enotor from the Law School were oil
!!lc1eratton tor n,e constitution of I
Artlcrle IV, sec tion 5, A, 5 or th e by.laws of the Student
on the executive committee it would be highly unfeo..,
Association outlines th e p,ooedvre to be followed by the Senate
the student AAHodatlon or the
ibfe to hove them discuu the motter.
election• committee supplemented by the "Rules 1nil Pro 1 "'b th
Ions uomm,•tlee rues.
The ta ct that the r es t of the . execut :;ve
com m 1,·ttee were ~j hIet·t"II
•
d I t 1 t ti
t ,.• eth er
oedures • For Student Senate Elections" appro ved bY the Stu .
00
United St11de nt l'. made an app....,l to th1'a" body more than llye wnR
" n nlle,tletl
"el1l '" t,y
ti un
ordent Senotc Elcotlons" aprovcd by the Stllden l Sonate (Feb,
u111 factu that
12. 1963)
and Mr. Erb realized this,
K nowing
that the the L&amp;w school votes terminated
unfair,
.Judiciary was r espons ible in this field he call e d them And ibo domlnanoe ot cl\mp118 poltt1c9
tJnder m·IJt'IP JV, ~1•,,11&lt;mri, ,\ , ,i nf 111
.. hy-laws or the St.ud~nl
as stated f hey told him the electionR com mitt ee muRt ta.Ice 1,r Mr. FM,'• 1111
rty ls 11 mntlPr or Aij~orlntion, rhe !'.tut! 0◄ 111 Judl1•h r,• 1n1t-r1
irt'lt&gt;d the wor,1s "to conduct' '
action.
_
1;pei•uhttlon.
t&lt;&gt;1111'1111111 ,,,ill fur n r p.ele ct ion und to l11valld1H1• vol es under certai n
The letter a l so implies t h at p t·esi dent Erb knew that ,
,•onll!lkms. These t•ouditlonH 11ri&gt;·
the Law Schoo l votes would m ean the en d of the United
An eleatlon booth woe placed
(11 ,\ ij R\lltAII In ntl e r.r r,f lltr "HUll!s "lltl f'r,w~dures" r1&gt;
In the foyer of the Law School:
e lt•t, tlon or 1,ivalld11tlon or vot••• wt&gt;11l~he r eMnim enrled to tbe Stu.
Students rule in campus politics.
How could any· one know
because of lta weloht and ,11,e 1lent Seoute nnd 1l"' ,11·1111
1, :111prnve ,1 hY lh~ 1!1•11ut&lt;&gt;
It could not be plaoed elsey .Jnws or lhe srud enr S;,n11te, part 1, a,.
Wedne sday night, when the decision was rnad e, just what
12) ~ stu.led 111 th,' 11
wher
e,
on
etect
ton
day
two
tlcle JV. sertlon 5. A, G. ..,111,,10,·1,111ne11111tle!&lt;
1&lt;
~ hflll be dl.~ted 10
the votes were. Sena t or Carna h a n at the L aw Schoo l was
rep fe.aontatlves of tile elections
the Studeut Jodi clary. "
the
instru cted not to ope n the boot h . It W'B!\ only aner
commi ttee 111pervlaod the votTht1rerore, nnY Ruch M•tlo11 t11ke11hY tile &amp;mat" el•-ctions ijonlelections
com mittee had clisqua llfied th e La w School that
Ina but voiced 110 obje ctions to
mitte e mut&gt;t bP anrrrov,,11 h)• 1he S111det Senut,, a.nd dtA Student
Mr . Erb a nd the eleeti.on s co mmittee
le a rn ed what the votes
were. They went to the Law School late Wednesday only
Juar c111,·y
.
the placemellt of the booth or
to find that the booth had already
been opene d by SenaTh e Senate elections committ ee did call the Student Ju any other Infrac tion.
tor Cnrn ahan. Therefore
the ch arge that the L aw School
dlclary, and at that tl,ne, the Judiciary recommended that
L.nte lhe ev~t11t1~ ot the next dny
votes were in va lidate because
United Students
knew they f&gt;resMenr CMr.lnto or th e SLudent
Ille elections committe e make a deot1lon based upon the evi.
. h
S h J•
dence availa ble then concerni ng the alleged vlolallon1 of
Hur Asaorl11tlon wns lnt11m1Nl hy
h 8 d come OUt a t th 8 8h Ort en d Ill t e Law C OO IS ground- Mr. FJrb tht11the J..11,wSchool votee
"Rules a nd Procedur e,. For student Election• .'' a nd proceed
1e88,
h"d hoen lnv111ldnted due to rhe
In accor dance with their decision and finding. The electlona
As far M the position of the vo t.ing lnachines is con. nlleged lnn1rnl)er place ment or tbl'
com mitte e did recommend action to the president of the Stu .
terned,
rnen from the Buffalo
Council
were avai lable to v&lt;)flni,;l)ootll 1ind ulleJted campaign.
dent senate, acting de facto, for the senate under eme.-gen~y
place the machines in any location requested
by the elec- in,; wlllltn 2fi fee l ot the hooth .
condition• u chief.execu tive (by.law, part I, Student Senate,
tio n s committee.
artic le 11, section 1, e, 1, a ), and he proved the action ,
Mr. Ca rn ahan. who was taldn g ca r e of f&gt;restlle ur l'll'h's requ Ol't ror n 11cw \
election proceeding
nt the Law Schoo l, was ~upposed
to election wna r~tuse&lt;l by Mr. Car• 1
"Rl,lcs ttntl Pr O&lt;'e
dur os For Studeot Senule lil.lec tJouR" n11m1&gt;ur
meet th ese men th e Monday morning of electio n week, an d eli•to
I 6A 1md uc ;u.- c1111
s1H111roon1only whe n ,,1111
R11·uttd In conJur 111110
to instru ct the men where they c oul d p lace the booths. He Hts te!,unl w 11R hnsed o n rhe with the by.laws or th e StudPnt SAttl\le on1•1 1, i.r t1c1e IV, eeotlo11
•
• t
t
d
h b th
I f , !llNi&lt; tlta l lo Mr, &lt;'11N,tnlo'~ know!. 5, A, G. Thi s In en'ect is Jolnt j111
Jties
•19dlc tl,;n 01·1•r election 1ne11u
never k ep t th JS appom men , an SO t e oo s we r e e t m Jerlge no Infra ction had taken place. ll ~'t'rves ns n ~nt e n, or ,·hrr.~s un,I hnh111
r 1•s ror ,wuo ·r,; ta.ken 1\1'
to do with Mr. lilrh rofh•n•l lo mak e apecille the Student Judl clnr y nnd ncttons tnk&lt;m t,y 1,re~idcnt rnr the Sennte
the f oyer.
Th e ir weight and s ize had nothing
11il\'i;utlo11• rou~ornlni: lhe lntrar. In au ..:mergenoy s ltunuon
the fact that t h ey were not m oved.
Tbe emergon oy rondlt.10,, exl~tad hecnuse the Studt-nt Seuu1•
It is obvious then that the imp lica tio ns CYfth e Jett.e r tl uus.
were
rould rn t he calle(l ror meeting botore th~ !ll\rin~ vnr.a,llon 10 ,fo
fr om the reoresentative~
from the Law Schoo l are groundThe general alleg•ll 0
termino logy o f famed
ha te I.ho lssne . there ror11. T1•-elecLio11would h,1vr. occurr ed t-00 1111•
b~sed on uncollaborated hur .
less, false , an d to u~ the favorite
TV barrist.e r Perry 'Mason, "unsubstantia
l."
say. The Law School had not
In th•• Remester (by.lnw• part I. Rtnllt•nt Snn:ll•'. :,rtkl e rv. sectton
fi. A. 5(n 1 (3) l
been given the opportuni t y to
Under Rule 6 c of the "Rules and Procedure&amp; For St11d•
d~fend Itself before the Stu.
c:nt Senate Electon•," "The elecllon1 commlteo on the day
dent Judiciary.
Mr, Erb waa
of votlno shall hea r complaints concerning violations '1f thele
not empowered to Invalidate
votes and call a new electlon
rulea and ehall recommend appropriate action."
without the eonsen t of the
An hone st uttrm11t wn8 nw,dt• by tbe Sooate elecUOI\• couunJU•'&lt;'
to r.out!l.l't th., l,aw lk hool re l)t'esenlnt ive on th P en.mo duy to uotlb
Judi c iary ,
\ r tl l'I.- IV, Serll on r ot th e Sen- blni of the slt uo.lion. Tho elec tion oommlttee wa s unnble l-0 l'eQCb
tCo nUnued on pag e !ll
the LaW' Scbool r Ppres~ntAtll\'o Cm 3G b ourA Pnre nlh otk aUy. t bt•.
lntemdfled th o eru~r~ency sltun llun
'l'h~ ,u:tton to b Yalld at" lh&gt;' vol&lt;•~ 11f 1h,• 1,Jii i-rbool h)' th•
I

I

Cause CelebrP

or

Student Judiciary Approves
Election Committee Decision

° ..

n•

THE SPECTRlJM

S~nnte

f'Jt1cll o ns r omm i tt oo

w•\11

un t cn pr J••lou..; or a rhi ,lre.ry

t1IHC""•t

their Orsi ncll on ,111s to t'llll ror 1111 1n 1tn ••1llali• 11·-1·1
,-.·11011
. wbkh "111"
bl O&lt;'k ell, I nrrc,rdl ,If; '" t.••&gt;&lt;I
h11111t1
1 le} tli,, :;111d!'II!11:•r A~aodat1or.
le.a.vh.14: lh ..- t"le..tl( tU~ t' l'1\lfnlllf•4.

t-!uto, .. ,1 o

~•\·uru1 r1•,.

maun

,,._t'tn1a ry t,

h~ 5'0-.1 t J'f\c,_. a r tt u tral &lt;,1 N . Y. 1 u nf1er th•

"

ti

Ul1 , a t

;\C't of M•r t ll

tor m•tUn t at a. •'Pl c,aJ r• t• 4't no,, t ,
~ tirt 1on llOJ 1ir,, or f\ 4"tnb • r • 1111
r,rl r~ , t'tbn 1ary t , ltriil

Jlli~~ .\\.•c• ~l•n c.e
e..:r 411MHlot1 tor tn
•

,.uuaC'1H•flnu

11 .00 p. ,- )'..,. , CIP"C
ll.t6ClOn 1-' M

fl'H• ..,,n,.,1 t11r t,l'l'h1n•l
f"VI
tn t • :•

.. , 1,1 nae

•tit,,, _,,_.by
,1,.a,
..,.,,,•.,,.'-"
~• '4"11,t. ,

, -.U u'f1&amp;I Ad •

•

1

\\'lth

t10 ,tlt11rt1rfi•r,

uthr-r

t.lhL11 If

;n1•,.lllll\ll tbt \'otea
·r11,, cl&lt;'&lt;'ldll'
" cu:ul~ ii&gt;' tlw 81u,J,•nt .Ju\lii',ur) ,,•, 1y ,.,,. .../1! n, 1),n
&lt;'&lt;.\t1.st1tu11onal as,~·t
•H· t111, t·1u1
u11t t ,, ·, urt did not tw,1r 0 ~
1&amp;erh11011yon tbe 11lh·r1·
&lt;' ,1n 111
11&lt;1n,,
ur th,, rtulo, 1u,I l'rnc,,dur,•• 1'• t
nt.u&lt;1t1nr Krn:1 .•• ►:1.-c·tu' ' 'l11H' C ' ''"
,, I •mtl ,,
,1111t •,ot l tu jnj a!
11&gt; w:u, t·o F h l H1·1Hl
Th•· S1UdMI" Hit, \'1"1
\i\011
hi
1114 it;d1!
, ,11 1 th,• • umni , 1 11• uu to1trn1 lath ,v 11r
,Ju
u, . ~h4 1 )1ln!\ l1~\·,tt 1 , 1,11111 1 I r, 1 1 u.111
\\'tll 111 ril1 , 1tnr•nn· ,, .•

ti1

k\11I ,1

thll

ii

�SPECTRUM

F,ldoy, Morch 22,, 1963

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE

PAGE FIVl

The .Playmate Candidates

MAZUR

IJ\' ANNl~ MIJNTE

At n SWllllKY l!OC
ktall loimge ll1
Manhattan
nn aJnbltlous
:voung
a ijVett young
ln reuenl weeks there have been a multitude of engrMslng, ,tlma. man entertained
laUng, newsworthy
events occurring on campus; unfortunately,
the lady, The pille blue draperie11 sur­
the baby grand
piano
Greeks have hnd preci"ous little to do with any of them. But here's a rounding
smoothed the sop histi cated so11nda
list of what they have done:
of the sultry Negro slng,.&gt;i·,
Beta Sigma Ryo bad Its annual Hair Tonic the other ntght. Broth.
er Joel and his date Rona won the door prize or a two weeks' stay
On a ~treet corner In Spanish
ln Jamaica
(NY).
In addition they won two new pledges for the H~rlem a group or you11g thugs
campus Dirty Rush Award.
moekcd a teenage !lt1·eet•\llalker
Slgm~ Delta To., congratulates
lts new pledge olass. 1n the event not yet hardened by lho pav11ment
and lime.honored
tradition of lhe sorority, she will be Initiated in she stomped,
super secrecy at the home of Slater Beverly, 2374 Holiday Ave., XX 3ln a corner of a llbf!U-Y ,
:nai, after ti. Aller the cer·etuonleH, n beer bla~t win be held with any
11
urrounded by UNeless dl &amp;Rer.
one who's 11vallable,
tatlons, 11 dotlble bl'008ted 1111U
In an effort to regain some o( the groat s Uiture they hone stly
"''hl11penid to an old 11wentt&gt;r
belleve they once held on thl" campuli, the l\tai:nmi es have decided ro
about the \fllgnlflc,an ce of , .•
hOld their big Solrtee row- times a year, Instead of only once.
Collegians sucked in II Florida
Th eb .1 Dry sorority has made up its annual CARE package. The
tan only to return to their c11m.
slaters are proud to announce that this year's package Includes 5,000
pUISt'I! nf b~ l!.1ind.chnl11 lwl~t lllld
pairs of old knee socks, plus 200 biographies of Cania NaUon.
beer.
The gentlemen and scholars o! Olg E 11had a post.party
party to
!!Ober up after Friday night' s dated bla~t. Conaplcuous ly absent was
A man who w11s bu1 n hnh•'s
bl'(•ftUlh ,iw1~y from lilt• ,1&lt;•co
nd
~roUier Joe who developed a nasty case of cltThosls.
Phi On You and the Twines hod a r eal swinger of a party. They most Important
button
In lh•
r·euled Lincoln Hall ond ball •n' chained and everything
to tho toe world
nutth• 11 t,~,I of lllm$elt
lappln' rhylhm of Horace Shrivelforlt and hla pince setting six . Alter and played the . plnno.
the dance everyone went to Botchitt's for pizza.
A gir l with ,, tlb&lt;·r,c;b1~,.
All the brothers of Absnlom 1&lt;
1p •llo n l'lpsU on u.r11undergi,ing plas­
t••Med lmtrll o howl~tl II pink
tic ijUrgery soon to have their nl&gt;se3 turned down, At the sl.lffle lime.
.
ball ,town i1 11101• of 11 Ml~u1d
a new caste 11st wlll be Issued the brothers.
Ing.roo m -only howllug ullt•~·.
Phi Slcl, sororUy was g-otng to have Its once-a.yt!ar Altnllsm Day,
Sb •ll(t'? She Nplll ll !11'1\1111
or
when the sisters were going lo do good deeds for the campus and city.
11.-r skin.tig ht )lant~.
Hitt when they oouldn't get &lt;lnough publicity,
they hod to caU Ole
whole thing ofJ.
In a ruat•h nllt 'Jltcr.l pad 011 N1w
The ul,er; are s01Ty to announce that their soclul life 118.11been Yt1rk'11 tower · o~st slclt&gt; n kid with
lllhlbll'cd due to no more TGIF's Fridays at the 299 Club. IDsteM a nro11key on his hack shot It up
they will be held nt Alleghany Stal~ Park. Brolhcrij are rern1nde(1 to "'Ith r, bugged con1~cllo11.
as wl th&lt;'ir other anlnUII
presrnt Utelr pins to the game warden.
A rar ,1cnter t'XplaJn~tl lo 1.tcus­
Crlend~ will b&lt;' there en masse,
to111111·lh&lt;l llCOnomy Ill buying ;
compn&lt;&gt;t car wllh a V-8 cng1n"
Tho preceding has b~en a non.µuii.l, nou-polllicat announcemtnl,
SATlRE

BY

BOB MILCH

111•e!i;lnt1;d60lcly for tho su k e of whatovt.'l' good sense might be s/ll­
\'aged from our Gr&lt;'uk sys t(•r11. It wnM originally intended for another
~Lu(lent publicat.ion. but beeause ot the truth underlying
U1e sa tire ,
\VI.' decided to publi sh it Whel'C ll would do most good.
Perha,ps fr:1.ternltles thOlmselves (1&lt;11dwe use lhe wor(I with ref.
N'N1oe to Lhe e.ntire Gi-cek syslell\) are not so much to blame for this
as the column Is. The problem Jij ultimately one of communication,
Realizing that frntcmltle.s
should not be expected to w11t.ci their
own news, the Ionic Column takes full blame for what it ha s come
to signify to many UB students. We arc not lmplytng that Gree'ks
have no ment. on campus, but t.111.1Lthey have not Ileen given Ule
opportunity
to s1lfficlently publicize that merit. The fommt ho.s been
such lhnt parties would seem the only benefits offered by \llese IIO·
ciaUy and polllictUly \miportant orgm;iizatlons,
Henceforth
the Column will attempt
to communicate
newe of,
and not by, the fraternities.
It is hoped that such a for•mAt Will be
entertaining.
infot'matlve, tn1thful, and some-tln1es controvtirslal.
1FC,
Pnnhel lenlc Council, !acuity members, 11nd independent
students will
all share In the news. and the result Will undoubtedly be better than
what now exists.
Impol'tnnt announcements
or Individual fraternities
ti.e. new elec•
LIOnl!, ptedg'! class officers, contest candidates,
highllght&lt;!d socia l
events, etc.&gt; will continue to be publkited.
Mr. Milch's saLlre was not meant as a personal attack on ~1N•
eltlc orgsnlzatlons.
A fraternity
man himself
(beCore his transfer
llure from Cornell University],
he merely selected typical example11
of what has appeared so often In t.hd Ionic Column. His com pariSon
uf our Greek system with that at Cornell has led lo his opinion. an
ovlnkm shared by too many to be allowed to continue. Any con.
meting viewpolnla will gladly be prlntcfd upon me~ling cdltorlat ap­
proval.

Dr. Earl Evans, Jr. Speaks
As Part of Grad Program
flr , E11rl A. EJv:uia, Jr., proressor
tlllll chairman or tile department
ur b1ochemtstry, Lfnlverelty of
('hir11~. will be th e second speak•
••1 In the Oraduate
)!anng01ueut
f"l'o!frllm 1e1·t11re serieR Wednee.
day nr \ 11.m, tu 134 Henllh Sci­
enct~.
" Ouedulu•
su,·yh·oo or Some
of the SclenUffc Temper.
.,mem" will he Dr. lilva.ue' topic
:n th,• ~orles SpOllllOred bY the
:-\,•houl of lluslnesa Administration.
.\~poets

S!•rving In his pre8"nt 1io1tlllou
,l11ro 19-12, Dr. E,•a.ns was previ­
OUHIY lnall"uctor In bioebemtatry,
asslet&amp;nt profe860r . aseool&amp;te pro.
lr•esor aod
ricling
department
chairman Ill tbe UnlvereLtY of Cbl­
•·ll.i;ro, He was a l 'nlverslty Fellow
111 lllochemlslrY, Columbia llnlver .
•lty, 1~34•36; Rod reeeart•lr uselst.
,1111 In pbarmrtcology, 1931.32, and
·••~lstnnl In lubor:.o.tory or cndo.
,·rln&lt;' reePxrclJ, 1932.:11 :ti Johns
ll011kins ~fl'&lt;I.Jea\ Srhvul

Or.

Evan s

uttl'w,,-,1

B;1l •11101·1•
P 1 1IVlN'hnic ln 1H)t11t. , 1 1 1 \' . \'i 1 '1 tht.•
ltSr !rc&gt;m Joh.1 !fut' Ill&lt; ruh•o•r
,•v ;,n,J Utt• J'h 11 !sum r·qlum
1,11
1 IJulv~r•slly
He w~I a fe low of th"
0

Rockefeller Foundation at the
UnlveNlity or Shefleld, Eng .
land, 1939-40: Chief Scientific
Officer, American EmbHiy In
London, Foreign Service Re.
serve, 1947-48; Consultant
to
Secretary
of State,
1951-5.:J:
and haa been on the Board of
Sclentfflc Counselors, National
Inatl tu to of Arthritis and Meta .
bollc Olaeaae, since 1960.

L toR ; Pat Graham, Glo~la Groaso, Flo Gerber, CaNle Uhl,
Caro l Straubunger,
Lind a Kirkland and Carle Srn11ler, will
vie for the tttl~ of TK E playmate at the annual TK E pl&amp;y.
boy party lonlght in Klelnhan1.

Debate Team Successful
In Novice Divisionat Elmira
Team Leaves for Louisville
By KATHLEEN
SHf-A
,\ 1uH lt-o c1,~h:1lf•tenm, r~nrcsont.
1111' !11t• 1·111v~•r'4l1Y.hooa ,.,,tnrnnll
ti·urn 11 to111u11111pu1 1d l~hnt1·tL t.:01.
l,•L!•·.bOVhl/'. ll1•d with ('oli; alr, 11111
' ...,,~,, v ror ~l'f•um.1 11tal'l\ ll 0\Y(\V\\t,

University in Michigan. Those
partlclpat,no are: Fral'IQlno Ml.
Bat■)'
Qhek, Tom Berdine,
Nordslfom
Richard Nomi .
rolf.
I 1111'111,;
,.,,r1111
: roo~~. I.he v,...~ll)'
d1vl~IU11or lhl' 1)1\hllte SOeloty eeut
1, t••lllll In llnx1ldyo lh1lvnl'lllty . Al·
thoui;l\ l.lw ctru-1.im~ did not r,t1we
wlttolu th•• llr,,1 thref', th&amp; nlClrmn.
11,y,. t••.1111ot 1:em lll l 'l\llllllllf(I
~lid
l'l1101 Zt•llrr 11111
(lc•h'llt tlU~itlJUIIDII'
l•'Ulll
ir&lt;nn \\luost01r r'o lh .11:&lt;&gt; All
ro11r llebnter~ . liw,l11lllng th+1 nl'lga.
Uv" t,•ao:r 1&gt;1IChu Mo11ltk&gt;W1~,.
nnd
n11rb11ro.Ole,:otn, llt-pnrtoo for New
York onrly In ordor w muk,. UAll or

""(I

1lw tl'11111wa, ll1•11k1I 1h1• 1m11hy
,,r II llllll'jllll or 111,1111•n
lrnr
On a collt 1·11tny n ight ~0,0011. l11•1•1111~t•
otltl 11l)&lt;!ct&amp;tor!Iwct•e on huriJ t111 pti1t1h, u111 of u Jimotihh• lflV
l(••Jll'l•Spflllllfl Iii•• I 'lll\'l'f~h)' WNl· :
tlW op,mlng of Yonkers Racoway,
lt11rrl111 11,dtllu ,;,,, , 1•11\WHr&lt;I
~n1:el,
A young writer cut out for
LlrHln Lcw~nlhul OIHI no~ Wllllrtm".
l\fe:dco •o that ho might "CX·
'rl1n t·4•lu1,wd wllh a r••1•urc1 of nve
perlc n CI'." RJ !I c11r 1,rnkP d1~wn wlnh Jnll rim·,, 111••···· Ar, llll1l8lllll
rmd )le lmmedlnt,•ly
w1rott'
lr•ullm, 01 thlij IO\lrt\01111•111Wllij
h ome for mo 11ey.
!JIU cl O.s~•UXlllUln111
iull llH'thl'MIWhich
Only three months after• O&lt;lll was toRf.'11 It, llw llnal nmna oC de­
111&lt;•S&lt;1w YMk f'lly 11llrtU'II'" l,t} re.
gi•essicmal elections magl\zlncs are bc-1.h:
Tht&gt; 1tH1111I
1•rm•1•d11n• nl l11tl'1't'ol. .,,,11r1·h the ""hot~ t()fllr• f&lt;&gt;r this
!llli;d with
~peculntlve
articles
lei:late dflJ111t
,~ 11l1
•i.s eMh debater y~ar.
abotrt lhe President of 19418
.
th~ Olll)Orlunlty \0 SJ)enk, without
A unique opportunl~y
for mcm,.
The stale legislature
collllinuccl lnterru11tlo1t ror II s 11wt•IO••d11erlod 11,,rs, lhe novlt•o dlvl•lo11 I(, italn
to quibble about fees and to, sldl.'· or time. tn tills uvrnt, the ,lcbntera addl'd l'llll)('rienre, wilt lHl J)F('~l'Dtod
atep issues such ns ra.isln,g th, wer e atrordell lb1• up11ortuntly t.o
1h11wePk or Aprll 3. 'F'our dobntors
di·lnklng age, strengt!M!Ulln1g- th(; (IUC8110ll lhr,(r Ol&gt;t)nlll'llt~ thus ex. will le:ivo n row doyff on.rty tor o.
Medcalf • Baker Law,
out! awing IXl~IU/! lbP wetrkn~K~ or rnllacy or touroaulAnL at tlt1llnrmtne COll~l;c,
bOlling , improving
Ute welfare their nrg11111e11t•
. 111U1ls event, 110
th In J,oulsvllle, K,•ntuc - y. 'l'boy will
situation,
appointing
judgen, cit• Ille arr1r·111uuv., nnd ne~allve divl ­ i:lve exltlbltlo n debate"
tu hlgb
A prlz" flghlt'r W"11 awa rd rd
Mlon• or lhe 1101
·1,·,, team wu11 on•r ed10&lt;,IA111Clolumbun o.ndrtevetand,
a doolslo n In Mlnutl on the 1'11.­ their Ol)PQOl.'Uts.
Ohl•• ,Hl&lt;'.Int lfrb:Lnn Jtm l11r College.
•I~ ur hi&amp; gllh t ongul'.
Another novice team left ye&amp;•
"rh,• h•Bm whLcb w111mnlte Lill•
The floral scenl of 11 sul,,urbun
rour.Juy trl11 \JI• l,hldll Ltlvealhal,
bathroom
wn~ replaced
by !11111 terday to •tte~d the " Freeh .
m~n-Sophomore Oeba t e Tourna.
m,b Wttllo.ma, llu~~~u c:oldberir and
of slow buming hashish whim my
menl'' thl1 weekend at Flint
Knr.-: 0 ~forri ...
w n the $1llesman lit up.
1

Our pubUc relations man ,1n lh1•
White House derendl.'&lt;.l his ,11.lmln
lstt·ation
hy saying
we h1~vt•n' 1
fallen buck nor have we inovNI
ahead,
A UB ~tud Pnt ,wt comf,orl
11bly 011 un utrp lnru, " " rorotr
to Norton Union. She hnd Ill'\ '•
,., hl'nro or Norman 1\1.aUerior
Ao~•·h11 lh. und \\'US ln§uilh~I
Whl'll told • li e t\Ot!Mll 'I bel,Bng
al , » unlw, ·slty,
l'os~lbt,1· Robe1·t L lr,syle sUllllll •·•t
11 up ht'~l In the A prll lssu1• "'
Esquirl'
"IC the Amer·lclH' n11
tion lnst~ ro,· a Lhousnncl y,•n rll
anti men sh/Ill ask to whal )111r
pns,· wt• directed ourselves. ,;orm•­
one uut th ere wm answ•'r: ti nll
mg "l!lmp~:•

(SUNDAY CLOSINGS)

THE LAW AND YOU
by Ronold Kominski
S11nd11), ,\luy ":1, 1!1
61, 1h1&gt; 1&gt;11 In McGowan v1 Mnryland . tllfl
Court stnted that the Sunday
1,r,.1111•C'ou f'I uf Ille llnft()(I St11te•

Closing laws "ore C)f • ,ec1,1.
,11,C'lch,d tour ,•uRt•K 1nvolvln11 the
,.on~llh tl !onnllty
o&gt;r st atutes
In
lar ra th er than of a .-ell9iou1
New
1·arlo11~ stull'B,
m&lt;'ludlog
character
and that Pl'ftentl)'
to
they bear no relatlonahlp
\'•irk. w1Jld1 re11ulre u lar~o nuru.
l)o•r or buslncsSPS to rl.'muln cloiwd
establishment
of religion.''
&lt;1r1 Sundny wbll~ exem1&gt;ting other~
'I'll,, Supr~•m, 1 Court IIOlod "to
whJch . .. 11 llrugR, g"soliue, re. nll111v mol) fW'OJ&lt;IP who r,111t oo 11
l't't'.~lnul'llltt. QI' ruro,Rh !ilJIU!letnOnl' dAy ralhPr tho.JI li\lndo.y to kuep
31 s1,,111.orhu 1•1• i-nndny ~to~,n~
thulr bu~littllll!"" Oll"D on lb&amp;t d1,y
f,ti.WM ,
might w,•ll 11n1~ldo tho.,,, p,,ol)le
tu lwn 1•u•t1• lht• f)llrlloa cow. with u.o ,~•ooomlr a1hu11ta«A over
SPR
ING
ARTS
TALENT
llr. 1-:vans w.as 11,vard&amp;d the Ell
plalnPd thu.1 ~u111!11y('to~ ln g )II.W R
t&gt;wlr &lt;·ou1petlto re
th~"" ro11ld
LIily Prize ID BlologJcal Chernlstry
Due to ~print V111'11tlon,th,·
,·11uaed tht•m r1·011omtclnJuey. ID \1 ,, 11 be, tbe temp tu.lion for 110m&lt;1
by the Ameri can Chemlcnl Society
&lt;Int.: for r~turnin!: 11pp11,·11t
lonM lit!' other
two flll~ll
lb!\ jl(lrlltlA
. fo UJ\"81t lha.t I hl'y hav., rl' ­
In 1942. He Is 11 memlJ er Oof t.he
for Lhe .s tudent t11lcnt rec•ltitl
,·ompl\\lned thn~ tlwy werll denied l\j!IOUa MnricUOn@ wblc.b eoD1J)(II
American Chemical Society, Amer
of the Sprlni: Arts Fesllval
rulll(ous
rr eedoro.
The
pu.rtf.etl thum to clono lJ&gt;olr bUl\.l.tll'll•l'll Oll
April 16 has been ~xlenr1ed 1111
- ,•1111111
lcnn Society of Dlologlcal Chem.
protet•tlon ot till• laws and W !111I bntl fOl'U1f1rly b-04111 thtl r
lsls,, Biochemical SOolety (Brl lleh) ,
tll April 1,
,·,•llglous frce\10111 1"ht' parties
Socwiy for E:&lt;porlmental Biology
Tho committee for this ~111,m 1rg111•1! tbal I.heir rl'.lllglous bNleta Jl'n5l 11rutltnbl1' d 11y"
nnd Mrdlrlne.
Society of Amer•
1~ luoking fur tht' b••~t L,lle11lt011
llH•m from doing bust • Tbll 8Ut►r,•n1'• (;ourt nlto lll\t lld,
111•11v,•11t1•d
lt•"n ll111•11•rluloglats, Sigma XI nnd
t·arnpus. J( \'•HI piny a lllll,lo'lll
11.mook nowt,,ui;, , lhoot Ulo
u,,,, ,,,. su111rilur 111111tbue th~ " I I I• 1•111
inHllllm~nl
t•lth••r de ssh-a I ur• •,1111,
'ruu 11.. t:i l'I nr Evan&amp; la the
th♦1 .,,,C&gt;I! bru
,·om•
l11v ,., ... 111r lllWR ~ubjoctl&gt;d llr •r 1111\'
nwtll'rn composlUons, have an
nutbor of Biochemistry of Bacterial
fh ~-m th 11 MJ1t clul lmrchm not ~,­ w hnv,, Al/t"'l1&gt;J •IK•tt.lk,w1•t• M 11
i\bihty lo r&lt;•:i.dlnt1•q,1yLl\, · IH
Vlru,u.
,L,•ti1(1 011 oer~o11~ or 0U1cr fctltli~ ,l:t ) ot r ••~I • RuuJ.,y ('IIH!lllf; h,clll
~r1t.llln· wl'll, or pt•rfor·m n1u1I
l.dl~ttl
If Jy
t '1dt,.."c.~tt) ltr)p4.td♦'K .,
The Supreme
Court
held
Th~ N&lt;"rl1•, will t,,, ~oo.dudoo m
1•rt1 ch1tH't'S,
lhlS i:,; y,,ur np1mr
ln.1nt1 11 ,HI • ♦'Sl,t..lu rt •H~I 01lif . Tht.•
that tt&gt;e 14th Amendlllent per
\prli
w ,1t,
th,, nppearante
ur
nmJl~ lo rlC'mnnstrnt,• y,,u, rul.
,\fl!
i...,J11••W,~ ,1 \",1,\Ui ,,nd
m,ls the State'• having wld &amp; ~tult"
.J11,l1,;11\\'iJIJum II. HI\Bl!e, ll.R
t'tlt..H ,
t ,111 tllo\
Ill I
'• \.ll.\r
cu,wl-,r\ h,
do•eretion
1n enacting
lawa
1•,,11r1 or \11pf'!tl~ ror Ore 'flllrd
AJ,j~IH:illC't,..
1 d'
h~ ;1,rk ,1
,~HK I lh i,:,a.l.,t11
•h 'tltt,ld.
• •...,, t
which d 1ffrrently affect &lt;loller
1
\'11·1·1111.l'bll11delphla. on I.bl! 9,
up -~t tl1•· Nvrl, fl \' u \ , 111un1
0 unll 1)
"
, '1,1y 111111·1
rrom
,11
ent cfaue1 of people, •• 10~0
,nut llr l(11d W, l\t&gt;Utcb, 1•r11r~~l , r 1~1l i11u"t tA• rclut11• q • rm•
11' 111 f"
,., th• cl•ulricatlon
1, rele ­
~N· ,,r polltl, it '4oh•ut1 ,, , 1"'u1.. on
ail nti,Jr
:11·1•h"hl /lprtl 2.
Nr,t -...... . S,t,o~I P•ne,..
v,111t t o the St•t,·1
obJHIIVC',
Lht• ~;t
'-------------•

or

1

1

1

I

I

�PAGE SIX

Friday, Morch 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

Placement Office Releases CJ
Schedule for ·coming Week Jpeclru~n
Maroh 25

lilhor, malb, l.nduetrla l rel11Fiu;lory
lnsurnnce Aaaoclallon. llons. and 11ud. Ad. can dldn t 811.
Sf:'(lk.lng CE, El~
l"E, Ml1l and
INTERVIEWS
FOR
clu,mlst.ry ca ndidn.tee.
TEACHING POSITIONS
March 26
F. W. Wool-worth
Company.
Flaet Islip Union School System.
~ Bull. Ad. can dld &amp;tOa.
Suffolk County. September open.
March 26
Durroughs Corl)(mlt.loo. Seeking Inge In elemenlnry. Junior and
senl&lt;lr h igh.
\CCO!lnttng. n,u,. Ad ., and math
Cold Sprlngff llnrbor, (Central
ri rndldatea .
District No. 2}, Suffolk County.
John Hancock M\llu11I l ,lfe In• Thfrt)'-flve miles rrom New York
tiuranco Company, Seeking liberal City on Ibo attrncUve North Shore.
nrLR &amp;ad Business Admlnlntrotton FJlemenlary nnd secondary teacb er
can didat.os.
npenlngs.
RelaU Credit Compnny , Seeltlng
N l a g a r II F 1111a lillemenuiry
llbem l art.• &amp;nd Busin&amp;s• Admln. Schools. Nl(l,,llnra County. WIil ba
lstral ion rll.Ddldlltoll.
recruiting , olementary Rod some
s 11eclnl teac-bera.
March 21
fCR,

AetAa C:aitually, Sooklng liberal
aroi And .Buslne!III Adrulnlatra.llon

March 26

/) /JI}J?
Call fl-'oari

up In the Union Board office , Nor­
ton , If you have any questions
There will be a meeting ot the call 13aTb St rau ss, TR 6.01121.
peychology ,club today a,t 3 p.m.
•
•
In room 204. Townsend . Dr. Wal .
Photograph y Clu'o
tor Cohen, advisor. will 1p1-ovtdea
general orientation in the field
Thwe will be a meeting of th••
of psychology and will answer any photo club at 4 :00 today in room
questions concerning edu,catlon or 262 Norton. Future plans will be
ra recr opportunities.
c!il!cussed. Th ere
a heav y moue.
•
♦
•
tary penalty tor thos e not at•
Tnlrnt Sito\\
tPndlng. Attendan ce will be tak&lt;'n ,

•

lf your Inst na.mo bogns with:
C, D. U-

Roy Scouts of America. Seeking
You should see your advlser
llberlll al'll!, accounting, aalee. cm.
the week of Mn.rch 25-20. It you
Md Ml'J can didates,
have not done eo, mo.l&lt;o an up.
1'ho Grllnd
Union
Company.
t10lnlmont In l&gt;ietendorr 114.
Seeki ng buillnOOEI ndmJnlstrallon
u Od II 001'1'I &amp;.rtll candidates.
1'ho 0&amp;ru11)1.lCompnn,y, loco, .
BLOOD DRIVE
POraled. Se&amp;klng llbora.J a rt.II and
Bualn l'f!H A.dmlnJstrallon
C3-lldl­ Angel Fllg'ht, the CO-Cd auxiliary
,tn.t(lj&lt;.
of Arnold Air Society Is 1,-po
nsor.
M0t.•re Produots.
SeekJng M.E Ing this year's Rod Cross Blood
ronil ElE ean dtdat 611.
Driv e on campus. It wlll be held
on Wednesday from 9 am to 3 pm
March 29
ln Harriman Auditorium. The girls
Leor Siegler, ln corperate d, Pow­ have volunteers from the ROTC
er MQulpni.en.t DITlsloo, Seeking Wing and nre looking for many
chemiatry, acco unting, 'mill, and
more. Those people over 21 years
MFJ c11!141d11to11
.
of ng 6 Wl!thing to g!vu blood need
U.S. Dopt\~lmeoL ol Labor. Seek­ only to come on the day of th e
lo,: peycbnlogy, aociology, econom- drive.

Enjoy the Cosuol
Contemporary Sound
of

The

•

"A Dale With Show Biz,'' ;
student talent production will Ix
hold next Friday and Salturday in
HBrrimBJI Auditorium.
Perform.
anccs sl:ar-t at 8 p.m. an.d admls•
sion Is $.50. Students pe.rtlclpat.
Ing In the show have had experi ­
cnrr In profes;;ionol pm&lt;luctlons.

.. .

Tho undergraduate

malh

club

will meet Wednesday, In romn 234.

or Norton to hear Mir. Joseph
Marm discuss "Solutlorus to Sys­
tems of Simultaneous Linear Equa.
tlnns." EleoUon rm· next year's
officers will be held. Thoso wish­
ing to vote In clccunns sho uld
r,ay lhcir dues before !Lho meet­
ing. Re frct1hmcnts will 'be' Kervcn
afler , I ho meeting.
•

• • •

•

Coby Taylor
QUARTETTE

Every Friday &amp; Saturday

is

• •

March 28

Sick.
oftheTwist?
RELAX ...

Psychology C'lub

WbenllancJ.Chlll Central School,
Span ish Olub
can dlclAtea,
Niagara County. Cornmuntlng dlRt­
"La Tertulla," the Spnnlsh club ,
Ilulful o Ssv ing&amp; lla.nk. Seek.Ing unce rrom Rochester, Vacancies
Accou ntin g, Bua. Ad.. and llbe raJ ll"led lo the elemetnry nnll secon d. will ow.el Monday at 4. p.m. ln
room 333 Norton. Tuesday Ulere
pt Y grad~s .
arbl can dldal ea ,
will be a dance for m embers of
March 27
ftaJtny
JlJxpNllll! Agooey . Seek,.
B11rnt Rllls-Balleton Lake Cen­ lite club, and of A4)ha 166 In th e
In,: Bullf.neffl A.d.mlntetratlon con.
tral
Schools, Saralog11 Coun ty. 1nultJ.p11rpose r o o m firom 7 :30
did~.
p.m.-0:80 p.m. It will f eu,t ur e Lal ­
UNIVAC Dlilslon
ot Sperry
In Am ericBJI dances and m11.9lc
.
Rand Oorpora.tloo . Seeking mlltb.
•
aC&lt;'.OUDtlng,and Uuslnel!8 Admln.
REGISTRATIONSTARTS
l\lnth Club
latrt\t,l•in Clllldlda tee.

J

al Cappo/a~
on Harl em ""'

♦

W ole ome D1\3'

The• UuJvcnlily Will hold IL:, n11
nual Welcornu Day for high schuol
students Saturday, April ;;, IL •b
mcpectcd that l ,500 student~ and
their parents will visit campus.
The p,rogram Includes an adu1·es,
'by President Furnas,
pan~! dls­
uussions , mock classes and cam­
pus tours.
There will be a meeting Qf al l
students wishing to serve a s cam
pus guidlll!, or to worl( on th e
committees today in flal'riman
Auditorium
at 3 p.m. Students
n,ay also aontact K.in Seg,il, TR a.
1453, or David
Wels€nfreund .
TF 6-0957.

•

P.S. Cocktail Hour £very Friday
12· 1, ALL Cocktails 50c

TIRED OF JUST THE
SAME OLD THING?

WELL

Try Something
New

• •

Honors Bauqnr·t

Th e Honors Banqu•sl commll t~,·
aMounces that any campu,1
ganizations desiring to pt cs~nt an
1.1w11rdat the Honors BRnquot mus.
submit thei1' proposed presenta­
tlona to Jim Horn, In the 1Jnl cm
Board office by Wednesd •1y.

o,·.

COLLE
PIZZER
•

Senate Job Open

Public Rcllltlona 1
The pubJit" relations

comm!tle,•

Cl•v1 land Dr,

TF 6·9565

Anyone wishing to be employed

M Norton is sponsoring: a Mnr. a~ a part time. paid secre t ary
r1e&lt;l Studentll Bowling P ,arty Sun- for the Student Senate for the
11ay, March 31 from 2J5:3 0 p.m , r ~malnder or the school year may
~ply for the position In the Son.
In Norton.

Frtlll baby.sitting and re frc~h- ate oCfice, 205 Norton. Indivtduals
men ts wlll bo sup. plletl 'v•hlle I he .ruust have 11. knowledg e of secre.
t·ouples are bowling, M11.rrieJ stu- tarla l skills and be available be­
dents wi11hlng to attend may ijil,'ll 1 tween 12 and 16 hours a week.

Tf 2-9331

Fm DELIVERY

The 575th Air l'orce BOTC Delachmenl
and

The Arnold Ailr Society
presents lllle

12th ANNUAL MILITARY BALL
l'orma1I

Sol~Jdoy
Night,Morch23 - 9:30• 1:30
KleinhansM11sic
Boll
featuring

Jay Moranand his Orchestra
Tickets Available

al lhe Nci~rlon Ticket Window

�SPECTRUM

Fridoy, Morch 22, 1963

PAGt SEVEN

Student Senate and Union Board Name
Week of April 15-20 Spring Arts Festival
Th.q Student
Senat.. nnd the
• Union Board have designated tbe
week of April 15-20 WI Spring
Art.s Festival,. The basic purpose
or this program ls to stimulate a
greater Interest In the Fine Arts
on i:ampus, and, at the same time,
make the communJty aware or
student activity on campus. ·
Throug'hout the week, there will
be art exhibits open lo all inter.
~sted peoµle. On IJ1e pro1,"l·am
will he a Faculty-Student
Exhibit
in t'()()ms 242-24.8 in Norton from
0:00 a.m. to 11: OO p.m . tllrough.
•&gt;Ul tl,e week. Th~ main pm·post •
01 thl:l event is to give both fac
ulty members and students '"'
opport unit y to display their wo,·«
Prizes of $25, $15, fl O wtll b,
awarc!Ep to those three slud~nlswho show the best work. A pn.nel
of judges from the al'L ,school
"·HI determine the prize winners.
The sec11nll ex hibit Is ont•
for local a r th,ts. Thi s ex hibit
wot a lso be avallah lc for vlowIng by t he ge nera l pub lic,, T h,•
painti ngs w lll ho dls playe &lt;l In
t he lou.nge a~as of NortOI\,
This program lt 1111be()n se t up
t.o obta in dl root commu nity
pa r tici pa ti on In the woek'H
ovcn t s. n u lso gtves man y
local artlst8 an opportunity
to dls p~
tlielr works nn
ca rnpu~.
These events wtll be h eld con.
curren tly throughout
lhe whole
week. Along v,llh these will come
a differentiated
grouping of dally
activities,
Monday, April 15, lsaac Stern
villi be in tor an tnfol'mal lecturr•
discussion with students. This wlU
be held ~\ the Dorothy Ra.its
Lounge early in the afternoon.
Since this ts a lecture.discus s ion,
it will only be available lo 11tu.
de nts, faculL-y and administraU011 .
1n the evening, Myron Bloom,
noted for the French Horn, wUl

be playing
with the Budapest forma nce In Buller auditorium and
String Quartet in a Mozart -Seh u . the public Is lnvlled. l\f1•. r&lt;ns.,ner,
bert conce rt. Thi" event la belng now associated With I he Unlver.
sponso1-ed by the mWllC depart. slty or Toronto. ho~ Mutlled in Vi.
ment OJ1d will be held in Butler enna under Segovlu and IE re •
A udltorlwu , Cape n Ball. Mr. puled to be one ot the fln.,.~t gui.
Bloom Is a well known and re. tarlat8 1D the field.
speoted man ln bill field and ha"
Fr lru1y ••vt•nln g C':ulOHdi, lb
played the French Hom the world
C1unam n nllet wUt be pt&gt;r­
over.
form lng In Jl arrl.luan :u1dltOT•
tum al 8 :SO. T hi• brilliant •
T uo•1lay, Aprll 16, hM boon
11 t'&lt;•n
).
3•ou ng company hll.ll 11,•1•
tlcs lg nated es Stude nt Par.
lil'd for Ute pnr pn,~ of pre.
tlrlp1.Ulon Day, At 8:00 p.m .
In J-1(1.J'
rlmllll Aud lturlmn thtlr.•
IW!ntlng ~omPthlng uni que ur11I
l'll.'Cltlng In t he fli.;td c,r Sp1\II.
w ill be a n onchantlng CIQm
.
l"h Flaml ngc, Dan('(' ,
binatlon of m usic, du noe a nd
Avo iding ti"' IISIW.1 roptP.
lnt .. r1&gt;rntlve readlog. Since It
tolr&lt;· of ju•I foi k lt•r" from
wfll be ,,nure,y compO!!•Jd of
th1• ,•arlou,
Jlr&lt;l\'lncfs,
t he
Ntntlent tale nt, ull 11tndPnl •
l'om 1111ny strive~, In an Intl•
will h a,•c an opportunity
to
mat.• \\ '8Y, to pr esent o hl&lt;'llll
display t heir tale nts or t o ap.
or drama, theatre nod danoc
precla t e th e tnlent6 of oth er!!
that renoots tru ly lndlvl duril
on c.ampus. The s how Itsel f
states aud nttl l11de~ or the
w:111last ap proximately
two
Spu.nlsh sou l , For tilt~ per ­
h,JurK a nd IK open to the ge n.
!o rma nco, Mtudent,1 will be
eral publl o.
admitted n-ee, but any othe r
Wednesday evening, April 17,
the Budapest String Quartet wi.11 !M'tSO II who wls hl'S t o att~nd
ruust pay $USO anct wll l be
present a second Mozart.S&lt;:huput In " reserved f!Patlni:- IIN' ­
bert conce,·t In Butler Auditorium.
•tlo n .
will
The 8:30 fl.ID. performance
be highllgbled by the wllolst Ben
Salurday evening at 8 :30 the
Heifetz. Ml', Heifetz Is a known music department
wlll b,' spon­
cellist. This performance wlll be soring the Slee Composers Choral
a, ,allable to th.el gencrnl public, Concert In the multipurpose room.
The University chorus will pre.
cou rtesy of the music department,
The opera movie "Lohengrin"
sent the works r,t many or our
wm be featured Thursday, April Slee composers.
16. It will be' sho wn al 3:00 and
8:00 p,tn. i n Norton 's theater con­
frrence room. Also, Thursday eve.
ning Eli K11Ssner, classical guitar.
ist, will present a lefture and give
8 recital at the 8:30 p.m. per­

T~•

bird• ore

Lucy B•re. Joe Arge nlo.

I. to R: Ron Schmitz,

Newman Club to Be Host
For Empire State Confab
The weekend ot Ma.reh 29-:11, th e
Newman Club of the Unlve1·slty
of Buffo.lo Will host the Newman
Clubs or the Empire State Pro.
from 61
vin('c. Representatives
colleges and unlverslUea through.
out New Y-ork State will attend.
The theme of the convention this
y,•ar I~ " New Frontiers of the New­
man Apo!ltOlat.e".
The confe rence wtll be opened
w1th r, mixer In Norlon Union
Fr!tlny night. Fr. Richard Butler ,
O.P.. Chaplai n of the NaUonw
Nl'wmon Apostolate, will give the
keynot,e sp~e&lt;:h, ''New Perspectives
111 Newman".

The Apostolatc both on and ott
campu11 will be the topic of a
s~ries ot lectures Saturdlly morn..
Ing, The annual buslnetta meeting,
the elcouon and lnst;allatlo n of
officers and the appointme nt ot
Regional Directors, will take place
Saturday afternoon. 'The evening
will be hlg'hllghted by a p unch
party and a dlnner..dnnce in Norto n
Union. Fo llowing a, MON a.nd
Sund l!Y
Communion
Breakfast
morning, the convention will be
adjourned.
The conven1;ion has been 1D
the plannlng' et.age since lBBl A U~•
ust..

'""''~•t

I.EONARDO'S
R ejfaitran l
GROTTOIN THE REAR •
UNIVERSITYPLAZA
Visit our newly remodeled dining rooms to en joy our
Famous Amer ican and Italia n Foods
From A Tasty Sandwich to A Full Course Meal
TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
SANDWICHES AND HOT PLATES

~' ~-, .
\_&lt;I&lt;!""·
JOU M ~ll1l"'-f

IION.-u.

A.men&lt;• • hooe.i n•w
l pclHI &lt;onw•tf1btl!t

SPECIALTIES- RAVIOLI . SPAGHETTI - PIZZA
Toke Out Orders -

Did you win in Lap 3?

Diol T F 6-93 53

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

IMPORTANT!If you hold any of the 15 winning
Con,
numbers, claim your Pontiac Tempest LeMa11s
vertlble in accordance with the rules on ihe rever~e
of your license plale.

LAP 3 ••.

WINNING
f
15
NUMBERS.
,-.un TOOi

Alld••m• lor Ttmpnls ••d Con..,fatlonPrtto
,nusl be uot v•a tfti1tered man, postmarked b1
M•n:h 23, 1963 ,nd ro&lt;otved by tllo Judc:es no
liter lhon March25, I ~J .

10 C.ONSOLA110H

If you hold a ConsolattonPrize number. you win a
4-speed Portable HJ.FrStereo Set, "The Waltz" by
RCAV,ctor. Or, you may still win• Tempest! (See
officialclaiming rules on reverse of your license
plale, and obsel"ie cla1m1ng dates g,ven above.)

1. A'86272
2. C 358698
3. A062375
4 C628490
6. 8797116

6 8 304 2 90
7 A622200
8 A000831
9 C050080
10 8711674

CONSOLATION
, . BfHtlt
2 C35Uet

~

Summe
r Studyin NewYork
Select your program from the I ,nun course,
comlucteJ flir 2, 3. -l, 5. f1, 7. K, I !I, I'.! and
1-1 week te rm, , h~ginni ng June -1 and ending
Sep tember (,.

MORNING
, AnERNOOII
ANDIVEHIHG
CLASSES
• In 8uunen
• In the Science,
• In Retailing

• In lhe A11,

• In Education

PROFESSIONAL
- UNO£R6RAOUATE
- GRADUATE
(. olle~c , tmlcnl, in good ,t,,ndms lll their
O\\ n ,.:hooh m,,y enroll, Apphcullon ,hould
be made in advunce . All cour.e- have the
,amc ,·ontcnt as in lhe rlcat.lcmic Y&lt;"&lt;lr,
Stu •
denls mo) 111kefull )'ear couise, or " com
t,inallon ,,r ~rngle term cour,~,. Credits arc
ord1n,irily tran,krable 10 olhcr in·Hitution}

.......

Wnfe to Ute 0 1reclor of Summ""' !tui&lt;&gt;ffi for
U"derjt.11uatc

811llftln SS· 31 .lf"d llpgh catlan

form. ro, utformilhon 01'1Craduatt and Profrra•
,1uo1u.1ftd,tate .sthool of you, 1ntt tt\l

" o~• l

NEW YORKUNIVERSITY
NEW YORI( 3, NEW YORK
8097 or 8098

Telephone SP,mg 7-2000 ht

7 C'71113
8 CUHH
9 BJUJOI
10 B411111

PRIZE NUMB ERS!

I't

DtO1UI
I'? B7t001

j

13 A15t4H
I' Hl7tOH
1&amp; 8411004

10 CO7HII
17 AtUOIJ
18 B31U44
19 A7H04J
20 COJUlt

1'MGRAND
PRIX50
Sweeps

takes

More th,n 50 timu lho chance to

for colle g es o n ly
w;n

Chan,t open to the ,en1r1I public,

20 Tempests to go!

• In Public Admlnistrolion

• In Engineenng
• In low
• In Communicolion
Art,

cee,.i.,

• A710111
0 AU7tU

,1 8 B5O711t

11. C4267tt
l 2. A.U16117
13. C7 412411
14 84433'4
15. 85975 10

Get 101 lot tho last lap ... 20 more Temp,,•ts and 25
more Consolation PrizesI Of course , entries you've al,
rNdysubmitted are still In the running-bot onto, ag.,n
and Improve rour odds I And, 1fyou haven't enter.clyet,
NOW'S THE TIME! All enJrlu reeerved before March
29th w!IIbe ehg,bleto w,n one of the 20 Tempe,!&amp;
to be
awuded in lap 41 So pick up an entryblank wher.you

buyrour cigarettes...

f
~

~

~I

EXCLUSIVEroll THE GIRLSI
_l'u rou ...,n • l t mput

,,::u,m 1,

, ,~
•MtMd I l"ti O•"I f'tpt'f'IH
O• •O 2 !'t ..... tfe&gt;j ,O•)I Ill £1.1r~,t,4J-

f•O' Pi-,t J~

J(,I

Ul ►•,~l

Get with the winners . .•
far ahead In smolflng satisfaction I

,,
.

�Friday, March 22 , 1963

SPECTRUM

fl.AG! UGHT

Faculty, Students Comment Budapest String Quartet

Queen to Reign

At Military Ball

0 n FaiIure Rate in Sciences TOGive Concert Festival

It became APJ)llrent ! tom !al~
1tudent. tha t an old and cber.
ltlhed elem en t of UB folklor e goes
llke tht. : "They me th0&amp;e fresh­
men aclepce coureee Lo -wash out
the pre -11roCeN1loool students. They
gel too many of them." While tbls
may be the elft;(' t, 11Clence ra.culty
members 11gree tlla.t thta le not
th11 lntcmded reautt .
IA)

Faoutty members feel thal
too m•"Y etude"u with neither
the aptitude nor the lntel'elt In
tolenco t.,ke these coure ee l&gt;e­
cauae th ey have to, '' Parent s
toll their kids that they 1hould
be a doctor, dentlat or pha r.
mac lirt-th at It's "Ic e to be a
profenlonal
man and that the
money lan•t bad," complained
one eclenco Instruc t or, "But.
what they forge t to tell them
11 th at a cert.tin interes t In,
and ab111ty for science Is re .
quired f or these profes1ion1 ,"

I

I

g68tlons cent.e r on either a decrease
work lood or Increase cr edit hours
!or !.hQ science courses. Faculty
members Slrel!S n greater concern
with mntchlng the student to the
1&gt;ourse. Where once the freshman
WB.lltel'.l to take a course In science
had the choice of taking either a
iliffloull survoy course, or an hon.
0 1·s course. Now he ls allowed moro
lntitude in his selections.

Pd l)y man.y to he the -world'A top

department
now
In nddltlou
10 rhernl~Lry 101. T hetormer cours e
I~ de&lt;'lgned tor the stu dsnt who
wants to learn something of chem­
istry but. d oe~ not 11lan t.&lt;l lllake
:, cnr,•!'r or It. The phys-tc~ 110d
hlolu"y deportments
hav e ntrer~d
Plmllar opllt1ns.
c&lt;lUl'lle

1111d l n•tru c:,tor s 11~rec
l'rt»illl'&lt;'ls for ~t•IN11•t, ij(ttde11ts
prepn rnU&lt;1n tn
math ond science f6 ln suttlctent, seem to ho lmprovtng. The three
t1tud ea1s reel thnt et•lenre department.s questioned nil
Neverrllell'ss,
too m11cb ts 11.~k&lt;-dor them in the c:lnimed s ste:,dlly- decreaslng rote
,de ure courses · " F'lrst of all. they o[ 11ttrltlon over the past tbrt-e
eb ouldll\ load U(I lhP Cre~hmnn years. They attribute this largely
t pr.,.proteaeloo:u I aludl'nta -with sCI ,to whnt they term tho lncrOl.lelog
murh Bclence 11t one lime." rom­ ~U'llilY of the 8l11deut admitted to
l"B, but also In l)llrt lo the ll'Il)laiued a former pre-med .
cr811•ed dtveralty iu science co ur se•
"Bul , the ,-ea.I problem Is that otrerert or 1h19 sc hool.
they- Just elC])t'Ct too n1u&lt;'b or you
In ecle oce eour&amp;es-a nd they'll tell
ynu ao. l'vo been told by more
than one ecle nce loA.tructor thlll
nine or ten boors per weelt ot
study l6 rolled tor. H's uore.~"on.
able.''
Studenta

11:nt hlp-h •Chool

BUGEL8KI

I

Wha L can be d one! Tb e1'8sooms
to be ~wo BChoola or thought on
ihht;
Lhnt of the students
and
that of tile faculty. Stu dont sug.

'l'hf\ uhemlatry
oll'er11
n l l!l-120

The UlltllJOl ROTC Mllilary llull
f1u(Jltlll'St dudn ,: th~ f!'cgtlvnl for will he lleltl tomorrow olghl 111
, 111• vertormuuet•
or nddil1onal Klelnhuns Music Hall . Jay Mora~
'rht- llucln11e11r String
Quartet 1•hi~Jl1Jbf'r workM hesldes
string wlll vrovflle the music (l'OIII 9 to I
will r,1•esent 11 ~loza r t.Scbn:bert (luarlcts, Wulln 'l'l'llllllll&lt;'r will he Ann~ SlaJ)le to_n, thE&gt; 1962 queen
Ill
the 1h1·ee co ncerts will crown this year's queen.
ll'Psttvnl !enturlng string cha.mber reatured
works or the ~wo masterR begin. 11ext l\'Pek . Ollwr on1att1 Include • f'llmllle Severyn,
sponsore d ·by
Bloom.
Aenor
Heifetz , OCS acad emy commanded by- Cad et
nin,; ~tonday. All 11r&lt;1grnma wtll Myron
toke pince In Huller nudllorlu m Leonard Arner, Jullua J,,e\·lne . and Lt. Colo n el Dlodo.te. MJ88 Severyn
ls a freshman histo ry maJor In UC
or rape11 nnll at s:ao p.m . Addl- Mleczy11law Hor 11zowski.
.
Bonnie
Barrow, epon.sored by
1lon11.I,•otwerla will be given Wed.
Stu d ents sh&lt;luld rn.ke advnntage Bravo group &lt;•ommauded by Cadet
needay and Thursday-.
or Lhls rare opportunity
to bear Major Chrh,1.ma n . M!ist! Bartow le
Th~ enllre feetfvul tOnH\RIH ot
works of ,\Joza rl and Schuherl a fresh mun Sptmlsb m jor J UC
nine c-onr~rts. The remaining 11l1t
Ronnie Acker. sponso~ed b; Del ta
11arfonned by ou tstanding urtlstl! .
will be given during Ule weeks
group commanded by Cadet Major
STUDENT RECITAL
of A prll 15 nod 29. Adnilssl oin
'l'he Wt!;!kly recltu.J given b)' atu. Ko tz. Mi"8 Acke.r Ls a eopbomor e
ror hl~'Ulty Rnd stair IA $1 J)Cr
roncert or $7.50 tor Lho H&amp;rles: den ts ot a ppli ed music w1tl lake ge ography major to UC.
Pal Holl'mnn , sponsor ed by Char ,
at l p.m. In the
ge neral admi ssion I• $2 per con. r,lare ~e~day,
by Cade t
cert or $Hi tor the series. St,1. auditorium o! Blllr d Hall . All stu lie grou.11 commanded
M,las Roffman 1B •
dents may receive ticket&amp; fr ee of den l&gt;1 and faculty ure invited to Ma,Jor Blair.
w1ll be Paul treehmun eoclo togy major ln UC.
cbarge tor any or all o! thl' con- , auen d. P er(ormel's
Judy M11rcklln,:er, sponso red by
certA by preeentlng th eir ID tflr ds Kroll, basij; WUllom Peun, trump.
et ; Elll.lne Orel'nherg,
Hoprauo ; NCO academy commanded lby-Cad e,
ar the Ra.lrd BaU box o1ftce prior
Belly Winkler. Judith Thompson Ll. Col. Stearns. Mias Marckllnger
to the utghl or the performance.
la ll 1reebm1Jl biology major In UC
The nudapcst Quurtet.. consider. and Ma.rgo Husln, piano .
By VICTORIA

Faculty member■ take the op.
poefte view , Says Dr. Phi lip (l.
MIies of the biology depart.
ment: " I'd like aome of the
other department. to aak more
ot their •tudent• .o that we
(the blo department ) wouldn't
be the whipping
boy for all
1tudent complalnta.
More de.
partmenta ahould uk fllr •n
honest effort. Any cour111 that
does not .. k lt1 1tude11ta for
hard work la not dolr,g lte Job ,"

By STEVE HARRIS
Llut semester the nltrlt.iou rate
(failure~ plu• dropeuf.81 In biology
101 Well 80%; in chemistry 101 ttie
Rgure WllS 40"1., The pl\y-slr~ d('J)atl •
ment role88ed 110 tlgu.res for !ls
101 COUl'lle, bur cllnrMterlzed
the
attr it ion rat e u "dlsturblngly high.''
Wb :, doeti II hapl)f'n ! 111 an. at.
IAllllPtto flnd out we BJ)Olle to stu­
dent c.eacber11and depar tment b oo.de
In die wbJect a.reu Involved , Here
a.r-eeome ot the nnll'Wl!l'tlwe r1U11e
up wllb .

I

"ADateWith
Show
Biz"
Ticketson Salein

TICKEl OFFICE
, NORTON UNION

A Blend of &amp;:r. Songs and Satires

to buv. Beautiful 1-.
-UB compus.
- Quietonly
'" orhood
mllu . Neo,
from
netllhb
W'rth 01&gt;1/on

~«a.

1ehoofs,

Cd ff 6-SU4

churche1, bus $too.
offer 7,&gt;0 p,.., ,

..... ,.,.,.u •••••••• •·-.,. .......

-----

$1.00 per Couple

-

..

~~ tt,lt,rrtt

- -

......................................

--

-NO

-----.
*'**11-****
....**"

,.

W Pfl'ATURING-

White
Lodge
HotelJim"Cowboy"
Bonner
MAIN STREET- CLARENCE
, N. Y.

fr om Th, · '' '" , ,u i Timl' ,

HAVE? • • •"

at 8:00 P.M.

FOR RENT

$2.50 • $3.SO · $4.50 • $5 .00
All Seots Reserved
Moil order•
110w with Mlf.addrened
1to,nped envelepe, Nad cheek or money
order to 8uffolo Jou festi•a l, Dento11s,
32 Court Street, 811ffolo 3, N. y,

''W HATDOES
'THESMALLHOURS
'

Dates: Fri. and Sat. March29 , 30

~ltdt ••• ••"'1"91

'

I

REMEMBER

TM

2nd BIG WEEK

srrlu,; qunrtet, bet.'l\nte qourtet.tu.
1 eKlden1•0 her·e last fell . The mem­
he,·ij, Joaeph Rolsman, lll"l!l violin:
Al!'Jllnder Schnelder, seco 11d vio,.
11n: none Kroyt, viol11; ond Mis cho
Srlmelder. CPIIO. lro,•e per formed
tbf' ,111111
,;li Ri!elboven (:yr ls ot
th" rm11111tne Oeetbovou
string
,111nrtelx hN't'
vvery rnll 11l11re
l!lli~
1'ht•He r&lt;lncert.~ hnve hoen
1111\IIP 'fl(ISSLl&gt;le hy the bpquest or
I h~ 1:tlP F'rederlrk an d All&lt;'e Slee,
\,those t'lmds also t&gt;rov1de ror thr
SlrP 11rnf1
•ss wshfp nnd ndOltlonol
l'lrnrnber concerts.
Bcc~use t~ ls Is the flr at year
t hnt the Budapest Quartet Is
Jn residence here , t his is the
first time that additional concerts by the Budap est have
heen avallable on campus. The
members of the quartet, with
the e•ception
of Mr. Rola.
man, will teach and coach stu.
den ta In chamber ,nualc.
Several well -known gueat art .
Jets will be teutured
with Lhe

and his ROCKIN .JACKS

tnesmallhours

(formerly from Johnnie's E)

:,,..
}

every

*

Nights

NORTH PARK THEATRE
MON. THRUTUES.

~::;;:'::-'..,
IP
l

Appearing

Wed .,
Fri.
and Sat.

"A ,1udy of loat 90U1'
, .. a kind ,of raw, jaggt!d te,tlu re
tha t 1cnrcaagainand aga.ln.
T he very tawdrlneu of the backgrounds -tcV enl ban , a
hotel room, 11 Greenwich Village apartment - ron•eys
~ore than their mwings and soliloqwca th~ .blealt nega•
uviam of the charactcn. One bit, when the QIXlcra
wobbllllglyslmula rcsa bar surface, lsextrcmcly clkctive.
Mr, Cbal tin luu dram':ltir&amp; the case of an embittere d
bulineu executive, to m!rror what he obviously !ttls
3:rethe ills of modern IOClety.Than ks mainly to a Light­
ll!'ped portrayal of the executive 's wife, the oouple's
d1mactfo showdownh.ua piercing soume,s.
One brilliantly dismal fragment involving a pffilatory
blonde, and three male aonlcs a.how1rhe drunken
quar tet incoherently trying to revive a dying 1pree.
Norman Chllhln Is a capable man, definit ely polntc,l
in the righ t direction.'' (Howard ThompSQn)
"lltls film is a brcaktbrough . and Norman C.h:titin is
a _born _film-maker.'' (Rich•rd Griffith, Curator of The
F1llll Library. Mwcum of Modem Art)

It

·~-:.::;-;""'
J..• ' •.,. ... _

~-~... . .... ll

_

2 GREATHITS ON THE
SAME.PROGRAM PAIK
NORTI
~

nram
IUI

Ill,

:."".;!':",..-~:.
..._

Fl~5JFFAl.0
SHOWING

m•mm

11t-1 11

�SP E C TR UM

Frida y, Morch 22, 196 3

PAGE MINE

Jean.Paris Spe,~ks
On French Poetry
Jenn Purls. ,n1e•t leeturer ltor tbe
lleilOrt ment or modern llrng:unges,
ll UM Nt•ll'I'
N1•wm1U1Olub
wtll 11rcs~r11. two :1rternoon semi­
The Hillel Foundation wtil ~pon.
Uur111i; Lc)1l, fl'o.~
Streng "
nars on ·· Al'lnali!a de Hn.~•ehlls:· ~or n Sabbsth senricte lhls cvcnini:- 1-nying two M1111Se11
111w
h wet&gt;l«lny .
Monday and Tueedny- at 4: l5 p.m. 1\l 7 :45. Dr .• Tustin Hofmann wlli These J\tnl:l!!l'S are at noon, ao&lt;l
In C1•osby l 25 nnd 11n eve11i11g Iec­ optW.k on. "A Jewish. Source of :;;00 p,m ,luring the week. Sat.
tnrf' on ·'The New French Poetry"
Dem11Cr11cy," An Oneg Shflbbnt \ll'(lay J\11\i&lt;.S is hrll'I llt 11 :00 n.m
'J'ups&lt;lay, 11t s;:lO 11.m. in trn mer. wm follow.
AU Mai&lt;.~C~nro held Ill Newm an
endort .
A Spnghettl
Suppe r wlli b, H"ll.
.
His ad11ph1lion of Brem.Jun Be. ~t'r\'cd in thl• Hjllel House Su11day
H. 1• g II l II I thl•Olog'y
&lt;ti:ICUl!-&lt;lon
hnn·, "Th,• Hostng1•" was flt~)liuced ul :;;30 p.m. Reservsllons may b,·
lns.t Yl'!\l' Jt•an.Lnnls Bart•u,ull nt made al the Htll el House, Follow . gt0UJ&gt;S will ht' hl)ld ut 9:00 n.m
I ha Oclcon.Tlloatrc de Fran, ·,•. HI~ Ing I.he supper. Dr . John Lnnr Pnd 10:00 n.m. each Tuerilluy nnrl
.
publi~lled works lnelude l-l~mlet, nss isl..iml dcl\n nf th&lt;' Coll.,ge ol Thurs&lt;IIW r&lt;ioni 330 In 111,,,1011
Shake ■ peare
par lul.memc
Con. A1-l$ nnd Scien,·es, Will sJ)MII on TIii' lt,J&gt;;l' 'T'u~&gt;&lt;da.yl~ Moral TM •
L, to R,; D, R. Kackery; Standing, Or, Henry L. Smith;
vl,1gy and Thursuny. Mnrringe ,
naiseance de Shakeapeare, IGoethe 'jlR 1 hct1: u Nciw Gertu-f1tty ?"
Dr. S, J , Segal: and Mrs. B, K. Pomerantz.
dramaturge, nod James Joyce par
Reservations
should
now b1· Th,• 11:mpift' Sta le N~ •mm1Gluh
lul-meme.
1&gt;11,tle1or Lhe HIilei Seder Monu,,y l'1llll't'J1tlon will he h~ld ne,cl we ck.1•nd and I he UB N owmnn f'lub will
two evening,
Ln•t reur h•• co11t1ul'f,•d
April 8. the Passover
~ourse• her~: onA In Engll1ah on lunchos Ap1•il 11 and 12. and ,, 11.. ,.t the gl 1lhering , A.mo11g th4•
In
"'l'he :\l.l'lh or Ul~•sses from liomer Pa6sovc.i· roast beer dinner Sun­ , vcn Ls will ht&gt; n Dinnor.dunce
bn,ak •
to Joyce"
nnd one in l•'r&lt;'Tl,ch on day, Ap1·11U. The deadline for all Notion nnd n f'ommunlon
By JOEY ELM
J:Utlge und T,lngitl•f!cR on WNl!}O. "f,e 'l'h.-atrc frnnrniR depuls 1980:· reservations
Is Mon&lt;l11y. April 1.
)Jr . Purls' 111•ademk ru 1'PPr In.
Thcr&lt;• WIii b,• n Nrwmtrn m t1t1l.
"Spouklng of Iden~." a radio show TV,
H'.owa1'd Km•s, pr1,sldcnl of Hillel
Language 11nd Ltngulsll,;a wn.an c!ud""' u tbree-ycnr term nR IEieturcr announces that nil Hillel ml1Jlber~ Ing in 1wm 23 1, Norton at 7 :30
uow In lts ~ecoud yenr on WGR
1rnd WBF'O, Is a 66-mlllute prO!,'TRUI 1hirceeu.week
series produced by In Frenf'l1 litern!\tl'P . and J)hil4lBOPhY 111·c eligib le to volt.' on the recent. j'Jll.
WetlneRday,
devoted to 1he art of tntormllllve
the Nntloual Eclucnllonol Televl­ at the T'nlverslty of Aberdeen, par. IY l'l'ViHetl Rille] Coni;lflution. Cop. (nte r. Vnr~lly Chrl~tllm Ft'l tow llhlp
ThUl'S(luy, April 4 , II nl(lCUng
interP~tl ng conversatio n.
slon Network.
Pr. Smith also ap. tir.lpnUon in lhe llurvord Jntermt.
il's or the Constitution
are uv11il·
tional Semln:ir, nnd oppoln lLmenl &gt;&lt; o.blc at the Hillel Hou~c for stu dy . will be hold ln room 330 Norton ,
Produced by Flllzabelb Drlbben, peared on I hp American Broadcast.
dlreNor
or educallonnl
televlalon Ing Compnny·s 11opu lar televlR!ou os VIKitinp; Prores~o1• at nru ode is Votes may be cssL e.t the Hous,• 0.1 1 p.m . 'rh,' gu,'f!t !JPCaker will
l'nl1·1•rslty nnd 111 I lw I '11lvl.'rs!ty Wetlnt&gt;sday , Th11rscl11y, o.nd Sun. h~ Rev. Ellis, who wl!J t.a.lk on
,ind rndlo In the ortl4!e or Univer. i,how, Meet •rhe Prorcs•or.
ot Nebrnskn.
!llty Relations,
the pr ogram Is
The main purpose of the prothe subject ·'Man Can Know God, '
1lay.
hrondrnlll Sundny evenings on WOR
gram Is to bring the unlveralty
nt 7:06 nnd Wednesday evenings
to the community , Many people
ot 7:00 ou W'BFO. Th8 program Is
think of the profeseor aa Just
a classroom
personallty
with
a public atruir~ presentation
or
C'ONTINUIDD F'ROM PAGE •I
few outside
Interests.
"This
WGR produced lu coopemtlou ,vltb
We want women! Ui00 or them
the Ulllv8rslty.
program dlapella that lllu■ lon,"
111-eneeded to be dates for mem. tue 1,l1•Nio11rull•• 1&lt;tule.s thnt "the
:\Ir, lilrll '• 1,l't\ollJI were cJoo.rly a
The participants
In the pro.
stated Miss Elizabeth Drlbben,
b1·t·~ &lt;•f the Arnold Air Society election s cot11mlltee ,;bnll henr com• ,·lolnlion or the tilect1Qn rules and
gram speak on no predeterthe show's producer.
from o ll on•r lhc nuHon nt lhe ple.lntfl concerning v(olutions or th e tht! ,·,lllstllutio n. IP. It a domoere.cy
On "Speaking of ldl'lts" tb8 guests
mined topic. It has bee n com"re prrmltted to expound their at. Hllh National Conclave Lo I&gt;~ held rulW&lt; no d llhall rm·&lt;lmmend 11ppro, wil1;1n 1100 mnu uniltLtllrally uanl"J)e
pared
to
David
Susskln d'•
lhe n11L'horl1y to deddo oa unpo11.
!ltudl'S, valuo~ and opinions
In on Mny 1 • 5. The mllltai:y ball pdute aclion ."
Open End Show by a local
for this conl'lave will be he1ld on
Arll&lt;•le I \', Si'.'ctlon A s11ya "nny rant a que~tiun l\R lb.I! pre,,ldeocy
All
participa
nts
on
t
he
:iny
suhJoot
they
choose.
critic.
n.lmost
May 4 from 9.30 p.m. - 1. a.m. \'iolnllon of the rulP~ will he re- or tbe Studellt Association and the
program are Instructors
here
'Topics tbot have been previously
Ir interesl,•d
you may pi&lt;•k up rened to the Senr1Lc by Ute elll('. mnJor11y oontrol or the e-.ecutiv8
at t h e University,
cllscusse1l Include:
The Common
applications
in the Ans&lt;'t IP'lighl tions commltt~e usklnl,! wihdrawn l &lt;•n1111111tteo•
'nwo hundred and thirt:r
This week's gt11l8t6 Include Dr. Col&lt;l, The Common Market, Child
OCfiOE4room 359 nnd return them (tC the CllUdldute." :-101\/here in thP l,U\\' i'ldlO0t ~•udenta COU8lder it fl
Charles Foll, pror8118or nod director Rl'arlog, Origins of Christmas, The
011 or before
Monday. -IG0 gll'ls rules wns Mr , ~lrh !'ranted tbc ll\t• 1dlol•tator•hl p
ot Teacher Education; Dr. Nicholas Artist tn Society, The Cuban Crises,
1hority to i!IVllllthtle an~ call u IHIIV
111111l&lt;nlnill~kl
Kieb, assistant
denn ot Millard Nuclenr Testing, Tho Culture Kick, h8\'L' uh·eatly signed up nnd Lhcrr
1•l&lt;!ctlo11
, or di~qunllfy vMl'S.
Hph lil1ser, L.a.w School
is nol much tune lefl .
Fillmore College, nd Mm . Cornella The Twiet, Theater
P8rsonalltles,
Allen. profcs;;or or Social Work, C'ollege Athletics, The Labor Force.
The host tor I.he show Is Dr. Henry \You,eu Working, The Va lue of
fhe drl.e•ln wllh the arcltea
Le&amp; Smith, professor- and cbrurmau College. Mentol netnTdnt1on, nod
uC the denartment ot antbro11&lt;&gt;logy .'lledlcnre.
and linguistic&amp;.
The progrnm ls geared to an
Dr. Smit .b bas hnd pre,1ous radi o ndult nudlencl, a nd otrere st.lmulat­
programa oud bas m&gt;IAlet8levlslon ing iutormnhv8 couvereation. OueBt
appearances.
On radio station WOR &amp;electlou is perform~ by the show's
Dr. Smith bad lbe prog1'nm "Where 1&gt;roducer Miss Dribbeo u.nd Is ar(IJ.
A.re You .F'rom?", In which he spot- Lrnrlly done. The racu\ty members
ted people in tho audience
1tn&lt;1 bnve been rosponalve and bavo
discerned
where they w&amp;re trout ueeu afforded au opportu.uity
to
ll, Mlle North of SHERIDAN DRIVE ot MAPU ROAD
r,olnts within the
by their vorlous accents. Dr. SmlUt dev1alo1, tllelr
(AdJacettt Tht Bo11l
n ord Mall Ploae )
ulso starred in tbe progrnru Lan. Jlrt-y.0ve ot air t.lllle.
Open Frida y 011d$ohud oy Htll 1 :00
"Spen.kin&amp; of Id eas" bne been
Ope,oi.,1 by tho JERRY IR OWNROUT CORP.
to
&lt;'lilied n wort.hwb.llo addition
local mdJo 1uy .Buft'ao Courier.Ex.
press radio and television
critic
Wokh and
Ja.ek Allen.

~·

,.

1

Local ~adio Show Features
Varied Faculty Discussion

Arnold Air Wants
Dates for Dancie

Letters, Law School

I

MeDlonaldS
sSr·wi
13lS5 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

FreeStudentDuskBlotterforthe Asking- WhileTheylast

Jewelry
Repeiring

..A-/iotla~ ofou,age
(Cot•••

Hertol ••d

Vlr9II)

PRESENTS

TheTrio
BIii Paoo, Al R.ID:&lt;lt&lt;&gt;
ood Mlts Toni C-llo•I

Friday • Sat. rdey Hit. ot 10: 00

QUICK, DRY

Requirements

Your first career decision
should be weighed as carefully
as laboralory chemicals. In
the work you do-where you do
it - and th e kind of fulur8 your
work opens to you-balance
should be the keynote.

Chemical
researchdivision

CIBA has a century-old
tradition of 8xcellence in
pharmaceutical products,
where today's basic research
brings about tomorrow's
healing preparations. CIBA is
a research orien ted company
where you'll find a haellhy
belance of the meaningful
ingrl!dlents that mak8 a career
satisfying.

Conlrol dlvlalon

Mac:roblology

For those interested in
furthering their sludy CIBA
offers a full tuition refund
program.

XEROX
COPIES
NO W AT THE

BUFFALOTEXTBOOK
STORES,INC.
( formerly

Teck

Univ. Branch)

3610 Main Street

TF 3-7131
For Short
Microfilm

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pric~s call:

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174 PEARL ST.
Tl 2-62l4

re■ earch dlvl1fon

Accep t Ihls CIBA lnvllotlon to
learn more of the Interesting
careers open to you In our
modern laboratories at Summit
New Jersey . Weigh , If you writ
your curre nt interests and
accomplishmenls with these
known CIBA needs for 1963. II
our concepts coincide will\
your abi lities and values.
please ar, ange for Jn
lnformJ• ve drscus5 lon

Microbiolo gy
research division

Reprenntallvos will be
Inter viewing on campus

for poslllone anli.bte to men
and women abo ut lo receive
BS, BA, MS or MAdegree :
Major In Chemistry with
academic emp ha sis in Organic
Chernls 1ryIncluding such
c.o_urs8sas Advanced Organlc J
Laboratory. Organic Oualllatlve
Analysis, Orga n ic Syn th es,s
and, preferably, a Senior
Research Thesis .
Ma1or In Chemistry or Phar­
macy with strong academic
preparation in Anat)'llcal
Chllmistry Inclu ding such
courses as Analytical Ch em·
lslry, Physica l Chamish'y and
Organic Chemistry .
Major In Biology with s uong
acl&amp;domic background ,n
Pharmacology . Physiology or
Biochemistry . A minor in
chemistry is desirable
Major In Mlerob101ogy or
Biology wllh empnas1, 1n
Bacter,ology Vlrotogy o, a,o .
cho•nls try Courses Ill Ch11m­
mry are desirable
Learn the full CIBA slory \ll)r
Juno 1963 gr~duilk~l

To orrange an oppolntment
see your c:oltego
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C I B

!":umm1l N£&gt;t, J!t r SQY
0111 01 CIBA Co rp
An Cqunl Opportunity Empklyo1

�Fridoy, Morch 22, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEH

BullsDropNCAA
TournamentsCagers
End
Slate
·
With
16-7
Mork
To SCStaleand Youngstown
The bask41tball teams of the
University ot Bullalo Ontebed the
1062-63 sea•on with a coml)(llllte
record of 36 wins and O loss08.
The vnrelty was 16-7 lncludlng two
NCAA regional tourameut losses
11t Akron, Ohio. '!'be freshmen
were 204 which Is the ~elll
frt'&lt;!hmun record In UB bil!toTy.

By ROCKY VERSACE
13uth,I&lt;&gt; varsity c~e rs dropped
the coneol11tton game ot the NCAA
Mld!lM~ Regh)nal tooroament
to
Young11t.own Untvcn,lly by a. score
of 66--5~
. The Bulle mat(1led bas.
kl'I-" 1\'1r betlPr than 13 mln11tes
unlll Jim Timm erman meshed two
to give Youngstown 11 IMd tb11l
wa. never rellnqu.lllbed
Along with lht• SC\11'1111-1
.. 1t,1rl. tho
P1•ni;ulne led l'hO WI\)', ,1,1 [(I ar,, In I
,.,,,.,unds.
So11homorn ~iard
Onn
Bni,mnt in-:1bblld R r&lt;&gt;houlldH tor

Bolb Dr. Len Sertuellnl and Ed
Muto saw their Oves regl ffler the
100th wins ot the duo·• seven­
yenr career nt llulTu.lo.
Sertus.
tlnl's UB mark ts 114.44 for seven
years. Muto's teams are 100.31.
1, 1953.
1-1-1-69/
I•ivP new mark• tor Serrusl lnf'H
Serru~llnl 'H 13-Year conching ree.
J\1ost field goats made hy 1eu1n
ord ts now 184-74 Including n 70· 11a\'en.year UB coreer are:
In season: 622 (Ties former murk
Moat pl.s/ game by Individual : 3o or r,aain tn66-57)
311 record In live yea.rs at Troy

I

Tllltl'alo, wblto BUI lloJohn rueehed
U for high 11;!1.fltt• RflQrh•g h11nor•,

non 'l'hMnpoon

OnlffhNI with

UB 1962-63 Cumulatfvo Basketball

•--~~

Pio yo,

Baldwin
HnnloY
&amp;scbuagel

U

Datza.nl
.Manno
Karaazewekl
Bllowus

In on earlier gum!', 8\IJ&gt;llrb Jumti­
lng tu1,J r-xrcllent ffbootin~ e nabled
8out h ('.r,rolln n Sw.to to ,itom11 the
Dulls, 80.RS. AKbougb 13uffn.lo shot
elve effort
frrc'll eP,

lloJohn

defl'll­
prcm•d lo 1,e !:he cur.

800,,C)ll'jl

J!OOrot&gt;t

Senior
guard
BIii Hojohn
cloeed out hl1 var-ally career
with hl1 top two aoorlng ef.
forte of the aeaaon. Bill col­
lected
13 points
agalnet
Youngstown
an d 9 against

The tall Soutboro61'8 controlJed
th" •boerdl! with a retl))eclable 4(-31 1
mar~n . ltu.olo,y dumped In 16 pohlla
r.nd Rarvey U tor Hutrnlo , while
'l'broo llulldogff flll'IRbod W'll)l more
the SC State Bulldogs,
than 20 JIOIIIUI
Una ainco ITB lrne.w mnrh
Stllte, wbleh hlMl ruur Bull'ulo obout their opponents .

Thompson
Bo.nnermao
Gill
Gilbert
Stofa
Mcinerney

fGS

fG

PC:T

23

287
271

13t
lll6

46.7
4.6.6

23
23
22
14
18
14
16
14
2
3
1

U.B. TOTALS 23

147
148

69
62

40
42

148
108
116
9&amp;
68
32
26
21
6
&amp;

5ll
48
46
37
27
14
7
6
3
1
l
623
678

36

a

1472

4U
39
41
40
43.8

fTS

78

62

96
61
22

64
37
17

37
43
84

24

65

26
20

611

23

24
7
4
8
4
l
466
469

Sta.ta

Statlatlca -

FTA

40

27
28
60
60
33
42.3
4.3.1

OPP. TOTALS 23
1286
Coach Sertustlul'e Career - Troy
U.B.

PC:T

7~.6
67
72

R.AY

6,5
12.47
4.8
2.3

i1
15
17

71

H9
2$7
107
64
53
62
49
90
H
28

6

86

27

3

67

•
SU

293

77

69
67
68

100

66.9
64.6

70-30

23 Gamea 16. 7

ltED

11
6
6
4
996
896
Len

Pf

O

PTS

25
330
Z
306
64
51
1
156
39
141
2.3
84
128
2.3
30
122
2.3
26
110
7.0
31
101
0.7
19
69
2.0
10
46
1.8
13
20
~8
6
12
s.o
2
8
1.7
3
6
f.O
2
ll
43.8
363
4
1665
89
366
9
H89
KMobucld - Statistician

114.-44

•

Skipthe sulphurandmolasses­

1~~~

to know the
non Allen of the Youog,town
B11a'iik•strategy 1&gt;efore It liook th e Penguins added an all-lonrney team
Conn of a.ctlon. Tbl&amp; proved to be berth to his Lltlle-All -Amerlca eP11n impol'tsnt MR!.'t l-0 South Caro- lectton.

G4M£S

23
22
23

Harv ey

l)OllltK

Wl'll, theft

Sl~le of Ala.hama .
bY Dave Baldwin - Ithaca at UB
The Bulls broke one all.time 1.12.Ga (rormet1y 32 by Chuck
UB record und lied another dur ­ OnnlelH - Capita.I at llB - s.r,.
Jl\g the season.
A 9,-tor-9 t1'841- 67)
Oary Han .
Robounds / seasoo
tbrow per!l&gt;rma~e against South
Carolina State oo Marcil 8 sur. ley - 287 ln 23 games (former.
paS6ed a former 'J)&lt;lrcent11geblgb ly Art Cbol&amp;wlnskl with 250 In
or 06.2&lt;;. on 25 or 26 freelhrows lllor.-57 - 25 g,amesl
at Altred on Feb. 6, 1962. Tho
Rehound ovarag-e - Onry Hai, .
25 rebounds of 6' 3", ~unlor ~r­ tey rn.t7 per .o:ame (for mer!) •
ward Gary Hanley In the Alfred Keo Parr wl:th 10.2 In 1,r.0 .611
Leas t p0tnta scored by oppon .
geme at UD on Jan. 18 tied tho
former mark ~ 2r; by Jlm Horne enl : :u - llodiester at lJD
ai;alnl! t R0&lt;:hester at 11B on Feb, 2.1R.G:l (formerly Hobart - as-

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�SPE'CTRUM

Friday, Morch 22 , 1963

PAGE ELEVEN

Fencers
lose North
Atlantic
CrownValentic
Brings
R~me
·
.
167PoundMalT11lle
ToDrewU.;BullsTieFor2ndSlot
nrew l'nlver slly Look the North
.\tl&amp;ntlc title from the Bulls last
SaturdAy by a silgllt three-point
1narg ln. The l.lulh1 were tied for
second place with R!T, liost scllool,
111lhe rhnm1&gt;lonsht11 event. l'fabnr1
,•ume In third.
The Drew epee nnd saiber ·1enms
11 on the Symcuse
and Santelli ti-ovllles 1·esl)eelh•ely, Drew· also took
llorne the North Atlantic
Broadswor d 'l'ropby ror I.he best threewrn pon te11m, flYmbol of over-a ll
championship.
In the last 12 years
o( competition,
the covet.ed Broadrn·or d lms only le!l its berth lo
the Buttnlo tro11hy rnse t.hree tlmee,
Hobart and Syracuse '"shared'' the
nutttt lo trophy for most wins ln
toll,
Buffalo fall team represe nt ed
by Joe Ferach and Barry Can,or
won 11, lost 6, only one bout
shy of the second place mark
team competition.
In
Indiv idual elienta, Joe F 1&gt;rsch
won a silver ·medal , poatlng a
3-2 r~ord In the finals , but
losing his 1962 ch ampion ship to

in foll

Harvey Schulman of Syracuae.
and Frank Peceno

Blll Wilkenson

Senior Jack Valeotlc ende,d U1e
wrestling sen.eon In ftne style for
repr(!aented lbe Bulle lo el)ee, win- rhe llnivel'sity ot Buffalo bJr tak­
nln~ 0 uod loslug 7 or the 16 bouts. Ing llr!lt ploce honors In tho 167Wi lk enson went 6 nod O ln the lll- pound division or the Interstate
dlvidunl evee competlllon to i,elaln Intercollegiate Lndependi&gt;nt T,ourna­
his tllle or cbamplon, won In 19-02. 111Pnt.
The sul&gt;er squad Nnalstlng
or Valent!c deff.'ated Gury llfa:yer or
)lark l&lt;'ox und Jorry Morshnk won West Virginia
University
tin tho
JO and lost 6, ngnln Just one bout finals by a score of 10-,1. ,Jnck's
ij)lort or Lhot second place 111nrk earler stepping atone was !Chuck
l11 lenm competition. Both Fox nn d llonyetz of Ohio University whom
Mu1•gl1nkqualified In the Jndtvldual be edged 7.n. As n junior, Jack
tlnnls, Marshak en.me In 6th an d llnlshed
third
In t,he na Ilona!
Fox 1led for second pince wit.h ll tuurney,
Two other nuN'~lo mntmen rep­
3-2 record, but wns a.warded the
bronze medn l as he bad more r1&gt;Hen1e&lt;1llle blue nod white at
touches scored against him th:tn the Ca.se Te1•h nrena, 191-pound
Grossberg- of Pn1·e. Saber Individual Kevin llrlnkworlh
und 117-poun d
"King Kong" Ph ilbin
was won by Sleve J&lt;.ra.11esof Jersey Bob Jaclu!on. Br!nkworlh
~·nmecl
Olly College,
fourth place honors whlle J o,clr;son
was ellmhlatetl In the nrst 1·ound.
Next year, the 14th N.A_.1.F.C .
The 01·•t i:ritl proJlle to be dis .
Whllr In high school, Philbin
Championships
will be held In
A tou1•nn1Mnt wns lllso hi!ld nt
West Point tor freshmen
Paterson State College In New
wres- l"IISMed lhlN yea1· wlll be Lhe Jaa Harnrd 1111AII-St;Lte eelecl1on al
tiers. All rour UB frosh - Edgar ltnown al "Ger" lo his friends and end und even 11layPd n frw ,inmo~
Jersey,
The biggest e1•ent or the soosou Pol~. Norm KP!ler, John Hesellnk "Ki ng Kong" to hi• 01111oneuta. It at hnltboek ,
will la lce place at the Air Force and George F.hresman won their
uue lmi&gt;ws anylhlnl( at nil about
Academy next weekend. JO&lt;' Fersch, ftrst ma:tches but were eventually
S:t)'8 hend !oor bull ,•oach mck
footh,111. la, knows lite 111•r~o11
being l)ft'enbnnwr , "I deo""'d 10 nut hhu
Bill \\'ilke nson nud Jerry Marshak o;llru.lnaled .
will represent
lhe Bulls In foll,
referred to Is G~rry Philbin , Gerry nt 1&lt;1"1,lr - lt on ly took a day to
e11ee nnd saber respecllvely,
al the
SWIMMING
11 Junior rroru Pnwluckett,
Rbodo know It wns tho ,·or r ect move ..
Nationals. They will leave for S11- "This wne the most ~u,coeea. lslnnd , Is a. Hoeiolol?Y muJor nnd
ver Springs by plane on Friday.
IIMLS
~~
his
m;ilri
lntereslR
only l}'.hllbln ,l has the potential to be
ful ~l'ason we've ev11r had .." So
thp he~t interior llnemau Lltul ever
comme~ed
UB swtm coach nm ~portN.
11lay••d fuolhll ll hl'r e. He has al­
Sanford upon the conclusion or
suy r:,•1·1·), "II I 111,v., n cl1:1n1
·e t1111·1Pd lll'O ~•·nul.8 l&gt;Nmuse or hie
the vnrelty mermen's ~-G s,mson,
"nuhl like to piny lll'O t,ull- aoy. fine roorholl lnlents - ejzo, speed,
The lelllll thumped Nlagam 621vhl't·c th ey would I\UI me."
llo , 11&lt;
,,1,,., n11d 1re111ondo11•ngi,;resslve.
22, In t ta final meet. 1'he trosh has
hern consc·lo111lou~ly 11Ct Io !l hl' M."
mermen n.,..ished with their best w1/11,:ht~lu 11dcl 11011nd,1i;e
ond pre ,;.
record ever, n 10-1 mark .
ently
1hc hPnrn ar 2~, 11ou1tdH
.
'1'111'l'OIIIIA llllln Iron, Pawtuc ket!
The var,slty team recently COD·
i~ 1111'IYIII' or ha11PL'\)'~rtbB( makes
ped 18 ,mednls nt the Stale Chnm­
Last se~son, despite a bad
II 11•11111
look good. GPr ry IH very
olonsbtps .
Snnford
notes thnt
ank le, Gerry made many all­
stll'll) ua 011 the tlcld b1&gt;&lt;en
-11He he
"tble
ls the largest
numb&lt;er or
oppone nt teams a. well a•
wa111• lo ll~ IJJH beat.
&amp;wards we've ever nccrued, Dur.
being an All. East selection for
Ing the season we set 36 ~!Lifer.
his perfo rm ance In the Pola­
nnrrtnr: i11J11rle9,neit year P hil ­
ent records.
Everyor~ hM done
ware game. As a sophomore he
bin imowld be n Ht.andout not only
an out standing 1ob."
copped All-East honors agal nat
hOl'B at llll, tlut ln the &amp;MJt as
Connecticut, the game In which
,1 vii . ''" 1•(\.e11pt:,1n &lt;h•rry will lead
Gerry scored an Impor tant
I he tnoll111II tlulls IQ whaJ. -could
The bll'dt o,. coming!
'touchdown from hie defensive
•lt1111Pu 11io be II ltaupl'r ffeDBP,n
ror
Lile 11ri.d1for s,
'
tackle posi t ion,

. . -"

•

GridProfileNo.I:"King
Kong"
Philhin

u,,~

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'S CAMPU
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Yi&lt;~Cf()YS

tl1(~taste

got

tl1ats rigl1t!
....

UB'a AII -Ea,t forward Gary H anley e•tabll,hed a ndW Buffal o
rebound record In Coach Serfunlnl'■ reign , He pul~
dow n
287 carom•,
•

-

'

wh ich broke
"

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Art Cholewlnakl'•

Once Again -

old mark
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�PAGETWELVE

SPECTRUM

Fridoy, Morch 22 , 1963

SPORTSCIRCLE

Where
DidBulldogs
Get''Scoop"?
By Jim Baker
Althougli the resuJta of the Mideast Regional s of the
NCAA tourney at Akron proved to be anything but op­
timistic from a Buffalo standpoint, one questio n does re- .
main th at should be answered.
Where did the Bulldogs
of South Carolina State obta in advance informa tion that
they woud be facing UB's Bulls in the tou r nament opener?
This club obviously had such informati on, as the SC
State t.eam had scoutin g rep resentatives at no Jes.'! than
four of Buffa lo's games late in the l'egulnr season. Yet,
the Bulls did not know that SC State was to be their op­
ponent unti l ju:-t pr ior to the LeMoyne encounter - ex­
actly one week pl'ior to the tourney curta in-rai ser. As a
consequence, UB coaches were um,1hle to scout the Bull­
dogs and entered t he game with mere hearsay reports on
the strengths and weaknesses of their init ial rival.
Aft e,cplonotion from toumom ent officials O S to
how ond why South Corolino Stote obtained odvonce
knowledge of tfte regional pairings is certainly in order!

The unavoidable fact remains, however, that the Bulls
were convin cingly crunched by both SC State and Youngs­
tow n. Th e only bright note of the whole affai r was the fine
effort of senior Bill Hojohn in both games. The amiable
guard from AJ1111terdamclooed out his college career with
his top two performances of the season. He paced UB
!!Co
rers againat Youngstown's Penguins with 13 point s
and netted 9 mark ers against the Bulldog!l.

•

•

•

•

•

lack VaJentic, U B 'l'I 167-pound wrest ling stalwart,
has brought additiona l laurel s to the already br ight mat
prog ram at this uni vers ity . He recently captu red the In­
ters t.ate lnt:ercollegiat:e Independent
Championship for
his weig ht cla.'18ag-.ainst the country's top collegiate wrest­
lers. In th e tournament that was held at Case Institute
in CleveJand, Valen t ic rallied to subdue West Virginia's
Gary Moyer, 10-4, for the 167-pound title. In his semi­
final match he trimmed Chuck Ronyetz of Ohio Univer­
sity , 7-5. Th e significance of this feat was t hat Ronyetz
had been previously unbeaten in mat competition.

•

•

• •

•

•

•

•

•

•

The 1963 college baseball season is rapidly app roach~
ing and to all veteran rMders of the Spectrum sports sec­
tion, thi s can mean only one thing. Another glossy pic­
ture df our baaebatl coach is about to appear. Unfortun­
ately , (or fortu natel y - depending upon your point of
view) there is only one photo of diamond mentor Jim
Peelle in ca ptivity - and WE HA VE IT ! Don't miss
next week'sis.•mefor this sta rtlin g first (or fast)!

With saddening silencr
and deep dismay,

Now sits the sullen
'Ca,,q.'liusCUJ/lf.

Buffalo akl cap ta in Brian Cuffa zoom, down alope In gian t sl alom race dur ing the
vltatfona l Ski Meet h1ald March 2-3 a,t Glenwood Acre•.

UB ln ­

IslUBSl,iTourney
Attracts
Majo
Teams;
l,aFountain
TokesSlalom
By GARY KAHN
aence of Dneder Barlon , 'Bulf11l0' hlll a of the year.
Ourlni.: the weekend or March _&lt;•nmeIn let pince thanks to Oel"l'Y Edwud S18'lller nex t year shou ld,
Recording to the expect.a lions or
2, 1he St.ite Unlver~fly (&gt;f Ne,w Ln F'ounla ln.
York nt Buffulo held ltff vury firsl
ft waa In croaa cou ntry
his Lenmmates, have a 11lmllarly
Annu,il Jnvltellonal
Ski Meet at
spectnculur
record. Bob Omten
that Buffalo lost the meet ,
Glenwood Acres nt Cold en. The
being severely handicappe d by
wlll he next year's
superman.
visiting big n1tmo teoms that pnr.
fault y equipme nt and experl &lt;'.rosa country variety.
wt,
but
tfclpaled were ColgatP. Si•rncuee,
enc e. Bob Grytten waa the
mo11t Js Brian OUlfe, th e captain
Corne ll, I,uMuyne. and tb,e new
only Buffalo finisher, with •
ot the ski tea.m whom you see
big name of Bull'alo. ln tbe four
above. Brian compellll! In every
10th poeltlon .
events, Cluffnlo took 2 1st pfncos
The weokend of Moreb 15th event aud always le in the top
and one 2nd,
found Buffalo at the Ohearn Tour- ten. It seems as tr oe;it year prom In Slalom, there w~re t ~,o runN narnent, Royal 1\founlaln Caroga lses to tlnd U.13.'s ski team skiing
or n. 36 itnte course In wbl~h Lqke. Nanr.y Sterner came In num- down a rainbow.
11l1
euoruo nal Gerry La F'ount.aln ber one In etnlom and third In
The ski club, Schussmeleters,
plnred 1st. Ed Siemer came In 7th rua nt Slalom.
should be com mended on Its fine
out or 40 psrtlolponts In thl11 event.
'l'bls year our ski team has been admlntstrntlon
ot tb e ski meet.
TM Olnnt Slnlom event bmd Ger- i:nrga ntuan asset to thlS Unlverry J,11 ~'ountnln In 2nd pos!Uoa. stty. Nancy Siemer ls now New
llob Thorenaon ot Syrac"1&amp;e, 11n York State c:hnmplon In her clae11I•
o:x~epttonnl 11kier. rum.- In 1.st. Rcatlon. Baeder Barton skied o.way
'Buffalo'~· Brian Cnll'e ca.me In with the Connecticut St.ate Alpine
r.th. '!'here were 11lso 40 co.rope. C'hampl0tl~hl11s and Gerry J,a Foun.
lllot8 In this event. ln Ju1.mplng, taln ha~ won or placed In the I.Op
although han dicapped by the ab- 3 l)O&amp;ttlonBIn all Slalom and Down-

I

He claimed that ,!0111•,q
1oonld fall in f om·,

Trackmen
4~~ al UnionMeet;
DonLeeBrealls
PoleVaultRecord

Ru t Doug sfn11ed con.qriou.q
fill thrrr wa11,10 more.

Hr 1,ows no {1wflm•
portir. predictim,

For he knows what'.qcomi1117
his com11
l cte demolition.
With thi11 futile effort
fl/, 11truct1,red verse.
lrnmlily 1·cti1•p
heforr it get11wo1·se.
All -EMt
Junior
forward
Oary Hanley
(6'3", 190) of Cheektowaga. N.Y.
hna boen named to the ECAC's
All-East
college-dlvtslon
squad.
Jlnnley ma.l'le two weekly teams
IUl&lt;l ww, nornl.nnt ed aovern l ot.hcr
th11,•s, Junlor ;forward Dave Bald­
win (6'3", 190) of A.mhenit N.Y.
~ and s1"'1mmorc guard Roy Manno
I (,'9", 160) of Buffalo
rooelved
honoruble mention statu.~ ... each
having mndt• ono w..,.,kJy All·.Ell.'lt

Choorlendlng
('heerlen dlng practices will be
huld I.his Monday Md Friday and
Monday, April l from 4 :00 to
6:00 p.m. In the small gym of
&lt;'lurk . In order to qualify. two
out of three pr11ct1ccs must be
attended.

Tryouts
wLll hP held
Aprll 5 ut 4 ·oo.

flw .

Friday

U,e rerord of 12' JO'' established
By JOHN KNIPLER
TIit• ll II Indoor track BQUllt! 8Ur­ lnsl year. flelhel''s wlnnlnit Jump
prleed plenty of people In the rarrled him 31' 8".
I'
Srhenootarl)•
nren
:ind 1~leued
However, It was a fine team
Rtill mor&lt;' in BnlTnlo hy 11,~leblng
effort which produced
UB'a
a strong 4th In a tleld or 16 te1tms
lmpreasll1e point total,
Stu
ut the Union College lnvltnt!onal
Katz finished 4th In the mi te
~teet 011 Mnrch 9U1,
and 5th In the 1,000 yard run.
CorU1tnd State. laRl yenr·,1 etnt e
Vern Huff ftnlshed Hb In the
chnmplons on the outdoor oval. GOO yRrd run, while nelber wae
rn1&gt;tured the to11 $pol wllb II Lola) right behind him In 6th pince.
of ~-1•~ pninfR, follnwod by Roch­ Bill Lll BUdo trolled Lee In the
ester (25½), Sµrlngftold (215), UB !)Ole vnu lt with a 4th place In u,e
(17•• l, 'l'rlnlly (16) , Altrelll (13\, brond jump lo Tound out the scor ­
nob e,·t• Wesleyttn
(ti).
£ln1Tnlo ing.
StntA (fi'&gt;), Union (6), J.eMotn e (5),
This seMon bas provecl to be the
Hamilton (-11. RPI (3). V,ennont
ror the Indoor
t3). Ithaca (1 1,l, Hnrlwlclk ( 1,), mOlll sucl•essful
track sqund In the history nr UB.
nnd Hnrpur (0).
Dou l,ee•• rerord soiling- efl'ort Howov('r, llie members cannot yet
In tho pole vnult and Ron Relher'e rest on their lnurelR.
,·\ctory In Ulo br-0nd Jump led the
The 011 tdoor season looms nl1end
l'D arorlng. l,o~ rlenred the bnr with nu 8 meet schedule within
ot 1a• to win ll1e e,·ent 11nd smush a 3 week period.

Mnni. ger
Fre!'llmNI

BBl!ct►llll

AJl cand.it'.lat.e11
for U,e !reahman
bn.""tm.11squad will meet Monday
Ill 5 :30 111Clark Gym . Tho«e Inter.
e~t.M .-&lt;hould be propurcd
with
u,e pniper equ.1pment tJ) begin
pract,re at thill tim1&gt;.

AII men who u.rc presently
freshmen and would like to be
manager or t,he footbnll team.
repnrt to either David Saffer, 307
•rowH, 8Sl~'i294 or head coo.ch
Rlchurd
Offenha.mcr 2011 Clark
gym by Wednesday.
11

Eduardc&gt;'s
Sen es 4

to

6 -

U.00

-

Fomily Style Spaghetti

a...,, ond a-

included

Ml.AT BALLS15c eoch
TF4-l77l

Free Oellvory with &lt;111n1mum
o&lt;dor of $3.00
or 50c Servico dioroe with onv toke out orders.
~

COMPLETELUGGAGEand
LEATHERGOODS STORE

A1TACBE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage

4o,,o.lte

UBI

TF3 - T600
O114nMo■doy, Thu,.cloy 011d
ftldoy evening tlll 9 P,M.

hum of sport shiru is ~
p1ct11reof mmmer smart;
nc~,. The oolors fill tl\e eye
with plc:isu~. lnchtded arc
1trik111g,tnpes, pl~ids And
handsome solid shades.
·r ite but1on-down collar
,1ylc is near, comfortable
and fa,hion ~rrrovcd.

.. " nm el prcscntinJ.t n brilliant recre.ntion ot thr declim• of
th&lt;' Third Reirh "011&lt;' ,if the ,:rrcnt book~ M &lt;&gt;ur time." 11.,1,.,.1 lluil SS.95,

Courtety Discounts to Unl~eraity Faculty ond Students
3400 MAIN STREET

the birthday king
Gabrie l Fielding

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ODSUBJECTS
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Students Vote Split Ticket
The new officers of the Stud- dents voted in Tuesday’s and Wedant Senate are: Michael Cohen, nesday's contest.
president; Michael Lappln, viceThe new senators from Unipresidest; Carol Zeller, secretary;

Horwitz,
man,

and Henry Simon, treasurer. At
press time, it. was learned that
the results of the election for
the officers, were being contestHowever,
ed.
no official announcement was made at the
time of this writing.
Election committee
chairman
Norene Herech said that about
2000 out of a possible 8000 stu-

STATE UN1VI
Chinese Educator
Discusses
Communism in
Red China

Robert Feld-

Student votes In elections

will represent the Pharmacy
School, and Lois Reeves and
Patricia Simpson will represent the School of Nursing,

1SITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

SPECTRUM

(See Page 3)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY,

VOLUME 13

Noted Educator to Meet
Students on March 20-22
•s

-

be on
on campus from March 20-22 as
the second in the series of distinguished visitors program.

Columbia University will

1

next few weeks and the dormitory
is scheduled to be completed by
January, 1964 so that it may be
in use for the spring semester
of next year.

Dr. Wise received the Associate
of Arts degree from Graceland
College, the B.A. from the State
University of Iowa, the M.A. and
Ed. D. from Teachers College,
Columbia University, respectively.

The new dormitory will be a
twin to 'Goodyear Hall, except
that it will not have a penthouse.
It will hou§e 450 students thus
bringing the dormitory capacity
of the campus close to the two
thousand mark. The dormitory
DR. W. A. WISE
will be situated between Goodyear
and Bailey Avenue with one .wing
in higher education.
parallel to the street and the
On leave of absence from other leg of the ‘L’ shaped buildTeachers College, Dr. Wise spent ing parallel to Winspear Avenue.
August
one year, August 1958
The two dormitories will be
1959, in Japan as a visiting proconneted through an addition
fessor at the International Christto the present cafeteria in
ian University, Tokyo, While there,
Goodyear Hall increasing its
he inaugurated, the first graduate
capacity to 550 students. Stustudent
personnel
course for
dents will also be aole to pass
workers In universities available
from one dorm to the other
in Japan and studied the adthrough a
new recreation
affairs
ministrator of student
room on the basement level of
Japanese universities,
work in
the cafeteria addition.

From 1938 to
1942 he was
teacher of science and mathematics,
athletic coach and dean of boys
in public high schools in Iowa,
and in 1942 went into the Army
Air Force Pilot Training Program
as a writer and editor of training
materials
course outlines, instructor’s handbooks and textbooks. He also taught in the Air
Force Central Instructors’ School,
-

-

-

During the two years 194748, Dr. Wise was associated
with Teachers College, Columbia University, first as an
assistant in the department of
student personnel administration, and then as a member
of the summer staff, teaching
two graduate courses.

traveling

widely

throughout

Japan.

As dean of student personnel at
the University of Florida from
1948 to 1956, his responsibilities
were to coordinate the personnal
activities relating to men and
women students. In 1956,
Dr.
Wise becamel professor of educaat
Teachers
Columbia
College,
tion
University, teaching the field of
student personnel administration

He has contributed articles to
several publications. Dr. Wise Is
"They
the author of a report,
Come for the Best of Reasons
College Students Today,” published
by the American Council on Education. The last in the distinguished visitors series will
be
Lillian Gilbreth, who will be on
campus March 27-29.
-

-

American Humorist Nash
Will Discuss Own Works
1
j

*

.

»&gt;

I
I

last ten years. It will have 165,000
square feet space on nine floors
and will be serviced by two el-

evators.

"

°

Time and Mo is composed of
Mr. Nash was educated at St.' eighty-eight verses .with illutratGeorge’s' School, Newport, Rhode ions by John Alcorn. With hi s
Island, and attended Harvard Uni- characteristically light touch, Mr.
varsity. He has, in recent years, Nash sums up the American scene
toured the United' States exten- ruefully: “Progress may have been
sively, lecturing and. giving read- all right once, but it went on too
ings from his, workg including: long."

The winner of the Pulitzer
Prize for poetry and the National Book Award, Richard
graduated
Wilbur
from
Amherst and continued his
studies at Harvard where he
subsequently became assistant
professor of English. He has
served on the faculty of Wellesly College and is presently
professor of English at Wesleyan University. He will be
the first in the series March.

The application should include class, experience, extracurricular activities, major, and
statement of QPA for last semester and overall. The stalent of QPA must be signed
by your faculty advisor. It is
also advisable to have two letters of recommendation,' one of
which must be from a member
of • the faculty or administration.

represented by

August

D'Alles-

sandro and Daniel Schubert both
of whom ran unopposed.
John Bou e of the School of
Dentistry, also unopposed, was
elected as their representative.
The senators from the Engineering School are: Michael Green
with 66 votes and William Gibbons w 1th 61 votes.

U. B. Cogers
Open In
Tourney Tonight
(See Page 7)

No. 20

books, The Vestal Lady on Brattle
and Gasoline, as well as the poems
“Bomb" and "The Happy Birthday of Death" Mr. Corso has attracted widespread attention In a
series of poetry readings in the
east and midwest and has travelled extensively in Europe,
Norman Mailer, best known for
his novel, The Naked and the
Dead which has been cited as one
of the most impressive works to
emerge from World War II, will
be here March 27.
He is also the author of other
hovels among which are Barbary
Shore, The White Negro, Advertisements for Myself. A graduate
of Harvard, Mr. Mailer has written for Esquire, Partisan Review,
and Cross-Section,

orglnal
manuscripts, drafts of poems,
Gregory Corso will be here and magazines articles of both
March 22. He is one of the lead- Mr, Wilbur and Gregory Corso.
ing spokesmen for the “Beat Gen- The' display is in the exhibit,
eration”, and the author of two ion room of Lockwood Library.
to a,Prophet.7

Senate Debates Calendar
Change; Appropriates Funds

'

in-chief and business manager
of The Spectrum for the next
academic year are asked to
send applications to Joan Flory,
Spectrum Mailbox O, or 355A
Norton no later than Friday,
March 22. '

vestri. The Medical School will be

The last in the series is Edward
Albee, author of the play “Whatever Happened to Virginia Wolfe”,
and “The Sandbox.” He will be
His works include “Things of here March 29,
Beautiful
World”, “The
This
There is currently a display of
Changed”, “Ceremony7 “Advice
manuscripts, unpublished

BY LORNA WALLACH
Evdn though the new dormitory
30%,
no
When the calendar for the 1963means an Increase of
large increases in enrollment are 64 school year was released many
anticipated.
students found objections to it.
Although the Christmas vacation
was Lengthened in order to allow
more time for studying, intersession is only three days long.
Want to Be Editor?
Anyone interested in applying for the positions of editor-

Ogden Nash, well-known Amer- Free Wheeling," "Hard Lines,”
lean humorist and poet, will ap- "The Christmas that Almost
pear here as a guest of the con-j
o
asn t and
“The Private DinI
_
certs and lectures committee &gt; .
lng Room
addltion ' man y f
In
March
21 in the multiThursday,
r&gt; Nash’s poems have been repurpose roorn of Norton at 8:00
p.m. to discuss his anthology of, cor( Jed.
"perfectly imperfect verses," Thej
His newest book&gt; Everyone Bllt
*

This is the seventh dormitory
constructed on campus within the

The senators from the School
Business Administration are
Anthony Campagna and Marco Si!

of

Wilbur, Mailer Will Appear
In Senate Lecture Series

The convocations committee of
the Student Senate will sponsor
a series entitled “A Damn Good
By LAWRENCE FRENKEL
Sampling Of Current American
new
dormitory foi
Plans for a
Literary Figures” beginning Wedwomen students here were annesday, March 20. at 3 pm in
nounced by the State University
Norton Union conference theater
Dormitory Authority last WedThe series will feature tour
nesday. The architect named for
Richard
authors;
the construction of the two and American
Gregory Corso,
a-half million dollar building was Wilbur, poet;
James, Meadows, and Howard, novelist; Norman Mailer, novelist;
Construction will begin within the and Edward Albee, playwright.

professor
of education at Teachers College,

Dr. Wise will meet with
students in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge during his stay on
campus. Check bulletin boards
for the time.
Dr. Wise is
known for his experience in
guidance
work
in
public
schools and student personnel work on the college level.

MARCH 8, 1963

New Girls' Dorm
To Be Completed
By January '64

Dr. William Max Wise,

Portable Nash.

and

The education senators are:
Norene Hersch, 36; Marilyn Schanzer, 29 and Bev Rosenow, 28.
There will be a revote to determine
the fourth seat between Lorraine
Jacobson and Marlene Hettinger,
both of whom have 27 votes.
Gary Brown with 30 votes

versity College,

In the order
of the number of votes recelved are; Alan Hoffman, 557;
Alnsley Davidson, 556; David
Aronowsky, 503; Russell Goldberg, 497; David Irwin. 494;
and Paul Flagg, 473.
Elected from the College of
Arts and Sciences were: Prkn Bil173; Robert Pink esteln.
etzky,
154; Alan
160; Sharon Pawlik

154;

152,

At. the Student Senate meeting
last Tuesday night the welfare
committee announced that petitions

were sent to the deans pointing
out that it is Impossible for many
of the dormitory students to go
home for a such short period of
time. The deans are expected to
act on the petition after the
Spring

vacation

The Senate voted to recognize
the Zionist Club and the Ulcranian Student Club. Both of these
clubs
are educational groups
studying the culture of the areas
they represent.
Some complaints were made
about the conditions of the roads
oh campus. The ground committee stated they were aware of the
problem .and were working on it.

The I.F.C. announced their
elections, Dave Smith is the new
president. Mike Lappin gave a
brief account of the progress of
the model U.N. Because participation in this project is so poor
the model General Assembley
which was originally planned was
cancelled and all that remains is
a model Security Council.
The finance committee appropriated $61,75 for Bisonhead
and $65 tb the New Student Review in order to allow them to
publish another issue this year.
There was some debate as to
whether an appropriation for the
Student Senate banquet wa s in
keeping with the policy which
has recently been formulated.
The Senate finally voted to
appropriate the money for the
banquet and an appropriation for
for the Honors and Awards banquet was approved as well.
The question was asked should
a senate member be compelled to
be on a committee of the senate.
The idea Was approved although
many of the senators pointed out
that tftis could not hold for the
new Senate.

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Business Ad. School Names
Three for Fall Semester
Three new faculty members have
Dr. Rubin Saposnik, associate
been named to the School of professor of economics in both
Business Administration effective the School of Business AdminisSeptemer
1.
tration and the College of Arts
and Sciences, has been on the
Dr. James S. Schindler, profesfaculty since 1956. He previously
sor of accounting, taught here in
1948-49 and since has been on the was with the U. S. Defense Department and the University of
faculties of the Universiy of WashMinnesota.
ington, the University of Michigan, and Washington University,
Lockwood Rianhard Jr„ assistwhere he is professor of account- ant business organization profesing in the Graduate School of sor, was
instructor in operations
Business Administration.
research In Northeastern UniverHe has been vice president
sity in 1961-62 and earlier was
of the American Accounting
associated with Arthur D. Little
Association, publicity director
Inc., Esso Research &amp; Engineering Co., Rome Air Development
for the National Association
of accountants and publlca.
Center, the Massachusetts Institlons chairman for the Institute of Technology, and the Lumtute of Internal Auditors.
mus Co.

Engineering School Named
Local JETS Headquarters
The Engineering School here has
been named Local Area Headquarters for a national youth movement called the- Junior Engineer-

ing Technical Society, (“JETS").
Dr. Wayland P. Smith who came
to the University this year from
Michigan State will be in charge
of the program. Dr. Smith is a
member of the national board of
directors of JETS.

ing projects.

“Members of the fa-

Recitals, Festival
Start at Baird Hall

Friday, March 8, 1963

Science Foundation Offers
Math Program This Summer

The weekly student recitals given
by applied music students will
Students from
high
schools
begin Tuesday, March 19 and con- throughout the United States are
tinue every Tuesday for the re- invited to apply for a six-week
mainder of the semester. The pro- pr'ogram of study and research
grams begin at 1 p.m. in the audi- in mathematics, July 1-Aug. 9,
torium of Baird Hall. All students under the sponsorship of the Naand faculty are invited to attend.
tional Science Foundation here.
The March 19 program will preTwenty-five students who have
sent violinist Gerald Stearns and completed the 11th grade in June
pianists Victoria Bugelski, Joyce 1963 and will be in the
June 1964
Salva, Linda Rosenblum and Bar- graduating class will be selected
bara Brown. A special feature of from schools with limited opporthe program will be a four-hand tunities for students of high abll.
piano performance of Copland’s ity in mathematics. The primary
"Billy the Kid” by Miss Rosenpurpose is to bring outstanding
blum and Miss Brown.
students in direct contact with
college teachers and research scientists. Both boys and girls from
The Budapest String Quartet, pub ic, private and p a r o c h l‘a 1
quartet-in-residence here, will give schools will be considered.
a Mozart-Schubert Festival beginThe research part of the proning this month and concluding In
gram will be under the supervision
by
Trampler,
Assisted
Walter
May.
vio Inist, the artists will perform
the complete string chamber works

Mozart-Schubert Festival

of Dr. Albert G. Fadell, associate

professor of mathematics, who will
discuss methods of problem solving and the use of reference ma-

terials both contemporary and classical. The students will choose research projects and will be guided
in the development of the projects
by Dr. Fadell.
The second 'aspect of the program will be two short courses,
Finite Mathematics, taught by Dr.
Frank R. Olson, associate professor of mathematics; and Topics in
Geometry, taught by Dr. Harriet F.
Montague, professor of mathema.
tics.
Requests for application forms
can be made to Dr. Montague, director of the National Science
Foundation Summer Science Training
Program in Mathematics,
Diefendorf Hall.

of Mozart and Schubert.

The entire festival consists of

General admission
will be availale to consult is $2.00, and students may obtain
and guide whenever necessary," tickels free of charge by presenting their ID cards at the Baird
he said.
Hall box office prior to the night
In addition, local chapters will of the performance. The programs
will be given in Butler auditorium
be eligible to compete in the Naof Capen Hall and will begin at
tional Engineering Project exposi- 8:30 p.m.
tion. Last year this exposition
was held in the New United Eu.
gineering Center in New York City.
eight concerts.

culty

“JETS could prove to be an
Presently Bishop
Ryan High
effective way of. increasing the
School has an active JETS Chapavailable engineering and research
ter in Western New York. Dr.
Smith hopes to spearhead a drive talent for local industries by givfor the establishment of chapters ing local youngsters a realistic
picture of what engineering is all
throughout the Niagara
Frontier.
about,’’ commented Dean Arthur
Launched as an experimental
Trabant, on the project. The area
project In 1950 by Michigan
to be served by UB includes the
State University, JETS now
counties of: Niagara, Erie, Catboasts 825 chapters in 45
tauraugus, Chautaugua, Wyoming.
states and six foreign countries, comprising a total of
DN BOX
about 24,000 high school and
Anyone who i 3 interested in bejunior college students.
coming a delegation aide or memWith the backing of local in- ber of the
Secretariat for the
dustry, Dr. Smith says that the
Model United Nations is asked to
UB Engineering School hopes to contact Mike Lappin in Norton,
be able to provide local JETS room 205,
Monday, March 18.
Clubs with equipment, speakers,
films, and local engineering proj-

AFROTC Cadets
Donate to CARE

Shortly before Christmas the
cadets of the 577th group, commanded by C/Major Frank Diodate, voted to donate $59.28 to
CARE. This money had orginally been collected to hire an
airplane to fly over Rotary Field
during Operation Turnout, but
the flight was cancelled because
of the weather.
As a result of the cadet’s decision, CARE sent food and other
needed materials to Sierra Leone,
West Pakistan, Israel, Korea, and
Iran.
In a letter to the cadets from
Frank Goffio, executivel director
of CARE, he said “May we assure
you that your gift means not only
real and urgent assistance to those
in need, but also the foundation
of a peaceful and stable world.”

ects and competitions. Dr. Smith
hopes to provide an opportunity
for high school students to become Involved in serious engineer

QUICK, DRY

XEROX COPIES
Won' AT THE
BUFFALO

TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.

(formerly Teck Univ. Branch)
3610 Main Street

TF 3-7131
For

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Tucker Quick Copy
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Peter, Paul and Mary the new
folk-singing craze will appear at
Kleinhans Music Hall Sunday Night
tha drlva-ln with tha archaa

McDonald's

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
MUe
Vi

-

North of SHERIDAN DRIVE

ot

MAPLE ROAD

(Adjacent The Boulevard Mall Plaza)
Open Friday and Saturday until 1:00
Operated by the JERRY BROWNROUT CORP:

7

J

OPEN ALL YEAR

j,
"

"

-

A

We have gifts you can
give to brothers, sisters,

�SPECTRUM

March 8, 1963

1

Frida

PAGE THREE

Package Design
Contest on Now

Dr. Li Is New
Asian Prof.
By ELAINE BARRON

Dr. T, H. Li of China, fifth of

a series of visiting Asian professors, is currently visiting here.
Dr. Li, an expert on the economy of China, received his B.A,
in political economy at St, John’s
University, Shanghai, and hi§ L.L.
in Law at New York University,
In New York. He has held many
positions in the government of
China.
He currently is a professor at
Customs College in Chungking.
Just recently, he completed a book
on American Constitutional Law
in Chinese.
Pertaining to the context
of his lectures, Dr. Li com,
DR. T. H. LI
mented. “I will tell the stu.
abnormal, but gradually they will
dents of the Chinese cultural
come back to normal."
heritage so that they will be
able to solve current probAmerica has made a favorable
lems. We cannot solve curimpression on Dr. Li. He says of
rent problems without historAmerica, “You have this freedom
ical perspective.”
The question was posed to Dr. of expression. People are not
LI of the reaction of American prevented from saying what they
students, both at UB and the
want. America now has a wide
other schools he has visited, to
distribution of wealth compared
his lectures. He replied, “They
are Interested in what I say. You with the 1930’s. Some aspects of
see, I’m able to compare the Chin, America amount to the substance
ese history with that of the West.” of socialism
Medicare and SoHe also noted that the American cial Security, for example.”
students are very creative. “Their
The American image In Formosa
educational system is good. They
are trained to ask questions and is excellent, according to Dr. Li,
are very inquisitive.” He added, "The cooperation between Amer“Their knowledge of foreign at.
icans and Chinese in Formosa is
fairs in general is good.”
Materialism has seemed to many the beat. An example of this
of the Asian professors a unique would be the Farm Agricultural
and outstanding characteristic of Program,” he added.
America. Dr. Li said, “this [maDr. Toshio Ueda, of Japan, is
terialism 1 is
true everywhere
the next visiting Asian professor.
They
are this way in Taiwan.”
now.
He will arrive at the end of the
Comparing
the
American
month.
students with those of China.
Dr. Li reflected, "I don’t see
LOST
much difference. Chinese stuZippo
dents are very practical
silver
lighter in Hayes
A
minded.”
Hall early this week. The word
Dr. Li has been exposed to the "Seawolf” Is engraved on the
political atmosphere of both Nalighter, and the owner is offering
tionalist and Communist China. a reward for its return. Anyone
He made the following comment who found the lighter may return
on the conflict between Chinese it to 201 Hayes Hall.
tradition and Communism: “The
Chinese are trained to fight Communism. Communism does not
agree
with
Chinese
tradition.
Communism Itself is a disease
an outgrowth of the Industrial
Revolution. Chinese Communism is
—

A total of $6,100 in cash and
savings bond -awards plus 48
medals and eight all-expense trips
to Chicago will be awarded to the
student winners of St. Regis Paper Company’s Fourth Annual
Collegiate Packaging Design Competition which opened recently.
In making the announcement of
the competition, professor Donald
Nichols of the department of art,
stated, “Any art student at the
State University of New York at
Buffalo is eligible to participate in
this contest which is aimed at
stimulating interest, on the collegiate level, in the field of packag-

Catanzaro Elected President
Of SUNYAB Debate Society
BY KATHLEEN SHEA
Gerald Catanzaro was elected
president of the University Debate Society, at election3 held last
Wednesday by both the varsity
and novice divisions.
The society sent both a varsity
and a novice team to the first
annual Intercollegiate Debate
Tournament at Ithaca College last
weekend.

The novice team had been scheduled to leave for Baldwin Wallace College until they were informed that the meet had been
ing design. Not only will partici- cancelled. They then decided to
pating students become eligible for attend the Ithaca event.

prizes, but

more significantly, they

will have an opportunity to better
acquaint themselves with a profitable outlet for their artistic talent.”
This year’s competition has been
to include every college and university in the United States. Students ai'e eligible to submit entries in four categories; (1) the
graphic design for a bag of lawn
and garden fertilizer; (2) the
graphic design for a bag of lawn
age; (3) the graphic design and
construction of a folding carton
for one-pound of candy; and (4)
the graphic design for a corrugated shipping container.

The affirmative team tied for
first piace with four other
schools. One of these was the
winner of the entire tournament, Union College. Affirmative speakers were Robert
Williams and Linda Leventhal, the society's new secretary. The negative team was
Gerald Catanzaro and Kira
Monkiewicz.
The University is sending a
team to participate in the Elmira
College Tournament tomorrow. Ed
Nagel and

Harriet

Hoitlinger

Williams and Linda Leventhal for
the negative side of the proposition. Next weekend, the varsity
They drove for four hours and division
will send a team to Brookarrived after the first round, but
lyn College. Gerald Catanzaro,
did, however, go on to do well in
Carol Zeller, Barbara Glegota and
the remaining rounds to make up
Douglas Dodge will represent the
for the forfeited first round. The
University.
team could have placed fourth
The Eighth International debate
highest in speaking points against
a field comprised largely of var- tournament, hold here March 1516, yielded some exciting moments
sity debaters.
as a single debater John Miller,
from St. John Fisher almost
By means of the same hypoth"cleaned up” the whole tournaesis it has been determined that
ment. Because of the illness of his
the affirmative team of Russell partner, he was forced to uphold
Goldberg and Karen Miller could both affirmative positions
have won both the first and sec- throughout the course of five
ond place trophies
Af- rounds of Intercollegiate debate.

for Best
The contest closes with entries
due in Chicago no later than April firmative Speaker. The negative
1, 1963. Winners will be announc- team was Harriet Heitlinger and
ed in May, with the top winner in Tom Berdlne.
each division being flown to Chicago for presentation ceremonies.
The varsity division enFull details and entry blanks are
tered a team which tied for
available from professor Nichols
place
third

in the department of art.

in the tournament

The team of St, John Fisher finally tied Colgate University for
first place. The winner appeared
on UB Round Table to discuss the
topic for this forensic year: "Re-

solved: The Non-Communist Nations of the World Should Establish an Economic Community.”

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

ditonaid

*

aLetterS

Frida'

Morch 8, 1963

ffiTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Allenhurst
To the Editor:
“Get' Inside! Get off the street
or I’ll put you in jail! Wild college kids.” These are some of
the nicer names that the fresh,
men boys from Allenhurst have
been called. Some people, especially a certain group of law enforcement officers, think that the Al.
lenhurst students have nothing
more to do than to wait until

Barrels Are for
Books,
Not for
Trash!
Sometimes it is hard for us to believe that this is a
University campus because often the students behave in a
manner more reminiscent of a kindergarten class. There
is a very good example of this on the first floor of the
Union.

somothing exciting happens.
Well let me tell those concerned
that as a member of this group of
‘social outcasts,’ this is not the
case. If the police had not made
a major issue out of such a relatively harmless incident, then the

disturbances would not have occurred in the first place.
In my opinion, the 600 students
who live at Allenhurst have been
responsible and considerate, and
tho police are making a wild stab
at a shadow known as juvenile
delinquency. If the police want
to handle any situation in the future, I suggest they act like officers and not movie gangsters.

Originally intended as a receptacle (or books to
be sent to Latin America, the barrels which were placed
around campus have been used by the intellectual student body of SUNYAB as trash cans.
It is more than regretable that this is the case. The
project of the International Club effects more than just
the students on this campus; its success or failure will
have a notable and influencial bearing on our counterparts
Sincerely,
Leonard Schneider
in Latin America.
All that was asked was that you take a few minutes
Fraternity Withdraws
to sort out some of your old texts and to bring any you
;ared to contribute to the Union. The barrels were placed To The Editors,
in their various locations for your benefit and no one Thi g letter is to announce that
Gamma Phi Fraternity hag withelse’s, and their disuse is a mark on you the student.
drawn from the United Students
If you do not wish to participate in a worthy colParty. We no longer find the
lege endeavor, don't. But please do respect the inpolicies or practices of that party
tentions and good effort of other students who are doin keeping with our own ideals.
the
time
to
make
bookdrive
their
and
nating
ability
It is a known fact that the
a
for Latin America success.
political control of the campus
We suggest that the students (and we use the term shifts about every three years.
loosely) who are guilty of throwing trash in the book A s we are a relatively young
barrels, either grow up and act in a manner befitting their group, it wasn’t until this year
alleged intelligence, or leave the hallowed halls to make tha we were able to realize the
room for those who want to learn, and, in learning, help reason.
It seems that after three years
others.
in power a relatively small group

King Opens Chemistry Series;
First Lecture on Spectrography

The student affiliates of American Chemical Society are sponsoring a series of lectures on
“Spectrographic Analysis and its
Applications.” The first kicture
of the series will be delivered
by Dr. Harry F. King at 4; 15 pm
March 19 in the conference room
Of individuals begin to feel cornplacement not only about the of Acheson Hall.
party hold on the campus political
Dr.King's lecture entitled "The
We had hoped to congratulate the newly elected officers picture byt no their personal conof the Student Senate in this editorial, but as of press trol of the party in power. It is Principals of Infra-Red Specat this point which they begin troscopy" will discuss equilibrium
time the results had not been made known.
However, we will take this opportunity to thank both dictatorial or at best polit'bureau configurations of different moleof party policy. cular structures and how these
parties for putting on an interesting campaign. Student determination
is unfortunate but configurations are determined by
interest in campus politics evidenced this fact by the This practice!
it does happen. We as a fraternity spectrographic methods. This disturnout for this year’s election.
have observed such a shift in now cussion will involve an explanation
luck
their
in
We wish all the new senators the best of
existent campus political parties. of quantum states and the energy
new positions and feel assured that they will serve their As a fraternity we have no by which molecules jump from
student body well. As in every election, there are some objections to abiding by the demo- one energy state to another.
who will be left out. We ask these people that they not cratic principles that the minority
The spectrograph can analyze
give up their interest in student government simply be- of an organization must abide by
majority. But this energy as it is emmitted
cause they did not receive enough support. There is al- the) deeison of thedecisions
should from molecules. If the energy is
ways a place for qualified and interested persona on the we feel thata the
proper vote and not
be made by
way
you
this
can
still
excommittees.
In
various Senate
by a few individuals,
press your interest in campus government while at the
We only hope that the forecastsame time participate in a worthy campus activity.
ed shift in campus politics within
The appointment of Dr. RichAs we have said before, we were glad to see the
the next two elections will serve ard A. Finnegan as associate
campus;
on
howthe
United
Students
party
a
second
to
shake
political
emergence of
professor of medicinal chemistry
Party from the grasp of their
ever trite it may sound the two party system is still an
in the School of Pharmacy was
and
allow
them
to
the
polltbureau
announced today, effective July 1.
essential part of our democratic way of life. If
proper
campus
continue
as
a
two parties remain strong they will act as a cheek on
Dr. Finnegan is assistant profespolitical force.
sor of Chemistry at Ohio State
each other; competition will make for greater effort and
Gary V. Whalen
University, a post he has held
the result will be a stronger, more vital student govcorresponding secretary
since 1959. He was a post-doctoral
ernment.
Gamma Phi Fraternity
fellow at
the
University of
by
made
statement
let
us
comment
on
a
conclusion
In
Chicago, 1057-58, and at Wayne
This
party.
opposition
of
this
year’s
one of the leaders
Editorial Criticized
State University, 1958-59,

Election Results Out

in the Infra red region of the
electromagnetic spectrum, an infra
red spectroscope Is used to analyze it.
The energy of the molecule had
direct relationship to the force
with which the molecules can be
bound together and to other types
of molecules. The lecture will be
concluded with a review of the
modes of vibration, the effects of
isotropic substitution, and the
a

principles

selection

governing

rules and the intensities of infra
red absorption.

Following the lecture there will
be a coffee hour and discussion
period. All SAACS members are
encouraged to attend as well as
any chemistry majors who wish
to join the organization. The
lecture is also open to any student
or faculty member who Is Interested in the topic.

Finnegan Appoi, ted to New Post

representative stated that unless a new political party
got into power this year the chances for a rival party on
this campus would be forever-doomed.
It is
This is quite an overexaggerated hypothesis.
University’s studfalse if only because of the fact that a Consequently,
no
ent population can never remain static.
m
permanently
remain
ideology
can
ever
power
or
single
existence.

To the Editor:
-Pant writing to congratulate
you on the excellent presentation
of the issues in this year’s election in your editorial March 1.
However, I have two complaints
to register about the way you undertook the endeavor:
1. Although you openly said you
wished to endorse neither party,
you literally crucified the Student
Alliance and patted the United
Students on the back throughout
newspaper of the State T nlversUy of
your editorial. I do not object to
The nfflcUl utildent
Campus.
14.
Buffalo
TTnlvereUy
Hall.
Norton
Buffalo. Publication Office at the
first week of September to the last week your treatment of the issues, but
N Y. Published weekly from
I wbuld urge you to have enough
tn" April, except for exam periods. ThankselvlnK. Christmas and Easier.
JOAN R. FLORY
Editor-In-Chief
intestinal fortitude to back up
convictions by actually
News Editor..MARY LOU WILSON I
your
CMrcul Mgr.
KAREN SANFORD
JAMES BAKER
8ports Editor
speaking out in favor of one parROSE NOW
CHAHI.ES STOVE
Office Mgr
Copv Editor
Advertising Mgr. ......ED BRANDT
I.A HR V SINGER
Brines* ,Mirr
ty or the other.
Editorial Ad
WM. SIEMERING
, THOMAS H AENI.E. JR.
Pin Ad
I urge you to demonstrate
LAYOUT EDITOR ....David Irwin
a little of the courage and
CENERAL STAFF: Victoria Bugeiskt. Elaine Barron, Joey Elm. Pat Muslal.
common sense that you were
Fhea. Charles l.lppman, Frp.l Apple. Rocky Versace, Fran Marfurt, Jane
implied to possess when you
Lawrence Frenkel, Peter Ostsrow, l.orna Wallach, Laura Zimmerman Kathy
were given the position of
Lilian Williams. Arnie Mazur, Cathy McHugh,
cin roope
Marcia Or zulak. ramllle LnBrocco, Donald Irwin. Alan HnffColleen Loi
editor and In the future stay
r,' Helen Chapell, Pat Lawner. Sue Jossph, Lois
man. Barb
clear of the hypocrisy laid
Hessinger,
e Sultano, Ron Kaminski and John Knlpler.
down in this editorial.
PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Joel Havens, Russell Goldberg and Hick Foser.
I urge you to investigate the
matters dealing with specific cases
Entered as second class matter February 9. l«Rl. at before you attack a person as you
the Post Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March attacked Mr. Gondree in your edI*
Acceptance for malllnK at a si*eclal rate of post3.
ape provided for In Section lloS. Act of October I
1917, itorial. I might inform you that
authorized February 9. 1951
even though Mr. Gondree received
Subscription 13.00 per year, circulation S600.
Heuresented for national advertising by National Ad(Continued on page 5)
PHLSS
vertising Service. Ine., 42# Madison Ave., New York. N T

After earning the B.A.

at the University of Minnesota,
he was awarded the Ph.D. at
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-

nology, where he served as

a re-

search associate.

He Is a member of the American Chemical Society, the Chemical Society in London, the Society
of Sigma XI. Phi Lambda, Alpha
Chi Sigma, and the American Association for the Advancement of
degree Science.

.

THE SPECTRUM
j

—

MSGR. WILDERS, RABBI

HOLLANDER, DR.

NORSTAD

Cancer Society to Conduct Seminar
Seminar on ' The Doctor-Clergy1
Team Approach to Cahcer and
Heart" will be conducted by the
Erie County Unit of the American
Cancer Society , and the Heart
Association of Erie County Thursday, at Capon Hall.

Theological

Seminary

St.

Paul

Minn.. Rabbi I. Fred Hollander
associate director of Chaplainc;

Services. Coordinator of religion
and televsion. for the Nee
York Board of Rabbis, and Msgr
hos
J mt* G
A
Archdiocese o
•
pital Apostolate,
Principal speakers are: Dr. New York. Clergymen of all faith:
Frederic M, Norstad, professor in the area have been invited t&lt;
theology, Luther attend.
of practical
“

Riders, director.,

�Fi ridaw.I March 8, 1963

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

*3onic

(Column

BY ANN MIINTE
Greeks now breathe a sigh of relief as rushing is finally at an
end. It’s only the beginning for the new pledges though, and there
are plenty of them. Congratulations are extended to all the Spring
pledge classes, along with wishes for bent luck in the coming months.
Preparations for Stunt Night are now under way . . .
it’s sooner
than you think. We notice already that the halls of Norton
are filled
with "the sounds of music" as rehearsals begin.
Panhhllenic Ball, hehi last Friday, was a tremendous success
Thanks go to all sorority women and guests who helped
make this
year’s event one of the best.
Other Greek news this week
Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity
announces an informal brother-pledge
pie eating contest during the day preceding
s
Spring vacation Good
luck, pledges!
The members of Alpha Phi Delta welcome their
newly inducted
pledge class. An informal coffee hour was held following the indue
tion.
Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity held its 13th annual Initiation Din.
ner Dance at the Peter Stuyvesant. The
night was highlighted by
formal initiation of the new,brothers and induction of Donald Spenelll
as president.
Alumni of Beta Phi Sigma will treat the brotherhood to a dinner
at the Moulin Rouge, March 21. The Spring pledge class is welcomed
and wished best of luck.
Chi Omega welcomed their ten now pledges at a mixer with the
sisters after pledging ceremony Monday night.
Gamma 1’lii held a stag party Thursday night at which everyone
had a great time. The brothers announce thci induction of nine new
....

pledges.

The members of Kappa Psi spent last weekend working on Pharmacy open house and entertaining a group of students from the
Univarsity of Toronto. The weekend was highlighted by parties, banquets, and a tour of Roswell Park Memorial Institute.

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE MAZUR

The past week-end, the National Students Association held a
conference at American University. Under consideration was the
proposed establishment of the National Service Corps.
The National Service Corps is
designed along lines similar to
that of the Peace Corps, aiming
at improving the/ conditions of
the blighted and depressed areas
of our own country. The services
rendered by the corpsraen would
hopefully provide the needed aid
and e/ducation to such groups as
the migratory farm worker, the
unemployed high school drop-out,
the slum dweller, and the southern

Negro.
Presently, the

National

Service Corp is hut the active concern of a special
Presidential study group under the chairmanship of Robert Kennedy. The study group
worked with the students at
the conference, explaining the
forthcoming legislative proposal and, as with the Peace
Corps, received NS A advice

and ideas on several pertinent

Dr. James E. Allen

to

Speak

Here Tomorrow in Norton

New York State Commissioner
of Education Dr. James E. Allen,
Jr., will discuss “Pederal-StateLocal Relationships in Education
tor the Changing Times,” here
tomorrow at 8 p.m.
His address, to be held in the
auditorium of Norton, is the annual mid-winter lecture sponsored
by Pi Lambda Theta and Phi
Delta Kappa, honorary education
societies, and the School of Edu-

cation. A public reception
follow in Norton.

will

Dr. Allen joined the New York
State Education Department in
1947 as executive assistant to the
commissioner of education. In 1950
he was appointed deputy commisof
sioner and in 1955 the Board
Regents appointed him President
of the University of the State of
New York and Commissioner of
Education.

Placement Sche ule Announced
Liberal Arts candidates.
MARCH 19
MARCH 20 &amp; 21
American Can Company Canco
Seeking
U S. Marine Corps,
Division, Seeking Accounting, Bus.
Ad., EE, IE, and ME candidates. graduates in all fields of study.
MARCH 21
Ortho Pharmaceutical Corpora
Berkshire Life Insurance Comand
tion, Seeking Liberl Arl a candi pany, Seeking Bus.
Ad.
dates.
Liberal Arts candidates.
U.S. Treasury Department InGeneral Adjustment Bureau,
ternal Revenue Service, Seeking Seeking Liberal Arts, Accounting,
Accounting, Bus. Ad., and Liberal and Bus. Ad. candidates.
Arts candidates.
Iroquois Gas Corporation, Seek
US. Treasury Department Ofing CE, EE, IE, and ME candi.
fice of the Comptroller of the dates.
Currency, Seeking Math, AccountBus.
Ad.
The Proctor &amp; Gamble Company,
ing, Economics, and
Seeking graduates in all fields of
majors.
study.

MARCH 20
Speer Carbon Company, Seeking

CIBA Pharmaceutical Company,
Chemistry, CE, EE, IE, and ME Seeking Liberal Arts, Chemistry,
candidates.

Biology candiPharmacy, and
The Travelers Insurance Com. dates.
There is no doubt as to the fact pany, Seeking Liberal Arts and
Roche Laboratories
Division,
that there yet remains a substan_ Bus. Ad, majors.
Seeking Biology, Pharmacy, and
tial portion of our population livLibe|ral
Arts candidates.
YMCA, Seeking Bus. Ad. and
ing in a critically impoverished
state. And under present circumstances thdre is again little doubt
that these approximately 30 million people have little hope for
improving their situations. It is
therefore quite natural that these
Dr. Borst will give lectures,
people should look towards the
Dr. Lyle B. Borst of the departgovernment for assistance; a gov- ment of physics at the University hold informal meetings with stuernment which spends billions of
dents and assist faculty members
of Buffalo, New York, will serve with curriculum and research
dollars for foreign aid.
visiting
College
lecturer
at
as a
problems.
However, the proposed legisla- of , St. Rose, Albany, New York
Dr. Borst, who is well known
tion, which must not be confused Wednesday and Thursday.
for his work in the design and
with the Youth Conservation
Corps measure Introduced by HuHe will visit under the auspices development of nuclear reactors,
bert Humphrey, seems to be some- of the American Association of received the B.A. degree from the
Physics Teachersa and the Amer- University of Illinois and the M.A.
what inadequate.
icah Institute of Physics as part and Ph.D. degrees from the Unlwhich
the
Firstly, the means by
of a broad, nationwide program versity of Chicago. He taught at
so-called domestic peace corps will to stimulate interest in physics. Chicago from 1940 to 1943 and
be utilized is not determined by The program is now in its sixth v. as senior physicist at the Clinton
the independent agency which year and is supported by the Laboratory, Oak Ridge, from 1943
will be created, but by the ‘'com- National Science Foundation.
to 1946,
munity” Which invites their servcanices. That is, the corpsmen
not work in any area until reAUTO ACCIDENTS
quested by local officials, and
their duties may bet largely over,
seen by them. The needed autonomy is lacking, and because corpsmen are invited, there stands a
by Ronald Kaminski
chance that any effort to aid
southern Negroes will be pre8. Immediately consult your
Every driver should know what
cluded by the local mayors and
lawyer. The sooner he is brought
county officials.
steps to take if involved in an
the sooner he can
Another area where the
automobile accident. Following into the matter
protect
your rights,
proposed Corps appears Inadeyou,
needless
advise
avoid
these steps will
quate Is in the very nature of
interview witnesses while their
complications.
and
trouble
the work. It seems naive to
memories are fresh, and do the
think of corpsmen creating
1. Stop! Serious criminal con.
countless other things necessary
a community spirit (as Is deto
do
so!
sequences attend failure
to preserve and record the true
sired by the study group) by
helping Harlem residents
2. If anyone is injured, render facts. Without your lawyer’s ad"build their own playground.”
first aid, stop bleeding, call a doc- vice, do not make any statements
One would think that Central
tor and ambulance, but do not or admissions to investigators or
Park has adequate recreationmove an injured person so as to adjustors for the other side.
al facilities.
The above is an oversimplifica- add to this injury.
9. Promptly notify your Insurtion of the! problem. However, to
S. Avoid added damage. You ance company. Many policies proattach the service group to the
drivers, vide that failure to do so will
existing welfare agencies working must warn approaching
liable for their result in forefeiture of your inin large urban slums might well or else you may be
damages.
be a case of making the same misdemnification rights
take twice. Basic education for Vt. Call the police. Their trained
10. Depending upon the amount
s\um residents ,1s the first con- accident investigators may prodamage, report the accident
sideration to be given such a prob- vide valuable testimony in a civil
lem and possibly students fresh claim for damages.
to the department of public safety
from college will have the necesIn New York State, ail accident;
sary ambition and energy to edu5. Gather written and specific involving damages over $100.00
cate these "pockets of poverty" information on the names and ad. must be reported.
the length
dresses Of witnesse
as to sanitary living, the economdrive ca:
11. B6st Df all
ics of birth control, the impor- of skid marks, etc;
ihow' their fully
tance for disciplining youngsters, re required by law
Next week
libel and Slend r
licenses to one ano
etc.

matters.

Borst to Be Visiting Lecturer
At College of St. Rose

STUDENTS ENJOY

PANHELUENIC BALL

Phi Epsilon Kappa has elected new officers, headed by president
Frank Duval. A bowling party will be held March 23 at Thruway
Lanes. Prizes will be awarded. The annual Founders Day Banquet has
been planned by the alumni chapter for April 27 at the Continental
Inn. Best wishes are extended to Bill Sanford, swimming coach and
alumnus.
The fratals of Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity remind their new pledge
class that the prevailing ranges of some types incur the upper truths
endured.
Phi Sigma Sigma sorority held induction ceremonies Tuesday
night. New pledges were welcomed by the sisters at an informal mixer
following induction. Grand Archon Florence Denmark visited Delta
chapter last Monday. Her stay was most enjoyed by sisters and
pledges alike. Panhellenie Ball was very successful and the Phi Sigs
had a great time.
Sigma Delta Tau sorority thanks the Panhellenic Council for last
Friday's Ball. Pledges were initiated last Monday., Carol Smoler is
SDT's candidate for TKE playmate. Joy Charkln was elected as
chairman of SDT’s committee for Spring Weekend.
The members of Sigma Kappa sorority give special thanks to
Leslie Miller for the enjoyable cocktail party preceding Panhel Ball.
Induction of the 15 hew pledges will be held March 18.
Tickets for the Teke Playboy Party, March 22, are now being sold
by brothers and at the Norton ticket booth. These may be purchased
dally between 10:30-2;30 and 4:30-5:30. The fratres will be at the
300 Club for TGIP this Friday. Newly initiated Greek pledges are
admitted by showing their pledge pins
The sisters of Theta Chi thank the brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon
and their newly named Queen of Hearts, Marlene Watson, for providing our campus with another social highlight of the year. The
sisters are looking forward to the Scholarship Tea with its annual
presentation of awards for scholastic achievement for sorority women.
The sisters of Angel Flight would like to welcome their new
Society
pledges. A party will be given by the pledges of Arnold Air
in conjunction with the pledges of Angel Flight. The sisters are
looking forward to a big turnout for the blood drive on March 27.

Letters to thePageEditor
,4)
(Continued fi ■om

material from certain committee student official should advise his

ly chastised by Senate president
Erb in a meeting that put Mr.
Gondree "on the carpet” and was
designed ,to do so. Is this how a

snbbrdjnates
by literally crucifying them in a verbal ambush
and castigation ? I might also
—

remind you that Mr. Gondree did
not resign from the Senate, but
only from his committee.
If you have enough courage
to take the criticism here offered, I hope you print this
letter, but knowing the attitude that you have shown in
this editorial and others, I
do not feel you have this spirit of humbleness or justice
within you. But if you might
find some, please print this
letter.
Yours truly,
Robert S. Pacholski
53578
'

chairmen, he definitely did not
receive enough material to' publish a decent newsletter.
Then again I might add as to
Mr. Gondree’g resignation, at least
he was willing to admit that under the conditions that existed the
job was impossible, so he thought
it would be better to resign and
rive someone else the chance to
ncceed instead of fooling people
's a majority of the other Senate
hairmcn did last semester.
I might also add because of
s honesty in' admitting the job
could not be done, he'was literal-

THE LAW AND YOU

__—

The program as presented t
NSA appears to be ineffective ir
its approach and its corrective
measures, measures which do not
really grab hold of the problems,
Nonetheless the concept of a
service corps Is Imaginative, and
if successfully applied may do
well for our “invisible citizenry”
the impoverished.

—

u say. Mak
6. Watch wha
admission even, if you feel at
£ al ,it
the other driver may alsoj
he to blame and emotional eom-|
ments may easily be misconstrued.
!

See your doctor immediately, j
,
Even serious injuries do not always result in immediate pain
'•

of

bloodshed.

REGISTRATION
your last name begins with
H. F. I
You should see adviser th(
week
March 18-22. If you
have not done so make an
appointment in Diefendorf 114
-

.

�Law Wives to Hold Revue
The University’s Law Wives Paris, in conjunction with Hens
Association will present a Fashion &amp; Kelly department store.
Proceeds of the show will proRevue followed by a tea Tuesday
for qualified
scholarships
vide
p.m,
Norton
Union.
at 2
in
married law students in need of
Mrs. Thomas C. D’Agostino, subsidy.
general chairman, announced that
rs - J°hn D. Bridge, president
four mannequins from Paris will
model the latest collection of of the Law Wives Association,
couturier designs produced by will act in the capacity of honorary
Vogue Fashions Patterns of New chairman. Mrs. James J. Cusimano
York and Boussac Fashions of is co-chairman of the event.

TKE Playboy Party Scheduled for
March 22; Tickets on Sale Now
Final arrangements are being
made for the annual Tau Kappa
Epsilon Playboy Party to be held
March 22. from 9 pm to 1 am at
Klemhan's Music Hall. The brothers promise that this year's affair will be bigger and better than
ever.
WKBW’s

Fridoy, March 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Jungle

Jay

Nelson

will host the proceedings. Music
will be provided by Ban Santi’s

14 piece orchestra with a comedian
and a female vocalist featured.
Severai sororities and the School
Nurgi
preS ent candidates
for 1116 TKE Play mate Contest
with the winner to be announced
at midnight.
_

„

Tickets can be purchased for
$4.50 at the Norton Ticket Booth
or.,from any Teke.

Soarcl

Spectrum

Poetry Recital

Graduate Mathematics Club
The

department of modern
Tuesday, Richard Meyer of the
languages will sponsor a poetry
wiijll
mathematics
department
recital Wednesday, March 20 at ?
speak on "Row Lumping in m x n
p.m. in the multipurpose room.
Contingency Tables,” and

Thurs-

The poet will he Pierre Viala who
will read French poetry from the
chairman of the mathematics deMiddle Ages to the 20th century
of
of
partment
the University
in French, Admission is free and
lecture on “The
Rochester, will
everyone is Invited.
Continuum Problem.” Both meetingVwill be held in Dlefendorf 204.
COMPUTING CENTER
The Computing Center will
Photography Club
conduct
5-week
seminars
in
start,
There will be a meeting of the FORTRAN Programming,
ing March 25. All students who
Photography Club in Norton 330 have taken math 245
are eligible
at 4:00 p.m. today. The recent to participate.
excursions to Glenwood Acres
If you are interested in attendand the Phototech Studios will
ing, write to the Computing Center
bo discussed.
as soon as possible, Karr Engineering 156, and state your free
will
Today,
Fitzgerald
Mr.
time only in blocks of 2 hours,
lecture on composition and tech- so that you can be scheduled prop,
nique. Anyone interested is welerly. These seminars are held 2
come to attend. Bring your photos days per work each session lasting 2 hours.
for publication

day, March 21, Leonard Gillman,

VIRGIL THOMSON

Thomson to Give Recital
Virgil Thomson, visiting Slee
professor of music, will give the

second of three lecture recitals
Thursday, March 21, at 8:30 p.m.
In Butler auditorium of Capcn
Hall.

Admission is free and all stu:
dents and faculty are invited to
attend. Guest artist for the eveInclude your address, so that ning will be Lillian Fuchs, con.
you can be notified.
cert Violist.
-

Wise to Be Bisonhead Guest
students in an informal atmos-

The topic of discussiion
ill bo, “The College Curriculum:
Its Plan and Purpose.”
phere.

Math Club
The Undergraduate Math Club
cordially extends an
invitation
all student to attend their
j n add-on to instating the pro- to
gram of inf0 rmal .hats. Bisonhead meeting Wednesday, March 27
has been selecting new memberr at 7;30 pm in Norton 233. The
who will be tapped at the annual speaker will be Joseph Marzo who
He is the second visitor in th« Honors Banquet in May. Members will discuss "Solutions to Systems
Equations.”
Simultaneous
series sponsored by the! senior) r the junior class who meet the of
next
year’s ofNominations
for
“leader,
organization’s
criteria
of
men’s honor society. The program
shiP- scholarship, and character” ficers will also be taken. Refreshis designed to bring together
ments will be served.
tinguished faculty members andj are being considered.
,

-

\

°

dis-1

THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
CAREERS for graduates with B.A., M.A.
Economics
� Statistics
Business Administration
■■f ■ f
Industrial Relations
Law

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*

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■

Dr. William Max Wise will be.
the guest of honor at the Bisonhead “fireside chat” Thursday .
March 21, in the Dorothy M. Haas |
Lounge of Norton Union. Dr
Wise of Columbia University will |
be on campus to meet with students during that week.

•

*

•

SALARY is $4,565, $5,540 or $6,675 per year
INTERVIEWS on campus

JOBS study and travel WORLD-WIDE
More than 900 individual student opportunities.
Summer (1*3 months) or longer in more than 50 Countries,
life guards, sales, resort, farm, construction, factory, hospital,
modeling, child care, hotel, camp counseling and other work.
TRAVEL GRANTS to $500 &amp; land arrangements by SITA (since
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For your copy of the ISTC 1963 brochure send 20l to:

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“EDUCATION
HAS FOR ITS
OBJECT THE
FORMATION
OF
CHARACTER*)
HERBERT SPENCER

"ON CAMPUS"

�PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Frida’ 'Vi March 8, 1963

OPEN TONIGHT
REGIONALS
MIDEAST
Bulls Oppose South Carolina State,
Zone Press Chokes Dolphin Offense,
Intramurals

Niagara Takes Aud Finale, 79-68

The basketball Bulls of Dr. Len
Serfustini departed yesterday for
Akron, Ohio where they will open
the NCAA Mideast Regional
Tournament tonight against South
Carolina State.
Game time is
slated lor 7 p.m.
The Bulls enter tonight's contest
with a 16-5 mark, which represents
one of the top records in the East,
South Carolina State has established an 18-7 season log.
The

Niagara Purple Eagles
regular campaign
on a somewhat disappointing
note Monday, as they turned

closed

UB’s

hack the* aroused Buffalo five,
79-68, in Memorial Auditorium.
A crowd of 4,614 was on hand
to witness the action. The Bulls
dominated
play
throughout
the first half with their fine outside shooting, but were unable
to cope with Niagara’s size in
the second half of play.
Joe Maddrcy was the particular thorn in Buffalo’s side,
as he collected 26 points. Most
of Maddrtjy’s 11 buckets came
on layups or hook from close
range. Guard BUI Kennedy
was another Eagle stalwart
with a 20-point performance.
Most of hi 9 points came on
jumpers from the area of the

left, Tim Cooney suddenly drove
toward the basket. Contact was
made between Cooney and Buffalo's Gary Hanley. The official
hesitated a moment, then called
Cooney for charging, to the dismay of the 2100 LgMoyne partisan8
UB took the ball and Roy
Manno was quickly fouled by
Cooney. Although Manno mis*
the free throw with seven
seconds left, Han ey batted
the rebound back to him and
the games was flna ly over.
Baschnagel emerged as the
Bull’s top scorer as well as the
game-clincher. He tossed in 11
points, while Dan BazzanJ
and
Gary Hanley added
10 apiece.
Chris Pitman paced the Dolphins
with a sharp 17-point effort.
Just how poorly the Buffalo
team shot is indicated by its 33%
total. The UB club connected on
only 22 of 65 attempts from the
field. LeMoyne meshed 18 of 44
for 40%. The Bulls held a 43-35
advantage in rebounding, as Han
ley snared 12.

at BOTH THEATRES

NORTH PARK
1428 Hertel

After Baschnagel's clutch basket, LeMoyne, waited gamely for
its best chance and did so in a
semi-freeze. With eight secojjds

key.

Buffalo’s showing in the first
half led many observers to believe
that an upset wa s in the making.
But Niagara’s tremendous height
advantage coupled with UB’s crippling foul difficulty proved fatal
to the Bulls. Center Gary Hanley
was particularly hampered by
personal foul trouble, as he sat
out most of the first stanza with
S against him. Then, with just
eight seconds gone in the second
half, he picked up his fourth.

ELMWOOD

Elmwood at Utica

“Nominated

for

the

best

performance by an actor
in a supporting role
terence stamp in Billy Budd 1
-

EH!
iTHE THEM
MUTINY!

The percentages reveal much
of the overall story. Attempting
the majority of their shots from
close quarters, the Eagies hit on
28 of 54 attempts for 52%. Maddrey was 11 for 15 and Kennedy
10 tor 15. Buffalo, on the other
hand, shot only a 36%, connecting
on 23 of 64 shots. Dave Baldwin,
who enjoyed perhaps his best
night garnered 22 points, while
little Roy Manno tallied 15. This
was Marino’s best offensive effort
of the season.

THE MIGHT!

CinimaScoPE

English Jimmy Dean? That's

Don Thompson outmaneuvers Niagara’s Joe White under
Thompson paced the Bulls In reBuffalo’s offensive board.
bounding with 10 retrieves.

rtuCgS

-H-.TTnr

what they’re calling 22-year
old Terence Stamp, who after
a brief stage experience landed
the title role in the Cinemaof “Billy
Scope
production
Budd.” Also starred are Robert
Ryan, Peter Ustinov, who also
produced and directed, and
Melvyn Douglas. The film is at
the North Park 4nd Elmwood
Theaters.

PLUS 2ND FEATURE

N. Park

Elmwood

-

-

“The Bridge”

“Bashful Elephant”

SPECIAL STUDENTS
DISCOUNT BY
Presenting I.D. card

1

|

|

The lead changed hand no less
than 12 times in the first half,
as the Bulls answered Niagara’s
every thrust. Eventually Buffalo
moved from a 28-27 deflicit to a
S8-30 bulge, as the Buffalo side
went wild.
of the auditorium
Niagara scored the last six points
of the half, however, and UB’s
halftime advantage was only two
j
points, 38-36.

As Cagers Squeak Past LeMoyne

BY JOHN KNIPLER
Squash competition has now
BY JIM BAKER
Buffalo closed the gap to two reached the quarter-final stage.
Due in large part to a wellpoints on three occasions, but Defending champion Andy Feldexecuted zone preiss defense, UB’s
that was as close as the Bulls ipan and runner-up Fox Ferrel
varsity cagers overcame an eightcould come. With Niagara ora top, are competing, in separate brack- point deficit to edge LeMoyne here
49-47, the Eagles salted it away ets. If they both continue their Saturday, 52-51. The Bulls were
with a seven-point string. With winnling ways, (he final match the unwilling victims of a frigid
the score 64-52, a five-point spurt could be a repdat of last year’s shooting performance, but were
able to weather the storm in the
enabled UB to move within seven thriller,
games late stage.
of the Eagles, but Maddrey then
The UB five underwent this a
Volleyball play will begin on
drove for a layup that drew
cold spelled in the second half,
Tuesday, March 19, with frat- when LeMoyne emerged
from a
Hanley’s fifth foul. Big Joe sank
ernity leagues competing on Tues- five.point deficit to assume a
the freebie and Ken Glenn meshed
47-39 advantage Buffalo did not
day and Thursday nights.
another freebie that was awarded
score a field goal during this time
Wrestling
after
the
workouts
start
will
Niagara
Hanley argued
seven
span that lasted over
call too strenuously. This pushed Monday, March 18, in the minutes.
Coach Len Serfustini counTap Gallagher’s team to a 68-57 small workout room just off the
tered this disastrous turns of
cushion and the game was beyond main gym. Jim Ryan, a physical
events with a zone press
education major and melmber of
reach.
that rattled the LeMoyne team
squad,
football
be
will
in
the
considerably.
During the reCoach Serfustinl tried the zone charge of the workout sessions
maining 9:50 of the contest
press that had succeeded so well which will begin at 3; 30 and end
the Dolphins could garner but
against LeMoyne, but it did not at about 5:00 p.m.
one field goal. Buffalo finally
phase Niagara at all. The Eagles
caught the Nilandmen at 50-50
No entry listg are necessary,
merely passed the ball to the open (but 5 out of 8 practices must be
with 3:10 remaining.
Ralph Yahn then sent the Dolman and attempted an occasional completed in order for an entrant
to be eligible for the matches. phins back into a one-point lead
shot. As the statistics. indicate, The date
of the meet has been with a freebie, but Norb Baschmost of these shots spilt the cord. changed to Thursday, March 28. nagel secured the triumph
with a
Weigh-in sessions will take place drive and, a
Still, there
Niagara finished itg season with from 9; 00 a.ra. until noon on were 1:10 left,bucket.neither team
but
a 14-4 record.
that date in room 213 Clark Gym. could capitalize on the remaining
opportunities.

JUDO

*

The Eagles came out with a
roar in the second half and
quickly erased their deflicit.
Andy O’Connell opened with
a three-pointer that Included
Hanley’s fourth personal foul.
Kenntidy then sank a layup
and Maddrey followed with
a tap for a 43-88 Eagle cushion. This damage was all done
in 40 seconds.

-

MANSON JUDO CLUB

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Friday,

March 8, 1963

Trackmen Finish 4th
At Rochester Relays

SPORTS CIRCLE

Politicos Ignore Fieldhouse Need

A strong UB indoor track squad
finished fourth in a field of.eleven
schools competing at the Rochester Relays last Saturday. Host
Rochester was again the winner
with a total of 30 points, followed
Having concluded_the regular portion of their 1961- by Oort and State (22), Alfred
62 schedule, the UB basketball Bulls carry a highly-re- (19%), UB (13), RPI (12),
garded 16-5 seasonal log into tonight’s NCAA tourney Roberts Wesleyan (7), Ithaca
curtain-raiser in Akron, Ohio. Their initial opponent, South (6%), LeMoyne (4), Union (3),
Carolina State, bears equally admirable credentials, as they Hamilton (2), and Harpur (1).
enter this post-season competition with an 18-7 log. This UB’s sprint relay team fell away
evening’s second encounter will pit the nation’s number one short of victory. Stu Katz ran
thei equivalent of a 1:58.0 half
small college team, Wittenberg, against Youngstown Uni- mile
(some 6' seconds better than
vesity. Wittenberg owns a phenomenal 20-1 record, while the UB record),
and Ron Reiber
the Penguin five enters with a 17-8 mark.
ran the equivalent of a :51.0 quarFrom a Buffalo standpoint the game against Niter mile to pace the team, which
agara last Monday could prove to be a blessing in disalso included Vern Huff and Tom
Cionek.
guise. It has been shown time and again that a game
The half mile relay squad,
against top-notch competition
regardless of the reconsisting
of Huff, Reiber,
sult
usually sharpens a team for upcoming games.
Cionek and Stern, tied for
Thus, the Bulls' performance tonight and tomorrow
third place, and the distance
should indicate the extent to which that hard-fought
relay team of Dick Sullivan,
battle against Niagara has benefited the team's play.
Chuck McKirdy, Ed Lontra�
to, and Katz finished fifth,
The seldom deep, usually dark, and always mysterious
The pole vault relay team
world of politics does not often move this writer to any finished a close second on jumps
great depths of interest, but this year’s campus elections of 12’s by Paul Lee and ll’s by
provide the exception.
It is a generally accepted fact Bill LaBuda. The total height of
that the reappearance of the two-party system here at a team’s best jumps decided the
UB has improved the political status considerably, as the winner. Dan Dangereau (43’0”i
Hug
(41) placed
air of monopoly has been removed. Yet, take one searching and Werner
the shot put relay , to
glance at the most important part of any party’s setup: fourth in
conclude the UB scoring.
its platform.
UB's powerful freshman squad
Now you might ask, just what could be contained in was rocked by academic problems
either platform that might pertain to sports on this cam- last Friday. Seven of the teams
pus. This is precisely the point; there has been a com- twelve members were declared
plete failure by BOTH parties'To offer any support what- ineligible because of their last
soever to the facility that is an absolute necessity here; semester’s grades.
Tomorrow the UB squad will
a new fieldhouse. Interesting, isn’t it?
compete with some of the best
of
be
example
by
what
CAN
done
was
seen
An
teams in the East at the Union
those who made the trip to LeMoyne College last SaturCollege Invitational' Meet in
day. The Dolphins possess a shiny, modern athletic
Schenectady.
center that is a sight to behold. The seating capacity

By Jim Baker

—

—

*

*

is approximately 3000 and can be expanded when the
need approaches.
Tourney
Four members of UB’s fine
There is a glossy and roomy press box along one
side of the gym and a readable clock. And this is an wrestling team will compete in
institution that claims an enrollment of approximately the 4-1 Tournament at Cleveland
Ohio. Weigh-in was this morning
1200 students. Compare this to Buffalo’s “athletic center” at
the Case Tech arena and
and enrollment and you will perceive an accurate idea of matches will take place today and
just how far behind other schools we are in the area of a all day Saturday. The UB entries
physical plant.
are Bob Jackson, 123 lb., Warren

Motmen in

Prunella, 157 lb., Jack Valentic,
The baseball Bulls of Peelle, Kosobucki, and company 167 lb., and Kevin Brinkworth,
will play a 16-game schedule this year despite the abbrevi- 191 lb. This tourney, one of the
well known in wrestling cirated season. The problem has been solved by a step-up most
cles, will draw from better than
in the. slating of doubleheaders.
12 states and 50 schools.
Several renowned diamond clubs will face the Bulls Last year, when rated as a top
here this season. Besides the WNY league opposition (Buf- candidate for honors in his class
falo State, ECTI, Niagara, Ganisius, and St. Bonaventure), Jack Valentio finished third in a
the Bulls will hoet Cornell, Colgate, and Rochester.
field of 23 others in his divison.
Kevin Brinkworth also did very
well in his first tournament com-

Oberlin Tops Fencers
By

BRYNA MILLMAN

"Neither snow nor sleet nor

gloom of night" prevented the
L'B fencers from reaching Oberlin
last Friday, but once there, they
v/ere
stopped by the Oberlin
swordsmen 11-16. The weekend
Wag also to include a traingular
meet with both Air Force Academy and Notre Dame at the
letter's home in South Bend Indiana, but again a combination of
the elements and car
trouble
forced canceUation of the meet.
The foil squad bowed to Oberlin
2-7 and the epee squad also 3-6.
The sabermen
came through
strongly, soundly beating the
Oberliin squad 6-3, in spite of
having to forfeit 3 bouts which
otherwise might have made it a

petition.

Four freshmen will also represent the blue and white at the
West Point Tournament March 15
and 16. Coach Ron LaRocque
named the boys making the trip
to be Edger Poles, George Ehresman, John Hesslink, and Norm

Fox will be fencing
Frank Pccenco and
squad capt. Bill Wiilkenson
will represent the Bus in epee,
and the foil squad will consist
Keller.
of capt. Joe Fersch and Barry
Canter
The freshman team met with
Hyerson Tech, of Toronto this
weekend, and was defeated 6-10,
bringing their closing record to
an admirable 7 and 3.
While there was some disapMark
saber,

.

pointment

expressed

at

Frosh cagers Harv Poe and Norwood Goodwin Di.it tag e
forward Art Coleman for rebound.
The Baby Bulls ended
the most successful freshman season in UB history with a
75-62 victory, their 20th in 22 starts. Coach Ed Muto was
heaved into the shower after the game in celebration of
his 100th triumph as frosh coach here.

Frosh Cagers Trounce Niagara;
Coach Muto Celebrates IQOth Victory
Buffalo’s

freshman basketball

team ended the season in a blaze
of glory with ti 75-62 triumph
over Niagara's yearlings. Besides
marking the team's twentieth
victory, the win also represented
Coach Ed Muto’s 100th victory
as freshman coach.

by subduing LcMoyne’s yearlings, 82-75. LeMoyne had

enter*id the tilt with a 13-2
record and gave the Buffalo
team a tremendous sniggle
from start to finsh. It was
not until the very end of the
contest that Buffalo opened
up the seven-point victory

margin.

Buffalo had four men in double
The game was extremely close
figures. Bill Barto poured in 21
through out the first half, ag the
points, Jim Bevilacqua contributteams waged a continuation of ed 15 in a tremendous two-way
their two previous battles. In the performance, Norwood Goodwill
teams’ first meeting UB had scored counted 14, while Dick Smith and
Harv Poe tallied 10. For LeMoyne
a 78-74 win at Clark Gym. Then Bob McCann, an
impressive sharpNiagara scored a 71-69 victory in shooting guard, scored 32 points.
overtime at the Student Center. Bob Mullen tossed in 17, Dick
Monday night’s encounter there- Gloscj scored 13, and Jim DeYulia
fore represented the rubber match contributed 11.
The score at the half was 43-38
between the two clubs.
in favor of the Baby Bulls.
Norwood Goodwin continued his
fine season play contributing 18
points.
Frank Delaney counted
24 for the Baby Eagles.,

Sick of the Twist?

Buffalo finished with a 20-2
mark, while the Eagles ended their

7-7.

campaign

night the Baby
Bulls scored their 21 triumph
Saturday

RELAX . . .
ENJOY THE CASUAL
CONTEMPORARY SOUND
OF

Th e Coby Taylor
QUARTETTE

Diamonds-Watches

JEWELRY

having

been unable to compete with the
Air Force Academy, the encounter
will not be delayed very much
longer. March 29-30 the top man
in each weapon will vie for booth
individual and school honors in
the National competition to be
Springs, Colorado:
perfect squad shut-out for the held at Silver
the host
Air Force Academy,
Bulls. Both Mark Fox and squad
',
of course.
Marshak

Every Friday

Watch and
Jewelry
Repairing

COMPLETE

"Alfred

OPTICAL
SERVICE

PA. 5415

Saturday

on

P.S.

near Cleveland Dr.
TF 6-9565

Cocktail Hour Every Friday
12-1, ALL Cocktails 50c

—

capt. Jerry

themselves in saber by winning
three bouts apiece.
The Varsity Bulls close
their season with a mediocre
record of five wins and six
losses, as they look ahead
to defending their title as
the North Atlantic Champions
at KIT next Saturday. A two
man squad in each weapon
will be representing the best
UB has to offer for the competition, Jerry Marshak and

:

,•

distinguished

Eduardo's
Serve* 4 to 6

BASEBALL
Varsity baseball coach Jim
Peelle announces that spring
practice will, begin Monday,
March 18. All interested candidates are to meet in Clark Gym
at 3:30 on this date. Bring
your own equipment.
Freshman baseball practice
will start the following Monday, March 25.

Family Style Spaghetti

$3.00
Bread and Cheese included
MEAT BALLS 15c each
TF4-3773
Free Delivery with minimum order of $3.00
or 50c Service charge with any take out orders.
—

—

DRY CLEANING
GUARANTEED
BLUES
CHASER
A call home, long Distance, is
a real picker-upper. For you.
For your folks, too. A phone call
is so much warmer than writing.
It tells them you care. Rates are
lower every evening after 6:00
and all day Sunday. Extra low
for many calls within New York
State after 9:00 p.m.

A

New York Telephone

8 lbs.

for

$2.00

AT THE

One-Stop Service Center
Shoe Repairing
laundry
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and dyed
All types of Ladies' Heels in

club in

l/^omwaij

1334 BROADWAY

-

Stock for Replacement
or Re-styling

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
-

Twist with

THE WITNESSES
The hottest group in town

TONIGHT and

every
Friday and Saturday

-

TF 6-4041
Open 9 A. M. 9 P. M.

(

at Harlem
CAPPOLA'S

G. Frisch.Optician

UNIVERSITY PIAZA

&amp;

Phone TX 6-9750

�</text>
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                    <text>or

STATE
Got Any Books
For Chilean
Students?

NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

SPECTRUM

(See Page 2)

Tourney-Bound
Bulls Close Regular
Season Against
Niagara Mon fay
(See Page 12)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1963

VOLUME 13

No. 19

TWO PARTIES VIE FOR VOTES
Voting to Be
lues.. Wed.

Student Senate elections will
take place Tuesday and Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There
will be a special election Monday
for the nursing students
Voting will take place as follows; University College, Arts and
Sciences, Business Administration,
and Education students will vote
in the Norton Conference theater.
University College and Arts and
TERRY

AGATE

MICHAEL LAPPIN

STUDENT ALLIANCE
PLATFORM
The Student Alliance was con.
ceived in fact six weeks ago, in
idea three years ago. The purpose
of formation is simply to break
one-party rule and bring democratic activity back to UB.
The United Students, the party
that has run unopposed for the
past student generation, has
not been able to fulfill the
goals of adequate student gov.
eminent. In order to bring
democracy and effective stu.
dent government to UB the
Student Alliance proposes;

1. We Insist that the Student
Senate take a more active part in
stimulating more student political
organizations on campus by giving
financial support to such organizations.
2. We Insist that UB take the

leading role in the Federation o(

Student Government of the State
University of New York to more
effectively express the student's

of New York must be changed.
We will strive to change these rules
but pledge nothing but our best
effort, making no wild promises.
ally

8. We demand that Student Senate take a more active role in the

protection of the students and
their rights. National Greek organizations will be supported for-

ever. If such groups are barred
from our campus we will fight for
their reinstatement.
9. We will initiate a committee that will have as its
sole objective the betterment
of student comforts, l.e., a smoking area within Lockwood Library and coat racks in Harri.
man.
10. We will prepare a complete
the value of compulsory
ROTC highlighting its advantages
and disadvantages and submit our
recommendations to the President
of the University for evaluation.
The Student Alliance knows that
study on

Sciences students may also vote In
the Tower lobby. University College can also vote in Goodyear
Engineering will vote in the Engineering School, and the law stu-

MICHAEL COHEN

PAUL SCHULMAN

UNITED STUDENTS
PARTY PLATFORM

The US Party is committed to
of the dormitory food service.
The proposed system would Inthe view of student government
clude coupons whereby students
emphasizes cooperation and
students,
would be able to eat either at
will take place at all the locations. responsibility between
any campus cafeteria or at
Students must have ID cards to faculty and administration. In Us
neighboring restaurants.
own realism, student government
vote.
is not merely a debative body; 6. We advocate the
establishment
UNITED STUDENTS
it is an Integral part of the uniof a student book exchange
President—Michael Oohen
versity community and must be
whereby students could receive
Vico President—Paul Schulman committed to the higher ideals
their demanded price tor books
Secretary—Betty Lock
of education and the process of
left on consignment.
Treasurer—Henry Simon
maturation to fully develop the
Arts and Sciences
7. We believe that the flnlng sysstudent as a human being.
Frances Biletzky
tem for traffic violations should
The US Party Is proud of
Robert Feldman
be reevaluated in order to obits accomplishments as a leadRobert Finkelstein
tain a more reasonale system.
ing instrument In the growth
Furthermore, ail traffic violaMichael Hutton
of student government and
Sharon Pawllk
tion appeals will be referred
student participation in our
to a subcommittee of the StuUniversity College
university. The various activRichard Daffner
dent Judiciary in order that
ities sponsored by members of
Cheryl Falcone
students will have the decision
the US Party In th: past Is
Paul Flagg
on determining the validity of
Indication of the quality
an
Harriet Heitllnger
the appeal.
effective
leadership
of
and
Jeffery Laytin
The US Party is in accord with
programing of which we are
8.
Rickie Stone
a congressional bill advocating
r’oable.
Pharmacy
voluntary, not compulsory,
This year the US Party is atKaren Miller
membership In ROTC. This
tempting to move even further
Business Administration
measure is designed to benefit
Into the problems of relating the
James Fancher
both the university and the
students of this campus to the
Nursing
military.
general situation on campus, in
Betty Neumann

dents will vote at the Law School.
Voting for the at-large candidates which

Education

Beverly Eosenow
Marilyn Schanzer

Engineering

Peter Scholl
Lawrence Weingarten
Medicine
August D’Alessandro
Daniel Schubert
STUDENT ALLIANCE

President-—Terry Agate
Vice-president—Michael Lappin
Secretary—Carol Zeller
Treasurer—Howard Gondree
Arts and Sciences

Robert
HOWARD GONDREE

view to the Board of Regents and monopoly is a violation of the law
th State legislature.
in our society because of the consequences It breeds. Monopoly has
3. We insist that the Student
never been known to be an effecSenate represent all the stu.
dents and take definite steps
tive Instrument in shaping the
towards Integrating Allenhurst
minds of men. Whether the opstudents into campus life, rathposition party has knowingly or
er than Just giving lip service
unknowingly effected this situation
to such goals.
is inconsequential, the fact still
4. We assure all students that remains that the organs of goveverything that can be done will
be done to bring Dr, Herbert Ap. ernment are monopolized.
theker to our campus and we feel
The Student Alliance commitment
assured he will appear.
is to competition, efficiency and
5. We maintain that an Investi- resourcefulness: competition to
gation into the possibility of a costimulate the interest of the stuoperative cafeteria, and bookstore
be looked into and, if feasible, be dents. Indicative of the lack of interest is the true fact that our
initiated on our campus as soon opposition’s president
was elected
as present commitments have
office against no opponent and
elapsed. The advantages of such to
a program are higher quality food with a total of 588 votes out of a
possible total of well over 5,000.
at reduced prices and textbooks at
lower cost.
Efficiency, to assure the student
body that there will be an effective
6. We pledge that the fining
in campus government, and
system will be changed and a more check
to resourcefulness because we know
equitable system will be chosen
'hat in ten years the University
mainly support in the administraof Buffalo will be one of the bigtion’s plans to place the Student
country and
Judiciary as the avenue of appeal. gest schools in the
that only resourcefulness can prof
7. We know that in order to have mote the growth of politics comalcoholic beverages served on cam- plementary to the size of our unipus the rules of the State Univer. versity.
—

BETTY LOCK

HENRY SIMON

the local community and extra- 9. We advocate the serving of
alcoholic beverages on campus
communal affairs in order that
on an experimental basis. This
student government and student
program would entail beer in
participation may be even more
Russell Goldberg
the Rathskeller on weekends
effective and significant.
Bruce Colder
and cocktails at major campus
that
UB
become
Alan Hoffman
1. We advocate
dances.
David Irwin
an active member in the FedCharles Martin
eration of Student Government 10. We support in full the policy
statement of the Student SenGail Ooldblatt
of the State University of
ate concerning the status and
New York. The purpose of this
Pharmacy
future of national social organwould be to better integrate
Gary Brown
izations on the UB campus.
Business Administration
the many units of the State
University system and to more 11. We advocate the reinstateTony Campagna
ment of a smoking room withadequately represent the varMarco Silvestri
in the library systeni.
ious student bodies relative to
Nursing
Lois Reeves
the Albany administration.
12. We support programs under
Education
tbe leadership of the Student
2. We advocate the institution of
Judith Kravitz
Association which would Ima more adequate parking sys.
Lorraine Jacobson
prove relations between the
tem whereby a student would
Marlene Rettinger
various areas of student acpurchase a parking permit for
Lorraine Rock
tivities; namely the Student
a nominal fee and receive a
Engineering
Senate, the Union Board, and
key to operate the gates. This
Gibbons
Bill
related agencies.
system Is both feasible and
Michael Greene
The I'S Party Is pleased that
less expensive than the coin
Law
two active organizations are consystem presently used.
A1 Brennen
testing this year’s elections. No
INDEPENDENTS
there
should
3. We believe that
organization is more committed to
Norene Hersch—Education
be an expansion of the bus thoroughly democratic Institutions
Paul Richie—University College
service for Allenhurst residents. and procedures than the DS Par.
Bak—Arts
and
Sciences
Walter
4. We pledge our deepest efforts ty. However, the basic aim of
Jean Lesser
to insure academic freedom on democracy is that the most qualNursing
this campus. Wo remain comified candidate be elected. Wo
Larson
Patricia
mitted to the light to return urge you to consider the parties,
Camille Panepinto
Aplheker
our
to
Dr. Herbert
the candidates, and their qualiPatricia Simpson
campus.
fications; then cast your vote on
LAW
■
5. Wo advocate a reorganization election days.
John Baule
University College
David Aronowsky
Ainsley Davidson

‘

’

CAROL ZELLER

Byalick

David Grzywna
A1 Horwitz
William Price

�Moore Accorded Highest
UB Honors at Graduation

F^Buffalo
n-J

'

-V.

*0.000 Root Gla
_

_

5000 &lt;&gt;000 7000 HOOO 9000
'

’

»000(

■ '■

Dr. Brubaker, John Dundas and Sandra Alderman representing drive chairman Joel Perel
who was unable to be in the picture.

International Club Sponsors Bookdrive;
Aim Is 10,000 Books for Chilean Univ.

at a time. This includes sororities Abu Khedra of Lebanon, explained
and fraternities. The names of the the purpose of the bookdrive in
The International
Club will organizations will be
recorded un- this way, “This is an effort by
sponsor a bookdrive starting today der the bookshelf poster.
American students to promote inand continuing to the end of April.
Chairman of the bookdrive
It is called “Crusade for Knowlternational understanding.
is Joseph I’erell. He feels that
edge.” The slogan of the drive is
The current book drive is simithe
bookdrive will do more
“A Book Instead of a Buck.”
than supply two universities
Two educational institutions ir
lar to one of three years ago, spon.
with reading material. SupAntofagasta, Chile, will receive the
sored by The Spectrum, to obtain
porting this, he stated, “One
books. The institutions »&gt;e Unibooks for Nigeria. The Internamain
things that seems
of the
versidad del Norte and Universitional Club hopes for strong supdad Technics del Estado. The first
to be lacking in international
port in order to make their prois
a common touch
relations
is a coeducational teacher training
between peoples.
If more
school and the latter is a school of
ject a success.
things were done without formines and sciences.
malities,
we would soon see
Over 2500 books have been
that all peoples are basically
collected so far. The goal of
By

Fridoy, Morch 1, 1963

S P E C T RUM

PAGE TWO

ELAINE BARRON

alike. The idea of books lets
the club is 10.000 books. Barrels will be located at strateus all better from knowledge
to build a better world.”
gic points on the university
campus. Students will deposit
Dr. George Brubaker, professor
the books to be donated in
of history, is honorary chairman of
them.
the drive. He commented on it by
When asked about the type of saying, “This drive is an excellent
book wanted, John Dundas, presi- opportunity for students at the
dent of the club, cemented, "We University to show in a personal
are looking for books of a univer- way their interest in University
sity caliber of any field. They can students in Latin America and in
be paperbacks, but with educa- the desire those students have in
tional value.”
creating a better future for their
Progress of the drive will be recountry.” He urged that all
corded on a “bookshelf barometer.” students and organizations in the
There will be a bookshelf poster, University cooperate in this maniwith books fllllng the shelf of the festation of international friendposter as a certain number of ship
a concept which is very
books is reached. There will also important among students in Latin
be an Honor Roll for campus or- American universities. Another
ganizations who bring in 600 books member of the committee, Nahil

'

Dr. George E. Moore, director of
Roswell Park Memorial Institute,
was awarded the Chancellor's
Medal, the highest honor that can
be conferred by the University.
The honor came to Dr. Moore, an
internationally known scientist, on
his 43rd birthday. He is the 36th
recipient of the medal, given “for
achievements truly great and ennobling which dignity the performer and Buffalo in the eyes of
the world.”
In the presentation at midyear commencement, Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, president, lauded
Dr. Moore as “a person, an enduring research executive, a
great research scientist and
above all a dedicated public
servant.”
Dr. Furnas noted a comment
about Dr. Moore by one of his
close associates, that "he bridges
the gap between pure laboratory
work, or basic research, and the
clinical aspects of applications of
research, right on through to the
individual doctor-patient relationship.”

are only tools,” Dr. Furnas
said.
“It is the work that
counts."
He cited Dr. Moore’s summer
program of 350 fellowships for
high school and college youths, a
graduate school for advanced research programs, and training for
more than 300 physicians from 27
nations since 1953.
“Dr. Moore,” the University president said, ‘‘is the first to admit
the vast size of our reservoir of
ignorance about cancer.”
‘‘Research at the institute,” he
reported, “has spread to cover
some of the nation’s most basic
work in the fundamental chemistry of the life process to extensive
applied or clinical research in the
350-bed hospital.”
“We have reason to believe
some fundamental break,
throughs may come In the very
near future,” he quoted Dr.
Moore as saying.
The 1963 Chancellor Medal win.
ner, Dr. Furnas noted, despite sizable administrative tasks maintains a heavy surgical, research
and clinical practice.
He is UB clinical professor of
surgery and his own work at Roswell is a search for a tumor-cell
vaccine and attempts to combine
drug treatment with surgery to reduce cancer recurrence.
“He was a strong proponent of
‘keeping fit’,” Dr. Furnas said, “long
hours before the Kennedys made
it a national issue” and "undoubtedly, he could outperform most of
the Marines in the current fad tor
50-mile walks.”
The institute director was in his
early 20s, Dr. Furnas recalled,
when he made the "major discovery” that brain tumors can be

ets

“In these days of highly stratified scientific interests," Dr. Furnas said, "this is a rare quality.”
Dr. Moore came to Buffalo
from the University of Minnesota In 1953. He was picked
from a field of 80 candidates
to head the Institute.
"Since his arrival,” Dr. Furnas
observed, “the Institute’s growth
in physical size, in scientific accomplishment, in recognition and
prestige has been truly phenomenal.”
He listed a plant worth $27 million, a staff Increase from 280 to
over 1800 and a budget leap from
$400,000 to $13 million a year.
"But the buildings and budg.
localized by radioisotopes.

TAKE A TIP FROM THE BROTHERS FOUR-AMERICA’S CAMPUS

Viceroys
got

own.

FAVORITES

the taste

that’s ridit!

—

Library Hours foi Spring Vacation
Saturday, March 9:
All Libraries —9 a.m.- 1 p.m.

All Libraries 8:30a.m.-6 p.m,

except;
Engineering;
9 a.m.-12 noon
Health Seiencei 9 a.m. 6 p.m.

Health Sciences
8:30 a.m.-lO p.m,
Saturday, March 16:
Same as March 9
Sunday, March 17:
Same as March 10
Monday, March 18:
Resume normal schedule

Sunday, March 10:

All Libraries

..CLOSED

except

Health Sciences 2 p.m.- 6p.m,
Mon., Mar 11-Fri., Mar. 15:

except;

Complete Luggage and Leather Goods Store
*

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES,
HANDBAGS and GIFTS
*

Complete Selections of Name Brand Luggage
Courtesy Discounts to University Faculty and Students

3400 MAIN STREET
(Opposite

UB)

TF3-1600

Open Monday, Thursday and
Friday evening till 9 P.M.

not too light

V3UL
Smoke

all 7 filter brands and you'll agree:
some taste too strong .. . others taste too
light. But Viceroy tastes the way you’d
like a filter cigarette to taste!
1963. Brown

&amp;

Williamson Tobacco

Listen to The Brothers F

Viceroys got-the
taste that’s right!

Corporatioi

iyr

•

WNBC Radio

'

Monday thru Friday

•

10 A. M

�1

SPECTRUM

Fridoy, March 1, 1963

WBFO Will Broadcast
New Educational Programs

for WBFO, stated, “The
has experienced significant
growth this year as a result of
program. As a member of the National Association of Educational many hours of conscientious work
Broadcasters it provides an oppor- by the students, and we anticipate
tunity to extend knowledge and even greater growth in the future.
resources to the community by pro Many in the community are beviding programs which are educa- coming aware of the station, of
tionally significant but not comthe contribution it is making, and
the improved technical equipment
mercially feasible. The only member of the NAEB in Buffalo, it will will make possible an even greater
provide students with the oppor- audience.”
tunity to get experience in an acSome of the students responsible
tual broadcast station.
for the success of the station are:
Diversified programs present Dave Jansen, station manager;
jazz, folk, classical and commer- Bill Ward, news and special
cial music from the station’s li- events; Jack Mulhall, chief' engibrary of over 1200 records. A neer; Ed Azif, director of public
United Press International tele- relations; Sol Leff, library; and
HERBERT APTHEKER
type provides the station with cur- Betty Bernbeck, secretary.
rent information for their news
At this time there are approxibroadcasts and commentaries. Im- mately 25 staff members at the
portant and interesting events oc- station, and anyone interested in
curring on campus, such as the radio work is welcome to join. In
The State University Board of Josh White concert and the Emanorder to be a staff member a stuTrustees is appealing a Supreme cipation Week speakers, are broad- dent is required to put in 20 hours
Court decision which prohibited cast over WBFO.
of work during a trial period in
The NAEB supplies the stathe appearance of Herbert Apwhich he learns the general worktapes
intellection
with
for
theker, a Communist, at State Uniings of the station.
tual and educational programs
versity at Buffalo.
Radio needs qualified people.
such as, Let’s Learn German,
Today, an increasing number
Notice of the appeal, to the
Panorama of the Lively Arts,
of colleges ate offering graduAppellate Division of the Supreme
and
Nuclear Peril, among
ate and post graduate degrees
By LORNA WALLACH
advisor
WBFO lg beginning a broad new station

Trustees Appeal
Aptheker Decision

Court, has been filed

in Albany,

Dr. Aptheker had been
scheduled to discuss Communism as a participant In a program entitled "Political Spectrum of a Contemporary
World” last October 31. Court
actions first postponed, then
barred his appearance.
Other speakers appearing on the
program here discussed Fascism,
Socialism, Conservatism and Liberalism.

others.

in broadcasting.

WBFO, a licensed radio station,
WBFO broadcasts from Baird
is in the process of having its lifrom
cense renewed. Dave Jansen, sta- Monday through Thursday
5:00 p.m. to midnight and Friday
tion manager, would appreciate
students submitting their com- from 5:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. The
to expand its proments on the programming of the station hopes
station to the FCC (Washington gramming to cover Sunday evening and start the weekday broad25, D.C.)
casts at 4:00 p.m.

The radio station itself is open
According to Dave Jansen, “With
to criticism and comment from ail
the faculty and
interested listeners. Any sorority, the cooperation of
university,
fraternity or other social organi- student body of the
zation that wishes to have news WBFO-FM will become the leadbroadcasted on WBFO should send ing educational radio station in
country.”
a card or letter a week in advance. this section of the

The court decision which restrained Dr. Aptheker’s lecture
Any school departments or orheld, in part, that public policy
ganizations who are interested in
required the Trustees to prevent
putting on a program should conhis appearance.
at

tact Dave Jansen

WBFO.

A

The Trustees, at the time the musical request show is aired after
matter was brought before the 10:00 in the evening.
courts, contended:
The 30 mile communication
radius of the station will
"The issue here is not Cpmmun.
probably be expanded to about
ism nor the speaker, but the right,
100 miles, resulting from use
of a university, its students and
of the new transmitter and
faculty, as part of their educaconsole which the station is
tional process, to examine and
purchasing. Next year the staideolcompare various political
tion hopes to get AM lines inogies directly, including the right
to the dorms for the benefit of
to examine doctrines as loaththe students.
some as Communism.”
Mr. William Siemering, faculty
Panhellenic will hold its annual ball tonight in the Terrace room of the Statler Hilton. Eddie Diem and bis orchestra will provide the music.
Each year the dance is given
in honor of the new pledges
as a celebration of the completion of a rush season.

Diamonds-Watches

fELRY
JEWELRY.

Watch and

Jewelry

r

I
I'Or
OPTICAL
SERVICE

Repairing
I

S. Fri»ch,Optician

UNIVERSITY PIAZA
PA. 5415

"ON CAMPUS"

PAGE THREE

Sane Sponsors Folk Sing and Poetry
Reading Friday in Multipurpose Room
This evening at 8:15 in 231 Norton Union, Campus Sane will present “Peace and the Arts,’’ a program of folksongs and poetry related to the arms race and disarmament.

Campus committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, “The program will

show how music and poetry contribute to the cause of peace and at
the same time h? Ip to bring about a
world in which the arts will
Folksingers participating in the flourish.’’ She added that admission
Is free, and everyone is welcome.
program will include Mac Mahoney
of the State University of Buffalo,
Marjory Klatt of State University
College, and Walter Zvaleko and
Florence Baugh of “Folksongs Unlimited,” a local singing group.
Michael S. Levinson, a poet for-'
merly of UB, will give readings of
his own work.
According to Hope Jolley of the

Don't Forget
To
Vote

1963 BUFFALONIAN

IMPORTANT
ANNOUNCEMENT
Printer has extended our deadline by one week
we are therefore able to offer—

Positively the lost time
Copies of 1963 Year Book
Monday thru Friday 11 to 2 P. M.
In Front of Conference Theater

$2.00 Deposit Required

�Fridoy, MorcK 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

ddditoriab

Hr

k

k

Read Platforms, Read This, Think, Then Vote!
Tuesday and Wednesday will present a crisis in student government, for it is then that
new officers and senators for the coming academic year will be elected. Platforms and candidates are on page one and the fight is on. It is now up to the student to make a choice.
Months before the elections were slated The Spectrum was weighing the pros and cons
of endorsing one group over another in the case of a two party contest. Now that this is
the case we find ourselves still pondering the decision. We know and respect candidates running on both slates, and since we recognize them as capable, responsible students we cannot, in all conscience, endorse a straight party vote. For if we did several deserving people
would be neglected.
At the same time in the light of the promises, accusations and platforms we
feel we must comment on several issues. First a quick survey of both platforms reveals a marked similarity. United Students program came out late Monday night,
and Student Alliance folowed late Tuesday night. Out of ten Student Alliance statements, and the twelve US statements, eiqht deal with the same subject.
In the preliminary statement of purpose SA alleges that US has a monopoly of power
and implies that US because of this, has been unable to fulfill the requirements of student
government. It is true that US has a monopoly, but any student can easily see that it was not
the fault of the party that they faced no opposition last year. Despite the one party election, US under president Dick Erb distributed platforms, posters and newsletters in an attempt to educate the student about the aims of the party. With no opposition they could
easily have saved themselves the time and money and made no effort to get student support.
Last year if there were any students who were sincerely interested in serving in student government they could have attempted to organize a second party. In fact if SA was
conceived in idea three years ago why didn’t they oppose US last year? Or interested people
could have run as independents as did John Peckman, Michael Lappin, Lois Reeves, and David
Smith. Student Alliance certainly has no basis for criticism of US on this score; monopoly
was not the fault of US but rather of the apathetic student.
Secondly the Alliance calls for ’dynamic democracy”, yet on one of their founders told this writer that they are out to “get” United Students. If US is run out
and Alliance comes in victorious, will thisbe democracy? No it won’t. It’ll be another
one party rule, but this time with the other party in power.
Now let us look at the Alliance platform. In their first statement they “insist that the
Senate take a more active part in stimulating political organizations on campus by giving financial support to such organizations”. The Senate has done this. Campus Sane has been allotted $400, and the Young Democrats have a budget which is being considered.
In statement five they call for a cooperative cafeteria and bookstore. This is a most
remote possibility to put it mildly. The bookstore is part of the Student-Faculty Association,
and this body will not be superceded by a co-op. This is State property and it is almost impossible that the State would ever allow a cooperative, with the objective of commercial
gain on campus. Even if the State farmed out land it would be highly improbable that they
would grant it to a commercial enterprize.
The cafeteria is also a remote possibility. As a part of the Student-Faculty
Association, all its reserve funds go right back to the association, and its monies are
used fora variety of projects including the dispersion of some of the funds to the
Student Senate, who in turn distributes them to campus organizations in the form of
budget requests.
The Alliance charges that out of the twelve statements in the US platform last year two
have been carried out. This is a gross fallacy. In accordance with last year’s platform US has
expanded its Convocations program; has exposed the ideas of both Ieftest and rightest political groups via the Political Spectrum series; has made known the meaning of the state merger
regarding Greeks, scholarships, and student activities via their NSA chapter and their committee investigations; and has acquired the ice rink for campus use. It will be set up in back
of Tower as soon as plans for its maintenance can be completed.
It has not set up a Senate newsletter to inform the students of the aims, functions,
programs, etc. of the Student Senate mainly because communications committee chairman
Howard Gondree was negligent in his duties. We met with Mr. Gondree and several others
last May when plans for the letter were initiated. After Ken Grossman’s resignation, Mr.
Gondree took on the responsibility. Since that time he has done nothing about the letter, despite the fact that senate committee chairmen have handed him the copy for the letter. Mr.
Gondree resigned from the Senate early this semester, but it seems he has renewed his interest in Student government since he is the Alliance candidate for treasurer.
All in all we believe that US had carried out the principles of its platform of a
year ago, and the Alliance argument that “very few” of these measures were carried
out in an unfair accusation.
We advise students to overlook the voluminous and fallacious arguments, regardless of
their source. Each student must decide for himself after considering the platforms, minus
all the finishing touches, and the candidates. Because we know the following from Alliance
to be responsible, intelligent students we endorse, form University College, David Irwin,
Russell Goldberg, Alan Hoffman. We also endorse the independents Walter Bak, Paul Richie'
Norene Hersch and Jean Lesser.
We ask that you support the US candidates for president, secretary and treasurer and
Michael Lappin for vice-president from S.A. We ask you to remember that a great many
of the students running on the Alliance ticket have had no experience in student government and have probably less interest. We have a progressive, sound student government
now. But a bad choice Tuesday and Wednesday will bring chaos and perhaps undo all that
has been done to date.
Personal friends should make way for qualifications, as each acquaints himself with
the candidate for office and judges the candidates on their ability, dedication, and desire.
You, the student body, must decide. Think it out and make an intelligent decision.
•

*

�

•

*

•

As am

item for our student press-- -rs tfu emsiMei
OPINIOH OF TH’ EARLY CLOSING HOIKS FOR WOMEN?'

lAJe (jet cjCetterd
NUCLEAR WAR
To the Editor
"In other words, only one-tenth
of the world’s population might
be wiped out in a nuclear war.”
—Lawrence Frenkel
"80% of tho world’s population
would survive the war without
genetic effects, even if all nuclear
arms are used.” —Dr. Lefever
It appears as if Armageddon may not be a great deal
more dlsa-sterous than a particularly nasty Labor Day
weekend. However, these two
statements, found In the Feh.
15 edition of the Spectrum,
seem to be lacking in credibil-

of the glorious abstraction,
the “megadeaih.”
Mr. Frenkel is evidently the unknown, and heretofore, unheralded,
father of the neutron bomb. He
has some incredible figures that
supposedly Indicate that the
world’s stockpile contains onefifth of the amount of fissionable
weapons that "w o u 1 d produce
enough fallout to kill one-half of
the world’s inhabitants." .
Unfortunately, in making this
statement he failed to take into
account a few of the otheir effects
that one usually finds commensurate with the detonation of an
atomic device, notably blast and
ity.
combustion.
How can one accurately speak
Bob Oaue
of the destructive force of the
world’s stockpile of nuclear arms
VOTE
when estimates of the Russian
To the Editor,
stockpile are so unreliable? How
I write to you to endorse Robert
does one accurately estimate the
for Arts and Science
amount of fall out produced when Pinkelatein
senator. I have known him for some
this is so dependent upon whether
extremely impressed
the bombs are detonated in the at- time and am
his qualifications. Of far greatmosphere or on the surface, not to with
significance, I feel that he is
speak of the type of bombs used ? er
the type of person who will strive
At any rate, these figures have
endlessly for the betterment of the
that characteristic roundness of
student body.
the “educated guciss,”
I am confident that if the stuDr. Lefever states that 20%
of the world’s population would dents elect Bob to the Student
type of repreperish in an all-out nuclear war Senate, he will be the
be
but neglects to note that those sentative of whom we can all
proud. To those who do not know
nations which would be expected
him personally, may I suggest that
to bear the brunt of the destructhey accept the advice of a fellow
tion, the U. S„ U. S. S. R„ Great
student who knows his qualificaBritain, France, and Germany,
job at hand, and reacontain approximately 18.7% of tions for the
has the capabilities to
the world’s population; the con- lizes that he
perform capably all duties assigned
clusion is obvious.
to him as a member of the Student
Deaths used to be noted by
Senate.
men’s names, then by their
Sincerely,
numbers, now by the percentJacqueline Dunn
age, and next will be the age

There will be a debate between the two party candidates for the major offices Monday
at 1 p.m. in the theater conference room of Norton Union. The debate was previously scheduled for this week but has been called off twice because of the illness

The annual Open House of the
School of Pharmacy will be held
this evening In the Health Sciences
Building between 7 and 10 p.m..

All the laboratories and classrooms will be open with special
exhibits, displays and demonstrations prepared by the student body.
Among the outstanding features to
be presented tonight are the various teats for sugar dibaetes. Us
detection and control; how prescriptions are compounded, how
the different forms of drug dosage
ere manufactured.: tablets, pills.
ointments, elixirs, suppositories and
the like; and how all drugs aro
tested for standard purity and
potency.

In addition, there will be a
demonstration of how corns

drugs, while similar In active
Ingredients, are dissimilar In
the way they are absorbed and

used In the body.
Letters have been sent to all the
secondary schools In Western New
York, as the Pharmacy Open House
has been a very popular feature
among high school students for
many years. In addition, there has
been publicity directed to the general public as it provide? an opportunity for area residents to
understand the complex nature of
drug therapy, see the Intricate activities of the pharmaceutical profession, and visits the campus at
the same time.
In the school’s Model Pharmacy, the application of closed
circuit television to education
at use will be demonstrated.

ouse Tonight

This year’s open house being held
as part of a special feature reEditor.In-Chlet
JOAN R. FLORY
cently begun by the pharmacy col- News Editor. .MARY LOU WILSON
JAMES BAKER
Clrcul Mgr
KAREN SANFORL
lege. Students from the School of Sports Editor
BEV, ROSENOW
office Mgr
Copy Editor .....CHARLES STONE
Pharmacy at the University of ToAdvertising
Mgr
LARRY
SINGER
ED BRANDI
Mgr
Business
WM. SIEMERINti
Editorial Ad
THOMAS HAENLE, JR.
ronto, participating in the first Pin Ad
David Irwin
LAYOUT EDITOR
international pharmacy student exchange. will be guests of the BufGENERAL STAFF: Victoria Bugelskl, Elaine Barron, Joey Elm, Pat Muslai
falo students tonight and tomor- Shea,
Marfurt, Jar
Charles Lippman, Fred Apple, Ro. ky Versace, Fran
row, as a follow-up to a similar Lawrence Frenkel, Peter Ostsrow, Lorna Wallach; Laura Zimmerman, Kath:
Marcia Cooper, Lillian Williams, Arnie Mazur, Cathy McHugh
visit to Canada by a Buffalo group Sommers,
Colleen Long, Marcia Orszulak, Camille LoBrocco. Donald Irwin, AInn Hun
earlier this year.
Barbara Goldwater, Helen Chapeli, Pat Lawner, Sue Jossph, Loi
man.
Hessinger, Mike Sullano, Ron Kaminski and John Knlpler.
While there is much more that PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Joe! Havens. Russell Goldberg and Dick Fosor.
could be said about tonight’s activities In the School of Pharmacy,
there is far more to be seen. The
•eel as second (Mass matter .Febrtijjiry 9, 19M.
public Is invited: there are free
it Office at Buffalo, N. T., unde* the Act of March
refreshments' for all, but mostly,
Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of
1819.
3.
%
age provided for In Section 1103. Act of October 8. 191
it promises to be an evening which
VO,
authorized February 9. I95i
year, circulation #600. ■
Subscription
.
will be both informative and ent’U
9U.VV
83.00 per
V '
lm\^
Represented for national advertising by National A«
tertainin
PRESS
vertlslnff Service. In«.. 420 Madison Ave.. New York. N V
—

..

•

L

School of Pharmacy Open

THE SPECTRUM
University of New York al
The official student newspaper of the State
Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus Buffalo 11.
September to the last week
N Y Published weekly from the first week of
In' April, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter.

�*J)onic

PAGE Five

SPECTRUM

Fridov, Morch 1, 1963

C^ofumn

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE MAZUR

sorority extends congratulations to their hew
looking forward to PanHel Ball tonight.
Conalso in order for Kathy Tucker, the newly-elected

Alpha Gamma
pledges. They are

Elections for the Student Senate
are scheduled to be held next week.
gratulatiotis are
The basis upon which leaders of
President.
student government will be chosen
The members of APD wish to congratulate the recently elected
should be given considerable atofficers of the Executive Committee, headed by president Ron Commune.
by every enrolled student.
Brother Gerald Marchand is also to be congratulated on his marriage tention
last Saturday.

Firstly, what is student govern

Alpha Phi Omega holds its brother and pledge beer stag tomorrow ment?
Is student government
night at Bosella’s. The brothers extend full support to the Student merely a debative body for discusAlliance Party and their presidential candidate Terry Agate in the sion of what color balloons will be
coming senatorial campaign. APO thanks the sisters of Chi Omega
hung at the next dance ? Of course
for their assistance in ushering for mid-year commencement.
Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity proudly captured the Winter Olympics
overall trophy, Winter Weekend, by winning the winter football game
and sled race, along with the skiing event. Tonight there will be
a "Hermie party” at Bosella’s. Tomorrow night the Initiation dinnerdance will be held at the Hotel Peter Stuyvesant. Thanks go to rush
chairman Mike Terlechy lor the successful Rush Dinner held at
Eduardo’s last Monday.
The Beta Phi Sigma Sweetheart Dance was held at the Hotel Westbrook Feb. 16. A Hard Liquor Stag was held Feb. 21, and the Formal
Rush Dinner at the Hotel Lenox followed on Feb. 22. All of these
affairs were very successful. Pharmacy Open-House is held tonight
with everyone invited to see the Beta Phi Sigma displays. The
Brothers will attend a party that follows, held by the Pharmacy
School.
The sisters are
Chi Omega welcomes its new pledge class.
happily anticipating PanHel Ball and their cocktail party at Linda
Kirtland’s. Ushering at last Friday’s Commencement was enjoyed
by all. Best wishes to JJawn Henry. Chi Omega candidate for Sigma
Phi Epsilon’s Queen of Hearts.
Gamma Phi thanks the sisters of Theta Chi for last Friday’s
social. Dr. Plesur was guest speaker at Thursday’s Rush Dinner, held
at the Continental Inn.
The brothers will support Sigma Phi Epsilon’s Queen of Hearts Dance this weekend.
The members of Kappa Psi congratulate newly elected officers
of the pledge class. Last week the brothers attended a bachelor
Many of themembers will participate in
party at Chestnut Ridge.
A group of pharmacy
the Pharmacy School Open-House tonight.
students from the University of Toronto will be hosted for the
weekend by brothers who were guests of the Toronto students

earlier this year.

Lambda Kappa Sigma, professional pharmaceutical sorority, welcomes two pledges this semester. Pledges joined the sisters at a
bowling party Thursday night.
The tratres of Phi Epsilon Pi congratulate Dale Kllneman on beThe new Spring pledge class is also
coming an honorary Phi Ep.
congratulated, and initiation will be held tonight at 7:00. With the
the old
excellent pledge class, the fratres are continuing to quote
Ep.”
philosopher who said, "this will be a banner year for Phi
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity holds a party tomorrow night at SchilCongratulations to Brother Lou Peterson on his
ler Restaurant.
marriagd last Saturday. An enjoyable time was had by all at the
party given by Ray Penman last Saturday.
Phi Lambda Delta fraternity congratulates its fine group of
Thanks go to
pledges and wishes them best of luck in pledging.
the brothers who worked for the Heart Fund last Sunday.
Phi Sigma Sigma sorority congratulates Its new pledge class
and wishes them best of luck in their coming pledge period. The
sisters are all eagerly awaiting tonight’s Panhellenic Ball at which
Phi Slg’s
pledgee and sisters alike will share in a gala evening.
philanthropy project Is now under way.
The brothers of Rho Pi Phi will participate in tonight's Pharmacy School Open-House. Guided tours are being offered to all
those attending the function. The brothers will have a display on
the second floor. The Founder’s Day Party was a huge success.
Congratulations to Sammy's newly inducted pledge class.
Best
of luck to those fratres and pledges who are running for Student
Senate positions on the Student Alliance ticket.
Congratulations
are also in order tor Winter Weekend king Richie Goidbaum, and
to the SAM bowling team for excellent performance during the

Student government is a vital force in determining the direction in which our campus community will go.

not.

There are some who criticize
Left to right: Ann Fitzsimmons, Dawn Henry, Sandy Nielson.
Linda Lesser, Marlene Watson, Ann Mllnte.
student government in general, arguing that it is simply a tool for
more efficient administrative control. No matter, on this campus
we are fortunate to have sufficient
autonomy in conducting our own
activities and programs. And because these activities directly conSigma Phi Epsilon will hold Its Eps as guests of the Fraternity,
cern the student body, student gov- ninth annual Queen of Hearts Ball
As part of the tradition of this
ernment is significant and proper from 9 o’clock p.m. to 1 o’clock a.m. dance, Sigma Phi Epsilon, through
leadership is important.
in the Crystal Ballroom of the Hotel a process of judging and voting
Saturday night. The music selects a young lady from a camIn an article entitled “Privatism Buffalo,
provided by the pus sorority that will represent it
and Responsibility in the American this year will be
noteworthy orchestra of Irv Shire, as its “Queen of Hearts” throughStudent” students are urged to
priced at $3.00 per couple out the following year. This year’s
participate “in legitimate social Tickets
are available from any brother of candidates are; Merlene Watson
and political activities. He should
Sig Ep.
(Alpha Gamma Delta), Ann Fitzbe an active, informed, responsisimmons (Sigma Kappa), Sandy
ble participant in the democratic
The Queen of Hearts Ball, an an- Nielsen (Theta Chi), Linda Lesslife of the campus, local, state, na- nual highlight in the social sphere
ner (Sigma Delta Tau), Dawn
tional, and international communi- on the University of Buffalo cam- Henry (Chi Omega), and Ann
ties.” If the overall student body pus, has been a tradition with the
Miinte (Phi Sigma Sigma).
is different, uninvolved in social Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity since
and political action, at the very its inauguration in 1954. Each year
In conjunction with the Queen of
least, the preferable attitudes Sig Ep endeavors to bring together Hearts Ball, the Sig Eps will also
should be exhibited by Senate the brotherhood past and present conduct its traditional Parent Day
leaders.
as well as the parents of the Sig the afternoon of the dance.

Sig Ep to Hold Queen of
Hearts Ball Tomorrow Night

However, even in the limited
areas in which most leaders act,
on the local campus level, there
needs to be a committment to

widen the intellectual activities of

the university and wrest the individual student from his lethargic,
inner-directed world. If it is the
duty of the student body President
to introduce guest lecturers at convocation programs, it is also his
duty to present stimulating programs.
The success of student government depends upon the in-

their degree of understanding of the
purposes of student government and their ability to plan
and execute a program which
is consanant with these purposes.
dividuals involved

—

UB's Annual Welcome Day
Is Scheduled for April 6

Mock college classes will
staged for 1500 high school

bo discuss the

is sincerely interested in student
government; for the possibility of
Sigma Delta Tau sorority welcomed live new sisters, with best obtaining honor and status as an
pledge award going to Sue Mindall. Linda Lessner was chosen as office-rolder is alluring to many
SDT’s candidate for Slg Ep Queen of Hearts Dance.
The new ambitious students.
pledges are welcomed, and all are looking forward to PanHel
tonight.
Marge Husln planned the cocktail party to be held
before the Ball. Best of luck to Norene Hersch who is running

fors and their parents from Erie

Parents will meet separately with
Niagara Counties at UB on
6. the university’s annual faculty members who will speak
on study habits, college financing,
Welcome Day

and

April

etc.

The mock classes, In the con.
Meanwhile, the high school Jun.
ference theater In Norton Union, will cap a day of open, lore will have the option of attendhouse
activities
presented
to ing as many as three 20-minute
give the prospective student a Information programs presented by
various divisions and departments
picture of UB.
of the university.
Th: program will begin at

9 a.m. with a welcoming ad.
dress from President Clifford
C. Furnas In the multipurpose

INSANITY

THE LAW AND YOU

The present Student Senate has
by Ronald
done a fine job. The variety of
Much is heard about criminal
programs offered, the expansoin of
tor Education Senator.
activities and participation, and defendants pleading
temporary
Sigma Kappa congratulates Mickey Campbell on receiving best the broadening of the scope of stupledge award, and Cheryl Lang on receiving the scholarship and dent government on this campus is Insanity. There are several tests,
best scrapbook award. Congratulations also go to the new Initiates. but a step in the right direction among the states in determining
Ail Sig Kaps are looking forward to the Panhellenic Ball this eve- toward which student government criminal insanity. The foremost

Ball

A welcome is extended from the sisters to the new initiates
and new pledges.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity extends congratulations to Brother
Dennis Kelso, newly elected President. The brothers will be hosts
this Saturday afternoon to the parents in the second annual Parent’s
Day Program. The affair will be held In the Dorothy Haas Lounge. Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold its ninth annual Queen of Hearts Ball
tomorrow night from 9-1 in the Crystal Room of the Hotel Buffalo.
Tickets may be purchased from any brother or at the door. Music
will be provided by Irv Shire.,
Tau Kappa Epsilon welcomes their spring pledge class, which
will be guided by pledge trainer, Bob Keller.
Teke has made arrangements with Mann’s 300 Club for "Greek Only" Friday afternoon TGIF’s. Tables will be set up in the top floor hall, and music
will be supplied. Admission is by pin or membership card only.
Theta Chi fraternity congratulates its five new, Initiates and
thanks Theta Chi sorority and Gamma Phi fraternity for the very
enjoyable social last Friday.
The sisters of Theta Chi Sorority wish to thank the brothers of
Gamma Phi and Theta Chi fraternities tor the great social last Friday. They thank the ru§hees"for making the Rush Dinner last Monday very successful. Congratulations to the new pledge class. The
sisters ate. looking forward to PanHel Ball tonight which will be
Preceded by a cocktail party at the home of sister Mary Aversano.
The brothers of Arnold Air Soci*ty and the members of Angel
Flight are looking forward to the forthcoming social now being
Dan Christman for providing the atmosphere.

student

Open house In each of the divisions will follow at 1 p.m. The
mock classes, to be presented by
room.
Merely to vote next week is not
Dr. Milton Plesur, assistant dean
A panel discussion will follow, of the university college, and Dr.
enough. One must look closely at
the issues which divide the candi- presented by UB students under Charles H. Ebert, associate profesdates and the programs proposed the direction of Admissions Coun- sor of geology and geography, will
for next year. As for the indi- selor Walter N. Kunz. They will begin at the same time.
vidual candidate, We must ascertain whether or not the candidate

year.

ning.

problems of

Jun- life,

Kaminski
closest

to

modern

concepts

of

mental Impairment is the "Dur.
ham Rule," adopted In 1954 In
Washington, D, C., and limited
solely to that jurisdiction. Simply
is advancing. The forthcoming and New York state test is called stated, a defendant Is not criminelection is a challenge to the stu- the
M’Naughte rule and it deter- ally responsible if his unlawful
dent body to choose candidates who
mines the responsibility of a de- act Is the product of mental
will continue this trend.
fendant for his criminal act.
disease or defect.
In accordance with the act,
The criminal law requires that
the
labordefendant
was
All financial aid applications
the defendant be judged wholly
tor 63-64 must be returned to
of
mind
under
such
disease
ing
the office of financial aid, 233
sane or wholly insane. When the
and defective reasoning that he
Hayes Hall not later than this
did not know the nature and Issue of Insanity Is raised, the
afternoon.
quality of the act, or, if he did prosecution has the burden of
know it, he did not know that proving beyond
a reasonable
what he was doing was wrong. doubt that the accused was sane
at the time of his criminal act.
In 16 states the legal test
of Insanity Is expanded to InThe trail of an Insane defendant
clude an "Irrreslstible impulse."
It must be proven that alIs a violation of due process of
though the defendant knew the
law. It must be shown that he
nature and wrongfulness of his
is able to understand the nature
exincapable
he
of
act,
was
and object of the trail and that
governing
the
normal
ercising
he is able to make a reasonable
of
the
so
as
to
will
power
and rational defense. The senthe
control
his
actions
under
9 4
tencing or execution of a mencompulsion of an Insane imtally unfit defendant after trail
pulse to act.
Is prohibited as cruel and un.
The legal test which comes usual punishment.

Jo

/

«

�(JSoard

Spectrum
Music Committee
Anyone interested in joining the
music committee of Union Board
may attend a meeting Monday at
3:15 in room 215 of Norton Union,
or call Gerrie Mroszczak at TR 64646.

Photography Club

Mr. Donald Nicholas, of the University's art department will meet
with the photo club this afternoon
at 4 p.m. in room 334 of Norton
Union, He will participate in a
discussion on composition and texture. Everyone is welcome.
Tomorrow the club will travel
to Glenwood Acres. Details will be
discussed at the meeting.
Social Welfare
Social Welfare club will
meet Monday. The program will
center around a medical social
worker. The meeting will take
place in Norton 330 at 4 p.m.
Anthropology Club
Dr, Marvin Opler, professor of
social psychology will speak on
"Studies of Japanese Cultural Revivalism" at 8:30 p.m. in Norton
335 Monday. Coffee will be served
following the talk.
At tho bi-weekly meeting Wednesday at 1 p.m. in Foster 205,
Mrs, Elizabeth Krakauer will read
her paper on “Arctic Hysteria and
Shamanism.”
The

Fine Arts. The Participation Day
committee is. looking for talented
students in many different fields of
Pine Arts be it modern of classical.

The idea behind this program is
the recognition of student talent on
our campus. It is expected that
enough student interest will be
aroused to make this program successful in order that it may became

The Duo Makanowizky, piano
and violin chamber ensemble, performed last Monday, Feb. 25, at
Baird Hall. They will be on campus until March 2, when they
will give their second and final
concert here. This concert will also
bu given at Baird Hall, at 8:30
p.m. Admission is free and all
students are invited to attend.
-

Gerald Relnagel, Buffalo choir
director and conductor, announces
that two openings in each part
(soprano, alto, tenor, and bass
are now available in the Reinagel
Singers, a Buffalo choral group.
Mr. Reinagel is expanding his
group for a weekly radio program
on WBEN, and for several short
concert tours. UB students who
At Monday’s concert, thei duo
are interested in singing with the
performed works of Schumann,
group should contact Mr. Reinagel Stravinsky, Webern, Schoenberg,
for an audition, telephone TR 3- and Debussy. They played with
3455,
perfect enselmble. and complete
control. Pianist Noel Lee deWomen’s Chorale
monstrated clean, smooth phrasand
Tonight, beginning at 8:30, the ing, excellent dynamics,
UB Women's Chorale will be virtuoso technique. Violinist Paul
joined by the Case Institute of Makanowitzky likewise showed a
Technojbgy Glee Club in a con- wide range and control of dynam_
cert ro be given in the Norton ics, clear phrasing, and rich violin
Multi-Purpose room. Together, the tone. His technique, especially in
ensemble will sing the Beethoven the contemporary works, was imMass in C, Various other, selec- peccable.
tions will be sung, and students
The outstanding feature of the
will be admitted free.
duo is their performance as an
ensemble, with perfect coordination.
Psychology Club
perform as a duet, not as a
There will be a meeting of the They
with a piano accomPsychology Club this afternoon at v.olinst
outstand3 p.m. in Townsend 204. Dr. Sil- panist. Each one is an
ing soloist in his own right.
verman of the psychology departThroughout Europe, they were
ment will speak on "Current
acclaimed as a "Duo PhenomomTrends in Gerontology.” All maenon". Thqy are the only first
jors and prospective majors are
class violin and piano duo perforinvited to attend.
ming today. In 1959, they were
awarded the "Grand Prix du
Disque” for their recording of
Bach sonatas.
an annual event.
the Duo
Those interested in auditioning At tomorrow’s concert,
may pick up application blanks at Leo-Makanowitzky will perform
any time in Baird, the Art School works of Beethoven, Brahms, and
office in Foster, the Drama and Bartok,
Speech office in Crosby, at the
candycounter, and 225 Norton.
There will be a general meeting of
all applicants March 19 at 4.00 in
the theater conference room to discuss the schedule for auditions.
Auditions will be held the week of
March 25.
The School of Pharmacy Alumn; Association will sponsor the
You’d better pick up the audi- annual
Pharmacy
Refresher
tion applications immediately for Course,
an event previously sponthere are only a limited number
sored by Beta Phi Sigma Alumni

available. All interested students
should attend this meeting. Be sure
and pick up applications so that
you can be there.

Dr. Paul Diesing and Dr. Francis College, and consultant at StromD. Parker have been appointed to berg Carlson Company.
the faculty of the College of Arts
He received his A.B. at Middleand Sciences here effective Sept. 1. bury College, M.A. at Boston University, and Ph.D. at Case InDr. Diesing, visiting lecturer
stitute of Technology.

at the University of Colorado
for 1962-63, will be associate
professor of philosophy; Dr.
Parker, professor of mathematics at the University of Alaska
since 1957, will be visiting pro-

He is a member of the American
Mathematical Society, Mathematical Association of America, American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Association of University Professors, and
New York Academy of Science.
fessor of mathematics.
He was elected to Sigma Xi and Pi
Having served as instructor and Mu Epsilon honorary societies.
assistant professor at the University of Illinois, 1962-62, and as
lecturer at the University of Chicago, 1950-62, Dr. Liesing’s field
of specialization is ethics and social

i

philosophy.

i

Dr. Parker’s professional experience includes serving as instructor
at Cranbrook School, Stanton Military Academy, and Montclair Academy. He was research associate at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, instructor at Case Institute of Technology, part-time lecturer at Western Reserve University, assistant professor at St
Lawrence University, associate professor and professor at Clarkson

Junior Year
in
New York

Dr. Jaffee Receives Grant
To Continue Heart Study
Research

experiments

seeking

palgn

against

birth

defects.

Initiating his investigation last
to learn how heart defects are
caused will continue here, under year, Dr. Jaffee worked first with
a renewed one-year grant of plicated in structure than those

$10,751 from The National Foundation —March of Dimes.
The project, delving into the
mysteries of how the action of
the blood stream in the young
embryo contributes to the developement of the heart, is under
the direction of Dr. Oscar C.
Jaffee, assistant professor of bioligy. In his experiments and observations to date Dr. Jaffee has
added to medical science’s understanding of the steps by which
a normal heart is formed. Also,
by diverting the blood flow in the
embryo from its reglar channels,
he has produced a variety of heart
defects.
These suggest how certain
heart anomalies found in human infants at birth may be
caused. Dr. Jaffee’s studies
are supported by The National
Foundation—March of Dimes
as part of its nationwide cam-

of

chicks.

Tadpoles

also

atlons along paths he has already
opened up.
He will apply his
technique of ligation
or tying
off
to some of the larger blood
vessels. For the first time he will
raise the experimental chick embryos through hatching. As has
already been done with frog embryos, he will remove areas containing blood vessels from chick
embryos before circulation has es.
tablished itself.
Studies of cellular changes in
the developing hearts, under both
normal and experimental conditions, are scheduled, and investigations into detects of the upper
heart chambers will be carried
forward. Dr. Jaffee will also ex.
pand on the work already begun to
study heart development by means
of transparent, plastic scale models.
—

—

Placement Office Releases
Schedule for Coming Week

.

Vote for BOB

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8 lbs.

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Junior Year Program
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New York 3. N.Y.
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—

from a calling card to a newspaper.

BUFFALO STANDARD PRINTING CORP.
1335 E. DELAVAN AVE,

|

*

\

oKblei-

AT THE

One-Stop Service Center
{

were

early subjects of experiment.
Dr. Jaffee plans further expior.

March 4
Summer positions for juniors,
International Milling Company; seniors and masters candidates in
Seeking Liberal Arts and Bus. Ad.
all major fields with Eli Lilly and
majors.
The location is IndianE. J. Reynolds Tobacco Com- Company.
apolis, Indiana. Applications art
pany: Seeking Bus. Ad. majors.
Worcester Telegram, Evening available in the placement office.
Gazette Sunday Telegram: SeekSummer positions available for
ing Liberal Arts majors.
March 6
student assistants with the Social
Bausch &amp; Lomb, Incorporated: Security Administration. InterestSeeking Math, Physics, EE, IE, ed students who have completed
ME, Accounting and Bus. Ad.
their junior year may become elimajors.
gible
by taking the Federal ServSeekJ. J. Newberry Company:
ice Entrance Examination. Em.
ing Bus. Ad. majors.
Manufacturers &amp; Traders Trust ploymeht will be in the area of
Company; Seeking Accounting, western New York cities. AppliBus. Ad., and Liberal Arts ma- cations available in the placement
office.
jors.
New York Central System:
Summer opening for a junior
Seeking Math, CE, EE, IE, ME,
electrical engineer with Kimberlyand Bus. Ad. majors.
Fraternity,
Clark in Niagara Falls. Interviews
March 7
will be scheduled March 18, in the
Erie Electronics Division of Erie
Lectures will be given on sucplacement office. Call 831-3311 for
cessive Tuesdays and Wednedays, Resistor Corporation: Seeking an appointment.
beginning this week in Room 134. Chemistry, Math, EE, IE, and ME
The same lectures will be offered majors.
Iroquois Gas Corporation: Seek,
accommoboth nights in order
date members whose schedules ing CE, EE, IE, and ME majors.
New York State Department of
may conflict.
Public Works: Seeking CE majors.
U. S. Naval Research LaboraThe lectures, which are to continue through March, will coyer tory: Seeking Chemistry, Math,
the following topics: "Anti-Hyper- Physics, CE, EE, and ME majors.
Summer Employment
tensives,” by Dr. Nathan Back,
Opportunities
Tuesday and Wednesday "TranMarch 7, the United States Naquilizers,” by Dr. Nathan Back,
March 12 and 13; “Generic Names val Research Laboratory will be
and Therapeutic Efficacy,” by Dr. on campus to talk with engineerEino Nelson, March 19 and 20; ing, physics, mathematics and
"Counter Products,” by Prof. chemistry majors who are inter,
Arthur H. Martin, March 26 and osted in summer employment in
the Federal Services. There will
21
be a meeting for all interested
The registration fee for the students Thursday at 4:00 in room
1963 Pharmacy Refresher course 330
Norton.
is $5.00.

A

An unusual one-year
college program

Previous to receiving an MA

and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, Dr. Diesing attended Concordia Teachers College, Illinois.

March 1, 1963

Pharmacy School
Presents Course

Arts and Sciences Presents
New Fall Faculty Appointees

He is author of Reason in
Society; Five Types of Decisions
and Their Social Conditions, published in 1962, and is presently
working on Readings in the Methodology of the Social Sciences.

Piano, Violin Duo
Returns Tomorrow
BY VICTORIA BCGELSKI

Reinagel Singers

Spring Arts Festi al Needs Talent
Are you a student with some talent? If so, you may be interested in
Student Participation Day to be
held during Spring Arts Festival.
Tuesday, April 16, the fine talent
of our campus will be blended into
a program which offers music,
dance, interpretive reading and
any other means of expression
within the general category of

Fridi

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

SERVICE

TX 3-0913

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QUALITY

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Open 9A.M.-9P. M.

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�PAGE SEVEN

SPEC T RUM

Friday, March 1, 1963

Registration Starts Monday View of Mentally
Retarded- Carkuff
Advisement
and registration for schedule

next semester {September, 1963)
will begin Monday, for all Uni.
versity College

students.

March 4-8
March 18-22
March 25-29
April 1-5
April 8-12
April 15-19
April 22.26

....

B, O, Y
H, F, I
C, D, U
G, A, E

Students will make appointments with the University College
W. L. Q
receptionist in Diefendort 114 from
M, J,
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 pjn., Monday
K, P, Z
through Friday, at least one.week
April 29-May 3
S
May 6-10
N, T, V, P.
in advance of the time they are
scheduled to plan their programs
Prompt compliance with the
for next semester and register for
regulations established for regiscourses.
tration for the fall semester will
Students, both freshmen and make it more likely that you will
sophomores, will register accordb( able to get the courses and Secing to the following alphabetical tions that you want.
....

Quintet

Present Concert
On Saturday in Butler Aud.
to

A February graduate with a
Ph.D. in psychology from the State
University of New York at Buffalo suggests that exposure to the
public schools and other experiences of normal children may
be the best method of achieving
maximum functional intelligence in

retarded children.
Robert R. Carkhuff of 45 Beiter
Walk, Buffalo, draws this hypothesis from his doctoral dissertation
which was concerned with characteristics distinguishing mental defectives from normals in drawing

tasks.

According to Dr. Carkhuff, almost all of the research leading to
the concept of rigidity as a charac-

teristic' of the intellectual functioning of the mentally retarded
has been done with institutionalized children. “Yet,” he points out,
“the overwhelming majority of
mental retardates live at home and
many attend public schools. While
they often function in special
classes, they are exposed to experiences similar to those of other
children in their day-to-day living."
One of the first to go into public
schools to undertake studies of
such children. Dr. Carkhuff conducted his research in the school

Students and staff enjoy facilities of Crafts Shop.

Projects for Spare Time
Provided by Craft Program

BY LAURA ZIMMERMAN
There are frequently many comThe New York Brass Quintet,
plaints heard on campus about
America and will make their
an ensemble of two trumpets,
first European tour later this
the lack of facilities provided for
trench horn, trombone and tuba,
the development of creative interspring.
ests. Those with spare time arc
will give a concert next SaturOne of the problems of a brass
day, at 8:30 p.m. in Butler Audioften at a loss for a useful way to
fill a free hour or two.
torium of Capen Hall. General ensemble is the small amount of
admission is $1.50; students will literature available to it. The
The new craft program is now
Quintet is responsible for much
helping to solve these problems by
be admitted free of charge.
of the current Interest in brass
sponsoring diversified projects open
Robert Nagel, first trumpet, is literature. They have done much
to all those with a desire to learn
the director of the group, which research and have uncovered many systems of Kenmore, Lancaster,
a craft. It offers a unique chance
was formed in 1954. The other pre-twentieth-century works, as Lockport, North Tonawanda, Tona- to originate, design
and create
Williamsville.
He
performers are Ted Weis, trumpet; well as promoting a large number wanda and
found that in the school environ- within a wide range of specific
Raymond Aionge, French horn; of
new contemporary works.
ment, the retardates exhibited an workshops.
John Swallow, trombone; and
Participants are able to enjoy
to vary their performances
ability
Harvey Phillips, tuba. Each memThe program here will be all
their work as well as seeing a
to
drawing
tasks
and
make
in
er is a soloist in his own right, contemporary
music,
including
adaptations for the sake of achiev- finished product at the same time.
and all have participated in many works of Holmbee, Jones, Arnold,
ing a given end. He also deter- No special talent is needed. All
orchestras in the East.
Schuller, Bozza, and Francis Poul- mined that
a group of “normal” those interested can join and work
enc.
children of the same chronological on any preferred project.
Ths New York Brass QuinThe craft program opened
tet Is the only permanent
The Quintet records for Golden age produced results significantly
regularly at the beginning of
brass ensemble In the world.
Crest, and gives many workshops different from the retarded. Likechronologically younger northe semester and there is now
They are
currently
giving
In schools, colleges and univer- wise,
mal children exhibited a capacity
pre-registration for specific
concerts throughout North
sities throughout the coutry.
greater than the retardates to vary
areas which will hold scheduled
their performances. “There are
workshops. This plan will redifferences in the productivity of
sult In group lessons and inthe three groups,” he says, “but
structions, and a possible fee
these differences are relative.”
may be charged depending on
Dr. Carkhuff thus feels that the
the circumstances.
retarded child must be viewed as
Some of the projects available
an individual and not in terms of
Cap and Gown, senior women’s
lean studies program In Turthe stereotyped views of rigidity. to those registered at this time include jewelry, chess sets, mosaic
honorary society, will entertain
key. Another guest directed
His findings further suggest that
table tops, lamp bases, sculpture,
shaped
by
retardates
are
and
reinvited junior women with a 1.5
discussion
leader was Dr.
in picture matting, framing, wood
spond
to
their
environment
overall average at a tea Sunday
Charles Ebert, who centered
much the same way as normal carving, set of Chinese tea cups,
afternoon. The juniors are being
conversation on religion.
children.
1 and textile printing (silk screening).
considered as prospective memDean Jeannette Scudder, one of ������������������������
There is also a complete ceramics
bers of the society, which will
the advisors to Cap and Gown
shop which includes such equiptap next year’s class at the Honopened her home for a dinner
ment as the potter's wheel, kilns,
ors Banquet in May. Cap aud meeting in
BAILEY ot KENSINGTON
when the
ball mell and tools for silversmithTF 3-8216
Gown members are chosen on the girls
ing, graphic arts, leather work and
discussed problems of womenameling.
basis of outstanding character, en students at the University.
The program is supervised
scholarship, leadership, and serv- Cap and Gowns' other advisors are
by Mrs. Irene Lahr, assistant
ice to the University.
Dorothy M. Haas and Mrs. Dorocoordinator in charge of arts
and crafts. She works with the
This year’s Cap and Gown class, thy Simon.
A Powerful and Compelling Film
student committee of Union
besides contributing to the ac"The Loneliness of the
The members of Cap and Gown
board headed by Carol Templetivities of the campus on an in- participated in
Long-Distance
Runner"
a series of panel
dividual basis, has been an active
Michael Redgrave
Tom Courtenay
discussions as part of the FreshAll students are eligible to regforce as a group. Finding a muister upon presentation of I.D,
tually acceptable meeting for Its man Women’s Forum, under the
cards and there Is no fee for the
ten active members was the big- topic, “Problems Freshmen Face
SNEAK PREVIEW
use of the shop or tools. Any UniSATURDAY 8:30
gest initial chore, but the girls in the Campus Community.” The
versity faculty or staff member
Enjoy ono of our Outstanding
have met periodically for business girls also served as ushers at
Future Attractions.
may register by paying a $3 fee.
meetings and for special functions. the Marc et Andre concert durAlthough participants must furnish
ing Dedication Week.
So far, the group has held
their own supplies, many of the
STUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
several dinner meetings to
Durlng the remainder of the ������������������������ necessary materials may be seexchange ideas among themsemester, Cap and Gown hopes to
selvss and their Invited
have Several more meetings with ��������������������■A**
guests. In October, Dr. Lyles
guest discussion leaders, help the
Glazier was the guest at dinUniversity
another service
in
Boll &amp; Chain Twist
ner, after which he showed
project, present the
Freshman
and Limbo at
slides and described some of
Ring award, and select the Cap
his experiences as a visiting
and Gown class of 1964 to carry
CHICK GARDINO'S
professor setting up an Amer1334 BROADWAY
on the ideals of the society.

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Also available to members is
an excellent reference library with
regard to the craft area. All interested parties may go to the/
crafts shop, 9 basement of Norton
Union. Hours for operation are:
Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Wednesday, 3 to 10 p.m.; Thursday,
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Friday, 1 to 5
p.m.; Saturday. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

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�Fridoy, March 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

l^seiigioaS

Cites
Dr. Spangler Awarded Grant Chancellor
Industrial Needs
To Study Biological Clocks'

“Biological clocks,” the periodic
bebavior of certain plants and anlmals, will be studied by Dr. Robert
A. Spangler, research associate in
biophysics here, under a grant
from the American Heart Assocltion
Dr. Spangler was recently awarded
an advanced research fellowship
from the Association for a period
of two years. Officially, his study
will continue the exploration of
"chemical kinetic systems and their
potential significance to biological
systems"

Dr. Spangler's work arises
from the observation that cer.
tain plants and animals show
cyclical or periodic behavior.
He cited the example of the
bean plant whose leaves droop
and perk up at regular Intervals both In the field and under
controlled laboratory conditions.
The theory is, that there is some
built-in mechanism which causes
this behavior: however, the actual
mechanism is yet to he found. One
possible explanation is that the cyclical behavior results from the relationship of a group of chemical
reactions occurring in the organism, and this is the hypothesis
upon which Dr. Spangler's invest!,
galions will be based.
Tied in with this phenomenon,
Dr. Spangler feels, is the behavior
of bees which can travel miles
from the hives and still find their
way back. This instinctive navigation la based on the position of the
sun, apparently with some built-in
sense of time to allow correction
for the changing position of the
sun with the passage of time. Proof
of this theory has been suggested
by moving beee several hundred
miles from the hive under cover,
and then releasing them. Because
the distance has changed the relative relationship of earth and sun,
the bees remain confused for some
time before re-orienting themselves.
In higher animals "biological
clock" as It is popularly dubbed,
manifests Itself as cyclical behavior In heart rate, temperature, or In the case of plants,
by the rate of photosynthesis.
“This same cyclical tendency can
sometimes be observed in “single

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, president
of UB, will speak on “The Na-

Spangler observes. AlNewman Club
hastens to emphasize tion’s Industrial Research Needs”
There will be a Catholic Students’
Farmingdale
gathinterested
at
the
in
Thursday
that he is only
Retreat at Our Lady of Lourdes
ering more data about the mechan- Graduate Center of Polytechnic In- Church, Main at Best, March 4-6,
Brooklyn.
of
biological clock, and is not stitute
sms
beginning at 7:30 each evening. All
welcome to
exploring any practical applicaGov. Nelson A. Rockefeller will Catholic students are
tions, Dr. Spangler will speculate be the principal speaker at the attend. Transportation will be proon some of the implications of its conference on “Research and De- vided. Moderators will be Father
Streng (UB), Father Dye (Bufstudy.

cells,”

Dr.

though he

'

"With space getting constant attention these days, it is interestinE t0 note that people who have
maintained this regular cycle of
variation in speed of heartbeat,
rise and fal1 of temperature and
Wood pressure, and other cyclical
behavior, were found to keep better track of time when living in
artificial space capsules. They also
seemed to be better able to perf”™ tasks and adjust to the
capsule than those who lost d.stinct cyclical manifestations. Possibly f" rther experiments will
demonstrate that those who main‘“I" 24-hour physical rhythms will
be better adapted to the rigors of
space flight
“Study of biological clocks
may also, sometime in the future, shed new light on cellular
reproduction. For example, little is known about what actually triggers each individual
c si I to reproduce or what goes
wrong with its chemistry to
cause It to reproduce abnormally.

“Another valuable result might
be the insight which such investigations will allow into chemical
control systems which regulate the
function of the cell.” He defined
a chemical control system as the
chemical circuitry of the body;
certain enzymes functioning in
certain ways at certain times, to
trigger the release of other enzymes for the performance of
various body functions.
“The charting of the dynamic
characteristics of these chemical
reactions is extremely complex,
and we are highly dependent on
analog and digital computers to
assist in this research,” he pointed

out.
Dr. Spangler Is a graduate of
Harvard University and the Harvard Medical School.

Case Men's Glee Club, UB Women's
Chorale to Give Concert This Evening
A joint concert of the Case Institute of Technology Men’s Glee
Club and the UB Women’s Chorale
will be held this evening in the
multi-purpose room of Norton

and Chorale.

Together they will
perform the Kyrie and Gloria of
the Mass in C by Beethoven.
Soloists for this selection are;
Jean Hoffman, Marlene Badger,

Hall.
Samuel Morneweck and Clive HohThe Case Men’s Glee Club, un- berger.
Admission for the concert is
der the direction of Dr. Raymond
Wilding-White, Kulas Assistant free.
Professor of Music, is on tour
from Cleveland, Ohio. They will
also be performing at Wells College this Saturday.
The program will include individual selections by the Glee Club

Vole for BOB

FINKELSTEIN
A

&amp;

S SENATOR

velopment

—

the Future of Long

Island,”

Long Island industrialists, scientists and political figures will meet
at the center for a regional conference of the Advisory Council for
the Advancement of Industrial Research and Development in New
York State.
A panel discussion on “The
Economic Growth of Long Island”
will climax the conference.
Dr. Ernest Weber, president of
Polytechnic, will deliver the keynote address at 10 a.m. In the

talks which follow the inter-rela-

tionship between education, industry and government in exploiting
the research and development potential of the region will be explored.
The speakers and their topics
will be; Dr. Murrough P. O’Brien,
dean emeritus of the University of
California, “Interaction of Graduate Education and Industrial Development”, Harold Gleason, senior
vice president of Franklin National

Bank, “Economic and Industrial
Climate on Long Island”; Assem-

bly Speaker Joseph A. Carling,
“Long

Island’s Potential for New

York State.”

These are but a few of
of the specialties at the

University
Delicatessen
3588 Main St.

TF 2-1456

around The Theme, “Reflections of Miracle Minutes,” made available
God and Man in Literature” begin- to Hillel by the Hadassah organining Saturday afternoon March 9 zation.
continuing through Monday
morning, March 11. The conference
will be held at the Bishop Scaife
Center at Lake Chautauqua.
Interested people are asked to
pick up applications in 217 Norton
or from Chaplain Beattie.
Lenten Service will be held every
Wednesday and Thursday at 12:10
in the chapel of the Veterans Administration Hospital. Father Beatand

Students who are soliciting for
the U.J.F. are urged to complete
their cards and to return them to

the Hillel House Thursday between
6-10 p.m.

Commerce Commissioner Keith
McHugh will introduce the governor at 12:45 p.m., following lunthe Holy Comcheon, and a panel discussion will tie will celebrate
and there wil be an opopen at 2:45. Participants will be munion,
portunity for lunch afterward.
Dr. Hector Skifter, president of
Airborne
Instruments
LaboraSCA
tories; Dr. Charles Mack, director
Jesse Nash, noted sociologist, will
of research at Grumman Aircraft
speak on ‘The Problem of Identity
Engineering Corporation; H. Lee in Our Present Day Culture” ThursDennison, Dr. William N. Leonard, day, March 7 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Dr. O’Brien.
Student Christian Center.
Wesley
The Wesley players will present
Angel Flight Now Rushing
Sandbox” a play by Edward
Angel Flight, sponsored by the “The
Sunday at 5 p.m. at Wesley’s
Albee
Society,
numbers
over
Arnold Air
the last
80 chapters across the nation. It weekly supper meeting. At
meeting Clark Squires was elected
is an honorary society of college
women who wish to support the president of the organization.
Tonight a bus will leave Norton
Air Force, AFROTC and the
at 6:30 for those wishing to attend
Arnold Air Society.
the presentation of the “Great DiAngel Flight participates in many
vorce” by Bishop’s Players. It will
non-military
military and
activities be held at Asbury-Delaware Methoon campus, such as the Christmas dist Church. This is the first in a
Carol concert given for the Cadet series of Lenten services.
Wing in Clark Gym last semester
and a Bloodmobile project now
Vole for BOB
being planned.
The sisters of Angel Flight are
presently rushing interested women. Those wishing to Join are
asked to inquire at the Arnold
Air Society office. Norton room
A &amp; S SENATOR

FINKELSTEIN

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on: “Purim In

Jewish Law and Lore.” An Oneg
Shababt will follow.
The holiday of Purim occurs during Spring recess this year. Saturday evening, March 2, a Purim
Social will be held in the Hillel
House beginning at 8:30 p.m. Music
and refreshments will be offered.

QUICK, DRY

XEROX COPIES
NOW AT THE
BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.
(formerly Teck Univ. Branch)
3610 Main Street

IF 3-7131
For Short Ran Printing
or
Microfilm prices call:

Tucker Quick Copy
174 PEARL ST.
TL 2-6214

359,

LENTEN
LUNCHES

PIZZA
COBNED BEEF
PASTBAM1

Inter-Varsity
Today Inter-Varsity will hold a
fellowship meeting at the home of
Dave Kanaar, 3881 Bailey. Singing
and planning are scheduled after a
5:30 dinner which will probably cost
about 50 cents. Discussion groups
are meeting at 4 pm. Mondays and
Noon Tuesdays in room 266 Norfalo State) and Father Moran ton, and at 3 p.m. Fridays in room
(ECTI). Because of the retreat, 217 Norton.
there will be no Newman meeting
Hillel
this week. Cardinal Newman Week
begins Sunday March 3.
Hillel is now organizing a group
Newman Hall is open to all Cathoof college students from all over the
lic students from 8 am to 6 pm country
for a six week trip to
every weekday.
Israel this sumer. The group is
Mass will be said at Newman slated to leave New York the last
Hall at 12:00 and 5:00 p.m. weekto return Aug.
days and at 11:00 a.m. Saturday week in June and
during Lent. Sunday Masses for 20.
dorm students are held at the CanApplications for this trip should
talician Center at 10:30 a.m., 12
be filed by today. Further infornoon, and 5:00 p.m.
mation may be obtained at the HilThe Rev. Father Streng will hold
lel House, 40 Capen Blvd.
his regular discussions in Norton
3:30 Tuesday and Thursday at
Hillel at State University College
will hold a supper meeting this
9:00 and 10:00 a.m.
Canterbury Association
Sunday at 5:30 p.m. Delicatessen
Canterbury Association is plan- will be served. Following the supning a weekend conference centered per will be shown a film. “Fifty

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STORES,

™

3610 MAIN STREET

home made PIEBOGI
(POLISH RAVIOLI)

home made KNISHES
(POTATO PASTRY)

(Across from Goodyear Hall)

TF3-7131

�Legislation to authorize major
changes in the Air Force ROTC
program is expected to reach Congress early in March, 1963. Known
as the Officer Education Program,
it will call for a two year, voluntary, on-campus program with a
number of $2200 scholarships. If
the OEP is approved, the USAF
plans to put the program into

effect this fall.
The first students enrolled in the
program will be selected from 1963-

1964 sophomores for entrance into
the program in the summer of 1964.
Transfers from junior colleges are
eligible for selection.
The Air Force has been serv-

as executive agent for the
Defense Department in the development of the legislative
proposals which will affect its
ROTC units at 187 colleges and
universities in all but three of
the fifty states.

ing

Another difficulty facing the Air
Lt. Col. Thomas Huddleston,
Force ROTC results from the re- Professor of Air Science, anquirement for five hours of class- nounces the 12th Annual AFROTC
room participation each week Military Ball will be held March
throughout the junior and senior 23
in the Mary Seaton Room of
years of the program. The very Kleinhans Music Hall. The evepeople for which the Air Force ning will bel highlighted by the
has the greatest need, the scientific crowning of this
year’s queen.
and engineering students, are findThe ball is formal; for cadets
ing it increasingly difficult to
squeeze these five hours into their this means they wear their regular
already crowded academic sched- uniform with a white shirt and
ules.
black bow tie. For cadets wishing to have their uniforms cleanThe Officer Education Proed for the ball, the uniform for
gram outlined in the proposed
the Thursday preceding the ball
legislation has been designed to
will be sport coat and tie in place
place all services in a better
of the uniform. According to
competitive position for qualimilitary Custom, cadets’ dates will
the
fied college graduates in
not wear corsages. Also, since
stiffening competive atmostables are reserved, all cadets who
phere on today’s college campurchase tickets are urged to go
puses.
to Wing Headquarters and reserve
Major features of the OEP call

1. Orientation of the entire program to the production of profesAir Force ROTC is the largest sionally qualified regular and resingle officer procurement program
serve officers for service careers.
in operation in the Air Force presently.
2. Establishment of a two-year
Its purpose, set forth in the pro- on-campus course of instruction
given during the junior and senior
visions of the National Defense Act years.
The plan calls for moving
of 1916, has been to select, educate,
the military training to an Air
and motivate large numbers of colBase and restricting the
lege trained officers for an inactive Force
campus program to academic subreserve force.
jects.
In recent years a gradual shift3. Three hours of classroom ining from the initial requirement to struction per week for each semestproduce officers for the inactive reer of the two year program. The
serve has taken place. Today’s re- USAF
anticipates that colleges ofquirement, and the requirement for
fering AFROTC will continue to
the forseeable future, Is to proaward three semester hours of acaduce regular or reserve officers for
demic credit for each Air Science
active duty assignments ranging course.
from a minimum four-year tour to
twenty or thirty year career status.
i. Two summer training periods
the first lasting five weeks during
behind
the
Reasons
Defense
the summer prior to entry into
Department’s move to revamp
the program. The cadet will rethe nation-wide ROTC proceive travel allowances of five
grams stem from the restriccents per mile plus pay of $129.67.
tive clauses of the 1916 Defense
The second summer camp will
Act. which have been particucome after graduation and last
larly difficult for the Air Force
four weeks. At the end of this
in the operation of its procamp the cadet will be commisgram.

Chief among these restrictive
clauses is the requirement for all
cadets, except veterans, to complete
four years of ROTC instruction.
This is further complicated by the
Defense Department decision that
the Air Force will support all requirements for instructors and detachment staffs at those schools
which make freshmen and sophomore enrollment compulsory.

The four-year requirement limits

program eligibility to approximately 36 percent of college freshmen.
The remainder attend junior colleges or four-year institutions

pected 1970 levels of nearly
seven million students.

UB recently became the only
ier to boast two IBM 1620 comuters.

In addition to the computer
hich has been in operation for
ore than a.-’year In the Engineer,
g Building, a second 1620 was
stalled recently , in Sherman

to Rudolf

Meyer,

magen of the computer center,
ore than 300 students made use

The first international pharmacy
student exchange will take place
this weekend, when the second
phase of this recently instituted
program will find the Buffalo phar.
macy students playing host to their
counterparts from The University

a place on the seating chart,
Tickets tor the ball will be available March 4-19 at the ticket
booth in Norton. The cost is $5
per couple but does not have to
be paid in cash. At the booth
the cadet can sign a waiver which
allows the university to deduct $5
from that student’s deposit. Along
with the ticket the cadet receives
a formal invitation.
The queen will be crowned by
Anne Stapleton, last year's queen,
who was representing OCS Academy, The master of ceremonies
will be Shelly Evans, a former
ROTC officer and now a student
in UB law school. The reception
line forms at 9, and dancing will
begin at 9; 30 with the music supplied by Jay Moran.

ANNE STAPLETON

Now at

"ON CAMPUS"

of Toronto.
Phase One began with a visit by
the Buffalo students to the University of Toronto School of Pharmacy during the last weekend of
January. At that time they availed
themselves of the opportunity to
tour that city’s college, compare
the two educational systems and
facilities and gain an understanding of the profession of Pharmacy
as practiced in the Province of
Ontario.

An extensive schedule of activity Is in store for the Cana-

5. A scholarship of $2200 for
each selected candidate to be paid
directly to the cadet, and for other
candidates
not receiving
the
scholarship a subsistence pay of
$111.15 per month.

dian visitors when they arrive
on the Buffalo campus Friday
afternoon. Following a coffee
and doughnuts reception In the
Health Sciences Building, and
a welcome from Dean Daniel
H. Murray, the Canadian students will be conducted on a
special tour of the Buffalo
school before being treated to
dinner In the new Faculty Club
dining room.

SPANISH, FRENCH

learn
GERMAN, ITALIAN, RUSSIAN
Modern GREEK, ENGLISH
"IN RECORD TIME
*

Created to seD for

far*

6. A requirement to serve at
least four years of active duty. Despite the obvious advantages to the
student of the possible $2200 scholarship and the opportunity to fulfill his military obligation as an
officer, Major Coleman, director of
education at the UB detachment,
Beginning at 7 p.m., when the
feels there is one possible disadvantage. He said: "The possibility annual Pharmacy School Open

House gets under way, the Toronto
students will view the exhibits and
demonstrations in the various laboratories and classrooms. Then they
will observe some special techniques
over a closed circuit television
hook-up. When these activities are
concluded at ten o’clock, the students of both schools of pharmacy
will repair to the Lamm Post for
an inter-college party.

TO SPEAK A SECOND LANGUAGE!
_

Two It" HIGH-FIDELITY, UNBREAKABLE
complete

IP’s

-

containing forty (40)

lessons.
m AUTHORITATIVE TEXTBOOK-lllustrated
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Key to Pronunciation
•
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•

Saturday’s schedule will include

tour of various points of Interest
on the Buffalo campus: the dormitories, the medical school and the
nuclear reactor. After lunch in
Norton Union, an afternoon tour
of Roswell Park Memorial Instilieves its future manpower needs
tute is planned, with a special procan only be met through an aggres- gram pf tours and lectures on the
hew
approach in its procure- agenda.
sive,
ment programs.
Winding up the exchange
weekend will be a banquet In
the Tiffin Room and a party
afterwards at the Isleview Restaurant. The Canadians will
depart for home shortly after
of the computer for various courses
midnight.
during the fall semester.
It is expected by the Buffalo and
“The new computer will at least
Toronto faculties that the Interdouble our student capacity,” he national hospitality weekends will
said.
become an annual event on the
calendars of both institutions. CerAs a service unit at the Un- lainly
the entire University exiversity the center, is available to
ends a hearty welcome to the
students in any department for Toronto group and trusts they will
course work requiring a computer. return home with many fond and
In addition, graduate students and favorable impressions of what will
faculty members make use of the surely be a memorable two days in
Buffalo.
facilities tor research projects.

UB Acquires Second IBM 1620;
To Become Largest Center in WNY
organization on the Niagara Fron-

Pharmacy to
Play Host
To Students

sioned.

which do not offer AFROTC, and,
cannot participate for the full term exists that the officers produced
may not be as well prepared for
of the program.
leadership responsibilities since
At a time when the Air Force there will be no opportunity to
stands in critical need of increasdevelop their capabilities through
ing numbers of qualified young col- the leadership laboratory program
to
lege graduates
fill vital jobs
four-year period.”
around the world, it not only denies over a
the opportunity to compete for an
The Air Force has taken the
Air Force commission to 64 percent
of the country’s college freshmen, position that although the ROTC
but it must provide instructors and program has traditionally and sucstaff personnel at its detachments cessfully operated on American
in sufficient numbers to accommo- campuses for many years, it no
date the increasing numbers of stu- longer is an effective instrument in
dents mandatorily enrolled in the
basic (freshmen and sophomore) the competitive process of selecting
and training qualified young officers
course.
for active duty. The Air Force beThese difficulties will be magnified in the future as college
enrollment expands to the ex-

12th Annual ROTC Military Ball Coming
March 23; Tickets to Be on Sale Tuesday

:

New Officers' Education Program
Could Replace Compulsory ROTC

According

PAGE NINE

S P E CTRUM

Friday, March 1, 1963

a

Never before has it been so easy
and economical to learn a second
language. Other fine courses usually
but
cost from $50.00 to $100.00
through the magic of LP recording
economies,
mass-production
it
and
has at last become possible to offer
these complete,.concentrated
Courses at the amazingly low price
of only $9.98. These new Courses
were devised and planned by the Institute for Language Study, in collaboration with a well-known
language institute, pioneers in developing the phonograph method of
-

teaching languages.

Basic Sentence Patterns &gt;
Everyday Conversations

•

Concise Grammar

•

plus a

5.000-word Dictionary

Your “Passport” to More
Travel Fun and Business Rewards
A whole new world of romance and
adventure opens for you when you
speak another language. Unlimited
career opportunities await you in
the business world. And here’s a
Course you can take in the comfort
of your own home all you need is
just 15 minutes a day and in less
than a month and a half, you can
learn to speak the language of your
choice “In Record Time.” Includes
every useful phrase a traveler orfrom getting
businessman needs
through customs, ordering a meal,
medical
aid
abroad. You
seeking
to
hear the voices of cukurcd native
follow
the
words and
instructors
conversations in your illustrated
“Listen
and
Learnl"
textbook. Just
—

—

—

"ON CAMPUS"

�Fridoy, March I, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Bulls Triumph, Accept N.C.A.A. Invitation
Cagers Invade LeMoyne Tomorrow;
Battle Niagara Five in Auditorium
The UB basketball Bulls, who powerful Joe Maddrey and forward Kenny Glenn. Play-making
guard Jim Kuryak and Bill Kennedy round out the Purple Eagles’

starting five.- They are known to
have a strong bench too, however,
as Joe White, Tom Brennan, and
Nick Ventura are all consistent
players.
This may be wishful thinking,
but the last time UB lost to thp
Buffalo State they rebounded by
thumping Niagara. That was three
years ago. This season the Bulls
again bowed to the Orangemen.
Well?
.
Notes
The freshmen enen counter
between
UB
and
Niagara figures to be intentwo
clubs
sely fought, as the
divided a pair of games earlier
team
took
this season. Each
a close decision on its home court.
The game at Niagara went to
until St. Bonaventure ambushed the Eagles by a scant two-point
them last Friday in the Clean margin in overtime . The starting
Armory. The possibility still exists times for Monday’s Memorial Audthat Niagara might be invited, but itorium games have been moved
their current situation might best back. The frosh encounter will
get underway at 7PM, while the
be described as “all in doubt.”
varsity clash is slated to sart at
The flaglca were exceptionally 9 UB students will be admitted
impi'essivc in the early stages of free of charge upon preentation
the season when they upended of their ID card. This is the last
Dayton and ViUanova on the tatchance for Buffalo fans to see
ters' home courts. Recently, how- the
tourney-bound Bulls in action
ever, they have gone into somethis year. An enthusiastic throng
thing of a tailsp\n and could he of
UB supporters certainly deripe for an upset
served by the team. Come en masse
Niagara is led by their sharpshooting captain and forward, and bring all available noisemakers
Andy
Rebounding (horns, sirens, whistles, drums,
O’Connell.
strength galore is provided by and women).
.

Wildcats Crunch UB
BY BOB PACHOLSKI
Coach Len Serfustini's Basketball
Hulls, cast in the role of a biblical
“David”, came up against a Villanova team, that proved to be
an unconquerable Goliath, and

dropped t 69-47 decision to the
Wildcats before 1,800 in the Main
Line Gym in Philadelphia last
Tuesday night. A combination
outside shooting and overpowering rebounding sent the Bulls to
their fourth defeat of the season.
Dr. Serf's warriors, although
diminutive in size compared to
the gigantic Wildcats, were not
an easy victim for the talent-laden
They trailed
Philadelphia crew.
by only eight points at halftime
and this margin was due to the
shooting of Wally

uncanny outside
Jones. The 6T" guard hit on 7
for 8 from the field, all of them
coming from at least 30 feet out.
The hard fighting Bulls were
continually chopping away at the
Wildcat's margin throughout the
first half, mainly on the strength
of Gary Hanley’s amazing performance of twisting and turning

acrobatics under the backboard

to toss in 10 points against the
Wildcats’
The ball

6’7” Jim Washington.
game was a see-saw
affair throughout the first half
and the Bulls were definitely not
helped by the officials who literally swallowed their whistles and
allowed the gigantic Washington

to illegally block four UB shots
as they were on their downward
arc toward the bucket.
The beginning of the second
half saw the inevitable come for
the Bulls, as the Wildcats, who
bossed the boards 51-26, ripped
off a 22-3 spree to put the game
beyond doubt. During this span,
the BUils had but one shot at the
bucket each time they came down
the court, while the Wildcats had
three or four cracks at the hoop

against Colgate, Cornell, Army,
Syracuse, Hamilton, and Paul
Smith Colleges. In the slalom
event, Gerry La Fountain placed a
phenomenal first with a winning
time of 26.3 seconds. In giant
slalom he was 3rd. The final official reports will be published when
they are received.
At Thunder

Mt., Charlemount,

Sunday, Feb. 17, Baeder
Barton won the Connecticut State
Alpine Championships. There were
120 skiers competing, His combined time was 1 minute 2.3
Mass, on

By JIM BAKER

A closing spurt against an
inspired Cortland State nailed
down an NCAA tournament berth
for the Bulls Saturday, as they
notched an exciting 65-59 triumph
over the Red Dragons. The pregame word was that the winner
of the contest would receive the
tourney bid and the rumor turned
out to be true.

usual this season, Dave
Baldwin and Gary Hanley were
the chief executioners for UB, as
they meshed 17 and 15 points respectively. Hanley was especially
effective off the boards, also, as
he pulled down 22 rebounds. Here
is where the overall story was
every time they missed.
decided, Buffalo outrebounded the
Washington copped 14 rebounds
taller Dragons, 49-29.
and Jim O'Brien took oft 13. During the second halt spree Jones
The game was extremely close
did not shoot often from the field throughout the first half, at
but his dazzling behind-the-back thd end of which tJB held a 30-27
passes and his passes up the mid- advantage. Then in the first
dle set up countless buckets for ten minutes of the second stanza
O’Brien, who finished with 13 the Bulls appeared to salt away
and Eric Erickson, who tossed the decsion when they moved to
in 16. Hanley, who performed
admirably against the zone defense pressure put on him by
Washington and the hacking pressure of the Villanova and that
the officials failed to notice, scored
The intramural basketball sea16 and held Washington to 7
son has finished, and the Zygotes
points.
The Bulls hit a lowly 38 per of the Independent league reign
cent from the field, while the as campus champions. They deJack Krafts’ Wildcats hit 49 per feated AEPI for the title 56-35
cent, led by Jones’ 9 for 12 from last Wednesday night.
Gergley led the assault with 20
the field. The inability to hit from
tho field was one of the main points, while Tompkins helped
detriments to Dr. Serf’s crew in the cause with 12. Zellman tossed
the hard fought first half.
in IX tnd Kipness 9 ftr AEPi
The Zygotes had defeated the
dental school to win the independent championship, and AEPi edged
TKE in overtime to capture the
,
seconds. Brian Cuffe came in 11th fraternity title.
All entries for volleyball comwith a combined time of 1 minute
15 seconds.
petition must bo handed in at
At the Syracuse Winter Carni- the intramural office by today.
val February 22 and 23 in slalom, The fraternity leagues will comGerry La Fountain placed 2nd and pete on Tuesday and Thursday
Baeder Barton was in 7th position nights.
The race for the Palhowitz
out of a field of 47 competitors. Ed
Siemer was 8th. In total, this put AwarcL for the; overall athletic
us 2nd to Syracuse. In giant championship tightened up reslalom Baeder Barton was 1st, La cently when the two leading teams
Fountain was 4th and Ed Siemer each lost 25 points due to forfeits
was 8th. The ski team dominated in squash competition. The. standall Alpine Events. In the 30 nje- ings of the 1 leaders Including
ter jump, La Fountain came in haskeball points are as follows:
2nd position. Baeder Barton came Beta Sig 229, TKE 222, AEPi 203,
in, in an awkward position, and Sig Ep 202 V4, SAM 197, and Alpha
(continued on from page 12)
Sig 194 Vi.

La Fountain, B ton Pace Skiers
By GARY KAHN
At the Colgate Winter Carnival
Feb. 16 the ski team competed

Buffalo center Gary Hanley dri ives for clutch underhand layup against Cortland. UB scored an
exciting 65-59 victory to clinch an NCAA berth.

i

yesterday announced their acceptance of an invitation to compete
in the NCAA regionals at Akron,
Ohio, journey to Syracuse to meet
the LeMoyne College Dolphins.
The Buffalo five enters tomorrow’s game with an impressive
15-4 mark which rates them among
the top college division quintets
in the country. LeMoyne figures
to provide considerably stiff, competition, as they are always tough
or. their modern home court. The
Bulls defeated the Dolphins handily a year ago In Clark Gym.
On Monday the Bulls face what
may well be their toughest assignment of the season when they
take on Niagara’s Purple Eagles
in Memorial Auditorium. The men
from Monteagle Ridge own a 12-4
loK at this writing and were virtually assured of an NIT berth

As

Zygotes Top AEPi,
Nab Campus Title

a 49-35 cushion. Such was not
the case, however, as Cortland
forward Dave Bleau put on a oneman show and moved his team
to within one point of a deadlock,
58-57. Bleau finished the contest
with 33 points and turned in
tho performance of the year (offensively) in Clark Gym.
The turning point of tne con.
test came when Buffalo’s Roy
Manno missed the second shot
of a one-and-one free throw
situation. Hanley snagged the
rebound and scored to push
UB back into a four-point
lead, 61-57. (Although Pat Svanson followed with a Cortland
field goal, Baschnagel answered
this by cashing two freebies.
Then Hanley pulled down a big
rebound and launched a long
lead pass to Manno for the Insurance bucket and a 63-59

jackets could manage only eleven
goals for tho entire con-

field

test.

High scorers for UB were Dave
Baldwin, who scored 14, and Dick
Harvey, who tossed inlO on 5
long jumpers. It was obviously a
balanced attack for Buffalo, as
tho scoring output was well dis.
tributed. Phil Yurecka led UR
scorers with 12 point.
'
The 34-point Rochester output was the lowest point total
scored in Clark Gym in Coach

Serfustini's sevejn-year reign at
UB. It is a tribute to a stout

Buffalo defense.

Vote for BOB

FINKELSTEIN
A

&amp;

S SENATOR

victory

The revenge triumph of the
year came Feb. 17 when the Bulls
ar.nhilatcd the hapless and erroneus Rochester Yedlowjackets,
(■5-34. The Riverman, as they are
sometimes called, were held to a
fantastic span of 16 minutes and
50 seconds without a field goal.
During this time UB moved from
a scant 17-15 cushion to an enjoyable (especially aginst Rochester)
46-19 advantage. The Yellow-

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SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

Alfred

UB Wrestlers Trounce

U., 25-10

Mat Record Is Best in History;
Brinkworth Has Unbeaten Season

Kevin Brinkworth. emergled
BY KOOKY VERSACE
unbeaten for his six season
The wrestling team added a
encounters. Kevin’s record is
unique honor to their list of
a
splendid
accomplishment
honors, by ending the season with
because Kevin, 1960-82 foota 25-10 trouncing of Alfred Unball star, never Knew a toe
iversity. The feat enabled the
hold from a flying mare until
team to finish with the best relast season when hi? first went
cord, 9-1 in their thirty year
out
for thei sport.
previTwo
teams
have
history.
ously strung together nine wins,
Bob Jackson, Len Ardieta, Jack
however, each of these squads VaJentic, and Bert Ernst all missalso cmcountered four defeats.
ed perfect skeins by only one
Only two UB wrestlers tasted match. Valentic, who is also a vetdefeat against Alfred
Jeff Gell- eran pigskin toter, lost his one
man by disqualification, and Paul against BIT which was his first
Kehoe by a decision. Warren loss in his entire college meet
Prunella,
Mike
and career.
-

Donahue,

Jack Valentic ground out decisions
for the UB Matmen, while Bob
Jackson won by forfeit. Little
man Joe Aiello fought hard but
ended
the
event
deadlocked
against his opponent Barry Butler.
Heavyweight Bert Ernst ended
UB’s finest season in top style by
pinning Alfred’s Joe Green in the

Paul Kehoe is shown well on his way to another UB pin. Buffalo conquered the Alfred Saxons,
25-10, Wednesday, for Its ninth triumph in 10 matches, a 30-year record.

Fencers Top Case, Lose To Orangemen;
Will Defend NAIFC Championship
By BRYNA MILLMAN
In a triangular meet last Saturday, the varsity Bulls -downed Case
Tech 16-11 and lost to the Orange
of Syracuse 11-16, bringing their

season's record to five wins and
five losses as the Bulls enter the
final week of competition before
making an appearance at the North
Atlantic Championships at HIT
Mar. 16.
With no Issue of The Spectrum
last week, a brief recapitulation
of the Feb. 16 victory over Hobart
follows. All weapons turned in
winning scores; 6-3, 6-3 and 5-4
tor foil, epee and saber respectively. Each squad captain shut out
his three opponents.
The total
score was 16-11. The freshmen
were also victorious, defeating the
Hobart trosh 16-9 to bring their
season record to seven wins and
one loss. This dropped to seven
and two after their defeat by
Syracuse last Saturday.
There was no question about
It, the Syracuse team gave
the Bulls a sound beating. The
with
UB foil squad escaped
three points and the epee with
two, but the saber men pre-

vailed and trounced Syracuse
6-3 for a final score of 11-16. In
spite of the strong opposition,
both Jerry Marshak and Joe
Fersch went undefeated.
Buffalo turned the tables on Case
Tech defeating them 16-11. taking
honors In all three weapons. Again,
as in the meet against Hobart, all
three squad captains shut out their
opponents 3 and 0, and the remainder of the squad put In their
best effort to keep the pace. The
foil squad defeated Case 5-4 as did
the saber squad, and the Case
epee was edged out 6-3.

final encounter.

WANT TO HIKE?
Three

One

Russ
students,
Goldberg, Bruce Rosen, and
Dean Wilson, have challenged
the disc Jockeys of WKBW ra.
dlo to

UB

an

50-mile

Brockport State to

hike

from

planned to take place
the spring vacation.
However, several more people
are needed for this venture.
All Interested students are
asked tp contact either Dean
during

Wilson
through

or
the

Bruce

Rosen
office

Spectrum

before Monday at 3:00 p. m.

191

pound

-

Buffalo’s Baby Bull wrestlers
also defeated Alfred 26-10 to
finish with a 5-2 record.

Frosh Rack Up 18th

Buffalo. The

hike is

wrestler,

Summarizing the season, Coach
Ron La Rocquev "I was very impressed with the group. It was a
complete team effort
everyone
gave 100%. I don't want to single
out one or two wrestlers because
they all did the job.”

The finest freshmen basketball
team in UB's history stretched
its brilliant record to 18-2, despite
the loss of three starters due to
scholastic ineligiblity. The Baby
Bulls were without the service
of 6-6 Bill Barth, forward Dennis
Zynda, and guard Dick Hetzel,
but still bombarded the Cortland
State yearlings Saturday, 82-61,
in Clark Gym.
Norwood Goodwin again paced
Buffalo's scores with an 17 point
output, while guard Paul Goldstein
contributed 16, and Bill Barto
tossed in 14.

team notched its 17th
by downing a stubborn
Rochester team, 65-56 on Feb. 23.
The combo of Goodwin. Goldstein
and Barto were again the high
scorers as they meshed 21, 15 and
14 points respectively.
The team has two games left
and striving to finish with an
unprecedented 20-2 log. Tomorrow
the team accompanies the UB
varsity to LeMoyne, while MonThe

victory

day they face the nigged yearlings
from Niagara.

This weekend the Bulls Journey

to Ohio to take on Oberlin, and
from there to South Bend, Indiana
to wind up the season with a clash

with the power of Notre Dame.
March 16 will see the Bulls at
Rochester Institute of Technology
defending their championship title
earned here when Buffalo was host
to the North Atlantic Intercollegiate Fencing Conference last year.
March 29-30 a three-man team representing the best in each weapon
The University of Buffalo top- will compete for national honors
ped all schools in the Association at the Air Force Academy In Coloof College Unions Regional II Tour- rado.
nament. The Bulls tied down six
trophies in the overall competition,
which included action in Men's and
Women’s Bowling, Table Tennis and
TIRED OF JUST THE
Billiards. Cortland State College
and NYU Loeb captured five troSAME OLD THING?
phies and Cornell and Alfred State
took
Tech
four apiece.
The Bulls copped a first and
second in the Pocket Billiards and
the Three Cushion Billiards competition. Sandy Finkelstein took first

ACU Tourney

in Pockets with Cornell’s George
Reiter coming in second and Steve
Leffler of NYU third. UB’s A1 Epstein finished second in Three Cushion behind the Big Red’s Steve
Keane and Leffler again placing
third.
The Table Tennis competition was the only place where
the Bulls were shut out as Cornell and Brooklyn College vied
for top honors here. In the

doubles, Brooklyn’s Steve Lassar and Howie Green were first
with Cornel’s Jogdish Khanna
and Venn Adani coming in
second. NYU was third. In the
singles, Advani copped first
with Lassar second and Rochester’s P. J. Lavakare in third.
Cortland State College was tops
in Women’s Bowling as they capered first in teams, doubles, singles
and all eyents competition. The
Cortland team edged out Alfred
State and UB ih the team competition. Janet Sheridan and Carolyn
(Continued on Page 12)

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�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Fridcr

March 1, 196:&gt;3

Lee Sets foie Vault
Mark; Bulls Are

SPORTS CIRCLE
Bulls Foce Rugged Foes in Tourney

e

BY JOHN KNIPLEB
Don Lee of the University of
Buffalo indoor track team established a new UB record and tied
the Rochester Field House record
The announcement of UB’s invitation to and accept- by polevaulting 13’6” last Satafternoon. On a following
ance of a berth in the NCAA regionals at Akron, Ohio urday Don
Jump
barely missed 14'. His
is certainly very well received by the Buffalo supporters. great effort overshadowed a 12’6”
Coach Serfustini’s charges have enjoyed a glittering leap by teammate Paul Lee (no
campaign to date, in which they have taken 15 of 19 de- relation) which also broke the
cisions and compiled an unblemished record at home. The old UB mark. These jumps occurrent edition of the Bulls has stretched UB’s Clark Gym curred during the Rochester Invitational Meet.
winning streak to 17 games.
finished 5th in a field
The competition of the Mideast Regionals will be of Buffalo
10 teams competing in the
fast and furious, to say the least. Buffalo’s rivals will be: event. Rochester
captured
the
(1) South Carolina State (18-7); (2) Akron or Witten- spot with 38 points, followed by
berg (whichever club wins the Ohio Conference), and (3) Colgate, (24), Cortland State
another at-large team yet to be named.
(231/ 2 ). Alfred (17), and UB
(15). Other leaders in the UB
Entering Wednesday’s battle against Nichols, the UB scoring were a third place finish
Captain Vince Heckel set a UB record of 6:4.5 in the 500hockey team owns an undefeated record. This achievement by Ron Reiber in the 440 yard
yard freestyle Saturday. He will lead Coach Sanford’s merrun and Stan Katz's 3rd place
certainly puts the Buffalo icers into the spotlight, as they
men against Niagara Wednesday In the season finale. A
effort in the mile.
seek to attain recognition as an intercollegiate team. The
winning record is at stake in the Clark Pool meet.
The UB freshmen defeated
previously
deadlock
with
unscathed
RIT particu- Rochester in a dual meet during
recent 2-2
larly pointed up the club’s merit to local hockey supporters. the varsity competition 37-9.
The UB swimming team blasted
Larry Elsie led the squad with Geneseo, 76-15, Saturday to notch
The UB ski team is another “informal” unit that has a 21’4” winning leap in the broad its seventh victory in 13 outings
earned widespread recognition from their outstanding per- jump. Bill Suedemeyer won the this season. Team captain Vince
established a Buffalo record
formances on eastern slopes. At the recent Syracuse In- 1,000 yard run, and Percy Mallet Heckel
r
vitation Collegiate Ski Meet, Baeder Barton took all the led a sweep of the 50 yard dash by o 6 minutes 4,5 seconds in the
UB.
500-yard freestyle, which topped
honors in the giant-slalom at Labrador Mountain. Jerry The previous Saturday, March his
own mark of 6:13.3. He also
LaFountain finished second in jumping and fourth in the 16, UB finished behind
Rochester captured the honors in the 200eighth
and and Cortland in a triangular meet yard freestyle event.
giant slalom. Ed Siemer and Brian Cuff were
eleventh respectively in a field of 37.
at Rochester. The top performers
The Bulls took every event in
The following day the team competed in the New for U.B. were Stu Katz, 2nd in the one-sided contest, as the folYork State Giant Slalom Championships at Greek Peak, the mile; Ron Reiber, 3rd in the lowing Buffalo mermen secured
which is near Cortland. LaFountain placed second in 600 yard run; Doug ColUngwood, triumphs: Jim Decker, 200 individboth the State and Eastern Class B senior competition. 3rd in the high hurdles; Tom ual medley and 200 backstroke;
Cionek, 3rd in the 50 yard dash; Royce Collister, 50 free; Jerry
UB’s Nancy Siemer won the Class D Women’s race, while Dan
Dansereau, 3rd in the high Chapman, diving: Stew Arnett,
Men’s
place
second
the
Class
in
D
Ed Seimer copped
jump; Ed Lontrato, 3rd in the 100 butterfly: Larry Szuminskl,
competition.
1,000 yard run; and Don and Paul 100 free; Alex Haase, 200 breastThese are indeed credentials of the highest caliber for Lee 3rd and 4th, respectively in stroke.
a Buffalo team that is striving for regular competition on the polevault. Kaz led in the 2
Decker,
an intercollegiate basis. When this is achieved these ski- mile until he was spiked in the The two relay team
Hasse, Brain Pry and Bill Smith,
H arsRrd or rot, « tiny
ers can remove that “informal” label that has been pinned leg and required hospital care.
UB’s
relatively unimpressive 400 medley, and Jim Burd, Mike
should like this gift, Miss
on the group. When one considers the quality of reprein these meets stem from Nawrocki, and Royce Collister,
C. Site writes, “1 was thinksentation that this team has afforded UB in its impressive showing
the fact that a school! of this 400 free also won.
ing of giving the boy I go
and
intercollegiate
East,
status
showing throughout the
size lacks the facilities necessary
with, a shirt for Christmas.
On Feb. 20 the mermen downed
competition is most certainly deserved by these talented for proper practice sessions. The
Someone Just told me it’s
j
gray sweatsuit clad beings seen cross-town rival Buffalo State,
performers.
improper to give clothes unrunning through the snowbank 62-24. The Buffalo frosh made it
sweep for tihe evening with a
a
less
you’re engaged. This is
a
provided
have
also
are
not
individualists trying to convincing 27-7 decision over the
The matmen of Coach LaRocque
news to me. 7 7 7”
considerable boost to UB sports this season. This univer- impress their girlfriends. They State yearlings.
It’s news to us, too. Wo
sity possesses the only intercollegiate wrestling team in are members of the track squad
attempting to get into
for
The Bulls have one meet left
don’t exactly understand
Western New York. The season was concluded Tuesday their next meet. Eachshape
of the
this year’s schedule, as they
what makes a shirt, belt, tie
with a convincing triumph over Alfred in the latter’s schools UB faced has the needed on
entertain Niagara on Wednesday
or similar Items more pergym. This leaves the Bulls with a glossy 9-1 record, which facilities to develop a strong in Clark Pool. A winning season
sonal than, let's say, a camrepresents a major step forward from previous seasonal team. Pdrhaps, with the proper lies in the balance for UB.
as fcosh trading facilities UB could become
era, book or pen. P.S. Yon
logs. Improvement is expected to continue,
can even have It monogramgrapplers such as the unbeaten Edgar Poles provide a bright a threat to these teams.
med, If you like.
The squad’s next meet will be
future.
Team

By Jim Baker

-

—

CAMPUS
4
“MALE CALL"

top,

picture for the

Buffalo State’s student newspaper. The Record, is conThe
tinuing their devoted campaign of yellow journalism.
in
latest episode accuses this sports section of boasting
article
that
Feb.
8
blues”
the
in
“crying
and
the
one edition
reviewed the UB-State encounter. Now if that article
were to be interpreted accurately, it would be perfectly
obvious that the game was covered in a sound journalistic
manner,with credit being given where it was earned
to the Buffalo State team. This is more than can be said
for The Record’s coverage of that game and the recent StateDetroit U. battle' in which the Orangemen were peeled, 9270, by the nationally known Titans. The Record’s headline
for that game read, “Detroit Upsets SUCB, 92-70.” And
they talk about distortion?
—

Buffalo leers Knot BIT
The newly formed University of
Buffalo ice hockey team hosted the
previously unbeaten and untied
Rochester Institute of Technology
sextet to a 2-2 tie recently at the

occured when

RIT was awarded a
penalty shot midway through the
third period, with the score tied at
2-2. Goalie Saperston made a fine
save on the play, as he turned the
Fort Erie Arena.
The ice Bulls, sparked by the Rochester attacker away scoreless.
goaltending of Howie Saperston UB missed a chance for a go-ahead
and the hard skating of Jerry Doh- goal when the RTI goalie thwarted
ertv, Irwin ' Pastor, Dan Garney, Jerry Doherty’s breakaway attempt
and Mike Whelan, made a fine in the third period.
showing in deadlocking one of the
major powers of the Finger Lakes
Hockey Conference
which UB
hopes to join next year if enough
school support can be obtained.
—

Buffalo drew first blood as
Irwin Pastor took a pass from

defenseman John Reakes

just

inside the RIT bine line and

slammed a long shot home as
Doherty screened the RIT
goalie very handily on the play.
The Bulla went ahead 2-1 in the
second period, as Ray Motyka connected oh a rebound shot with assists from Dan Garney and John
Vary.

The turning point of the game

Ski

at the Rochester Relays tomorrow.

ACU (con't from page 11)

Potter shot a 922 in the doubles to
nose out US’s Mary Davison and
Lynn Skloff, who finished with a
900. In the singles Miss Sheridan,
a brunettee from Long Island, shot
well in the 500’s to edge out Judy
Bono of Alfred State and Mary
Hoberman, a fellow Cortlander. In
the All Events, Miss Sheridan and
UB’s Miss Davison placed first
and second to capture berths in the
A.B.G. tournament to be held in
Memphis, Miss Skloff of UB and
Miss Potter of Cortland were third
and fourth respectively.

•

(Continued from Page 10)

will probably he skiing again in
three weeks.
At the New York State Cham-

pionships at Greek Peak, Gerry La
Fountain took 2nd position over
all in class B. Nancy Siemer took
first in women’s class D. Ed Siemer took second in men’s class D.

This weekend at Glenwood Acres,
the State University of New York
at Buffalo hosts this week’s competition., Buses will be leaving

from Norton at no charge to you.
Check the posted times.

LEONARDO’S
UNIVERSITY
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CLOTHES-ING NOTES—
As a suggestion, when you're
Christmas shopping, let’s
put our heads together. Fill
us in on a few details—people on your list, what you’d
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giftformyfath- M
II
er except thathe (('
always wears bows. My
friend said, ‘So what? I've
seen tie bars worn with
bows.' How about this?”

-

Campus

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT RUFFALO
English Cleric
Comments on
Disarmament
(See Page 5)

SPECTRUM

Buffolo Wrestlers
Upset Cortland's
Red Dragons
(See Page 12)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1963

VOLUME 13

No. 18

UB Freshmen Sponsor Winter Weekend
By PATRICIA MUSIAL

UB Hosts Debate Tourney;
Awards to Climax Program

By KATHLEEN SHEA
Thirty teams, some coming
from as far away as Oregon, will
begin registering for the Eighth

International Debate Tournament
of the University at 3 pm today
iri the lobby of Norton, Rodney
Batts is general chairman of the
event, A coffee hour for the debaters will be held during registration with the varsity division
of the Debate Society, sponsors
of the tournament, acting as hosts.
The tournament will give students a unique opportunity to observe an intercollegiate debate in
progress. There will be five rounds
of debate. These will take place
at: 6 and 8 pm tonight and 9 am,
10:45 am and 1:15 pm tomorrow.
The schedule of rooms, showing

Aspects In Economic Analysis.”
He will elaborate on some of the
ways in which a country’s geographical environment, including
its natural resources, can be a
strong factor in developing its
strengths and weaknesses. His
talk Is intended to open up new
fields for argument as the debaters
tend to stress the political reasons
for and against the establishment
of an economic community.
Charles L. Rumrill, president
of the Rumrill Co., an advertising
agency will be the other speaker
on the program. He has been a
member of the Trade Missions to
Germany and Finland. This plus
his recent trip to Europe during
which he had a chance to become
more familiar with the workings
of the Common Market has given
him the international view of the
collective organization. His talk
Will relate directly to the national
debate topic for this year as one
of the prime reasons listed for
establishing an economic community is the tariff issue.
After the symposium, the
awards will be presented. The
first and second place teams
will receive trophies. Plagues
will be awarded to the best
affirmative and negative sp-

DR.

A symposium will be held in
the multipurpose room at 3; 30 pm
the banquet.
tomorrow, after
There will be two speakers who
will deal with topics relating to
the national debate topic for this
forensic year
Resolved: That
the non-communist nations of the
world Should establish an economic community.
Charles H. Ebert, associate
professor geology and geography
will speak on; "The Geographical
.

*

*4

MR. RUMRILL
eakers. The first-place team
will appear on the HB Round
Table, WBEN TV
7 pm

tomorrow
The Tiffin Room in Norton will
provide the “snack” the debaters
will have at 12:15 tomorrow. In
the morning, a continental breakfast will be served in the multipurpose room.
Some of the teams to participate
in the annual forensic event will
be: Lewis and Clark, University
of Detroit, Houghton College, St.
Bonaventure, and Colgate.

Crowther Claims Television
Causes Newspaper Decline
By LAWRENCE FRENKEL
“With the rise of television In
the United States, mass audience
has become picture conscious and
picture stimulated. This has been
reflected by the decline in newsother than that
Iiaper reading,
caused by the dismal newspaper
strike in New York." With these
words Bosley Crowther, motion
picture editor of The New York
Times opened an address to an
apologetically small audience Wednesday afternoon.
He stressed that what the
audience saw was very rigidly
controlled. To a less mature
audience movie-going was a
habit, as TV watching Is today, and consequently the eight
major movife companies regularly mass produced movies to

will

slalom exhibition today on the
steps of Lockwood. It is still very
much a mystery as to how they
will manage this feat, but at 4 p.m.
you will be able to find out.
Tonight, the busses for a toboggan party at Chestnut Ridge
leave at 6 p.m. Transportation
tickets are $1.00.
Winter Olympics on Rotary Field
are slated for 2 p.m. Saturday. The
dog-sled race will open the event,
followed by a touch football game
BISSELL
DR.
and a ski relay race. Admission Is
free.
Snow sculpture judging will
be at 1 p.m., and the winners
will receive their trophies at
the Winter Weekend Ball.
Dr. Claude Thomas Biased,
president of the University of
Toronto, will deliver the principal
address at the annual mid-year
scheduled
for
commencement
10:30 am, Friday, Feb. 22. The
exercises will take place at Kleinhans Music Hall.
Approximately 440 candidates
are applying for degrees this year.
The number of candidates from
each school are; associate degree
program, 44; College of Arts and
Sciences, 96; School of Business
Administration, 54; School of Education, 74; School of Law, 2;
School of Medicine, 9; School of
Nursing II; and Graduate School

President Furnas
Confers Degree

couple.
Sunday’s ski trip to Kissing
Bridge will conclude the activities

of the weekend. Busses will leave
at 10 a m. and the transportation
tickets are $1.25.
Schedule of Events
Friday

9:00 a.m,—Polls open
2:00 p.m.—Polls close; movie In
conference theater “Carmen Jones"
4:00 p.m.—Skiing, Lockwood
6 p.m.-—Busses leave for toboggan party
Saturday

2:00 p.m,—Winter Olympics
4:00 p.m.—Snow sculpture judg9:00 p.m.—Winter Weekend Ball

127.

EBERT

what schools will be competing
against each other, will be posted
outstide the multi-purpose room
of Norton,
The Sportsmen, featuring
Jimmy Horton, will provide
the music for the informal
dance to be attended by the
visiting debaters and the women who will act as chairmen
for the various rounds of debate. Any women who would
like to act as hostesses to the
visiting debaters and attend
the dance may still sign up
for this position in the debate
office, room 332 Norton.

Don Menza and his orchestra

Voting is taking place today tor provide the music, and Greek folk
king and queen of Winter Weeksinger "Fleury” will entertjijp. The
end, The polls will close at 2 p.m, color theme is blue and silver, and
and the winners will be announced an ice sculpture will be the floor
centerpiece. Tickets are on sale at
at the dance Saturday.
Also, the ski club will put on a the ticket office for $3.50 per

gross a limited, but sure profit.
Mr. Crowther stated that this is
remarkable because movies never
grossed more than two million dollars, even in the hayday of the
movie era, when Greta Garbo had
reigned. An indication of the spectacular nature of today's films is
the fact that “The Ten Commandments”, “Ben Hur”, and “Bridge
on the River Kwal” all grossed
over $26 million,” Mr. Crowther
reasoned.
“The tact that a few films doing
extremely well has been the main
motivation to the floundering movie
making companies."
He commented on a second
trend, namely that the movement
toward more mature movie audl(Contlnued—on Page 10)

President Clifford C. Furnas
will confer the degrees, and
the Chancellor’s Medal will
be awarded to a prominent
CO-CHAIRMEN CAROL KUJAWA and MIKE FRANKLIN
Buffalo citizen. Last year’s
was
recipient of the medal
Sunday
"An Evening In Wlnterland” Is
Lewis G. Harriman.
the
theme of the dance which will
«° a.m.-Bussee
President of Toronto since 1958,
leave for ski
10:
begin at 9 p.m. and continue until
Dr. Bissell formerly served as
a m. in the multi-purpose room, trip to Kissing Bridge
1
dean-in-residence, assistant to the
president and vice-president. He
received B.A. and M.A. degrees
from the University of Toronto,
and a Ph.D from Cornell. He has
served on the teaching staffs of
Cornell and the Khaki College in
Sophomores In University
England.
The Student Senate elections
College applying for senatori5
and
will be held Tuesday, March
al seats must Indicate which
Wednesday, March 6 from 9 a.m.
senior division they applied to
to 4 p.m. There will be a special
and must obtain the Dean*®
election Monday, March 4 for the
signature of that division a®
School of Nursing in the Healthproof
of
that application.
The election
Science Building
Sophomores are only allowed
committee, headed by Norene
to vote for the U.C. candidate®
It was announced this week that Herach,
has announced the distrithe candidates at large.
and
a second political party, the Stubution of student senators for the
Graduate students in Arts and
dent Alliance, will oppose United coming year. They are as follows:
Sciences and In Education are
Students in the up-coming Senate
and
College,
6:
Arts
University
elections. In a statement from Sciences, 5; Business Administra- eligible to become candidates in
the party they defined their pur- tion, 2; Education, 4; Engineering, their respective divisions. Voting
pose a 8 an attempt to correct the 2; Nursing, 2; Pharmacy, 1; Medi- for these two divisions comes from
one-party system prevalent on cine. 2; Dentistry, 1 and Law, 1. the graduate and undergraduate
school combined.
campus.
Students In M.T., O.T. and
"We are a student alliance comPetitions are available now in
and
included
Arts
in
P.T. are
posed of a complete croea-seotion
the Senate office, Norton room 206.
sciences. These 28 senatorial
allied
of the University. We have
Anyone receiving a petition must
seats plus the four offices of
tc bring back to this University
register his or her name and post,
vice-president, secpresident,
a two-party system, and all. the
tion he Is seeking with the Senate
retary and treasurer constitute
benefits thereof, primarily "dyoffice. Petitions muet bo handed
the forthcoming election.
namic democracy,” the statement
Monday, Feb. 25 at 6 p.m. at a
The election committee wishes In
continued.
meeting of all candidates and the
students
University
University’s to stress to
Speaking of the
election committee in the oonlorT
growth they commented that it the requirements and eligibility in ence theater.
of
the
student
“will be in future years a national becoming a member
Anyone interested may
All candidates must submit their
and prominent leader among uni- government.
person.
versities in the academic world. bo a candidate representing the petitions at this time in
We have banded together to pro- school in which he or she is en- Campaigning will begin Tuesday,
Feb. 26, and all publicity must be
mote resourcefulness and effici- rolled.
According to the by-laws of the removed by 6 p.m. Wednesday.
ency in our government and University that will be Indicative of Student Association a member of March 6.
the character and caliber of the the Student Senate must have
students of this institution. These achieved a 1.0 overall average and
There are still several counideals will comprise, in the years a 1.0. the semester previous to his
tries which are not represented
to come, a living, active and viable election. An officer must have
in the forthcoming Model U.N.
basis for the furthering of aca- achieved a 1.3 overall average and
General Assembly which will be
demic freedoms and endeavors.”'
a 1.0 the previous semester. Stuheld here March 29 and 30. ApAnyone Interested in the new dents vote for the candidate repplications may be picked up at
party may contact party chairman resenting their division. Everyone
Norton 205. All interested stuMichael Shapiro at TR 5-5131 or Votes for the four candidates at dents are Invited to participate.
write to Box “1”, Norton Union — large;

Student Petitions Available
For Next Month s Elections

Student Alliance

Revives Two-Party
Competition Here

&lt;

�Friday, February 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

P AGE TWO

UC Registration
Begins on March 4
Advisement and registration for

Pathologist Stresses Care of Vocal Chords
Word of Caution Comes From Dr. Wilson

people realize that a fort, coordinating medical or surnext semester (September
will begin Monday, March 4, for screaming child may be doing ser- gical procedures with voice reall University College students.
ious damage to his vocal chords education. When the nodules have
and
This year freshmen and sopho- as well as disturbing the family been present for some time
have become fibrous, surgical remores will register at the same peace.
This
caution comes in moval may be advised by medical
previous years
1963)

time in contrast to
when each class registered sepa-

rate!^.

Students will make appointments
with the University College receptionist in Diefendorf 114 from
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m„ Monday through
Friday, at least one week in advance of the time they are scheduled to plan their programs for
next semester and register for
courses. Students will make appointments with their advisers and
register tor classes according to
the following alphabetical schedule
March 4-8
B.O.Y
March 18-22
H, P, I
March 25-29
C, D, U
April 1-5
&lt;1. A. B
April 8-12
W. I,. Q
April 15-19
M, J
April 22-26
K, P, Z
April 29 May 3
May 6-10
N, T, V, R
Prompt compliance with the regulations established tor registration
for the fall semester, September
1963, will make it more likely thal
Students will be able to get the
courses and sections that they want.
-

INCOMPLETE
A REMINDER: Applications
for make-up examinations for
the removal of Incomplete
grades will be accepted no later
than Monday, Feb. 25. Make-up
examinations begin Monday,
April 1, 1963.

Few

word of
a recent article by Dr. D. Kenneth
Wilson, associate professor of
speech pathology in State Uniof Buffalo’s Speech and
versity
Hearing Clinic.
“Most authorities agree,” says
Dr. Wilson, “that little growths,
called nodules on the vocal chords
are the direct outcome of continual vocal abuse and forcing of
the voice. Screaming and explosively forcing the voice causes
excessive friction and too-hard
The result
impact on the cords.
can be these vocal nodules, formed
in much the same way that corns
form on the toes.”
The result is chronic hoarseness displeasing to the ear,
and causing self-consciousness
in the adolescent. Chronic
sinusitis with a postnasal drip
and couching may also result.
As an example of voice abuse the
doctor cited the case of a boy
“who yelled and screamed excessively during sports, talked
incessantly in a highpitched
voice and delighted in startling his friends by imitating
sirens,”

Another lad "imitated the
sounds of birds, animals, cars or
jet planes In an excessively loud,
high-pitched, or strained manner.
Appearance of lumps can bo regarded as the advanced stage in
vocal strain,” he said.
Treatment should be a joint ef-

authorities.

If medical authorities Indicate that the condition is re-

versable without surgery, the
speech pathologist can begin
voice reeducation which Includes the elimination of vocal
abuse, training in pitch, loudness and quality, and making
the new voice characteristics
habitual.
The pathologist first informs
the patient that he is using his
voice improperly, because in most
cases there is a lack of awareness on the patient’s part that he
is abusing his vocal chorda.
„

Some types of abuse such as
yelling and screaming can be controlled by bringing them to the
person’s attention. Other types
such as snorting, or making highpitched strained sounds under ten-

sion, have become habitual, and
are more difficult to eliminate.
One method Is to make tape recordings and point out to the
patient these habitual abuses.

tape

By

watching

the
the

By ELAINE BARRON

A Student-Faculty Exhibition will

the patient can see
be held April 15-20 in honor of
pattern of his speech volume, and Pine Arts Week.
learn to recognize excessive loudThe exhibition will include works
nees in his speech.
of local artists aa well ae students
Often the hoarseness quality
and faculty. Any member of the
must be Imitated for the adostudent body is eligible to enter.
lescent untjl he is again able
First, eecond, and third prizes of
to differentiate between ac$25, $15 and $10 will be awarded,
ceptable quality and harshOnly student entries will be eliness. Three months of speech
The judges
gible for the prizes.
Indicate
reeducation should
members of the art department,
reduction In nodule size, or
will be Seymour Drumlevltch, Harif surgery has been performed,
vey J. Breverman and Dr. Philip
there should be no Indication
Elliott.
of reocurrence. Some researchEntries will be accepted beers have linked emotional facMarch 26 and April 5 in
tween
tors with voice use, and Inroom 205, Norton. All works
vestigations are continuing in
should have the name, address
this area,
and telephone number of the
The most important speech treatartist on them.
ment goals are elimination of voThe exhibition will be displayed
cal abuse and the habitual use of
mainly in two or three rooms of
proper pitch and loudness level.
Norton Union, with some paintings
The result is a pleasant and acthroughout the building. More inceptable voice.
formation about the rooms will be
needle

The pathologist also works with
the patient to reduce the pitch
level of his voice to the lowest
level which he can use comfortably. Loudness of the voice is
easily demonstrated to the patient through the use of such devices as the audio indicator on a

ART

recorder.

Fine Arts Exhibit
To Be Held in April

forthcoming.

This

will be

the last

oppor-

tunity for you to reserve your

copy of the 1963 BUFFALONIAN. The sale will be conducted Feb. 18-21 in front of
the conference theatre in Norton Union from 11:00 to 1:00.
A two-dollar deposit will be required.

Sara Ament, chairman of the fine

arts subcommittee, commented on
the exhibition, “Any media will be
welcomed, and any student can
enter. The fine arts committee will
reserve the right of discretion of
the entries. We would appreciate
and hope that we get good student
support for the art exhibit.”

FRAMING
At Reasonable Prices
—

CUSTOM MADE

Dig out that old Reprint or Portrait,
Come in and choose
your finished framing.
Your material is then framed and
mounted by professionals.

UNIVERSITY ART STORE
“ON CAMPUS”

Basement Foster Hall

—

�Bomb Shelter
Opinions Vary
By LAWRENCE D. FRENKEL

It was announced last week that
the total nuclear stockpile in all
the world today equals less than
one-fifth of one beach. The word
derives from Nevil Shutes end of
the world novel, “On the Beach”,
and It means quantity of Vssionable
weapons that would produce enough
fallout to kill one one-half of the
world’s inhabitants. In other words,
only one-tenth of the world’s popula’ion might be wiped out In a
nuclear war.
With this point in mind the
Spectrum asked students to react to the article in last week’s
issue about the Civil Defense
shelter program. The results of
this poll are represented by
the following statements.
Michael Mashberg, Sophomore
Philosophy major, "The core of the
fallout shelter controversy is not
preparedness tor nuclear war, but
It is to resolve the problems that
could lead to war. The main issue
is putting an end to nuclear testing and bringing about peaceful
co-existence."
“As our government feels that
fallout shelters are necessary, I
think that appropriate shelters
should be constructed. Our present program can only be taken as
a political propaganda. I am sure
that a dormitory, such as the
Tower, couldn't withstand the holocaust of nuclear war.”
Bob Rose, Sophomore History
major, “The idea of the fallout
shelter program as proposed by
President Kennedy le a constructive program. But, these signs destroy the aesthetic beauty of our
buildings, especially the Library.
I also would like to see a more
practical program with underground shelters rather than those
In areas as unpractical as the tenth
floor of Tower.”
Ted Battle, Senior Electrical Engineering major, “The best thing
would be to prevent nuclear war
rather than building shelters. It is
better to protect all the people
than a statistical few. Dr. Bruce
should know what he ij talking
about, but I don’t think thatBuffalo
will be hit, since industrial targets
will not be the primary targets in
a Nuclear war.”
Phil Prorok, Sophomore Chemistry major, “In this area there is
bo much industry that we will be
a prime target and consequently
we will be destroyed. Therefore
there is really no sense in an expensive shelter program. But, that
doesn’t mean that little kids should
tear down the signs.”
Herb Feldman, Junior Math major, “The enemy would be more
concerned with destroying our
ability to fight than with killing
our people. Therefore he will
bomb our military installations
and Industrial areas. This means
that if they hit Niagara Falls or
Lackawanna, we will not survive
the uii6c,3 of the blast and initial
radiation.”

Tournament'Opens Here Today
Recreation Areas Closed for Meet
A banquet tomorrow night will
climax the ACU tournament which
opens here today. The banquet will
be held in the first floor cafeteria,
at 5 n m. Joseph Paffie, assistant
co-ordinator, announced that the
top five contestants from five difterent schools will represent region 2 in the American Bowling
Conference Tournament to be held
in Buffalo. The top five women will
represent region 2 at the Women’s
International Bowling Conference
in Memphis Tennessee,
Today and tomorrow the following colleges and universities will
compete: Harpur College, St, Bonaventure, Alfred University, University of Rochester,- “Cortland
State, U. S. Military Academy,
Duchess Community College, New
York University. Fordham, Sienna

and UB.

Your Spring Dates Now
2000 cadets and 500
“Angels”, female members of
Arnold Air Society, from all over
continental United States, Alaska,
Hawaii, and our territories will
In May,

descend on Buffalo for their anual national conclave, sponsored
this year by the U.B. chapter of
the Arnold Air Society.

In conjunction with the con.
clave, there is to be a military
ball for the delegates held at the
Statler Hilton. Conclave chairmen, AAS Lt. Colonel Herbert
1500 Of
Feldman, reports that
these delegates will be looking for
dates.
Toward this goal, the

Society

is scouring the countryside searching for eligible females who would
desire to attend the festivities
planned, during May 1-4 with one
of the eligible cadets.

QUICK, DRY

XEROX COPIES
HOW AT THE
BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.
(formerly Teck Univ. Branch)
3610 Main Street

IF 3-7131
For

Short Run Printing
or
Microfilm prices call;

Tucker Quick Copy
174 PEARL ST.
TL 2-6214

Gifts of Distinction

-

Courtesy Discounts to University Students
’

.

'

on

Attention Girls! Get

LUGGAGE and LEATHER GOODS

A

Pour semi-flnalists will compete
in a round-robin billiards playoff
this weekend, UB has determined
the men who will represent It in
the ACU Bowling Competition. The
top scorers, from which five will
be selected to participate are: Ed
Taylor, Mike Huberman, Bob Braun,
Joe Aiello, Chuck Bonariga, Bob
Tisdale, Gary Grant, Ken Seglin,
Dale Marriot and Leon Smith. The
highest average of the bowlers
who qualified in the tournament
was 1S6.
The recreation committee of Nor-

MILITELLO’S
/

will be closed all day today and
un tII 6:30 p.m. tomorrow so that
jta facilities may be used for the
enL Anhough the recreation facilities will not be available for student use, spectators
are welcome to attend

ton Union is aiding Mr. Patfie with
for the tournament.
arrangements
Hall,
Norton
the lower level of
The recreation area, located

ANNOUNCEMENT

-

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Fridnv, February 15, 1963

*

‘

■

New Location NOW OPEN

3400 MAIN ST.
(Opposite

TF 3-1600

UBJ

University's Debate Society
Wins Four Trophies in Week
The University’s.Debate Society
returned from last weekend’s Canisius-Rosary Hill Debate Tournament with four trophies. These
were earned by teams and contestants entered in both varsity
and novice divisions of the tour-

nament.

Interested girls are cordially inThe novice team won tlrst place
vited to fill out a brief form in | n its division, with a record of
wins and three losses. Robert
Conclave Headquarters, 359 Nor- five
Williams and Linda Leventhal were
obltgatc
does
not
This
form
ton.
speakers . The neganyone to accept the proposed aUye team consisted of Russell
date nor does it guarantee that Goldberg and Karen Morris,
Two more trophies were brought
the girl will receive a date.
,

*

,

,,

,

home by these two debaters. They
won the award for the Best Negative Team In the novice division. Mr. Goldberg repeated his
performance of a few weeks ago

at Niagara University to again
win the Best Negative Speaker
award.

Carol Ann Zeller brought home
Heat Affirmative Speaker
award tor the varsity division.
Gerald
Her
teammates were:
Gatanzaro, Barbara Giegola, and
Kim Monkiewicz. The team tied
for second place with Holy Grose.

I ho

�Rights Committee
Asks for Tutors

Summerskill Visiting UB
Week Starting Feb. 25

The civil rights committee is
asking all fraternities, sororities,
and other organizations interested
in a group tutoring project to
attend the meeting Tuesday in
the Student Senate office at 4:30
p.m.
The committee Is presently supplying tutors tor services conducted at two Buffalo agencies. The
aim of the program is to raise
the grade average of deficient
high school juniors and seniors
in the inner-city area.

John Summerskill, vice president for student affairs at Cornell
University, will be on our campus
during the week of Feb. 25 as
part of the Distinguished Visitors
program. This program is design,
ed to give students and staff op-

portunity to meet informally with
prominent persons in the academic

world. Other

Frida'

S P E C T R U M

PAGE FOUR

distinguished visitors

will include Dr. Lillian M. Gilbreth, noted for her work in
scientific management and Dr.

practical
in
teaching and work in a social
agency has been valuable also to
college students. Because of the
students,
long list of waiting
teachers are needed immediately.
All program information will be
given at the meeting.

The

William Max Wise, professor of
education at Columbia University.

Dr. Summerskill, a native of
Montreal, Canada received his
doctorate
from University of
Pennsylvania. He is co-author of
Health Services in American ColJOHN SUMMERSKILL
leges and Universities and was a
contributor
to The American at the Gannett Medical Clinic.
College. Last fall he was awarded
While here, Dr.
Summerskill
a Carnegie Corporation Award to
study educational and adminis- will meet with students in the
trative procedures at a number Dorothy M. Haas lounge in Norof American universities.
ton Hall Monday, February 25
He will examine changes in the from 2:00
4;00 and Tuesday,
freshman year at these universi- February 26 from 3:00
5:00. All
ties which reflect the upgrading
students are invited to take adof curricula and Instruction in
many secondary schools. He has vantage of this opportunity to
also served Cornell as professor meet and talk informally with Dr,
of clinical and preventive medicine Summerskill.

experience

Committeemembers are needed
tor the Spring Arts Festival
April 15-20. People are needed
tor the publications, publicity,
student participation day, and
concert committees. Anyone interested may contact Fran Biletzky at Ext, 2884.

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB
The ' Anthropology Club will
hold its bi-monthly meeting Wedin Foster
nesday, at 1:00 p.m.
205. Plans will be made for the
Northeastern Anthropologic a 1 Conference to be held at
Cornell University March 29-31.
A tentative schedule of future

will

15, 1963

Soard

Spectrum

speakers and meetings

February

be

presented to the membership for
discussion. All prospective majors

The Photography Club will meet
today at 4 p.m. in room 264 of
Norton, All members are urged
to attend and are asked to bring
their pictures which may be used
for publication. There will not be
a meeting next week.
At the March meeting Donald
E. Nicholas will speak on composition and texture. Anyone interested in joining the club may
apply to Ron Ross 831-3560.

and other interested students are
invited to attend the meeting.

PRE-LAW SOCIETY

The regular meeting of the Pre
Law Society will be held from
NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE
3-4:30 Tuesday afternoon in room
339 Norton Hall. The executive
All students tutoring at either
will meet Tuesday at 3
the Neighborhood House or the council
Saint Augustine Center are to p.m.
meet Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in the
GRADUATE MATH CLUB
Student Senate office. The civil
subcommittee
education
The
rights
graduate mathematics club
will meet at this time to discuss will hold a meeting on Tuesday
plan for the semester and evaluate In room 204, Diefendorf, at 4 p.m.
progress. Anyone interested in Miss Edith R. Schneckenburger of
either tutoring or the other as- the Mathematics Department will
pects of the committee is wel- speak on “Interior Transformations."
come.

-

-

Next Issue of Student Review
Monday- New Editor is Named
Thomas Berdine and Thomas Ellis were appointed editor, and
business manager respectively, of
New Student Review, with the
understanding that final confirmation would be forthcoming after
the clarification of QPA, at the

the magazine is Friday, March 1,
The Board also considered

some

possible revisions of the constitu-

tion among which was that the
Board's capabilities to control and
censor be greatly limited. There
was also the question of appointlast meeting of the Publications
ment. Jack Segman, chairman of
Board.
the Board, suggested that the
The move was necessitated by Board not have the power to apthe resignation of both Gordon point editors, but perhaps to have
McCormack and Charles Eaton a veto power.
who originally filled the positions.
Dr. Robert H. Rossberg, associate
The officers were elected by the
professor of education and psypresent staff members upon Mr.
chology, was appointed as a new
McCormack’s resignation.
member of the Board. He replaces
The next issue of New Student Dr. Connolly who resigned because

Four different ways to make going
more fun than getting there
You can see why one of America’s will make you think that ice and snow
favorite outdoor sports is driving are kid stuff; and for pure adventure,
Chevrolets, with four entirely different America’s only sports car, Corvette—kinds of cars to choose from. There’s now in two all-new versions with looks
the Jet-smooth Chevrolet, about as luxu- that can stop traffic like a rush-hour
rious as you can go without going over- blizzard. Picked your favorite already?
board in price; the low-cost
The next thing is to take
Chevy II, a good-looking car .—fJBBkgw the wheel at your Chevrolet
dealer’s. If thatdoesn’t have
that would send any family
packing; another family
you thinking of places to
g0 mayhe you’d rather just
favorite, the sporty Corvair, y
a
whose rear-engine traction Keeps Going GfC3l have a ball around town!
/*

Review will come out Monday. The of added duties. The next meeting
copy deadine for the next issue of of the Board will be Monday.

&gt;

•

*

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on four entirely

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your Chevrolet dealer’s

�Fridnv. FeKrunrv 15, 1963

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Dr. Myklebust to
Lecture Tuesday

Movie Censorship

Dr. Helmer H, Myklebust, of
Northwestern University, will give
a lecture on Differentia] Diagnosis
of Auditory Disorders in Children
by Ronald
Tuesday, at 8 p.m. His discussion,
censorship exists today,
Movie
in the conference theater, will
include consideration of hearing but its power has been dealt many
problems, language disorders and heavy blows. The United States
speech problems.
Supreme Court has ruled
that
The lecture is presented by the motion pictures are within the
School of Education in connection ambit of protection of the First
with its program for preparation
Amendment, as extended to the
of teachers of the Deaf conducted
States via the Fpurteenth Amendin coorperation with St. Mary's
ment and which affords protection
School for the Deaf.
speech and press.
Dr. Myklebust is director of the for tree
Institute for Language Disorders,
State and city officials may not
professor of language pathology,
censor a picture merely on the
psychology, and neurology and
basis of their "opinipn". Motion
psychiatry at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. He is pictures may not be censored on
author of a number of books, in- the grounds that they are sacricluding Auditory Disorders In legious" as in the case of the
Children, Psychology of Deafness, picture, "The Miracle". Nor may
and Your Deaf Child.
they be censored by criteria clasDr. Myklebust has been
sifying them as "immoral", "harmawarded the Honorary Lift.
ful”, "prejudicial to the best inGallaudet ColD. degree
terests of the community”, “cruel”,
lege, the award of merit from
indecent, Immoral or tending to
the Conference of Executives
debase or corrupt morals.
of American School for the
The Supreme Court also reDeaf, and is a Dlplomate in
jected the ban on the motion
Clinical Psychology in the Apicture
“Lady
Chatterley's
merlcan
Psychological AsLover" stating that a film
sociation. His particular specialties are the psychology of
could not be censored solely
because It would portray
deafness
and Psyhoneuro“ideas that are not conven.
logioal learning disorders in
tional or shared by a major,
children.

THE LAW AND YOU

Canon Collins, Dr. Lefever
Debate U.S. Nuclear Policy

values and Institutions intact and
By PETER 08TR0W
The main point confronting this we want to create a world order
country today is to avoid nuclear in which all nations can survive
war, while preserving our way in the same manner.
of life. So contended L. John ColHe stated that there are two
lins, canon of St. Paul's Cathe- dangers to the realization of this
dral, .London, England, at last goal: nuclear war tyranny (either
Thursday's discussion of "The internal or external). The U.S.,
Nuclear Dilemma” sponsored by assuming its obligation to human,
the Canterbury Association and ity, must have a security jrolicy
which has three object?
campus Sane.
Canon Collins, is also chairman
We must dete
and
of the Campaign for Nuclear Dis- lesser wars; /While remaining in
armament. Dr. Ernest W. Lefever, a position tcr'win war if it occurs.
member of
the International The Concept h£_ winning still has
Studies Division of the Institute meaning. “It is the winner who
for Defense Analyses, Washing., writes the piece of paper,” The
ton, and consultant to the Council belief that there is a black-white
on Religion and
International difference between peace and war
is a myth. We are always engaged
Affairs also spoke.
In his opening remarks, Canon ( in some sort of struggle.
Collins stated that he believes j Disputing exaggerated claims as
the main problem confronting us; to the amount of destruction that
today is to avoid nuclear war would take place in a nuclear
preserve war, Dr, Lefever said, "To equate
while continuing to
our way of life. Since the intro-, nuclear war with the complete
duction of nuclear weapons, he destruction of mankind is incorcontended, “war is no longer a I rect.” He stated that competent
viable means of resolving inter-! studies show that 80% of the
national disputes." Dismissing the world’s population would survive
possibility of negotiation alter a, nuclear war without genetic efconilict starts, he said: “Once war fects, even, if ail nuclear arms are
begins, the rule of law goes by committed.
DISARMAMENT CRITERIA
the board; emotion takes) over)
Dr. Lefever determined three
and the situation becomes un. |
controllable." The belief that 1 criteria by which we must judge
such negotiations are feasible "is j a prospective disarmament proposal:
a wild dream.”
First we must decide whether
As for the deterrent theory on
whicfi our defense system is based, the proposal will have the net
he said; "The theory of deterrence effect of increasing or decreasing
is pased on false psychology." If stability between the two great
we go on as we have been, there powers. High stability makes for
will be nuclear world tensions: greater restraint.
Next we must decide whether
WORLD TENSIONS
I. The United States should be a proposal would have the net
effect of making war less danger,
ready to shed a measure of national sovereignty in favor of a ous should it come.
Lastly we do not want an agree,
world authority which would take
care of all defense problems ol ment that will benefit “the cheater." A treaty based entirely on
all nations.
2. We should recognize that one trust may be violated without
of the international tensions is detection until it is too late. There
tho economic situation. It is the is no such thing as foolproof disduty of all nations to work out armament.
During the period of personal
sensible methods of change from
conditions necessary for product- confrontation Canon Collins made
ion of war materials to conditions the generalized statement that
which facilitate production of life could not carry on as before
after a war, while Dr. Lefever
peace time materials.
S The United States should take brought up his belief that the
the initiative toward disarmament U.S. should be less concerned with
whether other nations follow it or world public opinion. “A great
power,” he said, “is never liked,
not.
4. It is vital that we should also but always respected.’’
take the initiative to bring Red
China into the family of nations. *■■*•******���****����*��*••
A member of the family is more
easily reformed than one who is
Ball &amp; Chain Twist
excluded from the family.
United
Nations
should
6. The
and Limbo at
take precedence over all alliances,
CHICK GARDINO'S
pacts, and treaties.
Canon Collins suggested that
BARGE
INN
Britain’s initiative should be withdrawn from the nulear arms race.
He noted that we must be ready
Music every Friday &amp; Saturday
to trust. We cannot be sure that
with the Fabulous
the other party is trustworthy,

but a risk taken in the cause of
a moral principle is worth it.
DOUBLE PURPOSE
Dr. Lefever remarked that
America’s power is “a trust and
an obligation, a burden and a
responsibility." The United States,
he said, has a twofold purpose:
We want to survive \yith our

UB CONTINENTALS
DICK

featuring
HARMAN on

Old Niagara Falls

Vibes

Bird., Amherst

NX 2 9722

Myklebust will be here
Monday through Wednesday, presenting a three-day seminar on
the Psychology of Deafness for
the students in training at St.
Mary’s School for the Deaf. This
is the third in a series of seminars on education of the deaf.
The fourth in this series will be
offered March 21, 22, and 23 by
Dr. June Miller, Director of the
Department of
hearing and
speech, University of Kansas

Dr.

Medical Center.

reasoning”.

Next Week: Auto Accident Procedure.

ity."

the liberality of the Supreme Court it has also held that i
there is no complete freedom of
speech or press. Motion pictures
of every kind may not be exhibited
at any time or place. Although the
court hag held that “Sex and obscenity are not synonymous”, ob-!
scenlty is not protected by the
tree speech and press guarantees
of the First
Amendment. The
States still maintain their police:
pc «er to proscribe pornographic
utterances sun tlims.
Despite

j
tufcll
VJm. CkJLmm

0—/- J*~B.XM
C~~ f&gt;-. /-i
0J-. i'&lt;U—

The Speech and Hearing Association of Western New York wil]
The Supreme Court has stated
hold its February meeting in con. that "there may be no absolute
junction with
Dr. Myklebust’s ist of public morals” and the
looks with disfavor on
lecture Feb. 19. The public is in’orms of prior restraint. However,
vited to this meeting.
there is no absolute protection
igainst prior restraint. It may be

UB Dental Wives
Sponsor Concert

The Dental Wives Association
of UB is sponsoring a Pops concert
featuring a pianist of national
prominence at Kleinhans Music
Hall Friday, March 1.
Tickets will be on sale in the
basement of Capen Hall, Wednesday, Feb.20, from 11:30 to 1 p.m„
and also at the ticket booth in
Norton Hail from 10:30 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. and from 4:30 to 6:30
p.m. daily. All tickets are
$1.75
per person.

Need

FOR SALE
1957 KARMAN-GHIA
XX 6-1318

FOR
?

Publicity
Campus Activities
Portraits
Group Pictures
?

quality and
fast service at

top

reasonable prices

FOSER
PHOTO SERVICE
TF 4-0652

Personalized

usual quantity

3 69

1 *J' I

regularly 6.00
(Save

H)

Choice of

EVER SUEEER
EROM
11

SUNDAY

SLUMP”?
see...

?

Call Dick Foser,
UB student, for

Rytex Flight

double the

Advertising
?

SALE

Stationery

a

Photographer

IMPRINT STYLE HL

FEBRUARY

Dancing will follow In the Mary
Seaton Room.

245 Oehman Blvd.
�����������������������*

In determining the limits of
movie censorship, we would do well
to heed the wisdom of Thomas
Jefferson. "We have nothing to
fear from the demoralizing rea.
Soning of some, if others are left
tree to demonstrate their errors.
And especially when the law
stands ready to punish the first
criminal act produced by the false

i

Dr. Lefever

tolerated In exceptional case*,
and films which are obscene or
pornographic will be denied exhl.
bltlon.

1

Canon Collins, Dr. Smith and

Kaminski

Happens to the best of us.
or do.
Nothing much to
’Course there's always studying,
. . . to cure
"Sunday
but
this
Slump," call the folks at home.
They'll have lots of bright things
to tell.you. Cheer you up in no
time, just hearing your voice
will make them feel good, too.
Rates are lower, remember,
every evening after 6:00 and all
day Sunday, Extra low for many
calls within New York State

after 9:00 p.m.

%

200 club single sheets, 100 enor 100 club double
velopes
or 100
sheets, 100 envelopes
large monarch sheets, 100 en.
—

—

velopes.

Fine

quality

medium-weight

paper with lined envelopes.
Choice of white paper with blue
envelope linings and blue Ink—or blue paper, blue envelope
linings, blue Ink. Choice of Imprint styles

shown.

Why not order Flight for gifts.

As a gift, Rytex proves your
thoughtfulness—It’s

obviously

made to order for the occasion.

New York Telephone
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
“On Campus"

�SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

*

Editorials

cCetterA

*

DEFECTIVE DOORS
Dear Joan;

X appreciate the feeling of the
students concerning the defective
doors which the Union was blessed

Second Party Emerges
After last year’s “no opposition” elections for the Student Senate this year’s two-party race will be looked forward
to with great interest. A new party, the Student’s Alliance,
will oppose the United Students in next month’s contest.
The candidates and platforms for both parties will appear in the next issue (March 1) of The Spectrum, and
elections will take place March 5 and 6. In retrospect, we
ate sure most students will admit that the United Students
have done a fine job this past year, and our enthusiasm
over the emergence of a second party has nothing to do
with the accomplishments of US.
It is simply that a two-party system is an integral
part of our democratic way of life, and despite the fact
that we admire the US and have supported them in the
past, we can only feel that this year's elections will be
all the better for the competition involved. If the election
is carried out in the true spirit of fair competition, this
can not help but be the case.
With a successful year behind them, including the Political Ideologies series, the American Foreign Policy series,
the upcoming model United Nations, and the various convocation programs, US is sure to have provisions for the
continuation of this type of program on their platform. Of
course there will be other issues, but whether or not there
are any hotly contested issues, we hope the students will
exercise their right to vote. It is a right denied to many.

“1 Was a Stranger

Friday, February 15, 1963

.

.

.

Like most other American universities, the Univer-

sity of Buffalo has many foreign students. For many of
these visitors their life here is a lonely and friendless one.
They return to their own countries with only an acquaintance of the outward aspects of American society. In

short, many come and leave as strangers.
Why is this the case? Are average American students reluctant to accept them? This may be the case, but
why. In this world where understanding and cooperation
among nations is so vital, why do many overlook or in
fact ignore the opportunity to really understand someone
“different.”

with. The mechanical defects were
discussed with the proper Univer-

sity authorities, with the architect and with B.A.W. Construction Company, late In August. Replacement parts were placed on
order and the latest word is that
they should be coming to us by
the end of this week,
The difficulty is that when z
door is pushed open to a 90 degree
angle It locks in place. No new
building can ever be completely
free of construction difficulties
and it is most unfortunate that
the doors which were ordered foi
this building were not adequate
for the amount of traffic which
we have experienced.

Sincerely yours,
Dorothy M. Haas,
Director

Capen’s Addition
Soon Completed
BV RICKIE STONE
A $200,000 addition to Capen
will
Hall, the dental building,
consist of two second floor wings
added to the original one story
wing. It will provide an opportunity for research in periodontosis, a disease which cause the
degeneration of the supporting
tissue around the teeth. Research
or. the disease will be done in the
fields of anatomy, bacteriology,
biochemistry, pathology and physiology.

When Dean James English, first
came here in 1960, he recognized
the need for research facilities
to expand dental knowledge. In
There is o general lack of interest, among collegians,
1962 he asked the executive comin political issues which are of paramount importance to
mittee of ADEPF (the Annual
many foreign students who come from countries passing
Dental Education Participating
through transitional stages which force the youth to
Fund started in 1955 by a group
be politically minded. This explains why the two groups
of interested alumni to increase
find little common ground on which they can meet. Many
faculty salaries in the basic science
Americans find it difficult to accept the foreign studdepartment) to help finance the
ent's preoccupation with political affairs, and the emobuilding of the new wings. They
tion he may show in his views.
gave their assent and contributed
On the other hand the foreign student becomes an- approximately $100,000 or half of
noyed at the complacent American whose apparent inter- the cost while the National Insest in what goes on around him is almost nil. Both groups titutee of Health contributed the
are the losers. First the foreign student leaves this coun- other half.

try with little real knowledge of what the American college student is like, and on the whole the lonesome years

spent here make him look back on the time with bitterness. Americans on the other hand are missing out on a
great deal of fun, not to mention education. There is no
better way of understanding world affairs than to have a
discussion with someone who has had first hand experience.
Since we all seem to be missing the boat why don’t we
do something about it starting now.

Language Teachers Initiate
An Italian Club on Campus
An Italian Club has recently
been formed on campus under
the direction of two Italian teachers from the department of modem language. Mrs. A. Vella,
and Mrs. S. Battaglia, the Club
made its debut last week.
At its first meeting Edward Le
Frak was elected president protein. Plans for the future include;

Italian breakfast, the showof imported Italian films,
speakers from Italian airlines, and
a possible summer trip to Italy.
The Club will meet every second
Thursday night in Norton Union.
The meeting will begin at 7:30.
The club is open to both those
who are or who are not studying Italian.

It is a common practice in for posing the same problem.
America that at this time of year,
To Lyndon Johnson the What’s
awards and honors are doled out
His
Name Award is presented in
their
disto deserved persons for
tinct contributions, be it to their tribute to the service he has givcommunities, industries, or what- en his office.
ever. Man may be judged by his
To Fidel Castro the Problem
actions, and the following Reflection Awards are hereby presented Child Award is presented for his
to individuals for their particular having lost his toy missiles.
achievements in 1962:
To Mao tse Tung the Altruist
To Charles de Gaulle the No
In regard to the construction, Award is presented because of his Award is presented for his reDean English said, "This facility contribution to negative philoso- straint in war.
represents a broadening of our phy in the realm of international
To Robert Kennedy the Expan.
responsibility as a professional politics.
sion Award is presented for his
school. We feel that we should
To Premier Khrushchev the Alnew and lively interpretation of
join the research effort geared to coholics Anonymous Award is prethe duties of the Attorney-Genmatter
how
much
uncovering new dental knowledges sented, for no
eral.
this is our function just as it vodka he may have drunk, regarding Cuba, he remained sober.
is our function to graduate comTo Robert Morganthau the Sacpetent dentists to take care of
To Col. Nasser the Lost Award rificial Lamb Award is presented
patients. It is gratifying that the is presented for his having lost for his cordiality in allowing his
alumni of this school, who conhalf the United Arab Republic
name to be used.
tributed half the coat of building with the hope that he may yet
To Frank Sinatra the HDAC
the
laboratories facilities, re- lose the whole.
Award is presented for his direc.
cognized the need and did someTo Liz and Dick the Newsmakthing about it."
ers Award is presented for their tory of the Clan, as chairman of
unstilled efforts and success in the board.
Construction was begun before
most consistently making headTo President Kennedy the Disc
the fall semester of 1962 began. line news.
Award is presented for his aid in
The walls of the West wing and
To the Paparazzi of Rome the
moving the record industry ahead
some of its equipment will be com- Kunaround Award is
presented with vigor.
pleted this week. Completion of for
the
world
informed
of
keeping
both wings is scheduled for early the latest developments on the
To Moise Tschombe the Prov
1963. April 25 will be ADEPF Day
ince Award is presented, onct
battleground of romance.
for alumni and friends of
the
To Governor Barnett the Neanagain defending the principle of
Dental School. From 9-5 they will derthal Award is presented for his tokenism.
be honored guests of the latter, thwarted
attempt to assert a vesand the first to see the new deTo Ted Kennedy the How Is
tigial mentality.
Succeed Award is presented for
partment and those under conTo Richard Nixon the Oh Yes!
struction.
having older brothers.
We Can Do It Again Award is
presented for his perseverance.
And lastly, the Nothing To Say
To Herbert Aptheker the Free, Award is presented to yours truly
dom Of Speech Award is presented for having written this column
You have until March 4 to get
because the awards committee is
your ID cards validated at the
a firm defender of tokenism.
NOTICE
Audio-Visual center in Foster
To General Walker the Rabble
Friday, Feb. 22, which is
Hall. However, these people
Award is presented with the hope
University holiday, all of th
lacking a validated card will not
that he is not indicative of the
facilities of Norton Hall wil b
be permitted to vote in the
U. S. military.
opened, except the Cafeter
forthcoming Senate elections.
To the Printers Union of New
and the Tiffin Room. Regul;
ID cards will be stamped every
To
Wrap
the
Wluit
City
hour's will be maintained.
day from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Garbage With Award is presented I
-

-

Editor-In-Chief
News Editor..MARY LOU WILSON
JAMES BAKER
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
CHARLES STONE
Business Mgr
LARRY SINGER
Fin Ad
THOMAS HAENLE. JR.
Layout EDITOR . ..David Irwin

—

..

JOAN R.

FLORY

Clrcul

Mgr
Office Mgr
Advertising Mgr

Editorial Ad

KAREN

SANFORD

BEV ROSENOW
ED BRANDT
WM. SIEMERINO

'

GENERAL STAFF: Louise Bank. Victoria Bugelskl. Angle Campanella,
Camille LoBracco, Elaine Barron, Marilyn Berclk, Judith Button, Sharon
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Mary Lou Wilson,
Larry
Frenkel, Karen Furlong, Mark Feldman, Barry Epstein, David Frey, Joey
Elm, Alan Hoffman, Judy Haber, David Irwin, Rick Gelman, Barbara Goldwater, Ron Kaminski, John Knlpler, Anne Milnte, Bryna Mlllman, Cathy
McHugh, Lonl
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PHOTOGRAPHY

Wallace

Peycha.

STAFF:

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Goldberg,

Larry

Schu’tz. Joel Havens,

F.ntered as second class matter February 8, 1961, at
the Post Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of March
3, 187*4. Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of postage provided for In Section 1103. Act of October t, 1917,
authorized February 9. 1961.
Subscription 88.00 per year, circulation 0600.
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service. Ine.. 420 Madison Ave., New York, N T,

York,

j

THE SPECTRUM

ing

Reflections

—

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at
Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo 14,
N Y. Published weekly from the first week of September to the last week
In* April, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas and Raster.

aii

�Friday, Februory IS,

1963

*3onic C^oiumn

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Panhellenic Rush

Reaches Midpoint

Today marks the midpoint of
Panhellenic Rush. The informal
This week has seen a few changes in Greek policy, among them parties have ended, and all rushees
the display of forbidden plaques. Although sororities and fraternities should pick up their invitations
were requested to patiently await the day of recognition in the cafeto the formal parties in the Panteria, the day seemeid to be farther and farther in the future. Con- hellenic office this
afternoon
gratulations to the originators of the plan to secure Greek rights in between 3 and 5 p.m.
spite of any and all obstacles.
The themes for the informal
Winter Weekend is upon us. At the time of this writing it is still
parties were as follows: Alpha
uncertain whether or not snow sculptures will be possible this weekGamma Delta-Nursery Rhymes,
end, If it is, good luck to all Greeks participating in the quick-frozen
Chi Omega-Southern Belles, Phi
capers.
Zeta Chi-Shaggy Dog, Sigma
With Valentine’s Day presenting perfect opportunities for some Delta Tau-Circus, Theta Chi-Proswingin’ parties, the week’s activities should be plentiful
hibition. All the sororities put on
Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity announces a Valentine’s Party toskits, participated in paper bag
morrow night at the Hotel Mars. A 1963 Sweetheart queen will be dramatics, sang and served recrowned at the affair, which is open by invitation only. Last Friday’s freshments.
beer stag was a huge success.
The formal
parties, which
The Chairmen of the Board of Alpha Kappa Psi would like to
announce their third stag rush party tonight, from 8:30 to 1:00 a.m. begin Monday, will be held in
"HEY STELLA"
The party will be held at the Parkridge Restaurant. All interested either one of the sisters’ house
By PHOTO CLUB
the enlarger along with an old
at
or
a restaurant. Sororities will
rushees are invited.
glassine envelope. This “sandwichThis
a
picture
displays
darkroom
Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority is preparing for Winter Weekend supply transportation to their technique
ing” technique yielded the above
parties.
used to add flare to a
by building their snow sculpture. Good luck to Sister Gloria Grosso,
picture that is too good to throw print by projecting the man’e ImMacDonald Hall’s candidate for queen of the weekend.
Filial bidding will be Feb. 28 away but not interesting enough age through a hole in the envelope and blocking out extraneThe members of Alpha Phi Delta Fraternity hold a rush party and is conducted on a preferential to stand on its own
merit. The
tonight at the Capri Lounge starting at 9:30. The party is open to basis. Both the sororities and the shot was taken in New York City ous details.
all eligible rushees. Beer, girls, and music will be in abundance. For rushees submit their bid to the out of the window of a moving
The camera used was a Nikon F,
car.
further information call Mario Catalano, TX 2-9655.
Panhellenic office in the morning. The straight print showed nothing 35mm, using a B8mm, F/1.4 Auto
The fratres of Alpha Phi Omega will hold a dated rush mixer for Then the council matches these more than a half dressed city Nikor lena. The exposure was
their prospective rushees tomorrow night at the Burmon Inn. A rush bids. Where there is agreement dweller yelling to the apartment about F/5.G at 1/60, on Kodak Panatomlc X film rated at ASA 64.
meeting was held last Wednesday featuring Dean Siggelkow and between the choices of sorority next door.
Normal development followed In
Miss Haas as guest speakers. The brothers are enthusiastically look- and rushees, an invitation is made
In order to add more Interest to spite of the high rating to utilize
ing forward to a very successful semester.
up for that girl. All rushees must
the shot, the photographer sand- the advantages of thin negatives
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity will hold their rush dinner at Ed. pick up their “Invitations to
wiched lh e original negative Into In extreme enlargements.
uardo’s Restaurant this Monday. Cocktails will be served at 6:30. Pledge” between 4 and 5 p.m. at
Those attending the affair will leave Tower at 6:00; the party is by the Panhellenic office.
Invitation only. Thanks are extended to Mike Terlecky and Mike
The Panhellenic Ball will be
Alois for the great job done on last Friday’s rush party.
held March 1. The Scholarship
Herb Mellnick was overjoyed at the celebration held for him by
Tea will be held in the middle of
the fellows of Beta Sigma Bho. He would like to express his apprecia. March.
John W. Reigle, rector of
etry In 1960 and served ns po\ Dr.
tion for their warm reception. The Fellows wish him many more
etry consultant to the Library
the Emmanual Episcopal Church
happy birthdays.
InPittsburgh, will open a series of
of Congress, 1956-58.
The sisters of Chi Omega hope the rushees enjoyed their “South,
lectures sponsored by the GraduHis principle works include poern Belles” party. The sisters are looking forward to their formal
ate Management Program of the erty; "Blood For a Stranger,"
party on Monday at the Little White House In Williamsville. The
School of Business Administration, “Little Friend," "Losses," and
fall pledge class was glad to hear the patients at the VA Hospital
Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Health Sci- “The Seven League Crutches.” He
enjoyed joke books compiled as a pledge project.
cnees 134,
is also the author of the novel
Intertraternlty Council rushing
Kappa Psi Fraternity spent an enjoyable evening at the formal
Pictures From an Institution.
rush dinner last week. Dr. Sporangio, a national officer from Purdue, which began January 29 is giving
"Christian Ideologies Within a
Other lecturers in the series will
was a guest at the dinner which featured the debut of a trio of folk prospective pledges an opport- Capitalist and Communist Framesinging brothers. Congratulations are in order for brother Paul unity to get a closer look at U.B. work" will be Dr. Reigle’s topic. be Dr. Earl A. Evans, Jr., profesPenner who received the Lee’s Drug Store Scholarship for the high, fraternities. Students who made He received a Ph.D. from Harvard sor and chairman of the departest average on all college work preceding the third year in Pharmacy, average the first semester are and has taught at Yale. Randall ment of biochemistry, University
Phi Epsilon Kappa Fraternity will hold a special meeting next eligible to rush. "Over three-hun- Jarrell, associate professor at the of Chicago. March 26; Dr. William
Tuesday night. Prospective members will be present. Election of offi- dred students," according to Dave Women's College of the Univer- H. Hastie, Judge, Third U. S. Circers for the 63-64 year will take place at the meeting. Highlights of Smith, treasurer of the IFC, sity of North Carolina, will speak cuit Court of Appeals, April 9; and
"have already signed up." This on "Fifty Years of American Po- Dr. Karl W. Deutsch, professor
the last World Series will be shown after elections.
The fratres of Phi Epsilon PI Fraternity are having a dated party is considered to be an average etry,” Feb. 26 to conclude the of political science at Yale, April
23.
at the Hall tomorrow evening. Buses will be leaving the Tower at turn out for rushing.
month's lectures.
8:45 p.m. Music will be provided by Hermie the Spermle. Monday
Each fraternity holds activities
Dr. Relgle wll also speak Weda
received
Jarrell,
Mr.
poet,
night, the fratres are holding their Formal Rush Dinner at the Hotel
such as parties and stags which
nesday at 8 p.m. in the Norton
the B.A. and M.A. degrees
Lafayette.
enable the rushes to meet members
conference theater on The Mean,
from Vanderbilt University.
The brothers of Phi Kappa Psi will hold an invitation only, dated of the fraternities and to ask any
ing of Money. The lecture Is open
He has taught at Kenyon Colrush party tonight from 9-2 at the Club Sheridan, 3500 Sheridan questions about fraternity life
lege, the University of Texas,
to the public and Is sponsored by
Drive. Music will be provided by the Valiants. The brothers wish to which may come up. Members
the Canterbury Association. A
and Sarah Lawrence College.
congratulate their basketball team on their hard fought victory over visiting Allenhurst also have
panel discussion will follow the
an
He was also recipient of the
Beta Sigma Rho, 29-24, and high scorer Frank Schabel with 17 points. opportunity to meet with freshlecture.
National Book award for poPhi Lambda Delta Fraternity will hold an Invitation only, dated men.
&amp;
rush party featuring “Mopsy" at Tom
Jerry’s Annex. The brothers
Here are some comments made
would like to congratulate President Rick Cohr on his appointment
as head of the Heart Fund Dance. They feel that this dance is a by students about rushing: Chuck
freshman,
“Rushing
product of the new role that fraternities and sororities are assuming Lippman,
gives freshmen an opportunity to
at TTR as campus leaders.
Noel Lee and Paul Makanow- studied In Paris wtth Nadia Boul.
Phi Sigma Sigma Sorority would like to announce their upcoming be introduced to members of the
formal rush dinner at the Park Lane, Tuesday night. They would fraternities and to form opinions Itzky, piano and violin duo, will anger. Today he is known as an
present two concerts at Baird excellent soloist and an expert
like to thank the brothers of TKE for the great social last Friday about them.”
night. Best of luck to Jean Loesser, Phi Slg’s candidate for Heart
during performer of chamber music
Terry Gerace, Junior, “Unfort- Hall Feb! 25 and March 2
Fund Queen.
�
unately the period of rushing is their week-long stay in Buffalo. among the younger American mu.
The brothers of PI Lambda Tau would like to thank its rushees too
short. Because of the whirl- Both programs will begin at 8:30 sicians.
and the sisters of Pi Omega Nu for making its party last Friday a big
wind of activity, much social p.m. Admission is free
and ail
Paul Makanowltxky, of Russian
success. They would like to remind everyone about the Engineering pressure
is placed on the freshstudents and faculty are Invited descent, was born In Stockholm.
Ball Feb. 22.
men, who don't know what they
Pho Pi Phi Fraternity will hold its 44th Annual Founder’s Day
He studied with lyan Galamlan,
are looking for because of their to attend.
Jacques Thlbaud and Nadia Boulparty, this Saturday night at the Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge lack of fraternity experience.”
performers
Both
had
achievacross from the airport. All pre-pharmacy students are invited to
anger in Paris. After his debut
Harvey Pearlman, freshman,
ed successful careers as solo.
attend this gala function. The brothers have completed their fund
in Paris he achieved fame as an
drive and have made their contribution to CARE. All students are "One can observe the fraternity
Ists before they Joined at
outstanding violinist both in EuInvited to see the Rope’s display case on the second floor of Health spirit at the various rush parties,
Paris In 1956 to form the Duo
rope
since
the
affairs
tell
and overseas as a soloist and
much
about
Sciences.
Lee
Makanowltzky. After
chamber music performer.
A wonderful time was had by all at the sigma Alpha Mu Hostess the organization and planning
touring Europe, the artists
Party last Friday night. The Sammies will be having their formal that went behind them.”
At the Feb. 25 program, works
were acclaimed as exceptional,
rush stag this Sunday night at the Hotel Lafayette. Guest speaker
EM Shuitis, freshman, "Because
of Schumann, Stravinsky, Webern,
will be Sid Youngelman, SAM at the University of Alabama and pres- there are often as many as three
a “Duo Phenomsnon.”
Schoenberg and Debussy will be
ently a lineman on the Buffalo Bills Football Club. The affair is open or four rush parties one would
Their interpretations of
the performed. The March 2 program
by invitation only.
like to go to on the same night,
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity will hold a smoker in Norton, room it is hard to get acquainted with piano-violin chamber music liter- will include works of Beethoven,
231 from 2-5 for rushees this afternoon, Sig Ep will hold Its rush din- more than a few fraternities.”
ature have received high praise, Brahms, and Bartok.
ner Tuesday evening at 6:00 at Laube’s Restaurant at the Lord Am-February 25 and 26, IP'C bidd- for they perform as a duo. and
herst Motel. It Is a closed affair. The pledges will be Initiated this ing
JUNIOR WOMEN
by preference will take place. do not subordinate the piano. In
Friday night. There will be a cocktail party before the Winter WeekCap and Gown, senior womEach rushee will state the frater- 1959 they received the "Grand
end bance at the home of Brother Cagan. Congratulations to Brother nity
en’s honor society, invites Junof his first, second and third Prix du Dlsque” for their recordDenny Kelso who was married Thursday.
ior women with an average of
choice. If his name appears on ing
The sisters of Sigma Kappa would like to congratulate Bonnie the
of Bach sonatas.
about a 1.5 to a tea March 3
corresponding fraternity’s list,
McDougall, the new president, and the other newly elected officers.
All Junior women are receiving
the rushee is chosen to pledge.
Noel
Lee
born
China
in
addition
to
was
of
In
this they wish Bonnie best of luck on her summer po- The
forms from the office of the
have more than American parents. He studied
fraternities
sition In Finland. The Sig Kap’s formal dinner will be held March 23
at
dean of women. Cap and Gown
one preference list, and they hope
and
the
at the Lord Amherst We wish to thank the rushees for the enjoyable
Harvard University
at
urges all women to return these
to get most of those of their “first New Elngland Conservatory
under
party.
choice” list. The bidding is done! Walter Piston. After receiving forms immediately, as the
(Continued on Page t)
group will have access to them.
by member of the IFC.
degrees from both institutions he
By ANNE MIINTE

Management Program to Open
New Lecture Series This Tuesday

IFC Rushing
In Full Swing

Piano and Violin Duo Will Present
Two Free Concerts at Baird Hall

-

�15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird”
Opens Thursday at Granada
By DAVID VOGEL

Moviegoers In the Buffalo area
will be in for a real treat when
the motion picture version of
Harper Lee's Pulitzer-prize winning novel, “To Kill a Mockingbird" opens at the Granda Theater
Thursday.
This is one of the most unique
pictures to hit the screen in quite
awhile and has great Academy
Award potential. It effectively
combines the qualities of humor,
suspense and tenderness in a
moving plot.
a
The story takes place in
a typical community in the
deep south during the depression. It deals with the experience of the young, son and
daughter of a mild-mannered
country lawyer as they mature and discover the evils
existing in the world. The
main theme of the story concerns the vigorous racial discrimination practiced In the
modern South.
Gregory Peck, who plays the
Children's father Atticus Finch,
agrees to defend a young negro
man innocently charged with an
attack upon a farmer’s daughter.
His defense turns out to be quite
a trick in a prejudice-ridden com.,

munity.
Mr, Peck does an excellent job
of portraying the determined law.
yer, especially in the dramatic
courtroom scenes where he is ably
backed up by the superb acting
of his supporting cast. The parts
of the defendent, Tom Robinson,
and the farmer’s daughter were
also played exceptionally well.
A young boy and girl who
will go far in the acting world
play the parts of Atticus
Finch’s young son and daughter, around whom the movie
centers. Mary Bradhahi, who
plays Scout, and Phillip Alford, who plays Jem, literally
steal the show, producing

Concert Features

Three Soloists
By VICTORIA BUGEL8KI

tense, and
heart-warming moments. In
one scene, six year old Scout
single-handedly talks a mob
of armers out of trying to
lynch the Negro prisoner,
many humorous,

Tom Robinson.
Of interest to the movie-goer
is the relation of the title, “To
Kill a Mockingbird," to the theme
of the story. The title is referred
to first by Atticus Finch when
he tells Jem that it is a sin to
kill a mockingbird because they
do no "harm. Bcout also refers to
these words near the end of the
movie when speaking about Boo
Radley, a neighbor of the Finch’s,
who is a psychiatric case.
One can easily relate these two
references and upon closer inspection, draw a parallel between the
Negro, Tom Robinson, and the
mockingbird. It is a subtle reference but one which contributes
both the. meaning of the story and
enjoyment of the picture.

Radio Positions Open
Openings for radio interns in
!903 with the Voice of America
are now available. Eligible candidates will receive career appointments and training in writing, announcing, and/or directing.
Mr. Joseph A. Kitchin, Chief, Employment Branch. Personnel Division, United States Information
Agency, Washington, D. C.
Before applying to him, an applicant
must receive an eligible rating
the Federal Service Entrance Examination. To comply with the
F.S.E.E. deadline, all applicants
must submit exam applications to
the Civil Service Commission prior
to Feb. 28.
Additional information may be
attained at the placement office,
basement of Schoellkopt Hall,
Monday through Friday, between
8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
—

JOE RICO AND THE
BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL
PRESENT

Salvation Army volunteer

The UB Little Symphony, under
Dr. Mols, presented a concerto program featuring three student soloists last Thursday in Baird Hall.
The orchestra, an ensemble of
about 26 players, performed quite
admirably in the concerto accompaniments, considering the small
numbly of musicians, especially in
in the string section
In the Overture to the Marriage
of Figaro by Mozart which opened
the program, the woodtwinds
blended well. The greatest weakness of the young ensemble is the
meets New York gangster
string section, which suffers not
from a lack of competent players,
for all are good musicians, but
from its size, which is quite small
9
In proportion to the other sections.
The Overture was given a spirited
and lively interpretation by Dr.
“Lyslstrata" and has dona much Mols.
television work.
The high honors of the eveDottle Drummer choreographer
ning, however, go to Gerald
for "Little Mary Sunshine" and
Stearns, violinist, Charles Wal"Three Opera,” both recent prothal, clarinetist, and Clara Han,
ductions In Buffalo will appear as
planiat. Mr. Stearns gave an
chorus queen Adelaide.
excellent performance of two
Supporting roles will feature the
movements of the Bruch con.
following players: Jacqueline Hancerto, demonstrating skillful
sen as General Cartwright; Law.
technique, fine musicianship,
rence Bearce as Arvid Abernathy;
Peter Piorella as Big Jule; James
rich violin tone and smooth,
Todklll as Nicely Nicely Johnson:
clear phrasing.
Joseph Freeman as Benny; Ronald
Mr. Walthall ■performed the AlOuastaterro as Rusty Charlie; Dick legro
movement of the Weber conRoth as Brannlgan; and David
certo No. 1 with deft technique
the
Horse.
Harry
as
Parell
and resonant tone. Dynamics were
The entire cast, which is
good here, as in the Bruch, and
98% students, totals 62. The
phrasing was done very well.
only of
composed

Missionary Reforms Gangster
In Guys and Dolls at Baird
4

"Guys and Dolls," a musical by
Frank Loesaer will be presented
Feb. 20-28 at Baird Hall.
John Boylan will play Sky Masterson. Mr. Boylan, a Junior majoring in French has played this
role before at prep school in Cambridge, England. He was the only
American in the cast. Last year,
he played a gangster In “Kiss Me
Kate.” A folk singer at the Limelight, Mr. Boylan has also played
in. “My Three Angels," “Henry IV,”
part I, “Desire Under the Earns,”
and “Blood Wedding.”
Elaine Braun will appear In
the role of missionary Sarah
Brown. A senior and a music
major, Miss Braun played the
lead In “On the Town” two
orchestra,
years ago. She has experience
students, numbers 24. The mufrom participation in high
sical director Is William Cox,
school musicals. A versatile
a Junior majoring In music,
Instrumentalist, Miss Braun
who Is the first student to diplays the French horn In the
rect a major university proAmherst and Cheektowaga
duction here. Jofeh Freedman
Symphonies, as well as In the
Is the stage manager, and stage
UB Little Symphony and Condirector Is Henry Wiclce. of
cert Band.
the departments of music and
John Kryslak, a graduate of UB
drama and speech.
play
NaIn commercial art will
All performances will begin at
than Detroit, the gangster. He 8:30 p.m.
Tickets are $1. and
made hia acting debut in “On the may be purchased at the Baird
Town.” He also participated In Hall box office.
“Streetcar Named Desire” and
There will be no performance of
“Guys and Dolls” on Feb 25.

See These Two Great

north

park!

Shows At. Reg, Prices

I

m
ms

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club tn

{

INTERNATIONALLY
FAMOUS
ORCHESTRA
and

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All Scots Reserved
Moil orders NOW with

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self-

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check or money order to BUFFALO
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Delaware at North, Buffalo 2,

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FERGUSON

and his orchestra

$2.50 —$3.50—$4.50—$5.00
Mall ardors

NOW with seH-tddrets-

FESTIVAL.

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Twist with

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TONIGHT and every
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Phone TX 6-9750

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Peter Sellers Strikes Again
PETER

SELLERS
MARGARET LEIGHTON

DANNY ROBIN

“Waltz of The Toreadors”
COLOR

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
Sun., Feb. 24th, 8:30 P.M.

A

saucy sprightly

comedy.

STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKETS
upon presentation of proper ID

May be purchased

card.

•d, slumped envelops, tend shock or
mono* order to BUFFALO JAZZ

s at North.

low on the screen

ir-kirk-kiHrk'kirkirirkir'

JOE RICO AND BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL PRESENT

1334 BROADWAY

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Frank Sinatra
f The
Laurence Harvey mf/ m///:' Manchurian
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Janet Leigh

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Kleinhans Music
Hall

The orchestra seemed to perform the beat In Mozart, keeping balance with the soloist.
In the Bruch and the Weber,
(Continued on Page 9)

HELD OVER

JAZZ FESTIVAL PRESENT

1421Him MMM

As an extra dividend that same
evening. The Buffalo Jazz Festival
will also present Maynard Ferguson his trumpet and his orchestra.
Tickets are on sale now at
Dentons, 32 Court St. and Sample
Hertle and Walden Ave .

dynamics a bit subdued; however,
the overall performance was a fine
interpretation of Mozart.

JOE RICO AND BUFFAT O

[HEATER

Among the great names in
modem music, Count Basie, who
opens at Kleinhans Music Hall,
Sunday night, February 24th at
8:30 P.M., rates with the top stars
of all time.

Mrs, Han performed the last two
movement of the Mozart piano
concerto No. 23 with complete
sureness of fingers, keeping a fine
control of the keyboard, never the
least bit nervous or abrupt. Her
phrasing was smooth and flowing,

ROBERT

ALLAN SHERMAN

MITCHUM

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21t»

SHIRLEY

STAR OF "MY SON THE FOLK SINGER"

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

—

8:30 PM.

A Show For The Entire Fomily

(No School Tbot Fridoy)
All State
$2.50, $3.00, $4.00, $S.OO
—

Rtnry^

MAIL ORDERS NOW WITH SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED ENVELOPE. SEND
CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL, DENTON,
COTTIER &amp; DANIELS, 32 COURT STREET, BUFFALO 3, NEW YORK.
Tickets on Sole Feb. 11th at Denton'i; Sample Hertei

A Hit Ploy From Broadway!

rm
FbR

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STUDENT

DISCOUNT

AVAILABLE

THE
MacLAINE BEE
SaUV

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'

�Fridoy, Februory 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINIE

Placement Office
Posts Schedule
Feb. 18
National Security Agency: Liberal
Arts and Business Administration
majors who have passed Professional Qualification Test.
Also
seeking Math, Physics, I.E., E.E.
and M.E. majors, test not required.
PMC Corporation: chemistry
majors.

U.S. Air Force: Liberal Arts and
Bus. Ad. majors.
Feb. 19
Kemper Insurance: Bus. Ad. majors.

Ross Laboratories: Bus. Ad., biand pharmacy

ology, chemistry
majors.

Feb. 19 and 20
International Business Machines:
Bus. Ad., chemistry, math, physic,
E.B., I.E. and M.E. majors.
Feb. 20
Bendix Corporation, Scintilla Ddvsion: Physics, E.E. and M.E. majors.

Feb. 21
North American Aviation, Inc.
math, physios, E.E., I.B. and M.E

majors.

Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc.;

C. E.,

chemistry, math, Bus. Ad.,
E.E., I.E. and M.E. majors.

University of Chicago: candidates with an Interest in the Grad,
uate School of Business of the

WBFO Announce Week's Schedule
Everyday

Hillsl
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will speak on: "Is Morality Grounded In Religion?" An
Oneg Shabbat will follow.
Hillel will hold another of its
Delicatessen Suppers Sunday at
5; 30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Following the Supper there will
be a lecture by Dr. Maurice Shudefsky department of English, -bn:
'‘What Israelis Are Writing About.”
The next meeting in the “Live
and Learn” discussion series will
be held Thursday at 3:00 p.m. in
the Hillel House.
All students who are participating as workers in the U.J.F. Campus Drive are urged to report the
results of their solicitation Thursday evening between 6 and 10 p.m.
at the Hillel House. The campaign
chairman will be on hand at that
time to receive the completed
pledge cards.
Newman Club
Father Strong will hold his regular Theology discussions Tuesday
and Thursday at 9 and 10 a.m. In
Norton 330. The topic Tuesday
will be Moral Theology, and Thursday Marriage will be discussed.
Mass is offered at Newman Hall
every day at 12 noon.
A late reminder: Newman Club
Bowling League has begun for the

Union.
The next Newman Club meeting
will be held on Wednesday at 7:30
p.m, in the Norton multi-purpose
room.

WEDNESDAY

5:00 On Campus

6: IB Germany Today

6:00 News

6:30 Selections by Ray Conifl

6:12 Evening Schedule

7:00 To be announced
8:00 Cincinnati Symphony Or-

MONDAY

chestra, Works of Bach,
Inter-Varsity
6:15 Over the Back Pence
Brahma. Schuller
This weekend several IVCF college students will be attending the
6:30 Relax with Hi-Fi, Peter
10:00 News
Leadership Conference at the UniNero
10:10 Host Bill Coleman presents
versity of Rochester. Bruce Hahn,
7:00 Netherlands Soloists
the Western New York area staff
works by Gordon Jenkins
worker, is the speaker.
7:30 Panorama of the Lively Arts
THURSDAY
Next Saturday all Interested
8:00 News
people are invited to hear the
Report
6:15
BBC
world famous Korean Choir with 8:05 Cooper Union Forum, "The
IVCF members. Everyone will meet
6:30 Selections by George Shear.
New Image of Man’’—Ashat the front door of Norton Union
ley Montagu
at 5 p.m. and dinner will follow
9:00 Concert—Brahms, Dvorak
7:00 “Disarmament is Not
at the Swiss Chalet. Prom dinner
Enough”—Louis Sohn of
the group will go directly to Klein10:00 News
hans. Admission for the concert ie
Harvard, consultant to U.S.
10:10
Polk
Music
—Eris
Stelss,
free although a free will offering
Arms Control and DisarmVarious local folk singers
will be taken. Anyone wishing furament Agency
will perforin live until
ther information may call TR7-2365.
8:00 News
midnight
Wesley
Universal

or

Day

Prayer

for

students will be observed by the
Protestant student organisations

Sunday at a joint meeting at University Methodist Church. A service of worship will be conducted
at 5 p.m. followed by a dinner and
program by the Rev. Paul Smith,
speaking on "Jazz as a Communi-

8:05 Cogito—Jerry Llobowltz

TUESDAY

6:15 European Review
6:30 Relax with Hi-Fi

10:00 News

7:00 Washington Reports

10:10 Nobel Festival 1»«2

7:15 Panorama
7:30 Dirt’s Learn

German

cation with God.” The program is 7:45 Interlude
sponsored by Canterbury Club,
3:00 News
Inter-Varsity, Gamma Delta, S.C.A.
Interviews tor Teaching Positions semester. Bowling begins at 7:45 and Wesley Foundation. The Wes8:05 Masterworks from France
each Thursday In Norton ley Foundation will be hoet.
Feb, 20
Jamestown Public p.m.
8:45 Burl Ives interviews the
Schools, anyone interested in
Limelighters
teaching in Chautauqua County.
9. 00 Concert Hall
Openings available in Elementary
(Cent, from Page 7)
10:05 The Jazz Idiom, Host Ernie
and Secondary Schools for Septem.
Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity will hold a dated rush party this
ber 1963.
Curtis
evening at Bosella’s Restaurant on Cleveland Drive, The Teke’s wish
Feb. 22—Sachem Central Schools to thank Phi Sigma Sigma for the wonderful social last Friday night.
Long Island,Suffolk County. Open- The Teke Playboy Party
will be held Friday evening, March 22 at
ings in Elementary, Junior and
Kleinhan’s Mary Seaton Room.
Senior High School.
Theta Chi Sorority had a wonderful time entertaining the rushees
Interviews by appointment only. at their Prohibition Party last night. The sisters are looking forward
to our social with Gamma Phi Friday, Feb. 22. Their formal dinner
Call 831-3311
Educational placement office to assure that your will be held at the Sheridan Motor Hotel, Feb. 25.
credentials are currently complete.
University ot Chicago.
•

•

•

9:00 Concert Hall—Beethoven
and Chopin

FRIDAY
6:15 U.N. Journal
0:30 Selections from

Mozart,

SaintSaens’

7:00 Debriefing

—

Ionic Column

CAMPUS CORNER

(Cont. from Page 8)
the soloists were covered by
the orchestra in a few spots,
but kept control of ths situation admirably.

Hollywood

lAJadiilnffton

Dr. Mols, the organizer, conductor and musical director, has spent
much time and patience developing
the orchestra, which has been in
existence only a few years. Having
already done a tremendous job in
bringing the ensemble up to its
present standard, he hopes to do
much more after his campaign to
recruit more players from the student body and the faculty. Anyone
who plays an orchestral instrument and is interested in playing
in the orchestra should contact
Dr. Mols for an audition, room 103
Baird,

DRY CLEANING
$2.00

AT THE

One-Stop Service Center
Shoe Repairing
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and dyed
All types of Ladies’ Heels in
Stock for Replacement
-

or Re-styling

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

-

TF 6-4041
Open 9 A. M. 9 P. M.
-

Buffalo Textbook Stores’

proudly announces its annual

After much hard work, the three
soloists earned ’the well-deserved
recognition they received. Mr.
Stearns, the concertmaster, and
Mr. Walthall, first chair clarinet,
had a double duty Job to perform,
for they had to play in the orchestra when they were not performing ag soloists.

Laundry

8:15 Sound of Broadway and

TRY THE NEW

Little Symphony

for

7:45 International Book Review

HUNGRY?

—

8 lbs.

7:30 Let's Learn German (repeat)

LUNCHEONETTE
WHILE YOU'RE

J

BROWSING FOR
BOOKS AND SUPPLIES

Sat

Special this week
KNISHES
.

Next Friday February 22

$30

Socks
50c
Cotton Slacks

$20

$3

Sport Coats

Dress Shirts
Sport Shirts
Ties
Shoes
Sweaters

$3
$3
$1
$5

Vests
S6
Pop-overs
S4
Ski Parkers

S10
Duffers Coats

$8

.

(POTATO PASTRY)

Here is just a small idea of what's “in store”

Suits

.

$12

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK STORES, INC.
3610 MAIN ST.

TF 3-713

Campus Corner

Don't Forget Our LUNCHEON BONOS

3262 MAIN STREET

Collect S10.00 in Register Receipts, and you get
a FREE Lunch from our "Chef's Specials " Menu.

(Opposite UB)

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Friday, February 15, 1963

Weekend's Debate Tourney

Student Sena e Releases C mpaign Rules
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
MARCH 5 AND 6
No campaigning (or the election
shall begin before Feb. 21. 1963.
There Is to b e no campaigning
within 26 feet of the polls.
I. Poster*
Not
than one poster
more
A.
per building per candidate. Size
14" x 22".
B. All posters put up in buildings must be approved by the general office of that building or they
will be removed.

B.

Nails and scotch tape are

A. Cannot exceed $36.00 (thirty,
five dollars) per candidate per
campaign, Including donations and
contributions which must be re-

Bosley Crowther
(Cont. from Page 1)

-

Assembly
First Round

-

the day of voting shall hear com-

Assembly

Multi-purpose room

Second Round
Dance

Multi-purpose room

-

these rules and shall recommend
appropriate action.

ported.

TOMORROW

8:00 8:45
8:45
9:00
10:30
9;00
10:30
10:45
10:45 12;15
12:15 1:00
1:00 1:15
1:15
2:45
3:00

VII. Petitions

Continental Breakfast Multi-purpose room
Conference theater
Third Round
Assembly
Conference theater
Fourth Round
Luncheon
Tiffin room
Assembly
Conference theater
Fifth Round
Banquet
Multi-purpose room

-

Assembly

-

A. Petitions will be turned in
at a meeting held by the elections
committee for all candidates Wednesday 5:00 p.m. in the conference
theater, Norton Hall.

-

-

.

-

-

B. This is a mandatory meeting
for all candidates.

-

Symposium

C. Signatures must be those
from school candidate Is running
from. At-large candidates may
obtain signatures from any divl-1
(
sion.

Presentation
of Awards

I
Pinochle
Tourns ent to Start Soon
■

—

The recreation

committee will
Entrants may choose their own
partners,
or arrangements will be
pinochle
second
annual
A, Eligibility shall be defined
In the by-laws of the constitution tournament Thursday, Feb. 28, in made for those who wish to par.
live animals or automobiles on
of the Student Senate which are: the card room of Norton Union. ticlpate but lack a partner. All
campus sidewalks.
The tourney is under the direction entry blanks must be in no later
1. Senators must have achieved
E, All publicity (oilcloths, postof Joseph Patfie, assistant director than Tuesday, Feb. 26.
a 1.0 overall average and a 1.0
Mr. Paffie urges all interested
of recreation, and Carl Pulveranti,
ers, slingers, etc.) must be reaverage the semester previous to
students
to sign up now.
moved by live p.m. (5:00 p.m.)
general chairman.
his election.
Wednesday, March 6.
2. Oftlcers must have achieved i
VI. Violations
a 1.3 overall average and a 1.0 the X
A. Any violation of above rules semester previous to his election.
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
GROTTO IN THE REAR
and regulations will be referred to
B. Members of Senate must �
the Student Senate by the Elec- have been a full-time student at �
Visit our newly remodeled dining rooms to enjoy our
Famous American and Italian Foods
tions Committee, asking withdraw- time of candidacy and during preFrom A Tasty Sandwich to A Full Course Meal
al of the candidate.
vious semester.
�
TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
t************************
SANDWICHES AND HOT

ences has also brought about a
rise in popularity of more sophisticated movies such as "La Dolce
Vita" and "The Virgin Spring."
These are now provided by foreign companies but as soon as
American entrepreneurs realize the
selling abilities of this new form
of art, the American companies
will also begin to produce.
Mr. Crowther noted that-wlth
the advent of the more sophis.
tlcated, candid movies, there
has been an outcry for "protection against the masses being made aware of the corruption and violence in life.” He
owed this outcry to our deep
Puritanical roots.
He explained that any form of ?
censorship would further limit the
artistic freedom of the motion pic- *
ture industry. "The only solution
is to let water find Its own level.
In other words, since the magnification of sex symbolism and motivation is an ever present evil, the
only control over films can and
should be on an individual level.’’
Concluding, Mr. Crowther stated
that the effects of television on
the motion picture industry have
on the whole been good. “In fact,”
he added, "we are going to see In
this country the amalgamation of
theatrical motion picture and the
TV fare. But It cannot come about
as long as television is controlled
by the advertisers. When we can

t

VIII. Eligibility

hold its

\dtaurant

LEONARDO S
•

�

HELEN

|

*

z

m

*

_J

1

SPECIALTIES

RAVIOLI
Take Out Orders

a

*

*

*

bring good pictures to television,
we will have the beginning of the
pictorial entertainment of the fu-

Coffee Hour
Dinner

-

plaints concerning violations of

Norton lobby
Dorothy Haas lounge
Cafeteria
Multi-purpose room

Registration

-

-

Maximum size—8'x4'.
tion or they must be removed by
B. At large candidates are al- th e candidates.
lowed t oilcloths.
D. There will be no campaignO. School candidates ore allowed
ing by loud speakers, airplanes, or
2 oilcloths.

like are prohibited.

3:00
4:30
3:00
5:00
4:30
5:45
5:45
6:00
6:00
7:45
7;45 8:00
8:00
10:00

C. The Elections Committee on

V. Campaigns

PLACE

EVENT

right of appeal to the Elections
Oilcloths and posters hang- Committee, Student Senate Exec.
ing from or between trees are Comm., and Student Judiciary in
prohibited.
that order.

C.

A.

IV. Defacing of Property

TODAY

Any such candidate has the

prohibited.

B. AH receipts and bills must
II. Sllngers
be itemized and handed in to the
A. No sllngers allowed on
elections committee chairman in
walls and all painted surfaces of
buildings, interior and exterior, an envelope and left in the Stualso windows and doors.
dent Senate office, Norton Hall, by
B. Any slinger a put on black- Wednesday, March 6, at B: 00 p.m.
boards must be attached with
C. All oilcloths, posters, and
masking tape.
0. Sllngers allowed on trees and slingers must be checked periodlamppoets if attached with string. ically by the candidates to see that
they remain In satisfactory condiIII. Oilcloths

A. Paint, whitewash, and the

B.

X

m

r—
Li
m

LU

z

X

-

-

—

SPAGHETTI PIZZA
Dial TF 6-9353
-

!

I
Lewis of the Park Lane
*
*

Beauty Salon

*

if
}

PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THAT

MR. FEBENCZ
(formerly of Lilly Dache

-X

HELEN
-X
Michael Hall presents

-

Rome

•

Paris

-

New York)

has joined his staff

The Snow Bunny of the Week
For appointment call TT 5-2872 or TT 6-9062

FOR WINTER WEEKEND QUEEN Vote

ture.”

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STOBES,«
3610 MAIN STREET
TF 3-7131

Books of All Publishers

20% Discount to U.B. students

HELEN BIKOFF

OUR SPECIALTY

Mon.

-

Wed.

-

Professional

REFERENCE ROOKS
MEDICAL

—

NURSING

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TECHNICAL

NEED A BOOK? Check with us. If the title you need is “out of stock”,
well be happy to get it for you. We carry one of the most complete stocks
of Medical Nursing, Technical and Scientific books in this part of the
country

Charge Accounts Are Available

The House Thai Service Buill

�

�*

Ffidoy, Februory 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

Tempest Winners...Lap 1!

IMPORTANT! If you hold any of the 10 winning
numbers, claimyour Pontiac Tempest LeMans Convertible in accordance with the rules on the reverse
of your license plate.
All claims for Tempests and Consolation Prizes
must be sent via registered mail, postmarked by
February 23, 1963 and received by the judges no
later than February 25, 1963.

If you hold a Consolation Prize number, you win a
Set. "The Waltz" by
RCA Victor. Or, you may still win a Tempest! (See
official claiming rules on reverse of your license
plate, and observe claiming dates given above.)
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February 15 and 18

�Friday, February 15, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Grid Bulls lo Face Boston College;

Bevised ’63 Schedule Announced
at least on Lhi;
2nd with a 3.0 yd, avg,
It Is official
Buffalo end
Dick Offenham7. BC was 4th in interception
er’s UB Bulls will face Boston
return yardage—358 yds. total.
College on EC’s gridiron next Nov.
9. Buffalo’s Director of Athletics,
Although Boston College finJim Peelle, today announced that ished 14th in national scoring powthe UB Faculty Committee on er, not one Eagle appears in the
Athletics has approved the game. individual listings which is indicGettysburg College, originally ative of their balanced scoring
scheduled to meet UB on the punch.
November date, has consented to
Now for the clincher
While
appear in UB’s season opener at UB finished 20th in national rushRotary Field Sept. 14. The sche- ing defense figures, comparative
dule, with an open date Oct. 26 is: scores are as follows:
UB 6
36
September
14—Gettysburg
BC 28
13
UB 6 Holy Cross 16
21 —at Ohio U.
28 —at Holy Cross
BC 48 Holy Cross 12
UB 27 Boston U. 23
October
BC 41 Boston U. 25
5—at Villanova
12—Marshall Univ.
Boston College finished third, in
19—Boston U. (Homecoming)
the final LAMBERT TROPHY
standings, ahead of such Eastern
November
powers as Army, Navy, Syracuse
2—at Delaware
and Pittsburgh.
9—at Boston College
—

—

....

'

Vlfianova

Colgate's Nelson Barmen is set up for a pin by Jack Valentlc in the
urday.
UB scored a convincing 31-3 triumph, its fifth In six starts.

177-pound match Sat-

Buffalo Grapplers Upset Cortland
defeated grappler in
the 123pound classer, started the evening off by decieionlng Prank
Millard. But then Fred Merz pinned Joe Aiello, Chuck Wilkinson
declsioned
Jeff
and
Oellman,
Duane Whittaker pinned Paul
Kehoe for the Dragons’ IS point
output.
ners is where UB began the
long comeback. Lon Ardleta and
Warren Prunella
both
scored
sparkling verdict triumphs. Then
Jack Valentlc outpointed AI Sosa, after just missing a pin
several times. This brought the
Bulls within a point of the favored Dragons and set the stage
lor Ernst’s heroics. ,
congratulated by
his
When
dad after the match, Ernst chor-

Fencers Suffer 14-13 Loss at RIT,
Seek to Even Slate Against Hobart
BY BRYNA MIIXMAN
RIT defeated the UB fencers
14-13 last Saturday bringing the
Bull’s season record to 3 wins
and 4 losses as the season reached its half-way mark. All through
the meet the single point that
made the difference was traded
back and forth, finally coming to
rest on the side of RIT. The freshman team, however, barely yielded the RIT frosh to a few points
to play with, finishing with an
18-7 flourish, bringing their season record to 6 wins and 1 loss
at mid-season. The freshman
team's last two meets so far unreporled were both victories, against Ryerson of Toronto, 13-12
and Jewish Center, 14-11.
At Rochester Saturday the
foil squad led by the 3-0 example
of Capt. Joe Fersch, edged out
the RIT foil men 5-4, Barry Goldstein each won 1 and lost 2.
The epee squad despite its
strength In Individual victors
lost to BIT 4-5. BUI WilkFrank Pocenco
enson and
each won 2 and lost 1, Herb
Bodecker lost S.
The Sabre squad finished with a
4-5 record distributing its points
this way; Squad captain Jerry
Marshak shut out three opponents, Mark Fox won 1 and lost 2
and Jay Caplen gave lip 3 to RIT.
Continuing to maintain their
strong record, the Baby Bulls
added another victory to their
record and again buoyed hopes
for several strong additions to the
varsity next year,, Almost every
freshman turned in a winning
record against RTT, and the exceptions tied. Gerry Aronoff and
Bud Holschuh both shut out all
their opponents; Aronoff is undefeated this season. Dave Kirschgessner and Art Orlich each won

2 and lost 1, Joe Paul won 4 and
lost 1, and Walt Ostrone and
Bob Toth both tied 2-2.
Thjre is some threatening
competition in store (or the
Bulls as th ‘y enter the final
stretch of the fencing season.
The future holds encounters
with such schools as Hobart,
Notre Dame, a perenially
strong fo
Case Syracuse
and Oberlin, all preliminary to
the North Atlantic dhamplonships to l)e hold this year at
RIT, and the National Intercollegiates at Air Force Aoad.
emy Colorado in March.
-,

Noteworthy individual records
posted for midseason belong to:
Foilman, Joe Fcrsch 17 wins and
8 losses: Art Oriick 8-5; John
wins and 2 losses; Sabre. Jerry
Marshak 16 wins and 6 losses;
Barry Canter 9-11; Howard Goldstein 7-12; Frank Pocenco 6-11;
Herb Bodecker, 6-14; Mark Fox
12-10; Jay Caplen 4-18.
Freshman team scores for the
first half: Gerry Aronoff 23 wins,
0 losses; Andy Freeman 8 wins,
2 losses; Joe Paul 15 wins, 4 losees; Dave Kirchgessner 16 wins,
8 losses; Art Orlisk 8-5; John
George 8-9; Bud Holschuh 9-11;
Larry Zollinger 3A; Bob; Toth
9-12; Walt Ostron 5-8.
Both varsity and frosh meet
Hobart here tomorrow.

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“The Boston College record and

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we have added another formidable opponent to our already imposing schedule. We believe this
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Brian Cuffe came in fourth in
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minutes, 7 second above that time,
which placed him third.

In women’s events, Roz Kimball came in first in slalom and
Priscilla Montague second. Priscilla also came in second in giant
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Said UB coach, Dick Offenham-

The Boston College Eagles were
8-2 in the 1962 campaign, their
first under former Buffalonian
Jim Miller. A look at the NCAA's
final statistics tor the '62 season
(listing the 119 major college
teams)
indicates that the BC
game is another high-water mark
victory.
hard-fighting
The
Buffalo in Buffalo’s rise from virtual obwrestling team slammed Colgate scurity in 1955 to an outstanding
in a superb team effort last Sat- 6-3 mark among Eastern major
urday in Clark Gym by a 31-3 independents last year.
Here is Boston College's 1982
count.
UB grapplers who pinned their record;
27 Detroit
men were Len Ardieta (157 lb.),
0
Jack Valentic (177 lb,), and Bert
28 Villanova
13
18 VMI
Ernst (heavyweight), the latter
0
0 Syracuse
match ending in the first period
12
with a fine effort by Ernst. Jeff
6 Navy
26
Gellman (137 lb.) t and Warren
14 Houston
0
Prunella (167 lb.) earned deci27 Vanderbilt
22
sions over their Red-Raider oppon42 Texas Tech 13
ents, while Bob Jackson and Joe
25
41 Boston U.
Aeillo were victors by forfeit.
48 Holy Cross 12
(8-2)
251
Prunella’s fine come-from-behind
123
effort earned him the win.
Here, in brief, is a resume of
The UB freshmen wrestlers EC’s listings in the final national
dropped a thriller to the Colgate statistics: (119 major college
teams)
yearlings 16 to 14.
1. EC was 16th in total offense
with 666 plays for 3325 yards,
an average of 332.5 per game.
2. EC was 12th in forward passBY GARY KAHN
ing
100/201 for 1499 yds.
The UB ski team participated
and 15 TDs.
in the Open Eastern Amateur
3. EC was 14th in scoring—251
meet at Song Mountain, Tully,
points, or 25.1 per game avg.
New York. Saturday the team
EC was 7th in pass intercep4.
Colgate-Cortland
be
at
the
will
tion, taking 11,5% of th
winter carnival at Greek Peek.
227 attempts against them.
Sunday the ski team will be com5. EC led the nation in number
peting at Thunder Mountain,
of interceptions with 26.
Charlemount, Massachusets in the
6. EC was 9th in punt return
Connecticut State Alpine Chamdefense—allowing 5.7 yds, per
pionship.
return. Note: Buffalo was
In men’s events, Baeder Barton
placed first in giant slalom and
second in slalom out of 41 and 43
contestants respectively. Last
ON HERTEL
week Baeder came in third in the
40 meter jump (about 135 feet)
948
HERTEL AVENUE
out of 28 jumpers. This was ac**********************
complished with a bad sprain
received previous to the race.

Watch and

TONITE

&amp;

16—Colgate

“Gee, Dad, you never told
men about those kind ot guys.
He wag bigger than me.”
The UB frosh downed the Red
Dragon yearlings, 18-13, in the
preliminary.
heavyUnbeaten
weight, Edgar Poles, pinned his
rival for the team's margin of

tied:

.

UB’s surging wrestling team
scored the upset of the year Wednesday by storming to a 15-13 triumph over stunned Cortland State.
The Dragons entered Clark Gym
with a perfect 6-0 record Includ'ng
a resounding triumph over RIT.
Buffalo's only conqueror. Both
teams are now 6-1.
Yet, the Bulls Ignored all previous records and rallied from a
13-J deficit to score their stunDing victory. The team win was
secured when Bert Ernst shocked
everyone In attendance by dealing
Urquhart his
Cortland’s John
inltal setback of the season, with
a 3-0 decision. Urquhart has
reigned as a 4-1 champion in the
heavyweight division.
Bob Jackson, the Bulls’

Legol

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SHERIDAN PLAZA

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"On Campus'

�SPECTRUM

Friday, February 15, 1963
#

PAGE THIRTEEN

Two, Host “Hated” Rival
Court BullsSparkSplit
Capers

Honley and Baldwin
To Comeback Win Over Brockport
Led by the stout all-around play
&gt;f center Gary Hanley (22 points)
and forward Dave Baldwin (16
points) the UB cagers staged a
dramatic second-half rally Wednesday to, topple host Brockport
College, 64-60. This was the Bulls'
12th win in 16 encounters and
shook the team loose from the
throes of a two-game lossing
skein. The win also avenged Buffalo’s only home court loss of a
year ago, a one-point setback at
the hands of the Golden Eagles.
The UB five suffered from
a noticeable failure to block
out under the boards throughout the first half, a factor
instrumental
in
that was
sending the team to a 36-29
deficit at the intermission. Ap-

Colgate’s 51% Field Goal Accuracy
Sends UB Reeling To Third Setback

bound. Buffalo could not forge
ahead, however, and the Eagles
gradually built up a nine- point
spread, 54-45, with 8:ll remain,

BY JIM BAKER

Colgate’s tall Red Raiders came
up with a blistering 51% shooting
performance Saturday night to
send UB’s Bulls reeling to their
second straight setback, 80-71.
Only 200 Colgate partisans witnessed the Raiders' fourth win in
13 starts.
The Raider attack was paced by
a sharp-shooting 6-4 sophomore

ing.

Then the Bulls went to work.
After Baldwin and Manno hat
each meshed a field goal, Coach
Serfustini ordered the Bulls into
a full-court press. It had failed
against Buffalo State and Col.
gate, but it worked like a charm

at Brockport.

Manno cashed a freebie, leaving
UB behind by 54-50. After a goalcall
against Buffalo,
tending
Hanley and Manno reduced the
deficit to two, 56-54. Buntich injunior guard has been spear,
terrupted with a jumper, but the
heading th e Wildcat five all
responded by stringing
Bulls
Philadelphia sportsseason.
eight points to notch the triumph.
writers regard him to be the
Harvey, Baldwin, and Hanley hit
parently inspired by a spirpremiere guard In the Quaker
lecture, the
ited
halftime
from the field to send UB ahead
City area. The Bulls will face
Bulls played their familiar
for the first time since the game's
Jones and his Villanova teammates in the latter’s 1 field
aggressive game in the secearly moments Rondina (20 points)
house Tuesday evening.
ond stanza, with Hanley pull,
cut the margin to 62-60 with a
jumper, after Hanley had cashed
ing off rebounds with rapid
consistency.
two free throws. Brockport then
The Bulls opened the second missed two scoring chances, after
After a brief layoff, intramural
half by storming to an eventual which Baschnagel hit two charity athletics once more make the
38-38 deadlock on Baldwin’s re. tosses for the 64-60 win.
Spectrum scene. Important final
results, the schedule for championship basketball gam qs, and
overall standings for the Palhowitz Award highlight the news.
Handball singles finals saw
Faiturus of AEPi defeat Bill Huff
BY ROCKY VERSACE
Several times last season he ap- of TKE for the championship 21Coach Len Serfustini’s varsity proached or bettered 30 points in 13 and 21-7. He then made it two
cagera anxiously await their next a game, thus testifying to his titles for himself by teaming with
two encounters, against Rochester shooting ability,
Bruce to defeat Huff and RosenNever-say-die
at home tomorrow evening, and
Jim
Me
thal of TKE in the doubles finals.
agairist Villanova at the Villanova
Monagle, a 6’4” senior, and
Team standings found AEPi the
Field House. The Bulls especially
the consistent Jim O’Brien
winners followed by TKE, Beta
(6’4”) are two other returnwant to "dig into” a few Rochester
Sig, SAM, and Phi Ep.
ing lettermen. Six-eight Sam
Basketball competition found
Yellowjackets for several reasons.
First of all, the cagers rememlorio, 6’5” Gerry Stcfanlo, and
several teams fighting for
ber the U of R "Brinks” job of
6*7” Jim Washington are
league championships. In the
two seasons ago when Rochester
the boys Villanova counts on
Monday independent league
Murphey’s
the
Mark
and
Zygotes each with a perfect
played
Monday
5-0 record
night for the title. Wednesday
night found a battle between
the Dental School and the
Spades for the top spot in
the league.
In the Tuesday fraternity league
TKE (5-0) needed a victory to
capture the crown. Alpha S'ig
and Sig Bp are 4-1, each of their
losses coming at the bands of
The Thursday fraternity
TKE.
league is led by ABPi and Phi
Kappa Psi each 4-0.
The team standings for the Palhowbtz Award for the overall ath.
letic championship shows several
fraternities in contention. Teams
with point totals over 100 are
Beta Sig—106, TKE—186, SAM170, Sig Ep—16016, ABPi—165,
Alpha Sig—160%, and Gamma Phi
—143. As you can see, the prize
is still anyone’s.
-

INTRAMURALS

UB Has Two-Year Score to Settle
With UR Five; Then Faces Villanova

Rochester forward Bob Easton Is a

night, a s the Yellowjackets

Rochester dumped the
Bulls, 16 to 60. Thirdly, the
varsity Bulls want a good win
under their belts to take along
with them to Philadelphia,
where they meet Villanova.
as

The always powerful Wildcats
of Villanova definitely appear to
be an obstacle in UB’s path. Last
year’s match ended, 68-53, ip
favor of Villanova with All-American Hubie White leading the way.

Junior guard Wally Jones (6’2”),
an All-Amerlean candidate, is an
excellent playmaker and ballhawk.

After the game UB coach Len
Serfustlnl commented: "We now
have to pick ourselves up and
regain the edge we had when we
won eight straight. We still
weren't sharp against Colgate; But
don't count us out yet.”
UB’s sparkling freshman basketball five stretched their season
record to 15-2 by trouncing Colgate’s yearlings, 80-66, Saturday
in Huntington Gym.
The Baby Bulls were again
paced by the outstanding performance of Norwood Goodwin,
who poured in 25 points. Harvey
Poe scored 13, while Bill Barth
meshed 11 for UB. Colgate's Bart
Engler and Mark Zaanat each
counted 15 points.
The score at the half was reasonably close, 40,34, but the Mutomen came through with their usual formidable second half effort
and submerged the Raider five by
14 points.

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likely starter tomorrow

invade Clark Gym for an 8:15
encounter. This game is considered to be Buffalo’s number
one revenge clash of the year.
game with Buffalo State to disfor hauling in rebounds.
received the tournament bid that
Excellent material is the phrase
Buffalo obviously deserved. The used to describe the Wildcats.
decision was a shocker, since UB An upset for UB is not out of
slaughtered the Yellowjackets in the question, however. One merely
their encounter by a wide margin has to comtemplate last week’s
and since UB had a very outstand- game with Buffalo State to dising record.
cover what desire can do for a
Secondly, all went wrong
In last year’s revenge game,

forward, Ed Muntner. He cashed
28 points and connected on 13 of
20 attempts from the field. Most
of these buckets were scored from
underneath, as the Buffalo defense was unusually loose.
The game was a tight affair
throughout the first half and five
minutes into the second stanza, as
the lead changed hands twelve
times before Colgate first grabbed
a commanding lead, 27-18. The
Bulls roared back, however, and
took a 32-31 advantage on Norb
Baschnagel’s jumper. The Raiders then put on a closing first
half rush to assume a 40-34 halftime margin.
Gary Hanley opened the
second half by meshing two
buckets, thus moving the Bulls
to within two points of their
taller foes. Colgate responded
with a ten-point surge that
left the Buffalo visitors with
an insurmountable deficit.
The closest they came thereafter was within seven points,
78-71, but this was in the final
minute of play.
While Muntner was the game’s
high scorer with his 28 point total, Bruce Corbett contributed a
sound 20 points to the Raider
cause. UB’s consistent duo, Dave
Baldwin and Gary Hanley, again
paced the Buffalo scoring attack.
Baldwin garnered 19 points, while
Hanley meshed 14.

Colgate sank 34 of 66 shots for
51%, while Buffalo hit at a 4295
clip, on 31 of 72. The Raiders outrebounded the Bulls, 47-39.

team.

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Lanky Jim Sweet, a 67” senior,

will lead Rochester in its effort
to make it two in a row over the
Bulls. John Canning, the scrappy
backcourt captain, and Ed Deutsch
(6’5’’) will be two other sure
starters. Rochester has its sophomore worries, just as does Buffalo.
A sweet decisive win over Rochester would gladly be accepted by
all here at UB. Perhaps, with enough desire and fight, UB might
be able to pull a "Buffalo State”
over the powerful Wildcats of ViL
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�SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

SPORTS CIRCLE

Annihilation 1$ OB’s Answer

Friday, February

15, 1963

Tankers Nip RPI, Lose to Union

By Jim Baker
When the university of Rochester Yellowjackets step
Clark Gymnasium’s floor tomorrow evening, the
basketball season’s number one revenge contest will commence. For the past two seasons the Buffalo team has been
the object of rough tactics on the part of the Flower City
five.
Two seasons ago UB’s team virtually ran the Yellowjackets off the court, but when the NCAA selection
committee (replete with “unbiased” Rochester athletic director Lou Alexander) debated the tournament qualifications of the two schools, what institution emerged as supposedly superior? You guessed it
Lyle Brown’s band
of renown.
onto

—

Last year the Bulls again entered the Rochester en-

counter with high tourney aspirations. This time, however,
the Yellowjacket influence did not need to reach the lofty
status of a selection board —they were blessed by a more
direct group: the game’s officials.
Yes, whistle footers Barney Heam and Al Distaola Fit so well into the Rochester scheme that Buffalo supporters in the Palestra were left wondering why
Coach Brown had neglected to fit them with that colorful UR attire, so that Rochester's seven-man weave
might be dressed in unison. (Perhaps those crazy UR
knee socks revolted the officials' modest sense of pro-

portion).

Frosh Coach Bob Bedell and Mark Grashow discuss the latter’s performance
in the 200-yard backstroke event after he
had been timed In 2:22.8, a new record.

Jim Decker recently established a new
the 200-yard indihe was clocked in
his own record of
last year.

university record in
vidual medley, as
2:25.1.
This broke
2:26.8, which he set

The UB swimming team split a
This year’s edition of the UB Bulls finds itself conlast weekend to
fronted with the same old problem: the elusive UR Yel- pair of meets
their seasonal won-lost
lowjackets. They are probably wondering if mere victory maintain
at .500. The Bulls
over this quintet is sufficient. It was not adequate two percentage
edged RPI on Saturday, 48-47, but
years ago. In 1962 the officials hampered the UB cause,
bowed to the Union mermen by a
but chances of that occurring tomorrow are relatively slight. 59-36 count.
emerged as
Larry Szuminski
It is therefore up to the Bulls to charge onto that court
and literally annihilate this UR contingent, which would the individual star in the Rensseremove all doubt as to which club boasts the stronger tour- laer meet, as he broke his own
nament qualifications. In fact, an annihilation will prob- school and pool record for the 100ably prove necessary. Just ask a member of the 1960-61 yard freestyle. Szuminski was
in :50.3 in this event, which topBulls.
;50.7 that he had

SPORTS CAPSULES

day provided a much different —(UB) (Szuminski, Fry, Decker,
picture, as the Buffalo finmen Collister) 3.39.4. (school record)
were submerged under a 59-36
UNION 59, UB 36
score. Szuminski again starred
for UB, but this time in a losing
400 medley relay —■ Buffalo
cause.
(Mike Nowrockl, Dave Hearn, Stu
Here is the breakdown of the Armest, Jack Kuzina), no time.
two meets;
200 free—Bill Schauer (U), Phil
UB 48, RPI 47
Evans (U), Vince Heckel (UB),
(RPI) 1:58.8 (pool record). 50 free
400 medley relay
(Lehigh Evans, Tony Mlkulec, Larry Szuminski
(UB), John
Paul Scesney, John Stebbins) 4:37. Boles (U), Fletcher Espenscheid
200 free—Larry Szuminski (UB), (U), :22.8 (equals pool record),
ped the mark of
established the previous evening Mike Jacobs, (RPI), Vince Heckel 200 individual medley—Caiman
it' B) 2:07.4. 50 free
Royce Schneider (U), Bill Bernhard (U),
in the Union meet.
Collister (UB), Dave Hearn (UB), Jim, Decker (UB), 2:18.2. Diving
In addition to this feat,
Ed Gelber (RPI) :23.2, 200 InJim Bowden (UB), Lawton
Szuminski won the 200-yard
dividual medley
Jim Decker Morison (U), Dave Warmflash
freestyle event and was in(UB), Dick Pranulis (RPI), Brain (U), 135.35 points. 200 butterfly
strumental in
the 400-yard
(U),
Armet
Fry (UB) 2:21. (school record). —Willard Grant
team's triumph. He was the
Divinl —Dick Woods (RPI), Mike (UB), Mike Miller (U), 2:54.2.
key difference in Buffalo’s
Gold (RPI), Jim Bowden (UB) 100 free—Szuminski (UB), Espennarrow one-point triumph.
Two other records were esta- 135.65 points. 200 butterfly—Mike scheid (U), Boles (U), 50.7 (pool
blished by UB mermen in Satur- Jacobs (RPI), Dou Koop (RPI), record). 200 back—Dick Beane
2:38.7. 100 (U), Decker (UB), Jim Garrison
day's meet. The 400 relay squad Alex Haase (UB)
set a school record by turning in free—Szuminski, Collister, Jeff (U), 2:27.7. 500 free—Schauer
(school and (U), Evans
(U),
5:46.4. 200
a 3:39.4 performance to down the Davis (RPI) :50.3.
RPI foursome. Jim Decker esta- pool record). 200 back —Evans, breast— Allan Rosner (U), Alex
blished a new school mark in the Decker, John Dyer (RPI) 2; 25.4. Haase (UB), Grant (U), 2;30.7
200 individual medley with a 2:21 500 free—Koop, Heckel, Jacobs 400 free relay—Union (Bernhard,
6:11.6. 200 beast—Haase, Mikulec, Boles, Schneider, Schauer), 3:30
clocking.
The Union encounter last Fri- Joe Gahm, (RPI) 2:38.8. 400 relay (pool record).
—

—

—

UB’s wrestling coach Ron LaRocque is enthused by
the support that has been given his grapplers this season.
Each gi the four home matches has attracted approximately 700 spectators, which exceeds the average attendance of the late 40’s, when Don Beitelman and Bob Leipler
represented UB. Both have since participated in feature
cards throughout the world.
A key factor in this attendance surge is undoubtedly
the matmen’s resounding success thus far. As this is
written, the Bulls are 5-1, after an outstanding performance against Colgate last Saturday.
The addition of Boston College to the 1963 football
schedule assures the Bulls of again facing the toughest
competition in the history of this university.
As the
slate now stands, the team will open its season September
14 by hosting Gettysburg College. Then Ohio, Holy Cross,
Villanova, Marshall, Boston U., Delaware, Boston College,
and Colgate will be faced. A tenth game is being sought
by athletic director Jim Peelle, but as of now there is an
open date on October 26. If a suitable opponent is found,
a home game will be set up for this day, leaving the Bulls
with their most challenging task ever: an aggressive but
balanced ten-game major college schedule.

—

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ENGINEERING PHYSICS

ON SALE DAILY AT

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

Tower Bookstore,

MONDAY, FEB. 25
Appointments should be made
in advance through your

Norton Candy Counter
and

Goodyear Bookstore

College Placement

Pratt

&amp;

Whitney

Aircraft
|

divisionop unit

y

R

Office

corr

An Equal Opportunity Employer

POWER FOR PROPULSION —POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
SPECIALISTS IN POWER
INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES. MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

CURRENT UTILIZATIONS

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY
Bulletin :
UB Gr idd e rs to Pla y
Bos ton Col-lege
Next Secison

or

NEW YORK AT BVIT~O
Asian

SPEC .THUM
BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY8, 1963

VOLUME 13

LOU W IL SON

However, he did feel that n
t wo.yeal' period wn~ 11osslble, nl­
thougb It I~ most unlikely thnt
1111tlor11lswt&gt;uld be allowed au
,.ctive 'llledgP clos.q arter tbo.t. This
would •he 11 ne cessary lnterprela­
llon •to rooform to 018 requlro1nent of Pllmlnnlll'g
natluual rra­
ternlttes b}' thP . dend'tlne date of
.rune. 1967."
'
)olevartbel~s~. t.he lnl er-~'mlerruty
an d Pnuhellenlc Counclla are 11re­
parlng to su 11mlt lr,dlvldual plans
for the (lrocess or dlsatrlllatlon.
111 a report to the Student Senate
on the December meeting of the
t'mnmlttee on Fnlternal Alfalrs, It
was stated that the Greek organl1.atlonl! Involved 1leslre to retnln
ron.tlonal afflllntlon n• long 11s pos­
• lble, possibly em1&gt;loylng the full
~ve.year 11erlod.

11 was expressed In this report
Micki Levine, Ponbellenlc pres­
tdeul. thnt, ''Sorority
,:,xperienco
ror O gir l 1s not de11Pndent 011
whether thP groun i• nallonnl or
locnl. 'l'he ,:lrls joins for Ille glt'lk
who will 1,,.hPr slRlers for fc,111•

DEST INE TO

PERFORM

TUESDAY

Touring West Indian Dance Group
To Feature French-Haitian Numbers

Jean Leon Destin e and his H'11l.
The program will fuse tw(l culwill apear t u,·al ti·adltlons of Haiti . thr
l1an Dance Company
here Tuesday in Harriman Aud- Afrkan
and the French . Some
itorium, Destine and hls ir,·mp numbers inoluded are;
'IRe\"Olt
are louring wider the auspices of of the Slaves",
''WHch i:&gt;octor
the Repuhlic of Haili Adml,;.~i&lt;)n l)a.nc~.
the "C1't!dle Mazu;rke."
fol' faculty and staff will be $1.00 : and ''Congo Troptc111:1
students will be admitted free orI He ha 8 appeared on major ll'le­
charge.
vision pl'ogrania including
the
'l'he p1-ogram Will rt,nge f1•0111F'ord Onu1ibU!I Show, CBS 's Ad­
the French-Haltinn
dances , H• venture Serles from thr MUJjeum
also will present Afro .West Tndi3n of Natural History hi New York ,
modern Haitian and ancient sla ,·e as well as the ''Scope Sho,,,•· frorr
includes Toronto .
dances. The repertoire
fire dances, market dances. c~•··
nlval and courting scenes
Destine and hi~ d11ncP ,·umpany
Appearing
with Destine will have just Teturned from a Lou,
By PATRICIA
MUSIAL
be pct·cussionist Alphons e Clmbet· i~ Europ~.
.
A song ,test In lhc Dorothy M.
Ro is nailed bv his people M·
The progr11111la under th~ d,r.
genii of the dl'ums." H, , e,·tion of th~ confrl'ts ond Jech.H'&lt;'&gt; nous Loung£• wUl be tile first eve"Haltn
nlu~ event or Winter Weel&lt;end, At
w.111appear as soloist and ,wrnm- cornntlttee
wlto also sponsored ~ ,.m. Thursday,
the 11011nde o!
1
pe.nlst.
last weelc 's T'nlll JacohK &lt;'C1ncerl hanjos
nml i:uHars accompunyl11g

"An Evening in Winterland"

Is Theme for Winter Ball

I

D)'

I'".'"

11 was nlso ~late d that the Pnu.
Counci l hod ntready insti­
tuted n program to e11ro11r11i:enew
locnl /:TOUPS prior to this sltuntlon.
hellenk

\J,.,:V;

Advisors Available
For Frosh, Sophs

If) do t".

All t'nlversit)'
rollege nd1·l~&lt;!l'I&lt;
w111lw ovul!nblA during February
tor nt&gt;l'Olntment,. Tntereslo d iltu.
J!PnlR ahou ld make nn appoint.
ment with the 1'0("8!l1Jonlst hi
lllefendorr 114 nnytlme from S:~0
a..m. to ~:oo p.m, Monda)' through
J"rldoy
·
StudPnts who an&gt; In ncadf'lllk
r!iffl&lt;"ulty, students who are un.
r Prtnln · of their vocational
ob­
Jecth•BR student.~ who nr~ having
1,rohlrm'R t" , ,heir ru1J11s1tn1Jnl• to
ncndemlc II.re atudent8 who want
to dlS&lt;'uss &lt;"nreer possibilities
In
their chosen fields, and student•
who wPre ndmitt~d In F'e,bn11u1•
10 University C'ol!Pi;e should make
nartl&lt;"ular otforts to iPe their ad­
vJ!IOra at this time
It is our dt&gt;sire In t'nJrcrslty
•'ollcge to alM MJ)Cnk to student~
-vho..,. at·nd~mlc rerords nri&gt; •11lls.
f:iclory and wtio merely wlRb to
•t•Yiew ttr r~evnluatP their rolle&amp;?e
progre,,s.

d4'eoratlons will carry ont the Color
suhAt11e, and on lee srulptu r e will
Ile the Cloor ce.n terp l eqe. Don
Me=a
and bis orchetttra provi de
the dunoa music wblle Oreek tolk
singer "Fleury" wUI be the tea.
the 1•olre~ or UB students wlll rln11 turvd ente~tnlner. Tickets tor tile
lhrongll u,e hn.lls or Norton.
d1111
r ,, :tl"I' J3.60 nnd arP nrnUa.b le
Vern Huss, Mik e. nnd Jack. folk 11l the t 11-ket office ,
KlnirnrR, will h1, ntnoug the featured
Win.tor Weekeu,1 will close SU011e1•funn1&gt;rs:lilddlP Gould will give dto&gt;' wilh " •kl party at KJ@s!ng
solo Mel,,d1ons with his hunJo. Folk llrl,tg,, . 'l'h" transl)OrUltiOQ UckeU
n,n~lr will 1,n•llomlnnte. A coff'e&lt;• 111,, ft.95.
11nd d,rni:hnnt hour wlll follow.
\ ~orr••Nhm to be mad!&lt; In the
Wlnll·r OIJ' lll 11!•• 111notary Field
· 1
h d I
the
r
,,
Hnturday
tv •C e u e concer ns
l• shll ◄&gt;illll or " . lp.ln; ; 11 a ~er!e~ , muvha.s to bt&gt; ~bown 'l'h111-,.dnyand
Tetut1s w
1n1r 1ic J)' "
•
, JA
t 2
oue tCt an un •
,r thr e events,
~'irsl, II sle d race 1'r uay "
p,m.
'
rfi
uJllnv
n
eled
1
1vmd11hi,•,
occnrrenre
tbs movl88
I 11
with
\'P
peo11r
"
h
I
h
d "~• lend\" Per
I0 , 1 l ·· tt1 !ll~hr otller~ wilt open
.1v1• ,e,.n C' nnge ,
r
,
•
·',' e, '\\
\ touch rootball play.
suuslon" I!• slate&lt;) for 'l'hursday
11
~I~ ~~~II
the lln.nl evrot Is n•lll "The ,•oung !,ic,us" will nppear
1 1 0 'f ·op hies wm be Pddn). Although llckcts hnve a.111sk i ,.,. u~ ~•:·
;r c,:mulatlva ,,olnl rPttdY hcPn vrluted, those whlQb
1
1
uw,m
nt
• ; he no' ndmlt1•lon w,,,•p to be u•oo tor "Breukfnst
1
1
ltu~IA. ,ere_ "
.
'flf'f»ny••·• wtll now be used tor
to llntary
1.i'1eld
.
I " Llk lae
ew ,
.. In Evening In Wlnt~rland" I~ · l•'rl~11dl) Persuns on.
thr thN ne t~r lh~ Wittler W111•kPmltirk••t~ (!'r "'l'hE&gt; lluatl~t' -W,~11
A!e
il:ill to he held from 9 o.m . to ,,~_,'&lt;I
_for "Tho Young on;,.
•
J o.m. SnturclaY. Dlue nnd sllv~r n11~•_1_
m
1 _ 1s_6_0_c_e_
n_t•_·_____
_

I

yen.Mt"

Now that the new scmeRtPr ho s
hegun, all University C:olloge fltn­
dents are remalned that February
i" n gootl tlms for taking slocl&lt;
or their
nrnd&lt;'mk
perrormances

Ho. 17

vicP Versa,
nt :1 p.m. in I.ht&gt;
mu!Upw·pose mom.
Mt·. Cr·owther's lhesls Is lhul
television hns resulted in bettel'
motion pktm•cs. Pe,)ple used lu
go to the movies to kill tlm&lt;•.
he says, but now unlc•sd Ute pichu·e
is worthwhile, "they kill time b~•
wMching
second rate television
:it home"
Mr. C1·owther·s cal'eel' in news.
p,,p~r work begun wh~n he WR~
II SlUdcnl al l'rluceton, Whcl'C ht·
was Ellllor or the Dally Princeton­
'" " · On his J.'l'ad11atIon he \l"ll ...
namer! winner or the N.-w Yo1·k
Times'
lntercollogia le
Curre111
Wrnnts ,·ontcst. "for knowletlge uf
th~ news." He used the substantlnl
prize money for tin exte 11&lt;
.Jetl ton,
of Eu,·ope
He went tu work for lhe New
BOSLEY CROWTHERS
York Times In the fall of 1928
and spent the next four ye11rs
rcpo1'1ing police stories, f11rurn,
M1·. Crowther
l11 author
of
nnd human .interest eplsod,•,i,
He moved lo the moti011 pictun· "T ht1 Llon 's Shar e,'' a n engro1111lng
department of the Tlm cs ln 18::17 chronicle o( the movie Industry
as ll.lll!ilJl.aJlt mm critic In 1!140. a., 1•eflecled Ill the f:t'OWth Md
of MGM , and of
and became fllm critic In 1940 development
During the war he was an ac . " HQllywoo4 Ra.Jail, '' the l\lgtllly
con·espondcnt
to the acclaimed biography of the late
credited
Navy. H e has appeared
on TV Louis B. Mayer. lie hM ,Written
numerous times including on Eel foi- many inagazlne1, not.ably the
Murrow/s
"Sma~ World" "1ow Saturdny Review and the AUo.rlUc
wltlh Darryl ZB.!luck and 1ngrltl Monthly.

(f;irol!I " · Halpern ctu,lrruan ot
rlw Al1111111J
('OmtJllll&lt;&gt;e or Ole Na­
llonal Frllternities. stnted tho! thr•
C'on1mitt&lt;•P IHI• ret11!ned thl' low
firm llf n111&lt;•llle, l\1oore. llannlr1F: &amp;
WelsK ··to do wlintever they r~~I
'" necea.sory for lhe prei;en-atlon
or narlonal rmt ernlt i"s Rt the, Stn.te
1·n11'nrRILy of Nrw York at nut­
b1Jo," Thlq ste1, hits hePn taken
In an etrcirl to protest lhe ottlrlnl
11t,$iliO11 nr Ille TnisteeR .

this year."

~0

Pait!' Z)

Bosley Crowtl1c r, motion picture editor of The New
York Times, will speak here Wednesday under thl) aus,.
pire~ of the convocation committee. He will address the
students on "Television•~ Effect. on the Movies - and

"" of the 1H'eS6lll, lber!l hna
bi!e1• no unul setllement
ol the
&lt;'ontroversy over lhs dlR11s~ooiat1on
uC the N11tional l&gt;'rateruitles oo
1h1~ e"mpus urou~ed by the rullng
or th&lt;' Board or Trustee~ of tbt&gt;
~1:1te llnivel"IIIIY of New York that
no social ongnnlzutlons 1vMh 1w­
t1onal affllatlons would be permit,...
t•:.rl in any Slnte.orernted
unit.

Or. Richard A. Siggell&lt;ow,
Dean of Students,,
Indicated
that ''no final word had , been
received as yet from Albany
as to whether or not a pledge
otaas would be permitted
after

(-

1BosleyCrowtherof Times
To Speak Here Wednesday

blB Nationals:
No Word Y.et
By MARY

Professor

Gives Opinion
of United States

";t"

0

CHAD

MITCHELL

TRIO

Chad Mitchell Trio Concert
To Be Held Tomorrow Night
The Chnd Mitchel( 'l'rio will 11)'• ~.nga Univer~ily In Spoklllll', Wa s)J.
pem· h11r~ !JI concert tomorrow · 1mgtnn. durrng- th ~ fall scmcs!c1
from s.rn in Clark Gym . Tlrl1d&gt; uf l9fl!I. l'or 11ut• yNu· they sang

Tournament Opens Here Next Week ,
Recreation Areas Closed for Meet

be ,ava ilable tor student
use.
By JOE Et..M
imectators are welcome to attend
nre now ,in sale in llw Nor\l,n for •m:all groups on cnmpu:, nnc:
The University of Buffalo \\"ill .,,..
ti~ket booth .
in the city under the prurnoliun bo , host to colleges competing h
Four soml..flnnllsta wUI compete
Lenny Klein a.nd Jules Levine of Father Rein11,d B ~avc r a luca l the ACU Tournament lo be hl'ld ,n a round.robin bllllards plnyo!f
16
8nd
· 'l'u Uus weekend. U.B. has dCtermlm'&lt;I
are co-&lt;'hairmen of lhc progi·,un I Cal holic priest who hn1J hc 1u·d tlw Ir, Norton Feb. 1:;
which is sponsored by th e con. g'l'nup sing at ~chool.
date the following collcg,,,. h iw ~ th o man whi• will t'epr~sent It In
CompctfUon.
cert committee. Tioketa are $1.5C
Later they lro.velJed to Manhut . entered the toume.menl: Hiu•r)ul' thtJ ACU Bowling
per pcra&lt;ll\ It pureha!le&lt;l Al thr t,,n !Qr se1·eru\ engagements. Th,•y College, St. Bonaventur,• , All!~ d Thi" top 11eorers, trom which five
nppcared on u,~ Arthur Outlft•ey t:nlversily,'-JJ'nlversity
booth and $1.75 Bl the doo1·
of Roch- wlll be selected to participate are :
Th .. trio 1~ real ly &amp; four .
radio show, at Lh~ East Side sup. ester, Corl\and Stale, U.S Mil Ed. Taylor, M.lke Subcrman.
Bob
of slng,:r,
per club, the Blue Angel , and then itary
•onw, ron,l,t1n1r
.Academy, Duch ess r,,'.n. Braun , Joe Aiello, Chuck Bonarlga ,
11
C'lmd :\lltclwll, l\llk,• Kol.lluk,
"J"peareu on Pat Boone 's, Peggy munity College, Ni&gt;w y,'.r,k
'.'· l3ob '1'19dnle, Gary
Gr&amp;nt, Ken
and Lt'OII
Fortlham
U1t111 ' 1"' 11' I Scglln, Dalo Marriot
and Jot&gt; Fn&gt;'l:ler. The ho~•~. In
Lt.&gt;e's 11nd Mel Torm◄!'s lele,•lsl on iverslty,
sh, ws . They topped this off with Slerum and UB .
Smith. The ltlg'best average o!
oolla\,o r&amp;tion with mu,.kal diu perfom1ance at Carnegie H,,11 Tiw recrNttlon arrn, lo•·'l!••il '" th~ howlers who quallflNI n th1•
rector Milt Okun, ,uran,:-, ·
with Harry Bela!ontc .
waa 186,
tht' IT mu~lc In a dl•tlnet soun•l
tho lower level oc Nort un H.,II I tournnment
that
mad e them a purl
Some ot their most re111~mber,,,1 will bl' closed iul day ~·..ii I
recortls include the "John Bll..-h an,t w1tll ll:30 Pm
~:itu1·,bl\
The Rc oreaUon Committee o!
of the folk and populnr music
world ln a N'la.t!n ly ,hurt
Society," and the albums "Mig'hty Frh . 16 so Its fn&lt;.&gt;ll!tt"&lt; m,iy h, Norton Union Ill aiding Mr . P&amp;ffle
time,
Day on Ca.mpwt" and "The Ch,ul upcd for the touma111ci.t Altl1tm1,;h IVlth 11rnu1gements for Ule tour The group originated
at Gou. Mitchell Trio at the Bltl.t'r ~:nrt
•· the 1'6('te.i.Uon rac.lltlt!s will n,.• 111u11t•nt,

I

I

w

I
I

I
I

�,.. ~

Friday, FeWry

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Asian Professor's Impression of U.S .
Is One of "Mater ial Advancement "
BY ELAINE BARRON
1'hia lurk or kn11wlodge Ii! u
of Paklstru1 ,L:~1\'t.• ~hor rc•omln~ , tl~t'ord~~
to I
111,, rourth 111 n Herw~ or vl1&lt;1lln11p,,,,tPs.~or llu•aln.
'' AmPrlcn, with
Asmh pr OflltiHO~. is r11rrt&gt;11llyvisit ­
Its !llt•hil I r&lt;•s11011slbllltl', cannot
Ing t11c University ,
ufford to mis~ noy k1wwlt1dJ;e of
t'nlf1·•ri•!T HuHa(o bus allPnded
,~ oC 1, mem.
n11y tm11ortunt 1,1'l'ls1w,
Ci&lt;kuttu llnlver,,Jty
n,14 the U,ot.
her countr y ol' tlw f1•ee worlrl,"
1·ersl ty of Mlnll&lt;'IJoti1, W~T e bu ro.
(•••lvrd hlH MIU•lf•r'R Ue!iree. nm·. trn UtouwlPd
lnit th1• program, be hos visit ed
Amoritt1, HA a wholt:1, hu~ lort
thl.' untv ersltlus or Rhod" lalaud,
ruo­
llli~!l&lt;
•nt i, Md l!:Mtem Illinois . He nu 1111pr{)•ijlo11 with definite
r•ru11hasls OIi lhl' Aealn
ha, 1111hllsht'\dseverol hookR on Ila, h·rlolbt
vlsilm , "'r lw l1111)1•~••lon that
I
r11ll1trt• of l'ftl!.l~lan
\1rllminmt'&lt;I Husnln

8, 1963

Newly Installed Norton Master Calendar
Provides Schedule of Events at a Glance

im~

Since last Friday, a new sight
gi·eets the thousands of students
who 1lally pour into the bookstore
er,trancc of Norton. IL ls a large,

~

mahogany,
glasg..pane led blllboa!'d
11top wltlch ts perched In bold

letters, master co.lendar.
•'This is something
completely
11cw a.nrl dJCferent," commented
James Gruber, asslstartl
dll'e&lt;;Lo1
of operation of Norton. "It's an­
othet· feature and service to the
students from Norton Union.'' he

hlll't·
IS only
011&lt;'
lhnl
it llll B added,
hlH imprPsAioll
n! 11rnd•1 good IHnLerlal progre~s ."
The idea of the mnsler calendar
""'
Unh•rr~ tty
l'ro(l'SSOr ll11•ul11
cttmo maJnly from Thomas Hacnlc,
"' Pu klMLUII, Pro[e ~or
Hut1n.ln s,•nlol' assistant
r••11llrd, "I'm i,rrnid I'm 11llll on
director or the
Ion lo the government Union. Many other progressive
lh&lt;.' f, h11(4'
my exroerl.,ncea on hold• u 110~!1
!his r, 11111111
~. Tben•lor1•, 1 nm 1101 1111nI• wl•II acquulnted with the schools have master calendars and
In n 110ttlllon to mnk,· u11~· c'f&gt;m. rul!' h ,. ,•OUl\lry plays ill tlll' fn. have round them helpflll in pubir..
menl. Mnyb(l I wlll bnv1;&gt;one when 11\rm1tlonol sccane.
lzing schoo l events.
t IPn1•e f'ol1. !Z, Ther o ta nothiui;
11·11~11 asketl
tlbOIIL
P11kiHl,111's T he pm-pose oC the calendar 1,
hPrn ~o profo11nd or ,·onsp!c11011k
attitude l!lw&gt;1rd Amer!ra, he com. to announce au social events,
aa lo im1111Pdle1P1yimprP:-.,_ u new~
IUl'llled, "Lntely,
A•rner letl ffl'81116 activities and meetlngs being hel d
romr r"
In h;ove 111111cnredlo Paklstnn ns
o,, ctimnus , and related Un1ver~ity­
1111 onl1,tmu, lll's(!llA th&lt;• rad th11t
IJurha~ bitf ~Luy hf'rt\ JJroleasor
spon8ored
even ls which may lal&lt;e
H:uBaln wlll give a t1crtre or let•• 1'11hi•tan neve, · snl on the fenc" place elsewhere ,
lllr&lt;.'f! on South A•lan oll'nlr• with tn her f&lt;.Jl'PiA1t 11olky ,md always
rt works like Utis: on the ca t.
••m11hMl8 011 th e J&gt;Olltlt•nl, •oclal, dN•1ily prn1•ed her Jlkp . 111lnded11AAH
11&lt;:onmnl&lt;', rrn!I cullurut studle~ or in nH1ny matters ut ,·atuPH "➔ lh endar are twelve months, with II
slot fo1· each day. Cards with
Pokhrt;lU
Am'lrica. AJ1Jerlc a now appear;
10 mo~! ol th!' l'llklalMIIS
II~ each day events will be posted
l'1•1,rt•dhOr lluantn tnwn1ret~ the rulher
hafflh •,i: In h"r lrnndllug &lt;&gt;I !11 the purpose lot. At a gl11nce
pllt 'Jl(lll&lt;- of th e Vl«lllnK Aslnn I'ro­ somr nt the affairs in whirh Pull- Ute student can see a record of
r1•~14ors 11rol&lt;~•l nY t hP promot1011 1,11111Hhllllld hP nurnmlly
rm,. u,~ act!VIUes for the whole ycal',
l&gt;f Ameril'U'R 1lndoN1t1111dlng
or the rPrned , 1'
All organizations
wishing
to
Aldan counfrl08,
throu1,h IPdw·o•,
In the su me way that l'rnt essor publk'lze an event on I.he calendar
l&lt;J unJyo,-..Jly xtud""'"
hy 1·,•11r
e8(ltlla.llve~ or the co1111trll'l!
. "Pu,r. I lusa ln h•H brought lnrormnl!ou should contact the rcscr ,vallons
tlrlpa t lng in this proj cd, my In. and virw., fl'Om his 11ru11le to office, room 115, Norton and fill
hr will lakt&gt; r,aw~ of the out
a
registration
form
for
11•ntion IN to ht•l11 LIii' 1ir0Jec1 111 Amerkn
A nwr1&lt;•11;1 11eo11l
a btt rk
to hl,; Unlversity-sponso1•ed events, Thlll
tbl• re.ipecl ," tu, t&gt;xplnln.,,J
c·ounlry. "l wlll lell m:, 11e&lt;Yl)leinformation WW be put on th e
·rbroui:h
h1~ 11•1•,tun, ~erle~ ~l th;,t the one xlni;:I~ lefl.&lt;on llrnt calendar immediately and L11us be
the dlll'c•n•nl untvor~lti""·
Prores . tlwy c•nn drnw from Am;,rtca is ava.llable to everyone
•or Hu11aln ha • lournl Lbal most thnt
they should lry to be as
In general the concw1sus ot stu.
Am◄• ri&lt;'t&lt;n
ijt1ldt•ntN 11r1• ignorant hnrd working ns tbt' AmerlNtnH
dent opinion sl'ems to be thal
of th!' AHlan count.rlee. " My lm­ lo mnke lire &lt;'Dmforlnble DL'lter.
pn&gt;Hlllon iN tlllt1 - tbul Pnlverijl. iollr, wil h o11t Rnrrlflolnl! an.y or the calendar will give a definite
interest
and
un- muklog honeHt atlt'mtll ~ theh' i:rr;,t 11rhl~1•om-mt.~ In othM boost Lo student
it WA l'!'tl1'8H
of U1e campus act­
a1 c rt&gt;alini; r11vrm,ble conditions fleMA,'' he lllnstrntl'd ,
ivities. Here are some speclfi&lt;'
tor knowing tlu.•••• countries but
The next visiting Asllln profe,qsm· t1omments:
BA U1lngs sUtnd now I'm ~Ol'TYto
,dll be IJr, T, H. L.I. of CWna,
Max in e Berman , soph omor.,,
HllY, kDOwloog~ 1- VPry In.adequate
n nd euper ficla l."
whn wlll n1·1·lve later this mon1h . "I was In a lol Of activities last

\\'lu\11 ask&lt;'d

or

M ASTER

CA LENDAR

IN NORTON

LOBBY

year, and I feel that
cn1enda1· is a gooo
publication for thl)m .
Rhould he given s lot

the master just get lost. You'll have this une
so\1rce of right in f1,ont of you t1IIthe time."
Mr , Hnenl&lt;• Al Stn un1.-f, se nl or, ''The mastel'
of eredlL" cslendar serves as nn cx,cetlent
T 1•rr ,v Ge NW&lt;', Ju ni o r , "Il'l:I clef. ,·eh!t le tn communicate
lo the
lnt t ely good bccaUf '3 ll wlll giv&lt;' sludent
body, informing
them or
the students up.to-date announce - the eve nts and activities planned
menl11 of comin g events on campus However, It shnuld supplement
and a chance to p~rticipnte
in the individual
caJend1trs, whlch
them,"
were previously given Lo thl' sl 11•
T lm E8 t&gt;enla uo, fr tJMhnu rn. "J di,nts, anti not eliminate them."
thlnk il will be much more informt\11111 H orowitz,
j un ior, ''Sine!'
atl ve , I t will reli eve searchini; Norton Union i~ the fulcr\tnl fol"
lhe bulletln boards for a.nnounre . campu8 activ!Ues, Lhe calendar
ments"
will be errecUvo In Informing the
Nan cy ,John~tou, .~0[1hnn111
rP, st uclcnl body of !.'vents or Lhe
''The caJen&lt;lars
lliey hand out campus."

LEONARDO'S /&lt;e:,fau,.anl
GROTTO IN THE REAR
Visit ou r new ly remodele d
Famo us American
From A Tas ty Sand wich

•
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
dining rooms to en joy our
and Ita lian Foods
to A Full Course Meal

TA KE OUT ORDERS OF ALL K INDS
SANDW I CHES A ND H OT PLATES

Ii""

SPECIALTIES- RAVIOLI - SPAGHETTI- PIZZA
Take Out Ordera -

DiQI TF 6-9353 --...-..--

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STORES,
INC.
3610 MAIN ST. TF 3-7131 Hours 9 to 6 Mon. &amp; Thurs. Eve 'till 8

C:CJ,."ll
f/You

w'ARM

NEED A

WORRIED?
(ABOUT PASSING A
PARTICULAR COURSE)

U.B.

TRY OME OF THE REVIEWS Oil

SWEllTSBIBT

OUTLINES WE SELL.

IT,

PLUS

SOME HARD WORK
, CAN BE THE

WE HAVE THEM IN A DOZEN COLORS

KEY TO YOUR SUCCESSIN THE
COURS
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GOLD, RED, FORESTGREEN
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WHITE, LIGHT BLUE
, NAVY.
BLACK, MALT, ORANGE,
OYSTER, GRAY, PEACOCK

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• BARNES AND NOBLE OUTLINES
• SCHAUM'S OUTLINES

LUNCHEON
SPECIAL
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• REGENTS EXAMS
• VIS-ED CARDS

~611ee '1{4fie

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( POFLI
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• DATA GUIDES
• HYMARX OUTLINES
• MONARCH REVIEW NOTES
• CLIFF'S NOTES

SEETHEM ALL AT

BUFFAL
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STORES
, Inc.
On Main Street across from Goodyear Hall

�PAGETHREE

SPECTRUM

Friday, February 8, 1963

McDew AccusesPresident Kennedy 25 Tickets Are Donated
Of 'Dropping the Ball' In Ole Miss.
For Performances 1n Baird
&lt;'11111
,.,, \h-11,.w, l·hnlrman

or tile

111' ~nld 11r11ls0now belni: gi ven
Clemson l'nlverslty
In South Ca r .

~lttdent Nou-Y!olenl
Coo1•dhn\tlng
( '11111J11lt11•1•
111o 11 ,uldrrx~ lwrn last
'l'h u1•,.d11)' uc1•11~eil l'rt&gt;~ldent Ken-

11,•dp of " drOJJ(lillg

the

lhl, Ju11ws Meredith

l'88f'.

ball'•

In

:\Ir .. llcPl'w was lh~ fourth In
11 wrleA 1&gt;f fin , ,ipe11kers who DP11e11r,•d lwre n's 1)8rt or the cl vii
rli:hlij
N1mmlt1ee·~ 11rogrnm 1:om.
mf\1111h111i11J{
Emanr! pall on Day . He
~dded that. the ·11rnsldent made
11 "wis hy .washy
s 11ee~h
on the
ev,, or the rlollng laRt tall u t the
l ' nll' ~t'Sll y of :\!lasll!l!IJ)Jll,"

JOSEPH

llt; said lhP fe d eral 11;0\'t!flLlnem on ulg b t count s or roll! n~ to e11nllnw,•d it •elC to be forced Into ror~1&gt; Cederol Iowa.
H
,·om11romlklnJ!: 11osllton b)• lh~
.\Ir, ~lcO,;w sul&lt;1 the reacltou
MIH~i•sl11ui Go1·ernor. Ross Barn. uf the nnllon·~ l)l't!HR to tlw N'('gl'Cl
~ti
11 wus rhe reurto,· 11111
,tble Lo tnt eg111llon 11111\
f'me nt to the So uth
tnk •• lhl' 11roper aelioo to ax~llrP hos "JlrohabW suYed nurny llvea
Mi•. ~leredlt h 'H eiirollmenL.
nnd pr&lt;•1•pnfed mnny henll1&gt;,1:a."

SM IT H

ProfessorSmith
~

!!L

o~~ o:!~

.~~

mterpr·etive t·cader, l~ being spon.
$Oretl by lhc Madrlg111 Reading
Society.

He

,·ecelvPd

h is

Art Students Study in Italy;

l~~ v~

speak about "The Miracle of Lan•
guage''
today, at 3;00 p.m. I,
Lhe Norton
Conferenc~
lhcalcl'
Professor
Smith, 8 well known

2nd Year of s,·ena Program

trav,, J. A Si\l sin n t 111•1 11rnroKs&lt;&gt;r
Sa ul ,f. Horwitz Is 11cco111pn11)•1!1t
the group. ·

Eighteen
st udents majming'
ln
a rl ed ucation arrived Mond ay In
Sll'ltl\, lta.ly , fm• 11 semcsle1·•s stu dy
The slx men and 12 women
Ht11denh1wlll uttend the Un!ver11lty

Kecoudnry

of

Stena

and

Istttul o

Statale

in

Tw••nL) ~111&lt;1~111
" wh,1 ,11~111 1h• ·
semester
In Sle.1111 ,·etu, ·nt'tl
Jan. 18. Th e progmm,
limited
to
junio r s un d senlOrH, '" elel'liVP
with full cre i'.llt for ,-om·ses.
MAKE -UP

EXAMINATIONS

Ap111lcallo11ijCo,· muke.1111 ex.
nml1111t1ousror the ,.emovul or
l11com1,lete 1:rndP•

11111st h,• oh.

tuf11e1l In lhe Orrtl'U ul Aclmis­
s!ous nnd llecorrlK, 20 l ll ayeK
Hall not lat er U111
11 Monday ,
F'eb. 25.
M11ke-u11 ExumlnatilJlle
b&lt;•i;lu

;\l011day. April I

'==========
:-::::
--....J

u nd drn.m.a1.l.cposil ion s nt the U ni.
versitica of Wi sconsin. Iowa, M:in­
nesota, Southern
California,
anct
Denver.
In th e cou rse of his ca.

reer he has

directed
mo!'&lt;' lhar
the Un ited Stalt&gt;t
and cana&lt;1a and has lectured ul
alm osl fifty colleges nnd un iverst.
lies throughout the United StaleH
L50 plays

in

Past president of Speech As 1KJ­
e1ution of America,
memh&lt;&gt;r or
the faculty at the Banff School
ot Fine Arl.s, bu has co•nLlt hor ed
two books. Fundamentals of Speech
and Sk ill in Reading Alo u d.

Pro!ossor

Smith has heen ha,1~.i

as ••an oul.sla.ndlng leader of his
professio n, an Inspiring lect111'l,1·1
and powel'fuJ 1nlerp1eter &lt;&gt;i llt ­
erature." He is considered "n top
n,ghl artist an'1 o. greil,L scholn,·.'

DRY
CLEANING
8 lbs. for $2.00
AT THE

One-Stop Service Center
laundry - Shoe Repairing
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and dyed
All types of Ladles' Heels In
Stock for Replacement
or Re-styling

PlazaShoeRepair
UNIVERSITYPLAZA •
TF 6-4041
Open 9 A. M. • 9 P. M.

JUNIORSSENIORS
OrderYourOfficial
Graduation Ring Now.

THE

UNMRSITY
BOOKSTORE
"OnCampus"
Spe-cial Shonk, available for Arts and Science, Business,
Engineering, Pharmacy, low , Dentistry, Medicine , Nursing ,
Physical Therapy, and Medical Technology .

Special EncrustingAvailable

Family Style
SPAGHETTI
Serves 4 to 6

,$3.00 Bread and cheese Included
Meat Balls 15c each

~•1·c•· l&gt;t·livc•·~• with
"" fil!c Service

chnnrc

minimum
onl,•1· of ~:UKI
wilh nn~• t.ak~ nut 11nl1·r,

TF4 - 3773

first

d'Arte, a lso In Siena. At the InEngla nd 0nd ht stltutc diey will 11tudy oil and
bachelor's degree at th~ Unlve1·
JrellCoe palnting, scu!lplur1: 11111
,
sity o! Utah. Professor
Smllh cl'ra mlc s.
11pent two and one half ye11ra a}
This marks the second year
a mlll81onary ln He.wall,
before
of the College's Siena program
continuing his studies ut the Un.
directed by Or. Clement T.
lve rsily of Lond on.
Tetkowskl 1 art profe11or. Col.
legea at Buffalo and Fredonia
Her e h e studled und er J . Dov ct·
are the only ones In the State
Wilson, i·enowncd Shakespea1·~an
University system sponsoring
scholar, and Daniel J ones, worltl
foreign study,
fiunous phoncUoie.n. R eturning ll
Stude nts will live with l tuliun
tlte United States as th e Dir ector
of the Illinois Theatre Guild, P1·0- tamlUes ror three
months
and 1
fessor
Smith went on to receive nilurn In Jun e. They will visit ,
R&lt;Ome,F'lorence and Paris, spend­
hi£ maater's from the Unive1·slty
Ing five days In each city p lus
ol' Illinoi s.
five •more days
fo1· Individual
Prof esaor Smith has held speee?
schoo ling

'l'wenly-llw
tlckt'IS for ,,ocb tH•r­ ,•lwrgo w«~ umd&lt;1 by AllPn 0. $.lgl),
ur tbe 'U n lveN1lt,y't1 d t&gt;lleCllua" nil rorm~th •e h1 Mulrd lluJI hA.VPbe~n cllnlmtun
residents
or the stale und er the dt)lllllt•d hy the UnJvers!ty LO tht• 11:1r1ment of mu~k and Irr Jollllh
ae 11rut or n . Margulis. µroJoot dlrr~o, . Oen ­
ln,w hOVP a rh;hl lo att,end Ole Jluffnln S1'11001 S)Stl'ln
lhf' l11J11rt1Clf Educullo u 'e ProJecl ernll&gt;' tlckl•te pu rchneod for muel­
university,
rnl llnd clrnmnUc e1•onte for the
The F'rderol Gove rnment
Mr, .\h i&lt;'.
'l'he l!l'IIJect iuvohes
11bout 2111, •tu d e111x ar,, 11urohn•ed from the
)lcUew sui d, ha s Ilee n "!lt&gt;gl\i,:ent
•rl~ ~••t11sid1, for the project .
in, enrorclng most ctvJI rlghtR leg. l,•••n-ngt,r8 from the l1&gt;Wl•r.lneom1' r111
,, , a re s u 11 or the tree tlcketll,
nllt e• whu ,tre working in a
lslatlon.
Bobby K ell nPdy has not t111
1J1·oi:1·nmor remedial work nod ,·nl ­ l'lOJN·t Ahl&lt;• ~tud~~t• will be able
ren lly b ee n acting,"
l\lr. Mellew snid lbe &gt;1L
11de nt rnr11I e1•rithment . l~xue11~PHfor 1lw lo ,11tun, J s11d1 l'Omlog events ll8
,·omml11e., hos a ault 1&gt;0n1llng 111 ;,1·uJpcf Hl'p fhrn1h·ed hair IOt•llll\ ,, gjpp IA'&lt;'lllre by Virgil Tham&amp;On
l•'&lt;•h. I I. nnd th&lt;' musica l comedy
u 1&gt;1s 1rict or Col umlJla ~'t'deral und hult by the •tutt&gt;.
A1111011111·1•me11t
1hol lhP 1tckel• "&lt;:uyRti nd llull~" ,wh f'dulBll to run
C'1111rtognl!•.sl Atty . Gen. K &amp;nn erl~·
would h,, mu1le uI•atl11blp tree ol F,·b . 211-~I aP,d !l(;.;!8
nnd ~•Br Chier J. ~Jdgnr lloover

ollna Is not Juatllled

Letterpress ond Offset

BUFFALO
STANDARD
PRINTING
CORP.
133S E. DELAVANAVE. Service

. Quality

-

TX 3-0913
Price

/'1•inters of The Spectrum since 1987

�SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR'

*

"] Henr You Knocking

*

POOR

ATTENDANCE

A~ 11 ~111,11,nr

Can't Come In··

B1tl Yoll,

Friday, February 8, 1963

Ul lhe

nPWly or­

the

entl111HIAHm

i;unlzed Sl!,tt• l'IIJ\'et·,.!ty
or New
\'11rk 111 nutfalo,
r followe/1 with
grPnt

1oterest

For a couple of months now persons entering the Union dlt111Jnyed br the student hody nod
from either of the two first floor entrances have been faculty for the lectures offered
greeted l)y signs stat ing "Use Side Doors Please" and lately IMt R!'IIIP!ller rnllcerned with ron.
I Ideas ,
"Use End Door Only'.'. It's hard for us to remember a time IP1t1110rary 1&gt;&lt;.&gt;lh1&lt;•11
when both the center and two side doors were in use.
The reC()l'/J 11tt1&gt;ndaneP \ml ,·ur11ln1I ntm11•11ht•r•• •urroun dlnr; th(•
May we aak the reasan why all the doora are not
Mosley leernre w,i. 3111111ln
nt!'d by
jn use? Why are either the center or side doors roped
helrnvior mo1·i, hetlttlnr,: the n11tur 1&gt;
closed or crossed with a wooden bar preve nting their
nt II unlver,ily:
lh1tl or soher In.
opening? Con it be that o~er spending $3.5 million the
11ulry Int~• the morP legltlmalp
Union is blessed with defective doors.
J&gt;Ollth'al (•ulorntlOnM ~KJ)lalnCld 111
And even if this were the case why shou ld it take gncct',.din~ 1,,r1u1•1•s i:lv,io hy 01•r­
~1 long to t'emedy the situation.
Our first recollection of son1&lt; le• b rt111trflnr~lu1 thnn ~lo·
"bnrred entnmces" is ellrly December, two long months ago. Oswnld,
The situation ns it exist.&lt;1now causes chaos and bedlam
Then name the out.cry of
during Ihe l11rwhlinur,; when t.r11fficto the Union is the
wounded
•ensibllttlea
the
heaviest,
furor created In the "aup.
Anyone who has tried to
l•nter this builcling between
11 a.m. und 1 p.m., or at the
chunge of classes is familiar
with l,he rrushing
cr owd
which tries to maneuver,
11ometimes three or four deep,
through a sing le side door.
'l'he other three are locked or
roped off. Both those enter/\ iug. 11s well a&amp; those leaving
Ihe building are f01·ced to use
the same door.

presalon'' of academic freedom
In re Aptheker . Th e campus
literally buzzed with co "ee rn
over thla Issue-students
and
profeuors

proclaiming

the

In.

justice of It all; "Like chit.
dren we came. believing , , ."
lo the lh;hl or certuht
uo11ur.
l'NJCI/"
las, we('k I mu~t HUY
"humh u,1(' ,11111··11~.'1,ocrl&amp;y"lo th••
Nl'rl.('~rll giv~n to 1he rrenldsh
nc.
tlvitl+'R of lh~ preceding
!lattw•lo.,r,
1,n~t we»k. the Student Sermte ln­
••lled n 1u1111ber o( 11romlnent edu.

&lt;·a1ors und civic lenders to speak
"' ii"" 11nlvPrslty in ,·ommemorn­

Otis Finley Delivers Final
"Ema ncipation" Lecture

With u little imagination Uon or the ~,~niug or thl' w,unTI- 'l'lw 111th ,md llf\111lecture in Ille 11dv~rllsers wbo 1·ons(antly plc:tun·
Emancipation
Da.y prognlllll
waa ooly wt1Lte person~ In their ads.
you can picture what this is 1•l11111lu11
rrocht.rnnllon,
like. The reimlt is that no one
Commenting on the employmeo1
In 11,, ~x~rel•e
or our rl~hl oC elven Inst Frldny by Olis Finley of
gets anywhere until some im­ u.-,,utemk freedom whl()IJ. baa so 1\ew York. u•sorln ,te dir ector or thf: ~ltuntiun. he said tba.t job dis.
,•rlmhmtlon
hns placed more than
patient student on the inside rerAnl Jy lwen so· vlgoroualy 11.H­NAUODlll l Lrbau League.
Mr. I&lt;'l11ley maintain ed thtlt ~lt­ Sll'.f nt the Negro population
intfl
wo mude ijUch n poor
!lips the lock on one of the ,erted.
tlt1g II Negro child ne.xt Lo n white
other doors allowing those •howini:; 1h111 )lr. Otis f&lt;'lnlr.y of child In 1, s(•ltool room Is not In­ the tbrP.l' lowest.paying Job oa.te.
leaving the Union, to exit thE' Nntlorwl \lrbao 1,eague dis. tegration. ll ~ added thnt dea~n,­ gorles - service workers, semi.
skilled workera a.od 11nskllled ln bor
l'heer n.mazemenl that n
through it, while the incom­ 11la.yed
,:-11llon of ijc•hools Is but a token
Th e nverage Jncon,e for the Negr o
l'niverahr
oC this size, (upwards
i 11g group pushes and elbows ut
nwu,mrP or eoualiti· ror Ne,:Toes.
flwnlly Js $3,23!1annnnlly, c.om,pnred
15,1100 students)
could regard
Mr. Flnley U ld tt,1t publlo
iti- way th rough the first tbt• s ubj('('t ot his ·1ect ur e - lhe
wllb $5,8:{6 ror • n white family.
sc h ool edueatlo"
haa never
door.
:-;.,gro ITI Ame1-t11u
so \lttlm~,r.
In c•oncluslon be urged that pr!
pictured
the Neg ro as an In.
t11nt •• lo t.urn out 11n nudteniee of
\ IIIM Individuals
and orl,"llnlZ&amp;tlon•
tegrat
part of the American
The lote,t 1ign at entrances oska students to remoYe
le11s lhu n Otty 11ersoo•.
11,i re.
wage an "undrnrnatlc
nnp ubllol zed
way of llte, The Negro I• ,.,..., _
their rubbon before entering. Is thi1 poaalble1 In light
mnrked that the Altnrue;v-OeTieral
fight for racial e11uu·llty'' lo au,.
ly pictured
In textbooks,
ex .
of the previously illuatroted confusion at the door, ore
of the l'nJted St1ttes re,:nrds
the
ment the more drama.Uc ijleps be .
cept in alave aeenea , despite
atudentt expected to bend over, at the ri1k of being
orM or Civil ltlghts
dll!CUHed
tog taken by the Federal Govern.
the emergence of the Ne gro In
n,i the mollt lmporta ,nt lnternnl
tromplad, to remove Nbb ers7 Certainly if the staff wiahet
m e ol and 1tntl-blas groups.
the llelds of science and tech­
11rohelm fll.Chlit Ute ontl.on todny .
the atudenta to remove wet rubbers thi1 con be more
"It's like war," he 11Uld, "you
nology,
Needleaa
to say, I w.. a
aa1ily, not to mention more safely, done ot the check•
.\ N~~ro hlm,;elf. the speaker cannot use all A..bomb CO'I'o. Job

room.

A casual obse r ver will note that to date few, if any,
11
tudent&amp; are complying with this reque st. We can see how
It would be difficult to do so. And then what about those
who wear the popular shoe boot. They are not asked to
remove them ancl walk around in their stocking feet, so
why should those who prefer the traditional rubber or boot
he Mked to do so.
It 11obvious that there i1 o flow in the arrangement
somewhe,. , If the doors ore defective and let in too much
cold air, they should be repaired ot once. We hope thi s
1ituotion will not hove to be endured until the worm
weather la upon us and the need for repolr is no longer
enentiol. Secondly, if the students must remove their
overshoes in the building, let them do it In the proper
ploce, th(! checkroom, not in the crowded lobby.
Upon observing the rrowds pu~hing against the one
door open to them in an attempt to enter the 'Union, ouc
cmmot help but rec1\ll the words of rC\Ck 'n roller Litt le
Jtichard's best seller, "I Hear You Knocking But You Can't
Come In". Despite our low opinion of rock 'n roll music,
we ha, ·e to admit, in this case. he hit the nail right on
the head.

n~w•su,;utr of the St.at e trn'"''•lty
or Ne1w 'fork at
N.t Norton Ba.JI, Ua ht nlty Campue, Bu/talo 14,
\ht llrol week or September to tho \Jl_l!tw•ek
1n At'f'II, .,._,•.••, .. ''" ~\f'T'II ('lllrlod", ThRnka.,-tvtrur. t"l\rletrHU
ontt
EOllo•-•n-Chl t! - JOAN ... f'LORV
N•w• IMll01 . ~I \HY l,OIT WTLSON
lloort, B,lhnr
..... fAMlsS BAKER
1-hfl nft1t'h,I •lUdent

N.

r

l•utill•h"'l

omct

C"opr 10:.111,,r

~u:1n_:.;•

•.., v, 1t'T
C&amp;lftllf•
('hukn
f,l",-flln'k♦I,

~~~
Ht'lM_.,Ii(:!~~~:~::.
Nl

OltNltt\.U.

S'l'Oi'/1'1

,1Tnn

I ,:nl•l lrwtn

K'rAVJr : ,..,,,,.,

Bank,

Vtotort•

Bn,:01•1.

/\ncto Camp .. ne!IA..

f .&lt;)lll'tl•·•·&lt;1, lt.ltfn• n .. rron. M,.rllyn Bert'lk, J U'11th Button, 8ha.N&gt;D
M,url~
r'1101•~r. \11'1( ("ommuutno,
\f"rY
t.ou \Vll-.crn, I.Arr,
Ku,ro l·"\u1nmr ,,,,,.
ft,,Jtlm"n· tJQ.n)' t-:"l&gt;"ttht , oa,·td Fr,y • .rofly

£1111.Ah,n 11,,IT,n•n. J,.,I)

llobor,

llavld lr,..ln, ntrk

O.lmt&gt;n , nnr!Jo.ra Ool~­

watrr,,
Jlc,,. Ki'ln1lh111kl, J"'h"
1.. ntnttr1 Anne Mlh1te. 8f")'11a MtUmRn, CAt hy
Mr ff 11tr1h. 1 11111 1,,1,\,
t-',u11
'1••1ron:,
J'\annM
hwln,
Arnie
!\tl\t.llt '. f'."1
lhu1lnl,
.lln1
~l~nn
M•t• ·1r f tr•'IHh\k,
.inn,
)'1?11rnmf'1", Rncky
\ •r111('0,
t..on,1
\\'11U,11,,, l,IIUa11 WIIHa1r1a, Ka.th~ t&lt;hf':\, f.ln•tl'\
\\'c,1•11, J'r.Mlht1r CHn"
W,1',

c·,,u,_. o• l ..:in¥, AH11n ,~~\ tn.

~!~ !B/J~~~~"HTA
t-V· ltt.:,..\t11

nn~i.,..,

t urr)'

~t h ulr,.

Jool

ll AVtnr.t,

J"1,,ti1r1..J ,, .. •f'4.1111,J tlftN
't\MU·r
~bn111,r:r
,. U~t.
• 1
11ffk• ..,, Ho ff'a ln •. ,
Y .• u,hJ er- ,tt~ 'HH o( M•rcb
U1"' .\cct1&gt;lanl•
tor
■s,e ,..IAI
nt tw"~l­
•rt' ll 1M·.11,-c1 f1,r H't &gt;ltNlon
llVI
\W'l ot l'Ch-'l.ler I. 1117
-.ut1w.i1•-j
t''tbnJ i'\1'")' t
lf&amp;\

,, .. f'o•t

.l

niamnc •t •

•~•r

r•••

n oo
·-•u. ('ltrc-ula.Unn tltO
ti•• ..... .-n u 1I for natt11fu\J a .J•o t&lt;' ••u• t, y 'l aU o nal Atl
ml Hflf'VI,·•
lne
Ot \htJh,r&gt;n
1\.-.., ~•• T'n,lt , Y

.1111j11•1J 1ru1,,u

\ f'IMI

HUld thu1 Negroes

teel turtber ls0- requiring
a
pis tol.
~a.DY lltU ('
Ju.Led hl'&lt;'IUIHe they are lgnpred by I l)(l~ltlve a(epe belp In the battle ."

is unexcuaable.

l\oPI!
this
behavior
lndlc11t~
tlml onl)• whNl /(!'eat l'Outrm·ersy

Reflections •

01•r11r~ nnd J&gt;Hti•ions nre aroused
lhut
Kllldt•11ts wlll attend
surh

lertur""
111 I'll?
ls :1pt1thl' In
h11~i~ tllf'Ut'~ 111ht• onr 1,'111de?
ll&lt;&gt;w 1·nn we mnlntaln
u post.
llnn of lnjur~d 11rlde whon the
In ~111111111,moratiouol Ow ~:man.
st.At,, Sl't•ks to .. pr&lt;1if'&lt;•t" us from
llil•
"hmt•sit's'
or .\Ir , i\plhl'kJI!' !'i1n11iun f&gt;rndnm11\io11, 111st week
,·ommttte~
t&gt;r"•
whtl~ ;i ,e,·w• or MJ1Pnk('rs ro u . 111., (•lvll rii:hts
II lll'Dl!'rllm o( 1n16!!l ~penk­
,·erne 1l with h11m11t1rlghlM ~o vh •­
l'I'~
'"
lllumhlnlt!
wb:tl The Pro.
tnnJI)· 11nl11•1tro '"' lht, &lt;'lllllflll•''
or
\\ " ru11~1 J)rO\'ll tht• nit 11•
• "nm~ gr e,. Ive cttlled n "century
on tbc- jl«l'l of lhf' Negro,
1)11•)' whn fePl we must hf' l'ro. ~tru~~le''
te..t~,t rron, , 11,·h
HS ~•nscl~m fl !s 1101 111Y1111rp()~eto re~iew
nnd ('omn11mis111.
A11n1hy, •t wh 1h•• 111cmnn11hul 10 discuss the
tor ull
aH 1lmt tl&lt;•mun~11n1(•d Inst W('Pk, ,.,•oblPm or t'l]UUI rilihts
1 ns
rntr ,,11Lt.,
nnd 1u,w it 11r&lt;--~ents
ont, prt,, ••~ lhul 1h, 1y ,trti 1·hd 11
lt•••tr tn the ~1ude11l.

,,.,11,.
,I

~•·II•

• •

By ARNIE MAZUR
very quietly
aakedl
what she, a North
er n er ,
c o u I d do on b e h a I f o1
the Negro cau•e. McDew'a an .
s wer, unhesitatingly,
required
her to travel south and aid In
educating and registering Negro
voters, Certainly, Mc Dew's frua .
tratlon Is underatood when he
le challenged
by persona who
are willing to help but not
wltlfng to sacrifice
pereonal
con~enlencea
for 1h11 "could
0
not leave ho'me.

s tudent

It ,~ no lon~e1· n11,·es&gt;1ury t"
\\'rh,•
lltc ~ttcl ltist.orl' of onr
ht the 8011th. 1111• ;\'111,.'TOruu. 1
~•"•·r1 11nM1I nuJ ,&gt;ur 111•opI,, lu Its
,1,•ll\ 111•1 n nd :ltlilude
IOWltrd the 11'1:hl ""
open b1111le ur,;alni&lt;t 1111
!l:111:ro 1·0111munlti• The Elmanclpn. 011~11 ~y~1&lt;• 111. fu the :0-01•tb, though
111111
Prul'lumntlon Ulll)'hnvestrl(lped
Ill!' l11•l111111tyIs ubsent, th~ baltl(•
f:' 8
)Vl
S 111,• N"~ro u! ~lnVMY Ill a legal i~ almost eo1rnll)' llS dlrtlcult if
,,·ns••, hill It dtd not I rne him or unlr he1•11u~ecivi l rlglit s must b ~
lhP luwl)
sll,h18 or ~l'C(ltt(I clas~ roug h! co,· in the dork.
Auyon( •
,·1tl11•11sh1p
Of Ibi s w.- Mt&gt; 1111 whu lt~llrw,ij tbnt NegroCfl W&amp;lll
'rOdll)' ;ii ;i fl m 111l'OOIII :\~6 oc """''''• H tlT&lt;I the reltels
nr th~ tu lhe Ill mke-l11fested Har lem
:-orton
t ·111&lt;11, 1111• rtv ll rights ' Rout11,
I hat l'ertnl n "r.o oslderotl9Ill!·•
nr r
cull1tull!P1•
1s ha, l11r,: n general
('horl~s
~lt •l&gt;ew. chttlrruau
Hnll 111,t 1111&lt;1'11
Iulo account when Ollt
m'lf'IIIIJ!, . \t this t!IIL" lht
c1►111 . • ,,,k,•smnu for the Studllnt
Nott- -.·!tool• nre divided into dl sl rlctll ,
mlttl'e •nit d""'ttle uu Its ,,roRrnm l'\oh•ni l'oo,dlnallni;
CommiltPe, le (h,1t lll,,11,. llrl' not delerm~ned
b&gt;
lur the .,,,111,..,1,,1
., •l&lt;'l••rmlnecI Ughtt•r tor the rights th1• r•1)lort11l l11hel on o ne R ta.c1
1'h~re Mil 1uuhah () h~ nc1lo11 ur hi• J1eol)lP, lie cuttl hl• ('t"-WOrk.1 t•tu&lt;t ht· 11,1tv,, •&gt;r u tool. l wo ul d
111 A111Jnl11
In tbt&gt; nreas of sei,-rc. , ,., hav,, 1'111 ►,i•ll th•• 111
0~t tlHflcult 1101 havr sUl:1:l'B'.t'd IC1 tbo abo \ ,
1
,rt 11Pd hou~IIIJ!, tutoring
un,lcriH·,v· m..thod for ,,1t:d n u1&gt;• ,,,p,.I t·h:hl• , ,tt11t1•n1 1hnt sh1 11·,w,•I south, ,
~t'lrnol 1111pll~. ,1&lt;&gt;-llh I: ,1111 ntllllnnt
unr•••i"'""
,01111•\\ h,,, u11r•~1llslk 1•1OJ&gt;Oilll,to,
11,,ged ,,ubhr
h1rlo s,•i:;r&lt;&gt;,:nllon tn tho public '""
rnup . ,,rkt11i: r,;,,,auuul
,:-1111 ,r,,, 11robl11m1~ hl•rt• a11 wPll
,-dJO('lll\ Jl\tl t•ldlrle! t\U(.·h •tud~tlt Ill" p()W+'r fur 11.. OWII ~ake. s~rc
JhlW dlW~ thl' problem ur I\ rro\1.
,•1\11 rti:11111
l'fl'li)'&gt;
llS s:-t'(' .. ,nd h,,, ,•hn,i, II ... 1,r1•,~ r1,r 1·t1·II ni:hls, 1.. ~ l"'"i•I&lt;· fll•'SPOI it~••\! to th•·
~!-1~1
,111 .H' lh+ ,,.u•1n ...1u, fl•l' th+~y f.l_l~ ,tml1 1 11t~ 1'hi 1 1'f' 1~ Jlf) ~to1pl1• f'Ouri,.
\tfnr1wj
t,. , uJ-ni•r of th,,
Rut 1hut ··11h,,r,1h " .. nw1d)
11n•
(url nt /11"tlu11 t,:,1•rnin1• mHt\t
&lt;l&lt;
t,,lu nnd t'rl" 1 '1111111) Ct1111wll;,r ,•,111 n hi&lt; 1,,\n,1:1tlu11 llu , 1·:1111'1'111•11101•1•·111lw nt&gt;! lloul o! tl)lll(I
1 !1111,11.., w.111 •·~pltih wha1 11
r11&lt;rn .,,,1, ,.,. ,mpr, ,i•, I h) th,•
"V 1h
'"'""
t&gt;t rh,· Nq;ro, or
th" f',HnH·lt t•lun,- tf\ tukl' 1n
\h ll• \\ nrul orlwt~ In th•· h,1ttl1 1 h Hlltni: th,
relattonshlµ.
It h1 ,,ot
1
a11 ·.~ ,,r hnu.{11w 1'11~r,,1,tatl1•11,
nncl ,l~idH I 1111 1dlt fltl,tf .ir,1 t-1.h.1111 ♦• 11111 d111\ 11 1111prnVP rn,·~ 1,·lhlloutt
wh ,1 r}h e1\"tl r1r.11t~ ('Otlllllltfftf• 1•11!1li·u ~1H1tt1.
hut
"'
I (iTl)l)IIlf":J\" 1k lro,.
th•
, ;1t
1h.1 '"
hr-h,
Durlno tht coff,,. hour, ot,t
1·or 1,·i•pt

,~,~••·
I"' Sena I

wHIU~ tn•tn

t•JIARl.f:~

lnhoepltallty

l&gt;hl'l d ii,

THE SPECTRUM
Oulta.Jo. l'ul)JloUon

tittle .. hamed of the Unlver .
alty and myaelf.
To place a
guest In a position where he
Is required to point out our

'

or

Joy

c· ·1 R'tghl

CornmiUee lo Meet

I

u,,, .,

co11r11!"'l

�Fnday, Feb1uary 8, 1963

,AGE FfVI

SPECTRUM

Bigger, Better Buffalonian
Will Debut ,n EarlyMay

~onic

By J'NNE MIINTE
Thts ri~L weclt hns placed the G!'eelc worlll a.L Lhll center of (hut
wh.trlwtnd called sp~
rush. Fraternities
a.ntl sorol'ltles u.e J?uslly
,,ccupied with colte 11srtles and smoket·s as they try lo intr oduce new.
comers t o the various aspects of Greek orgnnt~a.lon. B est of luck Iv
1tll houses as they manage one of the ll\llJor evenui of th&lt;' s1,lw&lt;1\

I

cont•lna team p lotur,■ ■nd ao­
By LORNA WALLACH
tton ahota, an ROTC eeollon, •
A, 1·ordl n g to edUor Tboruaij
modll'led academ ic aeotlo n d..
Boohel, this yenr'• Ruf\'~tonJou wttl
plotl ng research projeote, ind
h&amp; bh:ger and hett f\l' thuu ever
1 dormitory aectlon with twloe
Tbete will be ~iO llh-i,-.·• I\ hfch i•
All mAI\.V candlll eb.ot,i "'1 th, ,
so pages UIOl'C than l11MI)'0111·.tn.
pr ov Joua l ■uuu, All org,n lu •
eluding . 16 ,,age•
cutor. donhlln~
t lc1na have a page of plotul'ff ,
that or the past lssu&lt;'
Ther e wlll be two p■gu of
Thtl theme, IR this yPur'R llutrn.
cho ten literary work• of tho
lon,1,an wm be tbe history or the
1tudent1 ,
l'nJl'erslly
of 13ulf.alo nn d Its bltth
,11 mf'mbt•MI th•• ,entor 01Into tlie Stole University , •Ysten1. 1vlII ht• T(lllTet~n.tNI by II. J)(CltlJ.re
'l'h r ~ove t will l11, k~tlt 11 secret
:111~ thP dean• or All t he Mlhool•
1111•11
•ht' •lnt e lbe hook la out lltld ,1!1 the de1~•rtml'nt h~llds WUI
'T'lu• only lntornu,11011 re"e~l~d la h, r/lJ&gt;T9880tod.
th1u I h!I ,•ovt1r will curry out the
'l'hr Buff'alonli111 will b o M&gt;ld Car
lht1111Pa1•d w111rontnln t,)u~ ool&lt;&gt;l'II.$7,00 until the e-nd or fi'Ahru(l17.
Ol111•t-raed throurtho11t tl1e bool&lt; Jr ~~" be purehnsed in tbe book,.
will he 2,000 rnm1tus e1111didah&lt;&gt;te. ■tore, at the pen oounter or at t,lc,
Tl1{l m~Jorlty ot these pt0l11rea w11J llcket hooth. T}Hlre wttl be a sale
111:nt11~ed In the campus Jlf o 11ec. In Noncm lobby nn(! the donnt
Hou, Muny 11111Joreven.ttl auoh R ~ wllhln lhp nAxt l.wo week11. All
ITmnt"ltimtng, Winter Weohnd 11nd hookR wilt !xi sold on a resel'\'e
i"IJll'lng Weekend •Ill well IUI every. l)asts, and there will be very ft!W,
day ~dlvltte~ nre JllCtllred In this Ir ffO)", books IIVOtlllble lntl'lt' thnn
•1w•lio11.
l"ebT'Ulll')'. Th&lt;'t!e hooli:M wilt sell for
Ala o Included In the year .
$7.rlO. Th e Bul'falonl an will be out
b:&gt;ok is a sports sect ion, which
thl' flrM week In Mo.y,

yc11r.

Next Tucst111y. 11U119ror1tles will combine theu· ef(ol'ts in w1111t
will be both 11 st•rvlce and cultural project. Sorority women will ll&lt;'l
.,., u~hl'lrs rot• Ult Destine Dan cers snd will 1tldo backstug~.
One week from tomorrow, the broth ers ot A lph11 E_p~IIQnPl will
hotrt u1011• nnnua l VaJenUne•s Day Pnrty. The aff1tlr will take pince
111 th e Mars .Hotel, Li!st week's ope n party ·'was a fantasti c succss
with more thon ~00 peop le tn Rltendantt.
The Ball and Ch11in w11s
•lr,nced to lhe musl~ of the Del.Royals .
The slatel's of A)pha Gamma DeJt.. enJoyed meet1J1g the rush ~cs
11,~
the pu.rly Tuesd11y nlg'ht. We hope they enjoyed It as much as we cllll,
\:ongral ulaliorL~ to Diana J ohnson. ?&gt;est pledge of Ule fall claSll.
The junio r executives of Alpha Kappa P si wo ul d like to announce
" ... of cabbages and kings."
11,ssecond dated rus h party which will be held at tile Parkridge R es.
taura.nl, 300 Parkrldge
Avenu e, on Saturday evening after the Cha &lt;l
1'111, tiltoto or tlu1 r,~moueclown
Mit(lhel Trio Concert,
w:u; 111ken wI I h u K111l111t1r
sing la
Th e brothers of Al{ll~ 1-'IIJfh\lt.1 Wl9h lo OOJJg
l'l\lUlate the lnlUates
ISO(lftll-~'
film
,t the F.all Ple&lt;lge Class. 'the new br othe1·s were treated to dinner 11'111&lt; t•&lt;'rl1•). 11111!•.i.(
a!ter fnlliallon. Thi a Saturday night there wlll be a dated rush pal'ty rn11.cl ttl J\,H,A. IO 'l'h•• tlt'lgin11J
at th e Capri Lounge starting ut 9:30. Attendan ce will be by lnvita. l"llN \I II&gt;' SUJll' l"lll"Jlt•• •I with n 2X
Uon only . F'or any furth er Information ca.II Mario Ca telano at TX 2. tt•l••11hulo lllld O(IN!"1I Ill&gt; lo P.fi,G
9655.
ro, 1111 e:{tlONure or 11100.
The brothers of Alph,~ SIKOl11 Phi Will have theit• s,;~01111 sLllg.
'l'h,• 1,llol1&gt;it1~'1!h1•r
•l1tnillr~
nu,h party l&lt;mlght at the Northla.nd Grill, 151 Grider Street off Eaat
Delave.n. Il wlll begin at 8:00 and ls open to 1.11lrushces. Those need- tu 11crowd wl"'u the ciluw,1 wnlked
tng ridcH , please be In Towc1• lobby between 7:30 and 8:00 p.m.
thrnn,:h 111~11111.vlnK
hl,i f111nU1ar an.
,me pick
Tomorrow night Ule brothers or Dom l'bl Slgiru, will hold a rush tics. When ht• 511w 11111111•1
pa,•ty at C het's and Alice's tSailey nen1• East Dolavanl. It will beg\11 1111
" 1•111111'rn,
he 11top111•d11h01•taoll
A .~Ix-week summe r ln~tll 111,, Alst,,11t. pro(~s.i,ur ot d1en1lsl.ry ;
Mte r the Chrul MltChC'\ Trio Concert Saturday night. Tho party Will 11sa11m11dlhlH ('hOl'l\&lt;'lOrhlllt 1&gt;0se.
assistan t
hi• open to nit non.,.ftlllnted phn.mm cy stull ent.s. H~all..h Boolllilt or
i•ou would Ilk&lt;' ., Jolu th•• 111rht•mlstry, physics and m11th,, BN1.1amln M . Sharpe,
II
1
mlltl&lt;'8 fo r high scllool or ju nlo J p1•of&lt;'1&lt;gor
of mathematics:
nnd Or.
PhttlO/',l'llllh)' t'Juh lllld liCI' you r
I.ho wcek-'•YOUI'
Heart."
1hc:m $ . Wint er , 888001nte p ro.
,11a 111 thlM rot, high school teachers ls being n(. S.tt11
The fellows a! lletr, Slgnm Kh o will hold a bJrLhday party rot· own fuvu r lt" pfri 111
HC'rb Melln lck tomorrow. All n-eshmcn who nre prosp ootlve pledges umn, oonllict Hon Ross. 1m;i;ld1m1, '••red lJy the S&lt;1hoo1of Edurntl or tl'&gt;s!IOrot educntlnn ,lllld dlr&lt;'&lt;ltor or
are Invited. Congratulations
to fellows Mik e Bermnn and Rol, rrt ur •lop hy 1h11 w.. ekty niuetlngs h1•l'e, July 12-Au~ 9, l:hrough th the llllltltute.
The co11rees(Ind cl'l)(llt. otCrrNI
Sing&lt;'!' for 1•cc&lt;'lvtng accep t ance to Med. School after tJ1ree years uf lll'ld 1•1lt'h ••·d~a y in !llorto 11 nt ~ support of the NnUonal Belen,· •
J'1'01111dollon.
arc "Top ics tn PJ\yslcnl Ohcmt.s
r•1&gt;Uege.
p.m. lnqu lrc a t rcsc1-vattonR off•l·e
F1&gt;rfy.four teac1lers . not 11101· trv for Teachers ," thr ee credlt11,
'!'h e sisters
or ( 'hi Om rgil. would like to anuounct• lhnt for th" room nulllbu1·,
limn 60 years old With at lcn~1 • 1Ri1 s i r Principles of Physlet ,"
"Southem Belles' ' Purt y tor lhc rullhecs al Ute Collt&gt;ge C lub , Congrnl- 1
two yr.l\rs teaching experience who th 1·,•1, cre\flts: nnd "College Math .
uJaticins to Jenn Sd\ot•rnbs and her staff of officers "'ho were lnstall&lt;.'&lt;i
t;,ach a.t least one course of vhein &lt;'mo.tics." four crcd JtJI.
Monday night.
isll-y or physics. Will bo sel&lt;'ct,•,I
All oourscs will carry cre&lt;l!t
(mmnm Phi wU! hold an open stag party this Friday night at
Lo nttcnd two of the three courH• whkl1 m~ be ull(l(! t.oward th1•
8NJtller Craig Lynn and Doug Lot-d's apartment,
101 Eisman. Ken.
o(!ered tulUon-tree and wilt 1
fulflllm~nl of tbe requirement~
more . Rides will leave Norton at 8:30 sharp from the Candy Cow1ter
cetve stipends nnd travd l\llm,· ot the li)d.M. o r l!ld,D. degroo ln
/\ II l'Ullhees are invited to o.tlend.
anccs.
!hi! Suhool ot lllducatlon ut th1•
Highlight of the evening will be Doug Lord p!nytng his ~Jelen
By KATHLEEN SHEA
The Uwver!llty staff of th~ 11 U11lvetstly.
I h,,,ated banjo.
Russell Goldl;Jerg. a me111be1·of sUtute are Dr. William El. B,•11
l!lach p11rUclpa.nt wlll reoelvl.'
Jl'rid11y night, the fro.tres of Phi Epsllon Pi will hola theh• f\nnu,d, th e novice division of Ule Oebnte hett , p1•0Cesaor o f physics and
$75 per week and $15 per week
elated "Mostes t •· Party . The pal'ty will Lake place al the Phi F:1, Hall Society,
was awarded th e Bes! Fellow Of the American Phys lcn • pe r dependent ! up to a maximum
at the H ertel-Elmwood Plaza and the dress ls cnsual. There WIii al~o Spea.ke,• a.ward tast week,,nd 111 Society; Or. Ccorge A. Cltu·kc, .i
Of fOUT).
he a party on Sntul'day night arter lhe conce1•t. Congratu lati ons nrt• the Wealem
New York Debate
rn order to lhe uewly Initiated brothe1•s.
'l'ourna.n1 ent held at Niagara Uni­
'l'h&lt;' sisters of
Sigm a Slgnm would lll&lt;c to 11,1u1ou.ncelhnt 11 veraity.
Mol'e th11n hu.lf of th•
wonderful time WM hnd by all 11t th eil' coke party ana nt their ''Com, debaters ag11inst whom the tram
ss You Were at Age 5" Rush Party. We would like to extend i;,•nteful. was competing
w,,rc ,,r varsity
tha.nks to rusb chairman Flo Gerber for he1· planning of rush events. St9L118.
The sisters are looking fo1•ward to their ml1&lt;e1·with TKE tonight.
'I'M dt1tes for the 1963 ~tud11n\ 11t,,1 ♦1111"111 ,·,,11\lil'fl lo the Clreeb
TIii' Unlven;1ly
ll'tll11 !'OllS18lO!I
W1tb Winter Weekencl on the way. we would like to wish the best
u•,.~tlnne wun• sut »l
SeulLi e ' wl\l~b 11pp~t•r"IJ
lflRl weelt'II
,,f lu&lt;'k to lhe Phi Sig snow scu lptu ru teem •mil lo uur Queen candi . o! three novloeu and one vnrslty 111e.,tln;.; 'l'uesllny nli:ht. •rbey wilt ~111•·11·11111,1111/1 It 111iprov,,ct of a
debnler. Mr. GQh]berg an&lt;! Kar en
•lkh•, Bev Kfrs&lt;'hner.
1,,ke pltw1• 'T'1w•d11y ntul Wed11es- l1•t.111rto be ••lnl 1o the St11,1eBoo.rd
By popu lar dent,ll.ncl the SA1\l Hostess Pal'l .y Is back ag;un. Il Morris made up the negative d11y. Murch 6-0. It wtts also au. nt Trunteoe. 'l't,e bt1Sls ot tl\11le4ter
le11m.
l,lm
M1111kiewlcz
ond
Lin,111
Will tnke place tonight, al Fu.v.lo',; Cnpltat H all, and u,~ fcstivlllcs b~­
11mu11•rn
l thnt to dntt• $2.ioo lmn I• 1h11t th~ Rtndont Sl•nllte feet~
.l('ln al 8:30. Ct11•tl,a Rtll' l\nu his C1·ew will pl',,Vidt! the ente ,•tlltn1111mt L,event.hal apoke for th,· nfC11mu. 1&gt;1•1•11
cull1•1-111i1
tur• 11111
('n1u)\UHnnr. th!lt turtll1•r lnveMtl1;r,llon lnto ~
L•ve
side
of
Lhe
notional
debut,
,rnd t.hrr,, wilt be gills from both 1JB a.nd fl\lm Buffalo Stale . 1''1•,•,·
rntl runa.
r,,,.L.,r1111t
•&gt;•i&lt;tN111, uN·~,&gt;1t•n' 11-n
d
bus service wlll be provided on cumpus, and wlll leave 11l 8:15. 'l'ht, topic. The team racked up u n•1•.
R••&gt;'Mlll lllHll(,,(M w,,ro PllSSed II.I \1111111rtu11t.
1\1111l'&lt;'(IUests tllo.t the
Ord ol four wins nnd row· IOHSIJ~ lh•• lllflPll11.:: Anlhl'Of)Ology C'luh nr,nrd or 'J'ruHtN 1• I •Wlew tbelJ'
part,v .Is open only to eligible UB rushees.
l'he sisters o! S lgnm D1ilta 'J'a u U111nkthe l'Ushc~s for a very sing.
The Debate Soclely Is sendln_g f 1,000 nnct Sludeul Bar A8soc1atlon 0111·llrr 11N'IAlon,
1ng time 11t the coke pu1•ty. We will nil be In thcatt'Jcal costume for two novice and on~ varsity lc11m $12117.'l'he Rtudent llnr Association
/111 nmendment
lo th•• C'onatltii.
hn~ 11lready been npproprlotod
tlon was Hllgjlie"tNI. lt 1Ui.tea thnt
tlte informal l'Ush party Tuesdny. whM1 WM planned bY rush chair.
to the tournament whlClt Is being
S!'nute r1&gt;pre,wnt11llv"• moat hav e
mnn, Aileen Wlsbaum. SOT is ente ring Uu, snow sculpture contest jointly sporu,ored by Cantslus un6 $1i00.
Thorn w1JJ1 n discussion ot d!Vl&gt;• 1.2 overull, en d n 1.0 the 11reviooe
r,n·Winter Wel'kend. nnd according to chab•ulan Sue Slomun great Rosary Hill Colleges this weekend
11dd dny, ond 1h11 &amp;tndenl welfMe ~"llle"lrr ~• lie ~llg1ble (Art . 1,
1Huns are und~rway.
Tonight, the first rounds 11(tleball
made several aug~e,.. Sec. 2 port Ill : of.ricers must han
The brothers of Sigm a Phi Ep!lllon wu1 hold a closed. da Loo, rush Will be held at Canisiu.s, Rosa I y committee
tl&lt;&gt;ns Cor hn11rovemut. They flug . " I.I uvemll and a 1.0 the pre91.
parly tonlght from 9:00-1:00 at U\e Barg e Inn l~ated
off Niagara
HUI will be host tomorrow .
gested mote comp lete nd •binding ou• Jomester. (Att . n, Sec. r P&amp;rt
i,•aus Boutev8rd. Music wtll be supplied by "Herm:le." The brothers
Feb, 15 and 16, the varsity ell r•M&gt;-rofristrntlon. mor" e tr ec ll v G II I Th&lt;1 11nu1n.dmeu.t wlll be Toled
would 11.keto thank their social chairman for the enjoyable rush slag
~u»ervtslon,
1lme as~nme-n.t&amp; t&lt;&gt;r 11(&gt;(Ill 1\t the next !Jencitcl meettnr.
held last Friday night at t.l\e Otub Sheridan. The "Sigmas•· are happy vision ot the Oebu to Society wl r ,,oterlni:; the 1,,ym, und lu~reaaNI
J\n evaluaitloo ADd l81lderahlp
be host lo 21 teams !rom all parts
wft h the success or their record from Greek sing .
work vlo, tk" lndlvlduol
depurl.- ,·onfMnn.c11 will be held next Tue&amp;­
The slaters of Sigma Kappi. wilt be onlertatned by U1e pll'flg es on af. the country. The novice w1vtsion meuta.
•lay wtmarlty tor thP &amp;l'11ntor11and
the tradllional Song and Paddle Night . The pledges wlll sing songs will enter this event.
Th~ Senate rnt!tletl lhn NSA rommllt~t&gt; bi&gt;ads.
11nd will present personal gifts to their Big Sislel',;. A welcome "ill
Two varsity debaters l'epr&lt;•sent.
he extende&lt;l to all rushees . The siste rs are looking forward to Ole ed the University 11t Harvbrd lllsl
Informal Circus Party for lhe rushees next Wednesday which Will be weekend. ~l'ry
Cantanzaro
and
helrt 1tt Bev Alexander's.
('arol Zeller tleball•cl hnlh ~Ides Feb.
R,I, HEINZ COMPANY
11 _
The sister~ of Th~la Ch i en Joyed me&lt;'tlng U,e ruKhet•s 11t Iht '1'1•11
Seeld.ng Bua. Ad. m'1ons
of the Issue.
U. S. NAVAL AIR Dl!lVELOP .
IMt Sunday and are looking forward to seeing tllem al the lnfomint
Feb. 14 Novice debaters
will 11tlenu ,
MENT CENTER
uarty Thursday.
XEROX COR'POR.ATION
Louma:ment at Bnldw1n Wallac ·,
Seeking
Phy~I&lt;'~. E Ii: Arid
The brothers of Tl,et.,, C'hJ Fr:,ternl y thank Don Roberts for Inst
Seeking E.E. MJ!J. and Phy.
College
In
Cleveland,
Ohio
.
March
M.E.
majors.
Ftiday·s fine party heir! ht honor or Leroy Smtl..h. They also hope lhal
81camajors.
ROSS LABORATORTE-~
l and 2. Further fo1·ensk events
Uu, rushecs enjoyed last weck•s stag at Big Mother's , Tonight tl111
•ri-fE EQUITABLEl
WFE As.
!•• Elmira Ct,lll•i;e and lhe Unlv!!rSeek.Ing Bus All ., ("hrml1try
CbN 1ry Secries wilt hold their second slag , t'Ulih party at 'Bosseln 's,
stty or Syracuse. 11, •,. 011the n,,vi, ·,·
and
8Jnlol,") SURANCE SOCIETY
Pharmacy,
Cleveland Drive 1\1\dCayuga Rond . All l't'J.,1.stered nIBhces are co, dlally
Seeking Bus. Ad. nd Liberal
o.g~wlR
majors.
invited , Those nreding transporllltl&lt;'n shouh1 ronta c t Rirndy 1-Jans,m
Arts mAjor11.
OREMISTRY
nt TF 2.4987
REPUBLlC
STl!lEL
CORP .
W11ll am A. Bo.k111
·. du ·ectu r o'
seck\ng M.E ., Physi c~. ('h,•m
11
The fraters or Tau Ka1,pa Ep~llon wish In a.1moun r •• that their novJce debate. 111 holding rCl!'\lh
istry
aJtAI Biology
rnnJi&gt;r,
ORATION
innual Playboy Party wilt be he!d aL Kl einh ,u t'~ Mnry Seaton Ro&lt;lm mecllngs of U1e society Wednes.
THE
FffiESTONE
TffiF. &amp;
E.l!l . IE.
hl&amp;Joni
Seeking
l"rlda)' , March 22, not April 6 :,s wa.s stal ed in th e sum esll•r 1·nl!.'ndar . day ond Thursday arterno c,n s Jl ,
RUBBER COMPANY
E,'e b 111 Mu1tc by Dnn Snnll ond his 1:1 pie-re or chestr:1 , c-om..(lfans . ,ilng"r~ 1'RJ&lt; lieen I evlewit1g I he v:. r,,.u •
Seeking Bu..~. A,l ,LntJ \
BELL AEROSYSTEMS
1•IUJ1lht• hilt1rtous Jay (Juni:-1&lt;' J11yl Nelson will bl' 1111'hlghlll('hls . Tlw m~thods of presenUn~ " " 1r,:,1
Seeking Mat.b, l'hye lc11. E.E
counting maj or,
pll'/181''1 w1lh Inst Tursday's msh st ui:: nn,t .u·t lnoltlll i: fo, . ment 11.nddl!,russing tlw 11·,
T,•l«•s 111·1•
,v, I• I .!,'eh 12
and M.E . m11jo111.
11''11·,l lo ••m1gh1's s, w t,11 wllh Phi Sigm a SigmA
1'' 1SHER SCtF:NTfFI C
W'hlch IUl opponcnt' 6 .pgll lll •'III 1·111 NIA G ARA .\1Al HINE ,\· fl II II
Th , si s ter s 11r
An J:'f'I Fli1:ht will hnld ru ~h l••n \\' , dn, ••J 11V rron, b~ br olw n oown . R c~l ,r ~1·,11•tJr,
WORKS
S, ·,•klni; Chemistry nnd Dlo.
, H p .tn , iu NL1
rt u n Union. room 359.
Jui.ry majortJ
ild,n tt•11 n rt • h••ld. •lllr lni,: will h th
8, •,klug ME
Th,· br,1thi •1·,. nf Phi l&gt;mbcl11 D1lta
·
n11111
Hmr ,• !heh· 11n nn,,t ru .•h 11&lt;v1lc&lt;-~ ch1111i;I' p1u•1m•rs ,rn,t ii • r.,,b 1:l
l'
S . NAVA!,
AlR
TJ::.8'1'
&lt;'f:NTER
p11r ly f lnall' lO be held next Friday .il t )I,; C-luh \Jm '" 11f ·r ,,m RIii( hat~ boU1 BIUl!H of lh " 1,u;u•• 'l'l u
l' 5 .GE.....,.ERAI \ (' 1', 11' :-:T.
$ocldng Mal.ll, Physics, C.E:
,lerry'e, It is open to !nvltaUon . Tiu&gt; btoUtrtr. " i sh p rl's 1d~111 Hkk 111a ctlce gives th•• •l••h,1I cr,i
L"IG Oi;-Fl('E
u11I E.E . JlllljClns
l..oche hwk heu d!ng the• Heal"j. I&lt;'Un&lt;l Oan c1· I-'~ h 23
~
Seekm~
A,•to11ntm 11: ml " •
flex.tblllty and ada11tahn1tr

or

or

"'"M

Summer Science Institute Offered

For Teachers of Chemistry, Math

Novice Wins
Debate Prize

----------------------------

I'"'

Senate Elections Slated
''
For First
Week 1n March
•h"

•n

I

Placement ScheduleAnnounced

j

I
I

·•"••••II

I

q

�~

SPECTRUM

PAGESIX

rua ry

8, 1963

NewestFad: CollectingYellow CD Signs
By LAWRENCE

is 11rotet•ted. but tha l
some individuals are . ft Is 11n ubsolute Jmpo~eibitlty 10 rirotect 100%
of Iha 1101)11)atlon1111Je.
"a. '"'ft ,-'II
~
"" "~ "
live underg,-ound like mole!, , anrj
"'" aren't 0hout 10 do tb 1tt,"
every/me

,11.,1t~,,nnd it that slleller Is nvatl.
11hle. We owe that kind of lnsur­
&gt;m&lt;'e to our rnmllfes ~nd to our

FRENKEL

The l'nt,•erslty has become, within
the Inst Cew mout:ha, vant of a
c1ount.ry,"
mas.ql\•e tallout
shelter
11r~'l'aru
'the Department
of Def ense
lhat I~ Musing much conLrovers,Y
elaborated
on the Preal dent's
Lh~ughout 1h(• United States, Un­
message
with these worda:
der the dlr ecllon or 11U1te nnd
"The foreign and defense poll ­
county Otfl~e~ of Civil Oefenfie,
cles of your government
make
publk building;;
nre being sur­
a nuclear attack highly unlike­
vf'yed a11d •t&lt;&gt;&lt;·ked for ullllzAll&lt;;,n
ly, and to keep It unllkely la
a• tltllout ~better•. nn&lt;ler H\Jeeitl.
their most impom n t aim, It la
atlonH dmwn 1111 hy th1• Army
for this reaaon that we have
Cor1,s of l-111glrwer1:1.
devoted ao large an effort to
The moat apparent manifes­
creating
and maintaining
our
tation o,f thla activity la the
However,
deterrent
forces.
small, 1quare yellow and black
illQna that h~ve aprung up all
should a nuolear attack ever
around campus.
The contro­
occur. certa in pre pa rations
ver.slal nature of this program
could mean the difference be­
la Illustrated
by the fact that
tween life and death for mll­
students are tear ing down the
signs.
fions."

Erneat

A. Edwards,

aa,fety

supervisor,
is dlr~ctlng
the
shelter
program at the Uni.
veralty . A veteran of 27 yeara
mmtary
service during l~oth
the Korean War a nd W. W, II,
Mr. Edward• haa attended the
bacteriological
an d ra d lolo11lcat
warfare school f" his cap; ,clty
as tank commander.
In 1965
he took part In one of the
Nevada nuolear tests. As part
of this test he drove a sealed
tank through
ground
zero
shortly after the detonation of
the weapon .

'l'he llnivPrsily
hu s 11n1•
1,un,·~cl Tht&gt; ske111lcs ma1nUJin that tlwse
IIP anct llr Gt'ne llurrny , ehil'f
thflt 1wtln11 wlll ht• tHkt•n nga!nNt ~unemen1 11 tlon't spell out the er.
1
1 11
ut tht· l'ulversit.1· 11ollce fot'C'e, 01·~
~~~" 01
/
r,,,1Jvene~s
ot
the
shell
er
program,
:,
1
1
ro1nmented tlllll Ow ~Lnd••nts wbo ThP 1)1trnaes nre catchy, opllmistlc
al'tl dOii•1; lhli! rtre unl)' hnrming and v.igu,,. Authorities
on the er­
tllemselvl's
hee.u11s1
• tl1e tallout feels of l"adiation define t.h~ ef.
~helter
1woi;rnm nn thi~ rumpus fwtlv••n~s~ or the Hhelle•·~ thu l we
IA for them .
hove on this cnmpua within severe
Pr!•Hldent l&lt;ennedy lhou~ht the Jim.its, Dr. A1Jan K, nruce, profes­
1,rogrnm serlrms enough Lo make sor or rn dlnllon biology, st.ates that
Ute statenw.nl,
"In Ute event of If there !s o Jorge detonn\.lou much
l'lo~er thi,n within
JOO miles ol'
ntUtrk, the live• or those lndMdullulTalo, 1111d l! tbe wlnll earlies,
the fallout Into I he nren the shel­
ters wlll not ~erve 11• 1,radirnl

1 iii,'i~
wl~:.i:.:::::
;:~:
!;~:

I

)llll")Hll'P.

li e contf1111es,"F11,llou
t wlll drop
&lt;'0TIAldPrubly wilbln the two.week
11erlod that cMI dPfenAe autho•·­
itles allow, but it may be tln·ee
or four roonlhs hefore ,11eople &lt;'On
Mnfely come out of tho abelt1&gt;1·s.
CD SIGN I N CROSBY H.lltLL
l h11ve cnlrnlnted that ft wfll he
M•,hed
ul ~d lo 11ll~nd classes ith ttbel­
1\ve years !before fflant highly ra­
.. ., muno1tt&gt;rnent thl~ month,
Fol­
dlonl'lil'e siteM ore liveable,"
lowing 1hfH the Hnlrilrslty sh1ellerF
Ur . Bruce modllled hiA stat ent~nl~
or B&lt;ilentlllc tact, somewhat, with
,
lhe h0Ile Urnt maybe they will
"mt"s" Hulfalo. He roncluded, "The
Pl'(ltlenl llheller 1&gt;~0g-1'8ru Jij linilled
by the fnnda 11va1J111Jle
tu tt. 1 think
the mon~y rould heller be spenl
1111 11n&gt;vi•n1lng nul'lear holocnust."

......

~rr. ,\lorl!mer
T , lle1wn. he.1l1h
11liy~iciat. cont•urred with Dr. Bruce
n.nd nddeu th l\\. If everyou.e la fn a
ERN E ST E DW AR DS
xhellw, th Pn ~tntlstlcally, a certatu
&gt;ils whu lll~• ool lilt Ju thtl nuolt'n1· JJl•rt•entnge wlll ha ,·e ,to 6urv!l•c.
hl~t
1111dtlrP Cllll al!II be saved He continued, "The whole jdea of
11 they cnn be warned to U1k1&gt;the sheller
Is not lo ~ee Lbll.l

JOBS

AVAILABLE

College "cniora with majo ,•s in Accounting,

Business Adminlstrll ­
t!on .. J::conomi~s. Politic11l Scil.'nce, Gove,·nment,
Finanee ma, ·
qua~ify fo1· i11w1·csti ni,r and rrwar,ling careers us Intcmnl R,..vl.'nti"~
Officer , Tnx Terhnidan,
Spl'(•inl Ag~nt or Estate Tax Exnmine1'
off,..,•~,! hy the Trrusury Department, Internal Revenue Scrvit•e.
Apphcution ~ l\l'e h,•inK ll&lt;'Cl•ptcd from both men u,1d womt•u
he.:1lors.

I

everybody would glYe up. We have
got Lo •11r1~ ve ; somehody hns to
&lt;:arry on."

.\Ir, J,;dwords l'Onl'lu ded, "I ant sold
program.
I do not
t•fll''J whnt unyoue Rnye, Tr my gov.
ernmen,t deem• thM the shelter
progrnm will rauae you to ~un•h•e,
J will 1,ush Lhe shelter 1.,,0 g,.11m
with all mY might.,"

'nn thl' shelter

'l'h~ Spectmrn

olao intet·vtewed

Mr. John Mikolacjak, radiation anc'
chPmirnl oflker
El'ie County Of­
Ike of CIYII T.&gt;efenci,, He reveuled
I hnt l here were several basic nssum11llonR In civil defenre
r&gt;l:in­
nfng,

Among these are:
1) The
shelter will not be utilized
against the effects of a ther­
monuclear
blast other
than
fallout. 2) The majority of the
U.S. will be outside of t he ef­
fects of blast, lnltlal radiation
and lire. 3) Bombs of over 20
megatons
will not be used .
4) Ninety peroent of the nation
within two
will be habitable
weeks.
5) And, our shelters
wilt reduce the Intensity
of
ALL fallou t , regardless of In­
tensity , to levels that would
not be fatal to those Inside.

Mr . Mlkolacjak

PIZZA
CORNED
BEEF
PASTRA?tll

commented

P.O. BOX 1373

SYRAC
USE, N.Y.

~
~

These are but a fe w of

University
Delicatessen

.,......
......................

XEROX
COPIES Boll &amp; Chain, Twist
STORES
, INC.
( totmerly

T~k

Univ. Branch)

ond Limbo a t
CHICKGARDINO'$

BARGE

INN

3610 Main Stree,

TF 3-7131
For Short Run Prln t ln11:
or
Microfilm prk, s ,•all

Tucker
QuickCopy
174' PEARLST.
n 2-6214

Mu51c every Fridoy &amp; Soturdoy
N,ght with DON CONOVER
ond tho Fabulous
UB CONTINENTALS
foatur1no

DICK HARMAN •~

Vll&gt;H

014 Niogoro Falls Blvd., Amhent
MX 2•97.U

that

~

~

TF 2°14.56

HotPizz1u

•
FREEDELIVER
1'
•
COLLEGlt
,PIZZERIJI

\ nl,•r1ti11t•'- llu)

AFTER THE CONCERT, ..

NOW AT THE

,,1

objecUve the saving or mUllons
hum11-u lly(lll wbJcb we are conti
dent IL will do. But, we also reallze
th.at mllllon11 or IIYes wiU be lw•
In evenl of a nuclear Will'. And
consequently,
wo are not lnferrlni:
thnl the 6ho lt er pro~rnm will mak~
11,i ready for war!"

NOW
'S
THE
TIME
TO
SEND
A

i,,

l!'l ,lu1, n &gt;•uur hair.

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK

It ls part ut on,

defense 1n-ogram, and il has as it s

I Good Ealin 1g

OR WRITECARMENA. CERIO

QUICK, DRY

GEN E M U RRAY

defense olficfals.

..,

of the specialties at th e

3 588 Main St.

Salaries begin at $~.MO pe1' Mnum. Extensive ll·a..lnlng prngrnms
planned
promotions
nntl lihcn1I employee
benefits comnnn·
f~vorllb.Jy with thos e u,·atlable any wltere. Arrang e nn lnler.
view w1t.h th~• fnternal Revenue Service Rl'Cruitmont Repre~ent ­
:itlve, whn will he on cnmpu~: MARC
H 19

will , be stocked with food, medlcul If there ls n uuclt!Rr ail'hursl with­
sup11lies and other mater\lllfi nect'S- in 16 miles of a p11bl1c shelter
Au ch as we ba,•e on this cam putt.
so r y ,1flPr a uurle11r attnrk.
there will be 11.0 fallout but thP
"\Vheu 11sked lo eorument. :\1r.
~Mwurdri paid, "\Ve must Instill she lt er will he detilroyed by the
cOitfld ent·e ruthei· Lhao doubt. J other effects or tbe blast. It the
th
th
e ijUrlut•e,
ere wf.ll
fnlly exr,ect to survive aud l tbtnk blast Is on
be l'Onsidarnble
talJ0Ul produced
that eve ,i. the skeptfCR will seek but Uie shelters
will nnl b e dP.•
Nlwlt er In c~Re or danger.
Tbe ~LroyNI outsf d~ or u t wel ve-mtle
lmvortant
r10lnl is Lbot the JlrOI ('(•tlon otrorded
by the •hell.er~ rltnKe.
will tm11rove your chances or su,·J-ll) Mntlnued. "'rite lullouL til11;1.
vlvnl n i,:reot den!." He added, "If ter 1,rogrnm ho s heen endorsed b&gt;
there
werl' no rullout sheltel'!I, the Prestden ,t. CongreRH ond cl\'11

.

the

time

to tJ,,fl11te sup,•1·-~go;

u11st-urf sh irt s or, if you're

t:&lt;•ntl~ type wux ~entimentnl.
it ,•u~y tn &lt;IP something.

rur o ur g!fl u.nd card depts .

hnl'e a wudu of fun and fuvors

you m11y Sfl~ct fn1·

thl!i SWC&gt;t&gt;thb.rt l,r claytJ.

THE

Tr 2-933:1
Try Some

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

"ON

th,,

fn any case. we mak e

CAMPUS "

�Frldoy, Februo,y 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAG! SEVIN

'Bounty ' Saga Virgil Thomson Lecture in Capen t-lall
Features New Thurs .; Charles Rosen , Guest Pianist
VJ(.,"l'()IUA B UGELSKl
Some ot.her wol'ks mclude s&lt;'ores
Comic ,Brando Virgil Thomson,
Slee Cor films "The Plough thal Broke
Uy

vlsltlllg

/\ vlllt•h1ouR ct•J)tuln. 011 nrtsto.
"rllllt' lll'!tt m11t~. U henutfflll Poly.
n~f:111
and
an ndventu1·e-1illed
stuiy or mutiny ure thl! ingre d.
lt!nl• ot the $1S.1100,IJOO11pectacu.

PH,fes.sor of mu.sic, will give his th1• Plnlns."
''The River ,'' and
Ch-st lecture Thur!;day, at 8:30 "Loulslanu
Story ." Amon,g- his
p.n,. In Capen Hall, Guest at·Ust other numet•oua , composlU01,a are
for the evening wilt be Charles
symphonies,
Mo~es,
.ioncertl,
l:ir. "Mut1nJy 011 'l'he Bounty "
which opened thlt&lt; week flit the Ro~en, pianist. Admission is free string quartets n l'!d "mualcfLI _por­
nod all students and faculty are traits."
Te&lt;!k do,vntown,
invited to attend.
ln the le&gt;1d t'Oll' ot l&lt;'Jetehel'
Charles Rosen, gut!st pianist for
&lt;'hl'll4hlll I• \l11rlon lh •undo With
Mr. Thomson w!U spunk on ''Ru. Lhe event, wlll perform works of
Trevor Howard nortrnylng the In. mour In Music•· A natl\'e of Kan­ Debussy, Schumann
and Virgil
r,111wugC'u11tatr1Hlli:h.
sas City, Mfasow-!, he studied com. Thomson . Mr. Rosen ls outstand­
lllsplnyfng
a h1-011daen;i1&gt; or dry
position in New York and Paris ing not only ln lhe musical world,
HART HOUSE
h111uo1·, Brando,
utter
one gets
with Sc&amp;lero o.nd Nadia Boulanger . but also in the academic
world.
ove1• U1e lnltlnl ~bock or th11 nr.
HI'
was
music
critic
for
the
N~w
A
.Ph
L
Beta
Ko.ppa, Summ ,8 rum
t••oted lllngllsh accent. ih tho-r.
ou11bly enjoyable.
He e-0mes out York He1-ald Tribune from 1940. Laude graduate ot Princeton , h1'
1!\54. Mr. Thomson has nppo.?ar~t: went on to rcreivc M.A. nd Ph .O
w1t h aevernl dellc.ious commen~e.
of the New degrees in French Hterntur(• ,
l•'or exnmple when Capt~!o l:lllgh as guest conductor
the Boston
t••II• him lo muke love to th e York Philharmonic,
He made • the fh'ijt compl•~•t• ,..,.
and the Philadelphia
'r11h!M11nCltleC's dnnghter ill ordl'f Symphony,
cording of ti1e Dehuijsy etucleM t ur
lo maintain 1he good wrn or the Orchestra. He is the auth&lt;,r or
1'lte Hl.ll'l Mt111
s1• ta,,,. (.'l\llJ UI
which he will perform four here t
notlves,
Ornn(lo looking II little four books: Th e Stil t(' &lt;If l\tnH!t '
lhe Univ~1sily u( '1\11,m10 Will
ill
Purls,
1952,
whet·e
he WRS sh1dv­
11uiY.led :isks. "la that. nu ordPl Tb11 lll us lc:ill Seen", 'l'h1• A ri 11
When he ,:(' give 11 ~UllCCl'l Sundu.y Ill 3 ,,,m
~lr?" 11,- coollnues. "You s~e. It is J u&lt;lg'iog l\fu~ I&lt;', and l\tu~h· IU/l'hl l11g on a Fulhrlght.
tumed to Lhe U. S., he WM as. In the muu.pui•posl ,·oom ot Nor .
ralher n ditrereut thing than be. Ull d Lef t•.
sistanl profeRsor or humanltie(I ut ton The lJB J11'en's Glee Club will
Ing asked to tight tor one'• coun.
Some of .\Ir . Thomson's well. M.I.T. Resigning In ordet· t.o pur­
try." hut l!!tl'r a alight 1iause be
ulH11l&gt;l'rfol'111,
kllown operas !nelude ''Four Saints sue bis musiral carr~ 1·, M1·. RoRen
g-rina, "I'll do my best sll'."
in
Three
Act9,"
and
"'The
Mothe1·
made
se\'cra!
tours
or
fi:11r&lt;1,p
e,
111.
remember
Auyunl•
who
can
Dr. Charet\ P e ak, 11, wdl•k.nc;\\h
pe1form11nrrs with
th,,
t'l1urle.. l~tughto11 '1; Yil!fllnous por. of Us All." Both have te&gt;&lt;ts by eluding
Canadian
mu~ician, Juund&lt;'&lt;.I Uh•
l.,ontJon
Lrlly11l ut Bligh wll! roollie that Gertrude Stein, Th e latter opera Llverpool Philharmonic,
Hart HoUSt' Ukc null m 19&amp;-I
'l'l'l'\'Ol' Howard lij less U1e villain 'l'•JIJ be presented
here In April . Symphony ,rnd BBC Symph1)l\y
Dr. .Pellker
WllS
s11c,·e~1h•tl li)'
und more, the iron man ot the
«e:i. Despite
this vorlo.nce
Jo
Wat·d Mrw/\f1am, Who rh•vl'lupcd
oortrnyu I he Is JnH1 a~ bll!n,;, end
the club to 11 high llllll\dhl'&lt;I ol
Just as rruel
us Laughton
eve-r

GLEE CLUB

Hart House Glee ~lub 'Offers
Concert Sunday ,n No~

WUR

Rocalllng

the real mutiny
In 1789 of H.M .S. Boun t y, the

Library Contest Sponson~d
By Norton House Group

J)(lrfCl'lllllllC~

later

.

'l'hl'

takN1 ov,,r

POSJLl&lt;jll

oy Rolnrnl

and his orchestra

CINEMA

Starts l'RIDAY!

THEATRE OF DISTINCTIOI:;--

n

44$ Main St,

Buffolo Premiere
Mtltfta Me,cot.trl, ,t\nthofty

~

Pe-rkhtt, Rof VoUo"•
of

,

Dromo of Profane Love

I

Pau~~'br!:el~'loveandw~, 0 ~~:v::!:;'n~
ma,net1f

'

Th~
•tPHA.lDRA" 1torh

ctallr at 1:10, J:20, J :JO, 7:4J
• lot • Show •"err Soturdoy of 11:SS

PARAMOUNT11

Storts Feb, 14, "TWO

41\.

9tSS

FOR THE SEESAW"

Shlrfer MocLolne, Robert Mitchum

tt

f:

Engogement

In Jul!;!s Dos~1n 1 • Producfion

f

3-81105 ;

7th ond Final Week

"P HAEDRA" a Violent

\011t Novembllr
tlw

1tloni:- witll

All t~J&gt;''" 01

ht

the Tli.Un1wr 111
ty
'l't, runl 11

mu~•e wilt

111r1111•tl .-anging

be per
!111m aplrltua.ls

:,1111 Broadwl,y
show i,.•ore• to
SU\Ddlll'll etn!l/llcal t•evertolrt!. Ad­
mlllSion Is f1'e\' for 11l\itlenl".
tl(oki,ts ({If ran1l l y llfl4 11Lru(Ull'
$ 1.

FESTIVAL PRESlHT

8:30 P.M.

A Show For The Entire Family

MAIL ORD[RS NOW WITH SELF-ADDRESSED,
STAMPED ENVELOPE, SfNO
CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO BUH&lt;I.LO JAZZ fESTIYAl. 0£NTOH,
COTTIER &amp; OANlfLS, 32 COURT STREET, BUff ...LO 3f NEW YOAK.
Ticket, on Solo fob . l llh ot Donton•,; Sample tftrlt

..
~

Concert

in

(No School Thot Friday)
$2.50, $3.00 , $~.00, $S.00 - All Seob ll&amp;Ml"fed

'"-t•Ner

'l.lf i.Ollt i:lllmDltm

to Toronto

T HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 ht

FERGUSON

o,tk ,.
HOW with Alf,,
edd, ttoMpecl onvoto.,., S.114
ehe&lt;k or
to BUPfALO
Jill
FUT IVA Hotol Wntt,"'°k,
O.towor• at Na,th , l uffolo 2,
H.Y ,

.....

The UB Men 's 01Cl' C'lul&gt; lr 'IIVl'I

rd

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL -

All Seats Reserved

omo
N•WYN
N
.,......
,"""_,...

lhe club Is ll• 1wov11le IIIIISI\!
tho 'l'Ol'Qlll.o ,•/\ll'l)'~ . They
have ll'UltlC !I. 1·n,lrtllng filf Col

on

STAR OF "MY SON THE FOLKSINGER"

/,\IAI

ICUADff

m:111,, , )I.

llf

JOE RICO A HO BUFFALO JAZZ

MAYNARD

11
1--------!
2.50 . 3.50 - 4.50 - 5.00

I,

lias

.A11111r1~~iL11 untVtff •

ALLAN
SHERMAN

ond

Kleinhans
Music!
Hall
,.

ot

~~

~

SUN.
Mar.10th8:30

L'luh

silks and 11.as lli"t11 tn1ln.Y1•0 11r,•1·t.a
u, Toronto.
Th,· mlllll j.lW'ptJK&lt;

smger!I

•11
·IWnRNAllONAUJ
fAMOIS
ORCHESTRA

MACMURRAY

(.l lh•

I

m

HELD OVER -

Th~

1t1flMVl• tours

I

'tlli-~
"'''

ti,

( 'oio1•"·

tU1on tor 1111-mhl•n,titr1~ k1~'"
IIIHI till' re t11•art1al~ :.N' tf'I'
qm•nl ,,o il llm,- N&gt;ll&gt;'11Jnl111r

pi,rtlcipat&lt;'

.......
...,.........
.......... . . .. . .

l o tM• un

t rm•nrrlrnlllr n&lt;•tlvlty

WIIH 11mbla Nlt1tled "An Ev1•11li'ltw,lh
P1u·k, the }{art. 1-IOIISC tll\l(• &lt;"llh "

a cellist, whu h&gt;ts lmU ,•'&lt;Jl&lt;•I ll'llC&lt;'
story sails from one cruel
Tile ltou~~ committee
or Union hord nr Kon 1•1)Vl'n•d. 1111t1
U1IIY I&gt;••
deed to another, Bligh becomes
Donrd with the support or Protes-j hrn11,::ht fro111 h11m" tr r,revlously
\Ir ,
more and more hate d, and hla
sor Dnvld Stout and 11re, Stout N&gt;lleolNI by lhll 1101111net
•, F'.'\t&lt;h
men aeek revenge.
The pitch
nre i;JJOneoring a Ubrary co11test, 1•1mlbtnnt must ~nbtnlt 1m oNaay
hi
continues to build unti l Bran­
~tau.y or the previous rules h&amp;VI'1 1•Xi1Jla!nJnghl• ldenl~ tu,· :,, l10JHP. while
do takes command and puts
bP&lt;'n ~banged i11 Ol'der to llllOW llhr,u·y nnd ten hook~ he would
Wl\lter
Kt-mp
,
the captain
and h is fo llow­
the winner to com1&gt;ete tor th•• 1tk'.; tu ,ulll Lo hl.s collr·clhm.
ers adri ft. An arlatocrat!c to
,\ 1&gt;rize ot $100 will 111
Amy Lovemnu National
Awa.rd.
, n wortlcd
The ()lu b
the core Brando condones his
The eontellt Is opeu to nll s1u- to 1he cooteatont wltb the heKL
action wit h " I belleve I dill
yoUDg
men rrom ,·11rlou, t~1I,
d~ots on the uodergraduute
ll'vel. tvllecllon iu the 11wrllr,&gt;11t1•11t.
'rhlH
what honor dictate d."
Uoweve1·, only if the wlnnerot the 11inncr. if u ~eutu,·, will then )1al •I"
l,•geM 11ftl1l' Un !w• r~it,f nt Tor
The Bounty,
I\
thre e llliUll~d local oontest Is a senior cnn he :in opportunity
to 1•ompN11 for th, ,
..utli111: vt•&gt;&lt;ijelwuK huill ex111•ess­ represent
onto and ,·urr1•nt.l)' 1111, M
the Unlvereity
in I.he Amy 1,0,•eman !llntl111111l
,\~ lnt'O or
ly r,w lhti Him ot ll t'ONI or $700,. nut1ona.1 contest.
U 1)011.
onu. nealgned rrom 11ct11ol 11lunff There wilt be a minimum or :l6 Ar&gt;llll&lt;'ultun~ wl!I h,, uvnil1~ble 11t m ember,,, T h e 11\l'IIIIH' r" l.rf•
,,r the url1:ln11l HOUJllY, ghe Is hooks or UIOl'e~vlticb must be ~ub- the c;indy 1·01rntPr In .\101·1,m10\luv,
not t11W1lc Mludenls hut
!1111 fil'~t Khill ever built froon Ill e 1n!ted tor exatnlMLl&lt;&gt;n on the dny For
,,•11111,,.-1
rnrther
inlonnutiou
k ('('I u 11 ~•11e&lt;'in11y tor a motion ot vreseutatlou,
:8ooks may bll Bohble 1-rotrman , F.xt. 29!!7,
111t•ture.
The elo1-y Is 0110 of the nd­
,-~ntnl'e ,uul N11eel11cle 11layed to
JOE RICO AND THE
JOB RI CO AND JSUffAL O
ILK rullu,1
w11h ••xcellent color
BUFFALO JAZZ FESTIVAL
11l1t11&lt;&gt;1:rophy, On ll1e isle o! Tu­
PRESENT
h!t! o, •er 10,000 Polynesian
u1111v...
heeame ndurs
only to d("I
wh11t ,,omes
cnost no.turn lly to
1h1&gt;m dun&lt;:e, laugh,
und snll
,·1111nes. All ln all "Multny" 1&gt;ro.
l'ide~ :m enjoynble evening's en­
i.,ttninmf'nt,
If nolbhig
t!l•e so u
will be won ovc-r by Brando's high.
Jlltt•hed aCQent, 11nd clever antics .

-rRED

,chh..•r 11u~ d uh

PARK

~~~A\'lllUE

j

: :

t

Special
Price

1f,H4ll

FrankSinatra · ,
LaurenceH.arvey
JanetLeigh

f

I

NOITil[g
NOW!

See Thew Two Great

Shows At. Reg. Prices
Studentt

The
ffl, ·W,
Manch~Jrian
r Candidate
1 •

11

�SPEC TR U, M

PAGEEIGHT

Friday, February 8, 1963

UB Dental Wives
Sponsor Concert
will

ffW &lt;'I

Hln c4 FoundaUon
spnnsor a Se,bbath Service this
evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel
Houlkl. A symposium IWI ''Fait&lt;h
llltd Rca.~n~ will be presenlerl.
An OllQ&amp;'Shabbal will follow
'l'hl'

Lox an&lt;l Bagel Brunch

1'1.lefirst

,ii \hf' ...-m&lt;'!&lt;U'rw\U be held Sun.
'11\y, at 11 :Oil n m. lo the HIilei

H&lt;&gt;Ulk' Profeaaor Joseph Laufer,
tJ B. Law ,S&lt;;h.ool, will speak ·011
"F'&lt;&gt;url~en Ycat'll or Isrocl's t..,gul
n,wch.11nnent . Lights and Shad­

ows." Rese.rvat.&gt;onMfor the Brunch
~houM bl! madv. n.l Uw Hillel Hou~&lt;',

Tbe Dental WJves As8oclatlon of
Anyone who la intcrt&gt;sle&lt;t In a UH In sponsoring a P0ps Concert
dJscus.,lon gro up but is not able renturing a pianist ot oat lonal
to attend one l!Cheduled for Mon. promlni&gt;nce at Kleln}lans
Mll)llc
da.y Ill 4 o.m. or 'l'll~fldQy n.t U lh1II F'rlda,y, MaTCb 1.
noon, room 206 Norton or I,'rl day'11
al 3 p.m. room 217 let Dick Butt
Tloketij
wfll he 011 ealo 111tl1e
know your rrer Ume by &lt;'1llling hnsement of Capen Hall Wednes831.3675.
day, Feb. to, from 11:30 to 1 11.m
..
and also at the ticket booth In
Norton Rall from 10:30 n.m. to
Wt••ley
2: 30 p.m. and from 4: 30 lo 6: 30
The Wesley FoWJdation wlll 11.m. d111ly.All tl~ket&lt;! are $1.7611er
hold their annual winter weekend ,,erson:
rolroal at Allegheny Stale Park
Daucln!( WIii rollow lo the Mary
tbis wl'Ckend. Student" will leave
lhis afternoon and w'III return Renton Rooo,.
Sunday oftcmoon
The weekend will include winter
,q&gt;Orls and will center on the Topi(:

Hillel al Stale wlll sponsnr " ''What Is Wesley and Whe re Is
o,•UMteMen Supper Sunday even . it Going?"
tns:, a t 5 :80 p.m. In thl' College
------,
tJniol). Dr . Aibel Fink, a member ,---Ori:anlznllonH
lnlerestOd In
or the colleg~ CU1:ulty and ftlculty
using lbP maxter rale nda.r ai•e
11&lt;1visorto Hillel, wtll speak on
requested to registe ,· 11II a.c.
··RO&lt;'on:ilturtlooL•ni"'
llvltles with tha reservations
otrlce as soon A-8 llM•lhla lo
'nte next ml'oling in tlte '·Live
ond l.earn" dlsou,~~iun series will
eitpedlte !l!elr requeKIJ!,
bo held Thursday, 3:00 p.m . A
rnfft•~ h1111rwill follow

Beta Phi S igm a, the phar.
mncy fraternity
wUI pass out

hea lth pam phlet~ about
the
beart, we ntal illness and re).
atl\'e Illness stn,tlng Monday,
They will be round at the ~n .
dy counteT' In Norton nod at
lllP fraternity bulletin bc:mrd
the School of Pha rmacy (~
Floor).
The l)ooklet or tlte
week ~ll.llounced
In
Tonk Colum n.

a/-

WGR's"Flaps"Rickenbacker
AddressesROTC Cadets
By CHARLIE STONE
''B1laps" Rickenbacker,
other­
wise known as Fred Gage of WOR
radio, ''bombed" the ROTC corps
le~t Thursday with his "Morning
Mayor" humor. From his first
comments about the Greyhound
Bus Drivers meeting he was ad .
dressing, until h.ie rather · hurrled
exit, Mr. Gage provldeil a welcome
change to the cadet,,.

I
..,_...,.-at.

Wlap• makes regulRr appcnr.
11.1\ceson the , weekday morning
show of WGR to give hl11·enllgltt.

ening views on cross-oounlry up­
side down r a,cing, Edsel Tri.Motor
1d1·plane~. and other Urnely topll's,
l 1r. Rickenbac k er's uniform w ..s

quite unique, and from Its appcarance could be acc urately described
e.11 Salvation Army surplus. His
leathe r holmel was probably stolon fr om th e 1930 version or a Juvenlle dellnquenl, and hh1 t1·ouse1-s
seemed to be World War I ~avalry
surplus,
Lt . Col. Huddleston, pl'Ofcs~oa
o( Air Science, presented Flaps

"FLAPS '• RICKE N BACKER

cadel pilot wings and a ,,om.
mission appointing ltlin an honor­
a,·y tolon!'l In the cndeL wing
lo add to Illa coJlect4on of
candy.wrapper
rlbboOR and box .
with

'============~======l~=====!.'...
_____________:_
____________

N tm•nmn C'h th
Nuwnul.'n w~hc,1 to remimt
the
Lcndershlp
cveryon~• that
&lt;.'onfl•r&lt;'n1·,•IJf'gin.~ al Cornell Fri.
day
,
l."aUu•r Streng will have dls­
(;1l&amp;SIOJUI on Morl\l Theology
nl
0 ·00 11.11dl O:OO a.m. Tue!Klay ill
Norton 830, Thursday the loph'
will be Mnrriage, off ere&lt;! At the
l!llme time.
Dally MIUISla siud Ill Newman
H.al'IIll noon every clay. Mass is
sn,d for dorm student,, Qt the
C41tlallcian Center at 10:80n.m.,
noon, and :i:00 p.m.

Wcdn~.aday, FOib. 20, thete will
n mooting ln Norton muiti­
purpoae room at 7:30 p:m.
A Satu rd ay night social wlll
I)&lt;)

be held at Newman Hull, skating
al 8:00 p. m.
ln tor-Vars lty
Tho U. S. Home Sccrclat-Y or
North
African
Mls.qiotlS, Rev .
D~l"-'&lt; Green w!JI discuss the lm·
(IOrtam:e of mls.,lon work In
ln1t1blcd lll't'&amp;..q Of North Afl'ICII\,
••~l'{;('l11lly l\lgorta. )fondoy , room
234 Norton at 7:30 p. m.

WH~~

THE
WORLD

.. , will you go after graduation? ... will you
6nd challenging opportunity?, .. will you be in 10 yeais? These
important questions you must answer within the next year.
Real oppor t unity is a two-way stree t, a 50-50 propos ition,
Your professional advancemen t is based on two interdepend­
ent factors:
First, the growt h potentia l of the firm you join-second ly,
your ow n competence an d initiative.
The following figures show our ability to provide the first
requi rement. You must furnish the second.
Xerox Corporation has doubled its sales in the past three
years-from $27 mil lion annua lly to S60 million, with less than
1 % in militaiy billing • tripled its profi ts-from $1.6 million to
85.3 mill ion • increased employment from 1,650 to 4,300,
branch offices from 17 to 35, .. And plans for the fu ture are
even more astounding (see Fortune, July, 1962).
Opportunities exist in the following areas: Research an d
engineering • manufacturing • con trol • finance • sales.
Contact your placement office to arrange an interview with
a Xerox representative, who
will be on your campus ....
FEBR U A RY 14

UCROSSE ANYONE?

Oenov John;on o I 96 l oroduote of
11,,, ~tote u,worslty College ol Cort•
lond wont. to 'nort o Locroise Club
..., --~~,~n New Vor~ . An\'Of'IG f"ter•
e&lt;led Shoold oontoc&lt; him ot his
hofne, NF ◄ •5235, Of write to him
ot 11 Elle" 0.lvt, Cheeklow090 25,
N""' Y(lt~

STUDYlN
SOUTHERN
FRANCE
An 11n&lt;forgraduntelihcral111•f,q 111.'ar
in

Ai.t--r11-

PrM·e-nu
FRENCH LANGUAGE
and I.JTERATURE
F.UROPEAN STUDIES
ART and ART HISTORY
MF,nTTERRANEAN ,

STL'lllRS
l!logltab IU\d French
Amertc.a.11 Ollnieulum
rf'Qulromeots .
C'IUijlll! In

w.tut,tng
ln.illrule

HtndC'lrtK enrolled

l\l the

1Julvel'1!1ly ot Alx-MnraeUle,
rounded In H09.

S!ude~
live III French homes .
Tuition, 1'r-an8-A.Uantlc raree
mom nnd bonrd, 11.bo11l
$1,860.

INSTITUTE FOR
AMERICAN UNIVERSI
TIES
t.l. rue-Oetit.on-d6-Baporta
AIX -a.". ritovmNCFl,
France

Lop D"tedal11.

XEROX
CO RP O RAT ION

&lt;~

�F,idoy, Februuy 8, 1963

Sp_~~~~:~

S PE C TRUM

PAGENIN£

~~!(
I!.~~=~
~~~~ Annou~;;;}his
We~
:~•;:~~~
~:dule
IH• H.

·s

Lowyekyj

who

will

dis-

'l'he St•hmd ijl'tllll(
,w111e!&lt;lf'I'
,·11ss "e'• u trnnecendt.&gt;u.tu.lnumber,
mel'tlllll or the Prf'-1,uw Society
wlll be held W1tdnesd1l&gt;' :1.4::JO ltPl"1·es hmenlN will he served.
11.m. Ju Norton ~39. •rhere will he
Al(nln thlij K8Jll~Rter the Math
a film, "Th«.&gt; La,vr ers Pince ln Our C'lu h is 11ro1·ldlng n free t11torlt1g
~()(•lely."
aPn'ice
ror those per80J1s who de­
Kl•·~ l'Xll'U hel11,
Student Bar Aaaoclatlon
The. Student Har Assoclotlou or
Psychology Club
1he lu w St!hool recently Installed
Thel'e wlll he n met'!toi; or the
a 11... w 11rP~ldent. r,ouls ('occlnto,
Pt1y1•hology Club ut :I P.m. In
'ij4,

Townsend

'rb!l
'l'he SIIA IK t'l111rl(tld with tile udor1llon
conslltutlon
will
conduct
1111111w stud11n~ aotiv­ he ,·on slller~d RDd the election or
itles. w!rh the mnnugement or tha orftctwH will take J&gt;luce, All ma.
s••hools' ,•oCMNla and hooksto,·e, Jors ond t1ros111'.1c-tlvemnjol'S nrP
and with the puhllrntlon n( the ro,1111Psled to a Itend.

or

11ews111111er,"The Ooin,
!on", itn.d lhe yearbook, "1'hp Ad­

school~·

vot'ale".
A dl1111111·-d11nc·
e. the iu1nu11I llur­
rlwte ,·s' ll11ll, cmnmemorrHlng
the
7fitb
aunl\•PrRary
or the lnw
s chool, ls now belnK 11l11nnecl by
111e Sl!A ror late Mnr c h ,

Hall,
or th~

l"Ol&gt;Ul 204.

G:OO News

Wumeo's ltecreulion
will hold a ge neral

Ai;so.

rlatlon
meet­
iN: In Norton
234, Tuesday , a.l
l ::l/1. AL this lime the election
or new t&gt;!flcers will toke 11Jnre,
followed hy o bl'ler ml'etiui: und

rurteslunent
J1nur. All full time
Photography Club
women studMts nre members or
A brief me eting concel'uing lllulJ the \\' ,RA. and are h1vllPd lo
1·t1rl1mte.
activities
\\111 he held 11t -l:00, 1111

Schedule

8:45 WonderfUI

MONDAY
6:15
6:30
7:00
7:30

from

Over the Back Fen ce
Relnx with iRI-Fi
Netherlands Soloiot.'I
Panorama
of the Lively

8:00 News
8:05 Dlseove,ry and· Decision
9:00 Concert Hull
Mu.le of
I taly

9:00 Concert Hall

8:00 News
8:05 Ooglto

6:80 Ways of MIUIJ&lt;ind
7 :00 Debrieflng
7 :30 Let's Learn Oerrnan

8:20 Sounds

TRUUSDAY
Report

7:45 lnterruiUonnl
8:15 News

Symph on)

Even

Ing

H

10:25 Musi c Town
Jay

8ri.adwa y

amt

URA .

Daw

MeDonaldi
:ih·r&amp;
1385 NIAGARA FALLSBLVD.
½ Mlle North of SHE:RIDANDRIVEot MAPLEROAD
(AdJocetlt The Boulevo,cl Moll Plo1a )
0,.• Frldoy 011d Soturdoy u11ttl 1 :00
O,.rote4 by the JERRYBROWNROUTCORP.

- OPEN Al.I. 'fEAB -

ForYourPleasure
Daitcl11g11lghtly to th e k 11d1 of
Cowboy Jomot B011n
er,
Fra11
k Walker.
Hear the songs teachers never
taught from 3:00 every Sunday
afternoon untilwith Hermie tho Spennle
0 11d David Treger

For private Fraternity or Sororlly
parties phone TF 3·8180

JOBS
INEUROPE
(;rand
[Juchy
of Luxembourll:
,Ian. II . 11u;:&lt;- Wouh l you likt• tc,
wor k at u Swi~s rtt~c;rt. ;-t. ~m
wttj.,riunfinm, H G~l'muu fo.ct ory, a
,·un~tru ction ait&lt;&gt; in S J1ain. 01 "
summer c11
mp in Fra nce? Th1&gt;11
,
s and s of p II y i n I( •umn 1t•1- Jnb ,
(so me 1,ffering $1!l0 mc,nthly) ar,
avnllRhle in Euroi,e t o I' S. ,tu,
,lent:!'.
The Anwri~an
Stud ,,nt ln(111
m11tion Se rvi et&gt;, celebroting
It~ Uth
An niversary , will award TRAVt L
GR ANTS to th" first 150 11 11ppli·

you discover

RtlVll'W

lhe dr/-,e•ln with th• arch••

948 HERTEL
AVENUE

~hen

of

.Book

13:ollywood
0:11'&gt;Concert Ball
10:15 New s

. . ... .. . .. .. ....................

You'll s m oke with

Ire .

peat)

10:00 News

10:10 Wednesday
WBFO

lt'estival 1961

TOWERS
ON HERTEL

,•ants.
F or 20-page Prospectu s. com­
l'letc scle&lt;'tiC1n of European
jol&gt;~
•tnrl .Toh Appli~11tion (enclose $1
fnr Prospectus, handling and aiT­
m11ii N'Jl)y)
write,
nominl! your
"11nnl, tCI· Jx,pt. J, ASJS, 22 Ave
,1,, 111Lib&lt;&gt;rte, Luxembourg City.
r: rnnrl nuch)• of Lux&lt;'mh&lt;&gt;url!,Th•
fir t ROOO in')uirl~s rl'Ceive u $1
"' ''"'" tnwartls the rurchnse of
•I,. new ~tudPnt tran•l ho(,);, Barn
L •·1t1·n &amp; TrRvPl in F,n1'nJIP

LlebowiLl

FR IDAY

6:15 GermlU\Y Today
Re lax with HI-Fl
7 :00 Speakini;r of Ideas

'.3:;BBC

Jerry

6:15 U.N. Journal

16:30

8:05 Tho dncinnatl
Ol'cllestra

TUF.SOA1'
Ew·opean R eview
Relax with Ri-Ft
Washington Reports
Llz Drlbben - Panor a111a
Let's Learn German

-

10:00 News
lO:to Noooi

WEDNESDAY

8:00 N8WB""

Mixer Committee
001·s will ~Ive rl'porls
on 11ros.
pedlve
111·01,rrnms
. •rbl~ Is al,o
AndlllOllij ror ''A not e \\'Ith Show
llusln ees ·• which etarled yesterday
the llnnl week ror dues.
will be t•untlnued today tomorrow
Social Welfare Club
111•d Sunday ht tbe co nfer Pn('e
Tl1ere w!ll be u meeting ot the llll'lllter from 7 'tll 9 1,.m. Anyone
Sodol
Welra,re Club Monday In wllh n ~tugini:, d1rncln1t, muskal
Norton room 234, All undergrad­
or thea_trlcnl btLckground is wel.
unt1,s Interest ed In Soch•I '.Vork eome to 11\1dltio11 al lhlR tune ,
are invited to attend.
'Pbe show wlll lJe wnlnl) ' st11Men's Glee Club '7
dent 1u1,,nt but I! u member of a
Stud11nls interested
In joining slnclent i;-roup, surh lls o band or
tb,, tlB :\ten's Glee Club should trio . Is not frou, tlB they m11y
contact tbe new director, ilfr. An­ :,till nudltlOl\.
.
drew Henlb, In Baird Tlall, exten­
s10n ~31-3~26. Rebearsula ure Mon­
days from 7-S:30 p.m. nnd •rbuM­
da.Y~ from
4-fi: ~0 11.m. Concerts
are n11w being planned . The cluh
tbe l 1 nlverH llY or
will enteruiin
'l'oro11to Olee Clnb.
Math Club
The :\lalb Club will m1&gt;et Wed­
nexday ot 7:30 p,n, . In Norton 233,

Folk

10:05 The Jazz Idiom. Host Eml.,
CUrtl.e
11 :00 Music from Studio "{'"

10:10 Folk Muaro

today, In Norton, room 2G4. Mem-

of

9:00 Concert Hall

10:00 News

6:15
6:30
7:00
7:15
7 :30

!&lt;'.-om,·

World

Mu.sic

Arts

WRA

The

8:05 Mll.\llerworks

6:12 Evening

a fresh enthusiasm
the cool ~air-s oftened

" taste

of Salem

• menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter. too

�SPECTRUM

PAGETEN

Friday, February 8, 1963

BullsDowitWayneTartars,
Bowto Stat
Orangemen
Stun
UBFive
, 54-45
,
OBMermen
Splash Wayne State Sccumbs in 2nd Halt
Before
3000Screaming
OnlookersNiagaraondOswego;As Karaszewski Sparks 12tt, Win
SJ)urred onward
bY u wildly
rheerl~
thron&amp; or ecijl.itlc
coeds, tlie Orangemen
of .Bnll'alo
Statft dc•nll the Ul3 cagers :i
stunning
64-~5 AE&gt;lhA,&lt;'kTuesrloy
eveulh.11'In the new ~tat(' i;-ym.
Ou the StntP side it wns ~1,:1c1ly
a story or a sollcllr ,·oheR[\'e 8 tnrt.
Ing five that out11IRYPclthe llnll;;
trom etut•t to flniKh. 1&lt;'011rof 1het1P
st.o~ters (nick
Bn n ninn k . ,\like
l'lroder!c•k. Dkl&lt; Enter nnrl .Jnck
Wntko, played the full ~O mlmll&lt;'~.
The other: trnnatel' Jim Holl. wn~
relieved with JnRL thr~ .. mlm,1,,,
11.'fl tu the gnrne.
The Bulls l••d only 1hrt•~ lime~.
und on each ocroslon I fl,, bulp;c,
W/18 it NhOrt.ltYt,d on ... point I J.O,
22-21 :ind 2S-27). Hrodi&gt;rkk put the
Bulla behind
ror good wl1Pn he
:mnk four s11&lt;·1wR51Yt•
free tltroWH.
1111ttlng Stat!&gt; on top, 31.2S. WhPn
1•r•Hslve fast-hreuk huckN8.

In RU11111llll'Y.II must he ob.
~~•·v.. d thot th• • enthualasm of the
.Sl:lf('
RlutlPntri l111tl II s1111•Jfko111if hllone:il1le-beflt'lng
on the out.
,•11111~.
Th" ~ophomore-lad~n
Un
t••11111:111pu11rl'd to be ratA.led by
1h•· i11t•(•sKnnt din from ull &lt;'OfllPl'S
of 1I,,. ,·ym. 1&gt;111llun11szak, Brod.
(•rl,•k
:iuc] t'Orll]lllllY welcomed
It
11·11h uwn 111·m~. Thi" factor un.
1!1111111,,,11~
•·11ust&gt;
d nwny or 1he But.
f;do errtll'S, Ha rhe llnlls repeated­
1, 11,st •'"&lt;~Nier.I ~&lt;'(lrlup;· op1&gt;0rtu.
uith•• loy llu ·owl ng the holl away.
'rh~ l'H 11'0111wns i,lso unnble to
hi! fl"&lt;&gt;m nutslde, whirl! ts Imper.
1,11,·~ 111:nlnet the Hggrcsslve Stale
lfp(en st.' The RUllij &lt;'onnecled oo
lfl or tlJPil' M shot• ror a~-:i. Stole
~hc&gt;I 41': l,y meshlr,g
22 or 54
;,tlPrnptN from the tleld.
011 th&lt;' Rc-orinl( ohnrt nnnos,.ak
IPII with JR poln.t•, mmer collect~d
14.
UB's 13aldWln end Hanley
13 ahd 11 respectll'ely.
ronnled

Crosby
Is Sidelined

By JIM

By SUE GUNNARSON

BAKE;R

8upho11mrv h'llftrtl ,fHC'k Kuruszew~

Wayne put on one of the ir
best shows of the 'year (the ir
record Is 1-91, as fo u r of their
starters
flnlahed In double fig.
urcs.
Fred Wolcott , a short but
Imp ressi ve guar ct. garnered
16
point,,
se nior lorwa rd Jim
Spivey
scored 16, 6-7 ce nter
Frank Dmuchowakl counted 14,
and Kelty Barne, tossed In 11.

I

, kl 111111edlu ltnothH &lt;'lut,•h relier
'l'h,. 1·n swi111111rnp;
'"""' .. ,.,rn,•d slinl SuturdH)' 111!:hl. ilA 1he Bnlls
their season'R reco,·d 111 -1.,1 h} pu lh•d :i w,1y from \\'"r "• ~tnt e In
lrouuriul!.
(llP -:,.;I :1 l! n."" 111ernw11, th~ ~e,·ond hnlr ror an ~4-64 vi(•.
54.◄ 0. In th•• lnltPr·s [1001 'l'ueHdll)', lot·y. 1'hP Hull,· Pighlh c·llnsecuth•r
I rilt m11h ;cnd tw~Irth in rn ~tar(g
Two ~&lt;.'html rP&lt;•rn·t1Kw~1·e estah.
I Id~ ~ea"on wus w1rnessed by "n.
IMl\'rl hy I' ll llnr111m•. 11111l&gt;&lt;'&lt;·k
.,, olhM 11e11r.,·"11adt)'
throng
In
was llllWd in I :fil 111 the Ifill.yard
lnltiul medl ey for one now 111:uk.
Tt1e ollu,,· wns ,,., hr 1~:11-rys,u.
minHki , who swnm lhe 1i11
.ya 1·d fr"''·
style ill · i~.2.

&lt;'h,rk ,1em11rial r.ym.

The Bull" wound 1111with l\ 4fi'"o
,,ousiderahl)' ••old llrN• eve ning on the st.atlstlcs
cha1·1
half In whi,·h I'll nssumerl n ~4-20 whlrh
t"ok some doing ntter n
l11ll~P. Kul'aszew~ki ,·am~ 00' the :l l 'f effort in th~ Initial
stanzn .
heu,•h surly iu Ihe Sf'(•0nd slon1.n T ht•)' rollne1•ted 011 :H or 7r, fteld
:in&lt;I 111·ocePded 10 kE' lbe ,·ietory µ-0111nttl'111Jll8 l1lld Iii of 211 char.
The rr,.slt p1~n won :1:1lo ~ 11gaIn~t
lty nw~hhii:: ll\'e or six field gon! ily hr111•c&gt;s. \\'uynP hil oil 23 ot •17
tht&gt; N1:,,.11r1111·A•h111P11.
ull&lt;·m111", all jump sho;~ fl·om fur from lhP Held fol' 4fl\'I 1111dmeshed
\Vh 1J1in~ ull hnl OIIP PY.,.111. thP­ c111i, HP ftuishPCI wllh Hi l&gt;oiOtij It• 1~ of 2~ free 1h,·ows. 'l'he Bulls
hiM 111111"•rlnrm1111t·P or thP ,•11111hold tha ed,,;e 111 ,·ebounds, 47-41.
l11l mnhlen
pulled u ~n,nshlu~
II~ Httnl ey (lltl lPd dOWll Hi unt}
,l,J .10 ,·1,·101.• ove,· O•wego
Stnto paii:n,
In Clark pool S11ll1rduy. '!'hi s nut"
Once again juniors Dave Bald llnldwln rook In· 12. Wayne Dmu.
u11 eud 10 lhP ~le, men'• hlijlOI{ Win and Gary Hanley were
l'ltowttid led th!' f&gt;t&gt;lroit five with
slre:1k whh·h had 111' lo Su1urri11r
the st~ndouts on the scoring
,.1_
2_1_•,.
_ho_u_n~.
_ _d__ ________
_
l"rt Ih1&gt;m with 11 2 111ul I ,.,.,.m·d
chart. Both netted 8 fleld goals,
put Baldwin's lout.shooting ac.
FOR SALE
The •h•r ~wiu111wr fl/I' t ·l! wus
curacy (w hich places him amo ng
.rim l&gt;et·ker who hrok .. bis uwu
the nat ion's leaders) secured
1957 KARMAIN GHIA
university
re,·ord ,n lh P 2011 r,u ·rl
him a tota l of 21 potnts. while
lndiv !dunl u1PdlP)' with 11 2:25.1.
Hanl ey scored 18.
TX 6-1318
His old J'PN)l 'fl was ;1 :!::!t\, ,'-1 l:uof.t
Wilh ta 111lm1le8 l(OUe in tbq
flr~1• l111lr.thP ~tor~ wu, o low 15.rn
fc11·!ht&gt; Bulls, II:&lt; 001h S(JUlldH werfl
The meet waa all ont.alded
AU IYrrl II/! rrnm lOH(TUrun· from the
from the start, Oswego had
11.eld
. 'rh°'n t·B pnl loi;etber
M,
trouble with their bus ~nd ar.
r l1:ht-1111iP&lt;string. nnrl It 111i11e111·ed
rived almost an hour fate. Be­
aA if th~ Dull" were otf to th••
cause of some difficulty they
,·uces at iaRt. The Tarla ,rs came
did not have a complete team
ri~ht hnck with nn Pil(ht-110,ut te111
and had t o forfeit five event s.
11f their own however.
nnd thP
It might be noted that UB still
was axtiin u i:wunt
lhtffnto mar-'3"111
ran the eveota for which Os.
two r&lt;1lnl~. 23-21. i;n then rnllied
wego had no entrlea and In
lrn· lhelr ~4-~6 lrnlHlm!' cus hion .
one of these Decker broke his
record.
Arter
Wnyn~
bud opened
chP
•.-c•c11•d$tnnza \11th a hurkel. Kn.
C'o111'llWillhlm Snnrord ~utl thlM rnBz~wtiki
e nrerfld the cbl'llelil
nu&lt;l
let lllly Rhoul lbP •toaso11 10 dute : ,·nmiJille d with r~llow soph
llnu
" We buv&lt;' hntl more 1h,1n onr •hare llaiwni to lead the home iPam 10
1&gt;( lnJ11rlH1 this YP:tr. nne
whfc-h s•11•,.~1.:la m&gt;1ri,:ln. Buzuni 1u,·11ed
loo k llWII)' 1)111.'or our top kll~IU­
in n tPl'~polnt 1,erron11anct&gt; 011 five
tnPl'l!. (llt • ,. rt,(forl'lu~ to O hl'C)kPJ•
key ll tll ~ gon la.
nn~e rll( •pl\•t'd hy .llm ('ro~hy whkh
wl\l kBl'fl him 0111 ror the 81111S&lt;Jn.)
Now we nre over the hurdeRI 1iuI·1
or the H&lt;'hPdule and ,·111,ex11e1•1
feuluring
smooth ~nlling from now on, I ~x111'&lt;'1WP w!II 81111 llU\'E! II wlnnll'!;

Arw,·

~

WHAT
A TREAT
to you r

APPETITE
and your

POCKETBO

or

Carrols
FABULOUS
MENU

ANNUAL
WINTER
SALE

Buffalo State'• Dick Emer (62)
for rebound In aecond half of
town battle.
J\11n11~z11k fOllllWPd

With

,/ IIHf

shorr

'
I

SC,'•U
•., fl. I ,.

...

'

IRE
', 1 ... l I .

. ..

'

}

,,,,,,

E;H•~P
I '"

', ~f , l\ [ ~

on

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HAMBURGE

.fnm,.

J11in11lr1t

1/u• cm11pus.

'l'hi8 11·a~ 1he U1'HUA1•1111•11
·~ llllllh
Jut1lJ101, lhH on,o,::,em,,n nt1ijUl't\ud a ,·on~ec 111ln• lrilt111J\h in Hs owny
11,·1•-11ulnt h•nd oft•••· fi1•u mlnYtc•~ &gt;I" rt. tn llll'il ' ht1W l{)"lll. Ou u Hen.
ur the ~1,cond half had ela11sl'd
~cll'al h:1sls th, , Slnte ll'lllH iA 11.r..
.. th1• Hulls Rl'C 12.2.
Sh1u·t1y U1ereurter, Co1td1 ~••r. 111111
I llA tll•~t t,,nt•,muh•r Jx tomorrow
ordered th e l'lull8 1•&gt;l(u inl()
111
~11111
n zOlle pr,•ss t1cre11~1
,, h11t Stal,• nii,111. wheu th~)' Jo11111l') lo 1111111w11eready und wnlllni; ro,·ft, With :lllm. :-l1•w \"01·k lo luk e 011 the
•l!Vfl1 111lnt1los h•ft u corner .11,11 Coli:1ne llPd Hiuden, . Un Wednes­
by }!;me1·Uttµ two freehi~s by !'toll dny they will atlen\pt
to Me&lt;·ure
eent St114- ohend
by wu. 511.w. 1·ev!'lll'c tor their only homt&gt; court
Karuzewskl
luterrutHC'II
with
n lo!!@tll :t Y&lt;'III' llj:I), whon 1h1•, tut•e
(oul tully, hut BanllJll\n.k nod .Brott: nrCR;lq1im Suite
th., lnfler•x
erlck r11moved all doubt whb
lwme 1•011rt.
ii

6

15c

PURE
BEEF

Tempting Cheoieburgor
.... 19&lt;
Tripl e Thick Shakes .......... 20c
Golden French Frias ... ....... 12c
Thirst-Quenching
Coke ...... 1Oc
Delightful Root Beer .......... 1Oc
Steaming Hot Coffee ........ l 0c
• Full Flavor Orange Drink .. 1Oc
• Wonderful Hot Chocola te •. 12c
• Alwoy1 Fres h Milk ............ 12c
•
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Enjoy th em NOW
at

Track Team Prepsfor Opener;
Huff to Lead Bulls in Sprints
'rhe Indoor trnck ll'nm buff now
lmen ()ra&lt;'tlclnp; for 2 weeks lo
uret)!lritllon tor their 0 1w,~lop; lllA'et
Saturday, F'&gt;h 16, at Rl)(!hlltllt't
The tPum will be led hy cll.J&gt;tuln
Vern Hutt h,1 the eprlnt6 nnd laat
year·e MVP In trll,()k, non Do.nae.
rean, lo Ute ~hot 11ut 1t™1blgh
lump. Othet'11 who Me counted Oil
arc Hon n,•lher
lo tb1• HO and
hro~d Jump Stu KJIU In the dl11IHnce ra,,e•: lite· J.,,p•~ (Paul uml
Dou) In the I1ole vault ,\I C'oudvu
brood Jump, Dick su'lllvnn hnlf ­
mJle, T&lt;m.)' Clonck, 11nd Pt&gt;tll Slc•rn
In th~ s1,rln~
Due Lo lh~ i a,·k n! '"' 11111,·hh~r••
lb•• l'nlv erslty, th1- t1•am m118t en

UB Students

2

ror nn exercise
nl'ea
C'lurk nyiil
•1l,•e st1•1·ts. ur•,d
nnd n r•IACe to 111·a1
1hf'J dO nor l111ve enouKh lorkers
for thP r11n11ers to chnnge.

~(OSI ur theh· t1'1linlug to date
bll&lt;! been outeldl' In lbe freezing
weather und on n couple occasions
In below , ..ro Wl•Rlbt)r . Thi~ ls I\
drdlc-ttlPlJ
r1'ew or runners wllo
hn ,e hPPll working
under l1ard.
Hhlpe &lt;o bP ready
lo cnrrY. the
l'nlverst1y'R
ro!ON&lt; lnto Mll\pl'tl­
lion

c•,,a,

'""Iii

CONVENIEl"{T
LOCATIONS

2775 SHERIDAN DRIVE
Just West of Niogoro Foils Blvd ,

Royce Cottlater -

alma for 22.6

clocklng In the 60 yd, frtHtyle .
r0&lt;•ord b/

1111'lim,,

th~ ~,nson I~

for

5244 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE
Just West of Union Rood

0\'8r."

Allho1J~h
('ro,,by,

1lw mm·nwu ha1•p 111•1

lh&gt;'I

~,umh1sltl

hn.l'l'

11 sirnior,

j!'alned
l,arry
who uft~I·

ht·oke
only two do.rs oC prnctlce
Sch~dulr· SM11rd11y ~'eb. 1 ~. nt
l!&lt;&gt;&lt;'iw&lt;li&gt;r, d111u m&lt;'et: Snturdny, the f)OOI Nword ror the 50 yt1rd
F'Ph. ~~. ul Hurbt' sli&gt;r lu, ·ltatlonal : freMtylP hy dnllll' ii In 22.~
l-\,1urdt1) ' "ar.
2, al Rochester
Another U B •Wlmmlng star.
ll, '"Y" f;n turdoy. ~tar, ~ nt l'1llon
Royce Collister,
had this lo
IU\"l1 1ll io 11,\I
say ;;iibout h1a own swlrnm,ng
.\111
I1&lt;1tentlul t1·,1t•km1111 Inter.
0
1 hopo to do a 22,5 or unde,·
, .• 1,,,1 111 JC1111in.eth,·
rerorl

llure many lrnrrlshtp, in 1,r1•1mrln
Ill"' no lrll&lt;k
tho,m s,•lvr-~. Ther
to run (,o HbP)' tta&lt;• th•· t·nm11u,.
ro;i(l•J. !HI W&gt;'llihl 1r .. tn1n~ 111·I•a
, I"
h Pl•h•·r In 111&lt;lr.tck lt1t·k&lt;&gt;r
th•)' U~P thr T.a1&lt;omt'Of hallwxy In h~·lc,,r ,no111 HUY nftt,rNlOn 1,t "?• H,.

CARROLS

"' the 50 before the champion .
.ship ,ne,ets commence,"

George
I
FEB. 22nd
STORE HOURS:

Qiampus..C!lornrr
l262 MAIN STREET
(Opposit&amp;-IJB)

SUNDAY through THURSDAY
1 l A.M. to 11 P .M •
FRIDAY ond SATURDAY
1 1 .A.M. to l AM.

�Friday, February 8, )963

PAGEELEVEN

SPECTRUM

BufloloMatmen
SlamIthaca;
ToHostRedRaiders
Tomorrow
RV ROOKY VERSAOE
The
Unlversil y
of Buff a lo
w1·estllng team copped their lhlr d
victory in four st.arts by thei1
2s.11 win over Ilhaca
Co ll~ge
The match began wiln a nash a!
UB's 123 lb . Bob Jackson plnn l•d
his opponent J lm .Mackey . The
then settled down !lnc'
matmen
ground out several decisions f01
the victory. Ithaca
wa 5 forced
to fo11'c1t two of tbelr weight
classes - the 130 lb. and 1at lb.
classes.
The frosh dropped their fh•st
malch In two starts to the Itluicn
yearlings
by an 18-10 count
Coaoh Ron LaRocque,
however,
named several boys as quite lm ­
prG1111lve,Both 157 lb, Norm Kol.
lei· and heavyweight
Greenar,.
Poles decisioned their opponents
in fine style. Gilorge Ehesman and

John iHcsslink, 130 and 137 lbs .
resp~tlvely,
battled
hard
and
proved to be unyielding In their
draws.
Bu!Cnlo was host to Oswego
Stal.C Wednesday
evenJng. To­
morrow, at Clark Gymnasium at
2:00 p.m . the freshmen, and al
3:00 p.m the varsity
grapplers
tackle the Red Raiders of Colgate .
Bulfal o 28, lthaea 11
123 - Bob Jackson (UB) pinned 1-­
Jlm ~lackey . 130-Joe Aiello (UBl
,..,.on by forfeit. 137-JeU
Gellman
tUB! won by forfeit. 147-Paul
KehM (UBl d. Art Cardi. 1570rln.ndo Iacovelli ( I) d. Len Ar .
dit&gt;t.A. 167-Gnry
Ruberti (I) d.
Warren Prunella. 177-Jack
Val ­
entlc (UB) d. Chuck Henke. 191Mlke Tartaglia.
(UB) and Dan
Ander!IOn drew,
Heavyweigh t-­
Blase Iuliano (I) d. Bert Emst.

Buffalo's Jack Valentlc has hands full of Ithaca's Chuck Henke In their match Saturday, Valentlc
captured the decisio n In the 177-pou nd ev ent, as UB topped the Bombers, 23-11. Th ia wao Buffalo'•
third win In four starts.

Lookle, Look le - who's got the cookie (th at la, a pair of contact
while U B and Ith aca grappler, search for the elu ■lve ''cheat er s."

lenaes), Action 11 temporarily

hailed

Lafountain Posts
Downhill Record

BabyBullsBomb
Stole
I

The Ski Club, in its fo st meet
,,t Allegany S1.ule Pal'k. came up
with nn impressive scoring record
"Faker•· La Fountain, plac ed first
boards.
,., the m~n·s downhlii with a. rec­
ord lime of 32.l seconds. He com .
It wa s U ('Onslderallly clos, • en.
Other high 8COl'erS ro,· lhe MnlO..
t·oun~er throughout
the first hall I men were NorwOOd Ooodwlu nn d petl'd with 60 other skiers .
o( 11lay, Oij both teams experieu.ced nenni~ Zynda, who scored 11 nnd
H e also took third place in thl'
, B1111'11lo
note.bla dlrriculty In bull haodltng 10 nolnt• re:,peniYely
a nd shooting ac~urucy. At the con- Sta le's Joe LoT em11lo 1,aced nil men's slalom with a tune or 34.9
duaioo o[ the flrKt twenty minutes l\l'01ser~ l\1lh 25 noiats In :111 irn­ seconds, Bec a u se of the se a chieve .
Lbe t.ca.ms lert thr floor \\1th Bur. presslve showing. Tom l'rhnn•kl
ments he received tho: com bined
1nll!Pd 12 markers for th e Orange.
tn lo on to11, 32,26,
Alpine Trophy.
men .
In the second hal f , however,
Other merrr!Jers of lh e tea m who
Tbe Ba.by Bu',ls' l\ext outing tu tiled good scores \\'ere Baeder
the Baby Bull• connected with
amazin g conaiatency and left
~omes wmorrow nig ht , wb"n they Bart.on, and Robert Fost er . In the
meet the yearlings of Colgate 11n1. women's division "Pepp er" Monta ­
the Baby Orangemen for dead.
Long and 10010 Bill Barth,
verslty In th e ·,1rellmlnary to the que was the winn er in the ladle s
varsity encount ar l)Plwoen. thP t"·o sln lo m rlivision "~th a n•co rd Umc
UB'a 6-6 center, ,tarred In thl1
stanza with key rebounds at
Hl'ltool•.
of 1-1.3 seconds. Nancy Selmer
placed fourth In the same division
Rosalind Kimball pla ci•,I fifth ii
the women's downhill with 35.8
(Continued from Pa g., 10)
secr,nds .
Tbt.1 tiext borne m ee t wfli be Szurnnn~kl fl'fl1 : 22 9. 200 indlvl­
8at orday
ar1.. rnoon nr 2 o'clock dual medley
The team's la.st cncu nntcr wn ~
,Jlm IJ~('h r (U H)
m Cinrk r:ym nguln81 l'nlun C'ol.
2. 5,l l$Ch01&gt;I re('Ordl. Diving - at the PaUJ Smith \\' Int er Carnl.
Thoma s OLIO /0) 12~.75. 200 but. \'HI at Lake Placid
l Im·.. is n sum mar)' of I h~ win - ter - Stuart Arn el ( l' B I I: -H. 4. I &lt;'om Ing (!Ompetiti on will be a'
wrs of ,11,, ,., ·en ts nn.d th e winning 100 free _ Sgumlnskl I llB\ :61. 3, C-ulgntc.Co rUnnd Winlet Carulvfl:
'""''·
200 back - Dec k er lllB) 2·34,6. "' tlro11t Penk und the• !ollowiag
400 medley relay t; nfve rsi ty 600 free Heckel ( \ !Bi li.24 : 7, WPekond the t ea m will travel I•
or Burra ll&gt; llllil P enn, Alex Hnn se, 200 breast - Haase cum 2: 10.9, Syracuse for their Wint er C"'arn,
l&lt;rlttn F'ry, R oycP Collister)
4 :- 400 free relay Cnl versity of ::at
Song Mou ntain. The Sk
!I~ 200 f ree - \' i nre He, •k-~tl Dulfaio ( b a,·., Hearn , Jnck Ku1.lna, Tenm will host a meet at Glen
11:lh
~50 --tre-e r..airr,-l--F'ry:"-{:otltstwrT
:n:a.
·
ArrU"Ma.rcll "7 and :,Thl' gelntllialfug
Uni\'erslty
oC
llulfalo freshman haskethall team
,·aptured its 18th vldory In IHteeu
st-arlJI Tuegelay night by dealing
the hapies~ Ou!fnlo State yearlings
11 7R-5l bon,bing,

I

both ends of the court,
He
finished the evening with an
output of 19 pointa, most of
which came on tap s and short
Jumper s from underneath
the

Top-ranking favorites
on every
campus. FARA H'a durable Super
Twill with lean lines. In Beige and
Farah New White.

I

8 11ea: Waists 28" to 38"
Len1th1 2sn to 34"

VarsitySwimming
.

I

$(25

IHON

2100 1&gt;11.AWAltt:
AVL

0/'f.'\"

r.'\'f,,"fff

lllNIIOftl, 11.Y,

f: 1 F:NI.VG TILL I

�PAGE TWELVE

Friday, February 8, 1963

SPECTRUM

FroshMermen
Down
Oswego
Yearlings;
YoungUBCagersMustStrikeBack Croshaw
SetsMork

SPORTSCIRCLE

By Jim Baker

'/Whe n the UB Bulls charged out onto the floor of the
new Buffalo St.ate gym Tuesday night, this chant couJd be
heard from the UE side: "Thirteen and one - here they
come!"
This was, to be sure, representati ve of the optimism
that wa.~ inherent in UB fans before the State game com­
menced. Yet , a!ter the first half had been played and the
Oran~remen had established 11 26-22 margin, one could al­
moot se nAe the eventual fate of the Bulls against a team
that WM as high a.lj the proverbial kite for this t raditional
ch1sh .
The response from this corner can only be one of high
praise for the team from Buffalo State. Dick Bana.a:¼ikan&lt;I
Mike Broderick parti cular ly sparkled, as time and again
they capitalized on UR miscues and turned them into State
field goa ls. The Orangemen pJayed as a well-organized
an d so undly coached unit and in the opinion of this writer
they richly deserved the victory that they secured.
The BullR, although understandably disappointed from
the upaet, can actually profit from the e,xperience. One
muat reali ze that the UB club is dominated hy sophomores,
which meAns thnt the team lack11 expel'ience - especially
the kind they fa~()(l Tuesday.
These soph,- have played
on ly three road encounters all year and this fact wail cer­
tainly obvious when they faced the senior-laden Orange­
men in their own back yard.
Yet, it is only through games suc h ai- theHe that a
young team can gain the necessary experience that is so
imJ)el'ative in all rond enco11nter11.Thus, although the team
lOtlt, the experience that was gained OIJ Tuesday 11hould
prove. in valuable throug)'lout the remainder of the sched­
ule - a slate which lists four road contestfl and one on
the neutral Memorial Auditorium court.
Th411"eore seven oppanents still to be met, and
tflese remaining rivals represent a decided step-up in the
tefflpo and calibet- of competition. Beginning with to­
lftOrrowevening's game against the always-tough Calgate
Red Raiden , tfle Bulls will be meetin g th e rugged type
of oppot1ents t+.ot would be faced in any post-season
to.n1am ent. It is, therefore , petty obvious t+.at t+.e
eyes of the NCAA regional selec;tian board will be sharply focused on t+.e UB quintet.
After the Colgate encounter, this committee, which
literally pulled the equivalent of the Boston Brinks j oL
two year ago when they picked Rochester over Buffalo for
an eastern s.l.ot, will see the Hulls face Brockport State
this Wednesday. The Colden Eagles :-1hould prove an ex­
tremely stiff foe, as they defeated the BullH in Clark Gym
a year ago. The star or the game. Thwe Gumaer, is back
te11m will have to be ;it peak '.form to
ag-.iin and the
COTTU! home with a victory.
Brockport smothe red a good
Bufl'11.!oSta.te club b)• 18 points earlier this season.
After the Brockport contel:lt, the Bull s will return to
Clark Gym to face nn old ''friend.'' the Rorhester Yellow­
jackeb!. This will be another pivot:~! encounter in deter­
mining UB's to urnamen t credentia ls, although the selec­
tion hourd completely ignoted Buffalo's tt'iumph ovet thi11
t'Ontfogent two years ago.
This factor and the Bulls'
rough treatment in the Flower City last yem· make this
the revengt&gt; game of the year, a~ well a:-1the rno:-1tMlol'ful
nth'twtion of the hoop campaign.
The Villanova Wildcats are the Bulls' next op­
po•o nt and are heavily fovored to win in Philadelphio's
Palestra. Still, if UB can continue their present shoot­
ing and defensive exhibition, the team could well re­
peot that resounding surprise of two years ago .
Th e Bulls'
remaining opponent:, Hn' Cortlaml Sla1e
(w hid1 is repu ted to have lhe top quintet among Ne"· Yol'k's
stale college.'!), LeMoy11e,1nd Niagara (which until Sat­
urdlly was one of lhe 1hree unhcaten clubs in the nation).
Each of thPll&lt;' ~P\'t•n rPmainin,-r games will provide a
il'ttl.1':1od stt-rn t1•"t lcir I lw B1i11':1IC1
ll'ttm, 11ndthe outcome
t,re11t·hwill go a lon~r \\IIY tn,1:,rd clt•d1li11!!'t·his university' s
Rtandjng i11 regnrd \11a 11 N&lt; AA tourm\nll' nt invitat ion.

The UB freshmen ha.ve onee
again shown lhelr fine a.lhletfc
a.billty by their 62-12 victory over
Oswego Saturday in Clark Pool.
Under the leadership of Bob Bedell
these swimmers have won fi anr
lost only 1 meet this yea!'.
To add to thi4 great record,
8W!immtl1fi like Mark Gri:uhow
have broken UnJvei-slty record,.
like they were golng out of style
In this la.st meet they broke rou,
record~ in a slng'le sweep.
In the first event, lhe 100 yd.
medley relay, the UB me1 men
broke two records . Mark Gra~how
hrnl,c the 100 yd. buckttlroke rec­
ord by t-omplellng his leg of the
race in 1:04.3. The team Ulen went
on lo 1mll a 4 :18.3 fllr the entire
race which set II new 1'eeortl
Afl'llhl in the 200 yd, backHtrolte
Grai,how bl'oke the l'ecord by
swimming IL 2:22.8 (or the event.
When we asked ~lark fol' n
statement on his great swimming
he jWIL said, ·•J•m pooped." Th e

Muto's
Cagers
Crunch
Griffs
Again,
ButDrop
Overtime
Clash
toEagles
Bill Barth, the UB Baby BllllR'
C-7 center, tossed tn 15 polnls 11a
he sparked the Buffalo yearlings
to a 63-:'iS lrlumph over Canlslu~
College. This marked the third
time In as many outings lhal
Coach Muto's club has troun ced
the Baby Griffins. It wns also
the Bull's ~elfth triumph In 14
sl1Lrts.
On the previous Thursday tJsn ,
NJage.ra.'s freshmen quintet
gained revenge tor an ea.rUe1
setback to UB by nipping the
Bulls, in overtime, 71-69. This ...
wa~ only Lhc Recond hiss or the
yeor too·UB.

I

un

Norwood Goodwin leaps for short Jumper, as two Canlalua
forwards try In vain to stop the Saby Bulls' lead ing .corer.

31)

t

I
Varsity Swim Star Larry
Szumlnakl
f!nR I t·ecord of t'hc dny was bt'Oken
by lhe 400 yd relay team whi-'n
they swam a 3:4.2.9 for this dis.
lance.
All Coflch Bedell l 10Uld sll.Y wns.
"You cnn look too· a lot bdtar
fl'om th ese boys b.,fo,•e the s~ason
Is over"

The outstanding
player
fnr
Niagara
was Pal
Brodcri clt
who meshe&lt;J five clutch points In
the exlra seaslon and count ed l 9
points ror the evening. The game's
hig h scorer wa 8 Nlagllra cenlet
George Phillips. who game1·ed :,Iii
lnta. Noi;',Vood Goodwin topp.-tl
po
Ul3 wllh 17, While BUI Barth con•
tributed 13.

I

Us center Bill Barth (1S)
converts one of his key eec­
ond
t,alf rebound,, H he
pace, froah to 76-51 victory,
(See story on page 11),

DORMITORY RESIDENTS

1963BUFFALONI
Will be on sale in the lunchlines
next week .during the lunch
and dinner hours .

Thoseeatingin Tower:Feb.11-12
Thoseeatingin Goodyear:
Feb.13-14
A $2 .00 Deposit is required at this time.

.

ahot, H
State'• Dick Erner (~2-l and Jim Roll (40) guard him cle&gt;Hly,
US guard

Jack

Kara11ewakl

(2 . \ Pit•

mp •

""d.~ir

The remaining $5.00 will be requested the
First Week in May when the Book1s out .

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE V111VERSITY or IIIW YO.IIK AT BUff AIO
Plona For Annual
Winter Weekend
Set
( see

l&gt;aJC
~ :l)

SPECTJllUM

UN Assembly Rescheduled
l Ill~ to a lack or student sup11&lt;&gt;rt, the Ph llllp pine a In the model
Security Council. Th e progran,
mOdel United Nations Oenert1I
Is slated fo r Feb . 22, 23, 24,
\,sa mbly odginally scbedule d for
Tent.attn olnus ror the 11rogram
n••xl weeke11d bns been cancelled llere Includ e: t'Omw.lttee discus.
,nd re-sche dul ed for Ma.rob 29-30. fflons on the varion~ 11uestloll.8
pm;msed, voling, ttnd " ,·rll.lque
t'bn lrman
Mlcba el Lappin, a
,011ho1I1.01
•f" sena tor, sai d thnt thr.
•ornmltle&lt;&gt; needs Ind ividuals and
,ro u()S to ror111 the delegations. As
yet there Ill no delega.tlon from
•he United Stu tea or Fru11,ce. Among
·)H! big lllOWers, RUSNIU- will be
revreae nled by the Pre.low Society ,
,nd a .,,.·ou1&gt; or English history
uu1Joni wUI represent Gr eat 'Brit11n. The Cblne•e
government. on
~'ormoaa wlil be re11re sente d hy
he YounJ!' Amerl~o ns for Free dm·,1.
•he

The committee ha&amp; eent an
,nvl tatlon to Frederick H. Boland
permanent representative
from
Irel and to th e United States,
Mr, Bolan d Is a lso past preal.
den t of the Genera I AHembly,

Taub, Philharmonic Concertmaster,
To Perform Here at Feb. 9 Recital
Reb er J ohnso n. H e stud ied at
the Ta ng le wood Mualc Festf.
val In 1947 and has played
w ith KouHevlUky
and Bern .
stein. After graduation
from
Oberlin in 1948. he be came the
youngest
first vlollnlat
with
the Cleveland orches tr a under
George Szell . Throughout
hi•
aca dem ic career. Mr. T;aub ha•
been the recipient
cf many
honore and acholarshlpa.
;\Ir. Tuub is the ori,:nnlz.,,• "o~
director o! the UrllndenburK Cham­
ber Orch!.'Slra of Buffalo String
Art Qunrtel. Ile is u rrequl'nt per.
tormt:?r In Buffalo l'~oltals, especi­
ally in 1woi:roms here nt the m1J­

versllr.
Mr Tnub and ~liss Ko11111111lu
wlll
perto~m works of Vivllldl. roulPnC,
RrahntM and Slraviusky .

-----New Circulation System Is
Inaugurated By Library
l,111Jk
wood Library's

olrculatiolL
J,.partment
bas Inaugurated
a
n .., l)Ollcy In Ila handling
of
•l'erdue book s.
Reminders
to
•tu dents who do not r eturn their
OOO
ks on lime wlll be eenl lees
··"&lt;tuently than In the paat.

The library believes that It Is
hr• reeponalbllity
or the stud.
"nl to know which books be bas
Mr rowed, and wh.eo they are due .
•)1·erdue notices will be eent only
)~ce a month The 6rst not.Ice wlU
•f
si mply a postal card announc­
~- that the student
hllll overdue
lirary materlnls;
It will not list
will
~.. books, BDd th e library
'''"I) no record under the etud­
nrs nllllW ot wWch b ooks he hall

No. 16

roliowlog obJect11•eij w biob a n&amp;'II'
tuition sched uli'.1should nccowp lleh :
a. It would lncorpor•te • achodule
of cha rges which would be
both cona latent and equlblble;
b, It should place all chugea on
a level co n1latont with the
Un lve•alty' a commitment to low.
coat educational
opportunity;
c. It sho uld con tr ibute meaning.
fully to the flacal bate nee.._
sary to th e planned e,cp•nalon
of tho University an d to fta
qualitative
Improvement : end
atudo nt cha rge, In the several
d. It ahould mak e prov lalo111 for
I•
colle gu of tho University
1omo form of acholarthlp1 for
marked moat c lea rly by lta lr­
thoe e student,
wh o, I I ck Int
ratlon11I variations," the report
such aid, would be denie d ed.
stated .
ucatlonal o ppor,tun ft_y on the
It was point ed out thnt the
PAUL JACOBS
art lflclal ground• of eQono,nl c
11re•enl sclledule oo longer benrs
dieabllily.
any relutlon l'fl,ber to the cbamcler
I II rom 1111
rln11 th-' new tut t lou
of the proi;r11DU1 offered or the
lllllVl'rffllY'B Impending
develop- schlld UIP o1 $400 per year, l)IUI a
$26 activities fee with ot.her Ol\hll4
ment.
''Even on t he eaune &lt;mmpu, ijerl. rolleges, the r e11ort elated:
Puul J acobs. pianist with the ou, Jncousls tencles appellr.
T he
"A United Statea Office of
Education aurvey of theee co,te
New York Phllharmonlc,
will be student at Albany (or New l'a lt t,
In ten public universities In the
1&gt;r~senled In n concert or conte m. Predoola, Platt&amp;burgh and Stonr
North Atlant ic States revM II
J'IOl"~t·y music nt 8:30 p.m. iu But- Brook) who declareR himself Inter.
an aver,ge annual oha rv• In
oatea In a cnreer 111 publkl echool
ler At1dltorl11m, Monday _
,,.aoblog site, tuition free , Jn u,~ 1961-62 of $326 1 • figure com.
para ble with the net coa t t•
A i,:mauute or tbe Jullisrd S&lt;,hool si\me cin~sroom as the student wbo.
be met by State Unlverelty
of Music. Mi·. Jacobs spent ten because
hla lntere11t la no~ ln
atudenta In the htgheat Income
college teachng.
ta required
to
yenM In J;luro11eos a concert ar. r,ny nn. annua l tuition of S325.''
ca tegory (,82&amp;) and conalder..
ab ly higher than the net co ats
The report con tinued that If
t!st He returned to the l' . l!. In
to those In the middle ('22&amp;)
196 1 and tor lhe pust few mc,nlhs
a atudent 11 profeaalonal goal•
and the lowest ($25) groupa .
ha~ play~d with the New 'York
change even allghtly he finds
The United States Ott l.&lt;!eof Ed.
hlmaetf elthe• makl no up back
Phllhnrmonic.
th llt
11ccompanylog
ucntlon alao report• tb11t the n.e­
tuition or petit ioni ng the State
lionAI a.verag,e of tuition a.n4 tee
or1(111lhMIIOn
on it11 tour of J bpon.
of New York for a tuition re .
eo~ts In 78 publlo unJversllfee wu,
fund . In both lnata ncea ho will
In t96J.82. $271. Slrnllar ly. the a. .
ultimately
receive the sa me
l''or till• ijU 111
mer~ o{ 1959• 62 ,
ernge r06ls in 26 pu l&gt;lle unlver1Jttee
degree and wlll h av e earned It
.ftl.t'nb, hllH been on the facuU:y of
In lhe Oren~ LAkee 11nd Plain
Berk•blre
Musi&lt;' Center , Twiglebe t.&gt;klng preclae ty the ume
Sw.tw&lt; area wns rep0rted aa $217.
wood, Ma&amp;RllchuMetts as F~&gt;mm
cou,s ~a, with mi nor ex c eptions .
Doth of thesp figures nre co nsid er.
The1 rep0rt emp h1tijl1.ed thnt the
J11structor In coruposltloo and wrui
Milster Ple11 recommendatlou. call. ably higher than tbe costs to be
Fromm plonlsl for the Pl'illceton Ing ror for greater emphasis upon met bY State University 11tuden tll
Semln.nr In Advanced Music s:tud. graduate education tmpUea a size. In the lowest and mlildle lnoo10e
les, 1960. ln 1966, hl' w3s aw1&lt;1r
d ed Rhle addltloual oullny of ruada for rutegorle;i and a.ppro1tlroRtefy S50
tht• Arnold Mednl,
re~eal'Cll a.Dd the expenel\·e e11ulp. Jowl\r tha.11 the net coet to State
UnlwrsltY stodE&gt;nte ln the hl,;be1 t
ment It requires.
At n n.nl. Tuesday, 11. recep,tlon
"It alHO lmplh:.• greAtl)' exp11nded inrome bra.cket.
ror Mr. Jacob s wlll be helO 10· the llbrar)' resourcE&gt;s, consi derably re­
The re11orl coneluded thut StAW
llorothy l1 , Rous [,ounire In Norton dur~d fncnll)'-Hludont ratlon11 and Hnll"erslly bnA boe'II In nlslOll(lft
Hull,
an added ability to re cru it to the Ol!JYsince the j)lO.O ot WOJ'l(! Wat
The concert Is open to the pulblfa. rn.culty eminent ecbolnre at tile 11 Yol It mu~l as1um6 tb e •me
highest saln.ry levels. In fact, it t.b4" ohlli:tntlon&amp; as oU!er pol\llr. ®Iver .
Pd over
t tolverslt&gt; ' Is lo achieve 1ta just alllee whloh have dt&gt;Velo11
A reminder to all stndonts
meMure or ouulflY ln thf~ pe riod a ee.nlory .
t b11t their I..D. oa rd s must be
l t Is no longer ()Ol!&amp;(ble!o enp..
of rapid expnnelon. It iij extrMllelY
vallduted for the seconA semos . unlikely that Rtnt.e tn:&lt; runds alone pORe t hnt tble &amp;lgnltlc.ant handicap
ter In the basement of Fosti i r. cnn ~arry the full burden."
ca n be overoome In the Ume re­
Mnny atudeots
llave not ret
wa lnlnic solely through the use of
The New Tuition Schedule
done RO and Rf'P ur~ed to ns
current tax reven.ues and routine
aueed upon th t&gt;se und olher con­
soo n Uff JK)BSible.
RldernUolll!, rile 13011rd drafted the goffrnmental procedure•.
'l'he underl;vlni: tt1Cto1'tl behi nd
the dec•toiou or th .. nonrd or Tru~­
Lee:. 1•! till' Sh\ta Un iversity of
New York In setting tuition policy
were ,e.,enled this wook.
The deulelon was based Ul)Oll nn
ernluullon of the present tulliou
and fee S('be~ule, 11 proJecllc&gt;n of
rlw t uturo n eedK of 111,, Stnte
llnh•en,lty sy&lt;1tem, nnd nn 1rnnlyals
ut th~ obJectl\'ee whll•h n new
r,ollc)' would seek ,
"The present ached u I e of

New York Piani:st
To Appear Feb. 4

fl Is not necesijaf)' 10 apply In
Kl'OllpS lo form ll delegation. lndl­
•lduala mey a1111IYsingu larly, state
111e
ir preference$ relative to the
delegt1tlon they wish lo Join, snd
MICHAEL LAPPIN
lh!'n be ae1dgned I() it by the
Salu,•da)
' night. It iff hUl)tld lbal
rommtllee.
three membe~ or the blst-0ry und
political science der,artment8 will
Lat er th la month the Student
partklpnl.t• lo " ponel to select thP
Senate UN committee wlll ■ end
' delegatlo11 which gave the most
a delegation to St. Law rence
eO'ectiv~ ,presentation 111 nccOrd­
UnlVefl.elt y in Ca nton , N. V.
ance with the a.c~ual Corelgn J)ullcy
The committee wlll repreaent
of the countrr.

He graduated from Be hnett
High Schol here In 1942, and
went on t&lt;i st udy at Oberlin
Conaervatory
unde r Pro feHor

State
Tundoy Hight
(see P11~ ,,

Underlying Factors
For Tuition Decision
Revealed This Week

Delegations Still Unformed

MisK Ko111paJa le II well-kllown
In llutta lo,
t"'•nlsl a.nd teacher
t,,,,11,entiy appearing In recilnla fu
·h•• city. Mr. Taub, n former fac.
•1lt)' member
at the university,
h,i,
been a!lsoclale ~oMerllnaster
••I th~ Buttalo orchestra sfn~e 1952,
"'h• n the orcheetr11 waij under
ti, dlrootion
or St&lt;ilnberi:.

US "- Buffalo

BUFFALO, MEWYORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUAR't
' 1, 196-3

VOLUME 13

ilarry
T11ub 11t1eoclate coneert.111:.
eter of the Buffalo Philharmonic
llrc beslrn, will give a violin re­
·ilal Saturday, Feb. 9, at 8: 30
11tn. ID Bair d Hall
wll,b Irma
Kornl)alla, pianist. Admission Is
lw o. and all students und facul.
'Y nre Invited to atten,a ,

.

wlll be sent, a month later . This
one will list the book~.
ro

time saye d, lht• gtuff
to give quicker and better
service In retrlevlng- those booke
whi ch are actuallY requested by
another lndJv!dWll
Tbe greutest
etrort Is thus devoted to the most
urg ent need , nod lt le hoped tb11t
the penalty to th" nbeent -mloded
at the rule of five c11
nts a
dar - will nnt 11rove too burdnn­
aome.

HOW TO l)ETERMINE YOUR TUITION
UND ERGRADUATE

Net Ta,cabte
Income

Tult.lon

INSTRUCT ION

Tuition leaa
S IP o,ant and
Scholarsh ip

so

$0-1 800

, ;100

$1801-7499

$410(/

$200

S ◄IOO

$300

$7500-plu •

College

Total

Feo

$26

'85

S2fi

$.U5

µu

f f~

the

,GRADUA TE IN8TR UOTION-

hqpe~

Book11 orny ht• reuewcd

over ai;aln. uoloss
had a. request . for
new a book Just
plete number a.nd
main d eek on or
·•due.
on the
•tamped
For any book.a which are not Books maY also
·u rned then, one more not.loe rolling ~:H-3619.

over and

the llbrAl'Y bas
them , To re•
copy the com .
bring lt to the
before the d11te
date due sllp.
be rcu ~wed by

$0-1800

$0

,noo

FIR8T VEAR

'

U6

U6
tU6
f06

,1so1.1,9s

SHOO

uoo

s:s

$7500-l)IUI

$HOV

1•-00

S26

GRADUA TE INSTRUCTION
$0- lffllO

SUBSEQUENT
$(/

$6-00

I YEARS

SK

$!Ii

$1801 -7499

, ,soo

uoo

UG

S7500.p lus

$1:00

,~oo

l !G

PROFESSIOl~AL
,o . 1soo

J 'IOV

INSTRUCTION

(M.D., D.D,8 ., L.L.B.)

FIRST

$0

'26
$26

1!6

$1801.W&gt;,

$ ill)()

$5110

17500.plus

,~mu

$600

un
$S26

YU.JI

1111

"'

fr.st.
fUG

�SPECTRUM

PAGE'TWO

Friday, February 1, 1963

UB Collection Features · Origlnal Manuscripts , Books
\\'bt'n the 116-)'enr-ol d Unlver­
sil)' ol. llulfalo mergl'd
with the
1&lt;r,rnwllng
Stllte
Unlver11tty of

Ne.,.· York lht..l Seplemb&lt;lr, llltle
nrnntJo,:1 waJJ made of Lhe flneat
c&lt;llll'cilon of iolh Clf'Dtll.l') • P(letry
by EngllSb -epeaklng poel.tl to be
round an&gt;"'1iere Jn the world .
By rough count lhe oolle&lt;'llon
uompri1Ml8 over zo,O()ovol ul11.811
,

tain

that the very obscurity
dep1&gt;ndH on Lhe !(er,eros.lty of thi,
rnuoh of 20th century
11oet• tb emselve11, who usuully Pl'O've
poetry
render,
rough draft•
t o he sy m11athellc a nd generou s
. an d background
material In­
Mony ure pre11Qred to offer work :
valuable as 1ourcea for deep ­
~heetll free to a Collection whl eh
er understanding
of t,ow th&lt;!&gt; will b ~nefit so mao y. They •some.
poet arrived at a poem and
t !meM otter them o u a permanent
why,
loan. glvln1t I,.ockwood the ortv\­
Th e poet himse l f ten.dk to tll k~ lei;e ot tl1~t . opUou to bit) ' lf the
an objective, ll eJ!ghtly amu&amp;ed, 011portuulty to r them to sell.
lnLerenl In the 11r01•edure; aoprov.
Thr 0U!th n syste m Clllled "Inter.
J!l)l'arr 10110
,'' any quall0ed soho\.
Ing eve n enlhusl11stJcally
bul with the obvio us r eserval10 11 or In thll world run ito to tb t&gt;
thnt th e l)oent's
ultimate
lnde- ne111·eKtllbrary nu.d o rd er micro.
11endencc lie ke1&gt;t fn mind,
Ulm loRnfl or maou ac rl(its from
Hobc,rl f1raveK wrote the Orat 1,oc•kwoo(!. This means that tho
version
or o love l)Oem on a rlrh resource~ of t hP Collet•llon
vlece or drlrtwood ,picked u p from ~re not limited to students
and
Md1ol;1r ~ on tbe c11mpu ~. OI' to
the piece of wood.
\Vllhoul
budgeted
flll\d s Cor lhos~ who t•nn atro rd to travel
dUCh Heme, the Collec•tlon often to Butfulo,
of

. --

AfJ' ,.!r,!':::TIIII.:
~j..-'J
.,-

;

•,,. ,,._

)'

IIU'~t:-

tncl udi..ng prl.cel888 first editions
of orory poel "110 baa pu,bllahed
In English e ince 1960,
lo , addi­
tion. fi000 leU.en hav e be en galh­
lrom
the
erecl. 'IWUlY directly
P•~liil. explnJntng th oi1· met.bods
of c«DpOek.ion, topther
wllh 800
flies or little
magaztnea
where
~onw (tf tbt&gt; IIAAL 1•t&gt;rae flrsL ap.
pt•ors .
~fB n, sc hol a"" eoMider It eve n
more lml)OrPU!t I.bat the oolleo­
tion
ln ol ud 811 C(1lJOU0&amp;11 rough
Or iginal drafts on dlaplay In the poetry ro~~m,
drafu, ond mAIIUIICrlpt.s which of­
r
ten fol low u,,, dAvelopmenl
or a uatu1•eij hy Char loll &lt;&gt; Mew , t he C1unn.
The
"Friends"
and
the
100t•m &lt;rom 1he 11,ptr.lt
unl
aood enti re working marutl!Crlpl.t! of An ­
Charles Abbott Reading l'und
which IICTllted Liu, crea tiv e l)rO­ drew Young's Out of the World
are the major aourcea of t,x.
Ctlt-R t.c&gt; tbe nnl&amp;ll!!d copy to ­ and Back , ond ov er 10,000 eu'ly
poem,i ,by both
tra Income which hu been
Rllther wllh the ,painful stagee or unpubtlRlled
vlt•I to the library'• Qr&lt;)wth
fn-h~ twe en .
ramoo s and neglected J!Oel.a.
as the key center o f 20th ,.cen ­
Among th e outatandlng com ­
Amoni: ~ome of the other treas­
tury poetry manuacrlpta , ac­
ure.. in the rolle,•tlo n iH tlle ooly
pone nts
of the
colleetlon,
co rd ing to Dr. Oscar A, S11pnet
houaed
In the
Unlveralty••
know u copy or American
ve rm an1 director of llbrarlu.
atatoty Lockwood Llb.-ary, la
Ca rl Sandburg's
firat book, " rn
Th e! ren .dln~ tllnd lij nam ed tor
the only complete ~llectlon
He«tle•e Jo)r.R~aey;" on&lt;&gt; ol' t he
nud scholar who ln
In t h e worl d of the verse
two or t.hr~e be!ll e,clRtlng &lt;JOllec- lhe llhrurlan
tlon; or Jam e• Joyce ma.ler lale, 1935 hrc&gt;ke wltb the trnd ,lth.&gt;n1tl
manulCf'fpta of Robel't Gr a ves,
1inc htd ln,g tho conleo tR or bis conce11t or co llectlng mnnu •crlpla
and the t10t.ebook1 of
apartment
nt the tlm&lt;' oC hiK uH tfnnl coo!es nnd begnt1 ask­
Thomas,
Francie Thomp
n,
Jame ■
Elroy Flecker, L la
df'ath, an ear ly dra ft or The log poets to ijend their first roug \1
Mac Nelce, ~oy
Fuller
nd
Portrait of the Artist , and 60 work slteet.q to Lockw0&lt;1&lt;l Lib­
111 t b011e daY• th is wa• 11
Ge0f'11e Barker - a uniquely
aotebookij ltijed for rl' Beurch on rary,
11ni(IIIP ldt:n: poet.I hod \0011 heen
ml-l1aneou1
a11ortmen t rep­
Finnegan 's Wake ,
reaentlng
every
coneelvable
Through the (•ontrlbutlt&gt;ll!l of a In th&lt;' h11l1!t or scram1ing tb,e 11re.
trend ,
or don ors cul led ".F'rlend s llrufnary work when a 11oem was
~'1·t11111
Tbffl'I.' fJI !be m.a.ouscrlpt of W . or Lockwood L!bnm ," which Is •·ompl!&gt;l~d.
H. Auden's " Tb e Sen and tho Mlr­ a formal organization de 3lg11ed to
Th e "art
for art 's nke"
N'1'," Stephe n ~pel\der'a
1949 gtv&lt;' oddmonnl
supl)Or t It&gt; aucb
cri tics take the poaltlon that
the finished poem atanda, on
volume of PoOllls in va.rlons «Jratt e, 11roleclfl us the 11oetry collecUon,
Its own merit, that revl11lons
Fldward ThotruU1' flrt1l r o ndlllon •fx r endinga nre sche dul ed ea,: h
Crom pr 011e to poetry, Allen Olne­ year
hY such fa111o
u s pnets a,,
and preliminary work have, ab .
Wilb u r.
bl'rk'lf lnV(lCU YO, Thamo a Mer­ ll obert l,ow ell , Richard
solutely no bear ing on the
ton•.. religious
medllAtfon s, ea rl- John
Berryman,
on d Thom n.i; fllnlahed product. Other s m1 ■ ln. ,

9

Family Style
SPAGHETTI
Serves 4 to 6

$3 .00 Bread and cheese included
Meot Balls 15c each

Fre ~ Delivery
01·

with

minimum

50c S1•rvice cha rge with

ll ny

order

of $3.00

lake out or&lt;l~r~

TF4 • 3773

Dtan

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TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
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rREE PARKING IN THE MOTEi. PARKING I.OT

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9afa

Special Begins With Tapes Dated January 25 , 1963

- WE BVY USED BOOKS

9,·anJ Op etiing

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{

�Friday, Fe bruary 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGETHRH

PolicyStatedon FacultyUse
On Film Revievvs Of NuclearReactorCenter

\Cr~wther Speaks

.
\

A m.lvie c1•llt/' who say,i only
A 110111•&gt;'h:cH heo11 estn hllshe1I tlu1 Ncll'll•tlr C"tonl(!r It IH ••~11t•1•t(,d
1111eout 'of five movies Is worth when1l1y l'ncnlty members 11111y
UH&lt;' that ra,•ulty mem!K're will do tMlr
s~eing will speak ut thb Sw.t,e Uni­ lhl' r11&lt;'11llleij or the Nuclear Re . 1&gt;&lt;,~1
I(&gt; Hrek full ..uppott for tb elr
versity of New York nt Buffalo al SL'llrch Center without churge wbe11 reaoa r~II ldl&gt;:l• wbeu prelbnlwu-y
Lhey do not b;cl'•' uuy rund$ fo 11 ..~1,..rlmcnt:uion
.llA:I re11,,1uid t bl'
3 p,m.. Feb. 13 In Norton Hllll
l't!&gt;!ij:trch i;mnt 01' c·Ollll"U('f Ill PRY 11111
ut "tlt'r&lt;' n r11~1-.i
rch 11ro1ios11l
under the suspicl's of the Student
Ihe r~gular use.ducrges. Thrse ra. tl• 1111uUIHld•• Hgnn oy \H In order
mll1ies lndude
ibe l't'MIOI', hot
eonvo&lt;'ufion1&lt; cornmillet1,
Ir " iit~ulty tn0111her hllft n re•.
.... 11. thermo! &lt;:olumn .. 1el'11'0n u,•. ••·11r,•lt i;rl\ ot or ~ontrac t whlrh
Bosley C1-owlher, !JlOll0TII 111&lt;'­ c·eler,llur,
puHltive.fo;, 111·1·ul1&gt;rn
l(H' IH'O\ ldt•~ Cund~ ror P~YIUl'DI ot Nu.
ture edlto 1• or The New York and labm·ttlory spoc.1 -.. (wtwn avnil. l'l,•1\r t',•nt~r ll'lll-Ch4rg,•s, be wlJ I
T imes, will '1iscus8 "T olev ision's llbM.
hi' •·&gt;.tll'&lt;'ted lo f)UY Lbe regular
Effect on the Movies
and Vic,•
'fhe obvlu11• lnten1 nr 1111•1w1lwy (•l1nri;teH.na lon11;us the ruodll laa t.
1
Vcni:n .'
iM I(&gt; Pncourni:e r:1c11Jty 111emb&lt;••·~II' and wlwn hi ~ tun d, tor I.his
0

..
Skier•

For Winter

Practice

Weekend

Mr . C 1•owthcr has b~cn with th~
Tm1es since 1928, st,trling- as n
g,mera l assignment
n•pol'ttw and
to tht
working as an as~lstant
Atk Inson.
dl'llmn critic,
Brooks
and as assistant
to the ~11oloon
picture critic, herorc becoming the
p11per'i; rilm rcivlew,•r In l!)IO.
Cl'OwU1er's lhl'&amp;ls is that t,;lcvision
hns resulted In better molloh pie•.
Ul'C!I. People
us-,d lo go \It th,
movie~ to kill lime, ht! :1»y~. but
now unle~!I l)1e pltlurc Is worth­
whil~, ''they kill time by wn tch­
tng s" ,, on ct rate te levision al
honu.~ ·•

&lt;n UKe the t n~ilitles
or IIH• (',•llh•r
1111riuup arP UKf\d up_ he wU 1 be
t 1 ven thtlubh
lhuy
1lu uul huH' Plli:lblt&gt; lo 1•,mthm•• \1~1111;
th~ roblldl(el••tl lunds to J16Y th~ n•g11h1r 1'11111,.,.11l! hollt c•ha r i;,,_
\lS~.( lu1rl(~S. II i8 liOJ)L•dth11t lhruui,1,
1fo\\t ~, t◄ l' . at lhf' qnnw:1 ttow , h••

lhiij 1,ctll,•y r11&lt;"u\ly ,npm,lmrR will 11111lw 1•x11,.,tc&lt;I to m11ke an t•l'tort
l1t ahlt• to try out 1P&gt;U"lal'l'h tdros lo obta1u n. ~u 1,plt!Jm~nt.ar)
'trnnt
1

orlor

to a11111~1tu.?
r,,r 11&lt;'nern1~1111- f1 om

port

frt''Hn on,,.. ut

1
tlh.1 1,1-:P
tu·y ,1,1
\U•JIOrt\n,R his
th,... J:"cc11,ra1r ,•~1•ur,•h 11roj,·1't In orct,,, to re­
c:ur ..rnnwnt rtAl'IH'ltlt1.
'""'"
1111ym11nt111 N,h'h'141r l'Olll&lt;'l'
Th ere Is 1\0 time ltml t or, the
11~t•.1·lt:trgc•R 1r 1h1• work IN molcin,;
Uie of the faclll t les ar,d the re
~ootl 1,ro1?1
Pi&lt;s 011d llll'rc, IH 1.:00&lt;1
Is no obligation,
Implied or
rP1l~11uwhy mor~ ruo,1,-nre oBl-'d,•d,
ot he rwise, as a result of using
tht.:i.tlA:t' IH' iflK will utcually o u lt\rlntu
UY PATRI OIA MUSIAL
the fac illtre1 on this bas!, ,
n requefft tor ~u1w1••m1•nl.tl.lfuoil~
first, second, a nd th ird place
Howeve-r, It should be obviou1
~',ll'ulrlc s mPmh,.rii wlHhlng to
You can't believe
your eyes!
trophlea.
that the primary purpose of
u•1• lh,• Nm• IN•r (.)p11~(•r!ad llll es,
These skiers, members of the UB
this policy Is "pump.priming,"
or wlKhlng further l' lnr!flr!).tioo of
The King and Queen contcat­
St•buss mel1&lt;ter ski teem, are using
11 I$ ltnJ&gt;•'d thnl rr~•· use of !lw this n1'tll'le please A~t' Or, l,Utnb
ants will be judged Feb. 14 by
Lockwood Library as a ''study"
tul'illtl~s ll'111hel11 !11~111lymemhl'rH Ul' )Ir t,~\')~lR
o representative
from the Courier
He is the author o( "The Lion's (1.,,,,1)011 1ww rtlswri rrh ldPaH to f h~
area for tlleir
favorite
subject.
I.be
Bu
ffalo
Evening
Sh111'!'," ,1 ..t11·oni!'I,, or tht' movie
Expr
e11s.
Skiing on the lJbr ary steps will
11,,iut wh,.r•• th••Y NIU Ruhmlt pro.
just one of the many exhibitions, News, and the faculty. The final. industry as reflected in Ule growth l)u:-rah~ tn c·o~tthmnt a~ent·ic:; fll.
in The and development of MGM, a,nd of 1111e~Li11.K
con tests. and ovents taking pla ce lsts will be announced
;,erwr'"I NHllJ•orl or their
Friday, Feb, 15, and Hollywoo d R~jah, 1h0 hlogmpby r~ijenrrh 1&gt;1•uje,•t. lnt•htdlug pn)'·
during Winter Weeken d, Feb. 14- Spectl'Um
student
voting
wU1
oon!Jnue ot lhe late Louts 8. Mayer .
Oh,'U t ol' l'V,Jtll lH r Hgt'l.C'lJ ur~~t"s I 0
17.
unlJJ Zpm Friday.
The winners
AT THE
The
r,reliminilrY
~cbe dut e or wll) be presented al the Winter
ac tivities
h as been planned, and Weekend Bali Satu1'day, Feb. 16.
One -Stop Service Center
It proml~es a r un .packed weeke nd The Dance has 1\8 Its theme "An
laundry • Shoe Repairing
for all.
Evening in Wi'nterland " and will
Shoes and PurHS Reflnlthed
reuture Don Menz1,1,Orcheiotru.
The first major event open lo
and dyed
In addition to these actlvt .
Some 21 oollegcs and 1111lvcrs1.
All four rounds of intcrrc,nr~I
a ll who wish
to participate
Is
All typea of ladiet ' Heeh 111
ties
,
plans
have
been
made
ties
wlU
nttentl
"The
J&lt;lli:hth
Inate
debate
will
be
oper,
ti,
th,•
the snow sc ulptur e contest begln­
Stock for Reploeement
for twq movies to be shown
uing Thur.sdiiy,
Feb. H. This
tl'rnalional
Invitl\tlonol
Tiournn. Hh10ents of this school. SC'lie,htl ~•·
In the No rton conf~rcnce the..
or Re-styling
year Mother Nature bas provided
munt
of
th
e
Univ
ersity
ol'
Buf.
for
el\ch
l'Ound
will
he
publl81w&lt;1
atre,
"Breakfaat at Tiff any's"
UB with an abundant (?!I supp ly
Cn)o" whiOh will be held here n~x, ln next week's Spcrtrum
All\
ia scheduled
for
Thursday ,
of snow: this will definlteJy make
F'eb. 14, and "The Huetler " Is
weekend, F eb. 15-16. The lll111111\Igirl who would like to lll'l Hs ("I\IIIJ".
lhe snow scul pt uring a popular
slated for Friday , Admlselon
UNIVERSITYPLAZA •
fotenslc event is bein g spo risor•t•tJ tnan for lhe events should ~ubmlt
act ivity . Don't be surprised when
will be 50e.
TF 6...4041
m1mlw1
you see s uch things as whales,
l&gt;y tile varai.ty division of the oe . h~r namt: and tdcphonl:
Open 9 A. M, - 9 P. M,
i11loos, or even Ch1ulie Urown sud
A toboggan
party,
ski trlp, belt' Society. Gene1·a1 cha1i1•1uu1 to the Debate Society offa "· Hoom
his pals appearing between Norton un1l ~011
1-:ro.~L have also bel'ln p lali,. of the tournament ts Rodney B:1Lis 332 Nol'ton. Thell· dut1ri; Will h,·
and Main Street.
ned, snd more wlll be hca1·cl
1'1.bout these events in the weekr YleP.pre•ldu11t or tl1t• 1111111
11e so. t:&gt; act "" limekeepe,·s und Lu 111
lo ,·ome.
The them e for the event ,
All in nll, the Wlutei· clcty.
lmcluce U11•vl!dtfng d~batt•r~
" Fairy Tales In White," wa s
Weekend Committee beli eves Um!
An infor111al dance' will IJ,., h c•l1
submitt ed by Paula Reisaman ,
this yea r's p1•ogro.m will be psck.
wh o thereby won
freshman,
cd with entert.alnment
and fun. In Norton Ft•iday evening · fi-111
free tickets to all th e events
rut. rn p.m. to 1 n.m. Il will bE' 01,,.r
'l'lclwl!I
wJII he avHllablt'
of the w.eekend.
Two separ­
ate divisions
In the contest,
the
ticket
window
beginning lo mcmbe1·s ot the Debate Soch•ty
well as tin t..
that la, white
Monday. Also, offlcia.l programs lht• \'Isl iug t!Phnl~ri; uud tho&gt;&lt;l•
ed sno w, will provi de more
at the candy women who wilt A~t ;1,. ,•h;1i111,.,,
may bl' obtained
NOW M' T/fl•,'
opport uniti es for winning the
Nmnter.
nf the vnrious l'o11nd~ of &lt;kl&gt;ul,•

'Fairy Tales 1n White' Is
Winter Weekend Theme

DRY
CLEANIN
8lbs.to, $2.00

Annual Debate Tournament
ScheduledHere Feb.15-16

PlazaShoeRepair,

QUICK, DRY

a,

XEROX
COPIES

I

WBFO Announces Week 's Schedule
Wednesdny

evening WRFO will Unlvct•slly of Wisconsin whct'e h•·
1&gt;1•ondcast a talk by Dr. Cat'I Rog. is pro{eijso1· or psy&lt;.'hology
nnff
' 1'8 on "The Nature
of the Human
psyrhiatry .
i'lelng," Dr. Rogers Is one of Ame1·The On Cnmpus progmm hc,irt.J
1cr,'s mosl distinguished psycholo­
~ist.s and ls known a the 01·Jgi. &lt;laily 011 WBFO from 5:00-6:00
nat or or what is called "client. o( fc ra popular music uml news of
,·entered'' therapy .
He Is the author
of
hooks the most 1·ecenL of
1.; entitled
On Becoming
,,,n. This talk WIU! recorded

events.

Tht• Sp11r1~mN1 will
m11~1c.

Tht!

11rnv1d1• the

BUFFALOTEXTBOOK
STORES
, INC,

IJst or ullc•mllni;

~•:houl
int•lutl~• Ihos~ tis f:tr w~•t "" Or,•
gon and Utah. Thcs,• uniwr~ilh• •
at•c Lewis and cta, ·k and Brlghum
\'(,11ng. O~guotl Hall of lht' Uni ­
vct·sity ot Tomnto w,11 also "llt!JHI
Some or Ihe olher scho,11~ that
ha v c acct'plct.l rnvitnt,otts
a1•,•

36 10 Main Street

TF 3-7131
~~ir !-lllorl

Hnn Prlntt1,~

or
\ Jicrofilm

prici,s cull·

I
~--:.:;
_.:;.:;_
- -_-.:;.:;.:;
_-_.:;.:;.:;.:;.:;
_-.:;.:;.:;.:;.::.::.::.::.::.::.::.::.::.::.::.::.::-~~.::-~~.::...

These are but a few of

Tucker
Quick
Copy

Students who host
several this ,pi·ogram inc lude Chuck P~s .
174 PEARLST•.--,
which zynaskl , Ray Csruana,
DyanM
Tl 2-6214
Jnk
scttcr,
AJ·t
Rago
am!
Tom
Hsrpw·,
Ithaca,
Elmlrn,
Unlve1·.
a P~r­
sity of Uetcoit un,1 Colgute.
, ._ ___________
Syst,
ce.mpus

PIZZA
CORNED
am
PASTBAIII

/furic1n ly Teck Univ. BruMh I

a.t the

of the specialties at the

Universit
Delicatess

_,

--- - -=-=-=-.-

ANNOlJNCEMENT
directly

opposit~

UB

MILl 1IELLO'S

NOW AVA ILABLE
of Urgent Tnte1·est

T1tles

Pap erhack

PENUlN'S

LUGGAGE
011
1d LEATHER
GOODS

on

AFRICA
&lt; o:,.:ao

I.ABOC'I&lt; I'ROBLF:~IS
A S!IORT

HISTORY

TIIE

COUil

1:-; AFRH'A,

rn

do ilu

,,.,,,,

. l1n 1if ,

Uaulin

\\'~~ST AFI/IrA

, R"I"''

tlF AFRI CA, OllVl·I' &amp; ~·n.,-~
H PltOBLE~J,

\\ lllTt-: ~~:'l'TLJ,:R S 1:-; Ti&lt;llPI&lt;

n ,,,,,

Gifts c►f Distinction

n1sASTER. L(•1:u111

ARAB ROI.E

THE

. \1/

,,II

3588 Moln St.

TF3.7000

3400 Main Street

Hir hm o ncl

Al. \Fill ('. \

, -, ,11

1

f n • ,,,u /,n ,,1

ut

1·11
t/11

t

&lt;:nm,,\. J1u 1J.:1111
11

l ( tJ d
1T t1 1'

s ,n 1 d,111

TOWERS
ON HERTEL
:1 ll11ml~ 1:"ery S1111clr~y
948 HERTELAVENUE

*..........................
.

Courtesy 0iscouints to University Students

-

Spoon ond his
.,.~

New Locallion NOW OPEN

3400MAINST. TF3-1600
(Opposite V BJ

t+ o1110

.. .-,t'llk: ....

Aochn

,~ ,... ..

Of'd Do•14 Tt ... ,

hc,y
f

t

I

Svndoy ond Monet..,

II

TF J.8180

�SPECTRUlf.t

PAGE FOUR'

Ftidoy, February 1, 1963

REFLECTIONS

*

*

By ARNIE
IJ11~ to

One ot Buffalo's maj or drawing cards centers around
ita uncanny magnetism tor tons and tons ·of flaky white
snow. 'rhe stuff flocks t.o the city in droves, more speci­
fically, drifts . It piles up mounds along and on every
major thoro ug-hfare, making walking dangeroo11 1md driv1
ing well nigh imJ)Ossible,
But tfiere ie one areo which monoges to outdo oll
others in ih accumulotlon . Perched otop a picturesque
hill, notth of the city, ond surrounded by quaint little
apartment houns and lovely ,hopping plazas la o com­
nu1nlty of its own. It Is known ,omewhot dis-affection •
UB.
ateiy , by the maJo,lty of lh inho&amp;itants,

rls l point I n It.ff tenuou• hlstor) •,
Since World War If 1he Mnrsho11
Pion und, unwillingly,
Ul,e threRt
ot C'ommun111JJJhave help1ad IQ n,.

build li:tJrol'I' and Dlllkf1 It prlHl•
I11Intton~
peroua be)•I,nd 111ost a11e~
In s&lt;&gt;•hort u time.
The llnltt&gt;d StateR la, l~Ulle uu.
rurally, Involved In any t 111ture di.
rectlon the "new" Eurc&gt;pe wlll
undertake . Enga11:ed In a strug~II.'

with Communism. the Unit ~d State6
must lead • united tree 1vorld. •ro

meet

When they come out of class and wolk to their
cars, however, they may be in for o surprise. The first
tfiing that gree ta their eyes is the oatonlshingly clean
porlting oreo, almost devoid of cora, Then they may be
called upon to drop their books and run a~er o sinis­
ter looking relic from World War I, complete with tonk
treads and try to rip the towing block from their bumper.

Is there a solution to this problem besetti ng the happy
community of UB? The answer may possibly lie in the
minds of the carefree collegia11s who parade around the
campus oblivious to the rights of their fellows. If these
individuals would search into the confines of their brains,
somewhere bu~ied in the back they would find ~n ide11con­
cerned with common decency and consideration. They would
come upon a basic premise, recognizing other people as
human beings to be lh·ed with rather than mere llt'gan­
isms to be tolerated.

THE SPECTRUM
ltoon.a Bdltor ...... JAMES BAKER
Copy Editor

..... CHARt.ES BTO&gt;ll!l
)fl'!', ..... LARRr 8tNOJ!IR
W,a, Ad, ... TBOIIA8 HAENt.J!I, JR ,
Layout Edltor . , .. SUSAN BLOHAN

Blllllneu

BuRel!lkt, AnIrle camponell&amp;,

C.mllle l..oBra,ieo, JOl&amp;lne BArron, Mul))'n
8..-clk,
Ju&lt;llth Button , BIia.ton
Clarie-. M&amp;,.,,l11.l'ooper . Nic k Co n~t,on tlnn,
M•&amp;r~ Lou Wll• o n, Le.n,,
Frenk el, lw•u
F\1rtnn,;, Mark t'•IOnu•n, BAITY ~1.. 1etn, Oflvl~ Frey, Joey
Elm, Alan Rotrn-...n, Ju&lt;I)' J-lAber, n ovhJ Irw in, Hie)&lt; Oelm nn, B 11rbil.ra Oold •
wat•r. Ron K.am ln•kl , J ohn KnlDler, Ann• Mllnt1, Bryna Mlllma.n, C&amp;t.by
Mcttul(l1, 1,mt Lev)', ~'tftnl M~rfun,
Pottfthl lrwl11, Arn ie Muu r , Pol
Mualal. Jin, Nbon,
MaretG l11axut11.k. ,Inn,, ~omm er, ftorky
Y~r,,&amp;ce,
t.om&amp; Wall nrh, lJlll•n
Wuthuno, «~thy ~h••· 1,ln,l" Wot•,. F.•thfr Oh1••
~!'Ir. Colleen l.ong, .Allnn 1,..vi,, ,

~~~:~:z !ITAJl'l&gt;, Ru,wn

&lt;lul!lbollr,

T.nrry

:&lt;ct1ull x,

ltluroIw,

inil;'ht

enterprise
which
burgeoning,
unbellevlable a
wa• somewhat
decade
ago , And, for m1llltary
reatons, the U.S. n eeds a strong
defen1lve alliance with l:urope
so that our own safety might
be Insured.

hlal

The

or tht!

abovP o e~es• itle;s, tile.r e 11&lt;
au11h1. ]\)\"Pl\ Congr,ass, not

llttlo

kno"' u lo lie 1wrtfcouturly1rol'word.
lool&lt;lnl{, hns renl!v.r~ Lh11,I11ve11111st
more I.hon mnintn!n 0111· 111·es1,ut
ri,l11tlo n11hlf&gt;, and iH•fed acc ordingly
In 1111.st n11: 1h e

rr i&gt;sJaeut'k

Spectrum

irndo

11111,

Asks

How evvr, dlfCkul tleij d•~ llrlse
whN111v1,r nntlontt nltempt to s olvn
l!Omrnon flroblems, no matter
Ule
1•111,~ofor whit·h th t•y mai, unite.
In th~ 1&gt;ers1,eetlve or U.S. inter.

es~,

~h•cmJllan bns

t1 t.&gt;CJt•t'rtlth•~1

been highly

bending

Rrlr.oJn'e pol­
lt•y ro tonrorru
to Watiihlngton
•l1t11rl~rds,Other ~Juropean nntionM,
thOll!t'h morn het!itaot
11nd called
1111 loij~ often tho11; llreat nrlta.ln,
have 1tlso heen rollowlng the 1:.s,

This week The Spect rum asks Claude E. Puffer
vice-presidtmt for bus iness affnfrs;
Wh() ow1111
n11d01,eratcs the bookstore i,i N&lt;n·ton
a11rlwhe1·edo the ,p1•ofitsgo?

In essence, the bookstore is owned by the student
body. Legally, it is owned and operated by the Faculty .
Student Associl,tion of State University of New York al
Under th e leaderahlp of de
Buffalo,
Gaulle, France has become a
major
obstacle
to the' unity
This ia !\ non-proli,l corporation created "to promot~
and progre ■ a of the Atlantic
and cultivate educational and social relations among the
alliance, l'/luch can be ea Id fo r
student&lt;! and faculty of the University by assisting the m
his policy. However, hit Image
in every way possible in their education and in the ir stud)',
of a "grandeur"
for France,
work , 'living and extra curricular activities incidental
his supernatlonat11m, and hi•
thereto."
paternall1tlc attitude
toward
West Germany and the Com­
The Association is managed by representativea of tht
mon I'llarket. contradict
the
11dministration,
fnculty and students ~f t he Unive~sity. Tl1,t
Image of a 11nlted progrc1aslve
student representatives are the president and vice presi­
Europe. He may Jndeed b,e up.
dent of the Student Government.
llftlng French morale and sta.
billzing
French
government,
All the assets of the Bookstore are owned by the Fa l'•
but his Napoleonic ego can be
ulty-Student Association. The employees, including Mi
A menace
to future homogen .
Harry Chaskey , manager, rec¥ve salaries from the Asso•
elty, and at the very 1011st, o
nul11ancc ,
ciation. Their sole function is to provide the books and
su
pplies which you, the st11rlent body, and the facultr
I l&lt;'fPnd~r~ or dt• n1111lle's lnd,•­
pend ~ot line reply tbnt ollller na. need fo t· your academic work .
,·ue. All natfnv s, thut 18,ext !epl tor
011t•- Frunc11,

lions lrnvp a• m uoh nt stnke In
lh~ ro ld wnr ns doe'&gt;J 1b,a 1'.8.,
1111
'1 m11sr th ere fore ex E1rt uu
,., 111111t11rl11eooe u,•er NATO 1)01lcy. 11(1 to S!l(lnk.
Thal would be
Now York Gt rrue enouKh, Ir any olber nation

Tho official atu denl n•w•p •1&gt;er ol the Sl&amp;te Untnr•lty
of
B111b,lo. PubllcaUoo Office at Nori.on B&amp;11, U•l veroltY campu1, Bw!'alo u,
l'f, Y. Publlohecl weeklJ fron, th e llul week of Septembor lo thn Ju t week
ta J\S\tll, e.xcapt tor fl.J:n.m uerlod&amp; 1 ThAnke&amp;h 1 Jn,-r, ~ hrl1JtmAA 1rnd r-:11,t~r.
Edltor,tn-Chltl
- JOAN R, FL.ORV
N• ,.,. E&lt;lllo, , , MARY LO U WILSON

Ol!JNl!!BAL ST All'F : ' .oulao Bank, Vlntorta

••hallen11e, no IDd!'pen.

For economic
rcaaoria
the
U.S. must Htlsfacto r lly ar rang e
a role for tta elf with the, Com .
mon Market,
tl,at farsighted ,

The community of UB has its own personal govern­
ment, police force, recreational facilities, stor es, newspape r ,
magazines, department of public works, snow plows, AND
parking lot.&lt;i. It is in the parking lots that the true charac­
ter of the UB inh abitant blossoms forth in all its glorious
sple ndor . 'During the warmer month s the UB-ite's parking
behavior is, of course, above reproach. But in the winter,
one occasionally hearA of a problem.

But there is a way out for those who occasionally get
blocked in , , . they may park in any one of the numerous
visitor lots such as the one between Foster an(! Crosby,
or the st,W\ciousram p in front of new Norton.

the

deut •hlrd ror ce,
11rove di ,;;1htrou1,

°'

We rea lize that the blame for this behavior can only
be placed on the men who drive the snow plows. How
could we po1111iblyrationaJjze and put the responsibility
on the stude nts? It is obvious that a collegian rus hing
off late to a class could hard ly be awa r e of bl()('king an­
other car!

M J\ZUIR

XasR1u1 ,,g,•eNneul

reol'hed by Preshieut
Kennelly and
Brltah1 'R Prime ~lh1l~ter M11c mma11,
All!nn c e le Bl n _...,,,
tb P Atluntlr

Snow and the Student;
A Casefor Consideration

Evety once In o while, the white llnes criss-cross,.
Ing tho blacktop ore ever so slightly obscured by o
whlaper of puffy white snow. The drivers who use these
lots "forget" where the lines ore painted and ore forced
to. pork wherever o space is ovoiloble , Unfortunotely
these "1paces" ore occasionally directly in front of on­
other cor. Of course this makes it impossible for $Ome
cars to move, let alone make on exit from the lot,

lhe

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS

bad as much k.Dowledge a,nd ex-

Who gets the profit? Any ond oll net income de•
rived from the operation of the Bookstore belongs to the
Association. Such income con only be u,e cl to promote
the purposes for whic~ the Association wos founded. In
other words, the profits con only be used for the gen­
eral benefit of studenh ond foculty.

11eri"'nce of the cha.lteug,!B and
d i!Tlr nl lles of the world
strug.
~le.
For how l'J\D a n11M
o n llk e
Fronc~ . with such limited knowl­
etli:e or modern warfare, h1opo to
1·oncetve ns ndequn.tll n defe nsiv e
11ollcy ns Ihle' {1. S.?

At the time of merger of Th~ Univer sity of Buffak.
with St.ate University on September 1, 1962, it w~s _nece~
sary for the newly-ereated Faculty-Student Association t
pur chase all the assets of the Bookstore and all th_evend·
ing machin es. The Association, therefore, started its c~r•
eer with a debt of approximately $420,000. This entir ,
ft mh:ht hi- I.hot ll S. 1inllt1nry a mount must be naid to Statfl Univer sil,y ovei· the next fe~•
,trnte~rlet$ hove ~hoRen th, • wrong, years.
Ther efore during this period, part of each yea~ t
or less etrective pollcy.
Elut nt ­ profit from Book~tore and vendin~ machi°!1
es will !fO :·
tMk~ n~nlnst the l l. S. bne,ea up. repay the inrlebtedness. The remainde r will be avmladhl
_
o)n thP Idea lhat the U. B. may
for student a~tivities or other benefits to the stu dent bo ~
be " un relfable " tu the tlete,n.se ot
WPSlern

Eurol)e,

n11d lrrntlonal.

are unfound ed r-------tn fact, U. S. ln.

t&lt;&gt;rl'SI~ are so bound togethe r wi t h
1,ot only Euto1,e, but w!Ut every
On,•e11•, 1111t!ou, that our coun tr y's for .

etim Jl011Cl' Dll\Y hie' crlUcl2 ed tnr

l11•ini: o"Prl.; lot.oruartonatllst
In
th" ib:h1 of lllatory thla rru~1ul
flOinr In the present slate ot the
11lflnncc mny be terme d tbu mere
flllly

of

11nnnrlrnl
t hrotlf'

,le On111ll'. )'rete n,~er to
hul 110 l/\n,i:er eriste ur

-ARTS

---------------

­

&amp; SC IENCE S JUNIORS:

H IA 1h, r e~ ponsll&gt;lltty
ot eYery student to Ole, 11,l t.\o
Olflc(l t•f Adntll'llloos nn.t n11~ords, 201 ft a)•es Hall, a !ormo.J
,&gt;pJ1Ucn11o n ror cJei,:reP 1h1rlr1K his junior
year l&gt;ut in oo c:i.se
!Iller thn11 ten months lll'IC'r to tbe !IIHO of grnd n nUon.
U be
fttllH tu 111:0\w a111•llt-:,tto11, th, U1tiv~r•ltY
h not res1&gt;&lt;&gt;nslflle
ror llls gr11t111nlton

ir n • tudlml
noLUy tile Orrtce

l'bBHI'•'• th,· dnl e ,,( /:;l'ntlnntion, be &amp;houM
Adml!o sk,n• nm! necords
of lhia chaoge.

ot

�frldoy, February1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PACEFM

Marfino Lecture•s
On Dental Needs
''O nly about 0DQ.tblrd 0~ the
dental ne&amp;cla of the 110.Pulatlo111are
The big news tllla week la of oourse, rUllhlng. The IFC mixer pl'()ved being Lreated.'' Dr. Nicholas n.
vary NWardlng, and Sunday's PanheUenlc Convocation la expected Marllno told the Kenmore lltollher'a
to bo one of the best ever. Next on the Ust will be informal rush Club LhlM "'eek al tbe KeDIDI0re
parties, coke parties, bidding, and finally pledging. Happy days are YWCA.
hete agaJn!
Dr. Mnrllbo, acting h ead ot the
Meanwhile, Win ter Weekend la coming up wH.h'snow sculpturing department of perlodontology bore
for all . Well, at lea.st there's plenty ot snow thla year.
also told the mothe rs, "Tb e 11,revn,.
Eesl ot luck to the Sammies for a very successful Soiree. Other leoce oC oral diseases In a ra ,pldly
expanding
population, the sbor!Jlge
news ....
Th e brothers of Alpha Epsilon Pl were very happy to welcome the or trllloed denllats, and the cost
or dental tre:itment make ft liopoe­
large group of perspeoolives who at tended their first l'\lljh stag of this
sible, with the present atal ~e or
still young semester at the 300 Club. Til e brolhars urc planning an knowledge, to attain de ntJ\l b,eallh
open party for this weekend.
tor all.''
Alp ha Gamma Delti. Sorority looks f orward to meeting the
Quoth1g from the "Survey of
rusllees Sunday at the Convocation Tea. AU ruahees are Invited to
of Dentletry ," oonductod by ·the
t.lle informal party Tuesday e vening
American Council on EdtSo••
Tbe brothers Of Alpha. Kllppa Pal would Uke to thank tho sisters
t lon, he polt11od out that ab,out
o! Sigma. Delta Tau and the brothers of Alpha .Phi Delta for Monday 's
$2 bl lllon II ■ p e nt Wnually for
socls.l. The brothers congratulate
the new memb ers . Th e first rush
dent al care In thla count:ry .
ata g wlll be held Friday evening at the Old Post Inn, 3151 Main Stree t. " It everyone who needed d1en.
The brothers o! AJph&amp; Psi Delta thank the sisters or SOT and the
tat o• re reoelved It , t he coat
brothers of AK.Psi for the fine social Inst Monday. In!Uation for the
would be SS bllllon per yea1r,"
,
tau pledge clal!B wU! be held this weekend .
he uld ,
Or. RllYJllonc1Ewell , vlcc.presl . v:, rloll~ m1nlatrlos or the lntllAII
The brothers of Alpha Phl Omega welcome 12 new brothers la.sl
The
only eolutlon Lo the pro]Dlem, dent for resenroh, has Jett for r.,wemmen t porllcularly the M.ln·
Satur day evenin g with a dlMer dance at the Airways Hotel. Con.
gre.tul atlona are ottered to newly Installed president, J im Nixon . Dr. Marllno contends, Ia to find India and will be gone f or about !~try or He avy Industrle.s, the
Ministry or Economic and Defense
Th e br ot hers or Alpha Sigma Phi have electod tholr officers for now measures ror tile preve :nllon five weeks. He will serve as a con•
of tooth decay and oral dleea.aee. sultan t to the Govemrnent ot In. Coordination, a nd tbe Plannln,
l96B.6•. Congrat ulations to Done.Id SplnelU who head.a the UBL Best
dla. uudur the epcoaorabll) of tlhl Comm laslon .
"The knowledge required to meet
wishes for th e coming year.
He w111 ~ conlerrlo g wllll
Ford Foundation. Dr . Ewell wlll
Last Friday the brothers of Beta Phi Sigma had a. bowling party the!!e needs can come , only thr ·ough
Prime Minist er Nehru nnd other
advise
the
Governmen
t
of
Ind
ia
o.t the Suburban Lanes on Niagara Falla Blvd. Thb Saturday the r915earah," he said,
on the design and location or 15 members Qf the Oablnet. Dr. Ewell
broth ers ar e holding a toboggan party al Chestnut Ridge Park.
"Tho~e enig a ged lo dental re. to 20 major fertilizer plants which will sp,mu most of hla s\Aly ln
beginning at 12:00 noon. Last week ll'UIJlY of th e brothers went on a eearob are trylog to dete rml ni, the
Will be bullt during th e next ten lndia in New Deihl with el'lor t
Sc hool of Pharmacy trip to tho Uni ver sity o.t Toronto.
1u11l
bnelo ~lologlcal fa ctor H thal uo. years at a coat o! $600 to f 800 mu. vlslt.s to Calcutta, Madru
The Ohl Omep'a welcomed three new slsten at Initiation laBt derlle denlAI health and oral 418• Uon. The con.structlon Of U,e.se Hfderabnd . On bis way t.o India,
Sunday. The ceremonies wer e followed by a d!Mer at Leonardo's eaae. Tbey ar e att~mptlng lo learn
plants )!I essenUaJ Jf I ndla'a food he wlll visit Or , l,yltt Gliitjl)r lJI
Restaurant. The slaters are looking fo.rward to meeting the rushee s how teeth and bones develop, bow productio n ls to kt!t!P pace WIU\ •~1anbul. Qn.l on hh, return trip
at I.he Panhcllenlc Tea on Sunday
~allva lnlluencea the teeth , bow her expand!~ population,
Ile plnns to vlalt Mrs. Ewoll'11 rcJ.
Onmma Phi will hold a rush stag p arty tonight at the Balley bacteria affect the 01111 eol·lron.
Dr. Ewe!. will be working with utJv~~ In C:i;ecbosl1wakla.
Bowling Academy . The party Is open. Three new offi cers were eleot.ed ment, bow gums aocl teeth pr,Dvlde
cluea to body bealtb , and bow
Monday night.
The frat;-es of Phi EPllUoo Pl Fmtemlty jnlt.ate their pl edge on certain foOd elements affeet oral
Sunda.y afternoon. They hope the rush(M!a enjoyed the atag last week, tissues.''
a.nd the pledges enjoyed their Royal Day .
He emphasized that arter the
The broth ers of Phi Kappa Psi Invite all reg\ster od rwrhees to a age or thirty m ore teeth are lost
Following 11 the st11leU1ent hr that dlscrlmla11Uon o n aoovunt or
stag rush party tonight at the Niagara Manor, Niagara Falla Blvd . bee4uee oC pyorrhea tbao all olbllr tile U.S. Natlouu1 Stude nt Aesool~-1 rnee, color, crooa. retlglc,m, oc
tloo relntlv~ to Lho !Janning or I oullouul urhdu 8houlll noL 1111
prt.c,.
rea.eona combine d.
tnd Jilggert.
n1t,tl0oal Greek organlaaUoue ()ti tlced to 11ny 5001111 org•nlit1Llon.
The slaters of Phl Sigma Sigma are rnoldng plans for alt the rush
"Contrary
to
public
oplnlo,n,"
tbl&amp; campus. There ll1 11lso ~ It beU,ove.., however I.hill n11U011a
l
tunotlona tllat are coming up during the week. Th ey're all looking
he aald, "the areateat maJ01•lty etll.tement fro,,, the local chnpto•r. t 1me rnal orl(anh8tl;► nk In which
forward to meeting Ule t'uahees at thle Sunday Convocation, and al
dt
11ertmlnulloo
affe~ted
lly
pyo••l~U
dooa
nul
\Ix.let
en
of
teeth
the coke parties that foll ow on Monday. The fll.11'62 Pledge Clas s
FACT
can be ■eved for many year,,
oontrllmte to 1he eduo11t1on11tJ)ro,
has had their 90rority hymn a.ccepted Into the national Pht Sigma
If not permanent ly.
Cl'e8 by·
The
Trustee~
of
the
State
Uni­
Sigma Song Book Th e }tymn has been adopled by Delta Chapter
"There are very rew caeoa Ytbere versity of New York. 11ccora1ng I £ncoun1glog 11nrt1ct11atlon 111,
u their official song.
to ll re&lt;:solutlou or Octobor g_ lll53,
Tomorrow night th e Samm.lea will pretienl their Twelfth Annual bleeding gum s ual\Dot be lmp1roved a rb ttrurlly for bid socl11l org11nl•­ awar eoese of, not only Lile 10&lt;."IJ
Solree. Enterl.alnment Will be p rovided by Dave Cheakln and his or comple te ly bealed, howeveir, re. allon~ on an.y ui•il of the state e11mpua orgao utoo, hut thM na.
orchestra, and dress for the evening wlll be semi-formal. An over. eellrcb ls continuing In this very unlvorslt1 eystem to have nftll. llonal organ lnllou 8ll woll.
whelming amount ' of tic kets bas boon alread y sold, bu t you can •llll complex area ."
'-!. Er•cour11jtlni; tliu coll11l)arl80
n
latton o.bove t be locl\l level.
purchase your tickets from any Sammy or at the door. Th e brothers
or Ideals 11nd pr~m•u•~ 111 dilfer­
Dr. Martino also empbaelzod tbe
1,
1962,
the
Uni.
September
ot SAM thank theae !Tat.res who made the Tower Twlal Party uooh dentist's role lt1 tbe eo.rty dletsc.
ent campuHos, ovur~omlog tho
11er1lty of 8uff1lo, formerly •
provlnclallty (osl.llre,I hy the l•ck
tton ot oral cnncer.
a success.
pr ivate unlvoralt)', became a
The slaters of SDT have begun the new semester under a new
of efllcleut ehuuuel~ ol toiet.
ttate Institutio n. The Unlver.
"Approximately
twenty.l\ve
tho
u,
c&amp;m1&gt;1u,eommunlcatloo.
adm inistration.
Congratulation
to new prealdent Sandie St rome .
111)' of Buff~lo'e n1tlonal fr~.
e&amp;
nd
people
develop
mouth
111~o
eer
Mnny thanks to tho brothers of AKPsl and APD for the very enjoyable
ternltles an d aororttlea at th l1
Ill, USNSA dl11pprov•1 of
eacb year In the U. 8 .." he aold.
eocllll !Mt Monday night . Thanks also go to the pledges for I.he grael "Th&amp; American Cancer Socleti1 hna
time may be forced to abolltll
«ny polloy of t ho Tru■ten
party they held for the sisters last Wednesday. The sisters are ell 1,olnted Out that the deotlat'e role
all affiliation with nat1011alor.
of the StAte Unlvertt ty of
looking forward to Convocation this SUnday and the coke party In the dete cLlon of early oral can.
ganlzatlona. Thi• action would
New Vork denyln 9 •ny uu ,
Jeop«rd l2e tho scope and q11al­
Monday. They hope to see many lntereated rullheea. Those who hav e cer ta crucia l ror severol ren aons .
dent the right to Jot11 non .
lty of t heir progr am, .
not heard the album called "The Slgs Sing" are mlsalng a great Fir st, h!a working time and Inter.
dlacrlma t ory
111tton1I, fra.
new tradllion on the UB campus. The sisters extend their tha.nks est are concerned with the oral
orga nlzai!o n at th •
Tb 1• llnlvet'AIIY ot nuttalo na. ternal
University or 8uff:1lo,
cavlly and, lbere Core, ho baa, lhl' tlonul cbuptors have no dlscrlm.
to Sig EP for their wond e rful Idea.
The brothers or Sig EP will hav e a rush party from 9.1 al the opportunily to recognize a syrnplo­ IMtory c!aueea 111their conetltu.
MANDATE
Club Sl)erldan which la locat~ on Sheridan near Millersport . For matlc lesions that represent early tlons an&lt;\ non-dlscrlml11atory prac.
transportation conta ct Bob Haight at TF2 .126 ~. The broU1ers thank cancer. Secondly, an Ind Iv I duu I tlaee' are avonrenl.
Tbo IGtb NCUI0MI 8tudonl Con.
realizes t hat something IA
the IFC f or the fine job done concerning I.he mixer last Tuesde.y tbst
groaa mand11tu the national - ~14Cf
PRINCIPLE
lo advise the TrusleeH of tile
night. The brothers enjoyed the party lllst Saturday night at Warren's wrong In bis or her mouth will
usually consult a deotlat . Tibere.
state
Untverelty of New York,
Steak House.
I, The unlverelly must not rB­
fore, tbe dentist often bu the first
As a charity project, Theta Ohl Sorority has ad0pted a 12 year opportunlty to recognize or sua. strict tho Creedom ot choice ana tho New York State Legtalalu n,,
the
Governor
of lbt State of Ne w
old orplum Liong Yu Fah, whO lives In Hong Kong. The sisters wish pect eerlf can.cer ID the mouth, the treedom or a11sodatlon which
lo thank the brothers of TKE for the social laBl Friday. Th.ey extend l)oth to l)atlente who may be otal . a ro prere&lt;1ulslles to a deruo('ratlr York, -.od tb~ Uolver■ lty of D11t.
I
,
tongr atulatlons to Nanette Balk who received the outstanding p ledge ly unaware or anything "1'0ng and society and personal developmMl. falo or thl • r••110lu1lon
award at the dinner do.nee la st Saturday The sisters are looltlng In those who have spec\Jlo rom- Tbe Ideal towar~s which a unlver .
Th e 16th N111lo11t1l
Sluduo t &lt;'uo.
l)lllnts..
slty ahoul(I etnve I.a that or 1, grNI~ tur1ber naodate•
tbe n11forwa rd to meeting the rusheea th.Lsweek.
·
domocrstl(· educational commun,
tlonal IUl.ff to l!ltlbll•h
11.eU't fl
lty In which treedom of cbalce 1·onm1un1c~t1on-wllh tho Nt.tlooal
ADOY MATES!
&amp;od freedom ot RSsoclMlon are lnter-lhllternlty
con reren ce and
The rrJxer committee Invites
allowed to exlat.
lb~ NaUonal Pt1n.lfoll11nlo ConCer ­
everyone al the mtormal sh tr­
II The eductttloual proce11 ei­ once, advli!ln,; theoe orw1nrnt1o n1
wreck party tonight. It will be tende beyond tbe classroom, o.nd of thl1 re..olutlon .
beld In the multJ..purpose room Include, within Ill &amp;111\11
'
' Tbu Nall0l\111 St11deot ANOC!la.
publication was In New 8rllj~ h from 8:30.12:00 p.m. Admission
Oentae Levertov, an America n
1. Preparing atudentl or , ..
Poelll an anthology
edited
by ta t ree. retree!lment.s wut b,.
lion Sworln,r Committee her. fllt17
1,oet of Welsh a.nd Rusata.nJewtsh
IPO"llblt
participation
In
eo­
•«roo, wltb tb~ National lbecu.
Reuoth , publtahed In served, a.nd mualc will be pro ­
t1~11a
ent, will i;ead from h.er work s ReMeth
olety ,t all ••vcll, Cll'r'IPU8,
tlvll f'om111ltt011 111Jl.tR1e11t of
vided by the Merrtmen.
al 4:00 p,m . next Friday Jn the 1948 by New Dlreellorui .
oommunlly, 1t1te,
national,
11 h&lt;&gt;v ◄•
'
In a front pag e article In ''Th e
Exhlbl tlon Room Of LockWood Li­
and 1,.t,rnatlonal,
New Yol'k Tl.mes Book Review,"
~'u, tbor. thi.t If dl•crtn,taatiou
brary.
2. Promotl"g aw1renn • of
Ml'. Rexrot:h wrote:
·•She ha.!
I• l11de(l(Ipra ctlc M. we be1Je'8 I.he
IH UOI and opl"I0"I
bt)'o"d
Since her a.rrlval In the United evolved a style Of her own. clear
"1111,, would bo Juatllle4 I.II llJIY
tho C,11mpu1lovel.
States In 19'8, Mias Levertov has 11Jl&amp;l'8C, Immediate
and vibrant
ltlC,mpt to ollmlnata thll DIUOll&amp;I
Published four books of verse: with a very special sensibility an ~
ttlltl'rnal •r•teui at ihll U'llt• e.r.
DECLARA"l"ION
Here and Now (City Ughl.8 completely feminine lnalght. Sh &lt;
•It&gt;" ot nuffi.lo, for dltor lml.Datloo
I,
Fr
oodom
of
uaoclallon
lo.
1957 ) , Overland
to the bland ta the most tubllY aklllful poet of
In t•d11QatlouI• lncompAtlble ,rtlh '
1•l11desfree dom to Join a nAtlODQI human !'Quality. Uowner, lllaCl'IQI..
IJo.rgon, 1958), With Eyee at her genemUon, the moat profound ,
tratema.l
orgaol1a.tlon
.
Denyln,
tbl1
lo1Uoa bu b.len ~ fut l!d at tb•
lho Back of Our Beads (Nev. the most DU&gt;deat.the most rnov.
opportunity Qt tbo Ualv ertl ty ol llnlvereltr ot '8u1fal&lt;&gt;,
and proof
Direct ions, 1960), and The .i n­ Ing ."
auttalo woul1I b&amp; abro11~llnlf th~ nf ttl,~r1mlMUOO roel.t w1tb Ult
During
1961, Mlsa Levertov
to h'• I.Adder
(New
O(rectlon
BtU(l4lnl'I freed0DI to ChOOIO tho St at !I Board oC Tra.tHt . 011 I.bat
served e.s poetry editor ot "The
1961).
\&gt;'~ of orpoliaUon
wlt.h trblch ba■la, turtbl'II' ID'l'tetlptlo11 Into
The poet•a CJrsl book, 'Iii ~ Nation' ' magazine.
be ntftllat ra,
the fraterna l a11tem la _..,.,
1'he rea.dl~ la open to the puh .
bnuble 1ru.ag-e was publlahed In
11 USNSA rw.CAruu 11.e bRllflf -.ad Important .
Ile.
l,011,'lon,19'6 , S:er tlnit AmerlCAJ\
8y ANNE MIINTE

Dr. Ewell Visits New Delhi;

Talk With Nehru Planned

Ruling of State University Trustees

On Greeks, Evokes NSA Statement

Noted Poet to Read Work
In Lockwood Library, Friday

�PAGESIX

SPECTR.U

I,.

Friday, Februory1, 1963

OrchestraPlans
Students' Conic:ert

Deatlne perform, ''Witch Doctor Da~"

Destine Company Performs
"Fiesta in Haiti" Program
Jean Leon Destine and his Hal.
' The program will tuse two cul.
tlan Dance Company will appear turat traditions of Halli - the At­
here Tuesday, Feb . 12 In the Hnr • rloan ond the French. Some num ­

bers tncluded are: "Revolt of tho
Slaves", "Witch Doctor Dance",
the "Creole Mazurka " and "Congo
Tropical".
He has appeared on major tele­
vision programs Including' the
Ford Omnibus Show, CBS'a Ad.
v~nture Serles from the Museum
or Natural History In New York ,
as well os the "Scope Show" from
Toronto.
Destine and his dance company
have just retumed from n tour
in Europe. For reservations call
Mrs. Ruth Sha w, !1602.

1'1m&amp;11A udltorlum. Deatln e and
are touring under the
auspices or the RepubUc of Haiti
Admission for faculty and ate.U
will be $1.00 ; students Will be ad.
milt ed free ot charge.
hi! group

The program will range from
the, French-Halllan d a n c e II to
primitive voodoo ritual dances. He

aleo will JJr&lt;'sentAfro-West Indlau
modem Rnlt lan and ancient slnvo
dances . The repertoire Includes ftrr
dantes. mnrlcet dances. carnival
and courUng scenes.

Debate Society To Sponsor
Individual Events Tourney

'l'he University orchestra , known
By KATH L EEN SHEA
the "Improm ptu" and "oxtem .
as the 11 UB Little Sym1pbony••,
The novice d1vlslon ot tbe De­
poraneoua epeaklng event,. In
under Dr. Robert Mols, W'ill give
both, the conte■ tant le given
a concert featu1'1ng atude1~t 90Jos bate Society will begin, Its debate
a choice of topi c from a ll1t
Thursday, Feb , 7, 8:30 p.m, in activities tor tbe second semes ter
Feb. 8 and 9. Two teams wlll be
of thr ee.
Baird Hall. Admission ie 1:ree and sent to a tournament on tbe Ca.
In the forme r, the speakeT la
all students and facul ty &amp;re in• nlslus College campu s. The erent
given from 3-6" minutes to pr epare
vited to attend.
Is being sponso red Jointly by Ca. bis speech. The extemporaneo,a
speake r le given an hour to mako
The purpose of the orchestra, nlslus and D'YouvJlle Colleges.
according to Dr , Mole, la " to The novloe group , will also par. preparation. "In terpretive reading•
which Is the final grouping. One llterau
make the opportunity of perform• llclpate In the~ournament
Jng a concer to available to tho the varsity div. Ion Is sponsoring selectlo n ts chose n Crom tbree. One
here
Feb.
16-1
.
Thia
Is
possible
hour Is then afforded the contes.
advanced and competent student
"non.apecfned" or tant to prepare bis rendering or
performers." The student soloists as the event
opon
to
botb
vice
and
varsity
tile
work .
will be the key figures of the Fe b. teams.
Any
atudent who wishes to rep.
7 progro,m, which is a c,onc.erto
An Individual Events Tournament sent the University In this tour.
program.
wtll be Jointly spon sored by lbe nament should contact the depart.
The performer• and t heir con­ novice and variety divisions o! the meot of droma and 11peecb. It
c~rtos are: Gerald Stearns, vio­ Debate Society and by the Madrl. conching la desired, It may be ob.
linist, Bruch concerto; Charle s gal Reading Society. Ther e are lalned.
Tbe novice division of I.be De.
Walthall, clarinetist, WehEir con­ four events in which oonleetanta
bate Society welcomes new mem.
certo no. 1; Richard Gu1rluiz1.
o, ll1lLY participate.
The ftr■t le "Individual ora.
beral A to tal or eeven have Joined
trumpeter, Haydn conieerto,, Clara
tory." Thi• le a prupared ■peech
the grou11 this 11eme,iler. Practice
Han, pianist, M~art concerto no,
of s . 10 mlnutee In length on
debates are scheduled as rollowa:
23 .
a non -eontroveMll al topic. Two
3.6 p.m, Wed".eedaya in lH Crosby
other eventa Involve le" op.
The orchestra will ])('rfo1rm the
an d Thursday aftornoone In 119
portunlty
to
prep
ar
e.
They
are
Crosby .
overture to the Marriage of Figar o
by Mozart to ~pen the pr-ograrn
U ........

I

iif

.UUUjltitt

UNCAifi;JIIJY
8IIIUND
la u lflfot1tttaltltrtl
A
_,_
Plctul'II
CHILD
:.'. IS

JOI! RICOAMD THI
BUFFALOJAZZ FESTIVAL
PRISINT

--=-

1

~

r.#

WARING

i ~· ••

fAlll5I

2ndWEEK
al-

STUDENTDISCOUNTTICKETS
few oll P"'1•01111 moy be purchased upon p,...ntation of I.D. coNl1

CINEMA
Sprlnl" Weekt'nd

Appllcatton1 tor all those wish­
ing to work on a committee f ol'
Spring' Weekend are available at
the candy counter on lhe first
floor of tl\e Union. Oompleted
forms can be returned t&lt;&gt;room 205
Norton by Wednesday. There ar~
openlnga on tho Stunt Night, pub.
llclty , awards and Judgc11commit.
tees ,
•

•

♦

P!l)'cbOlor;y Club
'I'he undcrgntduate Psychology
club will meet today at :l p.m, i,
Townsend 214. All majors and
prospl'Ctlve majors nre welcome.

slty or Buf falo section, wlll he he.Id
In Norton, room 233 Tuesday, Feb.
111 from 7 :00 to 10:00 p.m. All
who are interested are Invited to
leave their names with Mt-. Jo.
seph Paft le In Norton or w see
Dlck Mnyberry or Ed George In
Norton , room 233 any Tueedny
evening.
There wllJ be a lee of U.0 0 for
it
schOlnstlcally eligible players. Al-'
though lnellgib'le students may
2.50 - 3,50 - 4,50 • 5.,00
participate, their scores will not
All Seots Resfflled
bP.
f or ran klng. A ny
Moll
oNlen
with llolMI
4•11, ,...,,., HOW,.,,.o1o,..
, subn 1ltted
044 ,._,
lwo students Who deslre to play as
•"'•k
ot
i. ,u,.,,Lo
partners may eubmlt their names
together. Other teams wilt be set
N . Y.
up at the director's discretion.~ ••-••••••••••••-••••~---....,-.,....--':•

SUN.
Mar.101h
8:30
Kleinhans
Music
Ball

l'r----------•-

,,,f,

JOE RICO AND BUFFALO
JAZZ FESTI
VAL PRESIHT

A Show For The Entire Fomily

,J,\

(No School ihot Frldoy)
".:'.
$2.SO, $3 .00, $4.00 , $5,00 - All Seats R-rved

Tlckou

awd hlaarch-.tre

KLEINHANSMUSIC HALL
Sun., Feb, 24th, 8:30 P.M.

on Soro Feb.

11th ot

Donton',;

ORDO YOUlSEATSNOWI

Sample H..-te

NORTH
!,

~

.--.-

AT 8 :30

SEE
BOTH FEAT
AT
8 :30

fl

'
'"

TF 6-7'411
1428 Ht1rte l

N&lt;:NI wit~f-oddresaod.

?s:"o..,,~·
Waldon

- ........ o.n..., ____

1011113-;;,tt-T■&amp;

11:VEIUNQI ll

&lt;•:t~;.
,a:iJ.;•;
~."""

flrl .. 1,1.. a,u:11Hoo1an
MA1'1Nll8
ac. 1 ,0 0 P.fll•

,-,_•l tt♦l. ........

'2."~

"•tt.t•t•a

Note :
What Woud You
Do If You Hc,d 2
Houn To Live. See
What Cleo D1oes.

.. l!il'lll1I

■ox 0"1011
OPIN
DA 11.Y 1 0 A.M.•I l'.111.
&amp;UIIIIIAY HOON,I P.M.

l.00
1.eo...z,0 0

..~-:=~~~·~•IIUp
:t:
1.00.l

floWlt lf«~t

A~
•• ., ... ., • ......,.._
f.JWIIIZ(ji{J,. .......... ,

;:::.:,:.~•--

I OHIIOULlt 0~ IIHltftHO
en ,T
ANO PUIFOIIMANO1t8
'PAIOIII
1:19 P.M.

......

..GLEEFUL
MADNESS
I"

$2..SD-$J.J0-$4.50-$S,OO

~

Mmo-trullli
·WYER,..

SNEAK
PREVIEW
fC~\,Ei:
IA
Tonight

FERGUSON

...~:.
twt•I ond

STARTS·FEBRUARY 71

M.-.IL ORDERS NOW WITH SELF·AOORESSED,STAMPEDENVE~OPE
. SENID
CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO IIUHA LO JAZZ 'CSTIVAl , OENTOM,
COTTIER &amp; DANIELS, 32 COURT STREET, BUFFALO Jf NEW YORK.

...
MAYNARD

~~!;

EXCLUSIVEAREAENGAGEMENT

nwni,B

,

8:30 P.M.

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL -

fAIOU
S
ORCHESTRA

---, «.:'"~!oi:
u,,AlO J'ftt ,.r.
m:Z.Holltl W..ibr oo)&lt;. 0.1-.

S..m Fell. 7, "TWO FOR THI SIISAW,"
Shirley MeclolM, Rol,ert Mltdn1111

mwia~

STAR OF "MY SON THE FOLK SINGER"

THURSDAY,FEBRUARY21 ■t

Moll ord,u

The Poulon Of PhO&lt;!dta • . • who ot Iha IIOffll MOMlnl
embtac«I lwrr love one! hi&lt; &lt;!Htructlon.
'?M.uD!tA " atom tlelly o1 I 110, 1:20, S ,JO, 7:45 ond ♦ :SJ
4 Lei. s,,.,_ OYffY Sot111doy■t 11 :55

M3
ALLAN
SHERMAN

Bridge Tourw.ment

■HIN~itm~

"PHAEDRA"o Violent Dromo of Profane Love

..

JOI RICO AND BUFFALOJA%% FlSTIVAL PRESENT

6th Dromatic Week

Molino M,rcouri, •ttt1tony Porlun1, Rof Vollofoe
In Jul•• Oossln's Production of

~'!fo~o~m!r"
...ir:.-•
;:'~'1

The annual lntercolleglatc Cum
pus Bridge Tournament, Unlvcr•.

\\11\1

Buffolo Pn1mlere Engagement

HELDOVER -

"'•"'t•••

...

THEATRE OF DISTINCTIO..
TL 3-8805

645 Moln St.

"ALL

Jll•Un•

PRIOII

Pall. 11, 11.

IIIIOLUDI

TAX

760 M~IH ST.
IWffALO, H,Y.

•

r•~i1•;•~~ •T-;;
•n:_w77i0•M:.~•-~.--~;,j;:•,i.V,•••
••••• • • • • • • •

I ••• ,.,,. ••••••• \kMU a, •••••••••• •• tor u. O •u.lfMit O , .. ~,,.,
I,....~"
····················
······· :·········· ······• ,...
I l.ftdo.M &amp;efflf tMtl: ti mtMY.,.,
,., • • ••• •,• • •••••••

·-

::•_,,...
...........
··············•·
.........
...........··········""'.
.....
.......
....
..........................
.....
Ott,Aau.
••• ,
•·••••·•·••••••••••••·••••••
L••••••••••ei.'!i.1:!.-:.'.~~~.:.:!'~!-".::!~
- INC!41

AfflNllPM

,oo•ou,s

AND '""''

• ••• • •••••·•··•

l-•••-'••--­

..

,11an1s -

·

�Friday, February 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

Smith Speaks
On LanguasJe

Je/igiow
:1Jin~
INTER.V A RSITY CHR IST IAN
FE LL OW SHIP

PAGESEVIN

at 12:00 noon.

Professor Joseph F. Smith wut

Placement Schedule Announced
GENER AL PREC ISION. INC'
LIN K DIVI StoN
~king
E.E., M.E., Phyalcs.
Accoun ting and Finance maj .

W. T. GR.ANT C'OMPAN'c
S...•ldn,... Ou• Ad and Liberal
j

Art-. Ma ors.

ors.
Feb . 7
ijpeak aboul ·'The Miracle o( Lan- Feb. 4 &amp; 5
LORD
M.ANUF.M-~IN
C
guage" next Friday, at 3:00 p.m.
PHO EN IX OF HARTFORD
COMP ANY
In the Norton conference theater.
Liberal Art•
and Bualnes_.
Seelcing
E. EJ,
and
M. E .
Professor Smith, a well known
Admlnl.straUon majon, ,
me.joni.
GRIFFISS AlR FORCE BAS E
MOTOROLA, INC.
lnterprt'liv,• reader, Is being upon.
See king E .E .
Seeklng E. E., I.l!l. , M.l!l and
sored by lho Ma drigal Rco«11ng
7:30 p,m. Anyone interested In
Feb. 5 _
Phy~i,·~ 111e
j or11. Al110IIN!ki fl!(
Soc-lety.
Joining one of lhe student led RELIGIOUS ORO.U."lZAn ONS
ASHLA.ND on. &amp; REFININC J
PAyrhology majo r on adVlln~
He re r l' Ive d his secondnr~·
,U.cussion group, oome Monday
COMPANY
de1trw I~..-~
Chairman of the department of
~ki ng
BWL. A.ocountini,:, Feb. Su.t ◄ pm and Tuesday at noon to anthropology and llngulsl:lca, Dr. schooling In England and hl11bach.
and Liberal A rta ma j on.
GENERAL RATLWAY SIGN AL
room 266 or Thurl!day at 1 pm Henry Lee Smllh, Jr .. Wedne!lday ~!or's degree at tne Un lvcralt ,y of
ABRAHAM&amp;. STRA US
COMP ANY
and Friday al 3 pm room 217 e, en Ing opened the 3eries spon. Utah. Protel!llor Smith spent two
See kin g Bw, , Ad. majors
SeekJn g E.E. an d PtlyelCM
'llorton. The subjects this semuter
sored by the Council of Religlou11 u.nd one halt yt&gt;ars M n mla,1lon­ F eb . 6 majoni.
deal ,.1th problems
rac&lt;.-d by OrganlzaUoM
to explore "Th,• ary in Hawaii , before continuing
GENERAL
F'OORD CORP
NATIONAL
AERONAUTI CS
ORATION
I &amp; SP ACE ADMINlSTRATI ON
l'hrlaUana on the college campus. Menning and Purpo8e of M11n." his studie11 ut the Unlvel'1rity or
London.
Seclring Bua. Ad. and Libernl
Seeklng Matti, Phy sl ea, E .E
Dr. Smith spoke on "Mnn the
Arts
maj ors.
I
~ d M.E . majo n, ,
He.-e he studied under J . Dove,
Toolmaker as Worshipper" out­
HILL E L
Wilson . tenowned ShakespeareM
The B'nal B'r1th HIiiel Found. lining the beginnings or man lUl n 1K'h•1lar, and Daniel Jones, world
:itlon will sponsor a Snbbath rellgioua being.
famous phonetician. Retumln ,g ll
Service this evening at 7:411 pm
The Council wlll conllnui: with lbl United State11 as the Dlre-clo1
In the Hillel House. D,·. Justin ll Ml'ricR of eight 1ccture 8 t.o be Of the Dllnoll Theatre Oullcl, Pru
fessor Smith went on to 1·,x·&lt;&gt;lv1
Hofmnn will speak on "Jewish prelll'ntc:&gt;d Wednesday Bfl('rnoonA
hill master's from the Unlvl•1·.. 1t)
Realism." An Oneg Shabbat wUI at 4 :00. The speaches are plannl'd of Dllnoll!.
follow.
t o provide a broad vll'w of man
Professor Smith hM h&lt;•ldKpce1•h
from Rl'Vl'ral rlisciplln1•s und oric•n
The HUiet Supper this Sunday talions.
Following tho lectures und dramatic positions nt thr Uni.
,t 5:30 pm will feature " ttsh there will be an opportunity for vcrs!Uee of Wisconsin, Iowa , lMln­
n l'l!Ot.a, Southern California, am
,tinner. It will alao Initiate a aer1es questions and dlscuSBlon.
Denver. In the course or his n,.
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
SHERIDANPLAZA
I)! lectu r es entitled
"Isrnel.Its
The next lecture In the gencrn I reer he haa directed more 1:.han
M~nning tor the Jewish Student series will be given Wed., Feb. 6 mo pie.ye in the United Stale~
Today." Mrs. Arthur I. Goldberg In tho conterence theatre. Hillel and Canudn and ha 8 lectur~d a
will open tho series with a talk Foundation wll1 sponsor Rabbi A I. almost fifty colleges an d unlv, BrN1.
Letterpress ond Offset
un, "Impressiona of an American ,•in Marcus of A.hevas Achlrn. ties througilout the United Stntl'i&lt;
J~ln'l!B." Relll'l"Vlltlons are nl'Cl'S- Luhavltz Synagogue In Buffalo
Past president ot Speech A sso.
111rytor the Supper ,
Rabbi ~ltu'CUS received his M. A. elation of America, member· o•
'!'he weekly meetings or the from Yolihlva University In Now tho faculty al the Ba.nff S&lt;."huol
,•nrlous Hillel Study Groups will York and was ordained there. Ht· ot Fine Arts, he bas co.nuth,ore d
get under way Sunday.
The ha.1 been In Buffalo for the past two book a, Fundam ental ~ 111
,c·hedule Is as follo1V11: Hebrew ten years and ls a past president or Sprec h and S klll ln Bead ing AJoud.
133S E. DELAVAN AVE. - TX 3-0913
I • Sunday at 2:00 p.m., Yiddish the Buffalo Council or Rabbis.
ProfeBSOr Smith bas been hlllll~I
• Sunday at 3 :00 p.m., Bibi&lt;'
Tho series will continue through as "an ou tstanding lender of his•
Semce . Quaflty - Price
Study • Sunday at 3:00 p.m. , April srrond. Other speakers al. profesaion, o.n Insp iring lecturer
Jrwtsh Etble11 • Sunday at ,i :00 ready 11&lt;:heduledare L. P . Peck, and powerful Interpreter of lit­
Prin u ra of Th e Spectrum rince 1987
p.m.; Hebrew D . Monday at 3:00 Dr . William Kerr, and the Rev
erature." He la conaldered "a top
p.m.; and Talmud • Thursday Rowllrd MOOdy .
night tutl~t And a great schol1ar "

M:onday, Fob. 11, Rev, DnllAs
o~n. secretary of North African
Missions, will dlftCWJS mlaslOMry
work. ThiR meeUng will be held
111room 23◄ of Norton Union et

ThP "Live and Leam" coffet1
hour discussions wlll resume on
Thursday, at 3:00 pm In the Hillel
Hou.e. Mrs. Norman Fertig 18
the coordinator of ttie series.

I

I

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�Dr. ·Dumond Says Character
More Important Than Color
sv

MA.RY

Friday, February 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

wu

UB to Act as Hlost
For ACU Tourney

Feb. 15 ~nd 16

wn ,soN

"Until men s\,llrt tldnklng ,8 bOlll
character instead of color, lhere
will be no justice and 110 rerlnln
peace,''
atatud
D~. Dwight L .
Dumontt Monday In his lecture,
''The Glory and Lhnllallona
of
Elme~cl,pallon.''
the first in n
serl~ commcm.oraUng the Cen­
of
the
Ema nl'lpa lion
tennial
P r"OOlamatlon.

D~e&lt;:rl blng the sltua\Jon o[ Lhe
American
Negro prior t.1 the
Civil• Wa r. Dr. Dumond declared
t:hal -I.he enillavement or n large
scctioh 'of the population in n
country dedlffilNI lo "lhe eoncepts
or equality al bll'lh and n 11n.
ur rights"
lveraal
detlnro llon
prescn led ''&lt;Inc of lhc sLrangcRI
paradoxes In human hi sto ry ." Th e
lnsUtullon or slaver-y ns practi&lt;•ed
in the United Slates wa~ a system
of perp et ual captivity exle ndlug
not only Lil lhose µcrs&lt;ms illegally
brought from Africa but also to
their desl'endents.
The lsaue of slavery, according
to Dr , Du112o
nd, was embodied
In the "eternal struggle be­
twe en two prlnolplea,"
t he
basic rlghh of humanit y as
compared with the 0on11ept
1

found In the theory of the
''divine right of kings."
The
official, aa well as Implicit
pollcle1 of the admlnlstratlona
which precede d that or Lin.
coin has been one of accept.
ance or the eatabllshed order.
order.

Morgan State Prof. Traces
20th Century Civil Rights
By JOEY

E LM

Dr. August Meler of Morgan
Feb. lfi IIDd 11: the UnJ•verslty
will he• host to collages c·1~mpe(. State College analyzed the hl,tory
movemenl
In tlw ,\ N~ocratlo11 or &lt;'oliPR•· of the civil rights
111.11,
during the twentieth oontury in
Union Tournament .
the .second lecture commemorating
T~
recr at on
1
ee
the Centennial of the J!lmancipn­
Nor'forf..l. on Is working wl
The leetlure
llon Proclamation.
Pe(fie to arrange the prc,.e;
waa given Tuesday afternoon In
They are handling 1·cgist1ration. the conference theater or Norton.
and arrangem~ntij for· th e brn .
Dr. Meler traced his historica l
chures.
backgrounds ol the Negro revol t .
In order IO ~nter tlrn tourn,1. "We nre now observing• •. stated
ment , c11r&lt;ah1 requirements
mul&lt;l Dr . Meler, "a second eman cip ation
hP met . r}n1111nts must t•omply or lhe Negroes, by themselves."
wlrh the Amate111· Stnndin1~ Pol­ Them appear to be sudden up­
ley_ Stud~lllh al l ' il must ca,•ry hcHV&amp;.ls resulting
a.s revolts of
I\( lt'UKl 12 HPdlt
h&lt;lllrNuncl l111v~ the rr..asses, but these really have
Com11t:lltlu11 beginnings that go bac k quite far.''
11 (' tl.111 tt,·erui;1,
In
thiR
year's · totf:nament
"American Negroes have pSBs.
w11l 1•nnNit1I ot rt n 1el! . H howlh1J,: ed through
three perioos ," said
'~ tiuwl111.11,(Ii. Dr. Moler. "The first fl'Om em.
di\ ldlQu u wo111Pn
l'IR(&gt;U, ,; nwn·K i,01•kel hlllln rd dl­
ancipation lo 1900 was one of
\·lsioll. 11 womPll's (IIIC'ket hi lllnrd~
dh·lxton, u men's rllr!!&lt;' 1•uRhlo11dt•oline. From 1900 to the era
hllllurd~ dil'ISIOII. II lohll' lrnnls of the N~w Deni was one of ml~­
,111.11,l~s
dlvislou, and a tahil • t,•n. eo ll'ndcncles. And lhe pel'lod
from Lhe New Deal to the preijent
nis doubles division.
has been one of n,ivenoe." The
'l'h ~ l'nil·t'reill
or Hu!l'ulo I~ ln Ni•);l'OL'S al'c now struggling
lo
IJ1vl. l&gt;ecome firal cl11ss clU1,ens. The
11lvlslo 11 ll 01 Th~• A('l'
, ,on II ••n1·&lt;11npnaB1•N
nil ol! .Nl'W growing imp(&gt;rtance of the Negrr,
\'u1•k Stuli&lt; 111•11
Outttrio.
vole hn~ been an Important fa ctor
,luss1•h t•utrle, dlr~l'lnr al' ,.,.,._ in human rights legislation .
rPuriu11 s1t111•
d, "Th!' rournnm enl
"Th e Cold War,' ' staled
Dr.
Is lli111ro11t•hin~our 1•x11ecil11thm~
Mcler, "ts helpful to th e Negrn
ii,;
10
thP nnmh,•r uf entrnnls
upholding the demol'rati c cause."
ontl we w11111to mukP Ihe ••ullre
Th e NAACP hns been success.
1ro
1
•11
u,
11s
,-.11Joy11hle
U
M
1,o
~Ri
h
l!•
1 11
f&lt;11·hot h .,,.tritnls "11d spP&lt;'Ie tor·w." ful In p1•omoling legislation con.
ll Is the hope of theAC\J that c·~rning equality In transportation,
this tYI'" or c11111
11etlllo11wlll soon and dlsc1·iminallon in housing, ed.
,u•ation, and recreational Cacilitles.
11.. HN•e111ed 11a Ol)·mnk ttl)ll1'1.
~·10111rh~ .\('I. tonrn 11ment !IV.•'In spite of the Jaws , de&lt;-lsions
will l11• selPl'led lo rti11rnat!11l rP.­ in many Instances were not obey.
J!I011 1wt&gt; 111 11,,, nntlu11nl li11111•
. ,•d. Legollsm was proving limited
Only one ~n1111nt from each col. but n new confidence arose. "A
1,•~r- will h1• 111•rm!tll•d 111, take revolution in ·expectaUons ot·cur·.
ed."
11r11·t.
1

DR , DWIGHT

DUM OND

"Th!' rights of man,.. affirmc1l
Dr. Dumond, in quoting Presiclenl
Kennedy's
inaugural
addt•ess
·

'

I

"co me not from the ~eneroslty or
the slate, but from the hands or
God."
The basic guc:,tion toduy IK one
versus
e1:onomlc
KQ~lal and inlellectual oppression
tor lhe A_merjcan Negro . Then·
rights
never hnve been fully,
a&lt;1knowlcdgcd, ns iR se~n 111 lh e
lssue of lntegra.lioo in lhe S011(h.
ern Stales. The prevailing systt,m
hc, declared. Is a "eomplex "
Jn)'th and t.radl!ion" whkh"wlll
or
never be corrcclt'd
short
revolution.''

or equality

DR. A UGUS T

In
summation
the
sµeak~ t
stated, "The present Negro revo lt
is rooted in earlier mov ement .·
(non-vio lence is one fourth of u
century old). CiVil rights leader
ship had gradually passed int ,
the hands of the Negroes them .
selves. The revolt
would not
have been possible without I.ht
changing public opinion of th,
whJtes.''

I

WHAT
A TREAT

I

to yo ur

APPETITE
and y our

POCKETBO

Allhou,:h th~ lnsLltuUon,
or
~Javery had bc~omc cntrl'nchecf
ond supported and protected by
powerffuJ Individuals, Lincoln pro.
ceeded to altaick It al the very
r'Ools. This refusal to compro1nlst',
Dr. Oumonrl overred, represented
''the greattl8l triumph or dem.
ocratlc lnslltullQns in lhe history
ot the country ,"
Nevertheless,
the success
of
the EmMCl!MltlOO'I Pmclamallon
In ellmlnallug
slavery IU! le,:nl
Cai·t hn~ nol ~xtende1l lo lilt' rom.
plelt' eradlcallt&gt;n or Ole under­
lying p~y,·hologlca l concept in.
,·&lt;&gt;lv&lt;.'11,
lhe rcfusnl to a1'cept th~
equnllt y or man, Includ ing both
llis l'IKhts and opportunllles , Th 1•
Hllt'Cl'!•.sor~of Lincoln, he stated,
htw1• ofl1·n followed th" &lt;lunger.
uus flOllry Qf allowing the "right~
ol the ln11ivhJua1 to be lcCL In
lhc hnnclM of lhe st.ales.''

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CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS

2775 SHERIDAN DRIVE
Just West of Nlogoro Foils Blvd.

5244 ,MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE
Just West of Union Rood

PIZZERIA
I
Tl' 2-9331
STORE HOURS:

Try Some

SUNDAY through THURSDAY
11 A.M, to 11 P.M.
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
11 A.M. to 1 A.M.

�SPECTRUM

Friday, February 1, 1963

PAGEMINr

Bulls·Conquer
Boslo
·n Five,81-li8
By JIM

BAKER

The bneketbnll Dullff roared from
, persistent first half deHolt to
,,vMtake the BU Terriers late In
che Initial stanza nnd eventually
.subdue th e quintet from B011ton,
,1.6S, Satur day 111 Clark Oym .
This was lhe BullK' seventh straight
rrlumph and their eleventh.
, "•elve contests this season.

•

Another cap11clty throng ,ne on
band ns Boston took the floor with
lire in thei r eyes and rolled u,11 a
phe nomena I 65':1 lleld goal figure
for the ftrsr twe11ty minutes. Dur.
Ing tJ1!~ time B&lt;l1!lon conetnntly
held the upper hllnd , ns the Bulle
werl' behind by UR many 11e eight
1,oinL!!on two occasions. Then with
1wo ml!wle• reruolnlng h8tore . the
intermission,
.IHck JCaraszews kl's
j ump •hot Initiated
a 11.lne.polnt
UB "'Purl that •ent the Blue nnd
\\'bite 11head to 11l11Y,a7-34.

Center Gary Hanley (40) etretchH
More1head (31) and Randy
another Buffalo field goal,

Matmen
RosiIthaca,
SeekThirdVictory
Con1·h Ron Lllrocque'f! wrestlera
. have ,been working hard [or their
next bli: mat.ch Saturday against
lth uea C'ollege. With two eolld
wins and o close defeat so tar on
the seaAon. tbt • grnpplers want 8
good win over llhaca. The fresh.
man match fa al 2 p,111.while the
varelty is at :1 p.m. Adml~slnn Is
free for nll st udents,

After Karaazewakl's
two.
pointer, G~ry Hanley meahed a
field goal and Dave Baldwin
tied the score at 34.34 wi th
another jumper. Then Dan Baz .
zanl hit from th e right corner
and UB took the lead. The
Bulla led at the half, 39.35.
While BU was ,hooting at an
unconscious 85% pace, hitting
16 of 23 attempts,
UB con.
nected on 16 of 40 shota for
37 percent.

It
Is hoped
I.bat
a
li.rge
crowd vdll be present to cheer the
Bulls on , to victory . Thie could be
one of the Wl'estllng leam's better
yen1·s eo l et's oll do our 11arl to
make It 80 by ntteudlng U1ls llllltob.
J.,et'e create o re11l "hOmt' 1•our1"
tttmosphere ror th e hoy11.

Wllh the sror~ 41.!IS in, the sec.
110d half , UR Dill togethe r a seve n.
1&gt;0int sl ring lo lake n ten-11oinl

•·u&amp;hlon. Hat1ley sparked 1hls su1•ge
with two lleld goals and a freebit- .
Then lloslon rnllled to within four
ilOiot.s ort three occasions.
Wtlh
t he 13ull~ tin to11. fifi-5 1, Knraszew.
ski aga in stnrled the Bulls on an.
ill other s1111rt, this one being Ille
i:111ne rllncher. The 6.3 ao11homorP
~,a.rd conn ect/id on a long jumper
,n end n len.gLhy uurrn10 dry s11e11.
Then Dlok Harvey s1·ored from
ba~·k or the key and Norb Bn~ch­
nujl'el meshed n long j um11er. Kur .
,azeMJkl and Bas~hnngel followed
"'Ith two fl'ee throws 111,Jeceto en I'
tile ten-rmint sp urt, leuvJng the
Terriers hebiod l&gt;Y a 65-51 margin
wlt.h 6: 30 Jert, Booto n closed Um
i:up to ten points sborUy there.
otter but lhaL was ng close as the
fleao town cra advanced .

Bille
n

Titanic
and burly Dick Moreshead
short Jumper from beneath baaket,

attempting to block the shot ,
th,·ow strlJ)e. Right be hind him
wns cen t er Gary Hunl ey. whosP
l!I 1&gt;0lnls nnd 18 rebounds repre.
~ented a IOJl-notch effort. He and
DIii 8llowus also held ao~ton's
6.9. 240.pound Dick )loreshe11d to
11 11Dilll5 ~like Collon, u ~hlrty
fi..S senior guard. led the Terrier
t'HU~e Wllh tr. 11&lt;,Jnt
• . Hi or whll•h
1·~1ne In the Jlrst hair . -.
The Te1TJe,..., wh(&gt; ar/ now 1.r,,
surre red their worst defeat of the
season In this encounLPr, The y
The game's high scorer was Dave had 11reYl011aly lost to ~urh tr.ams
,lnldwtn . who amn.5sed 22 points a, ~n·, nnrtmoulh
n11d S~ton
•nd wrts 10 for 11 from the frel' 11811.
The key factor In the UB tri­
umph was the Buffa lo defense,
which held BU to a scant 46
field goal attempts.
Boston
connected on 25 of these ef .
forts for 54 ~(.. UB shot 44 ~,.
hitting on 30 of 68. Foul shoot..
Ing accuracy also pl'Oved Jm.
portant, as UB was 21 for 28
In this department, while Bos­
ton was success f ul on only 18
of 31 attempts.

Cagers
VieForEighth
Straight
Win;
WSU
AndBuffalo
State
Oppose
UB
The surging University of But'a lo Bull s carry a seven game
1vlnnlng
st r eak and an 11-1 sea.
,-on record into t omorrow night's
.;-ame against
th e Way ne State
tartars.
The Bulls will be seek­
.ng th eir third win in a row over
Ute Detroit team which they de.
lea ted 70-65 last yea r in the Mo.
tor City and 61-50 in Clark Gym
Lwo years ag o. Wayne holds th e
1veral1 advantage,
four gan1es to
·wo
'This season the Tartar s ha ve
' ~een s uff ering the effects of la.st
Year's graduation. Th ey lost three
•enlor stars ( Fr ed Prime. Randy
lleglcr, an&lt;l K&lt;!n ~t nt'Zka 1 who
'ogether averaged 40.8 points Jn
•.ho 1961-62 campaign . Entering
·omorrow's encounter their record
1-8. with on ly n
, a catastrophic
\·111 over Allegheny
to count on
he posith·c s!&lt;le of the ledger .
The Tartars' IOSSl'S hav,, come al
i ·he hands of Bethany , Washing.,
Inn and Jefferson, Western R,·.
1:
,,·rvc. Th f e I. Washington

!

The University of BuHaJo rtfl l'
team fired
~boulder to shoulder
match
against
Mlcblgao
State
University at Lan sing on Jan . 26.
The teani match was lost by a
score of 1411 lo 1342. In the in•
dlVidual mat~ the Univ ersity or
Buffalo tea.m placed two men in
the top five of 2fl comp etitors .
Ren Jenu11LU 11l11cedsecobd w1Ur
a soore of 288 and John Pcragallo
tlfth with 279 out of a posslbl&lt;'

Michigan
gnn, and

T ech, Northrrn
Chlcngo .

MirhJ.

BU center hits on
as6-9Hanley
(40) fo uls hln1

't CAMPUS

''MALECALlt
Hav e you, loo, wondered
about tbfe? O. L. writ.Ga,
"One ot my classmate- re.­
ooutly got a dOllbl&amp; broaeted
blazer. I'm being given one
for my birthday and C&amp;D
choose any style I want. Hla
looks good on him but &amp;re
lbey here lo stayf ~ d9o't
want anything that will be
ollt..date d ft1st."

You won't ao
wrong with tithe r
the 1&gt;0pula
r single
breasted natural
&amp;boulder model or ("
the D.B, The
double brusred
atyle trend seems Jo a,. on t~
upswing, so don't think yo11
nff d WOIT)' much about II'• .
t llpplng qukkly.

0

300.

• •

is, "A boy I like dresses well

!:7. cxc:c pt

I

"

it might.help."

Career

May we suagest something
lbat might help enn mon?
a ,mart dip or tac lbal h
cau'I rulsl wurl_ogl

t'

Opportunities

.. .

in Sales

I

~

CLOTHES-INGNOTESSpeaking of accessoriesto keep
ties in place - try one of tho
new lie tacs shifted to the up­
per part of the tie. Looks 11nart

. . . . . . . . . . . . . ....

Mr. J. M. Gallagher will be Intervie wing on February
from

9:00

A.M.

~or one
rhing. He never
wean n clip nnd
his tie is always
'flopping around ,
.If you printed
. something on this,

l

Campus : Interviews
........... . . . . .

Manageme,

The Wayne Stat e sta rt er s to .
111orrow night will be th e te11m',·
leading scorer, 6-3 Sean Wh a len
and 6.2 senior Jim Spivey at the 1
forwards; WSU's tall rooki e, 6-i J
F1·ank Dmuchowsk! , at center; 5-~
sophomore Jim Hall and 5.10 soph j
Fred Walcott a t th e guard slots,
T omorr ow 's game wm n'iark
th e Wrd last home apperu ·an1•p of
the UB fiv e. The team wlll not
play here again nnl!J Feb . 16, J
w11en they host the J;tocheate r Ycl .
Jowjac k els. Th e pr eliminn1·y game
to the US-Way ne cla sh Will be u
third me clln g between the Bur.
fain frosh and the Cnn!siu s Cc,J.
ltge yearlings. The , Baby B ulls
have scored tlecislvc vlctorie~ in
both prevlo•!~ engagements .
On Tuesday the Bulls Journ,•y
to Buffalo State for their •N·Clntl
batlle against the rlvat Oran~,· n1en. UB won t he fi rst meclin~ .,
5!1.f;r,, In Clark Gym.

•

Miis C. woultl li~c to see
lhi&lt; hoy clipped- his lie. that

until 4:t&gt;O P.M .

Bl"ke , AHi . Dir ector of Placement

Contact

11,

Ml11 MIidred H.

for an appointme nt .

••• QUESTION OP THB
DAY -: Where's the beat plact
ro pick men's gifta? From •
men's wear specialist, llfttural•
ly , Now, wbo could wobe,...

£erringto!

...

To partphra.w a well lmon
TV (Otntntrdal - Look Slw)
- Fttl Sharp - dllrin&amp; U..
comln~ HolldlQ' period, Our
DltESS POINTER leaflet,
fllltd .. uh dolhu Up$,wW belp

ao"

7ou do rhl~.Gd your oopy

Read our brochures at
your plair:ement office

from The
Main Street

Just 5 111inutr.s/rom

tlie

cami&gt;U,I'.
~

Sign up NOW for your intefview

Squire Sliop
In Snyder .

SQ
' ...

U IR
' ,.

' '

'

\

i:,__; ::~
"

.
1-i
~, • '

.
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t ~

�Friday, February 1, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGETEN

SPORTSCIRCLE

SlateArticleGivesOBanIncentive

FroshDo'WDSt.Bonofor11thWin

UB's frosh cagers contin ued their
winning ways last week wttl~ two
trlunl'Ph8 In llB 'mMIY 11taru1. On
Saturday the l~lll recovered from
n horrendous flret half, In wlllcb
For all those who attended UH-Buffalo State cage en- they mlsl!ed all seve n ot their tre(;
counter here Dec. 18, the fact t hat another such battle Will throw attempbl and came ,on to
be waged this Tuesdn in State's new gymnasium -..:.ii be aU down St. Bonaventure's yea1rlings,
vui.
77-61 The scor,e at balrl!mil w•~
th e more e~ticing. In the first meetmg of these
intense zu2· tor the Brown fn.dloos ..
cross-town rivals the UB five emerged victorious by a scant The Bulla were pn.ced by tl1,e fine
69-57 margin. This prompted all sorts of comments em- ouL~tde abootlng ot Norwood oooa.
anating from the Buffalo State newspaper The Record mn, who w!lled 22 points. Othel'
which described just how the . Orangeljllen ~uld annih il~ UU-ltes tn double Ogurea wer•e Bill
ate th e Blue and White once they had the Bulls entra pped Onrth, Dennis Zynda an d lll ck
in their own glossy surroundings.
Het:iel- all of whom counted 16

By Jim Baker
._______ ---- ------------'-----'!

~

.

. Amidst all these vocif,et·ous bo~sts was a constant companson of the two schools gymnasiums. It was· repeatedly
Pointed out that UB's bandbox waa decidedly inferio r to
the comparative palaee on the Elmwood Avenue campus.
Of course, it bas been emphasized time and again in this
column that Clark Gym is a sad athlet ic plant for an
institution of th is size but when that fact is dwelled upon
der· · el h
'
t 1·1v
· a I , th e need t o respon d IS
.
. 1s1v ,Y Y an arrogan
ll'ttperative.
Let's tvrn tfte clock back just one short year, At
tfti1 time Buffolo State Is not endowed with ony atftletic "palace " in which to hold their sports ottractiOftt,
Instead such evenb ore held in a building thot seats
ffle ret0unding copacii of 300 spectators
Indeed
......__ .._ d
,.__
•
'
...,... me ate ....-_tfl!
U at Buffalo Stot~ encounter app,oacfsN, where •• 1t held7 In the Erie Tech Spor,ts
ANfto - tfte athletic plont of o two-yeor technical in-

(}()In~~ the previous

Wednuday
tho Baby Bulls made a rugged
Journey to Waterloo , Oot.orlo
to do battle with the Wate 1rloo
College five.
Unable to shake the ettei;wi or
the tiresome Junket they trailed
throughout the first bait. 11~ the
~econd sta nza, however. the)' out.
scored their hosts, 43-19, to cap.
ture a 75-49 victory. Goodwin, ngnln
pnced Ute Bulls In scoring with
18 flOlnt...
Aa Uie tee.m entel'ed laet o,lght 'e
enc!&gt;unter wlt b Niagara nt th0 S tu dent Center, their record ma,tehed
the varsity's 11_1 toi::. Their next
appearance comes tomorrow nJ!(ht
when they host a oantslue q 11tntei
that they have trounced h1lndl1y
on two 11revto11soccoalona.

Baby Bulla' gu11rd Dick Hetz el (20) tip~ lay.up attempt by
St. Bona'• Bill RIiey (11), ae Bill Barto (5) awaits rebound.

SeatingPlansfor UB-Sl
•ale Gome

lett e r from Bufinlo
State'H refer, is the long case which sets
Ht!lllth, PhyHloal Eclnr.atlon, nnd against the wall between the two
Re&lt;Jreatlon Depurtrnent &amp;: C•hnfr . sets or double doors .
man:
The end bleacher sections will
With the exJH!&lt;!Wtlon or an be utilized ns we see t!he necessity ,
overflow crowd and attempting tluring the course of the evening .
to control someWhal the aeatlng Th ese arrangements
are •purely
ttihrte.
Now there is certainly nothing wrong with shifting
anangements
tor both i,-dtools, an attempt. to group apectators
the site of a sporting event to a place that can accommodate
we are maktng the following acro1·dlng to the college they re .
present. We would appre1!late
the expected flow , Qf spectators.
Yet, the fact remains
arrangements:
that Buffalo State students, as represented by their st udj
!dwe areth dll81gnaling ththe ,,nsota1·lht
very much your following theBP
d
e gy 1n, as
e
e suggested arrangements
in th~
. h tt·t d to
8 e Of
t
h
d
ted
bb
en newspa~r,
a';~ .a op
a sno 1s a I u e
war
Un defeated
Brockport State eid&amp; Thlfl means that all Slate attempt to avoid any confusion ,
r
,might also add that seats will
older athletic fac.:ilittes on other campuses when they Teacbere soored !ta .ftrth win ,ot the , ·
9
~hemaelves were saddled with a highly inadequate plant Reason hY defeating the UB ,awtm.
e~t~ult~e anim ~Yde~~: be on a flrsl come, first served
mere, R6.30. The BuJfalo mm-men
JU8t one year ago
r
basis, and I suggeijt that you
2 4 a11 they enter way o( the double door to the
I
b
are ~rrenlly
Afte
th e I1\8.t UB-State ba ttl e, The .R ec~rd publi abed tomorrow's
• r
mee~ '141:alnst 011wego rlg'ht of the trophy case In the come eat· Y if you wish to c sure
an ~rti~e that scoffed at Clark Gym while 1:11mu
lll:1~eous
ly St-Ate In Clark ])OOI. The stJ11.rt1ngmain toyer.
of a good seat.
attributi~g several comment:5 to qoach Serfusti!1t that time Is slate d for 2 p,m.
we are designating the south
A~ usual, the1·e w1J1 be two
were decJdel_y!false. The article, w_lu~ was oonsp1cuously Summ•ry of us.Brockport n1eet: side of the gym aa the "UB'' games on sc:hedule, the first
minus a byhne, accused Serf of cla1mmg that UB ha d the ,•be 400 medley relay-Broc:kJ)ort side ana will attemp t to direct game starting at 6:30 P.,\1. be.
game well in hand all the way, when, in fact, all he said (Jitn L11m()ma.n,Jim Parlrer Ray all of this tratflc through the tween the freshmen tea.ml! of UB
R.ohln•on, B111McGaughy) 4i°1Z.3. double doors to the left of the and Slate. The varsity ga.me will
W88 that he "had full confidence in his boys all the way."
Wetl, tftis Tuesday let us toke our critical eyes to
Tbe 200 tree-Dave Schmlile (.Bl trophy case.
stal't nbout 8: 15.
The trophy case to w11ich w~
lflot "palace" over ot State. When you enter tfte gym,
l:59.3 !pool record).
Joseph P. Adessa
tab o good long look ot the out-of-bounds room. (It is
The 50 free - .Royce Oollister ----------------------jutt ot cramped as thot of Clark Gym). Then notice
(UB) =23•7·
lflet Gt tfte one place where O tpol'tl
Tb e 200 lndlvldual medley--Mlke
. Oreno I ItOUId COfl•
(;avalcantl (B) 2:22.
tohl lb ct.olce a.eott, center court II awkwardly void of
Diving-Jim Bowden (OB) llll7.76.
Otlf teats whotaoe.41rf
The 200 butter - Roblnso:n (B)
Fina lly, just try to distinguish what the public ad- 2:u.2.
• HERRINGBONES
drees announcer is trying to say! The system has been Tho mo tree-Larry Siu~ainekl
so arranged that the announcer sounds like a modern col- (UB) :63.8.
blue, charcoal, brown, light grey
Jege student climbing out of bed at 6 :30 on a Monday The 200 bark - Cavaloant.l CB)
morning.
2:ZM.
• CAMEL
SflEOIALPURCHASE
Then take a look at the blue -clad UB Bulls as they G·rab: 500 free - Doug 'Vlrkue (B)
roll up win number thirteen and deal State its first 1088 · The·4 00 relnr - Brockport Tom
TWEEDS
in the new State gym. It couldn't happen to a more de- Fnlt Keil Block Oary Stevena,
Reg. 1$.17.fiOnow
serving riva l !
Sob~Idt) 3:44.1. '
·
A

IJBT nk L Ith
a ers ose

~:i~:~·

s~or t Goats

BLAZERS

•

=

Facen SlahFenn;
SabreSquadStars
The nn renolng team nosed out
tlie 9WOl'lb,montrom Fenn College,
16-lll, 8at,urda1
In Clark Oym,
Strength l.n th&amp; 11abre event turnea
out u, be tht declBlve ra.ctor for
tile Bulle.
M11.rlcJl'o,r and Jerry Mareba.k
each eoored thNle wine, aa UB took
the nbre pbuo oC the m11tcb, 7-2.
The Bnlla lost the two even.la, but
onl.Y fly RCftnt 6-ol marglns . BUI
Wlllleosoo laJllod three win s lu
epeo co~ltlon,
while Joe Ferecb
socurc d two lriumpb8 In the toll

SUITS
SHARKSKINS
three piece-blue,
grey, brown, olive,
grey/black

CHliVIOTTWEEDS

v,1.MsClark O:,m.

Cheerleaders Ask
Student Support
There are only

A

ti;w b&amp;eketball

three pi8C&amp;1rl'ey/blaek
blue/olive, brown

of the

HERRINGBONES

SEASON

·

vested, deepest navy
blue, light grey, olive
charcoa l black

EAGLESHIRTS

l'\' M(.

'UB'• recor d la now even al 3-3.
The ~:rt m11.tcb ta 8&lt;lheduled tor
Saturday, Jl'ob. 9, wben RfT fn,.

$30

Clearance
25o/o OFF

button down-white ,
blue, maize, linen,
blue herringbone,
olive, grey, blue

STRI
PES
tab collar-blue,
white , blue, grey
brown stripes

l(Tlm~ left to ttlt1 1962-63 season
""11ctl we '1:811 at~.
All a tribute

to MJ.r fine tea.ma this year , we
hope Hlat th e 1tudmlt body ml\k~
an e.ll.4ut effort to support the
Bulls at theee games
We would like to have 11 full
how.it• tomotTOW night for the
Wayne Stal&amp; pme and a packed
UB lllde wtien WO pl.ay at Buttalo
State on Tuoeday. Aa we know
from p a• l f'X4)ei;lence, Buffalo
St.aw h11,1n trefflendouij showing,
both In number aad spirit.. Let "s
- It we ecanbel.lt them in tlleae

11•~
'•· our
nn , 121etloor
N

Bull• beat them

Clearance
All Sweaters Have

NEW HOURS; 10 to 9 Mon. - Thurs.... Fri.
10 to 6 Tues. - Wed. - Sat.

Been Marked Down

O'CONNELL

(ampu~(orner
3262 MAINSTREET
(Opposite UBI

LUCAS

Due°""'

Sititl 11:nd
Sport Coa,ta
n.ow in effeot
01t

CHELF
-------

3240 MAIN

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT RUFFALO
Recent
Games

Basketball

SPECTRUM

Reviewed

(see Page 10)

(see

15

The State University Board of
Trustees, meeting in New York,
Tuesday, established an annual
uniform tuition fee of $400 in

■

interested

State University units for
undergraduate students, $600 for
graduate students and $800 for
students in medicine, dentistry’
and law, effective Sept. 1.
The trustees, headed by former
Lt. Gov. Frank C. Moore of Buffalo, also established a uniform
college fee of $25 for all students.
The trustees, in a report on the
all

is cord
n pledging a fraternity
(ally invited to attend the mixer

which will feature Robert Rothman, assistand coordinator of
Student activities and advisor tr
IFG, George Movesia n lecturer ir
education speaking on fraternity

1

of fraternities will be shown ant
refreshments will be served. The
individual fraternities are planning booths to display their trophies and banners. The brothers
,,f the fraternities will be available at the mixer to meet the
pledges and answer any of their
questions.

After the mixer, the fraternities
are planning to hold open stags
,t various local halls.

FiveBudgetsOk'd,
Fountain Debated

page 7)

Tuition Rate

Interfraternity Counci'
The
Tuesday, from
m ixer will be held
of
to 9 in the muti-purpose room

At the Senate

Add Day

Trustees Set

Set Tuesday

Following the speakers, a film

-

No.

|FC Mixer

i

Drop

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1963

VOLUME 13

N'ortoji Union.
Any male on campus

No Classes Tuesday

said:
These grants vary with the net
taxable family income of each student and the level of collegiate
instruction in which he is enrobed.
The trustees intend to provide
that no tuition cost will be exacted
of students in the lowest income
bracket. To accomplish this the
trustees recommend that appro-

new schedule,

Photo by Bachrach

DWIGHT L. DUMMOND

OTIS

FINLEY

Emancipation Day Program
To Feature Five Speakers
By ELAINE BARRON
A series of lectures commemo.
rating the centennial of the Eniaiv
cipation Proclamation will be held

Monday through Friday,
Sponsored by the civil

rights

committee of the Student Senate,
the lectures deal with the past,
present and future of civil rights
By SHARON CLARKE
meeting
and race relations in America.
At the Student Senate
Tuesday night five budgets were
All lectures will be held in
the Conference Room Theatre
recommended and passed: $900 was
of Norton. Admission is free,
appropriated to the Woman's Choand they are open to the
rale, $192 to the Speech and HearPharmacy
public.
ing Society, $665 to the
The schedule is as follows;
School Student Council and $50 to
Monday, 2 p.m., Dwight L. Duthe, Polk Music club. The Debate
Society budget was cut down from mond: “The Glory and Limitations
of Emancipation"
$3,500 to $2,485 and passed.
Tuesday, 2 p.m., August Meier:
The student activities committee
recommended if an organization or “The Negro .Revolt: Its Historical
club is inactive for one or more Background"
officially
Wednesday, 2 p.m., Warner Lawsemesters it must be
son: “The Place of Music in Negro
recognized again.
The socal welfare club and folk Culture"
Thursday, J p.m., Charles Mcmusic club were recognized.
Dew: "Non-violence in a Violent
The general grounds comEra: The Southern Student Movemittee answered the question
ment”
on how the fountain wll look
Friday, 4 p.m., Otis Finley: “The
when finished by saying that
Responsibilities of First-Class Citabsolutely no one but the arizenship”
chitects know what the design
The theme of the program
will be. Money for the foungift.
will be what President Kentain was an anonymous
Contrary to the rumors being
spread, the pipes have been
installed for the fountain.
A new lighting budget has been
approved and mercury vapor lamps
will be installed In some of the
darker campus areas.
begin
Panhellenic Rush will
The Campus Barrel announced
hat it will begin collecting money Monday and continues for one
During this time, freshor the United Fund and UB Uni- month.
the chance
versity Scholarship Fund Tuesday man girls will have
of the different
in the dorms and Clark Gym. It to meet members
the council to dewas mentioned that this is the sororities and
would
&gt;nly time that students are asked cide which sorority they
o give money so It is hoped that like to Join.
The first week of the rush
hey will give more than any
period will consist of registration.
ether year.
from 3-5 pm in
The student welfare committee Girls can register
There will be
met with Dr. Kaiser and the calen- room 342 Norton.
dar committee. There will be a a two dollar registration fee to
various acdefinite meeting in mid-February cover the cost of the
Girls are
ti decide whether to change the tivities tor the month.
transcripts at
-■■sent calendar. It is hoped that asked to bring In
Registration does not
next, year final exams will begin this time.
no earlier than Jan. 6, with a week oblige any girls to join a sorority.
A convocation will be held
after Christmas vacation for study
In Norton at 1:45 pm Feb. 3.
or lecture review classes.
After convocation, the rushSchool closing in May will be
ees will be divided into small
pushed back a week, but students
groups which will visit each
Ail be able to enjoy Christmas
of the seven sororities. Then
study
of
a
because
vacation more
they will go to the office of
•veek before finals.
the council in order to meet
It was mentioned that school
the members, and refreshstarted Friday because dorm
will be served.
thought
ments
erroneously
officials
There will be a coke party Feb.
that students would spend the
4 from 3-5 where the girls will
weekend on work assigned Frihave another chance to express
day, thus cutting down on the
their interest in the sororities.
weekend free-for-alls.
also have an
Pan-hellenic reported on a meet- Each sorority will party.
ng held with faculty officials and informal and formal
The informal parties feature
PC. The fraternities want to stay
and will
•ational as long as possible. Pan- skits and fashion shows
high'•1‘llenic is already dealing with be held from Feb. 5-14. The
is a
•oral sororities and there will be light of the formal party
dinner in a restaurant where rush
lonal rush for three more s&lt;
can see sorority members in

nedy has

termed “the Negro's
efforts to emancipate himself
in the 20th century."

Charles McDew will be
the fourth speaker. The Southern
Student Movement Personal exstand-ins and
The talk by Dwight L. Dumorid, perience in sit-ins,
kneel-ins and the jailing, harassing
of the University of Michigan, will
include a description of the his- and beating following them help
Issue to
torical background of the Procla- this speaker present the
Professor Dumond will his audience.
mation,
also expound on his view that the
Effective integration into Amerifailure to properly understand and can society involves responsibilities
has
implement the Proclamation
for the Negro citizens as well as
left the Negro in “a modified form rights. This view will be advanced
slavery.”
if
by the fifth and last speaker Otis
Professor August Meier of Mor. Finley, associate director of the
gan State College will analyze the National Urban League.
history of the civil rights moveIn addition to the lectures, the
ment in. the 20th century during
rights committee will mainthe second lecture, ft will encom- civil
tain a table in the lobby of Norton
the
the
evolution
of
NAACP,
pass
11:00 a.m, to 2:00 p.m, Monand the recent rise of a non-vio. from
day through Friday, Here the comput movement.
mittee will display pamphlets,
The "cultural emancipation’’
books and paperbacks relevant to
of the Negro and the Negro's
civil rights. Application forma will
contribution to the American
be available for students wishing
culture through his musical
to work on the committee in one
heritage will be considered in
of the activities.
the third lecture by Warner
Lawson, Dean of the College
of Fine Arts at Howard University, Washington, D. C.

A member of the Student Non.
violent Coordinating Committee

Panhellenic Rush Opens
Monday, Programs Planned

(SNCC)

Students Back
Charity Drive

Campus
Barrel
The annual
Fund will reach its climax Tuesday when pledges from students
will he solicited in Clark Gym,
Norton Union, Allenhurst and the
dorms. Alan Sorrell is chairman

formal atmosphere. The formal of the program.
parties will be held from Feb, IS.
26.
Both parties give rushees
The donations
a

received are contributed to charitable organizations. This year’s recepients
be; The United Fund, The
The selection process is initi- will
Associatated at these parties and soon American Mental Health
problem of
both the sororities and the girls ion, deals with the
narrow down their choices. To as- mental disease and provides aid
sure a closer sisterhood sorori- for the mentally ill and a student
ties have a membership limit of scholarship program at U.B.
chance to become better acwith sorority members;
quainted

a

55 girls.
Final bidding which is run
on a preferential basis, will be
Thursday, Feb. 28. The Panhellenic Ball will be held
March 1 at the Statler Hilton to celebrate and congratulate the new pledges.
Mlcki Levine, Panhellenic president, said that sororities offer the
meet 'new
girls a chance to
friends and develop new interests, They also encourage scholarship and give awards to the
girls with the highest averages.
The Council give three scholarship awards, one to the Greek
girl with the highest average, one
to the sorority with the highest
collective average, and a carnation to all the girls w'ho have at.
tained a 2.0 for the previous two
semesters.
At the annual Scholarship T
in April, an award of a hundred
dollars 13 given to any Univeriity
woman on th

At the previously mentioned
locations representatives will present pledge forms to all students
and contributions will be solicited
All contributions will be deducted
from the students breakage fee.

Bucknell Concert
In Harriman Aud
Popular music, folk songs, spirit-

uals, and semi-classic! favorities
will comprise the choral prograrii
to be given by the Bucknell University Men’s Glee Club in Harriipan Auditorium tonight at 8:30.
The concert is open to the
public and is sponsored by the
University of Buffalo Glee Club.
UB’s glee club, known as the
UB Blues will sing the new alma
mater and several other selections,
The Bucknell concert in- Buffalo
opens a four-day mid-winter tour.

priate scholarship funds be made
available to State Universiy.
The trustees said they “are

confident that this tuition and fee
policy will not only solve the problems of inequity but that it will
do so without violating the prinopportunity,
ciple of low-cost
which State University shares
with all public institutions of
higher learning.”
SET UP INCOME FUND
The trustees also announced the
creation of a State University income

fund into which would

be

deposited;
1——All income received by the

various units and the central administration of State University
su sao.qnos papiaads pans uio.jp
tuition, dormitory income from
fees, and charges not required
for annual contract payments to
the State Dormitory Authority,
rentals and other fees.
2—The existing balances of income funds derived from sources
specified in the above, as of a
specified date.
3 Other funds, exclusive of
restricted gifts or endowments.
4— A portion of the annual
state appropriation to State University in an amount at least equal
to the estimated total of State
University income to be received
in State University fund in any
given year.
5—In utilizing the money in
University income
State
the
the university trustees
fund,
would:
(a) Pledge sufficient money to
make ail payments on leaserental agreement for State
University buildings erected
and financed by the State
Universty constructon fund.
(b) Pledge sufficient money to
avoid an impending increase
and permit continuation of
the current level of rental
charges to students in the
dormitories at least for the
period immediately ahead.
(c) Pledge sufficient money for
student union and student
activities supervision to
of the
permit reduction
college fee from $60 to $25.
(d) Pledge sufficient money to
eliminate any infirmary
fees.
(e) Authorize
distribution of
so much of the remaining
balance in the Income Fund
for the qualitative improvement of the educational program of the university and
its various units.
The trustees stressed the “e»
demands
traordinary financial
will make” and
development
‘These demands are. and will
continue to be, exerted on both
and capital budgthe open
ets of the unversty
—

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Fridoy, Jonuory 25, 1963

Dr. Sheppe Studies the “Social Mouse
99

By RONALD RIGGS

To most of us, a mouse may
be no more than an unwelcome
household post. However scientists are becoming: increasingly
convinced (hat study of social
patterns in mice and other animals may eventually cast light on
the complexities within the human social framework.

One such preliminary study was
conducted by Dr. Walter Sheppe,
of biology
professor
assistant
here, under a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Sheppe works with a
doe eyed, furry brown rodent
known as the deer mouse.
(Pecomygcus leucopus) a nocturnal inhabitant of wooded
areas throughout much of
North America. He refuses to
make any equations between
mice and men, but the personality complexities of the rodents are somewhat amazing
to the layman.
T

DEER

Using a six-foot square pen with
a

the ceiling, Ur.

window in

Sheppe observed the mice by the
light of a dim red light which

does not
nightly

disturb

MOUSE

10 minute period of
sizing up would occur. Usually
It consisted of eyeing each
other, punctuated by brief
meetings. Then for some reason which Dr. Sheppe does
not yet know, a pattern was
established as to which mouse
was to dominate the cage.
a

them in their
He kept a

5

to

wanderings.

"Probably I wasn’t close enough
record of what he saw by talking
the minute signals
to observe
Into a tape recorder.
which showed signs of weakness
He used two main approaches.
in one of the mice,” the biologist
1. One mouse was allowed to says. He is now developing equip-

live alone in the pen to become
adjusted to his surroundings and
then one or more mice were placed
in with him.
2. The pen was separated in
half with one mouse living in each
section for a time. Then a small
door was opened allowing them to
come together and their activities
were observed.
When a mouse had been allowed to reside in the cage
for several weeks and then
another was put in with him,

Root

for

will allow him to
watch unobserved from only a few
inches away while this jockeying
for position occurs. He speculates
that such factors as position of
of the ears and tail may telegraph
weakness to the more aggressive
mouse. When the aggressor is established, a wild chase will ensue
with short furious fights erupting.
Short breaks are also taken.

ment which

Two curious facts
these observations.

emerged

Either

from
the

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Special Shanks available for Arts and Science, Business,

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UNDER STUDY
chaser or the chased can end Ihe

pursuit at any time simply by
stopping.
When one stops the
other automatically follows suit.
Also, in spite of furious short
fights, with both mice rolling over

tnd over,

locked in

what

seems

to be mortal combat. Dr. Sheppe
"Ideally, they should be studied
has never seen the mice injure on a small island, which would
in
each other.
effect be an isolated little uni.
Some of their habits proved to verse,” he explains. ‘‘But a farm.
be charming. In one set, Dr. Shep- er’s woodlot, surrounded by ope
pe placed two deer mice in sepa- fields would be fine.” He
plans i
rate cages with a long spiral runhave openings for several big
way separating them. His objective was to observe if they could school students to assist him.
reach each other through the spiThe study will be conducted b
ral runway and what their reaction
first trapping as many mice
would be when they did.
possible and clipping a different
He thought that possibly they
toe on each. Then milk cartons
would battle for territory. Instead
the mice found each other and open at both ends, will be distrithen decided to carry peaceful co- buted throughout the territory. J
existence one step further. They them will be small pieces
carried two facial tissues (nest
smoked paper. When the mic
material) from one cage through
the spiral and combined them with track across the paper, Dr. Sheppi
the two tissues already in another will be able to tell by their foot
prints which mouse is traveling
cage. They then proceeded to build
establishing thei
where, thus
a joint nest in the small box supplied, where they now both live territories. He then plans to breal
trap
the total territory into
in peace.
ping all adult males in one Beg
This summer Dr. Sheppe
men.t and none in the other. Hi:
hypothesis is that ike young male:
hopes to advance his research
will thrive much better in the sec
by studying the mice in their
natural habitat somewhere in
tion where the older males hav*
Western New York.
been trapped.

the drive-ln with the arehe*

McDonald!!

McDonald's IK

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Vi Mile North of SHERIDAN DRIVE at MAPLE ROAD
(Adjacent The Boulevard Mall Plaza)
Open Friday and Saturday until 1:00
Operated by the JERRY BROWNROUT CORP.

A

�Friday. Jonuary 25,

PAGE THftEE

SPECTRUM

1963

Virgil Thomson, Noted Critic
Is New UB Slee ProfessorMusic,

Fellowship Given
Dr. Joseph Kite
By Heart Group

Judging Music; and
The noted composer and critic, Art of
be the Visit- Right and,Left
will
Thomson,
Virgil
Dr. Joseph H. Kite, assistant
The Slee Chair of Music Compoing Slee Professor of Composition
professor of bacteriology and imYork sition has brought a series of leadNew
University
at
State
of
munology has been awarded an
ing composers to the campus. This
advanced research fellowship by at Buffalo for the spring semester.
the
gift

of
endowed chair is the
the American Heart Association.
Mr. Thomson will make the first late Frederick and Alice Slee who
The two-year, $13,000 grant will
in a series of public appearances have also provided for a continucenter on “the use of cell cultures Feb. 14 in
ing series of chamber music cona lecture-recital in Butto study experminental and human
ler Auditorium, Capen Hall at 8:30 certs on the campus. Other comautoimmune disease."
p.m. During his residence, the Uni- posers 'who have held the Slee
Autoimmune disease is caused versity of Buffalo will also present Chair and have preseted lecturewhen antibodies in the blood, for his opera, "The Mother of Us All, recitals for the University and genreasons yet unknown, attack cer- on which he collaborated with Ger- eral public include Aaron Copland,
tain body tissue
trude Stein. The opei ;a is scheduled Carlos Chavez, Leon Kirchner, Ned
for April 4-7.
Rorem, Alexei Haieif, and Allen
In order to study the action
D. Sapp, chairman of the departCity,
Born
Kansas
Missouri,
in
of antibodies on cells, Dr. Kite
ment of music.
was edu189(5,
Thomson
in
Mr.
grows cells from certain tiscated at Harvard and studied comsues in the laboratory under
All students should have
position in New York and Paris
CHAD MITCHEU TRIO
carefully controlled conditions.
with Scalero and Nadia Boulanger.
their ID cards validated for
One important aspect of the For fourteen years (1940-54) he
the second semester in the
work is t*&gt; "fingerprint" the cells. was music critic of the New York
basement of Foster as soon as
That is, to establish why cells Herald Tribune.
possible. The personal schedfrom one tissue are different from
ule cards which were .stamped
written in all musical
Having
those in another. .
duringregistration are needed
is perhaps
Thomson
forms,
Mr.
zaga University in Spokane, WashThe Chad Mitchell Trio will apof for the validation.
for
“The
through
“This
is
the
best-known
Mother
approached
in concert Saturday ington, during. the tall semester study of antigens, chemical sub- Us All,” and a second opera with
in' here
sang
■b. 9 from 8-10 in Clark Gym of 1959. For one year they
within the cells,” Dr. Kite text by Miss Stein, “Four Saints
campus
and stances
groups
on
'
the
for
small
Diamonds Watches
ickets are now on sale in
says. “A cell from one tissue seems in Three Acts,” which was first
city
promotion
under the
in the
Norton ticket booth
to have certain antigens that are performed in 1934. “Four Saints’’
of Father Reinard Beaver, a local peculiar to that tissue cell. If was revived on Broadway in 1952
Watch and
Lenny Klein
and Jules Levine
Catholic priest who had heard the these can be isolated and identi- and was presented that year in
COMPLETE
Jewelry
a
co-chairmen of the program
possible to shod Paris as part of the festival “Masfied
it
he
may
*0^ OPTICAL
group sing at school.
Repairing
sponsored
by
light
assigns
the
con
on
how
difis
nature
of
the
Twentieth
Cenhhh
terpieces
SERVICE
ferent tasks to different groups tury.”
'Alfred G. Frisch.Optician
committee. Tickets are $1.59
Later they travelled to Manhat
of
cells.
also
provided
Mr. Thomson
r person if purchased at the tea forseveral engagements. They
musical scores for two films by
He cited work done by his
appeared on the Arthur Godfrey
h and, $1,7 5 at the door
PA. 5415
Pare Lorentz, “The Plough that
department in the area of inradio show, at the East Side supThe trio is really a fourBroke the Plains,” and "The
flammation of the thyroid.
per club, the Blue Angel, and then
some, consisting of singers
River,” and for Robert Flaherty’s
Patients with this disease have
appeared on Pat Boone's, Peggy
Chad Mitchell, Mike Kobluk,
film, “Louisiana Story,” for
been found to carry autoantiMel
Tonne’s
television
Lee’s and
and Joe Frazier. The boys, in
which the composer received a
bodies, antibodies which atcollaboration with
musical
shows. They topped this off with a
Puli tizer award in 1949. His othtack host tissue, in their blood
Hall
performance
Carnegie
at
director Milt Okun, arrange
stream.
er works include symphonies,
Harry
with
Belafonte.
their music in a distinct sound
concertos, Masses, string quarThe presence of autoantibodies
that has made them a part of
tets and “musical portraits,” in
remembered
Some
of
their
most
the folk and popular music
has been established in certain
which the subject actually posed
“John
Birch
records
include
the
world in a relatively short
heart diseases also.
for Mr. Thomson as would be
“Mighty
Society",
and
the
albums
time.
done lor an artist’s portrait.
Day on Campus” and “The Chad
By studying cell chemistry in
Mr. Thomson has appeared as
The group originated at Gon- Mitchell Trio at the Hitler End.” the laboratory, Dr. Kite says, it
York
may be possible to link certain guest-conductor with the New
other orchestras
antigens with certain antibodies, Philharmonic and
is author
in. a lock and key situation, thus at home and abroad. He
of four books: The State of
ascertaining wlyy oerttfn antiMusic. The Musical Scene; The
bodies attack certain cells.

Chad Mitchell Trio Coming;

Tickets on Sa e in Norton

-

JEWELRY

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

WHAT A TREAT
to your

APPETITE
and your

POCKETBOOK

AAusical "Guys and Dolls" Slated
For Baird Hall Week of Feb. 20-28
BUGELSKI

university’s music depart-will present the musical
Guys and Dolls Feh. 20-28 at Baird
Hall. The performances will begin
t 8:30 p.m. Because the new rule
onceruing free admission does
ot apply to musicals, student
•kets will cost $1

The

ment

The cast is composed mainly ot
Other persons perform
mg are doing so only in cases
where students were not available.
The orchestra of approximately 24
musicians
also consists ot only
udents. Auditions for both vocal
nd instrumental parts were held
past week

iid'ents.

the stage director and Josh Freedman is the stage manager. The
musical director is William Cox,
who is the first student director
of a major university production
here, Mr. Cox, a junior majoring
in music, is a former choir director and organist, and has directed
many musicals.
He was the musical director tor
Kurt Weill’s Threepenny Opera at
the Statler Hilton last fall. He was
both musical director and pianist
for the Studio Theatre production
of The Fantastics. Mr. Cox has
also directed The Boyfriend, Oklahoma, Pajama
Game, Take Me
Along and Plain ’n’ Fancy. He is
active in music department activities and productions, including
Kiss Me Kate last year.

Once Again

Carrots

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�PAGE FOUR

Fridoy, Jonuory 25,

SPECTRUM

1963

m
n(5)@
A New

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Bookstore
IS HERE

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3610 Main Street

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�Fridov, Jonuory 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIVE

Plans for Winter Weekend,

Spectrum

CaftloaJ Feb. 14-17, Are Underway

Winter Weekend chairmen Mike pics are also available. Deadline
Franklin and Carol Kujawa h'ave for these entries is Friday.
The Math Club will hold its first announced that
,
plans
are well
1
meeting of the spring semester
,
,
Plans are underway for many
\...
.
.
underway for an event-filled pro1
Wednesday at 7:30 pm in Noras traditional actnew as well
r,
,
,
, .
ton 329.
The speaker for the gram. Feb. 14-17.
ivities. A tobaggan party and ski
evening will be Karl Schroeder
Entry blanks for the theme trip have been added to the prowho will discuss Symbolic Logic. contest are available at the
as well as
candy gram. “Individual
Refreshments will be served fol- counter; the winner will- receive group participation is urged in
lowing
the meeting. Interested
free passes to all the activities. order to make Winter Weekend
students are invited to attend.
Applications for king: and queen, a n overwhelming success,
said
snow sculpture, and winter olym- Mr. Franklin.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

MATH CLUB

-

,,,

.

„

,

.

.,

....

i

»

,

'*

The Photo club will meet with
its advisor today at 4:00 pm in
the dark room.
The budget will
The following is the placement
be completed for submission to
schedule for the next few days:
the Student Senate.
'

Placement Sche ule Announced

Today

PRE-LAW SOCIETY
There

will be an important
meeting of the Pre-Law Society
Wednesday at 7:00 pm, in room
329 of Norton. All members are
urged to attend and newcomers
Guest • speaker will
are invited.
be William B. Mahoney, a Buffalo criminal lawyer.
Membership cards will be distributed.

DR. SIDNEY 8HULMAN

Dr. Shulman Receives Grant;
Continues Work on Project
An associate professor in the
State University of Buffalo Medical School, Dr. Sidney Shulman,
has received a research career
award from the National Institute
of Health.
The award will pay Dr. Shulman’s full salary and other
benefits so long as he remains
at the University. He is associate professor of both immunochemistry and biophysics.
Research career awards are made
only to persons considered outstanding in their fields. The award
is the latest in a series of grants
awarded to Dr. Shulman by NIil,
including two ,of more than $25,000
annually which he has received
(or the past seven years.
One has been increased this year
to $41,000 to allow for the purchase of additional equipment.
Dr. Shulman was granted the
career award to continue his studies on the immunochemistry and
protein chemistry of normal and
malignant tissues.
He is interested in identifying
the particular substances called
antigens which characterize individual tissues of the body such as
the thyroid, adrenal glands or the

—

“By identifying the chemical
and physical properties, computing the molecular weight
and shape and identifying the
chemical constituents of an antigen," he explained, “we hope
to learn more about the normal physiological processes.

—

Seeking

Bus. Ad.

Jan. 29
HARRISON RADIATOR COMPANY
M.E. adn I.E. majors.
FEDERAL AVIATION AGENSeeking C.E. and E.E.
CY
Jan. 30
GLEASON WORKS
Math,
Physics, E.E., IE. and ME,
majors,
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORPORATION
Seeking Liberal Arts and Bus.
Ad. majors.
—

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ME., I.E. Liberal Arts, Bus.
Ad. and Accounting majors.
CARNATION COMPANY
Seeking Liberal Arts and
Bus. Ad. majors
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Liberal Arts. Bus. Ad. and Accounting majors

.Ian. 28
STUDENT TICKETS
UNION CAR HIDE CHEMICALS
Chemistry maCOMPANY
Students at UB may receive injors
all degree levels
on
dividual tickets to any events
REMINGTON RAND
Seeksponsored by the music departl?\g Accounting majors
ment, except musicals (such as
EASTMAN
KODAK
COM“Guys and Dolls,” to be performed in February). Tickets can be
obtained upon presentation of
their ID cards at the box office
in Baird Hall, prior to the night
of the performance.
—

Most antigens are found not only
In one organ but in many. Dr.
Shulman is trying to isolate and
purify the antigens restricted to
certain organs in order to learn
more about cellular development
and function of the organ.

PANY
majors.

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Feb,

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Seeking. Liberal Arts and Bus.
Ad, majors. PILLBURY COMSeeking Bus. Ad.
PANY
majors, OHIO EDISON COMSeeking E.B.
PANY
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New kind of pen for
people who are always
running out of ink

MIXER COMMITTEE

The mixer committee of Norton
is sponsoring an informal dance,
the ship-wreck party, next Friday.
It will be held in the multi-pur‘‘In this way, of course, we also
learn more about such abnormal- pose room from 8:30-12:30 pm.
Refreshments will be served and
ities as are found in cancer.
admission Is free.
“It may be that there are certain
Poetry Reading
antigens that are unique to cancer
tissue. If this were so, it might be
John Berryman, poet and critic,
possible, sometime in the distant
will read some of his works in the
future, to Identify them and proExhibition Room of Lockwood Liduce antibodies to attack them.”
brary today at 4 p.m. He is the
Dr. Shulman is also studying
author of The Dispossessed $nd
“autoimmune” diseases
diseases
Homage To Mistress Broadstreet.
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Puffer Splits Fee
The $50 per semester general
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down by Dr. Claude E. Puffer,

proof cartridge or fill it
from an ink bottle. Choice
of seven solid T4K gold
points. And the Parker 45
"convertible"costs only $5.

The new
Parker 45 "convertible"

'ice-president for business affairs.
He said $17 goes to the State

Dormitory Authority to

oKblei-

pay am-

5

ortization of the debt of Norton
non; $7.50 goes to the student
alth office and $12.50 goes to
athletic department.
Also $13 goes for student actities- which is again broken
n; 25 to 30% is used to build
U P reserve;
|5.80 is requested by
the Student' Senate; and the rest

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�Fridoy, Jonuory 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

czCetters

*

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

ACADEMIC FREEDOM
To the Editor;

No Semi-Weekly,
Here's the Reason

As a recent alumnus and membei of the faculty of the University of Buffalo, I read with double'
absorption the generally . brave
and forthright statements by cit-

izens of the university community
in clear support of the long-established tradition of academic
Last June future plans for The Spectrum included a freedom at the University of
possible semi-weekly this semester. In accordance with this Buffalo.

plan finances were altered, as well as ideas for printing,
copy and advertising.

Now we are in the period we had looked forward to
last June but find that our dream of a semi-weekly Spectrum will not, in fact, cannot, come true. Although our
advertising, which has been very successful, and our allotment will cover the increased cost of two issues, our staff
is not large enough or experienced enough as yet to handle
two issues per week.
Two issues coming out Tuesday and Friday would
necessitate a great burden to student staffers. First, it
would mean coming to work on Saturdays and Sundays,
days heavily filled with assignments which may be overlooked during the week because of Spectrum duties.
Secondly, it would call for another day at the printer's
checking page proofs. Thirdly, it would be a heavier load
on all staff members with the result that in an attempt
to "get out" two papers a week we would be sacrificing
quality for quantity.
We did not feel that we could tax the ambition of our
predominately freshman and sophomore staff by requesting
that they spend even their free days in The Spectrum office.
A poll of the staff showed that 98% could not come in on
the extra days because of a part-time job, homework assignments, or participation in some other activity. Certainly
the 2% that were willing to assume the extra responsibility
could not possibly put out another issue by themselves irregardless of their zeal and enthusiasm.
In addition to the above, academic considerations have
forced the resignation of three top editorial members. With
a staff thus depleted it would be absolutely impossible to
consider another issue. We will have to make certain comprises and changes to accommodate the recent staff depletion. We hope we will be able to continue our twelve-page
edition throughout the semester, except of course in the
case of a very slow week news-wise, but if we cannot you
can at least be assured that the pages you do get will be
well layed out, attractive, readable and informative.

In retrospect we hove noticed that whenever the
academic boom is lowered as it is around exams, it invariably lowers on a member of the newspaper staff.
This is the universal problem on college papers, for a
college publicatiton is a week in, week out event. One
cannot say, "Well, we're a litttle short-handed today,
let's start tomorrow." Tomorrow is already reserved for
something else. And if what is supposed to be done today
is kept for tomorrow, the whole operation is delayed so
that instead of hitting the stands at eleven every Friday
the paper would come out sporadically.
A newspaper takes a lot of time. Usually discarded by
the student after he has read what he feels is relevant,
the papdr represents nothing. Few students consider how
long it took to write the story they are reading, to find an
appropriate spot in layout, or how it took to think up an
attractive headline that fit. Nor do they consider the hours
spent at the printer’s proofreading, the planning of an
effective circulation system so papers will be on campus
by eleven, or the cost involved in printing.
We are not suggesting that students do this. As editors,
this is our responsibility. But in the light of what was said
previously, we simply ask the student body to consider this.
We cannot go semi-weekly, nor can we increase the number
of pages per issue, but we still do our best to give you a
Spectrum vou will find attractive, readable and worthwhile.

The irony of the situation libs
in the fact that such acts of academic statesmanship were occasioned by proposals for political censorship. It is undeniable that any
society that exercises political
control to prevent the expression
of opposed ideologies, repugnant
to it because of their repressive
features, renders its methods entirely indistinguishable from the
techniques of those it endeavors
to supress. The hypocrisy of those
who would deny freedom in the
name of preserving it is here
made blatantly evident.
It may well be the case that
this situation, unfortunate though
it be, has itself provided a rare
educational opportunity of a different sort for those very students
whose chances for further enlight-

enment were being circumscribed.
For it must have been a lesson
vivildy underscored by first-hand
experience for students of the
University of Buffalo to witness
and participate in events that
succeeded in arousing the political
passions of men and thus to be
instructed in the living significance of one meaning of freedom.
However unwittingly, those selfappointed censors over political
views which they finfi personally
unpalatable have provided a striking educational experience in the
real dangers that lie in abridgment
of personal, in this instance scholastic, freedom in a democracy.
But this lesson, however, should
lead us to look beyond the specific confines of the situation in
which it occured.
As the university exists in and
is responsive to society, so its
educational prerogative
them academic freedom
exits by virtue of those freedom

special

among

granted and guarded by society
as a whole. Efforts to abridge
such freedoms are mirrored in
attempts to restrict their academic
analogues. And the lesson these
events provide is rendered quite
clear: Freedom to agree is no
freedom at all.
I wish to congratulate the ed-

Ohio State Law Professor
Reviews 1962 Decisions
The following was printed in the University of Pennsylvania Lav
Review. In the light of recent developments, relative to the Apthekcr
case, we thought students would find this relevant reading.
“Campus censorship in 1962 easily rivaled that of any previouf
year. From coast to coast, and particularly in the Midwest, student
bodies were quarantined from a variety of political heresies.”
This statement was made by Professor William W. Van Alstynt
of Ohio State University Law School in the January issue of the
“University of Pennsylvania Law Review.” Professor Van Alstyne’s
Article considers the extent to which the Constitution restricts the
right of state university officials to bar controversial speakers from
campus.
The author points out that “a considerable number of
guest lecturers, formally invited to state university campuses
by recognized student organizations, have been turned away
by members of the administration. It is significant that those
to whom the students were forbidden to listen were very often
unpopular figures.”
Certain organizations, such as the American Civil Liberties Union,
the National Student Association, and the American Association of
University Professors, have strenuously objected to this state of affairs.
The latter two organizations have based their arguments essentially
on policy grounds, and not on constitutional rights. The American
Bar Association’s Committee on the Bill of Rights, however,, “is of
the opinion that ‘no question of the Bill of Rights is involved’ where
university officials decide that spokesmen for the Communist party
shall be denied access to university facilities ordinarily available for
guest speakers.”
But Professor Van Alstyne takes issues with this position.
He argues that much of what the NSA and AAUP urge on
policy grounds is in fact fully supported by constitutional mandates. It is the thesis of his Article that “the ABA Committee’s
position with regard to Communist speakers is wrong. Settled
Principles of constitutional law require a liberality in state
university rules dealing with guest speakers far beyond what
that Committee suggests or what currenly prevails on many

itors of the Buffalo Alumnus for
campuses.”
the boldness of imagination with
After describing the prevailing Supreme Court test dealing with
which they responded in support
of the academic practice for which the suppression of speech, the author points out that “Universities
we alumni and members of the have experienced difficulty with both parts of the test. They have
improperly identified the kinds of evils that are constitutionally within
teaching profession have so much
to develop conclusive standards
to be thankful. All this has made their power to prevent, and have failed
isolate speakers whose presence on campus will probably
which
to
by
of
my associations
me very proud
incite violence.”
with the university.
Professor Van Alstyne’s major objection is that state universities
ARNOLD BERLEANT PH.D.
decide to bar speakers on the basis of their affiliations rather than
C. W. Post College
L. I. U.

(Continued on Page 8)

THE SPECTRUM

ROTC
A Breach of Academic Freedom?
—

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at
Dr. Ralph Maud, in the latest Buffalo. Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo 14.
Y.
Published weekly from the first week of September to the last week
N
issue of the New Student Review, In’
April, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter.
article
wrote an
which branded
JOAN R. FLORY
Editor-In-Chief
the ROTC program a violation
of academic freedom. Dr. Maud Sports Editor
JAMES BAKER
Circul. Mgr
KAREN SANFORD
Because of the increased lack of support for the various
CHARLES STONE
Editor
Office Mgr
BEV ROSENOW
the officer pro- Copy
Business Mgr
LARRY SINGER , Advertising Mgr
ED BRANDT
concerts sponsored by the Union’s concert committee, the inveighed against
WM. SIEMERINO
curement program in two impor- Pin. Ad. ...THOMAS HABNLE. JR.
Editorial Ad
SUSAN SLOMAN
group announced that unless the coming Chad Mitchell Trio tant ways. First it was charged Layout Editor
concert is well attended they will have to cancel all future that a “large military . . . GENERAL STAFF: Louise Bank, Victoria Bugetskl, Anglo Campanell a
concerts. This means scheduled concerts for this semester, indoctrination program,” such as Camille LoBracco, Elaine Barron, Marilyn Berclk, Judith Button, Sharon
Larry
Cooper,
Mary Lou
Marcia
Nick Constantino,
Wilson,
with the exception of the Spring Weekend one, as well as ROTC. is out of place in an ac- Clarke,
Frenkel, Karen Furlong, Mark Feldman, Barry Epstein, David Frey, Joe&gt;
Elm, Alan Hoffman, Judy Haber. David Irwin, Rick Gelman, Barbara Goluplans for next year.
ademic atmosphere.
water, Ron Kaminski,
John Knlpler, Anne Mllnte, Bryna Millman, Cathy
McHugh,
Lonl Levy, Franl Marfurt,
Donald Irwin, Arnie Mazur, Pat
The committee realizes that the gym is not the best
Rocky Versace,
Jim
Marcia
Muslal,
Nixon,
Orszulak,
Jane
Sommer,
imbuing
men’s
minds
If
young
Wallach, Lillian Williams, Kathy Shea, Linda Weiss, Esther Ginsplace for concerts, but since it is the only thing available with the principles that made our Loma
berg, Colleen Lang, Allan Lavin.
they must do the best they can. They ask students to con- country what it is today is “in- PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Russell Goldberg, Larry Schultz. Joel Haven
Wallace Peycha.
sider this and support the concerts.
doctrination,“ then the ROTC is
certainly engaging in is.
HowEntered as second class matter February a, 1951.
It is to the credit of the committee that they have ever, should this indoctrination
.he Post Office at Buffalo, N. Y., under the Act of Mar*;r
$
to
succeeded in bringing
the campus such big names as be condemned, as Dr. Maud sug3, ISI 1 Acceptance for mailing at a special rate of post
ape provided for In Section 1108. Act of October 8, ' • !
Dakota Staton and the Modern Jazz Quartet. Students can gests? It seems that today in the
authorized February 9, 1951.
assure the appearance of more big name performers by war of ideologies, all Americans
Subscription $3.00 per year, cm illation 6600
Represented for national vi'fn sin* by \attonal
simply giving their support to the programs.
(Continued on Page 9)
v T
vertlsing

Concerts Need Support

-

—

»

PRESS

Service. Inc..

420 Madison

ive,,

\

!

if

*.

*w

York

�Fridoy, Jonuory 25, 1963

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

C^oiumn
By ANNE MIINTE

We’re back to another semester of rushing, parties, projects,
and a little study on the side. Though we’re still recuperating from
vacations and exams, plans are already in formation for the busy
months ahead.
As a point of information, this column will henceforth be the
means of communication for all Greek activities. This includes Pan
Hellenic, and IFC news as well as individual sorority and fraternity
functions. The column belongs to the Greeks, and it is up to them
to make it all they want it to be. Any suggestions as to a change
in format or content will be appreciated and considered for approval.
Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity extends congratulations and best
Tomorrow night at 8:30
wishes to their newly initiated brothers.
there will be a closed party at the Ukranian Hall on, Military Road.
In order to quell any rumors that might be heard on campus, the
brothers announce that as of Jan. 22, 1963, AEPi has exactly 86
brothers on the roster.
Tonight the sisters of Alpha Gam and their dates will have a
party at Warner’s Steak House. Saturday afternoon, initiation will
be held at the Wllliamsville Inn followed by the Alpha Gam annual
The dance will honor
dinner dance at the (Cavalier Motor Lodge.
the pledges Congratulations to all the new sisters.

The fellows of Beta Sigma Rho are eagerly looking forward to
a great Spring semester. There will be a closed party tomorrow
An open book forum will be held
night at 994 Lafayette Street.
this Sunday.
As a final note, the fellows wish to welcome Mike
Bndler back to the ranks.
The brothers of Gamma Phi welcome their newly initiated brothers and extend congratulations to them. Initiation was held Saturday night at the Niagara Manor. Tomorrow night there will be a
bowling party.
'

Phi Epsilon Kappa would like to thank brother Ralph Endree
The
tor another great party at his home on New Year’s Eve.
brothers who ordered decals tor their cars will be glad to hear
they have finally arrived.

The sisters of Phi Sigma Sigma spent their intercession in New
York City, the Buffalo sisters being the guests of the New York
sisters. The vacation was climaxed by a fantastic evening at New
The Phi
York’s 1 newest Polynesian restaurant, the Hawaii Kai.
gig’s would like to inform the rest of the student body that this
restaurant can’t be heat for food, service, entertainment, and atmosphere. It’s back to work now with rushing plans and a philanthropy project first on the agenda. Congratulations to the newly
initiated sisters.

Phi 2eta Chi announces that their philanthropic
Members
active with the Cerebral Palsy Center,
attend the center on Saturday mornings as often as
ing their Christmas party they worked with fifteen
Center’s day care program. They have shown that
not only occupied in social activities..

organization is
of the sorority
possible.
Dur-

children in the
the Greeks arc

On Feb 3 the Sammies will hold the biggest and best Soiree
ever and it will all take place in the Hotel Buffalo. Entertainment
will he provided by Dave Cheskin’s orchestra, and the dress will be
semi-formal. Tickets are now on sale, and may be purchased from
There is a limited supply of tickets, so get them
any member.
SAM congratulates fratre Howard
while they are still available!
Flaster for winning the Sigma Alpha Mu National Competitive Senand
ior Scholarship Award, This award is based on both academics
participation in campus affairs.
Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a date party this weekend. The big
brothers and little brothers pi Sig Ep will hold a retreat this weekend.

There will be a beer stag following the IPC Mixer Tuesday night.
The fraters of Phi Epsilon Pi Fraternity are eagerly awaiting the
first Buffalo appearance of Lee Adrian and the Campus Playboys at
their open party this Saturday evening at Washington Hall. The
combo will be giving a preview today In the Multipurpose Room
from 3 to 5 Tickets for the party can be purchased from any brother
the large number
or at the door Congratulations are in order for
of Phi Ep’s wlio made the Dean’s List last semester. The fraters
recent marriage.
would also like to congratulate Lewis Shapiro on his

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE MAZUR

4 1963, a new year! People
speak of "new” this and that,
resolutions, "moving ahead with
vigor,” forthcoming Spring fashions, and other such nonsense.
Change, 1 have been told, is the
only constant, but I rather doubt
that man has significantly advanced since he first crawled out
of the cave.
The nations of the world are
forever hostile. Both camps, the
"free” and the "communist,” oppose each other with a vengeance,
even on the athlete field. Except
for the absence of any military
threat, the two power blocks ( internally, show no particular measure of understanding either.
It’s

Dr. Gordon Silber Named
To Head Foreign Study Post

departGordon R. Silber, chairman of of the modern languages
the department of modern lan- ment for 13 years. During World
guages and literature at the State War II, he served in the Army
University of New York at BufSecurity Agency for three years.

falo, has been named Professor-in

■charge of the 1963-64 Sweet
Brair College Junior Year in
France. He will be on leave from
bis post at Buffalo during the
1963-64 academic year, returning
shortly' before Sept. 1. 1964.
Announcement of his appointment is made by president Anne
Gary Pannell of Sweet Brair College, which administers this coeducational foreign study program
under the direction of Dr. R. John
Matthew.
Dr. Silber has both the bachelors
and Ph.D. degree from Princeton,
with further study at the universities of Grenoble, Florence, and
Chicago, a nd at Middlebury College, He began his teaching career
at Princeton, and from 1936 to
1960 he taught at Union College.
Schenectady, serving as chairman

Dr. Silber was chairman of the

national screening committee for
the Fulbright program in France
in 1961 and he was director of the
Paris office of the Institute of
International Education in 1951-52.
He has served for many years
on its Council on the Junor Year
Abroad, and he is a member of
the Advisory Committee on the
Junior Year in France.

During the current year. 110
men and women from 45 colleges
are enrolled in the Sweet Brair
Junior Year in France. Since 1948,
1265. have, participated in the
Sweet Brair s
program under
administration. After six week’s
preparatory language drill in
Tours, students spend winter and
spring terms at the University
of Paris.

Any student who must make a
change in his program for this
semester must make it at the gym
this Tuesday. Change of sections,
dropping or adding a course, or
any other academic change can
be made from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Undergraduate classes are cancelled Tuesday.

Those students who had to report to the gym last September
for changes will look forward with
distaste to Tuesday’s program. In
September the lines began at 6:45
a.m. and continued all day in a

curving snake-like formation.
Once safely in the gym students
waited in line to get their slips
signet! by an advisor, waited in
line to get class cards, and once
more waited i n line to be checked
out.
Only those who must have a
change in program are asked to
go to the'gym since conditions will
probably be crowded as it is. Anyone who has had a class cancelled
by a department may pick up a
course at this time.
As evidenced by the picture,
here we go again!

Within our very own boundaries there is sufficient current evidence to point to the
sorrowful amount of callousness and ignorance present,
no matter the degree of sophistication
middle
class
America has attained. President Kennedy speaks of a
united nation bent upon political, economic, and social
progress, and faces a Congress
of Southern Democrats.
Labor and management, rich
and powerful give lip service to
mediation, cooperation, and have
yet to realize that their needs
must be the same. That New York
City
imports newspapers and
subway goers must read the National Enquirer, that business suffers from a strangulating strike
in the harbors, must seem unimportant to indifferent, blind people.
I cannot believe that we walk
Students flood gym to change programs
about with opened eyes. It cannot be that human beings have
a heart except as an organ with
which to pump blood, A singer is
appreciated tor having a strong
and pleasant voice but is not understood as a young, proud Negro
(and I use the label advisedly),
A two-million dollar addition M, Harris, chairman of the chemfor James Meredith is yet pelted
to
Acheson Hall, the chemistry istry department.
in Mississippi and his northern
In addition to the wing itself,
University
cousin is told “the apartment is building, will enable the
number
of
over
$350,000 is being spent for
graduate
to
double
the
rented.’’
including a
students in chemistry in 5-8 years. movable equipment
The human condition does
There are presently 60 graduate nuclear magnetic resonance specnot change with a tin horn
trometer, electron paramagnetic
students in the department.
sounds
blasting
headache/
resonance spectrometer, mass specwith
construction
The new wing,
'round about midnight, Dec.
trometer, optical rotary dispersion
presently at the half-way point,
31.
Under such conditions,
apparatus, and x-ray equipment,
represents a 75 per cent increase
people touch one another
in addition to standard types of
lecture
including
space,
but they never do embrace.
floor
a
in
optical spectrophotometers and
theatre seating 250 and underequipment for chromotograhy.
We have learned our lessons
and
facillab
classroom
graduate
Also, provisions are being made
well, but how meaningful have
ities.
those lessons been. “Honesty is the
for vastly enlarged machine shops,
However, over one-half the new glass blowing facilities, and a
best policy" is a . typically nice
sounding phrase. However, I ques- area will be used for post-graduate pent-house high pressure labortion what exactly is being said. research according to Dr, Gordon atory.
Is honesty an end in itself, or is
it merely a better policy to follow
for whatever
dishonesty,
than
ends?

Addition Has Possibilities,
Student Research Expands

—

It has been said that Christianyet

ity has not failed, for it has
officers to be practiced.
The sisters of Theta Chi Sorority inducted their new
last Monday night, with Betty Lock as president. Initiation of pledges
The sisters are looking forward to u
will take place this Friday.
the
social with TKE tonight, and their dinner dance Saturday at

Prime Rib Restaurant.

For Changes in Courses,
Line Forms at Gym, Tuesday

THE LAW AND YOU
■i—

by Ronald Kaminski

the oldest and most
of professions is the
profession of law. Any profession
is identified and created by its code
of conduct or ethics by which the
Paul Jacobs, pianist with the
behavior of its members is Judged
New York Philharmonic, will be
and regulated.
concert
of
cona
presented in
temporary music at 8:30 p.m. in
Lawyers held high status in
Butler Audtorium, Peb. 4.
colonial America and twentyfive lawyers signed the DeclaraA graduate of the Julliard
School of Music, Mr. Jacobs spent
tion of Independence. Because
ten years in Europe as a concert
the lawyer's code of ethics
artist. He returned to the U.S,
very
strictly regulates his conin 1961 and for the past few
duct with his clients, other
the
New
with
months has played
lawyers, the courts, and the
York Philharmonic, accompanying
public,
its
of
the law today still
on
tour

New York Pianist
To Appear Feb. 4

that organization
Japan.

For the summers of 1959-62,
Jacobs has been on the faculty of
the Berkshire Music Center, Tanglewood, Massachusetts as Fromm

Instructor i n composition and was
Fromm pianist for the Princeton
Seminar in Advanced Music Studies, 1960. In 1956, he was awarded
the Arnold Medal.
At 9 a.m. Feb. 5. a reception for
Mr. Jacobs will be held in the
Dorothy M, Haas Lounge in Norton Hall.
invert

Aiming

honorable

———

work toward the Improvement
of his profession, to lead public opinion, and to apswer the
call to public office if it should
come. Every lawyer, at any one
time, is involved in at least
one of these functions.
latrge

segments

of

the public

the
greatly misunderstand even
simplest facts about lawyers. Many

think that his fees are too large
or that his job is "defending people
who have broken the law." This is
despite the fact that many lawyers
nothing for consultation
charge
and that 110% of all litigation is
settled by lawyers outside of court.
maintains its high status.
Most people do not realize that
the law is a device for regulating
grievAssociation
has
Bar
Every
human relations in a way designed
ance committees to hear complaints to give maximum opportunity and
pertaining to both a lawyer's pro.
freedom to the greatest number.
tessional incompetence and per.
sonal and moral misconduct. Good
r Dhcre are over 265,000 lawyers
character is the “first and fore- whose services are available to the
Yet there is a
most" requirement of being a law- private citizen.
yer. A lawyer who violates a growing shortage of lawyers in the
canon of ethics can be censured, many specialties of the law. 97%
suspended, or disbarred. Because are* male and New York has the
he IS a public officer, his conduct greatest total (1/6), followed by
is regulated and supervised by the Illinois and California WashingJudiciary.
ton, D. C. leads the nation in the
greatest number of lawyers per
The five functions of a law1,000 population.
wise
be
a
yer require that he
to
Next weeW: Insanity
advocate,
counselor/ a wise

�P,AGE

College Students Offered

Work and Travel Abroad

to $190 a month in a West German
factory.
ISTC members are at liberty
to make their own travel arrangements or sign up for a seminar
gram for student work and travel program! that includes low-cost
jet transportation and tours. ISTC
abroad in 1963.
Among the innovations offered travel this year will be handled by
for the summer ahead will be job SITA. Founded’ in 1933 as the
opportunties outside of Western Student International Travel AsEurope, travel grants, and a two- sociaion, SITA is one of the largeway exchange program whereby st and most experienced travel
ISTC members can obtain travel organizations in the world. More
expense reductions by ■ providing than 25,000 persons from 50 states
work or room and board for for- and 46 foreign countries have
eign students visiting the UB.
participated in SITA trips. SITA
The goal of the ISTC, the book- travel grants up to $500 are
let points out, is to provide stim- available to ISTC members.
One of the more extensive Euroulating work, study and travel
experience abroad as an essential pean tours ISTC has planned, in
part of education and a means of collaboration with SITA, is the
furthering good will. In the past Road-toRome Seminar, a 21-day.
both students (ages 16-35) and 7-country tour tht precedes the
teachers (no age limit) have job assignments. This year, for
participated in such programs, ho first time, there will also be
which includes paying jobs, orien- aMiddle East Seminar in Israel.
Round trip jet travel to Tel Aviv
tation seminars and tours.
For the most part, job openings will include stopovers in Romo
are in unskilled categories with and in Paris. A two-day seminar
minimal language qualifications. in Tel Aviv on the culture and
They cover such occupations as history of the region will be folfarming,
construction and tac lowed by a five-day tour of Istorywork, child care and hotel- rael and a month’s work on a
resort work. Wages are based on kibbutz.
the standard rates in the various
The brochure, can be obtained
countries and may range from by sending 20c to ISTC, 39 Cortand board in a Spanish work camp landt Street, New York 7, N. Y.

In a brochure sent to college
and university placement directors
throughout the country ths week,
the International Student Travel
Center outlined a stepped-up pro-

’

Friday, January 25, 1963

SPECTRUM

EIGHT

Judges Selected
In Essay Contest
Judges for ABC Radio’s “1962
HILLEL
Edward P. Morgan Essay Contest’’
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
the
some
of
nation’s
include
will
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
most prominent statesmen, it was in the Hillel House. Mrs. Norman
announced today. The judges are: Fertig will review “Moses" by Sholem Asch. An Oneg Shabbat will
Secretary of Labor W. Willard follow.
Hillel will sponsor a Supper SoWirtz; Supreme Court Justice
Arthur Goldberg; former Secre- cial tomorrow from 7 ;00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. Delicatessen will be
tary of Labor James P. Mitchell; served and
reservations are not
former Secretary of Labor Fran- necessary. Recorded music for
cis Perkins; Sen. Jacob K. Javits; dancing will be provided.
The annual campus drive for the
President
George
AFL-CIO

United Jewish Fund will get unMeany; Dean John McConnell of
der way Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
Industrial
Cornell University’s
Hillel House. Invitations to atand Labor Relations School; ABC tend a special program for workRadio Network President Robert ers in the campaign have been exby Gila Rosenheimer, the
R. Pauley; and ABC Radio news- tended
campus division chairman. Mr. Joman Edward P. Morgan.
seph Bronstein, assistant director
is servTheme of the contest will be United Jewish Federation,
ing as an advisor to the student
“Youth'c Challenge in the Labor
committee.
Market of the ’60’s.’’
Students interested in joining
The man and woman who win any of the weekly Hillel study and
the 1962 contest for college under- discussion groups may now register
graduate students will receive for them at Hillel House. The
scholarships for graduate study in second semester schedule is: Hebrew 1—Sunday at 2:00 p.m.; Yidthe school of their choice and an
—Sunday at 3:00 p.m.; Bible
expensive-paid visit to Washington dish
Study (Book of Jeremiah)—Sunwhere they will meet with leaders
day at 3:00 p.m.; Jewish Ethics—
of government, labor education Sunday
at 4:00 p.m.; Talmud—
and broadcasting.
Thursday at noon. “Live and
Semi-finalists will receive the Learn” discussion series—Thursnew edition of the 24-volume Col- day at 3:00 p.m.
lier’s Encyclopedia.
NEWMAN CLUB
ABC Radio and the AFL-CIO,
Newman Club will sponsor a sowhich sponsors the network’s “Ed- cial Saturday night at Newman
ward P. Morgan and the. News,” Hall from 8:00 p.m. to 12:00 p.m.
will be joined in their association
Wednesday a general meeting
with this year’s contest by the will be held in Norton Union at
US Department of Labor. The 7:30 p.m. Mr. Endee will speak
Four faculty members will partMilton Plesur, assistant dean of
anon “Character by Accident.”
icipate in a panel discussion en- University College and assistant Department ceebrates its 50th
Mass is said daily at Newman
niversary i n 1963.
titled “The Condition of the World professor of history and education.
Hall at 12:00 noon. Father Streng
Today." at a dinner meeting of “The Middle East;” Dr, George A.
Deadline for submitting entries, urges all dorm students to attend
the Montefiore Club,. Wednesday Brubaker, assistant professor of which are required to be 600 words
Sunday Mass at the Cantalician
at 6:30 p.m.
history, “Latin America,” and Dr. in length, is midnight Jan. 31. Center. The schedule is: 10:30
John P. Halstead, assistant proa.m.. 12:00. and 5:00 p.m.
Discussants and their topics fessor of history, “Africa.”
Program coordinator is Dr. L.
will be Dr. Selig Adler, Samuel
P Capen Professor of American Irving Epstein, assistant professor
History, “A
General Survey of endodontics in the UB School
Concentrating on Berlin;” Dr. of Dentistry.

Four Historians Participate

In Dinner-Panel Discussion

RELIGIOUS COUNCIL
The Council of Religious Organizations will sponsor a lecture series
o,n the Meaning and Purpose of
Man. The speakers in the
series
will represent the different religions which have student organizations on the campus.

The series will begin Wednesday
at 8:00 p.m. in the auditorium of
Norton Union. The opening speaker will be Dr. Henry Lee Smith
from the department of Anthropology and Linguistics. Dr. Smith,

who represents the Canterbury Club,

has chosen for his talk, “Man—the Toolmaker as a Worshiper.”

CANTERBURY CLUB
Canterbury will have three discussion groups this term. St. Paul’s
letter to the Romans will be discussed Wednesdays at 2 p.m. in
217 Norton beginning Jan. 30 At
3 p.m. on Wednesdays in the same
room, C. S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity will be the first topic. Jan 30
is the beginning date. Thursday,
3 p.m., 217 Norton a general discussion group covering a wide
range of subjects will meet.
Tuesday, Canterbury is having
a tobogganing party. Transportation will leave from in front of
Tower dorm at 3 p.m.

U.B. CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Tonight at 7:30 p.m. U.B. Christian Fellowship will hold its first
meeting of the new semester in
Norton 234. Ray Rollins, a member, of the faculty of the School
of Engineering and one of the
group’s advisors will give “A Challenge to Spiritual Growth.”

Whot would you do if you were
told thot you hove only 2 hours
to live. See whot Cleo deos.

"CLEO 5 to 7"

Academic Freedom
(Continued from Page 6)

the content of the speech they would deliver on a given occasion. He
argues that a ban on speech must be based on the content of the
proposed address rather than the speaker’s background.

THE MINOR MASTERPIECES."-iw
“WELL DIRECTED, BEAUTIFULLY

According to the author, a state university may only bar a
guest speaker if the assembly which gathers to hear him “will in-

/

IS

Corinne Marchand

STUDENT DISCOUNT

Agnes Varda

"AN INTRIGUING STORY.

PoIgNANT

SUSPENSE. MILE. MARCHANO IS
BEAUTIFUL.”-d..»n»

#l|K|fa|y|2|

STANLEY KRAMER

with photo-

A
CHILD

WAITING

P

'

I.D.

THEATRE OF DISTINCTION
645 Moin St.
TL 3-8805

5 th DRAMATIC WEEK
Melina Malcouri and Tony Perkins

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HER.'!-»w~i

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OF RARE
"IT IS AFILM OF BEAUTY. IT IS A GREAT
FILM WHICH IS A RARE THING IN TODAYS CINEMA.”-*.**,**—

TMM

me FILM. CONJURES AN ALMOST

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Starring:

"A COMPLETELY ENGROSS-

HYPNOTIC FASCINATION OVER AN
AUDIENCE. MAKE A GOOD LARGE
NOTE OF AGNES VARDA AND WATCH
CLOSELY FOR THE NEXT BURST OF
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w»w r./•»•«-

COftHNEUAfiCHAND in the AGNES VARDA film

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“MARVEIOUSLV REALIZED. THE MARVEL OF THE FILM IS THAT THE AUDICARES ABOUT CLEO, AND WITH

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BURT LANCASTER
JUDY GARLAND

pur*

Will lalVln

IjIIb HH‘.' .GUTTERS

GRAPHIC AND CINEMATIC ‘STYLEV’

TICKETS

for oil programs may be
chased upon presentation of
cord.

the Amhert Theatre.

'PACKS A WALLOPIARRESTINC...TRUTHFUL AND MOVING"

&gt;

f

Young Bruce Ritchey clings to Judy Garland In this tender
scene from Stanley Kramer’s moving drama, “A Child Is
Waiting.” Co-starring Burt Lancaster, the United Artists
release, written by Academy Award winner Abby Mann at

—Hmid rnbvM

IER™HSii

tolerably burden the school’s facilities.” Burden, in turn, is to be
judged on the basis of the time, place, and manner of the proposed
speech.
In conclusion, Professor Van Alstyne states: “Universities would
render a far greater service by abandoning substantive limitations
on guest speakers altogether. Any other policy necessarily expresses
a skepticism of student intelligence and fear of the appeal of today’s
social (ritics. Both inferences are contrary to the categorical imperatives of a free society.”

ACTED. A FILM WORTH SEEING!"

/

IU1 HUTU IVUUtf

■

Mt/l.
I

SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE

s»«

�Frida' •y- r, Jonuo

25, 1963

LETTERS

SPECTRUM

(coi rinued from pg. 6)

should be exposed to these prin-

are qualified to serve as officers.

ciples.

Instead of asking if ROTC is
a breach of academic freedom, ,it
would be more proper to see how
academic freedom along with all
our other cherished liberties are
protected by the armed forces of
the United States. We must not
speak of de-emphasizing ROTC
as Dr. Maud suggests, but should
seek ways to fully support it.
The issue as here stated is
not so cut and dry. There are
deficiencies in the present program.
Such a requirement as compulsory
enrollment for
freshmen and
sophomores is a definite drawback to the program. At the same
time, however, I feel by exposing
ROTC to criticism, it can only
serve to be strengthened and become an even more efficient component of our nations defense.
Gerald Krieger

Since this “indoctrination” does
not interfere with academic pursuit, there is absolutely no reason
why it cannot be conducted on a
college campus. Whether a cadet
goes on to leave a commission or
not, his training in ROTC will
enhance his ability to serve as ar
effective citizen.
Since indoctrination

tradition-

ally must be conducted in a highly

intensive

setting, ROTC could
hardly be guilty of utilizing it.
Since ROTC only requires two

class hours per week for freshmen
&amp;nd four for sophomores, it does
n ot over-tax the student’s schedule.
I dare say there are few other academic courses that occupy as
little of a cadet’s time.
As a second argument, Dr. Maud
describes ROTC as a “callous disregard for human life*”' which
deprecates the “Truth, Goodness,
and Beauty” to which the Univer-

GREEK TABLES

sity dedicates itself. This harsh To the Editor;
picture of the military is undoubtedly a carryover from stories that
We have noticed recently that
Army veterans tell of their days the Norton Cafeteria has taken on
in basic military training.
the air of an elite restaurant,
with separate tables. We interpret
tactics
were
sergeant”
"drill
If
this mean that another step has
used in training ROTC cadets, Dr.
been taken by the powers, that
Maud would be wholly justified being to weaken the fraternity and
in branding ROTC as a devaluat- sorority
system at UB.
ion of human life. But discipline
The one meeting place for the
in the corps is not excessive. Being
a cadet officer, I can relate that Greeks, owing to the fact that
it has been more than once that a there are no fraternity houses,
freshmen or sophomore cadet ex- used to be Norton cafeteria. Now,
pressed desire for a stricter dis- however, the Greeks may not even
cipline in the corps.
have tables large enough to seat
their members. According to the
Since men at the University are IFC and Pan-hellenic Council
“soldiers” for only two days per
Greek tables were to be set up
week, young men’s minds will in the multi-purpose room by the
be
greatly damaged by the
not
end of October. Seating plans had
ROTC in its “disregard for human even been drawn up. Providing
life.” If Dr. Maud feels discipline tables there, however, would seem
is excessive in the cadet wing
to be a task as impossible as getperhaps we should also outlaw the ting registered in 15 minutes.
Boy Scout movement as a force
It took only 1% years for the
which corrupts the minds of American youth.
construction of a 3% million dollar union; so far it has taken 3
In a discussion of the ROTC
months for the status of these
programs, a very important factor tables to advance nowhere, and
must be introduced. Is there a
no relief seems in sight. So the
basic necessity for ROTC? The
Greeks made do with tables in the
answer is simply that the defense
cafeteria (minus their bulletin
of our country depends in large
boards) but now it seems we are
part on the competent officers
to be denied even these. Maybe
produced by ROTC units across there is a good reason, but the
the nation. In the Air Force alone. Greeks have yet to hear it.
1500 of the 9000 officers needed
annually are produced by AFRThe time has come for an explanation. The Greeks are disOTC detachments.
gusted at being strung along by
The question may arise at this those
who would reduce them to
point as to whether these officers
the status on nonentity on campus.
could be obtained from other sources. Because of the highly specialThe brothers of
ized and complex structure of our
Alpha Sigma Phi
armed forces today, it is necessary
Fraternity
that only men of college calibre
.

■A

PAH CAKE PATTER

®

PAGE NINE

Carrtpus Cops
Towing Cars
Of Violators

Violators of the campus parking
rules are being caught up with
this week. Since last Friday the
campus police have been towing
away all illegally parked cars.
The greatest amount of violations occurs in front of Norton
Union and in front of the dorms
facing the entrance to the Union,
dorms and other restricted areas.
Monday and Tuesday of this
week also saw a rather steady
stream of cars In tow. And It
was reported that the towings
will continue until students refrain from parking in restricted
areas in favor of the lots set
aside for them,
Anyone whose car is towed finds
that he must not only pay the
flve-dollar illegal parking tee, hut
also an additional ten-dollar towing charge. Police report that one
indent has a bill for twenty-five
dollars, the additional ten incurred
because he did not have a parking
sticker
All cars are towed to- the university garage and students must
have slips stamped at the bursar's
before reclaiming their cars. The
registrar’s office said that any student who has a bill oweing the
University, such as a parking violation, will not receive their trailsccript until the bill is paid.

Grants Awarded
Graduate Program
State University of Buffalo is
one of 33 schools across the nation to receive grant for its graduate nursing program from the
National Fund for Graduate Nursing Education.
UB’s share in the more than
$100,000 being distributed is $1,851.77. Disbursements by the new
National Fund total $250,000 since
November, 1061.
George F. Smith, president of
the Fund and former president
of Johnson &amp; Johnson, revealed
that enrollments in the graduate
nurse programs across the nation have increased ‘more than
20% in the two years since the
Fund’s founding.
Students and faculty are ask.
ed to be more careful when
parking their cars In the Univarsity lots. With the vast accumulation of snow it is imposible to see the lane dividers, so both students and others park at random with no
thought for the plight of other drivers.
Some are even parking in the
entrance lanes preventing others from leaving the lots. All
are asked to observe a few
simple rules of courtesy when
parking.

TWiSt

Students, staff rnd faculty enjoy atmosphere of new

Tiffin Room,

New Tiffin Room Features
Music and Waitress Service
By PATRICIA MUSIAL
1 o "tiffin” means to partake
of a noonday meal! Orignally an
Angelo-Bst Indi word, Norton’*,
new restaurant the Tiffin Room
will make it a familiar expression
or. UB’s campus.

As part of opening ceremonies
at 11:00 a.m. Monday, President
Furnas will cut the ribbon to officially open the restaurant. Invitations have also been sent to
the vice-presidents, department
heads, and various student representatives. A coffee hour on the
second floor will precede the

opening

Concert Series
WBFO To Feature
Beginning Wednedayt Jan. 30, at

8:00, WBPO begins broadcasting

a series of concerts with the
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
under the direction of Max Ruolf.

This week will feature Roberta
Peters singing Overture to the
opera The Bartered Bride, Symphony No. 2, in C. Major, Op. 61.
“L’amero’, saro eostante” from II
Re’ Pastore, "Ach, ich liebte”
from Die Kntfuhrung aus dem
Serial, a Song of Summer, “Caro
Rigoletto,
“Quel
Nome” from
guardo il cavaliere” from Don
Pasquale, “Mad Scene’’ from Lucia
di Lamermoor, and Rapsodle Eapagnole.

Of other interest might be "Nuclear Peril" which provides a
background for the study and
discussion of the Impllcatons of
nuclear weapons and the threat
of global warfare. “Strategy and
Disarmament” with Hans Bethe,
Cornell,
professor of physics at
and advisor to Presidents Bisenhower and Kennedy on science
and the arms race, wll be the
first in the series.

The Tiffin Room is the first of

its kind

to appear on campus.

Featuring indirect lighting, piped

music, a professional catering
staff, and complete waitress service, the restaurant should provide

"an atmosphere second to none
in Buffalo’’ said Robert Perry,
director of food services. The decor consists of a blue and beige
color theme carried out with blue
walls, chairs, and columns plus
beige carpets and drapes. A touch
of red has been used to add life
to the room.
The menus will always consist
of a roasted meat, broiled meat,
fish, and casserole. Vegetables,
soups, and desserts will change
daily.
At present the Tiffin Room is
open only for luncheons; hours
are 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Later,
services will be expanded to provide morning and evening meals.

PIZZA
CORNED BEEF
PASTRAMI
These are but a few of
of the specialties at the

University
Delicatessen

3588 Main St.

TP 2.1456

to the JULIAN QUARTET

*************************

066°"

Every

FRIDAY NITE
9:30 P.M.

PARENTS
ARE BORN
WORRIERS
They

AT

TIT

PASTIME

491 GRANT (at Forest)
(Around the corner from State Teachers
3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE

3637 UNION ROAD

* ********

*

**************************

don't me

when th

)

lot of
every

j|

*********

A

New York Telephone

�Friday, Jonuo

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

25, 1963

UB Varsity Cagers Compile Six Triumphs
By JIM BAKER
They were on top 29-26 at halfThe last time this newspaper time, after completely outplaying
went to press, some six weeks ago, the locals in the latter stages of
the basketball Bulls of Ur. Len the first half. The Bulls had raced
Serfustini had complied an admirto a 19-8 lead, but then Alfred’s
able record of 4 wins against a zone defense forced UB into outsingle defeat. Now, with six adside shots, which they missed with
ditional games—and triumphs—- alarming consistency.
under their belts, the Bulls possess
After a long talk at halftime,
a lofty 10-1 log entering tomorrow the Bulls returped with renewed
night’s battle against the BU Terconfidence and rediscovered their
shooting eyes, Gary Hanley scored
riers
Although it is certainly true that 23 of llB'a 40 points in the second
Ihe IfB success story has been due halt, as UB rallied to win, 67-56.
to a solidly combined team effort, Hanley’s 25 rebounds tied the UB
record that Jim Horne had set on
Feb. 4, 1953 against Rochester in
Clark Gym.
Other high scorers in the
Alfred encounter were the Saxons’ Ed Mandell, an aggressive
6-1 sophomore who netted 20
points, and Buffalo’s Dick Harvey, who meshed 13 points and
scored on four clutch Jumpers
to turn the tide for UB. A
basket by Roy Manno with
six minutes left In the game
put UB over the 10,000-point
mark for Coach Serfustini's
seven seasons as head mentor
here.

Bulls’

63-61

overtime tri-

1

The

umph over Syracuse was probably
the most exciting encounter wit-

nessed here in many years, but
most UB students missed it because of the intercession. The
game was an especially intense
affair on two fronts. First, the
Kittle was close from start to
finish, as neither team could break
far in front of the other. The ultimate difference was Gary Hanley’s
three clutch buckets in the extra
session,
which sparked the UB
surge. Hanley finished with 13
points, one less than Baldwin and
Baschnagel.

Buffalo held the edge in the first
half as the Bulls went into the
intermission on top, 28-24. They
lost their touch early in the second
half, however, and the Orange
forged ahead by five. The Bulls
recovered when Jack Karaszewski
sank a long stab shot and Bill Bilowus found a hot hand from close
quarters.

Dick Harvey, 6' UB guard
from Dunkirk, has been a defensive standout In the Bulls*
current winning spree.
there, have been two particular
standout performers during the
recent surge. One is junior forward Gary Hanley, who hit his
peak against Alfred last Friday in
point effort that also saw him
a
tie the UB single-game for rebounds (25).
The other offensive stalwart
in the last six weeks has been
another junior forward, Dave
Baldwin. He reached his top
form of the campaign against
the Ithaca Bombers Jan. 12, as
he netted 35 points in a spectacular scoring demonstration
that fell Just six points shy of
the UB single-game scoring
record. (This is held by Jim
Home, who tallied 41 points
on Feb. 23, 1965.)
The latest UB triumph, their tenth
of the season, was secured last
Friday against Alfred. The Saxons
came into the game minus their
top scorer and rebounder, 6-5 Loren Baton, but still managed to
give Buffalo fans a thorough scare.

QUICK, DRY

XEROX COPIES

With the score knotted at
51-51 f Bilowus scored a free
throw to put UB up by one.
Yet, Syracuse had the ball with
one minute left. As Syracuse
did not have the benefit of the
one-and-one throw situation,
Dan Bazzani played it safe and
fouled Syracuse’s Dick Duffy.
Duffy meshed the freebie, but
this gave Buffalo the chance to
play for the last shot. Bazzani
missed a long jumper, however, and the game went into
overtime.
Then Hanley initiated his heroics, after Syracuse's Dick Finley
(the game’s high scorer with 16)
had put the Orange ahead with a
two-pointer. Hanley.bit two straight
field goals* sending UB ahead for
good. Then Norb Baschnagel made
one free throw and missed another,
but Hanley tapped in. the rebound
for a 59-54 cushion. Syracuse cut
the lead to 59-57 and 61-59, but

Baschnagel and Baldwin kept the

Bulls in front with clutch baskets.
With 12 seconds left. Bob Murray
closed the scoring with two Piety
free throws, but the game ended,
63-61 UB.
The other source of excitement
in, the Orange encounter was the
Syracuse coach, a one Fred
Lewis, The Syracuse mentor blasted
everybody In sight: the officials,
the UB coach, the scorers, the
timer, the statistician, and even
the players,
Dave Baldwin was the UB
standout against Ithaca, as he
meshed 35 points and spearheaded the Bulls' 91-68 victory.
The Blue and White was ahead
40-21 at the break, and was
not really taxed at all in this
encounter. When they roared
past an 11-8 Bomber margin
with an 18-2 spree, this settled
the issue midway through the
first half. Other high scorers
beside Baldwin were Ithaca’s
Bill Schutz with 13 and Don
Fazio with 12, while Buffalo’s
Baschnagel scored 12 and Hanley counted 11, UB connected
on 32 of 63 field goal attempts
for a torrid 50.9 percentage.
The previous night on Jan. 12,
Dave Baldwin was again the key
factor in the 88-72 conquest of
Oswego’s rugged Lakers, After an
unbelievably hot first half for both
teams in which Oswego shot 54,8%
and UB hit for 51.3%. the pace
settled down to a more sane level
in, the second stanza With UB
behind by a 21-20 count, Baldwin
entered the contest and immediately meshed 7 straight points plus
a key assist to put the Bulls in
front, 29-23. The junior forward
finished with the game's high total,
21 points.
This contest was also featured
by the outstanding defensive work
of guard Roy Manno and Bill BlIowuh who snared 12 rebounds.
A key factor in this encounter was
ball handling. Oswego lost the ball
15 times on miscues, while the
Bulls erred only twice in this capacity. UB shot 50,9% in this game
also. Other high scorers were Oswego’s Congliaro (18), guards Cas
Kowalski and Craig Sallin (both
with 17), and Buffalo’s Dan Bazzani
and Bill Bilowus (both with 13),
On Thursday, Dec. 20, the
Bulls egded Wooster, 67-63 In
a hair-raising finish. With seven
minutes left the locals held an
apparently safe 65-49 lead, but
the Scots’ furious press rattled
the UB five tremendously, and
the Bulls were forced to rely
on the clock to preserve the
triumph. Gary Hanley paced the
UB attack with 22 points and
12 rebounds. Buffalo led, 32-28,
at halftime, then built a 16point lead, but had to hold on
at the finish.
On the previous Tuesday, UB and
Buffalo State proved to all in attendance that their rivalry has
plenty of Are left, as they battled
nlp-and-tuck for the full 40 minutes, The Bulls emerged on top by
before an
a scant 59-57 margin
—

Letterpress and Offset

Roy Manno, a 5-9 sophomore guard, has won a regular berth
on the Bulls’ starting five, through his slick ball handling

and defensive talents.

drowd of 1800 in the margin in rebounds, 54-30, but win
steaming Clark Gym. The bandbox unable to hit from the outside
hot that the officials had due in part to State’s tight mar.
overflow

was so
to continually towel off the hall.
Still, the wet ball caused UB to
lose the ball IS times, yhile State
erred in like fashion on 12 occasions.

The game was therefore not the

ferocity of the pace and the endless screaming from all corners of
best in caliber of play, but the
the gym brought the excitement
to fever pitch. UB held a wide

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for-man defense.
The Orangemen outshot the Bulls,
45% (23 of 51) to 35% (23 of 66).
The game’s high scorers were
State's Mike Broderick with 22 and
Dick Banaszak with IS, and UB's
Gary Hanley with 19 and Dick
Harvey with 12. Hanley actually
kept the Bulls in the game by
netting 7 of their last 9 points in
be first half and the Bulls’ firsl
points of the second stanza.

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SPECTRUM

25, 1963

BIT Swordsmen
Score 15-11 Win Over
UB Varsity Fencers

SPORTS CIRCLE
“The Fred Lewis Shew” Hits Buffalo

By Jim Baker

As the cage encounter between the Bulls of UB and the
drew upon us, UB followers who remained
near the Main Street campus during the intercession anticipated a titanic struggle and probably one of the closest
battles to be waged-here in recent years. Yet, no one could
fully realize the show that was to be staged in Clark Gym
that Tuesday evening a week ago
“The show” was featured by a one-man cast, a vulgarmouthed, caustic, and a thoroughly poor excuse for a
coach by the name of Fred Lewis. The Syracuse mentor
started his three act play even before the game began. After
being introduced to local basketball figures, he offered his
first pleasantry: “This gym is too small and that floor
is %**"
Now that he had alerted surrounding observers as to his
future temperament, he smoothed his commentary down to
a dull roar as the game commenced. Here is where the curtain opens on Act 2 of our drama. Throughout the first half
fearless Fred treats surrounding spectators to an amazing
range in vocabulary (from the gutter to the ditch) as he
rants and raves on each anti-Syracuse call. The officials, Mike
Kull and Harry Blakeslee, turn a deaf ear to his chants, but
those around the Orange Bench blush with embarrassment
at Lewis’ lack of discretion.
Now things really begin to jump. UB’s Gary Hanle'
drives for a successful layup and decks 6-5 center Mannie
Klutschkowski in the process. While Klutschkowski lies prone
on the floor, Lewis is witnessed gesticulating to surrounding
players and fans in mad-man fashion. Instead of inquiring
about the physical condition of his athlete, he chooses to continue his showboat tactics to the complete disgust of even
Syracuse alumni in attendance. (After the game the Syracuse alumni in the Buffalo area sent a letter to the Syracuse
athletic director in protest of Lewis’ conduct here). After he
finishes this tantrum, he calls his players to gather around
while he presents them with all-important “guidance” and
while Klutschkowski is still trying to clear his head
unnoticed by Lewis.
The “guidance” that was being delivered at this time
escaped the confines of the Orange huddle and was pick?' 1
up by at least three of those at the scorer’s table (one of
whom was this reporter). Lewis’ advice goes like this: “I
want you to get that
$ Hanley and get him good.”
Then the first half ends. Again Lewis exchanges pleasantries with the officials
and this time with Coach Serfusas the teams depart from the floor.
lini
Throughout the second half and the overtime period
Lewis continues his verbal array of abuse
directed at the
officials, the two scorers (he claims that they cheated him
out of a time out), the timer (he has to be “watched” by a
Syracuse freshman player), and several players. This ends
Act 2, as the Bulls win out, 63-61.
Act 3 opens outside the Syracuse dressing room. Enter
our hero, Fred Lewis, who plants himself just outside the
visitors’ door. Enter two sportswriters who ask the Syracuse Fuehrer for a post-game comment. Amidst further mass
abuse (dominated by choice four-letter words), this much
can be salvaged for publication: “I think it was ridiculous.
How do you defense officials?”
Suddenly, as if beckoned by some omnipotent force, enter
the “villains” of our play, referee Mike Kull and umpire Harry
Blakeslee, as they are leaving the gym after showering. As
they pass by fervent Freddie, they are greeted by these
pearls of music: “I understand you got twenty-five dollars
apiece for working the game. They should have given you
two hundred and fifty apiece.”
Now enter the mastermind behind all this cheating, the
man who planned the whole fraudulent affair: Coach Len
Serfustini. As he approaches Lewis to discuss the contest,
the UB coach hears his team, this university, and the gymnasium called “bush” among other unprintable adjectives
Lewis continues his vulgar abuse as the UB players depart
from their dressing room, and further gutteral comment'
are directed toward some of them. Even the UB statistician
and a maintenance man feel the sting of Lewis’ tongue.

■

Orange of Syracuse

—

*

#

—

—

—

-

(Continued on Page 12)

PAGE ELEVEN

By BRYNA MILLMAN
The varsity fencers brought their
season’s record to a 2 wins and
3 losses when they were defeated
by HIT 14-13 last Saturday. The
freshman team however defeated
the RIT frosh 10-6.
The breakdown of the last 3
meets is as follows: UB varsity
lost to Hobart 11-16, only the foil
squad turning in a winning score
of 5-4. Joe Fersch, squad captain,
shut out all his opponents for a
total of 3 and" 0. Barry Canter and
Howard Goldstein both won 1 and
lost 2. The final score for the epee
squad was 3-6 favor Hobart. Bill
Wilkenson. won 2, lost 1: Herb
Bodecker won 1, lost 1, and both
Frank Pocenco and Steve Spero
lost 2. Sabre team tally was also
3-6. Jerry Marshak, Mark Fox and
Jay Caplen all ended with identical scores of 1 and 2.
The Baby Bulls fared better
against the Hobart team defeating them 19-6. Gerry Aronoff, Dave Kirchgessner, John
George, Joe Paul, Art Orlick
and Andy Freeman all shut out
their opponents, accounting for
17 of the 19 points.
The over-all picture of the clash
with Syracuse was more encouraging for the varsity who defeated
the Orangemen 16-11 and likewise
for the freshmen who downed
their opponents 17-8. Joe Fersch
came through again with a 3-0 shut
out. Barry Canter lost 3; Howard
Goldstein, won 1, lost 2 for a squad
total of 4 wins, 5 losses. The epee
squad and the sabre squad turned
in twin winning scores of 6-3. Bill
Wilkenson, epee captain, won, 2,
lost none. Herb Bodecker won 1,
lost 2; Frank Pocenco won 2 t lost
none, and Steve Spero split 1-1.
Both Jerry Marshak and Mark Fox
of the sabre squad shut out 3 opponents; Jay Caplen lost 3.
The freshman team total of
17 points was attributed largely to Gerry Aronoff, team captain, who shut out all his opponents as did Larry Zollinger,
Joe Paul and Walt Ostrom.
The most recent match was an
away meet against HIT Jan. 19.
This was a close one for the varsity who let victory slip through
their fingers, losing to HIT by a
score of 13-11. The foil squad won
by a close 5-4, with the help of
Joe Fersch and another of his 3-0
shut outs. Barry Canter won. 2, lost
1; Howard Goldstein lost 2, and
Bob Zelle lost 1, The epee squad
turned in a rather disappointing
3-6 score, those 3 points coming
entirely from the efforts of Bill
Wilkenson. Sabre team edged out
the HIT squad by a one point margin of a 5-4 score. Jerry Marshak
and Mark Fox both won 2, lost 1.
Jay Caplen finished 1 and 2.
The consistent winning streak of
the freshmen fencers prevailed at
the RIT match with t)B carrying
off a 10-6 victory, shut ouls going
to John George’ Dave Kirschgessner and Gerry Aronoff, who is so
far undefeated this season. Bob
Toth, Bud Holschuh. Larry Zollinger and Joe Paul each won 1,
lost 1.
The next match will be Saurday
against Fenn College here at Clark

“Mutt and Jeff” Duo Opposes Bulls

Huge Dick Moreshead, Boston University’s 6-9 sophomore
center, dwarfs the Terriers’ diminutive—but speedy—guard,
Both will be In the starting lineup when
5-7 Ken Leary,
BU invades Clark Gym tomorrow evening at 8:15. The Terriers enter the game with a 4-4 log against stiff competition.

downed Mass., Rutgers, Suffolk, and Northwestern,
while bowing to New Hampshire, Dartmouth, Seton Hall,
St. Bonaand NYU In cliff-hangers. The UB frosh wil host
venture in the 6:15 preliminary.
They

About 700 Wrestling Enthusiasts
Watch UB Team Lose to BIT
ROCKY VERSACE
first three matches o£
coach Ron LaRocque’a varsity
grapplers have been stacked with
excitement and thrills, satisfaction and some disappointment.
The crowd (in the vicinity of
700), at the R.I.T. match would
surely testify to this tact.
U.B.-: dropped this match to the
always strong Rochester team by
a narrow 15 to 11 score, which in
itself is nothing to be ashamed
of. Top matman Jack Valentic
finally tasted defeat, a ■! to 1
decision, as a Buffalo athlete, his
first loss in four year of dual comJack has beaten this
petition!
R.I.T. opponent, Jerry Hejtmanek,
three times prior to this bout.
Accompanying the one loss are
two solid wins over the University of Toronto (3 to 2) and WestBy

the

-n Ontario University (3B to 0).

athletics

create'much

to

,excite-

ment and many thrills* At schools
such as Oklahoma State, crowds
numbering 5 to 8 thousand attend
there
their school’s bouts. Perhaps Drop
is something to this game?
in to the next home match and
take a look tor yourself. If you
like sports you are sure to enjoy
wrestling. Next match is at borne,
Saturday, February 2, 2:00 p.m.
at Clark Gym. Come on out
it's free loo!

The freshman team holds a strong
2S-3 victory over a tough R.I.T.
rosh team tor a 1 and 0 record.
Varsity-wise, four grapplers
hold clean slates for their
WRESTLING SCHEDULE
three season matches. These
Peb. 2—Ithaca, home, 3 p.m.
boys are 157 pound ten ArdPet) 6—Oswego, home, 8 p.m
ieta, 167 pound Warren PrunPel) 9—Colgate, home, 3 p:m
Brinkpound
Kevin
ella, 191
pVb 13—Cortland, home, 5 ]&gt;m.
Burt
heavyweight
worth, and
Rochester, away, 8:30
Feb. 16
LaRocgue named
Coach
Ernst.
the
in
impressive
as very
Peb 22—Case, home, 8 p.m.
R.I.T. match Ardieta and PrunAlfred, away, 8:30 p.m
Peb, 26and
decisions,
their
ella for
York
State College WresNtAv
pin.
his
Ernst for
date and place
Tournament
any
tling
exgood
is
news
lor
There
announced.
school
wrestler
be
to
high
perienced
I-I Interstate Wcstling Tournawho is contemplating going out
by ment
Cleveland. Ohio— March 7
is
but
hindered
for the team
go,
S and 9.
where
to
such
as
obstacles
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�Fridoy, Jonuory 25,

S PECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

1963

Frosh Down Alfred For Ninth Win DRY CLEANING
After Syracuse Ends Muto’s Dream 8 lbs. for $2.00

SPORTS CIRCLE
11)
(Continued from Page

So ends our little drama of a very little man. This reporter has been aware for some time that Syracuse needed a UB Baby Bulls extended their
new coach to revive basketball at the Salt City institution. glossy winless streak to eight
Yet, it is too bad that such an excellent university as Syra- games before finally being subcuse should be so lax in its discretion as to sacrifice its moral dued by a flashy Syracuse Are,
and ethical standards in favor of supposedly improved coach- 75-64, Jan, 16. The Bulls had not
ing by hiring the likes of Fred Lewis. This man has created ended Coach Muto’s dreams of an
deeply-ingrained enemies throughout his road journeys this lost agame until the Tangerines
year, as his performance here was just a continuation of unbeaten season.
similar displays in Pittsburgh and even back home in
Syracuse.

In Pittsburgh Lewis told several sportswriters: “Wh'1 could walk out on the street this instant and, in five minutes,
round up ten fellows who are better than the players on my
team.” This comment came after the Orange had lost to Pitt

Since the Syracuse encounter the
team has notched its ninth sea-

sonal victory by downing Alfred,
86-50.
On Wednesday Muto’s

AT THE

Goldstein contributed 19.
The UB five was held to a
21-21 deadlock at halftime by
but
the
Ithaca freshmen,
stormed back in the second
half to submerge the Baby
High scorers
Bombers, 70-44.
UB’s
game were
in this
Goodwin with 18, Ithaca’s Valesente with 16. and the Bull’s
Goldstein, who contributed 12.

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'

The frosh’s seventh victory of
the year came at the expense of
Ontario for a game against a Waby an 87-71 count.
play-making guard
terloo team that they had trounced Oswego, as
turned in his top
the
camPaul
Goldstein
Earlier in the season other such quotes could be found mercilessly earlier in
effort of the year. He paced the
in the Syracuse papers. After the Orange notched their sec- paign at Clark Gym,
UB offense with 24 points, while
ond win of the season, Lewis chirped: “Well, I’m satisfied
victory,
their
latest
In
two
Goodwin connected bn seven field
already
We’ve
won
more
with this season right now.
against Alfred, the Baby Bulls
goals
tor 14 points.
games than I thought we would.” Then he added further inwalked all over their foes
from start to finish and wound
preliminary to the varsult to his own charges by declaring that not one of the curthe
In
rent Syracuse players could have made the Mississipp' up with a 36 point margin. sity encounter between UB and
Bill Barth, the club's lanky
Wooster December 20, the Baby
Southern team that he coached last year.
6-6 center, tossed in 20 points
Bulls subdued Gannon’s frosh- 61,
Yes, Fred Lewis is the new coach of basketball at Syra
in an impressive showing.
54. This was an extremely close
throughout, as the score at
cuse. Perhaps the officials of that school feel that this man
Syracuse affair
from
Tangerines
The
can lead Syracuse up the ladder in this popular collegiate proved too much for the UB halftime indicates: 32-30 in favor
The game’s high scorer
of UB,
sport. Yet, if the price of “moving up” is the creation of such
yearlings, as high sdh'ool AllGannon
hard feelings, the relaxing of an institution’s high moral and Americans Dave Bing paced the was a sharp-shooting who
talChatterton,
ethical standards, and the destruction of a school’s image visitors with 17 points, most of guard, Art
is points. Goodwin scored
wherever the name of that school is carried, then what good which came during Syracuse’s lied
14 for Buffalo, while Poe counted
is it?
strong offensive display in the
10.
The Bulla had led
second
It is this writer’s opinion that Syracuse will soon regret the SU half.
the
The
encounter between,
throughout the first half,
its choice of a basketball coach if, indeed, it has not done so but a sudden Piety spurt pushed frosh of UB and Buffalo State was
already. The name of a school is carried throughout the them into the lead at the break, a comical and extremely dull exnation by its athletic teams and the personnel that comprise 28-27.
hibition that included 66 fouls.
Forty-three of these infractions
such teams. When an institution of higher learning a ,w '
Syracuse continued their spurt were called in
the first half,
itself to be represented by a man of Fred Lewis charof the second which must be some sort of a
acter, its image in the eyes of the public is doomed for a in the early stages
as they opened a 12-point record.
The Bulls bombed the
downward plunge
and such is the apparent destiny of halt,
bulge.
UB could get no closer Baby Orangemen for the full 40
Syracuse U.
The minutes and emerged with a dethan five points after that.
two high scorers in the game, cisive 80-56 triumh. State’s Joe
oddly enough, were both from LoTemplo turned in, the game's
Norwood Goodwin tal- outstanding performance, as he
Buffalo.
lied 22 points, while guard Paul tallied 35 points.
Larry Szuminaki tied hie own
On a seasonal basis the merpool and university record for
men have defeated Buffalo
the 50-yard freestyle lost SaturState and Cortland,while bowday. but the UB swimming team
ing to Colgate, Syracuse, and
bowed to St. Bonaventure, 54-41.
St. Bonaventure.
This wae the Bull’s third setback
The freshman mermen turned
against two triumphs this season.
back the Bona yearlings, 67-37,
•
The teagn’e next start is tomor- This was their fourth triumph In
HERRINGBONES
row against the Golden Eagles five outings. Mark Grashow of the
of Brockport State at Clark pool. Baby Bulls established a new uniblue, charcoal, brown, light grey
The meet is slated to start at versity record in the 100-yard
2 p.m.
1:04.6
backstroke by turning in a
•
CAMEL
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Syracuse. The frosh
Szuminskl, who has regained effort against
have defeated Buffalo State, Corthis eligibility this semester, was land Syracuse, and St, BonavenTWEEDS
clocked in a record-tying time of ture, while their only setback
0:22.8.
came at the hands of Colgate.
Reg. $37 60 now
charges

journeyed

to

Waterloo,

Repairino

Shoo

-

and Purses Refinishod
and dyed
All types of Ladies' Heels in
Stock for Replacement
Shoes

Plaza Shoe Repair
UNIVERSITY

PLAZA

-

IF 6-4041
Open 9A.M.-9P. M.

-

Szmninski Ties [oik, But UB Bows

Sport Coats

BLAZERS

•

$30

answer

We hope our
will
help B.R. with this problem!
He asks, “Don’t you think a
girl who trys to get you to
dress in a suit,
i
0..jjhtl ($) shirt and tie just
:
to go to a neigh-

JssBs(£: Wji borhood movie is
being unreason-

lit/V'y able?
■

—

CAMPUS
f
"MALE CALL"

Isn’t weara sport jacket,
sport shirt and slacks being
plenty dressed-up?’’
She apparently enjoys dressing up, B.R. We go along with
you, though. Clothes should be
picked for the occasion and a
sportcoat and slacks would be
our choice for a neighborhood
movie or other casual dates.
'.

I; 91

it;/?, ing

•

•

•

Naturally, we're pleased to
receive this note, signed 'Faculty Member.' "May I compliment you on your interesting
column. From student comments, your clothes tips are
being welcomed. Also, speaking for myself, I am sure it's
not only the students who are
benefitting.”

Thank you. It’s gratifying to
know our column's being of
help on everyday clothes problems.
•

•

•

There's an interesting story
behind this, N.M. He writes,
“I am curious as to where the
raglan sleeve got its name.”

ITEMS

From Lord Rag- jn'ijeejLPw
Ian, a British general. The story is
that during the
\
Crimean war he
desired a more yf/Li
f
practical garment fp~TT
than a cape to wear on horseback and designed a jacket
that featured this free-flowing
sleeve. It caught the fancy of
the English gentry and became
a basic fashion.

of the

.

SEASON

Clearance

•

•

•

CLOTHES-ING NOTES
Dr. Buell
Gallagher, Chancellor Of California State Colleges, "Dress
and grooming are important
aspects of an individual's personality.”
A WOMAN DESIGNER predicts within 20
—

25%

Quote of the week

OFF

—

...

•JC1A/
HOURS;
NEW uruiDC

10 to 9 Mon
6 Tues

1Q fo

_

_

Thurs.
We{J

-

_

years men’s suits

Fri.

will be elec-

tronically controlled to resist
moisture, heat and light. Ours

$at

do this now!

•

3262 MAIN STREET
[Opposite UB)

•

i

Campusi Corner

•

Holiday time is dress-up time
and a perfectly knotted tie
helps give a well-dressed look.
If you're having knot trouble,
our illustrated leaflet, TIE
RIGHT, makes it eaw. r-t
your copy now at In Snyder.
The Squire Shop
Just 2 miles north oj Campus

3240 MAIN

�</text>
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                    <text>Jo4ous as a
carol, happ4

as the season
are our good

wishes for
qou and 4ours.

Tlz.e ~JJeclr11111
k_~/(1/J.

�PAGETWO

Readers StillLoyal
To Dickens Favorit e
"A Christmas Carol hi Prose, Being a Ghost Story of
Christmas" was first published at Christmas 1843, and sit1ce
that time its popularity ha:; never waned.
Generation aftar generation has laughed and cried over
the ,i.1ory or the mlRerly Scrooge,&lt;~· ------------­
who through the revel~tlons
or
rhretl spirltA - Chria lma ~ Past..
Prosem nod Vet Lo Come-became
j~~~o
,:,s:. ·-. - ~•
I
...
~
u man who "knew how to kee11
l'hrlslmas
well. H any mnn nllve
nosseijsed the knowledge.''
Charles Dickens, cre.itor of
•1
the "Carol,'' loved It as well
Many foods for Chri,l- ~
as, or perhaps better than, Its
mns feasting have been Ira- )
many readers did , He told of
crying a nd laughlng again and
ditional since early dnys of
again as , captivated by hla
Yule merry-making,
alstory, he wrote the 30,000.word
• though roust peacock, the
boo~ Jn siK weeks.
"f. featur e of the fcasl in mediWhen Dickens ga1•e readings from
nevnl England. is rarely , if J,.
his works in En gland nod America,
ever, seen 1oday!
the story or Sorooge was always
Mince pie. with ils spices l)
lhe l)tlme ravorlte with his audl.
• and fruits, is said to sym-\'.
ences.
Perhu1rn lhe b"~t known purl or
bolize the riches of the ~
the story Is Ohl'i•ttnns dinner at
ast, from which the wise '\
the Crutebits. where Scrooge aud
men came.
•I
the Gbosl or Chrlstmns Prescnl o1J­
''•
Legend
says
plum
pudser ved the family of his ~le1·k. Bob
~ ding began "hen an Bog• \
Cralchlt,
mnklng merry over a
lish king and his men were ~
simp le Christmas dinner.
• lost in a forest on Christ- S
Ar.cl " rnvor lt e chura~tar is 'l'lny
mns Eve. The cook us\'&lt;J~
Tim. lite Cralchlts' cripple d sol\,
foods he had on hand, j~.
to whom the reformed Sorooge IJP·
came "a seuo nd tnther.•·
• eluding pan of a stag, ~
011e or t he most t~mons speeches
plums, eggs, flour, to make
iu the English lungunge lA, doubt.
a ~ngle dish all could share. L
less. Tiny Tim's, at the conclusion
--....~ •6""".'o~ •o"'_....4
or the Chrlatmos fe11sl. "Cod bleHs
us, every one!, ..

\'· '.·-,~~- it

~

Feasts

"BETH L EHEM'' I N WATERBUR Y, Non­
sectarian re-oreatlon of the Town of Beth ­
lehem apreaits
across
Pine
HIii, near
Waterbury,
Conn.
Permanent
scene _i,,
Intended not aa a shrine but as an on-

!

aplratlon, with an educational purpoae, too .
In most respeots, the scale model follows
as accurately as possible t~e ap pearance
of Bethlehem In J ude11, as It appeared at
the time Chr lat wa&amp; born,

1'

1
l

Yuletide Spirit R emains A ll Yell r
Nenrly twt•ry ,·u111munlty bn~ it~
Herod'a Grand Palace.
spec l11l.wny or oouerl'lng Chdstm11M
(.'rowned by II Cross, Plue J-lill
-11 od tn sunie towns end t'llleR, tile hus 11roved nn Ideal location tor
spirit of Chrlutmas 11revall". Iller- the proJocti si nce its sholl!l IH ulml.
lu,· 10 the limestone cllll' where
ally, Ille yeilr arn nnrl .
llelhlclteru In Judea w11s built.
In ,vat erbury, Conu., nn nil.year
Other "Bethletiem•"
r(mllnder of tho Orsi Noel I• th••
We ll,known "Deth lehems'' In the
re-creation or th~ Town of llelhl~- Unit ed Stalos Include Bethleliem,
hem on nenrby Pine Jilli .
Pn. and Bet hl eh em, Ind. The Penn•
Thi s non-secLarh1n "llethlehem"
sylvonlu BeU1lehem emp hasizes Ute
was constructed lo •cale after re. religious meaning ot Ch ristma s
sea rch t1nd study ot photos show. during Its annual celebratio n. A
lug tbe Dihllcnl &lt;·ouutry. The cave ij(ar ereeted on II nearby mountain
or manger where C'hrlst was horn, top Is lighted throughout. the boll•
lnns like the one where th ere wus dttY ijeasoo.
star Is Beacon
no ro om, ,.,1d the noinnn lel:J.·
Near Palmer
Lake, Colo.. an
tlon -wl1en• n,e t•x \•ollectlon de.
cree d hy Au~ustus Caesnr wa11 to electrlr~!ly lighted star on a moun•
be paid ure 111110111:
the bulldlngs t~Ju to 1, Is a Cbrlstmas.sensou
beacon fut· motorlslR on highways
repreaenled ,
"Poetic license" l'laa been used
m~ ny ,nlles IIway.
Lighting Displays
to Include some bulldlnga which
were not, or mny not have
13811ut lr ul lighting
dlsplnye for
been , located ln Bethlehem
,
f'hrlstmaR
are famous in mnnv
such as "David's Home " and
I!, S, dtles .

---~

ht Altnd~u•t. ,, suburb or Pasn.
(lem,. i ·1111C,,ll mlle-loug avenue
hordered by de&lt;ld,lr cedars becomes
"Christmas Tree Lane'' at the holl•
day aeRson . Tbs dendara are !1luml­
n1tted by thousands of mu Ill-color ed
bnlbs for the onnual spec!lacle.
Color ecl lights oullloe the build ­
ings or tlhe Country Club Pl ~za
district in K.nusas City, Mo., at
Chri et nms time.
De11ver. Colo. llluml1~11les
its
Civi c Center during tbe holldn.ye
with m11ny thousnnds or ltgbls.
Yule Towns
Yule-nnmed towns havE, a speelnl
rnterest
In Cbrlatma~.
Arizona,
Fl orida and Kentucky acrn111ly haw
towns nnmed "CbriMlmu e," Then
th~re are Christmas Cove. Me. :
Nnzoretb. l'u.: fll'ight Sitar. Holly
Grove and llolly Sprfni;s ,. Ark.; as
well II$ l\O(tl, ~lo.: Noel, Va.; l\lls­
Cletoe, J(y.: Wi~eman, Alaska; anil
Stmln ('Jaus. Ind.

______
_________

.:..:._

i

4/.'I
'

ti•
i

1

1

a

Dowries Fill St ockings
,St. Nicholas,
the early blslwp
who wns the Hrat Santa Clau•.
Is ulso m·edJled with origln11t1ng
the r1t8iom or hnuglug u11 Obrist­
m.tH 8tookl11gs.
Acc,1rdlng to lege nd, be wished
to 11rnvlde dowrie~ for the three
il,wghters ot :t bunkrut&gt;I merchant ,
Since he wanted the glttM to he
anonymous. he tossed bags of gold

chlmo• •i·
Uio mercbunt'H
Arcidentally,
the go ld Cell lulb
ijlOcklngs lite girls lmd hung !Ir
the fireplace to dry.
Fu~tual handicup Is that, tbou~h
St . Nicholas lived In the tourtb
century, stockiugi; weren't mod•
with feet until the l I tl1 centur y­
lmt the Chrlstma• stocking ~Int )
Is slill o hRtlllY legend .
d.own

.~~~!~l

Christmas Carols Spring
From Various Sources

· Tinsel

J Scientists Seek Source of Star:

Tinsel on the Christ mas -1.'.
tree began, so legend i1oys,
when spiders covered with
webs a tree tbat had been l
decorated by a mothei: for
j
her many children.

J,'rom th,• llrst "1111ellt- 11hurt1 s,
"Adeste Fidelia"
"Glory lo Ood ill the Hlgllt!Sl." thP
" 0 ('ume. All Ye i"otthrul" o,·
sound or vni&lt;•~M,·nlse,1 In son!( 11ml "Ade11tP Wldells" mny hn\"e been
reJoklng
r1n· thP hfrlh or ('ltrl~t w1·ltte11 hy lhc rnth century writer
swells RCt'OijQ the niteH. •rorloy. ,1nd lt&gt;nrher , Snlnt Bonavenlur.i,
To reward the woman t
enrol~ rrom mn11y land• and mauy but Ill; t.'lWl't origin Is II mys t ery.
for her goodness to her ,
oporhs 1111the 111t
· ut holiday tltnl'. 'l'het •e's nn se&lt;•1·et about Its popunr.
children, the Christ C:hil)
Sour&lt;•P• or son1i, carols nre Joel ity 11111»). Tl has heeo translated
, changed the spider webs .
tn tbt, pnAI, but m1111yeon 1," tra1•ecl intn l20 lnngu11ges. nnd there are
~ to gleaming silver.
.
to Interesting origins .
more than 40 Englsb versions .
"Silent Night "
"0 Tannenbaum"
A broken organ lnHph•ed "Silent
~lost fnmlllnr or many Christmas
Nl1tbl." So that lbe 11euple or the tnrols orlgjnnlliur in Germany. '10
parlAh might btwe u aonJ: at Cbrlat. 1'11nne11hnum." 01· "O Christmas
rnas. Fathe r .Joseph l\fohr, an Aus. Tree," ~elebrntee lhe eve rgr een as
lrlan 11rlest. wrote the r11rol. and no emblem or Immorality. IL bna
ble orgnnlAt composed the music. added rumlllarily In the U.S .. ainee
II wes sung 1111f'hc•lstmaa F:ve. 1S18, tht' tuue ls used for several rollege
lo guitar uc compnnlmeot .
I son~ nnd tor the slnte song,
" ~lnry:ilnd, My Mal'ylond ."
''Deck the Halla"
Mistletoe 11gures In many leg.
FlxprP••lng th~ merriment
ol
"Merry Gentlemen"
en ds from pre.Cbrlstlu,n
times.
\;brlij\m ~~. "Oe uk lhC' Hall with
An ul/1 Enitlleh ~nrol thal som~- 1 t&gt;ruld tree . worebl11pers believed
,ll'era rrom a ronm,~ out oC It ha(l magical powers c,f healing
llnllAh • o r Holly" Is Hn Enl(ltsh tlttt4!8 ~_1
r11rol ,wt tu 1111nld Wel s h sir. lt 11lacP ,s "God Hest You Me1•ry,
thought
that
enemies
reft•n to 611Ch nnclent trndltlonA Genth •men ," '!'h e meaning Is not Homans
"Gvd reut you m~rrr gentlemen.''
who met beneath the mlslletoe
tJj thf' "blllilng Yul;," 1h11
.
but "God ke e 11 you merry .. gent ... must klas and derlr1re a dny's
"Flr1t Nowell..
J trm ·e.
t,'Jr~t J&gt;llhlls h~d In l'm~lh,h, '"rhn men ."
"Horald Angela Sing''
F'!rRl Now ell" Is h!lll evel In bl• tnl
C'hn,·h•• "\\'e•14'y, ,who during his
Tn~11y, kissing
hen,~ath
the
mnrUy 'n J;'r1&lt;1wh••nrot Th o •'ren&lt;'I,
11 lll e llcnP (1707 -17~8) wrote bund1·eds l 111lstletoe ro11111ln
s " h~IPVY holt.
word "Noel" Nim"~ from the l.1111
"'Ord mt•:inlug birth ; "Sow ell" la r,r hymM wa e Ins pired to write tl11y ,•,,sltllll , f'orrect pr,:&gt;&lt;'edure ls
the 11.1tgllclzed ver•lnu ll utb mcnn l " l!nrll , tlrn ll111
·rtld A11i.i.l• Sing" as thllt II b~1ry mu st be re moved to,
r.htlijl!!llu, 01 • n "sbout o! Jo)'" fM I h11 walk~d to ~hur&lt;'lt on (.'h1·let.roas ev ~ry k,sa 1nl!en. 11nd when all
the birth or flhrl~l
1'1111~ 1~ a ' &lt;111y
mul lwurd the J,ondon rburcb the berries arc gone, there are
ffll'ltl6VBI 1beJ)hl•rd bOll!j,
I 111•11•t'hlmn .
nu more ~l•HPS a, •oll(1bl1!.

·i

"i

'~w

.,·

Kisses Are Numbered
By Mistletoe Berries

I

I

Myste,y Has Fascinc~JedMan
Sinl'e St. Matthew llrst described
'"
the st11r of Bethlehem, its 111ystt0ry tr, as th is mlghl indicate,
rilar uppeored ut lulervals or 31&lt;11,,
bas faselnnted mankind. \Vue H u
miracle? Or wall tt u hr1ghter .thnn. :115 year~ , three inlenals ot "'·
,,
usual ~tar or otho;,r rcl e•tlnl oh­ odd yenrs from tbe time it
first l'er,orted would carry it I, • k
J~rt '/
lo 1•h11u1 lht• lif]le of the blrlh ,,,
Astonotnl'rs , while
• eeking
1,,I &lt;'lll'lst.
identlrv the 8(111'
, 0111JlbUslze that
it may have beeu ind&lt;'ed a mlrurle
Another Theory
thor can't be eltplnined ln terms
.loh1111nes Keper, a German
of natural phenomen:t . However, t ronumer, mad I' dlACOl'erles r ,1
n•s..:,r cb has 11rovided ntl\lerlal for Jed to 8tlll another tbeory nl, .1•
conjerture that the s tar may hav .­ lho star or Bethlehem. In 1UU4 "
been ,1 unlllra l nr&lt;·11t'l'&lt;'t1re.
ohsc n ·cd a contlgurullon, or l'i '
i;ronplng. of the JJIHUPIS .1111
11
One Dl1covery
Saturn and Mars .
.A Danish astronom
e r. •rych11
Brahe, dls&lt;•overed a new and lj]'ll­
lte de termined thar sul'b a ,
linnt sl.llr in the const e llstloo Cas. thrnration occurred ench ~05 Y'"'
slopelt, in J 512, according to the ~nd culculatlons l'Stllbl fshed
Enryelopecli11 Amcrl~ana .
th e snme gront1log mij:hl bnv e
Since that dl~rol'ery, '!'h o Ame, ·• peured In 6 8.C,- which , somr
Jeana Sll) 'S , It ba s beeu s11gi:estetl search indicates. mai • hav e I ~
that this might he un es 1,eci11llr lhe corr ect year of Chri s t's ho
brilliant slar vl•lbll' only lit lon g
Some lege nds Identify lb~ "
1nlen •nls.
m en a a nstr olol(t.'rs. thi " Llt!'OI')'
A reported appearance of a
i·oun tN tor t h e fn cL lhnl. n/"'
bright st ar In that part of the
1111rled 1n lh f• :New ' r e;;tatu Pnt.
heavens about the mlddle of
t lw wise men s .iw the s 1111
·
the 13th cen tury, coupled with
a vague account of a similar
\\'hilP t hP thr ee 11101 ~•••1
appearance a little more than
lui;l' lll~r would ~b ed nnu • u I lu
300 years earlier, led to the
rw s~. IJlt' aYe ruJ,;•' ohser · r m
~houaht that these mlg~t poa ­
1101 noll re 111
em, 1 Ile- 1111
albly be former appearaneee
n1e11, OM 11:,,1trnlo~ers;.would .
of the stu of 1572,

I

�STATE UNIVERSITY 01' NEW YOlRK AT BUffAJ.0
UB - Buffalo Sto le

\n Ind ian Looks At

SPECTJRUM

The Sino Indian Confll ct
I S,r Pogi• ! '')

(Sr,

£'1111, t6)

No. 14

BUFFALO, NEW YORK. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1962

OLUME 13

Senate Discusses
NSA Conference

Pink and Silver Decorations
Deck Norton for Silver Ball
At 6 pm tomorrow, Norton will be clol3edin ordei· that
, ,•111•ations:ind other preparatory tasks can be completed
1,r the "Silve r Ball". Pink and silver will be the prom1,,1•11t colors used for the decoration s of sleighs. A canopy
\\ Ill 1leck the front steps of Norton, and doormen will es­
• orl the guests into the building. Fl'Om hel'e they will be
w,hc1•ed to seats at various tables.

----------

Votl'ng EndsToday

For "Mr. Formal"
By PAT MUSIAL
.Thii, we&lt;!l&lt; the
,,ntle~ t. conducted

Battle Here Monday

"M 1·, Formal"
it.s i.umt com-

p11tltion. fashion
sho"'• 1u111 atu1h•nt voting.
Those who attended
the stunts

•&gt;

The faculty

l'ece11tion 111
•,·1·Nli11g

the dance will be held
f)o1oth11 M. H11as Lounge

in the
at 8::l1l

1/111,llllU th~ l'CCCption line will ln­
ducle:
Bol, Pa chol~ki,
gene,.al
rhuirninn;
C111·olyn Oussing, tic­
kets chairman;
,Jenn Schoembs,
Dick
publicity
chairman;
nnd
Greene,
Mr. Fornml
ohuirn1an,
Piano
nnnngements
or ,Toho
Kal'l'ut,
who
performed
with
Arthur
Rul,instein
and Vi111 Gli­
hurn, will brighten the t•eception.
The dance itself will feature the
Ronn l\ietc:alfe Orchestr11, "The
.\tost Exeillng Dance Band In tht&gt;
Land", with Ron Simp•on
and
gu11st vocafat
Evelyn G1•uy. The
bundstand will be deco1·al~1I us one
giant sleigh.
The
Mr, Formal
conteitt
winner wlll be announced lat­
er In the even in g by Dick
Greene
and wilt r eceive the
tho
Sigma
Kappa
rotating
trophy from Prealdent
Lynore
Leone.
Bob Pacholakl
WIii
announce
the campaign
win -

Tfhl 1'1111lrm11n
uf the Stlv11r llnll

By SHARON CLARKE

OR, J OHN

HALSTEAD

u1111r11111·lntt'd
to tht• Sprlui:: A1•l~
t:,l1o1ud •~yll11: that lht• ll'ller WUf
1•'1•ijl(\
•11
\, ,4tfi ro !he luduMtr'lal
wrlttl'n hi 11 11,,m11rou~ mood b11t
1,nh'll' ltch1tlo11s rluh, it41 tn th~
Ill' hnd ll'l!!tl to l)iJlnt ,mt (WI\ se.rl.
1'11hllc·11U1m~
JJ11111·d,
und an 11ddl­
• mull. . Plr•I, 1111
lrl 111,
, 1111
• prlt·•· Wiltl
tl11nul $11)0 WIIK 111111ru111·inlr1l
prohlhlllY" a111l H&lt;•t•1mtl,ht! fi•ll It
Nl~ll)t'Clrl II); R111t10111
Cm111ctl
WU~ !I i:rh•1 OIi~ l'J'ror 10 hh\'4' 11
C'DUll'Ol'MKY
111·0~1•()VI•)' lh,• Hkl ror11111ld,1111·1·In :-;01•1011
llllfun •
•kl
tea,n nnd it;i hudg,•l,
Tiu
,.,,1m hudgel or $X:?:?1,...111&lt;10.1hrP1·
,~e,s ilWll} nntl OIIP meet 1&gt;tunn~t'I rl~lon lo huv,• n rnrnml Sliver Doll
11
rvr h•Jll11', 111 g,,nel'lll ii wue fPll 111NOl'IOn hMUU~&lt;' It had hean B

11• lhnt llfl
de11nrtr11cllt t!IIOnld lot\Ht1trnl!twlltl1,t Oil 1•nm11
ha~ 110 tradlllOll6. lo HI\ opl11l011
"'"ll)ort all aU1letlc endeavor•. th(I
f)Oll Juijt y~n1· the muJorlty or ttlu.
Student
Senate
is not ullollPd
dents wnnted ,, fol'mnl dun~••·
ttlhlellc tenmK.
money to s111111or1
J)r , John P. llnlaleo&lt;l will dE1lilw
J•lvt•ry vre1•lous yenr th~ !ltlver
8
AIJJha Phi Delt11 presented
Since the athletic department
the llnnt 1111eech in 111., P1•e11e11re
11111110., 1110111•y
niHI one or the
,..,ntomime of the Fou1· Se1uo11's
will
not
aupport
a
sport
until
Polule ~erles Mouday .
,.,,,o,·dlngs
"Sherrie"
nnd
"Big
hlgge•t ~"l'~'I"""wat1 r~uUng a
it prove,
Itself, the Student
Ur. llul•1 end is a grnduiile
ut
room. TblN )11.'lll' ~ecnuse the d ance
liirls Don't Cry". The singers add­
Senate must provide f undl un­
Durtmou111 who received his M,\
will he In Norton there will not
"" their own touch by dl'&lt;'ssing us
til the aport ta eatabllahed on
ond l'h.l). from 1-lorvard . fie Joined
'he the e1&lt;11•D ro•t for a room , .AIRO
th,• ~ellHUns of the year , They also
campua aa a worthwhlte ac t lv.
the rnculty in lttUII (lij asslslanl pro.
11r,isented a skit b11H
ed on the How I h., cos I of " lll'lrnl has beerr re­
ity. It was the Studen t Sonate
Ceasor of hl~tury und Is 1iresenlly
dtll'ed $1.50 rr\lm hut year's 11rlce.
,ty Ooody Show. Princess Summer.
that flrat aided the fencing
~ond u clfng a tllllrae entltletl "Mod.
!\tll.Wlnter.Sprlnll',
or course, ca1•.
Ae of T«eaday night, 71 t ick e t,
t eam which now has a varsity
erll lm11eri111fam In Africa.'' ~,nrller
rlud out Peter Caccoml•e'A themo
ner.
.
.
1aoere •old,
T he Sliver Ball
equad playl11g
many major
-· •· The formn!Jty
of the occasion
lhlM
year.
he
vreaenled
n
leetu1·e
A Mun ror All Senaone.''
has been the major conc~rn of the
committee wlll Judge the dance
schools like Cornell.
da nee committee. From n 110ll last at the Stnte Unlveraily Colle1~e. at
a aucccaa If the people who
Alpha Sigma Phi and candidate
year It was learned that u l111·ge Syrac11KP ,·olled "Afrl~u · l'Cl'l!flBI'• The i\ten·~ C'llee f'luh wnM n11111r,.
come are aatlafled. They Hid
llu1&amp;h Gaylord added a little twist numbn
of students
wanted
to tiVl!S l11 ( 'Onlualon" Whkh WU&amp; n l)l'hlled $1,f,26. 'l'bls s11111Jnrludt•H
all they aaked waa that every.
lo the good knight-fni1·
muidc)t have II formal dance at the Uni­
treatment
of , .. ideJy.hehl
mlscon- trlt1K durinK si,cuud ~emt&gt;~ler 111111
one keep an open mind and no t
,t,11•y.In theii· skit the "had versity. The Silver Bnll, thcre­ cept10ll8 about lhal contlnout.
u$201l h)uH, wht•n needed. to 11n•H•
Judge beforehand when some­
k11il(ht." was defeated by the "good Co1·c,ha$ been made a~ formal us
hi 1058, llr . Halste11d WIIM111111wdu rerun.I The (IJue ('lull 111 lhe Cu• thing new and dlffere"t le IJ'I
possih le. The d(ess will includ,
monster'
thus winning the hand tuxedos and floor length o,· haller- n Cnh!lt ~•,,uow end,
troduced on campua.
111111111tlmr. turt-. hop1•• 10 hecome n •nlr-a utf f.
or th~ tatr maiden. Chivalry
was ina lengt h gowns.
did ex1e11Hlve re•earcl1 on Mcll'ruc•. clent orgonizotlon th rougb &lt;'llflt'Prt•
Arnold
M11wr reported &lt;►ll lhu
in1leed "rel,orn'', They also pre~cnt­
t111
d thv •alo or record~.
Following the dance, the Dnwn
cau 11u1lon11llsm. Pr~sently bi, has I
\l11ll•er&gt;1lly l'o111111unily lu rolutlon
eil thefr skits in Tower and Good­ BreakfnM will he hc.ld featurin~
t.he Dan Santi Quartet. This will o h&lt;1uk lu 1irOl!l'eHti entlllcd
The
Wfllinu, Sher111011,u teachh11t r,,1. IO the NSA Nt•W York Stat11 Hc ­
V''lll' Wednesday night.
be a buffet
type breukfast
and Rise of r,'lorroccan
Nat101rnl l1m , luw In ffiu~IIKh •'Xl)lttlned E'rl, 1-lch1. J(lnnal ('onl11r11111·1•,
'l'h1· r1•11ort wna
Sigma Phi Epsilon arid can.
will fe11lut·e a complete bl'eaki'ast
&lt;•ullonal Tours ln1•ot11oro1ad, whJt&lt;l1
1919_1934.
didate BIii Deegan presented
is u divlHl1111,1r- NSA. Tllerr ur, , ll'ad 111:11·1111•11"ThOllj(hl, not con.
nienu.
Only
those
gil'ls
who
• Broadway sing to carry out
possc;s the hreakfn$t
tickets will
Dr. lhll.&lt;1eud Is ,1 111emher o,r th~ 11vPr ~o sn111mPr pro11r:1m, 111 b:11. trovt.1r~w" :lllhoui,;:h ll c·ohtained
h,a them" "Madison Ave. Mis•
he pern,itted
to receive th~ ex· An1c,rirun lfisluri,
•ul AsHIH'l1~1lon. l'Ot1e, with " 111111'10 111~1•lthr 1111111y
&lt;•n11fro1·1•rt1lal l•su~s.
'l'bo
!er''· They also presented
a
tended rour o'cloek curfew.
'!'hey the Sul'lely ro, l•'rent•h lll~t, ~rl1·11I lr1te,·ests or un)'O!IP, 'l'he Anwrlr1111 r1•nutor~ 11m••Iln1wtl 1111d 1J1~1•ussC!
d
reunion of the fraternity
In
must pi·esent the ticket stubs to S111tlle&gt;1and th" Arrl,·1111ltl~t1lrtc•,111 ~t11de111" nwM 111111
1111k with th• •
theil • R.A.'s
1972.
Assodalhlll.
,111i\'ersily ijl11(1r11ts or tt1P &lt;·uu111ry, u 11c1int ruia1•d t•s l&lt;&gt; wh•lht•J thi"
________________________
-:otl&lt;'ntl lr!'l111•r~ hy university p1•0. 1·:11nJl\ts IM ii 1h•nnl1·r111')'wllh UlO
'1'1111K11pp11 EJJsilon uu1·ried out
aud 1r111•oi 111 Hl111ll&gt;t1(slrn,•11111
le,;sors in rn1,~llsl1
IH'lllttl JH)WN' ,ma
1111·Iheme "One Man In !•'0111'"L&gt;y
J,:orn11enns woulll, l'rire rrllll\O (1
•0111l'l~hlN
"""''" of tl magic show. The magi­
11iliOII wo1·h ,·110111
In Eui;lund t1111
"'"' · ln trying to produ~e a Mr.
II was m1011lhllWd th11I Olte uot.
tleluxe grand l•111r or Europe• ro:
I •nm ul, fil'st came up with thre,•
SJ.2011.l11dudln1: lrl\l1Hflilrl11llo11.;\11y ver~lty ad111lt1l"lr111orllllM ijUfd tllat
1res1ed t·1u1 olJ" kl 11t1,m1sh11v11nu rlgh\R. noes this
,,Ju1·us. Alter the addition of the
l1111
1 11111wrclassn11111
•i:ht ingredient:&lt;" candidate
Tom
To the Editor;
lion Is "a highly elgnlflc.ant
tuln fur11lor l11rorn111t1011fn fhtl muau that •tu~~ ut• ,·ar\ do uothfng
t ,tle 1· appeared.
111 c·hnn,:e PXlstini: struNureK
lt
occurrence
In this he.,,1,.
S111den1 Renu1~ offl&lt;'t!.
" Want an Exciting &lt;'hl'istmo~
the) ~now or n h~ttvr s)'stem! Ono
phere'• which merits
study
lhe
wl111•or will he ij~Jecte,l
Holiday?
S t udents
Offer,•d
a
Th,• •tuderll Wl/lrore c·om11ll11e11"('IIIIIOr rell lh&lt;i'etudent body WU¥ '
and understanding?
Fur­
ll'I' the result of till' ,;tudcnt
J?ree Tr ip to Cuba.'' Tht~ two
announced llrat ll m et with Dr, Ar ­ \'ery upnthetlc 'lnl.t 11.lnre the gep,. ;
th er, a relaxatton of tensi1&gt;ns
tin!( is known. Fol'ty pe,· cent
sentences headline a news story
thur Kal~t1r or th e calendnl' ,•om. f'r:11 HlUclenl did 11ot ('1\1•;1IO ,treLurl)
Jf
between Cuba and the Uhlted
I be based on Rtudent
votes,
in yo111· issue of Dec. 7. The text
mittee to dlN1·11s~ problem• caused ()reMenl !dens IL IYtl" Ufl 10 etutlc11t
States
Is obviously a most
1·1y.flve 11er cont on campaign
h)' the new ralendar.
Cou,•ernfug Jp11tlers lo provide lnlllntfv" . Thu
that follows describes how vnr
desired
goal,
And flna fly,
Hnal exarnlnatlons immedlolety 11f. rt•11ort ,itatt• d tlrnt ••veu student
fl!ing, and twenty-five
per cent
ious college students in the al.at,·
ae a member of the Am,ori•
It wu• i;over11111enl hns llltle say In e.icer.
ler Chrlslmns
vacation
~andidate judging.
The Sigma
have formed the Student Com­
can Civil Liberties Union, I
slated that the til! •te Rl'genrn lmnrd dslni: riKhlM, It ls only a "meaoa
ppa rotating
ll'Oflhy, symholir
mittee for Travel to Cvli•, nnll
am aware of the lmporta,,ce
r·equlre~ .~s lenchlng
dnys ,mch ror ad111!11l11trutlvtinrnnipulallon. fa
the yearly winnel', wil l be pre­
have rccei'Ved an iuvitatlon
in
or protecting the baslo fr•e•·
s.rnwsler rur :icn e tlidullo11. F'lrmlH thlH l1'111·11t l'H. It wns IIKkeO.
tcd by President
Lynore Leon,•
visit Cuba fron'l nn Ol')l'!lnizal.ion
dO'T'I of the lndlvlduale.
(I
cannot IJP helorl' C'hrielmns be .
thij Silver Bull. A l'U!llJlail!ll
which calls itself
the
Cuht111
per1onally feel th~t the Am­
rnuse
lhP 11r1&gt;•en1 sche dul ., 111. The r&lt;•vort QUl•Kllolll•ll the alma
,ricr will also he announced.
Fto&lt;ierntion of University
Stu­
erican
government
el'IOuld
l'ludes just e11ou1,t!1 lime for thr ur 1,re,011L hdUt.lltlOll nnd n~lte(1 IC
•ll•nts.
not restrict Its citizens from
l••nrh ll'): duys,
" uni,•ersll)• exl•Led Just to grind
travelling
anywhere
In ·the
Although the story Is not 111·e
•
Xmas at Norton
0111 Jegr~es.
Some sent\lorft felt
M any 1tudet1U have ~olced
w orld.)
cisely clear on this 11oint1 ap­
thc1·c• arc f, •w vnlue changing an,1
opinion
that
thoy
would
like
a
p111·ently the latter will puy ~11
mind broudc11l111t t•x11erlonco11 at
free study week after Chrlat .
Assuming
then that
all
o(
thl• hills involved in a plane t1·111 lh•••e ohjectives are dPs1rabl~• 11nil
mae, therefore
pushing
the , lhlK l ' utvMAlty . ll Wll8 fell Lllnt
frum Canada
to Rav11nu 'llo&lt;I nssumi ng that tht• coll~I!:~ t1tuI he R&lt;'110oldOt'•not ijtfmul11to edu­
date of achool cloeing back a
1"00111 and bonrd
hack including
&lt;•ntlun n~ mu~h t18 ll could, t1n(l
week. Thia would not a dve raetl1•nls concerned
are willinll' t(&gt;
( 11nc! p1·1•su1m1bly sightsrPirlld
un
that tllp lodll'ldunl was otteu ovor.
work within
the American
•Y·
ly affect atudenh
looking for
the island.
IOOkPd Out lllOHt Henatore boUove
stem to achieve these objoet,ives,
aummer joba booau,e the Unllhul everythlni;
d~p llnds 011 tbli
11t leu5t two questimi,
~,rise.
verelty at pruent
will c!oao
:'rly PUl'J)OStl in w1·lt1111,tlhi~
t"•rnonal u101lv11ll11u 1rnd lnt1•re•t
First, doe~ a plane ride to l"uh:•
aeveral week• before most ott,er
letter is not to que•li&lt;m
the
n£ rhr llldlvldUIII. l'opled arc IH'11fl.
provide the most e!feetivt• m,i•nn,
collogea. The present calendar
nor t o
idealism of the student•
Is alto belr10 used to seo If It "hl" uf Ar1111ld M11~ur'e rel)Ort on
for st11d~nts to l'e1:i•l••1· tlwit
di,pnrar,re their stated ohjl'Ctives
H)'Htem. In thll Slu­
th,, 1•d1w11l101111I
would be feulble
to go trl .
support
for
the•t• nlijl•Ct iv~s~
Indeed
whut
thlnl&lt;ing person
d1•11L
H1111n11,
otrlr" tor anyone lnsemeatcr with aummer achool
And secondly,
u,·~ j)rOSflt'l'tiv"
could a1·gue with
th~i,• aims,
1,,r,•Kl.. ,J 111 r~utlln,: lbt&gt; comDlet11
11urticipants in the ('uhi• flil(ht
a complete 1eme1tor and fa ll
("~rtainly.
there hiu not been
semester beginning about Aug. 10, r1&gt;i,1,rt
11illing to 11c1•&lt;•11tth•· flQ,sihl,•
n1IN1uate press coverage 11f wha I
1_•ons(..lquenc
111, tu tht•mst' 1
111•1
hllll hnppl'rwd in Cuha, althoui:h
~onnll)'?
Ttw Burka1•'M offll'P
rPJlCJrltltl
ELECTIONS
,111emust admit. tlml th,· n,~trir•
It ,,·rm~ to nw th11t th&lt;' wh11l1• Hot 111tlr lll&lt;•H c,,,,rn,rno1
ti,,
\II l1111lor, 1111d~~ulors ill U111
t1vi• p111lci1•$
of th,, Cuh11111:11v1•1n
•
prnj'-!l't. i~r1on•~ sOtnL' ruUw, lluu~h· d1w11~d fl-out 1whulunddpM I. ,•ntoo11 •l1'11u11t11( IIUMIIII'•~ ,\dmllllAlr11.
nwnt 11n, nt least JI~' II~· rc~po11fods
nhout
lh ,• nntun•
ur J th" ,,1111••ruh•tl thttl 111,, fr~ .....­
non 111,1)'\'11\1•lnd,1y tro111 9:3,1
lo;ihle.
Amcricun ~ot 1ll•ty. lf I\ f•t·:lvutt.•uol r,,r 1U'tH11•t11lt· t•Htllll~OIK, 111-h•, i1 111 In fruut ot thP ,·unftren~t:l
ritlil'u ,v,mld reform t1Ht lc'urnt i,c,,m••Htt•r (J1•i,ox1t :1od t1,1,·h11nJwl I lh• 1 ,ll~I
Certainty
too, who could
(('nntlnued
,,., fllllr" 7 1
ft•11M1·11n h,· tkllud,'d
deny that the Cuban rcvolv-

\\(111di1y,Tuesday,
1111I'~ entertained
~• th1, candidates.

u nd Wednesday
and introduced

Dr. John Halstea1d
ConcludesSeries

thul U1e athlrllc

Faculty Member Dl•scusses

•
C b s• • I
Free Tnp to U a Ituat1c&gt;n
I

!

I

I

h·•~"'

t,,.
0

tl••

�PAGE FOUR

Friday, December 14, 196f

SPECTRUM

, CHRISTMAS
J ·

I

I

I-

1

STUl'l ED
ANIMJILS

93c

J.IST PRICE
2.50 - 5.00 "
--

-I

First Come - First Served - No Limit

;:-@~MMW!M~

1

•

J

I

SWEAT StHIRTS

I
I

.
Regularly

1.98

2.97 -

ON Sill.£ NOW -

Only
1

1.9~B 1.98

NOW IS TBE TllME TO BUY
l'OR CBRISTM[AS GIVING

BU FFALOTEXTBOOKSTORES
(Formerly TECH- UNIVERSITY BRANCH)

3610 MAIN STREEI~

-

Tl' 3·-7·131

.Co•ing Soon ! ! A c::onap·lele College
BOok (New and Used) and Supply Stor ~
·lo Servic4t ·You.
We'll also hovesomeProfessionalBooks
- Medical,Nursing,Scientific
, Low­
ComeIn lo Seethe Tronsform
1otionNowin Progress.

�PAGE FIVE

Friday, December 14, 1962

ChancellorFurnasGives Reception,
HonorsPromoted Personnelat UB

State U. Publishes
Connolly's Book

Chllll('l•llor null MrR. Cllff0l'd r . I'. S1wnc·~I', hto11hysles; nr . Hlch.
~•111·11ns
will give a ro,•eJlllon Thur a. ard ti. \VPbbur, unntomy; JJr . Wur .
,111y,H••~. 21,, In h1&gt;11oror nc11de111it'
l'l'll Winkelsl e in. Jt· ., 111
•even1ht •
,1111udmlnlstruflve
11erMOl!nel whu
wve heen promot~d at the ~tlllll ,11~dir11w. \ll'b. Hazel H. HnrvP),
ednration;
l ,·en~ H . l\l11h11r.
' nlversity or New Yo,·k al U11fl'1ilo 11111·sln,:hi~ yea1. Tht&gt; l'e(•e11llo1tWIii Im t•ublit• h en llh nursini:: Or. 1,fo,l;'er
11cld rron, ~-0 lu f:oodyea,· llnll on ~lo n tHu1•l11os, nwdielnul c·hemlsl1·y,
h" cum1ms.
and ,\rlhur
II. M11rlln. 11harma,~y
111vll!lllo11s ulso hu 1·e ll••en ex­ will al Ro re&lt;•elve rer.ognition .
,,,ukd r.o hwmher s or the Denna'
Personnel Honored
,•ouocll 1111d their wive•. asslsrnn1

By ELAINE

BARRON

ll r. Thonws ~J. ('onnolly , us•od.
ate pru( es•O r 11r~:111:li~b. r&lt;'rcnll y
llni ~h,•d a lm ok e nllllt •d Swinburne'•
Th eory Of Poetry. It will ht• llUb­
llRh ed "mnellme In A11rll hy tho
ltPs~ar rh l?oun(lnllo11 or th,, Siu1t1
tllllV~raily.

•rhe 2r.i1 11111:ebook stnrto tl out
hlH dOC!Orlll subject
and was
la11,r 1·011,·erH•
d Iulo a book.
l'rel'lou~
auth&lt;trH of Lhl,c Nuh­
Jert hnd hneed rh &lt;1ir Judgement
on the 01111ly&gt;1iaof Swinburne's
own JJOetry. "I •et n.hou t n1ul.ly1•
tug hie c rllicul writing to nnd out
the theoreliro.l
Jtn•ls buhlnd wbnl
lw Mid,'' Dr. Conno lly explulned.
""

\'Ice chnnrellor8
nnd their wive•.
Admlntstrnllve
J)8l'ROllnel lo h A
,nd member• or lhe t'lwucello1··s honored inclnde:
nr. Arthur n.
,,lfh·e s111rr.
Butler, chairn1an, deJ)ur1men1 or
~'uculty memlJertl to be honored eco11c1mfrs; !Jr. Rollo Handy, cbuir •
Art s and Crafts Dlnpl ay on Second Floor Lounge,
111e
l11de those who hava heeu 1irc,­ mn n, department of phl1C1so11hy: Dr.
,nuled 10 Cull prorea~or: Di•. Wolter
''The book dl1pelle a general
Cohen, psychology;
Dr . Merton \V, Robert I.. Bl'OWU,11saoctnt~ denn,
inference that Swinburne wH
!;;rte II, ec•onomic·s: Dr. Laurence A. St•hool or Medl&lt;:lne; Dr. ,John u.
an advocate
o f art for art•,
'llchel, Jr ., li:ngl!sb; Dr. Gordon Stewart, vice cbnncellor for llenlth
'l'he ,·rllft Hhop on llw 1~round l'hrlijlmuij
&lt;·urds, toys and wrap.
aake. Hla actual theory
waa
is. Swnrtz, biology: Or. C'o11al.8nlina AtTuirs: John A , Beane, dlrec·tor or rloor at Norton hn«
11 orogrnm In 11ings. Other ~tu d enls 11re ma.king
that poetry should be dedicat ­
Yc1·aearls, socioloi;-y: Dr. Hlcbnrd
ni111tund re ,·aullcH, \\l e d- •·~rami ~ treP decor ation•.
p I a n n,i n g and d~velo11ment;
D,·. ~Ilk ~&lt;•r11e
ed to some co ur se. H is own
N. Schmidt. stuttsllcs;
Dr , Janleij
nesdny eveni n g• Cr'om 1;::10 to 11 It la not nec•essury to hnve pre­
person al course waa polltlcal
I~. Wert·, Hnance; Robert A. Ji'him. Douglns l'II, Sttrgenor, d euu, Scllo,11 l),m. Th~re I• u dollnr ragl• tratton Ylona experi e nce In working
In
republlcanlam,"
Or , Connolly
Ing, nsaoc.tnte dean ,111d professor or Medicine; und William 8. J.}rast, ree to cov41r the MRI J)f ffUp 11te~. 1heHP media l)i,cause tri1lncd crn fi
1
noted.
or law: na,1d R. Ko cbery, lnw; Jr .. u•s1wi11tedirectot or lihrari0R.
hut tool~ and eq u limwol can lie wor~r• demonslrnte any new tech•
Two purls or the hook . 1llr,•11dy
\\!nde J. Newhous e, Jr. , law; Sau l
u~ed without ,•ost.
niqueH. Anyone Interested ln work'!'ouster, law: aud Dr. Werner I{,
ing with Rllk s1·1·ee11tng or cernmlcs ()Uhllahed M boOkler., llr!' ·•s wln.
:-.Ooe
ll. physiology.
Student• llijlllg the c·ra[(. ijhOI) ,·au &lt;'Dulnl'l Mrs . Lahr In th~ base . lmrn e's Th eory of the ~Joel of Art .''
ChristmasConcert Sunday racllllies 11re nrnkin1, Hllk-•cre~11 m en t or No1•(un.
l\lli2. In ~he JOlll\8 llopklllH Juur.
AHoclate Professors Honored
mo!, 1,:1.11.nnd ••!;winhuroe on tho
Thi! 111uin1·ca ding room of Lock ,
~ltJRIC of Poetry,"
1957, by the
AsNocia te 11rofeNso,.,, Lo be hon ­
Mu11t-rn l,nn1:11h11,·AH,m&lt;•lntlon or
ored are : D1·. Alau K. Bruce , biol­ woad llbt·111·y will h&lt;• the site of
,\m erlnt .
ogy: Dr. Waltet· M. Dannbauser, the 11nr1u11lCh1•istmas concert lo
" Thi• boo k will he lhl• llttl, Or
c•hemJ.Lry; D1·. Ca rl Gans, hlology; he 111·rsentecl on SaLuniay arnl
sixt h thnt th1• RIHLC llnh·orMlty bns
fir. Ptynre I,. ,JIiin, l)hyslus: l)I'. Sun du y ut 8 :;J() 11.m. Free tickets
1111hli
slwd or thl • ly11c, II •l'llOlnrly
Hayne W. Heel!e, JINYChology; Dr.
1
fol' the cQncel't. may be ohtnined
,\1009 Slatin. J&lt;Jngltsh ; Dr. BenJamtu
A dil·cct&lt;n·y 1if-tiu~ suntml!•l' jvb!t-1 ~nm11:--.r·e~m·t"-, vurinu,"' tlt.•purt hook, wllh 111\t too wtd&lt;' :c rnn11e
r romthroughout llw Unit~d Stot 1•s for ntt•nts of th~ gQvernnwnt, lousine ss or 1111,,r"" ' ·" the ,.,·or,•~•o
,I. Townsend, f1ni:tsh: Or. Marian a t th ~ Baird Hall Box Office ,
J{I. "'l'hey ll l'f' lh~ ty111• nr
F.. Whit e, anthro1,ology
nud Jin.
. ' and 111dus lry. Nutionul
pa,. k $, 111,•nl!
F&lt;•utu1·cd will be the \\fen' s GIN• cullei!e sludcnl.s is now 11vudl11ltl1•
,i:-utstkH ; Dr. VlnC('llt Sa1111111
. bi­
Student .- ctui hcidn thcii· s1rnm1&lt;•r 1·1111chcH. 1111dsu mm1•1· tlwutrt -s lis t­ h OtlkR 1h111Hho11lolhP 1111bll•h1•dhut
Clul, unit the Women· ~ Choral&lt;'. un­
POClllll
Cl"l'i:11 1111bli
HhCl'S l'!Hl'I nr.
ology: Dr. rtot,erL ,~. llernt,,r sh,­
plans duriug the Ch1•i~tmuu holl• , cl also llf' l•d rnlleµ;e st udenl s.
li~t lcK ; llr . ,Jolin ,I. C'unat, ~rthq­ ile1· the cli reclion of Robe1·1 S. tiny vac11lio n.
Slu•k•nt.8 I\ ishinir suumwr wo 1·k ford 11" Il l' 1~11 lh:tt lh ~ Hlato
~ontlcs; nnd Or. Gill)ort 1), Moor e, He~kwiLb, ulonl(' with the Bru s,
•s, w~H 1lni 11i, a dPflulte lll e rnl'y ~nrv.
The l!lG:J "Sttn1m i,1• i-:111µlt1
,yrnen1 apply cli1·wtly tu lhP ~111pl11ye1
h•&lt;' h,· ,•ni;IIRIIIR In lhl• tlr•.•1•l11•~.
l•ducutfon ,
tcnsemhh· under the directi,,,1 .,f Uirect.m·y" gives thr numct,; und who urc indu1l~d in lht• dir1•cto1·y
l'r evic11,s hook• wrltle1) hy Or.
11t
theh·
own
r~11ut•st.
llllt
•l'C~tcil
uddre~ •es of 1,485 orl(ulli2:aLion~
nr. John W. Boylan , medlcltu ,· Frank ,f. Cipolla.
ar&lt;• T~e Pe,aonal Library
students
nrny co nL11cl the µl,1co- ('111111111lv
whirh want to employ eolle~rt• ~tu ­
Ur. Iv an L . Bnnnt'll, !llf'dlctne :
11w11toffice or copie~ of th e new of Ja,,;es Joyce, James Joyce't.
The C'vening will be highliy,hlt!d
dfnts. It 111
$0 gives 1&gt;osltimHI ope11
l,c,on El. Pnrhl, 11l1yslology;
Dr .
"Summer
~~mployment Directory" Scrlbbtedehobble, nod Joyce'• Por.
oh ho,,
t•'elix Mllgrom,
bacteriology
nntl hy the rvndition of Bach' s "~ lo g. salaries , and •u~irc~lion•
mny lie obtai n1•d l,y se nding $~ trait Criticism and Critique, 1 lc
lmmunotoi:-y: Dr. Donald W. Ren­ nificnnt." The symphony will 1,c lo npply.
with 111•
. Selll(
to National
Directm·y Servite , nlsn ,•ullahornted
l'ie, L&gt;hyRIOlogy; Di·. Clare N . Shum. performed by the chornl irroup s
The mnny t-ype~ of juh~ i11 th IJ&lt;•pt, (;., Box :120115, Cinrinnati Adler. or the h!Hlor y d r1mrtn1 ent
wuy, Jr ., t&gt;e&lt;lhltrlcs: Dr. Rlchat·d l\'nd the orchestra.
to write From Ararat to Suburbia,
directo1·y ore found ut summer at , Ohio.

Arts , Cra·f:ts, Shop Open

Summer Jobs Now Posted;
Many Opportunities Listed I

u,:.

·SELL US YOUR
Top Prices Will Be :Paid lor Them
Whether Used on Thi:s Campus or Nol

-·-

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STORE~
INC.
3610 MAIN STREET
Formerly TECK-UNIVERSITY BRANCH

Tl' 3-7131

�Friday, December 14, 191 l

SPECTRUM

Dr. Multer to (:iive Friend Lecture Considers
Neutralist Tendency in Asi,1
Piano Recital

FROM

By VICTORIA

BUGEL.SKI

Oowell Muller of the u luslc de1u11
•1.t11entfaculty wilt give a pianu
r&lt;acital Wedne~tlay in Bnird Hall
ul S:ao p.m. AdrnlsRluu ls tree and
nil Nl11dontannd Cuculty ore lnvttocl
tu all~nll ,

THE

CHANCELLOR

Dear Students:
Once ag;iin, the salt is on the streets and the bite is
in the air-the H&lt;,liduy semmn is upon us. Academic frus1l'ation:- are put uside, even if for only a few hou1·s, clur­
iug this joyous time of year.
Thi s is one of the few
pel'iods iu whkh men tl'eaL each othrr with a trne spirit of
freP.r!omand understanding.
There is a cert:i.in inexplicable feeling permeating this
sel\son making it. difficult for a man to be tru ly sad. Even
the tense world situation is fo1·gotten, for u time. Even if
we arn not winter sports enthusiasts. let us give thanks
that we may spend this season with our fa milies looking
out upon the snow coverecl ground rather tha n a lone in
a warmer Cal'ibbean clime.
In this, the last issue of The Spectrum for the foll
semester, it moy be proper to remind you that acomedi­
cally, things are different this year, Exams will be with
us immediately after the Christmas recess and this
time• of year is hardly conducive to intensive study.
With this thought in mind, the wise will effect a deli­
cate balance between seasonal celebrating and academic
affoin .

The University has seen many and varied occurr ences
this pl\st semeste r ; the q uest for academic freedom in our
own community , and certain world events which brought
th e nation very near the brink of a maj or conflict. We
have also completed the initial steps in the frustrating pro­
ceiss of becoming a state-s upported institution, wit h its en­
sui ng benefits and difficult ies. Any chang e is hard at the
outset, but we have gone far toward int egra ti ng wit h State
Univers ity of New York while still retaining an approp ri­
ate amount of autonomy.
Yes, we have much to be thankful for this year. Let
us forget our problems fOI' a time an d celebrate this Christ­
mas season as ,it should be - by turning our thought!! up­
wal'd.

C. C. FURNAS,
Chancellor

Sorority Presents Research
Grant for Syracuse Library

Or. Muller Joinecl the rr.,us lc d~­
ua.rlmeot fiicully LIJ!s fal.l In lbe
areas or,nusic Pduca tlon, his mnin
field, and 11lnnn. He explolne d tbnt
he enjoys the piano more himself
when tenr hlng others. Fie statell
thot he llndn tenuhlug very allm u­
lttling und that 1l "he1gh lens the
eff P~tiv1•m•ss of' hi~ own 111
'aclire."
At th e Juilllard
School of
Muslo where:, he obtaln,ed his
B,S. In muaic, Dr. Multe,· stu d­
ied piano with Edward Steuer­
mann, wh o studied with Buaonl
and Schoenberg. Mr, nteuer ­
mann Is the teacher

of teen.

age pian ist Lorin Hollan1der.
llr. M111te1•
Is a. trtend
Van Cliburn and J ohn
hotb or whom were
classmates at Jullflard.
Ing wlll lJe appearing
R11trnl11 Philharmo nic
y,mr.

ot plauieta
Browning,
h111 tallow
Mr. Brow-n..
with I.he
taller this

Atter Jullllard, Ur. Multe,· stud­
led at Te11chers' College ol'. Colun 1.
bia University w her e be obtaJned
bis ru11ster's au d doctor's degrees.
His dl~sertallon was entltlu d "Prln•
cipal ~•orms and Sty les ol'. 1Jomo­
pbonic Keyboard Llteratu. re from
1668-1767.'' Two ot bis owu nom.
uosilloos have been performed at
the Cathe dr al or St. John the 01.
vine ht N~w York City.

By MARY LOU WILSON
Western nnd Communist blocks .
"StulJlllty which deHeen&lt;la Into
China throui:hout
history I IN
alugoallon" la the dominant char- ocrupied n r,lar.e or supreme , n.
aclertstlc or lhe Soutb,;118t Asian portance tu Asia, and the obJ r
countries.
stated
Dr. Theodore Uves o[ the CommuuJijt Ci1luesc• 11
~~riend Moullny in 1ho Coui·tb of their pre~onl exJ)!lnslonlst dr ''•
five lectures on the coufrontatlon
Iulo the ucutrn l countries tuay .,~
t&gt;C American and Sovtoit foreign truced in lurge part to thi s f111,
policy In i11111c1r1a11t
world l)l'Of1lern Chim, ''looks rorwnrd to es t abll h
nl'eaa .
lnit a Himlla1· glory" tu lbe 'Ill d,
This ~ituatlon has v.risen from ern wof'IQ. hi! declnred. as well il•
o cull.nre wh1ch Is hi storically as to !Ile luevitnl&gt;le spread of h~
soclate&lt;l w 1th !l.11locrntic govern- MorxlAI ideology.
Furthermore, the Chinese clln ,
me1,t :ind l)ilS61Verelhdous pbiio~ophy, holh aocll •ines which llrP
closer t o the mllltant L enlnl s
avrrlle to r ulll&lt;-11Ichnni:e j11 any
philosophy th an do their Rus
Are11 of so~inly.
sia11 counte r-parts, Their attl
Th e policy of neutralism e)(tude toward Neh ru and Chlan q
hiblted by the countries of
Southeast Asia has developed
"pa rtl y out of pride, partly out
of rear," declared Dr, Friend,
Tradi t iona lly they have stood
between "two massive dynam •
isms," the capl•allst
versus
the socia list and, In this posltlon, have feared "bein g ground
to pieces between th e two

At his redial, Dr. Multe r will
11erform three early Freooll works
wrlllen by the prlnclpnl co,urt mu.
sldn ns Lo Louis X.IV, J ea:11 Heol'I
i1·An11:lollertund Francois Co uperin.
He exp lnlned the problems , or per­
forn1aoce or harolachord music on
1he piano nntl the questions that
11rlaeconcerning ornnlllentnt:lon. He
wlll also 11erro1•m the BE,othoven
"Wo ldsteilt'' Sonata and tCboptn·s
I hird Ballade. WorkA or nuch nnd
Roger Session~ wtll complete tbe

Al11h1, (~111u11u,D(•ltu, intl'l·na- cuse Univc111ity $1,0()11 to Iii! usecl 11rogranh
tional sOl'Ority (or coll~ge and uni ~ during the next two year~ for a
w ,•sity women, has ex1111mledits ~cminar on Cleft Pa late.
EXPERT TYPING OF
1Jrogm111.Lnst month, through it s
A check J01· $120 also WI\M pre ­
TERM PAPERS
fl'oun,li,rs Memorial Foundation, sentcd to Syl'ucu~r Univ~r~lly to
F
h/r'r~~~~~~~o 1
t
A!r1hu Gt1mm11 Delt.11 presented ~t.nrt immetllntely suhscriptions of
and Punctuor1on
$!1,()()0 Ul th~ Unive,·sity of Syr11- 11µ-to·uate and inclusive mnterlr1I•
For further fntormotlon
eu~1• 11~ 11 sdf perpetuation fund . l'or n &gt;sca,·ch in deft palate and
Coll MISS NANCY PARNESS
The pu1•po~e o! the .itrant is t o ck•it lip. The J)erpctu11ting fund is
l 13 Acheson, Campus
e,tuhlish a lihrnry of mnte1·i11! Co,• E'xpccted lo 1•ei1lize 11bout $120
r~scarch in lhe field of deft pal • y(•arly with which the cent.et· 11111y
nte ut the Gordon D. Hoop!~ purchnse lfbrnry materials.
D1·.
FOR RENT
He11ring and Speech Center al Pont, admini ~trn t or of the Gordon
Young mother with 2 small chil­
Syrucusc. The librnry is to be D. Hoople Hearing and Speech
known a s the Alphn 011111maDelta Center, hopes to build n book li­ dren desires to shore home w11h
Librai-y for Research in Cleft , urnry, and hnve a cleft palate li­ 2 femoles (senlo~ or grad), Five
mlnure \'(elk from compus , Re­
Pnlate.
hrnry that r11nk 5 the best in the
sonoble rent Coll TF 2-3985.
The sorori ty also gave Syrn· I nation.

!&gt;''"'"''
lo ullow
i1111nutions lo

JUNIORSSENIORS
OrderYourOfficial
Graduation Ring Now.
Availablo At

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKST
''OnCampus''

~o
s:airi~!i°
mns,

You've Tried lhe Resl

K ai Shek, using them as "tar
of Chinese propaganda, "
exhibits their disapproval ol
any softening of the line or
tendency toward a pol1oy or
co-exis te nce.

gets

/\lthough the United Stntes wo111&lt;1
the Southoaat .\k.
d,ivelo1l nnum,11)•
otHl without outside lnlerfereu r,,.
blocks."
Dr. ~'rie1,d averred. we have b"""
They hove reg11rded with suspicion tho motives of the WoHL :is "druwn in by the Communist oh:11
being imperlnlistic. nncJ their pl'ide ltmge.'' "We must.'' he "tatell, "b old
has t~cJ them lo rebe l nga1nst th e the line Ju n military sense ;111d
diNcrhnlnatory policlcH or the wblt d push tonvnrd with vigor ecouom1·ace as exhibited Jn the colonia l ic11lly nud 110111.lcnlty,"a1nce 1111y
period or Great Brltalu and the withdrawut 011 our part wo uld m~110
United Stiites.
Irrevocable losB or the malolnnd .
(See Speotrmn Aaks)
Allhough, he concl uded, tl1e nu, .
However, Comm un ist Cb!na bas slan~ a.nd Chinese otrer "a pol1111
he1,'lln to show Increasing tenden- oC both terro r and hope," we urt
cies or lmperla!istic
expansion in n position to "n ur ture a morr
such as in Laos and on the lnd- real economic growth" for lites~
Ian bor der . The gollcles o! Prlme developing nations. Foreign aid to
Ministe r Nehru of Ind ia bo.ve shown prevent
further
subversio n and
"o positive an d ambitious design," aymlJolio actions or nsa lstence sm•h
according to Dr. Frien d, in atte mpt - as the Pence Corps may pro-vide
Ing to create a third great power the help they need to mature both
to on:set t he io.lluences of the politically und eco nomi call y.

Bofore coming to Buffa lo, Dr,
Multer taught
in New York
City , W estchester , and at the
University of Massachu setts.

orma

Special Shan~s available for Arts and Science, Business,
Engineering, Pharmacy, Law, Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing,
Physical Therapy, and Medical Technology,

Special Encrusting Available

- Now Try the Besl

Along established name for good Pizza eating

/7.
'::fPtoan t·'
t o

Pl~~ZERIA

FREE
DELIVERY
TOCAMPUS

TR7-9119

(WITH A $2 MINMUM FOOD ORDER)

HERE
'S A NOTt NOT TO FORGET:

We have Spaghetti - Ravioli • Antlpasb,'s - Subs and all to take out

2751 DELAWARE AVE.
'.\t..u. • 1'hur~.
T-'ri.- Sut.
C l,m •d Sunday

l:l

(m•ur corner of Kenmore)

1

(

COMING SOON

We ore going to open a new
take-out location just 4 minutes
from campus.

1

�i ridoy, December 14, 1962

SPECTRUM

PAGESEVEN

Dean of Students Comments on Trip ;
( C'ontil!ued from page a)
policies in ou1• democrncy, o,r in
any democ,·a~y fo1· that ma Lt,e,·,
t'ommentinie on the tl'iJI 'to Culm
''Ce1·t11inly the Unlve,·sity \'•!111,1
he must perforce gafo the suv­
port of his follow citizens. ']"o &lt;lo Dr. Siggelkow. dean t•f stud1&gt;nb ru,t be in any J111sition of Hupp111·t
this he mu~t tuke care no,t to s11irl:
endeavor that
ro1· 11ny 11ro1111s~1I
conipromiae himself hevond th ,,
~irn1111vcnb Jll'('~,,nt n11ti&lt;ln11Ipol­
"This is 1\bviously not u Uni ·
point where other citi~ens will
icy.
listen to his appeals.
v,•r~ity up11roved or Univm~I~ •
"rcr~(lllll !ly l W•ml,I ho1111 thot
S(lonso rcd affair, und it is sdu.,,t.
Given the context of \:he
uled to take pince during a holi· ~Vel') ' ~tullont •i nc1•r~ly i11t1•rt•
slt•tl
Cold War, any American who •
dnr period when the institution is in this ·'free trip" would ca11·fully
accepts a t rip to Cuba at
eios,•d, and university adminisLra­ ur&lt;1uolnt himself with iii! possit,I(•
the expense of an organ(za.
lion can iuirdly I.le held re~ponsibll· i111plications, l&gt;:nch h•&lt;livldunl n1•1·.l~
for ihe vocation J\lnns of e,u•h 1111tl to con~itl,•r ,•arefully wl\111
tion which m!Jst have at
every stud~11t.
Int involved.••
lens! the tacit sanction of 'lhe
Cuban government may Well
have greatl)I Impa ired, If not
hopelessly compro mised, his
u1efulness u an aotlve par.
Th!! 'r i I' r I II Room. 11 fully Is " minimum 1·h111
·1:&lt;•of ~-76,
tlcipant within the Amerl,:an
e1111
ipp etl o'Cl\l.aurunt 011 Llw secllin t\l's ,mt in nir 1·on1litio111·d
polltloal
~nd
educational
n111lJ'h101· of Norton IJ11io11,i s uiicn. comfort with ll111i1·,,,·lliKhli11~ a11d
l l,1t11
·• 111·u r,·011111 11.m. lo~ 11.m., nre cnll•rtili,w&lt;l hy 11iped mus ic.
framework.
Whether
one
fin- &lt;1,1y~n wi,ek.
\I nitr~s~ ~e1•vic,· Is pt•11Vid1•tlJmt
likes It or not, that ia the
.
.
. tm tiJ,pinµ- is ullow• 1 d
way our democracy Is struc .
L1111ch1
.•m1 1•omhlnntu111s ,·ullf'&lt;' 1111 Putt- on~ must w&lt;•111
· tll'1'M"''" 111·
By LAWRENCE
FRENKEL
Lust Remesler the scheduling of
lured , ~nd any advantages
pri1·•• f1·11111$I.Oil lo ~l!.75; tht•1·1• couis uncl ti1•••
" A high runklug graduate center, 111., ~;nglneering
School coursAB
Which the Cuban trip n,ay
1, hich this University
is destined was lt;rndled by the com11uler ceu­
seem to promise must be
ro lwc,11n(?.muat conduct extensive ter. \Vhen I he 11ew, lurg11r co m p11(er
n•serin·h in m1rny di~ctplines. This is rondy for use, It will handl e
weighed against this fact ..
will require h•senn•h orleuted ijturr I he sch~dullng of courses ror tho
A~ to the secolHi p11i11t.Shol'tl)'
members
und the 8Neentia 1 re­ whok· University.
sei,rch tools, ona ot which ls a
aft~r th&lt;• referred to st!H ')' U)l•
One 11111•(1~ulady
lnl.erestlug proj.
lurgo computer center."
ert Ihut. l~ being cnrried out In peurcd. 11 ~olleague nurl I w~rn
With these words Mr. Rudol11h &lt;•ouJunutiou
with the computer
Meyn, 1lirecto1· or lhe Oni1•orslty center. is that or Dr. Robert A. appl'Oa(•hel! hy a s l u&lt;lcnt who
romn uter center,
announced
the Sp•ngler,
reseorch
associate
or asked our udvlce. !Jid we think
wld~•rungc Improvement
progra111 hio11hysl\'H. This projeot Involves it tl goocl idea fo1 him lo tak e
hetng JJlan ned. The muJor pnrl or u,e rnecbnnlsm or periodic behavior
o.dvantai:e of the of for ot' 11 "free
lhl~ program ls the construction or of 11,•lng organisms,
corun\onl)'
vacation?'' Th~ dtud&lt;•"l murie it
,.,, nltrnmodern
building In t.ha kno\\'11 ns "hlologlcnl clocka."
nil too clenl' that he had in nii11.I
11re11bet ween Crosby nod Dlefen­
A complex exam1)le or l.bJe J)er­
nothing n,o;·e tha11 a band of
ctorr H,1l\N,
iodlc heh:tvlor le our hearL beat.
When the building Is com­
fun at Culm n expens~. and lw
1Two more simple exnmples nre:
pleted late In 1963, It wlll
told us that other ,-tudents we,·,,
J 1110 growth
of )llanls duriug each
house a one and one-half mll­
considering the offer on the
2•1 hour interval nnd cell repro•
llon dollar I BM 7044 computer.
busis.
tluctlou , Dr. S1m11gler's problem
This computer ia capable of
r!Plll$ with the cu uses or this 11
erl­
App,uently,
th"""
, tu ,l~ut•
doing five million additions per
odic behnl'IOJ'. He lly1&gt;othe11tzea have never heard what ij\&gt;Jll"tim et,
second and can "m emorize"
that t11ey are c111rnedby euzymat .
hrief
associatfons
with
C11n1mil lions of bits of Information.
lcly c11tnlyr.ed chewieal reactions.
muniat aetivitios of the t9;l•Js
In addition to the necessary
In the hue.rt, ror example, It Is n
auxlllary
equip men t for the
did to the future careers of othel ·
three dimensional a1-ray or chem.
Americans.
Again one does not
7044, another IBM 1620 com­
i(•nl reactions that paces the mus.
have to opprove this sta'le of
puter , like the one presently
~le. nerve. and blood vesael ncUv.
housed
In th e Engl neerlng
uffah's to n&gt;eognize that it. existi!.
ity that produces the he1;1rl beat
This point should be most sm·­
Building, wlll also be set up
nbout ooce every seoon cl.
iously congidered even by those
in the new bulldlng.
Or. Spangle~ Is uaing both
students who would fly to tuhB
Until lhP JJTopoaed e1q1nnsion la
digital
and
analog
computers
with the zenl of the idealist , tlt,t
com11leled. a new . I 620 le being
to create mathematical
criter.
re nted nnd Installed in She rman
the idea or students goimg to
Ion for the array of chemical
Hall. This comnuler wilt suppleCuha simply on II vacation 111
..k
reactions that would govern a
111ent lhe one 1u·esenlly in use and
and thereby possibly jeopmdir.­
more simple ex11mple of perl •
11rnke n computer
avnllnble for
ing their futures, is realli1 too
odlc behavior.
He will then
medical research. The acceptance
preposterous to contemplnt&lt;?.
match these criteria to prac­
,1n(I utllizatiou or the cenler has
I han
sugge•t.ed her e vnly
tical reactions and come up
heen extensh·e. ln ract, the center
Every year a stout band of brav e young men mar ch oft
two 11spectsof a complex que15tion
with a aet of ch emical reac•
is ke11l in operntlon 24 hours a day,
to the jeweler to buy the engagement ring - unaided. We
lint
there
are
other~.
Fo1r
iu­
tlons that will prove his hy.
seven days a week, and still tl1e
at Artcarved. maker ·s of the wor ld's most treasured rings
stance, it hllll very real phi111tc111
pothesia.
demand for computer time exceeds
for over a hundred years, sa lute th em.
danger~. And then there a1,e the
he time avoilal&gt;le.
JC succ eaatu l. his e,q,erlment
More to the point , we help them. Here's how.
To 1111the need for personnel to could open ur, mauy new areas ot perhaps impossible hurdles on••
·111e
rate and progr11111the romput­ further reseurcb. It could lend to would have to surmount to leave
IN STYLES, Styles in engag ement ring s change over the
•rs. the UnlveTaity otJers computer 11 way 1.0 increaHe the rate of and reenter the United S:tutP.&lt;
years. To keep you abreast of the bel!t, Arlcarved qui,,zes
legally. And
to be perfectly
,·oursGs such as Inlroductlou
to plant growtb and mtgbt even rurn­
College Queens (like t.he one above) from all over th e
reali~tic, should not one ask him­
'omputer
Programing.
On the lsh the key to ca11cer. It must be
country. You' ll find their choices at your Art carvcd j ewele r.
sell how might the Cuban gov ­
•ofgher levels, ndva11ced seminars emphasised lhlll without the use
IN VALUE, Unless you're majoring in diamonds. your
re held In both digital nnd analog or the computer center this prob­ ernment use n planeload of visit­
ing American stu dent.s ror its
,rogrnmlug. Aud It Is hoped lhnt lem would not pven hav e a pos.
chances of disce rning th e true valu e of any pa rt icular dia­
,,,~rees Jn romputer Rclem·e will sibll!ty of being solved. As It Is, own purpose:;'/
mond are small . indeed. To ,;afeguard your inve~tment,
•• offere d In the no t too distant the 11120worked ~ontlnuouflly !or
Arlcarved gives you a written guarantee of your diamond 's
John D. J\1illi.1ran.
11tu1•e.
4S hours just lo urril't' al one very
tru e value, a guarunlee that is respected and recognized by
assistant professor of hii,tor.1·
It has been stated that the
email part or the solution.
leading jewelers everywhere, and backed hy a HO-year
extensive use of the computer
repu tation !or quality.
center on this campus Is char.
So, go on and buy 1he ring yourself . She' ll love you for
acterlstlc of the general growth
In the computer
field. The
it-especially when it's an Ancarved.

Cautions About Possible Involvement

"'"&gt;

Tiffin Restaurant Now Open

Computer Used in Research
Could Lead to Cancer Cure

,t\ll,.
.

FOR BRAVE MEN ONLY
...

number of problems that can
be applled to computers Is ra•
pidly mushrooming. As reported
In the Nov. 30 Spectrum, for
example, the computet
wae
used to select the winning
teams In tho Great Lakea De­
bate Tournament.

Art carved•
DIAMOND

AND

WEDDING

RINGS

Two of the
lovely designs
chOsen by Am~rica's
College Queens.
From $100 .

I DRY
CLEANING
8 lbs. for $2.00
AT THE

One-Stop Service Center
laundry • Shoe Repairing
Shoes and Purses Refinished
and dyed
All types of ladles' Heels In
Stock for Replacement
or Re-styling

011, 11f A ,,,,.,.;,,"'R Lca,lhtg Jt

uud /)fo ,,,wn,I

1963

PlozoShoeRepair
UNIVERSITYPLAZA •
TF 6-4041
Open 9 A- M. • 9 P. M.

u•;•lrrg

START
PAYMENTS
IN
JANUARY

3300 SHERIDANDRIVE

3637 UNION ROA,D

Weekly
or )J on thl y
Parmenta
lll' I ll 2 4
Mouths

Open Every_ fve.ning _JilL Cbrlstmcu

lt,-,w,.frrA

�Decem~er 14, 196 2

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

:::&gt;

Annual Labor Essay Contest Mich. State OUers
Offered for Undergraduates Language Studies
StndentK nl colleges eod nnlver­
brallnn or Lhe U. S. DeMrtment of
l..ubor," Mr, Wirtz ijald, pointing Mlli~s 1u,ros~ the nation "re lm lted
.ngual(e
out thnt the de11nrtment•~ 60th nn­ to 1iurtlelpute In a new 111
nlver•nry will be March 4, "One study program orrered In Europe
ot the deepest concern• here In llr ~11clligfln State Ualve,•,nty dur(he de11artment Is for Ille !)roper 1~~ the Kl1mmer or I "63.
d!'l'elo))111entor Amerlrnn youth lo
Six-week lntenijlve
-,ourseN hr
nn tirll of !ncreaHlng te~hnologlcal
ncb al t....ur~onntt, Switzerland:
rha11g~. oe!!up11Uonal gl&gt;ltt'lnilzntlon, J.'r1&gt;
s~lentiflc ndvnnce nnd Joh quullfi. In Germun al Cologne, Germany;
rntlonK of an ever.g!'owlug com. In llnllnn 111l&lt;'lorence. lluly, nod 111
S11unlsh al Modrld, Spoln nre now
plPXlty.
"A major Iheme In our mrn!ver­ 011et1 to student~ with somci back. (
1
Mry relebriulon year w11l l)e doftn. ground In lhP lon!(URl(l' tltt' ) ' Wlijh
inl( maupower
d&lt;•velo11ment, wllh lo Hlndy,
Mid .
r1nrllc-ul11r regard lo youth, a~ thP
Al II low cMI Of UJ)J!rOXllmuu•t)'
Mr, Wirtz announced the aa.
k••y that unlocks the run ootenthtl ~500 tn tht&gt; ijludenl, the rlon in­
socla t ion of the U. S, Depart.
tc,r 11rowth o[ our econo m)• In I hi' &lt;•lu,les : ,
year8 ahead.
ment ·of Labor and the ABC
radio network followlng a con­
"The ctc11urtme11t 18 celehratlng r111 1. Air truns1mrtutio11 frotu Nllw
ference with Mr. Pauley, ABC
nnnlver•nry.
Th e yonitg 11eople Ju York 10 ffil,ropP and r oturn .
Radio news commentator
Ed- , A111erlc,n will, I am sure, he ~t'le­
2. Tuition for thf' siX-WPC•k
ward P, Morgan and George
hrftllni: n hrilllant future for them.
Meany, president of the AFL .
sph•r• ond their ruu11try tr WQ nre Jt\Ut~◄' rou1·xe.
CIO, which sponson Mr. Mor .
nil wl~e ,,nough to muke It RO. I
a. llou,·d und riiom with 1•111rugan'a radio broadcasts.
hrnrllly
welcome the nunouncc- 111inn rnmilleK while 1111rlklp11ting
"I um dellghl~d lhul Mr. Pouley 11w111
or fbl~ ,,,;Ray !'Olllt'Hl nnd It~ In lh(• 11rogmm.
anti ~lr )!organ ltave s1&gt;lrrt11d tor Mfort to Inc re/I Ne our young
A period qr approxim,ately
the F.s~ny C'onteat ll topic Ao np. neo11le's uwareoflss or their ulu(•r
H~y es Ha ll Takes
15 days following compl,etlon
1irnpriule £or the annlversory
cele. in tomorrow's wortcj."
of the course Is allowed ! for
A [IC' r1Hllu nPI work's
tn62 Ed­
ward I'. MC1rgn11eHRHY0011leijl will
be held In IIRROrlutlon with the
llniled Stale• ll«purtmenl or l,abor
IL wn• unnnunced h)' Labor Secro­
t11ry W. WIiiard WMv. and ABC
rodlo 1ire•iden1 Robert R. Pauley ,
ThernP o, th(' onnuul rontest wilt
he "Ymttb'i, Chollem;r&gt; In I.he Lnbnr
Mnrkel or the 60'•·"
~Ir. Pttnl ey Hnld Lhe (•Oltte11l WIii
lw 011en to all undergroduoto
stu.
dt&gt;nl. , The ""IIIAH of lh e judge,.
Nnl!•HI rules und 11riV.('s wlll be
announrPd 111tho nenr future, he

0

Ir

I

travel at the student's dl11cre.
Uon, costs of which are not
covered by th e $500.

Library Schedules Posted;
Longer Hours for Holidays

t'h11rt~rcd 11lamas
tlnitPd Slate~ ror
1lu• s~cu11tl week in
bol(III ~to1uh1y, ,July

1'he Univ111'!&lt;iLyLihrarit •s will 1,,. H a.111. to 1 ll,m.)
111w11 l011ge1 hour • duriug
th•·
Sunday, Dec, ;lO-Lockwo•1d nucl
('h1·istmaR vacation than is noi•mul llnl'l'i11ian 2 11.m. to 9 p.111.
1•11cAtion perio,ls.
Monrlny, Dec. 31-8:'.lO n.l\1. to
5 p .m.
Saturdny and.,Suntlay, Dec. 16Tuesdny, Jan. 1-C lv~••cl.
Hi Lot'kwood Lihrary clOM'''
Norma l
Wetlncsdu~·. ,Jun. 2 for tlu• annual Chri~tm11;s•Conrerl.

fli~ht

Harriman

.....

fln1'l'ima111

Lockwood,

11&lt;':lllh

Letterpress and Offset

BUFFALO
STAND
ARD
PRINTING
CORP
.
1335 E. DELAVAN AVE. Servi ce -

Quality

-

TX 3-0913
Price

Printers of Th e Spectrum since 1987

CORNED
BEEF

F'r·itlny, Dec. 21 -C loae nL II 11.m.
Health Sciences, 10 p.111.).
O('c. 22 -

~cb1•clulL•(cxc€pl flenlth
!) 11,111. to 1 J),111, ),

Dee. 24--8;30

These are but a few of

11.111,

lu

Tu~ , d11y, Oec. 26-&lt;'lo6L'cl .
l)('c. 2fo to Fridny.

I lLoe.28-8 ::io 11,111.to 9 11,111,
S11Lurday, Dec. 29
~~hcdule (except Health

PASTRAMI

No,.mal

Scie11r1•~

Sunday, Dec. 2:1- Lockwood and
l!arrimon
2 p.111
. to 6 p .m.

WcdnesdRy,

Here .

PIZZA

(excent

Monday,
Ii p.m.

Winter's

E11~i11-,1•ri11i:

nnd Phy~ic• LibraricH:

Satunluy,

~

Look Now That

1sPco11d

Additional delulls 011 th,• lll'ogrnm
a ud opplirntlon rorms con Ile oh.
tul11ud by eontu,·tlnR ~'redrlt ! Mor.
llmnre, AIIH.'t'lcun Languag1 3 antl
Edu1•allom1I Center. Conli :nulng
fJ1lur.,Uo11 Service. :'lllcblgnn St11te
l l nlver~lly, lilnst Lnna!ng, Milch .

Library open its 11111·nrn
I schedu le.

Sciences, Chcmi.try,

l~111·011cthe

week In Sl't)lfllllhl'r

rOI'

,clw tlule .

IP11ves

will leove the
muro11e dul'lng
.July. f'our~es
15. The reluru

On A Dlffert.tlt

Normnl
Sci-,nccs

of the specialties at the

University
Delicatessen

.. ,,........
3588 Main St. TF 2-1456

-~ohhle~
/ieminine Footwear
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

SHERIDAN PLAZA

f aoN:TON"TA~;
tj
182 EASTFERRYST. CORNERWAVERLY ST,

•

~

PRESENTS

".JAZZ''

ll
f~'.,

EVERY NITE

(EXCEPT MONDAY)

~

~
tij

i

l

By the Finest Groups in th e Country

1

'1

il

~ ----=---..1
E;~~ni;mAYNo
;;e;o ♦ '
I1

'

·" ·

2
)\1

Low priced Food and Drinks
New Policy___

~o~/&lt;t
I

V

( formerly

11'ilh Gloria L)•nn f

TO ALL OUR FRIENDS
A HAPPY HOLIOAY

, I

INT ERNATIONAL

jl

'l'Of/f!Q.!S

I

♦1

~ ~
TT 6-9676
TT 6-9766 ¢,
'--◄.:::=:◄~.=...i-=--==-=---=::::si-=.:::.a':-~..,.~- ~ - ~ :..,
I

•

•

lnttrn.doMI

lar•-r1•s.

tnc .. Otl(0lt , Mich., Buffalo, N. Y.,.Tampa, Aa., Flndl~y, o..Colllnaton, ...

�f rldoy, December l4 , 1962

PAGENINE

S PEC TR U M

UB Presents Bnst
AffirmativeTeam

./e/igiou6
:1Jing6

1\/lll ht• ltt1Jd 011Jun . IR
Tlk tlo11hy for the lie•l Mflt·m
Cbrlstm_?s 11u1•ty tlilli'I'~ uu11ual lntll; ·,mJll)er wl(J !Hive, Leam t&gt;f th" (:a.n11elt f11tc1.
1111
1 I\;, thl• evenln~ nt 1·1111p.m. h~ held thlN Sundny al S:Hi 1,.m. 11utiu1111I
'ru11n1amc11tut thl! l111l­
rrnos11urlatlun
will be l&gt;t'O\tldM 'fhe Ku~ner is hAln~ nrevured hv ve1•sity uf Roches11,,• wl'nt lv the
fr111n the cRmpus to 17ll l)elnw11re ~lrii.. rennt., ll'llrbcr In cooi,eratlo;, arfirmntiVI! ll'Hll1
the Univer­
~,·••nul!, where the party Is to IHl wlf.11 u c:ommltt, ,o rrom Fronth&lt;1· s ity•s v111
·sity divi~ion, 'l'hc uf•
h11ld. ,
.
1,udge or fl'unl ll'rllll lly Mu rry tfrmative tram co11si~tcd 11r (;,,,••·y
,\11 "ho am Interested Jn l1"rm•i l&lt;udlmvHz. Ml'. uurvoy lh-evermun Cant11nz111·1•0011 C111·0I z~ncr.
"."tin~ In ~1?xt semester's tnl«r ., D,•pnrt111t•nt
ur ,\1•1. wtll ot·e•rnt .,;
or the uuiv~rsity ''-'"'"• Mis,
·
\urslty
uc_tl\llllls. 1•leuse se ud u l llustra led l"«J.1ttre 011 th!' Jeru~u- ,
By RUSSELL GOLDBERG
111+'11th•1I. 11• th, hOI~ wl(h 111,,
1
.C'liedul e uf ~heir rree time to nt~I&lt; lc m wlndOWHor Mnrr f'ltui;all. lleK. ;,:e!••· Imel the highest s1pe11k•••
·
fl,.,,"""" Ill • ••~tub11Nll&lt;'d n11revolt
1111
J111tt~. Uo~ 1,ll. Towe, • Dorm.
,,,,,nilons art• llt!('A~snry.
1''.
lo. llw · srorc was H!I ,11
1 the
Chunu~ah. or_wot' lhe nln•• •'&lt;')I'• 1111d1'1
thl' 11111110
"A ll who ,.. t(,r
111
Canterbury
••
•
h1g!iest ~pcaker 1,oint.;; !ll. l)f !ht• lsh fe~t,vnlij , ,s 1·u}uhrut1•d•l111•1n
ir 1h11 lnu~ rnllnw 1111
,"
An elg hl o'C'lork lllbs
will be•
I IIOs•hty, Imm ,,. lO p.m. fht1t'" ultt1n• tullt'IIIIIIU'lll
WCl'll l'fkil1•1I Ill) this ~cuson o.f the yeAt' nnd fo1• thi..
'l'h1• rnmlllltr ,;ymboltt llf ibis
•lll lllMotl!d hy C'llulHrlnu•y
i:lnn- wll,I he u I lunuknh det."or11,tlt11
: by a niembet' or the winnin~• t.·,un reason 113&gt;1
i;ul11~•dgreult.!r ntttor iety 11111td
1iy . llnnuknh , 11,,,r.,.,,tvul of
111111
.1oy nl St. Andrew's. All ~111urr,11111111111)'''.' rtlllel llousc . Stu/le111s rrom Coli.tale U11iv1•1•sit~. ll,vu.:-lu, lhnn nny or 1111•o1ht&gt;rs. 11 dMH lh;ht ~, ,.,.,. th,• 1tl111•
,u1111ltuIJ•Hdera
•h l1h,nt11 .i11d tnrully ure lnvit1 •1l. '"'l' l11v1l~d lo help in 1h1&gt;lll'e11aru. 1!111l)!t
' und H.11
•l11
H11 C:k•got11cl\111• h11v1
•. 11,1w11v••1·
. th1• 1111ll'Prs11I
1,1ea. 1111
• 1111•11oruhnn d th,• !0111 slda,i
,\ oreakr,ist wltl follow.
llon or o, h.;lual d~1·ur11t11
•ns nnd Jn 11usctl the u•i;utivl• teum. 'l'lh~ ,,,,_ ~11.:-cor th1• •t1•11~1:le tor r11llgio11~tOI)• 01 ,lr'11tlul 11,1,111 lh(t refUII•
'l'hlll'$&lt;lf \)', Ill j 11
.m.. Cnnterbury's t· t•tJalltt~ II holldlly ;1tmo~1&gt;here:1t til•e 118 teum ,,laq,,I thi1rd ill 11111·•·ly
•lll••&gt;tl ul 1111
• 'l'••ml)ll• tn JNU81llc.1m,
Chrii&lt;tmas Part} 1~ tu 1)1;&gt;held ~t llltllll . Hefl'e&gt;1llments and Jl111111lc
. fl fietcl or :J7 h•11111~
from the Unit·
Allm 111, ,hmlh ut Ale,und ut !JI•· .\ln•·••nbNIM, "" 1h11 &gt;1C111sof
l'hnp luin Rlc'Ultle's hom e. l no Rim- k&lt;1hK1111109will rollow1he •IMo,·111 t•d RL:1t1·~111111(•unutl,.,
LIit• On•111. 111~1•11111lr,•
wns broken Mn11n1htn, 011'1 1n11lt lo1)c,worB
\\'Ill/ii A\•enue
Ing l)lll'ly .
1111 1111,1w111•t'IIII(fro.,111en1•. 111111w,•rt• 1•11
lh•d . r,•1t••dl1·1tlt•dtht• 811
rc.
C'u11lerbury 1.1re~l'IIIHtwo dls cutilnvlwllmu, wer P n111lled 111
1,. wP,•k )lmnh\'I', of lhe 1111vi1•cdivt.111111111
• l11h•r11111111
whh-11 ~lrnn•d; •r l•t•II 111,11
r null •·&lt;•kln•llr•1thi• i,vQrlust.
IOI: grmq,s e8&lt;·h w11ak 111217 Nni•· lo llull'11l0 hoy a Ulld glr l~ at ,1mullll l', uf th ~ rlclml~ NOCil'l) 11tt1•111ll•d Ith• l'l 1 lf\'II dis1111
11t
•11 1•9d. 1'b o 1(111
1:- h11, ll11hl lhut I• rnnud In ever)'
1011:11 Ulhl.., •l•11Jy, 1 l).UI.. 'l'llllr ~- ('O!lege. 111 v111'111
us (llll'(H or lh.r to 1!1'11'.11"'-111
l$ n l th-, l111iv(•rsjt)• of .111111"' .hHlll:I IVIIH1111!1•11•
,, ... ••1111.,ll•wtxh ~)'lllllltll:11(• 'I'll(• nmonut M
,1:ly, 111111
11i,;enerol d!sClll!Hhtn i,;ron11 l'Ollllll')' tor the third illlllllfll ;\fld- 11111101
" nnd ,,1 St. Uo11nv,, 11t.un• t,•ul 11! th,, ~yri1111PIJH•tn• 11011tt1 sa111•flll
•••I ull Wll• Mllllkl,1111 tur
.\ 11.1., Thur sday .
Winte r ~ocla l. This 1111
1111al colleiw lJniv~,·xity 'I''' n 111x 1111111llwli11g
r11l1•r \nti orhus n·
1111ly 11111•o,,y hul It la•h•d rur
11
Newmat1
1&gt;
•11·ty wlll IJe held su1,1dny. tlt-r. 21!, sorne 4 1:!,1'1•0111id! 11111'1~
or th,, 111i,I
•
J ud~l•m was at th,s time
,•ii:hl d11yij,
:-l~wmnn wonld like to thnilk from N to 11 1,.m. ot lltllel flnu~ ~. Wl'S!. tittt•tuk•d the· 1111111,n)fio'n•sh
reelln o from t he lmpaot of Its
Tlus occ u rrence I• comme.m., 1s wl10 wlll h,, m1111• Stt11h11111t11•,•
ll••l111("
co n t~At
with
Gre ek cu"ltu• , e
" 11y 1lghtlno o r
, 1•~ryone who wm ·kcd on lhe •·llllilJ• •\11 ,./Ill eg(! s I1•11e11
,
, '1'&lt;•1•1•.••
, 11
•w
ora te d b y t h e ua
sui·cess.
111U11rr11111
during the wllller i·e•·r•s metH of th(• l ' 11iv1•l'~ity
I lli1111i
,
a n d phi losophy. T he old val .
ca ndles for an eight day per.
•nlo. mnking lt
11
\\'~tluesd;iy. '.llewman will hllVP t1r11 elli:lhle 10 :ittvutl , Pt1rent s ni•,, ut. t'hit·n~o.
vts were oomln{I under •har p
lod starting wlth Deo, 21 th is
ils .. 111111~1
(' hrl~tmnu ual'ly nt J\lew, re11uN•lod
to hrlng tilt~ n1111011
pllrl.ltlvutiun ln 1, 11 ,.
attac k and the Jewis h faith
year . Ono candle lo 11ght e d the
11co. Fl'Olll
11
1111111
Hall J,)v1,ryo 11e ts tuv!tell to •unn t lo the hllentlou of their HOil~ ,,0111111
~ of d,·l,ilt••• 11,.. t:U nu,·
might have disappe are d In a
first ni g ht, two t he second,
ull" nd
un•I 1t1111
gl1t1•r~ who arl' awoy nl
Hellen,stlc world If It had not
three the t h ird • •• wit h the
Ic,· toui\l t·ni•k,,d up 11 1&lt;•c~1rd ol
Hillel
,•olle!(e.
bc•en lnr the excesses of Annin t h c 1nd le belno used for
four winH and ruuc· luHSI'
'-', Tiu•
uoohvs . Followlr,g a revolt I"
llqhtl no ·th • ott1er -a~d1-.1 e• ch
Jtuti,I
11,m s11Qnsur a Subbnlh
'l'lHi 11ei,t111d 111 11 serlt.•s or sem,. ten Ill WII S n111,
1e UI&gt;Ill• F'l'llll ~lleh,•I
•·
'
" " " •
Jeruu lem which hnd been
n1oh1,
Stlr~lctl 11\is cVtln lni; n( 7:46 v.m. 1111r~011 " Th e Zionist ld&lt;'a'• WIii ht&lt; f'•' I N
•
eI • K81'tll '1
" ui·ris 1111d Ru~caused by a rumor of his death
Tit,• d1·1•f1l1•t
. \"l 1icl1 1• t111••1
I In ••
' UC"
,1t II II ieI tt onNP. !:iluce thtR w11I b" ht&gt;lil s,11,.luy ev011l11g.111 ~ 1,,m. tn ••' ti l'• 0 111
' 111,m"," I·' ' ln111'"lh•
"
• ,eri:, Th &lt;'Yare nll in tl1@i1
on the EgyptiAn fro 11t, Antlo•
~n1111• I)( 1)111
•11111"
1I10 nnnl .orvtce
11rln1
• to 11111111k. 1he lltlll'\l Uouse. Jl•lrs. Sell"., ,\dlrir r·11·••• ycat• Or ·111t~••collel-Cii•l,.1foli11t,, chus forbade the practice of
"
•
'
~
'
••·• wllll tu111·ll ••lir••w lnllt•t·• ,..111-11
111,
" l 1.1r 1!11•' 11l11
•
I lt •viii ~e t.lcvot~d lo lbnt will leru! t1u, semlnar On tl1e suh. ant I • tu o, I 11V we II us t 1II'~' J'11t•1,t1 Judaism under pain of death.
•l1111c
•1111". "• \ '"'I "Ill
•
ltd Ii&gt;' 111• Justin uorm11nn will iPl'l or "A t111dHu,Am."
t111
111
11;• SOI)),omor('M, _Hnh~t•l /1. Coul·
11.
·r1tiN rdll'! &lt;',lllijt•d IIUl'l•ttl lhl•l 111lrnl'l1•11.. ,,,,,,,,.1.1 ht••'·••." It• It"' 11,.,1
l
•11N •k .,
(111 " SOIUII IJ'houi:ht,i 011 JlH .
'l'he fllllol 011en House t111· ,11~ ,on.
·
111
•t,,·u1•or
. Ill 1truma 111111
th,· 111·,-vltl11M
:.:1•11
d1111Il'lrnni:1•• hn,I 11111l11•t•11tor 11111hrav1•r" u! 111,1
1111
An 0 neg ~hnbhal wlll ,w1•1111d~eml'ster will take 111n•e
'
Iin\,I
,
~pw c I 1, nccom11n111e1I
t I1c tc11111wh1•11 111•v1•r •·~•1k1•1l l11 1h1• vlll»I{&lt;' or .11a•·•
·11!11•1·••
1hl.' nw1111thol•lll'
~•&gt;"·
!olluw. St11'Vl\'1!8 wltl ~ontli•lltl &lt;lu•·- .Inn. 211, r,•om 2 \1Dlll 10 Jl,l'I,
•v
• n•• .,• w~• t oo.•I u rr !. •·om th11 llufful11 Modin . 11 11rk•st 111111,,.(l
.\111tt11tlli11R1•,·111111h
th l •trnlly lu,v-1, dlrd 1111il
1111!'tile t-x11ml1111tlo11 nerlod. 'l'll r lh•• Hli11•l !louse . ,\11 hl\llloltou ts I n t l•t•1111
( 101111I
I \ 11•)10l'LFt •{&lt;l&lt;1;i'"•••· klllMI n 1111111
whu WM, wt11!11ulo t•hrhnl1111ltv 111l"'hl IIOVl\l')I"'"• '·1°•u
Inter-Vars ity Christian Fellow1hlp

' lnter.Vusity'g

0

or

I

,,r

I

first servlcl' ol lbe •e••Ond seme••er

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.,xtenllod

to 11II st nd cn ts to nt1011tl.

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r:.:_lll:.:_
l'.:._C_..:.:
11:.._'th1• (l,·.,t1k )IIIIIK, •111Ij lt_n_1·1_1
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u '

An Open Leiter rr4Dm lhe Jr C
In the Novemlter aOth issue of the SW''·
I r111,1. a critique of the activities of th is
University's
fraternities
was attempte d by
Miss Ann Mii n te. Thi;; statement has bee.r1
pre.pared in an effort to con ect any mis­
con ceptions fostered by her a r ticle and to
reveal some facts which the student body
should have k nowledge.
Miss l\fiinte. alt hough calli ng herself a
Greek, is obviously misinfo r med of much of
the G1·eek wo rl d . Upon analysis of het·
article, two points are especia lly prominent
in thi;, respect.
·
First, although il is true Lhat :il l fra.
ternities a r e established upon a 11otmd basis
of tested ideals and that thetiu ideals are
~n iversal throughout
the Greek world, it
1s also tl'ue , Umt frntern ities 11re etab l is hed
for II multitude of pu r poses. Miss Miilite
seems to be unaware of the foct that the
majority or ft·aternities on 0111· campus are
socia l in nature , and not of the service type.
Although most hav e service activities of
so me so r t. their main puqJOse is not one
of philanthropy.
Rath er, they are en dowed
with the re :1poni.ibility of fostel'ing the de­
velopme1 1t of m,Llur ily of their individual
member s, by tea ching them to respect thP
opinions of others and to assume the full
share of 0ne's obligations and responsibiliti es.
Through this. arnl the embracement
of a
sound set. of ideals , a fraternity
prepares
it s members to take their proper place in a
democratic t;Odety . Attesting to this h the
fact that the leaders of ou r society are, to
a large degree. frat.ernity men. Our own
Chancellor Furna s is one example of t he
success of frnternily men after their college
days have ended.
Seco nd, it is apparent that, while Pledge
Miinte may have some knowledge of Greek
ideals, she seems to have no knowledge of
the essence of these ideals. Upon pledge­
commands that the neo •
ship, a fraternity
phyte ''lea r n" the ideals and goah1 of it ,;
group, and it is true that in most cases these
ai·e learn e,1 only hy rote. It is only upo11
a good deal of experience within the group, h1
practke of these irle:tls. that a person be­
gins to "know" tlu iir true meunings. One
ma y well a1&lt;sume that Miss Miinte. with
her short cxperienl'e in actual plcdgeship,
is 11ot in the most favorable position to
t!\.'alua te fraternal ideals.
A critical review uf the body uf her re­
po rt is also in order. She suggests a num ­
ht•r of' ;ier vice activitiei-: which Greek group,i
l'nuld perform. She hnd only to investigate
tlw matter to di!.co,·er that many of our or­
gai,i~ation~ are acti\' 11 in these areas. How-

ever. the suggestions she made iu•e not those
uctiv i ties which frate rn ities emph11size. To
fo11ter a child, to p r epare CAH E pnckage:-1
. . . These a l'(' impo r bmt ac(;ivities. But ,
wbat lasting imp ressions do su1ch acUvitics
leave? Cettainly not as deep as those gained
t.h rough holding parties !It orpha n 's homell:
through the collecting and cllispensing ol'
food and gifts at 'l'h11nk!,giving and Ch rist ­
mas; or through the devoting · of 11 g()Qd
man,v hours in the perfot'mancl! of' se r·vices
11t some m·ea hosp ital or social welfare
i n­
~titution. These are the act ivitiies that fra ­
tern ity men do, and in lhc p 1•oceRs imp l:111t
their ideals. These ru·e the uclivities thal
fraternity men choose to devote their time
and energies lo. And theRe a r e some or t11e
ways in which fraternity
men are mudc
i\nd united.
As for Miss Miinte\1 other c r iticlsm !I.
they are equally unfounded. Through absorb­
tion-or
the acceptance of fl'at ,ernity ideal­
illm-tested
anrl lrif'd in American 11ince
1776-a person ceases to L&gt;e.iust anothe t· hu­
man being. .f11
st an othe r number. He be­
comes individualized. both to hi.s group and
to his society . A s for the eredits of individ­
ual member!!, each group is justifiall ly prout.l
or the achievements and honor·s earned by
one uf its own . None can deny that this ill
a rtJflectiun on lhu group it.sel f. ft has
screened, ;.elected, and a ided in the motiva ~
tio n and dfrection of the efforts. of its mem­
bers. Ttt t&gt;ach of these cases, the fraternit.v
is richly rewared for its endeavors. And for
a man to be n true fraternity nian. he must
be an appendage of his group. But thi s ill
not all. He also brings something to his
iroup nnd. upon graduation, Je:aves vestiges
of himsef within that same group. Truly, the
fraternity is 110I only part of the man; the
man is also pa rt of the fraternity.
As for the intellectual leve l of our group.~.
sc h ola:stir arhiev emcnt. hu.s ulw,ays been the
hiihest goal of fraternities. rluring campu"
life. s ince the inC'eption of PM Beta Kappa.
186 years ugo, It iK tht• rarn campuK i11
Amerii:a luday where the all -me n•il avernge
t•xceeds that of the ull-Greck a1•e1·uge. '!'hi,;
i11per hap s not the hest indicant for .iudglng
,ntellectuai arhievemcnL liut is does help
in presenting my point.
But a ~till morr intJJO!'tant puint nwst 1,e
:qiprouched, concerning tlw +'di,torial 1,olky
of the S})ccfl'um toward fruttirnitl v.m1111s011
this &lt;•ampus. ;\lis~ ,Jtmn Flnr .11. S1w&lt;'lrn111
editor. ha11mad!! 1t he r 1wrso1111Irru~.tde to
degr:ul,· thi~ c•11111p11~·Greeks. Whnt her mo­
tive:- are 011lyAhc t·an imy Hui, her ntl'lhOJ!I
and ntt1m1pt~ 111•e q11il1•ol,viou~ . Even id ler

repeated invilation, she has r efused to sencl
reporters to cover I he l nterfraternity
Coun­
t'il meetings. Fort unately, the TFC did sul'•
ceed in obtaining the services of' two report~
crs. hu l O11ly I.Jystleking: their help personal­
ly. She attempte-1 ~o "kill'' cover age of Greek
Weekend . but 11irai11the WC was fo r tL1111
1te
in guining the aid of indh·idua ls on the
S11ectrnm staff. At lhe beginn ing of the
pre 111m
t 11emester, she nttempte(I to remove
the lo11ic Column fenture altogether. How­
ever, once a.gain, il was kept through the
effort s of other stuff members. Now It 11ecmll
prob11ble 1hat she has surceeded in irrrl\1enclng •Mi11sMiinte 1111.0writing the 1trlicl&lt;'
in question.
J\11for Miss 1\[iinte, herself, h1•r ,l('f ion in
wt'lting tht! urUc le was premature und tolnl­
ly unwarranted. She did nut nffklally nolil'y
'Y for
frate r nal groupA on tho change of J)Oli&lt;
the loni&lt;' Gulum11. She tlid not hothe 1· to In­
quire at the ofTices of the fl-nterna l co-o r­
tlinut ini bodies, the Tnterfraternity
nm l
Panhellenic Councils, for the ty pe or new~
11hesuppose dly seeked. If s he hu rl. sh1• tnh,v
ha\ ·c learena of the gigantic.- "Help Weel&lt;''
kl be held in the Spring semester and of the
proposed dance, to be ht•ld in Feb r uary , with
all p1•01it
s gong to the Hea rt Fund - hoth
11po11sore:lby the JFC. (Upon speaking with
Miss itiinte, llhe in formed the write r thtil
~he r!id nol feel it he r obligation, as edito r . to
~l.'ek out the new s.) So. it seems. Iht• def1.
cie11cy is not in 011•111'fidtlell of the fruter­
nal group:1. hut in the op&lt;•ratlun11 of the
Ionic Column.
Pe1·hap11 the muin prohlt •m of fratern iti.-H
ill that th ey ar e c&lt;•mpui;e .l of people. Thill
mak11~ them e.wecinlly prone hi "f)('ople •
hnl~,·~." l•'rntE&gt;rniticf&lt; are alao promine11t.
Thi'! allows tile peoJ)lc-h 11te r:1 nmny handJc,­
to gra!;p. But the fraternity wurl&lt;I ill prolld
of its heritage aud hop efu l of its fllluni. JI
ha s survived the atta&lt;'k~ of mnn y down
through l he al(ell 'll1&lt;1will t•o111.ir111t'.l
to do iro.
It will keep il:-. ow11house in onkr nml will
wrlcoml• ron11tr11rtivr i;11~~e~tion11
from thni;c
11ut11ide-111·01 ided thu :111,.,,.,e~tiunsare wis(I
and show r,rornl~!! of bcnring fruit. As tor
thMe who dislike tlle gygl(lm, show conk mp!
for it-in
~hurt , lhose who are l~o rant t,f
it-hy oli!11•r,ing thr 11t'lioni1o ( thcs1• pe,,vl ~.
the (: reek ~ can lien1me only more uuit.t•d
in I hf' h1~h pniiit!on that th~) •
and 1&lt;1:&lt;:unn,•w hold
F1·am·1~ J. A)l'SIII. l're-~id1•11
t

l11t1•rfr11ternityC'oundl
Stat,, Unlv1m1ity uf Krw York ut Uutful u

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PAGETEN

*

SPECTRUM

The Spectrum Asks

*

II

Si lver Ball

Verdict; Not Guilty
Thi! IFC has purcha11ecl s1&gt;ace in The Spectt·um t his
week to an!lwer Ann Miin te's article on camr,us Greeks.
Prank Alc~~r who ..;uhmitled the Greek reply on l,ehalf of
the CFC also used the opportunity to m11kea few poin ted
1·ema1·ks about 'J'he Spe1•b'um editor l\nd editoriu l p())icy.
Foi- lhosc of you who not as yet read Mr. Alessl's color­
full commentary

Fridoy, Dece"'ber 14, 1962

we refer ,you to page ni11e, thlt-d paragrap h

frnm thr hottom.
We will consider the occusotions , First Mr, Alessi
accu ses the edito r of i,,akin!I the degradation of Greeks
on this compus "her personal crusade ". If the president
of th e lt:C reods The Spectrum, and it's obvious from
his letter thot he does not, he would see {No, . 16 issue )
thot this poper does not indulge in crusode s for or
against any issue.

It ct•t·tltinly follow1:1then l,hl\t t.he editor would not
u"e lhe paper fo1· such tt purpose. l\fr. Alessi flaitet·s us
in insinuating that ;111yl,hf11g
The Spcet r 11mt'ould say wonld
m111• the imnge of the G1·eeks whom he !studs so high ly iu
his Jette!'. We have made om· position on editorial policy
cleur and rerer you lo Lheeditorial of Nov. 16.

Secondly, let us consider the methodi; and attempts
anent io1,cd r elative to coverage.
Conce rning the l'eporters
attending lFC meetings, neither ifr, Alessi t101· any rep..
rese ntative of the Council have ever r equested coverage
for th eir meeti ngs. Tn fact wheu the news editor app r Qach­
ed Mr . Alessi Mki ng the time nnd place of meetings so
that a 1•eporter could be ·Rent, the president vague ly replied
wilh "we're no t s ure of the place, or ti me,'' or "we may
not hav e a meeti ng t his week". Ar e these the r epeated in ­
vltt1tio11:Mr. Alc11siwas referri l1g to?
Let us just ment ion in pass ing that when n Sppr.:frum
re port er was sent to cove,· an IFC meeting last year he
wa~ ejctt8&lt;1 :md told t hat the proceedings of such meetings
were rwl for publication.
Ned Mr. Alessi alledges thot he hod to obtoin the
services of two reporters personally because the edi­
tor ''attempted to kill cove rage on Greek weekend ," The
two staff members re ferred to , o reporter ond photo­
graphe r we re ossigned to c over the weekend by the
editor. Dove Smith, a re prese ntative of IFC spoke to the
editor obout the e vent weks before is occurred ond plons
for coveroge we re mode then .

T,, llw editor:
Thui week T fr,, S1111otrumaakl! Dr, Piyare J11i11,
n8sooiate r,1·0/e••ar
Could you co mme nt on the ln dia n.Chl neae borde r confli ct ,
We are wl'iting in 1•eply to M1•.
an d Incl ude th e effect on futur e In dian policy?
,John It. P~ckhnm'R !rtte-1· whiuh
. No1•. 20, n Chinese naked and unprovoked attack on th~ pcac,,
11ppc11redin the Oec. 7 lssue. w~
woul.t like tq make it cleHI' that lovmg Jleoplc of lndin took 11ot only India hut also the rest of th 1
Mr. Peckham ha&amp; the l'igl1t lo ex. woi·!J hy gn•nt su1•p1·iae.Thi s attack on the 11ortheaste1'n as Wt!ll ai
p1es1:1 his opioio n~, hQweve1·
, we th~ notthwest.ern cxLrcmt-ties of lndiR, about 2000 miles Rfllll't, wa,
believe that he is being un f.ait• U&gt; very csrcf11 lly rre11111•cd
by the Chinese over a t1oriod of years.
lioth 1.h« Silvet· Ball conomittee
There are two l11rge 11reas of disput.e•th1.1northeastei•n s«t!lion
u11dthe Union lio11rd. He Is con· of about :l,000 Stl, miles called th" northeastern frontier Ul'en, and t.h,
cle111nit1K
the "vl!nt wiihou t, giving llot'thwest.t,rn 1·1•gionin L11dakh of abo11t 16,0-00sq_. miles. 8()th Lh,•s,
•
it ll £air chance,
an•ll s at•e claimed liy fndia, !luc to facts based in history, li•nrtition.
Wt• would llkc to unswN' some anti ti·eati,•s.
&lt;&gt;f the
1'4Htln1'k~ MI', P(,ekh111t1
In l! H4 the Mcl\fohon line ,vas draw11 in the no1'theast section
matfo in hii. fotter, First
of all. and in I !l5J In cha and t;hina signed a treaty with regarcl ti, 'l'ibet , Al
th~ Union will I•( eto.c,,I u,t ti :0,1 that tln,c it was 11nder6tOollthht everything was sett!eJ, and ron•
p.111
, lht• oigM of the Ball, there­ ~cquently to m11ku these l'l!)atrons moi·e stl'ingent, Panchshila, a five
fore, the "11~11 of thP ijid,o 11001' r1oint fol'mula fo1• co•eJ&lt;ist~nte wa~ ro1~nedRt tbc Bundung (;onfi&gt;i•eoot
~ituution" will not 11tcur ,
hi!ld in 191i5 lietween India 11ndChina,
Bu t all this show of frie ndliness by Commu n ist China t o.
Serondly, there will he no howl
ward lnd la was on ly on her llpe, T he commu nist$ had a
ing, ping-11,,ng ( M ,.. P,1ckhu11l
~hould he i11forn1euthat thu 111·011· differ ent program In th eir minds. As ;a r ty as 1957 t hey h ad
built roads In t ho Ladakh a re-1 connec ti ng all t l,e s tr at eg ic
~1 woi•II is tal&gt;h! tennis)
o'lr; 1,,,.
bases in Ti bet and a main road connecting Tibet and Siul.
cau~" these facilities will he clvs~u.
clan g. Th ese hOstllltles conti nued on the nort hwes t a5' well
'l'hird, thcr« wlll lw no waiting in
as on the nort heas t fro nt iers during th is t f,ne.
line for the h1·e11kf;isl..Ther e will
S,•pt. 8 the ~hincse forces ci•o~scJ the McM11ho11
line ond oecupic,l
he 11lenty of tncilities fot • t.h!•
the Thag La Ridge In t.he northeast frontier. Oct. 20 tbe Chines.,
buffet.
In summa •·y, Mr , l'eckhu Ill ho~ launched a IUllijsiventtack on both the eust1,i•11unrl westc1•11fronts, and
h11ve ndva1H:eu al ~ome points "'"'!Jinto lndinn te1•1·ltory they hnd
tinsel! nil of hi~ concln~ions al,ou1 never
he!ore clalmeJ.
Urn Silver Ball 011 th~ situations
'l'he Chinese talk~/1 pence but wuge/1 wai·, 'l'bey a1·e 11a1·row
which occurred at tho liornecom .
ing Oan,·e, withou~ resliiiJ11g thnt nationalists hut 0pporu111i.tic intt,l'nationalists.
The p1•esent agg,·essive attitude or the Chinese is not new to th~ru.
uny mist11ke.~ will he corrected
for the coming event. It might he □ isto_1·y lu1~ re11ently shown theil' hostile actions in Korea, Vietnam,
added that the Union Boa1•dl,since and m Fot•mo~u. More than rtfty count1'ies have condemned China
it is human, can a lso make mis­ for he1· ncent aggression against a friend ly count 1·y like India.
, 'rwo questions arise. First why did China decided to pursue it11
tnkes, hut they havl! alw1lys. in
the pust, t1·i~d to correct their e1·· cllum l1y forcefol means when it could have settled lt by negotiation;
roi•s. We might also 1·emin,cl Mr . a11d secondly- why was lnd1u ill prepared to de.fend its territory. The
r•e&lt;tkham t hat the Unio11 1Joa1·,I 11nswer to the first question i~ simple, From the tactics of China it is
co11side1'sthe Student Se11ut;ecnp­ ohvious that their object is much mot•t, thon to ga in claimed territory.
i\h)o of follilling ils 1•espo1nsihili­ As Indian nmhassaclo,• B. K. Nehru has salrl, in 1059 the Dali Lama
tieij and does not question their· and his disciples took refuge in I ndia which annoyed Peking. Also the
Chinese wa nt frontiers which would enable them to inva&lt;le Jr1tlia tu
,,hilit~, i11t heir 1•espeetive s1"eas.
some futute dute.
Tblls it woul,t hit ve,•y p1·011er
Thii·dly the Chinese wish to m,,ke it ricer to all the counta,es or
for the Student Sen11te a:na it~
n1embc1·snoLto question the nbility Asia that it and 11otIndia is the militat•y power on the con~iueot. Also
anothe1• aim of Chi)la is t,o creatt; a situation in which I ndia wouJJ
vf the Union Bourd in it s spe­
cinliied areas of social, c1Jltu1•,,i huve lo l!'ive up he.t· policy of nonalignm,.mt, 11ndeither submit to the
und recrel\Lional sei ·vico in the Un• Chinese w11y of life or to 011enlyseek an alliance with the west. Most.
ion. An.I' const1,uctive c,•il:icisms Important oJ' all is th~ rnct I.hat Chinese 1u·c uim!ng at the dt•st1•uction
of «vl'l•t~ urc gl'eatly appl'eciatt•&lt;l, of thl! Indian way of Ille. ft is a eont.est hutween t(Jl.alital'ia11China
lout snch c1•itieism should lie he!J ttuu demotl'Btic India. Must of the countries of Asin have theil' .,yes
t•tf Lill the lll'OfJel' ti111c, ll flcr i·ivittecl on th!' clash to see which alternative wins out ,
Th e Chinese are att empting t o Int erf ere wfth economic
llw ev,mt.
deveopment in lnd!a by oausin g reso ur ce,, human as well as

Agni11 we m,k Mr. Ale:-si to read The S1&gt;eotn1m. In
li1 ad1litio11, M 1·. Ptckhn111 cl'i•
the Nov.() isKuc, 1iag1: two, a three column. eight inch sto ry tidird the, .fonuul ity of the 13Jf1111·
011 l ite Wee}&lt;endwith six pil'lu re·s of the queen candidates,
' " it 1111) lllUCh to 11sk lh&gt;1t n UJli•
in the Nov. 30 is11uethel'e W/\1!/\ followu11 slol'y. Jlage nitw vcrsit.y us lurg,.; as vu r great Stnu ,

Ola pi,ge one. 1t measur(ld 18 inche!l and included a double
column vkture ot' the Weekend co-chairman. Aud tinn ily
in the Nov. 30 i~11uethere wa11 a followu1J i,tot'.Y, 1&gt;ngenine
relnlive to lhe ttlll!en and sing-winneri:;, This measu1·edseven
inches nnd incurred a picture of Queen Noreen Hir sch.
r,et, us mention thnt this story , two weeks old, was for
ull intent and pu rpose jou1·n11\lsLic111Iy
dead, but we felt il
was iml}(1rt1111(
(o 11 tertain ;1egment or the fltudent hodr
1111d su published it.
It woa not becous e IFC wos fortul'late in gaining the
aid of individuals on The Spectrum staff that th e We ek-.
e nd got the coverage it did, It roted the spoce on the
basis of its news me rit alon e, The Spectrum editor de­
cides whot stories go on page on e, ond if we wished to
"kill" Greek We ekend, re st assure d we would have found
more e ffectiv e meona of doing it. We sugge st thot Mr.
Ale ssi stop ond think be fore he so readily uses colorful
ond highly connoted words like "kill " in his criticisms .

Next we are accused of attempting "to remove the
Ionic Column feature altogether''.
We do not know where
the president arrived ut lllis &lt;'Ollt'lusion for it wa,; never
considel'ed by the editol'ial board. We did remove For The
Reco l'd, aJ1d we revised lo11ic Colum n so that events othe r
tbun those of a social natu 1·e could be included. Mr . AJessi
continue s a11ying "once again it was kept through the ef­
forts of other staff memhers."
What staff memhe1•s. Mr.
Alessi? It see111sthe lFC president would have us believe
that the1·e is a small underground working in The Spectrum
which guards anti J)rotects the rights of GreeJ&lt;s against the
"crw1ading'' editor whose perpetual cry is ''Down With the

Creeks I''
He t·o11c\udeK with "it seemi; probable that she

(the

editor) hn s sucl'eedm l in influencing l\liss Miinte into w r it,.
ing th e articlt.&gt; in question." Such may be probable for Mr.
Ales111
and the IFC , hut it is most ccrt.tinh• 111accurate. Miss
l\fiintll vounteered lhc artit'le, und her deci~ion to wrile it,
aR fat• LIS

wo knr&gt;,,
·. wa11 hel'EIand het'A alone.

flnan olal - ll ml\ed as t hey a re - t o be d eHvered from de.
velopmont to de fense. It may s eem to them that a few years
of sucl, diversion would be sufficie nt to oause the entire In ­
dian politica l, economc and social sys tems to become so w ea k
Universit ,v uf New York ul. Bu1as to leave no power of resla tanoe at,ai nst "" alien and to­
falo ,-houl&lt;l b(• abfo to s11ons,o,•
onr
talita rian philosop hy.
ru1•m1&gt;Icv,•11t In :.1 ~•ea,·?
'.!'he answer to the st!cond question as Lo why lnrln couhl 11ot.,le•
Sinccrclr,
fe•td hcrsdf moni 11dequately, is that they rlit! Mt e)(pect that Uw

Chi11ese would pursue their cluim by :force.ful men11s. Because vi Uw
tormet· tt•e,\ties made hetwec·n the two countl'ies, ln11ia was not t'e1uiy
fol' the massive att.uck. But China, who had made long and carelul
prufmrat,ions Cor 1he attack in advance, ruoveJ l'apidly int o Indian
,larues Horn
:!ud Vice-PreK.. Union uoni•d te1•1•ilot•y,fnclng nlmost no 1•esistnnce. India misjudged tlw f'hiuesu
completely anrl r111id11heavy pl'ice fol' their mistoke.
The other reason fot· I 11di"'" Ill prepnl'edness wn~ u mntel'lal uno,
tndinn society, like all free societies which 1,l'e ~oeonomicallyund er·
Concerts
developed, 1s constRntly subject to two thrnats or survivnl. On o is from
'l'o 11,,
;ditor:
exLernn.1 uggre~sors (which India is now facing) u11d the secon&lt;i i,
1 1,
the constant danger or int.cl'lrnl unr~ st. Thi,; may ht!come a reality if
Tlw Unive r ~it y Or l,'uff•,. lo h"s
a
tht discontent of the p«ople, flrising from their extr~me povt•rty, h
fr,1• ,1,ur1y ~'l'iu·s hud •mly one con11Jlowedto go unhceflcd. The thl'eat o! int.w-nal unrust , is o. certain Jy,
,crt per yeui• · · th at hei ng nt thot of external aggression n contingency. It is not sui•prisin g theu
Spring Weekend. Last scn,e11tcl' u
I
committee was fCH•nw
d to n!l~vlnte thnt. in the past. ,;ever·al years 11;di11
has used all the resoui-ces, and n s11
thi s situatiou , Everyone ut one foreign exrhange to meet the . mterual _ threat to her _eco11on1y.
.
Lime or anoLlwr complainc,11 that
As to the effect of th e present situation on Indian pohcy, lnd111
ou,· ciuniius wus not offorin,g en-1 fought a non-vivlent hat.tie against the Briti sh for independence , (h,·
tertainment such u~ other schools
(Conlluued on Pnge 1:l)
_
in the st u.t,• of 1)ur cnli!Jer.
This semester the concci&gt;t com•
mitt e,• hu6 wo1•kcct very ha.c·rl to
hl'ing e11tertain111eut.to th,t• UB
i ' hfl omcl11.l student
nt!lw!fptt l)er Of the Stnto Unlvorslt) • ot New York ui
students. llavc thr sturlenlLs t•e• Buffalo Pll~llcn11011 omce Bl NOt'lOJl Hall, Un!v,r,ILY CtimPu•. Buffalo 1: ,
y T'ubllshecl weeklY rrom th~ nrsl week of Soptembet· to the In st wee I
sponde&lt;l1 NO I! Atte11dunc11 has N
been dropping with each co,ncert. 11,· Aiw11, ~~('J!tll (or l'Xttm 11edotls, 'J'hR..llksglvtng. Chrl~tnmN nml l~\~lN',
Edl t or-fn . Chlol - JOAN R, FLORY
We know thti gyln isn't the most
J,nyout Eal tor .. .'SUSAN SLOMAN
('Ontfo1•tahleor gtamo1·ous setting MHnllf.(ln~ l~1lllor .. ,, TOHS KOWAl.
Phntog , F.~llnr.... RUN CU MMISC F
in which to hol(i our tllOCl'l'ts, but News t~dllor , ... l'EROMEllAJOllK
f'lrr 111 Mgr .• . , .l(,\RlilN
R i\~(tURlJ
wt• are doing our llest. tr the !!port■ Et111or . .... JAMES. 1.MKEllt omce Mirr .. . .... . . 811:V ROt!ENO\ ";
,,,1vert1eln5f Mgr, .... . mo UHANO 'l
!'Of).&gt;' PAIIU-r ....
CH,\Rl,EI'
STU&gt;II~
.
b
b
st,,dent.s want
1gger and
CL·, e,,.,uMM
M~'T .... •I.AKI!\' SINO ER
F.dltnrlal Ad . .. • . WM . SIF.~ll!illlN11
t~r things, they must suppo:rt fu- Jl'(n. M .... THOMAS HAENLE, JR .
I Ure concerts.
Bn~k. Vlctorl11 Bukelekl, An&amp;lft cnmponell"
Qf',Nl'.RA.L l-1',\ FF : Loul•e
The Ch11dMitcht•!l Trio is com· rRmllle 1.onr11cm, F.111111• 0nn on, M11rl!)n De1·~lk, J11•llth 81111011, sh.-, 1..,
•
i: B D
I 9 Tl I
t 'll Cll1t l,e , Ma n· lu C1Joner, !\/ll·lt C(1ns t ,u,HHl, ,1u r~· Lou \\'ll _,1u1. t .1• ~
Ing to u
r e,.
•
\ s conc~1· WI
l•"l·,•11h.(!
l. 1,01r11 1ri11
rl one-. Mn,k Ff'lh1mun r-t111T)
' t~p..,1r 111
, na,·h\ 1:ir &lt;•&gt;'i,ltw&gt;
dedde whi 1lht 1 1· futu1•p c:ouccrts will 1,!1111
, \lun 11nrruu1n, .J114lv H11t1t.~r. n,wtJ tl'wln. 11'h1 k , :&lt;•l11u\ n , But h1trn f :i)t ,
•
•
f
l
w111~r.
Hou
l~1
11nl11
&lt;1t
lt
l.
.ioh11
Knlpler.
\
nnc.
\1lll'H
(',
Jl1
)'1111
M111trnrn, t'nt I)&gt;,b I! h e 11
( . Ir IL 18 ~UCC&lt;":
SS u
nt .. Mdl! Ud t. J.nH I (,CV)', F~tuul
l\Tn ,rurt , t 1n11,,1,1 rt\\ 'h1, Atlllf'! ~1u ttl1',
J'
te,nduncc wist•• thtre ,~I he more , M111"1
lnJ 1 .Jim ~txnn,
Mnrc&lt;h1 Orsr.u111k, ,ln.11,, Fo111mP.t'. nocky
",,r ,cuv• •
ltobt•1•t.Pacl1ol~)d
&lt;:lmi1·mn11,Silver B~IJ;

·r H E SP ECT R UM

I

'if llut thn

•ommitte·• will discon. l,n, 11n Wnlln, ·h. 1,11111111W i lll:,m•,

• · .._ l'

"'

1,~1 1:.

l"olfr• ,.

1,1,n,1,t.

,!l ull

l..tJ1\ h1

Rnthy $h e•.

l,ln•lo.

W ~ I• •·

I•:slher 11111•

its work , We fed lhmL the 1'1l11'1'fl1'H •P il Y ST1ll 'F 1l11abell rl&lt;&gt;
l&lt;lhorg, f ..1rl'Y Se 111111z
. ,lnN ll n,en
In w11clw1i11nlet 11~nlukc it clear thut we do not wish student s arc not rcal11· int&lt;:1n•s tcli Wnll " ·" T'oycha
to c,~rry on a running foud with Mr. Alesai or the IF(' but, iu ha 1•ing the~" rouc~rt s J uc t,u
F:u11J1·~uns: !lel'onrt ct o.as mattl•r Fohrunry
1,1, U611 • ·
in sll conscie nce, wt- did not feel we could let ri1r . i\lc~:ii's I11,.vhviou~ l11ck o! &gt;UPPOl't,
\he r11.~l ()ffice al 8U tTa.lo, S . Y. uniter the Acl Vf MQ.rrh
groll!I t•harge.."I go Ullllll8Wet1.•d.
3, ll!i 1t, ..\ cc eptknce tor motlht¥ at n eneclat rate ut one~
Hc~p~ctt ull) •t1bmitk ,1J,
,;,1~e Vl'OVIJtd to r tn ~ectlon JtU3 Art M OrrntJer S, Htl
• 11ll,orlr r11 F'rbru11.n· t , IA&amp;1
The Concert r.0111m1(t~~~\lhti.c1·tJHlon $3.00 i,e r ye~r. clrc,it•tlun
t6♦0
The Spectrum wil l m:ike 110 furllwr t·omtner1t ur1 lhi.-,
tint1l'

1

ii1sue. We have proven the d1:1rgcii fol~c.

11.. urt''-t,Ull"lt for naPo nR.1 aOft, NI IJIUK t))'
~.. rv1"n tno .• ~,~ M1!&lt;U11nn Av,-. i

\.,lll'-lm:

'-ta.llon•I ...A~

S-••\'nrk

. •"'

�,i doy,, December 14 , 1962

SPECTRUM

,

PAGE ELEVEN

Chancellor's Title
Is Now Pres,ident

Mock UN GeneralAssembly
Planned for February 8, 9

By ANNE MIINTE
'J'J1e ' rollnwh ,i.; 1·1.1aol11ti,11, wu a
The year hll6 b('en rllled with
Best of luck to Pt•ior, Al Fulk . ~llo111M
t/11' Honrd or Trustee ~
By LORNA WALLACH
For the Unlvorelt.y'• UN the
n, spirit, 'and eome contr·ovcrsy. The B1·others would like to c,m.
committee hope, to have Sir
U11iversity o! • New
miij• gratulate
theit ' bowling team for of the Sta~
spite of State actions.
11fl "Ill conduct its tlrst mollcl
Hugh Foot ... ,peaker, dltOUH•
York 1u thtlll' monthly meeting ·
rlersta11dings nhout ~u hlicntiuns,
rloing a superb job thi~ semester.
!' nited Nations
Oo11er11l Ass e mbly
lllg the problems In South Af.
,t various
11the1· vroblt-ms, thl' Congt'atulations
11lso go to tho,e
"Resolved that tbe title l)f the tho weekonll ot F~h. 8 n 11d 9. All
rlca , Some of the qu e■tlons to
,·r~ks hllve had a vc,ry SIICCES~· brothers
who W h O 11 0 p e d Lbe Chier ndmhtlstnillve
omrer or fltat e students are luvlled lo Join 11 d ole.
be di1ousted arc: admlealon or
I semester.
Campnigning
r1w pledges
i11 il loasketball
conlA~(
Unll'11r~lty or New York "t rJutrnlo ~ULIOIJ nnd tl'Ol)h1es will l)e t\WRrder}
Re d Chin~, problem, of Af rica.
,·. E'ormul still gous on, &lt;'al'l'yin,r tasl .\1ondny,
Ads are uow 011
t.o the three delegat1011s t11at mo , 1
India and any otller worl d
th it all the excitement and anti- sale fo,· \he Sigm11 Alpha,
Mu ijl\1111be P1•ea1&lt;1ent11tStute ti niver. ~ttP~Uvi.,ly 111·eaent the ,•h1wi,olnl
problems which come up.
1Ation of !(OOd times ahead. We Soiree .Booklet. Boost the Soit•ee, slty or New York ut nutrnlo 11rnt ot Ille nnt10110 lhey represe11t
111a1
11 opttmfijlh- about Lhe future
it's !\'OOd for you! The Sam mies Urn.I It"' illl•nmhent ot •a1d oftlc~
\11111110
~ oC lhl' 111•0,•eedlnir11will
Jown State l l111\e ralty h11&amp; u1111. h1• w~11t to 1hn•11 1h•le~11Uon s ot rhe
· ,.J In this spirit wi$h evi•ryo 11~ we1•e ulso proud und honored to aliull lit• so Mslsnnt~il: aud
lllll'lt!d
~
model
l'N
nnd
It
wns
JIN whlrll requ~st them. l'rl'\ 'iOUtlly
u VN'Y hill/PY holi&lt;l 11y season.
have entertained
Lheir Nutio11al
"J•'u,·lhlll' ll«•nlvetl Hml llOllllhll(
•1uilt1 en:eaUve. Sevrr11I 1nr1~enls lhn IJN 1111•~llJ11101'IN
•1•
11~ h.-01h~1·s nr Alpha Phi Delta Field Secl'eta,·y last weekend .
I thns9 tnodel~
11
\\Ill bold a ch111111111gue party
'l'he sister~ ol Sigma De lta Tau c111
•1h~r 1·11si~erntlo11
or th~ n.lh11l11. or I hll C:enijrOl A••1•111lily lheu In 1111dJtu~ ~eut lufor111111fn11ht tb.,lr
auct,
"""~t
on
were
reinnctea.
•rwo
1tu rd11y night at the Executi\' C a1·e looking forward to Christmas
lstr11tl\'e org11nliatio11 or Atat,e l'ul•
l'e ~l)ed\VI' d I' I ngn t ll&gt;n J 1111011re.
lll•lt•l ,,n
C:ene~ee Street.
Th•, ~aroling with the si~tet•s ol' Alpha vcrnit~ of Nl\11 Yori{ .&lt;t Lhrtrnllo, th0 ,·11~1'• wot'., u,e 11ounht111:or l\hru . fl\lPSI ,
shrlrnv's slt11"s and lue wnlkout ot
p1&lt;1
ty wil l slul't
nt 8 ::10. The &lt;Jam, Thuy woul&lt;l al so like t11 tit leo Of 11111oltl1•~s ut \'lr 1, Chun.
th~ l(US8illll df;'legntton. PO\VPr 1101.
Sunw ,n)rorltlc• ctn~ rrnt&lt;lrnltie,
,,,others anrl 11Jcdge, ar~ plannin f? eong1•atulate
their new officei ·s,
cellor ('nr 111rnt11ess Atrolrs,
Vice
Ilic·~ 111
10 1111!,llc11µt11lo11nlso vluyod nnd tlll• l11t11rn11tlonal rnuh have
a pl'(ljecl. to h1&gt;l1Jone of tl1\' loca l
1'he lll'Oth ern or Sig Ep wiall 10 ('huuc•l•llor ro,• ~:,tucnllouu.l All'alrij, 11 roh• In thell· mod el llN.
nh'&lt;'IHly ~N II JI dt•leim tlon ~. II 18
,.q ,hanag~s
OVl'I'
the Ch1•islnu,1, t.hank the sis ter s of Sig Kap !01 •
f'l"''' t ull 11t11t YAF , tlir, n(\w Rlll­
,·,.1·atiun.
the fine ~ucial laijt Fri&lt;luy riight VIN' ('hniwl!llo,· ror lfl•seuroh. utta
Ml1'11l~a11 ill~te n11d St1l11t Lnw­ dl'nt ltr\' ICW, llllU Ult• \"01111.:n,,ruo­
·rll~brn1her s or Alpha Phi Om~ga ,.l the Burman Inn. Th« li1•0\ he1·s \'Ire Chnucellor tur, ll~1tlth 1Sr1&lt;'n. reu~o wlll qoou 11reae11tm111l&lt;'I tr11r11wlll ~/'lid 1leh' i!'llt lo nij, If tlll'Y
i;tl,f!' will hold thei1• annual Christma s "~s contiuueu u11011merge r ot th e t'N' s. S11ln1 l ,11wr,1twe wtll al R&lt;t
"111 have a plerlge-1,rotlwr
l'll ll not !WI trnlll!'4h
tlell'i;Ollons
. A (IV&lt;' no&lt;'d nhout UOrnorrl from t11e
rhi~ evening. The
ple&lt;lg,•s l1uv1~ 11ru·ty Friday night at the 1.lut·m1111 l'&lt;trnier 11n1vet•~lty or Rull'alo 1nto h:l\ ·e II mod !ll Security Co11111•1l
&lt;o•l~
d e d their service proje•·t which
Inn. They iu·e looknJ? forwRl'II to
(J&lt;'lr,g,111011Ill nv o wlll rt•1•1
'8SOlll sl11C\e11lh11dy thny wtll lnvlt,. aN.-,
will he a Christmas 11a1ty for · the II visit fr&lt;1111Sanlu
Cla11s, 1'h~ ~tal e t·nlv@rolly II( N\•W York, be fill nl the Ml1•hil(n11 Sll&lt;ll' mod~I
11at!ous Crom ft1t1~11rrt1u11IJl11gcol.
1•hil&lt;l
1·e11at th ~ 1tn01.ic11l:i.le tl&lt;!nri Lrothers
will
hold
theil'
New cbang~ll 111Vlt•l' flrPslde111 ror Dusl­ U&lt;&gt;neral Assemhty ~'eh. 2a and 24,
lr•grs,
ul' Mary Home.
YMl''S Eve party at
Lhe Uotel ness A.O:alr6. Vice J'1•esidenl tor A11y11111lhtlll1'&lt;1ste(1 le l11vlle(l lo
'l'bt' pledges or Alpha Sigma Phi ~l!ll'keen. Congrntulllt1ons
to the Edu cutto nnl .Atrutr~. Vice Pre11lde •lt ,\nyone 111\llfCBled Is lnvlled LOJoin
All ~tud enl H tntl•r~sted In 1111rll.
an• pl'esenting
a party
Ji'ridny howlern uf Sig E11 rur theil· vie. for Rl's,•iu·ch uni'! Vice Pre,.1.-Jeut the 11H delngalion . All expenses cf11nUng plons e contnN Miko Lnp.
11f(t
ht &gt;&lt;t Boscella's.
Th e pa~ty to, •y lasL week. ,Just previous
to
will be 1101d.
111n In the Student Senate ortlce.
ijfarrs nl ll:ao, tM Lherue being interseSJ;ion. tho big brothers and for Health Sde11ces, respectively
"'l'he Bowery hlast" . Congratula - little hrothets will hole£ a week• of Stat~ University uf New York
Lions to the pledges for ~JJOl'lsCJl'ing end rett •eat. The brothers
of S!i• at
HuffalC'l nnd that
simila r
J very succeasC ul ehrtetmaa
party
Ep wish everyone a joyous holiday
ch1wges
necessal ')' tu
coicu'irm
ul the Salvution
Al'm / post c•n season.
thet '~to ~ Jnade In the Utl,e.-sof
Builey Avenµe, Good luck, Hugh!
The ij(aters or Sigma Kappa wlah
The lnl ,;l'llllllOnnl ('Jub Jg 11g11l11cotwelvnhle thnt "'" Hlloulll he ablo
Tonight
t htl brotllers
or Bet a to thank the Si'g Eps for 8 very othel' officers and Qmployees cow
,000 hooks coo,
Phi Sigma w\ll lla,•e n. dated howl- enjoyable
social and are looking tinued uuo,, such merger.''
s11011sorl11,:t\ book drfv,., with Latin to ,•olle, ,1 25,000,50
tho a1&lt;1 or tht'I oilier
Lanes forward to the Tau Kappa Epsi•
illJ! 1111rty at the Sheridan
Amert,·a oa trs lurger , 'l'htij Y&lt;'llr, elllertni;
campuses.
A&amp; In lhe last drive,
lu•l('inning
at 9 ;30. Mon&lt;luy the Ion social to11ight. A Christmn s
th~ 1,011k drlvo will he or 1111Jnlcr­ Mr. rbuslwy
or the University
h,:others go en mnsse to t.he Buf. party with an exchange of g"i!ts
rnm1111~ natnr e, w1tb the ijtudent Book Store hne conAentecl to aid
rulu State basketball
1t11me aftn
will be held this
Moncl11y. Tht•
hodle"
l'lf
Cnni•1ns,
n•voavllle,
in every way posslllle.
nlijt•ting at Norton.
Thei,• didel
pledge c la ss will holct a Shoe Shine
Tllll, and Stnle Te~d,ers·
llosary
horns will be there.
toclay and are looking ior your
Dr. Brubaker of t h e histo ry
'!'he sisters
of Chi O,mega en- SUI/POl·t. Sigma Delta Tau, Sigrno
department, profee1or of Latin
coo 11oratlui; .
suianne C'her1•y 111HlNancy Jobn. t:,11101:n
Juyed the ChJ'istmas
party with Phi Epsilon
un&lt;J Sigma Kappa ,
American Studies. 11 honorar)'
Th&amp; books desired should be
th,, t1lumni chapter Monda :, night.
under the name of "The Swi11gin s ton 1Y$re 1·eclpl~11ts ot lh~ .F'rusb.
chai rman and will dlreot the
The sisters are now worki !1g on Sigmas",
have
recorded
their man nlng nt a ('I\IJ ;11HlOowm clfn.
o f a11 educational
nature and
dfstrlbu •tlon or thoee book ■,
l'hi O's Christmas
Kinclnt1ss 11ro- songs from Greek Sing and arc n e r We,luesday night.
ill fairly
decent
condition,
La\ ltt Amer Im la th e go:11 thl~
h·••I in conjunction with ~he Salva- ,nakiTig 8 record for their enjoyC'u11 und flown , s~n10.. wo1111.m
'l!
Paperbacks
will alao be accept­
ycnr be1·a11,,. 111mnny or thu ,,,.,_
111111 Army.
Many Lbaoks to lbe tiien'.
11onor ijol'i.,fy, a \v,m1s Ui" r·Jng 1111.
•
ed. They can be In any lan ­
liOUk or (,11rt11 ,\n11•rll'/I lh,• liter•
AUTHOR'S
COMMENT
hrolhers o:f Phi Lambda ))c)tu fnr
guage , of any dat,;. Until prop.
Inst Fi-iday's
socia l.
As 3 llnal uote . I would llkt1 to uuully Lo lbo trea11mo11 i;!rJ lldl ,
11cy rate i~ often less tb"'' 10%
nr t h e pop11
l nt1on. rt I• 11180lm11ort­
Gamma Phi thanks
1he sist,e1•9 co mm e ul llu Mr. Alt;ssl's nl'tlclo combluing un e xce 11tion11Iucndlen,lc
er facilities are set up the stu.
llllt In lli111, !11 lt,HK lh1111 Ill Y&lt;!lll
'll,
or Ah1ha Gamma Della for IPSL in thl;, week' ~ issue or I.he "Spec .. overugt&gt; with 1tu1·1t~i11ntlo11iu {1xt,•u. dents wi II be ask eel to deposit
l,nt ln An1erl&lt;•11 will buv e over
1•
',.i&lt;luy's s ocial , A cocktail pa rty trum''.
First of all. Mr. Alessi cnri-lc,u lut· oc:llv"!Lieo,
the Ir books at room 340, Nort.
o00,000,000 1oeo11IH
. Ar, 11r,11, t'Oll­
ll'ill 11recede the Si lv er B,111 this asserted
thnt I do not have the
d
.,
h
Th&amp; ring ls usually awarded
on Union ,
t11lnl111,1thlH i;r, •(11 I\ Pll)lllltltlOn
•"lluruay
nig t.
propci• knowledge
of lir&lt;•cki&lt; . to
at the Spring Hono rs Banq ,uet
h1fht onr.o
will ho vo II trerneudous
Kappa Psi announce s tlmt ll,e wl'ite aTI article
such 110 I ,ltd,
Jn 1h14 111~1d1•1ve the l11terru1. 111 ti,., 1111111111tllaton1 C11111r~
.
but because Cap and Gown
111•11\.
h\•rs arc
still recuv ~rut ing this is \,ec nuse T am still !'I ple&lt;l~e.
ti111111I
rluh hcl~. 111
' 1II' 17,0011hook R
from lhe very succe•sful Phannaey
My plcdgeshiu hr.s nothin)! to clo
members
did not feel they
II
lk
h,111rd
thnl
llteHP
tcxl•
1111\I
WPI'&lt;•
,·111111.-INI1111d ij(•n1 oul t,,
knew the girls well enough to
S,·liool Chri st mlls Bull. A ~oektui l with what wa s written.
Nigel'lu wilh
thp 1·0011erntlo11 of wlll l)e ~e n l will In
wn)' 1•1111
Judge, the de cision was delay •ed
1u11
t:,, was held by the h1·nt,h~r s
Olwiously,
pledgir,g for a ROI'•
1h~ 11s No,•y. •r111syear it I• quite tribute to the nonce of thnt fulurt•.
In 1hr Bulr11lo Room of th~ Sl.l\ller ol'ity is far rlifferent from ple dg•
1
untll now,
int!: 8 fraternity,
and J could nev,·1·
lll l1m1 11rec~dln~ the bnll ,
)loth girls, u&lt;•ws1111hu111111·es,
buv c
'l'h~ ivinner of Phi Epsllon Kap. Cl'iticize Greek s a s a whole strictly
pa's drawing
was Jam es Spurrow.
!rom my knowledg e of 11fodi,:i11!l.uver11ires over~-" • ~liss l'he1·ry w11s
ABORTION
'rtw drawing wu s h~ld ifl r.tarl&lt; The 11rticle wtl.S w1·i~tun hy me 8 ~ 11 mcrnlwr 11f th~ Fn• ~hnw n S1l1•~r1,:,111&lt;luring hal(time of th, • ba»- \li e editoi · o! th o Greek colum n. It
1
••·t lie II game Fn ay mg I1t. 'l' ,,1e is in this 1:upacity thnt T have be- IPA Comm!Ltee und wn,i nc11v.. 111
tr 1ur111tv would
lik e to thttnk come fllmiliar with all Greek news lhe fregbmnn \\'om e n 's ronw,. Mis~
,.,.,,,•yon~ who bought
a ticket. whi ch is moant
£or publicntion.
Julln~ton wa~ co-d 1alrnu,u or lael
by Ronald Kominski
I', ,reed s from the raffle
will 1.le and it is thi s news which 1 fMl yPn r's Purent's Day 1111d1'11t1lr11111n
II I to finance
a spo1•ts c linir cou lrl Le improver!.
u( 1ours .
Aho l'llttn Is Illegal tn lire llnl ted
Ninety 1,~ru,1111 ol nll nhortlnns
«• •·time in the future.
Mr. Alessi also stated that
hr . ('horles 11:t,e,
·r, :t•aocia le 111
.0 _ !,tutr~, exce11t tor 1he sl rl l'l n eces.
1trl' so ul('h\ hy m11rrl111lm1111seek.
h~ rrat e1·a or Phl Epsilon
Pi
the change
in Greek column
,,ru!ty thunk Urn pl e dg es for
policy was not made known , I
f&lt;&gt;KSOI'or l(ev lo);~ 111111
geogra pby , Mlly of sa ving lhP n,otller's lite . Ing to u v11ld the e&lt;'on om lc burden
I&gt; ,. exceptionally
good "Hon~~ ··
would re fer him to the first
WUK rh e 1-,"\lc!lt dJWuker. Cai&gt; antl Pesrt11&lt;l thl~ C11l'I. lh ere nre ovr r
11
or unoth~r chlld. Fifty perc e nt of
' n " plec!ge varty
la st r'rit.lu y
Issue of the "Spectrum"
which
Gown udvisors Jc11nnot.tc Scudder,
1,0011 ul111rtions every day, ntHI a
11
,t. They also thank th e Min •
made kno wn this change
In
deun of womeu : Dorothy Haas, co• w1d&lt;!s11n•n(J dl s1·ei:ar d of th e luw 1i, ,. nhortlonH nre 11crrormcd by
" •ti\ boys for their equally sueblack
and
white.
Further ortllnutor of stu de nt uct.lvlllcs, 1111d
•·• ful pal'ty Saturday night . Th e
more, I co ntacted representa Mlijs Dorothy Simon or the Cuun hy 10.1Ur111s.1)\,l'tOr• nna )IIW NI• 110\'lor~. 1wenly 11erre111 hr mid.

I

tw

Latin America Target of Book Drive

Sponsored by UB International Club

Cap and Gown
Awards Ring

"°"'"

·a

"
'

·

THE LAW AND YOU

f111Ter8 111i
l1e.
wll'&lt;'R, rtud twenty.Rn•
1•1•rc.. 11t br
Pt•s are now lookinct forword
tlves
of the various
groups
sel in l!'. Cen t er also attend e d.
• vigo1· to final s end pltrn, for
and
Informed
them
ol the
Hhoulu fll l' C vwtlms, wo th &lt;'r• nr tho, 111other• ll1emBl'lves , Tbe uaual
1 ope n date parly.
,Janu111·,v :rn. change, but to no availIFC
u• hroth er!I or Pl'll Kapp;,. Psi
was not contac ted because the
Co-ed Dance Group Formed d ot'orrnrd c hildr1111,111\d WOlll~II wlll, law J11ohthltA the rrlllO\'ld o( 11dead
to congratulate
theit• pledge
column Is the express ion of
lllneM~PH r, ,111
•. ur 1bfl 11borl1011 of II rape
serwus 1,hysluul nr /111,111111
on the successful ''Shipwreck
Individual
fraterni ties.
Con. A ~ew ,lan ~e gro_up ou.Jcr th •· bi&gt; nlluw" d 10 111&gt;ur1
• A&gt;&lt; llwrn h , kt.hit.
t t
Ith these I ndlviduals
d1i-cct101) of Miss Alier nutry u111l
'}'" lust wcekenrl on Beave,·
r1•d er11I 11lto1
'l i&lt;rn tt,w , and 1&lt;1
111
•11011!1
to have little or no
~1 1'S,f F:lrw:,c~I 8 ~. 1k~ 1~ n~
HI anrl to thank P.A. for th &lt;&gt; .::nie:
.
Ttw uhor tl on l1iwa nre h•r1a•1Y
l011s tlinnel'
On ce again that
fl t · therefore
my article
mg ur·me• • . ,e ,r s mec n~: 0 AIX Stull•• 111•ri11l1ubortlou to 11r11
e ec •
·
the group '\\•111be Thursduy,
.Jun, s er\ "P ti!&lt;' molhn'~
lll•itllb . th1• re. h11•,r1t on rt•ll~l11u• 11llll11ile•. with
1· ·
t
•
o! yi-nr lij hore al' d the brothwas rrccessary.
~d ·
'·1r
I t
I
h h' h
•t'
of 2d In I 1e women• ~ylll.
,om~ Proto~tnnt un4 Jt •wl~h ~cboJ.
JS ma~ lg ea ,o ,·a e pre La stly , t e
,g
pos1 sonAI .
Th e gruur, is open 111nrnlc an,I for111er• Ul'l(tt~ that rh e !'11l1r1JSmk~
,tfons for their gain Chrislmus
Greeks r~erred
to by Mr .
cs s , r.,male students who hav&lt;.' 8 ba~i,• IIUe lls heud ht lht • s1111d111r11fnHl11g 11r~hl11• u J vo, · u t lnit r,•forrn
Tb~
New Year's Eve partie~. Phi contd be higher. I 11m proud to h~
.
.
,
. backi:rnun &lt;I in folk dun1·1ni::. '[ h ev to uns wt1r r 11,. •·hnq,~• .
r~ll111l11· C'h11rc-l1 r,1g11r61&lt;ah&lt;&gt;ttlon
11u Pal exle nd s to all students
II member of the Gre~ks, hut t h •~ will meet cuch Thursday
fro~,
,
11s 111unJur r11r II p,•~vfnle hu11thi111
.m.
wishe s fol' a happ y holiday
is not enough .. I am 1nteresterl in , :ao to
Becau1e of c rlrl'l•nal penaltlu
________
_
,n.
th e imag&lt;&gt; wh,ch th r Greeks sy- 1 ___ 11 v
He,·11111&lt;1
· &lt;Ill' luw l• bused on bG·
many
docto
rs
send
thei
r
pati
­
"' sister~ or Phi Sigma Sigma st em p 1·esents to th e ,..,st of tl~c IY©~~~
llrvP1 ·• und 11011.hr•lh•vt!u 1tllk&lt;•. r&lt;&gt;
ents to abortlontsta who oro
J
to ron l(ratulat e the newl y ca mpu s. and it wa s out of th,s
"'"'"""
uri;111• thut II ahoultl not
responslbe
for 5.000 to 10,000
"U Exe&lt;:utive Board hea rled by interest
that
the
111•ticle wtts
!11• 111ol11t11l
hv 11t,, tt11•olo1dft tl 111ft.
deaths , and 50,000 sterlllty tol lt
ho 11 Sane ly Kai:el. The sis ter;. writLrn. The Ionic Coh111111is th,•
1111h•~ of n tt••t·I
h&gt;okln,: rorword to the pledges' voice of the Greek world. ontl it
omo ng ~borted women every
t Point Pa1't y t onigh t (so are has much lo do with the Gteek
year
!lledges) . Congl'11tult1tions alsrt in,ag., , Perhnrs
th is con t rovers)'
111En~lilllll nburt\( lll 1, llmlh,d tll
h\•ir pled11es 11110nth 0 ir inilie • will improv,• hoth the 1•olum11 ancl
\ "l rtu l \' otw ou I 1)( ,,i.••·r~ l ,0011 th,·
'-lf h·t 1uwtno1I
l) ut ,u·,,v,mttu~
whith will be het.l Monday
the inrngc.
ohornuui i"' h •),.'11111•u1111wt11ntlll1 1 d h1u11tHhui. 1lt•nth, hut lk i,t•rmlttt,d
''·
:'.lly ul'lide
wn~ wl'ittell l1e1•auS\'
lt-ul « nr,· i"' Pt1h••r d11,1h,cl to m,u,,· l\h1•1w,tr
tit ..••·t•t(,snr)' ll• pr~•~na
•grna Alpha Mu r'1·n1.,rnlly will J was &lt;fis~fltisfir,I with m~· c11l11
11
111,
wut ·lh) 111Ul1•ul•, c•r to 1t,1• tuf'tllcnl th, mu lhl'r '•1 ht'uhh
pllyalrul or
' it• &gt;l'mi- a11111
111I pl1•di:1 rmrt.y om l man) • oth&lt;•r~ told me of n
•~hi, th., t.hem,• of which i~ 8 imiln1' tlis~Rtisfortion.
I n N~u~•·
pruf• '"'i"llt,n Wll 1L d!',•Hm\'Nlt
tl10 1111•11t1,I )11 fhu f nt•tt Of 4;rOwfOg
1111, ~rt&lt;! S,n111•,·•·" Th,, Saw• you , ~r. Al,'ssi. Mio.s Flory hn•I
law l1y ." tu1111l' f• t• 1uw1tt of nu•ith':11 10,htw tl,_1 m11nd, tht 1 11rnh1nnt u( rt~
• r"n~·n Lolat.,•
their
n,,, ,,Jy nothing to rlo with wh11t I wrote.
,.,.,.,._.Ii)'
fnrm f,11••••thr h1w tod11y
1,,,1 f'11uncll for R111•lltir.l!Hi!I. I t3ke full credit for it,

l,,,f

I

�SPECTRUM

PAGETWELVE

Friday, December 14, 196 .

rr=================

Speclruin
CaffBoarJI
Photography Club

,w&lt;&gt;nitu•~ 11hysicul cducution ttffioc
of the in 1' 1ark.

The1•e will ht.&gt;a meeting
Ph11tography Club today nt 4 :00
11.m . in th~ dar k ,•oom. The 1·ece11L
International Club
exc11rsio11 will he discus~1•d ulrnl!'
'l'ut•stluy, the Anthropology Club
with $Ome fil ~t pnint ~ 1111the hu,I. will host a p1·og1·om on American
irel,
I ndiun Culture at the Inte1·nation11l (;Iulo facilities, room 340, Nol"Psychology Club
1on at S:30 p.m ,
The1•e will l,e an orJ!:OlllhuLiuttal
Chief Col'l,ett Sundown, chief
rnetllit•J.:
~h~ Psycholo gy Cluh
of the Tonnwanrln Senecu~ will be
today, 11
t a p.m. in roon1 ::!II, g11est apt•ukei· nnrl nanator loo· th,•
'l'own ~llnr!. lnl1•1·est~tl ~tutlents n1
film, "Mu s ic of America''. Thi~
invited to ntlNtii.
Cilm Wll~ made hy n Gllrmnn ~om­
nan,v ro,· use in a Ge1·m::o.nt~le­
Graduate Math Club
v isiu11sHies on music of th~ world.
Thert' will lw " meeting 11J : h,·
A ll sl11dc11l~ 11
s well as memher s
t:,·nduate Muth Clnh 11t •l ::!Cl 11,111,
nf liuth clubs n1•~ conlin lly it1vitccl
T1w~dny in Uiefe11do1·f, roum ,. t,1 att~11d,
Thi' spv11k,•r will lw AJh.,.,t 1:,
'I' h 11I'• cl a y, the lntt•,.notio11al
FRll&lt;tll of the ile11urh11e11t uf 11111th
"
t'lulo wilt h,tvtl ils annual Chl'ist.
en111tk~.
1m1x p111·ty. The program will he
informn l inclluling mu sic, dunclng,
IR Club

or

...

. .

Thrre wtll h~ u xpeeh1J 11,c,.tir,1,tuud rpfrcshmcnts , orfo1•eig11'lands.
lr1t1•1·1111tfo11nl
Rdati1111~('It,!,
Student Center
'l'u1•$d11y, 111 "'""" 2:1:1, Nw to, ,.
JI is j111pol'l1111t
that nil 1111&lt;mloms A :ipecinl concet'l featul'ini,t &lt;tn­

11rlhe

utt~n!I thi8 n,e,,t11111,

dt,nl

• • •
WR.A

he

l!iVell

)1onday nt 4 p.m. in Baird

llnll.

per!ol'tnCrs

Aclmission

is

free

will
and

11II sl11inv it, •11 u,

are
Any gil'I inte1·~skd lll hm•o111- 11l•11ts1111d f11c111Ly
i11J,!'.
an t1fficer for 1hi' W&lt;111wn
', ••!tend.
l&lt;l'Cl'enlion Associntit•n
must rill
Wo,·ks of Mo in rt, Dd11iss~•,
out II form bt•fm.,,Fl'i&lt;l11y,11::l011,m. ll ind em it h, Smit, and !~Isa
Fo rms muy be picked up nl ti ,,, llauschka will he featu1•e,I. Mr.
cancl)• counter in Norton, at tht&gt; Smit is the visiting Slee prote ~­
mnlll dt!sk in Goodyear. o,· ,1l lit&lt;! so1· of composition he 1•e.

Reflections
Ring ing bells in chur1:he!,
for solem n and glad &lt;:ere­
moniai occasions, goes back r,:
!O abolll 7 A.O.
In early Britain chcurch
bells tolled for an hour on
Christmas Eve, announcing
to S,1tan the coming : of
Chris t. At midnight , joy­
ous pea ls heralded ChriM's
Mrth.
~

Xmas Hours Set

::-

• • •
By ARNIE MAZUR
a nd

understands

what

he

ednrntionol

system.

Students,

pres­

sured lty 1rnrenl and environment,
During Cbrt~tmas week room s
find IJ1e meusur e or tllelr know!.
i:ll and 28~ will h e ope~, lo all
edge in grnde•. in letters or U1e
•t udeul s as s tudy R1·eus fo hel11 alpha bet. The lm1,rrll\11ce society
re lleva th e usnnl lihrnry e11ngeg. 11
l ncos upon lah e lA, catego rizing the
tlo11 11l'lor to 1111111
examlnutions.
11hy~kfa11us n mu11who has "made"
Nort&lt;m 11all will be op,an Snl­
it &lt;whutever "ll" Is) and the nrli~l

A I the r ece m NSA regioual ccm,
rec·en,•c it wRs generally held U,111
to make a lib e ral e ducntlcm mm·"
efrecllve certain rero,·ms must he•
mode within th e prese11I systt•m
A de- e rnJJhosizallon of i;rndes wonld
help improve tho atmos1ihere lor
urday . I &gt;Pt, 22 through f&gt;ec. 2:{.
t,s n "bentnick"
or someone who the student lo gah,1 more from hi•
l&lt;'romthat time until Wedno &gt;J­ has not mud e ll, is orojPcterJ onto daily l'iusses , 1'l1e good atudent, ,,.
d11y,ll e~: 2f. the building will be
the sludOnl ,
w e ll as the mediocre, would !11,,,1
rtosed.
nol have to roncenlrnte
011 "leo, ·11.
Durin g Chdstmas week Nor.
ing" !or an exam, but
he w,11
An "A" Is supposed to be at­
ton Noll will !Je open us fc)llows :
more ~li;nificantly lea rn tor fls owu
tached to the learned st udent
Jlec . 2-tl to 29 from 7::10 .a..m, lo
snke.
and a ''C" to t!,e mediocre stu.
6 11.m.: clost&gt;tl Sund&amp;Y. D ec. 30;
dent. However, this is not al­
Or the present condltron, i hn1•u
or,en Monday. !Jee. 31 from 7:31)
ways the case. It would be a
n timely anecdote: A [;i.ther ask••d
11,m.to G 11.111
,: ~lo8ed Den. :11 to
proper
label
(If la bels are
his son what h e ltnd gotten oul ul
.l11u. 2.
proper at all), If there could
a conrae. The son's reply, a cou1.
be aome distinct ion between
meotary on lhe present slluaUon,
the student who really learns
1was that be got u "B ."

The Spectrum Asks
(Gr)lltiuued from page 10)
Jlh•s,•nl Cl'isis 1s ~omelhini: that hns not taken ph,ce in India f1;1rovc1·
hundt ccl ,yeurs. It is enol'mously tlifJicult. for a nation conditioned to
1he ways of peace sud d1Jnly to be challenged by the necess ities ot' :i
la 1•ge scale conflict ,

Lcurnlng comus llHough cxpcl'ience, and one has to pay the 111·h-e
for one's mistakes. But no pl'ice is too grnut for the preservatiou or
ll nolilm's integrity
anrl indepenrlence. Fol' the people of India, the
111·c
srnt c 1•lsis is " period of tesling and stiffening
the freedo111 thut
,v3s wo11 fifteen ye11rs ago. The people of lnt.lia h11ve 1•i~en ro th~
occassion. One of the warming und most ~t1·iking effects of the cri~is
is t.he 11111g11i
ficent ~·csponse or the Indian people.
The ~!feet of the Chinese aggression on the Indian ha s ma&lt;le nro­
found effect. The shock of wa1· and the feeling of betraya l bl' those
whom we 1·cg1\rd as our ft·ionds has been II shocking experience which
has caused a turn in Tndian 11olitical thought.
Whnt..ivcl' the outcome of the present crisis may be, Sino· lncli1111rcJ11llOns can not ever be the same ngain, "So fu1• ns we nre conccrnetl,"
suid the Prime Minister of fnt.liu, "this war is pushing us to miliv.e
the hard realitie s and situations for which frlie nations must \,e kept
rend y." lfo further cuntinues, "India would have to change completely.
Mt. only in the military sense, but also ot,hcnvi&amp;e to meet the Chin~•&lt;·

ch11llen~e.''
The most Important outcome of the present crl1ia Is that
the Indian people have realized that In their t,our of i1eed
It Is the Western demooracits
and especially the United States
of America wt,o have come to their aid promptly, unstinting .
The hand of friendship
that they
ly and uncondltlonally.
have e11tended to them, the concrete support th~t they have
already gl11en and which Indians
confidently
trust will be
Increased, can and will never be forgotten
by a grateful tn.
dlan people. They now know who are their fr iends,
This w111·11Jay cost lndiu many liv es ,ind tr~asur~s. Lout•hat is the
price people to pay for their fl'eedom. 11\clian people Dl'e dcU!rmined,
and they nro nlso assured in their minds that they 111·enot alone.

TWIST totheJULIAN
QUARTET
!

t

t

i

tt••·~··················

Every

FRIDAY

NITE

i

ii

9:30 P.M.

i
!

AT

.
f

~!!!,!!
..~EI

(Around the cornerfrom State Teacher5.)

.................................

Quality i1sthe key to success at Western

Atlmiltcdly, nm stum lur&lt;ls arL' loigloat Western
Electric. l~ut cngincc·ring graduates whn c:in
llll'et them , mid who decide to join us , ll'ill be­
i;in tiwir careers ,it 011,e of tlw best tinws in the
h(slor y of the compnny. For plentiful oppor­
tunitit•s nwai l them l1nhnth c11gil1L·Cri11g
1111
d

m11n11gerne11t
.
/\s we enh .Jr a ttC\\· t\nl u£ eomrnu11icatio11.).
Wt•stcr,1 Electric C'11ginccrsarc t·arr&gt; inj! for­
ward assi~1111c11t:;
th~,t afkd th e whole ar t of
telephony rrom clcclroui c devices to high -spee d
sound transmis~ion , And. in tlw m1111:1gcmcnt
ca tul(ory alo11e. sevrr.il thous,tnc.l s11p1•rvisory
jobs will he uv11il11bl1•
tn
peoplL· 11 ith,11
tltt: ,w:-.t 10 )t'lll'S. ~la11y of lh 1'SL' "''" ,na rl­
ll!(C'YSwill rnme from tho class of '62.
Nmv's, 1,lw ti111r for you In start thinking
s,•ri1111siyYihm,t lh c ge;,cral "urk area that
Inter c,ls vuu 111Wcsk ·no Electric-. thC'rrrnnulal'•
lu ring a,;d ~upp ly 1111
it of tho Ut•I!Telephtllll'
S) stem. Thr:n whC'n nur repre&lt;1•11t11tiwt~,mt•s
to your eanipu s, you'll bl' prcp ,u·,·d lo d iscuss
1·1111
•1·11li1cl'lio11~
th.it will help 111,1~1•
the inkr ­

w.r..

*

u-. ......................

..
i

...

,

The •em ester clra\\'ij to " closio being taught
and the pup l
and we 11repare ouraelves for llnai
who merely reflects Inform,
examinations.
Undoubte dly, every
tton as a mirror.
student Is hupeful that he ,~Ill clo
-:-io
matter,
In em11buslzlng t 11•
well oo his e xnm" nud 1·ecelve a
the stud , nt
high grade . To this end. many stu. lmpol'ta nee or grades
school
,,ir
dent" will find themselves awake is ro und not attending
the g11inful purs11i1 ot knowle o ,~
'the entire night h etore u parllcu.
Jar e xam , trying to "lellrn" a se. h11t tor the p11rpo$e or "pull 1~
me,·k•." Whnt waa Intended to h•
progron, .
mestn's
o measurement
or the studer , ,
prov-ress, a dirticult
task Ind ~, a
'rhe cra.mruing Jll'Ocess is un 1u. hns become an end in 11:selt ,.,
1
'1icallon or a basic fault in our lhe student.

Electric

flncl 111
1111ypn1 !,(rums tlmt will aid him in explor•
i11g the exdtjug course of hi s carct'r - whik
udv.111ci11!(just as fast as his abi lit ies allow,
And hC''li be sec ure in tlie knowledge tlo.1t he
is grnwing with a compa11y dcdk 11t('d to lodp­
ing America set the pnct t in imprnvi11g cmnmu•
nlcalions lor ,1 rapidly grnwing wol'ld,
Challenging

opportunltl11

exitt

now at We,tem
ond chem1 ..
col englneen, o.s well os physlcot science, llberol orh ,
and bustnen malon , All quallfled applicants will ••·
ulve careful &lt;onslderotion
for employment
whhout
Ngard to ,ace, &lt;reed, color or notional origin . fo r mor•
lnforr,,ation about Weatem Electric, write College Reio •
tlon.t, Western Electric Company . Room 6106 ~ 222
Broadway, New Yo,k 38, New York . And be sure to
ononge for o Western Electric in,e,vfew when ou,
college rtptennfatlvQs
visit your 'campus .
Electric for eleclrlcor, me&lt;honicar, industrial,

''"'"' 111,,f.1.il,lc
.
Af11•1a 111,111
joins '\\'t• stmn EIPdl ie, he will
P11nc1palmanuh1chJrh11 lon 1ll0n1 it Chlt.9RO,Ill. Ke.1tny, N, L: Baltlmore, Md; lf\dlanaPOhi, Ind; Alltntown anC,L.turC!ldille, Pa,;
Wmilon•S•l•m, 'N, c., Butt•lc,, N Y.; No,111lndOV@I,M•ss.: Om•h•, Neb,, Kan, .. Cit) , Mo,; Columbu,, Onlo: 01.lehOmlCity, O,Cla,
cn,Jne.erlng Aesurcn Center.
. Prlntelon , N J, Ttlelyp t C1tpor11lon, Skokll , 111,t ind Llllle. Rock, Ark. Also Wei.ltrn El~lrl G dlslfl •
,unon cenleu In 33 &lt;llln ona ln,l•ll•tlnn h.. dQu,,t ors In 16 clllos G•n•&lt;•IhudQu, rten : 195 B•o•~w,y, New Yook7, N, 'I,

�ridoy, December 14 , 1962

Concert l]nevenf ul;
Acoustics At Fault
By MARK

PAGETHIRTEEN

SPECTRUM

Beckett 's 'Endgame'

ls Still Playing at
Walden Playh ouse

FE LDM AN

tr )'Ou wau I my ho1•t1st opinion.
" Com·ert
Committee
should
,1kP some e ffol'I lo flud a new
,11 ror future rout•erts
on Ulla
111
J1Uij,
l,u s t SotUl'dily
uighl's
11t'erl renturing
Onkotu Staton
o,1 1'be Turrler s could have bet&gt;n
Id in n gt'llasy ob1111do11edi:aru ge
11hny flllecl barn with rnts run •
,., ni; nruund. Th e nudieuce wouhl
1,, l'e prohubly
sufferecl ve1·tui11 di s­
' ,mron .s, but at leu~t I.he acona.
111•• miitht hn ve heeu bett&lt;'r .

I fe el t hot some

"[i)ndg11me.'' the \\"nldeu
P'J11.v.
house's r urrent and O(th Jll't&gt;dtle­
lio" , will IJC t&gt;Xlended 111 the JOtHI
\Vnld en nddre••
lonigbt
n11d to­
morrow 1:wenln~.

ot her voc a l,

lsts could have done a great
deal mo re with thi&amp; wo n der ful
t une.

Anoth ~r handkllJ ) fol' ,\Ill!!! Sln•

Uetketl',&lt; {IUIISi-lr l~glc
Snrnnel
run ·e, dono&gt; In one unlnter1·u pt, •tl ,
ncrO ntJ)ttllillllltll con- lll'I. 011ene1I :-IQ\' . :w t o high IIC('lnhn ,
In th••
Rilllin g uf 11lltno. bn~K. ond drum ~. Beckett, rn!'l'ly perronuell
Girls at Goodyear Decor ated Lounges f or Chrl1 tmaa Season,
AH somM ne r e morked to Ull ' after · ICJl'IIInre,1. is thP author or "Wnlr
11d '•Krot111'
llu , cu p~•e1·(. " You've he11rd ot th~ lr•g fo l' (:odot" 11
s Lo ki
Th ree Soutuls. well 1hese cols are Tap e.''
I It~ 1'hr Pf' Sudiments ," l!Jxre11l t or
A h!lrub • helt er 11ro,·ld~ s tlw
I hP hll~ij 11tnyt•r wh o hod hi s diCII.
~l!Mij
Staton
mor not ba one ('Ulti~a helt1g h en rd, the 11lani~t 0111Inous ~µ tttni: for " ~}11dgoI11w
."
lher·e are . four 111i
~llt o
o1I lhn finer jazz sl11Aer$ (Whi c h lo onll drumm er see11111d to be un ­ llexldin~
111)' 011111!011.$b l! l~ 11011. !mt s h ~ n wnre of the ncouslic»I
111·oblo111~ end, a ,•1(-tlm of ntll'l eu r C1tlllu111
By Ml:G GARBE
11t,, 'nn 1•um1111s' :llld 'Orf ,•umvus'
dill not dest:t' \'11 ~nch a&lt;lverne POil· and 11roceedecl to gn th ri r nwrrfli • Pl'eHldiu,; nn•r I he shel ter Is a
'l'h,• 11luns for t ltc foyth&lt;•11111i11i:women in th ~ fre~hmnn clas~. This
Juh,1•.1 At om• 110(11l durh~g he,· 11011d nt11l ovc l'h eur fn g wuy. ·r1w blind , c1•i1n •letl \)'rant.
ru 111n1uL
er. residence
C hri s lltrn • l'V('llt rler ve, lit!' 11111·1,ose
of s how 1»·rlornutn&lt;•~. s he lr1ed readJustlug 11it1nis l's sn los 1vere of ~Xlt'Ollll'IY
OArHril \l11l'che11,, N1111•1sllw 11•. pitt·ly \\'Nhtvsday
at
lioodyPlll' in.it the dly women tl w d orn1 u11t1
lh, • mfl-1·ot1ho110s, h111 this did 11111,
, 1)001' u nd llf!Ol"lgf11al l)Hlllil!r ,
rnnt. while Al!'r~d ·url unand JJ&lt;;,._
llull n1·e we ll undenvay.
lndiell • ,hmn lift• in it• finest spi dt."
l" 1111111
·01·" lh e nudio 11!(-k.1111.
•
T he
commuters
will
be
1 Ct•&lt;•Ithat ins~ Staton hOUlcl h e to rrn s h is s te11-so11 . n nd Normnn t &lt;,ns art• th,,t o,·et' ;5 1 frv s hm vn
would
ha, ·e ttu&gt;rou g hly re. au l'X(•ellent si nge r ir she woultl \\ 'l id ·111d 'rn n u 'J'olson, d~Cor1mod wonwu will shill"• h, th e fe s tivitie s
greeted at the door by t he
Jt••l'lt•~ ~lisR Stolon's
stat ure us Olli)" tuk e Rlo,•k or hl'l' :tblll tl&lt; s i 11h11bft»11L
s or ash bins. pfay ~Jar . to 1,c lwld from a . 5 fl.!11.
residen t s and escorted to t he
., ,,1,,.rormer If s h e had r erused to Olli! &lt;•Otl!
The purpose of the event Is
lounge. Aft er vis iting t he varl'Clllrlll&lt;' on httprovlni; th em. t huHe's 11itl'Pnts.
,1111.: 111 the Qym ~tier
realizing
Sia• hns u,•llmllod
putentlnl,
1111d Allhvugh
, JliO.Y 16 &lt;lownhelll
not only to celebrate the pend ous lounges, In Christmas guise,
111,
lh,• llOOr concllt Ions. Th e 1111dienre a l ihn eK " hll dlKJ&gt;layed it . llnt s h e
llwmutft•nly. ll e,·kel r siiare~ 11,~th.
Ing hollday season, b ut also,
they will have the oppo rt u n ity
rnil:h t h1we 011po~t&gt;
tl ~u ch n 1nov~, so11wltow m11111\~t!dto return 10 her
•nd
to ra t e each f loor on merit of
lug in makln~ tho g1•1t11~ltuurtl1111 t O g I" e th e c Ommu te ra ~
ltnt b elie ,,e m e. a p ~rfo 1·me1· has 110 11-111'o
du c1Ive, uom merr fnl groove. lilltl':hllble an d hom or,m~ly tnucnb rn.
residents a chance
to know
decora t ,on by meant of a ballot.
,,,.,ry mol'nl ri g ht to do so, A Al~o. MlRS Stn ton con Id mnke "ome
one ~nother.
.
Th&lt;' fi&lt;•tirs will he Nm)lcting for
1'1wr~ i• It( t 111 1,hy;lrlll a!'llo u yN
,•unl'l'rt ,iromul£w, {in this c-11se, chan~c•" 111 her urrhnk
rapl'l'll/fri•. tlir iwrfe&gt;rmnnc•P, H&lt;·&lt;·m·dini: to ct•ltle
Chun·man i. .. ,~ M1•11t&lt;•1
· ~Ont· 0 1•i~!trnlil) •. l,rnuty,
di so r11;anizn.
1h1• ('011cert
C'ommlt1ee1
bus 1111 I hnv~ hee u 1tco1·l11
g abonl lill 10 70 Bob Sokolslw nf I.h e {'ourie,•. ls x. 1ncnts furlhe1·
on the suhJed, lion, nnd umiahiliLy.
nltligaio n to 11rovicle the performer pet·,·tml of h&lt;'r se le~ lion s Rin"e r
Jll'C1Ms.
l)l'OJ,,,.,·K" 1ren11,ndou ~ ex&lt;1il,•- ''F,11· mnn)• month~ the rc ~i&lt;l,•ntA r~1•t&gt;lltion will follow in the
1111
It the bcs l 11ossl bl e co ndilious.
w11s ii• hi~h "" hoo l, und thut Is merit."
hnv1• lw~ n ju~L wnilini:
fo1• u S(lltth L•JUnl!e al whkh
n•fr,••h•
l0111:c-r I h11n l Ntre lo 1·ernomher
chunce
to
meet
with
the
l'011u11ulmcnt
~ " •ill lie :&lt;erv cd. Kan·n Bc ­
Even t hough Miss Staton
" l~ndgum e" l111s uu X:3 ,~ c urq\i~ . hti; WC1lltl'lt. 1' her ruel lhnL Lhe ,·e Js' linky
is l'O-chnil'llll\11
of
the
was working under an acoustl-

j

14111 WIIM lwr

Goodyear Hall ~ponsors
I CliristnzasParty Dec. 19

I

i

Abou t all I did get out of
l'l'iss Stnton's performance was
th ank you and more t hank
yous. and I do not know why
she was t hanking
me. I was

0~1 handicap, he ,· performance
was t rite and uneventful. Her
repetolre consisted mostl y of
.her popula r recordings such as
''The Late Late Show," "Broad­

'l'l ~ke •~ mny lw l)lll'Cha,e() Ul th ~
hu, .r.rt'lt-e m· ••~· ,·ttllln g ~F';J.r,1;!\'

nn aJl,tno-8vldNll

event.

h~tweon

THEATRE OF DISTINCTION
Tl 3-8805
64 5 Main St .

CINEMII

not applauding.

way,' ' uA Foggy Day," , ''Alh't

division

-1

NOW SHOWING
Rock Hud so n -

No Use," a nd A f ew ot her un•
distinguished
performances.

I heard th~ Tnn lers WCl'P 11Uftt&gt;
nH theHe "omnrnrdRI •
~ntertnhtlng
i?.ed folk grm 111s nr e uowndays.
1
Miss Stnton 1111stwo uatuml t1Hgueij&gt;&lt; the r easo n for lltefr &lt;'omedy
sPIK: n 11owe rf1ll voice a nd :t good
f~ tO overshndow
the music which
he 1· tr ee use &lt;&gt;!
rnui:,;e permlllini:Is u &lt;'omedy wlf\1111ftsel£. Th e reuson
th~ upper re g isters. How ever, Mhe
l " h en rd " and did n01 "see" tho
ltitks the nhlllLy to us e th ese Goe).
T~rl'l ers wa s beca u se )ll ss Stutou
~iv,,n gifts tu h et• advantag e, She
11111m e in un u1,n 1,preciath •e moocl .
siugg too loud , and thl i; runy have
'r hu s, I clepurt ed old, d egenerulini:
11~
.. n one or th e r enso ns ro,. mnlt­
Clurk ut intermi~siou. Besid es, folk
mg It Impossible
to di ijtl nguf ah her
mn slc is so rt o[ a drog [or loyal
lyrl1•9 !whl c\ 1 so und ~d lik e a s us­
a nd unbendln~ be.bOJl))&lt;'l'~
- llnd so
lall,i, d nu&lt;I hlun •ed noi se).
wns Orikoto .
fly now , J\llss
Stato n should
bllH• lt('QUirecl some Ql'IAittullly In
h1•r 11brn s i11~. Whelher
or uot on e
rcullies lite n~es~lly
or JJllrn~lng,
111' 11 prln,e fa N0 1· fo r d fs1in1,'"llls lt111• au exce lll!nt singer
trom a
1t111llocrc on e. Miss Staton seemed
to d ve lilll u concern lo lt01· pht'll8111 :111(1 th e r es nll was c•,·hle nt. Ou
11,, ' "lllJ/0(' /J
versi(IIIS
or
.. Pick
l' 11ur~PI[ l ' 11" lllld "Cherokee:· ,,he
f,'i11,· C11xl.1
.;,., u&lt;•d to he si nJ,tlug: lh e wm· c.h~ as
r ..
n; .•,,.,.11!" _
r., "" JlDM~lhle 1,rayiug that slte
Sol,·nli k :; - Cou rir,·•B ,t'JN'l'H~ I
w, tl1I n•1wh 11w end of th&lt;' c h oru e,

Ill

"LOVER
Co.hit

...

BACK"

COME

Jlo c l, ll ud son

-

. fli1111 Lollobri 11ldn

in

t

"COMESEPTEMBER
"
/JOT/I

-I&lt;

I---

NITS

IN COLON

[,at e Show evei·y Sat. Nite

Cvmini: Ucc. l!u - ·'Ph eclre'' with M1•lins Mal couri &amp; Touy Purkh ts

- ---- --

Starts

-

- -

Tues., Dec. 25 ·

Limelight
Gallery
49 EDWARD

STREET

Pvn/J1ring F'olk Music,
Wed . • S1rn. Nile

Held Over lhru

Dec 14 &amp; 15 - From To ronto
DAVID WIFFIN

"Trr11rn
~::d:.!;1,
•111c11/:
{
I
I

,,s;,, w"'"""

'

h t~ MHIJIP lJ1tH.-' UFi

lier arcompnn.

SAil ll 'EL

I&gt;

Miss Staton 's rendi t ion of
llads fared best In her per .
rma nce, but she did nothing
1tatanding. She gave a good
nd ltlon of J oh n Be n so n
"Ook's beautiful
composition
Fly," but
Nhere Flamingos

''END
(The

BECKETT'S

/

!

Dec. 28 &amp; 29 • from Toronto
THE SINNERS

/

Open Wed. · Sun. 8 p.m.-2 a.m

Wildest

Play

Yon Ever Saw)

{ FOR TICKETS,
,

/

~

Dec 21 &amp; 22
LIS/\ KINDRED
Direct from B11ter End wilh
Oscar Brandt

GAME"
TX .1-!18
46
0 1·

!
I

TL 2-U'.tlt:i

Stu,l~nt 1liscount tiCkl't~ may
1,c purchns,•d upon Jl l'&lt;•:&lt;ento­
tion of II) ra ,,d.

N F 3-5t:l7

- -- Ends Sot. Dec. 15th

"Black Tight"
"Oklahoma"
Sun . Wed . Dec. 16 • 19

"Devil at
4 o'clock"
"Sail A
Crooked Ship"
Thurs.• Mo n. Dec. 20 • 24

"Advise
and Consent"
START XMAS DAY

Robert Ryon (left) Teronce Stomp (center) ond Peter Ustinoo
in a dr ltmotic scene from Hermon Melville's "Billy Budd" a
much praised motion picture which w ill hove its Buffolo
premier ot the Amherst Theo ter starting Tuesday, December
2S.

Cyd Char isse and Zizi Joonmorie cu rrentl y showing
in "Block Tights" ol the North Pork Theoter . " West
t•

Side Story" open Chri!.lmos Doy.

"WEST
SI DE STORY"
S/'r ,'("J \l S1Tl&gt;f; .\ TS
/I/ S I 'ti/ ' \ 'T I.\TT/l/1,

.

J!y r re • e11ti11~
1 fl . l'ar.l.

.. ............

i

:,..

JJori~ 1.)uy

...............

i

l

�SP ~ CTR

PAGE FOURTEEN

IU

M

Fridoy, December 14, 196

Christmas Cards for This Season­

Coming Events at Baird Hal

Both Religious and Secular Themes

A num her of lectures, concerts
hu n , beeu sche duJ8~
by the music departm ent fur J anu.
11ry lfl6:l.
.
A 8001( ret •llal 'fill h e given 1/y
Belly .Allen. soprano , Jan. 14, nt
S:30 p,m , In Baird Hall . Laszlo
Stelnhurt, vlollnlst and Norm11 Ber.
lolnml Ropp, 11lanlst, will he lleord
In redtal 011 J on. 16, at 8:30 1&gt;.m.
J.;,o Smit wlll give hia third Slee
J,..,,1ure on F'rlda)', Jan. 18 ol ~:~O
11,m. 11,B ull er auditorium of Cnpen
T111
.ll. Tho C"oucert Band , und er t he
dtro,•tJvn of Fr11ok J . Cit&gt;olla, wlll

Enl'yclopedlu Amerll'ana.
Often,
plump rohlus were plct11red sit·
ttng on t TPP hrnncheR
dripp ing
With irides.

~re\&gt;IIUJ.: cards for Christmas
~b1&gt;w, 1.'Mh seueon, 11n l,ucreasc In
the number o! religious subjectsbut Lill• has oot !llways been true.
ln tact , the en rlle si Chrl stmae
car ds oft en boo designs that aeeme d lo luiv(I no l'Onnl'rUon wtt.h the
holiday ,

t111d rocllals

I

ru this enrly ~!age J&gt;\n.up girts
were not unusunl.
Kate Green- I
away
drawings
were frequently
u•ed, some cu.rda picturing alugle [
Instead vr !lfollvlt~· ~~en~• or
fl1&lt;ureHCrom her drawings, ot hers
srmhols or holl; 11nel ml"tleroe, por1rnylnl!' ,tanl'tng girl~ wllh gor .
e111·ly Am1Wl/'11
11 C'l1rl11tm1111 rards lnnd~ of !Jpw~rs.
ot the !0th c1111111
ry wi•ru de~o
rnt l.'d with roM•Rnnd 11ortrull11or
Abollt 1870, car ds were tro~led
yo11ng lndteli , IIC'MNtlng lo The 1111dfringed with hPHVysilk,

Read This for the Answer
Do Law Students Study?
Th e Law School's occupunts ore
uNually picLut·NI with tho!~ noses
huried derJ1 in hooks, sla ving un·
ceusingly tow ur d a tull comprehe n­
sion of th0 conce pt of justice.
However, there is n lighter, more
humorou s side whi ch needs the
full exposi tion of an artiAt'$ verbal
h1·ush, Thi ~ iR definitely nccessaTy
in or der to fully u111lcrstar,d this,
the mo~t wonderful of God's crea­
tions • • the law student.
0

Th~ Luw ~tudcnt i, not nll
serill11sn@ss, as you might )lave
been misl ed to think , but some
abides
in
mirth und joviality
tho•e somber soul s of oeriousr•e~s.
Such spiri t evid ent in the law
5&lt;1hool'sthree librarie s, McMahons,
Crottys, ond Kennedy s.
The
looal oaet, lnctu dlng
auch notablea aa Buddy "Gov •
ernor" Fiorello, "Diamond J Im"
Sorrentino , and Joel "app les"
Daniela , the notorloua editor
of the law 10hool'1 1canda l

shee t , " The Opinion" , are seen
over and over, gulping down

( Continued

DANIELL!

DR.

Biology Semi1r1ars

The hio log:, se min ars for thi~
month nnd l•arly .Tunu(ir'}' 01•e u,,
As one wnlks through the hn l· follows: We,lhe sday, Dr. A . Suss•
man, depn1•tment of bota1ny nt the
lowed haUs of the school, the University o! Michigan, Ann A, ·
voices of the students con. be henrd bor, Michigan, will ~peak on Ho1·in pursu it of the sli11pcry truth of 0l&lt;l1CY
and F o!'m Determination in
the law . ·'He y Geol'ge, are you still Neu rospora.
wearing that greasey kid stuff?"
.January :10: Di·. ,I. F. Dani elli,
to which George repli0s "as you r profesaor and chninuon Of the d«·
senato 1·ial reprcsent.ntive, I want po1·tmenL of medicinul chemistry,
to assure yo u that th ere is no St•hool of Pharmacy ut UB, wi;J
sr1~11kon Cytop lo~mic Inheri tance
Dean ," However.
l'ising to the in Amoebae.
occasion Caegar, now known as
F111·thc1· seminars
will be nn­
the schoo l's evidence expert, has­
lPns to as~ur&lt;' him, nil in Middle nounre1l al a Inter dnte. All will
English, th/It Sec. 17 of the Reul he held in J:)4., Health Sc:iences nt
Property Law disproves his whole ~ [1.nl ,
theory.
All s tudents a~e invited to
We wi s h we could spend more
the ~,mm week coffe&lt;' hou.rs
time in thi s place of culture, but
tv he held in the multi-pu1 •posc
the ca ll of the wild is stro ng, Jn
l'oom from a :00 to 5 :•00 v,m.
clos ing, here in a quote from
dul'ing exam week, Jan . ti , 4,
Shakegpearc, "Ope not thy pon•
and Jan. 7-!Q. They are apon •
derous and marhl ~ jaws, but Jtl•t
sore d by the mixer committee.
thee to a nunnery."

the ambroala of !earning,

APPETIZERS
CHOPPED LIVER .................................
MARINATED HERRING • Wine ..........
Sour Creom ........ ........ ............
NOVA SCOTIA SALMON (Lox) .........
GEFILTE FISH ........................ ,...... ,..

65
65
.7S
80
,75

SALADS and COLD PLATES
BIG MOTHERS SALAD BOWL
with Tossed Greens, Tomato Wedges,
Julienne Turkev, Hom, Swiss, French
or Herb Dressing .......... ., ........ 1.25
with Blue Cheese Dressing .......... 1.40

............ ***********
..........

A Nickel for a Beer and an Old•
l"asbloned Corned Beel Sandwich

GARDENLETTUCEwith choice of Herb,
French or Russian Dressing ...... .. .... .35
with Blue Cheese Dre,;,lng .... .50
CHOPPED LIVER,
,erved with Cole Slew, Hnrd Boded
Eggs, Letruce and Tomato
I 25

······••*••tt••······ ······ ·

A PLATTER OF COLD
SLICED
I,.

Hom, Turkey Sclam,, Sw,s~ Cheese
Pototo Sclod ond Gorru,h
I 75

............................
nut

AU of the item, on th ia

ore ovoilabl• ta you for you,
ot hoMe Luncheon, Porty or

Lo'* Eveni•9 Snack
INQUIRE AT THE COUNTER

20
25
20
30
.20
. 15
. 15
. 15

COLE 'SLAW ...................................
POTATO SALAD ...... ...... .......... ...........
SAUERKRAU
T ......... ...... ............ ...... ...
PICKLE[) TOMATO ...... ,........... ,....... ..
CREAM CHEESE ....................... , .......
COTTAGE CHEESE .............. ,........ .... .
HARD 13O1LED EGG ....... ,................
GREEN OLIVE SALAD ......... .... ..........
MACARONI SALAD ....... ............... , ....
DILL PICKLES ... , ..... .. ,.......................
HOT BAKED BEANS ... ........... ,.........
HOT Si'1UERKRAU
T .... .... ....... ........... ..
FRENCH FRIES .................. .............

"MURRAY$ NOSH" 15
15
.20
20
.20
.l 5
20
20
15
20
20
.20
20

'lrlr*tt
·•*····••tttt•tt•tt••···
BEVERAGES

,75

.. .1S
.. . , . 70
.45
,45
.65
,75

.45
.45
.50
.60
,1$

.80
.6S

MILK ............. , ....................................
CHOCOLATE Mil,.~
...... .... .........
HOT C HOCOLA"TE............ ...............
COFFEE ..................... , ,... ................
TEA .... ...........................
,.. .......
ICED COFFEE ..
,
. .. ...... ...... .
ICED TEA
PEPSI COLA
SQUIRT .
TRU-AC1E
.
HIRES l~OOT BE(R
VERNOl~SGINGER ALE

15
15
, 15
10
10
.15
. 15
. l0
.10
. I0
.I 0
.I0

··••111
·••·····••tt•*****••····

WE HAVE ON DRAFT
.25
Schmi,dts
Budweiser ................ .... ...... .25
Michelob ............... ............ .... .30
1

.45
.4 S

•****H******•••••••••••••••
DESSERTS

.65
.65

.35
.20

50c

.

A SIDE ORDEROF

SANDWICHES

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

ffltnu

......

CHICKEN CONSOMME .....................
wfth Matzo ....... ......... ,. ...........
HOT er COLD BORSCHT ..................
with Sour Cream . ................
SOUP DU JOUR .......... .
ORANGE JUICE
TOMATO JUICE
V-8 JUICE ..... ..

HOT CORNED BEEF
HOT PASTRAMI .
HOT ROAST BEEF
AMERICAN CHEESE
SWISS CHEESE
HAM
HAM COMBINATION
EGG SALAD
TUNA FISH SALAD
BOLOGNA
SALAMI
TURKEY
CHOPPED LIVER
SMOKED TONGUE
CREAM CHEESEond JELLY
PEANUT BUTTERond JELLY
KNOCKWURST
LIVERWURST
CREAM CHEESEon o
LARGEIJAGEL
SMALL BAGEL

,..,c{ett:.,r,~
"'"w,::-,'"" ·~""

atU1ck. The fallout sho lter Tack,,,
To the ct!ito1·,
nminin s a multi-million
dol1111
'l' he fallout .&lt;helter menace b !rau,I, dangerous
because it ,t,
ltuck with us aicuin, it $ecms, big­ lulles people wit h false promist•s "t
ge1· and m01,e hilatious
( if yov sa fety and he&lt;!ause i~ encourap ,..
like ,ick jokes) thun ever,
the hnrd-line nuts in our co.uni
Now muy I ask just what nm I
Yours truly,
su 11posed lo be doing fol' two we(•k•
Hurry Keyishiun,
oo I he ~econd f1001· o! C roshy
I nstl'Ucior in English
llftN' rm atomic attnck? Do I ru11
dowu to t he cnndy machine fo, •
Sliver Ball Again
~11ack~ when l'm hungry? Do you
su ppose the wnter supply ,viii 111•To the Edito1·;
kept coming a ll this tim e? And if
'L'his is to voice my 1·egret i11
it i,,. do yvu tiUppose the wate1• th e u n i o n boar d's unfortunah
will he ,ll'inkable? Al\d whut do I cho iue of No,·ton Union a s the lo­
do if I wunt some a ir - open a cnt ion for this year's Silver Bntl.
windllw?
R~ing unahle to uttend in past
One might wun t ~ome ah, too. year~, I looked fo rw ard t.o thi;
Ll't' • say we have five hundred vea,·'s S ilve1· Billi celebration.
pM11le in Crosby. If the huildinJ? • A !though the stude nt union i~
l, seuled tightly eno u1?h to protect t he iden l vluce fol' weekday activ ­
!hos" inside
against
1·u&lt;,liatioa. ity, considering the cost und othc1
whut happens when the tempera­ factorP, it is a poor compar ison lo
i11re ~tarts rising to intolerable the Statler-Hilton
for an evl•nl
lev1•ls ttnd the air gets unbreatheof this type. Speaking for a n11111•
11hle? And if it isn't that tightl y her of other law stude nts we voicr
sealed, then what good is it?
our intention of not attend i ng lh i,
A II thi s assumes, of couJ'se, that year 's Silver Uall.
&lt;.;1•osbyis ~till st andin g - not a
P erhaps the Statler-Hil t on R~u­
likely prospect unless the Russian s devous Theater wi11 have ;ome
com·
miss our part of the state
thin g interestin~
on the hill tm
plcte ly.
that night.
Let's face it, friends, the only
Ron Kamin ski
defonse ag ainst atomic attack is
Low Cla ss '64
to go uhout building a world i11

A HOLIDAY SPECIAL

SOUP ond JUICE

*************·•·············

HELLO DERE -

irlr-ktt.1rtt••1rtt

The 0 1:l Little Symp hony un d r
Dr. llobert Mole will gtve a contijn
Jan. ~l In Bnlrd Holl at 8:jO p,m
Adml~alon ror all program s
rtee 110tesa specified. All stu deo•.
und rocully are Invite d to atten d

ONE WEEK ONLY

3199 MAIN ST.
BUFFALO
, N. Y.
TF4-2575 '(Acron from the Granada Theater)
tt1t ..................................

$1.50.

1·
,.

Open in January

BIG MOTBEBS
......................

from

gtve n ronr~rt Sunday, J an. 20
3 v,m. In Norton Union .
"Le Ron dea u de Paris," a cha 1
her m11stc ensemb le of !lute , ee l .1
and IJarpi &amp;chord , IVlll give a co ,
cert -or Baroque music Jan . 24 ,
8, 30 p,m. In T31\lt,l Hall . Admlsst , n
tor stude nt ~ I• $1 : r eg ul11r ticke t,,

ICE CRl:AM
FRESH FRUIT PIE
WHIPPE'D CREAM PIE
CHOCOILATEECLAIR

20
25

CHEESE CAKE

35

25
25

Three Decked with Corned Beef,
Tongue ond Swiss, Cele Slew,
Russian Dressing ...... ........ ..........

1.35

"MA &amp; PA" STRAMI- Open Foced
Chopped Liver, Hot Postrcmi wfth
Tomato and Bermudo Onion ....... 1,30

NUSSBAUMS"KNOCKon WURST"
Lorge Knccl&lt;wurst served with
Scue rkroul end Boiled Potato ... .. . .95
Two Kncckwurst ..... ........... 1.35

"BUFFALOBOB'S BOMBER
"
Three Decker with Tongue, Hot
Pcstrcml, Turkey, Cole Slew,
Russian Dressing

I JS

"JACK and DILL" Liverwurst with Chopped Dill. Cole
Slow ond Russfon Dressing

80

"GOLDIESDELIGHT
"lndlviduol con o~ Skinless and Bone·
less Sardines with Bermuda Onion,
Lettuce and Tomato, Potato Solod
I0

"THE KELLE
" Mon It's Good
on c Lorge Bogel, Novo Scotoc
Salmon, (lo&gt;&lt;Iend Cream Cheese
w,th o GomtSh of Lettuce, Dill
Tomato end Bermuda Onion

90

.....................................
PLEASE INQUIRE ABOUT OUR

"SP ECIAL " FOR THE DAY

························~···

"THE RAYBURNGASSER
" -

Hot Corned Beof , Cabbog c and Bolted
Potato with Dill Pickle
1, 2}

�Friday, December 14, 1962

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIFTEEN

UB-Buffatlo
StoleBollieMonday;

!~~~~~~~~.!!!~,:-~~~~-~~-~,.!~~~~~~~~

w,11 tok(' on the t enms of u,urrnlo ver1fy the fact that tho couteats
'
.' ,
'
Stale nnd Wooster next ~londil)• are always hord fought oud ex- and Rieb Thomes, II fi-0 guard, seem
and Thn1·sduy eve n!nga 1·es1m&lt;'llv1;- l'ilin!,(.
to be the muluij\ays, Minton, au
ly, Since holh , ~oms nre sv,otted
ln th~ words or Howl e McAdnm, oll,st;,tc, 11laycr from Connecticut,
HY&lt;lt'lll:'ed 11.~ Ilofnts 11 game last
with outstanding lndil'hlunls, 111tl1er lluffolo St,,te head bn~ketbull
sq uad could possfh ly up ~et the Hut. 1·out•b: "Se rfustinl has on excellent ~enstm. 'fhomoa. a Little All-Amerf11lo quintet.
te11m ... size Is the most dnmaglu g
llulfulo State, nllhough ln,cking rucwr ... wP\ght and height . 1 ho\i P lrn ~election In 1061-62, hns over
In height, should ~•so 11rov1&gt;!lo be ft wfll he a good ball game." ,
1onoJ)olnts so fur In his college
u rormldubl e on11011ent. The fe et
ni c k BI111uMzak,n B~nlor veter11n c11reer.
thnl l! B bcul Alhany h)' oul)' two £t1r lhe Orangemen. lead s Ills t eam
11of11t~. a !(•am Stutr
h!IK rtlRo in acorl ng with " 22.a point 11e1·
I henten, plus !he fnet thut the 1gnnrn ~ame nvern$?t'. CloAe behind him Is
I~ u trsdllionul 1·lvalry, pruct!lcnlly mk e Broderkk
with n 19 1mlnt
' 1mts the go me on eve n t er ms. Any 11,·e1·11ge.

I

/nt,rnat,on•lly Aol&lt;nowledged to be
Flnut-By-F,r Choice of th• world'•
·-·- mo•t dlscrtmln•ling 11,tenera. .........

T-81- Astonishing Performance
In Comp act FM/ AM Set
~

I•

8 tron1i1torr pl@ 4 diode,. P rovidH
lone or amaiing crL-.pnesaand depth .
Beautifully , lim, pr.cl.ion c ra!ted
case, 6nished in rich black and •ii•
ver . Plug for A C adapte r. Comp l, te

TallArmy
Quintet
Downs
UB,73-61;
Baldwin
PacesBulls'Scoring
Attack

with

I

B JIM BA KE R
was close behind with 20, but he
' An Arm: Cadet team that Is en- also gnthlered In 18 rebounds,
dowed with tremendous
overall ' which reveals 'his lmJJortance in
height took rull advantag,e or tt the
outcome.
Dennts
Schantz
Wednesday,
to subdue
the un "nd Chuck Hutchinson netted 17
Bulls, 73-61, at West Point. 'l'he and 10 points rea1ieclfvely for the

~etbar.k was Buffalo's llrst this
season.
The dllfereoce
In size
hegan to show itself when the
score was knotted, 12.12 , early ln
the nrst half. The Cadets, led by
6'7" CaJ)tnln Bob Foley, stormed
hoth t,oal'ds and surged to a 40_24
hnlfllme margln.
During this time West Point ex hlblted a st eady, well d:rllled ut..
tnck that wa s able to capitalize on
1nosl o! Bnrtalo's mistakes. When
the Bulls lost the ball 011 vloln.
Hons or by mishandling , the Caduls came ri ght back with a timely
haskot that eventually
led to n
rn-pofnt cu 8 bloh at the br ea k.
The Bulls staged a consld.
erable comeback
late In the
second half, aa they reduced a
19-polnt deficit to only 9 with
1!41 remaining, The Bulla had
two chances
to narrow the
gap further , but were unable
to capitalize
on the Cadets'
apparent jitters at this point.
Army then built up Its lead to
12 point margi n at which the
contest ended, 73-61.
Although outscored by Army at
~ foul line, the Bulls were bet.
..,. marksmen
!rom the charity
rtpe . They wer e 13 for JG, as
mparerl to Army's 17 ror 24 ertort,
High scorer for lhe gume wns
1tfalo' s Dave Baldwin, wbo cas h- 1 ln 23 points.
Army's Foley

cag~te.tbe

teum

BtaUstlr.e

ment. Luminou1 clock hancb.

$49 .95

the Bulls showed a hot hand in
th e sec ond ba it, as they connected
on lo o[ 30 for a torrid 50%.
Viewing
the game as a whole,
how e1•e1·, the Cadets
dominated
the figures.
'!'bey hit on 27 or
li3 attempts for an even hollel' result than UB's second half per­
ce ntu ge as tile so ldiers connected
al o 60.!\% pace. Tltis Includes ~
runla~tlc Gt% fig ur e lo the flrnt
hnlr, when Army took most or
th eir shot s from close rauge. Bu!•
ra'lo shot only at% In the flrijt
hnlt , bnt tile aeco ud half u.ccurot•y raised Ille total figure to 40%.
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Mon .. Det. 17, nulfnlo Stnte ....Home
•r1111rs.,Dec·. 20, Wooste1· Col. Home
~~r1
... Jan . 11. Oswego State .. .Homo
Sat .. J an. 12, Itha ca College ..Hom e
Tue s., Jan. 15, Syracuse U . ... Home
Fri., Jan. 18, Alfred U. ....
Home
Sat .. J an. 26, Boston U. .... .. , Home
Snt., Feb, 2. Wayne State U. Home
Tues .• Feb. 5, Buft'alo Stnte ... .Away
Snt .. Feb. n. Colgate U. .......... .Awar
Wed., Feb. 13, Brock11ort St, Away
Sul., Feb. H, U. or Rocbester Home
Tues., Feb. rn, Villanova U. , Away
Sal., Feb. 2~. Co1·lland State .. Home
Sat .. Maroh 2, LeMoyne Col. Away
(Syracuse)
Mon .. ,\1nrch 4, Niagara U... .. Hom e
(Me morial Aud.)

~t ubcnt JHot1lt ~ l1op
:)400 Main Str1•et

F'r, •~ Pm·Hng

•
TF2-9331

•
F1•i. • S11t.

6 - l\lidnight
4 • 1 A.M .
4 - 11 P.l\t.

Sunday

1'8 ,

Open
Mon. • Sat.
Bill Bllowua centers UB team against Buffalo State Monday.
He has been among the Bul la' steadiest performers In the
first five games.

11 A.M .•

9 P.111.

GOOD
EATING

HOT
PIZZA

·PI~ Z ZEB I A
MENU
Smoll

12•
$1.00
1. ChettH
1.15
2. ChetH &amp; Pepperoni
1.15
3, Cheese &amp; Ancho'fin
1.15
4 . CheeN &amp; Mwthtoom
1.15
5. Cheese &amp; Olln
6 . ChHse &amp; Pop.,_,. (hot
1.15
or sweet)
7 , ChHH , Pepperoni &amp;
1.30
AnchovlH
a. ChHM, Peppe,onl &amp;
1.lO
Mushroom,
9. CheeM, P•p~eronl,
1.30
011••
10. Chc,ese, Pepperoni,
1.J Q

,.,...,

;,, lfrar

TF :1-7000

COLLEGE

Mon . - Thu

$59 .95

chart,

FAST
SERVICE

II OUl' S :

ac,,.,o,~,
.

720 - FM/ AM Clock-RadioThat
GivesMarvelousReception
At laat, a brilliantly otyled clock­
radio that allo provide■ •uperb FM
and AM pe rfomu1nce. Full feature,
hilly automatic Te\echron move­

S...all
l arg e
11•
16•
$1.50 11. CheeM, P•51iperonl,
Anchovlet,
1.65
1.45
Mu1htoom1
1.65
ChHH, P..p&lt;poronf,
1.65 12. AnchovJes
ll
1.65
1.45
Ollvu
1.3. ChHM, Pep ip.,onl ,
1.65
AnchoviH II
1.45
Peppeu
1.10 14. ChHH, Pesi•peronl,
AnchovlH, ,i.t,11hroom1
a. Olln
1.60
1.10
15. CheeH, P~pfMroni,
Anchov'let,
Mmhroomt ,.
1,10
1.60
&amp;
1.70
1.80 16. ALL T ~ WAY

ft•~.-,

Large
16"

1.95
1.95
J.95
l.10

•
FREE
· DELIVERY

•

l ,10
2.10

PEPSI • TEEM

15c

�PA.GESIXTEEN

Friday, December 14, 196 t

SPECTRUM

Buffalo'• Dave Baldwin
pulae.pounder.

(32) and BIii Bllowus

(62) leap high for offensive

rebound . Baldw in scored

k ey tip -In on this play,as U B nipped Albany
8 fl•kl'lbal/ action shots bJf ./0&lt;•/ fl&lt;rvrus.

State , 58-56,

In a

LuteBuffalo
·Scoring
Rlolly
EdgesAlban
Another

bnnne,· turnout

filed Into I rori:eu

Clark

bany

Hl'e h1td other

Ideas

Into

wH-1
howPV er.

Dungeon l11s1 F'rldny to
neHR u n!11•nnd-tuck hnttle between
the Dulls and the Peds or Albany
SI.ate. The uontest 11roved to be a
11111!-bltl•rall Ute way, hut the Alnt thv

Ytllrl.
The Ped,; 1·oared onto th~ court
and Pstnbllshed II slx.polnl cus hl oa
which they maintained thronAhQ\ll
most or the first half. Then th-'
Dulls rolllNI to the 01·c•nsio11 short.
and
ly h~torP I ha lnh,rmlsslon

UB RIFLE TEAM
The l' 13 Rifle Team rncenlly
rond 111
:11&lt;'11of
fl1•ed II• ~&lt;!1•011&lt;1
lhe Reuson ngolnsl Altred
llnl •
versltl'
at their
ru111w. Th••
mntch 11'118 won hy tTll ofter 1hr
totals
the off'lmnd Orlni: were
figured.
·y Hin(•~ the
This waR ne1'eRM:a1
the matc·h were the
totnls
same for both teams, 1371.
The llfl team fired ~26 while
Alfred fired 425 In orrhand.
The l'B Rine Tenm Is pre•­
eully nc•ce11ting female , full time
students.
Anyone with prior rltle teum
experience who desires to Jo)n
the t~am please conll\ct :\lnJor
Roy II. Stewart, APROTC De.
t acbment on the third floor or
Clark Gym.

the lead, 26-24.

'l'hen,

In by Bllowus. and Dave Baldwin's

Albuny ·s Paul Sheehan hnl'kel Crom the corner.
netted n fnntastlc- Ktnb shot from
!)1111 Zeb pul the Peds hack !nlo
Just inside the mid.court
stri11e.
and the the tenm lerl Ihe floor th e lend. but Bilowus hit from the
knotted, 21;.zr,,
tleid nnd Baldwin netted two f ree
ll1r&lt;1WM. A lb any's 1Jon De!UUII then
'l' he A lhnny le11m resumed their ..vaned the score for the lost time

Ugures were Allrnny's Di ck Crosse!
On the statistics
chart IL wns
with 21 nnd Jim 011pedisnno with 11ll Albnny. The Peds shot a torrid
12, and Buffalo's Bill Bilowus 11nd
Gar)' llnnley, who Hnlshed with 11 45.3"•· hitting 24 or 63. while UB
meshed 22 of 130tor 36.7%.
and 10 points respectively.

0

n&lt;·&lt;·urnte tllnrksmnnshtp
and 11irt,1· with 8 Jump shot. Munno mnd Hau.
,·eboundi ng erforts In lhe second 10.1' followed
with clutc h hnskel~
half.
In !net. thuy held n 45-3S 10 nnll down the trlumr,h.
1·11shlon 1vht!n llB mnde Its move ,,
t:unrds Roy ~lnnno and RIii lloTh~ Peds brought themselves tco
john shifted their tactics Into n wlthi11 two JJolnts of llfl with un.
defeuse .
This, coupled I othe1· des11e1·a1io11bn s k E! t, ngnln
1,rrs~ing
with an u11surge in Uul'fnlo's shoot.

\rom just Inside the time line. 'l'h,•

In!&lt; ncruracy
1·0111etmck.

11ame·s high sco rer, llkk
C'roMset.
lortetl u 101111,101,ing hook rrom in

Tl,,.

sparked

nn c,xclllni;

I

Bulls tied the "('Ol'e RI 45. •lfi frOl'I

with

n 7_polnt

two

free

bnrsl

throws

by

thot featured
Rill

llilowus,

or the l)l'l'SS tuhle, and

shot w11nl throUl'h
huzz.N· soundtld.

or

onP freebie

or

! I.EONIIRDO'S

I
I

by Gnry 1-lonley, a till-

Those

who

BANKEXAMINER
AIDES
► NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED ◄

SALARY

th P

the ,·ord• us th e

llnished

JutteQftadg
WANTA CAREERIN BANKING
PLUS LIBERAL FRINGE BENEFITS WHILE YOU TRAIN
-

In

tloublc

PROMOTION OPPORTUNITIES TO OVER $20,000 -

► You must file application

by Dec. 24. 1962 ◄
Start work July 1. 1963

FOR FURTHER

R e~laul"a11/

$5,500

INF OI-MATION FILL IN COUPON
MAIL TO

BELOW ANO

NEWYORK
STATE
BANKING
DEPARTMENT

GROTTO IN THE REAR •
UNIVERSITY Pl.AZA
Visit our newly remode led dining roornli to enjoy our
Famous Americon and ltolion Foods
Fr:,m A Tosty Sondwich to A Full Cou~se Meal
TAKE: OUT ORDERS OF ALL T(/NDS

100 CHURC
H STREET,
NEWYORK7, N. Y.
PLEASE PF.INT

Name __

=============a

------

- -

Address _

-~~1!_!!!!!.._~...,.._SPECIA.L
Tl ES - RAVIOLI . SPAGHETTI - PIZ:l:A

Take Out Orders -

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Dia!TF6-93 W-

OrconlactBankin&amp;
Dept. officesin Albany
, Buffalo, Rochesteror Syracuse.

-

....

◄,

I

�Friday, December 14, 1962

SPECTR.UM

PAGESEVENTEEN

�SPECTRU

PAGE·EIGHTEEN

Friday, December 14, 1962

M

ShowInterest
inHockey
;
·FroshFoceConisius
Tonight; Cornell Down!a Students
Is Plonned
SeekFourth
Straight
SeasonWinFencing Bulls M.UNYScrimmage
By BRYNA MILLMMI

By NICK COSTANTINO

Tlfo UH Freshnurn
will encounter

teum

nasketball
theii· -first

road lest of the season tonight a 1
Cnnisius l College. The gam .r• will
~t.111·tat
:00 p.m, i11 the Villa.
The yem-ling,; already hnve ,to
rented C'artisiuM97·7:l, in the opM­
I
ing g11me of I.he ,;eason, hul Cani­
siu~ 110sse~Ml!8two 6'7'' pluycrn.
Wnrr~n Plant antl Ken Spisiuk.
and /J. well-rounded scoring puneh .
In tlwir first
game, Canisin,;
plnc,•,I four men in douhle figure, .
lcrl hv .Ion Nit-hole' 111points.

1

LIB, however, ha ~ shown tha!
height doesn't mean cverythi"!!'·
Lc1I hy NOl'\YOOll Goodwin, 8\'CI'·
nl(ill){ 23.6 points per ,rnmc, thr
Bulls have yet to he de[eate,J.

Cornell handed down a nol Quite
of U B until they tied the ,core uriex11ecled io.g defeat to tt1e var.
Ill :15~% before the half en,led. ally Bulls last Snturday, emerging
victorious hi ea~b of rhe three
Thel'ellfter, going ahead hy H wen pon com peti Uon~.
points midway through tl1e ser­
Tbe usually strong roll squa d
ond hull, UB showed the m11rk of was hardest hll despite ettc,rts by
a ¢ood hnll club by keeping its t,olh Bnrry Cnnler and Howarrl
composure unde1· pre~s,u·i-. Niag­ Goldstein to eveu the score, wb!oh
ended with a 7.2, loss for• UB. Cnn.
ara cnme hnrk to tie the scon• 'il ·
te1• won . one, lost two:
Gold­
71, when the Bulls retaliate, ! t ,, llleln won one. lost one; and both
,._in liy four points.
Joe ~•erscb and Bob Zelle! were
defeated by all (heir opp ,onents.
A win of this type wo11l,l huv~
ltonuic Schwartz, n Cornell sopl1.
tn h~ co11~idcred a team victory,
nnd 1&lt;o
n or UB fencing coach Sid
where every man on thP ~quad Schwartz, shut out hla tbr,ee foll
nm&lt;Je un impol'tant contrihution, opponente, Ro11nie U•nnlly leads
but Goodwin and Hefael pu~ fol'Lh the er)ee squfld, but wae ca lled !n
outstanding
performances,
Good­ to replacQ Mike Snn!lers, Comoll
win had 33 points and Hetzrl's nil follman whn wa ~ iuiurell earlier
11mund hustle sparked thr tc•nm, thfs ~euson.
IJick Smith nnd Dennis Zyndn ,za·, e
The epee squad fared 9,ome­
the Bull s backbonl'd Rh'cn~lh l,y
what better, lo-sing to Cornell
pulling rlown more than LO , e­
by only a sHght 6.3 margin,
hounds apiece.
Bill Wilkenson , squad cap,taln ,

Fri.lay night, the Fl' osh mel f'ln,·
of the hest overa ll freshman teams
thnl Niugum has hud in the 111st Monday, UB wili Ince the Buf­
fow ye11r~. The Bull• overtnnw futo State Fr·eshmen and 1I'hu1·,c!ay
a team or good size anti w~ighl will meet the Gannon Junio:· Var·
by putting forth n tn,menriou ~ .si t y. lloth games will be play i•&lt;Iat
l.l'um ,,ffol't and wel'e victol'iou~ h~• ho,ne sta1·ting at 6:16 p.m ,

personally responslblu
for
those
three
poin ts, shutting
out all hl• oppone nts In the
usual Wilkenson tradition.
Cor­
nell garnered
their six poolnu
at the collective
expena ,e of
Herb Bodecker, Frank Pooenco
and Steve
Spero , who lost
three,
two and one re11pec.
was

By BARRY EPSTE IN
\ ot gaining 1·eco&amp;11ition that ther ,
The enlbu sh1sm tor Ice hockey ls need ,aod desire for u University
ot Oa, alhougb quiet, Is still very or Buffalo lea hockey tenru .
muoh alive . Car l Balland, member
Carl Balland mentioned
that
and an organizer ot this group, Jn.
some Muny teams, Cornell and
formed this reporter on th e pro.
Ithaca,
may posalb ly acrlm.
gress or the Ice hockey team and
mage the U B players,
Also
it seems that the desire for n Unl­
the University of Rocheater and
versit)' of Buffalo hockey team In
Rochester Institute of Technol­
the future Is quite strong.

ogy are listed

as poHlb,e

op.

~'rom the orlgioa l article pl'loled
ponentB.
concerning the rormatlon of an ice
'The horkey gro up i$ still operat
hockey learu, 40 men m1tde contaul Ing on 1t club bRals and ia tryl11r
a11r1 two meetings were held with to seek recognition from the nctlv
nbout 30 men pt,1• !ties commlLLee n" a school acth&lt;lt)
ntlen dan ce
meeting.
Monday and Tuesday to nllruct more stu dents, to 111ak1
nigh ts were designated aa practic e bOL·key a more r,ermnnent ncth1t )
nights a nd Port Eri e Arena wus on cn 1111ms,and JJOSs!bl)' to gnl 11
secured UN the rink ut which prn c- ac&lt;·e~s 10 fund s to hel11 wlt,h ex
Uces would hs held . The coat of penses and in curred in renting 0111
the rink Is be i ng paid for by th\' lhe Forl El'ie Arena llS 8 Ill'B C
men porticipnlln g who also supply ticP. rink ,
Although ther e luts been som,
U1elr own equlprnent.
Th e athl e tic ilepartn•eot, 111 •nD- ciuiN in this urea of UR aU1letlcs
11ort or th e gro1111, hns sup11lled ihes e students are very lnterest e,i
scrlnnna!(e Jerslex . 1'h e men pra c. in 1iromotlng ke hock ey at th, ,
1Ice rro,i1 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. So OR Stat e llnlvers!ty or New York a t
It 8londs now, 26 lo 30 men ere Buffalo nud LIJelr enthusiasm and
pr·arlicing l'Cl'Y late at night !!Very ectorts mny be the precuraor of ou,
Monday and Tuesday, lu the hopes ice hockey team.

I

or

I

tlvely.
'The HabeI1non u l~o lost 6.3 to
lh e Cornell squad . Jerry Marshak
prevnlled,
wlonin)( two or three
bout~. Mark F'ox won on,,. lost
two, and Jay Oaplen won l!hut
n n l O nod three .
Oornell freshmen experle1~ced a
close she 1•e Just scooping the UJ3
rroeh l)y one point for a 13-12 vic­
tory. The showing by UB's Gerry
Arouorr wn~ the highest ,of the
meet, n~ he drnmatlt:ally Mh
,ut out
all Hve of his opponents.
Tomorrow th e Bulls Jour11ey w
$yraru•e
for some splr'ileil com•
ll~lltlon w!lb th e Ornngemeu.

Ther~ will be a meetinig of
all intloor track and field can­
didate s, both varRit)• and fr&lt;JSh­
n,an today, at :1::lO p.nr. in the
Clark Gym b11~ement. Please he
prompt .

Sophomore
games

-SPORT COATS•

HERRINGBONES
blue. rh11rcoal. bl'own, light
•

I

forward Gary Hanley figures as key man In UB
against Buffalo State and Wooster next week.

gJ'C)'

CAMEL
•

TWEEDS
SPECIAl PURCHASE

BLAZERS
Re~. $37 ,60 now

$30

SUITS
SHARKSKINS
three piece-hlue,
g1·ey, bl'own, olive,
grey / black
UB'• Norwood Goodwin (21) and Niagara 's Rastus Phillips
24) battle for rebound under Bulle' offensive board.
Buffalo"s
8111 Bartl( (13), a , promlelng 6·6 center, alao vie• for ball.

CHEVIOT TWEEDS
thl'e e piece-grey / black
blu e/o live , bl'OWll

- - ---------------------Buffalo Winter Sport~ Teams
Demonstrate Winning Capacity
llll'H winter sports teams are
petCor miu g at a 84.6% pnce with
11 wine and 3 losse s during the
tlrott two weeks or competition ,

HERRINGBONES
vested , dee pest
char coal black

EAGLESHIRTS
button down·whiw,

wins over Canlalus
(97-73),
Waterloo (77-45) and Niagara
(78-74),

lllll Su1Jtord' s \"11ralty
. ijWlmm ers
are 2-0 with wins over BulTalo
State (71-2 4) and Cortland Sta t e
(49-46). Bob Bed eli's f r eshma n
•wlmmers arci 2. 0, having dunked
llulTalo Stale (72.19\ lltld Nia.gnro
hy u 69-i7 score.
Th e only lo SHt&gt;S oo tbt.-l 1B le dger
50,. Thl' young Bulls ar e mastering
Serf 's c on ti o u II r o ffe use mor e were s uffered by the VArslt)' fenc.
e rs to Corne ll (19-Sl and the fresh •
qui ckly than ex11eC'led and their
mn11swor ds men to Cornell (13-l tl·
man . to .man d~teu sive la otk e bllv o
llmitPd
O llllODlllltH lo au 81'(,roge
YarAliy couch Sid Sc hwart z su w
score or fiG,5 11t•rgame. Th e Bulls hi• so n, Hon , win three foll ev~uts
ba vP :&lt;VNa,:e d ,5 .2fi 11er gu m~
to ll•ad Corn ell to the win. Off to
n sl 'l"' •t~ rl , Rrhwo rtr. - wlih on.­
Ed Muto'&amp; rre ■ hman cager•
or tbe nutlon's tlnest conthl ng rl'chave ~mazed everyone enroute
ordii - looks forward to another
to a 3.0 mark with lmpre11l,ve
11o&gt;od
year ' tor th e sword1&lt;men.

blue, maize, linen,
bl ue herringbone,
olive, gl'ey, blue

Sample

learns are 6-1
and tht&gt; fre,,hmen ore 6'-1. The
Basketball Bulle or Dr. Len Serf ua.
Lint are 4-0 with wins over Semoton /,%-53), Toronto (S0-4li) . Duck.
nell CiS-i2 and Albanr State (5,Q.
nurr a lo 'e Vur~lty

t

nl\l')'

blue, light grey, olive

has a

~

complete
Formo.l
Rental
Service
for every
occasion.

STRIPES
tab collar-blue,
white, blu e, g1·ei·
hrow n st1•ipes

O'CONNELL
D1.'fr,,u11f

I

• While dinner jackets
• Black trousers complete
with cummerbund &amp; ti•

7. 195
S"mple - 1631 Herte l A.ve.

phone .TF 6-1234

LuCAs ,.,,
CHELF

S1tilN

1111!1

.'1poi't ( •m,t ~

L__ii1,,,_.
in_..r,_·
,·et_.

3240 MAIN

•

�Friday, Decemb er 14, 1962

SPECTRUM

r:-~
--

SPORTSCIRCLE

AnExtra-Special
Yuletide
List

PAGENINETEEN

Frosh Star·
Norwood Goocllwln
In Action

Mermen
NipCortlan

Th e l' tl ~wlmmlng tenm r11lll~d
tor IIH •eco nd victory Jo two stnrts
Saturd11y, by turning back Cortland
StatP, 49.46, In the los er's pool. Tbl'
· Bullij, wh o were IJehlud enterin g
1he ftnol two events, stormed on
to victory when Alex Haa se won
the 200.ynrd brenststroke
nod the
learn took the 400.yard relay .
Two pool re co rds were estab.
li~hl'd In tbls meel.. ll B'a Jim Oros•

By Jim Baker
_When. .iolly old St. Nick assumes his annual chimney
~eta1l Chl'IStmas. Eve, the~e will be several of his unsuspect111ghosts who will be seeking very special gifts:
Coach Offenha,nier - two 250 pound tackles
field goal kicker - right, coach'!).

by a -.1,uo the 200.yard tr eeHlyle 111
2: 03.7 and C'orlland'~ Lyon Grogan
finished th e 600.yu.rd freestyle in
6; 46.0 lnrldl•ntnlly , both ur t.beee
c.vents nre new to collegiate ewlm­
mfng. T he 200 was formt' r ly the
220 and the 500 wns tile HO .
C'roehy'a 220.yard perforwsn~ •e le
BlNOn 1111re cor d . He had ~Pt tbe
old mark lMI Wl'i&gt;k, when he was
limed In 2: 08.S.

Coac h Serf ustirli - two 6-6 for wards and a 6-8 center
( plus a noose for Barry Epstein).
Rya11 - another twenty-gallon Texas style hat
(and that junior college quarterback he's bee11rav­
ing about for umpteen months).

Buddy

Floyd Patt er1:10
11 SotmII L i..~ton.

a book entitled Ways to A Mi d

Dr. Miller - a lifetime subscripti on to Life Magazine.
ff(J;/'1'1/ Wismer somebody who likes him (So Jong,
Harr y - it's been vivid!).
Ralph Wilson - a few signat ure s (No, not yours,
Harr y!)
Mr. Peelle -

a new fieldhouse and a book of Purdue
songR (not love i&gt;.o
ngs, either).
Dr, Abrahamso11 - a new suit of clothes (He's down
to dung ar ees and a T-shirt, folks).
Rnn fn111·a111- a steel hockey stick tailor-made for Red
Sullivan's next visit to Buffalo.
Area cage coaches - some more of that good home­
style refereein'.
B1w1·11Epstei?1 - the autobiography of Coach Serfus­
tini.
Cookie Gilch ri..~f - a chlorofor m pill for Dallas' Ahner
Hayne s.
Dr. Satter ( Albany State Coach) - a book entitle d How
to WvnF1·ientls and lnflu nwe Peo1Jle.
Oakl am.d foo t ball fa.,ns - a football team (or at least ,
one little win).
Bill Everett -and Jack Sharp(! - m1 office girl to even
the odds in Room 104.
Ed Muto - a two-way radio to be used between the
referee a nd h_imself during all UB frosl1 basketball
games.
Cassiu.~ Clay - a paten t on the book title: I'm tlu·
Greatest!
( Why, who else could make such a
claim, Cassius?)
S t. Nick - a map to guide him away from these chim­
neys.

Junior flnman Royoe
the close supervision
In the 50
speclallzea
fn these two even ts
vlotory potslble .

All-America
Selections
Listed;
BokerWinsQuorlerboc•
Position
RADNOR, Pu. West
COI\St
lo0t bnll 8tll'!:0d bl'lck lhl s seaso n
to provlcl e three 11layers on tbe
l!l62 All-Amerlco team picked by
members Of the Amerlcnn Football
• •ooches Assol'lutlon .

film

studies

done

Women 's P.E.
Registration

XEROX
COPIES

111 coo11erat1011

Two stRt'li rrom $late of Orego n
•oms - quarterback
1'erry Bnk­
,. Oregon
State·~
~11elllaoular
assi ug and running
,ipeclnllst;
•ckle Steve Burrell or Oregon 11d It al Bedsole, Southern Cnll­
,1rn1a·s exceptio nal 1mss catching
nd, were the three Pacinc Co ast
layers selected.
They were the
r•l West Co11st 1&gt;la)•ers voted to
hi' coac h es'
All-America
since
1'llll co,1d 1es voled 1hom~Plves
nd Chl'i s Burford
of Stanford
a llrw hleudh,g 1,ower, ~11.e and
.·us picked in 195H.
mobility.
Put Richter, \\'l sco n.
lti,sults of the voting or more ,I n's 011tsl11ndlng 111
1"' c•~t!'hor. nud
han 60U coaches at 260 lea d ing llt:dsole a r e the e n(lg,
Bell ls
today by Joined at tac kle by Barnett. u 252•·hool were announced
1111 ~lnrrny, associutlon
president pound"r
fr,1111 Fremo111, l'oliror ­
nd Uuke bead coac h, In the De• nm.
••mher I issue or TV" Gulde mag­
The Texas L,onghorns' Jobuny
•lne.
\\'alter
C'am11 orlglnRle ,I
Treadwell,
the sma llest lineman
laP eoud1es' teom 73 yeart! ago.
ot rn4 pou11d&lt;:1,
nnd Rurus Guth ri e,
MutTay said the ~lldwest an d u 231-1,ounder from Georgia 'feeh,
, notb also suppli ed three
play • WOO thl' guni·d slots.
Rouodillll'
r• eneh ror the ftrM team . with out lhe tlr~t teum Is Lee Roy Jor ­
he l::u~t :ind Southwest
gaining /lnn, Alabama's
excellent
ce nt er
Ingle selections.
Bobby
Oell, linchacker who hails, HPJnopl'ialely
Jordan
lllnnesota's
sw lft•movl111: tackle rro111 ~:xcel. AIRbamn.
rom Shelby, N'. C., wns the on ly made the c&lt;,athe•· second tenm
l !ltll
re11enter and beenme
th~ Inst ~en•on . All hut Bedsole era
1:011ber .,.alayer MP1iiors.
hltd co nsecutive
•• 111.ake the squad . nuarct Tom
The roadies ulsu selected 8Ptu1 1d
'l rown was named in 1960.
and third unit.~. Sharfng roglonnl
Competition fol' the qunrtl'a ·huek honors 011 the second unil arc the
••hl ~lurray ~aid, wus U1e tight. Mld\\'esl and Pariftl' Coaat, each
1'he South
st in y..ars wltl1 Iloker edgi n g with rout selections.
·11111111
•~ Oeori:e ~Jira and Tom ~uppl!ed I w,, ru1d lhe East one.
lly,,, ·~. :-lorthwestern 's Mlit-k llOPh­ The tltlrd team !In~ more geo­
•111&lt;,r
P .\! yer• was voted "Sopbo- t:t'llt1hkal holnn c e with three euch
11orr, ur tile \"par" by t he &lt;'oach­ 1rom the South and :l!ldwest. two
~. w ht• made th~lr xt&gt;lectlon nu rrom the West Coast and Klngle
he hasl• or 11etlfonnl ob~ervntlon~. nom1n~P~ rron1 the East, ~loun­
&lt;'lllllini:n•1Inrts and' 1,o~t-1:ume tnln ::.rntes and Southwe"t .

QUICK, DRY

The women's physical e1luc11tio11
&lt;ll'J1n1·tmcnt nnnounccd thl' s~ront l
&gt;ee1114.,~ter1·C!~slr ntion procetlurPH
Wnm en ;tualents will rei:istl' r fol'
NO W A1' THE
n ext ~•n 1cster cla,~es, F l'iday, Jan,
I K frvm ~-12 110011, from 1-4 p.m ,
BUFFALO TEXTBOO K
S11taml11y, Jun . W, ~tudent, muy
STORES, INC .
r egi~ ter from 0-12 noon. All regis·
( forn1&lt;•rly Teck Univ . Du,nclt)
t 1'11tio11
will he held in the gym.

wit b '011stman J&lt;odak Co.
Joining Ilakllr. who haij J&gt;iled up
more th un 4,100 yards in lOtal of­
reuse in three seasons, ure thre~
ha cks who pro1•ide n balance or
s11eed and 11ower.
The hnl!bncks
are J er ry Stovall, LSU's 195-pound
runner
nnd kl ckel' with u tale n t
for key uashes In tight s1mts, Hlld
Roger
Kochman,
l'l•garded
as
Poon Stnte's
finest har k sl n cP
Snlmes,
Leony
)Joore.
George
Michig an Stole c11plUin with ,·er­
veruatlllty
as a runn er- blocker-d e.
fenslve nee, won the fullback po~t.

Collister prepa for upcom in g meets under
of usfstant
Coach Bob Bedell. Colllater
and 100-yard freestyle .
H la triumph•
against Cortland made Buffalo'• narrow

3610 Moin Street
TF 3-7l30

F't,r Shortron

Pri ntin g
or
~licrofilm priC&lt;'s call:

Norwood
Goodwin
(21)
11
shown In act of si nking 3 key
jump &amp;hots aga lna t Nlag1ara
frosh. Goodw in pa ced Buffa lo'•
78-74 triumph over the Baby
Eagles , aa he netted 33 pollnb
and spearheaded
th e UB t~,am
all evening.

TuckerQuickCopy
l74 PEARLST.
TL 2-'&gt;214

It's The Latest Word
and
The whole ca.mpus is talking about 'em

CllBBOLS

15c HAMBURGE
'Rs

,JUST 10 MINUTESFROM CAMPUS TO THE
MOST 0ElECTABllEEATINS TREATYOU'VE HAD IN A LONG, L.ONG, WHILE.
A Serving - o Second at CARROLS
Hofflbure•n

, . , • , , 1Jr

Hot Ctto&lt;:okat•

,

12c:

t':!-c!l::•k
S~o~r~.
•~•n~

C~ffM bu,gon .... 19c
French Fries • . • . . 12c CoffH • • •
. _ , • , • 1Oc
Mllk .. .... ...... Uc Solt D,lot,., ..... 10c &amp; Uc

�SPECTRUM

PAGETWENTY

Friday, De ce mber 14 , 196

A Look Over Our Shoulder •

Governor
Rockefeller
visited
the campus In mid - September
and in an
addr ess in the gym commented
on the th e n recent State merger.
Later he
toured th e Union ,
Her e he Is gr ~eted by Miss Haa s as stud e nts look on .

•

••

Rem ember when the weather was warm enough so that you could study
outdoors ? Here the camera catches a coed taking advantage
of this rare

o~:currence.

N o i t 's not Roc k H ud s~ n that has r ap t a tte nt ion
stud ent s a re, por t of an edu ca ti on c lass .

T h• M osley lec tu re rece iv ed pr ess coverage ooth locally
nationa lly. H ere two ph otographers edg e i n f or a picture ?.S
Mrs. K lein. wi f e of a loca l rabbo, addressed t he f ormer Fas .
c1st leader duruig t he q ues t io n per iod. ,

S t ud ents

fill

the

Norton

hours.

Old you say thM

bricklayers

n ame was

Beethoven?

of thes e coe ds .

cafeteria

Recognizt

Plwtos 11'-1'0111 Fll(/old

during

anyone?

Th e

the

lunch

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY 01' NEW YCl~RKAT BUFl'Al.0
Undef eoted
Foee Alban y
And Vount ed
(See Pa.q,·

Bull s
State
Army
II)

llor Otto il,
On Fre e Trip
To Cubo
I....
•ri&gt; ('11{1~ I)

SPECTlRUM

Ho. 13

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY , DECEMBER 7 , 1962

VOLUME 13

Rossiter Calls for Unity
Against Split Government
By JOEY

ELM

1

Nation~ls Disbanded;
State Affirms Policy

r,f 1nutu11I tl'URt between Cong,·e,s
ond ro ntnln 11U
The Iloard of Trustees of the State Uni\'ersily r~
the elements
of II good hoNJ~
, ,tllirmed early this week its policy which dOi!s not permit
trade." ,\oliclpatlou
of the fruit ci
national Rocial fraternities and sororities within the State
uf friendly compromise frequently
University System.
cbaratterl1.e Ute rel&amp;tlons between
Dr. Richard A. Sigge lkow, dean of !ltudents , in addressCong,•esa and the President. Moral­
I
lu~
re1iresentnth·e~
or campus
which the prealde nl• of I.F,C,
ity enters into the Jnteracl!ous be.
Ureel! or1,'llnltatlous Mondn;, Raid
and Panhellenic are membe;...
tween the two.
h, wa• uot!Oed by President HamIs be ing asked to develop a
Rosalter stated, "There exists lo­
ilton, through Cbnnuello1· (' 0.
plan for compliance with 11111
day a clear reciognltion thnt the
l•'urnas. or the llonrd'e decision.
ruling. Both lFC and Panh•I rulAS i,ay 'pl11y to win but not tu
Tbe llnlverslly has been usked
Ionic Counolla a re Invited to
destroy.''
ro oom1,ly with the policy, and a
es tablish proceduro
for car.
Important element• In e potteru
maximum 11erlod of Ove ac11de.m.lc rylng out thl• plan ,
of modern leglslutlve cooperation
~•ears, ending Jnne, 1967. baa been
dictate, not coopel'atlon pure and
Net n~ the time span !or dleat111· J\ijsoclote dean, Jeannette Soucl­
der. who Is also dean of wo.men,
simple but cooperation that ·•moves
iatlon.
will net ns tbo liaison ror tbo d111111
tind sbukes,"
The President anti
DR. THEODORE FRIEND
The administration bUd prevlous- of students'
ofnce with the na..
Cong1·ess WOJ'k togethet·, but the
1,, rl)(lueated
throu!!,h President tloMl o!lkoa. De"n SCuddc r will
President has a slight edge. "All
1·1.imllton'ij
ofHce
au
opportunity
&amp;lao coor&lt;llullle with tho CAl)ll)UII
branches of the government
urtJ
!
lo aMk the trUHtlJeij lo reconsider
gro1111sthe ultlmat~ t•rocQduru e••
egual, only some are more 01111111
,ollcy,
but
the
Boord
reor.
llw
1
1ablt$hed.
tb11n others,';
nrmed current policy.
The resoll ,tlon 11dopted ln Octc&gt;­
Dr. Rossiter immmed u11 the retu.
Dean Slggelkow, when quea!loo of the Pre•ldenl to the other
ber or 11163 by lhe Board ot
Southeltijl A•la will be tbe tovh•
tloned on the poa1iblllty of ad•
branches of t he government in the o[ no o.ddresa Monday by Dr. ThuTrustees, a nd which I~ beln,t re .
mlnlstratlve
1upport
for a
previous statement
Implying thu1 odore ~'\·hind, third st&gt;eaker In the
oturnmd here la 111 t,&gt;Uowa:
Greek attempt to fight th&amp; dethe Pr88ldent Is more powerful Prel&lt;!lure Pain.ts serins. The ,ilerlea
clslon said th a t the admlnlaRESOLVED , that no 1oolal
than Congress, aud Is steac)lly be­ defllH with tho confrontatttm
tratlon could no long e r contest
of
organization shall bo permlti.d
coming more so. Oul's le a world llusMiau uud Ame,·lcau torelgi~ pol.
the luue for the Board had
in any State.operated
unit of
where executives a re domin110t a ud iC)' 111 pto1t1h,MI world troubll•
decided. He oomment ed, "We
the Sta t e Unlvllrslty wh loh IIH
the Presl deo.t's power Is positive .
epotK.
,-re now a part of the State
any direct or lndlreo t •fflll1~
His po~ture Is that ot a leader .
lion or eonneotlon w l!h •1tY
Dr. J.'rl~nd, au iiuthvl'lty nn Asln.
Unlveralty of New York, we
C-ongreRs, on t.be other hand, le
nat ional or other organizatio n
wlll comply with the ruling,"
more or Iese or r1 referral body bas \l'lll't&lt;lud extensively tb1·ougb.
out1fde th e part lcufar un it ;
out the eounu·tes ot the C:1rle11t. A que11Uon which eltecls the fu.
1tnd ite vower I• negative.
and be It furthe r
After ~ l'lld un t Ing from \Vlll!Bm&amp; ture or the Greeks hero ts whetb~r
College In 1963, be went ,ou tll or not the c:um11
u• traternltle8 and
IUlSO LVED. thul. no 1uoh IOQ!at
receive his MA nnd PhD from sororities will be nblc to Initiate org11ulmt1on, lo Polley or practice,
Vule.
thlH year's pledge cln&amp;li. Dean SIi(· shall 011erale under llny 1'1118whloll
i:alkow said alnce Ile badu't board barR studonlij on account of r ace,
In 19S7, Or , Fr iend held con­
anything to the contrary be ns- color, rollgloo. cree d, national o,.
currently a Fulbright Gran1: for 1~umed they ~ould, but udded ~~
fgju or othe,· art.lllclal criteria i and
atudy In tho Philippine• and a
wlll rt'fer the &lt;tUl!kllo11to A1hnny be It flllber
grant-ln..;ald fr.om the American
tor rlnriftcnllon.
RlllSOLV!lll), tho.l the Preal dent
Phllo•ophlcal Society. He Wal
011~ ~orol'ily memb11r commented be, und hereby Is. authorized
al10 the recipient of the R,ock­
to
that ODl'I' student• reull.ie the nil• take ,rnch steps ns he may deem
efeller Foundation lnternatl,~nat
tlooals ,viii be disbanded, they will 1111pro11rlatoto implement tbla pol­
Relat io n• Stipend In 1961,
be leHij wtlllr11: to l'llBll the Greek icy, Including the determination
of
A mell\ber ot the history dep11rt. group• and this WIil influence the which stude nt org11nlzat.1ong a re
mcnt, Ur. Friend Joined the faculty number of rusheeR.
eoclnl, as dlst1011ullhed from 1cbol­
or the Unive rsity lo 1969 encl pree.
Nothing was said nbout local aatlc or relfgioue, and bis dect.alo11
e11tly teaches the course. The Fa r grou 1•• or profeeslonnl fraternities
Hhllll be tl!lal.
CL INTON ROSSIT~R
East in Modem Times. Ht iis row 11nd soro1it1es, ~o they wlll carry
The State entered tho area at
working on a book enti tl ed "Be. on as befo re . It was noted that
eocilll organizations
In 1953 whe11
"The President
le a ba111B1er tween
Two Empl r ea: Am,erlca , Arnold Air Society Is not consid­
ClrP~k groups oo two dllferent
made ror striking, Congress is on Japan
and Philippine
lnclepen • ered a aocinl fruternlty and will State oampue, Buff'll.lo en d Albany,
anvil," be concluded.
tht•re!ort- not be nlfeoted.
dence, 1929-1942.''
Wldbed to admit to th ei r orgaaJao.­
The ~atlonnlg may act a,11 "free tlon " Negro and .i. Jewllh bo:,:
Ill• other act!~ It les lr,elutle
member•hll)s tn the Amerlcu, llls­ ugents '' lo protesting the declslnu, reav~ctlvely, but were retu1ed to
can oo Ito !11.18by their natlonala. ln UIU
torlcal Asso olallo n and the Aesocl­ but the administration
case tho students ot tb11 arOUJMJ
atlon for Aston Studies. Cur1rently loui:er contest Jt.
Involved motivated
a apltt wltb
The University Senate Com•
he Is President of the Omicron
the nationals
mltteo on fraternal affalr1, of
law, lhe voter ls the la11otrecour~e Cbn11ter of Phi Bela Kappa.

·rt ll'.lkes a united cottntry to run uod the Presld0ot,
, /llvl ded gov1c1rnment," so stated
111· Clinton Hoss!ter. speaking on
•he "President
nnd Congress,"
wo,tnes dn}• in the Nort,m Qoorer.
nee theater.
IW. Rossiter, who lti presently
the John L. Senior Professor of
.-\mel'ican Institutions
at Cornell,
previo usly taught
at Claremont
College In Call[ornin, nt Princeto n
,n d also at an ln.11lltutlon fo Sntz.
hurg, Austria.
He Is lhe attthor of Conservatlam
1n America among olher books . He
.,l)tv ed on the Rocl,efeller Founds.
•Ion nod ls 11re'Henlly on the board
,,t the Woodrow Wilson Founda­
tion. He has been the past presl­
J.••nt tor both the New York Politi1•al Science Association
and tbtt
\merJcan Studies AJlsl)C)
la Uon.
In dla0u11ing the relation
bet ween the Prnident
an d tho
Congrea■, Or. Rosalter made It
clear he ha• no lnaide "dope"
on Wa■hinci ton, o.c. His data
c ame from general background ■.
' ••Our baalc 1yatem of govern ment is one of inhorrent con,
tentlon," ■tated Or. RoHiter .
By thi1 Dr, ft o ■aiter means, our
1y1tem l1 one In which che ck a,
res tra int.
and oonfllote are
preva le nt.
"T be Pret1ldent or Ule Unite d
:-!tales Is tugged to the le
"el Care policies ' by the bl
lies.
'The Jorge cities characterize
the
more resttes8 problem - plag ed
oeopl&amp;. Congress on the other h d
l8 tugged to lbe l'lght. This j ;i es..
1,eclnlly t ru e of tbe House ot Rep.
cPijentatlvea."
The Hottse, S&amp;nate and Pres ident
ire equally Independent
of each
nrhe r. De11plte clashes that ooeur
he! ween tbe President
nod t.bo
House, and the Senate our govern .
me nt exhibit~
coo1,eratlon.
The
'!Uestlo n then arises bow can co.
•we ratfon occur out of a pattern
that calla for cooteullon!
Dr. Ros.
, lter olfered a series of hypotbeseft ,
'·Political ties," eatd Dr. Roealter,
" ivhlch bind the President
and
1'ongreaa exert a lll&amp;Jor Influence

I

. d W'1IISpeak
Fr1en
.la
On Southeast As

I

I

I

ACLU Director Addresses Students
On 'What Price Academic Freedom'
By GORDON

McCORMICK

Tbe newly appointed
Natloonl
01rector of the .Aroerlca.u Clvft
l,1hertles Union. John J , Pembert&lt;&gt;n, Jr. addressed
students
and
nu•u1bers of the Nlagar11 Frontier
ilri1nrh of tbe ACLU on tbe topic

for aupporl.
He lllustrnted this
polUL by quoting Judge Learned
Hand who stated . '"Liberty must
lie In !he h._.u,·rs or men n.od wo.
men ...

Concert Set for Tomorrow Night in Gym;
Dakota Sta1tonand the Tarriers to Appear
or th~ Staton soun d Is thllt her
• lm:lng provides new emotional
,·oolext~ for fAmlllnr lyrics. tuning
cild son,: favontea
Into esoltlog
'""' hlLM
. Her most romemboted
11,cordln,:~ have Included "Potsr,"
und "Bla ckbirds of 19!9," u w•ll
n~ "ntoomy Sun day ."

lh dlsc11~~in1t tha vroctlrnl ImDakota Staton nod The Tnrrlerd
What Price Acndemlc l&lt;'l'eedom" nhtmentatlou
or •uch a ,•lew he will verrorm In concert toma,rrow
'•11•sduy evening.
mentioned tbe C'ulf!ornln ACLLl's night In rite ~ym . Sponsored by
Jr,, stoled I.hat Am&amp;rlcau tree- drive to defeat the F'rnnclg amend . tlw ron&lt;·••n rllnimlllel' . Uw 11ro­
1 •111ls that proleclloo alforded 111. ment. That 11mendmeot would ha VP. ~•·a111will h~J:111111 ~ 1,.111.
111uions, srhoh1r11 and students he Nald, t•x.te11tled callfornf!l's exMl•~ !!talon wtll sir.g a wide
rn111:c of soni:a from pnpulnr hnl.
r ,,., lmpro11er intervenlloo
tu the
i~ling- pnnorn11.1a o! blil~ limiting ind k 11, blu~H- She 1~ MUJtltOrH
•d l)y
•lrs uit or Lruth. and Lu provld,1 subversive a&lt;uvltl es. The amend. h r·r own Instrumental
group
oerlenoe for students
In II vlt1g ment would !1uve ullowed 11nygrnnd I
The Tarrlers are a folksi,og .
1,,. deo1ocratlc
procoss nH con.
illl")' tll lab~I any l11dlvld11nl or
Ing group who have &amp;pent 1;he
•" !Pd lo the mere le111'nlng of organization
ug tiubvt&gt;rslve and to
paat year making peraonal ~P·
' 111ocratlc theory.
pearancea with Bobby Oal'in.
limit their rights und 1n·!vlle~e~
1

I

Poetry Accepted
Tho Collow1ng 1tudeat11 baTo had
their IIIH.IIUB BCCOl)tOd tor pobll­
ratlon by tbo National Po;,IJ')' All•
KOCll\tlOO.Tho worka will ap~a,
In tbe Annual AntboloST or 0011•111
Poetry.

I

First Amendment

Mr. Pemberton
then d escribed
!he Firet Amendment rreedo11111of
• ~ePcb f\S&amp;embly
apd religion
'lt icb are st.a led ht absolute tenne
u lbp Illll ot Rights. Coogresa can
,,a ke no laws lo lhla area. He rur••r stressed the aspect o1 r ellgl.
,u• treedom stating that govern.
1mnt may not participate
ID this
"" &lt;lIn any way,

All

dtliena

on this hn•ls .

The C:illrorola
branrh using
meager r~•ources was able to point
up aorue or the basic coostltutlllnnl
freedoms with which t.his bill wa s

I

The group is composed of Elob
Carey, guitar; Clarence Co,,p.
er, piano; Eric Welube
·rg,
banjo; and Marshall Brlokm ,tn,
string ban.

Th&lt;' •tudonta

h,.t~ tJpr,n LJ n~cog.
Jun arll•t for Ille 1ia1 11 U
commentln~ on her c1ir,•er

in conflict. They nlao were able to nhed
get rbe major and minor candl.
dotes runolng for ottice to dt1cu8B
"I ...ever really ••J)lr,•d t u h1• "
and debate the .Francia amendment .
singe,· : · Dalcota de clnre• "I •tnrttid
As a result, he ntaled, t.be bill singln~ aw a kid to make ,,xt1·i1
Ile then contrasted
the se rela.
was defeated by l/1)\1,0110 vote• ont money and It wus excitin g. Tbon, I
oely nbsolut&amp; First Amendment
wbt&gt;o I made my way home, l ,rnol{ j
'n• odum s wllh ae11domlo freedom of 4,000,000 cut .
to bit~ fo(ld and pay thu reut. I
' h!~h. as such, ha.s little basis In , ~Ir . Pemberton closed ble df,. r1,o.llJ. dJdn't know whlll I w"'lll-"'1
l,,11·. 'l'bls airects the l'ole of those CUMlon by 111111111
tltfl local bnrnch to be ntU Inter on 111llt o ."
11
who wish to protect academic free­ to conside r tblA 41roct ll_ollUcal
lt bas been a11ld lhAl tbe 8&lt;1!&lt;:r!\l
lc•1n. $!nee I.here 11 little baals In approach.

worn

1104 tllolr

Mt , Jo Anoe tue \;
Haud Solo, Mona Coll.II; T he God­
deaa of Napla., Joan Alb&amp;Nllt.;
Johnny Luva Mary, Adellene Mar­

,\thk .; Staton

l'rt• : · Return

Y"~'"

I

tin. Progreu, Shlrle1 Wagnu;
A Surge, Maureen Wai.h .

I

r1111ADlhOIOIY 11 ll COUll&gt;llltl•m
,,r 1be bodt !)Ottey wrlU• n
col.
h•1t• m~n and womeo, NIPNIIODUnc
IIVl•I')' IO('tlOn 0( Ule OOOllll'), Stl.
•clftin• wore made trom &amp;ho Uuma..
and• Ill 1)04ffllt .-.b:alttl4.

t.1111

b,

DAKOTA

8TAT01t

�S PECTRU

PAGE TWO

Library Christmas Concer t
Set for Saturday , Dec . 15

Christmas Hours
For U B Librarie1s

jorlng In drama and speech . Mr.
Bearce an.d Mr. Wagner, both atu•
Tbe annual OhJ'llltmaa ooncert
dents lD the music department,
wlU be presented next Satutday are frequent performers
In the
and Sunday In the main rMdlng Butta lo area and In opera programs
room of • Lockwood Memor1al Ll· nt tile University.
brary. Both programa, which are
"Tt,e Magnlficat'' according
under the •ponso rshlp ot the mualo
department
and the ll'rlende of
to Mr. Beckwith, "la one af
Lockwood Memorial Library, wlll
Bach'• moat brill la nt ahd ex- ,
begin a.t 8: 30 p.m.
citing works, even though It
All at udeol.8 and f11cultr a.re In•
11 far shorter and more con­
vtted to attend. Admission la free,
clae than his orato rios and
but Ucket.8 wblcb can be obtained
PaHlons. The mu1lc speaks
at the Baird Hall box otftce are
neceeaary, No telephone reeerva • with dlrectne11 a nd alm pllc lty,
Uona w1ll be accepted.
In no ott&gt;er work of Bach are
the eontrutlng
color, of the
The program will be give n
by the UB Men '• Glee Club,
vario us Instrume nts - oboea,
Women'• Chorale, both under
flutes, vlollna, bassoon,, t rum.
the direction
of Robert s.
pets - used more excit ing ly
Beckwi t h, an d tt,e UB Bras•
to
br ing out the character of
En1e mb le under Frank J. Ci­
the mualc and the meaning of
polla, Mr. Beckwith will also
conduc t a chamber orchestra
the text."
oompoaed of atu denta, faculty ,
In nddltlon to tbe Magn Jtlcat,
an d leadlng lnatrum~ntatl1ta
of the Buffalo area.
lhe cho ral groups will per!onn
Special rantare muslo from the selected
Ohrlelrnas carols from
bra;ia cbolr ot Gabriell nnd Hol- Pol and, Germany, England, and
borne will open the concert. The America.
Readings for the Ohrlstmaa sea..
members or the brass ensemble,
all members or the band, are a son from the Scrll)ture a and var­
very select group . Their
l)Ur- ious l)Oeta will complete the pro.
pose, ex.plained Mr. Cipolla, ia to gr11w. They willl be given by Stan•
perform the great wealth of brass l~y Travis, cbalrman of the de­
literature. The ensemble wiJI give partruent of drama and speech.
a concert In Mareh.
....,
By VICTOR IA BUGELSKI

Frlday, December 7, 1962

M

'!'be Unive rsity Llbrnrlea 1,vill be
open longer hou.ra durlDJJ the
Christ.mns vacation than Is uorml\l
for vacati on J)ertoda.

LibraryContest,$100 Prize,
AU UndergraduatesEligible
to create

By BARBARA HOF FMAN

The hOuse c'ommlttee ot Union
Board Is ottering a prl,:e ot $100
Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 16-16 to the student with the beat JI.
- Locktwood Library closed !'.or th e brary. Professor David B. Stout,
a.onunl Christmas Concert. Harri- of the department of anthropology
man Library opens its 11ormal ' and linguistics, and Mrs. Stout are
schedule.
Bi&gt;OUsorlng i.he contest.
Lockwood, Harrlm1&lt;n, Health Sci­
All uodergradu.atee
nre ellglble
ences, Chemistry, Engineering and lo compete for the best collec.
lion of books on a specUlc subject
Physics Libraries:
In which he hll.8 recently developed
Friday, Dec. 21-&lt;Jl()Se at 9 p.m.
a n ew Interest or narrowed an
I exrept Health Sciences, 10 p.m.).
exlstlng one. Th e conecUon must
Saturday, Dec. 22-Normal
ached. be restrloted. to 15 books, either
ule (except Health Sciences 9 a.m. hard or sort covered, an d the con.
tustunta may oot spend over $~0.
to 1 p.m.).

Students way find It advisable
to use secon d band bookatores for
1mrchnsl11g of books ,ind obtaining
Monday, Dec. 24 - S:30 o,m. to book Usta In hi s field. BecaW!e of
6 p.m .
the limite d amount .ot money anu
lhe number of boot&lt;,i, ap11lt.cnnts
Tuesday, Dec. 26--Closed .
will flnd It neces sary to limit theft•
Wednesday,
Dec. 2G to Ji'rldny, field to a &amp;J)e0111caspect.
Dec . 2S-S:3 0 a .m.. to 9 p,n1.
The aln'I or the contest la t o
stimulate the studen ts' desire
Satn rd ay, L&gt;ec.29- Normal ached ule (except tree.Ith Sclencea 9 a.m.
to 1 J).m.

a ee raonal library

and encourage book own ortthlp

In quantlt)'.
This Is tbe first year that th~
contest will be held on the Unlver.
slty camp 111
1. Mrs. Stout ,von a
pdze in a similar contest at the
University ot Callforpla and be
In such
lleves that vort!clpatlng
a conteal Is n worth whlle experi
ence. "You can't be a proper Stu•
dent It you depend solely on tb t
University or public llbrary tor
books to which you refer frequen 1,
ly,'' said Ml'B, Stout ,
Th e libraries will be dis.
played In the Browalng LI.
brary on the second floor of
Norton, and t he final Judging
will be In May.

Sunday, Dec. 23 - Loclcwo1odand
Harriman 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Applications are avallabltl at th ~
candy counter, and tbose students
wlNhlng further lnlormatlon
ma,
contuct Barbara
Hoffman , ext
2997. Students will be given an .
other opportunity
to entN· th,
contest next eemeater.

Sunday, Pee , 30-Lockw0&lt;1d and
Harrim an 2 p.m. to 9 p.m..
Monda y, Dec. 31 - 8:30 Et.m. to
6 p.m,
Tueeday, Jan. 1--Cloeed.
Wed n e •day, Jan. 2-Norlnal
sche dule .

;.;;;;,,,;;,,,;;;,;====;;;;===•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim=======

The featured work of the eve­
lling will be the Magni!icant of J.S.
Bach, performed by the two cho ral
gr0up1, sololslJI, and orcbel!tra, all
under the direction of Mr. Beck­

Letterpress ond Offset

BUFFALO
STANDARD
PRINTING
CORJ
~.

w\1 h.

The solos wtll be sung by Taeko
ll'qJII, soprano;
MadelJne Davis,
alto; Lawrence Bearce, tenor; and
Wllllnm Wacuer , baritone.
Miss
ll'ujlt , a native of Japan, 11 just
completing a IMl!'les ot perform­
auce2 with the Boaton 0pt)ra Com­
pany, In the title role of Pucclnl'a
Madame Butte rny.
Ml88 Davia, a senior In the Col•
l ege of A.rta and Sclenotl8, la ma•

1335 E, DELAVAN AVE. -

TX 3°0913

Semc e - Quoflty - Ptice

Printers of The Spectr·um .~ince 1997

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The fabulou
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many uniquefeatures: live several days witha
Frenchfamily- special opportunitiesto make
friends abroad, special cullural evenls, evening
entertainment,
meetstudentslromall overtheworld
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Travelby Oelu1eMot
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SU
MME
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1963 •

53 Days .In Europe$705• INCLUS
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th e romance of m idn ight
.. .the beauty of
a precio u s star
M IDN IGHT STAR -for every fortunaleCinderella who finds

herself engagedin 1hc magic of a starlit night. The beautifully
glistening facets of this Artc:arvcd creation are displayed in a
Retting of new and lastin g magnificence. No wonder Midnight
Star was selected as lhl· rin:; design of the year by the National
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You'll love the n ~w dc~ign. And you'll treasure the fact
that it is marle hv •\rtcarved-th c name which has meant
the finest in diamonds fnr more than a century. Come in and
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"TRAOEMAR~
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The warld'smnl famou
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you10Its sptclalholidaypro1r1m1
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Clean,comfor
table and mexpen•
me accommodaltons
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menand groupsof all sizesare

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Rates:$2.60-$2.75~Ingle,$4.20·
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Write Residence
Oireclor!Drfolder

WILLIAM
SLOANE ' ·. '
HOUSE Y.M.C.A.
)5 6 Wost 34111
SL (nr Ninth Art.I 'l
OXlord5·5131

lll'lfYort, It Y.
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Out• of A 1111
•rica's Leadi11qJ rw c/rr~ and Diamiond I m/)ortl'ri

Men, gel nd of cmbarrJssing daodrutT c.11y 09 1·2-3 wilh
FITCH I In ju&gt;I 3 mioules (one rubbint:, one l~lhering,one
rinsing), e,cry 1rocc or dandrulT, grime. gummy old hair
tonic goc, righl down 1be dra,nl Your ha,r too~, h~nd,omcr, hrahhier. \'our ,,~ IJ)
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1963
Weekly
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Open, Every Evening Till Christmas

�SPECTRUM

Fridoy, December 7, 1962

PAGETHREE

Four Greeks Vie_for 'J'J1~r.
Formal" Title
Silver Ball I
Here Soon.
"The Most Exeltlng Dance Baud
in the Land" ts the slnga.n used to
refert o the Ron Metcalfe Orches­
tra k'fiown throughout lhe United
States, Cllllada and Great Britain.
N~xt Saturday, "'l'he Big Baud" will
prov ide entertahwient tor the 28th
~nnua l Silver Billi, one of the high.
lights ot the social calendar.
The Nonton balh·oom will be
docornled In silver and t&gt;lnk for
tile occasion; the bandsta nd ltselt
will be tran ate rred Into I\ glant­
•l?~d sleigh. Smaller sleighs will
1Jt1 use d as centerplerea tor 'tho
u1blijs,

Preceding the ball wlll be a
faculty reception at B:!3() p.m.
In the Dorothy M. Hau Lounge,
Refreshments
will be aerved
from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. In the
Sun Terrace Lounge,

1'he formality or lhe occasion Is
being stressed-a
doorman wlll be
un hand to greet tile guests, and n
to11 nntcll band bas been obtained.
The dawn breakfast from 2 to 4
".m. wlll also fen turo a band.
Tickets tor the dance are ,3.60
per couple and the price or the
d.iwn breakfast ls $2.00. Tuxedo
ren tal discount slips are avallable
[or those who wish them. There
will be no ticket.a sold at the door
.md the number o! tickets bas been
limited to 360 couples for each
eve nt.

Tom Bulter , l'au Kappa

Epsilon

Peter

Caccamise,

Alpha

Phi

Delta

Bill Deegan,

Sigma

Phi Epsilon

Hugh Gaylord,

Alpha Sigma Phi

Student Voting To Take Place Thursday, Friday
By PATRICIA

MUSIAL

t:ompalgolog for the ann11al "Mr.
Formal" contest has beglll), and
the activity is steadily increa sing.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
are the scheduled dates for the skit
and stunt (:ompeUt!on. These will
he held In lhe Norton conferenc11
theater, and the stud~nt body is
lnvll ed lo attend.
A fashion show and free coll'ee
hour We~day
will highlight th e

1·umpalgn. Each candidate w·ill be
sponsored !Jy a Buffalo 1uer,cbanl
an d will model various fa.sbton a,
from dre ss wear to sports op ;parel.
Present al this fashion ebow will
be several Judges who wrn lndl•
vldually sc1·eeo lbe candidates. Froe
co!Tee will be sen•ed after tho
event.

selecting the winner. Twenty•
five percent will be based on
the faahlon show Judging and
thlrty,flve on campaign Judging.
Tile them~ tor Alpha Phi Delta's
candidate, Peter Oaccnm.lee, Is "A
Man for All Seasons" and hi s
stun.ts will Include a ro~r seMons
pan,tomlme and skit.

I

will he based on this Idea ,
llill Deegan, "Madison Ave. Mia.

l~r•· represents
I 1 '

Alpha Slgmn Phi 18 sponso rin g bnsketbnll halftime tonlghL
Student voting will take pl.ace
Tho winner wlll he announced
Thursday and Friday and 111111 Hugh Gaylord who se theme 18
con1tltute forty percent toward
"C hivalry Reborn" and his skit the "S ilver Ball" Saturday.

ooo~iD TlHUEN
'JfHJER~JEWAS ONIE

PIZZA

CORNED
BEEF
PASTRAMI
These are but a few of
of the specialties at the

University
Delicatessen

3588 Moln St. Tf 2-1456

Palmer's
B.aul'I

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Start with a carton and you'll end up knowing why Winston is America's
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MODERN FILTER :

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rnur Chri stmas and New Year's

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D~n't

wait

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Flll.TER- BLEND

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UP FRONT

now -

till it'R tao late

Open evenings till 9 P.M.

Winston tastes good

MR. HENRI

Rikea ciigmurette§lhlounHd
!

TF 6-0777-8
(

Sigma Phi E af.

• p
01 . A, smnll Broadwa?' show 18 act
for his stunt competition.
"Ono Man In Four" ls Tom But.
ler of Tau Kappa Epsilon. A com­
e dy production Is plrmned for tho

at

�SPEC

PAGE FOUR

Student Review
On Sale Monday

[Jitoria'6 *

*

The TuJist vs. A Lecture

The doors to the conf erence the ater were clo sed
but the rock ' 11 roll and twist could still be heard. The
doora to the multf-purpose room we re le~ open , and a
microphone wu e mployed despite the foct that the mus­
ic Itself was quite loud. Especially piercing was the "man
with the horn" who see me d to be trying to break a
tou11drecord.

One, cannot help but admire Dr. ,Brubaker's palie11ce,

for he continued ti&gt; let•ture despite the obvious and prev­

About 130 people ottend ed the first lecture in the
se riea given by Dr. Adle r, about 85 attend e d to heor Dr.
Pleeur, Ol\d obout 100 Mondoy heard Dr. Brubaker. Al­
together the three lectures drew 315 people , 1ome of
whont were faculty members. We estimate d thot there
were just about thot mo,ny in the multi-purpose room
Mondoy aft e rnoon.

A D!'W look will chaN1cterl~e the
IAsue or the New s,tudent
Revt11w, both In l~chnlral l!ormaf
aod &lt;'Ontent ,

'fbe nwgn,lu"
ha• achieved, ac •
r.ording to editor Gordon McCorm •

lek, "A 111ore lll'OfeBaionlll look"
by the auhslllut1011 of prlntlltg for
the mlmeogrn.ph\ld form In whloh
II Ill li:lnnlly u11peared. Another tn11ov11l100la lh&amp; uUlhn~lou Q1f foll
11ag0 fthotogrnphs, oiten to ar.oom
11nny teature IU'Uclea.

In an attempt to clarify tho
pYrpose of his publlcatlon, Mr.
McCormick
stated that
t ho
Review Is "• general ca m pua
magazine" and not to be c,on.
sld ered sole ly of a literary na .
ture , stressing this point, the
&amp;taff haa attempted to ac h ieve
a balanoe betwee n artlcln , of
fiction and non.fiction ln ,this

St-nate'•
11011t!cal Ideo logy 11erleR
(•nlled "The Amdemlc Atmosphere,"

A1101h11rtllll81y 1,le~e or Pollttioal
ana)y~ls whlrh will lll)l)ellr 'IR OH
nrtfrlo 011 the llnlted Slales' pol•
Icy l.o tb.e Cu~tlll blocknde bJ• pro,
fesaor Newton Garver, a DlEtmber
or the r'nlverslli• raoulty.
However,

fiction

and

c1•ea­

Everyone cannot take :l course on recent.world affairs, tlve mater!QI will not be ne.
or 011 the history of some area now in the news spotUght, gleotod by the Review wMch
includes ln H,li, iaeue llwo
b ut all had the opportun ity to attend the lectures. There
plecea of short f iction, "I Can
nre two lectures left, Monday's will be given hy Dr. Friend
Never Ret11rn" by Hlldegard
and next Monday's, Dec. 17, by Dr. Halstead .
Van Landingham and ''All T hat
Is Left to Do'• by Tom Berdl lne,
You have two chances left to prove that college stud­
ents are concerned 11bout event!- that directly affect them. Featured also wUI be 8U,veral
What will win out, the twist or the lecture 'l
))OOftlR, t·evlows. RhOl'L h1t8 &lt;If sa.
t1re a11d II ll1ree
or1glnnt c11rtoona.

•

Here Come Exa,ns
The scheduling officeannounced yeste rday that the exam
8Chedu1e will be posted today in all the buildings and dorms.
Jf there is an unforesee n delay the schedule will go up
Monday.
We would remind all students that tlle last issue of The
Spectru m for this semester will appear next Friday. Al­
of
though there is st ill one more week of school !he sh~dow
1
exams casts dark ly, and Spectrum staffers will be hitti ng
t he books" in the last anxious moments before the fatal day.
Any copy, relevant to events which will occur during
the laat week of school or early next semester, must be in
Tuesday at 1 :80. The first issue next semester will appear
Friday, Jan. 25.
We take this opportunity to wish aU students good luck
on their exams.

TH E SPE CTR UM
1'h• offlolAI 1 t11d~111 '"'"*llooer

of 1h•

State Unlvo1"11ltyor New York at

9Uf\'Alo, Publicati on •o m~o •1 Norlon tlall. Unlveralty C&amp;mpua, BultL!o, I 1.
If '( Publl•hed Wt,kly rr,111,tti, Ural .... k or SoPlomber 10 the Inn .....
1r.
,n· ,\;" II, .-~,.,.,,, ,.,, t'X:uu vo1Jo(11, Tt\Ank1stvln,t,
Chrll'l"'AI'nni1 l~1u111
Editor ln,Chlel - JOAN Fl, FLORY

)l ,,.,,,in~

,JU IJN KOWJ\L.

f.&amp;$"0UI

, ,JEROM m HAJ our&lt;

~:\~~

l'ldl1or

P,llt ur

t-.....

,-,,Qr,.
~llor

.....

. JAl\11:$ BAKl!:R

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS

~P1·ond

alent noise f 1•orn acrot111the hall. Certainly such musical IHue,
halauce not only
events have their place, but we believe a litt le more plan­ Furthermore,
ning could have been uiied in this rnst:ance so that tht&gt; twist hPtween types or mater·lal Included
but nlko bet.wl'en opln.lons and
was not competing with a lecture.
vlewpom1s of major factions
m
l l nlverslty com1uuulty w:lll he
When one considered the state of wol·lrl affairs and tbe
eml)baslied.
A.o article
by Alan
th e recent Cuban crisis it is disgusting to see college stud­ Flhrllclt entlllad "Tl1e Tortuou~
ents flood a musical event and avoid a lecture dealing with f'ath~ or F'antn~y" queeUonlng tlle
wis tlom ot I.be visit ot Sir 01s wald
an area of utmost concern. What ill the matter with you'/ Mo~loy
10 our 1·an11111swill be lu.
Are you here to tap your foot. to the strains of "cool" 1•h11l1•&lt;l IIlu11g with comment hy
Henry Simon praising the Student
music or to ICArn?

•

Editor .... SU15AN BL.OMAN

11e1\r lll~1lor:
Alai; and alauk, theee will be
My uurpose In writing this Jeltcr only willhful dnydrelllJl9, {or I Ull ·
will not be abe to at ­
Is to laud the elforte or (he Unlon fortunately
Jlourd and its Silver Ball Commit.. tend tor lh8 ftrat time In thre e
lee in lbe 11lannlng of the u p&lt;IOm• yettrll. Doti'! reel badly , t tal• t
Ing "Stiver Bnll." They have trUI]' comfort In. the memories ot tb r
gon•• to great leng1.hs to make this past "S liver Bolla" which f wa i,
year's Bnll o night or nights, "tile" able to afford to go to. Ah, the Hote l
sO&lt;lllll tn·ent of the yeur. Oh to be Statler D11.IIRoom, that m.11.rvelo1u.
young ugl\ln, r cnn vleunUr.e It au co&lt;:ktail lounge, the uniformed
now . , . lhe pre~eutatloll or tho wallers ond the comtort or my own
,·nrsu ~" ( $11.00I by the smitten hero Sunday he~t suit. But you had to
lo his lady !:tlr. How bnnd~ome he wakh it, no more than 6 Manbat.
looks In his rented tuxedo ($7.00) tans aud ;1 esga for break:faa.t, n 1
(overlooking
the r.igurelte
burn, least. Total uost. abo11t $9.00 fur
8Uijlt1ltldere
aud
oddly LM whole evening,
grimy
How fortunate we all are to hov .
1111n,·1ted studal : how preLty she
euc h an. Intelligent, SOC\lu
lly minded
look ~ In tier furmal g1&gt;w11
,
group looking sfler l'he l.nterest i
1'1111h~nu whisks his choffen off
ot ~II us wealt.hy students. Hat ~
to the llllll ant! as be pulls up to
the entra nce II Jolly lltUe U8 cop otr to ~he Union Board, they •v~
pops UI) nnd gives him a ticket . done lt agaJn !

o{ (You know you can't pat•k in f'ront
or Norton II all. 110w don't. you?)
l~agerly thtl young thing and her
'l'h~ New Stu tlant Review will be
011 sa.le :Monday lhrou~h ~'l'ld.ny In nnxlons eerort u1ouut tb.e marble
lhe lobby or Norton Holl from 11talrs only to !Je met. by n elgn
1l am-2 pm . The vrlue ls twenty. rCRdlng "U~e the Side Doors.' ' Un.
lortunately, tbe night arhool stu.
ll\'e ,·ents per lsaue.
dents hove rend the 8a.me si gn
but our hero und heroine gamely
flght. thlllr way Ill, (Art er all he
paid $3,50 tor his ticket ,)
• , , 1,0 un d behold YOU wou ld
never recogni?.e the multi.purpose
room, Cor the decoro llona have
By L ILLIAN WIL LI AM S
camoutlaged
It Into an enchanted
of e1111rkle and glitter,
Every Friday, stude nts At U B Fairyland
are enlightened by the recorded Nnd tbe taint, lingering a.roma of
sl'Ssions in Ruth skellar. Mu ,i i c Wieners arul Sauerkraut (67c) from
from folk songs to rock-n-roll is the lunch menu in the cafeteria.
...
lntermlsaloo
time ls here?
fratured. Accorrling to M1'S. e:haw ,
nss i~tlint director ot Ncll'ton, n111ny Clom e you gny, mad collegians l)Ut
nf the artists htve been of.fl' t'et l down your gral)e Julee aud glui:er
(they're
free ; Oh
profe ssional bids for th,•lr J)Cl' · 11le ~ocktalls
.Joy! l and lei' s udjourn to lhe
fol'mances in Rath skellar .
bowllng alley : a tnol set or ping
Torlny 's Mss ion, highlighted by 11oni,; anyone?: or !or tbe more
the appearance of Bob Attee a ud rl~&lt;111eIn the group a grune of pool
his jan-twl st combo, will he ht&gt;ld may he rune,·Jlle . (Bowling, 450 o
i11 the multi-purpoR e room from i:nme ; plug 11011g, ROcper hr .: wol ,
3 - 5. The c,:,mbo is comvosr•d Qt' SOc 11er hr .: 110 gambling
11er•
H(lb Gyles. singer an,l plu,nist; mltled!I
, 111,1now It'~ ull over, le t' s
Tim h.raft, 1111 gui tnl' 1111d ' "' ""
( Stock IS• pl,1ying ,bu s tod,1y \ , 1tway to the dawn bre11k Coat ($2.50)
Tony Tn~anello, th e dnnn~: an,! after nil ll' s only In the next room ,
:in ntrlRt•, th e line Is Ju•l ne long RS
Boh A,t.lrn on the ;;ux,
It \\JI S Ill lun ch nnd C!'US8 $\Ill
Th~ g r oup is cur1·1mUy 11l11yi111(~ervt'" rhe ..ame wntery powdrre,1
at th, • P11RtimP B11r.
"J:RS tiUrr oun ded with at l~ast twn
1t!Pr•t•~ or h 1kewar m lm~on.
. It's the n ext duy nlroo /ly
uni t our t1Pro l\ll Hllt• • ,low11lo\\ •11to
~ r e 1111
•11 Ill e l'Cnted tux, 11111klng11ure
to tell tbe salesman tJint the c1gll,
rette burn was th ere before he
r•lckt •d IL UI) Th i• c•om«s hard 10
a 1wy who is $!ill , urr,..rln~ rrum
lH'l 'rd &lt;&gt;Ses ot i;lni;l&gt;I' al" , wntery
ug,:s, co ld toMl nnd warm nran~•
Ju It••· Th owP I WO ga.mM or ping
pong didn't hel JI olther
But urt pr
t11lt
all, II r &lt;JHI o nly hl,n
untlng
tranap11r1ut1nn. pnrklui.:
&lt;'ktll, rnr to ~et Olli Of LIie 101
~nln, And II hicnrh of •111ln
l)lll,'e

section

Ra thskellar Session
Offers J azz Combo

:r-~~~
. i&lt;~~~:-?~~,J~~~t
Offlc•
ROSENOW
1

10

lflfl' ,

'., ",

BEV

.......
1
~~·.

~::..
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:.:::?ifillSsm~~
~.;_i~.:.rtd~
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:l!)s°wtMli~&amp;
J"ln
THOllAS
M , ,

BAl!INl,E,

01-:.'I Y.JIAL 8TAt"Fl

Loulec

&lt;"'11mlllt1 1-",UrR('l(K), ~)lllAa

JR,

Slnk,

llf\rron.

VICIOl'h\ Bu,r,lokl,

MArll)'n

0Pttlk,

J\n(l le

JHlllth

Cdmpnnellll,

ButtOU1

~h o.run

("11td"'- Matf'IJ, eu,,,wr, ~h•k
t~nmu uurno.
,1 rtr) 1,011 \\ 11l~o1,. Ltarr:v
~T••1d I I, Knt\,111 Putlun• . ~1,uk l't.,tOu~nn. Hntr) J•:n..tut11. Po\11\ J,Tov. Jot') '
1
,.:,... ,1111'1
unrr11,=-n1,Jufly Flohtir, l&gt;n\ td rr,, ·11'\,nt,•lc n1,1m,rn, Bnrh11ro no1tt·.
W#l• t llt,o J(..an1ln.akJ, John h~nlpler, Aono .M11nh•, Bryon. MIUtn"'" · Cat hy
MtJl,.rh,
I .Olli l..•YY, l'tOnl MAr l\lrt , J)ou•la
lrnt11 , A,111• _)jj;s".-; P"I

\lo 1"1 Jim

Sl•o",

fAl li,I WflllAf"h,

l,IIU•n

•,,,. • 11JI""""
t. ,uor .

Ma.NICI or .. ulak.
WllltAmN.

.,~n r

IValf.1,

~

Peycb&amp;-

s~mincr,

R'11&gt;k'YVcru~~

Kath y S he :,, l.tn tln "· ~11111111
P:stht-r

.1\tlnn t.11v1n.
1•A• •I"' IRAPHV STAFF' RUt.611 11~1dlwinr,

l,■ 1 ry

tl&lt;'l11JltJ,

7, 1962

By MA RV LOU WILSO N

The stra ins of ''The Larly Is A Tramp" pervaded
the conference theater Monday during Dr. Bruba ker'&amp; ta lk
on Latin Arner icn. The melodic tunes flowed from the
ntulti-purpose room where a combo was pet'forming.
At the three o'clock change of classes students flowed
to the multi-purpoi;e room as if drawn by the Pied Piper.
Meanwhile across the hall a handful of about 100 students
attende&lt;J the third In the series on American-Russian re­
lnt.ions.

•

Fridoy, Dece mbe r

T RUM

ntu,.

Joe l HM eo,,

,,s.oo,

Sincere ly,

John R, Peckh.am
To ~he Edit.or:
Does the lJnlversUy
o1 J3u!ral c&gt;
lose prestige w:hen we, a u.nlver .
slty of m&amp;Jor college statua, B-Obed
.
ule teams such aa Toronto, Oewego ,
Brockport
Stnte and Cortland
State? .©ven It theae teams ar,
our b11sketba1l equals, are we, as a
on1verslty or .national statwi, stooi&gt;
Ing when we meet these teams In
compeUtlon. Certa1nly we are.
"No!" says basketball &lt;;oach Le r,
Serru.stlnl who contenda that 11ny
team -wtth athJete11 wlt.b a d esir e
to win are fair gs.me tor the Uni •
varsity of Buffalo and, althougb
these small local achoola may &amp;J&gt;­
penr t.o be easy knock.offs, In tbf
Cast game of basketball today, an1
teo.m Is eapab le of dropping an.
other at any given Ume.
In the proceas of building ~
top.notch
schedule, whfch or
theae reeults wou ld -.dd to ti,.
athletic preatlge of thla unlver­
elt,y; aoundly
whomplng
Cort ·
land Sule or nou ml11 agaln11
auch a power aa Duq uesne 7
Certainly no one would look I wl,,
wh en l'B
thrnMhes Oswego , 1111'
how many or u11 (and of nren su11pnrters)
would ~train our eyes •I
we ffaw In bolll print. OuQUP""'
edges U B, 07.80?
1',very lt-llm 11t&lt;eds their "11rn•
upp ers" fm· th e hilt i:ames, 1111
tl!IR COtll\ll' l!tl1&gt;11 with s ml\11 .......
n
seh(lol~ 1vJU1 n st udent 1•11rot1m,·
aizu bl 1• sm11IIPr Lhn n ourR tin,..
noth)I;~ ((ll' 11111'hllMketbnlJ p re~ll~•
R egn rdl &lt;'Rflo{ whether these,'""" '
ar&lt;· g-oocl 01· "ot I nnd bow dof\A
,n,ll
look wl!i&gt;n the mighty t 1 111v,
or lluffalo wttb a studenl e.i,rc•
nJPIII of II\ ~r ~01111rull II 1111·
d ent~. &lt;:••··IJlllll)t"~ "" h y whu
wl\0111d 11I )'1111•nY? r'c&gt;rtlHntl ~I .IC
It "'"' Jhl 1m) tn hoi•l&gt;&lt;r our lm•ll
httll &gt;ll'hl'il lll " .. ~ w,, I\UVl' ,1,'
1111&lt;1,,..,, doinl(' wllh fe10Lb,1ll,
ln 111,• •truggle tn .,111m·g,·"
(routlu.ued oil l'llllt• 1.:!'

�SPECTRUM

fridoy, December 7, 1962

PAGEFfVl

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE
B)' ANNE

MIINTE

MAZUR

•r1t11~,rlslij ln Cuba lij nt an tH1d

'l'he Stulo llnive,·slty System hns ,·eat'flriued 1ls resolution ot rnr.a 11tul tbe prickly problem le beJn~
, t there shall be no D&lt;lllounlly atllllatrd
"soclal organization"
In IL resolved In the conrerenc~ ro,01u.
111
~lut~ UnlVt!r•lty. To say that this reaffirmation
la unfair h• a gn•~&amp;
,,odt'rRtatoment.
The St;ite hn• nnce more wielded It" stron.1t ,1r111In The world l)ll11se~ with a siglh ut
nUer which should be determtned
by lll4l1'1du11l uulv\•r•IIIPK untl •·~lief twd AP•ericnns n re bom,1t11I
1 111
rh••lr smdents.
tl\nt q.,tober'a
abow ot force will
'J'he deed ha~ been tlone thOll!;h, nnd 001\ II I• 1111to Ute P1111,llel, be tho 111st. There are dellniLE1 lu.
,, 11ic Co uncil and IFC to detennlue
w,la1t.lautlo,,,. •hull follow. If tlw dlcMlons lhe.t the P1·esldent's 11~·
!iJtltlo ls u losing one, I can only ex1,1·es~ my regret oil tht• slt11nlll•a.
However, the bablle DIUijl be tou11ht , The Greek system on 1)111
· cam11uh llou 1u &lt;;uba, limited to endt1111the
•• 1111 t111wrlan.t parl oc every student's lire, u part tlrnl ht&lt; will not establfsbwenl
or u uucleur l)u~e so
,,lf1111
UISh reudil) '.
rloMe lO Olll' 11ho1•p,will 11recl}1lwlr
ll i~ well to rl'111embor, tlumgh, tlrnt denallon11lizln11 doe s uot 1,y n more sane 1111&lt;1,,~111•,•tullllt ◄inlH •
.,.,, me/ins lndltnt0 f.he 1•en10v11lof 111,..Orl'ek system e11Llrol&gt;
·· P'i·utt&lt;r­ tlOIIOI ~ll11alio11,
,1111.•
• 111tdt1ororttieij ar~ tormt•d tu 11rouwlr unity aud closeness "•lllil11
History muy Ytit record tlrnt
.
,,,.. bounds or the COIIIJ\Usos well u~ within their nntlonnl Afflllo ll ,111
Tl11•ClreekA ~an a.ml mu~l remoiu stron11 1111our 1·111111111•
ht s11il1• 111 lbl'~Ul o! nuclea1 • holnc1111s1, 11ro•
,o&gt;·:,itate action.
j~l'le,I h1to rwlit y, urnde tho nu.
lluu s or the world , t'llf)UCildly I h,•
1J1her Greek new~ this w~ek ....
HUJ)~r 11uwllrtul l'S 110d U!i.lSll.
A
lpha
Epallon
Pl
1hnnk
tlll'
sisters
or
Sli;
Kop
The brothers of
re111lzo I.hat wur must be avo ,MM
111
HDT
tor
belplot:
to
make
last
week's
1·om1Jlned
sociul
lh
l.'
i:re,ll
41
Pre ·ml~r
,11cves • it was. Congr:ttuh1tlons
go to the ba.ske1&gt;ball te11m on their at oil costs , Thanklully,
Khl'Ushch ev ~xhibiteu II rationnl
vic·tory over Gnmmo Phi, 55-6.
l)Qlloy r,,r uvoldln.g war by 1v1111.
'J'he sisters ot Alpha Gamma are planning to i;o carol hi~ "' Ii h t 1111
hi• mlsslleH , from Cluha
,1~1e,•s or SD'l' At several Buft'olo huspltuls. This evenln.g toe Alstl!rn dnwlng
III ijlJ du lug he did not "lltu!k
, Ill l111Vea social with Gamma J:"h.land Thet.'\ Chi troternilleA.
he allowed lb••
Urotber Pule Ca.ccrulrlse ls the Mr. Fonnal candlrlate ()( Alpha Phi down." Rather,
SUSAN OUFFV
Oj,lla traterntty.
The ~ampalgn theme is "The Mau tor all Se11sons."' world lv p11~h torwurd, or at. tJ,r,
very least , 11011tlnueto exist,
'rhe brotbe1·M of Alpha Phi Omega WIii hold ll " 1rn111:~ler" 11arly
&lt;tlUOrl'OW 1t.lgbt at tho Oas Light.
We are now faced, moro dra .
matlcally
than
ever befo,re.
Saturday trow 2-4 p.m., the pledge class o! Alpha Sigma Phi wlll
with the challenge of preeerv .
;h·e a party fo1· u.nderprlvileged
children In the neighborhood
or the
Our le;1d.
Ing our olvlllutlon.
3al vnllon Anny. Contact Buu Underwood ill ext. 35Gn.
era realize this, I a1T11ure, and
By KATHLEEN SHEA
llsh tin Etunomic Community,"
Tbe brothers or Beta Phi Sigma will attend tbe Pbarnmcy Schou1·~
so do those In the Kreml In.
Su,, lluff:,, WnH r·1•11wnet!"Mbs
1'hrlst mas dance at lh•} Staller HIiton. A cocktail party will precede
'l'he (:r,•11~ Lnkc~ Novice Dl·hnte
The
power
lo
determine
the
•II,· dauce, aud a breakfast will follow.
G1•eat Luke~ '1'0111
•n11ment of lll!i:l'' Toul'nament, held h""' In~~ we~k­
courae of history la now In
Saturduy u!t~•r110011nt the u1111qurt cnd, wus prniscd l)y tM 1(1 nttenu­
'J'be fellows or Beta Sigma Rho express their appreclallu11 10 ,11el
their hands. They must 11ot
IL on the excAllent Job be did 111 organMng
their aucces.,tul
1111110
whfoh cl.used lhl• Seconri A11111111I iug school» 101· It~ org AT1l~nt1011
now
to
arrange
true
peace•ful
\1tt11111nNocl11rnu, Thanks go to oil (hose who attended thr. dance
G&gt;·eat Lskes Novice Debule To1irh • nnri erficie11~y . Gcnernl Chnitnwn
coexistence, for Chl11eao 1ac­
._. Wllll as to tho•e who contributed
to 11 tine Rd book.
ament, ~pon.orcd hy the novlc,, of the event Wilk K~n Gro~smAn.
tion1 In Asia Indicate that 01ur
The brothers ot Gamma Ph i announce th~t hu1t Wel•k'a pa11ty WU6
division of the Jeb11te •odt•t:,,. Thl•
l 'nni~iu~ Collet(~ wus p1•~~tntcd
power to control will not be
, huge succes~. Belated thanks to brothers Craig Lyon und Dick GI.
crown of white l'oses and ulu, • car­ With th11 trophy lur lht&lt; IJe~t t~um
forever,
,r izto for the uae or their upnri,ment for the stag party, Oamrua Phi
nations wna presented to the queN• by th~ new queen , The l1est uCCirm
,nd Theta Chi Fraternity
will have. a social with Alpbn Gomrun to.
Power [IOlitlcs and tbre11tenlng hy Harriet
Hcitlinitel',
1'h11i1
•11rn11utive 111111ll~JCative speaker w111·11
oli:ht at Worren·a.
•ober rntlllng
does not tu1sur" of the contei,t.
lwo gil'ls from Mt: Union College.
'r he brothers or Phi Epsilon Pl c,ntertuined .ftv'e P·hl f:l11•(ron1 the peaco . Our national pur11o•e lo de­
The new q11c1•11,who 1s 11 $ 111111-Anotl,cr unueul\l incident that oc­
1 ttlV~ralty of Rochester
and 11 representative
trom the national fra. nned largely In tet111:i or ''beat•
ish
major
111111hol)t'Ktu llt• 11 ~rnn"• evried wu~ a three.way lie for the
•.•rnlty. The UB PIii Ep pledg-ea will In turn he ruakmg a pledge trip
Ing the Rn•alans"
011d "wlnn1lng" lntor, wns sPOll•Ol'~tl hy the Nl•W•
:o the O. of R. Congratulnl1011a go to •rerr.Y Gerace on llla re..electlon
fil'M place tesm. lt was npt nece~­
party tonight with the Ille cul(! war. '!'Ills cnnnnl be , We man Club. Her two attendant,,
.,. Fraire Su11er!ur. The,·e will b11 a pledp,
~11ry to brl!ak the tie with A fll~
mu•t
ncc8])t
the
exJstence
or
dif­
•he me "Honeymoon."
Solly Gerber and And1·c11 Osborne , o! a coin, as ha, h,1ppened 11t oth­
ferent ways or nre. be it In ltus. wc 1•e preAented hvuquets , Th,• out•
,.,, tournaments.
because a ~y11Wm
The lrotl'Ss ot Phi Kappa Pei enjoyed the "aewe1·a ot Paris" l)i&lt;rty
Rfa
01•
J,atln
Amerlco
,
and
~001iercome of the contest was ,lijchlt!d t,y ut ~cori~it irtCUTflOl
,1 lhu M1tJe11UcRose Oardeoa nnd 11re looking !ol'Wlltd to the pledges'
'AUnjC ll()nun
11.llvely
tusuro
the
continuance
or
.ihl11-wreck party o« I.he coast oC Beaver Jslnnd this week-e11d. Con.
si•cr&lt;•t hnllot of the gueHt Jebatl'l's,
pulnts wus URed. Thii give» a l.etim
our way ot life. As Seymour Mel ­
~ratulatlona to J)oachers anonymous on Lbelr succesa last week.
Catanzaro Honored
which wins over one with a better
man points out In The Peace l~ace,
M01·~ uistinction WIIS WOii (111 l'l'\:Ol'd u/ wh1s and losseR extt·11
The aiatera of Phi Sigma Sigma nro prep11,1•lng tor thelr nnnual
•.hr!stmna party tor the cblld1·en at ChHdren'e Hospital. Thia event " there Is a m1.1Jo1·dlfl'ereuce be. tho dehute societ~· Saturday by the µui11ts fo1· thi~ win.
b~• always been very much npprecilllted by t.lio children, and the tw1•e11~ucce•• Jn n pooce rnei!, and vn,·sit)' dlvlsion. G&lt;•r1·y Cot11111.11iu,
Scoring by Computer
,ls1&amp;rs welcome any contoributlons of old toys which could be m.u.do BUcoeasIn an arms race. Wln1nlng dtbating
11t Syracuse
Unlver •i ty,
In the arms race Implies thn ex,
'J'hu "riower pnh•ing'' method of
by students.
\\'11• J&gt;l'~•t•nteJ witl1 the out11t11111l
d~U·1·r11ini11g whi&lt;'h tennu1 would
Thia Suturduy tbe slaters or Phi Zet.a Chi will hold tbelr anuunl ten•lon oC del'lslon-110wer by cme 1111{
sIwak-,1 nw111
·,f l,y the uutionnl
over
another.
The
,1a111c
r unnce at the Hotel l:ituyvesant. A coclct11il party 11t the home governmenl
deuutc in e/lch ,·ounct wu ~ lmph••
honor
111y
ueb11t111g
~.,ciet)
',
Dell11
Linda Smith will be held before the dance, and pledges will be pe11co rnce, however, al111s at ex.
munted by the !HM nmchlnL• in the
&gt;1t.lU1
1ted at that ttxne. The children
11t tlle Cereb rnl Palffy Center tending U,e ran.ge or personol nn(I Sig ma Rho. Ml' , Catunzul'o wlljj engineering
bulldlni.
After
the
fur
lhc;
u
niq11e
feat
h~
~(111
1m,•nded
•uJoyed having the 'i11St&lt;?rswork wllb t.hem .
polft!Clll freedom in all •ooletlt'5."
third 1·ound, howevl•f, humnn lac­
11erfurniucl
in
d11livel'i1lg
hot!)
nr,
The broth.ors ot Rho l&gt;I Phi will bl' at tarn Stelle,· Hilton U\16
Wrs interfered with the.• muchfnc
A frightening
aepect of a,ur
Cit'111ntiV1·
tlrg"lllil61lls llh :t ,....u lt
F'rldny tor the unnual Pbar.111acy School Chl'latmllti dauou . A cocki.e.ll
Meoi-ing uf the deliati,, Mt•mhurs of
preaent sit uation le the exu ,nt
of the Uhles~ o! hi s p11rtn1·1• lk
~arty will precede the dan ce. The brothers are curreuUy collectlu!(
the novke ,Jivision or th11 &lt;lebntc
to )'lhlch It perpetuates
1tae,1t,
d~livered a total of l,J SJJ!!e&lt;:hc~.
•noney for CARE pac'Jlogee,
soci~ty then 11&lt;·1·0mpli
s hed the u.sk
both
domeatlcally
a"d
exter
•n.
1'1,e uwn1·u w11s &gt;1lso l,a• ed 11111111
The aleters of SOT thank tha brothers or AEPi tor a. flue so&lt;:h,I
i11
10 mlnut.cff which the machine
ally,
Wo
are
constantl)'
doln,g.
l11Htweek. Spech1I thanks to the &amp;ls1e1·•who helped usher the Jewish
llrn numoor of individual spenk~,·
tiH•k ulmogt hnlf 1111huur tv 11e
battle within the present ,true.
1•1,111e
r·s production or "Ou.r Towu" last week. .
ooinl•
he accumulated
in 1·uch c·,,mplish,
ture.
A
re.,pproachment
ba•ed
'rhe slaterR o! Sigma Kappa wish to tJrnnk Alpha Epeilo[! Pl tor
dns~. firKt and second ufflrm11tiv(•.
on mu tual truat and need m~r1t
heir ~oclu l la,., Friday. They are loolrlng forward lo the l!OC.!1111
wlLh
U nllk~ the original 11l1111
to use
'tho full UB toam, consistin"
Sli:111nPhi Epsilon. This past Monday the slsler11 visited the Wheel
by tlhe
therefore
be ,ought
,\,Ir. Cata11zaro, Douglas Dodge, und 011ly 8" mnny beiste:ises 1111,Itime .
Chair Hwne and sang the song~ sung at Greek Weekend In addition
US and USSR white we yet
Uarba1•n CJlegota, tied for third l.~e1wn a~ required by thr nu111•.oObrl8tmu carols. Christmas cprd$ will be sent to lndlvfduale n1et
maintain the poaalbillly.
bc.:1·o! guest teams, 24 wome11
place
in the entire t ournament.
,1 the bolJle, Qood luck to all I.he Mister Formal
ca ndidates .
q1m11iell'!I for the title of Min
the
filth
round,
thu
Ult
During
Newa Crom Oeneva showing HuK.
The brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a social wlib the
&lt;lmat L11kt'tlTournament.
'rhe ud­
,is ters ot SJg Kap tbla Friday night at tile Burman rnn . The J.FC eia's favor with llmlted luspec lion tcum met Le Mo yne College, which dltional cout,-stants were employed
o! aoy dlsn.rmament
or teet•bao finally won the first prfac. Tht •
,1ngere or Sig Ep nre recording the songs s11ntl'lu, Greek Sing.
u 1 "curler~"
tbe debat&lt;1 r&amp;­
The sisters ot Theta Chi sorority wl,h to tlmnk the brot•hers or 11rop0ael, and lhe clrculatlog llndi­ debul.e wu• t11µe recorded fo,· ust su ltd lrom th e various debate cen­
thnt ell'ectlve e.r.cbaugea on u radio program . It was b1·oad ­
l'K,g tor lhe most enjoyable eoolal last Fl&gt;ldny nlgbl
The sisters huva tnllons
mny enee te osfooa, oll'er hope that cu s led over WERA last Tµe sday ter• to thu tuurnament headquar~dunted a Chinese l)r\lbnn. Tbey l\re looking forward to tbe Christmas
coextet e nre Is In.deed vlnble , One night .
n,irty next Monday.
Next Meet Rocheater
Vi s iting teams wero teirl1tert'&lt;l
The brothers
or Arnold Air Society nre Pl'OUd Lo announre
the such proposal refer s lo the ab,alld·
1111ln
tloa or five new member s yesterday
onmenl or our 'rurk cy bA~e and
An other vnrsity team leav es th1.- Fl'iday ult e rnoon In th e lobhy o!
the neutr11Jlzatlo11 ut c·,•ntral Eu • nfl&lt;&gt;rnoon for Roche ~te1· ll n ivt•r- th e Conlerence ThcQt.er by Linda
on tbe tuiure
~l11Jor Jamee A. Colewnn addressed the membership
.,j the Air Force and the ~e1·101111nees
or the work confronting ue today. rope .
s1ty. Th&lt;' nffirmotlve s11eukl•1swill Lt•te~!hal, secretary Ol th'! tou111,
F'rhl!\ y, I.he membersbJr, ls having a dinner dane&amp; at tbe.Nlagnrn Fall ~
Le: G&lt;.'rry Ca tu11zaro unll C111'111
ut~~nt . William A , Bnker, tlirc.'C.ll.ot'
I bfllie,•e we are slnoorely lu.
\ir Force Bnse omcer e' Club. Special gu!'WU! include the AF'ROT(
Zelle r. Ji,u Ca rline and l)ou gla ~ u f novice dubato, was thnnked by
teretitecl, as ltw Hu ssmn e o.re, lo
11.. t:1ebment ortlcers.
D~dg" will speak for the negntlvc 1111conl'crnud !or his hel p and tn­
en..•lug tension• 11nd c.•reallng IE•glt­
lmnte stabilll)'. Success 1n our n e. ~ille ,;( t he nati on11t de bute µrupo- l~rcbt,
Thr~e nvvicc dch4t41
tcn111, will
,;ollnllona will test wbut we h,ave •i t•on. "Resolved: Th11t th e
learned rr om lhe Cubn n predlca . Communi st Nat;ioo ~ Should E •tnl ,- lie sent out Uii, wct&gt;kond.
meol . May It. be s aid Utat th o
two powers (a ced each other 1111d
embrnced.
al HOUie .and NAF"SA ; Ewald
llr . Art.bur L. Kaiser, director of
B, Nyqulat, Deputy
Commit •
"lml~slollll and re c ords here will
Student Handbook
·•11
resent the University at the slon~r of Education In the
'l'h,, 1iul&gt;IJc, r eln1fon~ com mlltoe mlltlnjl' lh11 he•t tilt♦ by l&gt;lto.;u.
AU copy {nr
the S tud ea,t
State of New York; 1nd Fred,
•nuual meeting
ol lbe Middle
1,u honrd 110110,rn,:ell that !ltudents shollld l)ll\Cu t.b.oJr antrl~•
H1tmll100 1&lt; for H)ll:l-ti4 must l.w 111 th, , 11111
erlck M. Bli1de r, Pretldent of
St"l~• Aesoclf1tlon
or Co lle,: lale
hunclect iu t&lt;i Ml'M, Huth Sh,w;,
Hartwick College .
l,•olstrn rs and Oallcer s of Admls·
II u nlC\11 ntWKl~It111 wilt mllltO Its In the bOl vro,•ldcd OU t.bo tAnd:J
1·oom ~Iii .'1;01t&lt;i11 llnll, 111 [&gt;on
tit
...,. ,. today
and
tomorrow
:1111~1a1~1w1•
ne~t wr,•k. It will h~ &lt;'ou111rr.
Barly morning sessions on " I IPll&gt;• Maurt;r, room 20~ F'1,-1l111lhi dl
·1, l tont e-Hsddoo
Hall , Atlan't1.I'
and Hints " !or tlle a dm laslon• ol­ uefor~ &lt;'hriMtli)llk.
'l'tu, title 1bould lie ellur t (o ot
n muul hly 11ullllr"tlon &lt;l(&gt;Sl1medto
'·'· ~..r.
Nf!w OTKunfailt!utl,.
1&gt;11 ..•ur,op
111rorm nud •·rt1ntr h,ter~Kt 111 ,1ic 1111&gt;H•
than 2 or 3 words ) unll ab ould
I le will be one or mor e lhnn fic e and fur tlle rcg ietnu· . resuer •
Lively. will be• h eld Pl ~. tn ,ttll lo
pu~. chunl(es thnt hnv,, ocnorn,.J
ulvm ·"lllr d olu!ljjntd acui·ttle~ wh ich hi, consis t ent with tbe purpoe11or
n•r, rPs~ntatlvea
or some 2Stl
since lu~t yeur . 11Jdit11111m de·
"&lt;••• and uolverslll es Crom six Jll(.)J'l'QW
twlull•· ••ullul'III, •w•tnl ,mtl • ••c·r... 1hr uew•lottcir. l'.a,•h •lu dont 111,11·
Two works bop ~ n t 11: 01111m will lctlon~ c&gt;f 111ul1
•1·i&gt;1
l I,) un) 11nd
11ruvldE'
tnrormal
dlsr11~Rlu11
or
II IQhtlghts of the
two-day
u ll ~rou p~ mi 1·1.uu1,u IIIH t J.,
;,,o.,ram will be addreaaes by
•'Adml s~ioo nnJ ,\dvnn~ •·n1t-11t &lt;&gt;I i11 Ii)' l i11• 17 ut th~ "'Q' In I
11111w, th•' 1111 1,•11•• ,: .. ,·. tol 1.. , 1,l111'11ll'
hi• uum~. atldrNt ,11111
four principal 1peakere , Fred ­
Rtudeut.s or H li:li A,•ad@11&lt;- l'rom
n t. Ir ;•ou lmow 11f "'" •&lt;1d1 1m ••. th,• ,,,,uuullt,••· h11• m&gt;t iir t••h·plwD•· numb~r ou t111c
h 1111
1rv
lse" :1111
1 " 1'he Lise of ll n ti1 l'~c.,. chrun,•s, i.,ndly nutir)' u111•ii
«,c W. Ness, vice . president of
, 1v,,,1 ,,1 11 nnrn•• 1'1•11 dollnrn I• Th,, winnt1r will b o uoo1iuced 1n
1
Hotatra College; Howard A.
t:est;ln,; \Hwhl11, "' 111 tlH1 :-f·•h•,·0'1n
the uli,,vt• v!f ,ces nuw
1,..10~ 1111,,r,,
,1 ,., ,l)~ ,,tuduor 1ut,. lh•• ucx t l••u&lt;- uctbo o;,,w,Jouv
Cook, President of lnl'ornatlon111111
,\1lvl a1•me111 1,r tHudl" 1,1,"

uw

Debate Society Places Third ;
Gerry Catanzaro Honored

,r

or

or

Nou1

Dr. Kaiser Represents U B
At Admissions Meeting

Union BoardInitiatesOwnNewsletter ;
Will Give Student $10 for Best Title

I

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I

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I

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�PAGESIX

SPECTRU

Friday, Decemb er 7, 1962

IM

U B Sends 3 to Conference. U B Is in Tourney !Vi~iting Philippine ·-lnstructo r
College President Lectures To Pick Billia1rds ls Third in Lecture Series
By LORNA WAL LACH
workahopa In which t he
Bowling Champs I , By ELAINE BARRON
addresaea were dlacuued
In
Mr
h p !fie
. t t I Or. Agatllon Pal, of the Phil.
sharp oontraa1
Thia was
I

1

and

Thi s l&gt;Qet weekend I.here waa a
New York State Regional Conler.
ence or t.he National Students .As­
eoclatlon. llB eent four delegates.
three from the Student Senate:
Arnie
Mazur, NSA coor dinator,
William Berger, Mike Lappin, a.net
Marlin Ouglno. The topic or the
conference was, "The Role of the
Student. Faculty, and .Admln lstra..
Uon In a University Community."
Tbe oonference beld at Watacn
Homestead near Cor ning, N.Y. tea•
tured three guest speakers: Thom•
of
as Hayden or the University
Michigan wbo Is a frequent wrtter
on student problems, Dr. Jfarold
Taylor , former president of Sarah
Lawrence College, and Paul Good­
man, a .former psychology prof es•
&amp;or and noted author on student
concerns.
The ftret event of the con.
ference waa a eympoelurn Fri .
day night,

Tho eympoelum

dla.

cuued

the general lneffectlve­
no11 of the preaent syetem of
higher education. It 11 a fact
that there le a decline of ad•
mlnlatrallve control In colleges
and univereltlee and a growth
of atudent government ,
There was, however, speculation
as to the renaon ror this decline.
Mr. Hayden believes that this la
not because
the admlnlst.rators
sincerely
believe In t.he lmport­
aoue or student government;
they
merely allow It lo grow because
of
OMlflcatlon
or 1111 attitude
towards the students.

J

8

· ·
ORep
a
'
.""'" an
coordinator of Nortcn Union, has
that there will he. a
Mr. Hayden discussed the con­ announced
trncl theory ot comm.ercla.J educa­ local elimination tourn,ament, the
tion . He said education is an arti­ winners of which will go to thP
llclal system wblclt only pretends
ACU regional finals. T'he tournn learning.
·
ment will consist of bowling, pock­
The
possibilities
ror obange et billiard~. three cushion billiurd s,
were brought out by Ml". Taylor.
table tennis, chef.15, and liridge .
He relt courses should not be eo
specialized, each course should be Both men und wnm~n nre t•ligihle
studied from all 148 aspects m.t.ber to compet&lt;:.
than. Juel one, as le now the caee.
Beginning today them will be a
The concept or exams should be
re-evaluated.
More emphasis
Is 16 game elimination t,ournnment
placed on the mark you recelvll for both men and wo~nen. Aftel'
Crom u course rather than the
which the lop 20 men 11nd women
knowledge that Is gnlned .
will compete in five, 1thrne-gamc
Student ■ ahould not rush In•
matrheB . •. This will determi11e
to college. Each year ahoud be
the five te11m membe1·,; and the
taken as one 11 ready for It.
five 11ltern11tes. These ieams will
It might be neceaeary to wait
represent the school in the Asso­
a couple of years arter high
school graduation or to break
tia tion of College Unions regionul ,
up one's studies with a few
tournament to be held here on Feb.
years of work.
15 and J t1. Region 1 of the ACU
Mr. Goodman
culminated
the consists of New York St.ate and
,·onference Sunday with bis adoresa. He erioke or ed ucation 88 the s011the11st end of Canada adn mnsler.
apprent ice relo.tlonshlp, .incent I&lt;&gt;~ew Yoi·k State.
depth.

llere ai;alu 8 major point of tbe
ronference,
the relation
between
student and tcncher, was brought
oul. The role of the odmlnlstralor
or a college or university shonld
be llmt or protecting the student
11nd tenc•her without exerting any
lnfluem·e over poll~y.

All

dimiuatiou

comed hl enter provirlinp : that they
1u·e non • profossionul eomp~•titQr~
To •um up lhe coulereoce. Arnie
Mnzur, NSA coordinator,
stale d, and that they have at lcnst a 1.0
Mr. Goodman felt the reason for
"Aside
from
the
Intensive
study av&lt;•rnge. For mo1·c detail~ contact
I.he (allure or some students Is
Hnd diacuij&amp;lon or the system of Mr. Joseph Paffie in Nm·ton room
duo to the tact t.hat lhero le not
e nough personal cont.act between higher educal Ion In Ame1•lca, which 20.
proved m011t Informative and en.
the toa~her nnd the student..
lightening, tho basic resoonslbl!lty
ro1·improving the level of educa•
Saturday, there were ad.
lion rest• on our society In .!fOn•
dre11es by Mr. Hayden a"d Mr.
eru I and the torcetuloese
or the
Taylor. Eich was followed by
~tudents and teachers ln.vol'Ved.
• queatfon and anawer period

1.1:0NARDO'S
JeeJLaura11/
GROTTOIM THE REAR •
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
Visit our newly remodeled dining rooms to enjoy our
Fomous American and Italian Foods
From A Tasty Sandwich to A Full Course Meol
TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
SANDWICHES
AND HOT PLATES

I
l

SPECIA
LTIES - RAVIOLI- SPAGHETTI
- PIZZA
Take Out Orders -

Dial TF 6 -9353

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

a guaranteed gift
, Sure to please or ~e will exchange It for
another from our stock,

TheUniversity
Bookstore
"ON CAMPUS''

f'ree Gift Wrappin g and .Mailing
of $5,00 or more

011

Purchase.~

hia PhD In Rural Sociology
• at Cornell University.
\\'hl'U aaked to compa1'e Amer ­
ican stu dents with those of the
PhiJIPJ&gt;IDeij. Dr. Pai commented.

tounu1mt&lt;11ts

m u st he completed by Feb. 1.
r I a ri u c, 11nd t1·011hi1
1~ will he
nwanled !,&lt;) the •chool winnen(. All
,.,en anil womeu sttulent:s a1·e wcl-

I

o

It '

l!&gt;plnes. third In a aeries ot Visltlng I.he limited exte nt that this alt b1,
A•lun i&gt;rofessors. is currently nt !Ion exists In the Phlllil)lnes.
t·u tor 011(' month, "I hope to give
Referring to the general at.
tlt ude of the Philippine peopl e
ij\udente n beller understanding
to the US and Its actions, Dr.
or the Philippines 1&gt;eo1&gt;le.''he ex­
Pal commented, "The Phlllp.
plained.
pine'• attitude toward the US
Dr. Put gives u aeries or lectur es
la rather unrealistic Jn that
on A•lnn Clvill1.atlo n In the semlnnr,
becauae of prevloua good re.
und 11100 le&lt;:ture~ In conjuncllon
latlona betweeen the Philip .
with Or. F'rlend's se ri e8, The Great
pine■ and the US, they expect
T1·11dltlon.
all US attention• toward tht
He obtained hl3 BS ~nd
Phillppin~• to be motivated by
MA at Silllman University In
altrul ■ m.d
the Phlllpplne1.
He received

OR. PAL

"1'he American •tudents 11re won•
inde11endent • minded
and
more
1wo11e to ap811.k their minds. They
nre nlso surin•i~lugly Job-orlented.
They are 11lready thinklni,. about
getting II joll. It seems 1hey are In
a bur1-y to get lndependenre from 1
1
their p11re11ta.''

Dr. Pal reels that the emphae ,~
In American life Is largely e&lt;·o.
-nomic. "There ls n. constant com.
munlcation
between the officials
nnd the peo11le about. how to keei ,
the economy moving," he noted
The main im1&gt;resslon th11l I.IJ.
Pal la going to take b11ck to th•
Phili1&gt;1&gt;ine.~about America i~ thi s
"The Americans live In mater iul
prosperity nod comfort. They nr1
bnrd-worklng people."
The uext 11roresaor in the eerie,
lo visit onr campus will be Mc,..
hnmmad Nus~ln, or Pakistan.

Saturday Night, Dec. 8th
Twist Night ot the
Rose Gardens - Biggest
Dance Floor in Town
Featuring the Fabulous
Prophets
All Waiting

Your Arr/vol al

THE ROSEGARDENS
WHERLE DRIVE, ~ Mile Eos1
of Transit

�PAGESEVfH

SPECTRUM

Friday, December 1, 1962.

DR. BRUBAKERSAYS

Je/igiouJ
':JiJingJ
U. S. Policy Has Failed 1n Latin Amerfca;
We Must ~~ttempt
U~derstand Others
By JUDY BUTTON
SCA

monthly Sat111•d11y Night Sociul~
this Saturday
evenir1g. Thl' pro­
g1·e.m Is scheduled to get under
way at 8:00 p.m. in HiJlcl llou~e.
Refreshments
will be served and
mul$iC fot· Jancing will lie pro­
vided by Hillel 's new hi-fi system.
Hillel will serve a delicatessen
sUl)Jl&lt;'l' this Sunday
evening at
5 :30. "The liegpoke Ov.,rcout," 11
l!hort 8tor·y film, will be shown,
followed by II g1·oup diseussion.
Re servations ure necessary for th
Supper.
The second meeting or the Sem­
iuar on "The Zionist Idea'' will be
held Sunday, at 8 :00 p.m. in Hillel
H ou8c, The Seminar Seriea is co­
sponsored ·by Hillel and the Stu­
dent Zionist Organization.
Alan
Ehdich will chair the meeting.
The next meeti ng in the Live
and Learn Coffee Houn discu s­
sion series will be held Tuesday,
at 8 :()0 p.m. Th e subject !or con­
sid~ration will ,be, "Le11ving the
Ne st Before Mal'riage." Mrs. Nor­
man Fertig is the coordinatot' or
the series.
Chriatian Fellowahlp
There will be a meeting of the
Christian
Fellowship today
in
room 330 of Norton. The meeting
,,.rill l,e he-Id at 7 :30 p.m., and the
topic will be "Modern Methods in
Mission Wo1·k." Ken Brooks of
the Philippines will be the speaker,

t9

I

By MARY LOU WILSON
ln agriculture, attempting "to ek.i
·•we hnve railed to get neross out an existence oo the hillside
,ll1111~1·M the Student
Center
our B)'ll1Jl8lby for 1,..atln Amer lQa," wll.h n horHe or donkey ."
Thursday, at 6:30 p.m. Tl1e menl
8tated Dr·. Oeorge Brubaker, , Mon.
Th e vast majority of the land
will be a e r v e d at cost (about
day in the third lecture ,~t the
la concentrated In the hand• of
$1.25) . A party will be held at
Pressure Pointe co nvosntlon sel'lee
the weatlly oligarchy who have
C'huplain Buerk's home following
conalatently denied the need
kJ&gt;Onijored by the Student Si!nate.
the dinner. For reservations
call
Disrusslng Unite d States foreign
for reform in theae growing
TF 4-4260 or TF 6-6900. The dead­
policy In South America, Dr. Bruco untries. The high annual fn.
is Tuesday.
line for reservations
crease In population, tow wage
bnker relnforred hlB conclualoa by
The SCA has an open discussion
pyinK that "we bave bean tmo conacale, lack of adequate com.
,•very Thu1·sdn y, 11 ::!-0 n.m .• I :00
cerned with unll-communls1n and
munlcatlona and need for re.
p.m. Check the bulletin hourd fo1·
buKlness oligarchy" In our re 'latloll.8
form In all aapec ta of the aothe room number,
wlth lbe Spanish e11ealtlng J1e&lt;&gt;plea clal structure combine to hamWeeley
per ltabl1lzatlon and progreu
of the Western Hemisphe re to at"The Rim of Tomot •row," a film
In that area.
tempt to understo.nd "B peop'le who
ln sununary , Dr. Brubaker state d
are diff erent. "
on the Near East, will be featured
the de111:
er In vureuJug ollr preaent
However, our dlfflcult) r In
"t the n.-xt Wesley suppl•r. 5:00
comprehending tho dlfferen,oe In
pnll,•y in Lulln Amerlcn Hea In
p.m. this Sunday.
Newman
attitude of the Latin la not: the
Everyone is -urged to attend u
sole problem to be faced In
e1tabll1hln11 amicable relaf:lona
w.,ek-day mass during
Advent.
with the South. !'The dlfflcut .
)!ass is offered ut Newman IIult
t lee Inherent in creating Sj&gt;me­
at 12 noon dalJ:9.
thlng luting In Latl" America,"
The candy snle nt Newman will
he declared, have arl1en 1'rom
lust one mol'e W\IOk,
the relative polltlcal inetabllllty
New man will hav e a meeting,
of the area. Thia has resulted
\\ ednesday, at 7,30 p.m. in Nor­
in a parade of dlctatorahlps of
tun Union.
a nearly Identical • chara,cter
H IIlol
which h~ve led to little s1oclal
llilll'l will hold a Suhhath Serv•
reform, a nd Instead merely to
1,-cthis evening ut 7 :45 in HilM
a repeated "chan ging of the
lluuse. Dr. Justin Hofm11nn will
guard."
sp&lt;'ak on "Jacob's Conception of
Hlatoricnllr.
the U.S. bau sup.
Judaism." An Oncg Shnbbnt will
ported, through renr or rlH!nit radl.
r~llow.
rullsm aud Pnaull!g !11Jury to Amer.
IIillcl will spom;or one of its
lrRn intereAts , theHe dl ct.ators,
thereby Incurring the Ill reelllnic or
tbe potentially
more dem1&gt;crat1t1
elements In l,atln Amerloun 110Jltl01•I life. Arcor dln g to Dr . Rru.bol&lt;er,
too or1en we ba, ·t• mulle th•e mie­
tukt• or labell nit "a nytbln ~: tJiat
'l'he LtlghL It11v. Le.urlstou L, Oburthes whloll conferred with the doeen't Iii our pntlern" na ro m.
:-calre. Episcopal Biebo 11 or Weat.:Russlnn Orthodox leaders In Mos. mnnfat
ern New York, will speak on ·•The cow.
Attempting to &lt;lls11el tho mylb
The Bishop atao traveled
Chrlstln u 111 Russin" Sunday at
of 11p11le11c~
1tMaoclnted with South
through out Russia, vl ■ ltlng
7:30 p.m. lu I.be conference theatre.
A111erlrn. and the lei:enaij ,of the
many churches.
The pubUc Is invited to attend, e.nd
He renewed
C'tmqulstadores, he IltiNertecl that
afterthere will be n reception
hla friendship with the Catho"Latin America Is not a rlc•b con­
wnrds In the Dorothy Hana Lounge.
Ilea of All Armenia, HI• Holl•
tinent."
Tbe urea pos scs s;is few
h&amp;a
reuently
reU1sho11 S-Oalfe
neas Vasken, whlle In Armenia.
3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE
na turn I resonrces. and well over
d tron1 a six-wee k visit to
1111•11~
He also mot with the Patriarch
60~ or the populotloo I~ em ployed
lhe Soviet Union and Yugoslavln .
Cathollcos
of the Georgia
Aa Obalrmao
o[ the Episcope.1
Church, E.phrem II.
l!lmrc b'e Joint Commission on Co.
The c1·owded churches In Russia
01•eratlon with the O1·tllodox and and th e willlagness or the dele•
l&gt;ld Catholic Churches, be was a ga,teY to promote mutual under.
,u~mber or a thlrleeu-man
deleg11. standing among nallous pn.rtlculnr.
1ion trom the Natloanl Council of ly inl[lressed the Bishop.

The SCA will hiwe n Chri $tmus

nur ,llttlculty In developing au ef.
tecttve allaocla Lion wllh these
e11wr1th1gnaW1na. 'l'hE' t:nlle d SlAtea
and Ruula.
both attempting
to
elicit their support In the conlllct
ot tdeologleR. bavo, be remarked,
lloelsred "open eeoaon nu I.a.tin
Amerlcll."
Wt&gt; must decide on n policy or
e1111portror "tho democ rut!c movo.
m~•nta, and, U neceeeary, the demo­
cratic left." P11n-AmerlcA nlem must
!Je de-emphaslle0,
and reepect for
the sovereign rights of the coun­
tries luvolvod must bi.' substituted.

Our poll&lt;')', be said, mnRt be •·one
or caution, one or· syn1Pa thy llnd
on._; of patience .''

BishopL. L. Scaifeto Speak
On 'The Christian 1n Russia'

3637 UNION ROAD

T'YPEWRITER
DEPARTMENT
"JIIDS
TOEDUCATION
BILL"

Olivetti IPortable Typewriter

-gJohhlet&lt;.!
Feminine Footwear
SHERIDANPLAZA

UNIVERSITYPLAZA

Key In New Bill

Iluffulu ...
Uw. 7; Typ,•1Hit...•r Jcpurt111~11t or th~ U ni, •1•rsi1y
Book~!\n·c nolt•d stuu11rh udvocat.e of proper too]ij !or proper
education, today introduct•d un unpre1•~dt,nt.ed hill for ,1ids 11o
education. l'ight on lhe htiels of 1&lt; new sd100I ,~mt'~t~,._ AU (,1:!/
ke)' 1,oinl~ of the bill were cat•tfully cover ed, with extensive
pri" i~ions tu allow both c-111&gt;ilaland Jow~r character$ equal con­
~id1•oation. In it s original promulgation the bill wus tabulated
to cover all type s ... white, black, or ruJ. Particular emv h:ixis
fo1· ma1-ginal lnw,vers r!esi ring advance to uraes to pass the s11111·1•
ha1·. Uniu1hno11b 1111pr•ovalis 1•x11el'lc1
f wh1•n I.he h1ll ,·urn,,, l&gt;&lt;•ftH,·
its rnlle 11)(t11•
s on the floor ..

JUNIORSSENIORS
OrderYour Official
Graduation Ring Now.
A.11ni/4bl, Ac

THE

UNIVERSITY
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..OnCampus"
Special Shanks available for

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without hlz toolz .
ThlH vreclslon tycvwrltor
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products of modern tim es. bu a %S!lil!•H k11r tnr every need .
llz I.be ooly com11lete llt&amp;-welgbt port.able 11nd rt111ently under.
Thi~ reduatlou In all
weot 11 reduction in prl!l9 lo
probobillltJ will reiult In :in lncrcse lo grade,i for tho 1tud,
euta.
For each one or my oonslltohuenta
tllnt 11kN1 Advan.
t.age or this bill, tJ1ere ln1taballs will be mon4f . . mo,u&gt;11r • ,
engraved tree on the caee. Further, nnd or gre"lor ,i.nto.
cnnce, they will reaeve free the l)Ol)Ular Webster ('1111.lirllllll
used unllil abo
Dictionary similar to the one mf 1U.MIAt1&lt;nt
I.out It to ber daytClr.''

Science, luflneH ,

Engineering, Pharmacy , Law, Dentbtry, Medicine, Nursing,

Physical Therapy, and Medi«sl Technology

Special Encrusting Available

n,•111

"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, Decembe r 7, 1962

SPECTRU&gt;JI

PAGEEIGHT

J

'

//
/)/) J?
" King Lear " SparksFit/ ally; NeuJCommittee (?
Mohr, Frey, Olds Applauded\ N~u; For,necl ...:&gt;peclrum Call (!..:,oar,
(T/11 , ,.,

BY GERARD

MARCHETTE

Gu,sl Critio
Gwe tf,e Drama D~purtment at
t.h,~ Univeraity credit for a bole!
~1.A&lt;b
at one of Shake$peal'e'~ most
frustrating
plays . "Killg
Le:11·"
conu1\ns all the hcautic~ ot lnni::uug,• and charaetcl'izntion
to be
fo11nd i11 "llnmlet" 1111CI" l\l&gt;,th~th,"

Furthermore,
Mr. Atkins' -..Lug.
inic ol Mr. Guastella tauRcs the
actor to address his line~ into the
wings.
line
OccaslonoJly he gets orr 8legitl•
("Legitimate'/
Whal
lR
1oute?") wilh relish ,

I

Photo graph.)' Cl~b

By BOB SA GAN

,,r,.11,iA ba~"&lt;I 011 th~ IVnd. rvcminp tJ,·,•~•11/.)

Lunch with Ogden Naab,: host n
reception for Halen Hai ies and
Manrlce :mvans; share 11, moment
or ••xcltement talklug to Vance
l'ack11rd or Quentin Reynolds , . .
all U1ls QDd mnuy olher p'lane are
being made In room 31a, i&gt;fftoe of
Mrs. Ru th SbJl\v, coor dlnato1' of
ncllvltles ond utlvlsor for tho new­
est.orgnn.17.nUon on campus: tho
f'onr. erts nnd Leutures Committee.

Th e1-e will be a meeting ut 4
pm today in the darkroom. A
lec tur e will be given ,IJy one of
th e members on pictm,e composiM t.lon texture
a d 5t I
'
.
'
n
Ye:
e~
hers going on the excm·s1on will
meet nt 1 pm tomorrow ut the
dnrkroom
'
• • •

~nee Theater

.
Th,e glee club, comprised of ~•
men anti women under t he direc
tion or Mr. Slominski, ha8 pe,
formed at Klein h11ns. The gl'ou1 1·
will sing a l'ar!Pty of Christmu
Christmas Party
Goodyear Sou th ilwit.ls all , ong s .
Followinir ihe ~oncert, the Hath ­
fi·esbmen glds to thei1• Comnrntet '
Christma~ Party to be held Dec. s kcllcr will ~erve a special Chri st ­
19, in the SouLh lounge of Goo1l­ man din11e1· from 6-'7 for il,00 .
A dance will be htlld In the multi­
Yl'8l' Hall, from 3.5 pm.
Each floo1• has decorated their purpo se rnom from '7-10. Dre ss
lounge tor the holiday senson . Re­ will be suit~ fot • guys and clressvs
for girls. The Manhattans will
fr.~~hme11is will be served .
provide Lhe music,

However, Rryna Weis&amp;, coming
eonct,J&gt;t that lettps off the p1111:1&gt;on like Queen Judith of· A.nderson
like l,hab grando
nnd
tr1U18cends a r~sJ)eclabl e '30d sounding
umusi n11 '!'his organization Is cow11osed or
r~~llng , 'l'hnt it mov~~ only fit­ dam&lt;:, is n mnlicioualy
Rcgnn,
Say
for
Jack
Christ's
Fool m~mhers or the stucloot body who
ftilly in the· prOl!uctlon avnilubk
that
he
is
11
p
irited
nnd
a
thl
~Ur, ahnre lhe common goal of new
th rouich Sundny at llnird muy IJ,,
tuol!s to our cnm1111s.Agenta oro
unrl
that
Jos
eph
Sanelli'
s
fo!llliKh
hnnc for the lur~e cu11111i•~
1n11li
,
In continuous touch wflb us, or­
Osw11
Id
lmpreascs.
one,• uwnitin~ il.
Ceriug to us and the compns some
Tho cream of the eveni ng
or the outatn ndln g and well-known
The trouble la In the over­
•
rests In the llonds of four
lodlvlduals and groups related to
all conception, Director Irwin
Social Welfare Club
gontlemen,
In the demandi ng
our own goal - (ot brtngln11 111gb.
J, Atkln1 has settled
for a
part of Lear, James Mohr Is
leve l cultu ral 11rogrnme to ,our stu­
The next meeting of the Sodu I
acrupulou&amp; unravelllng of the
dents.) Such peo1lle as well-known Weliarc Club will be helc\ Mon­
Int ense, artlcula,te and versed.
text Intact,
Is If&lt;&gt;lat4
He may not be this , with er.
ec,lentlst WUly Ley; poet Mark day at '7:00 pm. The spc11ke1· will
to prune the Bard? Watching
Ing old vine In all Its lmpll ca­
Vnn Doren; and editor, Norma11 he Mr. Frank Hodge~, of the school
th is ••Le•r" , one see a po1al.
Cousins are being oonlac;ted bv of social work. His topic will be
tlon a ar,d aenllitles, but he la
bllltlea t.o speed up t~c pace
the committee for rutul'e programij , Crimi nology , The meeting will be
cno rmo u1ly true hi his agonies ,
and
scrap
meuy bualnees
in Norton 335. This will be the
(swo rd play, etc.)
In February, two pro11rams
Although Herb Erickon movm&lt;
last meeting of the semestet·, so
Paul
Jacobs,
are
scheduled:
To be aure, the long evening ha~ like Methuselah and looks as old
all members please bring dues.
pianist for the New York
mo".emenl.11ot high drama It oot his Gloucester is humorous and
Anyone interested in joining the
Ph ilharmo nic, will come (:o our
L.
David
tull-hodled.
Along
with
high t1•agedy. Ona of these comes
cluh i~ welcome ,
ca mpus and give a conoi,rt at
Frey, some or Lhe 1t1tter ecenes
when Kent. takes leave of Leal' in
Cap11nH111l,T~e acclaimed eth­
have a rar e poign ance .
Act One, and again l11 the renic Afro-Haitian Dance gro up
Math Club
11pp~11ranceol the disguised Kent.,
As a matter or' re,.:ord, "l(i11)(' - The Destine Dancers wlll
The undergnduate
Mnth Club
Later on, when Lc11r comp1'ehe11tls Lenr" most pleased and sur 9rised
bring to our camp ue tho tr a­
will meet Thul'sday, at 7 :30 pm
his folly, the stage momentarily us in the ncting of Mr. Frey and
ditional and rltualle t )c a.ounila
i11 Norton 233. Mr. R. J. Lewyckyj
euars and we aro qulokened ,
nd Edgur Charl es Olds as Kent.
and dance s of two cultu ro l tr••
will discuss "A Prnblem in Ge­
Mr.
Frey
held
the
staj1;C
credit.­
dltlons
of
Haiti-tile
Alrrlca"
This being a college- level pro­
notics."
ably most of Lhe time, employing
and the French.
lluclion, one must naturally mnke
Fim1I plans will be made and
his
resonant
voice
with
spar
tan
lhe expected Q llowances !or lnpses
In TP.&lt;·ognltlon or hlff llChieve. fares will be collected for the Dec.
restrnint.
Although
he
sti
ll
lion
­
n! tttste (the embarrasing
&lt;1Mct.­
ments In promoting Rn apl)reoln ­ 28 tri(l to IBM 11tEndicott, N, Y.
ment by Henry
Simon of (;tou, lies phrasei;, he rises to this oooa­ tlon or the null ve tolk 11rt11 or his at this meetiug. Refreshments will
t1ion,
cester's
eyes being gouged out.)
country throughout the wo rlld, Des. l,,; s~1•ved.
and breaches o! caaUng (s11ecll\­
Mr. Old, new to ililH corner, line hllll been 11warded the Legion
•
rally, Cordelia and Goneril).
highest honor hl•
achieved an admirnble ba luna, and of llouo r-tbe
Marketing Club
country
can
beHtow.
D~ulh~r Modem, luminous look­ lucid delivery that sho uld not go
.Wednesd~y/ the Marketing t:luh
In&amp; lt a wile angular as Cordella, unnoticed.
As you cnn aee. this new orgnn• ~ 111presen~_Mr . . Ralph Turgean,
is mu ch too soft and confused to
None thele ss, you'd be beat ad­ ltl!Jllon Is well 11nder way. They do, n represantat 1ve of Howard Johnmake anything poignant out o! vised not to notice son1e of the however, need wore meml~ers to son's Restaurant. The meeting will
T,enr'a on11 true daughtet.
And othe rs who p9pulate Boris Barn• carry out t.be prograDI. They In­ be heltl at 3:15 pm in No,-ton
vite all interested members or the 334,
Sherry Miller,
an
uncommonlv
novic's
drab
setting,
drearily
vlt11I nctrcss, settles for vaud~­ lighted by Henry Wi~ke Jr. "King Stu dent body to attend our nerl
u *u u,. ,.... ,.u ... u
vilte blneks instend ot old Globe Lear" owes most of its glory thi s meeting on Thursday nt 4 pm ........,..
Jn Room ;U6 of Norton. F.lope to
grays In her hroI1d portrayal ot lime around to Shakespeare.
I\ Grl&gt;Ot Show tor tho Lover• ot /\rt
Ree you.
C1,1Mril.

But it dc111:rves-indecd, requires­

!\

Chrlatmaa Progr am

The . Niagara
U?ivel'!lity gl~,
cl~b will pel'form .th,~ Sund11~ CVl'•
nm~ at the nnxer commit.tee '•
C~r1stmas Program, The progran •
will s ta1•t M 4 :t)O in the Confer

••

• • •

Live Jazz Featured
Today, WBF ,O will present loca l
live jazz on Dave Jay's Musi c
town, US A. Seven local jazz mu­
sicinns wlll spend 60 minutes with
Dave playing Rll the favorite jaz ~

oharts.
Musictown, US A is a weekly
presentation
of WBFO from 10
11.m.· 2 a.m. Fridays 11ight.s. Ev­
eryth ing from show tunes to the
latest in modern jazz is featun• d
on Friday nights.
Mr . Ja y hn s worked in comme, .
cial l'lldio £or the past five year ~.
hoth i11 unu 01, t of stste ,

CINEMA
TL 3-880 S

645 Moln St.

Now Showing ,
Held Oyer, 5th week

••

SANDRA DEE, BOBBY DARIN

"Ifa Man
Answers
"
in color
Storts Doily ot

l :25, 3:30, 5:40 , 7 :SS, 10100
Lote Show Satvrdoy

* *,.,.•••ll

Michael
Guastella,
a usually
~1111ableact.or, is out of his milieu
fo&lt; Edmund. 'l'he staccato style o!
Mr. Guastelln ls as rar removed
from Shokesl) earcnn spoecb aa is
Mike Hommer from Shakepcnre's
b11stard son.

Pizzo
De li vered

Free t o you

door .

Fresh Boked ..•
the woy you like it

I

Limelight
Gallery
49 EDWARD STREET
Ji'ecsturingFolk M u,!o.
Wed. · Su11. Nite
Dec. 5-8

Tfl/11&lt;in

Fine Gast/
Waldmr Histo,-yl"

SAMUEL

Dec. 21 &amp; 22

ELMWOOD
AT UTICA
TT 2-1847

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FOR TICKETS:

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•

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,.
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182 EASTFERRYST.CORNERWAVERLYST.

with Choose
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th ( lhin.J one hoff prtc~.
londoys only
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F,1-Sot, 5 PM- l AM
Sun, 4 PM l I PM

By the Finest Groups in the Country
Low priced Food and Drink•
New Policy
. N_o Minimum - No Cover

I.AST_ The

( 3
~NITES
*

"FATHER OF
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SPECIAL STUD&amp;NTDISCOUNTS
At Both Theatres - Pre~entotion of I. D. Cards
~~A AUA H H A:A
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Every

PIZZERIA BON-TON TAVEB1'1r
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Howo,d Keel

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FOR SEVEN
BROTHERS"
Jono Powell

(The Wildest Play
You Ever Saw)

Dec. 28 &amp; 29 - from Torooto
THE SINNERS

13

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SUN . t~,u WED.

S11kol•l.11- Co11rir1·-Ex1n"rWH

•

LISA KINDRED

ii

BLOWS"

THEATRE

" r rr mr111lo1uiF..t~lt1·1111•l'lt
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" THE 400

ElMWOOD

Sanday

HACKETT ond RAVEN
DAVID WIFFIH

"HIROSHIM
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Held Over thr111

Dec. 14 &amp; 15 - From Toronto

COLLEGE

$Moll Pluo

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froncols

lli A• *-**.,......;;
....
Foreign fl lms
NORTH]
PARK
Ttuffouta
THEATER

GEORGE BRAITH Trl ,o

~eol\jri11g Miss Pola Roberts or, Drums
Opening Dec, 1 l -23 Skippy Williams O,gan 'Trio
!Direct ftom

Hew Yo,k J

Feotw"'\g Min Bcmodlr,o Palme, on D1uft01

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...................................
__.-tr.!

�SPECTRUM

Fridoy. December 7 , 1961

Student Association Subsidiary Of!ers
Educational Tou rs of Europe , Russia
'ducutJo oal Ti•o.vel incorporated,
f,
Ht travel subsidiary ot
" iiun-l)rodS tee NatlonAI Student
1be l ' lllle
ta
alloo ot stu·odatlon, fl con f e de r
1
· ""
t
over 400
d•ilt govern'lllen
s aI
',n~l'I Cllll colleges and universities.
.\
,
onriorlng tours abroad for.
1 511
,i ud..nlR ',!1111summer.
wr1 provi des low cost

cultural

.,n&lt;I1,rtucaLlonnl roreli,,'Tltravel tan.
ur•d especially to student Inter.
"'" '!'he ltavel arrungements
are
nl(tdt• in coo11erotlon with lhe No.
,1, 1 Unions of Students
abroad.
11111
nibe ••g or the loternatlonul
Stu .
1111
,h•nl •rm vol Conference.
The price of an NSA -ETI
tour 11 lower than th at of any
0 t1,cr program offered by other

;;:::~:~~!~:.,

1: .,•ct~:'~u;~P::;
sluden t organlza t iont&lt;Who make
t~e arangoments for the tour ,
•nd tho fact that NSA Is a
non.proflt organiza t ion. P rice•
vary from $750 to $1500 (tr an a.
portatlon Included) de pending
on the nature of the program ,
Price Includes meals, lodging,
tips, porterage, etc.

grams :\re ol'ter8d aboard lncludlui;
lnnguoge claasea, politico.I discus.
•iClll.i! url h!slory aod music lee.
tui't!S, and or course the social o.d .
vantages thu1 u student Rhlp orrers.
On the tour , there la no OP•
portunlty
to meet European
atudenta, and in each country
an Informal meeting with Eu.
ropean students Is arranged.
There Is ample free time on
the tour, and students are free
to leave the tour at any time
to purcue their own Indiv idual
lnterecta.
Campus travel director lb WII.
11nm Sherman, a tenching fellow
In the dt11)llrlment or English . He
is available trom 2-4 p.m. Mouduy

PAGENJNI

Want an· Ex,citingChnstmas Holiday?
Student s Of'1,ere d a Free Tr,.p t O . CUba

•
.
st u&lt;leut,s mterea t ed in tl'avellng
to Cuba during the Cbris tma ! hp).d
~
1 ays are BSk Cd t O a tte nd 8 mul'L·
u
d
Ii
3
6
mg at
:l mon ay. The looat on
h
.
of t e meeting will be posted ut
1·nrious points on Cl\mpus.

Eatt.Wett
Tour: Visits Berlin,
Poland, CtecboelovakJa, Hungary,
J'ro~r11ms or e 11rruoged so that Flnand, Sweden and t.b.r11eweeks
.i uMnts get a detailed view of In nuss\a.
encl! toUntry with foreign uuiver~
French.Study Tour: ~'our weeks
, lty s tudents acting as guides lu
,•ucll country . All llfClllPB are small, In Purls w1tb st ud y five mornJ:ngs
ond tour members must be between a week at the Sorbc,nne, nod two
the ag,is or 18 and 25, either stu. weeks living en famllle In Rouen.
dents. gr11duut e stu dents, or out or
Festival of Mualo and Art: Fran ce,
college no more than two years.
Italy, Austria, Germany, Swlber.
Traus11orntlon to Eu rope co.n be land, Scotland, England; wlth em.
bystudent ahlg especially chartered phusls on the major European cul.
ror NSA programs. Orientation pro. turol ovents or the summer.

the fourth dimension: TIME

*

;

they sought thl' 11'1:'iStl'r this form of protest to­
opportunity to see and evaluut~ w11rds a polic)' whkh could Jc11d
thl' situution in Cllha, st.atinv; that to forthcr incursion• on Amcricn'•
The group will leave Dec. '!!4, th&lt;? Cuban revolution i~ 8 highly dvil liberties
-': The KJ'oup fully ,ecoKnlt.1,K
flying from Toronto to Havainn, Rigni!icunt occurrence in this h&lt;•111
1,nd will return Jan. 3. All •ix- i~phere and mel'ita as Cull nm! thl' t;ruvlty of the pr e~ent ~t.'lt.· or
penses (plane trip, room and complet-0 :In und erstanding as pos - relatiom .• b ct w c &lt;'11 th&lt;' Uuit~cl
ho,ud) will be paid by the Cub1111 ~ibll•,
• tlu,t
Stuu ,s nnd ('11hr1 und t1•1'4
Fe,lel'ntion
of U nivc1'l\ity Situ.
'· Th,, ~rou11 11111
,ged that dir ect such a trip at this tinw w ,,u)&lt;l hvlr,
dents.
1,1·,•~s coverage of the Cul,nn ~ltu­ to ◄ lnsP tPm~ions h{.~Lween H1P Cuhftt1
Eurly in October, a group ut atlo11 hn s boon spnt sr 111111
~,,1r. 1,ropl~ 11J1cl the Am e ti cnn 11ul,lic.
s tudents from ,evernl Nl•w Yo,rk contmdi ctory, lc1n•ing 11 c ~ l tnin
f t: The United Stat~ s K0VNll
C ity colleges and univcl'siti&lt;!S niet 111nountl&gt;f cloubt n~ to what is uc­
nnd discussed the situution in C:11
• t,mUy ucuuiTinK thcr~. I'C'rsoriul, mcn t clu1•~ not huv, • th e ,-firht tu
ho. At thnt meeting the AJ Hlor 1l1 "on the si10t'' observ1.1tion woulcl r ostr icl its citizi,n's 11g hL to t1·nv c•l
Student Committee for Trnvel to clo n1urh to alleviate thc . e doubt.,. 111J1 011,1 w ith out encro11chi11~ upon
Cuba was formed, nl)J,l, aft.Qr 1re­
Since the u. s. govornm~nt tl1e fu11dunw1ttal princi ple, of f1•1•
••·
c~i\'ing an invitation , from t,hc
Cnban Federation
of University ,lt•e~ not allow its citi1.ens to tnw- t!om of the indivldunl, npon whi ch
Student:! t.o spend the Chl'idm111s ,,1 to t;uba, the CommiU,i,c is con- thiK nntion was f&lt;&gt;undcd.

.;!:nt~1!:~t

~~r~c:r~:a~!n
o~e;::~
1011 ror any students who rec1ulre
11ddltional l0Corll1allon. IC student.•
are unabl11 Lo comply with (biA
Lime schedule, they may leave a
message at the dl'lparttnent or E.n.
gl!sh set.Ung up an appointment .
Programs orrered include:

holid1tys in Cuba, the group d~- cc,ned with tbjg l)Olicy to r,;~IJ•Jl l
cided t.o make the trip for tile fol- tbe 1·ight of travel, ond f~vl thllt
•
lnwmg reasons:
u• responsible people. the" •liould
As students,

*

Did you win
Te~mpest?

a

Amcrlca js hortest new

t,po , t i con vertible !

... stilla mysterious
conceptto science.Timeis onlyan idea,
an abstraction
... an areaof shadow,speculation-andsurprise.

SE
PT. 5, 1752, NEVER
HAPPENED
!. .. Nordid anydate fromSept.3 to 13,
al least in Englandand lhe AmericanColonies,Whyl The Kingdecreed
that these dayswouldbe skippedto correcta discrepancy
betweenthe
OldEnglishcalendarand the newlyadoptedGregoriancalendar.This left
year.
puzzledEnglishmen
andcolonistswith oneI9-daymonthanda 355-day

IMPORTANT!If you holi:i any of the 5 winning
numbers , claim your Pontia c Te111
p••~t Le Mans
Convert ible In accordan ce with t he rules on the
reverse of your license pla te.

B159345
A063168
3. C625641
4 . B898060
s. C479646
1.
2.

All claims for Tempes s and Consolatlon
Pnzes must be se nt via egi~tere~ mall . post •
marked by Dec . 26 , 196, and received by the
Judges no later than De ember 31, 1962.
II you hold a consolation 1prlzenumbe r, you win
a 4 ,speed Portable HI-FtStereo Set, ' 'The Waltz" by
RCAVictor. Or. you may still win a Tempes t! (See
official claiming rules on reverse or your license
plate. and observe clalm1~1sdates g,ven above.)

CO NSOLAT IO N
PRIZE NUMBERS!

1. B258729
2. C065695
3. A014505

6. C233412

C375972
s. B398344
9. A487788
4. C403887
s. C00.1596 10. A121605
ITTAUS TIMlTO!U kl
TIM[ , Hamlllon·• u ,
1,,mel,' precise version

of

I tlmeplect 1,x,.

ftom 6 to 9 months to

produ
ce. Hall of 1h•
mo,ethal" 2000produt•
Uon steps. a,e quality
Inspection s whi c h u•

sure HamHton1ccu,1c1.

THEHAMSTER'S
BUILT-IN"CO
N•
TINIIOUSCLOCK
" .. •enableshim
lo maintainhis dailyactivitiesof
eatingand sleepingwithout the
usual stimull of light and dark·
ness. Helivesonexactlythesame
scheduleeven in total darkness
.

Are you a personwho likes lo
standout? A Hamlltonis bolh
attractiveanddistinctive
, a louch
of excellentlaste lhat you can
wea· every ))our of a lifetime.
Theyslart as low as $35. Ask
your favorite gift,giver. Hamilton
Witch Co., Lancaster,Pa.

7,

BMGRAND
PRIX50
Sweepstakes

for colleges

only

More t han 50 timu s the chance to win than if open to the general public .

45

T,ampests

to go!

Get set for th e neKtlap
110 1110
1e Tempests ancl
15 more conso lat,on pmesl 1P1ck up an entr y blan k
where you buy cigarett es . Enter now- enter often .
Anyentry rece ived by Ja nu~,ry 18th can Win one of
t he 4 5 Tempes ts sloll to &amp;10!Of courw ; e11t11es
you ·ve already s ubmi tt ed a re st1JI 1nt11erunn111g!

Get with the winners •••
far ahead in smol&lt;lng satisfaction I
SEE THE PON11AC TEMPEST AT YOUR M~ l' BV PCNTI.AC t•EALER •

�Ftidoy, December 7 , 196l

OU•hamer
PraisesBahyBalls;
T•m Showed
Talent,Versatilit

SPORTSCIRCLE

A Replyto Letteron Basketball

B)' ROCKY VER.8ACE
falo frolb; then lt h11ppened-l0&amp;4
lt'8 the ''best tr1111bteam since Ing 14-13 late to the fourth quartti,
I"ve Ileen hero. They are hard hit. a Syracuse back picked otr no tr,
tlog 11nd consolenllous and have rnnt Bntrato 1111&amp;1Md scamper~
much ooheslvenqss. Fair size, g00d untouched Into l,he endzone tro,
~pee d and p0tentlal," speaks for ab&lt;&gt;ut 20 ynrds out. Now vla cea 1,
For all lboee who ba,..e not aa yet read lbe "Letters to the Eldftcn:"
the material , These are the words n 11a11stng slluu11oo, the UB fr~b
column on page■ tour and twelve, I would urge lll&amp;l you do so betol'e
or tile bead tootbnll ooacb, Dick men again took lo the air , only 1,
re ading tbl.e column. There la a letter In lbal section that .-oloee a
Olfenhamer. concerni ng hie Baby hnve the ldentlcnl thing ham,oo,
•u11vosedly Informed opinion about the etatua ot baaket.ball at thiR
B'ootboll Bulle.
lllllYerslty.
As can be seen, tho fresh ,
Although the team flolebed the
man 1.s.1 record could Just a1
Thia letter begins wllll an assertion that ~be Unlvel'l!lt)' ol Bultalo
~eAson wlnnlr,g only ooe gam e
easlly have been S.0. One muat
loses 1,re•tlge when wo, "a. univer sit y of major college statM," 11Ched•
wblll' losing t.breo and tying one,
alao remember that fru hman
ute telllllB suob u Toronto, Oswego, Brockport Stale and Cortland
th~ 881lHO tl cnu be look ed 111)0D llS
football teams at UB, as well
State.
11greut BUOCG88. Against 801118of
H In many other major 001.
Ihe Jllost's top hn II clu bs, the lro$li
In the ntel !)lace, Mr. Epstein Is tot11lly misinformed wbe11 be &lt;:Alla
leges, are used primarily to
d!Pplnyed great talent an ll vet•~ntll.
OB "a university ot major college sltllus,'' tor we are considered n'
run the vartlty'a oppone"tl '
tty In P.very nspecl e&gt;f the Knuiu,
plays against the varalty. This
"maJor" school In toothnll only. Secondly. be clalme that UD Is "stoop.
llmlh the time available for
Ing" when these team s nre met on lbe uourt. Now lo anawcir lo t.b.18
several tlmu the Baby Bulls
Ar"1y's but shooter Is Chuck
pr~ctloe among themselvea.
chor~e. one only need rlrrnce fll oth~r bnskotball sobod ules. If UB h,
marched the ball down the
"Hut.ch''
Hutchln1on,
a
junior
"stooping" when fl oppaees Toronto, woat Is NYU doing when fl t&amp;cee
Wost Point field but failed to
Since an many ,,layer s werr• ou,.
forwllrd who Is unca,,ny with
that snmo quintet? Whal are St. nonnvenlure and Niaga ra. doing when
score, flnally droppl ng a 6.0
~11111dlng,II would be extr•ru,11
his high arFhlng ju"np shot
they oppose Southern llllnols, Villa M11donnA,Bellflnnlne, nod the like?
doolelon to Paul Oleb:el'• top
,1rrt1cull to single out nny o~,
from 25 feet out.
U B plays
Suro, II one conaldDr8 the only approprlflte prerequisite to tbe schedul•
recruit•.
Agah,at Manlius, a
Army Wednetday afte1rnoon at
rh1yer or even several play er. 11
West
Point.
(See
Page
11)
we are
Ing or a cage opponent to be that school's student vu1111ls.UO!o,
rnllltary prep.school, boasting a
stars. Doing excepll&lt;&gt;oally fln1• Joh,
''stooping," a nd so are 1111lhll other college tenmt, too.
lineup loaded with future stare
throughout this 11nst season wm
·for ml!ny major schools, the
cent11r Jim (Ringo) Duprey, lackl"I
V1111eee, Mr. Epstein, In basketball the quality of an op­
frosh alao dropped a close one
Brinn Kent and Blll 'l'sylQr , g1JA1'1
ponent It not mea,ured by that lnttitutlon•• enrollment. In.
LAST WE E K
by the same 6.0 score.
Ken Shaken and Jim R&lt;&gt;es.
,toad, It le determined by the playing ability of the team that
Rollton College 48 Holy Cross 12
The .Baby Bull scoring attack
Aleo qua1Tterbncks Roy Fer g11son
Nprotont■ tho college. Now I think we would all agree tha,
FINAL REOORl)S
began to roll against Colga,te, but and Fred Geringer, fullback Oeorg,
there are some pretty fine buketball
club, In this country
Team
Won
L.oat Tied so did that or the fine Colgate
Ad11ms, haJrhacks Pere:, Mallet, td
with a relatlve ly low ,tudent population. Indeed, three 1.udl
13utralo
3
0 frosh, resulting In a 7-7 stnle• Turek, Dick Vittorini
and Bill
lnetltutlona e~l•t right here in Western New Yor~ :· Canlslua
Bostou I . ,
7
0
mate . The lone win wn.s a aolld Woodw&lt;&gt;rlb, and endA Jerry (F'N!n.
St. Bonaventure and Niagara.
R
Holy Croo~
0 l~-0 victory ov11r the ltho&lt;:11 Col• c•by) LaFountaln end Cr1J.lgHelen.
j
I)
:I
legP yenrl!oge. In practically anl!le­ brook.
But then again wl\ measure the caliber or competition by the Vlllanov1l
7
2
V
dee11 mud, cm Rhowed n cold but
quo.lily or the leant, don't we 1 Well, lake a look at the &amp;OOre&amp;, Mr. Pela.ware
nesvlte Lbe fine effort by tb,
t1
II
happy cr&lt;&gt;wd or ho.il1etown,:1rswhet tl'o9h, no et.n.tllettcA or gnroes ex.
l!)p8teln, 'l'o mention the snme teams to which you reter, Brockport Temple
fl
Ohln
ti.
::
p0wer
meant
ns
they
pushed
the
St.Ille dafoated UB last year-are
they below our class? Cor~and State
cept the •cores, were kept. Tbe
:I
boys Crom near "Cayuga's Water.s" rensnl'. tor !his WIIRthnt !her,• wo,
I.hey ln!erfor? llUt'kDl'lJ
was beaten by thr_eepoinlJJ In the very Inst mlonte-nre
II
Gctty&lt;1bUrg
II
oil over the Buffalo mud.
merely llQ one nvallable to do ti!~
"!'hen there le lhe &lt;1uestlon ot the Toronto vorslty .Blu8!1and other Ce&gt;lgate
5
l
Upon the 11rrlvtll ot the laat gllJDe
Canadlnn out.Ills. Why play lhPHl teams that nre obvi ously Interior! ,-- - ----------, against the hight:, noted (best ever job. Although this rlen Is several
weeks too late, an:, atudent &amp;tali•
BUL LS SELEC T'ED
The answer to Ihle le twofold. First, a gBme such 88 thl8 glTes a coach
aoc&lt;&gt;rlllog to many) Syracuse Tan• Lll'l11ns who hnppene to like tooL
the 011portunlty to cle1ir bis bench and l86l tbe playing ahlllty of
Four players from the llnigerloee, the UB frosh were tlnall:, hall Hhould st-e Blll Everett at tll,
ble reserves In ao act-ual game sltuatJoo, Tben, when the coaoh needs
verslly or Bulfnlo lmve heen
gl,•en a dry field to play on and Clark Oytnnssium publicity offict.
to lneerl th011e reserve&amp; later In the season In more crucial sltuatlo'D.8, named ti) Bucknell Un,lveralty's
put It to good use. Fl&gt;r four q1111,r­
be hne u. better Ides or their capsbllltlea.
1963 all.opponent Coothiall team,
ters the tougb Bull linemen made
A 28-0 victor over the Dlsona,
shambles ol the huge Syracuse
the Bulls plaoed end Jllm Bow.
Sooondly, th8fle Canadian schools annually sa1.1kAmerican opp0neata
front men.
den , IJJckle Kevin Brlnkworlh,
ao that they might gradunlly Improve their own caliber ot play acroea
In fact, not on·ce, but twice did
lbe border.
They want to build, they wish lo beltef' themselves
i;,1nr-d.Jim MlchuQ, u,d center
lh e Tangerines h11ve a first 110d
throu gh expoeure to thi! more keen American competition. Ar&amp; we
nick Horl on the 11quadlselected
ten wlUllll lh e Bull Hve only tu
so superior, eo haughty, and so Independent that we cannot give them
b)' Bucknell team membe111.
NOW AT THE
be hailed cold by the llghtln g Dut•
n gnme whon they seek ll tor this l)urpoeo? It NYU, Manhattan o.nd

By'Jim Bak~

Grid
Scoreb11ard

"

QUICK, DRY

XEROX
COPIE
BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.

n.i1r111lcau llod ll within lliem~elves to pince Toronto oo tbelr schedul e, who are we to RIIYlhnt we nro too good tor th is?
N-

we c:ome to another angle In thla quntlon.

Mr. Ep.

stein clalma that we are ''atooplng" when we engage the Cort­

land, and t he Brookporte, even though they u1ually prove to
be mor e th an adequate foee . What do you think that a Penn
State or a Providence would be doing If they were to echedule
UB? Wouldn 't they be "etooplng," Mr, Epstein? Take a good
long look at Clark Memorial Dungeon, and declare honestly
whethe r we •re ready to move up the bas ketball ladder .
The h:i.rd and cold tact Is that this university wUI bave to be
('QOhmt with Its pro&amp;tlnt scllcdule until Auch time aa the university
fatbl'rK wnke up nnd repln.re Clnrk Dungeon with a field house that
la suitable tor an Institution ot lhlu alie. Until Auch plans are &amp;11.
nounced, we will have to content oursetve~ .,.Ith the CorUands rutd
Brocl!porte for opponents. And we :ire not "elOOl)log" when we play
th811&amp;rlubs either, as our athletic scholars\1111 program M well ea
our 11l11yfngfaclllllee are only on a ()Br with th&amp;Ae colleges at beet.
Ne.xt, Mr. Epateln chooses to reror to Jlru Newton an d a rellow
niHuNI Dave .Johnson . Now MT, Epstein claim s thnt "something- ha ~
!\'ODt'wrong ~omewber&lt;1" In Newt&lt;&gt;n'a case. I do oot wish to bring out
the detalla or Jim' s situation, aa I believe both he and Coacb Serruetlnl
pl'efcr it that way. How eve r, I can clarify the situation somewhat. The
mslu reason wby Newton did oot come out tor b1u1ketb11llthis year
'Was that he would not rec eive what he considered to lip adeq11au:,
ftnan e lal aid t&lt;&gt;r bta 011go efforts. COllch Sert1u1ttnl tnslA!ts, however,
thnt Newtou wna alm11l1 not eligible tor suoh beQallt R n&lt;&gt;.cor\1/
ng to
the mies laid down by the uoI,·erslly .
A• for Dave Johneon. I am sorry to Inform you, Mr, Ep.
eteln, but he did not average 20 polnta at Kenmore, nor could
he here at U.B. You aee, Mr. Epateln, I •Wen ded Kenmore High
•l 10, • nd I remember Dave•• bHketball effort• very well . While
he wH • good player and a flne ball h11ndler, he did not ave!'­
age anything near the 20-polnt tot.al you claim he can attain.
Now It Dave J&lt;&gt;hn•on were as exceptional a ballplayer as you
IU!eert. I am sure that Conch Serfuellnl would be more than flWIU'&amp; of
his pN'sence on IT8 soil , l belle ve !he eoncb'e attitude la the proper
one: "let him coo1e &lt;&gt;11land prove himself ." We hnve a dne tee.m at
thJe university , and It 1s composea ot players w1lh proven talen.tAI.
Should t.lle coa~h of lb06e men mere ly take someone's word that
be r, great, a.nd bellevo It without a teat 7 The place In wbloh a player
prove" bl1J14elf lff on the court again.et men or proven capabllltlea, noL
In a newepaper column ', wbere the printed word ls tbe only e'ltdeooe.
Fln•lly, Mr. Epatetn tnkee a varUng abot at the UB..Bulfalo State
rivalry. l wo11ld Agree wltb him on one phase of bis argument, but
( Continued on Page 12)

l

I

I

PLACE YiOUR SUBSCRIPTI ON
FOR TIME AND

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TF 3•7130

SPOR1~S ILLUSTRATED

For

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NOW AT

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"OnCampus"TuckerQuickCopy
174 PEARLST,
2-6214

n

.Yl!:W R,lTE fNCREASE JAN. 1, 1963

It's The Latest Word

and
The whole campus is talking about 'em

CAIIBOI.S · 15c HAMBURGERS
J UST 10 M1NUTES FROM CAMPUS TO THE
MOST DELECTABLE EATINS TREAT YOU'VE HAD IN A LONG, LONG, WHILE,
4 S.rvln t - o Second at CARROLS

Homburge" , .• , , . lJc Hot Chocoloto , ... , , .. 12&lt;
Trlplo TI,lck Sllokes , •. 20&lt;

Cl,ffMl&gt;ur,•"
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'°'
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CoffH •.••.•• &gt; •••• •• •
hft Drinb •. , .. 10• a tsc

�Frida y, December

7, 1962

SPECTRUM

!

PAGEELEVEN

BullsFae,,Albany
Stateand'Army
0nWings013 Straight
Triumphs
·

1

UB cagers
rejoice in dreasing room after 80-45 victory
100th
over Toronto.
T he win wu Co.ach Len Serfuatlnl's
as UB's coach.
Herc the team exhlblla cake that SOB presi­
dent Barry Rosenthal (in suit) presented to Serfustlnl aft er
the game.

By J IM BAKER
hulf , os ffori•ey scored all 11 of
On the wlngR or three consecu. Wa t}()lnls in I.his Lime. Karaetew.
th e
live
victorle~.
,the
Ul3 !Jlulla ski and Baldwin throttled
tackle Albany State tonight
ID Bucknell zone with 13 tnlll es a.
Clark Gym, ns the Blue and W)llte piece . Cen ter Bill Bllowua also
attoutr•t 10 stretch tJ1eir unbl ,ew- chim ed In with outstanding
play
lshed record lo 4-ll. Albany car- ott the boards nnd 10 points trom
lleld.
Buclrnell's
Lorrie
rles a. ftne reputullon
Into to- the
ni,:bt 's eneounter, belng a peren. MutJlllwny was the game's high
nlal power among New York State sto r er wHh 22 11olnts.
J,nst we~ke nd the UD five in­
co lle ge•. On Wedn es day lhe lBuffnlo t ea m Ira.vols to West Poin t nu g uruwd th e rur,·en t season l&gt;)'
lo take ou lh e Cod els In an altte r- s mashinl,! their fil'at two rival s,
wo rd out or Ibo Scranton and T oJ'ont o in c':lnrk
noon contest.
IHllilary acudemy bills th e Cadets Gym. '!'he latter t.-iump h rern•­
x~ a strong de!en slve club, with ~~ntt.ll Coach Serfu~tini's
1011th
two exce l lent sh oot e rs In spark. vidoi·y in hi Mtenure '" tht&gt; !lull' ,
!)lug guord Joe Kosrh1sko ruid rorcd inte ly folluwin~ the
Wlll'd llutrli Hutllblneon.
The for- roKl'h, l111111
mer average o 20 ()Olnts a game ,:um,·, Burry Rosent)lol, president
last yenr Ill! a Plebe.
,1f the S11pport Ou1· Hulls onnmiThe Hull s nol&lt;'hed their third ½ation, prc~ente1I n hul(c coke lo
~lrlllght irhrmtlll
Wedne aday by tho UB mentor. Thr inscri11tio11
dowulng Bucknell, 78-72, on the ut• t he cl)k,, reu,1: "t'0 nJ!ra l 11l11lo~~,.•9 cou r t.
The gnme wu Lion~. Serf - on you ,· LOllth vie­
feat ur ed by a t o.-rid shooting pe.ce, tvry." T he player~ n1lde1I t o t he
ns un hlt on 47-;. or its slhote celebra tion by presenting
their
to H % ror the Biso ns. The t,arn- coac h a bottle of cham1miine,
in i; point wns a 10-()0lnt UD teat
A~ ti' th e T oronto !!'llnw il~••lf
after Buckne ll had knotted th e , the !lull• t rnilcJ onl y onc~, a~ 'l'o­
,·onto net ted the first loucket for
&lt;'Ount at 4141.
lo the lir~t ltatr Ut3 WM piu·ed a ~..() margin. lmm r iliutely there­
by th e shooting and reboun i!ln~ uft&lt;:r, thuugh, tfll' Bulls went on
heroi cs or sop homore
(Ol'\1/l&lt;T
u tm·rid ~cori nl{ spn •l• which dom­
Gnry Hunley , who , ftnlshed th e in11te,1 the entire £iut half of play ,
e\'enlug with nutrulo II high out- At th~ half u B wns on top , 51put of 18 poiut s. Hnoley me:1h'
ed 15 of thes e markers
In the 18
_. _ ___
_ __ ___ ___
_
first 20 minutes , 1Lnd showed

th e bresk .
Dick Harvey , Jac~k Karuij"ew­
sltl, an d Dave Baldwin were the
m.a.lnstaya la the intense 11oc:ood

See Movie

L.J.'s coat nod trouserswon't
1ynchroni2el His complaint7 •·1
know being S'll, 160 pounds
un'I unusual, but either my
trunl 's loo long or my legs aro
too short, Ia a 'ttgular' suit,
panls are fine,· b11t the cont's
short. In a 'long' the coal's
good, but the trousers too
high. Must I walk throu&amp;,_h
life

,,,..-,

the

way to I.he Dull~' ~5-27 marghJ nt

SUPPORTOUR BULLS!!

In the second half th~ Uullo
toKsit&gt;,1, and wo11nd up with an
80-45 win. Serl cleared the bench
in thi s half, nnd every UBit.&gt; tal­
lied flt Je11sttwo point s, lla)anc&lt;'d
scor ing marked the contest. a~ the
top liuffnlo ACOn&gt;111 were Bill Bi­
Io1us and Gary Hanley . with 11
nnd 10 points respectively.

I!.

a misfit?''
Our guess ls It's
.,.
tht lrousr r&amp;, oot
yo u, t bal 's th e
misfit Th e dlst~nce M tl"een lh e
rrofc b an d waist.
k no" n a, ! h t rise.
varies In ,ui l modtls. You ap­
parenlly need a 'l ong' lo •
suit wil h not-100-hii:h rh•
trousers. Slop by, A quick
check ,t ill tell If thlll'a the

'y &lt;\.~~\)~~'.:
Going

Formal?

"Highlights

nhswer,

of the 1962

• • •
C.P. asks, ''When do you

Football Seasoni"
Tue s ., Dec . 11
12:00 - 12: 4fi
Colg at e
Bucknell
Temple

rs aw ay re ou n
aga,na
orward Dave Baldwin, who

SW IM MING

Th.e UB swimming
tea.m
trounced
Buffalo State'a mer­
men, 71-24, Wednesday evening
in Clark Pool, in their firat
meet ot the seaso n. Jim Crosby
sel s new pool and school rec ­
or d In the 200 ya rd treestyle
(206.4) und Jim Oe&lt;;ker este.b­
li!hed n n 6w sc hool mark in
the 200 rar d Individual medley
(2 26.8)

••y

any

.. .

Wed ., Dec. 12

1:00 - 1: 45
Pela.wa re
r:ettysb ur g
Boston

NORTON CONFERENCE
THEATRE

Underwood - Olivetti
Representativ e
wi II be in t he University Book store
December 14t h and 17t h
Demonstra ti ng Typewr iter s and
Add ing Mac h ines
Sophomore Dan Barzanl snares
r'i!bound in Buffalo•, · 85&gt;J triumph over Scranton In
the •euon opener.

wear a fuocy vest? School
dtl.Dce!?Foolball gnmes? Par­
ties? Several of us are con­
fused about thu." '
Simply but In mind 11'1■
iporls,-ear lltm. Flot for
sff•lr """" ca,ua l clothes are
O,K.

VB BOOKSTORE
"orCampus"

F11r be it from us lo !ah
issue witlt Tony Cut1,s! Jt.C.
write,. "l'ye noticed you re•
conimenJ the ,uit collar be
abou t l,'&gt;11 below the 5hir,1 col•
lar. How come, then, Tony
Curtis drops his about I¾" lo
2 11 below his ,hir l collnr? Evi­
dently he doesn't sec eye-to­
eye with you."

Sample
bas a
complete
F ormal
Rental
Service
tor every
occasion.

All M C11nltll you, R.C , ls
tlrnt o su it collar re.th1g about
1
&gt;" b e low th•
shirt collu glvt&gt;
lhe m ll.\1 flatltr •
f -,
Ing lint rrom Ui•
.,~ '\ neck lo the 5boul,
dtrs . Weil gladlJ'
./~ ''\ dtmonslnlle.

...
, J.'

• White d inner jackets
• Black tro use rs co m ple t e
with cu mmorbund &amp; ti•

7 .9 5
Somp le- 1631 Hertel

CLOT HES-ING NOTES J\strologi,1s say men born
under Leo nrt rhc best dremd
Maybe so, but we like to thinl.
we can help rellows born under
any S1ar achieve that dislinc­
tion ••• A RECENT POLL
namedFrank Sinatra the best
dressed "lbin man." We won•
der - wu hchom under Leul

Ave .

phone TF 6-1234

ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Presents

Julian
Twist Qu
artet

• • •

1li■rt off tbt New Yur wltb

THE

MeDonatdk·····
:a;~Today

,JSS NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Yi Mile Morth of SHERIDANDRIVEet MAPLEROAD
1AdJae9"1ttT1ie Bovlevord Mell Plosal
Opell Frid-, end Satllrde, •lltil 1 :00

Otoe....., .1,y tt,e JfRltY HOWNROUT CORP.

FROM 3 PM - 5 PM
in NORTON UNION

Multi -Purpose R~m

12f?222Q2'.iX?Z3

I
I

!
~I

a wt U caonllnated look. Our
DRESS POINTER
lt■ Bet
makesIt limpl- to lmo1' "what
aot1with wlutt. • lt'a 7ocn at
no dwat, lmt ■aodlu ftt"l&lt;"e
from
The Squire Shop
In S"ydcr.
J~t ! mUu north o/ CampU.t l

I

.. . \ 1, .....
S~,
I

~--o
H

U 11-..:.S
,\

o

'

\

'&lt;

,

•

..

••

_ • •'
I

�SPECTR

PAGE TWELVE

IUM

Friday, December 7, 1961

·FroshFaceNia1gara
After
TwoVict•1ries

Basketball Letter
(Continued from Page 4 )

untlonnl nlhlNfr 1&gt;owcr. we must 11rt• l h1•y t !\P m11for college we &amp;re
Arter wlnul»A' their IM1t two bas.
Mnt1nuf" to dr op the "wenk sister" with n Htullent enro llm ent now at ketball g8.lllee, tbe OB frosh- will
~MO t•nd i;rowlng every year? Do
teams. slrlvln,; toward bill' tlmo
rll~Y hnve the nnttonnl prominence meet Nluguru at 6 : 16 tonight 1n
0Jll)t1nenl6,
ttrnt we a• 11 major power ha~e Cla rk Oym,
T h" toss or J im Newton to the now an d will i:rnln In the future?
In OIi's seaso n opener a week
noPs Penn Stn l e or Michigan Slate
bllAk!"thllll team IA dt"flnlte , Conc11
ngo, the Bnhy Bulls snr _prleed a
have a ~mall rival like th .le?
Serfns!lnl , when asked about th ,.
fav ored CanisinH tea m , 97-73, and
The rlvnlry betwee n th e Stale
fnll11r11nr NPwtnn 11, c1,me,.ml thl&lt;
l 'nlvtJr•ltv or NPW York at Buffalo t•UtCIUSH~d lhP Waterlocl yearllniis,
yPnr d~scribed tho r&lt;•a~on to he ot ~nil nurr
; 10Stot" 1'encberli College 77-4-0, the t ollowl n!l' night.
11"t.,.r11onnln:..tul'!·"
'" 1111tl11uutea.
1u11Jrvon tunlly should
The leading UB scorers in these
hr tM·m1nnfNI Jn• t 8s Colgate no·
Th1 ➔ n1ay I)~ ar,. nnd tile r~ are l(,n c;~r Jllny~ svrncuse lo toothall . 11ameK wore Norwood Ot&gt;odwln nnd
boys ran dy 111t:okll "111w111n·~pluc~. Let's Ond another rival!
BIii Barlh. Goodwin acor,ed 23 points
ho11M•cr. wht•n " boy mukea gno,1
u1111l11stCn11IBIU8Hild 18 agalnNt
DaM'Y Epstaln
cm the fre~hmen team, serves (lutl­
Wnterloo, whil e Barth tnllled 21
(See Sporls Circle, p&amp;gP JOI
rulli • and shows promise aa a eoph­
In tho Orllfln contest and 18 Jo
omur,, but ra ils to compete In
the Waterloo conque st . Goodwin
UB CRUNCHESSCRANTON
bis junior y~ar. somet hing ha~
nlso led th e attack lo both games
(Continued from Page 11)
by eonalatenlly IIKslsllns: ln scoring
~one wwng somewhere .
One week a~o tonlg hl the Bulls plays,
W~lle talking with Coach
opened the slate hy defeating th e
One or the re&amp;aons fo1r these vie:.
Serfu,tlnl, I mentioned to him
Scranton Royals by an 85--013soore. tortes
was t he excelle nt rebounding
t h•t perhaps the beat guard In
Thil Butlij experienced consider­ of 6-6 by BIii Barth, Dlek Smith
able difficulty In the fir st half, and Dennl 8 Zynda. UB outrebound.
Wes tern New York la attend.
aa they were obviously suffering ed Canlslus, 66-44 and Wat.erloo,
Ing UB and not playing bHket..
from first game jitters. They left 66-10 .
ball. Dave Johnson, a Kenmo re
the floor with a 39~ · cu shion,
The shooting attack wns ai ded
Hig h School graduate and a
after a clo~ely played half in
member of that school'• only
which the Royals came within a In the CanJslus gume by· Dick Het­
tel, 'Wlboshowed the dopth of t.he
undefeated team, la a tranafer
point of U B thre e timea. After
118 equad by coming oft~ the benob
Scranton
had
narrowed
the
gap
atudent from Mu1kegan College.
to score 18 po1nl6.
to
29-28,
howevl'r,
the
Bulls
fin­
1tudent from Muekegan College.
ished atron.ir for their !19-3'.!mnrWh en t mentioned Johneoo to gin at the break.
·
he con1menled,
Conch ~rfusllnl,
In the ~oooncl 20 minuteR it was
''Where 111be! I~t blm come out all UB. The Blue and White out­
11.ndprove blmself." le It the volley RC01·ed their rivals by 46-21, and
60% of their s hots. For
or the Uolverelty of Ouffalo to we.II netted
In true UB traditio,n thP var­
the game as . a whole, UB shot
for athletee 10 came and ijl)"' ''her e 43%, sl111dng 36 of 82 attcm11ts. sity fencers handed do,m a 21-16
I am ." Certainly not, it iR known
High scorer for the game was defeat to the "o ld-tim ers" and
we actively seek alhlelee .
forward Davl' Baldwin, who cel('­ alums who returned Nov. 29 to
brated hi~ return from a two-year try again for a moment of glory .
We eeek boys who wnnt to com­ hit ch In the Navy with 11,21-polnt
pete , who a re able to meet aca­ performance. Baldwin entered the . A final f&gt;reakdowu o;f the team
demic atan dard s o.od who will be conte~t at the 9-ruinute mark of score reveala an especi11lly strong
foil squad which mowed down the
a credit t o I.hie lnalltutlon.
The
the lint half , and hia 11ggre1sive alums to the tune of 8 amd 1. Both
Cnllure or Dave Johoeon to piny
proved to be the p1rnch that Joe Fench, squad ca1ptain, and
tor this University of Buffalo bus­ play
UB needed. Other Bull s who fin­ Barry Canter, a relativ, ~ new-&lt;:om­
kethllll team ii1•11lbe a grave 1011s,
ished in double figure s were cen­ er to the team turned l.n dynamic
a loss of talent, a toes or d eslra
ter Bill Bilowus with 16, John performances each deJ'.eating all
and or 20 + potn le 11er 1tame.
and Dan Banani of their opponents for a 3 and 0
Karaszewski
Coach Serfuatlnl haa termed
with 14, nnd Norh Bo.schnagel re cord.
this year'• achedule "a good
with 10 market's. Bill Wituconis
11ne," which It la not. The addi­
The next event on the fenci11~
paced the Scranton team with 21
tion of Army and retention of
tnllies, while JOtl Quinn m eshed calendnr is the meet aR,ainst Cor­
VIiianova and Niagara are atepa
nell at home tomorrow .
11.
In the right direction but there
are atlll far too many "un.
known•" good •• they may be,
And this I Am sure will meet
with great dl1111pprov111,
(oot trom
the students by any means) but
11mong the so-ca lled "wllllk sisters"
Is (luJTnlo, our •o-call~d crosetown
rival . Every year the game Is termed
a totJS-UP and well It may bo, al­
though the University of B111Jalo
NOW AT
genorally to~~es them away, Pio.Y­
ing State twice Is unnecessary.
How many UJ3 studenl.6 are be.
bind this rivalry? IA It a rivalry
create d by l,he student&amp; or a rivalry
NEW RATE IN CRE~SE JAN. 1, 1.983
publlolsed by tbe papera? Would we
rather rival someone eJee tban this
6mnll ai..te teachers coll ege? Th ey
mny even havo a good team, but

SPORTS
CIRCLE
(Continuedfrom Page10)

that ib all. f concur that two gITTnl'aagainst this team ar e 011r t.o '" 11
und that we sbo1tld play tbem only ooce uuuually , However, whe n ht
3Ska for the nnme or a mnJor achoo! thal has ns Its chler rival ebch
a Rmall Jnstllutlon , 1 would ~e_ply; Detroit.
Yes, the Detroit T ltao1•
number one rivalry Is with Assumption or neighboring ,vtndso1 ', 011
,
tarlo. · Tha t's right, Mr. EvsteJn. it's a small ~rJ100I nnd a Canad ian
lnstltutloo at tbnt-lso'l
that r evolting
Yet, Detroit doe.a not consld
the men from A.. umptlon aerlou
sider Buffalo State In much the same faahlon, as Invariab ly
the Orangemen give UB such a rough time that an all -out el .
fort la required to subdue them. Then , once In awhile we foae
to State, as happened three years ago on our own cQurt.
Yes. Dulfalo State Is our rlvnl - and it should be. This do e. no,
mean thut we cannot establish l'ivalrii;s with la, •ger insti tut11,n,,
ror we should. But just because tbe word Buffalo Is wilhlJJ the nnrn~
oC the two tnstltuttons, there will always remain t.bat ll&amp;tural cro,;,.
Justly so.
town rivalry tbat e.xtsts In all such sltualions-o.nd

,- --------------------------...,

UB Fencers Edge
Old-Timers,21-16

tor••••··

PLACE YOUR SUBSCRIPT'ION
FOR TIME AND

tt1-:-

SPORTSILLUSTRATED

atter ski

UBBOOKSTORE
"OnCamp
1
us"

MCGREGO
e

SM/vT~ tiAWC
, Exclusive elasticized neck fits you better .•. will not sag
or stretch • Fine knit cotton, ribbed inside and out, ..
heavfer, sturd ier, warmer.• Color-coo•dinated \" · ·•· - ' I your

McGregor Skiwear.

$4.00

•
I

FORMALS
• &lt;3ift fortht man\\lhodrsirtsfrttdom
BURNS BROS.

1;.J.! •J M,11n

SI

n~a,

Genf

, soe

NOW AT

'~.:t'"'"'

A fft ll, maft iJ /ru •f

I

•

O'CONNELL

LUCAS

CHELF

,1l

L

MAIN _,

~I ~

jut/bl,

ftu"••r,JlrlcJio •

1-..................
.....--~--

fr~m S5.0(l

.JA

41

O!ampuaC!lornrr

L,

~:

1Pff1

•4n h do•t tilt easur.l ,t,ir tr of aHr •Jorll8f 111,tt/o,., T4,
"l"t o, o/ ,1/11
r:t1ill
a/,9 •~joy /r11.um of eltoltt i• fobrie

n,2

MAIN
&lt;Oppog;te

-~~~

--..... .....

Oo,fy

sn1n

-

ue&gt;

~1~

1:tOODtL".'NAllt AVL

1

~

_____j
'L------------------OPEN EVERY

_ __...

KIHMORr, H. \'.

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-

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>BASKETBALL

SEASON
OPENS TONIGHT:
UB vs . SCRANTON
Sre P«ge JO

VOLUME 13

ITATE UNIVERSITY

or

NEW YORK AT BUl'l'AJ.O
WHERE AltE THE
GREEKSGOING?
FOR ANSWER

SPECTRUM
.

(S.11· l'ng,

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY , NO,'EMBER. 30, 1962

No Verdict on ·or. Aptheker
After Four Weeks in Court

4)

Ho. 12

R~ssiter to Speak;
Tickets Available

·1'be al)lrlt of democracy doee ! the St.Rte University or New York.
Ideas: It welcomoa t.hom. Al tbat bearing, Justice Hunt re11 lnspecla th.em. tealJI them agalnat
eervtd decision until both. sides
hers, rejects whal Hems apurl- could prepare 1ddltlon11l briefs.
Dr. Clinton Ro~~iter, one of the nation's leading political
•&gt;1• nnd absorbs what seems true."
A8 o[ Wednesday, Nov. 28, exaetTble was part or an editorial ln ly four week&amp; utter the Drat Jn.
scientists, and an autho ri ty on the United States presidency,
•~• Cou rlor-Ellllresa last Thuraday junction w111 Issued, there wne no
will deliver an addres.s entitled "President an d Congress
,upporUng lb!! rlgbt or Dr. Her- word Crom Alboo)' u to the ou11062" Wednesday,
b~rt Aptheker lo spcnlt In the Stu. come or tbe cnse. No dRto has been
J,•nt Sennte's Polltlcnl
Ideology set for continuation or the hearln11.
The lecture is 11pousored by the convocalions committee
,. ·Ire. Tb (• edltorlol continued:
Durio~ these tour we(•ks, a nurn1111d
will
be hel1l in the Norton conrerence theater at 8 p.m,
'fhe cue or Dr. Herbert .Aptbe. ber of groups exp re• •e d theft sup.
Tickets may be obtained sta rting today at the i lcket booth
t, r un d hl3 propollj)d epeecb at port or the series and their dla.
1h11Uulvorslly of Buffa lo ls n case plensurA over tlte reetru.lnt placed
on the lirt.1tfloor uf Union.
Ill 1,ulnt. The chances are that ft u11on Ur. A11lbekcr's rlgllL to s11enk.
llr. HoR•lll'&gt;' rPc~ln •d his Anrtolll
f'orn~II l'nl\'~rHlty. and hl8 A,1 IIUd 11MICJ'Oft. '.Vo&lt;&gt;lliow Wll•on on d
~'.,culty members at th,.. Sta•c,
;o., 1•1
1 to speak, lJr. Aptbeker
I'll II. were awarded nt Prlncetou. ~;..,.Jy \rneri can ll ldtory prli:11,,
.-ould offer llllle thnt IB new, noth• Unln•r•lly
College nt Oene•en
II,• ~l•o bolds o Lt..U. from Kenyon
In dd1tlon In Conaervatlam In
rtln1t
111ir 1hnt le lrrerutoble;
would adopted a n•solu1lo11 s111111o
l'olle.i;c.
America, bis books lncludo T he
,•N,111geno mluds, make no con. the right or UU students to boar
Supreme Court ind the Comma nder
The political scientlat• 1 teach1 ,,,
from the Jtreat w11Jorl1y or "•11cnkors or various 1111lltlculldeol
GEORGE BRUBAKER
Ing career has taken him from
In.Chief,
Conatltu t lonal Dict at or.
ov11on And bec,\1110 It conflicts, ogles."
Claremont Colleg e In California
ahlp, The American
Prealdency,
p•&gt;,i&gt;rfol voices ln the etnle want
Tho Student Council or C'anlsh ta
to Salrburg, Austria. He has and Marxism:
The View fro m
•11 •llenco the s11eaker.
Collt•Jt&lt;&gt; 11ns•11dn tt'l!Olullon com1\"hy ur~ the~e Uu)1d people mendln~
t~ught at lht University of
Chnneollol' FurnAs and
America.
Michigan and at Princeton and
lll! nl•o edits th&lt;· periodical "The
1trafd?
lbe Student Senate for their !lrUlf•
w,u for a time the Pitt P ro.
Ft·iler&amp;IIMl" and ha~ been a wrllur
It seems abundantly clear tb.aL gle to retain ar.ademlc freedom.
• o wilt never strengthen
domo4feaaor of American Hl ■tory at
for rho President' • Council on NILr1&lt;'l' by euJ&gt;preeRlng Ideas lnatead
Cambridge University ( M aa■ .),
tlonnl Ooale.
combnttlng them. Suppression 11
ncsldea bis ncndo1I1lc role, Dr.
llr Rossiter returne d to his alma
t~• tool ot tyroony.
Those wbo
m11ter in 1916 as an lnatructor In Ro.dller ball s..rv,•d on the Fund or
government, From 196G·5Ybe iorvt1d th(' Republlt and the nocketeller
•u111lo
y It In the service or democ.
rory do grave d leeervlce lo their
Dr. (h'UJ'J.\~ A. Ul'Ubnk,•r will u chnlrmnn of the department and ~'oundl\llon and I&amp; pre1ont1y n
•• n belief, and to their tellow
­
delive, · the Wrd In a serlOtl of l1 currently the John L. Senior membM or the board or the WOod
•1·1•"
lecture~ lo the ~tudeot Sor1ale Prore .. or or American loatltutlon 1 row WIison Foundation.
He l1 alao a .-.now ot the Amer.
Oecl1lon Han gin g Pour WHka
progr:un.
PreMeurc Pointe, Mou­ at Cornell.
His contributions to ti/~ academic lean Academy or Arta an d Science■
day, Dec. 3, o.t 3 1&gt;.m , In the c1on­
Four weeks ago, Supreme Coutt
community have met with wide ac• und t.1111
pnal pre■ldent for bo th th •
ferem· e theater, ~orton l:nlon
Ju•llCe RUNell o. Runt l1111ed &amp;
l'lalm. Re waa tho recipient ot a Nev. York Political Selene• Alto.
P111po
rsry restrain!~
order bar­
,1ond11.y'1 program Is enll tied Ou(l'genbelm F't,llowshlp In 1963, elation 110d lbe Ame r ican BtudJM
rm~ Dr. Hor berL Aptheller from
Latin America . Dr. nrubaker, wh•&gt; and bns alio been awurded tho ASijOclt•lloo.
,peHkl.ng In the Student Senate's
Joined the l 1nlveralty sLort In 1.9~1
r,,uucal Ideo logy Serles. Tbe In­
, Bs oaslatant pro fenor
of bl1LorJ,
a ,ttlon waa laaued at the request
presently teacbe~ a course on the
,r William Egan of llallaton Lue,
RICH ARD E RB
history or LaUn America .
1invlctorlou1 Democrntlc oan dldate Thu 1'080IUUOD aeolarP d :
tor Congr1&gt;11 In the 80th Con,rrea.
lJr. Urubaker received bis ll3.A.
"It academic freedom le to nave
•·ooal DlatrlcL
By PATRICIA MUSIA L
,election of " Mr, Forma l."
any meaning, It must remaJn be· and lJ A from the l'nlVPrlll}' or
yond tile arm of governmental 111. Arltonn, and rerelved hl1 Pb n.
The tollo,.•lnr rraternlllee
brwo
The
program
for
the
!~tb
annual
Sloon
t1.1rvenllon, and wbereaa, the New n the University or Texa•.
s11onsorod can()ldo.tee: Alpha Phi
Sllvl'r
Unll
has
been
completed
York State Supreme Court baa ln­ after bt' worked In the U.S. !leu.
For the first lime the dllllce will Uelts, Poter Cace11ml se; Alp ha Sl,r­
terre ..ed wllh tbo activities of the ate as aide to Senator Carl H ay.
bP held on campu~ Otlc. 16 from m~ Pbl. Hugh Ony lord; Slrm• Pb!
d&lt;'r.
Student SenatP al the Unlnrslty
9::10 to l ·30. Norton Hnllroom WIii Epsilon, 11111D,e10n: Tau Kappa
or nurralo In relation to their In•
a
In 1966 be ,.,colved a U, S. Ill' de corate d wllb pink nnd sliver Epsilon, Tom Buller. Alpha KaJ&gt;p
vllatlon to Herbert Aplbelter,
P•I Riso hns R candl \l al♦ but he
gr~nt to study ond do re1011rcb for lbe ocrawlon to carry out tbr •
hn~ not bot&gt;n oNlclally named. Vot,.
"l\e It reeolved that the Student In archive, at Bogata, Colon:ibla . theme "Rhapsody ln Sliver."
Council or Cenl ■lus College ah:ill 111 11 Buenos Alrea Convention Fel•
Sleighs will he U8Pd for lablo log wlll talto place on Dec H-15
commend the Student s~nate, U10 IOI\', Two years later he Willi the plerM as well 11• tlecoriitlng the and th~ "loner will be announced
Admlnla t ratloo and Chnncellor Fur­ recipient ot the Charles W. Haclt­ bo.ndetaod. The facu lty reception :,t thl' bnll.
nu
.. tor tholr strong 1tand In etl Memorial Scholar1blp tor Lal· wfll precede the boll and will bl'
Rou '1etcalt'1 Orchc■ lra la tea.
ra, ·or of academic freedom."
In American Studies.
Re aerv­ beld In the Dorothy If. Hau tured to 11rovldP enrertAlnment at
dn111·1• 11nd 11 bund wlll perform
'l'he ProgTam Bourd or Council cd as vl1lllng professor at tl1e l,ouni;e al 8:30. Refreabroenls will 1111!
or Churches ot Buffa.lo nod Erle Unlversldnd
del Norte In, .Anto• be Rerved· from 10 11m to 1 nm In dui·lnic the do.wn bre11kt11et rrorn
! to 4 am .
County also aup110rted the l'nlver. ragasta , Chile. and at Lbe Unl,ver, the Sun Terra ce Lounge.
TirkNa ror tho dao~e are U .611
slty: "tor the right atand for re. elty or thP Andes Jn Bogota
Aceordlng to chairman Bob
spouslble academic rreedom." The
11er c-ouple; lhP price of the d1.wn
P1chol1kl "evo~ythlng from •
Prior to oomlng to tho Unlverbreakfnfft 18 '3.00 . Tuxedo rental
resolution stated lb.at Christians
top notch b• nd to a door man
are disturbed by Communism and 1lty or Burtalo, Dr. Brubaker aerv.
dldrount slips a.ro avall11hlo for
to greet gueat1 haa been a•­
CHANCE LLOR FU RNA S
ed
the
U.S.
Information
Agoocy
)iioe dsya later, Nov . 9, both Fllscl~ m be~ause both deny tree­
tbose desiring them. No llcllet.t
rang ed to give lhla ye ■ r'I ev ent
1lde, appeared al a spec ial seselon dom to speak truth. However, 11 as dlreclor or the u. S...Chllean
th o maximum amount of for­
wtll be ■old at the door and the
baa
I.rav­
Cultural
Inatltulo.
He
number l)f COUDll'Abl&amp; b&lt;'en llmlll•tl
mailty poulble."
The dance
~r Ihe St.ate Supreme Court seek­ continued, Chrl&amp;thrns do not fear
widely throughout
Latin
to 350 ror eMb evcmt.
wlll be high-lighted by the
'"' a decision on whether the ln­ ''freo and open dl~cusslon of the ele d
)JD&lt;lion ehould be utted . John C. entire 1pectrum or polltlral. social Amerlcn
rr,ry Jr. appeared a■ counsel tor and economic theories."
Tickets ror Dr Brub11ker'• lee•
ture, mny be obtained at tho lllclt­
et booth or Norton Union. Sltud•
l'nls moot bring thl•lr ID cardu

,.,r ftiRr

I

Dr. Brubaker l
To Speak On
Latin America

I

Program Scheduled for 'SilverBall',
'Rhapsody in Silver' to Be Theme

Senate Passes Club , OK 's Budget ;

Committee Comments on Parking
By SHARON

CLARKE

the Student Senate meotlo~
T ,day night the Anthropology
1'iuh w11s r11cognlzcd, $350 was ap­
Pr ' rlated to the Nursing School
l!r- •l~nt Council, and petltlooa for
C mess Admlnlslratlon School of•
ft, rs must be turned In by Dec. 6.
'&gt; the nl'.xt Peace Corpe meeting
f
10 a ,ruest •peaker rrom a
•lry that
has Poace Corpe
wo,1ere, will discuss, from per3ono.l
11 r,·atlon, whet Peace Cotpft vol•
· •·rs are accompllehlug lo hie
11 country.
A atudent-racully
• I will Mk queallona tollowlo,r
t,,lk.
Duo to confualon In the park•
'g Iota the general ground•
• •mmltt ee 11 a ■klng that atu.
1tnt1 park only within tho
White line and refrain from
arkl ng behind other cal'I. It
,.a, &amp;ttted that the ten cent ■
toll for parking In the Iola la
u1ed to keep the campua l'Oada
" good repair. The maintenance
crew requeatt
tliat 1tudenlll
•le" tu walk• as much u po.1

•Ible, and to stop ualng the
mud path&amp;. The mud tracked
on the flool'I and furniture
createa an added
cleaning
problem.
The quutlon or \fq_uor 011cnmpu1
for « boot dnnrt •. such 111 the Sil­
ver nail fns b1·o~i;bl up. At the
pre•ent time drinking on campus le
prohibited. R.lcbard Erb augge1ted
that a group be formed to docu­
ment a report or legol drinking on
olbPr campnsea lo the atnte to be
used aa o basis for further action
when the que~Uon of liquor on
campus Is agoln raised.
Tho plzta-oallnit contest that woe
suppo»ed lo be bold last week Waft
canceled. Jame• Gruber. assistant
director or Norton Union, uld that
Lbo pizza would have been auimped
Into tbe pressed-wood tloor or the
multi.purpose room. Tbe poople lo
cbargl' o! lht1 contest n.ked U It
could bo moved lo another room
but lhe request wu deulod.
Problema bave already arisen
about rh,:aretle1 helnr ground Into
1bp floor.

Elections Set ,
Petitions Out
l'etitlon, fo,· rnn,l1tlntes fo1· nf•
ncers or tho School of Busl oeas
.-\drnini§tration
Ill'(' availahlt• In
the Student
Senat•• off1r1• nnd
must lw eompll•ted by \Y~rl11c:1,l11y,
Ll&lt;'C.6.

,.,11

Person,
1,,- d,..:te,I to the
positions o( presidl•nl, viC&lt;'-J•rt••i•
tlent, ~t'cret.ary, nn&lt;l tren~l!rcr
Anyone In the Sehool or BualnesB
..\dmini-lnltion,
lnl&lt;-rrstc,I tn 111,
oC!ice, who has n 1.0 awroi:•. ,
1ligiblc to bCCODl('JI c1111&lt;li1l~t•
•
Csn1pnlgning
will tak•• ;,lac,•
front D&lt;-c.(l - 0cc. I~ Thi' •·lt,:­
twns will tekl· 11lact· Th11r,.1foy.
Ut-c. 13, at the entrance o( the
conferen,•(' the.ater in Norton ,trn­
ion from 10 a.m. lo :I p.m \"r,t1ni:­
will consist of nwml"'"' frorn th,,
School or Bualneu Admlnlttrcllton
unfy. Ir there ar" a'ly fl:1 thcr
riue~tions, contact l\,m,en Hir,_h,
rhainnan.

RON METCALFE

�SPECTRU

,AGE TWO

W BFO Presents Week's Highlights
Here are some highlighb from
WBFO's program schedule fo1· 11,t•
cqming wook, Monday , 9 :M p.m.,
II complete performance of "Aidt&lt;"
by Verdi, performed by the Rome
Opel"ll Hous" Orche stra Md Chor­
us under the dfre,•lion of Ge&lt;•rg
Solti, may be beard,
Harry J. Carman, Dean Enwri1.llll, Columbia College, will speak
&lt;m "A Long View of Humanity "
at 8:00 11,m.Tuesday, on the Coop­
er Union Forum.
Judy Garland fans will want
to bear the recording of "Judy at
Carnegie Hall'' at 10:00 p.m. Wed­
nesday.
Isadora Duncan, the well known
American dancer, is the subject
of "French at Heart" on Thu1·s­
day at 7:00 p.m. Three student
011
programs
are also offered
Thursday.
Jerry Liebowlu pre-

Research-.by Psychiatrists and Linguists
Proves That Our Speec;h Patterns 'Talk'

sents comment, prose and poetry

on "Cogito" at 8:06. Jim Pall'rmO
follows at 9:30 with "Et Cewr11", The trnlned linguist enu
and Paul Quinlin concludes the 9!)01 our geographic orllgin,
clue,
edu~ltlon
hroudcu~t day with "Music from economlc
other details ot our p11st,
Studio C" at 10 :30.
by llaltmJng to the way we
Friday evening you may hear
another program from the serieg
''Ways of Mankind" at 7:00 which
offers an exploration into the or."
igin and development of cultures,
customs, and folkways in various
parts of the world. Friday's pro­
gram is a study in values -,nd is
entitled "Wh.en G reek
Meets
Greek." And Dave Jay is ho st to
the popular "Muaic Town USA"
~how beginnin-e at 10 :00.

Named

Winner

Arthur T. Green, a sophomore
in UniveJ'llity College, last week
was $elected as the winner o! the
house committee slogan conteat,
in preparation
for "The Norum

Friday, November 30, 19~2

IM

euUy
soclu­
and
simply
talk. ,
Research here by a l&gt;a.ttery of
psychiatrists
and llng:uleta bns
proven that such non. verbal as­
pects of epeecb oe tone, lntlectlon,
hesitation and geat11re can olao
reveal many clues about our inner,
or emoUonal life.
Groundwork tor the atudlea was
laid by two members ,nt the de­
vartment of antbropotoaty and Un.
guletles at the Unlver1~ty, obalr·
man or the deportme nt Dr. Henry
Lee Smith 11nd Dr. Geo1,ge L. Tra­
ger. Joining forces with them last
year -was Dr. Norman Marke l, the
world's first profesaor of paycho.
linguistics.
'
Dr. Mar k el ttra dd len t he di••
clplln6 of paycho logy ,and llng.
ulltlca. The wor k of t hese
- thr ee haa rev,a l ed t hat n on.
ve rba l s pee ch

patte1•n1 give

constant cluet to th,i way a
per1on react■ to a gllven 1ub•
Ject such aa resentment, fear
Nuisance" campaign.
or fruatration.
The t,lg contribution which the
The winning slogan, with which non.verbal diagnosis of speech by
Green won ll $6 prize, was "WE linguist• otters • to the psychiatric
don't do THAT here." The House world le to aid tbe tl1eraplat ln
Committee is sponsoring the cleun­ making a faster, morE1 11ccurate,
up cnmp11ign to insure proper 11se dlngno sla or the potlent"e problem.
N'ormally 11Loklngup t.lleae very
of the Union and its farilitlcs in
gul&gt;!le Llttlterns req11ire11years or
the !utu:re.

erperlenc8 by tbe payohlatrlst who
learns L-0 spot them almost fotu­
ltlvely. llowever, a Lralned Un.
gulst, by wntcblng a so11nd movie
of the aubJect, or silting In on an
Interview, could cat.nlog with spe­
cial symbols most or I.be llngule•
tic Indicators for the theraplat,
shortening the dlagn01tUc period,
aud sometimes shed ding new In­
sight&amp; on the case. For ~mple
aome of the clasalo Indicators re­
q uJrlng the I.ruined Ungulstlo ear
are:

a aehtence In I.he middle tndlcat 111
tbn t the spenk:er Is changing hli
story. Octen an Inkling can be pe~
celved as to what he would J:i-,1
snld tr be hadn't cbangea, wbltb
probably Is a trouble spot w11,

~m.

.

4. Variation~ in smootlme~ • _
a too smooth pattern may lnd!cat,
rehearsal of the content: rougb
ness can mean lndeclalveoes~
Either way, 11 definite indJcator 11
revealed,
5, V1ll'lat1011eot volume, l'egl•tijJ
temoo, volce-qunllty - over-faal
clloped speech Indicates a deeln
to escape the subject, drawling o,
fondling words in dicates a apea(IJ

1. Ambiguity ot pronouns - a
person may be using such pro.
nouns a&amp; "he," ''l/' or ••everbody'"
interchangeably. If a patient says
"every body geta on my nenee" be
m11y actually mean bis wire, or preocc upation.
Dr. Markel 11 preee ntly ca,­
hie boH,
2. Une xpected
dist r ibution
ot
ryin g th e rese ar ch a etep fu,­
t her through an ex peri ment
stress - often a sentence which
wh lch keeps the non. ve rbal
on I.be surface appears quite ha r m.
asp ect &amp; of s peec h a• neutral
less, such as '' Wbat are we ha vlng
a s poasl ble but ra dica lly varle1
for dinner, Mother?" can reveal
t he content . Th ia le the flrtt
Insight Into J)ereonal relatloosblps
1tep In measurin g how tht
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�SPECTRUM

Friday, November 30, 1962

Health Service Suffering ,,Growing Pains" 16 Colleges to Attend Tournament;
Team
Staff, Inf ·,rmary Care Laud ed b y St ud en1r's IBM to Select the Winning
trophle■
be ■ l
I

By KATHY SHEA
ne!llstratlon for the Second. An.
nual Gr eat Lakes Novice Debate
Tournament wlll begin thla al ter•
noon at 4 p.m, In tbe lobby ot
the coufereuce theater.
The novIce debate aoolety will pl&amp;y boat
to 18 teame of novice debater■
from 16 colleges and unlveraltlea
during the two.da y event.
Th e unique fe11tu re of tlll•
tourn•men t 1, the crow ning of
M'" Great Lake■ of 19112. A
field of 26 con tea tan h wu
na rrowed down to 18 during
thC!prelim inary eliminatio n pa•
rade held In early November.
The young women were rated
on the ba,1, of charm, polae
and perso na lity.
Since they wUl act na bosteesea
a.nil Umekee11era tor the visiting
tenmll, only the l)umber needed to
perform these runotlons can parU•
clpate. Those who were rated high.
es t during the ell mtnallon will
1
1 don't like to miss &lt;!lass," "I atn co~:: 1:~tants will han 1.rn oppor.
b d
I
ldn't stu dy wlle1" I
tunlly to meet. the debaters on a
ore •1 k cou
•
d
w t don't fee l llllte
n; tu::ph er e
not &lt;!OD
·
f~~;n ~~:r~~~lgt~n~:
d t
t 0 study ·•
u c "~
the mu1t1.p11rp0Reroom, The d.110
0~
•
·
It was commented that prov!.
·
IH open to tbe debaters and ataff
are r11eml&gt;er~• o n I)".
sloo~ tor patient visitation
In acldttlon, there will be a con.
r11r from Idea l. Talking th.rough
11n °1ien window can often
be tlneotnl brealcfnst tomorrow morn.
mor e hurrurul to both pnlleut •1nd ing trow 8:45.9:20.
Jt la at the
visitor; Ille putlenl 18 exposed lo banquet tomorrow sfleruoon thllt
nd
Ute weather a
lbe vj.sltor 1:eta the voth1g will take place and the
dlose r to th e patient than be queen nnd her two &amp;ttendants will
would get I[ be were allowe d In• be chosen . Joni Dorecbel, Mias
to the room , Again the aolut!on Great Lak es Contest of 1961, wlll
(Continued 00 Page 8)
l!r0wn the winner .
The new queen'■ flrat fun c.
DKW 1961
tlon will be to prese nt the
Passenger Station Wagon
21,000 ml. Excellent Condition,
Sacrifice at $650 .
Doy, : TF 4.9335
TF6 ·7126
CIVILIAN CAREERSWITH

By LAWRENCE FRENKEL
o r. Paul F. Hollman, director
ol Student Health Services, stat•
ed, "Like many other eemcea
011 campus, we are struggUug to
ke~P pace with lbe rBJ&gt;ldly lo.
ere~slng student body, Our pbya.
ioal taclllttes are rather poorly
,rrang ed and very lruulequate. The
,olutloua to ma.uy problems de•
pend on our getting uew facllluea. Bu.t. until then, we need the
rooperatlon and understanding of
•be stu dents."
Wllh these words, Dr. Hotrin11n
tns 1verod severa l or the crltlctsm a
that bave recently been leveled
against the student health serv.
Ire.
The first uulvenslty dormitories
Dr. Hoffman, Or. O'Connor, Mra. Korn
Nere completed In 1953 and boused GOO students out of a total were ln,l.ervtewed.
The orlt.lolsm reeliugs In Lbeee word9 : "I dc&gt;n't
sor&lt;&gt;
lltnent or 11 thousand stud- fell h1to three areas. The major like beh1.g by myself , 0nd 1 d◄&gt;D't
PQ[ij,
ln 1950 the Student Heallb complnlut was agah1et the food like talking to mY frie nd s lbro ,~gb
In the patlenll! were receiving.
open wl1td ow." "I don't
beservice was relocated
llt•ve I am th11I sick,
n11turally
"Same on

so

bbno:~:e
:~rv:C lh:l~~a!tto~\tu:
·'

enl.s.

food we get lo the dorm , terrible .'
"Lt Is Ute same stu.lf that we get
In the •rower.''
The nurses com•
mented that the patients are often
hungry and It Is very dlltlcult to
lb
ddl • I od A th
get
em a
t10na to ·
no er
crlllcl•m Is that the cafeteria reruses to band.le special diets for
those patients too alok to eat the
regulnr food.
The so lution to
this problem must wait new flicll .
Illes.

I::; !~~:
~!~c:
M~!!!:~
11

;t's;t;s

Js

du-~~ger
~letely taken ove r to bouae alck
,tudenta, the need or 1111, Infirm.
ary was reco,gnIze d au d t b e flrat
noor wing or Michael was utlllz.
ed ror tWs purpoee.
In the eight yenrs that this or.
,an li11tlon baa been ID Its present
!oration It baa been part of
tbe rapid growth of the unlverThe second area ot criticism Is
slly Today the total enro ll ment tbe normul rebellion Of those not
eiceede 15 tbouaond with two seriously tit, to the Infirmary at.
•housand students living ID dor . moapbere.
They expressed their
11\ltorll\8. lt Is recognized that
'his rate ot growth, problems are
TYPING
Term Popers, Thesis, Letters
boun'd to artae.
Ju this area of
Low Pripublic health, however, thprob!ems grow out of proportleu
MRS. SOLOWAY
through tear and Ignorance..
18 N. Ellwood
Dr. Hotrmlln went OD to eay,
TF 6-0319
"It Is healthy to complaln. If aODle•
(Coll after 6:00 PM)
one 18Jl't c9111plalnlng be may be
1lck. rt means that be la think·
"HEY YOU GUYS ANb GALS"
1n~ and wan.ts to Improve the
1ltuotlon . Ot course these com,
plaints should be conatruct!?e an d
YOU'VE HEARD FA'l 'S DOMlNOI NO W
~hould not get out of hand."
HEAR
THE COUN TRl"S NEWEST SENSATION/
Several students
confined to
thf clinic for different
interval~

:°~~~:~s 1

to tile
team, the
bett affirmative and ntgatlve
speaker■, and certl"oatea
of
merit to Individual epHke,e ,
The tabulatlona needed to ■rrive at the name■ of the win.
nere wlll be done by m11n1 of
the IBM computer In th, E1111I•
nearin g Bulldlng,
"Power palrln.," le the lJletbod
or scoring wbtcb wlll be ueed.
This method ta designed to llnd
the winners with tho greate■t da.
gree or aocuraoy that la ponlble,
'I'bere wUI be tour roun ds of
debate lo the two.day tournamen t.
Tho ftrst, at 6:30 p.m. tontibt wW
be open to the public, The tlulea
of the other rounds are ae tolloW11:
.~:30 p.ro. tonight, 9:SO a.m, and
1l :30 a.m. Saturday. The room a••
lllgnmenta 11nd the conteatll to be
held therein will be posted In the
multi.purpose room.
The following colleges and uni.
n•rsltles
attend: Oonnon Col.

will

~~i.~!:~

~:l~~g;,e~e;:ngC~! '::i~
'
Siena Colle"~~ Reneeelaer Polytecb0 ,

~;cT:::!~~;;,
slty.

"'

!~c~°:/!;

.,- 18

1t3!:~~~

Also attending are: Oeueseo Col.
I~ge, H ougbt on c o 11e.,e,
,,
NIagara
University, C:anfelns College, D'Yonville College, Rosnry HUI C0Ue1e,
St. John Fisher College nnd SL
Bonaventure University.
Ken Oroaamun Is general cha ir.
man of the tournament an d Har•
rlel Heltllnier Is chairman of the
Miss Oreat Lakes Tournament con.
test. Director oc novice debate and
the originator of the toren,(o even t
Is William A. Baker .

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�PAGI FOUR

SPECTR

~IM

S,, eclrum Pag e

GJitorial*

*

Friday, November 30, 1962

o/Opinion -

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE

MAZ,JR

F'or too many ~tt,den ta on this

Studet1l1i here are privileged to attend :i University c1m11u" "$t11dent gnvernrnent'' J, a
where academic freedom is un assured and defended prin­ moanlngle sa and remot~ lnstttu.
ciple. Last week at Long Island University, co-member in llon Smne pe rsoo ■ bavo even ox­
the State system, the vice-president in a statement before pressed Mmplete lgnora nee as to
. This 11 ~ deplorable
the Student Council said that any individual currently under Its Plll&amp;ll'OCO
indictment or who might incite , n riot will be prohibited sll11allon, and 110 embarrt ,utng one.
Often, the 11iudoot body Is him­
from srieakingat the University.
for Ill 1111athy,lack ol ex.
In answering questions Posed by the students, the vice­ bule.t
pre!&amp;lon, llllrl lnar.tloo. And thll
president said there is not really a speaker ban, but the cr ltlci¥m Is de serve d. Tl~e re&amp;POD­
administration will reserve the right not t-0 allow any man ,tblllty or sel f.govern me at and for
to speuk who is under indictment or who will incite a riot. becoming aware of I.he Important
This, the administrat or added, was for the student's own 1~aue1 ot vnlue, larl{e (lDd small,
good, und it is the respon sibility of the student to follow r1•1Ls wllh the Individual. Flach
any dictum set down by the administration which is for his • llld ent m11a1 ~e " " active pnrtl11l11Nol ln fllll RIJO.Ira;ind ncllvlllee
welfare.
Recently Gus Hall, secretary of the American Com­ or the campus tr there ts to bo
munist party, was hunned fr om speaking at the University, nuy l~gllln111le raepeot fpr 011r
not because of his ideology, but because he is under indict­ c·ommunlty,
US 11 fortunate to have •
ment. Malcom X, of the Black Muslims, and former socialist oapable
■tudent government
Presidential candidate, Norman Thomas who spoke here and a coopenttv,
admlnl1tra­
lmit month, will be allowed to speak because neither fall tlon. The officer, of the Stu .
in either of the two categories.
dent A .. oclatlon ere knowt.
In New Jersey the BOt\rd of T1•ustees of Farleigh Dick­ edgeable, aklftrul, and alncere
el11&lt;0n University refused to allow Communist Party secre­
In their work. Conaldor ln g the
tary Gus Hall to speak on campus . The communist received re1pon1lveno11 and llv,,llnen of
tho 1tudent body, and even tho
an invitation from the students.
Student Senate, their aervlcea
In refusing to gl'ant permission the Board stated that
Mr. Hall had "thoroughly digqualified" himself for the priv­ are rather benevole-nt. Th•
many exlatl ng org11nlzatlon1
ileges 11.CCorded
in nn academic community. The Student
and varied program• Indicate
Council ond the campus newspaper took the opposite view­ the
unobatructed freedom UB
point nnd felt that the students should be exposed to all atudenta
have to dlv,ert their
controversial beliefs. Scheduled to speak at the University
energlu to worthwtil I• area ■
of Toronto, Mr. Hall, who hnd arrived by plane, was not
of lntere■t.
allowed to land because of a customs technicality.
Howev er, an lmpre&amp;Hhre J)rogram
With these facts in mind it is reassurinJt to rec.all the merely Indicates gonertl.l activity.
action of our administration relative to the Mosley lecture If on" w11re to look oloi,ely al the
By AN NE MIINTE
Jtnd the postponed Aptheker appearance. We realize that committees nnd grffupn lnvolnd,
Tbe aeme,eter 11 nearing an end, aud ao fur thla column bu
many students understand the significance of the principle lo JJ■rtlcolar, orp111 of etndent
government, be would be aurprl1ed done little more than to broadcast news ot parties and ooni&amp;a
involved, and its effect on this Univers ity.
There are some, however, who have no interest, or in to llod relatively tew partlclpan ta , Every week we aro given the same "nows" and every week IL IJ
£act. desire to understand the situation. These few "apa­ Thi' extra-curricular program la an dutifully prloted rep rdle11 ot Its Import.
This Week It will bt
or the haodful or
thetic scholars" can be found on campus, and even when ac~om11llebment
persona actually aelln; not of lbe dlJTereot.
their freedom is "crowded" as it was at Long Island and general atndent body ,,t any re.
Anyooe wbo reads this column In I.be hope of ftndlng wheo •nd
F ar leigh Dickenson, they refuse to awaken to the situation. Bl)8Clable proportion .
Can it happen here?
l!1vt1'7one ebould be tntereetec1 wbore p&amp;rtlea wlll bo may now turn the page and disregard wbll

Where Are the Greeks Going?

------ --- -----------

--

lmpllee lntclllgent use oc Lt• dl s­
Uoguleblng tea.lur e, tbo edltorta.l
Aa a member of the ■tudent column: I uee the word dl1tlng11l1h­
the point that
1'047 I wu umbarru1ed
to eee lng to Illustrate
eome llUdlDUI dt1play- Uielr lJJ1. Crom a purel:, newe standpoint, a
maturity
S.turday
by thro'lflos eAJDput paper le at best redundant.
There le lltue In o campus paper
1nowball• at tbe Colgate Unlvor1lt1 lootb■ ll 1,1,am
.
.- that the average ,tudeoL rould not
■cbool teJUU glean lrom the maas media and
Wbeo II vt.lll~
comet to plt.7 a.t Rotart lleld o~ lmll eUo bollrde lo Norton Union.
CUrk 011onuhun,
they come u It aeema obvlou ■ that t.be paper's
cuetta ot the University ol Buf. chle C aim should be to reflect the
falo. aaiS they ebovld be reapect- vle"'ll()lnt or the student body­
which llnanclally 1upport1 It. (T hia
ld III IUnb .
,
co nce pt la not lneomp allble with
Gene Nebel
rhe ostablla hed policy of moat
newapa pera which e~ho the cre doa
EDITORIAL POL ICY
ol their owners .)
To the Editor :
Nepllng
the polio)' ol alanllng
Al tbt rl8k or ~ubmerging myself llle new,, this leaves the edltor1al
Oft an e:r.cellont meana or making
I.II • CMUllda. I would bue to
exception wll.h your 11&amp;tement of articulate campua leellng . 1 do DOl
edJtorlal policy , I tee! that A llOWl­ men.u to suggest thn.t tho editor
paper'■ p11rpolfl
, eapeclally a C&amp;UI· ahould be blindly bulfeted by tbe
pu■ ""'_paper, 1.r&amp;naeend1Ulllt of atorm ot atudent oplalon ; lntelll •
ma.a, 41apeulnc new1, hut al10 genco Implies a certain omounl or
Snowba ll ■

To the Editor:

we

•hen
n. oew publication
aeella la printed II.ere. Any member of a Greet organlRtlon. C&amp;ll tell him
-recognition. Everyone Nhould be w11at be baa provioualy read In t.hts cohtmn.
lnterea~
when tbe Student Seo .
It le time for an hooe,t appn.lsa.l ot tratern11I orga.nl11Uo111 o~
AI&lt;' appropriate■ eeTer ,al huodred
(Continued on P1.ge 7)
thll ClllllpUB. $pea.king 118 a Greek. I 11,Jil 80m.ewbat n.t a dJlllldVll&amp;­
,age : I ehould be laudJng the noble alma ol the tr-ater11IUea au
perrepUveness and It doea not rt&gt;. aoror!Uea, Indeed, l would be more than happy to do Juat l,h1~
quire 100 much or tb e latter t.o
excopt that ao far I have dl aco,·e rod no suc h alma.
become B.1''llre or the major trend ■
or unlvei·slly thought. particularly
Porhap, It 11 an overal ght on my part , bu t not hing h11
oo such lsauea as J amill! lllerldeth
come to my attontlon , either H the editor or th• Greek col ­
or HerbMl Aptheker .
umn or a■ an lndlvldua t ■tu dent, that concern • truly lau dab le
In rloalng, a ne•apa11er•a editor­
event.a In the Greek world. There aro parties and gay eoclal
la.I column la that whlcb gives ll
ldenUty and cbaracler, that Which
week-end,, but I doubt If the■e ■ re the ulllmate In what one
mllkt!ll ll • new■ paper rai.ber lhaa
ean expect from euch powerful organization,
H the Greek,
a compilation of comm11nlQuec; aod
oomprlae.
tinnily , thle le also &lt;1ull1.0
a conaet•
vallve ataod .
Thia matter, howev er , ts one which must be haodled by eacl
Si ncerely.
I have no doubt that there aro 111.
&amp;4'Plll'&amp;tesorority or tr~temlty.
William J . Wara
dlvlduata among tho Greeks who have accompl lsbod muoh, bot.II
Ne ws Dlrettlor , WBJl'O academi ca lly and In lbe lino of general campus Improvement.a. Tbert
EDITOR 'S NOTE:
are Oreeka In the Student Seoate, oo Norton commttteee, In pubU.
We thank ~Ir . Ward for bi8 catloDS, In polltlcal groupa, and all ot these apea.k well for tbelll'
interest. We will leave th&lt;' policy­ aelvee. But these are lndlvlduala, and their merit.a must be credl~
making at WBFO to him, if he the efforts of a few of it s members . , • it can only he proud of
cannot take credit for
will ront.end to leav,• Spectrum ed only to tllem: a. trateroal orpnlsatloo
•hat It haa done as a group,
policy to us.
SUPPORT

If the coneumptlon of 1,000 quart, of beer le the mo,t
notable achievement that the oroanlzatlon la capable of, I
A• for
think lt' e time f or a roeva luatlon of the organization.
the olowlng uplratlon,
In most fraternal chartol'I , t can only
H)' that the action, 1pealc loude~ than word■,

BUL .LS ?

To the Editor:

Tbe week-end or l!he Colpt.
game wl' d!srovered one ol tbe
reuons
why l bere 11 apathy 011
I'm aura th ere ere many Oreelte on campua who are dolo1 wortb
tbla campus . ll Is be,:auae wben •
1'1o• offlolal •t ud•n t n•••11apv
ol th• Bl&amp;te Unlverolty oC New York ■t
whll• things aa well aa haring eocl&amp;l event&amp;
Theae Greek.I h~n
PubllcaUon
Office at Notion Hall. Vnlveroltr Campu•, Bulb.lo 11, ever one doea aometMng to pro­
H Y J'Ubllab.., ••altlY from lht n,., week ol September to the WII w .. k mote 8plrlt, someone else bu to not publlol1ed tbelr project.a, at lea1t not through this column . Per•
11' 1prll, •~c~pt ror uam period•, Th•nkoe!Ylnir. Cllr lalmu and f,-,,er
haps they do not wletl to bave tbelr ne,va 11rloled, but t lb.Ink 11
spoil It,
Edltor -ln•Chlof - JOAN A. FLORY
The week heror e the gam e a tew would be of benellt to them 1\11well as to the school to do eo. Tbt
pur))OBe or t.bls column la, after lllJ, \o 11ublt11b all tbe newe .
•JOHN KOWAL
o( us med&amp; a sign tor t be "Support
Out Bulle " &lt;"Jt.mpalgn. We were aocllll and other•fse .•
C~ltvr ... JlllROlflll HAJOITK
N•"
• t••rt• l'lclllor .... .. JAIISS BAKml
hoplog It could be kept by tbf'
There a re eome t'll ngs which &lt;•ould be sugge9ted to those Greek•
C"l&gt;J' l"Altor ••• ,CHABI..BS STO&gt;IR
dor111for followtng t ' B " Colgate w)lo hav e had nothing but roci&amp;J alholn In th e paal. Fra.te rnltlfl
B 1 olnt .. Min' , ..... LAJtRr BINOER
J'ln . All , ... 1'H OIIA8 BAIIJNL!t, JR.
llllffll'I.
Thie Will' not to be the nnd eoror ltl ee coul d, eithe r se parat ely or th ro ugh JFC, spo nso r to•ltT
o, :.'ltm...L BTAl"l": Loulae Bo.nil, Vle lor1e ouol•k l, Anli• C.nu,eoelll\, &lt;"ll~e. for on tho nlgb t a.tier the cbl14ern, prepare CARlil pa ckages, publlah their ow-o oowepaper or
('"ml h LoDtMoo . El&amp;ln• Buron.
Marllyn B..-dk, Judllh Button , Sl1&amp;ton gume l!Ome "bra ve," young men
Cl,11 k•.
Coop,r . Nlol&lt; Ct&gt;t1.i~n11nn, Mttry C..,11 WIIIIOII, 1An7 drnve up . t or e lh11 11110 rrom th o mag11.1lne, and collect mooey for the nrl oua cbarltable or gaouarlo• •
In the ~ommunlt y.
Rome have been done In thf! 1,1U1t; a,,r.,
.Prc-n"'• 1 KA.rtu FurJon«, Mark F etOroeo. nu"y
EJ)tilci,n, David
tJ.,,
, t.,n ll 011'111•n.
Ju~y H■bor. Pt,·M ,.,.in, Rifle 11e1man.Barbara OolJ.­ dor m, an d dr ove away.
hllVP not. but aon e bnve been dooe enough.
I don' l suggest rbal
'"••••, l(On 1t11mlnokl, Juhll l&lt;llll'IW, Arllll ){flnte, Bry r. •rn1man, Calb)'
Thla
11
not
lbe
oo
ly
tnatan
ce
or
\lrlho,11.
l ,opl
IA1'J,
Fro1&gt;t Marturt, 0,1n11~ rrwl.,, Arnio M... u,, T'nt
Greeb subordinate social actlv!Uea to philanthro pic a.od lnte llertn '
thfnge lll&lt;e tlt!s hnp-p1'n'lng, P ic ture ,
ooM: r only aug goet lht1y bDlanco th o rwo eve nly .
1.1
l~r~: ' w~~h~':J&gt;,~; ••
ar■ torn
ll'om 11ueo:n campaign
,,ar... • tltirr1 Lani.
J&gt;OKl~~•.
nnd
si1r11e
ot
oll
kiniu
ar
e
Again, the polnl to be 1tre11ed I, t he role or the lndlv
l'fl&lt;11'11IJRAPHY
8T/IJl'll' nu, ....11 Ool&lt;IIH'l'll', 1... ,.., ll•llltlll, J oel Rav•n ■•
W&amp;lla• • P&amp;)'C'b&amp;.
wrllleo on.
dual In the fraternit y or 1ororl ty . One or t wo membeu • •~
Why try to do eom,~thln,: whao
not be 1xpe ctcd to ahoulder either the credit or the bl•me
fo~ the entire group.
•om1•000, a cl11.1a
mat e or n 111'11001
m•tr will un doubled!)• ruin It for
y, 141
•
l'lu,re Id ll hnsl~ 1,tol1lP11111l011~Jbi,ae 11,,.,.
thn.l 16 couur, t
Polly ltognll, Chun (If ,03
1 •II 11rr~k1
1h11I ur ln&gt;IIYd11AII rn \
tc1 , ;it,•nrpl on , , ,
118.J'll
Dlcbrt. Cl&amp;" OI ,64
nrgnulzallon.
la a p~raotJ tr, Ins~ bis ld11nllty once t)le .1111111
r..,:,,·Scv,•r,rnrP. t"lau ot 'Gt
(Contlnu,·J on Pair,, Ii)

THE SPECTRUM

"""'&amp;lo.

,1,,.,,,,.

"\'Ji'ill'.JJ
,~'";i~r ,~:.~1t:rtt,~ll&lt;i&lt;'ith:~~r:::

I

'

�Friday,

November 30, 1962

SPECTRUM

PAGEFIVI

Crosby Hall's Speech Clinic Committee Invites Middle East Tension Traced
Offers Specialized Service S~udents to Entier To a 'Two-Pronged Revolt'
Library Contest

By MARY LOU WILSON
tor high 11ual!ty reaord!ng and tor
The housi, committee of N•11
··
The
soul'ce
of
tension
in the Middle East may be traced
reseB.l'cb.
A
btgh
ftdelity
recorder,
l,OCtHedIn th&amp; basement ot Cros­
ton Union is sponsoring a st~1,le11t to "11 two-pronged revolution" against prevailing socio-poli­
b1 Hall 11 Lhe Speech nn d Hearing oscilloscope and sound apcctograph
cilolc which provides speclaUzed 11re nlso ueed Cor therapy and re. library contest with the su11port tical conditions in that under-developed area, stated Dr. Mil­
lectures
of profC!sor David Stout, of tnQ ton Plesur Monday in th e second of a series
iervice tor lndlvidunla who have seareb.
;peach dlrtlcultles. Therapy le avalltfopartment oi antbropolo(r}' anrl entitled "Press111·ePoints."
The clinic beg110 In 1949 when u linguistics, and Mrs. Stout.
1ble tor such problems aa stufter­
The ftnt ot tbese be deelgualed
ms, aphasia, voice detects and also few cou rses were offered In speech
as "a revolution tor modernism"
Each •nd ent on the wider. which places he!lvy empbMls on
!or speech defect s associated with pathology. The purposes outlined
hearing Joss, cleft palate, or ce r e. for the cUnfc were: to help unlve r­ graduate level is eligible to ,com• the development of Industry and
brill palsy.
sl ty students with speech dlffloul • pete for the best student libral'y Introduction of technical cbllngee
Ues, to provide supervised training
a society which remains
rn addition to the regular houn of students maJoring In speech, to collection in a field in which he 1nto
much n.e It hns throughout the
,turlng Lb&amp; sohool sessions, the carry on resea:rch Jn the various ha&amp; recently developed -an inter­
ages.
dtntc also
offers
concentrated fields ot therapy and dlagnoata, and est;. The contest is in keeping
Although It la a rich Bret\ IDoil
•.berapy during the suIIIJJler . For to serve the community as a 8pe•
with the cultural and educational with a strategic geographical loc11·xmnple, group
nnd Individual alallzed health service.
aim to stimulate the students'' dc.­ tlon. Dr .. Plesur described It as ti
work le provided tor atu tterlng for
Inncl where "more exlsl ence Is 'Vilt)'
atnety •hours over n six-week pe.
sit·e to create a personn l library often the etondnrd or living."
In 1960 the number of coureea
riod . Articulation
therapy
and
offered was Increased to e nable
in a new field, This ls the fi.-~L Agrlculturally, a mere five 11er.
cleft Jll!.late work is also provided
a student to obtain a muter'•
year that the contest will be held cent ot the land area of five mll­
,1uriug the summer.
degree,
N eKt year
further
miles Is at present
011 this campus and it is h,op&lt;-,1Uon squore
courses will be Institu ted for
under cultlvatlon and nenrly 75 per­
The facllltlea of tlle ell nlc
that
it
w111
become.
an
annu»I
doctorat e work.
oent ot tho l)Ol)Ulotlon OCOUIIY II
include three lletenlng rooms
event. Ap11lications will be L''Vllil­ stt1tue equivale nt to that of the
where the Instructors may ob­
The departmont or speech ls as­
sble today at the cnndy counte•r ii• share cropper. Poverty la Lhe rule,
serve a student
In t raining,
sociated with the American Speech
and "dlseo.s11 enps the atrength or
An lnduetrlal acou1Uc hearing
and Hearing Asapclatloo whlch cer. Norton.
the .Middle Eaet." COUJlll'dwith a
sui te 11 a l10 a faclflty of tho
lilies people lo I be field or speech
The contesL t'Ules nre as fol­ populntloo exploijlon antl lllllerncy
clinic. Two sou"dproo f room,
11nlhology, According to Dr. l{ath.
lows:
rnte which oppronches an 11veriu:e
are used: o"e la available for
erine F. Thorn, director of tho
OR, MILTON PI.ESUR
~I) percent. these conditions char.
the person giving the hearing
spee~h and hearing clinic, "l-lelv·
1, Book~ m u s t lie purehus1 •d
n
•torm
n!l1111e111ployed br r11vlllU11~lerl1.e
life
there.
tea t and the other 11 used by
Ing people to improve their oral
within the school year t1r•,u,,
U1e cllenL
Speaklng of the politic.ii na~
ttouary regimes, 11ro being mM11.
commuolcatlon
skllls le a most
tore of thle revolution, Dr,
Septen1ber to May.
These rooms mny also be used rewarding experience."
Pleaur noted th at the people
The 0onfllct In t he Mlddlo
2, No applicant may enter lnor~
poaans "llttle polltlcal matur
East between the United Stale•
than 16 books, nor sJpen,l
lty" which le In part due to an
a nd the Soviet Union hu been
more than iao on their pu,~
UNORDEREDMERCHANDISE
"abeenoo of Wes tern atyle ti-a.
lnflue 11ced by "the Jud•eo .
dltlon of civil llbertloe," How.
Christian tle " of the U.S. .and
chases. Receipt s must b~ su h­
evol't he aald, an attempt 1•
Great Brltiln In whloh we have
mitted with the books.
being made on the part of t '1e
traditionally
aupported
the
3. The library must be specific
oppre11ed olaasoa to "b reak the
stand of Paleatlno In oppoeltlon to the linkage of the
by Ronald Kaminski
and related to whatever lt.opic wall of prlvll99e" and erlend
polltlcal
l!bertlet throughout
USSR to the Arab it. tee.
the contestant chooses ,
Almost everyone hns at one time
Except where fraud ls Involved,
the aoclal strata.
f'r!or to World War n, our
'l'he growing tr end townrd pro- tentlon I() the area wu mainly
,,r another rec eive d unordered mer• thel"e are no postal regulatto 118 4. The applicant must also sub­
fessed neutralism ou the part of ..,,ult•irnl nod missionary;• be do.
ohandlse through th e mall. n,. governing unord ered merchandlae.
mit with bis collection of
the government" of the M lddl" c lared, whlle our Inter p0llcy bu
booh. a short paper ext)lain•
duded with It, or by later ma\J, Legislation by Congress may some-:
Eust. a neutralism wbJch often np. been Qonc•erued wllll the str111A11
lo
ing why be chose this arua of pears to favor th e European pow. and mllltory no.lure of the Middle
l, 3 bill or request.. to pay tor the di\)' change this si tuation. In_ the
interest
and
how
those
tiooks
Jrtlcle .
The Elaeobo"'l'r Doolrlne
ers . ts trnreuble to a long tradition Eust,
meantime write "Refused'' on any
are re.la~
to it.
or animosity to the West. and ea. wnij, DJ•, Plesnr stntad, "nn nuempt
Tbe recipients or unordered mer. unwanted merchandise
or mall.
5. The contest will be judged by 11eellllly to Great Britain, 88 8 co. to 11111ordPr Into tllll obaotlo
•bnndlse b1n•e no obligation to re. Not only do you not have to accept
authorities g,nd the prize "~I I lontal power . The old regimes. sll uMlun."
nbunwterlrt•d by the sheikdom j
turn It, to ack nowldg e Its receipt, an) • class of mall but your refusal
be a check !01· $100.
ofte11 n•s&lt;1"1uted with lbe dc•ert
Summing up, he nddcd that we
t') 1111ytor
It (un less used), to will rnoat likely result In the send·
For further details please con­ countries. are giving way to 11111relllllHl pursue more tbun a poUoy or
glvo It particular care, or to 1e011 er having to pay tor the return tact Darbal'a Hoffman , Ext. J!997. po1111IM)(o'Veroments. Attempl9 to "lndJtrerent itood will" towar d the
JIOStAge.
It beyond a reasonable time. \
gatn the support or t!le populace, developing nat10011 ot tbe :\i!dllle
sucb as tbe policy ot agraglan Elssl.
Tbe
Federal
Trade
OommJselon
If It Is called for In person
has held lhat It Is a, violation ol
by tho •hipper or his agen t
UJe Federal Trade Act for a sender
withi n a reasonable time, you
ot unordered merchandise to cl&amp;lm
muat return tho merchandise.
that "the receiver Is under obllga.
However, you can demand •tol' ·
Three sem!n11rs will be pre­
lion ... to pay tor or return the
ago charges. One 1ure way of
of
merchnndlse." You are within your sent.ed by the department,
,tayl ng on the .ender'• malling
biology during Dec. In 134 B,ea llh
to
pay
for
It,
and
rights
ln
refusing
11st Is to mall It back at your
Science Bullding.
It Is your duty to notify the Fed•
own expense. If you wl1h to
Dr. Irvin lsenberit, L11borutory
eral Trnde Commission or thb
avoid reoolvi no future unordered
of the Institute for Muscle Re­
V!()IAtlon.
merchandise ' from any partlcu•
search at the -Marine Biol~gical
lar sen der, simply keep It, but
Lnbotatory,
Woods Hole, Mlaas.,
Next Weok: Abortion
do not open It.
Dr. R. P. Levine, associat.e pro­
fes sor,
Biological
Lnboralc,ries,
Harvard University, and Dr. A,
(continued from pg. 4 )
Sus sman, department
of botainy,
ood? Are the Independents on campus to view each Oreek as only University of Michigan, wil I hr
&amp;n appendage ot hls organlHtlon t
If this were true, then every the featured speakers.
Greek would necessarily
be togged as II gay social creature who
Dr. fsenberg will speak
lacks ambition and Interest lo any other maUers than social onea.
"(.;harg o Tran sfer Compl11x011in
The independents would have to be credited with auy r~ul ad­ Riochemical Syst.ems" on Wedlnea­
•anoes In the intellectual level of our University . This, ot course, day,
ia not true . Greeks have often been assets to lhe school In their
D ec. I 2, Dr . Levine will talk
Individual efforts. Why, then, do these eame Individuals consider
·•n a tta ck upon themselves? Better still , why don't th~y need the n bout "Stru ctural and Functi onal
Comp onent s of the Photo synth ~lic
1tuic1te and set about to Improve their organization?
Apparatu s of
C/1/11mydo111,
vn (t~
Instead, they are apt to cite othor Individual members
R&lt;'i11hal'dii..•
who have accompllahed notabla deed, u proof that their
In thl1, they are admitting
orga nization I• beyond reproach.
"H orology and Form Outer·1·n 1,1that each 1(1dlvldual tranlfera hi, p,ereonal worth to the or­
oti on in Neur osporn '' is the t opic
ganlutlon.
Neceesar lly, then, If thefo Is a member who tacks
Th e concert committe e will pr~­ ~hall Brickmun , •tri rii: hos~. AII
Dr. Sussnian ha s chosen ro, his
per1onal worth, then entire organlutlon
muat be con•ldered
aent Dakotu Staton and th e Tar ­ are veraatllo and play more•tb11n
address Dec. 19.
•ome what of a failure ,
rie n i~ a concert , Saturday, Dec. just the instrument In which they
Obviously, this metbod ot reasoning cannot be right.
!!Ivory
The seminars will begin u t ' 1=~5
tro up must have Its outstanding members an d thoee who are not p.m. with coffee followed hr th o 8, fr om 8 • 10 p.m. in Clark Gyrn, IJll!Cialize.
60 outalalldlng.
1t is the duty o! those members moat highly r e- address at 4 p.m .
Ticketa !or the coucert 1rt1 11
u,,
Dakut11 St11ton, noted recordin A
gardcd to set the pace for the entire organization. , lt they fee l
on
aale
at
the
ticket
booth
tor
tho
11rti
s
t,
wi
ll
,i
ug
a
wid
e
r
nn,rl
o!
that their ··organization Is not accompllahlug enough, they must lend
so ng~ f r om populu
b11lla,ls t o pric e of $1.liO per pen;on.
the gyoup to better goals and better aohlevamente.
Tbey cannot
trt•"CL their organlullon
to retlect the Images of tbelr lndtvldu&amp;l
blues, She i~ ~upp ortco,J hy hu,
•chlevements .
own instr umentAI t f I o, the
COATSNEEDED
Conversely, they should not be simply a re!lectlon ot the group.
Tnnir rs.
fr U1er ar e to be proud of their sorority or fraternity,
th ey s hould
If you know of munbon c,f tho
n,,1 make thls org11nlzadon eometh.lng to be proud or . The lllU­
Th,. Tnrri l•1·~ nm II t, ,lk ~l111ti11,( tn cult y or admlnlat:ntlon who wlll
nuto apprats&amp;l ot the group must be mado 1n the llgbt of group ac..
)!rou 1, who have s~ nt th ~ 111
•1 lx• l o tb" San Otero, CallfOIII~
,~mvllahmontll. Tbe lnclhlclual must remain ln4ivt4ual.
y~at mnkinlC per sonal ~l'Jl••nrnuc, •• 111·,•11 in January
lt Is my hope that the indlvldual of eaeh fraternal organtzstlon
i9G3, pleaslt
·, 11111opralse ht u group 1n the llgbt of bis oWD personal standards.
with vo1•1
1llst Bobb&gt;• Onriu 'fh , phont1 the Alumni Offlol (831)
It be finds something lacking, It le up to him to try to Improv e the
g1·01111IJ cornpo~~&lt;I uf l!oh C11n•y, 3330. Alumni I.lien era uuloot to
•llua llQn. If these 11re democratic !nsututlone, let the act!ona ot tho
guita,;
(;l11renct1 Coopt•r, r,111n
o; h1w,, Ch'8~ ha llll l\ewab'om c,lm•
i:rciup &amp;l)ealt for tbe wUJ or the !llllJority . I am coofii!ent tllat t.b18
Erit W1•i~"OOl'lr, '1anjo, and Mar • r&gt;ua.
~1~1or1ty la capable of ta r more t.han what It now produce,.
By PATRICIA MUSIAL

or

I

THE LAW AND YOU

•t-

I

Biology Talks

Scheduled

GREEKS

Dakota Staton and Tarriers
Offer Joint Concert in Clark

r
I

L

�PAGESIX

SPECTRU

,M

Friday, NoYember 30, 1962

Dr. Plesur Writes Booklet; Bands Feature ~ 1
.ii n
J
//
•
Future Concerts..Jpecirum Lall V:Joari
Review of 1938 Congress
By VICTORIA BUGELSKI

and ~~rved M II prelude to the
Now thlll the football season Is
lrure which gnlned 'F'D.R enough over, the Marching Banid hns been
Dr. 111U1011Pleeur. aaststant dean Hf'publlcan votea lo his foreign ,ipllt Into two smttller units, the
11tUnlverillly College, and aset11tont p01fcy program to carry the do.y Concert nand and tbe Unlverslly
professor of history, la the 11utbor in many n closely fought battle or nnnd. both under the d irectlon of
ot a recently published 37.p11ge the Immediate future.
Frank J. Clpollu..
hooklet, "The Republican CongresEvery member or elt.11.01·band Is
"Today,
thla
truce
appear•
11lonal Comeback ot 1938," poh ­
also a member or the Marching
aalutary because, In retroapect,
llshed by tbe tJn11•erslty ot Notre
Band. The Marching Band will
the moblllutlon came none too
Dame Preft's. In 1968, It was reo.d
have uome a.ppearanoE•ll lo the
soon and none too faat.
before tbe American Historical
spring , such as M1&gt;vln1r Up Day
sociatlon nnd was lat.er prlnt~d
"Thus the Republican comeback and Armed Forces Dlly. Pep bnnda
In "The ReVlew of Pol!Uce."
or 1038 served the national Inter. "'Ill be organized tot· a :ppearuoces
~Rt. A GOP trend was obviously at home basketball g11m,es.
Th&amp; ldu for the paper oc.
curred to Dr. Ple1ur whlle he
In tbe wind and, but tor lbe war,
Both the Concert Sand and
the deOnlllve Republican triumph
w .. te•cihlng about the New
the University Band WIii con.
might have oome a dozen years
Deal.
He deolded to lnveltl•
tlnuo untll the end of the
before Dwight D. Eisenhower rode
11at. further the relatlon1hlp of
achoo! year. The Conc11rt Band
trlumphnotly
down Pennsylvania
th• Republlcan comeback and
whoae member• are selected
Avenue to the White House.' '
the New Deal. "One of the le11
by audition, la the mal n organ .
written manlfeata\ton,
of the
Dr. Pleeur feels lb&amp;t the Con.
keen"
IJ:atlon. ••competition
New Deal WH the Republlcan
grelll!lonnl eleoUons or that year
atated Mr. Cipolla. ""rhe cal­
comebtok.'' he explained.
sta rted the strange coalition of
lber of the playlno ahould be
rn prepa.rlng the paper, Or. Pie. Northern Republlcaoe and South­
very good, bee11uae there are
1111Tinterviewed auch l)tl()ple as Johll er n Domocrats.
many r,ew talented per1'ormera."
D. M. Hamilton, former Republtcan
The Concert Band will gl'fe a
Tho conaervatlvo victo ry then
National Chairman;
T homaa E.
concert Sunday, Jan. 20, 1n Norton
wu viewed by him n a hlt­
Dewey aid Edwin F. Jaecltle, the
Union. All students cu:e invited
torlcal turning point In Amorl.
rlllln.g OOP leader from Buttalo.
Tbey will ulso perfora1 tor the
can polltlca - the start of a
Hie reseal'Ch also lncludeil corre.
Elrll' County Music Tea chere' As.
GOP comeback, which, If It
apondence wllh oeW8casters and
110clnUODJnn 22. Mr. Cipolla Is
had not been hampered
by
politicians.
planning concerts
of woodwind
Wofld War II , might eaally
and brass ensembles t,or March.
1-n a.ddllloo, ho reo.d a variety of
have put a Republican Preti •
Some off-campus concerts in the
newsl)llper and maga~lne articles
dent In the White Hou,o In
sp ring are o.lso being scheduled .
1940.
printed in the 19301s public opin­
ion polls, Congrosatonal speeches,
The l1n!verslty Band, which ls
One of the most Important ldeoe
and Intra.party
memoranila.
The or the J&gt;Rl)BrIs: "Granted that th e composed prlmurlly or students for
tooLnotes ot tM booldot nre lndl­ beydny ot the New Deal was wan. wbom music Is au avoc,,.uou. plua
c,allTe of thls extensive work.
Ing In 1938, It le safe lo ea.y thl\l music majors pel'tormlng on sec­
will give n
Oommontlng on the olectlone of 'New Deal!sm' as such still had a ondary lnslrwnents,
strong hold on American people." concert In Aprll. The Ooztcert Band
1938, Dr. Pleeur aal4:
wlll also give a aprl.ng concert here
This and many other ldeaa are and wm combine with U1e Univer­
"The election or 1938 forced the
President to temper hla anti-big. expounded muoh more fully Jn the sity Band tor a joint ou1t.door coo.
b11slne&amp;1 program with moderation book.leL
cert In Mny.
By ELAINE BARRON

A"­

v.•••

MUSICAL RECITAL

Fi~ld Must•um which was condu e1
ed by Dr. Stout.
·
viola recite.I will be given
The constitution of the cluL "' ''
We&lt;luesday by 'l'homus Beek, a
m ..mber or the Butr'..Llo Philhar­ recently ratified by ~he inem1...,,.
monic Or~h0strn In the confer­ ship .
ence theatre
or Norton Union.
Last night, Dr. Sloshberg fr on,
The J&gt;rogram will begin at 8: 30 the State University CoUege 111
r,.m. Admission ls tree. and 1111Hrockpo1•t presented a lectur, , r,1
studentB an d faculty are lovlted Mayan Ai·chtteology.
to attend,
H Jatory CJub
CHRISTMAS CONCERT
Professor
Orville T. )llu •J•hy
Jr., o! the hi sto1,y department ut
'l'lte 11nnual Christmas
Chorttl
William s College, Mass., will lui,
concert. sponsore d this year by tbe
music dopnrtweot llDd the Friends tires~ the annual dinner meeti n~
Of LoGkwood Library, will be given of the history dub of UB De,·. 1
Oeo. 16, and Sunday, at 7 p.m. in 231 Norton.
Saturday,
A

Dec. 1G, In the main reading room
of Lockwood Library.

"George
Washington
in tl,t
Opinion of his French Cont 1•m,
µorades'' will be th e topic of th,
The 11rogram begl11a at 8: 30: Ad­ speech .
Is
tree,
but
tlckete
will
be
mission
necessary. They mr.y be obtained
Photography Club
at the Bai I'd box office. No phone
The Photography Club will mn1
reaervullone wlll )le taken,
today at 4 p.m. in the photogr11ph)
darkroom, 36.1 Norton.
Anthropology Club
Medel U.N.
)le,1,bers of the club att~nded
Anyone int.e1·est.ed in repres~m­
the unnunl Amei~can Anthropol­ lng th e Stnte University or N~~
ogical Assoc. conventi on in Chi­ York at Buffal o at a Model Unit­
cago lo.st week. Besides attending
ed Nations Asser'nbly at Michigan
the presentation of papers by lead­ State Unive1·sity please contact
ing men ill the field. The membei·s Michael Lappin in No1·ton 20~.
went on a tour of the Ch icago Dec. 4 lietween l • 3 p.m.

4th
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3 300 SHERIDAN DRIVE

�PAGESEVEN

SPECTRUM

Fridoy, November 30, 1962

Dr. Mayer, Modern Language Professor
Revolutionizes Old Method of Teaching

'Distinguished Cadet Awards Given
To Seniors Ditch, Latt, Taylor, Diodate

Lt. Col. Parsons, CommunJaut with tho medal received, di Rtin­
By JEROME HAJDUK
or Padets, announced the new ~ui~hcd cndet.~ nrc allowed w 11p­
Dr. Edgar N. Mayer, associate
wing com mander for the inJlllll ' JllY for n nigular commiMion In
professor or modern languages, Is
ROTC program would be Codd the USAF upon graduation .
currently working on a new method
Lt. Col. Huddleston, proreseor
Lt. Col. Edward Taylor. The• m•w
whlcb could revoluti~nlze
the
wing commander assumed bis po­ of nil' science, thanked Cadei Col.
t~nchl ng or modern languages. •
llent perform­
sition Tuesday durilll!' a winic Kink.le for bis 11Xoe
Htlllzlng 1.8,pe recorders and prl}­
ance as Wing Commander for this
meeting in the Gym.
reco1•ded special lessons, Dr. Mayet
l
•• Four seniors were prc~entecl the ~emester's outdoor progrnm. Col.
bo[leB to be able to give a student
OistillKUi~hcd C111let Awat'tl at the• Pataons also deecribed the th1·ee
a fluent speaking ability of I.he
same ceremony. They wcl'c Lol'l'Y phnses or the winter p-rogram:
Russlnn l11nb'11age In about 200
Ditch , Jo~eph Latt, Edward Tily­ OCS school, NCO school, and the
hours, Jess than one ffemester's
lor, and Francis Diodnte. A long lc•cturc 84.'Ctions.
work In a normal course o! study,
~
.:Experiments, which Include
~._;:-~
·
Spanish and Thal, were begun
2'.'::- '~
~
seven years ago under the
• :;.a,.._
general direction of F . Rand
Morton of the University of
alan sounds, In this step the
Having a basi c vocabulart of
Michigan. Dr. Mayer'■ program
la the firat attempt to Include
atudent learns these sound•
abou t 600.700 words, ho tnow
Russian In the ••condit ioned
llaten ■ to a narr ati ve In Flu ■and Is able to dlstlnguleh between them, By the end of thl ,
elan, whl oh la then tran,luted
reflex method.''
"In this project , our purpose Is
ta1k, he Is able to reject all
lr,to Eng lish for him on the
Lo ti.&gt;acb the spoken language: we
110und1 which are Incorrect
tape.
11re far less interested In reading
Ru 11lan. Thia atep, according
Arter llstenjng to, tho pa.ss1lge In
and writing the langunge," Dr.
to Dr. Mayer, takes from 30 to
Russian and In English, be Is asked
!&gt;layer said. He remuked tJJat this
50 hour s.
questions
of the yes.'no ty·pe at
,,rogram Is the only one which Is
Tn the next task, the student ftr·sl, and then more dlfrt&lt;'ult infor.
1otally concentrated on the spol&lt;en learns how to pronounce the cor. matlon que11tlone.
language.
He then liste ns to u aegmont or
rect sounds himself. A sound le
Colonel Huddl e ■ton presents Distinguished Cadet Award9 to
At the end of it.hat Ume, the player, and the student reoeats It conversatio n nt normal Npeedl, un~
Edward Taylor, Joseph Latt, Larry Ditch, and Francis Olodate .
st udent should have a command Into a microphone. Re then plays I then nnswets quesllons abontt tho
of the language equivalent to that back the sound. On a basis or what I conversation. By the entl of! tbis
REFLECTIONS (continued from pg.4)
or a Russla n-b&lt;&gt;rn elg bt.year,old. the atudent learned In tbte part, task, he has 8 small vocnhulury,
From the student's
perspective, he then determines whether the almost perCect pro 11undatluu 1, tlw doll11r·s 10 u cnmvu~ group. Ntlt'd- 1111•mb.-r~to p.irtake ID their 11m
Jess to ..ay, II IH your ,•a111pusnnd i:r11111tt. ThP range oc hltorcst le
one advanlage would be ellmtna. sound he made Is correct. In this ,iorrect st ruotu re, and tluenc :y.
t:lon or conventional devices such part, the student begins by repeatyour money,
hroad and the poaslblll:,..,,. Cor ""·
In the final step, which no
ns memorizing grammar rules and Ing Isolated sounds, then syllables,
joyinr ~111.'hextm..currkulnr n~tt,.
Stu dent leader■ are supposed
,tudent haa yet comple ted, Dr.
word lists ,
and finally, words. This task also
to lead: not puah, pull, and
it 111•a,"' generous.
Mayer hopea to be able to ex.
The n•wards for aur h !udu ll(0!IU0
carry, It is of no amall wonder
tllkes rrom 30 to 60 bour11.
.
pand the student's active w,GrkAnother advantage of this
that st udent leaders queet lon
ar·,, uCJ le•e. Stu deJK g,ov~rmu,mt IR
Tbe student now begins to re.
Ing vocabulary to abou t aooo
program, says Dr. Mayer, 1,
words.
spon d to what Dr. Mayer calls
the valu~ of their efforts , are
011 1•x11f'rlencP. Ther&amp; 11re Ol&gt;J&gt;0rtu.
that the atudent 11 abl e to fol­
brouaen­
frustrat ~d, and somew hat dla. 111111,•xror inrrenHIDJ111~1:id
"structural signals.'' For e:111mple, When the courAe haR he~n lll)Sl~d
low any schedule he wiahea to
:ng &lt;&gt;II••·• k1101V!edg&amp;,·d ,.,.11vily 1101\
be Is told to point to another per. und re-worked, ull the tape, 1 will I guated .
set, pacing himself fast or
Prt1eently, llwr,· I• 11 ,·111111111!1111
lnnuv1&lt;tlon, tmv el, 0.11d ler\dership ,
son eacb tune be bears the Russian be sent to Washington. l,llte1! they
slowl y.
~•1u1&lt;-1111mrtll'i1111tlonIn Student govemme nt t&amp; n tb allenr;e
The key to this "absolute mas. word tllr "be" In a sentence, By will be r eleased to various imsliLU­ 10 111,•1'1&gt;11"&lt;'
h-y 1h,, Nilul&gt;•nt i;u,•t1ri111w1H ~11111)'1·0111111lt-:incl :111 11r~11in wblcll II smdont
tery" of pronunciation Is based on the eud or the pa.rt, when a sen. tutlons and Jndlv,lduuls
'
'''''" r,•&lt;w,·~• 11111I 1•111•u t1rD~P n~w , rnn ,,m,,·uvely 11011lybhns olf.
a conditioned reflex approach to tence such as "He Is r eading a gov~rnment.
1.o
Russian,
tbe
book''
Is
spoken
teaching language. The course Js
taught In much the anme way that stude nt can resl)Ond to the struc.
ture.l signal He knows that some.
a chil d learnt a language.
one le Involved, that an acUon ts
They
first bear sounds, I.hen taking place.
learn to imitate them with no
Even now, be does not know the
meaning attached, and finally to actual meaning of the sentence.
11ctual phrases and a natural build• He knows that an action is tall.Ing
up ot a vocabulary,
place, although he does not know
The course is broken down 1nto wbn.t the action Is, namely "read.
five tasks with tbe student master. Ing."
iug each part berore lie proceeds
In the fourth taak, the atu.
to the next. The steps ore:
dent geta the lexical meanings
He listens to 36 basic Rua.
of these phrase ■ and aentences.

rr"-·r '

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IIID.,Detroit. Mlcll.,Buffalo, N. Y.,.T•mpe, f'la., Findlay,0., eo111ne1on
, Ky.

�Friday, November 30, 1962

SPECTRUM

PAGEEIGHT

Health Cenhn
(Contlm10d trom Page 3)

Dr. Adler Opens Series;
Comments on Russia, Berlin

to this vroblem must awaJt new
By. MARV LOU WILSO N
who knows how t.o follow a flexibl e
,·,rndy ~nlc at Newm,in Hall · to l'.11.clllUea.
By Jvdy Button
Dr. Selig Adler wa.s Lbe !!rat l)OllCy and cited the Soviet doctrin e
l'aise funds to remodl'I the La•~•­ 'l'be third area ot C01111llBDt
Gamma Dolt.a
COD
·
speaker In the sePies en ti tied or "strnteglc retreat" BUch as that
Gamma Delta wlll hnve 11 howl­ ment of Newmon Hnll.
corned the nurse's an.d 1l octors. "Pressure
Polnl.ll" de111lng "'Ith employed In Laos and, more re..
The next Newman meeting will
Ing part7 81u1.d.a7
. All planning
world trouble spots. Speald ng of cently. in their withdrawal of ar.
to attend shou ld meet at Norton be Wednesday, in Norton Union. The students' admiration l!or the United States· rore!gn policy to m111:nent11
trom Cuba , aa an example
The ~ev. Father
,lnmcs E. nurses can be aummed up with
Rt 2 :00 p.m . Afterward s thel'o
the paat several decsdes, Dr. Adler
wfll k lunc h and veepc.rs at the Streng will hold his regular the­ I.be adJeottna loTOIY, 01t1arm1ng,atated that tour major changes 1n of thls. He stated his ballet that
Russia Is not anxious to risk the
ology dlscuaslona at 9: 00 a.m, and gracious, and friendly.
Alllherat Lutheran Church .
Th.e stud. the wor ld p rd1•ide a valuable "key accomplishments oC forty-five years '
10:00 a.m., every Tuesda)' and
Wee ley
eot.8' opln1one ot the ph]rt1lclane to understanding.''
struggle. but also poi nt e d out that
Weel~
at Alfred University Thursday in Norlon 330.
The flrst of these cited I• the
they will nse any means to "r educe
were very similar with ezcept10 11
Masses
arc
said
daily
at
ll!
and Wesley at UB will co-s ponsor
violent cha11ge Ir, weaponry
th e United States to a second rate
that
sometimes
the
dooroni
seem­
noon
at
Newman
Hall
and
every
an overnight retrut
at Watson
since World War II which haa
J&gt;ower 5bort ot war."
Homeist.ead.Cooper's Plains, New Sunday at 10:80 a.m., noon, and ed very lmpe rson,al and t0&lt;&gt;buey.
forced us to rellnq ulah our
Ynrlc, Dec. 9 a nd 10. The group 6:00 p.m. at the Cantallcian Cen­
Speaking of the ch ■ ngea
One
re ason
Js
llhe
tact
feeling er "free security " f or.
'WIil leave Frida )&gt; afternoo n at ter for Chi ldren, 3233 Mnin St,
which have affected our foreign
that the patient load nuct11ates a
merly derived from the pro•
HIii ei
6 o'clock and return Saturday
pollcy, Or. Adler alao dlacuaaed
tectlon of the sur roun d ing
great deal, and therefore, 'the pa .
'etening. Mr. Paul Converse, ex­
Hillel will sponsor a Sal&gt;bath
the failure of President WII.
oceans. It hu made u1 reall ze
!lent
load
at
times
becollites
too
ecuU Ye .eecretaTY or the New York Sl'rvico this evening at 7 :46 In the
aon'a "blue print for world
that any war could only be
State St udent Christian
Move­ Hillel ITouse. Mrs. Norman Fertig great for the three doc(,ora to
order," men tioning the failur e
called "a mutual suicide p11ct."
ment, will aid in leading the dis• will read from nnd comment on handle.
of th e United Nation s to pro.
Another reason 118that,
Reinforcing th.la point. he de.
cues lon. Tho coet is $6.00, inelud­ Jerusalem Haa Many Faces, a col­ with the separation of 1mUent~ clared that ruobUlznUon ts now "a
duce peace and the result ing
lng transport.aUon, but Wealer wlll lecUon ot poems by J·udah SJ.amp.
emergence of the cold war In
question of 18 minutes, not 1g
Into
male
and
female
wards,
the
pay half of this. Rceervations must ter. An Onog Shabbat will follow.
our time.
Furth ermo re , he
eta.It is spilt up, and the 0111anureu months•• and thnt "Prealdent Ken•
be in by Mondi')'. • ,
The second annual One-Day l n­
cited the ' inadequacy of our
nedy
cnn
not
hlunder
without
:rlek.
nnd doctor on du.ty must ULerally
Cantertr.ury
Ktitutl' will be held on Sunday. at.
system of International
alfl.
be In two places at one Ume. One tng the semt-exthiotlon or the na­
The Rt, Rev. Lauriat.on Sco,i!c, the llillcl House. Thi s year's themu
ancas In maintaining peace and
tion."
Althougli
calling
w11r
"a
game
Bi~hop of tho Diocese of Wcst br n will lie, "The Bible - lt.s Rele­ st udent summe d Ut&gt; her 1:eeUnga of Russian roulette wltb all th11 the startling upaurgo agalnat
In this WU)', "The s tud ent health
the colonial powers In Africa
New York. will apeak on hi s re­ vnnce for The Student Today.''
service is really underrated by chambers lnaded ." Dr. Adler went
and Aala caual ng unrest. Th ese
oont tl"\Pto RuMia, Sunday. l)cc.
A Lox and Daircl Brunch
on to make the point that nuasla
the
student.II
till
they
come
here,
9 in the Conference Theater. Th~ ut 11 :00 11.ln. w i I l be fol­
are p roblem • which we muat
possesse~ an advantage In their
then
t.bey
realize
that
thei
r
could
l)llbtlc Is Invited. and invitations lowPd by an addri,,, on: "Ia the
attempt to surmount.
not get better core anywber,e eleo.'' knowledge that a conmct will
have llCCn extended to the other Billie Literature?"
D1·. J u d o h
Dr. Hottman concl uded w Ith the never be begun by the U.S. and
In summation, Dr. Adler stated
Ca nterbury Clubs of Western Ni&gt;w Stampfer, Pl'Ofcsso1· of English at
fact that the problems tl11at are can ·only res,,Jt from their own that American foreign policy mlllJl
York. More details will he uvuil­ the State Unive1·Nity of New York
ncttons.
e1Cperie11cedIn the lnflrma .ry also
develop "a de0nlte creaUve poli cy"
able noxt week.
on Long bland, will be the i,'11.0st
ure experienced by other hospl.
nr. Adle1• rhnrocterized Premier It we are ro halt the spread o!
lnte r. Va ralty
spe aker. Dr. Stampfo1· will also
taJs throughout the lJnlted States. Kbrushrbev •• o pragmatic
man :...._
Marxist lntluence In the world.
:.,_
A student p11nel discus~ion will lend a study group (ln Tl,n T/n(lf
IHI held this evening at 7 ;30 tn of Sa,1111r/during
the afternoon
2.~ Norton. The topic will be session. Also planned for the day
" What 111Chri eLian Witness?"
orr ili$Cussion group mootings. a
Each "'eek Int.er-Varsity
has period of folk dancing and sing­
four discussion irroupa. They meet ing. a tour of the Universit) ' of
Monday, 4 :00 p.m., 266 Norton; Buffalo compu~, a Delicntessen
Tuellday, 1 :00 p.m., 266 Norton; Suppe.r and a social evening.
Wednesday, 1:00 p.m .. 217 Nor­
The next meeting Is the 'Live
to n : and Fri dny. 12 :00 nnon, 266 and Loarn'' Coffee Hour series
Norton.
which will be held on Tuesday,
Newman Club
Dec. 4, at 8 :0-0 p.m. The subject
Toniorro...- b e I n g the
11.ret for discussion will be "College
Saturday o! the month, everyone ls Morringe - Pro and Con." Mrs.
urged to attend Mass ..
Nom1un Fertig 1toordinute:i the Bf·
Newman Club ie sJ)On.soring n rica.

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••••

DRY
CLEANING
PIZZA
8 lhs.for $Z.OO
'

CODED
BEEF
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Laundry • ShM Repairing
ShOM and Punes Refinished
and dyed

All 'YP" of Ladles'HNI• In
Stodt for Reploce!Mnt

or Re-ttyllng

PlazaSboeRepair
UNIVRSITY
PLAZA•

"'6-4041
Open 9 A. M. .9 P. M.

These are but a few of
of the specialties at the

University
Delicatessen

3588 Main St. TF 2-1456

JUNIORSSENIORS
OrderYourOfficial
Graduation Ring Now.
Avcul®I• At

THE

before
oraftertheballgame
McDONALD'S
AMAZINC:i
MENU
Pure Beef Hamb1Jrger .......... 15c
Tempting Cheeseburger ........ 19c
Triple-Thick Shakes .............. 20c
Golden French Fries ............. . 12c
Thirst-Quench ing Coke ........ 10c
Dellghtfu l Root e:eer ............ 10c
Steaming Hot Coffee ............ 10c
Full-Flavor Orong1e Drink ...... l0c
Refreshing Cold Drink .......... l 2c

·UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
"OnCampus"
Special $hanks available for Am and Sclenoe, lu1lneu,
En9ineerin9, Pharmacy, Law, Dentlttry, Medicine, Nul'llng,

Pt,yalcol TheN1py
, and Medical Technology.

Special Encrusting Available

Make your first stop at McDonald's.
Whether you have a i;arty of two, four,
or twenty, we can serve you in a few
seconds each. You'll be pleased and sur­
prised to find out just how good a 15¢
Hamburger can be. McDonald's Ham-.
burgers are made of 100% pure beef,
government inspected and ground fresh
daily. They're served piping hot and de­
' licious on a toasted bun. Come in today
. •. you'll get fast, cheerful, courteous
service ..• plenty of parking •.. no car
bops .•. no tipping •. . the tastiest food
in town at extra thrifty prices .

.Mel)onaldk
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J,i Mlle Molfll of SHERIDANDRIVEot MAPLEllOAD
(A,IJoca11t T ... BouleYanl Moll Pion)
· Open Friday 811, Sotunley ""tll 1 :00

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Ope,.._., liy tM JERRYIROWNkOUTCOA.P

�PAGEHIN!

SP EC T RUM

Friday, November 30 , 1962

Juniors, Seniors Are Urged Model U. N. Hiere; Queen Contest, Sing, Dance
Register Dec. 3 - Last Time Jo in a Delegation Highlight Greek Weekend
The College or Arts and Sciences
Issue d nearly 1000 pa.ckets of reg­
istratio n materials to Its juplors
and seniors last week. These stu­
denls are now completing their
reglatraUon for next semester In
ro nnectloo with their depo.rtmental
advisers.
Over one hundred Arts Oollego
students failed to pick up their
regist ration
mate,1ale,
however,
during tho tour days set aside tor
doing so. Dr. John C. Lane, assist..
ant clenn or th-e college or arts
and sciences, anno 11nced that any

junJor or senior who wishes to pre•
register tor nelt Rcmester and who
has not yet Dicked 1111Ills regls­
trntlou materials may do so next
Monday, between 9 am and 2 pm
In front of the Bursar's Office Jn
H11yes Hell.
This will be n " last chance day"
tor obtaining registration
mo.ter­
inls. Any Arts C'ollege student who
will not have ploked up these ma­
te,•lals by this day must we.it to
register tu Clark Oymuasluui In
.raauary.

The$e delegations will consist
person s. There
will he trophies awarded to the
thl'ee uelegations that most ef­
fectively present the viewp,linl of
the nations thut th&lt;')' repr{•sent ,
The jucl~ing will IJe done by ll 11an­
el of members from the ]history
nnd political science faculty.

Library, Music Room Open Monday
The facilities of the browsing li­
bra ry and the music room loca hid
in Norton will be rea!ly for use
\1onday.
Room 250 will have separate
listeni ng booths available for pri­
vate use while a lounge area will
11rovide pi-ped musie for all to en­
joy. Cla ssic al, semi-classical, nnd
1,1opularmu sic will be played; nnd,
in the future, an announcement of
these selections will be posted.
The library, locnted in room 255

The Student Senate will present
Nation~
Foruml. The
purpose of this forum
is to
familiarize
students
wit ,h tbe
problems
f a c i II g the variou s
member nntions of the Unit;ed Na­
tions. ln order to fulfill th is pur ­
pose a model UN has bee~ sched ­
uled for the weekend oi Feb. 8
and 9. This a1&lt;Semblywill be mnde
up o! student delegations repre­
senting the various members of
the UN.
o. United

of nt least three

will provide 1·eading material t.o
be used in the room. Bool&lt;s will
not be tent.
An important 1·ule that e;hould
be noted by all is tlrnt no books,
coats, briefcase s, etc. will be nl­
low~d in these areas. Suoh articles
must be left at the checkroom.
The gchedulc !or use of these fa.
It you are Interested In elnterlq
dlitics
is as follows:
Monday
th,·ough Friday , 9 a.m. to 10 p.n1.; a delegation to the mod~,! UN,
Saturday, 12 to 6 p.m,; Sunday, pleuse submit n list of peoi 11e nn d
1 to 5 p.m.
their local addroos to Norton 205
before Tuesday. Also Include Jlret,
second and third choice ol' coun­
t ries you wlab to 1·epreaent.

Union Board Reception
To Honor Active Members
Union board ..w.JlLl\ono1· those
st udents who have given service
to union activitie s Wednesday
when it will hold its first Recog­
nition Day. An in!ormo.1 social
has been planned for the active
hlembers in which a.wards and spe­
will highlight
cial entertainment
the evenin~.

I(.

'!'ho sing, wblob featured eleven
fraternll ies l\nd sororll1ea . 011ened
Ute Oreok Weekend !esllviUes 1n/
the ltarrimnn Library auditorium.
Th e lligbllgbt of tbe weekend
wus the Greek dan ~c. whlob w as
open to all meml1ers or rrnlernltles I
nnd aororl U86, Including pledgee.
The ilnnce wn.s hold at Cn111tolHall. 1
NOREEN HIRSCH
Munir. for dancin g was au pp lied by
non Me tcalf who wlll nlso play nl c,•nt or ber ruling L-u.metrt&gt;ru votes
Silver Thlll. Throu gh the efforts or 1111d the retoeh1ing ntty !)errent
to lier by the
rhe IF(.), buffet tables lnden wltll wus attrllmted
The queen candldatoa
•·old cut!! und salad were provided. Judf{es.
The queen campaign, wl1lcb was modeled ta 11, tushlon sbow In tbs
und er the dlreetlon of Leslie .Lewis. mu !U-puropae room In Norton.
tern1lna.ted Snturdny evening at
'!'he IFC nwarded apoolnl tro.
11: 30 when tho Greek crown was phl ca.J.o tile cu.ptalns of the nuna,
11lnn,t1 on tbe head or Noreen nnd the trophy t or the 1raum lty
with th,1 highest acndcmlc nvcrnge
JilrN&lt;lh.
Tbei' queen was selected by popu. was awarded to lbe EnglneerJ.ng
lar vote nnd by Judging. Flrty J)Cr- f'r11ternJty.

..,

-

Speakers
from the executive
board and standing
committees
will be featured. Madeline Do.vis,
a music major here and folksinger
who ho.s sung at the Limelight ,
will give her rendition of •popular
folksongs.
The activities will be in the
multi-11urpose room from 'I :UO to
11:00 p.m.

Winter Weekend
The Freshman Class Council is
starling early this year in prepsr ation for Winter Weekend. The
exact schedule of eventa has not
yet been revealed, but it will be
hig hl ig hted. by the traditiona l
Winter
Weekend Ball and the
coronation of a King and Queen
of Winter Weekend.
Coor dination of t his weekend in-

The winners of the Greek Week.
end co,.petJUon last week were·
Alpha Epsllo " Pl, wbo snng Shim.
nndoa h and Ride Thal Chnrlot to
win the 1tmnll division tratornlty,
Sig ma Phi Epello" who snag Eter­
nal Fntber and Vtve In Compagne
to win the lnrge division trnternlty,
and Sigma Ka ppa, who aang Come
to the Fair .ind Smoke Gel,.. rn
Y-our l!.'yee to win the so rority o.l.
vtslo11. tu the queen oompelltlon.
Noree n Il i~soh or Sigma Oelta Tau
wns the winner.

on the Way

volvrui' the efforts of a great many
people with talents for sueb lll"eas
as pu blicity, coordination of lndi­
vidual events, or just the desire to
be a. part of something that will
prove to ibe fun in the snow. Com­
mittees 9.1"8 open to all interested
students, o.nd apl)llco.tions can be
found on the Norton candy-co unte1·

Positions with Potential

ENGINEERS
•CHEMISTS
•PHYSICISTS
Ceramic• Chemical• Civil
Electrical• Industrial , Mechanical
Metallurgical
National Car bon Company, America 's lending manufoc..
turer of carbon and graphile produc1s, offers pasitions to
qualified B.S. and M.S. graduates in the fields listed above.

Our futur 'e Is In t he hands of men not yet hire d

Our products include graphite anodes, electrodes,
motor and generator brushes, arc carbons and special
grap hite shape~ used in nuclear, missile, and a wide vari­
ety of industrial applications.

At Wl',tcrn Elt&lt;etric w, · play II vital role in
helpin g meet the t•umplt 'X needs of America's
v11st cornrnuni cutiun~ ll~'tworks. A.nd a carwr
at Western Elet'tric. the nmnufoduring am1 of
the nation-wid e Jll'IITelephone System, olfcrs
young men th e exl'iti11g upportunlty lo help us
mt•t•Ithese import.ult ll&lt;!roS.
Toda y, Western Electril- t'f)uipm cnt rc.-&lt;l
uces
thmm111dsof rnilt'S lo frac·tions of-st.'&lt;.'Qnds.
Ev,·n
~o. wr know thnt our pr•l'scn t cnmmunkations
sy~tcrns ill he !nadcqualu tom orrow; and wo
,art•st•t•king 11ays lo hc •p up with - ant! anlu ,.
p,1tc - th e future. For in~l;ince, right 110w
\Vt•~IPrn Elt•ctric engi n ee rs arc working 011
v,,riou~ ph:1\1·~ of so lar cel l ma1111L11·11111·,
rnmiat,u i1al)r111.data tr 31}!\flll§~ju,1 , r,1c1111,t
w
td cphon,•,, ,,J,·,·lru111l' cenlra l offi1·,·,, " '"'
cornp1111·rc11111,,,ll,·dp11tclll(ln111l,111•,-11111.◄ 1111·

We serve suc h key industries as aircraft, aluminum,
au1omo1ive. chemica l, mining , motion pictures. nuclear,
steel, transportalion, and the electrical manufacturer s.
Positions are available at J 2 plants and lab oratories
located in Ohio, New York, West Virginia and Tcnne:. see
and also in our Marketing organization which covers the
48 states from seven key chics.

,1

lnt crcsling, rewarding careers arc offered in rcsenrch,
' proccs ~ and product development. produ c tion and mcth•
od~ cnsinecring, produc1 and process co ntrol , machine
J&lt;!velopmcnt, plan! engineering. markcling. 1echnicul
sales and technical se rvice.
A National Carbon representative w,11he nn campus:

rnn mcl'I ou1
engint•cr~. If vo11ftlt•l thul 1·1111
stancl:irds, 1•011si1krth, • opportun1t1es o!fort.~l
by worki11g with our t·ump,111y. 111n frw ,hurt
yc:irs, y,111will /Jc Wc st,•rn El, '&lt;'11
Ii·.
Cholltnglng opportunltl .. tXltt now Qt W.._t,m
ffoclric for efecrrito l, mtcho11ltol , lndy u; loJ. and ch•ml•
cal engineers , at well 01 phy1icol u,,nc• , tlb1ral orh .,.
and bu1lnon maJ011 All quallllod oppllconl, will , ..
calve ccutful con1id1ratlon ~to, employm1n 1 w11t\oi;,
regard to ,o c.e, creed, color o, nallonal origin for m ort
lnro,mofion obout W11t1rn Elec-1ric
, w,ltt CoU19t Rtlo ..
l ion,. We1tern £1tdrlc Company, aoom 6206, 212
Broadway , New Vorli. 38. N•w York. An.d be 1ure, 10
otrango for a Wu ltrt't f11ttric lnt.,vlew wh1n ov,
colle!J• Mprtsonfo ti1110t •hit your compu•

ju,1 11fc•,1.

DEC. 5

NATIONALCARBON COMPANY
Divisionof Union Carbide CorpOf3tio n

.___

___

AN EQUAL OPPORTIINITYEMPLOYER

•___

I

1'11 1wrl•
·· t 11.. \\ ◄ II~ '"'" lll 111nf(11·,•,.....i
lau11d, t11,u1\ 111\\ ""'m1wrn ·,1t,uu~ JlH1-1-ltu1.;.
pr0!4,:tt.~ JIHH"i d111t·,,,111c
I prnc t ·)lM·, 11t1t )t t u1
tlh.' mind ot 10,01
\\1·
111·c•~Iquahr) Jn)11d1d
1

PrlnCJl)al m,.u ..t., JI I c l(H lit '• 1t r:t,1, h'
Ill, K"Jrr
~ J. IH 1 ,,, ML!. l"'Jlan,~:&gt;lh jn:t, AH1:l'lt, "''' lf\:J L.1.1,..-tdo1lt,
,1
Win$tOn-S.tl•m, N, r;, 1 1tfAIJ ri Y,1 ~\),th' tuvi1, Ml_ tm.&amp;ht, f.,.
~,,,
~•IY, V,J c.i.,•-A;·ntii,1;,
IJl\1'1 ~~1.th4\,,..
.. \.It'), O~l.a
Rur,rcti (,tl'tfflf, ronrttnn, N J,• hlfttyo• t ,,po,,t .1n, "~o~,o. 111:,:m,1i,w, Ro.,. At• Al r; ll1 f••n r,.. t
rtl~tfl
t1ucm('or1nM
outlon 1.cnters In 33 c.Jllu ,nd 1,otMl,t1ortr,.o.iou4rtfl, In IG cn•u Ciri'\trJI hn~Q.1.,r111" •~ Orp;.J""'· Ni N '1'.1t1i 1, ~ . '(

�-4

I

SPECTRUM

Friday, November 30 , 1962

BullsFaceScranton
andToron1to
WestCoast
Gri4~lue~s~hre~ten
'To AlterAII-A111N
D1stn•1tion
AsLocalBasketball
Season
Opens
:~::.::::.:==::~tid:l:
;:

87 8/lRRY EPSTEIN
Tbo OlllYllnitl,7 or Boffalo Bulla
open u, 8 lHMI buk&amp;tb.U 181800
--•ut
tlle Ua1-•t7
of a--nton
•-.,
....,.
tonlgtit . AJi t.hla i. the MUon 'a
opener tor lloUl t.eama, It ebould be
a tOll&amp;II oee either way, 8cnuito11,
Ute th • Dall• . bu a nuclea ■ or
•l«bt pta701'8, wilo will certalnJy be
ehaftled &amp;Dd roahatned
tbla flnt
game lo &amp;ll a.ttempt to nu the
righ t combl~oa .
'l'bn llo ,al a al110bout good overall height, es,erloDCe (tber have
1

Scranton

forward

BIii

conla netted 40t polnll
7ear 101' • 17..86 average.

Univen1lt1 or ToTonto bulceUlall
After reunlng lhe 8&amp;d newa from "the geograpbJc outlook" when the men of Troy. A S-1, 180-pounder,
team. He uaed to play baaketball Krawoiyk, Sert collUllende&gt;d tbe ballots are coun ted for the Amer• Campbell I■ matching bl■ 11160 and
for Toronto aod wae a loading veteran tor the cooacleoUouie att.t- loan Football Coacbe8 A811oclatloo'a '61 ijea&amp;one when ho ca ugh t 119
■corer during bl1 undergradaate ludo lhAt be dleplayed durln. hi ■ All-America team.
pae■ea for 1604 yards. Burke, ,o
For the pa.st two yeal'8, only one unheralded junior college tranefer,
years,
tenure with the club.
player trom a state weal of Kan. 11 among- the oatlon'1 lea dere In
Coach Se rfuaUnJ la haYlllC hie
Tho Bulls have their thl rdl came ena haa been se lected by tbe AFOA paae receptions.
bl
ltb th Bl
d Wbl
tor tho "mythical dream team."
A two-year letterman at tackle,
pro em■ w
e ue 8ll
t.e of the year on tap next W'ednea. That wq guard Joe Ro!Dlg or Col. 262-pound Steve Barnell of Or egon
Bulla. ne bu not yet deetded on day, when the)' journey to Lewfa. orado, •elected ror tbe nr■ t team hae twice been an AII-Ooaet choice.
a permanent atartlns line-up. Al - burg, Pa . to tall.a 00 Buckn1tlt.
ror two conaecutlve years.
Rod Scheyt1r, U2 pound Wuhlnatbou1h bo baa eight men ready to
Playera Crom lhe East (7), l\lld- 1011 t11ekle,la a. veteran member ot
do the job, •serf" baa not fouod the
west (6) and South (6) hue dom- one or the Coast'&amp; heal teame.
Mickey Ording, a 2!0 pouo d aeo.
loated the 1961 and 1962 Drat Allright combina ti on and It may be
America team, apooeored by East- lor who teams with Bar nett at
trial an d error unlll one ot lbe
man Kodnk Company and chogeo Oregon, and John ny Walker. a 210
live-man unite cltckll
by the votes of more than 600 pounder for UCLA, have been
bead college coache• throughout nominated for AII-Amorlca recog.
Tho gr aduatio n of Hide &amp;ho.
the country,
ultlon at guard.
■ho, BIii MoEvoy and Jerry
Presently 13 Far '\"eijt oandlCooter Roy Manaftold, a 236
Flllpakl n,eana the Ion or l••t
dates - playing for team• trlum- pounder, la n top.ootoh candidate
pbant during many lnteraecllonal as aocbormnu for a powerful
year'■ three leading soorera.
cballengea this aeaaoo - are com- Waablngtoo line.
Dlolc Harvey,
, with a e.a aver­
potlng for posltlona on the 73rd
Backfield Slota
age la returning but the Bull■
(•onsecnllve e11uad or lbe n11llon's Turning towards tho back11el6
oldest and original All-America roster that represents
the Far
wlll alao min the 1en1lcee of
team.
Weat, Terry Baker of Oregon State
Jun ior, J im Newton , who play­
By evaluating porformancea from battles Mll1ml'1 paaalng wizard,
ed •olld ba ■ ketball at a guard
game movies, coaohea wUI aelecl George Mira, and Northweatero' a
aput IHt year. Newton did not
the Oral, eecond, end third All- One sophomore, Tom Myen,, for
come out th la ■ ea ■on.
America teams to be aooouncod lo Oral team.quarterback. At 6-S and
TV Oulde'a Dec. 1 laeue.
195 pounds, Baker la an excellent
In nddltlon, senio r forward Jlm
JlllMsera.nd eluelve l'IIDJler.
Welt Coaat C h ■ llengee
Krawczyk Informed Coach Berfu1!&lt;'ourblghty -raled halfback:■ carry
Among the end can didate, tor
llnl Tuesday that be wlll be unable
All-America n hooora are three Western bopea on lbe CWTent oom•
to play this year due to a lack ot
Wes t Cout nomlne ea - HIii Beel. lnatlng list or 64 players Crom all
sole or Southern caurornln'a pow. aeclloos or the country. They er e
av all abte time . Kraw caytc, beftldea
Gu■ rd Joe Quinn playe d In
ertu l eleven, Hugh Cam pbell or Mike Ilattner, UCLA ; Obarll e Mlt ,
being married an d holding d0Wll a only t Royal game■ IHt ••• ­
Mel Rentro ,
Wash I o gt on State, and Verne cbell, Waablogton;
■on,
but
aver
a
ged
17
P•&gt;
lnta
tull-tlme e•enJog Job, la kept bwiy
Oregon; nod Kermit Alexander ,
nurte. Oregon State.
per
conteat.
hY at.udent-toacbl og commltmontl .
With UBC'a two alternating UCLA.

Wlb•
IHt

6 letwrmen a nd 4 other Yoteraru,),
apeed. and good ehootJ~ ablllt,1.

ScrMt on'a eight •eta.rteni" are
Olu.m and 6'6H J oe Bar.
bull who ..-Ill DTQbably alt~, nate
at C'Ol'ler. WIiiie Wltaconl ■, 6'3H
11nlll:uit ye&amp;r'ti Ulllllt Yaluablo play.
~r. •➔II boodle the right forward

w~ George

•1.ot

Tom ~ey , 6.,,., and Bud Coop­
••r, 61.", are eharlng the loft tor­
wurd alot. Joe Quinn and Don Wat•
•M, t.111, latter being the play­
mttker, will be ho ldlog down lhe
l,'llllnl
J&gt;()IIIUona.6'1· Jim Dooley,
t01) fr&lt;NJh ecorer , 18
h1al YNlf'II
8omowhore lo tho mldsL of the
10nunblo fOC' a atartlng borth .
TomoN'Ow night ttle Toronto
Bluea w111bring with
t+lem a 11 anorltnent of Canadian
pla,_... lnoludl119 two boya 8'8"'
8'5-. Thia height of
and Toror1to may be • factor Im.
portar,t to the ga me'• ouc..
come, 1lttlough Buffalo height
11 n,epectaOle thla year .
V■nlt7

Tb&lt;• flullB won oully over To­
rort.o lut year, 7j-H, 1U1dToronlo
tra,, on1, 6-1.8 for tbe eeuon.
The
Toront,o t.(lam wae a weak club last
rPllr and thla yeAr Ibey ebould bit
Ol11chtho Nme c&amp;llber. Rotumlng
[Ot' blJ! t.hlrd re&amp;r with. tho equ11d
baa
•~ JetTf Mc~llroy wtio. at o•a•.
an eicelloot Jnmp allot and wu
virtually Toronto '• ooJy ecorar last
y&lt;'llr, lie ueragoo. 17.1 point• a
rame wblle t.he whole t.oam man­
u:&lt;-d on11 53 points a game .
Alao retumfng u.11 year are
Ula two next lllc,tlNt -rwa.
Paul Olgna11, noted fw hl1 de .

fen• , and Dave Oudlterlony,
&amp;'V, who wori&lt;a decently olf
the bad&lt; board. Olgna11 had •
M aYOf'9gelut year and Ouch­
terlony had 7.1 polnta a game .
Other men returning to van,lty
pl•y are Doug MoKenale, 1
gverd, and Ke,, Wa lker , a for­
ward a•:,,- tall ,
Jl)hn ,1o-'&gt;1&amp;nu1 a1art1n1 bit
lllfbt b ll'BIK'll U bead &lt;oacb l)f I.be

Salem

refreshes your taste
\\ •
ft
II
ff.
-~-~~ everypu

/Me c'l./·wff

d~ ~r• ff, 1~ 1•t&amp;/

A l'l'freshrng d1sLo, ery is you1 s
C\'l•ry tune )nu -.n1t1kl'a !--al~
•m c11,wn•l'c• .. for Salem rl'fn·,dw-. ~our t.t..,t, Just as
Spnngtinw r,•tn ,,;lw ... ym1. l\lost n·l'n•-.lung. most flan,rf'ul. 1,111... that':- Sall•m!

• menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter , too

◄

�SPECTRUM

Friday, November 30, 1962
, coH GRATUt.AT/01\'5

TO

E1EIW MEM8ER OF Tiff
u.e. VAP.SITY foor1Jl'IL1.
T!AM FORrH5 c;.REAT
FIGHTING. SPIRIT
you s11owe
o 'N

MYC'REDENTIALS
fO('\ "6'3'

svc:crss
Ir,/ Llf&lt;r IS A l'IAl ·Tl fl
NOT 50 l'\VC." Of&lt; TA~ENT
OR
oPP&lt;IRTilNI~)"
AS OF tONCfffTffA
,TION
ANO p£1\SEVERANCt .
1

cw,wr1101r

~ow

wn~

'!'Has£

PE$Cl'IJ6E

'fl-II"

l'DOTl'llll

'T'f'M'I .

,, ..

woAO'~

~

v"""'n'

.I

EVERY G,I\Mf

you ANP YOIJR
DEDICATED

,

Of'f&gt;ONENTS

coACN£S

U.

WILL LOIIIG-LlE
ffEMEM9EffEP

Bostoh

fOR yolll'!

Y,llan0vcl

3/o

Del~w~re

I 'l
l'3

HolyCross

flNf

FOOTf~Ll
R £COIIO AT

rel'llple
O hio
U

u.B.

Z '3
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If/

5vckhell
O
G-e1tysbut-j o
6

Col3ate

0

JAC CASEY

PAGEELIVEH

SigEpEdges
TKEforSwimTIiie;
BetaSigBreaks
Free-Style
Mark
AH lb.o rour senson&amp; 1ioa trow
one to another, eo does the lnl!ra­
mural athletic prograw progress.
~'ootball Wll.B followed by ewlm­
wing, whlch hne now given way
to the basket.ball eeaaon. Howeve~,
betore we glance at the present,
we must coaslder the J)IISt.
The Intramural
1wlmm lng
meet, held on Nov. 19, waa
won by Sig Ep with a total
· of 49 polnta, TKE fln l1hod a
ajo■e secon d with 43 polnti,
IUldB•ta Sig followed w ith 39,
Te-1m totala are as foll oWt!

Sig mp ........47
TKFJ ............ ◄3
Beta Sig .... 89
Alpha Sig ....32
.AEPJ .......... 28
Oammn Phi I 9
Phi E11 .••- ... 18
8AM ., ........ JS
•rheta Chi .. 10
One rCleord woe set during Lile
qunli(ylng time trials. Bela Slgma
11.boestubllsh.e d a new meet recor~
lu the 100.yard rree-"tyle relay
event with a time of : 61.6 ~econds,
The team consisted or K.1og, Mer.

lhelr record breulug
team aild
uJso the &amp;wiwintng, meat. Rnle&amp;
wei-e mode to be t ol lowed.
The lntmmura) bulcetball
pro­
gram btlgan activity 011 llfonilay
night with the opn la g game, ot
Lhl! ludependenl
leagtte, a-Jta
or the nJght'a play were :
Alnl'k Murphey•, f.4---RanibOttomaJI
Icemen 4S-Sliak$r9
aa
Falcone li~th
Tower ,c
Dulcot1..•O-Za~••
U
h
T e PlgeklM alld the 2,clotw
each won by forfeit. TIie IIINpendent 1e11gue play wlll t..lce
pla ce on Monday a11dw.-day nigh t., and tlMI 1r.-.n11t,)&lt;
action will be "-Id on T~y
an d Thureday nlOII.._ Cbeoll
the 1che dule ~ect
In the
me n'• locker l"OOffl for the
night and time at whloll )'Ollr
team eompetes.
Tbe preeent etanding11 tw th e
overnll aporls tropb7, lbe Palllow ­
ltz Memorial Tropb7, !DclGdlnglJle
swimming , ...,uilll aNt u follo,, t•
Sig Ep -·-··· 16&amp;
Beta Sig .... 164
Alpba S,g 167

IOr 6 3 Record
ii~;i~~h,
::v::~:~!~ ·:..:·.:·:
..~ ~~~
UB ell.ps Colgate
~~:r•::~~}:~i
~~~y~ ~:t·:~
i~·
m
ofl\OtteTl~,1:;;
1

Butler a nd Kevin Brlnkworth
the : ohe dol e, be sho uld reniemborl
By JIM BAKER
wound u p sitting on the ball,
The UB tootbn.11 Bulls closed out
that upset over Boaton, U1e tre·
tbelr 1962 seo.aon Nov. 17 with a
The Hnal Colgate attempt at a me11dous performance agalns ,t }Joly
G·O triumph over stubborn Colgate. score that reached serlo0.8 proper- Cross thnt almost netted a trlEi.eld. tioil!I occurred '!11th tour mJnutes umph over the heavi\y.favoreld Oru110 a snowy day at Rotary
The win climaxed the Bulls' first remainlng In the game. McNanamy snders, the breatb-taldng
comecumpalgu as a moJor col\eg!l team. made his thh'd tumble recovery rrom -beblnd win over DelJLWllre,
,md lett (he Blue and White wlth ot the day, setting up the Maroon the stea dy and !!Ound
' elrlort to
a. b.lghly successfull 6-S record,
offense on the UB 29. QB Gerry dowu Temple, and those thrc u
, Ae the final 0011.nt lndlcatee, Barndln lDIDlediately Wt Hellman closing shutouts
over Bucknell,
there was only one score in the with a heave tbat was good fOT Gettysburg, nnd Colgate that ~los •
game , but that came on a pJcture 11 yards and a lirst down ou the I'd the ee11son In style.
play Indeed. n stpted when Gerl');' Bulls' 18. Barudln tollowed this
l'B, In Its last 10 quart&lt;Bl'II of
Ratkewlcz pounced on a Colgate with a roll-out tbat uetled only
rumb le on the Raiders • 28. Three two yards. He then tried three combat yielded only 76 ym·ds on
line plunges plus an otfalde peoalty passes, all or wbJch fell tnco:m. the ground (1 In, the second ball
against (letlys­
woved the ball only to the 21. It plate, and the Raiders were dead. against Bucknell, 3.11
burg , and -l3 against Colgat~). In
was fourth down and ~e
yardll
• • •
their last 12 quarters, wibU11 ecor•
10 go.
UB haltba.ck John Clmba CBIDe
Coach Offenh-1mer tent In •
extcremely close to enarlng
the Ing 7S points themselves, thE• Bulle
courier from the aidallnee with
club's rnehlng tJlle when he daeh• dJd not allow a sing le point to be
the play that waa to epetl the
ed from the UB 6 to the Colgate ~cored against them. That' ,s rea l
difference, It was a paH play
36 early In the Jame tor a 69.yd. defense , mu!
which Offle figured would put
Jaunt . This run sent the jWJJor
Coach Offenhamer had thl1
e nd Lar ry Gerg ley one-on-one
halfback on bls way to a 70 yard
to ny about the Bulla' achleve­
1
total ln U carries, but he fell short
agaln 1t hulklng 6 4'', 220 pound
menll thl1 year: "I'm elllte d.
Torn McNanamy, a linebacker
of the OB seasona l leaderahlp by
The aouon turned out •~ery
two IICllllt yards. The rw,hlng tJtle
who wa1 not exactly known
we ll. I'm proud of the bo71
for his apeed,
was won by J im Burd, the senior
- every one of them - and
The play etarted, and MoNa.n. fullback who amassed UG yar tla
I'm proud of my etaff. We llook
8.111T
rave Gergley only tok en cov• on the seal!on and garnered 21
our licking thl1 1eason, buii er11ge, as he could not keep In 11tep yard In six tripe against Colgate.
kept coming back and tlghtln o
Bob Edward, who
with. the UB end, That W&amp;.9 all
Sophomore
back after the Ohio and V'llla­
,1uarte rba ck John Stofa needed to gaine d l!S ya.r~ against the Raid·
nova gam e1. We took co urao e
~ee. Alter fa4log back and rolling ers , llnlshed with 2Sl for the eea­
--t hat•• why I'm eo proud and
the UB "ice son, juet one more t han Bob Baker,
out to his right,
pfeaaed."
wbo
mll!8e4
bis
ch&amp;Dce
at
the
man" lofted n. eoft balloon, and
Yee, tbat Stofn to Oergley · pass
Gerg ley, who waa all al one by 1h11 crown only because ot a leg ln­
:!we, snuggled the p lge~n in bia Jury that kept him out of the in the final analysis was just a
.,r ms for the decldjng - and only lineup tor several games. With symbo l - a symbol that was so
ot the UB team
- touchdown. Gergley waa later Burd , Clmha, Edwa.rd , and Baker representative
the year. . It r epre­
named to the week's AIJ-Eut team, so closely bunched tor the club throughout
leadership in ruablng yardage, the se n ted hard worlr, execution, Sood
cble Uy because ot Ihle etrort.
Coach Olfenhamer later doscrlb­ baclrlleld cotnpeUtJou wae ob'fions­ plannlog, spirit and de•lre , cour­
Jy hot a.ud heary throngbout the a,e. and SUOOESS!
ed Stota's toss • as a "skyrocket,"
but call It whnt you will, it was season.
Scoring Summary
the heave tha t proved tbe dtlrerAa for John 6lAlfa, he com­
1•nce.
Colgate ,_....0 0 0 0--0
pleted 5 of 13 paeua for n
Colgate made Its presence felt
yarde, but that wu hie entire
Dull'alo ..........0 G O 0--6
,,onaldera.hly throughout the game,
offense for die day . The 1now
nowever, a11 three tJmos they ap­
undoubtedly hindered the U8
WRESTLING
pea red beaded for a touchdown.
quartert,a~
(H It did the
i:!i&gt;earhended by the slylieh rnn•
backs on both aquad1) from
All candid ates for UB's vur­
nlog of halfback Jim Hellman, the
a more
menaofng
making
sity and freshman
Wl't'sl:ling
Red Raiders moved 52 yarde In
threat to Don Holland'• U B
teams are to report to R:oom
13 plays the first time they laid
season toul olfenae mark of
5A ' in the basement of ():Jark
their bands on the ball They mov­
1,092. A• it wae, Stofa wound
Gym on Monday, Dec. 3. The
~d to n first down on the UB
up tho year with 984 yarda ,
meeting will begin promptly al
11, but there ls where tbe Blllla
108 short of the UB record,
4 p.m.
made their stand. In three eosuing
will
Tbe va?'lllty grapplere
plays (two ruahes and an iDcom~
When the UB eeaaon la vlewe4
hegin their season Dec:. 14 with
r,letc pass) the Raiders adV'Bllced aa a whole.' It must be measured
a road encounter again st tht•
,1oly three yards to tbe 8. Then a success - 1tJ1d A big one tor
Toronto
Varsity Blues, Tb t
~unrterba.ck and captain Dan Keat­ sure. The team had only two bad
frosh team will open its scueo11
·n,:r hit Heilman with a swing pass, games, but both were played be•
Jan. 19.
~ut John M:lcb.no and Tom Butler tore the home fana . U on e scans
'"tlled the Colgate runn er on the
. slo11ptng the threat
4 yards
short ot a llret dowu.
The next Colgate threat oc ­
GROTTOIN THE REAR •
UNIVERSITYPLAl:A
curred Just before the half.
time lntermlnlon,
u Raider
Visit our newly remodeled dining rooms to enjoy 01ur
Bob Negley recovered a Stofa
Famous American and !talion Foods
rum ble on the U B a. A touch•
From A Tasty Sandwich to A Full Course Meal
down aeemed Imminent,
for
TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KINDS
the Raiders had 3 fu II minutes
SANDWICHES II.ND HOT PLATES
to punch over for a acore. The
...
-......... --...........first amaeh Into the llne gained
SPECIALTIES
- RAVIOLI- SPAGHETTI
- PIZZA
2 yards to the 7, but on the
very next play, tho Buffalo
fine 1meared Keating mercf,
tea,1y, ,w ith the result that

:d~:[fe
four te.·uus we1·e dlaqunllOed due Tile rewu.Jnder ot the rro.ternltles
the rulea. The ,-.,. have B()()red below 100 p0Jnta.
to lnftncllond
snit waR that TKl!l woo the relay,
As I• evldl'nt. lbe race I• T4'lrY
nnd Sig l!:p woo the meo1, WII h- t'lo~l'. mid thr oon11on I• l'ApldlJ
0111 the dii&lt;1ualUlcn.tlon, Bein Sli: 1&gt;r111:reasl11g.
Tbe llnAl 1'9"11\IAcionld
woul(I have won the relny wlthpruve 1nwreKtlt1fl.

ot

Colgate·• Jim Hellman (No. H) bucke forwaNI,
a1 three 8111!1eloae In.

...

I.EONABDO'S

RetJlaiirar.d

...............
-

guaranteed

gift

Sure to please or we will exchange it !or
another from our sto ck.

TheUniversity
Bookstor
"ON CAMPUS''
.~••~
Fr1•1' Gift Wmppint; and Jfoiling on J111rl'l111

of $5.00 or more

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Friday, November 30, 1962

'

UBFroshOpen
Sh1te
Against
Canisius
]Five

SPORTSCIRCLE

UBPlayers
Make
Football
Headlines

By NICK COSTANTINl)

Freshman baaketball coaeh Ed
Mut.o llDd !Lia team open Lhl!lr 22.
game season tonight against the
Canlslus yearlings.
This ~hould
As of tonight the 1962-63 college basketball seiw&gt;n i s prove to be one or the hardest
upon us. Yet, with this switch of scenery from the cold ecbedules ever raced by a UEI team.
outdoors into the cramped confines of Clark Memorial Dun- There are ten major teams Lnclud­
geon, footba ll news continues to pour in with surprising lug Canlstus, St. Bonaventure, NI.
regularity.
agara, Syracuse and Colgate lo this
The l11test grid news to arrive via the press release year's schedule.
route includes the announcements of two Buffalo rivals' AllThe probable starting UB lineup
Opr,onent teams. Both lists are interesting to UB enthusi- tor the Canlslus game ts: Dick Smith
asts, as each school has paid the Bulls considerable tribute. a 6'4" forwa rd from S11enc•3rp0rl,
The selection of the Boston U. All-Opponent team N. Y.; Dennis Zyndn, 6 6•S,, torUB frosh quarterback
Ron Ridolfi (No. 18) head's for long
b ·
'th ·t th
f UB
t b k J h Stof wnrd (rom Depew, N. Y. ; Paul
down6eld gain In gamo agains t Syracuse.
The Orange Year-,.rings WI ., 1
.~ name 0 .,
qu~r er ac.
O n
a. Goldatein, a 5'10" guard trom Ro·
Unga triumphed,
25-14, but Dewey Wade's frosh dlaplayod
Long .John or Ice Man, as he 1s affectionately called chester N y. Harvey Poe a 6'1"
much promise.
these days, finished in a tie with Boston ColJege's Jack Con- guard
o~~oge,N.. T.: a~d Nor • --------------------cannon for the number one signal-caller on BU's list. The wood Goodwin, a 6' forward from
press release out of Boston credits Stofa with "almost Erle, Pa.
..singl e-handedly starting BU off to two consecuuve losing
Dick Hetzel, Dave Fralungelo, Pos. Team
Pta.
17
seasons." Concann on and Stofa were the only BU rivals Bill Barto and William Barl.h will 1 southern caut. (9-0)
SATURDAY, NOV.
397
to penetrate the 'Tenier PllSS defense for TD aerials this also see action Jn the game. Barth, 2 Wlsconstn (8·1)
360 Buffalo 6• Colgate O
year.
at 6'6", Is th e tnll est mnn on tb e 3 Misstastpol (8-0)
350 flo eton College 41, Boston U. 26
The All-Opponent squarl chosen by the Gettysburg Bui- eqund. Tbe i-emaloder of th11 team t Te1as (9·0·1)
290 Penn State 48, Holy Cross 20
Jets inrludes three UB Bulls. They are: Gerry Philbin, consist.a ot Mac Smllh, Doug • John - 5 Alaba.ma (8-1)
!130 VIiianova 34, Rutgers 12
tJlckle Paul Gagliardi, and ,center Jim Wick. Stofa fil:iish- son nnd Ted Worosz.
6 Arkansas (9-l)
187 Delaware 9, Bucknell G
ed second to Bucknell's Ron Giordano in the race for quarIlecnu11e U13 doesn't boast a . big 7 Loutslauna State (8-1-1)
156 Gettysburg 22, Temple 15
terback honors on the team.
team In beli;l1t or welglit, their re- 8 Oklahoma (7-2)
132 Ohio U. 32, WeBt. Mich. 16
,,
"
..
~
bounding strength wm be ham- 9 Penn State (9-1)
129
SATURDAY, NOV. 24
64
pered, but good o"erall team spe11d 10 Minnesota (6-2·1)
0th er g,i d iron news invo Iving Buff a Io playen inand shooting alllllly, nnd hustle Other Teama Receiving Votes - Holy Cron 36, Connectl()Ut 14
eludes the results of the Gem Bowl game that wos held
and desire should help ovurcomo (Jlsted ruphabetlcal!y): Dartmouth,
Iowa State 31, Ohio u. 22
last week in Erie, Pa. Senior linemen Dic:k Hort and
lbelr reboundlng weaknesses,
Duke, Florida, Georgia Tech, Mis.
Kevin Brinkworth represented UB in this East-West cla ■h
Cunlslus, having two 6,7. , play- sour!, Northwestern,
Ohio Stat~,
THIS WEEK
011d were stand-out perfonners in the East's powerful
ers, boo.ste a toll tonm, a"e ,rnglng Or111:onState, Washington.
Holy Crose (6·3) at Boston College
ground attock , According to UB Sports Information Diover 6'¥' tn the stuling llm1up.
rector Bill Everett, who witnessed the 12-8 We■t victory,
Tomorrow night , the Fro~lh wm
Hort ond Bri11kworthopened gaping holes all oftemoot1
meet waterloo College, the Jnnlor
Letterp ress ond Offset
for the Eott bocks. Everett notes that the greater majority
Canadian chnmJ)lon, nt Clorlt Gym.

By Jim Baker

h-o~

l!IP'S
TOP
TENTEAMS
I GRID
SCOREBOAR

n

of the day's rushes were executed through the left ■ide
of the Eatt line, where Hort was operating ot guard 011d
Brinkworth. wa■ matriculating at the tackle slot.

The game's first score came when the power of the
West's forward Wl\ll which, far outweighing that of the
East squad. made it considerably easie r for the West backs
to grin/1 out a touchdown on sheer ground strength.
Then the East struck back, with Hort and Brinkworth
opening key pa11sages
in the right side of the West's line.
When the East had driven to the threshold of the West
goal, quarterback Ron Giordano of Bucknell hit an end
Slippery Rock (where?) with a scoring pass. The same
combination clicked for the two-point conversion, and the
East forged ahead, 8-6.
In the fourth quarter the East continued their strong
ground attack, but just after they had gained a first down
at midfield, Giordano chose to go to the air. The pass was
intercepted, and the West's strong rushing offensive led
them to the deciding touchdown, as the game ended with
a 12-8 count.
East Coach Alex Bell, who is also head mentor at Villa,.
nova, later praised Hort and Brinkworth for out.standing
performances. The game was divided into four 12-minute
t1uarters, and the two Bulls played 45 of the 48 minutes.

•

•

*

•

Two bowl announcements that should Interest local
funs also came aver the wire. Ohio University has been
selected to oppose West Texas State ill the SUII Bowl,
while Vlllanoya ha■ been chosen host team of the Liberty
Bowl contest . - • The Wildcats will oppose Oregon Stahl
and the passing wizardry of Hei1man Award winner
Terry Boker.

O&lt;lme Ume ,Ir.ill be al 6: 15.

Attention all s w Im m I! rs:
Var $ity swim coaeh Bill San­
ford and !rosh mentor Bol~ Be,.
dell are putting nut the call! for
merr:nen in the foUowing co,paci­
ties: The varsity teain is ~eek­
ing men to swim the butt~rlly
stroke and the '.Dnckstroke,

it

(NOT EXCLUDINGBALL AND CHAIN)

t

Every FRIDAY
.. and SATURDAY Nite
t
•t
....

i

i•t
t

*

t

AT

Service - Quality

3-0913

- Prl

Printers of The Spectrum

·nee 19:17

Contact either Coach San.ford
Conch Bl•dcll if you nre ;p.
terested in joining the me :rmen
in one of the above capacities.
01'

I

Going
Formal;?

CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
NOTICE
HOllDA Y HOURS
10 - 9 DAILY
10 - 6 SATURDAYS

TUXEDO RENTAL FOR
AFFATRS OF THE SEASON
Gift

Wrapping

Fr ee Parkin g In Rear

·C!!nmpu.a
Q:tnrttrr

I

i

9:30 P.M.

1335 E. DELAVAN AVE, -TX

The frosh finmen stiU need
a dlver, a butterfly participant,
nnd n manager.

TWIST
totheJULIAN
QUARTET

•

BUFFALO
STANDARD
PRINTING
CORP.

32f&gt;2 MAIN STREET

Sample
has a
complete

Fomla.l

1•

ITHPASTIME

I

i
491 GRANT (al Forest)
!
········••1t•
...........
··•-•tt••·- ·•tt••· ............
-·(Around the corner from State Teacher~)

~

Rental
Service
for every

ft

occasion.

.

*

• White dinner jackets

I·:·[

• Black trousers compftt9
with cummerbund&amp; tie

7.91
Sample;-1631 Hertel ,~ve.

phone Tf 6-12~~

,.

?t".__.,....-....1!!

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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UB • COLGATE
CLASH
CLIMAXESGRID
SEASON
8~6 Pagr JO

STATE UNIVERSITY

or

NEW YOIRK AT BUffAI.O

SPECTJRUM

VOLUME 13

Stu ent Senate

S(r Edilo1·ittl • l'&lt;111r•

No. 11

BUFFALO, t,fEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBEll 16, 1962

Is Praise

'CONTROVERSY
AND THE COUEGE
NEWSPAPER

Sing Today Ope~s
Greek We .ekend

For Political Ideology Series

Norene Hersch, le writing letters
to too deans or the Education and
11slc1n$
Arts &amp; Solence ac~ols
By JOEY ELM
tbem to publicize' elasa elections.
Greek Weekend opens today with a Sing tonight
For severa l years tbeee schoole
featuring 11 frateniities and sororities. The fraternities
have not bad officers. One or the
and sororities, under the direction of co-chairmen Allen
main gonle or the commit tee thlH
year will be to try to get more
Falk and Sandy Finer, have aJso planned a dance and the
atudents to vote In elections. The
Queen Campaign.
percentage or students who vote. to
The "Sing" featuriug 11 fratern ities and sororit ies will
the enrollment or the tTnJverslt)'
formally open the weekend. Tak- ing for n one hour extention ot
!Ir. J. Stephen Sherwin, proree­ ls very small,
i11g place in the old Norton Audi- the girlk' curfews. Fraternities
~or or English at Slate University
torium, the show will be given at wishing to display their banners
ro1111geet Buttalo (Buffalo State]
The student nctlvltlen committee.
7 ::ll) and ngain at O:30- Tickets ot the dance should have them
dDd chalrmn u of the local ACLU under Linda Freeman, ts c11rreotly
OR. SELIG ADLER
mny be pllrchase,I for 76c at the in the IFC office between 4 and
~roup presented the plaque to SlU- meeting Lhe Engineering
School
ticket booth in the Union. White 4 '.30 Saturday oftemoou.
dent Senate president Richard Erb. Connell to llelp lh1;&gt;m mnke any
titkets will be honon•d al 7 :3'J 11ml The queen campaign, under the
The Union had prevloualy com. 11ecessary changes in their oonsti­
i:reen ones at ll :30.
direction of Leslie Lewis. will
·nended Chancel lor Furnas and tutlon. 'l'he committee, which nets
Sing chairman Nicki Bunis re- terminate Saturday
evening at
F'rank C. J\loore. chairma n or th•• aij a Unison between cam1ius orga.
1io rteJ, "From s neak pn •,•it•ws, I I I :30 when Inst year's Greek
bonrd or trustees of the State Unl. nizatlons and tbe Student Senate,
nm happy to say that this year's Queen will place tbe crown on the
,~r~lty, on tllelr sl.ilods regarding reco!J)mended to the Senate that
Di· SPl!g Adler, 11rotessor ol' his•
·Ile nature of academic rreedom the Woanan's Chorale be l'ecog. tor;v, will give a lecture Mondny si ng ,viii puq1a ss 11!1expectntions. hend of one of the six hopefuls.
Competition is keener und s~•irit The Queen candidates:
Melanie
"" ca mpus.
1nlzed.
A 1 3 p,m. ln N orion Oonrer·eoce
it; hight•t than in previou s yeara.'' Banach, Sigma Kappa - Fnncea
thent er. The titl8 of the lecture
Ea.ch Greek organization will sing Dus, Chi Omega - Noreen Hirsch,
will he "A General Survey of Amer ­ two selections.
Sigmn Delta Tau • Bryna Millman,
lran nnd Rnselan Pollctee Co11ceo.
A EPi, Shenandoah &amp; Ride the Phi Sigma Sigma • Linda Reyno ld&amp;,
tratlug on Berlln."'
Chariot; Sig Ep, Eternal Father Alpha Gamma Dell11 • 11nd Nanc'/'
The lecture is 11art of a new
&amp; Vive 111Compagnie; Theta Chi Turkovich, Theta Chi - have been
sedes ~})on.sored by the Con·vocQ·
soro rity, Wo))derful Guy &amp; Halla uampalgning all we&lt;!k, The girla
I.ions Committee of the St~1dent
of Ivy; Alpha Sig, Adorernua Te modeled in a !Ashio11 show
Senate. Each or the live speBLkers
&amp;. The Battle
Hymn o! the Re- Tuesday attemoon.
lo the series wlll present un t1.nal­
Saturday afternoon the Queen
ysl~ or the Ruseinn.Amertcan con• public; Chi Omega, It's a Grand
Night !or Singing &amp; Sometimes I candidates will ride around the
tllct in n crlUoa l nrea or tho
world. Each professor wUI em,pha. Feel Like a Motherless Child; Phi field duri!Je the Colgate pme.
size the strengths and weaknoeaes Ep, Gadimus l gitur &amp; Santo Anno. Each queen candidate hu vi1Jt.ed
Also, Phi Lam bda Delta, Heart the di!f,erent frate,·nal organlz11.­
or our&lt;,11.!llfcy
..and suggest wairs In
of My Heart &amp; Green Door; Sigma tiona du ring thia paat week and
whlcli lt might be Improved.
Alpha Mu, America The Beautl!ul has been questioned by the !rater­
Dr. Adler r eceived ht.s A.B. from &amp; Don't Take My Pin; SOT, Me nity members.
the University of Buffalo, and hh
The win11U11r
Ji.r t will be .eleeted
graduate work culminating 111 a a~d m)'. Shadow &amp; Well, Well,
\.\ ~II, Sigma Kappa,_ Come to the by popular vote and by judging.
PllD we11 done at the Unlve,relty
F,ur &amp; Sm(!ke Get.II m Yo1n Eye.; Fifty per cent · o1 ber Tating will
or lllinol~.
Alpha Gam, Moon River &amp; The coma from vote, 11nd the remain.
Dr. Adler, who 111the Sa,mucl
l'aul Capen I'rores8Qr of Ameri can
History. Is an acknowledged e,c.
pel't 111the field or American ror.
Senate given Civil Llbertle, Award
elgn pol1cy. His wldely-nccla .lnied
'l'he N.S.A. steering committee, study, The taolationfsl t m p,u lae,
The award committee Included
under
Arnold
Mazur,
la
conducting
11r. A11bur Butler, acting dean or
waa p11bl1All,,edIn 1967.
the School or Business AdrnlJ11stra. an In vestlgalloo 011 academic free .
He Is the euU,or or a n11mber
lion ,at UB; the Reverend
Paul dom. They are asseaslng the pres. ot major articles which hav,e re­
&lt;'arnes, minister of the Unitarian­ ent conditions and future needs Jn cel\•ed wide dtaseml11atlon In auth.
Uni versallst Church o( Buffnlo, and answer to questions on academic orltntlve hlstoricnl Journal~ . With
Russell W. Gibbons. asaoolale edl- fr&amp;edom and student rights. It ls Thomas E. C'o11nollyor the Jllmgllsh
111rot the Hll!lllburg Sun.
o program or action and educaUon department. he wrote Fr om Ararat
desI~ued to reallze the univenllles
to Suburbia: A History of the Jew•
Seve n n&amp;w member were named needs. A multl-cnmpu e research
Community of Buffalo, N. Y.
tu the personnel committee uuder project is planned for the future.
Hi, wns former president ot the
chairman Madel1ne Kravitz . They
,,re: o-.i,,ld Bath, Florence Gerber,
The community dynumlcs sub­ Omicron Cha1&gt;1er1,1fPhi Beta 1&lt;1111Jln ond ls ru?'l'ently Vice Preeldent
!:i11a
an Gugino, Norsne Hersch, Bar­ committee of the civil right s com.
or the Univ ersity Senato hem. He
mlttee
Is
usklng
ror
tbe
time
ancl
h·•rn lloll'rnan, John Peckham and
ts a member ot the American J ew­
1'111
11Sch ulman .
support of oil students In Its tutor ­
leh Con1iress' Commission on l!nt er­
ing "program s nt Neighborhood
OthM newly.named chairmen of House nnd St. Augustine Center. notlonnl Affa!ra and la on tho Ex.
-'l11n
dlng committees are: NSA, Ar­ Tutors are needed ln nil hlgll erutlve Comn1!Ltee of the A merl­
noM Mazur; civil rights committee, school subjects. This opportunity cnn J~wish Historical Societi r.
Allen Falk and Sandy Feiner
Or. Pleaur to be Second Spe1aker
l,:11•ryGlasgow; welfare committee, to serve Is open to the student
Lord
Ble8s
You
and
Keep You.
log fifty per cent will bto alt~
William Berger.
The
seco
nd
speaker
ln
the
~,e
rfe
s
body n t largo.
will be Ill' . ,\llllon Ple~ur. Hf,; lee•
The highlight of the Weekend but.ed lo her by the Judgu . The
The 1lnance committee. under
The student publl c relations ~om· ture on the Middle Elset will be i~ the exclusively GTeek dance, judges of this yeara' pngeant are
~lfchael Cohen , appropriated bud­ mttlee, whtcb ach as the coordlnn.. given on Mond11,y,Nov. 26 at 3 p.m . open to all m~mberF. uf fraternities
~••• to the Engineering Student t or belwfen the Sennte and speak. 11l~n In thn confer ence tJaeatii r Jo a11d sorori ties, ineluding pied~ . Mrs. M. Mason of Hen11crer's, Dr.
l'nuncll. th e Rifle Club, and to ere appearln~ at th11 University, la Norton ,
Ti ckets may be purchased at a Lionell Wyld, ass iatant professor
' ,lt l.lDUS SANE.
The Engineering 11rgently asking for more members .
c0$1 of $a.60 per couple. They will o! Eritlish, nod Rick Azar froln
Ur.
Pleeur
grn
d­
Sludent Council received S820, the A display from various state gov.
also be sold at the door. Invitations
WRBW.
uarecl from the
fl'fle Club $450. and SANE wus ernor, saluting UB on becom.tng n
to 11ltcnd the dnnre were sent out
Voting- by member,
of the
State
Univu
rsity
~propriated $400.
state echool. wlll soon app eur In
to members of the facul t y, ad­ fru t~rn ltie~ took pla ce Thursday
l'ullei:o at ButTn.
l'he elections com mitte e.___
under Norton.
_______
_________
I
minslt-ation and st udent body.
and is taking place today in the
lo, Ho rec el ve&lt;I
The danre, a ccordi11g lo dance confe ren ce theatr&lt;' of ?\orton.
his ~t A ream the
Saturday evening at 11 ;:JO the
Univl'rslty or nut. chui nnan . Mike Shapiro, "Will be
ra lo und bi s PhD by all mean s the biggest fall prese ntati on of the various awe;l"d~
su11re me Court Justice Russell G.
from thP U u {VM • dance ever ." Thi s year th e dance tu the frnternitirs und sororiti ea
llu111Inst Friday reserved dccl11lon , Pennock alleg ed that th e suit
slty ot Rocha~stcr. will b,; hehl at Capital Hall, 1'170 will ta lle plnet•. Thr Slniring
South Park. Dan cing will begin trophie3, t rol)hy (or thl• lraternit¥
''' iA•nan ce of a permanent lnjunc. wa~ not begun for the purpose or
He is a mem'ber of the American nt 9 :aO to the rhythm s of with the hil(ll~st IIClltll•mlc11vcrag9,
• 11 to pr eve nt Dr. Herbert
Apthe­ lm11edlog Aptbeker's free dom or
an d the ~!lssl5alt111
1 Valley Hl11tor1
• Ron Metcalf' s band, which will and quec n'g trophy will l&gt;l•award­
, , r Crom speaking on campus.
speech . eo.yjng be didn't core where
~al Assoclntlona. llo also belong~ nl•o supply dance musi c at the ed on a pe, ,nan ..nt bas1&amp;thl" year .
llral argument was beard lo a Aplheker e[lOke, a.a long as Jt waa tr, the lluf'fuio Couudl un \1/orltl Silve r Ball iu December.
Th e IF C will award spefilll
" 111l by WIiliam Egnn ot Ballston uot at a tax-supported
facility .
Affairs.
Through the effort s o! the IF C, tro11hle11to lhe rnptains of th e
L•ke to prevent th e State Unlver.
The State Unlveralty, tbTough ltR Ur l'lt!&lt;lur lrns wt·IUt&gt;IIfc,r a 10um­ buffet ta bles ltlden with cold cuts Bulls also. Th o trophies have been
' 1 Y from allowing communist t1arty
hPr or scholurly ma1:ndnc~. Some nnd l!lllnd will be providud , All on tli~play sin,·~ W,·&lt;tn~•d11)
' in the
, 11,•111bcr
Herbert Aplbek er from attorne&gt;·. John Crary. alleged lbQI
of hi• more r ecent arUc les are: concerne d with the dance 'are bop- tro11hy ca se in th e Union,
··•·nldng ,
the University s houl d not Ile s ub­ ..Tb~ IIPl!ltlODRRetween the U1nlled
\11theker. wl10 was to have nd. ject to ex t ernal examfonllon of t.lw Stal&lt;'• and Pale~llo~. " ..Spotll,:ht
1 ·••&lt;;
sec! 11 studenl -Senote sponsore d method• or academic investigation OU the Dark Contlttt•ut:· aod "'Cur. ,
•••mbly Oct. 31, was barred fro m It uses, nnd what and ltow It may
~~=:~~ \~=t~::~!~nn&lt;~'. 1'11,, tollowln,c ,~ 1110 schedule sund•Y . Nov. 26 - 2 p.m ..e l) .m .
'•JklnK by a temporary resti;-a.ln­ think. He stated th at governm.eut domlc oonrrtbutlo n 1,1 ~ntltl ed "Tba Car tlll' c11m11u~ llhrarles Cor the Health Scienc e Library, er1geneer •
.... Ot'de,r ohhllnfll by "Egan.
•no Library, Chemla1ry Library,
lnterrerence with the right or legl• Republican Congrossionnl &lt;'omr•bllek 'l'ltunksgh •lni,: vncutlou·
1-:~a
n 's artnrney Edward Pennock
Ph yelc t Library
or ~ ...
Lockwood and H-1rrlman Llbrarlu
timate Intellectual inquiry nt the
19 8
7
•·r.:~d thnl th,, i~sue In tho c,,se
21
Tick1.&gt;ts fur nr Adli,r"K lt,.: l•1n• Wt&gt;dnesduy. Nov
;3o am .. 1·1a11r,,h1r Xuv ~~ - rtutf'd
wh~ther toxpnyors should pay l'ntverelt&gt;· would Imperil Its stan d. will bl' ovallahlo today 11udMo11111l
Y i&gt; p.m .
FT11lay, Xur J 3 - 9 ii m ~ V iu.
f ll't lltlt, 8 U SI ,1 hy men who 11d. log In the academic COllllJIUDHy
und nt the ticket booth. Tlrk&lt;'t~ tc,r l)r Thur"d11y, Nov ii •- cloaed
8,1t111,l11y
. :-io,·. 2t
Normal
~ ;,.m ·&amp; 11.m .
:-;c•11•dul,
,t,• thtl (ivcr rh rnw or the ~u• l,e nn Illegal ln tr tngem~nl on ron Pl1J•t1r's lecture wtll hP dl s trihu 1..,t , l•'d1h,y Nov ~3
I beginnloi; Mond.,y. J\i(IV. 19.
i-11,turd:,y. Nov ::~
9 a.Ill 5 JI Ill ~ tlljU ,y, Ne&gt;v ,G - dutt4
•11m
,,ut ,
sUtntional guarantees.

By JEROME HAJDUK
The Student
Senate
Tuesday
!light was the Teclplent of the
teco11d Niagara Frontier Civil Ub­
ortles A ward, "For upholdlllg tJle
principles ot academic freedom and
further ing the concept or I.he free
t1niveralty through Its series, 'The
Political Spectrum or a Contempo.
rdl°)' ,vorld'."

Adler Be.gins
Policy Serie-s

Hunt Reserves Decision on Aptheker

J

b

~~:t
c:fi~~:

Li rary

Hours for V acation
• poste d

�PAGETWO

SPECTRUM

Concert 1Features Dr. J.A. Bergantz Honored ,
nd s W~rks Association Presents Award
Copl~
A special concert featu ;rmg com-

U.S.Declines;!
Must Reform
By LAWRENCE FRENKEL
ExJ)r011slng t!Je Idea that U1e
11nltcd Stlltes was an empire on
the decline and suggesting polltl­
,,n) reforms, Alfred Allat.alr C(!Oke,
noL!!d Journallel,
radio nnd TV
n&gt;mmenLetor, and author, deliver­
ed the second Fenton Lecture to o
,1c•nr capacity audience.
Mr. Cooke · began with Hevcrn I
11111u~tngnnecdotes concerning the
0P(}Oslng British nnd Atnerican ex­
planations or our victory In the
A morloan Revolution. "Tile Amor­
lcu ns won because they got the
lnd!Rns drunk nnd seduced tho
French. We won ber.nuee George
Ill wua n tyrant and God lfl against
ti·rants."
ALISTA I R COOKE
He polntod out th at these
Then, Mr. Cooke suggested that
anecdote, Illustrate the fact
our federal system wlll evolve Cllb­
that It Wat a 'freak of history'
that enabled the United State,
lnel reAponslblllty. Stating that lo
to create the first atomic bomb
lbe 1mst Cllblnet members have
and thereby aecure a nuclear
been llltle more than soun din g
atresaed
that
monopoly, He
boards nnd 'Lrlnl balloons.' Mr,
there la but fllmay hletorlcal
Cooke Insisted, "We can not atrord
bae la for the rlae to power of
to have people playing politics
tile US ae a unique politica l
with the cabinet. We will have to
ent ity.
chooMe for more responslbhJ cabi­
Going on to elate the reasous net members from congress with
tor our 'decline' as 1be ranking foll authority to decide policy."
world power, Mr. Cook saJd. "we
Mr. Cooke ended with the
lost our nuclear monop&lt;&gt;ly; W&lt;l dls ­
words, 1' 1• there no al ternative
anned
at a dlsgrncetul
rate·
and We rebullt ~,urope through th~
for American, between panic
and apathy? Take a new look
Marehall Plan thereby destroying
at what you are doing u ln­
our dominance or conRumer HU­
premacy."
dlvlduale. Live by your convic­
tion,, And If there I• war, then
ll!r. Cooke the n returned to tho
what1"
most Importa nt dates marking the
rise lo promln11nce of the United
In the qnestlon period following
States. I.ti 1906 the US surpaMed Mr. Cooke's tnlk, Dr. Raymond
the United K1Dgdom In etoel 1,ro. H. Elwell, Vice-Chancellor tor ne.
•luctto o. After 1917 the US took Nl'!lrch, brought out lhe raol that
It~ pla.ce as a great power tor the lo July of this year . Russia surllrst time.
11assed the Untted States in stee l
~luropo had suffered n. trightr11I produl'tlon for the llnil time.
loss ot manpower and resources
while the United Statet1 had hardly
At o recorded Interview nrtlir tho
been scratched. By 1918 the USleoture. Mr. Cooke was 0Rked hls
wns a creditor Mtlon and 1111921 views concern ing the que'5tlon ot
loslated on giving Japan parity arademlc freedom relntlve to the
wlt,h the British nl the Washing. lnjuul'llon o~alost
the Aptheker
ton .Nnval Conference thereby de• talk. Mr. Cooke atnrmod, "You
~tro)'ing the balance of power In •hould bear everybody however
the Far Flaa! and paving t.he wny mucll II cl'ncklll'lt. It you protect
fllr IL to become a future trouble ,1. obild trom the viruses that llre
s11ol. All lhlll marked the de cline flont ing around he Is much more
,,r Britain and the rise or the llkl•ly to heco)'he Infected thR,n It
l ' llitcd States.
he is coustnotly expose d to them.
Continuing, he atat ed that
l'eople who ride in subw11ys ore
we conduct our campaigns as
much Joss susceptible to T .B. thn11
though we were Jiving In the
'11ure' protected 'country g1rls'."
19th century wh en It took
twenty
day, to travel the
breadth of the country and six
months to conduct a cam•
pafgn.
Todoy tvrclgn lender s cnnnot
wnlt to conduct U1elr bneloeas untllj
tl1ose campaigns are over. Thou gh
the nominating conventions have
been cleane d up by televMon. M:r.
Cooke would do away '1th them
entirety,
·

w,,

NEEDED
TAUNT - .UL TYPU
FOR TALENT SHOW MlXT S£MESTlR

AJptlcotloft• I•
Nortoft, Towe,, Goodyeor, AHenhunt

THE COLDSPRING

BON.-TON TAVERN
182 EASTFERRY
ST. CORNERWAVERLY
ST.
PRESENTS

"~ IIZZ''
NITE
EVERY

av THE

Ja Man

TR10

Low priced Food ond Drinks

I.AST
3
NITES

No

New Policy
• No Cover

Minimum

Thornell

•

Schwartz

...,................
ORGAN TRIO

TT 6 ,9676

Fridoy, November 16, 1962

TT 6°9766

positions of Slee professors will I DI', Jose11h A. Bergantz received icnl engineering, Dr. llergantz waa
I
be given Wedne&amp;day, "In Baird the Eleventh Annual Professional the first process engineer covering
3
Hall at 8: o p.m. Adll',ission is Achievement Award ot tile Amer!- 12 major products ror the Ameri.
free. All students and faculty 11re
can Institute
or Chemical Engl- can Oyanamld Compa ny, Wllrner, ,
invited t~ attend.
Leo Smit, Visiting Slee profes- neers, Western New York Section, New Jersey plant, in 1946. His en.
sor of music for the fall semester, 111a dlnner 11t the Sheraton Motor glneerhig experience inclu des wor~
will perform the Cop)a1~d Piano 11111Y~• 1ndny.
In umnufacturt-ng, plant design, pi.
Sonata (1941). Mr. Smit : and AlTh
lot plant, an d process developmen t.
!en D. Sapp, chairman olt the mue professor
and head of
sic department,
wJJI pi,rform II
the chemical engineering de,
Serving aJl a Captain lo the U.S.
four-hand
version of Copland's
partment here earned the award
Army, Or. Bergaotz received the
"Billy the Kid."
for hi~ major role In bringing
At'my Commcn daUon Ribbon tor
the first he I al
·
I
Mr. Smit will then condurt bi s
c mc
engineer ng
de pa rt men t to the Niagara
wartime set·vlce during 1042-46 in
1 0
the. Mnnhatt.nn Engineer Dist r ict. at
f~~r
Frontier. He Joined the Uni1:; 8 ~
voices and ten instrumen.ts,
vereity faculty In hie present
New York City nnd Oak Ridge
A special informal ri,cital for
position In July, 1961'
students and faculty will be glv" Th ~ lt11nge or a Cltemloal Engl- locatlonij, where. he worked on Lbe
en by )\fr, Smit on Friday, Dec. ucer" was the topic of Dr. Der~ 11rnduct1011of uranium for enrlcb.
7, at 4 p.m. in the rehearsal 1·oom l!"antz's addre..e at the dinner.
ment or plo11ts and the production
Q! Baird Rall.
Outslandln,:: In the field or chem- ot tluorlne and fluorocarbons.
At
Oak [lfdge be was Operations OW.
cer at the Clinton Laboratories
nuclear renclor and radloiaoto~ e
research c~nter.

s:~~

f ? ~!!~~~~C~~!r

Placement Office Suggests
Seniors E&gt;eplore Teaching

I

He rece ived his B.S. degree
In chemical engineering from
The placement office orges all f~ssionnl need~. Last year, there
the University o f T e nneaeee In
seniors to investignte the infot·- we1·e 12.887 scp11rnte opportnni­
1934 at the age of 20. His
rnation available on positions in tieo repoi'lell to the U.13. place­
graduate work fn chemical en­
the field o! Education. Their files men! ofi'ic,• in the field of E&lt;lu­
gTnoering and teach ing caree r
encompass opportunities
not onl y 1·ntivn alone,
began at the University of 1111
nola on a teaching asalatan t.
Jd' .
•
throughout
the II tat e ancl the
I n llu . 1t1on W 11st1ng the ava ,1.
.
s hip where he was awarde d the
ff'
h
'
country, but nlso list op&lt;inings m I l I . b th
e o 1c'-' 11s a comM.S. degree In 1937.
.
n , e JO s,
t
E urope an d Soath eas t As1a.
plcte staff of competent personWhile doing further graduaie
Insti.
Students get highe1· pmying po- nel to assist any student in his work at the Massachusetts
~itions th1·ough the free cam11ub. search for facts concel'l!ing a fu-, tute or Tech nology be was an AI­
thu,· ll. Little Fellow for one year ,
placement service. Those students tun• placement ns nn ~ducator.

I

II

who used t_he s~rv!ce wore ~uite
successful in ftndmg 8 position
which aflorded them th~ bencfib
of their specific personal and pro•

----

Cull or vi~it the office locnted
in the basement of Schoellkopf
Hall any weekday between 9 :00
a.m. and 5 :00 pm,

---

8

~ta~

:::h:1r~~to~a:b~~~%.~,'.:
lo Parlin, New Jersey. He recei ved
the Sc.O. degree la chemical engl.
neerlng from l\U,T. in 19U.

---------------,---------

�SPECTRUM

Friday, November 16, 1962

PAGETHRH

Miss Haas, Other Edlicators Honored
By MARY .LOU WILSON
Max Holt Andrews director

ot
Loeb Student Center at New York
\Jntversl~y delivered the dedicatory
a~dreas to a 1,7ollp ot some 200
raculty, staff members and guests
or the administration at tbe tormal
dedlea.Uon ot Norton Union Satur­
d,,y.
The Rev. John A. Buerk, cba.p)aln
cor Protestant students, stated the
hope8 tor the future of Norton
l'olo n In the Invocation when be
dl'ciared, "May it be a place where
,rode nts and faculty can meet In
rhelr common search for the truth;
may It Ile a meeting place tor
IM ••·"

Seymour R . Knox, former presl­
d~nt of the l lnlv orslty Council who
1,reslded over the ceremonies, anld
rhul, In esRente, this day could be
ro11Nl
rtered a dual dedication since
~-iUt the dedication or our student

tennis and bowling 6enioostrntlons, I
exh ibit this concept or the Union
l}ttrposea.
Chancellor Furnas aleo pointed
out that, even though we are
now a state.supported
Institu­
tion, Norton Union was built
primarily with non-et11te money, ·
the $3,9 million being derived
from private fund,.
Mnx Holt Andrews In bin dedl­
cntory speech, "The College Union
-Does
It Muke n Difference?''
summed up the choructer or the
student union aa the chler 11n1tylng
force in c!lmpus life. He desurlbed
1he tendency toward Insularity In
the rharacter
of various ll"J'OUPB
011 campus In thJa way:
"..\!embers of a discipline ba, o
c•oll'M only with ~heir collenguea,
living unit groups only within tbeir
unit . Greeks, independ ents, com­
muters nml clubs all tend to with-

h11vlng 1&gt;revlou~ly tuught tor ele.,·­ vt&gt;rslty development ond plnnnlrtJ(
en years nt the University ot New nnd asMoclMe proreaeor er educ~ ­
ll811ll)ijhlte.
lluo.
Dr. Kem11, who presently hold,
Miss Dorothy Hnas hns fterved
the po8ltlon of Director ot the In­ th&lt;! student body thl'Ougb Nor­
stitute of Freedom and CompeU. Ion Hall tor the past l!S yearY, 15
live Enterprise at Claremont Men's or t11em being epen t 1n the cal)IIC·
College, Is a nnllve of Buffalo and lty or director.
She Is a native
an alumnus or the Unlverslly.
ot Iluffnlo and a graduate or the
Dr. Mueller, 1,rotessor or high. University, having received both
er education at ludinnn University I\Pr B.S. and M.S. degrees here .
since 1953, holds a l.l.A, tro1u Wtl­ The oltatlon read" aA n tribute to
son College, nnd M.A. from Col. her:
umbla nod a Ph.D in pijy&lt;Jbolog)' "Through her unUrln!: devotion,
from the Unlvorally of Chicago.
~orlon bas g11loed a respected
Another Unlvllrijlty alumnus und l}Ositlon ht the m11.lnstream or
and former member of the Uni­ c-11m1•11• II[!'
as 11 gennlnntlng
versity faculty, Ot. Y11n Arsdole plnc·e tor Individual achievement
was recognlr.erl In the cllatlor. and u, a 11roving ground tor re­
"for myriad services or erh1t•11t1011,
~1ionlhle olllzensl1lp."

I

M Isa Haas with first S~iec­
truP\ editor during · dedication
ceremonies.

vices'' nnd "11n1moter

orthe

11rt

or

II vlng togetbe1•,"

I

1'he union set~ the iaste a~1d at­
mosphere tor the campus, dedared
Mr. Andrews , lt mu.'!t be an ln­
aplratlon to the student's mental
and emoUonal growth.

I

He went on to apeak of the
goa ls of the union In coll,ege
life auch as Its preparation or
the st udent for tt,o use of
leisure time after graduatlo,n.

Also recognlted st the dedication
ceremonies was Duane Lyma~1, the
architect who designed the !,true­
ture, and Robert Parke, director
or the Clrst Norton Unlon.

Linda Freeman, president of Cap and Gown, presents roses
to Miu Haaa during ceremo nies dedicating Dorothy Haas
At the luncheon held at 12 :,30 lo
Lounge.
th e multt-pur pose rciom. aeven edu.
union. we are lns.ugnrating n new dru w lnto their own niche."
Reco .~niting thJs tendenry, Mr. cntors were cited for outst.a.ndlnll
et'!I of aoademic endeavor resultln~
ounll'lbullons to their field. 'They
from our lncorpora tlon lntu · the Andrews stated It Is the role or
the union to provide a. center where Ill'~: Dr. Edward D. Eddy, Jr., Dir.J\J'­
Rtate University system.
thur Kemp, Dr. Kate H . Mueller
Chancellor Cll!Tord C'. Furnas, In these groups can m.lngle, therehy
and Dr. Talman W. Van Arudale,
delivering his welrome to the as­ t"reallng the whole o! the unlver­
Jr. Max H. Andrews und Ml!lls Do­
~Pmbty. stated the hope lhet Nor­ slly trom Its various Integral parts , rothy M. HMs, dfreclor or N,orton
According to the Association o[
ton Union wUI be "n center for
Union. were re cognized In lite
,·nmpus-wlde ~ull11ral 1111d Intellec­ C'ollege U nions or which Mr. An­ realm of student person nel ,work,
drews
la
vl&lt;•e.pre&amp;ident,
the
objllct
tual e,ctivltles."
of the union le to perform "a ser­ nnd Or. A. Wilmot Jacobsen wne
The Chancellor cited the ae­
vice mlsslon.l• 1t is not only tho honor ed tor his work In mudlcal
ries "A Political Spectrum of a
comm
unity center tor Lhe Uulver . edut•otton.
Contemporary World" In which,
Dr. Eddy has been the presfdent
6lty
and
organizer of 1&gt;rograma, but
he said, "a wide sampllhg of
olso "purveyor of goods and ser- ot Chatham College since 1960.
art lcu late spokesmen" speak for
their various ideologies as an
example of the type of cultural
prog ram which will be con.
INTER.ESTED IN AN OVERSEAS CAREER7
ducted at Norton .
Or. Furnas dr ew laught er from
lhP crowd with hi s optimistic re ­
mnrk that the final e11eech ot the
•erles. n talk on Communism to
he delivered by Pr. H erbe rt A11the.
k•r bns been postponed due only
delny or the
to a "t en1 porary

Karr Parker pruenta key to MIH Haa1 , Richard Erb
and Carol Vendetti

l

Ju, adnocemeuL , admJnlijlratlou
~r ._ Jacobsen, a grad .uat11 ot
and Integrity .'' Occupying
the JQl,n~ Hopkins Medical School LD
8alllmore.
ls clinical professor
He
J)resldency or Brudloy University podlntrlcs nt the University.
1961.
he
line
previously
held
Itc
the
rounder
or 1h11 city's ftral
since
Clinic ror Chlldreo
j)OS!tloos here aa director or Blum• Out-Patient
11I relations nnd editor or uulver- at the Butralo Children's Hospital
.
alty publication s, director ot uni- I ond a member or Phi Beta. l&lt;Ap11u

I

f·Qurts.''

lsmphoei@ will bJ1 placed on &amp;
h-tlnnced program tor the union,
l•·eordlng to Dr. Furnas. incorpC1rec­
r,t1 ng the cultu ral , soclaknd
r,•atlonal aspects of st uden t life,
•hus aiding him to become a fully
dPveloped parson , "a fr~P and vital

", MR, LAURENS L. HENDERSON, JR,
CAREER COUNSELOR

"ririt."
The actl,•IUe s ot dedication weok,
r rnging from the Fenton
Serles
l,•,·ture by Alistair Cooke to t.ablo

will be on the

November 21, 1962

campus
9 AM - 3:30 PM

to dlscua■ the tn.inln11 offered'at A.t.F.T .

GRACE'S
BEAUTY NOOK
446 MAYNARD DRIVE
EGGERTSVlllE
Tf 4-4161

PER111ANENT WAVING
TINTIN G AND BLEACHING

(an lnlen1lv•

nine months pro11ramof poet 11raduate otudy) and
the job opportunities

INTERNATIONAL

open to

sraduateo In the field of

TRADE and GOVERNMENT

SERVICE.

l ntervlews

m~y be scheduled at
the office of the
DIRECTOR OF PLACEMENT

and SET

$1.75

The American

Inst itute For Foreign

gift

Sure t o please or we will exchange It for
another from our stock.

TheUniversity
Bookstore
"ON CAMPUS"

Special Student Prices
SHAMPOO

·a guaranteed

Trade

Free Gift Wrapping and Mailing on Ptu chasPs
of $5.00 or more

�PAGEFOUP

*

SPECTRIJ

CJitorial*

Spectrum Avoids .Controversyr

Friday, November 16, 194-2

IM

LITILE MAN ON CAMPUS
'l'o U1~ Editor:

We, the , Executi ve Council 61
the Grad uate Student Aa1aocJation,
fir ml y commend Chancellor Fur •
nae for his stand on the principfo
of ace,de01ic freedom, of ·which we
11re in total agreement, This po­
sition is in line with t)le tradi­

Since the beginning of the semeste r we have heard
commen tis, so me in regard to specific issues and others of
~ general nature, as to the element of controversy present
rn The Spectrum. In fact this comphlint ha s previous ly been tional fu nction of unive1:sitica II!
voiced on this campus. and will probab ly continue to be centers of free inqui r y, which le
voiced in years to come.
an essential part of a ~·trong de­
At this time we feel it is necessary to inform the mocracy.
Respectfully yours,
student body, and the discontents of the nature of contro­
Exec uti ve Coun11il ol i,he Grad­
versy an~ it11 place on a college paper. First. someth ing,
uate Student Assoc:iation of
whether 1t I.le an event or per son is controve rsia l in itse lf
the State University of New
a neWSJ»\per's reportin~ does not make the event or perso~
YOl'k at Buffalo.
con tr oversial.
The Spectrum wlll present both sides of every ques•
Miss Haas
tion to the best of its ability. Aher seeing both sides
To the Editor:
of on Issue It is up ta the students to decide what their
r would lik e to congratulate Yo~
opinion will be. The newspoper, vio its edtorlol page can•
on tlle excellent Job you dJd in
not tell o student what to believe. We assume that stu­
the &lt;'ditoriat printed hut week en­
dents on this campus ore mature enough ond capable
tilled, "Thanks, Miss Hu,s.'' As a
enough of formh,g their own opinion, oho, a fair pre­
member of the Union Boa1ra, I have
sentation of the focts . If this ia not the case then the .had the opportunity to 'II/Ork wltll
=~
-=~
student himself m,ust remedy the situation, not the paper,
Mies Hana , and J would bo the tlrat
The Spect rum represents the entire student body. It to say along with many thousands
I\ +l~
rr 15AL.M05f 'rnl: eNDOf '!HE'Tl:fl.M ,A.NO
Wt.Jt!AVEN'r
is the only newspape r on this campus. and th ere for e has or other" roat ''truer words wer11
6El:N'T'ARD'I'
0~ A~l'l1" - ·'IOtJ I-IA'£~NE&lt;n{e' A&gt;$5tGN~OflOMt:•
a. great responsibility to all its st udents . If it is a ques­ never spoken.''
W~K .ANPY'otJ~ f'A~~ AAV!r~!:EN,w.llil::OIN ONTIME! ~!.L Mf: HA~11-1~otZAFT90,bJl.O&amp;eBN
~CIIN'
ti on of student welfare, or a move of the administ ra tion
I believe that the editorial and
•
YOUAIJOUt (\1ftAl/~,S AGAIN 1 11
whi ch we think will he harm'ful to students, or any other 1be rOQm named In Iler honor along
relevant instance, t hen will we take a l!tand on a con ­ with the oltatlon preeent ,id to her
trover sial issue. And in th is case we will l)e presenting by thl' University Ut'l' Just a j&lt;mall ,--------------------------,
an eva luation of the facts as we see it. Such an eva lua­ start In the right direction
of
tion will only come after car eful investigation, and wei ght­ thanki ng Mlsa Haas (or what she
has done.
ed judgement.
Some mistokenl)' believe that the pope, should be
I am sure that we llll realize tb11!
the crusading force Oft cc11npua.A crusading paper be­
Mias llaas le more than just tl1e
comes lost in the couae it supports. It loses its objective
,lirec•tul· of the stu dent union 1 btJL
perspective, ond becomes a biased publicotion, unrep,e­
insteod she is the ~pirit which
aentotive of the entire student body. We will not mount
actually makes Norton I-In.II wha.l
the gallant whit~ steed, ond beoring the banner of eternal
It Is tor all of ua. lnoloslng I can
only join with y&lt;1uund th ousands
truth led students onto the field. This is not our purpose,
ot others, who buve been, remark.
ln~ntion , or desire.
We will leave th e standard bear in g to the pamphl et­ Ing, " Than ks, Miss f!I\As.••
Yonrs truly,
eers and propoga ndi sts. for it is certain ly not the function
Bob 'Facbolak1
of a re sponsible Dewspaper. We will report the facts as
I\Ccurately, objective ly and wholly as poss ible. Our edi­
to r ials will compl y with the purp oses of an edito rial and Robert Frost R,eads
will suggest, inform, persuade, or enter tain.
Tho~e who advocate mor e cont roversial editorial s or
article s in a college paper are unacquainted with a paper 's For WBFO Program
This week The Spectrum osks, Dr. Arthur Kaiser, difirst pur 1&gt;0se- to report the news. If we report on a
Mondny evening at 8 :05 p.m.
rector of admissions:
·
contr oversial issue, and we feel it needs some further com­ WBFO, the university
radio
ment editoria Uy we will do so. But merely to seek out station ( 88.7 mgs.) will !broadca st
What revi8ions ha,v/lbMn made in the student
controversial issues, some of whi ch ma y be irrevelant, for · An Evening With Robert Frost ,
calendar?
the sake of evoking some controversy, or spirit on this with the poet reading 11nd com­
Let
me attempt to describe the exper iment in ca lendar
menting on his most rece·nt works.
ca mpus is immatu re, unju stified and ridiculous.
If there is som ethi ng which is developing on campus. ~he t.alk wlls l'ecorded last spring modificat ion which began at the start of the current aca­
whic h may be controveTSial, we will follow through at the University of Minnesota.and demic yea r·.
tape was made av~,ilable to
on the deveTopmnnts. After some tangi ble deci sion has the
WBFO through KUOM, the uni­
The a im, as with any calenda r man ipulati on, was l(1
been made, or some definite deci sion reached, we will weigh versity
there, a practice
the facts, and if called fo r issue an opinion edtor ially. We whieh is station
improve
the effectiveness and efficiency of the academic .cal­
common amOJ141'
education­
~nnot, in all conscience, however. render a decision on al stations.
endar. The predominant and historic pattern is the semes.
something which hang s in limbo. Such a decision would
ter approach. Th is ha&lt;l a disti nct genesis in that in an
bP. ra s h, and probab ly regretted la ter. An edito rial c.a!'I Other talks from other campus­
es incl ude "the Nature of' the Hu• eal'lier day a long summer r ecess was required so that the
only make an evaluat ion on the basis of the facts, it can­ man Being" by Dr. Carl Rogan,
young could aid dir ectly in the predominantly agricu lt ural
not manufactu re facts
the noted psychotherapi8't and an
This is the policy of The Spectrum, some may con­ address givet~ by Gen. MacArthur economy of the time by taking part in the planting, carin g
sider it conservative, but it is our policy nonetheless. It at West Point.
for and harvesting of crops.
was formulated after much thought and on the basis of
There are some basic premises which must be un­
experience.
We believe it is the best su ited to serve in­ The Ways of Mankind, "a fas ­
derstood. An academic calendar is an educational tool;
terests of the Univers ity community ,
cinating exploration into the ori­
a means to an end, not an end in itself. This is a fact
gin and development of culturca
Due to the Thanksgiving recess next week there will be and folkways in vorious parts of
which calendar committees, registrars Gild admin­
no issue of The Spectrum. The next issue will appea r Fri­ the wotld , will lw presented over
istrators, faculty ond students, ore sometimes opt to
day, Nov. 30. There will be a copy deadline Tuesday for WBFO on consecutive Friday ijVe ·
forget. A second premise concerns the ever increasing
nings
at
7
o'clock.
certain stories. Reporter s are advised to check the Spectrum
college enrollments which we face ond o recognition of
officefor details.
This is "an analysis of' the cul
AJl others are reminded that the deadline for all copy tur .. 1 rather than the biological
the foc:tthat the greate st period of growth is still aheod
to be included in the next issue is Tuesday, Nov. 27.
basis for the variations of behavior
of us. Coupled with this are the limited physical facil ­
between one people and another
ities on ca mpus and the limited staff . Not to be over­
. .. an attempt to undeN1tand the
looked in this ,egard is the tremendous increase in
ways of other peoples so that we
graduate school enrollments.
can get along with them, live with

The

Spectrum

Asks

...

4

THE SPECTRUM

'tl!e officio.I 11udon1newwapet ot the State University or New York at them, think with them, (and) grow
Duff'lllo. Publlcallon Office at Norton HtJI, t,Tnlv•l"llt)' C&amp;mpu1. Bultalo 11,
IC. T Pobll•hf!d weekly from th• ftret wuk or September to th e loot weok with them."
ID A11r\l, .-~r.•111tor e,ram pe rt&lt;HI•. Than l11¥1vln1t, Chrl•tma• •n~ l",&lt;l•(er,

The broadcasting sch~,dule fol­

Edltor-tn . Cht•f

M•nu1n,r

n~IrM

,IORN

-

JOAN

R, Fl.ORV

lowK:

Nov,
KOWAi. ~f.~i:,".;
, ~\t1~~ ;:·::g~A~uti.W~t~
M,rr
BANFORU
ai.,.
.......KARFlN ROSENOW
Advettt1ln1t Met', ..• , , ED BRANOT
&lt;'lrtol

omoe

lOOltorl t.l Ad.

"Bl!JV

, WM , Srl!lM.ElUNO

16-"Stand-in

F~r a Mur­

derer," a study in cultu1rc.
Nov. 30-''Desert
Solllloquy," a

study In education.

.

The third premise is that any calendar sho uld facili ­
tate the main business of education - teaching and learn ­
ing - not determine it. Change should be made in tht•
academic calendar when clear educational a dvantage is t1,
be gained and /or t!ducationnl progre ss is to be made; in
short. when such change will facilitate the teaching-learn­
ing process and/or make it possib le for a college to otfet
its opportunities, its facilities and its program to more
students .
A {oul'th premise is that there is no such auimal lli;
completely satisfacto ry college calendar nor is there •
completely ideal one. An ideal calendar can be construt.
from various points of ,·iew. That is to su,r. there 111a'
well l,a n rn lendal' thnt i~ c·ompleteJ~, Rati~factm'Y :111,
icle~I from the point of ,i,•,,·of Uw ('o!lc•ie pre :1i1font • 1
the college lr11~l1•e11
nr the 11\cull:vor lhl' ~tufl,•111
~ nl' 111
dir ecto r of hou:;in~ (Jr tltt• rl•~i~ti•:11·.

1

1

nii

(':dt•udm· n1anrnulnt inn i-- ~t!rt::iinly not t11 ht· 1·ur1~tn11•
1
lhe only 1rn1h lo int•r&lt;·ll,wd l'll'il:ieucy and 01· caiia1ily

~~~mR - ~~mt~:w~~-Dl~~~~•~i!wwri

,ror ,!lnu ..cl

011

l'a.:,• N•

�Friday, Nonmber

SPECTRUM

16, 1962

PAGEFIVI

REFLECTIONS
By ARNIE
By ANNE

MAZUR

MII NT E

During recent weah, tt111ssmedia
T.be big ne-ws,~ of course Greek Weekend wblcb opens tonight commU'nlcaUoo and puhlir. o.tterntlou
"ltll Greek Sing. At lut we hear the result or a.II these weeks of hnYP rocused U{)OU the Cuh~IJ crl·
prnctlce. n11d It promlsos to b~ really groat. Queon oa.mpulgnlng nears
AU In o.ll, the weekend will sl•, our olf-x.e1tr elections. and the
,11end a• the ll011r ot vodng approache9.
~..,.owlog co11flict In Southeast Ash1
,1ndou btedly be one ot fun, excltOlll'ent. and Just 11 little tension .
~ll fraternities
wishing to have their banners dlsplilyed at the or the three focal 11olnr.s, thi, (llf1nuce Saturday nlgJlt ~bou ld have them In the IFC otrlcA by f:SO 11oullles or tl 1e Chinese ore most
,nturda y afternoo11.
s lgnlftc1&lt;nt. Though
the biinner
The brothers or AIP hlll Epsilo n Pi announce that last week 's party
t1ITT1&gt;l. huge success.
Congratulations
to the new pledge o)ase officers. headlines may disappear, the Ohiun
,\II the brothers are looking forward to Sing and extend beat wlahea problem will remain for quill\ some
ro nil the Queen candidates.
lime , Chinn b'llng whut It Is, our
Alph• Lambda Del ta freshman wome n "s honor society nnd Phi Eu lntereRt and Indulgence is reQt 1lr&amp;&lt;;1,
Sigma f reshman men's honor society bold their annual reception Sun­
The present 11roblem Is tb1ll of
dny [rom 2 to 4 p.m . In the Multipurpose Roorn . Prosvectlvo freshmen
rnnmbers have been inv ited. and Dean Bradley Cbnvln wlll address Cbln11's military push hHo tm~as of
lhv 11~011p.
will have o. co~1kli1IJ purty precedh1g nort hem India, ll aymptom of 111Alph a P hi Delta fraternity
The brothers Rre ness rather th~n the disease . Due
lhe (}reek Bnll nt I.he Cnbin- l n-The-Sky nestnurnnt.
1H'o1tdor their rwtl&gt;ull team which showed spirit n11d enthuslusm at lo the llmlted knowledge ot Lhti
~,,,t-'r)1 gome.
situnUon 111Chinn . the various per1'he brothers or Alpha Phi Omega offer 0ongrotulut1011s to their sonalltles and tor11011or power ln.
Cinde rella tootbP.11 team \Vbleh squeaked
by TK!ll 13-12 Monday to volved. it Is dlrrl~ult ror analysts
lol'I, ttp the fraternity 1•hampionshlp. The brotht'r$ also continued their
By L AW RENCE FRE N KE L
117 t1r Economics till T111fca l of
service projects by ushering the Josh White. and Marc and Andre ro under~tnntl, or pretend to unTelevision is taking Its place on the stu dents l'eaction s
to (.ele­
derstn11d,
the
mollvrs
and
c't
uses
conce rt~ . Congratu lations to the newly elected officers of the pledge
eolleire cam puses as ona of the vi&amp;iltn tenching is this conunent.
1'lll$8.
of the present Chinese aggreH,slou.
most useful modern teachint aids. •·I can ' t eee-nny di end vantliges to
The Alpha Stgs will have a cpcktull party beforP the Greek 13ttll
Uoder the direction of Joscp h
Offered aa succinct eval uat luns
this type of instruction
bec.ause
at llelen Neville 's. 1'10cktalls will be serve(! aL 8 p,m. The hrolhers
Pl~•11sure , the University is deve­ an able teacher can present moat
of the problem are re f er en1:e1
tbnn k Mr. and Mrs. WIiiiam Young tor their hOspltnlity nt the house
loping one of the lcu-gesl and best material n~ well on TV as he can
p,,rty after the Bucknell game. The brothers wUI make their nnnunl
to the eommon panace a of
11quipped televisio11, centers in the present it directly to the class. "
R1&gt;1&gt;earnnceat the Bnrge Inn :ifter Oreek Sing tonight.
ma11y nation• to d ivert ;attcrncountry .
Critlciam
to telev isio n In .
Beta Ph i Sigma fraternity
will have a cocktail party before the
The majority of the programs
lion from domestic fa ll urea by
elu des the poi nt that lnatr uot­
r;reo k Bnll rrom '1:30-9:00. The brotbera will hold n breakrnst a!ter
originate
in
the
recently
relocatod
creating
emerge!lc ies on ria­
or la unable to main ta i n di­
cbr Ball. La,it Sunday the Junior broth£1rs beat the senior brolbers
of rect con t rol o f hi• 0 11111 w he n
basement
tlonal and inter national lov1111, TV studio in the
111,1 rootbnll game28-0.
Foster Hall. However, other areas
h e is leoturlny fl'Omt he , t u dfo,
'rbe Be ta Sloma Rho Autumn Nocturne Ill almost upon us ... re­
!he overwhelming
ambi t ion of
within cable distance of the studio,
Alao, h e I• una ble to g ayue
member to buy your tickets now. The or,en ,party held Jut week was
th~ Communist
Chinese, t:h e
suc h as the library steps or the
J wild and suC&lt;1essru1 affair.
Swimming and pizza eating competitions
etudent'o reactio n t o ■nd com­
z)ew fountain
aren, can be used
pr
eaalng
need
t
o
fee
d
atarvl
ng
are next on the agenda. Best of luck to the Handball team.
pr'ehenelon of the m at erla t
tu
originate
apecial
programs.
peuanta, and the ''legltlmatt e"
t hat 11 b ei ng pru en ted.
The Chi O's thank tbe brothers or P l Lambd a T au for the socJsl
The rest or tho T V pro­
l,LNt Friday night. Many thanks also go lo the socio! chairmen ro1•
c laims to the areao In d l1put t,
Another complnint ia th11t the
grarn Ing la done with a arnall
the fine work done at the nunual Mother-Daughte r Tea . Best or luck
(The latter argument has unstudent ca n not refer !Jack to tho
portable uni t tha t can t ran 1io the girls representing
Cbl Omega In Orcek Sing tonight and fo
black boo.rd if he missed something
mit
pictures
to telovlaiona
expectedly made strange b1!d.
candido.te Fran Dus. "First Lady of the Campus." Congratulations
to
ns be wlUI tnkJng notes.
011e
on ly ln tho same or adjo i ning
fellows
of
the
Red
Chinese
an
d
or
tbe
pledge
cln~s.
.fohanne Kingsland, newly elected president
su ggestion to improve T V t.each ­
roo m . T hi• method fa ueed In
the
Natlonalls
ta.)
The brotherfl of Gamma Phi hold n cocktail purty preceding Greek
luK is thllt the fatuity mcmbeni
t ho denta I achoo I to ma k o It
Rall at . brother Craig Lyon's a,part.ment.. Llu1l week's party wn• r,
who teach on TV should he given
poulble
for many atuden to,
hnge auccesa.
MO•I llkill)', lhe above reasons
lighter loads so thn~ they would
Tonight the brothers of Kappa Pzl will bav 8 " small purl&gt;' Ill C&lt;•rthe nggresaluu are comvle1mA!n, lnatead of only one or two,
hnve till1o to deve lop the &amp;pe&lt;:iul
to
took
over
t
he
in
atr
uc,or'o
Ult' upnrtment
ntter Greek Sing. Snturdny night a eocktnll party 11! tnry, nmong others . There moy be
l.l.llcnts needed to h,, good tele ­
shoulder white lie is doing in•
hrot.ber Scelsi's apartmunt vrocedes Greek Bnll.
he tween lhe Connmu.
11 ,·onnecllon
vision teachers,
tr A ora I work on II patient.
A sncceastul pa.ny ot their boll Saturday night and a Founder's
riist successes lhus tar Qlld l(h rltl!h•
As the use of televislon In tlw
There have been propol!als t~
l&gt;H.)'dinner Sunday highlighted
a grea.t weekend for the trntera or
i'las•l'Dom increases,
so hitlou, t!&gt;
Phi Epsilon Pl, This week promlsu
to be Just as enjoyable ns tho chel' 's ralllug policy lu Cubn, w1t11 11!18 thi11 method in Ihe 11harmncy
as these problems will be found An&lt;r
Soph .•Jr . vs. Sr. football game takes pll\ce Wednesda .y, and a party fij du e referenr.eM lo th o fllll&gt;C•OSl'd nnd chemist ry clopurtment.8
thu faciliti,•11 will aiain
bl.I wtllela tonight following Sing . Tomorrow night there wlll be a cockW.11 ldeolugli,ni l'lft In the Comm,u nlat well as in the sc hools of Modiclne
. Thi s trend 111denu )ua tru ­
alld Education, It is conceived that 110111led
1•.irlv al the HIIII befo re Greek 81111.The fra te rs wish everyone an
llt11matter. no uallon Is ln­
this will supplement l imitod teach ­ tecl by the fact that two sim11ltnn­
Anjoya.ble Greek ..,.Wiiek eo d.
dep entenl of lnternntlonal
torces, ing filciliteij nnd stuff and also eou~ programs cau now be h11nd•
'T')1e broth ers or Phi Kappa Psi thank the U.S. NaV)' for makin2
pncl Lhosi. exi,rfetl hy our own
thr p1•01:r11ms of the lod on the conxial cal&gt;les tying I.ho
lb~lr Honrin!l zo·s P nrl.y oue or the most aucc11saru1 ever had. A close(! country ahoula Ile rxumlned and augment
UnJverslty studio
lo Hnrl'iman
11a,-tic ipnting departments.
r·111•l&lt;fJ1i
l party Rt the P11rkrldge ~00 Clvh precedes Greek Ball te&gt;­ evol uat ed.
Capen
Hall,
a11d
011e aeries of 1,rogrn ms Is d e­ auditorium.
morrow night.
Health Sciences, A thfrd ch11nel
signed
to
ucqunint
education
The slster8 or Ph, Sigma Sigma nr&lt;&gt; all looking rorwa rd to lbt'
Since the Com111uni~l rel't'\lnllon
that they i~ to 1,~ ncltlecl within th e comlnrc
11r~N1 Bnli tomorrow night. Best or luck to Phi Sig's Queen ,-1,ndidnle, the llulle d Slate~ hllR, In P'frvrt. mnjo1•11 with vrohlems
ll'ill llCluully mcl'I, in the cla ss ­ y~ut· untJ Dil•f~utlorJ Hnll i3 to IJ&lt;•
lln·m1 Mlllmnn, "The Girl ot the Future ."
l11C1latedChinn. Our pollrtos or non­
tio,I Into the tnhltJ.
The hroth ers or Pi Lambda Tau thank the slaters or ('hi Omego rPcognltlon and preYenllug t:hlm•se room , A !i1·st gl'R1fo, fifth grnJe,
Anothor Rig11ot this i.. tho ON ' tl
tor :1 swh1glng social last Friday and exleud beat wleh e• Lo their entry int(I the world commun1ly 1111ilrtinLh grnde ha ve heerr h1·ought
'turc•n caodlda.te, Fran Dua. They nre looking rorwnrd to n lnrge turn . 11u1y very well Jlf'OV C detrlm,i utul irrto the studio ch,~sronm for nn foi- n larget ' st11,le11tslnff to hnndl~
0111ut the Engineering Stai:- next 'l'Vednes day at lhe Auf Wledersehen , to our nnllonsl lnterrat, It tltlll' hnu r of cl11ast••· 'l'lr efr 11('llvitie~ v11rious atudio duties. As expl'r••­
1'11f brothers o( Sigma Alpha Mu thnnlr those {rat ers who made have no! nlreu(ly , HY ull er\nlin,r tl1(' wne ohservP•I by sludt•nts in uu­ od by Mr. Pl e ll6Ure. "We llt/1 Ill
ll1,• J&gt;o.rty !LL the Ho tel Rlobford suc h a bui:e s•Jcces s. Th e S• 1111nfes Cblnese we risk nny future •a lis­ ntlwr ro om l&gt;y mean s or II c•los~d nnPd ot nc1dHl011lll stu d en t luilJ)
Pn ·f&lt;•rnliiy those with ~om~ ux­
.~1,n t.hank the fellows of Bein Slgmn. RhO tor tho Invit a ti on to their ral'tory peace, tnr· Wrwti11·11rulltnr a circuit TV hooku1J,
Progrnms
originating
in
1&gt;111
wo will welcome• 1111y
tll\l j)Orf11nr11,
•'I"n oarty this week.
und tradl!Jon s rno not communllr~tlc'
e&amp;ently r~ad , ov1•r tw o UII wltl1 II ,:011ut11
e luh&gt;rt•Mt Ill
The slelars of Sigma Delt a Tau bop e ev.er you e has bad an oppor- with lhRI h111.t1&lt;hulk of Asl" anrt al1J11io 111·
LhnuHUll(I
xtodl'lllH taklllG Mnlh lt•urulng 'l'V work
111u
lty to m ee t their cun dldnte fot • IF C Que en . Nor e ne , The sfslers ur~ humanity .
1ooklng forw ard t o meeting their new regional advisor, ~lrR. Anltn
&lt;:,1tRSUta11,
Th e most successful reoult of
'l'he Sig Kaps n re lookinp: forward to nn excit in g Gr eek WP.ek~nd .
our present poli cy would be an
,ll.,111lay evening the ne w pl6dKeo will pur l l~ivate In th e lradll1ono1
overthrow
of the regime I~
power du e to the backward
lllv ,in d Lllll c Siste,· Ni Aht.
nd1
1'J1c brothers of Tau Kappa Epsilon 1•1111gratulat~Al11hu Phi OmP!!:1
Co t ions we are abetting; a
\111tllri r line 13-12 victoty over the 'l'KE football te11m It wns a wrll
highly unlikely occurrence , o ,ur
The Nutionnl Academy of SeiAp111ict1nt• for tlw grncluutl •
lnn~ht l(ume . The Tek ~s will me et ut fr o ter Buh 1':ve1·di11g's l1ouse
Influence a nd th e preuurea we
exert are limited, for China 11
1•nec:s-)l.'ationni Rc~ea1·ch Council 11wn,t1~ wll ! Ill! rcqu1 1'\•d to tAli,,
fur u cM !.tnil party be(Ol'e thr dnnc e tomorrow night.
not Cub•. And • If fo rced to ,reha.~ been ca lled upon again to utl· th i• Grnduu t c Hr ror-cl Exnminn•
Theta Chi lraternt1y
co nrriaulat es Don Rob erts ou Ill• electio n
vise th o N11tlon11l Science Foun - lio 11 ,11,,iK lll'cl to test sc!c·nt ,fitl'ri ~lclenl. uf the Plcd go Clu~:,. The Cheery Bee r le, hold ,, nlrklnll
tallate , th e Chinese governm, ,nt
This
,,.,, 1&gt; at tN5 Niagnrn ~·nu s Bivtl. pre~edlog th e Greek Ball
would hnvc no alternative 0th er
&lt;fntlon irr t.hP se lertion of car11li- nrtitu, l,• And 1&lt;thievenll'n(
th a" to resort to force; war
cl11t1·s rot th,· Fou ndati on's (lr•, ,,,a 111i1111t.lon, utlmini sti•red t,y t he
'l'hE&gt; sisters M Theta Chi soro rity are looking forwrr1'd lu th~
:111tl F.tlul'lllion, 11 •r~stirrir Si•rvi ~t•, will
\1111:1:11T"" Snndny In , oleb rul lo n o f th e ir F'ouod ~r'ij flny , Wt•d11~sch1y would ~e Inev itable .
i:~um 11[ n•guln,· graduaw
Tiu 0111 1 )hir·il 1n on 6 to l 11 t e po~t-ilocturol fellowships .
iw Kivc•n Jun . 19, J!!fl:l, nl ,h•Ml"lbe br others or Arnold Air Society tho.nk tbu n1ea11e~ fM ,, ~ri·nt
'
•tt eeg of ouht.a11dlng ~c,- nult ·tl ,•,.11t,,,·Mthro111d1out thl• l Jn it" •
1•'' ty last Sat urda y. Many thnnk s •1lso ,.
"0 t o the Pntel'tnlnt u,•ot c•o111• ,,l\',wlfve
.v1111·•
'" n•11rears
P
~ •r
Co1111111
111
to be c·om' II t ,· 1 und r,·rtuit, fo,·,•ixn
11t•1t1•0
o
f
.nm
rtlf
ey
un,t
J1ru
Distefan
o
mm1lt•utl\•11.'l'hE" Us .. rommitte,d .to I cntl~ts upr1ointed by the Academy- ,.,.1 St
•
·
_____
___
___
1h11 folli• or withholding n•rog,,lrtio n I Rr ol'l.ltfh C'uu11cii will i,veJ1111teav- ,·uu nt l'lt&gt;•
Th~ nnnuul Stl p~iHI• Cot• i: ,1uh1nn tl tliplourntl c rt•lalion• amon i-:•t 1 Jllk1Llio11~ or all cnndidnt~s. Fin ni
n111ion• 011 11viden,·e M "~oofl loe- sc ltct ivn will be n1&gt;1.d
e hy t h" :1t1• ~•,,IJowx 11r1• u~ follvw• ; $1,80.&gt;
l1t1vlor-·•is hy11o◄ ·rltl(ou1 \\' e r, 0,·011- F, &gt;unt!Ati on, wi th 11.w11rd
s to be 1111 for the fir st leve l: $!.?,0110
f or th~
nlzo u nd aUJ)l)Ol't. 11nflomor1•nttc IIU\lnCt•cl~{Inch 15, 11)11:J
,
rr1ter 111etliRtc leve l; 1111J$2.:!00 foe
Rit resenr c h grnnl.9 tn the 11eld9 . .\n a dditi on or l'Ar t 11 or "Herm
go~Hr nm eots a11d ull~11 1/teoio.ir:
le~
Fellowships will 1wuw11rd~d !or tlw t.rrminal
level. ·r1ro ,11,ncruJ
on ilolfmann•wal0 1111o 11tl An(1rer Why must Chinn. be dlft'Nent !
•lu,ly in Ute mathen111ticu l, phy•t- •tif)t•r11l for p os t·d octorn l F◄1ll0"' •
.,, 11hyslcs, ..ronomtc•s, tnodern Ian
'"
~~ij
und biology h uYe b een OPut :whPn Gcdlchte" is proyJded b•·
'Nn pulley i$ i:imraut•·••d 10, htt ml, nwdfo11l, biological, und c111:i- la $6.11110.Limited nltnw1◄ nct'• will
,..,,,rcll'cl to t11,·ulty mem.bers bar e. a $360 grant to Dr. de C1w11a.
'111•r~s,rut. The C'hirao•e Coowrnn
•tN•ri 111!sder11·c•~; lllan in Anthr~- :1!,u bl• l'rnvl1lcd t o nprly tllw11r1I
T!11,1mints werP nwarded by the]
!Jr. tl aruir k r~•·Plv~d $2011 1nr lla1, In Jl&lt;•w•"· ur,, ru th lP•~. '" 1111pol 01l'Y,Jr!ychol ogy (e xcludin g clin• t1,lt 111
11, l11h,11·ntm·1
, f,,,,,.nncl trii v•
1 " 1nm1tto e 1111 the
Alloc~tlon ot study Jnt o the cco~ibility 11nd '111• ~un•. Howrver w,· ,11 ,. c·onrrul!J•·d i,·til fl•l'~huloJIYI, Jl~011i·uphy, wo- ,,J.
••nrch r.runts under the cbnlr- portunlty of t he lndiun thlrt! n,,,._ !u thl' f11l11ri•. Aml univ ,•oopl'r:c ilo11 11111111
•·.&lt;( c,~rhtdln g busine 31 admw
F11rlh1•r 111forru111i1111
11n,) 11p11lt
helwccn our rouo lry ond thr• oth~r 1,,trution), ~oci,,loKlY (not i111'1ud- ,•11t1u11m11wr1nl• m11~ 1&gt;1•nb tll iu,•,I
",rrxlll p of De11n H enry M. Wood- yMr 111nn.
' r ot the C:rncluate School or
Th1, lar~e~t i:ra.tll of $2,000 ,,.,,ut r1.lff&lt;rn~ o r lh~ wurlll c·.111""'k•• 11 iuic s,w-inl work!: ,,nd the hutnry
r,•0111th1• f'1•llnw~hip tl!fico. 'Ill•
••Ud Scie n cPs.
hl Dr. J ain fot· scnonl ug nud ••~),•u•j pns•lhl•• to ~e&lt;'lll'•· " 111tur•· Our " nd phtlu;oph~ uf Mil' " ''''•
tlunnl
\ cn,fom:; of il,·11"111·,•N1111r Horst recPive d $1,11110fur t he lnliuJ! 1h11e 1111d 11ln t~ eip(,:;urr 1•r~-1•nl 11ul1C'l~M
111,• w lfd,.fr111l11r.
Th,·y ~rl' ori&lt;'n to c11llc~c •~ni.,n. !111
0111Rt•~••urt·h Coundl. 2101 Con ­
lnnl&lt; t,,r "''" rn,11h i:r,1,h111h· nnll llf"C~·,IO&lt;'to,•ul ,tut ,tuthm Av,,n,1,•, :-; \\'. , \Vn •hi r~
. "tl~nllo o or nuclear apln ~lntes cosW in connec-tion wltlJ 1111•,.wtl :11111 11,• 11111•1
"111 pl,,&gt; 11" 1,u. ,t,,,11,, 11111!111
h1•1• with ..,qu1vnl,•nl J 1.. n :.'fi, fl t'. TIii' ,i..,Mlhn~ fur th&lt;'
~a1ion 111 thH nelc1 or ultra htr.lJ ••• 1&gt;1
·" ~. &lt;'1111111
' 111nlec
11lur crysta ls.
1
\ $GOOgrant tor study tn fotllr- "llP rgy 111ty~lc11.
purtanl rol,, In 111111
I''''"'' Jr tlh••r• I t111lttt11)(1111cll'lCP••rl..,nr~ All u ppil ... ,.,·111111( 111111h,·l\\1oto,to, ll'f\11 1~ /Ire \\u m11,i u,11 1u1n our h11rk~ rnnt• must bi• eitiien~ of th&lt;' lln lt h1r 1•o•t·tlo&lt;'torul ft&gt;llow~btl)1 J,
, try ij(ructnre nnd plannlng de.
'!'be study or che !&gt;Per \l uu.,• 111•
"IIN l11 underdeveloped
1/CODOIQ llr Rhl•111&gt;eIV/1.S 1irovl1lt!ll ror 1,y ;) ,c,n II, If \Vil 11ia}' wllh II "''
)1111) •·ti Stllll'ft nn, ! will UI' J1.1cJ1r\'&lt;I
~o,;
JI,,,. 17, t:hJ:l, 1111,Ifor •irrn1lu at,:
111
1 nt '" Dr. Cltou dbry .
f&lt;lli5 grnnt
·
, ,,r11rnl lt
ly on thl! l&gt;usis of 11blllt~.
Jan I, 1(163
,
1 f~l101111hip11,

TV Studio Set-Up In Foster
Facilities Worth $35,000
0

s.

c,,m,,

Nat•Iona I sc1ence
• Foun datIon
•

Selects Fellowsh,·p Cho·ices

I
I

Six

Research Grants Out ,·

Awarded to UB Profe ssors

I'

·

�SPECTlllJ

,AGE SIX

IM

Friday, November 16, 1962

Want to See Your Workin Print? Leo Smit's Concert
Review Presents Opportunity Honors Stravirnsky

By VICTORIA BUGl:.LSKI
mental party. It aboud be manda.. Leo Smit, visiting slE!e profes­
rory readlng tor all atudenta. While sor of music, gave a c,oncert in
it does not answer all the ques­ honor of Stravinsky's
eightieth
tions fully, it do1111raise the !111- birthday, Sunday at the Albright.
portant ones and for that reason Knox Art Gallery. Mr. Smit was
Is to be bJglily nlued. Untort-un. assisted by soprano Doirotby Ro­
ately It was not written by one senhergcr, violinist Hury Taub,
of our own people, however, we and pianist N or m a Bertolam i
can soon produce papers of this Sapp.
merit too.
Mr. Smit, an artist of the first
The poem "Mirror," ' an amusing
piece, was written by Collen Lang. 1·11nk,brill iantly proved the point
Perhaps future l•uea will Include made in \)is recent Slue lecture
longer works by the SMIie author. that a cohiposer shoulol also be
We ltope ao, for they would be able to perform. Mr. Smit played
with much feeling and virtuoso
well appreciated.
technique.
Alao enjoyable 11 the 1tory
"A Strange and Curious Vl ■lon/1
In songs by Tchaikovsky, Mrs .
which reminds one of the work
Rosenberger demonstrated smooth,
of Fra nze •Kafka, although not
clenr p h r a s i n g, de;licat.eness,
quite of the same quallty. Its
warmth, vitality , and very good
tnclualon In the review la a
11ah1able auet and deae,rvee a .control of d:ynamice. IShe sang
with much expre.sslon nnd made
' more lntenae atudy tt,a n thla
the music come alive. 'With Mr.
reviewer can give at the pres ­
Smit at the piano, the a•ecompani­
ent,
ments were exccption111ly well
Although ll will he construed done.
wrongly, we must stale nt th.le
Several abor t piano works of
point that we a.re not very lond
or Grace MMtln's miserable attempt Tchaikovsky were perfimned by
nt poetry , I seem unable, due to Mr. Smit. The familiar "Humor­
irnvown shortcomings, to compre- esque" was played crisply, with
h~nd the deeply profound vacuum complete finger control. In the
site writes In; however, we w111 other pieces, Mr. Smi1t demon­
let Uu,.t pass.
strated an extremely Slrncloth le.
"The Digression'' needs a good gato, clear phrasing, and a sing­
deal more polishing, but bas n ing melody line, alway!1 playing
good bllslc tnteot. Perha1&gt;11 the with feeling and vitali~y. In the
author could be more e)&lt;])llclt In ''Scherzo a la russe," Mr. Smit
hiH statement of purpose. rt seems disp layecl bis almost incredible
rn lher vague. Wllllam l,aag'e sa. technical facility. More&lt;•ver, Mr.
Ure Is excellent and presents, Smit Is a master of interprets·
briefly an important question. Let I ion and technique.
us hope we see moro Qf his worlr
.
•
The v i o I i n i s t perf11rmed the
soon.
"Comedy 11 Brown " I• not
Stravinsky
''Divertimento
(Le
••rl)•.
perhaps what we all aee In a
Bniser de la Fee)" with :Mr. Smit.
Tbe artlc lea are too many to give
M1·. Taub showed good. control,
pool game but It l1 a fin•
u complete review to ouch, but
piece of writing. The atyle la
rich tone, fine phrasing and dyl)erbaps a few comme nts will
excellen t and tho meaaage well' nnmics. A smooth legato seemed
demoostrnto my point or view.
taken. It la a very astute com•
t.o 1,e his most outstan1ding feaPraises are due Tema Siegel and
n\ent on • game that la becomture. Mr. Taub's technique was
John FUiler for their poems. Th&amp; Ing all too popular at tl:le Uninot lacking the lea.st bit.
ertfcle,
"The Academic Abnos­
verslty.
· k
l)bere," by Henry Simon presenta
The review ends with II delight,
Two·piano works of Stravms ·y
an Important quearlon which points Cul poem wWch 18 remlnlscent of a were performecl..by Norma Berto­
up the toollshoess or our I\CAdem. certaln well known J)Oet who uo- lnmi Sapp and Mr. Smit. With
lo ayetem. Beg111nlng students cortuuately 1 can't place at tbe Cine ensemble playing a~1d an ex•
need small claeees and personal at­ moment.
celle nt sense of rhythm, tl1e per·
tention In oriler to grow. After,
All In all, one must acknowledge formers displayed spirit and vi­
A.Ddonly after c11n they listen to a well planned baa!cally succesM- tality in the compositio~1s. Every
mass lectures by proteaaore of tul niagazlne wblcb does and will pi&lt;&gt;cewas interpreted well. Each
high call~re who have muoh to
1111a great void at OB. Let us note came alive. Not one measure
oaer.
fuJly sup11ort t.hls enterpr ise, and of music on this pi:ogram could be
Cart Gerand'a artfcle on
ln the words or the l111mort.ul
Kennedy I• at be1t auper-fh•oua
Henry ,T. Kaleerlleld, "The moss considered dull from the manand we hesitate to Hy what
grows nol on the eastern slope." ner ill which it was perjtormed.
It la at worat. If po,lltlcal artl.
cata are to be Included, they
should have aome content a"d
WANTED
not be merely political predic­
By L, DAVID FREY
Striking a ftrm and much needed
lllow tor some form of lntellectual
11cUvtty on the O.B. cam;pue, the
New Student Review bas, by Its
~x-latenoe. created an open oasis
In the cultura l desert we lovingly
call SIJNYAB. While ll must be
s tated that to thh1 orlUc'a untrained
eye, the magazine baa some few
nnd minor detects which we are
sure Ume will Improve. Tbo mag.
azlne In general cannot be pralaed
too highly, Its serious Intent, ex.
rellence of ,Jnethod, and variety of
content he{d tbia writers attenUon
for many on enjoyable moment.
Roee11and plaudits are du e Gord­
on llfcConn.lck and his tine staff
tor tbJa long needed nod much wel­
comed review. Basically, the re­
'f1ew la a magazine whlcb offers
an opportunity to any student Who
'lliabee hls work to be published,
tb.e chance to turn In bis work
And It Its quality ls acceptable, to
eee It ln print.
The print, however, 11 thla
aelf-atylod critic' • one aerloue
objection. It ■eem■ unfortunate
to me that thl• group's allo.
catio n fr om the ■tude nt senate
waa eo , small ae to prohibit
printing of a proper nature.
The mimeographed work la
hard to rea d, difficult to dec i­
pher and, more Importantly, la
not befitting a ma gazine of
thle qu•llty .
Unfoi,tun11tely, the group does
not poASe$s tbe tunds to have the
i;otJre mug11zlne J)rlnted. It le our
ferve nt hol)e, that they will Joon
have the funds, either by a. etu.
dent eenate gTant, or by sales, to
ltnve the whole book prllltea prol)­

Tana Tolson, Gerard Marchette, Alfr e d Brlnnar d and
No rman WIid

Walden Playhouse to Pr esent
Beckett's Play: 'Endgamet
The Walde n Playhou se, 1060 Wal-"Waltlng tor Godot," this play et­
den Avenue, wfll• enter the field o! plodes with unexpected humor and
·•avnut.g:,.rde" theatre with tomor- profound observations on the coo
row night's opening of, Samuel dltlon of man. In 19 58, "Endgame·
8eckeWs "Eb dgame ." The Beckett was the sensation of the off-Broad.
work, pertol'Dled In one long act, way season: prior to that, It wa,
will be repeated Nov. 181 201 21, 23 successfully l'er!ormed in Paris .
For Its -first local production, the
nnd 24.
Th e plot, such as It le, tells or cast will Include former S11ectnun
the death struggle coo!rou\lng four critic, Gerard Marchetta, who hr,•
survivors of, presumably, a nuclear alRo staged the J)roductlon; Alfr 11
war. Each bas made a world or bi11 Brlnnand and Tana Tolson, bot11or
own In the bomb ahelter lhnt end· the recent "uya letrata·• and Nu,
lessly entraps them, two going ao man Wlld, a !orwer member 111
rar as to live in a.sh cans.
Anthony Mannlno •e 11ctlng troupe
Like BeokeU's better
known In New York City.

I , ., ,,

0

2nd BIG WEEK -

A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCT ION,

"IF A MAN ANSWERS"
li'ilmcd in Eaat&lt;manColor,
Starring
Bobby Darin, Sandra Dec, Stefanie Powera,
Micheline Presle, John Lun d, Ceaar Romero

ib&amp;ist .

PfOPLE TO AUDITION UHIVEI\SITY TALENT

tion• .

The bitter piece ealled "Intel­
lectual" Is an Interesting p!0-0e or
poel.r,y, perhaps well done, although
I 11ereonally dlsngree with the
author's meHage.
"Sunday night and Mondny morn.
Ing" ie a. well written and poign­
antly neceaeary article on today's
oriels In the south . It la only un.
fortuute
th.at auch an arUcle le
the true ptctyre of our country. Jt
d088 not spook well or the good
old U.S.A.
Whlle aome of th e cartoon,
are fairly good, due to tho
printing they are not readable
and therefore h••d to appre.
cl•to.
"Campus PollUca.l Parties" Is 11
marvelous article wbJch analyzes
I.he role or I.ho al11de_nt govern-

.Apptlcatloni In
Norton, Tow•r, Goodyoor, Allenhurst
For Tofents Scouts Comm. - SPonsorodby Mtx•r Comml~

DOING
ITTHE
HARD
WAY
byh~lff-

Sunday Nlte

L.c1by John Boylan

' , .....,m ,
OpenWed. • Sun . 8 p.m .-2 a.m,

TL 2-9338

£TLH;,.E
;,1e
AyT;RE;;
ne

" JESSICA"
Angle Dicl&lt;lnson
MauriceCt,evofler

Now -

Notolle Wood

J

NORTH
PARK
TH.EATE

[P

I

:-w::•••n

" WEST SIDE STORY"
Richard Beymer

SPECIAL STUDENT OISCOUMTSAT BOTH THEATRES.

[M4~u!JJ
HJ
COMMUt-41SM'SMASTER-PLAN FOR
WORLD CONQUEST

.!9 EDWARD STREE'I'

FOLKMUSICJAM SESSION

}.UM. thru TUES.

"T HE CHILDRENS
HOUR"
AudreyHepburn

ELMWOOD
AT UTICA
TT 2-1647

Gallery

Wed. - Sat . Nfte
HACKffl &amp; RAVEN

" I LIKEMONEY
" with Peter Sellers
" IT HAPPEMED IN ATHEMS" with Jane Mansfield

(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!}

Limelight
r~ohlnnq Folk Mu#lc,
W~d . • Sun. Nit~

Buffalo Premiere

Filmed in Eastman Color

See the mo,it 1nfomous coit
of chorocten ever

easier3-minute way for men : FITCH
Men. get rid of cmburrttsslogdandruff easy as l-~-3 with
FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing. one lalhenng, one
riniintt), .-cry lr3ce of dandruff. grime, gummyold hair
ionic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks bandsomcr, healthier. Your scalp
tingles,feelsso refreshed.Use
FITCH Dnndrufr Remover
SHAMPOO every w~k for

•
f 117CH
L~ADING

MAN'S

SHAMPOO

pow,vc

dnndrotr control. .

Keep your hair and scalp
reallyclw,, dllndruJJ'-frte
I

-:::::•

�f ridoy, Mon mber 16, 1962

SPECTRU

The Thornell Schwartz Trio
Curently Featured In Area

PAGESEVlH

M

S,eclrum
Ca/f/JoarJ

Senate Continues
Membership Drive

BY MARKFELDMAN
(ii) !OUJ.
The personnel committee ,~f the
Norton Rul11
There are many jatz musician•
There are few guitarist&amp; who Student Senate, under chajrman
Norton Union Houae Rule&amp; are
who ha ve 1urvived yean1 of have a sound which 11 unique and Madelaine Kravitz, announeed that now posted on the gla■■ CJl&amp;eaon
frustration and toil to finally sue· easy to distinguish from all the
the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd floo?'II,
cred in gaining public acceptan ce othen. I can thinl( of a Jew such th e drive for senate committee
Social Welfare Club
and recognition. However, there as Wes Montgomery, Jim Rall , membera hu bee11extended , There
There will be a mcetln1 of the
arr also th ose mu1ldane whoMI Kenny Burrell, and Schwarts. Bi a are vacancies on all committees, Social Welfare Club Monday, In
nbilltles havl' ~caped the notice• manner of austaining notes at the except the student actlvitiea , com­ Norton Union, room 330 at 4:00
of public renown. Such 11 the cas! ond or a phraae or playing multi - mi~ .
p,m. Mrs liickocll, of the Commun­
ity Welfare Organization , wlU be
of Thornell Schwartz, a j azz g-ul- noted runs are extremely lndivid·
Appli cations may be picked up lecturin g.
tarbt who has played with such unllstic.
Anthropology Club
Schwartz's &amp;bility u a soloist in the stu dent senate o!fltie be­
notables as organists Jimmy Smith
The weekly meeting of the An­
ond Johnny "Hammond" Smith L-quals that of organiat Young' 1 tween 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. They
thropology Club will be held Wed­
and at present he Is the leader of and possibly aurpa■ses it. When
what I feel !ft the finest j117,zor- you listen to one of his solos, you must be accompanied by n rec­ nesday tn Foater 206, at noon.
sran tl'io - Tho Thorn ell Schwartz get lhe impre ssion that Schwart&amp; ommendation, preferably from s The general topic wlll be ratiflca•
'l'rlo .
is really thinking and f!eling what faculty or ataff meiber. Ea,cb ,ap,­ tioo of the constitution.
Mu1lc Dept.
1 have h11.dthe pleasure of !is· he plays. Ilia selection of note, plicant must also have an inter­
The recital to be given by Leo
tening to Schwartz on previ ous oc- ond his resourcefulness for phra s­ view In the Senate office.
Smit, vlaltlng Slee profes,or of
cnslona during the yaat year and ing- mako hi• s o l o e extremely
most recently at the BonTon Tav- meaningful and swinging .
Applicant&amp; will be judg,ed on mu~ic today, has been cancelled. It
t'm where he is curre ntly feaThe group's rhythm man is an their intere st in working Cl1l th e will be given. on Friday, D~. 'I,
tured. The improvement of the extJ"emely competent dru mmer , committee, any euggeatons they at 4 p.m. in the re hearaal roord of
trio on each ~ucce!llllve llatenlng James Connelly. He haa replaced may have , pa•l experience i:11oth­ Baird Hall,
Education MaJore
Is something of amazement. The the group's origi nal drummer, Jim• er stud ent government activiti es,
,oloing ability of the muslclan 8 my Smith (not the organist) and and how much time they cai~ 1ive
Seniors in Education must be
has greatly improved, new and is proving himself to be a senai­ the committ ee. Those applying registered with the education of­
f res h aTTangement!I have been tive and complementing accomp•• must aleo state whether they· thlnk fi ce. If you have not as yet com­
odded to tho group's reperto ire, niat.
working on a committee will help pleted th e placement oflice form s,
nnd the growing muaie!ll rapport
Feature&amp; Young'• Work•
t.hom become elected to tb, 1 Stu ­ please do 10 and 1uhmit thl'ITI u
soon as J)08Sible. ln tel'Vi8'f1 may
between the group's members hae
It is something of amazement dent Senato.
enhRnced the development of an to hear an organ group like
tl&lt;ctllent overall group sound.
Schwartz's with a well rounded
The group consist!! of Schwartz repe rtoi re, ■Ince moat of thern (ln stick to
0 11 guitar, orgn nist Lar r y Youn,:, eluding Jimmy Smith)
and drummer James Connelly. In rhythm tunes consisting of funky
Young, the trio has an excellent blue11which become quite unfunlcy
~olol~t and a comJ)0!8r of consid- after a while. Th e group's repre­
t•rable talent. Ria ability ns a 80• toire con1i1t11of compositions by
loist ha s improved lmmen~ely ov- Young who displays a fine writ­
~r the paat yea r . In the past, ing ability. A few or his compo­
Young would take long 10109 which ~itiona sunh as the go11pel oriented
would tend to go dry after the "Testilyln',"
"Tal kin' with J.
first three or four chon1Pes. His c.;• and "Blue and Boogie'' dia­
mu!ti-noted lines have ta lien on play his ability to excellent ad·
tlie dimensions of development to vantage.
tho point where his aolos are
Also, the grou p hu fine rendi ­
mt'Bningful from beginning to end , tions of John Coltrane's "Giant
Harmony StreHed
Steps" and "Couain Mary," John
Young's approach emphasizes Lewis' "Afte rnoon In Puis,' ' a
tho development of harmonic lines bossa nova rendition of "Bra,:11"
with n secondary emphasis on (the h ighlight of the evening), and
rhyt hm. I am not H)'ing that "Green Dolphin Street," the title
rhyth m is uni mportant, alnce this tune from the movie of the aame
would be nn absurd thing to do, name.
If something is going to "swing ,"
If you like good jau, I suggest
it has to have rhythm.
Schwartz la probably the most that you hear the Schwartz Trio
nder-rated a,iit.&amp;rist in jau, and at the Bon Ton Tavern on F erry
11
it it 8 sha me. Be ia a musician Street whera they will be fea~red
who bas three necessary elements through Sund9:y. The mus1e1 I.a
in excess: ( 1) a unique sound, pleasant llatening and excellent
(2) improvisational facility, and / JIIZZ, What more could you want?

lit' ur r■ nired by

contactlfle th11
placrment office In Scboellkopf
Hall. The registration deadline la
Dee. 16

Concert
The concert committee will pre·
SEcntDakota Staton and her trio
an d The Tarrlers, a folk aln,lng
gl'oup, Dec. 8 In Clark Gym . Tic­
kets are availabl e In the Norton
ticllet booth for 4U0 .
The International Club
The lnternotJooal Club will bGld
ltA annual Thanlleg\'flng {)Inner In
the Tilfeo Room (e~o od Door or
Norton). Ill 6:30 p.m A uadlU onal
turkey dinner wit.II all the trtm.
mlngs will he (en lnrfld . All mem.
bl•r8 ore rordlall1 lnvlt NI.
Woman'• Club
The Woman's Club 1ft ap0naorlnc
u warm co11tloan ftorvtce for for1&lt;li:n •tutlenlll who rnme to tM
l' nh•er11ty unprepnred for Buffalo's
winter wt&gt;ather. Any forellfll atu.
denl whn 1ft In need of ■ucb a coat
ma&gt;· ubl11ln one In room .262 Nor.
ton Nov. 20 and 21 from 10 am , lo
1 11111

II

CORRECTLY
CASUAL
The ablrt that make.athe soeneii the Arrow
"Gord on Dover Club" shirt. is a cotton Ozford
classic with the comlortablemeclium-point,aoftly
rolling button-down Atrowoollar.Placket froot,
plait in back - and backcollar button. Muter

n

cra ftsmanship givea sharp appearanoe and
comforta ble trim fit. $5.00.

TH'E CLEAN WHITE SOCK
He not only wears the clean white sock; he le "clean white sock ," It'• a kind of con fl•
wing the right thing to do; even ,f he de cl dea not to do
dan ce that comes f rom kno
•
hi
It Hie clean wh ite ,,ock'l are by Adler. Hla girl ie by hla side, every bit •• c lean w ta
•~ck·•• he la. Naturally they don't al wa y• wear white aocka, they juat act like they do,
People who really 1,wing are wear ing the Adler SC shrink eontrollad wool aock . • 1.00.

ADLE1'.~

,~r AO
LEIIcoMPMY.c1NCINNm14.01110

ADLER'S -lnglng

SC'a avaltable at

�SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

"

Corps Delegate
Seeks Recruits
By SHARON

For Admission

CLARKE

Robert r.hnR~ a progrnm otrlcer
n lbe Pea ('A Corps. lectured nn1
5bowed a 01,u l)ll the • Corpe TUeA-

""' ' aflernMn.
!\h', Chaoo utd that whe!I tlltl
Peace Corps w11~ lll'l!t conceived
ht, early problems were wbetber
nny Americans would volunteer for
su«l1 R 11rr&gt;l{r11m,and wbotber tor.
e1gn counu1e11 would welcome tbe
.
5ld\lM of th!\ TOl11ntee111

Today 'there are 4,000 Peace
Corps workers
In 36 under.
developed countrlea and every
country has requested more .
"!ext year there will openlnga
for 10,000 volunteer•
In 50

countries.
Only 25% (If thO!'P whn Jlpply tor
he POO(le Oor1,u aolu11lly go over ­
Every AC­
•ea&amp;, SBld Mr. Cbue.
reptccl VQlunLeor, however . go11s
t)lrough a two.month training peri.
od hef&lt;&gt;re heglnnlng hie two.yeo.r
aRolgnll\&amp;111in tbc Held, The nver.
ag" r1re Is 26 ,but there nr e many
oldor people eervlng. Pe()vle skllled
in n,trlculture, tenchln~ and health
are m()8l needed, hut there have
heen roqueats for 270 akllls. The
Peace Corp~ requires sound health,
emollonal eta.blllty, inlli 11llve and
-wmlngneee to work .

Tho three objective&amp; of tha
Peace Corpa, u outlined by Mr.
Chase, are to ftll the gap be.
tween t he h I g h I y proficient,
prod uct ive people of a coun try
an d t)le underprivileged with
llttle or no aklllt, to provide
volunteera and hope that tho
counlrlea served by tho Peace
Corp, will learn more about
th e United Statea through ex.
po111ro to dedicated Americana ,
and t o give Americana a better
Image of world problems.
II le nlll-0 bopcd that t11e volun.
1P8rR will Loarn from the people
1h,1y Aerve, beo4uae two-tbtrds
of
11a, world's population lives in the
,,m,ntrlos that Peace Corps work.
er11 Mier .

By JUDY

BUTTON

wnter, group guidance COl!lsultant
,;t th~ B'nai B'rith-Jewis
1h Fam­
Wealey
L)onald Hemstreet, a junior in ily Service, will moderate the dis­
the School of Business Admiois­ cussion. The guest panelist will be
h•ation was elect4!d president of active in the field of socii1l work.
the Now York State Methodist
Nowman Clllb
lJlub is
Student
Movement at the fall I This week Newman
conference. last w~ek--end. Also, sponsoring
a memberahii,
drive.
Clark Squ1ree, president &lt;?fWee· Inquiries may be made at the CRO
ley, has been elccted presutent of office in room 217 Norton, Tues­
p .m. ,;r Wed­
the Council of Religious Organ- day, 10:00 a.m.-1
izations aod will represent
the nesday, 11:00 a.m.-1 :00 p.m.
religious clubs in the Student
The RC'V, Father
James
E.
Senate.
Streng will bold ble regular
theHillel
ology discussions
at 9 :(IO a.m.
Hillel will sponsor a Snbbath and 10 :00 a.m., every •r uesday
Service this evening at '7 :45 p.m. and Thursday, Norton 3.10.
ot Hillel House. Or Justin Ho!mao
Afler
the daily 12 :OD noon
will speak on "Ct·iteria for Moral
Conduct.'' An Oneg Shabbat will Ma~~ at Newman Hall, prayers
will be said for the Poor Souls
folio,.,.
during the month of November.
U B students nre invited to a
Canterbury
"Lox and Bagel" brunch at State,
"Christ ond tho Campu3 1' 1 is the
Sunday at 10 :00 a.m. in the Col­
to be
lege Union. A
cullural program th1&gt;me of the conference
held this week·end at the Bishop
will be featured.
Scaife Cortference Center. It is
Hill el will hold a dclicatessaeD still possible w register by con­
6UPI&gt;Ot Sunday at 5:30 p.m. Tbe tacting
the Rev. R. Slhermnn
Rov. Joseph Cantillon, Cunisius Beattie.
College, will sp~11k on "The Cath­
Students are invited to i,ttcnd a
olic View of the Good ~iety."
This will be the third 11,nd final meeting of Cunte1·bury a1t State
pre aontation in a series on "ReUg• Sunday to discuss "Sex, Faith,
11nd Oenu ioe Freedom,''
nL 7:00
ion and the Social Order."
p.m. in activity room B, Student
Tho next meeting in the LiYe Union.
and Learn ctiacuasion seriM is
Inter. Varsity
Tucsdo.y at 8 :30 p.m. and will be
Dr. Adrian
Kanaar,
on the
devoted to the subject, "Building
a Happy Marriage." The meeting staff of Meyer Memorial Hospital,
at 7 ;30
on Tuesday, Nov. 2'T will deal will speak this eveni~
Hi:s tople
with "The Results of the 1962 p.m, in 2G4 Norton,
Elections." Mrs. Norman Fertig will be "h Christianity Cr ,edible?"
co-ordinates the series.
The CRO met this week and de­
"Social Work as a Career" will cided that room 217 Norton would
be the subject for diacus$iou at be the regular
meeting
pl nee.
the next meeting of the College The room will also be used for
and the Professions film series, dlsemtn11tlng lnrorcn&amp;tloo on the
Thu111day, Nov. 29, at 8:00 p.m. various groups at UB. The next
The film "Summer of Decision" meeting of tho coulloil will be
will be shown. Mr. Israel Gold- Nov. 28 at 4:00 p.m. in room 217,

:00

Any etudent
Interested In the
reuce Corps abould co1,t.aot George
Roll'roun, room 205, Norton .

Comfort, silence and
luxury to challenge any

TYPING

car from anywh ere

Term Paµ•n , Th(,5fs, Letters
lo• Prlc••
MIU. SOLOWAY
11 ~ . lllwood
Tf 6,0319
tColl o fto, 6:00 PMI

by

Nov. 30

All stu dent,s planning to enroll inatione 86 well as an lodlv1duol
lo the Prote11slon11.IUnit In Educa.. totervlew. The etud•mt should al­
lion, (Education 321-322, 421-422), low thr"
b,ouM1 (or the e:romlnn­
leadlng to certltjcatlon tor teach. tlon period.
Ing must be cl8-J'INI through the
C. Graduate
Students
seeking
tollowing proceclorea:
admlsalons tor the Graduate Uni t
A. Make appli cation !or ,aclmle- In Education, (El&lt;lucatlon 621.622) ,
slon in Room 202, Foster Hall by iuust complete steps A and B oul.
No,·. 30. Only st11denla whose cum• lined above.
No RJ)plicallon will be aon sldered
ulntlve average lit .90 or above at
th" time of application
will he unless all or tbese steps ere com­
eligible to apply (1.00 !or tho•e pleted.
•~))plying tor Ju_nJor and Senior
Df-riRions concerning apJ)Jlcotlon s
Units Jointly) . It should be noted wlll be made prior to advisement
tbat this grade point average in r1&gt;r the ftfth se mester nnd will be
no way serves to imply tbe min· available In the University Colleg e
linum tor acceptance , Rather, It Is tor sophomores. All others wlll re.
Htoted lo tac1!1tate processing or eel ve notice or action taken on
anplknllons.
their nppllcatlou by letter. Ques
B. Complete a battory or te111s Uons concerning
nppllcatlon
for
Saturday,
Dec. 1, starting
at the teats may be directed to the
9 a. tn. in Room 5 Acheson Hall. appropriate Univer11ity College ad.
At that time, nppolntments wlll be visor or the office of teacher eil11.
made tor health and speech ox11m. cation, 22 Foster Hnll.

Freshman Dance Tomorrow
Allenhurst
Aipartments
a nd
Goodyear
Hall will sponsor
a
dnuce
for freshman
residents
So.turday night at 8: 30 p. rn. In
Goodyear cafeteria.
Music will be provided by the
Dick Grando Quartet, which re­
cently pertortned lo the &lt;&gt;IfBroacJ.

way l)l11y, "Tbe Connection." Loe-O
J
favorites, The N()bc!&amp;,will also bu
featured along with Jimmy Hor ­
ton, vocalist.
will be provided ,
Refreshments
Every resi&lt;leot freshman is urged
to attend, atag or drag. There will
be no admission charge.

Letterpress and Offset

BUFFALO
STANDARD
PRINTING
CORP.
133S E. DELAVAN AVE . -T

X 3-0913

Service • Quality - Price

Printers of The Spectmm since 1937

There's a lot underneath the beauty of the '63
ChevTolet. Its roomy, comfortable Body by
Fish1!r screens out noise and shock. There's
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�Friday, Novemb er 16, 1962

SPECTRUM

House Committee

PAGENINE

Plans Clean - Up Drive Chennault Drill Society

Will Escort
I. F. C. Queen Candidates · Tomorrow

Slogan
- Contest
..
To Close Nov . 21
The house committee

of Norton
to
insure f)roper use of the Union 11nd
11s facilities in the future.
Is hl\vlng e. clean.up campalgn

To pref)sre for the cn1npe.lgn, the
,ommlttee le BI&gt;Onsorl11go. slogan
contest entitle d "The Norton Nu!.
sunce." The contest has begun
nnd will continue
until Nov. 21.
A J)r!Jle of $5 will be awarded to
!he 1111thorsof the ten , best slogans.
Slogans shoul d be written around
e.nd must be turned In
al the candy counter no later the.n
:1:00 p.m., Nov. 21. All entries must
Include the name, address and tele.
11h
one number of I.he author. All
slogans wlU be j udged on original­
ity and on whether It pertains to
lhe overe.11 theme and purpoee of
1he campaign. This contest Is open
lo all students and organizations.

Chennau lt Drill Society wlll provlde e.n honor guard of eight cadets to accompan y the IFC queen
can didates as they circle the track
In convertibles just prior to the
kickoff.

JlOTC now has a bulletin board
ln Norton. It la on the third floor
near the vending machine corner.
Operational orders, transfers, and
other nnnouncemcnte will be J)OBled
on this board.

• • •

(Continued from Pnge Four)

the pursuit of these objectives, one must look to other re­
sources available such as independent stu dy, larger classes,
increased use of television and teaching machines, the em­
ployment of additional pat•t time faculty and . more efficient
scheduling, to mention only a few.
At the University of Buff41lo, we believe it i's im­
portont to improve the calendar in terms of its conven­
ience and effi ciency. We are convinced, howeve r, that
modest reform is the oppropriote change at this time.
The pion we have adopted is the result of some two
yeors o f delibe rotion by the University Calendar Com­
mittee and hos won the approval of the University
Deans' Council for use in 1962-63 and 1963~64. Fac­
ulty a nd stude nt opinion were carefully sought , as was
advice and counsel of non-professio nal personnel.

N ORTO N CLOSES

Empty mllk cartons,
and offices.

Cadets are reminded to form on
the football lleld at 1.t: 40 and to
wee.r overcoats and glO'Yee. Cadets•
dates will be allowed to enter the
stands and alt In the tront rows
prior to the gnme. In c&amp;Be rain,
snows, or exceaelvety cold weather
forces cn n ce llatlon of Operation
Turnout, cadets wlll be Informed
over local radio stations.

Spectrum Asks

!he theme

Norton Hall will be closed
from 11 p.m. Wednes day, Nov . .21
until 7:30 a.m. Monday, Nov. 26.

Tomorrow the "boys ln blue,"
otherwise known ~ ROTC cadeta,
wlll be on display at the UB.Oolge.te game.
Operation Turnout Is the annual
game that the corps attends to
lend their support to the football
Bulls. The cadets and their dates
will occupy two sections of the
student stands.

Many of the lou n ges are cluttered with refuse
trate d he re. Books are placed on the cigarette
ashes are thrown on the floor.

and paper cups cover the . window

as la lllu11.
trays whfl ,e

Basically, the present calenda r continue s the semester
pattern. 1t is the intent to begin ear lier in the fa ll than
usual (Sept. 7 in 1962) that is, on the Wednesday or
Thursday immediately afte r Labor Day. The conventional
practice of beginning in mid or late September may repre- .
sent inefficient use of the month, Labor Day marks the
end of summer as a vacation period since faculty children
return to the public schools and most summer jobs for col­
lege student s have ended.
Ther e will be a four dny Thanksg iving recess as usual
and on this basis it is st ill possible to get approximately
15 weeks of instruction completed before the Christmas
recess. The University will take nbout a ten day recess
at Christmas time and return about Ja nuary 3 for eight
days of final examinations. A five day vacation is Rched­
uled between semesters.
The second semester instruction will begin about mid­
January. A one week sp1·ing reces s halfway through the
semester regardless of the date of Easter is called for and
again the approximately 15 weeks of instruction are ·com­
pleted by the end of the first week in May. Examinations
of eight days duration follow and the semester is over by the
end of the thi1·d week in May. Thus the plan represents
the usual semester program shifted to start and end about
two or three weeks earlier. Because there may be validity
in the idea of expanding operat ion during the summe r
months, this shift will make it possible to provide greater
opport unity for education during the summer. This growth
can be gradual and evolutionary.

ledges on many floors , both in loungeu

Beginning in the Summer Session of 1962, the
summer session offerings were expanded. There weff'
two six week sessions; the first beginning early in June
ontl running unti l mid-July, the second from mid.July to
the end of August. These two sessions were de1ignated
primorily for undergraduate students who wished to
accelerote. Students were able to take 12 to 14 sem­
ester houn of credit in 12 weeks thus earni11g olmc,st
the equivalent of o full semester schedule.

This semester pattern may have distinct advantages.
In the first pla ce, it is one which faculty ancl !ltuclents are
familiar with and which they underRtand . Also, by adopting
this approach it will be possible, if necessary, to make the
shift to a ,more radical plan or reorganization more ea~ily
tha n would be the case of one giant step.
On the other hand, if the mode11t re form d&lt;&gt;eM110t
work, th e instituti on can move buck to the original two
semester scheri1e with little difficulty. It also appears thnt
it is eclucntinnally and sl'ient itirnlly ;;uund to elimirmt e the
1
''lame dutk" sessit•ll of one ,me! m1t•-half tu thrt't' 1web of
instrurtior1 \\'liich u~uallv fnllm\·i•d after the ('hri~tlllal! r♦&gt;1ce:-.~. It is not po;;siltl;, to f&gt;\l•d1, t wh,1t studt'lll
11•&lt;1,,r
facu lty reaction will lie to an t•x:1111111.1tw11
,ll'hedult• lor tlw
first semester whirh liegill"I lmmt'dialt'l,1' at'ter a vanttion
Iperi od. · Time \\'ill te ll.

I

This lookT more
era are discarded

IIKe the aftermath
of a volcano fnstead of one of • the
with ~o regard for the rulea and regulationa.

Unlon lounges .

Pap.

�SPECTRUM

PAGETEN

Friday, November 16, 1962

Buffalo- Colgate Clash Climaxes Season

BullsSeiek1stVictory
of Centur
OverRaiders;
GoalIs 6-3Record
By JIM BAKER

The seventh meellng
or UB'H
Bulls nod the Colgate Reil Raiders
provides the pr e.galW3 selUng or
tile year. The game promlsee t.o be
excltlng in ltaelr, but the atmos.
phere around the clasb is Just as
c,olorrnl.

Ravens
Capture
Campus
GridTitle
With26-6Bombing
of APO
Team
The T!aYens turned back APO
Wed11esday to capture the Intra­
mural Touch Football
League
Cll!npus championahip.
The fina l
11corc read 26 - 6.

APO aqueeked by TKE 13-12
Monday aft.erTl()On to capture the
top -~110tln the !rnlernlty dlvlelon.
Dick Oalus
scored
boih
APO
t.ouchdowns on pass recopllons,
1md APO mnde 1,00d on one ot
two e xtra i,otnt attempts t.o clnph
the cont.est. TKE
scored first,
when Bob Keller
stole n Paul
Kohoo pass 11way !-rom an APO
defender In lhe end zoue, and last
on &gt;l 24 yud rnn by Kehoe. Both

TKJil extra point attempt were
turned bnck by fine APO detenelve
plays.
Thi; Ravens copped the cham,.
plonship or the Independent leagu e
by crushing the Redskins 42-0.

Lee Woltman,

This year's tea111 leajlere include
As fltr as tho Bulls are con .
Jflll Deegan, a bal!back, who leads corned., I.hey ore a.t peak form
the team In rushing ynrdage with pbysically. All players (with the
n R0l total in 86 oarrles. Tbe lead­ exception of eo11bombre fullbncW.
Ing passer ls sophomore Onry 1311.Carl Graiadel)
who have bee"
rudin, who has com plet ed 28 or on th~ 1 long Injured
list ot
0fi tosses ror 360 ynrde. Actually, lnte nre noi,· 1·endy and eager for
though, the team Is tar and nw11y nctiou . Also, the Hulls will be Jay.
tbe most effective when Cnnv'Dan Ing on the line a rnntaslic slatl•tlc.
Keating ls calling the slgiµrla. How­ accrued In the last two games. Th e
ever, he bas seen limited nctlon lenm has allowed only 33 yard~
this year due to recurring injuries. rushing In the last eix quarters or
He bas thrown for 226 yards on pln,v. Jn 1he last half or the .Burik.
14 &lt;:omplellons In 32 attempts.
11eil gamo the mue ond While al.
'!'he top Colgate l'eceiver le vet ­ lowed on~ naked ynrd . Oettysburi:
eran hnlfbnck Jim FIJllman, who i:alnp.d only 12 yards rushing In
hns snnred 11 pass~ tor 110 yards . lost week'R ball and 20 hi lb ~
RlgM behlud Hellman Is Chris Lo­ so~ond bn If,
mas, an end, who hne gathered in
011 paper the Bulls are defl.
10 heaves tor 137 yards. The to11
nitely the favorites, but this
Raider scorer is QB Barudln. wbo
means llttle, If anything, when
has tallied 4 touchdowns and made
rivals auch as these two teams
l two-i,oint conversion for n total
UB
get togeth er. However,
or 26 points.
smothered Bucknell two week a
Anoth er feature to tomor­
ago, and Bucknell proceeded to
row's e11counter la the return
dump the Raiders last week ,
to Buffalo of Colgate Coach
32-14, Colgate chose to save
Hal Lahar. Besides being a
QB Keating for the UB game ,
former co-worker with Buffalo
as he was still not fully re.
Coach Dick Offenhamer at Col­
covered from another injury .
gate, ~ahar was alao the play .
His absence undoubte d ly made
Ing captain of the AAC Buffalo
a large difference Ii, the out .
BIiis from 1946-1949 and a
come.
member of the world cham•
pion Chicago Bears. Th ia year
Ot11er lnterestiug
results show

aophomoire Col­

gate back, Is ourrentl[y 3rd
among Raider . rushers,
He
has gained 195 yard• In 37
carries.
Woltman alsc, kick ,
e d Colgato'a first field goal
In 20 years, a 27.,yarder
'
against Cornell.

Remember,
basketball
entries
are
due
no later
than
to­
day.
AJI league
play
begin
First, tomorrow's
gumo repre.
Monday, Nov , ;!6 rollowtng Thank11- sents the season 1lnale for botll
givtng vacation .
teams. From the Butl'alo el.andwlnl
this menne that 14 UB seniors WIil
The swimming meet will be held be playing their Inst gam •e tor old
Mondny night, Nov. 19 at 6: 00 SUNYAB. It also means thnt a win
J&gt;. m. Hnndbnil 1J1ay baa begun. tomorrow would give the Bulls a
All pnrllolpanls
are aakod to glossy 6-~ season mark, e1omelhlng
check with the rntram11ral Otl'fce that these ph1yere will 1001; remem•
For lh e suhedul e or their mntobea. ber wheu compnrlng the 1982 cam.
11nlgn to the two previous ones,
A second featu re to th,e game
itself la the stal"lllng fact that
U B has not beaten 01e Red
Quarterback
Dan Keating spearheads the Red Raiders' at.­
Raiders in 64 long years. The
tack, but has missed much of the season due to recurring in•
last time the Bulla e,merged
Juries.
The Colgate cap tain has completed 14 of 32 passes
victorious was way b,ack In
for 226 yards ar,d 2 touchdowns.
1898, when UB trounced
the
The highlight of the volleyball
tha t Rutgers, a team thnl Delawar r
Lahar has retur11ed to Colgate
men from Hamilton , 23-0. Since
lournamont
occurred when our
from U. of Houston, where his
LOnqnered, defeating Colgate; and
that clash the Raider11 have
cnmpus tied with Brockport for
teams complied
a mar~ of
UB dereated Delaware, as we ull
ta~en 5 straight decisions, the
fir st place. This goes to prove
know. Furthermore,
Holy Oros~
24-23-2 from 1967.1961.
laat belog b~ a 28-20 a,core in
thnt our women, not only our
bomb ed t.he Raiders, 22-0, whll•
the 1960 encounter at War Me­
men, are helping to raise the ath­
Whal lo look for in CQlgBte's .only heating UB by a 16-6 mar gin
morial Stadium.
letic standards of our campus by
otl'ense? Wntch for the balanced. In nu extremely close contest.
Thus
on
e
can
see
that
the
Bull
s
competing against other college s-­
lin e slot -T with variations to cap1.
Are there any more colortu l Jea­
hnv e plenty or ~ause eor extra
and winning.
tnllz e on Keating'&amp; roll-out wizardry turAa to lomorrmv's game? Oh y~•­
s th ey go after
1•1t'or1 tomorrow 11
nnd the pas sing threols or Darudln tom orr ow is 01,e ratlon Turno ut
n ti-3 ~enson murk and their first
(who personally
ruined Cornell) Thls m e1rns thnl 1500 bus driv er~
tr!umvh this century over tbe Red end Wayne Demlkolf. Coach Lahar
(oops ltOT C cadets ) wlll ewsr tn
Ralder a.
ls a well-known conservative on Into th e •to uds . ,.hererore, all UW
LAST WEEK
How does Colgate shape up tbls offensive matters,
although he'll s tudent "clvilia11e" h.ad better ~~t
year? Entering tomorro"l''S clasb tum bis passers loose I! the slt11- lb ere roo s ldern bly before tbe l : 30
Buffalo H, Gettysburg O
t hPy possess a 3-4-1 ae1u10n log, 11Uou warrants. He likes to piny startin g- time. Th e tlrst ~8 row s or
Buckne Ii 32, Colgate H
nod are seeking to finish with an bis cards close to the vest, vreter. se ction 14 (excepting lb e s eat s for
Boston U, 13, Conoe cUcut 0
e von elate . The Maroon bas de­ ring to put the opposing team In th e band) wlll be us ed for stud eol
Holy Croas 20, VMl 14
feated two Ivy Loogue powers In a hole through defensive maneuver ­ aealin g.
.\la asacllus ette s 19, Vlll;anova 1~
Comell and Princeton wl!llle tying lug. This Include. dereoslve special­
A 6·3 r ecord ? UB's first wln O\'e&gt;
Delaware 23, Rut ge rs 6
'lnother, Yl\le. Colgate has also shut ists who will get 1nlo tile game Colgat e in 64 years? Those or•
Toledo 13, Temple 0
out Lehigh, while bowing to Brown, under the wild-card substitution t he qu estion s, Tomorrow yfelds 1h•
nowliu g Gre en 7, Ohio u. G
Holy Cross, Rutgers and Bucknell. rule .
answer s.
THIS WEEK
Colgate Strong In Bac ,kfteld
Colgate (3.4-1) a,t Dull'alo (5·3)
On n 1&gt;osiUonal b&amp;!!IS,ll3 ot lnet
Boaton U, (2-6) at Boston College eeason'e lettermen are 111.lll11peer­
Sportwriter s and thos e in­
Penn State at Holy Cro11 (~·2)
headlng lbe Colgate eleven, par­
terested in sports layout work
VIiianova (6-2) al Rutgers
tlcul11l'IY strengthening
the back­
are needed! Sign up now at the
Bucknell (G..!) at Delaware (6·2) field and tackle slots. Th•e R41dera
Spectrum Office ( Room 836),
Gettyeburg (2-6) at Temple (3-li) avpear thin at fullback, c,enter and
Ohio U, (7-l)at Western Michigan guard, however.

Five CollegesHold SportsDay;
WRA Places First in Tollrney
The Women's Recreation A8so­
rlation 011 campus eent nin&lt;&gt; of
it~ top playel'S to B~ockport last
Saturday. The girls played a tot.Ill
of 7 volleyball tournament
games
and tied (or firt1t pince with Brock­
port. Other schools, represented at
tho l\portsday w c re: Fredonia
State, lfoffalo State, and Geneseo
State Teacher's College.
Along with the volleyball play­
ers, two delegates and an advi ser
were sent t.o represent the Uni­
versity of Buffalo in n conJerence
between the five colleges. Here it
wad dt-cidcd that each school would
host the other five In a Hporte day
du ring the course or the y011r.
F1'1!Clonia chose a ski -toboggan
da } at their winter lodge. Geneseo
st•lected a Folk and Square Dance
day . BoU aJo State chOlle a basket ­
ball playday and the University
of B u t f a Io selected II bowling
toumamont early in March. The
r&lt;'presentative., at the conference
~greed to meet every year to plan
tnt.!r • collegiate competition for
W()men on campue ,

CRIB
SCOREBOARD

LEONARDO'S /&lt;edlaw~anf
Nat11ml Shoulder
MP11 :~ Appnrc&gt;I
Sooclot D-u11t .

to

St1uh1nh

5424 MAIN ST.
Williomnille
MOM; TIIUllS, fRI. ttll 9 PM

GROTTO IN THE REAR
Visit our newly remodeled
Famous American
From A Tasty Sandwich

•
UNIVERSITY PILAZA
dining rooms to enjoy our
and Italian Foods
to ' A Full Course Meal

TAKE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KJNDS
SANDWICHES AND HOT PLATES

TODAY

SPECIALTIES• RAVIOLI - SPAGHETTI- PIZ:z.A
~

-

Toke Out Orders-

-~-

..............
Dial TF 6-93S3

UBFROSH
vs.
SYRACUSE
FROSH

-------

1:30
ROTARY FIELD

'PIZZA
CORIED
BEEF
PASTRAM
These are but a few of
ot the specialties at the

Universi
Delicates

3588 Main St.

TF 1-1 ◄56

�Friday, NoYember 16, 1962

SPECTRUM!

PAGl Ei.lVIN

UB RESERVES
STAR

UB-oils: Deliver
44-0 Address
AsBollens'
AttackDrawsBlanks

-UB'e Alex Haase preps for rapi dly .approoohlng

awlm campaign

By ROCKY VERSACE
I.empt for tbe two.point conversion . ,-------------In tl ll)llar fuhion Jerry Serl.
Due to ll mis print lo last
The UB roolball Bulls bav1, done
ve r plucked a Bullet paH out
week's lsssue, It wns erroneous!l. Theh· 44.0 ebelllng of tb ,e Oel­
of the air at the Gettysburg 29
ly reJX)rted thut tbe 189♦ Bulle
tysburg Bullets this pnat Snlurday
and re turned It to the 11, After
dere:ttud Hobo.rt, 12-6.
Actu.
set the senson won ,lost rec1&gt;rd 11t
a first down on the one, he
·any, Hobart won tho 1;an1e by
11,·e nnd three, which, wlt 'b. one
ll111t •ame •eort\ ttonllng UJ3
blasted over for the acore, Ryan
gnme left , Insures the team of a
then ran for two points.
tbelr lone loss or tbe eel\BOn,
wtnnlnl{ senson In their ttrst om.
As wnR ty 11tc1,1 throughout thrUB's r~co,·d wns O.l- 1 In JR84,
l'l:il :VPor "" n mn tor eoJJege team .
(1H's six toucbllowns ,vere ac. """•on , Burt:il&lt;&gt;mr,uu~rd to gel a
their lunu1rnrul )ICll.r ot 1·0l1(1,·110nl ed ro1· by thre1• rPgulurs­
t01whdown In tlll • ln•l mtnut o. A~ 1,'111tefootboll.
John Stoen, .Toho Clmba an,d Don d!d bis couuterparts,
Ryon ijet 11p
C:llbert . nloni with three re se rv~s ,1 nc,1rc hy interc~ptlng. A 2!1 ynrcl
I " unknown," ncr orcllng to c:ertaln rever se by r ex Pn ·e bark John
01T.cnm1rn~ factions) - Tom Oat . lful&lt;•hko 11lnred the J)igskln on tl1P
ml'.'yer. Jim Ryan and Jerry Scriver . Bullet 2R, A nrun llUS H to e nd
Chu ck Winz er for 15, thr~o goo/I
First blood wu drawn by Don
i:nins , aud a four yard Ryan rollout
Gilbert and the aecond unit
I lhl\l\XCd th !&gt; •rnrlng
tor the itn.y.
after a poor Bullet gave UB
Au lotere•llng sldelli;ht Js thn.t
ponesalon on the G/:ttysburo 36.
IJIJ'3 next ll[lllOllE'nl. Colgnte, Wits
Bob Edward whipped end twice
9 1llOthMt•d ~2-14 by Tluckn ell, tl,p
for 9alne of 14 and 17 ynrda,
~1une t enm Butrnl&lt;&gt; bent two weekg
after which Gilbert went for
:,go 3R.O. Thi s &amp;hould mak" UB a
the flrst six of many Buffalo
so lid tn.vo,•ll e to win nnd extend
points.
it$ setwun recor,t to an e,ccellcnt
LIit!' In the ~eMnd Qllnrter Bur.
lnlo uaught fire for another score , won t1 1111dlost 3.
l'.ll'~ '!'om Outmeyer was nnll'led
cllmaxiug a 63 ynrd drive of niM
t•lays . Gerry Rotkewlcz prov ,ert tllf! Al"AI" So1,homori- ot the Week tor
firebug ne hls 26 y11rd jaumt put hi~ 011ts l11ndl11i; 11lny again~, t1et.
Ontmoyer
the ball on tbe Bullet 10. A (ltfl)t&gt;rt t )'~huri: lruit Snlurdny.
to F,dward µRs&amp; of nine yards and Juul "' '••ti vc.a·ylittle i;nme 11~11011
11
•1• th,• Gettysburg
eorounter.
11
11 Storu sueok from the one dlfd tbP bt•r&lt;11
trick,
Stofn's
lwo point 1/oltout hut 1,c 11rovrd to ho one o! nur­
r1110·
~ llrighlt•~t lli;hts Snturdny .
111ndeIt 16-0 for un.
He ,scoped II touchdown cm o 12.
The ne:l(t Sl!Ore wa s not 1,utll 111,,
Mo.yl&gt;ethe late, late ~ow
~•u,·d 1'1111, lul1•1·1·H11tedn pneR. 11n1l
m.lddle ot the third period --u ?tl
WIil revive We .tyle, JU•.:
wns II ll's l&lt;&gt;n
dln,t ru~ller with n
ynrd drive highllghted
bt Jon,I\
"Recent ly a friend ar,d l el\W'
1111.tal
or 69 yordx II, 6 carries.
passes to Dave Nk 1hols and lRotke.
' Mold JameJI Ca,gney mo,;lr.
In "ddlll1 ►11 to Ontm1,yer'ij selec,
wlcz. nnd n J&lt;&gt;bn Clmba emmsh off 1l11r.rtir Soph o! th e Week honors,
on TV, He wore a t our 11ut­
tackle tor u,e sl.J".
t on coat and wo u,oughL tt
h•• ll ll~ Ille uuu~·rlihl Nld Larry
Upon entl'y Into the gnme, sopb . l1P1gh•y w,,r... 11nmh111t
l ooked pretty goocl.
you
ed for the
omore hnltbocl! Tom Ont mey1&gt;r (tb, , 1'll'1\I' w••ekly All .-:11at team .
th ink this style. wiJl cvor
gam,e'g leading rush er with 69 ynrds
com e b1&lt;ek?'! ·
At~o. for th e Drat lime In Buffulo
ynrda In tlve carries) 1,rom ptly grht1, ·u11 hi story , lTB Wllij listed
Jt hB, Crout t1111
0 fo Uotc,
Marted the scoring machine rolling :111Hiu)'1he l•l~sl's leaders !or the
but nov cr ma,l r. much oC "
again by laterceptlng o po11son the Lumh er t Trophy, emblematic
or
acnt , Tho hJgh
LI
UB 37, H e then bit ror galna &lt;&gt;f JlJnstern mnjor oollege footbntl su.
2.'i, 17 ond 12 yutds, the lnttM BC­ 11rPmacy. Foll owing the tou to,,.
spaced
thr \Hl ~
button lv y or.,
countlng tor th e score. Oat .mcy~r 1uted l~ums. Hutto.lo was IIsle d first
tuall y ha ~ a ,Im •
was finally atoJ,ped short In bis at,.. ornoni::-the "others recP.lvlug votes."
llflf (lffrt•I, hut
.,
11t1~ mot" ,:rn•·•··
(UI Utt••"from t lw ,,,..,
---­
tu1w1 to th .. ,..,,., lmttnm.

UBSwimming
Coach
Looks
Ahead
ToFineSeason;
KeyMermen
Return
By RON CUMl'/l tNCS
~'.vimming iH COM\'rncd belong s to
With 15' ret urning var~lty letter. Jnn Crosby "Jim potentially ~nn
uwu . Conell William Sanford
is hl• the best distance swim~e r in
, ;,ry hopeful ot hnvlng II winning the countTy.'' he said.
Sanford
•l 1os 11n again
lbla yeur. This wlll also praised diver Jerry Chapman
he CoMh Sanford's
16th year as and said. "Jeny
is doing nicely
the mermen'a mentor here. Tbe and should givl' us man) • points
seas on gels under way Dec. 6 with tl)e s1'aso11
·s meet.s.' 1
Butl'alo State supplying the oppo.
The membere of the varsity
~111o
n.
swim team are aa follows: RISftufor d. who ha s recelved hlP
chArd Beckerman, Jerry Chap.
Mnst er's degree from !TB, la secre.
m~n. Royce Collister, Jamu
tary of the NCAA Olvlng Rules
Crosby, J im Deck er , Lou is De.
sulH\()tnmlUee. He hns made out·
vlncentla, Jerry Doherty, Jon
~toudlng contributions
to his field.
Edelman, Brian Fry , Tom Glea •HOil ns developing
a computer
son, Al Haase, Dav id Hearn ,
wblch mnkes t1cortng of diving 11011.
Vincent Heckel , Denni ■ Kelao,
tes ts simpler. Aside trom his conch•
Jolin Kuzina, MIiton Ma rks, Mling job, Sanfor d ls udvlsor to the
chael Nawr oc k i, Geor9e Pap .
Hull'alonlan.
pas , Ra lph Popp , Wilbur Smith,
Sanford waa uke d what he
John Stuart and David Wooater.
thou9 ht about offering achotar.
Any person who Is interested In
ships to member s of the swim
Joining the team, can contact Coach
team. He replied: "The trend
Sanford at 831-2931. San f&lt;&gt;rd etnla to bulld up a team with
t•hn•lzes, "We are nlwnye looking
sc holarah lps. In due time we
tor Pt'OPle to join the team and
will get all that la coming t o
heir, ua hrlng bome victories. for
ua. Now we wlfl tiave to see
08."
what we will get,"
This yenr the Butta.lo mermen
will swim against two new teams
Oswell'u Stale and Oenegeo State'
Tho rest &lt;&gt;f the schedule le th~
.,amc: us last. year when the team
record was 7.0.
Pos. Tea,n
Poln,a
As far aa ouiato.ndlng swtmmera
Al11ba1110t 8.0)
&lt;lu5
,,re conce rned. Cooch_ Sanford has
2 Southern Cnl. (7-0)
◄45
this to suy: "Vll!oent .Heckel, Jast
3 Ml~Rlssl r,pl 17.O)
876
i•eur'9 captain of the team, will
4 Wlaconeln (6.1 J
·us
,e rv e as u utility man concentrat.
5 •rexas (7.0.1)
301
Ing on distance swimming aud th e
6 1111s
so url (7.0.1)
2a~
hntter(ly stroke. Alex Haase. wh o
7 A rlc:u,sas (7 .J )
rnr.
holds the school r ecor d In lh l'
s ~llnnesolo (5.1-1)
152
l,r.,1tsl stroke, will be rellla •ning to
!! No11bwestern (6.1)
119
t1elp the t ea.m. Jlm Deck er wlll he
10 Louisiana State (G-1-1)
77
1 key back stroker
and Individual
medley a wlmmar. As far os the
lllhers receiv ing voteH. list ed al.
-p rinters go, Royce Collist er wi ll Plt!\hetJcally: A rlzona
Slate, A\J.
le11d the co ntin gent swimming thu hum, nn1•tmouth, Georgia Tech ,
·.o.yor d free.style.
,\'ebruNku,. OklRhoma. Oregon , Ore.
According lo Coach Snotord the g,)n State, Penn State. Purdue and
n,• awst potential
a s far
ns Washington.

i

CAMPUS

MALECALL

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The Unive!rsity Bookstore

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"I own a real neat 1111cdo
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A Nite of FUN, DANCING &amp; SINGING
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ENJOY THESE GERMAN AND AMERICAN DISHES IN OUR
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Pig• l&lt;nuckle &amp; Kro~i'".. .. . I '65
Broiled Conrer Cut Pork. b,'op.' t 65
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hjor tit• ORGAN WITH A BE.Ari '
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DYLAN THOMAS re~d; his own wr,r\.•,

JOHN GIELGUCIreads Slt,1~1•sprAlf'

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FllfOAY AND SATUllOA.YHITES

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KNOWN FACTS - The
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CLOTHES-IN NOTES Someone 11ugg'e11ted
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omn1etu l ed,l!lven 1
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T . lt. Don't try .to mal&lt;o
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�SPECTRUM

PAGETWELVI

Friday! November 16, 1962

Buffalo Harriers Finish Season
leyToUBHockey
IsNew
Are11 By Placing 7th in State .Tourney
By Jim Baker

SPORTSCIRCLE

UD's orose country tea~b closed
__. out the 1962 season by ftnlshlog
tied for sevenUl pos!Uoo ilG a fleld
Many UB st udents Jn recent years ha ve often posed of 14 teams at the New York State
the questio n : "Why' does!\'t UB have a hockey team?"
Collegiate Trac k and Field Aeeo­
Here we are, enro lled in a school that is situated in clatlon Championships In Ithaca
the middle of a hockey bed, right across the border of a las t Saturday. The Bulls scored
country that lists the ice sport as its national pastime. a. total ot 188 polnta , which tie d
Here we are , located in a city that draws between 5,000 them with Cortland.
and 10,000 fans nearly every tim e the AHL Bisons play Roberts Wes leyan or Rochester
at home. And here we are, in the same Empire State as won the title with a low to~ ot
other colleges which a re much srnaJJer than UB in every 61 polnta. They were pace~I by Jim
Webb and Mack Gree n, who ftn­
aspec t, but which boast some of the top hockey clubs in lshed
one -two In t he racu. Webb
the coun try. RPI and Clarkson are just two examples of ran lbe 4.3 miles in 27 'p1lnutes,
I.h is fact .
9 seconds.
Thu s, there is ('ertainly a solid basis for all th is won­ The llr•t UBlte across time finish
derment about t he absence of a UB hockey team.
line was Dick Sulll van, wl~o came
tn 29th. Chet Cooley was r•tgbt be..
Of course, the answe r to this query is really two•
hind him 111 30th poslt!cm, while
fold. Firat, the UB athletic department would reply,
Stu Katz was 35th. Thie was In
there ho, been no concerted interest expressed in
a field of 166 runners.
tho actual formation of on ice team . Secondly, where
The UB !rosb Hnlshed 4lli In the
would the team ploy jf it were formed?
oomrietl tloo.
The flr11tpar l of this argument is ah·eady uoil1gelim­ fri&gt;sbman
Earlier In the weel&lt; th e
inated.
Last week, under the guidance of Tower's head
B11111cemented a wlnni~1g sea­
reside nt, Mr . Balland, the formation of a university hockey son by downing RIT, 21-38.
tea m was announced. Membership iR still being sought to This triumph gave Buffa lo a
round out the club, but a firm nucleus is already there.
aeaaon log of 8.7. Whll e UB
runners will be participat ing
Last week's Spectrnm listed the names of 14 player s, and
In future AAV rneeta , thuy wlll
more have been added since that. time. It fa the refore ap­
parent that the interest is present in eager and abunda nt not b e en tered ae repre,sonta.
tlvea of UB , due to Pi&gt;&amp;elble
quantities.
Naturally, these pl.ayers realize that it will take a ioaa of eligibility for fut11re
meets. Th is cofldltlon
few years before UB can mold a team that would be able NCAA
11 directl y e•uaed by t he eur­
participate successfully on an intercolleg iate basis. But
rent hal$le between t h,e NC.
~y are more than willing to work and work hard.
AA and the AAU,

______________________

__

to·

With thia thought in mind, Mr. Bolland, who wlll
cooch tfle teom , is completing orrongements for this
club to ptay in one of Buffalo's highly-competftiYe
hockey leoguft . Thia is where the y will start, but tfle
gool i, deflnltely the eatobllthment of an intercoHeg­
iate team and 1c1'edule in a few years' time .

Yet the second part of the ath letic department's argu­
ment still remai ns - where will they play? For the pres­
ent, the team will play in Memorial Auditorium, Nichols'
rink, and over at Ft. Erie Arena with the rest of Buffalo's
amateur teams. J;lut wheu the time comes for the inter­
collegiate team to take the ice, where will they play then?
Thi s is the key remain ing obstac le.
It h aa long been this writer's opinion that UB of­
ficials should emerge from the academic fog that
has encompas!ied them in r ecent years and take a good, long
· look at Clark Memorial Bandbox. The relic that masqu er­
ades as a gymnasium is 110thing but a th r owback to the de­
press ion era , and its usefulness has long since evaporate d .
The time to replace this monstrosity is now! Here's
wt.ere our future hocke y Bulls as well as our bo1ket­
ball team Clan gain a home of which all UB fans would
be proud.

UB is now the only WNY institution of highe r learn ­
iug that does not possess or have plans for a decent field­
house; and yet Buffalo is fa r and away the largest WNY
school of all.
Thus, the realization of intercollegiate hockey at this
university rests solely on the university fatl1ers. Th e inter­
est in the ice sport, is now clearly evident, but the pla ce
to play it is still non-exist ent. With Memorial Aud itoriu m's
achedule virtually drained of attractive dates, the only
answ~r is a new UB fleldhouse that will put this university
on a par with other institutions ita size in the housing of
a growing indoor athletic program.

UNIVERSITY

BOOKSTORE
THE

UNIVERSITY

ev ent s.''
Uut returnin g to the UB runner •
speclflcally, they will be runnl nit

unutlllcbed In A.AU meets 1n th ~
n~ar future. In tact, they have al­
l'i'Ody pnrtl cfpnted In one su vh
PvenL Chet Cou'ey recently prov ,•11
In the St. 1''rnntf :; Sports C11v111
cade that
be bus coosftierulll r
pi owess a ~ a walker. In th&lt;' lo
Sophomore cross-co unt ry sta r
kilometer walk be finished 2nil
Stu Katz
iUIIOng a field. or 14 runners fru m
bet weeu th e two orga11batlons Canada and the Unite d Stato •.
thnt
cont rol amateur
athletes Two of these opponents
wer~
athletes Olympic walkers.
tAA 11) and colleglate
(NCAA). Seeing lho.t college nth.
Thus, i n tbe coming weeks AAL'
lei es are also amateur parUoipants, meets wlll be run and UH track.
they come und er tbe jurisdiction ste rs will be participating !11them
o! both governing bodies , This bas However, un til the argument be,
resulted In a battle !or power be• tween Ibo AAU nnd the NOAA Is
Lween ihe NOAA and the AAU.
eetOe d, th ey will DOI be reprOBOnl­
The N'OAA baa ruled thBt all lD&amp; UO .

Fourteen
BuJ~alo
SeniorsFinish UB Frosh Play
College
GridCareers
TomorrowSyracuse Today

5
Co-ca ptai ns Dick Hort ,!1-n
d Jim
Seniors In the baclrfleld Include:
The fro h wlll e nd lbe 1962 883 •
Wolfe head the contlngeut of H Bob Baker, tailback fr om Warsaw , eon today agai nst Syracuse 81
Rotary Fie ld . A victory woul d give
UB seniors who will be making and UB's leading rus her untfl he
tl1e Bulls a .500 season. but Syrn.
their last appearance for the Blue was hurt lo the Delaware ga.m.,;
and Wblte tomorrow against the Jim Bu rd, tu!Jba"k from North c:use bas dominate d tbe series
Tonawanda, a nd tho present rush. Gamt! llme 15 l · SO.
Colgate Red Raiders.

Hort. wbo halls from DnnvUle, ing leadt&gt;r; and J11ckV11lentic, fullPa .• has twice been recog :nlzed
back from Maryvnle, nnd last year•~
00
the EJCAC'a All.East team at cen. lend in g ru sher.
These 14 seniors 11urvlved three
ter . Wolfe, n gunrd from lIDndl coll, years or the toughest opposition
hns con tinually been a u:e stand. that un grid teams have ~ver taced.
out despite
frequ e nt Injuries These opponent1l Includ ed Al'lllY,
throughout his career th!lt would Vlllnnova, Ohio, Holy cross. Bos.
have dlscourngeil a le,11.splrlted ton u.. Delawa .re, VMI and tomor11crrormi&gt;r.
row'B rival, Colgate .
oth er linemen who 1111~~
• their
game tomorrow are : gua,rd John
A postal match win ove.r
Bucknell University hall given
Michno trom Buttaro, gu1,rd Paul
th e UB rifle team a 1. 1 record
Ong1!11rdl from Laekawan~aa, guard
for the tul'r~nt s~n~on. The
winning- acor,· of 1407-1338
John Daniels from Erle, Pn .. tackles
Kevin Brlnkwortb (Butralo) and Ed
repres~nted II triumph for the
Harris (Dunkirk), and ~nds Jim
team. It set 8 new tenm score
Bowden (North Tonnwaud :nl. Dick
record. The previous record was
Olckmn n (Clarence), Chuck Winzer
19a8 which was s~t nt West
(Oolrolt) and Bill O'NelU (Ken..
Point lust seaso n.
more).

to-------------.

"ON CAMPUS"
your convenience we ore now offe ring a ~w
service to you. You may place your order for the 1963
Bvffalonlan with vs during ovr res,vlar store hovn .
FQ,

-~ohhle~
Feminine Footwear
SHERIDANPLAZA

Tbe Ull Baby Bulli. won lbetr
Ol'st football game by defeating th e
lthacn Froeh lR-0 . The Ylctori •
gives then, a wora 1, lost 2, tied 1
reco rd.
Dick Vittorini placed the vlctor v
by scoring two touchdowns. George
Ada.ms plouged one yard fol' tho
other U.B soore. The first TD finul
set up by Gerry ua Fountain on tt
rumble recovery alter be blocl1~d
h
d ll
on Ithaca punt on t e 11-yar
n• .

pullover
the barn stormer
by himalaya ,

TWIST totheJULIAN
QUART
ET

!..
.
i

(NOT EXCLUDINGBALL AND CHAIN)

Eve1ry FRIDAY

j and SA.TURDAY

BOOKSTORE

UNIVUSITY PLAZA

Ooaoh Fiebea·. by the we.y, teel9 playen1 under lta Jurisdiction (ape.
t111cally, college atb le tos) are not
to yield in thls controveN!lal fight lo enter ~ U spo n sore d. meeU as
representatives
of an NCAA col.
lege or uolverstty , or risk loaa of
eliglhlllty 1r they do.
It la because of t'11• very
~ondltlon that Coach Flaho r
feela the AAU muat ultimately
yie ld ground In th&amp; dl apute.
He aaaerta: "The AAU haa to
back down . The NCAA haa all
t he coaches, fa clllt les , a nd the
otflcial1, The AAU rolloa on
everyone elee (un der NCA A
Jurisdiction)
to
run
the ir
Q)nt the AAU wUI event u ally have

I
i
i

Nite

!..
:

i
i

9:30 P.M.

j

*

I

AT

i

ITREPJISTIME !
•
491 G,RANT l cal rores I)
i
j
!

St}·lcd with wily restraint .
sp iced with subtle overto~•·
orcolor •.. comforta!Jle, cor ·
n•ct, 100% wool.

o·coHNELL

(Around the corner from State Teacher~)

~••••••••••.....,,*•
rtt•••~...,_.,.......,..,.,.,...*...,......•

LUCAS

CHELF
324&lt;1MAIN

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Aptheker's Case E»ecidedToday
aupport lnu tllo right of •tu•
other (eaden)lll), to aeatlme •UCb
dent• to ho;ir •PNkON of their
powers might In tb.c long run seri­
choice.
ously Jeopardize the very prlocl.
'!'be resolution al.Ates In part,
pies that conatltuh! the lnd\,1duu1
and colleetlve {feedoms we so r.eal­ that the faculty "fll!ly ■llppOri. th.II
rlghL of properly consututed stu­
ouAIYguard.
dent group• and t..cult,y to invite
"We have confidence that our
,tude ntll, with proper gulda•nce
and a .. 11tance, can ll1ten, quH ­
ACLU Comments
tlo n, and cope wit h the ~,ro­
pencntll o1 all politica l phll'c1ao.
The m&lt;&gt;sti•harltable tb\ug 1
phlea, aeparate the tr11th f~•on1
con say about the attem1&gt;t to
fallacy and tllrough knowle11ge
curmll free speech Is that It Is
ba1ed Ori Independent enqllllrY,
n fooll~h ~ ttempt to protect r~ee­
adhere to and more eff11et1vely
dom hy taking freedom away.
support the fundame ntal be­
To deprl\'e people of tbe right
lief, wt,lch are batlc to a
to speak- eap00lnlly on pollti.
stror19 Amorlca."
cal grounds - IM to enshri ne
ltohert M. Morgonthau BRldln a Ignorance. Wben lgnorfince Is
letter to the Public· Affairs Com­ btdll Into our ne.tlooal life, an
mittee of th e Unltarlan.-Unh•erllll­ Informed cltlcenry la destroyed,
list Church, "I am deeply con­ democracy dies, and, even tun II&gt;,
&lt;-erned over mounting ev1den,ee or lnte llcctunl and polltlcal deepo.
'flUIIUco
l Interference in Lhe a ffairs
11am takea It• place,
If ll is to tuUlll It.a fun ctiQn
ot the Sta.tE&gt;University."
''l believe," 'MT. Morgentbau
us nn eduaatl onp.l lnstltulloo
ndded. ·'that the m11~ler of ,vho devoted to the furt,beranee or
· shall lie 11ermltted to epenll at the
k,~owledge,
State UnlverslL-y
various units oC the State 1Jo1lver­ must defend its right to bear
~fr. Aptbeker. IIL ao doing, tbe
sl ty or New York should be left
DR. HERBERT APTHEKER
P/101,,C1111rl1'RI/
of Co1wi1W
]j)o:pr68s In the hands of t.he tTnJver:l!lly's
University wlll Join the many
olhera whlch haye wou dlsllnc­
BonNI of Trustee s."
"We shall contin ue to defend tbe
Unn over the OPII091tlonof ren.r­
When news of the poatpone­
lawftll tree dom or Inquiry tliat an
Cul people who lack faith In tlle
ncademle community must posseBB merit of Or. Aptheker'• apeuch
very freedom they say ther 11eek
waa relea ■ ed, the Sta te U nl.
U it Is lo malntulu an eduuaUoual
to protect.
veralty Coltege at Buffalo (Sluf•
progrum of strength and depth .
falo State) p,ued a ruo lutlon
''For university leadership, or any

Academic freedom and freedom of speech wlll be placed
?n t'he block today when the State University of New York
:ippears in court to show Cb.usewhy Dr. Herbert Aptheker
~hould be permi.tted to speak here.
Tho court actio n follows an l~
Ju11otlo
n obtalned by Wllllo.m Egan
I&gt;! BP.IIBlOD Lalre and \aeued by
Justioe R. Hunt of tbe Supreme
r.ourt. preventing Dr. Aptbeker's
~ppearance here last Wednesday.
In explalnlng hi ■ action, Mr.
Egan aald he "decided to atrlke
whllo the Iron was hot." He
tald he was Influenced by t he
refu■al of Frank C. Moore of
the State University Board of
Tru1tee1 to accede to Senator
Mahoney•• req11est to bar Dr,
Aptheller and by the Cuban
crisis.
Mr. Moore laeued a etatemen t
,everal hours &amp;tier the lnJunct!Ou
wns lasue ll Hie statement eald In
part:
"The issue here is not commun­
ism nor tho speaker, but the right
nf n unlvel'1llt)",stu dents alld tacul­
,y, as 1.111rtor their edncatlonal
1orocees and eomprehend various
pol!Ll~alldeolbgfes dlrectly 1 tnclud­
hig the right to experience a doe1rlM 11.sloathsome Q8 communism .
"The Board of Tr11ateea o1
the State U n lver■ lty hae been
fully conau lte d and tt,e board.
la In accord with the decl1fon
that Dr. Aptheker be hea rd.

nud heur spe11k\.r• or tholr obotc.11n1l thnl the BOUrooot nnuelol
SUJ)])OTI or lhe 011lveralty bn A 110
beulng on these rlglltt .
..Thi\ tal\nre or

(See Pa.go 11)

VOLUM E 13

eleol,ed ,..P­

pro«.ot

and defend thet1e treadO'Dl■, in. It­
self, conalltute1 a aertoue tbr11At to
noademlo l'l'eedom a• woU 1111 •
threat to tbe rlghtll or all mo
citizens.''
At a pre•• confere nce at the
Buffalo lr1ternatlona l A Ir port.
■a id,
Or. Herbert Aptheker
"The ruling wn • ., Infringe­
ment on my right. •• a oltlHII
a11don the rlghtt of 1,000 oth­
ers who wore denied their rlghl
to speak .,.d to Hk me que ..
tlon1."
nr . Aotheter addlld. "It le • ~BIT
sa tl day wlieu Sit Oaw111c1
Mo11ley,
n raaclut lmpHftonecl tor hlH tellata,.
can obtain a vlan to come he1"
And spenk, uulte nvart from the
fact thut I, an Ameriean citlson
nnd veteran or Wor ld War Tl, nm
l
bll!'red from the Uolunlt.1.
tought In tbe war 'ho opl)08~."

~e dealnr od tht. be would be
wlllh1g to return to Bu_ffulo to
npeak Jr the U11lverelt1 a11outd
e~teud another luvltatloo.

STATE UNIVERSITY o r NEW Yo :nK AT 8Vff,U.0
BULLS SEEK
FIR-ST WINN ING
SEASON
SINCE 1959

llll)'

ret1e11t.all'98or.the people to

GRRK WEIKI ND

PLANNI D NOV. 16,
QUH N TO Rl1GN
(See Pug•,)

SPECTJRUM

No. 10

BUFFALO, N EW YO RK, FRIDAY, HOV EM BIER 9, 1962

Smit Feat ures Rosenb erge r, "Pressure Points( Union Dedicated lomorrow ;
New Series Ope ns Andrewsto DeliverAddress
Taub , Sap p In Concer t

6)' MARV LOU WI L SON
TIie cou.voonUon&amp;commlttel! ol
style known as neoclassic A
Max Holt Aru:lrewi,, dh'ectot• ot
the
Student
Seua:te
announc&lt;'d
t11r,1
f,imous work of this p~rlod
new ~erles nn Ameriel\n and }loR· Loeb Student Center .at New Yori:
le the Concerto for Plal10 and
11
University and vic1&gt;-preaident of
Wind Orchestra .
Rian forcl~u pollclea will opeio on the At&lt;Socintion&lt;&gt;fCollege Unio'III,
In 1926, Stravinsky made his Monday, Nov. 19. The progrum11en- ivlll deliver the keynote addre~s
first trip to tho United States. He tilled ''Pressure Point•" -wlll be at !ht• (Ol'lllsl dedication of the
made frequent tri ps up ul\til 1939, glve.11nt 3 p.m.
New Norton Uniun tolliorrow ot
wh~n he s11ttled permanently in
11 :00 a.m.
David Byc\1111.committee ehnlr.
Cahfornia and became an AmeriA graduate of Springfield Col­
Jnl\O. lss11ed the tollowlng slD.te­ lep, be received his BS in 1947
can citizen.
Slnee that time, Stravinsky hu n\ilnt: "We feel that It la or vJt11l and M. Ed. in 1948 there and went
composed works for piano solo hnnortan.ce l\l th e present lllmn, on to comvlete additional graduate
orchestra, ballet, chorus, chcmbe~ especially after the Cuba.n 01rlsls, study at the Sorbonne in Paris
groups, and solo instrument8. He the t we re.examine and clarlf)I tbP and Biarritz (Artlerlcan) Univer'
has Uijed the twelve-tone techui­ ldeolOg(cnl connlot bet-ween our sity.
countl'Y and the USSR. lt WOJ!for
Aft.er completing his military
l)\Je, still another writing st;vle.
th!•
11urp09e
thnt
the
pro1p-aJU
Mr. Smit has worked with
service with the 9th Army Air
Stravlns~
many timea, ,1nd called ••Pressure Points·• wae con• 1''oree as a radio operator and
celved."
haa described hie flrat meetgunner in the European theatre,
FIVE PROGRAMS PLANNl:.D
M. H. ANDREWa
lnq1 with him ;ia the "moat
M.r. Andrewa took the poeitlcin of
will
be
ftve
convooMJon
'l'here
exciting time of mY llfe." Mr.
auistant
director of intramural
The formal dodl0atlon of
pr~rame In nil. Each 'Will d eal athletics at Springfield College,
Smlt'a mo•t recent appearNorton Union will be mad■
with nn area or tbe -world which later continui ng thi s line of work
o1nce wit h Stra1tln1ky wu at
at 11 a,m In the ConfoNHttJo
a performance of 1.eaNocee the Amerlcnn•Rueslan. clatr'b has as director of athleti cs and bssket­
'rheatre following a 10 a. m.
heen parlfcularly acute. Each 1~­ bsll•baseball coach at the Univer­
in Loa Angeles latl year.
Friday, in the rehearsal room ture will be g-lven by a unlvenllty sity of Connecticut. From 1948- coffee hour for Invited gue■t.
Including ,tate offlcl1le •nd
of the l3aird Hull, Mr. Smit will 11rof8'lsor who is eapealatly kmowl­ 1952, he put bla athletic exper·
repre1ent1tlvea of eernpu ■ o,..
give another informal recital. ,All edgeahle In the areo.
ience to use as, football coach at
ganlHtlon ■,
The lnvooatlOit
performed.
students and faculty are invited
Mr. Ryclnn oomme11Ung on tbe the Connecticut State Prison.
will be delivered by the Rev .
Appointed Dlrectqr or Stud ­
lg_or Stravinsky, considered the to attend. The program will begin speakers anld, "The committee has
John A. Buerk and the w1l­
ent Union at the University
leading composer of the twentieth at 4 p. m.
long felt that we were not making
comlng ddreaa by Chancellor
tentury, was born in Oranienbaum
sufficient use of the talent -we or Connecticut In 1060, Mr. An­
Furno , Member■ of the 1am­
drew• eerved for 1evon year■
Russia, June 17, 1882. He orig in~
have on, campus . We were, tbere­
lly of the late Chulea P. Nor­
In the dual capael ty of co.
-•lly wished to go inw law. How­
rore. very happy to discover tbnt
ton , former Chancellor of th ■
ordinator or atudcnt actlvl•
•·ver, whil e at the University of
we bad exl)tll'la In those areoe In
Unlverelty, will be honored
tlea and director of eummer
~t. Petenburg, he began study·
our own history department."
at the ceremonlea ,
In 1967,
ing harmony and counterpoint.
The following lectures nre pla1ttned seHlo" actlvltloe.
Th e key to thu Union wi.11 be
The house committee of Nort~n - Nov. 19, Dr. Selig Adler . A !Gen­ he receive d the poaltlon which
Stravinsky's most famous early
presented to Dorothy Hau, dlrec•
ho now hold• as Director of
1vorks, "L'Oiseau de Fen" and is having a clean-up campaign eral Survey Concenratl.og on Dar­
tor ot thc Union, by Karr Parker.
Loeb Student Union at NYU.
''' Petrouchka'', "Le Sacre du Prin­ to insure proper use of the Union lin : Nov. ll6. Dr. Milton Phieur,
lemps", were composed for the and its facilities in the future.
The Middle J&lt;:llat
: Oec. ~. Eh , ~·Aside from his vital Interest In Slio in turn will dnllvcr lt to
To prepare for the campa ign, Geor!le A. Brubnker , Latia A'mer­ the field o! student activities , :Mr. Richard Erb, president of tht
Ballet Russe, a ballet suite which
iatlon, and Carol,
a slo­ lca : Dec. 10. Or Theodore Friend Andrews is al8o a qualified in. Student All50C
followed shortly afterward ■, Jed the committee iB 'llponsPring
tc, much controversy at the time gan contest entitled "The Norton m. South East Aaln: and Dec. 17, sti'Uctor having held posltl.ona u Vendetti, president of th11Union
iustructor o( speech and dr1111\t\Board.
when it was introduced because of Nuisance." The contest begins to­ Dr. John Halstead . Africa.
At lt ::«&gt; In tlto multl-pu~
Tickets tor ea.ch ~peach wlll be und as recreation instruc tor for
the unusual use of rhythm, tona­ day and will continue until Nov.
·ecedlng Wed,ne•• th~ Summer Institute s nt Counec­ room a Cit.1tlon Luncheon,rill ~
v11
!111bleon thP 111
lity, and dissonance. A less dis· 21. A prize of $6 will be awarded 11
,on8nt work, "Le Rossignol", based to the authors of the ten best day. ro cards must be vre&amp;e:nted ticut University . Preaently, he ie irivon honoring ccrt.aln educator■
Adjunct Profeuor of Education outstanding Jn Uielr fitlda. Th•
i111&gt;rder to gel a ticket.
,\ff the fairy tale by Hans Christ­ slogans,
R~"- R Sherman Beattlt will •ln
Slogans s ho u 1 d be wriH e11
ut NYl '
ian Ander son, was written at thi s
around the theme and mut t be
,me.
Directory Out
iH I•
other
acUvltle8 tu- th,1 invocation . Two to tbNt )tgn,.
In the early 1920'•, Stravin­ turned in at the candy counte~ no
The 1962-68 Stud ont Director y include memberahlp in protes•lon­ drmlMguuta and relattves ot the
late r than 3:00 p.m., No'f. 21. All i~ now availsble 11t the No·rton al and social fraternities Alph11 r ,t,•cs arct exJ)«ted to aHeJld.
sky abandoned Rua1lan folk.
fh 11ncellor Furnu and Seymour
1&gt;ntlie$ mu11t Include the name, TTAIITicket Booth from J():80 to Phi Omega, Alpha Phi Sigma. •"d
lore as II eource of his work■.
He also gave up eomo of hl1
address and telephone number of 2:30 nncl from 4 :3-0 to 0 :30. ID Theta Xi - m~mbeu hip In th~ JI Knox. f ormer c.hainnan of \he
technlquue of compoaltlon that
I he author . All slogans will he card q must he prc scnt~d.
-\~socialion or Collegr e.nd Uni - tlulv eralty CouneU, will pNMAI
• with Dr. Walt«r
J u d g e d on orlglnality and on
led to much debate.
Theee
.
v~tsi ty -Concert Manag ers, work lhe .-11.ntiou
whether i~ pertains t.o the over­
Included pplytonallty,
pol)'­
Medical, dcntul. socml work, unrl with th e Boy Scouta of America. \\ 1111•1,rcsidina- ovu th" eer..
1ti...
all theme and purpose ot the cnm­ law s~udent8 m~y obtain_ th eir di- 11s a Troop Committeeman ,ind tlte n11111
metors, primitive rhythms, and
dlaaonanct. He beg•n to write
r,i;ign. Tlti.a contest is open t,, ..11 rec to, l~s In thl•1r reapectJve school m11n11
gershi p of th11 Little Leajl;\141 'I'ou r• 111tho bu1JdloS 1'Cl1bt
\'&lt;•n•
luc~ from 1! - 4 p.a.
'" a simple , preclae. c;lear ~ludcnts and organization ~.
offices.
hn'!~h•II team 1n WGiltport.

I

By VICTORIA BUGELSKI
'
. '.•••o Smit! Vis!ting Slee pro fes~01 of muijJc. will give a concert
honor(ng the 80th birthday of
At)•av111sky,Sunday , at the Albr11tht•Knoir Art Gallery at 4:30
p,m. The pro~am is under the
dual sponsors.hip ~f t,he art !tallery
and the u.mvcre1ty ~ mu.sic departmen t.
• ~r •. Smit will he assisted by
v1ohn1st Harry Taub, soprano
tlQrothy Roeenberg, of the music
dcpsrt.ment faculty, and pianiat
Nonna. Butolatnl Sapp, wife of
the chairman of the muBic department. All three performers are
frequent recitalists in Buffalo and
on programs here at the Unlversity.
M~. Rosenbergor recently
appeared In a faculty recital
last OctOber. Mra. Sapp will
be appearing with the Buffalo
Phllharmonlo Nolf. 18 and 20.
At the Nov. 11 concert. works
of Tchalkowaky u well as
works of Stravin,ky will be

I

House Committee
Begins Campaign

I

�Friday, November 9,' 1962

SPECTR\J'M

PAGETWO

Second Annual Greek Weekend on \Aray;
Queen Campaign, S~ng, Dance SchedlJ1led
SIX SORORITIES
ENTERCANDIDATES

IN

By JOEY ELM
The weekend or Nov. 16 bas
been designated as Oreelr Week•
en,1 and wlll fonrtally open· with
the "'Sing". reaturlng twelve frat,.
ernltlea and soror!Ues.
Taking
place In the o)a Nor ton Hall
nudllorlum, the show will be glv.
en at 7:00 and again at 9:30, In
thl' evening.
Tlckel6 may be
purchased at n cost or 75c nt lhe
ticket booth In Norton.
The highlight of the weekend
the
Inter-Fraternity-Council
dance lo be beld al Cap!W.I Hall,
1770 South Park, Saturday, Nov·
~mber. 17. Dancing will begin at
9 ::JO to the muoic of Ron Metcal!'s
hand.

Is

MELANIE BANACH
SIGMA KAPPA

BRYNA MILLM-'N
PHI SIGMA SIG,~A

The Queen campaign, under the
direction
of Leslie Lewis will
choose the lovliest "Greek Girl"
from among all tho sororitie s, The
ce11dldatc~ this year are; Melanie
Ounnch, Sigma Kappa; Frances
Dus, Chi Omega; Noreen Hir sch,
Sigma Delta Tau; Bryna Millman,
Phi Sigma Sigma;
Linda Rey­
nolds, Alpha Gamma Delta ; and
Nnncy Turkovich, Theta Chi.
The wlnnJng 1,rirl w1U be selecte d
vote and by judging,
Fifty per cent of her rating will
come !Tom votes and tbe remaining
' fifty per cent will be attributed
to her by the judges. She will be
crowned nt the dance Saturday
ev..,nlng.
by popular

FRANCES DUS
CHI OMEGA

LINDA REYNOLl&gt;S
ALPHA G-'MMA DEILTA

The presentations
of various
nwnrds to the rraLet'lJal orga nb a­
U.ous will take l)IIWOat this time.
The sing trophies, oresented to
the winning Oroek organlv.aUon,
wlll be awarded on a. permanent
bn11Jsthla year. So will I.be an nual
Scholarship Cup, presented to the
fraternity
with the h i g he st
ac11demic average.
Dance Invitations were aent out,
to the deans and other members
of the administrative
eta1f.

NOREEN HIRSH
SIG MA DEL TA TAU

Correction
In lllst week's story on the
senate meeting&lt;; it was incor­
rectly stated that Issac Ste m ,
violinist, would play during the
Fine Arts week. Mr. Stern will
,ipeak during the week, rathe r
than play.

NANCY TURKOVIICH
THETA CHI

Glee Club Performs at Toronto University;
Participates in Dedication Week Activiities
By LAWRENCe FRENKEL
formed women's chorale was opened
Tbe Untnralty'a men'e glee club to any student whether Interested
will shore the spotllgbt with the In singing "for pleasure or profll''
Allaumptlon Univers ity and Unlver- To muke rehearsals more pleasant
,ilty or Toronto glee clubs at a t11. and covenlent for all students, they
university concert Nov. 2', at the have been moved from Baird Hell
University of Toronto. The Glee to HarrlmBn Auditorium. In con.
Club bu beell offered "traditional Junction with several or the re•
Canadlan hospitality" an.d lodging hearaals, socia l hours with dancing
during their two.day stay at the nnd rerreebmenls nre planned. Th e
university .
flr&amp;l one la ecbedulod for Sunday,
Tomorrow , 1he glee club will Nov . 11,
rnnke llA llrt!t appeuance on cam•
Thia year, the choral program
pus 1,errormlng at tbe Citation
hn baen changed from a atrlctly
academic endeavor to • atu.
luncheon to be held during Norton
dedk allon week.
dent.run activi t y. Mr. Beckwith
atate ■, "We hope the choral
Robert 8. Beckwith, recently
fll"OUpe will 100n become one of
appointed choral director , dtacrlbeathe changH taking place
the atrongeat actlv ltlea on
In the newly revltallze d mualc
campu1, In term ■ of t he numdepart111ent a■ a "li ttl e under.
ber of atudenta participating,
atood, but very Important revo alze of the budget and Impact
lutlon In an are~ which affects
on college life."
every atudent,"
The two groupe are striving to
Exemplifying lble revo lution ls a altaln this goal under the leader.
naJor ebani:e in the wbolc chnra o• ship or student orrtcers. The pre&amp;!.
tor or thl' rboral progTam . Tn th•1 dent of the club la Jamee Shoup.
s,aat partlclpnllon wna. to II large Toure nod ftnRnclnl a!Talr8 or both
encnt , limited to music muJorB itrnup~ nre now hPRded by Btudenl
..,ho look part In choral wor~ tor rn~nBll;PrB.
M'l!dlt. Thia resultPtl In vny lltlle
Another mnJor ch11ngp In the new
Interest rrom outJllde the de1&gt;arL- chora l program will be made pos.
meut and h,ence a curtalli,d pro. ~Ihle h8l'llUBP of Increased partlcl.
cram of public perrurmaMeH.
pall on lllld lntere11 . The scope and
This year, membership hi bolh uumb~r or public perrormances will
,•onslderahly. Mr,
llll' mlln'B _i:lee clu b ntld Llw n••wl_v~ h,· broadPned

THIS
WEEK

WHO SHOULD BE SAVED? LIFE
reports on a machine in a Seattle
hospital that could save 2,000 doomed
victims of kidne)( failure. But, because
it is in an experimental stage, it can
accommodate only ten patients in a
two-year trial period. Who is to die
and who is to be saved? LIFE reveals
how the dreadful decision is made.
MAN'S DESTINY. While othe rs talk ,
the destiny of all of us waits upon
Kennedy and Krushchev. They're the
men who are pulling the st rings, LIFE
says, and then goes on to outline the
significance of events in Berlin, the
India-Chin~ border, in the Congo, in
Laos and Vietnam and other world­
wide newsfronts. Also, LIFE comments
on the historic letter that exposed
Krushchev's hand. TEEN-QUEEN.
She's Miss Darla Banks of Dallas and
she's now Miss Teenage America, win­
ner over 79 contestants at the na­
tional finals. One look and you'll see
why. U.S. NOVEL. It's the year of
resurgence for the novel, LIFE say's,
as It profiles six famous novelists (in­
cluding Nobel winner John Steinbeck.)
lJFE GUIDE. What Broadway shows
are taking to the road? What reper­
tory groups are performing across the
country? LI FE brings you an up-to­
the-minute report. MOVIEMAKING.
A special report on Italian film-flam;
and in LIFE's regular movie section,
a deadly deck of movie queens. ON
THE COVER. U Thant and British
Ambassador Dean, peacemakers in a
difficult diplomatic spot. These days,
it's especially important to keep up
with LIFE.

H~rkwlth promises that the two
choral groups will perrorm a.a sep.
arllt P groups, and also combi ne
Into R mixed &lt;lhorue rc1r a wide
variety of functions, "from pep ral•
lies and student concerlls to •ttall
dress' perfonnoncea of m11Jorchoral
works with the Buffnlt&gt; Phllharmonlc!"
•
In fact, the mixed c horua la
already practicing for th1e Chrlat mas program planned for Dec.
15 and 1S In the malra ha ll of
Lockwood Me m orl a I Library.
Thia concert wlll featur-e Bach'•
brllllant " Magnlflcat" 'With vocal aololeta and a cha111ber or .
cheetra, both of which wlll NP•
re sent Buffalo'• finest art latlc
talent.
Audition orocedures 11nd eeleo.
Uon for tbe chorus have also been
,·hanged to encourage greater par .
tl'&lt;'lpatlon lo the choral program.
Stnrtlug next yen_r, the 1:rou11swill
be 01,e n to new membe'ra only at
lhe heglonln~ or the ech11&gt;0!
year.
Prospeotlve freshmen will be ln­
rormed about the cho ra,I program
•I the time or th'elr planning sos.
stone RO thnt tbey cat, schedule
nudlllons . Those studenu1 who have
had no previous e_xporlence w111hA
gtvPo BDPClallate s~aslon111In sightt'eadln;i to lmprov"
their baste
~k!IIR in mu~le.
J.Jii;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...
_________________

l

_.!

�Fridoy, No.ember 9, 1962

P.AGETHREI

SPECTRUM

Josh White
Pleases Fans

Frosh Counic:ilMarc et Andre, F'rench Duo
Holds Dancie Inspire Cabaret Atmosphere

By ERIC STEESE
The llt•st dance soonsored by tbe
Tb&amp; Josh White · concert was
Freshman Class Council will! bt1
nothing ehort of great! The re­
held tomorrow . night I n the ball .
markable thing to me wns the way
room or the old Norton Hall, from
he held his audience of apJ&gt;roir.
8:30 to 12:30. There will. o! cc,urse,
11
11Ately1600. l would venture thur
be a twist band aud refl'e~brnentA
comparntlvely few of those 11res•
wlll be avnllable.
ent were Joab Wblle tans at the
Tickets will be on SAie a,t tho
,w rt of the evening; I think we
ticket orrlce In Nortou or you may
1,lcked up some during the eve­
pay at the door . Admls6lon Is 600
ning, to the pOlnt that they knew
per person. Tb.ls dance Is the ftrst
nr his work on records.
of the acl!Vlllee plauned bJ' the
Yet for the most part he just
uounoll In a program whJch wfl!
,tood there with his right foot on
be highlighted l)y the tradll:lonal
1 chair
beatuig time and In a
"Winter Weekend."
mMnner as 1.nformal as hie attire,
Aµy freshmen who is interested
blnck trousers and an open necked
In the proceedings of the cc,uncll
JOSH WHITE
;hlrL whlcb proceeded to charm
meetings nnd wishes to asst.st 1n
hi~ audience.
hove heard the song, n\ oew One Its act.l'fltles is in vited to ottend.
His material helJ)ed. He came up 10 me.
Meetings ere he ld e \'ery 'l'wesday
the hard. way, and he sings the
Those who s~ayed to get auto. nfternoo11 at 4 11
. m. 111room 9.33 nt
songs of the people. Listen to him graphs afterward may have noticed Norton Union.
,,n record or think back I! you the infection in the left hand fin.
were there. How much ot Ws ma. gers. '!'he l11£Q0lion.wns the reason
Pre-Registration
,~rial Is contrived? How much ot he dfdn·t do .Toho Henry. Tbe whole
All juniors and seniors in the
It was comvosed? Not very much. concert was quite a hardship e•·
College of Arui anil Sciences
His Ideas are baslo; work, love pecfally after playing at Trinity
who expect to be enrolled dur­
,10d freedom, and wbJJe they oc. end Colgate o\'er tho weekend.
ruslonally ani bidden bllhind a de­ llfr. White said that he wanted n ing the sp1·ing s~mcster must
pick up their pre-registration
liberately llOphleUcated, and sar• rain cheek on bis performance
materials at one of the follow­
~astlc line. they still ring true. He here so he could satisfy himself.
ing times:
!~ nleo earthy.
I thh1k we ought to give It to
The guitar work by Mr. White him even though It Is hardly nee.
Friday , No\' . 10; Monday,
was 11lmllnr to his musi c and juat essary. J3ut first wouldn't som11one Nov. 19; Tuesday,
Nov, 20;
•• good. It was of the old ecbool, !Ike lo donat e a mlll!ou or so for
Wed11~sday, Nov. 21 - 9 a.m.basic and solid and too much lg. a 1600 seal ucooustlcally designed
4 p.m. in front of the Bursar's
nored these days. The · power or aµdltorlum. Barring the highly un.
Office, Hayes Holl.
this simple aod uncluttered style llkely dev elopment could we de.
ol guitar didn't really come over Ylse some way to make the multi •
ro me on tbe record the way It pur[Jose •·oom more 11greeo.ble to
did Munday night. Probably the an urllst plU)'ing there? I hope so.
best guit.a.r be played WU8 In the
lf you llked Mr. White as well
01,enlog , number,
Outskirts
of as he liked yoll, " a wonderful
Town. So good was be ln tact audience,'' l would suggest ".Josh
1hut. Mr. Rldly's Jazz background White- Live" on .ABC-Ptu·amounl.
·1M,o
rted itself nod we Jost U1ost Thi~ rontnin~ eight or the songs
,,r the l!Ong to runs on the baas, he did Monday night us well as
1vblch was nice hut I would rather three others.

By ERIC STEESE

Two ~mall Frenchmen vrent over
lo a big way Tuesday evenlng, Ill!
the duo oC Marc and Andre turned
Ihe m11ttl.purpose room Into a cBb­
aret ror u couple hours. The re.
cep tlon Ibey received was surprls­
Jog since they lost 20 to 25 percent
of the audience, (remember Ohio
U. anyone!), at the intermis!lon.
l was afraid this would give them
u rutber bad Impres sion or Amer!.
cRn audiences, hut this fortunately
\\'!\II not tbe oose.
The six hundred people who
remained
gave them a fine
sendoff at the olose of the pro .
gram; fine enough to produce
an encore ~long with numerous
well deserved bows , Someone
was clever enough to reall:e
that many would not under .
stand French, so to ass ist them,
llteral tran alat lona of the song•
were printed and left on all
aea ta In th e house. Thi• very
Intelligent procedure enable d
all to enjoy the con~ert .
The trnnelntlon, together with
the tempo or the piece, exvlained
whether the song was a comic one,
a ballad, or just a whimsy, Of the
Latter, Judging u1;aln by the trana.
lallons, there -re several beautl.
ful selections. The pharmacists'
Song, The Rabbit aud the Camel&amp;,
The Dog and The HerTlng, and

A suvper RI lb&amp; norgiu' were ult
siml)ly delightful plecea of 11/lll­
sense wbl&lt;!h olalmed lo be uoth lnit
mor e.
They did several love songa ot
French folk origin wblob I would
have gtven dearly to understsnd
completely. The frustration of trY­
!ng to tit the Eugll eh tra1111latlon1
was bnd enough but when I wa8
Informed by a French •CanadJan
friend that the lyrlca weffl eTpur.
gated to a etrong degree, t was
18lldy to run to an Interpreter.
What also helped the non .
French apeaklng wu the the , _
atrlcal backg round of both men.
They both projected with body
and movement aa well •• with
voice. , Andre SchleHer .eeme
to be the more volatile of the
two men. He u11Cdall of what
little atage area he had to.
gether with a grut deal of
arm and band gesturi ng.

Muc Chevalier spent a good ~eal
of the e,enlug leaning up agalnat
the wall a.a though It were the
side of a building on some 1111all
rue In Paris, and calmly playing
hie gultllr while hie 'OIONI active
partner carried on. In fad, much
of the time t expected to •ee a
OendJrme around the corner oa a
bicycle, eo strong wu tu Jl'rencb
atmoapbere they C0D1'eyed.

Novice Debate Society Sent T earns
To Two Tournaments Last Weekend
The novice debntc society sent
t wo teams to the first tourna·
menta of the semester last week,
end. The t.eam which attended the
.\nnual
Tartlln
Novice Debnte
1'011rnament at
the
Carnegie
Institute of Tc chno)ogy in Pitts­
burgh returned having tied for
second place. Their only defeats
were at the hands of the fil'Bt and
;iecond place teams.
Another team debated at Hamil•
ton College, in Clinton, N. Y.,
placed ninth in a g r oup of 20
atte nding colleges. The novice
,tebaters were sel~cted by their
conch, William A. Baker, to re­
jlresent our university in the first
tnur naments of the forensic year.

Since the young women will II.Ct
as hostesses and timekeepers the
number which can compete will be
limited by the number of college
who accept the invitations sen t to
some 70 colleges nnu universities,
Those contestants who hav e been
ranked lowesL will not , then, pnrti ­
cipnte in the contest.

J u d g e s for the elimination
parade were : Mr. Baker, director
of novice debate; Kenneth Gtoss·
man, cha irman of novice debate;
Geo1·ge Burnett, member of the
novice debate
society;
Elaine
Tampslona,
chairman
of last
year's contest; and Joni Bo,·achel,
Lhe reigning Miss Great Lakes
Tournament.

P oiae, per sonality , appearance,
and hospitality were th e qualities
Some 26 Contestants
in the soug ht in th e- contestants who will
3fiss Great Lakes contest spon­ act as hostes~es and, thus, re­
sored for the second year by the presentatives of the univer sity .
novice debate society, were rated The women walked across the
in the elimination parade Monday stage and intr oduced themselve s
7-10 to the judges. These participants
1n tho conler~e
theater,
µ.m. The r esults will be revealed will attend a meeting Monday at
during th e next week when the 7 p.m. in 332 Norton to learn the
tabu latioru1 have been completed. principles of timekeeping.

■oN-TiN'°'iAv~;l
l82 EASTFERRY
ST.CORNER
WAVERLY
ST.
PRESENTS

"JEVERY
A-ZZ''
NITE
I

♦

ev THE

Ja Man

TRIO

Low priced Food ond Drinks

'

Starting
Tonite
♦
thru
• November

18

Ne w Policy
No Minimum

Thornell

·• No Covet

Schwartz

ORGAN TRIO

......................
***"
TT 6-9676

TT 6-9766

l

~

~
f

before
c&gt;r
aftertheballgame
McDON.ALD'S
AMAZING MENU
Pure Beef Hambur9er .......... 15c
Tempting Cheeseburger ........ l 9c
Triple-Thick Shake:; .............. 20c
Golden French Frie!; .............. 12c
Thirst-Quenching Coke ........ !0c
Delightful Root Bee:r ............ 10c
Steaming Hot Coffoe ............ 10c
Full-Flavor Orange Drink ...... 10c
Refreshing Cold Dr,ink .......... 12c

Make your first stop at McDonald's.
Whether you have a i:,a rty of two, four,
or twenty, we call serve you in a few
seconds each. You'll be pleased and sur•
prised to find out just how g9od a 15c
Hamburger can be. McDonald's Ham• ,
burgers are made of 100% pure beef,
government inspe cted and ground fresh
daily. They 're served piping hot and de­
licious on a toasted bun. Come in today
... you'll get fast, cheerful 1 courteous
service ... plenty of parking. , • no car
hops ... no tipping • .• th e tastiest food
in town at extra thrifty prices.

MeDonaldk''·
:;e;~ .
138:5 NIAGARA FALLSBLVD.
¼ MU• North of SHERIDANDRIVI ot MAPLI ROAD
(Adjace11t The Boule.ard Mllll Ploro)
Open Friday 011dSot11,4ay 1111Nl1 :00
0,-roted lly tho JERRY IRO".fNROUTCOil,.
,

�Friday, November 9, 1962

SPECTRUM

PAGEFOUR

UNIVERSITY
BOOISTEIRE
. RECORD
SAL
THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

"ON CAMPUS"

CLASSICAL
RECORDS
SALE!!
Krip's COMPLETEBEETHOVEN
SYMPHONIES

YOURFAVORITECOMPOSERS'
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The fomo-,s Beethwn Festivol Recordin gs mode by the LOfl/lon Sym.
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standing presentation of all 9 maste rpieces, recorded with extr oordinary
technical skill, an 8 magnificen t 12" Long Ploys. Handsome 2-co lor soft.
cover book presents a Pictorial History of the Composer's Life ond Times,
extensive notes on the symphonies, 0\/er 30 illustrations. Pockoged In
sumpt uous leatherette gift case.
M-1740 MORourol
. Pub. ot $39 .50
Only $14 .95
S--1741 , Stereo. Pub. ot $40 .00
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VIVALDI
MOZART
BEETHOVEN
BARTOK
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SCHWANN
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Sosie,' Stan Getz, Miles Davis,
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and Ross, and a host of other
oil-time greats. 2 deluxe sets,
each containing five 12" , Lang·
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M-1509 . "POP" JAZZ Set A.
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etc .
All se lections are complete . Ten
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In handsome gift box. Value
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M-113 . Collector 's Item: ALICE'S
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OF CLASSIC JAZZ. A pa noramic
view of tradi tiona l Jaz.z, feat uring
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DEDICATION D!lY SPECIALS
1111Ballots lor Our Special! Give- ·llway Musi Be. "Submilled by Tomor1~ow al 1:00 P. M.
1•

Miss Kathy Stuber will draw the Lucky Names at 2:00 P. M.
In the Main Lobby of !Norton Union

* 1stPrize-SetofRegular
Modem
library
* 2ndPrize-"Moody"
theBlue
· Moose
* 3rdPrize•Webster's
Unabridged
Dictionary
* 4thPrize-$25Bond
* 5thPrize-Transistor
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NOTE
Winner need not
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Only University
Students eligible

�PAGEFIVI

SPECTRUM

. Friday, November 9, 1962

Need an Escort·?
Try the Dollfini;

Decision on Aptheker Talk
Pose Queries on lniunctions

Heard the late s t In lh 9 flt,ld of
esco rt services? The newest group.
'rbe court decision to bill' the
the Dollf!Ps , have been estal bll&amp;hed
on the Oregon U11Jverslty c.ampus. .\ pth ekel' s11el•Ch schedolPd here
The team of three moo st1~dents, tor o,-t. :u ho~ rnlsed some quee.
two seniors and one sophomore lion s us t,;, the clvll proredures in
otrer their company ror an even ing ,:ourts, Foliowlng Is e •Latem ent
to nny dallll el!~ coed.
Don't think this is II rand ,om se. eoncf\rniog I his queslllm, It deule
lectloo. rnr from It, Each pi;ospea. " 'Ith tbe neturn or lnjuoclloos and
t!Ye eoe d IR screened . and she Is lhe JlOBslble followupN to today's
matrhed witlt an escort &lt;m the he11rlng In Albnny .
bu la
her tn teresta, e.ge,, class
Mr. Egan, In Albany, seeka a
and peraonaltty.
The service has had little
permanent Injunction againat .
buslne11 to date becaual~ of
the SUNY Board of Trustees.
what the founders term "coed
His purpose Is to acquire a
1hynes1.'' It ■eem1 the ave rage
court decree permanently re•
coed would love a date with
straining Dr. Aptheker from
the three ellglble escorts , but
la too shy, a nd t he Idea of aek.
ever speaking on the c~mpus
Ing a boy for a date le ag:alnet
of the, State University. In tt,e
her very nature.
ordinary course of evenh, Mr~
nut take h eart, the three 1~entleE9an's procedure la to serve
01en, lul.ve not let the bad ba1alness
Upon the Trust~•• a summon•
arrect th eir spirit. They believe
and a oomplalnt, In which the
that once the Idea. has be,an ac ­
permanent Injunction Is for­
cepted they will do a grand , busi­
mally aought,
ness, and they even have pla,ne for
•oliciting additional member:s.
Usuully. the groun.ds tor a.n fn.
Another reason for the tack
Junotlon are that the plalntltt (Mr.
of buelneas 1, that most of th e
Egan) will be "Irreparably harmed"
at udenta at Oregon live at
unleae be le given au lnjunollon
home, and t ho Idea of brln,glng
and thnt be has "no adequate rem.
a paid escort home to ~neet
edy" nt COIIIOlO II luw (such as
dad doe. not alt we ll wi th t he
money damages to compe usn te for
coeds.
the ''Injury" be alleges Is beh1i;
AIJ three are trall8fer st11de11tRdone him). After serving this sum.
trom another university, an,d one mons and comp lalnt, the Trustee
formerly attended the Unlven1ity of then would hove twenty days lu
Oallfornlo. where be atlempt :ed to which to ijerve 0.11nnswer to Mr.
operate the some type of organlzn. l&lt;}gan•~complnlnt.
tlon with no ancoees.
Th11reatter, there might be addl.
Once all tbeae problemn are
solved, it seems that every date . tlonal procedural maneuvering, after
lees coed will hal'e an att,3otlve which the &lt;'R9e would be Aet for
dat e, and every handsome :young trial, and , It Mr. ~,gau won, ho
man will ,have a thrivin g thing would then be give11 his pel'man eut
going for him.
lnJuncrlon . Normall)'. all tlil ii,Jould

or

Gatemen Make Prof~ssional Debut
At Country Club This Thanksgiving
Westfield Academy and CentTal
School in Westfield, New York,
where they played together
for
two years in high school.

The Gatemen, a new folk music
noup on campus, will make their
profess ional debut at Dick Clarke'a
Drexe l Brook Country Club. They
will perform three shows nightly
ooth Friday, Nov, 26 and Satur.
,lay, Nov. 26.

The group is being managed hy
Joe Gattfried, and David Merrick
of the Four Arts Productions of
The group consists of four fresh• New York City, who are handling
men: Steve Foote and Steve Wa lk· their arrangements.
~•· on guitar, Alan Ramm on banjo
The group has been featured
and Bob Wnllace on bass and bong• here in the Rathskeller and at the
,,s. They are all graduates
of lntemational
Club.

The New York Pro Musica
To Appear Here Next Week
The New York Pro Musica, an
~nsemble group devoted to the
per'fo rman ce of medieval, Renuls s­
ance, nnd early Baroqu e mu s ic,
1dll appear at Baird Hall Sntur­
•lay, Nov. 17, at 8:3-0 p.m.
They will also give a concert
m Orchard Park,
at the high
,c hool auditorium, Thursday, Nov­
ember 16, at 8:16 p.m. Tickets are
'111 sale at the Baird Hall box
1ffice, Call 83Hl408 for reseTVn•
tio ns.
Directed by Noah Greenberg,
the New York P1·0 Musica ha s a
perma nent company of six voca·
lists and four instrumentalists.
The ensemble was founded in 1962
for the pu rpo~e of reviving in­
teres t in music written before the
time of Bach ond performing it
~nd thus making it known to the
µublic. The P1·0 Musica has collec·
ted a library of books nnd scores
•in early music. The ensemble a! so
iias a famous collec.tioo of instru •
ments for the members 1:o use.
Composer s of the Mlddlc
Ages and Renaaleaanoe ,did
very little, If any, editing of
their music , They dlacusaed
ft with the performers and

Improvised aa they went along.
Aa a resu lt. the scores have
very
little
Information
on
them pertai ning to perform.
ance.
The Pro Mualca re•
crulted a group of aoholara
~nd musicians to help inter­
pret the music.
The Pro Musica spends at Jea,t
one year 111prepat·ing a given pro ­
grum, and sometimes work on as
maay as six in one year. In adcli•
tion to a busy schedule of concerts,
t he e nsemble hold s classes
for
a n d.
~inger$,
instrumentalists,
music st udents .
The vocal group lnc)udc s a
cou ntertenor,
two sopranos,
a,
tenor, n baritone, nnd a bass. The
instrumentalists
perform on th "
luu·piseho1·d, viola da gamba, early
flute,
viols , vielJo
(medieval
fiddl e), ,·ecord er s, Krummhorn (n
instrument),
so f L double-reed
11snlt err (n "z'itherized
harp") ,
01'gun, sac lcbut (cnrly trombo ne),
b,•lls, and percussion.
Robert Marsh of the Chicago
Sm, Times desc ribed a concert
given by the Pro Mullica as a con­
cert "ab laz e with fres h and mira­
culous things."

take ot lea st one 111011th.
The law provldu a procedure
by which thle proceas may be
speeded up - at least epeeded
up to the extent that a plaintiff
(Mr. Egan ) may be give" a pre.
limlnary Injunction "pending"
the t rial and hearing for tho
permanent Injunction he aeoke.
Mr. Egan haa utlllzed
thla
&amp;peed-up procedure In the caae
at hand, 'T'hu ■, he ha1 m11de •
motion for a preliminary In­
junction pending the trla .l for
the permanent Injunction.
NonnaJ]y, llfr, Egan would have
,e rve&lt;l upon the Trustees a "notice
of 111ollu
n ," wherein the Trueteea
would have bee n notified that they
should appP11r on a certain day 1104
tl me to argue :ignlMt Mr. Egan••
motlou . This would take from 11ve
te otght days frorn the time or the
" nulkH of n10Uoo'' to the lime of
the :lrgument. But there te a pro­
cedur e wh81'eby even this may be
speeded
up. aod Mr . Egan b ..
lak en ndvaotage ot this 11peed.11p
11rocedure , too. l nstend ot ae" lng
upon the Truij(P,ee n mer11''ilotlce
of motion" (whl eh he would drnw
up hi bis own law ortlce Chia Jaw.
yer'M 111w oC!lcol). he bu aeno4
upon th e Truele os nn "order to
Kh&lt;JW rnuse ." by Which the lln to
eight day ••·altin,; period JDaJ be
rP&lt;JUlrod to o mere 24-hour 'lralUng
per lod OT' leas .
In or der

to ultllze

E:ontinue d on Page 11

I -I
I

Presen t Unive rsity Growt h, Expansion

I

e

~ORNA
riois
~

"■bow

req uired to !lO lo a Supreme Court
Judg e - any Supreme Court-and
urge that Judge to sign the show
r aus e order, on the ground that Ule

Late Chance llor C. P. No rto n Envisions
The gitt or Norton Hall a s a &lt;1mn11,.ns11tion for his lnbor s.
,t udent union Is the hest known
Chan ce llor No1too, him se lf ghy
')ijquest of · Charles Phell) B Norton.
an d se11Bitlv e, reallzod the n eed "for
llut two other le~c les nre per•
'mps more Important - vision and sl ud tmls for Roclal contact. for
r elnxallon and re~reatlon, tot· a
..ervice.
pleasant
comfortable
place
lo
For ii was Chao~ellor Norton spen d tbelr leisure hours.
rho foresaw the great Unlverslti·
Norton Hall i1 the fulfil l­
,·l1ich would ri se on lhe rounda­
ment of thl1 under1tandin9 aa
ions be was building. And the
Chancellor Norton bequeathed
"'e nter part of bis life was one
his entire fortun e that th i•
•f dedicated
aervlce
10
that
need might be met. Ttie estate
, nlversity.
was turned over to the Unl­
veraity ~ariy In 1931. Ground.
Char les Norton ll llrelong res!.
breaking cerem o n le■ were held
•lent of Bull'alo, was one of a
that summer and the building
~rou11 of lawyers who founded the
was completed
three
year•
Bulralo Law School In 18S7. From
later.
hat time Qn be worked for the
1fllllatlo o of this school with U,i,
Or. J1tlfao Pa rk, dean-emeri tu s
1"nlverslty, a goa l be achieved
in or tbe Coll ege of Arts and Sciences
1,91,
and former colleague of Chancel­
It was he who as vice chan ­
lor Norton's, sum s up bis appraisal
cellor originated the concep t
or the chancellor In "A Memoir
of the Greater .University of
of Charles P. Norton" wltb the•"
Buffalo. Largely through his
words:
efforts the Univeralty Council
"To inherit ide11ls is a di\·Jur
and the community were per.
birtbrlgbt:
to acqulro lderlls Is ,1
aua ded .of the future needs of
aup rem" accorupllshment:
to In­
spi re Ideals Is LO give life; lo
an expanding university.
l&gt;urlng the yenrs he spent as \'Halli&lt;" Ideals I• a magnlflc~ol
·lurncellor, the time aod ell'orl legacy_ These wPre the preacb­
.:l\'en to the University made serl. ments of the lite or this man.
,us Inroads Into bis private law Thoee wel'e the abiding Influence s
:iractlce yet he would Rccept no In his exlsteuce:'

the

c·11uee"proce dure , Mr. Egan wu

EER&amp;ALE

lnt.rnatlonal 8rtot1•lla1, lne., Oeltolt. Mich.,Bult.l o, N,'I'.. Tampa, Aa,, Andloy..0., Co'4n,to11, -

r

�S P E CTR

PAGE SIX

*

GJitoria'6
*
Thanks Miss Haas

Fridoy, Movember 9, 1962

~I M

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUS
L.yeletr•ta

•r.&lt;1
the Editor:
Davi!'! Frey

has

a W'8Y with

wot·!ls and his review of "Lysl11·
It is not orten that an editoria l can wholeheartedly come trata" was so cleverly written that
out in support of some event, program , policy o,· person, J ~ould not help enjoying• it. But

but this week the tables have been turned .
Tomorrow marks a hig}lpoint in the history of the cam­
pus. At 11 a.m. t)le $3.9 million Union wi ll be dedicated;
I.his act will fulfill the dream of many Union staffers among
them Miss Dorothy Haas.
As director of Norton Union for 19 years, and me mber
of the Union administrative staff' for 28 years, Miss Haas
has become a symbo l for students . She is the one they come
t:o fo r assistance, for 11dvice. and for information. She al­
ways has time for any re quests , and her complete devotion
to the students, and the ir union is well-known.
Wednesday night Cap and Gown recommended to the
proper authorities that the lar ge lounge on the first floor
be dedicated to Miss Haa s. To be known as Dorothy Haas
Lounge, it is a fitting tribute to an able admini11trator. a
loyal fr iend, and a wonderful person.
She 11 held in estee m by her fellow odministrators
01 well a, by students. Dr, Richord Siggelkow, deon of
at11dent1
, sold, "It la difficult for me to express adequate­
ly how plea1ed all of us in student personal 1ervices ore
about this honor occorded to Miss Hoos. No one better
reflectt that Important quality of loyalty to this Univer­
•lty. She, in turn, imbues both studenta ond staff mem­
be t'l ollke with that intong ible thing call ed "s chool spir­
it." Her remorkoble abi lity to work eff ect ively with each
new student group reflects her own youthful outlook, as
she con,i, tently typifies the ¥ery best of quoPitie, we
hope to see In our atudents and alumni."
The Spect r um is sure it, s peak s for sturlents and fa culty
Rlike when it s11ys, "Th1mks, Miss Haas ."

possiblethat eorrle of his
t riti 1,-is
m is unjustifiable:? If , as
he seerned to think, tbe pli~Y some­
times Lo~dered on the ~1lapstlek,
one muat remember that ,s(apatick
(lik&lt;' the tenching-lcarning
pro­
&lt;less) is a two-way thinl~• Obvi­
ously tbe raucous and gu tteral
!aught.el' of the audlcnce oncour·
11g-ed the east.
\~ it. not

Beside&amp;, the esllence ot Lysls­
trnta• ~ me!!Sage is oventatement.
Aristophane 's Insights were great.
He knew, ·before the.re were any
p~ychologlcal rates !'unning mazes

to prove It, that the eneJ1!;y wlllcb
create~ batt les is the se11f same
. tufr with which we t~ive, a11dmM y of ue, l)l'o11ght up in a
black vs. white ( not a black and
whit.el e11!l11l'e, find this hard to
underst81\d. And becauu this in­
s ight i5 Ruch a sori&lt;rUB business
he chose t he form of c0111Md'I/ to
UiustraU• the paradox.

The insi ghts o! "Lysish·ata" are
,ioi easily come by, Pcrh11psthey

the wisdom of a gra .ndmotli­
er. 01· what II poet has called
"l&gt;rtlV'-'intuilions" o! clil)dren to
unde1•st11nd them . It is WE•
ll to re·
tn the recent deb ate fl about the Apthcker postpo nement, mem~
that it is Athena , God­
:l fallaciou s argument has been presented by the opposition.
dess of Wisdom, who ia saluted
l'his view argues that since 11tatemoney is l)eing usecl to at the eud of the play, nolt Aphro­
pay for Aptheker's appearance, citizen s as taxpaye r&amp; hav e c!itP, Goddess of Love,

ft~ Not State Money!

t.heright to refuse the historian the right to speak here .

11~\ld

Sin clll'ely,

The Spectrum Asks
Th is week The Spectrum asks John Crittenden, from
the department of political science, '' What do you think of
the recl'nt i1ostpnnem11n
t of Dr . llerbtwt Apth itke1·'11
81)eecJi

herl'?"
.Justice Hunt, of the New York Supreme Court, baE
issued a restraining order that pre vents Herbert Aptheker .
a Commu nist , 'from his scheduled appearance in the Uni­
ve rsity's lecture series on political ideologies . William Ega n,
a Democ l'atic candidate for Congns s, reque sted the order
which will be subject to further argument today. Official1t
of the University a.re taking a strong sta nd in seeking a, re ­
scheduling.

Grace B. l\Tnrltln
No stote money was used to pay for Aptheker's
speech here, If he is ollowed to speo k ot o toter dote,
no lto te money wlll be 111ed to poy for his honororiu,n.
Complahtta
The money used comes fr om 11tudent fees, and none of
To
the
Editor:
As of this writing, (Nov. 5) the full text of Justic (
It is paid by the state 's citizens in the form of taxes. We feel Why?
Hunt' s remarks is not available. However, newspaper ac•
this should be clearly understood by all those who oppose
Aptheker's appearance and support th eir right to interfere
-aren't there lights ~m along counts suggest that four aspec ts ,C1f his st utement ma~'
In· Univer sity policy on the grounds that they ure tllJcpayers. Uu, path from Goodyear to Mnin merit special attent ion:
nt night?
1. How legitimate Egon's interest was in requesting the
restraining order.
- aren't there ironing l,oards
The inference is almost inesCil,pable that his reques t
11vailable in the email dorm11
was politically mot ivated. It is of substantial int ere st onl r
- must we put up with altt&gt;rna• to the extent that its expression probal,Iy incre.'\sed hi s
Anyone walking through the lobby of the union on Fri­ t;iveg like pork and "a.hr!mp wig­ chances of winning a seat in Congress.
meal 7
day mornings about 10 :30 a.m. will witness a mad scramble gle" at the same Anonym1ous
2. How appropriate rest raining orders are in the civil
around the candy counter. Pushing, shoving and elbowing
liberties field,
are prevalent as students fight their way to a stack of­
To
restrain
Aptheker in this way is to subject him fo
you guessed it, Spectrums .
Suppor
1
ts
a form.of prior cen sors hip. There are possibly some extrem e
It seems that some students take more than one issue
instances where such action would be necessary , but it i~
of the paper, in fact we have witnessed some taking hand­
difficult to believe that this speaker 's appearance threaten ed
tuls. There may be a partial explanation for thi s. Students
'l'he NSA Committ ee ot the B\u. grave enough harm to justify use of th is particular tech ·
are eager to get the coupons from surrounding hamburger
d
ent
Seuale h,n, made tb,9 follow. nique.
stands entit ling them to fr ee food. With thjs thought in
Ing statemeTitr elati ve to the Ap .
J. How the timing of the oction affec ted the procticol
mind they take mor e than one pnper.
outcome.
The result is that some students never see a Spectrum. tbek~r tulle
and in the pro cess many are ,va sted. We remind you that
Th e Nntioual Studen ts AssoclnAptheker's aJ}))earance as part of the Student Senall
you are paying for thi s paper through you r fees. We ask llou uommlllee ls r.on~erned about serie s had been well advertised for over a month . A Jegitl­
on Herbert mate appea l fo1• court conside l'ation should ha ve mad e i•
that a!J students tak e one issue and only one. If the situ ation lhe reKtralnt 11l11t•cd u11
heker·• eppenrnnce h11
re. The possible to argue the merit s of the case, jf that was nece ~­
whi ch ha s been prevalent in past weeks continu es we will ,\111
have to curtail our cil'cu lation. All copies will be left in rommlltee t\ally e1q 1por'ls the oro. sary, before his initially schedu led appearance.
u 111
. A T'ollllc11l Spectrum ot II
S
W I
Ma honey •s pre t e,re u&gt;
The Spectrum office and each st udent will have to come to ,:r
4 . How S
Cont emp ora r y World, and believes
. tote enotor . o tet
the third floor an d pick t.hem up. Only one will be given 1h,it Ila sncres~ t ul concl uslo u, tn•
standtng affects the issue .
to a stud ent. Whi ch would you ra ther have?
elutllnir the ull-dny fiemlni1r achedJustice Hunt arg ued that Mahoney's legislut ive positfo r
uled h)• NSA to &lt;'oord tnale tlJO entitled him to ha ve hi s plea to bar Aptheker act ively con
Reparat£&gt;lcch1r~R. Is ot ~oJue and .
B
"
Th J · ·
·
hupor1noce 10 the studenls ot this s1d~re~ by the . oard o , T ru stees.
e ust1cc 1s corre ct 11
ntvPt'slt)'
.
ass
1gnmg
p
rom
inence
to
Walter
Mah
oney.
U,
would
111
11
difficult t o name anyone who ha s done more to fo ste r tin
tn 11 basic declarotion •&gt;f p olicy , growth o,f "UB" as part of the State Unive rsity systen ,
11SNSA drrtnred thnl It "upholds However, it is obvious th at individuals outside of norm nl
the rf:;ht or any sm d ent gr mip to management channels can ·be given such pr eferred standin Y
l!'.cll
tor.fn.Chlel - JOAN R. FLORY
111
.1·1te w,h,,nnevgerntlh:tylo"n
' 119bwto ared· only at the ri sk of impairing the int egr ity of the Universit y
,lc)l1'( 1,(0W.AL
1,A10 11t l')dltor.... SUSAN SLO MAN d tess 1 1er or a '-~
• reatrlc.
e
- 1MaI1oney ,s p_ea
1 m
· th'1s ;SI·t ua t·!On was e111
titl e d t o " norma l"
l'h01m1 . 0&lt;11tnr
... RON CO lll.MlN GS nftlrm onr Ofll)O&amp;!t
lon to all
N,•1• ~,111.,,
Wll&lt;• ME II,\Jfll'f'K
t"frr ul Mirr , • , .K AR EN SANFORD
tlons
ancf
hnn11
on
spe.akers
a.s
not
extrao
t·dmary,
considerati
on.
ll r&gt;OtU E•J1101
• J AME8 l)A KF.R
0111~♦ Mn . , • , , RKV ROSENOW
Copy Wlltor
, , .C:IIAllLl'! l, l!TO &gt;lFJ
;l.4Vtrtltlll.tr M
. .... eo BRANDT being in consistent with flm educa.
Th e root issue in thi s affa ir turns upon th e need for
Buoln •■- M.........
. LA RRY' S rNOE'R
Ed ltnrlal /\~. • • ' W11f. emMl!lRlNO
llonal rea110
1s11hllllr" of any uni.
P, n , M ,
Tlf OMJ\8 H A E NWC, JR ,
free flow of ideas in a University, Prior to this, and evPt.
verstly.
more fun damentul. is the need for l'reedom of ideas a111
NSA 1·ommends 1he faculty end inf orma tion in the societv as a whole. Neither of th e,,
nrlmlnlstmtlon
In Its 1iblc and needs is absolute ; each niust be ba lanced by t he need '
worthy defense M nMde•mlc fr ee·1secu r e ancl prote ct the l'Onstituti on11
) order .
dom at ,mr 1tnlverslty. It Is untor.
tunatr 111
"1 111" vollt!ClllIdeology
l&gt;anger comes when these ,•iilues a ni 110! h11lan ced ,n
11roirnm hns Involve d ludlv1duataany meaninirf ul wa y -when
11ecurity is used t11rnt ionali ·,
11111sld&lt;'
th,• ncodem !r community, the muzzling of free opinio11. When liberty is co.•mall11
c1,r
10 ibr muu111•r It has ,
tai led fo1· reasonR of les~c•r 1trr1•rn-r, 1h1· r(•st ri ctir,n-. hel·c,1,'
l,1,1cr1ul
,.. ,ttono . .... . m•ll••t Feu•u .. r, ...... ,. a\
!1011.,•vt\ r, N'81\ I~ ,:onnitent lhnt [!\'I' ll more dnngerou~.
Uh , ,,,.,., uftke
at Hu tTMh,, ~•. Y
uu er '""' ·"-' u1 M1i11c 11 thr
11rlnrlt)I~ lnvoh·&amp;d. ucadem.fc
l'h e tuse may hn-.e a t'11r11nal,I&lt;·
-~l·q11l'Iil th, · L'mq1r~1
S.
Jls~•• \1.:ccfn 1ru1r11 tut ,, .. 1111w 111 u •IM ••le.I 11\.lfl ur IH&gt;•I
I I
l 1
_.,. 1•1nu&lt;.1crth•r w ► tu•1111o 11ot
\ 1 11, ~h ,,w~, 3 1:, 11 l fr&lt;;t•dom 111 rA01 n 11 o t1e P&lt;&gt;llcy
uHt1 1J111.,·c.1 ,,, w u._.,) , 1.1••
or
1hr unlvt'r•tty to provh11ea -.:-U.ca o firmll- establ ish till· l'i~ht uf sturltnts t&lt;1li~lcn t,, wltC111••
11
1 .,~..-~~."~!/H~~::~
1
11
!\lllll l'•'&lt;Jllin•TT11rnbf&lt;•r ul!J,
';&lt;\~'i')~';.~
.•::•~:, ,~~ ' "~~"'
~~~ t~~w,•I
,....,mt\t• for tttlJ und rrf'f\ dlls~usstnn, t•,·et· they pleiu,e. without 111111
"¥tir-ti•ltu( f"i'"".
li
dil
Ma ,u.-on ..Av•."•
· TOrk N T 1,~~11
1 ti"•\·nil
L"Qlll'll nencc.

Get Your Speclrttms Here

NSA
Student Rightrs

THE SPECTRUM

�FrWay
, No...,.t,e, 9, 1962

PAGl SEVIN

SPECTRUM

REFLECTION~; Dr. Cho, Visiting Professor,
BY ARNIE MAZUR

Finishes Month on Campus

Guaranteed to happen:
The (\lectiol\ returns for even
BY ELA_INE BARRON
Oreek Week.end 1s c1ulckly OIJproatlhlng with r.reelt&amp; tunl~
up tlle m011t minor otficea wiltl be
analyzed in tern1s of the situa­
Or . Kah Kyung Cho Lb,1 eec.
/or tb.e Sing and eaglll'ly th rowin g th eir energy Into queen cnmpa1gn.
und lu LIie aeries or visiting Asl1111
Ing, Pledges ca n be aeen pe_r(ormlng their dutie s. and someUmea tion in Cuba.
The difficulties ou •· cconormy is professors, apeut 11 mouth ou camgob1g a. little beyond the call or duly In their e1Tor1s to pleasl' tho
membel'II . All In all, lite Oreek acPne le vue "Cit ..Cu11
experiencing, especi111ly the ibear'a pus acqualnlJng students wllb his
011d excitement
that 11r11mlses to co ntinue throu~hout tbR semeater
shadow on Wall Street, will be world ,µid getllng iM:qualnled with
a11'isen"theirs ,
soid to have "suddenly
The brothers or Alpha Epallo" Pl hold their Annual Founder's Day
A oatJve or Korea, Or, Cllo
pnrty this Saturday night. at •he Hotel Westbrook. '!'he party begins from the Kennedy -steel d~el; a
fancifu l and meaningless ex11lana­ received hie BA at Seoul Natio11al
at 8: 30 and ls for brothers and pledges only , The brot.here are working
t1on.
hn1•d In pre1,1arat111utor Greek Sing under lhe direction of Sing chair•
University, and bis Pb. I.), in Phi­
nt the
Uulversll y ut
man Mike Hlnderateln. trhe brot.ben welcome tbe week ly comparison
The out-students will say '"H i;" losophy
that the Beta Slg11 feel It their obllg~tlon to mak e with tbe hlgl1 the in-studente, "Hello,''
Heidelberg . Be holds tho position
,tandntd• of AEPI. Thonk you, fellows!
A harmless, meaningless J?DPPY of aasocintc p1•ofessor of philo·
The slsterk of Alph.;i Gamma Oelta lnlroduce their candidate tor wlll be brought to a olaa1 and svphy nt Seoul National UOivct·­
Last year ho was a F11H­
Ureek Que~n, Linda Reynolds . They are looking forward to tonlgbl'R sl'nte ni&lt;'~ nebischey gi r•l will 1:ondlu sity.
hright visiting 11roff!llllor at Yule.
it.
,oc lnl wltb TRE.
By ANNE

MIINTE

Or. Cho hns given lectu rea h~n •
on .,astern nnd weBtern plllloso11hy.
" I llave t1•icd to ahow how philo·
,;vphically th~ outlook on world,
1111111
, utld (:o,1 has bren different
In the East and West and how
DR, CHO
thiH uttitude bas influenced hiijto1·~
I
would
also
like
lo
"'
th,
p.rt
ct younoe,' slu ll
differently.
look into what , iJ uny, will be lh1•
entJ
proOt of ~yntbellc clvflf1.,11tu11."h,·
111 ........ ,urlni; 11n111n• IIY lilt&gt; ID
W&lt;plained.
li111••:1 11ml h,·r,· , Dt. Cho aaid thai
in the u.niversitieK nf A111otlca,
Or. Cho was lmpreued
with
• IUtlN,t,
nnll 111·ofr•~OI'
• hnve ll'IMI
tho numerou1 education al Intlmr to I ht'm•l•lv,••· Th('i 1. thil&lt;! I•
atltullot11 lo Amcrlea. Ho felt
111.,11111 ., ► lii.,·,I h~ 11 constrictlnr
, lll'!hilt•,
the unlversltioa had excellent
f acllltie-. •~d were still trying
l\'h ,;1 11~~,•,tLn rummen l 011 the
to expand,
A popnlar Southern Jeade1r llrill About Americt1us as a whole. Am111
·l,•A11 w ..y ol life, llr, Cho
give thank11 on Turkoyduy that Jh. Cho !lllid, "l hnvu ltit1rnt•il thll l ,:111,,,1, "It i~ importanl
that
be Jives i.n America, the \n11d of Ametlcanff i&lt;ro bnrd-worklng . The 1 1111
•rirnn• .1111
.. 1.t h(• 11wure of
the free.
11rhl1,vement of America•~ oontem- their J,•11dir1grol•• in th1• co•,tllct,.
I 'l'&lt;'Sident Kennrd y will l,c crit• por11ry civili zation i• not mere in11 wm•J,I of toduy . 'l'h~y 11ho11Jd
hard work, t,,. 11111,I,
icized for appeasement and back­ l'ut'lu&lt;IO, lout 11 J'C.,,U)l
, &gt;tWMr&lt;• (&gt;f tlt1· J'UXIIC)II•
ing-down to Khrushchev ove1t Cu­ efficie ncy, vl,ior. nrul el((wl\unl ,lllllit}
know1111(' n,or1· ubout
ha hecauee we did not go to war . 1~,.dershi1, . I 11m ioing to taltu
. 1'dua.bile•'- t.v 1117peop Ie. "
(oroian
policy 11n1I fo•·~ltcn !lat
h
18
"
x~w York, Loll Angelilli, and
Me atao 11oted that the older
til)ll~ ,"
Lns Vegaa wlll claim to be "the
entertai nm ent c a p I t o 1 of' the
lltld
more
mature
1tudont.1
') 'I"' llext vtHitln1: A~iun prvworld." Someone, relaxing in the
•howed • 11reator lnal ght Int o
r.•JIBUI' in th~
0111
·1,•K, will Or.
warmth of his ltvinir room, will
the nec:eaa(ty of knowing ~bout
,\,!11\utt l'ul. Of th•• l'hlllipines,
foreign
cou nt rlet.
He felt
lrnow better.
there wa■ a lack of lntere,t
will 111l'iv11 h,·11: ~I)\"
l1
A etruggling jazz mualcia~ 1 will
f ind eucc888. H.e will be critiieiwd
~ becoml"t;
"commerch1I "
Th e buck covers of at leas't ~wo
,lo~en paperback~ will claim the
~,•v&lt;'1·11lauthors to be "the t'ineat
Af1d 11,oal sh:ntncant
writer
lCl
come along."
Turu11ri'llW 111 lJ 11.ru
. 1111
• new 111n,I e11tttl11111•d
l o Lh1• lnhhy of'
A major br ~11k will be run,oroo
between k.uuia and China. So too, Norton \fol"" will hn ch•clloted . :'I:nl'tnn,
Rob&lt;:rt T'11rkt', tiroL dir,.,ctor 11nll
bt•t\Vetrn Nasur
and tbe Arab At this time II '" :1p11ropl'lnl" to
rPtt1ll the Mdlr1uion or th!' fir~• P.111, W ll1&lt;•1(111, fir "t 1m..•i,fo1H of
world.
Lhe Uo11r!l u! M1111ager" accrptcd
A child will pose u John Ken­ union, 110w t larrfm1111 l,lbrar)' ,
uody'8 grandson Crom hia 111legeu 11 wn• l\ cold ond hln•IAl'Y ttn)' 11,,. ,,•y a gi\'PJl ,. , 1h,•1n by A.
l"~l,
II. l~t:I wh,i.1 /liorwu J111Jl Gl(!Jlnl Bartholom ,,w. then f'reai•
f'itst marriare.
,1,,111 uf lh~ lfuivt•r5i•&gt;· Counrll.
Research diseoverille li11ki11~;
ell('•
&gt;11·,•tte ~moking and c.inccr will
uThe ■ e
are to Pt'Omote •
I.a•denounced by a t.obaccon~11t a,
apirlt of fcllow ahtp ~mong the
student ■, to to1tcr
tlle toclal
"Communiat ln■pired.''
1
phoes or UJ\ vertlt)' Ille, to CO­
Diefendorf HaU will ~ t r i k e II
ope r~le t n •ttalnlrtq lhe tntel
someone aa being &amp;imilar w 11
lcctunl Ide al, of th~ Unlver.
birthday c11,,•.
.. t y, t o l&gt;t•' ~t,n th e preatrge
The New S~udtwt Review will
r t the colleg• c• onpus within
be IICOfiedbt!&lt;,1&lt;\JBeil is not print.eJ
the comi&gt;wnt t y a,od to be relavishly.
~
1pon1lble for lhe adm1ni1&lt;tr~ ·
A leadin!f larg~ -circul 11t1on111111&lt;
­
tlun .,nd flO'-'~rnm e nt of Nor
uioe will feature, "The Revival
tort Union,.
of Religion in America.'' Meintiun
I f'l\'111 ti~ ur U11fl11lu I not
,.f bin!('o every night will be ,111111Lth,• 1••·nolud ur 11ny011,•PN~on, lt

Sonicn nc will say that ''The
~fr. l&lt;e1rnelll Craw ot W1ir,lil11glu n Pomp was ll\e guest speaker
is unrenl;
11ri oln
•t laat Monday's prof8M•iOnul meethtg ot Alpha ,Kappa Psi. Mr . Cr11w C\innection"
1111oko OD the as11u0la or practical account111g, Cor&gt;..gratulatlons to tlie wife' s ti,Je. People like that don't
exist. People just don't sit aroullil
football team (lT1a fine win o,·er APO .
waiting for a cowboy or a teon­
Alpha Phi Oelta tralernlly
welcomes tbel r new pledge ola11,t1tn­
ard, the Jooomotive. Beaide 11, ev­
dtwt11d last Tuesday. An informal corree hour followed the Induction.
eryone know8 that drug addicts
The fellows or Beta Sigma Rho will have Elmo WithePapoon and are fiends, rapista, • degenerates.
1000 golluns of beer Ill lhl'lr party Saturday TIJKb.t, The party le on. They hnve no tender story tio tell.
Tickets Cor the Beta Sig AulmD Nocturne can be purchased trolll any
And certa inly not Sister ~!alv11fellow or 11ledge. Bel.II Sig defeated Sig Ell&gt;Ju bowllng last week and
iion I
gained the dlsllnclloo of having the highest aeries bowled thl• 7ear.
A local art theatre will fe,aturC'
This series mank topped that of AEPl by thirty points and replaced it
11 musical eomedy.
aa blgbest series mark.
The !irst sno wfall will be con­
Gamma Phi traternlt,
tbank8 the alstorw and pledgea of Phi Sigma
cursc,J ,
Sigma for last Frldar'11 eooJal. Ue~t of luck to Phi $lg'&amp; queen candl. eJdered pretty. The 118CODd,
date tor Greek We11k.end, l:Jryna Mlllme,o. The brotllere wlah to tbanlt No one will 11otice the third l.
Brother Clulr Andor811,1 for the party held al his home Saturday.
Thel'e will be a date party tomorrow night.
The brotherM or Kappa Pai thank

the sl8lerg

or Alpha Gam for
made the evenJ.og
espeolnlly er.tertalnln~.
Tho monthly "Good Tlntij Cha rli e" party will
be held this Thur sd11y lmm ed l11tel&gt; ff'llowlnr; the APhA meetln~ at
the Horge Inn.

a great time at the aorlal . l&lt;'nlkslnger Paul Penner

Phi Epairon Kappa rr11ternlty lhAnk~ Brother
the .grent party held /\I his bom " &amp;tun!ay
nlgbt.
bod by all.

Ralph Endres tor
A good time wu

The brothers ot Phi Kappa Pel have thulr 1u1uual ltoarlng Twrntles
1111rty this Snturday night. Congratulstlouw
to new otttcers Jed by
~ea l Meyer.
The sisters or Ph i Sigma Sigma tbank th&amp; brother~ ot Gamma Phi
Coran enjoyable aoclol lost Friday. Tho Alaters are all umtious tor you
to meet their Greek Week-elld 1•1111d
ldate, Br:,n.a .Mltlma.n
. "T ho
r.Jrl or the Future ."
lh••
Cor
tho
an d

'l'he brothers or Sigma Alpha Mu bold an open party t0nlgh1 tol
I lol el Richford , UIJlt Wednesday the broth l'MI held u roceptton
~'rater Char lee Goren. MllowJog--bia l.&amp;lk. here . Coogratulatlon11 to
bowling team, wbloh mo ved Into third pla.ce. ~d by Leon Smltb
1.
Arnold Grat.

The sisters or Theta Chi would Uke to Introd uc e I.heir queen Cf.Jt.
didtlle for IFC We ek-end . . " Needless to HY, It's NII-DC)'" (Turko.
l'h°II). 'I'h ey also extend be&amp;t wlAhee to slater M&amp;r7 Aversano, condldate
(ol' Miss Great wltoe.
'l'hu Sig Ept will ba.ve • eoclnl wltb the sllJlera Of Alpha. Sig
( lluft,.lo Slate) tolllghL. Last Thureday S ig Ep celebrated ll~ P'ouod ere
Dny Ill lbe Swlaa Chalet.
Sisters ot Sigma Kappa will celebrate their t,•ounders Ony lOday.
/\ note ut
The so1·111·ltywas toon.d ed Nov , ~. 1874 at Colby College
~ood luck lhroui;:h cam1111lgnh1g to l\l&amp;laofe Oanach, lhelr que.,11 cnn.
1lldnt e tor Greek Week-end.
Lust Saturday ulght th e brothers of Arnold Air Society begll.ll their
winter 11rogram wllb a party at BUI llruoakfll'ij hou9e and a bRy ride
al Slevcu's St.sb lee In Elall'l Aurol'll. Thauk~ 10 Dan Cltrlslman tor
providing the ente rtainment.

CITIZEN'S ARREST

or

,,r

I

-----

Union Dedication Recalls
DedicationProgram in l 9:-J4
I

• . ,,

THE LAW AND YOU

--

--

I'

iJ 111·0,u•1 ,11.11~•· l'"HH•mtwr (~buu
Sports columni.eta'W'il1haill tho
1 ,,1110 1':'nt'trlll .. 111d~IU P c·ontrlbu
l'ehabilit.ation
of Sonny Liston.
CHANCElLORNORTON
11,n, Th i&lt; t,1JIIJl111: I• ,w.11111•1!to
They too will forget to mci2tion
,1111 lmn , form th o ur, 1
th,• \Tnlv,•r•
Th" i,;uneral publJo knows ll•flo I rurtH, t hllt • felo ny hl'lb boon com­ .,~m, •thini: -h c now Clln buy wh11t ooened . StudPnl ~fO IIIIM , n·p11•11
11e \\ ant:'\,
:'l:ortnn \ 1 11w11 ◄ tan,i. u ti
lug ever y 11cttvit&gt; on tb1• ram11u•· 1
ot,ou• eillzeu'x arrest
so betore milieu l)y the person urreeted.
There will be a luU III news rormed 8 (Ull'tlde which started 11..tnhl1• 111cmor1al l-0 une 11( the
1 ►1tvute porson may arrest If
,·11111lll11ln~
/urthPr, wP rnust deHnP
' !Plooy.
o felouy ha.. in racl ueen comm11. ~\ ents of cri~is importance and in front nf Edmund Ha yes !foll l)nlv ••rs1ty 'K gr~atest !ric11dl'."
,\ retony ~~ dlsllngu1Rhed as a •ed whtither or no t It 1"8e lo bl~ attention will locus un the capital
controversy.
l'l'ime put1isl1able by ol'le year or 11ref!cnce, If h13 bas rnasonnllli&gt; p11110~hm1•11t
ltc1m1·l• citing evidence ol in­
mor~ imprisonment
in a state g,,ount1s tn suspect Ille person 11r
in the atmos•
11e11iJP11tiary,r
while a misdemeanor
rested. Uetore mall.lug the arrest oreMed radiation
1s n crlmr 11unislrnLle l)y one yea r he niue1 Inform the 1,rlsouer or phc1·e will appear. No ac~iou will
or leR•, 119\lolly In a cou nty Jail, the arreill, require him to aubmit, l,1• taken ,
The wor/1 ar t e•t c!mv•a from th&lt;' using reas ,onable torce IC neceeeary,
Studen t&amp; faill~ final.8 will !ind , Thirty se('nll,lur)' •1:ho111Lt•Achr,• (1111th~mntlc,; 11nd Ur. Normn,1 C.
;,•much verb "arreter" whlcb means aud lmmcdlnlely lake him betor o fau l t with the c.e.mpus calcr1d11r.
from Ruffalo 1mm schoo ls art' Jlllr• ~ ... ,,, 11, 11tof,•••11r of ~tKli•tira ,
111•top. •lay or reRtrRln the liberty a pea,·e 11ltloer.
It will be guaranteed ~hnt 111oth­ t,cipallng in an in-service lnatl­
Tho teachers study two matho­
M n ver~on .
Eitl10•1
· uo offi ce r or prlvat~ per. ing i~ goaruntecd to hAJ)l)l'n.
tute in muthematks, spon~ored b&gt;· nrnllt-»I phto•o~ In geometry and
Ill New/ York. llll ottloer ma)' ar. FOil mny ,u·rest wllhout n warrant
the National Scie nce Found11t)on, in p1obabillty and atatistic• 11nd
rt•A&lt;11 11Prson fur u feltm&gt;, al any Cor n bruucb or the peace. A prl­
Thu ,c.ults of the mock elec­ her•· durin~ tht• 1902-G.1urttdcmir l1:iv1• \lw ,1pp111
l 1ln it&gt;· t,1 vblN'VO
!lmr•.•,,119 even without n warratot. v11te perso n may not 11rrelll Cer 11 ~ion tor Governor and Senator • ior schoo l year
,11Ht ,lo,~u~,- th~ activitict or a dom·
c\ w11rrant is needed for a Sunday mJsdemea nor not 0001mltted In hlr. ~ew Yo1k State, conducted in the
Buff~Jo ten ohor11 with II mini ­ unatrAtlon clt.111of blrh 1ohool
,,r ulghl-llme. arres t ror a mtsde. presence .
Sµ~otrum office fol' the student mum of two yeftri, uf teaching ex­ juniore being tau c b t, dmlln
fuea.nor The aulhorlt.y to arre11l
body have been tabulated.
prrience and a strong bacik ground
It lnalructed by il. police oltlcer
without a warraDt IR determine/I
Tw,•nty high ~chool junfo,w f'roru
Nellon Rockefeller beat !Rob­ iu mathemat ie11 wne sclecte,I un
to make a felony arresl, a prlva.te
by 11tate atatate.
1&gt;of'flonIs guilty of a mlRdemeanor ert Morgenthau , claimin( 60% of A compe titive baals, acc ording t o the 111,tfalo area wtre choaen for
~11ther on officer o r i&lt; private tor failure to do so.
the ballot&amp; cnst. Jacob Javit, ouL­ Or. Harriet F . Montagu e, p1,l ffls­ the d~monatratlon cl.ua.
'iti z,•u n\Ay arreBt U 1&gt;ersoa for a
atripped the Governor's majc,rlly sor of mathematic■ and direct.or
'l'111·1111ii
h attendance
ai tho lo •
Uecenl cour t decision• bold that by polling 78'1"
elony or o bre11ch of t.be peace
,titult•, lht' teachcra
WeN abh •
0 ot the vote. The of the institu~.
:ommltted lo hJa presen ce, or to a suspected •hoplltler may be tem. inte1·est ghown by- tho11e who 1par­
tu 11ar11 ,Jgh t sei:n111terbou n o f
At111iating
Dr,
Monlnt,tUP
ur~
Pr
porartly detained for IDVe■ tlgatloo
11tevent Ute crime.
tlcipated iJi the 1tn.w ballotlnc Albert
F'a dcll, auoclate pro ­ 1tradu1t.e credit in mathematlct .
An ottlcer may a.rreat tr )111hu by II store•, management.
1'h11y •~ enrolled lo U.r {neUtu~
le appreciated,
Uloush tht t!Qrn•
,·,,aMnable grouruia for sosplolon.
Next week· Unordered morehan­ out, u the roeulta, wu not al; all fi1~110ro! mathematic, ; Or . Fr:,nl,, tultion tr110and Nee.Ive book aud
••ased on lntonnatlon
llM lo lb, , (11~"R. Obon, llllt1oda~ prof~a,or of travt1I 111lowan~
au.rpriiinJ1

by Ro11aldKamlntld

s, ,,

I ,\

,,r

Secondary School Teachers
Take Part in Math Institute

a.

�S P IC T I U ~ti,

fMII IICIHT

Prfdoz,Mee hr'•

1M2

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Enter nowl Here's all you do :
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PAGEMINE

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Fridoy, November 9, 1962

Lall

Pre -Law Society
·r~ere wlll be a regullU' meellng
i,I the Pre.Law Soolety, tllle Wed,w•&lt;lny, from 3-4:30 p.m .. In room
13~ lo Norton Union. L\ Olm will
lie ahown ao d l\11'. Sher man. a
member or l he faculty, will speak
••ll 1,1\bor Relation's Law.
Psychology T nt
'l'IH• Ml.lil,.e~ualysls 'l'est wUI be
~,veu to s"eofors applylng to the
p-ndunte
ac hoo! ot psycholotfY"
V{~dneeday, In room 132-of Towns.
""d H all at t :00 p.m .
There will be a ,2.00 fee which
1r 11ot paid at ibis time will be
r:otsed t.o $4.00.
Glee Club•
"Bac h with tho Twlst" I• the
HIie tor tho Joint rehearsal ot the
L'.B chorus, Women"s Chorale. ond
)t~u•e Glee Club, under the dlrec.
lion. of Robert S. Beckwith, to be
held Sunday, In the ballroom of
t1fl1•
rlman Llb rory at 7 p.m.
The rehearsal Is tor the annual
rhrl~t=
concert on l}jlc), 16 and
11;., to be held at Lockwood Ll111
'1\l'Y, The Ba~b. Magnlflcat will
1,c 11ertormed . The Sunday rebeal'S­
:11 will be over at 9 p,m. Twisting
will toll ow wl tit Don Conover and
1he Cou.tlnentals,
teatur lng Dick
IJJ1rman on vibes , Refresbments

J Chase to

V-'oa~

S1peakTuesday;
w·II
I Show IP
eace Corp F"I
I m

vr u.,.01'!111llitAJlonwill

ltoberl t.:bnse, e11eci&amp;l Bll&amp;letant
be planulld ,
lo t.he ,,tttce of public all'.nl,rs or
Any 111"1 aJI lntdreated
perwns
I.he Peace t.:Or,&gt;s.wUI spe ak Tue s­
~honl(I ntteud
llay In Ille con ference lbeate1:. Mr
Mr. Formal
Tb~i •e will be a UlllUdatory meet- Chu&lt;1e wilt speak Ill ~ o.m , 11.n(Int
Ing vt 1111Mr. Formal ca.ndldatee 7:~0 p.m.
und their cam paign managers toA tllm
deecrlblllg
the P06Ce
do. In room SAS Norton at 3·~0 ('ort•" will be shown and a ,corree
Y
hour will b~ held s.tter the lecture.
ll -m

Student Speech 4 Hearing Society
'!'here will be a meeting ot t be
Student Speech and Hae.ring So­
clety on Tltur,;day at 2:00 p.m. In
room 83a Norton. Dr. M. D. Steer
from Purtluo University
will be
tb., ~1u;x1 111&gt;eaker. lt etree hm ent.a
wlll be 1!erved and all a:re we\.
1•omed.
Travel Map
Tb~ public relations committee
or the union board hae drawn till
a trn volt!e map. The purpos o of
this llUlP IJI lo advertise
offers
tor rides and riders on trlpB.
Through the map a greater amount
ot 11tudents
will see your olrer.
The map boa been poated lo the
basement of Norlon oppoalte the
IJook•tore . Directions are 11vnlln.ble
tor all Intereste d vereons

Chaae attended pu bllo
■choola In Sprlngfleld,
Malna .
ohueetta before entering Wee­
leyan University In Conne+ctl­
out . A clu■ officer nnd ac'tivc
In sports during hi■ co llege
yeara, he gl'aduated In 1969 ¥11th
honors 111 Amer ica n Stud llea.
Mr.

CheckroomRules
lltlldent mfauaf) or tbo Norton
l!nlon chuukToom h11o11
nllmlltd lo
the 1•~ll\blf8lllnent ot tb11 tollow tna

regut"tJons:

Officer

In tile Office of Pro .
gram Develop1ne11t 111d Coord .
lnatlon. Th i, office act ■ aa
staff to the A11oclate Director
for program ■ and provide.
policy guid ance and flecal con­
trol for tho four
regional
of'llcoa,

lt (' iDs mu st oo cMelloollll4
~ra'lnl.
by l.be owner.
2. (!hec ks m11:, oot be lnt er­
r hnnged .
3. All ttom~ mu"l be wltlidran
at the eame tlt,1&amp;. The cbec t
room 11 not to be ull«1 ae 1
tocl!er.
• • ldonUth'.atlon ~ muet be

1.

In rE"aJ)()p.seto tbe laterest

or
Gover nmen t In a
r •cace Corps program, Mr . Cllase
visite d this Onrrlbeau
lslo n d 111
Auguet ot thl t&lt; yenr and developed
" Peace Corps educatio n proJec1
which will enter trultLlng eiirly In
111., • 01\r\)ados

1nas
.

1)1\

.,

e.

fill ~gA,tl'Q.

Ab11olut1lly

110 ovornlgh
~lloekl ng , It ems &lt;:lln be NI.
clo.lm cd only at t.he too ot
3~~ per day .
Lollt tags result ln a G()o

tee .

-·----------------------

SHOW,CAUSEORDER PRESENTED

He took advantuge or 11 natlorwl
Continued l l'Om Page 6
t ellowshl1 1 to attend tbe Mmxwell
Schoo l or Poblio Atlmlnlat1ratlon flvo to elll'ht t111ywait le too long
Hunt ) wlll for the llrwt thn•
at Syracuse Unh'erslty
wh olre ho
hea r tho tettlmony of five wlt­
re&lt;.:elved O MRster~ I leit•·fl~
nnd
be
will
be
Irreparably
Injured
111
ne ■aea, took ar the dooume11t1
hy the wait . ln Mr . Eg11n'9 tl\8e,
P ublic Admlnletmtton ,.
and other papj!r1 which in.,y k
11, Judge signe d hie show cause Ot•
l'omlng
to Wnsllill!(ldll
.... a der h1te on Tuc~clily. and It orderod
l"troduoed Into ovldenn,
and
MauRttement Intern in J 111
11e or
wllt be atked to decide, both
­ the Trust ees to "ppes.r ror tho
1900. lie worke d as a -t1lnl'l'n1111tst
on t he factl en the law, whetll •
ant In the lilxec ullve Otoe,, ol tbe hearing on the motion t or 11rellml.
Secretary. Navy Deportment,
but uary lnju nctlo11 ut noon 011 Wed­
er on the merits ~r. Ega" hH
was called Into 11.cUve mllltury llt&gt;~day. 'rhtn h~urlng was held,
prennted o c11e 1how lng th"'
service 1vlth lhe Army ror 111,, first
,ind It r es ulted In the Judge's etgo.
he h•• • teoat right to the In
six months ()f 19tll .
IIIK ot n ' l)~ellmlnary Injunction reJunction .
Mr. Chase has worked
In
~tn1l 11lt1g the TT\lalees trom perIt slH)uhJ bu no1,1'1 root lbe per.
the Peace Corps elnce Auc,ust
milting
.Apthekor
from
epeakln&amp;,
lies·
a p1wrmu1cc1&gt;t1(
or11 J udge Bun
of 1961 where he Is a Prog1•am
'" 'I Hll111, n hNltl.111\ tor the ~crma. ()rt . ~I wnn not n t\ltl an d COTllUI
I
1111111
l 11!111
wli1111 whlf'h Mr . F.gn.n h&lt;'l\rln1,t: rntller, It wll.ll naere)J a

Geography
Clamru.u 'l'beta Uptll on Fratern­
llY will sponsor
a panel discus.
will be serve d.
diOII Wednesday.
at 8: 16 p.lJi . to
Student Reoltal
C,·osby l ~O. T he program "Oppo r­
'l'be weekly student recital, glnn
i,y applied
music student.a will tunll lei! In Oeo1l'l'n11hy.'' 111Int end•
1uke pl a~'8 Tuesday, nt 1 p,m. In ed l.o 11nswer any uuesUons stu •
fl•'i•k ~.
lht! au,lltorlum of Baird Hall. All dl.'nts mny have about t he fteld of
1i~11rh1◄,\' l11
11wePn 111,, 1•t t0r110ys and
, 111deot11:rnd !acuity are l»vlted to geography.
It sho uld be noted t hat the
the Judge. based upon Mr. Egan••
Se1ny1
11ll~ud.
Supremt Court Judg e who •lgna
" 1m11erM"11111
1 oral ari:umnntB . Tbb
T&gt;r. Abramson ot the Sch ool or
I.R. CLUB
Is uBlmllr .-nlled n "«umm o.17" bear­
the "show ca4se" order need
'l'he I.DdustrluJ and Labor ltela, 1ildu1111tlon will addr ess the first
of See.ny8, Tuesday at 7
not be th e ■a,:i,e judge ' who
The Arnold Air Society,
na­
111,iu; Club will meet Tu esday IP meeting
ing,
hear, and gront, the prellm! •
ty of
-.ortoo
Union tQOm 233. Tlrls 11.m.ln the multi-purpose room ot tional honor fraterni
I( tl11• Jutl;t,• 1). l(li(IAM todlly that
nary ln~unct lon . In Mr. Egan '•
u,eellng will bo or a geuernJ bueJ­ Norto n . Everyone Is Invited . R e­ A FR OTC cndets here is pi ep ar­
case th ey hAppened to be tw o
hil{ for their !i!teentb Naloonal
th ere should bo no l11Jun/lll o11 lit
"""" nlltUrt1 IIIHI fu tur e arllvltieB frosbments -wUI be served.
diff ere nt judgu.
(Th e ■how
Conclave in Buffalo in MA¥ l)y
nil, th,m the prellmlnnry jnJuncllon
cause order alone doe, not, In
1,htnini ng d11tes tor t hf.' f.'X~~ted
will bfl "vncatM," ,ultdthn Btudeots
a nd of Itself , have the effe ct of
:.{,lx)O de\egntes ,
mny 11rnceed In lht.1 J\othoker mat­
enjoining anyone. Therefore,
The girls will be escorted l:o the
ter n.e their Ju41Pnent dictates
ne11tspaper account■ which may
Military BaU, in the Statler Hil­
hav e referred to Judge Hunt ••
IE1tnn m,1y npJ)C4l.) U. bowenr.
ton, by cadet-9 from universitie~
decree as a decree "co ntinu ing ''
·1he Judge gM1.o te the 1&gt;41rmano•
all over the country. The date
The
Inter-V&amp;l'lllty
al10
bBll
a
II.
a
prior
i11Junotlon
are
In
error.)
By JUDI T H BUTTON
1nJtw,•llo1J, tholl th&amp; outy (iroce llur e
tonsista
of girls from
brnry In 'l'OOm 217 Norton which bureau
New ~ n Club
Oncl' Judge Hunt the de· !O to!IOVI IN for tht• 'l'rUijl\1~8 lo
school~ and sororities in the tirea,
l'lte next ~ewman meeting wilt IA open to all stu deni.. The In ter • ~tie\udi ng UB, Erie County TEochni­ crc11 t•1r,~ prelhnlna1·y lnJunetton
tnk e 1111 11,l)l)MI In thll hOJ)Oot got,.
Im Wednesday, at 7:30 p.ru. A va,·all;y also ,holdB ~ Bi ble diBCU"·
11~ln11t 1he trust ees it la lmme d l­
cul Institute. and othet'!I.
ting tbo h1Junct1011 orllet reversed
~•&gt;ulul will be helil tomorrow ut sio n In room 286 or Norton on
ately
c•lfootlve
ugnlnat,
not
only
I
he
Mondays at • p,m. and Tuesday s
In Actdition, the Air Soc iety,
:-.ewmau Hall.
by 11 high er court .
truetees
.
but
nlao
the
Truste~~•
with an active membership fl f -4.2, "ag ent s, ijorvau ts (lnd em11h1yees,"
Mass Is offered dll.lly at Newman at 12 noon .
HIiiei
ho.a re-establis h ed the A n g e 1 Thull It became etfeNIVI! 11gtthiot
l u New York, tbe tlr~t n))peal ta
lmll at noon. Novemller IH lhe
'rl1eri., will be a Sabbaill ~ervlce Flight, the national co-ed auxiliary
to the ApJ)811ate Division ( In tho
111011th
devoted to the 11oor souls.
Clinnc•Jl
lor
Furna
s.
Oe&amp;n
Slggel­
The Rev. James Ill Streng -wlll Ibis evening, 7: 46 p.m. at Hillel. of the Arnold Air Society. Th ey kow , et al . Dleobedi e11ee or ~he de­ ordinary couree of events), 11ud
the second llPJ)8al Is to the hi ghest
hold his regu lsr theology dlscua­ Pr . JusUn Hofmann will spee\ on 11rc holding their 8th Naitiona l c ree l&amp; a co ntempt ot cnnrt .
New York court-the Court of Ap.
&lt;lnns nt 9 n.m. nod 10 a.m. every ''Abra ham -Pionee r or t he Spirit.'' Conclave in conjunction with Ar­
Rabbi Nalltan Gaynor or Temple nold Air . Angel Flight active ·mem ­
ftc r. tr federot con­
Toda.)', there will be a fc,11 pents . 'T'hcrt111
l'11eeday aud Thursday In Norton
Sinai. wltl give the Recond le ct ure bl'rehip totals 27 girls. It ba s
Mlltu1to11111prtnclpleK or mntter11
l!oaring on Mr. E11gan•ademand
rno.
for a permanent
Injunction.
hllVP he\'11l11Jet1Lf'd
Into the tllffl)Ute,
Sunda y Mass ror dorm atudents In !be curren t series. "Religlou elected Miss Glor ia BlizniEik, n
It l~ JlOMSlble for the 101!10,I(party
S lnoe a sui t for an Injunction
1, held at the co.utaltclan Oenie r and the Soelnl Order," Sunday eve­ Cadet Major, is command er.
ning. Rabbi Gaynor's topic will be
to
tnk.11
the
case
to
1h11 flupr .. me
is a suit In ••equity" (aa dl1tln.
"' 10: SO a,m ,, 12 noon, ond Ii p.n1 .
"A ,lewlsb Vi ew of tho Good SoC11det Major Charle s Wagner,
gul1hod f rom an action at
rnu rt or th o United Stl\tea, (P re.
Weale y
cloty ." A delicate s sen aupper wltl chuirman of the date bu r eau and
~um:lbly, ronelltullonnl mnttora wilt
"common law"), there 11 no
Wcsley·e hayride and barn dunce
he ~erve d _preceding the progrl\lll coordinator of Angel Flight, saye,
he Inje cte d Into the dl~pute ro&lt;lay
trlal by Jury. Thua, today, the
1&gt;111
1lo held this evening. Oars ...-111
ut fi , 30 11.m.
"I have the moat cnjoyabl11 job
oven It they weren't on the ala!.)
Judge (It need not be Judge
Ii nve the campus at 7 p.m. !or
" lndh ·ldualism
and Conformity ever. l 've met mnny nice g irls
\ lirou: n&lt;lvunce reee l'vatlon s are
thi s job.
wlhll ure th ~ 1,ropar limits ?'· will si nce I was assigned
u,•ces&amp;ary.
h., the topic ur dlscuaalon 11t the Howew r , with 2,600 cadets need­
r'1•om Sunday to ,Vedn eadfly al
next co ft'.ee hour, 3:00 v.m. on in1r dates. mea ns I will h1Wc to
, · 30 p,m., the Rev. l,ullua Bell,
TllurR dny. ~Irs. Normnn FerUg Is meet a Jot more by 1!16:l. So, a ny ­
1•11~tor or ~•1r~t Methodist Church,
the co-ordinator
or the aeries . , body know any girl s?''
r'.lmlrn. will co nduct a 1&gt;reacbl11g
Dear Students,
111tss
ton in l ·ntv cnlty
Met hodist
'h urch.
~Ir. Oell will he Wesley's guest
Letterpress and Offset
We would like to !Ok!! th ,s oppo rt,mity to thonk
,1 lhe s u111
1e1· uour , 5 p.m .. Sunday
you for your patience during our rece nt remode ling
Stude nt Christian A11oclatlon
·r1i1• oext mee ting or the Sr.A
Everything is practically comp let e arid we ore right
•Ill he held on Tbur sduy, at 7:30
11 Lhe loung e or the
l'nl vers it.Y
bo ck down to business
•,·e~by ter ion Church. ;\lac Mahon ey .
r he noted folk si nger wh o ls now
I
At th,s tim e we wou ld like lo men tion some new
1335 E, DELAVAN AVE. - TX 3-09 13
111,enrlng ut tbe I.Al Crl l ique, wlll
'I
nie ,·laln
odditk&gt;ns to our menu . Our new snack bar 15 now feo ~
hl!er.Va.-.lty Christian Fellowahlp
Semcre . Quality • Price
turing FRESHLY BAKED PIZZA, served the woy you
~IT'. Donald ¼n_brlski from the
11,,aalo Bible ln~tltute w111speak
like it We also hove BARBEQUEDCHICKEN, borbe Printer s of Th,e Spectf"IJ.m aince 1937
•11 "The
)teanlng
or wre" this
qued
in our inim1toble way , And for those who desi re
·vcuinit lu ~orton room 23~.

---------

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FEATURING
Larry Pirrone . Quartet
Evn, SBt. :-.it.I!
I.! p iece combo on Fri.)
Nu I'" 1 facilitir, (lvailable

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From A Tasty Sandwich to A Full Course Me al

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THE UNIVERSITY DELJCATESS
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3588 Mo,n Street
TF 2 1456

T; l KE OUT ORDERS OF ALL KJN/J~
SANDW ICHE S AND H OT PLATES

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�PAGETEN

SPE~T

,RUM

..Manuscripts" to Be PubJished;
Magazine Appears in December
M11nu11Cr1pts,
11 campus literary
the publication, but mc,ely to
1111lilieation, will come out the
offer him an opportunity
to
· t'(llnd week of De&lt;:erober. The
display hie work,
rnutoziDc include:i poetry, pros!!,
'l'he publication
began
fou1·
and M&gt;meart pie&lt;:ea. There ne no
ol
political. vieWti expreasoo and an y yeal'e ago as n continuation
commen tary w1ll be in the way of The Asterlek, Dr. Llonel W1Jd la
N·iticlam of conlemporary litel'ary the faculty advisor, and. ViDcent
On Luiso is the editor. The staff
workl!.
The 1ubject m.o.ttet is limited consists of both grad u ate and
students here.
Ainee the mairai.Jno contnins . uo undergraduate
This year for the first time,
e11tire and doce not aim at stren­
Jng poin~ in storia. Mauscrip ts Manuscripts is coming out twice
Is the only campus magazine dodi- yearly once in Decembor and once
'in May. Art pieces are also a now
1·otod to serious literature.
Manuecrlpta deairea to bring
fo11tu1·e.
the wr iting elements
on the
Any s_tudent who wiahea_ to
campus together,
The maga.
submit hie work to Manuscripts
zine. however, doe. not want
may contact their office in roor.n
the Individual
to roae hla
6 Hurriman
Library or through
i dentity In becoming part or
m11il box 60 in Norton Union.

Fridoy, November 9, 1962

Play Probes Dope Addiction,
"Connection " Loses Theme
By GERALD

Delivers
Ifll't'13} LeCt Ure

All Ihe ijOr.ond act dt•aws lo n
long overitue cioM, someone say s,
"U~unll.v It cloesn•t $eem to meRQ
anytlJ.in1-C'He's tulk.log about hi~
Cir&lt;'le Art's Impresario and noted hMoln drugged lite, but we found
lo,•nl director, supplied the guld- the 1•br;u;e more tiertlnent to tb,,
lug hoocl tor the nttrnctlon. Flrsl ()la)• ltHeH. Rut 11erbaps this is be.
JJigliters lwd an add!Uoonl Lrent Ing too hnrd on the u11Lhor who
si nce Author Gelbe1· atteodl!d the doen 1u1,•e aomethlog to e1ty eve11
11erroro1nnce.
If his me••age is camouflaged by

'!'here has Ileen a great

Ur. KAtherine F. Thorn and Dr.

ic, will be a member of a sym­
posium on counseling an d pal")bo­
ther11py in speech and hearing
pl'Oblems.
meeting of the American Speech
1'wo papers entitled "Conll'OIot
and Hearing Aeaocia t ion in New Stuttering
in the Eight Through
Y01'k City, Nov, 18-21,
Twelve Year Old Child," and "Chil­
Dr. Thorn, director of the clln- dren with Velophoryngeal lnsuffj.
ciency" will be preaented by Dr .
W i I a o n, associate profeBSor of
speech pathology,
Dr. Wilson will also be a mem­
ber of a symposium on stutt.eri ng
during the meeting.

D, Ken.11.cth W i I s o n from the
~peech an d hearing clinic here will
be participants
in the a1mual

Addresses by -Prominent Gradua,tes

Highlight Law School'sAnniversa1ry

Commentators
on the tnlk wUl
Addresses
by three (lr&lt;&gt;mlnenl
J;T'llduntea or tho Low School or be Professor Walter J . BIIUJ)I, Chi•
the Stnte University or 8\J.O'IIIOcago Unlversily Law Soh ,ool, Don•
1vlll blgbllghl
the Scboo l'a 75th aid 0. Lubiok, Tax Loglsl~tlve
Anniversary Cooferenqe, next ll'ri. Cot111st1I,Otllce of the llecretary
or the Treasury, Washlog:ton, nnd
d11y 11nd Saturday.
l'rMrsHor Ernest Brown , 1-lflrv&amp;rd
At llle Snturday luncheon, ijpeak. !,aw School.
11rs will he John Lord O'Brlan .
"Legal Education-For
What?
oromlnenl
Washington
nttorney,
1935·
Juli t&gt;rnnk C'. Moore, chairma n or Changing Persp~ctives,
1962" will be the topic, or a
the Ooar1l ot T rustees of tbe St.ate
Saturday address at 10 ,a,m. In
Unh•er~l1y ot New York'. The
Room 110 of the Law !School,
lun cheon wUJ bll al 12:~n In 111
\•
will be pa■t
All speakers
Buffalo Athletic Cluh,
Dean's of the Law ISchool.
At a 6: 30 anniversary dlriner
Princlp~I speaker will bu Fran.
Friday, at the BAC, Hono~able
cia Shea, Harvard Law 1:lchool,
Charles S,
Desmond, chief
and dean of the UB Law
Judge of the New York Court
cf Appeals, will be the featur .
School from 1935 -1940.
ed speaker.
Commentntors
on his lulk WIil
The program wlll O.J&gt;ml
2 p.ru. be Protessor Mark DeWoilre HowP,
F'l'iday in the Staller II llwo wltb Uurvard Law School, lJ ll dean.
Sandra Doo I~ i,h otograpbcd
In t ile Jnmes l\i&lt;'Cormlck Mitchell 19-t0.44, Jusllce
Pb.Ifill Hnlpern,
oue of th e ecuntr outllla eb_e wear .~ Lectu1'e eoUtled "Art the Fedornl New York Supreme Cou,·t, dean
In her role or o. photogrnnher's
r1tx Lnws rn~tortlng the S11hst.un- from 1944-48 and 1952-5:J, Pro!es·
modol in the laugb . prov okioi;- "H 1tve Law of the Slate• ." Spe1Lker 801' LC1ul~L. Jett e ll)'rn e Profeuor
a Man Answer's" A Ross Hunter wlll bv proressor J o,;e11h T. Sne,id, or Admtnlstrnll\·e
Law, lfarvard,
T'rodu otlon. Uobby Dnrlu, Michel. Slo1'lord llnlver~lly
Law School, UB dean l!HS-50.
In&lt;- l'rt18le, John Lund. C'ueAar
l&lt;owc,·o ant Stepbunle Power also
star In the Eastman
Color Olm. 1
NATIONAL
TOUR
If will hav e II.ff Uultalo Premiere,
Hlm111taneo11sly nl . the Suburbnp
A111borstaud thr Downtown Cinema.

rontroversy

The Connection
A 1/\l7 P1.AY ,\BOUT JUNK
tN&gt; Dick Gtondo Quonet1e

Feetu,,nq

SAID ARDIS $MITH, NEWS.
"A Tnvmoh! 8Cl')I calt ouemhl~ on
o tocol dago ti\ tho DOil
MlO&gt;ONI"

•i•

SAID JACK GELBER, AUrnOR _
tr\V QIO't o, f -,,,ofc 1ti
A Vety Qoad performanc.t"

·,- hr1 h truly

U1JO N IGHTU

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SUNDAY Cit 2 :J0

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26 to 30 - P, Q, n, S,
3 to 7 - Q. L, M, N, 0
10 to H - E. F. G, Ti. 1. J
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Freshmen will make a program
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College
receptlonl•t
In Diefendorf 114 et least one
week In ndvance or tbe above
sche4uled times.

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MUSIC
HALL:

FUme(1 in Eastman Col"'

SU D $111 $4.~All S.ata R111n1,
bMt choke fll -a r- ...._ NOW with th•ck

PM

t
♦

Storts Todoy -

SHLOMO CARlEBACH-famous Folk Singer

~

:
I.+...............
~ ..................
.

TL2-9338

GEULAGIU with the Oranl-plua

*

Y, Z

Nov.
Oec.
Dec,
DPc.

Open Wed. • Sun, 8 p.m.-2 a.m.

November 13th - 8:30 PM
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

You

people

ht!!!t,an
.

TUESDAY

audienc e,

suffer?"
That's why we're . bore, Ernie, but
tor the llre or us we can only thiok
of you aR nctors and not as tbo
honeRl to goodness Junkies that
Fred told 11" you all were at th~
heginn.ing o! the play,
\Vlllll

~.s uo~titl'\

••u ll CHMOMD

SflJl&gt;fNT

yells

T , lf, V, W, X,

7 p.m. till ?

~!:
RIii

Erule

"Why are you here stupltj?

* IN

Nov. 15 to ~1 -

led by John Boylan

'l,4

Hackett as Leac~ and Stuart
Roth as Ernie don't give the
necessary d eath.In.life
quality
to their characters.

Frosh Registration

~:~~J*~-:(itl
j

:~so

verbtnge.

The charactera
Just don't
come over th.e footlights, Not
only has Mr. Keller Jnterpo.
late d It to death, but Richard

There ai•e some flne moments In
the play, tho ugh. Phil Welnlg Is
the perfect Harry, even \hough br
Jtas no lines. And L!11-etto ·Dunne a•
Sister &amp;ivation etenls the show,
The 1,tay lt•elf hns a. moving t11de
out as Harry plug• hi b.ls vhou o,
grn ph """ llsterui to bis cann ed
music irl sUeot co11;1J1reb.euslon
S 11
enklog or nmHIC, Dick Grnnd o',
()llllrtet plnys cool jazi that I~
All rreshmen ln University Col. wo,·tlt tl&gt;e vrl~~ or adrolAslon all
lege are reminded
that progr11m hy itself. 'rh.. ploy run s through
planning and pre.reglstrallon
for Not 1:l.
next semester
wlll begin Thurs.
day, avcordlng to the · following al.
pb11betlcal schedule:

al

MAKE

dea I of ex!'ess

about both the pllly
Michuel Butor,
Visiti ,ng Pro- and the movie made from It, whlcb
Cessor of French here, will present opened 111 New York last month,
the first of two public: l ectures 'l'he movie played one day before
Wednesday, at 8:80 p.m . in -room being bnrred by a. court becauel.'
148. DieCeu.dol'i Hall.
of the use or a. fo ur letter Anglo,
'"The Novel and Poetr-y" is the
Saxon word meaning excre ment,
top ic chosen by the Mr. Butor who
hos won recognition
as an out­ 1vhluh, ror the junkies denotes her ­
standing
representative
of neo- oin.
1·ealism sioce his publi&lt;cation of
When the play premiered
two prize-winning novels in 1967,
three years ago It also ra ised
L' Emplol du Temps nnd La Modi­
a stor m because of the new
ficatio n.
While established himself as an
approach of the author. Some
author, Mr . But-0r has t;aught in
called It a bore while others
Fl'lmce. Egypt, Englant1, Greece,
praised
Gelber'a
originality
the
United
Swit,z.erland,
and
and teohnlque. The near-capac•
States. He wus Visiting P1·ofessor
of French at 13ryn Mawr College
lty audience seemed eager to
and taught at the Middl~ College
judge for Itself last Friday.
Summer School of Fl.'1lnch while
"'J' lie Connection'' contains a good
visiting the United State! 1 in 1959·
deal ot ad.libbed 1nterpol&amp;Uon.by
the players. Thi~ factor can elthor
ndd to the audlence's insight Into
each r,urtfoulnr character or It cnu

Thorn, Wilson to Attend
Speech-Hearing Meeting

drug lb&lt;' J)ln.v into the atoremeo.
we­
tloned
bore.
Onfortunately
found Lill' latter QuaJHy to pre .
dnml1&lt;ute.

LflSt Friday the prlde of connecticot
Street,
'!'be Circle Art
'!'heater.
presented
Its first live
drama . Th e blll of tare wnij "The
nounection," Jack Gelber's contro­
ver~le l play about junkies
and
drug nddlctlon. Fred Keller, tho

IButor

HAD YOUR"FIX"?

MAURI

F i/111,d in EnBtmai Color,
Starring
Uobhy [&gt;ar ln, Snndra Dee, Stefanie P owers,
Micheline Pro slc, John Lund, Ceaar Romero

�SPECTRUM

Fridoy, NoYember 9, 1962

rAGEELlVIN

It's BullsVs.Gettysburg
BulletsTomomw
Chiefo•stacle
Buffalo
Elev~n
Stampedes
Bisoas;APODownsSigEp1, OBFoeRepresents
.to WinningCampaign
StoiaPacesAUack;
Hort
IsAll-East
FacesTIEforTiUia OnRoad
By JOHN KNIPLEA

By BARAY EPSTE I N
The University or Buffn.lo bel(I
1rnclwell's
Bl•ons s~oreless ' !nr
(our Cull quarter,; 11nd collected a
rouuhdown In every one ot theao
quurtl'rs In, a 28-0 trh1m11b last
Suturday In Lewisburg, Pa. Only
,i,e enow got lnlA&gt;the UB end ton e
,!$ the Bucknell team never pene.
1mtecl beyond tllP Hulls' 15 y1ml
1111e.

Jobn "ICU man" Slota Wll~ rlgh~
,11home lu !be brisk weather . Ke
run ror two touchdowns , threw to
,,nd Lal'ry Gergley for a ' 13 yard
1111~811lay tally and gave off to
Jnhn Olmbo, who turned the cOl'11''1' tor six yards u nd th e fourth
1 11 touchdo wn .

Bulls gain 261 yarda on ground
The Bulla bad one of their finest
r11nnlng dnys. They gained 261
)'llrds wltb Tom Buller leading th e
rnahers, He 1&gt;lck ed up 59 yards
In 6 carries. Stora went 61 yards
In 11 earrlee;
Jack Valen tic 29
yo.rde In 4 carl'fee aud Johnny
l'l mba ru~b ed 11 lfme e, gaining

~5 yards,
'l'he rugged Uulls' lfneroally

dug
field and
g,we Buoknell'e ace quarterba ck
u l)llllling all afternoon, The Bulls
broke through the Bison lloe and
threw Ron Glordano [or loss s[ter
IO•~- They harrassed him, blocked
hi• pass011, jarred !um hie s loose ,
intercepted his passes and allowed
n1orda11u to complete
only 12
,,nsses for 77 yarde .
111on tbut snow-sllpl)ery

QUICK, DRY

XEROX
COPIES
10c

'l'he Dulls scored ·lat e In the 1st
,,uarter to 0 11en the acorlog. Stora
1msaed 30 yards to Dave Nlcltol~
Imm his own S5 yord line. Olmba
"'rh lllhled over center
tor H
yllrds lo the Bison 23 aod sop h­
omore tullh~k Carl Orazladel gal.
lu11ed to the l yard line . Slota
went in for the score. Alt er 11
plays and 67 yard s later. the Bulls
led 6-0. Stofa was wid e on the
l'.IT kick attempt.

APRatings

Clmba recovera fumble .
Butrlllo Acored again when Clm­
ha recovered a Buckn ell tumbl e on
1he Blsons' 18 yard lin e. Stofa
1mssed to Larry Gergley for 13
yijrds and th e T D. At the half th e
&lt;1•or.,read : Buft'alo 12-Bucknell O,

TuckerQalck
Copy

•ee

'l'he Bulls score d again with ta
seconds lert in the 3rd quarter .
.Hier Stora re covered a rumble on
Iha Bucknell 24, John Clrubn ,·us h.
•d tor 6 yard s, but a personal roul
11en
alty pushed tbe Bulls out to
111,.31. Stora then hit Jim Bowdon
,or I S yar ds, ,Jnck Valentlc ca rri ed
1~ke ro the 6 yard line. Stotn roll­
"d out looking for a receiver, but
,•Jected to run on the option no d
went 1u [or the score. J oh n also
1.in for two poh,ts a lt er the toucb­
dnwn. !TB 20-Bucknell o.
llurrulo •cored onre
1:1 tert In the game.

By ROCK Vl!!R8ACE

As a N!Sult of Ineligi ble pln,era
With Sat urday's 28-0 pnaUng of
~11un10t111gIn the fraternity t:oucll Buekn el l, th e football Bulls appear
two traterultles
foot boll I eague,
to ~ 1,"'l'lodlng rhe lr W!lY to their
hav e had to forfeit all their Win­ first winning senaonsi nce 1959. The
ning football games and ,entr, next obata cle (or Is Jt ?) Is Getty,.
points . AEPI and AK.Psi were l:ound burg College, wbl cb spo rt s 11 won 2
to bav4Q1aed Ineligible men , a~,4, 111 an d lost 6 record to dnt e.
{I result, possibly lost all cbEUICes
With wins over Albright and
for victory In the run tor the Pal­ i\fuhlenburg and losses to Buokoell
llowltz Memorlol Trophy .
(2 1.2.2) , l&gt;olnwnre (1-49) , Lehigh
Oue to the fortelts the Mo,nday (HO), J,ntayelte (14-20), and Wit­
rootba.ll league re sulted in 11 Ue te nberg (6.27), the comlog game
to be one or the tew
for t o11 honors betwe en s11:E p appears
and .APO, each with 11 6..1 'record. "breuthers" on th o schedule. But
These two tenruR met In ~ pla ,y off 1r one reco.lls last year's gnme, tho
l(llllle on Wedn eMday , and APO "broolber" t urned Into 11 good Old­
Senior Co.Capt. Dick Hort :
tnsb ioned slam-hang football gamo
emerge d Ille winn er, 13-6.
Th is week'• AII-Eaat cente r.
The Alpt,a Phi Omega el,ev • with OB llnnlly emergl nl( Ylctorl.
Jlorl
loterce.Pted l wo passes
oue by 11 14-6 count.
en will now play TKE, cham p,
ugolnst
the Bisom, and played a
With 16 experiouc~ d le llormen
of the Wedneaday leagu e for
generully
alert game throughout
book Crom th e 'GI team, the Bullete
tho fra ternity championship on
tbe afternoon,
could puck a beuatty punoh It they
Monday at 3:30 At the 1a me
i:et f ht • hti-nlls ,
Sophomore halfback Ken Sny .
time the Ravena will meet 1the
Als o nowtno.ted ror tbl! 1e1uu
der, the Bullet•• top receiver ,
Redskins for tt,e top apo t of
were 11uarterback J ohn Stofa and
hu 1na~d 1()' paaaes for 161
the Independ en t league . 1'he
end Dave Ni chols, The latter was
yards and 1 touchdown.
two .. ml,flnal wlnne r6 wlll
~u11homorea like tnci,le Irw in SUV­
nomJ'nate d for Sop bomor P or tho
play for the campus champlo11hecker (0•4#, 210 ll&gt;s.); g\\nrd, Dill
•hlp on Wednesday,
Week honors.
~omuel (6'1", 220 ,Iba ,) ~JJd tackle
UB Notes ...
Th~ UulJij, wbo
BIii l,ak o, "'2", 240 lbfl. ) .
All l!lltrle~ tor lht, J1a11dball tuur ­
Although tn c Bullets are •
Coach 0 11'.
enbamer deeuribee !LIi ''a n11ruent ffill St be ropor tod to tho
few yeara off, the Bull■ IN
lstenmed.up squad ," ente r the G11t­ lntramurlll omcu nu lat er tha:n to­
here; Jtrong, el1perlent1d ~nd
day, Friday . Nov . Y(b, The tourna .
tysl111rg contest tomorrow in con.
hard. With the r ight • attitude ,
ment will begi n ~londay, No~·. 12,
81der ably bett er phy~lcal condl. with singles mnt &lt;lhtlll held Mondll)'
desire and ftght UB : 1:ould ro ll
up a good acoro Satu~day ; how.
lion thou In rnctint week s. Full· and 1"uesda y, and doubl es pla.y on
ever, one must not forget the
back Corl G1•allladel, who Wll9 1'hurMay,
tough conteat Gettyaburg made
kno&lt;'ked ~old In the Blsoo gome,
Jjask etbull eulrl as are due next
out of !.8•!year•• mat .ch.
bas no broken bones and Is rea dy J•'rlday. The fraterniry l OOb
'lles 'Will
tu play against the Bullets. Doh comp 0L11 uu Tues days and •rlmure­
Bnker, whu hos been sideli ned days ut 8; 30 p.m . nnd tile lo dupen­
e,·er since he incun·ed a knee i o• dent teams will J]llly Monday
Jury ln the Delaware ga111e, will through Thursd ,1y evenings al,ao at
be reo cly tor action. Others wh o 8:30. All lea gue play wJll begin on
will be 1·e turning
to duty are i\lonuny, Nov. ~~. tullowlng the
rullbacks J im Burd and Jack Va\. Thanks1,'ivlng vacnllon,
~ntic, and co·capt. Jim Wolfe.
Halfb ack P hil Parsons Is Get­
Time trlala for the sw1mml1n11
The Bulls are still bavlog dlf ft.
PER COPY
ty1b11rg'e lodl ng ruaher wit h
meet will be held Monal1y
culty holding 011 to tbe pigskin .
(01191' 16)
a 4.8 yda .-per-carry average.
through Wednesd ay even ltigl
They rumbled s rimes le.et Satur­
between the hour• of 5 anal 6
Sophomore e" d• Pat Noonan
W\' have a COJ&gt;~to fit
day, but rortunately reoovered all
p.m. Entries mus t be turned In
( 190 Iba.) and Vince Majkowtk l
but 2 of th ese bo'l)blea.
you r
need and your
no lat er than today. The m,1ot
(190 Iba.) ha ve been moved up
b1JdJetl We copy a ny thlDJr
will take place on Mond,ay,
to tile aecond unit for defen •
the eye can see. Free
Nov. 19 at 6 p.m. In order to
alve purp oeea , T he llne la an­
pick up and d11llve'7.
partic ipate In the meet , 1111111n.
chored by senior t ackle, T om
tr ant muat like part In !;he
Schwl ner, a hefty 6'1", 265.
Ptl.
t ime trial, . The poo l will be
Pos. Te am
pounder. Gradu ation and In.
1 Northwe•tern
(6-01
442
open for prac t ice aeaalo n, to­
juries put a weakneae at guards
2
s. Cllll(orula (6-0)
(09 mo rrow from 1 to 3 p.m. a nd
whe1'6 aophomo~ BIii Samuel
174 PEARLST.
Monday from 7 to 11
307
. p.m.
(6'1", 220 lbs,) and Junior Bob
3 Alabama (7-0)
TL 2-6214
4. Mississippi (6-0 J
37ll
lo closing , Mr. Ed Muto, thu 41·
Nelaon (6'11 #, 195 lbt .) will
:m 1•ootor ot the Intramural pros ·ram, plenty of action.
6 Texas (6-0-1)
6 Arka11$88 (6-1)
17D bas ask ed to include the folUow­
Senior l1nlfbnck Phil Pnrsous "ho
7 Missouri (G.0-1 )
UG lng ijlalemeo ts. All rrate rnJ ty a1"°rt s ~VW11ges better than tour yards a
S Wisconsin
( 5-1 J
118 mnnogers ,ire ,·nutl oned to chook car ry , ll arry lln zzord, and ,•eternn
9 Lo uisiana State (6-1-1)
102 th eir sport.fl rosters for all plnyers rullba ol, Bob Wolrgan g- are tho
10 Minne sota (5-1-l)
93 who are lnoUglbl&amp; according to the end ~ to keep an eye on. Not ex­
Intramural rules. Tb.ree tr ateritltl ea ceptio nally big, these boys can put
Others Receivi ng Votea: Peno have lost all ent ry points du e to thPir goo d speed no d exp&amp;rlence
Suite, Orego n, Georgia Tech , Ml· forreltl! Cll\lHCdby lnellgil.tle parU ­ to work If given a cbonce.
Utnl ( Fla .), WablngtA&gt;u, Army, clvnnts. Thie hns r esulte d In 11 Ta lk eoomtt to bavo Oottysburg
Dnrtmout h, Auburn,
Oklahoma , great detlcll in tbelr tbancet1 ror about one possibly two yenre from
Flori da, UCLA, Kansas , Michigan w1nn.lng the over11U sports trophy, th e )}Bilkof th Plr bulldlng up plan s.
Sta t e, Oregon State , Arizona Stnte , the Pulhuwiu Award. A word to A chec k o r 1110 roster ebowa why,
West Virginia.
The llneuo gleams wllh big, rangy
Ute wise Is su(fic\ent ...

more&gt; wtrh

Delicious Pizza

l 'o..capt. D1ck Hort , U B's 6-foot
,~11-po
uud center, wan mimed to
·he weekly Eastern College Ath­
·,.11,, Confere nce football team for
hi, stout play In the Bulls· 2R,O
11,rnablng or Bucknell ,
'

Delivered!

Hot to your door

ol no eldro charge from

COLLEGiEPIZZERIA
LOWEHBUU
OH TAP

MAXl.'S

ll'F 2-9331

Moh, on4 Ftrry Sh .

PRESENT-

Small w ith chetne (Appro ", 12") $1.00
large with che,ese (Appro x. 16") $1.50

THI f.t.MOUS

BAVARIAN
TRIOEDELWEIS

l/oult]P IOtll'ti11u1lfir ,,,1tm

FIUDAY AN D SATURDAY NIT£$

A Nite of FUN, DANCING &amp; SINGING
FREE SONG BOOKLETS

l

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,ti,,,,,

A1ldit i1,1111I

ENJOY THESE GERMAN ANO AMERICAN DISHES IN OUR
DINING ROOMDAILY FROM 11 I\.M - SUNDAYS FROM I ~ •1,
Roo,t Young Tom Turkey _ •. SI 65
¾,lb. Strip Steok
• , , •.• , Sl,25

1
~U•rb:o•Sc:hJ
1z~F'
.~.::::':
. :-:g Half
:(~~,.~r.~:i:.
~u~◄:.~:k d,1)1)·.
· :-:~
R..,°/rOU&lt;klfng
Krout ... ,. . 1,95
Fried Chicken • , • . .. .. • 1.75
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tA:!a!i~';~AL~
nodc.
wurs1

PtJto'.o P(lt\COk.t,• ?Sr Fron~
&amp; i·c,o,o
~;oo tlX
thtNnHI Moft•, lunch..- ftom 7So-rrt , &amp; Sot. Sp.c ·lot, Doub._ Flth fry tJ c

l11Jof th

ORGAN WITH A HA fl

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1,r, mu,h,-o&lt;&gt;m,,
olive,,
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h,•t: •lrnv, ini,r Miss Ano Fritr.simmons of ~tcnon,1ld
ready fo?' dcllvt•.ry
mun,
I Fre., piu.11 n WL-e~; tu wiJrner for all of accond A\•meater,
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111111 lln"c your cllll iea for new drawing

SHARE

YOURCHARM
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No klddmg... 11'10111
and ~
thinkyou'rethe ll!ealest! Most
everything,nvolvrngyou lnler
eststhem Tellltiemwtiat's~p
pening in person,by photlt , ,
,l's the best •lfY• Whynot t~II

home long Oislancetomght1
Ratesare IOwtste,&lt;!fyeven,nv,
after6 andalt daySunday
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NewYorktetepbo■o
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1Tc:,:::;::
::~1
,:;~•~!

�S PE CTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

Friday, November 9, 1962

UB'sFIRST
FOOTBALL
TEAMTHE
1894BULLS UBGolfers
Finish
Season
Unbeaten
Record
YearBoasts
ManyHighligh
s

: I

11

½

Hat.• off ' to the undefeated
chump~ of the greens.
For
the

E. C. T. I. . . ..• ....
McMaster

first time in its lengthy history, a
University
of Buffalo golt team
ha~ gone undefeated
in dual competition. And the irony of it alJ
pi that three out of the first four
men arc sophomores, .Much credit
muMt be _given to Dr, Leonard
(Serf) Serfustini for molding this
young g roup lnto the fine champ•
ions that they are .

INOIVIDUAL RECORD
L
Name
, w
~r.
1 oav e Frost ...... 5
4
Soph. 2 Gary Weisa .... B
2
2
Sopt,. 3 Steve watt .... 7
2
Soph. 4 Tony Mlg nano 8
5 Tom Demblk 8
O
Jr .
6 John Peckham s
o
Sr.
Alt.

171/2
15

3

v,.

F•ed Berm.an 2

T

0

Although
the
seaaon simply
glfttere d with eicltl ng events, Serf
points out the follo wing as the
seusnn's high lights:
I. First place in the Brook-Lea
Invitational
at Rochester ( out of
12 te11ms).
2. Making thll E.C.A.C. qualify.
N . Y.
log round nt Syracuse,
(qualified
with SyrMuse Univer­
sity to represent the area in the
finals at Jrarmingdale,
L. I.)

Have the UB Bulla Improved?
We of the Spectrum Soprts staff feel that they have.
A.a
poaitlvety trr •efutable
proof w e offer this extremely reveal1ng photograph of the 1894 Bulla­
UB'• llret football team .
Note the bulging b ice ps ( look hard now) on those monstrous
behemoths!
Thia ru1gged
band or Bulla played a tough two-game achedule 68 years ago; they nipped Hobart 12-6,. but
t11en rallied to tie Rocheeter, O·O, The latter game co11cluded a weary eeason for the local
lad-.••
they flnla h ed with a gaudy 0-1-1 reco rd. We wonde r If t he reason for the short ach,~dule
wu the "p hyaic;,il condition" of these apeolmena of 1894 manhood (eapecallly those a In the back

3. Sixth
tournun1ent

~- Handin g St. Bonavent11re
fir•t loss in Hix years on the
Bonaventure home course.

f'OW),

No, Mr, Peelle did not ooaoh this team!

NewFacesDominate
-UBBasketball
Squad

6. First unde!enl.ed

lls
St,

golf team

at U. 8 .

Bowling
FRATERNITY

2v,

Weiss

162

P~llow
161
Top Games of the year to date:
1. H'ohnan - 208
2. Weis s - 202
H lgh Seri ea:
1. \Veias - 65,
2. Pellow - 621

II

CAMPUS

MALE CALL"
I, there any age limit on

corduroy? That's tl10 question
bothecin~ this instructor, who
writes, 'l'vo noticed a numbrr

Team and individual records are
LEAG,UE
Team and Poa.
Won Loet all follows:
Alpb a l!}pallon Pi.
l.l
l
VARSITY GOLF
Beta Sigma Rbo
I.~
8
Season Record 10 wins and 0
Sigma Phi E11sllon
Iii
Ii
losses (dual matches)
Bowler
Aver.
Seglln (Alpbn Et1allon Pi)
191 Opponents - (victories over-)
U.B. Opp.
Peekhom (Alpha Kappa P1~1l 178
174 Niagara
Zelman (Alpha Epsilon Pi 'I
16½
174 Niagara
Reynolds (Gamma Phi)
14
170
Fl,;her (&lt;1amrua Phi)
Buffalo State
10½ 7½
Top Games of the year to date:
Buffalo State .
16½ 11/2
1. Seglht (A~JPI) - 238
10
8
2. Reynold• (Gamma Phi ) - 21:1 St. Bonaventur e
St. Bonaventure
15
3
· High Serlee:
3
Canisius
16
1. Seglln (AElPIJ - 699
4
2, Reynolds (Gun1ma PbJI) - ijSI Canlalus ......... ·•,~....~•.. 14
HOUSE PLAIIJ LEA0 iUE
Te.am and Poi.
Won Lost
~•lr&lt;.&gt;hallers No . I
J.O
2
Robert bl. Lee
J.0
2
'9
3
1E. lil. Cum1:ningS
Jl'illIUOl 't'
ll
3
I Bowler
Aver.
Holman
170
Notural Shouhf Pr
Olmstead
164

''We'll have it tenm of many
new faces." Wltb thi s comment Ull
varsity baAkothall roach Len Ser­
fnsUot looked 11\lo the future ot
the ra1&gt;ldly apl)roaohlng cage cnm­
l)Blgn. The Bulle open their season
l"ridt•&gt;•, Nov . 30, with a hom e on­
re&gt;unler ng11lntot the Unlvel'slty nr
Scrontnn .
Thr loam wit! ha domlnoled hy
nPW t1lay81'11du o to -vtlrloua renson~ .
Fir s t, lwo players who wer&lt;' &lt;&gt;ounl.
••d ur1on to help form the t9r.2-6~
rl11h'111m~k•nR will not hc nvalloblo.
Jlni Newton, n l)&lt;'Omlslng gna rd
a yen r ago, did no! report. Jllarl
ThlelP, th o T111tls' 6-fi dPpendnhle
center for tw o yoars, Is aide.lined
from the f'ffoots of his ltnee epera •
tlon .
'
Thie tutn of event11, J)lue tbe
Jl'r1lduat1on
of ~ etal'ters
(Nick
Shosho, Oerry FtllpBkl and nm Mc­
Coach Len Serfuatlnl
Bvovl. leaves the Rulls with only
th re&lt;' holdovers fron1 tbe 1961-~2 hnmstrlng muscles In th e prpces~.
~qund. 'l'bey a.re: senior forward He hns been l!mpin~ for Lhe past
Jim l&lt;rnw cv.yk, ]U!\lor ~uard Dick three we eks , but IL is hoped that
Han ey, and rugged BIii Bllowue, he will be ready for the aeaaon
n. junior r&lt;&gt;nter. "But trorn here on opener agalt1st Scranton.
na11nermn11 Is 6-6, RD exc ellent
In," !-err addA, "thf'Y'n&gt; mostly
s hoole,· . and o player who should
n~w.'"
help \o UO olf
Aduslly, the oagoril will bl• bol . he u tremendous
ijle re d t'OnAldera'hly wben the fool th e board•. Hi s height alone Rhould
ball aooeon Is completed. Tw o 19Gl ron t rlhule greatly to thP Ul) ca us e,
Rtalwa.rte who will join the VB ae th e main weakn ess to Buffalo
hno11ster a nri' ne&gt;w q1,arlerbM1king teams tn recent years hns been a
the football Bulle . They are John woefnl weakness In the '$1•e de.
Stora, o 6-3 [01'ward. and guard Don parl mt-nl.
llnnnermnn h as n lso Incurred ml e­
(lllbert . Bot.h are Juniors .
Thi' most en.couragJng
reat\11•0 forlune. how ever. as ))e has been
a l&gt;llul the Ull cager,, Is tbe appa­ o ut two w~eks du e to the flu . He
rt&gt;ntly rapid progress of the nu­ will report lo prnctlre Rhorlly.
Another newcomer to the Bull s,
merous so1lhomoret1 on the team .
!;err nole8 !hat "the aop horno reij fol'ward John J\lcluerney, is also
nre. t'Omlni, nlong fMt , nn d 11re •ldellr .ed from prnctlre . as be
balUlng for Atarl1n g Jobs." Defl • broke o sma ll bone In bl Mfoot. He
nlte Ntart1011 ohnll &lt;'ni:ee h1,ve been wilt rep ort lo anolber week.
Thus, with the season openeT
made h;v th e followlng eecood.yenr
men: 1:narde Roy Manno and Dan th ree short weeks a,way, Con.ch
Bau.ant. and torwerd s Norb Buch­ Serfuslini ts lookin g tQrwnr(I to a
na,:l'I 11nd JllOk KarMiewskl .
1tt1ccess ful campaign. Th e ecbsdule,
Oth er sophA •ho tlguri' J)J'Oml. ''ll'e n i:ood one." sa ys Ser f.
nontly In tl)e tln118' ptan11 thl8 year
It Is also an Interesting o n e, wilb
sre, forwards Tom. Gill nnd Gary the addition of s urb Mwcomere oe
Hanley (tTR'e moat promlelng jumv vnunted Army, Scrnoto n. Albany
shooter, 4C~ordln1ot to Cooch Ser. Slttte. among others. Other 11:eyop.
ruatinl), ~ard Don Thomps on and ponnnts tnchtde Vtllnnova, Niagara,
6-li½ centllr P11ul Ballmlda.
ero Rs.town Buffal o Stnte. Bucknell
In Aoldlllo n to these promtstni:­ ttnd "hoted" Roehestl'r .
eophA, the cagera bne he1&gt;0elrong•
trn's cross-eounty
tesm eve ned
Jy bol alered IJy thl' return of Davo tht•lr season. at 7-7 Tuesday with
Baldwin and t-he 11nrollmen t or a 2n-13 triumph ovc&gt;r Gannon coC
Gary B1&gt;noerman. a lrnuster. Ba.J(I. te1rn.
win . J. ~br,,rp.• hooling fnrward who
r1n runners nniled down se cond
l&amp;d lb~ nulls' BN1rl11g for ODO 1\1'· throui,h sl:xlb PORIUons in the race.
ml!'ltt,r ht l&amp;S&amp;, la hnck agnln oft er wllb Cht't Cooley pacing the Bull s.
Gannon's John Dorisb crossed the
kt'rVi'11!' ll bit.ob In the Navy ,
How1&gt;vf'T, he wo.fferod a 14.fn cb flnJsb. line nrat in 23:54.
Th e 11U fros h Hnrrlen1 bowed to
cut rrom a m!llbap in a phyelcal
••tl11r,ttun cla.ta, And t11tllod both, L~~loyne, 24-31.

i

place
in
E.C.A.C.
(tied with Syracuse)

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Special ,Discouftt to Studenh

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juckets and suits,
Th ey look nttrad­
lve and
sren,

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Thankone ol lhe Fnnch Kinas·
tor !his decotative touch , .. Louis'.
XIV,webelieve.He tired of seelna
his constituentsusln&amp;their sleeves
as a handkerchief.To dluouraae
this practice, he decreed that
sleevescarrya rowor buttons.lhey ,
hm bun standard equipmenl,
since.

~

We hope this

baJiliug problem
hasn't completely
!ntstrated C. J,

He writes, "The

hrenst pocket of a
suit l liought is at
an nngle, rather
than straight across .. Regard less ~
of how I insert a handkerchi ef ~
-n nd I've tried every possible
way - it look., odd. Hclpl"

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CLOTHES-INCNOTES-In

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remover. H~ng yoursuit or jao­
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ste11mwill smooth ·It out •• , IT
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LOOK JUST AS
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one of the
large size belt buckles? Try
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the froot bulge.
~
1111

f

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Oo color tllntbln1tlo111
ttump
'you?Ourleallet,DRESSPOINTERS
,
cleari up tht p0nlln1 questionol
''what eon with whtt" and is
paektdwith practicalclothestip$. ~
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�'

Friday , Nov e mber 9, 1962

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRT EEN

f4:,otball Association Selects
StoiaNearsUBMorkAmerican
Seventeen iAII-American Grid Candidates
John

Qua1·terb11ck

Sto{8, with

LW0g8mes to go, ia within 286
ynrlfg of the University o! Buffa lo
individual total offenl!l' record !or
u single season.
The UB record is 1,092 yards,
,c t in 1961 by Don Holland. Hol·
lanJ amassed his total
on 669
yards passing and 423 rushing. '
Stof8's total for _seven games
th i~ season is 806 yards - 04.6
1iassing and 161 t'llShing.
Stofu, if be is to, break the rec­
uni, must average 143.6 yards for
LT
Jl',i last ~o game.11 - against
uct ty~burg Saturdhy
at · Gettys­
and against Colgate Nov. 17 at
Rota1y Field, His average for
,even games is 116.l.

se,•enteen new player~ have been
Brlg~.'111' Young, recovered from
Dave Betu-man, llflchlRllJ&gt; StatlJ.
l'il~tl !or early season 1&gt;erl:orm­ '111Injuries, moved ahead of all
Guard• - Bob Burl&lt;. 1111.ylor
;
an1·eK by the An1erkan Foo ,th11ll
rushora f.or t ho flrat four games
'l'ony O.\Y, Columb l n; Ketth Jllolen­
A~soelt1tlon, II was nnnounced by
wit h 62t yards In 75 carries.
yit•I', West Virginia ; ;\II-Okey Ord.
UIII ~lurray, AFOA vresldent an()
UCLA 's ~c,mlt Alexander, an
Ing, u1-egnn; Johnl\Y T deurwall,
.Tf&gt;xrui: Johnny W11llcer, U.C,C,A.;
Duke University coach.
all.purpose
back, r Ip p ed 45
Seven linemen and ten b acka
In tho
yards for a touchdown
D11rn Wntson, Ot10rgla. Tech. Jack
hn.l'e be~n 11dded to the ro111A;
tr or
Bru'l ns• big upset over Ohio
t;vt'rcko,
Nor~llweRtern :
'T'(&gt;ih
candl&lt;llltes for the 1963 .All-.Am,nlca
State.
llerh.
MISMOUrl.
teum - to be selected by the AFCA
Sp11odRu,r .\ll'I Uen!ro ot Orei;un
Halrbackll
\1 al Ion ~'alrcloth.
al I he sen•on·~ 11onch1slo1l
,
1md O~ynn Weaver ot Houston ­ T~11nesijee: I.Arry Fer1t11son, towtl ,
A total or 64 player-includ
.
who set 110ult lime NCAA one-gn.mo Billy O:imbrell,
S&lt;luth Carolinn:
Ing 47 grid stars aelecled In, a
rerord With !Ive In terc1&gt;11t l&lt;&gt;ua Mike llal'ru"r, lT.CL,A.; Dave Hop p.
pre.season poll of coachen-­
1gu.Jnat HayJ01· - have nlso been mnn; low11 State; Ro,:cr Koohmo.n,
now comprise the nominating
nominnt~I
llt holtbock
by the Penn Sto.te; Mark Lei:i:ott, Duke ;
list for the 73rd ooneecutlve
l'OllChOA .
Cha.rife Mitc:bell, Washington: Prea­
squad of the nation's old1,et
cher Pilot. Now Moidc.,oState; Pete
and or,glnal All-America tealtn.
Halfh1wlc J{ou 13ul)il k or Mkhignu
Slnrtell by Wnltei· Ct\ml&gt;, In .1889, St11te mOVt&gt;d up when lw golne,l l'odro. West •rems State; Dave
tbla conrheK' All.A1u8rka teaim fs ~1)7 yardH 11,;nlnat North Cu.rollnn . ll1\illlOY, Mlcl\iglln: Jon-y Stovall,
Kponaored hy the Eastman J{,odak 11" broke ,UI 12-ycnr record 1111"1I A&gt;nlsinnn Stnte; ~:Ilion FotUtt, Drlg­
h;,m You.ui:; Mel Routro. Oregon;
Compn.oy ror the tJ1lrd co11ijec11llve by f;ouny nrn111lelluN or )1SU.
nyrou Weaver, Houston; ;Jlon Bu­
year. More than r;ool1euct r,lliege
111111'horntou or Nebn1ijkn Ian;; bfl•l&lt;. Mlchl1:11nState; Kormll Al.
0011.c
hes,
nslni:
tiv~lun.tlonN
fur­
uJtibed by a.nnlyiing .m,iny i:ame bijnll lll)llll1Ulted roa, t!J.. rullbl)Ck cxnncler, 11.C.L.A.
.
mo,•les, wl II select the honor team. 1msl1l1111
Centers-Jerry
ll011ll:11M1, Tl'XII~
Final bnlloUng wlll be reviewed by
l ,l~l or AII-Americn
Jl()lllhlt,l••, A&amp;~l; Lee Roy Jordun, Ah1bt11n411;
the All-Amerk~1 Board or Coo.ahes i11d11dl11K11ri&gt;
.se oson c•nnrlidutes
lt11y .MI\Mfleld, Wnehlni;ton : WBY114l
led by ;'llurray. The first, second are :
l;Qe, Olclnboma.
a.nd third All-America LPUIHS wm
Ends
1-1111
lll
ert~oe.
So11tbe1·11
Quarterback-To,·ry
8'1ker, t)r.i.
be :i.noounced · lu the De,·omller l
C'allfornh\,
ltuKh enmpllPII, Wnsh. f;Oll Stall•; Sonny ()lbb11, TWU\ft
l~•ue or TV GlfJOE.
lngtou State; T~tl Ouvls, Oeorgln l'hrlstlnn;
Jorry Oroes, · Olltrolt.
Moving Into contention
at
Tech; Verne ilurke, Oregon State ; P\H J\lcC11r1by, 1-ioly Cron; 0eorge
end Is unheralded
junior col ­
Tom llutchlnson.
Kenh&gt;&lt;•ky; Join: Mlru, Mia mi (F'la,): Diak !3hlnor,
lege transfer Verne Burke or
11,wkey, Syrlll'usu ; Pat Richter, Morylnnd; Tom My·era. Northwest..
Oregcn
State.
After thr·ee
\\'i"l'Ollllltt;
lJllVe lWbluson. Penn em; .loo N,unath, Alabama; 13111
games, he grabbed the lead
State, t:IOyd \\ 1•hh , Iowa.
l,c&gt;t brldi: e, Oeorgi&lt;I 'l'ech;
DIiiy
among the nation's pas• catuh.
Moore, ArknnMR.
ers with 25 receptions. Burke
Tacklea - !:lte•e Barnell, Orei:ou;
caught eight pa.sea In Oregon
1111hBell, Mtuuesota: Scott AppleFullback, - Mike Lind, Notr&amp;
State's up ■et over Stanford.
1,111.'l'exu~ ; Daryl Sunderij, Ohio llum~; lluy Poag~. 'l'eiuui; Qeorgo
Among emerging luckle stllr11 om State; lt"retl MIiier, l..011isl11!lll
Stllte;
Scott A111,Jeton, 11-~. 227.pounder Jltn Uunna.wlly, Mlseisalppi; Art S11imes. ,\ll~hlgr.n St.itu; Den Wll from the llnlversily
t1f •rexn•, l&gt;&lt;1- G,•egol'y, Duke; Jlod Scheyer, Wa:sb- ~on, S &lt;l II l h ~ r n C11Ufo1•u1~: lhll
ryl Snnders (R-5 1111&lt;12:17) or Oblu 1111:ton; Uol&gt; Voi:el, Ohio Sl~te: 'l'homLou, Nebru•kn .
Stott!. ll.D(
l Fr•ed Mill er (6·6 lllld
227) or t,outNlana Stn tl''ij dt•fon,11lve­
ly-tough Uengala.
Sunder" t11ams
with Hob Vogel, a 11rel'iou~lir--ao.
nouoced c11ndidnte, 10 give Ohio
Staten two.man taokJ e entry Ira tbP.
A~'CA AII-Ameril 'a rullng,i ,
At guard, Ja uk Cvercko, a 236.
pound, ,t.O Junior, hn~ been a key
Jlnemnn In tbe upsuri:-e or tile
Northwe"tern
Wlldca1s. Tom Hertz
(212 nnd 5-10) or :r.U~•ouri ulHo ha~
Ileen cite&lt;! by con~hes for ,oUIRllnnd·
lng play,
Center Wayne 1,ee, " ii,2, 2011ponnder Crom Oklahoma , has ,uoved
up to challenge
for AII-Am•Prlca
reoogniUon ,
Two wpboruore
quort er b,l\ tks­
Tom Myers of Northwestern and
Joe Namalb of Alabama - have
heen \mp re adive with their eiu-Jy.
Re11eo1~passing 11c1·urilcy
. ll111l..oth .
ridge or Ocorgln 'l'eob, an old-ta.
s hlonetl triple-threat,
bas 1111d a
ha11tl or root In virtually
uvery
110loLscore d by the Ceorglnns. 01·
reeling the powerful Arki.nNo.s ut
lRck Is quarterback
DIiiy llfoore.
Five halfback, have been l'OC.
ognlzed for their early.sea11on
perform•nces. Eldon Fortle of

Buffalo
Swordsmen's
Lackof Size
HidesWealthol TeamStrength
'l'be varsity tencers will begin
their season wttb the traditional
opaner Rglllnst the Rlumnl Nov. 29.
In gpite or their smnll size, It la
expecte d that tbey will maintain
,me of the best winning records
or ,in.y UB val'slty team.
Small ~lze this year la Wdlng a
wall or strengU1 In the individual
by a vet­
•t1uada, ench captained
eran tencer with a Jot or experl.
en~e end an ndmlrnble record ot
uuul~ won. Joe Fersch 1vho lead~
lb~ rollmen will nleo be training
In epee this year. Joe placed in the
Coll 1111.u
ls ot the AFLA. meet Inst
Sauir da.y. Bill WJlkl!beon, who took
sroond pJ11ce In the epee division,
w!II be leading the epee squad.

Jerry Mnrahak, another veteran,
wlll take charge or the snhermeu .
The entire team closed with a
9 and

a record

Iut

year, and toi,.

ped that otr_ with the winning of
the North Atlantic
Champlonablp.
Backing up Joe F'eracb In fo ll
wlll be Howard Goldstein, a. new.
comer to the equa,d; Jules Levlnl'
a former intramuruls
champ, and
Du.rry Canter, who Is also training
for saber comJ)etlUon. Joining BIii
Wtlkenaon wlU be Herb Boedecker,
Frank Pocenco and Steve Spero.
Mark Fox, who was Freshman
Fencer of the Year 111 the 1960-61
se11so11,will assist Jerry .Marshak
as will Jay Caplen, a three.weapo~
mlUl, nnd newcomer Al Fields.

Manlius
EdgesFrosh

Gettys burg Leaders

't'hl! Baby Bulle will Ile seeking
l~elr llret victory of I.heir season
iomo 1·row lu their home encounter
ol the ye11r. The OB yea.rlings, 0.2.1
Rushlng: Pb1I Parso ns , RB. 66
tol' tbe season to date, host Ithaca carries tor 313 yards 04uo.le 4.R
tomorrow at 1: 90. AJI eti1lente wlll
avernge.
he lldmltted free upan presentation
'lf !heir ID card.
Pa ssing: tteed l!:rnst, QB, 22/49
t,11,t Soturday the frosh !oat their for 230 yards, l TD, 1 conv.; and
secon d game or the year, ns they Don Elnders, QH, 21160 ror 230
were bested by Manlius. 6-0. The
yards, 1 TD .
game's only score cnme when Man­
lius q u.arterhack
RolC Stegman
1'ot11l ortenae : Phil Parfton~. HB,
c1•oseed the goal line on o. sbr.yard
:!13 yards.
rollout In the secoud quiu-ter.
The Baby Bulls have only two
Receiving: Ken Suyller. HB, 10
enoouo.ters left, one of which Is to­
morrow's battle aga.lnstlthaca.
Last for 167 11nd 1 TD.
year UB emerged victorious, U-6,
Punting: Vance Johnston QB, 24
ilL a gatne tbal w&lt;int right down
lu the wire.
ror 803 yards equals 33.5 average.

Ente ring UB Game

The UB team
1962 slate one
when the highly
Cresbmeu Invade

will close out its
Scoring:
Barry Gruber, HB, 21
week Irom today
11olnt.s
on
2
TDs,
6 or 9 PAT kicks,
regarded Syracuse
one field goal.
Rotnry Field.

L&amp;.MandCHESTERFIEL
2 lor I SALE
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m the LOBBY of NORTON

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JUNIORSSENIORS

CHARLIE'S
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Sat .• 8 A.M.·2 P.M.
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�Harriers Win, Enter State Meet

SPORTSCIRCLE

Billsa■d Bulls
Rebound
-And
H'-!
By Jim Baker
The ability to rebound from disheartening defeat Is t he mark of
truly aoundand ,vell-poiaedteam, r ega rdle&amp;1 of the form of competi­
tion involved. Aod if anyone should desire concrete p'l'OOf of tbla
statemen t. he can find tw o living exa mples of it right her e in the Queen
City .
3

.
Fir&amp;t. take a look at thoae Buffal o Billa, who have ris,en fro m the
status o! lelt.gu11doormat to that of one of the AFL'e most feared and
Nl!pected teema, Sure it's true that the Bills still occupy laat place
In the Eastern Dlviaion , but consider the long road they have wa veled.
They starte d the year off In the woret faehlon fmagln ­
abla by dro pping thei r firat 4 conteate, 2 of which they liter .
ally handed the ir opponents (Denver 11nd New Yorkl on a
•five r p latter .
Then Coach Lou Saban decided to call a team meeting. All problems
we.re aired in an open and frank manner and the players were assured
that the ir stato.a W&amp;8seeure as long as they put forth their best et.fort.
Saban etre.~sed that he was going to sink or swi m with the current
~onnel.
Encouraged

Frtuy, November 9, 1962

SPECTllllM

PAGEFOURTEEN

by this vote of confidence and armed with renewed

enttmelum, the Bills went out and gave the Houston Oilers a fierce
physical beating and led practically all the way, but were nosed out
In t.he laat minute d11e to the incompetence of the "official»."
Vot, here la where the value of that open meeting reall y
•rted ltnlf,
In spite of a horrendous 5-game losing
lko ln, a n 0-5 record that quafifled the BIiie only for cellar
dwetlfng honors, the knowledge that they were "Jobbed'' h'I
their laal outing , and • n unbelievable run of bad luck, tl'le
team pulled llllelf together once more. Thia time, howeve r
nothing wu going to atop them!

UB's cross-country te1am even•
ed their seueon at 7 - 7 Tuesday
with Ii 20 - 48 triumph over Gan­
non college. UB runners dlown.~d
through 6th poaltions ill the rac e,
wth Chet Cooley paaing .,tbe Bull a.
Gannon 's john J;)orish crc&gt;stled the
finish lin e firs t-ill 28 :64.
The UB frosh Bar riere bowed
to LeMoyne, 24·31,
Saturday Chet Cooley led the
UB harriers to a team vi.ctory by
defeating host lthaca Co1)ege and
St, John Fi sher of Rocheuter in a
triangular
meet. UB had 36
points, Ithaca 36, and !St. John
Fi sher 62.
Cooley placed third in 1:be mee t.
Other UB finishers were Stu
Katz, fourth; Cam WeiJffenbach,
sevent h; Dave Stephenson, t.enth,
and Dick Sullivan, elevenlth.
Thu Bulls will finish ~heir sea·
Ron at the New York Sta1;e Cham­
pionships at Ith a c a tomorrow.
Fourteen schools have en l;ered the
rompetition in thi11meet , and Al­
fred will vie as the ~lefending
champion. Buffalo State, however,
looms as the favorite this yei.r,
according to UB coacbi Emery
Fisher.

UB Cro n Country C,apt. Dave Stephe nson talks over Bull'•
Proepecta with Coach Emery Fl1her, u team prepare, for
N. Y, State Champions hips to be he ld tomorrow In fth aoa.
Th is will be the final race for Steve nson, who le tho U8
co ur,e record .holder, He was al•o the harriers• Moat Valu ­
able Runner In 1960 an d 1961.

GBID
SCOREBOARD

LAST WE EK
Buffalo 28, Bucknell 0
Thu Bills ran onto the War Memorial Stadium field with blood Wltle1&gt;berg 27. Gettyaburu
ltl their eytie 11nd dealt Liu• Son Diego Ohnrgars a mercilell8 36·10 Colgate 13, Lehigh 0
drubbing, to the delight of the frenzied and victory-starved Buffalo Anny 26, Boston U. 0
partisans in attendanc e. Since that game the Billa have throttled Holy Cross ~ll, Daylon 11
Oak land, 14.-6, shocked Denver with an electrifying come-from-bohind VIiianova 14, Detroit 0
triu mph, 45-38, and tied the Eastern Divis ion leaders, the Boston Pat­ Delaware 20, T'emple '
Ohio U. 35, l\larahall h
riots, 28-28.

fl

T'HIS WEEK
Buffalo (4-3) Hl Gettysburg (2-6)
Colgate (3-H-1) at Bucknel l (5-2)
Boston U. (l-61 at. Cou,wctleut
VMI at Holy Cross (4-2)
·••••
•e-~w~
Ma!ISUQhuaettes at Vlllano\/a !li-1)
Ou.r own UB Bulla provide the other example of a team which
J)(Mll!esseathat same determined ability to rebound from disaster. just Rutgers at Delaware (6·2)•
(3-41 at Toledo
glanoo over th o Bull'~ fteuaon lo d11te you will notice tbi~ cltaracteris tic Temple
Ohio U. (7-0) nt Bowling Greeo
in several places.
RILE TEAM DEFEA'TED
After downing Bo8ton U. and playing as well as could be expected
BY
NIA.GARA IN OPlc NER
agailllt Holy Cross, the Bulla wore trampled into the Rotary Field
The State 1111tv1&lt;relty ot New
turf by VjlfaQi)va. They followed this perfomianee with three dls ­
app0inting ' r,erioda ag11inst Dclnwatt. Then, however, the UB forces York Rifle '!',•nm Jour11oyed to
llnlveraity
Sa turday
pieked tli.emselves up by the bootatraps and rallied for two TD drives to Nfngnrn
to softer R 1371-11,!GS defeat.
8Ubdue the Blue Hen.a, 20-10.
lllgh
m,•et Individua l ecorere
Temple provided stiff competition, but the Bulla never ­
were UP's John Perag11llo and
tflere" emerged wlth a S-point victory.
Then came Ohio's
llon .tenneUI each wltb 280 out
Bobcats. The UB attack became meek aa a kitten, and th e
or aoo points. The UB top five
Bobcats c4awed t he fumbling felines (er Bulla) to death, a 41-6
lliso tncludod John Bacon, 273;
flotooauat to be exact.
Yet , for i1111
sooond time this season, Coach Offenhamer's charges Jim Shearer.
268, and Doniel
displayed their propen!ity to stab back after II humiliating defeat , Pn tors on, 267.
Lut Saturday they slithered nil over Buclrnell's mud aod stampeded
th e Herd in a 28--0 011slaught. In ao doing, the Bulls sla mmed the
&lt;IOOI'
ntt the BIIIOIIS'3-yen jinx over UB teams.
, When the 1962 football season reachen its conclusion, if theee cwo
IO&lt;lll.l
teams can ,how nothing else for th eir effort&amp;, they call'.1 both take
great
prid~ in their
ability
to strike
back from
bitte r
dl.lli.ppointment and defeat. It ls the remarkable quality that has
ea rned th e adllliratlon aud plaudits of Buffalo gridiron followera
(werywhere.
While fivo gameij atlll rema in on the Bille' slate, the team has
11lroady p roved Its worth to local fans. This club has suffered un.
believal,la n1iafortune, looked it squarely in the eye, and n1et it head-on.
Th e l'il8Ulb &amp;peakfor them.M?lves: 3 wins (it shou ld be 4) and a tie
in 6 tremen dous efforts.

I..:===========::::;
the barn stormer
cardigan
by himalaya

fe11sible.
As for th e presenL, ~h. Ballond,
the head resident of Tower Dormi­
tory. is spearheading this drive.
fir will s erve as coach of the
leam, as he has a solid hockey
background . Bolland played var­
sity hockey !or 4 years at RPI,
one of the top hockey t1ehools in
the country. He has also been
act ive in areQ ice leagues in re­
e.ent years .

Anyone inteniat.ed in joining
this hocl&lt;.&lt;'y
club is urged to con·
u,ct tho Twer informatio11 deek
(TF l~17),
Nonn Finkle (TF l•
!r.144) or Riek Salte r (TF 6-7~).
litany requeati. ha ve already been
""' eived, ind.11dinr those of four
An exciting schedule ill being
varsity football players. They are:
John Cbnl&gt;II,Gerry Ratkewici, Jim p I an n e d (in one of the local
leagues playin,g in either Memori­
MacDougall, and Dom Pie1.trak.
al Auditorium, Ft. Erie, or the
Othel'll
have atr...dy signed Nichols rink) for those who are
up includl!: Larry Polon, Wally interested in doing some serioui
(;reenapoon, Norm Finkle, Steve skating lhi s Heu on. Get your
WeinsV&gt;in, Marty Bernawin, Den­ "blad e~" s harpened and call one
ni• Minni, .John Slngt1lski, Howie of th e above number s 11t your ear­
SaJ)(!ratl'l
n. 0 11'11:
l.aub, And Rick llPst convenience .

who

l·hlltl r.

Conch Balland a ssure a all who
1'1u~ 14.•m i,; being form ed with are int ere•ted thot he ''doesn't
the- !dCA tha t in one or two years see an y prob I e m 'in eecurin g
u·,• hook••r can be played here on mat.che• or a playin g site .'' All
,u1 lnt.-n-ull~t&lt; I~ baaiA. It is gen- tha t i11needed Is an encouraging
rr 11Uy und~r¥Cood that UB will rpsponso tA.l th is e ffort, with th e
hu,,,, • nr:w IJl)Orlllarena in a bout 1•rospect of 11nintercoll egiat e team
!,v,·
M&gt; a h.o me ice rln lr II " ,n~,ing in the balan ce.

Yt'•"'•

Hathaway's latest brainchild
-in genuine India madras
· Tus CLU B SHIRT has all the well-bred
touches of the Ivy.League look. Soft and
1upplccollar with a button in back. Small,
discreet buttons. Roundedcuffs.
But Hathaway has addedsome innova:
' tions of its own. Single-needlestitching.
Careful matching of the pattern across
the pocket. Plenty of room through the
shoulders.Goodlong tails. And the shirt•
ing itself - India's famousmadras cloth.
One hundred per cent cotton. In all
aortaof braveand brilliantchecks.

JoinUBHockey
Team!
An ice huckey team is being
, fonned ! Yee, severa l UB students
have huddled tog,Qther and de­
cided to bring to reali ty a team
which has been considered here
for several years.

The ClubShirt

I

$7.95
The plea santly offhand look
beli es a world of metic•ulously
correct styling in thi s relaxed
all-wool cardigan

O'C0HNEL
1L

LUCAS
CHELF
3240 MAIN

£t4u~
n

JIA)Y'
2900 DD..AWAIIE A.l(L

Appa,,d
OPEN EVENING-

SHOPS

lllHMORE, M. Y.

'?""1&amp;« ad if~
CHARGEACCOUNTSINVITED

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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